Cape May Wave, 29 May 1889 IIIF issue link — Page 2

A CAPE MAY WAVE— SEMI-WEEKLY— WEDNESDAY, MAY- 29, 1889. .

ntm Emtwoumir m wmir. Bird* ot * father frequent!, flock to i jail loprthcf. ' Among revoteUonrey relics the epin- , ptog wbwl atend* pro- eminent. j The Cbritttan Inquirer lliinka lltat one - o(llrt latest proof* of the "ladcSallodtm" of tte term "Cbriattin" ta Men in t Pooneb. The netivee 117 of the tntel > UllltaWilll; lbeT are »o Rood." I reorfre thb year t dividend of 39 pet ] cent. Leaeep* might point to tlib fact , >■ proof that cattail are pretty good , properties. mod therefore ralee a few , million* more for the ftni'ma echeme. The Chicago police seem to hare ' plenty of "due*" in the Cronln murder 1 caee, but if they do not acoompliih more 1 than-lher did in the Soell caae the. |*r- 1 pctrators will escape. It will be dl»- 1 graceful, howercr. to fall in the Oonln ' cue after the eeidence now In Uieir ' ■nmniAni The mod eastern point of the United [ State* b Qnoddy Head, Me.; the moet , northern point Is Point Barrows, Alaska; t the moat western b Alton bland, and 1 the moet eoutbern Key West. Working. ; from these four points, many will be sur- S prised when they locate the geographi. j cal centre of the United Stater. t The aagadty and profundity Of' the ' typical Chicago detcctire may be infer- * red from the remark made yesterday in c regard to the Cronin murder by EtPoliee Inspector Ilondeie, who appears " to be engaged upon It. jje said: "Prom all we now know of the As it is safe to say that It was either a political assassi- c nation or the result of some prlralr ° cause." By narrowing the catastrophe " down at thb rapid rate discovery cannot be fir of f. Dr. Cronln's prediction of hb own w death by violence b one of the most p dramatic Incidents of that terrible affair, i> The effort of hb enemies to show that b hb sssesrlnstlon was brought about by Is pointed out will prove futile. The at- u tempt to connect the victim of their ni machinations with any dlsgraeefnl epi- a sode which might have lead to hb death hi will not mislead the authorities. The m guilty conspirators will be detected and fa punished tf to ere b any Justice in the WOTM- th W0"a-

In the Presbyterian General Assembly | there ere not any of those displays of re- 1 Ugiout enthusiasm that are often to be 1 seen in Methodist conventions The | prudent men ; nearly all of them ere do- 1 mure In eppcanncc, and » considerable • proportion of them are well along In life. 1 But the body contains a few impetuous 1 member, and .they are not the youngest J members, who occasionally mike their • presence and their vicwskDDwiHn e way , which b Impressive, end which thows , that men like John Calvin and John | Knot are still lo be found among them. . Postmaster General Waoemakcr r.'- ' cently received a telegram from Poet- 1 muter Plyns, of Outhrie, Oklahoma. In ' which he says that the dally sale of ' pontage stamps at hb odes amounts lo ' about $30 ; that the eleven clerks in ■ the office are kept buy from 5 o'clock < A. M. until midnight, and that when ' the mall b ready for delivery there b 1 usually a Urm of men a half mile long ' waiting for their mall. About 3000 let- j ten and 1000 papers are delivered from ' that office dally. There are Ave backs " and sis newspapers In operation In Uic ' new town. Land Commissioner .Btock■bger received a report from Inspector > liobbt, at Gulhne, which shows that , daring the Oral week 430 entries were , made end fsrty-lwo notices of contest

There has been some talk In Ohio 1 about the legality of empowering a 1 woman minbter lo perform marriage ' leremodlea. A Probate Judge hu do- 1 ckled that she b not disqualified on ae- ' count of arx. Why a controversy about 1 thb hi theae days, when a man and 1 woman can stand up before anybody and be married f An agreement before . declared a legal marriegc time and again. 1 A man merely acknowledging a wornau lo be hb wife and living with her u | such, without having gone through any , form at all, conetitues a legal bond In • some Stales. Perhans some of these 1 days marriage laws will be reduced to such a shape that there will be some un- . I fortuity and deHnitcneas about them, < bat at preeent they are in a wonderfully 1 confused stale. As our law stands min- ' liters and msfblratee are superfluities , in promoting matrimony. , It b quite a popular l-eltcf that the | '■•plains of the great ocean steamers ' may always be found on board their "■■I*- But thb Is not so. One of the ■ardeet men to SndJs a sea captain on the day after his veteel hu been brought a lb pier In New York city. He elays 1 board until the passengers have been landed, then he gives acme final dlrec- £ hats to the Aral officer, and Immediate- c he goes to the Custom House to ar- o range for the Una] consideration of the •hip's papers. After that the com- <' mender of a great ocean liner b about as * hard to come across as I. a needle In a f haystack. Hb presence is not required upon the Teasel. Urn unloading and s ceding for the return royags ere under h the management of the superintendent ' at the pier. The Geptnin b only too giad j to be on land lie does not even occupy hb berth. He pub up at some swell ho- 1 tel. but b not always to be found there, k The new taw which has Just gone Into J effect in New Jersey forbidding any per- a •on from marrying minors except in Ibo pfMees of guardians or pnrenu, or un- t less a properly authenticated certificate J •f their content b preeeated, will eerl- ! Camden aod all the other Jersey towns < screws the Delaware from Pennsylvania. How Camden has bean sought by 1W < tylvanta couples who couldn't or would J dart J the gW of hi. choice from the prothJt ,- otary or some other officer tree fltvt en- r toroad a few years a*,. Many youug • i jf— ■ >••• • «-"» :

Happy- Bona of Mutineer*. , One hundred yeare ago bat month oc- < ciirred thefamous mullny on the Bounty. 1 A few of the mutineers, who Ml their 1 Ce plain and a boat load of their com- 1 tadea adrift on the Pacific, remained in ' Tahiti after the Bounty returned there. « and three ot them finally expiated their 1 crime on the gallows in England. There ' ' erenow about 500 deaccndanb of the J from Tehltl, and for many yeare lived ' recurety. unknown to the world, in their < bland home at Pltcairo. Most of ' Urnsn are now fishermen end farmers at ' 1 Norfolk Island, bnt the two -families. r numbering seventeen persons, who, thb- ' 1 ty years ago, returned to theb . native 1 I island, have; according to the tidings ' . Just brought from them by The bark I KUtado, increased to 117 souls, lo Feb- 1 roary last year there were 119 of them, ' and as the oommunity b remarkably 1 healthful, and most of lb members live 1 1 an advanced age, It la probable that ' 1 the blriba dunng the put year have ' rather fewer thah usual. I Only one man hu ever abandoned the 1 world to permanently cast kb fortunes c with the PI leal rn colonists, and with ' , thb exception the names now borne by the dccendanb of the . mutineers are r those of the original founders -of Ibe f colony. We receive no news from them 1 without being reminded of the men r who, though guilty of great crime, ■ founded one of the moet peaceful, >ep- ' py, aod virtuous communities the '' world. Only one of the mutineers lived sec even the beginning of the Chris- ® llan colqny ot PI teal rn, for during their I Uvea the little bland was the scene of strife and bloodshed. U wu John ,, Adams, wlo for many years survived q kls comrades, and whose memory la re- u verrd by the islanders u the best leg- .. left by theb fathers, who taught the children to read the Bible end set theb ' feet In the path they have ever foUowcd of simple virtue and of mutual love and A forbearance. 0 grab daik end bitter days In Iho history " of Pitcalrn Island. Husscll McCoy, for D instance, who b mentioned by the tiptain of tile Mikado, the last ship to bring *1 us news, u the magistrate of the com. J" munlty, is descended from one of the *' worst of the mutlneera, a man who experimented until he had concocled a ' that enabled him to hve. in babttnel drunkenness, and who Ms at shot in self- defence. * £ The world b always glad to bear from T humble deaccndanb of the mntl* whose romantic hbtory hu nude b known In every land, and who etoned so beautifully by their virtue* for Ibe great sin of tbelr m Jl. Y. Bun. di

Scribnere's Magazine for June marks , the beginning of a now eoterprbe not - ' lees notable than the Hallway Series - commenced years ago. It b the series > of popular articles on The Practical Ap- ' t plications of Electricity, s subject wblcb I i has become of chief importance in the [ ■ scientific, commercial, and industrial , ' worlds. The opening article, by Pro- ■ fceeor U. F. Brekelt, of Princeton, b en. 1 tilled ' Electricity in the Service of I Man." It b an introductory paper ■ < which seta forth, in clear and precite ' w>y, some of the common methods by > which the more important!, electrical 1 phenomena are produced, the laws which they reveal, and the principles Involved In measuring electrical quantities , such as the Volt, Ampere, end Ohm— , , which have lately come into gen- , oral use, though not properly under- , stood. The principles so lucidly cs- 1 , plained in Ihb article will be fully ap- 1 ; plied in the rest of the series, which will ' , describe Modern Telegraphy, Electric ' , Household Devices, etc. The . illustrations in Professor - Bracken's ' ehow some of the best apparatus : ip a thoroughly equipped modern labor- ; atory, and include a number of rare par- , The career of the English cutter, the I Valkyrie, that is intended to race in | waters, will no doubt be cere- . watched by yachtsmen. Tbst it b ' fleet has been shown in lb recent races; j whether it b fast enough to beat what I they delight 10 call on ibe other side "a ( skimming dish fitted with a centreboard" can only be proved by an actual race, , the cutter type of yacht baa succumbed so frequently to the Americansloop# that the result b not hard to ( A Chinaman this wees found a gold 1 nugget worth 31. WW and three ounces ( ot gold while washing dirt with a rock- , cr at Kanaka Bar, Cal. He had been 1 working awey there all winter, and had ( scarcely gotten gold enough out to keen , starvation from getting the best of him. . He made a akip to the Flowery King- 1 dom. and declares that hb toils aod _

Loei.— "I don't know where, I can't - tell when, I don't see how— something , of great value to me. end for the return . or whicb-1 shall be truly thankM, vb : a good appetite." Focxd.— "Health and strength, pure ' en sppetlleUlM that of a wolf, regular digestion, all by taking that -popular and p:cullar medicine, Hood's Saras partita. 1 want everybody to try It Ibis season." It b sold by ail druggifts. One hundred doses one dollar. "Wave'*" Business Local*. Photograph gallery to rent on Beach avenue. Apply to William King, No. 191 Arch street, Philadelphia. If A. \V. Springer and eon, builders and contractors, Cape May Point. Thb firm attends promptly to all business New and fashionable millinery roods of different styles, hats, bonnets, tenth ribbons, illks, satins, velvets. Work 1 done by expert MbeL. Fhifer. si Jene 1 H. Smith's, C. M. Court House. mS flt Dies* goods of the Uteet fashionable 1 styles, silks, cashmeres, cloths, ging- ' hams, aatleeof. Genu and hoys hats , an JSTnewa m841 j Colonel Jama a Billet hu the ooiy Brunswick reedy for business, lib ' hu a fine location, handy to the ] beach, and central for other places of public resort. The Brunswick hu s acoommoda* "'P*"*"™ ,or : John G. Shcppard offers hb services to the people of. thb county u an auctioneer. Ills long experience In the business makes hTs services desirable. Communicate with him by letter to hb address m Urls cl ty.^^hdera left at thb Puu 8*1* — The property recently owned by the late Andrew 11. Stevens. Good house, bam. sod fifteen seres of land. Situated In the. Borough of Wot Cape May, near Cane May Point. Will be sold cheap and 00 easy terms. Apply jn-LHenry Edmunds, No. 89 WuhtngIsaae WUleta. eneouenr to William It. Sbeppard. No. *7 Washington street, is scE2.tK!?Egns and to suit perrons of every description. Hb store IT centrally located, and is neatly fitted $p for the convenience of buyers. Mr. WTHetU designs to keep square up with the time, both In regards to the completeness of hb stock and hb moderate profits. tf Captain Bumoer Marcy hu bought island bridge. He will re-open it to-dar

Early Objection to Coal. The discussion of the probability of there being a deposit of coal In the valley end under the city of -of which there seems to be con■iderable evidence, recalls -some Interesting facts connected with tlx earliest in that city. When oosl wu first introduced into London u fuel, very serious objection wes taken to lb use. It appears that lo the beginning of the century, brewers aniPsmiths of the city, finding the high price Id wood pressing hard upon their returns, resolved to make some experiments with co*l, but Immediately an outcry wu raised against tbem by persons living wu petitioned, and a law wu passed prohibiting the burning of coal wilhis the oily. Those who tried it, however, the new fuel to be eo much superior lo wood that they persisted lo Its Bnt to determined wu the government to suppress what wu regarded as London a capital offense, and It is record -that ono man at lost wu executed under thtl bw. * It would appear that the ladles were most bitterly opposed to the tue of oral for domestic purposes. They considered the smoke lo be ruinous to their complexions, and would not attend parties ' at bouses In which the objectionable wu used. Bomo persons went the length of refusing to eat food of any kind that had been cooked on a coal Hardware Trade Journal. Eng. Harriet Beccber Blowc b in much bsthealth than she way a year ago. b conclusively proved by the fact aha hu been strong enough to read "Robert Klsmcra" clou through. As mercury will surely destroy the sense 1 of smell and completely derange the 1 whole system when entering It through \ mucus surfaces. Such articles should 1 be used except on prescriptions I from reputable physicians, u the damthey wlD do ere ten fold to the good can poaslbly derive from thgm. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney, Toledo, O., contains no mercury, and b taken Internally, and acta directly upon the' blood and mucus surfaces of the system. Id buying Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure you get the genuine. it b taken internally and made In Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & Co. Cirsoid by druggists, price 75 eta. per bottle. Th* Or«ateer Curative. Electricity properly applied b the moet efficient and rational treatment of of Uie nervous system, and some morbid conditions can be treated succesaf ully only by thb means. Hundreds of former sufferers from different parts of our country, and many at Cape Msy, whom 1 have treated, bear living testimony to lb efficiency. Why suffer lingering death when you can be re- < lie veil by the .electric treatment el applied by N. H.rn, Medical ElectricIan. Broadway and York Avenue, Wat Cape May. Bend for illustrated catalogue of A us- ] trian bent wood and furniture agent, I 1410 Chestnut street. Philadelphia. . goods are strong, light and aura- -

Vnnamatir's. 1 We tell you day by day and week by week of the ' poods we have for sale, of | the attractions of the store, . of the conveniences offer, d 1 to enable you to do your : comfortably ancheasy. | If you can come to the sWtre , all these await you. But . you can enjoy them without • coming;. You and the store are nearer to-day than ever before — your wants and its power to supply. You can write for what you wish and be served as well as if you The how-to-do-it is here told. There is an important and fully organized department of our busines, employing hundreds of people, which devotes i:s energies to filling orders by mail to out-of-town customers. It is entirely independent of the regular sell ing force of the house, and , as far as possible is meant to represent the customer and

jj the interests of that customer, n People who are trained in the : qualities and values of goods j e — expert shoppers, in fact — « [; take in hand your written s order and go from counter i' to counter selecting the goods required, just as you would do if buying from a list you b have made. "All possible ° l care is exercised that the ar- . tide selected shall be just , what the writer asks for. ■ Of course there are occasional misunderstandings, and > delays sometimes occur be- c ; cause we may not have the s exact artide and must get it J or have it made, or because . customers lail to be explicit, 1 even to the omission of ouant ities, colors, and sizes. Tak- c' the many hundreds of - 1 daily orders intoconsideration, ' » thesearc few indeed. 1 But to order dearly and 5 satisfactorily you must know , the goods and their prices. *■ - Hence the General Catalogue ° of the store. Issued Spring » and Fall, containing carefully ' compiled lists of artides kept r for sale, with their price, il- , lustrated wherever possible. - t In the Catalogue you have p spread before you for your - choice the stodes of more than forty stores and so con- J . veniently arranged and in- » dexed that you can find any e . article in an instant. That's J more than most shopkeepers ? can do even in their own ; shop. If you wish that Catalogue, • ask for it. A postal card re- . quest is enough, but be sure = ; to give your name and adbyline return mJ, without 1 cost to you. r m : :

The Broadway M. £. Church people. I Camden hsvs extended * call to Rev. . George B. Wight, of Trenton, to become . their pester at the expiration of the term °' ** P"*—' P«»»or. 1 O.&O.TEA n The Claires' Th Ever Cfier-i u PERFECTLY PURE, s X MOBT DXLlClOG! BLTfiUXOL Tt 1 11 '- Tavasmtt111a7r.l1:. taTtr star as : BggisgilasSI 3 OrfenuTlt Occidental ?«s Os. .">'ix •"-* off". n-«»» dv. *•- rnr ssiter Iks beat:r-< i a.. km" en, - x. x. iroouox, West tare *17. • "■ **- BW AIW. West caps Mir. ' Wildwoot! Beach, ' ^Vildwood ' BL.*— " ^ °°* '°r : IOHPABIEL POLISH ' FOR ; FURNITURE ONLY. 1 USE AS DIRECTED. TRY IT. BOX.D -V , BENEZET & BRO, ; HORSE FOR SALE. 1 . One Pair ofj Mules Ch*ap (or > Cash. GEORGE J. REED. Holly Beach, N. J. !

lan't This Wfrfrt You N*ed. The! Indian Hemp Bitten, cooiblnc ' In a peraltarmuner the beta blood purifier and strengthening qualitia. They ire purely vegetable. It 11 one of the - beet of remedies, and succeeds when 1 purify yotrr blood, aid the digouon, and give new life and vigor to the body. , Good for dyspepsia and liver complaint I . and is a preventive • of consumpUon. . * Sold by Joan Fuastkx, J tf Green Creek. am- Advrrtisrnrnts. C^HEIUFF'S balE! O^^'tus^I WU ujare'u'' iSS? * ?ATU*P*Y, mat ska. tue. ah Uai met or renal or Isod so* (rrauao aEaSSSSS; ■oostagls ihooMowaik 00 tao sootiaoa are ot treaiiatua screw, Ma tow mm as sorb ; Hoe jMWflamlSiSC SrenroL SSTstnStS i 88£&SS*&CSx£ rlSHHSs r to Peter McUotlotn, bT tleod ,UIM Noretooer 1 ArteoAabt^ana uken in eseruuon^al the smt of 1 DatM.'r at iuree SllOI"l*ltee*a«te. There is nothing mira«K _ lous about'it. On the contrary, it is very I simple. Nevertheless, it does [ sound odd to htar that you . ■ can sit at ease at home and " by a few inhalations bring the ozone of Colorado and the ' balm of Florida "directly to ^ Odd,- ^ cause you know that — as a rule — long and ex- . pensive journeys must be 1 taken before \ou are in reach ol either health-giving atm- spheres. But Drs. Starkey & lVlen's Compound Oxygen Treatment combines these eleBecatise: It is blood food 1 pure and simple, j Because : It is inlialed di. .. rectly to the breathing surI faces. j Because : Circulation appropriates it at once and — you get well. r You can get a list of those , cured by the Oxygen Treatment by sending your address ! to Drs. Starkkv" & Pai.en, J No. 1529 Arch St., Philadeljphia, Pa.

Wanamaker & Brown again., The Store of the million for Clothing is ready. ' This Spring is the twenty-eighth at the old corner. We are tied closer than ever to everybody this season who wants to get the worth of his money in wear and style. ** You want no more. Wc are not so extravagant as to promise too much. All we expect to do is— j' Give you a better money's-worth than anybody else. Because we manufacture the Clothing. Because we take small profits. Because it's the only way to get your trade. Spring Overcoats — full styles to quiet styles : $6.50 to $25330. Spring Suits— stripes, checks, mixtures, Cheviots, - wide wales : $10.00 to $25.00. Bring the dollars you expect most for to us. You'll not be disappointed. We are more eager, abler, wiser to serve you. We want to beat last Spring's sales. Wc do in I \ the clothing. Boys' Clothing from $3.50 up to the handsomest suits ever got up. Wanamaker & Brown, Oak Hall, Sixth and Market, - Philadelphia.

H. a RUTHERFORD, 32 Washington Street, Cap* May City, N. J. M STORE. NEW GOODS AND 10W PRICES, c EVERYTHING IN HOUSEKEEPING LINE, Crocfery, Wood, Willow and Glassware. FULL LINKS OF BRVBRKB. CAPE HOUSE, — - CAPF MAY POINT, N. J. all tht Year. Heated by Steam. Lighted with Gas. Fine ~ Large Rooms well Furnished. Thirty Open Fire Places for Wood and Coal. HOT AND COLD SEA ™£TER BATHS ^ ^stomftatasenatrereerekinereM. ^ ^ HAMILTON. Manager. THE NB-W M0UNT VERNON HOTEL, " CAPE MAY CITY, NEW JERSEY. }| DIRECTLY ON THE BEACH. EVERYTHING ENTIRELY NEW. AFIMSINTKKNTB. TABU! MHI BKNV1C1: FIRBT— CI.ABM. lb TERMS REASONABLE. t, Will Ob.« jane sjtt,. » Ni.!L.' r " WILLIAM ESSEN, ' Bakery, and Ice Cream Saloon MANSION HOUSE BAKERY, No. 7 Man* on Stiaat, Capa May'City, N. J. J. W. EAGEN, Manager. c SAMUEL M- SMITH, FORMERkY WITH BAILEY, BANKS and BIDDLE, Rapiirif* FRENCH Clock, and FINE WATCHES a 8pacialW |

;IY0U "can save mohey By examining o'ur line of SPRING DRES? GOODS AND » Surah Silks, Silk Rhadames, Silk Failles, China Silks, ! ALL WOOL HENRIETTAS, SILK WARP HENRIETTAS, i PLAIN AND- PLAID WOOL SURAHS. French Challis, American Satines, French Satines, American Challis, Beaded Wraps, Braided Wraps. BRAIDED STOCKINETTE JACKETS. t ■ HALL'S No.;26ISouth Seccnc Street, PHILADELPHIA. ¥ ^"OVERCHARGED." A. C. Yates & Co. SIXTH AND CHESTNUT ST S.. Soots Mors 35ubbrr fioods. <gu. W. H. APPLEGIT, Ladies', Gent's, Misses and Children's «HFINE SHOE 3,:^No. 331 KaiBhos Avenue, Camden, N J. ELDREDOE JOHNSON ^ BOOTS AND SHOES, RUBBER GOODS A SPECIALTY. Fine Wall Papers of the Latest Patterns. R. PARKE, I 8 South Second Street, Philadelphia. Ladies' and Gents' Boots and- Shoes ffilfaifiK Start Mies' WaiteipktiSpialties. GEORGE L. LOVETT, 2 Ocen Street, Cape May, N. J. HARNESS, BLANKETS AND . 1 LAP ROBES DAYID W. RODAN, FIELD AND GARDEN SEED Coal A Wood, Flour A Feed of all Kmds, Fresh A Salt Hay in Bales. ANDREWS^MANUFACTURING CO., GENERAL SCHOOL FURNISHERS,; DOVETAILED SCHOOL FUB^TURE, MBP MlHB AnUrewa' Ulobc*. TeSnrtana, Mmpa, China, ail ktnda, 0 K- | IS PI rni AVXNL'S. pear 14lb Buret. NXW TOBK-CITT. WARE & ELDREDOE. CARPENTERS AND BUILDERS, Office, Manaion Street, Cape May, N. J. DORLAND'3 NSWSPA PEB CtiHRKSPO HDEHC E iAMMffi BDRIAD, , J.'a.BOa^XP. Prop, and Her. SELEOTH) qppnq Northern Grown SEED rrria * core Special Low Rates Ei'EUTS. L— FRF'GHT'paid. ' " w. A. khott' ' 'n^'g t ; FOR SALE, nva unk uoksx wxooxs, raica eso xacii. thbxb two kok»x wauoxs, one HHAI.L MAKKBT VJlUOJI. CAS. HAHDRXKD All ltS WITB CBiLLID BOXES ALL MADE Of TBI BEBT MATKK1A1. BO KNOTS OB FUTTT USED. UMi of TkmBINODONE. WOfLX OUAJIASTEXD. Cll .BLKa FOii.m:, catrUse rftater. E. BORHEK, PRACTICAL OPTICIAN, PARABOL/T LENSES, * (

ipmfcaat l*U*rinfl, Enrols bina 6«odJ. DONT KEEP MfflliG TDUE ' TEAM IN THE OLD RUTS. 'Taint always wisdom ta keep in the old rots nor is it policy to drop into' a store aod .make [Yurchaslss sji^ply to save time. You've no doubt heard. of our store at FIFTH, SOUTI k PASSYUNE M PIIUIIELPIll but haven't called_on us because it's a trifle out of your way. ;• You can't raise this objection now. We've added a Retail Department to pur store in the new ■ GIRARE BDILDING, 12H all MARKET STREETS. ■- We have been known for nineteen years as the manufac- | turers of the : Good Ptiilmlelpliin Made Clotlpg. • We now introduce ourselves direct to the people as Re-tailers.r--Thc location is easy of a:cess, take the Market street car at the ferry, it passes our door. N. Snellenburg & Co., WH0LESALE~:-RETAILERS, MARKET AND 12-TH STREETS, ' HiLADELPHIA. I. H. SMITH No. 47 Washington St., Cape May, N. J. FINE READY MADE CLOTHING, For Men and Boys inall Ibe Latest Styles ad tbe Lowest Prices. GENT' FURNISHING GOODS, HATS. CAPS, TRUNKS, Etc, Elc GEORGE M. POWELL, " MERCHANT TAILOR No. 15 Decatur Street, Cape Mav City, a well ae ecteu bukx o iaotaa»M(**MnararoiMi«tofli<-mweroM»nU7o*ii«i4ewln».ie Seaaooablr roa.l7.mete ItioUUnt. Qua. Capa aM full bare of Claattameu'a Purntaniae tluou t etwareereabiaire. nre.lremwt rorelrlnereumMlraUamlM to. m,* renafreWa, remq.re* ) HIRAM DeWALT, MERCHANT TAILOR, No 817 Chestnut Street, Philada. Popular Styles at Popular Prices. Itaie of best lalerial at a Reasonable Price I. L. SHEPPARD, 29 Washington Street, Cape May, N. J. GENTS FURNISHING GOODS, HATS. CAPS, DIBRELLAS. ■ HORNER'S AGENCY _a^*: Pianos, Organs & Sewing MacMnex, 5*$?? (tape Maj end Bridgeten. N. J. (SSlfi b. f. hqrnerT* " " SCISSORS: SCHOLLHORMo Full Hickle-Plated Scissors and ta, Ladies' Seism Trimmers, """""W. S. WARE. L. F URM AN SMITH, COAL AND WOOD, Schellert7BTs.l.anding. Caoe May, N. J. ~ ' WM. E.' I IAHPUR, No. 10 South 4th 8treet, Phtiadelohia. Clock, Chronometer and Watch Maker. (tocKeor xv but Disown >it kwaiked. clocks wound, bet and' HIGH OABH CLOCKS A SPECIALTY. MISS LIZZIE SMITH ERS, SPRING MILLINERY. No. 16 South Second Street, Philadelohie.