Extraordinary Clubbing $2.35 for $1.60 | \ BOW TO SAVE MONEY IN YOUR PERIODICAL LITIERATURE FOR 1909 *! si' ' - i * fljir First-Class Publications, Practically Supplying the Entire: n Needs of a Family, Offered at a Reduction from their j u Combined Subscription Price. « -> : > ; \obi Local Newspaper, a Great Household Magazine, a High-Class Agricultural and Home Paper and d I a Fine Literary and Family Paper, all sent One Year for $'r.6o to the Advance ? Paying Subscribers to The Star and Wave j K Ik' ' ' ' V < i!W? li H * V ' ,O.A 't'l ?//. ■) '' - ■ il A W/. :'■ ;
i the star and wave / . $1.00 i the udies world . . .50 farm and home . . .50 ' good literature . . . j5 i publishers' price $2.35 '
All Sent One Year Fori $1.60 d
| • i great opportunity to save money - ' ;
By special arrangement with the i • publishers we are enabled to make the < ^ ' above extraordinary clubbing offer, to ' wit: We will send The Star and Wave. The Ladie8' World. Farm and I Home and Good Literature all one i year for $1.60, the publishers' price of i the four publications being $2.35. By I the terms of this offer you get your ! local newspaper, a great household I magazine, a high class agricultural and home paper and a fine literary and family paper, all for one year, thus 1 practically supplying the entire needs of the family in periodical literamre, for only $1.60, or a little more than i half the combined publishers' sub- i
senption price, of the four publics- : Hons. Subscriptions to the Star and . may date one year from the time of their present expiration, provided the same are not more than one year in arrears ; if more than one year in previous arrearages must first paid. Subscriptions for The Ladies' World, Farm and Home and Good Literature will be for-the year 1909, or date one year from the current issue, according to the time of their receipt and the custom of the office of i publication. In offering your favorite local horn e newspaper in club with three of the most popular and widely circulhted
periodicals of the day at so low B - I price, we are presenting to our patrons i an extraordinary opportunity to save I money upon their reading mutter for r the coming year. The Ladies' World, c i Farm and Home and Good Literature .{ : are all publications of the highest \ f order of merit, each one of the leaders j 1 in its particular field, and their com- c r biiied paid circulation exceeds a million t and a quarter. When three such really r fine publications covering so broad a ® f field, may be had in conjuncticn with ; your local newspaper an entire year for s e only $1.60, the outlay for the actual I ■ needs of the home in reading matter isl f 1 small indeed. ] I It
■ » f • the three publications we offer in club with tie star ano wave i i
The "Ladies' World is a fine high grade monthly Household Magaizne, edited by Charles Dwyer, for twenty years editor of the Delineator, and published by the S. H. Moore Company, of New York. It is in the front rank of publications of this class, being celebrated for its artistic make up, wealth of fine illustrations and practical treatment of all subjects pertaining to the needs of women in the borne It combines fiction of the highest grade, contributed by the leading writers of the day. with a number of carefully edited departments, covering the entire range of household necessities, and embracing the latest i Fashions, Artistic Needlework, Domestic Cookery, Household Informs- • tion, Exchange, Health and Good Looks, Etiquette, Heading for the Young, etc. Each issue consists of from 36 to 44 large quarto pages, with a beautiful cover printed in colors. Farm and Home is the leading agri- : cultural and home paper, published i
semi-monthly by the Phelps Publishing Company, of Springfield. Mass. ' It is carefully edited by writers of ex1 perience and ability, thoroughly prac- ■ tics 1,* and covers the whole range of : topics that interest and are of value to , the members ${ a rural household, as ! well as all others who are in any way I connected with country life. It pre" - sents in every issue the latest and moat • reliable information that experience . and science can supply upon the num- : erous topics covered by its many com- : prehensive and varied departments, • which include Farm and Garden, ■ Market Reports, Fruit Culture, Meoh- ; anical Devices, Fashions and Fancy Work, Feeding and Breeding, The ■ Apiary, Talks with Our Lawyer, News of the Day, Dairy and Creamer}-, Household Features. The Poultry i Yard, The Qu«stion Box, Plants acd ■ Flowers, The Veterinary, The Horse, Sheep and Swiue, etc. The twentyfour numbers which comprise a year's subscription make a volume of over 600
• pages. | < Good Literature is an attractive and ; ! - very popular illustrated literary and , - family monthly periodical published by i f F. M. Lupton, of New York. It is c 0 famous for its brilliant serial and short j s stories, written by the most celebrated ; y authors of both America and Europe, 1 - and Its practical, useful and entertain- - t ing departments, which include The , e Housekeeper, Our Budget of Fun, ( • Knots and Tangles, Our Young Folks, t - the Poet's Corner, Needles and Hooks, , Fashions, Pen and Scissors, Answers , to Correspondents, Facts and Figures, - Items of Interest, etc. Three fasciny ating serials are running at nearly all e times in its columns, while its short , stories, of which there are from four , to seven in every issue, are among the 1 1 brightest and most clever to be found i in any American periodical. It is hand- , somely illustrated, and every issue ' - consists of from 24 to 38 large quarto b pages, including a beautiful cover , 0 printed in colors. ]
Star & Wave Publishing Co.! W ' \ i ^ f Cape May Gity, N. J. [j
O flics. S£r May Court How. New ° MONDAY. DECEMBER 7th, 1908. f between the hours of 12 and 5 o'clock, *■ to wit, at 1 -AO o'clock, in the after- J coon of said day. ALL those certain lota or parcels of " land situate, lying and being in Wild- * wood Crest, on the Five Mile Beach. in the County of Cape May and State * o' New Jersey, known and designated * on a plan of lota of the Wildwood Crest J Cosnjpanv. as lots numbers seven (7) P and eight (8) of Block number fiftyooe (61) and are bounded and described ® follows, to wit: BEGINNING at a point on the * northeasterly side of Forgetmenot d Hood at the distance of one hundred n (100) feet northwestwardly fr.-m the J point of intersection of the North- t westerly side of Pacific Avenue with c tbe northeasterly side of said Forget- , menot RomI, and extending thence northwestwardly alohg the northeas- a teriy tide of said Forgetmenot Roa<i, a 0 distance of sixty-fire (66) teet, and at right angles thereto to said Foraetme „ not Road, between parallel lies in length or depth northeastwardly (with width of sixty-five feet), a distance i of one hundreJ (100) fee t. CONTAINING six thousand five hon- ~ dred (6600) square feet of land strict subject to tbe covenants, I j, conditions and reservations set forth t a certain deed made by tbe Wild- £ wood Crest Company, a corporation of „ the State of Maine, to the said Goe- „ S Weber. dated tbe first day of May . and recorded in tbe office of the „ t at Cape May County on the 16th I „ day of May, 1907. Being the same I . land and premises which the Wildwood , Crest Company, a ""nw>riti^r of the V State of Maine, by deed dated tbe first t day of May, 1907, and recorded May, „ 15th. 1907, in the Cleric's Office of * Cape May County, granted and coo j, veyed unto the saidJGustave Weber in ! fee simple, subject to conditions n therein expressed. j Together with all and singular the, j rights, liberties, privileges, hereditaments and appurtenances thereunto be- j j longing or in anywise appertaining, j and the reversions and remainders, n | rents, issues, and profits thereof, and | also all the estate, right, title, inter*, p I est, use, property, claim and demand of the ~ said defendants of, in, to and j out of the same, for the purpose, be - sold, (subject to the mortgages of the . New Jersey Training School for feeble minded girls and boys of Twenty-five , Hundred Dollars with interest at six per cent, per annum from May, 1st, . 1907) to pay and satisfy unto the said complainant the sum of Two Thousand r Nine Hundred and Eighty-one Dollars i and Twelve Cents, the principal and c interest secured by a certain mortgage made by Gustave Weber and v Mary Weber, his wife, to the Provi- N dent Building and Loan Association of * Camden, New Jersey, beariDg date tbe v seventeenth day of August, A. D.. v 1907, and of record in the office of the p Clerk of/be County of Cape May, in Book 79 of Mortgages, page 347, etc. , Seized as the property of Gustave Weber, et ox, etals., defendants taken T in execution at the suit of The Provi- 1 dent Bu lding and Loan Association of Camden, New Jersey, complainants, and to be sold by ROBERT R. CORSON Sheriff. 1 Ephraim Tomlinson, Solicitor. , p. f. 16.64 ' SHERIFF'S SALE. By virtue of a writ of fieri facias de bonis et terris, issued to me out of the Oourt of the State of New I will expose for sale at public vendue at the Sheriff's Office, Cape Oourt House, between the hours of 12 and 5 o'clodc, to-wit, at 1 AO o'clock in the afternoon of MONDAY, NOVEMBER 16. 1908. ALL -those lots and tracts of land situate in the Borough of Wildwood, in the County of Cape Mav. and State of Ni-w Jersey, and are bounded and de- i scribed as follows, to-wit: BEGINNING at the point of inter- i 4 section of the Southeast side of Hud- 1 j son Avenue with the Southwest side of - Avenue, and extending \ thence southeast along tbe Southwest 1 side of said Magnolia Avenue, a die tance of seventy feet, and at righ' I angles to said Magnolia Avenue, be j tween parallel lines in length or depth \ 1 Southwest (with a width of seventy j feet) a distance of n<nety feet, i 1 | Containing sixty-two hundred square- < i feet of land strict measure. Compris- 1 '■ ing lots Nos. 1 and 2 of Block No. 63. j < shown on the official map of Wild- j i wood. N. J., made by L. M. Rice. Bor- ; t , ough Engineer, A. D., 1905. Being 1 1 premises conveyed to Arthur Coisey i e by Baker Bros., deed dated October 12, j t 1906, add recorded in the office of the ! v Clerk of Cape May County, in Book 1 c 203 of Deeds, page 376, etc., in fee. I Seized as the property of Arthur I Coisey, taken in executiou at the suit 1 of Frank Lee Dickinson, and to be i sold by ROBERT R. CORSON. Sheriff. JOSEPH BECK TYLER. Attorney. p. f. $8.82 10-17 5t / i IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE i 1 UNITED STATES FOR THE DIS- 1 ( TRICT OF|NEW JERSEY. the matter of |W alter E. Buzby, a 1 Bankrupt. Trustees Sate in Bankruptcy. Hotel Hilton and Furniture at North { Wildwood, New Jersey. i By virtue of an order of this Court, | , made by Lewis T. Stevens, Referee in i Bankruptcy, bearing date September | 19th, A. D.. 1908.. L WILLIAM .J. I HARBISON. Trustee in Bankruptcy, will offer at public sale to tne highest | ( bidder, on Friday, the twentieth day | : of November, A. D., 1908, at one , o'clock P. M., the following valuable , | real estate and personal property of Walter E. Buzby. a bankrupt, on the ' premises, at North Wildwood, (Angle- 1 sea Railroad Station), Cape May County, New Jersey, to wit: — i ALL those two certain lots or par- , eels of land, together with the Hotel building thereon erected known as the HOTEL HILTON, situate, lying and being in the boroughvof North Wild-
sgeSsssfe angles to FInrt Avenue, one hundred feel to a corner; thence (3rd) northwestwardly and parallel with First Avenue one hunired feet to a point in tbe Southeast side of New Jetaey Avenue; thence (4th) northeastwardly along the Southeasterly side of New Jersey Avenue one hundred feet to the place of beginning. Comprising iota Numbers Two Hundred and Fourteen (214) end Two Hundred and Sixteen( 216) on First Avenue, in Block Number Two Hundred and Nineteen (219) as shown on tbe of Angleeea, made by L. M. Rice, Jr., Engineer, June, 1900. Also all tbe Personal, Property and Furniture contained in the said Hotel Hilton above named. Tbe said property wiH be sold tree and clear of all liens, expect taxes and other municipal liens. The terms and conditions of this sale will be made known on day of sale. Dated October 13th. A. D.. 1908. WILLIAM J. HARBISON. 10-81 4t Trustee in Bankruptcy. NOTICE The County Board of Taxation will bear. Appeals from the aaaregmnif of in tbe different municipalities of May County at the places designated below and upon tbe da tee named, convening in each place at ten o'clock in the morning Appeals cannot be considered unless made in accordance with the rules of the board and upon the prescribed blanks, which will be .supplied ♦»» trhn ike lit i them, upon application to the Secreof the Board, W. E. Young, Anglesea, N. J. Upper Township, Tuckaboe Hotel, Monday, November 2nd. 1908. Cape May Point, Borough Hall, Wednesday, November 4th, 1908. West Cape May, Borough Hall, FriNovember 6th. 1908. Middle Township, Court House, MonNov amber 9th, 1908. South Cape May, Borough Hall, Wednesday, November 11th. 1908. Lower Township, Township House, November 18th, 1908. Wilfiwood, Borough Hali, Monday 16th 1908. Cape May. City Hall, Wednesday, 18th, 1908. North Wildwood. Borough Hall, Friday. November 20th, 1908. Holly Beach, Borough Hell.' Monday, November 23rd. 1908. Dennis Township, K. of P. Hall, Dennisville, Wednesday, November 26th, 1908. Avalon, Borough Hall, Friday. November 27th, 19o8. Woodbine, Borough Hall, Monday. November 80th. 1908. Ocean City. Fin-t Ward. City Hall. Wednesday, DecemDer 2nd, 1908. Ocean City, Second Ward. City Hall, Friday, December 4th, 1908. Sea Isle City. First Ward. City Hall, Monday, December 7th, 1908. Sea Isle Cit- . Second Ward, City Hall, Tuesday. December 8th, 1906. KLUS H. MARSHALL. AARON W. HAND. STILWELL H. TO WNSEND, County Board of Taxation. Attest:— W. E. YOUNG. Secretary. Dated Cape May Court House, N J.. October 6ib, 1908. 10-17 8t Tkhyfidrf 00* YEAR8' OH^^H^experience Tradc Marks Designs ' """ CORTRIGK^S AC. tpTclal net iu. wlthoul c&iv. lnt?a Scientific American. A huidaomelr lllnrtr«te<l weeWj. 361 Broad *»y, llswlrt NOTICE TO '-lAlT CREDITORb. of Francis K. Duke, Deceased. Pursuant to the order of Chas. P I Surrogate of the County of I May. made on the 30th day of I A D., 1908. on the appliI cailion of the subscriber. Executrix of j said deceased, notice is hereby given to the creditors of said deceased to exI to the subscriber, under oath or affirmation their claims and demands against the estate of said deceas<d within nine months from the 30th da« j of September. A. D.. 1908. or they will I forever barred of any action against j the subscriber. ! September 30th, A. D.. 1908. HARRIET L. DUKE. 10-3 9t Executnx. Two of a Kind. "Oh, George." sighed the lovesick maiden, "I'm sure I'm not worthy to your wife." j "Well." replied George wearily, "I'm I not worthy to be your husband, so | we're just about evenly matched."— | Press. Defined. | "Pa, what's au infidel V | "A man who has never had reason j as yet to believe his time had come."— ' j Chicago Record- Herald. A Sad Case. A story is told by a lawyer of Little Rock. Ark., about the sad case of a I native of that town who sought justice by reason of the tffeft of a horse beI to him. As, however, the man who took the animal returned it to the owner, the lawyer advised the aggrieved one to let the matter drop. "Can't I have him arrested tor usury, then?" demanded the man indlg "What on earth do you mean?" "Daggone It, mister; be used the boss, didn't he? Yes, sir; be used him mirhts hard by the looks of him!"
man was principal had the siighteM idea that be had any romance In Ma soul. He hunted for boys to lick; be gave oat double lessons; he scared libtie gtris half to death with hi* s-owU" And yet tbe profeeeor wad bubbtaf over with seft hearteduen and mty waited an opportunity to develop It Tbe opportunity earn* two months 8fber be did. and he was embracing It at the same time that wo wore oalltag hka a stony bearted wretch and. predicting that be would never And a woman to marry him. Tbe profaaaar; being a : bachelor, went to board in the family , of Deacon Hard mas The deacon had beea a widower for five years aad had ' at last at tha age of forty -five masted 1 a girl of tweerty-tfcrea Be was ac- , counted a fatherly man and a gead man, and R eoon became nnmteea gossip that his young wife was making things bad for Mm. In the aohoelmaster aha had mm* one to tall bar . trouble# to. What he didn't eee aa an inmate of the hooaa Me weald toil Mat. When she became eeafideatlal be be- ; came ber champion. She told -Mm of ; tha deacon alapgtog her mouth, and he shuddered, flhe toM htes et being choked, end be bubbled. She taid him of bring dragged around W tha hair of the head and sat on. and he warned to take the husband's 8f* According to tbe you^r wife, de deacon waa sly. He would call bar his ' later chastise ber aad sgoims her throat in tbe bediomn. He weald ring - lar. Tha professor saw nothing, but bsard all. His pity, torttgnarinn. sympathy and several othsr senttmsats ware aroused. One dsy the deacon bad to . go over to Bsrryvllle on business that would detain him two days. Ha went by train, leaving the old hone and buggy at home. That night bis wife and the schoolmaster eloped. Their trunks were packed and tied on to tbe buggy, and they set ont to drive a distance of twenty-five miles to the train. They had scarcely got clear of the town when the old boree, which hod no sentiment in his soul and was nut a bit Interested In elopements, fell down and broke tbe shaft. Up to this moment tbe wife had been as soft at butter and as tender ae chicken, bal dow she suddenly changed and called the professor names. She called him a doughbead and a fool and a lot of other things that astonished him. but by and by he repaired the broken shaft and a new start was made. A mile farther on It began to rain. It was a cold rain. It was a rain that meant business. It soaked them to the skin In ten minutes. Then the deacon's birdie swore. She swore p cheerfully and freely. The astonished professor chlded ber, and she slapped his mouth. He expressed hla belief ' that she wasn't the martyr he took ber for, and she slapped it again. By ^nd by the rain held np. It will do that sometimes, no matter whether you are eloping or out on the road buying hogs. Then a new start was made. The professor was between two minds. He didn't know whether to keep on and save tbe woman from further cboklngs or go back and lick the boys harder than ever, and as a consequence he drove Into a mudbole, the ' whole outfit sticking fast. Thinking he had arrived at the end of his journey, the old horse lay down and allowed the buggy to settle to the hubs. The woman swore some more. She also clnwed the professor's face. It took an hour to make the horse understand that tbe Journey had Just begun and to extricate the vehicle, and then a new start was made for an Island In the Pacific. Sentiment had chilled, bqt not killed. They had made another half mile and were talking about the way the husband bad menf aced her with the crowbar when both f front wheels of the weary buggy went • down in unison, the old horse stagger- ' ed and lurched around, and finally tb» outfit rolled down the bank into a r creek. The woman was the first out g She welcomed the professor with lani gunge and kicks. She made a new ati- tack on him with fists and fingers. In 1 fact, he had to haul off and hit her In ' the nose In self defense The professor crawled up the bank and started back for tbe village. If any observations followed him he gave them no heed. He knew that he was followed for some distance by a woman with a club, bit i In the darkness he had all the advanOn Saturday and Sunday we saw tbe 3 professor about. He looked like a man j that had loved and lost The deacon . got home Sunday night to find that his wife had gone, and certain folks said that they hadn't seen him look so relieved since his marriage. He was even jocular and jolly In bis talk. On Mon- , . day morning we were In school at th" usual hour. So was the professor. That something was about to happen we could all see. Something did. He began with the biggest boy In school and went down to the smallest girl and administered to each one a thorough tanning. • Then he remarked that school was dismissed pending the arrival of a new teacher, and he headed the procession •s we all walked ont. We were glad at the time, but conscience stricken later on. We had sized him up $s possessing a heart of stone, whereas he was simply bubbling over with tenderi ness for his fellow men. The deacon's i wife never returned. She continued on and eloped by herself. M. QUAD.

