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VOLUME XXVIII. . CAPE MAY CITY. HEW JERSEY. SATURDAY. MARCH 31.1883. WHOLE NUMBER. 1498.
ISBfe t t CAPE MAY CITY, *g. j. ; C.B.lfASJULTa:. • 1 .50 a yaar in Adranca. *r«ff«ional Cards. J a frijFFMAN, ~~ IS CHANCERY. Ktnm onrRT^CMMiNaioMUt. fj~ f. DOUGLASS ATTOBNEY-AT-LAW *0. u°rIZ?'B. ™.-clu,tPM'T y^-AL-fEB a. "barrows, — ATTOBNEY-AT-LAW SOLICITOR IN CHANCERY, -MOCWT IjOM.*. JL^Fj^r. J. v. leamo^g' a'sq y, D1H TT ST8, JAMES M. E. HILDBETH^ ATTOBNEY-AT-I.AW A»0 boucitob **«ter and examiner in chancery. _OMee at No. « Walking!.*] xuart. Cap* Mai City. N. J aia-ly JJEBBERT W. EDMUNDS, ATTORN E Y- A T-LA W, •OIJCTro* AND « AFTER ts CHANCERY. Cana Mat cut, v. j on.. P«t»m ffardj. ^NOS R. WILLLAMB, ABOHITECT AND BUILDER. WILL MAKE DRAWINGS. AND JtpPBRiy ,*END OR CONTRACT I ernci <1 WaaAlnrtoo K., Cape May, NJ. ' J ^ B. LITTLE, - • '
PAINTEB "AND^BLAZIEB QRGASS AND SEWING Ma B. F. HORNER, HAM ORGANS J SEWING MACHINE BKIDTETOS. X J. Btaaoa, u Jartaoo m., Oepe May city. lyn Q. TO GARRISON'S ~~A SIATIDNERT, AND STOBE YABIETT POR HOLD FES*. BLANK BOOKS. TOILRT PAPER. POCKBT • • LaRY. SHELL GOODS. r.MIINO TACKLE. „ CHEAP LIBRARIES. -"WnOATCRK MOATS MANUFACTURED ON THE PHERIsEs SEWING MACHINE MEEDIJE* AND oil A SPECIALTY. W WASHINGTON STREET. CAPE MAT. N. J. /"J.OODT EAR'S RUBBER TELTVJ IMG AND PACKING CO. HOSE, CLOTHING. BOOTS A SHOES D. P. DIET ERICH, Haw York Belting and I 'arking Company WAREHOUSE, m CHEgTNC-r ETBEET. ~piG68 ti BROTHER. AMERICAN WATCHES, n WALNUT. Oar. DOCK STREET, PHILADELPHIA WATCHES A JEWELRY REl'AlliEl). V B. MATLACK; m • Ba. « X. EEYENTH ST- PHILADA. TEEEA GOTTA DBAB am SEWEB FIFE. CaiMNET YOPS, WIXDGCABD CAPS. 1 CHIMNEY PLTES. (MSDEN VASES. CXMENWbc. WanaMad Lowsm ITMul Baai Plpea lariat JAX HAND A SON, OXLT PRACTICAL JEWELERS CAPE MAY DIAMOND CUTTERS. , BO. II WA8EINOTOX STREET, ^ cira.ATOTT. ^ , L. BICE, JRo_ ARCHITECT AND SUPERVISOR i 4*0 walnut street, AND SPBCmcATlOXS CABKPULLT "Mjl. SS-ywAd JOHN M. BUB8HLL. GENERAL DEALER IX DBY GOOD8/frROCEBIB8, FLORR AND FEED. PATENT MEDICINES. PORK, LARD. HAMS. SEEDS. Ac. — — - — JOtti m. acaaam FfflBMIS MKWLWSS&LSS'g r- ; '
JjbMrxl. '* raapmnit of Utrr, Hum rl» *.v3 Kidneys. 1 SYMPTOMS OP A MiJA'Cn Utqi- 1 KroMiua°^mj j' SSHaSSSSiPg j' S§§3gipj^iBMs-' ; .vmptom. appear. I .^iry "ijzszrt^vz.zjz i; t: If Yon bar. aalon ...Jibing- hnrd of r dU~Uoa. ,« Id In.,, .Ion. 1 let u aisbi. uan a Ana .rMywa vjlt la rehcvtd. f , Time sad DMaf IUIU -111 It saved " I.J nl — aji I ^e|.4n^, Ihe Itegalaaor ^ I it is rrmxi vegetable. ■ A»" ■". .n.lin^pn— Who^y ,< C Hruad or ^ E*rSS2S?S£S I Ss 5 <5rs£fi£,*£i- -—*<-/ f P M. J.«rT, Umaripdn. Uh» 0 s r tin Genuine, wb-ch shrayi li aad fugnaturc 2T J. II. ZJULJk'a'cu'. 0 PgLS*"L.BV ALL PRCctwsrs »
■EE YAM BCRCN'S
LADIES' TONIC. A Poaltiva Cure for *11 Famala s Complslnta. A £jrKss SaUSyDmnMa SL00. • a^° otter rrmrdlaa W-Of tut ar^atett" Blood Baatoruw AJrn! on eartt. No^dMeaae orUl ) '"rnr^rr D»» HI. a^r^^ u. ihe a«rd and Desk wan udu: yt» art aict. a only 'ral had w WMasMa. n» H» luuera a- a«e H my aata ram Ufa. BaaSnda kan Sara • aared br ao aottg. RK TlU ba paid, tor a east °S •aaaRaMr** "k"* 1nrM an Hcmattbrr, Ik.p Blllen la no Vila, dniBtd. Mtdtdae em made; tar "larand'j Prtetei and omoiaa. Try' ttaBtwra today. t m-t . 'CAHTEbs" ronFuls • FOR THE BLOOD OaM fiaa^a ml Jart. and -is. am Mttou ' £ ^^SntMieemeiwekxL, *r* r«* ottr, ■
A XATTER«r PACr SOLCTIOS Of aEXTI- j MENTAL PEOALERSFrom the Nr» BattSpA "A besUiy Rtacnr woman dtea dm die of a brotato fccmrt." a welLknowa pbyai- 1 • rhn aaid: ♦'A b-«WiT heartia only i tilg ' . muaclr, and' nobody can have grief j enough lojjtrak It. When, llierrfore, a j blooming young widow ahowa apparrntiv | inconceivable grief *! the death of her . ' add in a abort time recovers her equanimity, she ought not to be secured 1 of hypocrisy. Neither may it be cooclu- j did ibat another widow who aooo ptllct and diet har had more affection for her i buthand. than the flrw. The flr« widow may have had even. more affection than Ihe other, but hare been auaulned by I physical beahh. "It ia erroneous to suppose thai death heart diresae h slwaya sudden. Il Is very commonly protracted for years, and exists undetected by most skilful grhysi- i i ciahs only to be drveiopel by tome aud- ! I den. occurrence. There was an eminent j I physician of Brooklyn, io active prjctic-, | j who' died within an hour of a time when ' • be was about to lecture. 11c war to wril I Ibat. After examination by skilled phyii- ! ' tdaaa of fir* rlam loauraneeeompaniea.be j was dociaaed in be pcrtirtly sound, and a policy for flO.OOO insurance oo bia life reached home before lira body was cold. Tha cause of hit death Was a rnyaUby until the poeUosnrm exaroioalion, Iry-Dr. John G- Johnain, of Brooklyu, showed thai a little piece of chalky deposit in tlie heart bad become lonreoed and formed an emboliay. The man bad simply taken apecimena out of his desk, and be in his ehilr without any excitement, or undue effort. Any little excitement might hare done it. and then his death woyld have been cited as that from brokt o "Socallcd deaths from broken be* rut may be frequently traced in this way. One exenioo aa well aa another may furnish the requiaila culmination. Madieal books are Oiled with instances of death by bout disease during the performance of pleasurable natural functions. When a itweariy dead it is easy to put oo hloi the Ooiahlng atroke, but It ja Inaccurate to give tbe finishing stroke ail the blame of , bis death. When a womanjaaea her bti'haud, or a girl loses her lover, and by her < nervoOR exhaustion, lnas of sleep, lack of ; nourishment, and grief, weakens the action of her bean, she la tald to die of a tine ot iter oean, sue is aaiu to die ot
broken heart, but she has in fact died of a very ordinary disease. "The case of Bill. P.wlc, bring four days with a ball in his bean, is often spoken of aa remarkable: but Dr. Flrut records a case where a man bad a ball in bis heart twenty years, and finally died of pneumonia. Bah these men had healthy hearts, and could dm have had them bruken by grief. Yet. in fact, more men than wnsncn dir of heart disease. Out of airmales. Another record showed lev enI teen males nut of. twenty-four cases. Anj other record showed that in sixty-two caaea of rupture of the heart there was a fatty degeneration existing. In other words when fat ia substituted for tntuclc, tbe organ la epaily broken. If any of these diseased people have been subjected to sodden grief they might have furnished illustration! of heart breaking. One medical observer- records one hundred eases of rupture of tbe brart where there was ho grief to account for.iL In fact, grief is a very rare cause of heart breaking. "Disease la tbe real cause of heart breaking and tbe various kinds of disease which lead to il are ao many that volumes would be necessary to describe them. The cause of these diseases are manifold, and are very much under the control of the individual. Tbsre are, of course, hereditary tendencies to beyrt diaeaar: but.asM. from traumatic causes, these tendencies may exist for years without fatal resulL , "It la a curious fact that the least dangerous heart disease often creates tbe most £ apprehension, Freqently patients who j have only a functional or curable disorder - will not be persuaded that calamity dors J not impend, although there may lie no . real danger. On the other hand, organic U disease may exist uninspected. There ' are sympathetic relation! between the ' mind and the heart, and disorders or the ,, bean art frequently traceable to mental . excitement, either plea «u table ar painful. n Quick beating of tbe heart Is no certain " symptom of danger. It has been demon * sumled that -the pulse may safely range from 100 to 140 per minute lor many ' name ti s gharaplre or its mcrtL lis r Eracj is • Per parurctara sea adrertiwroetL T*Z* bj ' H. A Eenaadr and Marej A Maermy. cape Max [ <*'■ i_ _ Little Johnay, who was writing a com- '■ position about hens, he said be knew where bens came from, but didn't know where they gM eggs People ray that hens lay eggs, but I know better. My lather keeps kxi of bens, and when be wants any eggs be alwas sends me to tbe store for them.— Boston Tramrript. The Greet Female Remedy it prepared by tbe Women's Mediae! Institute o< Buffalo. N. \ .. and ia their favorite prercrtp- » ssx lt Is aoM by dragrisu at ffl .M per bottle. Ladies can obtain ad > ice free, been curat? lbo*e wbu >>•» A Virginia Vrekly. wUtft^iYSaren eight yean without a skip, bought; its second new towel the other day. tbe oM one bong ruber Miff with age. ^ pood crash towel ought to last a pruning offlen ten years — Detroit Frw Pra. My hnsfaaad had drtmkw habMa be could ota uremunw! unit: Parker's tilngvr
t- j bi: ram H— . us ,1,1- rr n ,sn , I 1 talk alrmt home because I am rajeiy e i there and men like ' to talk moat of what ( tbej know least about. "There ia no ■ ' place like borne." Even tbowe who. live '' j in boarding . houses louchingly warble I that song. Home is more to a woman f than to a man. A man who has no home r j i« a social tramp. Willis woman it is ( ' | different j she wants a home, but does ( ^ ' i*>t always have a-chaoee to get it. Wo ( - ; man feeds upon affection She il neTcr ( 9 1 happy until she gets her ideal man; and r | then she is Last down to find another ' j woman's photograph and lore -letter in 3 i his overcoat pocket. But a man gels bis F • borne— I*, house, mortgage, mechanic's ' I lien and all. He har all, but tbe tnort11 cage ha< him. All of a man's life, ex- \ 9 j ccpt what he speodi at the store, dub, ( >1 ! caucus, lodge or prarcr meeting, is spent - in hit borne, Man is great in hi. own , ■ i house; if he is not a king he is at least i - j a prince cooaoR. Many are like tbe man • ! who, on being nominated for lieutenant | 11 I governor, aaid: "You have nominated the ] 1 : right man for the right place. I have ( c | was married." " | Il ia said that every borne has a skele- ' ton, but I don't believe it. It is only a ( thing ol tbe imagination. Some regard a - poor relation as a skeleton: but tbnt ir • belp it; and is entitled to young sympn- J ' Mtv. Heat's are brighter and better than ( 1 inip used to be. Oar wires make tbcm t 1 so. When, a wife buya her husband a E diam'tnd pin for Christmas U brightena < borne; and tbe buabaod is made happy by 1 receiving tbe bill ton days before Cbrist- ' man. Husbands, lake your wife into ' 1 your confidence; it will beip you to sue- , cess. What is borne without a dojf it , ' ia altogether too quieL f look aAbgfhnm • Philadelphia to Burlington oorejjudxaih- '. - ct than to try it again A-WoqldTaite ft pair I uL-fwin habie* to Ban Praociaco. That J ' dog^wouod a six-feet chain around my ( legs and around the legs of other men in 1 ways that . were unaccountable. Some ' men are fond of dogx. They will pay c > fi»00 for a Gordon Better and never shoot ' ' anything but the setter. Ledges are useful, but too msny of * ' litem do not makes borne happy. A man " ' iu I <wa joiord'po many Yfiat it look biui ' 1 rlept iu regalia, called ltii wife Worabip } I r,,t At..,.., to. t, w--., . 11 Master and son Junior
He spent a great deal of' his lime lurch - " ing in proccssioos and in visiting the tick, n especially ladiea of 16 year* and upwards, 't He was taken sick himself, and be was ° visited by so many committeep that bis ,f wife was glad to get him well. Fill your J home with beauty. People ought to live ' in every rum iu the bouse. 1 have Jiuitl ° a great many bouses— oo paper— and 1 <- am at it yet. 1 would arqjtl tbe spare . ■c room. It is cold, and damp. There is >- nothing in a spare room that will burn. '• 1 have nficit tried to warm a bed io a ' 0 spate robot, but alwaya failed. If you Rave any doubt about tbe spare room, . rr ask your pastor. r. - We live in brighter homes now. and | v lire in better houses than kings formerly " lived in. I can say, with Talmage, that ' d I was glad to be on band when ibis planet ! I" came along. Our fathers were a lot of t scalawags. (3;«hod in tin and steel they f would go into a neighbor's castle and rob - ' and destroy. But now thingi are bettor. | H a man area another with anything be 1 wants be makes ■ detf with him in stocks, ! * in oil or cotton, or wbgt, and be gels tbe 9 property; but be don't disfigure tbe oorpae.; j ' Only 160 years ago tbe last witch was d burned in Mcotlsnd tor getting np s than- j 9 der-storm by pulling off her stockings. '• now a man wan's gel shot if be pulls off « bis boou iu 1 parlor car. What man it 1 * there who would have lived in 1776? Eighteen units axe better titan seventy- <■ six. The world Is better than it used to * be— and it is going to be still heller wben < 0 yon get out of k. Every man should r T have a den— a room or rloaat In his bouse. ■ * sacred to bis own use, in which no wife ' 0 baa aright logo tearing around -a (leu t c full of precious letters, photographs, dona I 9 and unpaid bills In your homes you | 9 must expect troubles- U is troubles that ; 9 make home happy. Trouble* make bet, t ■> ter men and women. Enjoy your troub- I les aa they come along. Fill your borne t D with music, lluy your boy a fiddle even i if you haves doxeo of them, and you < 9 have -doe, two, three, one, two, three— I f all tbe day long. i A wmsll morna Prajer. | From the MkMMown Mereorr. « A lady residing in this village, the , * mother of a bright little boy, wai talking ( f to him tbe oUtcr night, just as she was , a putting hie to bad, about the efficacy of t- prayer, and told blm that if be woold ask ( 1 God for anything that be particularly de- , 7 sired sbe had no doubt that his request , wooia be granted. Tbelinle fellow knell at his mother's knee and preyed God to j * send him fifty little aistrrs.aod one bun- , " dred little brother!. That prayer was , J nerer finubed. for the mother, aghast at' , tbe prospects of baring ber house turned , into an orphan asylum, lifted the.boy to bis , feet and tucked him into bed without a , momenta unnecessary delay. , Tbe mast impatient man w* ever beard ' . of was ibat great freight brakeman , u who committed suicide out West tbe r other day. If be could bare been willing I to wait five or ten minutos-but there, J , there: some men nerer can wait for tbe J t slow moretnenls of tbe inevilalde. — Boat. J i The lateat news frtm Ecuador U (hat ' ■ tbe last Gorernment lasted Ju»t fire mio- F I utee. The inbsbirants are dayoring for k i a fresh one every year; but maay Liberals c » think this ia mo long a term to be consist- t cnt With perfect freedom, and a atop toward despot Urn. —Pyrl. , , A d<hatia« soie^ 'in Tswa has one r hundred and Binety-au by-laws to be ob- 9 - served, respected and obeyed. How a 9 K P^h'T ■pit. on the More wben I - theVndety Is in aeaslon ia something w I r^D"! «*+> -Pdrott Prr, pr*, £
"Ma's up ataira changing her dreaa. , , said tbe frecklcd-faoe little girL tying her ' , dotPt bonnet r.rtngi and casting ber eye , about ber for a tidy large enough to aerre 1 , as s sbawl for that double-jnlnted young ! , -Oh. your mother needn'L dress up f..r , me," replied tbe female agent of the mis- t , sionary society, takiogaself-aatisfieil view i , of herself in tbertnirror. "Run up srd t tell ber to come down jast ss sbe ii in ber , mnoy." i "Oh, but sbe hasn't gut ou ber crery. t day clothes. Ma was all dreraed up in , ber new brown ailk. ' cause sbe exprwe.i . Mias Dimood to-day. Mies Dimond at- , ways conies over here to show off her t nice thingsiand ma don't mean to get left, i Wbem ma m'w you oonaing sbe said 'The i and I guess the was mad about i something Ma aaid if you saw ber ndar , drc*s she'd hare to bear all aboat the poor , who don't have silk, and you'd j ask bet for more money to buy hymn [ to tend to 'em. Say, do tbe nigger • ladies use hymn book leaves to do their t bair op in and make it frizzy ? Ma says £ sbe guesses that's all tbe good the book. , do 'an, if they ever go any books. 1 c wish my doll was a heathen. " t "Way, you wicked little girl, what do c want of a beatbeo doH ?" inquired the i missionary lady, taking a mental inven- , of t be new things -in tbe parlor to get t material for a homily oo worldly extrart- r PM- ■ "So folks would send ber lots of nice t things to wear and feel sorry to have her 0 going about naked. Then she'd have „ heir to fnxz, aud 1 want a doll with truly 0 and eyea that roll up like Deacon , bllderback's wbeo be Bays amen aa Sunday. I ain't a wicked girl, either, 'can* , Code Dick, he's been out West and , swear* awful and smoke* in tbe bouse— ( be says I'm a boly terror snd be hopes I'll g be an angel pretty soon. Ma'U be down r io a minute, ao you oeedn't take off your t; cloak. Site aaid she'd box my ears if 1 „ asked you to. Ma's putting on that old * ilreai she bad last year, 'cause she said t, •he, didn't want you to think the was |, able to give much this time, and site need- b cd a new mnff worse than tbe queen of * tie cannon ball islands needed religion. n Dick asys you oughter goto tbe , islands, 'cause you'd be safe there, and f. the oatifa'd be sorry Utey wai such sin-
nets if anybody would send you to 'em. '' He says he never seen a heathen hungry ' enough to eat you, "less 'twas a blind one. an' you'd net a blind pagan's teeth oo edge so be d nerer banker after any more missionary. Uncle Dick's awful foeny. and t makes pa and ma die iaugbtng some. ' "YourUode Richard is a bad depraved t wretch and aught to have remained out west, where his rtyki is appreciated. He , reu a Itorrtble example for little girls Tiki „ you-" "Oh, 1 think he's nice. He showed me ■' bow to slide down the bannisters, and he's teaching me bow to whistle wben ma ain't around. That's a pretty cloak ( you've got, ain't it ? Do you buy all your good clothes with miasslonary money ? 1 Mi says you do." Just then the freckle-faced little girl'sr ma came into tbe parlor and kissed tbe ' missionary lady oo tbe check and said ^ ihe wai delighted to arc ber, and they proceeded to have a real sociable chat. I The llitle girl's ma can't understand why : a person who professes to be ao cbarita- " ble as tbe miaaioBary agent does ebnuld * go over to Misa Dimond's and say such ill-natured things as she did, and sbe '' thinks tbe missionary ia a double-faced I gomp. ^ > Tbe contrarieties of the Chinese, as ) compare^ aritb us, have often been com1 mealed on. Tbe Rev. Belah Brown writes . about them in the CkritUan AitoeaU. c We shafe band! as a salutation ; a C'hinat abakta hand! with bimacir. lie aland. . at a distance, and. clasping both bands tot getter, be dtake* tbem up and down at i you. We unoover tbe bead aa a mark of .- respect; they keep their beads covered but - take off Iheir shoes for politeness. We e share the face: they share tbe bead and i eyebrowa. We cut our finger nails; they t insider it ariMocmic to hare nails from - three In fire inches long, whieb they are oWtgrd to protect In silver caeca. The Chinaman's waist -coat is outside bit coat, and bis drawers outside bis trousers. We blacken our shoes: be wbitoes tbem. 9 bare soup as t first coarse at "■ dinner, and dessert at but; tbej bare des- * acrt at first and soup at last. Here people- take wines ice ooldr the Chinese drink ' theirs scalding hot. We bury in the earth; " they on itaaorface. With ua black cioth- ' ii a badge of mourning; with them 1 white garments indicate the loaa of friends. 3 the land of oppoaitos it is the old men " who fly kites, walk on stllu and play tbe '. shuttlecock, and, to keep up their odd ways 1 oT doing things, tbey play tbe latter with 1 their feel in stead of their baoda In China us tbe right hand is the place of with them h is tbe left band. In 1 dating letters we place the jresr last; Utey 1 write the year first. They alwaya speak ' of the mariner's ormpaas (their own in- ^ ' resitao) as pointing to tbe south. We . * pay our physicians wben we are tick; they e pay wbdn limy, aiwwnU,- hot as -soou as ■ ' tbaygrtsidk the jtay -atop*. Hem men , kiU ibetr aatQg* . C»U*dk geu re- ' t vengehy tilling himmlf. We use a soft I . pillow; -thar A ttoefc-of wood. Tbey r ship, li ftinll i. ring bsBs from the ( . outside, and sremBy lent their screws in \ . epposBe ifiregjioo from ours. I Hsre reed Barker's Ginger Tooic for . had cough. a«d bemomge I had twen- J t 'T-fire rear*. 1 frel like another man i lineal used U. Am M years past. BeIt sure to oore younger persona. A. > ttr. Hitb^rlre, Pi. ' I
The Pre., ana I-rotitbttlon . I Tbey nerer gi any credit few it, hut ' tbe Mbthrs. Drverthcieae, ill more to break | class of citixens. Aa a-™ u« a aal - n j - near a priuiiug Mfiee, ir. rfckselott-i. j i! doomed Tbe entire printing eiUbl.ih. i ""i-iTur"., t rr"r, r 5 " i<irl ' poiwo the moral atm-rephen; of tbe loan. • who located near a newspaper ofm ontlis such la the iofluence of tbe Tcxai pres. for rood. Three wai an apparently the two principal plaza<- Tbe gentirmen who did the mirkctinj early ia | the moroing! bad to go to one plazi for • vegetabici aud to the other for mat, and ] tbey bad to pass the corner referred to, j that corner was a good site for a saloon, t Northern gentleman citabliabed a pais- ] tial saloon on that con^pr. It wai cailrei I Eariy^Bfrd," out of compliment to 1 tbe customers who. took their first morn- ] nourishment there. Tnc proprietor l compounded an entirely near kind of cock- ' tail, that was ao aed active that even the members of the temperance Baud of Hope, ! harnessed themaclres to market baskets, and insisted on going to market half an before daybreak. The wive* ol i most of these early risers were aronisbed 1 at the high price asked for meat, judging < by the small qftantity brought home from 1 market- Occasionally, the staid old brad ; of tbe family, instead of trudging home ■ on foot Willi a bcary basketful of beef '1 and vegetables, woahl-be driren op to tbe j bouse in grand style, in a hack, waving basket, over bia lined bowling a heccb- ! aualiau refrain, two friends holding him in ' tbe vehicle. Tbe reveler's excuse f.-r ! going In market wax that be prided ei- J ereite. but it wai the new kind of cock- ' tail that be was really after. To be brief, ! owing to the geographical position of that J saloon, and the seductiveness of the cocktail, tbe entire town would noon have i in an inebriate asylatn bad it n»t been for the press Qpfflsitc tbe saloon tbe office of a daily flaper, and as a , matter of citlrae tbe editors, compositors snd everybody else connected with the ,d establishment drank early and often.
'- Tbe proprietor not desiring jo-antago- ' . nixc such a powerful agency as tbe pres.. >' sold tbe journalists whiskey on credit. I n -• lest than one month the establishment t' was closed, out by the sheriff, and then >- upwards of-a thousand of the leading eitid xchs quit going to market for exercise. I- Thus did one single newspaper break up not only the pernicious influence of ihe d saloon, but the saloon-keepor himself. II Five succcaeirc strangers,' not knowing 9 bow great an inflncoc- the press of Tex as 9 bas for good (whisky), «erted saloons on that fatal corner, and none of tbem lestH > longer than three weeks. Two of tbe s proprietora oommitt<-d suicide. Ibanks to * tbe disinterested efforts of those heroic k Journalists. Just as no lion or tiger can tr be found pear tbe jungle in which roams tbe Aerce gorilla, eren ao cannot a saloon exist near a well organized priming of. ' Hoc. While temperance lecturers talk e about the eviis of intemperance, the mucb d abused press actually closes up the whisf ky shops. — Tmu Aiaf/agt. |) The roller skate Is a wayward little h quadruped. It is as (lollcsome and more t innocent looking (ban a lamb, but for j interfering with one's upright attitude in tbe community it is perhaps the best machine that bas appeared in Salt Lake City. One's first feeling oo standing up on a 5 pair cf roller ska tea is an uncomfortable - tendency to come from together. One * foot may mrt out toward ldaba while tbe other as promptly strike* out foe Anions. Tbe legs do not stand by each other as » legs related by 'blood should do, but each " shows a disposition to set op io busmen t aiooe. and leave you to take care of your- ' self as beat you may. Tbeawkardoeas of 1 tbis arrangement is apparent. While t tbey are setting up independently, there I is nothing for yon to do bat to sit down r and await future development a And 1 you have to ait down too, without having ' devoted aa mucb t bought to It aa you - might bave done bad you been consulted . in the matter. - On* of tbe mast noticeable things at a * skating rink is a strong attraction between » the human body and tbe floor of the rink. - If the human body bad been coming - through space fur days and days, at tbe ' t^to of a million miles a second, without . I sippping at eating station!, and not ex- - Milling Sundays.- when it strike* tbe floor. > we could understand wby it struck tbe ! - floor Willi to tuucb violence. As it m. > however, tbe tbin^is inexplicable. ' There are different kinds ot falls in | ' vague at the -rink. There are the rear t I fails, and front falls, tbe Cardinal Woitey ! 1 fall, the fall one acmes tbe other, three in j ' a pile, and so on. There are some ot the J falls ibat I would like to be excused from ! ' describing. Tbe rear fall is tbe favorite, j 1 It I* more frequently utilized than any < other. There are two positions in dkat- i lag. tbe perpendicular and tbe horizontal. - Advanced skaters prefer the perpendicular, < - while others affect tbe horizontal. | Skates arc no rrapvetora of persona j 1 Tbey will lay out a minister of tbe Gos- t > pel or tbe Mayor of tbe dty aa readily a* f 1 tbey will a abort-coated, woe-suspender ' : boy. or a giddy girt. Wben one of a man's feet starts for , Nevada and tbe other for Colorado, that F does not separate Mm from the floor or ; 1 break up hi* fan. Other portions of bis n body will lake tbe place his feet bevo ' Just vacated, with a promptness that is * surprizing. And be will flod that tbe fun b baa Just begun— for tba people looking on. Tbe equipment! for the rink are a pair 9 of skates, a cushion, and a buttle of liniment. ' _ For dressing the bair, and beautifying 9 it wben grey, nothing I* so satisfactory at •I'xrlter'.Tlai-Balmttt. '
{BY ijIraoRmv, LAWS OF NEW JERSEY. | j UHAPTER III. 1 1 j ' V jad 1-rot^enaete.t, That till! art shall tax e j ■vETraith io be Injured, or wbo^bal^wulujlj ILjurc-t. (if *II<» aba:: aiiTui jf rua^.loua^jfie&Hartj ^'-rrT91^'^ 01 | iteth»o aaau be" i*A. to wawutid "oTIav o»*r•►er or tbe poor lor IM traen: of IB! poor ot ; "Ap^SfM^iaoosly re. txc. AD act to aulhont- i-ltle. al-Mrf-WWo.1 rpaa to ' I
1 An AMIo aojsJ'y^hr WMWettte^ay tM ■ ttSiauWN'^l'iwU Pa«imeat Intawrj. r "jtoerovad Jamiarj xa, t«-a. E nat-YEU vti ' , raM^aao rewut ot Indjmrau'- ittjtaovoC I Daeted Io "tbe Senate aacl' General , l^rS^ <kv»ro to^ata^ort^baie aMurooj . -uxermiKW ot tbv Isrtaoa lM tvepffl. aerh suit l tor^aoeh OTjiMation ] -w reoeUer^hatl ^hare t»en appouited. ai if ] i approved Jauusrj st. p-«- ' 1 • aemtuy "m tea Stat1? 'Jr^N eVj«wr?r,7Lal , • f-rucai tgrev ot tte^trt i^wbteh^lhla ja laaop?T iu.riJWUo^l?jr™«M^w^a^brIdre'<* ) I'MtJj »u*b°'rw^^t°QMj^r^p^»" J Ibat jwrpoae^b Voih-Jpaitoo .of the aexx^ux J > t.r^irral cuttvr. or cMnli ao !uoural) Ue£rored.wu.rji boeds shall I* Made parable at silk perloda of ume dm ezceoding tweoxy yeara rraa * y aaaaxa, Jj Aad be U enacted. Thai thr boada laaood in '' sfsSS^KKsS s BUM bj aattorttr ot lb I. art. » i. And be It euadted. That UUa art shall take elAppiw!wd Jaaaary XI, lass. « CHAPTER X. «nl!» irT«YSu7o^tJ^o^.°T?aI*rrorn tt API after ike pawage of ih|- #™ v raau iu» r
r ewSaii. I , are hervto^repeaKd! aiK. u'si^a^aa'all TiT' ; | !Utr tor alt pnrpneea of lertatalloa ta rvxaboai f 1. lie it roaclod Id the peuhtr slot Genera i . • A ot tbe Mate ot Now Jeraer. Tkat | Sre^^'we'hpatS^m ! hw^'^^iS^wUhmjihS tonSot^batta - ■r tti^-owtaualf I herein ununx'irr.r-^*'' ' 'aaaunri™"'?1' " "wbtra * *?T" . frered to tn tte a--:; and aUon^ta ot UlU atate ' lb rare me abrritT rre^tbe ttaae betDj^oTOMi* aejirebrtaut 1Mb alaleahlU juv« tte^powe'.t'l
'[ I^^'dauii'ri^ri ggtfgj deta^t^abd eBert^ltmKrtlatrti . _ ^ ■ SSSi-vaiiSjiaSS •re 'the paraoar'.'proahiod7 that1 ^nclf'tStt^ar «o appmme.!.ihat] t-e authortsoTu. pobllahtto taws of the sure of New Jeraer. t. Abd^ be lt^et^M^|kJ^ah Iga ^abd parta oL ! A runnel Sti|iM^DMeJkm^romhd_'-A^^ . Iba'maooer imMM uj tbe°»ev«i"araf ™'i° this art. f 9 Approve,! February s. im. I * to "Au aa to uneuil'ui act to parJ ualty ouurotidate the ae veral rtf ne tawi of thli ' tMrth%oittoarand etrffr' iSdred^ttd 'ehrht y- ; re.e.W, sad M hcret.y. amended to rest aa lolr e-- - HSSSS't- • Thai Una art ahaHbea 1 poidtrart and taXerfleef lounr-ltat.-it. | Appro. ret

