N HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher, ?XA COUNTY 2'i? REPUBLICAN PARTY. TWO DOLLARS rEI AH2fT2u, ' VOL. II. RIDGWAY, PA., THURSDAY, MARCH 14, 1872. NO. 2. POETIi Y. ' ' At'JTT TABITII V. DT OLIVER WRSDBLL BOLMEi. WhaLvor I do and what.v.r I my,. . Aunt Tabltha Ulli me that Isn't th war i When she was a girl (forty summon ago) Aunt Tabltha tolls me they never did so. Dear annt I If t only would tnko horadvlco I But I like my own way, and I find It so nice I And besides I forget half the things I am told ; But they all will come back to me when I am old. If a youth passes by, It m iy happen, no doubt, He may ohanoe to look In as I chance to look out : She would never endure an Impertinent stare It 1 horrid, she says, and I mnstn't sit there. A walk In tho moonlight has pleasure, I own, But it Isn't qnlte safe to be walking alone ; Bo I tako a lad's arm Just for safety, you know ' But Aunt Tabltha tolls ma they didn't do so. flow wicked we are, and how good they were then 1 They kept at arm's length those dotostable men ; What nn era of virtu, she lived in I But stay Were the men all such rogues In Aunt Tabitha's day f If the men were so wicked, 111 ask my papa How he dared to propose to my darling mamma : Was he like tho roat of them Ooodneae I Who knows t And what shall I say If a wretch should propose f I am thinking If Anut know so little of sin, What a wonder Annt Tabitha's aunt must have been I And nor grand-aunt it scarea me how shockingly sad J . That we girls of to-day are so frightfully bad I A martyr will save tin, and nothing else can ; Let mo porish to rcscuo some wretched young man I Though when to the altar a victim I go. Aunt Tabltha'U toll me she never did so I Atlantic MmtMv. TJTE STORY-TELLER. MORTGAGING THE HOMESTEAD. BY SlltS. R. B. EDSOX. They were a grave-looking group that wore gathered in Dean Lindsay's best room that lovely Juno morning. First there was Dean Lindsay himself, always a prominent figure anywhere, from his tall, muscular form, and bold, resolute face. At his right, their eibows leaning on tho table, whereon lay writ ing materials, with sundry folded and creased papers, sat two men, one of them idly toying with a pen which ho held in his hand. Ho was a slight, dark skinned man, with short, bushy hair anil whiskers the latter of tho mutton-chop stylo and both of the color denomina ted " pepper and salt," He had a bright, alert face, and clear, bluish-gray eyes, and his namo was Mark Seldon, and his calling attorney at law. Tho man at his sido afforded the strongest possible contrast. Ho was tall and loosely built, with a slight stoop in the heavy shoulders. He had a florid complexion, with small, sloepy-looking, palo-bluo eyes, a bcaidloss face, and long, lank, sandy hair, pushod behind his ears, said ears being modulod on a generous plan, as regarded sizo, and, if I may use tho expression, placed in the' most favorable possiblo light to show advantageously. And, as ho carried his head a little down, they gave him the appearance of listening covertly, with out seeming interested. This man's name was Wilson Amos Wilson, and, though you might not think it from his dress or general appearance, a rich man. I mean, of course, rich for his locality. Ho might not have been rich for New York, but for Dalton, a small, western township, he was a perfect Croesus. Besides those, thero was a small col ony of young Lindsays, in assorted sizes, the largest of which, pretty Delia Lindsay, stood behind her mother's chair, her arm thrown over her shoulder in a pretty, protecting way. Mrs. Lind say had been an invalid since Harry's birth, four years, and Delia was practi cally at the head of tho household. It was, moreover, no light thing to be at the head of this household. There were, besides herself, seven children, which, with her father and mother - and Paul Leicester, who had boen with her father for the summer, just eleven in the fami ly. Added to this was tho cure of a dairy of a dozen cows, and added to this, tho fact that the state of their finances would not admit of their kocping a ser vant. And this question of finances brings mo to tho real" subject of my story, " "You'll excuse mo, Wilson, for being a little down-hearted about this thing," Mr. Lindsay said, with a faint, depre cating smile. " It seems like signing away my heart's blood to give a stranger a claim on tho old homestead !" A slow red burned itself through Amos Wilson's cheek. " I wish you wouldn't speak of me as a stranger, he said, hastily, with an involuntary glance at Delhi, which no one but Paul Leicester saw. " I meant any one not a relative, Mr. Wilson," replied Lindsay, soberly. You know I had hope of help from my cousin in New Orleans. I mentioned it to you." Mr. Wilson listened, and nedded thoughtfully. " Well, tho fact that I have applied to you shows that that hope has failed me, and so we'll say nothing more about it. Perhaps you had better write tho deed, now, Mr. Seldon." Mr. Seldon bowed pleasantly, dipped his pen in the ink, and for a while tho faint scratch of the pen on tho paper, and the loud ticking of the kitchen clock, were the only sounds in the house . - Mr. Lindsay leaned his faco on his hand and looked steadily on the floor, tho slight twitching of tho muscles about te uiquth being the only sign qf emo tion one could discover, Mrs, Lindsay, white and tili as a statuo, her faoe a lit tle drooping, sat a few foet at the left of her husband, while Delia retained her old position by hor mother's chair, a troubled shadow in the soft, brown eyes, and over the sweet young face, Harry, awed and perplexed, hid his face in the folds of her dress, while in a little group at the open window were gathered the rest of the children. L -. . How unnaturally still it was ! How in contrast to the freshness and bright ness of the sky and air ! Looking from the open windows one saw long reaches of softly-undulating prairie, bathed in golden light ; whilo away to the right a blue, sparkling river, sentineled with cottonwoods and Bycamoros, and ovor hung with palo, translucent mists, flashed and rippled between its volvety banks. No wonder Dean Lindsay shrank from the thought of this fair heritage being compromised; but there was no help for it, and ho had got to make up his mind to think of it as no longer really his, but subject to Amos Wilson's author ity. Ho could hardly keep from groan ing aloud as he ran over in his mind tho half Bcore or moro of fine farms which belonged to Wilson, all of which had first been mortgaged to hira, as his was being now, to raise the necessary money to keep them from being given up alto gether. And then, one after another, they had been given up, and Amos Wil son was tho possessor. Would hit go in the same way Y Would there be a few years of struggle with ill-luck blight, and drouth, and mildew and then his wife and children be homeless Y He started with a nervous shudder and glanced up. Amos Wilson was leaning a little forward, looking steadily at Delia, with a strange fire lighting his Blcepy eyes. " Tho deed is ready for your signature, Mr. Lindsay," Seldon said, briskly, " yours and Mrs. Lindsay's." His voice broko tho weird spell which had seemed to hold them, and Paul Lei cester got up from his seat by the kitch en door, and camo and stood by tho ta ble while tho deed was signed, and tho money seven hundred and fifty dollars counted out and given to Mr. Lind say, who, in turn, handed over the mort gage of tho homestead to Mr. Wilson. Then he turned abruptly and went out. Mr. Selden looked after him with his quick, bright eyes, but no ono else ap peared to notice it as being anything unusual that a hired man should in trude his presence upon such on occa sion. And now that business is over, I will take the opportunity of saying a word about this samo Mr. Paul Leicester. First, ho was a stranger in Dalton ; i. e., ho had been thoro but little over two months, having come early in April. Ho had seemed so anxious for employ ment, and offered to work so cheaply withal, and upon such easy tonus not asking for payment until Christmas that Mr. Lindsay had thought it best to tako him. Ho could not work the largo farm alone, and he was specially anxious to do a good deal this season, to try to recover himself. Mr. Leicester was not very much used to farm work, it was quito evident, but ho was so ready to learn, and so quiet and persistent about everything he un- undertook, that Mr. Lindsay was de lighted with his bargain. He was ex tremely reticent at first, but by degrees he had grown more free, and once or twice had surprised them with such a genial now ot wit and spirits that Mr. Lindsay had declared himself unablo to see what sent him there a man of his abilities. And now a word in regard to Mr. Lindsay's embarrassments. For three consecutive seasons the harvests had been extremely light in his section, scarcely paying for tho outlay of money and labor, to say nothing of profit. Then tho expense ot living was considerable, for ten persons require no small amount of food, to make no mention of garments, that will wax old. Added to this was a long and severe illness, lasting all win ter, and running him behind to such an extent that ho saw no other way to go on with his work than to hire money. This it was next to impossiblo to do, and after some pretty severe struggles with his pride, he so far overcame it as to write to Julian Richardson, a second cousin, living in New Orleans, and re puted very wealthy. Ho had never seen him, but had heard that ho was un married, and somewhat eccentric. And so in this strait he ventured to appeal to him. He wrote tho first letter in Feb ruary, but it was unanswered. After waiting in a state of nervous anxiety and suspense two or three weeks, ho wrote again. This time his letter was returnod, after being opened, but with out a line or word in amswer. He strug gled "along a month or two moro, and then ho wont to see Amos Wilson, with tho final rosult I have heretofore de scribed. The days slipped away like golden sands, and tho summer grew in beauty and brightness to Delia Lindsay. The sunshine fell into her heart as soft-' ly as it lapped tho green, blossomy hills. The daily drudgery of toil bocamo sud denly lightened and illumined by this samo golden glow, and the world grew dear, and life looked only a sweet and beautiful dream. Into this supremo atmosphere one day a sudden cloud broko. If it had been no largor than a man's hand," for weeks, she had not disqovered it, and was, there fore, totally unprepared for the great darkness that came upon her. She had returned from a long ramble over the prairie, her hands loaded with blossoms, and stood by the door, describing their names and habits to Paul Leicester, whose grave' face was softened into a rare, tendor smile, whenever the pretty brown eyes and wild-roso cheeks wero lifted to his face. " Delia, my dear, I want you a mo ment," her father said, coming out into tho entry. Without a word she followed him in, the blossoms still in her hands, and some of them dropping to the floor as she walked.. t Come in this way, my child," Mr. Lindsay said, passing before her and opening the door into the parlor, where, sharply outlined against the sunset sky, stood Amos Wilson, his back to the win dow, and his great, ungainly form show ing in bold relief against the light. Somehow tho feeling of depression which had so weighed her down on the day when the homestead was mortgaged, cuate upon her again, and she iult the color leaving her face, and felt her lips growing white and rigid. Mr. Lindsay closed the door care fully and came forward to his daughter's side. " Delia," ho said, struggling to appear calm, " Mr. Wilson has dono mo the honor to ask my permission to pay his court to my daughter. 1 have told him that my girl is tree to answor for hor solf what Bhall it be, Delia Y" Delia cast one quick glanco into her father's faco, and saw all its eager hope and anxiety. Then she turned to Amos Wilson, who had taken a step forward, and was looking at her sharply from un der his low brows, his palo eyes burning with faint opaline tints. Involuntarily she shuddered and drew, back. " I do not love Mr. Wilson, father." she said, faintly. "But you can learn to love him, Delia 'f" ho asked quickly, his lips twitching nervously. " No, father, I cannot," she answered, this time firmly. " I thank Mr. Wilson for the honor ho has dono mo, but I do not love him, and you do not ask me to marry a man I do not love, father Y" " No, my child, I do not ask that," ho said, gently, but with a chord of sadness and disappointment in his voice. Poor Delia I how suddenly the cloud had descended and enveloped her. With a heavy heart she crept softly out and left the two . men together. Sho know what her refusal had meant to her fath er. She knew the load which chafed and fretted him so, might have been lifted with a simple movement of her lips, and yet she had not sho could not give it ! Dropping her blossoms as she went, sho hurried out to a little ar bor of wild vines in tho garden, and there, alono with the pitying twilight and the stars, sho sobbed out tho first bitterness of her regret and pain. ' Sho heard Mr. Wilson como out and go away, and then, a little after, heard a step in tho garden a step that sent tho blood in a fierce, sudden torrent to her heart, and then to her cheeks. "You are not repenting so soon, Del la Y" and Paul Leicester came and took the wet flushed face between his cool palms, tenderly. " O, I couldn't marry that man ! why should he ever think of such a thing Y" Delia asked, pitifully. " And father" She stopped abruptly, but ho felt how hot her cheeks grew against his hand, and know what she would havo said. " He is rich, littlo Delia." " I know it," with a littlo choking sob. " And am only your father's laborer : and yet I havo dared love the samo lady. What do you suppose sho will say to my presumption, if she refuses this rich man so cavalierly ':" "Yout O O, Mr. Leicester! don't mock mo," ami she broke down in anoth er flood of tears, and Mr. Leicester com forted her with a great many fond words, which wouldn't look half as delightful and charming in print as .they really were, from tho fact that oertain things aro universally pronounced " silly," un less one happens to bo ond of the dra matis jermue then, they aro better and more to bo desired than the wisdom of Solomon. By and by it grow chilly, and the damp mists camo up from tho river, and Mr. Leicester said, Delia must go in, though she, foolish child, would havo tarried thero, gladly, nor thought of damp or chill, if it had boen January instead of August, it he was only there. " I want to seo your father, too, Del la," he said, and so they went in. Mr. Lindsay sat by the kitchen table, his arms crossed and leaning on it, and before him, scattered about, sundry bills, papers, etc. He looked up, then made a motion to gather them up. Mr. Leicester drew Delia's arm through his, and came quickly forward. " Mr. Lindsay, I love your daughter and sho loves mo," ho said, in a steady, assured voico. " I know Mr. Wilson would be more acceptable to you, but I think you are too much- of a gentleman to object to mo on property grounds. I think we can manage to live Delia and I somehow. What do you say to us Y" Mr. Lindsay glanced from the radiant, blushing face of his daughter, to the strong, quiet ono beside her, and, though it cost hiin a little pffort, he said, cheer fully: " I will add my blessing, if that is what you ask. God knows that my child's happiness is more to mo than money a thousand times !" Paul Leicester's face softcnod into a rare smilo. " You aro a bravo man, Dean Lindsay," he said warmly, his eyes kindling, " and you shall never bo sor ry for having trusted me." Mr. Leicester begged for an early wedding-day, and soon won Delia to his sido by his eloquence and persistence. " It was as well, perhaps, now as any time," Mr. Lindsay thought, and also yielded. And Mrs. Lindsay had too long leaned upon and deferred to Delia to think of objecting to anything the asked, and so it was arranged for the last week in September. Two weeks before tho time Mr. Leicester said it would bo nocossary for him to be away a week, and, without mentioning his destination, he took his departure. Tho week passed, then ten days, and ho neither came nor wrote to them. And thon it lacked but one of tho day fixed for tho wedding, and Delia grew ner vous, and Mr. Lindsay angry. But the afternoon brought the truant, who, with a bright smile, said he was delayed by business. "By the way," he added, taking a folded paper from his pocket, and tossing it to Mr. Lindsay, " I saw Mr. Wilson as came along." "The mortgago deed!" exclaimed Lindsay, looking perplexed. " Yes. It's no more than fair I should make you some present when yeu have so gonerously given me this dear girl," putting his arm about Delia. " But I don't understand. I I" " Thought I was a poor fellow," fin ished Leicester, smiling. I know you did, and I will add that I have been to considerable trouble to give you that impression learning farming for in stance ! Do you remember that, Dean Y" he , asked, abruptly,",, tossing "tf" letter upon the tabtoV 'It was the first t letter he .had. written' to his cousin""in New Orleans !" Mr. Lindsay rose to his feet, white and trembling. " You are not he you are not Julian Richardson !" ho gasped. " I am very much afraid I am that ' eccentric personage,'" he replied.laugh ing. " I believe I was christened Julian Paul Richardson. When I received your lottor I concoived the idoa of visiting you, incog. Your second letter deter mined mo, and, I must confess, I am thoroughly delighted at the success of my experiment, he added, with a bright smilo upon Delia, who clung to his arm, palo with wonder and excitement. " You see, Dean, I desired to know if you wore worth helping it's a foolish hobby of mino, always and thero was no other practicable way. I think we'll not have to trouble Mr. Wil' on again, my good cousin 1 For, as I told you onco before, I think we can manago to live some woy Delia and I can we not, my darling Y" And for answer Delia hid her faco on his shoulder and cried, woman fashion. Just a Question or Two. . An exchango thus descants upon print ing office bores, hitting tho mark so fair ly on the head, we cannot fail to appre ciate, endorse and copy. Hero aro a few of tho innumerable questions which printers are called upon to answer : Do you print both sides of the paper at onco Y How long docs it take to make a news paper Y Suppose you write everything you print, don't you Y . Why are those boxes of different sizes, and how do you know whero to find a certain letter 'r1 Cani't you print a picture of anything you want to Y I should think you could. Why can't you Y (After printing some horso bills for a man not long ago, he found fault with them becauso tho ' cut' was not liko his horse. On unother occasion, a gentle man camo to us with tho information that he had left his horso in front of tho office, and ho wanted a picture of it taken and some bills printed). If you print one hundred bills for $3, I suppose you will let rue have four for twelve cents Y I should think it would bo fun to bo an editor you don't do anything but sit down and read newspapers and sto ries all day Y Do you throw away your typo after you have printed upon it once Y You don't care if I take a handful of this typo, do you ? It can't bo very hard to set typo all dav is it. now '( vivu , i uuip you print someming r I wish you would print my name for mo; it wouldn't be much troublo to print off just one namo. What is this for Y what do you do with that? what makes that look so funny Y what aro yau going to do now ? what for Y why Y what makes you keep so still Y You don't care if a fellow just talks, do you Y By tho time a man goes through with this list of questions, his company be comes so monotonous that ho cannot fail to porceive its effects upon tho listeners, and ho walks off with tho impression that wo havo treated him unkindly and impolitely. AH tho abovo is to tho point, and when the questioner takes tho hint and leaves of his own accord, we feel serene. But then, when, as occurred with us tho other duy, a man comes in with a 32-pago pamphlet, with the backs torn oft', and insists on us piintinghim a copy of that same, backs and titlo-pago in cluded, for ten eentt, becauso that is all tho original copy cost him, wo feel dis posed to explain to him tho quickest method of getting down stairs, free of charge. ,1 V ' 1 L ' l Necessity of Sleep. There aro thousands of busy pooplo who die every year for want of sleep. Sleeplessness becomes a disease, and is the precursor of insanity. We speak of sleep as the image ot death, and our waking hours as the imago of life. Sloep is not like death ; for it is tho period in which tho waste of tho system coasos, or is reduced to its minimum. Sleep re pairs the waste which waking hours have mado. It rebuilds tho system. Tho night is the repair-shop of the body. Every part of the system is silently over hauled, and all the organs, tissues and substances aro replenished. Waking consumes and exhausts ; sleep replaces and "repairs. A man who would bo a good worker must be a good sleeper. A man has as much forco in him as ho had provided for in sleep. Tho quality of mental activity depends upon the quality of sleep. Men need, on an average, eight hours of sloep a day. A lymphatic temperament may require nine ; a ner vous temperament six or seven. A lym phatic man is sluggish, moves and sleeps slowly. But a nervous man actsquickly in everything. He does more in an hour than a sluggish man in two hours ; and so in his sleep. Every man must sleep according to his temperament but eight hours is tho average. Whoever by work, pleasure, sorrow, or by any other cause, is regularly diminishing his sloep, is de stroying his lifo. A man may hoi out for a time, but the crash will come, and he will die. Thore is a great deal of in tomperanoo bosides that of tobacco, opium or brandy. Men are dissipated who overtax their system all day, and undersleep every night. A man who dies of delirium' tremens is no more a drunkard and a suicide than the minis ter, the lawyer, the merchant, tho editor, or tho priuter, that works excessively all day and sleeps but little all night. 11. IK. Beecher. A witness in court who had been cau tioned to give a precise answer to every question, and not to talk about what he might think the question meant, was in terrogated as follows : " You drive a wagon Y" " No, sir, I do not" " Why, sir, did you not tell my learned friead so this moment Y" ' " No, sir, I did not." " .Now, sir. I put it to you on your oath : Do you drive' a wagen Y" " No, sir." " What is. your occupation, then ?" -1 drive a horso." Sulphite of Soda as a Remedy for Small rox. (From the SclentlSo American.) We -publish below a very interestinar lottor upon this subjoct, tho writer of 1.1 1. j i? . n w ii tun uusires nis name to do suppresseu, as ho does not wish to tletract from the forco of his statements by creating an impression that ho is puffing a nostrum from personal motives. ThQuerh per sonally unknown to us, wo havo formed a high opinion of the candor of this writer, both from tho communication itseif and tho private letter that accom panied it. 1 ho statements mado are m the high est degree remarkable. Small pox has so long boon considered an incurablo diseaso, not to be arrested by any hu man moans when onco its virus has en tered tho circulation of those unprotect ed by vaccination or previous attacks of the samo complaint, that tho an nouncement of even a single successful cure will arrest public attention at once. Tho remedy named, suhihitc of soda. has been growing in favor for somo timo as an antidote for blood poisons, which act seemingly like ferments ; and wo have ourselves witnessed apparently happy effects produced by its use in complaints supposed to arise from such poisons. Its value in this class of dis eases has been so far demonstrated that it has been made an officinal remedy. It we are to credit tho statements of our correspondent, a most astonishing effect upon tho small pox poison was produced by something, which, if it was not the so Joe titlphis, ought to bo most earnestly sought. Wo aro not aware that any spontaneous resolution of this terrible diseaso ever has taken place, of a character that could bo mistaken for tho cure ascribed to tho action of tho drug under consideration. The drug produces in proper doses no effects to bo feared, and therefore can be mado the subject of experiment without danger to patients. Its merits, therefore.as a small pox rem edy ought to be at onco thoroughly tested, and if it should be found that tho euro alluded to was probably an effect of tho crude petroleum employed to an noint tho body, or tho result of a cause unknown, tho fact that a cure is alleged should stiiuulato investigation into tho real cause. It is, wo believe, very raro that an unfavorable prognosis, based upon tho aeuteness of pain in tho head and back in attacks of small pox, fails to bo verified. In tho particular case described, these bad symptoms woro strongly marked, yet tho patient, the next day after tho character of tho com plaint was deemed established by tho eruption, was convalascent, and in a few days recovered without the formation of a single pustule. 1 hero is, ot course, tho possibility that thero was a mistako in diagnosis, and that the diseaso was not really small pox, yet this seems rather improbable. Tho hope that a cure, for such a scourge as small pox, may bo discovered prompts us to call particular attention to tho letter of our correspondent ; and we most sincerely wish that tho supposed efficacy of this simpto remedy may bo demonstrated to be a verity. A REMEDY I'OK SMALL POX, BY ONE WHO IIA9 TRIED IT. The following was written several months ago, but was not forwarded, as the press has been teeming with small pox " cures" which aro generally so evi dently worthless that I hesitated put ting my little communication among tho prescriptions; feeling .almost sure it would meet with no moro attention than is accorded to tho many, placed daily before tho prudently incredulous reader. But I find it impossiblo to resist tho conviction on my part that to withhold any longer from tho public my know ledge of a remedy or mode of treat ment: for variola and its modifications, would bo criminal, as well as weak, in view of my confidence as to a successful result. Some years ago I had a case of vario loid, in my family, contracted from ac tual contagion, but not from strictly immediato contact with variola. Tho patient, my daughter, a child nino years old, carried a muff to church, the day after her mother had loaned it for a short time to a young lady friend in tho cars. This lady had just recovered, ap parently entirely, from small pox con tracted from her brother, who had re t urn ed homo from the army convalescent, but during the period of active desqua mation, after a recent and almost fatal attack of small pox. Precisely ten days after my daughter carried tho muff, on tho eve of the tenth day, sho was quite ill from a complica tion of symptoms. The next morning I noticed a number of spots on her skin, alarmingly suggestive of variola. Not having had any experience of such a case I consulted a friend, a physician, who at once pronounced her disorder varioloid. Ho thought, too, that it would prove a severe case, as the symp toms, namely, fever, back ache, head ache, nausea, and tho general appear ance of the eruption, warranted such a diagnosis. I took the caso pretty much into my own hands, as I had at onco resolved to pursue a line of treatment entirely dif ferent from that usually employed in such cases. Some time in the year 18G1, I read in a number of tho Scientific American pi that year), that a new rem edy, discovered by a French chemist, namely, soda tulphice, was attracting great attention in certain quarters from its success in the treatment ot ulcera tion, etc., and more particularly by its having cured entirely several well-at tested cases of hydrophobia. Its many valuable properties were fully discussed, verified, and freely endorsed by the Fronch College of Surgeons, and were in substance what is now given in am ple detail in the " United States Dispen satory," 1871, thirteenth editorial article " bodu) sulphis. . After some delay. I obtained a bottle rof tbi8'modicine, and'made use of it ac cording to the notice of its properties, as occasion gave opportunity and always with satisfactory results. To resume tho subject of my case of varioloid. I administorod to my patient 15 grains of the tcxht tulphice, dissolved in milk well sweetened, every three hours. I also had her entire body oiled effectually with crude petroleum applied with tho bare hand. Tho next morning tho eruption was abselutely killod and dry ; and tho dis ease broken up, to tho wonder and, I need scarcely add, tho great relief of all interested. As no pustules had had time to form, not tho least trace of tho erup tion remained ; and in a few days my child was as well as ever. When tho "seventeen year locust" abounded in this region, it was found that tho sting of tho malo locust was so poisonous as to produce serious' and, in some cases noted, even fatal effects. A servant girl in a my family trod upon a locust, ond tho sting had to bo with drawn with tweezers. Tho girl scream ed with agony, and said it was " worse than forty beo stings." I gnvo her about 15 grains of tho sodm tulphice, and kept tho wound wet with a cloth dipped fre quently in a mixture of equal parts of spirits ammonia, alcohol, and strong water solution of tho sothr tulphice. Al though her foot had swollen amazingly before I had timo to prepare my reme dies, yet it stopped swelling at onco af ter the first doso ond application. A sharp pain-went through the foot occa sionally, but in a few hours tho swelling and pain were entirely gone. When my interest was first excited by tho article referred to, concerning the sodtB tulphice, I urged a prominent drug gist to send for it. Ho consented, stat ing, as far as I remember, that I should havo to wait some timo for it, as ho should have to order it through a Lon don house. I received it in duo time, labelled as above. I havo, sinco that first supply was ex hausted, mado use of tho American pre paration, tho sulphite of soda ; but I prefer the foreign (French) article, as the Auiorienn contains a larger percent age of sulphuric acid, and is, in fact, a hyposulphate. However, this now offi cinal preparation is equally efficacious. I used the sohe tulphice with perfect success, in cases of ulceration end as a wash for scrofulous discharges of tho eyes and glands, at tho samo timo ad ministering it internally, in doses vary ing from 10 to 30 graius, three times a day. I would strongly urge tho uso of tho crude petroleum in connection with tho todm titlphis, for variola ond all its modi fied forms ; and in tho treatment of measles, scarlatina, or any eruptive dis ease, whatever its naturo may bo. Tho beneficial effect of oiling tho skin is well known. Tho " crudo oil" I use is that sold hero in Pittsburgh under tho namo of " Kiers Petroleum." Several varieties of crudo petroleum can bo got, on inquiry, that uro so clear and puro as to bo available for many purposes without reiinimr. Of this article thero is, fortunately, no scar city. As the latest edition of the " United States Dispensatory" may not bo within reach of all interested, I subjoin, from my copy ( 18 1 1 1 a portion ot what is said of tho remedy swhe tulphice under tho description of tho article, pp. 820, 827. " Sulphite of soda, (soda sulphU). This salt was first adopted as officinal in tho present edition of tho 'United States Phormacnpcoia. " Medicinal uses. Sulphite of soda has been used in cases of yeasty vomit ing with remarkable success. The mat ter vomited in these cases has a yeasty appearance on tho surface, and is gener ally found to contain when examined by the microscope two microscopic iungi called sarcuia veiuriculi and torun cercvisue. 1 ho diseases, m which these medicines (tho sulphites') havo boon re commended, aro purulent infection, of whatever origin ; malignant pustules ; hospital gangrene ; erysipelas ond other cxanthematous fevers ; malarial and miasmatic fevers ; and in lino, oil dis eases which may bo supposed to depend on absorbed poisons not acting on the tissues, but by a species of fermenta tion " Also, in controlling suppurative ul cers, and all suppurative affections of tho mucous membranes, asot thethroat; the bronchial tubes, through inhalation by tho atomizer ; tho urinary passages ; and tho alimentary canal ; and in any case whero thero is reason to think that the local affection is sustained by zvmot ic influence or invisiblo organisms, (par asitic, vegetable or animal; ; and in any diseaso in which purulent infection of the blood may bo produced by tho same cause. They almost act as spocifics in such Cases. " At certain stages of cancerthey operate in the same way, by obviating 1L. . , i L -1.1 i .A! M tun eueeis ui puLiiu lerinemuuons. Dr. Farnsworth says, in an article on the influence of drugs upon lartas and insect lifo in standing water : " A so lution of soda sulphite destroyed the in habitants of the water in one glass, in two hours, etc. By comparing tho ef fects of the different drugs, the Dr. shows that the soda sulphito takes rank with the highest in efficiency. Thus wo have evidonce that the soda sulphite is an agent (just beginning to bo appreciated) that can be relied on in exterminating noxious parasitio life ; also animalcules, that produce or follow upon various diseases : as a remedv for ulcers and sores, for nausea, and vomit-- ing ; tor eruptive diseases j for poison ous stings and bites ; and at tho same time possessing no injurious properties whatever, when made uso of, internally or externally, in reasonable proportions ana quantity, . True Friendship. It is one of the severest tests of friendship to tell your friend of his faults. If vou are antrry with a man, or hate him, it is not hard to go to him and stab him with words but so to love a man that you can not bear to see the stain of sin upon him, and to speak painful truth through loving words that is friendship. But few have such friends. Our enemies usually teach us what we are at the point of the sword. " Faithful are the wounds of a friend, but the kisses of an onemy are doceitful." Facta and Figures. They toll us of a railway in Kentucky wheroon tho locomotives are assisted up steep grados by a yoke of oxen. A blushing bride at North Platte handed her marriage certificate to the conductor, instead of hor ticket, and was horrified to hear the announcement that it wasn't good. Cleveland oil refineries in the winter run their refuse oil under the ice in tho harbor. Tho Plaindealer placidly re marks " that is why tho lako water tastes so badly now." A firm of button makers in Birming ham, England, surprised their workmen New Year's Day by dividing among them a proportion of the profits of their business. The amounts ranged from 1 to i per head. A little four-year-old of Bristol went to Providence the other day, and in the depot was accosted by a Quaker lady, who asked, " How old art thou, little girl Sho looked up in tho face of the Quakeress and replied: "I'm not art thou I'm littlo Jennie." By tho death of a rich undo in New Orleans, Miss Nollio Mellon, lately em ployed in a millinery shop in East Sagi naw, Mich., has fallen heiress to a for tune of $200,000. Miss Mellon for sev eral years has supported her widowed mother by her own exertions. A Sheboygan (Wisconsin) woman en tered a saloon tho other evening whore her husband was carousing, and attor expostulating with a broomstick to the barkeeper and two or threo other men in the place, soundly whaled her hus band, ond then led him home by tho collar. The Chicago Ttmea says of tho strinerent law recently enacted by the Legislature ot Illinois : " It s a nice law, this new tcmperanco statute. You can get drunk, larrup your wifo and knock smithereens out of tho furniture, ond then mako tho man who sold you the virus pay all tho damage" A firm in Sheffield, England, has just succeeded in rolling tho largest armor plates ever made. The plates aro in tended to protect the turrets of tho great war ship Devastation, which is being built at Portsmouth. Each plato weighs twenty-four tons and measures twenty feet in length, nino feet in breadth, and eight inches in thickness. The most reinarkablo achievement in surgery which wo have seen recorded of late was that of the Delaware wood chopper, who cut off two of his toes and carried thorn several miles in his pocket, and then had thorn tied on again. It tho story bo truo tho sovored member. grew hrmly to tho stumps, leaving only a slight scar, and aro now as useful and ornamental as evor. Thoro is a French astronomer, Planta- mour by namo, who has conjured up a terriblo comet that is to strike this earth on tho 12th of August next, and knock it utterly out of timo. Wo aro truly sorry for this, for we had somo cherished Elans that wo cannot possibly carry out eforo that time. However, it occurs to us that wo have hoard of this direful chimera before, and that it has failod to keep one or more appointments for ex tinguishing this globe. Wo shall cher ish tho hope that it will prove mtracta bio this time, and that Plautamour can not induce it to work out his malignant purpose. The Chicago Post's Plains correspon dent writes : " I never saw so many Indians in my life. I should think there were a million at least. I won't take off an Indian ; though several of them will get taken off before spring if ueneral I aimer moves westward. 1 hey are dressed mostly in blankets and bear s grease, ihey are a confiding people. Yesterday a squad of thirteen came into our tent, and tho oldest availed himself of the right of seniority by sitting down on our hot box-stove, which he mistook for a valiso. lie was very much surpris ed, and the quartermaster has been is suing laudanum poultices ever sinco. In Texas a lively competition seems to bo going on in tho production of weighty infants. Waco County first put ' in a claim for tho championship because it could show a baby eight months old that weighed thirtypounds, whereupon Montgomery County camo forward with a promising fellow only six months old who weighed thirty-five pounds. " Pooh ! " says Robertson County, " those babies are well enough, but Mrs. Dr. Poole, of this place, has a baby that weighs thirty-nine pounds at six months old." The other counties havo not been heard from, but we presume the finest specimens of elephantine babyhood still- " Dlusn unseen. The Pure Milk Movement is still kept up in Boston. Before a private moeting of ladies and gentlemen recently hold to consider the subject, tho liev. J. E. Hale stated (and ho is perfectly responsible for his statements) that tho middlemen or contractors do what they please with tho milk before it reaches the consumer j that they do please, in the first place, to tako off all the cream ; that they add water and a mixture of burnt sugar to give color, and then of salt and plain sugar to rectify the flavor ; that the pop ular taste has become so perverted that this vile moss is preferred to the genuine fluid ; that this spurious milk causes a fearful mortality among children. Mrs. Caroline IL Dall submitted a report from a sub-oommittoe, setting forth an alarming mortality among the young from the use of impure milk, and stating that the profit of the contractors - was nearly 100 per cent. Dr. Jarvis corrobo rated former statements regarding the infant mortality. The Rev. Mr. Angier cited the example of two families in New York, both known to him, one of which was fed upon pure and the other upon adulterated milk. The members of the first " were manly, healthy, robust, happy," and those of the other thin, dyspeptio, cadaverous." The plan adopt ed by the meeting is to b.uy milk direct ly of the producers, to bo supplied reg ularly on city routes by an Association, thus taking the business as much as pos sible out of the hands of the middlemen.