IH . .
.. I. u
■atoMMl
Mr>. P. BrumpI. wlf* of P. RrunMU •took dealrr. realdenec fUU Qraod
Everett. W«»h_ fifteen year* l auffeml with terrible pain In my back. I experluirntinl with doctor* und mollcine*, but sot little If am relief. 1 no tually - believe ' the arbtuft in my back
and throucb the
KOiln became womo. I dkl not know what It waa to enjoy a nlsht'e rent and aroee in the (norplns fed la it tired and an-
rcfrsahed. My *uf- _ fermc eetnrttmee vra» altnply Inde* acrlbahle. Finally. I *aw Doan’* Kidney Pllla advertised and not a box. After a few dose* I told my buiband that 1 was fecllns much better and that the pill* were doing me good. When I finished that box t felt Ukc a different woasak. I didn't *top at that, though. I continued the treatment until I bad taken Ova boxes. There was no recurrence until a week ago. when 1 began to feci mlaorabls again. I bought afnotber fcox and Uirec day* - treatment reatorad me to health. Doan's Kidney Pill* act very effectively. Very promptly, rcllerc the aching pains and all other annoying difficulties. I hare recommended them to many people and will do ao when opportunities present them-
solve*.’
Girla and Ball Playing. "Ball throwing I do not advise to great extent .or girts.” Bays Dr. Luther Gullrk. physical director of the public schools of New Ycrk. "It mokes the clx.vli.le prumlr.oat and destroys the i/nmotry of tie neck, a fact every girl U likely to regret when she la ojdor and begins go wear evening gowns."
The New Skirt.
The new gcrod aklrt Is something iiko the umbrella skirt of a few year* ago. and even siij^caU the revival of the crinoline. However, we will trust that the crinoline monstrosity 1* relegated to the past for "keep*.” aa the children say. In the new gored aklrt the fullness round the feet Is. perhaps, a trifle exaggerated, but at the some time It la very gracefsl, as It falls In charming folds from the wslst dewn. It can be arranged with a few Ulp pleats, bat these are rather old. There . is something fascinating about the
A .. r ?¥ ™, A J: °L *!!/* I ? llJn - clssiical drapery, with a sugget-
"" !oa of ffou-froulng silk beneath.
medicine which cured Mrs. Brunxel will be mailed to any part of the United States on application. Ad dress Kostcr-Mllburn Co.. Buffalo. N Y. For sale by’ all druggists. Price
CO cetta per box. • Why He Didn’t Call.
Henry Taylor Gray of Bradstreefs kas just come back from s trip around !he world. On the return voyage he led Into cocversatloc with a purse pmud New Yorker who had made the
lame trip.
"1 suppose yea visited the Pyrt> sees?” »ld Mr. Gray In the course of
the talk.
“No.” bluffed tho other. “They ranted us to spend a week with then, put they got measlea in the family at the last moment and had to recall the invitation.”—New York Evening
World.
IS
Ns Chance for Argument. “I can’t see what you fled In me to i •admire." said., the : lovelorn youth. •That'S Just what everybody c!*e earn"—Chicago D*Ur New*
The First "Lzdy In Trade."
Pe-kaps the most nctable instance
record of the feminine street trad-
er. siyo tfc ? London Ctronlcle. Is that the "Wcito Widow." otherwise the Duchors ct Tyrcdnaell. the Francis Jennings of tho De Graamcot memoirs who at the time of the revolution in 1C88, according to .Horace Walpole. "being reduced to absolute want on her arrival la England, and unable for some time to precure secret acr.-_u to her family, hired one of the rmdls under the Royal axohaagu, and mainrained herself by the salo of small nrttcio# of habordaihery.. She wore a pkite.Oreas. vrapplpg her whole por*00. a-j.s white mask, which she sever removed, and excited much In-
terest and curiosity*
■Miss Gacnon, Sec’y Detroit 1 Amateur Art Association, tells younf women what to do to avoid pain and suffering caused
by female troubles.
*‘ I can oonacientionsly recommend Lydia E. Pink ham’s' Vegetable Compound to those of my slaters suffering with female weakness and' the troubles which so often befall women. I suffered for months with general weakness and felt ao weary . that I had hard work to keep up. I had shooting pains ani was utterly miserable. Id my distress I waa advised to use Lydia K. Plnkham’s Vegetable Compound, and it was a red letter day to me when I took the first dose, for at that time my restoration began. In six Weeks I was a changed woman, perfectly well In every respect. I felt do elated and happy that I want all women who suffer to got well as I did.' — Mias GottA Ganov, 3M Jones Sc.. Detroit. ~ ** Mich. Amateur
to clMtrty shown
irely ear* the sufferings« n; and when one con side. „ that Miss Gannon’s letter Is only ooe of hundred* which we have, the groat virtue of Mrs Pfnkhsm’B medicine most he T«*-- :, »«d V- all.
Hi pa ns Tsbales an the best dyspepsia ,medicine ever made, bandied millions them have bees Mid la the United Buftes in a single year. Every Ulntsa
roUerofl cr cared by their am. common Is it'that dlaeaac* origl from the stomach It may be safely asserted than la no condition of U1 health th-.t will not be benefited of .gnred by the occasional nee of Ripens Tabulae. Fbyskiana know them and *aak highly of them. All druggists •ell them. The flre-cent package Is enough for an ordinary occasion, and the Fanny Bottle, sixty cents, contains ‘ " f far a yeas. One
The Girl Whfc The girl who surfieta la hhat picture of bannohy in the msttcr of
gowning..
Her drees la smart and businesslike. Is she is a working girl. But for festive occalfons she Is a* dainty and Cuffy and plcutreaqae as possible. She is always suaay and gcod na•tnred. ■3ie is choofful and sympathetic. and ha* a wholesome sense of
! turner.
| She Is not morbid or melancholy. J and her stork x>f philosophy enable* j her to put blues to the rout. VT ! You see Ijor every day. on the ! ttreets. In the shops, s generous, sew I slble. cheofy. whcle-souled girl. One who is well UHed and whese presence ■lone brings cheer and pleasure.—New York American. Promotes Nervousness. Women wltn a propensity to fidget should cultivate the habit of sitting perfectly sMll In a chair with their hands loeeely clasped in their lap. A quiet. repLwcful manner la more to be desired than riches. Fidgety wcoua have ccrvous fingers which apparently must always be do- . lug something—playing with s chain . worn srosnd the neck, besting s tattoo 1 on the tap, crumbling the bread at dinner. or otherwise occupied in Irritating the nerves of the onloc-Uar. Such women should avoid a rocking choir a* they would the plague. It offers too many ogwert unities to indulge their restless bsBtts Nervousness of this sort Is sometimes due U 01 health, bat frequently it ts affectattoa. The wall-poised wemtn had no fidgety trick*.—New Tbrtr Prow: • A ' Wistsria Dress. Aa/altogether lovely anxlr Is a wlateria dress. It Is of piflo msnve mou»seUae,de sole over *I!k of the . same odor. The moassothe bloaxe it very simple in shape. It Is beantlfuly embroidered in silk and chiffon, with wisteria dimer*. Three of theee ample racemes fairly roiex the front, each l$Ue. aweet-peevllke''Uoasom 'being spiffed out until the oootcur Is parfecr. As for cs|pr. the shades are perfeciion. raaglng -from eoft deep violet to palest msnf*. Below Ihp celntur*. which Is of foliage green taffeta. « wisteria vine is embroidered down the (font panel of the skin. It Is oentinued around, the. deep flounce, softly graceful clusters hanging here and there. The side* and back of the skirt are finely tuckeg. to about the depth of the knees.—Philadelphia Record. Her Novel Lawn. Her house stood ISO feet back from the street, but from bar front porch It seemed to boast a much larger lawn. It was all a matter of perspective, however, thought out and achieved by the bright little owner It UxV her too yean to get the effect, bat when one owns the property. It la worth try-
years' growth, the effect W dIs lane* she has obtained Is really quite woo derfal. There Is a vis Is of foliage and ao optical Illusion of space that gives the Idea of many acre*.—Phil* detphla Telegraph. During Baby's Third Year. The following Is given as a propet diet for an average child during Its third ysar: Throe-quarters of an hour before breakfast s piece of an crange. First meal—Two tablespoonfuls of well cocked cereal wltn cream, a little sugar and salt, stale or dried bread and butter, glass of warm milk, soft egg throe times a week. Second meal—Gloss of worm milk, or a cup of chicken or mutton broth, with a-slice of stale or dried bread, a piece of unsweetened zwieback, or a good breakfast biscuit. Third mcsl—Broth (when nft given at second meal), meat or stock, chop, roast beef, roast lamb or white meat of chicken, scraped or finely cut: potato baked or boiled or. mashed, or rice, or tnactaronl stewed very soft, with milk, asparagus or fresh peas, cr string beans, or spinach, cr stewed celery, all thoroughly cooked, and bread and butter; junket or plain custard twice a week; ao other days, prune* or baked appie^,- or apple sauce. Fourth meal—FYom tea to fourteen ounces of warm milk, with bread, fa rtna. arrowrcct, barley, cornstarch, or granua cr milk toast. Young Woman for Overseer. A young woman has been appelated road overseer for a prominent rood in Shelby county. She Is to have charge of all c< the head* allotted by the county court to her particular road district. Mil Is to work the roads Just as well as the members of the strong er sox who wore appointed to similar positions. Many mongers of the oaiirt who are responsible Tor tbe young lady's ap pcJnlmeot are confident she will make a record for beraelf. and that the roads In her particular district will be the beet specimens in the whole country. !' b also predicted that she will have no difficulty In securing baa da to work the roads, aa most men will not object to being "bossed" by a woman. The young lady who has thur achieved distinction as the cnly road overseer in the United States Is Miss Bessie Shipp, who lives with a Miss Helms, formerly of Chicago, on a farm near Millington. Miss Shipp and her friend arc engaged in the business ol farming for themselves. They own the property and conduct Its affairs Miss Shipp Vas appointed goad over seer by tho county court for road dia trtet No. 1. the read being know* as Shipp road, in the second civil district By a special arranrement the magls trates of the various district* were permitted to submit lists of those whom they desired appointed as road
Couches and Nerves. Couches have saved more minds and nervous systems than all the doctors and medicine* put together. U is the best refuge that the over worked housekeeper has, did she but know It; and the only fault I have to find with women is that, as a rule, they do not use their couches half enough. When distracted by the infinite care* of the household and worried over this j bill and that a woman should have s ■ place where she can throw herself j down and. stretched at ease, allow her j troubles to straighten themselves out ! «f their own socord. | By theee means hysteria is avoided, ! beauty Is preiervsd, and tbe women's ; chances for eternal Mlvatlon are : helped tremendously. — Philadelphia North Am •rises. I Turnover Laundry Bag. Often the summer girl prefers to i launder her dainty turnovers which ■ are apt to lose themselves or he torn In the ordinary wash. If she wishes to keep them seperale when soiled, s . sug0Mtlon is here given for a dainty 1 aad Asple laundry bag for them: Sew lnmrthii- two handkerchiefs with colored borders, leaving about 2 1-3 inches tree at the top. On the wrong side of l the bag. Just below the openkig. sew on s atrip of whit* muslin about an : Inch in width to give a phteo for the ' drawing ribbon, whlofi should be of I the mm* color a* the border of the I handkerchief. 'Aiie ribbon may be of ! taffeta, satin or the washable silk ; tap*. The bsgs themselves are easily laaadered, and pretty out of all proportion to their expense or the trouble b.—Brooklyn Eagle.
She «r«t shut off the
t Street by a quirk-growing
Jspaa tee varieties
The idea at first was irit r apparent, as K took time las to dhow
of Justice Bass, cf the Second district. In looking over bis Ust. which' bad al ready been voted upon by the court, the name of Miss Shipp was found. The young lady .bos been regularly elected and will assume her new position at cnce. Mias Shipp 1* an attractive woman of about 25 years of age. Pbe has lived in Shelby county nearly all oi her life, and at one time taaght school in this city. She was considered bn* of the best Instructors In the scanty Both of her parents are deed, and the young lady, although not obliged ts work, has done a great deal. She Is an sll-arcend athlete and an expert marksman. It Is said that toe is exceptionally efficient In. the nee of ■ rifle and shot gun. and has established an enviable reputation as a banter. Her father died recently near Millington. where he was a wealthy and pro* porous fanner, and at bis demise Mist Shipp became possessed of ocnslderable property.—Memphis Sclmftar.
Fashion Notes. An Ivy leal veil in black thread lace la a catchy novelty. A fold of contrasting chiffon Is noted i some drapery veils. Stitched dock outing hate are worn by women as wail as children. Narrow milk ruche* are tbe latest and smartest trimming touch. More or leas tiny stole effects are a feature of much dainty neckwear. Outline lace with dainty braids or imo of the narrow embroidered rft>
Dotted foulard Is being extensively used as s trimming by tbe best drese-
Klther a row of heavy stitching or • hemstitching finishes the hem of a chiffon veil. Pinked niches ana pinked finances are another step toward our grandmethers* dsy. Mercerised muslins are decidedly silk like. The process takes splendid effect on the raised dots. Great car* must be taken not to gst the BtocUees bodice* too low, else they are nnsuited to ordinary wear. Pate blue I* one of the moat admired
Fringe* are, it to said, to to
narrow raveled fringe of ■ a toping of the tome
i of the new doth gowae
The Car* of Clothes. Too much cannot be said upon tb* airing of silk aad sroolea waists after being worn. When removed they abonid be carefully brushed and mended. If there are any little repairs to be made, and then hung over a waist hangar or tha back of a chair near an open window, with the wrong side out. For this, fluffy waists, or those of haniWvae silk or satin. It Is aa txoto lent plan to stuff the sleeves with white tissue paper and pet tb*
shirt waists, which should always be laid their full length and very lightly, on* over the other, may be obtained by »«wwg ah ordinary wooden box about two feet long by three feet deep, and covering It with some pretty cretonne. with the loslde covered either to match or in ooatraeting goods, and the covered lid attached by two or three fancy brass hinges.—The Dellne-
Ueee of Turpentine Any childish throat or lung sffeotlaa la relieved by Inhaling tbe vapor of turpentine. Also rub It Into the chest an til the akin reddens, when a moistened piece of flannel Is applied. A subseqffsnt sweet oil application will save the skin. Persons In remote districts find It
It la said to be one of the beet dressings tor patent leather. Mixed with beeswax turpentine to one of tne very beet floor polishes. A few drop# In the starch will prevent the starch from sticking to the asd Iron. A oat foot (one aeea some law barefooted children) heals quickly If milter resinous fff>entlne or spirits of turpentine be applied. Pains from burns will readily yield to an application of spirits of turpentine. It will speedily remove the serenes* from,* blister. Paint to b«wt removed from clothing by mease of turpentine. New Ways ts Cook Cab bag*. Plain boiled cabbage to an uncompromising substance we all know; but U yon chop it'before boiling, season It with pepper end salt, drain the water from It when It to quite tender, pat tt la a with rich you have achieved a delicious marvW In tha cabbage Use that ought really to go to the table under a prettier name. Then stuffed r cabbage affords a delight in the eallng that to never to to found In a cabbage served without such Boil the cabbage whole
last before it to quite done. Take out the middle very carefully, leaving a good cage, bo to totok. Fill this case with some chopped.oold cooked chick-
For Philadelphia
enough to give It with a little stook end a bee ten egg or Tie ap aaouraly with a string tor SO mlnafta U with melted me grated ^r-
tJ
before taking from the oven, aad whan you are ready to Bead U to the table surround It with a rich. ' ‘ Mtoe the ktod that vor, and K will to with tha cabbage.—Philadelphia Tele-
U
n
Daily at 3.15 ^ If. from Cape May Landing. Beach front Trolley direct to the Pier. Daily connection for Wilmington. Del., via P. and R. R. R. at Delaware Piver Pier. Stops at Chester Tuesdays, Thursdays, Saturdays and'Sundays. Steamer Leaves Philadelphia. Pier 3, foot of Chestnut street, daily for Cape May at 7.30 a. m. Excursion, 1 day Ticket, $1.00. Excursion, Season Ticket, $1.25. Single Fare, 75 cts. Gape May Steamboat Gomoany. 101 Arcade Building, Philadelphia, and Washington and Decatur Bts., Cape Ms
CONGRESS HALL. DIRECTLY OH BEACH. The only Brick Hotel in Cape May. The most modern, up-to-date hotel in Cape May. Surrounded b a magnificent 5-acre lawn, with an UNOBSTRUCTED VIEW OF THE OCEAN. The hotel has been thoroughly renovated and improved at a large er ense, and service, cuisine, etc., are unexcelled. ORCHESTRA. For terms, information, etc., address R. HALPIN. Prop.
fflotol ^afa^ottoj
CAPE MAY, N. J.
Thirteenth year under same management. Frontiag directly on the ocean. All modem improvements. Room? en suite with private baths. For terms* apply to ^ JOHN TRACY & CO.
THE VIHDSOH NOW OPEN .•Finest Location in Cape May... R. HALPIN Also of Congress Sail.
THE COLONIAL
OOIAN END OF OCEAN STREET. UNOBSTRUCTED VIEW - . PRIVATE BATHS. ROOMS EN SUITE. *
WM. H. CHURCH.
THE ELBERON.
. Enlarged, improved, accommodates 150 guests, private baths, larg« . opposite Congress Hall, two minutes walk from' beach, P. R. R. and R. R. R., near post office and churches. The table supplied with aea food. J. R. Wilson & Son.
THE GLEN WOOD
N
Hurtles Street
peitnUj Lmtod for all poinU. Near Be&oh. Finert] Lwmtiou W. F. WILLIAMS.
m. • m mi r
wm:. s. stLiVW, omraistAX. ooieraLa-cnos
DIAL*. W
t.tmx, BRICES, SAND, CEMENT AND BUILDERS MATERIALS. No. *>. Ml Buima arun.

