Cape May Wave, 26 August 1882 IIIF issue link — Page 1

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VOLUME XXVTII. . CAPE MAY CITY. NEW JERSEY. SATURDAY. AUGUST 26. 1882. WHOLE NUMBER. 1467. '

•3 APE MAY OITT. XT. J. - »r 9 1 .50 a year in Advance. ffrofrssional Cards. J B. HUFFMAN, ATTOiWET ASP OOTNWLLOII *T LAW SOLICITOR. MASTER AND EXAMINER is . i! iS' ; i v BLTRXMg OOnW^XJWMLMIOS EH. , pf f. DOUGLASS, ATTOBSE T-AT-LA W no g,n£F'£&?OA*catr Y^ALTKB A. BAKBOWS, ATTOBKET-ATiAff SOLICITOR IN CHANCERY. J-JB. J. F. I. E AMINO ft SON, DBHTI8T6, I ^QaraKaYT iroHoeiroTbsnJ^an: Sat. | JAMBS M. E. BILPBETff : ATTOBN E Y - AT-I. A W solicitor, master and examiner in u CHANCERY. 01 .^OMea at No: ssWssMagtaa Street. UatwMoy " lusinrss «ards. v B. WILLIAMS, " ARCHITECT AND BUILDER. ,, WILL MAKEMIRA WINDS. AND NITXRIN- r IBID OB OC1.1 IRACT. nrnci-ii wmUshoo sl, c«k May. kj. C B. LITTLE, 1 nucncAL PAINTEB AND GLAZIEB, j C^ramjrte WMla QBGANS AND SEWING MAB. t. HORNER, PIMiBS. ORGANS & SEWING MACHINES B8IDOET0N, N. J. . • QO TO GABBISON'S ~ gTATBHERT, AND STORE VARIETY ' FOR GOLD DENS. BLANK BOOKS, TOILET PAPER. POCKET CUTLERY. SHELL GOODS, riSBINO TACKLE. CHEAP LIBRARIES. _ MINIATURE BOSTS^MANIYACTTREll ON 8EWINQ MACHI^NElroLES AND OIL A TV WASHINGTON STREET. CAPE MAT, N. J. QHAS. V. PEBBV, OILS. PAINTS & VARNISHES. • PHILADELPHIA. mbllAni JOHN M. BU88KLL, J DRY GOODS, GROCERIES, BOOTS, SHOES, & NOTIONS, ; FLOUR FEED PATENT MEDIUIISAM. TOO. LARD. USES. REEDS. So. " *D. '^DIIETE WCHN sonnr n> PsuLAMnzsiA. Pa. ytgCE, BUILDINC BY MAIL. i *®§sgri

For Autumn Wear. ■ _ | 0ur Bargain sections offer many lots of. Clothing for men and boys, well adapted for Fall wear, at an average of forty per cent off from the low prices established at our June Upset Sale, You may save the cost of a journey , to the city, and perhaps much more, on a single suit of clothing. Wanamaker & Brown. Oak Hall, Sixth and Market Sts, Philadelphia. BLOOMSDALE LARGE Kggg|»LATE FLIT DUTCH CABBAGE. Large, Flat, Solid Heads, Short Stems Contaro '^^U^nro^nrWUuOl j ntvajjfm (rom UaO<*! tloare? nbSroiar opp-nnglHra pop | Hot e Sialic Oraia ef Seed U Bilsei Iraa Sullu, Ell frcn Se'.e::oi Buds. ( D. LANDRETH & SONS, soa. ¥i asp a south sixth streitt, n iun;« m cmiii «mu ) BRANCH STORE, fct-iosai & W. Career Delaware Arena, and Area street. Philadelphia. OUR MOTTO:— "QUICK SALES AND SMALL PROFITS!" PEOPLES RELIABLE STORE. No. 41 Washington Street, Cape May City, (Opponlr KmMAAgfeMn, CHARLES NEEDLES. MANAGER. *enlaim;ed store, increased stock, j larsrat >w«urtiui of Dry Good, to ine rlj. A oom J>; .ve One of ' Ladies' and Gent's Furnishing Goods, Spring & Summer Cloth & Dress Goods, LAD'ET, CENTS AN11 CHILDREN* HONE. Role agency la Cape Max for DR. WABSES'S CELEBRATED COfiALlHE CQBSETS. *llon"f^*rfu,i''pllS,*»: W^tagtaattnet, oppoaUe Ken- j We have as CoHeelion Willi any other Store in the (llj, MajVMtc 4CHAHLE8 NEEIILEB. Mauve:. ~ FOB SMS AND MSS GOODS HALL'S No. 26 South Second Street, " C. B. COLES, LUMBER MERCHANT, MANUFACTURER OP Doors. Sail, liili, Haliup, Mats, Scroll Savini ail Boies. OFFICE, NO. 14 KAICHN'S AVENUE, ^ ^ ^ CAMDEN. ST. J. COLSON & MULFORD, LUMBER. OFFICE AND YARD, Front St., 3rd Wharf above Kaighns Ave., CAMDEN. N. J. AP:i:n-y BOOTS AND SHOES! taigsat and Ron Catpjat Sum of Good, Ckta? Bouts and Shorn la rape ha, co.^ J STYLE, QUALITY AND PRICE CANNOT BE SURPASSED. ONE PRICE ONLY. -A. _ PEE OUR tLH GAITERS. ALSO. A PULL SUPPLY OP FINE WALL-PAPERS * ELDREDGE JOHNSON, " B8 WA6HINOTON STREET. BOOT AND SHOE STORE. WM. H. BK2STEZETS

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/irr jfasuranrr. I MILLVILLE ; MUTOAL MARINE AMD FIRE 1 INSURANCE COMPANY. MILLVILLE'N. J. Actual Surplus over all Liabilities, Including Re-insurance, I Fire and Marine, $21,203.59. : Rates Low. Security Unqoeshoiiatts. ; ETTLEMENTS PROMPT AND MANAGEMENT ECONOMICAL. ! F. IIEKYES, FrrA. . 1L U HOWELL, Sr. , AGENTS AND SURVEYORS: j P. Kidney Toram^Cape Ma? Cli._ 4. || II. WOl^Nl, Djere Creek. [i Lh.'S^P^ui.. I W . R. t ahGUdiT, tlt>?|Iullding palrrial, (ft r. J EBEMLAH ILStlHEI.LENGEBS LUMBER YARD , j Schelleacer-a Laodioj, Cape Mar N.J, j her in I he contilr, hi ever, cimIT? 10 Hill Ihe j 100,000 FEET WHITE PINE. SIIISGLKS OP ALL' KJiyih. . rHoOKING. PBAMENTI'PP. PICKBTh. j FumlAbe>l .lib liiopalrfc. IHIU] J. U. SCIIELLENGEB. JJAItUWAUK. 1 NOO. I» AND-.S: rEOBBAI. KT_ j I DOOKS. K1JNU6 j t .iiiii'i luc JttlULDIKOS j JdH — J 1 ASH BRACKETS. HOT-BED SASH. HAND ILA1LS, NEWEL POSTS, BALUSTEHk : BUILDING AND HOUSEKEEPING IIAKD- • WARE OP KA-ERT DESCRIPTION. PUMPS. PUMPS. PUMPS. aSf^e^T^Ui^jAiwotoSi^ l-utLrfoiio. uBbed Wire, lore M.. Here. etc. II 111 V llordjrAre sp eUAlum. en: Uu» Run. Rinrere. and SLATE MANTEL SHELVES. r'i?r£e' prTnc' ■'res before porchaaliw oloe- ■ HENRY PRKDEBICKK. Jnnria-I CAMDEN. N.J. 1 faints, ©ils, 4r. Jp J. MELV1X, OOR. OP LAP JbYETTS AND JACKSON JJTS., Cape Mar. x. J-. Dealer In ► 1 i PAINTS. PAINTERS" SUPPLIES, WHITE LEAH, LIHSEED OIL, SPIRITS OP TURPENTINE. PATENT LIQUID PAINTS. VARNISHES, WINDOW GLASS, r PLAIN AND ORNAMENTAL. j ALL AT rilll.AI'KI.rii I A PBIGBS 9. <5. Xrirr's $torr. pKOFIT OB NO PBOFIT FOB PAINTS, OILS AND GLASS. OIIJl AND IILASb, ! ' °OU^j$D<GljSi, , AND ;.LAS6. j ■ N. C. PRICE, Pntiiemt Okut OmUtr'il I'trry etrrrt, * . WHOLESALE AND RETAIL STORE. DRY GOODS and GROCERIES, .! FEED STORE, Ne. rr Parry /Urrrt. , ; Corn, Oats, Hay, Bran, Mill Feed j WOOD YARD, j 0 C T ' ALLMZ^?"*1' rV*T^ °F f I NreLinlud on Phot*, tenors. Praetor' ■» Pnp I SI, lor CASH. j ^g^fetgr^ar"' )»-T " ' XC. C. PRICE. $fOO°I||i

j HOW THE KING LOST HIS CRO^I^^ ] Tlr Kin.- , men, irncn he hod Gain the bear. I Kirutr blraalcnoh theflshrrbioar, 1 I And. tno behind and two hefurr. 1 lnsaaniphinreliiina-onirtheahore. -v • : l> j'c'"n" '' r l' " : " "t" •' -nf Vto lanjh ai all and am «nlr > dea n. ! ; snu neeer more laoyh al IrsiSea:" • j ■ ! The pawn. ore » 1 ei^shcr baud:1*1*1 j j And I mw ci.rr> my ii-e«*k-e atn^bt, j The dUrh ncmu «trr nrat, i j Tae mnre linja al snr.a. ■' °U*° = ' j lord, and mirthful damea sne laU - Anannron ercry hi'V' api-ar. : 4 — our tit« airwornnrmBor: Tl.v n-l u-uije* reached [be tiiroac: SQUTHERK FARMING. At U10 clnac of the war tlie Soaft, was i M a large IiulirUnal indcblcdiK-a inctyrcj "Thi^ "tQMrtUa. onlaatinn in Georgia alow, ; unoaclihg to £3fl,nO(Lono. more than Ihe : whole-amount of bor jir- vnl taxable prop. The high price of cotton iodarcd all the planters to cultivate a, much of this crop as Ibcy cdald, nnd a« the new stains of the j negro had put the management of hie labor 1 variaUv rvnl.ai out llicir pUntalione to llie ; r ■ nue as in Ibe dare before the war. and with : no more personal labor. Many planters ■ ; wmlto the citiu, to live, having the entire ! mnnageendbt of their plantations to the froed. I turn, sadaa tongas the ooUon rent was paid j cared little for Ihe methods bj- which they were fanned. The uegroja woniesl Immense . tracts of land, aeratehiag over Ihe soil with ( Ihcwnalleat kind of a plough, using li 111 - sir . ' no fertilizer, nor resting the laud, fulioaing I in the rawest way each methods of farming i as they had homed in the days before the , face of the laud and were unable to raise I enough crop# eithaq <0 pay met or" to get a living for themselves. The owners of the plantations soon found the ryvenuee cut oH and I -s ir lands so worn out as to Is- unproducLve. and the country so full of similar prie, impossible. Th y then commenced re turning to their homes to work their planLatinos themselves, and if pouutile to get them bock to something of their former prol ductive power. It is gem-rally admitted that when the I owners of the plantations realized that they . brighter and belter future opened to tho ' Riuthjand the commencement or her pros- . j peril j dales from that time. Many of the {-lactation! fell into the hands of younger men, cither by inheritance or purchase, or mat often by renting, and they were far more able to manage the f madmen in the then disorganized or disorganizing stale of labor than the old clave owners. Nevertbfks* Hie country was without imopey, and cotton was the only crop in which it could be 'actor or tank - ; with the premise to liavc the handling of I the owner's cotton, and to get an advance I of ptoririans, males, or fanning tools, or ; fertilizers, the planter must pledge his not1 ton to be delivered nl the warer-housC in tbo I fall The loan, of whatever amount, must be paid in full within the current year, so that new advances might be made tho fol* lowing season, consequently the farmer planted every sere of cotton he could care for, and as little corn and anvall grain AS poasfbte to feed through the fall and raisspring'e advances to enable him to buy enough then to carry him through the eeeeon. , When the hinds become exhausted, instead of ploughing deeper or fertilizing, more land waa cleared, »M this "reverent" of now land put in ft ton the aeoondyear. For the post four or" rears the mast iutelli. ' gent cheeof far. have oeco that by this kind of farming !>y ware impairing their lands and their factors and bimkrrs, with their high rates of interest, end Ihe nicr- ! a long credit system, were reaping all the profile of their labor. The* planter waa kept poor by the want of enough capital to | run their farm on A -ash bacs. and his farm ' ! was worked at a great and inereaeiug diandI vantage. This has led to baying smaller farms, working fewer seres on the larger plantations, routing crops, and rating the land; to a better and deeper system of ' ploughing, and the ue of homremade moI improving the soil so at to get, in many inrlaooes, a bole of cotton to the acre, when j five or six yeere ego ii took fiwe or six sen* . j to produce s bale, and that of poorer quality. More corn and oats are bang planted, for. age of different kinds reoured end meet , raised In feed laborers and stock through the entire year, instead of buying provision, . grain, and hay in the spring. Com. sugar cone and ootttm are well started in this see- ' lion, and from thp large lncrelsed acreage of cans it is evident thai King Cotton is not i to rale eo many subjects, nor over so large ' ! extent of territory, es in the pest, though it [ is confidently expected that his weight 1 I I wOlnotbedimmiahed.— Hartford OmranL I ' ;

si/N. ABOUT MARK TWAIN. "^'"i iusT*" " " rpl In order to obtain on account of how Mark Twain became a pilot, the reporter yesterday ' made inquiries nuiong old steamboat men. ! and wax rewarded by receiving inhumation . I to tlie effect that the gttat hnrnorist bad first served as a pOol nnder OapL 1L IL Bixl.y. j w ho is now the commander of the Anchor - j line steamer City of Bstofi Uongc, \ As soon as the reporter heand this he turn. > j ed his foots:, ;* in tfie direction of the levee, I land bearding tlie City of Ilston linage, , found Capt. Bixby seated on the boihw-deek ! with his little bloc-cycd daughter in his lap, ; and engaged in assisting her to arrange a ' j number of picture blocks which were scatter. ed over the bottom of a chair. ' • When the reporter approached and stated the object of his visit, the old Captain's eyes brightened with the recollection of former 1 days. "* '■ I " Well, sir.* be said, "the first time that j . I met Mark Twain. Or knew that such a per. I son existed, was in 1S5T, At that time I ; j was the chief pilot 011 the Paul Jon of. a boat 1 I that made oocnsionml tripe from Fittsbcrgh I io New Orleans. One dsy, while we were j ,-ouiiug down the Mis-dssippi. along, ougular, j ; h<Ms,ierdike vonng fellow, wb we limle a[>- 1 ; 1' tin.! to he fastened with leather hinges, ! entered t!,q pilot hou-e. and in peculiar. Don't you want to lake or picrt young fellow t | " ' No, sir, tliere is mbre bother about it i | " ' I wish yon would, mister. Pm er | j printer by trade, but it don't 'pear to 'gree with me, and I'm on my way to Central j ; America for my health. I believe IJU make i j i f tolerable good pilot, 'cause I like tbc river.' j " ' What makes you pull your words that "• I don't know, mister; you'll hare to [ : -i.k my ina She pulls hern. too. Aiu't j j-jonH leach me bow to be er pilot" * j " - The only way is for tnont-y.' — Well I'll teach you for *500.' ; " ' Goewhilikens ! ho ! he ! I ain't got fi-VtO. | but I've got fire lota in Krokuk. Iowa, and : u orth two bits an aero any time. Von can ' ; Lave thpt if you want it.' , " I thld him Cbft I did not care for his I j 1 ay (100 in cash, cl.Vi in twelve months, ! and tho k-.iance when he became a pilot, 1 llo trot with me for a long time, bnt some. limes lo k onaaional trips with other pilots, j At the breaking out of the war he was a regular pilot on tho Alonzo Child", and re-main. ' Led on that tsafKinlil she was turned into a r-mfederale rant, when he got through Jbe | Lues, and going to Hannibal, Mo., his uatTre ; I- -wivenlistrel as a three months' volunteer I I iu the Confederate arjgy under Gen. I'ricc. ' At the rxpiratlotr'oF the time of his enlist. in-lit he went oat to Nevs-la, where his i-tother Orion Clemens was filling the position of Secretary of the Tctritory. Out t'ore he driltod into journalism, and gradn. ally developed the humor which has sinoc ' "Did you ( v- r hear from him after be went out West P" iuq<iirod the reporter. " Yes, he u«ed to write, and lot mo know o! his wliereabonu. On his return from the Holy Laud he sent me a letter which con- : Uined his wedding card. The wording of i the letter, as near as I concern ember, was as ' follows : ' Thirty tons of paper bare been used in imhliahing my book " Innocents Abroad." It has met with a greater reds than any book erer pahhsbrd, exorpt "Uncle Tom's Cabin." The volumes mil trom €.1 to fo, according to finish, and I get onehalf the profit. Not so hod for a scrub pilot, is it f How do you run Plum Point— a son-of-a-pun of a place f I would rather be a pOol than anything else I erer tried." " " Meeting him in this city gave you con- ' aiJcral>lu pleasure, did it nqtl" "Tes; I had not seen him in fifteen yean, nnd when I met him it brought back 1 old dnya." " Has be changed much " No, a very little. His hair, it is true, ii ' somewhat silvered, and his face has a few r more wrinkles in it, hut he has the same light in his eye, the same nose, which always J appeals as if it was expecting to smell some, thing bad, and the mine rickety swing of his limbs he had when 1 first met him in the . piloljtousc of tbo Paul Jones, twenty-five J years ago." ! pilot t" s "Yes ; be was always drawling out dry f jokes, but then we did not pay any attention - to him. I was talking to him yesterday , shout tbe river, and-hc tolMme that on his down trip to this city bo did not recognize ■ single point on the river, as. everything had changed so since he lrfL"— TinM-Drv.ueraL \ ENGLISH WOMEN OF TO-DAY. oorresjondent of the Boston J/crald says : I " They are, as a general thing, big -headed, 1 jowly erea lores, who do not require the ad. d'tion or hair 10 give their faces size. They I hare round cheeksvand plump abouldsra almost invariably, Jisl their anus are for the t most port very strong and m oscular in ip- ■ pearmoce. That is to say, that they are lean and long, thin above the elbovra, big I just below'the joints, and shaped generally with more indications of sinew than grace. • actually 'bared, Area in the ; rap* theatrical costumes. They «re corere.l with lace of 1 some kind, mostly black, and always very 1 thgk. . Hindi and feet in Fxiglsnd are conI Greeted with a liberal regard for the raw , malarial that is quite pleasing to observe. • I never saw such extremities in my lifs, especially on a woman ; and, as if to sggrarate , ' this condition, there are no shoes that prop- , erly fit the female wearers. Mea's hoots and I show can bo hod in almost any style hare, but I hare yet to see a well-shod woman in r London. The foot gear is of that alqgpons Icoss-indhe-hrel description which makes iu wearers wabUe around in s peculiarly dis- , tresrfng way. Punt and powder are used ir. New York ;_\bey are lavished here. I don't know who first started the talk about t fair Fngtish complexions Women with , clear skin are not one half so plrnliriii as t dozen really pretty, natural complexions since I arrived on this tide of the water. , Lot I bare aeon an amount of "making up" . i'.st I would Dot have believed bad its exis. , tenoe in actual nee the world over. Seven. t cigku of the women you meet iu London an : j chalked -ed roughed till you cant teSwhelh. I rr they are yellow or while in their natural , When was a man cYtr weak thai tbederO , • did oat charge down upon liim* 1

: , A peculiar story crane* In in of a fsm- 1 ily who lisrr resided in Jrnnmgt county, t | lad., for many yrar.. anil during all this j : porch fseing Ibe east. No weslbcr has J bccncvUl enough 10 drive them loan Ibis • , oj>en porch to lake their rarals. A gen- [ . j tieman says he dinrel -witb 'the family 1 | when it wot cold enough to freeze the . ; victuals bo tbo table, yet tbe family sal al , It bat bc'-n reported in Clinlon. 111., j 1 Dial a young man of lie Will county re - ' " o nllyyjied from rating too much. It is .. a'U-ged that he made a wager that lie could cat 'two pounds of candy, two ; pounds of pcaobrs, drink two qnarta of Ijivalcr and a hit of other stud, which. It D , s tid, be accomplished, but soon after died from the effects of it The story it said 10 t Several days ago an old peacock died in I i ; llallfsi cnunly. Vs., at the advanced age s ■ of twenty-two years. His companion d ed about two years back, age 1 twenty - | years. • ; At a dairy farm near Berlin, where Iberc - . are one hundred P-iws. to the c-ituteroa. 1 j drunk. For two days ibe enws were . wholly intractable, attempting to g.re Uic milkers and bc'-i-wing io concert. By r 1 unit tniuaki- Hie person waTerliig flic- , I c.>*s turned the fauix-t or a bsrre! of com . 1 1 1'randy. wbidi Uapiientd lobe placed near „ j Hie water fJocM. and the trough, instead 1 • of bring filled with water, received the t braudv. ! The Eiovldenec ./..urn if Says: Ttw I t j up «rAVi|...n's\yiiarf, Fail iiiver, lot Ibe j J ju«t alwve tbe ire-, tin- botloBl of tbt- bole j being on a level with tbe icc. The hole t was not noticed at llie lime, and the 3 weight of snow upon ibe deck caused Ihe vesacl 10 settle until the water put BY , through the hold and she tank. She has -, since been balled out and the hole has , lain patchtsl up. Hie wiseacres of the . neighborhood are discussing the problem - w briber the rats gnawed their way out or . io, there being a difference of opinion • cooe.-raing the ability nf the animals to - fix upon lite location of tbe surface of llie " icc ifffliey giiawed-tle-ir way out. c The T-'rooto OU>U says : A spcenlntor e ir, tlie ncighlsirliimd of Hyde Park Is ' buying up ail U* cats lie can get, and pay- ^ in? therefor from 10 to 30 rents each. He , says I he pelts ^rr rurcd and manufacturedi. Just the same a. fox, mink. Ac. t The following is from the Toronto ;• Glefie: A little girl altottl 7 years old c passed tliriucli the city by. the late train lavl nigluUiund fot Chicago and travelling e alone. She bad a ticket sewed to one shv-vi- of. her jschri, onsjbich was writr ten, ' Ha'.tit: Marvity^tom Montreal io ' Chicago." • Mrs Co^ Sc'tultz, of flick triile, U I., _ W ho was b tried a Yew weeks ago, had been an invalid for several months. On t the day before licr depth she told her , friends I tod she was gojng p, djc on the . following day. Rhe made ail 11m- arrange- - 1 menu for her funeral, and was dressed in . b t burial garments when she die t t>bc .. was 00 years old. Surf bathing is a revelation 1 1 went in yaotcrriay with a lovely and modest J woman from the North, with whom I laid hut a abort acquaintance, although I hail seen a good deal of tr-r. At we stood . , awaiting tlie coming of a huge wave, site r clutched my arm. and, poising lieraclf on s one fool, bended the other leg. and pulled ■ her stockings over her knee- trying vaioly . to make ihoiver a strip of white. Slic f thought nothing ->f this— neither did I. " In an inttant tbe ware was oo ua, and we » were riding lite tsrt-ll as happy as a pair of ducks. !» Tits, evening litis lady wenl sailing « itli Ibe same (arty that had Jiecn bath1 ing with tier in (he morning. As she 1 Mopped ore-r Ibe side of Ibe boat site cxposed about four iochca of bcr pretty silk stockings, and bcr face was crimsoned j Willi shame and mortification. Now, why this difference ? It was exaetly Ihe same liuibjbat had Irecn exposed to llie knee all Ihe morning without any 1 thought of confusion. As I came into lie ' hotel corridor yesterday a young fs-'y ' ] "Shut llie do or ! quirk! Tliere'a ■ 1 somebody owning 1" • She had put on Iter liathtng^ull for a a trial trip fa tier 111 Aher'a mom. and was - horrified that a man -tsi-itd-ee her in that a fix. A half bran Ulrr she and I wen- ly. r u» at crery ihmti of the tan. and riw, with - her shapely figure ts-nUed. was*writing 1 tier nanie in tlie sand with her toes, while j her tnerry Dugh rang shore Uie mar of 1 the waves. ' Bui If the dressing on llie loach and 'r the uncoosriouini-si » Jb which Jhr qjost j , [ mod rat of girls a'and Hit- ex|tnsnre cnosrquenl upoo it Is remarkable, tbe ooodurt , of m crowd in bathing is Mill more to. . . Tliat is tbc miracle of social life, I think. 1 The girls rlad in litis prankiogly pretty , drtos— Uic paMiig pressure of tlie ware* x outlining the curves of the body — with « the warm fleab glowing and throbbing ■ beneath the tingle garment— tin girls - thus attired run hand-in-band In tbe water j with their sweetheart!, and romp and ' { frolic, and are ducked add haulod out by 1 the feet, or are clasped around the waist, It or catch tbe fellows about the neck at a a big wave oocmo— and yet there is not the a slightest prurient suggestion, snd no hint . of esllanlrr. 1 dim' beiievr s scsodsi wss ever born iu the surf. I cannot cooocivc • of a sentimental attitude amid Ihe rolling t. The War Department has issued a gen. a | erol order, the object of which is to raise . I- the standsrd of marksmanship in tbe J army. It is atispevtcd the miserable shooting exhibited in Washington by Sergeant ; Ms-on has induced the Department to 'I 1 take the SUT- It is a graxl move.— A'orr. i I

^Hfilual, (?tr. V^wtMAN CANVSCAUH f' WMW : X iLYDIA E. PINKHAM'S YZ3ETAELE COHPOTOI). A More C ore for wit FEMALH WEAK. N ESSES, larladlog Lenrorrbwa, Ir. reswlor and PalufOI Plen-trnolton, laflaniniailon and Ulreratlon mt Ibr Womb, Flaadlaa, PBODAP8CS UTtaU. Jka.^ : ar-KIPNKT OOMPI-Aivre qfHItbsr Inn Find Great ItrUrYla I la Cos. LTSIA tnxtntiiis BI/KID I't IUP1ER , urdk tv c«oj«iBd an! n «d rnrlSCT on rra SJ-BaU by on llrosglau.-H* <0 , a^Diiiawv.itn

P DOES ■ WONDERFUL □ CURES!

L WHY?

I Rwnaao It arts aa lb. I.ITLlt, BOWELS ows tu=.cr« tLM CenlopTraWtoer^ndUn. ' _rtri T .rriraw [KIDNEY DISEASES, LIVER COMPLAINTS, -1 ^ 'ict Pilct.^ . ^ i 'gajr ATTBEY'.-u^SnS rturx, snoa Mitt 1 r POSITIVELY CURED 81 V' [CARTER'S Ifci5' : Ws lhan Gored, flcl Marelr Rslbvetf ^ Ana Can Fro — ITAot tec halm. . ^^otadnrvrereia.rr-raotjIi'roni^K; -1 . raefcrerta. Tb-ye^riltblsbytaiXMjS'. 1 apoaxtMsfraapaioto. fr-.ro =, o^re"'. r ~ CA^rT-?wc;r£^TTr^v!iX"'

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