Cape May Daily Star, 22 August 1890 IIIF issue link — Page 1

VOL 19. NO. 47.

CAPE MAY CITY. FRIDAY MORNING. AUGUST •22. 1890.

PRICE 3 CENTS.

OOXFECTIOUCTT. CTC. '1' WOKT SMITH. MAXI'FACTCIUNO CONFECTIONER, «0. 5 Washington Strft.

HOTELS AKP COTTACfB •JJKJTBD STATES HOTEL. Oouxmb LiritmT /jrn J*n*o>r 8TK«tr» Trims, tx II*.

HOT ELM A\U COTTAOEK.

\J> YIETRI,

F.

J^KEXTOX VIL

VILLA.

Chok* FralU aad ( •■Jrrliaifrj, ItUiai) Macaroni. Vrrmioelli and .Pare Ollae OIL 40 Washington Strrrt Copt Maj. H J. Wbllman'a CootjpcUooa a Specialty. ■ IftCKLLAXKOt'N. H k. hallo well a SON, • • - Wholesale and Retail

Open for the Season. - Kalanr«d and Improt c<i.—

Nemr the Beach.

US. 4. A. HTEBS.

-^ILLER COTTAGE.

No. ■

Perry Street.

Ml Renovated. t'aUloe In

SAFE.

»} the Ojle of a

HUE BRUNSWICK,

STOC KTON HOTKL, CAPE MAT. N. J. 'Tape hay In.mild September. Important cooakleratlooa for health. GatoCape May latter part of Augtiat and September; Bocat bathing and ^feat beacb known. Pure'apring water in ceneral uae, natural drainage Into tbe creek in ..I laland Sperial rate ol «3 per day alter Auguat fed to St

, r

in TKimmmuL hays.

i a hjt afn-nioon in the early part :

brother in law. The feud w

Returning front the interment of Bella the Tolmya and Cwstletona had, or pretended to hart, occanion to pan the Richardtun remdenoe. Tjiey apprrhrading eoene each cotirwe had barritwded tbe houar and watched for the a|mroach of the cavalcade. A draprrate fight rtuned. and among the flnt to fall waa old Mr. Tulmy and two of tbe Caatlrtoh bora. The Richardson reaideoce was act ua fire, and the deaperate -fight grew fiercer and fiercer until the night mercifully came down and itopped it. Many on both aide, were wounded and killed, but ringularly enough the principal*—Jardra Toluiy and Tuan Kirhenlaon—eecaped withodt a acratch. After thu the feud waa quirt for some

little time.

Ju*t at thin atage of the conflict Junto Tulmy had uccarion with hia wife to virit the (‘aatletoau. He aroae early and treiit for hia hurw; but an unuaual thing ha-1 hapja-ned. The horwe had broken the fence and etrayed away. He tracked the animal a long dhtance. when, tired with hia long mofnihg wJk, he aeatei] himnelf to rt^t. He beard crackling

•a i . u .« •• «. lea'vK at hi* back, and thinking it waa Of la*t w»k that two Omaha youngmen ^ ^ lonicd r<muJ Hr Urn-

cham-ed to be *pending the day at a farm ^ t „ tmeT ^ bia morUl

bon*- on th.- MW.uri. They were lying Tom Richardeou, cany ing in hu hand ■ on their bark* in the idunle. of eome rifle. No alarm, no augi-T, waa Cihlbttee* on the Wiik» of the yellowiahrirer. ited by cither. "Are yon heeled. Jim?”

tlnate two little mound* aakod Ku-hanUon in a quiet fort of way.

covered with gra** and M-atvely dutin-

guinbal de/'' aaid one to the other. "Yea; what are they, graven?"

"They are. and thereby hang* a hiitory' of tin- temtoriiri day. of Nebnutka." "The Toluiy and Rirhonlwin familiee lived in thi« neighborhood and owned adjoining farm* or nuicbm. and were op term* of the mart urfibborly character. When their children grew'up the young pe*qile of.' the two familie* were dependent uj.tn each other for *ociety. They varied the dull routine of rural life with dam-e* mid picnic* and »uch innocent *i*irt* at *ugge*t«*l themeclye* to their rurtie fancy, and though the boy* and girl* lacked the ai eompluhmenU which adorn the young ]ieq]ile of -the preaent generntii«i. they had their full ahare—:he girl* of beauty and the boy* of that da*h which makes even rurtira

acceptable in f<-male society.

Julia Riehnnlsou. now in her 18th year, wa* a. sparkling brunette, and could round npa herd of cattle with any of the boy*. Jim Tolnir wa* a dartiing cowry of S3, .who could jump hi* horse over four rail fence and jack np a silver. ullar off the gru** while hi* steed waa going at thu rale of fifteen mile* an hour. | Tbe two. Jame* and Julia, had been ' equestrian rival* Miu-e childhood, Julia | inaisting that she wa* the better '

! man, »o to say. of tbe twt i Thu* the children gre

age when their, manner la each other changed, wlien Julia no longer talked

Irrborae- ko‘U

a certain

to daring deeds of borwmanship, and wlwn Jame* felt shorn of all hi* dash and bravery and was awkward, absent and timid in the |irr*euev of J alia. Together and alone they were silent and uncomfortable. It wa* only in company that Jam™ iwcmni to rally, and when Julia, thinking nobody wax watching, would lift her dark eye* from under their sweeping lashes and look with glowing admiration on her old playmate.

But there i* no use to dwell on the ar- l"* »'d >" :»"■ domestic tragedy, dent though flickering uun-n* of love. ! Bu ' u ' ,w » V«rd of poor Jnlia. Pa»It i* snm.-i.nt to say that James and ! in l"vfcsjir wa* toconsoUble in Julia loved. Love is a iwssicm which. : ^' f. and af^x the slaughter of the however mach and long It smolders, | Vmthershe had loved and of the lover find* expreadon at U*t. and the longer ! ,l11 * * til, “Jored died broken hearted, it amolden the- more abrupt and jdainer the grave of Belte.

•Well. no. Tom," answered James just a* quietly. "I forgot the Shooter thil

morning."

"Then I've got the dead wood on yon.’ "So you hare. Tom." ; "Do yob take water. Jim?" "Oh. yea, Tom. I take water." "By-by, Jim.” "So long, Tom," and (hey parted.. A month later Jame* Tulmy waa again up early in the morning and strolled off in the direction of the Richardsons', but this time didn't forget hi* "shooter." Tom Richardson wax milking hia last

Tom looked np. "Y’e*.” bo replied calmly. "I am very slow thia morning." "Are yon 'heeled.' Tom’" aoftly asked

the other.

"Well, no. You *ee the milkiug"—"Then fve got the dead wood on you." "To lie sure. Jim," he answered lazily. "Do you take water. Tom?" “Oh. yes. Jim; I take water some-

time*. like yourself." ••Good morning, Toih."

"So long, Jim." And the relentless goce more separated. The-feud had rowed down to the two. A third time they both met. now on the l«nks of the Miai. an there was water for both. Thi* they were both heeled; each had his loaded rifle. With heart* of lion*. Irat stealthily as tigers, they approached "I* there any water about?" asked

Tulmy, in a hitter irony.

“Not a drop. Jim." wa* the caiy re]Jy. ami they advanced a little doacr. Quick a* lightning Richardson raised hi* rifle and fired Tulmy dropped, but ers death sealed hi* eye* forever he raised hi* Weapon and lodged it* contents in hix enemy'* heart- Both were found dead next day within fifteen yards of other. Thi* was the end of tbe

will be the avowal. The avowal came. James was accepted and the young couj-lt- were happy. Their parents con•ented. but thought it better to defer tbe upiuu for a year. When they were told of thi* determination. James said: "Do yon kpow 1 think my sister Belle and your brother Tom will get ahead of u* if we don't hurry np*" "TamP she exclaimed; ".why, the' gawk is ashamed to

look at a girl!"

"Never you mind. I see them often together.” Thu* the lovers confided in each other, and the young and old of both families were happy in expectancy. But though a year would not he long in pasring. a* Julia aaid, still a-year often bring* -many changes, especially in affair* of tbe heart. Twenty miles away lived the Caatletuu family, where Jame* in homing for stray stock had often called. Mabel Coatleton wa* a beautiful girl, well l*>m. accomplished and affable—a different type of beauty from J alia Richardson. She was fair and tall. Tbe mustangs had been straying away Very much of late in that direction from the Tolmy ranch. Of course James would go in pursuit of them and call to inquire about the fair Mallei. . In those frequent visit* be and Mabel became attached to each other, when, fiithleas to hia engagement and forgetful of the pretty Jul», be induced her to elope with him. and the first known of the affair waa that the}' were married. Julia Richardson'* feeling* may be better imagined than described. She was slighted., she wa* betrayed and jealous rage fired her. The whole Richardfamily* felt outraged, and the Tol-

tbe intended of her brother. And three are tbe two little gravis which are the indices of tbe story.—Cecil Hasting*

Omaha World-Herald.

4*i* painfully shocked.

knowing that such would be the result, kept discreetly out of the way for weeks, when, snpinring both families to have cooled down, he visited hia parraU. When Tom Richardson beard of hia arrival be rode over quietly toward the Tolmy reridenoe with a rifle at hi* sad dl«-honi. As he approached he observed

Tolmy retreated inside, but toon reappeared. also with a rifle. Seeing this, Richardson raised hi* rifle. The act wa* repeated by Tolmy. Both fired sunul- ! taheondy and Belle dropped dead, j pierced with the bullet intended for her . brother. Frantic and aipalled at having killed his fiancee. Richardson gal-

| loped away, filled with 1 despair The Tolmy* —

Activity la Rondo* atrvvts. The thing that most astonished me about London, and that 1 bad been least prepared to sic there, wa* the ami activity in the street*, A New Yorker born and bred, who ha* seen the principal American cities, fancies that there can be nothing in the world like Fulton street and Broadway. But after one hour on foot in London be will regard that heart of New York'* traffic mochas a turbulent old sailor I heard of regarded a SC-calitier revolver. "What are you going to do with that, pea shootel'P he asked. "Nobody Would be afraid of that. Stand off a bit and fire at me a few times till I sue what it Will do. Now, if you happened to have a knife about you and felt sassy I d feel afraid of you."—Julian Ralph in Harper

All Italian who keeps a fruit stand > the oorncr'of Court and Bchermerhoru street* lircamr engaged in a wrangls with a small boy who tried to get three ajiple* for five cents. A policeman off duty rtepped up to the stand, saying, "What is the matter, ItalyT Tbe boy fled while the Italian was explaining the cause-of the difficulty. Tbe poBoeman helped himself to two juicy pear* -froqj a lot labelled five Cent* each, and munched one of them, patting the other in hi* pocket. He sagely told the Italian to be careful in his dealing* with boys, and It wa* a question whether ths fruit vender wa* as angry at the decamptr boy as at the policeman whose coat t wa* weighed down by tbs pear be h deposited there.—Brooklyn Eagle.

Tto makTth^

tons, though Mabel'* marriage wv pans to oomxnhend i of tpetr contriving, took rides with their —Youtt'* Oopj

A theological atndent who panted. by his profemor place where the former prevailed on the profissr opening prayer. Arising t announcement, be amazed

gallon by laying: "Profeaaer Smith will now lead us in a petition of the faculty of the H seminary to the throne of grace of which I have the honor to be a atod cut. After accompanying your humble aervant will attempt to preach the word whose shoes he is not

and worthy to unloose."

ring 1 - Whether the a trance got his ants in reference to his prrf iserr and

is order of aervioe aaffidautly ■

the situation i*

LOST LOVE.

A rhlladslphla Hsra. A man came to the conclusion that it waa an act of moral cowardice to tip a waiter in a restaurant. The- cowardice lay. he argued, in being afraid of the waiter's scorn at the apparent parsimony. Ho determined to he morally brave thereafter. The opportunity came. He finished hi* dessert and the waiter, in the customary manner of solicitude assumed by waiter* when tbe customer looks good for an ample tip, placed hi* coffee before him. He weakened a trifle, .but iusolred to brace himself. He drank hi* coffee somewhat more deliberately that, usual, hoping to attain a state of mental composure, but a* tbe time approached -for disappointing the attentive negro, who already taw in hia mind's eye a big round shining coin, the brave man grew leas equal to tbe deed he had reoolved U He hand payment of his bill and dallied with the finger bowl while the waiter went to get the change. The change came back on the silver plate, two quarter pieces lying. a* usual, a bit aloof from the net of the efiange. The man's eye sought that of the waiter aa he tremblingly reached for the change, and he beheld on the negro's face an expression of expectancy almost realised. With a difficult simulation of calmness he succeeded in grasping all the change, including the two quarter pieces. Daring not to look at the waiter* countenance, he hastened from iN* room looktog as if he li*A committed a crime. “I frit to, too," he aaid, as he related tbe incident afterward, "and I won’t subject myself to that feeling again for any consideration. ‘ I could feel that waiter's glance of aontompt upon my back." A woman finds it quite easy to be morally brave under sach dreams tancea. Why is it ao?—Philadelphia Press

No one has ever been able to give an authentic account of how such enormous quantities of beeswax came to be deposited on the beach near Nehalem. Specimen* are found along the beach in varioo* places, but it is- most plentiful near the month of Nehalem. As the sea shifts the hare I seers -of it are washed ashore, and large quantities are found by plowing in mwoe of the low land near the beach. There are spots where ths sea has never reached in the memory of the oldest settlure. and which are covered with a good nisrd growth of spruce, whcir deposits of the wax maybe found by digging. Specimens of the wax may be found at the bouse of any settler on the beach, and to all appearances it is genuine beeswax. Several too* have been unearthed, and one man shipped a large amount to San Francuco once, for which ha received $300. In qnality it is as gpod aa any in tbe market, and has retained its fsmllisr odor through all (La rough usage and age. Ill* supposed by eome and so stated that it came from the wreck of a Spanish vessel over a century ago. Other* my it came from a wrecked Chinese junk. These traditions in regard to the wrecks corns from the Indians and are not reliable. It is possible this beeswax is really "lost treasure' which people are digging fur on the Nehalem —Tillamook (Ore.') Headlight

It is mure or We* true that the naked hand may be pinnged with impunity into molten uu-lal. M. Bouligny. who made a special study of what he called the "sphiauiilal" state of bodies, proved on his own person that it is possible to plunge the e*th1 into molten metal and yet sustain no injury. Ths theory is this: The hand of the operator having been carefully moisten ad with a very virile liquid, such as alcohol or ether, i* to be plunged rapidly into the mol tea metal; for some esses the natural humidity of the ririn may do as well. The moteture te thrown by iu sudden contact with the metal into the spheroidal

To make a secure fastening for the large double doors of the barn bolt a narrow bar of iron to one of the doors at its middle point Notch the ends of the harm, uoe on the lower qnd one on the upper ride, to fit over Iron hooka i>i«i nre bolted to *h* door, q*— bending upward, the other downward. The bar moves in the arc at a circle when tbe doors are fastened or unfastened. This makes a secure fastening for large door* which are liable to be blown open if held only by a small book on the inride at the same —New York Independent.

Chief of Office-Where's Binka? Clerk—At home, resting. Chief—Booh! He's bean away c vacation for two weeks. Clerk—That's why he baa to rn Pittsburg Bulletin.