Cape May Ocean Wave, 3 May 1865 IIIF issue link — Page 1

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VOL. X.

CAPE ISLAND, CAPE MAY COUNTY, NEW JERSEY, WEDNESDAY. MAY 3. 1S65.

NO. 49.

Sflcct ¥ortri>. • iMPORTimrv. Itee waited Ion* elxnish, K rttrieea, Th* fall I J- 1-"1. i Th « lamb" plsjrlng «" IM ***«> • Th* swalk>»» come *1 l»* ; Th* HuKlnh round wy door : themo-oiuxm"" may; Th* mm come d-educ to lha •Sore— Why doatfJu »»»' "*» J.y 1 Too know you pul n" off, K itliln n, Until tbe early *princ: Th* Iklo am tranquil and screw-, Tbo !-• «. cm th. win*, . Th. flther sprvw* hU llttlr soil, Th* wnrt In th* hay, Th. prltarow Nwma. In th. vrte~ Wlty don't you nam. th* day 1 Th* thruah la bull Jin* lh the thorn, Awoog th* whtsnvrlng leaves i The lark !• buy In the seta, Th* marttB hlOrth the ear e». The little tn Ola don't built la i *10 t Btoare ! I way not aak afaln ; Why Oon't yon name tn* day I

tfommunicatrrt. for the Ocean Wave. A ii«r,AM. Methought 1 had wandered fur aw*y J from the hautiU of men. that, reflecting ii poo pleasure* past and other* jet to co«e. 1 had grown, a* it ware, entranced, ; and perceived not whither my Steps tondod Awakening at la*t from my ab- , (traction , 1 fouud mjnelf In a secluded J yalley, enclosed on e*ery side by frowning cliff.. The apot I had certainly nerer before wen. Affrightened, 1 sought • to retrace tny etepe homeward, hot found < It imponible ; nor coold. I dl*cern any : path by which I might hare entered this ; aeqoeetered vale. Finding search in j vain, perplexed 1 sat roe down upon n rock, lamenting my end lot, and bitterly j accusing that fatal abstraction which bad led me here, perhaps to die. Oh 1 what ; ■ ui awful thought to one in the flretdawu of We. who had lived for the present j only, to be bow enddenly overtaken by ] grim and mereilese death, mloao and in • as unknown placo ! Where now were. i all the joys I bed pictured to myself ? j Where now the happy day to which I 1 bad eo long looked forward— the d»y j iwhea tny LonUe and 1 shoald be joined | together in one flash ? Crazed by niy j thought* I would have faiu destroyed myself, bht no Instrument was near with which I might affect my design— nothing ; bat dreary rock* and abrnpt precipices. I was doomed, oh ! agonizing thought, , to drag out a miserable existence for, mayhap, a week, to die at lest from star- '■ » alien — I, the petted child ff weal It, : who bad fondly trusted in hi# riches and | yooih, to die lika a dog. alone! Too i late, ales ! did I discover thai ricbea " were not all," thai youth and happiness might flee awey. Valoly I vowed, that j were I restored to my home, my kindaed, j my beloved belhrothed, never should I forget my stewardship to the Most High, j never more should 1 please only n>j»*lr. : ' Alas ! 'twas ell in vain ! ne path could I j find, no aoand broke the dead silence of ! that living grave, no animated being, not even a bird, appeared to my eye* ; abase the snowy cliffs erosc^the doodle** tkj extended ; below nangbt but ferns and rock met my auxions gaxe. .Twas the valley of death and I was its victim. Despairing at. last, 1 laid me down upon the rocks, to gain, perchance, aoine sleep, for fatigue and grief had taken away all my feeling, I had btcorne indiffarent and hopeless, I had suik Into the lowest depths of despair. Suddenly the ground before me opened and there appeared unto me an old man, whose beard and head, whitened by tbe : . anews of many winters, strangely re- j minded me of tbe pictores of holy men, which, when a guiltless child, at my sainted mother's knee, 1 had so loved to view' The old man's eye fell upon me. "My eoe," taid be, "whet doet thou here in this strange place, alone J Why hast thou wandt-red from tby happy home to this bleak and drksry valley ?» ' . Melted, I pocred/oul to him the story of my on happy rabble, bitterly deploring my and aiiuajlou. and beg'ged bim to ooodnct mc to asy-kindred. "Sob," said tbs\>M man la slow aa<? solemn tone, "It is the Lord's doiag ; he it is who has led thee here, thai ihoa aright'* reflect upon thy peat life, aod jfehli split to a aesie of thy atlfishneaa 0 and sin that then migbt'at oeknowboontj, and be warned to avoid io future •• . •-• ' th -»#v

mindful of my follows. I .strove again j < to find, tbe way by which I had oome. { A veil seemed taken from my eyes, I j found the path, and retracing my stop* ! ^ soon arrived in sight of home. But as I was offering lhaakt for my : unexpected deliverance, I became con- j scioos that my name was called, and this • impression became more ami more di»- ] tinct, until looking aroonil, I spied my a j Li loved silting under our favorite trysliug tree, laughing at my astonishment. " "How uneesily you bare slept," cried ' ■he. "Wbat! is it postible," stammered 1, " and was it it ail but a dream T" Reader, it was only a dream, but it had its moral, and I trn«t that the lesson 1 was not in vnin. And let those who " live for tho present only, remember their d I afflicted brethern and tbe eternity to " which tbey ere hastening B. R. C. " Opening Court. f j An Iowa patriot writes to a jour- tl nali'Vour story of the Minnesota sheriff „ i« a good one, but ia "no vrhar" when c | compared with one we used to have in „ ibis State. It was at the first term of. J, Judge M'F '* Coun, held in B ^ | County, (hat the following "good on" 0 ; was really perpetrated : | A uew sheriff hod just been elected, ' u ! and tho Judge, wishing to have every .. • thing done in order, celled the newly* ^ : sleeted official into his ro.om to instruct . ; him as to bis duties, and finding aaid 3 i j official decididiy verdant at to tbe pro- t por manner of opening eoort, wrote out ^ , | tbe entire proclamation aod gave bim all j c , necessary inetructiui.s in relation thereto, j j, , Now it so happened thai F — — < of e 1 l* County, a fon-loving attorney, , ; was sitting by at tbe time, aod seeing a : > chaoee for fan ahead, prepared another t , ! proclamation, and by a little legerdemaiu ' ; - ; succeeded ia substituting it ia the sher- j c , ifTs hat for the enc given him by the j , i ; Judge. Eleven o'clock csme, and so did j-j . j the order from Judge M'F : "Slier- ! > { Iff, Open the conrt." Drawing his in- ; i i I struction deliberately from his bet ^ , . j commenced in a stentorian voice : "Hear ; f I j ye ! hear ya 1 hear ye ! The HouoraUlo j j r District Coart of the County of R ! , 1 1 13 wound up aud all ready to grigd. All 1 1 , hating grists may pitch in, andflreir , , j grist* shall be ground 1" The laugh that ( I came in oan only be appreciated by ! i ; lY.stern nun. , Cornered. < . ! Covetous- people often seek to shelter ; i , ) themsslves liebiud the widow's mite, and 1 1 1 ! to give a paltry sum to beaovolmt ob- ; i uijecu under cover of bar contribution. |i * : The foilowing iucident has a moral for | : » ' all sncb : l A gentleman called upon a wealthy • t ; friend for a contribution. "Yes, I roost give you my mite," said j _ j the rich man. . j "You mean tbe widow's mite, I supI pose," replied the other. if j "To be sure I do," ^ j The gentiepan continued — "I will be j | satisfied with half as much at she gave, j t i How much are yon worth 7" a "Seventy-lire thousand dollars," he ; s answered. i. "Gite me then a check for thirty-five j ii thousand, that will be just half as much e as she gave ; for she gave all ahe had." ii It was a ne* idea to the wealthy merchant. ^ 6 Where the Cold Comes From. Observations of the cold terms for save- ! d ral years, show that the icy wsve comes j i, down over the crntral portion of this coo- i e ; lineal, striking oar Western Slates and ! , passes 'over the ocean in a southerly direc- j i tion. The cold wave does not affect the j ' ! L'acifie shore ; it conies down from the j f j Artie rwgions upon ih« Rocky moaniains : 0 and then tnrnt eastward so that th* first : i- j news we have of it, days before it resohet u here, is from Minnesota, Nebraska and y i Utah. It follows the valley* and the coarse ( of the water*, and spends itself over the Golf streams, where it warms again, and rising as it expands, is wafted hack io tba upper atmosphsre. This cold air enrtent r" is just tbe opposite to tbe warm water cur. B rent wEch we csjl the Gulf stream. Tfewl pomes from tbe torrid sons wwsurlv. sad is <J turned northwardly by the configuration of ie tba lands as tba cold air wave i« eastward ,0 when it strikes tbe pioentaias, and these. |(j runs along our coast aSVeting tbs climats of lbs lands near it, till it loses' itself io the Northern ocean aed lee. So God has provided io aatera for beat and cold motur'* ally to effect eech vth.r. f* — If you would find a grwat many {halts : U oa lb* look-oat. H you would find them io vtill greater abewdaae*, be on th* look-in. at — Those who bed oe slander are nlwsjs ve heuyty.

iO'ConuelS and the Irish Bank ! 1 Crisis. A run was Lsiug .made for gold bj [ ' the peasantry of the surrounding conn- ( [ties; and crowds of clamorous frieze- ; I coats might be seen pushinc and light- j . i fug at the door* of ail the books in L— — : „ Tho Btnk, howeter, (which has a line* proved itself to be es solvent as j „ nny establishment in Ireland,) enjuyed ■ c at that lime tbe least confidence, ami I of coarse, tbe more sat upon. I ; B had a few of their ooe-pound notes j B though I believed they were very good, j if pttopie would oply have faith in thum ; ( still, as I feared the panic itself might { t bring aboot the catastrophe it appre- 1 c bended, and it was snore qui pcut gverj^j.c where, I thought it would only be pro- 1 in me to save myvelf; so I mounted ; ' peg, and trotted with my bundle of 1 notes into L— — \ On arriving at the bank door, the Babel of mixed Irish aod English was ^ terrific. Men and women tugged and \ •toggled together for precedence, and I . \ could hear these exel.mations, "Tliero i t you have torn tbeeoat off my back inak- ! ing ns much fnsv a%>nit your dirty thirty- ' shilling note, as if it were a pack-load ! of ten-poondere yoa had." "Arrah, yell bo all served," cried out ' ' a droll fsliow on tbe verge of the crowd, j j "Here's the Counsellor coming, and u . of gold on liis buck." 1 | All looked in the direction the last i speaker pointed to, and there, euro ! enough, I could see approaching the ' burly figure of O'Counell, who was one ! i of tbe directors of tho bank, and b^d 1 ! just arrived from Dublin. He bad not ( i exactly a bag on hi* back, but he carried | a parcel in hi* hand. , ! "Let cic pass my good friends'" ^aiil | ! he, "and you shall all be served." Aud i 1 he pushed shoulder foreufost tnrough tlikyi | crowd, who made way for biro, and gave ' j three cheers for tbo "Counsellor" as be1 n»aa«'d. The Liberator, as lie was called, might j have been twenty minutes in the bank, ! when a hurrah was raised from those who s.ood nearest the bank door, "Didtdt I toll you, cried a fellow, crusliing his way oot and blowing with his breath to cool | hot sovereign* which h* held with difficulty in his hand ; "Didn't I tell you ; the Counsellor would settle it T There ■ iV? are at it, hard and fast,, es telli-tr | chandlers on a melting day, makiug sovI ereigns like winky, and they're shovelling > them oat npog the counter as hot at | boiled praties Irom a pot," and ha blew ! again upon tba sovereigns, and held ' I them up to be touched". Seeing and j feeling was behoving, and there, sure ; enough, was the gold, wartu as if from; j the crucible. I "Glory to yon. Dan I" shouted out j | the c^pwd, who oow really beiieved that 1 ; the Counsellor was making sovereigns i in the back' parlor to me*t the run. — j "What** the use of crushing; yen can't j break a bank when they're melting out j money like that." i My cariosity was at its height, so, j with one tremendous effort, 1 gained 'j sdmtsMOR, aad there, sure agongh, were . i the clerks ladling oot burning hot eovereigns from copper scoops to the people, : who crowded to the counter,, and who, ! snapping and blowing their fingers, were i picking np the coins as jon might | roasted chestnuts. 1 They sa; the ru$» was not a new one, i and that O'Connell only revived it, in j the caaa of tho Bank ; hot it was not the leas meritorious end successful I on that account. The clerks were really I engaged in the back parlor beating the I I sovereigns on Sre-ehovels over a large ' ; fire ; and rushing oot with red faces and 1 1 in a furious hurry, they threw them "hot • j ail hot," to the cashiers, who counted 1 ; them out with iron curling tongs to tb* I customers, who believed that tba work > of coining was going on over inuameri able crnciblea in the back parlor. I The plan had a dpnbia advantage — it , inspired confidence, and (fiwdgUi* pro-, i cess of money-taking eo slew ootErjrSrt of the public, who w*re perpetually t burning their fingers, that the btnk with a very limited supply, was able to meet a demand which, under tbe circumstances was necessarily slow. The clerks could serve the people as fast as tbe people " conld couut tho hot sovereigns. » The ruse which bad the almost iusUna teneous effect in allaying alarm, O'Con- » nail maintained was perfectly justifiable, i- From igooraocn, a panic, which might, have proved fatal to ths bank, arose, and k ; be thought be had a right to allay it by | playing on thieaame popular ignorance. 0 i A bank-that eoald serve sovereigns at • will (rem aim oveo cookTaaver. of course, e ; wsut gold in th* i mafia alios of a simple

j The I.afe Prrkldcnl. the Sew I'ndilmt and the Actiiu > ice Prealdent. ALrobum Li rotn was born in Ilwrdin i cnua'y. Kentucky, February 12, 1809, and | rr.n**i|uently, at tbe lima of M* death, was j in bis fif. y-«tventh year. When be was 'eight years of age hi* Ittber removed %to ^ j Sjiencer conniy, Indiana, then an almo«t j nniahablted ailderneM. ' Here young Lin- | coin obtained the rndiments or an edurai lioa. by iodaslry and perse»er»gc», alqiost ' I unaided by tutor*. In 183') nS father rej moved "to Docatnr, Itlinoiv. In 1633 Mr. | | l.iaeoln raised a company for the Black ' Hawk war, aud woa made captain. After ; military service sn over he entered ^ j into business for himself, but did not suc- | ceed, and iu lftt commanced hi* jio'.itical j, career io the I^goletnrr. After. hi- first term expired hest-.idiud . ! ; ia 1631 was admitted to practice, and ' iu April, 1837, removed to Springfield, and j commenced bnvioess in partnership with ! John T. Stunrt." He was three times elected to the Legndatnrr, and then remained *ix I years in private life. In 1K44 he slumped i In. Stato of lilioou for Henry Clay. In i 1817 be took bis scat in Congress a* the ; only AVbig Itepresentutivx from Illinois. • in 1648, Mr. Lincoln cnnvaviud bit State ' for General Taylor. In lr l'J he tbo Whig candidate for United Slates Senator, t but did Dot succeed. He took sa active | part in tbe political campaign of : slumping tho Elate agaicrt Mr. Douglas. 5 In ldoo the Elate Convention nemioated i Mr. i.incnla for United States Senator.— | lie wa* defeated by Mr. Douglas, la IHt'nl he was nominated (May 16, at Chicapoffor l'resiilent of tbe United Elates, and wan • elected November fi. On bis arrival wt i liarruburg a plot for ki* assassination, av be paeeed through Ualtitnore, was discovered, and lie reached Washington se- ' cretlv. He was ioaagnrnted March 4, L-'Jl. : He was re-elected November 8, 1664, and ' re-inaugnrated March 4, 1865. Just when peace was dawning upon hi* country— just as he was abont to enjuy tbe fruits of a wive . administratioB of affairs, on the fourth *nrrfnTtery of tbe surrender of BumleS, ho ! fall* by tbe band of nn a*M**in, and died on j Saturday n ornicg at twenty minute* past 1 seven o'clock. , , Andrew Johnson. Vice president of tho ; United Elates, who now, by the providons of tbe Conrtitntion, become* I'resideot, 1 w«« burn in Raieigb. X. C-, December 29, lnOB. At the ape of four lie lost hi* father ; ! ; , at' ten he wo* nj prriit cod to a taiior, whom : ' ho served n'Tcn yuan.* While learning hi* j trade be *l»i> b-eravd to read, and is empiratically, iu was bis lamented predecessor, j a oelf-teupht maa, and of plebeian origin, i Id 1824 he went to Laurent Court-house, . E. C„ where be worked nesrly two yeare. ( ' In May, 1826, be returned to Raleigh, i where he remained until September, when r h« removed to Greeu'ille, Tennessee. Tbe | ' first office he ever held was tbat of Alder- [ ' man of the village, lie was re-elected 1 , 1 twice, aod in 1630 wo» choseu Mayor. In ^ | 1833 he was elected to tho Legislator*, in ■ 183" wa* defeated, aed iu 1839 was reeiectvd, lo 1640 he served as Presidential 1 j elector and canvassed tba Bute for the 1 Dumoeiatic tkkeL In 1641 he was elected > j tn the Elate Senate, and in 1643 was sent -'to Congress, a her# ha served until 1853. t ' In tbat year be wa» elected Governor of I ! Tennessee, and again in 1655. lie was in | 1857 chosen United State* Senator fur tbe j fill teym ending March 4, 1663. Wben j ! Nashville wa* captured by our forcoe in the *pripg of 1862, he wes made miliury Gov- " efl.or of the Blitlo by lb# President. N'uV^ " | 8, 1664, he was elected Vice 1'rfiWdeaL, • sud succeeded to tbe Presidency by tbe death of President Lincoln, A"j^'15, 18C5. e Uoa. Lafayette Foster, United .Stales t Senator Irom Connecticut, having been. | elected President pro lew, of lha.£ij>Bt« off March itb, is now the acting Vice Presi« ' dent. The Coostitotioa, articlo 2, sectioD n provides at follows : „ In cave of the removal of the President . from office, or of. hi* death, reeignation or " inability lo discharge tba {lowers of tho y said office, the same shall devolve upon tbe e Vice President ; and tbe Congrats may, by | law, provide for the case of tbe removal, e j death, resignation or inability, both of tho j Provident or Vice "President, declaring ,t { what officer shall than act -as Provident ; j j and such officer shall act accordingly, until I the disability be removad, or a President . : shall be elected. I In pursnapce of this constitutional pro I vision, the act of Cnngrees of March l«t, 1792, section 9, declared . that io case ,of a' it | vacancy in tbe office both of provident aod | "Sice President, the President of the Senate rf" pro tempore, and in case there should be no President of the Senate, then the speaker ' of tba House of Representative*, for the time being, should act es President until A the vacaucy -wee supplied, which mala be '• by tro election to be held ou tbe first Wed<1 m eday of the oaeniug December. Iu Mr. Footer woe born io Franklin, New London coanty, Connecticut, November 22, 1606, end is e direct deoceedaut of Miles Siandish. He graduated aV Brown '* Uvivarsily ; 1s a lawyer by profession ; was »• a member of tbe General Assembly of Oon»t necUcut In 1837, 1840, 1846, 1647. 1848, d loo4i Speaker of the House in 1647, 16-1? ,y and 1854; Mayor of the city ef Norwich ' -for two year*. lie wis r boson United | States Senator from March 4, 1855, lor six • | years, aod in i860 jras ra-eieeted to the • Senate for six year ap* During tb* TbirtyIt'JsusuDlh Cdogrvss bv was ohatruiau of tmj 1 ('ommiUea oh Pensions.

Uws of New Jersey. ,i fir ATTOomTT.) <• A further supplement to an act entitled n "An act cooccrnlng road*" approved li April sixteenth, eighteen hundred and a furty-»ix. i' 1. Be it enacted by the Semite end Gen. a •ral Assembly of the State of New Jcr*«J, u .That the overseers of the highways of the several roa.l districts in the county of Cape s: May, sball he eloctcd by tbe iegsl voters ofj t the said districts, at tbe regular town meet- ; n ing*, ai the time* and in the inanuer ih« | 1 said town meetings are now held io the s different townships of said coanty. ; li 2. Aud be it enacted, Tbat so much (ff , ■■ all act* and part* of sets as are inconeistent c with this act be, aud tbe same ere hereby : a repealed. i s 3. And bt> it enacted. That litis act shall i i take effect immediately. i a Approved March 23, 1865. \ o . - t ! An Act to aatliorixe the inhahitanl* of (he ^ township of Dounis. in tbo 1 county of < r Cajio May. to raise money by issuing | a bonds, to pay bounties to volunteers or ; - drafted men. - j j Whereas, the inhabitant* of »*id fownship. 1 , in town niuotir-g assembled, on the fourth , day of .lannury, rigblecn hundred and ! , risty-five, did order their township ^om- , mittee to pay a bounty lo'volouteer*. and j alt who should furnish substitatva,-40 bo 1 accredited on the qaota of tbe said town- , ship nndor the call of December last, for , three hundred thousand men, to the hum- j her necessary to fill the qaota of said towu- , ' ship, or in ca«n tif to pay three hundred dollar! to each drafted man, 1 uot otherwise exempted ; and did further Order their said committee to issue the ' bonds of tbe4owu«bip for tbe purpose of raising the necessary fond* to pay said j bounties, and did instruct said committee • to procure the pnivagc of un net or act* ' by the legislature of the state, to legalize ' ^ 1 the said bond', and all former bonds of . 1 said luwuship which have been issued for ' the purpose of psyitig bounties to voluu- ' tears under previous calls ; tbercf. ire, j 1 1 1. He it enacted by tbo Senate und Gone- j ' ral Asrcmbly of the Statu of Now Jersey, 1 That it shall bo lawful for tbo lowuidii)) ' committee of the township of Dennis, in ' the county of Ua{>e May, to provide for the 1 payment of moneys heretofore expended, or • hiiroufler to bo expended, for the parpo*e • j or payicg bounties to volunteers and drafted ' : men, not othera-ite exempted, as sot forth 1 | in Ike^prcainhie faeteto. by issuing bends in • j the name of the township Committee of the " j the towi»hip ol .Dcunt*. under tho seal of ' i the township, to be signed by tbo chairman ' '.and clerk of said committer, in sach suti* j • j and payable at suck times as the said town- • '* | ship committee Shall deem advisable, beffr- '' lag intereat at the rate not exceeding six " ! iieAcenl. per annum, payable annually, and e . to pledge the property and credit of tbu township for the payment of the sauir, . '' which bands it shall h« lawful for the said ! n eoinmillee to Sel! and a>*igu ; provided, | 0 that said bonds shall nut be ivsaueii to an I '* amount exceeding twenty thousand dollar*, . J' and vball be mad" rcdcoinal^* in not less^ " than four nor more lhaa »ix years from the . d date thereof. >l 3. And be it enacted, That the -uid towuship commit'.eo shell b«ve power aud 9 authority to provide by taxation for tbu payment of said bonds, and the interest "* tbereon and shall cause to 6a acsosned and " collected, by tax, in the Line and iu the manner in wbicb otbar taxjls are assessed *' and collected, aad io sncb snms as they 'shall deem aee«esasjr-^-6ral, a yunrly.tax of l* five dollars on each white male ioiiabiunt of tbe township above the ago of tarrutyone jean, and the balance on tb« taxable cs property of tbe said lowosbip ; provided, that nona of said taxes shall be wsseaaed aad collected until after the first day of Jaanary, eighteen hundred aod sixty-eight, except such amount* as sball be nscifsary nt to psy tbe annua! interest accruing op said nr bonds ; and provided, tbat all pereon* who J® bave paid c-mmptation money under any other draft, sball be exempt from said pod if, tax ; provided, also, that when said taxes te are collected the township collector shall pay the sums to tbo township committee of Lp said township, to be inviolably applied lo Dt pay iheintoreel and principal of said bond*. as the same shall become doe and payable, 0 aod for no other purpose. % 4. And be it enacted, Tbat this act shall id 'lake effect immediately, te Approved March 22 1665. no — — rr ACt to legalise bodds issued by tbe k* township committee of the Middle loss. ^ ship, in the coanty of Cape May, to 4. drafted and commuted men, end to raisa money to pay volaatoera. '* Whereas, the inhabitants of the Middle "{ townsbip. in tbe county of Cape May, at ID a specials town meeting buld in August a* last, authorised and instructed tbe lowuD* ship to Dane bond* to provide a bounty to fill the quota cf the townsbip ; tbareth for*. cd 1. Be it enacted by tbe Senate aed Geue»ix ral Assembly or the Bute ol New Jersey, That it sball be lawful Idr tbe township „ ' cou.niitue of tbe Middle - township, ia the county of Cape May, to provide for tbe re- *

demption of bunds h> retofore issued to and commuted men, -and to rain to pay volunteer*, payable at such as are specified in tbe resolutions adopted at the aforementioned town meetbearing interrsl at a rate not exceedsix per ceutuui pur andnm payable anuuolly. 2. And b" it enacted, that tbe said township committee sball- hare power aod aui tbority to provide by taxation for the pey- | incut of the .isid bonds cod Ilia interest due I tbereon ; and the said toooship committee shall yearly, and every year, until all Ihu - ' bonds i**ued shall bo redeemed and paid i nil. order and caused to bu assessed and > collrcted by lax as follows : one-half to bo assessed on the polls, aud tbu other half of e»id tax to be assessed and coll*cl«l on tbo n-nl aud personal property in raid townsbip ' as.n-sscd end collected, a -efficient sum of money to pay the interest on the amid ! bonds us tho saute sball bcconiu due, and to pay ami discharge the principal at ibeaevoral timet they sball beccine due and payable according to tbe tonor of said hdnds ; end thut tho township collector of said township or other person fur that purpose ! appoiuted, shall, whun inch tax or any part ti'-vrcuf ah A ho collected, pay^ie ssme to ' the township coniroiltoe of suiif . townsbip, . : arid that all such moneys no to be raised virtue of this act, shall be loriolably applied by **id township committee to pay tho interest and principal of said bouda as the Mime sbull oecome dne und payable. 3. Atid be it enacted, Tbat this act shall tsk" effect immediately. Approved March 10, 1805. e» *t$ A Tickehurg Reminiscence. Kerly ill tho engagi m- ut which folowed our first ussaclt, wheu the rebels just fairly opened upon the Sccood and Battery 11, Second Illitttia Light Artillery, had began to answer , shell tor shell, General D. Stuart, who very shorvsighud, rode tip to the forge of "B," which wtus standing some distance in tbo rear of our thundering guns, and called out, '"Why don't you get this piece into position ond answer ' the rebels ? They'll shell or out directly I" Tho Dutch smith, standing noor, replied, "Well, Shelters!, me has uotiog to scliute mil te hlaokeuit shop but hosSchOeS !" The infantry support ronrod, end the "SbenerolV duties called him to another , part of the field very si^dcnly. uskt's (Comer. .in. ttaqtinns, WdOlts, tturetioos, ke., must lw with the Nnnwrrs nail Buluttnes la [ i tinW-r tu —H,r* Iwrtlon. I Pim.n i.f »tl dmcri|>tlnns, Intrndnl few this Dol> irtiwut, must tu*»m*iWf ur^jtWU. or Um-j wUI rr- ' eoive »> atleaUao wtirterer. , Wk tikcnoiciticruf anunzmouscummuulcrtlone * Kor the IK-vsn Wsve. Iliuterical Knigma.— No. 34, I am compoieti of 4-1 letter). My 5. 35. 15. 4.1* 29, 25, 36, was so A mart- ^ cao statesman. i My 3, 23. 12, 37, wa* an English statesman. ^ ! My 3". 43. 7. 42, 27, 11, 25, 32, wa* an Irish d j My 40, 35, 43, 21, 44. 5, 23, 31, 13, was a " i French priest, general and Rtatcsraan. '' | My 8, 13, 20, 8, 3-1, 19, was su American revolutionary general. " My I, 22. 5. 24, 4, 42, wa* *n English adJ [ miral. >' | My 43, 2, 14, 23, *38, 32, 34, 27, 13, 24, wee II a no)ed Roman gunnral, ■ My 3, 25, 41, 18, was a Grecian philosopher. >' My 33, 26, 9, 12, 33, 5, 4-1, was a building j famous in French history. J- ! My 39. 10. 2. 36, 43, 11, was tba nursery of ,d ! infidelity. of My 41, 32, 16, 14, 22, 38, v.arihe mosteeleL , brsled of the Atiglo-Baxoo monarebs. 7 My 16. 17, 23, 30, 5, 2. 19, 19. 44, woe tbo . ancient war-banoer of Frence. 10 j My 33, 10, 38, 12, 21, is a name, bencefor'7 ! ward to be execrated in American bis'n lor>'- " Mr whole was un event which sUrtled all Kuro,ie to tbe early part of tbe present century. Mac. For the Oman Wave. • tllUfltetl'. My Oast, almost every one uses. ([| My second, every one is liable to do. My third, every one cen see every day. My first is mads by my third. My second is done by my third, ie My whole lie celebrated bottle of modern n- times. ■ Mac. to Fur the Ocean Wave. M lltQSrapbicBl Names. 1. A man's name, aed a defence. 2. An l< element, and a geian at cards. 3. To be a angry, a vowel, aod mother's pet. 4. A ,1 vowel, a vowel, and a road. 5. To be happy, and a gin's oamo. 6. To ba heavenly, aud a part of.lhe body. 7. A requisite ap■y pendage to a church, and not loose. JHao Auswdrs to Last Puzzle*. ^ No. S3 :-r "Anna virkmqne cano." y' Akacb*#*.— Mount Holly, Pbiladelphin, '1' Albany, Worcester, Bostua, llarrisburgl '• Trenton, ltout»ville, Madison, New Or- »- jeaoi, Bridgoton, Kastpart.