JEFFERSONIAN REPUBLICAN Thursday, December 25, 1845. Terms, $2,00 in advance: $2.25, naif yearly; and $2,50 if not psud hefoic tho end of the vcar. England and (he United States. The question of tear or peace, is now the all absorbing topic of the people of this and ihe mother country. The speculations thereon are nearly as various and numerous, as the minds that conceive and the tongues that utter them. We have already given it as our opinion, that there will be no war. That opinion we now repeat. Our rights in Oregon, up to the 49th degree of North latitude, are so clear and indisputable, and the fee of the land between that Hue and the Columbia River, is worth so little to the mass of the English nation, that the govern ment of that country will never go to war about it. They may send ambassadors to negotiate, their press may retaliate the bravado of our own, and their people become excited on the subject as well as ourselves; but they will nev er commit so great un outrage upon civilization as to declare war upon us, for not accepting a iinc South of the 49th degree. If they do pro ceed to open hostilities, it will be for something else than that even if that should be their ex pressed cause. Our government has made a liberal offer to England to settle this long-standing difficulty. The proposition has been declined by Mr. Pa kenham, the British Minister, without his giv ing it that consideration, which its importance demanded. It is said, however, that he reject ed it without consulting his government. We liope it is so for it. is not at all likely that a more favorable offer will be made by the Uni ted States. Much as we are inclined to peace, and would deplore the evils of a war, we hard ly think our government ought to recede, mate rially, from that proposition. The Democrat on the Message. Our neighbor of the Democrat is still tugging away at the President's Message, and trying to make it assume an appearance and character different from what any body else has seen proper to give it. In tho course of his "hero ics" upon it', he says, " it fell upon ihe Whigs like a clap oj thunder on a sunshiny day," or something like it we quote from memory. This is rather news to us. Even if it had come to us, unannounced, it would not have created much sensation. But when we reflect, that for -weeks before its delivery, its principal contents were known, and published throughout the country, it requires a stretch of imagination, such as few persons can accomplish, to realize that it fell like a " clap of thunder," &c. As far as we can learn, the Whigs generally ap prove the course of the President in regard to Oregon, and condemn, in unmeasured terms, his free trade principles on the subject of the Ta liffl Try again, friend Schoonover. Perhaps next time you will be able to make a little more out of the Message. This being the first docu ment of the kind which has been delivered, since your accession to the editorial dignity, of course the people will orerlook. small mistakes. It is, moreover, a good one for you to practise upon, and if you are only diligent, perhaps you can make yourself perfect, before you exhaust its topics. The Harrisbur? Intelligencer. We mention, for the benefit of those who -would like to have good a paper from the seat of government, that the Harrisburg Intelligencer will be published semi-weekly, during the ap proaching session of the Legislature, at the low price of SI per copy. We recommend the In telligencer to the peo'ple of this county, satisfied that they will be pleased with it, if they take it. The Columbian Magazine. The Columbian, for January is a gem. Be sides two superb steel engravings and a plate of fashions, it contains forty-eight pages of as good literary matter as we have ever seen col lected together in such a magazine It is pub lished in New York, at $3 a year. Now is the time to subscribe. Hand in your names and we will forward them. JT The editor of the Mount Holly Mirror lias in his possession one of the tickets printed for Locofoco use at the last Presidential elec tion, which is headed as follows : Polk, Dal las and the Tariff of '42 !" This was a part of the infamous game of fraud and delusion through which Mr. Polk gained the power and patron age that he is now wielding for the destruction of American prosperity. Bel Apollo. Congrcs. The past has been an exciting week at Wash ington. In the Senate, besides a mass of mi nor business, a number of deeply important quostious have been agitated. The resolutions of Gen. Cass, instructing the respective com mittees io inquire into the condition of our na tional defences, both by laud and sea, may be mentioned as the most prominent. They eli cited a. discussion which lasted several days, and in which many Senators took part. Some of them gave it as their solemn opinion, that no war would grow out of our present difficulties with England about Oregon and whilst most of them spoke in a spirit of forbearance, all were united in declaring that the honor and in tegrity of the Union must be preserved at all hazards. On their passage, the vote stood, yeas 46, nays 0. Mr. Allen introduced a reso lution authorizing the President to give a year's notice to England of our intention to put an end to the treaty of joint-occupancy of Oregon, which will be considered in the course of a few days. Mr. Atcheson also introduced a series of resolutions relative to the establishment of a Territorial Government in Oregon. In the House, the Bill admitting Texas into the Union, as a State, has passed by nearly one hundred majority. Many of the members who voted against it, wished to have an opportunity of expressing their sentiments on the subject, but were prevented by having the previous question moved upon them. This application of the gag-law, is not at all relished. In the Se nate, the Bill has been referred to the Commit tee on the Judiciary, and when they report up on it, it will no doubt be more gravely consid ered, than it was in the popular branch. Mr. Levin, the Native American member from Phil adelphia county, has introduced a resolution relative to the amendment of the Naturalization Laws, and at our last dales there was an ani mated debate going on as to whether the sub ject should be referred to the Judiciary Com mittee, or to a Select Committee to be appoint ed for the purpose. This resolution has occa sioned considerable feeling in the House. Easton Whig. Hallo, Pennsylvanians! Did or did not James Buchanan, Wilson McCandless, Richard Brodhead, Benj. A. Bid lack, Pottsville Hughes, Samuel W. Black, etc. when they traversed your State in 1844, as sure ' you in effect that Polk was as much a Ta riff man as Clay ? They duped and cheated or told you the truth which was it ? Have you read Walker's Report yet ? Do your jour nals which huzzaed for Polk, Shunk, and the Tariff of '42,' lay before you the substance and drift of that Report ? Have you pondered on Mr. Polk's second official explanation of his Kane letter 1 Does it tally best with the Whig or the Loco-Foco expositions on the stump last year? And do you stand ready to be swindled again whenever your office seekers have ano ther axe to grind ? Think the matter over, Pennsylvania!! ! and keep thinking till the time comes to act! Tribune. Some of the Locofoco papers, in the Tariff interest, pretend to be disappointed with Mr. Polk on account of his hostility to the protec tive policy. This is sheer gammon.' The knaves knew in the outset that Polk was a bit ter enemy of the interests of free labor ; and ev ery time they asserted the contrary, they were guilty of the basest deception and falsehood. Mr. Polk has spoken nothing but what every intelligent man expected him to utter; and if he does not now go on and extirpate the pro tective features of the tariff, he will prove false to his own sentiments false to the " democrat ic" hatred of free industry and false to the darling purposes of the Slave Power, whose tool and instrument he is. Sussex Register. A Member of Congress. Speaking of Mr. McConnell, of Alabama, a Washington letter writer says: The honorable gentleman reach ed town to-day, dressed in the most singular and outlandish style. He had on a pair of high legged boots, coming up to his knees. His pantaloons were of buckskin, and the legs were thrust inside his boots. His coat was white, and his cap was of rough bear skin. He im mediately commenced a grand spree in honor of his re-election, and he has spent the day, I am told, in rovisiiing his old haunts. Of such are some of the legislators of this free and hap py land. The prediction has been made that the next Governor of Pennsylvania will be a Whig ; and when we see the names of Gen. James Jrvin, of Centre County, and Hon. James Cooper, of Adams, brought forward for the office, we feel inclined to look with confidence for the verifi cation of the prophecy. Sussex Register, Fifty-one buildings were burnrd down at Bridgeport, Coniiectiui, un. ih.u U'tt iiibt. The Canada Press and the message. Some of the Canada papers are quite savage in relation to the President's Message, and threaten terrible things. Witness the following from the Montreal Herald : " We regret to see that the tone of the Mes sage is decidedly unfriendly, and that there ap- pears in it a studied determination to make no compromise whatever of the conflicting claims of the two countries The successful viliany practised upon Mex- ico in Texas, is now recommended to be adopt ed towards Great Britain in Oregon. Grants of land are promised to all who choose to go and settle thete, and tho certainty of their title to possession being confirmed by the United States Government being distinctly held out. Mr. Polk will find that England is not Mexico. " The style of impudent bravado adopted to wards the European governments, and the threats against them if they dare to establish any new Colonies in North America, although peculiarly silly, are intended no doubt to irri tate ; they show clearly that if Mr. Pojk can possibly excite a war during his administration he will certainly do it." English Railways. The London Times has published a docu ment relative to the railway interest of England, which had excited much interest and a great deal of alarm. The document presents the as tonishing number of 1,263 projected companies, io carry out which will require nearly two thirds of the national debt of England!! Even the deposit often per cent, will alone absorb 53, 136,350. It further appears that there are 47 railways completed, representing a capital of .70,680,687. In the course of construction there are 118 lines of railway, to complete which, even wilh-the Parliamentary power of borrowing one third on debenture, will absorb .67,356,326; so that the invested capital in railways, leaving entirely out of view the new announcements, is already the enormous sum of 113,612,012! But if the old, the new, and the announced undertakings are added together, wiih the ten per cent, deposit, we have the in credible sum of 649,573,790 required for this branch of trade alone. The world never wit nessed such folly, knavery, and madness before. Elliott, who stood charged with the murder of young Kendall, at Washington City, has been discharged. The discharge was granted, on the presentment of the Grand Jury, that Mr. Kendall came to his death from a pistol shot fired by the said Elliott in self-defence. Disease among the Turnips. The Liver pool Mercury of the 14th uh. publishes an ex tract of a letter from a magistrate of the Coun ty of Louth, slating that " the destruction of the turnip crop is much more complete than that of the potatoe. All the Swedes are rotten at the core; yet their external appearance is as good as usual " Accounts from the south of Ens land also state, that the turnips there have been attacked in a similar way." By the use of a "sponge and vinegar, chalk marks can be removed from a brick wall, so says a writer in the North American. The Duties of County Auditors. The Harrisburg papers contain a Circular from John N. Purviance, Esq., Auditor Gener al of the Stale, to the County Auditors, notifying them of the provisions of tho Act of April 10, 1845, which makes it their duty to examine the dockets, records, and offices of Proihonota ries, Registers and Recorders, from September 1st, 1840, to the 31sl of August, 1844, inclu sive, agreeably to the Acts of April Cth, 1840, and March lOih, 1810, and if either of the of ficers should have during any year received for fees a sum exceeding in the aggregate $1500, to certify the amount. The circular also calls attention to the 40th Section of the Act of April 15th, 1834, which provides that the Couniy Auditors shall audit, settle and adjust all the accounts of the Treas urer of the County with the State Treasury, embracing Stale tax, tavern licenses, retailer's licenses, hawkers' and pedlars' licenses, tin and clock pedlars' licenses, pamphlet laws, militia fines, &c. And io facilitate this labor, as well as to establish a uniform and convenient mode for settling the accounts, a form to be ob served in making reports to the department has been prepared. Tho Cincinnati News says, that the pork packing business has fairly commenced. Nerv ous people have moved out of the city, they cannot endure the shrieks of ihe dying hoga. Why thev do not Lay. The reason why hens do not lay in the winier is said to be the want of animal food, which they get in .summer in abundance, in tho form of insecis. An telligent editor in the VVest says the reason is that they havn't limp, 'He Uys, bnug mi. shun. iTIatters in Oregon. The people of Oregon, according to state ments in the St. Louis Reporter, are virtually divided into, three parties. First the British parly under the auspices of the Hudson's Bay Company; secondly, that portion of the Amer ican emigrants who, from various motives, favor I the plans of the Hudson's Bay Company; and thirdly, that portion of the American emigrants who are in favor of the extension over the ter ritory of the laws of the United States. Emi- grants depend, for the supply of clothing, pow der, iron, and many other necessary articles, on the accommodations they procure from the stores and trading establishments of the Hud son's Bay Company. American emigrants sell their surplus products to that company, and purchase of its agents the comforts and many of the. necessaries of life. Those who are well affecied towards the company, it is said, are treated liberally, while those who peak boldly in favor of the United States Government and its claims, receive but little favor. The Bri tish party and that portion of the Americans who favor their plans are said to be in favor of an independent government. The American settlers, it would seem, are also divided on other grounds a portion contending for the laws and regulations adopted in a "mass con vention," and another portion for ihose passed by a legislature held last year. Among the acts of the legislature was one declaring that negro slavery should not exist in the territory, and that every negro found in the territory, at the expiration of two years from the passage of the law, should receive a stated number of ! ,Mho8 al lhe whipping post This ,aw wa8 subsequently repealed and anoiher passed, re quiring the negroes to be sold at public auction. There are but a few slaves there, and they were taken by their masters a few years ago. The Newburyport Herald, after contradict ing some statements in the papers discreditable to merchants of that place engaged in the Or egon and Sandwich Islands trade, says: " The actual distance to be sailed from New York to the mouth of the Columbia river, by way of Cape Horn, is estimated at 15,000 miles. A ship canal at Panama, to be cut through the Isthmus of Darien, which is only 37 miles, would save a thousand more than one half the distance, reducing the voyage out and back to less than the time now required to make the passage out. The distance from N. York to the mouth of the Columbia river by land is about 3,700 miles. The territory which the British claim in Oregon, North "of 49 degrees, is represented by those who best know it, as bleak, inhospitable and barren, abounding in volcanic mountains and glaciers. It is now valuable only for its furs, and these, through the indefatigable efforts of the Hudson's Bay Com pany, are rapidly diminishing. The American colony in the valley of the Wallamette, is said to number about 8,000 souls, though this esti mate is probably overated. The climate is considered equable and salubrious, and the soil deep, strong and fertile. The crops never fail, the water is remarkably pure and the water privileges abundant. Shoujd we extend our possessions over North Oregon as far as the Bomanzoff mountains near the seventeenth par allel, we shall reach that latitude where sun does not set in Summer. Near the mountains, in Summer the sun appears to stand as still as it did in the days of Joshua. In June it is 25 degrees above the horizon at 'midnight,' and the only mode of knowing that it is 'midnight,' is watching the sun when it begins to ascend. Fowls go to roost at 7 P. M. and repose until the sun is well up. In Winter it is of course the reverse, as in the high latitudes the sun is not seen for six weeks." The .Hcxicau minister. The New York Courier has learned from a reliable source the particulars of the appoint ment of Mr. Slidell, of Louisiana, as United States Minister to Mexico. It aeems that Mr. Parrott, whose brother is already a Consul at Mazatlan, a Mexican port, was sent to the Cny of Mexico to sound the Government; and he ascertained the fact that they were ready to ne gotiate and willing to settle all the difficulties with the United Simes for money. He return ed to New Orleans the last of October, and went immediately to Washington. Mr. Slidell, learning the result of Mr. Parrott'a mission, made application for tho appointment, which he obtained. The basis of the negotiation, we un derstand, is the Rio Grande for the boundary, from ihe mouth to the source, and thence a line North to our boundary; and the sum-re quired, or which it was intimated would be fe quired, as a consideration is. 3x5,000,000 io-: wards which the amount due- by Mexico la A merican clannas, will be taken in part pay ment,' Upwards of 40,000 emigrants have loft Bre men, this jearjur. th.e United Statqa. . . nformenisHi as it is. Mrs. Smith, the widow of the Prophet J0e has addressed a letter to the editor of the New York Sun, in which -she gives the following picture of Mormonisrh; as it now exists under the management of the Council of Twelve. She is said to be very wealthy, and shows a disposition to condemn this great system of n. inquity and imposture, fostered by her late hus. band. " The laws of the United States are qnite good enough for me and my children, and my settled intention is to remain where I am, iak0 care of my properly, and if I cannot educate my children here, send them to New York or New England for that purpose. Many of ihB Mormons will no doubt remove in the Sprtnu and many more will remain here; and itotliju,, would give me greater pleasure than to have a mixed society in Nauvoo, as in other cities, ami all exclusive religious distinctions abolished. " must now say, that I never jor a moment believed in what my husband called his appari tions and revelations, as I thought him laboring under a diseased mind; yet, they may all be true, as a prophet is seldom without credence or honor,, excepting in his own family or coun try; but as my conviction is to the contrary, shall educate my children in a different laith, and teach them to obey and reverence the laws and institutions of their country." She also says : I am left here, sir, with a family of children to attend to, without any means of giving them an education, for there u not a school in the city, nor is it intended there o Vin H Qnv Kara nr of qiiv rttlin !. I """" '- v "" wneie the men who now govern this infatuated, sim ple minded people, have sway. I have nut the least objection that these petty tyrants remove to California, or any other remote place, out of the world if they wish, for they will never be of any service to the Mormons or the human family, no matter where they go. Their object is to keep the people over whom they rule in the greatest ignorance, and most abject reli gious bondage, and if these poor, confiding creatures remove with them, they will die in the wilderness." The amount of money in the depositories of the U. S. Government on the 1st instant, sub ject to the draft of the Secretary of the Treas ury, was $8,922,885 42. Before the Presidential election, the locofoco cry was 'Polk, Dallas and the Tariff of 1842' Now, it i, Harrah for Polk and Dallas the Tariff may go to the d 1 !' Democracy is al ways the same ! There are a couple of Editors in Lebanon county, in this state, who unblushingly declare that they 'want money !' Funny lhat, ain't uT "Never too Late. The Knoxville Regi- ter announces the marriage in Jefferson coun ty, Tennessee, of Mr. Frederick Pulse, aged one hundred and two years, to Miss Dorcas Man- non, aged thirty four. "NATURE AND EXPERIENCE OUR GUIDE." The extraordinary and well authenticated cures wrought by the celebrated Sugar Coat ed Pills, or Dr. Smith's Improved Indian Ve getable Pills, have naturally drawn ptihlic at tention to them. Perhaps in the history of Medicine, from the time of Hippocrates to the present day, there is no evidence of a medical compound obtaining equal celebrity in so short a time. There was never a medicine recom mended by such high authority as Dr. Smith Pills. Besides their great curative properties. (possessing as they do, such astonishing power to open all the natural drains of the body, viz the Lungs, Kidneys, Skin, and Bowels,) they are, unlike other pills, extremely pleasant be ing coated with sugar, and as they do not grfp, nor produce nausea, or any other unpleasant conseouences. thev havn heinme verv onoular j - --j i for Dyspepsia, Head-ache, Costiveness, Biliom complaints, Foul Stomach, Fevers, Wornu, Want of Appetite, Impurities of the Blood, Ob structions and Female Complaints generally. Colds, &c. One of the most influential ami benevolent ladies in New York, Mrs. S. A Gould, Matron of the U. S. Naval Hospital. says, "There is no medicine in hr knowleda1 so well adapted to the numerous ailment mankind, as Dr. Smith's Sugar Coated Pills She especially recommends them to ladies j Read her certificate in the pamphlet. Dealers furnished at the New York College ot Health, 17S Greenwich street, New York, and sold by Agents in Monroe o. Schoch & Spering, Stroudsburg. - J R. Huston & Co. do. Jno. Marsh j Co. Fennersville. ID CAVTlON:As a miserahle imitation b been made, by the name of" Sugar Coaled jfr&, it is necessary to be, sure that Dr- (5. Bnjaro" Smith's KifTtiatlirn io nn ni'nrir hnv Prirp 95 cenW- Aug. 14, 1815, "