Cape May Wave, 24 June 1882 IIIF issue link — Page 1

I ' '■ — — — ' . ' ' — ■

' ' ■ , ■ ' ' ' -,g? r * ~~ " ? ~ VOLUME XXVIII. CAPE HAY CITY, NEW JERSEY. SATURDAY. JUNE 24. 1882. WHOLE NUMBER. 1460. fH!" fiW** *•• • .. ...... ~ . . mr . .. . ■ ■ ' . U 'V. - N. -■ ,• t.-r-.i-M,1 >■-. ■— r'-_Jrre'l-t7,rtTn>P ■

oa-pe j^jk.'sr orrr.'N. j. % 1 .50 * yw In Advance. frofmisBXl Stsrit. j- R wnrmg. 4TT«RKKY *KD COUNSELLOR *T U* SOLtCITOK. MASTER AM- EXAMINER ££ F. POPGLAB8, iTTOBSBWT-liW rtUJCTTO ft IN CJJiiecKtlT _ *' "8e,'*'TCnr. Ar.TBB A. BARROWS, ATTOBKE Y-AT-LAW •OUlTTtlE IK CHANCES) , -p< B. PHI LLIP8, M. D., RESDEHT HW3MTHIC PHI36IAN, No. » Oocu Street, Oape M»y. A- JjST J. i. IJAMISO A SOM. D BSlTfi T8, A*TOBREY-AT-LAW ABO »ouoto«. mabt1r abo examines is dunceey. " j ARCHITECT AND BUILDER. . will make drawings. axd wtekis.•wbokoosthait OMCX .1 IV *»I. *JT «x HAND A SON, wit fiimou, jeweler* CAPE MAY niA«OW^CCTTEK>. ^ B. LITTLE, i PBicnriL PAINTER AND GLAZIER, QHis p. PEBRA", OILS. PAINTS 4 VARNISHES. FBILAOEU'llIA. rttildm QffiAHS AND.BETOre MAB. F. HORNER. G£SEBggSg^J^T' HATIOitEET, MB STORE TiHETT MIMUTUEX RuawiUKrraciYEED OK »»»'■• m*6sgbjim®u» a so oil a » wawnmrwm rrsrft, cats bat, k i. 22 < Walnut, Cor. Dock St.,

WaMMttttf'f ftttt. , When you do your Spring Shopping If you come in person, The trains from the different branches of the Pennsylvania Railroad come to the new Broad Street Station, which is within one Mock • ■! our store; you walk directly through the new City Hall to •■ >. MV:--t Street front. If you come by Philadelphia and Kcau.. t.irnad, any horse car on Thirteenth Street will brin,; y>u directly from tht Callowhill I > Street Depot to our door, ll you come through Camden, N.J, . any horse car on Market Street, except the- red ones, will 1 bring you direct We have provided new and spacious reading and toilet rooms for the free use of visitors. | , If you order by letter, 1 Departments of goods have l*.-cn so enlarged and improved ! that our stock, unquestionably the most comprehensive in the ! United States, is bettor than cat. We send without charge, j or any obligation to purchase, samples of the new Dress Goods, Silks, etc. We give prices of our entire :tock in our new j Catalogue for Spring and Summer, which is mailed free to all ] who send us address on postal card. Hundreds of orders are filled daily, and goods sent by mail and express to every State an' i Territory, with full privilege of return and refund of j money if they do not suit John Wanamaker, PHILADELPHIA. I * 17 £ ' I] i 'i'i* i'im?'™ "bathing suits. A fail Assortment of Ladi<*', Xum'^qpua' and Sort' at oar double yoke.pebfict fitting bathing shits salesroom*. an a •» market st. k. w. oor. or sixth, sua or the eiq elephants. • ALBWWW, Wl

flhit Flanntt , yacht imo i

[?]

**"*** T °T^ "T D. W. J. HUTTON * CO.^ / ~ fob silks and. dress goods " hall's No. 26 South Second Street, philadelphia. , boots and shoes! i Largsst sad Mom OonpMc stock of Good, Cheap Bouts mod Shoes la Cape may Ce. STYLE. QUALITY AND PRICE CANNOT BE SURPASSED. ONE PRICE ONLY. r an our mo oAnm also, a full arm.* or FINE WALL-PAPERS _ ELDREDGE JOHNSON, n CO WABHIUOTON BTBEET. GOTO THE PHILADELPHIA CHEAP , BOOT AND SHOE STORE. GHADES, Wn)TH*8 ANITSTYLEH FINE BOOTS A.3STD SHOES, And a full Line of Plain and Fancy Slippers. JLXMO A PULL LINE OF Q088AMEK8 | " eU°4* P*rUC° ""*** '"j _ KNOPF, now opened ! WM. H. BENEZETS

NEW AID MjCNTHAT. ■

itiitll BOOT & SHOE STDBI est in sir, iu

i^kbhhnhbbs L !«!•«■« WM. H. 8ENEZET. • | " : M. H. GOLT r NO. 37 JACKSON 8TREET, CAPE MAY CITY. - FRESH AND SALT HEATS. | Fine Groceries awl Provisions of all kinds, -

£irt ftottinrf. T MILLYILLE f IUT0AL HASIN1 AND Fffil J insurance company. ft MIU.VILI.K S. J. , al Actual Surplus over all Liabili- * ties. Including Reinsurance, j Fire and Marine, d . $21,203.59. ;j Rate Low. Security DwotiuNe. " | settlements prompt t, and management economical. rwajcewe vraaica where aoc nproeeate.1. F. HEEVE8, Pi**.. " It L HOWELL, Sec. .. agents and surveyors: ^ Win. Boee. cape m«r Conn Hooee, u f. Sidney Ttnrueod, Cnpe May City. r il w. nana. Dyera Cnat, , i. ii. Tfrnmne, com Sprint. h a. r. Weeuou. Soma Seavllle, ], J.W.awato.q^m^ C "° e guUflinj gtotofol, m. i J-FRFMTAHR KftTTKI.T .WfiRR'K f. lumber yard ■ Acbellensert LaaOas. Cape May k. j.. „ '.There any be loand Ihr lament Cod. of Lolai ber in l-'ir cuonty. of every qnejisy lo eajl ue | reoctreaeefe of ooandon. builder, mid the « community in general. aoo.mj plastkb1ku lath. {j SttfXOLKS or all KINDS. n floobtso, frame stuff. PICKETS. IWOKDEBS PROMPTLY FflJJtD v ' or«t».ly 1. b. SCHKLi-ekokk. k ; -p^ARDWARE. Bsasil doors, bunds. ^ -sckou. sa wings. 3 |UU| : hot-bed sash. f hand bails. newel posts. balustekn : | building and hofsekekping hard- a ware op every description. ' pumps. pumps. pump8. 8 late mantel 8helves. ] ' Ytta* WaarpStad toJ^'ISdHMwrSIre! * | ZZZ. 1 Jnneia-r ' ■■ ■■ i Saints, ©ils, &r. ; -p J. MELViy, cor. of lafayette and jackson sts.. j ' Cape May. n. j„ Dealer la ij • de»uck is I j • paints. i: , painters' supplies. : j IHIT1 LEAD, LINSEED OIL, , spirits of TtKPEK iine. ] i

PATENT LIQUID PAINT JL- j' YAKNISRES. WINDOW ULASS, 1 1 plain and orsamental . ,e ALL AT PHILADELPHIA PIUCES ! ' ... t 9. <f. 9Crir r's j^tnrr. I psorar OB HO PROFIT FOR j ' 'paints, ; oils and glass. oils and glass, \ _ N. C._PRICE. I PrwHaU Giau ChUUr, T7 Par, Strat. ' wholesale and retail stork, | DRY GOODS and GROCERIES, ^ feed btohe, vii Com, Oats, Hay, Bran. Mfll Feed j ' * WOOD YARD. wood wt and split. cedar posto of i . Km LMaMad as rneMLbenj^ Fiedler an pro- ' j J7TVENTOBS ADDRESS EDSOS SSSKTHlHSS DMadlMt in-

TroBiat fer Blue FEt—Hmnct Hciuf. i ; I bare takes " my pleaaure In the an- : u rkra* aroode " to nanj weeks thai 1 feel „ Uctioed to tell you of a bright, brmr and , 0 moat eoioyabit tail after mackerel off Capr i, May. f, McKe«5 represented ike commercial In- • teresla. The wily WUer, a HlarkMoor a , chnraalia fust emerging iolo a legal baL , , ! lerfly, and myself were coasted as reprr- : f i ecattBg the learned profraaioa of l be law. . Cape lUchardtos bad lold na lo eel aboaid the awifuaailiDg Zilpth al mid. M night so thai, before daybreak, we could i ;] get over the harbor bar and sail atnighl lo ; the.fiahisg basks , twenty miles away. 0 »Uy WUer lied brougbl akmg some (! chicken frictuu. and was also armed with a bottle of claret. Tbe legal wiler pro- ll duoed a boule of " Hub punrti " and n i, doles raw tomaiocs wltli " buuer Iblckly o apreac on oocreet" aiding chunks of bread ' t| Cbaacei says, L. trio «nr moard by lur rnillmg Hi* J! anchor cluiin and Ibc music of the flap- , ping saila— ever vseloome lo ibe true fish- , ermsa as Ills prow Is turned toward Ibc . , ri.iug sun sod Ibc welcome spot where ye n mackerel most do ooogregate. 1IU1 HcEeag, who answered lo Ibe name ' of "Tlie Beautiful Billy." rciorted on tbe , wily William Wiler, lawyer in rar and „ •indent io posse, by calling " W. W. W." " the sad sea dog," and by Uiat name be went ever after. . n "ibe commercial man and tbe wily Wil- . linm looked a liule timid asnbe " Zilpab " , cautiously picked ber dainty way through ' , the tearing surf before break (as;, but the d writer hiring beard thai "harbor bar 1 , meaning" a good many limes, amused ( by reading a Any copy of Heine J, which bad mysteriously crept into the . basket. Alas poor Heine, of whom says : " There la no page of Heine's without its wit, wisdom and pathos." ^ It was the clear-cut Grey, now an cmi- j ncnl Jersey barrister, who used to ba so , much amused at my favorite passage from . Heine's "Pictures of Travel" in which f he sayn be met a man forty-five years be- c i (Heine wa» juM forty-five yean old ) Ji wbo wmsbed add dresaed him and clothed him and gave blm spending money, sod oooeladce the picture thus : "I cannot embrace blm, though other folks can, for I myself am this excellent r as the elifl breeze filled tbe Zilpeh's swelling sails I read from Heine that — "The tree* of pleasure in. tbe neble, , the beeJtifer and tbe good may often b< , imputed Unaagh education, bat tbe sense of pleasure in bunting and fishing lies in £ blood. When ooe's ancestors have been burners of tbe bock from time im- , memorial their descendants find a delight f in tbcec noble occupations." Heine adds ; with undoubted patbas : , " My oneestors, however, belonged not , lo lite rare of burners, but much rather to that of ibc bunted, and I feel my revolt at the thought of taking deadly aim . at lite descendants of tbclr former eel- , • leagues in misfortune." \ Having shot al acveral bocks without , one. and having trolled for and , brought "aboard ship " a good many snapping mackerel, 1 respectfully dissent from lleiue. wbo was a critical wathetic, and not a robust disciple of Walton or of . Wcttley Richards. , But we will return lo our matutiiual , mackerel while tie " Bad Sea Dog " and , tbe Beautiful Billy take a whack at tbe , Hub punch. "W. W. W." Insisted that < tbe Bostoo punch added piquancy to the | "luminoaity " of the god of day. whereat , suggested that tbe sky looked of | a color a ernes between " cold gravy " and , " Spanish altar lace." " l'atiftnee," cried Cap. Richardaou . , "stop your musicand come to breakfast." | Hot mackerel disappeared as did tbe , ' volumlnoos slices of brenkfoit bacon be- | ibc oombtoed attack of three valiant , " trencher men "—Wily William, Beanti- , ' ful Billy and J. M. 8. Al nine o'clock we | struck tbe " banks " and sightad the red | Quicker than I can write it, we bad the , outriggers fixed and tbe middle line , t astern, with a sky-blue leaden minnow | . for bait The " Sad Sea Dog " manned | ; the right-hand outriggber with eelskln , squid as bait ; and suddenly he grew , white about the " gills" (face), and as be ; ' cavorted madly around tbe deck, ex- | ; By the everUsUng jumping jingo, I I've booked a porpoise or a whale." , " Suppose you have, you land lubber!" jelled Skipper Richardson. " Pull on blm like a good fellow, and stop your : - Wily William began to poll in dead : earnest, as he asw a mpnsuont mackerel rklppieg through the water, yet coating ' ■ toward the schooner as nimbly as the liule Bailor bey in the song was said to ! •kip through Hades. " with the broad- , ! cloth on his arm." Tbe " Sad Sea Dog " | soon got a bird's-eye view of a hue mackI erel endeavoring to rvx afmad cf tht lint an old trick af the bounding mackerel in his efloru to disearagc the book from " EasyTeasy!" said Skipper Richard ton, | as, with a wild halloo, W. W. W. flapped | eighteen pounds of quivering mackerel eat tbe deck with fore* enough to have iprixe fighters of hirtory. "6kiouy Mc- | Clnaky "or " Scabby McGliee V l I Soon Beautiful Billy McKeag hooked a "whopper." and not having cultivated Hub punch as intimately at tbe " Sad Doe." his tov. rauallv rreat. did not ^. joy, not °

I display itself to much hi what tbe gnol d I Quaker called • ' creaturrly activity. " u I Tlien tbe fan grew fast and -foii'mr I till tired nature sod our lacerated fingers could stand the strain no longer. We I bad all ibe fish we wanbd ; more then . wc could cat, after dividing with our j Cape May friends ; so, after and apprlir.- „ I ing lunch pre paied by the •• lean but lovely " Wiler. we besought the tkipp- r m to turn tbe prow of tlie Zilpah bomewacl Ibe "Sad Sea Ilrat " at the rapidity with J which the Hnb punch bad diss ppea ten, , W. W. W. asked in the reddest bines, but with a winkle is bis eye, whether " nee swallow made a summer ?" We al) lived a week la that uoe bright s day oo the fishing banks after the snap- a ^ mackerel, and we would have willing- • tve hat bed our tired limbs io the briny 1 deep while the skipper cut anchor, but < the fear of the "man eater" shark was f before our eyea. And had we not that r ; summer's day sailed, u Tennyson reys, 1 I u we sailed in our nancy ship over the a ocean Hoc, the pleasure "of believing ' I what we see is boundless u ire wish our t ; souls to be." Aau the son began to sink, 1 I carting ha rich mellow light athwart the j ■ throbbing heart of the aaa-u we bad , i folded Ibe tents of tare for one day -and I alter tbe akipper had cleaned the mackerel , i we meant lo take home, I read lo tbe now , i quiet and "Sad Sea Due," and to Use at- , • motive bot yet " Beautiful BUly," bow , I I Urtderly poor Henry Heine described | " Nature lias got back from tbe artist, ' ; ; the capital which ibe formerly lent them -. , ! and see it is restored with handsome in- . lereat. , " Inauad of forniablng the artist with , models, Nature now copies herself from 1 ' her own' tradels. " Tbe sense of the MasUftd has per- ; : anted the whole aaden. and, as former- . ly. the fieab exeraaed its isfiueaoe over 1

I the spirit, so now the spirit influences the > ] flesh. ! " Sol without reward is the worship of ; beauliftil Madonnas, "f those fair altar plcmres which impress themselves 1 lite soul of Ibe bridegroom, whilst the I bride carries devoutly in her breast tbe J : features or sproe Ivsutiful saint. "TlirouEh such elective afflo'rty a race * of tarings l.a« bere arisen fairer than ibe * I sweet nil ott which it blooms or tbe sunny - ' | sky that spreads reatnds it like a frame of j J ' I looked up. Beautiful Billy wasj' ; sound asleep : I rut I felt encouraged as 1 ' 1 1 saw a pensive drooping of Ibe * eyelids suggestive of emotion ou tbe part | j silencr abrobtiy. ha ppy'>ouKjTt s 'Th ' r! ° y ocM ' "re "rot I 1 UPVeine— hrt. ablver'my ! ' if 1 wouldn't give cm all for one 1 ' eoodtniferof Co!. Sawyer's applejack." I' By this time McKeag was awake, and j 1 looking scornfully at the unsentimental • " Sea Dor." asked for "more." And as | I we nearest Sewell's I'oidl followed by the i ( Ten icgs ever follows tbe sitting sun. all j * tbe boys listened while 1 narrated bow J Heine's poetry was the charm of ; 1 youth, thirty-five years ago, and bow I it " is filled with an nndertone af weeping j: , over the vanished "world of possible 1 , ideals : and how genuine emotion springs 1 ; up st Which laughter it bushed." For ex- I I ample when the poet says : ^ ^ ^ * earth, and takes its adventurous flight ' i through tbe wide, yawning space of the c sky. till it strike* the oold stars, and sinks | With tnlnclod sfgh- and shouts of Joy coo- ' that in ail creatioo there is nothing j I J Tbe "Sad Sea Dog" was permeated ' with the sentiment of the occasion. He 1 gated proudly al the twelve mackerel, ' which were a!! that be and " Beaotifol 1 could carry to their hotel as proof of • their flshtng prowess. Both waved me a ■ tender farewell, murmuring; ' When 1 shall we three meet -again ?" May Ibc ' generous fates sood give us another sum- 1 iner day among the mackarel. J. M. S. • Camuek. k. J., June 6. 1882. ' " Lemnte Kt." said the old man musing ' with his chin on tho top of bis cane and speaking In tha ahriH faiacuo voice of age, it must be forty-aeven years since Ann Maria died, yet I can remember tie very J curls that hung down over tier shoulders * and the red on Iter cheeks that was like a winter apple! Dear mc I ahe's never a mite in all thorn years, but just sits there a-lookin' at me. u she did when ' brought her home. Y ou sec there was a kind of romance tew II and I've often and often thought that if I had the power and could rite U out it would read beautifullcr than a novel : tire fact was that Anna ' Maria hid another beau, but that ain't no \ w onder, for she was the smartest and prettiest and best girl in tbe bull country -sole ; 1 what 1 mean, she had favored bim ' ever so liule afore I come around, and began kecpin' ber company. Folks kind of ] coupled their names together, and seme of to bother me, hinted that abc cared a for Itim. Why, you'd ortcr tew bev ' him ! He waa alira and fine aa a lady 1 and wore gaiter aboes and bad bailer eyes ' as if he'd never had quite enuff to cat. Ann Maria care for bim 1" why, tbe girl had acme and knew tbe difference atween fe ller as straight u a sapling w ith a color ' new mahogany, and such s melancholy looking specimen as that-t Besides, I had s mortgage on the old bomcated, and Ann Maria's father owed me money, I did right by tbem. I told ber cf ' 1 sbe married mc I'd deed tbe whale thing to ber, and I did. Weil, we was ; married, and we made as purty s couple as you ever saw in your Ufa. Ann Msria 1 bad a aettin' oat of China and linen, and I provided the house, and folks said 1 had the bcrt wife a man ever bad in tbe world, and I'd got everything Just aa I wanted it. 1 and a'poaed it wonld always be so ; but from tbe day we were married my wife ' failed In health and spirits, and In six 1 mouths I buried ber; folks said it was consumption, but- it didn't run In tbe fami- ! I was blind and foil of pride then ; ' I've thought since," — here the old man lowered his head— "that mebbe all > the time she loved that white-facod chap as I dlspised. A woman's heart, I've found out, is a queer thing, and Love goes 1 where It is sent, but if she did and mar- ' ried me from a mistaken sense of duty , why all I've got to say is I've been punisbed, too. for I loved bar. i'cjhaps I I never felt it as much as I did when I saw ! her lying while sod peaceful in ber chinli ' gown, with the violet oo it, and aome- ' thing round ber Deck that I never ace bc- ■ fore— a Utile cheap locket with some hair in it that wasn't mine. Then 1 mistrusted ' llist ber heert hsd broke end I said aoiemn- ' ly as I kirted ber good -by : • My dear, ' IH never have a wife but you if 1 live tbe 1 fourscore year and ten f and I never have. and I think mebbe sbe wiU sec that I j loved her truly and forgive me at lash" One of the New England regiments which went into tbe action at Second ' Manaasas bad been short rationed for two ! days, and on that morning totae of tbe j companies hadn't a single hardtack lefL ooutpanics tilOD t a ungir narotaia itiv [

As Ibe flgbt opened tbe bullets began to i one of the men rurbed up to bis cap- < tain and called out: • • "Say Captain, can I be excused?" "What for?" "I want to go back and hurry up our < provision wagons." "Can't spare you— fall into line— tbe ■ wagons are ten miles away. ^Tes, I know tbey afe," protested Uic soldier, "bot I've got bold of a blamed fool who'll bet ten to one that I cannot ) make that ten miles io fifteen minutes! ' Lomme go. captain, and 111 whack up half tbe bet!" , A little boy wbo was accustomed to ■ sky grace in the absence of bis father bad younger brother wbo found it bard to wail until grace was over without helping , himself to socnc of tbe good things near. ooe occassion. what company was present, tbe young master of set entities , oServrd the sm£l! boy helping himself liberally lo cake before the blessing was asked, so be deliberately said: "For what t are about IG receive, and for what Charlie has already helped himself to, tbe Lord make us truly thankful. Amen."— ] Brooklyn Union-Argot A scientific journal explains, in a long article, "How thunder storms coate up." We haven't read tbe article, but we know tbey come up. Tbey watt until tb«' Sunday-school picnic reacbea the grove Sffi'S'JiSSS'iSCflS cometrp like thunder and lightning. It takes the average thunderstorm Dot more than ten minutes to ooa» up in the oeighi borbood of a picnic.— Ex. 1 1 -mw-bwon Rats." 1 The thing desired found at laB- Ask . : Druggist* fot."Rough oo Rata" It clears j 15c. boxes. 1°*'

' There is perhaps no one of our Stale 'Institutions concerning which tbe general public know so little as the "State Rejnrmrd School." Many scarce have a In." '-edge of its existence, and others Suppose it to lie a ponsl institution with : stone prison like ImUdinge, with Imodtsire, j I high walls to prevent escape. Nothing ' I th? name irophrs a Reform School, com- ! biniox the elements of a reformatory iustitution and a place of instruction. It might be nailed a "Home." for in fewhomos are the physical, mental and moral ; nature of children better cared for. It is ' located near JameSburg, in the midst of a , i farm of five hundred acres. There 1 , are six substantial hriek buildings. One ; ! "f these is occupied as a residence by tha ; ' superintendent, in it are alto bis office, | i | a dining-room, in which all the boys take t < i school. rootti and chapel, but altogether 1 ' | small for the latter purpose. Our . | | Legislature ought, w ithout delay, make j i sn appropriation for the erection of a I J : suitable chapel in which the religious exer. ; cites of tbe school can be held. Uoe I . I building is used mainly I or manufacturing • purposes. Here shirt making is carried ou [ quite extensively for a New York firm. < The shirts arc cut la New York and sent j t to the Reform School, where tbey are ■ made, washed, ironea and put up iu boxes. 1 Every part of this work it dooe by boys c who are from ten lo sixteen years of age, • and In exoelieney of workmanship and 4 beauty of finish will compare with at* J other manufactory iu the country. < Tlie other buildings are called " family < buildings. " in each of these a man and , wife reside, having charge of from forty ' sixty boys. In each of these buildings . is a school room also with desks and black- t boards and for three hours each day the 1 into families, they have a strong love for ( their own bouse and in most of them the , walls of the school room arc adorned with ' pictures which the boys have purchased, \ and ooe or two musical iafltrumcnts have , been procured in the same way. There | now three hundred boys al the school. It was my privilege recently to see them al! together in their chapel, to bear thtm ring and tie permitted to address them, though I*ha"e spoken to many audiences, I think I never bad belter attention nor was ever listened lo witb more apparent than when 1 spoke to Ibe boys at tlie Reform School. This School is Jmder tbe management of Mr. and Mrs. Eastman, both of whom portant and responsible position and are doing a grand work for God and humaidly. hauturru o! the Clrj or C«pe Mar In CUj Council der die Inn of l*e Stalest New Jersey, hem* - betwcea Cape Island Creek and the Al- . by autbortxed and empowered to chaaxe the . an.l tbe Ileaett Drier, as follows: beginning st | Uruadwsy bridge oie: Cspe island Creek and ' s»me. Tha the whole expense ot ehsnglng tho | (Old Cspe Msy C'uj land Company . and thsllhe s city ol CapeMsy to be need AS t pahhc stghwsy i msde vacant by the changing or ine course of il h roadway as hcrrtcbefere sutesLJE*JI pass imo P the poaaeaatou of the said Cape Msy City Land t Company by virtue of exchange, and ttna ordlf cape May nnto tne oOcere of tne cape Msy j City Land company, Uetr snocesson In offlce or ' "ntc-'i. And be it further enacted by eathorlly * of the' name. Thai Una orJinance shaU tale ofe '^aSI^MKcUaY. JIL. trewident CoaneU. j Attest: II. C.TOOMt^N?Reooro«! ° Approred Jane IS, tna. I Have been a bay fever sufferer for three ® years, and I ba«eotleo heard Etys Cream Balm o An illiterate soiJicr conlilvcd lo spell ■

aqnSVreriom ukMlSSiXlWf!'' My Husband bad Drunken Habits he conld not oeercome until Parker's Ginger Tonle his opt energy, ol mind mod nerve a. and gave UdySlreagta " *" '° *"■" Dann* A tqlken of Sew ells 1'oioL Vs.. has Just died of a war-wound received SI HpolUytOnc bottle of Malt Bitter* equals in , porter, whUe tree Iran the objections urged ■ Walertnelon rind makes a good pickle, and lu good tor afplnk trtpshp." For valuable information, read the adi ItU the aeason -for rt^fing up bamntocka upon ireschsrva^supperts. Stop dosing and drtiggiDgtJake^rioe , Tbe President is expected at Idog caurrh la the madder. ' Stinging, smarting,irritntion of tbe uri- 1 I" nary pamages. diseased disclarge*, cored < ! hy Bnehupnin*- |i- at druggist*. Pre- , pkid by express, #1.25, 5 for »5. E. S. ' Wane, Jrtney, Oty, H. Jv Qnlnlne superseded. narte'^ sguarantee of Us mere, lurororyu t as wonderful as "atrtstwa - il a. Keoaedy and Marry h Xecray, cape May cay. *

y fdttai, etc. 'pnm^ J ale rnrm *t^ JMwiiJ^taTrepieortbSUgH Blggresl ^ Lid Cumeraand CuUcura N^p^exxeTa^^.Msd' mother died from it. eared unit' I uso Uta r caueaiaTuaoivrtii PSORIASIS. r- i mi i. y r u^Mmra<aM^'tWwreM^UUsreW*TMe salt rheum. "''•^e'teassitr' CUTICURA. ■dnnrtrt gty extereaOy^ahd^ CatXeara We-^ '^'''lLpol.'wKKKb a'pOTI^il. Bosttm. Maes CATARRH Sanford's Radical Cure. hj°|n^^^sw|^^rtw^mrro^Se£S lUdtesMvitv. VVBBg8 j, |*ypTgnt hosrtm. ^ usar. N'uts^s^HystwM. I and Are^PIT sac. Hold everywhere. ' dVspep8ia. " r ,u^i.'"*K'e'ms"rt e^nphslleatly what we know ; """""constipation j biliousness.^ ^^ ^ ' '^'^''"''malalria. u'b ad^breath bTISnrvtonry^sSS 'stmmons Liver IteguUjaundice. c btmxuons Liver Iteguistor soon erodlcaus thU n dtseaee from the system^ Irevtng the skin cJeer . an ree rem. ^olic.^^ ^ ' re' I ef 1 wne h'SmOTs'lAvERronSirisSSn- " thli medlcme.' U u not unpleas»nt; It Is harmr leas and ejU&ve. barely vegclanie, = bladder and kidneys. ., fri!^«'otdMK^ey»jeswrtlM mSStfot Ure^LtyvrntllL and both the Kidneys k bladder [" thl"reppire me^"?Trad«CM«rk*uli signs - ; tne wrappers the red Z Trade Mark and signs

1 """j. H- ZEILIN *_CO.._ ■ WHSNCE COKES THE HHEOUinjED POPULARITY OP ' Allcock's Porous Plasters? ' Because they have proved themsclycs tlie Best Eternal Remedy 1 ever invented. They will cure [ asthma, colds, coughs, rheuma- - tism, neuralgia, and any local p^ns. Applied to the small of the back . tbey are infallible in Back-Ache, nervous Debility, and all Kidney - troubles; to the pit of the stomach tjicy arc a sure cure for Dyspep- ! pepsin and Liver Complaint. i ALLCOCK'S POROUS : BLASTERS are painless, lragrant, and quick to cure. Beware . tif imitations that blister aad burn, | ALCOCK'S, the only Gen- - uinc Porous Plaster. : WORTH SEMIHG FOR.