' ' • . " Tsr .
VOL. X. ! -l.t I . 1
CAPE ISLAND. CARE MAY COl'XTY. NEW JERSEY. THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 1>. 1864. i-LL. 1— - — 1 ■" 1 - - 1 1 1 — - — i-L. - . - ■ — — ' s=
i NO. 2o. -
Jrlrct ^ortrtr. A MRXEBl SOXG. am I w*lVt>) mr ttar hill* on» d«r I IHtcaeU another sheep see. " In all the gm worli.tbnt ■* r."thln«; *a»wret Am my LllU l*mznir-wi1h hit BimMr fret. Wllh hit rye so bnytn, « And hit wool SO Arhlle. Ota J he'* my ■taiUag, < hi heart's 4. fish!. Tbe retain, he That Buys In the tire. Dearly raoy dote on hit Bartlne* InuM Bat I love my iittte luMlt *»■»." And tie mother Sheep *nd her little one, Side !ry tide liy Cowa In the tun. And they went to sleep on tbe EBWde w nra, While my tittle JsAmteT ir* bet* <•* tuy tire. I went to the kitchen, tr.d wtet did He*. Jlol the old pty dot with her kit idn* three. I hetrd ber wtaWp«-:tn« serf! -reid she. "My kiuene trlO) tail* *11 to r»wUi*ly culled, Ary the pfetttyst thlnjt Itant ctu be In the world. TheHidlnthetreo, AW the old ewe the But I lore my klltent there Under the reeking rb*ir. I lore my klUent with *11 my mlytat ; I lore thorn at soornttr, *hd mood, mi aleht -, •Which 1* the pirfllest I csanot tell, Which of the three— * for the life ol Be — I lore them *11 to well. Now 111 Uk* up*} kittle* the kittles I low, *~.i we'll lie down teyetber ne*li: I he warm stove." Let the kittle* tleej. under the tore to wsrm, While my little a*r!lt* nettle* here em my tern. « west to the yard, and rtw the old lien Co elueklnc tbout wtth her cjilekent ton, •he r lacked end telttrhrd. end the brtstlej twty. And wtatt do yeq thinks httedhettey k 1 httrd bet ug ; "The tun did never thine On tnythiny SkefMsr rhlrkrn. of mine. You tony hour the Sail moan. «nd df*et If you rlssse Bui you will never Oud ten such chickens tt there. The ft loves he» klttent, the etc loiet her lamb. But they do tot know what * proud mother I -m i For ltufkt, Bor for klttent , I won't port with there, Tboufh the thtep ud tfr etlt thould yo down re. their kneet. hot no! not thoayli the klttent thould crow. ' Or the Itmm.r oh two yellow ley* thould ft-, my dot! downy dsrilegta! my tweet Uttltkhlny-. Come nettle now WreSy under my wlnyti" So the bra sold. And the efah hetu *11 sped At f*f^A*1hr^y rsnlil to ihrir nice iMther bed. And there let IVn sleep In their fettheit to wsrm. While my llttlo chirk tretles her* an tnj iron, ^iretmrore**— — "iaaBBMBgggg -■-■.■y I
gfntmsting J-totn. BEX'S BEAVER. _ i A pioneer aettler in the. woods of Cmnod* htt steed to It* o mau of lirave t heart «nd strong bnnd. We bad been i fire dtYk trt« oor Canadian form, and we i had • "frame b-iuhe" a- .fmirly Cited for i two ftinillh a* two firts in Pari*, one ' ! •bote the otber, or two dwelling* ad'- ■ joining in » eeini detatched villa. My eld?} i.rwiiiet bad the wife of bit choice and two fine boys. We bad thirty acre; ir. corn , fruit, grass and kilcheu g^len. This cMfM't of the woods mads the two brother* next to the eldest very oncssy. They wanted s world to conquer, •nd 1 retiiemiier when WalteT, tke eldy. est, uuw eighteen, said to iny father, "Gyje.Juhu and nic ten shillings to buy nxes/«i.d we till Dinr ask env more of you. We will gire you • receipt in full for osrwh hUmmr."' "And may well do so, 'if, yon base v ur health sod cmti fetch your food from f i.ome fr»T« While," «ald my mother. The result was that the two boys started , each with on axe and an knapsack, for «>4>Uee cafied " Tbng'a Uollow,w ted «flf« i»to the denaa forast east of oiir besne. The iroct of land comprising • fine iraterfnll, bnd been booght by • nian eased Bugge, and bo inteudcd «bwt-tiis cUioi should bear bis own tiamc ; but he lisped oud called himself Tlmgge, and other lulka called bim what he called lymself. and Vence the ogly ncats was fastened on a Tery loteiy tal- 1 ley, whieb is now a beautiful and pros- ! - peroas eillagS, long ago emancipated from forest trees.^beasers, blackened stamps, and its bad name. On the mill-atre»m, wbare now stand the mills of my victorious brothers, Ben's bsaver was csngb; in a box-trap Ha was a baby beater, or he might have | known better than to intrude into the j 'small room thai became his prison for. t ha bribe «f *..»wwat n ppla. Tbe colony j of beavers that ba.1 built r.ear where the .ore-iull no. w* l».o tuuaid out of tbeir bovsc, and all shot, by my ; .tiro thaaa,. while they were trying to get | in ht their owe dwow. It was a crutk. and pr<4ut4v job, for bearer skins then ! hnttU a very high prica. Kot one was 1. f» alive exevpt baby Brownie, who was gitau to Bin by waeoa of his great loee for four-lboted ptU ' I went over ' tree*, or eeyliugr, which they cat down «r» b their abisel-like frout lee.b, and oailt it, tbo trw dry rooot. of the dwell** w«k thstr soft ltolog. the tre*wreeVbwk and balbins roou fa»W
in winter, all' were « o^lcrfol to uie. - The boys had matched them, at work . i : for some deySyKef re tbey commenced ; destroying them. Tbey bad seen them i cnt down sapiiagalo repair damage pur- I posely duoe to their , dam. Tbey bud fiuatrd these to the place where they were wanted, et.d then, lifting tbe nick i upon tbe fore-leg, ns a man lakt i e bur- i den ujioii hi* arm, they bad put it iu it. I place, very much alter the manner of a . i monkey Many liars* said , that the i hearer carries burdona oo bis tail, and i that k« uses it as a trowel. My brother; i acre not able to verify these assertions They were of opinion that thou.h the i tail may be used sometimes 10 br/ice the i : animal, like a fifth leg. or to hammer i tbeir work int&friace; yet tb*t it is opt i ; used a* a trotel or rait. Perhaps the ] \ time tbcj allowed themselves for ob«r- ■ rstiou a *s too short. I 1 took snln of Brownie for a long 1 . lime, and be toon grew to be u big < . beaver,' and very tame lie wa« one of i the most cheerful and aUtctionat - pets in »«rid, and. though lie nie bark and bulbous roots readily, hit futorite food was bread and milk; if it was sweetened, it was a special a:.d delightful treat. One of our neighbors was remarkably j fortoaale ir. finding horses that had gone j , astray. On bhing asked for the secret of his eagaciiy and luuk, he said "1 always fancy myself a horse, and think ' . what I would' want if I was one, and a where 1 should go to gvl it " If I could ^ faoey myself a beaver, i might hope to explain some of the singular doings of Hi-n's. He loved my brother so dearly that Alice (my brother's wile,) was al- jJ most jealous of Lim. It aos impossible J I for Ben to separate or hide from him. « . Ou one occasion, lien left home to go to Plat'.shqrg and Wbitehal, ou Lake | •- i o -
' Champloin. This lake -is nearly one hun :red miles lor-g. and lias many steamboat landings on both sides : being at . it* widest nof*ubovp srx ratios across. The beaver was left home, but when Ben went up to his room at St. Albans IIo- . ui, he was met by Bruanie who showed no signs of f»ligne, and indulged iu the most exiravagaut expressions of joy. ' Ben rewarded bis a'.leutiou with a dish of brcsd and milk, of which he ale aboul one-halt, and then laid himself to sleep on his master's valise. 11c changed to ■ bis master's ft ft when my brother »ss in bed. In ilie morning Ben missed him, and the remaining portion of. the bread aod in jk. "Brnwnif h«s gone home," said lien to biusvlf. That night : he staid at Fia'tlsburg, on tho other side ; of the Iskr; when be retired to bin room, af cr taking suppi r in an ordinary dining ' ! room, ihtte he found Brownie on bi» valise ag^in. Agaiu there w*» a j .yfal ; meeting, and en tagtr cuiisumption of bread and milk and sweet applet. This ^time there was none left for brpakfasL | Sull Broauie disappeared early, aad not i until Hen reached Whitehall was he ' again vitible, It is to be rioted that in adi tbe distance traveled by this beaver. . i there was water. Brook* and a small ; river took him to St Alhno'* aod after . that he had tbe lake. The beaver is a j poor traveler on land and does better by ' ■ night than by day. Modi of the work F oi beaver coloniea ia done iR the night. . But, Brownie followed bis tantirr by i day, aud made the asme speed as (he j boat, aud always knew where to laud. I The animal hss powerful means of water I locomotion in the bind fett ; bis tail he I > uses as a rudder. - Who or what told Brownie that Bee I I was to land at Whitehall, I cannot j , I kuow, but there l.c was, ready to pay hie , anient respects to bis master's pocket, i j for the sake of a sweet apple. ii My sister Alice had hoped wbeu she ■ : married Ben to reform bis pa*»ion for I j four-footed pits, by furnishing substii j tutes ; but he went 6tt thj principle of I i "the more angels is the heart the more r room," only he read babies end heavers I j instead of celestial beings. I remember klMl#. Bfw'i rocful expression of face as j she txciahned, " 0 d«*r! Brownie li s a 1 nuisance, lie has bulk * dam in tbe » | |«rlor, of the flri -irons and , fender and t ' music atuoL He baa made a ^uublt'r toomad htiuse at Ute back of It whh two II ottomans, and luted them with the hates n oftnylaX mnsic bttbk. And thbu he d j has stolen my drit-4 awert apples, aud r. j laid il.em up f»r his wiper's proiisTon. d ! Bat he is weireuic t.i th. m now. for who • ; would eat toetn s:t«*b« hit oiresed thnm rejovarl Iadoid. B^u. t>r i* a iuisaaco." *\ "Wa are .11 nuiMscer-^fiisiiMs.i
mid Brn. "beavers, babies, and grown 1 1 and women " "I wish you would speak for yourself' and Brownie. .and not for pie and the ' babies, Ben," said Alice, laughing. "Lock at biro." said my .brother, as Brownie combed himself with the claws 6f hie hind foot, making a toilet as carefully a* a cat, or a lady. Wo all did look at bim. and we all forgave his rait--j chief, and admired his ncatnf-h. sagacity and affliction. All jhc world forgive* : the pets and favorites when tbey serveor amuse sufficiently to pay their way. Tne end of poor Brownif wa* tragic, and no aetiler in Canada has been more sincerely' mourned. To this day a twn-li-r sadness fill* tuv heart whi-B I think i of bim. lie was mi-tsken by a hopter for a wild beaver, when the hunter wus on an' excursion with niv brother jn the back woods. He was *but. Ben got Tils skin and had' it stuffed, ami to this d*y it is kept as a parlor ornament iu my brother's Canadiau house. — All tic Year Hound XEintfiS IN H0LL1N11. Amsterdam is tbexleanect ci:y io the world. It is kept in this condition systematically, aud undergoes a rigid puri fication every Saturday Every house , ihen "presents a scene of unexampled acliviiy, both inside and out. Then are ' put iup> operation all the mopping, and sweeping, and brushing, and scrubbing, and (tasting, that the housewives of the old school know so well bow to make use of in the practice of their profession. This process is net confined to abe tbrrshold and mtrble steps, a flight of which is soon rubbed fall of holes ; tbe pavement, walls, windows and each individual brick in front of the building are all cleaned in the same thorough
manner. Spo s out of reach of the hand are visited*by a well-aimed streeui froia a stanll engine kept by cv rj fani- ' lv for ih*t purpose. The results of »11 this we k'y expnrgi- c lion ure toatetiuies ditasirous to the uu- ' ^ sophistical ed stranger. Ou emerging fc from bis hotel for the first time e*rly en J Saturday morning, be meditates in a philosophical way on the prospect of a 1 ^ delicious walk before breakfast He 1 i walks on in a sort of a delicious dreamy 1 abstraction thinking of the soletn aud i i " r impressive appearance of a great city in | its slumbers, the entirtj desertion of , ' street* lately so crowded, and the ab- ' ' sence of that busy hum of industry ' "which," he says to himself, "one short boar will call into fresh life and actios, ' ' hu* short," when be is startled from- bis ; ' ' ' revery by an avalanche of water on his [ ' hat. Taking it for granted that a water- 1 ' . spout has burst from the nearest canal, 1 | as takes refuge uuder the next porch. ' ^ and after recovering from his fright, • ' Isok* forth to.s ft nothing but an am hi- ' ' tiout servant giil, a sort of water-nymph. ' w ho, having pnr>oed an iodiscreet s'pt- 1 der, the last of hi* race, to the top of 1 the spont, is threwiug bowl-falls of wa- ' j ter at him to bring him to terms. Af , ter repairing damages, be again veo- ; tur«s forth, only to receive on bis ' ' shoulders two or three blows from a muddy broom, inuuded for s mosqiiKo that had been so foolish as to rise from ' tbe cauui where he Itelooged He pro- ^ gresses still farther, w .en a stream pro , pelted from a small band-engine with ' more than the vigor of Cochitnate, de- ^ j molishet entirely the elaborate eff.-rts of ' his laoudress. At length, becoming bc- ^ - wildercd and uuable, from tbe quanliiy oi water with which the* streets are ^ ' flooded, to distinguish them from the ' canals, be cynpietas his philosophical j * I tour by Walking into one of tbe latter. anu taking a delicious Jfoth before bieakr i fast. Being thence fished out by tbe ' . i nearest domestic, the brlpl-M savant is conveyed into his bcnal in a sttte of Im- ! becility. Flies in Amsterdam would en- ' ^ jov' life lea* than any where cite in . the j world Tbeir race bgs long stnc* dic(i : oat, and wrre use to make his appear- | -* • *«« ja 4b* street lie wonid be innbbtd ; - Mud is k*pt down with a strong arm * , ana the rising of a cloud of dost ie in- j | «tani!y *uppr«r**i ii with the most strin- j r~ j ge: t rigors of the law. — Boston Re- 1 fO * * — ! copier. t-» . —a .re. i — te — An txehange s*ys that if every mar. 's i ■d i breast could b« looked into, there troo u. ; would Cud th« image of aooie vipaan. ' O If yoo Irn.k- in the bosum of the ladles ID yoa fiad a daAtierre.type of Charity, * , ponmenwie, and a {vapcr of ncediC* beb*» 1 side* t«e or three billrt doux.
H.iED ON THE HOfiS. r • One of the most common censes nf blood impurities is the use of pork. It hashtru said that all thing* were created ' for spme aise purpose, bat bogs w tTr never made to eat. Christ only used J them to drown the devil*, they can never 1 ! be of any othi r beneficent nse At an' . article of- diet, pork excrls a most pfr- . nicious tnlluence cm the blood, overloading it with carbonic gts eud filling !ft with scrofula. Tho bog is not a ' healthy animal. From its birth it is au inveterate gormandizer— and to satisy it* eternal cravings for food, everything in field or gutter, however filthy, find* a lodgment in its capacious >u>mach. It eats filth, w allow* in tilth, and 1* itsc.f but .a living mass of fifth. Our bodies are made up of the thiuoa thai have been picked up ft out our plate*. The humoral properties end inflammatory effect which pork imp.m to the blood, t ltd* to germinate vermin in the system. Grab in the liver, kidneys, lungs and other or gans frequently bare their' origin iu the , h»e if this filthy article of food. The Gazette Afedic/ile ess< rta that the ' tape worm trouble's only those whoeat potk 1 It furtlicr rciiiarks'thtt the llebrcas are never troubled with it, but the pork butcher* are peculiarly liable to it, and that doc* f'-d upon it are nnifrrstlly so «1B cted. Iu fact it turns out that a small parasite' worm, called " Crysticeroiis" which much affects pork, no scouer reacbei the human stomach, than from i the change of diet and* position, it is changed into the well-known tape worm. ' and the experiments of M. Luehcnrooi- , ster, of Zittoria, made with great professional care upon on executed criminal, have f-sublislicd the fact beyond doubt — Medical C"mmon'~S?iin. THE DEATH MATCH. — — " i
The "death watch" (Anobium stria- • turn,) is a very cuunnou ininsle of our : houses Among those who are unacquainted with the habit of insect*, there ' is a common super. tgion that the strange' ticking •■mud Often heard in old i> a sign of approaching death. This noise, however, is caused by a small w hich, daring its boring operai lions, rob* the neck and thorax (chest,) together, by which uu-uns this (io some persons) terrible omen i* product® — a fact, which if more geucrwlly known,* would save a world of causeless anxiety aud uneasiness. Iu the larva slate these insects do great injury to our furniture aud the woodwork of old houses, which they gnaw continually. When captured ! this little beetle feiguw death with the strangest peitinaciiy, preferring, it is , said, certain death under a slow fire rather lh«u lo betray tbe least sigu of vitality. The "death wutcb" on accouul | of lis mired >abits, minute size, aod durk color, is very stldom seen; and, at there are often several individual* worktag at the su me lime ill their bortag optruiion*. the fraud stem* to proceed simultaneously from opposite directions, thus adding to the superstitions terror 1 wherewith, by some persons, it is regarded. The greatest evil, however, to be dreaded from it is the injury it does j through its. excavations in the woodwork of our houses. 1\ is not larger than a good sized flea. THE HI MAN i'l LSE. The human pulse has in all age* been , consulted as an index of health or disease. It is • kind of dial within as ' wbirb gi>es us both tbe mentor* of time and of health. The pnlse of • person iu health beat* about seventy suo-es in a minute, and the ordinary term of life is about seventy years. Iu this seventy | tours, the pulae tf a temperstc man ■ beat* two billion, five hundred and s*v-' | j eutr-four million, four hundred and forty j 1 j thousand tiroes. If no^ctual disorganii zaiion thould happen, a drunken person might live until his pulse beat this num- ' ; ber of times ; bot by the constant stim- ■ ; olua of ardent spirits, or by poise qoick- ' i euing food, the pulse becomes greatly j sectleratcd, aud the -two biHioir, -fivw j hundred and aereoly-fonr million, foor ; hutidri-d and forty thousand pulsations, " j ar* performed iu Ut U more than half ' j tbe ordinary term wf human life, and life ; gm * out in forty or forty-five rears, int | ate ad nf aeveuty Tin* *ppiteaiioo of „ j number* i. given to *buw Uut-tha ac- _ I celeratiott of those force* diminishes the s i term;of human life. — Medical Journal. ■ ; It it reported tint Queen Victoria is i furuisniug a story from her own. pen fop ' on* of the Locdoo magazine*.
A WATKBfiPOlT AT. SKA. Tha bark June D.-u!l. C*pt. 8mltb, which . arrived in the Toames ou the 13th .nit,. • from Bermcds. bad an exceedingly narrow escape from deatructinn by * waurtp»ut at- | j «e». Sbi- left Bermuda on Sunday. -August' ,"j 14, atidthorily after, the wind (Taring fallen to a dead calm, she came to anchor off the Great Sound. "The eyening." writes one . of the pattengers. "was eultry and overwhelmingly oppressive ; not w breath of air 1 rippled the water oi cooled tbe hot atmosphere. The sun travelled du*a the west -i and disappeared like a great circular patch of bloo-J behind a heavy bank of black cluad>. The nisht was eqn »lly miserable ; tRe heat inten'A; the wind was dead, the tiruad expanding water smooth tt glass, j uiS uverylhing in nature st-eined to deuute | some unusual phenonielios al hand. 1 be | i morning came, but uo^hange with i(. j Cloud- of Var'ed bae, bot all sombre^grty j t and black tinged, chgsed and gathered he- { ' Death tbe sky : tne ran rote a ball of.'fire, | and loomed in the distance Uke a red-hot I OS-pound spherical shot. No wind, uo | 1 rqiple, no sign of cbinge except perhaps < for the worse. At seven tbe cloudi' gath- j ered thick and heavy, and far in the dis- i tauce «e could tee rain beating down on the 1 -• u in line* of wal'er. Our alien lion was soon diverted from tbe rain. Capt. Smith . and Mr. Virgin, the pilot, asked if we did not bear a distant roar, as if lb ere wera u | naval engagement going on dt some short, ■balance. A doll . rumbling mar could be ' dial ractly heard. 1 •• We next olperved. about five miles i from us. a cylindrical coium reaching from i ' the tea to lite altitude of 600 feet. From i our point of view it appeared about three i feel iu diameter. It waa of a grayish hug. and assimilated in hue with -the clouds '# above. It rested upon tbe water, and by the u'd of our glasses we could distinctly observe the salt wuter ascending and the fresh water descending in torrents — the sea ' in u htale of great agitation. Around tbi^ ct liiioricul column the wind seeuied to be rushing with tbe force of , a volcano. A smaller oue. which appeared about tbu I
time, was apparently 'twallo'ed' by the larger one. For toiue fificeu minute* we . i watched this remarkable and to us novel . {ihenomenoti. The pilot then pronounced - it w water spout. At' we had never seen one wc felt no alarm, ttil warned that if it struck the ship we must save ourselves. While We were yet conjecturing what would be the retait ef this e^traordipary forinaliue. the great hue of black cloud* soleinly advupccd ou erch wing of the spout. Tbe rata Was pouring iu wild torrent-, and then the spout dropped down its mighty weight ,of wnSwr on the pitiless sea. while the winds uiadly rushed it towarJs us. We now became .larined. The roar of the falling water came to us like the distant sound of Niagara. The sea "At lashed into great waves ; the water* 'gjourvd and babbled, and 'use in swaying masses over aix feet in ; height. With ueadly aim and certain purpose the awlul colum udvauced. Nut one ! on board the ship but felt the danger, aud knew that nothing could a*v« us il it .trwck Use ship. I hank God it buesl about thirty j ' yards from us, aud the last remnantjOf water ceased within about teu feel of the stern. _ CH1LDBKVS ARMS AND UKg. A distinguisbed physician who died some I years since, ia Paris, declared: "1 believe j that during the twenty year* that I hsv# j practiced my prOfjpsioo in this city, twenty ! thouiond childran have been carried to tbe < c.-meteries, a sucr fice to the absurd custom i ofexi-osing tbeir nrrns naked." Oothisibe1 ■••litor of the Philadelphia " Medic*.] and ; Surgical Reporter" remarks: "Put the! bulb of a thermometer in a baby's mftath, i the mercury rises to ninety degrees. Now ; carry the same to Us little hand ; if thegirui i jfp I tare and tbe evening cool, the mercury | w HI (ink to fifty degrees. Of course all tire j , . t.lood that flow* through th-sc arms must ; ill from ten to forty degrees below tbe j temperalureof the bear). Need 1 say when ' 1 1 these currents of blood flow back iulo tbe 1 chest, tbe child's vitality must be more or '■ I Irs* compromised ? Aud need I add that r . we ought cot lo be surprised at its freqaeot l . recurring aff-ctiens of the toogur, throat ■ ."j or stomach ? I have seen more than one ,i child with habitual cough and hoarseness, ' choking with uracu-. entirely and f ernraneiftly relieved by eimply keeping the arias ' and hand* worms. Kverv observer and progressive physician ha* daily opportooi- " tie* of witnessing tbe **me cure." ^ THE KICK" ROOM. »"* — It-uiay-be eeeeoletwsy ta kuow that inr ' -fecttoo communicated through the air rarei, j ly extends a few feet from too body of the ^ ! patient ; and oven in Abo moat malignant ■ j di-eose*. with the exception of confirmed ® j small-pox and acarlet rever of tb# woxat - ' kind, il# influence doe# oot vxcead a. fcf ,f : sards, iljbe ronm be wed veultlaied. t*n i the contrary, if venlilatioa be neglected, j the y-ower of infection becomss greatly e augmented from iu coDCkDtraiioa in confined mud quiescent air; it even settle# upoh the clothes of the artradaol*. and the I : furniture of tbe rooms, and tbese tutyil* it more Teadily when their, texture U wool, f J fur, cotton, kt any looa* and downy suV stcow,
BRETITIEH. — Tbe cigar and tbe cap «rq very intimate Bcqnamtaoces. — 8i Aotboay may be a very good saint , he keh|isaD uaee^ilor able fire. — France works 400 coal mines, 202 iron mine*, aud mines of Other -ubstanee* 2tti. ' — A farmer in PuHiani L'ounty, bwa • mile of . children I His name is Furlong, and be bad eight sons. — Turpentine sppHed to the plac* where a wavp has stnng will reduce tbe swelling immediately. — A man may effect lo be very confidential and never unbosom himsell of anything bot u big shirt-frill. — Travelling is amid take all tl»A ie ' wooden from meo. as transplanting takee the woody particle* from cabbages. — The gentlest io heart are generally the bravest in action. The Tipurtans always went into battle with their Holes. — Two lovers, like tbe two halves of a , divided bark note, however widely separa- _ ^ ; ted. always correspond with each other. Home persons seem to have* wild-goat like faculty, by which they can leap from i summit to awi.mil over the abysses of life. ' — I.et the yoolh who stand* with u glare 1 of liquor in his band, consider which he I had belter throw away, the liqoor or him- > eelf. " ■- An ape is so much like a bnman being ' that to kill one might plant tbe.stiosi of » whole apiury in n sensitive mau'x conWhile a young widow is weeping over ' the jnnmwy of her husband, sbe may fitb ' ' up u snceessor ie tbe dark stream nf her —Young women in a.-a-port- should uo-di-rstaud the fact that sailor*. I bough covered with pitch, are f*muu* fev not stick- ' . iug to their word. , —There are many eternities ta the ho- > man hsarl in tbia poor life of rime -eternal wishes, etorosl hopes, perpetual pictures, , perpetual sounds. perpetual
— Tl e |>*f»ionf ure nt leaal bold, geoer- • rous. although destroying lions . sgol^mds a quiet, deep-bitings cver-»uckieg, xanomous bog. — Rhymesters arc always talking about the mountains. They bore the mountain* worse at A to far let* purpose tbau the tun-nel-makers do. — In everything that i* repeated daily ^ there mast be three periods ; io the first it , is new. then old and wearisome ; the third is neither — ilia habit. ^ — Mild qualities will gain by being opposed to sharp ones ; exactly behind the sbarp fioger-uail lie the wadeiest and most susceptible nerves. Some think, in their cynicism, that the distinction between a friend aod a lover t* only that between a hedge-bog and a hedge-dog. — It is with books as with salted meats, , which, if moderately and properly salted, keep a long time, but with too much salt ; spoil immediately. — It seems straoge that a beioglwith a human heart, caa deliberately caoee wliolw , nations to weep, when we suffer so uij^ at making one person unhappy. Hurler's Corner. 1 1 Aim Enigmas, RKtdlrs, qu«tl<»», kc . Bunt bel -iccoiapanlKl with the Aiuwers and Solutions In ; order to secure tosertioo. M I SI KLLANKOl'K EMRJLL— So. 8. ( j Jan composed of 67 fitters. My 5, 6. 13,-17. is an adverb. I My 7 20. 27, 24, 22, 40, 19 43, ia an , anxiety to many. , j My 36. 46, 51, 11, 15, 16. 26. 47 50, 49, . 44, 39, is good whole-onio advice, [j My 1. 4S, 8, 9; 67, 69. 19, 47, is » bitter , • kerb, yet of great value. , . My 2, 10, 4, 32, 27, 26. i* a p»raoa of e ! _ graat importance to tbe public, j My 46. 48. 37. 52,53, S, 9. 7. 8, 21, 24. 56, l ia a vast^ continent, t My 25, 55, 56. 6. 37. il, is a cauao of I great contention at tbe present time. „ My 12. 26, 36, 65. 61, 62, ie wbw we can all have us long us we live. | My 14. 15, 16, 32, 34, i* a pleasant time t ' of life. j My 28, 29, 30, 31, 23, 35, ia a vary Scare# My 67, 65, 66, 40. 54, 64, ii tbe name of oa* of tbe prophets. My 60, 42, 45 37, la a troublesome coaok panion. • ' ^ My 63, 31, 34,-58.- srs orgwnt which, wa shonldroe mishrable. e My 18, 10, 11, 41, 45, 61, is what *oL . diers aod others ore often glachto ace. - t My whole i* what every true American t citizen should do. Bsujr. r> Cape Mag C. H-. Oct, 1864. Answer next week. fjf Axawsa to Ekioma in oor Last:— s "Tbe Seventh New Jersey Begiiujnt. * Answered by "Eix^y-five," Of l'rioceten, f N. J. ; •LiUlw Vac." Philadelphia. «T Ajtewer t#>

