The Jeffersonian. (Stroudsburg, Pa.) 1853-1911, August 24, 1854, Image 1

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JSJcuotcb to polities, iicratuvc, Agriculture, Science, iHoralitH, anb eucral Intelligence.
VOL. 14
STR0UD8BURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA. AUGUST 24, IS5
NO 41,
i
1
jit
n
Published by Theodore School
. TERMS Two dollars per annum jn advance To
ojjiurs an 1 a quarter, h:U yearly and if not paid be- . , , . . , , ... ,
toic the end of tiipyoar. Two dollars and a lmif nes anybody but a rich man her idle ana ex-
cT:a pensive habits keep him always poor. If she
nSiiiV; catchcs;i Prize which Perhaps, one in a
nventy-five cents for evcrv sti'jSL-qnent inspruon. The thousand may do, ten to one she soon dis
charge for one and th"ec insertion? the same. A liber- , , , , ,
srf discount in.ide to ycarlv advertisers. .gusts lier husband. In an other case she is
rC? All letters addressed to the Editor musi be post-' i r ,
pnid. jalwnj's out of Jicalth, the consequence of
Having a general assortment of large. elcjnnt, plain
aim ornamcniai x ype. wc are prepared
to execute every description of
Cnrds, Circulirs, Hill Hea ls, Notes. Blank neceij.ts
Jiisxines. I.eqai nd other ninks. Pamphlet. Ac.
willed with neatness anJ ilpsnnieb m rramhip
Terms,
AT Til E OFFICE OF
T55K JS3FFi3KfrO.tSAiY.
Truth.
nr KiciiARi) coi:.
ifol alone in realms of beauty
Not alone beyond the skies
If on earth we do our duty.
Heaven all around us lies!
White-winged angels fan us ever.
Unseen spirits round us more,
When we make a good endeavor.
When we do a deed of lore J
'Spirits of the dear departed
Press upon the brow and cheek
.Loving kisses tender-hearted,
Prom their pale lips pure and meek.
And their gentle voices mind us
We are passing fast away ;
Slay their luvi tig spirits find us
In the bright eternal day !
Lei us then, with firm relisnce
On the just and on the right,
Sid a fierce and stern defiance
Unto error dark as night!
Let us, then, with faith unflinching ,
Say to Troth " Thou art my guide,"
Come on wealtiTor want most pinching,
Let whatever fate belidel
Let us, then, the right impressing
On the mind nnd heart of'oulIi,
Give to age a solid blessing,
In the sacred love of Truth!
- f tt" .breaks his bones by blows of his mighty
Wno Mae tne nest vYlvesI ; arms and hands, and tears the ilesh by
-By all menus marry a woman with money,", l,igm0nstroas teeth. The native hnutsman
my careful fathers to their sons;" you'll find , . h u U hm
uueuy as not to set a saitable w,fc, v. ho , wbf Soe3 scarcii or meet witn mm
has a little fortune.' "Give me beantv, grace, while pursuing less iormidable animals,
1 t , . .1 . 1
and accomplihmen s, is the mental answer ha3 learaed tbat the safest wa lo en age
of enthusiastic youth, "and leave mercmary . . , , , . - . 0 1?
(considerations to baser souls."
is to act quite on thc defensive; to let the
We submit that neither is ri-ht. !t is In- monster draw near, when he will iinme-
finitely more important tbat a young man iUtely seize the end of the gun, (ready
should choose a healthy, amiable, and btelli-! cocked and presented,) between his teeth.
J T , . , , , ,
gent partner, than that he should select eith- Instantly it must be discharged; u the
er a beauty or an heiress. The latter has man cither delays till the ape has com-
. 11.. : ut.: t... i : t .1 1 -i .. r -i
buanj tupuuaiw iiumti, juu, xjv mw um
tibe has been married twenty years, has cost
tier husband the amount of her fortune in su
perfluities. Besides, heiresses are generally ;
brouglit up in idleness, spending their time in
reading novels, lounging about on the sofa,
or acqbiring a taste for fashionable dissipation;
wo uu.L tiiey are eitiier ausuroiy roujaniic or
i . .i -.t
nl of health from want of exercise or from10. , . i!nsn Pnn-or?' The creation of -m irmv
, a u ? ,- i , w ater. After being washed with the tLose 1 owera : l ne creation ot au army
Ute houra, and, therefore, entirely unfit to . and a navy, and especially of thc latter,
make good wives. B-auties. on the other ralDPj 5t s ralied UP leavinS a portion .g nQt the W0Jk of a few u.onths or a f(JW
hand, mostly are vain or giddy, if not both, j Poking in the grass. In the spring yCars. f we were to commence to-mor-lf
svites were designed for playthings, or had this was the earliest green spot and con- row "with a will'' to create a navy and
nojwrpose beyond being parlor ornaments, tinued to be thc sweetest, as was proved devote thc utmost of our energy to the
teauty might be desirable, just as pictures ' by the cattle resorting there to feed. By obJef , it would be many years before wc
r r rr-i i i - , , could have one that could meet on the
W or fine furniture The man who mar-( and by one of them died, then another, ocean tl)C navv 0f Francc, and much ion
rios an heiress sacrifices his independence ( tu0Ugh apparently fat and healthy. Then r bcfirc wc"CouW cope with -that of
and ends by finding he is oui of pocket also. one was oponed to ascerfcain ti,e cause of Great yjTt ln. The fact is, neither the
The lover uho weds merely for beauty ties aflenvards othcrs for cur;osjtj.. ' American people nor the genius or spirit
2itelf to a doll, which has not even the mer-;In Btomachs of tho?e that had fed of their institutions will allow the keeping
at of being sure to keep its painted cheeks. . of larc military or naval organizations,
Thoscwomen makethebest wives whocom-!lnost UPn tlnshair ,nunured sPot ;Tcre such particularly as arc neccessary for
Mm common sense with jgood temper, who' found Uto or threo dozeu !,a,r UalLsi such the protection and defence of insular
lavebepn brourrht up to help themselves, ' as we used to be told when a boy were points ; and the consequence is, we never
' ad who brin-sound constitutions, equable 1 'witch balls.' We have seen them threo bhall be prepared to meet, at least not on
m .?irit,, and asincere affection, as a dowry to ; inches in diameter aud solid as it is possi-
their lovers. A wife should be her husband s olo to compact hair together. The ca- anmuents which the large maritime na-
1est friend she should be competent to couti- Jamity grew so serious that the owners of tious of Europe always retain, even in
5l him in difficulties, to cheer him in sor- ' tiQ cattle bad to plow up the ground and times of profound peace, ready at a short
tow, to render his everyday hearth the pleas- ;turn undcr the sod aud its rich manurino-, noticc for an emergency. The naval
ntcst spot to be found every where, lfshe
Iiss confirmed ill-health ehe cannot be all
Ljii to him; neither can she if she has a crook- "
e temper, or habits of indolence, orisdefici-
ant in practical eense The oman uhose
whole heart is devoted to show, to company,
or to idle accomplishments, may possibly
make an interesting belle, but she is sure to
urovo a verv indifferent wife. We would
not have voun n-irls neirlect the beautiful
entirely; but that which adorns should be
wade subservient to some more solid super -
structure. To knnow how to play the last
jiew air, yet be ignorant how to compound
the last new pudding, is surely unpardonable,
A man might as well neglect to learn a bus-
nesa as a woman refuse to acquire a know!-
"eeim, . r tlI ,
Jt is useless to disguise the fact that girls are
r , , ,
tnn nflon dirnrtfxl tn nttrnnt-Invnrs rnllior t ion
in retain the affection of husbands. This is
C a i. ff.m;i:
HjJUi.iaiij ii rn. ui niv uuuyiiLeis ui luuiiuuo
aUUVt; XllU lltcoaii-J ui uauy IcllKir. ill IS. A., wijuioinujjjiDtutmij v..-
ljie successful mechanic's wife, makes a vir- of the country most anxious for its accom
;ual slave of herself by drudging late and oar- pHshment :
order that Anna Maria may be "brought Thfl prescnt q ,aUon of Cuba
ijp,'4 as siiP PIjrascs ,l "!!e a lad.v- The does not exceede 500,000, of which at
'young miss accordingly is crammed with ieast
one third are Bqzales, or Africans
music, dancing, French, and other fiddlo-fad- -who have boon imported contrary to the
Jlep is told always to carry hor shoulders laws of Spain, and who would be freo as
.4 k and novcr to romp and is tnught to soon as the island belonged to the Uni-
What sort of a
wife can such a creature make
If she mar-
; want of exercise in girlhood and, ifshe has
! ofTknriniT. entails her weakness natural! v on
I her progeny Physicians do not hesitate to
say that a large proportion of female invalids
. .... . .
is known to be legion owe their complaints
.. . .
to the fnllv of parents in neglecting to brino-
them tip properly. Ledger.
"Wild man of AiTrica.
, the Gaboon river, more to be feared than
the African boa; it is the wild man of thc
i wood not the ourang-outang, though an
'immense ape alwavs acting on the of-
lse ape alwavs acting on the of-
!f and ready to" attack man. The
... . .
of his extremities arc longer than
jfensive.
iboue3 of
i
i those of an ordinary-sized, full-grown
itnan. I have examined them here, and
jwhilt contemplating the skull, the jaws,
I j , .
jann their terrible apparatus, realty ex-
i
jperienced a sort of shuddering. Thc
canine teeth are upwards of two inches
' long, and of proportionate bulk. There
lis a ridge running from the top of the
i , , , .
inose backwards over the crown of thc
!
! ea5 this is affixed a muscle, by which
: the living animal draws backwards and
-forwards a most frightful crest oi stiff
, hairs; when enraged or preparing to in
flict injury, he erects them and draws the
t mJ -J f
crest torwardsovcr nis larga eyes, ana
j utters most hideous yells at thc same
time.
; Nothing seems to intimidato him.
awwiw.w wvr uniiiivi.fc u .
oomeumes no aavances wnu uougus 01
J trees broken off for the purpose of con-
Scaling his approach and attack, and
i suddenly grasps the legs of a human be-
;. T r- , . , A
mg, brings him instantly to the ground,
43 J a J
presseu tne Darrei so as to close it, or iaiis
to a fatal wound his doom is sealed,
Curious Effects of Hair on Grass.
A few years ago the purchasers of hog-
w al Tcrre 1Iautc ind carried 5t ou
upon the prairie and spread it on the
, . . . ,
which contiaucd to sboWJ its cffects for
Ci
vears after.
Hair balls are often found in the slo-
bld JIPet, eating hen onn or anothei
animator when thc swine have been
butchered; and perhaps oftencr produced
death than is imagined. To prevent ac-
cidents. let all the hair be plowed under:
jf js very valuable manure. Tribune.
!
j The Filibusters and Cuba.
Some one who seems to understand 1ih
subject ii writing a scries of articles for
$aiional Xnlcllincncer on the subject
of reft.rencc to its acquisition
1 by the United States, and the projc
J , , - , Tn -i
and the progress of thc billibustcrs
xx XJiucn.aj
Tho following may interest our readers,
ns Rlinwinn- sninn nf the COnSCQUeUCCS of
ts . a
1 1 it fn llinf nnrfinn f
consider work as (lcradin
tcdStatcs, agreeably to the decision of the .
Supreme Court in the celebrated case of
the Amistad negroes. These, with 200,
000 free negroes, would form a very dan
gerous clement as regards the tranquility
of the island under our rule, and a most
fearful one in ease the Spaniards should,
as they undoubtedly would do, declare
the freedom of all the blacks, should they
see any prospect of our success in an at- '
tempt to wrest the island forcibly from
them. .
Of the free negroes in Cuba, both slave (
i 1 n i c r l
j Illalc adults ; the proportion or tcmaleh
...,J l.:u 1.-.: n it.
j aud children being very small, as the
policy pursued there has been to keep
up the supply of slave labor by direct
importation of adult males rather than by :
t ! depending on natural increase. Under a
! thc nogro population will rapiJly decrease.
But, even without this decrease, so small
a portion of the island comparatively
: is umler cultivation that there is ample
: 1S unuer cultivation mac mere is ampie
' "aPace aud ?r r,fc ler?st nc miI" '
' lion more oi slaves there. I he cheapness ,
0f the land, the fertility of the soil, and
the excellence of the climate for all South
ern aud tropical productions would alto-
' gether form most overpowering induce-
ments for emigration with slave property ;
r 7- . , cu . i i t ,
from the united btates, and but a lew
years would be required for the transfer
from our Southern States of probably thc
full number of slaves indicated above.
Can an? Southern man contemplate'
such -an exodus of white proprietors,:
.. , , , 1 -,,
moneyed capital, and slave labor, with- i
QUt a Solute dread as to its withering ;
elfectupon Southern prosperity, wealth, j
progress, population, and political iufiu- :
enee : Jor can ooutneners aenvc any
consolation, in view of the .above disad-
l"i iirnrni: 1'UI IllkVUW III' M sSIl .111 IIT I IH llf)
. -..1 1 t. : ii.
shion that it wHl be only a transfer of la -
bor, wealth and influence, from one sec- !
tion to another and a new additional sec
tion of Southern territory. On the con-
. , 1"." , , , , , , 1 ji
mi -it 111 ,!(' it icn n 1 tf nirnft tries rn t in
q,,i,, M,i.;nnnf ti, TTn?nn ?t
WOuld foon be apparent that it would
create a division in Southern strength, I
and that the interests of Cuba would be ;
autagonistical to those of the present
, n f 1 .
Sniithnrn snofion. It would in tact be a i
house (iiviaed against itself, and not uni- .
ted for the protection and defence of com-,
inon interests. It is unnecessary to go
into any argument to prove this, as the'
C0Jnnc?tcd with thc casc aro equally j
, , , . , ,
stroUff and obvious. !
fa
Besides, tuba, as a matter 01 couifO,
woul(j be our weaj- pointj the most diffi-
cult as well as the most expensive por-
tion of our territory to defend and won u
a certain proy in the , fan, war wi t
any Power who could obtain and retain
a supreinacy upon our coast. It is
al very pretty and 110 doubt very nation-
, r i.ii.
al ami patriotic, 101 us 10 taiK 01 uuing
able to "whip all creation" and "the rest
of mankind." But if Cuba came into
our possession to-morrow, with our pres
ent naval and military means for offence
aud defence, will any one seriously con
tend that we could hold that Island for
six mouths in a war with either England or
VrnnM nr fnr ..:.,. iinti, nf
peace establishment ol Great Britain cm-
. ploys, 'iu,uuu seamen, aim m m
weeks
after war was determined on with Russia
,l,e had afloat and ready for active war
elnnni "inn stiilinnr fnrtn fnllv
, i slli of.the.lin and
, 1 liulio ..
. aJnd 13ack
! gea are cach of ll)ei)1 tbe U10?t p0WCrful
naval force which thc world ever saw
combined in a fleet. How many years
would it require for the United States to
put afloat a force which could meet eith
er of those squadrons ? If any one re
quires an answer to the query, let him
ask the head of the Mavy Depai tmcnt or
j any 0f tue 1110St experienced and best in
I formed officers of our navy. Is it not,
then, the hcighth of folly for us, under
6uch circumstances, to encumber ourselves
with distant insular possessions which i
could, & no doubt would, be promptly torn !
! from us 5u the first war with a great naval
i Power 1
Suppose wc should obtain Cuba at the
terms on which so many are insanely
anxious, say at a cost of one hundred mil- j
lions ; that our citizens should, for two j
or three hundred millions more, buy the j
estates and negroes belonging to the old
Spaniards residing in Europe or on the
Island ; that our Southern citizens by j
by thousands should emigrate there with (
half a million or a whole million of their (
slaves, worth three hundred to Gve hun -
dred millions ; and when we had thus,
transfcred eight hundred or a thousand , . - .. , , , .
p , i extract the following timely and highly
millions of American capital, in money J .
or labor, into the island, it should bo:valuabIc lmits for thc preservation of
wrested from us in the first "big war'' in. health. The extract should be preser
which we may be engaged, with the ab-j ved and referred to during the warm sea
solute certainty that the conquerors would son 0f cverv year,
at once declare the freedom of the slaves, I " .
and establish a black nation of one and a Aiat 13 Onolcra.
half to two millions of negroes in the is-1 Cholera is the exaggeration of intesti-
lan-I, at our very doors, besides the loss
. i i .i . , ii
., .. c , , i
the other contingencies or an extended
lt mivbe mid that ill this U a chimera
XI' HU UU oillU lillttL till tillo X i. LliiHiLii a
e ., J . , .
ot evil, or at least a very remote contin -
' , . , . . f. - . r n
geney : bat such is not the lact, tor n we
, -.i-iii u -ii
should acquire thc island the result will
, , t, , . , ,
not only be very probable, but almost cc -
, . . , JJ ' , .
tain, it we become engaged in a war with
' r . , ? r, , .
one of the great naval Powers. At any
" . . J
' J ... '
whether prooable or improbable : by
, 1 -i
acquire territory which must neccessanly
1 i-i" n 1 . 11 1 1
be difiioult and cxpennvc to delend, and
c I,. , .i i-
tne possession of which would rather 01-
pos
iti ii 11 uiu ubuiiiviib iui u ;unti.ui tiauuu
Oi the immense capital which nationally, . , , . ,
.1 v 1 n 1 111 : , .ii ihis uchuition, explained in language
and individually we should have invested , c ' cni
.1-1 i 1 r less professional, wou hi do more good
m the island a loss of greater rnagm- . 1 . r xi
. j , ., .1 e x " than all the popular receipt.-? for the cure
tunc in one item than the aggregate a- . . 1 1
to enter into war with us as being always J. . . . , . ,
, , . , , 1 ?i ' As cholera has become a general, and '
an assailable point, and one by the con- , , , , c . 0 t ;
. . r , - , c ' 1 i 4 i 1 perhaps, at least xor the present, a per
quest of which alter we had invested such 1 r ' , . j . 1
1 . . (. , iii manent disease or the country, and at ;
an immense amount ot capital and labor it . . , ' .
. .. , , , , j ir 11 'his tunc is more or less prevalent m anv ;
m it, would be such a dreadlully severe c., , - , TT . , . ?
, , c . -l , State or the union and one, too, which
stab to our tuture progress and prosperity. . ?. . ' .
e already crnoy a very large portion
r.,. . , Je A 1 J c.x 1
ol the trade or Cuba, larger than any
., , ' f3.- , r,J
other nation: and any aucional profits
, , , c , , .1
we could derive from that source by tuo
f . , , t . v4.,
posses.-ion of the island go but a little
penc which the government of the island
! rf" u,u mautc,,aV7 Ui ",u. ""lJ
van i?i
the same amount of regular troops which
ujimary sjiu na-ai iorce lor its care ana , . , - , , r . r . , ,
x . . t- e , , between thirty and lortv leet long; but,
protection, cveu in time of peace, would . , . ,J . . .,, . .. , , 1
r , ' 1 1 1 r in order to be contained within the bod v,
sadule upon us. W c should not, 01 course .... , ..-'
, . c . , , it is, to save space, arranged as a sailor
under the system 01 government which we '. , ., c
, . . J, . .1 -i i would coil a rope; iorever moving m
should introduce into the i-Iand, require . f , ct
, o -l rt t .1 l iiii'i. j j i j bi i u .,i vw.'.u. j i i-iiii'.o
the Spanish Government thinks necessa- ... .. . . , . . c . .
, .,, , .. . this motion is the first object of the phy-
ry ; but still, under all the circumstances . . . t 1 1 1
.A iii sician in every disease. In headaches,
ol the island, it would always require , K J L. ,
-I, j.1 bullous aitection, eostiveness, aud tne
very strong garrisons and a largo dispo- ... ., , . . ..' ,
,i . rr .- , j P . ,,,, hkt'. this great coiled up intestine, usual-
enh n ?nft ottrntt'n tnrt T' nr trnnr3 I tin - a i i
, .. ., , 'ii, lv called the bowels, is torpid, and med
prescnt negro population, it should be re- . ' , . 1 ' , , t
1 n . , 1 1 . , 7 , ; , , lcmes are jiven to wake it up; and what
collected, represents in adult mates what , x c , A '.. .
' r 1 -, f ., .does that, cures the man. Costtveness is i
IS USUllll Y 1UUUU 111 IUI ttt-lWIU 1UU
black population of the island. In other ... . . L. ' t , , c
j .i . 7 7 iT begiumngs or it is the attendant oi ev-
words, there are more than double the c , . . .
, ' p it. i ,i onn nnn c ery disease known to man, in some stage
number ot adult males in the 200.000 free J L. r T, . T
n i i .t -nrtrr or other of its progress. But the human '
negroes is Cuba than m the 4oO.00 free , ,- i i t 1
P , , . , , T- , 0. . bou v is made in such a manner that a i
colored population or the Luitcd btates ; , , x . t . . t ;
, . ' 1 , . -i , single step cannot bo taken without tend- i
and what may be considered as ihcpfn-'. . 1 ., . .. . . j
7 c pic iii n i mg to move the intestines: thus it is: m
sieal force ot the free blacks m Cuba is .. , , i . i
. xi t -n- pp ii the main, that those who move about on 1
equal to that of one million of free colored . . i . . , , - , t
1 , t. , .. their feet a great deal, have the least sick-
population with the usual proportion or, and 0S tho othor hand) those who
females aud children, ouch bemii the . ' . , , , , . , , i
, . , ir sit a great deal, and hence move about but .
case, not only will a large regular force Httc10VCr have sound health-it is an I
be required constan ly on duty, but the 'ssibiHt it ;s a rulo to which l hav0 ;
fact adds greatly to the risk as to the sccu- i
.. , i. . .. r r never known an exception,
rity of the ilsand even in tinicof peace from , , , - 1 - , , ., , I
., . . -I i i in Cholera being a disease in which the bow- ,
servile insurrection, and affords a dreadful , . , . . . , , , , ,
... ,. ' , p els move too much, the obtcct should be
facility m promoting the views ot an mva- . , tt . , pi . c.. i
,. " p to lessen that motion. .1 he very first!
ding force in case ot foreign war. ',. . , , - r.i,i .... , 1
v, , , f , : thing to be done in a case ol cholera is to ;
J he total destruction of thc sugar cul- . ,j Tf . i ,,..n
. , . . ,,, . , , , secure quietude. It requires but a small
ture in Louisiana, Hondo and 1 ' nntelli gence to put these ideas
which would be occasioned by the aequi- . could 0w bc burnfc ;
sition of Cuba, in which culture one nun-..
dred and fifty millions of dollars are in-
vetted, thouifh a srreat limirv, wounl still
! v ,1 1 ....
bc only one of thc secondary inuiriei-
,, ,. ; jJfr
which would result from that event.
n ,. , t, ,
Let bouth Carolina say what has been
.uu uju.j uuil-luu upon uer population,
111 Mtlll fTPTloril I nrmnnntu hp tlir.
' x y, j """calling is always on the look out for the
comparatively limited emigration of her .
citizens, with their capital and slaves, to
the rich cotton lands of thc South-west;
and then lot her estimate her injury by
the much greater emigration from her
territory which would result from the ac
quisition of Cuba. But the injury to
UUUlll VJUIU UU, "XfilL ilS XL HUUIU UL ,
, . ?..!. i i ai
would not be equal to hat which Mary-
land and irg.ma would suffer from that
cause, as slave property is less valuable
1 . ', , Ct . , ..
anu secure in these latter btates, and the
lt r , ,
profits therefrom are less and more un-
1 . i.i-i t Jt r u
certain, and the inducements there lor the
' r , , i i iii
transfer of slaves to Cuba would be so
South Carolina, great as it would be,
. , T, . . .. ,
much the greater. It is haruly possible
to ver-cstimate ll.c bligh and injury
U,R wou 11 "J ueu. .luv uf
for of oven half a million of slaves from
the Southern States ; and be emigration,
in a few years would probably greatly ex
eccd that number ; but the result upon the
Southern section of the Union from such
a cause in the abandonment of planta
tions, decrease of production, loss of cap-
. I ......m.. .1, i tn lmni'nt'nnin.ilc
xt.x. .uju.j uuu wau. "u",'f,,u"-'
and genera decline in the value of prop-
his views, never uttered a truer or more
, A .i c .i it t
solemn warning to thc South than when
he said that "Cuba to the United States
,. .I'll n . j. I ' i J
was the forbidden fruit; touch it ami ye,
,, r . c ., , , ,
die. Let boutheners who advocated its
acquisition pause and reflect upon this
solemn interdiction
f Jr.ER.Tf! a r. Wit. One of our exchanges
has the following hit: The late liev. Mr.
Chapin being asked of what use the eld-
ers were in a church, replied, that it was
said to give power to ministers. He was
a unit the elders cyphers; placed upon
the right hand, they increased his pqjvcr.
'But he added, 'mv elders have got on
the wrong side, niftl reduced me to a
decimal fraction;'
ertv is 5 0 ouvious aim great iu;xl it is uu- ., . i i , , , ,
Jl , b , the most unconquerable relunctance; and
necessary to make an argument on the , , , r 1 , '
, . J r, k , , when he has, from anv cause, been mov-
subiect. Mr. Calhoun, who was always . . '., ,, ., . . '
,. J lt . ' . ing about considerably, the first moment I
alive to Southern interests, and who on, .P. ,. nn r , . . c , 1
' ' nr t-mImtw n ontii t nr r n n I n coot u nAfti.j.tl .
f I...I ...n., tilnnii l,wl ( l O , . 1 1 1 1 It. O i J
LXliil. IJUIIii. i!3 tan 1 uuu uu -i)ij;iiitu in
j VALUABLE IIIITS.
From jjr rjau-s journal of Health we ;
ntl vermicular motion
.,ki:. i
vji uiiuiuiij litui iiuuii-i
presses the mherent nature or cholera and
r . ... r - -
suggests the principles of cure, in ltsear-
slaSc t0 thc IUOst unreflecting mind.
r., , . , ,
' 1 he public is.none the better, or wiser,
' r 1 ,. . . , '
or sa.er. tor one ot all the ten thousand
. , , . . . , . . .
cures tor cholera, proclaimed in the pub-
. . , ' 1 , . , .
lie prints with a confidence which itself is
' . . ,
a sufficient guarantee, that however well
. . , f , ' . .
informed the author may be in other
.. , , , ,(,.
in'illiivc ic rofrnrri i in nrn r:nlT thru." nrr
III l.kLt , J , I - W. . W . M .WWW. W M -w J W
ni-tniinnll r lrriinrjint" 1 nr no mfin h:is ji
. t J , , .11 i- u- 1
right to address the public on any subiect
& t , ... .. r , , ,.f i
connected with its general health, uuIcas ,
, , t , , . . . . . ,
he understands that subject in Us broau-
, . ,, J ,. i( 4. .
est sense, practically as weli as theoreti-
J . J. , , . ,
urave it belongs to our safety to undcr-
, . . r 1 ,1
stand its nature for ourselves, ana do
. L t . lt , ' , ,
what we may to spread the knowledge a-
1 0
montr those around us.
T , ,.
may give an idea of the motion of the
intestines in ordinary health. The
human rr
health moving too much in some dis-
'v . rf; t- f(lflrfl! St.anrR
bo r'obbcd Q'f iada of hi yg
urns.
nM i i.',,.n .
I here can be no cure ot choiera with-
. , , ,i n. i.- i
'OUtquietUUC tne quieiuue oi lyiu-; on iuu
, 1 w
T1 ph . . fao un,3ersUml, hi- .
J . .
in-tincts of nature; and he who follows !
them most and interferes with them least, !
is the one w ho is oftenest succe.-sful. They ;
are worth more to him than all the rig- !
marolc stories which real or imaginary j
invalids pour in upon the physician's ear i
with such tacile volubility, ir, lor ex
, I 1 . 1 r, 1
amnio, a physician is called to a speech-
hJ stran aboilt ,vhom n0
on(j ivo inform!ltionho kuowa i
..... , ,, - - , ,
if the breathiug is Ion?, heavy and mcas-
0, . . . , J ,
ured, that the brain is in danger; if he
. ,, . , r x.i 1
breaths quick from thc upper part of the ,
. . 1 , , ! -c
chest, the abdotren needs attention; or it
; , -.,.ip ...:i : . I
the abdomen itself mainly moves in res
. tio the ,u aj.0 8tlffor ln vi.
Qf inflam3tion of l)0wei?
the patient shrinks involuntarily from nnj
, t0 Ulot t of his peon.
' , - iiicts of mitm. and a
in valuable guides in thc treatment of dia-
Q.1.V.
Apply this principle to cholera, or even !
common diarrhuM, when tho bowels do ;
rf iinl mnrn fTifin tlirAi tlnioj n lfir fln !
- '
patient fouls such an unwillingness to mo
J.ou th;)t ho cven from hU
delicious, and he feels as if he could ty
- , ' rV . , 1 J
there always iho whole annual crea-
tion is subject to disease, and the fewest
,,,.. I.im n r., ii .... jt if ..1 nn.llllrt,ir iIt.1 nf
IlKUIUUl, UUUI IlliX iltXV Wl V SUt'lUlUKi "'
. . ' , . ; 1 .i,rt:,. i,. , i,v
sickness, and yet msttct is their onl pny-
. . ' J
sician.
Perfect quietude, then, on the back, is
'the first, the imperative, the essential
step towards the cure of any case of ehol
era. To this art may lend her aid to-
wards making that quietude more perfect, (
by binding a cloth around the belly pret- .
ty firmly. This acts beneficially in di- ,
minishing tho room within tho abdomen
for motion; a man may b&Q pressed in ;
a crowd as not to be able fo'6tir. This j
bandage should be about a foot brond,and
ng enough to bo donled over iho body;
n t 1 c n n rtl lrit 11 nvihlrt f 11 r.n
UU w U J i kS If . X V .1. X Kf kJ bUL'Wl
n'icnitnn Uttln 1 n nfhnrc In vomilntn
l '
pieces of tape should be sewn fo one end
of the flannel, and a corresponding num
ber to another part, being a safer and
more effective fastening than pins.
If this cloth its of stout woolen flannel,
it has two additional advantages its
roughness irritates the skin, and draws
the blood to the surface from the inter
ior, and by its warmth, retains that blood
there; thus preventing that cold, clammy
condition of the skin which takes place in
the last staces of cholcry. Facts con
firm this. When the Asiatic scourge Grst
broke out among the German soldiery,
immense numbers perished; but an im
perative order was issued, in the hottest
weather, that each soldier wear a stout,
woollen flannel abdominial compress, and
immediately the fatality diminished mora
than fifty per cent. If the reader will
try it, even in cases of common looseness
of bowels, he will generally find the most
grateful and instantaneous relief.
The second indication of instinct is to
quench the thirst. When the disease
now called cholera made itfir;-t appear
ance in the United States, in 1 831 T it was
generally believed that, the drinking of
cold waterj soon after calomel was taken,
would certainly cause a!ivatioB; and, as
calomel was usuallv
ti v-fn
cold water
was strictly interdicted.
Some
of the
most heart rending appeals I have ever
noticed were for water, water! I havo
seen thc patient with deathly eagerness
mouthe the ringer ends of the nurse, for
thc sake of a drop or two of cold water
there while washing the face. There aro
two ways of quenching this thirst cold
water and ice. Cold water often causes
a sense of fullness or oppresion, and not
always satisfying; at other times the stom
ach is so very irritable, that it is ejected
in a moment. Ice does not give that un
pleasant fullness, nor does it increase the
thirst, as cold water sometimes does,
while the quantity requiredps very mueh
reduced.
The Srsi ftep then to be taken where
cholera prevails and its symptoms stm
present, is :
To lie down on a bed.
2d. Bind the abdomen tightly wih
woollen flannel.
3d. Swallow pellets of ice to thc ftrHesfc
extent practicable. .
4th. Send for an established, resident,
regular phj-sician. Touch not an atom
of the thousand things proposed by brains
as 'simple as the remedies aro represent
ed to be, but wait quietly and pafcieutly
until the arrival of your medical attend
ant. But many of my readers may not be in"
a condition by distance or otherwise,'
wiiere it is not possible to obtain a phy
sician for several hour?, and where sack
a delay might prove fatal. Under such
eircumstances; obtain ten grains of calo
mel, and make it into a pill with a few
drops of cold water; dry it a little by the
fire or in the sun, and swalow it down.
If thc passages do not cea-e within two
hours, then swallow two more of said pill?,
and continue to swallow two more at tko
end of each two hours until the bowel
ceaso to givo light colored passage, or
until the physician arrive".
Foreign
Neirs.
Four Days Later from Europe.
Arrival ol' the Steamship Ummh
Estreat of the P.U33ians-Capture of Aland
Reported Battle between the Turks
and Kussians-2000 Russians killed and
500 Captured Later from Madrid.
Sandy Hook, August 1G. The steam
ship Uuion, from Havre, with dates to
the 2d inst, arrived this mrning.
The steamer Biitic arrived out at 4 o'
clock on Wednesday morning.
The steamship America arrived at Liv
erpool on '31st ult.
On thc 00th ult., the ship Marathon
arrived at Liverpool, and reports having
been struck by lightning.
The latest intelligence from Spain is,
that Espartero has entered Madrid amid
the most enthusiastic acclamations of tho
populace. The Queen has fully agraed
to tho programme prepared by him of n
now Ministry, and tranquility has been
restored.
Tho Queen Christina is allowed toleavo
Spain without violence, but if sho hesi
tates she is to be removed by force.
The retreat of the Russian army'isr an
nounced, aud the design appears to be
to fall back on Sercth.
An expedition to the Crimea hits been
resolved upon by tho allied forces.
Nothing new has transpired from tho
Baltic except a rumor that the Aland Isl
ands, at the mouth of the Gulf of Bathitin,
have b.uen captured, with great loss, of
life. This needs confirmation.
Another Reported Battle
A telegraphic dispatch from Yiefta.1
slates that tho Russians were totally; de
feated at Slobodgie on the 23d of July,
by the Turks, and lost 2000 men iu kil
led and wounded and 500 prisouers.
Austrian correspondence, however, cou
tradicts this story.
Thirty thousand Turks have crested
the Danube at Olteuitza.
British and French officers ware con
tinually arriving at Rutschuclc from,
Schumla.
Tho division of Prince Napoleon would
probably first enter Wallachia. Every
thing indicates an intention of making a
vigorous struggle at BuTciharast.
"A grand council of war belwten He
allied generals was held at Varna qb
10th, - -
i 1
ij-awteiiihlfiiillifeiB