Cape May Ocean Wave, 21 July 1869 IIIF issue link — Page 1

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.'.mi i i gjniu iAi fiAPTO MAY, NEW JERSEY, WEDNESDAY, JtJJuY 31, 1869. i'3-.r-' x • - : : ...... ; ,2DV,\(].UUQ — _ — , ... — ... .... . . — ... ■ • v •- • _ — u 1 ilLLa

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MnH AS* A. !,■ _ ll^rf Grant the general regret qxpufeuucd by the people at kbi heflrf thai he was going to faave the tame evening. Tbe Prmfcfaut replied ftat; tqma^jo, as arrangements had been math to that effleL We respohded that it bad hero hoped be would ranaln to honor the Grey Beserves* bell, end that thousands at people would come down on that belief. lie replied that be w»* gtad-jtwoulfl.be of fastest* Cape May ; but be desired to aroid all such ■ublie display*. Finding that be had made op Ms ndad we dropped the subset, . Md toted - him : If .ha intended naklng any May at the Branch, to which herepHed that he tepcctod to more, and wishing him God-apeed on congregate *t our slater aen-stde rival. Long Branch, for which piteMhe party left last craning about eight o'clock. Take him, dear Branch, and treat him kindly. k In the words of the immortal PogI berry, comparison, are odoraoa and Bpot always In good taste; yet as Cap. ^■day has, from time to time, been made ^^t subject at tuny disparaging re^Arts, we cannot fbrbear from giving Hk axlracte from a correspondent of Mysirec writing from Long ^^fe, which dearly demooatratce j ^■tf we bare not tbe excrss of e»- •. ^^knee and eo-mlled fashion, we i ^Kf , amusement. A seaside. i ^^Aotaaatie views mnd not even i ^^^Lalh I Nolo the contrast : ^Hnr.re always expect to put i ^Kv Utile Inconveniences' ^^ftst opening of n railroad; tbe building of s road i be in itself an Invention ^^■aos to enjoy the buspl^^HBraoch, yet the people ^^ftto be utterly ignorant ^■(f such a place as our ^^^LtaUfag a fcUow-trn-^Vfrom Fhlladelphia, ^Kot a street hi New of this Englisli■t tbst of some of ^Bggagr for Phlla^Btodjbf by the ^Bhuiou. and can^^Kat from New. If yon tend a ^^^st first go to ^■pcted to pay ^Bour parcel. ^EjSSrhjr^Hen titles

We take the following extract* Artemua Ward's "Panorama," jnst §igiS8fiB«s 5nil AUTISTIC CAUOOL jzrxaspsgm drew a small cart load of raw turnips over a wooden bridge. The people of ias-ft'JS'LW; before me. Up to that time I had an Idea it was behind me. , Time passed on. It always does, by the way. You may praailflf have noticed that > lime always does. It is a kinAaf.teVttoraha*, it I became « msa. I haven't distinguished. myself at all as an artist; but I have always been more or leas mixed up with tbe art. I have an uncle who takee photofibaplW.indfl' haves servant who— take# anything MtotftWii.tWiW rbi I like mule. 1 (mat ing. Afd raddrel .Wl *8oi!retboee fete bear me. They me raider erah thin UUITlKi l .4 .3 The other night some sUvtr-roi^ed young men came . raider my window ing." I didn't go. I didn't Udak it would beoocrecL . I found onalc very sootliing wttrn I lay m with 'fever in Utah ; and I >ms very ill ; I wae foorftiSj wasted. Mt wdS'bSWtl down; to nothing, and (<ny note' was*.. sharp I dtdnt dsh- to fori(arthtiltini»caa 'stayl^JBLgjMl I should never get It ngain. And In sho wn, married, (bough ndfiko tnueb her hnsbaod ; he had'flfteen other •Ives — she used to slog a Ixtllnd com- . mcncing,"»«eel blrd.du not fly away. " • and I told-hst I wvMn'L She played thcaccordioo divinely— accordionl,- I - praised her. Tit* ffraaxnt asrzl. I went ta Cahfarnia on the steamer ArieL This U iho steamer Ariel. Oblige mr.byytaUfily gaalng on the steamer Artel; and wjgoi you go to' California ba sure and go on some other staainat, "because the Arid isn't ' " ' • • • r Arrrmnro^ SMIUTS! Monkeys srepsstty oommon. yetns all tbe families are remarkably cunning. hat ftkvtrbeofrrelto'tferteder the forest v*U. biter »' few day t starvation, dart into a cage remaining food, and thus ba secured. But how. are the monkeys caught V The spe fiupBy resembles man. TMr rtees are. human. They love llqnor, and fall. InParfour bihI Bennaar the native make fermented bear, 'if which the" iponkgya are passionately fond. Aware, of this, the natives go to parts of the' aWeaAfreqieiM by the moido ys, and wit on the ground cal*bas!« t*U pU the ' enticing liquor. Assoonasthc modbsy iees and taati. (t, W utfet. Totri trie. 'of Joy Uistioon attrwA Us aamtadce.' Tbt® an orifle b^Wa, dM nr r»«6rt, time the beasts show ail dagrses of in-. toxieatioo, . Than the negroes appear. ! o The few «W come too late to get . ftjddbd esifa^a.1'. ¥hb too; ■ thrirnwn gettos. The na^a^fakc b«» "P. and tbsaa begin to. weep and' Mover them up wtft maudlin kiwes. Mfhen a negro takes ooe by the band trad him off the nearest monkey ^■fl ding to tbe one who thus finds . ^Hpporl and go off also. Another sill ^■up at him, and so on tmttl tlictieleads a staggering lino of ten <*■ a ^Karn Up*V menfcay*. When Anally ^^kght to the village they are socaged, and gradually, sober ; but for two or three ..days a ^^Btally dimlmthing supply of liquor them boss to reconcile them ^^Jtea to their, state of. : captivity. ^Apractin of wearing a small the Imtton-hoh- by gmile^Hapao the front part at tbe ^Kiha U B> k< a sp>4 of lily of ^Mhks iraf, at kMna'adbh •» ingenious ^Mention oocprta. the Mefrmr-m itafresh^Bhracalhthafappcl ■m strifes of the partly m :

Hall was really a^1 it magnlfirent entertainment. The pyro- ' „ technic display on the lawn was almoet j } like a laky spoctacte In ila beauty. < Tbe moon wis out in its foil lustre, I raasyansFS^ttsj! , drawn op In line facing the ocean, and . 1 i and the porches and balconies were 1 ' I From the balcony of Mr. Knight's ; c cottage General Grant and party | 1 -viewed the fireworks, and listened toj ' . the splendid nbtyinf of McClurgl H , Military Band. 'TOs bs'tbc first tin* I we have heard McCIprj's Bat^d' Wnce r (unity of pajing.a merited compliment t | to the proBdency &ej display. After h , the last spark had died sway, and tha c I Ongrda. lights upon the balcony had b , expired, tbe regiment entered the hall, I down tha line in the following order : " I General Grant and Mrs. Creaswell ; * Postmaster-General Creaswell and i! , Mr*. Grant; Ex-Secretary of the Nsvy, 1 r Jloeie. aod Miss Nellie Grant ; Cadet J F, D. Grant and sister , Samuel Hoar " I add Mfea Mclntyre ; and O. 8. Grant, b Jr. . I n As soon at the President and suita I d , wsro scaled the regiment broke ranks, ! li sad Hasslert superb orchestra of 25 | o pieces struck, up the inspiriting dance k music whloh he knows so well how to b It Is impessible for us to mention all j ti the ladies who deserve It, among sw-h o a Ihrong; and we therefore give a few i " ' •ho attracted particular attention. | h One at " the bellca oT tbe evening,'" Lt Mis. Mary G— 1, of Philadelphia, « uas moat rlchty and tasteftilly attired : i K —Pink silk, (lowing trull, with white j t Swiss liinic; elegant diamonds— uni- j o rer/atlf ndmirtd. Missis h,— white j v silk, with Fn aclj muslin over-drcsa, | ' flounced and pufHd, frlmmed claborately ryith Valtndeuue lace ; pink c *««- Mrs,. W. H. H—n,— French » muslin ; short dross;. ruffles, trimmed with blaek ktea ; nine mitn overdress, . , Are; profusion of Uiaxnoads. Miss , Nettie F r, of Fhlfedclphia. pre- ( . seated a styifeh' appsaranee,— neat . . Mack raid white striped silk, with MoT; flowing sack ; Monde hair, a U -Pompadour. Miss E. W — snauve silk, point bice, flounced, low neek and . , short Sleeves ; pearl and diamond Jcw- .' |Hry. ' ; Mrs. G — —if, of Jersey City.— ' fhbrf [Sink fllkffflminod *-ith French j rtnUHn.qalllfBgs; hsndshine diamonds, f Muss Nettie G—ff-blnc silk ; bfack and' whlte striped safin "over-skirt ; . iilack satin sash ; hair pnffed. Miss ,i Maty S—th,— short white , dryes, , with bine fringe ; bright bine silk oeer- , drws. -Mtoe Mary O e (ems of tin ( hehes'uf the: eVeningl— flowing white silk, with bine and white striped grenndine, 'creased -with pink flowers; hair ^ heautlfhlly " arranged. Miss Mnrv ( ^ T— ^er,— long whjts French muslin , drear, raffled -with yellow silk. Miss , ^Bf^y-rf-A-prteO and white silk.;; .'. "trJiiaiei fla&orstely wiUt green satin' ( a «)uil!lngs ; .black feoe /set u, Ac- din - monds. Miss AHee Met- -y, -white . t, "Eutlq oVcr white silk, trimmed with . Alght Jdua satin. ,Mxs. D. G — -A- | ,■ aotosad rtfay. trimmed with :btacd lace, . V Mms«rf. MMs Kite F^T, -abort ; y wjija- ank,"; jM over-skirt-' Mrs. J. ( J, of Pittsburg, wore the hand- { somest pearls and diamonds In this , tigatetrftsw. LJ whose (feossf* me do^not remember, 3 but who attracted universal attention r for their grace, bearing, and dress. % The ball, was a grand success, and j every Body retired well pleased with * Wiijdino a Saaatooa — A fashy ionsble wedding was celebrated at ^ Saratoga Springs on Wedneaday. The ' paffla mm David Boyd, Jr^ of Phife1 dclphls, and Alifia, daughter of the 1 late Manning TiaarhrrCniekerhocker, ' at New Tork. Tlie scene at the dtmrth trdesc^ed aV being besutfful. B The chancel was tastefully decorated with natural flowers, oader the snper- « vision of Mary Walton, assisted by '• Miss Carrie Johnson, Miss Ella Stc - ism, Misses NeWeand Vleve Putnam, t Mies Carrie Fiteher and Mia Juliet B JHU. The flowers were furnished In '• profusion by the numerous Mends of happy pair. After the raremony » at the church a delicioae collatien was * THii! roonl" tbe - ^Wfaodoes "rsmwmbor the genial, a aaofel lfopd-"Da.y." ss.hU fifeads a delighted to can him » He irasttwi We - Ate^rry. r orthe mo»t confirmed hypochondriac. 10 We rappoee nowthat the matrimonial y chaia Ba* besfe ttttyriaed; aroaad him a we shall mtdom' See him. We be- - Then we wtsh him much joy and * djU«. w^T^^lteTtoray's * of ths Hm. mvdool beaterawid at the _ Use hoard walk which I but lorn- ' I tiuad .fa my bud. tttme .fe a dreadful

' | hsre failed to notice the Liik; ' r j In which ooc woman, who is not per- r , I fectiy well-bred or perfectly kind- j ^ hearted, will eye another who Uw , , thinks is not in such good society, and, ( i - above alt, not at the lime being in so J costly a dress as she herself fa in. It h J is done everywhere ; at parties, in j j church, in the struct, and at the severs! „ 1 .walsiing-plnccs. . It is donsby women I In all conditions of life. The wry'acr- E T^Sht felrlslearn it of thetr mistresses, I is done in an instant. Who cannot n recall hundreds of instance! of tl»at t | sweep of tbe eye which takes in at a j glance the whole woman and what she ^ ■I on, from top-knot to shoe-tie V It b j cannot be a new fashion of behavior ; m the dally Increasing pretence of -j [ people to superiority, because they n | spend more monay on their backs than is quite s diflcr/nt matter— makes a| at once more common and more re- q I luarkablc even than it was ten or fifteen j, ago. Men are never guilty of it, m or with such extreme rarity, and then ^ such feeble and smsll-souled sj-eci- ! of their sex, that it may be sot g down as a sin not masculine, oh at (, | least epicene. But women of sense, n of some breeding, and even of some _ ! kindliness of nature, will thus endeavor ,] aaaert a superiority upon the mean- b est of ail pretences, and inflict n wound j n in a manner the most cowardly, be- , h j cause it cannot be resented and admits j of no retort. If they but only knew I „ - unlovely, how poeitively oflcnsiw i | Obey make themselves in so doing, not 0 Bnly totheirsileot vietlma, buttoeverj- ] |, I generous-hearted mao who observes j ;t I their maneouvre. they would give up i ,| I triumph at once so mean and so cruel, | whleh is obtained at such sacrifice on j, I their |iart. No other evidence than this eyeing is needed lliat a woman, whatlie her birth or breeding, has bul small and vulgar soul. , The Hartford Coarnoi says a Phlla- y delphia young man, who has a young and pretty win, of whom he became ' considerably Icalous, started her o(T week with her only child to risil her grandparents, who reside in the eastern part of Connecticut. She has , an aunt living in this city, and stopped here to visit a day or two before repairing to the calm, seclnded spot : which her husband had designed for j ° ' liar. On the day following ber arrival ,i she made the acquaintance of a travel- j ing merchant, who had friends living 1 where the .snot resides, and Intimate <1 relations, from some cause or other, i d sprang up. which have led to the en- j 1 aetmcut of a scene not set down in the i c original bills. On Friday she started, ' « as h«r aunt supposed, for Norwich, on ] i ; the 2 F. M. IraiiiT but, at the same j 1 time tlint she was preparing to lake a ; cacriogo to the depot, the traveling r 1 chap was paying his bill at the United t ' States Hotel, in order to meet her else- t - where. It wsa subsequently sneer- J ' taihed that they did not go o(T on the i eastern train, but up toSatUrday nlglit ' ' there had been no arrival at the doml- I ' cilo of the grandparents in eastern. I Connecticut, and the supposition is i ' that an elopment is being pretty ex- t tensively carried out on short ncqosint- I ' once. What the Philadelphia hus- i band will do about it isn't certain ; 'at ■ 1 rate, if he had kept his wife at i home, she wouldn't have Iwhaved any I ' worse than she has now. I > The Cape May gossip of the Phiia- , ■ delphia Star gets off the following. , ' Our lady readers are the best judges - ' of the correctness of his assertion. , "The belles here are generally mar- , ricd ladies, who court notoriety, laugh, : talk, and dress accordingly, a description of their dresses In some rases be- , e log written by their husbands, and handed over with a polite request to ' insert Now, the beauties are, with ' rare exceptions, quite retiring in their ' dispositions. From 10 A. M. until 4 ! P. M. tbey are genoraily stowed away out of the sun's rays. Such a thing as a bath is not drramod of ; It might 1 iqjnrc the complexion. 1 "8alt water has a tendency (that is, ' when Liken in tbe form of a breaker in lte natural state) to create an un- ' pleasant roughness on tbe lurfact- or the face. Then the changing of clothes ' so very often Is very troublesome. It ' Is passing strange the untold numbers ' w"ho eome to the sea -shore and yet . never take a hath, simply becauaa it ' may afifeet their loolu.'' e At many of tha watering-place ho- , tela the waiters are not paid any salary, t tbe feea tbey receive being considered J viees. This Is the fable cf the frogs a and the boys being enacted over again. - Fun for the landlords, bill death to the J !"**■ ' - ' $ The following story is good because L it is true. We had it from the lips of s good woman, who was told it by ths r principal actor hersclC " Ven I first * come to FHadeHy to serrt, I was very uncivil,'' said Katrine, now a tidy serJ yaot in a' respectable family. "I % lauth mooch, and I feel mooch l ashamed to remember bow I behave vefl I know'so littic. ShOn, daf vas . my beau— Shoo, be took me to that h teatre one night, ven I been in Fifedelfy bat tree weeks. We sits in t. gallery, und we not asegoot and Shoo I said he wooM get a better seat (fobs 1 puts Us leg stounddtr peat and sHde , ' down rait der pit and looks up sod e; ralla est; 'Katrina! Katrtne! ooom 1 >' ; down I tfeh agoot place here !' and I ' Iran ever, and said I .- 'How can 1 ' * reran, Shon V And be anM : ' shust 1 ■ slide down.' So I pot ray lag* round r . d« pillar, and I slide, down. Dooneri

nnoa sr.asx We clip the following sensible paragraph from a very interesting apd . exceedingly weti written feUsc in the Philadelphia Prm at yesterday : "Something must really be done to relieve tbe dullness of the Sabbath here. bear it rvmered that our old friend, Mark Hauler, who has his hand at HkU, is thinking seriously of giving Sunday evening! concerts. -. I the rumor in true. At Long Branch the Sunday. concerts are vocal well as instrumental, and ban g proven a great success. There, profra- I sional singers are engaged for the pur- s pose, and tbe managers find the investment a paying one. These concerts " take place, in. the parlor of one of the * principal hotels, and can on no account objected to by any, save, of course, 11 those who believe Sunday Intended 11 "a day of mourning and sorrow." general demand hero seems to be not exaotly for such concerts as thou *j at Long Branch, bat simply that the bands of the various hotels on Sunday c should play afternoon and evening, as do on what we call "week day.-' It is not impossible tliat the demund ° will be acceded to. If Mr. Hnaatcr takes the lead others will soon follow. '" Much of the old pharisecism about Sabbath has been crushed out by c of circumstances, but much remains. Sunday is a day devoted to j physical rest. Nothing that is wrong j " should be permitted on this day, but j ! how any reasonable minded person can " | anything sinful or contrary to the I I teachings of the good book in the sim- " ] pit- strains of music in beyond the ken of ] ordinary mortals like ourselves. The ( 1 : org will support Mr. 1 1 ussier or any j 11 I dullness of Sunday In the vis- , ^ | Tlie people who object to Suuiutetitinnod, but they possess n -uint lo a past and intolerant age. Fan fast. I am independent. . | " Fan slow. 1 am engaged. t Fan with the right hand in front of Fan with the left hand in front of 1 your face. Leave me. j " Open and shut. Kiss me. I 2 Open wide. Love. I r Open half. Friendship. ! , Shut Hate. Swinging the fan. Can I see you | Fan by the right chock. Yes. i Fan by the leu cheek. No. . To earry in the left hand. Dcsiron. I of getting acquainted. Carry with handle to Hps. 1 will li ) flirt with you. I In a shady Schnlkill core some half- 1 " I young gentlemen bathers were ' I themselves in ports natural!- ' j buz in the cooling naves, leaving their J clothes upon the shore. While they j j j were at tlie height of their enjoyment J j young ladies, each with a book in . ^ j her hand, camo down a steep, narrow | ( path and seated themselves upon a i ■ moss-covered rock, under a spreading which overhang the river, opened - their books and began to read. Tin ^ men swam around a projecting point of the shore, and waited and waited for the damsels to go away ; I they continued to read on and on, - turning slowly loaf after leaf, so rory i interesting were tbe sensational novels i they were perusing. And all the while they were closely watched by the now ] shivering and Impatient bathers. For i nearly two hoars the young ladies t ; stirred not; bat, as the sinking sun i to throw long shadows over ths leaden water, they arose, and arm-in- i arm tbey. began to move off) when ' suddenly one of them paused, threw off her Mg straw hat, unlaced, un1 bottoncd, and dropped her frock, and . called out : " Come ashore, boys I Pot ' on j-our clothes. We've got through I reading." They were not "young ■ ladies" at all, but two wild, mlschlev- - ous wags, fond of fun, and practical I jokers of the most unscrupulous kind, > who bad come oat to play a cruel trick r Tbolr secret, however, was so well I kept that, individually, tliey have not t A Newport correspondent has the following, which Is equally applicable , to this latitude : r "Large numbers of excursionists - are bete daily from all parts of the f state, and much amusement is afforded , the lookers-on when tbey arrive at the t beach. They hire thin bathing-dresses, ■ and they are handed out without ret gard to their fitness or size. Portly t old gentlemen and ladles are often seen la tbe water trying in vain to make a suit come together which was made " for a slim youth of tender yean. Soma- • times the afflict is very ludicrous. " I Here la etrmsthing for ^ " or ho ' lsapaintat: » "Ths Picture or Tint Gbeat 3 of art. It is an oil-painting done in petroleum. It Is by the old msa tori. , It was tlie last tiling they did before f dying. They did this, and then they , expired. t "The most celebrated artists of , London are so delighted with this ple- . tare that they eosne - to the hall every [ day to gsxe "at 1L I wish you were , nearer to it, so yoo could see li better. , I vrtah I could take H to your residences , and let yoo see it by daylighL Some t of tbe greatest artiste come hero evai7 morning before daylight with ten terns \ to look at h. They say tbey never J »*w anything like H before, and they , hope they never shall again. . " When I first showed this picture I in New York "The audience were to , enthusiastic is their admiration of this , picture that they raited for the artist ; [ and when be appeared they threw ! The physleiaa " whose sands of life | ^ <mt'" c"'

WAvsra shssiss : Ufat USA «a terror Sufet A . XSrakXtos'arauMJ|tt- a - - A >cU inmrtll Soil ; " Or, usswsr«r«lly a- »»«"• | There appears to be less nttcotion ' given to dress and ostenutiooa display I ' this season than heretofore, vrtrich te( - surely a good and encouraging plgti. ' I Straw bats with wide black bands are | i the correct style for young gentleman 1 X vulgar and shoddy lady is detected immediately »t tlie watering plncss by appearing at breakfast in a silk dre« and diamonds. Few tourists remain longer than a day at any of the Niagara hotels, evidently hurried away by the extreme ^ =b"E«»- ' IrHf Invalids should refrain from surf bathing, as tlie sodden shuck is not'' Q calculated to improve their condition. ) K Miss Otis, a conspicuous Boston J;U beouly and bells, drives a Undera ^ turnout at Swsmpscott— tho aristo- , c-ratic Massachusetts reeorL ^ | Diamonds at breakfast are vulgar, j b Long Branch is to have a circulating j J for the ladies They need it. i | Entire sails of fine white F reach ) . j flannel are mucli In vogue among £ gentlemen at the seaside! Tbey | I cool and generally becoming. J The belle of the Lake House, Lake ^ George, is a beautiful young Cuban' ^ ' miss of flftoeu summcre. She plays, ( dances, flirts, and sings In the most Tlieaimu.il excursions, pic-nics, Ac.. , up tha Hudson have enntmenepd, and, ' lugs and dancing large# ore in great demand by red shirt commllu-es. I . , The new-fashioned upright trunks appear lo t-xciie quite as many eathsi I from railway employees as did the J I * One iff tlie India pcnsible things to take ° I tin- nraqhore is one's bathing-dress, and yel ma few women make pretty I Naiads 1 In this garment, ak in in eve--rytliiug else. Fashion tempts her toj tarics to forget economy. . j Kid slippers, for that luxurious conI nectimi of "mastrrty inactivity" that ( lira faahiiinallle women of saciety , ' I all about, are of a variety of . | colors, with high -heels, and as pretty . tbey era I*. '• ! I Tlie following axedteat receipu for a [favor: Take one pint of whisky; stir ^ | in a spoonful of whisky ; then add one I pint of whisky and brat w«U with a j ° I spoon. Take one gallon of water, nnd ( ! reach ; then put two apoonsftlll of I witter In n glass and immediately 1 I throw it out and fill the gloss with whisky. Flavor with whisky to suit " j your taste. When It W to be kept long in warm climates add sufficient whisky to prevent souring. I The Cape May correspondent of tlie j Philadelphia Preu (who by lbs way ( , writes a good letter) thus refers to the | decline of billiard playing as an nmusoi ment for India i ! - i i. Why U -is 1 do not kuaw, but the "j Indies of tbe Stockton House do not | ' to take as much interest in the i i game of billiards as they naed to do in < i days gone by st other hotels on tbe i Island. Perhaps, croquet becoming ; - a great favorite here, monopolist* i i their attention. Perhaps, the Stockton , ' bar is too near the Stockton billiard- | - room ; or, perhaps. Indeed, the gran- , i drur of the hotel itself abashes the fair i t ones, and keeps them within the strict i bounds of propriety 1 ■** 'hat 1 think , ! it wrong to play billiards for cither , - man or woman, but iktrt, swjt so riia . 1 A few seasons ago at tho Congress , , Hall billiard rooms, and at Barrett's, t both of which tbe Stockton bt excels, . it was considered (As (Aiay, not only for 1 ladies to look on at thagaaw, but oven t occasionally to join In, and very good players the majority of them wontNow and then thi-y peep timidly in at e the doors <n windows of the Stockton c room, bul that is alL To eater tbey never seem inclined." . " Tluwe little words we have italicized c contain the germ of a valuable sassy B on the tyranny of public opinion, if c the War, wen the piaos for such sub- '■ jeet, or had tbe space to devote to 1L * What mil lit **rli ,atl Thai, fearful >' warning is unjust and unchristian. It n is seldom or never addressed to tbe * evil-doer, bat to pNveat one' from ® doing an net meeting the approval of tian tyranny is verily the1 invention of " the devil. It prevents the good man or woman from balding oat the band r of fellowship to aave an errlng -lrtntbSr k or sister— to Aft them from the stough " of despond and briug thefc to the path L at right It says to tbe repentant " sinner you most remain a sinner— to i' the Christian,' you must not stretch forth a helping hand. This is rather 'f far-fetched over a Millard table, perb Imps, says one, bat the moral it, always I do right— alsrsys fforv to do righL I" No less than laTrattacm at A>w- . ;>ort, in whloh many a dscent mansion , would easily fit. base boen disposed of for tho season, furnished, it feeqid, ip , princely style, the rents sveczgtogfaom r t450 to $4000 for the snnuner rnoothz, . three New T orkerz among othurs having paid the fatter sura each. Nearly „ 300 of the cottages are owned by tttan0 g era, who come to reside ft* a brief 1 period. No leas a personage than Mr*. George Francis Train Iras built , s house st tiic cost of *30,000. Mrs. Cashing, of Btistoc, it (oUowing In bar track. Same idea may he conveyed b of the extent of ths aafea whan it fa b knows that tbe principal broker has I disposed of an nmcfe as HJIBMWl worth to. year. Andtlrarato^ !■ i : ; ;

"p J aLsTVJwTroLy* i .H .noqw,* svpk wSfatwAUUl. I AWtAvWUtoti-t tWw'iyV -«• 1 riwfCSW r • nasi wis. II" -, 1 i tfratdjbrf ^ Midnight to the sanctum ; darkness broods oferuiv und nq sound.satotra I the ear save the Mick of 4he.tj(|to and i old ocean droning his dfatont luifaby. such anight as this, pitch ifarfrsm' i thAsnrf, sohtary and aistMi ; hut »s left, awa strnck and almost tetritied at the weird, mysterious sok .nmty for us. The politi dans are sweltering In the sun at Hprrtsburg, while' we lire enJoying the cool hreeze. and diMfen : of Oape May. ; ''"'l"" J In ooc respect, we in ibis country, . are far behind Ufa watering pfacca of Germany. M e have no puUic gambhalls where the zexm mingle at . the same tabka and state thato.**^. on the hazard of the die. Bat t^^H wo miss those hard, unnatural, ur^^ fi-mMIhe, woman firaea, defonncd with , suppressed cxritement and the greed of gain, one meets' daring the we will st : Baden Baden and Hombourg. The largest Cape May lllaraiiarttai i i found was the rise of a baatesttg, weighed nearly half a pound, aad was i-xhiMted at IhegreatCMMal MfrHary Fairin Phifadrtphfa a* a great eoriThe Ball 'tin estimates thd totifliiuinUher of Ifriifaddphlatui,^ pil a^ea, *•>• »- nt from town/itl the course df'the - period. Indudiag those, gose to Europe, tboao at the vraaldrvaUnfand . and rural boarding-booses, as The Unron hotel at Saratoga^# engaged s couple of. Falters who, from ' the 4th, to the 15th in»L, haye added uratlj two hundred .woofcoj^a, to, "the Union lanler. , The camp of the Itescrres is named after Brevet Major General E. Uptoo, I U. 8. A. , who was Assistant Adjutant General In tho war of thr rebellion. The bqrfjpagetl at not so finb is thofe of last JpteV Bathing In the early ages was con■idcrod typical of moral parilp, -formnrcli com|Klkd his household to purify tlielr bodies with water pattern* to patting on titer good dothes brfor /' going to BetiWl^-a raichw^)1 "vrtfldh wr fear has s-ully, growit loja d^tuae.in many families besides ties atodcrn Jsoobacs. So ops says who ought to know, and If clrsulttstoi lii aaiitto'god- — lines*, as the pood' book atsert* It U, What good people we shodld fcS be, down hierr,'** a'tttka^Ut tflUt'' ' Salt alr ie eaid not to agree' Wjifc tho : Kallistont and other oosmetka *6 mu ill 1 aflbcted now-4-days by evdti t$Hmvs i > of Ere'. - look spottadi sfttefrta •trawttril, y il anything but lon-ly 1 1 IvhoM. Lvlh-r A thing of beauty is. a^jov forever, compliment, in the .w»y.a( q prewnt ' modest violet, modi less to raich a combination of taste and efaaarrae as 1 Ilundertpfund A Spang favor thd'r Whew I but Jt was hoi yestepfay. 1 Would that ws could accept Sydoey r Smith's "Uggcr li on —strip off ourfarah ' The New York » •'v.MjJp c : e licet, gives tbe frllowtog senribELad- " rice, of which we.mate a notej^be ; rSr .tnkcH nine, no FUriatiqo "talk., ' At a sea-side ball evraythjw rajatt ^ be in n'frar, full dress aaa'aUttjsMBJt f *■"» to «o*n the ifay.brfwr. , Well, what of U, Mend Jter, wThra ; and Iwoi again to rarely took tooome here from PMhtdriphto. It only shows whaiatwlgt'^ 4 Mte M^Tair^yTaek > U fa ^.sptetat 'of Interatoaraar 1 ~ Tills ririinn thai wfesas • llnttiriira. ittlli it i ^Uj . f.n