'.4 . The whole art ok Government consists in the art of being honest. Jefferson. STROUDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1846. No, 19! VOL 7. wpdc Turn ilolhrc rtnr nnnnm In rulcnnri' Two dollrttS hefore t!iC did of the year! Two itollars and a half. Those who receive their p;oer Ik a carrier or staire drivers employed by the propru;- I v.i nncrs discontinued until stll arrearages arc paid, except at the option of the Editors. , ,, ,,,., hvittbe inserted three weeks for one dollar: tweniy-fije ccnu L-V" -....i,iupnt insnriinn i.ircerones in proportion. A hiWT.il discount will be made to yearly advertisers ' , rSlu lott-rs aii.lrnMi.d in the Editors must be post paid. JOB FIMNTIIVG. Having a general assonmcni o, -; mental rvpc, - '-- j .,"' description of Ufa Cards, Circulars, fism sic;is noiw, Blank Receipts, JUSTICES, LEGAL AND OTHER BLANKS, PAMPHLETS, &c. Printed with neatness and despatch.on reasonable temis AT THE OFFICE OF THE The Poetry of She Poor. BY R. NICOLL. We are lowly very lowly Misforume is our crime ; We liavo been trodden under loot From all rccotded time. A yoke upon our neck is laid, A burden to endure : its? To suffer is our legacy The portion of the poor ! We are lowly very lowly And scorned from day to day Yet we have something of our own Power cannol take away. Bv tyrants we are loiled to death . By cold and hunger killed ; But peace is in our hearts it speaks Of duties all fulfilled! We are lowly very lowly Nor house nor home have we But there's a heritage for us While we have eyes to see. They cannot hide the lovely stars Words in creation's book Although ihey hold their fields and lands Corrupted by our look ! We are lowly very lowly, And yet the fairest flowers That by ihe wayside raise their eyes Thank God, they still are ours ; Ours is the streamlet's mellow voice, And ours the common dew, We still dare gaze on hill and plain, And field and meadow too! We are lowly, very Jowly, But when the cheerful sprimr Comes forih with flowers upon her feet, To hear the throstle sing. Although we dare not seek the shade Where haunt the forest deer. The waving leaves we still can 'Bee;'1"" The humming buds can hear. We are lowly very lowly; Our hedge-row paths are gone;1 Where woodbines laid their fairy hands The hawthorn's nest upon. Yet Blender mercies null are felt, And heaven doth endure, And hears ihe prayers that upwards rise From the afflicted poor! BV REQUEST. , , ; ' From the New York Observer The Kli uted Lily. BY PROFESSOR ALDEN OF WILLIAMS COLLF.Gn What aU this lily? said Mr. Parkman. as he slopped by a hly whose white petals were, withering before they had fairly opened. He ; was walking in his garden with his daughter Louisa. " Well. Sir," said the gardener resting a mo ment from hie labor, " il lianlhadfa great run of ill luck. ' In the first place the bulb got a wound ! land.'r from the spade when it wus transplanted : and . 1 think the idea of unblighted and fadeless then U wasn't set out as soon after it was la-j flowers is a beautiful one." ken up ai it should 'have been : the late frost,) "It is so ; but it is a poetical rather than a too, lhat we had in the iatr part of May nipped (spiritual idea. All moral perfection will be it a llnle ; so lhat taking all'iogether, it has had found in heaven : every thing necessary to ihe rather a hard time of it, and it is no wonder coinpleie perfection and the highest happiness tli3t it don't make a fine bloom. It is badly flighted, sure enough; but there is many a fair ihing in this world that is badly blighted. There is a land, Sir, where there is no blight nor frotji." . ' Ye, James," replied Mr. Parkman, " and we musUseejOiiiahaUweihaveiuinterebt ihere.V riibpeT'lsaid UdRJa mesflfhole m nly . the SaV viour'hagoVto'-pr Tortus both there. But dont you think, Sir, there will be flowers in heaven ?" Mr. Parkman smiled, and made no immedi ate reply. James continued : " There will be music there, and why shouldn't there be flow ers there ?" " I am not prepared to say that there will not be flowers in heaven." j 1 always love to think there will be flowers dhere, and flowers which will never fade." " You could bo happy there, even if that should not be the case, could you not ?" " I can be happy in any place in which God sees fit 10 place me in any place where his presence is not wanting: but as flowers are among the finest things which he has made, and as the blessed Saviour was a great lover of flowers when he was on the earih, I think, (if 1 lie Lord should see fit,) it would be all the bel ter if the)' were to bloom in heaven." " What authority have you for saying that the Saviour was a lover of flowers?" " Because it is expressly said so in the good book ; and if it wasn't, we might know that he was a great friend to flowers, because he was so gentle and lovely himself." - " I don't recollect any passage of Scripture which expressly affirms that the Saviour was peculiarly fond of flowers." Doesn't he say, sir, " consider the lilies of J the field how ihey grow, ihey toil not neither jdo the3r spin, yet I say unto you that even Sol- I omon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these. Wherefore if God so clotho ihe ! field," &c. You see, Sir, that he ascribes the clothing of ihe flower with beauty to God, and not 10 nature, as the heathen among us do." Thinking that he had stood idle long enough, ! i he prepared to resume his work saying as he i i did so, "Well, whatever may be the case with ' my old friends here," pointing to the lilies and j the beauty of tho morning." roses and other flowers, " I hope lhat dear ol-l " Yes Sir," said she with a sweet, yet lan ive plant of yours will be there." I ql sniile, " 1 enjoy every thing." "That must depend," said Mr Parkman sol- j " You do not suffer much pain then ?" emnlv. " in one sense, at least, upon herself." I j When they had passed on so far as to be out j ! of James' hearing, Louisa said 10 her faiher, do you believe there will be flowers in heav- , ? "It is a point, my daughter, in respect tojther's eyes filled with tears, she said, "mother j which I have neither belief or unbelief, j Bible is silent respecting it." The 1 j " But James seems to be certain about it, and j he is a great reader of the Bible you know." " In James' case, you have an example of the I effect of desire, in causing belief without suffi cient evidence. We believe what we strongly . desire 10 be true, on very slight evidence. James is such a lover of flowers, his life, as it j were, is so bound up in ihem, that he can hard ly form a conception of a happy placo where they shall be warning. Hence, he strongly de sires that the' may be found in paradise, and j hence believes that they will be found there, on j very slight evidence ; or rather on none at all." 1 j " I didn't sec as the passage which he quo - jted, proved that the Saviour was a peculiar ad - I mirer of flowers." j " True," said her faiher, " the words were spoken by Him to illustrate a point very differ- ent from the one we were considering, yet I have no doubt but that the Saviour as a perfect man, must have had a keen sensibility to the beauties of nature, and hence must have been ;an admirer of flowers. James is there without doubt right in his premises, but I do not that his conclusion follows. It may be, see and ' doubtless was a fact that the Saviour loved these beautiful specimens of his Father's handy work, but I do noj think that it follows from this fact that there will be flowers in the better of the soul will be found there. The great question is are,we prepared for a residence there V" This suggestion awakened thoughts in Lou isa's mind which were not aliogeilier pleasant. She was not a chrisiinu : she intended 10 be come one, but was not ready yet. She was in terested iri lhe subject of religion, and hived to hear persons converse upon it, and to converse upon it herself, provided Us truths were not thereby brought home too closely to her own heart. At such times, she was always inclined to change the conversation, if it could be done with propriety. It was in part owing to this that she made the following remark, " Father as I was looking at the lily, a little while ago, I was led to think of Ellen Rodgers." " When did you see her last ?" il Yesterday." " EIow did you find her V " She was much weaker than she was last Monday. Then she walked from the bed to her window, and now they have to carry her. She told tne she had walked across her pleas ant chamber for the last time." We had beiier ride over and see her this morning. Should you like to go?" " Yes, Sir." .The carriage was soon ready, and a short drive brought them to the door of a small, neat j house, around which everything bespoke econ omv and comfort They entered, and ascended 10 the chamber where they found the invalid silting, supported by pillows, at the window which commanded a view of a beautiful meadow, and a small lake whose surface shone brightly under the beams of the morning sun. She had seen sixteen summers, and it was plain that she was never .,. . i r ...i,:..u i..,.i -l.t, .i ,uec,"BUW"M""41 "au "u'"cu so much beauty the scene spread out before " J i,r Tn r,nlir,'hha,?hflfln rRa.-irflRr1 liful tin I nnntnrnntinn linrl aivnr. fl plparnfifis IO her complexion, a bloom to her cheek and a brilliancy to her eye which increased her beau- ty. and told, at the same time, that l was beau y brightening for the tomb.' ' Good morning, LUen," said Mr. Parkman, as he entered tho chamber, "you are enjoying " Scarcely any. I bey nurse me so tenticr- Jv that I should hardly know I was Sick but for my failing strength." " lour strength sensibly declines I " Yes, I cannot last long." Seeing her mo- father would like to know lhat Mr. Parkman here." Her mother retired for a moment. " Do you ever feel that it is hard to be called away so young1 from the beautiful world, and your dear friends." Not a shade passed over her transparent countenance as she said, " I cannot say lhat I do. My life has been a very pleasant one, through tho mercy of my Heavenly Father ; and addresses her thus : "Behold thou art be- meeting a wall. It was proposed to blow up and if he sees fit to remove me hence, what j trothed unto me with this ring, according to ihei an old building; a hole had been-dug under 11,. have I say? I have committed my all 10 him. riie3 0f Moses and Israel." , capable of holding a kilogrammo of gunpowder;. I feel sad when I ihink of ihe loneliness and j 'pjje raarrjage contract, which is an indispen-, one hundred and twenty grammes of the cotton. griet ol my parents when 1 am gone, but Uod can comfort ihem and" will." Mr. Parkman did not think it best to exhaust j her sliength by continuing ihe conversation Ion - ' ger. At her request he offered a prayer, and I 1 1 U ' HI w.awv.wu .IV I... W II UK II I W V. V I ' U II II I III II ! promises, iviihdrew with his daughter. The ride home was a silent one. The scene J which had been witnessed was left to make its own impression. The Armistice is to be terminated, and the War renewed vigorously, by the decision of the Cabinet at Washington, which was logeiher nearly all of Monday. A special messenger, probably Col. Eaton, who brought the Monte rey despatches, has been sent back wiih orders to this effect. The armistice was doubtless conceded by Gen. T. under ihe impression that the two governments were on the eve of pacif ication. Lt. Armistead, however, left New Orleans on the 1st with despatches communi cating ihe failure of one offer of negotiation, and he has probably already reached the army. The Union supposes that the fresh orders to terminate the armistice and go ahead, will reach the army in 16 days. "The Mexicans have been driven from one of their strongholds," says the Union, "and one of the keys of Mexico is now in our hauds." Gen. Taylor's official despatches do our iroops great honor. A pear free at New Haven, 200' years old, has blossomed within a few days past". t Ceremonies at a Jexvisn Wedding. A Jewish marriage is an imposing spectacle. Formerly most of their marriages took place in ihe synagogue, but latterly they have been more frequently solemnized in their houses. At the hour- appointed, the bride and bridegroom are severally conducted, the bridegroom by main friends, and the bride by friends of her own sex, to the place appointed for the celebration ... I of the ceremony. The company assembled to i,nM. .h rnremonv. is usually very lar-e.-'of Sometimes there are as- many friends as from j '-''- two to three. hundred. There must be len men, j otherwise the marriage would not be valid.- When the company have all assembled, and I the priest or reader who officiates on the occa-! sion, is ready, the bride and bridegroom are Ud frnm nrtnthfir room into the' olace where the ceremony is performed, under a velvet canopy, i which is supported by four poles ; the bride, being supported oft the arms of two women, - iand the bridegroom on the srms ot two men. 1 1 nese are always inu pdrcuis ui mc .o...i.a.,. .bt.,....b ,..i.... u.u... !. I T ! 1 .1. 1... ... t 1.. t-kVtI.rw1 if it It f I(vml K, vr!ll i' about to be marneo,- prov.ueu ue 1";., alive and able to be present. ll not, men wie task is coffined 10 ihe nearest relations. The bride, on being conducted 10 the place where ! may. in a mouitied sense, oe .u 10 ue .1 mir the marriage is to be solemnized, is invariably ; den 10 her. To such an extent, indeed ,l?e veiled, in token of the assumed modesty of her ; Ming carried among the body, thai a husband character. When they reach the spot, the ' "hosfc wife has been seven years married bride is placed opposite ihe bridegroom, and lm. w"ut having any children, may put he . ' nnf .t' ',,,,: n, KnmP nc-rsonser- the priestnot ihe rabbi, a some persons er- 1. . ),,; r,Iron ohm nr asbnau-'roneously suppose ,iaving taken a glass 01 y oujjjjuoc; naming - - his hand, says a brief prayer, of which ! wiftC til 1 1. P.. 1 ! ... C llin InwlltTfr n3BC3(IPtf (lie IIHIUVVIIIJJ die uo ituunij; iujou.o . "Blessed art thou, 0 Lord our God, King ot the universe ! who hath prohibited unto us the yr Beelz, the correspondent of the Arade bciroihed, hut hath allowed unto us those that my (Jf jeri,Ui wlu, has lately returned from, a 1 are nameu uy 1110 means 01 canopy aim weu - uinc ring, dicsscu dmuuu, . ..... - O o ' r 1 1 T -.11 iU. i ness; the voice of merriment ot the brioegrooms r, from out their canopies, and yotiihs for their is j musical feasts. Blessed art thou, 0 Lord! the ner Ol nis peopje israei y uit; mean ui . wmcn nas oeen demonslrated 10 Ills piesence. canopy and wedlock. Blessed art ihou, 0 ; profcSsor Schoenbein, of Bale, has discovered Lord, our Lord; King of the universe ! who has ,jJal By 8UbjCcing colion lo a certairv process, created joy and gladness; bridegroom and bride; whcn is fitj a 8ecret, he can transform it into delight and song, pleasure and sympathy. - a diflerent substance, which difl'ers apparency Speedily, 0 Lord our God, let there be heard, bul sighiy, but which posesses highly inllam in rhe cities of Judah and in the streets of Je- maDie an(j explosive properties. Any firearm rtfsalem, the voice of joy and the voice of glad- can be chared wiih this coffon powder quite rejoicer of the bridegroom" with the bride." ,taDje ,,0W(er js necessary. "I fired," write After this prayer is said by the priest, the 1 Mr. Beeiz, "at the distance of forty-eight pa bridegroom and brido severally drink of the ces, with an ordinary musketr loaded wiih ouo wine laid before them; and the bridegroom goes gramme eight decigrammes of the vegetable pow- , round the bride three limes, and the bride round the bridegroom twice. The bridegroom then takes tho ring and puts it on the brides' finger, ; sable lhjnfT in aj lhe jewj3h marriages, is next read, in which the bridegroom binds himself to j three pounds ol gunpowder could naruiy nnve take the bride as his lawful wife, according to ; shaken, was made a complete wreck." j the law of Moses and Israel, and that he will maintain, honor, and cherish her. It is farther distinctly specified that he shall keep her in decent clothing, 'f he sum ho is to settle on her in the erent of his dying first is also spR - i cified. The priest then drinks another glass of wine, and after a short prayer, the bride and bridegroom partake of the wine. The empty glass is then laid upon tho ground, and the bridegroom siamping upon it, breaks it into pie ces. The lesson meant 10 be taught the newly-married parties by ihe breaking of the glass beneath the bridegroom's feel, is lhat they must also, sooner or laler, fall beneath the power of death, and that they ought, consequently, so to keep the world under their foet as thai, whon they come to die, they may have no ground for fear. This part of the ceremony being over, all present shout with one voice in Elebrew, "May it turn out happily," and lhe whole affair is then ended. The scene is aliogeUicr very imposing, and the effect is very considerably heightened by the personal attractions and handsome dresses of the Jewesses, and the touching Hebrew melody played during the greater part of the ceremony by a band special ly engaged for the purpose. When lhe cere mony is concluded, ihe evening is spent in re joicing and fcsiivily. Before concluding niy .accouiii of thoare- f monies observed at a Jewish manage, it is right to remark, that even the nuptials uf'ihe poorer persons of the Hebrew community kij solemnized on a scale of great splendor. deed, it would be difficult for mere speci;.ttr -to say whether the parties were poor or nr from the appearance of the assemblage betort htm; for rich persons often attend ihe wedding of their poorer brethren, afcd invariably make point of presenting the bride and bridegroom 1 .. 1 1 -.! ,itil-..i- fn litt. , wiin some nanus..,,, g.,.-, money or plate, according 10 the c.rcumstan- ces of ihe parties. The presents so rec -nii.? always cover the expenses? in many instants they considerably exceed ihei'rr. But f'esntv.s this, there is a benevolent Jewish Society; r.' tablished for the express purpose of giving small j marriage portions to poor Jewish girls. ,'lMin amount given varies irom tnree umiureu io-iwh r .1 1 I 1 hundred and fifty dollars. As intimately connected with ihe marriages of the Jews, 1 ought here to rernarK Hiat noin- . . .--lf , mg can rxceetl tne anxiety 01 tiiarneu jewer - - T. ; on comempi ; sim eci; hiumicucss muwic.. 1 Jewess is so well aware of thf, thai her life : away by divorce. The circumstance, however, J . . of a Jewess being divorced by ber husband on o , j 'his account,- h one of exceedingly rare occur-- i f C II C t) . important Discovery. J0riiey in Switzerland and Ha Jy, im rceemiy . - ,,.. ar, 6ve WIiness ioa urilliam uiscoverv. uul'ii an eye ... . . . - , as wej as wi,h common ouupoHder, and' will ; pr0pe lne Same ball as from a common gun; to obtntn same effect, only half as much of the vege- t der; the ball, which was one of the largest size,. passed through three planks, each an inch in thickness, and was divided into three pieces by powder were placed in ll; the building, whicti j 'Plle following are said to be lhe principal advantages of the cotton-powder: 1st, it leaves hi the fire-arms no residuum; 2d, it lake fire suddenly and uniformly; 3d, it burns up- entire- j ly, and consequently makes Utile or no-.- inoku ; 4th,. its transportation is attended with much less danger than gunpowder,, as a violent shock is necessary to make it explode; 5th,it is more bulky bnt not so heavy as powder; 6th, after having been moistened it can be dried, and" is as good as before. Trials have been making', and are now in progress to test its properties,, and to ascertain whether it may not take ih place of gunpowder. Professor Rottger, ot Frankfort, lately announced to the society of Naturforschenden, lhat he had succeeded 111 preparing some cotton-powder possessing the same properties as that prepared by M. Sobb enbein, v 4 " What is the chief use of bread?"" asked? art examiner at a school. exhibition. '"The chief use of bread," answered the urchin interroga ted, apparently astonishod at the simplicity of the enquirer, "lhe chief use of bread is lo spread butter and molasses on it." Contempt of Court. A justice .of ihc- peaco in Montreal lately committed a Vermont lawyer to prison for words spoken 111 debate, he having called lhe said justice V P.IJiUiigln Cockalorumvin open court-