Cape May Wave, 26 May 1883 IIIF issue link — Page 1

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_ VOLUME XXVIII. ^ ^ ^ CAPE MAY CITY. NEW JERSEY. SATURDAY. MAY 26.1883. WHOLE NUMBER 1506.

~ IfiSyfe/! k C1APE MATT CITY. J>J. J. K 1 1 .50 a yar in Advance. ?rofrssionaI (farfij. B. HUFFMAN, ^^•UCITOR* ¥ A trriR^i ?ri'^i i u nc ZH B i Pf r. DOUOLA8K, ATTORNEY-AT-LA W *o kktss™*"* ^7 ALTER A. BARROWS, ATTORNEY-AT-LA W |-)n. J. F. LEAKING ft 80H~ DENTTSTS, ■twasSss •MSjI *'T °«aTlioeai-.T»araJara and 6*1asora Easviiza— rndara. JAME8 M. ETnnjSETI^ r ATTORNEY-AT-I.AW AND oouttpoe, "m aktkk *!*!> rkmikb* !* egg •' - <&&£'*«*. pgy ^ ■pj'ERBP.nT W. EDMUNDS. ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, •oi.irrro* and HtrrgR ib chahckbt. i Cspe KlJ CKj. H. J. all-! J)R- JAMES H. INGRAM, ] PHY8ICLAN AND SURGEON, ] URKKK 1UU. II. I. Afdnrap|*T<>ffraa»dmc.roeitamly»1is» 1 JJKNRY M- BOYD, i ATTORNEY-AT-LAW ' OBNYJSY an(xr, trf*t ntWM^t^SAj baud fob

Bo. ss Nona in BUTM. rail*!*!,**. BOTHtTWIlUr rvGy Insinrss (Cards. ' ^VoSRTwnjJAMS, architect and builder. KILL MARK tlRAWrrrm. AMD M'PKKTy ■ met oROOWTKAtT. ^ a Little, j 1 a i n t f. A x d ^ g lazier. qagans and sewing maB. F. HORNER, PIAMOS. OfiGANS & SEWWG MACHINES BRiDorrox, N. j. KraLet. U !«.« «.. Cpr Mf «R. q to garrison's 31THE8T, Uffi SJTO TAHITI B..R OOLD pitta. BLANK BOOKS. TOILST PAPER. POCKET- I'liAHT. SHELL OOODS. P.SBUIOTACRLR. I'll RAP 1-1 BRA R IRK. RIN1ATFU BOA JR ^RAfrilfAL-U LRl) UN BRR-INn MACH HI K^RJUD) 1KB AND OIL A II WABBIKOTOX iTKEET.CAJ'B KAY. K. J. OOODTEAR-S RUBBEK FELTVJ I Kti AND PACK LAG OA BOS*. CLOTBTBO. BOOTS A (BOB. D. P. DIETERICH, New Yc«k Belting tail Packing ttanpanv "K3I5SWS,a-,52fKS-VAKKaeVBR ■» Cimuui'l STRRXT. ■**'*-? """ 'pRaraSaio. Pa._ I J a matlace, . ' • KB a K. IKTZNTR BT, PHILAItA. TERRA (ETTAEM EBi SEWER PIPE, ; CBtmfeT TON, WIND GUARD CAP*. ' IGIRBRY PU.es. OAKHES TABRA. CB- ; . w.namae L^-Tnw^, m np-iora- : J 8. K." HAND ft SON, - t °*LT PRACTlr.LL J EKE! -KB* I CAPE MAY DIAMOND cjittkbs, ] Sa. U WASHDrtlTON BTRKET, RarAiana or Pin jinur a BraOAiTr. 1 architect and supervisor «0 walnut street, 1 PB1LADKLPBIA PLAHB ABD RPRdPH'ATlOXS C AREPIUV J * OK. V ROOK BO. V. *-1'^ 1 john m. russell, • -- — r-. - r.i.u j 1 OR-XBRAL DKALKR IS 1 get goods, groceries. 1 FLOBR AND FBKD. p08e, lard. sams, seeds. a .

Irir auUrrrttommtg. 'STEELMAN'S '1 COLUMN. DRY GOODS. if j Stock increased, and prices re- 1 i duccd We are selling Muslins I j at the following prices: Pocassct. j - 9Ctt; Wamsutia, 12 i-2 cts; j ; I>ov*l! Toot; lidca,4-4. ioctsjf 3-4, 16 cts.; 10-4 35 cts.; Good] 4-4 Bleached, 9 cts.; Fruit of the] Loom, 10 cts. Wc arc selling) - j Black SHk at 90 cents beats any Dollar Silk in Millville. Wc] ; have better grades selling (at $1 ,- ] 1 5, $1^0,-^1.65, $2.00 and $2.50. j We have reduced some "4Jress I Goods 38 per cent, simply because | the- colors are not the Latest n Styles. They arc very-good and vety cheap. IN MILLINERY we as usual lead, having secured ' the services of a first-class Milr liner, formerly in one of the leading Chestnut Street Establishments. Wc are satisfied wc can suit all, and our prices will be as usual belpw all others, as our ) manner of buying in large lots and for cash gives us the very bottom prices in the market. In Fancy Goods, in Satins, in Hamburgs, in White Goods and in : fact everything in this line will found complete arid the prices j right. Nearly 'forget to mention mention to the ladies that we ! have 25 pieces Naipsooks selling at ft cts. price elsewhere ih Millville 16 cts.

i IH CLOTHING HEPARTBINT wc have made improvements and alterations in order to meet the demands. Arc now making a " specialty in Fine Clothing for j. Men and Boys.. This is a new departure in the business in Millville; but our people demand it, ; , and they must be accommodated , also keep in stock complete line of medium and lower grades. ^ Good" .suits for Men $4.50; Youths; f 3.50; Boys, $1.50. Here Is a chance for everybody; 1000 pairs good, strong, working pants S selling at $1. We make a special effort to suit all in the very » latest styles of Hats, Caps and . Gent's Furnishing Goods, wc arc in fact, headquarters for these ,Kood^ THI SHOE DEPAETIEHT. having been considerably enlarged, is considered by all to be " the finest South of Camden, and ' our Stock complete. The largest stotk in the coufitv, and to be sold -below all others, the great , Discount announced by other 1 dealers to the contrary notwithstanding. Ladies and Gents cannot fail to 'be suited. The business in this department having so increased that wc 'feci guaranteed in carrying an im- r 1 line of goods. Children and infant's shoes of every de- i sorption. Iq all our depart- J merits we have the largest Stocks, ^hc Lowest 1 'rices and polite. attendants. Talltmi Depm. . W. SOOTT CALKINS. Manager. A FULL & COMPLETE, STOCK. * am ta look 1 mis — A Specially. Cqatikgs — The Best in the Market. * L Suitings — No end to them. Styles — The very Latest. WoRKMAXSHtp — None can excel ^ — Governed by your orders, u it You — Ask your Conscience. Yet — Gi»-e us a trial. A J. STEELMAN, = 8, 10. 114 16 HilhStraet " MILL VI LIS, K. J. I

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' SiSKli^OACHt I ' POSITIVELI CURED BT ^ [CARTER'S , i3 m r7ifrr«a. uoauiwrnn. wacr» " •la'™ p'-eir voicot 10. an r »pooiL'«fcT»r!a!ot«. rwoSMULi r T" 1 cast: • foc:"i"cv tidj vbv.i • IISALTH IS WEALTH! r?1 *««.'»£»'• "SS'mV8S*,'^4 j, 1 t s'x porrs ^ j jBoardina Souses. j 1~)ELA WARE. HOUSE. W. B. BCHEU.KXGEK. mfrWIor. TERMS. riOIR V lu W A WEEK- ]1- I -JJILLEU CXJTT286", NO. 4 PERRY STREET. ] TBAKBiaKT A>D rKRMAKtKT Ot-KSTS I MODERATE RATES. )> |«H- ,MO- T. IL BROOKS. ! ' j (Soal, Wood, fftmr, rtr. 1 AND WOOD. • | j a GOAL AND WOOD YARD 1 S2SSS LKHIOH BOU. BTUVK ASD qBBSTKin , I rraa OAK ARU HICXOKI l^pOD. ;t ■'.l-U. A l»i> W-HK3JAKUKB. 1 1

AM inv BSC - Vpln* c*AT. TB. nrw IM llllnil lllr liiifWHoriM jmokM »B*r. WllO • f roilf AM M|»ml at!: The Milwaukee Baa Boy -On «ie I "Say. I iliaujilil yon *il Roiog 10 try . 10 lad i different lite," Bid the grocery man la ike 1*1 boy. u ibeyoaih CBmt in Willi bis pekcts full of sngic worms, anil put Ihc-m Into, wblle he went Bshing, and be held a long ingle upliy (be tail and lei j 11 wiggle so il frightened a girl that bod ; Come in tiler two cents worth of yeast, so ' site dropped her .pitcher and went out u! ■ the grocery as though -ehr was chased by : "I am going to lead s il iff went life, but a l.-.y can't change bis whole course of life in a minute. y»n lie 1 Grown peroral hive to gora prototira for. six months, I brl,*e Ibey can lead a different life, and 1' bail Ibc tiuic lliry kale their cud before the ail months rx|irr, and base to commence again. When il n no alfircd bard ) brrak off being bad. you rbauldn'l crprvt > too much from a hoy. Bui I am ctafkg a- well as could be especlrelx^jisriliairf Imkaa'l was. Grab, why don't you bum a log. . That yeas! Hist the girl spillid on Ibe floor, smells like il was , sick. I should think tntt bread thai was laired with ihat vast would smell like j . Ibis ovAing butter ynu sell lo hired ' ! girl"." "Well, never you qtind Ibe cooking ; , buuer. I know my business. If p«>ple ! , ward lo ipe p«T bufi^r when Ibey have | , company; anil then blow up the grocer I , 1*1, ire folks. 1 an -aland il if Uiey an. ! , But what i« Ibis I bar alvru! your falbrr | ,

El hack yard, anil wounding Mm io the leg. land then trying lo drown Mmscjf in Hie dsirrn > Doe of your neighbors was in here this morning and told me there >ros motder in the air at your house Us! night, and ibey were going lo bare the police pull your place as a disorderly Rouse. I k think you were st the In! torn of the J whole business." "il. it'ssll adsrn lie. and these neighhoc* will find they better keep will about us, or we will lie- about them little, id Yon see. since 'pa got that bUtking on his fac^be don't go out any. and to make ft il pleasant for bim na invited In a frw H Irieods to spend the evening. Ma hu g d r? up around, and the baby is a rUisy, only J il smclU like a goat, on account of drinkn dp the goal's milk. Ma invited the mio0 ister. among the njl. tod after supper r, tlie men went up into pa's libmry to talk. h O. ycu think I am led. drat you. but of " the nluc men at our bouse U«t nigbl, I am l„ to angel compared with what tliey were " when they were bpya. I-g»c in tlie bath room to untangle my «sli hue, and It it ' nest to pa's room, and I could bar every - | thing Ibey aid, but I went sway 'cause I 1 J . thought the conversation would hurt rny L morals. Tbcy would all steal, when tney j ! were bnyt, but darned if I ever stole. Pa M j has stole over s hundred wtcon loads of J j "»ler melons, roe damn used to rob or.. 3 chords, another woe alms tame docks be1 J longing to a farmer, and soother tipped I lover grindstrars In front of Ibc village S I "WNL Rt"1 broke Ibeta, and run. ■a | another used to slal r«o, and g«...ut in M l.u,e "voods and boll tliem, and the minir1 ;'i«"r was Uw worst of ibe lot. 'a use be £ | to*.* seine, Willi too* -other boys, ami - i w.iit to a si ream Wlsrrr a oeigfh^r was [raising brook, trout, and ch-in.d ibe 2 ! stream out, and to ward off suspicion, be - ; went in the man the next day and paid i | him a dollar lo let bim fish in the stream. | j and then kicked because there were is. ! j trout, and the owner found tbetnmi wen- | j stolen and laid it to some Dutch bpya. I j - | wandered, when tbrac men were idling ! - j llreir experience, if tlwy ever tlrought of it j now when they were preaching ami pray, i ' I iug. and taking up coiled iras. I should I ' , think tlwy woulduT ny a boy was going I 10 bell right Off- cause he was a little w ild . ; now days, w ben he lias such an example, i _ j Well, lately, starts sly luis tvvn burgling i our chicken op, and |w loaded an old ! :. musket .with rock salt' and laid he would i u til the fellow full of tail if be caught " him. and while Ibey Wrro talking up ] Hairs ma beard a rooster squawk, and she i weal u, the stairway and told pa there Was t somebody Inn* ben bouse. Pajumfwdup i sad toidtbe vUhngs to follow bim and they i would see a man running down Ibe alley, | full of rait, and be rushed rat with the i gun. and the crowd followed him. Pa it t -Shorter than ibe rest, and he pasted under t ibe first wire clothe, line in the yard .11 I ' right, and was (oing tor the ben houae on f j a Jump, when his neck caught the oscond i ; wire clothe, line just as the minister and t - , two, of the deacons caught their necks un- ' r 1 tier the other wire. Yoc know how a I t - j wire, billing's man on the throat, wiil set j e j back, bead over appetite. Well, sir, 1 1 ,1 was locking out the back window, and i a it .wouldn't be BlwlliTg. Iwtl.l ihiak thay . , [ a!\ turned double hack snmtnersaulu, ar.l j ; struck ra their ears. Anyway .pa did, and the gun urns: have 1 beany « hod, or it struck the hammer ra i c a stray, foe. it went off, and It was p.«nii d s towsrdf tbahoms. and thrre of the visinuw rural ted. The miairter was hi! il< 1 » <*st,o»c piece of salt ukisghiBL la the f I hind kg. and the othtx in" the back, and - * j be yelled its thought it- was dynamite. I r j suppose when you shot* a man with sal'.. I I Uke when yoo get corned beef ; ]

brine on your chapped bands. They all yelled, and n*. seemed to have' been knocked aiily. tome way. foe be pranced around and seemed to think be bad killed them, He swore at the wire clothes line, and I li«n I missed pa and beard a splash , like when you throw a cat in the river, and then I thought of the cistern, snd I and pulled him out.' O. he was awful : damp. No sir, it was no doe! at all, but a naiidcnt. and I didn't have anything to ido with ih 'Hie gun w-snn'l loaded to kill, and the salt only" went through the skin, but thoec men did yell. Maybe it was my Chum I bat stirred tip the chickens, , hut 1 dra'l know. He has not cosumcnn-d ' to kad a different life yet. and be might : think it would make our folks sick if ! nothing occurred to make Iboa pay aUrnIira. I think where a family lias been having a good tfcal „f exercise, the way our* lias, it harti tbem lo break off loo " suddenly, llul Ib'e risilnre wrat home, teal quick, sflrr wc g- pi o„l of the ris1 felt when be was in oar house, as (hooch I he was on the' verge of a yawning crelcr. ° ready to becogulfo.1 any minute, and he " guesscil he wouldn't conic any more. Pa " changed bit rlolbea Vnd laid roa lo bare II Ihetn wire cloihes line* changed for rope ' I ones. I think it it bard to suit pa. dra'l d yoo ?" " ' D. your pa it all right. What be 11 needs it rest. But why are you not 1 working at the livery stable? You haven't been discharged, have you r And the ' grocery man la IE t llule lump of concentrated lye, thai looks like maple sugar * that' bad been broken, knowing llie boy • would nibble al H. "No. sir, I was not. discharged, hut : c when flurry man hods nic a kicking I borac to take my girl out riding, that set- ■ tli* It. I asked the boss if I Couldn't lijhive a quiet boree that would drive Mr. I L self if I wound the lines around the whip, I •Jaml be let me bsvr rac bp raid would go ' ■ a'vi'day without drivinr. You know Low ' it is, wheo a fellow takes a girl out riding i i in- don't want bis mind occupied holding i ' lioes. Well, 1 got my girl in, and we 1 went out on the WLIrefish llay riotd, and j j it was just before dark, anil we rode r j along under the trees, and I wound tlie I lines aroiipd the whip, and put one arm I : I around my girl, and parted her under the ' [ j Cliin with my other lurod. and her mouth • ■ ! - kcd (o good, and her blue eyes luoke-J 1 »l mr and twinkled as much as to dare , ) t» kiss her, and 1 was all of a tremble, i and then my hand wandered around by

end gavebrfr a smack. Say, thai «a« r.a IC kind of a bone to give lo a young fellow 0 to lake a girl out riding. Just as 1 15 smacked her I felt as though the bogey '• had been struck with a pile driver, and ® when I looked at the horse he was run"ning awsy and kicking the buggy, and • the lines were dragging ra the ground. 1 was scared I tell you. 1 wantrd lo Jump out bvl the girl threw her arms around my 1 neck and screamed, and laid we would '• die together, and just as we were going n to die the buggy olruck a fence and lie c hone broke ions* and -went off, leaving us r in Uie.bnggy, tumbled down by the dash 1 board, but we were not hurt. The old I" bone flopped and wen! to chewing grass. ' and he Iraked up at me as though he - won led lo say •pfailopprne.- I tried to ' caleh him. but he wouldn't catch, and • then we waited till dark and walked ' home, and I told liie livery man what 1 1 thought of sorb treatment, and lie said il : I bad amended lo my driving, and dm 1 kissed ibc girl, I would have been all ' right. JJr raid J ought lo bare lold bim I warned a horse that ^iuld not shy at kissing, but haw did I know I was going to get up courage to k« lier. A livery man ought to lake H far granted tint ' when a young fellow goes out wilh a girl ' lie is going to kisa lwr. and give him a hone aceutding. But I quit him at once. 1 aTOBt work lor a man lhat hasn't got 1 sense. Grab ! What kind of maple sugar is that? Jerusalem, whew' girr me some The groceryansn got lihu somr wm'ir and teemed Mrey lhat the hoy Isri taken 1 il* lump of cnorrntraird. lye hy mUuke. ami when the boy weni out the grocery ) man pounded bis bands ra bit knees snil ! lsugked. and present ly he wcnl out in j frrat of ibe store and found arign "AVrs* j IsUs, Aern p.vtrt sacra'* a nrt, fajTrVn ' frfpr . Shooting At Long Range. : Jocoli Fresh SIX 'lied to tlie Government men! ly fur a pension, alleging lint be was engaged in a band-tu-band fight wilh Hwntraviile. Va . ra July 2. 1968. and ■bat while In that fight be was rut in the. right arm and shot in tlie bfi arm anil One of ibe Onvernmenl prnslra exminers at Washington win- in reply: "Tbt" claim it Inadn.lsrfblc without fur- 1 tbrr and rarer definite Infunnatinn. Die claimant is therefore required, with the re! am of hit letter, to «tlr, under oalh, what canard him to get into a fight with i sabre; what kind of a tabic it was he 1 got into a fight wjthi bow be he happened ; have a hand-to-hand fight wilh it; ; whether he bad lands; whether there i any wuoo—fa present during the 1 figlU; bow be managed to gel ahot while ! with his rabre, whether it was a thotaing sahre; whether be brlievea Ibe I aahre shot him; whether It shot anybody '■ ! else, wbetber be shot it; how many shots { I were find; who fired the first shot; wbelh- j the soldier was in tbe habil uf fighting ; with his labre, bow king a time he fought ) • i'. and whether be bad ever (ought any ' . pctent wbetber the soldier slia! the sabre i or the sabro shot tbe soldier. It should ■ . be shown whether they fought fur the j distance of five in lies opart or tbe sabre j as five mile* luog. a Michigan man fired al his own bead ) paws without hilling it. tbe Louis? i ville (bwriraJirorauif is oiewn enough to i remark that during the late civil war a 1 great many abarp-ahooura came from . [ Michigan - - Detroit Free Frew.

dl Seeing a Bart le- Field . *1 He waslnw Syracuse, and he mid he'd d give almost anything lo see a bal!le-fl< M. r. It was therefore areanged that be sbwtld ii go up to Port I'illow in rompaqy. I nrvtr r. taw such an rathutiast on the subject of I war and the fields of caroacv. He went | ir rat and bought three histories before we ■1 left Mrmpbis.and on tbe way up be talked ' :t war to every man who - would listen 0 lo bim. ' 1 warned bim not to be diaap0 pointed if Greeley. Hcadley and Abbott e had made some errors in describing the it lay of fields which none of them hail seen >. within five hundred miles. i! "Oh. of course not." he replied. "I t dra'l expect to see more than a furt. five f or six burst rdcannra. a frw skulls, half a I- dozen can nra- wheels and a lot of musket. a bareis. 1 shall bring away abrat a dozen F swords and revolvers as relics, and I won■J der w hat it would cost to get one of the . old cannons up to Syracuse?" When Ibc l>a! swung in at Port Pillow , s I Aw my friend's cbin begin lo fall. The 1 landing was a steep slide for a distance of , s hundred feet, and tbe mod was a foot , ■ deep. We dropped off' the, gang-plank. , i and the steadier w«rf"ber way. RW-wlut'j Hirer inquired tlie Syracuse . s roan aqhc luakc4'up the grade. , I "This is a historic bluff. Prepare to • sees battle-field." j We tugged and strained and swore, and i » finally .reached the bluff, each man plat- , t tered With mud from bis Collar-butt' n ■ "N«w. ll.en," said I. after we bad . r scraped off part of our trad,, "over tbi re I ' is tbe fort. Yoo can roe whnc , all the tiig guns were mounted. Above it ; ; must be tbe citadel. Over la the right ir j ; the ravine up wbijli the ^irrrstViiM'D ad- I "See here." interrupted tlie cenllerain , from New York, "do you call this a lwl- , llc-flrld. , "Certainly." , "Thia infernal sand.lboa-'lliieketa, that 1 swamp, rbem two nigger cabins are a bat- r tie-field, ehr , "Of couroe." , "Well, sir, it's an Infernal fraud- a f dead swindle on honest men. and I hare c good mind to pnnch your hisil for c me up here: llalile-ti' ,d eh: , Why, sir. if I couldn't Iskr^selTicres t.f tamarack swamp anJ*?nake a balileflcM than thUl dm re r look decent man in the- face again! Go on with you? Yob zre-x liir and a deceiver"' And be went off and sat down on aire- - and sulked and growled and grumbled ' ie ana s lilted and growled nnd

f.ir six iung hoora,and when I sbowrel hint * bullets and breast-plates snd euber relics be chtrged me with having trough; tbem 7 up fropi MempbisSn my pocket* A policeman patrolling Gratiot avenue A yesterday was callrai into a shoe-shop. the proprietor of which is an lioocsl, uasusP peering burglier, and asked : J "Canyon tell me iflSliencral Gr*c! is d still io der city?" E "Grant; Why. be han't been here in * a year." '• "la dot boasihk; My frem, vbas der b Breaidcnt here about two weeks ago ? d "No." '• "Vbas derc a big riot down town tire * weeks ago in which some Dutchmans gat « kilt?" d "No. air." d , "Vbas der tome ferry boats got blowcd d "Never beard of any." * "My frent, ladt me ask one more qm-s- " lion. Vbus some orphan asylums al) burned up one night last week and all der " leedie children roasted like ducks in der y "Of course not." 1 "Veil dot explains to me. I 'have a 1 pey Sbon. He vbM.'ondt nights, nnd be duan' dome home till two o'clock next morning. Vben I ash bim aboodt it he * mys some on>banasylam burned downe r ' some ferry boat blew oop, or Shcne ral ' Grant vbas in town und rhants to see ' bim. So dot boy has been lying to me?" 1 "Vhrll, to-night be .vhil.ablip oudt as " usual und by 1 o'cleick he vhil o.mie * creeping in. I sligli josk bim sbere he ' vbas ail der time so long, und be vhil say I Sbencral Sherman vbas in town. I slial! II tell biro dot 1 lake bim out to der born und 1 introduce bim to a school bouse on' fire, ■ und vben I am ail tiled oudt mit dubbing him 1 pebef dot boy vhil see some abokea und elhay at borne nights. I though: il vbas tunny dot so much happens all der t time und dry doan' put it in der sbemum , pabcrs. Vben. vbell, I nth it TS1 nigLs ) so I could pegtn to show bim dtu i am r de-r biggest hbcneral of alL "—Detroit Frtr ' ^ r "f- Nicho1" ,or jun-' SL Niiholas for June is croyvded wilh ) . pictures, and appropriately ushers in tbe summer wqh an interesting artldc, by I. . N. Fred, on the Tribute, "Fresh-air ) Fund. "through which to many thousands of poor fiity children have jprn enabled to ' lisle the pleasures of a two weeks' vara i lira In tbe country. . Humor and pattus . delightfully blended in tbe account of ! this noble work, and Jhe experiences til its beneficiaries vividly illustrated by \\ . i H Drake. M. Woulf. and Jessie McDre : motL Tbe biter also contributes thrre . drawings for a poem ra tbe same subject, , Margaret Johnson, called "A Beau: i- r : fol Charity." ' The Frontispiece b a charming picture I by Mna L B. .Humphrey, illustrating J Mary J. Jacques's Verses, " Great I grandmother'* Ganlcn : " and there b a * Decoration Day poem, by Celb Thaxter. u ' Harry M. Keiffer's popular " Drummer. Boy " sketchet. ore revived in this number c . wiib to entertaining paper entitled.— First Days in Camp." Frank R Slock- : »• !'•• l ; ■ J'-.' rg ■' y :y. '. l: Refuge Sand*" with a shipwreck and a ' rescue ; while the grill will he interested r I in "The Baptist Sisters," by Sarah J. h , l'riciiard. which telb of a blue boat, a £ tornado, and how some money was found _ in a well. J. T. Trowbridge leaaes "Tbe link- » bam Brolbero." in bb capital aerial. In- 0 . voived In a concretion of disaster, from which an tbe piook and energy of the : " Tide-milleea." and all tbe Ingenuity of i tbe author still be required to extricate ' " Swept Away," by Edward a Ellis, u f 1 full of characSaristie incident, deecriptieo, ' and pifurc- ®

The Keely tllotor. A good deal of ridicule, baa been lav- - •1 isbed on Mr. Keely, of Philadelphia, who ' '• claims t J have discovered a new motor of fi marvelous power, and who has been for ; r yrmro saga gad in oonslrncting a genera! re i Stbal would utilize Ms invention. 11b i cbim is that with a mere thimbleful of J r water he can develop a power that will * J tear down mountains Extravagant as ' " in raising a great droi cf money for bis . 1 experiments, and he U backed by some j ; * very abrewd and intelligent capitalists. ' ! > He now alleges that lib generator Ins ■ been perfohed. and that the time has . ' crane for him to take out his patent The 1 ' days of steam, he says, are numbered, for I • pensive and to mighty that it will do tbe I 1 work of the world st a tboajKBdtb part of | • the cost of steam or electrical appliance?. ' In stirocg, molecules are a comb'ioatio nof ] strait,. When water is heated these i atoms arc driven apart, but tbcy still co- > ' here in tbe form of strain. Mr. Keely claims lhat should they become disinle- i grated, then would thb gbnt powea tie- s .cine developed which he utilizes in his t C'lH-rator. All combinations of matter - * simply groups or cluster* of molecules, r Shotfld (be minute atoms composing llic t latter be Bet fire . by what Mr. Keely caib e vibratory motion, there will lie found ll* i secret of lib great invention and the mar- e velous urea to which It tnsy 1* applied. J li is not to I* disguised thst tbe scientific r world rrgsrds Mr. Keely si a bonfbug, I but his gentTator is actually on ejliibition t at Phibdriphb. and within ths caning t it will I* proved whrt^ev it has any I * piactieal value, ^ji ,Ii».iiM Ik: isrene !b r marvelous devrlopiuem in chemical n spedatlies are now rrconstiluUnlf the t alums dbeuvered ;hy chemistry with tbe s mod vurprisiag rosoiU Wild a« Mr. . Keely's cUims may be. scientists who dis i credit bim believe that even more won- c derfui discoveries will yet be made than 1 this is raid -to be. The distinguishing c and glory of our age b its scientific » and tlwir appl icalira to our inilustrial progress. — lkmorttt\ MonOilj/ v." ; Tlie reariet cuat ••.' the English aspy. al by one tlie leading cattuaa hove abolished l« t'l.e gay cilor* with which they liave been E wuu wuicu uiey nave oeen

- Held. The sharpshooter, wilh his deadly ■* wesjion which kilb at so wide a range, has forced the military authorities to change I he uniforms so that they will not be a mark for the repealing rifle. After careful tcrts. it has been found that a. '' certain shade of gray, a liloifh gray, in fact. U aimsst indiitinguishnMc at ■ distance. when worn by maases of men. " Should the great war so oflcn\redictcd brrak out'iu Europe, if will puzzle Ibe ° commanding generals to distinguish their own soldiers from those of the enemy, for r all I he nations have adopted » l.st is practically the same uniform, in France they ^ have also abolished the drutn^oorpo, and " ddiippLaring. Fighting, baa become a matter of machinery and engineering. Before the invention of firearms the .controls were hand to hand, dhc weapons were swereeb and spear*, licnce tbe passions of men were roused when they came '' m sight of each other. But* in modern 1 warfare the soldier fights with a distance, r and often an unseen enemy, and il b not a matter of passion, but rather of endurance- Charles Foorlcr, who lived in the I Vginning of the century, predicted tlut ' tlie time would come when industry would c I* made as attractive at war waf in his day— that the Uburer would go to the ' field and the workman to bb shop prcrer did by mnsical processions, and that the various industrial groups would wear gay * attire- In other word*, the name der ins which made war ao attractive would lie made use to take away ibe weariness of toil, and make work as pleasing as is ' marching to the stood of martial music. ; There may be something in thb theory, i 1 and it all the color and music are left out ' of fighting, pei hap« they may I* introduced into our industrial . life. — From | DtmorttCt Monthly fur Jviu. [ The Train. i X H namot - , Will, ear to ground The hul-u.tr. who. "Nearer, atarvr. - . Till. Uke aqgtvr of nishtns. rrlghtrnet eartle. With cost and wind an ro ] vug ant rnrteE ami , ' nn*"'~ ' . TXe white usoke fl I, • J ^ 'nLai-v j . • c • 'Father." asked Willie, pointing at the t phrase "double entendre." "What does ! that mean?" "Why. my son," replied the ^ parent, happy to exhibit bil knowledge to , the family "that's a kind of gunboat whiyb p •oils both ways; Ibey have two bows, yoo that's why they are called douMceodera."— Boston Trantcript Tbe bair of a girl employed in an East- ^ era tnttun mm ssaieanght in "the madiin- - lorn off her bead and ground into * bits. But tbe girl didn't mind it much. ° She kept right ooal bee work, simply re- *. marking that it only oust four dollars, anyhow. Thb U one of the advantage* of art over nature.— Norr. Htraid. o: A SufT*ror from Rhoumatlim. j *i care aml-tre-i* "" jrelL II <e mrattMr. * S' CoUfsyle. Hmfhspiaetn. N. Y. <

What England Should Do. Comment lug editorially upon I'rof rotor ) ' Ilrycr'l paper on "England and irebod" I in the sauie number, tbe June Cxsttbt r says of the piesrnt aspect of tbe Irish ■ .('j< (lieu. But lo us who watch tbe ttrng- ■ gle calmly from Ibc other ride of the At. [ ! Untie, such a view teas mistaken. It 1 ' is a mistake not to follow up tbe remedial I urea which will complete their work. It is a mistake not to use the present lull in • populat agitation for tbe purpose of carey- • out reforms which could not be so : well discussed In the midst of clamor. > Al-rvaall, bit a mistake lo allow tbe dynamite and dogger conspirators to feci tW that they have gained their object of pr, -venting reforms, and further cmbillcr- ' ing tbe minds of both nations. Nothing phases the ruffians teller than tbe English people should identify the Irish people with themselves, and make their out-r-igea a reason for pausing in the path of conciliation. "To us, therefore, it seems that the ministry of Mr. Gladstone ought to prein the policy which it announced threq years ago. and in which the I And Act of 18*1 was so great a atep. . It may. and indeed it ought, at tbe aamc time to conspiracy and outrage with the hand, It can do so all (be more confidently if Uie rest of its conduct, and its willingness to Baton to reasonable proposals, tb"« lhat it iqtiot the victim of pxnie- These murder* and explosions must be the work of a not very large Of fanatic*. But the fact that they have not exi itidranore reprobation in Ireland, and liuVwcxxn promoted evrtain Irishmen in America, and applauded by other*, shows better than anything obr the depth of hatred by her wclitncaql eff'irts during the last fifty ycari^ or mmv, might she not try the expertnt of ivuviug the Irish more lo t^cm-selvi-s, and letting tbem learn, by a little disagreeable cxRcrir nee, bow bard a thing curi-ntlng is. anobow great are ll* cvib of disorder? IVrhaps, if llic patriots of had more retpoosiMKly thrown them, they might learn a little more wisdom and ruodcratira." Several A the pictorial feat ore* of. the Jane ('oitmyaie of uncommon interest, like the frontispiece portrait of Tennyson Wiv.ihwT's bust, nod the other fallpage fiiciorro io tlie profusely illustrated by Edniuod W. Gusto <>u "laving Sculptor*." Mnat readers will probably turn with a

' iirely interest to the three or tour papr.* )' by authoritative writers.on subjects which now lead in 11* current of public diacusnon. What 1'rufrooor Uryce has to aay alsnit the relations of "England and Ireland," is of first importance, both from ilia point of view as a Libera! commoner n and as a student of political history. lie n sets Iiirh idiasynciacica over against English pride nnd stubbornness, and weighs " the past cauAp* and tbe future outlook of . tbe Anglo-Irish aUuatiUi with admirable j fairoesa and attractive fuUncaa of knowledge, lie makro tbe Irish question comprehensible, which is saying a great deal, r and is discreetly silent as to what tbe polu r ey df England ought lo be. Mr. Howeila, in Uie sixth part of "A Woman's Reason," assists the liero and Iieroine to make up their quarrel, and ln2 troiliice a ahipwreck. perhaps to show t that "moving accidents by flood and field" „ are not ioc xnpatible with his viesrs of n-ivel writing. A racy story, bv I'rofos- ' tnr Been of Yale, called "Split Zephyr." - rratrasts the aims of a party of aludcnls s on leaving college with their views and . conditions fifteen years later. But most notable, for novelty and flavoi of tbe soil, - is the concluding part of Joel Chandler 1 Harris's story -sketch, "At Teaguc I'o. t "Topics of li* Time" discusses "The Present Aspect of tbe Irish Duration."— "Tbe Outlook for Sutesin n in Anwrka." e "Over-organized School Systems,*' and I "Two RUB Men," meaning William E. j Dodge and IVter Cisiper. Tbe accood bundle of "Open Letters"— the new edi- ' tonal rlepartment —offers pithy remarks - on "D* Dynamite af Policy." by P. T. - Qulnn, an Iiisli-American who disronn- . tensnccs murder and conspiracy; on "Xalhsnial Hawthorne Again, ' by James Herbert Mow; "Mr. Gable's readings." 1 bv Charles Dudley Warner; "iiornay as ? Mark Ami «y," by Mia Ibrima Lazarus, r "Tbe Galloping buna in Art," by George Soell, a Baton artist, who upholds the conventional attitutea given to tbe hone • by artists against the couclusians of tbe , aulbor of "The Hone in Moll no." sod . who has tbe humorous support of a aiihootte in "Bric-a-Brae" rrpreaenting a " Horse Race (after Moy bridge! at a C'ouni' try Fair." A very interesting nurabcr of Demorcst'a Magazine is the June issue of this popular and pleasing publication. Tbe opening article, which is illustrated, is "Hume, Sweet Home, and its Author," contributed by Virginia Titcomb. "Pictures from Rouiuania," profusely lllusuathd. is of great iolarmt, as is "Tbe House of tbe Trobadours," by lizzie T. Lewis. Jennie June s "How YVc Use in New York" gives a glimae of a workingman'* home; snd Uie story "Out of the World" is cjnRnucd. The shorter stories sre*ralribulediby Jenny Burr. Dorothy H itmyd, Miss K. B. Chceaborough, anil Erie Douglass; while among the poou or tliis number are George W. Bungay, Carlotla IVrry. Ellen Hutchinson and Adelaide Waldron. "Home Art and Hume Comfort." "Current Topics," various del*rtmrnts treating of fashion, household mailers, science snd art. ana a variety of misoelloneoos articiea, combine to make IVmoresi's Magazine for June a remarkably interesting nuifiber. The pictorial department is excellent; the fine Ariel engraving. "The Palm Offering." befog after the (Victualed painting by F. Goodall, tbe nated English artist, (nfi is not only a fine specimen I>f the engraftr's skill, but givra an ailmlralde htro of zbe style of tbe great paint, r. - — - .a. — . — All persons wishlng to teat tbe merits. Lf • great reiucty-looc Uitt wtlt poAilvely rare Coogtis, ttoida, Asums. Branchllls. or say affMOlaaaX ia« Tarsal aoe lsmgi , icd get a t-otuaof Dr. King's New PisAd illustration of stiagioera is cited by Arkansas editor who knows a man who I talks throogh his note to rave the wear I aid tear on Ml false teeth.— A*. 0. Piotr"t. ' A Crossing so oesNiy gmtrastr evn^iiiiiiig 1 parlrrts Hair liaOain ocrer IaU> to