Cape May Wave, 4 October 1884 IIIF issue link — Page 1

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volume xxx. cape hay city, new jersey. saturday. october 4.1884. whole number. 1573. ,

CAPE MAT OITY. »T. J. $ 1 .50 a ynarin Advance. Troffsslonal garfls. j b. httftmak! »tm«**t awp onmtiniLLoa ar u* ■OMCtrom. MAffTO »!tn EX AHIKBB "ISiSEfEEST^ , *1 Capo «sy Cttv dally WW Summer pj r.,popola8s, attohney-at-la w ■nurrroe n« mASCKRT f «-l y Cin Mir Orr ^taltb a. babbow8, attobhetat-law solicitor i?f chakcbbt. jjr. j. r. lkaming a sot, DBKTT8T8. jame8 e e. hh.dbkth, attormky-at-law ■oucttob. k.tfm *wti kxawthkr tp i flBAMaen. j_jf khbebt w.edmund8, attorvey~at-law, BOWTTOB Alf*> WA*Vnt IP CHAWCKET, . " ' U ~Ol.1l»oirvT^«M I ■p)b. jakes h. ingram, « pbyricia".' and surgeon. - ^ ' AfanwlTaffr'*ara«.coeetao«ry<>»swd. j5bubkn townsend, AOKWT CTTHBBBIAJH) j mutual fire inktjbance go. I rioter rt Op- w.j Oram Beam. IT. J. »*' > ^LYRIsT W-ANDER^ uounbellor-at-l a w, - "tara&sjsjKsafe'" ' ^ ^ „ jf*"? MAMtSrCrPMM<ilBWk »*r INL Hew I* >y. ten . . '**-* „ lutom CTarfl*. -piyoe r. wtlliam&, r i architect and ruit.der. *!u v abb dbawipoe. a hi) SCPKRIF » orwnE^iPwI»S^' BuTOMP M*F. ru. « B. LITTLB, ntir'a's d^'qlazxeb. * p. flxntt j gekr&al audit foe aababhdaoo. ' MM An* Street. PUMUpklA. organs and sewing ma- : ,V/ CWWBt. b. f. horner, 1 FitiosAuisisEmjiucn BBIIXltrilN. K. J. Braraa, Ha. M BMOpralWAO.^ir QEaW.GBACE, practical builder, WjfU. AT TUB QLO BTAHp. cafk BAT * A^i»iy'°Mil"**ri 1 1 *!"" "" L -OlBSte^rara.."-' " JMUM gEWINO MACHINE H BSRMBf HIl ] -'•""SgKST™-" ' jttlcaSKRSwsSE: mms. «>»». *S awl Hinw f qo to garrison's ^ STAfiflKEEY. AID STORE VARIETY ( ran aovo rtrtx. blahk book*, tout fafhk. Tocxwr cctlkkt. hex eoosa. piMHiNu tackle. , CULT UBUBB. 1 ■ IXIATCU BO ATBJB AHTB ACTTBKD OH BTO? MACBIHK HjyryBB AHD oil A i BlIBWWWT.gBMT, K.J. 1 •ppENHY HABMB. . general upholsterer, r j cabthw. ma i rnnrnm. a hp wbhitl bb bam ahd bxtaikxii. BMMMMpUriUaUWMra. ■»»» ^ !

. €*ft £Ug (to. SPmlutntt. I IT SCHELLENGEB, grxex rmi cam BAr"oorHTT. ' BfiOBKES DBT GOODS PEOYMIHS ■ <pH0MAS EBBICSOX® 77 HKW HTOBB AT OHBMH cbkbk, GROCERIES. PROVISIONS, DBT OOOiie. TBIBHIHOa HOTIOH* LaiItfTitoto^JiDiBMMfear JOHN M. BUB6ELL, OBHBBAL dkalkb ih DBT GOODS, GBOCEBIES, boots. 8h0bb ahd hotlohg. FLOUR A IV 15 FEED. patkht bkdiczkbh. PORK. LARD. RAMS. REEDS. At JOHH *. RTHHSLL. OoM Bprlna. Cap. Bay Oo^K.J. a PRICKS' STORES, hV *t mmr ht . r «m hat CITT. ' GROCERIES, DRY GOODS an* NOTIONS, PATWT*. (HILOBH. OILB, TARHI«nBH. OLAKK .ml PCTTT. WkotaMH we Brtaiir feed'ttore! oobh. oat*. hat. bbak ahd bill pxd) w «« •BttUdbifl WJrtfrial, the. JEREMIAH B. 80HELLENGEB*S LUMBER YARD BckfDwran hum. ow» B« h. j. MHT WUII#rillL MMM Pl.AHTKBIHO LATH. rhihglbh of all kihds. floobiho. fbabb bttff. pickbtb. oratAl. J. IL BCHELLXHnKR MATERIALS,: MILL WORK DEPARTMENT t.i«Wv>v.fraf.rMl.hiraWi.nUiv1i,rrf J White Pine Lumber, Siding. Ac. Aim SABTBHV irvHWB FOB LATH ' AHD BHIHOIHS Rockland Lime. Hair. Hardware : and Painta. otb faooitib* abb fibht-claba KIMBALL, PRINCE A CO.. hrwok part mhnvrfl)^ v.j. | «mi, Wood, Slme, rtr. rioAL AND WOOD. tH™ „..™. ! A GOAL AND WOOD YARD | BCHBLLBHance LAHDIHO. bwMUUatuwn of a* b«k LBH1UH BOO. null AHD CHBSTHUT | FIHa. oak ahd hickobt wood. btthbookd. S. CUBTIS, practical plumber, GAS AND STEAM FITTER, I Mo. ii Omar auwt, c*f« ma; car. yantte. Boom. FMnw. BMek. BOW wtu J Gas, Water and Steam Pipes, Chemical Work A Lead Burning I terra cotta drainage r^S'J^S^STmCM,'u^aiS; I CmzmTCHWOBK nii.'sfaT tal i •

, yrdtol. A Great Problem. on — Tab all the Kidocy aod lirer MutUmm. —Take all Ifae Blood purifitra, —Take all Ibe Biaimatit rmrfin, lis —Take all the D^rpejma aod inditcaliuo _ — Take all the Apue. Ferer and billiooa H ipMiJIeo. —Take All the Brain and Herre force -Take all the Gnat health reatora. —It) «Wt, take all the lot qoalitie* of 5 all thrte. aod the —bat QuaHtia 'of all the beat medicicea Is the world, aod you will flsd Ikil—IJop 3ji —Bitten hare the beat coratlre qualitieaand powenaf all —Concentrated u —Id them, aod that they will core *- when aoy or all of theae, aingly ot—arm- — Fall. A thorough tHMwIUKtoe poaiure proof of thl, i, Flrr yeara ago 1 broke down with kidney and Liver complaint and rU-umalum. Since then I have been unable to be , about at alL My liver bromine bard like wood; my llmba were puffed up and filled with water. All the lieat phyaldana agreed that nolbine oonld oarr roe. I reaoivnd to try Hop Bit term; I hare uaed aevrn botilen; the bardneaa baa all gone from my liver, •welling from my llmba, and It baa wrked a miracle in my caae ; otherwise I would have now been In mv crave. J. 1W. Motet, Buffalo, Oct. !. 1881. rorerl, and BufTerlnc. "1 Wi. dragged down with debt, poverty and aufferlng for yeara, eaoaed by a ■let family and large billa for doctoring. I war e-euplnely itlaonuraged till one year ago, by the artrior of my pastor, I p commenced using Hop Bitten, and in ooe month wo were all wall, and none of us have teen a sick day aince, and 1 wast to i aay to all poor men, you can keep your families well a year with Hop Bitten for r leas than one rfortni'a viait will coat. I know it."— A WojoasoBAX. < Bull er Ijtton's Briflie. Where It Toactica the abort, | and tbr crrol Colnmna In cblld Oeglaa wliti prayer and wnrmtilp on tnter. ' lot tile, and bow Inuuvrly. on on! tune lire, tbr > old man tuna back to prayer and wonblp. potmaartr mr A- Bulacr Lytton. In bla "blranee nndge of nre baa many I and awfu; ! Aelrtiee and art arat-u.ru nibb and prayer ■ -utberarurof H-arm twlf. Dlrmnybr.:. , - wM^g^w^'acTt^'vagwiunHamaMwiS I nf a dtaee oumt ma' YaKK CHU Tomc' iu* 1 ayigraaiayoaaa.freaaalrinDeorairattboavwbo " , ^.'d^TJSSar^riibl ' . teysune of Or central area of the bridge of nfe i SAL ICYLIC A. ; an^a^B^SartrSiiSrlJnlSS? > . D u^ab^uer^praaonoaa frw Add DeaB^aa ( ' ITHE OljD REOflkBLE SPECIFIC e . ENDORSED BY PHYB1CIAN8 AND THOUSANDS OF PATTENTB r j . ^ ^ 1 POSITIVELY CURES ' RheumatisM ( Gout. neubalgiA • '" jp yow donot^deepalr '.o' take Sallerllea^ r gravel, diabetes ; Blood poisoning : mta taB dtmamaa to ho laaguagea. Kovi by mrSStnotpn^"' " mttl *"***• I WABOBTRKB B CO_ FBOF8, oyAdaw »: Broadway. Hew York. I , sis'.'is i.'s*"' """ : cajarhh : re3^lapralint'nHrSUr!a!l(<iy^daff)Sd ' •pra Una pale) raoaaa no pair, r.l.ra rrOvf ■ 1 I ELY BBOTHKBS, DracgMa. Owtgn; H. T- [ jaSnffiH^^BESSB jglS3>

The Pearl Cross Heirloom. The pear cram waa an heirloom. Ett* wore 11 the flrat time I ever aaw bar. and 1 noticed Its beauty aa it mated upon a knot of deep blue ribbons at her throat. lUbbopa and pearls both soiled her fair c complexion, deep golden hair, tad brows eye*, large and soft aa fawn's. " 1 think I loved Henrietta Raymond the first hour I met her at a small party my Aunt Hilda gave Is honor of my return from a long buaioeaa trip is Western citi lea. When the party was over Aunt Hilda told me that Mia Raymond waa the niece 0 of a new-comer Is our Tillage, a retired clergyman, who bad tales a bourn very Ilad the been a great heiress or a very e floe lady I might sever have drawn ber _ into my bean of besrta, aa I did very soon. But she waa a loving girl, poaseasu ing no worldly wealth, aod we met on terms of perfect social equality. I waa as orphan, who owed (docatienr care, everything to Aunt Hilda, who had t an Income ao rery narrow that It moat c bare ooat ber many acta nf aelf-denial to 1 r upport me. But at the time I met Etta , Raymond I bad obtained a good situation in a commercial house In New York, and ; waa putting'all my apare funda in Aunt • Hilda's keeping, for her own comfort. I bad been absent more than a year on . buaioeaa for tbe firm, and was enjoying a vacation of a "month'a duration, wbci) 1 meet, wooed and won Henrietta Kay- " mood. 1 courted ber with all my heart ; ' aod when the acknowledged she loved j ■ me, my cup or happiness waa full. I Her Code, Mr. Raymond, when I j ! placed ray worldly prospects before him, i , was adrerac to an immediate marriage, ; r but gave hit hearty conarntlo our engage. • rncnt. How the time speeded away, and how much of It waa spent aide by aide in that happy summer. A year passed, during which time I was (ielaioed dotty at my post In the counting bouras having mpnnaihilitiea and duties that kept me far into tbe night. Aa summer drew near I was troubled with fear- ' attacks of vertigo, aod I looked forward to my vacation as a much-need rest aa i well aa pleasure. To my great diaap- ' poiniment It waa postponed until September, and X waa really ill when at last I ' packed my trunk and took the train for borne. Before I saw Etta I was prostrated ; an attack of fever thaL threatened my life, depriving me of consciousness for , weeks. When I recovered there fell upon me a blow that caused a dangerous relapse. I waa blind; our only doctor aaid hopelessly, incurably blind. It was impossible for many bitter monthsffor me to feel resigned or patient, i I preyed to die, rather than live in my youth and strength a burden npoc a weak ! and aged woman. My gifts to Aunt Hilda were melting away last under medical 1 expenses, and there was only ber small income for our support. But for Etta 1 believe I should have taken my life In those dark, desperate ■ days. Yet she wss a very angle of cam- ' fort. She refused to accept my offered ' release from ber engagement, and actually i proposed aa Immediate marriage and Immigration to New York, where the was ' sure she could find work. Oh, my darling! bow my heart wrapped you close In those dark days, when all other hope or ' seemed stricken from my life. Every 1 day as I sat in cor tiny parlor, helpless t and idle, Etta came to me, pressing her > •oft Bps upon my blind eyes, and whlapShe read to me, talked to me, sang and I played upon Aunt Hilda's old-Iaahwoed r piano all my favorite tire. If the wrath- ' er was fine we walked out, Etta leading 1 me to the retired spots. Bnt I mourned for my future I What • life to be to me? 1 must learn some f new pursuit to win bread, or depend upon < charity. I waa well again and strcog.and < every drop of my young blood was in re- I volt at my enforced idleness. At Christmas time Mr. Raymond's only I •on came from Chicago for a TisiL I had t lieard of Albert : Raymond from Aunt Hilda. From bit mother be bad inherited < a fortune, and he'had loved his oouatn 1 Etta. Because of 'her refusal to be bit wife he had gone to Chicago, where be adding to bla inberitage by successful 1 I was prepared to be Jealous of Albert 1 Raymond, for Etta always spoke kindly I of him, giving him warm, aiauriy affection. Before be had been home a week 1 t knew that he and Etta bad some secret between them. I could groupe my way by ] that time to several of the neighboring bouses, aod waa often Etta'a visitor, aa f •be had often been mine when I was get- I UngwelL' ] Mere than once, coming across the garden, I could bear Etta and Albert conversing in an anlmalral, eager tone, lo ' stop abruptly the moment I appeared, at ' awkwardly to introduce general subject* < wbich I waa ante were not Ibe subjects of i the original conversation. A visitor came 1 from New Tnrk to Mr. Raymuud'a, a • friend of Albert's, aod Etta instated open I my inviting him to my aunt's house. < He was a gruff-spoken man, and talked incessantly of the affliction. Knowing ' how I shrank from any onuvtraalinn,from ' any sympathy upon this subject Etta bad ! always delicately led all tuck talk away ; 1 from it. But, to my surprise she enonur- j ! agod the suacger, aod fairly wrong front i I mi every symptom, both pending and ; during my illness. ■ Wben he went a wayabe accompanied lini ' borne, -though I offered to escort her over ' a little lata. It was a week after this, and Allvtrt ! bean away, when be returned aud- ; denty; coming Into the room, be aid : "Bum, it will he all right." Then seeing mr. I am sore, be made i arene awkward explanations about mnoey i Investments. But Etta grew very Blent, I and sore after I beard peodl over pa|» r. j Albert "rewriting. A lew minutes later , : be left the room, and • iaj|Ui Etta ; i ashed me lo rxeme bar lev a rnsment and j ; f.Jlowed him. Igrreipod mjr way to the , .table, where i was aare i beard Albert j i j Hitting. Nothing that: IWI tbgnt, '■

. till a small piece of paper wis found dose beside Etta's chair. She had trusted to 4 my blindness for its remaining undJsd covered. I was half mad with Jealous pain, and 1 u somehow got to Mr. Raymond's study, ir "Will you read that to me?" I asked. „ Without another answer be read: "1 must speak to you. Will you wait e in tbe summer bouse." "Thank you!" I Slid. a "What is It?" be asked. u "Tbe wrong note. I will find the a <**" " r I went away to the summer bouse as j softly as a thief, guarding nlj steps en the _ frozen ground. They were there, and 1 oould bear Albert's voice. As I came J near I beard Etu— "Ah. Albert, I will r lore you all my life for tbis !" y She was crying, torn I could tell that k by her broken voice. D 1 turned away and went home. It was a cold day, and I was utterly miserable. u- -Aunt Hilda insisted upon nursing me, and j I submitted, brooding over my secret pain, g seeking no sympathy. 0 It was natural that Etta should turn a from the bliqd lover, who was but a disn appointment to tbe handsome young man d of fortune who bad loved ber ao long. 1 1 would try to give her up.oot in anger. but q But I oould not. Albert relumed lo a Chicago, and every day Etu became dearer to me. She was the light oh my life. She gave me every hour she could ; spare from her duties to ber uncle and his d bouse, and she spoke of our future as | surely to be passed together. 1 bad no I j courage to tell ber I suspected ber secret, ^ ( and only in my lonely hoars did I dwell j upon tbe remembrance of Albert's visit Tbe long winter wore sway, the early 1 spring was gone, and when May blossoms 3 were bursting Etu came one morning to > "Do you remember Doctor Sanderson?" . she asked. , 'Your cousin's friend." My heart seemed to stand still. 1 "He came from New Y'ork solely to ( see you. and be warned us that we must . nut give you exciting hope, for some . months. Perfect tranquility' be told us, [ was tbe great hope for the recovery of r sight." 1 "Recovery of my sight !" "He thinks r that possible?" r "Be thinks it more than possible. If . you improve in strength as you have done . all the winter, be waa ocruin be oould I successfully operate this month." I oould not speak. Very gently Etu r told roe of her o-iusins kindness. He bad gone to the city solely to find the doctor, , r Who waa no more his friend than be wss , ; tbe friend of any other patient. He had . . brought him to aee d^0nd then burdened | ElU with liis secret Instructions. I Even Mr. Raytnood pnd Aunt Hilda were | ignorant of this loving conspiracy. i I It humiliated me to thick of the part I i . had taken, the unwprtby construction 1 . placed upon Eu6's outburst of grali- i f lude. But she should nerog^tnow I . ■ doubted ber. even for an >. < •Ten me," 1 said: ririfSca this Sector , i wUl cane again." \ , "He ia here waiting lo sec you." t no reluctance then in my aniwera to 1 , my eyes closely, aod cave mc a promise | o! sight in baa than two months i And be kept bis word. Aflerjtbe opcr- | alioo be gave mc strict direction* for and confinement In a dark t room, till, at the end of six long weeks be 1 again, and lot me aee once more lb» i daylight and Eua't face. , From Ihtl hour I gained hope and oour- t again, and when my eyes were per- ■ restored returned to New York. 1 1 expressly for bidden I to resume my , old duties, but tbe firm gave me a posi- t tkm aa salesman and a good salary. Eua waited another year for me,, when i great uncle leil me a legacy that enabled me to marry, having a sure income, i It waa not till we had been married i a year that. Etu aakod.me for seven i dollars. "Certainly," I replied. "Do you wonder what I want of ao | much mooey?" she asked. "I wonder, for we had no secrets hi our aod my wife usually told me what she spent her mooey." | '1 will tell yon," she said. "I wast to , "You" sold that I" I cried. "Thought i valued that above all poaaesaiooal" | "But not above your eyesight. Dr. was paid five hundred dollar* . . tbe operai ion, not ibe fifty at you tup , posed." , "Etta!" , "That wss part of our "secret. Albert i , would have given me tbe mooey, but I ( would not let you owe your tight to any one save me. So be took my cross and r sold it for seven hundred dollars here in New York. Tbe man who bought it , agnsd to beep-it for a, lime for mc. and , day Albeit told me be oould get.it 1 again. I 1 shall always th Ilk tbe cross bad never 1 . out of Albert's possession, and be 1 i loo delicate lo give It again U> Etu. ' I I be was in New York oo a wedding 1 ■ ' tour, about to aall for Europe, and be gave . . | bi^vwtin tbe opportunity to redeem at- 1 I bti'knan. I My wife wears tbe pearl cross wbenev- ' er she U In gala dress, and I never see It ' , brr fair throat but my heart swells . loving gratitude to Ibe faithful women ' ' who sacrflced it, the dearest treasure she 1 owned, for me, to restore to me tbe lost ' ' bhaiing of sight. Old Shoes. Even old shoes are valuable. Tbey are > cut up lv small pieces, and those are put • for a maple of days ia chloride of sulphur, which makes the leather very hard | brittle. After this b effected, tbe maur- ' , taJ b washed in water, dried, ground to > I powder, and mixed with some aubeUncr I . wbich makes the par", ides .ad here together, t , as sbriraee, good glue, or thick a Jiutiuu 4* yn** ""o fcttw*

se Crookedness tn London 10 If you have semi -legal or sesci-detect- *- ive relations with the profesricm It b not difficult to obtain the restoration of »)«**■ arctide you particularly desire. You communicate first with one of the chiefs, one of tbe leading men in that. branch of work to which your loss or the mode of 11 the robbery naturally belongs. "Gentlemen Dick," for example ia a most amiable and obliging thief by profession. "A friend of mine," says my informant, tbe * aforesaid lawyer, "lost a valuable scarf pin, an hrirkxxn at the Oaks. I applied " to Gentleman Dick. He gave an appoint - * rncnt at a certain 'little Uvern in the eastern per, of Loodoo. I met him and e waa struck with the cleanliness of tbe inn. II There was a pump aod a rosy landlay. Her daughter was playing tbe piano In l! the parlor. Gentlemen Dick said "gin cold" was his liquor. I took gin oold J also. So likewise did a gentleman whom L I bad observed oo the'reoe course at Epson d ringing sentimental songs lo a harpist. '• So also did tbe harpist. Gin cold was the popular drink. Tbe landlady heraetf n didjiH mind' if she bad 'Just one,' and L we thus became quite a little friendly , » party. "Tbe man with tbe pin was late. It il was an hour after the appointed time , before he arrived. He also thought gin o oold waa a good thing; and when be had r 'wetted big whistle." as he called tearing y lid a 'throe straight,' be beckooed me, into d a back passage, 'bolted the door, and under s a gaslight took out a bundle from hit A pocket, a red cotton handkerebicfful of o pins, watches, chains, lockets, and various .. arctic! ca acquired the previous day on the U courec. " 'Which is it?* he asked. f "I fished it out. » " 'Will a five save you Y I inquired, , o handing him a note. " "Certainly, anything you like," he , •aid; The governor's lip is good enough - if It's only a two of gin.' " Patience is a virtue which. in tbe pratice , nf thieving as a profession, is highly , valued. It la also an absolute necessity 0 in the successful conduct of serious affairs . 1 Take aa an example the netting of -C200,- , c 000, recently "made" in Ibis way. A , certain small company of professionals, , '' called by their enemies the police "gang," (though by the way, tbe police are not ( ' always enemies), purchased one of tbe ] largest and best iron safes procurable for ■ ' money in London. Tbey shipped It to | n Cape of Good Hope. Two of tbe company i 3 or gang followed iL At Cape Town they , had it sold by auction. It was purchased , 1 for the Diamond Fields. Nobody would ■; 3 buy such a safe as a at unless he bad i ■ something valuable lo put Into it. Tbe i " original investors followed this sale. One t 3 morning when tbe purchaser opened it, i 1 the (30,000 worth of property which be - had deposited there was gone. Tbe Alt • - bad not been broken open. Tbe thieves t had made duplicate keys to fit it before c I tbey ha<M>ul it up for sale by auction. a 1 "I wonder," says my legal gossip, "if „ - tbe gentlemen I recently saw driving in n I tbe Bois at Paris wis tbe first or second of tbe two who carried oat the brilliant ' exploit. I asked Gentleman Dick the question quite recently. He smiled and called for "a gin cold.' " ■ "And what sort of a person is a Ihlevc's E 1 you ask. 11 "Well, in this caw he was quite a 'swell' 1 I In appearance and I belire be waa work- 9 Ing among bla 'shady clients' more for c practice and experience than f .r money." u "But," lie said, "the cleverest thing 0 that ever waa don? waa liie Jewelry-rob- * i In the strand. A 'prof carional' goes P 1 the store, selects £500 worth at rings 0 and watches, pays for them with real » - money, the goods are packed, and be is ti * about lo leave when acre enters bis con. I i in tbe character of a detective i< At right of him the buyer looks raisers- * ■ ble." * "At last," say* tbe detective, "you c i don't escape mc thia time." * Then addressing tbe storekeeper, be ] "1 have been after tbis gentleman 1 1 two years, tbe cleverest thief in town; L i be has bought watches and rings of your' t •Yes." » "And paid yen in five one hundred • "Yea." "Let me see them?" f I Tbey are handed to tbe detective, who f picks up bott money and Jewelry, makes 1 I * memorandum In his note book, band- 1 cuffs ae thief, requests the storekeeper 1 l follow him down to tbe police station 1 (Scotland Yard) In a few minutes. 1 "I have a cab at tbe door wta another • ' officer Inalde." be oootlnnea, and be hauls I off bis prisoner, while the storekeeper i goes for bis hat and coat and In doe 1 course proceeds to Scotland Yards to find ' 1 they bad not heard of tbe robbery or tbe I clever capture. — Oor. PMla. Inquirer. 1 Wear and Tear of Ships J , If a vessel Is strtckly first -class, and 1* ] , wall cared too,* ba wiU boh! bar raliag < , twain yeara. Then she most h. careful r ly examined, and if found in good cmdi- * r ii « ber rating may be ©milnuori four f . yeara lqpger. But ycai will notioe before uTe end of twelve years that the captain i . don't carry on talmas he did the Aral trip. I . Even with a fair gale tbe lopgallaoHalls f j o>me,*and tbe mainsail win possibly be clewed op. If tbe ship has aged pretty J fast, as rite will under a cap thin disposed I ! drive ber, the chances are that the am- , bilious captain geu out of ber into a new I •hip again. A new man taxes tbe old a •hip, and she drops out of the trade a ! [ 'Frisco or China, and carries guano or « ctaL When a ship has carried cargo for fifteen yeara, eveo under favorable drmmstancea. she is an old ahlp. Sho is r like an overworked man, she totters on , i ber aoy. In a heavy sea she ia longer - rising on the swells, for she has somehow I 1 lost ber buoyancy. Las! of all abe gtws 1 - into tbe lumber trade, and there wallows , o her way from port to port, un'il her booea r are laid upon a teMbore, or she fails to , rise when a heavy wave strikes brr. l, Tbe Duke of Argyll says ll* wsrld is ten mliliuu years uid,

Honesty of Woman Cashiers. "Do women embetzle?" • "No, tbey don't. I never knew a woc man who handled other people's mooey to > steal ooe cant. I bare employed women . as coalers for yeara. Tbey are quicker f at making change than men; tbey will def tact counterfeit mooey quicker; they krep - their cash aoooants clearer, and don't want e to rue the whole business as men do." Bo I said. one 'of Buffalo's heaviest dry goods ' merchants to a Buffalo Krpnte reporter. ' "Yea, tbey are invariably booest. I bare I heard of young women aa clerks who - kerchiefs, etc., but the cases are rare. I Most saleswomen aod cashier* in Boffalo • lire at boot, and keep off tbe slrecu at night. Many belong lo good families and > to churtbaa. Tbey are in every sense re. i sponsible. "Newspapers nowadays are fall of i run away wUh fortunes, wreck booea, . fswillwa, reputations aod public loatitu. 1 lions. Cashiers gamble, steal, abaoood, r speculate and use mooey entrusted lo I them by poor working people. Tbey lie, dissemble, deocire and finally rob tbe directors of tbe corporations employing them ' but women do not steal. Look at tbe suicides, caused by all tbese breaches of i trust! See tbe beggars these ricek-tongned ' villiani have in two cities during ! tbe past week— but women do not cmbex- ' tie. ' "I have a cashier now who it the 1 shrewdest woman I ever knew. She sits ' up aero where the cash- halls roll in, evi1 dently kept busy making change. But ' that young woman knows all that ia going on at every counter of a is Urge store. She catches shoplifters, 'reports irregularities among clerks, aod del ecu every Uule ' device invented by the salesmen lo brat 1 nor s 'Ulle-Ule.' Tbe crookedness abe i reports among clerks would affect her if allowed to pass. She often calls me up ' and polnU out some mistake in tbe cash ' check, saying, for instance, that baa oc- ' curred five timca a is week. Mr. is i eery careless.' 8o you aee abe decs not - accuse him of wilful mistakes in making - out his check* but I understand ber and - apply the proper remedy. ' "A cashier's plaoe is a hard one. She : sits up there alone, generally; ae out i quick to make change, and tbe knowledge that every cent lost comes out of ber (8 or (10 per week naturally tends to make ber nervous. Sbe must watch for mutilated, punched and plugged coins; and for counterfeit pieces and bad bills. checks accompanying tbe cash are ingpriably written in baste, are often iland If ae does not read tbe figoorreetly ia liable lo send back too ' 'Bat you askad me If women embezzle. have I known a single case; never I beard of ooe. I cannot aay that of 1 bare employed four "young men not quid) enough, ae oacr two robbed How th« Supreme Court Is Opened. To begin with, there is a degree of dignity and autely bearing about ae oourt and its members which permeates even to ' most humble attache. There U a i quiet in tbe oourt room which recalls the - of ae Covenanters. When one enters, the involuntary feeling comas on | that tbe room is set aside only for tbe i contemplation of the sober side of life, and woe lo him who jibes and Jokes In tbe ; prrsenoe of the court. At twelve o'clock tbe justices come in from tbe con- , suiting-room end take aelr seats oo ae Awsy to ae left of the chamber seen a youthful officer, whose business is te catch tte flrat glimpse of tbe advancing judges. Then comes three raps with a ponderous gavel by the reme offiTltis la meant as a signal for the audience to rise. Then, wia tbe cblef justice In advance, the judges enter from the right of the chamber. To tbe rear of the jostioe's seat la an aiale. In tbe cenIs an arched entrance for tte chief Justice. Through ais aisle the Judges file and take positions oo tbe right sod lefL None enter until the chief Juitlce{$Dergre from the centre entrance. After all have filed In, tbe chief Justice makes s graceful obeisance to ae standing audience. the Judges take teals, a stroke of tbe gsvel is made, and Ibe audience seats The opening of tbe oourt falls a youaful officer. It is after tbe old Englia form: "Oh, yea; oh, yea," etc., and ooocludea wia the words, "God bless the honorable supreme oourt." Tbe oourt now ready for busiDeaa. All tbe Justices are clad In black silk gowns, wia an ecclesiastical cut. Tha Borrowing Family. Tbe borrowing family tent their boy Jack over to Mr*. Murphy's to borrow some tea and sugar andK plate of butter. Murphy waa busy aod bad no Inebnatioe to lend to neighbor* who never returned anyainglbcr borrowed. At tbe fame lime abe did not care to entirely ofaetn. • I'd be glad to accommodate yeas, " ae mid, politely, "bat olm in s hurry sod haven't tbe time to wait oo ye. I've other to fry Just now." The buy west botae and reported thai Mrs. Murphy wss too busy to attend lo and bad other fish to fry, etc. "And why didn't ys wait," asked bis mother btaaaiasly. "Go back sod take another plate wia you and leD Mistress Murpby voo're In no hurry, and mMber'd be much obliged to ber for s plate M lbs fried gar A Short Memory. Groom— "Well, pel, Is there anything want lo-dayF' Bride-' Yea dear. I wia you would •top at tbe asad sore and gel soma grass G room— "Certainly, lost ; bat what do ' want of U? We have no lawn." Undo— 'l am (going out to the cemetery Groom— "But what for?" Bride— "1 promised my flrat husband ( that I would tee thai ids grave was kept ; > green, and I bad almost lurgoUen about !

"Karo,"the Missing Link. ^ 'Kran,' tbe 'sLraOert 'miming Unk.' whose history •Dd sppemrenee hare ono- ^ atderahly excited adentiau and amused a tbe cortoaa In Eompe. arrived in Phllat del phis last week In charge at George Shelley, who scene: penird Ihrl berk, tbe _ traveler, to Stam threr yeara agn. *lra .g the child was captured. M-. Bhetlr* sat k in an upper room at Use Bo gbanj Hnu<« f Wia 'Karo' braid- bim and ri»<nnra-rt ' learnedly and volugiloously oo bis littN io charge. Tbe child, who la believed tn ha between 8 and 8 yeara of age, was orally dressed in s pretty terra-cnua gown, red . stocking* sod bultnoed kid shoes. Heavy silver bracelets adorned ber hairy arms . and a oord, inwoven wia gold thread, ^ encircled ber waist. Though tbe now is r~ fiat sod the face sod forehead was covered . wia black hair of varrisg length aod u closeness, tbe child Is saved from repul. alreoeas by ber remarkably large, dark, u gentle aod Intelligent eyea, and ber geo- . oral exprceeioa of amen aad good nature. £ 'Krao,' says Mr. Shelley, was captured wia ber parents lo January, 1881, In tba . wilds of tbe Loss country In northern n Slam. All of the tribe that bare been x seen are completely covered wia hair. In ^ their natural stale aey lire in trees, are d destitute of clothing and almost without language. Their food la fruit, they do • not posses* ae knowledge nf fire. The •name 'Krao* Is simply (tbe Siaroew for te *»*• u Mr. Shelley, who is a believer lo tbe j Darwinian theory, while not pretending lt that Krao aod ber tribe supply the only link between man and the higher apes, u holds lo the idea that these carious people j". are allied to at chimpeoxee in many ^ physical points, wia much resemblance ^ to civilized man in intellect. He instances . aa Kretfs ape like characteristic* tbe fol- ^ lowing facte: She baa thirteen dorsal verlf tcbnr and airteen pair* of ribs, instead p ot twelve a* lb man. She has poochra In sweetmeat*. Her cranial measurements „ correspond wia those of the higher apes. >t Her ears aod now are without cartilage. g Her finger* are akoormally flexible. Tbe 4 hair oo her body grows in directions that characterize ae Simian hirsute growth. e Krao, since ber captivity, baa learned it to read, write and speak English, aod has I. also aoqoired some knowledge of German. T From a wild, untaught little savage, tbe 0 has developed into a docile, affectionate r and remarkably intelligent child. Sbe ^ ill 11 has recollect loos of ber wild life in L Slam. Tbe child wrote her name in fall e 'Krao Fkrinl.' with a pencil, lo a large, . I ouod, copy-book band, picked up a band. . kerchief with ber toot, and good-oalured- , ly opened her mouth to abow where abe bad stored away nuts In her enrioua, apelike pouches, gbe is shortly to form one t of tbe attract isoa at the Chestnut Street 1 Dime Museum. ' He Knew What a Sinner la. 1 "My dear boy," aaid an earnest Sunday School teacher at the North End Mission to a frowsy urchin, "Do you know that we are all ainoara V •Yea, rnarm." A long and earnest talk followed, in i which ae claims of tbe guapel were fully i set forth; but tbe teacher waa only re- : warded by an unintelligible sure, i Finally it occurred to tbe locber that i perhaps abe bad Ukru tbe boy beyood bte : depth, and aa she inquired : I "John, you know wbal a sinner is,doa't • you ?' "Sinners, rnarm! Ob, yes ; ainnon te . strings it turkeys' legs." Better than Vacation. r , This is preeminently tbe vacation ' recreation. But tbaee wbo suffer the ' depressing effects of summer debility, tbe . disagreeable symptoms of scrofula, ae , tortures of blllioasoem, dyspepsia or sick . headache, there te more pain than pleasure io leaving borne. To inch we my, give l Hood's Sarsaparilla a trtaL It will purify f jour bloody lone up aod^lttreylben your biliousness, aod positively core- dyspepsia " or si ok headache. Take it before ync go, ' and you will enjoy your vacation a . thousand fold. • ' If we apply ourselves seriously to wisc dam, we shall never live without true " pleasure, but learn to be pleased wia ev- ' erything. We should be pleased wl'b ' wealth, so far as lt makes us beneficial lo ' o'.hera. with poyerty, for not having much ' to care for, wia obscurity, tor being un- • A Startling Dlseovsry. x Mr. Wm. Johnson, of Huroo, Dak., writes Oat his wife bad been troubled n with acute Broach I U* for many years, and that all remedies tried gave no permanent relief, until be procured a bottle of Dr. Xtntfi New Discovery for Coosum prion, Coughs, aod Colds, which bad r a magical effect, aod produced a permanent r cure. It Is guaranteed to core all Diseases of Throat, Lungs, or Broooblal Tubes. Trial Bottles Free at. Dr. Kennedy* Drue ' Store. Large Size (1.00. (8) e If there were no enemy, there oould be !. no conflict; were there no titrable, acre oould be no fsia; were there no frar, e there oonld be no hope. Hope, faith and d love are weapons, aod wrapoos imply r foaa and encounters; am) relying oo my weapons, I will glory in my sufferings. Budtlan'a Arnica Salve, ° Tbe Beat Halve is the world fur Cute, Bruisra, Sores. Ulcers. 8ab Bbanm, Ferer ' Bora, latter. Chapped Hands, Chill*, e lain*. Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and ■ positively cure* Pi lea, ar ao nay required. - i It te guaranteed to give perfect eatixfaci lion, or matey refunded. Prior 25 cents gtr^brnt. Fur Hale by Dr. Kennedy . IL If Ibe habitual thought thai franvg Itself Into oor life, lt affects us even d more than our Intimate social relations ■ do. .Our confidential friend* have not ao much to do ia shaping our Uvea a* to thoughts bare which we harbor. 7 "I waa mom deed Wia beert difficulty can now do a good days work, and sinccrrly reoommend Dr. Graves' Heart _t I Regulator as tbe remedy — Geo. G tedding nt Hartsgrove, O." (1. per btalie at JO* drag Mm