Cape May Star and Wave, 25 April 1908 IIIF issue link — Page 5

r, ■ ;-Jpi CAPE MAY STAP AND WAVE SATURDAY APIRL 25, 190a

fcftKlH6 POWDER Absolutely Pore The only baking powder ■ made with Royal Grape Cream of Tartar >• Mini, R( Use Phosphate RIO HRANDE. ; Captain Silas Shaw spent Sunday borne with his wife and grand children. t Mr. and Mrs. George Taylor and children visited friends here. this week. <■ Mr. and Mrs. Warren Meal spent f Sunday with friends at West Cape - • , George Thurston and lady friend, \ drove to Cape May Sunday afternoon. Mrs. John Morton and two sons £ were visiting friends at Wild wood over t Sunday. The many friends of Mrs. Mary j Goff "were pleased to see her at church v Sunday. g Among the automobilists on last Friday we noticed Mrs. Fred B. Neal, g Mrs. Jones B. Hand, of Philadelphia, and Mrs. Thomas Riley enjoying a c ride with Reuben Reeves, of West Cape May in his new car. ^ Somers Isard arrived home Monday c with a load of oysters. g Mr. and Mrs. William HarriB and daughter spent a few days with friends |- in Philadelphia. t! Mrs. Eliza Morton, of Dennisville, is £ spending a few weeks with her daughter.

Rev. Mr. Farley, an evangelist, will preach in the Baptist church on Sunday morning and evening. Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Bates, of Fishing Creek, spent Easter Sunday with j their parents. Mr. and Mrs. Brown entertained their daughter Marie and husband, of Vineland. Miss Nettie Harris went to Cape May on Friday. Mrs. Eleanors Schellenger, of Cold Spring, visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Turner, of this place. When a boy turns his bulging pocket inside out we marvel at the quantity and variety of articles he has stowed ■way. ' Odd lengths of string, mar- 1 blea, a horse chestnut, a top. brass | nails, hickory nuts, an apple, and i many more articles are garnered by j this "snaoper up of unconsidered trifles." We think the collection must ! be hard on a boy's pocket. And it is. , But do we ever think of the variety and ^miscellany of the substances we pat into the pocket of our stomach? 1 There's th-i apple and the nuts, and thiDgs besides quite as indigestible as ( brass nails, and with no more food value than so many marbles. And yet we wonder that the stomach "gives out." When the stomach breaks down 1 under the. strain of careless eating and N irregular meals it can be perfectly and permanently restored 'to health and I . strength by the use of Doctor Pierce's 1 Golden Medical Discovery. The action j of this medicine on the stomach and j c other organs of -digestion and nutrition , is so marked, that, relief from disease is at once exjferieneed, and the headaches, liver troubles, kidney disorders, t skin eruptions and ether sympotoms of a diseased stomach are quickly cured. , Dr. Pierce's medicines are purely vegetable— no alcohol or habit-forming E drugs enter into their composition. ; GREEN CREER. Joseph Johnson, of the Camden Fire i Department, spent' faster at Alfred j Crease's, accompanied by another fire- ' 2 Stewart Lowe was taken very sick ■MaHBawwawsBwaaMB Pale, Thin, Nervous? ' Then your blood must be in 1 a very bad condition. You j certainly know what to take, then take it — Ayer's Sarsa- j parilla. If you doubt, then ' 1 consult your doctor. We know 1 what he will say about this J grand old family medicine. j Tbto te tb* flr»t qoMtiaa yoor doctor woald aak: 'An your bow* la r*»ol*r?" Ha knoara <■ U>»I A.ily action of tb* bowel, 11 abaolulaly A RUdatTJ.C.A»fr9»,I«w!U.JUan t Aye* S£_ | Wa bar* aa alalia I Wa pnbJlak c I ,

one day last week, but Dr. Lake soon brought him out all right. Richard, Selovat caught a fifty pound drum last week in his pound. Weak fish and king crabs have arrived. Sylvester and Bessie Robinson came up from Eldredge to spend their , Easter vacation with friends here. | Their father, Joseph Robinson and i wife, drove up after them on Sunday. 1 William Wilkin, who sailed with \ Captain Joseph James, to Charleston, was so 6ick when he got there that he i was leftrin a hospital. He has typhoid j fever. He is a member of the K. G. E. £ Lodge here. t A.- M. Robinson and Ralph Schel- < lenger drove to Burleigh on Thursday ' evening to meet Edgar Douglass, who , is president of Middle Township S. S. i organization to arrange a program for i the May meeting to be held at Dias J Creek. ( I 1 Mm Willis dr- Bramell and Mrs. t Alonzo Broeius, of South Dennis, spent i Friday with friends here. Meadames Helen James and Lou [ Hearon spent Easter with their parents bare. » Frank Hollingsead and family spent ' Friday and Saturday with Edgar Crease at Cape May. t Jerry Foster entertained company the first of the weqk. Mrs. Harry Conover has made frequent viBits to the bedside of her r Washington Hemingway. 6he fa and her family and other relatives at- a tended the funeral which took place on 0 p Frank Mathis is the proud father of j a'son which arrived on Saturday in time for Easter. v Harry Thompson, who has been in I £ Beach Life Saving Station all > winter "has returned home for the j t< I p; Miss t Ethel Erricson did her Easter | e< shopping in Philadelphia. Mrs. Maggie Schellenger entertained ! a, company over Easter from Philadephia. , g, Ralph and Pauline Niekerson. of | g Inlet, spent their Easter va- j c cation with" their "aunt, Mrs. Jane 1 jy " hi Mrs. Francis Cresae was called to ] last we^k on account of I m the serious illness of her sister, Mrs. j Campbell I m I T. Woolson, of Somer's Point, was j

here [last week with his • various j remed ies. 1 1 A. M. Robinson went to Cape May on Sunday to attend the Presbyterian ' j church in the morning and make official e 1 j calls on' some of the Sunday schools. ( : He is", the county president this year. ; He also wnt to Haddonfield this week f to att nd the Presbytery there. William Hollingsead and son Frank, C and Ed. Compton and wife, wen I to d Geshen on Sunday to attend the funeral of Charles Sayre. o Misses Bertha and Carrie Scheutze, of Pierce's, passed through here on I Sunday. f Captain Joseph James, of Schooner Lotta Russell, is on his way from t Charleston to Philadelphia. J Mrs. Rhoda Ludlow and brother Russell Sheppard. of Trenton, spent Easter d with their sister, Mrs. Frank Hand, d Mr. Sheppard assisted greatly with the singing in the morning service. • j s, Rev. and Mrs. Elijah Tozer are en- j tertaining company this week. I ci Captain and Mrs. Ezra Norton, of J d; - Oape May, visited friends hrre the first • of the week. j fi Mrs. William Eldredge, of Stone S spent the first of the week I with Mrs. Sarah Schellenger. ] v: | The new house of Walter Schellenger di is being plastered. j Mrs. Sarah Schellenger visited her ^ oi I daughter. Mrs. Eva Townsend at Court i m i House Monday. Mrs. Mamie Hebenthal. of Cape May. j C visited home friends here on Tuesday, j Mrs. Mattie Slaughter and Mrs! | hi Priscilla Broughton, of Wildwood, | spent Monday night here with their a parents. S A letter received here last week j from Rev. John Lowden. of Downer, C says they are very nicely settled in N their new home and every thing movziiroly. They have a fine church. d< get more salary than they did w here, with one church less Our female population seems to be 01 increasing. Of nine births since last ^ July, 6 have been girls and one girl and one boy have died. We have fourteen ^ widows, fifteen bachelors, several ofthem living alone, nine widowers and three maiden ladies. j Miss Erroa Norbury7\who had -been 1 1' in Philadelphia, a month-with fier sis-l ^ ter, Mrs. S. M. Crease, returned ' )c last week, accompanied by her ! fi: nephew, Adolphus Crosse. Mr. Cresse ! and wife came down and spent Easter. , g' The Methodist (church rendered an Easter program entitled "The Day of I Victory," on Saturday evening. A; very large congregation was present and the program was well carried out. Ji The Sunday school is well atten^H and we hope good is being done, flm older members stem to be taking more interest than usual. ^ Quantity and Quality rarely ever go I together. Here's the exception. El- I liott's Emulsion Oil Liniment contains I half a pint of an emulsion of Spirits I Turpentine, Origanum. Kerosene Oil, I Ether and Ammonia, and sella for only I a bottle. Guaranteed ar money I back.BV. IE. D. Marcy A Co. apr |

' COMFOltTTNG WORDS ' Many Cape Court House Households WB1 Had Them So. , To have the pains and aches of a bad back removed ; to be' entirely free from annoying, dangerous urinary disorders is enough to make any kidney sufferer grateful. To tell bow this great change can he Through t about will prove comforting -Words to hundreds of Cape May readers. Jos. Douglass, living on Maine Street, Cape May Court House, N. J-, says: "Mra/DoBglaas frequently suffered from sharp twinges through the small of her back and she was- unable find relirf from theee troubles despite the fs-rt that she used many different remedies. Headaches Tand dizzy spells frequently bothered her, < and she was unable to rest well at night. Doan's K-dney Pills were recommended to her by a friend who used them with good results, and she : procured « box at Willets Corson's : btore. After using them a snort time the pains greatly diminished, and it was. not long " before they entirely , disappeared. She is now feeling much < better and recommends Doan's Kidney ! Pills in the highest terms." . < For sale by all dealers. Price 60 , cents. Foeter-Milburn Co.. Buffalo, ! New York, sole agents for the United • States. Remember the name- Poan's— and take no other. ( fisui.no creek. Mrs. Hannah* Woolson had a carpet j sewing Thursday. A large num- ] of neighbors and friends were her guests and enjoyed tbor- r oughly the many good things she \ placed f before "them to dispose of. j reported'a fine time. Mr. and Mrs. William McPherson t visited her sister, Mrs. Baroett at f Beach Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. II. Morrell Woolson[entertained Ttev. snd Mrs. F. B. Sheppard and son for supper Thursday eveuing. * t Aaron [Robinson, of Green Creek, j and County Superintendent of Sunday t visited tour Sunday school afternoon. t Irene Woolson and Miss Rena p Millet, -visited Miss Ella Douglass at. _ her home at Cold Spring on Saturday, £ Mrs. Annie McKean. of West Cape f visited friends here this week. Miss Louise Vanaman visited her j| mocher here Sunday. f, Enoch Miller visited his friend. Wal- p I c-nocn miner visuea nis inena. wai-

j McNeal, at Erma Saturday and I George Jfatthews wears quite s smile. No wonder, .No. 3. It is a fine daughter. William Feaster was calling on in our viljage Thursday IssL Mrs. Harry Thompson, of Green was visiting her mother a few Miss Etta Gregory passed through village on Friday last. Mr. and [Mrs. John Heminsway, -of were called home to his funeral. Mr. and Mrs. William Thompson took tea Sunday evening with Mr. Snyderand wife. Mrs. Joseph Snyder and grand- 1 called on relatives here one j . this week. Rennie Bishop from Germantown, j spent Easter^with Mr. Caleb Shaw. |( Mr. and[Mrs. waltf r Shaw and son j ' called on their grand paients on Mon- ! { Mrs. Albert. Pierson is spending a , days with her daughter. Mis. H. : Mrs. Julia Bell, [ of Holraesburg, is , ( visiting Mrs. A. H. Snyder for a few | J J ^ Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Cummings called ( Mr. C. Shaw and family on Wed- 1 j nesday last. Edgar Woolson has gone to Green ! . sturgeon fishing for a while. ' I Edward Orowell called on his sister, c Mrs. John Snyder on Saturday last. 1 1 Mr. and Mrs. Charles Folk and son J c called on Mrs._Charles Matthews on I last. | ( Mrs. Charles Foster, of Green j f spent Easter with her sister, j t Albert Pierson. i , Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Crowell, of Phila- j , wore over Sunday visitors j with his aunt, [Mrs. [John Snyder. ! Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Huber and son, j , of .Darby, spent Easter with Mr. and t Herbert Shaw. " Harry Johnson, of North Highland, 1 ( has moved in our village a£ain. - BITTEN BT A SPIDER Through blbod poisoning caused fay a ' ' piderbite, John Washington, of Bos- c queville, Tex., would have lost his leg, | i which became a mass of running sores, j had he not been persuaded to try Bocklen's Arnica Salve. He writes : "The I r application relieved, and four < boxea healed all the sores." Heals every sore. 25 cents ac All Drug , Stores. ^ apr ; . TUCKAHOE ; The spring institute ofithe Cape May ' i County W. C. T. U. was held in the j Tuckahoe M. E. church, April 21. 1908. The delightful weather, good attendance and enthusiastic speakers, united in making it one of the most

w«^nmrtitut« ever^ held ibTthis | '•nd. gave a powerful address is the ■- evening. Topic. "Temperance, iU octloolc. its progreaa. its final aucceas." 4 IKKKE OF 8EA1TI 7 , Price of health in a malarious i diatnet is just 25 cents; the coetj^a t box of Dr. King's New Life Pills," . JY rites Ella Slay ton, of Noland, Ark. New Life Pills cleanse gently and im1 fe and vigor, to the system. J5c. Satisfaction gukrtnteed by All Itruggiats. apr

; POPULAR MUSIC 18 CENTS A COPY I At tlie Star and Wave Music, Post Card and Stationery department, all ; the latest music can be -obtained. | Among the popular ones are : Sweet Heart Days. : live or I would Die fcr,You. • , You can't guess what be wrote on my 81a te. Sturshine. I'm starving for one sight of You. i The cloeer it gets to leaving time the it is to[go, (Waltz aong). It's Morning. (Coonjsoni). When the Springtime brings the roses, Jessie Dear. Class Mates. i : Society Whirl. The old See Saw. Make Believe. Afraid to go home in the Dark. _ The best I get is Much Obliged to You. Dance of the Nightingales the Nightingale calls its Mate ^■g Madeline. Mail orders promptly filled. When ordering by mail add two cents for postage. COURT HOUSE The grounds about the public buildings are in excellent" condition and ' Smith takes pride in keeping the buildings in good order. Considerable work is being done on the Main Seashore road in the northern part of the town. Professors Gill and McCready spent their Esster vacation with friends in Governor Fort signed the bill mak- ] ing it unlawful for an unnaturalized 1 to hunt game without first ' * procuring a license, > fee fee of which

3 is ten dollars. For each and every violation a fine of ten dollars will be imposed. This will be a great factor 1 in preserving game as fee foreigners i have been slaughtering it at all seasons of the year without regard to the 1 law or fee rights of fee American citizens. - 1 A number of our Bociety people Spent ' Sunday at the Hotel Cape May, whils others topk the usual trip to Atlantic 1 City. "The King of Zion, "a scriptural f cantata, was successfully rendered by 5 the -choir of the First Baptist Church Sunday evening. The church was I crowded and the music and readings ' were of~a high standard. Both the morning and evening services of the First M. E. church were I I well attended. The following musical i : program was given : j Morning Service— "Celestial Voices" j j organ ; Hymn No. 161 ; Anthem, "O; j Death, Where is Thy Sting." Spinney; Offertory; Hymn No. 156; Anthem, "Turn Thee Again, O, Lord;" Sulli'van; Hymn No. 162; "Easter Recessional," organ. Evening Service— "Spring Song." . Hymns Nos. 16(J, J59, 157; : Anthem, "Easter Hymn," Novella:! j Offertory; Solo, "From Gloom to1 Glory," by Miss Risley ; Hymn No. I 68. -Anthem, '[God Shal£Wipe away I ail Tears," Field; Hymn No. 180;, j "Easter March," organ, j Mechanic street is in excellent con- ' I ditions and the State Road from here | Goshen is one of the best [in the county. j The application for the appointment of six Surveyors of Highway to lay ' | out a public road at Rio Grande was j over until a later dxte. It is | thought that the petition will be with- ' ! drawn from fee Court files. { Later— The petition withdrawn aod : a new petition will be filed extending ] j the length of the road which will be i satisfactory to all parties concerned. ! The Wildwood Electric and Traction | Company has purchased of fee Five Mile Beach Electric Railway Company I and the West Jersey Electric Company : a number of shares of stock and 'in order to pay same and to secure funds I ! for further enterprises has issued bonds I not to exceed in the aggregate one , j million dollars to fee Security Trust j Company as trustee. David H. Goff, one of our young atj torneys now practicing[in Camden, was I ! j in attendance this term of court and { won for fee plaintiff fee suit in the , Circuit Court, Elwood H. Reeves vs. Allison Parker, et al. CABTOnTA. YM H.IB tiWl* BMffi 1

JaA She took Scctfj Emulsion. mgjfe Remit : I Vf! ^ * P0*""1 • <*r " weight lji'£| ALL OaUCCZSTSt SOc. AKD $1.00 jf ^

it Death of Washington Hestinfvnr Washington Hemingway departed th's life on Saturday. 18th im it. He ' came here over thirty years ago, and ^ successfully taught school for • several , years. H- ni irried and lived here and , has held fee postoffice for many years. , Hat waa<78-yeais old on his last birfe- ( day. The funeral occurred on Wednee- . 1 day. Rev. E. A. Wells came from • Pleasantville and conducted fee ser- | - vices which was largely attended. The wife and children have fee heartfelt . - sympathy of all. He is going, only going c Out of pain and into bliss. 1 Out of sad 'and sinful weakness ' Into perfect holiness. i Snowy brows no care shall shade -them, ' • Bright eyes, tears shall never dim, Rosy lips, no time shall fade them. e Jesus called him unto Him. ■ - i r OABTOHIA. 1 Bewths ^TteRMYwHwAhn 1 j 1 ! ERMA ;£ j Mr. and Mrs. George McNeal spent j, j * Easter with h- :* lister, Mrs. Lena , Crane at Atlantic City. ■ Mrs. Annie Hawn and daughter, . • Miss Lizzie Hawn, were among fee ; Philadelphia shoppers Friday. — i ' . ' ~ d Democratic State Conventioa b I j *2 The Democratic voters of Cape May , County are directed to meet at a con- 0 - venient hour and place in fee several' t| , precincts, to be designated by the Pre . cinct Committee on Tuesday, April 21. g i 1908, for'fee purpose of electing dele- y gates to the State Convention, to be a , held at the State Street Theatre, T Trenton, N. J., on Tuesday, April 28, 1908, at 12 o'clock noon for fee pur- g pose of electing four Senatorial and i( i twenty district delegates to the Democratic National Convention to be held q in fee City of Denver, Colorado, on ^ July 7, 1908, to nominate candidates ^ for President fand Vice President of I ^ fen United States. K. Each election district in fee county j o] is entitled to elect one delegate. j | • EVANS G. SLAUGHTER, | [j Chairman County Committee. , J. W. PINCUS, , Secretary. y i Aik (far AD«'» FmI-Eim. A Ptwlrr. • g( ' It makes walking easy. Cures Corns, ti Bunions, ingrowing nails, swollen and tt sweating feet. At all druggists and gc shoe stores. 25c. Don't accept any Si substitute. Sample Free. Address, nc Allen S. Olmstead, LeRoy, N. Y." 4t •

A pleasant Snd instructive Easter -~| servic^rok place In fee First 1C1 E. chur^tkst Suhday. The puiplt plat- ~ Easter lilies, hyacinths and palms. pastor preached in fee morning o& "The Resurrection of fee Body." The evening service consisted of singing fee school, special anthems b> the choir, and recitations, all bearing on Easter. The sermon# tomorrow morning will on "The Recognition of Friends in Heaven," a continuation of last Sonday's sermon on fee Resurrection of fee body, and fee evening subject will be "The Consciousness of Sin Forgiven," continuation of fee sermon of two weeks ago. DOIM BDsmurf ton "When my friends thought I was about to take leave of this world, on account of indigestion, nervousness and general debility." writes A. A. ChisTreadwell, N. Y.. "and when it as if there was no hope left, I persuaded to try Electric Bitters, and I rejoice to say that they are curing me. I am now doing business again as of old, and am still gairing daily." ■ Besc tonic medicine on earth. Guaranteed by All Druggists. 50c. apr ROTATOR IS THE KAIE OF A PERFECT AURI OOCK Whether you are required to report for work "On fee minute" or a person of leisure, a good alarm clock is often a necessity. The ROTATOR is and is recommended to both light and sound sleepers as polifee safest and Barest guaranteed of being aroused at fee time desired. Ultra sound sleepers, after[ using common, continuous alarm clock a short time, have found feat fee alarm awakens tbem momentarily only, and again lapse into .slumber, fee alarm having failed of fits purpose. alternate noise and silence of fee "Rotator" is so irritating in its effect and so persistent in keeping at it feat never fails of its object. The retail price of fee clock is $2.50. On account of the universal depression, fee manufacturer was compelled have ready monsy, and "The Philadelphia Press" made an arrangement direct wife him feat enables them to offer "The Press" Daily, orf& whole year, and one of the "Rotators" delivered at your door, both for four doland twenty-five cents. The saving is yours, ~but hurry, as demand is greater than fee supply. • Don't wait until you have a deep seated[cough. "An ounce of prevenis worth a pound of cure," With, thelfirst tickling of the bronchial tubes gefcu botte of Rydale's Cough Elixir. for parent or child. Contains opiates. V. M. D. Marcy & Co fl

, - ERMA BULLETIN VOL. i. Erma. N.J.. Ml. 25 1908. * .7

Items of Interest at R.T. Johnson's

! Bargain in 31b. canned pears, regular price 20c, now 10c. i Non-alcoholic chrystal flavorings, , regular price 10c, now 5c. | Rice pop corn, regular price 20c qt., < now 10c. i Unce Jerry Pan cake flour, 10 cents, t now 5c. « ] I 12lbs best buckwheat, regular 55c, i now 35c. 1 Korn Kinks^T for 5 cents. | These are specials while they last. I A little job in men's and boy's suits, y I Sizes 35. 36 and . 38, breast measure F-1.00 to $8.00. These are regular $8.00 E j to $12.00 suits. c | Young men's long'pant suits, age 15, t 1 18 and 19, at half price. t | Children's wool suits, $1.50 up to c j $4.00. -* t

These are a saving of nearly 50 per , cent. In asking for the above please mention the good* advertised. To introduce it to those feat want of the finest coffees in fee land will sell our Dutch Plantation coffee at 2Se. Has never been sold for than 32c to 35c before. Offer good only until last day of this month. over 5 lbs to any one [customer at price named. Hains 12c, sugar cured and smoked with hickory wood. They are delicious. We raised on our own place between 3500 and 4000 lbs pork. It was all corn fed and we put it down in pickle, the old fashioned way. 12Jc lb. Beats the dry salt that is forced on you'today. Don't' take my word for it, but it.

REUBEfi T- JOHNSON ' ' ERMA, N J.

i BAAM W ■ ■ ■ jS |M| •-» :1 ! K ijBrf JpM ■ ■