JEFFERSONIAN REPUBLICAN Thursday, February 24, 1848. Terms, $2,00 in advance. $2,25 half yearly; and $2,50 if not paid before the end ol the year. fXp h. BARNES, at Milford, is duly author ized to act as Agent for this paper.to receive sub scriptions, advertisements, orders for job-work, and payments lor tne same A number of Locofoco editor, who are the most severe in their denunciations of" Old Fed eralists," advocale the election of Mr. Buchanan to the Presidency a man who was the leader of the old Federal party in thi Siaie. and who opposed and denounced the last War. Such 15 Ittofoco consistency ! r . Mr. David Wilmot has been elected a dele gate from Bradford couniy, to he Locofoco State Convention, which will meet in HarrUr v on the 4ih March nox. lie will no doubll rffer rcsolti'ions on the subject of iho Proviso, and a rich scene" will thereupon enue among' the " harmonious democracy," without doubt-. There was a gathering of very sillyLocofu- cos on iho 30th uli. Divers foolish -things were done. A Mr. Emrie moved that " some one take tho sense of ihe meeting." Any one might have- taken, the " sense of the meeting," end yet not had a thimble-full of the article. Prentice. FROM WASHINGTON. Fremont's Sentence remitted. Peace Propositions. Washington, Feb. 20. Col. Fremont has been found guilty of all the charges preferred before the Court Martial, of mu tiny, disobedience of orders, and conduct unbe coming an officer. The Court decreed dismissal from the service, the lesser penalty of the law, but recommended him to the lenity of the President by a vote of seven to six. The President dissent ed from the Court on tho charge of mutiny, but approved the rinding on the other two. He then remitted the sentence, and ordered him to duty. It is said Col. Fremont has rosigned his commis sion. Despatches were received this morning by the editor of the Union, and by others, confirming the rumors which reached here last evening of the ar rival of propositions for peace from Mexico. The terms are those originally submitted by Mr. Trist, with aqualification for a standing army of twelve thousand men to protect tho Government. It is also stated that the Mexican Congxess will ratify .this negotiation without much division. Washington, Feb. 21. Hon. John Quincy Adam. This venerable gentlemen was taken with a fit of paralysis this morning, in his seat in Con gress. Dr. Fries caught him, and he was taken to his residence. The House immediately ad journed. This incident, so like that of Chatham's, -has-created a profound sensation in our city. Easy oat Gen. Scott! The Washington correspondent of the Phil adelphia, Ledger writes : Of course Gen. Scott, a I always wrote you, is virtually recalled, and not merely sus pended. The latter term is merely expressive of the fact that "there ate reasons for his recall. The Court of Inquiry will bring these to light, and show that Gen. Scott's direct offence was not military, but an assumption of diplomatic power Gen. Scott, in a word, advised Mr Trist, after the latter was recalled, to entertain the Mexican proposition oj peace, and he became thus indirectly the author, or at least co-operator in the negotiations. Gen. Scott had no author ity to do so, and is answerable for the act ; but the Administration will not be rigorous in regard t him, and content itself with making out the charge, and withdrawing Gen. Scott from the command of the army." We ask the conntry to think over this state ment. Ask any advocate of the War why it is not terminated, and he will answer that Mexico refuses to make Peace. The Whigs are daily abused by their adversaries with prolonging the War by encouraging the Mexicans to hold out and refuse to make Peace. Congress is called on to vole new levies and loans in double quick time, in order to driv.e Mexico to make Peace. And yet we have the illustrious and triomphani Ipadpr of oar own armies ignominiously deposed for ihe crime of advising Mr. Triet to receive ami forward to Washington Mexican overtures for Peace ! Was there ever before a War bo steeped in hypocrisy and villainy as this ? It is settled, wo presume, that the efforts f r Pffice in Mexico are to be fully, as. they al ready hare been nearly, foiled and annihilated at Washington. Mexico is allowed no chance to make Peace with t. The Peace party is in power there, but "the War party is in prwer Lere. and no prac can be made. But let ui ftidf,pose our Sarita Annas snd Almontes, and all i jjl.be rpeirdtly djuwted. Tribune. i. . j BY REQUEST. ,From (he Penna. Inquirer. NEW YORK AND ERIE RAIL ROAD. Philadelphia and Northern Penn- vania. Mr. Editor: I see by your paper of this morning, that the lower House of the New Jersey Legisla ture has passed a bill,rauthorizing a subscription of 500,000 to the Belvidere and Delaware Rail road a sum which in addition to present subscrip tions, is supposed to be sufficient to complete the road. Neither the citizens of Northern Pennsylvania, nor of this city, seem to be sufficiently aware of the importance of this movement. The presont road from Philadelphia to Trenton, in connection with that now to be made from Trenton to Belvi dere 13 miles above Easton, will form two-thirds of the whole road to connect Philadelphia by rail road, with the New York and .Erie Railroad, where it will cross the Delaware at Carpenter's Point, in Pike county, about 45 miles above Bel videre. According to a statement in a pamphlet issued by. the New York and Erie Railroad Company, in vindication ol their adoption of the Pennsylvania route down tho Delaware, instead of the more Northern route through Sullivan county, New York, that the grades aro so nearly level that one engine can take over tho former (Delaware) 307 tons, while it would take four trains to take the same tonnage over the 60 feet grades of the latter (or New York) route tho same distance ; and that the Company will save S558,690 per annum in cost of transportation by the adoption of the Del aware, and that on 400,000 tons only, while they confidently assert that they will carry 500,000 tons over their road within five to ten years after its completion. This saving to the Company will be equal to 6 per cent, on the whole estimated cost (9,000,000) of making a single track from Now York to Dun kirk on Lake Erie. Tho grade of the road fiom Carpenter's Point through Belvidere and Trenton to this city, is sim ilar to that above that point, of which the Compa ny speaks so favorably while the high grades (over 60 feet per mile) from Carpenter's Point to New Yoik, are, if possible, still more unfavorable to the Company than those which they have avoid ed in Sullivan county. It will thus be seen that Philadelphia occupies a much better relative position for a connection with the road at tho place where it crosses the Delaware than the city of New York a fact which secures to the citizens of northern Pennsylvania, at no distant day, a choice between two of the best Atlantic markets, for the sale of produce or pur chase of merchandise. The Company is fully aware that a branch from Carpenter's Point down the Valley of the Dela ware, must naturally divert to this city a portion of its business, and is at thi3 moment actively en gaged at Harrisburg, in endeavoring to force thro' our Legislature a bill, repealing the right of Penn sylvania to make a connection on Pennsylvania soil, and offering on certain conditions as a sub stitute, a connection in New York State, over a Bridge to be erected by the Company at or near Carpenter's Point, in addition to their required Bridge, some five miles above. Thus removing the point of divergajice from our own State to New York, and subjecting the trade at that point to the control of opposing interests, well understood by business men, and to the risk of two Bridges over the Delaware, in a section of country, where, with in 40 miles of the proposed crossing, every Bridge has been swept away by freshets within a few years past. The citizens of Pennsylvania generally, and more especially those of Northern and North-Eastern Pennsylvania, owe it to the State and to their own interest to be active in opposing any new Grant to. this Company, which shall forfeit the right of our own State to have a connection on Pennsylvania soil free from the risk of bridges and free from the undue control ol opposing in- terests at the point of divergance. I sincerely p t t jf our gjsjature does not confine the Company to the point at which they have, by the last proviso of 1st Section of the present law stip ulated for a connection, viz: "At or near Carpen ter's Point," they will at least require the bridge offered by the Company, to be finished simulta neously with the one above, and by all means ro tain their present right to have a connection in Pennsylvania, even if its citizens must go through tho Glass House rock to reach the road at Bul den's Basin. C. The JVtiw Hope JDcfnnct. The committee appointed to investigate tho affairs of the New Hope Bank, of New Jersey. have reported the result of their investigations, j The officers of tho concern refused to be ex amined. The commi'tee reported that the Bank had failed four times since 1820. Tho only funds on hand to redeem their worthless issues was one hundred and fifty coppers ! A depos itor wanted these pennies, bm he was told they were wanted by the Bank to. pay toll I Prpn'ico of the Louisville Journal, says pointedly A little over forty years ago, Aa ron Butr was brought to trial on a charge of treasoe for undertaking to raise wi-hin the lim-, its of the Unitt-d States the means of wresting Mexico from the Dominion of Spain. It was treason then Uj dream of the conquest of Mex ico, but i is xow tho height of, p t'rioti-m to undertake it !'r HIGHLY IMPORTANT. Treaty xf Peace with Mexico. General Scott taken the Responsibility. BOUNDARY OF THE RIO GRANDE. New IGexico msd California ceded to the United States. Arrival of the Special Messenger at Wash vigtvn, cj-c. cc. 6fc. Peace Intelligence. "We have received (says the N. Y. Herald) what we believe to be authentic intelligence of a treaty of peace with Mexico having been negoti ated and accepted by tho Mexican government, at Queretaro, by General Scott, on the basis of the instructions sent out by the government last year. This intelligence arrived at New Orleans on the 13th, by the steamer New Orleans, bringing Vera Cruz dates to the 8th inst. Mr. Freaner, the bearer of despatches from General Scott, has also been landed at Mobile by the steamer Iris. The government messenger has arrived in Washington. These despatches contain the treaty of pence proposed by the Mexican Congress at Queretaro. General Scott took the responsibility of ac cepting this treaty, under certain conditions, and of forwarding it to the American government ut Washington. One of the conditions is, that 12,000 American troops are to remain in the city of Mexico till certain obligations are complied with. The ba lance to be withdrawn. The boundary lino is to be the Rio Grande up to the Gila, giving- New Mexico and California to the United States. The United States is to give a pecuniary con sideration to Mexico, of a small amount compar ed wilh that in the rejected treaty of Tacubara. Gen. Scott, as Commander-in-chief of tho American Army, has taken the whole of the re sponsibility of accepting this treaty, and for warding it to our government. Mr. Trist's agen cy in it is probably subsiduary to that of General Scott. Great excitement prevails at New Orleans, and greater at Washington. Annexed are the details of the news : From the National Intelligencer. Fob. 21 .J From several sources, each confirming the oth er, we learnt, last evening, under circumstances to command our entire confidence, that a project of a treaty of peace with Mexico, signed by Mr. Trist, and, as we believe, by the Mexican author ities, has been received in this city, and is now undoubtedly in the hande of the Executive. The terms of the treaty, as we dimly understand them, are, the establishment of the Rio Grande as the boundary between the United States and Mexico, and the cesssion by Mexico of the provinces of New Mexico and Upper California to the United States, and the payment by the United States to Mexico of a compensation therefor, say fifteen millions of dollars. However the fact may vary from these particu lars, there is no doubt that the treaty substantial ly to this effect is now in this city. From the Mobile Herald, Feb. 13. The Iris arrived at Mobile on the 12th, from Vera Cruz, whence she sailed on the 7th inst. She brought over an officer named Fraener (we are not certain that the name is spelled properly) as bearer of despatches from Gen. Scott. He was in great haste, and seemed to be full of important matter. Attempts were made to " pump" him, but they failed. He left the city of Mexico on the 3d insL, and started last evening for Mont gomery on board the steamboat Montgomery. It is supposed he carries important despatches with him. An unexpected climax occurred recently at a Locofoco meeting in Kittaning, Pa. The leaders in that vicinity had every thing cut and dried, and expected the country people to swal low all they said ; but lo ! upon the presenta- tton of a aeries of resolutions sustaining all the measures of the Administration, and abusing the VVhlgi in the usual style, a country Demo cral, offered gome additional resolutions, which were received with loud plaudits and mthusias tic admiration, praising Generals Taylor and Scott. The leaders were nonplussed, but after some time succeeded in carrying an adjourn ment, before the question was taken on the a doption of the resolutions. Tho meeting has not since been resumed !---Ar. American. An Important Uill. The House of the New Jersey legislature, a few days since, passed a bill authorizing the Camden and Amboy Railroad Company tosnb- scribe five hundred thousand dollars of stock in the Trenton and Belvidere Railroad. It passed by a vote of 31 to 22', and met with much opposition from gentleman whose inter ests are identified wi-h rnal routes competing for the trade of the Lehigh and upper Delaware. The tariff of 1846 is beginning to work finely. Tho amount of specie exported from New York doring the week ending on Friday Ian, was $744,437, or nearly three quarters of a million tf dollars to pay for British goods im ported under the new Tariff I No wonder there ts unusual tightness in the money market. Kx-President Adams still survives, but tho re sult of ht3 attack is very doubtful. '" Another JLetlev front Gen. Taylor The public will remember that Gen.Gaines last summer, made public a letter fram Gen. Taylor containing some of his views relative to the war and its further prosecution. The Gov ernment thereupon re-enacted the noted Gen eral Order No. 050,' and communicated it with a copy of Gen. T.'s letter to him. The follow ing reply to that despatch, was recently fur nished to the House by President Polk, in an swer to a call from that body. Head Quarters Army of Occupaion, V , . Agua Nueva, March -3, 1847. J I have had tho honor to reeeive your com munication of January 27, enclosing a newspaper-slip, and expressing the regret of the De partment that the letter copied in that lip, ami which was addressed by myself to lYlaj Gen. Gaines should have been publihed. Although your letter does not convey the direct censure of the Department and the President; yet, w hen it was taken in connection null the revival of the paragraph in the regulations of 1825, touch ing the publication of private letters concerning operations in the field, I am not permitted to doubt that I have become a sulject of Execu tive disapprobation. To any expression of it, coming wj.h the authority of the President, I C3 v 1 am bound by my duty and by rn-pect lor his high office, patiently to submit but lest my si lence should be construed into a tacit admission of the grounds and conclusion set forth in your communication, I deem it a duty which 1 owe to myself, to submit a few remarks in reply. 1 shall be pardoned for speaking plainly. In the first place, the published letter bears j upon its face the most conclusive evidence that tt was intended only for priiate persual, and not at all for publication, it was published without my knowledge, and contrary to my wishes. Purely 1 need not say ihat I -am not ln-the habit of writing for the newspapers. The letter was a familiar one written to an old miliiaiy friend, with whom I have been for many years interchanging opinions on profes sional subjects. That he should think proper, under any circumstances, to publish tt, could not have been forseen by me. In the absence of proof that the publication was made without my authority or knowledge, I may be permitted to say, the quotation in your letter of the 650:h paragraph of the superseded regulations of 1825, in which the terms 'mischievous and disgraceful' are employed to characterize cer tain letters or reports, conveys, though not open ly, a measure of rebuke which, to say the least, is rather harsh, and which manv think not war ranted by the premises. Again, I have carefully examined the letter in question, and I do not admit that it is obnox ious to the objections urged in your communi cation. I see nothing in it, which under tho same circumstances, 1 would not write again. To suppose that it will give the enemy valua ble information touching our posts or respective ; line of operations, is to know ver)' little of the Mexican sources of information, or of their ex traordinary sagacity and facilities in keeping constantly apprised of our movement. As to my particular views in regard to the general policy to be pursued towards Mexico, I per- j caive by the public Journals that they are shared by many distinguished statesmen also, in part by conspicuous officers in our navy, ihe pubh cations of whose opinions, is not obsttucted by any regulations of the Department. It is diffi cult, then, to imagine how the diffusion of mine can render any peculiar aid to the enemy, or especially to incline him to enter into negotia tions for peace. In conclusion, I would say it has given me great pain to be brought into the position in which 1 now find myself in regard to the de partment. It has not been of my own seeking. To the extent of my abilities, and the means placed at my disposal, I have sought faithfully to serve the country, by carrying out the rules and instructions of the Executive but it can not be concealed, that since the capitulation of Monterey, the confidence of the department, and, I too much fear, of the President, has been gradually withdrawing, and my consideration and usefulness correspondingly diminished. The apparent determination of the department to place me in an attitude antagonistic to the government, has an apt illustration in the well known fable of Esop. I ask no favor, and I shrink from no responsibility, while entrusted with the command in this quarter. I shall con tinue to devote all my energies to ihe public oood, looking for my reward to the conscien tiousness of pure motives, and to the final ver dict of impartial history. I am sir, Your verv ob't servant, Z.TAYLOR. Maj. Gen. U. S. A. Commanding. To Hon. W. L. Marcy, Sec'y. of Warr Wash ington D. C. Increase of Odd Fellowship. It is stated in the last " Golden Rule," that at ihe last session of the G L., U. S., a charter was granted for a lodge in Honolulu, Sandwich I -land, and one at Garracra, in Central Amer ica. There is no doubt these small beginnings are destined to prepare the way for the exten sion of Odd Fellowship over the whole conti nent, as well as 4 Isles of the sea.' At no time was it in so flourishing a condition as at the present time. Prejudice is rapidly disappear ing before the most convincing of all proofs good and noble deeds ere many more years have pasM-d the influence of Odd Fellowship will be fir It in tho moat remote parts of the globe .rv that, wherever may be the fortune or misfor tune. of a member to be cai, he will bo hailed ns a bin' her. Origin of Opposition to the School Law in Berks County. We find a humorous sketch in the Reading Herald, accounting for the opposition to com mon schools in Berks county. It repreients a political aspirant who first aspires to the dig nified office of Justice of the peace ; then by way of gaining distinction above common peo ple he dresses his girls handsomely in new calico, anrj sends his oldest son to buinlirtg school for three months. In the meantime, th0 old man becomes a candidate for the State Leu islature and the article gives tho sequel Great was the joy at Sour-Crout Hall The election was over, and Daddy was elected to the assembly, with only one vote again.;! him that of a spiteful neighbor, who said he wouldn't vote for a man that didn't know how to spell his name but Jacob, who had now come home, had given him a complete thrash ing, and so that account was even. One morning, a few days before ihe old man was to leave for Harrisburg, ho took it into his head that he would catechise his " b'hoy," when the following dialogue came off between them. " Well Jake, what hash you larnt at do skool ?" " Oh, every thing ! father," replied the hope ful. " Ebery tings ! dunder ! tint ish more as I pargaiued for, well let us hear some of dent." Well then, father, I've learnt from the schoolmaster that the earth is ns round as an orange, (a mournful shake of the head by the old man,) that it revoUes, that i, turns round on its axis once every 21 hours, which causes day and night, and" " Stop, stop ! Dat ill do! Kitty run fur mother, Jake's as"crazy as a lunaiics.--Mtn Got ! my poor boy the world turn round ; Why we would all dumblo off!" And tho old man wont to llarrisburj; with the fixed determination to vote against alt School Laws and he faithfully kept his word. We wonder if this is the representative who directs public documents to " Beneveul , PotsgrqJ, Montgomery co.. Pa." Montgomery Ledger. Tough Story nhout a Negro. It is stated in an Augusta, Georgia, paper, that a negro man in ihat place of middling age and size, weighing about 150 pounds, in the short space of two hours, at the usual hour for breakfast, ate and drank tho enormous quantity of provisions comprised in the following list, viz. : 13 cat-fish, 2 shad, I 1-2 dozen biscuit, 40 flat cakes, 1 1-2 lb. butler, 6 links of sausa ges, 23 eggs, 30 ears of corn, 4 chickens, 2 slices of beefsteak and two of liver, 1 gallon back-bone stew, 1 large plate of rice, 19 cups of coffee, and 1 pint of brandy. The inconve nience attending this experiment was so trifling, that he immediately walked to another quarter of the city and ate 17 watermelons, expre-sing a desire to partake of more could they have been found. It may be proper to add. in con nection with the above, and it would seem strange loo, that as regards his ordinary habits of eating and drinking, he is remarkably abstem ious. The Kentuckians were recently boasting of hav ing a hog weighing 840 lbs. nett. This excneJ the envy of the Ohio people, and the Cincimi m Gazette proclaims that Kentucky is beat a hog having been found in Warren county, which weighs 939 lbs. nctt. PILES. This distressing complaint proceeds from a want of proper evacuation of the bow els. The foul humors, instead of thoroughly ex pelled from the body, are but partially so; a por tion being left as it were at the threshold, is the cause of this vexatious complaint called Piles; and is frequently neglected until it ripens into a more horrid form of disease called Fistula. Wright's Indian Vegetable Pills, of the North American College of Health, are a true and natur al remedy for the above complaint, because they effectually cleanse the body from those morbid humers which are not only the cause of Piles, but of every malady incident to men. Beware of Sugar Coated Counterfeits. Re member, that the original and only genuine Indian Vegetable Pills have the written signature of Wil liam Wright on the top label of each box. .. For sale by George H. Miller, who is the only authorized agent for Stroudsburg ; see advertise ment for other agencies in another column. Office and general depot, 1G9 Race st. Phil'a. MARRIED, In Stroudsburg, on the 1-9 th instant, by h(v Rev. Wm. Scribner, Mr. Isaac A. Stuun'sT u Miss Ann Smith, both of Smithln-Id town-hip. DII, On the 14th instant, at his residence near Stroudsburg, Mr. Robert Gordon, aged about 60 years. At Bushkill, on the Sth inst., Mr. Benjamin Schoonover, aged 67 years. In Stroudsburg,, on the 19th instant, Georoe Wallace, infant son of Samuel Rees, jr., aged about 6 months In the Northampton county Alms House,. on the 31st ultimo, Thomas Bcrk, son of Aaron Burk, in the 17th year of his age. In the said institution, on the 9th inst. Aaron Burk, aged about 47 years, aud formerly fiom Easton. '