VOL 19. NO. ®.
CAPE MAY CITY. THUi&DAY MORNING. AUGUST -28. 1890.
PRICE 3 CENTS.
<'0.\KKCTIO}VEBT, BTC.
rp MOKT BMITII, . NAHCFACTVKISG CONFECTIONER,
No. S N
CATE MAT.
F vietrj, • rv-V' >» Cholrr FrulU Aid (onlrftUAfrj, lUliAO M.cAnini, Vermicrlll And Por« OH»e Oil. *0 Waihrgton Strrel. Cap* May. N. J. Wliilmiu'a eoDfcctioD* a BpacUlt)'.
H ISCKM.A K KOCH.
H."
E'
OBEKT FISHER,
REAL ESTATE BROKER,
G‘
•UIXUTOI STkCKT.
ilnadquArter. for Sutlooerj, Blank Hooka, Toilet Paper. PiaUlnv Tackle-, Toluca, M.nature Boata, Seaalde Noeel-
K s
IWAHbIMi II(IBBEH A HPKCIALTT. ~Ar'extent<e aaaaetiBnal dCarrlacaa.on (ml Horae, and earelui Urnrra. can be ul lalard al all boura lue I rlrale I'aiUea, Kara
HOTELS AND COTTAGES
■JJNITK!
ED STATES HOTEL.
COBABA LaraTATTC aad Jacaao* b
New It mwraxed aad reAtled.
Tbb borne baa eaCencou. a tborou*: no nrt eeaual mad near the h
JTBEXTO\ VILLA. Open for the Season.
MBS. J. A. NTEB8.
-J^J-ILLER COTTAGE, No. 4 Pkruy Strxct.
ralj Painted and Iteooeated. Colalne Aral claaa. Tenna Keaaoeabla. Maa. M W HUFFMAN. ^HE BRUNSWICK, Bcanca Htbact abovc Ocsa* Hr CAFE MAY.
JAMES B. 8T1TEB.
piER t
AVENUE INN. ilia ala tab Tkab. Caxni.L Locatioa. }\rr Amul, near Watkii.gUn Street, within two i HfeN Mat N
pHE ALDINE, HaCATCA Btuxt, Naab Baaca Araat a. CAFE MAT. K. J.
THE WEST END, Hear the Beach Firat-elaaa Inalllta appoint menu. Will remain open until October la!. Reduced rate, after September l.t. MRS. A. E. DOYLE.
ATTOBYEYK.
TT F. DOUGLASS, * Cape Mar CHy, X.J. ATTORNET-AT-LA W, SOLICITOR, MASTER AND EXA MINER IN CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF NEW JERSEY.
JAMES M. X. HILDRETH, COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW
CAnMaTCiTT.N.J.
TTERBERT W. EDMUNDS. COUNSELLOR AT LAW. BOUCITOX AKD MAST EE IN CHAXCEXY.
OB IS COM** Milk and Cream Depot, 48 JACKSON STREET.
Fare Balem County MUk an
SPICER LEAMING. ATTORNEY-AT-LAW BUUCITOB AMD MA8TKB IS CHAKCKMY, 47 WAABIKtaTOB STKIXT, Cafb Mar Cm. N. J.
C. B. OKI SCUM, i
H’
E1SS' GALLERY',
J. W. EACA N, MAYKIOY HOUSE BAK» No. 7 Massio* St., Cafb Mat. All ttofe at FiVDeh and Vienna Bread aad
Wax And Pa per Flower MaIm-IaI.
DENIZOT. # DOanenlHmne
Hnue FuruWilnr Cooda. Tab la kcl CuOrr),. Hajdro», aaa. i laid to Fitting Keya. Bapatr-
UnionTransferCo. BAGGAGE EXPRESS —AMD— (UotnlRiilrotC. Tkksti|uU. O^-VZOZ:
Car. Waa
^JORGAN HAND, attokszy Aid) Colbsalixia-at-Law. Solicitor. Matter and Examlbcr la
aod Notary Public. Cafb Mat Cockt Houax, N. J. (Opposite Public Bulldlngi I
PHYSICIANS.
H
A. KENNEDY, M. D.,
KXSIDEbT PHYBICLAK.
UNITED STATES PHARMACY, B. Cor. Washington A Decatur 8U,
CAFB MAT. H.J.
iiflct Havre. From 7 to k A. M. IS to 2. and
: to»F.M
AW Might BeO.
K 1
. PHILLIPS, M. D.,
KESIDENT
HOMEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN, Cor. Ocean and Hugbea Street*, CAFB MAY CITY. OfU* Heart: ItcSAJI, llot P-M,5U)7rJt.
TAKES MECRAY, M. D. XEBIDEMT PHYSIC LAN.
OFFICE.—PgaaT By, CAFE MAY CITY. ,£ff, 11 AT Miu at. At raaidcaoe. Mo. t North St.
■y M. D. MARCY, M. D., ’ * BES1DEMT PHYSICIAN SIMCEIMA
et and Columbia Ate
CAPE MAY. M. J. OBtee Mean Prom »to ♦ A M (S to 1P. M.
J-^R. WALTER 8. LEAMING, DKMTlST, Obpicb—Cob. Hcobbs abd Ocbab Bn. Cape Mat Cm, N. J. In Avtebdaxcx Daily.
UOTLLN AND COTTAGES.
STOCKTON IIOTKL, CAPE MAY, N. J. im May in uj'.I 1 rntplember. linporutit conaktcratioDt fur health. C.itoCapo May latter part "( Aukus - , an t Sypumlnjr; linca - . bathing ami aafeal beaol) know n. Pure apring water m general uae, natural drainage into the creek in rear of lilaud. Niieclal rate ..1 j3 per day alter Augutl 23d to September ISih. Gre*teat bealth-giviDC r..-..rt on tlie Atlantic Cutd. The Summer Capital of Uio Nation. Application for |. ■ no, if mad,- before the Suth inat.. will reault lo unaurpaaa nmodatloua. I TUKO. WALTON, Proprietor.
< 0.\<al£K8.S IIA 1*1*. CAFE BAY' CITY. K. J. OPEN JUNE SMb, IsflO Remodeled end Improved. ^ J. F. CAKK. Pro^rielor.
Directly ou the Beach.
Table Service First-Class.
, TURKISH TALE.
BABY OWNED THE CAR.
''Jeawe Jamen, tile Minonri bandit, pomnwed many manly qaalitiea," feelingly exclaimed Uncle Dick Henderson at tlfb Bmnawick hotel. Well. He tea. turned i after the Pinkerton* threw that bomb through flu- wituliftrof the Samnrla Aaidence Hinl blew off the arm of Jeaae'a mother. Ever after th botli Frank and Jeeae declared w» the knife on the Pinkerj.m men. killing of J*-»m- James hv Bob Ford
the ,
grateful fiend. B •' gave him ahelter a him well. One «h dnatiug off a pictu
''■« eating regael and treated
you know tliat bn
rot hi* death wound. ur.-..f W. dear old. r, whom he loved
r L _ plor ^ 4,< ‘ h * There waa a baby in the railway car the other day. It waa not an nnnaoal child, but it had a decidedly bright face and pretty waya. For the first few mihw ■he wms very quiet, and her blue eyea looked around in wonderment, for evidently It waa the little one'* fit*! ride on ’a- ran, Then a* she became ured to the ronr and rumble the baby proclivities asserted themselriw. and she began to |iUr with herfatheranmstache. Atfir»llie-father and mother were the only parties interested. hut soon a young lady itrwn adjauudged her Mcort and directed hla attention to the laughing child. He l,*iked up. remarked that it waa a pretty baby and tried to look unconcerned. but it was noticed that his eye* wsndiuvd lack to the s|iot occupied I the hsppy family, and he rommenoed
nile.
The baby pulled the hair of an old lady in front, who turned around savagely and glared at the father with a Hook that plainly Raid. -'Nuisances should he But she ranght right of the laughing eye* of the baby, and when she turned back she teemed pieaard about something. Several other* had become interthe ehlld by thi* tim,- -boaranw d young clerk*, old ladies and girl*—and when the baby hand* grasped tlie large idlk hat of her father and placed it on her own head it the way. unable tomlraiu him*.-If. bund loud guffaw, and then * sheepishly out of the window, ashamed 1»- caught doing such manly thing. Before another five minute i playing peek-a-boo across the aisle with thejwby. and everyone was envying him. The ubiquitous young man. the x
Trains- ' v O'^ * George E. Klingler, Proprietor,
Opposite Congress Hall,
I Squares from station.
CAPE MAY. X. J.
4. B. WILSON, Prop’r.
I heard a story of William H. Seward the other day which I think it a new one.
not certain, but I am impressed a conviction that it cornea from
Miss Olive Rislry Seward, an adopted daughter of the late Secretary Seward, whose Bohemian literary salon t« on can have the entree at the national capital. It was at the time when there was great agitation of the remoral of the capital. and al! Washington was alarmed. One of the scared ones said to Secretary Seward, "Mr. Seward, do you think the capital will be removed from WaahingtonT" "Ye*. I think %\vill," was the reply. "But where—to Cldcago!" ••No.” ••What? Not to St. Louis? Well, where then?" "To the City of Mexico. That will probably be tlie center of population of the United States one of thee*
days.''—Pittsburg Dispatch.
THE wixuboii. CAPE MAY', N. J. IffO.* Caps cii> rco. Local ion unaurrsiHtl. One block from a:«,t Hi um t.-:! - turf. Strictly Fint-clasa In all it* appo 1 -* WALTER W. UREF.X, of Philadelphia. rmprleti
THE ORIOLE, Foot of Perry Street, CAP£ HAY, N.'J. C. F. WILLIAMS, ■* PROPRIETOR
dearly.
"In one robbery at Bine Cut, when tb* James gang w Jeraa- led the way and relieved the passengers of their valuable*. He came to one woman in black, who waa sobbing Utterly. Jesse stopped and inquired the cause of li*-r sorrow. As slit- handed him fl' 1 in jJreenWk* she cried mlsiveJy: •It's all I have in the world. My husband's corpse is in the baggage car.' Tear* came to the eye of the train robber. Going into hi* pocket he retunied the f*0 and addcl two crisp $100 Ulls to it. which he forced the widow to accept. He never would rob a cripple, or an old gray haired woman, either. He once took an overcoat off his o' in the streets of Liberty, Mo., a gave it to a ]ioor, shivering old man tl had been turned out into the cold by ungrateful son-in-law. I could naj many other instance*."—Denver Rept
l BILL’S GRAVE.
re ha*’’ been at
ESS
■unt for the frowi ls)dy. He hail failed to notice the baby. The brakeman looked in from his poat on the platform and smiled. The paper boy found no enstom till be had ajs-km to the baby and jingled hi* i- s-ki-t of change for her edification. Tlie conductor caught tin- fever and chnrki.I the little one under the chin, while the old gentleman acreas the aisle forgot to |wunp Ms ticket, so interested was ho playibg poek-»boo. The old lady in front re lax. *1. and diving into her reticule unearthed a brilliant red pipjiiu and presented it bashfully to the little one. who, in response, put her chubby arms around the-donor’s neck and pressed her rosy little month to the old lady’* cheek. It brought back a flood of remembrances to tliat withered heart, and a handkerchief was aeen to brusii first this way and then that, as if to catch a fall-
ing tear.
The train s|.d on and polled into tbs station where the baby, with her parents, were to leave the car. A look of regret came over every face. The old gentleman asked if he couldn't kiss it Just once; the old lady returned the eanea she had received and the baby moved toward the door, shaking a by-by over ^ the shoulder of her papa, to which everyone responded, including the newsboy, who emphasised his farewell with a wave
of his hat.
The passengers rushed to the idd* where the baby got off and watched till abe turned out of sight at the other end of the station, shaking by-liye* all tha time. Then they lapsed They missed that baby and not one of them would lie unwilling to acknowledge The little one's prescuc.- had let a rift of sunshine into every heart, warm or cold, in lhatcar.—Orphans' Friend.
Middle*?*)rough, England, is well known a* the great center of the iron trade— a city of GU.000 inhabitants, with ISO blast furnaces, and an annual output of nearly 2.000,000 tons of pig-iron. But there has recently bc-n founded an English Middlesborough in America, which bids fair, if its present rate of development continue*, to represent in time as modi wealth in gold and iron aa the older dty of which it is the namesake. Two year* ago it had no existence save in the minds of its founders; today it-is a city of several thousand inhabitants. aspiring to become the i-rindpa] seat of the iron and steel manufacture of the United States. —Harper's.
So called remedies for isles are without number. The complaint often lasts for years without affecting the general health, and on the other hand constant irritation and bleeding may at once affect the entire system. Keep the bowels regular, relying upon fruit and grain diet. Avoid tobacco, condiments, liquor, etc. For bleeding a wash or injection of tannin is recommendixl —one ounce to half a pint of water. Any good antiseptic ointment may be tried, to be applied with a snpptsttory syringe. Inflammation is remedied by frequent bathing in cold water, rest and ] * fooi—Herald of Health.
Publisher—I* this novel of yonr* quits complete? Pretty Authoress—All but the name. In fact I don't know what to do for a title. Publisher (with an admiring glance)— Do what other pretty women hate <f Marry one —Pittsburg Bulletin.
Richfello—What a perfect complexion
Mias Beauty has!
Rival Belle—Y’es. By the way, she 1* with her brother tonight. Do yon know him? He's a very prominent importer of drag*, chemicals and toilet — • • —New York Weakly. Elderly Coquette—I have given many
a man the sack. Gus Do Smith—I
have had enough time.-
There har lieen another red letter day In the history of Deedwood. That was the day on which Wild BUI was killed by McCanll. Though a popular man. Bill was a dead shot, and McCanll could not have killed him if he had not apiruerhed him treecheroualy. McCsuil waa immediately locked np, but the excitement I*-
at a mob assembled for
, . trying, convicting and lynching him While the proceedings were in progress the clatter of hoofs was heard and a man uu horseback appeared riding at full sjssd with his reins in his U«th and with a rifle in one hand and an Indian's drip|iing head in the other. He had shut aifd killed the Indian jnat outside ,,f Dead wood, and the event was considered of *> mnch Importance that
-the crowd forgot ita lynching aad pro-
ceeded to gratify ita thirst for vengeance by conU-midatingthe gory trophy which rolled at it* fret. McCaull was afterward taken to Yankton, where he was hanged by the neck in a lawful manner. W ild Bill was buried in the old cemetery with a rude white hoard at his bowl, but five yean later Home of Ids friends exhumed the body and gave it burial in the new cemetery ou Moriah. It was reported al that that Wild Bill's body had turned to stone, and a man t-ame here not long
afterward and offered the undertaker f IS.isw if he would help him etoal it for
inirjsiscs of exhibition. Since then there haw U-rn many inquiries about the case, hut no • -nr U-lirvta that the' body waa lietnfie.i. Bill's new grave on the mountain top shows that it is the resort of many curiosity seekers. A path is worn
acr w* lots to it from the main wagon
road, and the white headboard has tst-n whittled away by relic hunters until it
reaciiiblrs a leg toothpick.
One -man appears to have worked a knot out of the board, and the ground all about the well beaten grave is covered with cartridge shells. There are frontiersmen, it appears, who show their regard for Bill's memory By standing in hi* grave and emptying their revolvers into the air, throwing away their dgs shells as they reload. The other ic city marshal found it uecotaary i iu one of these follows, who had done little cbe fur a week except shoot his revolvers over Wild Bill's grave. The man appeared to hare a genuine regard for the dead man’* memory, and as ho submitted to arrest he expressed his *en*e of the outrage in most forcible
term*.—Cor. Chicago Herald.
The Ul* Desert Can Be IlerUlaoKl. M. J. Dybowski ridicules the popular notion tliat the Sahara consist* largely of shifting sands anAqontendi that this hot region might be cttbni('d and utiliad for agricultural imrposreNs^All that it needs is water; and the main ifrtfi of M. Dybowski'a cotmnunirati in is b
bow abundant this is al "
low the surface. In many parts palms, when once planted, can reach it frith their roots. In others very shallow artesian wells suffice, and the water flows continuously. He advocates a system of irrigation from artesian wells, and, as a proof of the abundance of water, mentions one such well that yields orcra thousand gallons per minute. When onro palms are established the whole aspect is changid by rich vegetation that
grows around them.
The Gaiter Ms... Think of six men chained to a bench, iked as when they were boro, one foot ou the stretcher, -the other on the bench in front, bolding an immensely heavy (15 feet long', bending forward to tbs
shoving np the oar's end to let tlie blad* catch tlie water, then throwing their bodies back on the groaning bench. A galley oar sometime* palls thus for ten, twelve or even twenty boars without a moment's rret. The IwaUwain or other, sailor in such a stress puts a piece of bread steeped in wine in the wretched rower'* month to stop faint the captain shouts tbe order to redouble the Lash. If a slavoCalls exhausted upon hit oar (which oftai chances' he i* flogged till he is taken for dead, and ,thi pitched nm-erem/nionslj- into the ss-a.-
Stanley '
In Glasgow. Scotland, recently Sneriff Lre-s decided a very unusual George Kliarp, builder, applied to liars a Jane Hmnah, a friend of his wife, interdicted from entering his hou-e in his absence. Jane defended the case, stating that she. had Mrs. Sharp'* permission to enter the hotasr. This waa not denied by Mr. Sharp, but he stood on his right* that Mrs. Sharp could not receive any visitor—not even a near relative—against his wishes. This contention, the sheriff says, is sound law. and has granted th* interdict asked.—Loodon Letter.
Grandma is pretty well on in years now, mud timo has left his marks in many wrinkles on her dear old face. Little Lucy was sitting in grandma's Up the other day, and after a long, inquiring gaze asked: '■GraB^ua.what mokesyo face all so mussed apT—Presbyterian
Train Robber (boarding parlor car, western express)—Quick, now, if yer knows wot'* best for yer. Git yer vslybie* ready. Mr. Hayseed—Land ■skeel Marier, here comes tbs porter.—Good Newt.
When an-
my library si —Samuel Ro
•s Old M
The shell of the crab and lobster owe* iU bluish gray color to the superposition of two pigment* nr coloring matters which have been isolated—a red pigmunt and a blue one. As long as these two pigment* exist simultaneously the crustaceans remain gray. But the blue pigment U very fugitiye, and some time* under the influence of a disease It is destroyed, and crab* are found with portions of their shell more or lees reddish.
boiling water the blue pigment is entirely destroyed, and the red pigment, which U very stable, appear* alone in all its brilliancy.—La Science en Famillc.
Cotton Stalk Bocxlng.
The manufacture of bagging from the cotton stalk, which was commenced not long ago, is rapidly on the increase. Expert cotton men declare the induct to be fully equal lo any other bogging material, being quite aa strung aa Jute, lea* inflammable and only a shade darker. ■The cotton stalks have heretofore been wtroubli-sonie incumbrance of the glean-.-d fhdtls. They had to be lieaten down and borhed or plowed in for the succeeding crop. They are now, however, worth $2 a ton to the manufacturer, and so constitute a very handsome source of revenue.—New York Commercial Adver-
The most celebrated fishing club in Canada is that on the Resttgouche on the south shore. It has a membership of forty, and the stock is now rained at about $8,000 a share. Admission to that club is exceedingly difficult. One of Its numbers is Frank Tbomsoci, of Philadelphia, one of the rice president* of tbs Pennsylvania railroad. Nearly all th* members of this wealthy dub are dtixens of the United States, although sums of the shares are owned in Hie Dominion and in Great Britain.—Philodeljhia Record. Thay Went. A little child was beseeching Ivt father to take herto visit hex grandmother, who Bred at a distance. To get rid of her he
see grandma. Florence, and $10 don't grow on every bosh." "Neither do grandevery bush," answered the
Th* Wind—You're a great rude thing. You’re nothing bat a tanner. The Bun—Blow softly, my friend. You're another. The Wind-True. And, come to think of it, ire possess literary tastes. We are both fond of Browning.—Pittsburg Bulletin- _

