Jeffersonian Republican. (Stroudsburg, Pa.) 1840-1853, July 24, 1851, Image 1

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    JEFF
THE WHOLE ART OF GOVERNMENT. CONSISTS IN THE ART OF BEING HONEST. JEFFERSON.
VOL. 11.
STROUDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, JULY 24, 1851.
No. 44.
j 1
'id itim '.'
JPtiblishucl by TlicodorcSchocIi.
TERMS-TvTFdoilars per annniim in prance Two
dollars and a quarter, half yearb'-and if not pad be.
lore the end of the year, Two dollars and a half, l hose
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employed by the proprietor, will be chargeU J. 1--
cents, per year, extra. ,, ;i
No papers ditcontinucd until all arrearages are paid,
except at the option of the Editor. - ,civ
.IE? Advertisements not exceeding one square (six
teen lincsl will be inserted three weeks for one dollar,
and twenty-fire cents for erery subsequent insertion.
The Charce for one and three insertions the same.
A liberal discount made to yearly advertisers.
IE7 All letters addressed to the Editor must be post
paid JOB PRINTING.
Haring a general assortment of large, elegant, plain
and ornamental Type, we are prepared
to execute every description of
Cards, Circulars, Dill Heads, Notes, Blank Receipts,
Justices, Legal and others Ulsnks. Phamphlcts, 4c,
printed with neatness and despatch, on reasonable
terms,
AT THE OFFICE OF THE
Jcfffcrsoniaai RcpwblioaM.
He's None the Worse for TJial.
What though the homespun suit he wears
Best suited to the sons of toil.
What though on coarsest food he fares,
And tends the loom or tills the soil:
What though no gold leaf gilds the tongue,
Devoted to congenial chatl
If right prevails, and not the wrong,
The man is none the worse for that
What though within the humble cot
No costly ornament is seen :
"What though the wife possesses not
Her satin gowns of black and green ;
What though the merry household band
Half-naked fly to ball and bat?
If conscience guides the heart and hand
The man is the none the worse for that.
True worth i9 not a thing of dress
Of splender, wealth, or classic lore !
Would that these trappings we loved less,
And clung to honest worth the more!
Though pride may spurn the toiling crowd,
The tattered garb, the crownless hat,
Yet God and nature cry aloud,
The man is none the worse for that !
Itecoplsoii Address.
We give below the address delivered by
S. C. Buhxett, Esq., to the Monroe Artiller
ists, in this borough, on the Fourth of July :
Soldikus: The duty devolves upon me!
of making a few remarks to you upon the oc
casion of this, your first visit to our borough.
You come for the purpose of commingling in
sdcial intercourse with your fellow-citizens,
and to participate in the exercises that may
here transpire, commemorative of the nation's
44 great Sabbath." The day selected by you
is truly opportune, as the one hallowed in the
memory of u3 all, as the one upon which a
bold and decided attitude was taken by our
ancestors against the unwise and impolitic
measures concerted by the British Legislature,
a day upon which those high resolves were
taken which -were so nobly and triumphantly
sustained by the prowess of American arms in
the dark and forbidding hours of the Revolu
tion, and which formed the glorious harbingers
of the after splendor and renown of our com
mon country. It is a source of just pride, and
State pride is a virtue'?ts well as love of
country, that the declaration of Independence
was first promulgated in the chief city of our
State, that it was within the limits of our
own good Commonwealth that those chiv
alric and generous spirits of '76, in view of
their political degradation and the gross in
fringements of their most sacred rights, sec
ibeir lives, their fortunes, and their sacred
honors, " upon a cast," and swore " to stand
the hazard of the die."
It is foreign to my purpose to dilate upon
the scenes of the Revolution. I leave them :
to another. Suffice it to say that the Spartan
band brought their all, and freely offered it as
a sacrifice upon the altar of their country,
that many battles were fought, many lives
were lost, and much treasure expended-before
they attained their darling object, that
" Liberty arose, not in the sunshine
And smiles of Heaven but wrapt
In whirlwinds, and begirt with woes ;
Her birth-star was the light of burning plains."
Never perhaps since the organization of
our government Jiasthis country enjoyed such
a seasoofonVejdalnd industrial, prosr
perity. Uur commercial marts are tnrongeo
with the richest contributions from all coun
tries and climes, and., exchanged for the no
less rich productions of our own highly fa
vored land, simultaneously enhancing the
gains of the merchant and tradesman, and
pouring a golden harvest into the coffers of
the government, while every city and town,
village and halnlet, throughout the broad ex
tent of our country, from the great lakes to
the Gulf of Mexico, and from the Atlantic to
the Pacific, is vocal with the gladsome sounds
of industry, whose splendid creations redound
to the physical welfare and social refinement
of our citizens, and contribute to develop the
mighty resources, and add-to the wealth, the
power and grandeur of this .magnificent Re
public. The political and social condition of
the masses are infinitely better than those of
any, other people -,upon the face of the globe,
Wfi have.no ieudal privileges, dating far-back
to the dark and barberous days of the Celtics.
We have no established Church to curtail the
exercise of conscience, to force implicit obe
dience to every exaction suggested by reli
gious fanaticism and bigotry, and eat out the
substance of the people for the support of a
proud and arrogant priesthood. We have no
armed police quartered in our homes as spies
and informers, who are ever ready to carry : these effects; its name is time,
out, at the point of the bayonet, the behests i Days, months, years and centuries are all
of despots and tyrants. In a word I congrat- embraced in our notion of time, and we attach
ulate you, and I am proud in being able so to to it the capability of being measured in con
do, upon your full, free, and entire exemption ( tradistiuction to eternity, which admits of no
from that long and fearful catalogue of the , numerical calculation,
badges of oppression, which are concocted in j Time .g an m(jgt persongj
the cabinets of Kings and Princes, m the clois-: one of great importancc. They lay plans and
ters of priests, and in all the dark dens of the toil for their completion Bolely in reference to
devotees of legitimacy. the COnsideraUon that there will be time suf-
Our country presents the anomalous exam-.
pie of sustaining her authority at home wuh-
nut n sbindinn-armv. and her authority abroad
i ' fnce ti,, th. m,llnr rommpr I
with a navy less than the smallest commer-
ciai European oiuua. it u. uut uie uuSia j
or tins government 10 ouim anu moui migncy ,
ww.c i UUwUfck.b..v
plunder defenceless nations and j
easury with surreptitious gains,
in the nath of conouest and adorn
Armadas to
swell her treasury
to follow in the path of conquest and adorn
her capital and chief cities with the fruits of
a system of legalized robbery,-to organize j
armies to stand between her and her citizens. !
tt i c - u i w ,
Her's is a far h!gher and a nobler destiny, in i
me cuiuvauon oi uie arts oi peace, aim ui .
me tuiuuuuu ui me u.io vji av.t, ;
elevating her citizens to that point of political, ,
intellectual, and social well-being, designed '
n .,.:
hv their Hrentor. One distinctive feature in
hv ilipir frpntnr Ono distinrtivo feature in !
by their Ureator. une distincue leaiure in ,
j - - ;
the political condition of the people of the U-;
nited States, is that their ricrhts are secured i
within the limits of a written Constitution,
within the limits of a written Constitution,
clearly and accurately defined, the provisions '
. . , : , .
ot which are carried out by three legitimate ,
co-ordinate branches, the Legislative, Execu-
tive. and Judiciary departments, a system '
o i
somewhat abstruse in its design, but perfect- 1
7 . . . ' ; , i M
ly harmonious in all its operations. I beleve
this country has the honor of inventing and
nromulsratinff written constitutions, for every
genuine constitution now existing in Europe ,
' ,. :
or any where else, has been formed since the ;
American nevoiuuon aim nu uuuuLbugge&u;u
by American example, which presents very
clear proof of the infinite application of Yan-
keo ingenuity that it not only seisin the of old . th- pIeasure; oflifo ave I 'i 2 own
manufacture of wooden nutmegs, but m the ost their attractiveness, and you take but a generation, yet to those who shall follow, our
framing and devising of one othe best and j sjjgllt mlerest jn worldly things, yet it will ' name wil1 1)0 unknown; the elevation mark
most stupendous systems of governmental pol- j -c soIid pleasure to -revt the brow of ing the spot where we rest will soon be level
itv that ever existed or ever will exist- ;7i i -n i u e u i 1 1 ' cd and tne marble W0In so that the letters
ll max evei L.uticu ui evui ij i tAiau ' this lull, tvnurn mnntr venre hffnr vnii hoholl - . , ., .
Soldiers, since the days of kjrjght errantry '
d chivalry, the profesesion o'farms has ever j
ana cnivairy, me proiesesion oiarms nas ever
been esteemed a nolle and honorable one, but
like evervthincr else, as I have before intimated,
-fit- eunin t;itXfti.Kooct
. r o r .
purposes. The military orgaftization of this :
country is different from that of most, if not
an tne European amies. xneir armies are f
cnmnncoil nf mpn pnrlv ? mnrCQpJ lritn flip
""'"i J ....r. ;
them, with no definite rifrhts to challensre '
ic ngnis. to cnanenge
no high and enobling '
ir souls apd impel them
their vigilence, with no high and enobling '
impulse
s. to swell their
lorward to tne penormance pi tneir aaue
but they are emphatically a -servile class,
pledged at all hazards to do the bidding of;
those in power. In this country every man
i . . r t . i x ' i
n Knld?Rr. hut iustso far as the defence of.
-
his home and his country is concerned
nib llUilie UliU Ilia euunuv la euiieeiueu.
Many have been led to doubt the efficiency
of citizen soldiers Throwing aside the deeds '
of noble daring in the Revolution and the war
r-iom u-i- j u i .1 - ,
of 1812, exhibited by those that were termed
"mw mllitin." thp InfYv hnnrinrr nnd snlpndiil
' j m o i
achievements oi our citizen soldiers on tne
plains and at the mountain passes of Mexico,
must remove every aspersion, and challenge
the admiration and respect of every man. It
was there proven that our citizen soldiers,
vwfa
lueiteu Jiive u. ouu v niwui uciuiituui leuieu-
dous shoclis. Nothing could withstand their
sudden and overwhelming attacks from Mata-
n v.m t n,rr
morus to Buena Vista, and from Vera Cruz
to the proud city of the Aztecs herself. Not
a heart was unmaned, and not an arm un-
derved, until the stars and stripes were planted
on every battlement, and flaunted in triumph
m-pr pvprv nrnstrate foe.
Gentlemen, from your soldier like bearing,
known patriotism, we have abundant evidence
that
if you should ever be called upon to face
m vissaged war," each of jtou would meet
"grim
it with the fortitude that becomes the soldier,
and though the contest mighflrage with fear
ful strife, and the
" Scathing fires should leap from line to line,
And the cannon's loud roar jtnock heaven's
High rolling thunder," ' 1
you would never strike to an insolent foe,
nor suffer the beautiful banner'that stands at
the heal of your corps, to trail in dishonor to
the dust.
Soldiers, this is your first visjt to our bor
ough, and I trust that it, like similar exchanges
of courtesies, maybe productive of a spirit
of friendship and good feeling; -Jetween citi
zens of remote sections. Iribehalf of the
members of the "Humane Fire Crmpany,"
and the citizens of Stroubsburg in general, I
bid you a warm and cordial welcome.
The rotation of the eartixperiment
has been successfully triedboth at the
National Gallery and thcrSmithsonian
Institute ia "Washinrfon.
Times Takings and .caFiugs
BY THOMAS C. HILL.
. Throughout all the phases which, nature
presents to us, we have evidence of changes.
History and personal experience both teaches
us that there is one thing which produces all
ficfcnt tQ finish thenh
Anoldmansitsunonaloftvrock. the base
t . . , , ...
surrounueu -uy uie iragmeiua oi ,
bygQne ag(JS . in one haD( he holds an hour
j in tl)C other a scythe ln hisleftis the
emblem 0f limited duration
einbiem ot limited duration m ins right the
bol of destruction and arbiter of moi,
m:. , J .
.....
aa t fK i. I
, man seldom extends bcvond threc;
d t d -f , t conc:equcnce
-core ana ien ears anu oi wnai consequcn ce
ig u tQ us how , the earth shall endure .
it jg onl important as jt effects our mortai ex.
jt is onjy jmportant as it effects our mortal ex-
istencc The earth may be annihilated, the
sun row dirn and the stars fade awav vet
sun2 w aim, anu tne stars laue aw ay, jei
: Ai m : ii.. f
. i mi . i- f
imm0rtal man, will continue to live, !
inuii, luiinuruu uiun, win uuiiuuue iu nve, i
am thinl and acl aftertj,e destruction of
umki
u tnn Pn iA m:Q, i
mnm Mb ;,., . tuL
J 1 om,,l"o ,
houseSj lhe habitations of civilized man and
P . -
iliu auuuua ui uuulc lliiu. luuhui l uicociil cl
,.lf:r.,i mntracttn ,t, i,,i w
'
c . .,. , u..uu i.-
' yieuu ilUiUO UiUUliU' llJC t-nuii.1. .m na ..ea-
; yen pointh)g spir6) though it be is ney.
ertheicss a pieasant object, as it stands in the '
Lontril rti,0 isttin iw;n f t?w.
fmn;nr .n,l to von thPrP is nn!
thing is familiar, andtojou there is no
-
place like native viIla and the home
0f your childhood.
Years roll on-you have grown up to man's
. estate, and perhaps descending1 to the
. ' J "-" " " "
the vilIage at your feet.
standing in the same
S5tniu1infr
com ,i;f,- ,v,a tun ,:!, ,u
1 O
; W WUilib UA.WblVtX U.O t UiU Llilli i i 111 UUb
,ef:ei,.f .:n ,
t"w"""t"b euutexuuLe
cnanges wmcn nave taKen piace since, wnen
an idle boy you were accustomed to sport in
neighboring meadows. The house in
which you were born and spent your early
, , . ..i
uavs nas cone, ana in us place there stanas a
r.u- i - ts
notions of the luxuriant and refined. The
cmrch als lhe promment buildings of the
vilIa(Te has not beenablcto brave the chan-e
"age nasnot ueenauici0Draeine cnanoe,
hurch also. Uie Drominent buiidinffS of th'
but on the sacred pot whero it st00d for ma-. for a short time, on our return new faces greet!
ny there rears its ofty headj a proud : us, and of all our friends scarcely one ii left
raonument of the skilI .of the architect . the to recount the happy days of sunny childhood j
"u v..i. ,...or youth. I
-..i., t., ....
UUUIU UOl rauioie over Uiem even II YOU were
' i . .u .
nirmn rfctnrJrt tn thn innnnnnt nmncnmnnfc
; 0f childhood
The little sapling which you set out in your
yout!lfui days has hec0me a great tree : the
' j uti-j o ntxo uLbuuji ajjiwi ui-t-, lul'
; acorn buried in the ound hag burst Us d
1 . . , . " . ,
tenement anu grown to De a giant oaic ; your ;
( piayiu-ates have become women and men, and
those who wlien children lived in the quiet
j village now borne down by age, die in the
cr0wded capital.
A great and almost supernatural change
has caused it Ask the woods and lawns,
the mountains rearing their heads towards
hpnvpn. nnd thp simnv nlnins: rnvornt wit Ii
verdur and with united voice th wj tcU
.. . .
I wm waB vwvvu
you it is tune,
The hapless infant soon becomes a child
the child gradually, yet certainly progresses
;t0 the season 0f youth manhood soon sue-
j c-eedSf and old age bringg us 6peediiy to the
j i. . i i .1
- uuor 01 uie Luiuu, uie eiubiirj tieuu, uie rosy
j 1. . i. i-j.: 1 .1
cheekj tho bloom of yguth and the gay ad
untroubled :spirits;are given- up;? 6obriety and;
thousrhtfulness succeed. These are at last
, changed for the wrjnkled face and whitened
ockg) the bended form and forgelfui inemory
of second chidhood.
Not every one passes through these chang
Go into the grave yard and aek who are 1 our. city pitching out the logs with her own
, . m.. :,it: ,..t. r 'J:ii.. ! .1
es.
the sleepers there J The tomb-stones
will
not tell you of old age merely, ripened for the
sephulcre. By far the greater portion are ( our bachelor friends as$are matrimonially in- nQ sueariug to another, but does not in
those from the ranks of youth and manhood, clined. We care notj,in what rank of life jure fcjie woojt jt jg readily cleansed out
Aye, there, too, you will find the little mound such a woman may befound, she is a treas- )y tu0 manufacturer.
as well as that of the adult ; the new born ' ure. In thc midst of 'poverty, toil and want,
;nfnn,. in.,h;r,rr h ha i.,i ' h o r ?rt nn ;Q nn ;m nfi.i pkn bl n. and she has on-; " Sigh a Gittin up Stairs." Said
and joyous youth-all are there. Time for
them was short ; their earthly existence was
not of long duration ; the boundary was lim-
ited to a few short years, and then their life
closed. They have gone on that journey
whence there is no returning.
Spring emerges into summer, and autum-
nal zephyrs, are exchanged for thc biting frost
and chilly winds of winter; thc flinty rock
! by th. continued action of water gradually
wears, away ; what were once mere bushes
become mighty forests, rivers change their
courses, and form new channels, stars disap-
pear and others fill their places, and even our '
whole solar system is moving forward to some
lar distant point, there perchnance to be de-
stroyod.
Splendid temples with their gorgeous trap
pings become insecure and totering; the vel
vet is moth eaten and moulded ; the gilding
tarnished by rust and damp; the gold becomes
dim, and the most fine gold,changed.
The child of fortune, the daughter of wealth
and luxury, who has all that this world can
furnish to gratify the desire, or administer to
the wants of man, whose cheek the summer
7rnhrrc n rn mnrin noir,iJtf nil f.
-iv -uumou, uvi uuouui ;
uee iium uiiiu ur uuxieiy ior uie iuiure. Visit
her when a few years shall have elapsed; see
"ur Pvuny bincjren, ner pate, emaciated
1 a.-- ! t 1 . i
trame and care worn brow are but the rem-
nant of th t hi , constituted an object
Qf b H fr
all are gone ; hope, the last to forsake us, has
tr.7mr. Lin n..n.L.. rtCl.t. i 1. 1. P
mynt, me marcu oi
Jjine has puc sad and bitter changes in j
bShfoS
i "
their future career clouded in o-lnmn.
The little stream dancing with merry music
ver ,ls f0? fea 13 a, ?eautilul sight, as its
flowery banks stoop to kiss the sparkling np-1
, but follow i on-see 'new accessions!
made to it at every step, until it swells into a
maae to n az every step, until it swells into a
majest,ic river, bearing life and produce on its !
b)ad bosom ; behold- it wending its way to
t100CCan and finalIy ,nlngmnr lts waters,
.. ' J. . . , , , 1
-., mmiij 1U3
w th tJmsft nf thP frrnnt n. tlro tn h Inshnd
witn tiiose oi tne great sea,
by the fury of the elements,
t - -
Yon snlennid castle, frownin
... .
rr witli Datter-
les, and bristling with cannon, whose brazen
m,ouhs deS.an?e to e enemy, the strength
or wnose loundations challenge the united ex-
crtions of Inan t0 undermine them, and which
has been ernntrd ns a nrn.ul Rnp..imon nr ar.
I a 1 t mi i .
- i - w..--
chitectural skill, and a nhgt legacy to coming
1 r .
generations, will need but a short lapse of
tlme ere lt wiU be covered wit , vy and its
apartmentg become a homo for and
bats J the scream of the owl at night will be
heard from its crumbling battlements: its
Wa,r , e weaPons W1" bc broken and useless,
and the n of ite fa obliterated
mm me liuuic ui lis ijusaeuro ue uuiiieruieu
' from the memory of those to whom it was1
,
bequeathed to perpetuate it.
! iUan t011s year alter 'ear tor tne trifling re-
sha-....t..i ' ,J
t tneron mscriued win oe invisible to him who
clmll ttfnl 1" nmrvnrr t li n mrtivlrl nim nil -c 1
i- . .
tion, marking the character ofthe sleeper be-
. .. , i
neatl1 tue sod ; yet soon even his task will be
ended, and Uie stone worn and crunib ng fa 1
to the ground ; even .before this shall
occured, our mortal '; tenements will
have
have
mingled with the dust
louth, beauty and .vigor soon depart. It
?c tint .nlwnvs snrinnrnnrmnnmnp lint iev win.
,. cf Pmimc i,n n ihnmcainac
W,. ,l;nt5 ,i vintv
leave us; cares, disappomments and anxiety
ress heavy upon us; the companions of our;
' fy dayS are C"1 dmvn'an(1 t,,ie,r grave-j
stones grow grey in our sight: we leave home '
press heavy upon us j. the companions of our
. T ls. evcr marching onward; he abides
lnnrror w th snmn t inn w th ot inrs- hn tn ma
,
nnn thimrnnrl nnirac n ciilict itiitn Snnn nine
one thing and leaves a substitute,
j too soon his account wj.th us will be settled,
, U."L V lti,ltiv
but whenever it shall. be, may we go to our
f
," Like one who wraps Uie drapery of Ills couch around
; 1imt ,
I And lies down to pleasant dreams.'
A IfJodtil of a Woman.
Some time since a man residing a short dis- j is with difficulty preserved sweet through the
tance from the city, " shuffled off this mortal ; warm summer nights, I will give you a rem
r.nil." le.avin.rr a wife and three daughters edv I have used with good results. Itissim-
1 apparently helpless and penniless upon the
, 0
ter about 1G years of age what JJurns calls
' a " bonnie. sweet, and sonsic lass" a whole
1 orm f.,11 ho1th virtue nnil rural hpnnl.v
LL 1111 llill J A itXIH kill 11 WM V( uaau w - wv .
resoIved tQ fc effort for thc s t of
l:
her mother and sisters.
A Warm-hearted
neighbor offered her, at her own solicitation,
75 cents per cord for cutting wood, being an j
advance of 25 cents on the usual price fori
. such employment commonly considered the '
! 1 , i. 1
1 , -l
most lauonous even ior uie siernyr tje..
- Nothfag daunte(j however our hcroine c0ln.
mencedoperations, and by dint of application
and economy, in a short time managed to
save enough from hene'arnings to buy her a
j wagon and team. Shfis now daily seen scl-
ling wood in our streets, and unloading as
actively as any wood-carrier who drives to
...
fair hands,
"
3 ,
reality to such of
lady for such she is in
, ly sought by unwonted labor to suport ner-
1 self and relatives by the toil of her own hands,
Had not our heart another shrine which claims
, its homage, we know jiot that tins moral he-
' roine this Joan of Arc pf the affections
! might not tempt us to violate Mrs. Norton's
J oft-repeated injunction to. "loyo not." .As.it
is, we advise our bachelor friendfto pay at -
tention" to our 'wood," not thc-'MIbWer
-teirV'-Memphis Enquirrr.
Effecls of War.
It is stated in the foreign papers, that the
census of Crotia.Slavonica, Banet, and Tran-
sylvania, recently taken, shows that there are
in those provinces, twenty-Jive thousand wid-
ows, the result of the Hungarian war. Such
facts as these are eloquent; and should be
known and circulated by every lover of peace.
Millions of men have fallen since wars began
millions and tens of millions. Cajsar sac
rificed at least two millions, and Napoleon,
directly or indirectly, as many.
The dead are not all. There are the dis
abled physically, who remain a tax upon their
country or their friends. And there are the
!,.,,, '
aisaoieu morally, whose war-tuition
unfits
them for the arts and purposes of peace. And
there are the destitute widows and orphan
children, who, if not in all cases absolutely
dependent upon society by the death of the
heads of households, are less productive to
the state and less useful to the race, than
they would be under the culture and direc-
they would be under the cultur
TT T'
Confusion
nu.
i arts' Peded education, or false education,
indifference to suffering, national exclustve-
ness and hereditary enmity-such are a few
onlv 0fthe evils which follow war rixrM
J the -wis which ollow war, righteous
, ' , .
J between evils ; and we rejoice in the belief
umi, uuutr uie uirecuon oi rroviaence, me
, , . , . ..
A 1 A. 1 1 f T" ,
mirnnsfis inr wmr.n wars nni nrrhrinnr hnvn
; hfiRn nprmittPfl. nrp cn nnnrlv nponmnlialiofl
1 a o
r ' j
, that their occurrence will become more and
i
; more rare, until "wars cease in all the earth."
The e-?nense of wir -innPir? i nrdiVI mrt
' - tl 6 7 : f aPPears a sord,ci Part
ofthe calculation of its evils; but even this
k l f.T 4. i ii .
chnit r tirvt ho i rfrrrtt nrt in t hn nnnnnnt In
.
" ue lorgouen m uie account,
, our own case, for instance, what millions of
j b consumed in the lal
, "nhe;eo AnTfh "
j , , ! , ' account n
closed; for, by acts of Congress, so much
puDiic aomam nas Deen given to tne soldiers
Und sold ,W ivirlmvs.tktwn rln not nnHprt-P
. , -
to compute the amount of acres, or the money
value of them. Justice to claimants under
the wars of preceding years, re-opens their
account and increases the vast aggregate.
We do not object to these grants. Men who
peril their lives should receive the semblance
of payment though no payment can be real
ly adequate. And their representatives,
,
when the soldiers have left the world, are
That these ap-
l nennrntinnc thnr
propriation
tilUlf
pensions, gratuities and
mong the just and necessa
ry consequences of war, does not weaken our
argument, but rather enforces it.
Our policy as a nation is peace. In peace,
education, 'industry, frugality, religion, the
true elements of national glory and happi
ness arc best cultivated. The notion that to
preserve independence, our jouth must be
r , ,
trained as bull-dogs, -and be
quick m quarrel '-an old-tim
eprrP(1 t Rnmnd nnd third 1
trained as bull-dogs,. -and be sudden and
time hgment, pre
served at second and third hand from the
''7 " " " " . . f .
SPartas' &o hs Huns, the banditti founders
of oinef and other savages-is giving way
before common sense. e are a new nation,
ilvinff m a new world, and must teach our
I . .. ., .
'race better man mis, oy precept anu exam-
1 J
pie. ' x lie war spiiik iieeua uu tuituic, uut jo
found sufficiently abundant whenever oppor
tunity occurs for its developement, as expe
rience testifies. Arthtir's Home Gazette.
Preserving ftlilk.
As this is the season of the year when milk
i -
! ply saltpetre finely pulverized and stirred in
have no coolimr apparatus. It will often save
them from having stringy curd, that is when
: the milk Can hardly be Said to taste SOUr, but
.
to urse a lighter "JIJ '
sides preserving the oriffinal nature 01 the
I Jo mnrntPmlnr 1nllnr NfiMS-
paper.
Marking Si
says: I wish to l
Olie WU0 KGCDS a 1
Sheep. An agricuitnst
impress it upon every
keeps a flock,, if not more than
1 uiic nuwMiiujivi
. - ... ,1 : v,nt!
l to paint-mark
st,ee ft js as most all men know, a
i,onTl nnint. nnlv n fpw pants a pound.
and one pound will mark a thousand.
Take a pinch of dry powder, and draw
the thumb and linger tnio tne m 001 upon
the paraicular spot you would mark, loo -
it. 1 r t in coma nnrl if
sing the powder at the same time, and it,
will combine with the oil of the wool, and
l. kKinhf rnH mnvlr fhfif Mina will
make a bright red mark, that rains will
mttvhbnn nn(i w;n nnrlrft frnm
a um pi, uut, uPu .
we learn, from the Richmond Despatch,
(pSngto t
T ntlJe enJ fcho churcn)
ypu couid aecure your eternal salvation, I
renijy believe hardly any of you would
try jt. But let any man proclaim that
' there was 'five hundred dollars up there,
and I'll be bound there .would Le suou a
I gittiug up tho steps as you never did see.
Rewards of Drunkenness.
If you would be always thirsty, be a
drunkard for the oftener and more you
drink, the oftener and more thirsty you
will.be.
If you seek to prevent your friends
from raising you in the world, be a drun
kard for that will defeat all their effor
ts. If you would effectually counteract your
own attempts to do well, be a drunkard;
and you will not be disappointed.
If you wish to repel the endeavors of v
tne wnoie numan race to raise you to hj
character, credit and prosperity, be a y
drunkard ; and you will most assuredly f
If you would starve vour family, be a
drunkard; for that will consume the
means of their support.
If you would be imposed on by knaves.
be a drunkard; for that will make their
task easy.
If you are determined to be poor, be a
drunkard; and you will soon be ragged
and penniless.
If you wish to be robbed, be a drun
kard; which will enable the thief to do it
with more safety.
If you would wish to blnnt your senses.
be a drunkard; and you will soon be more
stupid than an ass.
If you would become a fool, be a drun
kard, and you will soon lose your under
standings. If you wish to unfit yourself for social
intercourse, be a drunkard; for that wilL
accomplish your purpose.
If your are resolved to kill yourself,
be a drunkard; that being a sure mode
of destruction. If you would expose,
both your folly and secrets, be a drun
kard; and they will soon be made known.
If you think you are too strong, be a
drunkard; and you will soon be subdued
by so powerful an encm
If you would get rid of your money
without knowing how, be a drunkard;
and it will vanish insensibly.
If you would have no resource when
past labor but a workhouse, be a drun
j and b(J unabic tQ do
If you are determined to expel all
comfort from your house, be a drunkard;
and you 'will so.on do it effectually. If
you would always be under suspicion, he
a drunkard; for, little as you think of it,
all agree that those who steal from them
selves and families will rob others.
If you would be reduced to the neces
sity of shunning your creditors, be a
drunkard; and you will soon have reason
to prefer by-paths to the public streefs.
If you would be dead weight on the
community, and "cumber the ground''
be a drunkard; for that will render you
useless, helpless, burdensome and expen
sive. If you would be a nuisance, be a drun
kard ; for the approach of a drunkard is
like that of a dunghill.
"All the crimes on earth," says Lord
Bacon "do not destroy so many of thc
human race, nor alienate so much prop
erty as drunkenness."'
Religions Maniac.
The Chicago Tribune gives the sub
joined account of a female impostor or
maniac, who is figuring off in Illinois.
There is a woman residing in Hancock
county, Illinois, who claims to be inspir
ed. She is a native of Vermont, and has
lived thirty years near Cincinnati. It is
said that she had no education whatever,
but was taught to read and write by the
spirit of God, and received at the same
time a command to prophecy and write
a book for the instruction of mankind.
Obedient to these heavenly teachings,
she addressed herself to the task thus mi
raculous assigned her. For four weeks
she wrote incessantly, day and night,
without food or sleep,at the end of whiSh
time the holy influence was withdrawn,
with the promise, however, that it would
again be communicated to her at some
future time. Three years afterwards tho
promise was fulfilled, and Mrs. Celia
Spaulding, (such is her name) has recent
ly gono to Cincinnatt to superintend tho
publication of her work, written under
such auspices. It is to be of quarto size,
and will contain 500 pages. She styles
it "A Memoir and Prophecy, written by
the., inspiration of the Holy Spirit of God,
under the character of Shiloh, or thc
weary sufferer who is to bring tho true
light of the hidden gospel to fallen
man. She also "comes under the
light
, f h woman 0l0thcd with th
I I
sun
and
t- out th(J g , Churehes of John,
, . , oj
I ' . -J- .
Mrs. Spaulding, says the Chicago Trib
une, is now 55 years of age, is well in
formed on general topics converses flu
ently and connectedly upon every- subject
but that of prophecy. "When that is
mentioned she at once becomes wild and
incoherent.
TO DE3TR0Y THE CATERPILLAR. Iu
answer to many inquiries for the best
mode of destroying oaterpillars on trees,
which have caused such havoc of our
hope, the present year. I would say that
three drops of lamp oil poured into their
nest will effectually destroy all that may
b in the nest at the time when it ia ap
plied. Albany Cultivator.
ft!