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- s - - "9 We will cling to the Pillars of the Temnple opf J ieri andt 5 nast fall, we will Perish anmidst the Ruins.' VOLUME V1. Court Rose ., 1' - - * EDGEFIELD ADVERTISER BY W. F. DURISOE, PROPRIETOR. TERMS. Three Dollars per annum, if paid in advance-Three Dollars and Fifty Cents if not paid before the expiration of Six Months from the date of Subscription and Four Dollars if not paid within twelve Months. Subscribers out of the State are required to pay in advance. No subscription received for less than one year, and no paper discontinued until all arrearages are paid, except at the op tion of the Publisher. All subscription, will be continued un less otherwise ordered before the expira tion of the year. Any person procuring five Subscribers and becoming responsible for the same, shall receive the sixth copy gratis. Advertisements'conspicuously inserted at 62J cents per square, (12 lines, or less,) 'for the first insertion, and 43J cts. for each continuance. Those published monthly. or quarterly will be charged $1 per squ are for each insertion. Advertisements not having the number of insertions marked on them, will be continued uutil-ordered out, and charged accordingly. All communications addressed to the Editor, post paid, will be promptly and strictly attended to. From the Georgia Journal. "I had adream which was notalla dream." Byron's 1Darkness." 'Oh why have I waked ? It was so bright, And my heart was filled with such strange delight, -I could dream for years and never awake, For the chillness of Earth the charm might break, I dreamed, ad -I stood by a rivulet's side, -A.soft.br peegeiffied -its silveg te,. ef-Ua -luW0L U5Ot. O-gy ear, It was sWeeter'thanrinastrel's harp to hear. And mingled with that there seemed to be -A voice of enchanting'-melody , Not such as is heard by mortal ears, But sweeter-He'll ne'er forget it who bears. : listened, and louder arose the strain -Alas! 'twere worth life to hear it again -A light step approached-I learned me not, 'That music -haa-chained me fast to the spot. t is'ot in hurtan power to tell 'The power of that wild enchantiig spell 'The being who raised it only could break, -And she stood before me, smiled sweetly, and apake. "Thou art lone," she said, and 'her words sank deep In my sorrowing heart, and I did weep; "Nay, dry those tears, though I know full well "Thou hast more in thy breast than thy tongue may tell. " Thou art sad, for the friends of thy youth are gone, "There are few wvho greet thee with friend' ly tone; " Thy heart's full love has been given and spurned, " Thy visions of joy to sadness have turned; " Thy morning of life is cloudy and drear " Where smiles should be, there is often a tear " And care with his withering touch e'cn now " Has left his mark deeply upon thy brow. " But sorrow no more, for see I have come. "To live with thee at thy quiet home; "I will be mother and sister and friend, " And love thee sincerely till life shall end." She ceased-my heart leaped high as she. spoke She touched me, the charm of the spell was broke I turned-she followed the path 1 led And then I awoke,buit "due vision had jed." .,liscellaeous. Front'the Recordtr and Watchmnan. MINISTERIAL SUPPORT. A HIN(T OR Two. To all to whom it may concern.* There are some subjects. Mr. Editor, to which the attention of Christians, and chris tian churches, cannot be too frequently di -rected. If I mistake not, such is the nature of the one which stands at the head of this - article. On this, they need " line upon line, and precept upon precept." The remarks I nropose to make will be very plain, and intended to expose some of the evils connected with ii. 1. It is an evil but pooripi to pay the preacher. I have nothing to say to those churches that compensate, in no way, the man of God for his labors of love. I leave them until the day of final reckoning, when they must answer for glaring neglect of duty. But for a church to admit their duty in this particular, and to dole out with a sparing, if not with a grudging hand, scarcely enough to buy their ministers corn, is no small evil. And this too is done by churches that are able to pay thrice as much as they now do to the support of the minis try. Other labours are not put off with half pay. But the minister's services are so much less important than any one else. that he must not grumble if he gets but half a loaf. I repeat it, this is an evil un der the sun. Were this ah occasional thing, it might be better tolerated. But it is too general-the instances of those who are well supported by their churches, forming only exceptiobs. In this the value which is set upon the gospel by those who profess to value it.above every thing? Don't these people love money more than the gospel? Is charity outraged to answer YES ? 2. Another evil is. to promise a minister a certain amount, and pay him only a part of it. This, too, is not so rare a case. If it were, it would be better both for church and preacher-the former would not be guilty of breaking a promise; the latter would not be disappointed in meeting his reasonable expectations, and he would be spared the pain 'f thinking at least, that his people are not to be relied on. But it is a very common case, that churches pro mise one thing, and come shortof it. Who will gain-say this? I venture the assertion, that nine-tenths of our preachers do not get, any two years in succession, all that their churiches promise to pay. There is many a subscription unpaid. Now, this is a sore evil. Ministers can't live on unpaid subscriptions. (Pity they could't.)' Be sides this, promises are serious things; and they should no more be violated when made by churches, than when made by in dividuals. An individual making a 'pro mise to pay money, is held accountable to his church if he fails, wilfully to comply. And yet, the church may fail to fulfil a similar promise made to its minister, and nothing must be said about it ! It is an evil not to be winked at, because it is commit ted in high places. Nor will it do for such ciommunion, hfave not' palt ubscription. The minister always con tracts with the church, and not with indi viduals, whether in the church, or out of t, so that, in all justice, the church is bound ror all deficiettcies. And any church put ing off its minister with such a plea, de erves to be left unsupplied. 3. Another evil is, that what a minister receives in the way of compensation is re eited in such a manner, as is little calculat d to benefit him. It is received by piece meals. a little to-day, and a little to-mor row. In many instances, the whole amount so comparatively little, but the manner in which it is received, renders it still less in value. Why should not ministers be paid quarterly, or semi-annually, as well as lit rary and theological professgs, &c.? At any rate, where this cannot be done, would it not be more to the credit of the church to pay him in full at the eno of the year ? This would not only look more business like, but it would enable him to lay out his pay, however small, to better a-lvantage. Won't churches correct this evil ? If they are determined not to raise the wages of their ministers, won't they try and pay them all at once ! 4. The practice of collecting, and paying he minister on Sunday, is another evil. But fewv chturches but what do this. To ards the end, or at the beginning of the year, you will see the deacon, or some otne else, with subscription in hand, butsily col lecing the amnount su'oscribed; and the frst thing, after leaving the pulpit, the preacher is met by thtis collection with a roll of money,'(sometimes very small,) which is counted out with great care, be fore " many wittnesses." Now, all this sort of busitness, on the Lord's day, has to say the least. the appearance of evil. some other day, should be taken to attend to this butsi ness, o- re this done, more, in my opinion, would be collected thtan now is. Th~le church, where the deacons are negligent, should appoint sonme otte to attend to it. And now, Mr. Editor, I have said all that I intend to say, at present, on this subject. You may hear from me again on it,, provi ded, (I like provisions) you think this arti cle will do any goodl. Respectfully, OLDos. From the Ladies Companion. TIlE WAR-WVOMAN'S CREEK. In Georgia and North Carolina, there is hardly a river, creek, or stream, that has nut connected with it somne old Indian tra diton. The title of the present sketch is taken fromi one of these-I believe otno of the principal tributaries of th6 Natahtalee river~, in the Cherokee nation, North Car olina. The story, as told by the few In dians remaining since the removal in the fall of 1838, runs thus: Many years ago, in the first settlement of the country, a wandlering party of their tribe attacked the house of a squatter some where upon their borders, during his ab sence, and massacred all his children, and left his wife covered wvith t he tmangled bo dies ,of her butchered offspring, scalped like them, and apparently dead. Sho was nut, however, wounded so badly as they had supposed; and no sooner did she hear the sondn of their retreating footst eps, th an disengagitig herself from the heap of slain, haggard, pale, and drenched with her own and the blood of her children, she peered steadily from the door, and finding her ene mies no longer in sight, hastily extinguish ed the fire, which, before leaving, they had applied to the logs of which it wab com posed. Wiping from her eyes the ivarm blood which was still reeking from her scalpless head, she directed her agonized gaze to the bleeding and disfigured forms of those who, scarce an hour before, had been playing at the door, -and gladdening her maternal heart with their merry laugh ter; and as she felt, in the full sense of desolation, the last ray of hope die within her bosom, there stole over her ghastly face an expression as savage as was ever worn by the ruthless slayers of her inno cent babes. Her eye gleamed with the wild fury of the tigress robbed of its young, as closing her cabin carefully behind her, with a countenance animated by some desperate purpose, she siarted off in the sane path by which the mudrderers had de parted. Heedless of her wounds and wasting blood, and lost to all sense of hun ger and fatigue in the one absorbing and fell-purpose which actuated her, she paus ed not upon the trail of her foes, until at night, she came up with them encamped at the side of the creek, which is indebted to her for its present name. Emerging frotn the gloom of the sur rounding darkness, on her hands and knees, ;he crept noiselessly towards the fire, the blaze of which, as it flickered upwards. iscovered to her the prostrate forms of .he Indians, five in number, who, over iome by an unusually fatiguing day's tra rel, were wrapped in deep sleep, with their inly weapons, their tomahawks, in their 3elts. Her own stealthily advancing figure, is the uncertain light of - e burning pine ell upon it with more or less distinctness iow exposing its lineaments clotted with >lood, and distorte'' y an expression which ier wrongs, and - sight of the desolators if her hearth-stone, exaggerated to a de ;ree almost fiendish; and now shading all, ;ave two -gleaming spectral eyes-was iven moro striking than the swarthy faces vhich she glared upon. Assuring herself hat they were fast asleep, she gently re noved their tomahawks, and dropped all ut one into the stream. With this re naining weapon in her hand, and cool re olution in her heart, shei bent over the earest enemy, and liftid thb instrumrit, low, buried it in the temple of its owier. rhe savage moved no more than partly to urn upon his side, gasped a little,. quiver d a minute like an aspen, and sunk back o his forner position, quite dead. Smiling hastly in hie rigid face, the desperate wo nan left him, and noiselessly as before. lespatched all of the slcepers, but one. to hat long rest from which only the last rump can awaken them. The last devot d victim, however, was aroused to a con ciousness of his situation by the death truggles of his companions. He sprang o his feet, and felt fur his weapon. It vas not there; and one glance explaining very thing, he evadted the blow aimed at im by the brave and revetigeful mother, eized from the fire a burning brand, and vith it succeeded partially in warding off he furious attack which followed. In a ittle time they fell struggling together, the ndian desperately wounded, and the"un rtunato woman faint with loss of blood md her extraordinary erertions. Both vere too weak tv harm each other now, md the wounded savage only availed him If of his remaining stren.gth to crawl way.-In this piteous. plight, the poor votnan remained until near noon on the llowing da~y, when she was accidentatlly liscovered by a straggling party of whbites, o whom she told her story, and then died. fter buryitig hier on thme spot, they made omc exertion to overtake the fugitivo In lian, but unsuccessfully. Lie succeeded mi reaching his tribe, and from his tale the ittle stream. before mentioned, was ever ftrwnrds knowtn among the Cherokees, mod also by the pale faces, as the " WVar Woman's Creek." Erom: th IZr Carulina Temp. Adirocte. Atmotng the various causes whtich in this coutntry lead men to inutenmperance-ignor tuee antt idleness in our opinlion, stand amost ptotimnent. .Alen, int general, dlonot rinmk front a love oft the taste of spirits, hut from a love of its effects-a love of its stitmulating quialities, and who in health need or feel the want of stimuli, but the idle and emupiy headed ! The man who, as Dr. Young ex presses it, "consecrates his hours, By vigrorous effort and tan honest aim," needs no stimulus beyond that given by his attention to his duties,-his hours never hang heavily, time nuever drage with him simptly because hie is engaged-. IHonestly and usefully engaged. And how tarely do we see a truly industrious man drink ing ! It is he wvho is idle-unemployed-un interested and feels that he has nothing to live for, that seeks that pieculiar glow of feeling prodtuced by artificial stimulus; hence atmong the surest remetdies for in temtperatnec, or at least amnong the mnost eifectual provctttives, is to teach the peeo pie to be industrious. To follow steadily some useful occupation, and devote their leisure hours to reading and other meoans of..mental improvement. Children who are suff'ered to grow tup in idleness, area most sture to become dissipated. ]t isa natural consequence, and parents who are so foolish as to thitnk their sons too good to be userull,- ermploydmut expect tt see them the end, a dishonor *o their family, - a disgrace to themserves. Every n should supply himself and familyf 'v boks and papers. The lat ter of-w .., above all things else, per .haps, ii .st likely to beget a taste for readiig,:a a .thirst for knowledge. To these his ter evenings and other leis ure boil duld be devoted, and lie will soon fin b-id pleasure as well as profit derived. this course, that will do a way hi. osilion to idle away his time at the-gro or gaming table. In a coun try like - where much depends upon the peop 'eading should be universal, and thd ase parents neglected to learn them in th,.should now learn of them selves It isa. sb notion that a*man-caiot learn to'd after he is twenty-five or thirty "Id. We are personally ac. quiainted one at this time, who com mence .is alphabit, and learned to read wel r he was seventy years old! and we If seen the old man poring over his hook, pst without intermission from morning night, and blessing his God fur the 'lege of reading! There is now a r in the Legislature of Ken tucky, ,. a Statesman and Lawyer, common niversal respect, and who made lils nark when signing his mar riuge bo e a short time since, in a speech-b' he Senate remarked, that his son,1 *as then sitting as a member of the.' -branch of the Legislature, "was a oy, when Ilearned to write." Few now what they can 'do, on til'they 'nd it is .a want of effort that keepsni .a man from performing deeds ennobli5 *his own character, -and last ingly b ial to his fellow muir. if a man si n determined not'to try'toite complish thing ror his own. or the good of , he will be sure to sueceed in makid self a blank; butif the time that is. f e" t in wbining over suppo sed inabI ,and gerhaps'real disadvan tages, ont in more vigorous effort, much wo a done for the benefit of oth ers, as w ifor the individual concern ed. We h tto be undeuiable, that in a country 1 r, for a man to neglect to inform-bi f and family in reference to their rel obligations, duties and res pousil a oeiety, is treacherous to his coun . ly unworthy of the high trusts itted to. him. There is no.. -e.chealiansodical.s ma en rausra the monej'pe't in this State for whiskey and tobacco, or lost by idleness, would be more thao sufficient to educate every child in it. But wce dit6t *top, as we are about to write a chapter, where we intended only a paragraph. A GOOD [(7-j HAND. In the endless variety of hand-writing to be met with in this scribbling, sciawling world, there seems to be some difference of opinion, or taste, as to what constitutes a good O?*.-When a fair lady sends a fair note, and requests the pleasure of your company to tea on a given evening, that is doubtless a fair 171. When a man writes you that unless you pay that note he holds against you, in twenty-four hours, ho will send you to jail, that may be called a plain (7. When a gentleman sends you an exceedingly polite note, only demanding the satisfaction of blowing out your.brains, that is denominated an honorable (GP. When a lady writes a billet-doux, wiih a quill plucked from the wing of Cupid, and with such a fine, delicate stroke, as to be inadvisable, except to the eyes of love, that that is, without doubt, a lovely (7. The Lord's prayer, written in the compiss of half a dime, is a very fin e (G A (Q which is frequently pl aced at the bottom of a note; " for value received," however vile and coni-se it may appear, it is a very prom isiug (f. Qne which af'ter wvriting a long leaii, snparific tirticle, requests an Editor to favor the public with the sublimesqueez ing of an empty noddle, is, to say the least, a very impudent (Q. The gentleman, again who writes to the saume humble ser vant of the public, on matters of business of any kind relating io a newspaper, and makes it a point of forgetting the postage, (by the unanimous opinion of the Co~rps Editorial,) writes a most rascally (G. The individual whose name is given to ev ery petition, whether he approves of its object oi- not, without giving himself the trouble of examinin~ its contents, writes, ithout doubt, a very-careless (lJ7P. Theti with these, there is a close (GP, and the sprawling (i'--the round (3GJ, and the sharp (t7'-the easy (GP, and the cramip ed (Q7"-the running (7*, and the halt inig (GP-the copy (G', and the bumsinesn (:?--and the (GP' that has no business There is tho counting-house 0:?", the le gal (Q?', the clerical (Q*, and twenty othei different (Q(* all of wvhich may hi "good, bad or indiffei-ent," as it happens But wthem weo r-eceive a letter, post paid which reads thus. [thouh it beq(udil-track! and pot-hooks]-"Enclosed are $3, ro which you will be good enough to forwar< your paper to Peter Paythecashdown" this, we consider, to be positively the BF.s1 (GN!!THE PRINTER. Things Certain in 1841.-The y'en 1841 will be a very eveatful one-to ever' body who gets mnarried. 'ibhroughout the whole course of th year whenever the moon waines the night will grow dark. - Those who have debts to pay, and a cash will lose their credit. I: is probable that if there is no busines dong, people will complain ofrd imre but it is certain that those who hangthemn selves trill escape starving to death. Many a man will grow rich this year in a dream. If the.incumbent of a rat office should die, there will be a dozen feet ready to step into one pair of shoes. He tho marries during this year will run a great risk-that is, if he duos it in a hurry. lie who steals a match, will make tat tiers gossip, and get himself into a scrape. He who is pennyless this year will not grieve much at the fall of stocks. He that grows without growing wiser, will be a long time coming to the years ol discretion. He who wants to borrow money, will know the value of it. He who laughs at his own dull jokes, and hunts for a cat with three tails, or be comes an applicant for ollice, will rival honest Dogberry, and be content to "write himself an ass. There will be more books published'this year than will find purchasermnore rhymes written than will find readers, and more bills made out than will find payers. Ifa man builds a house this year with out counting the coit, he ivill know more at the end of his uudertaking than at the beginning. . If any body jumps overboard without .knowing hoi to swim, it is two to one that he gets drowned. If aify one lenils an umbrella, it is two to one that'he is obliged to go home in the rain for his pains. There Vill be a great noise about the couniry-whenever it thunders, and a dust will be kicked up-by coach horses-un less the roads are McAdamized. Whoever makes the discovery that the world is given to lying, will only do what Jack Fallstaff has done before him. Many an old sinner will resolve to turn over a new leaf this year, but the new leaf will turn out a blank. .lany a forfd fool wilijump into a honey pot, and find it mustard, without being a ble to say, with the fly, "I'm off." Mlany things will be wondered at this year, and turn out not to be miracles. Finally we are oropinion, that this will be a wonderful year-Just like all that have gone before it. Politicians Will make fools of themselves, pettifoggers will make. fools of others, and women with pretty fa ces will make fools both of themiielves and others.J.CahLei1dn;ad roun4 -- e.. .. . -~tc ztst out who should b6e o a be a great cry and little wool, as at the shearing of pigs or a seiion of Congress A Chapter on Mafrimony.-There are four sorts of women amang the candidates for matrimony corresponding to wives, com panioue, ladies, and ladies of fashion. One weds a wife, marries a companion, courts a lady, and becomes affianced to a lady of fashiou. One is happy with a wife, con tented with a companion, lives in a quiet way with a lady, nnd manages to get along with a lady of fashion. One is loved by a wife, well treated by a companion. es teemed by a lady, and tolerated by a lady of faishion. Oue is one body and onepsoul with a wife, a couple with a companon, a family with a lady, and a house keeper with a lady of fashion'. When a man is sick, hie is tenderly nursed by his wile, pi tied by his companion, visited by the lady, and inquired allier by the lady of fashion. If the husband dies, the wife is inconsola. ble, the conipattion mourns for him, the lady is married in a year, and the lady of fashion forgets him in six weeks. For widows are singular creatures ; they resein blo green wood, which while it is burning on one sidle, is weping Of) the other. Phil. Stand. Imposiion.-" WVe learn fromt a source entitled to full credit, that large numbecrs of part blood Berkshire hogs, have been tak etn front Lebanon, Ohio, to Missouri, and the south, and there disposed of as thorough bred."-Ay. Farmer. Is it possible that there arenany such un principled breeders about Lebanon 1 We hope there may be somne mistake, and wye call upon those, either there or elsewhere in this neighborhood, who have any pre tensions to breeding fine bogs, to cotme for. ward and deny that they had any partici pation in such transactions. WVe have our eye upon an individttal itn this city, wvho is reported to make a busi ness of buying tip half breeds, both of Berk shired ahid Durhtaum, and of taking themr wvestward and disposing of them as full breeds! The first time that we can learc of such a shipment, wve will take pains ti inform ourselves of all the particulars amc give them to the world.-Though we milsi say, that those who, frotm pentariousnes: or a mistaken economy, purchase hogs om cattle of any breed, as pure, from any one but, a ivell known and responsible breeder and one who is not ashamed to have hi~ stock brought before the public, deserve to .be taken in. T. A. [West. Far. St Gar. Cold Water and Croup.-T he Roches ter (N. Y.) Democrat records a case, o the croup, by application of cold waeter The patient waes a little girl, t wo and a hal years old. [Her parents were called to he bed-side, about 10 o'clock at night, by : strange noise, and found her apparently in the jaws of death, from that fearful dis ease, the croup. Theitr was no medicine ii the honse suitable for the case: the firi was out, so that the water could not be sspeedily heated; and the parents felt tha it wa no time to get a physician. [a thi dilemma, they remembered having read of a tchild being relieved of similar distress and.danger by the tise ofcold water. . Im mediately cold water was'applied with a sponge, to the neck and chest, and in less than a minute the child was so far recover ed as to airink freely of the (water. Shf was ihen wiped dry, wrapped up warm, and in less than i hree minutes from the first application of the water, breathed with perfect freeness. The ciild had a similar though less severe attack.'some months af ter, and was relieved in the same manner. The Beggar and the Caste'r 'Oil.-The Portland Argus relates abn amusing case, in which a beggtfr iii that.'city received what he asked for', but iot Whit he wished for. A few days ago, a full grown, able bo died man presented himself at the door of our citizens, and solicited the lady of the house to give him two cents. She remar ked that she had. none, and inquired what he iwanted with them. " To buy a dose of caster oil, marm," was the reply, " for I feel dreadful sick." The lady had no cents, but she had plen ty of oil, and she prepared him a stiff dose. He tried bard to get excused from taking it, but she was firm: lie was a sick man, and it must go down. The loafer found he was caught in his own trap; and where lie meant to have a glass of liquor, he got a dose of physic ; but, making a virtue of necessity, and with sundry wry faces, he gulped it down and cleared. He'll not call at that house again, we dare say. Mysterious Professions.-"Now Tom," said the printer of d country newspaper, in giving directions to his apprentice, "put the "foreign leaders' into the galleys, and lock'em up-let 'Napoleon's remains ha"' a larger head-distribute the 'army in tE' East'-take up a line and finish the 'Brit ish linister'-make 'the young Princess' torun on with 'the Duchess ofKent'-move 'the Kerry hunt' out of the chase-get your stick and conclude the horrid murde' that Joe began last night-wash your hands and come into.. dinner, and then see that all the pie is cleaned up." Some.printers are devils-and no mistake. Consolation.-A couple of loafers were standing upon a wharf on South Maine street, last Monday," I say Jim,' said o "there's a new license law g ip nuto operv , ion tod. #no mioney -wlIv o 55ov ec oif. " oarulk enon~i__ Breach of Mail Laws.-About 50 suiti have been commenced in New York, against persons who have incurred the pe unty for writing on the margin of newspa pers sent to their friends by mail. The fine for each offene is $10. Mother's Love.-There is so divine a holiness in the love of a mother, that, no matter how the tid that hinds her to the child was formed, she becomes, as it were consecrated and sacred; and the past is forgotten, and the world and its harsh ver dicts swept away when that alone is visi. ble; anld the God who iWatches over the little one sheds his smile over the human deputy, in whose tenderness there breathes his own! An Trish gentleman thus addr'cssed aA indolent servant, who indulged himself itt bed at a late hour in the morning:-"Fall to rising! you spalpeen, fall to rising! Don't stand there lying in bed all day !" An old man, who lived to the extraor dinary age or one hundred and fifty years, haid down for himself the following excel lent and concise rules to which lhe adhier ed, and the result sulliciently evinces their wisdomn: "Keep" he says, "your head cool by temperance, yotur feet warm by exer cise, RISE E ARLY,, o to bed soon, nev er drink till nature required it, and always piay the PRINTER." Secondl FlooA-'-Ori the 6th instant. the Cuimberlatnd River. at Nashville, rose higher than it had been for several years. Much of that portion of the city, on the east side of Broad street, wias under wvater filled the basement stories 'ci the houses with water. The Sulphfur Spring neigh borhoodl was also inundated, and the.wa ier had reached the-second stoi'ies of ths houses.-Augusta Chtron. Sj' Sen. Every fural may justly be consider ed as a summrons to prepare for that state. into ivhich it shows us that we must some time enter; and the summons is more loud and piei-cing as the event of which it warnd us is at a less distanco. Singular Remedy.-We find in a Frencli Journal the account of the cure of a caso of Hydi-ophohia by a largo quantity of vinegar administered to the patient by. . - mistake. Count Leosina, a physician of Padtda, hearing of the case, exhibited the same remedy in a very violent case, and succeeded in effecting a perfect cure. Rou~orGa esin Poultr'y.-Soa p mnix ed with the food of chickeds, or Indian meal we; up with soap suds and fed to thenm is said to be a curs for this disorder, that is so fatal to poultry. A Buckeye Girl---Thero is a girl at Massillon, Ohio, named Hannah Crous, Swho is little over six year. old, and weigh. S161 pounds.