\ 7 ' . ' * . c •
■"LEI ALL THE EXrS.TBOP JUM'ST AT, B#*tIkT OOD'S, TUV OOUSTRT'S. AND TRCT1T8." NC
- V()|" IX'
CAPE ISLAND. CAI'K MAY roi'XTY, XSW JERSEY, THURSDAY. SKl'TKMUKR 10. 1SK3.
NO. 15.
NOT ALCOHOLIC. A HIGHLY CONCENTRATED. vegetable extract A PTBE TONIC. DOCTOR HOOFLAKD'S. , gcbha9 bittew. PREPARKD BY 81. 0. K. JLtt&OX, FhlladelpWa, Ta. WILL EFTECTir ALL Y CTXRB uvkk ooaruiiT. BWMU. JlMBlrE, Chronic or Ketrom Debility, XHaeaae of tho Kldafiya, acdall <Um*m arfaitig trom a diaonfeved Uw h 'or Stomach. f .Arulcre. or miM u> in* Stomach. Sour Erue-tr-um. Waving ■« riutl*flB( at (ho Ml o! W« i issn sass-wadr*.. -anti? i ^assrtaZSiKtse' *£5MgbRs5tKjr • k JShfek- ■ of Heal, Ooratac m t>» ■ n*h. Cor.riat tnactaiMa * of Enl, aM great Otpmaloa of And wiUvootUvsl) prtrctt V allow f«m, BU* lotto fiWv, A«. ^Bh THgT COKtalK mr\ HO ALCOUOf. OB HAD WUIIKXT i ? ^ ■nttjwtnco»tti*«bo»oili»aa«wia c'.:.ety-ala« W no you «r»°| «"wr>hln« lovtrer.c»«a tool — , Tn ou w* at to bulM up rour acttstlOOk* 1 f Do you want io be! well I Do « u « ant to »rt rid of Homewe t P0 you waatangy * ... l" HOOFI..YN It S GERMAN* B1TTF.ES. [ . PARTICIXAR NOTICE, 'fi f" thoro are mam (feoparaliooa aoU under tho sstftsaas'aafsaaaro xsstsr^^sasr- - ~" l SesSwirsriaaare k far Uquoc- to created aad kopt up. and tho iMtttt to . .oil Uo knrrar. attendant upoa a dronkan-.-a Ufa "poMhoiowho dealt* and will hare a Lfanor Ktssaa^SSivitst^p SJasSBaa jlwaB {^*Kt&» fitT-visTS-?"** ***" Wt*" ,-"tpf L ATTENTION, 80LDIER6I q AM) TUB ag._ -I FRTENDS OF SOLDIERS. Harm** BUton" will cure stire-tcBlha ot I ha .tuto oattpUL* U uThalTpu bh.it? al'ttoat daUjr Is the nottoparwt « '•» eeifcal of tho tick , It will t* \ mug.'. v^'ssjfasisaaflsac t ra.ltn.Sin SRKSjSiiSt wKnttn I s-sstss .^r^iwsJvas L jfawiB'.'i.-giffieagsgs "lu hoca fartd by the mtioroi"— k| Philadelphia. AoruoO Od. tin. W Mraon. J one A »t»u»: «( lb cretlrtton. Tour I tiaofu ii n rrr1 ■ - nr-r1" — . .rr. Tl-"* L ssitatii"™ -'lacf I 8fea.'u''ia8TOyi?gsffi | a^ssn£ssssssss» ssat a-isswrttK: 1 oltoAiy. Poo. -wk oo inow-t wtt. —rwtyaht. k un®»« anythtnoln^ If 1 <Ud fawo a kw. B m-Sl^tTtto keep a MM 2? ?'t«r" Oo ay W M nam* M htttt Mo griop of the d oad AirUr, r mttkiy mU ttO ihoy r-old do ao ««n for too. aM 1 a53ssi?5«sraat,»s." flwsf as, ^ « tg&» y^grhSawsgrt ..bbbMHI SS? tK^Thi™,'bS{d "SiuSS *fa. *^Ta I month.; far. mCw. I ta » TtoSSS! srfisu?i asf s.°".i£& Ink an tho p)aro ol ra,u> Lara— to your Blttort wUl I eve th' «l.'i:oua phrtlon of atain cfaopfaf to try njgGMsa^S^AU, a g^^ST'
ftifrt f oftrg. : how the money goes. , bt JO*» •. mi f [ How gnos tlio manor.' Well it I'm euro il i.k't kardlo ull; ' j It goes for root and o.tt-r rain. For brood nod bnitor, coed and er»''», | ' llatk. capo, and carp U. hcojio and hi«— . And that'* tho way tuo taoooy govt! L, .flow goaa the utonacf Nay. j r Doa'i everybody lfnc« tiio »n^ I | It coo* for boniiola, coast; sad cope), j tfUk», ratio*, atu.liap, relvuto. crapoi. ' Shamir, ritoboua, form, and fartoolowi— I ; And ihat'a iba way iba tooaoy goer ! I . Flotr goat tba ojoopyf Sore • .1 wiib tho way) wero tomrwhnt fowor I It go«» for wage*, Uxec, debty ; It goat for pfoatnii, goo» for hot). ' For paioto, putnadr, end oaoJo-ruao — i And tbal'o tbo way lit mo net goer ! ( How gooa Iho taooey T Now. f i'oe tcarce begun la meotion boar ; ^ It poet for IkCM. foolbe/rrrion, Toy., dolle. and other b.Gy'o thing). - 1 Wblpo, wtiailaa. caadlea, belli, and bowi — ; t And that'* the a ay tbo money got* ! flow goat the tnoaoy f Come. I know it dldb't go for rum; , It goes for acboola aud dahtiatb cbimf) , It gooa for charity tomalimeo, For Rtiiaiuni. and anch tbmga at ibooa— i c And thai'* tbo way tbo money good! ! How goat tba money ? There, I'm out of paUaoee, 1 declare ; t II gooa for play, aod diamond pis), , For pnblie alma nod prieala #iat, For bollow •ham. and Hilly tbowt — t ^nd that'* tho way tba tuonaygoaa! !, -L ■ =i ! I fried ' , .. ... ., i- - ' 1 tTrott " Arthm'o Hoh) 'Slagaitae^j WOUNDED. — i ■ Six baadred aad fortr-three woond- ; , ed !" | " If tbn were all I* My wife ipoke in a aad cotee. ~If that were all f "The retnrn_U gi»ep it pon^pUta." ; t said, referring again to the cw. paper ( ; which I held In my baud. "Ooahoa- , dreu aad forty-or.e hilled, aad tlx hundred aad forty.tbm wounded." , " A fearful Hat, tmt it jp not all," mj j wifa answered. Har tonas were e*»u ! itauAtr than at^flrst. " A great ntaay , I more were wounded— a grkal many | : more." ' . ' ' T; , ! •' Dot thia la an official return, signed , ! by the rorotnatding general." , ; " Aod an far. doubtless, correct. But , ' from etery batUe-ficfcl go awlft-wmged , r tnasseagers that kill Or wound at a thou- • aontl mile* in*taad of a thousand paces ; , bullets Inshible to mortal eyes, that' , i pierce luring' heart). Of the dead aud | | wonuded from ibeie Wc bare un report ( | They are casualties not spoken of by our | commanding general.." . | ! I had not tboagbt of this; or, at , ; lea.t, not with any realising «ent« of i ; what It tnrolred. My «He rwa Diced r , ; "Let n» take the matter' home We , j hare. A aon in the army. Tho ball that ; itrikaa him strikes u* If 'In that Hi I of j r kitty) and wouudad wti .had found bis , ■ name, would There hare been no hafo- > net point or shattering bullet in onr A i firth ? I Ahisrr at the thougbL Ala those iatbjbla mssMMigera of pain and ; [ death wound often deeper than iron aut|. I MP* f At shs thns spoke my eyes wsre restj logon the official Hit, and I taw tbe ; name of a friend An ejaculation of ; surprise dropped from a j lips. J "Wbntf" lly aurtled wifs grew ' slightly pak , " Harley is wouadadl" " Oh daar!" The pallor tnesesaed, aad the kid her hand over her heart—, slrn that aha fait pain ffcero. '*Badly V Bbe tried to ateady he; roice "A baUlbroagh bla chest- Not set down at dungerou., howerer." "Poor Anna 1 \frhat kail tidings for htrf* My wife a row. "I mult go to b»r immediaialy." Soon afterwards wa wast out to- , gather— ! to my office, and aha to rliit ; th» wtfc of our wounded frieod.' It I. Strang, fcnw litUat *><>« «ho sraot broaght Into fbe scta.l presence of -j death and dtoster o, ih. haMe-HId rs- * 1 ititU'lc* +vti ii»p!y co^Rs^el. , Tfe
j talk of our looses as indifferently at if i ! men were crates and bales, I do not; : \ except myself. 4 Sotaetime* P feel s* ' i I thongh all sensibility, all sympathy for i [ human suffering, hod died out of n y i ! heart . It Is, perhsp*. as wyll If we ! | j perneired to the fail exleut the terrible • i j reality of tilings, we would be in l alf- 'l ; paralyzed states, instead of continuing . , our useful employments by which the ; 1 j common good fs str-mi. We esosot j j help the suffering nor heal the wounded I I -our mental pain. But let us tee to i | it that tbrooph lack of pain we fall not ; i in mioistrafton to the extent of onr I i ability. , | « When I met my wife at dinner-time, ! i her face was paler than when I parted < with her in the morning I saw that ; the had been suffuring, while I, Intent 1 hours upon • my work, bad half fur- j gotten my two wounded friends— Har- ; ! ley and bis wife — one pierced by a rist- ; i | ble, and the other by en invisible bullet ' j " Did you see Aniu. ?" I akked. j "Yes." i "How is she?" j "Calm, but hurt very deeply. She , i only had the news Uiis morning " "Is she going to him ?" # j " There has not been time to decide ' i I what is best. Her bnabusd's brother is I ' ' here, and will get ns much information ' i by telegraph to-dav as' it is possible to receive. To-night or to-morrow he will j for the battle-field. Anna may go | with him." I "She appeared to be hurt deeply, yo-i \m " Yes," replied aiy wife; "and wa. ; in moat -into »s pain. Every line in her j face exhibited enffejiog. One hand j was pressed ail Uic While lightly over j hearl " i "What did she say ?" !' "Not mucliT She seemed looking j the distance , and trying to make i ont tbfng) Srrh hut imperfectly. If he ' | were to die." I think it wonld kill her." j ■ "Two deaths by tba iatne bullet." I! ■aid, my thought recurring to .onr nion)- , lng conrerution. * L In the evening I called with my wife to sse Mrs. Hsrley. - A teieeram had } been received staling that her hnshan^) wound, tbongh severe, was not cbmid- ( ered dangerous. The ball bad been ex- j tract ed, nnd he was reported tef be doing well. She waa going to Jea to in the i night train with her brother-in-law, and would be with her husband in the quickest time it was .possible to make. Ilow ; a f«w boor* of suffering had changed ; I The wound waa deep and vary j painful. It was nearly two m-snths before Her- 1 we. »uffit.'en;!y recovered to he remov.d from Ike hospital His wife bad bew permitted to see bim every dey, and to remain in attendance ou him for * greater part of- '.he time, . "Did yos fcaow ihet Mr Harley and his wife were at hose J" said I, on com- j ingin one ,d»y. ' "No. Whan did they arrive ?" was | thai answer sad inquiry. "This morning. I heard it from Her j 1^« brother." , . '/How are they f r.sked my wife. .-''He looks as woli as eeer, I mm told, though atiil safftrfng some from his wound. ' Rut she is mi|erable, Mr. Her- , lay says." A shadow fell over my wife's faec. and she sighed heavily. "( was afraid of that," she said. "J knew sks was hurt badly FlasLjuyyjda close readily, bnt spirit wooads are^^Benlt to haal These invisible bollets era almost Sore to reach some viul pare." * I met Mr. llnriej net long afwrwards in company with his wife. Hhi eyes were bright, his lips firm, his cheeks flushed with health. Yon aaw scarcely a sign of what be had' endured. He talked in a brave, soWievl/ maanvr, and was ssxtwas for the time to come when ■ the aorgeen would proa ounce bim fa^t ■ condition to join Id. regiment. His wound, when referred to, evidently gave ' him mora pleakntw tksa pain. It was a f mark of diktiaeti.,a— a sign (he* he bad ■ offered even lifo for ' ..ecuatry I MfJ&mt wfldttbm JUxi#** it > touched yoa. to look into i>wr dreamy, t absent eyre, on her palieot Jipe aad ax- • htBStrd rroat'.asntk-
"She hss worn herself ont in nnr*ing ; f nie,"said her hoSbsnd, in answer to a; t rr mat k oo her appearance. . He looked j a ot ber tendrrfy, aod uith jnst a shade of j 1 anxiety in hi* fuse. Was the truth not j n pfainte him ? Did he not knntr tliat . j she bad been wounded al*o ?— that two i t balls left the rifle when he wss strock. f ' "tie tf them retching to h'is diilaot | a j ? • y 1 "In- three weeks 1 hope to be in the i s fivid again, and free to face with the , c j enemy"." He apoke with the ardor of a j i slrdiig dtsiro, his eyes bright, and hi. I t j (are in a glow— wounding, and the pisin j t I of wounding nil forgotten. But an- t I other") ryea Itecuma dim "as hi) briglt- : d : ened— uttotber') elm k) poled as ^i* i t 1 gn-w warm 1 saw thu tears shining ia* 1 | Mr), narley answered, iu'an unsteady s ] roice, ' t j "I' sin neither hravc coons h '»r e strong rmough for n soldier's wife." ♦- e She bad meant to say more, n» wss <: j plain from her muancr, but rooid tiot j I I trust herself I ) J " Oh, yes you arc brave enough and i [strong enough," replied Mr. Harley. ; r t with -animation. " Not every one could 1 t ! hate moved no calmy amidst the dread- . t 1 fu! scene) of a ramp hospital after a 1 bailie. I watched you often, aod fill j I proud of yon." j | " If the had not born wounded also," j my wife began ; but Mr. Hurley iot«r1 rtipted her with the ijaculation. j "Wounded !" In n tone of surprise. | j "Yes, wounded." resumed my wife ; < 1 ' "and. n* "liqw appears, nearer the sept * of vitality thin you were Did you 1 know this before, Mr. IUrley ?" ' i 1 1 My friend wus perplexnl for a little" 1 while. Hi- could not get down al on^c ' ; to my wife's meaning. v ' j 1 ' " When you were struck she win ; I ■ ' struck also." | 1 il,a " J0h;jea l" Light broke In npon i I I'Uir,' Harley. He 'turned quickly to- i 1 wa^s hit wife, and saw in her face j 1 what htrd been unseen before, the wast-1 1 [ ing and exhaustion that enme only from 1 f dee | ideated pain. 'He. had thought the ! 1 | palrncsa rf her.counloiiooce, the weak1 1'uesJ thai msae her st«fp slow and can- 1 1 i j tion). only the result of overtasked tuu*»; .[ties and nerves. But ho kn«w better 1 . j BOW. ; I • "1 didu't think of that," he said, with ' i visible anxiely. ns he gazed into bis j 1 1 J wift-'s coantcnam-e. "Onr wounds, so j . • ghastly to i he eyo.«, often get no dreper r | than the fleth and bone. The pain is i | ! short, and nature comes quickly to the j r j work of cure wiih ail her healing ener- | gle*. We suffer for awhile, and then it | ■ ! is over. We arc strong sod ready for i • ' the conflict again." I ; "But." said my wife, "into the homes 1 , that stand far away from battle-fields j r i come the swift-winged messengers that j -j wound and ^ill «s surely as Iron bail j I ; They strike jnolhers, wives, sisters — | • sutne with death wounds, all with the j ' anguish of vital pain. Alas for these | i j wouadrd 1 The healing, if it foliows.^u ! eerer, as Lfie surgooos say, hv first in- | .tension, but always slow, and oftentimes ; Uiroogh abscess aad ulserau'nn. The I Istger number never entirely recover. , ' They may linger for years, but do oot a lose the marks of suffering.". • j A long silence followed. There were j others present wiib, like Mr. Harley, ■. had never thought of this. I noticed 1 that fur the hour we remained together i he waa tenderer towards his wife, aud , mere that oace I saw him looking at L her. w^ile she was not observing bim, e with a trodblrd eon'nteoance. He did not again sjieak of the early period at a wkirh'he expected to joio his regiment. I s On the day following, another long a list of, kijlcd and wounded was given to y the public. As I read over the names, e sad conaUd the numbers, my 'IbAcghl J came back from bloody field and suffert log hospital. " Three »ru not all," I p tafd. "Alas, not all! Tbs ball struck is twice, thrice, MimeVimss oftener. There a is ptln, there I* apguish, there-is wounda ipg even cato death, in maoy, many d bosses wHhia a Uioutaad miles of that carj place. Kctne are aloae and aet jrliBipd— rdjiag on their hauis-fieU with naoe.ia pit aveit a cup of water to tbuir lips y soma are with loving, friends, who • ytt f»U 1H sisHeh m Cow Of Mdod, W
; handage the shattered limb ; some cover i | their woopds, hiding them from all eves, t j and bear the pain in cbos»n solitude, i | sum of all' thia agony, w"ho shall 1 give It ?" < iSur wounded ! If you would find ! i i tbcm all. yon..<nn)t look beyottd the hos- [ c pital-. They are not every one bearded ' 1 j and in msle attire. There »*t beeide j t | in the car. jnst now, a woman. Too 'scarcely ^noticed her She left at the 1 1 j*coroer below. There was not rou- b life J I | her face ; her steps, as they rested on I > I the pavement, were slow She has ' ' i wounded, and is dying. Did yon 1 1 ; notice Mrs. D in church last 8nn- ' ! day ? "Ye«; and now I remember I 1 1 that she waa pale, and 'bad an altered | 1 look." One or our woonded. Do you I 1 : see a "Kee si ihe aindow ? " Iu the ' ' ' marble-front Iioumj ?" Yea. "It is asd ' enough, what in-looktns eves !" Wound- i , ed ! Ah, sir, they are everywhere a boat ' u) ! Already froni over a hundred bat- 1 . j tie-fields and skirmish-grounds have been 1 j ' such missive* a* pain and death. "Thiy j , penetrated unguarded homes in ' i ! city, low*, aod neighborhood in : once happy and peaceful country, - . wounding the beloved oniB left there in hoped-for security . For eaolPt%Braj is . balm only iu G*!ead. Gfd is tiieii^ ! physician HOW OLD HELD WAS REWMKD. I We once knew a man by the name of Reed commonly known a* ' Old Reeil." quite notorious in hi* war, and whose religion wa* thst afLr death !u would ; appear in t. e shape of some animal. • and thooght he would be a hone. Now, old Reed bad been a hat-! man, and had { not been in the habit of treating bis j family as a religion* man should. One ] day, after bi« wife had suffered from neI gleet, and borne hit abuse until her petience was completely exhausted, she I determined to givejjjjiu* plain lecture, ' and to touch aj^n his religious belief | So. resolutely slating hrr*elf by hi* | side, and looking him folly in the fsee, while a teardrop gliatcntd in her eye, I she commenced : " Reed, I am going to have a ser ous ' talk with von ; I have something to Say . • to you, and yon mutt hear it ; I have a i i dnty'to peifonn, and I shall do it j end then, if yon ere miserablu hereafter, it j will not be my let-It. You believe, • | Revd. that when yon die yon will turn Into some animal, end you think you will be a horse. Now, if you keep on [ your present course, and continue to j neglect end abnse yonr family, aod ; > squander your money for drink, when i i yon die yon will turn into some poor ! I old twelve-tb'.IIing hor-e, end tome rietnij peddler will get yon, and yon will be , hard worked a.vd half starved, and I will see you every day la a rickkty old wagon . full of clams. , " But now, Reed, it needn't be »o. , j Yonr future may even be accoiding to i yonr theory— a bright-, unhappy one ; . for if you will reform, and turn right i abont and become a better man — be i kind and affectionate to your family, . and treat them a* yon should — when yon i die yon will tarn into a five hundred dollar horse, and some Fifth Avecne - bock will get yun, and give yon abnibel , of oau a day, tub yon down with ppa1 straw, and have yon docked and your r tall set op " 1 Old Reed was converted, reformed, t end the last heard of him he wat pi- , tieotly waiting for death to introduce I him into his coveted borse-beaseo. I . '. .1 fflTOtrfl BASQtST. N " — > Water may be a sober beverage, bnt , it mtkea vegetetion lsogb, and tbe l .grass get* high on it. Go Into the gar- - den before breakfast st this season, and [ yoa find tbe flowers with tk'lr cops full i of the bright wine of Nature. After t taping el) night, tbe gay baeebanafs have more 'ban they can carry la the r morning ; and as they nod. top-heavy, i in the breeze, they apHI tlpelly the • shining beverage. They wooM ting If i they could ; bnt voice being deuied r them, the merry mate* ealwte tbe pun > with partem* A delicious concert of F fragrance, a chose* of iflkeMriBg odors
hilars from their dewy Hps ; tyr harmony", oat discord, .comes of the drink-b-»ots of tbe flowers. The woodthe jasmine, and the helo trope flood the air with their apicy pentinge ; : and ths lowly mignktiettc and tbe My- ' of thr-valley mingle their iweet perfume, ' the under tones of a rymphooy, in tbe lense-delighting'olio | Ii' wc covet anything enjoyed bj onr j'eotinlr/ friends, it ia their dewy, swee | smelling summer mornings Tbe second crop of clover is begging to console the | bee for the loss of thV honey blouoms jtlist lio withered in the hsy-cnovrs. As the dews exhale under the earthly enn- ! they lift up cloud* of perfume . j snd he who rises with tbe lark for a | walk in the fields may banquet bis eonl ! he ^'gbii break feet. ' ^ >— ■ j CHANGE Or BiUITC IS OLD AGE. A ctao may change bis moda of iita at j as bt is on tbe'youtbfal aid) of middle ; the meridian line once passed, til such j radical change U attendad with tba peril of | death, (lava you aver bc-icad in ihe burying greuaili. or in the ceerological colamus of oewspapcit, ho* often husband follows ' wife or wire busfartH, with Ijrief intervals of Uino butapan ihair departure when Ibay -gprrv—letig lited'Uigalhcr? Theage.woro cooelitulioo is nn,bU Iu react against lbs bereavement, and to adapi iisjll to tbe new | circum»tonc«s la nbicb it it plac-'d. Ill* u«ual forui in which death ipvades the body ^of ihi-sa aged (-ertout demoaiirsto) this irulb. for they di» either of apoplazy or of parclyaie of ibn hraio. Tba mind, thriak. ing instineiivi-ly from daalh, esarit all Its jnjwer* of racovtry to rally after the blow received . th« rxertioo it too much for it , it i* sheltered hy the very attempt. Here you oevar beard the vulgar remark tbul tbe builder of a- bouse dieg almost aa eoon as tbe house :• completed? The observation bus some foundation In troth, but tba cease of tbe effvet is cot "lack It b ' tbe eery inability of lue aged mind to meet ■ against old babtte loat. Meo rarely build , booses uotil they bet* amassed something like independeuce of fortune ; la other , worde, they are generally io the afternoon of lira, and they build tbe bouae for a bar- ' - bor from tbe cures of button*, where they *" ' may twirl tholr tbumU and "enjoy life" by ' oppressing themselves with idleness. As ' lung as tbe bouse U liuildiog all goes well ; r lb*y don't mire the sbfent i-hop or C^ant. . 1 tug room. There it the briekisytr to be * I acoldnd . and the carpenter to be overlooked. I ! ami discBtsion* to he held with the architect aud money to be paid oot; in fine, there la t something to thiak about, something to »oiry over, something to fret about; it is 1 | tba old roand of life, in miniature if yoa 1 will, bat still it is tba old round which has 5 been paced for forty years. Bat wheo lb» 1 j house is complete, when tbo last coat of :i paint bss dried, and the last chip hos been r removed, and the bits of mortar taken away . —when the owner bee nothing te do but to e enjoy bis fine hoove snd hi) affigent fortnot, I then comes tba vacuum— nothing to do. The old man bade years have changed hit body, and tbe toy tires hire even snoaar thaa it tired the - child. Tharf ta no ebr- '• relation, between bnllding a bonis and 0 death, bnt there ie a close connection bctwean sga and the change of life. it e A MOTHER'S GRATE. Karth bus lusi) sacred spots where wa feel like looeeniag tba' shoes from onr feet, snd treading with holy reverence ; where e conmnn word* of pleaaure are onfittiog , ' placet where friendship's bends have Ho- >- gered in each other** ; where vows here ir been plighted, prayers offered, tod tears of parting shed. Ob, bow the thooght* hover ) around such placet, snd travel hack through lw immeatored space to visit them ! Bnt of atl the spelt on the green earth oone it to ■acred at (hat where rest), waiting tho retam-ctrntt, these we osee eberlehed and a lovwl. Hence, in all-aget,- tba better pot tioa of mankind hare ehoaep the loved spall for the bnriel ot Akek dead, aod jt> it those spots they hare ftv?r to wander »T* e eventide to meditate aad weep. Bat among all -Ute cbarnel-bosMe at thf dead. , if there ia on* spot etora aacred than all the reetrit is a mother* trava. Thaw vlaepe tba mother of oar inlWcey— the r gulije of onl yoolb— the counsellor of onr « riper years— our friend wheo oilter* de- • serted ns ; she whoee heart was -a etrenger r, to erarp ether feeling bat love, and who t icoald .find always (lessee for o* when we II could find none for onrrelvea. There Mia J sleeps; ted we love tba verjNarth fot bet ° tike! >f Faith— an anrtwt deepped beye«4 «k* a relaef deetk V*

