Cape May Ocean Wave, 20 August 1863 IIIF issue link — Page 1

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*" •" TM* GOO'S THY rorvrilYc. AND TRUTH*." '- ..." • vol- IX. ' CAPE ISI.ANI). CAPE MAY COUNTY. NEW ■ri;itSKY.TlTtJRSnAY.Al.'GrST 20, 1863. "KObT

NOT ALCOHOLIC. A dighly concentrated. VEGlvTA BLE EXTRACT A I'l'KE TOXIC. DOCTOR HOOFLAND'S. GERMAN BITTES8, FKEPABKD BY OB. 0. X. JACBBOK, Phfladalphta, h. WIU BPFBCTU1LI.T CUKE inru courLAi.1T. DTiraniA, JAVniCB, Chroulc or IVervcms Debility. cimiic of thm Kidneys, aid all die aw m ssialag from a diaordarad Uw or Stomach. «■" ; • *«<h u coa*ttya- ' - :' 7-^SSS^SS9tk - ' l^ilsM»ar«rMt»t U UK MMMk. itior fetiw- / Unoiu. Mnklac .* Ftauertwz o il. lit c( lb. (ubhii. wUMUlt :«A7.WH Herri* I and PtShuii unathlac. tUaUiBf at tbe llson, Cbekiaa or SuSMatiaf araevilca* w».n is a ■sagtBMssssjariiB t . »KJ?iiSSrS3r _ n«S Er" Cheat, of Heat, towwiar lathe IMl forataat lm»ruioM of Oil. aad *tv*l Dapmalan ofTplrtta A Aad will peatttvely present Y.IIew Baser, BiU ■ imu Voaor, a. ■ TBUT couraut * KO ALCOIIOL OK BAD WHIIKIT I Th»r wHI rurv thr aborr AUraara la alaetr-elne De aau .ran. 10 frrl aril I Da 7"U want IQfrt iM oi Itervoueaen I 1=^-335!%--.*— tfrwKM UOOFI. AND'S . GKBUAN BITTERS PARTICULAR NOTICE. raab.tvvaaj. .ivaiMa

Than ara hut praparaMea* nM uo«»r tha lu of Mtteto. pn ur 1b quart hoMea, soapoanOrt of fheSheapeet whisker or seamen row, seatlaa^VcSssa^ - — Thle dan af bitten haa aM will aaatln - th't-'dc.aKrd* todtha5?»Jt" th» i;i'raH.p -.-r.-:suV!y o»-.rr tb' InSueacr »• Alcwhalle aonulaaw e< the went hind. tha dnlrt tor lienor It created aad kept »P. and tne malt la all ib» hnrrara at wadset upas a Creak onr. Lie For ifcoaa who Antra aad will has* a Ideas? Utters, 'a M.MlaS (b. »oll<wmw rar«,.t. Odoaabat Ua af Heet.ad*. Gmtu Mum aad tola artth Thin Quart, of G«.:1 Br«ndy «' Whlabtt, and tl« sUKacmrs . -or (Mat* In Iba marbrt, aad will fast art In. Too wilt ban all tha Wlhn at Hood aew hitfm in eoaaeetlea w«th a *eod arll-1* hf uqmw, at a aiueb U-a prlra than tMaa lafri-./ ya*tar>tUwa will aoat )»it. ATTENTION. 8OLDIER8! — a*D the FRIKS'DS OP SOLDIKRS. TTa sail Iba attention of all ha«lc| relation, nr Maad. la thr aroiT lo tba firt lhat •' Hoo«ati.'. > . Om.n «Urn" wlB cure alna-tratlia of IM d»- j rsjrsr ssrarySE?SKfifK j tha oe-spspers on the arrtral of tba stekJlWl be ■ gpfcsrw^.'iasKr'.T irnytojd amour | our aoldtara. hnndmi. of Ilan aUght kaadMdttat .' Wr rail j-*rtii ill, r Allantloa to tha fotlowtn* ■*■ nation , harora, » k<— life, to imc hla own lanfaag, . » haa oaaa aavM bj Iba Hitirrn"IhlteoalWtlv Aturoat tod. Itor. BaaZaa^aBrrBMi Httert haa aaaalay IfiTtCrr m at atr nar " ^WB^and hare i.ra lor tor .a.' toar yaaaa.a mrmbri of ahmc.c'. i.irbrateJ Vat- ■ . . - , M.Y'wtij! r.ss'.irjLssv: y .' 1 l^«b 'onSSnaahSy!" rt> ■ @ssS>® H Sreearkb italabrtia, ol auth balow amtk.! 3s.:nrrs1ar,.?i£-" Uau Cfc«t .lwr, tod Jtew Tor*. _ hjjjt t" hteSSSld. Oa. C Bh Kaiaa. J oka F. Waid, ua K MMtaUaa HaSSal U. Tbaaaar. Co. T. tothWaa. * r ' — •3SBlSBLt « apt ■ a ,V . .. ' > *" * . " j • 'i. ■ %+l-H

i-flrct ®oftrn. [Fioot Ch.tnh-re't loureaL] THE (HI RCIITARD TIE*. Hio'l; pat of a rummer gravu ' 'X pan white lily grew : It* root won red n ibr b»art of the dead. It. eop held tear* or detr. .. • | Blanched aa «bita a* a Orel day's snow, j It ajtranjr hy a m(»»»y at one ; • An ua gel's amtle tamerf into a flower, ' Aod it blo»M>m'ed tii-re wlfoe. It traa priaoaed round with iron rails. Cankering red aith rort j • Audit roi# lika a tl>saiag opr.n a iroood. 1 That coratwB poor human du.U It apraag fmai a maiden 'r brek'O heart— Twaa ibiTpnreu thing on earth : , Yet it* fihmu. riKiU were deep in a grara. And (Jvath bad fifen tl tiiith. It fed on non'shloe abd on ahowen, It drank the warm bright air 5 Th-r# waa onar a flower at tdeo'a gate Oi*» yet more para or Ikir. White and pura a* a virgin'* aobl, Boft aa an aogel'a »ing, Jl rose to hear the biroa abova Of hrann 10 raptortg sing Tba flewar waa aa whiu as 'bn maiden's abroad, A nf graciously It grew j And lla offering trf dewy laar* On the gram balow it threw. ! could not fbiok but it waa a sign Of hAppinea* and reit. For it arrmed t» wbi«|H>r to ua who'ra left, " Ypar Alice ir*Mi thr bte^ "

; j? clcd Igiseellaitn. ; MY REVENGE, ytf ; - ; VS k met io the beginning of the action, i and toy cuuiny, Richard With- | era — ha a rebel. I a fudrrali»t; be on 1 'out, I moonicd. It maitera not now < 1 why I hated him wuh aha fl. nwst wrath ' 1 of iay nature. " The heart knowrth it* ' own bittri-iitai,1' and tlie detail*, while moat painful to ma, wouli^ be of trifling interest to you. Suffice it to aay ihut our feud was not* political one. For , r ten years we wrrh the cloaest inmate* - ! that the aamo rtodiea the eame Uaies, > j and the aaiue aims cuuhi make u a. I 1 j waa the eider of tba two, and the i j stronger, physically, and compare! it el y ' { fnendicaa, aa the world takes 1t, without [J any near relatittia. Toung, solitary, ! . and Tlalonary, as we were, it 1* hard to I ' make yon understand what we w»re to j each 6. her lip to the period of our [ estrangement, working together, eating • together, sleeping together, I can safely j »ay tiial *> had not a "j-.y or grief, not a pleasure or vexation that we did not 1 .hare with aa almost, boyish ainglr heurtr cdoeM. One day changed all. We r aroae tn the morning dear friends ; we 1 'r lay down at night bitter enemies. I was ar man of eztirmea ; I either loard or bated aith the wbi le strength ..f iuj 1 heart The past wax forgotten In the [ preaent. The tea year. <4 kintiuare, of | congeniality, of almost womanly tenner- ( neat, ware Biased, aa with u sponge ' We looked each other in the fate, with • angry and eearrhmg, ryre-.-Mid lmi a • »ory few words (oar , , .« wad" t.m deap ' K> be dfrmooatrative). ' had we patted.. • Then ia my solitude I d*»Hed my . clenched hand o(ioa the Bible, and ; ! rewad, pwtohtoa-dy : t •* I may wait ten yars, Blchard ' Withers 1 I may wait twenty, thirty. If you will bnt sooner or leter, I swear ' I wiU ha»e my reaaogc !" And this waa the way we mat. I- wondar if he theueht of that da* ha laid hb hand on u>y bridlerein, and looked ap at we wi'b lii* irrwcbecoaa blaa »y»e. I scarcely think he did. or be rould not ha«e glaen me that look. He pas baauliful a» a girl ; indeed, the cantfatt of his fair, ar «... ' "'j. regS I dart exterior might- ha«« Iw. partly --like aeer t of my former attraction W • I Ma, Hot the hivi-ltorea of aa angel. ! had it bean We, woe Id not hare *a»od j him from me thee. Th.-r, .a. a pilot 1 1* hi* hand ; bn* (Vara be had tiw- to 5? i> ■

der the blow, throw op hii arm*, and ; go'dnwn In -the press. Bitterly as ! lifted him. the *iaioo of his ghastly face 1 haui- ted me the long day through. You all remember bow it was at Frederickabarx— how we Crowd tb» ! rirer at -tha wrung point, and under ! thai raking fire of the enemy, wire so j dl«a*tr..u»iy repulsed. It ana a jud niiatake. and fatal to | many a braae he5Tt. When oiph'- fell. I 1 lay upon the Geld amang the dead and . wuuuded I waa comparalitcly helpj leas. A ball* bad shivered the cap of' 1 my right knee, and my shoulder waa ; laid open by a 'abre cnt. The latter bied profusely » but by dini oi knotting j my haedk. nh *f tightly around if. I' ' managed to .staunch it In a measure, j For my knee 1 could do ootblng. Con- 1 sciuusneia did nut de*rrt me, and. the . pain was intense; but frum the moan* ' and wails aboat me, 1 judged that! others bad fared worse tb'aa I. poor fellows ! there was many a mother's J* darling suffering there— many of my j comrades, lads of eighteen and twanty, ' »h«i had never beta a night from home 1 uh'il they joiucd the army — spoiled , pets of fortune, manly enougbt «i bgart, hot children in years and consiilntioD, ' who had been used to have every iiule ' ■ ache and acretch compasaioned atitii an almost eitravsgsnt sympathy ; (here 1 they l«y, cripp ed, gashed, and bleed- 1 iug, crushed end dying, huddled tv- ' getber, some where they bhd weakly ' ■ rawled upon their hands and kpeos. 1 never a woman's touch to bind up fheir j ' wonnct*, or a woman's voice to wl.Japer j ge tie eonkuiatloB | It was pitch dark, and a cold, mise- ! I rable r-in was lulling upon us— the very j 1 j heavens aci-ping over our miseries. ; 1 j Then. tl>r< ugb the darkneaa i-id the , 1 : dritzling rain, through ihe groans and 1 ; paayrre of »he Mien men about ma, I j j heard a familiar voice close by my tide - j I " Watf-r! watery water I 1 am dr. 1 ( ' ing with ihirat— If it be bat a month- 1 ;ful — water! For God's sake, ph, give < , mc aratcr I" || I recoiled In dismay. It wig. tb* j 1 mice of my enemy, the voice of Rich- j « aid Withers. They were once very dear j I to me. those mellow tone* ! onoe tha i I plesasnta«t music 1 wished to haar. Do you think they softened mo now ? You . | arc mistaken I am candid aboat it. ' I j Mr blood (what I had lcf>) boiled in | | my reins when I heard htm— when 1 1 I - know that he lay so close to me. «Ul I . I ' powerless to withdraw frnm his deb ated [ I neighborhood. There tflas waterln my : ( canteen ; I h*d Ailed it before the la*t ball came. By Stretching out my hand I could ha*c given him to dr>ck. but I : did not raise my finger Vengeoucv ! waa awaet. I smiled grimly to myself, 1 and said down in my secret heart, " Not j ' a drop shall past his lips though' be parish. I shall bare my revenge." Do not recoil with horror. Llgten ' how merciful God was to me. There waa a poor - little drummer on the other aide, a merry, manly boy of > thirteen, the pet and plaything of the 1 regiment. There was something of the I German in him. Ha had been with us .. from the Bret, and was eonsldeicd one ■ of the abb-si drummer* in the army. I I We aenld never march to the tap of | Charley's dram again. He had got a I ! ball in his lungs ; and the expoenre and . , ' fatigue, tog- thrr with the woond had : made him light-headad. Poor little ehilrtl he crept'chme to me In the darknere, and laid his cj|*ek upon my I breast. Maybe he though*! it was 'his • own pillow at home ; maybe be thought 1 it his own '.other's bosom. God *l»n# t knows what he thought; but with his t hot aQas about my neck, and his curly ; head churn to my wieked hear., evea - then swelling with the bitter hatred of I my eromy, he began in hi* delirium , *» warmer, " Oer- Father who art in j heaven." • I wait a rough-bearded maa. I bed . been aa orfdran for many a long year. 1 bat not toe mai.y or too long to furgel I the simple -hearted pearer of my ebildhO"d — tbr dim risieu c-r that mother's j face over which the grass bad grown fot I taentj gKshging summits. 8om«ihlog - knder stirred Bilhin my bardtntd heart. (

I j It waa too dark to see the liitle face; I j but tlie young lip* weni on brokenly : I t si "And furgite onr trespasses aswefr ■ fortrhe those who trespass against n* " 1 I ) It went th.-oogh like a knif . — t • •' sharper tbac a sabrc-crt, keener than a ! i • 1 ball God wao merciful onto mo, and ! I I thU young child was the chanoel of His ; cwrey, ^ • |t 1 j *' Forg've us our trespasses as we for- ' 1 j give tlio« who trespass sgsinst us " 1 I I- had o. ver understood the words be- t ■ fore. If ao angel hsrf'uttered them, itj I ' | eonld seareely hate been' more of a rere- ! 1 j lation. For the first time, the thought | ' ' tnat -I mihh*. bo m-rully wounded, that 1 ! dta b - ight be nearer than 1 dreamed, • | ttru. L' nr wfth awe and horror. Ttte i a long-fcrgotten sermon was in ' I my csrs; •• It is' appointrd un»o nir* 1 pnee to die ; and aftet this the judg t Wfu:." " , 1 j Worse end worse. What nirasnre of mercy could I etpect, if «he same was j to be meted that 1 had meted to my j • The tear* swelled into my eye. and I ; trickled uowa mr cheeks, the fire, ] had 1 j rued since ray boyhood. I felt subdued, * and strangely uiorrd The rain wa* falling stii! ; but the lit - j * J tie head upon my breast wni> gone. He j h 1 had crept away silrtuly itjfo th-" d»rk- 1 | His tin. onseious mission »as per- 1 1< .formed; he did not re urn at my call ' . Then I lifted myself with great ejfuit 1 The old bitterness was crushed, but not h sltngether gone. | " Water ! water 1" moaned Richard j I Wi there, it) bis i. irony 1 it j I -Ira gad iay>clf close to Mm. I o "God be prui»ed I" 1 said, with a j solemn heart. • Dick, old boy, enemy 1 p j no ionger. God be praised ! I ain aide " | and willing to help you I Drink aud be 1 b i IWefd,." g ! 't had ho*"1 growing 'ightrr and I b j lighter in the east, snd uow it was uay. , ! day wilbla snd without- In the first . gray glimmer of dtwu. we looked into j each other's ^ Lastly face* for a moment ; ' 8 I tlie canteen Was *t^ Richard's mouth, ii and hr drstik as the 'f«r»rcd only can j •- I drink. I hutched him with moist, eyes, | r tipon my elbow, forgetting n:y * | bandaged shoalder. ' ii I Ho grasped me with both hands j ; Blood-stained and pallid as it was, his : p . fate iv u* as beautiful hs a child's. ■ n " New let me speak," he said, pant- ' f ! Ing. " You hare n.i-j idgsd tnc. Ru- 1 I , fut. It was all a luis'nke. I meant to | c bare spoken this tuornipg when 1 ! * grasped your—" " Forgive me, Dick," I tnorroored, h | I fcK sctpsthing warm trickle down my ! f j sbouhler 1 laiuted and fell. Tbeu all 1 was thick darkness. -is ) •• » • • . « ft j I opened my eyes. Where was lit ■ How pdd everything was 1 Rows of | beds stretching down a long, narrow ! j hall, bright with sunshine; and women, i * wearing while caps Cnd. peculiar dreasrs, ; c flitting to aad fro with a noiseless actir- ! t ' ity, whitb, in my feaiful sickness, It tired me to wotcb. Mr band lay out-/ side of the aoceri. It waa shadowy as. t 1 a aki-letoti. Hftiat had beeome of mys"« flreh? Was a child' or a man I n 1 body or apirit I 80 light and frail did > f I fuel. 1 began to thiok I was done with I i material thing* s' »g- ther, had been 1 I .subjected to some reining proce**, and ' [ was nhw awaken to a new existence. I • But did they hare beds in the other I . world I I waa looking Itxily at the op- ' peaite one when some onr took my a. 1 hand. A face waa bending over me. I : 1 looked op injo it with a beating heart 1 1 T"C golden sunshine was on it — en the 1 lair, regular features, tba red lipa, and r the kindly blue aye* 1 " Dick !" 1 jgnaped, " where have you r beso all these years *» 1 *' W«eks," yoo mraa, wld Richard, 1 with tb* old ttoUa. " But never mind now. Yon are better now, 4,ear Rnfus 1 Yob will ll*u!, dear. We absll he happy . togeiher again " t ' Where am I V I nskhd, still batyl - ". What is the matter with ma I" 1 " Hospital, iu tha firat place," said t Richard. * Typhus in the second. Yon ; were taken after that Bight at Frfcde- . j ii«kabar|.n '

It breke 0|>ou me at ouce. I rtmem- ' that awrul night. I could uerrr, 1 never forget it again. Weak as a chili, '"covered ray f»c» aith ray hands, and j into tears. Richard waa ou bis j by my side at once " I «as a brute lo recall It." be whls-j ; pared, rcmoracly " Di uot think of It, , old buy — you must not excite yourself t Is alllurgonon aud forgiven." " Forgiie us our trespasses as we forgiv* those who trespass against nt!" I J pray-d from my inmo-t heart I " Those words have be»n in yoor ' j month night and day, aver since you j taken," said my friend. I lay silent, cogitating, i " Tell it c ono thing. D;ck," I asked. ! " ap we iu the North or 8»uth ?" " North — iu I'liiUda-iphin." " Then you are c prisoner," I said, 1 mournfully, recalling his principles. " Not s hit of it." " W hat do you mean I" Richard lmgbed. ' 1 bate seen the error of my ways, i have taken ihe oath »f allegiance. I yon a t- strei g muogh araiu. wr I shall fig'n »u:e liy si-le." " And the wound in your head I" I . ! ssked with emotion, ltokii g up at bis ' j handsome face. '* 1 oi<"t mi-ntlon it. It healed op " And the little drnmmer." Richard bowed bis head upon my hand " He was found dead upon the field " "Hasten bless turn! They say he died prayit g, with bis .mother's name iii. ii,... - "Revere him as an angel." 1 whis- • pered." grasping hitn I y the hand.1 " But for hi* dyutg prayer we had yet j enemies Oh, Richard. God's ' 1 grace Is w«th the --■» -vj 1" . ^ TIIF. IIF.I,L-ROPi: rOI'XD. That is a good atory ^ii<l lately iu a i Scottish newspaper A tnvern.keeper the lit'le ti>wn of Ki%o haj recently , erected a aho«er4iaih in one of his . part of nb'cit a-s* fitted up at u ! sort of bar. or ' tap-room.' as ihc-y call It on the other aide. L One evening an Irishman, who hap- ' pened to b* drinking with a f«w com pi- ] tiioos in one of* the ■ otes, rose for the purpose of 'ringing for more liifuor. ■ I uro nd lor the bell cord, hit I eye f< 11 "iii? the rope ntmcbed to t e sbtwer-baib. . ; I "'By 8t. Pathr'ck 1" said he j "It have found the ball-rope at last" Aud seizing it, he geva it * strong pull, | In an instant he vu drenched'to tha | 1 skin, find almost frantic with rage. To the no ema'l >:ons> u ent of bis cQrnpa- | nions, he roared out . ' Och, he the power i ^ i* that the wsy I ! play trick* upon travellers li-e mr- j self I Be jabers, if I*Bad thai big baste j I of a landlord forninst me, I'd tache him j better manneks." Aptartaou or Wedlqcx —None hot J tha married man Las a home In bis old j 'age, None has friends, then, but b» ; >,iic but he knows and feels the solace of the domestic hrartb; none but he and freahrns in bis green old age. amid the affection* of his children. There IS no tear shed for the old bsche lor; there is no re^dy hand and kind to cheer him in bis loneliness snd bi rewvemeul ; thfSBaJJkJtui'e in whose eyre he can sea hit^atT reflected, and from whose lips be can receive the unfailiag assurance of can sn% lovs. No. Tnc old barhelor may be courted for his money He may cat, and driak, and revel, as such things do ; and he may sicken and die.io a hotel or garret, with plrnty of attendants about fata, lite so many cormorant* wc.itng fur their pray Rot be wjll never kn«»w what it is t<i be l»ved, and to live agd to die amid a loved circle He can never know the comforts of the domestic fireside. K Ti.s man wbe is trnvpeor to tale a *•*» paper has bought Uf i5*.-»*Msil dog. an old 1 Ihot-gen and a Ire' watch. Ha edo- ' cates Ue children Jn lb* street, end his shanghai* hoard oa his neighbors

. I DURKCTIOX8 AR TO "RCfEIT* ISO ATTENTIONS." , j We G»d the following' practical adI sice adrift in-our exchange papers ; I I "A yoncg man admires a pretty girl. | and must manifest it. He csu't help .! doit-g so f.,r the lift of him. The young lady has a tender be»rt, reaching out like vine-tendrils for something to cling to 8he sees Vie admiration-, is fi.tter- • | begin* soon to lot*, expects some [ tender avowal, and perhaps gets so fsr * j as to decid* that aha will chooto m a* - ! white satin nnd*-r thin g mze,' etc , at i I the very moment the gallant that *he loves is popping ib- quretfoQ to another j dsmiel ten milta off I Now, the diffi- , j cnlty lies lu not precisely understanding | the difference between ' polite attcnI tion' and the tender maaifcatotious of 1 love Admiring a beantif-l girl, and wi*h. j ing to make a wife of her, are 001 j always the same thing; and there-fore it is necessary that (he damsel should be ; "P°D the alert to discover to which class ! the attentions paid her by handsome and fashionable young gentlemen be- ' long. Firet, then, if a yonng man ^jreeu yuu in a lond, free, and hearty lone ; If he know* precisrlj where to pot his hands or- his bat ; If ho turn* : his back to yon to tpenk to ano'her; if ! h* 1-11* yon who made hit coai ; if he squeezes your hand ; if be eats heartily iu your presence ; if, 111 short, he snerzea when you are singing criticises yonr curls, or fail< to be fjoltsb in fifiy ways every bour. then doot fall in love with hitu for ihe world ; be only sdmires you, lat him do or say what he will " CHERISHED REMEMBRANCES' Timk niellogs idea* aa it mellows I wine. Thing, in themselves Indifferent acquire a certain tenderness in recollec- [ ti'Ough. remarkable neither (or elegance nor feeling, rise up to dur m-mort dig- ■ nifi'd at the same time and endeared. As countrymen in a dia'ant land acknowledge one uD- lher as friends, so obj-cta to. whlc'1, when pre* nt. we gave bot little aiteuiiun.-e'e nOur«hed Id dis- ■ tan 1 remembram-c with a cordial regret. , If in their own nature of a reader kind. 'the ties which they bad In the hour: are drnwn still do*- e, and wo recall tbein I with an enthoaiasm of foaling which the ' same object* at the immediate rime are unable to excite. Tbe hum of a little tnne, to which in onr infauey we Havw 1 oteu listened ; the course of u brook, 1 which in onr (-b'Mhood we bare fre- ! quenllr traced ; the ruin* of an ancient , building which wo have remembered j ' elmost entire ; the half-faded miniature I j of the tellowid dead— these renieai- | brer.cts sweep over the mind Uith so • epcnsr.tiiig puwer of tenderness si-d , j mslsnchol). at whose bidding the plecsI urea, the business, the ambhicn of the j presrn' moment fadd and disappear. 4. Our finer f-eHngs are generally not ' more grateful., to the fancy than moral - to the mind Of 'hts tender power , which rememhrance ben over us, several I uses miglit be made. This divinity of j memory, did we worship It sright. might lend i<* aid 10 our happiness as well as. 1 our virlos. t , f.ITBAOHhil'ARV FLOODS- 1 GRAVEYARD WASHED AWiT, > A sad incidasi or the severe rain storm s of lost week, which was felt with more or Irss fnrca aver mi»i of tha Slat*, wasfbt washing 'sway of, pariina* of lb* grave- • yard in Moravia, Cavuga t'onniy. ft bs- . ing rumored in tfcw village tiial Dry Creok, swollen beyond all preeevlcnt, w*a fasi undermining the western portion of ihe came. i' rery n large crowd haet-oad ibithcr, with \ spades aad shovels, in hope t^at tbay miyhi ezhome the remain# of their frienA • ere the walflra coald reach them. But Iho d hopa wa* in earn, and coffin after eoifin was was eeeh to ba waebwd firam its raetiwg place, mingling proa iscnouaty with stamp*,, trees snd drift wood of every description, r A bout an aer* of soil was »a<hed away to tba <Ubth cf twenty fset; and as soma • rrf 1 hs coffin*. r-ti eat. tbe rvmgh boxes a woe Id strike 00 sen, baret and l*»va ani exp.w«d coffin, tha cover of which coming "(T i' 1 conteoi* wnoii( pilch headlong into '• iba torrent! The rwmins of tb* late r l.veetea«at 8loy»l, war* vastuxJ out before , t hey e»«M be reached.- wliltoaahva^ auaooou* efforle were awda to rare them. . d Flasllv, however, tk* body wsa secoreu II *onre distance doWE tb# stream. Altogel her sixteen bodies wer? thus swept •wsy. only eight of which had hwen"VecovereduBio M cine* day m.un. A nember of -kail* vu-d ei-vnal Irenes were rreevered ■ bell day ; also frarmems nf grass elotbee, j coffin lids and side* were strewn along the nan »• a* eareie s!« aath* dvifl wood and . coffin, m.l wholly washed out prntroded a » foot of more from the embMkment —Ex-cAi-.gr -s ^