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VOLUME XXXIII. CAPE MAY CITY. HEW [EBSEY. SATUBDAY. SEPTEMBER 10. 1887. WHOLE NUMBER. 1719.
CAPE MAY CITY. N. J., /. BS.rH r KDHU3DB, PoNUkcr and ProprUtor. itssnr r. baud, motor,$100 i Tor Strictly la A&naca?rotrssional (Sards. J^EAMING ft BLACK, ATTOBNB YS-AT-LA W, CAMDEN, N. J. m-j JQB J. jr. LKAJtare ft SON, DENTISTS Cm Ma r Conn Mown-Wntratays no Bassoon siATnx»— Fna»r«. OAA APMHOATMrnire. J" AMES M, Jt HILDRgTH, attorneylat.-law AMD solicitor, master and examiner im CHANCERY. OBoe At No. M Washington Btreet, Car* Mar t»y. M. J. nw-lr pKNNINGTON T. HILDRETH, ATTORNEY . AT - LAW SOLICITOR IN CHANCERY , 1M MARKET ST.. CAMDEN, N. J. NB"B«aauli OHM U Cap* Mar Court Roue, spaa 8atantay is»-r Saltern (Sards. A B. LITTLE, 1 PRACTICAL PAINTER AND QLAZIEB. SHOP— Ooaaa (met aezt Area* now. OAPR MAT CITT, N. 9. , OrSsra may be lsft it R. Johnaoa'i atora^ ' -ft O. GILB, ■ HOUSE, SIGN AND FRESCO PAINTER, CAPRMAT CITY, M. J. RtfTIMATRB PURMI0BRD. gUKBOQATE'S OFFICE, « SURROGATE OP ^HB^OOUNTT OP OAPE •i at* offlee at Car* Mar Coon Hon**, on , TCRBDAY AMD SATURDAY jqanielooE Hiars, Tobacco. Rues aM Fauci Boodi. R ARTIER SHOP ATTACHED. BARBER ATTACHED.
cap* may court house, m. 1. BLMI BOOKS. STiTHT 1 n bold PENS, P18B1NO taorlb. bopb twiwrg^nammlx-eh^prllyb amd oaaaatotiood vioum strings teat to ally PoasOMea aasreramureUiai i Hni«a nWii ot aiiriw am. i. 8. GARRISON. ^^8aA^n^w«niiaiiu» m. (mr* Mar m. j. "POINTERS Oil POULTRY" A PAMPHLET telling how to keep and feed Poultry and the diseases that destroy them, will be furnished free to all who want whb sell our Condlmental 8ploa. or -by ourselves. . nXOMWKKTU. FOOD DO. DO* Dim Street MM •$SSf . . . j^BS. J»Jf.ftJ. B.H0BXN8ACJL, Medical and Burgtoal Offloeo, 40 Tan ESUMUBt jwSSS5S£S s'Ejrwi j? ■"abiTtoT t lofp |j|F^^Sv^Ep lamkiixmimt e«iigt»a ■ i ifj e5«3p>— tlej— ft S.anMsv a I my*. j&s«e. I I aj laa, SeSiB IUwnuPB iw'VM BgjKggSclaxji
SPECIAL VALUES $12 00 s LONOON-MAOE tFALL OVERCOATS ,a Mooter us in London. Special psietcAuetoer an unusual x punch asc or ovcrcoatinqs / v j \ rnoat the English Mills. / j I" \ Really Worth $!8.t>0. f\ \ A OVERCOATS SENT BY EXPRESS Sry -J - " _m, | HEIGHT -WEIGHT i ..... j JF1. BREAST-SLEEVE flE fe- I DS- I SHADE WANTED, j ^ I I ^ E. O. THOMPSON, H.J IHJLt- * , Aito, Qoitler. Tailor ft Iapsner. " =^SS« 808 Wsfcut Stmt, | |$o. 1338 CHESTMUT STREET. I 2« Brcadwir^'j <OW~'^OELPH,. ' L. E. MILLER, G£N£RAU CONTRACTOR, MOVING BUILDINGS A SPECIALTY, ; I CAPE MAY CITY. N. J. Jyi** " Tiotrb and hoarding Rousts. ' AMERICAN HOUSE, Chestnut Street (bet. 5th and 6th) Philada. « f iARES D. HcCLELLAM, Proprietor. ' ■ I - 1 I West Jersey Hotel, foot op market street, camden, n. j. i atUekkf total" u^,0r^"* *cooo"»*,a«on». Am Uimnkful lor pan rairouiec. Good 8ia t ( stephen parsons. ImU of Panon't Hotel, Camden. , john potter. Clirt. Jl»-j ELDREDGE JQHNSON 39 Washington at.. Cape Rar,:M. jr., BOOTS AND SHOES, ; Largest ami man oompM* Swrii U til tM la-.mt Hlylr, IJuaIiij J RUBBER GOODS A SPECIALTY. a ho a fall "apply omutaaUr on band of Fins Wall Papers of the Latest Patterns. o Buliabl* tor OMUra, Hoiala, etc. Call and r lamina atoot and prlcta. a3-j , CrjSSL~ MOST RELIABLE [ "gmA FIRE INSURANCE AUENCY , In 0ape May County- i Bi" HttB c"f™ts i Ratra as Low aa to any Companies. i ApplloattoM from any panoUhrooomy win noelt , W. SCOTT HAND. Agent, , * P-\ ■■ — * — is-r oapr max court house, n.j. i
EN OS R. WILLIAMS, \ Arohiteot and Builder, 3 CAPB MAT CITT, M. J. I ° Baa ha>l an tiptrienr* of mroly yean In bnUdln* at (Mpe May. No charm (or drawlnf or plan when ooniraci tor bnlldinf U awarded mm. II paya to bnlld from a fowl dwdfn, and ohaapor to maKFtlwraUonabn paper Man aturih* wort la doac. " I Shop mar of Wit OBce. ■ ' * STEAM HEATING. \ ORLANDO KELSEY," I NO. 510 ARCH STREET. PHILADELPHIA ^ Z»ls»y'e Pitent eotionsl Safety Steam Generator. Beet in the c World. Adapted to Hotele, Manufacturiee and Buildings i of Bvsry Description, fl8-y t! aa Q JOSEPH P. HEJMRY, ^ House, Sign and Frescoe Painter, j f. CAPE MAY CITY, N. J. J^r > . NATHAN C. PRIpE. I Surveyor a Conveyancer, ' CAPE MAY CITY, N. J. f»-J I DUKE & DOAK, ■ Contractors and Carpenters, i i CAPE MAY CITY. N. J. 5 Phtwrnoa » a«ee. fs-y I S DAVID W. RCDAN, PUOT OP JACRSOX BTRRVT, CAPR MAY, M. J. •- Wlrtea to Intono tba pahgc itooraUy that M baa en baaa a eboioa lot of = FJELD AND GARDEN SEED ■a a1 Reaaooablt Prteaa. Aleo dmier la heat cjoallty or "S. Ooal A Wood, Flour A Fssd of all Kinds, Freeh A 8 alt Hay in Balea s — —jm; wayar-H ff GOFF & SMITH, j* MAMtpACTURBSS AMD 98IPPRR8 OP I BRICKS POTTERS BDFF^ gLAY n LOWEST CASH PRICES, a Paraonm »i Srllaplalri aad Mlllrm«; Offlcf , Smtth-a ortwry buwe, w a ta • . ■ ■ t-., M*lDe.H.J. s w. a maw, axaal im Onlan by Mall eui r*c*.Tr drrbr- Atmatlot el — — —amanaaa— —a—— — — — •mmmmmm — — — i — • S BENJ. S. CURTIS, s Practical Pluml »r, Gas and Steam fitter, g - Hd: II Oecafwr Street, Cape May. N. 4. m " -SW STUmLLl ■ jay
THE SHENANDOAH. as olo wiiaier'p EXPEI1IEXC* WITH til* ( ituyateeb. . ( A Itig mull. Willi a face ltruuiul by ' many, clirnen, aat on » brncb nl lial cry Park, New-York. Iiwking at the rhanging'panorama. He Beuicd too preoccu- ' pied to notice the heal,- and continued J to gaze Miessly out to where Ihe God. ' dean ol Liberty teemed about to melt A 1 weary newspaper men walked across the 1 park. "Well, Captain Dcnnt-ll, I thought you • were dead," aaid the reporter. " You are r | the very man I want to see. I had in- ' tended writing nn article to-day on the 8 old Confederate privateer Shenandoah. .1 but my search for one of lier crew Juts 1 been fruitless, and I think 111 give it up. ' Yon know the government sold her at ' auction the other day?" "No, I hadn't heard of It," said the ' captain, "but I knew •omellung about c the Shenandoah. My nhip wan captured " her some months after the wiir had ended." 1 •-■Tdl ■nltonmlHnMH't j • It all occurred in the Arctic Ocean," 11 said the captain "I had been in the 1 South dui ing the greater portion of the war. but a year before It ended I saw " hbw it would be. no.I made my way to- » ward the Pacific cra-L When I arrived « in San Pram isco I was nearly out of funds, so I cast around to find a means " to increase my income. 1 saw something I1 of a sailor, and my fovoritc lounging place, no matter whfte I chance to be, is •' about the wharves. In San Francisco I •' became acquainted with a number o' 11 Katherlne, of New London. Through ° tain, and as he was short-handed I was '' ■biped as third mate. - " "The Katnerine made a fast trip, but Cl when we arrived on the grounds we a number of whalers al eady there. went to work with a will, anil soon " bad everything in shlpsliapc order. On .the 86th of June, 1865, we were cruising in the Knmschtka sea. On that day »c a 'catch,' and were very busy frying " oat oil. My wstch came between six anil *" bells, and about nine o'olock the man ri at the masthead sang out, 'sail bo?' '' "When asked whereaway, he said he thought a steamer in the offing, and thai * ■he was heading in our direction. The captain came on deck, and together we made her out. We com hided aho was 81 one of the Russian men-of-war, whose " duty it was to cruise in these araa to protect the seal fisheries. My watch " beii-g over I went below and turned in. " for I was tired, and did not give a sec. ond thought'to the supposed Russian. S "It seemed to me that I bad not been asleep ten minutea, though It had been " three hours, when I was awakened by a '' voice shouting. 'Turn out here; P turn out; buaieess on deckj* n "I thought a whale had been sighted, c but did n -t Uiink of the steamer once. '' It did not take me long to tbiow on my clothes and get on deck. As ascended the hatch way I saw an officer dressed In gray uniform standing on dbek, and 1 soon as he »sw me ha asked: 'Arc a mate of this bark?' I answered * that I was. " 'Get your boat and crew and go to * .c--. L, V « », steamer.'
"I looked In Uic direction tn which be J pointed, and saw laying about a quarter of a mile away from the Katherine one ° of the prettiest vessels I had ever run across. "What Teasel is that?" I asked, for j the flew no flag. "The Confederate ship Shanandoah.' he answered, ss he turned on his heel and walked to another part of the Ksi herinc. I asked a tailor who was standing | war how much clothing I had better . take. He looked at me with e little smile ^ and said that one suit would do me. # The significant way tn which he answercd me opened my eyes. Up to this time hid thought there was no danger to r ship. My idea was that wc were r only being sent on board the Confederate ship to sign a parole, for the war bad ^ ended In April, and It was now June Surely knowing this, they would not J to burn us. But wc soon found to our coat that It was ended In name only the Shenandoah. We showed Lieu- ' Clifford the San Francisco papers j with an account of Lee's surrender. He said he had no orders from his govern , menu We were talking about the Lncldent the other day. He is now With the * Old Dominion Steamship Company. ' "I manned my boat and the captain . and the other mates manned their*: | Then we pnlled for the Confederate. But ' we were not allowed to board her. Cap- , tain Wardell bad a hawser thrown us, and with this we were ordered to lash t our boats together. There were already two boats In tow belonging the Nimrod, of New Bedford, which nad been burned the day before. It was now abont 2u'clock the morning of June 87. The sun was : ab nt as it gets in ihat lat hide— about an hoar high it appeared to be — and tee weather was extremely cold, LlenL Clifford follow d us quickly from the Katherine and a few minutes later she waa one sheet of flame*. "For thirty-six hour* we were towed _ in the wake of the Shenandoah, and in s the course of that time the boarded and 7 burnt three "more whalers, and their boaUiyere added to our little flotilla. We suffered^ extremely, not alone from the weather. We bad not provided ourr selves with a sufficient supply of water or provb-ions, and we sufiered the pangs of hunger and thirst. "In a few hours after the burning of the thro- whalers the prjvateet came _ upon a fleet of seven more whalers, six of which she tacked and burned. The other, the G-nerml Ward, was boarded , and we were put on board. Before we I parted company with the Shenandoah lire officers of the prizes were taken I r>, aboard and made to sign a parole not to [ bear arms against Die Confederate Bute*. | that had owed to exist three months ., before.
Under Guard of Hla Honor. An old local liLto-y of Pennsylvania, contains the following anecdote, which gives us a new incident in Washington's During the "whisky insurrection" in Western P- nnsylvania in 1782. the leader, Bradford, acquired a powerful influ. Mitchell, and d-ew him deeply into the conspiracy. Mitchell was a young, enthusiastic man. with a beautiful homo, a wife and one child. The conspirators believed that inform ation of their plans had been sent from Uic Utile village of Washington, in Penn sylvanla. to the President. Bradford pcryuatled Mitchell that the lei ten containing this information were in the mails, and must be seized as an act of military nercsdty. Robbery of tlie,ma'Is was then an of. punishable by death, bul Mitchell, convinced that be was risking his life to serve his country. Joined by two olbei men, Mopped the wagon on a lonely road carried the mail-bag to Bradford's house. taken out. and the rest were returned to the post office at Pitt-burg. When the insurrection was quelled, all the leaders escaped excepting John who rode into camp, and finding General Morgan, gave himself up. "I have been a fool." he said. "-I see ■ plainly. I am ready to bear the i punishment of my folly." General Morgan, who knew tloii he j 1 deceived by Bradfoid. was ante ye I j I him. He hblieved Mitchell to lie at heart ' ' an honest man. and. with the rest ol tin 1 1 punishment would Ik- death. in- -le- ! I tnrmincd to give him a elianee w es j' ^ ^ ^ ^ i "I will give you a |)asa to Philadelphia, j • Report y ourself there." "1 an} to have a guard f" "No. none." The General turned on t.i- litcl ami, ' walked awav; He Intended and expei t- ' ed Mitchell lo fly as soon as he had j ! reached the widerne-s, hut 'be young M honor was a st-leler gtla-d 'ban > without flinching to his death. lie bade farewell to his wife and ch id and started alone on horseback to Phil- 1 adelphla. It was a three weeks' j nr. ' escaped- He reported liim-elf as s pris- 1 oner was triad, convicted and sentcm-cd to be l*MM, | President, with an account of Hi- facts : In the case. Washington, it Is said was • deeply touched, ond at once sent a full I pasdon to Mdchell. with a message to return to his wife and child, and to keep I clear of conspirators for the rest of his ' How An Invention Was Stolen ( Prof 8. B. Morse, the inventor of the i telegraph, was annoyed by infringe- i ments upon his patent, the defense of i which entailed costly lawsuits. He au- ! vised Inventors to keep their processes , and machines secret, i! they could, and work them themselves, or sell tfiem to a -
powerful company, rich enough to in. i dulge in suits at law for the protection i of their rights. Huntsman, the inventor of st. el Ingots, anticipated Mr. Morse's advice as tosccrcsy by a hundn d Tears. He was an English watchmskcr, and his temper had been so often tried by detective watch-springs, that he determined to make his own steel and hie springs. He discovered, after several experiments, that a piece pf steel, if melted and cast into an ingot, would be uniform throughout He offered atecl ingots for sale, ahd tech was the demand for them that he built a factory to produce them. The process was kept a secret, and his workmen were paid high wages and sworn not to raved the method. One snowy night a stranger rang the bell of the factory gale, and appealed piteouly to be admitted, lo shelter himself from the storm. He was dressed as a farm laborer, and the foreman, not suspecting any deceit, allowed him to - tretch himself upon the floor near the The mm apparently rank off to viocp. workman cut the bar of steel into small pieces, and threw the bits into crumbles, which were thrust Into" the furnace bntil their cont- nta were melted. Then they drew forth the glowing crucibles, poured tnc liquid contents Into moulds, and set them apart to cool. the Stranger awoke, got up, bade workmen good-night, and went away. ' taking the secret of making cast st-el. He was an lion manufacturer In disguise | but was, nevvrtheleaa, a thief. "I was In the abip about an hour, and ' while there I bad time to find out why 1 we had not been al owed to come on ! board when 'we were captured. The ' crew waa the most ill-assorted and badly ' disciplined company I had ever seen. ' They teemed lo je present • very nation under the sum very few being Americans, 1 except the officers, who were for th» 1 most part Virginians and as nice a lot of 1 gentlemen thieves or new ornament* to ' a hemp necktie as I ever me'.. It would ' have been an easy matter for- twenty 1 men of nerve to have taken the vessel, " and the officers knew and appr dated r tho Net, . After tiguing the parole we * embarked in the General Ward and set sail for Ban Francisco, whvre-we duly arrived after an uneventful voyage." x At the ballet: e Sixteen-year-old Youth — Oh, what a d lovely girl 1 e . Bald Head (next to Urn) — Bonny, she h was In 18*2. ° j At the Club:.. Jack and Jim are playt, I '"Uaek— The King.- - is 1 ^ faobAjjntjn^ and bowing together}—
. j The Rocky Mountatnsfor Recre- | j U Why do so few of our ire n go West (or ! „ recreation? There is no land where na■nro recreate, a man «. six does there. I „ You li" ally rruew soar youth The ell. thoroughly fare d OU'. coahl. u. tl.ep * «Ouk. and have bean glad "t.. fill n| J have gone inlo enmp at the m the afte*. , . lasilu-; of all provt.lons a piece of raw . bsmo— before turning io It t. true . „ some. M Ant. find the rarehod ntm— , pherruftW mountains trying to .h.wl ' educallno ll Will tw well . but It I- h rail,, r a< the point "I his pen — readv l«r ' 1 uftlv. revhn fresptcntlj. and . O...I. • . rrf.reocv to verify Id. .tai.
I orat. desc Iptlno nf the hall Ihe appear. I aoce of the audience am! of the lecturer 1 r be has b en sent to report . -i [> Ye becPUttot flndlils«crouot.allbougb '! t he Is sure he wrote a column. "May be it's crowded out," suggested t a brother reporter, and then adds, "Why. „ i- no; here it Is! It Is cut down and they've " c ner of tne third |«ge, next to the market Our college. bred young-f- lend may be c c very angry at such shabby treatment; d but if he is a sensible fellow, ho soon 1- gets used to it —SI. NiOudat. " The Heqcese or a -Bank 1'iiesidext.— Bank President— Mr. Bullion, I regret , to state that I have discovered a trifling « e deficiency of #100,000 in your acounts. " Oa-hler— I — : 4 0 PrcMdoat— 1 have also learned ihat, • a although your sala y Is hut #8,000, you ' hare within the past year pitrclms-d real , estate to the amount of another #100.000. Cashier— Really, air. 1— ^ President— And I have asseertained . 1 lhat you ate going io start for Montreal I*, to-day. Now, I have one rcquerst to J' Ca hier— Name it. sir. „ President— Don't go u itil to-morrow. Give me one dn> 's atari, in no other part of the world are the ,d sufferings of cattle so severe as on our 'F northwestern plains. And this is so be>D can c the rmnchn-an usually makes no *e provl km f--r feeding or sheltering his 'J herds in win'er. Tlie own-r -of 10 000 n" cattle may not Jiave one shed to shield Jn bis animals from the kl ling winds and *• blinding snowstorms— not one bushel of com. not one t -n o' bay for their sustenant* ween the Jhln gr*ss It covered 10 with Ice. In the Warmer seasons the 'd cattle are able to look out for themselves, but In the winter the ranchman trusts to luck, ank never knows nntl< the spring ^ "round up" how. many of his unforlun re ate animals have so reived. - let ■ a ■ ily Mra. Nancy Baker, of Wettheld. N. J. , who It repuud to be 08 years ol age, hired a man to mow the grass upon her farm last week, and. after the man bad finished, she went to loo* at the Job and found he had not cut It close enough to 1,0 the fence, leaving canslderable good grass standing. The story runs that she iy. obtained a scythe, and, swinging it ■with vigor and precision that caused the neighbors to gaze upon her in astonish1— menu cut the grass close to the fence and did it well
I OF NEW JERSEY. [BY AUTHORITY.] chaptkk clxxyil ^ | v.*""' ; I | i •; ' -! •. :,y£:-::i i: ' : ■ '• •' ; • '
CBAPTRR Cbxxrui. Approval Msy S.1M7, CI1APTEK CI.XXIX. 1 Be II n ^ bj*^E*^*osI Or- i Approved Mai s. UKT li"SeuBrelK>!»ed l.y 'the Senste and Oener.1 Awontolyef ihcmteotSew Jer», j. TMt miJersey sod Ihe ^SlnTT.i an-1 Keeex It.llro d ^pin.appleaeau •* *he Morn, and Eaarx haiinuo ■ultled w the arb-.trtlioii ot two artiuraUira. un. ernor, and the nther t,y the ^aald^cmnpaule^. lo : laanpou'the .uue and'eald ioinp mie*. Th 1 ^l^c"l«^d**.'lte"l^?nfBm«^retary*ni J r-wilauoo. The arrerd anrnn Ue^pip^e in rrr.niur ' '^pprurcd Jtarth XJ. JCISTRRSOI.rTIOMMO. II. ' re^nni-l'annl'vt'rJary ot the tramilig of the "°olS«od#ro!h!tt'nnd.-r^an""ish^^jJh, i- drtphU oo*tne refreteeSlirA/nl 8' P>enil>er, , anoodonuai one idourand elan! hon-lreri isI eigniy.wx.and Uu reeonaklned the^propjtjdj j fiuueaot Americ*; wberenpon inch prnceed1 Ira umedai^rnnnSed1 to'by s?VheaMa , and territnnoe. *n.M,.atte<l tn the ortsWia0 uon in Philadelphia, on theseeonu day tot l)edredand^Sh:y™x?oTls oomLinltotol cen- » tennlai cnipmiMion^lui^ied^wt^ ,u'',"nir re 0 be ccSnmroKirarod; and whareae, me pvoPUM by aaid body adopted Include, amffi-
I : ► UAI1,-I«u,., »c,ni..,l,.|™ . ilr «»• g. lilnc nrouo.l on a cretlcb end litre, up. - riHiiu and II- o e Idred ■nnn )uippr<| -It ... me en' l.angtd nty • brash, n • nguM bhroed up yrauuday •vet I. re I.. nl a mile an kulwi twelve ' •••••' •••■! -n lire hull I reck 10 1 might I-Iouu* It tl.< -.1 insurance a little while It— n, W 1. 1 ' Iteng : A cloud of •Irani m l a doi.n barrels nf .cabling Mstrtflrs tbtraigb ihe air. The ag.nt Il» ... — ran., right now tit up the polk I . V rigl.1 Where you Olr I My other leg
The story U the wounded cr.Ule who — '«« terriers re King's College n-ospllat In ordc lo have hU wouod drewu-d !. wry rrmarkab e. but there are ettll stranger Instances of ca. nitre ragarlly . Thv ICt trick shepherd, , (or e tnin le. po.se.-ed a collie, which, , come to Irenr a striking facial resem1 bltnce. to It. master. Tliis dog was an i as'ijumi. i-liureh-gocr and would even occupy its master's [x-w on occasions, when Hug liimsclf played truant from divine service. On the Monday after , ouo of these occasions, when indispostr tion had kept the shepherd at home, the [ minister of the parish called and -found - Hug silling on the side of ills Ingicnuk, ii the dog on the other. "Weel, James," you at the kirk yesterday." James said , nothing, bul looked across at the dog; tire dog. too. said nothing, but his eye i winkled and lie placidly winked at J, Janres! This story is vouched for by > Hogg himself, an unimpeachable wit. .nesa. U went* to indicate an oven -anb " tier refinement of canine intelligence i than the anecdote attested by the secre- * l i(y and"i«6Hc"r of Ling's College UospL nl A Gift for AU. I" In onler to give all a chance *o test it, and ilius be convincd of ita wond- rful »' ctirntivc powers. Dr. King's New Discov. » ere for Consumption, Coughs and Colds, o- wfl ire. for a limited time, given away. •i' 1'his offer is not oply liberal, but shows J; unlxmnded faitli in the merits of this „i - cat remeuy. All wh • suffer from " Coughs, colds. Consumption, Aa bma, BrnnchUie. or any aff ction or Tnroat. lo" Chest tit Lungs, arc especially requested I) toralMt Dr. H.A. Kcnnefl.'sdrug store, V' and get a Trial Bottle Free, Large But-:li-a #Y. 4 "J I A't us have quits with Canada until w the ba-c bail season has passed. We J] stand on pretty near an cqnal footing £ now. It is true that our fishermen havo met with great losses in the Canadian coast, but we must not forget the capture of Engli-li vessels cruising for seals off the Alaskan waters. Within Ihe re captured three British ships in the Bchring - en, the confiscation including over rj '.no thousand valuable seal skint- A t" load or lisul'of mackerel ia nothing in " cmpai.on. Lel'n even tills thing np> . ►' Tens of tboustnds of Colds lead to Consum; tion. Fevers. Setteled Coughs, Asthma, Bronchitis, Croup, Whooping in Cough. Ac- imrdiate relief by Dr. Beth £ Arnolds Cough, Killer. Physic is necessary at times f<fr Bll- ° iousness, Costlvenew, ftc. Use Dr. Beth Arnold's Biliont Pills. 25c. Mothers, teething and fretful children J need Dr. Arnold's Soothing and Cordial, it- Druggists, 35c.

