Cape May Star and Wave, 11 January 1908 IIIF issue link — Page 8

i,-.. ,uw1.^.IWI.^M<4Vii ii iqpHi IIMWII •miwiwpn.ii g CAPE MAY ;TAR AND WAVE, SATURDAY JANUARY 11, 908 t_L L . • . -f ,• - 1 rYjffiWffr , 7 — |

RON ROSE BIBLE CLASS * Br WUlUi «- raCWAT. t— .la. jj un TOOK BUS AMD BE SUM TO FIND TIE T KSOOGES. ADMBS ALL QUESTIONS TO TEACBEK AT t COAIBTILLL PA. TT E Copyright. ids. by *m. H. Rldrway. * FiUkM mItb Staa«j*>TT t treason ITi Jan. 13, 1908— "Jesus and c John the. Baptist. John I': 26-34. t SYMBOLS. C Verse 25. — "Why then baptizest e thou?" - J Where pat the emphasis, on baptizest fc or thou? On the Why! Mr. Ridgway, i if a fellow can be saved without it, t like the dying thief, why baptize at all " -r£he Quakers don't do it and they are r among the best Christian people here- 1 abouts?" George, the Friends, spirit- S ualize all the ordinances— but# Sunday r school class is not a debating club and if you will all turn to Matt. 28: 19, you will find the "Why.". Emphasis j on the thou. An old ceremony with a new kind of a roan. Same told les- j sons, but a new kind of a teacher— ( 'she's in earnejt— she's on fire.' Syro- ( bol of cleansing, (Acts 22: 16;) of j burying, (Rom. 6 : 4.) Almost every f one deairea a symbol of some Bort for , most things. Pretty hard to have made j you believe three Wednesdays ago folks ( loved you very much if you had not ( gotten a few "symbols" in your stock- _ ing! Take all the ordinances— you ( need them for Spiritual health or the j Great Physician would not have pre- , scribed them. I ROOSEVELT. Verse 26: "In the midst of you ^ standeth one whom ye know not." How much the people of that 'day missed because they dicFnot know 1 ' One who would cure every V. sickness 1 and ill was there and they never knew it. The same today and thousands ! don't know it. Unhappy, miserably • * people right around the corner, ^-no — 1 the other corner where the fine bouses I are. They have only to ask Him to be < cured and happy. (Matt. II: 28; I Peter 5: 7.) Tb re are great men, in ' the bud, in the midst of you today 1 "whom ye know not." Be good to ' everybody fnd you will be good to all great men. I have a Friend, Jo* Fitch, district j 1 attorney in Brooklyn, N. Y., who was in the 6arae class at college with Presi- 1 dent Roosevelt. Said Joe, "Bill, he I was a little weak-eyed, delicate, con- ! sumptive kind of a fellow and ours was a rousing big class.* We were se ted ' alphabetically and he was away back : among th* R'a. He couldn't half hear. ' half see and had a hard time generally. So the professor took pity on him and put him Up next to me among the j ' F's. But bless your heart. Ridge, hej was the very last fellow in the world 1 ' would have picked out for a President, j let alone a great on ." "Say, Joe. were you good to him?" " . IMPORTANCE. \ ■ Verse 27 : "Latchet of w hoses shoe I am not worthy to unloose. " tLReal big men ate shoe latchet men. The Master that sort. (John 18 : 6.) That very important man swelling around is not the owner, but only one of the "help"'. See That unassuming little fellow? There he is. Go talk to ldlll, he'll heat too. John Baptist was a self sinker, here's Christ's opinion of him. (Matt. 119-11.) And do you note the last part of verse 11? There is just one way to be somebody in this world and the Master tells us how in Mark 10:44. May we all learn this lesson today. Where is the head of j Teddy's and Joe's class? On com-) mencement day he got off the usual "Vale, • vale" and it was indeed a "farewell" into obscurity unless he, too, bad learned the leason. (Ps. 18 : 86, 86, and marg.) 4 POINTERS. : ''Behold, the Lamb of ooo. — The Baptist with all his heaven-given I ' greatness, iiia eloquence, his power toj draw and sway men, could not take away a single sin. He could only point. That is all th best teachtr can do. But do you do it— or waste the j precious half hour !n a five^minut s's | skim over the verses— plus twenty j minutc-s gossip? To this lion of the , desert Chri-t was the Lamb. Contrast the cousins. Both to be done to the j death, the lion like a lion with a roar that made the Herods tremble and the ] lamb, like a lamb, dumb before he» shearers. (Matt. 14: 8-6; Isa. 53: Y) Remember the passGver lamb story. Are ou safe under the blood of the Lamb? GRAPES. Verse 31 "I beheld the Spirit descending as a dove.— it abode upon Him." John did not know He was God's Son "Until be saw the sign of the Spirit upon Him— and nobody knows you are God's aon (1 John 8: 2) until there is some sign of the bpirfr- about you. Some church members, supposed to be L Christians, are only corpses. (Ron. 8 : 6.) Here is the touchtaone to tell. Gal. 6:22. Sample your fruit and see If you have them— in bto*om or green I or ripe. It is no easy thing to make the boys and girls understand the office of the Spirit, but a little bunch of hot fe"'.

grapes with a "taster" for each will show how the Spirit-kissed life has the sweetness fof the Sun-kissed vine and you can turn to John 16:1-8, for warrant for the object leason. p WARMING UP. n Verse 88: "He that sent me to bap- n in water. " \ { Luke's account, chapter 3: 16, adds 0 "with the Holy Spirit and witn fire." c mej ns cleansing and if you t want to know how warmth cleanses n washing your hands when they are cold and you'll find out. The point is t this : You can never be muco of a t Christian without a warm heart. Who ( ever saw a warm-hearted boy a real t bad boy ; a little roiBchievious perhaps, that's all. "No heart is pure that j is pot passionate, no Virtue is safe 1 that is not enthusiastic. " Don't know. 1 who said that, but you see you need j not be distrurbed if yon happen to get into a Methodist meeting and^feel I yourself -warming up with the breth- j ren. It's a proper symptom ! WITNESSING. I Verse 84 : "And I have seen, and j borne witness." That is where most of us fall short. 1 like John Baptist Some one haa j said, "The world don't know whether ] Christianity is a good thing or [not,- it never been tried." A bright epi- 1 gram with a spark of truth. We have j never yet tried very hard at witness in the way John means. He told ] everybody, even old Herod himself, and you have never even spoken to Jack Jones, who »orks next to you dewffHThe mill every day. Oh yes. ( heard ybu lead prayer meeting last , night, but how about Jade? He wasn't , th re. Luke 14;. 28. j . 7 1 CAPE MAY SCHOOL OF AGRICULTURE ! Announcement of summer session of j the C£pe May School of Agriculture 1 and Industrial Art and Science. ! For the yeAr 1908' the Cape May j School of Agriculture and Industrial : Art and Science will b4rin July 6th ■ and continue until July 81st. The fol- . lowing courses wi'l be offered to New Jersey teachers: HOME ECONOMICS, including sewing, cooking, household management, marketing, home physiology and - i MANUAL TRAINING, including 1 woodwork, basketry, weaving and dei etoqing-- . - ELEMENTARY AGRICULTURE. . Study of soils, animal industry, market gardening, school gardens and summer play grounds. Prospective students should, as early i as practicable, notify the management in writing of the courses they purpose pursuing. No pupil will b- a Emitted to more than two courses. , If engaged in advance, board can be , procured at some of -the best hotels at j the lofc prices of $6.00 per week. I All prospective students should communicate with T. D. Sensor, Department of Public Instruction. Trenton. N. J. The State Board of Education recently passed the following reso- - lotions : Whereas, Tne many economic changes that have come to pass in recent years necessitate industrial training in oar . public schools ; Whereas, A fair amount of indus- , trial training is necesary in order to ] make the cbildr -n useful citizens; ( Whereas, All children should be Trained Itrthe fundamental principles j of earning a livelihood, as well as that a few be trained to meet 'the requiri-- , ments of the learned professions ; ( j Whereas, Industrial training, to be , | universally applicable, must be so regr | ulated as to cost of equipment and maintenance tha^ it may come within I , the reach of all of our district schools, j however near or remote ; Whereas, The foundation for proper ' j in Jus trial development should be : laid in the first years of a child's life j in school, and that the subjects which f pertain directly to 6uch training can be : most advantageously taught by j J teachers in the first five grades of the j school ; , ' R solved. That it is th- sense of t! e . ' State Board of Education that a knowledge of manual training, borne , j economics and elementary, agriculture . j should became a part of the professional f i equipment of ■ ach teacher in the-pub-s lie schools of New Jersey ; I I Resolve That the Committee on e ! Education consider the propriety of r aldng to the list of subjects in^which e every person must be eofaminfed the subjects mentioned above in order to j receive a license to teach in any of the grades below the high school, or in e any department of industrial omianual training in a high school, of requiring that no course of study shall be approved by the State Board of Edun cation, unless it shkll include proper courses io manual "training, home „ economics and elementary, agriculture, and when the same shall ttke effect, >e and to report to this board at its next g meeting. u ' * The ftifht Name. 1 Mr. August Sherpe, the popular overL seer of the poor at Fort Madison, la., « says : "Dr. King's New Life Pills, are „ rightly named; they act more agreeably, do more good and mike one feel :e better than any other laxative." Gears :e an teed to cure biliousness and ccnsti>t pation. 26c at All Druggists Im

Board of FreekoUers Year's Wort 1 The appropriations by the Board of Freeholders this year, it is said, will not exceed $62,000 and the cost of the Goshen road will be paid out of year's funds.- This is a reduction • last year of $4,000, which is en- . couragmg. If the various munidpali- j ties will do as well as this, tax bills , next year will be materially reduced." ( The following report of the commit- ! on treasurer's accounts showing ' the receipts and expenditures of the ! County for the year will be interesting to our readers: Receipts. Balance on hand May 9. 1907,$14.075.« Received from Courts, 181.86 Received from stenographer's salary, from state, 16.66 Received from int. on Sinking Fund acct., 184.64 Received from sale of Sea Isle Turnpike Bonds, 17,800.00 from premium on sale S. L Tpk. Bond sale, 162.26 from btate for Road Bepaira, 1,109.26 Received from Stat* por ion for bldg. Goshen Road. 6,240.20 from State Fund School Tax, 18,845.69 Received from notes disc "ted, 46, 160.67 from county' taxes and State school tax, 101,687.84 Received from sheriff's office receipts, 74.85 from surrogate's office receipts, 28.24 from miscellaneous sources, * 83.45 $200,460.97 Disbursements. .$ 5,872.09 Jail. 1,687.62 Almshouse, 2,708.08' State Hospital, 1,606.66 Coroners, -184.84 Elections, 8,187.82 ; Stationery, 245.20 Printing and advertising, 1.885.8&' Incidentals, 2,182,64 : Freeholders and officers, 1,932.48 Burying soldiers, 190.26, Public schools, 48 1 . 74 Counnty law library. 30 00 State and county road bonds, 2,400.00 i Int. on State and couuty road bonds, 888.00 ' a.n„ D...k

on Bridge - bonds. 450.00 1 Debt u ;<i intspecial deficiency, 792.97 ' . Aw:', building Goshen road, 17,784.57 Q Acct untitling Tuckahoe road, 3,748,00 j Building Sea Isle Turnpike, 15,851.36 0 ' Public buildings and grounds. 1. 147.07- B County road at Dennisville, 6.50 n - Clerical force tax commisison, 583.81 a [ Bridges, 6,266.90 f. Improvements to Almshouses, 177.73 0 Improvement ta to Holly Beach s road. 892.95 t • InL Ocean C'ty road improve- b ment- bonds, 425.00 0 Int. Holly Beach road bonds, 120.00 s Repairs, Ocean City state and j county road, 427.84 j. Repairs, state and gounty road \ Seaside and Ho 1 c Beach, 1,180.97 y ' Ocean City Turnpike note, 5,241.00 s ' Int. Oce-n Oity Tpk. note, 89.53 a Sea Isle Turnpike note. 2,000.00 > Int. on Sea Isle Tpk. note, 68.61 e 7 Temporary loans paid. 36,005.00 ' State fund school tax, 13.845.95 State school tax, 41,537.84 | $171,470.57 Balance on hand Dec. 81st, ■ 1907. $28,980.40 Balance on hand in following Banks : Security Trust Co., Cape May. (S. F. Acct) $2,400.00 s First Nat. Bank. Cape May ■ Court House, - 3,979. 50 Marine Nat. Bank. Wildwood. 6,536.15 First Nat. Bank. Ocean City. 16,064.75 j $38,980.40 ^ Ralance due from Cape Mav fc County Tax. $6000.00 < ! Due from state 1-3 cost Sea » lile Turnpike, ( t c Dcalk of Mr. W. D. keynolds I Mr. WeatiTelt D. Reynolds, brother jj B of the late Mrs. A. L. Haynes, died t " suddenly December 29, 1907, at his t ^ home in the Oatskill Mountains, New J 11 York. Mr. Reynolds, a former well • known resident of Plape May, was a ( man of model character, an optimist. < r always cbe»rful and encouraging. His j e many friends here were always glad , 6 to see and greet him and are filled with j h sorrow at the sad news of his death. < B * I y There are two old adages, "Haste makes waste" end "Make haste slow- i e ly," that every one should employ 1 1 when they undertake to cure a cough 1 1 e i 1 a few minutes with preparations I < a containing morphine, opium, chloro- l form or other opia'es. They may stop 1 1 e the cough and cause tleep quickly, but ; i e they also dry up the secretions ard i il conslipate leaving ofttim°s a far worse 1 1 h trouble. Rydale's Cough Elixir is : guaranteed under the Pure Food and j ■ Drug Law to contain no opiates or n harmful drugs of any kind or characf ter. Think about it when you or one h of th* children have a cough. V. M. e D. Marcy and Co. jan ° The United States Government in its "Pure Food Law" does not "indorse" n or "guarantee"' any preparation, as l- Some manufacturers in their advertisements would make it appear. In the " case of medicines the law provides that >e certain drugs shal l be mentioned or. the t- labels, if they are ingredients of the ir preparations. Ely's Cream Balm, the ie well known family remedy for cold in a the head, hay fever and nasal catarrh, -• doesn't contain a Bingie injurious drug, L so the makers have simply to print the ct fact that it complies fully with all the requirements of the law. Mosquitoes Dp Against It Dunt' wait for Professor Smith to an >i hi late the mosquito pest. Consult Thou Soults. of Cold Spring, about J" that new lot of netting received. The best, on the market. Cheaper than , anv where in • the county. Local ~ Phone. tf a- - — Try an "adv." in the Star.

I 1 NOTICE j To Richard Peon Smith. Jr„ Kitty] Florence A.^ylton^Mary ' Wood-C John G. Woods, Lucy A. Conway, j Charles Williams Magill, Clara W. Msgill, Richard Penn Smith, Morton : W. Smith. . - / You are hereby notified that under ] Tax Certificate dated November 8th, A. D., nineteen hundred and five, the undersigned. Herman G. Horn, with a i business office at No. - 801 Stephen Glrard Building. Twelfth street, above Chestnut, in the Oity and County of Philadelphia, and State of Pennsylvania. haa paichased the premises in Cape May City, New Jersey, situate on the southeast side of ' orgie street, and [ being lot No. 110 in block No. 2, and ' part of the same property grant d and conveyed to Francis H. Duffee, Trus- 1 tee, by Washington J. Duffee and wife, by deed dated th- twenty -third day of ! October A. D„ eighteen hundred and | seventy-six, and of record in the office j of, the Clerk of Cape May County all Cape May Court House in Book No At I of Deeds, page 408; and part of tBaj same premises granted and conveyoH by said Francis H. Duffee. Trustee left the New Jersey Trust and Safe Deposit* Company, by deed dated the twelfth H day of May, A. D., eighteen hundred j ' and eighty-eight, and of record in the I Clerk's Office aforeaaid in Book No j 80 of Deeds, page 231, at a sale for un- ! paid taxes and assessments held by and ' on behalf of said Oity of Gape May. ; on the thirtieth day of October, A. D„ j nineteen hundred and five, under and by - virtue of the prevision of an act of the Legislature of the State of New ' Jersey, entitled, "An Act concerning the settlement and collection of arrearages, of unpaid taxes, assessments and water rates or water rents, in cities of this State, and imposing and levying a tax assessment and Ken in lieu and instead of such arrearages, and to enforce the payment thereof, 1 and to provide for the sale of lands subjected to future taxation and asaessment," passed March 80th, 1886,. 1 and the several acta- supplementary ' thereto and amendatory thereof. 1 And you are hereby notified that you ] have, or claim to have, an interest i' therein, and unless the said lot, tract ' or parcel of land shall be redeemed be- ! fore the expiration of one year after 1 the^errice hereof, a deed for the same ' will be given according to the provis- ' on of said Act, etc. I . HERMAN C. HORN. Dated December 12, 1907. 1-11 6t m » P. F. T

THE HONORABLE CITY COUNCIL OF THE OITY OF CAPE MAY. : We, the undersigned, being owners of property in the vicinity of Stockton Jefferson street. Franklin str-et and Madison avenue in the City of Qape I May and interested in the construction I of a sewer or' drain in said section of said Oity, do humbly petition your Honorable body that you will cause to laid or constructed a suitable sewer drain on and along such portions of said streets and avenues as in your judgment shall be necessary to propercarryvoff the surface drainage from properties in that locality : and that Honorable body speedily take such steps as may be necessary for j&e accomplishment of this object And your petitioners will ever pray, etc Richard Oampion. ^ John F. Craig, Geo. D McCreary, Chas N- Davis, G." W. Jacoby. M emu can Hughes, J. Clifford Wilson. Jessie L Eldfedge, by Samuel F. Eldredge, Atty, Wm. G Essen, L C. Ogden . 1-11 4t nnucMTicc Notice is hereby given that on the day of January, A. D . 1908. the following resolution was adopted by the Oity Council of the Oity of May: "Whereaa, a petition in writing haa been presented to this Council by owners of "TOjperty -hr the neighborhood of Stockton avenue. Benton avenue, Kearney avenue, Jefferson street. Franklin street and Madison avenue in$he City of Oape May, praying for the construction of sewers or drains to properly drain the properties in said locality, and "Whereas, it is in the opinion of this Council necessary that such sewers or drains should be constructed for said purposes, and that such sewers or drains will benefit and increase the value of the real estate in said vicinand that benefits should be assessed against the properties so benefitted, be it Resolved, that this Council cause such sewers or drains to be constructed j and that they give public notice of their intention to construct such sewers drains by advertising for a space not less than ten days in two or more 1 1 newspapers printed or circulating in . ! said Gity of Oape May. briefly describ1 1 the proposed work and requesting | j : such persons a» may object thereto to , | present their objections in writing at ( , 1 or before thq. expiration of ten days | j - i frort the da e of such notice to the ■ City- Clerk of the City of Cape May ; , • and that said notice so published in j . said Dapers shall be signed by the Oity Clerk of this City, and shall bear date of its first publication. " In accordance therewith a public ! hearing will ba held on Monday, January 20th, A. D.. 1908." in the Council 1 Chamber at 7 :30 p. m.».NOTE — Such persons as may object ! to the construction of the above sewers 1 or drains may file their objections in 5 writing at or before the expiration of 3 ten days from the date of the above 5 notice 1 Dated January 9, 1908. JNO. W. THOMPSON. . l-ii 2t City Clerk, e e How to beat an undertaker : Cough and Coughing end in Ooffin. Cur* the Cough, stop the Coughing, and let the undertaker keep his Ooffin. Rydale's ? Cough Elixir is the best and surest [ way of accomplishing this result. Best, because it contains the best remedies 6 known to aid nature to cure a cough. 1 Surest, because it does not contain '' opiates or harmful drugs of any kind. Guaranteed under the Pure Food and Drug Law. V. M. D. Marcy and Co. . jan

UilLUUHlll 305-307 Mm stmt, cue vq, p. j. BIJ OU Motion Picture Attractions FINEST SHOW AT CAPE HAY New Pictures Flondays, Wednesdays, atid Fridays

THIS COUPON WILL ADMIT ONE V AT The Bllou SATURDAY Evening Jan. Uth or MONDAY Evening. Jen. 18th ONLY S

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FLORIDA The Ual af Suaiaiar Sunahl a an! Flowers IS BB*T 8BEN BY PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD PERSON * LLY-CON DUCTED TOURS Febhiary 4 -nl 18, and March S 1908 Two Wo«k» to Three Months In the Tropic* ROUND S49.75 TRIP - FROM CAPE MAY Proportioned Ret <>5 from Other Points SPECIAL PULLMAN TRAINS INDEPENDENT TRAVEL IN FLORIDA For detailed Itineraries end full Information, consult nearest Ticket Agent i. a. WOOD. GEO. W. BOYD. Pessenger Traffic Meneger General Passenger Agent.

Watches, Clocks, Jewclrr We cao s—ll yon watches sod clocks M below Pliiladephia priest and ourp ! guarantee goes with them. Elgiu and 1 ] I movement. W- are etUl). I the business Oat prices are right r land wort stands live ns a trial. L Sim Its. Cold Spring. Local . Phone. If * I PHILADELPHIA |j| reached in a few moments. | Il 100, 000 Philadelphia DusiH phone* — everybody reacb- ( I LiSL THE MIL ; s ||l. M. HO 20 « Liurrl 1 I I District ifcgg Street, s I I Hour fifiSHl Wf . ||

1 i: DO YOU OWN A HOME : I- That will Support You? h For Bale on Easy Terms. 1 ; eight room bouse, 1 stable In good- condition, wagon sheds, » ] large chicken coop* will accomo- ' . dale sDout 150 chickens, about j ' of an acre feDoed In as a chicken ; brooder. 40 acres of land, 30 acres . of which is Ado rich truck land • and an orchard with about one • hundred fruit trees. A five room bouse built two -. years ago has 4 seres of ground I 1 acre suitable for a first class 7 ■ garden, 8 acres suitable for pool- • ; try or pigs. ; Both of these p operties are located on what is known as the • Jere Hughes Rosd about } mile 7 from Bennetts Station, A haker 7 • passes daily and a butcher twice - a week. Near school and church and is only five miles from either '"ape May, Wlldwnod. Holly ' Beach and Aogleaea. There are 7 no better produce market^ than . - either of these. For further im- • ' formation Addreee " JOHN W. KIMSEY ; Erma P O. Cape May Co.