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VOL. X CAPE ISLAND. CAPE MAY COUNTY, NEW JERSEY, THURSDAY. OCTOBER 30. 1864. NO. 2J, ... : - ---- ■ 1 . 1-^— r*i»— ----- , ' ' 1.,-, w P—-~ mm —
f *l«t f #ffts. 4 THEBORK THAT BLOOMED IP ! « K, STAIRS. n wilcu'l. aovrwv. t. Beside my door » rmMim nw. And w*» MM lis branches threw. Yet blossom never yielded j I mrM M lon«, wBi anxious rye, I Vet failed to look, where tor on high . T%a S'iaao B window shielded. (me day, Intent on household cares, I oped n llUle room up stslrv. Whose window loosely (lo« l Jdy wee, twtt pete eiwpt up betide, Then Affle, sparttll**, «■ «he fried— Til — «' yowr meewf In at the looaeaad blind, thry'grrw— More braotiful they oevnre* to view. Than any outdoor bloom era ; And day by <Uj, la merry pairs, My hahaa.dHd. ITrould ileal up stairs, ^ndlkn.-. new rnnrn " UThcs autumn came, oh, time of ckwm I ' mftlmm ■» pawataua buda of bloom, tatty the (Tnve'a d.rtt kerpios I Bat A0i» iwbetly wiped my rye«, And gave earroses for my si*»u, PdftfMf chM my weeping. Ob, far a cblld'a Meat faith, to feel KotaMaROfibafnturCi weal— P Bl fiiiittn *Hfa" and "may-he's" I— -I ruaea, ma, IT your rone-tire bean, 'War up ao high," (he llaped nt prayers, wftfilhaa some beautiful •oj^talri." Where wl Anil tad the bible-." £tltrt Iffiistrllaag. k|WWI,'M*d wives. Tf—hMili afe often tbongfetlauly exacting, ftftd in pond inch • variety of petty daties ob thalr uncomplaining petty on uncomplaining e
wivai, Ait, tiie eolffr fades frofc tho t chBjL Bpi joy die* oat of tee beart. « '• A vbeagbtfaltooiMd teoder^ sympathy ortold ©bang* the euttro-or poet ofJBBBJ homed. A contributor to i lij$ Jffnirirtdrf tells* ttory which haia I goodtar^; |* It #bt tt« freshest of April mornings, « with b toft triad, that bod rifled all man- c * tier of bwmI aeaota from dimpled hoi- t Iowa, parpled ovjr with yoong violets, t and aolitary brook aid e«, fringed ^witb « white euemofis stare, and wafted ihem t into, the city atreata to revive many a 1 weary dweJlef R^pong paring stones. I M& Afdott.' atandlng at her window, looked do«B At -the 1trm feet of earth t that city people dignify with the title of < ••garden," Bad felt the annoy ipring in- t Hbncm evan there. 1 ''What a lovely morning 1" aaid she I to hsfiilf , "tela i» the very time to put ! " my dahlia* ioto the ground, and lake , • car* Of the roam— how fortnnate that ' I to-day will be comparatively a lei»ure ' time tome! Women don't often got I nl|ppd from (he domestic treadmill, , and what with spring atari, g. company, j aaddMH<daaidag, 1 have beoa literal- j ]y a slave for the laat three month*. , * OWa hot in" the open wir. among , the J flftier-roota, sad I shall feel as thongli : 1 waa aauriog a yaw life !" JpMmat Mrs. Arden ! Bad the lived i to bo thirty years old, without koowiog | to braatha, withoat Crat asking her has- j baftd If 4t«t pteteetly proper and coovenieat? Mr. Ardaa had laid out ao eti- •_ arm . * VI. I.4.. '
titely did* root programme for ! * ^tfajjh bocaaie, diaeontentedly eyeing j l Shaaaw eifcreoat ha bad been boyiag. j t "bailie, BA't yon fix Ibis overcoat j c somehow f Than is somotbiag hitchy j ■ ■biialjAs SiHBi jiiii tan tell where the ; c troobla is, yoa're so smart with yoor needle 1*' • < «*-"* 1 Mis. Ardagtook it oat of his bond* i aSSlobkif at Ivdaspairingly — there was i hyaalmri' work aboot it. t k "lad Kaffio— If yoa woaldn't miod aMMApdBoa OWst boaams they're all ] in a wrinkle — the pattern was a bad . A " ' - rTwlHl>Hd 111 V-'T •*— Bode < aeaorOiag to the vary patura, aatirely I Mta — rnliWn " 1 Mr.Arrather aheapifhly; "MartU aaid it ; iMIjlllI H'. bat Mertla 4m^ know . ' -* -a ' " 1 "TSVy** bed fossd that oat be- < (HjlhBMlM iWw Bode," m# Mrv ^ajy.latiriis,, Imr Spewee, ftp. ymist» Hir l^jyefeftemgiagthe aaMsaL **wMare ywe goiag to have Idmtkme, Tm the agsayua tfzz * !SSS£S^ * te;» ' " ' i»i'MfsifcW*rn-'i J
| TTViie goes the day of Mawve that i was to hsve pat my gsrden in socb bean' ! , tiful order," sighed Mrs. Arden. ! . j "0, pshaw !" aaid her boscaad, con- j j lemplaiing hi* whiskers in the glass, I "whst do yoa care about gardeo-work T j A woman ought to fiud her chief bappi- j nets in domestic datie*. I don't ap- ; pro«* of this everlasting fidgeting sbout j flowers !" | "Ilsrry," «aid his wife, "you wonld not be st all contented if your officework was to endless that you never got | a moment'* time to ymokc a cigar, or | read a book or newspaper " | "n — do," replied Mr Ardeo, beaita- ! tingly i "but then yon are not a man " [ "No — I know I'm not," aaid Mrs. ' Arden quickly; "if 1 were, my wife should have a littlle leisure to breaths occasionally Mr. Arden went oot, ifautting the door, with some vehemence, behind him. "I never did Bee each a complaining itt as woman are." was his internal reflection, as he walked-rapidly down the street. "a | Two or three bour»r steady work soon ! disposed of the press of office-businets I awaiting bim, and he threw bimself back in a chair to rest, and look over bit . newspaper. Bat the balmy wind fanned hi* forehead like narcotic incense, and - the aensation of dolce far-ntenU was in- 1 f expreasibly delightful — the closely priotg ed columns became a mere oonTnsed j columns oecame a mere uumuacu ;
blur, and the first Mr. Arden knew, be ! — not exactly atlrep, perhaps, bat , ^Irtsioly not very wide swwke. • Something carried bim back to the , time when Nellie had been a bride — . and blooming as a rose. How well | I be remembered the blue light of her : eyes and the satin brightness of ber i complexion. She bad grown wan and I j weary-looking since those days. Wat j it possible tbst b* had been lacking io . care and tenderness ? It was rather an uneasy twiDgs of conacience. for he did ; her, rattle-brained and thoughtless though he waa. ! He thought of ber, sitting alone I through the glorious April day, bending over the work be had asaigoed to her i ! until the pallor deepened oa ber cheek 1 sod the eyes grew dim *od latteries* — : remembered the many, many dayt< she had spent io the same wearisome | occupation. No wonder that the little > garden waa a aunny spot to her — no ' 1 wonder that she loved the flowers, whose i freshness seemed to revite b«r whole nature. A man may be very croel to a woman : ! without cither beating ber, or denying ; ber the necessities of life. : Boppote she shoo Id drift awwy from ; ! him, like u delicate leaf upon a awiftI running stream ! lie shuddered at the mMbtj idea. 8be waa not strong — tha •jtime might coma when a narrow grave I and a white headstone would be all that . | remained of his little wife And then — ' sboald be not rsmember all these things? . { He started op from the troubled net* . arnrtr n f f.ncr that had wnvan itaalf in.
j work of t tO a vague dream ; the sunshine lay ^ brightly ubon the floor, and the fingers t j of the office clock pointed to tha boor j ' at which be usually wewt home to dio. ( I ner. - # - — - ( The podding was made — the coat in | prima order— the ansa lis factory shirts y< ripped apart, and Nsllie, though pale' ( aud tired-looking, eame to ibe door wMb smile, to greet ber hoaband. / j "Why, Harry, what on enrt^/' have ( got there?" she exclaimed," a* Mr. ( Ardeo came op the steps, staggering | under the weight of ytwo or three bios- ( aoming geraniums sad verbenas, which , be had brought from doWa town ' with , incredible difficulty. , / ( "Thaught yoo'd UkeX>me flowera for yonr garMh, my dear" explained be ; and Nellie straightway gave him a pleased, happy lookJwhieb ba did not aooa forget. J "And sow," /aid ha, after . dinner, "there isnt myth to do at the office todqy iawppaa^yon and X ^tvou tha af- > tovftofta to gMsft wovlu WaaanaMka . tha kola ptoa. aa went aa a ptok !" Hatoy. toat woald ha ftaftgtkfai 1" i nMiiflfts, with hrfghtaaiag eyas: "tmt th&aa shirts — " r "0Aa patter aboal Aft aMita! Wt '-'3SeS&& a kftil'iftfl'Tri —
T ELLIS G nOklEL There is a carious game of modern i invention, which it often played at yoong r ; people's parties, end which illostrstes'- 1 1 very happily the growth of a narrative, j i i as it travel* from mouth to month. A ) ' brief anecdote is written out plainly and f simply The writer read* it in a whis- ] per to hi* next neighbor. The next ( ' neighbor, baring heard it only ooee, re- < pea is it, also in a whisper, to the person j ; on hie right — that one to ihe next, and | so on, outil it has gone aronnd the room. , The last person repeals it alond, and , tbea the original anecdote is read from . the paper Tb« difference betweeft the , j two veraions is often very arousing. — | | Many of the famous stories of history j , | i have changed widely eoougb in their . | passage tbrongh the yeara. One, which i , has olten been told fh illustration of , ! chivalry in war, is a case in point Lord Charles Hay, so the story runs, Captain , of the English Guards, aud the Marquis d'Aaterocbe, of the French Grenadiers, found themselves facing each other with . their commands Each stepped forward, bat in hand, bowing politely. "Gentlemen of the French Guards," said the Englishman, waving precedence, "fire !" | ( ! " No," replied toe equally polite French- . I man, "we never fire first " Whereupon, 1 I j chivalry satisfied, the English Guard* | ; did fire, sod ibe French Grenadiers were ; cot up wofully. Carlyle, in booting for , I materials for bis htetory of Frederick ihe j Great, fiahed op the genuine accoont of .
| this transaction. What Lord Charles . Hay did ssy was — "We are the English Goardt, and we hope yon won't run ; away before we can get at yoo, a* you ^ did awhile ago at Deftington." So much I for international courtesy. "Three black ; crows," wbeo cbased bark to the starting I ; point, become, very oftco. "something black a* a crow," as in the old rhyme, ' i which every scbool-boy knows. Couni try villages are proverbial for their facilI | ity in starting rumors. Y on are oot sod a sodden shower comes op. Yoo have an umbrella, and Mary Ann Jones, on ^ j the sidewalk opposite, bss none. It . is ' i a simple set of good nature to offer her ^ i pretty round hat and scarlet feather the ^ shelter of yours — to see her safe borne ! Next day some one says she saw Mr. Gray walking borne as easily as possible 1 with Mary Ano Jones. Before the week ^ ■ is over yon ere engaged, and the wed- ^ , ding day ie fixed fur yoo. How many ^ i lives have been wrecked, and loyal hearts ^ I broken, by baseless rumor. Some cere- j i less looker ou makes a laughing speech , i It fa repeat- d by the hearer in grave : " i earnest. It gathers weight as it roils ; 8 along, and ia strong enough by and by | to ruin an honest man's credit, or crash i D s good woman's fair fame. Ageinst ^ these intangible etories, moreover, there ia ao defense. You cannot arrest a per- i son for scandal, bacsnte tbey hope a ^ thing isn't ao, or horsewhip a man for a ! 1 wink, or a meaning smile. And so < " every miachief-maker goes scot-free Indeed, not all the story-tellers have ^ actual mischief io theji hearts. Half of
them, perhaps, wojiid Se really sorry to , f any barmy They wish everybody , 1 well; they no one's enemies — only 1 is to pn&orai to tall what one hears ; : I and 19 a certain order of minds it i* snch { 1 pleasure to communicate news — to be 1 1 to eagerly — that the temptation j , of telling all they know, and piecing oot | ■ knowledge with surmises, it irresistible. ' And so — "behold bow great a matter a : ! fire kindleth,, — the miaebief ia 1 done. The only core for this tendency, at least the bast one, ia to be ao bnsy! aboot one's own affaire as to have no time for ooe'a neighbor's. It is not through the working bees in the hive that the mischief comes. They have eooagh to do to gather their own honey- 8eott's parting counsel need to be -•"Be good," oats is— Be busy. Toocsnca KrnAra — It is refrcshiag to find upou the toabeloae of dtp art ad worth, snub delicate seaUmenu of profound respect as arw — ftodted ia tea < following lines cot apoa u tombstone : ' "Bm lias Mayar Parker, yfhtelAtojtovAu— fltteateogktor. He dMMbut aay hare, Waa barkd wiikoet aay tears, And wham he's goaa sad how ka faros, No waa kuuws aud an saa cneas." t . - » ffiHW 1 -#« 1 -A teaaftift Mtev fte eat M tea aalaalaB— to* mm HftjA te teaalinftt, I whoa tea Mb roaaad Wm by riagiaf 1 mh*. kjniilil lit )HhM|iA (WA1
* X WORD IM TIM. In ibe Conference, when Ei- | : der P. was Presiding Elder, there were 1 1 | three brotbes, all preacher*, and not j 1 generally considered very bright. Oae j | been examined, and had gooe out | ( the conference lo pas* .upon him I , P., as presiding officer, - rose to I , ' give his opinion "Brctlirrn." said he, ' , "ihese S — v. ali of them, are well-meau- 1 men — ihev're good men — I mean they're good'Christians ; l»-it there's no | mistake ahoat it, they're all of tbeai got very soft place in their heads somrwbere.'' Turning his bead a little, he | met the indignant eyes of the two o her j brothers fastened foil opon him With- ] out chacglag a muscle, be raised one-1 • hand to emphasize his words, and with I a curious expression of countenance, stealing on, he continued : ' And lo tell the truth about it, who ha'n't — who ba'u't ?"' BEAITIFI L SIMILE. Sir Waller Scott, in hi* "Woodstock," remarks, wi'h rare felicity : "There is. 1 I know not why, something peculiarly pleasing to the imagination, in cootero- ; plating the Queen of Night, when she is ' ! vajiny. as the expression is, among 1 ' the vapours which she has not yet the '' power to dispel, and which, on their 1 ' side, are unable entirely to qoencb her lustve.* It is the striking image of pa1 tieot virtu q, calmly treading her path 1 . . — ' aaaiI n.nn.1 and I. ad ra i , n r f through bad report, 1
having that excellence in bersolf which j ' ought to command all admiration, but ( bedimmed in the ryes of the world, by ( suffering, by misfortune, by calamity. , i\ OLD FiHHIONED MOTHER. , Ah, how much meaning is composed J ' in that aim pie expression, Oit oid ftuh- ^ ■ toned mother! It carries our Uioughta ( back to those women whose home iuflu- , ence was pure and elevating, who taught , their daughter* 1o render themselves i blessings to society by ibeir goodness, . 1 tlieir diligence and their useful kuowl- . edge. < We think of the lofty heroism. , the brave "endorance. the thousand vlr- ' tuea they inculcated, and sigh at the contrast between the past and ibe prea- . ' ent. "How few modern mothers underj stand or periorm tbeir duty io training . 1 their children. A smattering of this r that and the other, is considered quite I sufficient edocauon, and to show off to . ' advantage is made the great aim in life. i No wonder there are so many desolate , fire-aides, so many unhappy wives, ao , ! many drinking gambling husbands. r ! i JOKE FOR SELFISH Ht KBASDb. I I t Lord Ellenborough was once about t I to go on ibe circuit, when Lody Ellen- - ; borough j^id that should like to accoma I piny him. He replied that he had no a objection, provided she did not encom0 1 ber the carriage with band-boxes, which ! w-re his abborence. During the first e day's janrney, Lord Ellenborough hap'I | peoing to stretch his legs, struck his 1 1 e — n g
against something below the seet. ) , discovered that it was a band box t j «cnt the window and out went the , ; band-box. The coachman stopped, and : i I the foounun thinking that the band-box 1 j had tumbled oot of the wiudow by some I « 1 extraordinary chance, were going to j S pick it up, when Lord Ellenborough fu-"^ ' rionsiy called oot, "Drive on I" The ' ^ 1 band-"box was aocordingiy left by 'he , , dilcb side. Having reached tee county 1 , town where be was to officiate «s judge, j , Lord Ellen borough proceeded to array 1 bimself for hit appearance in tbe Gonrt j - Ho oae "Now," said be, "wbere'a my j 1 wig — w hare's my wig?" "My Lord,'' 1 1 replied bl» attendant, "it was thrown j ■ oot of tbe carriage window." A Scotch minister, after a bard day's labor, and while at 'dinner tea,' at be t called It, kept incessantly praiaing the I "baas," and stated that "Mrs. Doolop , at ham* waa as fond o' beam at be was," , wbea tea mistreat kindly offered to send ^yr tha present of a ham "It'* naeo k(W o' ye, aaeo kit', but 111 ao pit ye » lU tronble ; IV joa Uk' it heme 00 tea borse afore me." When, on leaviag, be mounted, and tbe ham waa pat ' 10 a affifc, bat tome difficalfy wet experienced In getting it to tie properly. • Hi* it ten live renins soon cnt Jh« Oort, ditn knot. "I think, mistress, a cheese g UteettUfau'wod rnek' a gran' *»•-' 1. .nee." ' IV hlct wis immediauly acted u, ***
BODILY CiRRIifiK. I Ia«lra<l of eivinx all torts of rule* about j j out tbe toes, and straightening ap I j tbe body, and holding tbe shoulders hack all of which arw impracticable to many, he- - ( cause soon forgotten, or prodnctive of 1 1 feeling of awkwardness and discomfort 1 , , which prodace e willing omission, ell tliat op the head and move on. letting Uie head , ! and thoolrfeVS "Take care or them-elves. Walk with the chin hut spghtiy chore a ! hnpzontal line, or «ilh your eye directed | lo ihinge a little higher than your own , head In this way you walk properly, pleasjirrbly. and without any fre'uog of restraint or awkwardness, if any of you wjfh to he aided in securing thi« habitual caryour hands behind you. one hand grasping ' the opposite wrist Englishmen are admired the world over for I heir full chests broad shoulder', sturdy of body is a favorite with tbem — in the simple promeoade. in the garden or gallery. iD attending ladies ulong a crowded street, in staliding on the street or in public worship. Many persons spend a larg part of tbeir wnking eiisteore in the silting position. A single rnle well att'-n>'ed 'o in this con- ■ nection. would he of incalculable value to multitudes L'.e chair, with tha old fash, ionod etruight hark", a little inclining hack '' ward, and sit wrth the lower part of the 1 hodv close against the back of the chair at r , Ibe "seat Any one who trieh it will observe r in a moment a grateful support to the . whole spine, and we we no reason why , children .hould not be taught from the he- , ginning 10 write, and and knit in a ; sew. knit in
position requiring tho lower portion of tbe hody and shoulders to touch tbe back of thachaitat the tame time. A very composition in sitting, especially among is with the shoulders against the chair back, with a space of several inches ; bet wagn t lie chair back and the lower portion orihe spine, giving the body the shape of a balr-boop; it is the roslanlaneoos. instinctive and almost universal position assumed by consumptive on silting down, unless counteracted by an effort of the will: hence ; parents should regard snclt s position in r their children with apprehension, uod should rectify it at once J.W.i/ .Yetr Vorler. MISTAKES OF I HU RT OK STORKS. ^ Beasts and birds have their instinctive notions or law and juMice, which are often quite us much at fnult as those of human tribunals. A correspondent of the Ixindon mnl. administration uf law' by soma stork , l judges. He says : The stork, to Scltleswig. is the pel of the country people, who cherish all manner of tuper-tition* coocerniog him. They eo- ' courage him to build upon their roofs. ! ■ Happy is the cottager at the summit of 1 f ' wbose gable the bead and beak of "la mere , ■ cigogne' are to be seen risiog above thr nest of sticks in which she broods over her . coining covey. Among many stories that were told me in which the stork figured. 1 j 1 noled one as bring peculiarly curious and " well authenticated. A miscbieous Schles- " wtgiao damsel took advantagJ of the ao- ' mentary absence of a brooding etork. to - remove the eggs and substitute those of an b ; owl. When batching time came, watch t was kepi and it was evident that the" doOiestic happiness of Mr. and Mrs. Stork was seriously compromised by the appcar- * ance of lb. newly-horn. Stork the father. 1 or the newiy -worn. o.ur. .or ...0-. f
manifestly pur/Jed and pot out by tbe j - unusual appearnce of his pseudo-offspring ; ! there was nothing of the paternal profile j about them ; aod probably he remembered 1 ' have seen, when returning home late of t 1 evenings, ao iH-tooking. bltck-ryed fellow. , . j whom be recognized in , them a certain . J family likeness. Affer addressing remon- • ' strances to bit wife, in the gnise or some | pretty severe pecks, be Bew away, but j presently returned, bringing with bim other : ! storks of grave eppearance, probably the | i elders of the tribe. Tbey held a consulla j I tioo. and then set upon the owlets, threw 1 I them oot of the nest, and killed tbem ; after , ! wbicb tbey Bttaked tha mother stork, killed i ! ber likewise, and lhe»dep*rted. Doubtless ' tbey had acted ae aaemed to therm jost in I so ucotual a caae, aod had carried out tbe sentence tbey bad passed after constituting I themselves ioto a Creswell Court extraor- ( dioary. |a thr tilni #f a him1 It hat been decided To oov of tbe western ' courts, that a kis* is a valid consideration. I In a case quoted, aa old bachelor offered a , yoaug lady a poay for • kif. The •** . waa accepted and tee kite giveo, bat tire " bacbalor refusing to »va the pony, a soil was entered in tbe coort, aod tire jury de- " cited that tea poay or its value abould be 1 riven to the girl. ^ jWJtei are the aavy pleasnrey and tbe • ch^r fancies of the poor/ _ After all, there is aeroelblBg about a • Hi—in (*> «a wSe ttefbanww uM • T!* i .Vtiti'ffi to t —mi mix -Aft* el - '• . ' ' . -.^ ;re Jit - ■ sm •
— God gives io asture, tt io an oracJc, thb answer before tbe question is a*ked., — .The world weep« away the griefs, end, ' with those griefs, the memory of the «rep\. — Habit uniformly and constantly strengthens all oar active exertion*. ' — The wanderer from home, like tbe 1 surveyor, "drug, at eocb remove a lengthening chainl*' — The lover carries away with him the * first kt*s as a «ao to brighten and warm hi* ' ^ whole after-life. — The mnn who ondertrw-k to walk against time has given it op. but time is ' still going ahead. — In the deep, sweet twilight, the earliest innocent feelings of childhood Hatter aroood os like night-butterflies. " .- "* — The hoose in which we were born ia tbe bridge upon which are stretched the : musical strings of our whole lives. - — Water Lillies are white chalice*, heltj op hv on-een ha ds — beautifal thoughts ' rocked 011 the swell, of a pore bosom. — The religion »f some folks is a mere . matter of ornament like thev»tone god* which rich men set up in their gardens. , ful. Merit and good breeding will make — l'ltiloeophy may analyze a tear, hnt K t spectrum, but 1' cannot make a smile. f — When we are alone, an hour pastiuidf night, in the streets of a aleeping city, f everything around as appears as if bewn ic " the ad iOiant of eternity — It ia a aad thine that irenermllv as a j — generally as
. man s fear* grow, and as his hopes grow. Ins oaths and curses also grow — those ejmculato'y prayers to Satan. — Sleep soothes and arrest* the fever , pulse of tbe soul, aud its grams are the ' quinine for the cold fits of bale as well as for the b"S fever of love. — Sweet words fly like honey-bees from the flower-lips of a lovely woman, penetrate the heart as with the shaft of love, aad ' then fill tbe puncture with bone^" *- If we would be happy in life, we should look upon the glad to-day as a long youth, aod upou the sad to-morrow as a short old age. ^ — We lave much more warmly while ' cherishing the intention of giviug pfeaaare, lb m an hour afterwards when we have giv- ' ' — Tbe most painful port of our bodily ^ pain is that ahich is bodiless or immaterial t — namely . our impatience, and the delusion that it will last forever, f , — Tonting or sulking is catalepsy of the . 1 apint, in which, ae in the phy.ical disease. every limb rigidly maintains tbe position f . in' which it was surprised by- Ibe attack, e — That face is the noblest that beam* r brightest with benevolence. That hand r the most beautiful from which benefit* and l ! favors and gifts are continually falling. j — How brightly do even little joya beam ° upon a soul darkened by the clouds of aor- ; row. as stars rotne forth from the empty. *- I sky. when we look up to them from a deep ° ' well, or from cellars. 0 1 — This life is a hollow and insipid toy — I only the sinking froth of a life — a leap >" through the ring of eternity — a rotten. ^ i asby apple of .Sodom, the taste of which ' I we cannot get out of our mouths, apit aod ' 1 sputter as we may. 1 may.
I? uzzltt's (Corner. ALL Knigmm. Riddles. Quotums, Ac., must be sr. -ura [Anted with thr Answers slid Solutions to order insecure insertion. ._ - — . MI8('ELLA>'E0rS ENItiML— Yt. 4. J am compmeit of 3 » letter t. My l.H. 8, 7, 26. 31, 12, is a *lation. My ?. 6. 13, 32. 18, 6. is an soiusingpley ! My 9, 20, 12, 22, is what every boos* j should have. My 14. IS, IB, 13. 10, 11, 16. I", te. 19, is what we all should be proud of. i My 21. 24, 25. 2». 3, 4s what wo are often glad to se*. My 30. 16, 29, 23, 33, ia a useful, yet oftco dangerous insMrament. My 3", 32, 36, 36, 37, is a accessary article for comfort. . My 34, 33,. 1, 2, 2B, 87, are the one# by A whom our country la 16 an uproar. " My 27, 31 20, is a delicious bovevego. My whole is a motto worthy of Mo* adopted by our eoldievs. 8*uOL. b Answer next week. A Akswrb to "Little Mae'*" tetiRiftJ"*"" , "Take tea Oooua h^ore,' aad |oy tog It/' Ajckwkb to f.swniA to oor lresa 1 jot -General P. H. Sberidea, lb* hero of the ribeoandoah Valley." 1 Tbe following pereoos bave.eonl . root Anawcre * <•io.ni. »ss, , Jacob T. Prieo, J TWflftteftHOffiRI V*T ' , H. ffiaoatette. ffitelto* HiU. : L. ftureartte, -SroffMto" P *■ * it r'-v ' %k y-M : *' :

