JEFFERSONIAN REPUBLICAN Stroudslmrg, RToveniber 10, 1811. Terras, $2,00 in advance; $2.25, naif yearly; and $.2,50 if not paid befoic the end of the vear. New Jersey. The difficulties in the New Jersey Legisla te have been settled, and Mr. Pennington has '-run re-elected Governor by the following tri umphant vote For Pennington, 44 For Peter D. Vroom, 30 "Whig majority on joint ballot, 14 Governor Pennington was inaugurated the nOernoon of the same day. Governor Porter has appointed John 13. But--r of Alleghany to be Canal Commissioner in jiuce of Hugh Keys lately deceased. uoh s inai aiiew lornnas uccn puaipuueu -I 1. . 1 . "NT -I7.l-1 I 1 u the 2th of December. Potatoes. Twenty thousand bushels were recently sold Hallowell, Maine, at two shillings per bush .1. At Green Bay, where wheat is selling for -nventy cents a bushel, flour is retailed at $7 .tO a barrel ! Governor Corwin, of Ohio, has appointed' Thanksgiving throughout that State. The Intelligencer of Friday last says:-Gcn. I fral D. Parker, formerly Adjutant and Inspec tor General, and subsequently Paymaster Gen oral of the Army, has deen appointed by the Secretary of War Chief Cltrk of that Depart ment. "Come Home." The last New Orleans Picayune contains the uhore cheering and welcome exhortation to hose who love its "sunny clime." Touching 'isease and the safety of strangers arriving -icre, it says: All may now return or come to "w Orleans without fear of contracting the vellow fever. Those all those who seek to letter their condition by their talents and in dustry, and who, at the same time, increase ho growth and wealth of our beloved city, are welcome among us. Let sharpers, loafers, sharks and blacklegs keep away. The Philadelphia Post Office. A paragraph in a morning conlemparary a iy or two since, in which it was alledged that veral heavy losses had been sustained through tismanagement or crime in the Philadelphia !'nst Office, we know to be utterly groundless, "ihe forty-five thousand dollars sent from Bos :n was committed to the care of Harnden's Ex cess, and it is not pretended that it was ever .-i the Post Office at Boston, Philadelphia, or . 'jv intermediate place. The -'twenty thous-.-ttl dollars' alledged to have been sent from Brooklyn has dwindled down in the reports to venty dollars, and there is as little evidence t wrong in the Post Offices in this case, as in Me other. All the charges calculated to effect :ue reputation of Mr. Montgomery appear to be piaHy destitute of foundation. Mr. Hobbie, f the Post Offiee Department, is in Philadel phia attending the Circuit Court in behalf of e United States against Reestde, and not on count of any errors in the administration of he office m that city. An Officer oi the De triment has communicated these facts to the tper to winch we have alluded, over his prop er signature, and it will, of course, retract the ""wees against Mr. Montgomery, who is one .the most careful, competent and scrupulous aificers in the country. We cannot but regret 'He appearance of any articles calculated to convey a different impression. lrwune. Loco Gains The Sussex (N. J.) Regis r shows off the' boasted triumphs of the Lo os in some parts where little or no" exertion is stiade by the Whigs in the following stvle. Whirgain in Sussex Computed in Locofoco ptyle. At the late election in oussex me regu teri&'Locofoco candidate for Council had 1102 otes: regular whig, none: Locofoco majority, 102. The majority last November was 1762 makintr a clear whig gain in eleven months t Six fiunarcu anu aixty lilu cwico. getting up stairs pretty rapidly. The Arkausas Tragedy. The last Arkansas Gazette contains a de scription of the late outrage and wholesale mur 4cr at Uland 64. It is said that "most of the lynchers were the former associates" of thei unfortunate. victims; and that they combined to vmurder them and drive them off in order to get their nronertv. The Gazette publishes the names of the murderers and the murdered. It appears that since the murder, the lynchers have driven the women and children from their homes in Coahoma county, burned their houses mud sold their lands and property "nnder sham :-"- - . r. loVements." Judge .Lacy ot tne supreme: "oiir i of Arkansas, and some of the most res- xieoiable citizens, have beep threatened with Jeath if they attempted to bring the lynchers j;iiific?. New i'ork Election. The Whigs have succeeded in electing one Senator from New York city Morris Frank linas will be seen by the following statement of ihe vote, in the first district: Whig. Loco Foco. Franklin. Lord. Varian. Purdy. Co. N.York, 16,214 16,131 16,456 16,227 Richmond, 74 74 Lings, 139 122 16,353 16,253 16,530 16,301 Varian's majority over Franklin, 177 Franklin's majority over Purdy, 52 The abolition ticket polled about 75 votes. The Carroll Hall ticket, upwards of 2,000. The Courier and Enquirer gives the follow ing as the latest returns received when that pa per went to press on Friday morning. They are sufficient to determine bevond a doubt the political complexion of the House. 1810. 1841. Whig. Loco. Whig Loco. Albany, 301 535 Columbia, 223 , 537 Cayuga, 174 200 Chenango, 253 300 Dutchess, 109 800 .FuIton, 16S 100 Greene, 341 500 Herkimer, 1296 1400 Mefferson,. 473 180 fMontgomerv, 505 400 Madison, .16 400 Ontario, 1301 600 Oneida, 6S8 1200 Onundaga, 87 600 Otsego, 881 1000 Oswego, 110 300 Orange, 537 1300 Rockland, 1045 900 Rensselaer, 205 260 Sullivan, 208 182 Schenectaday, 72 232 Saratoga, ' 385 300 "Seneca, ' 89 300 Uulster, 154 280 Wayne, 197 200 Washington, 1994 1000 Westchester, 362 a 934 From a slip of the Albany Aurgus. j fOne of ihe Whig candidates for Assembly ! is elected in this county. According to the above, the Whig loss in the Assembly is as follows: Ulster 2; Albany 3; Rensselaer 3: Schenec tady 2; Fulton 1; Saratoga 2; Oswego 2; Jef ferson 3; Madison 3; Chenango 3; Cayuga 3; Wayne 2 2S. Whig gain in Montgomery, 1. Great Fire in Barre. Thirteen hundred gallons of spirituous liquors were burnt on the green in Barre, Massachusetts, a few days since. The liquors consisted of several retail ers who promised to give up the business of selling on condition that the temperance people 1 w 1 would buy what they had on hand. A few nights since a negro fellow was shot by a boy thirteen years of age while entering his mothers house in Springfield, near Vicks- burg. The negro had been hunted off before, and returning, made his way up to the door in the dead of the night, when the boy shot him. The Texian Congress have directed a mar ble bust of Senator Walker of Miss, who made the motion in the U. S. Senate for the recog nition of the independeace of Texas, and a por trait of Senator Preston, who seconded the mo tion, lo be placed in the capitol of that Repub- 1C. Prince Albert is said to be very expert at catching flies an amusement which he gener ally practices in stormy weather, when his pre cious health might be endangered hv going out. There is no man so stupid, but has a genious or something. Sux. Reg. Loco Foco Festival. The Loco Focos at Gettysburg, Pa. celebrated the re-election of Porter as Governor of this State, on Thursday ast, by a festiral. An ox was roasted and de molished on the occasion, and several speakers addressed the multitude. One of the orators, under the excitement of ihe joyous occasion, indulged m a great many indecent personalities, and made such uniust and offensive reflections upon certain individuals, as not only to disgust every one present possessing any refinement of feeling, but so exasperated one of the parties whom he attacked, as to induce the latter to treat him to a caning. As soon as the opera tion was commenced, the orator took to his heels and made a lodgement for himself in a second story bed chamber of a dwelling near at hand, from which, however, he was soon ejected, and was compelled to make a precipi tate retreat through the back yard and alley, and take shelter under the roof of a friend. A Perilous Adventure. A balloon ascen sion was made from St. Louis on the 9lh ult. by Mr. S. Hobart, accompanied by a young la dy. After the balloon had attained the height of two miles, Mr. II. wished to descend, but found tho valve cord was bound fast in the neck of the balloon, which hung in folds, pressing on the small hoop overhead. In this difficulty the bold adventurer climbed up the cords to the hoop, and, resting upon it, disentangled the valve cord, which was necessary to give him command of the balloon. Ho then descended and made a safe landing about eight miles from the city. Sugar or Lead. The Milwaukic Journa says that a large and rich body of lead of ore has been discovered on Sugar River. Riot and Excitement at New Haven. The students at Old Yale have been creating a disturbance of a very serious character at N. Haven and have disgraced themselves by an outrage upon public properly which is attended with public danger, and at the same time it is unjustifiable and infamous in its character. It appears that on Saturday last the Fire Depart ment of that city turned out with their engines for inspection and review An attempt was made to try the power of the machines upon the Central Church, for which purpose it was necessary to lay two trains of hose across the upper Green, but the students who were enga ged in playing at foot ball upon the Green de termined that the hose should not be laid a cross the Green, and in the face of the public authorities who had assembled to witrress the performance, successfully kept possession of j the Green and drove off tho department But the quarrel did not end here. Soon after 12 o'clock on Sunday night, a gang of students in disguise made a rush upon the engine house, and almost entirely demolished a beautiful ma chine, called the Washington, which was en tirely new and ornamented with a beautiful por trait of the Father of his country About two hundred feet of hose were also deliberately cut up and destroyed. While this was going on the citv watch ral lied, but were assailed with brickbats and other missiles, and so overpowered by numbers that their services were inefficient, and it was not until the alarm bells were rung and the citi zens began to turn out that the rioters dispers ed. The College Faculty view these circumstan ces with deep regret, and have come promptly forward and offered to repair all damages, and will exercise all the means in their power to prevent a repetition of such offences. N. Y. Sun. The Movements of Santa Anna Santa Anna, it is said has declared himself Dictator of Mexico, and has promised to re store the constitution of 1824 Other accounts avMhat he was in treaty with Bustamente, but that his real object was to assume all power. He arrived at the capitol with his troops, on he night of the 2d September, about three o'clock, captured by assault the fort of San Francisco one of the strongest holds of Busta mente, and also the fort of St. Geronimo. Most of the officers and men captured, imme diately enrolled themselves umong Santa An na's party. On the 3d, President Bustamente, with 1500 infantry and 500 cavalry, attacked one of the posts of Santa Anna, but being re sisted by 500 men'of the corps of Puebla and argus, was repulsed with great loss, and re- ired leaving on the ground his killed and woun- ded. Gen. Galindo on the same day with 700 men, abandoned the cause of Bustamente and oined Santa Anna. The Censor says that at tne last accounts General bania Anna had completed the besieging line around the capitol with the prospect ol its early surrender. ra IJorrid effects of Kuan! On Sunday morning the 24th., Mr. Gcorrge Vanduyne of Peqimnac township, in this coun ty, aged about 30 years, was found lying on the re in his own house, literally roasted to death. On Saturday evening he purchased a quart of wihskey as usual "to keep Sunday, and during the night, whilst intoxicated, flogged his wife. Ou Sunday morning he plied the bottle again and his wife, fearing another flagellation during lis intoxication took her only child and went to a neighbor's a few rods distant, leaving him sit ing in a chair by the fire. Sometime alter an unusual smoke was seen pouring from Van- duyne's chimney when Mrs. Y. and somo of the nei"hbors went to the house and discovered him lying on ihe fire lifeless, with his breasi, . i i i .1 . -. -. iii- bowels aim uouy so ourneo inai u was wiinuu ficulty lie could be removed. Jcrscyman. A "Philadelphia Lawyer'' in a Snarl. sinsular incident occurred at tho Philadel- phia Court ol Sessions a few days since. A man named Mavwell, it seems, had been con victed for the larceny of a promissory note, and when brought up to recpivn sentence, the Court told him that if he would iivc up tho note lo tho lawful owner, his sentence should be mitigated from three year to six months The prisoner was willing to do so, but said the note was in the hands of his counsel, Dan I. M'Laughlin, Esq. Mr. M'Laughlin was then caiieu upon, out nc uau conciuueu io noiu on the note to satisfy some demands of his own, and refused to give it up. The Judge then or dered him to give bail lor his appearance on a charge of receiving stolen propeny, and also a rule to be entered bv the clerk to 'show cause why Dan'l. M'Laughlin should not be stricken from the roll of practising attorneys. Express. Valuable Discovery. Kennel Coal. The Pittsburg American states that Messrs. Reynolds & Shunk, who are build ing a Furnace on Red Bank Creek, near the Allegheny river, have discovered, in the imme diate vicinity of their works, one of tho largest bodies of this kind of coal that is known in our country. A friend describes it as lying in a solid body, and opening on the breast of the hill, fourteen feet in depth This description of coal, from being free from sulphur, which l never the case with bituminous or anthracite, will, we have no doubt, be capable of being converted to great and important, uses in the manufacturing of iron. The discovery of a mineral of this description is of very great val ue. It has heretofore been found in small veins, but this is tho first discovery that has been mado of so large and valuable a body. Bait. Sun. Tho expenses of sweeping the streets of N. York for 1S41 are estimated at $150,000. Iron. We see by the annual statement of the Sec retary of the Treasury that six millions three hundred and ninety-seven thousand, three hun dred and seventy dollars' worth of bar iron alone, was imported into the United Stales during the last year, besides articles manufactured of iron, amounting to one million, twelve thousand three hundred and twelve dollars, making in the ag gregate 7 millions, 4 hundred and nine thousand 7 hundred and?eighly-two dollars. Here is be tween seven and eight millions of dollars ex ported in one year to pay for an article of which we have at home an inexhaustible supply. We need no stronger argument in favor of a protec tive tariff than this fact alone. In our moun tains are found inexhaustible bodies of coal, lime and iron ore lying in close contiguity, and nil that is needed for their developement is the lostenng aid ol the government, uive us a protective tariff and we will soon find the hills and valleys of Pennsylvania ringing with the busy din of the manufacturer, and the Valley of the Susquehanna smoking with numerous fur naces daily pouring out the mineral wealth of Montour's Ridge. We hope to see the atten tion of our manufacturers and mechanics drawn to this subject it is one of vital importance to their interests as wellas to every friend of American industry. We hope that the press throughout the country will speak out upon the subject let those who dfcubt our ability to man ufacture a sufficient supply of iron' for our own consumption, visit Coluhbia County, where the)r will find sufficient iron inbedded in Mon tour's Ridge to supply thJe United States for dges.-Danville (Pa.) Democrat. U.VPARALELLED CaSE OpmPRISONMENT FOR Sabbath-Br e a king ! O n 23d ult. we were witness something which 1 o seemed to be unparaleled imthe history of Ju dicial proceedings. Mary Badwin and Claris sa Mitchel, of Ridgeberry township, helween e levcn and twelve years oj age,:ere hrouglit from prison by Sheriff Stevens, on a writ of habeus corpus, before Judges Good wirt and Laporte, to procure their discharge from 'the custody of the Sheriff". It appears that th little girls had beeu complained of by a fellow !hy the name of John Owen, for "hallooing and making a great noise on Sunday" on their returl from Sabbath school, and that a Mr. Justice Yettingill, had sent them off" in the custody of tlje constable ro the county iail in default of payment of a fine of $4 50 each, which the said imm dilate Justice of the Peece commanded the const ble to demand of them or to collect the same ou iof their, the little girls, " goods and chattels ! ! " After a full hearing of the case, they wire promptly discharged by the Judges upon the round first: of their infancy and second of the illegality of the whole proceeding. We have no time for comment upon this extraordinary case. At pres ent we can only add thatit is lucky for Messrs. j Owen and Pettingill that they live among the peaceloving people ot IJiradlord county, rather , - , h w,,eri 0r Mississioni valley. where lyncn Democrat. i 1 1 law is fashionable ! Towanda Death a3Iong PreBvterian Ministers. In no proceeding perioj in the history of our church, have we beenlcalled, in so short a space, to witness the dwth of so many useful ministers. Since Aprilllast ten have fallen. Seven of these were of tfp-Southern part of tho Church, viz.: Messrs. Bocter, Jones, Holman, Phelps, Breckenridgf;, Suss, and Winchester; two were from Pennsylaniaj H'iz. : Messrs. Tait and Terry, and one Ar Linn, from Ohio. Messrs. Sloss and Winchester were both mem bers of the last General Asembly. This is a mournful memento. Wetland still and reve rently acknowledge the had of God and at the same time plead with him b spare his church, withhold his hand, and snd down his most precious blessings. Prcsbijcrian. Fork. It is said that p'rk will be lower this season than it has, been.for some years. There are large quantities olpork and bacon now on hand in Cincinnati4! Louisville, &c, for which there is but a limitedemand, and the price has consequently fallen o 3 or S 1-2 cts. per lb. This discourages deafers from buying the new stock except at a lry price From prospects, new pork will not blng over i2 per 1 flfl nnnnilo ixvii'.nrk llniln. The Canton, Miss. Creole ays, four per sons in a family in that County Were recently poisoned by tho mixing of th4 seed of the Jamestown weed with theircofle The persons were very ill, but recovered aftermedical aid. Supposed to bo the wicked act ofAhe cook. Great Powder Mill, Tho tsburg Ga zelle recently contained a particufp. description of an extensive rowder Mill jusisut in opera lion two miles below tho city on te banks of the Monongahela. It is erected on now and perfectly secure principles, and b onss to Mr. Andrew Watson. It embraces elt! en spacious buildings,, a boiler, store, and ine houso, mill, pressing, graining, glazing anqlrying hou ses. It is an extensive and moslperfect es tablishment. The Gazelle adds: Eleven buildings are now computed. Tho principal rango front 700 feet on thdNononga hela. and are bedded ai the rear andletds in a high bank of oarlh excavated for thit uirpose. They stand about 100 feet apart. front and rools ol wood, tho oacK end want stone two feet thick, so built against the earn that in case of explosion its force may be sit to wards the river, removing ihe wood wok and leaving the rear end walls unharmed, ihere is a rail road along the whole front of peso buildings, for transporting the materials ail (ho manulactured articles Irqm one building tlaiin other in tho progress of ihe rqm.ifacture ifceury Iay. The citizens of Lexington, Va rpcemly vited Mr. Clay to partake with, them a p.'l," Dinner, which he felt constrained to declm.. ' But several invitations had been sen: out l,efnr. Mr. Clay was heard from, and to one of u.,n H6n. Ephraim H. Foster of Teniies tt.. turned the following spirited atfd' truthful rt. ply: Nashville, Sept. 30, 1541. Gentlemen: I acknowledge, with my un feigned thanks for the compliment, your note f the 21st inst. inviting in io attend a festival, to be given in your' vicinity, on tli 7:h of next month, and to join my "Kentucky friends in ex pressions of confidence -and' regard for the pre eminent service rendered by the Hon. He,vry Clay, to the great Whig cause of America during the recent session of Congress.' If I know my heart aright, my zeal in sup port of the cause and the principles you pro pose chiefly to honor by your festival, had ju origin in the most solemn and patriotic convic tions. Recent untoward evrjnis, unhappily cal culated to impede for a moment the onward march of that cause and j1i speedy operation of one of its most vital principles inspire, ra ther than abate my ardor. My imUo ,3f ,f,3t nothing is done, while any thing remains to he done.' The pleasure therefore, of participating with you on an occasion so proper in itself, and at the same time, so full of justice io thu 'pre eminent' claims of a great and distinguished public servant, would not suffer me to excuse myself by any common-place apology; and I regret exceedingly, tho indispensable duties here, which compel me to forego a gratification I would otherwise eagerly embrace. But the opportunity suits, and the necessities thai plead my absence from your meeting, do not deny me ample leisure to drop a passing tribute to the character and the fearless spirit of your il lustrious guest For more than thirty years past, the history of Mr. Clay's life is conspicuously interwoven in almost every page of his country's history; and although it has accorded with the dictates of my humble judgment to differ with him on some of the essential topics that have divided the public attention, I have,-nevertheless, en tertained for him personally,- sentiments of pro found admiration. In the end, when these ex citing questions were settled or supeiseded by others of far greater magnitude, and a diversity of opinion or determination, changed the rela tions of former political associates, I found myself, with a great multitude of my ancient friends, battling at his side, and successfully struggling with a party, mainly headed and sus tained by the unconquerable energies of his em inent and truly gifted mind. In this honorab'.s alliance, a more unrestrained intercourse has satisfied me of the purity of his political life; and I do not any longer hesitate in subscribing to those extraordinary and unrivaled virfUM which give him the enviable pre-eminence lCis now his fortune to enjoy. Honest of purpose, and yet not more honest than determined, Mr. Clay scorns both subter fuge and contrivance; and preferring defeat to duplicity, he bolsly encounters his adversary in open field. He practices that frankness which others cnly boast, and his firmness, bor dering on the extreme of that necessary virtue, is seldom 'persuaded to yield or to temporise, although it might be, that a timely appearance of submission, would purchase the success of an enterprise. Such I conceive him to be the man you design to honor by your festival a citizen destined to be ever illustrious in the annals of the Republic. . It had been better, perhaps, for himself and theicountry, if he. had earlv learned to conceal an excess ot honorable emotion, wmcn. aione has lTffherto checkedvhis high career, better, by far, for that sanief country, if the people, would happily resolve, in their selections for exalted station, to pass by the faults of an in genious nature, and prefer a man for the acts of his life, ratlier than lake another on untried professions. In the one way we have a secu rity which seldom fails us m Oie other, there lies not unfrequeiilly, beneath a plausible sur- face, a hidden purpose of ambition, which kiss es but to betray, and then betrays without a blush. Under a government like ours, whore the national fabric literally'rcsts upon popular confidence and affection, examples of the latter kind destroy tho public temper, and lessen the chances of suoces in our great political exper -ment. And if, unfortunately, the history of the day in which we live, may be supposed to un fold a precedent, closely allying itscit 'itti these pernicious examples, may we not indulge a comment nope, mat an lniewgoni aim aim- governing penpje will, in due season, detect the alarming abuse, and in the signal punish ment of its guilty authors, correct an evil wmcn. strikes at the root of our free institutions. i tender to the assembly that shall surround your festive board, ihe salutations of a distant friend, who is with them in heart and sentiment, and to yourselves individually, assurances of ho sincere and unqualified regard of, Dear Sirs, Yours, truly, EPIIIUIM 11. FOSTER. To the Committee of Invitation, Great Speed and Accommodation. Pre parations are making for building one of tho most splendid steamboats in tho world. Hr speed is not lo be less than 30 miles per hour. She will accommodate 1000 passengers with stale rooms. Length of keel 325 feet. This boat will be built on an entirely new principle Instead of the cumbersome vaier wheel she will use a newly invented propeller. She is lo ply between this city and Albany tho ensu ing season. Tho building of this magnificent steam palace will , he under the direction of Captain Fellows, her intetidetl commander. x. r. Jt.i I