ii . nTiiwp irnii rVinnfi" -.. - - - i - , r nrriT -? T ,f W. v: tit 11 lift lWa.B : . a nn! 4 twwt ' HA .Jh'h f '" " ' "" ji -in The whole art of Government consists in the art. of being honest. Jefferson. 1 1 r VOL. 11. STR O UDSJ3URG, MONROE COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 7, L850. No. 10. 11 rrirc; Published ly Theodore Sclioch. ; K? ye Tvvo' anyd a talA rfose who receivLeir tmen Thv a carrier or stage drivers employed by the propne toTwill be charged 37 1-2 cents, per year, extra. K nincrs discontinued until all arrearages are paid, except atfheWnofthB Editor. .fAJ,.crtisemcnts not exceeding one square (sixteen lmcs( rrr. :,nrm.i ihmo uonV-s fnr onft dollar, and twflnlv.fi vi cents for every subsequent insertion. The charge for one and three insertions the same. A liberal discount made to yearly advertisets. IE? All letters addressed to the Editor must be post-paid. JOB PRINTING. Having a general assortment of large, elegant, plajn and orna 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 reasonabletcrms AT THE OFFICE OF THE Jeffersonian Republican. Wait a JLittle Longer. THERE'S a good time coming, boys, A good time coming, t When Printers shall be paid their dues, t Their children have new frocks and shoes, , k Jn the good time coming : , The devil's pittance shall be paid, ! -,.. u His pantaloons sowed stronger, . And a bran new hat to crown his head ' . "' Wait a little longer.- irtht, z kv There's a good lime coming, boys, " A good time coming, "v . SQbscription lists shall swell in size, Proportioned to the enterprize ; l. In the good lime coining ; ' I Aud every farmer in the land, ., - . Shall feel his mind grow stronger ; . Patronizing county trusts. Wait a little longer. . , v 'The re's a good time coming, boys, A good lime coming, f" : When an editor can pay his debts, (Which now too often he forgets,) He'll settle off his old accounts To make his credit stronger, With half dimes in his fob for change, r. ? Wait a little longer. A Good Joke. i The following joke is too good for us to take the responsibility of it, particularly as we were sworn never lo mention it but editors' oaths, lovers prom ises, and pastry cooks' piecrust, are about of a muchness ; so here goes : Young mammas are proverbially fond of displaying the precious intellect of their "buds of beauty." A friend of ours, dropping in at the dinner hour of a youthful pair, not two hundred miles from this city, was treated to a gra tuitous entertaiment on the score of maternal soli citude by the charming hostess. " You've not seen our Willie for an age, Mr. 1 he's quite a little man, I can assure you ! Willie, shake hands with ihe gentleman." Of course Willie obeyed directions, and of course our friend, as in duty bound, was filled with admiration from the crown of his head to the sole of his feet. " He's so po lite, too," urged the mother ; " says yes sir, and no ma'am, and cati use his knife and fork like a gentteman." Now, Willie," said she, placing him at the ta ble, the better to give a practical proof of her as sersions: "now, Willie, what will you have V Our friend was all ears for the reply, and.prepared to go into immediate ecstasies, but no reply came. Will you have some beans ?" " No-o !" roared out the precious. "No ,? is that the way to speak to your mother! .No-whatl" ""No beans !" shouted the little curiosity, fling ing the plate at the mother's head and upsetting the soup tureen Into our friend's lap. " Deliver me from smart children hereafter," exclaimed our friend as he related to us the mishap, at the same time threatening to pull our very inoffensive nose If we should ever make a capital of it. We did not relish the threat, through we did the story, and so told it, in conseqence of which, we beg to assure our readers, that from this time hanceforth we con sider our nose pulled in several places. A Scolding Wife, or a Smoky Chimney.--At a young man's debating socieiy, the ques tion for discussion was " Which is the great est evil, a scolding wife, or a smoky chimney?" After ihe appointed disputants had concluded, a spectator aaid. I've been almost mad a listening to the de- bate of these 'ere youngsters. They don't' know nothing at all about the subject. Wait till they have had a wife 'for twenty years and been jammed, and alammed all the while and wait till they have been scolded because the ba by cried, because ihe fire wouldn't burn, because the oven was too hot, because the cow kicked over the milk, because it rained, because the sun shined, because ihe hens did'nt lay, because the butter wouldn't come, because the old cat tiad kittens, because visiters came to soon after dinner, because they were one minuie too late, because they sung, because a young lady was invited to call again ; why Mr. Chairman, I'd rather hear the clatter of hammers and stones, and twenty brass kettles, than the din,. din, din, of the tongue of a scolding wife. Yes, air, I would. To ray mind, Ml Chairman, a smoky chimney is no more lo be compared to a scold ing wife, than a little negro is to a dark night. Mrs. Parti u glow's liast. Reading the newspaper praises of Jenny Lindas benevolent disposition, Mrs. Partington came to .the.complitnentary expression in regard to the "IeU -JeelinE in her bosom," which the Swedish jJNightingale cherished .towards the unfortunate .and eedy. Involuntarily raising her spectacles, and looking the very personification of amazement, the good old lady repeated A feller feelings in her bosom'! la me, if that aint just the way the fellers used ito do when. I .was a girl,!V And themshe re adjusted her spectacles and kept on readipg. , From. Chamber's Miscellany. How Coal was Made. Geology lias proved that, at one period, there existed an enormously abundant. land vegetations, the ruins or rubbish of Which, carried into seas, and there sunk to the bottom, and afterward, cov ered over by sand and mud beds, became the sub stance which we now recognize as coal. This was a natural transaction of vast consequence to us, seeing how much utility we find in coal, both for warming our dwellings and for various manu factures, as well as the production of steam, by which so great a mechanical power is generated. It may naturally excite surprise that the vegeta ble remains should have so completely changed their apparent character, and become black. But this can be explained by chemistry ; and part of the marvel becomes clear to the simplest under standing when we recall the familiar fact, that damp hay, thrown closely into a heap, gives put heat, and becomes of a dark color. When a veg etable mass is excluded from the air, and subjected id great pressure, a bituminous fermentation is produced, and the result is the mineral coal, which is of various characters, according as the mass has been originally intermingled with sand, clay or other earthy impurities. On account of the change effected by mineralization, it is difficult to delect in coal the traces of a vegetable structure ; but these can be made clear in all except the high ly bituminous caking coal, by cutting or polishing it down into thin transparent slices, when the mi crocopo shows the fibres and cells very plainlyj From distinct isolated specimens found in the sandstones amidst the coal beds, we discover the nature of the plants of this era. They are almost all of a simple cellular structure, and such, as ex ist with us in small forms, (horse tails, club mosses, and ferns), but advanced to a enormous magnitude. The species are all along since extinct. The vegetation generally is such as now grows in clus ters of tropical islands ; but it must have been the result of a high temperature obtained otherwise than that of the tropical regions now is, for the coal strata are found in the temperate, and even the polar regions. "The conclusion, therefore, to which most geologists have arrived is, that the earth, otiginally an incandecent or highly-heated mass, was gradually cooled down until in the Car boniferous period it fostered a growth of terrestri al vegetation all over its surface, to which the ex isting jungles of the tropics are mere barrenness in comparison. This high and uniform tempera ture, combined with a greater proportion of car bonic acid gas in the manufacture, would not on ly sustain a gigantic and prolific vegetation, but would also create denser vapors, showers and rains ; and these again gigantic rivers, periodical inundations, and deltas. Thus, all the conditions for extensive deposits of wood in estuaries would arise from this high temperature ; and every cir cumstance connected with the coal measures points to such conditions. Good Actions. It is the custom among the Arabs for each pil grim in passing by a memorable spot to cast a stone thereon. In this way a pile is reared. It is a common excuse among men when urged to con tribute their might to the general good, that their individual efforts would be of no avail. No per son is so obscure in our opinion, who has not in his power, by good actions and upright conduct, to aid his fellow beings and elevate the standards of morality, truth and justice. No good action is ever lost. A pebble seems but a small and insignificant portion or the world's surface, yet cast it into the water and an infinite succession of circles sur round it, -widening far beyond the reach of vision. So with a good action, it is a trifling thing at the time; it may have impressed but one human heart. Yet the lesson will never be lost. Wider and wi der grow the circles till they lose themselves in the sea of eternity. Do not neglect the day of small things. Trifles make up the sum of human existance. There is some grandeur and magna nimity in doing a great action or making a great sacrifice, but true charity and true greatness is content to labor unseen, save by the one unsleep ing eye that seeth and rewardeth all things. Do not fancy youself useless; Nothing in the wide world is so. But one thing is certain, we cannot be quiescent, and unless our influence is for good it must be for evil. Though our contribution to the general good be but the widow's mite, let it be given cheerfully and unrepiningly and it may yield an abundant harvest. There is an able monument, or rather mound of earth, which now stands on the borders of the Vistula, raised to the memory of the illustrious Kosciusko, by his coun trymen, and, during its erection, no one passed without carrying their portion of earth towards its completion. Men, woman and children, each aud all, labored together for this one grand object; the rich and the poor, for the love of the patriot dwelt strong in the hearts of .all, and each hastened to do. honor to their illustiious countrymen. Let none despair or be idle, for they know not what destiny is before them. Minersyille Bulletin. ' Ceasar, what am become of de darkey what stole de tallow f 1 He ha$ been taken up on an. affidawt, and carried up to de S'preme Court,' to have it fried.' On an affidavit, Ceaser V Yes, J seed de handle myself I did . .A p.le.rgymgn, said tpthe boys.in.jhe gallery, V Donimakeu.ch a noise, for you , will wake, up youriparsntB belo,w:." L ;; k, 4? lm Pumping a Iakc Dry. Dr. J. V. C. Smith, the editor of the Boston Medical Surgical Journal, who is now on a visit to Europe, gives ail interesting description, in his editorial correspondences from Holland, of the manner in which the lake of Haarlem is being drained by steam engines and its water sent to the sea : " Six miles from Amsterdam is the inland lake of Haarlem, 24 mile long by 11 in width, which, three hundred years ago was found to be percep tibly increasing by shooting its. waters further and further, and covering up the land threatening the first commercial port of the realm with destruction by flowing in upon its bank. Various schemes, at that remote epoch, were devised by able coun sellors to stay the threatening danger. Three Dutch Engineers, of acknowledged ability, propos ed draining off the water, first raising it by wind mills. They are entitled to remembrance, from having suggested the plan adopted in 1849, for a verting an impending calamity. Seven years since, delay being no longer safe, a canal was dug a round the whole circumference of the lake, aver aging 200 feet in width by 19 deep. These monster steam engines are housed on the sides of the lake, some six or eight miles apart, each moving eight monstrous pumps. All the pis tons are raised at once, at every revolution of the machinery, raising 15,000 gallons of water, which is emptied into the canal, whence it is hastened on by a fourth engine faster than it would othor wise move to the Zuvder Zee, and thus it reaches the sea 15 miles distant. In April, 1849, the pumps worked by three of the mightiest steam en gines perhaps ever constructed were set in motion; aud up lo this date, July 25th 1850 have lowered the contents of the lake seven feet By next April, it is anticipated that the bottom will be fairly ex posed, and. all the water conveyed away from its ancient basin. All that is executed at. the ex pense of government. The Spider. The intelligence and power evinced by the spi der in securing its prey has often attracted atten tion; but we have seldom have of so remarkable a display of these faculties as we witnessed a short time since. A small-seized spider had made his web on the under side of a table. Early one morning, a cockroach was noticed on the floor, di rectly under the web, and on approaching to take it away, it was discovered that the spider had thrown a line around one of its legs, and while the observer was looking at it, the spider came down and lassoed the opposite leg of the cockroach. The spider then went up to his web, but instantly came down and fastened a line to another leg, and con tinued for several minutes darting and fastening lines to different parts of the bodies of his victim. The struggles of the cockroach though a full grown one were unavailing to effect his escape he could not break his bonds, and his efforts seemed only to entangle him the more. As his struggles became more and more feeble, the spi der threw his lines more thickly around him ; and when he had become nearly exhausted, the spider proceeded to raise him from the floor. This he did by raising one end at a time. He at first raised the head and forward part of the body, near ly half an inch ; then raised the other end; and so continued to work, till the cockroach was elevated five or six inches from the floor. Thus " hung in chains," the victim was left to die. The spider was not more than a tenth the, weight of his prey. What sort of a winter we are to have. The Alexandria Gazette says: 'We have heard, through a scientific friend, that he has recently examined a record of the wheath er, which has been uninterruptedly kept through several generations, for the past three hundred years, and that he finds that as are the first three days prior to the autumnal equinoxes, so are the autumn and winter which follow; that if these days be mild and pleasant, so will the winter : if, on the other hand, the three days preceding be cold and blustering, so will the autumn and winter that succeed. Our attention has been more particu laly drawn to this theory from the remarkably fine weather succeeding the hail-storm which recent ly passed over thjs section of country, which is so different from the. wheather generally succeeding a hail storm.-' National Currency- We find in a New Eng land paper the following ingenious table of ac tional currency : 10 Loafers make one Grog Shop. 1 Grog Shop makes 50 Drunkards. 50 Drunkards ruin 50 Families: 50 Ruined Families fill one Poor-house and Jail. 1 Poor-Hbuse 'and Jail make 1 Great ' Bill of Cost. 1 Great Bill of cost3 make 1 Poor Town. 1 Poor town drains the County Treasury. 1 Bankrupt County is a Great State Tax. 1 Great State Tax drains the National Funds. An old Nurse's cure for the Summer Complaint. Take three nutmegs, grated; to whjch add the yolka of three fresh eggs, and three tableapoonfulla of French brandy, or best Port wine. Dose a table spoonful three times a day. It is one of the simplest and most ef fective remedies overused for cholera infantum. For thirty years an old nurse used this, and du ring all that time lost not a dozen caaes. With ordinary care, good nursing, proper aitention to clpihirigi.&c, no child need die of summer c.ornjpLajnt, ifypu;will but.uae the above assist; ant. The American aud Swedish Nightin gales, The following, From the New York Mirror, is-a very good hit at the extravagances which fill the papers about Miss Lind's singing : Another triumph. Shortly after the ar rival of Jenny Lind at Boston a very painful event occurred there, which has very seriously affected her. It appears that in the house where apartments were provided for her there was a very suberior mocking bird, whose pow ers of mimicry and song were such that he had silenced both the feather and feline circles there, canary birds and cats giving up all at tempts to outmatch him in their respective notes. He was moved into the same room with Jenny who was charmed with him. After finishing one of her simple songs, "Bob" tuned his pipes and gave out a very fair imitation. The ad miration of Jenny was unbounded ; she tried him in a snatch from the celebrated "cavatina" in "II Punfani." "Bob," after one or two leaps from perch to perch, his tail in ec atacy, filled his chest again, and run over all those beautiful notes as accurately as if they were the mere echo of the thrilling notes of Jen ny. Mr. Barnum, who stood by, became a larmed. He knew the owner of the bird had too long a pocket to admit of a possiblo hope of his willingness to part with him, or even en ter into "an engagement" on any terms, and here was a bird equal to Jenny. Jenny, how ever, seeing the consternation of her friend, sprang to the piano struck off, in her best style, hor celebrated " Swedish Echo Song," " Schielmeert vax undei hell vlarling Weigheugh ! ha ! weigheugh !" " Bob" listened, sprang to his water jar, and took a sip ; listened again, shook his feathers, and began. For a note or two he succeeded admirably; but when he came to that point where the voice of Jenny leaves the earth and turns a a somerset in the clouds, poor " Bob" faltered; he was seen to struggle hard ; reeled, and fell dead from his perch in a lock jaw. cale for Weighing Grain. A valuable machine for weighing and meas uring grain is thus described by ihe St. Louis Republican " One of the most convenient and accurate machines we have seen to weigh wheat or any kind of grain has been invented by Mr. W. H. T. Bramble, of Lafayette, Ind., and patented by hitn on the 7th of May, 1850, A model is now exhibiting by Mr. Insley, at the Virginia hotel in this city. We have noi sufficient familiarity with the construction of the scales to attempt a description at this time, but may say from what we have seen, that its construction and the principle upon which it acts, is perfectly simple. Once seen, the won der is that it was not before invented. To warehouse men, millers, and those engaged in the buying and selling of grain, it seems to us to be of great value. By a very simple, yet accurate arrangement, any amount of grain may be received, weighed, and the account kept per bushel, and the total added up by dial plates on one end of ihe scales. In this it dis penses with the use of tallies and all account keeping. If a certain quantity of wheat is to be delivered, the machine is slightly shifted, the index set at the other end to measure the quantity required, and when that passes through it it stops. Bui its greatest value is to millers, who have to tru3t to other men to attend the " run." By placing it over the hopper he may at all times ascertain precisely how much flour be is making to the bushel. He may de tect any errors on the pari of his workmen or machinery. It is of very cheap construction. Mr. lnaley is here to sell rights to States, counties, or individuals only. The model will be exhibited in the Exchange, and we com mend it to the attention of our grain merchants, millers, etc. The Interior of Africa. Bancroft, an intelligent voyager, has, years ago, dissipated the delusion, that the interior of Africa is a " desert waste." He has shown that it is accessible to navigation and trade; thai the climate is as healthy as that of the tropics generally ; that there are regions of beautiful and fertile country, affording oppor tunities for legiiimate commerce of indefinite extension. This adventurous traveller explored the river Nieer within forty miles of Timbuc- too. He has thrown light on thousands of miles oi richly fertile and wooded country, wa tered by that great stream: and upon the ivory, vegetable tallow, pepers, indigo, cotton, wool, palm oil, dye woods, timber woods, skins, and a great variety of produce, which invito the trade. To carry on this trade in the vossels which navigate the river, ii is necessary to have black crews. The " London Spector" remarks : " Of course the free blacks, educated in the West India trade, will become useful workmen in penetrating the native land of their race. We must depend, at least for generations, to come, on the black race to supply the bulk of the crews." For our own part, we do not see why our own country should not compete with Britain for the rich trade of Africa. Nor do we know any more efficient method of com petition than the proposed line of steamers. Rain Cause. A very simple and excellent instrument or measuring the. depth of rain that falls, has re cently been invented. It consists of a copper funnel, from 5 to 7 inches in diameter. The rain being collected in a glass bottle it should be placed in a small stand near the surface of the ground, to project the bottle from the action of the sun. The amount of rain fallen in a given time is measured in a graduated glass jar, one-tenth the area of the funnel, and so di vided, that every inch in depth of the tuhe shall indicate one-tent h qf an inch falling in the funnel. The amount, of rain falling can be measured by tiuch an. instrument to 1 -5000th part of an inch, or oven less.. .. . . To Fatten Fowls. Fowls may be fattened in four or five days, by the following process: Set some rice over the fire with skimmed milk, as much only as will .serve one day. Let it boil till the rice is swelled out ; add a teaspoonful of sugar. Feed them four or five times a day in pans, and give them as much each time as will fill them. Great care must be taken that they have nothing sour given them, as that prevents their fattening; Give them, clean water, or the milk from the rice to drink. By this method the fie3h will have a clear whiteness ; and as rice goes further than barley-meal, it will be found more economical. Cows Holding their Milk. A correspondent of the American Agriculturist states, that he had a cow that would not give down her milk ; and, as he had heard that putting a weight on the back of a cow would make her give down her milk, he laid a bushel of grain on her back, but without effect. He then put his el bows on the centre of her back, and bore on till her back became hollowed, and then she gave down her milk freely. In the American Veterinarian, we remark that the holding up of milk is done by an effort of the cow, of which she will tire after awhile ; and if a person will deal gently with a cow, and sit down and perform the usual operation of milking, per severing steadily, the milk will flow freely in a short time. The discovery of this simple and gentle method was made by a boy only nine years of age, who could by mild means milk the most refractory cows, which strong, men had tried in vain to subdue. Kicking Horses. Daniel D. Gitt, of Adams county, in this State, communicates to the American Farmer his mode of breaking horses of the vile and dangerous hab it of kicking. He says : " I attach one end of a strong line to the hind pastern of the horse, and take it forward through the loop, fastened to the trace, at the side of the horse, and attach the other end of the line to the bit of the bridle; a line attached thus at each side of the horse, if left sufficiently long to just enable him to make a step, will at every kick he may make, operate so severely upon his mouth as to cause him very soon to give it up as a bad job." Singular Discovery of a Toad. As some shipwrights were engaged in open ing the brig Brilliant, of Workingham, lying in the Bute Docks, Cardnff, in Wales, one of them had occasion to " take a chip off" one of her quarter timbers, when to his astonishment he saw a hole in it. After some further examina tion of the part and probing it, an immense toad was taken out. The animal, on being handed ashore and placed in the sun, hopped about, apparently delighted with its liberation from its oaken cell, and introduced to light and heat. The vessel is 22 years old, and the toad must have been imbedded in the tree whilst growing. This piece of timber was traversed by bolts and other fastenings in almont every direction ; but strange to say, Mons. Crapaud escaped un hurt, although in such a dangerous locality, af ter no one knows how long, nor how much knocking about ashore and tossing about at sea for more than 20 years, to and from various parts of the world. Capital. Professor Risley, who is now in Itily, says that when he was in Venice, an American cap tain and an Englishman met at dinner. "You are an American, sir V said the- Englishman. " 1 reckon I am," returned the captain. You have the name of being great warriors?" "Yes," said the Yankee, " we shoot pretty well." "But how is it you are so anxious to make peace with Mosico 1 This does not appear much like spunk." " You are an Englishman V interrogated 'the Yankee. " Yes," replied the Englishman. " Well," said the Yankee, " I don't know what our folks have offered to do with Mexico ; but, s'ranger, I'll just tell you one thing I'll be d d if we ever offered to make peace with you 1" This home thrust at the Englishman set the whole table in an uproar of laughter. An Original Notice to Debtors. A Mr. Beckwith, of Smethport, Pa., gives notice, af ter the following fashion, to his old custommers to square their accouta : " I told you, some time ago, that I had made up my mind to lake a nimble sixpence instead of a slow shilling ; but it has proved too nimble for me, and I fear I shant even get the slow shHling, ii's so long in coming round. Those indebted, " me would do well to make themselves nimble, or I shall be under the necessity of ascertaining by gree ting, where that nimble sixpence is. You that have danced, walk up and pay the fiddler." How to Destroy Rats. Professed rat catchers in England use the following compound, and so affected are rats by this perfume that they can be taken with im punity :--Powdered assafcetida one quarter grain; oil of anniseed, one drachm ; essential oil of lavender, one scruple ; essential oil of rhodium, three drachms. Mix this compound, and spread it on the bail in the trap. "What are the chief end of man ?" asked' a school teacher of his pupils. "Head and feet," was the prompt reply. The teacher fainted. It is decidedly in bad taste to attend the funeral of a colored friend, and then inform your friends you have been a black berry ing JET Said qyqung urchin indignantly, to a gen tleman who had called him a boy. " Dqint-qall me. boy Pv chew'd tobacco Una Blx yeare," Thj.getll6man apologised ! . .