I- . '| JM&XaJ
-CROSS BEA8IN6” K BriUlut fniay Samoa ly ley. Jane* E. Homs. Uft»» U* •• n,r, •*» P** 1 SfWI •» CMf*|« m4 CMie*tn«a‘, Er«» WhM »« S4ajI*t lo4« a Urt •• kt*n*y.
Rroout.rx. N. V -la the SammerteM Uctiutiic ’(-a 1 Chnreh SnnJ*r mornm* the r»»ior, the lUr* Jiiaiee K. Holmee. tuJ (or bu .object CroM »W»niu. He touk a. hi. text Mattliew xxeu: S3: Aod a. they came out they found a man of '• t-mioc hv n-.nje; him thee com:o bear Hta ctoa*-" Mr. Holme.
p«Urd
Three kind, of
.... _ .-ailed St. Andrew’a i in the (onn of the_ letter
dir.ary lalti
,t of thrM that Jei Thu confuted of I
which waa earned before! re of execution, and tw«
It w» iffcr^fl
zva
of torcwawlni, C a'mOMvnt. In th* twtaklullins reaponaibility. or aoou irkaome reatraint, or twrhapa it ia an orerwhelnune .!•v:race. Sow are they like bimon ol Cyrene, fall of bitterseaa and rreentmeot, .trusslinc alont under tlieir burden with dossed per.i.tence, bat fimlmg no joy and no prodt ia their creoa. On tlia other hand,
there are the Pan]*; the I
i: no. it U of com pa rati rely
n i he ho-ir* of » end 10 o’clock morning that that memorable pro- . ..f winch dm. wn. the centra! figt forth for the jdace of execution: ouiaide the city wall.. Ordinarily and preceded by a imblic crier, om tune to time proclaimed aloud lure of the crime. He al»o carried c wooden board on whnA thia »T«
ter oi roarer, a great crowd non.d lol.ow. The - eight of the cro« «>on prored too hea- y for the exhaujtcd .trength of dcau.. Yon mu.t ren'embe: He hat not tarted food or drink aincr the I’a-chal aupper the night before, and that event, had occurred since then in ouifk succcmob. every one ol which mu.t hive -tirred Hi. «oul with dee- r -1 emotion-. Tilbetrayal by J11 dak. and the farewell to Hu diaeiplea had occurred. after which He had aprnt^ rocne
hour* alone in (.etharmr terriSe mental and apiri
wa. then, a* aul remember, that emir, found Him. .inre which
and a. painful, too. as men ever bare thi. life. But what a contrast they piwarn t‘ for their life note ia .oyoua and tnumohant, notwith.tanding the cross on their barks Simon ia the man who >• bearing hu lot in gloomy and sullen at Jeoce. and bearing it in a way that make* ton feel he ia none the better for having to do it. Paul ia the man whose suffering, and buses you can plainly see are the explai'ktion of aia buoyant and eon rare out spirit. His lot. disagreeable and ditbrult a. it i«. > accepts, not as the other man. with biturnea and resentment, but in tbit •pint of faith and oWdw-iic* that ttod ha. a right to expect from all Ilia chil-
dren.
1 know there are some to whom thi» will >oucd strange and perhaps imji'tutblr. and I know they are conscientious and religious people. They accept it aa a fact that men must expect to be suddenly halted in life, like Simon of Cyrene. made to bear heavy and humiliating eroaa, and they jvor to be *tn-ji-hearted and brave under the ordeal, but it is always and only eeable and unfortunate circumtheir lives; and they resent it and hate it a* did Simon: and that it all. Thee never seem to find the source of strength and happinraa in their cross. Now. ia it that the Paul attitude and the Paul are possible? Possible to the nreracn I mean? Or do they reauire the
md the Paul vil
ugeie. It t Hi. n*-
. ... HU dueiole* had a aaken Hun. ' Meanwhile He has been hurried trim place to p'ace and from one official lo another: from Annas to Caiphas. then to Pilate, then to Herod, and/then again to Pilate. Indignity upon indignity, torture upon torture litre been heaped upon Him all that livelong night and all thai ".orning. so that it i. not to be wondetrd at that Ue weight of the ero** wa* txi great for Him. Up to the Ust eat. . 1-jwcvee. He manaerd to drag it. but here He sank exhausted beneath the heavy load. It happened just then that tbu man. Simon of Cyrene, came upon the scene, and him the' Roman soldier, aeaed and evmpelled to carry the cross the remainder ol the way. On first thought it might seem strange that the people would nrrnfit such an indigniiy put upon a fellow Jew. but thi. Kimo.. wa. undoubtedly a foreigner, which hi. drea. woald ind.eate, and the soldiers would know that it was safer to put this hnmikation on a foreigaer than upon a Dative of Jerusalem. Ai" it waa. the peohavr resented jt, that -o suffer the <’ of bearing a heathen cross. and_ have been the explanation that Simon wa« a foreigner, and only a proselyte Jew. How surprised and chagrined be mu.t i been, to be thrust so unexpectedly into raeh a predicament’ Uow it happened that he waa there walking abroad on a fast day we do not know. He may have been idly strolling along that country road without any particular aim or purpose in view, or he may have lived outside the eity walls and was entering the city on bu.ir.esa or to worship or merely on pleasure brut. We eannoiknow how to explain hi. presence there on th.t road betwr Calvary and Jerusalem just at that mom when same one wa. needed to bear the crow of Christ, but it happened that he appeared on the scene just as Jesus sank beneath His load, and he finds himself seized by the Roman soldiers, and despite his remonstrance*, compelled to bear the croc, of Christ. It is all so sudden, and to unexpected, that he een scarcely know whether it is rot all a dream. UV see it all as he did not. We ee Simon", experience that for which woald gladly give all that we have. And why coaid he not appreciate it? Waa H ignorance on his tart? Had he never hrs l the nlme of Jems of Naxareth' Had he not lie.rd of ( those strange ant Start ing event* that had been stirring Jertualrw of late? To him it onlv appears * r an unfortunate accident that he hapoenct to cross the path of thia man Christ ot the wsy to execution, just as Hr tanl down under the weight of Hia eroaa. Ai it is, hr eonsidrr. himself abused, humili a ted. dicgraced. and now he longs for the momeat of release, that he mav hide himself from the gaze of the people and bear in -imee the defilement that 1 upon him and upon his house. And now I wish to place alongside of thi.. and in contrast to it. the words of the npcrtle Paul. ’’Cod forbid that I should glory save ia the cro*s of Christ." To Simon the rrow. of Christ means disappointment. disgrace and loss: to Paul it n the one thing glorious and worth rejo icing over. How explain the difference in reminent? It will so* do to say Paul is aimuly dealing in a figure of,speech, while Simon actuxliv suffered the" weight and the di*trace of an actual cross, for Pari bore the cross of Christ as actually as Ni —on.
I: s
THE SABBATH SCHOOL
lalcrulloMl
Sc pi to her 24. .
Pfer f*.,
ftmlthionlan Artlate Art Bu*/ Prapa*
' log Pair B*hlWta./( t
!*r©nded the place wefa" open to air comers, the Smithsonian Institution workshop would doobtlew at present afford mor* .of Interest than the Interior of any other gorernmdft Inatitotkm or department in the city. The exhibit which the Smithsonian and burean of ethnology win make at the St. Louis exposition U In course ot preparation In this workshop, located In an obscure and out-of-the-way corner of the south aide, not far from the harbor front and steamship wharves. At present Mr. GUI of the bureau of ethnology is applying the ilnlibln* touches to the fourth of the 10 reproductions in miniature of the most atriklna. artatic and wonderful of those peculiar ■tructures erected by the preColumbian Aztecs. Zapoteca. Quiche*, Mayas, Mlxtece. Chtbohas. Ayamaraa Qulchmaa. etc., throughout Mexico, Central America. Yucatan. Colombia. Ecuador. Bolivar and Peru. The reproduction. now completed. Is none other than that of the famous "House of the Governor" (Casa del Gobernador). fituated on the eumit of an enormous pyramid In the heart of the ruined city of Uxmai. In Yucatan, and by ail traveller* .considered the greatest triumph of aboriginal art and en-
gineering skill In America.
Readers will be Interested to learn (hat thi* miniature reproduction of a temple covered from top to bottom with the most Intricate carving and stone cutting Imaginable, was casi from piaster of paris tn (he rough, but owing lo the wealth and Intricacy of the ornamentation of the original the greater portion of the model had actually to be handcarved from photograph*. prints and picture* of the Casa facade*. This proved a slow, laborious and difficult task, but Mr. GUI has at last completed' the work to the eatU-
faction of Prof. William H. Holme* houses and enshnned in the tem- 1 th * originator of the Idea. Seme who i.Tfeg;sS^"S"‘i» o, a4ssU»™ a.c »»«-■ «*"•> Mr. community witnessed for the saving and j Gill did not carve the reproduction
iseking tbs heart ness snd' the hope : cUansing power of tltt Gospel. The ex- I from a block of hard wood Instead of » of the other, fhtothermani.no bortatiou. ol the thitTt'be teidi / P 1 ** , * r but b « ‘lelni* that
Sebjtck Absltaccct Frea lv3.
II—OeMea Tsii, Epk. U-Meafry
Vsrses, 1-2—Ceaaeetery a*
lb* Dtj't Letsao.
L The tree ii/e frs. 1. 5). I. "Fomemuch.” Comnert 3:1*. 1 be apostle poinu us to Christ s suffering* as an example "Arm yourselves.” With a rrsolotioo such as animated him to suffer ail the evil# to which you may be exposed in the body, and particularly to suffer death, if called hr God to do ao for your religion. For thia will be armor-proof against *11 your enemies. There is Mill fighting, for »in will he moleslinx you; though wounded to death, )ct wiH it struggle for life and seek to wound it* enemy; it will assault the graces that are in you. Yon may take the Lord’a promiae for victory; that a hall not fail; but do not promise yourself ease in the way. for that will not hold. “He that bath suffered.” etc. It is only by a severe conflict in which you must be armed with a readme** to suffer with Christ, -that the power of ain over you can be made to
with the wire mind that was in Christ, in order to live no longer in the flesh to I the lusts of men. but to the will of God." ) We eannot deliver ourselves from the filth of sin: but when wr are renewed, taking on a likeneas oi Christ, then we are armed against the lusts and defilement* of the world. ’To the will of God." Thi* will be a new life. The only true way to live is to live in harmony with the will of God. What He wih* i* best and to the Christian
Paul c
- that the
, mqft one hare
gtimpie of the third heaven? » ••*. j—* j ponder this query, in the hope that we may clearly see and lie convinced that it *- no unattainable principle for any mao,
arwhere in this world.
Here are two young men—classmates at college, nr thopmates. if you please, in the a-mc office or factory. The on* is about as diligent as the other and abont a* lucf**fuL Nerertbriesa. there'is * marked ifferenee. The one finds study or busies*. as the rase may be, irksome and aviah. it neither inspire* nor develop* ..im. He simply does what be does be esuse he ought to or must, and his whole life i.'nothing rnewe than a stolid persistfaint— — better scholar, no better workman nrs* man. bat he is a contrast, notwilh standing. Whether it is study or business, he finds his joy and inspiration in what be does, and does what he doe* from a spirit of love. There are the same restraint*, the same burdens upon both, but the one exults in them and is developed by them, where as the other ia full of resentment, and is in no way benefited. While the one is full of enthusiasm and anticipation, th* other is heartless and crushed. The one ia
Paul, the other ia Simon.
People used.to wonder “why Cteoege William Cnrtia. the dist nguiahed and gifted editor df Harper’s Magazine, entered the lecture field. He eras known to have • lucrative position and a considerable income from hia writing*: and ao it accmrd strange to many peonlr that be should take up lecturing, with its inconvenience* and risks. Some were inclined to regard him as mercenary, but on hit death the expl-snstinn appeared. Years before, ao it is said, Mr. Curtis bad engaged in a bosines* enterprise with a friend which proved unfortunate for both. It was in order to all the obligations incurred by the
, . «> :
A gentle way of saying
spent too long a time tli— <:.-it;v. ** *1 1.— I.
"May
meins evil on._. .. wanton: indulging
by God and Intern prranc
The term Gentiles here intemperate, wicked and jg in every sin forbidden n. "Excoa of wine." etc.
the apostle’*
_ __ i. He utters against it eondemnetion of no nncertain sound. Every |>er*on and especially every man of God should be outspoken against intemperance. '’Abominable ido'vtries." In an age when sensuality waa w-rougbt into all form* of literature and art, was blazoned shamelessly in the deeorati '
PHI-COLUMBIAN CURIO*.
; of thi* emphatic.
4. "Think it strange.’’ It is strange the carnal man to see the child of God ; disdain the pleasures of sin; be knows not ! the higher and purer p'euures that the Christian is called to. "Execs* of riot." ; Rather, "same slough of debauchery.’ ; ’"Speaking evil of you." The wicked and
this would have been an Impoasiblllty The symbolle figures, feathered
he'knowa'not I P' unlcd divinities, frets, ehev- ■’ ' rocs, and all the other strange figure*
adorning the facade of the Casa del Gokemador are, he state*, of a char-
oiute~\i ways' 'have A sneer?or tb^* 1 fo complicated and Involved aa who refuse to share in their evil doings. I to render a reproduction 4a wood out of
^ * the question. In addition to these pre-Columbian
o God I
firm which bore hi* name that his *oin: on those extended lecture
and Mr. Curtis lived long enough to retire that ft
from the lecture platform—and that, too.
-ked do not hesitate
when they meet a Christian. HI. An account to be rendered (vs. 5, 6). 5. ’’Shall give ac
hath the day aet; and it shall — though they think it far off. Though the wicked themselves forget their scoff* against the godly, and though the Christian alights them and lets them pass, they pass not so; they are all registered; and the gres. court-day shall calf them to account for all these riots and excesses, and withal for all their reproach** of the godly that would not run with them in these wsy*. "Ready to judge." See chap. IA As the salvation ol the godlr is fully arranged, so is the judgment of their calum-
niators. whether living or dead.
(I. "The Gospel preached also." They - “* ' rlv received the Goepel received
AM they
other work of equal interest ia in progress. Mr. Palmer la busy building up the cast of a sulphur-bottom whale from the moulds taken in New(oundlaad. while Mr. Turner is equally busy mounting the big giraffe, the Norwegian elk. the Pamir sheep, the musk ox and other animals. He has jurt finished the work of mounting a black bear, which competent judges aay ia another triumph of modem taxidermy. Instead of standing reared on Its hind legs and steadying itself with a stick
IDEA AGENTS WANTED In each town to tele orders for cur new High Grad*
Guaranteed Bicycler.
New 1903 Modela “BcIJlsc,” CcorLie *8.75 0t Cossack,” Onszantood iiiab Srafo $10.75 tg SUtarhut,”- a Boauty 812.75 "Naudorf,” Itoad Itaoer 814.75
no better bicycle e*. any prim.
Any Other make or' model you srarT ol one-third usual price. Choice of any atacdurd tiros and bert equipment on all our bicycle*. o:r»ny>af yuorvtee. We SHIP CM APPROVAL C. O. D. U> an, ooo vrtihcmt a cent dcjtotti and allow IO DAYS FREE
TRIAL before purchase U binding.
$00 Second Hand Wheels [q Jg
taken tn trade by <r
akeaandmode;*.good x>ixs
NOT BUY furSiir 0 ratet/aao 1 fiict*fai'xl or ful 1 Snorting goods of all kinds, al half regular price. Coot*li * a world of useful Infonnailou. Write for ItBYCLE CO., Chicago, III.
WM. 8. 8 HAW, CKSITES-A-Ij CDSTTR-A-CrrOT?. DEALER IN LIKE BRICKS, SAND. CEMENT AND BUILDERS MATERIALS. Telephone No. to. Elmira Street._
B. S. CURTIS, dtPlumbing, Steam and Gas Fitting, ot ALL ORDERS RECEIVE PROOPT ATTENTION.
SHOP-No. 11 Decetur St.
CAPE MAY. N. J.
IF YOU ARE A FARMER
lAND HAVE 0Nl CEHT|&
Buy a postal card and aoud to The New York Tribunu Farmer, New York City, for a free specimen copy. The Tribune Farmer is a National Illustrated Agricultural Weekly for Fanner*and their familua, and stands at the bead of the agricultural press. The price Is 11.00 per year, bat if f ou like it you cau secure It with vour own avorite local newspaper, the Cars Hat Herald. at a bargain. Both paper* ooe year only •LOT
i, with interest.
aay that th*m.
g-—£ >•' th^r^ad not die^ - to their aim j mounted by the old school of taxi derby the Gospel, they had d-ed in them, and , .. , . ^ died eternally. It ia therefore a wise : “t 1 * 1 *- ,hl * Particular animal appears* • have ain ^judged and put to ] In the characteristic act of pulling up
! prevention b
there srw to-day who — —,
thirz Mr. Curtis did. and as a matter of
fact th* number of men who have done death in os before we ..... . ao in the oast is not small. Indeed, there part with ain, if art die in it and with it, r.re men living ia our midst who are striv- ! we shall perish forever: but if it die first,
ing to do this self same thing. But all before us, then we live forever. "live. -*- —* is—* *v- •»m# spirit in to. God.” A bitter fountain
__ God.'' A bitter fountain sends forth bitter waters; a sweet fountain, water* that are street. A soul living in God will
from r.laec to nlaee. a vagabond on the face of th* earth; it wa* the rross that brourl.t him into prison, and into danger; i: was the cross that made him a disgra~r. and his r-mc an execration wher-cvr-n tfirve wa* a Jewish synagogue. Paul rsfered low, and pain and bumi'istion over and nrer again on account of the cross. Cai' it a figaro cf speech if you will, but his back was beat, and broken: bit bodily pairs were r.s crania*, his humiliation was at deep and his Ion as great as came tn Simon of Cyrene and far more so. The exper-eaces of the two men were very aimPx-. dnMt identical: for it was on a country road, leading into IHina« us that Pan! first came fore to fore with Jesus Ckrlit. and it wai then and there that the cross of "Christ was laid anon him And that from that moment until he died he bore that eros*. icelieg keenly the weight of it. -the L -riiliitisn of it. the lore it occasioned him. but. unlike the other men. glorym- in it sbd rejoicing *eeo.ir.t of it. Way the contrast? J Pan) understood the rross. it* meaning, purpose, iU power: Simon did not. I'— saw. that that crosi, instead of being the iiuOraaent of torture and s'osme. was on ■ntxary God’s saving and sanctifying —-* —o In that cross
— ifest the **i— thia otherwiae noble task. One man win
aet as if he were a bond slave, and while ... be ia faithful to his duty, does it in a show that life by action. If the heart be wheerlesa. hearties- manner, apparently right in the sight of Jehovah, the outward 'finding nothing in hi* hard experience to man will reflect His image, rejoice in or be thankful for. He goes r\ f . Various exhortations (va. 7-11). 7. j about hi* task as Simon bore the cross-- "End ... at hand.” Thia might have cursing the luck that brought him to the been said at any point of the world' hour, and full of bitterness and resentment J **— **-- -* ' T —* **--* —■*
on arcov it of it. Witbou’ heart or inspiration. and without comfort or joy. be
take* up his croa* and trudge* toward Calvary. On the other hand, there are our short life. But what is the utmost men to whom these heavy tasks became ao length of time, were it millions of years, inspiration and a source of strength; who- to a thought of eternity? To reach max are finding their happiness and their de- the end of all things is. even after our ve'.opment in carrying the cross, o hap- measure, at hand; for when he dies the pine-* and a dcvelo-unent that they would world end* for him. “Be sober, and watch otherwise never have known. unto ptayer.’’ Sobriety is 'the friend of U yon and I are to have the Paul spirit watchfulneaa. and prayer of both. When of courage and contentment, even while the affections are kept quietly under conwe staeger under the heavy cross, it can trol, and care is taken that e-ea in lawful only he by the wav nf the Paul attitude things they follow the world but lightly; toward God and the Paul relationship to when th' necessary duties of this life are Jesus Christ. This it the same Paul who done faithfully, yet with a mind free and wrote. "We are children of t -d and u disengaged, then the soul can more easily '-hildrec then heirs: 1 e:re of God and joint turn to spiritual things, and be ready conheir* with Christ;" th* tame Paul who tinuallv for dirine meditation aod prayer, wrote. '’All things works together for , 8. "Above *11 thmgt.” Paul nuta lore rood to them who love God. Afterward at the bead o? the Christian graces, in his Soron of Cyrene underatood the guaa of ; match!*** chapter on charity (1 Cor. 19). Chnat. and turn ha became a Pad. Though Peter likewise does the aams. Paul goes the authorities turned him out of the *yn- I so for as to aay, "Lore is the fulfilling of agogue as defiled, though he anfchia family the law.” Charity must be as the crown, une ostracised. H mattered little to or the outer garment. It must be used by w. since they could clearly see how the Christian aa the ipost important and .—» good had come to them In th* form ; most distinguished Christian virtue. Love of misfortune. . i# the essence of religion. It mult be at And do j* noj aee # bjw tr— thh foof l work in tbs heart and shown ia the life,
a atone with his left pxw. and peering underneath in search of a wily and artful crawfish that is trying to escape hia cuteneas.—Washington Host.
Eery core; their souls
the burden*-of the family __ mother, and that the new and heavy responsibility to others were just what they needed to round out their characters and to fill their careen with force and
stren-th?
And whatever may be tb* form of the
from God, and is the one thing that ire ; may keep through life and carry to heaven with u*. "Cover . . . ains.” It delight* ! not in undue disclosing of brethren’s foilI ings. and doth not expose then williagly
—M 1 to the eye* of other*.
weight of the eroaa foul upon o* m tins , HI. "Hospitality." A* would often In »» friends, let us remember these necessary toward tha suffering. “Without . _ thine*: That it is possible, like Paul. 1 grudging.’’ Not murmuring at the coat oi the ap-wtle. to find the inspiration and >oy trouble. Tha gift." Endowment of any of our Itvea in tV» eroaa: and. further, that | Wad, but eapscially that.conferred by the it must be ro if our ittifod* toward God . Ho.r Spirit—money, ability, influence or i* ore of faith and obedience and our , whatever God has given. “Good stewre stiooshiD to Jean* that .of a loyal and . arda." Whatever we have ia tn be “minlovmg discip.e. istered" to other* aa God may direct. We
I are Hia stewards. What wo c*3 oar own - —* n ~' < — J »—re-— *- trod, am! wo
» Bfo
Buying a Volcano.
The value of the Mexican volcano Popocatepetl aa a sulphur mine is explained In Page’s Magazine. IU own-
. _ er. Genera! Gasper Rancher Ochoa, reduration. To the eternal Lord that made | celved it from the government in rec-
Cwr';hS.l"!”iw j oniuo. ol
sand years a great nutter in respect of ! ■‘Id to have offered It for IB.000,00-* ' —*- * ' —- ’ bargain, considering the million* of
dollars worth of sulphur it contains. Two parties are declared to be bidding for It. one backed by John D. Rockefeller and the other by John P. and Samuel Green of Pitta burg. There are two schemes by which it la proposed to work the Afipbor mine. One la to tnnnel into the volcano at abont 600 yards below the crater, and to remove the sulphur by a cable conveyor carrying buckets 100 feet apart. These will dip into the. red hot molten sulphur and bring it out, the backets traveling 200 feel per minute. The estimated coat of thi* equipment is about
*500.000.
The other scheme propose# to send a cogwheel railway over the lip of the crater down into th# sulphur lake, but it Is questionable If sdftcient foundation is available to sustain the heavy support that would ho necexsary. For many generations this sulphur ho* been mined in s crude fashion, and it U believed to be Inexhaustible. Its market price at present is *40 per ton.
God’* cm*.
Into all miliar way*. God iofnxzi
livcv ia many simple, fo-
® God infest* this element ot
surprises of life; which
pcctcdly britjiten <
eye*. with 'ifht. L-. . sueotuea* into Hi* children’s makes it to run on ’
were not counting oe, , ... not trying after, tha strain of music ia tha midst of drudgery, tha beautiful morning picture or sunset glory thrown in aa we peas to or from our daily boatnasa, tha unsought word of encouragement or expression of sympathy, tha ssntanee that meant more for ua than the writer or speaker
' me asd a hundred othan that chance—i t cf ten is; you mav
STitffod’J krre" £&?**-
tv&L
cv. Dr. Woods, San Fnadoeo, Oal.
from God and b»’- . should, as “good atewarls,’
glorv. If we hare an o-.aiortunitv to vote agaicst the uloon and fail to do to, instead of ministering good to others we will be putting a curse upon them. "A* the 1— •> <ri.— who .neat for God -a oat
what Hh reveals to them; speak the truth as revaaled in
mav reft. is tha limit of pur
Thia
Bhamal - When a man’s foot gets taagiad op with a woman’s under the table and aha gets mad about it you can make hue madder fay pretending you thought U wae somebody else.
Her FI ret visit.
When -n new danghter-tn-iaw m visit to her husband's old horns pom sway with a collect ion of t
pirtures of tor
the past furnished the principal supply- ' Animals as Sailers. A French acientirt. according to the Faria correapondent of the "London Expreas. has made eoma very Interesting obi ervaUons as to th* love of different wild aslmala for the sea. The Polar bear, ho saya, lx the only one that takes to the aea. and la quits jolly when aboard ship. All other* violently rearnt a trip on water, and rocUeronaly give vent to their feelings until aea sickness brings alienee. Th* tiger suffers moat of alL Tb# mere sight of a ship makes him uncomfortable. and when on board be whines pitifully, hi* eye* water continually. and ha rubs his stomach wlm hia terrible paw*. Horeea era very hod sailor*, and often, periah on a tea voyage. Oxen are heroic In their attempt* not to gfva * ‘ do not Ilka
ffrew J» » Icehca.
< THEm8T0RY°0FHSAl > E°MAY < ’C0UHTY }
THE ABORIGINAL TIMES
To
THE FBESENT BAY
fiMBBACmO
An accouaUof the Aborigine; The Dotch in Delaware Bay; The Settle-
‘ le VYIlap
ment of the County; The Whaling; The Growth of the Villages; The Revolution and Pntnots; The Establishment of the New Government; Ac War of 1812; _
The Progress of the County; and The Soldiers of the Civil War
BY
LEWIS TOWNSEND STEVENS.
480 PAGES. 48 ILLUSTRATIONS. 31 CHAPTERS. 5 APPEDICES Sent Postpaid Receipt of $1.©0 by LEWIS T. STEVENS, Publisher, SOS Waahlagton Street, CAVE MAX. N. J.
SAMUEL E. EWING ... General Contractor ... HOUSE MOVING A SPECIALTY. Post Office .Address, Cap: May Court Ho'dss, N. J.
Paint! Paint! Paint! -v"l IlIHY DON’T YOD PAINT? But when you do. ua*.. u C»—IW nothing but the beat material*. I mix paint** - ® "W—•• properly, apply them thoroughly and rapidlv. inn exercise tt-. good taste in the aelectioo of colors. Gnarantee ail work, cheerfully . e -g-v farniab cstimatr*, and promptly attrsd to all ordera. A completeV»~ Une of Painta. Oil. Stains, Puttie#, Fillers. Brushes, Varnish**, and other Coloring Material* of highest quality. IlAFAYElRUtE BSUNEHnP 103 Jackson Street, - Cape May, N. J. PRACTICAL HOUSE. SIGN AND DECORATIVE PAINTER. AGENT FOR J. E. PATTON'S SUNPBOOP PAINT*
r in price d* of plate
and handle exduafoely (ha pr»They are of finest quality and are nothing bait diaaatiafaction. AI
' d in stock.
the com moo grades, which give I plats, white, window and colored glass a ' an AAm'Fxcwatx HxdioiTXJsxzsom.
MORPH INI Bn or detention from bocseas, laaviag no cravlag; j We restore^be Dervoat and phyricJ^yatoma to
Uvertiseio (hit Ptpir.R piys

