- ,..,. N r - ' " -. ., i, '.I..,. .. , i " I j in i I i imm i" iiijiiim.i mull HI! - I - l'.lJLjJiTBCTCEt:-UJUMl.lJajM Ji.i-i-u.JiinMiii t-ii-i. i .,.,. '1' "" '" .JiumiJim uurmj jwitmum, .. , , ,flHldl w n i , ,u ,11111,1, , .u.t ,im m ! iuMiumimm 11 11 11 r'fiaawcaa!" nini m-AA,im I. ikllL-, -r n.--r.CT-iij-iiiiLii s v t 5 V31 ,--. . - ., .YV , - : . -tx ' .11 'it The whole art of Government consists in tjie art of reino honest. :Jefferson. I VOL. 3. PRINTED AND PUBLISHED BY TEEOBOKE SCHOCHj TERMS. Two dollars per annum in advance Txo dollars Inl a quarter, half yearly, and if not paid before the end of he year, two aouars anu a nan. j nose vno receive ineir lapers by a carrier or stage drivers employed by the propric- or. Will ue ciiarguu i- uu. utr yuur, t-jira. Ko nancrs discontinued until all arrearaecs are paid, excent It fi oplion of the Editor. : )l ".Vivertis-'menis not exceeding one square (smccn lines) n.l be inserted three weeks for one dollar: twenty-five cents nrevcrvs-bseoucntinseitioif larscr ones in nronortion. A Kberal diviunt will bo made to yearly advertisers. IO-au letters aaurcsscu to me JiOilor must be post paid. 3 OS iBj5ISOTIS&. Ear in- a general assortment of large elegant plain and orna mental Type, we are prepared to execute every ues enption of Jards, Circulars, Bill Meads, Notes, JUSTICES, LEGAL AND OTHER PAMPHLETS, &c. Printed with neatness and despatch, on reasonable terms AT THE OFFICE OF THE JTeffersonian Republican. lf m lll'PJIiLI-l m PROCLAMATION. Whereas, the Honorable William Jessup, 'resident Judge of the 1 1th Judicial district of Pennsylvania, composed of the counties of Sus- niehanna, Wayne, Monroe and Pike, and Jo seph Keller and John T. Bell, Esqs. Associate fudges of the courts of Common Pleas ol the :ounty of Monroe, and by virtue of their offices, fustices of the Courts of Oyer and lcrrmner md Gener.il Jail Delivery, and Court of Gener- il Quarter Sessions in and for the said county 6bf Monroe, have issued their precept to me, Commanding that a Court of Quarter Sessions nd Common Pleas, and General Jail Delivery md court of Quarter Sessions of the Peace, for ihe said county of Monroe, to be holden at Stroudsburg, on Tuesday the 6th day of Sep tember next, to continue one week. NOTICE- f. Is therefore hereby given to the Coroner, the PJustices of the Peace, and Constables of the fcaid county of Monroe, that they be then and there with their rolls, records, inquisitions, ex- -.minations and other remembrances, to do those fhings which to their offices are appertaining, and also that those who are bound by recogni- feznee to prosecute and give evidence against iho prisoners that are or shall be in the Jail of the said county of Monroe, or agajnst persons who stand charged with the commission of of- ifences, to be then and there to prosecute ones- liny as shall be just. c-iir yTTvro a ttt rc? 01 :rr f O.IlIU. VJUiXO.i.U iJJ0, ouciiu. Sheriff's Office, Stroudsburg, July 27, 1812. j ,v GOD SAVK THE C05iM0NWEA"LTH. WAYNE COUNTY JMUTTJAL ALL Persons insuring in this company are . members equally interested in its velfare and in the election of its ofiicers. Iruorder to become a member of this company and thereby be insured, the applicant gives a pre mium "note, the -amount ot winch is in proportion to the amount to be insured, and its degree of hazard, thus: if S10G0 is to be insured, at 5 per cent., he gives his note ior 850. if at 10 per cent. he gives his note for $100, and in that proportion fr a greater or less sum, according to the rate.of hazard, on winch note he advances G per cent, and m additional sum of $1 50 for survey and policy. He then becomes a member on the approval of his application and is insured lor five years. The aggregate of the premium notes constitutes the cash fund, chargable first, with the expenses, and second, with the losses of the Company; and should ii prove insufficient to pay both losses and expenses tho money to meet the losses, (should any occur) is borrowed agreeably to the act of in corporation, and paid. An assessment is then made to repay such loan upon the premium notes, i.i proportion to their respective amounts, and in no c -S3 to be made but once a year, notwithstanding so, oral losses may happen. At tho expiration of five years the note, if any assessments have been made and paid, is given up, ana the insured may renew his application. rohcies may at any t:me be assigned or sur rendered and cancelled, and the premium notes given up. according to the by-laws .of. tho, Oom- jspany. io more than three lourths ol the cash in'aluo of any property will be insured, and all ysc.-1 r.azards. such as Cotton lactones, irowucr eMiUs, Bistillenfts, -Machine 'Shops, Manufactories tir i rimers jnk, and all establishments qt the aciR cuss of hazards, are not insured upon any ionJi'ions whatever, and thafno one. risk is taken vcr vjJUJ, it is considered much more safe and B?ss expensive than in Strifk nnmnanios. where fUy insure large amounts and hazardous;proucriy. f STCM5DJBLL STCfKES. Lent. ptrouddburg, Monroe cp5.Dc.?r5ll4-l.. r h STROUDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA., WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 24, 1842. fin irimi ii i m ' 'ii m i mi ii PIKE COUNTY HOUSE. George ISiddis, Having taken the above stand in tho town bf Milford, recently kept by Ira Coburn, is well prepared to accommodate in a satisfactory man ner those who may favor him with a call. The TaMe will ba supplied with tho beat productions af forded by the market. Jiis Rooms and Beds are such as will, he hopes, prove satisfactory to all reasonable cus tomers. The Bap is, and will continue to be, furnished with a choice assortment of Liquors. H tables are large and commodious, and will be well stocked with Hay and Oats indeed every at tention which can promote the comfort and sat isfaction of customers will be cheerfully be stowed. His house is large and well calculated to ac commodate Pleasure Parties. With these advantages backed by some ex perience in the business and a determination to keep a good public house, he confidently ex pects a fair portion of public patronage. Milford, August 4, 18-12. For Monroe County Courts, Sept. T. 1842. 1 Jacob Starner and Michael Altemos, admin istrators of Michael Starner. dee'd. vs. John Gower, No, 41, May t. 1837. 2 Jjaforge vs. Jayrie, No. 7, Sept. t. 1S3D. 3 Keller vs. Kortz, rfo. 14, May t. 1S40. 4 Wallace vs. Newman and Dimmick, No. 29, Sept. t. 1840. 5 Stokes, Dreher and Miller, for the use of Daniel Stroud, et. al. vs. Walton, No. 24, Dec. t. 1840. 6 Colt vs. Bond, Nn. 4, Feb. t. 1S4I. 7 Place to the use of Lander, vs. Dimmick, No. 8, Sept. t. 1841. 8 Robert Levers, et. al. vs. Lynford Van Bus kirk, eL al. No. 23, Sept. t. 1841. if Colt vs. Bond and Havs, No. 43, Sept. t. 1841. 10 Colt vs. Samuel Bond, No. 44, Sept. t. IS 11. 11 Colt vs. Dreisbach, No. 45, Sept. t. 1841. 12 Mulford, Martin & Co. vs. Wallace & New man, No. 48, Sept. t. 1841. 12 Murphy vs. Eck, No. 15, Dec. t. 1841: 14 David Hefielfinger vs. Sarah HefFelfinger. 15 Sarah Neyharl, by her next best friend John Kern, vs. Philip Neyhart, No 5, Feb. 1. 1842. ARGUMENT LIST. 1 In the matter of the estate of P. Bulz, dee'd. Tule to shew cause why the enter and the order of the court, Sept. i. 1841, shall not be stricken off. 2 Schoonover vs. Schoonover. 3 Winch vs. Brown. , 4 Hollenback, et. al. vs. Stephen- and Isaac Gould. . 5 W olf vs. Yanhorn. 6 Brown vs. Post ens. - . .. 7 Commonwealth of Pa. vs. Brewer. 8 do vs. II. Eck.. 9 Price vs. Stokes. NEW ESTABLISHMENT. Wholesale and Retail TEN ATI SHEET 1IN WAKE " MANUFACTORY, At Stroudsburg, Monroe county , Pa. Tho subscriber respectfully informs the citi zens of Stroudsburg and the public generally, that he has opened a shop on Elizabeth street, nearly opposite William Eastbnrrr's store, where he intends keeping constantly on hand, and will manufacture to order, all articles in his line of business, such as1 TIN-WARE in all its variety, Stove -Pipes and Brums of all sizes, Spouts for Dwelling Houses and other Buildings. Alscr,oery superior Russian and American Sheet Iron, Which he will manufacture into, every shape to suit purchasers, &c. &c. As the subscriber is a mechanic himself, and employs none but first-rate workmen, the pub lic may rest assured that his work is done in the best and most workmanlike manner; and ho respectfully solictits a share of public patron age. - Come and see for yourselves, before you pur chase elsewhere. XO53 PJ2WTJER and LEAD, taken in ex change for work, and all kinds of REPAIRING in the Copper, Tin, pndT.shce; Iron Business done at-the shortest notice. , . WAN-DEL .BREMER. ' utaujiu. ii tSic laic VcSo Message. Mr. Adams rose, and, in a firm and distinct tone of voice, audible in every part of the Hall, read his report as follows: The Select Committee, to whom was refer red the Message of the President of the United States returning' to this House the actj which originated in it, "to provide revenue from im ports, and to change and modify existing la'.vs imposing duties on imports; and for other pur poses," with his objections to it, with insiruc tionsto report thereon to the Kouc, have at tended to that serviucj and rcspectiuiiy report: The Message is the last of a series of Exec utive measures the result of which has been to defeat and nullify the whole action of the Leg islative authority of this Union, upon the most important interests of the nation. At the accession of the late President Harri son, by election of the People, to the Executive chair, the finances, the revenue, and the credit of the country were found in a condition so greatly disordered and so languishing, that the first act of his Administration was to call a spe cial session of Congress to provide a remedy for this distempered state of the great body pol itic. It was even then a disease of no sudden occurrence, and ordinary malignity. Four years beore, the immediate predecessor of Gen eral Harrison had been constrained to resort to the same expedient, a special session of Con gress, the result of which had only proved the lirsi of a succession of palliatives, purchasing monetary relief at the expense of deeper seated disease and aggravated symptoms, growing dai ly more intense through the whole four years of that Administration. It had expended, from year to year, from eight to ten millions of dol lars beyond its income, absorbing in that period nearly ten millions pledged for deposite with the States, eight millions of slock in the Bank of the United States, from five to sis millions of trust funds, and as much Treasury notes; and was sinking under the weight of its own improv idence and incompetency. The sentence of a suffering people had com manded a. change in the Administration, and the contemporaneous elections throughout the Union had placed in both Houses of Congress majorities, the natural exponents of the princi ples which it was tho will of the People should be substituted in t he administration of their Gov ernment, instead of those which had brought the country to a condition of such wretchedness and shame. There was perfect harmony of principle between the chosen President of" the People and this majority, thus constituted in both Houses" of Congress; and the first act of his Administration was to call a special session of Congress for their deliberation and action upon the measures indispensably necessary for relief to the public distress', and to retrieve the prosperity of the great community of the nation. On the 31st day of May, 184 1, within three months after the inauguration of President Har rison, the Congress assembled at his call. But the reins of the Executive car were already in other hands. By an inscrutable decree of Pro vidence the chief of tho People's choice, in harmony with whosfc principles the majorities of both Houses had been constituted, was laid low in death. Tie President who had called the meeting of Congress was no longer the President when the Congress met. A succes sor to the office had assumed the title, with to tally different principles, though professing the same at the time of his election, which, far from harmonizing, like those of his immediate pre decessor, with the majority of both Houses of Congress, were soon disclosed in diametrical opposition to them. The first development of this new, and most unfortunate, condition of the General Govern ment, was manifested by the failure, onco and again, of the first great measure intended by Congress to reatoro the credit of the country, by tho establishment of a National Bank- a fail ure caused exclusively by the operation of the veto power by the President. In the spirit of the Constitution of tho united States, tho Ex ecutive is not only separated from iho Legisla tive power, but made dependent upon and re sponsible to it. Until a very recent period of our history, all referoncd in either House of Con gress to the opinions or wishes of tho Presi dent, relating to any subject in deliberation be fore them, was regarded as an outrage upon the rights of the' deliberative body,-among tho first of whose dtlties it is to spurn the influence of the dispeiiritir of patronage and power. Un til very recently, it was suUfty'ent greatly to im pair the influence of any member to be suspect ed of personal subserviency to the Executive; and any allusion to his wibhos in debate was deemed a departure not less from decency than from oriior. An anxious desire to accommodate tho qcjion of Congress to (he opinions and wish es of Mr. Tyler had 1ed jo modifications of the .first bill for the establishment of a National Bank, presented to him for his approval, wide ly differing, from the opinions entertained of .their expediency by the 'majorities, of both. Houses ,of '.Congress, but'' .which faile.d.to obtain that approval Tor lic. sake of -which, they '.had been reluctantly adopted. A 'se,cpnd attempt ensued,' under-'a sehs'o of the indispensable .ne .v '.'i1 js a cessity of a fiscal corporation to the revenues , and credit of the nation, to prepare an act, to which an informal intercourse and communica tion between a member of the House, charged with the duty of preparing the bill, and the Pres ident of the United States himself, might secure by compliance with his opinions a pledge in ad vance of his approval of tho bill, when it should be presented to him. That pledge was obtain ed. The bill was presented to him in the very terms which he had prescribed as necessary to obtain his sanction, and it met the samo fate with its predecessor: and it is remarkable that the reasons assigned for the refusal to approve the second bill are in direct and immediate con flict with those which had been assigned for the refusal to sign the first. Thus the measure, first among those deemed by tha Legislature of the Union indispensably necessary, for the salvation of its highest inter ests, and for the restoration of its credit, ltd honor, its prosperity, was prostrated, defeated, annulled, by the weak and wavering obstinacy of one man, accidentally, and not by the will of the People, invested with that terrible power, as if prophetically described by one of his own chosen ministers, at this day, as "the right to deprive the People of self-government.' The first consequence of this Executive leg islation was not only to prostrate the efforts of the Legislature itself, to relieve the People from their distress, to replenish the exhausted Treas ury -and call forth the resources of the country, to redeem the public faith to the fulfilment of the national engagements, but to leave all the burdens and embarrassments of the public Treasury, brought upon it by the improvidence of the preceding Administration, bearing upon the People with aggravated pressure. The fa tal error of the preceding Administration had been an excess of expenditure beyond its in come. That excess had been an average of eight millions of dollars a year, at least du ring the four years of its existence. The prac tical system of its fiscal operations had been a continued increase of expenditures and diminu tion of revenue, and it left as a bequest to its successor no effective reduction of expenses, but a double reduction of revenue to the amount of millions, to occur, of course, by the mere lapse of time, unless averted, within fifteen months, by subsequent legislation. By the double exercise of the Presidential inter dict upon the two bills for establishing a National Bank this legislation was prevented. The ex cess of expenditures beyond the revenue continued and increased. The double reduction of revenue, prescribed by the compromise of 1833, was1 suf fered to take its full effect no reduction of the expenditures had been prescribed; and in the course of eighteen months, since the inauguration of President Harrison, an addition of at least fif teen millions to tho enormous deficit already ex isting in the Treasury at the close of the last Ad ministration, is now "charged upon the prevailing party in Ccngress, by those who had made it the law, while the exercise of the veto power alone disabled the legislature itself from the power of applying the only remedy winch it was wjthm the competency of legislation itself to provide! The great purpose for which the special ses sion of Congress had been called was thus de feated by tho exercise of the veto power. At the meeting of Congress, at the regular annual aession, the majorities of both Houses, not yielding to the discouragement of disappointed hopes and bafiled energies, undertook the task of raising, by impost duties, a revenue adequate to the necessities of the Treasury, and to the fulfilment of the national obligations. By the assiduous and unremitting labors of the committees of both Houses charged with the duties of providingfor tho necessities of the revenue, and for the great manufacturing in terest of the Northern, Central, and Western States, which must be so deeply affected by any adjustment of a tariff, to raise exclusively a revenue adequate to the necessary expenses of the Government from duties on imports, a tariff bill believed to be nearly, if not wholly, sufficient for that purpose, was elaborated and amply discussed through a long series of weeks in both branches of the Legislature. Tho pro cess of gestation through which alone such a complicated system could ho organized, neces sarily consumed many months of time,; nor were the committees or tho House exompted from severe reproach, which the purchased presses of the Executive Chief are even yet casting upon Congress, without rcbhlre or re straint from him. The delays were occasioned by the patient and unwearied investigation of the whole subject oy tnc appropriate, commit tees. As the period approached when '.he so called compromise tariff Was to ho consumma ted, leaving tho Government without any re v enuo tariff sanctioned by tho law, tho prudence of Congress, without precipitating their deci sion upon the permanent system which they fondly hoped to establish, provided and sent to the President a temporary expedient, limited in its operation to tho space of dno month, during which to avoid, as they thought, the possibility of a collision with tho apprehended antipathies of the President, they had suspended for the samo month tho distribution of the proceeds of tho bales qf the public lauds, which4, by a pre vious law, wtjs to taljblfectjtho day after the expiration ojitbe cgmpromtsV, Not only was this No. 25. most conciliatory measure coniemptuouslv re jected, but, in total disregard of ihe avowed OpmiOnS Ol Ills UWll uulici-iij wi mv iiuy, concurring with those, nearly unanimousf tdl the most eminent lawyers cf the' land, in soli tary reliance upon the hesitating opinion of :Fm Attorney General, he has undertaken riofonly to levy taxes to the amount of millions upon th People, but to prescribe regulations for ifcreoi ?ection, and for ascertaining the-value of im ported merchandise, which tho Jaw had; id fix press terms, reserved for the legislative a'utio-: of Congress. And now, to crown this system of Qd'h&htrl and tuireleh'jng 4-rc;f .! of P.-a!CuL?v'c.iHta-t ion by the alternate gross abuse of constitu tional power and bold assumption of pover never vested in him by any law, we copie to the "Veto Message refcrrcd'by the House" rtftliu committee. A comparative review bf the four several vetoes which, in ihe course of fifteen month-.; have suspended tho legislation of this UfftOi!, combined with that amphibious producid:T,"iha reasons for approving and signing a bill, ahd at -the same time striking, by judicial construction, at its most important enactment, illustrated by contemporaneous effusions of temper arfd of sen timent divulged at convivial festivals, 'and ob truded upon the public eye by tho fatal friend ship of sycophant private correspondents: an f stripped to its naked nature by the repoated'atul daring assumption both of legislative and o" judicial power, would present -anomalies t)i character and conduct rarely seen upon earth. Such an investigation, though strictly "within the scope of the instructions embraced iii iu reference to this committee, would require a voluminous report, which the scantiness o'f time will not allow, and which may not be necessa ry for maturing the judgment of tho House upotf the document now before them. The reasons assigned by tho President for returning to the House of Representatives, with his objections, the bill to provide revenue from imports, and to change and modify existing laws imposing duties and for other purposes, are preceded by a brief dissertation upon the pain ful sensations which any individual invested with the veto power must feel in exercising it. upon important acts of the Legislature. The paragraph' is worded with extreme caution, and: with obvious intent to avoid the assertion, made in such bread and unqualified terms in the Imtar read at the Philadelphia Independence-day din ner party, that Congress can enact no laics with out the concurrence of the Executive. There is in this paper a studious effort to save any in dividual from the imputation of asserting tho unqualified independence of the Executive upon' the Legislature, and the impotence of Congress to enact any law without him. That assertion, made in so explicit and unqualified terms, iift'He Philadelphia letter, is here virtually disclaimed and disavowed. The exercise of soma indepen dence of judgment, in regard to all acts of legis lation, by any individual invested with the veto power, is hero curtailed and narrowed down to the mere privilege of not yielding his well-considered, most deeply fixed, and repeatedly de clared opinions on matters of great public con cernment, to those of a co-ordinate department, without requesting that department seriously to re-examine the subject of their difference. The co-ordinate department to the Legislature is no longer ihe co-ordinate branch oj the Legisla ture. The power of Congress to enact a law without tho co-operation of any individual Ex ecutive is conceded, not merely by unavoidable inference, for tire closing paragraph of the mes sage, recurring again to the same troublesomo reminiscence, observes that, after all, the effect ot what he docs is substantially to call on Congress to reconsider the subject. If, on such reconsider ation, a majority of two-thirds of both Houses should be in favor of this measure, it will become a law notwithstanding his objections. The truism of this remark may perhaps be accounted for by the surmise that it was a nev; discovery made since the writing of the Philadelphia dinner-party letter; and tho modest presumption ascribed to the Constitution that the Executive can commit no er ror of opinion unless two-thirds of both branches of the Legislature are in conflict with him, is tcm pered by the oiniablo assurance that in that event he will cheerfully acquiesce in a result whicr would be- precisely the same whether he should acquiesce in it or not. The aptitude of this hypo thetical position may be estimated by the 'calcula tion of tho chances that tho contingency which it supposes is within tho verge of possibility. Tho reasons assigned by tho President for his objections to this "bill are further preceded by a narrative of his antecedent opinions and commun ications on tho subject of distributing tho proceed of tlio sales of the public lands. Ho admits that ay the opening of the extra session he reconme:i ded sueh a distribution, but he avers that this re commendation was expressly coupled with the con dition that the duties on imports should not exceed the rate of 20 por cent, provided' by tho compro mise act of 1S33. Who could imagine that, after this most emphatic coupling of the revenue from duties of impost with revenue from the proccegds of tho' sales of the pub lic lands, the first atid paramount objection of tho President to this bill should bo that it unites two i subjects, which so far from having any af- hunv to one another, aro wholly mcongruoui in their character which two stibiccts are laeuucaiiy tne samo wnn jnoso wutcn.01 ilaH 1 m Mi