.uiuiwunpiPMi^miiiju i i-i iiiu, B CAPE MAT HERAXD. THUKSDAV. OCTOBER 21, 10O»
OR! FURMJNGRESS Big Convention to Be Held In Billings, Mont VAST AREA IS INTERESTED.
Extant ta Ba BanaEtad b, Naw Math <xta af Cultivation—Mambara In Man) Btataa and Landa. It la azpoctad tbat float Unpctoa to tba moTemam for tba rapid aatttemeot of tba 200,000,000 am* of aamlarld laada 1c tba treat and aoutb artll tx ftveo bj tba foortb dry farmlSf con erraa, which will ba held at BUUnga ModU Oct 2B, 27 and 28. Tba attend aoca at tbe confraar la eipoct-J to be vary large. An expoaltlon filled with exhibit* of dry fanning product* from all oral tba weal, which will be beM la con nartlon with tbe mretlnf. will add graatly to it* interest and wilt fir* the delegates and etattor* definite Idea* of tba wonderful result* which ar* beih» aoeompllabed with little rainfall by aclanttfle aoll cultura In tba mind* of those best acquaint ed with conditions In tbe west it 1* the feneral belief tbat tba aemlarld land*, bandied by dry farming tnetb oda, most In large measure aolr# tba cry of tba eastern people and tbe city man for farm land. This land can ba purchased at a low price. It can be obtained In large quantities—quarter or half sections—and If property farmed will bring results as satisfactory s* can be obtained on Irrigated land. No Longer an Experiment. Tbe methods used in tbe so called dry farming no longer ar* an expert ment Within tbe last firs years con dlttons of almost every conceivable kind have been successfully encounter ed. Each season has developed new and wonderful possibilities to tbe desert lands once they are placed under cultivation and once the tittle rainfall obtained earb year 1* properly pro
PINK Dir I AT* MOWN. Fumble Lead* up «• Touchdswn by v tbs Providence Eleven. Philadelphia, Oct. It —The University of PsunsylvanM lowball team won a bard foougbt fM* bsrs ttt* afternoon in defeating Brown Unlrsr ally by a score of I* to 6 IVonayl vania'a first touchdown was tbs re suit of a blocked kick on the second play of tbs gam*, while In the .j- h ir i hi-it teed kick gave
ty. Brown's atoll* touchdown w^ directly the result of a fumbled pu Sy Hutchinson, tbe Pcunaylvanln ful.
sack.
There was A good deal of tbe spec tacular In tbe miking of tbe firs touchdown. Hut Chib ton dropped th< jail on s punt at midfield, wiwre i Jrown man recovered It. In an effop •j> follow up thjf Advantage McKay punted again, but the ball was blodb >d. Hraddock catcolng It on tbe nm;; ,printed fortyItwe yards for a touch
down.
Pennsylvania's second touehdowi came before five minutes more ol play Hutchinson caught the ball a* McKay kicked off for Brown, went dashing down tbe field for brilliant run of fifty yards An outaldt kick gave tbe ball to Brc McKay's punt against the irlod went out of bound* on hi* own 37-ydrd Un« From that point Penn started an as sault on Brown's Une. and* In six plays Hutchinson plunged over for a touchdown. The goal was not kicked. turn came about ten minutes later. Hutchinson fumbled s and tbe Brown captain fell on tbe ball on Penn's 17-yard line. Using McKay and High In abort Une plun is, Brown aurely but slowly fought i way to Penn's goal Une. and In reive plays the ball waa carried •er for a score. McKay mlaaed the
goal.
Tbe safety touchdown, which was tbe only score In tbe second half, came after ten minutes of play.Forced to kick from his 5-yard line, McKay' punt waa blocked by Cosens, am
bo recovered tbe ball foe
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New York and Albany STATEROOMS $1.00 UP Reasonable Rrates for Automobiles, Horses, Carriages, Etc. Steamers “Frank Jones” and "Saratoga DAILY, SUNDAYS INCLUDED
There Is perhaps no belter example of tbe possibilities of dry farming than j punt In Utah. As cue goes down through Spri
the Bear river valley Id tbe heart of | Brown, was downed by Sommer
the Wastatcb rang, be sees great Irrt j Mn^ the goal line,
gattd field* of alfalfa, beets and grain. The Une . Bp ^ lammu7 foUow:
> the valleys, while oo tbe hillside* ai« other equally beautiful fields of (
waving grains, grown by dry garmlnc ““dock
methods, where tbe rainfall always U
leas than thirty Inches a year.
So successful has been ibe dry fartp. log In this valley tbat many Irrigator* bare sold their Irrigated tract* and become hillside dry farmers On all sides In thlaValley tbe dry farmers report
unusually successful crops Growth of the Movement.
When tbe third congress dosed there were about 1,300 members, and tbe movement was established upon t permanent basis as the leading economic force to the greater development of tbe west and a powerful factor Is the betterment of every region of tbe world where agriculturr Is being practiced. Those members till* represented tbe east and west af this country and some foreign lands but tbe bulk Of them were In Colorado. Wyoming. Utah. Idaho, Montana, the Dakotas
and other western stales.
Tbs membership oow it more than "^300 and represents thirty-six state* and territories of tbe United States and ten foreign countries Itew Mexico leads with 1.20? members; Wyoming Is second, with 1.1M; Nebraska third, with 837; Montana has 202. There are members lo New Hampshire, Rhode Island. Massachusetts, Connecticut. New Jersey. Maryland. Pennsylvania. West Virginia. New Tork. Ohio, tbe District of Columbia. Louisiana and UUnotx. Canada leads the foreign lands with twenty-six members; Mexico has ten and Australia nine. British Columbia, Russia. France. British South Africa. Hungary, Bn ill and Turkey are among tbe other foreign countries repre-
Pennsylranla US).
Diet rick Marks (Cosens) Lam burton Boras (Pike) Cosens (Cornwall) Thayer So inner (Irwin) Hutchinson Brown (5). MoLyman
Krais Ayter
Fullback
Carp
Racquet Regnler Sprackling Young (Adams) McKay (Aldertofer)
High
Touchdowns, Draddoek, Hutchinson. High. Goals from touchdown. Braddock. Safety. Sprackling. Referee Dr. A_ H. Sharpe, of Tale. Umpire. Mr Murphy, of Brown, Field Judge, W. if Swarthmore. Head . Taylor, of Princeton Length of hall'
TIGERS BEAT SOUTHERNERS
Princeton
Oepartmsnt of Agriculture Active. While In Wyoming and Idaho this summer Secretary of Agriculture Wilson took great delight lo Inspecting districts where dry farming was In progress. What be saw satiafled him tbat dry farming bad come to stay, and It it the purpose of the department to encourage It as much aa possible. —— Considerable aid lo tbat direction baa already been given; a number of crops, notably grain- have been discovered abroad which are peculiarly adaptad to dry farm culture. Agents of the department are lo Siberia sod Turkestan sod elsewhere in Asia searching for new crops which can be profitably grown lo tbe aemlarld regions of tbe west without tbe aid of Irrigation One of their recent discoveries Is variety of alfalfa that will grow under such conditions, an alfalfa which In tbe high, dry belt of Siberia yields two crops a year a00 In addition furnishes pasture for a brief period..
Cultivate
Learn to laugh. A good laugh , better than medicine. Learn how tell a story. A wall told story Is aa welcome as a sunbeam to a sick-room. Learn to keep your own troubles to yourself. Tba world la too busy can* for roar Ills and sorrow*. Learn to stop croaking If you cannot team to ses any good In tbs world, keep tbe had to yourself. Learn to hide
a the earache, head i. Don’t cry- Taara i well enough to novels, hat they
Left end, Left tackle Left guard
Centre
Right guard Right tackle Right end Quarterback Right halfback Fullback Left end Left tackle Left guard
Centre
Right guard Right tackle Right end Quarter beck 'yeft halfback
512 Washington St.
Cunningham, of Princeton. Molse of Sewsnee both tried field goalls after this, but neither waa aucceaaful. There was no further scoring. Princeton _ . Position Sewane*
Frantz Left end
Score* Decisive Victory
Over Sewane*.
Princeton, N. J, OcL 16.—Prince ■u beat the University of the South, also known as Sewsnee, by the decisive score of 20 to 0 today, and the Tigers' goal Une waa neve real danger. The Sotftbenaert proved tbe husky Tiger* and Hart and Read gains through their line almost at will, they made galant fight nevertheless There was much punting on both sides. In the first half, after a » of punts. Princeton tried an onslde kick In midfield and Sewsnee got the ball. Then Myres, who played a beautiful game for Sewsnee, circled the Tiger Une for a thirty yard gain, only to lose the ball on a fumble. Another exchange of pasta gave prlnoeton the ball on Bewanee'i 30-yard Une. Hard bucking by tbe Tigers finally carried tbe goal line for a touchdown. Waller kicked -the goal. After the kickoff Myers made sober run of thirty-are yards aad Sewsnee panted to Prino Une. After a pent W Princeton Lanier tried a drop kick, which low. . * >
l series of punts after the
bad b
25-yard line took the baS to Sewanea' 10-yard Une, where the ban wa ly paaeed by Sewane* aad I hack of the line for a safety. . The Southerner, weakened iBJtbe •cond half and Ume waa taken often for tojniisa to tlteir men. A the kickoff Molse, of ftewanM. punt Chrystie's bend, aad when b« * the baU be was dawned on Princeton'* 15-yard lias. Princeton ‘fumbled and right base
always welcomed, but thi or hypochostdriac to sot a where end bs is a a
“Hubby do /as like mr new ha."
slxty-flv. yards, all of ft within two • yard* Of the bowd«»r.Ji«t,fap» u ■ touchdown. Waller kicked the goal. aUtuteu. Mora peats war* made and Princeton got the ball in sUd-fteld Read. Hart and Daw** beg** hammering the Uoe hard and t sooeedsd
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UblEHli TEiniE 41ELEGW CO,
2nd Fluor, P. O. Building
WALTER B. WRAY District Manager
EDGAR P. STITES, JR.. Atfent
Cape May, N. J
Driehanty, 2b, Morlartty. 3b. O'Leary. 3b, T. Jones, lb. Schmidt, c, Donovan, p.
Left tackle
(GlOem)
Falkenberg
(Rawlins)
Totals
Woe hr Left guard Cheap aan Centre Juban Wall re Right guard Cox McOrohan Bight tackle Noise (jiorman) Welch Right end Finlay (Grainger) Christo Quarterback Browne (Bergen) sad Left halfback Myers
(Bard)
awson Right halfback Lanier (Cunningham) Hart Fullback Hawkins Touchdowns. Read 2; Dawson, l. Goals from touchdowns, Wallen >. Safety, Prlnoeton. . Umpire J. H. Costello, Cornell. Referee. C. R- Reinhart, Lafayette. Field Judge, W. Tote rey, Penn, linesman,''8. S. Feagles, Princeton, Time of halves 25 m., and
0 0 0 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 2 0
22 0 « 27 14 2
Two-base hit*, MoriarUy. Schmidt. Delehmnty, Abstain, Leach, Gibson. Three base hit Wagner. Hits off Donovan. 2 In three inning*; off Mnliin, 4 Inatngs. Sacrifice hits, Leach. Wilson. Clarke <2). Adams. Sacrifice fly, Hyatt. Stolen bases. Clarke (2). Abstain. Miller. Doable play. Buab to Schmidt to Deiebanty. Left on bases Detroit 7, Pittsburg 10. First base on balls, off Donovan, 6; off MulHn 4;! off Adams. L First base on errors. Pittsburg 1. Hit by pitcher, by Donovan, 1. by Adams 1. Struck out by 1. by Adams, 1. Time—2:06. Umpires, OTxmghUn, Evans, Klein,
and Johnstone.
PIRATE* WIN THE PRIZE.EABY Detroit Shut Out In the Final Game Brilliant Pitching by Adams Detroit, OcC 16.—Pittsburg won the world’s baseball championship at BeePark here today In defeating Detroit by tbe overwhelming score of
2-to-0 4*1
one of the, greatest bgttlee ever fought for the world’s title. This gives tbe National League Cham the rictory by four game* to the third successive defeat or Lhe American league Chamtotha worid's series and the ly*trd straight Victory for the Nation
defeated Detroit to 1207 and 120*. To Cheriea AdBHHj
pitcher bom
****** American
the lion's sharq of tbe credit i victory, and Ms wonderful pitching has crowded Wagner, Leach, Clarke other Pittsburg stars into the background. Today's victory * third of the eerie*, - and ba he! trait safely throughout the entire game. He allowed only six Mu and in only one innln*. the fourth, Detroit get more than one si Adams allowed only one baa and in four Innings he retired Um hard hitting American Leagues in one, two, three order.
Tbe a core follow*.
adiators ^">$1.75^ Six feet Stove Tubing FREE with every Radiator CAPE - MAY UUMIMG GO. 406 Washington Street
FOR SCHOOL INSPECTIONS State Board Formulates Uniform
Rules Under Naw Law.
Tbe State Board of Education has prepared a art of rule* governing the (natter of medical Inspection in the public schools of the State, copie* of which will be sent to the authralties id each schoei district. Tbe appointor medical inspectors in each school district was made coi by the Legislature last winter, and In order that the rated'regulating the Inspection* shall he natfora 1 State Board has formulated them. Two or more adjoining school dto ict* may employ the asm* tor. Pmdls sent home after diagnosis by an Inspector cannot creti their classes except upon certificate of a regularly qualified physician. In-
most be made at least <
a month In rural districts, once week In small town* and at least three times a week in cl tie*. A medical Inspector is forbidden to attend sent from school by Mm, unleas be happens to be dx physician of tbe family of which the
cMld Is s member.
The sanitary condition of the school ' ill dings also oomes within the pro- : vlnce of the medical loapecto-s, who 16 make their reports on such ter* to the local school boards. Special work required of the Ins pecsuch a* vaccination, frequent visit* or fumigation*, are to be illy arranged for between the Inspectors and the local boards.
It trW be remembered that at the opening of lb* Alaska-Yukon Ex -:lon at Seattle, the Great Northern 6 RaHway put on a 20-hour train from Chicago jto fugei Sound With the completion of the .new Mflwar Chicago * Bt. Paul extension. M*.ntenance of Way Departasant will
« bringing tl
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The Prudential
Why
Fr«t over a Uoal Stove when the (iaa Kail la lor will to the work Cheaper, Easier and Cleaner. We have a Fall liie oi
^GAS=
PcapeT may herald
Printing of the Better Kind for Commercial and Advertising Purposes
614 WA'MINQTON ST.
CAPE HAY, H. J.
SHERIFF’S BALE. By virtue of a writ of fieri facia* to me directed. Issued out of the Court of Chancery of the State of New Jersey. I will expose for sale at public voodoo at the Sheriff's office. Cape May Court House, on MONDAY NOVEMBER 22nd. 120*. between the hours of 12 and 6 o’clock M., to wit, at one o’clock in the
All that tract or parcel of land nod premises, hereinafter particularly described, situate, lying and being In the City of Cape May. In the County of Cape May. and State of New Jersey, and lying and being on the southeasterly side of Lafayette atreet. and butted and bounded ae follow*; — Beginning at a point in tbe southeasterly aide Une of Lafayette street. ScheUenger’a Landing, said point ; the south westerly corner of lot of l*W belonging to Larduer Smith, and being the lot whereon he now Urea, aad running from thence along tbe Hue of tbe said Lardncr Smith, In a southeasterly direction hundred and six-feet more 01 to lands of Ulcajah 8. Smith; thence binding on the lands of the arid Micajah & Smith, a southwestparallel with said LAfayette street, alxty feet to a corner, which is also the corner of the said Micajah S. Smith’s lot: thence on a Une parallel with tha Uoe of lands of said Lardncr Smdh^i. ar^orth west-
to the
eriy side Uoe of said Lafayette street; thence binding os the southeasterly
i and six
aad running in a northeasterly direction sixty feet to tbe place of be-
;. Within wMch bounds
talned six thousand three hundred aad sixty square feet of land, being the
same more or Ism.
Belied as the property of Ann* Brown, et sis., defendant*, taken in execution at tbe suit of Micajah 6 Smith, complainant, and to be sold by ROBERT R OORSON, Sheriff.
Dated October *1. 120*.
LEWIS T. STEVENS, Solicitor, p. U tUM 10-21-K.
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Report ot the (eoliUoa ot The Merchants National Bank AT CAPE MAY In the Slate of Next, Jersey, at the close of business SEPTEMBER /, /pop RESOURCES Loans and Discounts $102,414.51 U. S Bonds to secure circulation . 50,000.00 Premiums on U- S. Bonds . 77J-44 Bonds, Securities, etc. 66,717.50 Banking boose, Furniture, and Fixtures 22,106.75 Dne from approved Reserve Agents 19,528.31 Checks and other Cash Items ^1,258.10 ' Notes of other National Banks * 495.00 Fractional Paper Cnrrqpcy, Nickels, and Cents 230.71 Spede 510,503.20 Legal-tender notes 3 Redemption fund with U. S. Treasurer (5 per cent, of circulanioo) Expens< . ..yww.gu Tbtal **78.©J5-99 LIABILITIES Capital stock paid In
Surplus fund
National Bank Notes outstanding . Individual Deposits subject to check
State of Naw Jersey. County of Cap* May. m.
I, Urary H- KMrnlg.. Oe*U*r of to* *1
do »2WBlr swear to** to* above —’
tort of my know Ml g» aad belief.
JOHN T. HEWITT JOHN Wi MECRAY H. S. RUTHERFORD
Lehigh and! All Sizes-* 0 "* ^

