JEFFERSONIAN rep ublican JEFFERSONIAN REPUBLICAN Slroudsbursr, IVorcmber 17, Terms, $?,C0 m advance; $2.25, naif yearly: and S2,$Mf not paid beToic the end oi me vear. General Scott. In our paper of to-day, will he found a letter from fhis dwinguished gentleman, drawn from him by numerous letters of inquiry, from vari ous parts of the United States. We publish it without comment, leaving it to ach individ ual to form his own opinion of its merits or de fects. The legislature of New JeTsey adjourned on Friday last, to meet again on the 1 1th of Janu ary next. Gov. Pennington has appointed Thursday, Public Thanrsgiving in Dec". 9, as a day New Jorsev. of Two hundred and twenty-two persons have re cently signed the Temperance pledge at llolli daysburg. The Governor has pardoned Dr. Chauncey who was convicted in Philadelphia about a year, ago of manslaughter. The Miners' Journal, at Poltsville, contains, a graphic sketch of the now village of Shamo Tiiu, and its resources. Vc detach the follow ing paragragh : Shamukin.as all the world knows--and if they dnn'uhey should is located in Northmnher- iand county, about nineteen miles, or thcrea wav, irom tile winding and neauutui ousouo hauna. It is a thriving, healthy little town, of some eighty or a hundred houses, which con tain about six hundred souls, and is indebted for its existence, as it will be for its ultimate prosperity and wealth, to its coal and iron ore. A large portion of the town lots, and nearly all the coal land in the neighborhood, is owned by the Shaniokin Coal and Iron Company. This Company, as the name imports, is the union of two Companies. The charter was granted in March, 1840, and expires m 1857. The capi tal is S300,00Q The united companies own -about 1,400 acres of coal and iron land, 750 of which are .situated in Columbia county, and the imlance in Northumberland, on the line of the Danville and Pottsville railroad. On ihis tract there are twelve excellent veins of coal running principally a disiance of three hundred and twenty rudhrnugh the tract, varying in thick ne..s from live feet up to -elevo-n, and in eleva litm "from two hundred Ui four hundred feet -a-buve the waier level. There is one vein indeed sixty iVel thick, but we do not think it can be worked to advantage ; besides the coal from Jhi vem is bony, and of an inferior quality. Of the twelve vein-, only four are partially work ed. A fifth the. "flat vein" has been opened for about one hundred yards. The flat vein is a red ash vein, and the only one in the Shamo khi region. "The New York Tribune suggests that the name of Samuel L. Southard be put on the tick et with that of Henry Clay-ihe latter as the Whig candidate for President, the former for Yice President. . The New York papers slate that five hun dred thousand pounds of butter are on the way .-tnNew York., via Erie Canal, from Buffalo. .The larger portion of this supply is from Ohio. U. S. Troops. The steamboat Marietta ar rived at St. Louis on the 27th from Pittsburg, Jtaring on board about one hundred and twenty men of the 1st. regiment of dragoons from Car lisle Barracks, PaM destined to Fort Leaven worth. '.New York State Canals There was re reived for toll on all the New York State Cu naN, during the first week in November, $82, 503,79. According to the N. Orleans Crescent City, the number of beautiful women in mourning in that city is immense. Some are widows, bereft of a husband's tenderness; some mothers, deprived -of a son's or daughter's companionship; others are sisteis and maidens, desolate in the world, seeking in vain a brother's kiss or a lover's pas sion. The Miner's Journal says that a largo number of men have been discharged, both in 4he mines rand on the landings, in consequence of the opera tois being unable to forward as much coal as for merl)vowing to the partial obstruction in the Ca iial. Tho Norfolk Beacon says it is reported that th JJon. Caleb Pushing is about to lead to the altar a daughter of President Tyler- 3Iassacliuset? stands Firm! The old 'Bay State' is the Whig State after all, nextto, if not before, gallant Kentucky. Troubles at Washington or elsewheie, perplexities, disap pointments, and quarrels, may shake but they can not overturn her. She is proof eve.i against ' per ils and false brethern,1 and nothing less than fif teen gallons of the ardent can make her sound head ewim. In spite of clouds overhead and disasters thickening on every side, she has nobly sustained herself in the recent election, re-electing 1 Honest .John havis1 Governor by '5,000 majority over Mar cus Morton, end 1 or 2,000 over all the Locofoco, Abolition, and scattering votea. Tribiaic. A revolutouary soldier named Capt. James Chapman, recenly died at New London, Conn. The Great Western arrived at New York on the 9th inst.with news seventeen days later from -England not however, of much import ance. Mr. Stevenson, late Minister to Eng land, and family were passengers. Tire Britannia arrived at Boston on the Sun day previous, but with news not so late as the Great Western. The preliminary proceedings in the McLeod case had reached England, and were the occa sion of much remark. O'Connell had been elected Lord Mayor of London. An insurrection had broken out simultane ously in several cities of Spain ; but was sup pressed. At madrid, an attempt was made to seize tho Queen 1,000 men entering the pal ace, and it is said there was figiing even in the Queen's drawing room. Hunterdon Gazette. One of them Punished. A Court Martial, in pur suance of the directions of Sir Robert Jackson, was recently held in Montreal on Mr. Johnston, an officer in Dyer's corps, lor participating in the capture of Grog.nn in the territories of the United Stales, and that, having pleaded guilty, and after addressing the court in mitigation of punishment, he was sentenced to be discharged from the corps. A Caution to Water Drinkers. A woman re siding in the lower part of the county, a few days ago placed her mouth over the spout or nozzle of a small hydrant for the purpose of slacking her thirst; but little tune elapsed befoie she was taking with nausea and cast forth a live eel. about four inches long. Applicants at hydrants should supply them selves with a tumbler or some other convenient vessel, and thereby save themselves from the dan ger of swallowing other things that might slip down, as "slick as an eel." -Sat. Chron. Divorce Case -At the recent term of tho Stark Courtly, Ohio Supreme Court, a divorce was granted to the wife of Jacob Cope, on the ground of cruel treatment. The Court decreed in the wife the exclusive use of the whole of Cope's real estate during her life, and besides J ordered him to restore to her her wearing ap parel, or pay a fine of one hundred dollars. Latest from Mexico. The Schooner Em blem arrived yesterday from Matamoras. She brought with her $9,000 in specie. Pseudo revolutionary movements are the order of the day, and business is at a stand, as usual. It is very sickly ; the British Consul) Mr Breeze, among others has died there It is said that Matamoras has declared in fa vor of Santa Anna, and the rumor that prevail ed to the effect thai Tampico had declared in his favor, is partially confirmed by this arrival. We hitherto refrained from noticing the latter rumor, as it was authenticated. N. O. Pica yune, Nov. 5. Tobacco a Remedy for Arsenic. A young lady in New-Hampshire fell into the mistake, so often committed, of eating a porton ofarsenic which had been prepared for tbe destruction ofrats. Pain ful symptoms soon led to the inquiry; and her mis- lake was discovered. An elderly lady who was present, advised that she should be made lo vomit as speedily as possible; as she had always felt a perfect loathing for tobacco in every shape, it was supposed that ihis would at once effect the pur pose. A pipe -was used, but without producing a nausea. She next chewed a large portion of strong tobacco, and swallowed the juice, and that even without a sensation of disgust. A strong decoction was then made of hot "water, of which she drank perhaps half a pint. Still thcie was neitheir nausea nor dizziness, nor did it operate at all, either as an emetic or cathartic. The painful sensations at her stomach, however, subsided, and she began to feel well. On the ar rival of physicians, an emetic of blue vitriol wras administered, and produced one operation. One or two days after there was a discharge of a dark green color, approaching to black. No ill conse quences followed. Another case occurred in the same place a few years subsequently, in which arsenic was taken through mistake, by a sick person, and she em ployed tobacco with the same success. She, too, had always loathed the article, but now chewed it, and swallowed the saliva without producing sick ness at the stomach. No emetic was administer ed nor any other remedy. Sillimait's Journal. ... A Thrilling Incident. The Havre Journal mentions anin ciilent which occurred to some whale fishers during a recent voyage, which, it observes, would be incredible if it were not attested by the captain and his men. Capt. Deglos, of the Gas tave, whaler, was fishing off the coast of New Holland, and was giving chase, in a boat with five men, to a large cacholot whale, which they soon came up with and harpooned. The animal, as soon as he felt the instru ment, went down perpendicularly and earned out a great quantity of line. 1 he crew remained with their oars raised, waiting for his reappear ance, when on a sudden they saw. ah enormous jaw rise on each side of the boat, far above the gunwale, which was thus caught in the mouth of the whale, and was ready to be crushed in an instant. ine men were so paralyzed by tear tnattliey could not obey the cap Jf A 1 . .1 tain s uruers to get out tneir saws and work away at the animal's mouth; hut gradually the jaws began to sink, and, after giving the boat's side a ter rible grating,. disappeared beneath the water. One of the men fainted away orrhis seat.--&z. Chron; The Cost of a Frolic. A very serious affair occurred at Washington on the evening 0i Washington the last day of October. A party of 3roung individuals determined to amuse themselves by a frolic of steal ing cabbages, and accordingly vent ured upon the premises of a gardener near the city, who expecting some thig of the kind on "Holly Eve," laid in wait for the aggressors, and fired a gun, which severely wounded one of the persons engaged in the sport. Finding the individual severely wounded, the party retired to a dwel ling adjacent, when strange to tell, n examination disclosed the fact that the sufferer was a young girl, dressed Jn man's clothes! lb. &r": Bigamy. A writing-master'namecl Wellington, alias Smith, jit Rich- mond, Va., lately duped one of his female pupils into a hasty marriage with him and went off to Warrenton, N. G. to soend the honeymoon. He had. hardly gone when a prior wife came on posthaste fromfche North in search of him; whereupon he was overhauled, brought back to Rich mondj and put in a snug place. He is likely to escape from punishment, however4, on the plea tlat he had an other wife when he married No. 1, and was therefore not legally married, to her at all, but perfectly free to form new engagements. lie will, how- ever, be tried for swindling" and false pretences. His two, wives are in great distress . Moral. Never marry in haste one of whom you know notliincr but what he (or she) tells yon. .A hurried marriage with a stranger is a very poor disguise for sednuction. lb. Death froiu: Poison. On Friday the 5th inst. the body of Mr' William Wilson, of Erie, Pa. was found dead on the pavement in front of the Asso ciate Reformed Church, on Eighth street. It appears that the deceased was intoxicated the evenning pre vious, and had been on the steps in front of the Church, from which he, fell and killed himself. N. Y. Tribune. Defective Guns. An able writter at Washington is addressing a series of letters to Mr. Clay, on the subject of Southern and Western Armories. In one of them the writer says: "In urging the importance of good guns, such as a national foundry would give to our vessels of war, it is only ne cessary to remind you of the fact that in the last war we had more men hilled on the Lakes by the bursting of our own guns than by the shot of the enemy. It isa terrible thing m action, and a great damper upon the bravery of the most gallant tar, when he is afraid of his own piece." From the Newark Daily Advertiser. ILctter frosia General cot. The following circular letter from Major General. Scott has been handed to us for publi cation, li has been drawn from him, we un derstand, by numerous letters from various parts of the Union, including applications from New Jersey, asking his opinions concerning the pol itics of the day. Washington, Oct. 25, 1841. Gentlemen:--I have lately had the honor to receive many letters from as many different States, eireh propounding, on the part of the writer and his neighbor, nearly the same polil cal interrogatories lo which answers are re quested. The scope of the inquiries is a flattering proof of the interest that some of my countrymen take in the opinions that 1 have formed on certain great principles of abiding importance to the success of our systems of government; and as 1 have nothing to conceal, if nothing of value to communicate, 1 shall, at once, without policy or reserve, and in the form of a circular, com ply with their several requests. Parly Politics. Although from early manhood-, 1 have, by he profession of arms, in the defence of my country, been thrown out of the ereitaf party.-politics, yei I have never ceased to be an attentive ohserrer of public events, and and ihus, I believe, there has scarcely booh a discussion of moment in Congress within , my time, on which I did not form and modestly hut firmly express a passing .opinion. A mero youth, I felt the liveliest joy when the alien and sedition laws expired in the tri umph of Mr. Jefferson. From 1806, 1 was old enough, by speech and pen, to call for a prompt and energetic redress of our wrongs suffered from Great'Britaio under her orders in Coun ctlptho attack on tho Chesapeake frigate; and long continued impressment of our seamen? and when the war of 1812 at length came, I was among the first and longest in the presence of the foe. The insults received from the Frencht Directory their depredations on our commerced renewed under Napoleon s decrees,(Bcrhiraud Milan) which followed, tho British Orders in Council, also largely shared in ihy indignant reprobation. f$$j$?''- The administrpjrof 'Mjgjvladison and Mr. Monroe, likehat of.Mr. Jefferson, had, in their respectivo periods, my humble but hearty ap probatioifand 1 have ever since censured noth inr in either but the sale of a part and the dis mantling of our Navy; the gun boat system of defetice that followed, and the indefinite em bargo, which, crippling us for war, by destroy ing our commerce and finances, and oppressing agriculture, wars long continued without re dressing one outrage from abroad. 1 give this little sketch of the growth of my party feelings or opinions unimportant, per haps, except to myself and a few partial friends, to show that if I have never been a Federalist in any party sense of the term, so neither have I been a Jacobin, an impracticable or abstract ionist in ati)r sense whatever, but always an old fashioned republican, devoted to the support of law and order; a democratic Whig fjusl as all my family had been Whigs in the great strug gle for national freedom and independence. The, Judiciary From an early and long con tinued study of elementary law, my mind has ever been imbued with deep reverence for the Bench State and Federal; an independent de partment in our system of government, and which, holding neither the Purse to corrupt, nor the Sword to terrify, addresses itself only with the mild force of persuasive reason, to the intelligence and virtue of the whole communi ty; By the Federal Constitution, every possi ble safeguard is provided to shield its Judicia ry against fleeting prejudice, political rancor and party dependence, to which legislators and the Executive are unavoidably, drrectly and constantly exposed. Hence, "to the one Su preme Court" is widely extended (by "appel late jurisdiciion'5) "all cases in law aud equity, arising under the Constitution, the laws of the United States and treaties made, or which shall be made under their authority." Looking to this express provision, I have al ways held that when a doubtful question, aris ing under the Constitution itself, the supreme law of the land; under an act of Congress or a treaty, has once been solemnly adjudicated by that Court, the principle of the decision ought to be taken, by all, as definitely settled; tinless4 indeed, it be upon a re-hearing before the same tribunal. This appears to me too clear for dis putation; for the Court is not only declared to be supreme, and hence there can be no bench beyond it; but to Congress is only given the power to -constitute inferior tribunals. By ap peals to the Supreme Court, a settlement was intended to be reached, aud anarchy, through a long distraction of the public mind, -on great questions of legislative and executive power kthus rendered impossible. Practically, there fore, for the people, and especially their func lionarfes, to deny, disturb, or impugn principles thus constitutionally established, strikes me as of ovil example, if not of a direct revolutionary tendency, Except, indeed, in the case of a judi cial decisiofehlarging power and against lib erty; and any dlfngorous error of this sort can be always easi lycdrrect ed, (and should only be corrected) by an amendment of the Consti tion, in one of the modelhprescribed by that in strument itself the organic aw of the States and iho people. Misconstructions jijf Jaw, othe er than the Constitution arc ymolf.eredaily corrected by amendatory or declalory acis.of Congress. The Elective Veto. This by the framcrs of the Constitution, could only have been design ed 1. To enalble the President to defend his own rightful powers againM' usurpations on the j is known to be necos.sury., 2. Because many of part of Congress. 2. To enable htm to forbid j fice-holders, appointedmder even reckless ad- omer legislative lnirac.ions ot ine onsuuiuon; and 3. To guard the country against other acts of hasty or violent legislation. It is hardly possible to conceive a case un der the first or second of these heads, against which the Judiciary the balance wheel of the system does not afford, of itself, all the secu riiy that the people can require. But without ihc protection of either the Bench of the Veto, would the executive depart ment, (become so super-judicial of late years) bo too weak to fulfil the strictly executive func tions for which it was more particularly crea ted? -Or rather, would not that department slill be the most powerful, for evil, in the govern ment? The President is under the checks of the constitution aud law, rightfully invested with the power of the Sword, andillc; has again and again had that of the P.urso a!s?. The Mouses of Congress, it is true, lay taxes, on impOrls and regulate tho sales of the public domain; but. it is he (through his agents) who handles the proceeds. From 1S33 to 183C (tosay nothing of the present) he alone nominated and dis missed all the agents who kept as well as those who collected, distributed and disbursed the public revenue. The apothegm make us your executor : tee care not who arc your legislatdrs; has a rightful application to such immense treasure as annuallypasses through their hands! The rapid increaho and spread of population; tho growth of national wealth; the amount of revenue collected and disbursed ; the new re lations (by the extension of commerce) with foreign countries ; the additional appointments at homo aud abroad ; tho number and value of contracts all constantly and necessarily on the increase; a general decayjn morals, perhaps as groat in Congress as elsewhere; tho habit that we have seen prevail (hiring several presiden tial terms of filling public officos with little or no regard to moral standing; have, taken to-, gether, already openod loth head of iho gov- ernrrient element 6r power and corruption ...t.; t. . m i- . i wa3'pussiuie lor we Cramers and a. dgptera of-the constitution to foresee or to con ceive. Who, at that distant day, for example, over dreamed of tho spectacles which have re cently disgusted every honest citizen ofpoAi. mastwrs, mail-contractors, mail-agents, and census-takers covering the land with government pamphlets, handbills, and extra-gazettes, sufli. cient (if read) to sap tho morals, public and private, of aa entire generation? ofihe cin-tnm-house mercenaries in the large cities liviua on the public, neglecting every duty for par y meetings and the polls, and rendering to Few er the most bribe-worthy services? of District Attorneys and Collectors, rambling missionaries defending every abuse, of office their own th most indecent in order to maintain power ir the hands of their patron ? All who have re. fleeted on the foregoing facts must be ready to affirm that Executive. Patronage "has increased, is increasing, and ought to be diminished V I hope, then, : bYlan early amendment nf t!8 constitution, to see a reduction of the Prtxi dent's veto. The regulation of patronage woulj properly follow. There can be no good reason why the vc'u should not be overcome by abare majorny in eai h House of Congress, of all the members elected to it say, for the hetiefu of reflection, at tW. end often days from the return of the hill. An amendment lo this effect would still leave ll;u President the general representative of every Stale and district armed with the votes of all the members absent, at the moment, from the respective Houses, and ihere will always be some members absent from both. Rotation in Office The inquiry under this head, is not definite in-any letter before me. It, however, is presumed to refer 1. To governors and secretaries of territories and some of iho judges therein ; district attorneys , collectors, surveyors and naval officers of the customs, marshalls, post-maters, whose commissions a mount to a thousand dollars per annum; navy agents ; registers and receivers of land offices: surveyors general of lands, and Indian aient3 - -sill of whom are by law, appointed for a term of four years; but subject by express enact ment (except the judges) to he removed at plea sure 2. To a high class of civil officers (next to the chiefs) in the executive departments at Washington ; other high functionaries foreign ministers, secretaries of legation and consuls ; post-masters, whose commissions amount to less than a thousand dollars per annum ; super intendent of Indian affairs, Indian sub-agents, &c. &c. all appointed without limitation as to term, yet subject in practice not by express law to be also removed at pleasure, and 3. To the assistants allowed by law to very many of the principals included above which assistants are called clerks some of them deputies, ap praisers, weighers, guagers, sub-inspectors, store-keepers, light house keepers, &c. &c. all appointed and subject to removal, as under the second head. I am asked Whether (in my poor opinion) all those functionaries (amounting to many thousands) or any of them ought to he periodi cally superseded by original appointments? If yes When? And if it a part only Which ! We have seen that a great number of offices are filled for a term of years, and more without any limitation a to tprm. I, however, can draw no line of just distinction between theclaimsof the two classes upon the favor of country or government. Premising that regular periodical changes in the subordinate servants of the country, merely for the sake of change, would necessarily swell executive patronage, already too much swollen, I am obliged to add that I more than doubt, on jjler grounds, the policy and justice of such cnaugos. . i-fgjsgc: use, mr uic ame aim prompt execution bfmwilwlHttsiness, much official ex- perience in a greauriunher of particular stations, ministrations, such as .we have seen,) will al ways after a time bo found of irird integrity, and of eqttal industry jand abilities. 3. Be cause, again, some may e found in a state of honorable poverYy, the resuTtfcno less of stern integrity than of along and exclusive devotion to the interests of the public; ami 4. Bemuse, to remove such servants, or not to re-appomt them, at the end of a term, would not only dis courage successors ina faithful discharge of duty, but could not fail'to outrage the moral sense of entire communities:.! speak on this head from what I witno$(iim 1S29--30, of iho cruel experiment, on a large scale,, then made upon the sensibilities of the country and tho mischiefs lo tho public interests which early ensued. What I would, therefore humbly advise is this : To turn out not only a change of Pres ident, but in any and every week of the yetir, all office-holders known to he deficient in ei ther -honesty, capacity,, or industry,-and to ap point, in their stead, men know.n to possea.i these qualities. Without an anxious attention to this rule, a government of the people, resting on virtue aud intelligence, cannot bug be suc cessfully mantained'; for a blind or vicious dis tribution of enormous patronage would soon, by the force of tho highest example, beat down all that is ta.uht in the Church, the School House, and the College. Otic Presidcntinl Tcrm.Of the eight chief magistrates that preceded General Harrion whom a nation vet mourns the first, third, 'fourth, fifth and soventh presided' over this Fn ton, respectively, two successive terms tho other three, hut lour years each ; and every one of th o eight, whilst in ojjicc became a can didate for a second term. I consider tho sublime examnle. set hv the father of his country, in declining a third elec- tlon---vylnohJhias .been duly followed by our four xippufar Presidents, and would no-doiilit have been observed With equal good faith tr: