L
a>
VOL XX. NO. 5.
CAPE MAY CITY. MONDAY MORNING. JULY 6. 1S91.
PRICE 3 CENTS.
('ONFECTIOXEBT, ETC. rp HOHT SMITH. iiiKur*(7miisc CONFECTIONER, ciMina H«ii.n at ffiu.AOA i kh kk - Ho 5 Watfiinf ton Slnttt. CATE KAY v K II&LLOWU.L & BON.
\m. 07 WMbloirton'Mreet.
; ylTTOBXKVM.
J HPICKR LEAMINQ, * * ATTORNEY-AT-LAW fOIJl.TTUK ANDMAMKRIN CTtA(iOARY
47 Waahihotok Struct, Capa Mat Cut. N. J.
HAND,
ATTMKRKT ADD COITKIU.IXUI-AT-LaW. Solicit or. M*»lrr »ml EiAmlnrr 1c C Tiatirrry. Supreme Court CtMiimiaalunar aimI Notary Public. Cape Mat Court IIoiwk, N. J. (Oppoaltc Pubbr Kulkllhta ) If E. nouuLAsa, (tape May Ctt r . N.J ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. . SOLICITOR. MASTER A1II» KXA MINER IN CHANCERY’ OK THE STATE OK NEW JERSEY’. J AMES K. HILDRETH, CtlLNSm^OK-AT-LAW >>oi.uiiroa.MA*rM(i K*»Ri>rT»r*r«Alu.T«T NOTAKTTTIBUC. OMoa aMTo 4 Oa— RCr d-
YOLUNb COTTAGE,
.<-hr>irr Km. Cbolce Uiiin>. fainlly Trade ,,C ' ’ P. COLJJNS. I'l opr trier. rpREHOST HOUSE. Cor Kkam.uk am> Wahiiroiok St*. te*// Haaoratad and Imprarod Tutua **aiu«»hji. Mrs. M. I. Ciiapi.ais. PHE ALDINE, ^DataTi u BrKxtT, Near Baacr Avaair, CASK MAT. K. J. Tbuo. Mcuxcr. PrMprtalor.
KAN VIEW HOTEL.
0'“"
tTf~Iuiu>idiAit ly »rp.»Ile lion Pbr
PiyM KM 50 mn.
Kina u lur* ami llqnnra Dcli|[lil fully
cool Summer Ganlrn. MARTIN J. HEIRN.
. jrpHE BRUNSWICK,
L»r*M. fool^l JAMl> H STITBt. tKXTON VILI.A.
Open for the Season. and Improted.Ike Beach. ■BSi. J. A. MYERS
X INCK1.I.A X BO IS. Craia Bfo.’s UUNDRY
STOCKTON IIOTEIa, CAPK MaVV, XtJ. aw i REMuHEI.F.l) AYR BEFl’KXLSBED. ILTSINE OK THE HIGHEST UKUKR. F. Til EO. WALTOX, I'roprl. lor.
M
HOTEL. L,1FA\ETTK, r. X'. J., Owed* aid P-upriclora. Tlm.ouably i
PHVNICIAMM. ytYIK-i MKi IU Y. M D
’ M. 0. MAUCY, M. D. t • RKKinrNT PHYSICIAN KIN' K l»P. OKPICK PhlUdeipbla Pbannar). Cor. Oceal
V.*
GAPS MAY, N. J OJRc. Noun—Yroin a lo9 A M ; 3U>4P »
Ka. 47 WaaklBElan StPreL **«w&rdi«sssfaw
—Munlcai Satarday. AMES J. HOAR.
v CARPEXTER ash builder. Eattamrra Painl-lrru Jobi.ii.e allwdrd to. At aiutNiT—IHVla tiTutnu* west'end Laundry
as. VP.'I.Y AT WKSf *XI« IIOIKI.'fc* A. R. GORDO N. CAPE MAY. N. J. General Expressman.
THE ENGLISH CLUB.
Tbe Kngtlal one of tl>rw cl hundred lame could lira fir
alBiredly Ultan Many id Urt «iti> thia Inti raaaoo of the aeocr of plct thought that from louklug tkoo la that nu room it aboul gratlun hrina
rocint. r, perl Three plnraal: uaual in Arne Conifortabli
L-lular, it la
di&rutpolia M a dapot, and b ahtpping of pi
chlcki
thruatillK llrrl fill «ay they I
jinl flue enough lo pren ut Ore
high, w ith Kit
¥~YR. WALTER 8. LEAMINO, DENTIST, Okpicc—.'-or. Hoauica amoOckah Sts.
tp« May yiT», N. J. >a»nt Oaivr.
M
MIN AVENUE
II. PHILLIIU.M. II..
HUII^I’ATIIir I’HTSIMAX, i or. umm and lluatno ntrret'. .'APR MAT CITY. lor Hour*: 1 tut. A.M . 1 InS P.M.. AlnT PJi
HOT A; US AXO tflTTAOKX. TJNIJftp STATK< IH )TEI.. Uouaca l.ir«rrrra aun Jacuhi* hraarri
>a undriKtuir a thonmgh "urraUna Trey central and a ear the bet Term.. »v re. and aug .erk^JS jer day.
|)IER AVENUE INN. ora* *u. tb« Year. Cum t\*r Atmtu, tuar NsaAta^fou SMdf,
Within twa anal
T
riYHE ACME,
8Ecu.su and Reach avf.ntk. C»r« Mat Cm. Bara HotAmi KkAa 16 Ct atiaor Hocaa
BEACH AYA.pSF.|«J^aRE BELOW H. B. Buonu delightfully cool auk airy. only ant) part (rum tar .art. MRS. C. E. MUNROE.
TnnroMiMG. SOCtH LAFAYETTE STKELY.
J DENIZUT. lieodTal Uoaae Furul>Mur4ioada. Tab!
JOHN AIKINS’ I0B CREAM PARLORS
JOHN AKINS IT WaahtuirMai IP . Cape Ma> City. TJaion Transfer Co. lUOGAGE EXPRESS —AKOGeueral .’.Railroad.’. TicketAgents. Vat. Waablagtaa aad Jarkara HU. Bagjggr^ealled lur and ebefked tnall pinnt.
JJoofo^ieaf Qarbcn Fairmount Park, PHILADELPHIA.
-HIM Brads Bird* and RrpUlra. —UUmllag aad lulrarllrr. kdmlaatnn, 3B era.; Children, II OPES EVERY DAY. Acram«de [ >yM«rre<(>. aad bequeat tnu aaluTUay»aa«lL»K«l 1 Hahday. J dly
laurpaednl. One b S'elrlljr flret^-la» In all In WALTER YV. GREEN, of Pbil.delpl.ii, Proprietor.
HOTEL. CHAEFOXTE.
E. Misson, 26 Washington Street, is showing this week a windovvful of China Ware of Awicrican Manwfartnre. An inspection solicitixl.
FOR SAIaE A few Choice Building Lots IHrectly oa the Beach—Two Mjua r» trurn the W J K R. Markon. CUy water. Gas Klectrtc Ugtta, wide .trrrt. penwrUy dral. ed. Lott6» —-’ c *“—■
very grateful aaateully gat hi clooer pmxlml Raukiu tried I poaitiiely ref 11 toulnhnl at wl rebellion In t
that plainly a mam. With little of the mi Ue rhtckefui w alickiug to tl lo a hole al»u face, and all 1 lawiled* tin- 1*1 hau-hed tliciri teru.nl air. Tb IbekiU-lien Hr
Reed, nrmrl) t a Dumber of c bad prraerved lu long JourtM Of courne it tiea with giaul great enjoy uw thing that war rraeutative Hi that when be year* ago. he 1 the .mailer at careful!)' pick IcstbeMepopc that Doth log » waahardloU the eeideoce ol Cor. Chicago I
into or throng Whca the it their done the grin at them proud of their by turna. The tame spirit tb Gage’s time an
•‘Nineteen yean ago today." aaid Ii •pectur Byrnce—"I shall never forfi that day's duty. I was ordered over 1 the Orangemen's headquarters from m precinct at daybreak—I was captain < the Twenty-first then—and took every one of my men along except old Sergt. Davenport and a doorman. We expected trouble, and I had a lot of hand grenades heaped by the second story T“diiwu in the old station house in Thirtyfifth street, told the sergeant to lock the doors and pelt any mob that would try to enter. Old Dave was as good an an army when it came to sticking. Hr just sat on that pile of hand grenades and waited. "He had a good long wait, i didn't Those who walked in that bloody procrasion from the Eighth avenue headquarters of the Orangemen to the old Haymarket in the Bowery will be apt to remember it to their dying day. I can bear the crowd yell now when tlie militiamen la-gan to shoot right and left. From the rear, from the housetops, it rained brickbats and hot lead. A hundred must have been killed before the end of that march of terror and death. -It was 3 o’clock the next morning before we got back to our station. I was as dark and still as the grave. A we hammered on the door and yelled window iu the second story was slowly and eautiomdy opened and old Dave said: “ 'Who is there!' "* 'Open the door.' yelled the tired men. ‘Open it or well burst it in.' "You will, ehr came from U|Htairs in shrill tide*, and in the window ap;.-un*d the old sergeant, fighting mad. with hand grenade in each fist and an armful in reserve, as a lajy carries suowl "Stand back thnv! or there will lie murder. Back. 1 say." We had come all the long and bloody way. fighting every inch of it. without a (bought of showing the white feather. Every mother's ana of us would have been killed twice over ratluT than tail. But we r.n< then. Before old Dave, with his armful of hand grenade*, the army that had saved a city from sacking scattered and fled. The sergeant was left to hold the fort alone until we coaxed him from shelter into roniimv h-nding that we were not the enemy. Then he came down and let ns in.—New York Telegram.
There is an asylum for urjihan girls in Lock-. Switxerland. which finds a ma Vet fur all the old postage stamjn sent I 1L Nearly everybody far and near m quainted with the fact sends to the as; Itmi his or her second hand stamps, and for toe information of those who are ignorant a eircnlar is issued calling for the contribution of etamie and also setting forth the use* to which they are applied. Rare stamps of' course g dealers or collectors, while tlu- com: tr sorts are apjiUcl to decorative purptaaw. being used to ornament acr shades, etc., and even, no says the c lar. to jniper rooma. The circular does not ray how the American green stamp of the past can be nard-fur decoration. Over a million of stamps were received by the institution from all over the world in Ib&L and a considerably larger munler in 1888. The stamja are assorted by the children and pot up in packages of M or 1U0 each. Tinwe collected in 1888 were sold for 1.200 franca, or $340. and those of 1W8 fur $360. This may not seem much to Americans, bat money goes farther in Svrttxerland here. Persona, therefore, who war put their old imtage stamps where they will do the must good should send them to M. J. Nougier. director- de I’Asile des Billudrs. Lode, 8witxerland.—Exchange.
Lawyer J. F. Haskell, of Lowell, has a 4-yenr-old sun who is os bright as h duxen silver dollars and who has ai daciuus sense of humor that may lie worth money to him when he gets into I Mill tics. One of his latest experiments is the talk of the family just now. "If I put this tiu soldier and horse that laiwl of milk 111 uuua’il lick mi you see if sin- don’t." be said recently to a visitor, and the visitor seeming ' credulous he dum|>ed the toys into 1 milk. Mnmtua as promptly "licked” him for doing it. "By gush.” he said delightedly, as he returned to the visitor frupi the scene of castigation, hi 1 amusement subordinating tbommse of pain, "she licked m but they didn’t find the rgun Globe.
Grist mills occupy a |irominrnt j lion iu modern farming. By their the labor of reducing food to a digestible condition is transferred from the animals to the steam engine, and the ner roua energy which would be used for the purpose can be directed to the organs which assimilate' tin- nourishment and transform it into flesh and bone. In the case of horses which are kept bury in the day it is almost imjitTative tMt a part of the merhank-al work of crashing or cutting their food should be done for them, or else they have not sufficient time left for rest. One has only to examine a siuuple of beans or maize to realise what an expenditure of power is needed to grind them up in an animal’, mouth.—New York Commercial Adver-
A curious falculatioo of the amount of food consumed in a lifetime of seventy yean has recently been made liy M. Boyer, a French savant, now chef of the things M. Boyer says that the- average epicure of three scon- and ten will have consumed 30 oxen, BOO sheep. 100 calves, 800 lambs. 50 pigs. *.200 fowls. 1.000 fish of diflerent kinds, 80.000 oysters, 6,475 pounds of vegetables. 243 j-ound. of batter. 34.000 egg* and 4 tuns of bread, be®des several hogsheads of wine, tea. ooffee, etc. This enormous amount of food will weigh but little short of 40 tuna.—SL Lo-du Republic.
0006 AND ENDS. It i-OKla the Americans about 41,(00,000a A petroleum motor tricycle baa herd Invented that will run forty miles on one gallon of oil. Everybody cannot grow neb. especraHy If be bad hi* growth before brooming wealthy. King Hambrrt of Italy ban often aaid. ‘I should wish to he a journal** ware 1 ik* a Liug." Mine- Pauline Lucca is auw 48 jean old, and ban .lackjgl to retire from the uurraUc stage. There la ward more OuplicUy la m George EiMt ivMiipoaad "Mb 1 of « and &
of the world. Senator CuckreU. of Mi-port, la raid h hr the only man who baa ever had i Ka an daeily U ceofluea«
"I w an *|ieiidiitg Sunday at Che borne of a young friend of mine, a law atudenL I not ica>1 Iu bis room a ebtld'a raving bank, and u|«g^ picking It up the merry jingie centlv anffered a ‘rut*.' Knowing »ha» the father of my friend waa a man of mean. 1 could not conceive what the young maw wanted Yo rave small colas for. so I aahod him. And bare la the answer hr gai t me: •Well, )ou are, father altuwa me CS a seek pocket money and glrra It to me every Bubday. Kir-iuenUy when Tuaeday moruiAg came I w— "broke." The rigidity of fa thrr'a rulew kept me id this undone stale fur tlie remain.ler of the week, for not an other rent eouM I get till the following Sunday. • -Three or four Moud.,^ luxury will, cmuilng wreka of penury cm used n • (vmiinuiM- wiib myself, the raault 1 urn- that levulvwl thi-webeme. five iloUarw a week amounts to a fraction over ES57 a da): when I leare heme In the tiuiruitig I plam 43.57 iu my pocket, •todrr no cirrumiOanrea taking any more. If I return home at night pedal leas, all rigbl. for 1 have enough money for the next day. and the next, and for every day till the following Sunday. Butif 1 don't upend all that 43.57 uiy iron rule it to place the balance lu the bank Some- days that bank geu 43 aud boom- da)a It doesn't get a cent ITn-n at the end of tha’ intTath . 1 opro i« eod bare cmah galore. Last year
Accident- in miiu-a w hereby many miner* bare lost their lives hare tat been inf re qoent withiu the last
mine In Oalai lire. 22. 1888. a lire-. The Her abaft of tha Lehigh and W
which lined the shaft in noe of Abe mine, belonging to the South Wilkewbarre Coal rantpany eauglit five, and abut off (be ■ eight men who were at that time in tbr mine, and were starved or suHucated or burned to death. Then followed the gas explosion in tbr .’anliookr mine April 3, 1880, by which four turn were killed aud five more neri ously iujureil. Then came the cave In of tlie Ashley miur, near Wilkabarre, May IS, Iu which thirty one mium were im priaoorel. twanty ninauf whom wen hurued I terrible of ra-
I. In Mnmumithallire, EiigUml. Feb. A MU. By an expkadon of gas SUu miner* iuiiuiaamed. and fur several bouts no
will be given by the tfWHirand. of typewriter* throughout the country and abroad lo a device which effectively aervea tbr purvwr of raring the loss at time aad Xiraare and the smearing of the Bngrr* ai injury to the alignment involved in a ordinary method of ekeaing the type ol the typewriting niaehlnr. Aa iuveoaioc rught out which claim* to do it ooudaU of a band brush applied at right angles to the type bar. When *- 1*1 are tbr rotating brush Is bald directly any key the type ia brought Into' enntari It is cleaned almost instantly, when It la ' another hey la atruck. and so
of the way, aad It ean be t readjusted in an instant, if this a the prevalent waul o
turn. This cave I* (n rp—lng the A Maminn.il cave of Kentucky In n . tuda. and will be a principal object of attraction to viaHor* of (he Black HUM— Dradwood (S. D.J Pioneer.

