Cape May Daily Star, 4 July 1892 IIIF issue link — Page 1

VOL. XXI. XO. 3.

CAPE MAY CITY. MONDAY MORNING. JULY 1. 1892.

ATTORNEYS. SPICER LEAMINO.

ATTORNEY-AT-LAW

SOUCTTOK AND MA8TE8 IS CHAMCUY

4? Waibwotos Snutxr, Cats Mat Citt, N. J.

ORGAN HAND, Col'kucixoh-at-Law.

Solicitor, Mx»u-r And Exa Ch.nocrj, Supreme Court Conn

Aud Noury Public.

Capx Mat Cockt Houak, N. J.

J. s

M

M1K( ELI.AM I S. T,IK ON LY TO COTTAGERS Japanese Store For Shoe- Rep.lrln B , .hor-; ^ IV CAFE MAY

nilffl.lv k VI n naffllv -11Kr.t... w.u.r

I’KICE 3 CENTS.

HOW TO MEET JESES.

In all the» tliltu:.tluuilnCliH*t.Altboush be Ms/id- 111!, moment offenuc without limit, and without mi-take. iuhI without exception, unireraal pardon to all who It. Now, i. m*t that cheap cnautth—

utfhly mrk toTHOS. II. TAYLOR, the i« Ur AhoeniAkrr, Drcatar Hrret. teco hop from Murcy A Mecrmy'* diug Ato

K MCKERBOCKEit j procunrd t-lscwhcn-.

livery stables yourself as to this fact,

IMPORTING DIRECT FROM JAPAN

I sun.nnxk or to Ken

I can therefore offer to customers Fresher and More • ter or Mnr»ii.»-H, j Desirable (Joods. at More Advantageous Frice^^liah can be ‘mo u*. Heart.

You are invited to examine and satisfy ' Loxnox. Juiya.—Dr

•V ’ “ rra-itc from all da

all thine for nothin);!

Thills the who' derktond U—that

that

H.

F. DOUGLASS, rtwr^jmiTt BUiEDixa.

* ATTORNET-AT-LAW,

SOLICITOR, MASTER AND EXAMINER IN CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF NEW JERSEY

JAMES M. E. HILDRETH COL'NSELLOR-AT LAW

the Gaejk-1 a.

htdlrve that Chriit

ivc you you nrv aaved. When! > marc doubt about it than that here. No more doubt alvout it y.Hi have a rittht hand. No more ■ut It than that there i» a God. 1 committed five bilhdrvd thoniktfrewlon* Chriit would forgive

uageetmUonea

all clnivo of the Enttliih

Pro]de the wnrmt vt of wrleomes and the .

heartiott (tieetimta. -The work of amvmj- I - v, ! u ,Ml . r *» . ins hii tour hailoenexcwlinKly difficult. 'l‘"u«h you had Ron So numerotu wert; theinvitationinwaitinu ^ ibrough the whole calalo);ueof crime-, him that to accept Home and decline other* 1 hlaiphcmy and murder-ChHkt equally pnvdng accmal inridhraa. Wh.r- ' l« rfou T 00 J"'' “» freely, you comever he haa cone the lancet church.-* in . *" rhonch you had committed the dtl« have been crowded to exnw *ud ou , l! ' h *-' !l, <-kt «n of the tongue. Why. could have been filled many timi-i over, i " " :j 1 hri-l r*>m*a to itardon a —nil hr •Among the M-rmon> he hoi proadiod th.- J " r nothing. Height li nothing one adected far publication thi- wn-k i- ! j’''l l, h i- nothing. Enormity is nothing. . from the text, Mattlu-w xxvii, "What J I’rotractedneis Is nothing. S shall Ido with Jesu-’’' | <’'«»’■las like tnountalto few their sir®. t» ;• Pilate was an unprincipled politician. | The leandaoverelgn grace expand.

I«d lympalhhik convictioni of right I

rish U

PHYNICIANK. J AMES MECRAY, M. D.

W 4|

t).35.n

EST JERSEY KAILKOAIi.

and dekire* to !«• honest. L- ferc Buhmrrg<d by a wi» IK I bud to pleaie the jv-op ' KUiihcvl prlloners were government, and Abe | | mode to free one of then;

land Jes

. K^c “P "

I give

P all o

1 other cxpeclath . I lay bold thee.

promlMsc I fly to thy arms.

; Uier

‘Parlor Car attached. I leave Cape May as t PHILADELPHIA:

STOC’KTOX HOT Eli, THE FINEST SEASIDE HOTEL IS THE MOULD.

y»- "•

MARCY. M. D.,

DPPII'E-T‘biLde||.hu lluirmary. Cur.U

1)“

M’-.LTEHS LKAMING,

DENTIST.

Okpicb—'on. Huouda akdockak sCapk Mav Citt. N. I. I« iTTsnoanm Dxii.t.

Iv" pl

HtLUPS. M. I*..

HRfUDKNT

HOMEOPATHIC FHYSIC1AS, Cor. Ueran and llucbei Hlrerti. CAPE MAV CITT. OUet Horn: T toV A.M. .1U.3 PJI.SIoT P-M JJR. ANNA M HAND. IIHBreot the late Ur. Keaned) ) Cor. WAniixuTux aku Du-atpr Sn., CAPE MAY CITY, N. J. Oppicb Hot hi: Until 10 a M. From 'J to 4 p. u. •• 7 to# “ Kaitnaacg—The Drvoe.Bo. LafayrUe St. IIOTKI/4 AXI» 4'OTTAGKS. JJNITED STATES HOTEL Comal Larirrrrx >xt> Jacxaoi SvKacn Newly rraovalrd and rrltlrd Till* home haa uadergooe a thorough repalr lB f;— thebe.,,,.

Chri«. the Saviour of tindemand of the people the renegade free, hut Jeaui 1- held. A.- the ha aged aud cruel eyed Darahhaa gnea among I‘i* aympathlaera. receiving th ' cotipatulationi, Pilate turns tolas other di-tingtii-bcd prisoner—mild, mn-k, inoffensive. loving, self hacrifldng—and ‘

so he

>. then, with Oh. it is no dried or wi that throbs with - the heart of ever;

and the delegate of cutting the bread woundid mid dying : up and aald, “Cut th

ther

ihcr prop*. i». ^ Kuiiud

army during th multitude of him • haves of bread,

r commissi - giving it i. Some on slices tbit

-If the question, "What dl I do. then, wltfi^Jous:

things yo

u-tl the delegate cut the -Ur.-, very thin and handed the bread around until I bey nil had some, hut not much. But. 'Is- God. there is no msst of economy iosjH-1. Ilrvsd for all. bread enough |varv. Why is-rish with hunger.’ Again. I advise you. a. one of the best thing, you can do with Christ, to take him

r two things -inherent ut-

mi lie does In the is. Now Christ Is

itioo*. Inherent attrnct-

m«« and tlsen

way of kindne— town,

111 Ugh these [

Iveneis—fairer than the childrci

rith him.

Tint coxTOinrocs wat.

| You can, in tDc lirst place, let him stand

wit bout n word of nsugnition; hut I do ,'1”^'," will allow that. He coim-s 'auIUng' .m ; m V

. long journey, you will certainly j 'V'fJ,' u a < hair on which he may sit. Hr i, . ' " ary. you would not let him stand ,, u b ” some reeJgniUon. If a lieggar j ‘ "A., hsir. you recognixe him and j J lrcaIn j |

faint in the sin the matter with yi humanity, and y

iym|athy. and your commin priety will not allow you to i yithnut rvcogultiim—the ihc Mils. You will ask. Wlial Weep’ where was he hurtf

nkincenie In the hn-ath of his lilt aveu of holy hrings, the l«-st. In a of mighty one*, the strongest. In •n of great hearts, the lendcrest and >«t lymiatlielie. Why. seulpture I r yet l.s-n aide to ehin-I his form,

to present the flush of hi. isle to strike his charms; and surjirise ut eternity will Islent when we rush into his with uplifted hands and - ‘ ‘ -l bounding with

-This I;

common

let him stand -undid one* of

woundid

I a del),Ilia PKOM PHI1.ADKI.PHIA

HOTEE E.i FAYETTE,

CvVl'K MAT. N’. .T..

.JOUN-TRACY & CO., - Owners and Proprietors. Dlieclly on the Beach. Complete In every department. Th,-roughly r

,1th outragro nt I know vet

uu will dowith Jesu Another thing you

Has he not don

tv loved at

h. If oil the noth whole earth woo

win is

with ti

l improved passenger elevator. Adtlio:

tdii:

tGtVK

S EA CREST INN. CAPE MAY. N. J BKACU AVr.,ONK lUJCAKK BKMtW K K. KfAllON. Ho-m» deUKbtlullj rool and airy only kilty tret tn*» the tort. MRS. C. E. MUNROK. yy yomixc. NO FT II LAFAYirm. NT. Fin larged and renovalrd K and #IO per week. MRS. i. FOSTER.

-tOLLINb COTTAGE,

a* Old Glbaon U'blskv and is her Brands. Choke Wines, ronuty Trade P. COLUKB, Proprietor. JHK ALDINE, Dtciri a BTaxxr. Kxaa Baira Aram-i, CAP* MAT. h* J. Thro. Mt-KLUta. PropiMtor.

JTRF.XTOX VILLA. Open for the Season.

Union Transfer Co. BAGGAGE EXPRESS —AND— BsusralRillroai.'. Tickit:. igsets. O.TWZCX-. C*r. WRRfclRgtM Bad Jack toe 8 . Baaaxe called to and cheeked toell l iron. .soieU and cottajes. and deline.

nflec-

autlKnit UIC 1 *> lnK add, royal Is-nti-rs to help them, Ivut Biis.ia g,g the chief advantage of that conih-seeu.iidi John Howard tumid ids lock n).«, tinrvfltietneiits and went around prison, to spy out their sorrows and relieve their wrongs. 1ml English criminals got the chief advantage of that ministry. 11

heart and tell him to stand adde. If an I The sacrifice f^T'^o 'L!d ^'"rt^tia loBcndve penmi.cmnte and persu-u in j for you nud me. The cruciflliou for j.

' ou havc to do something

with him thL morning. What will you do with J.-susf Will you slay him again by your sin? Will you spit upon him again? Will you erurify -him again? What w ill you do with him who has loved Jim with more than a brother's love, more than a father s love, yea, more than a mother's love, through all these years’ Uh, is it not enough to make the hard

of the sock break? J«*us: Jesus.What shall we do with thee?

I have to say that the question will after awhile change, and It will not be what shall w-c do with Christ, but what w ill 1 “rist do with us? King all the bells of eternity at the burning of a world. In - that day what do you think Cbwlst will do ' with hsf Why, Christ will say: "There is man whom 1 called There Is that 111 "bow soul I importuned. But aimld not any of my ways 1 gave innumerable opportunities of aalva-

Tlo-y rejected them ail. Depart. I knew you." Blessed be God. that

n- not come. Halt, ye destinies of ily, aisl give us one more chance.

One! Some

ravelrrs

ie wilder

yi-arengo found the skrlet.m d some of bis garments, and a

rusty kettle on which the man had writ " n or scratched with bln finger noil thew onl«: "<J God. 1 am dying of thirst. My -aiu Ik on fire. My tongue la hot. Go) rip me In the wildernesa." Oh, how augWtive <if the rondilion of those who die h. le wilderness of sin through thirst- We Ac hold of them lolay. Wa try to bring i_e ei.ll water of the rock to their lija. "e say. "Ho. every one that thlrstcth" Gisl. thy Father, aw aiu thee. Ministering

' ,1 watch the ways of the sou; bis moment o»-er this Immortal <• see what we will do with

ipirits

bend no

t back fro;

,- standing

. various way* _ you do not want

o you. and you have

‘ aial tr.

>d that If I

re ho|Mrl«-ssly in -

' Well, that i.

aud laid my debts and gave t

a receipt In full, and railed off the pack hounding creditors, if I were on a found, ing ship, and you came in a lifeboat ami

-J Off •• w*owk - out — 1 took me off. could I ever forget your kiml-G-n wenty IhJrty. forty years. He haa Uref Would I ever allow ui opportunity Stooil close by you three times a day. j to pass w ithout rendering you a servin' or breaking bread for yoor household, all attesting my gratitude ami ]ov,night watdilng l.y your pillow. He has ought we ’to feel towani C l«m in the nurrs-ry among y.mr children; pluniM into the depth of o.

he has been in the store amongyuurgoods. pluelosl u* out' he has been in the factory* amid the flying ^ Ought ,t n.a to w-t tlw very' wl>evls, ami mm-If yia, nir-1.1- 1- - . — ,

1 can bill him

til like his.

will w

1 iut

the

2®ofo§iea[Qarbcii Fairmount Park,

HOTEL CHALFONTE, How aid street at d Sewell areuue. Cape May. N. J. Open all the year, fit Electric Bella. Accommodations 6r*t claaa, H. W. SAWYER, Propiietor.

tune deaf a helpful cr on ship0 nothing.

1'IIIUDEM‘IIU.

—Wild BfRSta, Birds and Reptiles.— iRlrmtlRg and Inslnirlirr.— Admission, 2D cts.; Children, H

take him by the It.

him you do not want his Inter yon do nut want his breath 01 that you do not w"Bm his t behavior. You can bid him a

will not goiu that way, thi-nji , your foot, os you would at n dog, and cry.

"Begone!"

way. When mate could nut do that, you could not. Desperado.-* and outlaws might do an. hut I know that that!* hut thewaj you will treat him. that that is not what you will do with Jesus. There is another thing you eon do with him—you can look on him merely as an ontician to

cure blind eye*, or an aurist U ears, a friend, a goal friend. ' companion, a cheerful passe-m.-- , board; hut that will amount ’ | You can look upon him as n

abashed while he rouse* the storm, or blasts a fig tree, or braves a rock down the mountain side. That will not do you any good, no more save your soul than the admiration you have for John Milton or

William Shakespeare.

1 1 can think of only one more thing you can do with Jt-sius, and that Is to take him into your hearto. That is the brst thing you can do with him; that Is the only safe thing you can do with him. ami may the Itod omnipotent by bis spirit help me tc persuade you to do that. A minister ol Christ was -leaking to some children and aald, "I will point you to Chriiit.” A litth child rose lu the audience and came upand put her hand in the band of the |Mu4or and said: "Please, *ir, take me to Jnus n. 1 scant to go now." Oh. that it might now with such simplicity of ex|wrienee you and 1 join hands and seek after Christ and get an expression of his bene-

faction and his mercy! THE TtltsmEG WAT.

You may take Christ into your ooofl-

md tell !

rvnev; that | it. And our check; | man. J.-v ij. or if he " rC<,r

mi old thai

or? 111.

hsMUtst rings r

with a bravirr grief? Did blood ever t: in each globule tin- prire of a soul? wave of earthly malice dashed its bl foam against one foot, the wave of inf. mnlire' daslirii against hi* other foot. * 011 his thorn plem-d brow, aud all thel of darkness with gleaming Ion res 1

paged through bis holy soul. the ikTixiTC sarmrirg.

Oh, Me the dethronement of heal king! the conqueror fallen from the w

r! the

e of a God.' W,

T. J’

QUEEN d,CO., Oculists and Opticians, 1010 CHxmn-T »t.. Phil’

1 dry, I

technicality. I simply ask yc M^ut both feet. 01. the "Rock of hurl yourself into the deep art of his men y JJe romes and says, “I will save you." If you do not think he is m hypocrite and a liar when be says that, believe him and say: "Lord Jesus, I believe; here is my bean. Wash it. Save It. Do it now. Aye, it is dooe; for I obey thy promise and come. 1 can do no more. I— . _. a km; asked. I come. Pardon is mine. Heaven Why, my friends, you put more trust - everybody than you do in Christ, and in t rust in the bridge crosale stream, in the ladder up to the more trust In the stove that confines re; more trust In the cook that prryour food; more trust in the clerk write* your books, in the druggist

erthe louelli . .

exile and the horrors of his darknes*. Christ sacrificed on the funeral pyre of a world's transgression; the good for the 1.0.1, the great fur the mean; the Infinite for the finite, the God for the man. Ob. If there Ik in all this audience one person untouched by this story of the Saviour's love, show me where he Is, that I may mark the monster of ingratitude awl of crime. If you could see Christ as he Is you would rise from your seat and fling yourselvi* down at bis feet, crying, "My laud, my light, my love, my joy, my peace, my strength, my expectation, my hi-o en,

my all! Jesus! .lestu!”

Oh. «

re of hi* i

' Why. he

Doyt

them

Du you wi more of his blood? His arteries wi___ emptied dry. awl the Iron band «4 agony could pro**out nothing more. Would you put him to worse rxcrudallon? Then drive .•mother nail into lu* hand, and plunge another spear into his side, and twist aw*her thorn ludrhis crown, and lash him with another flouiCnf infernal torture. "No.” rays some one; •"slop! stop) he shall not he smitten again Enough the tears. Enough the blood. Enough the torture. Enough the agony.” "Enough." erics artii. "Enough,'- cries heaven. Aye, •Enough." erics hell. At last enough. Ob, h*»k at him. thy butchered Lord, unsbrouded awl ghastly os they flung him from the tree, his wounds gaping for a bandage. Are there no hands to close these eyes? Then let the sun go out and there he midnight. Howl, ye winds, and howl, ye seas, fur your Lcsd is dead! Oh. ' it more could he have dune fur you and me than he ha* done? Could he pay a bigger price? Could he drink a more Utter cup? Could be plunge Into a worse catastrophe? Awl can you not love him? Groan again. O blessed Jesus, that they may feel thy sacrifice: Groan again Put the four finger* and the thumb

Saturday. May 21. Mr. Alcander Hutchinson, manager aud proprietor of the great caoutchouc works at Dangler. Montargis, celebrated his coming of j- a family dlnoer, at which his Immediate relative* were the only guests fiung gentleman and astute and Host curious development*of the principle -f heredity that has ever coma under my -iss-rvatlim. HI* father, the elder AIauder Hutchinson, himself a native of .'ctmactlcut and the son of the original ouudrr of the great India rubber work* t lamglre. married a French lady, the daughter of the Count de Loyaute. children. Including hi* namesake oungest son. -all grew to maturity .ere educated in France. 11* died three years ago, and the younger Alcander Hutchinson succeeded him as , .irictor and manager of that portion of the estate that included the property at Langlec. He was chosen according to French law to follow the nationality of hi* ; hut though thus a citizen of th* 1 State* be has iweer vial led America s tills young Parisian, horn and bred rfished darling of an accomplished li mother (a lady of remarkable Intelligrnre and force of character,, haa developed by sheer power of heredity into a stur dj awl practical American. IIs was waited upon nut lung ago by a deputation of the citizens of Montargis, who offered him the nomination of deputy as soon as he reached the age of twenty-one if hi would embrace the French nationality. Hut the young man preferred to he an American citizen like his father and grandfather.—1'ari* Cor. Philadelphia Telegraph.

1 was talking to a pretty and discouraged little girl the other day who is singing in the chorus iu one of ous ccmic i-iH-ra com-

"though 1 try my brat. I'm nig aattoh-d with the chorus. It only means twelve dollar* a week in thi* city. I ran sing. I . —,d folks say I'm prrlt#. But I'\e

y, that sounds like

got no •pull.' • •Thill:" sail!

poHtic*."

"it'* just the same on the stage," *be replied. -You've gig to have Influence or Is- soinrlsidj ’* favorite. There are lota ol little part* that I know 1 could play. but. u. I'll never get the chance. In our

y the '

.cl|*l pai

flayed l.y the nim-s of t isl s natural enough, of coarse—and th* ext one to that by a young lady whom ic manager seems very' fowl of. "Then many of the chorus girb are pul in the front row heransc they have Influ. n rial friends, while some of the prettiest are pushed into the background because they Awl there were the mislaid discourage iH-nt and drajiair iu her pretty blue eye* » she turned away.-New York Recorder

An instance of a laboriously produced effect la-ing effaced by the simplest mean* that of a breach <4 promise case, te luirriater who held the brief foe in jnred lieauty was famous for studying effeet when he pleaded, and to that end ar ranged that his fair client should he so placed that her charms should be well under the observation of the Jury. He began a meat pathetic appeal by directing their attention to her beauty, and calling for justice upon the brad of him who could wound the lieazt and betray the confidence f one so fair, concluding with a peroration ? such pathos a* to melt the court to lean. The counsel fur the defendant then rose, awl after paying the lady the compliment of admitting that It wa* impossible not to assent to the encomiums lavished upon her face, he added that nevertheless be felt Umnd to ask the Jury not to forget that she wore a wooden leg. Then be sat down. The important fact, of which the fair plaintiff’s counsel was unaware, was pre*intly established, and the jury, feejlnj'

The following anecdote clearly illustrate* JC reasoning jKiwen of the monkey tribe: One w as kept tied to a stake in the suburb* of Havana, in a place where he wa* rojicatedly robbed of his food by crows One day he lay still on the ground, pretending to be dead. The crows were allowed to steal to their brart'a content until the artful aimlan was sure they were In reach. Instantly he grabbed one by the leg, and, despite lla loud calls for help, literally plucked every feather .from the fccklras bird and then flung it toward it* screaming companions.—St. Louis Re-

A Test for Sewer Gas la a Boom. A* a capital tret for sewer gas employ inglazcd paper saturated with a solution of one ounce of pore acetate of lead In half

not a pint of rain water. After partial drying

expose in the room. Sewer gas in any

do with such a Christ “ nount w111 darken or blacken the paper.

-New York Journal. . _