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«• '-.Vr V 1 ' ' '"Tati "LBf ALl/tHF. ENDS THffiU AIM^T AT BB Tfrt 'tlOP'B, THY COUNTRY'S. AND TRUTH'S." . v
■ VOl/lX.
~^APB ISLAND; CAPE MAY COUNfo, NEW J1SKSEY, THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 3, 1S63.
NO, 14.
' NOT ALCOHOLIC. a highly concentrated. VEGETAHLfi EX.T-HACT A roue TOXIC. DOCTOB HOOFLAND'S. CKRMAX BITTERS, PREPARED BY ns. c. x. jacmw, nuirafohfa, ?*• 7 wEULflrrfiCTDAia.T cnau UVKB C,»MI%AI"T~S- • ,*- mranu. Chronic or Wanroaa DeWlity. Disease | of tha Xldneya. ardsdl iUUMi A MtietnmtOaotemwAim^ ■L or Stomach. 1^g$g8®r "ntM, iSSimSut Om " ft - ^ft ct CnKjulS »"•> IwpriillouoI^pW'sAod wt»po..O»jJ^o;^.ttjwr«v.,. BlU HL TIK> qOHWW R ID ALCOHOt O* ,"AD WIUSSttT ' I \.iy I ngggSEEZ KJOKSttSg,'.*? . .. . HOWI.ani rs op.rman Birri:®. PARTHrLAK NOTICP TUfao Mr »*»y jeepsrstliw* «o >d apd* ttv . Sjj^g3HSS L iti
S ib'tmn Vtbd>Aantk Dyoa** i '» dasher#* Ufa L ' f- ATTENTION, 80LDIER6! ft IID THK | FRIENDS OF SOZDTETfS. We nidi the vtfciwton of *11 b»»ln* m!e«l«u re I SS£>iESagSSi&ff f jg^.^-agjetagffia I^Tih.', It •!■'— ttlttnl '■'• II— It '<■' "".I. I "t^SSui*— < » - m— , - f ~ or n..^f It.. 9 rwu-iHrltl-. I aaCTBB«w:»^asffisaaBg I sars ss OTfjrWiiSSssaBSe'S: I I ■ SsSSKSSS —• 9 I ^-jviriatsrs'A'S I arBgEfe'dmi'.&'s'an " Hilitf ■ HBAMor attwnuivin ! I "^wTrSt m£?l* N OBBTA I -A: "*•*• /gir^
f tl«l ?«h»imperishable. The pore, the bright, tb# VtfMlif#]. Tb»t Mirrrd oar bearui in TOBtb ; Tb« i inputs* t> A«orldU»» j>r#y*r, Tbe dnuu of tars sod truth . . Tbs longings slur somatbing lost. The .pirtt'ft JW**11* Tq^s tarring* sftar bettor-hopes— , Tt»«> ibiogt can nsvtr di«. .,••{ 1 1 be Ua.wJ band stretched forth io i The kindly word in fn.l i dor* tow Tb.t prot.i • (i**ad iodMd : Tb» rin for Bwey.noftiy kreaUtwd. IVk* joatic* lhrw.ua* Wfk : Thwww Ikiog* ahnll B»w« cHw. < ? Tb* B.mory of . cWpilf lunii. Tbw.pr.Mor. of .kiM. And .11 ikn »riB»., i»«t *od full. That mabw op lor.'i Crat blfa. , If w|lh . firm, OBcbMgiaf f.stb. And hnlr Iroat on high, TboM bMda ban elMpcd, tkoM lips bar. I Bat — 1r* t - .... . '.. .. t Thau things .ball ner.r dir. Throng*! and ika kUur word. That » ocodrd a. it fail ; i Tba"c bill log w«ot of .ympally W« ftal. bni onaar laU ; 'I ba hard rapolae that elulte Uit baart Wtoow bopaa aasra bonndictf bigb, If an ao fading racorJ kapt — 1 bMa Ihiof* aknil o*ntr die. Lat nolbl.f paaa, for rrery ba.d Mail Bad mas work to do ; , Lom not . ehaoaa to wakan lore— Ba Arm, and Jmi, and *ra». a 8o ahall a light Ikat caoool fada a Raam on tbrr irr.ni oa high. J And angni roieaa aay to lhaa— J Thasa thing* ahall trwaordia. t
itlfct ^BisdUang. | "Jacotjes lajitte" , " ft men maka tEoir boaal of the boooraRt nana, dm rank in lift, which ' Ihnjr inherit from their father*, why ' ■,-kcuM it not ke a mocb nouler boait to ' owe only to ayanif, to my own talent, my gtnlna, my indoatry, name, and for- ' lunc, and poaition In *oeiety— to make , them nil, in abort for nytelf 1" Such were the reBrction* of n yootb I who, one Borning in the year l^il. »u ! hurrying, ia much apparent agitation, : ilung the eueot of tb* Ckaotaoe d'An- 1 . tin, and who now .lopped, u if node- j I elded whet to do, before on* of the tundiomeit hotels in Pari*, whieb bid r, been lotyj the abode of t great banker, i No rentier bad be passed through 1 I the gate, than a my n.taral feeling of j ! timidity made the youth draw back a 1 few step*, wfejto hit tnild and pleasing ' conalenatioe seemed to *uo«e a Bill t mora pensire exprasaion aa hi* eye fur ; a moment fall apon hi* plaio comae \ garb. The courage which had led him [ oa so for had taddoaly abandoned httn. 1 and be would hat* gone away a* be [ came If the coaclergr, or honee-portcr. > who bad been for eome moment* watchI ing and smiling at bla eni6arraa*m*Dt, » bad aot advanced toward* him, and io- , qairpd whatbewaatBl j "I with loteeMoaaWar Ptrreganx,n i replied ho, oweoBfagod by something io | the took of lb* man. ' " Yon can walk up stain," answered ' the pofter, pointing to n wMn. handsome stairoase, which our young b«ro \ ascended as if eectj step was msde of Bra, so orach did be drsnd catting wlUr r his hob-nailed and du»ty show the noft ■ il l, n*\tm sliln'i werod lb la the note room be found a grant many people, pod .hood modnmly io a earner, wbils the big ttar» trembkag ia bis ey» ,ga be thought of hi. «ati«a town, of the patent at root of ^ eompaoione of Mi eyidhood, and of the la* adisn of Ida mother-ber apguUh, » b»r fe.rs, bet ndinonmno*. •' Yon barf hare a humble borne, bat still a bo me,'' mtld she, wnepiagly ; j •f ' »br.^T. ' £ **££$ ~ ; " pliad rr^uag tkw^ my brotaa**." 9*4fr*. ■■ V l!J *'
•^fot it i.e»er comes to tiose who do not seek.* replied the yoong^nthusisst. •• Bron." tafd ihe fond mother, " go, If it must be so; but ahoird yon dot i succeed, do not be ash.ffled to retuni ■ to us. Thr boose of yoor fotber, and the sftns of your mother, mill be erer opoo to you; nn8 like the prodlgM, you shell hare the fatttd calf killed for y&tF ' ' f"" WT--- - ■ Hb'bud laughed In his youthful ardor at the poerfli fears of his toother. "i?ot succeed r* .aid he to himself ; " impossible 1" For WM hi* faith shakro in th* moraine on which he left hie home ; foe that morning wee a lotdy one in April, and bow conld he dirtro t !he gracious proridence of GoA wbfirt the vary air be breathed seemed redoier.t with 'Hi* goodness ? JJut as be drew near the end of his Journey, the goal of his, hopes, he pagan to fed some misgivings ; and by degraos tbey look sueb j posers* ion of his mind, end of efHJ fscuity , that at the mounmt it csmo to ' ] hie litre to ban aa aodlance of the | b.nktr, he would gisdiy bate been any- | where else. 1 Moi sleur Perregaax wm standing in : tho window ; ba w.s reading e leiwr, i nod hwrdly raised bis eye as the youth | courrd, aa if awaiting bis speaking ; ! but .bearing nothing bnl a horri-d ; breathing, he at length looked op. and perceired a »«7 pleating countenance and dips parted m if to address bim, bat go sound we* audible. "Jfon wished to set roe, air 1 " aaid the jb.iiker, courteeody that tbe youtj; rtcesered bis roice and course | sufflciently to reply"8ir," sa.d be, "I bare neither n.te'e, cor fortonf, nor rution, bat J i . .i i»l -_J -A- I.W„. !
the will and power to c C»rij jou gi*e ice a placji in your office ! , c TiW lowest woold satisfy me-" I 1 Wh«| is guur name, jioaag roan ?" uksa M. P.rreg.ux, unable to take, bis [ 1 eye. uff hi* intrresting countenance, nod c reading talent in tbe bright eye that, in a renewed hope, bow fearlessly met bis. « ''Jscqoes LaGtte," was the answer. t " Yfiur ago T" • ( " I am twediy ; I was born In 1767," t answered be. 1 "Arc you a Parisian?" was the c ba4k •r's next .qoestion. jl "No, sir; lain from Bayonne," an . swsred Jacques. •« "• Wbst is yonr father f" rejoined the t banker. f " He la a carpenter," replied the I Tooth ; " but be baa ten children, and 1 1 am eome to Pari, to try to help my fo- | iber to support them." i { " It ia a laudable design, yonng man j bat 1 hare no place vacant"— then ' i added, as he aa# the etter disappoint- i manl that ma.ked that express! re coo >- < tenance— *• at pre-ent, at least 1 am i iorry that It ia so, bnt another 'ime, i perhaps " Then dismissing tha ybtft'. > with a roartoous hat iapsfatire gestore, i he Whs obliged to retire Every iking reemfed to swim before hir. eyeu. He knocked up against the door, which be forgot to qpen ; his foot ' slipped In the site-room, *'an^ he neatly ! fell down the tteiroase JNt Ike courage ba had ekerted— and more ft nccoanrr than may be at Brat Imagined in-ud . dressing a great man and asking a fsror of blm— •« i Ms eoerage had foBrt as be beard the wuids vf the rejcctton. He felt a kind of shame, nay, almost of remorse, al hiring expoaad himself to a refusal ; aed lha last woWh • df the banker, and the last words of hH mother, seemed ringing in bis cars. Slowly sad with dowocaat eyes he was crossing Uie banker's eonrt-yard, when a pin oo the grooad caught bia aitaation. He stooped, picked It op, and stuck it eerofally 1a the lining of tba end of bis coat; Thia aertog, %Hfling as If-wWs, dscMcd tba lortunes of the tsrpeetor'a son j M. Perr gsnx wqg still standing in" ! the window., auabk to sbak(^ off lb* . j painful baqrkMiaa . 'oft ^ 0!" j j hie tolmal kadiBallsdap.toaka iafaaast ' j lag conatanancs of ^ i
j conn with slow .od languid step, bit youthful figure drooping under disap- i pointmeht, and deep dkjeclfoa markirif e«#ry feature. Suddenly be saw him i •toop to aome object too minnlc for bins < to distinguish fiom the window, and pick it up By the use he made of it, I the bunker guested wh»: It must be ; tnd the strong impression made by ibis i little Jocidsnt npon hit mind, it perhaps inconceivable by thoae who know not i , tow accurately character may be estimated by trifies -ll was eaffici-nt to enable M. Perregaux to discern la the ; yoothfut snltor he had rejecled a mind ] i trained to .order and economy. "Tbe i t man," he said, " who would noi let even I a pla be lost most have habits of cilcu- j t lation, order, aud steadiness;" and ' » opening the window, he gave a alight : I congb. Jacqutt looked up, and taw . the banker beckoning to bim to eome i back. Quickly was he again oa the * bnndeome staircase ; bat we will not 1 > say that this time be wae at cautions of i Spoiling tbe carpets ; and once more he . stood, with head erect, in the .presence of the banker, i " You will grant my request ?" said , be to him, is j* tons of happy eont fideare / ; " Whet makes yon so eura ?" asked L the banker, with a smile, i " Why otherwise would you hare ! t called toe bacx ?" said LaGtte. , "Quick Intellect, order, and economy— you ought u> make a good clerk," J was the cordial response of M. Perne gaux- "Go to the bank; 1 ahall be j b j there immediately, nod will set you to ; j wort" r | Such a wind aa that of Jacques LaI .j fit:* couln not long ramaio in,a mbordii nate capacity. The Revolution broke
I out. At tbe time of tbe Assembly of 1 I Notables, be wss book-keeper, then ! cerittpwper, and ia 1&)A partner to M. Perregaux, and, soon after, hit sac- 1 and exocolor. In 1609 be was 1 appointed Director, and in 1811 Preai- ' dent of the Rank of France, having prtviouslj made President of the > ot Commerce, and Jndge of 1 the Tribunal of Commerce for the 8eine ' Department, whieb in 1816 he was ' choft'D to represent hi Uie Chamber of ■ Deputies. After the Revolution oT ' July. 1630, be fiBbd some of tbe High- < •eat offices of the 8tate. His wbolv career was honorable to himself and bene- ' ficial to others Honorable to. himself, 1 be was indebted, under Providential 1 to his own talent aud irro- 1 proacbable conduct for hit brilliant sue- { 1 cess ; aid nsefol to others, for be traver I lost an opportunity of doing. good. Ilia { ' benafli* are still fresh io the memory— ! the heart- nnmory— of raaoy. A child of the people himself, he oever forgot the first day be stood a suppliant in tbe . ant>- -room of M. Perregaux ; and nerir_ oid heavy heart, that he conld reliefs of burden, return nnsolaced. He -died on tbe 2Gtb of March, 1811. Some ehort time before, he had «cnt for bia graodcbildreo, tbe children of bis only daughter, the Priucesi de la Moekqaa ; aud baring embraced them, and taken a tender leave of his wife, and daughter, and aon-iu law, he gently ex- . nirvd without a struggle or any apps- ■ rent suffering. _ clear ok the draft, The Reading (Pa.) Time# aaya : It fo ' well known that commissioner- Kaapp 1 ru aery precise aad exact io his pro- ' caeXtufMifwajrs keeping an sy« to tbe ' interests srf tha eoiratry. ablla dealing honorably with all. Mow, U happened i that amoog^ia able-bodied mea drafted i from one of tba Heiceibergt. there was > aa obese specimen of bnuuohy. but . whoa tie pbsnaqs . bit as one of the r elect. When bo received his ' ticket - for sogpV ha hastened to ReudHtg. and f koo. hig wbpre lired the cutest specimen of a fovyer, Ira w»rt straight to bit ) oflfo*. Said be. ' I'm drafted 1' t • Tba dsawt you try ! it sust baa* f beta a very Strang ataa that drafted '[H. - . ~ A iJ ' - ' Well, I'm drafted, aad #ant to got : ^ ^ * ! ! ]>«jau«prawdM to tba office of f!;buqgtom)|sHa<y. ■
' Here,' said the lawyer, ' Commia- I aioner, I have n aubatiiote.' Commissioner looked at the wheexy i specimen for tome'time- "He won't I do ; ean't march.' "Bat he moat do,' blundered ont the ' ; 4 au^ yon know be will.' ■* He etra'i march ; be wont do ; and ' 1 can't take blm.' This was what our smart friend flc- 1 aired. J " He wont do0eh ?' . 4 J ( • Tlfo. be Wont ' Well, then, scratch hit nsme <fff the list ; ba ia drafted, aud wants to be exempted ' The Co'mmiesioner looked at the law- 1 Iyer for about a minute, then regarded ' the fat draft, and without speaking a { word, scratched off bia uame. BOB fT.4DDI.VN OORNE TRADE. , 'You know Bob Waddin, I guess,' said Uncle Mike. •Not that 1 recollect,' I replied. ' Well. Boh was an amaEin' hand at j trading horses, and generally came ont ahsad, too. I never knew htm really I girdled and the underbraab cut but : 'Hiw was that, Uncle. Mike ?* ' Why, yon tee, Bob had been getting j a gray horee ia sotne of hit deslin'x. I that was just about a* nice a horse to ; look at as ever put bis nose through tbe : rack-sticks He was a hnmnn-lookiu' I 1 borse, and nclhia' shorter He was |_ , always Icokio' erter start, and carried i j bit tall like the national flag on the : , Fourth of July ; but he wouldn't work ; j he was above U ; he'd almost stop when . b* tsw his tbtdow followin' him, for | . fc^r he might be drawin' it. ' ' Now, then,' ssy* Bob, 'some iudi- n
vidual it hound to be picked up ' rc ' 8o makin' an excuse that old Gray's s| shoos wanted fixin', be seat bim to the tr harnessed up bit t'other J horses, bitched them to a wagon load of stone, drove down to 8am Hewitt's, tl -stopped before Urn door, took out the j, near horse, and harnessed up the gray ja io bit plane, wen( in, took a drink, and hnraitad around tilt snme follow •hoeltl I icom" along who wanted to apecilate. t1 He hadn't waited long when he seen t, soma feller co.mtu' down ibe road likeali v creation, bia horse under a full ran, |« while he was sawln' the bits, and hoi- d lerin ' Wo ! wo with oil bis might and 1 main. He mnnsged lo stop him arter a 0 little by Sam Hewitt's, and tnrnin' blm 0 around, he come up a slappin' bia bands a | and In a tesrin' passion with his bonier' a j ' He's never ready to atop,' says he, a j "that horse ain't; and though he'a the c best horse I-e*er owned, yet I'm deter- ( mined to get shut df him.' t ' Well, jolt then, out comes Bob, and r mounted his wagon, just as if be was f goie' to drive off, when, eex he, ' Hallo, ( stranger, parhaps you'd like to deal t with me for a steady one.' ( * Why. yea,' aaid tbe stronger, ' I i woold like aomethin' a lfttle more qnlet • than that go-ahead, sea^-dragoa "rascal of mine.' ' 8o Bob looked at tbe sorrel, and I found him a square bail! animal, his eye i full of fire, ad' every muscle ia full 1 play.' I • Well.' oojs Bob, after a few wards with me, ' there's my gray— toft's your 1 •orrel •, what's your proposition ?' < •Now you're talMn,' ssid tbe stranger, i •xaminin' the gray, as he stood hitched ' , to the load of stone ; 'lH giro yon tor- * ral and tbe best forty dollar clock in my i I wagon for the grpy.' * Done I' *r«d Bob, ' Jtot nnkittk.' i • Neither of Ibem naked t'other quae- I tloaa, 'cause neither of them wanted to , answer any. Tha horses were swopped. ; Bob bed got biaeloek ; and tb* stranger | got Into bl* w ngop, -took np hi* lines, i i wad biddin' 'em jgoOd-bj,' was about to i start, when Gray pot a atop to it, and wouldn't budga a kait lu vain did the I i stranger whip wad eohx— not an fnah I could aa gat. . Ttora sal Bob, taeghing I ia Mi starve, almost ready to hwrSt, to i no bow the atnthger wwtfylrg io start, art eiWfon. Not a wrfW dViS tha stranger aay, however ; but after he f bad got tired, aad bad g^rea up tryiu' H Cajttuqra, Ha eo»e and ent down on thai
bloek. bob thongbt he might si well be going. So, picking op the rib- — ' Go along 1'aays ha- Tha sorWl tornrd his head, and looked back a* him, as mufib as to say, ' Dont you wish I would?' bnt. didn't stir or poll In vain Bob eoakad and patted; sorrel there, ondwunt anywhere else.* ' Well, I reckon It's my tojn to laegh now,' aaid tbb stranger." 'J wpposd you'll call again when yea come to town?' '' ' Oh. nerer mtsd.' Wald Bob, ' eorrt? will go, or die you toutdnt get here' with her *' ' Oh, yet.' said the rfrsnger, 'Joe csn start him if youl! only bring some shaving* and kindle a tire ondtr blm. aa T * did' ' Then ue laughed agalo, aed when 1 came away, they were plsyin'a game tq tee who should take 'em both.' loxge8t dowt-hell in the world. Tbe Bhore Ghaut — a down-bill fifteen and a half mils* long— if thus dascribed j in the Albion : ",A highly Important railway communication has beao opened | io tbe Bombay Presidency.-- This communication brings the high lands of tho Deccan — two thousand feet above tbe I aea level — into close coonection with 1 the low lands of the Presidency, and 1 with tbe town of Bombay itaelf; con- ' verting Deccan into a kind of aobarban > I. district for the citirens. The Bhora I I Ghaut iodine of tbe Great Iudiaa Pe1 ninsula railway baa occupied more tban I I seven years in construction ; and during 1 the greater part of tbat time there have ' | been forty five thousand workmeu daily employed upon it. The Incline ill aeeuipiujcu UJIUU IV. 1UI IUCIIUC M ■ M-
ries of tunnels through mountains of rock, viaducts stretching across valleys, alternating with eadt other, each part a triumph ot modem acfeaoe and skill. The, incline reaches, at one long lift, tbe height of ono thousand eight bnudred and thirty-two feet, the highest deration yet attained by any railway iocliua. It fifteen and a half mil*! long, und ita .awrage gradient consequently one in 16:39. Tbe Mgbesw gradient ia otto jp thirty -seven, and tbe sharpest curve fifchains radius. The luuoeit arc twenty-five in number, the greatest of any of them being three hunand forty-one and-n half yards. There are eight viaducts, one consisting of eighlgtotoM* of fifty foet. and beitig hundred aud twenty e in* feel bigb, ltd another of • like number of archeti with .'maximum height of oao hundred and forty-thrfai feet. Tba qoaatity of cutting amount* to two million and sixty-seven thousand seven hundred and thirty-eight cable yards, sad of tmbsokmenu to tws million four hundred and fifty-two thousand three hundred and eight cubic yards. There axe twentybridges of ratios* spaas, and s*»-enty-foor culverts Tha total cost of tba work has bran £1,060,000 stedlng, £ 68.730a milt'" I had stopped at a store In Miaaonri purchase tome little article*, when attention was directed to an old lady wb« wss examlnhigji pleee of calico. 8he palled it (hit way and that,aa if aha would tear ft to pieces, held itttp to tbe In different positions, spit on a corner, and rubbed ijL between her fingers to try if the cobra were good. She then stood still awhile seemingly not entirely satisfied. At tut she cut off a piece with tb* dark'* scissors and banding It to a tall, gnwtir-loofcfog girl, of aboat sixteen, who was atandiag beside bar, aai4 s 'Hera, Lit Jena, yon take 'o chaw that, 'u aaa af'tfadOe.' Lis Jane pat I» let© .'to# mouth, aad dutifully want to work - ' , ;. — ■ — "be .a 1? ' • A waatern paper eWka* ttoaameswf two sabawibvr* from iu Ust, bautsa fitof •tra rtoqaita bang. The publutor mjp b* wist compelled to b« ».rererteVs« he ; did not kaow ttojy prsseot a4<r**» etiar dsy . of tto hsrtb treat met t -to wana»v«»«rar hit iltbar. " He traaU ma," said toi . moarefaUy, •• at if I was Ms son by anottor - i J father sad mathvr." *

