CAPE »AY STAE ABD fit! ■s^ssaaw. Uapd hStudiil Wave 1907 tons dasc TW.T r«l*. Ismed KkMkolliln W Out of tows rirculsdon. Sstnrdsr morning. Jtaerlpta Ma, ta Mr i tar It Won TOwyh^iutf !«-«*" " «««1 « lau postal matter. ADTTRTISOrG RATES— Fo< tlx coovtmieoce of thomdssbiagto.aDdad.ml<—rsri by — P- Co* s£ -5ssaase.s-», „ — -» - affowd for pubHcatkm. either In weekly or daily adWoH. vfllhc charred for el the rate of 00c dollar ■■il.rtlnnTT^r'-f th^e inches of .pace or I ear. s j& Cre ettootrlaf hi addition for each •TAR AM> WAVE PUBLISHING CO. 1 315 and 317 Washington Street 1 • Aaron W. Hand .'General* Manager ^ j TELFPHONP®' , *""{ UjS*, u. !nTfle" '* ■ripn tar Itrita taH 161 1 ADDRESS CAPE MAY S1A* AMD WAVE , THE SENATOR STAYS WITH HIS BILLS * The Newark Star says : , "When the Whitla kidnanninr wss , giving the newspapers first page stories i •very day and It looked* as if the case would take its place among the on- i solved mystrries.'everyone said that in j New Jersey "there should be some erond | hot legislation enacted to make sore ( tESt kidnappers passed by on the other | ( side. The flegislators art the fever. , which wss a pretty Rood slim, because t legislator doea not ordinarily begin to'thlnk "of things until everyone else has fortrotten them. But this time they remembered. The only trouble'wss to see who could get'a bill across before they found the Wbitls boy and spoil everything. In the House Assemblyman CIsrk Introduced s resolution asking: the attomev ( general's office to draw up a hill mak- j Intr the extreme penalty for kidnapping i death, and everyone sat back and c Waited to see what would come of it. c Jn the 8enate they 'were not doing • much about* It. knonwinar that, the * House wss looking 'after It. "and there 1 were other thine* to eenpying their attention then, anyway. All except Sen- , a tor Robert*E." Hand, of Oape May e County. Without any warning and r after no consulting at all with the st- t to rney -gener*! h» predbeed a Mlf that summarily disposed of kidnappers as ' aoon as caught, putting the State to the expense of hut a few hundred volts * of electricity. Of course, the kidnappers had to-be tried first, but the pen- t alty was the main thing. The bill did not come up until a dny or two ago. and then they killed*it. That was not Senator Hand's fault though He d'd all there was to be done to get it through. He 'even offered to hang kidnappers himself for nothing if thejr would* nass*h Is bill, "hut they couldn't see it. Senator'Gebhsrdt said that Hand was bsrbarous to think Of such a thing, but Hand let Jt go at that and went on voting for the bill. That's one thing about him. He said the other day that he was a "hayseeder." but somehow or other he al ways manages to stay with bis bills Until they are passed or their death Certificate has been 'signed. He had a bill up not long ago to provide for the lighting of a road in his county. For some reason it did not meet with the views of the other members ot the'Senate and fell with "a loud crash. Next dav Hand moved to "reconsider "and pissed it Three dsvs later Wakelee trie11 to get the bill "hack from the House for'reconiederation or something ^ but there was nothiDg to it He might a Just aa wejl hare tried to coax it back with a picee of cheese as to get Hand's c permission. Whatever happens to it a there it can't be aaid th«t it failed because of lack of work on the part of its e Introducer. c Hand ia an oyster planter and gen- ^ eral contractor. He owna a dot of timber iand and doea a heavy business in | poles, piles and ties. He started on his " political career in the local Board of Education, graduated from that into the Board of Freeholders, side-stepped o long enough to be a delegate to the t National Republican convention of I 1896; proceeded to the Assembly and 1 finally/ in the Senate, where he is finishing his third term. He is the first Senator from Oape May to hold the position that long and the second to be * elected' more than once. NOTICE J PILES and other diaeaaea of thx recta m cored without the knife. , Treatment painless. No delay from a business. The most careful and rigid investigation invited. Send for •awfcut * DR. R- REED. t Boom 780 Witherspoon Building, WalOffice bean » toff.' 11-14 26t ] A brtm Cm to Acta ha 1 Shake into your shoes Allen's Foot- I Earn, a powder. It cures Tired, Ach- I tog. Callous, Sweating. Swollen feet ' At all Druggists and Sboc Stores 25c. •ample FREE. '.Address Allen 8 Olm- * ■tod, Le Regr, N. Y. 4-17 4t ! ■fry,,-,-- ,x ^ _
BX CMBARMT2 "W6 Q .
COopyrtght, IMS. by American Press Asso- I elation. TOese articles and Illustrations must not be reprinted without special DONT KNOCK TILL foU'RE 8URE. | Perhaps you got swindled, but maybe you didn't, on that five dollar set- j ting of fancy eggs, simply because the ( finest, fresh, fertile eggs may be made , to batch nothing or the worst of colls | because the eggs aren't set right or the chicks aren't fed right Kir housed right Eggs are porous. What chance have they in a dirty neat or a filthy, foul smelling coop? * Fine eggs can't hatch fine chicks In a poor Incubator, nor can a hen whose vitality has been lowered by starvation, sickness or lice keep the heat up that degree to hatch good livable chicks. Chicks from high scoring ancestrybe changed Into scrawny culls by bad feeding. Peeps from the whitest birds may grow to look like two legged kettles simply by giving them no ■hade and feeding yellow corn. L]pe j a crowded, damp, dirty or badly I ventilated coop will do any hatch. David called all men liars. But it wasn't true. He was really Just excited Through and through. When you're hot beneath the collar And feel like knocking, too. Just don't throw those heavy bricks Till you're sure It Isn't you. HOW TO FEED CHICKS. When mother brought the "peep lea" In her apron from the barn' your first thought was to get breadcrumbs to feed them. Wasn't it Jolly to see the fellows eat? But that was one of the few mistakes mother made, for chicks should not be fed for a day after hatching, so they may have time digest the yolk which they absorb before leaving the shell. Feeding so soon brings the deadly white diarrhea. Feed mother hen alone, but turn ber babies out on a clean place free from Indlgestlbles, for with them, like other babies, "everygoes to month." Fresh water and air for their first day's fare. Then for two days scatter a little chick grit and sweet, dry, fine bread crumbs. Feed little, but often, Just enough that their crops are half full In the
WHITE PLYMOUTH BOCK AKD CHICKS. ' !
and two-thirds at night and never allow feed to He around. After two days feed finely sieved ground mixed grain such as wheat, j and millet and add a little meat { : scrap or raw meat. Do not feed meat If using hard boiled 1 1 but do not feed the latter till j chicks are a week old, and then sparWet cornmeal. bran, cooked and baked preparations are not good or necessary. but sound cracked grain for chicks and whole as they grow older fill the bllL , Chicks on range often need no meat greens, as grass, worms and bugs ] their place. Lettuce and tender . clover furnish the fine green which their system requires. ( DONT8. Don't be afraid to give good mess- : You hold your trade, give pleasure, gain treasure. Don't expect to buy thoroughbred 1 for a song. Such an Idea is •ttagatber wrong. Don't waste your money on bargain 1 egga. Bach trash will hatch a ' Don't 1st cheap John sell you an incubator. He's the advance agent of undertaker. Don't spend your time monkeying ; wtth the regulator. Follow the rules of the Incubator. Don't throw up the sponge and quit a few discouragements. Fight on. 1 •be solar plexus is often delivered 1 hi the last round. 1 Don't forget to have the brooder dry and clean, free from leaks and filth , bad crawlers mean.
K* esTto* git Aa' gtvo it a^ukk^mro; * Then call the Shanghai rooster rooad To ketch the airly worm. Mow rake the ground op fine aa' smooth. Mark -out nice even rows An' plant 'em in t£e kerect sign. Bo every onion grows. By gum, you've got 'e*n sHck a a? straight! I fist Ua see 'em grow, ft seems aa offul time to wait / To glw a mess or so. 1 But I'll list sit beside the patch To ketch the good ole smell. TO hoe "em every day or so - An' sprinkle 'em real wsB. ' : ' Then, when they rlt list strong enough - To smell about a mile, i | TU pull a lot an' trim the tope I ^ An' eat a good long whUfc. m spread the yaller butter thick ' | .On Sally's bread, so grand. An', with a leetle salt fur aasa, I ni Sat to beat the band. i If all them folks what* s got (he grants . ! Would put more onions down. , 1 There'd be more smiles a-brnsJdn' loose ' | An' lass ole cranks in town. I I ' C.M. B. FORMULAE FOR FEED8. - CHICK FEED. Pounds 1 Cracked wheat » ! Cracked corn 10 Millet 10 , Oatmeal V.. 10 . This Is the basis for true feed, and the following may be added If desired: Pounds Kaffir corn 10 1 Cracked peas JO I Cracked rice 1 , Rape. I Hemp '....A 1 After a mouth or six weeks use this coarser scratch feed: Pounds, i Whole wheat 2D ; ' Coarse cracked corn IE Kaffir corn .'. » I Barley ; — E 1 Millet S i If you desire to use forcing mash or broiler bread, try the following: FORCING MASH. Pounds. Cornmeal ....X 6 Flour mlds 1 1 Beef scrap 1 j BROILER BREAD. Cornmeal 2 , Flour mlds 1 I Beef scrap H | Fine grit H i Mix well, stir In six raw eggs and sufficient milk to moisten. Bake In greased pan In slow oven, j and never serve sticky. Always have fine grit on the chick table. feather8 and egg8hell8. Hops as a side Issue and shade are a paying proposition for poultry-men. They furnish nice, cool shade and an Average of $50 tp the acre. Certain Incubator firms have advanced prices, while others have dropped. The charming flavor of canvasback ; ducks comes from their eating a celery 1 like cress that grows In Chesapeake bay. To add this flavor to your ducks : feed them celery tops as greens for six weeks. j. Fifty thousand eggs a day Is said to j be a thoroughbred ants record. Tell ' this not to those who are eggB-ag- | geratlng In thetf advertising egg record breaking hens or they will claim i these ants are their hens' mothers' j sisters. Fossil eggs large as a man's bead : have been found In Maine at an lndl- I cated depth of 7.000 feet. For the 1 good of the community all human fos- | | ells should be burled deeper, so that j j future scientists may not unearth tbem > | as specimens of progressive people. I In testing eggs you will find tbem j | very slippery. Just moisten your fin- j I ger tips to save a slip, but, of course. ; j not at a tobacco stained Up. j When a poultry Judge attempts to I I score a show while under the Influence i of liquor, call the bouncer. When he i uses profane language, turn on tbe't trouneer. The grange Is after a law to catch j I the hucksters that handle bad eggs, j I But we are told that the farmers sell I these rotten eggs to the hucksters. I j Now, If the law gets the hucksters and j will that stop the "rot and spot!" I When eggs are 40 cents a dozen and J | pdtfiidcake sells at 10 cents, how can a j ] baker sell cake at that price and not I use "rots and spots?" Give It up? Here too. In Arkansas they fined a young man \ a dollar for firing a rotten egg at a , United States senator and missing j him. The cold storage firms threw ' 60,152,740 dozens of bad eggs at the ! people last winter, hit them for fresh , egg prices and are now loading np for i another shot Now, who's who? Put your show cocps away In a clean, dry place and lay those bitter feelings on the dark shelf of forgetfulness, | where the dust and cobwebs of oblivion may bury tbem deep. The Joke Is on a poUtlclan who on a | vote hunting expedition threw off his coat and built a chicken coop for a ] party whose vote he sought. After soiling his clothes and sweating' his shirt his request for support received the reply: "Sorry, but don't go to the polls. Haven't voted fur ten years. Politlx la too rotten." XRAL. heir chxnoee wreck By sweeting In a voters' chicken coop. Bat 1st tbem get the egg truat by the neck Aad hang them with the law's beet double loop. If you have thrown the poultry drop plugs Into the garden patch, turn them ' under before the hens are out to scratch. ^ I I] i !
— ^ /Ito A A"v y~\. ^~v Each Business Day I I — , - Paid to Policyholders In Claims, etc., is one of the striking: features of the 1908 record of ((jBThe Prudential 1 I! > — - -
:;[ FOR SALE OR RENT APPLY TO Sizes 11x14 and 5x14 ' Printed neatly, in large type, on good | heavy card. We carry a Urge assortment 1 1 including the following: ; j I. FOR SALE >| 2. FOR RENT 3. FOR SALE OR RENT. Apply to ; 4 FOR RENT. Inquire Within ' I 5- This Property FOR SALE OR RENT 6. APARTMENTS FOR RENT 7. BOARDERS WANTED 8. HOUSES FOR RENT 9. HOUSES FOR SALE 10 BUILDING LOT FOR SALE 1 1 . OFFICE FOR RENT 12. ROOMSFOR RENT 13- STABLE FOR RENT 14. STABLE FOR SALE 15. STALL FOR RENT 16. HORSES BOARDED 17. NO SMOKING 18. PRIVATE 19. BOARDING ao. LADIES' RETIRING ROOM 21. MEN'S RETIRING ROOM 22. NO TRESPASSING Under the Penalty of the Law 23. LEGAL QUARANTINE NOTICES (Yellow Stock) Price s cents each ; by mail 2 cents extra. 1 Stamps accepted. Spetrial rate for quantities | STAR AND WAVE PUBLISHING CO. CAPE MAY
/ > NO STRINGS 1 , We have no strings tied to anyone. If we had, we would .pull everyone into our store and fit them out with a pair of CRAWFORD OR LA FRANCE SHOES. After that we wonldn't need the strings. They would all .9 come hack of their own accord. They would be so well satisfied that they would always come here for shoes. We have in a new stock of Crawford and La France Shoes and Oxfords for Easter. i j Call and see our new line of Neckwear and Hosiery for Easter S. R. Gidding CLOTHIER. HATTER AND SHOER 419 Washington Street. Cape May
I We want to save you 33 per cent. Am f*lnf bin/v : | H£=Eand give you easy terms, tooUll vlljulliliy !i
I FREE t CATALOGUE I 4- Of the latest clothing T styles will be mailed you ? upon request. From this
Come and see our mammoth display of new clothing. The best . . manufactured. If you've the cash, all right. If you haven't the EflOHM < • cash, WE'LL ARRANGE THE TBRMS TO SUIT. JS ink I J All that is stylish in men's, women's and' children's wearing • • apparel and everything needed to make the home comfortable is ' ' in this big Camden store ; and all yon have to do is to OPEN A ^ < 1 V^Hhh ! ! CHARGE ACCOUNT and A ' 1
j J Order cloth- j j + iug by Mail I j + if unable to I ♦ store in Cam- ' | den. ^ Mon'c An
cnun? r> <3 1> t t r \ d noirrn i * turci !
f Men's Apparel Included in OUR ♦FREE CLOTHING ! 1 CATALOGUE, yon will t • even find samples of the I T popular cloths that go 1 Z mlo our suits for men. It | ♦ will tett yon HOW TO f SAVE ON FINE j Z CLOTHING. ♦ BOYS' SUITS j ♦ An unusually attractive Y line of boys' and young ; 1 Z men's suits, $2.7$ to I 9 >7-50-
SOME POPULAR-PRICED LADIES' WWT ' : : TAILOR-MADE SUITS 1 : n| | | just to give you an Idea of how reasonably-priced our 1 : f \ ladies' stylish Tailor-made suits are, we describe four ot ' . < | . . tbem below: flilffiHHrtoH! ■ ■ » -'. as , , n
styush surr l • 1X78 sad 01X00 This stylish Suit msde in I striped Suitings shd Pans, i mas. Suitings in light t shades, trimmed with con- t trusting Taffeta silk; t jacket, Romaine - lined, r frys: Jacket silk-lined, f
I STYUSH SUIT 1 017.50 Fine Tailored Suit msde , all Wool Serge, in a variety of staple and 1 colors— black, bloc I smoke. Reseda, - and Copenhagen. , style in All Wool Worsted at 017AO j.
STYUSH SUIT | 019.SO A natty Tailored Suit, made of Worsteds and ; also striped suitings in sU the dew Spring shades; aa tin-lined, 019.50.
STYUSH SUIT '< 02X00 t Graceful Cut-a-way, single" J ' r-.. ' d breasted Cost Suit, jacket 1 <1 M inches long. Made of 1 ffS w striped Worsteds, in staple and fancy colors— Reaeda , , 1 • Copenhagen, Smoke and >. Taupe. 022X0.
FULL LINE OF WAISTS. SKIRTS AND MILLINERY. ; ' * v/i n 1 J, OHUVIO AitD DULLin
♦ THIRD LESS | COST ♦ It's just as easy ♦ to come to our Mg Z store in Carry) an aa ♦ to go across' tha T river. HERB yon Z get just as much ♦ satisfaction on Z CLOTHING or Z HOME- FURH- ♦ ISHINGS. ♦
; SPECIAL INDUCEMENTS MADE TO THOSE STARTING HOUSEKEEPING 1 II I ^ CARPlTA aesmj. rSLZSSZtm purnitubk^ ' Just below the Broadway r. r. station BROADWAY & PINE ST., CAMDEN
EVERYTHING FOR THE HOME ; We furnish the ] ' home complete, or . > any part ot it, with ] the newest and ] best. Carpets and < furniture yon get ; | here to exceptional [ advantage. ALL YOU NEED ■ * } AND AN EASY ' ' WAY TO PAY , . FOR IT. * .1
J. C. KENEMAN AGENT OFFICE 914 CORGIE STREET CAPE MAY N. J. .... a. - — ~J>-. - _ J. 1 ii'iiii'ditii'i^rfiiij 1 1 Ato 1

