A: OtltOIt 5 The whole art ov Government consists in the art of being honest Jefferson. : ; mat -3 TOL 9. STRO UDSBURG, iVEONROE COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, AUGUST 24, L848.. J ; t . i nil I in i ii mini i )imc published by Theodore Schoch. rc Two dollars per annum in advance Two dollars TERMS-i wo wuj nd jf uol d beforc the entl of ana a quan .., -. ' d a naif. Tliose wlio receive their th0 7 ft Wrier or stage drivers employed by the proprte papers by a carrier u J , tor, will be c nar . . uatll;lll arrearages are paid, except NO papt-ra u'7,u' E(ilt0r affifcXSnts not exceeding one square (sixteen lines) II7Adcms" , for one do lar. and twenty-five wf!Lb5 .1". subsequent insertion. Ti.e charge for one and c.cn" '"fnn the same. A liberal discount made to yearly inrc-L- a jo-AllTc"crs addressed to the Editor must be post-paid .TAB PRINTING. w,rine a general assortmcntoflarge. elegant, plain and drna 1 menial Type, we are prepared to execute every description of description IPs mm Circulars, Kill Heads; Notes; Blank Receipts, JUSTICES, LEGAL AND OTHER BIiAWKS, PAMPHLETS, &c. , Printed with neatness and despatch, on reasonable terms, AT THE OFFICE OF THE ' JcffersoiJiau KepuDIicasi. From the Cincinnati Gazette Hurrah for Zack I Old Zack will gire the Locos pas, Hurra, hurra, hurra. With him we'll beat their General Cass, Hurra, hurra, hurra. We'll Rive the Locos all a blister, .And make thetn think of Buena Vistaff 3 Hurra, hurra, hurra, Hurra, hurra, hurrah The Mexicans at Monterey, Hurra, &c. Did think that they would win the day,,,:. Hurra, &c. If Locos think so now, alack, -Twey'll find that they can't beat old Zack; Hurra, &c. The people have resolved, en masse; ' Hurra, &c. That Taylor's far ahead of Cass," Hurra, &c. And only wait election day , , . A debt of gratitude to pay, Hurra, &c. . , ; Our valiant Taylor freedom's pride',, . . Hurra, &c. . Need only that event abide, Hurra, &c. And then assume our ruler's place ' And free our country from disgrace, Hurra, &c. -wiiigSougr. BY J. A. GOULD, ESQ. Tune "Auld Lang Syne:" Come Whigs arise, lift up your heads, Your glorious course pursue ; For liberty and equal rights, Let every heart be true. Chorus: : From East to West, from North to Sotith From river, lake, and shore, Let ev'ry man .go heart and hand, . , . . For Taylor and Fillmore. . Let all the int'rests of our land, Be thoroughly sustained ; ff b i t Let capital and industry, Divide the profits gained. Chorus From East to West, &c; . The doings of our delegates, ' : -Were certainly correct ; For Taylor is the very man, Whom we can now elect. Chorus From East to West, "&c. Of candidates we ask no pledge, :. ; It is do guarantee ; - An honest man is always safe, - A rogue can never be. Chorus From East to'Wrest, &c - And when i.he great election comes, i , Be sure it proves no farce, : . Let Taylor have his patterri full, -. - .f- t The remnants give to Cass. - Chorus: . '5 ; " From East to West, from Nrth toSouth. "From river, lake and hore Let every man go heart and handr For Taylor and Fillmore The Pork Trade of ihe West. De How s Commercial Reiew for July, contains some jnieresiing tables on the Pork trade of the Wes tern Stales. The number of hogs slaughtered doring ihe year I847, 1848, was 1,509,000 au increa&e of nearly fifty per cent, oyer pre vious years. The number hlaughter'ed in Cin cinnati alone amounted 'to 575,000. Only a fiinall portion of ihia valuable product is expor ted ; and four-fifths of lhat sent out of the coutry, 18 io the Brmfh Colb'nids, South Amer ica, and the Wesi Indies. JJj3 'Nothiing can .be done well,' says' Dr. Knchener, 'that is done in4 a hurry.' 'Except taiching flees,1 adds the London Punch'! ,,The " Hulks" of Bermuda. It may.be interesting to some of our readers to know something about the place where the Irish Patriot, Mitchpll, is condemned to linger out his days in confinement on board a prison ship. They are truly named ''Hulks," and i would add loath some hulks, too., ,1,, was once a prisoner of var, and confined on board, of them, and have a most vivid recollection ofthpsc floating castles. The Bermudas, or Somers' Islands, are a small group, situated about half way .betweon Nova Scotia and the Antilles, and, about six hundred miles from the American , coast,, or from Cape Hatteras. During the war.of 182, it waa. the head quarters for the British army and, navy on the American station. It was from the Bermudas that the army under Gen. Ross sailed for the i 1 -1 Chesapeake,, and for the attack on Baltimore.., It was also from the Bermudas that one division of the army, destined fpr the attack on New Orleans, departed, under the command of Gen. Keene the division under Gen. Gibbs, for the same destina tion, sailed from Jamaica. These Islands are a- bout thirty -five miles in length, and about twenty broad, and are divided into about forty islands, j the sea running through them in every direction, J forming bays and inlets pn almost every side. One of the hulks, file " Goree," an old African ship, is situated at the head of St. George's har bour and is used as a receiving ship. The " Ar dent," sixty-four, was situated in the bay, about four miles from the navy yard at Hamilton, and three miles from the tanks, at the head of a long and dangerous reef of rocks which extends ,from the eastern end of the islands for about . thirty miles, in a kind of a semi-circle, running around the western side of the is'and. Inside of this reef, and near the head of it, lies the " Thames," a large ' the water is so clear that you can see them hook dismantled ship, her lower masts only standing, j in the bait, in five fathoms. I cannot illustrate on looking like three stumps stinking up, arid a bow- j paper, or portray the excitement it creates in, sprit sticking out lookins like a dog's tail cut off. j watching the motions of the fish when all their. This is the place the patriot Mitchell is incar- j movements are distinctly seen with the eye. Fish cerated. This hulk the " Thames" has taken j ponds and traps are, frequent, and some of them the place of the " Ardent," which has been hauled are very large an,d contain large quantities of fish, into the docks at Plamilton. which are always on harid to, .supply the market, Confinement in one of these hulks is bad enough when the heavy gales,, .which last sometimes many for sailors, who are accustomed tok wet jucketjdays, prevent the fishermen from taking the usu and hard fare ; but for a landsman, who has been al supply. - bred in scenes of refinement, it is, absolutely, un- ; ; " " endurable. His fare is the condemned provisions Tauner'i Bark .OTannre for Clicrry ,., , , . , . , . . Trees. - ' oi tne Druisn navy, ana mai wnicn is not con- demned, an American dog would turn up his nose at the scenery is the constant dash of the ocean against the rocks, laving it into white foam ; shut in on the .south by high hills, and,, on the west, open to the Atlantic, but locked in by that impas - sible reef that no vessel dare venture near. During the war of 1812 to 1815, 1 was captured by the Lacsdemonian frigate, and carried into Bermudas, where I remained a prisoner of war;those in thei'r prime, . ;This: tan t is spread-under eighteen months, and was, for a time, confined in the "Hulks." I' know them well, and wheal was first crowded down into the gun-deck of that! loathsome craft I thought my days were numbered There are very few persons that can form the slightest idea of an entrance on board of a prison ship 1 had" been partially initiated before, hav: ing once been picked up at sea by the Melya-j monenigate,. ana once ueiore capiurea omine coast of France, and sent on board the hulks- at Portsmouth'.' On entering the gangway, your mess is called out, and' if they are not near at hand for your protection, you are pretty sure to lose your kit." The hulk at the head of Sf. Georges's harbor may be compared to a wart on a handsome wo man's face. The bay which forms the harbour is a beautiful sheet of water. On the left are lofty hills, with plateaux of ceder groves along up their sides, dotted with the white villas of the citizens; arid in a vally, and gradually rising to the hills, is tHe town' of St. George, with its while stone houses and flat roofs; and stretching far down the'bay, and on the hills below, are the Barracks and Fort Somers. On the south are some low is lands, which the open sea rolls on in interminable swells ; sometimes dashing against the rock-bound shore until the white foam looks like a lady's frill, graceiully fitted to her neck. As soon asT was through with my examination at the court of Vice Admirality, I was marched to the dock-boat, and when 1 approached the huge black hulk, swarms of heads could be seen peep ing through the port holes. My blood ran cold as I was ushered on board of this floating pest-house. A few mariners were pacing fore and aft, and un er a large awning, on the quarter-deck, my name was registered by an officer, and my mess num bered. Fortunately for me, my mess was near the gangway, and I got but one black eye before I was surrounded by my mess. My cloihes bag was gone and. I had. the satisfaction of seeing one or two very pretty fights for the possession of one of my shirts. The Goree .was a general re ceiving ship, where the pirate, the privateersman, the sailor, and tlWlandshla'n' were all thrown to gdtheri A fterwardstnlie American prisoner s we re trVriVferredVo tlie Ardent, sixty-fourr iivtjjj uppet bay, where the Thames., now lies. After a few days' confinement on board of the Goree, I was transferred to the Ardent. . Nothing but stratagem can ever relieve the un fortunate Mitchell from his position. . In the pas sage up, inside of the reef, at least four hundred guns could be brought to bear upon any vessel that should venture in, and those at, a high eleva tion. The reef is a perfect barrier to any approach direct from sea. There is no passage through the Islands any other way, except for small boats, and they vyould have to pass through the harbour of St. George in order to reach the upper bay. After remaining on board the " Hulks" fpr some time, I was fortunute. enough toget.my parole, and lived on the Island of St. George until after peace was. declared. The inhabitants of the Bermudas are: a very plesant. agreeable people, and the wo men are beautiful. The air is pure and vvhqle some, and the fogs from the banks of Newfound land bleach. their delicate white s, kins, until they are so clear, that the, blue veins can be seen through them. Like the West ,ndia Islands, sea bathing is a constant custom with both males and females, and bays, and places protected vby the jutting rocks are allotted.to the females, where it would be sacrilege for a., male to enter. . There are many handsome cedar groves, which are con sidered valuable, and, in fact, .they., are the . only thing valuable raised on tae Islands, except for home consumption. . . v. Bermuda is a famous place for fishing whales., sport around the island at certain seasons of the year, and as for fish on the table, there is no place,' in the. world, in the same latitude, that equals it.J The great boast of the islands is thegruper, which I are caught with hook and line on the coast, and Tne editor of tlie Boston. Cultivator, in a de- j 3Cription of the farm of Messrs. A. D., Williams . & Son, of Roxbury, gives ;the following account j of lhat gentleman's management of Cherry trees : Spent lan fresh t (hom- the tannery,, about a j horse load.toeach tree 'once.in thiee.or fourvears. is used for, all cherry trees ;without .exception, and it is regarded as the best manure, reviving, old de caying( trees,. and giving a. healthy. rapid growth to j the jrqexnbslly around the .trunk... -As .an evidence that its valuable effects are not .merely mechanical 5y Naming moisture, like any litter,, on opening the tan the fibrous roots, of the cherry are found penetrating the tan in every direction. Some coming directly up into the tan, where, it is laid above the large roots of the tree. In somepla- ces where tl)e winrjs have blowed off some of the tan numerous roots may be seen. This opiniou so highly in favor of the use of tan as manure for the cherry, is given" after, many years exnenence and on many trees, ine soil is at slrong loam. 4 This valuable discovery was made by some an- I cestor in the family, who had dug out sojne rocks, leaving an unsightly spot, which he filled with spent tan. and earth, and some cherry trees carne up there and grew with uncommon vigor. As tan, in its fresh state, is generally injurious to vegeta tion, we advise caution in its trial, lest the tre'es suffer by injudicious doses. We may use tuo much of 1 good thing." . Desolation o Yucatan. The New York Commercial furnishes the fol lowing interesting letter from Mr. Fitzgibbon, the editor of the Honduras Observer, descriptive of the state of affairs in Yucatan! It is dated Be lize, July 4th. The town of Bacalar, formerly' called Salaman ca de Bacalar, is built on an elevated' ridge of land overhanging the lagoon of the same name', ;and contained a population of between 3,000 dnd 4,Q00 souls. A body of the Indians were ranging' that State, under the command of a chief named' Jose Pablo Cocom, to the number of labout J'500' men, and attacked the'town on the 15th of April last. Among this entire body of men,- only about one hundred' had guns. The Yucate'cos, on the con trary, were well armed, and the town itself was strongly fortified. On the land side there are seven small batteries and a breastwork of full a mile and a half in length. These were all yielded 'without a'struggle, and the troops fell back to the castle erected to protect the place on the, lagoon side, and mounting somn twen ty gun's and (bur mortars. The women and children, and the oflceil?! abandoned,' the town to the I tVd fan's,' and fled to Belize, or wherever else they could find shelter. The castle held out for three days, when it capitulated, the beseiged being permitted to leaveithe place unraolested, except having their heads shaved. Not a single: person, is known to have been killed during the attack, except six Yu catecos in the castle, killed by the. bursting of one of the cannon. That many -were afterwards mur dered thete can be no douht. The Indian gritto or war whoop, did more to take the place than anything else, for it appears to have paralyzed the defenders of the town. ,In nearly every street I found cannon had been placed for its defence. Of the town itself 207 of the finest and best houses had been destroyed in the flush of victory. Here and there the most re volting sights weie to be met ; human corpses de voured -by hogs and dogs. These unfortunates had been murdered after the surrender of the place, and had been dragged with ropes around the neck or legs through the streets, iand there left. In the grave yard I found the tombs had been broken open and the bodies taken out and served in like manner. . But the most revolting and horrible spectacle of all was within the walls of the castle. I found the partially burned remains of nine human beings The wfill wns nlsti choked on with hndies. Tn one angle of the battlements I found the body of! r , . . , , . . ,, - a female in a partially decomposed state, and was ' . r . , , ,,,', i , , informed that she had been .violated by eight, of: these savages, and then put to" death. The stench, was beyond anything I ever experienced. On the outside of the castle walls I should suppose there was a good handbarrow load of human hair. . - Of course there is nothing like order in the town ! no man's life or property is safe a moment. .' Notwithstanding this state of things, however, sev- s Having procured about two ounce of chforo eral shops have been opened by people from Be-' f"rn, I administered it by putting it in a Spoooe lize. I saw the. torture applied to two unfortunate Spaniards who'had, been taken prisoners, and" af terwards saw them receive fifty lashes each The Indians are continually fighting among them selves, and scarcely a day passes that one or, more ence of the United Statesj'and: say that unless they are stopped, they will not leave a Spaniard in the country. Remarkable Hcscuc from Servitude of a free Coiored Pliiladclpliiaai. The New York Tiibune says thai there has arrived at lhat port, as a; passenger from Ha vana, m the barque Rapid, a colored man nameujoun i.yue, a native, o, rm aueipn.a, who returns to his country after an absence of twe ve or fourteen years, w.thm which period - -1 I I 1 I . - I Til I 1 I .... ua0 uOC a. a.ugu.a. uuu iiuuicauug one. i , ,;rl r : Somti short lime ago, a gentleman of New York, while, travelling, in the ; island of Cuba, stopped at the ingnio,;a sugar estale of a weaf ihy plainer named Dnn (Jumper Hernandez, about 20 miles from Maianza.. While exam ining the machine of ihe sugar works, he was addressed in English by one of ihe apparent slaves employed about ihern ; and ihe result of guardotl conversation that ensued was 10 in form, 'him that the slave, was in truth s free Ajnerican , citizen, wrongfully held in slavery. His story was this : He had been shipwrecked many years before on the coast of Africa, in the ship Jupiter, employed in ihe service of ihe Colonization. Societv. Wiih the rest of ihe crew he had made his way along the coast for about 130 miles to the slave, station at Galli nas, where, he was well received by the pro prietor, Don Pancho Ramon, who promised him a passage in jhe fir:i vessel to Cuba, froiu which Island ;i would be easy 10 reach tire l)niled Stales. The slave cargo which he thus accompanied being duly lauded in the neigh borhood of Maianzas,. Lyile was cooped with the rest of his color in ihe 'barracoons,' aud soon found himself at work as a slave on the estate where he waa thus found by a stray wayfarer from his own country. He had made more than one unsuccssful attempt for his. freedom, aud had at ihis time given u;p the thought of it in despair. After luther inquiries had bebii made, ihe case ,was laid before ho Secretary of Stale, who fully entered into ii, and readily, responded to the call made upon hjm to demand the liberation of the man. . Our Consul at Ha vana also entered inio tho spirit of the instruc tions which he received from the State Depart ment, with his characteristic zeal aud ability, j Tho upshot of the whole matter has been llie arriial of ihe man, as free,' at New York, as above stated, with iho sum of $2,2 if 33, as his wages during the eleven years of liis tier vtiudeV with interest, beside his expenses holhd. Curidus Invention.' An the village of Bir mingham, Coiin., ihere is a machine for making brass chains, which works as if endowed with human instinct. By a turn of the driving wheel a largo roll of wire is transformed into a. per fectly formed chain by the unaided operation of self-a'ciing machinery; " PreveH)oii is better thanutef 14 -Jfctt'; Receipts. .To Make Cold Cream. M.-It in an eanlw:rf pipkin, over a very gentle hat, a quarter ofa'if. ounce of white wax, and as much .Nperniacwi'i ;s add, while hoi, an ouiice of the oil of sweet al monds ; poiir it into a bowl, and tir it umil im becomes smooth and quite cold, aililunf "rudiY ally, drop by ytop, a large table-spmuifwl u ' 'dps tilled rose or lavender water. Tins is jurucu-' larly good for (fie hand, rendering the km soft, and pliant. Preservation of Cucumbers. In Germany and Poland, it is said barrels uf ciicunHiera, of vari ous sizes and age, headed up- water n!itf ar preserved fresh; from one yeaV to -another ! immersing them in deep well, where the uni form lemperaiure and exclution of Ihe air seen to he the preserving agents. To destroy Flies. Mix in a -aucer, a lahle fpoonful of cream, half as much ground black, pepper, a leahpoonful of brovvn .tugar. This will attract and kill flies without duner of poi soning children. . How to prevent the Ravages of Moths Thp ravages of -the wdollen moih may be prevented by the use of the following substances : To bacco, comphor, red pepper, turpentine, ait'd. perhaps the most agreeable for wearing app.iraif a mixture of one ounce of rhubarb, and kejit m a box or drawer. If the substance be drv. cat- ,erfil in-the folds of the cloth, r,,., Hank".,. or furs ; if liquid, sprinkle ii Ireely in trie oox- , , , 1 J, , . ; es, or on Ihe cloth or wrapper, laid over oc ... . i ' r Chloroform Gercu to Horses.' &T' A gentleman at MorrUtown, N. J., ha'vietna valuable, but an unmanageable hnrVe, -ao filvl ficuli to shoe, determined to try the elftrsi of chloroform. He says and lettintr him inhale it : ihe anitu i seemed to like it, and snufied it tip very ea rly ; in a. short time it had the desired efTecrand he laiti down quietly, when the smith put tm ih'e thott while he remained as if asleep. In about twen ty minutes he entirely recover? from the ef- fncis of it' and has been Derfnttlv w!l hvh'p Dismal Enough. 5 Somebody has given the following description: of the Great Dismal Swamx, sima'ie'd in Virgin ia and North Carolina. l.Je may well call v, as he does, a "fearful plat- e." '-It is full of wild bird's, wild beasts, reptile.- and runaway negroes. Huge bullfrogs,, nearly ;1S large as a man's loot; with smaller specimens of the same enus open a , d conccrf every ighi.-Great indolerfi h,rons anJ olher ,m) azvr () a fi;h unless h out of his own accord - - 8t rQund Qn ,h rjpn, H.vnrin (,f mna- queloes, ephemera and sand flies fill the air. Ai about sundowr.i and after, all the animal lifti is in motion. Every throat is open. Tho croaking of the bulfrogs, buzzing of niseis, coo; ing of turtle doves, and the sounds from a thou sand musica I instruments, pitched on as many different keys, make an assemblage of harmo ny and discord that defies a description The vegetatiori of the Swamp is more luxuriant than can. be yen in any pari of the world. The timber s pine, oak, sweet gum, black gum, holly, t'ne beautiful tulip tree, ihe cypress., loa ded down with its festoons of mos, the mile toe 'bough in dark green bunches growing about, on many different trees, with different ktMds of limber. Immense canebrakes, so thickly interwoven with vines that one might about as well attempt to walk through a brick wall as to force liis way through. A canal is made ihro' the swamp, and, part of the way, it goes thro' ihe lake, and on iis banks runs tlie siage road. Shakes, lizards, scorpions chameleons and other loathsome, reptiles, abound in great numbers," Valuable Invention. Mr. T. S. S:eadman, of Philadelphia, has just patented an invention 16 ease the weight of heavy loads on draught hor ses. This is done by means of a curiously ar ranged elastic spring beneaih the shafts, with bolts running through. It works beautifully, and will prove a great blessing to the poor horses. Punishment in China. Of ihe different kinds of punishment to which ihe higher classes in China are subject; one is, to be flogghd wiih a piece of pgr fumed bamboo. It is said that on one occasion ihe executioner in pum.shiiii -i mandarin, committed a mictak, and used only a common piece of bamboo ; 111 roioequenee of ihis the criminal, after .being pum-hed, Mezed a knife and ripped himselef opeu, declaring th'at His hbner was gone. U53 It Was so hot in New Orleans, by ihe last: accounts, that the Crescent says the people there have been compelled 10 draw their breath with corkscrews This is entirely loo hot. , Prophecy Fulfilled. The conversion of a church inio a. banking-house, in phjoeems a striking fulfilment ql tne bcrijiniral paage. $The house of the LordjiaU be iuYntdinto ad of thieves r " i :" Si -f -' M 1 - t