Cape May Star and Wave, 30 May 1908 IIIF issue link — Page 5

CAPE MAY STAR AND WAVE SATURDAY MAY 30. 190a .1 — — " . I . . a : , >. . i I n ' '■ ~

■ / WOYAL QRAPg =f CREAM OF TARTAS IRoyalI V BakinflPowder j ABSOLUTELY jf- I COURT HOUSE Hiss Gertrude Fisher. of South Seaville, was visiting Miss Dora Hall this week. The Cape May County Trotting and Breeding "Association hold their first meet this Saturday week. Burton Corson was a Sunday visitor at Dennisville. Howard S. TownseDd is a frequent visitor at the county seat. Some of our farmers are getting their late potato ground ready for planting. » Miss Louise Springer spent part of last week with friends in the Quaker City. Mrs. Claude Long has been spending part of the week with 'friends in Camden. Mead Tomlin was a recent visitor at ftennisville. Burton Corson and Miss Lydia Springer were out driving Tuesday evening of this week. Charles Tomlin. of Dennisville. was visiting his son during the first of.the week. Miss Emma Foster has returned from a visit with her brother in Philadelphia. Mrs. Dora A. Stiles and daughter spent part of the wpek wjth her mother at Tuckahoe. Leslie S. Ludlam spent Sunday with his parents at South Dennis. The farmers are bringing in their early strawberries Curtis T. Baker, Esq. , of Wildwood, was at the county fseat looking after real estate ^matters on Monday of this week. Base ball has become a thing of the past with Court House people and the sporting blood is getting very thin. ! The receipts from the minstrel show ' which was advertised for|the benefit of j the Court House Athletic Association j have not "yet filled the coffers of the j Association. The boys decided that the money looked good to them. | About two weeks more' and then the ; Hjgh School pupils may have" their va- ' cation. Very good results are theffruits of the work of the pupils and devotion and earnestness of the excellent corps i of teachers. Levi Wentxtll and Bon Learning are J employed at the new Baptist parson- . age which is being built by contractor i Godfrey. Nothing has been heard of Brice . j Clark known as "Reddy" who took [ , Harry Bennett's horse and runabout 1 i and disappeared. The horse and wagon I ' have been recovered but Reddy is still , at large and it will be a good thing if { , he is not captured, perhaps he will j < then give the county seat a "wide)' berth. ' ' * Our yachtmen are getting their ■ailing craft in trim frr the summer races. : The "Quito" has been fitted | up in fine shape and is one of the fastest at Bennie's Landing. And Captain ,-Ed. Springer may wtll be . proud of his ya cht. Knowing that so ne oeople say too much we will close with the following ■ remark: "Rydale's Cough Elixir is J guaranteed under the U. S. Pure Food and Drug Law. Serial number 2119 to contain neither Morphine, Opium, 1 Chloroform nor opiates of any kind, c and to be absolute ly harmless. V. M. D. Marry & Co. may 1 COLD SPRING. Mia a Edna Weeks entertained Mire Estella Hams on Tuesday evening. « * Gravel is I being carted from Cold Spring station for road'purposes. | The annual May Party or excursion to the woods and water, of the Cold Spring Presbyterian Sunday School r J When the 1 Hair Falls j Then it's time to act! No time i to study, to read, to ex peri- J ment! You want to save your < hair, and save it quickly, too! j So make up your mind this > very minute that if your hair j ever comes out you will use < Ayer's Hair Vigor. It makes J the scalp healthy. The hair i stays in. It cannot do any- \ thing, else. It's nature's way. i The beet kind of a testimonial — 1 a— /Ly er'sS&ZL. . ■

s occurred last Thursday. A good time = is reported by all. g Mrs. Mittie Richardson, of Court H House, spent Tuesday with MiBS.WidH die Hoffman. = Millicent Chad wick was an over j| Sabbath visitor at Cape May. = and Mrs. Irvin Eldredge will EE soon remove to this village for tlfe = summer. = Miss Edna Weeks has successfully Z passed 11* examination at Cape May = City High School and will graduate I June 4. Miss Edna is a bright girl = and possesed of unusual energy. Be- ~~ fore the 'bus conveyed the pupils, she coyered the distance on f ot, during one whole winter, through storm and R- through shine. We ; congratulate her i is and extend to her our best wishes for i success in every undertaking through I >d life. st Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Bate called on I relatives Monday. I >r Mrs. ' Nellie Taylor, of West Cape j May, visited Mrs. C. McNeill Sat- < it urday. , Miss Ethel Nickerson, of South Den- a fr nis, came down Monday to look after 1 w school interests. She was elected-to look after the pupils at Academy this s >f year. Miss Nickerson is well prepared sr and has been a successful teacher for 1 three years. It will be remembered 1: g that she was valedictorian of the class >- in which she graduated. t Parents and children regret the de- I it parture of Mary Phillips, who has so successfully taught our school during t a the past year. She is pronounced a t

y teacher of more than ordinary ability. being especially fine in mathematics s and discipline, and has put the school e on a splendid footing, leaving it in excellent condition for next gear's work. i We wish her success wherever she | - shall select as a new place of labor. Miss Lulu Shaw has returned to her j r home after having spent two weeks at j f the home of Mrs. Jos. -McKissic. Mrs. Emily Schellenger visits at her* | i old home here occasionally. Mr. and Mrs. David McPherson spent r Sunday at Burleigh. A little new comer at Thomas j . Matthews, r - / , A SURPRISE PARTY s A surprise party was given Miss , \ Florence Halbruner Tuesday evening. I ' j Those present were Misb Estelle Har- | i ris. Miss Edna R. Weeks, Miss Mab 1 . I Foster. Miss Julia Allen, Miss Libhie | McNeill, Miss Nellie Halbruner, Miss 1 , Lydia Halbruner. Ed. Halbruner, El- ' I wood Douglass, Claude and Robert ' j Phillips. Walter McNeil, Frai.k HalWilliam Smith. Joe Elliot, 1 Bertram Snyder, Walter Owens. It is impossible lor any drue to digest food without the aid of the stom- < acb. Man cannot do nature's work— he , can only assist her, and any concern 1 claiming that they have a remedy that will digest food without the aid of the ; i stomach, thereby allowing the stomach to lay idle and rest, are claiming the I impossible. All remedies for stomach troubles should'be given with the sole 1 1 of aiding nature, and enabling ( | the stomach to do its own work. One . of the best scomach specialists in the U. S. wrote the prescription from ' | which Rydale's Stomach Tablets are j made and they enable the stomach to ! 1 i do its own work. Two sixes, 25c and , , j 50c. M. V. D. Marcy & Co. may 1 i t

OABTORZA. /?The Kind Yos Haw Ahrafs BougM ERMA Miss Lizzie Hawn visited friends at Cold Spring Tuesday. Misses Sheppard, Douglass and Mc- 1 Neill took tea with friends here Thurs- 1 day evening. The Children's Day program is being prepared Mrs.^Bertram Snyder is visiting her 1 sister in Tennessee Mr.JDaniel Schell* nger's children are enjoying a new runabout, Mr. |aud Mrs. .McDonald are living j the Bennett house. For people who are run down and who suffer from indigestion . or dyspepsia, biliousness, or torpid ' Jfver, coated tongue with bitter taste in the morning and poor appetite, it - becomes —necessary — to turn to some < tonic or strengthener which will assist , Nature and help them to get on their . : and put the body into its proper 1 condition. It ts becoming 'more and | more apparent that Nature's most val- | uable health-giving agents are to be found in forest plants and roots. Nearly forty yeare ago. Dr. R. V. 1 1 Pierce, now consulting phsician to the i ; Invalid's Hotel and Surgical Institute, at Buffalo, N. Y., discovered that by : scientifically extracting and combining • certain medical principles from native : roots, taken from our American forests, he could produce a medicine which was ■ marvelously efficient in curing cases of 1 blood disorder and liver and stomach trooble as well as many other chronic, lingering ailments. This concen- • trated extract of Nature's vitality he named "Golden Medical Discovery." purifies the blood by putting the stomach and liver into healthy condition, thereby helping the digestion and assimilation of food which feeds the blood. Thereby it cures weak stomach, indigestion, dnapid liver or biliousness, andkindreawrangemeots. The Cape May Baking Co.'i ice cream parlor, 406 Washington street, is now open. 5-30 tf

HOSHEN. t F. W. James was transacting busi- - ness at the county seat last Saturday. Ed. Townsend was visiting friends at r Qennisville one day last week. Freeholder Spenee and wife were 1 calling on friends at Court House last s Saturday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. John Douglass were ■ entertained by Mrs. Thomas Swain 1»« r Sunday. i Learning Wentzetl, of Dennisville, I was in town one d»y during the week. The Delaware Bay fishermen are : having very good luck with their : pounds this year. I This year the sea gulls are very in the bay, which is unusual unleas there are severe storms along i the coast. The Italian strawberry pickers are to arrive and prepare for the summer work. Jesse Hearon was recently here on a daily visit Charles Coombs spent last Saturday i afternoon transacting business at Cape j Court House. Mrs. Mary A. Padgett has been , spending the week with Mrs. L. Swain. Harry Snyder, of Philadelphia, has , been spending the week with friends km. , The early crops of the farmers j though they will be somewhat late will very good. { Meadow birds are very numerous in the vicinity— of Bidwell'a ditch and t the nearby marsh. ( ■ ujc u«u uj mill mi.

B If a person could always know just . what the trouble was when they began 1 to feel sick and "out of sorts" and ■ - also know what to do to get well quick . there would be lots leva sickness, a There are thousands of people who 1 " I suffer from Catarrh of the Bile Ducts j who don't know that they possess sev- . r j eral little ducts that lead from the , , t Liver and Gall Bladder and carry bile i and other fluids into the interstines. .j When these ducts get clogged with ' r mucous the owner will begin to get bil- I ! ious and have all kinds of mean feel- j £ t ings. Ordinary livtr pills and powders fail to relieve this condition. There is a remedy, however, made especially ' . for the trouble. Rydale's Liver Tab- , lets — a prescription of a specialist, j One dose convinces. Write for free I J sample. Rydale Remedy Co.. Newport j _ I News, Virginia. Guaranteed by M. V. , , j D. Marcy & Co. may j j DENNISVILLE I Captain Coleman Chance spent part " ! ; of the week at the county seat. Miss Beulah Stiles has returned from a visit with friends at Petersburg. Miss Rae Thompson spent part of ' the week with her grandmother, Mrs. j Mary Earnest. i t Brooks Blizzard, of Cape May, was 8 1 a Sunday visitor here with his parents. } ^ Messrs. Harry Chester and Charl s | g | Carroll were shorping in Philadelnhia j recently Mrs. Beulah L. Stiles has returned from a visit with friends in Camden I and Philadelphia. j ^ i The base ball season will open on I j Day. Manager Jefferson, of | 8 I Collingswood will put a fast team in j 8 I the field this season, and expects to | , claim the county pennant. Miss Clara Douglass spent part of j week with Mrs. Inez Corson, of I ^ ' C ourt House. E. L. Rice spent Sunday with Mr. ! * and Mrs. Uriah Gandy. j ^ Mrs. Mary Way is at home after i I - . . .... . . t

' spending several weeks with her daugh- I ter Jessie, who is at Colorado Springs. ■ The boys have tried the pond water : and say its all right. There is a large head of water and a fine opportuniy j for boating. Henry Martin, of Camden, was visit- ! ' ■ j ing friends here during the week. j ' I Henry Wallace, of Cumberland county, was transacting business here j ' | on Monday of this week. The small boy has begun his deatruc- | 1 tive work among the birds nests, not realizing what harm he is doing the | community as well as the birds them- ' selves. 1 1 The crabbers on the Delaware Bay | ! shore have been favored with several 1 1 | good winds. Fluvial Jaipes was a recent visitor I . I with his father here. The farmers in this township have planted a large part of their farms in i lima beans which they ship to the ' city markets. - Lewis Gilbert has one of the finest ] , chicken farms in the county, and the ! is becoming a paying one. j BY BEST FRIEND Alexander Benton, who lives on ] : Kuxal Route 1, Fort Edward. N. Y., ' says: "Dr. King's New Discovery is | best earthly friend. It cured me of ! asthma six years ago. It+iai. also t er- ' formed a wonderful cure of incipient' ' consumption for my son's wife. The ' first Lottie ended the terrible cough, i , and this accomplished, the other symp- ! toms left one by one. until she was , perfet .iy well. Di. King's New Dis- ■ i coverj- 'a power ove • h.- and colds j is simply marvelous. ' N j c -.her rem- j edy has ever equaled it. * "ully guar- ! j anteed i v All Druggists. : Jc and $1. 1 Trial bottle free. may j ' I FISHING CREEL Mrs. B. F. Sh^jpard, daughter and i ' son, spent Friday afternoon anj e- en- ; ing with Mrs. Annie Woolson. Mrs. Martha Snyder spent Tue- day , with her sister. Mrs. Charles Corson \ at West Cape May. Miss Danealia Hoffman, took tea -

Sunday evening ^with ber friend, Mi— Sarah Woolson. ' Mrs. Jennie McPherson and daugb- ' ter Emma were Holly Beach visitors ' Monday over night ^ Mr. and Mrs. D. Ann-ell Woolson and daughter Irene were over Sunday visitor with friends at Holly Beach. • Miss Mary Oliver, of Cape May, was f *n over night visitor Monday with Mrs. Lottie" Mi Her. / Miss Palate, a teacher in the Cape ' May City High School, was a visitor Tuesday night with her scholar. Miss e Ruth McPherson. r Mi— Rena Miller and brother Wilson, were Cape May visitors Monday. Mi— Sarah Woolson visited Mr. and Mrs. George Matthews Tuesday. ' : Mi— Olive Douglass, of Cold Spring, ; was calling on friends here Monday, j Mrs.Vleorge Mailer, of Cape May, was a guest Wednesday with her ' sister, Mrs. Enoch Miller. Mi— Etta Douglass from Burleigh ' is visiting Misa Maude Yerrick at the ' 1 Sea Shore Cottage. Ask Uncle Cale how he likes his i new clover. 1 Joe Snyder, of Cold Spring, called 1 on his brother on Sunday last. — I Freeman Yerrick took in the 'sights c of Camden and' Collingswood the latte^ part of laat£week. J Mrs R- Crease and son and sister, ! and Mrs. NellieTHand, of Rio Grande, 1 and Mrs. Lemuel I sard, of Borden - called on tbeir aupt, Mrs* I

Matthews, or Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Lemuel Iaard and two | sonfe of Bordentown. spent a few days withjier mother, Mrs. Clint Matthews. We are phased to see Robbie Woolson is improving. Miss Etta Douglass returned borne on Tuesday last after a week's visit with her friends. I Burton Corson spent Sunday at the homestead. Burt has become one of i the prominent yachtmen at the county I seat and mate of the yacht "Quito" one of the fastest in the county. Manufactured at Newport. Va. . sold from Maine to Florida, ready and am- ! ply able to help all in need at any time i or place, irrespective of nationality, j creed or color. Such is the record of I Liver Tablets, made only for ! liver and bowel troubles and the best remedy known for Catarrh of the Bile ! Ducts. Write Rydale Remedy Co., fori | free sample. Guaranteed by M. V. D. i Marcy & Co. may A NARROW ESCAPE. G. W. Cloyd. a merchant, of Plunk, ] Mo., had a narrow escape four years I ago. when he ran a jimson bur into his | thumb. He says : "The doctor wanted ! to amputate it but I would not consent. I bought a box of Bucklen's ! I Arnica Salve and that cured the dan- i gerous wound." 25 cents at all druggists. may i GREEN CREEK. j Amos Brosius. of South Denuis, was | here on Monday delivering carpet, j Dorothy Broughton, of Wildwood, is ' spending a few weeks here with her grandparents. | Earl Hollingsead. Frank Fisher, i Helen Schellenger and [Grace Chris- ] I tien attended a banquet at Court House ! | eveningMrs. Elizabeth Foster spent the j week with her daughter at Holly | , Charles Hollingsead made a business t.iin tn Philarlplnhia MnnHav to Philadelphia Monday. r I

The members of the K. G. E. Lodge i , and ; their wires enjoyed a social in : their hall on Saturday evening. Mrs. Julia Conover passed the 59th ; milestone on Saturday. Some of her 1 1 I children dined with her. in honor of the j ; | event. . j i I Our village in need ol a good resi- i dent doctor and music teacher. i j Mr. and Mrs.[Stuart Lowe are enter- ' i taining his mother from Wilmington I for a few days. J Mrs. Georgie Crease, who has been i in Camden for a few weeks, has re- I : turned to her home here. I Mrs. Jane Foster was called to ! j J Goshen on Tuesday to attend the fun- 1 1 eral of her uncle, James Cullen. Misses Phebe James and Marion I Mixner visited Court House friends on I Thursday. Henry Daugherty. who moved to I Dennisville, spent Friday here. Miss Catherine Shields, our primary teacher, closed her school on Friday. • 1 She took her scholars to the beach It 1 is expected both teachers will return for another year. The catch of kingcrabs has been ! j fairly good along shore but fish are not j very plentiful. i Mr. Wheeler, who lives on the farm ' I of Misa Joanna MacName, has a fine J ! early potato patch j ( | Joseph Brown drove to Dennisville ' ] i on Saturday after lumber. . i I Strawberries are quitefi lentiful here. ; ! : Some go to Wildwood while others ship j ! to Philadelphia. < William Wilkie, a ho was taken sick : < aboard of.the Lotta Russel and was , J I treated in a Hospital in Charleston, ] j has returned home. Miss Hannah Hoffman, 'who taught ■ at Diaa Cre k last year, closed her school last week and is" now at home. father. Franklin Hoffman, who is far advanced in yeare. is in quite poor health. i i Pastor Tozer and wife, drove to Rio 1 Grande early Monday morning to ati tend the Neal-Thoreon wedding.

Asber Logan, of Wilmington, wholj I married Mi— Laura, eldest daughter ' of Levi Foster about nineteen yeare ' ago, has been in poor ^health for some j time. • He came to the home of her parents a few weeks ago and on Monday evening be was taken from this ; world. He had a complication of diseases. He leaves a'widow and one son. i The funeral took place on Friday. In- i terment'in the cemeteryThere. ] The da— of graduates of our public , school is the largest thia year, we be- | that has ever graduated here, i seven. There is wily one boy J this year while last year out a class , of five, three were boys. Eighth Grade— May Foster, Phoebe ' Ethel Schellenger, Ethel Sadie Brown, Agnes Gitner, f Conover. t Seventh Grade— Gertrude Norbury. t 'Mixner, Carl Norbury, Edna c Hollingsead. ' j

0 Sixth Grade— Frank Camp, George e James, Ezra Mains, Lee [Ella Mathis, i. Mabel Conover, Rita Fisher. The regular business meeting of the Epworth League was held at Frank e Hand's on Monday evening, t Lewis Ross and T. Hickman attended the Dias Creek Grange ontTuese day evening. This was Mr. Ross' first f visit. \ ' DOM PAY ALIMONY. to be divorced from your appendix. There will be no occasion for it if you . ketfp your bowels regular with Dr. King's New Life Pills. Their action I 1 is so gentle that the appendix never has cause to make the least complaint. , j Guaranteed by .all druggists. 25c. r Try them. may RIO GRANDE. A pretty home wedding was solemn- . ized at 6:30 o'clock on Monday morn- | ing at the home of the bride when George Thorson. of Chalfonte, Pa., , took for his life partner. Miss Rita ' i Frances Ncal. youngest daughter of ' j I Mr. and Mrs. Frank Neal of Rio . | Grande. Rev. Mr. [Tozser officiating ' i | The best man was Thomas J. Rilay, a j - 1 fri'nB of the groom. The Matron of ' . Honor was Mrs. Mary E. Rilay, coucin ' '■ of the bride. Mrs. Louie 'Harris, sis- ' ' ter of the bride played the wedding ' march. The room in which the event , i occurred was decorated with palms ] and the scene was vera- impressive and 1 i pretty. The ring service was used. ] ' | The bride wsb charmingly attired in ] ! a gray traveling suit and carried a 1 j beautiful bouquet of carnations.. The ' . groom wore the conventional black. , ! ' After the ceremony a wedding break- ^ j fast was served, and the newly mar- ^ ■ ried couple took their departure for a r ' short tour of a week, including Phi la- 'r delphia and other points of interest ir. ' the Keystone state. Both of the conWJC nc.TDWiic SU1LC. ouuu Ol uie con- ,

tracting parties are well known in Rio , Grande. The bride is a most estim: i able young lady and is highly esteemed by a wide circle of friendB. The groom i ■ also has many friends who take pleas- ' I in offering congratulations to the . I couple in the happy culmination . of a courtship of over a year. May their lives be filled with sunshine and I the dove of peace and prosperily hover over them is our wish. A CERTAIN CURE FOR ACBINC FEET Shake into your shoes Allen's Footj Ease, a powder. It curea tired, aching, callous, sweating, swollen feet. ] At all Druggists and Shoe Stores, 25c ' Sample Free Address. Allen S. Olm- | sted, Le Roy, N. Y. — 5-9 4t I I IN THE DISTRICT COURTS OF THE j UNITED STATES FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW JERSEY In the matter. of In Bankruptcy, William T. Chambers, Petition for Bankrupt. Discharge. iTo the Honorable Judges of the Die- 1 j trict Court of the United States for . i the District of New Jersey : I William T. Chambers, Junior, of the ] .City of Cape May, in the County of I Cape May and State of New Jersey | in said District, 'respectfully represents ' ' that on the thirteenth day of April last i 'past, he was duly adjudged bankrupt " under the acts of Congress relating to bankruptcy ; that he has duly surren- . ; dered all his propertv and rights of • property, and has fully complied with 1 ail the requirements of said acts and of ; the orders of the Court touching his , ; bankruptcy. i Wherefore he prays that he may be * ! decreed by th- Court to have full dis- < charge from all debts provable against his estate under said Bankrupt acts, i j except such debts as are excepted by j iaw from such discharge. ' I Dated this^f ourteen ttilds y of May. A. D.. 1908. WILLIAM T. CHAMBERS, JR.. , Bankrupt. ■ District of New Jersey, — . I, William T. Chambers, Junior, the 1 above named petitioner, do solemnly , swear tnatjthe statements made by me in the foregoing petition are true. WILLIAM T. CHAMBERS, JR. ; Subscribed and sworn to before me.

ilthis fourteenth day of May. A.' D., . "1903. SAMUEL F. ELDREDGE, Notary Public of V. J. ORDER OF NOTICE THEREON. On this eighteenth day of May, A. D . 1908, on reading the foregoing petition it is Ordered by the Court, that a hearing be had upon the —me on the fifteenth day of Jane, A. D.. 1908. before said Court at Trenton, in said District, a t ten-thirty o'clock in the forenoon ; and that notice thereof be published in the and Wave, a newspaper printed in said District, and thrt alt Gnownjcreditore and other persona in interest may appear at the —id time and place ana show cau«e. if any they have, why the prayer of the said petitioneifahould not be granted. And it is further ordered by the Court, that the Referee in Bankruptcy shall send by mail to fall known credicopies of —id petition and this order, addressed to them at,tteir places oJ<*e8idence as stated. Witne— the Honorable William M. uie nonuraDie nilliam M.

Lanning, Judge of the —id Court, and ; the seal thereof, at Trenton, ir. —id , District, on the eighteenth day of May. A. D„ 1908. GEORGE T. ORANMER, Clerk. Per BENJAMIN F. HAVENS. . [Sol] ' A true copy. GEORGE T. CRANMER. Cleric. Per BENJAMIN F. HAVENS. Deputy.

m i n« huftiiig cough continues , yoor X i ' J T«fc» Scott' j Emulsion. 6 I , J It btnldt.iip and strengthen* your entire cystwiu j 5 1 A It contains Cod LirtfOS and HypophosphitMao X . A prepared that it is onsy to take and assy to digest. X r A All. OKVCCOTS. M. AMD |U»

TO THE UNKNOWN HERO SOLDIER Sleep, honored hero, gently sleep. Sorrows ne'er can make thy heart weep ; Thy battles on this earth are o'er ; Silent to thee the cannons roar. Thy name enrolled on Cod's own scroll ; Living bet ond the thunders roll ; No s^ber clash but all serene. Where God alone doth rule sopreme. Tall marble shafts may mark each grave sleep the leaders bold and : Their names inscribedjwith golden .hue, A>- bright as stare in heaven's blue. Such tribute noue will dare deny 'Tie jlist to honor (hose who die the hosts to win the fight ; Since freedom's cause is always right. Thou unknown hero of the field, J st as determined not to yield. Fell witli naught but thy gun in hand, thus thy na'ive land. love thy country more thau life, Fighting to overcome the strife; marble shaft marks not thy bier, Thou unknown soldier we'll revere. Sleep on. ye honored unknown brave ; Wild flowers will bloom o'er thy grave, each returning morn in May, dawns the resurrection day. Then when the bugle call shall sound The unknown hero will be found. i lie NIIAIIUWIl uciu Will ue 1UUIIU.

Thy name will then the first appesr; Thy answer will be "I am here." He who watches the sparrows fall Will ne'er forget thy name to oall ; He notes just where thy body lies And loves thy soul that never dies. A crown of li'e for heroes wait; Wide open swings the golden gate ; With martyrs ar.-l with all the blest, ' He'll bid thee enter into rest. M. S. Marcy, Peoria, I1L REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. From the Gazette. Wildtfood Crest — Wildwood Crest Co. to Sarah Y. Gentner. $1. Lot 41, block 3. Same to Mary C. Eldn dge. (1 Lota 25 and 53. block 3. Same to John Jackson. $!. Lots 3 and 4, block 62., Same to Jesse W. Coombs. SI. Lota 17, 18 and 19, block 76. Lower Township— Ephraim Hildreth et als to William H. LaChard. $800. All right, title and interest in south- . westerly part of Ephraim 's Island at Beach Turnpike drawbridge, j William H. LaChard et ux to Wild- ! wood Crest Co. $1. Southwesterly portion of said Ephraim'8 Island. Cape May City — Emlen Physick to J. Henry Edmunds. $1. Independent and CoaJ Company's ice plant. Cape May Real Estate Company to A. Lincoln. $2354.26. Lots 570,-571. 672 and 573. Plan A of —id George H. Reeves et ux to Lillian E. $1. Premises an west side of Perry street. Cape May Point— William S. Casaelmau. Trustee under will of Matilda O. deceased, to Margaret E. McCooley. $2500. Lota 24 and 15, F. OABTORXA. tag****