F TJew Tork City.—Short Jaunty jackfcta that extend only a few Inches below the waist line, take a permanent place among the latest styles, and wlU
WOUAX’S JACKET.
as genera .wraps. The applied yoke is a marked feature and stamps the garment as being up-to-date at the same time that It Is generally becoming. • The smart MayManton model shown la made of zlbdlne in the new shade or garnet, but corduroy In dark blue, gray, brown and tan is exceedingly fashionable for walking, shopping and
and in bell shape, rdges ore finished
irlth double bands that are turned orer ronn the collar, but the lower edge
tj ft jfnd
ar. but
sleeves are simply faced.
Imona for a
o cut this
a woman of yards of i
twenty-one Inches wide, seven and a half yards twenty-seven Inches wide, six and a quarter yards thirty-two Inches wide or four and three-quarter yards forty-four inches wide will be required, with three and an eighth
yards for bands. Popularity of tl
The pendant is so popi
to be found now on bracelets. Beau-
• rvodsn >opulnr tl
the
t. two heads of which meet. In top of each of these bends Is set
some kind, precious or Imitation, a good-sited pendant hangs from the Junction* of the two. Woman'* Taka Shirt Waist. The shirt waist with a pointed yoke makes one of the notable features of autumn styles, and is shown in velveteen flannel, corduroy ana similar materials. The May >(anlon model Illustrated Is made of the new. soft finished corduroy In Napoleon blue, worn with a tie and belt of black satin, and Is singularly handsome and effective, the severe style suiting the material to a nicety. The original Is made unllncd but lighter weight materials are more satisfactory when the fitted foundation is used.
WOMAN’S KIMONA.
out-door sports, and all suiting materials are appropriate, while cheviot and covert cloth make satisfactory
jackets for general wear The' backs fit snugly being cut with side' bgcks
arm gores, but the fronts are loose fitting and Inclnds ~ 'yoke Is applied over the cloth, but can toe omitted when preferred and the little coat left plain, as shown In \he ■mall cut The neck Is finished, with a regulation coat collar and lapels, but the velvet facing is applied In novel manner, the edge being cut In the Van iDyck points that appear in the newsat designs. The sleeves are in bell shape end flare becomingly over the hands, o cat this Jacket for a woman of
. To c medluz
material forty-four Inches wide, or two,'and on eighth yards fifty Inches .wide win be required when yoke Is used; two yards forty-four Inches or one and three-quarter yards fifty Inches wide when Jacket Is made plain.
' The loose flowing kimona Is a recognised and deserved favorite of womankind. .It is picturesque at the same time that It 1* comfortable, generally becoming at the same time that it Is a negligee in every sense of the word. , The May Manton original, from which • the large drawing was msde. Is of .white India wash sUk. with figures of rich red and bands of plain sUk to match, but Japanese crepe, simple cotton crepe, cashnjere, flannel, flanwlette. cotton velonr and fleece lined albatross are all equally appropriate, which U best depending upon the use . to which, the garment is to be put. Bilk and all fine materials are charming when ItJls to become a loun; robe worn in the boudoir or bedn flannels and the like are better when •ft U to serve as a bathrobe. • The yoke, cot without seam, smoothly across the shoulders, but the main portion U arranged In gathers and Joined to SU lower gfige. The
back, one at each front somewhat deeper lhan those of former years. The lower portion of the back Is plain, the two box plaits being applied and stitched on each edge; but the fronts ore arranged In three narrow box' plaits each, which extend several Inches below the yoke, then fall free and form folds. The sleeves are In shirt style with narrow cuffs that are buttoned over. The neck Is finUhed with a regulation stock; the ballons ere oxydlzed metal showing raised beads, but plain gilt or pearl are equally correct. To make this shirt waist for a woman of medium size three abd seveneight yards of material twenty inches wide, three and three-quarter yards
fiCIENCE AND INOUSTRr.
There Is a large tale of bad eggs tor.
manufacturing purposes. Brown
U Is made from the
Ish for of bad i
d pols yolk
eggs, and the white of the eggs for albuminizing photographic
it of all clouds are white, fibrous, detached f frozen vapor; always i The e may They
The hlghei those delicate masses of high against the blue most point of the highest of the be 10 miles above the earth, are called cirrbus clouds. Altogether there are 10 principal types of clouda The lowest, known os the stratus, are really horizontal sheets of lifted fog seen on damp days or In very damp localities. These clouda are only a few hundred feet above the earth.
pie proba ti a Joke;
■I
unearthed In London a considerable trade In cats and dogs' meat for the manufacture of sausagee. It Is stated by the sanitary Inspector of the Bethnal Green district that an enormous amount of this meat, highly seasoned with various condiments. Is undoubtedly used in sausage muklng. and that sausage factories, especially of the irer sort, require very close watch-
The certainty wltb which the rprex if- the bubonic plague has been traced o rats has moved a Japanese bacte-
clviilzed nations unite in an effort to exterminate the animal. Japan, he says, la ready to bear her part in devising and providing the means. His suggestion has called forth a unanimous approval from the doctors and scientists of many countries, and there is no doubt that the first steps In finding a way to accomplish it will soon be taken. It may not be practicable to wholly exterminate them, but their number may be enormously reduced. For the sanitary protection of the traveling public Franco probably has the most up-to-date laws. In the first place it Is forbidden to carry persons visibly or notoriously affected by contagious dlseasjs In compartments that are used by the public. In the second place, the dally cleaning and the periodical disinfection of all
required. Linens of sleeping cars must bear a ticket Indicating to the passenger, the date of the last cleaning, at they must be properly .washed and a
i t* a h
terWard subjected t» a high temperature. Dry sweeping and dusting, which
only serve to scat!
irohlblted. It being required t seats and woodwork be wi
re proh 11 floors.
:ter disease germs.
that
>ors. se
with cloths moistened with some uni
septic solution.
j “Artl-
wlped : antl-
i paper
sea." Dr. R. Ogd< substance: "Our
In tbe course of a ficlal Cooling of Ho Doremus says. In
magnificent cathedrals and churches and our sumptuous theatres would ac-
pleasure.
some means for artificially cooling their Interiors during the summer months. Our mlllion-dollar hospitals snould be artificially cooled to save human lives during prostrating and often fatal heat What an outcry there would be If they were not warmed in winter. Why should not our homes be made comfortable In summer as well Isjwlnter? It Is unhygienic to live m too hot a room as In one that ItHoo coM, Our eli club edifices should be tooled In
X
In a more direct several systems which could be cooling the air In
Doremus says, that general attempt to solve the problem.
way? - ' There are )f producing cold readily arrimgeW for i living rooms, and It
lUg Ship* at III* Past. Gigantic as are the sea monsters devised by the modern shipwright, we have not reached the dimensions of the Mannlgfnal of Frisian legend, whose masts were so high that a boy. sent aloft to "bear a hand." came down a gray-beaded man. whose deck was so spacious that the captalr. had to gallop about on horseback to give bis orders, and whose length was so great that when swinging in the Channel her stern scraped the cliffs of Albion while her bowsprit swept the forts at Calais. But we have exceeded in some respects the dimension* of Ptolemy's great ship, which was <20 feet long. 57 feet broad, and 73 feet In depth of hold, and which tmLtried 4000 rowers and 3000 mariners, betides unnumbered soldiers and passengers. Or the great ship of Hlero. King of Syracuse, the dimensions have not/been recorded, but abe was at least as large as Ptolemy's, consider ing that her freightage was ''€0.000 measures, of qore. 10,000 Jars of salt
to the provisions required b }
the crew." and that she was so large no harbor In Sicily oonld contain her.
la EMM
NEW JEKSEY STATE NEWS. Atlantic City Ex-Couocilmao Struck by a Convicted Prisoner. the McKinley memorial fund.
Mr. Itaary S. White Dead—Charles Brown Brssfbl lo New York to Be Tried lor ComplWly h (be Huoltr Murder Case—Perth Amboy Uoclors Orfaalxc-James C McFarland Fatally Stricken-Other Lire News. Henry S. White, among the best known lawyers in New Jersey, died at ?'. c ^ R**' Bank, aged $7 years. Mr. White was a graduate of Columbia Law School and at one time assistant collector of the port of New York. He was a Civil War veteran, was a director of the Hudson County National Bank of Jersey City and Ncversink National Bank of Red Bank. At one time he was department commander of Grand Army of the Republic of
"r, Courts Endico
- At'antic County Crjminj at May's^ Landing. Judg
one yea*the char(
Sharp to prison on
harge of assault and battery
upon William Cullingan, an Atlantic
Gty carrier. As soon as the si was pronounced Sharp jumped
the bar enclosure and sprang upon exCouncilnian George Cluin. of Atlantic Gty, a brother-in-law of Cullingan, who was silting in a front scat near the pris-
oner and who Sharp though ing in the prosecution of tf began to pound him. Com grabbed the frenzied prison
tied him to the jail.
Charles^ Brown, accused of complicity in the Washington Hunter murder at Riverside, who was serving three yean *° d DU I. R '* rjr t * le Sing prison
Borirned
.. „ — — . Sing prn
who was pardoned by Governor Odell, of New York, so that he could be tried in New Jersev. arrived in Bi dentown with Otto Keller, who turn State's evidence. The men were sent to th* BurHnRlon county jail in charge of Tbe Freemasons of Gloucester county had a gala time at Glasshoro. A ial train brought down a hundred from Philadelphia with a band, and
ibers of the order came parts of South Jersev. Then
short '
n from Philadclphii mbers of the ordi
Tall Cedars of n a number of
The |
after which t! >f Lebanon i
lidates
ere was a ' degree of i conferred
The people of Trenton are much inlet :sted in a XfcKinley memorial. A sur >f money is to be raised by small popt
Men
> memory of the '
Several hundred dollars
been contributed.
xiptions for the erection of a rha.* Mercer Hospital to be
' ' ’ President.
e already
James C. McFarland, of Philadelphia, died suddenly of 'heart disease at his summer residence in Ocean City. He had just returned from a walk on the beach when he was stricken. He was connected with a Philadelphia bank, and was 4t years of age. The first medical society was organized by the doctors of Perth Amboy. The officers are: Dr. J. S.- Wilson, president; Dr. H. M. Brace, vice-president; Dr. F. C. Hendry, secreury; Dr. W. E. Ramsay, treasurer. Councilman Robert Weiler, of Egg Harbor City., met with a serious accident by being thrown from his wagon during a runaway. He sustained a scalp wound, besides many contusions. The jury ir. the case of Capt Uriah P. Lee, of Maurice River, returned a verdict of not guilty of the charges that Captain Lee had dredged oyi beds of others in Delawar Maurice Cove. A boom in building is on at Swedesboro. with every indication that it will continne. The cunstruction of the sewer and waterworks plants is being rushed, the glass works are in full blast and merchants are “np to their elbows" in business. The town has never experienced anything like the present pros-
perity.
Frederick Miller, aged about 20 year*, jn of John Miljer, living near Sergeantsville, committal suicide by blowing out his brains with • shotgun.
Animals SomsUmm Kill TKvms^lvrs. You often—more's the pity!—hear about men killing themselves, but did ever hear that animals take their lives? There Is a Florida beetle that dies In one'a hand the Instant It Is caught, from excitement, maybe, and a sea cucumber, akin to the star fish, that gets ao mad when you disturb it that It throws out all Its digestive organs. The crab often throws away a limb. If In any way It la made sss. It is easily done. In the crab's upper arm there Is a little groove, and when he grows excited and wants to throw OK his arm. he
when the captor draws near. The tall ilrms on to attract attention while . Lizard slides out of sight The fos 1 gnaw off a paw to release himself from a trap, and the "mantis.” an insect bites off It* toes when captured. A dog will sometimes starve himself to death at his master's grave. Many wild animals refuse to eat when caught—Chicago Record-Hera'.d.
R«rorw» real We** Expansive. About thjo^quartcr* of a railroad's receipts come from the freight department Tbe passenger department supplies nearly all the rest, the Income from mail, express and other privileges being comparatively small. Carrying passengers is a simple matter, or would be. If .state' legislatures did not now acd then take a hand in prescribing
mi fpr railroad pasIn Ohio a law was that the height he-
re platform and the lowest passenger coaches should not
exceed 1! Inches. This cost the railrxmfls nearly 3100.000. and tbe reform led to the abolition of a number of flag stops where tbe passengers had been quit* willing to scramble up off the
G. T. Q6IIB0RT Sanitary Engineer
ELCCTIIICAL CONTRACTOR BAS AND STCAM FITTER •ANITARV PLUMBING
OAb AND COMBINATION FIXTURES
HOT WATER
STEAM HEATING
EDatlrnates Choorfully Furnished. WGWHMrfflO*[MlOl. 105 Jackson Street, CIPE Mil. X.J. Dl^y GOODS flRD notions Also a complete stock of heavy and light weight UNDERWEAR DIX WRAPPERS A Specialty, -f* We rhsrgv nothin* for showing goods. Then-fore, we trust you will cell sad examine onr stock before going elsewhere. OUR MOTTO K TO PLEASE HRS. H. A. CLARE 502 Broadway and Turnpilce, CAPE MAY N. J. ' Geo. C. Edmunds Groceries, Meats and Provisions.
41 Br
PROMPT PgtlVERV.
Iroadway, West Cape May. CMOIC
ICE GOO OB ONLY
E. BEN STEAD, Qhoice goods handled only. Strictly pure canned goods etc. Goods delivered to any part of the city.
Co*. BROADWAY sad MYRTLE AVE.,
WEST CAPE MAY, N. J
J. 33. CRA.IGr,
-REKAHUW OF—
Vetoing Jfflachines & @rgana
420 Washington Street
J. R. WILSON & SON,
810
Mattings, Oil Cloths and Linoleums. Com. 'Wjamaci3>TcaxoN' jlxis XSmo.a.’X'crm Bimacrw
If You Want to Make a Present,
Buy some of our Diamonds, Jewelry, and
Seasonable Noveltfes.
WE HIVE JUST WHIT IS W1NTED FOR * WIFE, i BRIDE OR FRIERD
In addition to our excellent assortment of luxuries, we have many of the necessities in Watches, Clocks, Eye Glasses, and, indeed, everything that can be found in a modern Jewelry Store
IN OUR FACTORY ALL KINDS OF - - - REPAIRING IS DONE - - -
Diamond Cutting and Setting a Specialty
JOSEPH K. HAND, 311 Washington St.
CHARLES T. CAMPBELL,
Wbt>!*u!e u4 Rrt.Il Drain In
Milk, Cream, Butter & Eggs
SOLS AGENT FOR THE
Thatcher Mfg. Co.’s Creamery Sapplies.
'PHONE »B.
CAPE MAY CITY. N. J.
308 DECATUR STREET
•ILUS i- SIKCMftT.
l. *x*CY ■ZMcncBT.
ffl. (§. Beng^b^ib § Sons, - - j&lxnnboTS - » (lias and §team fittersBAHmUmV TOKS a 8!PISe3a!L7V Estimates Furnished.
41© Washinoton St.,
Ca.pe May. N. J.
THE GAPE WAY HERALD Is a Clean Family Local Paper, Published for the betterment and advancement of Cape May
Issued every Saturday Morning '” s r at 506 Washington Street StTBSCRIPTIOS PRICE 31.00 F$R YEAR. The Herald
■$tJob Officej»Is ogupped with New and Modem Type. Ideas thoroughly up-to-date and practically handled. Can turn-out first-class Work at short notice, and at reasonable prices. All kinds of COMMERCIAL PRINTING
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