,i n i'jLpi.uu.inri. trill 'iiM'v.111! n hi, ir m it " ' w hhmjm tar. JEFFERSONIAN REPUBLICAN TZiurscSjiy, cptcuibcr 11, 1 8-115. TTcrms, . 5,00 :n advance: S2.,.).,, naif yearly; anil $2,00 if not paid lefon; the end of the year. ftj V. Ii. Palmer, Esq., at his Ileal Estate nd Coal Office, No. 59 Pine street, below Third, wo squares S. the Merchants1 Exchange, Phila., and No. KiO Nassau street, (Tribune buildings,) N. Y.,is authorised to receive subscriptions and -advertisements for the Jcjfcrsonian Republican, and give receipts for the same. Merchants, Me chanics, and tradesmen generally, may extend their business by availing themselves of the op portunities for advertising in country papers which his agency affords. Mexico. We are still in suspense in regard to the con templated action of Mexico towards this coun try, on account of the annexation of Texas. She has not yet made a declaration of war, and it is beginning to be currently believed that she will not. This certainly would be her wisest course. Mexico is too weak to attack us with -any hopes of triumph, and tho consequences of a war with us, her statesmen are well aware, would be terrible to her. We think, therefpre, that as she has procrastinated thus long, she will pausu longer and consider the coit, before authorizing open ho3lilties. All the exciting rumors wo have laiel)' had, on this subject, were got up by interested speculators. y Specie in IheKatik of England. We observe among the news by the late steamer, that on the loth of August, the specie in ihe Bank of England amounted to 10,000, O0U, or nearly $80,000,000. This is an unit stially large quantity to be gathered together ai one time, even in the vaults of this mammoth institution. It is nearly, if not quite, as much tas wo have in all the United Stales. The es timated amount in this country, a few years ago, was SSO,000,000. v Canal Commissioner. We understand that James Burns, of Mifflin county, was nominated by the Loco Foco Con vention that assembled at Harrisburg on Thurs day last, for Canal Commissioner. His party friends s-peak of him as being a man well qual ified to nil the important station. RcLcrl H. Morton, of Dauphin county, is the Native American candidate ; and unless the Whtg State Central Committee soon present a man of our own party for the office, our friends will be compelled to make a choice between the two above named geniletnen. Candidate for Assembly. The locos of Monroe held their Delegate jIeeting, at the house of Andrew Storm, in Hamilton township, on Saturday last, and nom inated Samuel Meyers, of Pocono township, as sheir candidate for Assembly. The locos of Northampton will hold their Delegate Meeting on Tuesday ihe 23d inst., and nominate two more candidates to complete the jtcket. The JLady's Book. Godey's Lady's Book for September has been received, and is rich in reading matter and embellishments. The prose and poetry is of an uncommonly interesting character.- Go- dey seems to improve with each succeeding iiumber. The subscription price for a single 4 W copy is S3, or two copies for $5. Vermont. " THE STAR THAT NEVER SETS!" The annual election, which took place in Vermont on Tuesday a-week, for Governor and .Members of the Legislature, has resulted in tTf I I m t glorious wnig tnumpn. ine returns are not Vet all received ; but sufficient is known to in Mire the success of tho Whig Governor, and the triumph of an increased number of Whig Representatives and Senators. The Green Mountain .boys have done nouiy. buccess to ihem. Dr. Gardner's tectures. We acknowledge with pleasure the receipt of Nos. & and 9 of Dr. Lardner's highly inter eating and useful lectures. They are equal in alue io any of the earlier numbers. Price 25 . cents per number. Heavy Fine.' - , We forgol to notice in our last that the Court of .Quarter Sessions of Northampton county '-had sentenced Jefferson K. Heckman, Stale Senator from Northampton and Lehigh, io pay afineofS300, and give ecurity in $1000 to keep the peace for five years, for assault and battery in spilling in the face of Matthew Hale Jones, Esq. Deputy Attorney General of North , uinpton county. -vj- nomination. Col. John Swift, has been nominated by the Whigs of the city of Philadelphia, as their can didate for Mayor. Col. S. was Mayor of the City for a number of years prior to 1841, and discharged the duties of the office in a faithful and energetic manner. Col. James Page, is his Loco competitor. The Natives also have a candidate, but we have not learned his name.---Tho election will probably be close but unless the Locos and Natives unite, the Whig candi date will be chosen beyond peradventure. for the jeffersonian republican. Mr. Editor : A grand scheme of internal improvement has lately been started in Philadelphia, which is creating considerable discussion and specula lion. The plan is to run a Rail Road from Philadelphia, or Tide Water, along tho Valley of the Delaware to Carpenter's Point, where it is proposed to intersect that magnificent work now in progress, the New York and Erie Rail Road. For the privilege of connecting with thai great work; Pennsylvania is to grant the right of way to that Company through ihe north ern counties to the Great Bend of the Susque hanna, on tho way to Binghampton, passing through the Coal region of the Lackawanna, a matter of vat importance to tho city of New York, from which a supply of Coal could be obtained at all seasons of the year. Besides the company would save some 30 or 40 miles distance in construction, and a proportionate expenditure of money. 'Tis said by those pro fessing to be judges, that for every mile made up the Delaware to Deposite, ore, two miles could be made in Pennsylvania for the same money, saving to ihe company half a million of dollars at least, besides passing through a bet ter farming country. The distance from Tide Waier to Carpenter's Poini is about 120 miles. The grade is about 5 feel in the mile; indeed it is believed that the whole distance from Tide Water to Lake Erie, by this route, would not require a single inclined plane. The formida ble barrier of the Blue Mountains offers no ob struction ; there are no Alleghanies to pass ; no tunnelling of Mountains ; no obstruction by al ternate rail road and frost bound canals. Such a work would be greatly advantageous to both Stales. Philadelphia and New York, have both done enough by gigantic works of internal improve ments to insure their growth and prosperity. All jealousy of each other ought to cease : let the people have a choice of markets. At the point of connection the facilities for reaching Philadelphia, or New York, would be about qual. The interests of the fanner and the hardy sons of the forest should not be sacrificed to mercantile cupidity. The narrow and sel fish policy of restricting trade to this or thai city, to the great injury of the farming interest, is fast giving way, and will be ultimately swept by ihe board before the mighty torrent of pub ic opinion. May we noi then hope to see the citizens of these two great Slates cordially uni ting in pushing through this greal work. No thing in this way is too difficult to bo effected by their joint efforts. Look to the north, we see the mighty works of internal improvement of the State of New York. So on the south, ihe no less astonishing works of Pennsylvania. We propose to call' this the middle or central route, which, when completed, will not suffer y comparison in public estimation and utility, with either of the others. LACKAWANNA. A decision has been lately given by Judge Siory which is of considerable interest to per sons purchasing at auction. The plainfifF pur chased some mills, &c, at auction at $40,000, le supposing that the auctioneer had fair bids against him. It turned out however that there had been no bid except his own beyond $20,- 000. the others being fictitious on the part of the auctioneer. The original owners of the mills received ihe $40,000, and action was in stiiuted against them to recover back the pur chase money on ihe ground of fraud in the auc tioneer! The sale took place in 1S3G, and the plaintiff did not learn the deceit until 1840. Judge Ware of Maine, held that tho plaintiff ought to recover, but Judge Siory delivered an adverse opinion, chiefly on ihe ground that the fraud was not brought home to the defendants personally. The case will go to the Supreme Court of the U. S. N. Y. Courier. Importations in Texas. We find it stated in :he Galveston Civilian, that entries of U. S. goods have been made under protest in ihe Custom-house at Galveston the parties intend ing to try whether they are liable to duty, upon the question whether Texas is or is not now a part of the United States. They talk of killing r.aiile now by a galvanic battery, io make the biHchory descent and, the meat lender. How considerate! r . ?. Facts by the Way. The Philadelphia Chronicle says : A man, who shot his daughter with a pistol, and was acquitted on tho plea of insanity, is to be aeen upon our streets. Shuster, who was convicted of one of the most cold blooded murders ever perpetrated in Philadelphia, and afterwards pardoned by Governor Porier, on condition that ho would leave the country, has been convictod of receiving stolen goods, and has been sen tenced to three years' imprisonment. Sarah Ann Davis, convicted of murder, and discharged from the county prison last spring, by a pardon from Governor Porter, is said to have been keeping a house of questionable morality in the upper part of the city. Wesley Flavel, con victed of a cruel murder while in a fit of intox ication, and pardoned by GovernorPorier, on condition that ho would immediately leave the country, and never return, walks our streets in broad daylight. And a number of less distin guished personages, who have been convicted of crimes, and pardoned within the last two years, may be seen walking the streets, loung ing at the corners, and holding familiar con verse at public places with better citizens. The JLatc Elections. The Whig parly had never better reason to be satisfied than with the results of these elec tions. They gain nothing, it is true, and that they did not expect ; bui they loso nothing of moment, and thai ihey had every reason to an ticipate. Not to be routed utterly under the circumstances, is a substantial victory of itself: for, let it be remembered what those circum stances were. In the first place, the Whigs were dispirited by e election of November, which had resulted so differently from all their anticipations, and their depression was propor tionate to the sanguine expectations they had naturally indulged. On the other iiad, the De mocratic party was flushed with recent victory, buoyant with good fortune, confident of success; possessed of the Government for four years. The Whigs again had scarcely any motive to nerve them for the contest. Triumph would not unseal Mr. Polk, or elect Mr. Clay, and de feat could scarcely render their situation worse, politically, than it was. Even as in Tennes- see, wnere mere was a senator oi mo u. o. to elect the approaching winter, the motive was inadequate, for the Democratic party had al ready secured a majority in that body. We repeal that such being the circumstan ces of the -country, as depressing as they well could be to the Whig party, and as animating and encouraging to their opponents, the Whigs have done nobly and well in maintaining their "round and making a drawn battle. In tho face of a recent Presidential defeat, it is impossible for the defeated to do much more. Time must elapse chagrin must pass away new pros pects must open the spirits and the hopes of men must have opportunity to rally before a vanquished parly can hope to plant their victo rious eagles on the captured walls of their foes. The recent contests in the above states, show .what it was only important to show at this time, that the Whig party in all of them survives in its pristine force and integrity. Misfortune has not disbanded, or intimidated, or diminished thetn. There have been no desertions, and thev need but the incentive and the occasion io make as vigorous exertions for. the old cause as in 1840 and 1844. Time is on ihe wing, and parlies will soon be marshalling for 1S48, when all the disasters of Tylerism, treachery and 1844, will be gloriously repaired. Richmond Whi l rr to The Providence Journal, in some remarks on the late occurrence ai Lexington, Ky., where the laws of the land were treated with scorn and contempt, expresses thfe following very just opinion : "To what tribunal can Cassius M. Clay ap peal? There ought to be a power in the land to take the press of the Truo American, and replace it in Lexington, and give its control to the editor. The same power ought to take. some of the leaders of the outrage, Thomas F Marshall among the rest, and put them in ihe penitentiary. That power, in a government like ours, can only exist where the allegiance of the people to the law is unquestioned. That power, we fear, does not exist now." Decidedly Good. 'Which is the best house in V said a gentleman on a steamer, address ing a person who, he had been informed resi ded at the place indicated. 'The House,' was the decided response. 'That's tho house where all the big bugs stop.' Discovering, af ter a night of unrest lhat'his informant was the keeper of the house alluded lo, he desired him to send his baggage to some house where the bugs were not so big. Santa Anna's Wife is just seventeen, very fair and charming. What is exile to him, who is 50, and with one kg, in the grave I JJj3 We find the following in the Philadel phia Ledger of Friday morning last : "Report of the Arrest of a Murderer. It was currently rumored yesterday, that a man named William Runyan, well known in the upper part of the county as a horse dealer, had been ar- rested in Montreal and brought to the State of! New Jersey on the charge of being the princi pal aclor in the murder of the Castner family at Changewaier, N. J. The story is, thai since the execution of Parke, his wife communica ted the facts lhat led lo Runyan's arrest, and implicates several others in that horrid tragedy. Runyan, it is said, was a relative and heir of the Mr. Castner who was murdered." We take the above to be one of ihe worst specimens of the countless fabrications thai have been circulated in relation to the Change water murders. We know the Mr. Runyan re ferred to, slightly, by reputation, and feel per fecily confident that he is as far from having killed the victims of the Changewaier tragedy, as those victims are from having killed him. He may have bled a green'' un occasionally, and has certainly dealt in "bits of blood" in the way of horse flesh, and this, wo are fully satisfied, is all the blood for which he can justly be held accountable. Mr. Runyan is in no way con nected with the Paiko or Castner family. As to disclosures by ihe widow of Peter W. Parke, nothing of the sort is known in this quarter. If some of our contemporaries would wail for the Warren papers, they would perhaps have less "charming variety of particulars in regard to the murders, but such as they supplied the public wiih, would bo much more worthy of credence. Belvidere Apollo.. Premature Interments. The Courier des Etats TJnis, publishes a let ter from Paris, dated ihe 24th ult., which gives account of a movement in Paris to preveui the distressing and terrible possibility of premature burials. Tho following is au extract translated from lhat paper : " An estimable philanthropist has recently made a report to government respecting prema ture burials. According to his calculations, the delays now prescribed by law are insufficient. He has collected during some years past, a long list of persons supposed dead, who have aroused themselves at the moment when the winding sheet was about to be wrapped around them, or after they had been lowered in the grave. It is frightful to read this report of facts sustained by authentic proofs and then how many are unknown or discovered loo laic. " II! omened rumors arise occasionally to de velope some of the subterraneous dramas, which, genuine or fictitious, freeze the soul. Last winter a young and handsome artiste died sud denly of a violent malady. A young man whom her death had thrown into despair, was speak ing to a celebrated physician about her last mo ments, when ihe Doctor remarked that it was not uncommon in such cases to mistake for death what was only a long and deep lethargy. At these words the young man was stricken with terror. " If shu were not dead!" ex claimed he in agonv. But she had been bu ried ihe preceding day, and many and tedious formalities were requisite before permission could be obtained io re-open the grave. These were at last surmounted, the grave and coffin were re-opened, when ihe friendly (?) Doctor, who accompanied ihe trembling lover, said, " She is dead : but not more than two hours, for 1 yet feel the warmth aboui her heart." She had been burried two days ! The means of preventing such horrors are simple and well known. In Germany, a coun try of wise precautions, thero is provided to each cemetry, a hall, where the dead remain sometime before being committed to the ground In this hall the body, neatly attired, is laid upon a coucn before tne lips is placed a mirror which ihe slightest breath would cloud, and between the fingers a string, which on tho slightest movement, would cause a bell in the department of the keeper to ring; this hall is visited night and day hourly by vigilant inspeo tors, and as we were told at Frenchport scarcely a year passes thai the bell is not rung by one of their supposed corpses A Dr. Lyon has arrived at Now York, with a lad named Davis, said '.o be a clairvoyant, and repined io be able lo tell, when in a slate of Somnambulism, what is the real disease of any sick person, and what treatment (if any) wil remove it, and even what course has been pur sued previously, what medicines taken, &c. An Editor of some paper in N. Y., very un gallantly says that ho knows a lady who was iiU years of age 10 years ago, and at the pres ent time she is only 23. A Paris letter published in ihe Boston Alias says, that " Mr. C , an American lady, some seventy odd years of age, has been led to the altnr by a gallant Englishman, who 1m not seen thirty surwmers." Indian and Yankee. The water at 4ja t. inaw is very clear and very cold, so cold as t. be almost unendurable. A gentleman laieiv amused himself by throwing a small gold Coi in 20 feet water, and giving ii to any Ir,J;a;i who would bring ii up. Down they nlU1Ppii but after descending 10 or 12 feet they C3 ' up so chilled that alter several such ineffectu . attempts they gave it up. A Yankee st.mtW by observed that " if he would give it t() m for getting it he'd swing it up quicker than Imfo. ning," to which he consented; when Jonathan instead of plunging in as was expected, qujeiy look up a setting pole and dipping ihe end in a tar barrel, reached it down to the coin ami brought it up, and slipping it in his pocket XValk ed off, to the amazement of the Indian diven and the no small chagrin of the donor.- Co. Poughkeepsie Eagle. " SUGAR, COATED PILLS," If we were willing to limit ihe office of ia,:B to its proper sphere, and to cease eating Wnpil appetite expressed content, indigestion wouti be a much rarer occurrence in civilized com munities than it is observed to be. Hippocratr- remarked that severe perspirations ari.sinn d. ring sleep, without any other apparent cause, are a sure sign lhat too much nourishment u made use of. The day of reckoning will follow such a state of repletion, which clogs the boi! Iy functions, and may lead to sudden death bv some acute disease, when the individual u ap parently in good health. Dr. Smith's Sugar Coated) " Improved Indian Vegetable Pills," are all-efficacious to regulate the state of stomach, improve digestion, and purify fluids. As they are pleasant and perfectly harmless, they are resorted to exteuiivnlv by the dyspeptic, and all persons of sedentary h. its. No family should be without them. Dealers furnished at the New York College Health, 179 Greenwich street, New Yuri, a:. 1 sold by Agents in Monroe Co. Schoch & Spering, Stroudsburg. R. Huston t Co. do. Jno. Marsh 6f Co. Fennersville. IE? CA UTION. As a miserable imitation hij been made, by the name of" Sugar Coaled Piils.' it is necessary to be sure that Dr. G. Bei.jain:.! Smith's signature is on every box. Price 25 cena. Aug. 14, 1815. MARRIED, In Stroudaburg, on Saturday evening laM, hv ohn Musch, Esq, Mr. Samuel Phillips. anl Miss Phebe. Walton, both of Siroudsburg. In Chesuuthill tsp., on Tuesday last, by tb ivev. Helllg, Mr. UEORGE d. KELLER, bi:J Miss Martha Jane Brodhead, all of Mtmr-m cottniv. BARGAINS May be had at WELLES & EARL'S 4W Dry Goods Store, No. 05 Barclay siref, t doors above Greenwich street. New York, where the following Goods may be found, a: unexampled low prices, viz : Brown and Bleached Shirtings. Calicoes, the greatest assortment ever ofTerel on this side of the town. Muslin de Lames, ) , T , Ginghams, 31 ICS. slack and colored Alpaccas. Plaid Alpaccas. Flannels, White, Red and Yellow. Cloths, Cassimeres, Saiinetts and Kentucky Jeans. Shawls, a great variety. Hosiery, from 1 shilling per pair to 4 shilling'. Together with a great variety of Fancy Good. N. B. J. W. Strader, formerly ofSimui:!- burg and Shawnee, Monroe county, would li happy to see his old friends, and the Merchant of Monroe and Pike counties, ai the above Stor?, where thev can be supplied with all descrip tions of Fancy and Staple Dry Goods, on a reasonable terms, for cash or a limned cred.i, as at any other establishment in the Cuy. New York, September 11, 1845. To the Voters of Monroe county. Fellow-Citizens : Berne oncouraged it a number of mv friends, I am induced to oft myself, at the approaching Fall Election, as candidate for the office of CORONER. Should I be elected, you can rely upon my c1' charging the duties of said office with fideli'I Your Obedient Servant. WILLIAM H.WHITE. Siroudsburg, September 11, 1S45. To the Electors of Monroe uounty. Fellow Citizens Encouraged by mar' of my friends, I most respectfully offer rap' as a candidate for tho office of m thn ensuim? neneral election. Should , lonm rrnr fnnnpitv anil rlaim to the ofHcfi ihv nf vnur auffrares. mv most anxious ityecy and unceasing efforts shall be to merit you3?' discharge of its. duties. Wiih sentiments of respect, I remain yours, &e. WILLIAM A. BRODHEAD Lower Smiihfield, Sept. 4, 1845.