Jeffersonian Republican. (Stroudsburg, Pa.) 1840-1853, September 11, 1851, Image 1

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    V
JEFFEKiOMAN
BLICAN.
f T
ft" Si-
. THEGW'HOLEjART QF GOVERNMENT CoksjSTS IN-THE ART OF,T3EIN(JiilONEfe1'. 'JEFFERSOlsT ' ' '
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: ;;,', ;'";.STApSthSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA.,. THURSDaSt, SEPTEMBER 1 1 , 1851.
VOL. 11. , :
No 51.
REPD
Ptiblltltcd Iy Theodore Scliocli.
- TERMS Twodolla.-s per annnum iti advance Two
dollars and a quarter, hal(yearly and if not paid be
lore the end of the year, Two dollars and a half., Those
w ho receive their papers by a earner or stage drivers
employed by the proprietor, will be charged 37 1-2
cents, peryear, extra. -
. No papers ditconlinued until all arrearages arc paid,
except at the option of the Editor.
U3 Advertisements not exceeding one square six
teen lines) will be inserted thrte week for one dollar,
and twenty-fire cents for every subsequent insertion.
The Charge for one and three insertions the same.
A. liberal discount made to yearly advertisers.
IE? All letters addressed to the Editor must be post
paid. JO B P R I li'XIJfG.
Having a general assortment oflarge, elegant, plain
and ornamental Type. e are prepared
to execute every description of
Cards,. Circulars, Bill Heads, Notes, Blank Keccipts. i
printed with neatness and despatch, on reasonable
terms,
AT THE OFFICE OF THE
.Teffcrsoiita.ii Itepublciua.
Jury Iist, Sept. Term. I 51 .
GRAND JURORS.
Joseph Frantz, Ross,
Peter Lander, Stnithfield,
iFranklin Starbird, Stroud,
Amilc Bush, Sniuhficlu.
1'eter Jayne, M. Smitlifield,
Jackson Coolbaugh, do
John L. Staples. Stroud,
John Keener, Paradise,
John Eylenbergcr. Stroud.
Jacob Hufsmilh, Cliesnuthil
Philip Jrantz, Ross,
Philip Fethcnnan, Stroud,
Elias Honscr, Chcsnuihill,
Henry SI oddart , Tobyhanna
Felix Storm, Chcsnuthill.
Samuel Husknk, Hamilton,'
jonn l iioie, smitliheid,
Peter Gowcr. Ross,
William Huston, Stroud,
Charles 'Drake, do
Daniel-Miller, Hamilton,
John Storm, Paradise,
Peter Kresgc. Chesnuthill.
John M. Struuk, Smithlield.
PETIT
JURORS.
John Lesh, Hamilton,
rlvirlcs .S. Palmer, Stroud,
John Smith, M.Smithfiid, .
. Fmnkenficld, do
Jacob Gnipe, do
George M. .Michaels, do
Rudnlphus Smith, do
Philip Mctzg.tr, Hamilton,
Xlelchoir Kintz, Hamilton,
Samuel Keller, do
James Poste'ns, Stroud,
David fiowmanParadrso,
George Setzer, Jackson,
Davia Cregory, jr. Polk,
Lavence Fisher, do
Jacob Long, Pocono,
James Staples, Sjnitlificld,
George Hilyard, Jackson,
Jacob Drejier, jr. Hamilton,
Michael Shoemaker,, do,
Simon Mover. Smitlifield
Lynlord Shoemaker, do
Chas. llouser, Tobynanna.
CD Brodhcad, Chcsnuthill
I.yniofu Alternysc, do
Charles Musch. Stroud
James Bunncl, Smithfiled,
AnlhonvTraiisue, do
AnthonV Sebring, Pocono,
Henry Kintz, do
Peter Smoke, Coolbaugh,
John Sigliu. Chesnuiiiill
William Ruth, Pocono '
John White, jr., Pocono
Abraham xettcr, Stroud
Peter Geli, Ross
Trial Itst.
"William Trainer vs. John B. Teel. ' .
Owen Rice, atmrnev for the Heirs of Joseph Horse
field, dee'd. vs. Abraham Butz, Peter Meckes, and Tor
re Tenants.
Same vs. same.
Seme vs.same.
John M. Dieblcr vs. the township of Pnce.
AVm. Orcrfir-ld :uid Sarnh his wife vs. Simon Smith.
George Reinhart vs. David Reinhart,
joim m. Taylor to the use of Peter Mostellcf vs. Phil-
jn Hoffman. I
Godfrey Grccnswcic's Executors vs Iolin Meckes.
Philip O. Dotter vslohn Kunkel. j
Godfrey Grcenswcig's Executors vs. Jos. Green.wei?.j
. ""- - .
x u a . . i
J. 6c E. W. CORLSfco. ;
No. G9 Peaii Street, Ne?V-l. ork j
1 . J Wlin'opnln Tnl
1,1 jHJtiwis i' iiu.mu16 "oa- .
ers in
Green and Black Teas,
oi all descriptions suiteu.to the
Coulry Trade.
Are also receiving from the best manufac
tures ? full assortment of TO BACOO, of the
most approved brands, all of which are con
fidently offered as equal to any in market,
. and at the lowest cash prices.
Merchants visiting the City would'do well
. to call and examine our stock befoie purchas
ing elsewhere.
September '4. 1851. 3m
SHERIFF'S SALE.
BY virtue of an alias writ of venditioni ex-
j - ci p . rn conscious, thinking, and sensitive being, nous
ponas issued out of the Court of Com-! , , , . ,
mon Pleas of JVIonroe county, Pepn'a., to me cd m thls tabernacle, to be the -result simply
directed, I will expose to public sale at the of its internal structure, and the arrangement
puunc nouse or jacoD jvnecni, m uie iorougii
of Stroudsburg, on Saturday, the
20th day of September next,
at 1 o'clock in the afternoon, the following position and structure, .which is beyond the
described property, to wit All that one equal ; reach of our scnseS man ;s to appearance
undivided moiety identical with the ox, or with the animal iow-
or piece of Land, Water Power and 1 louring t .,..
Mill thereon erected, situate in the Borough est in the scale of creation.
of Stroudsburg, adjoining land ofSam'l Stokes, J
land late of Daniel Stroud, deceased, and land Operation oil an Elephant,
of William S.Wintemuto, and John Shively, short time since the elephant at the
ClV AcrCS and 42 Perches, vadofthe Temple of Paris, named
. . . . , Aly Scha gave signs of madness during a per-
more or less, being the same premises winch J m. . , , tt
Daniel Stroud and wife, by their Indenture, formance. The supenntendant, M. Hugier,
bearing date the 4th day of February, A. D. at once stopped the performance and proceed
1639, and recorded at Stroudsburg, in Deed ed to consult with the competent individuals
Book vol. 1. page 233, granted and conveyed n the Eul)jecL In consequence he called
to James Hollinshead ; together alsa with a . - . . , . . n ,
' . r mr.. f, ,,6, M. Chepartfrom his Zoological Museum, ve-
ground rent of iifty Dollars per annum, is- .,.!!?. , '
suing out of said premises, and secured by ternmary surgeon in chief to the school at
Jacob Singmaster's large Frame Tannery and Alfort and to the Guard Municipale. After
the following buildings, on-the ground convey- i,aving felt the pulse of this collossusj the
ed to said Singmaster .subject to d ground . consult; 6xis declared that the animal
rent, viz: a two story Frame House, 20 ft. by . " u , , . , , , -45
ft., with a basement or cellar under neath , was attacked with hypochondn m conse
and a frame Kitchen attached, 16 ft. by 20 ft. ' quenpe of carries at the root of his tusks, and
a frame House, two stories high, 20 ft. by 20 advised the removal of them, which were a
feet, used as a sleeping apartment. A frame . d ,jaf each .rf le th To aid -n this
wmg of said Tannery, 24 feet by 16 feet, . 1 a to
A frame Letch House, two stories high, 17 attempt, M. Hugier endeavored to put the an
feet by 25 feet, with letches or vats therein, imal to sleep by means of opium and chloro
A frame building 38 feet by 16 feet, two sto- form but though administered . in immense
rics high, with vats or letches ; and a frame qUantities they had no apparent effect, arid
Bark House. 40 feet bv 29 feet: also a steam- , , . i ji .
worke f connected with said Tannery. The they were compelled to employ a windlass to
water for driving said Tannery is. carried hold him down.
across said lot, conveyed to said Singmaster The operation took- place July 17tli, before
as aforesaid, by a wooden trunk or fbrebay. thirty-of the pupils of the veterinary 'school,
The improvements are a large
GRIST MILL,
4.0 feet by 50 feet, with two run of,
stones therein ; a FRAME FOUNDRY and
"l fc
1 1 W$m
cj.flUltoou-iupuvr.anaa nog reu cut o(rand tbe roots extracted, which alone
JtffifbL"lU'd eighteen pound. IS. teeth wil.
erty of James Hollinshead, and to be sold by not be replaced. As for Aly Scha, he is a
me. I Uttle jll after the severe operation, but it is
PETER KEMMERER, ' confidently expected that he will have no re
Sheriffs Office Strctudsburg, ) Sheriff , Qf madness, and that he soon will be a-
August28, 1851. S .
Xiead an4 Iron Fjpc,
A ceneralisopply pf Lead and Iron .pipp of,
aUsizesj on hand at all times, .and,. for salel
4 . , pfCKSON 4- SAMPLE.,
ston.'July 17, 1851. ly. ,
Easton
. BLANK MORTGAGES
'"For sale at this Office
Tcuiples not-made iviih Elasids.
'Tis not in temples made with hands,
The great Creator dwells, .'
But oirthe mountain top he stands .
And in the lonely -dells ; ;
Wherever fervent prayer is heard,1-1'
He stands recording every wcVd ;. ,;t
In dells; pn mountains, everywhere ;
He never fails to answer prayer. , . "',
Yes in the poor man's lonely stall,"
And in the prisoner's cell, . , J
And in the rich man's lordly hall,
The great Creator dwells :;
Where two or three are joined in prayerj
His audience hall, His home is there;
Wherever prays the child of grace,
In his peculiar dwelling place. .' .
Think you that temples built of stone,
And blessed by priestly, handi " .
And more pechliarly His own, r
More reverence demand ? ;
Go to thy closet, shut the door, . l!
And all iiis mercies ponder o'er;'' ;'
Thine all pervading God is there,' ' ";
He loves to answer secret prayer.
The temple the HJreator owns,
The temple is the heart,
3 H .
No towring pile of costly stones, . ,
Nor any work of art.
The cloud capped spire tliat points on high,
May draw the. lightning from the sky,
But 'tis humble, modpst flower,'
That drinks in the refreshing shower';
And in return for favor given.
It breathes its fragrance back to heaven.
Someclihg to prelate's surplice strings,"
We bow to no created things ;
One God we worship; one al6ne ;
Earth is His footstool ! Heaven his throne.
"3Ian is a Chameleon and dotli
Feed on Air."
Professor Leibig, in the following, dem-
onstrates this noetical assertion to be a sci-
' ,
entlfic truth :
. , , . , .
" bcience has demonstrated that man, the
-jgjunr who performs all these wonders, is
formcj 0f condensed air, (or solidified and
liquefied gases j) that he lives on condensed
as we-- as unCondensed air, and clothes him-
1 1 .1.t 1?
sen m conuensea air; mac ne prepares nis
food by means of the same agent moves the
heaviest weights with the velocity of the
wind. The strangest part of the matter is,
that thousands of these tabernacles formed
of condensed air, and going on two legs, oc
casionally, and on account of. the production
and supply of those forms of condensed air
which they require, for food and clothing, or
on account of their honor and power, destroy
each other in pitched battles by means
of condensed air ; and further, that many
boHevn the neniiliar nowers of tho bodilnss.
raent ot its particles or atoms ; whrle chemis-
try supplies the clearest proof that, as far as
concerns this ultimate and most minute com-
' and a crowd of veternia'ry surgeons. The an
imal was alternately placed on each side for
the different teeth, and with the aid of a saw
d forceps,and cord attached, the teeth were
Mn tn rPKlimB his exercises which the 'public
find so amusingi
The peach crop has been very good along
ihQ 6horesbf the Chesapeake, this'seasdn, one
cr having receiyed. $7,000 in onefweek.
and $8,000 in the next, for the proauce.or.uu
brqhard, of four hundred acres. '' .'"
Correspondence of the New .York Literary World.
Death of Tecmnscli.
Hon. L. Bradish, Prest N. Y. Hist Society:
Washington, May 5, 1851.
Sin : Popular opinioruih the United States
has, . for. many years attributed' the killing of
Tecumseh to the late Colonel Richard M.
Johnson, of Kentucky. The brave men
whom that officer led in the attack of the In-
dians, fighting under the great Shawnee Cap-
tain, took a pleasure in permitting pubic ru-
mor to place the honor of this feat on the
brows of the commander. But the truth of
history requires shat the name bf the real
actor should now be told
By a letter which I havexecently;received
from Hon. Orlando Brown, late Chief of the.
Bureau of Indian Affairs, dated Frankfort,
15th April las't, it is shown that the veritable
actor was Jacob H. Holeman, of Kentucky,
a. private in Captain Stuger's 'company of
mounted volunteers. The event has thus
been detailed to me by Mr. Holeman.
Stuger had himself been a veteran Indian
fighter in the early wars of Kentucky, and and passion are supposed to reign with un
perceiving that the woods they approached wontet? force.
. c ui r t j- i j During the raging of the cholera in Cali-
were favorable for an Indian- ambuscade, r i ol At-
... .... forma a young man from the State of Missis-
warned his men on entering it to be on the 6isp; jesSe Cook, about 23 vears of affe,
look-out. The forest consisted ofyoungbeech!
tree, Mch put out thoir 1W hoontaLy, I
nt fil-o fir root frnm iUn. J T, U
at fh e or six feet from the ground. Brush
rose up nearly to meet them, so that the view
was intercepted and the action of cavalry im-
possible.
.Col. Johnson determined to dismount three
" . e , . " , ,
w,uiPau,ui m, c ,wuo neir;er2ndnerinfantdaughter Hergriefwas
horses at the skirts of the wood leaving tliR ,no ?n n ,r. i a tm, i,..i .1 e
other three mounted companies at the same
point as a reserve. His force consisted of
mnnntnA ,i.i,on vni ,,o,00 u :u
. ... , . J i et vale-of a river. Her earthly support has the voice of the people to sway the des-
is ment men furnishing their own horses, who ( faileaf and yet she clung to life for the sake ' tinies of the State, the restored' and well
were, from their position, expert in every art ' of her infant daughter. J sustained credit, character, and confidence
of forest warfare, with man and beast They , Strangers proved kind, and the hand of be-! 0f the - ast, tiree years, are the best omens
were armed with a short rifle, of the kind
, mi t i i
called yagers. They had no-swords.
Captain Stuger's company was one of those
dismounted, and entered the woods on foot
The Indians were so completely masked by
the foliage that the contest was one essential-,
ly of parsbnal combat, both parties seeding
the shelter of trees and coverts, and fighting
according to the Indian mode, in verv open
j r i t i i j . ,
order. Colonel Johnson led his men, and
was soon wounded in two" places, and carried
to the rear. Holeman and a companion were
sUindini? tofrether. when thev saw two In-
dians rush forward and in the act of firing.
They themselves both fired instantly and
killed their men. His companion was also
mortally wounded and fell. Holeman ran up
to the Indian he had shot and took a pistol of cu
rious workmanship out of his right hand,
-
which lay extended as if in the act of firing
when he fell, and, retaining it, carried it to
liis quarters after the close .of the action.
When the battle was terminated, it was
rumored that Tecumseh had, been slain.
General Harrison and some British officers
rode up to identify the body. Harrison re-
cognised the chief by a peculiar tooth, which
, , . , . . -
had turned blue, all the others retaining their
wnueness. noiemen menuonea uie circum-innrl
stance of taking the pistol from, that Indian's
hand. He went immediately to his camp and
brought it. The-British officer (whose name
, ,r, .... . J
m 1
he-did not know) decided that it was one of
a pair formerly belonging to general Brock,
which that officer had presented to Tecum
seh. Tecumseh was armed with a handsomely
made English fowling-piece, and evidently
had his arm extended in the act to fire when
the ball of his antagonist pierced him. His
j u 4. 1. j- u j c t.
dress could not be distinguished from the
other Indians except by its comparative clean-
iparative
ness.
These particulars were narrated to me in
the .War Office, a few days ago, by Mr. Hole-
man himself, in presence of Governor Ramsey,
of MinnesotaCaptain Eastman, U. S. A.,
Mr. Wise, chief clerk of the Indian bureau,
and several other gentlemen. We were im
pressed with the entire modesty of the nar
rator. Not a word was utterred in the vein
of boasting, or in depreciating the merits of
others, far less of his corn
mander, 'Colonel1
Johnson. He had in that action, three balls
pass through his clothes; namely,. one under
his arm and two through the skirts 0f his,
hunting-shirt He also received a bail in
his cartridge-box, in front, which was arrest, !
. fa '. ' 1
ed by a ball in one of his cartridges. He fited
sixteen balls in that action.
It affords me pleasure to add that Mr. 1
Holeman has been appointed Indian Agent'
for the Territory of Utah a mark of respect'1
due to his intelligence and worth.
Very respectfully,
HENRY R. SCHOOLCRAFT.
7?;;,r Jifiw frmn Tree We still
fu. j.it. r u -
uiLua near ine ueuiu ui ucta, uy imwy su -
r, ., .
- ...V p " " - " "
of the easiest and most certian things in the
world, consisUng simply m throwing up a I It jg Bupp0cd that? it would wear
little circular bant or"mound of earth round 1 ag hands for some kinds of machin
the trunk of each tree, nine or ten inches J erv an,l wiH doubtless bo used for many
high. One man will do hundreds in a day, 1 other purposes. A.patent has been se
and we have never' known a Bihgle mstance J enredj and the'rtiole-will soon'be in mar
out of thousands of cases where.it has failed t ketand in Use.
Chemical Freezing Agents. In the hot
bed of wonders, the chemist's laboratory, the
degrees of cold are procurable by using
highly volatile liquids for evaporation. A
man may be frozen to death, simply by keep
ing himself drenched with ether. "By the
assistance of liquid sulphuric acid, water may
be frozen in a red hot vessel. But that re-
markable .substance, liquid carbuoic acid,
takes the highest rank of all' known freezing
agents. In drawing it from the powerful
reservoirs in which it is necessarily kept, it
evaporates so rapidly as to freeze itself, and
is then a light porous' mass, like snow. If
a small quantity of this is drenched with eth
er, the degree of cold produced is even more
intolerable to the touch than boiling water
a drop or two of the mixture producing blis
ters, just as if the skin had been burned.
An Jutcreslinz Incident.
Mr. Joseph Leavitt, one of our citizens re
turned from California, in speaking of sights
and scenes in California, made a mention of
the following highly interestingincident which
speaks eloquently of the true humanity of
hearts even in California, where selfishness
who was engaged in the laborious work of,
!
f iUlSSUUd, CUI11SUI1T Ul IIUSUUUU, Wile, ailU IWQ
, Qne rf thm an
, stacked one of the children, a little boy, and
he was soon stricken down by cholera and
laid by the sorrowing parents in a little grave
uf on.ine Da 0 .e,rlve.r- C30,on aIter XT
i father o'f the child died, leaving only the moth
her youth and the first born son of her hope
had departed to the land of spirits, and their
' were lying in their graves in the qui-
, "evoience proviaea lor ner wamsr ana uie
voice oi Kinuness p-reeieu ner ears, jjut ais-
J ease d upon anJ death tQre fier
( from her tender infant, and by stranger hands
she was buried. The sweet loving eyes of an
! infant Iooked UP confidingly into the face of
itj i:i-.ij.. -i.-j.u
iuuc uuu tuut;iii;aLt; inLiu iiuuubbiruiuuuuiurui piacea jrennsyivama on mat uroau pxui
fondingly. No female was there to caress form of honesty and trustworthiness, from
and care for it, and the young miner, with a which noting but the most incompetent
enroll in nr nonrf nnn with n trncf- in RnH nnrt ,.. . . .. x.
' swelling heart, and with a trust in fcod and
t his own resources, took the nameless infant,
, then ony geven monthg q1( -n ch n
provided for it with all a father's care and a
mother's love. He daily fed and washed it
and dressed it, ana gave it lond name ot his
mother, Mary,' by day cradled it near him in
his toils, and at night huddled it, as an angel -
i child, to nis oosom. inter a wnue ne maae
application to various families at Sacramento
I ......
city to have the chi d taken care of and of-
fered to pay five dollars a week, but none
were disposed to undertake the Care of it and
hfnlv,nrfnnPi1 minino-. nnrl rpsnlmd tn nmonml
toOregonand there take up land for a farm
J 1 : i iL. 1 .'ill t mt- -
' and make a home for the little orphan. The
simple unadorned facts in this case are suffi-j whether an Executive, who may be fair
ciently touching and suggestive, without any . lY said to have plucked up the "drowning
comments from our pen. Bcmgor Whig.
A Carious Bequest.
M. X. , a rich farmer in the neirhbor-
hood of Pithivers, (France,) died a short time
ago. A few days before his end, which he1
f approaching, he-sent for his lawyer, '
hnuino- mrflf his will lm pn n noH unnn
whim to have it read to his heirs before the fu
i neral- The lawyer promised, and A
II : .1 ." .1 1 : .1.J U 1. .1 !.
"a s r ' ""
house of mourning, all the heirs duly assem-
bled. But what must have been their aston -
ishment when they heard the last curious be -
cZti:tt
mother rest I wish to be seated in a large
red arm chair, beside a marble table, in a po-
sition of a man taking his meal. I desire
that a person (a female) should keep me com-'
pany for one year and one day, and all this per-
11 1 ... 1 1 1. f rr t 1
son shall ask should be. given her, as.if I cal -
r Ied for it myselft To that person who must
nnt hR nhosen from amon"- the heirs. I. be-
not be chosen from among the heirs, I-be-1
aueath forty thousand francs, and give her.t7.""; .,, , " Xi
1on,. m'mf fWn hnnrc nrU rfnv tn tnlrn
fin A.-i-U nit" .Qitnli it? flirt minor ctnru rn1n
the fresh air." Such is thd queer story rela- tnose on tne otiier nana, wno iiubr ineun
tl hv thn. Trfinr.h nnnnrs. Thousands of an- lv of her. and Wish to Strike hands With
1 plications are daily received by the executor
'of the rich deceased, from nurses and old gos
sips anxious of the honor of keeping the com
pany of the queer individual, and fingering
the reward.
Ai-f i,ir1orl bv . hnsluved
another triumph. At Abiiigton, Massa -
; chusetts,- there is an establishment for
manufacturing artificial leather by the
a steam engine 01 six or uigu uuu. sv
power, the machinery attached to which
grmf? ?P the ol"PBffad j"0:
nr -roliifh nrA out, nit hv thft SllOfi and DOOL
j makers and which nave heretofore been
in.vnt. fLmwn own v. These are around
to a powder resembfing coarse snuff, and
this powder is then mixed with guihs and
other substances, so thoroughly that the
whole mass becomes akind of melted leath-
er, in a snort time tins aries a nine,
and is rolled out to the desired thickness
--perhaps one twenty-fourth of an. inch.
t- t . .. .1 ? i . Tini
i This pew-fashioned leather will make
rood middle soles, and perhaps inner
inner
,o - , , .j
! souls: and would be very durable round
the shafts 0f a- carriage, or in any place
, - hahV is all the wear desi-
Hear what a Poiiiisylvaniaii
says of Us.
We find in-the North American of the
19th ult., abetter from Baltimore. The
writer says he is " a Democrat, and" has
been one from the good'old days of Jack
son down" that he is no politician, and
that the only vote he ever cast for Presi
dent was in 1836, when he voted for Mr.
-Tan Burcn. He is .a Pennsylvanian by
birth, and still considers ' this State his
home. He thus talks of the approaching
election:
"The present struggle in Pennsylvania
I regard as of the highest moment in its
bearing on the future prosperity of the
State and of her citizens. It was-my for
tune to be abroad during those disastrous
years which followed the suspension of
the pxiyment of the interest on her im
mense debt. Odium I heard everywhere
heaped upon her name, until at length her
sons blushed to acknowledge a mother
whose fame and character were as pre
cious to them as their own. Those who
passed, as I did, through an ordeal of so
much obloquy in a measure, it must be
confessed, not altogether without justifica
,i r v .i ,i ' ,-c
lZtZfZ
tion can never look back upon it with
. , 9 --- -j
. afc the bar idea of witnessing a return of
' the same deplorable condition of things,
t The great, and in fact the only question,
after all, involved in the present, contest,
, 1S the financial good character of our al
ways honest, and now debt-paying Com
monwealth. Other issues which have
, beei1 ?-ade b'. crested partizans are
, swallod up m this. ,
. "If . Gov. Johnston is again chosen by
for tlie future The faithful exertions of
i i i j
one man-Ins watchful care and econotn-
, ical management of her finances the
prestige of his unsullied integrity, mspir-
ing hope and reliance around these
i,.-. , .... i .1
stnfPRrilr,si,;T1 VPr hnvo t.bnmf. her
t, , . r , -r, .. , ,
Re-oleot the present Executive, and her
' C0Tir3e To" still be , onward and upward,
until the heavy burthen left us as a lega-
cy oy nis preaecessors, snuu ue ruuuueu
within reasonable limits.
' "Now, Messrs. Edi tors, while my poli-
tieal nrincinles are verv decided. 1 am
ni;Umin. tlm nt,lr irnfo T nvor met.
fo'r residen( wasin 886 en I voted
- -rr -r t t.
for M.r' Yan Bu.ren: In examining the
. Question nOW agitating OUr btate, 1 have
Ill IIU11L1U1U111 Lll 1. .J IKK w m VJUW W V 4M W
aimed at attaining nxvhonest and candid
1.,4-A C li- T4- vnnUAT.r -rf In Tl Cm
solution of it. It matters not to
honor" of the Commonwealth by the
locks, is a so-styled Whig or no. All I
look at is the good of the State. "While
; party prepossessions urge me to vote for
M Biglcr, because he is a Democrat, a
y 7. , , , 1 e
gard to the welfare and reputation of
: tue ocate savs vote ior lur. uonusiou, uu-
cause he has proved himself the man of
the crisis. The danger is not yet over ;
i , i n 1 1? 1. A
, out wnen it is, it win De time euougu iu
commit the helm to less able and more
; jneXperienced hands
, aismtims event that could
happen to Pennsylvania at the present
, time, would be the election ot the Demo
cratic candidate. So thinking, 1 intend to
make a journey of one hundred miles
next fall, to cast my vota for Mr. John-
st0n, the tried, true, and faithful friend of
. '
i.:,, Sfofe
Twv
, . y
' , i,' MW;ti,
OUt a Stain, Will VOtC IOr VxOV. .JOUIlblOU,
' those on the
'secessionists and traitors everywhere, can
cast their suffrages for Mr. "Biglcr."
The Mew Protection Against
Fire.
The following letter from an Amcri-
can in London, furnishes additional and
; interesting facts in relation to Phillips's
t "Eire Annihilator," which, if is what it
profeses to be, is undoubtehly a most
useful and wonderful discovery:
London, Friday, July 25, 1851.
The most extraordinary thing that I
! bave witnessed since I left America, is
! Phillps's Fire Annihilator. Passing up
j Cheapside a few days since, I saw streams
of flame pouring out of the three-story
windows of a Wholesale Cloth Establish-
raent, and the building and it3 contents,
seemed doomed to immediate destruc
tion. I was within a few rods of the
house, and as I approached the door, a
man rushed in with a Portable Fire
! Annihilator in his hand. It was not lar
ger than a common water-bucket,, and
weighed some 20 pounds. He ran into
tne third story, and within less time than
it has taken me to write these few lines,
every vestige of flame had been "anni
hilated" by the vapor which issued from
the miraculous little machnie. - For a
minute or two afterwards, the vapor wa&
seen issuing from the windows, 'then
all was over. The fire was extinguished!
I was so much astonished at the marvel
lous results of which I was an eye-witness,
that I hastened to discover and vis
it the inventor of this Fire Annihilator.
At his establishment I examined the ma
chine, and tried several experiments, each
of which sattsfied me that this is bdyorid
all question the most valuable discovery
of the age.
. The vapor contained in, this little ma
chine acts upon flame exactly as the damp
in a well actsupon alighted candle. Flame
cannot exist p.n instant in the vapor. The
vapor rushes; from the little machine with
as much force as steam flies from the ea-cape-pipe
of a steam-engine, and flame falls
before it as quick as the ligktuinS,o ah.
The effect is inconceivable, and the tri
umph over fire is marvelous beyond con
ception. A great and valuable addition
to the utility of this invention is that this a
vapor can te breathed without injury.
The consequence is, a man with one of
these little machines may protect himself
with the vapor and enter into the midst
of the fiercest flames with perfect impu
nity. They fall before him in an in
stant! Depend upon it, that sarcely a house
in America will be without one or more
of these machines within a year, and you
will see that the fire insurance offices and
fire engine companies will be numbered
among the things that were. " The amount
of property and human life, of toil and
trouble, that this little miracle will save,
is beyond computation.
Lachawaiia and Western' Kail-'
road.
This road extending from the village
of Scranton in the coal beds of Pennsyl
vania to the Erie railroad at Great Bendy
14 miles east of Bingham ton, a distance
of 51 jniles will be completed and opened
for busines during the ensuing month Qf
September. The company building this
road is the same that owns the Cayuga
& Susquehanna road, running from the
village of Ithaca at the head of Cayuga
Lake to the Erie railrnad at Owego.
They have made arrangements with the
Erie railroad company to run their trains
on the Erie road from the points of inter
section Owego and Great Bend 45
miles apart. They have their engines
already built, and a large number of car3
contracted to be in readiness when the.
Pennsylvania section is completed.
A line of railread will then be comple
ted and in operation from the c.oal beds
to the village of Ithaca at the head of
water communication with all parts ot
the State, which must be for some time
to come at least, a point of transhipment.
It is questionable whether the difference
in favor of canals over railroads in the
transport of heavy articles like coal, will
not overcome the expense of tranship
ment, and forever make the Cayuga
Lake channel the great thorouhgfare for
the transit of Pennsylvania coal to the
interior and Lake markets of the State.
The enterprising Company engaged in
opening this new route are building a
coal depot on a large and extensive scale
at the head of navigation in Ithica. They
are cutting a- canal paralled with the in
let to the Lake, so that a train of cars
can dump their coal directly into canal
boats, and the ordinary labor and expense
of transhipment be mostly saved. We
will receive coal in this city by way of
Ithica early in October at a much cheapo
or rate than ever before. The coal for
this market will of course come by the
Cayuga Lake, until the Syracuse and
Binghampton railroad is built. Osiccgo
Times.
Three Seventeen.
We heard a good story the other day,
of an ancient joker (now dead) who is the
father of a great brood of fast boys.
The old gentleman who was a rather
strict governor, though when outside ho
would occasionally "let up," drink, talk
horse, and go in for the chances. The
boys knew this boys generally do and
while they respected the "governor" on
account of his age, they positively objec
ted to his propensities for humbug. One
Sunday the governor was1 reading the
Bible, and when Ez, the oldest boy pro
cured a set of dice and having spotted
all the low sides so that he could not get
less than fifteen, commenced throwing
them on a chair. The governor came
to a hard word, looked irp and saw the
game. Then came the following conver
sation; Gov. Ez, youboy Ezirah! Do you
know what day it is!
J2z. Yes fifteen Sunday. ' Seven
teen. Gov. Well, then, you .go and put them
things away; throw them in the stove no
put them on the shelf. Get a book, sir,
and sit down -and read.
Ez, put the bones in his pocket, and
got a book; but somehow or other the
dice were again soon out.
iV.-ASeventeen! seventeen! I seven
teen !! ! ;
Gov. Springing, from his chair and
allowing theKBible to drop otf the floor.)
Wliat! not three seven teens' Good God -them
would havfion the lipss lait night!
1