Cape May Ocean Wave, 14 March 1861 IIIF issue link — Page 1

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'yoTx'MEG. - CAPE~ISLAm NEW -JERSEyT TjJPRSDAY. MARCH 14, 1S61. ' OTMBEll 42.

IfilMttjAMtlf ^dberii«taKi)ts. - ' WAR AND SECESSION! FARMERS ACCOMMODATION LIN 2. 15ti.i«n«c/ Seaton. *1(14 War and BmcmIob, Ihowh you m»y ro*m. B* lb*7 ***r (O twaptlac. don'l U-.-r your bom* ) ■ul «*ll <m V— ctlrtir and «c* wlidm. !■»» lb«r. . Ho no« *o (toy to 0* louud elsewhere. Cheap, chaxp. *hMp, ch**p. Row*, la price 1 am bound to «ult you *n>how. When tou(u< In hi* W«goa and mhU food War*, Von wilt ear, Ir* »o c*«n 111 uot jo <•!•.■ wbrre j A Int rat* now for ouly Tweivr Dime*, I know U la aceordaaec with the dutln*** of Uan. A <1*1 will b* alone In a bw day*. Fl*aa* fir* at your o-der» early. THA DDK CD VA.101LUKH. Patetah tin, Marsh «tb, 1MU SHOES! SHOES! SHOES' SELLING OFF AT [ WHOLESALE PRICE8, TO CLOSE BUSINESS. • COME AND SECURE BARGAINS tt rpHC people of Cap* May will taka nolle* that Mr, I 1 THOMAS CLA1UC wlU 8LLL OFF hi* Stock WOMEN'S AB» CHILDREN S BOOTS AND SHOES, , . at Itts 8Uire, opposite i ' M*.Boac>AN's Mabkkt Hocix. I Until the 19th of this Month, , " At WhoUtal* Prices. Women1* Leather Woroceo, • |1.00 . ^ — i MUSICAL CONCEPT. h MUSICAL CONCERT, will >» held In th* M. I * la QuarlattW, Trie* and Dvrta, by loaf alngrra. I Tba proceed* to be derntad toward* liquidating , the Minuter"* aalary (or Urn peat j-aar. DaonoMS at 1 o'eloek.. Kxerrlar* l . epmmenr. . at IK Cefcek. Admittance .IS cent*. Children un4*r U year*. 10 erat*. rha Ir lend* of (UUglou add I lorer* of Mutl* are lot Ited to attend. ty~U the ahotr* «**nln« should prore ualavora- 1 .. M*,.H wUlhahaM th* Bt*l lair *reMa(. , STEAM DYING & SCOURING 1 ESTABLISHMENT. . I MRS. E. W. SMITH, No. 28, North Fifth Street, between i ^ MABKKT A A UGH, PHILADELPHIA. TVICCC GOODS of **«ry deaolpllon dyed to aay rotor. la*UII«a Wearlmg Apparel uf et cr. Z • atMcrlpltan, dj-d la lb- atoat I/Mhwrartde ami urr- * manual eotor*. and Bulshod IB a sujwrior style.— K Jlartno. CMkmar* and Crape Bhawla, Tabl* ard IIM BM term, Carpnta, ttu«! Jul- Beourrd. Pongr >- ' fr autd Bilk premm S»-I>y*d all Color*, and warranted O^tlrmem's Cloths* Cleaned or Dyad on ■ "ESSSSjttS^an. t-y M a ALLEN A NEEDLES' f - lMPKOVKDrSTANDABP ft Super-P hospha te of Lime, I I Tht old establish#!) artieia, in conI sisal use by thonsand* of Far- ■*- Btrrs and Planters for n J * number of year* part. k THICK 845 per WW lb«. ('2 1 ets. per 11..) r . G U A N O . K rmOTUM. «U*rtved dliwet Trem n* Gor#rnJCHABOE. This 1* th* old fashioned VhOMryOn-l eae, imporled dlr«t. [ AZLRN * NXEBLRS* NEW FERTILIZER. I L PBICK |30 par 2000 IbB. (1} eU per lb.) ' VQJfMJDBT. Bt.Mnn m*ker*Ula* bam* D*M aad I -* r.iBB PLASTKB. Warranlal pura. la barrel*. L inadi tn PitIttt rr ■I ^ *c arUclr*. K* H. B. W* bar* * laijta nomlwr o> Dtplomai fer ■ miimduBlS awarded by tba rattaa* Acricnttural SoI H alrttM, w%Jak pao a»a tofOBrtad to (all and *x*mW CI Bth. WbarroB & 41 8th. Wnter St., [ PHILADELPHIA. B , ftdrM-Bt-bm [ A* BO* OABBCTWB.J {jnBStAH CBCECU. f| BOOT it SHOE 8TOR6 -1 [ OCXAJf VATS BUILD ISO. (OppStitt the United Strut Hotel,) I ■IIIBlT" IHOB* amd UAPTBUU, L Ser On xU LnBUa ami 'fMldram; and Man', and 1 9rj-* It at* and Cnpa, at lb* ntnrt reaaonahie priac* I _ OABBBTSOS A CMVftCH I ^HOM^^indusTRY7

•VMIIK «KJ-MMDa /LOVE, H0B0B, AHD 0BET. , Premlae to lore I Why woman think* To lore a prtrlle^e, not a Uak ; If thou will trnly take my heart ^ And kcyp it, thl* I* all I «*k. I Honor thae 1 Yea, If thou wilt lire ® A life of truth ahd purity i ^ When 1 hare area thy worthiaeaa, I cannot choo** but honor thee. t Obey! When 1 hare fully learned * Each want and wlab to undentami, C I'll learn the w laden to obey, f If thou Jut* trlatlom lo conmand. a Bo If I (hfl to lire with I bee fat dnty. love, and lowllnen, ' ' 'Tt* Nature'* fault, or thh>«, or both : g The yr«eter nuil control I he lea*. j n MKMB«lKgL.K^/«2«;Ve c A TANBIE BPZZCH" a The foUo»itig aputcli wni delivered g an BDnexBtionist at a recent election. 1 1 "Fellow citizens and horses, hurrah ! t There's got to be a war. I'm for whip- n ping Great Britain right off without i stopping for corapHittBots^>-W^ ronst j hustle the Uritj^yffon IMTb over bead r loot of thin here^ycuirn continent - 1 II nrrah for the annexation of Canada I | g We must have the critter neck and heels, < if wo have to a'adc in blood to oar knees i r to pull it from tii^ horns of John Bull. J c Wa most do it. Where's the possum 1 r whose little sonl don't echo them eeoti- 1 1 ments J Oc ain't nowhere, and never I { was. Can't yon, and I, and every one ] ; of us rouse up the wolf of human nature 1 1 till he'll pow the whole of Old England j . clear down l»elow low water mark! Yes . sit-ce. Every citizen of this tall land, from tho owl on the hemlock tub to the • I'reaidanl iu his great arm chair, i * in favor of this nll-tbuudrring and libertyspreading measure. Just let them gloriotu id< as pop Into tho United Stales cranium roirly. and see if an earthquake * shout from 26,000,000 of Indiarubber ' lungs don't shake th<^ whole cur'.h, crack | the zenith, and knock the very pole* , over. 1 tell you there is nothing on this ' of the Millennium like our own everlasting institution ; nor yon can't scrap* up f a flock of civilized beings on the faoe ' oi the universal lera Jirma who knows ^ so well to defend and spread thorn.— * Whera's the Yankee who won't vote for j his country within three quarters of nn ' ' Inch Of his life, if it triei his soul, yes— ( and his upper Mother too ? What's England? Why it ain't anything at all, icsr ely. Uncle Sjui will tukc it yet for ' a hondlArliUf to UcV his nose npon. ' alien lie gels s cold. We ore bonnd to wake' up snakes, an# no niitlake. Let ua once gel hold of the job in right ear- ; nest. With nlf-of Uiicld"8Aiu1i boys, and if we don't dig a hole as deep as eternity with the spades <>f Yankee pluck, and scam the grease spots off the face of the world and pitch them clear to the bottom o! it, then I am no two-legged ' crocodile. Wfikn this isJdone yon will •ec the great roaring eagle of liberty like a big rooster crowiug on the top of a ' barrel. Why, you ore oil ready and ; primed for the enset— all you want is a ' live coal or two of fir* dropped on yodr dovoled beads to touch you off. Me-, thinks the flashes of fire in your eyes today forebode blood and thunder— only mind you don't flash in the pan! If you all d* your boaaden duty in this dHsis, yonll spit tobacco juice of determination in John /Ball's eyes till he has the blind staggers, yon can take him hy the tail and swing him beyond ull recollection I Rouse ye, ronse y» — to i the rescne ! Let the shout pt aetrate t ffery nook and cranny in North America—from the tip top . or the Artie regions dear to the Straits of Gibraltar. ' Canada and the United State* forever I begot in a war-hoop, cradled ijt thunder sad brought up in glory!" Nor UaT-A WiX aUjc d;irrr, driving olung tl.* rood wilk a New. ~at ra'hT.Vuek I hnw.'

A.C0N0LICT WITH X T1CEB; c While Mnccomo wns goinf -through „ his performance with tho -Be;gal tigers "c at Mnnder's Menagerie, reemtly, a*ti- t cress caught his hand in her month. — , ['hinting his knee in the smal of the li- j gross' back, and pressing lcr against t the bars of the cage, then eizing her t lower jast with the right haid, behell ' . her powerless to do no moc than re- j ( tain the left bend in Iter nouth. So | i cool was Maccomo in tiis trying.^ \ position, that lookers-on thoaght it ; part of his performance, but when j Maccomo called to one of tie keepers, < 'She has g£t my band fust ii her month. ( get a bar of hot iron," the tuth of his { position flashed through thh minds of those present, aw4 created tho greatest excitement — onrlidy fainting ^ others running from the painful sight Four or five minnt* had elapsed | the iron was ready, luring which ' titae Maccomo stood as a pejr of siatu- j ( , ary, not a quiver of lip to stow the pain j he was enduring. When ready the hot j I was applied quickly acd surely, by I I die of the keepers, to one if the large j j ( teeth in the upper ja*r ; atd, as though , . she had beeu electrified, her month ; open. Mactftmo qsick as light- 1 j | ning^drcw his hand away, caught hold | i of a thick stick, slrack tho animal a torj rific blow on the scall, brought her i j down, and forced her to finish her perI formance before lie left the cage. When j come ont of the cage, his bleed- | ing hand testified to the frightful simg- i gle w hich hud bt.eti going on between | man and beast.— MATRIHOHT 1H rBANCEA married French-woman is in every . respect her liusbhud's equal ; he is not her lbrd and master, but her friend "Mom ami," is the title by which she | artilri'sn-s Itim. The law iu»/ n-qulre her to love him, to honor liiin by vir- ! tuous conduct, but not to obec hi in. lie | has, indeed a certain superiority in the i management of their ccnlnon Interests, j but her rights are notto the nioro effaced for that ; in certain cases her concurrence is indispensable,- and she has a deliberate voice with an absolute veto. remains the mistress ot her whole fortune, by making a reservation respecting her personal properly. The husband and wife aro two partners who club their capital for mutual advantage but who keep it distinct in their accounts, to facilitate any partial and complete dissolution. She can' raako her will, and leave hef husband without a tou of hers; if the die intestate, her property, in some casei, slips completely through his fingers. She mast will it to him, for him to be- aafo and sure. The profile arising from the industry of the hnsband and wife, and tho savings they may«ke enable to form a common-stock, to the balf^of- which the arife is entitled. Tim law places such confidence In her, that, in the event of her widowhood, she by right, is tho guardian of her children. Between brothers and sisters thoir exists a perfect cquality-us lo their rights of iuheritance from their falhey and mother. If the 1 parents nre inclined to disturb this equality, or to favor a third person to the prejudice of their children, the law fixee limits to the power of bequeathing. A Frenchman cannot put off an offobding son or daughter with nthilling, nor can he impoverish his neglected family | by leaving large sums-to eharitable Institutions. . ,y i | — HOW TO TUAT THE BITE OF A DOG Dr. Stephen Wafe, of Boston, in bis tesllmonj of a recent case which grew oat of the injuries from the bite .of a I dog, furnished the fo'dowiag valuable 1 advice; — In the case of a bite by a dog, whare the animal penetrated the flesh, whether the dofe was knowp So be med ' or not, he should me tba tame preeeok lions. He would wash the woond with . warm water, exlraot *U Ua vine posei- , lite by seeking the wound with Wa lips, nndU.er. cauteries it deeply wllb the —Bll1 1 11!1!

caustic most readily obtained, hat should | potash- could be procured at OMC— The timo iiKjtWch the effects of tl*e bite of a rand dog would be seen S varied from two to three days to as many years, but if no 'effects were felt after j or three months, as a general thing ( the patient might consider himself sale. p [ Bites made through clothing are sel- | [ doin productive of much harm, as even f | the dog is mad the clothing absorbs t i-the virus before the teeth reach tha flesh. ! i: Most of all the fatal eases aro where tho * person was bitten on some naked part. f c Concerning the possibility of a cure in , 1 real case of hydropobia noihiug was ' said. i i THE JOUBBET OF LIFE The following every day rules, from » the papers of Dr. West, are thrown to- J gether, as general way-inarks in the jour- < ncy of life Never ridicule sacred things, or what ] others may esteem as such, howevet ab- I 1 surd they may appear to you. | Never resent a supposed injury till j i you know the views and rsotivos of the t 1 author of it. On no occasion relate it. j Always take the part of an absent person who is censured in company, so I far as truth aod propriety will allow.. ! Never think worse of another on ac- j ' • count of his differing in political and re- i ' I ligioas subjects. Never dispute with a man who is more j | ' than seventy years of age nor with an , I enthnsiastc. i Do not jest so as to wound the feel- . « I ings of another. j 1 Say a* little as posxiblo of yourself | ' ; and of . those who ore near to you. j 1 Never court tho favor of the rich by j flattering either their vanities or their vices. Speak with calmness and deliberation, i | especially iu circumstances which tend to irritato ADVICE TO YOoKO LADIES.' A friend; who i* himself the father ] of .several interesting daughters, has ■ handed lis for publication, the following 1 extract which wo commend to the calm reflection of our fair young readers — "Trust not to ancertuin riches, but prfepare yourself tor every emergency in life. Learn to work and not to bo dc- i pendent upon servants lo make your bread ; sweep your floors and darn your 1 own stockini. Above all this, do not esteem to higly those honorable young men who sustain themselves and their , parents by the work of their own bauds, 1 while you care for, and rtcoive in your company those lazy, idlo popinjays, who never lift a finger to help thmnselves, so long as ihcv can keep body and soul to- ; | -gether, and get sufficient to lire in fashion." — New Yorker. i u,| l HARRIAGE FOB H05£T , I never knew a marriage for money , that did not end unhappily. Yet man - f aging mothers and heartless daughters s are continually playing the same unlucky , game. J believe that many think that J they wfll hot hove a bettar chance, and t dread being dependent. Such marB riages, no doubt, sometimes prove tolers ably comfortable, but a great number j would have been far happier single. If r I may judge by my observation of socl; , matters, marrying for a home makes that . home a very tiresome one. r TUninT YOOKO M£V. y Girls, bewari of transient poungnon, i- never suffer the addresses of a stranger : recollect" that one good steady fanner boy or mechanic is worth all the floatiug 8 trash iu t^e world. The allurements of „ a dandy jack with a gold chain about hit neck, a walking stick in bis paw, e some honest tailor's coat oa bis back, and a brainless skull, can never make up \'t the loss of a kiad father's bouse a good d mother'! counsel, and the society of brHhera and sirters; their affections h last, while that of aucha yonug man i« j.. loot at th* wan* of the heney-moon. I, T*' b"*- - * iay*AUreruse._j8g

BY AUTHORITY. LAWS OF NEW JERSEY* * Supplement to an act entitled "An act relative to the sale anJ deposition of the real estate or Infant*." approved March I nineteenth, eighteen hundred and forty- [ five. 1. It* it enacted by the Senate and General Assembly of the :!tat§ of New Jersey. That if tho real estate of an infant or »• ; fanU. or any part of it heretofore told, or { that hereafter may bo sold noder tho proI vision* of tbc act to which Ibis is a snppleI inont, bo. or *hall havo been at the time of such sals sahject to an estate by the coar- ■ tesy, and the person entitled thereto shall consent ia writing to receive a gross sum, to be approved by the court in lieu of inch - estate by the curtesy, l[io chancellor may, after eueh consent in writing has been Died I in the clerk's o(5c>!, direct the payment of ' each sum in gross as be shall deem reasonable and shall be acceptable to the por*an entitled to Bach estate by the cqrteey, in manner aforesaid, which sum, so paid, shall m bo taken out of the proceeds of the sale of the real estate of socb Infant or infante, r-. S. i so subject lo said estale by tbe curtesy; / \ '"'."JS provided bowevor. before any such sum fholl be paid, tho chancellor shall be satis- "*^4 1 that an efti-ctUal release of such estate aS | liy the curies , has twi?n executed and de- ! live red. - >• VV.M 2. And b« it enacted that this act shall take effort immediately, j Approved Fob. I. 1861.HEALTH OF HORSES. Nothing tends so much to health and, | well being uf the Ilorso as clnauliness and good vontilaltoa. Better that a boric | f bould go without hit food after a bard ride, than that he should bo loft in the tt*. blu covered with swoat and mud. and por- . mi t ted to dry off lliu*. A careful atten- fs^ lion now i* all important ; a careful drying off and cleaning down with good clean litwill do inore for tbu hone than any oth- | er tmnlmeiit : food lia<l better be deferred I than the rleaning. Why should 113 hard ! woikiug horse be allowed to go to often unattended 10 and nnenrcd for, xriien tho sport in* liorme has the most Carofnl' atlenI tion and kindest card? liive thn samo wise care to a *iu king- horse and he W?II pay back a hotter fee than tho race bono, ond .( r.*k . bat .11 horses, whether tha f/irm-horse. roadster, or sporting-horso, all ! «h«ubl receive rare and altontion. They need clean beds, and baths, and pure air, aa * , much as inan ; and at it is always injurious fur man to allow himself lo eat iminedij . • tely after hard work, or eat while his blood is heated, so it is also injurious for the horsef or any other working animal. A pert young lawyer once boasted to W member or tho bar that bw had received - two hundred dollars for (peaking iua carlain lawsuit ; tho other replied, "I received double that sum for keeping silent iu that very coso." Conneticut has nearly ono thousand public schools, and about opt hundred thou- ' ! B.itid children bntweon tho ages of four and i mv teen. The State has school- accomoda- , | lions for soma eighty thousand children, at an annual expense of about ono Locdrod I thousand dollars. The average allendar.ee, • however, is bat little ovtr fifty thousand. Deal gently with those who stray. Draw " back by love ond parsnasion. A kiss ir mora vslnabie to the lost than a mine of gold. Think of this and be on your guard, 1 ye who would cbaie to the grave ao erring ' brother. A pedagogue was about to flog * boy for having raid he was a fool, when tbe boy cried out — "Oh, don't f don't I I wop't call- - you so any more f I'll never say what X r thing again in *11 the days of my Ufa." I Ac ignorant fellow was bbasting in hi* travels he had been care Bed everywhere, I and that he had teen all the great in Europe." "Hare you seen the Dardenellea V said one of the persons present. "Y«," replied he, "I dined with them a Gibraltar, [ and found them to be very 'excellent coar " , g What u a Uoqcxrra t — A young lady of |f mora beauty than sense ; more accomplish . t menu than looming ; more charms of per* son t boo grace of; mind; more admirer* than • friend#; more fools than wis* men feral- •• SendauU. ' ^ The latest Irish buTl w* read »t is tbe f esse *." *-i Irish gaotleman who. I* order lf to raise the w^d whereby to relieve him- ■ self (knot pecuniary embarrassment, rot his § Hts iniui^ Wjk largo wsoiBt and then ■jrSenil ia yw*r job work. llnwdbills circulars, card*; Ac., exoeatod at this *fSea. -