Cape May Daily Star, 12 July 1890 IIIF issue link — Page 4

VOL 1». NO. 12.

"fr CITY SATNIIDAY MORNING, JCLY 12. 1890.

<t>>KtXTIONK.RY. ETC. HOTKl/* AX» COTTAGE**

HOTEU- AKD COTTAGE**..

CONFECTIONER, IJEVSEl^ . _ < *rr.,l ' "to****-* Wmc*. ■! vr r &Si.%!Xr

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sexton; vii i.a.

^ Open for the Season. CMr* FrmJU uU CmImOmmtt, I niar^rd and Iaipi-«*rd. lubu U*o*n>al. V.ratMlU »Dd Pore *** r B< ‘* rh ' Oli*« -OM. KM. i. A. KTSM 40 ***« C*** W - J -^-ILLER COTTAGE * Whlun*o-. (\NifcoUon« • hp^Ullj. i **»■ * Pm» t PraMT.

■ ISCELLAXEOI'N. U a HALLO WELL A SOX,

Mk>. M W HUFFMAN pHE'BRlXSWKK, ' I

STOCK T03f HOTKl?. cajme ir. r. KEKODELLP AND ULFIKMKHED. ftlSlNE OF THE IH(illE>T OKUEB. OPENS JUNE 30.- ‘\ V. TOEO. S ALTO.T, Praprlelor

the west end, Tatar*. Mnnuars featta, 8w«U HomI-•' } .’■"KSr&i'-KS.'SS' B*M E< tax* Cm* . avpouniKmu j. • «ARUta>!<. An« MRK. A. r, DOYLE.

S * *.«m«**. .«vmm,. f tom. Aaors Onus .StN**r : BOAWMNi; HOUSE* A SPECIALTY . x ** r N*> * J

C’OXGHKKH/WAKIa. ~ CAPE KAT CITT, X. J.' . OPUrlVSK WU, 1SS0. Remodeled and Improved. 1. F. CAKE. ProprU-lor.

T\TTF\ TV Tl \fF worre «fcr luistskr come In. I brlirre I lAJUUN ll'l ilMXi. . S»mh DoffV-J a'bwj nSire todiy if tlurt

/ IhotbAndo iiei* LaA hmd a KTAinof emee. ! Agiitter and benntytoth^whiditasfAr .••The eitrpentcr* Are eboql done.' I ^ o'-‘ “J k n'' on liU she broke off. end encl. a eambemaM and tamenees Ttan V.- made qmcl: work of H. I luuK ^ down nil nt oner." | to-the near brt ■ !t is not eib«etfaer. nor it.’ ThcyTl 1 - able to quit to-njj^it." ! "How duyou mean? He was always very much, that we can .the better see Farm r- Hill came into the cheese E'oo'l »« *‘rr ‘ drfrcU on account of the clownem of the Mia ia which hi- wife Was bnar to tell “Yea. i.i a way. Cat be let her work object; we should be able to see the merit She tnm.'.l t- him in taild stfnnv» » I “ 1 slave wiihout eyer Irvin* to make its better, too. It 'is the dispodtioo to Whv, v.-,thoiif enttin* that doorr" I thiint 4 ea--y f.ir h<-r If 1 should say my nndervalne the familiar, the cammonWeil. 1 did mean much as could 1 “ v '^t out \ shonld say 'twas that place, that beset* ns Now, take a certo have that door cut. and the hole ! pumji In the shed that was the death o' tain class uf advertisers They will hunt 1 will try and the kitchen to j Sarah Dully" ' - “ ' *'

put the dishe» through without wslkin* 1 ,"k ou don t mean it!" ; h—

round Cut yon se.'the men have made - "Ye*. I do. I’ve seen her a -workm* which they could cl rich good time that ! thought it would "way that old pump-stiff and heavy more profiUhle. in many cares, than the he best to-let V-m -go, as it’* Saturday “d hard and wbeesy. till there didn't one chosen. Or they will provide "dodg night, and not break into another week. *f«n • ^Feati 1 leftinhar. IneWw thonght ers" and "guttemupee” that nobody

all anond fur a medium that is far away.

■e with a result much

the ready acqnitocenc* she always gave

to her husband's decisions

•Tin going to have it dune, though," went on Ur. Hill with energy . "Tee promised tt l-sng enough and it ought to have Ix-rn done long ago. I shall have the men back here-.before long, for I’ve about made np my mind to have a wind mill set this falL. Folks say it's a grand thing for saving work. The boys and -men are tired of pumping water for the honmC It's getting' too late in the day for such old fashioned methods I believe m keeping up with ‘he times” But sbe^wus so .entirely in sympsU^' with nil hie plans slid •irraugpuients tiiat

06 thought' of complaint crowd heFj U»e dead, and in

Bird as s'.H- carriqd a load of milk

down to my sister's in town and

way they have things fixed! Nobody in that house o' hers fnisee a drop o' water 'cept to drink it. It all comes through pijies and runs away through pipes But folks in the country don't have such fixin's.' They cost money, and flesh V

blood's cheaper'n money."

••But there's a naw pomp set in now." "i'es,” with s short, mirthless laugh, "ith make things easier for the second

chances of their being "diatribe ■ingle delivery from ths bridge over stream or canal. No doubt much of this sort of advertising matter has met with

such a fate aa this

Bnt the near-by newspaper is the medium that ought to be used. It is an old personal acquaintance of every man in _ the comm unity. Its voice ia familiar" and listened for. Its statements are trusted aa those of a stranger would not he. Moreover, its circulation is among the very people who compose the class from which the custom dennd must be obtained. The home paper it, by all odds the medium for home advertisers

Mr. Hill rapidly made bis wsy out of reach iff the voices and found himself in the current which passed. on to the parlor. Before he realised it hr sUxd beside

glance took in the

cxprrwiiun of ineffable peace.. But the

•round to the ■‘print: boose. A beanti-.! weary look had not been quite smoothed mammem*. were anumuiv suoful little rivulet Which bubbled through <">‘ >7 the kindly finger of death, and ^ ^ ££, turT M n*. for one com-r of tie- l«ok vard had- been sharply into his heart smote the idea that . . .

«™-i - <« KJe

powa. But the singular obttumess to *»«• “ he had furtively scanned it that all cummun ~-tiw onvrau-uce .fften daf- I* seemed U. n»t there now as she shown by .dd time country folk had led "ear the coffin Making a signal to the bniljrrsuf thesubstantialfamhonse her. be drew .her out of Hie house and

to place the kin leu door oi. the other "“l «°ward the buggy.

Wait, 1 hadn't got throh^h yet." said her husband, following her to the Sluing bouse. "My, you have gut a lot of nice li«>king butter there. No wonder your butter always bring* the Iwet prices anywhere round. But Tin-going over to the funeral and 1 guess you'd better go

'long."

"Ob, I can't." said Mrs. Hill, slaking her head very decisively. "I'd like to roal well, but there's too much to do." "Noitsensi'. Call those big girls of yours and U-t them take hold a little." "They do. They do all the sweeping, but I can't leave the dairy work W anyone else. Poor Sarah Duffy! Seems as though I ought to go to her funeral

"Go'u get road;

Harriet."

“Oh, never mind that. They like to have a little time for study and they bught to. I can leave it for a while."

I'll call ' ter comes."

a a long talk.

"No. she has enough to d ...

latched."

He stood and watched her while she K the finishing touches to the pats of ter and .then .walked with her around the house Her step lagged behind his

h she sat wearily down on the lowest

Harriet. | girls.”

j "Well make

don't know

don't feel quite up •That's your mistake, mother. Von get yourself deemed and the ridell do

Me#. Hill, after fifteen

j minutes, appeared at the door ready to take her place in the smart buggy which

her. We most get her away from home

for a change, girls."

"She won't go.”

-"Let's go'n tell her she

lying down.”

"Lying down?': said Janet with

lanjfh-

Mother in her working dress was walk- WerM’s leather, ing around the nouae to the dairy house Kest cattle furnish hubs for more than Father took her arm and brought her in- h ^/ ,k. wnetd'. UmW Next to them •■Mother,” he said, "I'm going over to ro*U, and after them the East InReuben'# next week to see about that ! ,p.„ bttiUlo and the sheep. Horn hides business bet s een him and me. I shall inconsiderahle In amount and of low hare to again three weeks after. I want value. Pig «in used for saddles ia in

you to go with me and stay between demand and supply. Dog akin her husband drove around. He talked j and rat akin for gloves are mere items of away in great animation as usual, but | Mother # face flushed, but she shook ; account, not at all equal to the kangaroo before long seemed suddenly struck br bit bead. ; skin, which has quite superseded some her unusual silence. "I couldn't do it,” she said. "I don't & calf, while deer hides furnish “Ain't you wen. motherr —v— _w., •. ia v- -t -l ... _ . .

"Oh.re*.aboutsausual. Iseemtohars a kind of tired feeling tnust'of the time lately, but I ■'pose it's bi-cause I'm getting, old. We can't always -be young,

ir. Hill. But any oqmvrife was such a mVelty

that he cesued his tidk, and pretending to look critically at the gram field of a neighbor stole a few 'glances at her face. He was not an uueervant man; had not, perhaps, in the daily round of har- - - look at

one there for a Tsar; and

It's the girl/ time for

"Oh, yes, yes," said father, half irritably. “bat it's the girls' time for taking care of yon. and they know it. Soenc

girts know il too la "Don't bother i

Mrs. Hill "It would take a we fuming and hard work eewing fur get ready, and would do

previous years, and does not Include the hundreds, perhaps thousands, of propositions submitted with regard to arti_eW As there has been an increase in the cumber of periodicals published in

Ain't K-iitA - to Ih.

Jaani-'.h-Hk-A. uh, oati-d the how. j [.{— —' r-bb-tlag m-ir, CAnlnbutu,-., -So; IthiAll-AA 8i-V«I.A,0-. WO-

cl,.—iiui rid-.-

br.™a #H, we . lA at-M-n-iirAt W u

w—UW. W —cbi« bo„. luld

-- - — - - - - Now oat of *,000 manuscripts ayear

The Century can only possibly print 400 or lasa It follows that sdiltng.a magssins ia pot unlike walking into a garden of flowers and gathering a single bouquet. In other words, not to accept an article, a story, a poem, is not neoemarily th “reject" IL There may be weeds

go and lie down. She laughed and

ne went to find his daughters.

"Girts, do yon know mother's run down and tired out, and that if we don’t look out shell be the next one to go?"

It seemed a cruel bomb

the light hearts.

"Why, father, is anything the matter?

Where's mother?"

"No, stay here; there ain't anything

the matter yet, perhaps. It's only I

have it stopped before the mat

the garden—but the fact that a particular bloesom is not gathered into the monthly bouquet does not prove that the editor regarded the bloesom as a weed,

and therefore pasted it by.'

"Tre begged mother time and again Hwould be impomdbleto .weer^J let me take the dairy work." said “‘V* 0 "*" tat® a tingle handfuL Ths

•She says it's too hard for |

"declipid" are naturally

| prone to gibe at sympathetic or apolo-

then. Well ^ tlc

r for vi ir enit f,.v we P”*™* the above simile with contidr for you and for * - n

treble diffidence. There is truth ir Deverthelem! And it would probably he much eatier for editors to make up a number of bouquets from the flower# at tbrir disposal than to gather the single one for which alone they have room —

Century.

, . , giaum va can, wuuc urer hum* runu»

■ay but what it would be P»«-*nt to j letXher os well as that for a

~?A_^i rtoty of other needs In 1886, Nsw Yor

1* X —V- .. , . rtety of other needs In 1886, Nsw York oouldnl take the time and 1 couldn't be lmIlarl *d from sU sources about «.««.- ready. I shouldn't want to go looking qoq worth ^ w,w j,, | M ^ shabby. and I danI nesd anything new I amount fed to a little ovsr fliIN>,B00

The home supply of hides is far below

the demand, in spit* of all the cattle upon our 10,000 western hills, not to mention the plains of Texas or ths ranches of New Mexico. Mexico herself oends ns many hides, both of steer and goat. Indeed, she ranks next to South America, from whence oomat two-thirds

importations. The heaviest, a

then dyeing and selling than. Ths advance in price is nominal, bnt each hide takes Up ten pound* or so of salt, and this yields*' — - —

"Send for anything she wants ready there wont be any fasting It hup herself ‘ and the'sly In bogs and from Harriet, half to- _ y at seeing very plainly that Ksnetiua^ wa» going on which —j

There is only one remedy for 'those wholesale devastations of African aborigines, and that is ths solemn com laof England. Germany. France.

a power in She came lock with renewed strength nmm. the rich heart of Africa should ha family’ Who amid here toliered mad .pmt for ths dmr hon»ft3m SltadwmU m Uu. lots yrer of ths ‘Jnir mt>i writory, tignaHaad aa it haa diSar^tWs remS Narnia left ^ by *> much advance; that popnla

amgloyad artists at an i rp mm of eoanethit like Ua novel*. Thom eopim tara a private each tme bstag kbalad