VOL lit. NO. Iti.
CAPE MAY CITY. THURSDAY MORNING. AUGUST ‘21, 1890.
PRICE 3 CENTS.
COVFEOTIOXER.T, KTC. 1 HOTEM AKP CCTTACgB rp most 'siiirn. ! tjnited states hotel. MJJfVrACTCEJKG j cGucn Liriimr l»n CONFECTIONER, K'iSrSieiS • -r » .• ■ •..o.ll.ui rrrt orrtrul M4 0'»r I hr Wach. CAPE HAT. I : — — • 1TKKXTOX VILLA. P VIKTRIr • P . • i^ui Open for the Season. Cbcltv KreiU and Conlirllonprj, KnIar|CF<I
Italian Macaroni. Vermicelli and Pore
OH** OO. MRS. J. A. ■TEKX •0 Wa&Mjtam Str—t. Cnpt ««/. *. J. -J^ILLER COTTAGE,
1 No. I I’ekhv Snutar.
A ttenovated. Culalne drat
Ferma Uraau&ablr.
Maa. M W tiOFKMATf-
BKl'NSWICK,
HOTEL* AND COTTAGE*.
Wbitmui'a ConfeaLuma a Specialty.
7 HUCELLANEOKN. IL HALLOWELI. A SON,
H j riMiE i “*•— 1 1 |K: U ,
I Larar.t
CATE MAY. i>l ^Uionia^^^Eaorileiil Cutalne. JAMES B 8T1 TEA
STOCKTON HOTEL, CAPE MAT, BT. J.
Cal* May In mild Sepictnfeer. Important conaiderationa for RealUi. -Go toCape un ] “ May latter part of Aujual apd September; floral batfalufi and aafcat tx»cl> known. «de'
Pure>prin C water in prueral oae, natural drainage *
laiaud. Special ratc-ol A3 per day a ‘ l*eaUb-jl»tU|! rtwort on Uie Atlantic Application for tooma, if made before^
loimodatiom. •.
•r'Aoguat 33d to September I"■ -h. Greateal oaat. Tbe Sommer Capital of the Nation ...c S5th ioaL, will rcMilt In Biourpaaaea r. TUEO. WALTON, Proprietor.
piEH AVENUE INN.
| orn »u. the Yata CEWTwaL Locattoa. ‘ No. 07 W aah Inglwn Street. /Yrr AKaw. weur MViaAwpfaa Srmr.- , , u .. Within two mlnut-w nflke Beach awd'T—l I i*ra Mai.. Office, -ritat*- laethtM lor OMuarretal Xni- \ POBEBt'wbHEB, A mod -“‘ 0 "i-"LB"wAUis.
MEAL ESTATE BROKER, Life and Eire Inaurancw. rrwU and Aatmiy Anwar. OacaaCl'y.X J.
G*
Hooka. Toilet Paper. Flab In* Tackle. Twtora, -Mmature Koala, Seaahle Norel-
tlea, rtc^ etc.
J. W Lutrll'a Pnliiuwtkaa far Bate
(Sooda Bald tor BpatCaali J. B. UAKUBON. Afent. r KICKERBOCKEK LIVERY-STABLES
(Rear of Knickrilucker IceOfBor). WasaiaaroK, anorr. Ockaii Sraarr. IMA KOI HORSES A SPECIALTY.
jr Pilrale Paittre. EarurtacBarcaw WfLU-AM IIKBENTHAL Proprietor
THE WEST END, Kearth* Beach 'Ktrrtelaaa In alllla app.de nU. Wl I remain open unlllOetolier 1»1Keduced rale* alter September let. MR*. A. K_ OOYLE.
K NIC
H
A-croi
SOLICITOR, MASTER AND EXAMINER IN CHANCERY OF THE-STATE OF NEW JERSEY JAMES M. E. HILDRETH, COL' N6ELLOR-AT-LAW
.ffoucmMi.Ma*TU A Kxawinaa mCai NOTARY PUBUC. Office at No. 4 ocean Btr rt. Cara Mat Citt. H.J.
ORIMCOM'H Milk and Cream Depot, 48 JACKSON STREET.
C, B. GKtSCOM. Manager.
JJEIS.S GALLERY,
J. W. CACA N, MANSION HOUSE BAKERY No. 7 If AMioR ST., OArR Mat. AH kinds of French and Vienna Bread and
Mbs mad Paper Flower Rale riel.
TTnionTransferCo. baggage express -AK>Ssunl. Rflilrxu.'. Tiek«t.. Afwk. O.WZCRt: CffT. R aakingtae and Jaekaea f
'HE ALDINE,
Drcrra Hrarrr. Ncaa Baara At»m*.
CATE MAT. N. J.
ORIGINALITY.
rracu arcrvla of Witliln ngr nla ,. _ The |n*fert eerm ^ a atapenduns th-aieln • No bUarre Uralanayrl ba.1 r.ee wrai^hl Thla odd, oelrd wdbder Into ahape. and fee OjhM fnrn Ore a!..o» of Tancj tem* 1.. ale A whim to n,nal thu, t.» tue ualauctt l!a radiant a.I.«d thr.lied •mo wUh drlirl.t.
rhamv.l Tibetiu.
I’AIITLOW’S LUCK.
The buckboard and steady going i«.uie*
of Mr. JaclcMin Hit!.-, late of Imcmitan NewyTticago. rounded a betid in the timber road a niomeut aft.-r a man. monnted
:Idtig borne, eulerv.1 it from a which. pnncl the main road a
little bey^md tbe imid.
The racking of tbe cajuestrian's steel was kept from K-eomiag tuonotonous by
tbe part of the racket
all things considered. I reckon lock's 1 A riloodj !
agin mer j ''Nineteoc years ago todav." said In"Looka *c-r agreed Mr. Dills, mildly | iptetor Byrne*—“I shall nerer forget Interested. j that day's duty. I was ordered over to ■•Wal.-r.xauvsl Part low. -after I had thu Unmgrmen'a headquarters from my drifted about all over the went. I finally ^ precinct at daybreak—I was captain of struck this jam ut the state an' settled i tbe Twenty-first then—and took every down, a few mile* south uv yen- on a one of my men along except old Sergt. claim jinin' tb«- one that Ike RJnr took Davenport and a doorman. We expectop next day. 1 lowed that out thar on ed trouble, and I had a lot of hand grvtbe flat land, with little to steal an' a;.- ! nade* heaped by the second story Vfin-jmn-nlly nobody to (••-ter. I might sort dows in the old station bouse in Thirtyo" live down my hick!" | fifth street, told the sergeant to lock the He went on to tell bow Mr. Ulue andj doors and pelt any mob that would try liiiicwlf had erected their shanty acrons j to imter. Old Dare was as good as an the dividing line of the two claim-, army when it came to sticking. He just each sleeping on the part of tbe cabin j sat on that pile of hand grenades and
- . ... houuwtoad. tints making a cheap jnetense of complying with the requirements of the homestead law deinandiniL n Jilaei- of reridimre on each Then, before they Had got more than fairly settled, the TranKcontinental railway jral in an ujijiearance, cutting their claim* in twain, and remum-niting their
owm-rs but scantily tberofor. e- 1
No serious uusfortime had overtaken
Partlow. howccrer, but hb
waited.
-He had a good long wait, if we didn't. Those who walked In that bloody procession from the Eighth avenue headquarters of the Orangemen to the old Haymarket in the Bowery will be ajit to remember it to their dying day. I can hear the crowd yell now when the militiamen began to ahoot right and left. From the roar, from the housctojis. it rained brickbats and hot A hundred must have been killed
•tumble nt the slightest provocation, and ! tomed ill hick manifested itself often : before the end of that march of terror
hb* rider, as be weakly reversed the bom- i enough to keep him in mind of the fact and death.
at the sound of the buck board's approach j t* 1 '' man i« "I Jew days and full of trou- | “It was 8 o'clock the next morning
and came racking toward it. IdoVe* ’*
; l*fore we got bai k t
He was thin and wan, ns if from a recent illness, and his month had a dis-
couraged droop at the oirners.
He beggetto slum- tjp- Iracklioanl seat with Mr. Kitts, sujijdemeuting the ex-, ruse Unit he was in dagger of being unable to long kevj'i his' joinu* tbgither if forced to continue the victim of the rack. ' "A feller.** he said presently, with a I mournful tune that was almost a sigh - j "a feller must *ave himself all he kin-
I 'si«s-ially when Hick's agin him."
t' He had fastened the rocker behind *h
! huckboard and crawled onto tbe neat with suspicion upon his juirti with an "Um—ah!" of rolief. i ‘J mislern pnd degenerate Jonah, The two mei, cv'haugvV tho cirilitin. 1 "SbouMn't wond.i
if “passing tbe time o' day,” and Mr. j Bitt*.
The only cuwpoaaessed by the jartners ; was aa dark and still as the grave. As choked to death on almost the last of , we hammered on the door and yelled a thrir tuniija; the chinch bugs made | window in the second story waa alowly merry with their diw-ouraged looking | and cautiotudy ojiened and old Dare wheat, and a train on the Trmnscouti-J said: . .
nental so frightened the team of horses “ ‘Who ia tliere!’
tliat Bine atid Partlow owned jointly •• •Ojien the door.' yelled the tired that they ran away with a borrowed men. 'Open it or well buret it in.' mowing machine and Mr. Partlour. ruin- "You will, ehr came from ujxtaire in iag tbe fognier mid endangering the life shrill tunes, and In the window appeared of tbe latu-r. tbe old sergeant, fighting mad, with a But all this was nothing more than he hand gn-nade in each fist and an armful expected, he said righfully. and it waa. Tn reserve, aa a boy carries snowballs, therefore met.with Uvuming resignation' “Stand l«ck there! or there will be mur-
by Mr. Partlow. But Mr. Blue, less fa- der. Back. I aay."
miliar with miafort
C'OKtiKENK IIAIjIj.
OIF MAY CITY, X. J. OPEN JUNE 1Mb, 1 M*0 Bitta. having done ail that courtesy de-
Remodeled and Improved.
J. P.-CAKE. I'roprlctor.
ATTORNEY*. F. DOUGLASS, Cape May CUT, S.J.
■ORNET-AT-LAW.
IRBERT W. 'EDMUNDS. COUNSELLOR AT LAW. HOUcmiR AND MASTER IB CHANCERY
H™
gt Directly on the Beach. Table Service First-Class.
Terms Reasonable.
Is-gau to look W e luul come all the lung and bloody
way. fighting evnry inch of it. without a thought of showing the white feather.
immetiU-d Mr. ! Every mother's son of us would ha'® *
been killed twice over rather than turn
. „ It had IstTt lint lately that Partlow, tail. But we ran then. Before old Dave, ded of him. was ready to resume though feeling physically out of ahaj*. j with his armful of hand grenade*, the
j the attack ujion the chaotic scheme* | arlte expresacd it, had ridden to New | army that had saved a city from aack- ! with which he luul been wrestling before Chicago on Kn c-mud of no iiiterrsf to | ing scattered and fled. The sergeant j the apjiearance of the other. I us, and while returning had become . was left to hold the fort alone until we
"When luck'saginhiiu." hi.s passenger Weak, ill and delirious and. as be learned I coaxed him from shelter into compre-
! repeated sighfully, “as it is agin me!" ^ afterward, had been found wandering ! bending ,11011 we were not the enemy.
•1 reckon jo," agreed Mr. Bitts. en- i aimlessly about at a considerable dis- | Then he came down and let us in.—New
Cara Mag Crrt J NPICERTME^MINO. ATTORNEY-AT-LAW BOUtTTOB AND MASTER IN CHANCERY _ -17 Wabuikovos Strxxt, Cats Mat Citt, N. J. I^ORGAN HAND, Attouikt and Coi-kbru^ib-at-Law. Solicitor, Master and Examiner 4n .‘ksneery, Supreme Court Commissioo and Notary Public. Capr Mat Court Hocbr, N. J.
PH Y RICIAN*-
H
A. KENNEDY, M. D., rebidrnt rmaiciAN.
UNITED STATES PHARMACY, E. (Mr. Wash)nab* A pecalar Bis.' CAPE MAY. K.J. nofre. Freni T to • A. M . IS to S. la
•pt a. PUIDUPS, M. D., RESIDENT B0HE0FATH1G PHYSICIAN,
FAMES KECrIy, M. D.
i P.IL,aaa*to»r.M.
M. p, MARCV, M. D., * REBIDRNT PHYBIUAR BlNCt UM.
CAPE MAT. X.J.
TYIL WALTER S. LEAKING, DENTIST,
Cape Mat Cm, K. J.
Proprlclor.
cm imaging hut little the evident desire of ' tance front the way he should have pur- • the other to indulgi'in reminiscencing, i sne«l. and faithfully followed by his old
i Mr. Jaclaonflitt*. late of New Chicago, horse,
whs interested more in Junction City Partlow had lieen taken in and cared and the financial benefit he expected to. for by kind souls, and was now only just i derive from the place than in the wot* recovering from a severe illness, of the man beside him. j Ho was ready to progtyKtieatc more He had a|>j>rnaclied New Chicago six ill Inck for the future, months before with the same wrestling Prompted by what he had la-lieved a I with schemes that now tore him. - _ • | premonition, ho'bad. l»-fore leaving tW Thelssnu at that settlement luul waxed'‘-double claim, given Mr. Blue a lahurious- ■ and waned, and Mr. Bitt* had failtsl to ly executtd document resembling a jiower | enrich liiiKM-lf; blit with the ever spring-. of attorney, giving him authority over j ing hojie that animates the truo lioomcr, his claim during liis aim nee. , he was now on his wavTo Junction City. | And now it woold not surprise him | filled with still.greater confidence than much, he confessed, to find that Bine. | ho had entertained ujwn approacliing concluding that he had feloniously run New Chicago. | away with the racking horse, had in It waa decided and announc'd that the dulged in some retaliatory measure. He Dakota and Gulf railway would cross could not-aee bow Blue could avoid entho Transcontinental railway at a cer- tertaiuing an uncomplimentary opinion tain point where there was not little of of him. at the very least, nature's handiwork to be teen. (, "The <-laitn* air jest over beyond the Tbe road bed .-f the Transcontinental, timls-r thar," he continued; “an' I a shanty on the line between two home- wouldn't he surprised if" st<-ad chums, an apology for a fence, an- 1 IDs further forebodings were interotber for a stable—that -was about all rupted liy the >ajqM-arance of a little there was to he seen. squad of horM-m-n. who came galloping This was at noon. A little later tbe toward tliein |fi» of tbe timber, just
agents of the two railroads and one of . ahead. f
Uie projirietors of tbe slianty on tbe line. “That's Ike in front. The rest air between the claims were actively at strangers to me,” he said, gloomily,
work with a gang of men. and before 10 “Wonder what's up?'
o'clock of tbe following day tbe entire;, “Ike, what"— be began, as tbe horse-
section had been staked off in streets and men reached the buckboard.
lota. “Shut up!" broke in Mr. Blue.’ “We’ve
At noon the sale of lot* began, and be- I got a surprise for your *
fore night tunny had'been sold. By-sun- j Partlow doubled up a little closer on set half a doten shanties had been ; tbe neat of the buckboard. They Were “slapped .opr-and Junction City began J half way through the timber before he
to be. j spoke again.
The rajddity with .which the news of | "Wonder what they're up to!" hrmuttbe new bom bourn traveled was as ton- j tend to Bitta. "Mebby they're gain' to ishing. Tlie next day the building of hang me. or sump'h'f Ray, Dec, I bain’t
houses and the cuuiing of inhabitanU be-.j done nuthVan'"—
gau in good carnesL | "Shut upr broke in the gi-utleman ad-
Slianties sprang up. Others came on ' dnvea-d.
wheeled trucks from deserted elaims and "Jest my rog lar luck." sighed Partmore or leas excuseless settlements. | low. "But I liain't done nuth'nT Tents were jilentifuL There apjieared -Vs they emerged from the timber bo what out of courtesy were called stores. ! looked up to see the familiar outlines of There, too, was a "hotel,” the “accotn- the shanty, on the line bet wren-the
jpodatJoiL-" of which were little short of claims,
awful, anil a saloon where was dispenst-d Instead he. wide eyed and open liquid comfort mostly of the "Bsttleax" , mouthed, beheld new bom. bustling, brand. j Usmting Junction City, with its already • A .day later the initial number of The respectable showing of houses and tent*. Junction City Pioueer-wa* sprung upon 1 There ajqwared activity everywhere—
the settlement by an enterprising gen- men hurrying hitheJand thither,
Ueman who had firerioualy. founded Ths shanties ami tents springing up, a buildSumtjer Pioneer and The New Paris Pi- ing just rolling in on ti ticks, a new deoncer. There were also many other evi- : j<ot rising sky ward—to abort, tbe spring-
deuce* of the'daring and activity that a | ing up of a prairie ‘'city." new burn lx Kim develops. i -W'y—w'y—I—how—where" Bitts' jautengcr wriggled about on tbo Mr. Partlow threatened to collapse, seat of the buckboard and oighod again. ; "It's [art uv the
'The wramoB, CAPE MAY', N. J. Twelfth Seasco—18#0. Capacity 300. LocaUcp uosunaiste. Ooa tkvk fitan tbe New DepoL Nearest House to the Furfi Strictly First tlssa Id all Its appoiot•a. - WALTElTYr. GREEN, of Pbllsdel^his.^
THE ORIOLE,
Foot of Perry Street,
CAPE HAY, TV. J.
C. F. WILLIAMS,
PROPRIETOR
irpriae,” grinned
Ike Bine. "Y’ou an' roe own half town. Morn a thousand dollarm' worth uv lott Sold already; an' more a-goin' all tbe time. Prices riidn' every minute. We'D be rich men yet, Ork. ole feller!"
“I—my lock"
“Has changed at last. I found out where you was very soon after you taken idck, but as you ws'n't in any great danger I reckoned oh not lettin' you know anything about this till I could spring it on you all at • “I—I can’t believe it!" faltered Part-
low. r
"Oh. it's all truer “Bich—lock changed—I can't bell era my sense*!" said Partlow. alowly. “I rw-kun I'mlostn' mj mind or sump'n'P He rose to step down from tbe bockboard, and weak from his recent illnew and the excitement Ml forward to the
ground.
“His arm is broken _ ._ . . was the verdict of the doctut who had
my last three dollars. Uve | arrived at the settlement in good tims be'n/based by a craxy man. My wife j to be called to tbe cabin whither Partlow
iway with a man who owed me. an'
was reckoned by me to be sure pay. i Tbe sufferer uttered what sounded like ~ caved in on me once, an' kept me j & sigh of relief. fur forty hours with a half inch ] - "Things air all right yatr he said, to breathe through. Ure had ths Weakly. “I hain'i lopin' my mind, after ‘ ~ year*, an’ all. I'm trill Oracle Partlow!"—Ti ~
•Luck's bc'n agin me Irin muemlxT," he ventured presently. “Name's Partlow—Oracle Partlow." He paused to note the effect of this Mr. Kitts uttered an “uh-huh" of assent. and withdrew within his shell. “Yep." continued Mr. Partlow with pathetic pride, "I re-cWn Pm the unluckiest man ‘twixt this an’ anywhur*. Pre b'i-n mighty nigh everything hut'
plumb tailed."
"That's bad," commented Mr. Bitta,
without i-morion.
“Cm—oh! you bet!"pursued Mr. Partlow, warming up. 'Tve be n shot by a .deputy sbrr'f T<r a hawse thief. I've bet Uosred nearly out uv the county by • cyclone. Ftp stood on a bar'l srith a rope around my Deck, waitin' fur a vigilantes committee to decide whether I
the 'feller they
e be'n held up by road s
Y’ork Telegram.
An A • j 1 u in Tkst CnllorU K lx III P-. Tliere is an asylum for orphan girls in Lucie. Switxerland, which finds a market for all the old postage stamps srht-to--it. Nearly everybody jar and near acquainted with the fact sends to the asylum Ids or her second hand stamjw, and fur Gte information of those who are ignorant a ein-nlar is issued calling for the contribution of stamjw and. also setting forth the uses to which they are applied. Rare stamps of course go to dealers or collector*, while the commoner sort* are applied to decorative purposes, being used to ornament screen*, shade*, etc., and even, so says the circular, to paja-r rooms. Tbe circular does not say bow the American green stamp erf the past can be used for decoration. Over a million of stamps were received by the institution from all over the world in 1888, and a considerably larger number in 1889. The stamps are assorted by the chiMreti and put up in packages of SO or 100 each. Those collected in 1888 were sold for 1,800 franc*, or |340. and those of 1889 for $980. This may not sei-m much to Americans, but money goes further in Switxerland than here. Persons, therefore, who want to put their old postage stamps where they will do the moot good should send thorn to M. J. Nougier, directeer do 1'Asile dcs BUlodes, Locle, Switxerland.—Ex-
change.
Lawyer £ K Haskall, of Lowell, has a 4-year-old Son who is as bright aa half a duxon silver dollars and who has an audacious sense of humor that may be worth money to him when he gets into politics. One of his latest experiments is the talk of the family just now. “If I put this tin soldier and borae Into that bowl of milk mammaTl lick me for it, you see if she don't," he said rectatly to a visitor, and the visitor seeming incredulous lie dumped the toys into the
milk.
Mamina as prumjrfly "licked" him for "By gush," he'said delightedly, as be returned to tbe visitor from the scene of castigation, his amusement subordinating the sense of pain, "she licked me for the soldier, bnt they didn't find tbs bura<-.~—Boston Globe.
Grist iflill* occupy a . lion in modern farming. •In. 1 xl-.r of reducing food to a digestible condition is transferred from the ani-
transform it into fleah and boue. In tbs case of hones which are kept busy in the day it ia almost imperative that a part of the mechanical work of crushing or cutting their food should be done Jot them, or else they hare, not suaciaTt time left for rest. One haa only to examine a sample of beans or mail* to realise what an expenditure of power ia needed to grind them up in an animal’s mouth.—New York Commercial Advur-
■e ager right smart uv the ti
A curious calculation of the amount of food consumed in a lifetime of seventy yean hAs recently been made by M. Boyer, a French savant, now chef of tho Reform club of London. Among other things M. Boyar say* that the average epicure of three arore and ten will bars consumed 80 oxen. 900 sheep. 100 calves. 300 lambs. 80 pigs. 2,900 fowls, 1.000 fish of different kinds, 80,000 oyster*, 8,475 pound* of vegetable*. 948 pounds of. butter. MiOOO eggs and 4 tons of bread, betides several hogsheads of wine, tea, coffee, etc. This eaarmons amount of food will weigh but little abort .of 40
An', Morgan in Philadelphia Saturday Night, tons.—SL Lodi Republic.

