CAPS MAY HERALD, THURSDAY, APRIL 5, 1906
CAPE MAY COURT MOUSE. Mm E«tft»T»ylor *p»nt tb» «ir»t of tb« wrrk with rrlmlvri 10 AlUnUO« ily. Kltoo Wprk» uml wlfr "f » r rr over Suud»y vUllorm here. M<* Tbomt* H. Hughe* of Weel l'»pe May viailed Mr* liwrge Viiace on Wo..-
i* v
11I to tireen Creek
Mr» Jame od Monday UujUngtbrad »
Mis.
» ill.
Nor
t Monday with her a
Trout.
Mm 0»mr Bu.hmll at Westcolt of lleuniivUle a MeaaicL and daughter ol Richard tJoyd «lfe aud , I Ha. I reek were entertali
I Mi»* Uuda d Mm Joaeph Millville and
bv Socra Moflat l*liiladel|
* Will
. Kettle Me aeie taking ii 11. on Thurs.1
I'hil-
the aighta i y and Fridu,
and daughterretu f -) Weal riilladelphia r •>|M-ndiug several
CUT GREEN BONE. Th* X'oat Economical Foad Whan Fad I Judiciously—A Good Food
Box to TJaa.
1 ThU article on the uae of cut green
bone waa aecured for the benefit of read cm who deaire to have the moat thoroughly up-to-date Information thU aubject. which has direct bearing upon the question of winter-egg piodm lion, say* the Country Gentleman When it 1* possible to have the cut green bone within the limit of an lay that will not exceed the value of the egg* produced, no kind- of food will equal It in value a* an egg producer. In localities where the raw material ran be obtained It la very largely uaed to advantage; .those who use admit that it excels all other kind of animal food for the laying hen. We give below a design for feed box mads of wood, which Is excellent for feeding green cut bone, for an even distribution among hens; the cut bone
FARMv£GARDI (61
week. Ralph Tow used of Cape May t ily wa> calling on friend* here Saturday. EKMA Miss Maud and tiara Fierce -pent Monday night with Miss Ruth Mcplierson at Fishing Creek. Mm Bessie Johnson entertained on Wednesday at a quilling Mm. Elia John son Mm. Allie Barne t Mrs. Albert Pier son of Fishing Creek. Mm Ijllian Hand Mrs. Ly-'ls Dickenson Mm. Aunie Hand Mrs Mary Hawn and Mm. Ber-haUand Miss Hits Neal of Kio tirande spent a few days with her friend Miss Fannie Taylor! * Miss Lillian McNeill spent bund .y with her aunt Mm. Hose Jackson at West Cape May. Mrs. George Waiters land Miss May McNeill Of Cold Bpring spent Friday with Miss Alice Hawn. Mr. and Mm. Bert Snyder are entertaining relatives from bouth Demis this week. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Hawn of Bridget<A are spending a few days With bis parents Mr. and Mm James Hawn Mrs. James Dawson and Children of West Cape May are visiting her Parents ML and -Mm. R. M. Biddle. Mr. and Mrs. Peter Guiblgh of Philadelphia have bought the. house and .ground of-Mm Montgomery and will 'move there in a few Days.
BEST FOR THE BOWELS
EAT 'EM UKE CANDY WMt. PsIaXsMs. Pnt*nt. Ts.1. Oooa. Ho *«*rr Slck.« W«a*.a or Oris*: IS. B *• ‘ u o-fboi. Writ.forms■
IEEP TOUR BLOOD CLEU
FISHING CREEK. Richard Matthews and wife spent Sunday with Albert Matthews and wife of Cold Spring. Edgar Woolson and John James spent the first of the week in Philadelphia. Mixees Maude and Clara Pierce of Erma and Ed us Barnett spent Monday evening with Ruth ^cPharson. Miss Hannah James of Philadelphia is visiting her father and ns ter Mrs. Cynthia Matthews called on Clem Matthews on Saturday. Mrs. Lydia Thomas Thomas of Holly Beach spent last week with Mrs. VanGeorge Matthews and wife called on Mrs. Bertrom Snyder on Fndsy. Harry Stiles and wife of Holly Beach spent Friday and Saturday with Lem Scbellenger and wife. John Snyder and wife entertained Albert Sohnson and wife over Sunday. Mrs. Mary Scbellenger, son and aister spent Monday with Mrs. Lois Woolson of West Cape May. Albert Woolson and lady friend from Cold Spring took tea with his parent*
on Sunday.
John Woolson and tons of Holly Beach, apent Sunday with fata father. Richard Hemmingway is the proud father of a aon.
Investors:—I havs a bargain salafoT A modern hotel, forty bed rooms, fully fur niafasd. Including silver and. Unsos. near ‘ »; ocly a small
BOX FOR FEEDING GREEK BONE
should be mixed In with the dry wheat bran, using enough of the bran to arato thoroughly the cut bone, placDg all In the feed box or trough, from which the hens can help themselves. This baa the advantage of alviamg tturn t bone equally, aa well as providing a dry brsn food, which is enjoyed '.ho hens, who make good use of It the manufacture o> eggs. The alats the trough prevent me fowls from scratching the bran about and wasllrg ing It. Cut green bone la the greet egg producer. It aids the growth of pullets Intended for winter-egg production. When fed to the young chicks, you can almost see them grow. It tains fat, lean, protein and phosphates. From this can be made all the com ponent parts of the egg, even to the shell. The egg contains about 13 per cent, of shell, a)Un, etc., 63 per cent, of water, 12 per cent, of protein and ten per cent, of fat, and a small percentage of mineral matter. TV .a would Indicate almost pure lean meal, for the bone alone, dry and frea from blood, contains about one-third animal matter and 61 per cent, of phosphate of lima. To have the beat cut green for the heny, it should be at least onehalf meat In making a comparison of foods. Mr. Jacobs says; "It will be seen that green bone, rich In blood and adhering meat, contains more protein, more fat and SO times as muen mineral matter as an egg—that Is, pound for pound (of eggs and green bone). The bona only contains all the elements for producing the egg, but has some to spare for the maintenance of the fowl.*’ This Is one of the few kinds of feed for he: that contains a toll complement of the necessary elements for making the entire egg and a surplus as weil for sustaining health and vigor. One pound of cut green bone is a full allowance per day for 16 bens; this with wheat and cracked corn and i short-cat clover or alfalfa hay. will ' e a perfect ration for the laying
SMALL DOOR FOR FOWLS. Place Through Which the Hens Car Fass and the Hons# Still IUSaw off one of the boards In the middle of the door about ten Inches from the bottom and attach hinges or strips of leather and a narrow (trip of leather with a
alit cut In the the bottom of
this small door. Turn the door bade on Its hinges and drive a nail main door through the silt in the leather. The small door can be opened and dosed easily, says the Fanners' Home. Jhrough this small opening
the hens car
plaasura. and yon have the aatlafactloa
of knowing t
The tanner's hea competes for i edance with wheat, poultry produc a aggregating half a billion dollars is
value.
A combination of tree fruits, poultry and bees in the hands of a capable person, beau lha bead as a money
aksr.
For bowel trouble give fowls copperas water, and for-swelled heads, quinine pUU. One two-grain quinine pill wlU usually euro a hen. The first year U the most profi abls year in the life of the -an. With good care a pullet will lay UO eggs the Ant rear. 100 the second, and but 60 the
third.
Set your foot down on the bMlnaw
t farm. Get cash foe / (rocs., i* where yo« egg fcM,
WELL-MADE CHEAP SLED. Construction of Handy Conveyance tor Use on Farm In the Winter Tima I have csed with much satlifactlon tor throfc vr four years a altd made on the plan ahoa-n In the cut. wrin correspondent of a farm paper. The acoed hardwood 3 xS Inches. The _ , former la cu E two pieces to form the crook fastened securely at the joint with a couple of half- . Inch bolts Th# top pieces or raves are hardwood 1(4* _ 6 Inches. A notch aeml-circular, one-half Inch deep on both tides and three Inches from ends of benches, so that when the eight one-inch csk pins are driven dowff through raves and Into the runners the whole Is held firmly together. It be made say sire, but mine Is 9*4 test long and 3*4 feet wide. For hauling corn shocks to the barn for husking and green fodder to cattle, plows, harrows. etc., to and from the field. It Is very handy. On bare ground the pole U not needed.
EFFECTIVE POST LIFTER. Can Be Hade by Fanper from Heavy Pol# 'and' Heavy piece of Pointed Iron. B. P. Wagner of Missouri has published the following description of a post lifter: A cheap and effective post
- POST LIFTER IN POSITION, lifter caa be made from a stout, wellseasoned pest about four Inches in diameter and six or seven feet long. Have It shod with a heavy piece of iron with an out-turned point After working the posts loose It is a very easy matt!- to lift them from the ground with the Implement shown In the accompanying engraving, using another post as a fulcrum.
SEASONABLE JOTTINGS.
Start a set of books. Be a busi-
ness farmer.
An English agricultural society has offered prizes for the best fenced
April Woman's He Tb. variegated fiction In tka Woman * Ham* Companion for April lodadea. ‘My FrUod Jack,” a Mam Mery, by Clara Morris; "Jeptha Martin—Peacemaker.” a tat* of the Month, by Cllntou Danger field:''Diadpllnlng Derrel,” a pn-liy love etory by Zooa Gale; “Ike Ambition of Viejo Chavrs,” a tele of the Pueblo loti lane, by Lanier Bartlett; Burton E Btevrneoo'e lively arrlal ''Affair, ol Blair,” auoibrr of Elliot Floaer’s "Harney aud Korah" akrtebea. and f vrry •-uu-itaiulng ekl>, "TbeStrengtbuf Wisdom.''b> Emery Pottle, Illustrated by Floreui Sblon. Besides Mis. Gould's faeb there ere many other practical artUire— “The Softly Shaded light." "ClocbeU*] Norfolk Jackets.'' "A OneSunirae Garden,” "Eastertide Noeellies for tb Table,” Mrs. Anus S. KicbarJaon's aeu siblr dtecuteloo of "Beauty Culture as i Profession." aud a timely eulenalomro iu "An April Fools' Party.” by Marjor. March. Published by The Cruwrll Publishlug Company. (Springfield, Ohio, one dol’ar a year: Uu crula a copy.
JH KKIFF'M (SALK. By virtue of a writ of Fieri Facias, t directed. Issued out of tbe tout t of Chancery of New Jersey. on tbe asm day of February, A. D-. I90H, In a certain cans' wherein Samuel B. MoCabe Is oomolslo ant. and John C. Blrcker, at ux. et ala., are defendants. 1 shall expose to sale at public vendor, on Monday, April 16, IG06 between tbs boon of twelve ana five o'clock p. tn- lo wit, at LOO o'clock in the afternoon of said da>, at the SberilT* office, in Cape May Coart House. Cape May County. New Jersey. All that certain lot or piece of lam premises situate in the City of Cape May. County of Cape Mav and State of New Jersey, aud docribed, as follow*: BeKiunlog at tbe south corner Grange's lot and in tbe northwest line of Columbia avenue and running thence by tbe said Hoe of Columbia avenue south forty-two degrees ami fifty nilnn'rs Ihlrir seven and six tenth, feel t-.a o of other lamia of said ]-aac U. Smith; tbeooe by tbe said other Mods at right aogl.-s with Colombia avenne north fortyeven degrees and ten minutes weal ninetywo and three tenths feet Ufa twenty fast rids alley: then or along tbe sou then* u-' Idr of aakt alley north forty one degr nod forty-five minutes east thirty-art and eight tenths Met to the north* corner of the Grange lot; theooe by the —Grange lot south forty-seven degrees tea minutes east ninety-Are and firs ha feel to the place of beginning, ooomining wi:hln said houuds three thousand five hundred and forty square (eat of lore or less. Being tbe same premises which las Smith sod wife by deed bearing date June I. 1001 and recorded in the office of the Clerk of tbe County of Cape Mav. In deed book No. W pages tl Ac , granted and cr veyrd to tbe said Kate Lawrence In fee. WILLIAM H. RBIGHT, Sheriff. Dated March IX. 1906. amta M. E. HHdreth. Sol'r. 6-16 p f pya
Dainty Work
Ladies' and Children’s Fall and Winter Presses require a special experience to insore pe^ect laundering, that is where we *an help
Tm . you. We excel along this particu-
Good time now to get the last of I lar branch of
the wood snugly piled np before
things begin to push In other dire©- LAUNDRY WORK
I will take my chances hiring the
ynsn who picks np the hoe that lies and feel sure we can satisfy the In his way, rather than the man who most fastidious customer,
goes around 1L E. L. V.
Winter on the farm Is not simply the time for resting. It Is the best time In the world to read, think and plan for the future.—Farm Journal. According to a botanical glossary aa 'ergasiophygopnyter” Is a plant that tas escaped from cultivation. Just think, comments the Rural New Torker. of having to fight such a mon-
that In our neglected Helds!
While beans will grow In a wide variety of soils and climates, says the Orange Judd Farmer, the produc tlon of the commercial crop seems to be limited, chiefly on account of the attacks of the bean weevil, to a narrow belt along tje northern border of the United Bute* and to a portion
of California.
a An Acre tor the Boy. I believe In giving the boy or girl an acre or two of good land close to the house upon the understanding that I am to furnish trees, plants and seeds to stock the plot, and that he or she Is first to supply the family with all the fruit and vegetables the family can use, and then have the balance to sell to best advantage, the proceeds to be his or her own. This will serve to center the children's In terest in the farm, says a writer In the Orange Judd Farmer, and the con victloc will toon follow that there Is no place where a person can live as pure a life aa la the
around the farm when at la the winter. But It Is wear clothes enough to keep from taking cold than it U to brag and
Troy Hand Laundry filO Decatur St. Pkeae 146
~ Wok Called for And Bsttraad
.Scientific American. I fcaaryg.'ssaga war.
raiui If you fall to take advantage of the convenience that tbe First National Bank of Cape May Court House offers, it is your own fault. We’re doing business every working day from 9 to 4. Come in and look us over.
IxxrgaM. line fruit and coulecUous la the City at Hogan's. Leavs your ontar for name eggs early Its more satisfactory to you. If In a rusk we will name eggs while you wall Horan's.
■•sold fashioned yellow jack .od sailed paaant brittle. Jelly Eggs Me Ux. at Bogwa'a.
OVER 900,000 POLICIES is the total of policies now in force in The Prudential in the State of New Jersey. What a grand endorsement of The Prudential in its home State!
a point tn Lefxjrtu-.lnfi nlnrij Bt
/ N ORDINANCE An ordinance prorldln* for thr extension t tbe erslrn of water work* owned l.j the tty of Cape Mar. New Jener. bv Us- lavlnc _f a water main of tbe ater and rl>a>ar-ter In tbl* ordinance art forth from . . pidnt I - - •
of the.
Lafayette stroet ui fiadlaon avrno-: thence ■Outb on Madlaon armor u> Cape May avenue : Hmcv with a t wrl re Inch main, south on Madlaon avenue to Beach avenne: thence with an elffht Inch main east on Hear 11 arraoe U> Wtlmlnslon avenue, and also prurldlncfur the Issuance and male of bund* of tbeCUy of Cape Mar to the amoant neressary to provide •undent fund* to pay for the cost*of tal.'rxBe It ordained and snarled by the Inhabla the City of Cape May In City Coonrll id and It U hereby marled by antbur-
lly of the •aroe.
Sect loo 1. That the system of water work, hrkwlnc to *ald rtty hr extended by Iheron■troriton of a water main, brctnnlnc at a
nlnety-flyp feet wevt
SPs
11 wuntmt iurww wtlae for Mdsfor 1 1 ^In^acculdaiw-r
urdlnance aball and. shall have * “litter of
— shall brrerrlrrd hr sad opened In Common Council of .aid city sEatrS'SUiir ssssTeS.t'ss: ndl ataorh time a* Mid Council
line to make *ucbaward: and Mid * til wtMuiul further or outer
_ -e for that purjMe borrow fur I
ofCapeMay the aam of twenty thou-1 •*-*’ 1 l**«e bond* of the
tbe proWdone of an I
act of the Lrctslatnre of the State of New 1 Jener. entitled “An Aa author!liny rtttm of
. to pay for the.— _ — Mid water ir*tem. The bond* Issued shall be coupon hand* and bear dale the First day of Mai . nos. and draw Intemu — "rw par centum per annum, with InlenM Lble arm I-annually, and Mid bond* shall «• Hold at leee than their par or face rail*-: hood* aball be In denominations of BOO •| be made payable In thirty nan date and aball be known aa Water
Mottiiigs.'.
New Line of Spring Patterns jnst received
OVER
100 Different Deirs
TO SELECT FROM
Japanese Mattings With a pretty carpet effect. Wears longer and looks better than other mattings at double the cost. Beiore buying elsewhere. Ca*l and look over our stock.
Store closes every evening at 7 o’clock
CHARLES A. SWAIN. 305-7 Jackson Street, CAPE MAY, N, J.
tn *lm Mid bond* and tbr City Bcporate seal of thr city thereto and thr City Treasurer to counter,ten the Mme and alrn
the coupon* 1!
i hereby authorised aid bond* ready fu
ifiSSS?
prepare said bond* ready fur execution be officer* of tbr city herelnaboee named, boon their e incut bn a* hereby directed Wl the Mme or any pen thereof fuqgta •t price that may be obtained there tori
ch sale or Mies shall be aDDlleo n/extendon hcrvlreferred tj'
Committee in selling i
, r ._j)defar tbe sale and delti
of all or any portion of the
Be it further ordained an enacted tbe taawance of said beads ■ sinking fond aball be created suffiaent to meet — —• jit*, and there shall be
in tbe City of Cape May. s to pay into mid sinkit necessary amount, ai Ily tbe interest on aa
fireen Tfndiiig $tnifs WITH CASH PURCHASES. MENS UNDERWEAR FROM 25c UP. MENS GOOD SUITS FROM $4.08 UP. BOYS SUITS FROM $1.50 UP. Store open evenings B9“ Special for tbe Country. Watch for my wagon. All ol tbe latest sty la clothing at the latr-' prices. JOS. LAVBMTHOL, 319 WASHDISTOK STREET
immediately npe
THOS. W. MILLET. Mayor. Attest: JNO. W. THOMPSON. Recorder.
A SB lOICS SET
We have set a high notch to reach by the time onr next report is to be called for by tbe Comptroller of the Treasury—$50,000.00 dee iti. We can do it with your p. Tell your neighbors about if; enlist them in the work; the task will be easy. Maybe we can help suggest some way to bring them in. Thr First National Bank of Caps May Court House.
1) for Uta county and adjoining territory. Salary (SO and rxpsnma paid weakly; expense money advanced. Work 1; position permanent. No In restexperieoo required. Spate time valuable. Write at oooe fur fall partiealnnd enclose aelf-oddrreaad envelope. BUPER1NTKNQSKT. IBS Uke Bi..
WK GIVE.
AABOH WOOLSON
Fishing Creek CASH DKALKH IN
Groceries and Provisions, Dry Good* and Notions- Ready Made Wrappers, Ladles and Conte Underwear. A FULL LINK OF SEEDS A Line of Seed Potatoes and Grass Seed. Agent for I. P. Thmnar Phosphate. Poultry bought every Wednesday until I o’clock. LAND LIME A 8PECISLTV. Loci 'Phone 55.
Charles T. Campbell NO- SOB WASHINGTON ST. Cape May City, New Jersey fire-insurance
ARE YOU INSURED*
Insumnte pieced on building furniture, etock, plete glue, end boiler, in the best Cotnpeniea repre*nted in the Conatry aa fuUown: UNITED FIREMEN'S INSURANCE CO. OF PH1LA. THE GERMAN INSURANCE CO. OF FREEPORT. HOME. FIRE AND MARINE OF SAN FRANCISCO. THE SUN INSURANCE OFFICE OF LONDON. THE PENNSYLVANIA CASUALTY CO. UFPHILA-

