Cape May Star and Wave, 29 February 1908 IIIF issue link — Page 3

THOMAS ff. MILLET k SON I =C0AL AND WOOD— oppioE aao WASHINGTON STHEET >. CAJ'K MAY, TV. J. TT pleplione NO. 50 ^ /C Established 1831 Established 1831 O \ | "The Old Reliable Jewelry Store" > ® JOSEPH K. HAND ^ X 311 WASHINGTON STREET J Zfo Watches, docks, , Jewelry and Silverware. Ra pairing of all kinds ? a ■ Nt ' promptly attended to. ▼ 7 I BUILDERS HARDWARE AND MECHANICS' FINE TOOLS far-a-s.* v W. s. WAHE h 516 Washington St.. Oape May. PHONE 1M A

SAVE MONEY! SAVE MONEY! By Dealing; at SWAI1VH f .ACCOMMODATION MARKET ' Broadway and York avenue West Cape May, N. J. All kinds of groceries, MEATS and provisions at th< lowest market prices. Goods delivered to any part of the bor- * ough or city. Local Telephone No i ia 1 BECKETT'S LIVERY and Boarding N tablet* i TUCKAHOE, N. J. ' Hacks to meet all trains. Good driving Horses and Carriages to Hire. Pri ▼ate horses and carriages boarded and carefully looked after at low rates. / Clipping horses a specialty any time during the week. FRANK BECKETT. ^

IF YOU WANT A GOOD RANGE OR HEATER . —SEEJESSE IMI. BROW^ — - — >, WHO HAS THE Only Full Line of Stoves in Town * Tin and Agate Ware. Tin Roofing in all its Branches. HANSION STRRET Cape May City. New Jerse}

Shoes! Shoes! New, Largest and best stock of Ladies Gentlemen's and Childrens Shoes at Less than Philadelphia prices An Entire New and Large Stock of

Wail 3Pap©Ff which will be sold at prices to defy competition ' ' ,3*yii* bad many years experience in the business, I only ask an opportunity to convince my customers that I can sell them at the lowest possible prices t Please examine my stock Pefore buying elsewhere. K ELBBIDeiE JOHNSON, 318 Washington Street JOHNSON'S STANDARD SEEDS^l POULTRY SUPPLIES- ^ Bote rMatWpMa Agrata for the rainoni 'nCtt^ators and • WB«. areas for ft*!*0* vS\ EVERYTHING fr* ft. GARDEN, FARM W LAWN Johnton Seed Co., SaSg&f™" • ^ " „ ! - "'.til '■ .r.: "'*• t/Vj-* .

BULLBTlR. T""\ , : . , \ WASHINGTON CITY— THE BA6MET OF THE PEOPLE. The «yes of eighty million American people are now on Washington, the Capital of the Nation. The wheeb of the National Government • are now in full 1 motion. Congress is in session and. lite busy whirl alike legislative mill is intensely interesting. Many hours may be spent in the Senate or House gallery watching the legislators at work. The other workshops of the Nation are also well worthy of a visit. The White House, the home and offiie of the President; the State, War, and Navy Building, with its museums and models; the Treasury Building, with its huge vaults, the Govern. I roent Printing Office, the Patent Office, and the Congressional ( Library; the National Museum, the Smithsonian Institution, the I great Monument, and the new Union Station are all attractive I features of the Capital City.>*" — I The splendid city with its numerous' parks and statues 1 never loses its charms at any season. The service of the Pennsylvania Railroad to Washington serves a wide territory Its trains afford a direct means of reaching the National Capital, and tickets at reasonable rates are on sale at all ticket affices. - Attractive three-day Personally-Conducted Tours to Washington; leave New York, Newarjc, Elizabeth , New Brunswick, Trenton, and Philadelphia, on March 12, April 2 and 13, and May 7. The low rates, $12.00 and $14-50 from New York, $9.00 and $ 1 1.50 from Philadelphia, and proportionate rates from other points, covering hotel accommodations, all necessary expenses for the three-day outing, bring these tours well within the means of everybody, Detailed itineraries and full in'ormation may be obtained of Pennsylvania Railroad Ticket Agents."

WILLIAM RAU Sf* LANDSCAPE , fS* DESIGNER Beautiful Artistic Villas o European Styles. Roof Gardens' Rustic Tea Gardens' Designed and laid out by Practical Gardeners. Old Estates Remodeled and Atteadcd by the Month at 1 Reasonable Rates. , Pruning and Spraying of Trees, Shrubs and Plants with , .up-to-date Implements, and thoroughly tested remediesfor all | diseass of plant life. 1 Jf ARTISTIC KATORil ASD ARTIFICIAL FLORAL DECORATING j ngd Guaranteed High Grade Nursery Stock, Plants, Bulbs ' tvpmr Seeds, Fertilizers Etc. ! ! 6 ; Washington Street. ] 4^, CAPE MAY, N. |. _ _ — — . t I

J SEE WASHINGTON ; the heart of the nation c THREE DAY TOURS « via y PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD V March 12, April 2, 13 ~ t> and May 7, 1908. ei ROUND TRIP RATE $10.75 OR $13.25 o! from cape may la According to hotel selected. Covers necessary expenses for three days. Tickits gni returnin for ten days. | ALL THE PRINCIPAL POINTS OF INTEREST THE NATiOMAL CASITAL p Detailed Itiuerariea and full nnfonnatl'ui of Ticket Agents or J. R WOOD. O. W. BOYD. ' d( Pesseneer Traffic Manager General P&sseturer ArenL hi Philadelphia P . ' __ ^ 8

The New-York Tribune The newspaper in the home is a necessity Get one that can be safely read . by the entire family. The Tribune is a paper that jyanto all the news of the world in such a manner as to be readable without offending, the laws of good aste. It is a human paper — one edited by men and women; andywhile, at times, it may occasionally make mistakes, its readers beiieve and" trust in it. Tie Daily Tribune is more than a continuous history; it is and has been for over sixty years the great exponent of progressive national thought and fills a larger place in American history than any other newspaper. It contains special articles on nearly every subject which interests intelligent and clean-minded ^people, to say nothing of the instructive editorial articles and reviews of Books, Music, Art and Drama. Infant, thera is nothing ever printed in The Tribune that will not nstrnct and educate, just as it is a fact that there is nothing ever printed that willoffend decency. With The Sunday Tribune you get a handsome illustrated supDlement of timely topics and a superb twenty-page magazine with colored cover, which contains most interesting fiction and short stories by well known authors. This ' with other sections, goes to make' up one of the most complete and Sunday 1 Newspapers published, jy? . •' N 1 The -Daily and Sunday Tribune is the i^eai family newspaper. If you are not ' familiar with it ypuhwe it to yourself and family to at least .try a month's « subscription to verito the above statement . A dollar bill sent to the Circulation « Department o£ The Tribune, New York, will bring The Dally and Sunday Tribune I into your fafhi y for one month. Or send $10 for one year. f

* Three Diedph* out teaching. John's] murder sends toem hunying to Jems. They cross the sea fora vacation. Christian workers mast real. "Bat the devil never rests." Gears* how do you know he don't. (Luke 4: it) Talk and exci tenant brought crowds after! Jesus. Curiosity, Jesus never repel* motives. Do boys go to Sunday school "spreads" and summer My parents are Friends and there was no meeting nor First Day School in town. I was the average Borough boy and I belonged to all the Sunday schools in tovtn, Methodist, Presbyterian, Epissopal and the Rock Run Mission up among the mills and colo&d folks. Two in the morning and two in the afternoon. I wored them alternately. All I was after were the "fun with the fellers" and the 'Hay outs." Today after the years I am superintendent of one of the church schools and the Rock Ron Mission, and teaching in almost every Sunday school in the United States and Canada; also teaching other thousands who never enter church and Sunday school. Be good to every boy— never "tear him out— coax him along— once a month is better than ever. I am not the only boy who "worked" a SunBay school picnic for three plates of ice cream and landed in the Kingdom. Shut your eyes and let the picnic boy slip into the line as ; often as he likes— what are a few i plates of picnic ice cream? My boys nowadays call tt "mortarf"- — Mark -6; j! 40; Matt. 12: 80. HOW TO GET THEM. Verse 5: "Whence are we to buy I bread that these may eat?" 1 Read Mark 6 : 34 and see what moved ■ Jesus. What do you know about shepherds? Jesus is always concerned about our needs, tea, our everyday j bodily wants. (Mat. 6 : 25, 26.) Because you forget this you are often un- t happy. Jesus wants every boy to have i the best of everything really worth 1 having. What are some things worttf] j having? Begin, Frank. HealbhTgod^. c job, friends, money, happiness, good c home, appetite, good education, auto- r mobile— yes, that's right, go on. Well, j here is the answer. Matt. 6 : 33, and f here in this other referen'co is why you t may not get some things you ask for. B James 4 : 3. It. t WHO'S PROVING YOU? b Verse 6: "And this he said to prove 1 v Uncle Sam proves all his big guns. t< Every wise employer proves his boys. " It was Jesus' educational method. f< thng that gets up mus. struggle 11 up. It is said that ninety per cent, of the men who go into business for themselves fail. Even Rockefeller and k

had close calls and Mr. Rockefeller is said to still carry the scars of proving time. I have been many years getting my best inventions to market. Jesus was continually proving his disciples and yet at last ihey failed miserably (Matt. 26 : 56.) It is * not often pleasant to be proved, but Uncle Sam nev-r bothers proving a < poor gun— he sells it for junk. The employer never proves a poor boy— but £ discharges him. But Jesus just keeps on proving and proving to the very £ hoping to find His lik* ness in us. 6 QUITTERS AND FINDERS. ] Verses 7-8: "Philip answered him. « . . . Andrew saith unto him." Note the difference in these two men. r is "stumped," as you boys say, ( "up against a hard proposition and e dont" know what to do." Andrew G around and finds something in 0 shape like unto you fellows— just an f

ordinary, every day boy. Which kind i of man are you. Philip the quitter or Andrew the finder? These two sorts ' of boys are in every Sunday school, I every office and every shop. When i Cyrus Field found he could not lay the | j Atlantic Cable he ftent ahead and.laid > it. When Edison found he could not c ' find a filament for his electric lamp he ' f went ahead and found it. When An drew found there was no food he went t out in the crowd andfound .it. The s ] world seem to be built this way. a Man's limit is God's beginning. Ei : 8 ; 14:15. I THAT BOY. Verse 9; "A lad here, who hath five barley loaves and two fishes. " Every since those quadruple Sunday p school days I have always been cov- f' inced that this boy was going a fishing when he fell in with' the excited crowd ti of passover pilgrims. His mother had di put him up a lunch of five soda crackers and two smoked herrings, "blind rob- a< we boys used to call them, two a, a cent. All the boy had Was shirt, N

- 1 ' si Muk a»k kr l 6: •».) ortsr la u What Paul says, I 'jWheo you harried inf to '£19 r was hot for year I ooe eke, what a place fewMUtojpj men rarely amount to 1 in thought, in exproaaioo a«i?2B i and we cannot by Ohriatlike ualafHH f are too. And. girls, you fcvnr HH| - mother and sisters have ' V|j % M - house in order. What- tkse wffl l3 1 come of soaw of us ityouaia^H i terns? We can pardon you lota, H|| - never that Keep the buttons eg awlQ i sboea. and be neat about your*)j|j(£9 ' Then you'll always be our nreatkairtH - —and we'll beau you anywbexa. PTOT^f 1 81 : 27-81. i TO GET A GOOD JOB. « - Verse 11 : "Having given thanks. " , 3 How many of you have "graea" ra r your house? Suppose the diariplaa 1 ) had befun distributing before taking j 1 the food of Jesus, would it hare "gooa r around? Why did Jeeua put the disci* i ) plea to all the trouble, why not Juat^ ' aay "stomachs be filled." Don't know."»5 1 Thomas. God seems ne«er to do g ' | - thing man can do. It's only when we. j 1 have emptied our lunch boi that God-'-"; seeps in. It's only after you have j i worked all night on the problem that j God gashes the -answer. Only- aft— 1 you have trained and trained for posi- j tion that God sends ihe employer. But j ia the point, do you ever ask ■ God's blessing on the lunch box? 1 i Theas. 5: 18 WASTE. Verse 12; "Gather up the broken ^ piecea.". What was the use, since it came so easy? Waste is America's besetting sin. The average French family will well on the waste of the average 1 American family. It takes this one foliar bill I hold in my hand, working day and night for a 3 ear, to earn the nickel you burn up in half an hour in cigar or tickle your ^ throat fore seconds with a soda, put this is a trifle to the broken pieeea rof time gathered up. This ia how these Ksaon do them for the moat part upon broken piecea of time gathered up. is .how these lesson notes are written. This very note is being writwhile I am waiting foi the «H "dinner is ready. " Heaven has no uae a waster— neither has earth. Prov. 18: 9; Rom. 12; 11 ; Prov." 16; 19. VERY ANNOYING.

This Hardly Expresses What Cape May Court House People Say of It Any itchiness of the skin is annoying. Little danger in itching skin diseases, But they make you miserable. Doan's Ointment is a never-failing - For Pil s. Eczema, all itching troubles Cape May Court House citizens endorse it. Win. Husted, living on Mechanic street. Cape May Court House, N. J., says: "For some time I was troubled with a s-vere case of eczema which caused me a great amount of annoyand worry. I tried a number of different remedies, but did not find any relief until I learned of Doan's Ointment and procured n box at Willet'a ~ Corson's drug store. This remedy soon eradicated the annoyance and I am glad to say I have not had any return of itsicne." For sale by all dealers. Price 50c. Co., Buffalo," N. Y.« ' r oster-MUDurn (Jo.. Buffalo. N. X..

sole agents for the United States. Remember the name— Doan's— and - : no other. ELY'S CREAM BALM has been 'i tried and not found wantng in tbous- J| ands of homes all over the country. It " i has won a place in (he family medicine .] closet among the reliable household • 1 remedies, where it is kept.at hand for ! use in treating cold in the head just as soon as some member of the household • : the prelimnarv sneezing or 42 snuffling. It gives immediate relief ▼ and a day or two's treatment will put 1j stop to a cold which might, if not checked, become chronic and run iff to 3 a bad case of catarrh. ? NOTICE. 50 Engraved Cards, $1.00; (including 'A plate.) Your name in Script. Send -i sample. 50 Engraved Cards with name and J address. $1.50. (including plate). Es- js furnished on engraved wed- -4 and other social stationery. ,a 100 printed visiting cards, name and T address only. 60 cents. '-J. Address Star and Wave Office, 815 and 817 Washington street, Oape May. J NJ;