' Cape Pap (Ocean lime.
S "LET AI.L TnE END8 THOU AIM'ST AT BE THY GOD'S, THT COUNTRY'S. AND TRUTHS "
i Vol.. IX. • " CAPEISI.A^ CAP^ ^^COUXTV. NEW JKRSKY, THURSDAY. JULY 9, 1SS3. NO. .6
*>Tfrt>eti | M1SS1.H6. IJot among the suffering wound-d; Not among the psec-rul d« ad ; Not among the prisoners. " Miaalng." ; That «a> all the massage said Yet his mother reeds it oser, L'otil |l>rMfk her painful taara Fades lb# deer Dame (be ha* railed him For Oiraa twomiid twenty years. Koond bar lit is paari and plant y ; Bright an I rtaan tha yellow Boor; WhiU the ■> oraiejr gfones riaslor All orouod the kitafeeo deor. Boforty. the sfeek old h»a**.cst Drowse* In his patrh of tan ; N mily abinaa tbr oaken .Ireaeer; All tba morning's work U dona. ' Through the window coma* tba fragraae* " " Of « stony hartsM morn, Fragmart nnaft from distent reaper*. And tba rawing of tie eoro ; ■ And '.ha rich braalk of tba gardrn. Where the gnldr-n maloaa lie ; Where the blwhlng plemi era lorning j All tbrir red ebaeka to tba aky. Silting there within tha aonabioe, , l.ranmg on bar *a»y chair. With .oft line* npon bar forehead. I A nd itealtvs r tn her hair— Blind to annthina— dead to fragrance— On ihat royal barveat morn — Thinking »b'ile har heart ia warping. Of her noble browed tral-boro— How ba left bar in tba Spring-time, i With hi* young bean fall of Heme; With hia clear and ringing footatap; W'tb hi* lithe and nipple frameBow «l>h taara hia rye# were brimming As ha Wis*vd a I eel " Good-bye," Yet eba heard him whittling gaily At ha waot acroaa the rye. ! Hieing. Wby (hoald be be miaaing ? lie would fisht nr-til ba felt ; And if wounded. kiHed. or pris'irer, Soma one there would be to loll; f Miming. Sti 1 n hope to cheer her ! Safe triumphant, b* may com*. Wtth tba victor army sbuutia|. With the clamor of the dram. So through all the day* of AnUmn— Io tbi rv# ai.ri in lb# morn— Sha aiU hear bit quirkeaing footsteps la the nulling of ib# corn. Or tba will hoih tha howaebold, vv hila har h*art goat leaping high, * Thinking t at aha heart him whittling In tha pathway tbroagh the rye » # a a a a a Far away, Ihrnngh all tha Antainn, In a lonely, lonely glade, j In tbeklreery deflation *1 bat tba battle-storm hat made— With The rout apon bit market— In 'be • re ana In th# morn— ! In 'be rank gh-nm of the fern laaca* Idee her nobleJirownd f rrt-born.
ft tect |pKtib«|* thk aurrnr avkxt. bt xna. i o. n*unr». ! The favorite pttpil of Robeni. the' elder Tenlert, bom at Herlem in 166th. painted ittne of hia Itedt pictura* it a j menu gerret at Antwerp, finding -to j purchasers. collector* fearing lett the ' effort of their nobler paintings might be , | epoUed by aoeh vnlger company at hia j " Drinker" and " Rustic Weddiog ;B j end here in tbia wretched atodio, nrr- ; icg, a* it did. fir eating and airepiog ' npartrnrnt, ttndio and kiichen, wan one | of the greateet taatier* of the age born j — David T'ofore. The boy "a first car- 1 ne»t look Ml on hit toiling, airkty father, j end that father's eaael ; and, aa If to ! bear <>nt the old adage. " that which ia deetinctT to be a nettle etinge young," ! I he caught op hia fothert abdicated pee- 1 oils, and art to work to arnear and to j danb a* eerly aa Ma fosrth year. Uuiikr hia other brother; Abrnbatn j he had ell the high Impulse* of, and ntrao-t vamrstion for, geniut. One | day, when Raben* viaitcd the rqoalid : atudio of hit former apprentice, the two ' falh'wa, both baey deubliag away after: their childlab Way, Abraham eat etUl to | hia ewracr, aerer distarbtof himaotf ; aboat tba aatnnce of the great matter, j while loan apraag to the eye* of David, j an iwtueiaffi to RuUos, tb* pencil drop- i ped fro® hit fittk hand, an, with mpeotM breath, he gated on one to whom hia daring .pint ntJkA aad j •oared to imitate, Struck by hi* mute a' tew bold elrokee apon the little fcL j (.rt^nraaa, txplatwd the o*oct of; Voy rftenrazda nU ; "My gift* I httd! La * 1
few® OodT^rfacnhy o'rW?SeIo., |- from Rabcat." Pasting over the intervening year* of oar young »rti*t, w* next prceent him to tbe reader in bit fifteenth year, when ' painting tbe landscape for hia father1* ; pictures, with which, when complete, be woald lead to an ait, and set off on foot j for Antwerp, or BroiaeU, to diapoae of , i ! them: On n trifling incident on one of thete jonrueyt waa laid the foundation j of hia future great neta. Painting a blind flate-pUyer at aa inn by tbe waytide, Lord FaLtoo. accidentally coming along; off rid him three ducata for tbe beautiful aketcb, which our hero joyfully accepted, giving one to the innkeeper, .one to tbe blind man, aad reserving only one to bimielf. That same " FleUPlayer, " stolen from England, and found again io Persia by Gol. Dickaoo, «ho . ! repurchased it at en enormous price, ; ; ranks among tbe chief effort* of our < ! groat master. Its merit Introduced him, at tha Age ! ! of twenty, to the Archdnke Leopold, j who appointed him painter to the court, j Here he painted the * Ood of Wedlock, " • a piece of art which waa wroegbt wiik : such consummate tkilKbat, froip a di»lance, the featnrea appeared beautiful, j but, on a nearer view, the attractiveness vanished. Yet, strange enongli, was tbia very tk*f sfonrre. *o little complimentary to the rosy fallen be so lightly sported, destined to bring bim a very slave beneath their airy-tinted bonder. Tbe arrhdake, having given the painting a conipicnous place in bis prHpe cabinet, bad a scaffolding erected fn>ui . whence to take a nearer inspection, tb.i steps to which were of alippery aseeint, very difficult to mount. Now it chanced that our hvro bad often met the ward of Rnbens, Anna Braagvl, sometimea at , tbe grearmaatcps etudio, aoinelimcs at I that of Iter oibt r gaardlsn, tbe painter 6chnt, hat mere commonly at tbe bouse of Tan Barlew. who eantionrd him against the fully of dreaming to match j hit talents with the beaaty and weAlth , of tbe youthful hrireaa. But when haa ever love«breu barred from 'whence he wills to be? T ;*ur« was In despair. He had promised to nerer breathe a syllable of hia id-starred regard to Aona, and reaolatrly ditermieed never to see her again, when, unfortunately, or rather fortunately, as the
tuque! proved, be met her one morning at tbe court of the arckdnke, standing . with Van Barlew and RuIh-iis before hit ' famous painting of " Wedlock." Our artitt aceoaied tbe trio, and for a j while tried to talk indiffrremiy about ' ' the w. ether, till, eering her place ber foet on the slippery step, he suddenly, I by an Involentary impulse, asked, ".Arc 1 j ywn afraid to venture Withoe- a moment's reflection the ; . 'anghlnirly answered, "No, If yon will am i at me " t The delighted painter sprang forward, ; j offering his hand \ " Let me take yon at yoer word. 1 ' . ean guide yoor steps np th* slippery stern t easily." j But the yoong beirees etepped hastily i i back, while Bariew said maliciously. *' 8er, DavM, how yoer nngallant view j : of wedlock eanses Anna loliesitate." j I Rubens jokingly observed, "la faith, j David, yon have taken a most nacoui- ' plimrntary view of tbe snhject." Meantime, Anna Brengel bhtsh-d ! deeper, moving farther ewey. Still Tc- j | aim, ndlfctoffdflaaoted, again offered j hit hand to mmiat her mount, when ah* ; said archly, hot kery sweetly, " O, no, for th* peh ting, to very b-eatiful from : :thla d stance, wtU lose all its beauty aa j we approach." A something in the yoong girl's blush ] and tone emboldened our painter to i reply, " Nut U us, store we woui.i uuI deratnad the proper puiet of pertpec- ! " 0, I meant," the in'genlonsly as■WSfA " where we might not be able i • t« go beck to the plensaater point of •| view ngMe." By a strong effcrt be mattered hia i foaling*,, .aasing hi* hand sercsa hta brow, th .ftre ceaKetcfcwbag It might i |WaM0 byjrane, det, r»«re^ her
well, and thm i».r M proximity forever. That nigbl he called at her goardlan J Barlew 'a bom*. Old Cornelius left the j yoong people, having an appointment j with his friend, the paiuter Bcbnt, little I dreaming that ob* so conned and list- j U-red as our court painter could be to j deeply enthralled, btill such waa tkn j Let, however stran.e it may seem that i he who bad painted wedlock so nnpal- 1 Unity had neiertiwlws fallen madly sift! desperately in love with bis master'* | girlish ward ; and now, baviog come to I bid brr a caltn, brotherly farewell in trie verV Leth of fifty desperate resolves that sha should never he aware of the : passion she had inspired, the truth i broke forth in all iu impassioned ra«li- | anee on tbe fatal moment, as be bade j her farewell. Yes, standing on the i threshold of the door, his lip* told her, I in mild and broken accents, that he I loved her, as, wildly enstamping their | fervor on those that did not resist tbe pressure, he clasped brr to Ms breast to { a farewell embrace : and thus they 4 parted. J The moment Tenters was gone, Anna i flew to ber room, bolted th* door, aod j then sat down and cf'®d heartily. Any i one, to have seed the young hcirese at 1 1 that moment, would have thought she ; had juat become aware of tome terrible i calamity that was crushing out fier kapI pine** forever. Far different waa the fact, however. Ovetjoyed. delighted, at j the realisation of her wildest dream of ambition" and happiness, aha fell a secret , gleam of satisfaction in the knowledge i { that, though poor, Teuiert was too great a favorite with both ber guardians i,f-r them to reject his pleading when N backed by her own. With th* arrow still festering in his . ' young, ardent heart, Tenier* called lb* ■ : out day on old Schut, whom be found > ) at his easel, working ont a sea storm 1 1 that Salvutor Rosa need not have blosM i td to own. Wit boot telling the old i ; painter who wis (be object sf hi* regard, ! lie said a hopeless passion waa driviug I ! him to France. i "Pooh, nonsense!" qnotb tbe old > ' storm painter, who, blessings on his I hardened old heart, laughed at the blind ■ god'* pranks, " pooh, David ! take her • by st -ro !" • | Quitting tbe old storm-king, he pro-
C ceeded to the study of Van Barlew, erni1 cent alike aa poet and painter, i ■ "Do yon know, David." qnoth the paln'er "the arch-duke taye you are last i losing your senses 7" t; "And well be may," replied tbe der aponding coort painter, tilling the same , story he had before related to old Bcbnt t adding, "0. if I could only write ver- : tea like yo»4" i. "Write Btmst-nse In qooth our irrovI , emit old poet. "Who ever yet, David I spud In hi* wooing by stringing rhymes , together ? No ; be a man and love brr " I Somewhat ereoaraged — since the ! ' guardian had forbore to ask the^name, r of tk- chosen one— onr hero sped to 1' hi* friend Rubens. "Are yon really in live ? asked the gTeat master, rj "Madly, but hopelessly. Site Is a ! great heiress, while I am only a paint,jur." - i Anna, with the petulance of a spoiled I child, avowed herself pining to death i for the great painters sake. The gnar- - ; diana mat. and decided in Ai* frvcr i Rnbens gra a sapper, inviting Teniere, t > end, willing to subject him to a little , annoyance, told btm him he bad invited t him there to sign the marriage setiies ; mints that had been arranged between ! hi* ward. Anna Brrngei, and his It ' friend. Cornelias Schut, in the character » j of proxy for her grand father. Hor- - j ror-sirirkn. poor David shook and - : trembled like the n>pe» to tbe brew; j yet great was the reraWoa, whee ia - ; the weed of 8ehot'« name, he read, e ' traced by tbe bold band ot tba notary, f ! bis ow a— David Tsaier." ! "is that all tike difficulty ? asked'- -Rua i bens "Tbeo go home, David, hi* to a : yosr eaael. and paint bar porNfc in « ,t . piree dvtiiged to imm< r alin you both, r ' "IM w«r ». t roar Kueeea." >• j Day and night did poor dea ponding
worYoeTdn'flfc}, llff- growing |" j into llir and bcanty beneath his touch, j j rose Into i»a meridian splendor, his ) j " Fortune Teller " Settling with his bcaotifol Anna in I her ancestral castle, an old, time-v .irn structure, situated betweeo Met him and 1 1 Antwerp, our great master became the | i j teacher, as wrll na friend, of Don Juan, j i of Austria. H-rc, too, we find amonc ! litis Ne-.hcrlatid guest*, tha bishop of. I Ghent, the Duke of Marlborough, and ! i j Christine of Sweden. While Don Joen I ' was at his "csstle of tbe three towers," | i so celebrated in bis after paintings, the j i royal pupil bus left a pleasing evidence 1 i of his progress In the art, in a beautiful i portrait of Tenter's eldest sou, a pretty, ■ *tiuny-:rp*sfd urchin, the lovely face left . i by Tahiers on so many a tabk-t. of the i fair girl who stood by his sida in her > blushing beauty, viewing the painting ' i of Wedlock on tuo pleasing side of its ■ slippery ascent , __ aaa - , A 8TOBV FOR Tnc CIIlI.nRr\. "Capital l"n re." ( It was a little past twelve o'clock] ' I and a taerry groope of boys were sektod : , on the young grass under the trees that ' t shaded the academy play grounds A , little later aad they would be scattered , in every direction in their play ; but i . first tbe/ mast attend to the contents of , th* well filled pails and baskets, where I their dinm-rs »re stored away, f 'I should like to know,' said Howard t Colby, 'why Joe Green never comes I out heft to eat his dinner with the rest » of ns ; but always sneaks off somewhere ; i till wf all get through ?"' i "Goes* he brings so many goodies, he is afraid we shall rob bim,' said i another » 'Pj«1i!' said Wil. Brown; throwing I bites -if back on the grasr. 'more likely ) he doesn't bring anything at all. 1 k heard wv foih-r say the family must be i 1 badly pinched since Mr. Green no« , killed ; and mother said she didn't pity . t them ; for folks bad no business to be poor Vita proud.' 1 'WeE ssid Bain Merrill, "I know j « Mary Greco asked my mother to lit her ! 1 hsve her plain sewing to do ; but then r folks do that sometimes that aren't very poor.*" 'And Joe is wearing his winter clothes
nil this warm weather, and his pants are j patched bnhfnd ; 1 saw them " said Howard Colby, with a very couipi-icmt f leojt at his new spring suit of light grey. 'I tdl yon what, boys,' said Will [ Brown, '1st * look to-morrow, and see • what tint old follow does bring, any way. Yoa know ho is always in his seat by tba time the first bell rings, and we can get a prep ioto bis basket, and then be in season for the roll call ' Tbe boys agruvd to this, ail but Ned Collins, who bad sat qnietly, eating bis dinner, and taken no part in the conversa' ion. Nat ho simply remarked, as hn brushed the crtraibe from Ms lap. ' I can't see what fun there will be in that aud it look* real mean ®nd sneaking to me. Vta sure it's none of your business what Joe bring* f8V dinner or where he goes to eat H.' 'Ytn're always such a granny, Ned Collins,' said Will Brown, contemptuously. 'Ton's* got e*%ry one of yoor old Aunt Sally's notion*.' . Ned con Id not hear to be laughed at, , and it made him a Uitle angry to hear ! hia kind old aunt sneered at, but bis I eye* only flashed for a minute, and then ■ he sprang np, shouting, 'Hurrah, boys i for foot-ball 1' aad ia fiva minutes the i whole play-ground waa in an nproar of ■ fan aad frolic. The next morning, at the first stroke I of tb* bell, a hair doxea rogaUh f*cr_s I peeped into the school xoom. aad, tore i enough, there was Joe Green, boaily , plying his pencil over the problems of , the algebra fosson. It was but th* work of aa instaat to horry into tbe li»- - tie elwtbee-rooia.. aad soon the whole » group were pressing around Will Brown > as be bold the mysterious basket in his . . hand. Among them, in(spit* ot tbe re- • monstrance of yosterday, »a* Ned C«- [ itsa, With hia flee foes f#rty crimson - * «»A-. * A
| • ith shame, or aoineihiug else ; we i t • shall we, % I ' 'It's big enongh to hold * day's ra- j 1 | lions for a regiment,' laid Howard Col- 1 by, a* Will pullid ont a nice whits n«p- 1 ' ! kin. Next came a whole newspaper, a j j large one, too j and then, in the basket 1 , i was one poor Utile cold potato. That ; , : was all. Will held it np witb a comical ' , grimace, and the boya laughed and : ' cheered as lqpdiy as they dared In ttie ' j school house. 'S«* here.' said Howard, .'let's throw > ! i It away, and fill tbe basket with coal! and things ; it will be such fun to itc 1 i him open it.' TU* boys agreed and the -baaket was 1 soon filled and the napkin placed care . | folly tn the top, and before the bell , commenced tolling, ths^j were on their ' ' • ! way down stairs. > j Ned Collins was the last one to leaT* 1 [ the room, and no sooner did the last head disappear, than, qoiek aj flash he | emptied tha coal into the box again, re- ■ : placed the paper, and half Glltd the | basket , large as it was, with the con- ; tents of hia bright tin pail that Aunt < Sally delighted to store with dainties ' ' j for ker darling's dinner. Ned was in I , his seat almost as soon as the rest, aod ■ all through 4hc forenoon he looked nod ' ! foil as guilty as tbe others, as be sow ' | the sly looks and winks that were ex- ' changed anoug thorn. Noon come, • | and there was the usual ru«h to the i clothes room for dinner tickets but, in 1 stud of going out to the yard th- boys » lingered about the «l«or and hall — I Straight by them marched Ned Collins j with his pail on his arm ! 'Hnllo, Ned.' said Sam MUrrill, . i 'where are you going now ?' II, 'Home,' said N«d, laughing. 'I saw Aunt Sally making a chicken-pie th'l r morning, and they can't cheat mo out r of my share.' 1 I 'Ask me to go, too,' shonted Howard e Colhy; but jnat at that moment they s . spied Joe Green carryirg his basket inv | to the school room, e 'I should think he'd inspect some- | thing,' whispered Will Brown, 'that coal • ! must be awful beary.' ri Joe disappeared in the school room, n j and the curion* eyes that peeped through y the crack of the door were soon rewarj did by seeing him open bis basket — t» i 'Hope hi* dinner won't lie hard' on hi* i xiupi ma uiiiiiiv win i in naiu uu inn t,
stomach;' whispered Howard Colby — ' | But apparently Joe only wished to get J p Irs paper to read, for be took it by t e a corner; and pnllcd; bnt it was fait. He i d i looked in in surprise; and then in aai rt ] " of bewildered way, took ont a couple of ' aunt Sally's great crispy duughnals, then I " ■ one of the drliciont round pies be had { f| ! so often seen in Ned's bunds— bread i ^ ! and butter, and sneh honey as nobody's e bee* bnt hers ever made, and the plamp. white breast of a chicken. It was a d dinner fit fur a king, so poor Joe 1 thought ; and so did the boys, aa thry peeped wonderingly from their hiding- , * i place. But Joe did not offer ti taste ; ( it ; he only sat there with a very pali L face, qver which the tear* began pre- ; , t smtly to flow very fa«t Then he laid | , • his head on bis desk, and Freddy Wil- j e ■ son, one of the smallest boys, whispered, t "I guess lie's preying;" so they *11 1 I stole away to_ tbe play-gronnd without , ' - speaking another word. ' f 'That's some of Ned Collin's work,' said ' Will Browo ; aFtar a wbila, 'it s just like ' , ki--' j : 'I'm glad of It, anyway,' said Sam M*r- ] ( riU, 'I've felt aa mean all the forenoon as If ^ I" had b«» a robbing a ben-roost. Tbe , 1 Green* are not to blame for having only | '' cold pntatnoe to eat. and I doo'^wonder | t ' Jna dii.'n t want all at frllowa to know it.' 1 f 'I Ilka Joe Grren baal of any boy io J scbool,' aaid liy^ Freddy UjlMpi. 'and I . think It was too bad to try to mako fan of I 8 'Nobody asked yon what yoe though'.,' | .said Will Brown, fiercely ; 'wail till yonr J ' opioian ia called for.'- i ' The little boy looked very meek, and lie 1 r bis dinner io alienee, bat the fact was, ^3' 1 - Brnwn began to foel rneomfortable. , n 'Father aays Mr. Green was lb* bravest , men in tbe company.' Mid Sam Merrill, 'aod ( ibat ba wouldn't have been killed, only ha . (hbogbt of - very; ont els* before I imself.' 'Ltoll yew what, boys." a^id good natnred , Tras Granger. '] move and Second that wa *( are all a-ka®*4 of ourselves , aH tn favor of '
i this motion will eign fy it by giving three ch»«r*%r Ned Collins ; there be eemes tide < ininote, brimful of chicken^tie.' Tbe boys sprang to their foet. and swingj ing their caps in tbe air. gave three hearty ! cheers for Ned C< Ilio». and esrn Will ] Brown joined ia the thorns with as food a '• 'hurrah' as any of tbem. Sam Merrill exI p'nioed the whole matter to Ned. and he I only »«id io reply. 'I've often heard Annt Sally say that it was a poor Ipnd of fun ibat mu«l be earned by hurting somebody's i fitlimra. aod whst Aunt Sally lays is most . always so.' — Laditi' Rep* tilery. ' mcAlTIOXS AG.USST DK0W5I5A. I As multitudes go a-bething during tha i hints of summer, and eren the very heat ! swimmers. are liable to bedmsn-d. perbape m >re liable tl ao others from their very fearlessness, it ia a proper precaution for : every mdividoal to be familiar with tha mean* of nsuscilation. The London pby- . jm a, euros advise— 1 To send instanily for a medical man, and while he i« coining, placo the paliest 10 ih« open air. unless the weather is vary Cuhi ; expose the face and cheat especially '2 To clear the threat.— Place the patient gently face downward, witb one wrist under the forehead, in which position all fluids will escape by 1 ho mouth, an I the tongue ' itself will fall forward, leaving the eotrenre into the windpipe free. Asm I this opom1 iioo by wiping and cleansing tbe momh. ' 3 7o eirile respiration.— Tuni the patent woil and instantly on the aide, and 4. Kxcito the nostrilv uiih snuff, harte . bom. volatile salts, or th# throat whli a foa'uer. etc., and da.li cold water on the ( fan. previously rubbed warm. If there be ber in ' 5. o imitate rrsprradorv — Replace the pa* not on hia face, raising 'and aoppnrting • th- cheat Weil on a folded coat, or other ar icfe of dress. * 6 Turn tin body very gently 00 the side I and a little beyond, and then briskly on lb* t face, alternately ; repeating there messurto deliberately, efficiently, ood pwraeveringty, about fifteen time* in the mionte, or every foor seconds, occasionally varying the aids. ? (By placing the patient 00 the chest, its " <a*ity is cAjnprcsscd by the weight of the b dy. and "expiration takes place ; when turned on the side, this pressure is removed. 1) and inspiration occars-) 7. On each occasion that th* body is re. , pl-c»d 00 the face, make uniforns'kut efa fic ant pressure, with brisk movement 00 the back, between end below- the shSNllder * r* h'.ade* of bones, on each side, remorlog.tb* ~ pressure immediately before turning tbe body Tin th* side
j e. After respiration has been restored, ; promote the warmth of the body by tbe 1 application of hot flanaels, bottles or bladof hot water, healed bricks, etc.. Ur tho stomach, tbe arm-pits, between lb* thighs, and to the sole* of the feet, to 1 induce circulation and warmth, i 9. Paring the whole lima do not cease to • I rob the limb* upwards, with firm, grasping I pressure, pod with energy, uaiog baodker- ' chiefs, flannels, ate. 10. L-t tb* limb* be tho* warmed and I dried, and than rlnthad, tba |^sundkre 1 tnpplyii'g the requisite earmant*. Cautiuu.— L Smd qoickly for madlcal as.iHtance and for dry clothing 2. Avoid I all irongh usage and turning tha body 00 the back. 3 Onder oocircumitanpes hold the*body by the foet. 4 Do not r»ll | ih* body on "casks. 5. Nor rub the body ; witb auil* or spirits. 6. Nor inject tobacco : smoke or infusiop of tobacco. 7. Avoid ' tha continuous warm bath. 6. Ba parlica- ' careful, in every case to prevent persona crowding around the body. | General Ohtervatioru —On the restora- ; lion of life, a leaspoonful of worm water ' should bo given ; and then, if the power e^ swallowing has returned, small quantities of wine or brandy and warm water, or coffaa. ' Tha patient should b* kept fti bed, and a disposition to sleep encooragwd. Tho treat- ' ment recommended should b# pera-veied in ' for a considerable time, as it la an errone- • 00* opinion that person* art irrecoverable means* life does not soon make its appear. •nrs, case* hsviog bewn sscceesfolly treated ' after perseverin* several bwure. . I In endeavoring to reacoe a drowning f person, take him by the arm from behind. bitaeen th* elbow and tbe shoulder A . good awimmer can, by/^ftrading wafer." catch both arms thus, atffl keep lb# pereon f from going onder for aa hour. tb« very t'.'Ofglt of tb* victim aldioa-to laoyiag . np. for hia foet thso are maioiyw . gavad. and h# also, to that extent, " treadK. water " Ir a drowning person I* saiawd anvwhern else hw ia pretty aura to clalch 1 with a deatb-orip. and both p-ri«fc. I Any on* can remain for k -are in water. . whether ha can awim or not, by clasping hand* behind bim, throwing htmrelf on hi- bock, an aa to allow oaly his nose to be I out Of the w.fer A very lrttl* pftouaqeof , mind, force of will, and confidence. *Hl f enable any one to ausai lhi* poitiioa-

