CAPE MAY HERALD. THURSDAY. JUNE 13, 1907
LOCAL COUNTY ITEMS
Items oi Personal Interest For Oar But) Headers Hers Miu Fannie Tavlor has acrepted a
Mr. au>l Mr. l‘svi.1 Ha«n .pent Sunday a th 1 heir dantiliter al Holly Beach.
atten.lr.1 the mil.Iren VUay rxerctaes at Kishiuit Creek >uo<lay night. Hev. K. A. Wells aas in Millville one day la.t seek. W e are glad to u-rte that Mrs. Lock, sUo u Miller inn from an attact of tvpbold fever, i« uiocli improved. Mn. Platt iv Mailing her daughter in Philadelphia. Mr. Mary Johnson a-as in Cape May abonping one day this week. Mis. fcdith So alts was risitiDg her grandparent.. Mr and Mra Thomas
1 Seymour, of Holly resilient ot Eros, ass
1 Saturday eveu-
PLACE TO KEEP NOTE*.
A useful little artlcla that made la spars moments la memorandum slips. It Is di containing unused half sheet! of lettsra and other odd pieces of paper that are so useful for mems. and notes, and for which. If tldlneas Is to be regarded, u place must be found. The case represented la our rkeCcb I. Intended for hanging on Ihe a ill he ■ he aula uf a writing table or som?
CAPE rtAY COURT HOUSE
Miss Linda WratcoU of Dennlsvillr. 1s spending s few dsya with her cousin. Miva Myrtle Willis. Mis. Etta Hackney entertained company over Sunday. Mis. Fsnnie Wheaton b the possessor of a new piano. Mb. Ethel Heritage b .pending tbb week with her friend. Mbs Marion Kichob of Aeslon. David McPherson, wife sod children, at Cold Spring, sod Alex. Douglass, wife and baby of Burleigh were lbs guests ot Mr. and Mrs. Alex. Douglass, Sr., here on
Sunday.
Wm. Weeks and family of Atlantic City, have been spending a tew days with bis parents here. Mrs. William Jenkins of Medford, b spending this month here with her husband. who b employed in the glass work.. Mr. and Mrs. Daniels, of Caps May. Were over Sunday visitors here. Mrs. Frank Peter., of Jersey City, to ▼biting her parents. Mr. and Mrs E. P.
ither suitable place, and
wo pieces of cardboard covered with naterlal and edged with cord. There . a ribbon loop at the top by which It ; nay be suspended from the wall, and i i small tab Is sewn on In front Into ) vrhlch s pencil can be slipped. At the top Inside two pieces of tape I ire sewn, and the papers are fastened j nh> piercing a bole in them and then • lushing the tapes through and tying | :he ends together, and In this manner the papers can then be pulled away ■ne by one as they are required. The word "memoa" can be worked In silk
Littleton Simmons, of spent Sunday here. Mis. Alice Kblry has i
Philadelphia
Job Heritage, of Ilei.lrrvtllc. .pent Son day her* with Wm Powell and wife or
HEW COATS ARE PICTURESQUE.
We have tor some years past been accustoming ourselves to gorgeous and picturesque evening cloaks, but now an and luxury have been called Into play In wraps for all purposes, and. though the severe and conservative coat still has Its time and place, there are few times and places for which a woman can not secure a picture coaL Cape models are Increasingly popular. but an amazing amount of variety Is obtained In these lines through clever drapery for sleeve purposes. Many of the cape* hang straight and long In front and back, but are so cut that they may be caught up In deep plaits to elbow length at each sUs In order to allow play to the anna. The kimono sleeve Is epidemic In the cloak realm as In that of the little suit coat, and Chinese and Japanese Ideas are In high favor with French designers. Delightful little short msadn-ln coats In dull blue, richly embroidered In blues and yellows and made upon the true oriental lines, have been brought over by some Importers snd are delectable Utile things to slip on over an airy summer frock In white or la a color with which the blue will not clash. Short loose coats of taffeta In white or delicate color, elaborately embroidered In soutache of the same tone, are also among the Imported short coats for summer wear, and the little abort wraps In cloth. In linen, and In luce are beyond counting. Some hip length taffetn coats, very simple of line, made seml ffttlng and with loose, short kimono sleeves and trimmed with a wide band of dyed eluny or filet set Just Inside the bordering hems, are made for wear with sheer frocks or with two-piece frocks of voile the shade of the taffeta. Natural hoed pongee or tuaaor, handsomely embroidered or braided In self-tone, makes s chic and servioeuble little short coat of the picturesque sort, and occasionally one finds a coat of this kind ' with touches of green and black or of bright red and black relieving Its neutral tone.
CURE FOR RED ARMS. Poor Circulation Has Much to Do with This Defect. Poor circulation Is responsible for note beauty defects than anything else. Particularly la It to blame for red arms. Of course, one's arms may 1>e reddened by untimely exposure to the weather, but If the circulation bo good the first warm week or two will n-ork a cure. It's the redness that iomes from sluggish blood movement that's hardest to remedy. A beauty doctor says the best way to Improve Ihe geneisl circulation la to keep the •- xtremitlea warm, take abundant exerriae. eat only nourishing food and avoid tight as well as damp garments. In that he is at one with the family physician. A capital cure for redness of the arms Is to work op a creamy lather of first-class soap and massage the members night and morning. The ather. of course, should be removed with warm water and the arms dried i borouchly. Next take half a lime and i ub the akin with It vigorously until all the Juice is out. The beauty doctor asserts that this Is n sure cure In meet Instances. An alternative method which ran be recommended la that of applying a paste of oatmeal and water. The finest Scotch meal should be used. handful being stirred with a wooden stick, a teaspoonfnl of borax and a ammonia added, and the whole well mixed. This should be allowed to cool, then applied to the arms with a -omplexlon brush, and the paste allowed to dry on. It should then be wiped off with a damp sponge and the arms dried with a soft towel.
Useful Sponge Bag. Not very decorative is the ordinary aponge bag In a plain or checkered waterproof material, so many housekeepers have ornamental outer coverings made These should he of washable materlali. either linen or crash, and can be worked with the words "Sponge Bag." doae In plain black or In old English, with a little scroll effect underneath. This lettering can be done either In double outline, filled In with n fine seeding, or cross stitch mm be substituted. Use a mercerized cotton In ted - old blue. Make the bag from one long, straight piece, doubled and sewed to within three or four Inches from the top. Turn over In n deep hem on each tide, held by two rows of stitching for a casing, and run through It n cotton cord and tassel of the same color as the embroidery.
POLKA DOTE TO RIVAL CHECKS.
Adjusting the Veil. . The adjustment of the veil U quite other than formerly. Now that the weight ot the bat Is all toward the beck and downward drooping It gives a contrary Ho* H we continue to draw the tulle tight!; under the chin and ap over the bar* of the bead to knot at the crown. Instead the veil must be drawn nerres the front of the hat and downward, knotting at the base of the brain. The lower edge of the
Polka dots are rivaling stripes and leeks as the characteristic decoration of the summer. They are to be ven on every eort of material and on an sorts of accessories to the toilet. There are among the new materials a great variety of polka dot chiffon In the color*, the design being formed of an sites of polka doc Borne of the mis are white with colored polka and some are In the pale tints with darker polka dot*. There are elmany patterns showing dark nds with lighter dots, and nothing Is more fashionable than the black grounds with white polka dots, unless it be the white grounds with black polka dots. In fact la the polka dot effects, ns In the cheeks and stripes, the black and white oomMaaUon seems to be the most satisfactory. Most of the chiffons which have a colored design on a white ground have n plain hand of color around the foot
ft
Sell Recommend
L
OWNETS I HOCOLATES
And Bon-Bons l-4s, l-2s, Is, 2s, 3s, and 5 Pound Hoses
Everything Fresh 2Ed Pore In Candy
W. S. HOGAN, [Corner Washington & Decatur Streets
WASHINGTON LETTER (Special Conwpondcnce-l t la not such a pmMtlr world when H hard beaded cougreas will upend yiuo.ooo for u sen nltnr to sentiment, ^^^^^^^^^^^■u'ldlug of the old Irrigate Constitution means. She has been rebuilt to the exact model of her | first self. Again a full rigged ship. may spread the stately pyramid of snowy canvas which carried her safely | from one pursuing fleet and maneuvered her so craftily Into position for raking the Ooerriere. Tbs Gusrrisrs's Ball. They have dug np the Guerriere's bell. too. which will again strike the hours on the frigate's deck aa It did! from the date of that famous fight to about 1S4K This bell bas a history of | Ills own. for it was cast by one I’etiv Idlest of Amsterdam In the year 1300. stolen from Holland by aoldlers of the ! French revelation and was Installed on the Gnerriere In time for the capture of that ship by the English. When the Guerriere was In turn sunk by the Americans a midshipman sent to save anything removable from her decks brought back the bell. Woedsn Walls and SUsL When the Constitution was turned ut new a second time from Boston, here she was launched In September, 17V7. the old ship found a grim looking line of sisters to welcome her return. For years the Constitution bas been carried on the navy list as "unservlce ■bis.'' The fiscal year which sees her tv-turn to the active list will see that 1 decorated with the mimes of twen-ty-five modern steel battleshliis of the first class. This summer see* the American navy with more battleships In commission than any nation except Great Britain. Bis New Battleship*. J Of the nineteen battleships on the active list only the Wisconsin and Oregon are In yards under such repairs tint take them out of commissloa temporarily. France, baring more battleMft built, bas but thirteen In commissi on at this time. Germany bas American battleships will go Into commission daring the coming fiscal year If the plans of the bureau of construction for rushing the work ' and by the end of the year armored cruisers, which can take their place In the front line of battle, will also be In commission. The New snd the Old. The frigate Constitution corresponded to the armored cruiser fat her day. X duplicate of her old battery will be reinstalled In her gun porta. 8be had thirty long twenty-four pounders and twenty-four thirty-two-pounder*, or, words, her batteries could discharge 1.488 pounds of shot altnultaneoualy, or about 744 In broadside. One twelve Inch gnn on one of the sister ships the rejuvenated Constitution will meet liras a shell heavier than her whole broadside. to* #f tfi* National Bird. Lillian Deverenx Blake of New Yorit, who proclaims that the esgle itlonal coat of arms Is a lady bird, and the earn tor of the Harvard mussum. who says no one can tell hat the government'* Idea was as ) sex. an both la arrer. U la {Mainly recorded In official document* that Ihe father* selected an eagle of the male CaHard Hunt, chief of the passport division of the state department. Is the greatest living authority on the naof the eagle. M 1* traa. bas bean called to hi* airenthm only In the last few day*. To settle It he Inalmd up the description of the coat at a
in his nltilxtcr.it trundle of thirteen nrrowa. all proper, and In hi* beak a arroll. InanHied with this motto. 'B plurlbns nnmn.*" "That settle* Hie question." observed Mr. Hunt, “for that l* the law. See that word •hi*?' tt could not be a ladybird." Mr. Pinchot’s Trip. Gifford Plucbot, chief forester, dropped In at the White House a few day* ago to say p odtiy lo the president and Secretsrj- l-oeb prior to bis departure for the west where be will remain until the falL He Is to accompany the Inland waterway* commission on Its trip on the Mississippi river and will afturwnrd nit end the public land meeting at Denver from the 18th to the 2Mth of June. This gathering Is to be held for the general discussion of public land matter* and has been Inaugurated by Governor Bochtel of Colo redo, who has been interesting the governor* of the various western state* In the meeting From Denver Mr. Pincbot will go to Idaho and during the remainder of the summer hopes to visit n mmilier of the forest reAn Agricultural Explorer. Probably nolody In the government service bas had so many Interesting and unusual experiences as bare fallen to the lot within the last year of Professor Frank N. Meyer, explorer for the agricultural department He has just completed a remarkable tour of China. Korea and Alaska In search of plant*, flowers nnd cereal*. In the prosecution of his work be
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rHS~=: . ■
parts of tbose lands which It Is believed wet* never before visited by white man. He baa brought back to Washington specimens of plants, flowera and cereals that are new to the agricultural department. CABL BCUOFIKLD.
In the time of Augustus Caesar hooka In the form of papyrus roll*, copied by overworked nnd underpaid slaves from the authors’ original manuscript, were abundant and a lahlngly cheap. Horace bints In oi his epistles that his works were being pirated and sold so cheap that they were getting Into the hands of the rabble and becoming schoolbooks. Martial. In one of his epigrams, says that a copy of bis Thirteenth book may be bought for 4 numml (about U ct and that If Trypboo, the books should sell It at 3 numml be would ■tin gut a profit Both Horses and Martial convey the Idea that their publishers occasionally put out larger editions than could be sold. In the ter of editions de luxe; Martial writes that a volume of hi* epigrams “poltsbed with pamlce stone snd Incased In purple may be bought at A tract US’ for 8 denarii" (about 80 cental.—New York
HI* Trlfcet* *• T*s*n*Fauee. The temperance reformer was Justly proud at having converted the biggest drunkard In the little Scotch town Induced him—be was the local gravedigger—to get tip on the platform and testify. This is how be did tt: "My friend*." he said. "1 never tbocht stand upon this platform with the pro-
clerk on the Ither side of me. In thoebt to ten ye that for a whole month I baveua' touched a ilrap of anything. I've saved enough to buy me ■ I
rale of decrease to about aa tech for ‘feat of atrvatioa, *i *
HTHIFLEB,” said Michael 1 Angelo, "make perfection, and perfection is no trifle ” Tim amount that you will pay for a Life Insurance Policy in
The Prudential
may be but a trifle, but this trifle means insurance protection for your family, and that is no trifle.
Skating! Skating!
WASHINGTON STREET Near the Reading Railroad Station Finest Floor Possible. High-Class Patronage and Equipment ORCHESTRA^
Parflenlar Attention Paid to Beginners Sessions (rom 3.00 to 5.30 P. M., and (rom 8.00 lo 10.30 P. M. ADMISSION, 25c.
NOTICE TO OYSTER PLAN TERS
la hereby riv toad* of the Stale of New Jeraey under the tidal waters of the Delaware bay and Maurice river cove below the line running di vect from the month of Straight creek lo Croaa Ledge Lightbonac. asd commonly kaown a* Ihe ' Southwest Line," sad uwd aad enjoyed by such Icaaec* for the taking. pUnling aad cultivating of oyster*, that all lease, for such lands heretofore granted by the New Jersey State Oyster Commissi' n. expire on, JUNE so. 1907. ad mast be renewed oa or before that Ma. The law require* that each applicant for lease shall make and file the prescribed ath aad shall pay the rental in adtanc*. Failure lo com ply with the law works a forfeiture of the existing lease* and all lessee* la aad to their
_r*faq«bed to < 1^ and may lease the e 'jeSZmiah n. ocden. EDMUND 8TITES. JB. OGDEN GANDY. WILLIAM DeGKOFF. ALONZO T. BACON. Sup*.. Ice and Foot Office Address. Maurice River. New Jersey.
Notice to Taxpayers
Notice is heresy given that lor all peraooal taxes for the v ear 1906. which shah not c been paid by Mxy 15. 1907. tax warts will be issued after that date, accord"Jotice it hereby farther given that *11 es on real estate for 1006. which have beea^paid by Jalj, 1.^ ipoy^strU after that of the real ratal? Ugiveaimmi cordngto law. Dstofi May 1. 1907. SOt. NEEDLES.
1 Mvertbcaarts
this head will
Big baa of fruit,, uuU and candles at Humus.
Don't miss your last ebaoos to buy 1
E o e 03 CO -I
3 >2
One Welsbach Lamp Will give you More Light than
4 Open Flame Cat Burners or 4 Electric Lights AT 1-4 THE COST
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f fatal Mm i tsanilkianut - - KinllinUwll BIU lenenher—We it Plembin, CAPS MAY ttlDKOTATOIO COMPANY 406 Washington Street O. A Merchant, J,. Gen. Manager. ■■“”»!'« £ «

