Jeffersonian Republican. (Stroudsburg, Pa.) 1840-1853, March 27, 1845, Image 1

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    .it wolloj -' jj :tr.: i ' " ' The whole a"rt ok Government consists ,in tie, art of beino honest. Jeffersoa i- " ' ' ' " ' 1
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.Tcffersoniau Republican.
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s
REVIEW, to be conducted in the city of New
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Y?Mmiriim N C
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ha II Bayard Del L
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Members of the House.'
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Wr W Summer Va .
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hJ hn While Ky
tIhmcl P King Mass
i .V liayncr N G
James Delict Ala
WAMoselyNY
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A II Stephens Gear
ma Rodney Del
1a L Sample lnd
lit H Morse Mc
J P PAenixNew York
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J -P. -Kennedy
J Collamer,
John J Hardi'it
WS. Archer
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h R Inscrsoll
'. Joy Morris
t-J M Berrien
ihbert C Winthrnn
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Alexander 11 Stephens
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STROUDSBUKG. MONROE COUNTY, JRA .THURSDAY, MARCH 27, I84!5.
Here is a real jrerh which" we find going the
rounds, credited' to1 the u Social Monitor." We
yould that every body could enter into its noble
spirit-r-especialiy all such as have the-' manage
ment ot prisoners : ,
The Erring.
;t-
.ill!
nr JULIA A. FLETCHER.
-Think gently; of ;the erring!' -
j ;Ye know not of the power it i-1 j j
, With which the dark temptation came
, In some unguarded hour., . ,;.
Ye may not know how earnestly , . , .
They struggled, or how well,
Until the hour of weakness came
: And sadly thus they fell.
.' , . .: "to u--.tiY
j ninK gently ol the erring! .
- Oh ! 'do not thou forget,
j-,-u
iK't
However darkly stained by sin,'
J j
He is thy brother yet." ' l'
Heir of the self-same heritage ! ' -
Child oPthe self-same'GodT
He hath but stumbled'' in" the path,
Thou hast in weakness trod: ';
Speak kindly to the erring'! . ,
For is it not'enouch ' Mi
That innocence and peace are 'gone, '
Without 'the censure roush ? ' "3
- It, sure must be a weary lot i i
That sin crushed heart to bear, . iu
And. Utey, who share; a happier fate, -
Tlieir chidings well may spare.
Speak kindly teethe erring
Thou yet mayst lead them back,
With holy words, and tones ofJgve,
From misery's thorny track.
Forget not thou hast often sinned,
Andtsinfulyet must be, ;
Deal gently with the, erring one . ; -
As God hath dealt .with thee ! .
irt-t 1
Extract from a Phize Essay Written By 'a1 lady
in. Providence; R. I., which obtained the premium' out for refuge ; if a 3ark uncertainty liang over its wigwam, in the night; in the morning the old In
lately offered mrBoston. forAe best original pro- future destiny; it cannbt buVrbcb'il in nVoriyand dian sees the trap and knows that some one "wishes
auction-in. prose. -
. 14 Religion's, All." i
1
i he .mind oi man is. like ihe?tiuciuating scav tt
never is at rest, there is a. perpetual .tendency,
w'hiich cannot be. curbed by perpetual disappoint-'
mer.t, to send out
tile desltes after Some obiCCt
beyond our present reach. But we are never sat
isfied from the attainment of our present desires.
The law of the tiatural world, by which objects di
minish according'to their distance from us is re-
versed in the moral. The object of our wishes
are magnified in proportion to the distance at which
we view them. As we approach near, the'eharfn
is broken the illusion, vanishes.,. They provefo1
be but bubbles, which as soon astouched, dissolve!
in airy vapor. Still we do not rest. At evcrj
fresh disappointment, we put. forth new desires
and' new efforts, Yor the attainment of some object !
yet more remote. Even "success, tlie inost unr
bounded, does not satisfy us. We weep for more
worlds to conquer. j
Amid tliis tumult of the minds-this everlasting
restlessness of the soul, religion, ibenign visiter,
heavenly monitor, descends to mum. She comes
in radiant and alluring Xorm, and addresses him in
. , , , . o ; . ' t . i
ents of winning tenderness.
I will say to the swelling su
accents
Receive me
and
surre of passion,
Peace, be still." 1 will quell the fever of disap
pointineut, by lead frig you to fountains of living
waters. T will point to 'you the shadow of a greai
rock in this weary land. Receive me; oh ! on whom
the Son of God looked with teriderness,,and I will
oireci you to an oujeci oi pursuit, wurtuy. yuur
heavenly origin worthy' ofy'duVhattarc, but little
lower than that of -angels -worthy the il.warn
springs of .which you are 'proudly,' yet painfully
'cons?jpjJS v . Yjjjrlo ve, pursuit r tha objecLlo which
.1 will directyou is.infiniie, therefore; ybur pursuit
will be endless. Xou delight .in p.rojgro.s.s here
your progress .will be cpmmensuraje wiilijeterniy.
' arn boundless, vou shall be satisfied
y our aesire?
n. k?K;J ' 1J),V nn.
when you aw
ly so, you shall frequently bo filled, in this.hoase
of Wr pilgrimage,' wlthprelibatidns of fut'ure
blessedness.' Receive the, and vou need never
fear what your nature" renders so revolting to you,
a cessatiori of Hope," expectation and' effort. True,
your- capacity for hap'olnp&'s shall be filli'd as-soon
as you enter on yodr everlasting inherit a rice'. Hut
that capacity shall be forever increasing, and!for-
ever filling with all the fulness of God. Through
out the immortality of Her existence, Jymir soul
shall be continually ex'panding'hnr'vievvs; strength
eniqgJjerenergiejs,irtiid drinking deeperari dldeep-
.er of the , fivertpf . pleasures, which flows,. a'Uthe
rigltt hanqyt.the Alost iiigh. ,, , -, ,,.,
'S'uch aieVhe boundless offers of religion. AJl
Hint itmn can desire, all that ins nature can re
eive, more than liis ut'miist powers 'of appreheii
i'ion cari'reach. View the' naturedf man", and the
object; by which he is surrounded';' hisimind'rtat
capacity ojiVver seeking,, yefyrevor reusing to
be filled, frpiu earthly.'SOjUrces, and say, is riot this
iivine Religion, in i'.s fteencss, its rulnuss, and
in itsiboundlessnessito ,a-being thus constituted
and, thus, situated,, is ,it not .a:. ,.!V":iew the indii
vidual who has embraced, her in his, inmost squI,
and entered .on the high and .holy courev whichj
she dictates, and then say with an emphasis, drajyn.
from reality and not from theory alone, is not e-
ligion all? See her disciple a' partaker of the ills!
uici'.lottt to human nature, lie' considers himself
as rundereducafion in'Gods 3chboli"and wHbtrW'
er' his divine' Masterfrown -or 'smile, he knows' he
dispensation is adapted'to'his present need, ahd
tetds alike-to fit himfnr his future. inheritance.'
What mojalgrandeur is there, in thcjcharacter of.
the Christian,! Amid. the vvar of, elements, the,
wreck of matter, and the crush of worlds, he can
sit like Noah in the ark, calm, quiet and secure,
for the edifice of his hopes is built on the Rock of
Ages. View the .Christian as taught by religion
to subdue the baneful passions of our nature, which
are ever springing sources'of wretchedness,' with
in bur own bosoms. -nsteaisof 'suffering the ser
pent revenge, to twine around His heart, nd'nour-ish-itself
in the misery "of andtherj he has learnt
when he .is reviled, to bless ;l when ihe is. defamed,
to suffer.;. A happy man is he!.- for,,; in proportion
as he yields to the influence of the principles he
has embraced, his soul .is in. harmony, within itse.lf,
in harmony with all around him, in harmony with
me governing principles oi jne universe
It is like .
a well'turied instrument, 'whatever, key is struck it-
responds melodious notes. c
; Follow the Ghristiah'fiirther, as'he enters 'the
dark' valley of the shadow-of death iHe're nature
instinctively recoils.. Hut religion takes away the
stingof death and 'despoils the grave of its victory.
I Truef the .proud -precepts ofphilosophy .might have
euaoiea nim to meet u witn leignea composure,
but
it is divine religion, alone, which can in reah- ;
e liie strength of iis "heart, when heart and j '.
ty be
flesh fail: - AVhen the silver .chdrd is loosed, and
the golden pitcher broken, and the 'frighted soul-,
findiiifr that the Trail edifice. iscfuiiblinr, looks
i -
horror. " ' " -,L
Bles3edreiigibri! light f the-wotld, sole hope
0f a j-uined race.;- renovating principle, which re-:
st0res,life and beauty vhe;reall was .corruption
anrj deformity ! , extendthv benign .reign let thy
lnc h mnlunrnd. anrl thv IipiipAt dlfTllsnd.
FiiVeresiisBS Skefoli 'of Iowa aud
WifcCOilMil.
We learn from the- Providence Journal of Sa-
turday, lat .lliai,.an ;instrucuv.e lecmrejupon.uiese
new States was delivered in that city onjihSth;
i.nst., by Dr. J. ,-. C
fcmith of, Boston a lecture
replete with, information denved-from.a tour thro
tliose countries, during the past summer. "The
Journal gives an abstract of the discourse' from
which we'gain the following : ' ' ""
u The Territory of W isconsin is 600 miles long,
and on an average-1 1 uO mjlos brdad;, an'djarger
than wtho whole ot iewv,ngland.. -Jowa is bOO
miles; loiig, arid on ari' ,averag.eJapO, mjlesbroad
one-third larger,thaii Iew Jvngland iheresour-
' fees, qf the country, a ro jasmense you may ride
1 day after day over a plain of unbounded fertility,
' and hardly meet a human oeing. l jie sun rises
' oi,tne green grass, uuursus nirougu iuu iit;uv-
' ens and sets in green'grass again, l nis country
WOU1U sujjpoii 'ovu,uuu,uu -ui uuiiiuir uciuya.
There js a succession of prairies rising one above
the other like a fl'ght of steps.. This: has Jieen
caused by a succession of tipheavings from below.
The Missi3sippiflnovquife a harrow stream, was
formerly 15 or 20 miles wideband has been 're
duced Mv.: its present bed', by-.these, upheavings-df
the;earthr ;; :c.. ... , : .
U'he mounds found. here, i)rove, this to. have been
a very old country. There is a , series of these
structures reaching from western icv lork to the
Gulf of .Mexico; and" Jfrom Wheeliiig, Va', to the
fase of the; Roh'ky''Mount6rnf Theso nidOnds are
-I ...... .! 1,..rJtv.,iJ.-l"'" !
en 100 feet in hdight.-anu 30U0 teerupon a siae
! at the base. There construction must have cost
,"ch time ami lanor. i ne war ib y
im'Hi.e; Mississippi ho the to(y df,onc
mound and .thus-carried to the city of S
much time onu lanor. i ue water js pumpeu up
one of these
St.' Louis.
The efevationTof hhe;;itiound':is sufficient ta carry
illfe watei into the.;h.ird.stor.y pfeyery house in tlje
,city. Se-me of, the,riuounds ,are,;epulchral,f and
contain immense, quantities pfhuman bpne.
Some of the mounds are fortifications, extreme-
one of- theiri !d! tree
circles, showing il'tpr have been at least fouf hun
dred years old, affd this slaliding upon , the ruins
,,r nnnthpr'trnHhrohaliltf :is Vild' vhen it fell into
Wi mwj J
decay. There cart bc' no'ddtibt that this'couritry
was formerly inhabited by an industrious, peace
able and comparatiyely civilized pepple, who were
exterinijiated by. the iriuption; of the 'Indians, ; a
Tartar tribe, vyhich.ij quite accent event.
Geologists admit that this continent is older than
f.uro; e, and this conliucut was formerly the bed
ly well, pons'tructed. ' Ujioii. those mounds Trees
'have ar'owii up and cfeVayeil; ai?3 orth'r-V trees, now
'.ild, havb gVoVhVipotl ffie-iVruins. !n'Vfief iVupon
'HnV. iU" fhHiii tree1 with foAr 'hundred concentric
of the ocean. The proofs of this; are quite numerous-and
conclusive. It' is a lime country and lime
isa product -of the ocean ..The immenso masses
of stone, around the falls of St. Anthony are com
posed of sea shells. This country has been thrown
up from the bottom of the ocean by a series of up
heavals, the lasLof which was the Rocky .Moun
tains, dividing this great ocean into 'the Atlantic
and Pacific oceans. r -. t.
, Here are to be a series of States of immense er
tent, and more fertile than apy other part, of ,the
country. It is. the best part.of the country for, a
man' to settle in. Ho can go there 'and select a
farm and not be called upon to pay a cent for it for
perhaps two or three generations, and when the
land is eventually brought into market, he can. be'
sure to have it at the minimum price of $1,25 per
acre. A man who should, overbid a squatter
could not safely remain in the country.
Tiie American Fur company commands univer
sal respect among the Indians. They are punctu
al in fulfiUins all their engagements, and they nev
er sell any liquor. The Indians have no fear of
the United States Government. They think the
Great Father at Washington is a man of huge pro
portions, but they have no definite conception of
power. But telLthem that if they behave ill they
will get a ball, or, if they behave well, a blanket,
and thev know what is meant. In the boats of
the Fur Company one can travel with perfect
safety.
" Except in the hunting season the Indians lounge
about their wigwams and keep drunk' when they
can get whiskey, and ' gorge themselves with food
when they can-get that. When the hunting sea
son arrives, they purchase blankets and traps of
the Fur company arid start oh their expedition.
The squaws do all the labor, dress the skins, &c.
Fhis aives rise to a stranee kind of polygamy.
I An Indian wants three or four squaws to do his
j work, and looks round for the strongest he can
: find. He lavs a trap at the door of her father's
i n a - i vj
to purchase his daughter: If he does not choose to
accept the offer he does not touch the trap The
next night another trap is left at the dodr, and so
on til! a sufficient number is offered, when they
are taken in, arid the owner comes forward and
claims his squaw.
They leave their dead upon some lofty ridges
and let the flesh waste away,.and then collect and
bury their bones. An "Indian woman who has
: been most shamefully abused by her husband dur-
Jng jjjs life, will go everyday and lament most
jTlerl v over his .dead body,-and will finally col
lect his bones and cari;y them about with her, and
When it becomes impossible to preserve them any
longer, will bury them with the utmost care in the
bottom of her wigmam. If any body has reason
to be' thankful for Christianity ; it is woman; for
without' it, even among our own race, her condi
tion is little better than, among the Indians.
From the New Vork Express.
Inaugural' Address as it should have
been.
I, James K. Polk, a modest and. unpretending
juvenile of Tennessee, quite a boy in cpmpanson
with my predecessors, have been elected by the
influenced suffrages of a people who llog tneir
slaves at pleasure, and do not govern themselves,
to be a chief magistrate, to be governed by the
same people of whom I am constituted governor.
I cannot hide my modesty, and blush so exces
sively, that I am-obliged to use my pocket hand
kerchief. . -
. Tom Jefferson, who did not believe in the bible,
wrote for this people a constitution, which has
been the " blarney- stcne" since the revolution.
He swore on the bible, in which ho did' not be
lieve, that he would defend this constitution, which
same religious ceremony I here, perforrn. in the
presence of this assembled multitude. Said con
.:.i;r,n r "l.lnmou ctnnf" linvincr been broken
stitution or
W.WW --Q j
in Wus hv mv illustrious nrclece3sor,- Geh
Jack-
... - j -j i
son, his successors have each a bit to put under
their tongues, that, like Demosthenes, they'may
use loud sounding words, and walk in any body's
or no body's -foot steps. 1 take 'upon m'ysolf the
-solemn' 'obligations, "to preserve protect arid de
fend" ihe bit of the constitution in my mouth,
"pugnix el calcib'us unguibus el rostro"
Doctor MoViarity, of Philadelphia, said in'Thtb
lin, that 1 owe my subjection to fthe will of the
people; to tlio forty thousand Irishmen in America,
who voted for riid to-a man by command of his ho
liness, the. Pope of Rome. The Whigs attribute
the dishonor of defeat to the influence of the Ab
olitionists, and the Native Americans. I owe my
success to the bone and sinew, tough hides and
strong muscles of this Empire's democracy and
my especial thanks are duo to the Empire Club of
New York. I will reward all the brave fellows
with gifts, pf offices. . ..,- ?-. . ..'-nit
I coneratulate mankind that his, , accidental, ex
cellency, John Tyler, has found the end oflns oh
ligation lo serve the devil, and hope his friends
No., 43.
will manufacture and use all the tobacco he may,
cultivate, and that he may find a market for albhis
Tcxas inferest, whether in scrip or cotton. Tbi
diddle the boys down east, I promise incidental1
protection, a term used before, but which I neither"
understand nor can explain. . . ..
Each state is a sovereign power. They; do as
they please, and the United States protect them in
w hat ever they do. They borrow money and re
pudiate, and their enemies who lend them "fndney,
dare not say " pay " The Texans are in di
cannot pay, at war, and do not like to fight
We."
the United Siates, spread the wing of the Ameri
can eagle over this "land of promise," and there"
is an end of obligation. Becoming part of thi
country, thev can follow example and repudialo.
To promise is one thing, to pay Is another thing.
The transatlantic half of the Anglo Saxon family
have set us an example of avarice and ambition.
They grasp at every thing within their reach and,
power.. The people of this country, this half.,of
the same family, following their bad example!;
shall spread their power over the whole western
world banishing the Indians-until they be driven
into the Pacific, and staying the tide of foreign'
immigration setting hi upon us from the old world.
An old man in this assembly recollects when'
the United States were peopled with three millions
of inhabitants ; now there, are twenty miMons, and
your youthful orator hopes to see many millions,
more scattered and divided from pole to pole, fiorn,
shore to shore, requiring half of the citizens to bo
soldiers to keep the rest in order. - -
Ours was intended to be- a frugal, government.
To pay for actual services requires but a .very
small amount of money. There are some meit,
however, of large minds, and large pockets, which
minds and pockets could only be satisfied by be
ing filled with the peoples' money, obtairiedi'nany
manner. Many millions of "money have been ta
ken, and someof the criminals have been , taken ;
and, altogether, it has been a great take -in, for
men who repudiate indebtedness repudiate.all ob
ligation to punish rogues ; they who care not for
reputation abroad, care not to be honest at home.
The revenues' are. large, national indebtedness
very small, and there is abundance for all neces
sary wants of 'tho treasury ; but those who are not
satisfied with moderate things must follow the'
steps of their illustrious absquatulators;
The prosperity of the country has been so great,
under even adverse circumstances, that the war
debt of 1812 has been paid off. It is earnestly
desired to involve this country in a war with Mex
ico, and the-other nations hostile to injustice and
oppression, and thereby involve this nationun-anr
other " bond of union," a national debt.
The people of these states, who owe money
abroad, should not take upon themselves any trou
ble lo pay ; when they can do it with perfect con
venience, it will be time enough. The bounda
ries of the country are imaginary. All tho world
is ours, and being free and independent, we will
enlarge as, we feel inclined
To borrow money and not pay, ... .
Is styled Repudiation;: - ,. ,-
To pirate land-from Mexico, v .-v it&O
Is nought but Annexation.
Trusting that both houses of Congress will pay
due attention to the great infidel from;' England,
who proposes to lecture for the benefit of this .na
tion, your orator bows, and .retires to take a nap.
Anecdote. A countryman reading the Bible to
his wife, -where it is stated that Solomon had three
hundred, wives and so'ven hundred concubines,
the good woman, in a, tone of surprise, said .she
was sure he did not read it .right, and insisted
upon looking at the passage herself; when, having
conned it over two or three times, and satisfied'
herself that if was so, she looked up in his face',
and, chucking him gently iriider the chin, rex?
claimed, 'Eh! iohat a 'simple Solomon laoulcTst thou
make! , .'.'
Somewhat so. When we hear a rhan boasung
of his lpyc for the dear people,' we are strongly
inclined to suspect him for a love of the ' dear'
people's offices. It reminds us of the Irishman
who was ahout to marry a Southern' girl for her
property. 4 Will you take this i w'othan to be your
wedded wife V 1 Yesydur rivfliehco; and the rio
gars too.' ' ' ": '
Getting will qut--lon't crnmp il!
Hear the oiil-poupngs, of an .honest heart in. re
gret for the :Hilaf?daedlconb,ificn of his 'unmen
tionables.' v " ' ' '
x uiuiouit , j til cncii uiu uuuoihw"
. Long-time we've stuck: together 5
Variety ufscenes gone, through, . ' -Mft
.,.,And braved all sPrts. .of weather' mm
f Tfiol mtiirir nf an"Abolitiori paper says
7.1
11 llll
I r f Itla
cnuhtry ' is the Cradle of Liberty, trie baby nifistt
have been-rocked 'toideath."- ;
, The, pftener, carpqts are shakeni'thedonge'rhoy
will, wear: the dirt that, collects under-them grinds
out the threads