' ^ "
VOIPMB XV.
CAPE MAY, ISTEW JEESifST, AVEUJ-rE-STJAY, AUGUST 18, 1869.
WHOLE NO. 743.
jtoiu.cn tuts. -'WW, IMTN, ITTHJCCT-IT^W At» frtTAtl) rCUS. 1 1 *m. law a ItertMJfil IE •. H-fawasus, - •. r IULIK, ATTOBXEY AT-LAW, otra uuu, a./. n* ' a. «ray, 7' arnwcr^Mjar, Jttrrtt, town p«, st" WOOM/Ji— |r,w« ItatAn •( a Mh »u. •EStrX iff Fine American and other Wafabra, "rtefeJHA ■■->■.. .■».'■-■ - " K. r.-'MBUtira r» a, im. t>--^UJJAH M. WXMWN PACKAGE AND JOBBINC ,i / iDRWUBTI' '«< 1 NO. ao4if/Iriitfa'-f MMr, MWv.- iWAMjffH, .afera,u, rnca nuvSSmtA MNri « k • • w. AA aurliM, C?£Vu5»*' i^r, WW "« M. W ntou, kWl.< .r patsMta, ACCTtON BVIMEH. Sm sj? mux*, >nii urn eu mrn. ( ^ps^r^f ■ -^■SgSfitTC; ertjwtOrtlvere j j • • OM »llH JEREMIAH acHEI-IXMOER I I. STEWART DEPl'V, >1 j aa si. sicord rrrrrr. abotk ![ < B trace*, ruiLAD-A, j ® coarrrx o"l"clot*h«.'*wi"[>'o w p | jar ;""2 1 P. HflCBB, Jr. 1 £|5K SuSK cSc'oIJ : CONVEYANCUM. sagggg.'s^gf*- - ^ , THOMAS 8. CLARK'S " BOOT AND SHOE STQBt, •x •jUWriimMnkn, | •- '"aSwwiewra^ f ■*ttf2Sri££w*',aj mrrWC * #OKK MADS IVOR Kit. » MEPAIRINCI .V EAT 1.1 DORR. ' WBDltESPArs. s*d P FX ID A TS. _ rumau -&<®r of the ZjUjS-JF, j *^'' *'"*' V lmSS""1 ■*""• ~ "• |a t NWIWini, 4«— V ^ CA IVINMVARE. I A.ItqJJW'Btook LATEST ST-yUt" " '.."J IfwaA'flwiRiBret Mai, 0.J.HENKEL8, ■a*. ,90,.^ ,*^ 1». g p., : a
! BtilfW cwh . "" ?AHT» AID SLifim, cVejiai^crrr.AJ. for. JJWA. a »W1R *' CAKPFX'I KIU I MtlLDHHX, a«iaw Witunnaul M.A> «■ j)"- R-W »■*»**: >* MtwirtH uiuaii, £ >yavg*-; .»» L_ O.MAUCT.SL ■ - jottrt ' " 1 », aritenwur, icx a imam, ■iiiiiti KKAL KS1ATB BMOKEKF, ' f" car* iiutRaj. "" I - SSsS"")"'.'' r- ' £rrS3,,^».«..« ' * Ka/Bk*. wask. - i ' i fi flP I j ■■muiacnin.iua.c«iaq. '■ >>'■*«" mmUu of i.Mfc wltk nfr'j. J IIENR1 ERRLICRER, ^ ' s "* Tailor, " 5 -v.. ii2 enssxerr sttbsx, ] raiLAOKLrniA. ? T J. A. HARRISON. ( t u ' MOXl, |J J nut c?TLE*r, « «rmnC1X1< L ■ ritvmo TACKLK, TOUCCA j ~ 1 ; "ctra, ca«TA j f • Mttut ! «• ?" W. H, B0NEBA00., '3 A Amvrloan ami Foral0« RiMta, ^ ' triiiu jii unrnjL nirf a w lo. 1103 0k« ml BtrwV rUaUpUa. XP a a4t»4,»f>k«a 1 ; n»HT«in ^ fin MiBtaUsTUPi Sua. „ 1 I nu FIT ANT w/xoon-. S MOSQUITOES. AMD ITiIEK £ INSMCT8. 2, gr£^»f »r RMtat UM^cmMRa TU A«i»UU. W.L. S0M. Ontu,, ^ ^w» *4tr»4crw*a«. J' HUFNAL'S 1 Pkarmaoj, H car* ■»» cm. a. J. "■ J'.&SSUhJ SKSSSi - &«llBII pSnFPMERTj smuit aicriclcot mmna S ■! mail i ' „ JLTif /.S- . _ "C"1. " » n > wyaa. an^r otina t M. w' <»**.•■ > ""*"■ W\T1 1 .ay*, a, ,,R* mm aawat . " IILLI TB POST ' '
OR Jf«> HoteU. CONGRESS HALL, * TAPH MAT, M. J., It an Opa fcr tie Iterptm of Ostda 1 ' ■UOTi all ltd CONGIE1S HALL rtrUtl, L Wwttwrtl tflatnlj Rt faaUte, kartt«|; ^ Lr.casK.RtMM*. ' i '"- CMtMtaA R«. OKA UTHUtl, MeKtMa'i Allanttt HataD •JjSaSiisisrSSgi _ ;OHR McMAKIX. ripailttoi. fc,M» •' Cart, law, titihll ul mi ,1 JaiJTtoSr'^lSi *' na** *'" QITTASI BY TOR IRA. Colonel John Fonlin, Proprietor, r ^S.i3KgaggV3rjM7 ' HOVTHR, BUHPUnSr ncsnns, Pn, ti*m. ^ HUH-IH ndHtwifl. _ pUUDKLFlU HOGE, ^ ' c ^jtes«&gs : Tga:— — ■- Sssrr i NEW COTTAUI, octal tTaxBT. .. late,. Coin. Ml Koooor) b f "^fS^SESSLr^ % (umoorraai. j . cart Mar. H. J. _ ATT" CITE Ml " DIAMOND " , JYbtft £ jFitmty Hazaar, (OMiaWAAL wnhM IM i» Mil " rtHt»rMt.»wrTtrtnat— ItniiuMt ± RtkMa n*Jh«a:B«M IA 1 WT-ar iciunrw a tumtu. innrrn, w war catcrrxm, ra. °! ^TRJrd=i»: s-sr^r-M s "l>"*""t* *—m W ri CIGAR 1 TOBACCO STORE T COU.V fc IIECSE, 6 B2S2,°1' .*>* '.'tY Ttn*1 -iiiKaSu 1 5ScS-4rsi:!Ka!T£ T jg|t§3f|^ 7 FINE SAMPLE ROOM, 1 11 ICR ARB R1MDCRM =- ABTUTW i CuMlns and Djralns RMma, j I. K. lilt. CUDXCTulKTUTIat, bo HOWELL A EOUKEE, j Paper Hanginga, '* OtfMtrnaikaiN Rarkattt., MMtlRla _ II IB !■» J^sry^rrjcir: i "tw.mi.i IM,l>t«i|,«blL laKMtm.il. ' r win, AK.- .-*■*• V*.n. U VUatMKarn mini. h. cart, .HAWit, »
Cmrt, Mmt BMMa. , COLUMBIA HOUSE. ciraRa)r,'K>, 1 J TKX OC^N D Y THE Ml KLTU ' " | WITH IKCCalTY. i Kxtolloal Eoilnat IWlUHIat, aa4 Urtalf I nttoiw ikw imuawbtMi>t n. r „ ^ ^ OOLCKlirsoTi'7' POLL OCEAX VISW ' IwaSS^feTirS ! STOCKTON HOTEL. J tJPSMAT,N.&, rrraa garpnib, rrapaoiti. Oc,A" House, wTo'T^S" S2.TssrHSr.Lu'o•.'rss^•^;„,^.• "ft It RaallMt It aetotal of IkaoUol ttd hit I. chtroetfi or IM rati,) m.l I. mil bo kopl atrltUr Imi likt It crotr mmi. nrntttCTitLM • ■u M "fKTT 11 'AWTER, ^ STATES HOTEL. CAPN MAT, X. J. IwmMbnnrRnKH^io! SSfl^SsffiBKsiSt S" National Hall, ■yy ASUS NVDKL rOTTA(OprMtM IW tMoklm lMt« a m ■iioimtou.iiwRtit.wiiin ^ BROS RARER. RESTAURANT A LA CARTE. | Oar. Wuhlartaa A Jarktaa Ra, cars mat. ( ! ^»u mni liter, cm sat, *, i. rLaattaaaRoruarRctoartToBiti ' w'ianli w ill ■ Wltoo, moon, atoral ML, tr Ikt tkolMOI ' M. W. rawctrr, rr.prt.Mr, I O HERMAN MOR j tars sat citi, a. t, , opoa tor lha I ■■ ■ | Hot of curaM. tirrr, t ***cMWaafcco. rruMtwort. j ntUWARl BRUSH, ■ i tar* mat errr. a r. t rtli ,opoMr HotM, rllo.lH oo LAFAT- I "• ■ TWfM.&trtrw**. , WILLIAM MatOt, rttfrtotto. , nicvi " ( *'*W WROLCKALR ARS irtalL ' L1Q4JOR STORE, ! raCttOR Rlto* (Mtr I ho Botlroot IMpoL} c ,tcr. !?* ^ « THROUGH LIRE ; YOBK, , . .PWMt. : (SUNDAYS EXCEFTKIT.) ' M>, lltA.IAllMM ' Ttrt, at IM» k. M. -"riaAfiffi. •
r°> mw.M E. ^ HrtrMtlMHRO. Hrwut Uil MP TtAntM wtlWcWT ForlhoroMooouoto olto.rto hoo» rnr i •«"• Thtl I boro Itrtt before. Thrtt'. 1 tt, wot drof Ju.1 left lo. rtt — \nmJgMBljmyZL., " ^ To ho nr. i lor. rwa with oil m Mltht— | ^ t. w *i*"m H^IM' hartJ.^.'"*"' .^-^'on.x^MrMr^UM.. MAItlt MCRTIRU AT MaMORD i A ssMOrncsMcE. h It to in the rammer of '65, tho ! , " (T«7» »l wbicli Cape Mar had etpr- ' j riercd tince the commeneement of the I , " war. I to an invalid then, with nn ! , empty rhwwr, to tall af the find Hull i , A Run. "Carriage,' tir ^ wild a hack- , man, at I Itmiied to tkr' front of the I , '4 hotel after dinner. 1 Uttcned apathel- | ] knlly to hit liat of drivta until he taid | "Diamond Beach." What a proity j - name, I thought, and then I taid, "I'D , pi there." I almost rvptntod of my , for the ouMquitot ,o tlw pinro were j v aimott too picntiln, t«- keep off with i, one hand. My driver waa a lively. 1 chaLty fellow, however, from TV owl- : bury, and hit geniality lea-, ne l my v t ride contidcrnWr. ,, 7 We reached the heooh and 1 wat , , plraaod. Tito tailt « huh dotterl the , >• boy made it pictureaquc. I could not j o hunt for diamondt bocautc it gave me , a dull pain in my ttump to ttoop. 1 n ; wandered up in the shade of the high „ Wuff in tearch of a spring my driver « hadiald me of Directly 1 found it, and aitUngnpona log which lay hloogJ tide of it, at - If it wat alto tliirnty, 1 ^ look a good eoettig ArinE Then I A coAirocnccd to think, and my thoughta , run Away with mo. rod took me luck ft to a Virginia thicket, where a tall ,, ' handsome fellow tpiung out upon me ^ and shattered my arm ere I could give J it him the thruat which leveled him. Hit * pale, frightened fare, and his oh ('.oil ! c J were right before tin, when the fretlicel J of voices startled toe by laying, "I liko ; ^ 0 the off colore." I turned sliarply , , around, and oh, rach a proity fare, j but it wat the faee of the fallen confederate in the Virginia wooda. A 1 ^ figure draped in black, evidently bcr i n mother, accompanied her. I could { (| only raise my cap with my left hand | >{ rice." I regained ray carriage with a ^ J nervous energy— saw tie dead (ace and it* living picture peering at mo all the dreary ride back. One in tho hotel ^ saw me searching ths register ami pausing over the iuliim of Mrs. and AAios H , and servant, from Rich"I like the offeolots," sounds in my I! - con to-day, b« whether ths sentence " referred te ths handfnl of pebbles which the possessor of that pretty faee held '7 la Ker tiny hand, or whether to my | uniform, I never knew. I on|y know 1 that to save my life I cot Sown my : ; gray dad foeman, for I waa a retreat- 1 lug Udai soldier. R. M. T. || Kits rsmillll fc , disco vrred thst the clergy have either , set the present styles or are following " , those set by Uir Parisian rfryonl..- b ■ "The abbes have ptitie white loose , tunica, inco over violet, lappets nnder '' the chin, the scarlet waistband and no " ends, no crinoUae and bncklod shoes." " But few Parisian tltjmta, however, " now visible nt their devotions in 1 the Madeloiim, St. Roeh or Notre Dune. Most of l^em are at the sea- " 1 side. PrinreasCIotliildeand heramall (ainily are at Vinssk-sur-Mer, where " l*riiice Napoleon has chosen a real- ^ In this connrrlioo wo may add lr UuuOarioUa Patti, according to a pri- f" vate letter which we have Jnst area, ,c living like a princess at Boulogne- G sur-Mcr, where she has s pair of ponies " which She drives herself, to the ad mi- ^ ration of everybody." CariotU Patli, " we may Itarther add, will leave by the w steamer Villo de lhuis on the 96th of ■" August fcr New York, where she will ,l give, with Theodore RHter, orchestral P eouoerts under the direction of Mo* who Is now bt Pa. lt. The cnaturan of the I'arisian sab-bathers 11 duly described by our corresponAmi, who dwells particularly upon the ' i imiiialnin and Orieatal beauty of « 1 thr yMsw re, wWdi "has not yet «' got to Xtwpari," but might well be 01 adopted there *nd at Long Branch, r Ckipr. Aiay. Oaaey Island and Nahaat. <* ' -X T. Mm «. »' e— are ft Not AsrtmiRu.— A Briton peasant u csi his way to PkrisT-stopped at the „ barber's shop In Hahiboulht While T the bather was atrepphtg M« maof the i, prosaaA aatieed adog stMbrg near his b ehair aad stared at him fisoHr. ' " What U the matter with thnl dug," RMU-pm-at.-thath.R^ra., _ TW Wher answered wfggg * " *m u I " Writ, he rate it." T;,, , TT-' |S ■ r..
A lively fetter writer at Saratoga wonders what can bring people to thai dusty little country village, except n dire necessity for medical use of the walera or a love for racing and hat horses. The correspondent' (a lady) aaysi "What do people talk about in Saratoga 1 First homes, then hotting. then suppers, dinners, Ac. ; then women. ' 7 It may ho a good place for match- ' making, I oil I doubt 1L I doubt it fir the reason that there are so few eligible ] men here, and those few so averse to matrimony. What the young women ; do I am at a loss to imagine. 1 should think, however, that they would enter for the "consolation stakes." To gel up a wardrobe, to array yourself in I .three dresses per day, pay a Urge hotel j bill, and then not kill your game, most j be the worst possible investment. It was only the other day a mother com- J ' plained, in accents not unlike those of \ ' that lone, lone creetur, Mrs Gum- j ' midge, what a terrible trial bars logs : ; was to her. She hod brought hrt two ! daughters here for three seasons, and they were still on her hands. Ay, I madam, and they will remain there. | The men who seek wives at Saratoga j I are fortune banters. Go home and set your daughters to honest work, I ■ j and then, perhaps, they will Had hoo- 1 | eat husbands j • and dance, and flit, in spite of tlx- odds I | against them. A butterfly in one bal- 1 I ancc and a horse in the other ! The I j clothes I have seen during the past 1 j week are the most wonderful ponaramn I ' j 1 ever beheld. For "loudness" and I ■ 1 | startling effects I do not believe they ] be excelled except by the wardrobe , j of Xiblo'a Garden. Indeed so many j j of the women resemble tho supernu meroriea of the I Hack Crook and White j Fawn, thai I sometimes think 1 must ' j seated in the parquet of tho tbeatso. I nre the blondes, "tho Girls ot ' the Pi nod,' us they are called here, with just stn-h beads as lorgnette hare j i I won pointed at for so long a lime. : - ; it is owning to a wrotchod convention- ■ ! allty that still draws the Hoc norm- > ami they lure husband. ' What must ■ women dress, anil then draw, and thsn i Fur what? fo alt met the at- < they would priae animals, and use t rvlinrd language in discuaaiug their ' points. i It is tliisit horrible, and I do not see I iwlf to such scrutiny. For a womatr i to dress to gratify those who know and t appreciate her, is not only a pleasure i a duly.- To put herself on exhilri- i for th«i benefit of the general pub- ,n lie is such a lowering of womanhood < as no one who rc»|»*ts the sex ever r I requisites wili Ilea beauty if she is a g | is fortunate enough to be born and L I so. To try to be one or the other a p laved at Saratoga, to the luitisfkrtinn c of no one and the disgust of many, t Alack and alas 1 t Burleigh, the correspondent of the > JomtmsT, thus describes this n watering place, and compares it with c Cape May, Newport and other noted [ popular resorts : "The whole soil of i! New Jersey, from where you take the t train lo Long Branch is powder and 1 dust, and the ride in ths cars is per- I fretly suffocating. There is nothing i in Long Branch itself that is attrao « live. It stretches along the main road g about a mile ; the hotels on one ' side, the ocean on the other. The san t I wat* down on the gloss r surikce of the t sea at noon, and the heat is intolero- t ble. <1 The hotels are bnilt long and sham- a Wing, in the cheapest and flashiest a style of summer resorts. The soil is g red Jersey soik The main road i in Tront of the hotels is kept watered s and is tolerable. But the drives off d this rood are amidst clouds of dust c that destroy all comfort of riding. r There are none of the attractions at r the Branch which make Saratoga or * Newport, Swampscott, or the water- li ing plana of New England. It is a i' place, foil of fast people The clement is very Urge. The are numerous, and some of * hotels are completely monopolized Jj Jewish families There Is none of . indescribable style and make up J which is discernible nt the Springs, and Is so marked a feature and gives * such a charm to the society at New- ® port. There is none of that family and home feeling which is seen at the * New England watering places ; nor is ' any of that rkrisUn gayety which marks the company at Cape May. " The company at the Branch is a ° com | any fond of boating, sailing, fast , driving; ltla rough, hmrty, holster- ' ous ; sporting mrn of the fancy, who, 1 with their attendants, late rapper* and * convivial habits, give the piare a pecn- J air. Families who go to ths country , quiet, who wish to lay off and onlive by themselves and have s" J time, give the bench a wide berth The season is very short, and the visit J ths unusual crowd and the class of ' persons drawn to the Branch. " ( Anyhow, says thr Xatim, the China, i man is coming, and wu venture to pro- , diet that h. will in twenty yearn hare totaBy superseded Bridget. . | [The Glades Ilouie, off Cohasset, 9 U ] RdlTO Mow Boston, hi doing nicely J stomsl A small and dehgl.tfol \ MTlSi ft» ■ ' -to, ' ■ '
^ | aihihuw nt. I a : Tool ! Toot I Scree— ch— eh, go the he I brakes. Cape May I shouts the cons' doctor and two breakrsmrn, as though y) i the thousand dusty excursionists wore not all made foDy aware of the bu t by x- reason of their Uiro* hour* ride— the e view of tho nurah and the smell of the i. salt air. The first on the platform are I- i the newsboys, who, shoe less, costless; >r j and ecini-haUcas, reach the hotels with fo | their; literary ventures with a celerity 0 that would puxzfe Dexter. Thou like n ' bee* swarm men, women, children, ind fants and baskets on the platform. — r Mnny are here for the first tiimfaud t they look disappointed at the size of n j the breakers, expected them to ran as ri the poets make tlwm, "mountains •j high." -Sanguine people rash for a :t | lathing suit, a chair, a dinner ticket, e an excitement. The economical with if, their hnge market bosket* lined with a hard boiled eggs, look for a retreat 1 , sn hour the pleasure' brigade have made a circuit of the Island, looked ] I I into all thr hotel parlors and manr : a j private rooms, went 'round in the ; J swing, bathed, bought oysters and ( , I Cape May diamonds, got tired and ' - coma back to the Excursion House for , dinner. Tliaec who have brought I , lunch cat iu the second story balcony, I I where tin- breezes cool simiiltancuusly [ - ; their lieat and their collee. Tlic man ; t with a surplus of bologna trades it off I for his neighbor's cantrlope, and ail I I the old ladies makes intcrcliange of I pie, cake and confectionery. Down r | stairs iu Ihe dining-room the hungry ! J crowd moke amiudcalelattcr with their with an apiwUte that is a stranger lo l inner man tilled, the outer man , put in motion for purposes of digesI The dancing is marked br n | , vigor IM refreshing to thr lookci -on as | i is ■ vlmiisting to the |nrti. i|<anL • r l'.K«d manager with a blue lodge. ] t " The "thei way shouts evervhody. "Swing corners' ladies chain ' ForFirst lady to llie right "' and so. pellartniml sml alsint, keeping thnr to the j lively music, go thr .dd fellows and the , even fellows, the slim young girls and I the fat old women. In tlu middle of ; 1 the excitemvut- ding-dong, dung-ding, j * rush for baskets and l»nncts and I Isindlcs ; a crowding on the narrow j platform and in the narrow doors, snd j and rest They were up nt fire j awake rvfriwhrel, ami that their one | day at Ihe s.-aaidr may brighten the whlrli will have to be passed In the factory anil nt tlic Iwni en- thrv taking a walk, lost a valuable diamond . ring in an unaeconntnbki way. Diliwlthoul any clue to the ring, and the ] gave it up as gone, "for good and nlL" Before daylight tlie following calls of tier ntirar, a small negro girl. ' giri who had not heard of the ring be- , ing lost, said she had just liad a dream, in which she was apprised when, where and how the jewel had been lost. , and that, If allowed, she felt rare she . could find it. She then described ths , place ami manner in which the ring , and begged her mistress go with hsr and test tho dream — • strange circumstance was made to ths household, but all treated , it with the utmost Incredulity. It was afterwords concluded to humor the , girl, however, and she and several j white membrrs of the family proceeded to the designated spot, more than a , yards from the house. Here , the dreamer told her mistress that, as iu bcr dream, she most drop , another ring and it would roUus , guide lo the missing one. A plain gold ring was handed the girl, she let GUI and rare enongh it rolled and •topped within two inches of the lost ring, which had got into a crevice between two bricks ia the paremeal It may be imagined that the ring hunters were somewhat astounded 1 at thr miracle. There is not tlic least about this curious dream and result. -JfeuusiUe tWiWoarnsf. Olive Logan, at Long Branch, we told by a veracious correspondent, is getting handsomer and radier every day. She gets up every rooming at five o'clock and walks four miles before , breakfast, all alone. After breakfast , she pats on a brawn linen suit, and ] down lo the bench to bathe in . swimmer of her sex, so far ; paddles, floats, treads backward, and scares the bathing master by going out wliero the 1 sharks are. After tho bath (he puis on 1 bine dress and plays billiards for two hours, to the astonishment of Use billiard maker, who swears he never saw the like. Then she puts on a gorgeous silk for dinner, and after dinner she goes out driving, and the way she handle* the ribbons is a caution to Gnat. In the crating she puts on a satin dress with a leng train, and all forbolowed with rod velvet and yellow laea, 1 and goes to tome hotel where there is rtronger than in bath, billiards, or bowling along the avenue. At pfeTSU ( o'clock she corns* home, pots oo a . merino and vrilns woman's rights UU bedtime. Nomtwi HDdertrcnd/Esq haa bee. ' St. Ixwfe on a visit to Ms friends. 1 He has moulded aball for Jim MeNieL who murdered thirteen cAtt— to c53 I blood at PMrnyn, Marion cnut.lv. and WW zmoumpany em Insure Ihs Wfe
The greatest depth to which a diver can descend, with the greatest appfiJk, snccs of safety, is about 100 feet, and, B. for this, a bunch of hundred weights eh i mB*1 '*■ disposed about his person. )pf The average depth at which he can . work comfortably U about 90 feet, lie whieh w»" O"*' Uw depth at which the !„ ' operations upon the ltoyal George wvre conducted . In the water, from 60 to 70 feet deep, the men can work for two .. hoars at a time, coming up for a ten ;y minutes' rest, and doing a day's work diver, encased in otic of Sic be 'a dress. _ era, went down in the Mediterranean l(j to a depth of Id.! feet, snd remained there for twcnty-Avr minutes ; and we u have heard that Green, the Amcfitna M diver, inspected s wreck in one of tho a Canadian lakes at a depth of 170 feet ; ^ but his experience was enough to con- * | it without danger of life. At this j | depth the pressure of water oo the lt i hands is so great as lo force the blood n I to the head and bring oo fainting (Its, ,f while the requisite volume of air iasids j | the dress to resist the outward pressors of the water is so great that it would B speedily suffocate. Means hare been J j tried to obviate thsse difBcnllies, but J ] for the present a limit has been set te ' the extent to which men may penetrate t j the secrets of the deep. An Ingenious Italian workman has brought to Eng- ' land a sort of armor dress which would n I resist the pressure of water ; but our j. submarine engineers think this would U not obviate the difficulties arising from j 'he limits placed to human endurance. y The brain being the nervous centra, r and the fed lag through which thought n is mtablished and feeding generated. 0 consequently it can only mat and be .. nourished during steeping hours, n There is no fact more clearly rstsbi- fished in human physiology thsn this, s j It expends its energies and vitality I. the recuperation does not Iqual the . expenditure, tho brain wither*, and I insanity o lis general result. Those . persons who think the moat, who do ! brain work, inquire ths most sleep. . Time saved (gnu ncasssary sleep is ; I destructive to mind, twdy and aonl. , j All hralthy |*itsoas should sleep not 1 I tlinn nine, in every twenty-four hours, f Th« sleeping should ail be done at one , time, and Uisl at night ; " early to bed I (wealthy and wise," is s physiological , t fact. Give yourself, your children, I and servants plenty of sleep, in Ihori ougbly ventilated rooms. Invalids : when lltey can, pravhlod they exeroiwi I j their tmdity membcra as frequently and i ' I tp/j«e»'s Journal, which is gnoerally , well informed alsiut Kunqwon sffhira. quite setisalmisl It is known Hull ' will visit the United States during the j liecn made current that a more illns- ' next summer, in th**pcraon of Eugenic ' Montijo, grand-danghter of old Mr ' Kilpatriek, at one time American consul *t Malaga. Slid s friend of Wtsh1 ington Irving, wbolnoneof his letters. says: " lamia Napoleon and Eugenie 1 Montito, Emperor and Empress of 1 Franco- one of whom I entertained at ' cottage ou the Hudson ; the other, ' whom when a child I had on my knee 1 at Granada! It seems to cap the ! climax of the strange dramas of which 1 Paris ha* been the theatre during my ' life time. ••• The last j I saw of Eugenie Montijo she was one of the reigning belles of Madrid 1 Eugenie, AfpUlm't Jomrnal tells ns,wll ' not visit the United State* as Empress of France, but will travel is oy. under an assumed title, whieh, however, win ' not prevenUher receiving a moet core ' dial and enthusiastic reception, wbrr- ' ever she may show her still beautiful ' face. She win bo the first of the ' crowned heads of Europe who has J landed oo American soil I The Chicago Tribune do lends the I President for rocking pleasure and rest t in the season when almost everybody . but editors lias n phty spell It rei minds us that Mr. Buchsnnu resorted I every year to Bedford as his favorite t place. President Pierce visited the I Crystal Pnlaco, New York, and went . into summer quarters at Cape Island. President Van Buren was fond, even 1 to flunkcyism, of aristocratic people. 1 President Jackron spent ' many weeks ' of his vacation at the Ripraps, Fortress ' Monroe. The I "resident most oaten ta- ' tiously addicted to dispfayihg himself 1 oo public tours, with a pomp and ' that at the present time would 1 oppressive and oflfcrodre, was Waaht Ington himself. | ITe-olc* in a town in Pennsylvania, [ ore wound up by the girls standing |tn , a row while the young men 'go along , the line and kiss them all "good night.' . Tie- winding up pari ia anxiously waited for by the young men, and , highly relished. 1 Front Abt, the song writer, has been • invited to conduct the great National ■ Fongerfest, atCAndnnali nsxt yssr. Fori Fermro waa married hrt mouth, , at Franktbrt-oo-Abe-Maln, to Dr. I , lsura Raascb. " takrn her two^ugbhu* to .Saratoga 1 for three seaseus, and they are still eu • ' her hands. 1 1 , tn aw I California pears are twenty oenh each in Chlcago-aboul five cents a bite. ] It Uatated that 91,000 ia the averao: ' j niglaly pmflt of ths Chicago faro A Nuw Jersey hontrtUtf has best ■Qjtcocod to ISO yean imprisonment.
d. Te t. lw« TOarvfemarert. . iu.aa.ssss. k ' nMwrasvllmswrwssas Jm h ■■irtiTOrtMsSrSTOsm. n ^*,"^"17*1 r** * "z jsi^r* L. a "7""*^ T** " BCSOCB AT TUK ATLARTSC TXLBoHarii Omcx.— IW m/e— (to fab- * graph operator) O air 1 I want to send • kiss to my hnsband in Uvarpool. ' How ran I do it ? a OtHfiuy Operator. — Fssiert thing in . the world, ma'am. You've got to give it to ms sritk feu doOara, tad Ifll traasmlllt right away. I IW »P!/,_ir that's Ihe care, the e directors ought to pat much yuuogrr , and handsomer men in your position. (Operator's indignation ia grsai.) i There is mueh howrt appsuheusioa r fast the Harvard boys rtmfi art have 1 fair play rt themes uu ths CNh. Jure 1 at present, however, intiiHgft Kng- - iishmen are sa ksenly Mum of this to have anything occur to produce luls- rarprfaed if "*>ul play" fa afaaasd. ; A prudent Englishman alight even re- . joie. over a victory by the Rat it la . as a cheap way of mnarBgfat gaud . frc"ag over here. r Fashionable belles this seamn hare I a now distortion for the human body, f Instead of thr Grecian bend fa fast ' year, they now hare s sort of combjna1 Uon of that and fifty other diflhreut ' (angles, mixed up together. The hands > are lapped at the side, and arms placed like the wings of s skewered pigeon, 1 snd, when performing the usual pastime of locomotion, they go hopping 1 about like (he kangaroo ; so much sn, that the fashion has been appropriately called the "Kangaroo GaDop." Touug maids, and even uncertain aged ones. 1 g<> hopping and wriggling about, with a skip and a hop, enough to dfagtMl I any sensible, sond-minded person. The Cape May Ware and Lung , Branch A'esrs are continually reisers - I ling that the Cape snd the Broach "do , not cross rach other's pstk. " snd nre I cnminually printing srticlea lo Show . i that the bench at Ihe other place . I Srylfa. Chsrybdis, the Maelstrom, si other horrors snmmod into one. wholesale drowning casuality at ritl would he the greatest boon to the rt I editor and many of his readers — M. , liy rail from Son Francisco lo K. ■ York at 211 game* of euchre, 1V:» I I drinks and 117 cigars, whieh show him | to he a very slow euchre player or a wry rapid drinker and mnofcrrThc proprietor of a hooc mill adver. . Uses tint " jicrsoos winding their own bones ts he ground will be a(tended lo wirit punctuality and dsepatah." ' The other day S ®^j oq Ibehrncli r threw a stone sad i track a Lieu tenant General, three foreign ministers, Ave governors, and eleven ssaatom — and II sraoa't a good day for dioUfa|Bi*hed , visitors, either. The following advertisement appear* in an exchange : "A young lady who ' has received a good edWtwMau, can ' read aad write, and I* versed in ' geography, history, mmic, dancing snd elementary mathematics, wishes s 1 situation la a respectable family ss r washer and irouer." A correspondent of a New Turk - paper says that the hotel hminess fa I dead st Newport. seVmgws the present i exorbitant prioss rule. The Ocean 1 moi*T' *nd gaeeud when It fa kunwu thet en Mutt- : day the "retes" wvre htomaed half a . dollar per day. Under James II, of Arageu, no ama 1 C mid be arrested ia ths pi latum «f a • woman for any crime has than nitre- ' dev. The people of Venice oner hfamd aa , eclipse which did not quite come up lo their capectatioin. The Isrodcm Sjweistor calls a baby 1 show a " melancholy exMbiliott of ( l«3py cellnlwr tfasua I Gea sickness fata hem tntndu ed I npon the stage ia a fare* cuM "The Chopa of the Channel," now peefenuIng in Loudou. ; ^The I Mfcrenro- Courtship fa bliss Flush sacks of Mue and of tdscfc, I adoro tlw ladle* there coed, hmcing Ths editors of the New York (fail , t would freshen Utrtr ■*■■■ gmrtf' I roneliug a batch of rspaMs reportw Uspe May. ^ Urehsare reudwred^www. potot' tin cloven fooC They I ■am. , being deviled. A Virginia clergyman has invented machine that wDi pick and ciras 1,000 tUL-hcl. of peanut* in a dsy, doing the worked twenty nscsL A correspondent of a New Orleans says (htm fa not a finhufaee row A fate female ofaneresker dispfayd , a recemmendatiou bum te spirit tf . Abraham Lincoln.

