i ' ' t \ ' Cupe JJlag ®cem$_tosiot 1 • - X
"volumes IWSJllll'.Ui. H-T-^r 1.1. -I i
CAPE ISLAND. NEW JERSEY, THURSDAY. MARCH. 12. .1363. — '-W — - A .
NUMBER 40
jfototr of % Shins. XII UB OH— TE BKAVU and txue. A UAT10X4X. A*TBK*. IfO. T. MOSBI*. Freedom spreads her downy wings Over »U created things ; Glory lo tbo King of kiog* ! * f Bond low lo Htm the kner ; Bring the bsnrt before Hi* throne— j Bow lo Him and Him nlont— Bo'* tb* only king wo own. Acd llo bn* m»do a* free 1 Cwonc*:- — Arm and on— to brave and IVec ! j Arm and »tiko for Liborty ! Tho hot ieei spot a smiling *nn Kro *bod hi* gonial revs opon. • la lhat which gWv# a Washington \r Tbo drooping world to cboor ! Sound tbo clarion peal* of Fame. Ye who bear Colombia'* name— With existence freedom came — It is man's birth right Lere. Cnoai'S Arm and on— yo bravo and free : Arm and *lrik* for Liberty ! Heir* of an immortal (ire, Latjiia Herd* tour b*art* inspire — Weave the »tr*in and wake the lyre, Whe^ejmnr proud altara »tand ; . Hail with abCnt* and lond hurrahs, Streaming from a thousand »par*^*" Freedom'* rolnbow flag of Hart, * The symbol of oor land I C«wtf»:— Arm and on— ye brave and free! } Arm and Hike for Liberty ! "jStltci glisrtllim IXa Arthur1* Home Magaiin*. | HABITS. t » »!' I BT M. t; 1. A Tbut "we are the nlavea of habit" j none win deny, who have their eyea open , to conaidef the dully circomalancea of j their life, and mark into what accustomed channel* it mures; bow hard it ia to j break away from old associations.- That these' "habits both bod and good are formed in youth," is another of tbo** trite copy-book aayinga, which like old gold, loea nothing of their value from -- an antiquated setting. llow imporUnt then, Lhat the mother's vigilant n«d * naxioos earn should bo directed to hfrr ehiid from the first dawnlngs of its young intellect, lest the pliable mind be warped into the mold of bed rather than good habits! With the latter we have but little to do at present, for it is eearcely: possible for a child to have too many good finbiu, while it ia boh easily led astray by the counterparts. Love of trntb, diligence, neatness and order, • veneration, generosity and good temper, and all the other vlrtBes. have their opposite* ; errors into which children are liable to fall according to tbefr several temperament* and circumstances. And Drat, we cannot be too strict in retiring peifeU truthfulness To a child. "Whether from a natural warmth of imagination, or carelessness on the part of the mother in correcting Inflated or ' distorted accounts of any event, children am too apt to indulge ia soperlr • tires in their style, describing things as "nwfni, or "horrible" when tbey are only disagreeable or annoying, beside* adding generally to the narrative for the take of effect. Endeavor to teach them to relata NcU simply as tbey have occurred ; and with proper guidance the habit of truthfulness will become so mneh of a second nature, tbkt ft will, he found painful to deviate from H. Mud. mischief has recalled from these "I supposes" and goeases" which have been added to embellish a atory, and give it Interest. Is not this proneneaa to ex■ggerate ob the part of children, often to hit traced to the mother's 111 concealed smiles of approbation, after bearing torn* youtbftl sally of fancy rather than traih. Children may •»«> he incited to bahto of iodostry. It *TO certainly co.t •a effort »t first to overcome the natural )0ve of ease ; bot mothers often foster ro.U-.Ug '• *•" ■l»>«S> MhwkH -H" W. Wpl* »«• »' hU-ro kuuplivl. •»* U*J h»" pla. ,A,k.pdrol-««f '»«»» gather tve*b them to wait on yhn. giro} lluh m'"' «™i« WJ b« p«(<)nroJ bjt » w»T S ■*»* I «»1l grow. 0l4wv of «*•
' should be Tound Tor lis user busy band., j and yon will see that this courso pro- 1 | motes both health apt! happiness. How ; j pitiable n sight it is to behold in after j life the efflcte of childish indolenco cud j I self-indulgence IIow heavily bangs I i the tims on the hands of the listless and i ; ouoccupied, whose early habits have ' I been formed, and fonnd so difGcolt to I j overcome ! We never'iiked the cbsnc | ter. since we used to read in our childish I j days • ' ."Tie the voice af the sluggard, I heard | him complain," Ac. T Then, too, every mother know* bow ^ \d1IBcult it it to teach children habit* of i | neatness and order. How common it is ' j to tee* them toss the hat, or the book, or , j plaything on the floqr, with the consol- 1 i ing remark, "beTer mind, mother will i ; be sure to pick tBajgnp again." If! ! mothers continue to dOrbis, the* will soon have their time fully engaged, be- ! aides being annoyed ' with the constant !• j demands made by disorderly and core- j ! less children, for articles lost or mislaid, j 1 and wboie whereabouts mothers are al- j j way* expected to be in eome niysterniu* 1 : manner acquainted. In such a bouse- , I bold, where the children ere allowed to | make a constant litter and confusion, I and tbe mother is Worn out with efforts i I to repair their negligence, comfort can- | not be expected to renide. Rather in- 1 | nnrc your children from the first to linb- > its of order. Teach them that there • j is "a place for everything, and every- | ■; thing mcit be in its piece." Show! ' tbero how much easier it ia to find sn ! article that has been carefally laid aaide, ! lhao to btf obliged to "hunt tb* house over," or weary every one with inquiries j conccring it. And then how important j in aft«r life, this early training to habits of method and vystem. Veneration may be exercised towards I different objects. When influenced "by . If In our relitioni to the Supreme Heing, i it leads os lo abhor the taking of his name in vain. In a lower degree we are > required to reverence parents, or those i who are soperior in age or station to . i ourselves. It it very essential that these , become fixed habits with oar ' children. , They .should early be taught to dread , and dislike the utterancc-of profane isn- , gusge. or anything that approaches to ( it. We often hear yooog persons., who . wonld not on any -consideration defile > their lips with an oath, yet make the | nearest approaches possible to it, by their foolish exclamations of "P mercy!" i "my goodness 1" Ac., which baa grown . with them into a habit, and which, f whether they realise it or not, are tbe I very attr^ntee of the Almighty. Nor -lean we be 'o exacting in having chil- . | drcn pay joe honor and -respect to their parents, or others older tken :hem*-l*es i Tbe crying sin o! the times J* this hab. I it of insubordination. It is thought by t some that tbere in .umething manly and ) independent in asserting opinions con- > trary to those of their elders ; a coarse . of condadt whjgh makes many a youth. I vain, opinionated, and insufferable. > Cannot this habit V* checked ia its I birth t klsy not ike mother have an in* > influence in teachieg the child to re- • spect its elikrs, and always to valne the i opinion of those who arc more expel rienced in the ways of the* world than it • can possibly be ? i Children are also said to be naturally . selfish nod self-indulgent. That this is I true to » certain, extent. there can be no i doubt, bnt that their habit*" may" bs changed la eqaaiiy so. The greed. *i»d k avarice of a child may be enconraged t natil it bteomet a mMer ef its toys and | cakes, qolle as dote fisted ea the wretch r who lives on the chink of gold, without r really enjoying bis gains ; while generf ons, •open-hearted benevolence, fostered . sod well directed in yonth, may become l a benefit to society. Tench tbe luxury , of giving ; begin in little things, and . yon will not lone yonr own reward, t Tbeee hints as to some of the com 1 coamen ili-ba.bil; d cbiWrco which it r
, j is desirable to gnnid against, are only j - 1 designed to lead mothers to a careful . - consideration of the subject, and are | - 1 not intended to embrace all that a watchI i ful mother will be apt to observe in ber ; constant intercouT® with bet children. I ! Many of these arepersonal habits, some - of temper or faulufiuding, tbe latter of i j which is pcculiarly^disagreeable and an-, ! noying, aud grow* with indulgence. ' i i Whatever they may be, lose no time or ' ■ trouble in e*udicn|iiiff them like HI w*rd* ( i from your garden^ and supply thrir pi a ; cas with plants of a beautiful and heal- ' thy growth. Parkerfburg, pa. Item the Wl-lv WcrlJ. IT MIGHT HAVE BEEN BV NOtUlAN X, FIIITTl"Or all the «*J »or'i St tr>azu* or prn, Till- arc thvae, • It haw hvvn.' 1 Glnnciog backward llown the vista of ; years through which we have passed in our life's journey, how often we find ourselves saving, as tbo- mind lingers • over some' event which at one time pr | | another came near changing oor whole I coarse in the fotu*hv it might have been 1 thnsnad so There \»e so many posti , I bilities, so many SveAl* upon which hinge onr career, jKaU we sometiin. s wonder how there niW^ so many prospei rous journeys as.thfiee nre. Nor would < there be, if tbere was not another hand • than ours to guide our little bark over | the rough sen yif life. Truly, we may j j well congvntnlat^ ourselves that it is as well with us as It is ; lhat we have eaI caped the ihonsnnd and one mishops which crossed along the narrow path- [ j way over which *e have journeyed, j | With so many diverging lines before us, it would ba indeed marvelous did we j I never go astray ; mini our success or de j feat hangs upon a small pivot at times, ! so small that a feather's weight wight turn it in eilbe£ direction. liut wl a vre Twve~most ti Isment, Is that we hnvo not done so w«ll a* we ! might ; and iu the retrospection of the pest, there' are many opportunities, ' which, had they been rightly improved 1 might have led to a far different aud 1 better result. Yes, we might have been farther nd ' vanccd in tbe icale of progress and nsc fulness. Might have been, perhaps, on ' the highway to honor and fame, and ; ' gaining a name that would adorn the f ' ptfges of history, and ever be retnem- ' bered with grateful hearts by thus* we ^ leave behind. That yoong man who is. reeling along 1 under the debasing influence of intoxi- ' eating liquors, and spending his lime, ' 1 money and energies in scenes of dissi- ' r pation and riot, might bare been an ornament to society, and a leader of his ] r race. Put, alas 1 how difcreni is his | 1 condition now. That' individual who , passes by upon the othnr side, might I ' have been an artist of ths holiest standing, and reaping lairels of\his profession ; bnt a little want of energy, or, ' perhaps, of right controlling influences, 1 determined it otherwise; nad now he * stands apon a level with tbe great mass 1 cf humanity. "flint person who yoa see -yonder, 'oil- " ir.g away as a common laborer. tor his 8 daily bread, might have.been fife of tbe ' great men ot tbe age and had a control- ' ling voice in the affairs of nations, had he bnt need aright the talents entrustvd F to his keeping. * And co we might go oh and enume9 rate by hundreds, i» every calling of 1 life, in illustration of onr subject. Might ' hatt fiew* is written on every psge ol * life's history ; and there are,' indeed, ' bot few who can look back and' say that 9 they hare no desire that their record 1 should stand different. ' That most' be a master mind who gives * all* his energie* to the fulfilment of a 8 definite object and bends every cirenrr s ance to bis will passes through i all ths different phases of life without taf|{k|Mfi btabhosen course, -or takes no coloring - whatever from Weir ' sotf rounding'- - !'■
| The most skillul mariner will some- j I limes suffer shipwreck amid the surging 1 1 breakers So wjtb as who are sailing ' onward on ^he greet ocean of Time; ■ ' and, indeed, Kjfpuld be truly a marvel, did we leave no "-wreck of love, of 1 wasted talents, or ruiohd hopes upon its ' dreary shot e*. Happy the man who stands at the . close of his earthly pilgrimage upon the ■ 1 verge of that deep rolling lido which > , divides >he known from tin- unknown worlds, and looking Imck over the way 1 he has traveled, sees no spot therein to , remind him that it might be different ; ' that it might have been far more fc i bis own honor and happiness to have pur sued another course ; who, seeing no cause for sorrowing, calmly awaits the alarm-stroke wbicli tells him his journey * is over. RETTFJXO FBOSS BUSINESS. Kverv one wilh his pies open hu* *»en , ' many meo^fsrmiirs and other«, make great , j mistake* in "raiiriag'' esrljr from ba*ine»H After one ha* Spent the bc*l of hit <]:•)'( in ' active employment, it i« quit* unnatural Tor hint lo an-ipenil all wink, fold hi* hand*. I sad Ml down idle. 'I he laticieii pleatar--bvfor*. IIow much belter t« it In retlrr slowly. |o give up labor aud ratu by de Activity, bodilv and menial. t« necessary to keep one's faculties bright and in a b*ai thy condition. To the farmer espweialli, ! w.t would say. prepare for old ago by d« greea. If your farm is large, lay off a par ! lion of it for fruit coltnre I'lant an nr. chord of the choicest varirlie* of applra, pear*, plum*, cherries, and prache*. I' a good proportion of Ihc apples are Full anil Winter aortr, they will always be market I able, nod will yield a handsome income I with ooly little labor. Plant alao a rioeI yard. Ths care of it will furnish pleasant occupation for an old gentleman, nnd the " grape* and wine yield considerable income. ; This Jjttuxt . deserves more consldentioo 1 lhao it commonly receivea. TLo profiti or j- . * farm aie never too large, even after the j ■ ' hard labor of ono's prime applied trf it. j Hat one cannot expert to plow and hoer | and lloe and plow. Why. ihwn. »ho il£" we I ' not pnt oor farms into »urh a condiliywyhal . : when onr limb* become slifleneiT by u^id our lands will yield us nsarly the same la- 1 i come with las* work T That a large and Well selected fruit orchard will do lliis. do I intelligent person will dewy. A Truit tr*e' | ; when yoong costs but a trifle, it occupies J . I bnt little space, does not exclude hoed j crops or grass, and when grown to mnto- ; rity. yield* an annual income nf from $15 to j 840. And besides tb-' orchard and viae- | yard, Irt the aid man have his garden. In ? I this way, ho will have enough lo dir. and ' | yet not he oppressed with care and labor. . ! Commit nng the larger part of the farm tb - | hit grown sp sqna. he can give them the . ; benefit of bis experience, while both par- ( j tie* u -.11 rejoice in their proeperily and ( their independence. ». BY AUTHORITY. I - — - LAWS OF NEW JERSEY. A fnrthaf" i upplement to the set estlilsd "An set io regulate tho practice of the ^ courts of lew," approved April fifteenth. uke thousand eight hundred and fortjx six. 8 Be it enacted by the Kenate and General Assembly of the State of New Jersey, '* that in si y civil caote which has been here. * tofore'or flinll hereafter be finally ({etvre mi nod, until the ch-rk of the court shall |. er.lV the warrants ef attorney, declaration, j pleaiftngar^frQCMOings sed jodgmmlt in j aach eaase. as is raqqxrrd-,by the sevsniy seventh section of the act to which ikta 1*_ e supplement, the entry of tbe verdtel or ' role for judgment *in the minute* ef the coart, shell be held sad taken in ike coon '' in which the sams is obuined. to be the •' record of lb* judgment in soeh ees*., and I, the same shell be recqjved ia evidence in 1 said coart, a* such judgment, as felly as ir J the record had been ma fie up end signed, as by said aection required. % 1. Ard"be H enScted, That this act shall take effect immediately. ■ Approved February 4th, H63. h An Act concerning actions of replevin. L Be it enacted by the Benate end General S Asaambly of the Slate of New Jersey, •- That'll shall be'lawM for any sopram* Ccort eomtnitrkinnr Cf this Stn*» to sp'provr
j of reM^iu bond* to bd berwafMr girec to ' an^TS^er in ectiona of repforin depending in any court In this state, sad aloo lo . I approve of the sufficiency qf tbe saretio* ! therein named : nnd such approval, which , shall be endorsed by the coinaiUvioner on the bon.l. shall have Lho swtna force and effect us lifco uppi-oral by a judge, as now required bylaw; and thereupon the coroner may proceed to serve the writ nf Aud be it enacted, That before tho commissioner shall endorse hi* approval on •ucli bond, ho »hail reqauo tho sureties ■ named there, a lo justify before bi,n in as *1 'arm, and »hail thereupon iininudiutely tile il;e udinatii* of j istitiration villi the clerk of the court whence the writ of replevin is 3. And be it enacted, TTtul this set sha!l lake effect immediately. Approved February 4. IMA A Further supplement to an act entitled "Ai^oct to secure lo creditors sn rqoal and just diti»ion of the estates of debtor* wbo convey to aJtiguee* for the bone hi of creditor-," approved April sixteenth, eighteen huodred and forty.six. Be It e n acted by the Senate and General Ataembly of the Slate of New Jersey, I'Jiat th ali c i»es aris.ug after :he pauage . -if it, i* act. the inventory and list of creditor*. wilh Matement of claims required to i>c hied t.y a**ignee« unoer the act lo which i* a supplement, and Ihc supplement* l herein.. -hall be proved before tho snrrogatd • if the proper county, ami recorded by him in a bo. k lo bo provided for that purpose* and lo bn called "'Assignees Book ar.d that for laRiug proof of «uch inventory and |i«t. and lor the recording thereof, the •urri.gate shall be entitled lo the name feet a* »rw allowed by law for like sereicea in roUli'.ii lo inventories of deceaieil person*. 3 Ami be it enacted that ibis sot shall take effect immediately. Approved Febraery 4th. 1BGX , A* Farther aupplemeul to the act entitled' "An act relative to commissioners tot taking, the acknowledgments end proof j"' of— deeds," approved April, fifteenth. eighteen hundred nni forly-aig" j Be a enacted by tb. Heuatu and General ' . Assembly of the Sale of New Jersey, ■ That it shell and may be lawful to appoint I foor commissioners for taking'tho ocknowl. 4-C\lgemdnt and proof of deed* in the tow^H t of Orange, in tbe coiinty of ESska. - 2 Aa<! be it enacted, That tbls's^H ' deemt-d a public eel nod to U|^^H 4 immediately. Approved February An set to confirm tb^^f and proof of deeds s^^| in writing taken by LVusrea* it appears I d^H ' Garret S. Boice aaa^^H the nineteenth day eighteen hundred e^^H the commiselohers -tq^^l edgrmenta and pratM^^^B ' fifth ward, Jersey City, fiH son, end state of New" Jera^| cum'diissioned end sworn IbQ^H virtue of snid conimissroa ; aa^^ll^H it appear* that said (barrel S. IftJ^B thereafter reiNored bis residence out oW 1 said fifth ward end after such remordf,^ # from ignorance of ihq laws of this state' contioaid to take acknowledgments and proofs, by reason or which defective , oekoowledgmeots end prooT, innoceet pertohs may bn sdbject to great loss; therefore, Be it enscted by tbe Senate and General I Assembly or tho Slate of New Jersey,' I, 1*h"t lb* *''VVV*I scknoajedgmenis and - n proofs of deeds and other instraments of y writing, takm end certified 'by the said t Garret tj. Beico ea commissioner after his ' r' removal oat of said fifth ward, be sod the f same are hereby cos firmed end declared , valid end elfccfual. in like ntanoeras though # the seme bnd been taken and certified hy j bim while residing' in tbe aafd ward for q which he had been eppeioted. f 3. And be It enacted, That thin act shell I take effect immediately. Approved February 4th, 186J. 1 Thi peach originally a peisoaohs almond Its fleshy parte w*a then need to poison arrows, and wa* far this perpoee translated into Persia. Trans pi* n tat ion and cnlrive-ti-n heva not oelyjm'moved tbe peisondnn qualities, bnt prodoeed the deliefoua frail ' we new oejoy. r (ff-Take "lbs OcaaoWavw."

