y-jtm r 1 1 rrp.iimi 11 if i i ri 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ."' 1111 , , . - -- ' ' ; - : ' - '- ' '' - ' ' ;. ; ipHE WHOtE ART ok Government consists ih the aut-of being honest Jefferson. '''Mf V(3L. 4. STROUDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA., "WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1843. PRINTED AND PUBLISHED, BY SCHOCII & KOIIiOCKi ,mnnrr. m .ii !..,. m in nrftttinrn Two rinltarl sind a quarter, half yearly, and if not paid before the end of Hie year, Two dollars and a half. Those vho receive their puuuia uv u itnui wi oiu , j -j i t...- lore, will be charged 37 1-2 cts. per year, extra. No papers discontinued until all arrearages are paid, except at me opium ui mu cuuuia. ICPJulv-crtiscments not exceeding one square (sixteen 1 mess wiine-inscrted three weeks for one dollars twenty-five cents liberal discount will be made to yearly advertisers. lEPAli letters addressed to the Editors must be post paid JOB PKIKTINCr. Having a general assortment of large elegant plain and orna mental Type, we are prepared to execute every des- cription of Cards, Circulars, Bill Meads, Notes, Blank Receipts, JUSTICES, LEGAL AND OTHER BliANKS, PAMPHLETS, &c. Printed with neatness and despatch, on reasonable terms AT THE OFFICE OF THE,! r." JTcffersowian Republican'. FOR THE JEPFERSONIAN REPUBLICAN. God in tlie Stormi- How vain the atheist's affected laugh, And, ridcule of Power Omnipotent, Nature attributing in all her forms, . fl , To tuulesigning wild fortuity; , . Or deist s conlidence in hope absurd, The fearful hope, of an enternal sleep., , A God of just perfection rules on high, And takes cognizance of the deeds of men. - Oft stooping from his throne of thrones in heaven JIr deigns to place himself in middle sky,' As if in anger walking to and fro, f .Shaking creation with. his mighty tread. ,, Descending on the sable cloudI saw Him seat himself composedly, in his liaml;-V JIc held a lurid thong of forked form, Poising, and swaying it with awful grace, As charioteer impatient for the course, ' Though needful not to urge his frightful speed. His breath the power that rolled his chariot on, "Seemed as he held it in his mercy's might 'Tit awe the waywardness of human pride, TSiat turns man back from following after God, , Aiid w&n him flee the dreadful wrath to come. lie breathed, and starting for his destined goal, Mysterious goal, known only to himself, Through middle space th' Eternal held his way, I3y mortal mta seen only through a veil, In mercy hiding; linn from mortal gaze. 3Ie breathed, and as he rode tn grandeur on, The mightiest trtanarchs of the ancient hilte;. Trembling in knotted joint, and.sinewy limb, ... Did their obeisance to Omnipotence. . 4 . ..Some bowing waved their arms in reverence, ' ; SSume shuddering by turns, then bending low, Scattered their orriaments from off their crests, In sign of fear, of deep humility. .; . .Vhile others falling j)rdstrate to.the-earth; .. Consigned their'long held honors to the dust, 5ft adoration of the king Supreme. vrhe everlasting hills hiS presence felt,' ' " ' And owned the ierrors rjf his fiery rod Still as he brandished it iri tipper air, And bent it sheer on their devoted heads, iScho awakening from her caverns hoar, -Shook earth with the reverberations dread. Milford, July, 1843. Held liim 0 his Bargain. ' A poor fellow, say the Pittsburg Post, na tv.ed Wise, in Clearfield county, Pa., )ias got liirrHielf tnto a very foojih" matrfmonial difficul ty. He -attended a rnilJihi training, and, at a -'feissing party " he ma'rried "in fun" to sin ifilere'iHg lad;?, named Martha Stage. Af tir (the party, Mr.'Wise ihought that Miss. Mar ilia ihad iin'furthcr .laimsr wpon him ; htit she thought utiierwise, a.od acting on the remark in ihe play .of oats, peas, be'a'hs and barley grows' virjiich runs, " I'll hokl to you f bargain, mid won't let you go' ahe has instituted pro ceedings ugainst the pcor fellmv 10 malt e him ackiiOAvJcfiae her as his awful wife. Xovd, B-OKxanee, .an'd' Sstici'dch A young lady of Cincimrau is said to have irimped overboard from the Little Ben, while titi her last passage down, '2 0 or 30' niilbVbe- ifiw the city, and was not recoTered. She was! forced 10 Jcsre ihe city to prer snt Iter marriage Viih a gfcriilentaft obnoxious to her patents?; Tlw name of tho. parties not ate trtained. Th3 Editor of Kite Cincinnati Enquirer hopes that theaifair uly -all be idle rumor, but fears that titers is truth in the melancholy particulars. n Flo-rldra, ihe number of Indians is'cstima- ted betw eeh 3 and 400. It is feared mat they yei determined .16 make war upon the whites. 7-hen' will the " Florida war" Jiave an nd ? ,,' : : . t,A'Y Mr, Grattan, A? Jirll,4l; Wsw.., answer1 toan mvitatftoirfc; l,Vd ,-jhe JaVe Bunker-Hill celebration;, reirio ,1,Jr ded, .and pegged the committee ,,d cx?e cfewJiffPl'1? doubtful task -of " dfli v-in,(nS Ji,&!P' , ... , From the Saturday Courier. Sale of tSe Public Works. The veto of the Governor of this Slate of tho bill for the sale of the public works, we meniioncd.to our readers last week as having beetf filed iri 'tho office of the Secretary of Stale 10 be returned to the next Legislature. This brll provides for the incorporation of a company, to which is to be transferred the main line1 of the State improvements by railroads and canal, cotinecting the city of Philadelphia and tho ciiy of Pilisburg. Those improve ments, constructed at an aggregate cost of about fifteon millions of dollars to the State, are 10 be sold or transferred to this company for the sum of sixteen millions, to be paid in sub scriptions of one hundred dollars a share, in cash or in certificates of loan of the Common wealth. But it will be recollected that we havd previously stated that these certificates are at about SOU lor SluO and the conse quence would be that the company would buy the improvements at about eight millions. The general objection of the Veto is.that, in the language of tho Governor, the measure is most impolitic and unwise." The vcio then goes on; to state as follows : "The income from the main line of im provements this year, will very considerably exceed that of the last year. During the first two months of ihe business season, under great disadvantages, it is upwards of thirty thousand dollars boyond the corresponding months- of Jast year. This is surely no cause for despondency, but for confidence and hope in the future value of these improvements. At ail events, if they are to be sold or dis posed of, let it be on the most advantageous terms .to the btate. li, instead of confining the commissioners to taking subscriptions of stock on the terms mentioned, they were allow ed to sell the stock at public auction, to the highest , and best bidders, in amounts 10 suit purchasers, an advance would probable be re alized beyond the simple subscription." Speaking of tne late attempt to sell the Delaware Division, at ihe Philadelphia Ex change, the veto says : When we seea most unexampled scramble for tho stock hired men forcing their way inio the room of the Commissioners not a man subscribing bonaf.de for himself, but all wear ing the aspect of bold and unblushing specula tion persons who look an active part in the passage of the bill in the Legislature, congre gating from remote parts of the State, and witnessing the transactions with more intense anxiety ihan mere patriotism usually produces and the Commissioners finally compelled to disperse hasiily and close the books without completing the task confided lo them by the Legislature, it is well calculated to make us pause ; to retract our steps, if we have acted without due caution, anfl to proceed only upon the cleares't conviction of dutv and of sound policy" To take possession of Oregon. It should be named, among ihe movements of the day, that Col. PJchard M. Johnson has accepted ,an invitation to attend the Oregon Convention to be held in Cincinnati on the 3d, 4th, and 5ih days of July instant. In'his re ply to the committee inviting him to express his full confidence in the title of ihe United Stales to ihe Oregon Territory, he says, "J am, therefore, willing to adopt such measures as may -seem most conducive to its' immediate oc cupation, whether the Government acts or not, having due regard to the laws and constitu tion!." A portion of the Canadian papers say that another rebellion is certainly brewing there, and that it will be far more extensive than the last. It h staled that irregular military com panies, have been formed ; and bodies of pri vates ,are secretly forming. Meetings are be ing frequently held in Montreal, which are largely attended by ihe French Canadians, and secret societies, having for their object the dismemberment of Canada from the mother country, prevail throughout the .French dis tricts. Mutiny and Murder. slthe New Bedford Mercury publishes a let ler.igiving an account of a mutiny which had broken out nu board of the whale ship Faii haven, Capl. Norris, at the Ascension Islands. The 'Fairhaven had lost 11 men, and taken sonie. jiatives on hoard :n place of them. -Oue morning, (no dates are given,) whales were raised, and boats were lowered in pursuit, leaving the captain, a boy, and' three natives ,on board. Shortly after they had left, those in ,boais discovered the ship's signals to be ai half mast, and on reluming in ha&le, learned from the boy, who was in the Jigging, that the natives had murdered the captain. ' With great difficulty iho mate contrived to get 0i board unseen, by way of the, cabin windows, and loaded several muskets, with one, of which he shot- one of the natives dead, iAnothe'r w,as".1i6t by the bpat's crew, who mic- ceeded in pelting'. .on- Ifrtard shortly after, and. 'the third wasput jnt'o ifoh-ahd carried into Sydney. . . - Effects of Perseverancenever despair. The Providence Chronicle furnishes the fol lowing account of success from untiring perse verance, morality and honest labor. In tho fall of tho year 1830, a young man just out ol his time, landed at Whitehall, New York, to seek employment as a journeyman printer. He was comparatively poor and friend less, and after, three months spent seeking work, was about ready to give up all hope of success, but resolving slill to persevere, he at length obtained employment as a journeyman at eight dollars per week, in the office of the N. Y. Evangelist, a weekly paper published in that city. He continued in that situation till the Spring of 1832, when he procured a press and a fevy type, on credit, , and opened a very small printing office to print cards and circu lars. He had no sooner commenced business in this small way for himself, ihan the Cholera, that awful scourge appeared in the city. He was compelled, with a heavy debt, to close his office, and go to work as journeyman on the Evangelist, to procure bread for his little fami ly. After a few months, when the Cholera had subsided, nothing daunted by so unprom ising a beginning, the persevering young man reopened his little office, and obtained, occasi onally, a job or two of work. This enterprising and persevering young journeyman printer is no other than Robert Sears, the well known author, writer, compi ler, printer, publisher and bookseller, of the three beautiful volumes of Pictorial Illustra tions, which succeeded each oilier at intervals of about six months, and of which, by the aid of about S5000 expended in advertising, the almost incredible number of 30,000 were sold in less than eighteen months ; and also of two other pqually elejiant pictorial volumes "The Bible Biography," and the " Pictorial Wonders of the World." These two volumes; are re ceived with a popularity nearly or quite equal to that of the Pictorial Illustrations ; and in addition to these, Mr. Sears is now the Editor, Proprietor and Publisher of " Sears' New Monthly Family Magazine" a most valuable periodical publication, which has already ob tained an almost4 unprecedented circulation. How striking an illustration is afforded in ihe uphill progress of this friendless journeyman printer, of tho truth of the adage " Labor omnia vixcit"-- Labor conquers all things. Hatching Apparatns. They have a machine for hatching eggs now actually in use in London, bringing out the little chickens in broods of fifties and hundreds, with all the punctuality of an old hen. The following is the advertisement of the machine, as we find it in the London papers of the 2d inst., which we insert gratis, just for the sake of spreading a knowledge of the new inven tion : "Hatching Apparatus! Reduced prices (from Eight to Sixteen Guineas.) Messrs. Todd and Son, of Bury street, Bloomsbury, beg to call the attention of the public to their portable pa tent Hatching and Rearing Apparatus, being the original manufacturers. "This successful invention is capable of hatching, at a trifling expense, any number ol game and poultry eggs of all sorts, from 50 to 200, at one time, and possesses tho further recommendation of furnishing poultry for the table at a trifling cost at all periods of tho year. For further par ticulars apply to the manufacturers. A machine may be seen in use daily." Wild Morses in South America. One of the Robertsons, in. his let ters on South America, states that he has in his possession contracts which he made at Goya " with an estanciero, for 20,000 wild horses, to be taken on his estate at the price of a medio each, .that is to say, threepence for each live horse or mare. The slaugh ter of them costs threepence a head more, andstakirig: and cleaning the hides, once more, threepence; and lastly, a like sum for carting to Goya, making- the whole cost one shilling for each skin. Of this contract ten thousand animals were delivered ; the skins were packed, in bales and sold in Buenos Ay res for six rials of three shillings each, and they sold ultimate ly in England for seven or eight shil lings ; that is, the skins sold for about 2,800 3,000 percent, on the first cost of the horse from which the skin was taken. Such is the accumulative profit sometimes..of the produce which is taken froni'the hands of the grow er in one country before it gets into the hands' of 'the' cbhsumeV in . anoth- ( Tjhc Fourth off July., The records of the Past unroll, Of gallant deeds in battlcdone, And trace upon the brilliant scroll ' The tale of war, and Freedom won, ', In those dark days of blood ahd strife, " Columbia struggled fdr her life., A nation's love has set apart - This- day, to memory of the Past; -And proudly in a nationjs heart Those memories rise distinct and fast;' While prayer and martial pageantry, " ' '' Devote this day to Liberty. 1 On every sea by every shore , , '' Our star-lit flag waves high arid' freei'; And lound above the Ocean's roari -1 : Is heard the Trump of Liberty: Oh! bright o'er Tyranny's dark grave, j(- ,r Hope's star lights up the Western wave- Oh Liberty"! this hallowed day Thy name is heard from every tongue;!. Rich offerings on thy altars lay, With garlands bright thy courts are hung; And waving- in the morning light, Gleam pennons steaming far and bright. Not in tho monarch's gorgeous hall, , Not in the warrior's brilliant train, ; . When clarion's sound at Victory's call, And plaudits hush the cry of Pain, ' ' While. nodding plumes, and banners red, Jri cruel mock wave o'er the dead. But in the low and peaceful cot, Where man uritrammel'd, happy, dwells, Tyrants unknown, and cliains forgot, ; The song of Freedom fearless swells: There, rise the pagans of the Free,- To bless thy name, Oh Liberty! 1 .. . We hear thee in the whispering tones The sportive wind bears o'er the plain; ( The billowy realm the ocean owns Repeats thy name from main to main; , . Hill-side and streanj their voices raise, And tune their notes to sound thy praise.. Oh! dearest boon on man bestowed! Thou sunlight to the daring heart! Thou guide along rich Learnings' road! Thou nurse of Science and of Art! , v This joyous day, our millions free Devote to gladness, God, and thee. A shout o'er free Columbia breaks, A shout that swells a nation's bieast; The wild North hears the sweet South wakes And rings with joy the wood-clad West, From mountain top by plain and sea Ascend the anthems of the Free. (, . , The soil by freemen nobly won',1' Is F reedom's habitation still; - Oh! guard it great and holy One, From foreign arid from civil ill ; The hand that won our battles for us,! Oh! be it ever round and o'er us! Accept, oh God! a nation's prayer, Accept the heartfelt ofT'rings given; Thanks for Thy kind, untiring care; Thanks for rich fields, and smiling heaven; Happy, on Freedom's soil we live,. Ours are the thanks thatfreenien give. As changeless as the truth of God, . May this tune-honored day return," to light the green and blooming sod, Where Freed'om'stquenchless altars burn, Let ceaseless thanks ascend to Thee! . Our God! The God of liberty. An Exciting Scene. On'e of the Mier prisoners whV es caped and is at New Orleans, has re lated to the editor of the Picayune; the particulars of their suffering. I The time of drawing the lots, which! was an act of life' or death,' was one of the most anxious solicitude. One hundred and four white beans and seventeen black ones were deposited in a hat the prisoners were marched up to draw, every two handcuffed together the poor fellow whose evil fate it was to draw a black bean was then separated from his comrade, on' whom he was neverjto look again he was put into' a: high-walled yard, and in four hours afterwards a volley of deliberately aimed Mexican mus ketry separated? his immortal soul from his "suffering body ! Base was' this victory of cowardly vengeance. " Father, is President Tyler fond of Music AVhy,-soaf "Because I lieard yoipsay he'lM' brought up scv crakpRGs ! ' ' ! !:' ' J j . The Paisley Murderess Arrested A young woman, named Christina Cochran, alias Gilmour, who is accur sed of having murdered ner huifaiia", in January last, near Paisley, in pcpl$ land, by administering arsenic., aijpVeL at New York, on Wednesday ning, in the brig Excel, from. LIgr pool, and was aiTested. under.. theJpi;o visions of the late Treaty, slil tak ing been demanded by tnc Brititsit Government, through an agent selu? to this country by the Acadia. ; The gentleman to whpin sh'eyvas married was a man of wealth; vwfe settled 1000 L. upbti her on ihe.dav or ner marriage, ancl ner lamer settled, 1000 B. more; thus placing at he'pim. mediate disposal, nearly I0;000ifjr April (suspicion having been ;expilf) he was disinterred, and-a larg&.quaftr tity of arsenic found in 4ris. stoma (Jk The wife fled. Previous to her marriap-e sfie- borhood in company with liim whjyeb caused the suspicion, and led toitpi discovery of the husband having beeii poisoned. It was then report'eckdt Paisley that the wife intended lea ing Liverpool for New York, and1$ fidavits as to the particulars tAgiie sent to Sir James Graham byitheiiiu ral policeman, who received i0i;ders that if Sir James supposed she: could, be demanded under the treaty ,Jrip proceed to Liverpool, and if Jt ,wf ascertained that she had emifarkjefj to take the steamer, and pursue Ae& He did so, and arrived at New Yairfe on the 3d of last month. She is a woman about 25 years of agei atijl; was accompanied, by a young itiantK They passed on board as MfinST Mrs. Spear. His. real name, hoWj&vS1 er, it armears, is Simpson TKewif& is imprisoned in the Tdmbsfsw York. Murder at Georgetown, Olale? The Examiner of that place gives an account that on Wednesday two. weeks, Mr. George H. Bohrer, othat county, was deliberately and in cold blood shot down, whilst engagedF"at work in his field. He was approach-; ed by a clan of. cut-throats, three: of whom fired rifles from' the skirt of the woods, the ball of each rifle li kin'g effect one entering just bel!biW his! right under jaw; another entering his right breast, near the nipples, an$ the other the small of his back. ..The brutal attack was made witliout'givr ing any signal of alarm. iVir. Bohrery ran; after- he received these ball's) about one hundred and ninety Steps, before he fell. He was pursued by his blood-thirsty murderers, and with. his hoe, with which he hadbeen en gaged at work, his brains beaten out! The perpetrators of this foul crime' then retreated, leaving the manglpjll corpse in the field.. This hornbfe deed was perpetrated close by the side of one of Bohrer's little giris who was at the time with him in the field. Mr. Bohrer was a man possess ed of considerable property, which, fact may serve hereafter to elucidate1 this daring and-awful crime.. Al last, accounts, three persons had been ar rested, and were under examination.. It is as rjlain as ' day-light j tM in& punishment of human crimes musk become certain, or human- life, 'is$g be the sport of the hardeneiUvretche of human society. - , An eel was caught inra4e Wet V, vvaru' 06 uo., in yonnecucuxjv'er, near the ferry, Upper MicMleton, a low days since, weighing.Slbs been attached to ayouDgrman named Spear, and afterwards left the neighs circumierenco y m, lengtn-. 4it-2te.Gt .it 1 ; '1