Jv
CAPE MAY CO. GAZETTE. DEVOTED TO THE GENERAL
INTERESTS OF CAPE MAY COUNTY
Alfred R®*d. ImSK
T. Smith,
Ci« HAY COURT HOUSE, HEW JERSEY, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1880.
L IxNwnJn*, D. D. 8. J. T. Learning, fy Son. DENTISTS. CiPSJtiv'aJuBT Etttk TiMd*?', Wedneedsys. and Saturday*. CAPS MAY CITY, Tueedajrs, and SOUTH SEAVILLE, Fridaya.
VnTL'S.K, Physician and Surgeon, CAPS HAY OOCBT HOUSE, K. J. ■°° htl yJ. B. Hi ffman, SUPREME ASC MASTEK IS CHANCEM, Cat. Mai C. H. t S. J. VWUI »••>>» ««l» »* OP* Mw C1IJ ruchCIrr. Jas. H. Nixon, ATTOBSEY ACOUStiELOR AT LAW. Omcm i* ImcUKn Briunitu, M1LLVILLE, S. J.
UNION HOTEL Cape May C. H. rtHMMMg •ttatattthed Hotel is still open for the reception of permanent and transient guests, where all attention will be given to their comfort William Eldridge. mchClyr.
:2fE
mi
VETR Y.
Burial Mom.
Mrs. S. R. Conover, Fashionable Milliner, MILLVILLE, K. 3. m<dt61yr • L. B. CAMPBELL, DEALER IK »TOYES, HEATERS, BANOES, TINWARE. CUTLERY, GLASSWARE, Ac-, Ac. High Strkkt, Millville, N. J. ttchGlyr j.P.BIICM,
Dealer in
■OESES, CABBIA0E8. H1EVF.SS, Ac. MAUI tfmccr, NEAR THE BalDCIE, MILLVILLE, S. J.
mcbSIyr
A. YOURISON, mu im,
AND DEALER IN
nEAPY-MADC HARNESS, CAPE MAY C. i, N. J. Please Call and Examine
_ Our Stock!
We have on haad a good assortment of Ready-made Harness, Collars, Bridles, Sad-
dlfs.—Whins.—ffofafi. Nets, Blankets, Va-
lises, Trunks, Etc.,
i ALL OF WHICH WE ARE SELLING
at low Cash prices.
Open Wagon Harness os low as $ 8 00 Carriage Harness as low as 10 00 AND MANY OTHERS OF DIFFER-
ENT STYLES.AND PRICES.
a^-Cail and sec before purchasing elsewhere.
On this side Jordan's wars. In a vale In the land <rf Mnab There Uea a loneljr grave; And no man knows that sepulcher, And no man saw It Or, For tho angels of Ood uptnrned the sod.
That ever passed on earth; Bat no man heard the trampling, • .Or aaw the train go forth— Noiselessly as the daylight domes buck when night 1* done. And the crimson streak on ocean'* cheek Grows Into the groat sun; Noiselessly as the spring-time Her Crown ol verdure, weaves. And all the trees on all the hills Open their thousand leaves; Bo without sound of music. Or voice of them that wept. Silently down from the mountain's crowx The great procession swept. Perchance the bald old eagle On gray Berth-Peor's height. Out of hi* lonely eyrie Looked on the wooumns sight; Perchance the lion stalking, 8till shuns the hallowed spot; For boast and bird have seen and heard That which man knoweth not.
With arms reversed and muffled drum,
Follow his funeral car;
They show the banners taken.
They tell his buttle* won.
And after him lead his roastcrleia steed, While peals the minute gun. * Amid the noblest of the land
We lay the sage to rust.
And give the bard an honored place.
With costly marble drasl.
In the great minster transept Where lights like glories full. [sings. And the organ rings and the sweet choir
Along the cmblaxouod wall. This was the truest warrior That ever buckled sword; This the most gifted poet That ever breathed a word;
And now earth's philosopher
' Traced with his golden pen
. end «n flowing in a peculiarly beautiful golden light; or, as often hap- , they will be divided by their priSometixnea one is. seen on the set’s edge, juet entering or.emergtng i the shadow. Viewed with a firsti telescope, the sight becomes a *ubi exhibition. With such a , when Jupiter is in opposition, one i moons may often be seen on the let’s disc, or face, as a round bright rhich c».sis a visible shadow on i planet, the shadow looking like a c spot. It is an impressive illustraof the human eye, that it can, with the i&I of such optical devices as the tele-
scope, note such facts as THAT MOON'* SHADOW
ob a world not only so remote from ours, but 550,000,000 milts distant from ihe Sun that illuminates it and its satelite. None but the best telescopes reveal distinctly the pronounced but unstable cloud-markings and different hues on Jupiter’s vast and diversified surface; but a glass of very moderate capacity will disclose something of the general outline of the equatorial belts—sup posed, and with reason, to be vast masses of clouds, floating in the atmosphere of the planet—and bring out the moons beautifully. Although it is now 270 years since Galileo discovered this majestic acheme of dependent worlds rev^ing aboinrThBlr gieas o*L
the round of the Parisian*, newspapers. It appears that during the latter part of his eonam'a reign the Prince became dissatisfied with his boot-maker, and formally withdrew hie custom from that artist, who continued, nevertheless, to ornament the front of his shop with the attractive inscription “Purveyor to his Imperial Highneaa, the Prince Napoleon .” Noticing this deluai*e announcement one day, as he drove, past the shop, Prince Jerome sent a member of bis household to tho boot-maker with positive orders that the inscripUofa
mchCljT.
A. Yourison.
CAPE MAY C. H.
J. L. STEEL, MANUFACTURER OF LADIES’ AMI CENTS’
FASHIONABLE
LIVED! ATTACHED. Horses always on hand, Fsr Sale or Exebaigc.
aii
L. Wheaton.
mcbftlyr
\« HTfcVT, K® PAY,
PATENTS
j NEXT TO TU£ “GAZETTE" OFFICE. CAPE MAY C. H. Repairing neatly and carefully done,
mchfilyr.
devlaaa, medtaal or
VE/VoS?Z3!SuS -MUWK I-.I—v
SUNlrut*, Grrnt Catarrh Brmcd.. remedy lu the worldf for TAimM. No matter from long standing, by giving STTBDIYAST’S CATARRH REMEDY a Bdr and Impartial trial, you will be ennvfuosd of tlila fiM-t. The mwjlriut- Is verr pleaaant and can be taken br the most delleata sioiuaeh. For sale by all drugglsU, and by Holloway A Co., SO! Arch St., Pima, mchfil?
■wa-w-ww-a -wr* jEt
R. L. Hqwell, SURVEYOR AND Civil Engineer, MILLVILLE, N. J.
- _ —^ Hpocial atu Vinh CiruaiiOi
And had he not high honor—
The hllfslde for a pall.
To lie in stale while angels wait. With stars for tapirs tall. [plumes And Uis dark rock-pines like tossing
Over hU bier to wave.
And God's own hand. In that lonely land.
To lay him In the grave ?
In that strange grave without a name. Whence his uneofflned clay Hhall break again, O wondrous thought I
— On the hills he never trod. And speak of the strife that won our Ilf With th’ Incarnate Bon of God. O lonely grave In Moab’s land! O dark Beth-l'cor s hill! &penk to these curious hearts of ours. And teach them to be still. Ways that we cannot tell; He hides them deep, like the hidden si Of him be loved so well.
ever, he subsequently found th«t his commands had been disregarded, he took legal proceedings against the bootmaker for unlawful and mendacious advertisement of his [the Prince’s] patronage. The defendant’s counsel, in the course of his pleadings, endeavored in the following ingenious manner to show cause why his client should not be compelled to withdraw the offending inscription, arguing that such a decision on the part of the court would infallibly result in serious prvjudice and loss to the boot-maker. “For,” he observed, “hitherto passers-by whose attention was attracted by the announcement in questian stopped, entered the shop, and bought boots freely of my client. And why did they “ ■ they had already said to themselves, “Prlrvftw ~
like the family, of planets around the
Sim, not yery much IS BEALLY KNOWN '
about Jupiter to this day. We know his distance, the period of his swift rotation, his size and weight, the character of his orbit and the time of his long year; we know that the matter which constitutes the groat planet is not much denser, yet, than water; we knbw pretty certainly that Jupiter has an atmosphere, and clouds in abundonce; w« know the size and distance of each of his four moons, the Almost circular character of their orbita, ond that only one of them is as small as our own moon, dfstanl a world, but in reality it is
anhually “buying in the < ket” (from our own ^ and “telling in the t ®wn country with little book, we notion Is a [6 cents] for thoM who oaa £. a the dearly beloved wyetern flutter os America must pay hiu 10 cents on purchasing the same. Bed the pamphlet been printed in our country, where western farm produce could find a Wtfk' at among printers of the same, some good honest craftsmen would have had book have been era here—-and we fear they are few in number,—to a sunt not above 5 cents, So much for “baying in the dearest market.” We will ote below heads of the three chapters of this Cobden Club Free Trade pamphlet i “faow much is actually taken [yearly] out Of the pockets of the American Carmen by oom^el J ling them to buy dear, instead of allowing them to buy cheap, goods.” . “What becomes of the *400,000.00 yearly taken out of the pockets of the American farmers ?*’ “How to put a stop to the in 1 tolerable losses which are year after year inflicted on the. farmers of America.” Free Trade with England is to make us all so much better off than under the Protective Tariff,—that causea such “intolerable lou*£»” to the British
must be a good workman, and an commonly cheap one inte the bargain. We will give him a trial.” If you foroe him to remove his inscription, the peripatetic publis will certainly infer that he must have raised his prices, and will hurry past his shop with averted eyes.” The boot-maker, it need scarcely be added, was cast, but one cannot help regretting that so humorous a plea should have been disallowed by a French tribunal.—London Telegraph. &
The Pronunciation qf “U”
Ninety-nine out of every hundred Northerners will say institoot instead of
but-a little. No earthly eye has seen the surface of the planet itself. Its continents and sens, are not, probably, yet permanently shaped. Jupiter ii buried'thousands of miles under
ENORMOUS CLOUD LAYERS,
and it is these we see," not tho planet itself, shining, in that sprene golden light in which wo aeo that remote world through the telescope. The planet it-
self is probably undergoing that long ! _ HU( we adm j t .
period of fiery throes and upheavals J vulgarism to call a newspaper a noospa-
through which, geology tells us, our own per ?
world has passed, in the slow process of , 0ne vulgarism
condensation, cooling and development | other BOXlthcni ] that's the only differ-
the requisite conditions' for the
rhyme to beauty. They will call new and news noo and noos—and so. on through the dozen and hundred of similar words. Not a dictionary in the English language authorizes this. In student and stupid, the “u” has tho some sound as in cupid, and t should not be pronounced stoodent andVtoopid, as so many teachers are in the habit of sound-
ing them.
competition with Americans were told. If farmers are to be the objects of so much solicitude from the British Free Trader, would it not be as well to begin at home, among the starving agricultu-
rists of the British Isles T
Wc will conclude by giving a portion of an interview, from the Phila. Evening News, with John Wanamaker since his return from Europe lately. He is one of the most successful business men now living, a thoroughly loyal American, and one who has observed clo»*ly«
He said to the reporter :
. “I went to Europe for play, and I think I played upon three things' durtion~of "com n^rcial*^ n terests*:^ecor^f, the position of things in Ireland relative to the famine, and third, the religious institutions, the Sunday-schools
and homes for boys.
First, as to business—I find that since the Centennial Exhibition in this city business has ' been far from good in Great Britain. American manufactures were introduced in foreign markets by
* . , . . ,, . j i, ; the exhibition in this city, and
It is a vulgarism to call a door a doah ,
much a " u ^ t ^ * >e€n t * ,at CYervwhere Philadel-
Jupiter’s Approach.
The Lustrous Planet's Nearest Visit
on October 7tb. -
The perihelion of the planet Jupiter, concerning which so nun'll has been said, will take place an hour after sunset on the 25 of the present month. ~At that hour the great planet will be at his nearest approach to the Sun, and very near, also, his opposition, or nearest approach to the Earth, which occurs on the 7th of October. At this latter date the Earth and Jupiter will be exactly on a line, end both this side of the Sun, ao that the large planet will be at its bent
higher forma of life. The ruddy streaks ami m'«iivmary eTmitling lines of ’lire seen on Jupiter’s cloud-surface, are held to be rifts or openings in tho cloudlayers, which show the reflection of tho lurid glow so far below—the glare of an unimagiuablc struggle in which no living beings- are engaged, but only Nature’s wild forms and forces. Jupiter may be an older world than cure— he must be many yeara older if the accepted theories of modern scisnce are correct—but owing to his vast size he is slower in cooling off. Our moon—a little planet—is supposed to have -passed through all ite stages of development aud life, to its existing airless and waterless state of death and desolation, in a tenth part of the time Jupiter will require to go through even one stage of his
stupendous bistcrt.
1 In looking at his golden disc, a world
for telMcopic «**min*tjon. Con«mu* ^ . cW notin(i th(! hi. .pproiim.t. viMt the H^tfonl „ law °r itTWno oothtr Hr*, th. Tim*. h~ thw. in.ere.tu., r.o»,k.: ^ ^ ^ hc u „„ I. will b. about . doxen y*»r* OT * ; cur t*io of. roncclr.! .tag.
he .gun come. k> new the Sun .nd our whK]| swfu ,
world; and the present season will
the
therefore be the best time for inspecting him through the telescope. He rises about an hour after the $vemng twilight has begun to blend wiih the shadows of real night—slowly ascending, large and lustrous, from a point perhaps a little north of due east, and reaching a position in his southward-tending up-
•progreas,
all unseen by mortal eye, and amidst a roar which .would drown all the loudest combined noises of Earth. That sound hsy never been heard by mortal ear; and even the light itself, which makes that distant world visible to us, is not ih« light Jupiter is reflecting at the momont. but has been nearly threo-quar-
hour flashing its way here,
FOR SALE BY
EJT* . _
made, eaumate* furnished rations drawn for Mills, Bridge*
word r»Ui in which he bcuomM. by 10 th , of ,92,000 mil „ p,', ^cund!
o’clock or sooner, a fine object for study. Even a good opera glass, of the right -construction, will reveal 'his satelites. Seen with such a glass, these four moons, all placed symmetrically on a line, and
WAinj' like
- OS2AT OOI.DXN BEADS
FRANKLIN HAND,
to leveling; lines -of -pror.
for mill sites, cranberry . — ■ drainage works etc. Plans I strung or an invisible wire, present s uu* fumuJi«d .nd wriS | dutiful .ight. o<Wn on. wdl b. hid . W * , « , -jd«brt.mdth. g*w. ptan... .nd lb. orks and all similar eonstructi-ms or i 6 *
i others i
Even that unimaginable distance oomee, as Tennyson says of God, “nearer than hands and feet,’ 1 when contrasted with the measureless gulfs of space in which some of the sons we call stars are
phis seems to be as well known as Now York. I think, too, that the high esti-
north.™ .nd tb. ! in Mr - Jolm our ’. th. only differ- | hd. Minuter to th. Court of St. J«n«, When th. London Punch-i.h« “ h ' W * bro *' i ' •ouaOuliui to ol-
io hurlcsane th. nrnnnnnhtlinn of »r- tcnd.ng th. lcnowl.nig. of our c>£ in ™ntr, it m*k«. them dl th. d.k. . | En*U"<L Bat .1 ™ to 4. nugn,l!c.nt dock, the tutor, looter, ...d the tub. ‘ Ul P l *>' ° r m ‘ r ».nuf«-tur.u -
Centennial Exhibition more than any other reason that tho prominence of
Philadelphia abroad is due.
uicu «•••« «»-•« .. w lathis recognition of our indusfrial ,TW.y for TWU^Joo for ] g™'™! *" -kdd th. r.port-
calling a dupu.a doop.
a toob.. You never find tbc best Northern speakers, such as Wendell Phillips, George Win. Curtis, Emerson, Holmes,
and men of that class, saying
Undoubtedly—it a* apparent everywhere 1 have been. I can give you an illustration : In one of tho largest manufacturing concerns in Paris the firm made refere-nce to the extensive hat condtirn in Philadelphia of John Rj Stetson A Co., and said that their manufactures were so good that they had to copy some of-them as superior to their . “A compliment from Sir Hubert ?” “Yes,” responded J. Wanamaker, “it was with considerable pride and pleasure that I found that American supremmany directions was being so
‘ Trade and English Com- generally acknowledged.
— ia f—i Perhaps the best evidence of the
growing popularity of American manufactures in England and the best indi-
Prince Napoleon’s Boot-maker. A diverting story, humorously illus-
avenue,
a fault that a Southerner never falls to. He has slips enough of another kind, but he doesn't slip on the long u. As m.nj’ofour teachers have nevey had their attention called to this, I hope they will excuse this notice.—.Southern Letter. _
Affectionate Rivals.
We have, like hundreds of thousands of others throughout America, recently received Free Trade pamphlets from England. The one before us nddrc*« to the Augustus Mongredie
author of “Free T
mrrce."—Of course we should feel j thankful for the concern of outriders i
our affairs, and the whole history of | cations, of the change tlrat has come Eneli.li policy touching our n.tion 1 tb- ni.nur« tur.r. ol^EngUnd U ... r,, , | ... . - • shown in the statistical tables giving might f?] lead us to trust unpRcitly in ih<f ^ of Bntiah nmmerx* The the ttisinterestednesa of this kindness, j condition of universal interest and conWe must forget we have had/two wars | com, and almost every merchant you with the Mother country befora we meet considers himself a missionary in ii i . . .... I • the causa of free trade. The clamor were allowed to buy our teaJ manufac- protectkm u Klinetllin? frighttured articles, etc., except worn bully- j j- u j illustration of the state ing monopolist*, and to preserve our j of feeling existing can be had than the .him from «-.rrli nn th. h.yb-w-u by j f.-t Ui.t th.y .r. printing million, of “Rule BHUnnte." Then .gm^^n ^ Amin “ te as was thought a third opportunity^Wat^^ji,. filing in favor of free trade t presented to get us under British “Pro- ; -Can't something be done in America tection,” bow this Mother country sent j to get theJpeople to agree t ^
oat her Al»l>.nu>* to R~troy our com- j merce, and munition! ' Al jitito the ?ubject shairtd send for a copy
vet be fresh in the minds of loyal Axner-? ] of Augustuit Mongredien's pamphlets : j addreised |o the Western Farmer in ,c *® 1 , , ^ America in favor of free trade and bis This jiampblet under notte* baa the • otber ou amerce. They will earmarks of the English prmt*'r. ‘ how S4»vcrely the eboe j •inches
liversal trade ? i
iU Mi be on one side, atand.ng- emtive of Prince Jerome Bonaparte . earmarks of the English poorer. ] th ^ ^ bow severely the M.m.1 tb. Otbw, in . Ml».gb. prortrbij .br.fl,n«., bo. rrr.nUr e «ut , White th. .uthor bo. th. • hommr. . _Sooo«o.» Hooioroo.

