CAPE MAY HERALD, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1904.
CLEVELAND WILL PRESIDE.
*•■4 lanMrtaal AawnMr 0*4. SI. NKW YORK. Oct. U.-Tb* fultowlos official •DnotUMt'iwtit of <3rorer CJcvp UimI'* aMMwniiUf at a poUttca) sneotlut In till* (*11}- lta» i>*4*ii uiade at Deiuocrattc national ln'adtiuartt^s: "TIj»* Himlmiw Mru'a Parker and l>avla aBWM-lation. ahoae meuilwraliip la drawn from the leadliitf hualn«w men of New York, have arranjced to hold a niaaa meetliii; In ('ameicle hall on OcL 21. KvPreakh’tit <Jrover Cleveland luia ao far overcome hla dtalndlimtlon to make a mieech durlmr'the eanvnaa that he haa •'oiiaeiileil to prealde at this meetlujt It Is. however, fully uudenatuud both by the natldnal committee and hv bis friends that this apI>earame of the ex-|irw»ddent will be the only one he will make as a speaker dutinj; the eamiialem The principal speech of the evenltyf will be delivered, by et-8e»-retary of the Trvnanry John <■. Carlisle, ami It la exiiectvd. that this meet line will i>e the moat lm|Mirtanf one held by any party In New York during the pending eampalKU.'*
NEW POSTMASTER GENERAL. Hebert J. Wynne Aapolated by Pare* Meat Moonerell. WASHINGTON. Oct. 11.-President Roosevelt haa appointed Robert J> Wynne postmaster iconeral to succeed the late Henry C. Payne. Mr. Wynn# has been actiuj: puatniaater general by presidential order aince Mr. Payne'a death. Thta appointment makes him a meml>er of the cabinet. Mr. Wynne waa born in New York city In November, 1852. and was there educated In the public school*. He removed tb Philadelphia and learned telegraphy, working In the Gold and Stock board, eventually becoming chief operator of the Padflc and Atlantic Telegraph company. After living eight yearn in Philadelphia Mr. Wynne came to Washington. In 11KJ2 Mr. Wynne was appointed first assistant postmaster general and has hdd that position up to the pre* ent time.
Financial and commercial. CImIbs Stock Qaotatloaa. Money on call firmer at per oetst Prime mercantile paper, 4*466 per cent Exchanges, fllACkSjSS. Balances. I6.»C, *4. Closing prices: Amal. Copper... t3\ N. T. Central. li»H Atchison Bt*, Norf. A West.. 71% B. 4 0.. Penn. It It IBS Bnjoklyn R. T. Reading 71% C. .C..C.A St. L HS Rock Island.... 9% Cbee. 4 Ohio.. «•, at Paul H*s Chi. 4 Northw. IsMi Southern Pac... US* D. 4 H 173% Southern Rjr... S% Erie.. 31% South. Ry. pf... »4% Oen. Electric. . . 171% Sugar 12% m Central 143% Texas Pacific... 8% Lackawanna 2M% Union Pacific...us% Louis. 4 Nash.. 12 Dj S. Steel IS Manhattan 1H% V. B. Steel pf... W% Metropolitan—130% West Union K Missouri Pac..-100%
BAPT!XT CHUKCHm GROW. JONAH MII.LKR CRITICALLY ILL
West Jersey Association Closes A»The ninety-third annual session of the West Jersey BapUat Association, which has base hi progress in the First Baptist Church In Millville, came to a does last Thursday night The forty-two churches In the association show a marked In all branches during the pa»t year. The report of the treasurer showed a balance after all expenses had been paid. The association decided on levying a per capita tax of three cents on the membership of each church. The hand of fellowship was extended to the paptlat Church of Elmer, organised during the year. The report of the Reform Committee urged upon each chnrcn and its members a closer observance of the tiabhatb and strict sarvlllauee of each tnemIxrconcerning the manufacture, sale and usu. of In-
toxicating liquor*.
Dividing Creek was decided upon
next place of meeting. The new officers
are: Moderator, Rev. W. W. Bullock,
Bridgeton; clerk, Kev. George 8. Wendell of Woodbury; treasurer. Robert T. Seagravse, of Salem, all being re-elections
except the moderator.
A Manly Htand. Councilman Joseph Hand haa taken a mauly stand to prevent any other person from attem ting to dispose of bU vote as far as bis vota In council is concerned. He recently told Superintendent D. H. liOvell, of the West Jersey snd Seashore Railroad, that when the time came for the granting of ordinances and resolutions for necessary rights in connection with the building'of the new station at Cape May,- that he would vote for all fglr things, and against those which wcold not be tight. He also Inferred by this that no other pereot. need not attempt to arrange for Councilman Hand's votes.
WelLKoowB Lawyer Stricken Wlrti Parallels la Philadelphia. Lawyer Jonas Miller, a wrll-cnown member of the Camden her, la In Coopvr Hospital, a victim of paralysis. Mr. Miller waa stricken In Philadelphia Monday while on a visit at the boas* of a friend. The ataoke affected hi. entire left side and hta condition Is such that It jp thonght tbs stroke will prove fatal. In fact, the Philadelphia physician who waa hastily summoned, told Mr. MHler'a friends that there waa no hope at all for
the lawyer.
Mr. Miller, however, milled' daring Monday night and Tuesday morning re gained consciousness long enough to request that Dr Ernest Kamsdeil, of Camden. be sent for. Dr Ramsdell Immediately obeyed the call and after prescribing for the stricken lawyer.-returned to Camden, and arranged with the police to have
Miller brought over to Camden. Ramsdell accompanied the atnbuPhiladelpbia and directed the re-
moval of Mr. Miller to Cooper Hospital
HU condition U serious.
lawyer Jonas Miller Is a brother of Cltr Solicitor Richard T. Miller, who has been seriously ill for several months, but who Is now able to be akbU office, and a son of tlw late Senator W. R. Miller, at
May.
i the ACr/MllI \otr% 1/ K . of Ufcceto
How Republic-ana l>olt. Few Jerseymen know linqr the Republicans in control of Uil. State have made natural resources return vast Incomes that were absorbed In salaries during tbe Democratic regime. For example, tbe Bureau of Banking and Insurance l« now a veritable mint. In the last quayter the State netted $140,000 from ttd. department, although the average for tbe past few years been $175,000 Ten years ago the department was a drag on tbe State: it gave little or no valuable service and certainly did not produce a dollar of revenue.
FLOUR—Blow and lower to sell. Mlnae-
■tfSiLFiS: world's ' liberal njs ms®lis%:
;^sx
•’tfTv -Dull; shipping. *7%c.; good
choice, me.
. POTATOES—Steady; Long Island. »U* 62; Jersey and southern, tl.i06t.73; Jer-
sey sweets.
BI
BUTTER—Finn and In good demand; extra western craatnerr. Sc.: extra nearSteadr. with a fair nearby firsts and western firsts. : CHEESE—Firm, but quiet: New York full creams, fancy. 10%610%c.; do., choice. I0610%c.; do- fair to good. S%6 *VivE POULTRY—Dtdl
BATH. Me- Oct li.-Tte United
States battleship Georgia waa launchad ben today. Governor snd Mrs. Joseph M. Terrell, Congressman snd Mrs. F. C. Tate snd Mien Stella Tate, who christened tbe ship; Judge Hamilton McWhtrten. Mm. MeWhtrten and Mr*. Camilla McWhtrten and other notoMen attended tbe ceremony. Tbe Georgia delegation which attended tbe bumcbl»g is being entertained by John F. Hyde, rice president of Che Bath Hon '
work*, tbe builder of the ship.
KANKAKEE. HL. Oct. 1L—A suicide pact bae remitted In tbe death of Mias
Kean a Busy Man. "What’s Senator Kean doing in tbe campaign f asked an uninformed Democrat yesterday. Well, It would be easier to detail what ha isn’t doing. No Republican i* working harder or more effectively than John Kean. His band l» seen In the pacification of tbe Union factions, the harmonious drift in Bergen and Ocean son among the clans in the central section of the State. In a word, be seems to be making rare his party bn» a Republican majority In thi next Legislature. World's Fair Excursions. Low-rate ten-day excursions via Penusj Ivan la Railroad, October &, IS, 1$. and 36 Bate 930.10 from Cape May. Train leaves Cape May at 7 JO A. M.. connecting with special train from New York arriving 8*. Loais 4.15 P. M. next day.
Presbytcrlail Mynod. Presbyterian ministers and elders will gather In Atlantic City the middle of this month for the annual convention of the Synod of New Jyrsey. The sessions will be held in the First Chnreh, beginning next Tuesday, and contlnning three days. As l^kekood, last year, ont of the 479 ministers who belong to the synod, only 1M answered to roll call, and these, with sixtyfive elders and eleven corresponding members, made a total attendance of only 31$. Atlantic City, it Is expected, will attract a much larger number to the coming gather lug. Another consideration Is the fact that this year is the golden anniversary, of tbe founding of this city by the ‘lebration was held in June, and Dr Allen !. Brown, chairman of the synod's com m It tee on historical materials, read at that time, a paper on tbe founding of Atlantic City on old “ '
Don’t fall to mad Sol. Needles' advertisement tathla psper and fill your green trading stamp book.
—All kinds of ready-to-wear ladles’walk ing skirts at Sol Needles' snd get green trading stomps.
For nil the news read the Hualu
Police Slapped Hanlou’s PuBtahasenC. PHILADELPHIA. (XL 11.-Terry McGovern was giving Eddie Hanlon such severe punishment In tbe bout at Industrial ball last night that tbe police Jtoppel tbe fight In tbe f-rartk round. Hanlon was banging on the ropes in a helpless condition when tbe police Interfered.
lew DHIob la BiOl 1-X. MEMPHIS, Team. Oct. ll.-Lou D0km. tbe worth's champion trotting mare, owned br C. K. O. BWingg, broke all work out lecodb for trotting horsea by circling tbe course at tbe Memphis driving park In SiOllfc. Mu wind shield waa naed.
■er Wasted to Be Ifcet Vee. . BROOKFIELD, Mass.. Oct 11.-
old. was accidentally a hot bare by Irelog Mnndcll. fourteen years old. and to fiend. Mondell waa afntnxl bunting' wttb a rlfia, and t^e gW waa {ricking up ebaatnuta with other chfidren. After tbe accident tbe Mandetl bay rnebed to tbe gHTs father and. banding Um tbe itta. begged to be ebot also.
GENET A. N. I, Oct. 11.—Monday was one ef tbe warm set days of tbe year bam reaching M ia tbe abate. Tlw tampan tare was 00 dagms at •
MILLVILLE IN RAILROAD FIGHT Council May Be Cut CMT tbe West Jersey Stein. The ordinance to compel tbe West Jersey & Seashore Railroad Company to erect safety gates at street crossing*, wnlcb haa been urged by s unanimou* rote of tbe Millville City Conndl last Friday evening. A vigorous fight I* anticipated when the legislators undertake to enforce tbe ordikhce. A railroad official states that ahonld tbe ordinance be enforced the company will erect another station, or more tbe old outside tbe city limits, sod thus cut off the long curve and enable their trains to maki better time to Cape May, and also get out of the jurisdiction of wist he termed a ‘Tyrannical conndl.” Member* of the conndl aay that In retaliation they will give another railroad company every Inducement to ran tracks through the city-
At Trenton, In the Central Baptist Church. October 35 to 37, will be held tbe seventy-fifth annual session of tbe New Jersey BapUat oonveatioo. and beesnse It marks the diamond jubilee of the organ! satisn. more loan usual interest ia taken ia tbe arrangements for the gathering. “Enlan<ement n will be tbe keynote, and delegates, representing the 57,000 Baptiste in tbe State, will listoo to reports and ad dresses on tbe scope, as well as the methods employed, of the missionary work carried on by the denomination In New Jersey among tbe people of varying nationalities whom the sodevy’s workers
Black gtill la Error. Mr. Black is fond of saying: “He Governor who will appoint Tax Comm Is sionara who will do their duty in asaaa roilroad property.” Than Mr. Black not do hi* duty an a Tax Oommlaeio
Is met Us antira approval.
oftbeU ha oonennad ia lUs decisioa pabRaly ai ia aU hto aata as a Tag OomateteaaH
Mayor Fagaa uf Janwy OUr," for sv*rybody In Hndaoa knows ths assuth . Tha ernaada for equal mxal tad by May« Fagaa; Mr. Bl, ad la Mm game only after ha at ad the Iteh far tha Dm
All Eyes a re. centered on the CAPE MAY HERALD Because it gives the information want'd. ■ THAT'S ALL IT IS IN THE HOMES Thk Retail Dealer FINDS HIS CUSTOMERS There the weekly newspaper is read carefully and thoroughly. Advertisements are given careful consideration. So it is in a paper that goes in the streets or cars, a circulation in car aeats and office waste baskets, won’t sell goods. THE CAPE MAY HERALD Is the home paper not only of Cape May, but of all Cape May Count}. Try and be convinced.
l«HWinYOUB!]JOBr[PBIIItlNfir;DON@ HERE")
We are prepared to do it in the shortest possible notice. Neat work,
Low Prices are our motto. A trial solicited.
CAPE MAY HERALD,
fod Washington Street, Cape May Pierson and Son.
WA
NEW
C*PE|wY|mBKET.^>
Cor. Washington and Union Sts. Where you will find choice Giuceries, Vegetables, Provisions and fruits. We also handle “Micheners Star Hams. w
TjOORT
\Bm. U. (ifeVei^s BUILDER jl; Office and Shop-'’or. Corgie and Jefferson Sts. CAPE MAY. N. J.
FALL STYLES.
nnioiH m i
ami
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