Cape May County Gazette, 31 July 1880 IIIF issue link — Page 2

The County Gazette. — — in i ALFRED COOPER, Rdito*. BATUKlXAY, JULY *1, 1*80. meaasfsfs^m — i 1 . . . _™P NJSWi OF TllE WEEK. . *. t i * jTTT I $ Camden baa the swall-pox for a ten* nation. A sea lion, night font long, was caught in a canal look at New Bruuswick on 8aturday. 4000 new ooachet to be run in Philadelphia with five oeut fares. One borne nan pull a coach full of passengers. Eight sea lionrnocaped from thn to* quarium underneath the piar at Coney Island, on Friday, causing considerable oonsternation among the bathers. Fifty 1 dollars reward is ottered for each . A letter from New York speakiug of thn stench and tilth of that city says: " Actually, our best streets smell worse than the nastiest pest-bolen of Philadelphia. The Meantime our children die at the rate of 75 a day. Captain Williams insists ou dumping the garbage where of necessity it is swept back by the tide. The consequences are profanity, dead cats, fearful odors, disease, dead dogs and distemper. Don't talk la me of Sodom. Say naught to me of Gomorrah. New York beats 'eiu both." — » n * Ten or a dozen boys, in Philadelphia alone, have die 1 of lockjaw, caused by injuries from the t>y pistol. — la not logishuiv* action in order on the subject ? » » « The use of the toy pistol should be 1 prohibited for everything except to •hoot Spits dogs in the cities. The diseases caused by these two aro said to be similar. The police of Ocean Grove are authorized to shoot Spits dogs at sight. Pity it is not so everywhere ; the toy-pistol is rapidly taking the place of these dogs, only the disease is lockjaw instead of hydrophobia. The "Mays Landing Record'1 has recently made a great improvement in its appearance, and we think Bro. Taylor ; will find a corresponding improvement in its patronage. It Is one of the best t local papers in Booth Jersey. - ■ § a • Dr. Tanner, the faster, still lives and teems to be gaining both in flesh and •pirita ; he has only a little more than a week yet, after which he can indulge in watermelon or what not ad liiitch. Wc are anxiously waiting to see what arc the benefits of this great experiment which is attracting the attention of the whole country. m » m Mrs. Lucy H. Hooper, writing from Paris, complain# of the scarcity of popular reading, and sighs for a chance at ' the Philadelphia library once more. She also enters her protest ngsinst an American fashion of wearing silk handkerchiefs around the neck instead of a linen collar or white ruffling. She says : "It has an unclenn and untidy look, and spoils the appearance of a pretty girl's toilette far more than the wearer herself Imagines/' — — — — - ♦ ■■'■f — The Egyptian Obelisk, "Cloopatra'H Needle," has arrived safely in New York and now they don't, know what to do with it as no one seems to have a^ yet authority to receive it from the captain of the weeseT which brought It over. The Philadelphia Times" suggesti that "some enterprising and thrifty clothier or dealer in canned or corned beef or patent medicines may buy it and use it as an advertising medium. Such an obelisk, if set up in Broadway with all the Egyptian nonsense seraped off of it and ornamented with new letters In red and gold, setting forth Its new owner's business, would attract a great deal of attention." » ■ ■ ■■ ■ ■ . - • w The Springfield Republican suggests that an advertisement of a stenm-diip line reading something like tlds- would be pretty certain to draw the public attention and patronage: "Our captain understands his business, and will not be the first man to go over the aide in case of accident. The crew are drilled three times a week as a fire brigade and in the use of the life-boats. The rain plugs of these boats are kept in their proper places and not in pantry oi Wjxgago room. The second officer li islpstriictions to shoot such members of the crew as show the white feather in case of an alarm. The somber of jiassenger* taken on each trip will always be 50 less than the life-preservers which are kept on board, The twenty-seventh annual exhibition Of the Pennsylvania State Agricultural Society wiil bo held in the Main Building, Centennial grounds, Fuirmount Park, Philadelphia, September 6 to If, 1880. The aggregate of prises will amount to 140,000, over half of which \

will bqjur live stock. Three prises will bo givwti in most of lbs classes ranging as high as $150 tor a thonjqgtfwed burse, with $100 nncf #50 for #e<>0»4 and third prises* The aewo ratio pf increase owmr last year is obeerved in all otter glassy Air letvi national exhibition of sheep, wool, and wool products will be held in connection with the fair. About $10,000 has been set aside for premium* tor these exhibits, and It is expected that the principal wool -gaming qpuu/rigs will be represented.1 All (he processes of the manufacture of wool into cloth will be carried on in the buildings < e » Admiral Wyioan, in command of the United States man-of-war Tennessee, ordered to Cuban waters to investigate the recent indignities offered to our flag by a Spanish vessel firing upou two American schooners, ha* ascertained that the corvette Canto is the vessel tha overhauled the Merritt and New comW, and that the Spanish authorities claim tho Utter were within a league of the shore at the tirno they wore fired upon, and the Spaniards would not admit one of their fthi|is had committed the outrage till incontestable evidence had been obtained that the Canto was Ike vessel. Then tliey immediately assorted that the American schooner* were within three miles of the coast, and that the firing was justifiable. Such a plea comes too late to be credi bio. The Ethel A. Merritt is now in port, and when Captain Rand was shown a paper containing the despatch, he said : —"That's a lie, and ever)' one of my crew will swear that we were at least six miles from the coast, and on making a second observation I am positive wtwere seven miles off." A few months since we warned th«* farmers of this county against a set of traveling "sharps'/ who in various ways contrive to cheat honest but unsuspect- • ing agriculturists by getting their #ig- , naturo to certain papers which they present. Tlicse papers seldom show clearly what they are, upon their face, but many a farmer in the State can tell you to-day just exactly what they are. Three or four weeks ago a man traveled through Cumberland county, claiming tlmt ho was the authorized agent of a phosphate manufacturer. The uodus opgitiXDi wis this. He appro lohed the farinc;*s with loud praises of hi* stock in trade, and after convincing them that there was real merit in Guar ticic ho proposed that they accept the ugvuey for thai neighborhood, and lu was to supply them ut the rate of $18 per ton an article which wus sold at $40 by the retail dealer, lie next produced a blank form which they wore to sign as a guarantee that they would act impermanent agent, and upon the back of which was a certificate that they were worth n certain amount of money. A large number were iiuiuood to sign this paper, anil the would be philanthropist "went homo ilo ship the phosphate/' Weeks went by and yet nono of the victim* suspected that anything wa$ wrong until the early part of Inst week ' a lawyer from Syracuse, N. Y. arrived in Bridgeton and took steps toward the I * a • A

collection of certain promisor)' uotos which had been discounted by a NationaI Bank in the former city. Then for l the first time the would-be agents discovered thnt by detaching a part of the agreement they had signed, thu balance was a regular note and held them liable for the face value of the same. They have clubbed together, employed counsel, and will attempt to resist the j>ayinent of these interesting bus of paper, one of which in for $225 ; but the general opinion seems to be that they can not c*eape. i It seems to us that the swindled farmer* are not deserving of much pity, as they have been warned rej>eatod)v by the press of both city and country, and when they went into the speculation they did so with the intention of making a grand good thing out of their neighbors. The sad and desolate heart and life i of the widowed and childless ex-empress ' of the French, never fails to call forth ! ^ a sorrowful sympathy in all hearts of all nations. Her ealm, resigned, despair as I her mother's heart moves her to take that long and dreary pilgrimage to Eu- • Inland, where the light of her life went j out, is pitiful indeed. On her return she will visit the Island of St. Helena, the place where Napoleon I was exiled in 1 N I ft, and liberated only by death in 1821**- eix weary years. A writer in the I/ondon "Telegraph" in speaking of the visits to these shrines says "A strange journey, and amoloncholy one, ha* lieeri that of the widowed and now childless lady who left hor secluded retfent at Chi*e)hurtt to visit the spot in the grim South African mealiefield where her only son —hor pride, her consolation, and her hope — fell, with his face to the foe, in a quarrel that was not his own. She has accomplished the I object of her dreary voyage, and in re taming she will touch at the moat fate fill rock that history can record — the , rnodrtm Caucasus to which the modern I Prometheus was chained, for the vulture i I of disappointed and remorso to eat h.s

h**rt out— the Prometheus *> I* bound only by death. 8b*%|l behold the sit? of the emytf grave, fo< oh ll» va' ty yet th« most famous »■ j uklm in the whole worlf. Then tbb unliljppy lady trill uoiuebegk r aoarceiy to ah' •-thn corner* of her house have been thrown down And the ember* on her I hearth are icy cold — but to the sequestered asylum to arhiah alia will he fol lowed by the reapeotfui sympathy of *li Englishmen who can feel for the woe* of a'spousofe*# wife and a childless mother. Her way to England will be tjic watery patli followed by the i sleepier that took the young Prince Imperial, flushed with boyish ambition and bo£)*h gallantry, to the tdnud diioe whef® was to gieet hi* death — the seif o ugfe path which, »uiy -five yearn giffOfc followed by the three-decker, Surl^unibei loud, bearing on hoard him * hud once been Emperor of the Frooolp j King of Italy, Mediator of Switzerland j and Protector of the Ctyifederatiou i| the Rhine, but of whom tlie IrfevocwbH decree of Neinea' and hi* own tuadi? selfish ambition had made an outlaw and a -bankrupt, a captive baudit, hated and de»jji»od of man kind, stripped of hi* sounding titles, degradod from his dignities, and transported for lift." This jrriter evidently does not view the Bonaparte* through the spectacle* of the Historian, J. S. C. Abbott, who ; lauded "Bony" to the skies, and placed him ou the throuc of perfection, — sanctified him — but then we can not expect the name view of lite subject from un English standpoint. lie goes on a* fol- t lows "The bones of the Bonapertes arcscattered far and wyle. Italy hold* many of their sepulchres. Then* lie Joseph and Lucien, Pauline and Caroline and Eliza. In Rome and Florence lias their dust mingled with the dust. The ashes of Josephine uro at Rueil. Jerome, sometimes lvmg of Weatpinilia. foun«l, as Governor of the Invulides, a * tomb close to the mausoleum of his * great brother. An adopted Bonaparte. Joachim Napoleon — "1« -Roi Mural" — fiile a naiueles* grave. His corpse after his execution was huddled into u trench . full of quicklime in the wild Calibriun | county. The Kiug of Rome wag interred in tlie vault* of the Oipiiciiins ai , Vienna; Mme. Mcro wo* hurried in Ruine ; the bodies of Napoleon 111 and the Prince Imperial repose in the quiet little Roman Catholic chapel at Chisel hurst ; while the good and evil genius of the race, the founder of this wondrous family, Abe man who might haw made his country, and indeed the bolter part of Europe, prosperous, happy und free, but who spread, instead, broadcast, deatli, devastation, and havoc, blood>hcd and tears, and ruin and irremediable despair, slumbers under the golden dome of the I aval ides, in the stately cenotaph, the walls of frhich arc supportgd by the 12 victories of Pradier — slumbers there, with the cloak of Marengo and the sword of the Austerliu on his ooflin — slumbers there on the banks • of the Seine, in the midst of that French people whom he professed to love so ; well, but on whom his monstrous ambition brought, in the cud, nothing but ruin, defeat, and humiliation — the dis-

grace of a foreign occupation, the restoration of a hateful dynasty. Did much more result from the insensate policy of Napoleon 111? Did he, when he surrendered his sword at Sedan, leave n much brighter legacy to tho people who had loaded hitu with honors and l>cnefaction*, than li is uncle had left them j after Waterloo? It i» written that those who strike with the sword shall )x>ri*h by the aword ; not les* signally, not lev* awfully, does the inordinate pursuit of self, the insatiable nourishing of personal or family ambition, the wicked disreregard of the interest* and the happiuess of the others in tho hntehing of "vain schemes of imperial aggrandizement, bring with it its own doom and it* own bitter retribution. he world has had enough and to spare of Ctesar ism, and has but few tears to shod either for fa-aar or for Oetariua dtvid . Were it ^nol fur the warning and example \ which thd lc&aon of their lives should i tench, it might be as well that they ' should lie as completely forgotten as the hundreds of thousands of tonseripts who fell on the bloody fit-Ida to serve < their greedily ambitious ends. They j i were *oqurge* and curses, and mankind ' i« well rid of them. Newrthele**. the deepest commiseration and sympathy tuny be felt for, and is the due of, Qe •nr's widowed and childless relict." AGRICULTURAL. coxdrctro ay indkx. "Vick's Magazine" aavs that oabbape worm* may Ik killed otf by tha application of lime-water. Week after week wo see items copied fVotn this department of the Uamtik by our exchanges, and no crvxlit given. The can< of tomatoes put up in the State of New Jersey last year were 5,591,0(Kt or nearly one-third of the whole amount canned in the Un ted States, which was a little short of 17,000,000. It ho* bean rumored that the wheat

b*rv~t in Biioau * a poor " 33JT exporUtioii of whaat i* to be pro|4bit- d al it Uii* *kould bw( hnuv, jr tblf "mm H AUi'- i • --4 prill iu . I til inll 1 I and our farujin bt yichi v. ui by iHi#furtUti' » of those m m Uronit A*} \% J The timely rain* of the last few days have <£lianged the prospi-cu of the farmi/aruuuU r+U&kc r try prumi*»iig. 1 1 ha* a strong healthy ^growth, ttaUirhig early/ eroi ddutt whetlver the corn crop ho* received any nyury from the late pzutracted drouUi ; but rHtheiHjrnefited, ta using the root* to go deeper. It i» also hi time for ail late crops, j such as potato*#, turnip#, he. -it ie in At*aou to eow turnips and cabbage j rein ember tin hay crop i* light, ail root rop* will help carry u* ivmovCv the approaching winter. While 1 subscribe to the article on the a "Dairy," in your la*t i**ue, a* being on the whole interesting and valuable, there is one point to which I cannot a«ent. That i* the use of water in cooling and hardening the butter, ami wa*h- | ing or ritiiing out the buttermilk. The leas' water Used to make good butter the better. If the cream i* at the proper totiiperatufe when put in the churn, it •ihould be surrounded with lee o^ cold wati*r in hot weather, by being placed in a Urge tub or vessel while churniny. ' When the butter li#* come, ail that i* required i* to work in the nace*i*ry quantity of salt, which at the same time will work out t^ie LuUertnilk ; set it in 1 a cool place, of the desired temperature, and the butter will be yellow and hard, without being deluged with water. The le«* butter is worked the better. All that is required is to remove the butter- j mrlk — more than this is an injury, making it sal vy. Now if water is used it must be removed by working, *o nothing is gained as the buttermilk may a* frcfl be worked out, a* to be washed out, and , then tho water worked <*ut. Always re- | member this one fact, that if any water is allowed to remain in the butter, it ; has a tendency to make the butter ran • | cid, especially if thcavater i* not pure ; and but very little pure water is to be found in this section. ! MILLVILLE NOTES. Not much but departures this week. M Us E1U J. Garrison is at IsUnd Heights. .1. ■■ The family of Mr. John Mickle ore at Asbury Park. Miss Sallie Mulford is in Ohio visiting her friend Mia* Lucy Mayer*. Mrs. C. S. BrandriiT and daughter are breathing the mountain air at Hazelton. i\i. Mr. A. G. Butler and Miss Fanny Mulford are spending their vacation at Ocean Grove. % Mr. and Mrs. Lorenzo Mulford are taking a tour through tho ooilnty for a week or more. Mr. and Mrs. Isaac B. Mulford of this city, and Dr. I. B. Mulford and wife oi Cnnden, are e.qjoying soa&ide life at Atlantic City. . Mr. Harry Whitaker, formerly of Yinehmd but late of Phi lade lphia, committed suicide on Saturday night lw«. i

His parent* reside m vttieland. Mr. Chcestnnn and family. Mr. Mis kelly and family, Mr. ChAs. Conover and family, Mr. John Lttdlum ai»d wife, and 1 -cOrci of others are at Pitman Grove. Joseph Dawson E^., together with his family, start fur Island Heights on : Saturday, to attend the i!Ainp Meeting now in progress at that popular resort. The W. C. T. IT. and the Temperance Reform Club have consolidated siutil September 1st. Their meeting will be hold in the Temperance Grove every Sabbath afternoon at Sj o'clock. There it n reguhir stam|>e<le from our city this week, and though there are always a few stay-ut -homes, the city will -oon have the Appearance of Goldsmith's •J)e#erte<l Village" if they keep on going. A few d\ys hiikx- a« our friend B. F. Shaw, of Cumlterluml, wan on his way to Millville with « load of wood hi# team mn away, and nwing into contact a-ith . vitiother load alo-ud of him both wagons were considerably damaged. Quite n prominent wedding in thi* city on Thui-sday night of last week. Mr. George Dawson was unite<l to Miw Bailie MiClure in the pi-eseneeofa num- ' W-r of friends and invited guest*. Your corresp^mdrnt wishes them a long and prosperous life. UUSHKU lTElklS. Capt, «T. B. Prlee of the schooner "Ad^ vaneo," has l»een spending a day or two at home with his bctt*r-h*lf. Mr. William F. GuUen, of the T\ R. Rteamer, Ktaraarge^ is at home enjoying a Vacation, lie has Wen absent three yestw. Where is that snake storv promised the readers of the OxxtTtK by "H" of Pierce'# Point Points? Ijct u* have it I brother. If yon want coal, wood, or lumber, go to Oapt. Jim Chester, who is K»und to aeoomhiodate all who call on him— as to quantity, quality, and price. Mr. William Garrison Br*, and wifb, visited 9anville Camp grcrnnd on Fridav of last week. They are among the obi* e^t ri sidentM of Gh^ben, the ages aggn - ftitlngoverlTOyear#; tbcv were in active if b before a mqioritv of tha Goshen as war* born. L

W U u W I If i 4 L I V ' 4r .iru.. to* m« awectod , ■-*- - * *t o u » ix*u < Hatards) , the II I>ay of July A.D. lg*t>, I dig, at ^SSnTMfi* y Hugh* X h" Ui the Citv of ' ef>s May; in the ! cuonty of Up# Mar, and of Mow Jer^-y a * aforcau^ Ail tho#. tracu <A tb* north aui*t iiiu of JaokaOi* -LreeU and them-a— 1— Oiudinghy LuiU ; .1 heia of Matthew VV^il idKi dcceasgd f l<ard»; thence— 2- -thereby south twentyhve degree# and twenty minute* O0*t, tmentytiw fat to H. Ed- j munds' other Jand ; tfieiine— J — thereby lite* west, eighty-two and *ight-t*ntk> feet to aald line of Jackson street: thence ! — 4-— along ti*e wme north tweohdv* (fogxee* and iwcuiy outuit^ *va#t, twih ty-ftve teat to th- of b^giwnicig. c outaining two tliousand and neventy square leet of land, ire the same more or lew* - 4' I The Oecrmd lot Begimlrarol a point i in the north-east lin o oflnaksoi rtroet, which pod>t *b oioo the sout Uariy corner 1 of R. D. Iklmund# A RonV laiul, and thence — 1— n.*rth-OAJ>twarflly Mndiitg by fetid B. D. E^lmunas A Nju'i land, eighty- twofold elghtti®Pth* b et to the \ -i »uth-east line of AbigaH Gheppard'u Land: thence —2 — thereby south-east ward!) by twenty -nine feet t<> corner of j JiMte ianci : thouCe — J— soath-westwardly Mhfllhfcthereby eighty two and eight-tenth# feet to «uid line of Jackson street ; thence— 4 — along sani Life oLJockoox. *Uc4-t ncrth-wcsusardlv tw* uty-nine feet to the pl#p<r of -Ipegii:ning, containing two thousand, three, hundred ai»d oeventy^jgUt square foet iff land be the *>m-- more or hm; b®cg the aune two lots of land Jan* B. New- ! eR ssowfevod the fir^t to ih* sood kicii | ar<f D. F/fmund# and"J.Hf-urv Edniuii i* by deed dated tk^o^jor 2pUi J873, of re cord in the <Hdrk's Om of Cape May i county in hoek £7 of l>aedsf page 6ol ; the second \o J. Jit' nry Edmaads. by «iec<l dated "November vtb, 1876, of rec- ! ord in sold Ab the property of Henry "E. Edmunds, et al Defendant#, and t#ken it ♦ xectition at the *uit of C^niuel Covp- : ur« Complainant, and to he n4d by WILLIAM H. BEKEZET, i Dated, May 26 1680. Sheriff. Bergen A JergMl^olik j P. F. ^11 — SHERIFF S SALE. By virtue of a writ of FI. Fa. de bon. pt ter to me directed, issued oat of the Cape May Circuit Court, State of New Jersey, T win expo*e to sale at PubBc ; Vendue, on • ^ Tlmrsdaj , 12 Day of Aognst A.D. 1880, at the hour of 2 o'clock P. M. on said day, at tl^e hotel of Lewh Wheaton, in Cape Maydourt Ilottoo. in the counyy of Gape May, and State pi New -Jersey as .aforeAU tho#e two kn* <fi land or. the plan of lots of Five Mile Bewch Improve | ment Company, as filed in the Clerks ottice of Cape May County, and recorded in Deed Book No. 45, page 396, designs ted as Lots No. <11 and No. SIS— -lx>t No. 41 is situate at the south-easterly corner of Surf and Sixth Avenue and has a j front on Surf Avenue of 50 feet and ex1 tending of that width north -west wardK along Sixth A von no 100 leet — Lot No.

:U8 is situate at south-easterly comer of New York and Walnut Avenues, fifty i feet fVopt on W alnut Aveque, and extending south- westerly along NvW York 1 Avenue 100 feet. Seized as the property of George H Levis, Defendant, and taken in execution at the suit of Charles Magargce, j Plaintiff, and to b? sc&d by WILLI AM II. BENEZET. Dated June 1 1th 1880. Sheriff. Walter A. B*rn>*#, AttV P. F $:> ,v4 SHERIFFS SALE. By tirtuf of a writ of Fieri Facia* to me diiwted, issued Out of the Court of Chancery, State of New Jersey, 1 will exjxiee to sale at niolle Vendue, on Tuwda) 10 Day of August A. Ik I88tk at the hour of 2 o\Mk P. M. on said day, at tlie hotel of Thomas Busby, in Tuckahoe Upper Township, in the conn- \ ty of Ca|»e May, and State of New Jersey m* aforcmld. AU that IcW of !t»tid dtuat* In iixe tft»per ToWriship, Oapb MavCoutSty, and Sute of New Jersey, Beginning at a stake for a comer, the same also a corner of John Busby nnd Capt* Matthew* Stevens* land in the centre of the public road leading from Tuckahoe to Petersburg, and running from thrmt — 1 — along tlie centre oi mid road south twenty -four nnd ore-half degrees, east seven rod# and eight links to a stone; thenoe— 2-wouth sixtv-five and one-half degrees west thirteen rod# and twenty links to a stone ; thence — 3 — north twen * tv-four ami one-half degrees nest, Four roils and likks to a stope set; for a corner in the libe of Richard H- IYoung and said SMpldis : thence— ♦- along the line said et^qdiens, north fifty-three and one-half degrees east, fourteen yod# to plqoeetf beginning, eontaming two ami onvdiali square rotls, be the same more tena Seired a# the pmpeity of Matthias 51 Hess and Sarah J am- liens Defrndants. and taken in exeeutlon *t the liil ot | Anthony Steelratn, executor of Tliotnas Van Gilder deceased. Complainant, and to be aold hy WILLIAM H. BKNEEET, Dstsd, June T 1880. Sheriff ' j John B. Huflftww», SWV. T. T *> 4*

M m M T rm* w - a "M I ii u J L u r i.'LM i Di&j&mJ % LgfDGCToy, mm jukky i U' ory . t am urgaaiMKl 1844. CMteuolad *MVt<y invito* , InMirVar fcw jofl* # H MU+j ' to I*./ xom+ta *£a(J -V-;. •/-/ r.. - u.. PREMIUM NOTES 'IJll h.i. :ut uai yuoiatiw # da | > .. i i»n. i.*-.- J1\< j*4r S ZttfiS n*-u i mat lor i <iae4jufiu^**£*4e TWO HUFDXED AND SEVENTY THGtrSAtt DOLLARS. ^ Ua*s p*> nton JSCa i * YOr nnCbiiiy TL# |ircn*loa rot¬ are loot* J Sjgw*- t35r OiStf* n#'l *> ■>'- Hsbtr U> Loot hy misniaoax»*m«nit. y * erjr poltt) uutict U i»bt U<*u> lfc< mmm* 11.* •. lurou* *ul! ai^er wbteli (*ey are luibl* tf any I# Mpdsd. T iu. ( uuifmii) i..»> no taaaMVreMajr prri . r. > *>m <x 4ii«-fetau. or Hire# |k#ici«*»and oou^-KI. utn of ti^efiuua. ricx •« i»i ycylatoaitaalltiw «ur;iarLjo#nu. *ii ' >« i*j Win b# 1oua4fnaa> 0£XBY fc. hi m*iX.tw*m+ry. HBOMBI WltWCD, t'M+ MayC.M. Mrgfo. <t Q A A tSZ&KS&FJte J)oUlfcK«wu; V HAimu, Uuy#axm girls ar.^k# iaaar> ot r ai »«>rk ii.-r u# fcijju. . an> eiar Via wort 1- I icbt bAitS Mi kuQyoa# OOO rtxta at. TU<wr wi»o Jtre wWrWWeaot t^ia notice * »:' u> Utfir aJtoww at ttr+. Now lath# fltrtr. rUfe MMNba«*d an lariag np iai*r ttf mont y . Aodraaa ! TRUE *«). Axosu^ Ha in#. maylfc.iy. DO YOU WANT a handsome black cashmere at the old price, and 25 cent* en the dollar cheaper than if I had to purchase tbem at the recent advance ? If ao send to TOM LUDLAM and GET SAMPLES ' and rem will be #ttrpm*d at the low prices he will give yon on them. 1 Do you wish to purchase a new dreaa in either (OTTOV W08L SILK or other fabric ? send to Tom Ludlaxa for sample* and *ee who; ha will tend you. — Do you intend having LISLE THREAD I ■ ?» or

KID GLO^S? Tom Ludlam ha* the finest assortment in tins section of lbs count) . Ail the new ityle ^vv\\ow%, \EW SPR1W 8IAB1N, ^V\cv\».Vs • - "Vicvo- TiioX \t\Vvw5%, the very latest. oiwete frefen 25 rt*. to $2.00, and in b-t the newest, cheapest, and beat aioorted dry goods stock in Millrilk;^l^|r* law eimea as mam ffbod* to selectfrom as any stove in our City, and 1 :«Uow no man to uademell me. Just received an elegant line of ladies' AU WOOL SV1TLXGS. it 25 cent* y*+ yard. New line all wool 56 in. cloaking. 300 do*, children's bordered handketcheifV al 3 cts each. 30$O pr*. child's colored hose at 8 cts. Send for samples and prices fug. comparison. Tom Ltplam, MILLVILLE, N. J. spr?4H0lf. ^ Final Settlement. OctT Kxwiiw ot win l>e audlml h: .1 t*> il>f MM|»k and tnaoiled 1e the J udpes er ttw vti-utm w»v.n e?