Cape May Herald, 14 September 1901 IIIF issue link — Page 5

BORROW ISO TROUBLE. Dr. T«lmaie Sa>» li I* a Bad Habll That

book to are what aocaccncnta and dntira air far a brad. I«t twry »rek bear >ta burdena. The ahadou>

UafiU Maay to Pror*erly 'DJatbarf*

Their Outlet.

Qad Will »*et Oar Eal|tiicks at The) Aria*.

iropjriat'i iaat.1

Here are buaineaa men juat able ta man-

i^m^ps, sgfJss# irs‘BA.13 rtSksLisrs; izfti&aiSZiS&i'J*d»v ia the'SvS therco'i." 1 «?' u «"ereot. # lio not worry arxmt notea n-w.! gsuaisaujfijsysi 5 “

ii£.W£Z ! EJ-Sra *-

! no accident#- ! b»» —■ -

,k * “"S ! i a; ii, d .u ■lar. will l>e aa faithtal in 1910 aa in 1981. I Bid e hand ia mights than tha inaehina-

yonr worldly occupaatore from the torch

- -tor of ‘ •

Then

» ot atorma world, ao there ia a law of troable. a

imMmmwm

erohition. and the atorm fall (

i or the red the darknei

_ there

and they ai They make

incaa will fly

ia feet.

bce->nie t sins

with aorae per-

giSSsi

tew ‘- i triz Ssi."&zi% , &rSi si irs 1 s.u^ujsrva' Es- •fta.’rsa^ss i r srS

afii^sLS? 5»-^sirs5t 1

affs.-hb'arass SSs s\ir™™ ssr?.^ iiswrjs

E£H: S &—i i ^i^rtSkTSu 1 *^ :SSSS.^rS^

sxxJ? sr-T,

S £p p !?.ts ia;: i n vis."^

£Z:j%r£sr.s&,‘Z‘zz i ; &isrsa-i's&vsss:

THE SABBATH SCHOOL. Interriaf^nil Lettou Comments For Septanher 15. Sdhlccb Jhcob a Prince With O.d, (let. WixU.. l-32-Oolden Teat. Uke xtUU !-«•«• ary Vertat, 24-2S-CMK9Mlary at the Day'a Letaoa sii^vSS riL‘;FI"S Ixtrd would not permit him to remain -IShte Xh.ttf'lJSi.'E promise* of which he waa heir, and then, a* he could no longer live in jieare with iwSlif tffiLiSJg 1 ‘’wMInMOim..' Th— m.w.nsri snhz'mjtfi tte; E.'SKT-’^iJTS-t.riSa huinbud lumtclf before hi* lirolhrr. rccog- . luring him .M lord, and |>uUing himaelf down aa a aerrant.

'he fcjr

man, and never neglected to take every powiole precaution. D. "O (iod of my father Abraham/’ In thi* great emergency he had retourac to Sl^SSJSiJSfSSX?®; over Uihi Jordan he had nothing but hia ataff, but now be haa wivea and children 11. ’•The hand of my brother.” Jacob brother when he Uecd this expression, which implica the nUncrt cruelty, proceeding in the work of alaughUr to total cxlcr-

7. "Greatly afraid." The fojr of hia iris Aassaur 5 *

z2^

wiWoob* and wailing.

You will have nothing but m>aiu<vuue . r—•—c- — — it. ‘how‘aSdl’I LTn^tchThe righfkind ' ^ rmaUy. U^h^bit of borrowing t of flab if lie arranges line and book and: «t_wron£ becau« it_u tmbehef.^(rt bait to catch lizard* s ' “ “ “

S h Kts •■'” i is^5:r h -.f^ , a',.i 3 t. E S r .igain. the habit borrowing trouhie i «‘U wjnda upward UU «>gel. guard it-and

“ rc ; -^ s ^.•sKTri;

ana thirst the rock U cleft, and nnd the pathway rada at gafea that are TiaTigrthe^^d^ 1 p^uife^^.^das

with bending wheat, and the cattle come down from the clover paaturea to give him milk, and the orrharde yellow and ripen, railing their juicy fruiUf into hia lap. Alaa. that amid anch exnoemnce of liiraeiog man ehouM growl a* though he were a eohiier on hall •vtion* or a Kailoton short allorranr*; that n man ahould stand neck deep in harvesta looking forward to famine; that one should feel the. strong pulsea^of^health marching with reg-.

treml nets;

ItSMIl gfcsB

a man rhould a felThat n ''

of life and yet assault of sick-

liis plea os it wil] »o_r

Let pleasure chant her siren song;

Tis not the eong for me.

• To weening it will turn ere long.

For this is heaven's decree.

But there'* a song the ransomed ting

To Jeana. their exalted King, With joyful heart and tongue Oh, that's the aong for me!.

Courage, my brother! the fatlrfr doe*

day rattle the brtiken wTndow assh with , not give to hu son at school enough monpr that one whom God loves end aurroond* hut wdl meet «U your exigencies as they

. | should be lotddng fpr*

t.te SU/E.

ing’ lla» He stinted thy board V Ha* He covered thee with rafiT Has He ^ireadi trap* for thy feet and galled thy cup and neaped thr aool and wrecked thee with storm nnd thnndered aj«on thee with *'

life full of calamityr

If your father or brother come into your liank. where gold and sjlver are lying about, vou do jJot Watch them, Tor you know they are honest, but if an entire aign*. So aome men treat God not as Si ~ but a _*trangrr, and set i :

—— .^hw triftpdfl tor passed the whole of each steamer sailed in prayer to ■sfeiy and the sueccss of tl

everything in Gi " ‘

the line. Put

Jod’a hands and leave it there. Iiarge interest money to pay will • — a farm, a'store, an estate and

troubles wtH

the day

sent

n. happy buoy-!

Lhank _

laughter; adore Him for morning/=-*■• ■ in. in the casrade, soaring in tbf

soon eat up'a farm, a Ftore, the interest 03 borrowed

•warap anybody. .•Sufficient _ is tlie-evil Ihrreoh''^ • fk

The XloaBtaln Qrestlon.

Moses was to build the tabewiaclc after t-e pattern ho had received in the mount. 3od was the architect. Mere onlr the builder. That method saved much discuslion and trouble with the workers about the tabernacle. There are some things, the world cannot change; God’s plan for - ’ life is never out of date; the architecture is perfect. It is I roe* an nor Roman; it does not

it ia after the

remind*CUkToI Hia uroi

kr trffiV & 5s^ pr s p s2

eo^utod 0/SO animals.

such as to reneat —, J made by each, as they ivrly came before Ksau, uccuinpamcd with a conciliator) - message. "Pass over before me.” The)- were now near the fords of ^ae Jabbok, close to the region of expected aT'-Will a pease him.” Jacob hoped to esteem which be had instructed his serv“^.^u^^uigh, ” J«oh*ook .labbokwaa a stream flowmg into the JorssMAffiStttf&ftrr

e of ourselves and our

WHERE QUININE 15 RAISED.

le one staple drug that la now the world over la quinine. Wherever there la fever or malaria there nmture'a antidote stands ready to relieve the sufferer. From Patagoto Alaska nnd from Ceylon to Siberia the prescription used ofteaest

Is the white powder that

n Ceyl

used

t ia the prodec. The dla-

m lards

1 scum America is an 01a siory, uui Is not generally known that tha

Java

the cinchona tree Is not Indigenous, but was Introduced only after many failures and with Infinite toll and patience on the part of the Dutch gov-

ernment.

Fifty years ago a Dutchman named Hasskarl was sent to South America to obtain slips and seeds of the quinine tree. After many adventures and two years of wandering near the head waters of the Amazon. Hasskarl returned to Java with 16 saplings! They were planted and flourished remarkawell. but when the bark was first five years later, great was the

to And that Hasskarl

luped. and Uiat the saplings

were not cinchonas at all.

Another attempt was made a few years later, when an Engllsl chant, a Mr. I/cdger. sold to tb<

bly w< taken,

disappointment t

ad bei

Dutch

iger. 1

planters some cinchona seed he had obtained In Bolivia. Twenty thousand trees grau- from Ledger's seed, and

many of them are still t

1 standlag.

* quinine forests are planted

Ings h

kept

In this c ycyr, oh

slip planted alongside of Us roots, s that the quinine supply Is never dl mlnlahed. The ba r k Is stripped from the trunk by Javanese women. They cut it Into short lengths and dry it. first In the sun and later In ovens. The dried bark Is then put through a crude mill, which cuts it into small bits. These are shipped in bags to Amsterdam or Bandoeng, the centre of the

quinine Industry of Java. At the factory the baj

with an alkaloid and ground again. It Is then pumped into Immense tanks

filled with hot crude petrolei

dissolves the alkaloid from the bark.

The oil In

sulphuric acid to remove the alkaloid, and the crude quinine crystallzes when It is cooled.

«—a-it-*—*, J avoril

o; mmacii. lie lousr.eo—11a inign. anc S& s?£ “s.-sSteufe™*- c«,d,^w U^tu e-gfe ~-f &«.„*• perseverance, submission, faith—these will Great things ore ; —' *- * 1 —— •■’•"

placed in trays to dry. In 100-pound

finished quinim

nark.

ESTABLISHED 1901, FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF CAFE MAY, CAPE MAY CITY, N. J. OFFICERS GEO. W. NORCROSS, WESTLEY R. WALES, G. M. HENDRICKS enesiDENT. vice president, cashier. DIRECTORS GEO. W. NORCROSS, Capitalist and Hotel Prop . TWESTLE7 R. WALES. Phvsic-an and Druggist. EDWIN R. BRYAN, Lumrer Merchant, LCW,S i» ,>T N tv ;s;cSs,«:i:£i"°.r'” T -" w G M. HENDRICKS, Cashier, tea Tb lbm? ,IC ^eant ‘ ,epo * itor * CTCry flM:UllT which their balances and business Paid up capital, 525.000. The first and only National Hank in Cape May County Pays 3 per oeut. Interest on time deposits.

Edward UanKbssbl, Custom Tailotine. A full selection of new and up-to date Flannel Stripes, Worsted. Serges, CasMinerca and Cheviots now in slock.—At popular prices. 424 Washington Street.

HOWARD F. OTTER, No. 619 Washington SU{ Cape May City, N- J. GENKRAl/ UPHOLSTERER. RENOVATOR OF FURNITURE AND MATTRESSES. WINDOW SHADES, AWKIN3S ACT BEACH TE1.TS A SPEC^kLTT. CARPETS MADE AND PUT DOWN. . *11 wo** aaourriv arreaeco tp

ie ia now ready for the market.

The cutting down of the cinchona tree Is thd distinctive feature of Dutch quinine culture. The old South Amer-' lean method was to peel the bark and then wait four or five years until ft grew on again. But this process proved too slow for cinchona gatherers., and during the last decade thoustods of trees hare been cut down without any new ones being planted In their places. As a result, the accessible quinine forests of South America are greatly depleted and corn-

little of the from the part

where it was discovered. . Qnlnine of an Inferior quality comes from Ceylon, and the British government supplies Its army and navy hos-

ds from

THE HOMESTEAD East Corner Washington and Jackson Sts. CAPE MAY, N. J. THE CAFE is thoroughly up-to-date in all appoint. incnts. Handsomely appointed parlor* Ct J for ladies. Cottages served with Choicest Wines, Liquors and Beers. J. J. EATTY, Proprietor ■*T E? A I T K IP? DECATUR ST. (First hoj*v 1 Ci /a I I •) I i\i r rr ° m ,>c * ch > - °p en 1,1 1 Jr \ Lw I ll—Vl—C 11 w Lw year. Rooms large and aift Appointment* firm-class. On sine excellent. Rates, 52 per day. upward; $10 per week, upward. THEODORE MOELLER.

pltals the H

Tti* firenlh of Uorlroliure. ' It Is said that in the state of Connecticut there are more than 800.000 led of glass devoted wholly lo the growing of flowers for commercial ’purposes, and doubtless a similarly good showing could be made in other states. Yet not so many years ago flowers were looked upon as an expensixe luxury that, for some curious reason, whimsical rich people liked to have. Indeed. It is not too much to say that the average American of a

rath-

er ashamed to avow opcnl ing for flowers. Such have been looked upoi

effeminacy, to be - ridiculed, if not condonmed. But today the appreciation of flowers Is general and the amouat of money invested in their culUvaUcnia in the aggregate enormous. But the commercial side of the qucsUon Is. after all. subsidiary. The growing love for flowers misdirected though

MANUFACTURERS OF

M. C. SWAIN & Co.,

OFFICE if RESIDENCE, I ARTIFICIAL STONE Corgw and Queen Streets \ PAVEMENTS. CELLARS CAPE MAY. N. J. I ‘FLOORS, &c. Twenty-five Years Experience. I OF ANY COLOR OR DESIGN.

WHY HOT TRY ELWELL & ELWELL, m umE stm amjsb tie c-m «i. ra wmras stuci. For Fine Groceries and Provisions, Butter, Eggs, Etc., Salt and Smoked Meats? Orders taken and delivered.

PROM PTATT E NJ ION._

^_WRITINB,-_

openly any lik1 a taste would jon as a mark of

MECRAY’S MARKET, 623 Washington Street, - Cape May, N. J. MEATS, GROCERIeTaND PROVISIONS PT SHihPLESS' GILT-EDGE GUTTER. Country Produce Fresh Daily. Poultry of All Kinds. Squabs a Specialty. FRtiM OUR OWN FARM.

H sometimes Is, indicates an increas-

pnthy with the

if nature that Americans

Ing sympi

grow

thot

beauty and

ity^j laps

and greatest’ob-

tbeir early

Similarly, Americans somewhat achamed to

C^Midn- 0 th7 bleaaing* He wii. (V) “uved j*onrcss that they were from the doimIrom a great peril fv.ll); <2) he »a* ehlc try, because, from the point of view of to feel that a neat breach was healed (S3: the pioneer settler, the

curiosity wheSX naked hl/nsror, but he did hies* him. 1. Consider the place. It

was a place (1) of great trial (vs. 6. T); ; stacle they (2) of fanmble confession (v. 10); (8) of pioneer life.

'r-Fi on iiLtUfv iLj' 1

•ked hitherto, perhaps because«_na-

ic • first and g encountered In

4): (3) he ha (y. 281. and apbt; (4) he t

inc. and wa* a euperior man ever after. | haps poverty. Hal

a anew

made * pnnec

- freah a no

after.

“*™ I 331 the pioneer settler, the city repre-

sente,! civllltatlon. while the country

1 • . I ■ • # n — .• 1.... 1 ^ .

stood for struggle, privation and. perI haps poverty. Happily, however, that

wm:.‘s. suaw, GENERAL CONTRACTOR. 7 \ Deai.kr In' t LIME, BRICKS, SAND, CEMENT AND BUILDERS' MATERIALS. Telephone No. 30. - 523 Elmira Street*

•en-ed." These words have a deep son.. mm?--

rise upon his • er Jacob was

ither Jew n

rsz’L Christian can

Bead the Libia ST 1

beauti *• \

-highe.

! keener understanding of tb« of nature.—New York Tribu:

Olv* Kvat-rbody ■ Chanre. Emerson's dictum that treat every one as if he

ought to be Is an excellent rule pratlee in dally life. It is human ture to ride to the level that is ex-

it IL

peeled of I'

It Is not necessary to

tbr earth and the cloud* that curtain tha, • different of opinion ac to what is artistic aky and tha Mia« that waves,in the for- and baantiful in human workmanship, art; thank Him for a Bibla to read and a | man are of one mind whan tlicv stand.behaviour lo deliver. fore the.mountain-creation. The Sermon Man-.- Chriistian* Ihink it a bad aign to c.n the -Mount ia the pattern of the * ly jubilant, and their work of self-exam- , tha architecture of a right Ufa. ination is a hewing down of their brighter' , men cry: ''Back to x Ctiri»t/’ urgii

experience*. Like a boy with a

knife hacking everrtbing he eon— —

*o their self-examination ia a religion* I men the command 1 tb-t wa* given to. cutting lo pieces of tbr greeneat thing* - Moaea: "See that thoa make all thing* acthey can lay their hands on. They ipi- ' cording to-the paifem hewed thee in tha

agine they are dn.ng God * service when mount.” What*? '

thev are going about borrowi ar.d borrowing it at •‘- i —

which i» always a sure

Again, the' habit b{ borrowing trouble' ! The Setting of • Hope. ! MB dle<3 l " 1S3T ' - bnt ho on is wrong hecauae llie present is sufficiently I The setting of a great hope ia like the ing. and expect* to continue bis start- | UxMywith trial. God sees that we all ' aetting of the sun. The brightnea* of our I‘lea U long atlte liven. He w«u a rtdo- j 18 t ^ bl f!.f ad ; ,0 '! lir * '* £ onf -. Fltadow* Of evening fall „ te lut DemocntUc state con- i’• helr ont *‘» rt! drcumstances or

^iotb-TfaeU a broadct^sliadow* - ws TsnUoti and took his Bible with him.

so th«t he did not mi ax reeding the allottefi portion of Scriptures amid the

look at my memoran^m Loai^Loc. — 7- — ^ - turmoil erf pOllUca

should ell he'

flerlpturos In 1S0T. h

them

mt it is Important

:Jn con-

tect be etudfad with the desire on your part to give credit for all that

icm, and that nothing in

P. RIEGER H0TEL= RESTAURANT

1818. IE!

219. s Decatur Street, - CAPE MAY, N. J. Phone 88

SsJ S.-i.-ir its. 1 K‘5=^,2:

all the cargo intended for the entire cars- stars an** and tbs night ia holy.—H. W.

van. 1 Btrar look at my m«norm»4gm LougfqUoc. -.

tn'a Home Com pant

Sweet

lion.

SEASIDE STUDIO,' ADJOINING STOCKKtt? SURF BATHS.

^ICT’CTI^ES 23 CENTS - Ixterior and Interior . Work of all Kit Enlarged. Devetop'jig and Ptintin VIEWS OF CAPE MAY.

W. R. SMITH. Proprietor.

J5.2ST Ittids.

ting Done

Pictures Copied and

for Amateurs.