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' ' * 11 ' -■ 11 — ■• ' h volume xxx. CAPE MAY CITY. NEW JERSEY. SATURDAY, JUNE 7. 1884. WHOLE NUMBER. 1554.
■T r™«n»»IS? Uvje: MAT OttT. **. J*fj.SO a year m Advance. BfyTDODo LI.HR! Ri.TTOBNkT.AM. AW IB *"* H noii'-iT.iF r*c*A*ecr y cm _ HLt T U K N E A W 1«— -rag,. BTO T.MMim am
^■dentists, ^^fceatviu.e- Prtdiw*. KTM E ~nH.DKETn7 ^RTTOR NET-AT-LAW «MJW«TAWP RMim IN ^■UHT W. IDRWW. rWrnrnvrv ITJ iw fc IX6B43P, aoeht ctmbgrlaww ^^^ftrtra wa^x » MW« ^^Earj^ieponOowir 'Wimm — ■ SlrtifK ffnii.
■fceB-wiuJiiu. ^■jHITECT AXD ROHJ'F.H. hku drawi** aztd 1-,-nio-pent «•«««*« ^■b -«: Wrthtro«e St . cm. May *» ^RTuthJE — | ^HTKK ASP I! LABI BR. j Pf* ;r"^ _ 1 Hjucaun*
Mu GAWU» «*» . | ' I KwinMttllbrtKU* C caKn«.*.J.
yrfltart. 5 CtoiifteJMstairi Invisible Arch nocture In • New Englsmd Personage, r. -Tea- Mr ■ud.-oor oaarrn art muried J- d.«wree tenter op ite stalra." graggsassssi artaliwreaala ma nerrei mm'tn' . erriX.-.' ■ j rExtraol frran Interview with the wtf* afBev. P Pbtj Pastoral Bapum Ctaish. OoMorooa. Xia
A Dangerous Caeo. ( , Nrtrreered drat lily palaaln mrtoea and "Extending to the and of my loea and , to my brain ! ■ W hull made me tolirous ! •■Tram agony. "It toak three men to bold roe on my bed at timea! "The Doctor* tried In Tain to relit re me. Bo' to no purpose, t "Morphine and other opiates. "Had ooeflcet ! I "After two month* I wa* gireo np to "When my wife beard a neighbor tell what Hop Bitten had done for her. aha at eoce got and care me Borne. " The Brat dov caiod my brain , and seemed to gu hunting through mj .yatem for the pain. , "The atenod doae eaaed roe ao much thai I slept two hour*. something I bad . not done for two tnootha. Before I had uatd fire botilea, I waa well and at work, aa bard aa any man could, for oyer three weeks; hut I worked too hard for my tfnogth. and taking a hard cold. I wm . taken with the moat acute and painful rbemnatiam all through my ayatem that a waa erer known. I called the doctor* f again. and after aerer*! weeka.iber left me • a cripple co crutchea for life, aa they mid. I met a friend and told him my care, and be aaid Hop Bitten had cured him and would cure me. I poobed at him. but he waa ao rsrneat I waa induced to nac them again, ia teal than four week. 1 threw away my crtllcbea and went to work lightly and kepi no ueing"tbe bitten for y Bre weeka. untlll I became aa well aa any - man Uriog. and bare been ao for tlx yean rinoe. It alio cured my wile, who had been ao tor. yean; and baa kept her and my children, well and hearty with from two to three bottles per year. There la no need to be sick at all if these bitten are h used. X J. Bait*. Ex-8upervtoor. •TgUaxwinrakd wife. * "ZJEr£2l the part urn of health ! r "jWhywhtrtaa. a^crr
SALICYLIC A. > i BwraCj «. f wjaSbl* ' ^ — > •I « m OLD JUU-LA B! A' SPECIFIC , ' T - UdOCRnbe of PATIENTS ■- : . ; ■ ■; ; ■■B^Hrvktafivnmoiy. Bcd0 < ynwajt :ures J RheumatisM "Gout. nedbalgiA SaBrtllne a: ISSia ha m-i --Ho IPffj?* **ncTnr* *" ■iOBAYEL. DIABETES tvt vr-Aii in s'
rj^ro poisoning „ **"' " M. D. ana Marey* IpGgljnljrJ .. V. . , < ■" of i ^■HKtore *re WW. XLX
Cousin Amasx "Three yellow crooknecka and a peek | of pearmaina." aaid Mia. Bella Ba!^ apple, amoothlng down a stray wrinkle In , her JarmtOy -ruffed pink plaid apron, as 1 she handed up her wicker-baaket to the , ' broad-shouldered, brown, young farmer. " who brought into Cmbaboeo each morning ; I the Tillage supplies of fresh fruit and ; • vegetables. , "Tea, Mill, all .right," waa the brisk , , reply,a* he executed the order with much , - alkcrity; "and better crookneck* you nerp rr cooked. I'll bet a cabbage. I knew J you'd be wanting crooknecka of a Satur- ! • j day. and I picked out the three *wr«teat I ! I could find and re red them particularly J i for you. And the pearmains, I could • i hare sold erery last one way hack here ; , " I but thinking you might want some, I ' i wouldn't let 'em go for lure nor money." i j MUa Balreroappie grew very roar, and , ^ smiled a sparkling little resile away hack i in the shadow of her proeokuigly-drep I sua bonnet; and the rosea under its crim- ; ped frill grew rery deep, indeed, as uf*n ; ■ lifting her basket down, the ducoecrrd a , il great buncli Of yellow and while and pur. ' pie chryreotbrmums nestled amid the ■ crooknecka and pearmain. "You're dropped your flowers into my basket, sir," reid Mire Bell, ioooceuily, basket, nr." reid sum Ocii, iraocwiy, l
•cooping them out sod holding them up I The young fsrmer looked guilty of bar. , ing committed a highway robbery at the least. c •T. I, tbey, I just kind of pitched them , In for good measure," be summered. "I , wanted to get rid of 'em; there's such an t ereriasting lot at home. Do keep 'em, , pleaaa. , He gave the lines a twitch and rattled , off without waiting for bet to refuse. j ' Mire Bella, finding herself in the lurch , with the Bowers ao bar hands, carried ( i* them Into the bouse, to the disgust of . ' Mire Aurora Balremappie — A tall, akim- ; milky blonde, in a blue calico wrapper, , who had witnessed the proceeding from , i the window, and waa much scandalised . | thereb}-. "I am shocked at you, Bella," she re- '■ marked in a lane oLperaooal Injury, "for ' keeping them a uagie momanU" ' "I could not help it," answered Bella, j [ "unlere I had shied them at his back; and i then they would only hare fallen back in , : the mud." i , "No killing matter if they did,", said ] Mire Aurora; "and you bad betler lake , ■ my advice and fling them out now." i "I wont!" said-Bull*, flatly. ' Mire Aurora, bciag well acquainted . ^ with her sister's characteristic*, shrugged r her shoulders and said no more, but re- > renged herself by being ao cxasperatlngly ^ sulky that Bella, after a fe* ineffectual q efforts to establiap harmony, found it o for the sake of her ncrrea to c make an errand to a' neighbor s Miss Aurora, taking deeper and more deadly reugeanoe for this by declining to cook any dianer in Bella's absence, was teaching on pickles and cold herrings la the kitchen, when her sister popped tn. In much excitement, with her bonnet^ape - floating wildly In the air like a pink baa-
"W hat do you reckon siaT cried the lady gleefully. "He was then! and Mrs. White introduced us. Hrt a I fricad of the faiplly, and his name's Robin Kureet; and Mr*. Whits aayv* bettre, or steadier or bet tar tempered yaung man never lived. He'a got a farm and a orchard, and ia really Intelligent, and Mrs. While thinks lota of him, and •ays-" "If you will just hsre goodness." Interrupted Mia Aurora, Impressively empl.a - izing her words with s herring, "la explain what under the Sun you are talking about, I will he extremely enlightened and much obliged." "Why, he—hinti" said Bella, "that •ells the crook necks snd things, and gave ! aw the flowers."' "The huckster!" shrieked Mire Aurora dropping a pickled osdoo to clasp her hands tragically. "He ain't a huckster, And I doot ; care if he la," asserted Bella, with aston- ' iahing logic, "he's very nice." ' "Bella— Bella!" murmured Aurora, "that the pride of the Balwunapptre . should bare fallen ao low aa this!" "Bother the pride of tb^Salaamapplral" • cried Bella, stamping ber foot. "Who i » the Balaamapplea thai they should tower shore erery body that ia aa good ) and smart aa the) are? Selling crook necks . -ain't a ate! The Baleamapples haren't a gotanyaenae, and I wont be a Balaamapple a minute lunger than I can help. "Inil nli a hat Bill Couain Aiuasa what 11
think when be tins to Orabebnro," coo- h linued • Aurora, dcapairinglj, "and finds = caw of his relaUoua Voaiag ber bead about h a mas who peddles crooknecka? These i: rich old fella ws are always altra faaUdldua! It'll apoii all my cba-SDcee." Aurora fieag bar hairing iota 1 corner , and .bunt into lean. "Dear aakssl dout ory. bonej!" said ' Bella, who waa soft hearted, with all her « faults. "It wouT matter a pin. Cousin , Assam ia lou dtatant a relaUre to build 1 hops on. if we wanud.to- Ha-a gol lots < and nterea. and thing* we never even heard , of. Nut likely bed .leare us aaythisg. j anyway." "Bella Befcamappk. are yooadunoer j said Aurora, abarply. "Who expects a -second couain u. leare as anything on thai acoHtol? ' CousAi Amasa hasn'l any wife. Now do you nnderstandT' "Oh," aaid Bells with a little jump, "that's the game, ia tl? But bow do you know you'll like Win, Bat Too oerer , law him." -Its mighty certain le like his bsnk tbopusi* jure uow. And lueuld brtp y» w> a r-d t«) H yoo j -I wilir Cried Bella, before bar steer ! ZmiZ ™ « fi^'^n'- ■ i things of hitx, and I know U Ukrn sue; l»»l— ' -atwoiw. «•
him mean for all the cousin Amsrei Ihst oould be raked up. If they were m rich they couldn't walk straight." In eridaaoa of the platform she had c chosen, Bella appeared on the following ^ > week at the Crababoro church festival in : company with Mr. Robin Burnet. " "Entirely against my wishes confided ! MUa Aurora Balaamapple. U ber friend 1 Miss Cyrill* Dumps. "I rery much dis- * appro re of Mr. Robin Russet; and I must ^ 1 nered creature!" „ "What, ma'am— what?" exclaimed a ' fiery- looking old gentleman, with red J ' ; whiskers and snapping little black ryes. • who, being immediately behind the two , 1 very free with your tongue, ma'am— . : outrageously ao. Do you know Mr. ( ; Robin Ruaaet is my nephew, ma'am?" j Mist Balaamapple scrutinized the pep- £ ' iaterrogator with critical calmness y "Sir," she replied, "1 did cot know ( ' whether the gentleman In question was ( your nephew or not; and permit me to j add. I didn't in the least care. BUI1 fur- , 1 ther allow me in resnark that you have on : ' lnus old goose, and your Depliew probably , rcsembloa you! " _ "Ma'am— what?" began the old gentle ( ■ almost strangling in bia fury. j j
But Aurora swept swsy in calm disdain 0 sad left him floundering in a storm o j, wrath. n "My dear," said Mr*. White, sailing down on ber aa si»e passed that lady's c stand, "isn't Bella the slyest little piece v born? Here ahe is an ugly engaged a to Rob Russet, and the rest of the girls „ going wild because tbey bare just q discovered that he has got a terrifies!!) s rich old uncle, who arrived the other day r from some myatcrious place. I met him r oooe. * 111 introduce yon if I can find | him-ob, here be la! Mr. Amais Higgin- , Mlsa Balaamapple." c Aurora toak a hasty giiDne at him and i turned pale. Couain Amaaa and the pep- j old gentleman were all one. He ap- c peered to hare recovered his temper and | waa chuckling quite jovially. r "I— I'm sure. Cousin Atnsss," began , Aurora, with sweet womanly meekness < "you wool mind what I aaid to you? You , know—" a I "Not at all— oot at ail!" Interrupted the ] 1 old gentleman, with a chuckle. "It'a all 1 right, couain." t ' "And yon know I wauldn't have aaid < 1 a word against Mr. Ruaaet If I bad knewn i tie was your nephew, lonly— " i "Of course not — of ooune not." chuckled t I Cousin \ mass "How oould you have i 1 known a man that worked for bis living ' - wu cot a villian? Quito pardonable, I i ' a tsura yen. But Rob Rnaaet's got to earn ] 1 h living wbile lie'e young. Don't hurt ■ 1 these young fellows to work — the making < J of 'em! But don 'I fee! at all uneasy about I ' Bella's future couain Aurora, 1 shall leave I f a" a) jgaparty — erery oickle— to Rob. t at least. Of ehurae I ain't such an old < - fool as erer to get married myself." ' Aurora (alt that she would have facriD feed bar oew silk umbrella cheerfully it e roe could only buvt smashed it on Couain i- Amaaa 'a bead. ■ « h
Wo Case. fi "I see dey tab turned Sam loose." said tl •ae negro to soother. " "Yes, de) had in lal 'im go, kase no a caaa ozald he mads outan de charge." i "How wax del? Tell mi 'baud it." I •Well, da way to trouble rix, • while 1. geesmea seed Sam wid ene ob his shirts b ' Yes, an' 'nsUdhim furstaaling, didn't o deyr 1 "Dwt's hit; bur w*ea dey cum ferr trile, f de j«4ge •dared del tor ws'n't no ground I fur the "plsiat. ortar he'd bcerd de teati t iscoy uf Gam's moddee." "Whal got Urn out?" t Detoaple tar' dal Barn's mudder sruz washis' fer the gommssi, an' de jedge sed dai kBgonto snszt wu* lucky 'cough lo . git his ctoxe tortoy, ta didn't tab no - rowa tn growl 'bout Jtowssher Oman's frens as' dtkten wV-ln' Vra de balance ob ' , towero-lT "tin jnyr" owwa," answered the „toer, at tbsy partad. The AzsV warn Nwtror Told. 1 of the weeuhrfal posranof that best of , all medieraro Kidwes-Won. It has been awSsroiA"'. ^ ; a^tcsim ^ RfaetunatuBb w^Malarte, My earo tato, mii • , "ZbtaaMDtfwa awear I bit :;.wy,-r; "That piatstiff wiH swear I "
1 W.K swear i did ML Now, what cl UudT "Atawtad detea. easy," Ju ^ T ^ o -vered bweestatarary la Booth AoMrica. p ■ ■ - - -'■J ' ; creamy* can mak. ap joar «iad that a , you taw tarotyoormoaayaad tad your r Ubr for year gataa ^ | ■ time all aUftiwea and II I latdthejo.i ' disappeared. A CtiMago toto lit*'* tad taa taw a 1 stair vaT whan ta asw I jawy *■*" ■. tbaisroro Betad lorgathi. oaoe and east! act mm. «tam sc - such a nude staW Y rare add to taa ataef toroseroadW i .... ^ ^W^toawjfa^g
" There is not a letter carrier in the I city butwhoiatbeeastodiacoftbeaeoreta , of some one on his route," aaid a well- A; known postal official recently. " What a sensation tbey would create if what tbey i knew oonld be revealed at one time! The A I divorce ooorta -would be overorowded, anil rivals for msidmil' affsotintia would be parading the streets, armed to the <" teeth, looking for the otha fellow. But *• Postal laws strictly provide that p » I carrier must never tell of what ho sera, £ repeat what be bean nor make public in I J® any manner the address upon a letter. •< | notified to deliver letter* only to the person to whom addrrwin l it ia en- !I< joined upon him to remember this rule, it esgwoially aa regard* members of the same ' I, family. Well do I remember when 1 waa ^ earner a certain maiden on Broad street n ' receiving letter* from a father and ' Whether one knew thai the other •' 1 WU writing to the giri or not I do not [. 1 but thia I saw several timoe : When [ ' she received a note from the old gentle- . . 1 ahe vma very deliberate in her move- u ■ menu, but when 1 handed ber one" from » ' the eon she waa out of ttothouae in a jiffy. « One of the most annoying thing* to the ^ carrier* is the imprndenoo of 'masher*.' " have had three fellow* intercept me and i' intercept ''
ofta »5 or »10 if I would tell who such a £ waa, and whether ahe were named «■ not I remember one lady in particu- a !ar, who come here from a neighboring " city and stopped at the residence AT 'a millionaire. She was a magni^oont worn- iA mac would hardly pass her with- J nut turning around to take a second look, i mashers nearly went crazy over her, " and one met me at nearly every street ' corner on my route with some question regarding her. I came near getting into half-a-dozen fights over her, and waa glad * when ahe went home. But the device* of married men and women who are holding clandestine ooreeepondenoo are ingenious All such people stand upon a vol- , oano, not knowing the minute it will * to send forth fire and a ruined reputation. One man used to beg me r every day ' for God'* sake don't lot my ° wife get bold of my letter*. ' Tho woman c a* smart as ber husband. She wa* [ also holding a secret correspondence, and 1 waa in that, too. Site did not want her t husband to know of it I took good oar* J of both, and they enjoyed cheating each I other. At one time I tavo known on my ' i route half a dozen ladies who were resting under the belief that their husband* I holding a oornspondenoc which ' > should not be carried on. Each one ! would give me minute directions that if I received a letter from each and such a ' i place to be enre and hand it to her, aa it ! I was important and interested both. No [ [ doubt it did, but then I didn't think three t . should take a hand in the bmrinras ; only ' ' the husbands reoreved the dainty .apistlee. < But tta Ikw-I tetanies 01 The new , 1 offioeeffor the most extended opportuni- j ties for ely work. Boxes are cheap and 1 . the Utart trick now is for husbands to , f ha to their tender epistles sent to these \ k boxes. Tbey have the key and no one i else can get into it. If tho wife happen* ! find the key, why. ahe ia ready aati*. the why. she u ready aati*-
by being told it belong* to a door at o! store or the refo, or something of that £ sort. Yon aee, only one clerk or ao knows « anything of your letters No one taa an a idea where yon lire or anything else. e then, postal clerk* and letter oarriere quickly. Traveling salesmen are becoming heavy patronizera of the boxes f ■in oe they hare become cheap. The exfor there gentry is that they rooeire letters they do not wish to be seat home J the envelopes are dropped into their • boxes, and when tbey retnrn from their 5 tour* they told bnndles of letter* and no 1 one lo ask questions that might bother E them ta answer. THE UTILITY OF FAJJT. ' The ntdity of pain ia seen in the mem- ' brane which sweeps the auriaoe of the eye, | , for instacoe in aeveral animals, whenever ■ any irritant particle ia brought into oon- | , tract with theoe delicate etruciurea. Hie ] lain caused by the fureigu body seta up , roflexly a muscular oon traction in this j membrane, and thus it is brought aaroes ] 1 offending matter is removed. When the ' } foreign body is too fixed to be so removed, 1 ■ disorganization of the eya follow*, and a «mut a general destrnotion of the organ J_ the irritant matter 1* got rid of. Dretrno- "" ticm of the eye in there animals wonld be L a common ooourrenoe if it ware not for tiii. musoular arrangement and pain is t the excitant ; it is, as it were, the finger , which pulls tbe trigger, and so the mapuna aw ■*•*> — " — — — •
chinery already provided and prepared is set in action thereby. In man tbe Buffering reosaa by a fiwaian body in tbe eya » calls tbe attantion to tbe part and leads „ to to removal H H ware sot fortWpain ^ ao produced irremediable mtenhinf wonld *: often be permitted to go on nnobeoked, V because nnnotioad. Not only does pain J ao drfred the eye from tbe injurious ef- «i ' facts of foreign bodies, it often all ... to £ protect the definite organ from orerwork; « and where pain ia eo produced rwl * „ given to the part, and reoovrey is instt- g tatei Eepeitally im thk area where the j «jm are not as atoolute pair, and long , apaetaelea a^ng the eyes a pair give =l5KSff5r= painlrea wtoee Incipient disease is aggra- , rated by pnietent notion. *11 of which : would be avoided if pain were a eoose- \ qura.ee of tha malady. I > ■ i- i ' Those persons who bare attained to ® . emineooe in any vooation of life bare Ibl- I * work and unwearied application. None ■ are truly happy imilhoec that aza buay . . I for the only real happiness lire in useful ; a work o t same kind. edb«r of the band or t l- the head, ao long aa ovar-cicrtion of nthm J ■ ia avoided- . It toouldbethaaim dfevoy- ; one to be employed. If.aH men sad « worn. rem- ua-ul-Rioj- 1 f man! fcare would to tare sorrow and H wiokeditata in the worii j
[BY ACTHOHJTTJ Laws of New Jersey. CHAPTER LSI V. uanij tS'ttt1 *uu« of8*?? Zrma. ktaa ' t le 1st cn» Urlbu italr id etna tmre la not a 1 t MWI. ptQQ<v1»,rt »Deb rtlf aaWaMv red ' J Clll. «aS publlctelKUDr" • car isasvt proorwli of ura »*lr for taa per- 1 nauueal loazU ottDl* aula a* may'br orfaolxrU ■ art a*c a ran ai may twnroee^^ovrran-i I Mil. fhmU^b* iwoTiilrU by ibr UvJ barltir I tt^racb city, by _ tbr ^uaor of uw^baad* of ■*; 1 * be paM^t*x*tira 1 .-J not exreeSln^en *^^I^^V2r«iiy1.ach"r1|t'j iIij.T'jMiIn J
in* rirtt?uiro^1' I t2° *oS0lbe'lu2r' u brtebj 2 s. Aot'be it rn*otm. Tret una act afcailtate K Approrrfl MlicIi B. list. CHAPTER LXV. g ary^tbbtjrth. one Ibosrand «*hl battered es-1 n t^r»T^f'jlown * "W* w fS^AHd^be ll^rnw-trd. Tbat »urb water boodi ^ •rrrn per rentnni of Utelr par valoe; tbe uld [J ray oe^Sd^ rwrlp^oT'dnV! jJ ihujup ^lS r bUfrowwb u. pay oa snob " 'any o A^pterodJUrcbaS, ISM. a. ^eauuiro imtm" pabltd" fbttnictlon A vlUoa) appnired JUrcb tweaty*»rnt'-. one Uiooiand elabt hundred and oerenty-foor. Auembty of tn# elite of New Jrrofy. Tri: ^ » twenty* ;loU*r* "nnnnSyof cbro-bSi monryVre- o £^&ZXS£SZiZS3, sis i ^"i'^5rii^?ierbra.;*yroaraXi- s ever, Uit when theee hu been •pporuoood to > s^sK'sr.'s ■ •*■1) reoelte from the mate appropclatloo state • ESiHHJSs : oM^^brawradTinnd*. tarpnrcbS t"
sLgassss s under Mr cbarze; proelded. lh»l the wrmen X s. And belt' enacted. That tbu actahalltaXe u effect lmtnoU*lrly._^ 1 CHAPTER LZVtL A fnrtber reppleniro^tere^ sot entfllfd^An act GSSwfand aevrati-Bil °°t " ' ^b^Be H enaged^by the^ NrnaU^and Genijil amraTwK " codrM , nrorad March iwrolydhtrd. one thoomnd elabt i ^ andeicbty-utee.be unaided to read a* | Sni^narpQraireaSg^w^y^wtdch tali j •tatinz rarb are they^»b«nhae^ the l ^taejmralna baUdlnin'd ol "t ' ret intevfera irtth ta^ret^otjhejr^ra^aiid , azoodand nt&rlrat raose thorefor, radi are eSSSssSSsai , aentenoed to a line ret exceeding ion doUaraand • "~tl And be It enaoied. Thai this art shall UXe CHAPTER LIYIU. A Supplement to tneVi enUUod "An Art InertaairafgSlw ire tbS«n!f Spirhumlred'are aeeenty-four (Re! ;
rarti ajSwM|| ta tsar g£T«^» mfiStisvsyrssys; ''apf^rodMrtre as, tlCHAPTER LIIX. "liSSdEETOta CHAPTER LSZ. I A sertdMi tea artrowsff "Aa KS NnfU-
laie the prsaiee of aemwtry and toprarartibe p Tr? n"'iS^ed by ire aenma and Oeoera! Amambty or tbe State Ynvey^TJm mewre amradra ray^nwd ' ESiHSSSHS ; purpoee In tbe oonnty cleft** offle* cMbr county l fclSSiiJ'S^U.'SJSf'ataro! S5S?3 ! tbe drnui of wbkhbeU^l^rea^e^nd I enz*^^'|re^/<e.'*nd°f^ wbwh^refflirty the ^ SSie rean raob petren rerwwrinr tbe lot fo whlcb tbl* 1* • rapplement.l . * And be it erected, Tbis this ret *b*.l tnxe A pproved Mire* xt. 1SSA. CHAPTER LX XL for*"L°'poriIi^""fc*!ctuSr Mb in the rtrrr 1
^rtwnre^^^the Jurlwdicuon^rt thtt^te J diy of AnznM below the beid of Tnrnton^Ulbj J argLgSfS'F^Fjss; ; im'ltaHLS&toWDi^'SC j day cYtiwmfS! tmre ad prooecntion* or proceodtnaa under tin* act it penal arttore; and In ill rach ictlon* both ranlo. Kbe iworn; proelded alwnya. beterlkelee*. i* "SroSrat^ttaSroaSrSai^reiM^ ratlCTSire'ra«"se'°f^^sft,\,,J s^uTui» "SSiSS airiLr. ISM. CHAPTER LXXII. •upplement toiniet enUUod "Aa nc re* nor. - ins conreyinee*.- ^™j1^2Sdire*vmiy' '°*Se it erected by the Senate and General A teemtily af the Stale ot New Jeraey, Tbat eeery aclniiwle-lfemebt ■* proof or ^^d^,rt«on'yiuzind twine JnUu* •^i.bemotorr^midej.y lory a,mSSi£Smt BtaS toretira* pwSf rt ieXbowI»d^^t.by the ttwi^oftre^maM^or the poi S. IS2L'?SS5Sjl 2 berreuamraudylre'rtbctnz ^■d^^tn^w-fed-A'; Stre^^a^reramranytS' auS'i^rer'n adgmrat W^rnof. j" Jre ^rrtU»raOTled*n»^wiiI^e.^^«;nt i : I
K'KnSS^SKKlS^S g SSStSifaSS s stSSSreS "niSw Rerectre^rret'tba art ahht! tale Im ^A&eSnaMmrcl'tl, l»d. ffBAPTER LXXIII. ta?pc*araSo orti^'of'rtDdiwre nal emate," a menMj"or"Sf Sre'ta^Hrte Jeraey. T*»t {? wbeu any decree or Jodpn.nl made in any reu. ^ % tne ciert oMbe J conn of ortureo jdeaaoeof tacrapmerof deed* J" and morzairee tn any corety. ■ ^S^t^rSff^n^Tre^ I : | | j - it h- wed tn the raprrtM court npa aaustncuon ■ ' "'aiuifbe^'eSErat Tret ttianrt ihsn like • ; "3Z333;*.**. CHAPTER I -XXIV. t A Further Rnptdement ' - | <■ L^^rascMdby'Sti ima and Oe renu j
, bj reason ot tbe omnwton lo pnbltih tM adrtfUae " ! - ; mrtra* "wreibau tore compred_.wBh t^ J j ^*2|~KES]».'SS:S I j | CBAPTEE • ' r^tul\C^y ' taa SimPiSSm Sf) yS { ' "tttfw g cnirtod; Tbat iznmtjt ra- i I 3^^' I ■ i , i'BppTTrTfr ■
tm^edjlrt by ueeoe btmrd birtnz rentrtd of Approred March XT, ISM. CHAPTER LSXYL ^ £Sflbl°'b.'^ ■S'Sefoe'reeyear *1 "re be* SS^re, thi* set shaU fah* -^yssass.'^. CHAPTER LXXTI. A sopp'mrat to "An net In relaUaa to the SsKWggAg .SJi^rss ur ! S;i'sSS»ja?.5i ty to purchase sny Inmplte or maradtltoed I road, and rach oMnmuairtiCTi tore not axwetad < KjSHSS'SHS' 1 l^^mtaurae^^'the'ramiutSa^
SLTfassffssast'sSs i iSFSFSSS taeaame nzht of appeal a« prortdot for in ' the acu aforerald, which «h*U be tried In the ! manner therein nriitded for.attd the com* and ernense* iba'l he raid a* rrortdad tn the raid ; w£ud in the act to wnich this ia a Iran'* - [ Tire be It erected. Thai tut* •« iha" '»« ; effect Immediately. ; Paned AprU 1, 1S84. j ^ ^ ^CHAPTER ^ ! 'rr,: reSwStb'S'o^^ ' "F" ,^^'.'i?^^f^"a'iJ3^ oi'tae i SSSSg : sSSSsSS nrtrsrapcra printed t^dn^rd^al I <"2^£^"*'nMim'MU^iet»*«SS>£ w """."" S?°?SIJSieIi"An rat w ratarttt^Ito
S5SSS I ■/ggmlh' ggjga re^Sftae mmpSon hu 'hU oS.Sol Smrti Sfre'oftte rawSSndtSC0'CtaSs SliSsSSESiiKv.'s ' a'a'il'li ?1 raralodf Tbat^e boal^ of Un».rfcr^isrsr^Kg uiJDtre^*of mra-^P^^enu they stelUnttBfduteiy^procrtdtoOTYaMre'y ^.w rewr'u^th r y*C' ■ !• al*o make and excrete, rata Tanr 's^nTpSml'&rtf i^ymwUoe.are^ certiorate OT * raretrteSe m re
SmsiaaSSsajg I^Msaysssfiisssss r'! chapter l.TTX. SSSB5&S^BS' eermreum'ttie "deed U eocreymnoa pi tart Id. Kags.us.'ggsas'g.'sg SSSSSSS 2^ farxKjS-. iweSpfflfTisM.

