Cape May Daily Herald, 27 July 1907 IIIF issue link — Page 4

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CAPE MAY HEKAUJ, SATURDAY JULY 17 1907

BRIDE OF t StmiOB

MISS EDDY OF CHICAGO TO WED ALBERT J. BEVERIDGE. CUrt Comat from Prominent Family *.d Hat Been Pretenltd at Seven! European Courtt—Brtde-_ groom a National Figure. Chlca*o—Mle> Katherine Eddy, daughter ot Mr and Mrs Anguatnt N. Udy uf thlt city hat been-•oo«d and ertdK'- Indiana. Senator BerendKO recently sailed for Enrol* Miss Eddy l» In Germany rtstttnB her

The date «Tthe wedding, according to friends iere. has not been deBnltely fixed, bat wlU occur before con

.QUleUnd. a member ot the Thundorboita. a local military company at Athens during the war. Ttaa Mitchell Thunderbolta waa a company competed of men too old for active service In the field, and waa orgamlsed purely for home defefiae. Mr. Ullleland. the Inventor, believed let with a cannon of the double barrel pattern he could mow down Yankeea by the hundreds. He had his -.non cast at the Athena foundry. 1. when finished. It w:is hauled out the outskirts ol the city, where a

,t of Mlsa Eddy t

Miss Eddy 1

■ In t

etty.

tunable apartment tpyrse at sixteenth and M streets northwest. The family closed the apartment early In' the spring, and Mias Eddy went to Europe to arrange

her trousseau.

Miss Eddy Is a niece of Mrs. Mar chall Field. Both her father and

MISS KATHERINE EDDY. (Chicago Girl Who Will Wed Senator Beveridge.) mother~T>eloiig to the families long prominent In Chicago. Her mother was Mias Abble L. Spencer, daughter of the founder of the firm of Hibbard. Spencer A Co. She waa graduated some years ago from an eastern college and after her graduation spent some time abroad. She was presented to Chicago society four or five years,ago, and since then has spent a part of each year In Europe, traveling sometimes with her mother and at other times with Mrs. Marshall Field. She Is a linguist of rare ability and has been presented at several at the courts of Miss Eddy has great personal charm. She Is tall, slender and graceful. and has a wealth of golden balr which she wears In heavy- braids twined about the crown of her head, alluded to by her friends as "Katherine Eddy's natural coronet." Miss Eddy Is fond of walking, and while In Washington she and Senator Beveridge frequently took long walks Into the country and not Infrequently Miss Eddy accompanied him on his morning walk to the capitol. She took the keenest Interest In his struggle for . legislation to prevent the employment of child labor and was Interested In his speeches. a Senator Beveridge was the youfltest man In the United States senate when he entered eight years ago at the age ot- 36. His gift of oratory had gained him a national reputation even before he became a senator. He startled the staid old senate with his methods of procedure and hia strenuoslty has caused him to be referred to as "the young man's sort of a man." Ths senator was a plowboy in Ohio - when he was 12 years old. The natives of Highland County. Ohio, are said to easily recall him because ol his ambitious nature, which early showed Itself. At 14 bo was a laborer, apd two years later was working In a logging camp In lUiaols. It was In the log. Sing camp that he began^ stndy ca tlccal affairs. In 1881 he .borrowed 880 from a Wend and entered De Panw university at Green castle. Ind. Here he won all the debates and got prises enough to pay his college ex prases for two years. In 1885. after two years of work on a ranch, he returned to Indianapolis and began the study of law. Mr. Beveridge married Katherine Langsdalo at Greencastle. Ind.. In 1887 8ne died In 1»M.

Dsrtc Future for Baby. "How much do you ask for a bath tub for a child T” "From ll.M to $10." L "W-b-e w! Well have to go on washing baby In the coal scuttle till the prices come down."—Chicago Journal

A HISTORIC CURIOSITY.

The Famous SL Louis

barreled cannon v emy In front. It

the dty i except to

The Ooubls-Bai

test was made. One test was entirely non was a rank failure. A 50-foot chain, with the ends attached to two cannon balls was the charge. The bells were rammed Into the cannon goo'll and bard. It was the Inventor's Idea that when the cannon was fired the chain would stretch taut and cut down everything within Its length. When It was properly loaded It was touched off with great ceremony. One of the balls got out a little ahead of the other, and the devil and Tom Jones was to pay. It had a kind of circular motion, plowing xtp about an acre of ground, tore up a corn field, mowed down saplings, and the chain broke. One of the halls killed a young' cow In a distant field, while the other knocked down a chimney from a log cabin. The members of the Thunderbolts who went out to witness the test scattered as though the ebtlre Tankee *,rniy had turned loose In that That one test was enough to convince the Inventor that his double

is more disastrous It than to the enras drawn back to

nd was never used again celebrate Democratic vlche number of times for this

purpose belng'Umlted.'‘except In state campaigns. Several year* ago the old cannon disappeared from* Ih front of the dty hall, and it was found in a Junk shop, from which It was rescued, and after being mounted and placed In th<^ little park on College avenue, opposite the federal building, where It now stands—one of the most Inter-

esting relics of the civil war. Snakes pears and Csrvants*.

It is perhaps one of the most remarkable coincidence In all literary blstoiy that April 23. 1616. should have been ihe death day of the two greatest geniuses of their time. or. indeed, of any time—Shakespeare and CerVkntcs But It I* doubtful whether they ever heard of each other. Jusl as Burns and Schiller, who were born in the same year, twinkled, to use Carlyle's fine phrase, like bright par-. dcular stars in opposite firmaments, rod never mingled their rays. It does not appear that Shakespeare knew any Spanish, and as the earliest translation — SbeLon s — of "Don Quixote" begun to appear In- 1612. after the author of ' Hamlet" had re tired to Stratford, and was finished In 1620. be is not likely to have come under Its' Influence. It was -The Knight of the Burning pestle"^ which

first betrayed this

Of American Ogtain.

The results of recent kycploraUon show more and more clearly that If America has received much from'the old world It has in return given much. The American origin of early types of the horse,' the camel, the rhinoceros and other animals, which eventually attained a circumpolar distribution, but that the same fact fa true of some forms of existing mammalia does not seem to hove hitherto recognized. Dr. Allen thinks that eastern Siberia has derived some of Its present mammalian life from boreal America within a comparatively recent p— REFLECTION - OF A BACHELOR. A conscience Is something to worry you for fear you are going to get

caught

The rich would get terribly poor if there weren't so many poor people to make money for them. Lock of Napoleon’s Hair. As Interesting relic of Napoleon Bonaparte has been placed Is the Nottingham Castle museum. It consists of a lock of halr'bf the emperor which was cut off about an hour after hie

T ll-K moat powerful car in the world for the money. SMiorse - power. 1 US-inch wbetl base. 22U) pounds. Great speed and endurance. Thoroughly up-to-date, striking, graceful, racy—but not freaky. Very quiet. Wonderfully cotufortaUe. The simplest oar built and the easiest to- opera!". Many excTuiive.fi uturrs. A positive revrLsiiou to (hose who have not Buill by the originators of the famous integral motor aud traus■iiInMoD system and the three-point su-iu-usioii; and hacked by/ourleen

greater (rated) power 1907 Model 17 Runabout. $2250 1907 Model 18 toming car $2500 Write for descriptive circular, or better •till, image for s demonstration. Cape May Auto Co. Both Phone*

Ca/ir May, New Jersey

Hotel Windsor

A'oir Open.

The most modern I Dirrdly ou Ocean Frc

Capacity, SoO

el In Cape

and Beach Fro-

_ . .n. Booms will. Hath. Dining Boom overlooking the Ocean. The fioeal Sail Water Bulbing. Balmy Sea Air. KUblng and Sailing a Popular Faitime. Flam, aud Hates upon

application.

Hotel Ghalfonte

First Class Family House NEAR THE BEACH TKl.KI-!loaK CoXSBCnOK. E. A. CSE8SI, Cwssr asd Proprietor

Valet Service

Ladies&Mens Tailoring

Have your Clothes Cleaned arid Pressed while you are asleep- Afternoon or Night.

EDWAKD VAN KK8SEL. . 421 Wasiiinoto Cape Mays leading Tailor Phones Bell. 78 W. Keystone. 178 M. Saifc Cilia b? ui Jttai Sm Bn

C. H. Taggart 512 Washington Si. Groceries & Provisions BROWNBACK’S BUTTER .Fresh Every DayQuick Delivery. Goods ike Finesl

LATEST IN LOCOMOTION.

, London.—U-Is claimed.that anyone using the new curved shoe represented In the Illustration can move 41—-* as fast as ha can by walking In ordinary manner, the shoa causing the steps to be doubled 'in length. The contrivance Is the result of much experimenting and. of many modifications of designs. The new takes less time to learn than skating, and the weight ot the shoes Is not

skates. Fitted with a broad sole, the curve shoe provides the best means for traveling over a sandy soil. It Is fastened to the fool and calf by three booked buckles. The curve shoe consists of the curved shoe Itself, a foot holder, and a leg rod with ankle Joint. The wearer of the shoe uses the ordinary movements of walking. In place of the steel touching the ground, the curve Is set down and the step Is completed by a forward rolling motion of tho sole. When the sole rolls forward a spring Is tightened, and this swings the shoe forward whan ft Is raised In readiness for another step. Models for children have been made for a few thill Inga.

JACOB GASRiSON WitiMiram! .'.Jfiffilef 308 Washington St —Lsrgr Stock of— WITCHES. CLOCKS and JEWFLRT Repairing Promptly Done Specialist Is Eye TesKnj

William G. Essen

BAKERY AND .’.Ice Cream Parlor.’. 524WastiagtM SI Cape May, N. J.

Iron Pier Opera House TO-NIGHT

And Saturday Matinee

THE TWO ORPHANS Orchestra under leadenkip oi Prol Feher

SURPLICE EFFECTS IN FA ’OR

In Paris. Nothing Is more typical of the modes that are held In first favor If Paris than surplice effects, especially when the draped bodice shows a gracefully drooping sleeve, cut In ons piece, with It A beautiful shade of Saxe blue voile Is used tn the development of a chic frock, the skirt belns rut circular, with an overskirt effect falling In sharp points over a founda Bon of silk mounted voile. The points ot the overskirt are stitched, down closely with very fine silk soutacht braid, making a charmingly simple trimming for a marvelously beautiful iklrt. . . - The bodice-proper 'is a -fitted elft tn filet lace, over which the volte Is draped In fisbu effect, the fronts, ihontders and sleeves being bordered with a band of dark blue silk em broldered braid. There Is a vest of pale bine RUk. finely tucked, set Into the front of the boiiee and above this there rises a yoke of sflowy white lace, shirred down the center with two liny cords of apricot panne velvet- A pip Ing' of the velvet Is repeated In the collar and again at the cuffs of the dibow sleeves of lace. A famous couturier has shown him self particularly partial to all shades of blue this season, despite The vogue that has been given to the browns and yellowa. One of his creations In Delft chiffon cloth mounted over satin worthy of mention. The cloth rtrlped at wide Intervals with pair gray ribbons and 1 tainted with sprays ot pale pink roaes.. the hem of pah 01 no with bouquets of blurred pink roses having a band of silver tissue a< the top. The model Is the quintet it nee of elegagfg for the social gale ties of Jhe summer at the fashionable resorts. Very fine ribbon umbrolderiei In pale blue and pink odotn this dalnt} frock, the sleeves of which are ar ranged fSrttE epaulettes bordered with silver tissue, of

if which the belt Is a

Wlds Tucks Art Features. Wide tucks are eipeclsllj- dl* tlngulshlng features, and particularly becoming to a tall figure. It is'qulte safe to say that tucks and bands win be "In" throogbout the summer, for they lend themselves so well to linens and'Other summer materials'. It mutt be admitted, however, that there are other modes of trimming more adaptsble to the froct and even the suit of silk. To return to the voiles and the other fabrics to which our pretty allk costumer have Seen forced to glre way In Hen of the unpleasant weather. The plain, voile made over a figured, checked or striped silk has never really bad a hold npon us until now. Now we hive made up our minds to revel In them, and all manner of op

Biggest Cpanbsrry Bog. The largest cranberry bog In the world la being established | n - state. When completed It will c 00 acres, of which 800 will be under mitt ration by July 1. The work of laying out and cultivating, the bog *«s begun more than two yean ago, rod since then a force of more th .00 men.has ben at work. TV- beg Is located an what Is I . he meet part a natural swamp bord ag oa a -pond from which water listributed over the rwanp by amplog * i lsx - Ptxicn Herat*

F ROM assets ot •forty-eight million dollars and liabilities ol lorty- ' one millions, in 1001, to assets <»l more than one hundred and twentyseven million doliars and liabilities of lesst han one hundred and seven millions, in 100(5, is the record for the past five years.

The Prudential

You should apply now to secure some ot the protection tor your family that these magnificent figures stand for, and to feel the satisfaction of carrying your protection in such a strong Company.

CAPE MAY Grain & Ccal Company Washington Street, next lo Reading Terminal ~ANNOUNCES: BROOMS—25c. and 35c. A good .4-tie broom for 25c. WHIST BROOMS—10 and iSc- Something fine for iXc SCRUB (BRUSHES—8c. 12c, and 15c. A polished solit back brush for 12 c. HORSE BRUSHES and Mane Brushes. A full line from 20 lo 40c. DUST BRUSHl.S—15c, 20c. 25 and 35c. A beauty for 35c. STOVE BRUSHES—The kind that i-s a pleasure to use, 10 and 15c. A car-load ot nails of every si/.e and kind fcpm 3d fine to 6«.d. Cat and wire, galvanized, finishing ami roofing nails. Special prices by the keg and to contractors. 1'ioiupt delivery to any part of the cityWIRE FENCING—Barb. Spiral Ribbon. 1'lain. Twisltd. I'russ and Cable F'ence. At lowest prices , “ Galvanized Poultry Wire Netting, from 1 to (> feet, by the yard or roll. Pnmps and r.U the parts. Galvanized pii>e 1and 1 R inch, all lengths. Full line Iron Pipe Fittings ..nd Drive Well I'oiuts Get our prices before buying. Tar Roofing Paper, two-p’y aud three-ply, nails and caps for same. Galvanized Water Buckets, all sizes Fiv. gallon Oil Cans. Lanterns. Hoes. Rakes. Scythes. Grind Stones Ice Cream Freezers. Ho<s •specially for working in flower beds. . Plows. Harrows. Cultivators, and all Oaiden Tools. Transplanting ‘BrowelS, Iron Corner Mangers. Salt Bricks. Gulden Wheelbarrows. Poultry Supplies of all kinds. Nesco Drinking Fountains of Galvanized Iron, sizes 1 quart to 8 quarts; Prices 20 lo 50 cents. The • only way to have pure water for your chickens, it will pay you to get one. Pigeon supplies of the best quality. Special mixtures that will give great results. Anything you wanl in FLOUR. FEED. HAY AND STRAW. Agent lor the Celebrated UPPER LEHIGH JEDD0 COAL Cape May Grain & Coal Company

This Space is Reserved for .'.AMERICAN ICE DURANT.'. ICI ANP COM J. HENRY EDMUNDS, Superintendent ' OFFICE: 512 Washington St

T (

church edifice now ta use In America, the First Caltartaa church. The bulklis SS3 .vows old. John a Lewis has been eextra and bell rinser at the rhureh fur mote than fifty years.

(. J Fcnocneon. Ja-

Lowknt. L HiMtNss

CONGRESS CASINO 31 Perry Street THE FINEST BOWLING ALLEYS IN THE CITY Alky* equipped with Backius Automatic Pin Setters.

Opew from 9 a. m to 12 p. m

B A Hiv.uw, Prop ,