... ... ' v • /
I ■ "I.ET ALT. THE CXDS THOtJ AIM'ST AT A Tl. V .;OTi,~ TUT" nirNTKV? JV' Till. TITS ."
VOL. IX.
OAl'K ISLAND. I JAPE MAY COINTY, NKH' .1 HUSKY. THURSDAY. NOVEMBER ft, 1863.
NOr-23.
' fit Smft JJIm ®ctaa O^Utt M FVtLUHI3l KVta* TTIIUWY IV ' •. R- MA4UOM iliLC, A* cat MM, vm Mm **mu. *. 4. .:■« ut»r.rTT?rrr/ 4 r ■< •» IMIU «»4 a Hmit »•« _•* ' PftlgflTWV. fkdlk.l i, <«© vkrnm knt i»«S & M. ttr-nra. UuKhnL JTATB OF NBW J WIS BY ■ s?s£sg»f,cr.-.,~ Sre Jjie^w' ' »-n— cwreTrMaMe. spjiai, jj. C.Avr. Mw Vndrabaant Him H. Urew*. k f T— ^e. w«L PH|ti jrammsrara ramm-msSSir momoSiuom t. I ■ s»m> **"* w»I ** CAI'E MAY COUNTY. » wtu or csukk rmbnsvlame. !&SB JSKuss-ffijr. : * 'BBC ■ aWw - —» i spc3s«rrar%»** «- »w- . UPPK* TOWNSHIP tees*. a«ow»> «m-| tew«* W tear aw. h h tea- ' I ii"?!! tmO ef hereto— foBn loe~ , sswsflBwir. .«u> *£' ".. os..vua TUWNsair Mpiff Jter*.- M-tlUwrtL FUHer ygjMipt%»--l»iWWt M- ■*»»• L MiWHA Ttrirrwrttir. , ? MLfr >. Wr iss" cn4*n I g£*ffiaar ^ ,. J * & IJI ■IIIUPO* _l __ln ipt S. lea*. : mrwifcflBUC ¥ ■ !'■*' llMMW— - ' ■ aSrWaBl^^ijSFSktim.? » • . .: - : ra--' d>: -. I '^•: ' -■•• -.
w' $drrt fsrtt?. FOR THK rU(i. j Lemon* Ml. but U, Ibe Proof bade peep • 4. Flowers d*. bit srfll their w«d shall hurra 1 • From death the agtok yooffg lift wflt j**p. IVboa dvaih » b» II com* and touch tha } Tbe >iil.Bd,J shiver of braqg biood I J« ibrtMiotf riirotjfb oar coaotry pob ; j Aodab. wbS is oM lim..^^^, WiU frssdelD •• Olii ln», or alrtp WUU uur jr«al load a bo wade u» frsa. • 1 Ooo forir«-t oa • b»n •• for*r I To kutp tbe old tfajr Hjin*- pel. Jrlrct fiiatisc Btt ii. I , a moMt roa s«r*. Old Mr. Axryra going by lo bia morsleg-'a work. He looked boot and ^ 1 -worn and poor. Harry Eldsn ihoogbi, ' ) aa be loanged ohiatllng o»er bli fttber'a j gats. Tbe breakfast bell rang. Ilarry j jumped off tbe gate, and taming round, r I etock hie heade deUmiaedly into bit '' poekeia, sag lag to hiiaaelf as be vast *" j op tbe walk, "111 be rich aben I'm a ' man. When I'm aiaty yaara old* I won't be a carpenter, and wofk be day's labor, ai Mr Arcry doea. 1 don't bellere be 4. went to work riffbt when be wee a bej " Mr. Eldou was titling oa tbe pissaa vitb i.i« psi«er, and board limey's speech, "j boulK Rffbtif Co Uim. se be rote and | wdtked ia to breakfast with bia soa. Harry waa deep in apebataliaa on hit ' way to aSfcol. Coald bit thought! jbses Leon put into words, tbsy would i • ban ran samrthiag It tb: "I bar. »• too ceate in joy poakeLr Bd. Smith wiH ■ tiisf* Me t>H eb« rar that, I fcaow, and I bate a arw whetJ that will fit on it la the place ef the one that jg goat, and 1 can paint it op with tbe prill ftnbr r ) gars ma tbe ntber day ; sad after it In Utione ii will he worth 'l»»n\y Dft es"nU. k John Wood wants a eort,*"r bo told as ». | so swMie ago, sad I goess bell kne b j of me. There's ooe step towardt g*t- ' ling rieb." Tbe eehool door was reet h cd nitd tkw eonrioa ce-»eered V\9B racui litr e Harry raabod oot. fall of bit new ptan, to find Kd. Smith. AH at •not be observed Georgie X., a Htifc J. Mead of bia, sitting on tbe sidewalk, e digging hie fingers icto a wide crack, *■ and at tba a^me time erylag bitterly j - WhaUe np, Geurgie V J "Oh. Harry!" and the little boy's e I g*W burst oat afreeb. " l*»a lost my new plats aHeya — two of than — down ! thin brta, and I can't get tbata oat again, i and father tars that be waaY bay any 1 mora, for 1're lost to many before these.1' " 111 see If j poo l them ont for yao." , i sad Harry karlt dowa on the ridewslk j In rain he pat bis eye u> tba cre»lce , sad peered within it. la vain he poktd ^ j about tl with a slick. He toon found i oat that there wai no nee of trying longer. The aOcyt wera irrceocab.'y goo*. "Oh, Harry ' try jsai ooee mere., I Oeeegh plearied. " I do wast tbeai so -IfcRSy-" r | Harry knew that it was bo oac to do so- *• - Hew tmoeb did year aH^-t 'cost. k Oaotgie T Harry hardly knew what " maris Was oak tbe g static a. ' '.-Tea cents. Tney wera each big j ones. ! Horry Ml bia Hp hard. He was 0 Christian. He raaiemberai " sv#n Christ pleased set kimsaK" s I " Wen, Oeorgit, yon may go and bay ' i some mora," aad be palled the bit of ,r^, p«pcr M rf U> !»ckJ> ud P" jae.ua. - j H.«w<l I boy woo Id giro Mm ten eeata to boy I two sew ntirys wRb. While be was rcMaariag. H«ry ran o C Hs bardly ! I ksee wbH 10 do with bimoaif to r tba ! j rmmbr trf tba raoraa. _&dM act j >-pcatMir sad pasaed Tto HMr- ■
nooa asaaiuo of school was osar. Harry walked soberly bourn. Not that bo fclt - »«rry shot be badgttea tbe tee rants to Georgie No, be was giad of it when he tboaghl definitely aboot it at all. bat 31 be bad a troubled sort of feeliog, as tboagh ho bad not aceompllthcd quite fu < what be wished that dty. j Mr. £lden, too, bad tboogbt daring the day of tbe resolution which ha bad ; hennl Harry express la lbs morning, ! and raaoltad to have a talk with Mai j about it at alfht. So, after tea, jnat as the son was set- ' ting, he called him ont to him on tbe ipistu " How about getting rich, my boy f " What, qlr f" I Harry's eye had a look of somewbal ■ ! astooiihed inquiry in it, '* Coma aad sit down bare, my son. 1 beard you aay this morning that yon meant to be rieb wbea you wera a man. I# Have ywa thought anything more abont g it to-day, and what ♦" t_ "Tea, sir, I bare thoaght about It," »( answen d Harry, privately interrogating 7 himself as to wbetbtr bis father always I beard ceerthing. "And have yon thought bow lo go to „ »«rkl" 4 "I thought of a beginning, bat I did : I oot do Ik" r> " Why f" « "Yon see, father, I was going to do " this—" aad Hairy went 00 with the dea tails of bil little plan op to the time he , 1, saw George X crying on tba side- . 4 waft—-" aad ibaa. lath nr. I thought first I would not givo it to bios, bat aftars wards I did." s •• Why r d "1 tbongbt It would not be right If * I dW not, fbr I should tot bava liked U 1 II moch If I had been in his p!sr. " « Mr. BMaa's face wore a pleased ex- 1 b praaaioa, but ba made ao reaanent. "Aad what wera yaa saying about ' Mr. Avery f *' 4 "Only that I should sot lite to wofk 1 r at be does when Iwrn-otd" * " Mr. AM Of Is bae of the nobert mm * I bmew, Harry. ' i '• Why. fbtber r " " Yaa, I Hrink ao. Dtd yon ever read 1 Wh a tarae 4s this In yonr Blbh, "And ' ■ 1 lay onto yoa, make to yourselves t friends of the mammon of nurigbtcous. c neas ; that when you fall, they may reeeira yoa into e* ariaatiog babitationa f* , i. " Yoa. air, and 1 never quite knew - what it meant." " Mr. Av*ry was owe- a member of a a wealthy firm in New York. I knew Mm T then. One time we were walking the » street together, when we noticed s tmsll V crowd beginning to enlWt at a corner, f Our way led directly through it When " we came np, we found two men ia the " midst. Their (seen were literally pnrpie - with piatoMft aad they were fighting i a with a fieecatvcas that shewed their par- i 1 poses were deadly. Mr. Aeery tamed | 1 lo me, " I know one of those men. I I thai! try and slop the fight." I askrd ' f him not, for I feared he might be hurt, | aad I n^w a policeman coming op. and j * thought tbe matter might be settled; a without bis Interference. Bat he walked 1 coolly sp to the uppermost maa.aod - laid bis hscd on his shoulder, " My * friend wont yon let this man np and go t away, asd forgive him whatever he baa dona ? I ask yoa to do iLv f Ha lamed fiercely at Mr. Avery, bat wbea ba saw who it was, be stopped s abort, and 1a a raioote altar stawiy. I I " Yea, sir," and ba strengthened ft with an oath, •* ! will. Ye gsre we r money and work, air, one Una when my f women and me was starving, and I'll \ f qait fighting if ye like." . Tba officer cams np then, bat than I wu no work loft Ibr aim to do. Nor is I this a solitary iaataaoa ia Mr. Avery's r Hfv. Bta baa been 4s habit of beaevo- ! ■ " f ** What baa tMa to do with the text si yon told me, father, and why is M; j tiAve^poorf^ , a | "4f. Avery in «o«r in mooay now, , a j bacawaa bk firm failed. Tbey faiiad for , 1 ' tba rasa so tbtt tbsy depended aawtbeff 1 : whose (bay believed to ba rabable.end 1 whweraibwat. 1 1MM jw tbt taciriect » a j beeasaa bara Mr. A vary bad tdad* a ■HHHm
y friend with th« " mammon of anrigbt- ! It eousness,'^ that is, money. lis added' 1 0 that sua to his everiastisg possessions. ; c n "And so I think, my boy, that yon j | it made a good iovoatment this morning, ! is when you replaced George's lost alleys, j 1 e You have begun to ba rich — nut exactly ( I in tbe way you meant, but in a better ! 1 g ooe " "S j' d *• Bat about the last part of the 1 f, vera#, father, " Shall receive yoo into | a everlasting habitations ?" , 1 "I believe," — and Mr. Elden turned. ! I- a face full of very bright moaning apon , 1 ie bia son—" that all tbe deeds we do for 1 the love ef Christ here, are k*pt ia ; * memory up above. We shall not win j " be-even by them, Harry, bot they shall j 1 vt welcome ns when we enter there. Ajid 1 it wilt be a glad Welcome, too, Harry, J 1 I. fbr some of tbe sools who have lived on < a earth," Mr. Bldwo added in a low tone, 1. with hie eye fixed 00 the line of red it when- tbe ena went down. Harry knew then that his faiher was 1 " tbroagb talking with him ; and that his I , g ay»«, which seemed fixed on the die- 1 | a tance, saw more than just before them. I , j e««ti tba glories of the New Jsrueaiem. JtriXEKR WOMEN. 1 4 J A Japanese fody appears to epend all 1 1 'her talent on her haad. Her hair is'i | blank, glossy, tiilek, mod long, aad Is j 1 0 done up in a moat imposing snperstrae- - | tare with the aid of cnshioni. false hair, : 1 e , combe, aad dagger*, or erossbars of tor- 1 I 1- j to fee shell. I cannot describe it exactly, ' | it 1 bot there appears to be this plan : | I • Brushed back in ooe central and two ' 1 lateral masses from the forehead, it I | meets with tbe back hair brushed straight i If! np, aad tbe eonaeqsence ie a seriet ofl I t j rolls ialertwioed witli gold tbread-aad^i I silk staff, soil curiously fastened up with ' I '* I corai- banded ptwe, fMt oombs. aad tor- | toiae shell bare. It really haa a very | | it 1 pretty "fleet. Tbe married ladies for- ' I j tber sdora themselves by polling oat 1 1 k their eyebrows and blsckeaing tbeir i T-thaic teeth, though i believe tbe origin! 0 ! of thie was arith tba huebaads. who, al- 1 1 ■ ways free tbcaraelvee wish to make their j I wives anattractive to otkere. Any ia- 1 d fidelity ia patiiahed by deatb ; bat before i > J | marriage women are |>«rfectly free, j a ' Tbeir faces, when they don't powder* I 1. j lhsmenvra— -which tbey are very fond of - t 1- ; doing, aad paiating their ftps with red i "j —are very pretty wheu you bare become | ( e a littK* aocastowed to the grnwiue Moo- ! I ptdtnb type. Their Agurea ara absolute j t a pbtActioa, and their haada and feet i ■ a ; sataller and better shaped than any I j I e ' ever saw ia Ewrope. This it owing to I 1 their drase, wbioh ia na*e» tight, aad to i . - their a ever wearing boots, but oaly ■ j straw uadafct, or a kind of pa Ueu ia wet I s ! west her. ■ I ■ I Tba drone of wee aad women is almost I f i the same. A long "k«cmoao,''descend- - 1 Ing to tba ankles in meat abd to tbe j 1 1 1 groaad with women, though tneked up i I j any betgbt in walking oat. is likt a I I j nightgown, ogefi ia the front right . j dowa, folded over the breast, aad se- ] j cured st tbe waist by a girdle. Tbe 1 j sleeves are very Is age, sod knag down 1 1 ! nearly te tba knee. In addiUoa, Use 1 ; woman havs a loag piece of figured silk f which tbey wind twice or thriee rooad » the waist, aad tbaat bang np bahlnd no j e M to droop in n kind of reetaagalnr fee- , toon dowa to the back of tbe karaa. , t Colore are geovraily sombre, and n* wall , I as the patterns, wbMi am commonly I checks, are regulated by tba laws for the * ! different classes. Xe cap ia worn, but ' » tba eeelie claaa generally bind wwnnd 1 r their beads a piece of eoarse atnff. The ' I Yakonino wear a closer kind of koeI mono, and over this a kind of mantle. J B ! generally of ganxa or crape, aad marked , I j with tba devices of the Datmio to whom 1 I I tbey beiang Tbey wear variooa shaped 1 - bato, aad always carry two swords at ibe ! I I irfi side, one longer than tbe other, sad | • t , both gee orally in admirable working 1 1 . | order. Yon maet always keep an eye • ion-fteae two-awarded men. H thy . t ! draw you mast iheto Uwm^swr U cian ' l] (01 there ia a lav (origimrily duuUUss j rj with A ham* as ohfttt) ftnMI.tb^ draw > i j sbeir sword tbey moat use it, otherwise i » > they era edbee deeapitated, er evmtmii ! ( a | kort k*t, that is. slit up tbeir bobt ft p
| Tbe Jspsuesa est like the Chinese, with chopsticks, sod appeer to live chiefly on riea and fish. With this simI pie diet, however, tbey have very robust frames, and though not tail or fine men, | appear to be able to endure much j fatigue. If yon enter a house, they rise 1 and make a deep salaam, saying, "O hoe > io," and do the same when yon leave, j w7'nK. "Sly morro-o" ( may you ba hapi P>"). T.bvj generally bring yon somcthing to ait on, in dvlereacc to your j customs, and present yoo with j cap of tea. Tbe lady will then take a , sweetmeat between her fingere, and yon 1 .gill, be expected to open your mouth, swallow it, look a* though yon liked it, and aay, "n rmg-a-to" (thank yon), to which aha will bow and aay, "de-it- ! ashimasii" (equivalent to "there It no occasion") k boon STOKI. A showily dressed woman, not bad j looking, recently entered a handsome f ■ store along the promenade. 8h« lodked j ' the wife of a man who had suddenly ' money by army contracts. Her! •■harness' vn good , but tht owner was 1 evidently only lately aecuslomed to In- | 1 dulge in finery. She entered the "prin- ' cipal depot" of a citisen, who, among , other proprietary articlua, la the inventor ' of a celebrated hair tonic, f As she eorerad, proprietor was behind ; the counter — a matter rather rare for j him — and with his bat on bil head. lit- I i personally waited on bur, asking, with j j his beat smile : — "Whet can I show ytiu, ma'am 1" j "Why, yonr hair lowle." "Hera it. ; ia, nw'au" — producing a' 1 of tbe article. ' » "This ia what makes hair grow; does fit ?" "Yaa, ma'am ; yos'll Sad a iiviia pam- | - pblel inside tbe wrapper with many ear- j '■ tificates from peO[>ie who have been j | bald." "Humph What's the price 1" | "A dollar a bottle, aia'am ; six bottles I for five dollars. " - 'r j "You're eertehi itll bring hair in f I "It never fails nnlesa the hair la dei strayed by dlaeste " I "Well. I've got a bald spot on the ' t lop of my head. I'd givr live hundred 1 ! dollars to hate It covered again." Proprietor said he had no doubt the; | tonic would accomplish the result, and : j the lady ordered the half dozen to be j | sent to her house. Proprietor took the | i address. As the laey turned to leave I the store, the proprietor removed bia i bat, showing a bead whose crown was I ; innocent of covering. • "IVvll, I declare I" exolaimed tbo lady, I | transfixed, looking at him to blank | aatorishmeot. j "What ia it, madam ?" [ "Why, I swear if you ainl bald your- j j aetfl" Proprietor was about to rejoin, but 1 the lady cootinned ^ " f don't want thqk, bnir grease o'l yonni now. 1 jest believe yoo're lyln'." I Proprietor attempted to explain, but lady wouldn't listen. K. stives City ft a gay place, and tbey hare queer specimoti" ef bumaaity dawn 1 there. If you don't believe it, read tbe ] fallowing from lbs Journal, about a woman or doubtful loyalty, who was recently bafora the provost marshsd : Sha gave aa an avidaace of bar loyalty that her husband had bean killed ia tba 106th Illinois Rogiareot. •: When did yonr husband go to flliqpftl" "About Ultra years ago." "That wu bofore Iba wu, was it not T" "Yaa." "Why did yea not go wKh trim r "Wall, I didat like te go off so l*r with a man I wasat much acquainted with." "Yaa don't mean to uy that yonr husband was so raaeh of a j stranger that yea did not like to go with "Yaa, I do. I had only been married to him about a year, aad I wasn't going ( leave my folks aad go off to IlKnot' with ran I didn't kaow mora shout." What j could ba do bat discharge bur? j — A maa .baa beau sqpt to tba lorenv ' Aayfaai at Philadelphia for attempting to stop a shower with a eheek-refn. ! — Hurt is a very good domestic toes'. : J May yonr aoftt-e and sJsmdera agarast too .JbakntorififtfirinftaaMrt wai j aheyr himaaif afreH #f raaaova. - TAadremi- , »f censure ia lie death of ganiar
i ULLlbllfFIL LLl.KSB. There ia a charming tradition eoanecled with the sits on which thaYeriple of 8oloreon was erected. It te said ta hare been occupied in common by two brothers, one of whom had a family the other bad none. On this spot vs< sown a field of wheat. On the crening succeeding the harvest, tbe wheat haviag been gathered in separate shocks, the older brothew said te bia wife: "My younger brother ta unabie to bear tbe v" burdm and heat of tba day ; 1 will arise, take my shocks, and placa them with hieI without bia knowledge " Tim yonagyr brother, being actnated by the same banarolent motiVea, said within himimlf : "My elder brother hae a family and I have none ; I will ariee, take of my •borki, and place them with hie without r hft knowledge." Judge tbeir eatonisbj ment, when, on the following morning, j they foond their respective shock* tta- ' j diminished. This coarse of events trane- ' j pired aereral iiiglita, when each reiolved | to stand gnsrd and solve the myatery. j They did so ; and on the following night , they met each other half way between 'J their respective shocks with arm* tall. Alas 1 in these days, bow many would sooner steal their brother's whole shock I I thau add to it a single sheaf. 11 CAKING II r It H K. It SHOES. ll . . ' Tbe tendency of India robber shoes is to tnaka ibe feel cold, and in such proportion | t» endanger the heslth .^OUnce tbey sra 1 j useful -mly in walking, when the ground la (muddy or slushy with molting ioJw("ra'' • there care* they era invaluable, nod U»ere_ i ia no equal substitute. Two ruWtloutd i he observed whenever it la possible. Wheh j rubbers are on tba feet, person* should keep , ( moving; and remove than on antering the ' 1 house, if it ft intended to remain -overs fcw j muiutes. U the rubbers hare bran am the ' fact several boars, both shore and stockings ara necessarily damp by tba condensation 1 1 and ^confinement of tba perspiration ; therej fore all should be removed, and tho naked | fool bald to Iba fire until warm and dry ia 1 I every part ; If then a pair of dry stocking* p®1 uu-und a -pair of. mjjh (prig iiyj. pert or shore, there will be a feeling qf comfort for the remalndw of the day which I will more than coro|«nsate for tbe trouble . taken, to aay nothing of tba ailments 1 averted. But 11 must sot be forgotten I that, as India rubber tboea ara impervious ' to water from without, and ought to lie , j worts only id muddy weather, sod oaly tbau | : wbau the wearer it in motion, so leather' (j Shoes, rendered impervious to water by ( j blacking or any otbar means, should bo.' J lika ladia rubbers, used temporarily, aad<vheo walking ia mud or slash. Fee eom1 ' moo purposes tbe old fashioned leather I boots or shoes are tbe beat, If kapt wall' ; Mac baas J with several renewal, of dry . socks daring the day. If the feet sweat pro- ; . fusel y. Al cold and damp feel are tba svenuaa of dretb t» multitude* every year, a systematic attention to the above seggrej lioojt would save many a valuable ItXo.— I Haiti Journal of Health. ' OF II HAT MAN IS MAOE. - ; Of sixty-two primary elements known to , j nature, only eigkuea are found in tba hu- , ! man body, and of ikes* savca are metallic. ! Iron ia found in tbe blowd. phoepberu in | tbe brain, limestone in tbo b«e. lime in tbo booee. dost and aebes ia aH. Not oaly [ I three eighteen faaman elements, hut tbe t whole tixty-two, of which tbe universe is j hem. erqpotial basis in foar subs tan- ^ can— oxygen, hydrogen, aitrogen. carbon— rsprenenting tbe more familiar names of " fire, water, saltpetre apd chareoal. And suck Is man. the lord of the earth— a spark i Ira, a drop of water, a grain of gua powder, an atom of chareoal,. [ "Paddy, boaoy. will yoo bwy my ».ioh, c aawfI "Aad ia it about aelling yar watch ye ara, ' MikaT I I "Troth, ft ft. daritog." ' "What', tba price r "Tin shillings and a wee aratebkto ef the f errata re." ' "la tba watch a daciat oaa V "Sore, aad I've bad it twenty years, aad U never yet daeaivad ma," . . , » "*•». yvr tin. Now, taU ma, , does it go wall r "Be dad, aad it goes faster than an* watch In Conaaugbt, Menster, Ulster, LeibSter— 1 aaMhorateg OaMin- - rlo - • Bad iaafe to ye, ■foe. ye ha*e tokabaw > io. Didn't ye any it nvrer-deeeirad f a f ' : -rT lq "%f«i »' 1 Aid, s Aar did it, for i a. ear1 depended on it." 1

