CAPS MAI WAYI SUPPLEMEHT. = CAPE HAY CITY. NKW JEBSEY. SATURDAY. JUNE 21. 1884.
The Great Bargain House IK TH1 NBW KNICKERBOtKBK BITLDINO*. NO. 60 WASHINGTON STREET. CAPE MAY. N. J. i.— — ~ ~ < « Great Bartaim ii QUIINS A GLASS* ARI. GREAT BARGAINS In Old Fashioned EARTHENWARE. WOKUnrt L HA BOA I.N* * la a fall umtbui of LAMPILI.AMP ("HIMKEYHaaB bi rkers ' A too BEADLIDBT sad rtbrr OI1A. »' HT. ■ tora* FIVE CENT COUNTER - TEN "CENT COUNTER IMMENSE BARGAINS . IN TIN WARE. Eitratrtkrr Bartaiis in Wool ail Wffliw Ware. wBK3( . eras! Btrraio* la CANNED GOODS sad BVAFORATKD PHl'mt. (Hiai Bargalas la SOAP* of trrry dsaolpooa trasa a I ooai rati to IU (aaat TOILET ROAP. Real Genuine Bargains "mai^^^^ PA1KT BBL'HHBB. DCST BRUSH IS, WHITKWABH BBCSHB8, Ac. ALSO PAIKTS la larft bskI nsl: aaaalllMa. WINDOW OLABR la an sU-a. Ofo«Bs^P','a)«Ofaa' TartMj j Apru- ^ Uto*ut*' " " *" "" " ' gMITH & CO. ' PLANING MILL, SASH FACTORY & LUMBER YARDS. MAKUPACn'RRHS OP Doors, Sash, Blinds, Shutters, Moulding, &c. ( •Baask*** tare a UrfraueXaawca band. la oar waroootna, read j for Uaiaediste ihtpMi. ; BRACIfTS, SCROLL ¥081, TUBNINGS. SIC,' Maastaotared M order, si aa an astir* by sojanor Atoo. dealer* la BUILDING LUMBER; OP EVERY DESCRIPTION. * • «, savs a lsr*r steel rensten-.lj oo toad, under otto, well aeaananl. aod sow as loaical msric. WILLIAM C. SCUDDER & SON, ^^|l^!fTAKD^DRRAL8TR«TA^AI«DnL^i^^^^^T<»-f I The Best is the Cheapest! OO TO BENEZETB POK TOl'R BOOTS AND SHOES, 5 I Washington Street. Cape May, N. J. Sole area: fur Cap* Mayjactaei <bwslM "WALKER SHOE." TNt taaa tna w Mat u uit nrniri. We male s *p-e*aK* *f Pine Race* lot ladle* aad J|ia«. Apm-tf " ,_F W. IS . BKKEXET.
OUR MOTTO-" QUICK SALE AND SMALL PROFITS!" } THE PEOPLE'S RELIABLE STORE, | No. 43 Washington Street, Cape May City. CHAKLE8 NEEDLES. . hfkino and bchxsr OKbsk goods, . aaiuaca. Underwear aad TnaaNnn of even *er-rtptioe. we eocOdenUj invite teeoi. we have MUSLINS AND FLANNELS watt* real be dailBM'l at the artoea wa « si sat state la Ut roast*. n^totoTnM An Mnd iiel SStSTcSr! '.LSTK: S£tee~m ■ DR WARNER'S CAROLINE CORSETS. asaal pner f lJt, wt haee redaced toll .an. HaB aa*l aeaaar ■Bmli 1 totee *r Dnwt Pood*. ao»e of whtrh ate as lew aa lecrai.s rant. Ureal Bsdactteaal Prsrae Is errey deperunra!. aad ta aa asamtna ot tee mjd. with of waayarta« «"■ wit* Ueeeer other stared, ire ten'. oar lad/ on Arm n aad UepaUfcla The People's Reliable CLOTHING STORE, s 41 Washinton Street, Cape May City. . CHARLES NEEDLES. Larfeet, Cheapaw aad meat each in iae eoaoy af J Gilts' Rgair-Iade Cloilii ul Fnttht t* H-rte!!» Setoeted tar the 8FWNU and BTHMBB TRADK of t »t. "" wi ,u„ ...v bi'itt, ii«nms ext.* m tt..,. . .." u ki, ' ""SEEDS! SEEDS! A PURR, PSBBH AND KRUABLB STOCK OP fffiiliBU, GRASS, FL0W1R, CLOYER AND BIBB SEEDS. Flower Seeds at 5c. per Packet; 25 Packets % I ; 1.2 Packets 50c-, Pne nj ■allteaaj aSdraaacw retelpt af ante. HKNKY KNOTT A BUS. TmW and M^Mase. r-— Owaar HaRXe sad Howard Ntrwev. tw M«; oij.y.J. " SAMUEL H. FRENCH & CO., Paint Manufacturers, PAINTERS' AND BUILDERS' SUPPLIES. BOH REiDMUEO PIHT. BEST SI-SMSI piut iudticbieeii miTTi— r£T cS??ES*£r & -S*«£T (MnaxtMMtw SAMUEL H. FRENCH A CO.. W TUM atwva ivcith 1NB cuwrvu. eaun- raup&rau. |
DURABILITY SEA SHORE PAINTING SECURED BY USING LUCAS' LIQUID PAINTS: CAPITOL LEAD. IIEPB»ytN<- f> If CAI-K KAY: WABB A KLUHELHIE. Ba.Unrv. •» A. B. I.ITTLE, Ttlalr,. An C. B. COLES, LUMBER MERCHANT, I KAKtTAiirBPRS OF : n Doors, Sash, Blinds. Mouldings Boxes. &c. « BRACKETS AND SCROLL SAWING. ' ChU • juaier sieci sad f«T wsiraaive. Aaenl lorWaNne* WhaaaVh »■ LPberwshrrTrlVt'"1"-' | Office. No. 14 Kaighn'a Avenue. Camden. N. J. i'1^ " .SASH AND POOR DEPOT, ; CAPE MAY COURT HOUSE. N. J. : W " 111 1 f tiSSaa" UDdsotTcilL WOKh' ! • A BVT^ Wl' IW. <>ar new A I ' Doors. SosG, Bills, Slote, Moiliis, &, SmeBs, *W he fnaad Ihr bra sad most ">n.ivf in -.«nb J.nej, Vr.m.-v a afeetttv. Xt te-lrr. , j .waaMtv dlled mad raurfsnwa rotrj*. ert. W« inrllr w»ii,,>l: »uwi»eini»l»d "lunsir. j a*sc!h wUT*erbrerfBllJ fanilshel, AHs>e>d% ,i- I'lCerd si yuur araree iP*»*«».wr*L s rnuaaahle j ' CONNER A SCHELLINGER, 'ICE! ICE! ICE! THE KNICKERBOCKER ICE CO., OF PHILADELPHIA. 1NUPPLY nuTBCB, ILCBTAUKAMTS A*D OOTTAWdP, VlTIl PURL EASTERN ICE. hLW"COAL! COAL! COAL!BBST IfCAUTT, CAItTPl IAT rKKI'AIIRI) POK FAMILY USB. AND PILL WBIGKT Oil AMAKTKBH:' j *£?} ,0" °r,,f" l"4> B™K'* w^irnlNr.TUS HTRKBT Above OCKAK.CAP* MAT, N.d.
WINDOW GLASS WAREHOUSE, BENJ. H. SHOEMAKER, 205, 207, 809, 2 1 I North Fourth Street, Philadelphia, IMPUKTRK UP Thick French Plate Glass, French Winflo* Glass Sii|le&DonhleHick, AMSSIi'AX WINDOW OLABb, SKYUG1IT AND PLUOB ULAIC. Photographer's Crystal Ground Glass, Ornamental Glass, GERMAN LOOSING uLAtW PLATES. BBYBLXD EDGE PLATER, Gt.AZIEUS DIAMONDS. . BOOTS AND SHOES! Lartvel sad Mom fnaiplasr RwcS of Good, C*-»p Doju dad Shorn In Gape Msj Co. STYLE, QUAUTY AND PRICE CANNOT BE SURPASSED. (Mods thai rto«1 Pn or Ptoaae. win be ezrhaaced or asoo rj ref oaded. ONE PRICE ONLY. pd 'hMfnrCAsa.to the ai^ I havr o^MMiOT t^aynrtddaw iabo«i|^UU^op lowhleh pEK or It SS-SO UAITKKh. ALWJ. A Pl'LL SUPPLY or FINE WALL-PAPERS SUM, for OoOafrr. Hotel or Wtnn«dioae». Usll aod prior ssMtptoa before porcba»JB« elsewhere ELDREDGE JOHNSON. rs SB WABHINOTON STREET. CARPETS, MATTINGS & OIL CLOTHS At a Reduction of 25 per cent, from Lowest Market Prices. "v^LTL Hr«» IS. Tape«r.-e aad Inerau. .-.reds r« r*n aad nmaessto «w aad tons. China MaUiao- WaA^ltrd COivA aad Psbc » OMhs, a;, widiaa. Uoaaefuntohlng Drj Oood«.AcY. E. ARCHAMBAULT & SON, DRY GOODS AND CARPETS AT RETAIL, N. E. Cor. Eleventh & Market Sts^ Philadelphia. CHAR a PRKK.J.. .UAaC.RSXTEh FRENCH & REEVES, i Noe. 13 and 16 Federal Street, CAMDEN. N. J . DKALBKS IN GRAIN. FLOUR AND FEED. r i Mlaweeasa Pai«n PVwr. MUI P~d, IM IW-i Barf. BnOT. Cnane ««d noe Ball. H.J aad Krmw 0} tae Bale or BatoUc, Axto urease. UaUie rwwder, OwL At- JcUb; ; Ftrtili3«rSf Agricultural Implement* and Truck Baskets.
IBartiU ?arfl. ~jArE MAY CITY j, J MARBLE WORKS, , a. a cor. RaJlmad Tract A Tarapthe. J m 1 ■ HOmTMXKTB, TOM BATON BH, HTKITING I ' BTONES. Anda ai. Nlade ot MubtoMdPI^ • « pisrfUanfous. i RUPTURE j i i-bbd-wbioht a oo.. »"i sats avmw, \ Y. Nrw inrtliivl. HoMe ant ease wlin our I mm romfort. llrli'f si oner. |-smr« alirndrd ( v. .ad rrturn home ihr aamr daj. Atoi. Nanir wllbonl surjlral op-vat loo. by Dr. I WICIOHT. l-hyU.-lan i.bii.vrd is warn. Fonorrly al u Wear nth , « li,«ik. for J real stamp. IJ'M ( IFYOUI^p S/^r.Sr« the patrni (IB- „ . „„n- r., it- vtdlul atiraiyni^^Trv , hVld "LO!"1"?!'!"— JANNISA OStOTuSISv r-b « 1-ehval'
p,^rENTs, ; w- - > *",>.V.i"w'*5S^iV%K«reSe!ff | ( srsaassA . pensions™?:^® i < trills enruird wb-n itall maitni. claims re- . op—ti— <1. rralursUin, Im-rrawra. Imuoxv. back pay 1 1 1 and .Ivrharr.w iHeaiaul. APPlv si oone.dAu < ( pr-JH.Ureaymit it<ht. Pres B*r,i by tow. Ad. ^ . KDWON A r«i.. Aliorarre sad Claim A(enu.tll , r. bl . Wash ineioo. IV a: ' mmm'< I ■. m IT - II 5- ) T, . C i. .."fl^LlllNTOI pro- ' , pi- atnt-f.,, An* " . si, ivwenr a «nv-rasfal 1 .WW, I iHliaS; ion- o|vna iwliire lb- wivlrrvmilwolul- ly snrr. I AMBoe addrem^i^ ^ QQx. AaxuWa, Mains. 1 ins more monry lu s frsr .1.1. than Ton rvrr , thouM poaspdr rt swrevtftrea. cepMal a« r a«ir.-l. S'r will risrt y,*,u. Yon ran work all : mr umr or tr. «n«L ilYn- only. Thr work tonal- . vrrulp wtart-A ^^r'J^^ceau'mS'rvrey
' fI,MWrnab? oMrrnrnc S^Pa" panVolanv !'ireu^T^J1'irbiola(rtyb»nre.m ilm?' delay." Iiw-y 'gTlNbdN A CO- Portland. Matte. PATENTS i 0*r«Bc»Ul|ppoalieihr|-. «. Patrnt offlcr. m and W "ran obtain parent, la tons time than tli.wr refimre frosa Waablnkum. ni Vnd moi-i or drawl na. Wr adnar u re tj , ^renmmiliy lrrrjJ^rtisrrruad wemakevro ^ We refer, hrre. Ul tire Tost Msstrr, thr Hp pr. or tb- Money orderDtv.. and inoBrtatoof Ibr to |-.b. Petrol tiBoe. Forrtrmiar.adrtre.iertaa. u, nd r I—rare to arsnal eUrau la yoar own tare, or manly. c> A> know A Co., fi, Oppoaar Parent Ofljrr. Ws.blnrt' n. D^C. " DITIint I | I Al hll 1 a S! KbTre.Sm': » 1 b. Pmrent ^OBc^Wajb'narem, ■' rer^rhanred enleu i-aren'u allow*,.!. Brfer. lit room. Lrwta J ahaeoa A Co.. Baokrrn. and Po-i- > j— : uar-> B Ihc work^ proprrtMrrenrer Bret Ra^ «* S^LT'Kt^vrfiT^tOt foraUhod free Now Y CRAZY PATCHWORK 5 llsvinr a larrr smortmem o^rwananu and I i SSsaSsi jsvwsfe ! ■etui- en-i rv<ra«IHI vrlvrt# lalliliBrreall Jart j, in- puna lor lire mom snprrb panrre of fam-y «i pmkian InrfJjU. Thryare ol thr very Bire« e q hs hi r eo.1 jsmotbt c^maJM ai^aaymlwrerii q : HI'"* g srSs vz^rs t 5 I : ANGLESEA, ' Cape May Co., N. J. L LOTS. - ■ 00x100. J PnreatRearhooibr N-w jrv—v roaai.«»d le 1 ' am emlblr from New York, PbiladMphia. by rail a " rrew running Ulosins Anxlreea n m.l-e orarer a PbiiedeUmCaml New V-llhenCepe Mef. . , ° *" 1 ! Ki— lre..idnnlln«w»i.riepr,rvrmlala<le|«h I 'of M lflreafo«.«rlMaea^ei~m-u- 1 i uoaol abide from <a|k. order. hoOy ami lower- , 1 ma^hMaf *h0°im "" w?*mrwr vhe".^" r p> 4N(iUCf.(^ |JC4D tX)_ » t • w e 1 i " * ' Id I VOTTAO® WE SAIJI AN* TC t
THE AJCMBICAJf PXAO. Hie flrat Enropeao bannera nafuried the nboros of the New World, of '' w hich we have any anthmtic eoconuL a' ar» those of Cofumlmn, who lauded on •' the email inland of Sac Salvador, Oct It, " lftfi DoabUeea hit idea of a now world " came from Ioeland. which he rinilod early j '■ in 1477. Mia a on WTilm that Colombo*. " drrwaod in MarlAt. alepped aaliore and | n planted the royal atandard of Spain, em- j * blaaoced with the arm* of Castile and * Leon. A white flag with a green croer j 1 w -j> its oompanion. In 1499 the eastern (■' otawt ot South America was explored, and ' 1 eight yearn later the discovery wa* an- 1 c nonnoed to the world by a Florentine, j c America* Ycqnaa, who gave hi* name n ! to the Western Continent Aboot this « lime the Cabot* planted on the shores of j 1 ! North America tlie banners ot England J I ; and of St. Marks of Venioe. The esuiy e voyagers found that the Indiansof North u i Ameriaa carried as a standard a pole oov- fi ered with the wing leathern of eagles. ' The red onai* of SL George floated from " the mast of the Mayflower, 1620, when '' the pilgrims landed on the Ilymon1' rock. For a oentnry and a half, ■' _ -a j the Oulonial and provincial p- -iirilig ! of the English , fla- # ^rtods, the ! ■ North America, with „ continued in I devices and m-' -us addition of nmiiy all red. wit< -foes. Borne flags were j 1 red ar-' - MLille horiaontal »tripe«, or ; !•' .a blue stripes. .Otlifrs were red. 1 ,«f\ wliite oryeUow. Upon these were j - Ihc pine or "lAWrty irre," ami the word*. 2 " An appeal to Heaven also star*, the 'I cwweenl, anchor, tieoVer and setpenli> Undfer tire latter. '"Don't tread An nre ' Undfer the Don't tread me.'
A flag at the ImtUe of White Flain* Vxuv the words " Lilwrty or ileAth. " On jnn- ; nary i, 1776. at Osmbridge, Mas*.. «s> firet hoisted the " Grand Union" flig of , the eroMh of SL George and SL Andrew, j and Uifl Uiirteen alternate red and wliite j stripes, cnihUinatic of the anion of the thirteen colonies against the oppressive sets of British tyranny. This was the flag in use when the Declaration of Independence was rred by the Committee of Safety, at lt.iladi lphi*. in tin- presof W'ttellingloii in New York, am' frd m ill b Imitvuiy of the State House in iiostdtl. Gu tlie 14th of AngusL 1777. Congress resolved "that the flag of the KlaUw lie tliirteru stri|K«s alternately red and white, and that the anion thirteen stare, white, in a blue field. nprsarnUng a new constellation. " Oinv the stripe* were increased to fifteen, bat iu ISIS they were clisngud twek irernuuiently to thirteen, perpetnstiug the origins! thiltevo StaUw of the Union, and it Was decreed that for every new State (Wming into the Union a star sh -nld be oddish The stars have five point* ; : those on our coin* six. They wore first ; nrrilbged in s circle, afterward in the ; form ofa largo star, and now in ptfallel ' linea ... j —
to br coxa J Die history (if Llie dnaWVery of coke | and tlie development of tlie traffic has , iiAeV been written. Antlientic informs- , Uiiii of the first use of ooke in this conn- , try places it in 1817. when it was am- , ployed by Col Isaac Me won. one of thr • earliest fooudera of Western Pmnsyiva- | nia, in refining iron at the Ilnmsock, or , Upper MiddleUm mifl. a few milen from thr Ybughioglieny river. In 1818 tlie , use of coke was aUempbsi by blast fur- , lmt it liad to tie abandoneii 1*canaetlielilast was too light being only , pounds te> the sqnare inch. Even when tlie value of ooke aa a farnaoe fnel was fully appreciated, tlie enjoyment of its advantage* wss prevented by inability to increase tlie blast In 1883 WilFrimstone msnnfaotnreil good greyiron at Uie Mary Ann farnaoe. in county with ooke produced from Broad Top o wl. In the same year I". H. OliphauL Fairchanoe farnaoe, near Uuiontowu. exhibited at the Franklin Institute. Philadelphia, sample, of iron made from bine lump ore smelted with mke. In 1840 the Gnwt Western Iron at Hredy's Beud. bnilt four ooke funisce. In 1811-i. ooke was made on tire lank* of the Yonghiogbeny river and shipped in flat-board* to CmnMrati. A gentleman who is well informed in all tlie d. -tails of the ooke basin ass says that Dudley, an English iron manufacturer in the sixteenth oratory, is entitled to the dl*ouvery of coke. He used it for the s^pie pur]>o*r to which it is applied Dow, smelting. The manufacture of cuke ui Coniellreille region did not riseto the of a business until toward tlie close of the decade of 1838, when it wa* carried on principally at Dawaon'a Station. on the Youghiogheny river, six miliB below Oonnrllsville, by the Cochwho are still iu the business, and to most of whom it has brought great Cincinnati is soperstitioosly interested the case of a woman wito falling asleep in s railroad train, dreamed vividly that child at borne had been seriously hurt. She was so deeply impressed by the vision that, on arriving in tlw oity, she drove directly to a physician's offioe and carried him hastily to her residence, where the yonngater was found to lwve I thrown from a swing at ndMy tlie time that the mother had dreantedTlie story is told core umsianci ally by the Imtwmis oonoented. i What is known ae tlie "Taxauome Cianpany* of Hamburg has started vehicles provided with an apparatus which. Ly Aix turning of the wliffiU, 'marka ths] exact distance rut.
far cower: n r.n. This fmli lias of UU attrected a good of attentiiA, from ita having been awrled Ural A was frequently matte iul • turtle soup. Whether that be so or w.A tlie conger eel is in reality one wf tetr most ralsable faod-fiahsa. Tbete is. unj fortutosMy, a prejudice tu the public mind against It In all «ootrnental fish tnarlMa—at least in those situs ted on which on tain the fish- a plentiful supply of congers tony always be had writer lias week hundreds of them in j'b- markets at Dieppe, Boulogur, and ! end in the wisiae of Franoe the I nigra nccapie* a prominent place. It I tw ow verted into eioellent amp, and may be cooked in various other pal.it j "M* nT* : it may be roasted, stew- " liroitrd, or made into a succ- '* I Gnernaey and Jereev ita " reteemcl. as being ads- -lWsh " Si try art in an e t<> the colfish ought to ' otrinent degree. Dii' exposed f- oe much more plentifully -c sale than it is ; and if our r men found a market for it, it would j donlrt lie sa It is a most prolific auf- , raid, yielding ita egg* in literal millions, i j A s|*>rimen whiclt weighed twenty -eight i p. .mid* possessed s roe of the weight of i j twenty-three ounoea, which was computed ■ ! t.< contain the almost incredible number . of fifteen millions of eggs. Mr. Bark- • ; land, in one of his fishery repor|s, aaya • i "What lieeomes d this enormous uum- . l*-r of egg* is hnknown to man ; they j pi.ilmbly iqrta the food of many until! . Mvt-creaturee, especially crabs. They are 1 t-x—edingly minute." How curious it seems tluit the common herring, which yields on an average . j about thirty thousand ova should be so . I plcntiftfl. and the conger, which contains [ ] many tnillioni of egg*, should bo corn- | panttivcly so scanx'. Tlie Ivtnana is an annual, the fruit coming to maturity about a yoar after the ' shoot is planted, the trunk of the troo - subsequently attaining a height of from ' eight to ten feoL and a girth of thirty -six i inches. From, this trunk, which j* of a filiron* nature, are thrown out long p-nlm- • like liranclies, at tlie junction of which - appears the fruit, each group of bunch- 1 i nnmliering from four to twelve, being . called a "hand," aod each hand having eight or ten bananas upon it A bunch of right hands is the ordinary size of i shipping fruit From the root of tlie ; tn-e several shoots or snckers sprout each of which, in turn, beoomea a fresh • tree. The life of the banana tree, liow. I evil, is not usually long, for is is fe!lc<l nftra the fruit is gathered, andaometim.-s • indeed daring the operation. Jains .-, contains' a good many banana plantsI ' lions, varying in size from twenty-five thousand to two hundred tbouaaud tn«-s, I for the most part cultivated by tlie email
: settlers in the different parishes. Tlie** 1 holdings generally consist of three or four acres of land, on which the owiior* live in a temporary mud hat, bring afraid to leave their property to the teudcr merries of their neighbors, who rob each other's ground with the strictest inipnrliality whenever they can get a chauc-. cultivation ia very primitive. Dm laud bring cleared by a big hoe, a hole is dug and the sucker ia planted in it, iu most coses nature doing all that is nancvvary ; bnt in larger plantations the tnv* aft all planted with some degree of system in the form of squares, and treuelftos :.re dng I»t irrigation, the banana thriving best in damp stiff soil P*.-TIU»"JEII FORESTS. Ht-me forests are in many parts of the it. aid. A numtwr of stony tree* have Iswn received at the Smithsonian Institute from the West In many cases they are hardened by the peculiar atmosphere a* they stand, and in others they are buried, the part* being replaced by mineral matter. The Little Colorado river in Anions has long been a famous locality far such finds. At one plsoe more than fifteen hundred oords of trunks and section* of logs were found by government surveyor*. Most of them were ailicified. Many are seven feet or more in diameter, and from twenty to seventy feet in height Die greater part of them have probably been ooveral in the marl that originally w*» one thousand b-l thick. Some of the tree* are changed to jasper, assuming numerous hue*, while oilier* toMinble opal, and, when broken open, thBourc is often found lined with crystals of the most beautiful tints. Louisiana and Ohio are noted localities for faa&il trees. In the former State, several years ago, in tarning up the ground an ancient forest layer was unearthed, and in succession two other, below it ; and scientists judge, from ttte size of the trees, that from the time of the first layer to the last sixty thousand yean must Itave olapaed. In the remains of the glacial drift in Ohio old forest* are often diwj.vered. Some have been buried bor i.nath the' water by the *i - M -g of the ' Uu.L Some of the Ohio trees are not entirely changed into atone, being yet euft, i while others are found in all stages bum rock to porous sponge matter. You dare not have opinions, or, having them, yon dare not declare them or act 1 tti em. Ton compromise with crime evert day, because yon think it would be offie , ions to jleclare yourself, a^d interfere. . Yon are not afraid of outraging moral*, but of inflicting e«»m" upon society act ' «

