Cape May Wave, 1 July 1882 IIIF issue link — Page 1

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VOLUME X\vm CAPE MAY CITY, NEW JERSEY. SATURDAY. |U) Y 1.1882. ' WHOLE NUMBER. 14«0.

OA.I»E MATT CITY N j *'"5®a y*Br 'n Advance. -Tofrssionnl Cards. j ' aitdpfman, Jj DEX A MIS KB * • ^*cnr COICT'OTHMUmoser. ■o»r«*M trvonr JSIK* j pt f- douglass, ^T'ro BSE y-A T-L A W swn so. ^rt«r>S*wfHA!tCEKr ALTER A. BARROWS, A t to B N E Y-A T-L AIT noucrroi in chancery. jjj ii. phillips, m..d., RESIDENT HOKEOPATHIC PHT8BIAN, So. 8 Ocean Street, Gnpe Mij, ft. J. OOpr liners — I loiA-a.. II lo 1 Mod s to t r. m. j")b. j. f. leamixg ft son, destTsts, su» tt »u* boos io W'rdnwldsj noon. Car* Mat cooMtnocxx— Tlmrvujt im Bsi"i!£l i M.T.u*-rr*U.. jamesm. e. hilb beth~ attobnev-at-law mumn. BARTER AND EXAMINER IN • >1 No. m »uu|Uh. siren. Ore Mat Ory.N.J BIA-IT ?usinfS5 Cards. ^kos b7w|LL1AMB, architect a si) builder. WILL MAKE DRAWINGS. AND MTEKlh"."END OR CONTRACT. OFFICE .1 Washington Care Ml.. N.J J'a. K. HAND A SON, - ONIT PRACTICAL JEWELER" cape may 1)1 amond cutters, a b. little, ~ PRACTICAL pa i ntkb and gi.azieb, orders Ml" * rt,aiCEJ(A!Li •» «or^ £1has. 1'. pebby, - Msoufsrtnrrr Jf and DfaJn la OILS. PAINTS & VARNISHES. • qkgans and sewing maB. F. HORNER, PIANOS, ORGANS & SEWING MACHINES . f^oody ear's rubber feltVJT IMO AND PACKING OU. HUME. CLOTEINO. BOOTS * SHOES. D. P. D1ETERICH. Sew ^'ork Itching and Parking Company j WAREHOUSE. BW ''1I01MT STREET. DOllH U'1 VmiLAPKLrMlA. r Q.0 TO OABBIBON'S STATIDHEBT, AID SIDP^, hmcty LZT" fflfMSffi!0™"" AND OIL A »<* w.E«roaroN muar. cape hat, w. j. j^iggs & brother.AMERICAN WATCHES. 22 1 Walr.ut, Cor. Dock $U jklphu. lwatc^s i jewelry kepa1bed. JOHN M. BUSiSELL, OENERAL DIALER IK DRY GOODS, GROCERIES. " BOOTS, SHOES. & NOTIONS. FLOUR FEED *"A.-r*jNT MEDICINES. j. x. bbbsell, BHiMi .

|j ~ BATHING SUITS. ; PATEST DOUBLE YOO.PIERCT FITTING BATHING SUITS SALESROOM*. W1 A res MARKET StJn! W^cw^ or Hrra.'w. »( th- Bl<; ELEPHANT*. w»« ST. k. W. Car. OP SIXTH. nga

Jllmt Flaamtt YACHT/NO |

' \ — .fwf /(pr.Wr (j AILH. TRMSTMAB* feyy/j»VA -li SHIRTS.

and oil, rr msx^fof u*onr*J«u M Hat araaoB, ni-1 were pronounced frrtret I.j Hum who nam Hem. Wetare also n ton line of OVKHAI.I.S. IIRAWERS. WHITE SHIRTS, KTC1CLE or SILK _ laced SHIRT*. I)OC RLE BREASTED SAILOR SHIRTS, tram all grsdei of Rami, at onr rTriiTi.TiiT^l!** V""*~ D. W. J. HUTTON & CO. ^ FOB SILKS AND DM GOODS ~ , HALL'S No. 26 South Second Street, PHILADELPHIA. " 'pW-"° BLOOMSDALE LARGE flatdotch cabbage. 9 Urge, Flat, Solid Heads, Short Stems ■ aoo. aa-1 mm vueh aeleriJon?iire nm^JS acrSpSSTSmw "ren* «f rl1"" l"t reaHot t Single Or*In of Seel U Aiiicd from Stalki. all fnm Selectai Heidi We will mail calalocae free of elaize is all apfdaranu. D. LANDRETH & SONS. NO*, ft AND n SOfTU SIXTH STREET, (bei aeea Marfcr' ao4 CamBaal SOeela.) BRANCH aTORE. fW-«m s. W. coraer Ilelawar. Aeeaae ane Aren steeei. ITnudelphla. GO TO THE PHILADELPHIA CHEAP BOOT AND- SHOE STORE, G It A. 15 E f. WI I) t'ii^ TSvi>"^?,YL E H Of Oem-a. LaRlea'. Mlaaea' Bo,P on dllarrnv FINE BOOTS A.'JSTD SHOES. And a fuH Line of Plain and Fancy Slippers. JVMO A ?ULL X.It.'.E OF OOSBAMER8 a, e££ - |eUB_, . ^ ee..-- |lU|1J ^ IllNOI'F. NOW OPENED! Wi H. BKNEZETS

HIWAKDCEF.'BiLJlWatirmaml.

'^^^^BflOTiSIOI STORE

•** wm. h. benezet. GEO, J. BURKHAHDT'S SONS NORTH bboato rklOW Cambria street, Swr ('eeMhteWn JannUoi SlaUoa Penaa. r. r.) i w»wk Town times. «u chestnut htueet, PHILADELPHIA. cedar water tanks N wmim KCOND "A"0 T AN K8 °°'aa6"UT' """"" c. B. coles; i, lumber merchant, MANUPACTCUK OF • Dras, Sail, Bliiii, taint, Bracteti, Scroll Safin aii Baa. J OFFICE, NO. 14 KAIGHN'S AVENUE, CAMDKN, IM. J. 1 Rupture *. » rertaftaa Cay MMaa fay p,. J, j. Melted. e-l«emn.T.

TO COHSUMPTIVKJ

DScBUTTS ; DISPENSARY. rl ftuMef iac tt u y. at amm rr ubm. mc. dSSw1- . Mm* "LisSSaa! ' -faggg

JQrr Rncwurr. MILLVTLLE 15 MDWil liBUfi AND FI|1 INSURANCE COMPANY. MILLVII.LK N. J. Actual Surplus over all Liabilities. Including Re-insurance, Fire and Marine, $21,203.59. " Rales Low, Secnrity UnpstoaNe. PoMelea Llberal-H<awat-No Two-T»nraa Swindle le Ikem. SETTLEMENTS PROMPT AND MANAGEMENT ECONOMICAL. J K. BEEVES, Free., B. L HOWELL, Sec. AGENTS AND SURVEYORS: H. W. Hand, Djcra erect, I. il.Thamaa,CoM8prtac. J. IL Dlrenj, Deanlaellle. E. P. Weatoou. Doalt Sear. lie, J. W. Hwala, Doth en. r. II. Hamuli, Sea rule, T. L. KaaaeU. Tactahoe, n W. B. VaaOMer, Peieialaueh. ! - - a£L. luildtng ^atrrlal, <?tr. j JEBEMIAIIB.SCHELLKKGEB-S : LUMBER YARDi , Schelleneer. larnlmt. Cape Mae N.J„ ; l/hete maj he loaaatU'iMteaiawict ot unar her tt. the ramrj. of eeerj quality lo anil the , requlrereewa of txXSttkm. Uokklere and the " lre.000 TKET WHITE PINE. eeo.«0 PLA8TKKIKU LATH. , SHINGLES OP ALL KINDS. nOORIRO. FRAME Sll ff. PICKETS, And ui ah on rraj kind of rr-OKDKRS PROMPTLY PILLED 1 rssssnsa ssef"" 10 Lrabn hhUA-'I J. a SCHKLLKNOER. jjARDWABE. ' Noa. Ill AND ir FEDERAL ST. CAMDKN. N. J. ^^^^^^SASB, DOORS. BUNDS. ; iLU[} HOT-BED 8ASH. HAND RAI1A. NEWEL POSTS. BALrsTERt; BUILDING AND BOUSEKEKPrNO HARDWARE DP BTBRt DESCRIPTION, ! PUMPS. PUMP8. PUMPS. :h*u^rRi^, ^tr^Sre SLATE MANTEL SHELVES. ClMhea-Wnmnra, Nana. Don* and cauie ^ Votea^BIlT^gaied BrUanaia uul Hollnw-ware. PUnaa fire aw a nail befarr penfcaalnj elae- "'**■ nlmiT nutDERicKs. Jonell-J CAMDEN. N.J. ?aints, ©its, &t. Jp J. XBLY1H, COR. OF LAFATETTE AND JACKSON UTS. J Cape Maj. N. J„ Dealer tt> ! PAINTS. 5 MUMRS< SUPPUES, I1TS LEAB, LlliSIID OIL, ' 6P1HITS or TURPENTINE, PATENT LIQUID PAINTS. YABSIBHBS, WIKDOW BLABS, plain and ornamental ALL AT PHILADELPHIA PRICES ' g. S. Wri't Attn. pROFIT OR NO FBOFIT FOR "paints, jtaWIEsr' i N. C. PRICE. d /'radical Giam OmtUr, 87 ftrry Alnrf, h wholesale and retail store. ; DRY GOODS and GROCERIES, Pnml) STORE, »» P"-er ■> »■. I Corn. OAtE, Hay, Bran, Mill Feed WOOD YAMS, wood pit and sput.^cpia R JeiwTn or « ** WKS toSj- hSTSjh^** ja-y N.""^CL. : TftTENTO ils ADIHtmB EDSON li3

J "V iiamaker's. We'll trj- the experiment awhile £ ' of giving you a Httle more spc1 | cific news about goods. We know well, if we can get such i news to you promptly, tnat it j will be acceptable. You can i write or come. White muslin dresses at about three-quarters value. A few are shown in the window t of 1 301 -Chestnut, each one mirked with its price. Very — Tiny more are within. 1 he materials are nainsooks, r inonsd'lnde,mullsandSwisses. omc are very plainly made with little or no trimming be- , vond some deft handling of the material itself; and some are !. elaborate enough. The extreme prices are <13.50 and £60. An excellent plain dress is sold : for $5 ; neat and well made. Low prices can almost always be put upon such goods a little late in the season. It's rather early now ; but profitable making appears to be over already. Just now you have the double advantage of many such dresses " to choose from and low prices. Ready-made dresses of a j black-and-white striped fabric ' that looks like summer silk, but is silk-and-cotton. For general . wear they will be found quite J good enough; better indeed than sLmmer-silk. Well made and substantial : but the chief virtue is in the price, $10. iam ta l 1MB Chestnut timet, second fiuor Black grenadines have l>een one of the most distinguished features of our trade for two months past Wc have had the finest in the world, and aii grades down to the poorest tnat wc care to keep; and a wonderful variety of patterns. Figured grenadines lhat • brourht $2 lately ale aciliftgfit f i And this may be taken as 1 a general indication of what we are doing in grenadines. K-l' •' r!f,-- ..ihallding A .. cxtraoi'di .arf <1> btSgc, extraordinary in quality and widih. we are selling at 50 cents ; 47 inches. No lady who ; can use debrige will be inclined to pass it; for it is worth twice the money. , The melanges at 40 to 60 ; cents a e worth a half more, i just about. There arc foiLt* qualities, and somewhere about , fifty color-effects. If dress-gOods ai*e lower than they were elsewhere — we don't - say they are. Advertisements say t\ y a—, but there is a cer- ' t . s'.y i- ss in t' o..c satnc adve ' . which makes them . not _ 'mpressive. — If dressgowlt ara h>. 1 T phtewhero in ourcltv, the fall is due to the singular spectacle here of three great classes of tlw IHOat faslr. I0nab1edrcsr - - 1 ata fraction of tlv irv ' . ;hnv.langes, small c!v cks and -smR j-chcck strip« a f wool fi»w sL' - id- *> wool, and Iiia. k laindgC. . Wc mention lliese th ee, because they stand o f rem the ' rest of tlw Stock, tO rpicuotis ln two ways ; they are fashionable, peculiarly so : and they arc at s half, two- thirds or thfec-quar- - ters value. Thlrt end fcotlb drelre. eooth from renwr. 1 Sash ribbon, satin-and-gros-grain, 7-inch, of value $1 .1 5 for 75 cents ; aU colors. We refer '• to a particular sort, of which w« have three thousand yards. Black moire, 7-inch sash, 90 cents. ' Block sr-sh at $1 we arc out of part of the time ; but wc re- ^ ceive some every morning. Do not confound th s quality with f that sold at 65 cents elsewhere. ' Silk mitts, ordered from the ,. makers a year ago^ include a tt wider range in die colors than ever before: black, 50 cents to $4-50; white, cream, 6cru,terra- ! cotta, cardinal, etc., 75 cents to t >7- ' * Jon^ WAN A: IEEK.

"Well, well, well!" rxetsiincd Mr. tM»«op«Klykc, u tie <l«noed loin tbe room I aw) cla«p.«l hi. wife lo Lu aniu. "home ; C *K»'0 oW giriy I* aod be kisred tbe taby ' and alamsied hia bat ■ (taima tbe .wall, „ l"a wife JigRed around hln-, with I iun|k* on her lipa, icara in ber rye*, mad j h :bc4o.»call w-rinkta. t "I>id>ou bavc a (ntal bnai rider" ebe r, asked at Icnfib, ainuEhteniOE not iier . face and rubbing bis wldakav "IWl Cd.t» exactly wbal you reran by a -burnt ride,' " rrtwlrd Mr. Sputipeo. dyke, atari nf at birsyrUe ' P'rapa yon imagine 1 atraddltd llial Uwl andatuck | spurs into it. Tbe lawt I was on goes by 1 I sails aod m* legs. 1 bad a good sail, if r that's "bat you n3an. See. 1 haven't , got over tbe roll and pitch yet," and Mr. Speopcddykc lurched acroaa the rown. willi liis limbs very wide apart bringing up before bis wife with a Jerk and giving , bis pantaloons a hitch. "li e done you ever so much good," . eaid Mrs. Spoopendykc, "but are you always going to walk like that "What If I do?" demanded Mr. Spoop- : endyke. alraighleniog up on his sew legs. : "Don't you like that walk ? Anything in that walk obnoxious lo your sense of propriety ? Doee that walk in any way gtale J <*> yoor finer, feelioge ? Some day when I'm not busy 111 fit yon up with a big mustache and a scent of onions and adver- >_ Use yroa as s (fencing school. Then you can abow mc how toget around cheap." "Did you have a pleasant trip, dear—?'' began Mr, Spoopendvke. "Cruise! Dot trip, Cruise! You take cruises on boats, not trips. Do you know ! wbal s cruise is?" i Isn't it something to bold oil in?" Inquired Mrs. Spoopendykc, timidly. "The Bible fells about the widow " "Thai's It, fxactly," returned Mr. Spoopcndyke, with perternatural soletn1 nily. "1 went to sea in an oil can. I didn't know it unlit 1 got home and consulted your profundity. You -hit it flret | dip. If you uoly bad a chimney on crooked and sputtered a little, what a student lamp you'd make ! I tell ye I 1 made a cruise io a burnt, dod cast it!" oared Mr. Spoopendykc. slipping off the handle a> be teslixed the ouihge to his fi-elings by bis wile's ignorance. "And there wasn't any oil or any measly widows in it ! I sailed, I did," and Spoopendykc lurched around Uic room again and brought up all standing. "I should thought you'd have been afraid!" murmured Mrs. Spoopendykc, gising around him admiringly. "1 would not g'l out in one of those feats for the "Of course you wuuMnv gnuueu nr., Spoopendykc, somewhat moilified by tbe tribute lo his courage. "Much you'd know about taking in Miecll and lighting tbe blnnetta add orcrlhtdlidg tin- boom tackle." "Upon my word!" exclaimed Mrs. Spoopendykc, ber face radiant wilh delight. "Did you do all thai ? I don't know about lbs barnacle or tbe broom taCkle, but I'm gild yoa^ learned to take in sheets, because you used to kick them off so you know, and baby—" . •Yell!" snorted Mr. Spoopendykc, I i "Sbc-eu sir ropes, 1 tell yc ! 1 s'posc ye , think we lianlcd in featherbeds and white i kpreaHs and dittos. Well, we did not. You'd bear the captain alng out 'Hard a lnc .' haul away jib sheet !' and then I'd catch hold and pull." I "1 should thought you'd been scared to death," said Mrs, Spoopendykc, ber eyes 1 glistening -wlili lot- and reverent* for hex husband, "is that the name they gave you? I believe IH call you llsrdilee hereafter. It's real pretty—" "Too Just call me that once, just once!" howled Mr. Spoopendykc, temporarily f of getting hie sea legs and stalking op to "hia wife al his natural gah. "Tou draw that on me tbe first time and— aod— and 1 ahirer my Hove plp^:" continued Mr. • Spoopendykc, suddenly recollecting that he was oautlcal, "If i don't make you ( throw oter a fender or lose your atandlng rigging !— understand mc T' and Spoopendykc regarded hia w Ife Intently to note ' the effre-l of his threat. ! "Certainly," replied Mrs. Spoopendykc, > "You Inean that you dooT want me to , tall you by that horrid name, or else— or ' If I do, yooll make tM get Op in tbe 1 muruinc and boild a fire, isn't that it, . about the fender f : "That's Jo* it !" grinned Mr. Spftopen- . dyke. "Tou madeksl on the first tsck. AU you need now is a centreboard and a taf roott to fie a Cooard steamer: If 1 - -ever want a sniff of skll B»f, all I want to : do la to talk ahip to you. Ifow 1 tell you ) wbal you do. Too put your helm up and start away for the kilcheo, d'ye bear? ' Aod Just tt aooo aa you've taken in canrati and put the stops on, you start a fire * in tbe galley and get mc up a dinner of lobscout* and duff! I'll scull down there directly, as soon as I've bent on a clean shirt and a ttaymil ywtamd my neck. . Where's my sta'ns-lsr • 'Didn't you Isnve 'sen no hoard T flut1 tered Mrs. Spoopendykc. r "Where are they ?" roared Mr. Spoopi' endyke. "Get me a pair of sto'ns'la before I open ports on ye ! Cuffs, dod gsst tt! Onffs! Don't ye know that cuffs tre j stu'os'ls ?" sod having rather impaired the effect of hia phraseology by uecesmry t explanation, Mr. Spoopendykc accepted the articles from his wife's trembling o band, and soowled at himself in tbe glass, i. "Do you want anything else?" the asked brightly. "Any other rigging. :- .beets, barnacles. Jibs, hard a lees, or a anything before I get the lobMeta hud puffs r IC "Avast!" sputtered Mr. Spoopendyke. a "You go do what I tell you. Ill heave to and lash my helm until you pass the B word, then m hear down. Sow you go ° bt^m m'gfed fee had a good time,"»I liloquiied Mrs. Spoopendyke, as she acut:o ! tied down stairs, "though Fm i going to lash bis helm. 1 hope be won t | hurt himself miKdi^ar^d ri^pattatfeg mmntAe.l°ov« the sea tenns to fix them ' in her memory, while Mr. Spoopendyke !'- wrecked the l-edroom in °LJ^ j necktie ihMwms banging down hia hat*.

JAMES ft. NIXON. ai 1 roa xNTxriso tux nxxt loxwaaw . The following interesting matter is cuo- ' densed frop tbe Camden Prat of the 33d: ' £ It is already an established fact that the . present Cuegmwnan from this, tbe First District— the Hon. George M. Ilnbera— j p it In he vigorrmslv npprwed for s re-oumi- 1 1 nation, and all opposition to Mr. Hnbewm 1 ' it centered upon ihe Hon. Jsmn H. Nixon, of Cumberland county, tbe eam- " paign premising to be a memiaable battle " of tbe giants. .lames H. Nlxuo was born al CedarI ville, Cumberland county, in 1838, so that \ I be is now in the very prime of manhood, : j , ** years old. As a lawyer we foci justi- 1 i tied In saying that be standi high in the 1 i ' professloo, and there has scarcely fern • | sn important case in Cumberland county I s since bis admiasinn lo the bar, in which I R he has not been actively engaged at couu- ; „ ael, notably, in tbe James Dixon, Freder- ■ ick Schwartz, and Charles E. Landla I trials. ' Of hia political life Ibere is simply thia ' lo be said: No man in the State of New i L Jersey lias a purer, brighter record. In i n 1868 be vu elected to tbe Legislature from tbe Second District, Cumberland \ e connty, and was returned three timet i " afterward successively, itc moat note- ! n worthy matter of all in this coo section J being the fact that he was nominated u each rime by acclamation. In 1868, he 1 . was nominated fee tbe State Senate by I acclamation by the people of Cumberland, j who elected him by 1,400 majority, the c largcat majority ever given in that county { * to any candidate for Senator. In 1876 he ' wis chosen to represent President Hayek. ! " on the Electoral tic£t. ; 1 In 1870 Mr. Mxoc's name was pre- 1 rented to the Congressional convention at ! ' Vine land, be receiving the next highest ' number of rates to tbe tall gaunt farmer. John W. Haxelton, who received tbe I ' nomination. In 1878 Mr. Nixon and CoL ! Potter of Bridgctoo, were tbe only grn1 tlemen prominently named as tucceasors ' to Mr. Sioqjckaoc, and it is a matter of 1 history Urn one or ihe other of these gentlemen, u.oet likely Mr. Nixon, would ! have been nominated, when General Robe- ' son appeared upan tlic scene, fresh fiom ' Grant's cabinet, and fresh from an lores- < ' ligation info his course while Secretary of ' ' the Navy, and asked the people of Ihe ' First district to vindicate him from tbe s charges or corruption aod high mlsde- '. 1 manors in offloe, which were at tbe time ► - so persistently made. 1 Thia was asking a great deal from men J * who had fairly earned preferment by rea- « son of their life long .devotion sn<t — * kuowledged Dtocss, and the leaders of tbe " 1 party naturally rebelled., Remonstrance, H 1 however, was useless, and General tiewell _ f wilh almost every other prominent Republican in the district, at last gave war. The convention whieh nominated him »«i _ held at Wopdbnry on the 17th of Septem- ■ ber. Robeson did not have a majority 0| l the voles cast in this old reliable Hepul-ti. i can strooghold, and secured a plurality of : 5.531 Totes through tbe (plit in ihe ranks a 1 of the oppoaltlon, Groescup, Oreeeback, , receiving 8,435 votes, and Strattoc, Dern " , octal, 5.951. Mr. Robeson polling a total i ! of 14,746 votes, ar 806 leas than the com- ' : bined rota of the opposition. Such is and ha been the situation. Mr. t Robeson is now before tbe people for a I third term, aod Mr. Nixon Is his enpoenedL Mr. Nixon ia well quaKScdto con- ' teat with Mr. Robeson, and wh^belicvt- he " > has tbe sympathy of First DislriHJtcpub. am.UmlXriim ' I . , A colored man named- Jlobr Tompkins ;, wu on trial' lu weak before' an Austin £ ' Justice for assault. Old Uncle Muse was 5 one of tbe leading witnesses foe tbe (hair, ' The maln poinl was whether or not Tooip- J 1 kins bad given any provocation to bring * * on tbe row. 1 "Now, tell this jury all you know about J 1 the affair," said the Justice. ' "Bun I tell de Jury all I knows in my f " own way V asked old Moae. r "Yea, tell the Jury wbal you know iu ' Jrocrosrn way." ■ Old Moae turned solemnly to the ex- ' 5 pcctanl Jurymen : ' "Oem'mens oh de Jnry, you am " de r meanest lookln' crowd eber I seed—" , "Stop!" bawled the attorney for the i State. J "Your Honor will Incarcerate tbe wit- >- txas for contempt of Court 1" bowled the I . attorney for Ihe priaooer. t The 'foreman of the Jury got up and , asked the Court to protect the Jury from • Insult. 0 "Witness, if you insolt the Jury again j a I shall certainly resort lo extreme meat- ^ "I'm not gsrlne ter consult anybody ef ' you don't Interfere wld me," said old y Moae. sullenly. ,f "Gem'mena ob de Jury, you am de „ meanest lookin' crowd eber I seed outside a jail-" n Jhe prosecuting auomev Ijumped np :. and dawn. The foreman of the Jury once more bowled, "Your Honor !" Tbe coostable laid his heavy band on tbe collar of old Moae. when tbe latter calply repealed _j U) Ihafmyi- "You am de meaneat lookln' crowd eber I reed oolside ob a jail. Dem vti ., de berrv words de prisoner da Med when he fust come inter de barroom, aod which * led to de row." <1 The foreman sat down quick. Tbe atT torneys doubled up like Jack-kniva with « wilh a surprised look of childish inno1 cense, once more said, emphatically, lo x- the cowed jurymen : ■ • "You tin vie meanest lookln' crowd R' eber I seed outside ob dq JaiL'-Tore. ^ Bl/Onf. ' An illiterate soldier contrived to spell ®- brtSdna u. It. B. -re"" -low- " utch,- and wba tokl thsLUw spmag^rss^ A cttixea it Sewells Potot/"Va., hu 2: sir— rw"*" w *°""v j ' For valuable infornfeUon.^read^Jbe ad5! ; It is the season for rigging up bombe ! — k. Sup doaicg and drugging: take advice *- j | i nimirei Livar Kegula-

yraial, gtr. t!j a - A KpsoSetit Nr. Altwn Kmgwoij. Kseav. N.H- troohled . Irsd puwmlng. p«n'r»T*Al*3»i''(! , WOOM brras isn.irack onra, saa tas n asaa» ' I IJ. ^ i sdssr p80ria8i8. ! ^,11^ K. HmAstsOB^N^i "l cji'-ureurculieam N^pruauifejhr salt rheum. Mrs. WM. I-KLUNUTON. BSawa. Wit. cuticurat I and Cancan Soap externally sad Concurs ReCATARRH Sanford's Radical Cure. byl^d^nim'a^mSdiabrMr q!^aud5sms ♦w'r'^ASt tS SZJSrt* , plsssrr or cleetrte lottery lor ^sun and wsnknrss of and Agne. Price rjc. Now evtvywnetv. "'c ilui ' BIUQU8WE$8. ^ ^ . '^MALARJA.^^ 1 ' " bad'br'eath ffSS8MS^'«SS?Sa^ ^ jaundice. lndlnltv--"colic. lea SffVffi^irc1 "pnreiy ' recrtshiei' " *"rm bladder and kidneys. Mtte ol Ue dtaease* ot Ihe bladder ongtnsle rrosnteuss ot the JUdaoysjoMorr the im«ol csr IJter ICR), and both Use Kidneys * hlsddre will he resaorod. , the— npprtf1 tee red L Trade Mark sad stent'"""j. h. zeilin * con ' WHENCE COMES THE HNEOUHIEB • POnn.AETTY OF AllcQck's Porous Plasters? ; Because they have proved then- ' selves the Best Eteroal Remedy [ ever invented. They wiH cure asthma, colds, coughs, rheumaj tism, neuralgia, and any local 1 pains. 1 Applied to the small of the back ^ they are infallible in Back-Ache, . Nervous Debility, and all Kidney I troubles; to the ph of the stomach ° they are a sure cure for Dyspepi j .cpsia and Liver Complaint. ' ALLCOCK'S POROUS PLASTERS are painless, iraJ grant, and quick to cure. Beware r ofrmitations that blister and burn, a Get ALCOCICS, the only Genuine Porous Plaster. r WORTH SENDMG FOR. l.ouushrd'n tSofo?- -noxsns or rnx uws