Cape May Herald, 13 December 1906 IIIF issue link — Page 4

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CAPE MAY HERALD, THURSDAY. DECEMBER 13, tgoi

CAPE MAY COUNTY NOTES

Herald Writers Present Lively News All Told one isely for Busy Readers

DIAS CREEfcn*., .1 ^ ° Ur Busy Reoder* More MAS CBSKK. ^TTs s ■ S c l.^Alo.C1.rt.l~whtsh P 1 *** 00 tD Tb. tt.worth Ix-a*-. officer. «erejc .tAAll-Jbi p«u>r Watawrtgfc* o. buoday 'T^ Tommy Seyre, • p ~"^ ^ ankle * «•* *« 0 - ' Xf> ^ U “ amw Sb.w ot Deorttetd. N. J-. ^ tMUbk her peronu. Mr. .od Mra Tboe. 5? Moeder from -eWUn* r*UU»» to Mill ^Mm. fnlonr— NOrU* aod dentkter, wro^od b!«rr»o. w. em»oo. p»- w aptod Chrletmai with,Dr. Jamea Quloey ^MraJHowaid Norton wa. tU1Ud« ber aUwr a» Kldora on Friday. Grace and wife ot Goabeo. alteodad Uhquarterly meeting bare on Sander Tax Collector C. F. Corw>n of Cod Booee. orer on Sunday afternoon. and took tbe Elder orer to prt^b at tb amlng eerrtc. at that place. & D.. A. T. Howell of Patron, ot Hubaodry. .pent laet week In Trenton 1 : »■ tending tbe eeeeion of the Grange. On the alck Hu tbi. week we mctlon Mrs Emma C. Douglaaa. Mra. Jem.ir Howell. Mra. Laura B. Howell and Wl!

Harry Norton to getting to be an expert rifle eboU ' Cbarlee H. Howell eet oat eereral bundred peach tree, from a Maryland nunery

FISHING CREEK

The Little Town Furni.bc* Maay Items ol Interest FISHING CHEEK. December 12—John Hemingway end wife of Long Island, are Ttoiting relatleee here tbto week. Edgar Foster aad eon Earl ot Pblladel phia. spent Saoday with Daniel Wooleon and family. Harry Learning and wife spent two days in Philadelphia last week. Mra. Mionloe Bate .toiled reUUree In Camden last week. Mra. Dora Eld red *e and Mtoa Edna Wooleon. spent Sunday with tbclr etoter. Mra Emily Thompson of Green Creek. m Til lie Geyer. Bessie and Lemuel

family oyer Sunday. Exekeil Eldredge and friend of Green Creek and Albert Wooleon and wife took tea with A. Wooleon and family oo Sonday afternoon. Several ot our ponog people attended extra meeting, at Burleigh last. Wednesday night. Mtoa .Barths Woolson and brother Janes spent Sunday with their conaio Jennie and Earl Woo toot.

Mr. Dooley America'. Favorite

Public Ledger NwtMw.lnc.ll “-asassnss:'2e3££2c

RIO GRANDE What la Taking Place In and About Tbe Village RIO GRANDE. Decembw IS-Wln field llarrto .pent Sunday at MlllrUle rUltlng friends. Leon Hand returned to bto position «t lo'ly Beach, after a .pell of sicknem for three weeks. Harold Morton and Mtoa Nettle Harrto. ho graduated here last spring, are going i Cape May City high school. Thom who are on the alck itot an much Improved, and are Men around tbe place again are Mrs. Thompaon, Mr. Paul and Mu. Marie B>vwn. Mis. Fannie Borden returned to ber borne Monday, baring spent Mreral days with friends here. Mr. and Mrs. Allen Day of Heuueta. were the guest of their parent, here on The Baptist church scholars are rehears lag for th»lr Christmas entertainment. W llliam Homan bought a horse and boggy last week. Mrs. Smith Kndloott made a basin toe trip to Cape May Wednesday.

Awarded lavalM’s Pension Former Coroner Swain 8. Reeves, of Cape May Point, has been awarded an invalid's pensioi of 912 per month from October 20. 1808. Coroner Reeves Is one of the bravest of veterans and red In company A. Seven b N. J. Vol, during tb* war. was one of the men who daring the summer of ISO I signed the roil call for enlistment in tbe okl Baptist church at tbe corner of Fra kiln and Lafayette streets. On Aogoet 23 be enlisted in the company mentioned, and "became a corporal on June 18. 1864, and was mustered out of tbe service on Oct, 7, 1864. He was wounded at-the battle of Get-

tysburg, Pa

FACTS TOLD IN BRIEF

Items of I ale eeet Gathered fbe Ose

Big Hue ot Fruit, Nats sod Candy Hogan'a If you wish all tbe real lies IK< then read the Haaau> All tbto week at Hogan's, lb of After Dinuer Mint, worth 83c at 10c. —Money may buy bappiness, bnt lots of people are very well satisfied with ■be imitatiun article. —We every day and ever? hour say things of another that we might more properly my of ourselves. —Don't pull down the shades in youi living room as soon as evening falls. Let yoor light shine ont to cheer the pass-

voting Machines It may be said thet if every charge against tbe voting machines in this State could be shown to be true, they would nut condemn) the new method of voting. 1his asaeruon does oot go to the extreme of declaring the voting machines perfect and desirable in every way. There ars certain objections to them that are well founded, hot none s> serious tbst they could not be essil; overcome. But with these objections ex isting. It cannot be successfully disputed that tbe machines recorded accursteii le votes cast and gave tbe correct /e Had voting machines been In use throughout Cape May County, it would have been possible for tbe oorruptors of the franchise to have purchased volea by the methods revealed daring the recent recount hers. There would have been no opportunities for bribers to have marked ballots in such a manner as to have been able to identifr them when counted, even though the codrt could only be “stupicioua.”

Big line fruit nuts and candy at Hogans

Iter. let R. Hick. 1007 Almanac The Rev. Iri K. Hicks has been compelled by the popular demand to resume tbe publication of bis well knowi and popular Almanac for 1907. This splendid Almanac is now ready. For sale by newsdealers, or sent postpaid for 25 cents, by Woxn amd Woars Pcsushixo Coxraxt, 2201 Locust Street, St. Louis, Mo., publishers of Woan axd Woexb, one of tbe best dollar monthly magnifies In America. . One Almanac goes with every sabecription.

Cape Island Ledge. No. so, F. A A. on Tomdav evening bad a double raising, and daring the evening alee elected tbe following officers for tbe term: Woreblpful Master. H- 8. Rutherford: senior warden, Frank B. Mecrej; junior warden, Walter L Savage: treasurer. IS. H Moore: secretary, a R. Stiles: proxy, Wm

BU Hus of Fruits. Nate and Candy ai

BEST FOR THE BOWELS

Tbe Wave Bold Again R. Bnggs Davenport, of Pblladel phis, baa purchased from ex-Mayor J. Henry Edmunds, the Cape May dally and weekly Wave. He took charge of tbe

plant Tuesday.

New Jem Hot In twenty years has there been a lagMatlee aearion promidng the laDnee interest of that which will aasetnMy in Trenton. Tuesday, January 8,The House will be Democratic, tbe Senate Ragubliean. On Joint ballot tbe Republicans will have a majority of seven. Already the election of a Unitad States Senator to sooted John K Dry■nilexciting popular Interest. The True American has mado arrangements for thoroughly hovering this Important session. Besides the dally reports of all routine proceedings, the undercurrent of opinions and actions which precede and lead to the Legislative act, will be carefully watched and fully reported. The contest for United States Senator to succeed John F. Drydsn has already begun. Interest is at fever beat, and a Democratic House and Republican Senate promise to maintain the intereat until the session's

dose.

The publishers will mall The True American dally, except Sunday, dur ing the entire aesslon for one dollar cash in advance. This will give sub scribers the preliminary proceedings and the aftermath, from January 1 to April 30, inclnslve. Address. TRUE AMERICAN PUB. CO.. Trenton. N. J.

GARDNER'S BUSY DAY

(CONTINUED FROM FIRST FAGEJ

unfair and ruinous competition, demoralising to markets and basil bllltj, compelling the redaction of price* below a fair margin of profit and often tbe eale of goods without profit, while also foreleg red act loo* of wagea. In vain lower tbe cost of production t of tbe prtoon ooctrector, la eome « detcrioralioa of quality and in others an entire abandonment of the manafaotnre of gradee of aboes similar to those made n. Prtoon made shore are 10 per ot the output ot legitimate shoe factories, with which It oomre into direct Twenty per cent, of tbe total output of legitimate factories Is of le same (trade or quality aa the shoes isda in prison. In farnllnre the seriously affected by the prison product The prison cot of the regular manufacturer* to market their gooda, offering to supply any of tbe goods therein lUnstratod at discounts of from SO f there In every effort to r

infactoring. Traveling salesmen find It Impossible to sail tbs trade them. In tbe brash Indaslty tbe menu fact are of »crobbing end aba* brushes ha .banrtoned by moat of the large wblcb formerly made them, owln* feet that the prtoon* are making li Him of three kinds, aad many of tbe principal manufacturer* buy the prtoon bruahes to sell with tbelr higher grede of goods. Those wbo still make the prison gr.dea cannot aelI to the toil II to the r.-tsll i department stores bay .this ctore of goods almost entirely from contractors bars In orison made goods In the working shirt and overall Industry the manufacturers cannot sell the rads at all until the low price prison mads good* are all sold out; they hare to wait until the prison* are sold np for tbe senior jf be cannot afford tbto be baa to at prtoon priors to keep bto factory to operation aad bto mas employed, aad then finds that prison prion have demoralis'd tbe market for bto whole output. In the wbtok and broom Industry tbe prtoon made goode bars a meet ~ toing effect. The prtoon broom*

of tbe regular madafacturers. Many factories Id MVeral States bare been ronutog three day* a week, while all the prison* fall time. Prtoon made wbtok* are iped to as gnat a distance as 1.4000 re, freight prepaid, and sold 82 per ■ leas than tbe manufacturer using free labor arils them f. a. b. In all of there Industries the mannfaciren are a anil in! tbelr desire for a federal tow eonflntog tl e slat* of prtoon mad* good* within the State In which they are made. Ij other words, prohibiting Iolanta ta transm toeiun of i

The experience of those Interested In legislation to prevent the telling of prison ■mr ‘ 'petition with the goode “free labor” In •■Steles demonstrates tbe most. If not legislative committees appeal'd to were favorable to tba proposition and that the Stete Legtototnres are ■eoerally willing to enact iMhtostototton for tbelr arreral dtatos bwt forthe fat always .

PPto

i of othor Stoles,

la of ber words, the State. In tbeendeai to protect its m*o of* oompetiU only encored, by withdrawing ItaownoomprUtloo. to making the State n better marfcot for the *

of other States.

a Beridos, thorn Who i 7 ef re01 as priaoa manufi

jwtartofihrir MBey

After the detatta bofl oewriooed fi “•

formality of «r

Uthtoweoka* Bom's. IB of After

December Review of Reviews. The American Monthly Review Review* for December to a valuable magazine. It* frontispiece Is of Hon. Oscar 8. Straus, tbe first Hebrew to be In a President's cabinet In 'The Prog res* of the World,” Its editorial forum. It discusses brilliantly fortyfive subjects, domefiifc and foreign, of present moment Its important article* are: Tbe Moat Prosperous Period In Our History. By Richard H. Edmonds. With many statistical tables and diagrams. President Roosevelt and Corporate Wealth. By Arthur Wallace Dunn. American History and Mural Painting. By Edward Hale Brush. With Illustrations. Eminent Foreign Composers as Guests of America. By Lawrence Gilman. With portraits. How the Kaiser Works. By Edward T. Heyn. With portraits. The New President of Brazil. With portrait of Dr. Alfonso Penna. The New Natldnal Forest Reserves to the Southern Appalachian and White Mountains. By Thomas E. Wtll With Illustration'. The Electrification of Steam Rail ways. By William Maver. Jr. With IF lustrations. Tbe Education Controversy In England. By W. T. Stead. With portraits. Leading Articles of the Month. With portraits and other Illustrations. The Season's Hew Books. With portraits and other Illustrations. i. Tbe Season's Books for Children With portraits and other Illustrations.

WANTED—GOOD MAN In each county to represent and advertise cooperative department, put out Samples, etc. Old established business bouse. Cash Salary 92Li>0 weekly, expense money advanced; permanent position. Our Reference Bankers National Bank of Chicago, capital 12,000,000. Address. THE COLUMBIA HOUSE, ChF cago, HI. Peak No. 1.

A DUTIFUL SON’S PROVIDENT INVESTMENT W. D., a foreman employed by a construction company in Atlantic City, was accidentally killed by a freight train. He carried two policies in The Prudential of $500 each. On the one he had paid only $14.63, and on the other $49.80. A check for $1,000 was promptly paid to his mother whose chief support he had been.

LIKE AHOEL'8 S0BE8 pare, spotless aad white, are the clothes that we send home. From Start to finish, onr wo r k Is properly done, thus we can insure absolutely SATISFACTORY 'RESULTS. Onr careful work has pleaaed many customers and it will surely please you.

Troy Hand Laundry filO Decatur St. Pkoae M BaT Week Called heJAnd Delivered

Watch fur Hogans weekly epeoala.

Watch for Hogans weekly sped all

ECZEMA and FILE CURE TP1JTJ5T? Knowing what Hwaa to suffer CAACl I will glre FBEK OF CHARGE to any afflicted a poritlve onr* for Eerema t Rheum. Erysipelas, Hire and Skin ■reire. 1 aslant relief. Don’t snffar long-

IF YOU HAVE REAL ESTATE

To Boy To Sell To Ifnt To Insure

SOL. NEEDLES 508 Washington St, Cape May.

Great Removal Sale IS ROW GOUTS OS AT . I. Tenenbaum’s, On account of moving in my own building, No. 414-416 Washington Strict. Therefore I have decided to clear all my. stock of Clethim*. Show* • Cents FnraUkln^i, regardless of cost. Now is your opportunity to lay in your winter clothing. Boots and shoes. Yon all know that my goods are all new and up-to-date. Yon could save at least 25 per cent daring this special sale. Come and examine our stock and select whatever yon want fop your Christmas gifts- . I. Tenenbaum, 421 Washington St. Next to Philip and Hughes’ grocery store.

o<jBrown Villa

218 PERRY STREET; CAPE MAY. OPEN ALL THE YEAR sz— . Room* Large and Airy Appointments First-class . . , J.. Near the Beach ... B. E. MURRAY.

WM. S. SHAW GENUAL CONTRA CTO! ».ii.. u , v jClme, SSriek, Sand, Cament and SSaUder* ir. Sfcaterialt. t

JAPANESE WARE BXDR HOLIDAY GIFTS

We sell more goods suitable for Xmas presents than any store in the city. Why ? Because we carry a large assortment of goods for this particular season of the year that no one else sells. Visit onr Japanese department before making your holiday purchases.

Oharles A. Swain, 305-7 JACK80K 8TEEET, CAPK MAY, N. J.

Gas Stove Tubing 1

FREE

With every Gas Heater purchased at our store. We have a complete line of Gas Heaters on hand. Come in and see them. CAPE MAT ULUMUTATIHG COMPACT 406 Washington Street. O. A. Merchant, Jr, Gen. Manager. •• LOCAL 44 Nn. S7

Established 1886.

Bell Phone 97x

The Daylight Store

Ckriiunai with *11 It’* Joy*. Merry Mute, and Child'i Freni* I*

1VB ARE ready for it with an assortment of useful things for gift giving that has never been surpassed in onr many year* of catering to the want* of the public. . la our Wen’s department we have a choke selection of useful and ornamental artkks. while oar Ladie’s, Infant’s and Children's line is unsurpasaed. The aaaortment is LARGE and the prices are RIGHT. O. L, W* KNERR, 518-20 Washington SL