P . ' CAPE MAY STAR AND WAVE, SAITJRDAY, MARCH 7. 1908. - '1 " ' . •. • . v-v£?z wnw *
■ I "THOMAS W. MILLET & SON f ^!0IL AID WD= | • OFFICE 3RO WASHINOTON STREET ' CAPE MAY, N. J. W T*»lephonel>0. 1* - . C ■
k 2 £ Established 1831 Established 1831 j? h \\ "The Old Reliable Jewelry Store" •« h JOSEPH K. HAND 311 WASHINGTON STREET \\ 2 h Watches, Clocks, Jewelry and Silverware. Ra pairing of all kinds 2 h I V promptly attended to. 1?
. • BUILDERS HARDWARE AND MECHANICS FINE TOOLS ja b>-a -z,a a W. S. WAHE r . 516 Washington St.. Oape May. PHONE 184 A SAVE MONEY! SAVE MONEY! Hv Dealing at NWAI>'N ACCOMMODATION MARKET Broadway and York avenue a West Cape May, N. J. All kinds ol groceries, MKATS a*** provisions at tb< lowest market prices. Goods delivered to any part of the borough or city. Local Telephone No 1 10.
BECKETT'S LIVERY and Boarding: N tablet TUCKAHOE, N. J. . Hacks to meet all trains. Good drivlhg Horses and Carriages to Hire. Pri vate* horses and carriages boarded and carefully looked after at low rates. Clipping horses a specialty anv time during the week. FRANK BECKETT. IF YOU WANT A GOOD RANGE OR HEATER —'•EE— •JESSE jyn. _B:E?,O"W"JS} WHO HAS THE Only Full Line of Stoves in Town Tin and Agate Ware. Tin Roofing in all its Branches. 332 n amnio:* street Cape May City. Mew Jersey
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 Wall Paper, which will be sold at prices to defy competition a Haying had many years experience in the business, I only ask an opportunity to convince my customers that I can sell them at the lowest possible pneea. Please examine my stock Pefore buying elsewhere. KLDBIIM1E JOHISOH, 318 Washington Street.
I — 1 The Home Newspaper fTlHE NEWSPAPER that chronicles all the local _ I happenings of the neighborhood can oarer be dis- - placed, but it needs to be reinforced in every family - by tha«ewspaper that gives all the news of the State, Nation and World. Thin is why the , Newark Evening News should bare a place iu every home in New Jersey. It " covers the State from Sussex to Cap* May; it tells the truth aboutb politics aod-poiiticlsns; U wears no collar and Is under obligations to nobody but its readess. It gives all tbe news all the time. More than sixty -eight thousand residents of New Jersey bpy It evtry day. Try it a Month for 50c THf EVENING NEWS PUBLISHING CO. 215 217 Market Street, Newark, Naw Jersay
* vl/ WILLIAM RAU W' LANDSCAPE JJ^F DESIGNER ^ Beautiful Artistic Villas of European Styles. Roof Gardens' Rustic Tea Garden*! Designed and laid out by * Practical Gardeners. Old Estates Remodeled and * (tended by the Month at Reasonable Rates. PruQing and Spraying of Trees, Shrubs and Plants with up-to-date Implements, and thoroughly tested lemedies for all ! % d seass of plant life • U* ARTISTiC •NATURAL AND ARTIFICIAL FLORAL DECORATING /■ ^83 , Guaranteed High Grade Nursery Stock, Plan Bulbs ■■ Seeds, Fertilizers Etc. 61 2 .Washinoton Street |4a*. CAPE MAY, N. I
SEE WASHINGTON 4 THE HEART OF THE NATION THREE DAY TOURS VIA PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD March 12, April 2, 13 aid May 7, 1908. 1 ROUND TRIP RATE $10.75 OR $13.25 FROM CAPE MAY According to hotel selected. Covers necessary expenses for three days. Tickets gjDi retumin for ten days. ALL THE PRINCIPAL POINTS OF INTEREST THE NATIONAL CAPITAL Detailed Itineraries and full Imformatlon of Ticket Agents, or J R. WOOD - O. W. BOYD Psuencer Trmfllc Msnseer <»>tner»|T»s*onirer A ecru Philadelphia 1
TKe New-York lribune - The newspaper in the home is a necessity. Get one that can be safely read .' by the entire family. The Tribsns U a paper that prints all the news of the' world in such a manner as to be readable without offending the laws of good ! a ste. It ia ats.tas paper— one edited by are and vearea: and while, at tones, . it may ocosocaly make rrnr»tn. its readers beoere and trast m it. Tbe ' OaSy Tribaw is more than acnntmncsxs hisiory; it is and kas bees for over sixty years the greabgxpooec-. of p:ogrees.>e national thought and fibs a larger place j in American huCorr than any other newspaper. It -on tain* special arucies on ! neariy every subject which interests intebigect and cseun-einoed Jreopae, to say cocaiag of the mstr-etive editorial amcies and reviews of Boots, iicsic, Ar and Drama. In fait, there is nothing ever printed in Tbe Triwse that will not nstruct and educate, just as it is a fact that there is nothing ever printed that willoffend decency. , With The Sunday Tribune ; ou get h handsome illustrated ^upnlement of Umely^Vcs and a superb twenty-page magazine with colored cover, which contains most interesting fiction and short stories by well known authors. -This . with otfter sections, goes to make up one of the most complete and Sunday Newspapers published., Tbe Daily and Sunday Tribune ia the ideal family newspaper. If yo'u are not familiar with it you owd it to yourself anjLjamily to at least ,try a month's BunscnpUon to verily ji le above stetemedt. A-dollar bill sent to the Circulation Department of The frfbaae. New Yotjrfwill bring Tbe Dally and Suadey Tribune into your fami y for 6ne month. 0/ send $10 for one year. .
LESSON 10. MARCH 8.— JESUS THE BREAD OF LIFE. John 6: *7-87. CopTrisbV ooe. fax 8. 8. T. S3o. MfaMedru StwmdWm SELFISH N ESS. Vera^B; "Ye aeek me . . . .because ye afBBhe loaves. " Any "loaves and fishes" followers these days? Name ever some of tbe motives" that bred men to follow Jesus. In spite of.all tbe fine things said and written, selfishness, after all, is tbe 8pring.of almost every life . Tliis very day as I write this note I asked one by one a large class of prosperous men, most of them Christians, what they would do should they st^idenly come into $1,000,000. I got all -sorts of-an-swers, but not a sjngle man said he would use it to help others, no not one. While I think nearly all of them would so use any means they had, yet I caught them unawares and the sponta neous thought was self. Ia this a bad r thing. Does Jesus teach us to look out/ for "Np. one?" (Matt. 6; 83; Mark 8:36.) Must we first get saved ourselves before we can save others? GET IT BY HEART. Verse 27 : "Work not for the meat which perisheth. " What are some of the things that k db not tish? Name the fruit that does ■ . require cold storage. Love, jov, , eace, long suiering, gentleness, goodness, faith, meekness, temperance- (GaL 6 : 22. 28). Eat to live not live to eat Commit these six lines. They are worth the trouble: "Live while you live," the epicure would say, "And grasp the pleasures of the present day," "Live while you live," the sacred preacher cries, "And give to God each moment as it flies." Lord in my view let both united u * iBWehhure whil8t I live in thee. •ny"""1 onio tha rife: S*"Tnis is • „ work of God J * teas as t , work." Then he s "work not, ' Jast have faith. This para dor bse puzzled some older i boys than you. We cannot work for j I eternal life. It is God'a gift. (Jctm - 1 10 : SB. ) Think of warding {& j Ccmsmas present' If yoa work to earn it, it is joar wages, however cfcs- j guished. Some folks think they can do some particular work to win God's favor, like saying prayers, going to church, alms giving hospital build- . ing, etc. (Mark 16: 16), and so what good would all your work be if you are to be condemned anyway. When I was a boy father hsd a kitchen garden back of tbe house. Sometimes I did things I was especially forbidden not to do. Going off with the "bad" boys to the Brandtwine to swim was one of them. When I would come home from one of these swims late in the afternoon. I used to go out in the garden and no modern patent, double acting weeder could make the weeds fly like I would do for an hour or two. But my splendid work was of no use. J would "catch it" Just the same. The trouble #as, I neglected to (onftsa my fault and ask forgiveness, and my good works went for ] nothing. What I needed was a .work 1 j °f God done in me and then my work in the garden would have been all ! right. SEEIN'S BELIEVIN'? - Verse 30: "What doest thou for a: sign that we may see and believe thee." 'The sign they wanted to see was for bread. They were thinking of the manna. Would they have believed? Seeing does not help believing. Sight is least dependable of all the senses. There is a great fortune for the boy who will invent a railroad signal system independent of sight. The seranphor inventor has made a fortune by getting half way. Railroads arc j abandoning color signals. Year* ago I sJsaw Signer Blitz, a sleight of hand ' \ man, throw a bag on the floor, tramp I ail over it, bang.it on. a chair and then • j take a lot of eggi oat of it. Then be ' . broke the ' gg» in a man's hat. stirred j i them up and oat flew half a (fezes j ! I canary birds. Everybody aaw it. but 1 1 J ooeody believed tny .'of :t_ The osiy real thing* were tbe [birds. Signs would be no help in believing. God's ' plan is believe first and then you will : see signs everywhere to confirm your faith. The glory "of God is all around ' but iLis veiled until we believe. John 1 11 : 40. 1 ABE YOU ONE? • Verse 81 : ' Oar father^ate. . .mabnlt ...He gave^ them breadjout o£h eaten." Here is what they say, in effect, tb - Jesus: "No big thing in feeding 6000 for cne meal 1 Moses got bread Jforty , years for 2,000,000 of us.. Moses' bread i
e them calkd. We don't grow therein ; AMYSTSST. - ; I am the bread.of life." . [ y understand this? What d.d you have y for break fiat? It was all prepared by some other life. Tbe milk by the cow y life and the toast and tha cereal by ,. the plant life. The cow gets its -life j. from the grass. All comes out of the e sunshine and the soil. We cannot eat . the ground or think the sunshine so d the vegetable and animal lives are our j mediators (in the middle) and give us the elements of the ground and of the • d sunshine made fooi. Nobody has ever. ^ tpld us what sunshine really is. W* get our spiritual food from God through I Jesus. He is the bread of life. ( 1 Cor. 10: 16, 16). Our mediator, Heb. 9: 16. • JESU8' GRIP. * it Verse 37 : "Him that cometh unto me 1 will in no wise cast out." • it That means everybody, no, matt it how low and bad. Nice, clean, w dressed Sunday school boys like o i, and those hoodlums running wild and ■- dirty down iff the brick lot. Men some e times ask people to comd and then x drive them away. I have known Sunday school officials who have asked boys e to come to them and then cast them out for being "tough." Jesus never e did that and never will, (Jno. 10: 28; 17:12). If hs ever gets hold of you d you are his forever. If you think you "cant' hold out" remember "he is it able" and you - ive his word against any "casting -^i." Did you eve* notice' those b hydraulic machines ■. down in the miu for. putting steel in- . . s in and out of the furnaces? Wb*n " d th / get hold of an ingot it has to come There is no such thing as let eigo. Jesus is just like that machine in | hi a holding or. power. "No man shall T chick tbe re out of my hand." And I T would like to see all the tsec in I creation pluck an irgot oat of the jaws ^ of s hytir ulic charging machine. PhaUdriph a Sportreaw's Shww o Philadelphia's Sportmmu's Show. b which is to be held in the First Regio ment Armory building, Broad .and . Callowhill streets, from March 9th to t 14th, now promises to far exceed exe ceed in importance anything .which the promoters had hoped for. J. H. B Beck, manager of tbe show, to whose efforts the success of the last two . Automobile Shows in Philadelphia was t, due has returned from New York after 0 a week's stay in that city and he has 1 booked most of the principal exhibits s of the Madison Square Garden show t for exhibition in Philadelphia. They will be shipped to the Quaker City on e a special train, which will be made up r at tbe close of the New York show. a The pros;>ecU for the Philadelphia t show indicate that the exhibition will j exceed iD beauty any display that has . ever b en attempted .in Philadelphia. r Many of the leading [motor boat . £ • builders of the country will be among £ tbe exhibit, rs. Tbe motor bicycles ] ' builders are also making a good dis- | play and the gun makers and fishing ! tackle manufacturers are sending in i the latest models of tbe productions a ■ of their various factories. The decorae tions will be the finest that have ever been seen in an interior decorative r scheme. The idea is t® represent « c strip of forest land and the ball will be ? field with large fulT* grown pine trees, t Hidden among thetn will be fine speci- . mens of wild game life size. The roof V will be decorated with thousands oi ■ pounds of artificial leaves and vines. - Some of the exhibits are coming from / as far away as tbe northern part of s Maine, and with them will come a I whole corps of noted hunters and guides 1 who will be able to tell inquiring sports2 men of tbe grand banting, fishing, i el/., to be found in their Cistricti. e Everything is .complete now for the i big three days' trap mooting iocte a- _ i j meet at Holmesborg Junction, a few : miles ooteide of the city, to be held in r i rrnrrtrr with the show. Invitations i to tfes sfasec have bees rereled to thna 3 i thousand sportsmen mod it is expected 1 that the entry list will be tbe largest j ■ that has ever taken part in any shoot - I in Pennsylvania. Worked Like a Chans Mr. D. N. Walker, editor of that ' spicy journal, the Enterprise, Louisa, 1 Va. , says: "I ran s nail in my foot ' last week and at once applied Bucklen's , Arnica Salve. No infiamm*' ion followed, the salve si'nply healed the wound." Heals every sore, bum and skin disease. Guaranteed at all drug ' store. 26c. ' mar

