m . CA~- MAY STAP -ND v
fiREEN CREEK. HiM Helen Ewing. of Cold Spring. Bpentfpart of tl>e we:k with her aunt, < Mrs. Hattie Boyee. c t Mr. and Mrs Edward Chance were called to Holly Beach Tuesday to at- j tend the funeral of their son in-law, t Jetae Matthews. a A fine daughter was born to Mr. and t i Mrs. Will Eldredge Thursday. I After spending two weeks at Wil- c mington, her farmer home, Mrs. Laura Loyn, has returned to the borne of t ber parental t Mrs. James Ross and daughter v Beatrice, of Court House, spent part t '' ' 'ill iin iiiiiii —11 irmf herTjfothcrE. p The Presbyterian Sunday school held t their Children's Day serrice Sunday t morning. It was pronounced very good, n The floral decorations were very fine, e Thomas Douglass, of pias OreOk, f our township secretary, visited botlT f Sunday schools Sunday afternoon. b A shack has been built at the public * landing "and is occupied by so the col- a ored people, of Whiteboro. They are ti working for Joseph* Brown planting 0 oyster shells. , • l, oyster sneiis.
William Sbellingburg, of Philadelphia, was here last week looking after business interests. He is interested in bay work. Mrs. Priscilla Grace, who went to Atlantic City in the fall, has returned home for the summer. Sadie Brown is assisting Mrs. A. M. Robinson with her house work for a f etc weeks. Mrs. Georgie Crease is with her daughter, Mrs. Orilla Hemmingway this week. They drove 10 Cape May ,ori Monday. Steward Lowe took a very large cedar flag Dole to Wildwood this week. ' Mrs. Sallie Cummings picked . seventy quarts of cherries from one tree. Who can beat that Some .of our people drove to Wildwood Saturday evening and|did not get home till early Sunday morning. Theodore.and Truman Hickman and their wives attended the funeral of Jesse Mathews at Holly Beach Tuesday. The Junior League wiil hold a home commencement in the near future. A Virginia lady say*: "I have taken some of your Rydale's Stomach Tablets and they did me more good than anything I ever took for dyspepsia. I have had it nearly all my-life, and feel bo thankful that I have at last found something that helps me, for only those that have this disease knows what it is." Miss Nettie Spring, Taylorstown, Virginia. Rydale's Stomach Tablets are sold under a guarantee to do all that is claimed for them. V. M. D. Marcy & Co. ju FISBINeCREEK. Miss Helen MtiKexn and Mrs. William Cummings spent the day with Mrs. Sarah Shaw on Friday last. Mrs. George McNeal spent Thursday last with Mrs. Enoch Miller. Herbert Bates is on a visit with his parents. Harry Fisher was an over Sunday visitor with Gordon Yerrick at his Seashore cottage. Milton Matthews and sister, Mrs. Frank Thomas, visited their sister, Mrs. Frank Speace at Qape May on ; Saturday last. ^ Mrs. Elmer Hemingway and daughter and moth el, of Green Creek, passed through our village on Monday. Mrs. Enoch Miller spent the night with friends at Cape May on Monday. Gordon Yerrick and ltdy friend,*Miss i Winn, of Philadephia, were over to Erma on Monday. | Our new yachts, the "Winner" and "Reliance" gre now ready for busi- # ness, as the "Winner" wai launched ' on Saturday, and the "Reliance" on Monday and the Brothers Woolson are quite pleased. ( UIBD dallin OlBnlsn, , I. ... ...I * L bailie took
Danelja'Hoffman on Sunday last Miss Mary Snyder is taking music lessons of R. Hoffman. Mr. and Mrs. Harry States of Holly Beach, called on frieuds and relatives on Monday. Mrs. David Masoa and fami|g, of Cold Spring, visited her mother, Mrs. D. Snyder, on Tuesday. AS FOR ALUM'S FOOT-EASE A powder for swollen, tired, hot. smarting feet. Sample sent FREE, Also Free Sample of the Foot- Ease Sanitary Corn Pad. a new invention. 1 Address Allen S. Olmsted. Le Roy, ■ »I'T- — ^ 6-18 4t Help your City, help New Cape I May, aud you will help your bant at be same time.
FOR SALE— Small farm. Very little cash required. For pari cu l*rs applyto J. H. Hughes, 410 Washington street
INTEREST!*# NEWS NOTES Continued'from 1st P :ce ' are shorter than in almost another large city. In Boston, where climatic conditions make a long vacation les necessary, i the schools remain cloeej from the I second week of Jun>- to the second. * week of September and in Cleveland,- 1 Pittsburg and Chicago the summer va- ] cation is almost .as ong. I The Phi ladelphi* arrangenv nt open* i the schools Septenjbei 1st, and closes \ them July IstT As a result of the in- i vesti.atior.a the vacation period is apt i to be lengthened. This will be emiuwTi;l/ leaaodabic and sensible for the popilrf of all grades need more ' time in which to enjoy themelves in a 1 natural way. They need to come I earner to the seashore and depart later I health's sake and there will be 1 molly coddels when the oppot- 1 tunity it afforded them to do this. c absurdity of hajf-day sessions in June 1 and Septebmer whe > it so often almost hot to breathe, merely for the sake I of keeping thfc schools open a little ® is apparent to any observer, t longer is observer.
'• Mental work is impossible, or nearly * so at such times. Mr. Harnty is do- ( d ing a noble work in fighting for longer | vacations.^ 0 ® 8 (• d The following are the officers of the West Cape May Alumni : President, L Miss ' Elizabeth H. Blattner; vice president. Mrs. Eld ward Hughes; sec-! reatry. Mary Eldredge ; treasurer, 1 Ralph Tayloi. The high school will y be placed on the approved list next y vear and graduates of the approved course, will hereafter be the only new e members. received. <•(•<* j It may be an exceedingly difficult e thing to arrange to run on some sort of schedule a few troiley ca s, but it is _ high time the art nad been learned t by whoever is responsible for our local trolley system. The method of its . j management is a disgrace and humilaf tion to the town. Every time we have . a lot of important visitors (its management takes a turn for the worse and [ s jt is execrated in hearty teims by visi- 1 tors cud everybody el-e. There is need ; for less hot air and more accomplish- j i ment on this system. If it cannot ! ' be properly handled its franchise : I should be cancelled. Cape May has ! j been altogether too liberal with the ] I trolley and is getting do returns. i » (• <9 I | The Chalfonte, under its owner and I [ proprietor, Mrs. H. A Crease, is now i 1 entertaining a liberal quota of guest i 1 and has a number of engagements. j 1 Thomas B. Hsrper. of Philadelphia, j who has a Columbia avenue cofage, caught seventy weak fish, while out in . the Melvina, Tuesday. Mr. Harper is th gentleman who by his promptness ' in prepaiing a supplementary water ' works, saved the .city from an incip- , (• C. <» Under its new proprietor, B. T. . Smith, manager of the Continental, 1 , Philadelphia, until recently, the c Stockton has brilliant prospects. The f number of reservations for rooms is | 1 far in excess of any similar time c , and Irom its opening Saturday it seems to be insured a successful sea- j soi.. Proprietor Smith is preparing I c I for the opening with great care and is j making the house verv attractive. He ! * wi'l include a large orchestra and make * the music a feature. , j r (• » (• i The Lafayette is preparing to open 5 for the season on Saturday and is in I ' the piuk of condition. Col. Tracy, the 1 widely known proprietor, putting forth ' particular effort in add ng attractive a features and conditions. s Cape May's awakening is perfectly « evident to all who are nyt afflicted ' n e-iueui. ui an wnu are nit amicieu
1 with defective vision and the number of visitors to date this seasoo are far - ahead in number ot the same period ( in previous years. Since March there has been a con1 stant succession of important events | and they are still occurring. The uni- 1 form expreasion of individual visitors I and conventions during The year has i been ope of comple e satisfaction and j admiration for the resort and of faith j - in its great future of development. 1 The Greater Cape May is a fact of the j present and not a dream of the future. ' although the future possAses possibili- | ties of development surpassing the fondeet dreams of the moat devoted of , Cape May's friends and admirers. I i The great harbor project la sufficiently : ; advanced to make evident to the com- < petent observer, that while it may be
e technically termed an experiment f complete success is a foregone cons | elusion which cannot be reasonably I doubted. The increase in the volume
of water flowing through the inlet or f entrance to the harbor, caused by the . great dredging operations by which 20 000,000 yards of material was removed from the sounds in order to i create the large landlocked bay, has already doubled the depth of water in the entrance unassisted by any artifiL clal control such as the jetties to be by the government engineers. these the stone is being quarried and the first fleet of^barges containing their loada of stone ia expected to report here July 1st, after which the work will rapidly proceed. The engineers are now plotting it oat. » » • Han- William H. Taft is a man for , whom every conscientious Republican vote with pride, and independent , Democrats who appreciate honesty of breadth of mind, reasonable- ^ nesi of judgment and purity of character more than party affiliation, may as conacientously cast their ballots for him. No matter by what force William Howard Taft was injected Into the as a candidate 'for the nomination, the facts stand that he is a . lion, me laccs ataxia mac ne is
i worthy and deserving representative of . the4Republican party, that he has the r interests of the people at heart, that j : he has the courage to fairly and 1 squarely meetany emergency that may | i j arise, and that the nomination came 1 , to him with an enthusiasm greater, : perhaps, than that with which any ' - other man has ever been nominated for , the presidency by a Republican con- j I vention. t There is sufficient reason in these j I facts why the Republicsn party and j ' those wbo believe in it should do all < that lies in their power to bring about his election. C* . & ^ Councilman r. Sidney Townsend, i was very 'much gratified by the kird 1 remembrance of friends by the i mediuroship of post cards on his birthi day anniversary a few days ago. The \ ■ cards received depicted friend Town-' send in several phase;, gunning, doing fire duty, automobiling, and so on.
ratlin* Hair Dandruff Does not dolor the Hair We wbh you to podbvdy and distinctly understand that Ayer's Hair Vigor does not affect the color of the-hair, even to the slightest degree. Persons with the whitest or the lightest and most delicate blond hair may use it freely without having the hair made a shade darker. Ingredients: Show this formula to your doctor. Ask him what be thinks of ft. - * • • "
OASTORZA. Bun the *0B H!,e *Jw2rS j Rydale's Tonic never fails to cure | hills and malaria and is one of the system tonics on earth. It contains in addition to other valuable ingredients. iron, quinine and strychnine. I Two sizes, 50c and $1.00. V. M. D. | Marcy>& Co. ju WEST CAPE MAY'S WEEKLY HAPPENINGS Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Eldredge, Jr., and son Leone, spent several days witii I relatives in Millville. Mrs. Amelia Church, of Erma. 'is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Jere Church at j their home on Pearl street. Mr. and Mrs. Charles 9itwmington, j of Philadelphia, came down the last I of the week and will now make their home here for the summer with her I parents. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas El- . [ Walter J. Fenderson, Jr.. was trars- | acting business in Philadelphia Mon- 1 j day. I David Evans, who has been em- ' ! ployed here and making his home 'with Mr. and Mrs. Emanuel Stouffer, j' i returneud to Philadelphia Tuesday. Mrs. Frank Mengle, of Philadelphia, ' a week end visitor with Mr. and Mrs. Howard Stites. 1 ' Mrs. Samuel Doak and little daughMary, of Philadelphia are spending I ' week here with her parents, Mr. i • j and Mrs Charles Eldredge. Mr. and Mrs. J. Woodbruff Eldredge ; were Sunday visitors with Assembly- 11 i and M s. OersviUe Stille at their i ana m uersvwe stille their
r j hom« in Tuckahoe They made the r ■ trip in their automobile. Malvern Craig of Philadelphia, and j j Charles Craig, of Pennsgrove, were - 1 called home Sunday by the serious illi ! ness of their father, j Miss Helen McKean was among the 1 1 Philadelphia shoppers Monday, i Little Miss Mabel Channels gave a 1 1 tea party oq the lawn at her parent's i home Tuesday arid^he little tots had a very enjoyable time. Those present i j were Hattie Morton, Letetia Peteraon. I Laura Pierson, Mary Blair, Anna [ Meyers, Mabel Channels. Last Saturday was the occasion of a : jolly social affair in the form of a party and dinner given by Mrs. S H. Eldredge, to h4r Sonday school class. After a day's sport on the
e beach the guests were taken to it "Cedarhurst, " Mrs. Eldredge's country i- place, where they were entertained at y dinner. In the evening the party ree turned to their homes in a large farm - wagon, finishing up the day with a straw ride. The young ladies present were : Mabel Richardson. I Emma Wheatsn. Phene McKean. Mary Bennett, Mary Eldredge, Edith Lafferty, Hazel Taylor. Hazel Otter. Elsie Springer, Mabel Newkirk, Katherine Muth, Alice Hand. Irene Hewitt, Florence Pierson, Sara Chew. Ida Jaquette, Alice Newkirk and Maude Filer. Sberwood Hand has accepted a position at the manufacturingtplaut of the American Ice Company. Frank Lawrence, a fisherman, while
ir fishing with a seine^S* tnrday captured e a large sea turtle which be towed } ashore and found that it wetgbed^about - 540 pounds. He kept it for peve**l 0 diya on. the IotJ»ack|of the Reeves cot" s tage at the corner of Broadway and [i West Perry street and It was viewed ■ by a great number ofr people, s At the West Cape May High School Alumni banquet ;beld at _the Colonial 1 last week Mrs. Electa Edmunds Schef. : lenger, of the class «f '88 gave an - original poem which the association ; requested be published in the Star >nd Wave atd here it ia. It ia oertainly an excellent delineation of times referred to and will be appreciated by many : • ' 'x#aa in '83, twenty-five years ago. Can it be that long. It hardly seems so. the little red school boose that stood on the hHl, We wandered each morning our Btore house to fill. With basket and kettle and sun bonnet Nothing but country girls through and through. Our school bouse not modern, but we loved it much.
f Its walls not festooned with pennants e and such. t j Architectural work lacking, but why d I ""d " y j When we entered the door D. O. Vane ' aman was there. ; Our faithful good teacher, a scholar j, . was he, r I often felt " small though when he looked at me. I A fitting tribute to him let us give, e ^ His memory iwe'l! cherish so long as I 1 He has answered the roll tall, ascended I I on high, i May we join him at last in the realms i bye and bye. , Now up the old stair way, then turn to j the left, e Can >ou follow me friends or has memory bereft. b ! To the old wooden benches, now into the seat, { Hear the tap of the bell, next the Lord's prayer repeat. "Now open your books, to work with a ■ will". Were the words of our teacher, D. C. Van am an. still. We'd watch the clock eagerly, hoping | It would point to the hour denoting ( i n„on. ■ Then out to the farm and up to the hill. ' And often to the store kept by old Uncle Still. Sometimes 'round the world, to Uncle Bijah's we'd go, His apples to steal wl.en our teacher ! had said no. Spring time is approaching, examina- , j We quaked and trembled and shook with fear. . The test soon was over, our marks we ; . had made, How foolish we were to^be so afraid. | We thought we were .smart and that 1 1 we knew it all, . [ When we went to the Court House and entered the hall. . 1 Our schools days were over, how sad the plight. . ' We were not able life's battle to fight. . ! But fight Jthem we must; we're fighting them still. . I If you want t© know more ask Lide's . poor Will. • Our class was not large, but proud are ! For first on the list is this class of 1 1 three. ] One of our number. Mary V.. i A very bright girl indeed was she ; | She's passed beyond, is now on high, J J And dwells with angels in the sky. I Lide Eldredge 'twas then, she was I studious too, | But oh. full of mischief, yes clear through and through r Liirougu anu mrougu.
e Commit to memory? Well I guess she ( could, 1 j For thus number one. she frequently ' e : stood. . ! The third of our number, friends 'lis ( getting late, e Well 9he's moved away, clear out of the state. a I'll not weary you longer, so please j , But fond memories still linger of the c t days of '83. t > The Cape May Baking Co.'s ice S cream parlor, 406 Washington street, is j ( nOw open. " 5^0 tf l HERE G RFJiff FOR WOMEN ' J Mother Gray, a nurse in New York, v - discovered an aromatic, pleasant herb f oiscovered aromatic, pleasant herb
) cure 'for women's ills, called Ausr tralian-I.eaf. It ia the only certain n t regulator. Cures female weaknesses | o and backache. Kidney. Bladder and F " Urinary troubles. At all Druggists ' L i or by mail 50 cents. Sample Free, j _ i Address. The Mother Gray Co., Le t Roy, N. Y. 6-13 it The odor ot spirits turpentine and r kerosene oil is not as fragrant as s"me j t | other things, but when in the right i '■ proportion and combined with Orii gatium. Ether and Ammonia and then | I whipped into a thick creamy emulsion, h it beats the world for reducing swell- j t; ing, relieving soreness of the muscles b - and stiffness of the joints, and then C who cares for the odor when it takes u . the place of pain. Elliott's Emulsified E „ Oil Liniment is made as described j si above and put up in half pint bottles i 1 for 25c the bottle. Sold under a guar- ! g i sntee. V. M. D. Marcy & Co. ju j E
V ^Scotf J id A wnwn^ mother » by increasing their flesh ai^ j ** 9 nerve force. ii jjwj& , 1* provides ba&y with the necessary fat A * Ami and mineraI food for bealthy growth. " It AU* DRUOQIST*« OOC AND tl.oo. d ======-^==-==— — -
AN IDEAL WORTH WHILE >. "Give instruction to tbooe wbo ean- >. not get it for themselves," said Con - t fucius, and he spoke well. Equally worthy of admiration ^is the purpose e of those who are striving to give happiness to those who cannot get it for t themselves.— to bring into^the colorless lives of their less fortunate fellow d beings a bit of God's wonderful out pf doors, "a rose-spot in the dull mone otony of gray existence. Up In our cities there are hundreds s sweltering in bare box rooms that stare defiantly into'similar boxes£across r the way. To bring these people out of that narrow unlovely life and give - them a knowledge of W. purer happier one, crowded with comfort is truly a r beautiful ideal. Abundance of fresh country food, the coolest and cleanest e of white beds By night, breezes forever flowing from off acres and acres of purifying waters, "miles of warm s sea-scented beach," sea-born sunsets, and a thousand other charms of nature J —these are but a few of the new delights 'hat a week at the Bhore means a to sucb people. You who are here enjoying not only the comforts but all i the luxuries of fashionable summer' life, do you realize that your expenses s for a day could give to a mother and child a week that would mean an epoch i In their lives, something to be talked of day after dav and dreamed over ; again at night. This is the sort of thing that the i ladies of the Seaside Home, at Cape May Point, are doing. July first marks . the opening dav of Manager's Week. On this day all visitors are cordially ; welcomed and invited to inspect the j House and its woRk. Lunch is served. ■ [ free of charge, at 12 :30 and the day is devoted to the entertainment of visit- - ing friends. | During the following week the ladies I meet to devise new plans by which to extend their kindness to greater num- . bers of the needy than before. They welcome the smallest gift that can be . made use of in the Home. The old proverb, though; oft-quoted has lost . none of its truth, "'t is more blessed to give than the receive." ONE INTERESTED. The deposits of Secucrity Trust Company are constantly increasing ; if the management was not good and conservative, this would not be so. | CASTOR I A For Infants and Children. Tha Kind You Have Always Bought (signature of A CERTAIN CURE FOR ACHING FEET Shake into your shoes Allen's Foota powder. It cures tired, achcallous, sweating, swollen feet. At all Druggists and Shoe Stores, 25c. , | Sample Free Address. Allen S. Olmi sted. Le Roy, N. Y. 5-9 4t 1 : When you need clotning ask for C M. ' WESTCOTT the Cape Mav County , salesman. Everybody knows that he is with WANAMAKER & BROWN ' OAK HALL Sixth & Market Streets ' Philadelphia. An enormous stock of i clothing ready for Men-Women-Boys i and Girls. We pay excursion car fare j both ways upon the Durchaae of a cer- ' tain amount BU CHEN'S ARNICA SALVE WINS i Tom Moore, of Rural Route 1. Ooch- ! Ga.. writes: "I had a bad sore ' ome on the instep of my foot and ' could find nothing that would heal it ( j until I applied Bucklen's Arnica Salve. . [ Less than half of a 25 cent box won the day for me by affecting a perfeci c cure." Sold under guarantee at All ( ! Druggists. j0 | EVERY WOMAN WILL BE INTERESTED t | If you ha-e pains in the back. Urin- J ary. Bladder or Kidney trouble, and « ] want a certain, pleasant herb cure , j woman '8 ills, try Mother Gray's , Australian Leaf. It is a sale and never-failing regulator. At Druggists tby mail 50 cents. Sample pac kage f i Address. The Mother Gray Co., N. Y. 5-9 4t c
A Reliable I Remedy j Ely's Clean Balm 1 irqniekl) «h.orb«l. j j Gi.es Relief al Once. I clemmen. soothes, I | hi-als and protects I | the diwwwd mem- I resulting from I Catarrh sud drives I away a Cold in the | Head quickly. Be- • [ stores the Senses of 1
J CATARRH j HAY FEVER a
and SuielL F ull size 50 cts. , at Drag- a £sts or by mail. Lp liquid form, 75 cents, o Brothers, 56 Warren Street, New York, h
, I ' PROMINENT PENNSYLVANIA QERMANS ■ The Per.naylrpu Gennsng are prominent at t m of the Pomy aylvania Bar Association, at the Hotei e Cape May this week. Among the - "Dutchmen" none ranks higher then r Hon. G. A. Endlieh, of the Common - PleaB bench of Berks. Though one of v the must youthful looking 'of the 40 t odd judges who attended the meeting, - he is old enough to have been upon the bench for nearly 20 years. s Aside from his local reputation la t his county and state as a judge, he ia s always a prominent figure, by reaaoa t of his contributions to legal literature, e which have made him universally r known in all countries where the a English system of jurisprudenee i prevails. t J Judge Endlieh ia the puthor of "The - Law of Affidavits of Defense in Peon* a sylania," "The Law of the Right! 1 and Liabilities .of Married Women," , "Endlieh on the Constructioh of 2 Statutes," and various other text - books of the law, besides being a s "prolific contributor to law periodicals. 2 In the great German district of Berks 1. he is held in the highest esteem and r throughout all the German districts of 9 Pennsylvania he is regarded as the 1 foremost exposition of the intellectual i qualities^/pf-that race of PennByl1 vanians. His only one fault seems to • be that in a state, where Republican majorities sometimes run as hign as ' 400,000, he is a Democrat, and this is 2 assigned as a reason wny he is now » not one of the Justices of the Supreme Court of his state. His home district has beep very loyal ■ to him, and very apprecative of his services as was shown by the faot < that on the occasion of his last election - he was the unanimous nominee of both the Democratic and Republican plrtiea, i and received the whole vote of his ' judicial district. Apropos of Judge Endlieh 's legal ' fame, a member of the Bar Associa- ' tion in extolling the wide influence of Pennsylvania jurisprudence, made ' mention of the fact that last year I while on a trip abroad he had had his local pride considerably swelled by Hiaring Judge Endlieh 's book on the "Consti action of Statutes." quoted in ■ the British House of Commons. Judge Endlieh, aside 'rom his legal accomplishments, is a master of three languages. English, German and French, to which may be added a fourth, the distinctive dialect of interior Pennsylvania, known as Pennsylvania German. ;Another Pennsylvania Dutchman, of eminence and renown, is William A. Hensel of Lancaster, recently triumphant as the counsel for the defense in the Pennsylvania capitol trials. He was pronounced by the late G rover Cleveland the best stump orator he had ever heard, and all those who have ever heard him will agree with the expresident. The remarkable thing about it is that at the begiuning of his career he was a boat the most discouraging proposition in the way of an orator that ever happened ; but through sheer will power aud determination he conquered ;his disqualifications and cultivated facility ot speech and ao oratorical eminence at the bar and in politics, that have defied all rivalry th.se many years. Judge Ewing, who is chairman of one of the important committees of the Association, and now chairman of the Pennsyvlania State Railway Commission. is Ja frepresentative qjonejof the most distinguished of the ScotchIrish families of Western Pennsylvania. He is a native of Fayette county, and in his own person he has a distinguished lawyer, a judge of the Common Pleas, a U. S. Circuit Court Judge, and now occupies, as the headj ofjthe railway commission, one of the most powerful and important positions in the state, with semiJudicial powers. He is descended from a line of lawyers, judges, clergymen, professors and other ~~ intellectual who have been prominent in the history of Western Pennsyvlania. a century. One of the most genial men of the convention is Judge Schwartz, of who during a service of some 20 years, has made himself a fixture upon the Common Pleas bench of Pennsyvlania. One of bis amiable hort comings is a love for the water and an overmastering desire to get the tetter of the denizens of the water by means of hook and line. It ia said that the judge has remarkable persutsive powers, when it comes to luring fish, and that the biggest ones invariably come to his hooks. On the day of the opening of the season in Pennsylvania it was reported that his very amiable attitude upon the opening of court was due to the fact that he had landed a 19 inch bass before breakfast.

