Cape May Herald, 30 April 1908 IIIF issue link — Page 3

CAfg MAY HERALD, THURSDAY. APKIL 30. 1908

• Paper Wit* the Sixth, e la tlio United ^Utes. The bolktlnc ol ■The PhOedelrM i Ere nine BrteUn." a pletnre qfi which 1- ■ hown.above, and which baa Mat l>c'n occopttfl. ,1» uoauiraaiw! by mjy Mruetun-ug-lia Mod tp the world. It • aVwnr tnorooirtitr preetiiii Ur,-.

up-to-date newapaper plar.ta li e..l-tcace. | "The Butletlp" Jioa a (!|cMplira which i now reachca far bcyocl the bfeLcat polr.eJ attained by a *1 *ily w«i< Wi, .1;-r In j

le powerful raya. make - brneht no dayllaht at all The eompoatnir room occuplea the entire Inth e.-ir jt la probably one of the beat .nd moat thorouphly equipped of In exlatence. The battery of

aextuple web perfecting Hoe prerw-« Ki preaa haa a capadly of 7J.r»IO rlaht-puce papera an hour. aitCuO twelve-pace pvpe.or st.au atxteen. twenty, twenty-two or

t*enty-foor Page papera.

Ba ch of these glean tie preaaea contain' *’® no Integral parta Any one cf them Win ronrutne twenty-live or thirty mile, of paper an hour when worklnc r.t full •peed. The pvese. a are operated by a »>■*- tem of automatic eon trot the preaeure n' a button giving the prrsvman abwdute command of the Intrlrate marhlnerv. Tit' brrasea are aupplled with Ink automatl'ally by a apedally designed pump Jnde. pendent electric motors furnish the power for each press. Every piece of maehln-'r cry In the building la gbnllarlr operated.. t

e column o. -V , maro Africa. The walla of the 1 are wamsrotrd with natural Clreas-wnlm-t. The floor consists of marble

boys' recrmtlon room and r

partmrnta are on the eighth floor, the tatervenlne floors being used " *

•nd professional purposes

IS COOK FOO ft KING

M. MKNAQIH, FRENCHMAN, A 0ENIUE IN HIE ART.

telyou, when *lrln* oyer the depart taeot declared be wai easily the moat eOdnnt worker la any dlvltlon' of the national employ. It la undoubtedly on the rsrommendatlon of Mr. Cortelyou that be is

Edward Vl|. Raya *10,000 Ealary Yaae ly to Monarch of Reyal Kitchen Who Prepares Meals at Boek-

tbe prlrllegse which the sovereign Is still allowed to retain In democratic England ia tba appointment of bla own chef. When there la a change of ministry trine Edward, at the dictation of tha prime minister, haa to take on a new lord chamberlain, who la nominally' the boas of the upstairs department of the royal household, and a new lord steward, who la supposed to have supreme control of the culinary department But the real monarch of the palace kitchen, the "chief cook," as he if officially styled In good old AngloSaxon, la not subject to the vicissitudes of politics. Whatever party i» fa power he continues to hold hla Job at hit majesty's pleasure, which is Just as long aa he contrives to satisfy hla majesty's highly cultivated epicurean Us tea. This 1* a matter which really affects the king more closely than a change of administration, for whether the liberala or the conservatives are In a majority. be can exercise very little conTbe august functionary who ministers to (he royal appetite Is M Juste Mcnager, a native of the land of good cooks, and something over 40 years Of age. He geU 110,000 a year, which Is *500 more than la paid the Brat eea lord of the admiralty, the famous Sir "Jackie" Flaber. who practically nina the British nary. M Menager haa an enay billet. He Is paid hla big salary not ao much for

what be actually does, aa for knowing

how to do It

So great a culinary artist la not expected to produce three masterpieces In one day. With the breakfast of the king, which U always a modest meal, he does not concern himself. He la hot required to sleep tinder hU master’s roof like moet of the royal menials, but lives In a private residence a abort distance from Buckingham palace. He always drives to the palace, arriving there shortly after 11 o'dpck. In hla own pilvate office, a gunny apartment adjoining the kitchen and overlooking lawns, be receives the

raws op by Uo(d JTarir of the king's hoeee-

Dock the Lambs Early. One of tlie gravest mistakes and most needless ones a sbepberd con make Is to leave I be docking of the Jambs ill lb A- are large or several months old.' Tills trimming liualnes* can lie attended lo vrl.cn the lambs are young ami I»*for» brat and fllrs make the Job an unnecessarily painful and risky one. When lambs an- a few daya old. the tails can lie tskec off

A few days Uler the other work can be done, and all will be well. To defer this la only to make a harder job of It and a more risky one. and often a flock of lambs is act back by It folly a mouth's growth. If done early, the lambs win notice It but very little, and If-tfc«-weather is favorable, not at alt

Waiters Get Leg Weary. "I am going to take a month off. sir.'* ■aid a waiter In a fashionable New Tort restaurant '1 bars become leg

“Leg weatyr be sald.% “Why, that la a horse's disease, lant Itr Tea, air: but we waiters get It too. sometimes" . "How don It affect your “Mweb the same aa It affects a bone, air. The kgs become numb. They don't mind yon right. Tbey nr® apt le crumple under you a»d lat ywu down. Leg weariness Is caused by too nroCb leg work. sir. It ia like writers- cramp EPrao too murk writing the band gives out FTOcn too much trotting the legs give out “When a bone gets leg weary tbey put him to pasture for a month. With my leg weariness I’ll alt at home on a rocking chair, and with the paper*, my pipe and hooka IT1 Uke It easy tin «y legs tone up again."

No Chancs. “Do you think his interest In art will ever ninouut to anything?" “No.” answered Miss Cayenne. “Ha la toi well off to become an artist himself and not rich enough to become a conuoisaeur."—Washington Btar. Not In Hot Estimation. "1 suppose you regard marriage as a failure!." "No," replied tha lady who had secured throe divorces. “I've succeeded In getting a fair bunch of alimony each time."—Chicago Becord-Uerald. Implacable. “Jlmxon'a widow threatens to break Is will.” *T thought she approved of It?” “Yes. but she can't fond re him for dying during bouseeleaning time."— Cleveland Main Dealer.

quhar. the master

bold, and begins hla day’s work. The office of the lord steward, who ia nominally at the head of the gastronomic department, la practically Sinecure, it la at present tiled by Lord Hawkeebury. who pockets $10. 000 a year for drawing hla salary and looking Imposing on aUte occasions when hla attendance la required. IX M Menager were capable of he might occasionally envy the lord stamard. Bat be has.decIMwd be would not be happy U be wor able to practice bla art Aad • as fame la concerned, aa the king’s chef he enjoys a far greater of It than la bestowed on any figurehead functionary. Bealdea abundance of leisure la allowed him In which to

cultivate bla

Rlanesd For Colts.

A tablespoonful of flaxseed meal ad-' ed to the grain ration of each weanling eolt every night will have a lirnefirlal effect upon the I®wets sad give a gkau to the coat. Money spent fur flaxseed meal to feed to the youngsters I* an la

■ BO p

Hubby—My pet you will pardon me, ut aren't these griddle cakes a Uttla burned? Wiley (almost In tears)-Ob. Tom. and 1 tried to make them so prat tj tor yon with that pyrograpb set you gave roe!—Boston Transcript Let i

e tall you that evary misery 1

by Eerturner In the yaar 1803.

demo ns trs tad by

A Paradox of Flight. A paradox of flight ' experiment la that the

wind blows against a certain f curved wing surface the less ance does the bird offer IL

Tha MoakraL

From the end of its nose to of Its tall the fun grown about eighteen Inches long. Ita color ! a grayish red. shading to black aroun the rouaxle. legs and feet. Tba f«r ! tarter coarse and thickly Ailed Wll long, coarse hair. The tall ia devoid a

n Is served be ts free ease® until art o'doct rations for the great vent of hla do-main-dinner—begin. At hla command for this work are four muter cooks, aad a retinue of well-trained attendanta, all dad ta Immaculate linen. Perfect discipline prevails among them. Clockwork reggularlty la U« rule. Each dish la begun and finished within a minute of the appointed time. Few words are apoken. 71>e king’s kitchen contains thing Uke *10.000 worth of ntensiu. no leu than 800 j of them of copper, and five -e solely employed to keep them brightly burnished. There are 4.000 knives. 8.000 forks, and aa apoons of various sixes used for cookand kitchen purposes. For the service of the royal table there 8.000 forks and spoons of massive sll‘iv./i jH Of ’I Like the king himself, M Menager to tactful man. Ha I please the women folk and the mu who does that ia sura to be popular. He hu badly challenged the opinion cntertalord by moet exalt* that women are Incapable of ing the higher mysteries of the culinary art. He eaeotrages . . asraral of I Ingham palace. He has declared that there are at' leut half a do-ien women cooks In London who are capable of preparing a dinner fit lot the ktu*. TO EUCCffCO^ICC It prARY kOEB. Assistant Postmaster General Hitch-

"in my Pelbcr'v

FRANK H. HITCHCOCK, ited ae Loeb'e Successor as Secretary to the President.) going to got bla new appointment, for he to regarded as Just the mu to carry out the spirit which hu prevailed there for some time. Hitchcock Is a mu from the ranks, i example of what cu be done In Washington without pull. Educated In Boston schools ud working bis way bo went to Harvard and graduated In 1**1. Ont of Harvard he was recommended to Washington for chief clerk of a department, ud down there he came. But department work did not hold him. for he took up tiro atudy of tow, ud graduated from the Col urn blu law school In Wuhlngton and wu admitted to practice before the

Meanwhile ha had been taking oth ’ civil service examinations In various places, ud finally attracted the attention of Cortelyou, who took him under hla wing.

COLON’S NEW OFFICE BUILDING.

New Orleans—The flrsl office building In ColoiAru recently opened to tenuts through the enterprise of Isidore Rich, a Central American trader of this city. The building occupies a lot 60x85 feet. Is of aubstutlal construction and contains 44 rooms, every one of which has already been taken, besides the two stores on the ground floor. Mr. Rich haa been trading In the tropics for a lifetime almost, ud to

GOLDEN TEXT, house are many mai

TIME —Thursday . >. JO. Jaws' -

dlariplse wu

ils rruclflxlon.

PLACE - An upper room la Jarusaleau Comment and Suggestive Thought. The world ud everything In It. Is a bundle of needs. Everything Is hungry. The grouhd greedily drinks In the rain ud the sun. The tree ttretches Its hungry roots Into th<soil ud Its hungry leaves Into the air Tour house Is a focui for Incomlnx supplies, of coal, and food, and * thousand luxuries. Every man Is buu gry for bread, ud air, and knowledge,

and love.

This sense of iu-ed In mu Is a «ooU thing. Without It. there could life, no growth. When u child hungry. Its rarea's Justly begl-i r for Its health. When lie soi' lot see Its needs. It to in a sad

condition.

Perhaps the chief cause of the disciples' trouble was Christ's predicted departure Into the Great Unknown. See John 13:36. All that have seen their dear ones slipping from slrht un derstud that one of the principal hu needs ud desires Is to know whither they have gone, ud If there to be a reunion. Christ answered that question for them and for us. By revealing heavan as a place. Father' house. Heaven to a homelike plaoe. familiar and dear, with llgbta shining for ut In the windows, ud the Father waiting for us at the

open door.

By revealing heaven as s place Of private, personal abodes, not a vast caravansary. In It “are many man ‘abiding-places.” "muslons" coming from muere. to remain. These

First Office Building ' In Colon.

thoroughly posted

n all matters he foresaw the American occspatlon of the Isthmus of Panama ud made a few Investments In Colon. He established the Amertcu Trading company there ud developed It Into a successful enterprise. A fact that to not generally known to that all the lud upon which the city of Colon ta trail! belongs to the Panama Railroad oompuy, ud there fore to the United States government The land to leased for periods of five years at so much per annum, acoordIng to the location of the loL CIRCUMSTANTIAL EVIDENCE.

The lata Senator Pugh, of Alabama practiced law for many year* In Eo fanla. A Eufaula mu said of him the other day: “In u eloquent speech on dream stutlal evidence I once beard Senator Pugh drive home the danger of hla sort of evidence with a good lory. "Ho said that a Eufaula woman

for which the ladles of our state are famous. She put the pudding on shelf to cool ud then she went out to have a dress fitted. Her little Jabes was left alone In the house. “Jabex played with hla toys till got hungry. Than he put a chair neart the shelf. cUmbed np and ate all of the delldooa pone podding that hto small Interior would possibly hold. To condode. he did a strange tl "He caught the cat, dabbled her four paws In the soft yellow custard In tha bottom of the dlah ud then sat her down. She scampered through the kitchen Into the dining-room ud parlor ud thence out of door*. On tha bare boards of tha kitchen, on the dlalng-room'a red carpet ud on the parlor’s carpet of green she left Impartially small golden footprints, very neat, very conspicuous. The boy smiled softly to himself. “And that evening, on his father'# return he beard e wild scampering below. the banging of the front door, n terrific mewing ud the sharp crack of a rifle. “Then little Jabes smiled softly

f

Tha Troth of IL dare say, I do look mad. Jlgley says I'm the wont Uar ha ever saw. Wlaatnu—Oh, that’s a gross libel. Bluster#—Of course. It to. Wiseman—Well. I should eay. Why. everybody admits you're a pretty good — Standard ud

“Old Peng born Is working him sell to akin and bone trying to keep that

I.KMON TEXT—John

The History of -:Cape May County:FROM THE ABORIGINAL TIMES TO THE PRESENT DAY EMBRACING

abodes Uke oars on earth. 3. By reraeUng heaven as a large place, with many mansions—room for all. "Heaven will contain Immense throngs wlihont being crowded. I to children will be u the grains of sand bar the ocean's waves, or the stars that begem the rank of night Yet there Is room! The many mansions are not all tenanted."—F. B. Meyer. By revealing heaven aa a prepared plaoe; prepared, moreover, by me heat able to make It delight ful, since he la the creator of Ml de Ugbtful things on earth, and thor oughly knows our tastes ud desires B. By revealing heaved aa the place of eommunlon with Christ That wa tba purpose of hto going, which ssj d hto dlsdplea—to make ready a .place to which he could bring the:., a fellowship without any parting6. By insisting that what was left unrevealed concerning the hereafter Is to, be thought of as joyful ud not grievous. "If It were not so." If heav •are not this warm, loving, home Ilka, beautifal place, ~I would hanyou,” would have warned you ud prepared you. It to not enough to know the truth about God. or.be In the way to God. or to have the divine life In us: tinhumu soul longs after God himself Our Lord met this need by disch s Ing the final, supreme truth, that he God: “If ye had known me."—

AN account of the Aborigines; The Dutch in Delaware Hay; The Settlement of the County; The Whaling; The Growth of the Villages; The Revolution and PatrioLs; The 1 Establishment of the New Government; The War of i8«a; The Progress of the County and Soldiers of the War.

By LEWIS TOWNSEND STEVENS 480 Pages. 48 Illustrations. 31 Chapters. 5 Appendiee SENT POSTPAID ON RECEIPT OP $2.00 »T LEWIS T. STEVENS, Publisher 610 Washington St. Cape May, N. J

J.

GO TO

D. CRAIG’S.. 108 Jackson St. Cape May

■ ro '""?ouR Shoes RePaired Yon will find a first class Shoe Maker, and be wil do your work Satisfactorily, as nothing but the very best of Leather k used. ilia Fa Bu Still! Tn Cu Sit tanc Fa Da Ttu Fa hid tail f you meet vitl- accident a hilt traveling, the Empire Registry Company will ps-

yon FIVE LOLL Alls PF.R WEEK for Ions of time. Tn case of death. *looa WE ALSO INSURE AGAINST SICKNESS OF ANY KIND. 8ewing Machines And Organs

Sold on Instalments

ALL KINDS OF MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS TUNED AND REPAIRED. STRINGS FOB VIOLINS, BANJOS AND GUITARS ON BAND.

108 Jackson 8tre c t

J. D. Craig,

Established 1886.

Bell Phone 97x

should fcavw known my Father also." Christ was tha compute Image of the Father. But this answer did not satisfy Philip. He wanted some mar vnlous vlilon of God each ax Mot saw on Horeb. "Perhaps of all i'.-. disciples Philip was the toast recey live aad the slowest to ccmpreiu.'.-! the thoughts and spiritual beauty .. the Master. He wax the materialist of the company.”—Rev. J. Q. Greca bough. Christ emphasised the greet truth, hto oneness with tha Father. L By reminding Philip of the long time he had been with Christ—for he had been among the first disciples— and of all the evidences he bad sees of Christ's divinity. I. By specifying these evidences beginning with “the words" he tv’ spoken, the wonderful parables, the beatitudes, ths model prayer, the mom. the private conversation!— words so gracious, wise, and powerfu that they must come from God. 3. By naming also ths works he ha ' done, the long aeries of oonvlodu. miracles, showing inch n mastery o nature, dltesse, and death ns only Got. could possibly possess. 4. By a persons! appeal: "BeUert me" when 1 tell you "that I am In th Father, and the Father In me.” Chrit: here turna to all the disciples, foi "believe” to in the plural, and urge: them to consider his credibility- Ws: be the kind of man to Ue? to Indulge in empty boasts? to be guilty of whsIf false, would be a horrible bias phemy? The character of Christ, oven more strongly than hto miracles, proves the truth of Us claim to divinity. (. By a warning (v. 38) that they ware not to expect to eea la tha Man Christ the awful and splendid majesty of Jehovah. In Christ's human body, to be sura, dwelt "all ths fullness of the Oodhssd bodily" (CoL •:»); but Us outward manifestation was clogged by fleshly limitation*, by osr human Infirmities which Christ took upon him. so that he must say, while la tbs flash: "My fhtbar to graatsr than L“ TVs answered PhlUp'a “

Mankind to moving toward the light and such to onr faith now tn the dlvlas Intelligence that wa do not believe that In our hearts were planted aspirations and desires that are to

In Upplncott'e.

HERALD flLASTE.

The world Ukee Us apeflofftota. t hatw Ita

The Daylight Store

The Prediction is that you’ll be a buyei if you’re a looker at Knerr’s Millinery

Fine Millinery

O. L. W. KNERR. 518-20 Washington SL

ISAAC H. SMITH CLOTT1IER AND KIHNIStiICK

FULL LIHE OF TRUNKS ALWAYS OH MHDi

Opposite Reading Depot. 608 WASHINGTON ST.. CAPE MAY. N. J.

HOWARD F. OTTER GENERAL UPHOLSTERER Dealer la FURNITURE and MATTRESSES WINDOW SHADES, AWNINGS, and BEACH TENTS A SPECIALfY 111-13 Mansion Street. Cape May

WM. S. SHAW GENERAL CONTRACTOR

Dealer la

JUime, SB rick, Sand, Cement and SBuilder*

SSateriaU.

fJelepkont Dio. £0.

St£ Stmtrm Strop

B- 8. CURTIS Plumbing, Steam and Gas Fitting Au. ORDRRS RECEIVE PROMPT ATTENTION

SHOP—Delaware Ave.

Cap* May, A. J.

SAMUEL E. EWINCi General Contractor, House moving a specialty

BUBasnas,a x

\Bro. U. §(euer?s iffiBMT’W- LAUWCH»BtBjB|fo

Office as* Shop-Cor. Corgis and! Joferson Sts. CAPS KAY V. J. -