Cape May Herald, 15 November 1902 IIIF issue link — Page 8

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SHOPPING IN CAPE HAY.

LmDm Can Save by Buying Good* at Home—A Fact Worth Knowing.

• prevailing t that when weeriiig ap- > to I’blla-

Thcrv la an errooeoua Idea among women to eome extent

a number of Utile artlclea of wearii

parel are n«xlod they muat go

del |'lila and go “abopplng" among the big department atom* to get them. And they fancy that whatever they buy of auch storca la certainly a bargain, bong] at ".reduced" prloea, etc. Now, rlgul here at homo more geuuinc baigaiiu are to tie obtained, aa a rule, aud if lad lea will yiait the store of Mm. Milton Hand, at Weal Cape May, they will besurpriaed,

ml that Ibis

BLA8f>ROM MARIE CORELLl'

aud coiivineml tl

la tr*e. Why

b your Uouda*

carry your nionet away to the big alorea

that you can juaraa WfH apCnd w neighbor, and to better adrantagi

are uocheaper In Philadelphia than tie

aame good* are aold at home, and beaidea, you aave car fare aud other expenses. Buy your Wrappera, Dry Goods, Notions, .Trlmmluga, Millinery, Remnaula, Shoes, Hosiery, Handkerchiefs. Ties, and very many other articles, many of which

are marked lower than the aame goods

are aold at in more pretenlioua stores.

This la truth.

.Holiday goods now in stock .In great variety. Won’t you come and see them?

Would hi

price*.

Mbs. HiieTOK Hand.

venueani^

like to abow\you my goods and

Fourth avenue ai

‘ Broadway.

FISHING CREEK. Mia* M*ude Yearicka is visiting her friend Mias Etta Douglas this week. Mrs. Cynthia Matthews is yisiting her boo at Petersburg this week. ’ Mrs. Emma G. a Barnett is spending the week in Philadelphia. Misa Jennie Woolson la visiting her •later. Mrs. Harry Thompson tbisaroek. Herbert Shaw, wife and children, apent the first of the week in Philadelphia. Miss EtU Douglas spent Saturday and Sunday with Mias Maude Yearicka. Mrs. Lydia Hoffman and son Cbariea, of Holly Beach, are visiting relatives In this place. George Endicott and wife, of Burleigh, visited Daniel Wooisou and wife on Snn-

day.

Mrs. Miranda Beeves and Mrs. Jennie Learning, of West Cape May, spent Wednesday with Mrs. Wm. T. Bate. Mrs. Amelia Nickerson and daughter, 'Ethel, of South Deania are-visiting her mother this week. Mr*. Olivia Roberta and son, Stanley, of Holly Beach, spent Tuesday aud Wedueaday with O. S. Shaw and wife. Lemuel Sehellenger, of Townsends Inlet la enjoying a few days gunning trip this week. The D. of A. will hold a festival at Cold Spring Hall on Saturday evening. : November loth. GREEN CREEK. George Mlxner wheeled to the County Seat on Tuesda;

day.

n Rubios

illness, 1* nfiw rapidly improi f Mrs. Sallie Errickaon ‘la entertaining her mother, Mrs. Scull, of Angleaea. Luther Crease went to Go*bed after lumber for his bouse which is in counw p of erection. School has been closed- for the pa*t three days on account of the convention at Capo May. Mrs. Wilda Mlxner and Mrs. Bertha Crease called on Dias Creek friends Turnday afternoon. Richard Holmes has the material for a new fence to be placed around his prop-

erty here.

Miss Deborah Crease and daughter, Mrs. Mlxner, drove to Court House dur-

; leg the week.

k Coleman and- Haley Selover have rt>i turned home after, a few day’s visit in

’ Philadelphia.

The Ladies’ Aid Society will meet Thursday of this week, at the residence

of Mrs. Harry Thompson.

Edward Foster Jr. and a geo tie man friend, of Camden, are visiting Mr. and

Mr*. Edward Foster Sr.

The Misses Ethel Errickaon and Lena James spent Tuesday and Wedaeada with

i friend* at Denniaville.

r The ladles of the Arbutus Temple gave I K pot-pie supper Saturday evening in the j jLG. E. Hall. It was a grand success, | mad the pot-pie:—well, it was simply oat

L«f-sigbl

Rev. W. M. Lister raised a flag poM/or his children this week.. The flag wss i Men by ps>wer>-bjr to be np-sldo-dowu. | We hope they were not in distress of any kind. . f Probably two of the trappiest beys for j miles around, on Tuesday, wore James and Frank Fiaber, agr/ eleven and nine years respectively, j It was their very : Km gunning trip, rntd in company with j their father they sat out In quest of game | in the nearby woods. James shot three | rabbit*. Frank killed one with a club and 1 the father, Edward FUber, by killing three more made the total number of ■oven rabbits.

He’s AM Right. j ‘Uncle Josh,” 'n the play of Joabu* | Simpkins, given in the Auditorium here n Thursday evening, la an all-right old i, sod no young fellow can “make tj>” the character aa well as the old gao- ' snan so naturally play* It. Ha Is now year* of age, and has been on the • since be wss 15 yssr* old. He owns residence and oil

literals* DafcbsU With Wealth. Marie Corelli has an article entitled “Vulgarity In Wealth’* In the new Eng- [ iwh magatlno King and Country. In ‘ bitterly attacking millionaires she

writes:'

“As a nation of bombast and swag- | gcr the Dill tod States Is a kind of rare show in the world's progreaa. but her ; strength is chiefly centered in doilars. j and her Influence In the social world trochee that dollars are the only ware. ' English society has been sadly vulgar- ! Ixod by the American taint" Miss Corelli doc* not approve of either Morgan or Carnegie, says a London cable dispatch to the New York j American. •’We see J. Rkrpoot Morgan.” she writes, "a moneyed octopus stretching out his greedy tentacles in every direction and striving to grasp , the British shipping Industries and in- I terosts. Everywhere It Is devouring ; everything In Us deadly grip, which. If It is permitted to hold, would mean i mischief, though no doubt It might

un-tc* "

■rate rejoicing In America." Mr. Carnegie la freely abused far his generosity in donating libraries. He la colled a “poor human bipod." Is accused of patronage, ostentation and swagger. “The manses" under Miss Corelli hear of Carnegie strewing free libraries all over the surface of the country aa If they were so many lolllpops thrown out of a schoolboy's satchel. They follow the accounts of his doings with mingled wonder and deri-

sion. With many of t pendently thinking clam

sire Carnegie's money pitched at the public savors of a patronage which they resent and of an ostentation which they curtly call swagger. Once

wealth could not pu

Perfection Oil Heaters ME SMOKELESS AND ODORLESS

Two Styles of Finish, Japan and Nickel Maximum heat at Minimum Cost

Founts Hold Four Quarts and Burn from 8 to 12 Hours easier to Re-wick than a Lamp

Endorsed by the STANDARD OIL CONPABY If your dealer does not have them DROP A POSTAL

RICHES OF INDIANS.

BUSINESS OPPOBTUHITIES.

Flasadml n**oarr«-* of the Choctai

aad Chickasaw Tribe*.

Lo, the poor Indian. Is soon to be a poor Indian no longer. According to Mr. W. A Durant a lawyer with j Choctaw blood In his veins, the Choctaw and Chickasaw tribes of -Indians, j

chase an entrance j numbering all told about 25.000 souls, j

,dvcni»cmcDts under t | plain type, five cent*. * 111 I ADVAXCK. Display type. !<

s head. »<■! in per issue, in rents per line.]

Secar* at whole**:'-. HLj Perry street. Salted Peanut Brittle, uniy at Hogan’s.

purchase an entrance j numbering u

Into society; now It Is the only jjps* j should be at no distant day about the j ! u _*'

pie In the world,

priv- New York Evening Posi liege of personally knowing and

queatly associating with the royal family are known to accept payment for bringing otherwise obscure persons under the immediate notice of the king, and it Is a moat unfortunate and.regrettable fact that throughout the realm the word goes that no such obscure persons ever dine with their sovereign without having paid a mlddle-

“W ealth

Miss Corelli

_ iba. Is

plastered, as It were, by the merest haphaxard toes of fortune's dice on the backs of uncultured and Illiterate Americans who, bowed down like asses beneath their golden burden, are asinine! y Ignorant. In very few coses

'ealth go hand In hand * or dignity.

with MHUc

mannered. Illiterate and singularly un-

interesting In conversation."

NOTES FROM MANILA.

Philippine Capital to nave the Lar-

. Kant Theater la the Orient.

The difficulties with which the health officers have to battle In Manila are shown by the following Incident re-

ported In the Manna American:

The court of customs appeals recently handed <lown the sentence In the case of Alfred 8. Wilson. Wilson la the ex-customs officer who was Instructed to place certain condemned articles of food on the garbage ‘scow and who Instead sold them to a Chinaman for 300 pesos. The evidence showed that be did place the artlclea on the scow, but rescued them and sold them. The check which the Chinaman gave was seised, and the goods .were eventually recovered. The defense urged that the man was not acting as a customs official when he sold the goods, but as a private person, and was not therefore responsible to the customs act The decision, -ghlch is by Judge Arellano, holds that he was In a position to^know better than any private person that the goods were un-

fit for use and that the c

had not tor that reason collected the duty upon them. The sentence la that — ‘land

celvod from it

reports recently rsManlla, that city v^Ul soon

have the largest theater In the orient, says the New York Tribune. U'ls being erected on the old circus grounds, north of Calxada de Billbld. near the center of the city. The architect's description of the new National theater states that the seating capacity will be about 2.000, There will be 500 ore tra seats, 100 persons may be act modated In the boxes, 200 In the chestra circle, 800 In the family circle and L000 In the gallery. A stock < pany has been organised, and $25,000 will be apent In decorating and furnishing the new place of amusement

Games In each pound package of lion Coffee

kinds. Oet Uan Coffee and a Free Osaw ■t Year Omars.

says the I Sjieeiat—4oe UW

i the first j Hogan’*.

occupy,

Choctaws owning three-fourths and the Cblckasaws the remainder. We will

and the Cblckasaws are partners In

the country we~ Jointly (

nlng three-foui

the';

share In the proceeds of the Bale of all the surplus lauds that will be aold aftthe lauds have been allotted In severalty. Each man. woman and child la to have 820 acres of average lands. Then the surplus will be sold, and the money .goes to swell the fund we already have at Washington. Then from the Bale of town lota we will got I don’t know how many thousands. One town brought not long ago the sum of $300,000. “The biggest thing of all, however, la nr ownership of valuable coal lands. 600,000 acres of which are to be aold In the next two year*. These lauds are now being extensively mined, and our tribe get* enough royalty from them to maintain our schools. Good judges say they ought to bring from $50,000,000 to $00,000,

bll

United State*, and there appears to be no limit to the supply." Thus it appears that the Five Civilized Tribes have been maintaining a sort of trust with a corner pn town lottf The next important question is. What will they do with the money?

kind* at Campbell'*. :i08 Decatur street. Extra! Extra!! has removed to 421 Washington Street. compelled to seek moi« Commodiu* quarter* Having met with gracious encouragement

stock of

Clothing, furnishings and Shoes that lean be of greater service to you now W. L.. DOUGLAS SHOE, every pair is guaranteed. I will be pleased to see you in my new I. TENENBAUM. 421 Washington St., Cape Way

)r. H.

r Appendicitis Thee

C. Howard of Champaign. lit, the Increase 1c the number of

cases of appendicitis to the cluingea in tbc methods of milling flour, saya the New York Commercial Advertiser. Up to 1875 coses of this trouble were exceedingly rare, and be asserts'that the modem process of milling-very white fine flour, which takes from the grain nearly all the phosphates and leaves only starch and gluten, la chiefly responsible for the disease. He assert* that wherever a community baa abandoned the old fashioned coarse floors appendicitis has very' soon made Its apboarailee/ the latest illustration being hmong the negroes of the south, who, while their bread diet was solely corn IJQour, did not know what the disease [ was. As the use of fine white flour has Increased appendicitis has made Its appearance among them with most

Goald's Hew Polo Pony Para*. Thomas M- Faff of Scotch Plains, near Fairfield, N. J., has sold a farm of 200 acres in Washington valley to Georgs Gould, and It la stated that the place win be used to train ponies for polo, aays the New York Evening World. . All the Gould ponlea now at Lakewood will be taken there. The site is finely shaded, on a mountain slope, and la considered one of the finest pieces of property in that section. (The purchase price was $20,000.

Lori—Oas Lamp of Coal. Come out into the garden, Maud. For tbs black bat. Night, haa Boa And I'm searching for a lump of ca

. I am eaarrhtng her* alone. Maud. . And this la my heart's deslr*: I'd gtv* Ore dollars If I had It now To pot op the kitchen Qr*. All kinds Molaaae* Candy made treat every day at Hogan's.

Poultry, Game and Squabs killed and dreeaed to order at Campbells, 808 IT tur street.

FIND

The latest and beat for Headache* and Neuralgia. Send to

cent* to PINO CO.. ~

- - r, N. J.

Haas’ famous Mother'* Brand su'd Roll* of all kinds fancy Cake* and Biscuit*

f all kinds fancy t Campbell's, 806 I

Decatur straet.

If you are In need of ladles’ aod gents' furnishing*, or shoes, luspeot the stock carried by K. Conley, 406 Washington I *Unet. B« radnctions In ladles shirt waist* and wrappers. Agent for Barnes

Erb Laundry.

Blankets^ kU thi'bH

Cat Prices on Blankets and

Robes for Saturday. s at half the price to dose out this have bought n stock lot and must leforc they come in. Also Kobe*

and Harness.

Subic BlankeU. regular $j.5o, now $1.35- “ " “ r.oo. i.to. Robes at $3.00 are worth $5.00. •' Buffalo, $6.00, worth $10.00. Single Carriage Harness. $10x10. our make. Opeh Wagon H«rnc*».'$ti.oo, our make. . Bridles. $2.00, our make.

* lues, $1.75-

FOR SATURDAY ONLYW. A. LOVETT

57. U. _ »<

A MAN'S APPEARANCE.

Depends on

Collars t<> auli tbc neck.

Gloves that are ju»t right, Neckwear that h beoomlug. Inderwear that l* comfortable.

Socks that look pretty ami well. We furnish things worth wnarl'g

prloea worth pavlog.

Agent lor STANDARD PATTERNS.

Insurance Emancipation.

After your policy is issued you may go to the Philippines or the North Pole,or you may stay at home. In any event your premium remains the same.

The Prudential Insurance Co. of Imerica. Semi Office : Kewari, K. J JOHN F. DRYDBN. l*re»ide LESLIE D. WARD Vice I'n-Mil. EDGAR B. WARD. Secrets

H. E. RlCHAKOKON, A»»l. Supt., Cape May Court House, N J.

Picture Frames Window Glass Walter Savage 309 Mansion Street, - GAPE MAY. N. J. A large assortment just received oi Popular Priced and High Grade Framed Pictures.

OIL HEATERS • Have'Arrived. Why Fay $11.50 Per Ton for Coal? Heat Your Room With an Oil Heater. Or, Better Still, Use a National Heat Radiator Which Heats from the Waste Heat from Your Range or Any Stove.

GHAS. A. SWAIN,

305-7 JAG^SON S#.,

CAPE MAY.

P. O. Box S41.

Long Distance ’Phone

Local ’Phone 65.

Whatever U designed and manufactured in

JEWELRY,

found here within a r

a week after it it

will be four manufactured.

JACOB GARRISON.

ATLANTIC CITY BAIL ROAD. ENGINES BURN HARD COAL. NO 8MOKE. TIME TABLE In Effect OCT. 1st, 1903. Tralni leave Cape May for Philadelphia: Wyek Day* — I r»n A. M. — Arcommodntlon. Arrive Phi- /• UU ladtlphi* 0.80. y A.^SL — Exprcm. Arrive Pblh , , c Em — Expreu. Arrive rbllsdeld'35 phlaOAS. Sunday* — a.70 p - M - — F-xpre«. Arrive PhlhuklTrain* leave Philadelphia for Cape M»T Week Day* — 8.45 jJJ' — EkP"* 1 - Arrive Cape May 4* * 5 — Express. Arrive Cape May r , r F. M. — Accommodation. Aftlve 5‘*5 Cape May y STSundaya— A. M. — Express. Arrive Cspe May

[•ARE YOU LUCKY P»l in obtaining a FLOUR — that will make Good Bread — IF NOT it is because yon have failed to try GOLDEN BEAUTY made from the famous Minnesota hard wheat.

8ITLEY A SON, Inc., ^^ General Agent*, Camden, N. J. Awnrdtd First Prixe at the Ml. Holly Fair.

Latest Improved PALMER Engines

TO OON8UMPTIVIS. The undersigned haring been restored 10 heskh

|t'-r h™*™.

o hi* fellow MBtrcrt the BM*a* oi Cora To 3 •• *

base who desire It, be wOlcbeerfaSy »tni (Urt

0. L. w. KNERR Wpaiggil

618-20 WA8H1HGT0N STREET, . CAHE MA Y. N. J-

zzz-xitjcx^ car MARINE AND STATIONARY * Engines.

$$0.40 $101.60 1168 90 $197.50

ALL COXTLXn.. D. F-UCER. Agent Cape May Co.. & , '

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