Cape May Herald, 25 May 1901 IIIF issue link — Page 6

•i Sfioma ns Ihaiiijh my tinck Would lircnk.

Is it not true? Women suffer, fed the Terr life crushed out of them, grow old before their time. Each morning wake up determined to do so much before tne day ends, and yet— Before

matter how hard they struggle, the and they fall upon the coucn crying “ Why should I suffer so I What can I do?" The answer is ready, your cry has been heard, and a woman is able to restore you to health and happiness. Backache is only a symptom of more fatal troubleheed its warning in time. * Lydia E. Plnkham’s Vegetable Compound will stop.your torture and restore your courage. Your pains come from unnatural menstraation or some derangement of the womb. Let those who are suffering read Mrs. Morton’s letter and bo guided by her experience.

ak opes Letter to women.

wttUffdiaB. I tbouht I would write and taknfc you. My rritem wm ootbely run down. I •offered with terrible beck-

•che ia the small of my beck aad oould hardly nricht; was more tired ia the morning than on retiring ax night. I had no appetite. Since taking your Com. pound I have gained fifteen pounda. and am gaining erexy week. My appetite has improved, have no backache, and I look better than I ever looked before. “I shall recommend it to all my Menda, as it car- ' ' • - - 1. E. F. Moktot,

tainly is a Wonderful medicine. SM York Street, Cincinnati. 0.

When a medicine baa been successful in restoring to health

more than a million women, yon cannot well say, withoi

e it will - - — —

(abottl

nee,

■pedal advice—it Is free.

. - -

trying it, “I do not believe it will help me.” If yon are 111, don’t hesitate to get a bottle of Lydia E. Plnkham’s Vegetable

id write Mnu Pink ham, Lynn, Mass., for

icsitate to get a Compound at oni

'5000

REWARD >1 b Mt Ctnmc, or wm polkhej bclcn ebucusf Um .

m3.

WU«i Bappo^od to Iho Mas Who round It Ont. “It occurred to an alchemist one day that It would be a fine thing to take sulphur, saltpeter snd dried toads, pound them sll to s powder snd 'sublime' them together In sn alembic, which he carefully luted and set on the furnace to he&t. He poked up the fire and waited around, thinking what he would do with bit money It this should turn out to be the powder of rednetion that would turn baas metals Into gold, when, bang! went the alembic and the windows blew out. and the door ripped

ruins coal or t ashes off himself snd wondered what had struck him.* He tried It again and again, and each time with the same result; and then It dawned upon him that he had discovered

to his recipe has le better article of charcoal, say that of willow twigs. Instead of toasted toads. ‘‘Little did the old alchemist dream what potency was In that "powder of

by Its mere round piece powder Into

touch, yet when a small, of lead Is pnt with the Iron tube of curious

id fir

possible to couver gold Into the possession of him that has the Iron tube of curious workmanship. and not gold only, hut all manner of goods and chattels, houses and lands, messuages, easements and hereditaments. even men's souls and bodies. Lay down the book for a moment and bethink you what his powder par excellence, this powder of powders, has brought about since first the dried -toads charred in that alembic. How has It put down the mighty from their seat, and exalted them that are of low degree! How has It been the helper >*f men that struggle for their country's freedom, believing that they had the right. God-gtven and Inborn, to govern their own affairs and not to be

i 1776, ai ptible s

sea the Atlantic, contemptible and re belUous when the time Is 1901, and the sea the Pacific: This powder asks no questions as to right or wrong. It propels with equal violence the bullet against the breast of him that fights the foreign tyrant and him that resists benevolent asslmllator."—Harvey

itherland In Alnslee's.

the t Suthi

BasUy's Vast Itaadlas. Huxley, says John Flake tn the Atlantic, seemed to read everything worth reading, history, politics, metaphysics. poetry, novels, even books of science: for perhaps It may not be superfluous.to point out to the general world of readers that no great men of science owes his scientific knowledge to books. Huxley's colossal knowledge of the animal knlgdom was not based upon the study of Cuvier. Baer, and othef predecessors, but upon direct personal examination of thousands of

' extinct. He contempt for

mere bookishness In matters of science, and' carried on wgr to the knife against the stnpid methods of education in vogue 40 years sgo. whan students were expected to learn something of chemistry or palaeontology by reading about black oxide of manganese or the dentition of anoplother-

m. A n t further

equipment In natural his-

tory than some desultory reading, attacked the Darwinian theory In some sundry magazine articles in which he made himself uncommonly merry at Huxley’s expense. This was intended

' “ i. an

) au-

thor proceeded to write to Huxley calling his attention to the articles snd at the \ame time with mock modesty asking advice-as to the further study of these deep Questions, bugler's an swer was brief and to the

ir six bottle.'

^.■yss;

-•ZiAfgr.

Sn Croup Core, for Coaghs. Col>. : Croup snd Bronchitis. So oplnm. W ceals, CTOp | The continual chancing of one's mind is can be! ^ t0 ^ 11 °° {

I - | a yi

_! grown IfjoahAT.naeuB.Urci.i

without

Poush.’ Supply I ““ “ etlOUgh Pot- I W« will five filflO reward for ary esse nl . |. _ ! catarrh that cannot to cured with CalT* f ash and your , Catarrh Cure. Taksn tntaruafly. profits wfll be! rJ - 0 * OTt *■ Co " PrOT *-^°- large; without! iz.oSfh^Toa^theiui! Potash your I — , FITS permanently cured. Ko fita or aerrou*crop wm t* 'scrubby. i>r- n, h. guva. Ltd., an archst.. paiia., ra.

-"The success of gasoline automobiles in France brought about the revival mi steam automobiles in Englhnd and America, and was Immediately emulated In the United States by the construction of electric automobiles. "It has bsen reserved fgr the 20th century to witness the slmulmneous development of automobhficonstruction along all three lines at so rapid a rate that It Is Impossible as yet to tell which Is In the ascendant Whatever

When the woret romet to t I have to ms Vs the best of it.

■ILLS MILS—filMCU 0FFEI Eli* BUL to Ccwta w» Wta Ml W aarJ-O. ajtorn. I. <3*7*- treatment o< tk* tml mriicU* cm

iicltHES'wVs'TABASCa

SSSm.-SIThrewW.tjl.tjta

DO VOU WOPk IN THE WET? TNCOnOKAI.

outcome. It Is pit contest Is to be d< cs, for In this country alone all the different principles of construction have found .ready acceptance and are pushed forward to thslr logical conclusion with youthful vigor. With accustomed conservatism, English automobile constructors ding to steam propnlslon: in France and Germany progress is made chiefly In the development of gasoline machines. To America. naturally, fell ike leadership in the construction of electric automobiles;' but that leadership bids fair tc be rivaled by American builders of

well Some firms In the United States turn out sll three cissies is almost squat perfection.”—Edward Emerson, Jr., in Alnslee’s.

LKWIS T. STEVENS.

M. A. SCULL.

DM17 RON I RISK; BE INSUIED IN ONE OF THE BEST mg; jjjggjgaggi ggiypjygjgg BY STEVENS & SCULL, 5o6 Washington St., Cape May, AGENTS FOR The PHILADELPHIA UNDERWRITERS’ FIRE INSURANCE POLICY WHICH IS UNDERWRITTEN BY The Insurance Company of North America and The Fire Association of Philadelphia The Philadelphia Uxderwbitehs makes a Specialty of Inaurance upon Dwellings and Household Furniture, Stores, and Stocks of Merchandise, Chinches, School Houses, Public Buildings and Contents. Also, insures Loss of Rents caused by Fire. Total Assets of the Two Companies, $.15,890,542.29

graMtinul eirdi.

-VR. WALTER 8. LEAMING,

DENTIST,

Office Hours:—

9 to 11 a. m. 2 to fi p. m.

(fid floor. Can Mat, H. J.

JAMES MECRAY, M. D. Ooa. PsasY ahd Washikotok Sts. (Opposite Congress Hall.) Cate Mat Citt, N. J.

8 to 9 a. m. 8 to 4 p. u. 7 to 8 p. m.

J^EWIfl T. STEVENS, ATTORNEY- AT-LA W, 806 Washington St, Cate Mat, K. J. Master snd Solicitor in Obanesry. Notary Public. Comtolssiunsr for Psonsrlvaula. Surety Bondi secured for contractors, officials sad fidelity purpsses.

THE HISTORY Cape Ma*y County TIm Aboriginal Times. LEWI* TOWNSEND STEVCKE.

CONTENTS:

In dime sod thf Dutch Explorers.

A—Life Burly is the Eighteenth Century, g.—Development of Religious Denomlea-

—Maritime Tends

—indent Loans and Taxes —The Religions Contrortrsies.

.idasstssatsga. .. . — e:—.— vi Hi , tv—

Tory.

Apicertad H _

li.—Aaron Lesminr and His Times.

IS —John Hsttoo, the T

S.—John Hstton, tl .j.—Preparxtionj for War.

IA.—The Rerdletion Detins.

IS-—Caps May Patriots

16.—The Ending snd IndcpendeitaS.

I?.—The County In iSoa IN.—The War ol iBis.

to.—Progress After the War. so.—Noted Men of a Generation. >1.—The Decade Before the Rebellion, jx—Opening of the Civil War. st—First New Jersey Cavalry. si.—The Enlistments of i86s. IS-—The CampslgnLof 186* snd 1865. s6 —Life Following the Rebellion, tr.—Fifteen Years of Prosperity. s6.—Distinguished Visitors,

so —Cape Island. 3o.-C«pt_MqyTity.

—The Boronghs. < Appendix A—Members of the I

B—Board of Freehol

D-Post E—Monidpal Officers. F—Table of Population. It is illustrated with forty-five pictures of prominent places snd persons. U printed In fii.jo. Postage so c

THOS. STEWART. E. M. BARTON.

STEVVART&HSART0N Fyt~&.c?rio2LZ, ?)Ouse § Sign Bainipbrs

never sm him « hard." f ••Ysa.” answsrsd the manager. "Ha Is always In s hurry to gri that be can play golt"-1

FIOTTEIE^ GrORDOK (FORMERLY PIER AVENUE INN.) UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT. RENOVATED THROUGHOUT. OPEN ALL THE YEAR. BOARD I NO BY THE DAY OR WEEK. 138 DECATUR STREET, CAPE MAY CITY, N. J. A. R. CORDON. 7 •

CLINTON SOUDER, DEALER IN (yFumiture, Carpets, Oilcloths, Mattresses, Matting, Window Shades and Awnings. 311-313 MANSION STREET.

E. S. HILDRETH, Successor to &60. Hildreth, 32-34 JACKSON ST. CAPE MAY.

Wholesale and Retail Dealer in NILIB0I1E FLOUR, GRAIN, FEED, HAY, WOOD, FIG. FLOUR IT PHIUDELPHI! WHOLESALE PRICES.

Brown Villa, 228 Perry Street CAPE MAY, N. J. UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT. Large Airy Rooms; Renovated Throughout; Excellent Table; Open all the Year. Mrs. E. W. HAND, Prop.

OCCAM «mCCT, CAPE MAY, M. J. iff-Open all th# year. An elegantly located family Homl-^aa Beach and Railroad Station. R. J. CRC8WELL, Prop.

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