Cape May County Times, 22 August 1919 IIIF issue link — Page 7

OAPB MAT OOTOTT UMTS. SF» TSt.« CTTT. ». J.

JJMjrm ■ 111 ■ ■ I mi mi mi rnmmm

B0OQar«) Oeslwebi aad b «■ t>W *900, TOM win t]

ittttmtqHP vmm.

I TASTELESS CUi TOT

to* It ££S5»

u F ^« E » S pW« k MW btood need* (Jeinlae to PqEtfrit and to Enrich K. lb«M wBr *“ ‘

le^ 1 *****'

! cna «M H * boaW.

Ftr Hags aid Pultry Kmmir^ggjUttK

KETSTNi WECImI—>rttr t N,

litt off Corns! Doesn’t hurt > bit and Preeunt costs only a few cents.

Witt tot. finxen! Ten cm lift ofl tuy hart com. aoft com, or com between the toes, and the hart akin cat 1mm from bottom of feet A Uny bottle of Treerone- coat* little at any dm* at ore; apply a few drop* upon the com or cal'.oa. Inatantiy It atope hnrtlns. then shortly yon lift that bothersome corn or otllna right off. root and all. without one bit of pain or aoreneaa. Truly 1 Nohuiabngl ' Some ftngenr that are tampering with sonata* were Intended by nature for the typewriter.

IT’S NOT YOUR HEART; TTS YOUR KIDNEYS

Kidney diseaae is usurily n i.CMe4.ri

Tou^onlduM OOLD^Dt^HaS Wm CHI QapadM hamadlately. The soathlnK, WUnc oU sthaolataa the kidneys, relierea iaBanunstioo and de-

__ V^lS^lS^eToS Capeules. In twenty-foar hours you So5d fed hea’th and Tiror retornLg. After you fed somewhat imprared one to take one oy tw<> capsules day. so as to keep the first-efess itkm end ward off the danaer of .• attacks. * Ash for the orialael faapori IfKDAI. brand. ^Sree sisea. toadod if they do not help j

TOASTS OF RUSTIC ENGLAND PALESTINE UNO OF BEAUTY

As Mieht Bo Expected. Many of Them Have to Do With Eating and Drinking. A good rustic toast is likely to be concerned with beef and beer, like that comprehenaloa toast of Arcadian wilds, “The Nine B'a,” which U as much as to say: Baker's boat bread, butcher's' best beef anl brewert beet beer. In another form It rum:: "The Inside of t loaf, the outside of a Jail, a pound of beefsteak sad a pot of good ale." The plow la toasted by an enigma: “Life before, dead In the middle and body and soul behind.” The shy carter gives for a toast: "Scorched bread Md well bn tiered,” adding. "If that ain't toast Tm bothered." Some toasts are a Unto unklsd. as: "May Im a* *um wurrk In the 'eat go 'ungry when the frostea comes." To a farmer'a wife It la polite to raise your glass with the words: “ ’Era's good 'ealth to 'ae. ■nun. an' may yer alius 'art the strength ter push about aame as yew does now, and aot a pattern f all the funner* 1 wlrta way round.* 1 —London Homing Boat

Willing to Work.

“Old man, you are working tco hard. Ton ought to go away." "No. I prefer to stay berr. But t hare to work hard In order .o send my wife the price of anmr -r board this xesr."—LontarUle Courier-Journal.

t t"lnk*

What man haa done t

A lot of men wit! criticise e peroxide blor.de and then turn around to

ralgiiten their loupe

The moat manifest sign of wisdom "No om can do bette*: than hls h^tla conttoabt chaarfnlneas.—Montaigne, geeryone can do as we" as that.

turn Seems to Havo Expressed Determination to Make lh» Country Lovely. Palestine, In Its endless variety of Nature, seems like a miniature land Cod made himself, a tiny epitome of the whole world. Or <s It a lovely woman with a lovely iwul? Under a danllng sky It curves in swift changlna beauty through hill and valley from the river to the sea. Eve’s mystery lurks In the sand stretches of Slua*. Feminine lure la In the pur-ple-tinted mountains of Moab, a virgin calm In the Lake of Galilee under Its misty veil. Jewels shine In Palestine's bosom, the emerald Garden of Getbaemane and the sapphire see', that duos the fast-flowing Jordan by breathless Jericho. In the spring the land 1* decked In garlands of orange anti uunond blossoms ami J myriads of tiny, vlvid-hued flowers. And the Indomitable will of Judaea speaks In the low. stony, tounde. bills with their determined tufts of growth. It Is as if Jodmea ■aid to the world: “No ravager can dcapoll me. I WILL bloom." Palestine Is syelc**. running the gamut of the years In budding Galilee. In fertile Kharon. and touching eternity In the hoary loveliness of Jeru■sletn. where the century old crevices sre ss Inwutiful as a mother's wrinkles to her son.

This DrinK Doesn’t Change Its Price Its quality doesn't vary, and it doesn't start a headache.' Th* Original Postum Cereal is pure and drug-free. It will agree with you, and its rich, robust flavor makes it a big favorite. Postum is a real part of any med for old and young. “There’s a Reason”

•HOAD* BUILDING

MEET DEMANDS OF TRAFFIC Construction of Frank Highways

7. 7. Hm. in a speech spoils, January 23, 1810, j" problem of the railroad neglected for the next five.years ins It has for the last ten. It will bllfeit every form of activity by piralyaing the wnole trade." W. C. Brown, president of the New Tort Central lines, said November 5, 1012: “If car* are kept In motion at the average speed of freight trains at at present time, they would make on the average four times the mileage they do now. The trouble la the cars, as a rule, are held longer to load and unload than the time Involved In the actual movement of the cars"—that la, the terminal had the railroad by the throat and was choking three-quarters of It* efficiency out of it The prediction oi Hill wss absolutely correct A period of acute congestion Ir. railroad transportation had already set la

and would have gone to the bitter end of paralyzing every form of activity had not the motor truck, which had no terminals, gone to the rescue. Now at this time. May L 1818. another thing baa got the motor truck by the throat and is choking three-quarter* of it* efficiency out ot It. This time It U the dime museum freak construction of our eo-called good roads, not by tying up th* mol or truck r.s the locomotive was tied up Ir the terminal, but by kn Ing It and its trailers to pieces, i cutting short the life of the rolling stock, as well as making It move •lower and with not over ooe-q ter of a load over the Imperfect surfaces. Increasing the coat of motortru.k transportation way beyond whst It ought to be fer what the motor

amount It can do way down below the normal, writes Frederic 7. Hash. In New York World. Had these roads been properly cointruded they would have gone to the stock exchanges and been b< ught ard sold there, like every other kod ca transportation securities As It Is. they have gene to pieces •qd left the bondholders, th* states counties and townships, their bonus on their bands and only a scrap heap of bed roads to show for them. These freak roads, had they been offered oo the stock exchange* with only themselves as security would not have sold for one cent on the dollar. They are built on the credit of the states, counties and townships through which they passed. This at the rate of two hundred mllMons of dollars per year. A speed of 150 miles an hour on the beach at Daytona. FIs., was made last Lincoln 1 * birthday, a rate of eg which the locomotive ha* never I able to reach. Anything beyond a three-ton track load Is more than s freak highway can safely carry, while the ordinary normal load of the freight ear on Its railroad Is 50 tons. If these few things could be combined In the hlghwry—absence of terminals, a rate of speed beyond thst of the railroad, a freight-carrying tonnage equal to that of the rallroed. a cost of the upkeep less than that of the railroad, this would multiply our present means of transportation servo or etxht times and give tills country a prosperity during the next dosen year* such as we have never i-reo dreamed of. We want to chance «ur form of highway conetrartlon over night and pnl our highway securities on th# stock exchanges and not our highways on the dump heap Highway Mocks and bonds bated on the value of this proper! y-cnostrarted highway will pay a higher rate of Interest than the railway* over have, for 11 will do much

Good Reads in Arizona. Assisted by netbmal and foreat service appropristioaa. the state of Arl'-ous and ll» 14 count!*# have started upon a rosd Impr.vemaul program rM>e<'<ed to consume at least 110,OuOAOa ■end I sou* Is Anewsr. Few eonminnltlcs. except those having litre* cities in thrill with a rr lilting ti'.gh valuation, can afford a roitdrrn system of highway* and P«> m they go. The only other elterusUvo la to loan* bonds.

Imitations Are Dangerous. AN OHIO druggist writes to “The Practical Druggist,” & prominent New York Drug Journal, as follows* “Please furnish formula for Castoria. All the formulas I have worked with are either ineffective or disagreeable to adnnoIster. fr To this “The Practical Druggist” replies: r We do not supply formulas for ' proprietary articles. We couldn't if we wanted to. Your experience with imitative formulas is not surprising, but just what is to be expected. When Qattarin ii wanted, why not supply the genuine? If you make a substitute, it ia not fair or right to label it Castoria. * We can give yon all sorts of laxative preparations Ife children, hut not Castoria, and we think a mother who asks for Castoria would m* feel kindly toward you if you gave her your own product under such a name.” No mother with & spark of affection for her child will overlook the signature of Chas. H. Fletcher when buying Castoria.

Children Cry For

CASTORIA

Mother* Must Use Care. Why do we bo often can your attention to imitation* of Flrtther** Castoriaf Because it is n baby’s medicine and imitations orwalways dangeron*, particularly imitations of a remedy for Infant*. Yonr druggist may not keep an imitation but they are take fatal on drug-store shelves. Reliable druggists think only of ttie welfare of their customers. The other kind only of the greater pnxtt t» Mi

Tear own judgment tells yon that Fletcher** Castoria h over thirt- -ears at great expense held up its reputation, a ously wusl _ xi. Then, it follows that this company must one the very beat of materiaL Mnst employ expertt in the selection it the hsfba. Hast retain skilled chemists in its msmifai-tnr*-Tonr asm* good judgment moat tell yon that these irreapaasMs imitators are trading on yonr credulity and the reputation bnflk up by Mr. Fletcher, during aU them year*, for hit Castoria. ■CTHEU SHOULt CAP THE BOOKLET THAT IS ASOUKD EVETf BOTTU Of FUTOEYSCttlMM OCNUINE CASTORIA ALWATS Bears the Signature ef

Cleric—Young Van Sapp wants a suit on credit. Clothier—Sell him something that won't last over two months. He never pays for one suit until he needs an-

Befer. paconilng a Soldier. Oorp.—What w«* you before you Joined th* army? B. P.—Happy.-Meas Kit.

Just So. "What made the speaker walk across the state before be be ear to speak?" "I suppose that was the preamble of

The progress of acricultorr Is the difference between e game of chance and an «

Horrible Faux Pi “My dear you have mod mistake.” “What's the matter?" "Don't job real'ze that ibid er It morh too cool for fnraT" Fish and mosquitoes often b bite at the same tnse.

When we save money we're When the other felluw doaa tightwad.

LUCKY STRIKE cigarette It's toasted to increase the good, wholesome flavor of the Kentucky Burley tobacco. A regular man’s smoke and delicious 1

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