Cape May Daily Star, 8 July 1892 IIIF issue link — Page 1

VOL. XXL NO. (i.

CAPE MAY CITY. Fit I DAY MORNING. JULY S. 1S9-2.

PRICE 3 CENTS.

Fv

J.

ATTORN KYN. SPICER LEA MING. ATTORNEY-AT-LAW HOUCITOR AND MAtlTKK IN CHANCRBT 47 WiAHIXOTOlT Staixt, Cape Hat Citt, N. J. m|OBOAH HAND. AlTOKNET AND CoUNAEUAIK-AT-La W. Solicitor, MAlter mod EzAmloer is ChADoerj, Supreme Court CommuAlouer Aud NoUry Public. Cats Mat Count House. N. J. (Opposite Public BulldlDE* I

H.

F. DOUGLASS, rosT-orncE n cap* Max air. -*

ATTORN E Y-AT-L A W. SOLICITOR, MASTER AND EXAMINER IN CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF NEW JERSEY JAMES M. E. HILDRETH. COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW

I'HYNHTAVS. TAflfcs MECRAY. M. D.

# V." Mr

nr. At r »turner. No. « Ni I). MARCY.'M. D.,

MISCKM.AMXHN.

TO COTTAGERS For Niloc KopnlrinK, iborouohljr And nnllr Uoue. brine your «..rk to TIIOS. II. TAYLOR, the po|tuIaf nboeniAkcr, Decatur ►Irrrt. aeroud

Ocean Street. A SPECXALTV. of PArrtAErA^u^th

TAMES J. DOAK, ^ CARPENTER AM) BUILDER EAUmAlCA PurnlOirU. JobUDe Atlendn) I

EST JERSEY Ri

RAILROAD. KWT JUNE -4.

•Parlor Car AlUcbrU.

rrAlBOIII leA»rC»t>» M*T a< roltow* I

PHILADELPHIA:

.. AIXTIM MOD ATIlIN Atop

6.35^

'7.00 i

THE ONLY

Japanese Store

CAPE MAY'

SINGERS OF i ■ ■ Why Every P..r

I u. proplicj fo t. it I. evy to M-e of the time it wo 1A Hut if the mo

, . that time are Inrailinr

I can therefore offer to customers Fresher and More I * l ‘' 1 D^m* from Tb« Uniud St.te» Gi Desirable Goods, at More Advantageous Prices, than can be J ■fc^rTncr 1 'Tmi u procured elsewhere. You are invited to examine and satisfy : ■ 1 5i ,| »' w > " lf i«mr bad forgotten tb.

' Fame never knew tl

IMPORTING DIRECT FROM JAPAN.

itself literarj : r t familiar names of

r. If Keltoil

ODDS AND ENDS. a Busy Mu ood an ErrnoA. Germany bricklayer* average COO a year. ! buriSd'alr. wldTOtJya A^lira-'lnlheaa^ To make one pound of honey tb* here urt "- •mb many amall erranUa on hla

' must vLit from 90.000 to 300.(XU flower*. ; mind beside hi* regular bu.iuna aflalra.

Don’t try .wimmtng in eieek* where tb* I n ** 1 b * , ' lD, ° » dr T K»o.U atore the other day ater 1* two feet deep and the mud *t> feet ! . *T d 10 ^ '^"k- ’T waul a amall doop-

la cMimated that KU.OtO.OuO t

yourself as to this fact.

T. SANZO,

STOCKTON HOTEL, TllfL FlMST SEASIDE^ m)TEL IS THE^ HOKU). unWnit*uUUr*uiacvajn^diilelj perlcct. 'urcbealreI'UtJvii.urnlUKeutceitvaudau F. THEO. WAI.TON, Proprietor.

w them, i

every

J doe* r

liaprniaA. They

Niagara Falla e In Scotland, it b aald that tc empty cradle will inaure the cool cupanta for it.

Them

paw then

the hearer* of their day.

played, la It

log do not atop to applaud) If we recall tb* names moat prominent in our literature. whether they were destined for a longer or shorter date, we a hall see that they are undeniably Illustration* < BUrviva! of the Attest. Turning ov Dohle Volumes of Sledman add Mis* I: inaon. in which, as on a vast plal whole line of American literature i»i up for Inspection and review, and mi past like the ghostly midnight colon Napoleon’s grand army, we cannot

, percentage of c duced Is harder. | No English a

! and George III, < . Victoria baa reached. She 1 A New Englander who bet eat "over a hundred eggs won the wager by making a

of shad roe.

Stanley la reported «o have made I1S1.00C he from hi* American tour. One half of tbl*

h half from hh lectures.

* c A hotel keeper In Florida U aald I n offered a reward ot five dollar* for treatise on how to maka outdoor

:eept George II

attained the age Queen

bat he could n one hour" hearty meal

to the r

life a

of the I

Ofice HOers-Kroni • tot A. M-; Slofl’ M JQR. WALTER S. LEAMINO, DENTIST, Oanck—Cor. Hughes and Goran St*. Cate Mat Citt, N. J. In Attendance Dailt.

E"

PHILLIPS, M. D.,

RENIDKNT

UOMEOPATHIC PH TM Cl AX, for. Ocean and Hughes HU ret* CAPE MAY CITY. O0ce Hotira. TUiSA.M..1UI3P.M-StoiP

D"

ANNA M. HAND.

Cor. Washinoton and.Decatur S CAPE MAY CITY, N. J. Oppick Huuhp: Until 10 a. M. From J to 4 P. M. “ 7 to 8 “ Eaai oauca—The Devon. Ho. lafayrur I

ITOTEU4 A»l> OOTTAOES. JJNITED STATES HOTEL. Ouaxaa Larstrm *so JacaaoN ararrr* Newl^^rrakindrd and re*lted_

“fel.T’K'

*11 per we b vSey'E

S EA CREST INN. CAPE MAY, N. J.

BEACH AYE..ONE BOI’ABE BELOW K B.

STATION.

Kouins drltghtfally enolud alrjh ^ MRS. C. E. MUNROK. ^y^YOMIYU. NOITTH LAFAYETTE ST. Esalarfft'd •ad rrno>»lrd. S** uud 910 per weds. MRS. A. FOSTER.

QOLUNb COTTAGE, DRCATUB 8T. OPP. COLUMBIA AVECAPK MAY CITY. K J.

TcJeSiVfjSi." mmm - r. foi.uN*. pilE ALDINK, . Dacsrva Street, Nasa Base* atence, CAPE MAT. K4J-

J^RKXTON VILLA. Open for the Season. Near the 1

MRS. J. A. MYERS. J)IER AVENUE INN. OPR* *14. TEE TEAR. CRNTRaL Uk stioI

““lean^f it* WALE*.

Far 8*1* Cheap.

For sale, on very reasonable ten Tally-Ho Coach, la excellent eood with barnnaa complete. Coach built in 1, New Hampabire. Appiy

H. W. Sawtkr.

•s-t)0 LtStlM"” “ , ' B “ i^i&i'ssaSSSS’TrtS Iteoeetor Aepleseft ^t Kii.'--! .nil bm.'amera at 'rhllade'lpMs iu P. B* ^ j • * P. M -Espies, arrives at Philadel 4.40aderhaLol' M. 5.00 Couavct.'a'Snort llousr for Al>| w i id so <1 and Hulls Brs.li. al sea Isle lino lor Sea^M- i iiy. ucrao cny. A delphls S-I*P. M 10..U0 L^y^g&issnrsf •:ijO uHignsy* 1 I tft P. M.—Aeeomroodalion. slep) •I.t )U inlermediale stations. Arri Philadri^ihia 7SO P. M. Connects at

’5.00 RJW Holly bea w —* - *9.00

.^Ijnrj.iorH.len'.a -*s, (Yrnnrel. at Cm u W ildaoMl .Ml H»

‘ ilartaii'aiMl i

nvrs at PhlAdelphU II.U, P. M. PROM PHILADELPHIA.

Trains leave lor Cape May :-Ejrre*s weei Jays, ~jjoo *. h.. •i.Ri. M oo and •.Voo r. u K.lurda>.oal), •! .Ri P. M. Arcoam'datlon MISS) a. M- XfO p. v weekdays. 53 Halurd.s onlj. Huaday Kx|»vwa sUO. Ph.ladalphla JWllmtngton A Balti-

i. Inning far) 1 at 3 4a.4.41.M.:.4o r. . and liJUnlaht i:..ri e r.-soonal l.nniiedof kllman Pallor (Yu* aud Diaiak Car S 14 k. in. as ibe Bnwd Hire.ihulion al 5 Is p. n. ainrrl allh Llrallrdal Koulb Hireel hla or BaRimoie only. JUS. 4Jil. 5JH. and (inSunday*. 1ft, 740. Pill, and 11 1* a II. * 57, 7.4k p. a . and ULOJ olgbl. altimore only,{(Baud II.Ri p. at. O.DAYTON. J. K. WOOD,

raJEEe XL ^oofoglcaf Qarbcn Fairmount Park, PHILADELPHIA.

FOR THE SEASON 1892. Increased attraction* In the large coQrctlol of living Wild Beaut*, Bird* and Reptlle*.—iRtemtiaff and Instructor.—

Acceaslhlr by Btreet Car and frequent trai Satuidays and legal Holiday* (eierpl Ji tb). Adulia. to cents; children. 5 Cent*.

lest Jersey Cabinet, Cor. Grant and North Sts.. (OppeaU* Depot) CAPE MAT CITY. N. J. ITOTCF. eye examXJUkCi , NAT ion.

OUR EYE specialist Will bain CAPE MAY, MOSDAT A TUESDAY, JULY 1* AID, Place, 32 Washington St., 2d FI I row 4 Jt A- M . to & ~ -

queenXco., and Opticians, |0IO CnaargiT Bt., Pan

HOTEL LAFAYETTE, CAI’K MATT. N. .T.. .JOHN TRACY & CO., - Owners and Proprietors. Directly on the Beach. Complete In every dejiartment. Thoroughly r <1 and supplied with the latest improved passenger elevator. Address J Tract, Manage

HOTEL CHALFOYTE, Howard nnet and Sewell avenue. Cape May, N. J. Open all the year. Gas, Electric Re)la. Accommodations first-class. H. W. SAWYER, Proprietor.

Hoteli Oriole

L. PHIL. KOENIG,

Pindaric

are singers who do not sing. What aays Holmes, with eager sympathy and pity. In one of hi* moat familiar and most beauti-

ful iyrict:

broken lyre* that re*t

h glorlo

iraileat

niu.li In them!

ist the capacities c Iffer widely, som i a quart, and other > of the finger* wh voice* differ In vol i> Iliat fill the al

La blowing a ringing peal, the)

At Hantaholin. on the coast af Jutland. In Denmark, from the llgbthouae situated at that place, there Is flashed nightly electric light of 30.000,000 caudle power. Mrs. Malaprop eometltnea blu then on the head. It rained in torrents aa a... left church on Sunday morning without an umbrella. "How Irrigating this 1*1” the cried. Gold and allver leather for very costly evening shoes, that show a pattern upon the metallic surface in place of the grain of the leather like alKer eiik, moire, diapering. ate Figures put forth by the superintendent of the census show that three-fourtha of the people of the United Sutee Inhabit the district* wbe tween thirty

positive

sinking Into melancholy but faint vlliration: Mill othi are flutes and pipe*, whom- sweet oraht

note baa a dying falL

Some are heard a* the wind or aea heard; some Ukc the rustic of leaves; soi like the chirp of birds. Some are hen long and far away; others across the ileldi others bunlly ncraas the street. Fame la perhapa but the term of a longer or shorter fight with oblivion; hat it is the who ’’drinks delight of halt]* t peer*.’’ and bulde hts own In the fray, who filially commands the eye and the her ' —George William Curtis In Hariwr'a.

Ths Atmosphere and Mainspring*. 'Your mainspring U broke,” was t ■'**.“ J and ion of a Jeweler to a young ns oc entered and walked up to the ter, meanwhile probing for hi* watch, young man hadn’t aald sword, ao it

I ■" easy to Imagine that he was astonish'd at having Ibe cause of hi* being there thus

premiptly and positively foretold.

mug per-

When I am In training I get ilf paste, walk one mile, n

aps auo yard* at a stiff speed, to get my wind. Then 1 return and taki light shower hath, after w hich my m. rulis me down with flesh glovsw, rubbing

In all direct Iona Afterward he

me with his list

I it

twenty n

utes before silling down to breakfast.

desk, and drink a glasa of milk and crean After sluing around for an hour, 1 go for two or thres miles’walk. Thau I go tom boathouse and am rubbed down. A ft. this I take n eplu over the coutse, row lug

twenty sis to thirty two atrol

This is simply ao exercise row. The rub-

bing process Is gone over again when ' . For dinner I hare roaat beef or sometime* a fowl, with vegetahh until tudf-past 2, take a walk.

c- One thing amateurs should iud: Never leave your rsc* on before tb* day of the race comes. It stamla ison that no man can row as hard aa ha la able each day, aud he In belter condition the day of the rare than when he hs'ridtdug.—Kdward Hanlan In Lad 1*^

. ba|w worth noting that aliu* the daughters of Henry VI!—both quisu*— married into the peerage there kaw 1 I*, lieve. till the present day been no ins'^nre

■udaut of the soveretyn bea jeer of England or Scot-

a child o

All Rooms Face Ocean. Iketiled and Nofl Shell Crnbet Steamed Crabs a Specialty. Chfe S-ttacl(ecL

Opposite CoiufresH Hall,

CAPE MAT, N, J.

J.R. WILSOX, Prap’r.

Margaret Tudor was queen of Scotland. od married, for her aecoud husband, tba Earl of Angus, her daughter M rgaret marrying the Karl of Leouux. Mary Tudor was queen of France, aud married, mo oodly. Charles Brandon. Duke of Suffolk, their daughter France* marrying Guy, Marquis of Dorset. Till our present queen's reign the House of Hanover has refused to ally Itself with the nobility of Great Britain, even the marriage* of George Hl'a brother* with ladite not of royal rank being ao bitterly resented aa to cause the passing of lb* royal mat' flag* act. Thl* act was the more disastrous, as the limitations of the Protestant succession narrowed ao greatly the choice of suitable partner* for our prince* and princesses from the court* of Europa — Notes and Queries.

I remember Maxalnl saying that be did nut LWiev* that chance existed in history. ”A cause must necessarily underlie every event, although for the moment it may appear as ths result of apparently accidental circumstances. An Alexander, a Cawar, a Napoleon are not tb* results of accident, bat the inevitable product of the time am’ nation from which they spring. It waa not Cwsar who desiroywd the Roman republic; the republic waa dead before Cower came Sails. Marina. Catiline pro

gifted with keener Insight and greater genius. - snatched the power from theta and concentrated it In hia own hand. "For there waa no doubt that he waa Alter to rule than all the others put together. At the name time, supposing ha had appeared a hundred and fifty years earlier, he would not have succeeded la destroying the republic. When he cam* the life had already gone oat of it. and even Omar's death could not restore that." —Mathilda Blind In Fortnightly Review.

•aw. 1 believe you will quarrel with St Peter over the fit of your robe. She (patting a bow on her bonnet)—j shall want it tailor made, certainly.—Mar JprkTimen. ‘ _

he recovered from hi* amaxemrnt ’’Didn't piles* It; I knew It," waa the Jeweler’s re ply—"that l». I could almost have sworn to It when 1 saw you feeling for youi watch. 1 puemar.) then that something waa the matter »ith that article, atuMiav log guessed that I was ready to lari .twen-ty-fire dollar* to one dollar that It was the mainspring that was broke, and I’ll tell you why: There's a certain time of the year when If 1 have two or three persons come to me with broken mainsprings 1 can make up my mind that PH have twenty or thirty more of the same kind of custom

ere within a very abort lima

"Now. It'a Juet a week and a day ago that a man came to hare a Job of this kind done, aud up to today I've had no less Hum twenty mai nsprings to pat In. They break '—’ *rily; atmospheric condition baa

1 •- »• ill put a

ire ior a year, rs may mat two or three years, and, again. It may licit last two days, one day, or an hour. You can't tell they're liable to break any time, no maltci of bow good quality they are. I’ve had

springs break right a In.’’-Buffalo Expn

"No, al

"Thla la a dry goods store. Isn't It)” "Yew. air.” “And you hare a carpet department, eh)" "Yew, air." “And aeli nig* and that sort of thing)" "And yet you don’t karp doorplates)" “No. air.” "Well, my adrloc to you and your eroployera, young man." aald the euhurfaan dweller, aa he walked out in disgust. "1* to lay In some sort of a complete stock, or retire from the business.” Then he dashed Into a carpet store, and aakwl again for a doorplate. "You’ll find them at tb* hardware store," aald the clerk. "W* don’t keep them." "I never saw them at hardware atorva In all my Ufe," aald-ths pusxled a hop per. “Can’t help that, air." replied the clerk. So be tried a hardware store In this way. “You don't keep doorplates here, do you?" ■•Certainly we do." aald the clerk, "What ala* do yoa want) Bras* or diver)" and be took down a box of them and handed out one of each kind for Inspection. "What aort of a doormat la that, air)” thundered the annoyed customer. "Why don't yon pay a little more attention to your bualDcae?" "Yon aald doorplate,” aald tb* clerk. "Did I) Did 1 eay doorplate) Are yon "Certainly, that's what yon aald.” ‘■Saf. young man. hav* you got a fool killer about th* store) Because If you have, I can give him a Job. Here I’re been blundering all th* morning Into dry good* and earpat etorea, asking for a door plate, when

st all th

I'll gt

out end hire somebody to kick mef"—Ne«

York Tribune.

There la th* wall w

l China

watch which I

Attacked by a Itahld Cojota. Alcino Aiantx, a Mexican ranchman o! Klo Grande City, Tex., has undergone fearful experience that will probably cot him hla life. He waa riding after cattle, and eatnpod al night by a little creek '’ null through a tangle of in requite, tethered his horse, cooked bis supper, and waa squatted by the Are amokiug the in evitable cigarette when a mad coyote mg upon him from the dark, be little beast, with every hair standing :ud and his Jaw* dropping fuam. struck full Id the face and fastened lu teeth In bis nose. The animal bore Alania hack ward and lie sprawled at full length. He endeavored to defend himself with hla hand.*, hut to no avail. The coyote snap ped his u-etli 'through the skin In a hall duacn place*, and the fare of the man was covered with blood. As he struggled tc hi* feet, frvuxlsd with terror, hla assailant disappeared The ranchman reached Rio Grande City the next morning atul treated, hut is extremely prostrated, ill probably die of hydrophobia. Mad wolvesandcoyotea inaouthweaters Texas at this season are by no means union. Three years ago G. C. Chamber a son-In law of the millionaire ranch . Richard King, was attacked while on horseback by a mad wolf. He went to Paris as foal aa steam could take him, waa treated by Pasteur, and has not suffered ly Inconvenience-—Cor. Fort Worth

The Supply of W hatabone.

About 300,OX) pounds of whalebone wen rented from the Atlantic catch of wl during 1900, and less than that amount _ secured from the Paciflc water*. Fin*

orth lu weight in silver,

and only the wealthy woman can afford t* use it. The ordinary principles of production and trade are overturned as regard* halebona Modern appliances and 1m rove menu appear to have decreased rather •an to have enlarged the amount of tb* rod act- The price of whalebone fluctuates one than the stock market, owing to the It it impossible to calculate upon

the at

until U

baa actually been extracted,

ere are only seven manufacturer* In this country, according to the latest report They pay (10,000 ior a ton of raw material,

up and prepare It for market.

Quantities are used In the silk mills where ribbon la manuWlured. It Is used there

edge of the ribbon In weaving

Some of the brat bat manufacturer* use It the sweat hand* of their silk hala Aluugh the coraetereud dress stays of wom•till lake up practically about the whole supply of whalebone, yet fully 80 per cent, of the corset* manufactured here are braced up with something aha.—Mercer. A Year'* Work at tb* Roy! aflat. The number of coin* struck In the royal ■lot last year was 88,000,000, of which 17,SOO.OOO were rejected in th* weighing room. Tbs total coinage issued waa £7,080,186 lit gold. £1.AW.088 in silver, and £90.185 In

— ' raa no demand for th* Are

pound and two pound Jubilee gold coins, and the four shilling pieces will be with- ■* Tb* metal manipulated weighed

of gold. 888 tons of ail tar and 74

ton* of copper. The theft of a fanall quantity of gold by a lad daring ths year waa ths only case of theft In forty ysare.—Loo- up ei

babtre have their feat tortured by tight bandaging to make and keep them email. That practise, let us amy at onoe, waa never prevalent, except In very high societylika really tight lacing In England -and even there It is now gradually tieoomlng otwolefe. Rut amung the sweltering mil lions of China there la a practice which, aceme to have a cunooa result. Tba mother carries her Infant In a kind of hag or paenleron her back, and nnt-wa in other aiuntriea where the doraal carriage la affected -with the fare turned outward, but . probably, we ought to aspect In Chlaa, where everything arema to go and by the rule of oontrartea-wtlh the

a rued Inward.

result of thax la that the baby'a noaa la of necessity prerewl against Us mother's hack, whence, no donbt. say the learned In has been evolved, la the the peculiarly flattened or eharaeteriatic of the Chioa-

•eae girl*, even

>en allowed to lire,are little thought of. the family generally they brer no nature; ry are known as No. I or Net a, Uka conda, and they are no more reckoned member* of the family than th* cat or the dog. Ho when a Chinaman ta asked what family he has. he counts only hG boys And a boy la treated with great honor and ceremony by the women. When he la foor month* old hr 1* art for the first time In a chair, and his moth**-’* mother arnda or ' bring* him many present*, notably amung which h sugar candy. The candy is cm blrraatic of the sweat things of life, and It la stock to the chair to signify the h that he may never lack first birthday is the aeooc

Ra la t

a In

any thing .

tc.. and whichever ha first lays bis o decides hla fatur* occupation.—

It came to my mind while visiting the dog show to in vretigate tba traffic lu man'* beat friend, for dog dealers -or stealer* - are reputed to display considerable Ingruu ity In their struggle for Ufa. The real dog

_ i tbemaalvre with the exe itine of the order. Th* clipper* know where all the valuable dug* are owned, hecapae they are employed In clip and embellish three choice animals A* auuo a* a dealer ho* a customer for a dog of a certain breed ha asks ths clipper to procare tbs drsi rod animal The clipper, not caring to have any dlfflenlty with the pereone who employ him, oalla upon one of thee* atrret prowler*, and the dog demanded is stolen

clipper to replace h individual the dog*, with on York Epoch.

CewMaret* Betteo* Will Be riealy.

The ballon* adopted by ths Confederate nary hare been vary highly prised In th* ■oath since the war as relics, and have, where they could be obtained, bean used a* Teat and cuff button*. Owing to their ecareity they hava been In veir active demand, bat they now eeem dreilneri to be-

e drag on the market, a* a resident

of Norfolk. Vo., baa reoeivad a letter from the Arm la l-oodoo which made them during the war, stating that they still have

dire and can furnish the buttons in numbar.—Philadelphia Ledger.

A plantation of India rubber waa started by the government of Assam In 1871 In a forest at the foot o< the Hlraalayaa. Seed- " ware plaateff*ln the forks of tree*.

The trees wore subsequently placed lu bade, fatty fret wide, protected by the surrounding forest. Id 1880 the plantation rxteodad over 1.108 scree, and contained

lady, vlalUng with

eldwly malrtci being his o

him attempting to escape. "So, Mr. ShariTan." she said, “It hoe cleared up, 1 a**.” ‘Why, yea,” be answered. "It has cleared

dAw-lw