, • ■■ ■— ' 1 CAPfc MATf STAR AND WAVE, UROAY, TA WJArF^^SJ^
The Kind Too Hare Always Bought, and which has beat in use for over SO years, ' has borne the signature of _rj/f - and has been made under his pers . sonal supervision since Its Infhncy. '-CtfcAuM Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and "Just-as- good" art bftt Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of IniWrts and Children— Experience against ExperimentWhat is CASTORIA Oastoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It Is Pleasant. It. contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Karoo tic substance. Its age Is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishnees. It cores Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea— The Mother's Friend. CENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of The Kind You to Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. ! j _
HENRY. IQopyrtght. U06. by the a a MeClure Co.; SOMEWHERE la the deptha oi the big city., where the nnqulei drega ere forever being abaker together, young Murray and tlx captain had met and become friends Beth were at the lowest ebb possible to their fortunes, both had fallen from M leaat an Intermediate heaven of respectability and Importance, and both were typical product! of the monstrous and peculiar social curriculum •f their overweening and bumptious civic alma mater. The captain was no longer a captain. One of tnose sudden moral cataclysms ' that sometimes sweep the city had hurled him from a high and profitable Position In the police department, ripping -off his badge and buttons and Washing into the hands of his lawyers the solid pieces of real estate that his frugality had enabled him to accumu- ( late. The passing of the flood left him low and dry. One month after his dlshabllitatlon a saloon keeper plucked him by the neck from his free lunch counter as a tabby | plucks a strange kitten from her nest and cast him asphaltward. This 6eems 1 low enough. But after that be ac ; quired a pair of cloth top. button con- i grass gaiters and wrote complaining letters to the newspapers. And then he fought the attendant at the mu- ' Bicipal lodging bouse who tried to j give him s bath. When Murray first ! aaw him he was holding the hand of The Badge of Honesty Is on every wrapper of Doctor Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery because a foil list of the Ingredients composing It. 1s printed there In plain English. Forty years of siperfence has proven Its snperlsr worth as a blood purifier and Invigorating tonic for the core of stomach dlsordwa and all Hver ilia. It bnllds up the rundown system ss no other tonic can In which aleohol is used. The active medicinal principles cf native roots such as Golden Sea! and Queen's root, Stone end Mandrake soot, Bloodroot and Black Chvrybark are estracted and preserved ■7 the use of chemically pare, trlplereflned glycerine. Send to Dr. R. V. Pierce at Buffalo, N. Y., for free booklet which quotes extracts from well-recognized medical authorities such as Drs. Bartholow, Xing, Scuddcv, Coe, Ellingwood and a host of oUim< showing that these roots can be defended upon for their curative action It all weak states of the stomach, nccompdpled hy Indigestion or dyspepsia -as well n InAII bilious or liver complaints and In wasting diseases • where there 1* tot^Fnesh and gradual running down j of tlprairength and system. The ^Golden Medi«»i makes rich, nura blood and so Invigorates "end Slid, thrnuch Sob. Il.p \vb~.ic system' Thus all skin affections, blotches, pimples and eruptions as well as scrofulous swel- : lings and old open running sores or ulcers are cured and healed. In treating old running sores, or ulcers, It is well to Insure their dealing to apply to them Dr. Pierce's All-Healing Salve. If your druggist don't happen to have this Salve In stack, send fifty-four cents Ib postage ■tampa to World's Dispensary Medical AsfitiMion, , Dr. R.V. Pierce. Pres.. Buffalo, H- and a large box of the"All-Heallng Salv* * will reach you by return post. Ysu caa't afford to accept a secret nostrum as a substitute for this non-alcoholic. doe or uowx compos rnox. not Sagsrasud, tiny graantoa, easy to tabs
an ltdtlun w.-.iiiuu woo sold spples ana garlic on Ks*ex street and quoting the words of a song book ballad. Murray's fall had been more Lucl ferian If less spectacular. All the pretty, tiny little kickshaws of Gotham bad once been bis. The megapbomman roars out at you to observe the bouse of bis uncle on a grand ana revered avenue, but there bad been ac • awful row about something, and tbi 1 prince bad been escorted to tbe door by ' tbe butler, which in said avenue Is equivalent to tbe Impact of the avun 1 cular ahoe. A weak Prince Hal. with out inheritance or sword, be drifted downward to met his humorless Fal 1 staff and to pick the crusts of the streets with him, i One evening they sat op a bench in ■ a little downtown park. The great j i bulk of tbe captain, which starvation ; i seemed to Increase, drawing irony in | stead of pity to bis petitions for aid was heaped agaiDst the arm of tha ' i bench in a shapeless mass. His red j I face, spotted by tufts of vermilion i week old whiskers and topped by s I sagging white siruw hat. looked Id the J I gloom like one of those structures thai ' i you may observe In a dark Third ave i nue window, challenging your Imagi j I nation to say whether It be some , thing roeelit in the way of ladies' hati j | or :i str-.ir-lH-rry shortcake. A tight I | drawu bolt, last relic of bis official' I aprut^ness. made a deep furrow In hit ! circumference. The captaln'B shoo; , j were buttonless. In a smothered baas i ' be cursed bis star of ill luck, Murray, at his side, was shrunk Intel his dingy and ragged suit of blue j i serge. His bat was pulled low. He 1 I sat quiet aud a little indistinct, like, I some gbost that had been diapos . j '"I'm hungry." growled tbe captain ' : "By the top sirloin of the bull of 3a- 1 j shan. I'm starving to death! lUghi ■ • now 1 could eat a Bowery restaurant j '•iear through to the stovepipe in the alley. Can't you think of nothing. Murray? You sit there with your j shoulders scrunched up. giving an Im Ration of Reginald Vanderbllt driving his coach. What good are them aire doing you now? Think of some place we can get something to chew." "You forget my dear captain," said Mnrray without moving, "that onr last attempt at dining was at my suggestion." "You bet it was!" groaned the cap tain. "Yon bet your life it was! Have you got any more like that to tnakehey?" "I admit we failed." sighed Murray "I was Bure Malone would be good for one more free lunch after the way he talked baseball with me the last time 1 spent a nickel in bis establishment." . "I had this band," said the captain, extending the unfortunate member— "I had this band on the drumstick of : a turkey and two sardine sandwiches when them waiters grabbed us." I "I was within two Inches of the J olives," said Murray, "stuffed olives, i | I haven't tasted one In a year." i "Wbat'U we do?" grumbled the cap- 1 tain. "We can't starve." j "Can't we?' said Mnrray quietly I "I'm glad to hear that I was afraid | we could." * I "You wait here," said the captain, rising heavily and puffily to his feet "I'm going to try to make one more turn. You stay here till I come back, Murray. I won't be over half an hour. If I turn the trick I'll come back flush." He made some elephantine attempts at smartening hit appearance. He gave hla fiery mustache a heavenward twist; he dragged into sight a pair of black 1 edged cuffs, deepened the crease in hla middle by tightening hla belt another 1 hole and act off. Jaunty u t ioq rbk
| noceroa. serosa the tooth ead of the ! park. When he was out of sight Murrey | also left the park, hurrying swiftly | eastward. He stopped at a building ; whose steps were flanked by two green lights. I "A police captain named Mnroney."! be said to the desk sergeant, "was die-1 missed from the force after being tried under charges three years ago! I believe -sentence was suspended. Is this man wanted now by tbe police?" "Why are ye asking?' inquired the sergeant, with a frown. "I thought there might be a reward standing," explained Murray easily. "I know the man well. He seems to he keeping himself pretty shady at present. I could lay my bands on him at any time. If there should be a reward"— "There's no reward," interrupted tbe sergeant shortly. 'The man's not '•ranted. And neither are ye. So get out Ye are frindly with um, and ye would be selling um. Out with ye quick, or TCI give ye a start" Murray gated at the officer with serene and virtuous dignity. "I would be .simply doing my duty as a citizen and gentleman," he said severely, "if I should assist the law In laying bold of one of Its offenders." Murray hurried back to the bench In the park. He folded hla arms and shrank within his clothes to his ghostlike presentment c Ten minutes afterward the captain' arrived at tbe rendezvous, windy and | thunderous as a dog day in Kansas. His collar had been torn away; his! straw hat had been twisted end battered, his shirt with ox blood stripes split to tbe waist. And from head to ' knee be was drenched with some vile j and Ignoble greasy fluid that loudly ! proclaimed to the nose Its component leaven of garlic and kitchen stuff. "For heaven's sake, captain," sniffed i Murray, "I doubt that I would have j waited for you if I had suspected you | were so desperate as to resort to swill barrels. I"— "Cheese it." sale) the captain harshly. _ "I'm not bogging it yet It's all on tbe outside 1 went around on Essex and 1 a proposed marriage to that Catrina j
| "It t hat you MacT " he eald . . .
j : that's got the fruit shop there Now. - i that business could be built up She's | a peacb as far as a dago could be , ; "1 thought 1 brd that seuoreeDa i ' mashed sure last week, but look what . , she done to me! 1 guess 1 got too l ; fresh. Well, there's another scheme B ■ queered. ji "You don't mean to say." said Mur- . ray, with infinite contempt, "that you ' would have married that woman to . help yourself out of your disgraceful 1 troubles?" . I "Me?" said the captain. "I'd marry ■ , ! the empress of China for one bowl of [ j chop suey. I'd commit murder for a 1 , j plate of beef stew. I'd steal a wafer ] : from a waif. I'd be a Mormon for a - r j bowl of chowder." 1 "I thlnkfc' said Murray, resting his | . head od hla hands, "that I would play ; Judas for the price of one drink of , whisky. For thirty pieces of silver I would"— I "Oh, come now," exclaimed tbe capl tain in dismay, "you wouldn't do 'hat, Murray! I always thought that kike's squeal od his boss was about the lowest down play that ever happened. A * . man that gives his friend away is worse than a pirate." Through the park stepped a large man scanning tbe benches where the fi . electric light felL "Is that you, Mac?' he said, halting h , before tbe derelicts. His diamond stickpin dazzled. His diamond studded fob chain assisted. He was big and smooth and well fed. "Yes, I see j - Its yon," be continued. 'They told me at Mike's that I might fiud yon C I over here. Let me see you a few mlni stes. Mac." n 1 The captain lifted hlmlelf with a ? | grunt of alacrity. If Charlie Finnegan p | had come down in the bottomless pit to ^ I seek him there must be something v doing. Charlie guided him by an arm a Into a patch of shadow. b "You know. Mac." be said, "they're t trying Inspector Pickering on graft * charges." "He was my inspector." said the cap- t tun. ° "O'Sbea wants tbe job." went on a Finnegan. "He must have It It's for tj the good of the organization. Picker- * lng must go .under. Your testimony h will do it. He was your 'man higher ^ Bp' when you were on the force. His c ■hare of tbe boodle passed through * your hands. You must go on the 0 stand and testify against him." j, "He was"— began the captain. S "Walt a minute." said Finnegan. A ' -
iara^tt Pfor" "y era— two^ fty^'on «£ ■ spot and the resf- ' "He was my friend. I say." finished , the captain. 'Til see yon and tbe gang and the city and the party In the flames «f hales before TCI take the stand f* gainst Dan Pickering. Pm down and " \ut but I'm no traitoi to a man that's been my friend." The captain's voice ~ rose and boomed like a split trombone. "Get out of this park, Charlie Finnegan. where us thieves and tramps | and boozers are your betters, and take your dirty money with you." Finnegan drifted out by another ' walk. The captain returned to his ' T couldn't avoid bearing," said Mur- | ray drearily. "I think you are the big rest fool I ever aaw." / "What would you have done/* caked : tbe captain. / | "Nailed Pickering to tfc«_ah>ea." said Mnrray. 1 "Sonny," said tbe captain huskily and without heat, "you and me. are different New York Is divided into two ' parte- above Forty-second street and below Fourteenth. You come from the j ether part We both act according to a our lights." An illuminated clock above the trees , retailed the information that it lacked I the half hour of 12. Both men roes . i from the bench and moved awfy to- ' gether as If seized by tbe same idea. a i They left the park, struck through a j j narrow cross street and came into L ! Broadway, at this hour as dark, ecbo- ? lag and depeopled aa a byway In Pom- . peii3 Northward they tcrned, and a pollce- , man who glanced at their unkempt E. and slinking figures withheld the at- . tendon and suspicion that be would t have granted them at any other hour and place, for on every street in that I I part of the chy other unkempt and , slinking figures were shuffling and hurj ' rying toward a converging point— a , point that la marked by no monumem save that groove on the pavement worn by tens of thousands of waiting J feet [ At Ninth street a tall man wearing t an opera hat alighted from a Broadj way car and turned his face westward. I But he saw Murray, pounced upop him ' and dragged him under a street light ' The. captain lumbered slowly to the ; corner, like a wounded bear, aud w<i ed, growling. j "Jerry!" cried the hatted one. "How j fortunate! I was to begin a search for you tomorrow. The old gentleman has J capitulated. You're to be restored f> I favor. Congratulate you. Come i the office In tbe morning and get all the money you want I've liberal in- - structions in that respect" "And the little matrimonial arrangement?' raid Murray, with his head turned sidewlse. "Why— «r— well, of course your uncle understands— expects that the engagement between you and Miss Vanderburst shall be"— "Good night!" raid Murray, moving away. | "Y'ou madman!" cried the other, ! catching his arm. "Would you give ; up two millions on account off'— "Did you ever see her nose, old man?" asked Murray solemnly. I "But ITBten to reason. Jerry. Miss ] Vanderhurat is an heiress, and"— j "Did you ever see It?" ■ "Yes. i admit that her nose isn't"— "Good night." said Murray. "My I friend is waiting for me. I am quoting bim when 1 authorize you to report that there Is 'nothing doing.' Good night." A wriggling line of waiting men ex- , tended from a door in Tenth street far np Broadway on tbe outer edge of tbe pavement The captain and Murray J fell in at the tall of the quivering mil- I Uped. I "Twenty feet longer than it was last , night" said Murray, looking, up at bis measuring angle of Grace church!" ' j "Half an hour." growled tbe cap- I tain, "before we get our punk." The city clocks began to strike 12. ] bread line moved forward slowly, leathern feet sliding on tbe stones • with the sound of a hissing serpent as 1 they who bad lived according to their - lights closed up in the raar. MAY PROVE FATAL WjC Cape Mjj Con Bow Posit Lem At ■ptrtutt af It Backache is only a simple thing at . : But when you know 'tis from tbe ; That serious kidney troubles follow ; , That diabetes, Bright 's disease may be the fatal end. You will gladly profit by the followexperience. 'Tis tbe statement of a Cape May House citizen. Mrs. Rem. Sise, ljvirg on Hand ave Cape May Court House, N, J., "I suffered from/requent at) tacks of backache which were generally accompanied by headaches and dizzy _ spe)ls. These would be especially se- I in the morning upon first arising, and at times prevented me from attending to my household duties. I tried different remedies but received very little relief Until I procured — Doan's Kidney Pills at Willets Corson's drug store. The results l.received were gratifying and I continued tbe use of this remedy until the pains and lameness in my back disappeared, headaches and dizzy spells vanished and since that time my general health been much better. I know that Doan's Kidney Pills do all that is claimed for them and am pleased to give them my endorsement. ' ' p For sale by all dealers. Price 60 cents. Foster- Mil burn Co., Buffalo, N. Y„ sole agents for the United Remember the name— Doan's ■ —and take no other.
THE WINDSOR OPEN ALL THE YEAR R. J. GRE3WELL, PROPOPEN FOR SEASON APRIL 4th First Class in all its appointments. Son parlors. Suites | with baths. Thoroughly renovated and heated throughout. _ OPEN ALL WINTER LONG the Most Comfortable AH-the-Year House onjthe Atlantic Seaboard.
: FINELY FURNISHEu FERFECTLY HEATED
TABLE BE8T IN CAPE MY PRICES HDDERATE
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i J^arbor SCHELUNGERS LANDING Local 'Phone No- 3d.
Poth's Beer. I Choice ^Wines and Liquors JAMES A. CARROLL.
HOTEL DEVON South Lafayette Street May N J, L. KEHR, Proprietor Moderate priced^otel. Open all the year. Heated rooms. Centrally located. wrisleys new cafe Comer Washington and Jaekson Streets, CAPB MAY, N 'j Steaks, Chops, Sea Feeds and Salads, Oysters In Every STYLE HOARD BY DAY OR WEEK FRANK B. WRISLEY Upholstering In all its Branches. Furniture of all kinds. Mattresses mads and renovated. Window Shades, Carpets, Mattings, etc. We guaran- ' tee satisfaction Furniture to Hire \>y the day or week HOWARD F. OTTER S11-1S Hauls. StrJei WM- ®' BLATTNKB QXO. B. BSNIfKTT '/ South Jersey Marble Works CAPB MAY. V. J. ^ Increased taelllUed and la rxe^stock^^jrare- rooms ti mated on Turnpim I MONUMENTS TOMBSTONES AND^AtL DESCRIPTIONS OF MARBLE OR PI > AMERICAN and ITALIAN MARBLE. ffrM ^5 BLUE ETONE FLAG AND CURB IN STOCK ^ AND LAID AT iHORT N )PI BLATTXER & BEN NET < •j— ** ud Baueatei tnrntabed W. S. SHAW & SON Genera! Contractors. Dealers in Brick, Lime and Cement 523 ELMIRA STREET BOTH PHONES A. CGILE^.- • House apd Sign Painter a. Decorator.
Office 105 Jackson St Cape Tfoy City
SHOP in BE1B ot Glen wood Hotel
Wall fape?. . Big Reduction in SprlnR Style. 626 WASHINGTON STREET Before decorating your rooms look at my new stock of Wall Paper Burlaps, Liner usta Walton. W. LENOIR mm

