Cape May Star and Wave, 4 April 1908 IIIF issue link — Page 3

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THOMAS W. MILLET & SON '4 i =C0AL AND W00D= OFFICE ., 32 O WASHINGTON STREET OAJfE MAY, IV. J. Telephone VO. 50^^ * ▼ 7 Established 1831 Established 1 83 1 \\ "The Old Reliable Jewelry Store" JOSEPH K. HAND «> 2$ 311 WASHINGTON STREET 2t 7 a Watches, Clocks, Jewelry and Silverware. Repairing of all kinds 7 k 1 7 promptly attended to. It BUILDERS HARDWARE AND MECHANICS FINE TOOLS W. S. WARE 516 Washington St.. CJape May. PHONE 154 A SAVE MONEY! SAVE MONEY! By, Dealing fvt SWAIJfN ACCOMMODATION MARKET Broadway and York avenue West Cape May, N. J. All kinds ot groceries, MEATS anc* provisions at the lowest market prices. Goods delivered to any part of the borough or city. Local Telephone No 1 10. BECKETT'S LIVERY and Boarding Stables TUCKAHOE, N. J. s 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 anv time during the week. FRANK BECKETT. IF YOU WANT A GOOD RANGE OR BEATER CrZESSHH ZmT-E BKOWIs) WHO HAS THE Only Full Line of Stoves in Town Tin and Agate Ware. Tin Roofing in all its Branches. 322 MANSION STREET Cape May City, New 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 Wail Paper, which will be sold at prices to defPftompetition 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 prices. Please examine my stock Before buying elsewhere. ELDBEDUE JOHKMNI, 318 Washington Street. - ' "> 'f r*' -r f .

AT HALLS PONGEE, ALL SILK 27 INCH 76 GENTS. "Four in One" Black Water-proof Jap Silk 65c. 75c. and ^ $1.00 Neat Designs in Stripes, Checks . and Gray Silks 50 c. 75c- and $roo Something New in -Wool Suitings SHADOW STRIPES At 85 c- and $1.00 36 Inch Pure Silk Black Taffetas $1.00 Up 50 in. All-wool Panamas $1.00 All-wool Panamas in all colors at 50c , AU-wdol Stevens Checks at 50c. Wicklow Stripes and Checks at 18c « ; LADIES AND MISSES TAILORED SUITS JACKETS AND , ' SKIRTS r In these goods there is so much, badly made, 1 cheap stuff, in the market that we do not care to quote prices, but if quality and workmanship count with you, call and examine our stock. MUSLIN UNDERWEAR Corset covers 15c. up. Drawers 25c up. Nightgowns 50c. up. Short petticoats 29c up Long petticoats 59c up. DOLLAR SHIRTWAISTS We have waists from 50 cents to $3.50, but we make a specialty of fine lawn waists at $1.00 and qan give you a splendid variety and better quality for the money than you ever saw before' HALL'S DRY GOODS STORE 226 Market Street Philadelphia The Home Newspaper THE NEWSPAPER that chronicles all the local happenings of the neighborhood can never be displaced. but it needs to be reinforced in every family by the newspaper that glvee all the news of the State, Nation and World. This Is why the Newark Evening News should have a place la every home In New Jersey. It covers the State from Sussex to Cape May; It tells the truth abouth politics and politicians; It wears "no collar and Is under obligations to nobody but Its readere. It gives all the news all the time. More than sixty-eight thousand residents of New Jersey buy it every day. Try it a Month for 50c THE EVENING NEWS PUBLISHING CO. 215 217 Market Street, Newark, New Jersey The New-York lribune The newspaper in the home is a necessity. Get one that can be safely^ read i by the entire family. Toe Tribune is a paper that prints 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; and while, at times it may occasionally make mistakes, its readers beiieve and trust in it. The ; Dally 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. In fact, there is nothing ever printed in The Tribune that will not nstruct and educate, just as it is a fact that there is nothing ever printed that willoffend decency. With The Sunday T ribune you get a handsome illustrated .'supplement of tirgely topics and a superb twenty-page magazine with colored cover, which contains most interesting fiction ana short stories by well known authors. Shis with other sections, goe£&> make up one of the most complete and Sunday v Newspapers published. The Daily and Sand*} Tribune the ideal family newspaper. If you are not familiar with it you owe it to yourself and family to at least try a mouth's subscription to verify the -above statement . A dollar bill sent to the Circulation Department of The Tribune, New York, will bring The Dally and Sunday Tribune J nto your fami y for one month. Or send $10 for one year. .

SBE1IFFS SALE By virtue of a writ of fieri facia* to , me directed and issued out of the j Court of Chancery of the Statoof New ' Jersey. I will expose for sale at public . hours of 12 and 5 in the afternoon, to- | wit, at 1 o'clock p. m.. on • MONDAY, "APRIL 27th. 1908, j ALL that certain tract or parcel of ' lend and premises hereinafter partial, ; larly described, situate in the City of Ocean City, in the county of Cape ' May and State of New Jersey, i 1 BEGINNING on the northwesterly i side of Central avenue at the distance of two hundred- and ten (210) _ feet southwesterly from the southwesterly i line of Nineteenth street, containing i in front or breadth on Central avenue < forty (40) feet and of that width ex- . tending in length or depth northwester- . feet to a fifteen feet widejtoeet and the lota of Ocean City AeeOdhtion. i » Being the aame lot or piece of ground i which William A. Massey and Roxanna < G., his wife, by deed in indenture, I dated the thirteenth day of September, A. D.. 1897, granted and conveyed - unto the raid Josiah Bradway and Re becea O. Brad way, his wife, their heirs and assigns, forever, subject to the I conditions and restrictions of the Ocean City Association. Together with all and singular the rights, privileges, hereditaments and appurtenances thereunto belonging or in anywise appertaining, and the ' reversions and remainders, rents, issues and profits (hereof, and all the estate, right, title, interest, use, i property, claim and demand of the said defendants of, in, to and out of the ' same, as may be necessary for the ' purpose. i NOTE— The above property will be ; sold subject to a mortgage of $690 . with interest thereon from April 2, , 1907, and taxes for the year ,1907, 1 ; amounting to $23.40 besides cost and interest. Seised as the property of Rebecca O. Bradway. et als., defendants, taken in > execution at the suit of William A. Massey. complainant, and to be sold by ROBERT R. CORSON. Sheriff. Albert A. Howell, 415 Market street, Camden, N. J., Solicitor. Dated March 17th, 1908. P. F. $9.86 3-28 5t 1 SHERIFF'S SALE. By virtue of a writ of Fieri Facias. • to me directed, issued out of the Court of Chancery of New Jersey, on the 4th ; day of March, A. D., 1908, in a certain cause wherein Robert E. Hand, Ad- ' ; ministrator, etc., is complainant, and Mary Halpin, et als, are defendants, I - shall expose to sale at public vendue, ON MONDAY. APRIL 20th. 1908, , between the hours of twelve and five o'clock p. m., to-wit, at one o'clock in ■ the afternoon of said day, at the Sheriff's Office, in Cape May Court , Hou6°, Cape May County, New Jersey. 1 ALL the following described marsh tract or piece of land situate in the Borough of West Cape May, in the County of Cape May and State of New Jersey, and bounded as follows: | BEGINNING at a corner of land of I the Knickerbocker Ice Company and the WesL Jersey Railroad Company;!. • thence along the Easterly side line of the said Railroad Company north six- 1 teen degrees fifteen minutes east one j hundred and forty-seven feet to a cor- j ner of land now of said West Jersey Railroad Company, formerly of Wil- 1 liam Eldredge: tnence I bounding on j Baid Railroad Company's land south i 1 sixty-four degrees thirty minutes east j about six hundred and twenty feet to I Cape Island creek ; thence along said j creek, south three degrees fourteen minutes east about sixty-six feet to a i small gut or branch of said creek ; ! thence south forty degrees west about eighty-five feet to the line of the Knickerbocker Ice Company's land thence bounding on said Ice Go's. End north sixty-six degrees fifteen minutes ' west about six hundred and twelve teet to the place of beginning. Containing within, said bounds two acres of marsh more or less being the 1 same "tract of marsh or land | which was conveyed to the said James Learning by Thomas J. Yorke i by deed bearing date February 17th, 1891, and also being the same premises j conveyed to the said John Halpin and William J. Halpin by the Baid James : Learning and wife. ROBBRT R. CORSON. Sheriff. Dated Mareh 18. 1908. j Morgan Hand, Solicitor. P. F. $9.36 ' Appropriating Ordinance, 1908 An ordinance to direct and prescribe ! | the amount of taxes to be levied in the j ! City of Cape May, in the year A. D-, i | 1908, and to make appropriations and ! 1 limit expenditures for the time begin- ! | ning the first day of January. A. D., ! I 1908. and ending the thirty-first day of ' I December, A. D., 1908. Sec. 1. Be it ordained fsnd enacted ! by the inhabitants of the City of Cape I | May in City Council assembled and is j j hereby enacted by authority of the 1 same. That the following amounts j j ' are hereby appropriated for the rej spective purposes herein stated from ! any funds'in the treasury, to be used j 3 for the respective purposes and net 8 otherwise. . 1 . Mayor's salary, $ 500 1 2. Recorder's and Superinten3 dent of Water Works, etc., 1.000 I > 8. Assessor's salary, 500 1 f 4. Collector's salary, R00 t 5. Treasurer's salary, 600 6. Building Inspector's salary, 150 1 7. City Solicitor's salary, 300 1 8. Street Supreviaor's salary, 600 9. Engineer of water works. 780 ' . 10. Ass't engineer of water works. 720 i 11. Two Engineers of Fire Dept. 1.440 i 12. Police and Watchmen, 4, OX 18. Lighting ats. and public buildings, 12,500 14. Repairing, cleaning and < watering streets, 6.000 i 15. Fire and Water. 6,000 i 16. Property and Improvement, 4,000 i i 17. Incidentals, 2,500 I 18. Int. on City bonds and I It

27. aSSdrf H^thr* * si Operation of 8ewor Plant, UB J* 29. City Carpenter, 80. City Engineer, tt 81. Engineer Pumping Sutton, QD J "2. Amusements, 33. Musit^ Sec. 2. And be it further ardatond and enacted. That the money "* Tax dupltoate forA?Di., 1908, 7gjS| jl| Sec. 8. And be it farther ordained and enacted by the authority of th* same that this ordinance shall take effect immediately. 8. F. WARE, President of OoaocQ. Atteat: JNO. W. THOMPSON, - ^ Approved March Do Yos Need Male Help. "The Bowery Mission, conducted by Louis Klokech, has notified the Governors of the sertral States that the Mission can supply at a moment'* notice any number of able-bodied men for unskilled labor to the farms and industrial centres where there ja a marked dearth of labor. Ail that is ' required to secure such help is to pay 1 transportation. Applications should be addressed John O. Earl, Free Labor Bureau, 92 Bible House, York. - CABTORXA.. WAR UPON THE AMERICAN SALOON In two-thirds of all the territory of the United States the saloon has been abolished by law. Forty years ego there were 3,600,000 people living in territory where the sale of liquor was prohibited. Now there are 86,000,000 people under prohibitory law. Sincv ; that time the population of the'eoontry ' has scarcely doubled, while the poplo- | ation in prohibition territory his inI creased tenfolld. There are ,20,000,000 [ people in the fourteen Southern States. *17,000,000 ;of whom are under • , prohibitory law in some form. In 1900 [ there were 18.000,000 under prohibition ! in the United States ; now there are ■ 36,000,000. In eight months Statej wide prohibition has cleared the saloon . from an area as great as that of i France. In that area there is a solid ' block of territory 300 miles north and r south by 720 miles eastjand west, in | which on the first day of next ^January ; | a bird can fly. from the Mississippi to 1 the Atlanitc Ocean, and from the , | boundary of Tennesse to the Gulf of , j Mexico without looking down upon * j legalized saloon! Great Britain and ' | Ireland could be sec down over *hi« [ j space without covering it. There ; would be 10,000 square miles of "dry'* i territory left as a border. —From "The 'I Nation's Anti-Drink Crusade," by | Ferdinand Oowle Iglehart, in the ; j American Review of Reviews for April. i When you need clottung ask forC M. I WESTCOTT the Cape Mav County . salesmsn. Everybody knows that he is with WANAMAKER & BROWN ! OAK HALL, Sixth & Market Streets r Philadelphia. An enormous stock of ! clothing ready for Men-Women-Boys I and Girls. We pay excursion car fare | both wayB upon the purchase of a cer- , tain amount. ; ' NOTICE TO Ult'T CREDITORS. Estate of Henry Brown, deceased. Pursuant to the order of Chaa. P. Van am an, Surrogate of the County of i Cape May, made on the eleventh day ; of February, A. D., 1908, on the ap- . j plication of the subscriber, Admistra- ] tor of said deceased, notice is hereby | ; given to the creditors of said deceased I to exhibit to the subscriber, under I oath or affirmation their claims and de« ' mands against the estate of said de- '■ ceased within nine 'months from the . ] eleventh day Uf February, A. D., 1908, I j or they will be forever barred of any ■ | action against the subscriber. , Dated February 11th, A. D., 1908. JOSEPH E. BROWN. I 2-15 9t Administrator. 3] , • "j BEOBBE W. BEEVES .steam ana Hot water H E g T i H 6 Sanitary Plumbing by * Skilled Workmen. Ask for Estimates. wasHigOH Street.