--r jyt.., JlJJUL'UWtJW.'t'gga Scubtcb to ipoiitirs, literature, Agriculture, -Seieuee, Jttoralitg, nub eueral intelligence. g&mm temim m ds &ms&m &s mm wma "mm mmm mmrn mm$$? mm? shbh in esssa ss , - . VOL- 14. Published fy Theodore Seaioch. TERMS Two dollars -1 tvo dollars per annum in advance Two !i quarter, half yearly- and if not paid le- dollars and : tforc t.ic end of the year. two dollars and a half. No papers discontinued until all arrearages arc paid, excoftT. at the option of the Editor. ID Advertisements not exceeding one square' (ten lilies) will be inserted three weeks for one dollar, and XWeftty-five cents for every subsequent insertion. Tho charge for one and three insertion? tho same. A liber al discount made to ycarlv adrei tiers. JET All letters .iddressed to the Editor must bo post paid. .3 O PRE NTI AT G. tr Having n general assortment of large, elegant, plain and ornamental Type, we are prcnai ed to cxeeuteevery desctiptionof " -J Curtis, Chcnl irs, Ilill Heads. Notes. Mauk Receipts -Jusjlftris, Legal and other Rmnks, Pamphlets, c. nnntetl with neatness and despatch, on reasonable iienns, AT THE OFRICE OF THE JEFJFE&SOfl.SAST-.. - mi - Tli What is the existence of man's life, . But open war, or slumbcr'd strife, Where sickness to his sense presents The combat of the elements; And never feels a perfect peace Till Death's cold hands signs his release It is a storm whe.c the hot Wood ' Outvies in rape the boiling flood; And each loose passion of the mind Is like a furious gust of wind, Which beats his bark with many a, wave, Ji Till he casts anchor in the gra'e. It-is n flower which buds, and prows, Jnd withers as the leaves disclose; Whose spring and fall faint seasons keep, Like fils of waking before sleep; TJien sinks into that fatal mould Where its first being was enroll'd. It is a dream whose seeming truth Is moralized in age and j'outli; Where all the comforts he can share, -As wandering as his fancies are; - Till in a mist of dark decay, " - The dreamer vanish quite away. ; , It is a dial which points ont The sun-set, as it moves about; And shadows out in lines of night The subtle stages of Time's flight; Till all obscuring earth hath laid His body in perpetual shade. It is a weary interlude Which doth short joys, long'vroes, include; The world, the stage, the prologue tears, The acts vain hopes and varied fers; The-sccne shuts up with loss of breath, Aud leaves no epilogue but death. Read This. AYe find the following 'word to boys' rtnr nf nnr pvrlinn-rs. nnd narticul nnmmended its nerusal to our voUns read- r , - tl YT7l r ers. ues It- uy liuuri, wiu ia "respected? It is the boy who is making a'n effort continually toie?pect his father, nnd to,obey him in whatever he may di- . recttobe done. It is the boy who i3 kind to other little boys, who respect age, and who never gets into difficulties and -quarrels with his companions. It is thc boy who leaves no effort untried to im prove himself in knowledge aud wisdom every day who is busy and active iu en deavoring to do good acts towards others. Show me a boy who obeys his parents, who is diligent, who has respect for age, " who always has a friendly disposition, and who applies himself diligently to get wi3- dom and to do good towards others, and if he is not respected and beloved by ev- orvbodv.llien there is no euc-U iLiug as 1,,.,, ; .rM. B...W thil lit- ' appears to us to illustrate pretty well me relative positions of the South andIorth. n- oi -,;i,f Cincnn on-nirn A-n.n lib ! A .AAroA lnS Wfallnw Ui lJm '- V v- . -w --. UVHr 'Hallo, Sambo! I want half de cubber- n2 'Jio, .uaslieei lou got more nor nan -v -W . 1 1 already 'Hump! Don tiuk disVisgcr fool ,lo ax 1 C for whathe got already, eh? . I want t'ud- der half, too?' t "Jimbo! Den I quit; for I no see what bisincss I cot in dis bed!' 'i y$0 y0U rjnn't quit neider, my brudder; vou sl'be berry well for to keep m.y back - ..-1 warm; so CU Jus ccp u,et aua 1Jv vhere you is?, ef you know what's ennd o 2or you- -you nigger , A Ronie.A man who cheats in short - .ne"asurc1 is a measureless rogue. - Unless be gives short measure in wheat, then'heis rogue in grain. -r Tt in whiskey then he is a rogue in spir it?. f .be gives a bad title to land, he is a rogue iu-drcd. And if he cheats whenever he can, he Js .indeed, in spirit, .anin gr.ain; aiueas ur.clcss scoundrel. , . ' . ;V.- . , Counterfeit halfllar.aated-IOrn nnA mi it-ill Ym rioTT r' ors and vou will crow up and become , V. 7t, Co,X7f tlic Intliaus into the torcsfc an(i catclling chief into his mouth to prevent him from ; to vaccinate thc same person several tunes, " ?5f 1 ? g P mUSinS' Pa? UPD ithtl1)fiU ! the dry leaves and bushes ran rapidly in makin an outcry, and laid him down in I or as lon as the sore is produced, with UGtUl mCD ! the sf n5fy arouI!t!' 1 was startled by tue ircction and rose higher aud high-1 the bottom of the carriage, enveloped in the distinctive character of the vaccine T 'KonTo find un- ' VeffnT t'K ' " ff fVt hu ? b As f " C0W-p0S' der the head of AomproMe (says I'ack into my hiding place, where though ; e dudS that hUr- f "tAps ?,f f , ff fbe , 41 ... !tl,n Aim tHlirrhf T w nnnroaoliinf me r ovcr UlG SCene' aIuI obtained a cat-o -nine tails, stiap3 veSK!lc is this, viz: on the eighth day some one to whom the anccuote is new,) the dim tv.il ig.t 1 sa w app oacbin me thcir dhk k.f articlas ' . f fa . w h A Border Talc. In the 3ear 1831, while acting as sur- veyor in the new State of Iowa, I was a "ul" iwuiui.M,. lulug tragedies which so often occur along the borders ot civilization m the West. htle serving in that capacity, 1 had of - ten witnessed deeds of valor and despa- of QQn reniove ier j iDg its tendons so that it released its hold queries put to him by a gentleman on the' veu times, and in Ireland twenty-four ration, and a fool hardy courage which . rQ details of his plans I could not and the maideu fell heavily on the log. occasion of submitting to re-vaccination, times, greater than it is in Lombardy. made my blood grow cold but in the in-; QS he gpoto in aQ UQ(Jer tono but $Qt s0 wjtjj tbe balf-brccd, however, for . We advise every one to take the notice of; Whence comes this difference? In Eng cident to which I allude displayed cm the g00n j saw tjlcm stealthily approach the ! the blow from the tomahawk caused him them that their excellent common sense 'land, those who please, take their chil ono hand, such unmitigated vindictive-; sfcreamj an( crossing over were quickly j to lose his footing and fall, but as he did so demands, as they are made by a man 1 dren to be vaccinated iivLombardy vac ness of spirit, together with the most reck- jost to sight. I wa3about to rise from ! he grasped with one arm the garments who is a well known enemy of medical ! cination is compulsory. The proportion less daring and total disregard of death, concealment to return to the tcnt.aud ! of the "maiden, and dracd her after him cant and deception, viz: the editor of' ate mortality 4n England and Wales is and on the other such puro affectionThnd such delicate refinement for the then wild wilderness to exhibit, that it stands out iu bold relief above the memory of tho many startling sceucs I witnessed and the trials and the hair-breadth escapes . T 1 XL mat i underwent. m One night after having nearly completed niT operations iu iufc u- , gion oi tue ncarc. - try, and preparatory to taking my final j I could not have escaped from the fly leave of it, I walked forth from my tent j jUg foot of the Indians, nor eluded their iu which my companions were busily en- swift tomahawks and yet had I avoided gaged in devouring their supper of broil- their fat flying arrows would proha ed venison, and strolled along the banks J bly had reached me and I would not of a quiet stream that rolled its deep and : ave liv-ed. cither to assist iu rescuing the silent waters through a vast and fertile ' maiden or tell this tale. So I was forced country, finally to empty into the Missis- to resort to the fertility of my imagina sippi. The sun was fast declining in the ; ti0n while waiting for the time to come west, his bright rays danced only at m- ; ' tervals through the dense forest intercep ted by the hanging boughs and hoary ; trunks of huge oaks that perchance had stood the fierce blasts of an hundred win- ters- still unscathed. The gay coral of the forest birds was dying away while j they sought with yielding wing their places of nightly rest the almost cease i less chatter of the squirrel was still the sound of the cracking bough, as it fell be neath the hoof of the fleeting deer, was no longer heard, and all nature seemed wrapped in the silence of repose. Unheeding my footsteps, I wandered far down along tho banks of this quiet stream, and seated myself upon a broken and deca3ed stump nearly encircled by the trunk of a tree on either side. My mind was enshrouded in that deep reverie which so often steals over us as twilight's Daimy nours come on, ana miaht long have remained so had not my attention j been suddenly aroused by the approach ; of a group of Indians along the banks of saw rairrored in mimic glory the images j the stream. Instantly my hand had j 0f briglit realities on their high position ! grasped my ever faithful pistol when sud- j on earth, they would not be there if it j denly the foremost Indian, changing his j AVcre not fov the bright originals in hcav course, entered a thick clump of bushes i C11- i,ug musing, I sought objects to a- snd soon emerged from them, walking 1 mnsn n rwnr ntnliinn- w?Mi nn mtoi- j upon the trunk of a tree that had: fallen wll0m 1 .D0W ,SaW ?S. hl,S manI iorm rose toTrerinrr aoove ins loiiowers, C ' InH in nY w hmr mf snmft itf, n knowledge, lie was the destined chief of the tribe that occupied thc country a- UD nie) aM 5UICH ,A ,uaa J sorae iUUUlU Ui;l"tu IU. J. UUU UltV UlUi - only, but I was greeted with that respect and welcome which a stranger ever meet among the Indians. His dress was richly fantastic his face covered with many colored paints, his moccasins embellished with curiously wrought beads, and a huge painter's skin hanging from his brawncy shoulders,gave . . ... . him the air ot superiority over tue rest.- As they passed. singly over the stream, I . , ,, -J. saw that each was more than ordinarily fc0ii...j, 11 -w-w-w unusua occurence I remained con- coaled till the lat had passed over and entered thc thick foliage upon tho oppo- ; sjte banir, and then stepping torm, i saw f .1 . .. f i-i t - p '!!!Sd!fA.f.,el8 ioaru. wuivu x. uew m uu butuu uau wuv o r ... tjMixj it a. ai y mvjvs .yui jvw j w v r!m. -rvnrn mnn I net in cinrlif. nnrl . e xi -. rpK- , r - . , f f . , th b k aboye their i i ...;.i.. i I ' TTr halted: and one of their 1 l-Wtl - " - " 1 ! number began to address me otners in a I mixed dialect of French, English and In- . noted af.breed, of whom I heard j not a little and had seen somewhat. His : father had been one of the first French I . 1 , ...... t il. - 1 L traders, who penetrated the country west to the great lakes for tralhc with the In dians, and his mother was the daughter of a tribe inhabiting thc North Western Territory. In this character was com bined all the bravery aud cunning of the Indian, together with that total regard lessness of death manifested by f the Frenchman, and a jealousy and vindic tiveness of spirit not often seen in cither. From what I could catch of this brok en harangue I learned that he had forin- ! cd an insatiable passion for the chiefs daughter, who was that night to be uni ted to the noble young man I had seen pass over the stream but a short time be. iVc, and who was to succeed hcr aged father as chief ot the tribe. 'Hie nau breed had often seen the beautiful 'valley flowo'as she was called and had as often vowed that he would possess her. But his effort thus far,had proved fruitless, for when by stealth, be had gained ac cess to her, and whisppcred his adoration for her in "the softest accents, she rcpul Fedjfhis basc and' treadhoroug words and fled from him in disdain. All his cup- across ana completely spauncu me stream te an exciting scene. My anticipations 'in that rolled quietly below. I he other In- I wcre too true, for I had not long re- ariv dians ioilowed m quicl: succession tucir maincd in suspense when I distinctly STROUDSBDRG, MONROE ning and stratagem were of no avail to se cure her. his most artfully laid plans had ! Vionn flinrnvinrl nnrl liio tnalrixl inffOrmifv had si nally failefl of placing hcr in his bands. This night he had resolved to ; use forcc bcfor shc'sboul(1 become the .n: r -fi,o- enm h. , tj whose watchful eve nothinirbut the with my companions come to the rescue , of the fair maiden, when the sound or' voices warned me that still some of the n.irtv rcmaineu. anu mat sucn a steD i .... i . X j j x aye, even the least intimation of my pres- eiice, would be the signal for one of the savaire's arrows to have sousht a hid iding ic re- ' place from its poisoned top about the wiien I WOuld act. I gazed cargerly forth in the direction the Indians had ta ken, watching the least thing that aroused my attention, but all was still, and there were no indications of the tragedy soon to be enacted. The sun had sank far dowu in the West, and illuminated the horizon with his do parting rays; the pale new moon was fol lowing closely in his brilliant pathway, the scarcely stirring breeze moved not a le5f, the silent waters gave not forth a rippling sound, but reflected in solemn stillness the moon's pale rays; the harsh howl of the wolf upon the distant hills, and the wild cat's shrill cry were un heard, and all things seemed rapped in the stillness of death. I contemplated the heavens above aud beheld with mo mentary rapture the myriads of constel- j iati0n3 sparkling far and near amid the vast space ot tho ethenal regions. 1 gazed upon the moon, pale and wan, and ! n, i00d upon the silent waters and ; evc jn thc direction to which I anticipa- i -Card a wild cry of horror rise from far jr ; nA rlutnnM T an A mnro rnm. i UU 111 : muv. -. cv-. w ! .n :.. l,,rnnn the boughs and trunks of thc trees thc j re flames 0f fire ridng up towards the 1 skies. j XlIC CUUiJUS 1UH 1UUUU1 j HUU livux j""u ' the Indians shrill warhoop rang out clear Mil --.. ,1 Tn lnnln. nnJ rirt-f 1 n H unon the still ni-'ht air. Soon the dull j 1 G obscure flames had grown into a fierce and lurid fire and shot up 'above the for est trees, winding upon itself in fierce ; fury like an enraged demon. Louder ! and louder rose the cries and the still- nnc- -.f tl.n nirrlif snnn nnnhlpfl inn in hear . UU13 V- HIV is.uu -vw th f approaching stepg hurrying . , nyynnaun ll!inv n- f hr nr.mlrin - - . IUV wuuuJivu o , fc Mq beneath thc foot.fall j slart. jcdfroni my place ot concealment, nut re- U b - th Indi j again sank j baok yb5fe cvcry nerve within -me thrii - ; , , . , ., . . . cxcitemont. ,-VAIIV-Ab'--v ww - rj?h ound of ersons flyin n aimost every direction, now eauie towards mcj : the war.hoop rose louder and nearer.and rrifi 11 tins snrn:iuui!r iruiii liiu luuiita ui .. n e. i. i.i 1 ' - . - ... , f Qnd iposite bank I saw approachin discerned to uc the iiult Drceu i the frightened, and nearly unconscious maiden. Instantly I sprang forth, and Here he exhibited to bnow a curie inure, QT a jjbt circic 0f pC.lvy vesicles, con grasping my pistols, I stood resolved to : and proceeded to lash him to a tree, be-. taining thc lymph, or specific matter, aud fire upon him ere he crossed tho stream. ing aided by Wagner; they then stripped ja rose coiored blush, extending from the Twice he assayed to gain a footing upon , him entirely naked. He also exhibited -outcr cjrcjeoftbjSpC.u.y border all around the log which served as a bridge, but his cat-o nine tails, and was about to ex-;jtj an(j fading imperceptibly into the sur failed from sheer exhaustion. Ho then ccute his threat when the boy shrieked, i rounding skm. Unless it presents more called to his assistance thc Indian beneath ' and a man who was gathering brush rauor jcs3 txs appearance it is ouly a me, one who had already sprang upon to his assistance, and the young villains coimnon sorCj niKi Jn nowise protective. the long, and was fast crossing when I fled and secreted themselves. They were ' just jn proportion as it approaches the raised uiy arm to fire, but scarcely had 1 1 subsequently arrested, aud upon tho ex-jabovo appearance it is perfect. I consid done so, when he fell with a heavy groan ' animation Wagner turned State's evi-cr tw0 or tluG trials, with good reliable upon the log and rolled off into the wa- j dence, corroborating thc story of Snow, lymph on thc quill, takeu from the sixth tcr. pierced by an arrow from an Indian , which wo have given above, in every par- t0 tbc) njtb ,jaY anfj inserted without rapidly advancing from below. Hardly lifvil flift first Tndian fallen, when another sprung upon tho log to follow him, and f trial in the Court of Common Pleas. Thisj sufficiently protected by thc former vac again before I could raise my pistol, be ' young wretch is only 15 years of age, cinati0n. I would certainly, however too fell with a heavy sound into the wa- and has long been the terror of tho neih- j vaccinate ovory few years. In the clcv- ter. The third and last was now rapidly passing across when an arrow wont whiz- zinc past me anu strucK in a tree over my head. Instantly my linger pullud mo trigger. and a sharp cracii or a pistol ran upon the air-as the Indian leaped from the log, ana icu wim a sunn ury ui neisvme, rn.) was auuiuuu.ty ournc to horror into -the stream. " j death on Monday of last week by hcr My pistol had done its work, but the ' clothes taking fire", when no one was pres fl..cli rovnnlRtl nivnerson to the half-breed ent to assist iu putting out the flame3. who drew forth his tomahawk and was a bout to hurl it at me, as tue tover or mcanu was quue active ror.ouuoi ui u.- -mthHT-nnv" vAMivA-ninv shield, it issahUhcro is nat. t aJ":"'e. rr r :. -".:.:. ,.C.tnS. 'ri,0 rkhnrWnrif l.vnn,R from sir all, m tlic uciguuQroroou mat u fdenlv. and by almost supornuman eiiori, luuonary warfin wmcii uiii in(au.iim--; JT, 1 (he hilftbrcod with his rr:cHioip burden, a soliiicraitd tit one time a prisoner. pox m-LondQu is three tnuea,, and in ikepnnts ou m arm.. COUNTY, PA. MARCH aa xotri! gained a footing upon the log and was last crossing, when I raised nay arm to lire upon him, but suspecting my" design he shielded himself bv brincinsr the form of the maiden.before him. Scarcely had he done this however, when the swift aud sure tomahawk of the lover buried itself in the" arm that bore its treasure, divid - muttering : 'I go not alone, but thoushalt die with me!' and both fell into the water. rm . r .1 1 i i .1 - J.no vounir xnuian nau aireauv snranjr i u -j upon the log, and as the garments of the , maiden rose to the surface, he leaped in, eager to rescue her from the grasp of ' his enemy. The wily half-breed, soon asi he saw thc arm encircle, thc maiden rose upon the surface of the water, and with ' answerably from the fact that history 'hundred per annum. Erom six to eight his hunting knife commenced an attack 'proves that the mortality, having former-1 hundred thus die every year, in the me upon the Indian, who having to sustain ly been so frightful as to sweep off more j tropolis alone, whose lives might be saved both himself and her whom he prized more than life could only parry the been so far reduced by vaccination, when thrusts of his assailant. Thc conflict was 1 even imperfectly" or very carelessly per ouly momentary; for half-breed was so formed, as not to exceed five per cent., deeply wounded that after one or two 'and that this small proportion i3 still blows he disappeared beneath the water, ( further reduced, even iu those who are and the youngs Indian, supporting his ( seemingly not susceptible to full and sat prccious burden, was nerving all his isfactory vaccination, strength till assistance could be rendered.) , 2d. Arc there any persons to whom I had already sprung upon the log, and j the vaccine vesicle cannot be communica was about to leap into the water, when a1 ted ' and if so, are those persons liable shrill crv, that still rings in my cars, rent The half-breed's knife had done the work, and sank with its possessor to tho bot- torn. ' As I stood gazing upon this strange and igic scene, the young Indian turned one tra glance upon the lifeless form of the maid - the air, and casting my eyes down, 1, those persons who are inoculated, i. e. tion, ne nau just retired irom uu, oreaK- 1. ftrI Inl.Irl tlm Kfn Klnnrl -.Jfl, fl,Q .nrnL . 1 irm nh nF thn a m n l.nn- fnsfc TOnm. til at. Wft Tllicllt See the table at OLUUU liVlli IIUU L V U-'11V, 111b uivvu , Him lub It US V l J VI i.ilv ..ma y j 7 - spirtincr from the mouth of the maiden. taken in the natural way, fa process since I which a reigning Prince sipped coffee. en and then folding it to a still closer , vesicles in two persons much pitted from embrace they sunk through the water to a natural and severe attack several years a long and last repose. In a moment , since. They were both servants in the more not a ripple was left, but the smooth, families of two of my patients; and, what quiet stream rolled on as quiet as before, is singular, they were the only two full leaving no trace to tell tho sad tale. j and complete vesicles, having all the Thus perished the remainder of this proper characteristics as in the vaccina once powerful tribe, for thc eld chief, ' tion of the infant, amongst seventeen per when hearing of the sad fate of his! son3, thc united number of the two fami daughter, returned to his burning wig-1 lies. Several of these vesicles, however, warn, and in the phrenzy of grief cast presented such marked characteristics as himself amon" the burninsr ruins and be- to assure me the parties were liable to came a part of the unfeeling confiacra - tion; while thc remaining warriors either! joined another tribe or faded from before) thc advance of civilization. By the light j of the lurid flames, I wandered back to' my tent, where my companions stood hor - rifled at beholding that greatest of scene3 -a forrest on fire. A Devil in the Shape of a Boy, An unparalleled outrage was commit ted in Dorchester ou Monday afternoon b-y Frederizk Pierce a young villain, who, our readers will probably remember, was put under bonds of 200 a few months since for cruelty to a member of boys' military company of which he was thc p.nnffim. it nnnears that a vear since Pierce had a school bov difficulty with a! son of Mr. Snow of Boston, who is now. only 12.V rears old. On Monday Pierce! i .. i .. ..f AT".. SnA' fa- 1 llllllv . I lllljrww 1 1 1 1 ' 1 LLII.t UU -'J-1 .KJUVM a w i his son fiuding that he had gone to 1 n...i,:j , u VjltUiUllUllU, tY-ilU UUb IIIUIU until Uliu. j . b k Bo3toQ th met a b : named Warner, and. the trio went to a j saloon ,vhrc Pierco furnishcd refresh- j mcut3 for the party, and they soon after I aa fn iwi at.r Tn nn?n n- I 111 klLil.till L. U Wl kZ-l J , hi b th s but littIe; ; travel, tlio Ticree boy, with tho aid of J W' -bo U about Mears old, tied , .snr-r ini nun rnnr. sr.nirpn n n.'iiinkc.r- w . a . . .1 . 1. ... ji i ' ) . . a thicket a short distance Irom the road ticular. Thc Court required the prisoner to find sureties in thc sum of 8500 ! borhood. Wo sincerely hope that lie may upon the op- ! again entered the carriage and drove to; proc033 should never draw a full droop of g what I ward Savin Hill, where they stopped ,and ; b00ti for ,nore wOUt t away) thc . bearing , Pierce and Wagner conveyed bnow into snr0 cAa resent the following appear- be punished to the very extent ot the law.,ular atioe QU thhj subjcctj to which vo no is a uisgracu to huuimuil). wmS uelu (Mass.; itcpuniican. Mrs. Elizabeth Stillwaqo;; of Gon - She was one hundred and fifteen years old, l.nlwnl hiiV. " SiiJ -v-" Shn hnr fwn rm5 hiirn elorO,t lOxlieVOsl ir ... . . , , . 9, 1854. From the K Y. Herald. Vaeciuation Is it a Preventive of SmaM Pox ? We publish the following facts as par ticularly pertinent to the present univers-' al prevalence of small-pox. The remarks. : were made by a surgeon in answer to !tac Scalpel.- j To the Editor of the Herald. In, i answer to repeated requests of a public : of mv opinions with regard to i ... exnosition ot mvonii 1 j i o - t the' preventive power of vaccination, and how I account for the present extensive prevalence of smal 1st. Thatvaccin all-pox, I reply- a verv nowerful nreventive is shown un-! j i-OL. 11 a L UULIUU lO UllUULOllUUdUlV than half of all the persons exposed, has to small-nox? It has been supposed that 11 the discovery of cow-pox, forbidden by law) as well as those who have once had the disease, were not liable to a sec- j ond attack. This is certainly incorrect, j I have, within a fortnight past, succeeded ; in producing two very perfect vaccine ' creator or lesser decrees of small-pox, or to varioloid, as wc call it; and several were 'entirely unsusceptible, the vesicle not showing itself ; in these it was sup- posed thc former or infantine vaccination had protected them. This, however, can 'only be fully proved by again vacciuat- intr them, as it is impossible to say but some hidden cause, not ascertainable in any other way, might have prevented the virus from showing tho distinctive char acterictics. 3d. How do I account for its unusual prevalence this year? I answer, ihere is undoubtedly an at mospheric pre-disposition existing at this time. My reason is simply this : all the inhabitants of our city, take them one with another, are as well protected this year as the last. Small-pox existed last year aud does more or less every year.to an extent sufficient to SDroad all over the . - l - city. The fact is it will in a year spread as extensivelv from six cases as from six- J ; ty . and win manag0 t0 catch an immense majority oi tuose wno are not protecieu. Now this season small-pox is vastly more prevalent than it has been within forty vears: indeed it is so much more so. that ' . i wc have no rational cause left than at- mosplieric prc-disposition lor its grcatiu crease. rm 1 a .1 -i n -1? I J . . 'i nn nn v s:iro Tiipriinn in r. 11s iiisr:isf is Vn oval centre of a brownish col- , (lrawiug a mu dr0r op of blood, sufficient. for,jf :t ,i0 not takn 1 onnsidr Hmr ne.rson i e,)th nmilbor of tbe Scalpel the Iriel tlif-re is a non- ere is a pop - jrefL.r nll readers desirous of investigating the few known facts in the history of the di-easo. Hespectfully, your obediout scr- - 'val)t Edward II. Dixon, Editor of the Scalpel, 42 Fifth Avenue. T . It i c orttirt rm niftnf inn in eouneuuuu nu wm...u. wc Ktve an article irom thc London Med icafTimcs (i( Gati(e, headed NO 18. Glasgow six times, what it is in Brussels, Berlin, or Copenhagen. Of each thous and persons who die in England and Wales, twenty-two die of small-pox of each one thousand persons who die in Lombardy, only two die of small-pox. The proportionate mortality, then, from small-pox in England and Wales, is elcv- three times greater than what it is in any country in which the inhabitants aro compelled by law to Have tneir emiuren vaccinated. These are great facts. In -j . ' our metropolis one thousand persons die 'annually of small-pox: If vaccination ! were compulsory, it is indisputable that iti nmiilipv nf Hofit.lis frnm t.liis disease in ww - London would be reduced to two or three by an act ot rariiament. A Den of Horrors. "Kirwan," in a recent volume of Trav els iivEurope, gives the following account of a fearful chamber in the castle of thc Duke of Baden-Baden, in Germany: 'We made a morning call at the new casltc of the Duke, which surmounts the hill, and were shown through all its a- partments. As if for our accommoda- 'We have seen the breafast room and ta 'ble of many in America more richly fur nisbed. The apartments were quite an air of poverty, after having seen those at Versailles, the Quirinal, and Turin. But the underground apartments posess a fearful interest. Yrith lighted torches wo went down into the cellar of the palace; thence by a spiral inclined plane, wc went down, down, until, by a door formed of one huge flag, and fitted to its place with remarkable exactness, we entered 4 small oval room, perhaps ten feet in diameter, and hewn out, of thc solid rock. The door was shut behind us, and we were burried alive under the mountain! A rav of light came from above, and we could look up as through a narrow chim- , ney; a" stone was removed beneath our feet, and we could look down perhap two or three hundred feet, and could see a little glimmer of light upon a da-hing current, whose murmcrings came to .us from beneath. And all around the room were seats cut out of thc rock. And what was the object and history of this awful room! Its history, as given us by our guide, and within its walls, is briefly as follows: Tn the days of feudal clemency, and in- quisitonai piety, tuose suspectea oi polit ical or religious heresy, were suddenly seized, and confined in some of the adja cent cells. The little room, above de scribed, was the room of judgment, and the judges were let down by machine ry through the opening above. The ac cused were then introduced, and that heavy stone door was shut! And there, shut out from every eye, save that of God, and their judges, they were tried, and coudemned. If not guilt-, the accused were hated or feared, which made con demnation worse than guilt. "VY hen con demned, they were commanded to kiss the image of the Virgin, in thc apartment; in thc movement, they touched springs, which caused her to embrace them, and in the embrace, to pierce them through with daggers. Then a trap was sprung beneath their feet, which let their bodies fall upon a wheel, armed with knives, which was kept in constant revolution, by a stream of water; by those knives, they were cut in pieces, and the mutilated frag ments fell into the stream below! Aud there we were receiving this, aw ful narrative in thc very apartmcut where these atrocities were committed in the name of Justice aud lleligion, with the tunnel beneath us, through which the bod ies of their victims were letdown for mu tilation, so as to be boyond the reach of recofjnizauce .! For a moment our blood run cold, aud we were filled with horror! Oh! if those stone seats, and those wall of solid rock could speak if the injunc tions of perpetual secrcsy were removed by Him who upheaved the mountain, what an awful narrative they would give of thc scenes of treachery, hatred, and blood there perpetrated in the name of God and Religion! Thc stone door swung open, and we, grouped our way through a labyryinth of chambers and passages, dark as mid- ' nicht, into the open air. e all breathed easier, and a icenng ot iear gave way to one of security. Wc were soon after on thc railway for Frankfort-on-thc-Maine, deeply affected by the beauty aud wicked - - , ncs3 0f 3afjen-Baden, thankful that its J dayg 0f pclMU tyranny were i at an end. , . There is a girl iu Benton county, so killing pretty that she has to wear around hcr waist a spike-belt similar to thosft that farmers' put on colt's heads break them from sucking. This is theVonlv e, . v..i. - - . f i , - . , , a yuhg gQtit, QQ3 notmc,a J , A piiculution. f. -4