Cape May Star and Wave, 27 March 1909 IIIF issue link — Page 2

2 CAPfc MAY STAR AND WAVE, SATURDAY MARCH 27, i

The Kind Yoa Have Always Eooghfi, and which has been in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of _/* - and has been made under his perfy . 80°^ supervision since its inf&ncy. J-COcc*U4A Allow no 0110 to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and " Just-as-good " are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infant* and Children— Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys "Worms and allays Feverishness. It cures 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. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of The Kind Yon Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years.

COMMUNICATION Editor Star and Wave : Dear Sir The article'printed in the Star and Wave several weeks ago regarding the unnecessary patatronage Of department stores of large cities by 1 residents of smaller cities and towns was a good piece of advice regarding , this unwise practice. Every citizen having civic pride and a desire to have his home city prosper, should be willing to do the majority of his purchasing, if not all, from the home merchants, as well as expect support to his line of business. All who gain a livelihood In any municipality, whether laborer, artisan or merchant, should reciprocate by supporting »he home Industries. But there is another phase of the question so obvious that it j should not be ignored by the merchants. The article previously printed states that the things purchased in the dty can be obtained at home, "just as readily, just as good, and at just as reasonable prices." I will have to disagree with that statement, although I do net believe it was mads with an ob- • Ject to mislead. In most lines of merchandise you are either obliged to pay more for many articles than you do in . the citv or accept an inferior grade at the city price for the superior article, and generally the variety is so limited that if you do purchase your selection is a disappointment, being merely a substitute for the article desired. 1 hfive often experienced great difficulty in finding what J wanted, income case; going without entirely and in others j getting the desired article on the first visit to the city, when I would have , been glad to purchase same here. | Many others experiencing the/ same i trouble follow this course, and often : purchase many other things at the j same time that could have been pro- J cured here. Frequently merchants will j remark that it is useless to carry certain l'nes and quantities aa they can not sell them. I take the .opposite view. Every time you fail to have what a customer wauts you are deliberately building up trade for your competitor, and with a few disappointments the prospective customer will ignore your place of business or use it merely as a " jack-in-the-pinch. " But please a customer ani he will walk by a dozen stores to purchase from you, and recommend your business to others. If the merchants of this city will furnish their clientele with a greater variety, and in many cases, a better

grade at more reasonable prices, they will discover that a large amount of the $100,000 sent annually to Philae delphia, would be spent here. £ UNISON. ■ GOOD NEWS. ™ Many Cape May Readers Have Heard l' and Profited Thereby. "Good news travels faat, "and the ■ thousands of bad back sufferers In ■ Oape May are glad to learn that prompt - relief is within their reach. Many a r lame, weak 'and aching back Is bad no * more, thanks to Doan's Kidney Pills. B | Thousands upon thousands of people B ' are telling the good news of their Sx" 1 ! perlence with the Old Quaker Remedy. " ; Here is an example worth reading : ' Lewis Kurtz, retired, 32 E. Oak street. Millville. N. J., says: "A little over a year ago I had a bad attack of kldnev and bladder trouble and my health became much run down. My head pained me, my back ached and J there were times when a complete re- 1 , ten lion of the kidney secretions ex1 ted. The passa ges of the secretions j also intensely painful. Doan's, Kidney Pills came to my attention when j i 1 was in this condition and I procured j 5 a box. Tbey soon helped me and I continued taking them until in good health. | j I From that day to this I have had no j . , occasion to use a kidney remedy and I ' think just as highly of Doan's Kidney * : Pills as ever." For sale by all dealers. Price 50c j > i Foster-Milburn Oo.. Buffalo, N. Y.. , | sole agents tor the United States I Remember the name— Doan's -and . | take no other. | , s I — — " 1 THE SOOTHING SPRAY of Ely's: j | Liquid Cream Balm, used in an atom- 1 j izer, is an unspeikable relief to sufferers from Catarrh. Some of them de- • 1 1 scribe it as a Godsend and no wonder, j ; The thick, foul discharge is dislodged ; 1 > and the patient breathes freely, per- I haps for the first ^time in weeks. ! ' Liquid Cream Balm contains all the ! ] " healing, purifying elements of the solid | ■ - form, and it never fails to satisfy. ! , I Sold by all druggists for 75c., includ- 1 , . ing spraying tube, or mailed by Ely ' Bros., 66 Warren street. New York. ! 1 ' I < ' Health and muscle are developed I y I 1 , the judicious exercise afforded by the, ' . bowling alleys. Congress Alleys, 33 " ' I Perry street, sre the most modem i and beat equipped. Try an even- ' ing at the ancient and ever enjoyable ' ( ■ game. tf j , I i

Afraid of Ghosts \'^Z \ Many people are afraid of {hosts. Few people tT~, _ a are afraid o( germs. Yet the ghost is a fsncy and /t '/ ;\ rvj < the germ is a fact. If the germ could be magnified , y . -«£-C *_) to a size equal to its terrors it would appear more . terrible than any fire-breathing dragon. Germs V* ; can't be avoided. They are in the air we breathe, the water wa drink. ^ ^ ( The germ can only prosper when the ooditioo I of the systam gives it free scope to establish it- ■ self end develop. When there is a deficiency of a vital force, languor, reetleaaaess , a sallow cheek, , • hollow eye, whoa the appetite is poor end the ( , sleep U broken, it is tiw Oolgasftf against the germ. You eea I ' » fortify the body against all fierm, by the nse of Dr. Pieroe's Gold- I ■ oa Medical Disoovery. It increases the vital power, -1— the H f system of dofigiag impurities, enriches the blood, pots the stem- A IBP t •eh and organs of digestion and nutrition in working condition, so II "1 ill ♦ £££!• 5? W**k ®r Uintod **"* " which to b*oed- V mi 1 •'Golden Medical Disoovery" contains no alcohol, whisky or \ \ ill t habit-forming drugs. All its ingredients printed on its outside U I 111 a wrapper. It is not a secret nostrum but a medicine or known J ]' III . OOSfrosmoN and with a record of 40 ytmrt tf ceres. Accept no gpt ill „ tafcstitnts — there is notaiag "just es good." Ask your neighbors.

= MStM0(L Lesson XIII.— First Quarter, For March 28, 1908. THE INTERNATIONAL SERIES. Text of the Lesson, Prev. xxlH.%9-SA Memory Verses. 29, 30-Qclden Text, Prov. xxlli, 32 — Commentary Prepared by Rev. D. M. 8tearns. ;Ooprrl«M isoe, by Xasricsn Pits. iavhHta] ! It would seem from the frequent use ' of this portion and Isa. ▼ and xxvlll that there are but few passages which touch the sin of drunkenness. I would respectfully suggest to the teachers that they might with profit use or bring into these favorite selections of . the committee such portions as Gen. lx, 20-27; LeT. x, 1-11; Num. vi. 1-8; Judg. xlli, Jer. xxxv. Hah.'1 U, I Cor. j vi, 9-20; Eph. v. 14-27, and others with I their contexts. Even these eight por- j tlona would cover two years' lessons ' If the committee should ever have ; their attention called to them and feel | led to adopt them. But I am finding no fault with repetition of the same passage, for I was taught at normal school, over forty years ago, the ne- ! cesslty of "Iteration and reiteration" ! to Impress truth upon the mind. Isa. xxvlll, 13, teaches us that It must ever J be "precept upon precept Hue upon | line." We have three times In the ' Scriptures the story of King Hezekiah and of the conversion of Saul i and of Tarsus and bow tremendous the importance of our Lord's seven- ; fold "He that hath an ear let him j hear what the Spirit saith unto the ! churches." In connection with the "woe" of our j lesson, what about the six woes of Isa. j v, the eight woes of Matt, xxlli and the three woes of Rev. vlll, 13; lx, 12? j All the woes of earth are as nothing I compared with the woes of eternal torment, and as I read the woes of ; Rev. lx and note verses 20, 21, I learn . therefrom that God Is so unwilling | that men should perlsb that He will j ■ In those two woes give men a taste [ of hell on earth, that they may per- 1 chance repent and escape the torment of the lost In bell. See Job xxxlll. 29, 30. The more often I read the . description of the drunkard In verses ' 29, 30, of onr lesson the more clearly j I see there as the sinner's substitute ] Him in whom alone Is salvation, a i man of sorrows and acquainted with ' grief, with whom the rulers contended and against whom tbey babbled, whose wounds were all without cause on His part and whose eyes must have been red with weeping after the strong , crying and tears of Gethsomane. He , was made sin for us; In our stead He suffered, bearing our sins In His own : body, and apart from His atonement ' there Is no deliverance from the J wrath to come nor from the power of , sin In this life for any sinner, whetb- . er he be drunkard, profane, gambler, j moral church member or any other . kind of sinner. The "look not" of verse 31 sends us ] to the "Look unto Me and be ye saved" 1 1 of Isa. xlv. 22, and the "Behold the 1 1 Lamb of God!" of John 1. 29 If we j are lo be saved fr«>ui looking In a j ' wrong direction It must be by looking J 1 j steadfastly In a right direction, and ! , that Is the thought In the "looking j . ! unto" of Heb. xll, 2. It Is surb a j ( . steadfast beholding of one person that i j all else Is lost sight of. As the eye ! 5 effectetb the heart and the heart Is ' prone to follow the eyes (I-nin. 111. 51; 1 j Job xxxl. 7>. It is easy to see how j ' j necessary It Is to look In a right dlree- 1 f | tion. Ps. xxvll. 4. Is such a helpful j < , word In this connection. "One tiling j . have 1 desired of the Lord: that will I seek after, that I may dwell in the J i house of the Lord all the days of my ' j life, to behold the beauty of tbe Lord 1 j and to Inquire In His temple." See " also II Cor. ill. 18. "Beholding as In a ( J j glass tbe glory of tbe Lord, we are j ^ I changed Into the same Image from f J glory to glory as by the Spirit of the c ' Lord." Tell the poor sinner of the j love of God. the love that came from 1 I heaven to Bethlehem. Nazareth. Geth- ; ' j semahe and Golgotha for us a!! that ' j we ml^bt not perish, and If sucb love , does not break the hardest heart noth- v Ing else will. Sucb love known and be- j. lieved leads one to say from tbe v I "Thy love Is better than wine." t will remember thy love more s ] than wine" (Song L 2. 4). Anything 1

| the love of God presented to the J I sinner will only Illustrate the truths i J of the last two verses of our lesson'! | and show the utter Indifference of the ( dead soul in whatever may come and ] j the Inci ■: i ' rible nature of the carnal I mind, which Is enmity against God. 1 ; case may look as hopeless as the 1 1 dead and corrupting body of Lazarus i • the dry bones In the valley of vl- | i slon or the hard heart of a blaspheming Saul of Tarsus, but see In each j of these how easily God wrought , As workers with God we mnst ceane f from onr own wisdom (Prov. xxlli. 4)< and let Him who Is the wisdom of c God do It all. We know nothing and I can do nothing except as the Spirit of * God shall teach us and work In us. ? Farther back In our lesson chapter (verses 20, 21) we read of the sure t of the drunkard and glutton r and are warned against wine bibbers i: and riotous eaters of flesh, and here s again by contrast we iMnt 0f the ' durable riches and righteousness of ^ who said, "Except ye eat the \ flesh of the Son of Man and drink His ' blood ye have no life in you" (Ptot. > vfll. 18; John vt 58, 64). When the v last hour or moment In these mortal t comes to those who know and In the love of God the next step Is I with Christ In paradise, but to the J ■naaved sinner ft will be as our Lord f taught ta> Luke xvl, 22, 23.

SHERIFF SALE By virtue of a writ of fieri faciasto . me directed issuing out of the Court of Chancery of the State of Ne» Jersev, I willj expose for sale at public vendue at the Sheriff's Office in Gape May Ooart House, N. J., on MONDAY. APRIL 19th. 1809, ' between -the hours of twelve and five o'clock, to wit. at one o'clock in tbe afternoon of said day. ALL those tracts or lota of land and i i premises, situate on Peck's Beach, in : • Upper Township, in the County of i j Oape May. and State of New Jereey, • bounded and described as follows : In 1 1 Section K on plan of lota of the i ! "Ocean City Association. " [] Lot No. 6, situate on tbe Soutbeast- | erly craer of Bay Avenue and Fifty- . first Street, containing in front or width on Bay Avenue fifty feet, and of I that width extending in length or depth r Southeasterly between lines parallel trwith Fifty-first Street, one hundred . | and fifteen feet to a fifteen foot wide ; street Also lot No. 144, situate on tbe , Northwesterly corner of Simpson Ave- 1 nue and Kifty-sscord Street contain- ' I ing in front or width on Simpson AveI I noe fifty feet and of that width ex- ' ■ fifty feet and of that width

» tending in length or depth Northwest1 erly between lines parallel with Fifty- ; second street one hundred and 'fifteen . | feet to a fifte- n.dbot wide street I J Also lo- No. 208, situate on the . j Southeasterly line of Simpson Avenue . j one hundred and thirty feet Sootb- ; westerly from the Southwesterly side of ■ , Fifty-first Street containing in front ' j or width on Simpson Avenue, forty feet i [ and of that width extending in length ( 1 or depth Southeasterly, between lines . ! parallel with Fifty-first Street one I i hundred and fifteen feet to a fifteen , I foot wide street. '' . Also lot No. 216. situate on the , Northeasterly corner of Simpson Ave- , nue and Fifty-second Street, containing ' j in front or width on Simpson Avenue ! fifty feet, and of that width extending | in leugth or depth Southeasterly beI tween lines parallel with Fifty-second I Street, one hundred and fifteen feet to ! a fifteen foot wide street Also lot No. 349, situate on the I Southeasterly corner of Haven Avenue ; and Fifty-first Street containing in , ; front or width on Haven Avenue fifty , I feet and of that width extending in length or depth Southeasterly between | j lines parallel with Fifty-first strqet one hundred and fifteen feet to a fifteen foot ■ street AIbo lot No. 441, situate on the ■ Southwesterly corner of West Avenue | and Fifty-first Street containing in I I front or width on West Avenue forty ] feet and of that width extending in length or depth Northwesterly between lines parallel with Fifty-first Street i one hundred feet to a fifteen foot wide street Also lots No. 443 and 444, situate on the Northwesterly line of West Avenue seventy feet southwesterly from the southwesterly side of fifty-first st. containing in froDt or width onWest avenue sinty feet each lot being thirty feet in width and of that width extending in length or depth Northwesterly lines parallel with Fifty-first street one hundred feet to a fifteen foot wide street. Also jot No. 337, situate on the corner of West Avenue and Fifty first Street, containing in front or width on We«t Avenue forty feet, and of that width extending in or depth Southeasterly between | lines parallel with Fiftv-fiwt Street ninety feet to a fifteen foot wide =treet. Also lot No. 648 situate on the North- ! westerly corner of Aabnry Avenue I forty leet and oc that width extending J in length or depth Northwesterly belines parallel with Fifty-second ; Street one bi_ndred feet to a fifteen j foot wide st'eet. j ^ Also lot No. 729, situate on the I corner of Asbury Avenue and Fifty-first Street, containing in front or width on Asbury Avenue I forty feet and of that width extending i length or depth Southeasterly between lines parallel with Fiftv-first one hundred feet to a fifteen foot street. Also lot'*No. 742. situate on the line of Asbury Avenue, four hundred feet Southwesterly from tne' Southwesterly side of Fifty-first Street, containing in front or width Ashury Avenue thirty feet, and of that width extending in length or Southeasterly between lines parallel with Fifty first street one hundred feet to a fifteen foot wide street. Also lot number 948. siti-atc on the line of Wesley Avenue 1 hundred feet Southeasterly from ' the Southwesterly side of Fifty-first Street containing in front or width on Avenue fifty feet, and of that ■ width extending in length or depth between lines parallel with Fifty-first Street one hundred and i fpet to a fifteen foot wide street. i street.

Being the same premises granted | and conveyed to said James Moore in ! I fee by "The Ocean Front Improve- j ! ' ment Company," by deed dated Feb- 1 1 i ruary II, 1898, and recorded in the < , Clerk '8 Office of Cape May County in ' No. 141 ot Deeds, page 131, etc. i | Also lot No. 442. situate on the- I line of West Avenoe 1 ! feet Southwesterly from the I I Southwesterly side of Fiftr-first I containing in front or width on i West Avenue, thirty feet and of that i width extending in lengtiP or depth 1 between lines parallel | with Fifty-first Street one hundred < to a fifteen feet wide street. « < 3eiog tbe same land granted and t conveyed to said James Moore in fee t William Gland and Sallie M., his • wife, by deed dated June 18th. 1898. ( and recorded in said Cldk's Office in r Book 139 of Deads, page 99, etc. t Also lots No. 439 and 440, situate on t tbe Northwesterly corner of West Ave- i and Fifty -first Street, containing { front or width on West Avenue seventy feet; lot number 439 beinh £ thirty feet in front or width on West e and lot number 440 being £ feet in front or width on West Avenue, and extending in their respective widths in length or depth I Northwesterly between lines parallel with Fifty-first Street one hundred r to a fifteen foot wide street. Also lot No. 536, situate on the I Northeasterly corner of West Avenue I and Fifty-first atoeet, containing In I front or width on West Avenoe fifty 1 feet and ofl that width extending in I length or depth Soatheaaterly between I

linos parallel with Fiity-firat Street foct "tract. Also lots number 798 ard 794, situate on the Southwesterly ci-rner of Central Avenue and Fiftieth Street, containing in front or width on Central Avenue ninety feet; lot n ember 798 being fifty feet in front or width on Central Avenue, and lot number 794 being forty feet in 'front or width on Central Avenue, and extending in their respective widths in length or depth 1 Narttrweateriy between lines parallel ! with Fiftieth Street one hundred feet I to a fifteen foot wkje street. Being the name premie's granted and ; conveyed to said James Moore in fee by "The Ocean Front Improvement Company" by deed dated November: 27th, 1900, and recorded in the Clerk's Office of Oape May County, in Book 152, page 829, etc. 8old subject to lien of unpaid taxes for the years 1907 and 1968. Seized aa the property of Julia H. Moore, et als., defendants, taken in execution at the suit of Charles Hahn, complainant, and to be sold by ROBERT R. OORSON, _ ' Sheriff. CHARLES A. BONNELL, Solicitor. P. f. $37.2$ 3-80 5t :

SHERIFF'S SALE. ® By virtue of an alias writ of Fieri - Facias de bo. et ter., to me directed, . issued out of the New Jersey Surpreme . Court. I will expose to aale at public £ vendue, on J MONDAY, APRIL 19th, 1909, between the hours-of twelve and five o'clock p. m., to wit, at 1 :30 o'clock in the afternoon of said day, at the sheriff's office, in Cape May Court e House, Cape May County, New Jersey: ALL those certain several tracts of K land; No. 1. Situate on tne easterly e side of Broadway in the City of Cape S May, County of Cape May and State of New Jersey aforesaid, beginning at d the distance of one hundred and five 0 feet south of the southeasterly corner of Broadway and Mount Vernon Avep nue, thence extending southward' along ' the east side of Broadway forty-five n feet to a point; thence extending at y right angles to Broadway, east, the n distance of one hundred and thirty feet n to a point ; thence northward on a line e parallel with Broadway forty-five feet ' t to a point; tnence westwardly the dis- : tance of one hundred and thirty feet to e the place of beginning. Being part of e the same premises which Jacob Snare, ' n executor, by deed bearing date the .. ninth day of November, A. D., nine- : teen hundred and three, and recorded at Oape May Court House in Book 182 t of Deeds, page 512, etc., granted and • e conveyed unto said Genevieve W. Sickles in fee. subject to certain building restrictions therein mentioned. n No. 2. Situate in the Borough of South Cape May, fo-merly West Cape J May, being lot No. 2 in the division of ■ the homestead farm ot William Ruther- ■ ford, deceased, beginning st a point in r the sou to line of the Turnpike road ; leading from tbe City of Cape May to < J the steamboat landing, being the north- 1 J east corner of the tract allotted to Jen- ■ 1 nie W Rutherford and the northwest 1 corner of lot one allotted to J Henry e Edmunds; by said lot 1, south five ' e degrees thirty-five minutes west ' n twenty-eight hundred and sixty-two J r and eight-tenths feet to line ditch at ■ i southwest rorner of said lot 1 ; thence ' i nortn eighty-four degrees and fifty t minutes west one hundred aud six feet j 1 . to the outheaRt corner of lot No 3 ' - allotted to Lizz e E. Godfrey ; thence , ' i by lot No. 3 north five degrees and i • t thirty-five minutes east twenty-eight | ' - hundred and ninety feet to the south , I 1 line of said turnpike road and north- , ( i east corner of lot No. 8 ; thence by said 1 ' road south sixty-seven degrees twenty j ' i minutes east one hundred and eleven I ' - feet two-tenths to place of beginning, i : Also all that certain parcel of land in J : the Borough of South Cape May. in ! J r the County of Cape May and State of | ' New Jersey, being lot numbered three I f t (3 1 of the division of the "Homesiead i ' i Farm" of William Rutherford, de- j I cea-ed, hy proceedings i" the Court of j 1 : Chancery, wherein J. Henrv Edmunds I E was complainant and Lizzie E Godfrey I i and others, were defendants : bounded 1 1 : and describ-d as follows: Beginning;11 i at a point on the south 1 ne of the ' a : Turnpike Road leading from the City I 1 of Cape May to the "Steamboat Land- ■ ing." the same being the northeast M • corner of this lot or piece of land, numbered (8) set off to Lizzie E. Godfrey, j F and the northwest rorner of the lot or i piece of land numbered (2) set off and 1 - allotted to Jennie W. Rutherford, and running thence along the line of the lot or piece of ground numbered (2) set \ off and allotted to Jennie W Ruther- & ford, south five degrees and thirty-five i minutes west two thousand eight hun- ( dred and nirety feet to the line of F lands now or late the property of ! o Georgie H. Edmunds and tjie south- a I west corner of the lot numbered two b (2) set off and allotted to Jennie W. ! t I ; tnence along the line of j Georgie H. Edmunds' tract north eighty-four degrees and fifty minutes west one hundred and five feet to the snutheast corner of the lot numbered four (4) set off and allotted Clara T. ) ; thence along the line of the numbered four (4) set off and al- I to Clara T. .Henry north five | degrees and thirty-five minutes east j two thousand nine hundred and twenty feet to the south side of line of the aaid Turnpike Road and the northeast corner of the lot numbered four (4) set off and allotted to CUra T. Henry ; thence along the aaid south side line of the said Turnpike Road south sixtyseven degrees and twenty minutes east hundred and ten feet to tbe beginning and northwest comer of the lot numbered two (2) set off and allotted to Jennie W. Rutherford, within which bounds is contained seven acres of land be the same more or less. j Seized as the property of Jennie W. defendant, taken in execution 01 at tbe suit of City Line Brick and Lum- 8r ber Co., plaintiff, and to be sold by cl ROBERT R. OORSON, Sheriff. March 16,1909. Francis D. Weaver, Atty. _ f. $20.84 3-20 5t ■■ PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM m|I|gggg|g' K

I SHERIFFS SALE By virtue ot a writ of fieri facias 1 issued to me out of the Court of OhanI 3 eery of the State of New Jersey. I win 1 J*poee for Mle 'Wblic vendue, b«3 tween the hours of 12 and 6 o'clock, to- , wit, at 1 ^0 o'clock in the afternoon r «t the office of tbe Sheriff at Cape M.y , Court House, N. L. on 1 MONDAY. APRIL 6th. 1909. t That thirty shares of the thirty-ninth series of tbe capital stock of tbe eom- ] plsinant association, held by it a. col- ' i complaint in said caure par- > ticularl v described, to be first sold to pay , «nd satisfy unto complainant tbe sum 2 if* thoV®""'1 hundred and nine , dollars and twenty cents, the principal. dues, interest, fines and insuranrepral , mium secured by a certain mortgage i ™*de bv the eaid Theodore Mueller and , Caronne Mueller, his wife, to complain ant. bearing date the twenty-sixth [ r L JSDary'Jfa ^ year of our J Lord one thousand nine hundred and M seven, and of record in the Clerk's 1 BJ^ No-3 pa**8 28'. etc.. ami that certain mortgaged premises, with the appurtenances, in the bill of f°°£la£l\.n the said cause particularly set forth and described, that is to say: ALL that certain lot or piece of ground in the City and County of Oape i May in the State of New Jersey, de- • ' Bcn.bed. ,c£?*JipS t° « survey thereof . made by E. S. Taylok, Esquire. Sur- : veyor, on the twenty-ninth day of August, 1881, as follows: Situate on the southeasterly corner— , of Decs tor street and Columbia- aveA| : nue. containing In front on said Dea^H i tur street fifty-two and six-tenths fee*H : »nd extending of that width In length" ; or depth eastwardly along the southeriy side of said Columbia avenue at right angles to said Decatur street one ! and thirty-six feet to ground . of William Marks; bounded eastwardly by Mid ground of William Marks ; 1 b,v, other *rcmnd of M'd Theodore Mneller; westwardly by said . Derator street and northwardly by Columbia avenue aforesaid. " Being the same premises granted and ; conveyed to the aaid Theodore Muel- ! ier, by deed from Oharies Young et ; ux., bearing date June 24, 1896. and recorded in the Cape May County * * Clerk s Office, in Deed Book No. 128. w 426, etc.. in fee. J , Seized as the property of Caroline Mueller, etals.. defendants, taken In 'xecbtion «t the suit of Cape May Building and Loan Association, complainant, and to be sold by ROBERT R OORSON, 1 r „ „ „ Sheriff. James E Solicitor. p. f. $18.57 8-6 6t SHERIFF'S SALE. 1 By virtue of a writ of Fieri Facias de bonis et terrtsTTurtforketed judgment, to me diracted, issued out of the New Jersey Supreme Court, I will exto sale at public vendue on MONDAY. APRIL 19th, 1909, between the hours of twelve and hve o clock p. m., to wit, at 2:30 o'clock in the afternoon of said day,* at tbe Sheriff's Office, in Oape May Oourt House, Cape May County, New Jersey. ALL that certain lot or piece of j ground situate, lying and being in the J| i of Sea Isle City, on Ludlam's M 1 in the County of Cape May and w j State of New Jersey, marked and num- • on a certain plan filed in the I Clerk's Office of Cape May County, at Cape May Court House, being lot No. ) 21 8. bounded and described as follows: Situate on the soutbwestwardly side of I Avenue at the distance of I four hurdred and sixty feet southeastwardly from the southeasterly side of Street, containing ih front or | breadth on the said Eleventh Avenue feet and extending of that width in length or depth southwestwardly i between parallel lines at right angles said Eleventh Avenue one hundred M I and ten f-et. Seized as the property of William F. ™ j defendant, taken in execution , at the suit of Thomas Timbo, plaintiff, : and to oe sold by JOHN W. REEVES, „ Lrte Sheriff. i March 17, 1909. Pope & Runyon, Attys. f $6.84 3-20 5t When you need ciotiung ask for C M. the Cape Mav County salesman. Everybody knows that he flj| is with WANAMAKER & BROWN OAK HALL, Sixth & Market Streets An enormous stock of I olotfiing ready for Men-Women-Boys and Girls. We pay excursion car fare ways upor the purchase of a cer-

NO AOIDS simple cleanliness is what we rely to give the clothes the desired whiteness. That's why your will last much longer ifjsent to THIS LAUNDRY Our prioes are reasonable and our work unsurpassed. TROY HAND LAUNDRY 810 Decatur St. Keys tons Phone 40 d1 Work called for aad delivered.