Jeffersonian Republican. (Stroudsburg, Pa.) 1840-1853, July 29, 1852, Image 1

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    NO MM
tiTtitiu v
THE WHOLE ART OF GOVERNMENT CONSISTS IN THE ART OF BEINGHONEST. JEFFERSON.
VOL. 12.
STROUDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, JULY 29, 1852.
No 42.
JEFF
Published by Theodore Schocli.
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rai1-
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Havinf,?df
to execute every description of
WLZMmm,
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trrms,
AT THE OFFICE OF THE
Teffersoimiu Kcpublicau.
Old Chippewa.
Air " Rosin the Bow."
AVe are up! Don'tyou hear the Whig thunder?
We come with a hearty huzza !
What foe ever heard, without terror,
The war cry of old Chippewa?
Chorus The war cry, &c.
From Queenstown, where nobly he battled,
Niag'ni, where gory he lay,
The people re-echo the thunder,
And cather for old Chippeiva.
Prom Mexico's snowy sierras,
Her vales where they bask in the day,
Comes the voice of his valor and virtue.
The glory of Old Chippewa.
North, South, East and West, it arises,
Xo faction that thunder can stay ;
It hails with the blessings of freemen,
Their champion and choice Chippewa.
His breast has been plowed by the British,
And forty campaigns make him gray ;
But we'll wreath his high brow with a laurel,
And glory in old Chippewa.
When Mexico's millions were offered,
From his country to win him astray ;
44 Tho1 poor, ril love, live, and die by her !"
So answered our old Chippewa.
The hero that can't lose a battle
xt... .: u c-ij. : i. r
,,t , . , -, 0 c , . e e j
We 11 be while Scott fights for our freedom .
Scott fhee, with our old Chippewa.
A Lundy's Lnne fuss with the British,
A fuss on Chepultepec'8 day
Thus the feathers will fly from the Locos,
When they come across old Chippewa.
"Tis 6trange, though in stratagem able,
He cannot make a faint in the fray,
A fall save when riddled with bullets
Ne'er happens to old Chippewa.
With the high soul of honor to nerve him,
And good soup his stomach to stay,
Come Mexicans, British, or Locos
They're nothing to Old Chippewa.
The Locos selected a leader.
But their managing Masters said nat;
So they straw-stufFd the coat of a hero,
And set it 'gainst Old Chippewa. ,
Poor fellows! they're tired of their fetters,
And shrink from the trick with dismay;
All true-hearted Democrats spurn it
And rally round Old Chippewa.
Home toil, with the iron of England,
Free Trade Pierce would pierce and would
slay,
But Scott likes the ore of the Keystone :
He used it at old Chippewa.
Xo despot will dare to insult us,
No traitor our Union betray,
With him who has bled to defend us,
Our President Old Chippewa.
The pure and the wise and the noble,
His country's best guardian and stay;
In camp or in cabinet peerless,
Ohf who is like old Chippewa 1
Make way ! for the torrent is coming,
J he millions m battle array ;
Their glad shouts will soon cleave the wilkin,
For Victory and old Chippewa.
. , .
Camp Meeting Anecdote.
At a campmeeting, a number of ladies
continued standing on the benches not-
with standing frequent hints from the
. , . 3 i j
minister to sit down. A reverend old (
gentleman noted for his good humor a-
rose and said:
I think if those ladies standing on the
ii i ,i. . i j i..i, it.-
utucnes jinew tney uau xiuieb iu iun
stockings they would sit down.'
This address nad the desired effect-
there was an immediate sinking into the us into scrapes, and thereby one of the
seat. A young minister standing behind ' f ors of a f burcb d " ba worse."
, , , , . , , . . , A young fellow entered the church and
him, and blushing to the temples said tQok Ms gea(. with hig hat Qn Aq elder
'0 brother, how could you say that!' ; noticing it stepped up and requested him
'Say that?' said the old gentleman, 'It's to take it oft'. His request not being
a fact if they hadn't holes in their stock-, complied with, he came to thc young man
nigs, I'd like to know how they oould get
them on.'
JJIT'Oh mother, mother, come quick
Angelina Arrabella has Gen. Pierced1
lWlwt! my child.'
'Angelina has seen a toad, and General
Vemj 1 !
'What does the child mean? Tell me
this minute what dreadful thing my pet
darling has done.'
'Why, she's General Pierced she's
fainted!3
The following anecdote was rela-
j frt rritor in the Jprepvnmn nf fhi?
tea 10 a "ter ln er.eyman 01 tUlS
ppi. r o fnrm hoimn in "r?rin?n rlnvinn-
weeK 111 a larm "0Ul3C 1" llgima, dUling
a n,ffufc gpcnt there SOme SIX years WO.
i jo
"in December, 1 , towards the close
of a dreary day, a woman and an infant
child were discovered half buried in the
1 snow, by a little Virginian, seven years
i ; J J
old. The lad was returning from school,
! and hearing the moans of some one in
threw down his satchel of books
and repaired to the spot from whence the
sound proceeded, with a firmness booming
. . . . tl
1 one of riper years. Hating the S110W
tfrnm flin i lirrmmbrl hndv nf the mother.
and using means to awaken her to a sense
of her deplorable condition, the noble
youth succeeded in getting her upon her
feet ; the infant, nestling on its mother's
breast, turned its eyes towards their youth
ful preserver, and smiled, as it seemed,
in gratitude, for its preservation. With
T
.1 ftoiintonanee iilled with hnnn. t m a - ril -
., . -i ,i r-
... a
lant yontn encerea tne sunerer on, mmseii
bearing within his tiny arms, the infant
nn flin slirmlrlnr nf liAr liffln prnfiir..rT.
1 "My home is hard by," would he exclaim,
1 so oft as her spirits failed, and thus for
: three miles did he cheer onward to a hap
'. py haven the mother and child, both of
. whom, otherwise, must have perished, had
it not been for the humane feelings and
; pcrseverence of this noble youth.
A warm fire, and kind attention, soon
m,B;c,l,nn.l,ncl,!.nJ on rvmmrnnr.1
, jb ,
from 2vew Hampshire, a recent purehas-
0rnf,f,rm;nfVnoinl,Wl,nf . I
" w o ' i
it.:,. tvi: i t
ut'iii luia yiuuc. uiiiiivuu ciiiiuix iui bo - .
i O 1 J
several days found him, and in five months
after, the identical house in which we are
now sitting, was erected, and received the
.happy family. I he child grew up to man
hood entered the array lost an arm at
. , , LJ - . ,
New Orleans, but returned to end his
days, a solace to the declining years of
his aged parents."
" Where are they, now ?" I asked thc
narrator.
" Here," exclaimed the son. " I am
the rescued one ; there is my mother; and
here imprinted on my naked arm, is the
name of the noble 3outh, our preserver !'
I looked, and read ""Wixfield Scott."
No Use for Trowsers.
On the morning of the well-remembered
meteoric shower in 1833, Old Pey
ton Roberts, who
intended making -an
early start to his work, got up in the midst ,
of the display. On going to his door, he ;
saw with amazement, the sky lighted up
up
with the falling meteors, and he concluded
at once that the day of judgment had
come. He stood for a moment gazing in
speechless terror at the scene, and then ;
! ... . . I
with a yell ot horror sprung out ot the
door into the yard, right in the midst of ,
the falling stars, and here, in his efforts
to dodge them, he commenced a series of
ground and lofty tumbling, that would
have done honor to a tight rope dancer.
His wife being awakened in the meantime,
and seeing old Peyton jumping and slop
ping about the yard, called out to him
to know 'what in the name of sense he
was doin' out thai daucin' around without
i
; his clothes on.' But Peyton heard not
j the judgment, and the long and black ac-
i count he would have to settle made him
heedless of all terrestrial things, aud his
wife by this time becoming alarmed at
his strange behaviour, sprang out of bed,
and runniug to the door, shrieked out at
the top of her lungs
'Peyton, I say Peyton, what do you
mean juinI'5n' out tbar Corae in aud
put your trowsers on.
Qld peyton whoSfl fears M near Q.
verpowered him, faintly answerrd as he
fell sprawling on the the earth
' Trowsers, Peggy ! what's the use of
trowsers when the world's on fire ?'
A IVutty Fluvorctl Ancaloto,
Meddling with others sometimes brings
a second time, and seeing he still hesita
ted, the elder gently lifted it off, when to
his (the elder's) chagrin, out rolled a quart
of slicll-barks on the floor, making more
noise than was consistent with the rules
of the church.
" Man," quietly responded the young
ster, composedly, "see wliat you have
j '
done.
A servant girl applied to a druggist a
few days since for six. cents worth of the
" glory of rhyme." She had been sent
for chloride of lime !
Passages in Gen. Scott's History
The libellers of Henry Clay have al
ready commenced libelling WINFELD
SCOTT. We present below ccrtainacs,
which will serve to show what is the man
whom Locofocos arc calumniating :
In 1834, when South Carolina was
threatening the dissolution of the I
nion, and Gen. Jackson was threatening
t to hang those of her citizens who would
not submit to the collection of duties at
Charleston, Gen. Scott was selected
"Pyicilnnf .TooL-orvn oc fi nnnflfl nnfl l1 fl i
by
o-ent
of nvnrnmml fo .rnnnnrl to the eat
" . r, McElroy, residing at No. 622 North Jyctea 10 a wise ana salutary discipline, ' end then might those to whom their ed
of difficulties and endeavor to procure Third gtreefcj who m be Qne Jmndred their physical training is sadly neglected. ,' ucation is entrusted, indulge the pleasing
their peaceful settlement. Upon that oc-; and eight years old on the 26th instant. I That this is a subject of "reat practi- ll0Pe tuat tuese novr Joung and beauti
casion, Gen. Cass, then Secretary of War, ; Her maiden name was Catharine Snip.- oal importance is sufficiently evident from ! M daue" &om a
addressed Gen. Scott a letter, from which She was born in Allentown, Northampton : the fa that WQman, haniness aud use f course offashionable follies, while, through
n,n fnlWinrr i ovfmof couuty Pennsylvania, on the 26th of Ju- , Ct . WOman 3 haPPiness aud use-, the plastic influence of education physi
me ionowingis an estracc. 'ly, 1774. She inherits the constitution : fulness are in a great measure, propor-cal, intellectual, moral they shall be
" He (President Jackson) has full of her fatiier w10 was from Qermany and tioned to the health she enjoys, and that' come as 'corner stones, polished after the
co7ifulcnccmyon jitdg hundred and seven years all other qualifications will be of com-, similitude of a palace -07ifc Journal of
and it is Ins wish that you repair imme- f Sho rftlllftTnilftra npp,'nn nP , . . . 1 Education.
idiately to Charleston, and examine every-
I ,, . . ,
: mine nnrmnp.rr-n wit i rno lortincations.
o
i Yoi are at liberty to take such measures,
either by strengthening those defences or
pruaence ana a jusi V,ccamwn re -
quire
i v i . r ir.. t l. xl. - r-ll r
e quote irom xur. jeign mu lunowing
i i i ci , , p .1 1 1
to snow now ijen. ocotx lieriormeu me
task assigned him :
"No one who had no opportunity of
observing on the spot the excitement that
existed San have an adequate concention
of the delicacy of this trust Gen Scott
had an acquaintance with the neonle of
tnn ho TvtWfrWl. w. w?f.
" w " T 7
nation was such thai many , the great ma-
j0nty of them, looked upon him as a public.
in(mv. R vpnsrfisftlv ?f nniM( t
J . . V w7 f, . -
nrevnnt, a Tfisorf. to nrins. find nnHiincrpnnlrl
r - j o
1 . .1 . .. ... ll 1" -I
1 IU U11UO, UUUUUllllUiitUUlU
: jadiciouL than his conduct.
begining to thc end, his
nave oeen more
" From the
conduct was c
i' i um uui usitiiuQ iv Liivi uuu, ma
conduct was conciliatory as it was firm
J - -
and sincere, convincing that he knew his
,i..i ' . i-i Pi c j
uiii.v. iiiiii w i tm vtiu lij iiiifiiiii ii-. ;iini
yet that his principal object and purpose
was peace. He was perfectly successful.
when the least
st imprudence might have re-1
suited in a serious collision."
However politicians may neglect or j she may invest the proceeds and receive earlier and mafcurer life, was widely ; mig party tliere should be found a sin
misrepresent such services, the people a more comfortable maintenance, without diverse from that of tho former. The gie man unwiHing to give him a cordial
will remember them to the lasting honor , being compelled to labor so hard. Phil- privations with which they were more or1 and hearty support. As to his "being
of him who performed them.
Hear another fact
In 1837, there were serious difficulties
on the borders of the United States and
L-anaaa, wmcn tnreatenea imminent aan-,
gerto the peace of this country and Great
-x . -r, ,,r n
Britain. President "I an Buren, following
Canada, which threatened imminent dan-
'
the example of Gen. Jackson, entrusted
Scott with full powers to take whatever
steps " he might think necessary to pre-
teps ne mignt tiunii necessary
serve the laws and the honor of the cc
He accepted the post went to the
the iron-
tier, speedily the disputed questions were
amicably settled. His conduct on that
... .
occasion, won, as many will remember,
the highest encomiums from all classes of
the American people. On his return, the
citizens oi Albany and the legislature ol
New York tendered him a public supper,
which was accepted. Gov. Marcy, then
as now a prominent Locofoco and recent-
, , ,. j-j i i.
ly a leading candidate for nomination for
the Presidency, presided. The following
are among the regular toasts on the oc-
casion :
" Winfield Scott Xot less the scholar
than the soldier, whose pen and sword
have been wielded with equal skill in the
defence of his country."
J
" The soldier Who has ever made the
law of thc land his supreme rule of action,
and who while he has alwavs fulfilled
and who, Mlnle he has always fulnlled
its utmost requirements, has never, in a
in-le instance transcended i limit,
.f n ,r ; f. hn Tr ; Z nrZ?
on ot our rignts
cator of our laws."
-fc, . Ti.iui
let another witness :
The late Dr. Channing thus alludes to
Gen. Scott in one of his works published
SOme Veai'S SlllCe :
fp fi,;s i;of:r,;oi..i ,v,
il. I . M
j-v iuu uwuuuiijuou uian uuiuuvo
me rare uonor oi uniting wim military
... -
energy and daring, the spirit of a philan-
tbronist. His ATnlnifci nn .!, fiVln1
.u& uuv-bwu.v uiupuan-
placed him in the first rank of our soldiers, lnent- Ifc was merely alleged that she ' when, in seasons of relaxation, she should
have been obscured by the pure and more stole 'a pin,' without setting forth wheth-jhe allowed the freedom of the mountains,
lasting glory of a pacificator, and of a er it was a breast pin, a clothes pin, or a ' ;be bms, aud tbe meadows in ordor to
friend of mankind. In the whole history brass pin and is nleadin-s must always '"P?00 of health to her cheek,
of the intercourse of civilized with bar-', P and as Plc.adinSS must always, cheerfulnCss and animation to her spirits,
barous or half civilized communities, we , be construed sttly in favor of the pns- tenacity to her memory vigor to her in
doubt whether a brighter page can be 1 oner li wus argued that, for aught that tellect, and strength to her muscular sys
found than that which records his agen-1 appeared on the face of the indictment, tern, the daughter, now a young lady, is
cy in the removal of the Cherokees. As ' the pin stolen might have been of trifling ! shored into society A scene of amuse
far as the wrongs done this race can be vaJ T. CmZ therefore actin- on ents usually follows this important event
atoned for, General Scott has made the! , nGomt! fore, actin 0 onLate honr8 late supp0rs, stimulants and
ovmWJnri I tue raaxim de minimis non curat lex, dis-1 excitement, drive sleep from her pillow.
expiration. , T . . , , . . t i i ,
" In his recent mission to the disturbed
borders of our countrv. he succeeded, not
it """ "
so mnol, hv Av fl,- nnMniR
and generosity of his character, by moral
j
influences, by the earnest conviction with
which he has enforced on all with whom
he has to do, the obligations of patriotism,
justice, humanity and religion. It would
not bo easy to find among us man whoj
offorW?hisPUtrirbnto Hecate fST Ao
. uccause j. woum ao
something, no matter how little, to has-
ten the time, when the spirit of Christain
humanity shall be accounted an essential
attribute and the brightest ornament of.
a public man."
. . . . I
ade the subject'
Such is the man now m
of Locofoco denunciations !
A Remarkable Case of JLonscv-
ity.
Mr. Edwin Gary the Missionary of the'
' -Evangelical Home Missionary Society of
I TTmr,, vnrfc at.., i
i Kensington, reports that he visited a Mrs.
rt,.f.1 T "
xi- i. . j . .-, .
tiroi uuiiLiv uroviuuu iooq ior r, ip. Anion
SJmi una 0
lcction of G cneral Washington. In 1790,
, sou- bv ,m . , ..7nT1 , ;1 , -
soldier, by whom she had seven children,
four of whom are now living, two of them
' i . . . . ' .. .
being twins, sue had a remarkably vigor-
LZ1...1I .1 . i ..iii
uus uuu&uiuuun, aim oiten assistea ner
PWhddnhh She wTd'takY
2 dg f ?
, , . . , , ,
ease' and Place lfc 011 the back of a horso-
She stU1 retabs much 5trcnS and activi-
S? amI be, taken for a woman of
Vu or 1 u msteatt oi iuo years ot age.
Twent.V-onft vfinrs atrn slm ronrnvftfl wlrnf.
5a teriMTcd sccond-sieht and can now see
18 ndnTVr hl
a&cieail and- distinctly as ever, bbe
i does all her house-work : waits upon her
I . . 1 iw uiuu
1 , J , , f.n.
' joraft danghter, fifty-one years of age,
I " d years past;
ajjd ittClldS a St h 11 tb
in ' 11 s av s ore or s op, w Inch they
I in tho trnnt. rnnni Aeii. ctvnnnMi
I , r 7 , . . : ' "uuj
I however, is begining to fail, and the la
i - w
' fir , atten 100 reflmred ofT 18 more
, tlT ?he Ca e,ndure" The dauSbt -
Z.ZV'Zl0! ZTJ"
own right, valued at 03,500, which some
i j . , ii ii i
nt nnr tripnns nrr onrion-rnrino-fn call fimf.
of her frifinds arn finfl rnrlnatn ell t.lmf.
uuujmcu jacr, Lout i?isca?a. .
Old Plaster.
j j js not perhaps generally known that
' old plaster from the walls of buildings, is
uuu ui Luu m luuu uui
' Plied to "Pple trees which have
decayed from age and, its conse
, ' Tf ,,)fA rfv
one ot the best manures that can be ap-
1? 3 i .. 1 . I'll 1
oecome
consequences,
disease. If the soil about the roots of an
0id apple tree be removed to the depth
of a foot, and over a circle of eight or
mne feet in diameter, and old plaster fill-
"-"iSZ'.S ZLTl
.m b c . .i
, manifest almost as much vigor as in its
nm, ill uiuu uutta UUli Ul LUI1, rUVlVO, ilUU
r. . i .
youthful days. And if, farthermore, to
il.l Ci.. li !
lUL uuuuuis rubuuingnom tins application,
T , V J . 1 . , LLalnn5
Jnade of ashcs (or lc J th health R1 be
fully restored, and grafts inserted in the!
trees, will succeed as well as if placed in
fche limbs of the youngest and most thrif-'
eS hard. There is a prin-
ciple in old lime, which renders it peculiar-
( ly valuable for tbis U3e and r where.
ever its virtues are understood, will always
secure it from being thrown into the gut-
tor or thc ditch. It is also an excellent
inSredient in compost heaps, and for pla-
Jing around young
tmon IdcZraPh- j
! W1 n . TTcTT"
i When T hp. unmnrffil Sinnov wic fnl1
i,. 'i I" Vli.i "; , : 7'
rrr-V T " i" i i -
falsetood by denying his had writing,
, he saW. Whcn God hath brou ht mo
i jm i i t ,
mt a dllcnuna 1,1 wlnch 1 must assert a
Hie or lose my life, he gives me a clear
indication of my duty, which is to prefer
Wnof I frt o CAinn. "
u.ukii w iauv,uuuu,
j Stealing a Pin A young girl hav-
ing been convicted of larceny in the Court
of General Sessions at New York, she was
I hrmirr if. un fnr Cnfn0 nn Kfnnn 1f
i 1 t . T i .
iii-r uuuiihui inoveci in nrrnsL oi .iiKi'Mnnnr,
- a
nn filft frvn,infi flinf. ftrfl-fti
, n? . x1 , , , . , . . , !
il. i M...1 I il. - ; i
i"y uescuucu ju me iuuhjl-
. ;uu l luu.vl 10 "
1 . t. f 1.1 1 i
Pomc 01 IacVue Pin 5l.oie" 7 " amuui1
! ne Worth at)0ut 0nC "un(lrert aua-
Wise men are instructed by reason ;
men of less understanding by experience;
the most ignorant by necessity, and brutes
by nature.
Physical Education Of Females.
a Spurzl.eim that
r
the Pbsical education of woman is of
more importance to the welfare of the
world than that of man.
Whatever diversifcvnf n; mvi
in regard to the truth of this propositio n,
. ... J-
, - VB.AAVU 111 tl I WUJV
( .. .l utnuiujIUKJUI,
i oi woman's physical powers should attend
1 r
that of the intcllecual and the moral.
Indeed it has become a tonic of commnn
remark, as well as of regret, that while
i , , , ,L. c b I ,
lue mental taculties ot lemales are snb -
i T '7 emaxes are un-
parauveiy mue avail it tins precious,
boon is denied her. It should then be a
matter ofsnecial attention with narents1
and educators, to secure to the daughters
' c , . .
from an Carl? and JudlC1
, - W,JUJU1"UI v UG1"CU
icious regard to
xi. J J,. i i . i
luu uuiuulius oi uicir puysicai constitu-
ir r r .. t
uon. ucuupymf-, as woman aoes, a(
' PSitin M r6SpeCt3 mral inflU' I honest some what misdirected devo-
ence in our own than in any other coun- tion to thc Soutl bave we bclie never
trv and to which is iustlv nspribpd nnr i i I n i.'ii t e
- T 7 J 7 aslcnbed our(hecn questioned, even by the bitterest of
singular and growing strength as a peo- his political opponents. A gentleman of
pie, it is a matter of primary interest not N Orleans, who was a fellow passenger
only to her. but to society in General.
- , ' " .
that cUucat,on' m ail respects,should
be such as shall be adapted to the main-
. r , .
tenance ot ner present exalted rank.
r
1 -Tr, ,1 ,1 . , ... . . ,
Whether thts end will be gained, un -
less thc popular system of female educa-
tion is materially modified, admits of ser-
J '
ious doubts. Nor are these doubts re -
i t . . .
m0ved' bUt ratUer strenSenea and con-
1 fid, by a comparison of the women of
tbis day witb tbose of a few generations
, mi v.. r-i i i
past. The condition of the latter, both n
-r '
Pa"' AUU oi lauui, uoiu m
. lesg famiiiar taustht them self-reliance
' and cotentment, under subsequent and
lllore propitious circumstances; the tree
air they breathed purified the vital cur-
rent, imparting health and animation of
'
Spirts, while the pure water they drank
x. c , A, . 4, . . .t, t .4. ... .
a'lLu viuatiug cuu
taste. Reared amid such influences,they
were strangers to those fashionable mala -
dies which modern refinement has indue-
companions worthy of the
patriots of the Revolution. True their
i..
opportunities ot study were limited; but a
deficiency of books was, in a good meas-
- .
Ure, compensated by a treer exercise
judgment and reflection, and by a closer
observation of nature and of mankind.
That the females of the present day
are inferior to their predecessors in point
of strength and health, the elements of
longevity, and fast deteriorating in those
qualities which gave them energy aud
is a factj ifc is believed, gener-
ally acknowledged. Nor is this in any
degree surprising. For while the broth-
er is permitted to engage in all the in-
yigorating pastimes which his nature and
ly admonished for indulging in those
heaHhful amusements to which her dis-
ri! i-.Jn Uv Gl,r ?o fnlif
posiuou iauB .
.aiitnose natural unpaid .u u,g um
exberance of spirits and the joyous
hi t f outl are rudc boisterous, or
"ruj( ul yuutu, .no u, uU1 ,
at least ungenteel, and should therefore
( be repressed. If she goes forth to breathe
goes forth to breathe
, the fresh and pure air of heaven, she must
i vnlr WITH P lTll!:iKIiriiU &LUII illlU IWbll tlll
.1 i ,..ZtU
! gravity of a funeral procession. Should
f10r instructor permit her to trundle her
hoop to exercise her lungs beyond what
is regarded as the standard of propriety
i ll 1, 1 ... .1. Z ..-CnnL- TIM.
' Uie iaSIUUtlUUlU lliuuiut unuwvi, rw
testing
that her haughter is becoming
rude and unlady-like.
N"or is this all. At a time when most
I ' - . , . , ,. i
caDable of proUtmg by instruction, anu
. n eary ana aisoruereu, uuiu ui muu.
. 1 1 . .. 1. , .
! boaJ sue rises not t0 U3elul ompioymenis,
' but t
to uwait, through the languid and
unprofitable hours of the day, the return
0f the evening to bring a renewal of fes
tivity and pleasure.
A few years thus passed, introduce her
to the cares and duties of domestie life.
iDcstituo of self-reliance and self-control,
' P'
ties, with a constitution impaired and men-
tal jes misdirected it is not strange
if she fails to meet the stern realities of
! life, and sinks to an untimely grave!
! Would mothers when thev visit the
' Dur"f 1 Place. or. inc a?aa antt 5eau' in T
marble inscriptions, the age of those who
f it ii i i 1 i fi
died afc period of Jife wflen by a judi
'cious training thev mifrht have been the
I
center and joy of the domestic circle-
i Dirt reflect that a mistaken pride, or pos-
' si,b a cious ignorance of the laws
of health and of life, are hastening their
Wn mnu
0 h lovcd ones to a like ta
I From the Memphis LTcnn. Eagle & Enquirer, 4th.
mz 4' n w
and
Li Wir
cratic fellow citizens at least, the opinion
of ex-Governor John A. Quitman, of Mis-
s-lsajDD; s entitled to some weight. The
I 11) o
r i, mmM,i on,i i,;a
L r -
',VL uv veuiwuau a ic uaja oiuvc u
; steamer bound up the river, asked his
i of s,ott
. opimon ot tren. Scott.
'Sir ' said the Governor, in reDlv. 'the
1 7 - - - , I. I
: Americ!in peopie haTe neTer done Gen.
Soott iuslice! Thc more that man.s cha.
Scott justice!
racter and claims to distinction are can-
' asscd the Lher be the stand ho
take in the adiniratiou ftnd gratitude
of bis countrymen.
x have been su
surprised and astonished
continued Gov Quitman that among th
rtn,i w s.w!1,j st.vfly
I know the man, and he will be control
led by no one contrary to his own con
victions of what is right. And, as to his
being, true to the South, I consider him
the most unexceptionable man on that
score among all the Whigs who have
jeen namcd in connection with the Pres
; jdency. I am a Democrat: and, conse-
nnpnfi v differing widely as I do from
,Gon. Scott on cvory politica, qaestion,
nnrnr
can never give him my support; but if
thcre s a Whig in the Union for whom,
under anv circumstances I could cast my
otie for President that Whif is Win
J '
field Scott!'
Such, in substance, we understand,was
the reply of a brave and gallant old sold
ier, when his opinion of a noble and much
abused companion in arms was asked.
We have before heard that these were the
sentiment3 of Gov. Quitman. If we mis
take not, there is a gentleman in this city,
(a Democrat,) and another at Holly
Springs, Mississippi, who served with
GoV. Q in the Mexican war, to whom,
some months since, he-made declarations
almost identical with the foregoing. This
testimony, from one of the highest Dem
ocratic sources, taken in connexion with
Gen. Scott's hearty, unqualified, and en
thusiastic approval of the Whig platform,
j (which it is nowAz?i ami palpable to thc
world is sounder, stronger, and more just
to the SouUi, on sectional questions, that
the Democratic platform) these facts,we
say, ought to be, and we doubt not will
be, satisfactory not only to all Whig3 but
to every man in the country.
1
A foolish man in Illinois has disinher
ited his children because a "spiritual me
dium" told him that his wife, with whom
he lived happy till her death, was unfaith
ful to him.
Railway Accidents in England. The
statistics of the last half year show that
the whole number of passengers on all
the railways was 47,509,932. Out of
those there were only 11 killed, and 204
wounded.
The Sabbath. The Marshal of Indian
apolis, la., has given the barbers to un
derstand that hereafter, Sunday shaving
will not be tolerated. Druggists aree
quirod to restrict their sales on the Sab
bath to articles of necessity, and keep
ers of lively stable!" are enjoined not to
hire horses or carriges for trips of noisy
pleasure,