T ffc..' ,-!. '. . 5 PC?:, .i The whole art of Government consists in the art of being honest. Jefferson. ) VOL 8. STROUDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, JULY 1; 1847. 1 vf.rMS Two-dollars per annum in advance Tifro dollars and a quarter, half yearly and if not paid before the end tit the ycai, i o aoiiars anu a nan. rnosc who receive ineir liincif by a carrier or stage drivers employed by tlie proprie- iU win beeharced 37 1-2 cents, ner vear. extra No papers discontinued until all arrearages are paid, except it tlie option of the Editor. ICT Advertisements not cxceedingrfne square (sirteen lines) will be inserted three weeks for ojieTlollar: twenty-five cents fr every subsequent insertion : larger ones in proportion. A liberal discount will be made to yearly advertisers. JO All leitcis addressed to the Editor must be post-paid. JOB PRINTING. Harin" a general assortment of larg, elegant, plain and oina mental Type, we are prepared to execute every description of Cards, Circulars, Bill Meads, Notes, Blank Receipts, JUSTICES, LEGAL AND OTHER BLANKS, PAMPHLETS, &c. Printed with neatness and despatch, on reasonable terms, AT THE OFFICE OF THE Jeffersonian Republican. Flowers. Ye are the scriptures of the earth, .Sweet flowers, fair and frail, A Sermon speaks in every bud That woos the summer gale. Ye lift your heads at early morn, To greet the sunny ray, And cast your fragrance forth to praise The Lord of night and day. Sown in the damp and cheerless earth, Ye slumber for a while, Then waken into glorious life, And bid creation smile. Thus when within the darksome tomb Our mortal frame shall lie, The soul, freed from the bonds of sin, Shall join the choir on high. A Sweet Draught. A lady poetess, writing about her lover, says in ihe charmingest manner imaginable: -He drew In one long kiss, my whole soul thro' My lips, as sunlight drinketh dew !" The Baltimore Clipper tells us a good story, of which the following is ihe substance : A board of school Commissioners,' who en cumbered a consequential little vjlliage in Ma rvland. heinrr in want of a teacher, advertised in ihe newspapers for 4 a well disposed moral j tnan, who was capable of teaching the dead Ian-; guaoes, and did not chew tobacco or drink whis- j key? After a fortnight of this advertising had been elaborated, a raVboned Yankee made his j appearance with a knife in one hand, and a Cape Cod Projection, alias a cake of ginger- bread in the other, and held ihe following l,mP with th rnrnmiiiM pfnrpsaid! Well, sir' said the chairman, eveinz the J candidate from head lo fool, 'do you possess h is believed ihat brown bread will generally ihe necessary requisites for a public school J be found the best by all persons having slug Jeacher V ' gsn bowels and stomach?, equal to ihe diges- T ...- T rln ' nnRwarerl Slick, whittling his I xOww ', J a J -m llr.. 4 Do you understand Latin?' asked one of ! J - i the committee men, a Dutch farmer. 1 guess I do,' replied Slick again rounding the end of his slick with hh knife. 4 Well, let's hear some of your Latin,1 said the Chairman. . n..mhn Mr snnash r.nm. et nunkintum lin-S m,' said Slick, drawing his coat sleeve slow- j cum ly under his nose. Humph !' exclaimed the Dutchman, 1 ish ihat Laiin ! Who's le auihor V Josephus,' replied Slick, he says, in his life of Governor Hancock, ' Sic transit gloria Monday morning Hancocibus quad erat de inonstrandum. Dai's gool V exclaimed the Dutchman, rub bing his hands, ' lere never was petter Latins I1 Now, sir,' said the Chairman, l suppose you understand geography?'- I guess I do,' replied Slick, sharpening the end of his stick. 'How far have you been V As far as ihe District of Columby 4 What Slate is it in V ' A State of desperation.' 4 What latitude are we in V 4 According to ihe thermometer, we are ten degree below zero.' What is the most western point of North America V 4 Cape Cod.' 4 Good. 'Now, sir, let us know how far you studied mathematics. What's ihe area of a quare acre of land V ' That depends upon ihe quality,' replied Slick, snapping the blade of his knife. Well, suppose it be corn land.' 4 Why, it depends upon the number of hills.' 4 Say five hundred.' 4 Guess you might as well tell a fellow how many grains to a hill.' 4 Five. ' Then, accordin to Euclid, ii would be 750 feet horizontally perpendicular. 4 Excellent ! Pray, where are you from V 1 Staunton, down in the Bay State and I effn do most anything.' 4 No doubtj but there is one jhing you can not do ; vow cannot humbug us- You can go. ' From Chambers' Edinburgh Journal. White and Brown Bread. Several years ago, we threw out the surmise that the separation of the while from the brown pans of wheat grain was likely lo be baneful to ihe health. We proceeded, upon theoretical grounds, belicVing ihat Providence must have contemplated our using the eritire grain, and noi a poriion only, selected by means of a nice ly arranged machinery. It struck us forcibly, that to go on for a long course of years, ihus using a Kina oi 100a umerent irom wnat nature designed, could not fail to be attended with bad consequences. We have since learrted that our views have some recognized support in sci ence. The following paragraph from a recent pamphlet will at once serve to keep the subject alive in the minds of our readers, and explain the actual grounds on which the separation of i the flour is detrimental. 44 The general belief," ! says the writer, 44 is, that bread made with the finest flour is the best, and that whiteness is the proof of its quality ; bui both these opinions are popular errors. The whiteness may be and generally is, communicated by alum, to the in jtir)T of the consumer ; and it is known by men of science that the bread of unrefined flour will sustain life, while that made with the refined will not. Keep a man on brown bread and valef, and he will lh'e and enjoy good health ; give him white bread and water only, and he will sicken and die. The meal of which the first is made, contains all !he ingredients neces sary to the composition of nourishment lo the various structures composing our bodies. Some of the ingredients are removed by the miller, in his efforts 10 please the public ; so that line flour, instead of being better than meal, is ihe least nourishing ; and to make the case worse, it is alsq, ihe most difficult of digestion. The loss is, therefore, in all respects, a waste, and it seems desirable ihat the admirers of white bread, bul especially ihe poor, should be acquainted with these truths, and brought to enquire wheth er they do noi purchase, at loo dear a rate, the privilege of indulging in the use of it. The unwise preference given so universally to white bread, leads to the pernicious practice of mix ing alum with the flour, and ihis again to all sorts of adulterations and impositions ; for it enables bakers who are so disposed, by adding more and more alum, lo make bread made from the flour of an inferior grain look like the best ! or most costly, and tc dispose of it accordingly at once defrauding the purchaser and tamper- mg wnn ms neaun. Among me matters remueu by the miller are ihe large saline substances, which are indispensable to ihe growth of the bones and teeth, and are required, although in a less degree, for daily repair. Brown bread should, therefore, be given to nurses, and to the I .-. dia-,y0Ung and to the growing, and should be pre- furred bv all. of whatever ase.whose bones show I a tendency to bend, or who have weak leeih lion of ihe bran. But with some it will disa Uree, for it is too exciting to irritate bowels,' and is dissolved with difficulty in some stom - . rt t y . 1 1 1 1 .1 I achs. -wnen mis Happens, tue orau suuuiu uujej.awa, u j. ...auc a SuUU u., .. v removed, either wholly or in part ; and by such self down. The night was almost passed tran- means the bread may be adapted with the great- est ease, to all habits and all constiiutions. Mr. Smith, in his tato rem'arkable work on fruits and farinacea as the food of man, gives some illustrations of this doctrine. " Bulk," he says, " is nearly as necessary to me articles oi . - t Tl 1 1.1 diet as the nutriment principle. They should be so managed that one should be in proportion to ihe other. Too highly nutritive is probably as fatal to the prolongation of life and health, as that 'which contains an insufficient quanliiy of nourishment." It is a matter of common re mark among old whalemen, that during long voyages ihe coarser their bread the better iheir health. " I have followed the seas for thirty five years," said an intelligent sea-captain to Mr. Graham, " and I have been in almost every part of ihe globe. I have always found that ihe coarsest pilot-bread, which contains a con siderable portion of bran, is decidedly ihe best for any man." " I am convinced, from my own experience," says another captain, ,rthat bread made of the unbolted wheal meal is far more wholesome than that made from the best super fine flour, the latier always tending to produce constipaiion." Capt. Dexter of the ship Isis, belonging to Providence, arrived from China, in December 1804. He had been about one hundred and ninety days on the passage. The sea-bread, which constituted the principal article of food for his men, was made of the best superfine flour. He had not been long at sea before his men began to complain of languor, loss of ap petite and debility. These difficulties contin ued to increase ihe whole voyage, and several of the hauds died on the passage of debility and inanition. The ship was obliged 10 come lo anchor thirty miles below Providence; such was the debility of the men on Ijoard, that they were not able lo get ihe ship tinder weigh again, and the owners were under ihe necessity of sending men down from Providence. When she arrived ihe owners asked Cap'. Dexter what was the cause of the sickness of his men ' He 'replied that " ihe bread was loo good." tetters cf Paul liouis Coiiricr to a Female Cousin. A PREDICAMENT. I was one day travelling in Calabria; it is a country of wicked people, who, 1 believe have no great liking lo any body and are particu larly indisposed towards ihe French. To tell you why would be a long affair. Ii is enough that they hate us to death, and that the unhap py being who should fall into their hands would not pass his time in the most agreeable manner. I had for my companion a fine young fellow. I do hot say this to interest you but because it is the truth. In these mountains ihe roads are precipices, and our horses got on with the greatest difficuliy. My comrade going first a track which appeared more practicable and shorter than the regular path led us astray. It was my fault. Ought 1 to have trusted to a head of seventeen years ? We sought our way out of ihe wood while it was yet light, but the more we looked for the path the farther we were off from it. It was a very black night, and we came close upon a very black house. We went in, and not without suspicion. But what was to be done. There we found a whole family of charcoal burners at a table. At the first word they invited us to join thetn. My young man did noi wait for much ceremony. In a minute or two we were eaiing and drink ing in right earnest he at least. For my own pan, I could not help glancing about at ;he place and the people. Our hosts, indeed, look ed like charcoal burners ; but the house, you would have taken it for an arsenal. There was nothing to be seen but muskets, pistols, sabres, knives and cutlasses. Every thing displeased me, and I saw that I was in no favor mTself. My comrade, on inn r.nn'.rarv. was soon one of the family. He laughed, he chatted with them ; and with an imprudence which ought to have been prevent ed, ho at once said where we came from, where we were going ihat we were Frenchmen. Think of our situation. Here we were among our mortal enemies, alone, benighted, far from human aid. That nothing might be omitted ihat could lend to destroy us, he must play ihe rich man forsooih, promisng these folks to pay them well for their hospitality ; and ihen he must prate about his portmanteau, earnestly be seeching thern to lake care of it and put it at the head of his bed, for he wanted no other pil low. Ah, youth, how you are to be pitied. Cous in, ihey might have thought we carried the dia monds of ihe crown the tieasures in his port manteau, which gave him such anxiety, con sisted of the letters of his mistress. Supper ended, they left us. Our hosts slept below, we on the story where we had been . -r i 1 eating, in a sort ol plailorm, raiseu seven o eight feet, where we were to mount by a lad der, was the bed that awaited us a nest into which we had to introduce ourselves by jump ing over barrels filled wirh provisions for all ihe year. My comrade seized upon the bed above, and was soon fast asleep, wilh his head upon the . precious portmanteau. 1 was determined to 1 I. anfrn 1 mewl r nrtfl fi r n n ri A cat mtr. quuiy enougn, anu i was oeginmug .o .um fortably enough, when just at the time when it ' appeared to mo that day was about to break, I heard our host and his wife talking and dispu ling below me and putting my ear into the chim ney, which communicated to ihe room below, I perfectly distinguised ihese exact words of ihe husband : 44 Well, well, let Us see ; must we kill them boihr To which the wife replied 41 Yes" and I heard no more. How. shall i tell you the rest? I cduld scarce ly breaihe ; my whole body was as maple ; to have seen me you could not nave told whether I was dead or alive. Heavens! when I think upon it ! wo two were almost without arms ; against us were twelve or fifteen who had plen ty of weapons. And then, my comrade dead of sleep and fatigue. To call him up, lo make a noise was more than 1 dared; to escape was an impossibility. The window was not very high, but under it were two great dogs, howling like wolves. Im agine, if you can, the distress 1 vas in. At ihe end of a quarter of an hourwhich seemed an age I heard some one on the stair case, and through the chink of the doors I saw the old man, with a lampjn one hand, and one of his knives in ihe other. He mounted, his wife after him ; I was behind ihe door-.-ho opened it; but before he came in he put dow4t the lamp, which his wife took up; and coming in, with his feet naked, she being behind him, said in a smothered voice, hiding ihe light par tially wilh her fingers tr Gently, go gently.'' When he reached the ladder he mounted, with his knife between his teeth; and gding to the head of the bed, where ihe young man lay with his throat uncovered, wilh one hand he took his knife and with the other oh, my cous in, he seized a ham which hung from the roof, cut a slice, and retired as he came in. The door is re-shm, the li'ght vanishes, $nd 1 am left alone to my reflections. When the day appeared, all the family with a great noise came to arouse us as we had de sired. They brought us plenty lo eat- they served us a very proper breakfasi, a capital breakfast 1 assure you. Two" capons formed pari of it, 4,of which," said the hostess, "you must eai one and carry the other away." When I saw ihe capons 1 at once compre hended the meaning of those terrible words, "Must we kill them both?" Wlay is there so much iiseac. Because, in a number of things, we do just what by our nature, we never intended lo do. For example : 1. Man is iniended lo draw fresh air every time he breathes. Almost all ihe people, when in their shops, breaihe ihe same air over and over again. To show ihe necessity of allowing fresh air continually to euier living rooms, and the bad air to escape, it may be stated that every person, during each moment of his life, de siroys a quantity of air twice as large as hhh self. , 2. Man ought to breaihe pure air at every breath. Our sewers and drains are so bad, thai the vapor and foul gasses rise, and we breathe ihem. 3. Man was intended to take open exercise every day. Neither his heart, his stomach and bowels, his skin, his liver, his lungs, his kid neys nor his brain, will act rightly, without walking exercise every day. Most of us do not get any walk, or only a very short one, which is scarcely of any use. 4. Man is furmed id lake simple, plain and wholesome food He eats all sorts of things, which not only do him ho good, but do him harm, and drinks large quantities of beer, spir its, and wine, which hurt his stomach and take away the proper use of his brain. 5. Man onoht to wash himself all over with water every day, ad as id cleanse the pores of the skin, else they get slopped up; he cannot perspire rightly, and his skin cannot breaihe. The majority of people only wash ther hands and faces. 6. Man should wear clean clolhes next his skin, because the body gives off bad fluids. At present many people wear the same thing day after day for weeks together. 7. Man was iniended to live in the light. Many, very many, have scarcely any light in iheir rooms. S. Man in this climate, must wear warm clothing. Many have no flannel, and are clad wilh heavy and useless things. Hovv much misery would be avoided in the history of many lives, had truth and sincerity been ihe guiding and controlling motives, in stead of prevarication and deceit ! ' Any vice,' said a parent in our hearing, a few days since, any vice, at least among the frailties of milder - character, but falsehood. Far better that my child commit an error or do wrdng and confess it, than escape the penalty, however severe, by falsehood and hypocrisy. Let us know the worst, and a remedy may possibly be applied. But keep me in ihe dark let me be misled or deceived, and it is impossible to tell ai what un prepared hour a crushing blow, an overwhelm ing exposure may come.' Relief for the Toothache; Some years since I found ihe following re cipe in a highly popular dental work, 2nd bav ins used it with the most gratifying success from that lime to the presdm, in common case'j of toothache, it strikes me L may be ihstrumren- tal in relieving suffering by making it pub);,c. Take Sulphuric Efhfr 1 oz. Pulverized Gum Camphor 2 drachms. 44 44 Alum 2 ' Mix and keep tightly corked. 'Wet a little cotion or lint with the mixture ?tQ apply to ihe seat of pain. The above quantity can be ob tained of any druggest for IQ or 12 cents. This preparation havin.abcen simply the re sult of scientific investigation, arid not having been obtained either Cr.om the Indians or Arabs, it is recdmmendeel to cure loothache arising from local inflammation, (in about three cases out of four, in ls than five minutes) but so fa'r as the writer 'jf this article is aware, has not been known to cure Neuralgia Face ( con sumption to set bonqs, or 4 shut ihe cellar door and rock the baby." H. PRESTON, dentist. No. 12 Slato-sircel. Hart. Courant. Mrs. Partington says she has always noticed that, wether flour was dear or cheap, she had invariably lo pay ihe same money for half a dollar' worth. Bost. Post. Poll Evil. I noliced a very simple cure for the poll evil in your paper some lime ago ; lhal iu to wash out the sor'e and apply common salt. We have a good horse that had il for two years. I doubt ed the simple remedy, bui resolved to try it, thinking it could do no harm, at least. How ever, the horse soon got well, and is now as ound as ever. 'JOHN MILLER. Thornton, IU.yTeb.'Sp.' A Good Telescope. A genlledian conversing with aii lri;hmnn. stated ihat he 'had seen a telescope witlr'which he cduld see rocks in the moon.' 'Arrah,' saul Pat, 'and wa's it not my own father thai had .x telescope which wduld bring a hug so near y..i could see him five niiles off, an' you could hear" him gruni, too !' In Germany every child must enter schoobat six years of age, in default of which a penalty is exacted of the parent. - K . FaSal to Swsaae; Sahpeiro is as fatal to swinc as arsriic to-many Our foreman last year salted sumtj sw'iuo with; refuse salt which had been taken from a beef barrel and stored away ; within twelve bourn two out of three which ate of it died, and flie third was much injured. As fanner at thiA: season are emptying iheir meal barrels, instead ' of preserving, ihe refuse salt for the future, ihey had beiier bury it in the compost heap. Our5 beef was but slighily sahpetred, and hut litile could possibly have been taken by thti swine. N. H. Post. Chokeihg. Neal cattle, fed on apples or potatonv ar very liable to get chocked, and rilany a valtia- animal has been losl from not knowing hnw i afford relief in time to save life. The fojlrjws ing remedy is therefore published; wi fi ihf? fullest and most confident reliance in its effio.'i cy. . As soon as an animal is found to be choki", pour into the mouth, from a boule. a pint of inl, rubbing the throat externally, at the same time,, with the hand. A friend who", by he iay, is. a skilful veierinary surgeon, assures us he h;i never known this remedy fail, and that the re lief afforded is almost inMantaneou.4. The tn lubricates the gullet, and faciliiates ihe eject iin of the obstructing substance, without ihe slight est pain. If oil is not immediately i t a " nable'. soap and water may sometimes be abb inutetL with equal success. Marrying. " Young women i I heeft-wu tell you 10 look. out for your husbands, for l know ihat you are fixing contrivances tu caiclr ohei and are as naturally ori ihe watch as a cat is for a mouse. Don't ban your hook wjih ait artificial fly of beauty ; if you do, thr chance.- are ten lo one lhal you will catch a gudgeon--some silly fool of a fish ihat isni worth his weight in sawdust. Array :he '.!4ner lady with beautiful garments of virtue, mo Jesty, wisdom, truth, morality, and unsophisticated love, ami you will dispose of yourself quicker, arid to mtich better advahlage than you would if yoii displayed all the gew gaw --it flipperiugs, fol do rbls.and fiddlededees ini..e universe. Remem ber that.it is an awful i'n,jng to die a self manu factured old maid!" Tjow Jr. A mafihine has ju ji been" invented for making beef-Sieak tender. In dhe minuie, the tough est beef-steak tha. ever made a man's jaws ache, is made lender and delicious. This machine will be a blesmg m boarders, if the keepers of boarding fcou ies will introduce ii. wiretw said a married man, looking for hi bbot-jric x, after she Was in bed, 41 I have a pia'fco whe'.e. 1 keep all my things, and you ought to kiuv it." 44 Yes," said she, " I ought itf know wlere you keep your late hours." A lawyer wrote "rascal" in the hat of a broth er lawyer, who, on discovering ii, entered a complaint in open court agaihsi the tresspasser, who, be said, had not only lakeri his hat- bul had written his own name in it. A drunken Yankee soldier iri Mexico, Ky way of penance, was made lo march through ihe camp, in a straight jacket made of a head leas rum-barrel, labelled "a walking rum cask." " Waiter," said a dinner-out, in a down town restaurant yesterday 44 Waiter, bring me a plate of soup, quick.'.' Say soup again, stranger, said a tall Ten nessee relumed volunteer, who happened irf sit opposite to him, 44 and I'll give you a Sierro Gorda whipping, I will. I. told the old Gen eral'when I left him at Jalapa that when I come to the States I'd lick the first man I'd hear sayiu' soup, and I'll be hanged if 1 don't do it." A Mew Bool CrampaKg Iflacajiwe. Mr. John E Tucker, of Boston, has invented a machine for crimping boois, which appears to be quite a novel feature in ihe boot-making art. It can be mado so as to be driven by steam. Metallic Hub, Spoke and Rim. f Moscow. N. Y.. has n't 4k tIA I t w i length perfected a metallic hub, spoke and rim. carriage or wagon wneei, oy Gracing me bpuhea in iwo rows on tne nuu, wnicn is in paris, a cylinder, in which the spoke is screwed or riv ited and ihe axle sheeted. The spoke is hI rivited or screwed into the rim. 9 !'. M