Cape May Star and Wave, 22 May 1909 IIIF issue link — Page 2

2 CAPb MAY STAR AND WAVE, SATURDAY MAY 22, i9u? _ - ■ ■ * 1 . 1 ■' " ' 1 — ■ — ■ .

Big J mm ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT HEftf: A\fe$riablf ftrpsrafiontrAs ■RtH slmila mgtteftalaalRrtito IQJP (tog the SiooBdis andBowkcf ■j* MIS ■BR : Promotes DigeslionOwrW v nessandRraLConialnsndao H| Onum-Nophine norMneraL Not Narcotic. ■I Apcftci Remedy foKftafta B«< Hon , Sour StonaduDtantai Kcu Worms .ConvulskmsJevensfr 1 »■ ness and LOSS OFSleep. ■K - TteSi mk Signal ire of ■ /&0Z& Kffii NEW YORK. ^gtiHSS^gl Exact Cop> of Wrapper.

39 J For Twfcnts *nd OhSdren. ■The Kind You Have ■ Always Bought Bears th" 7, v. : Signature /Am of w c\ iV% 'n m J- Use I ■ . IT \Ji For Over Thirty Years i iCASTOBIA

ACTIVE AT EIGHTY AS HEAD OF A GREAT UNIVERSITY The Career of IPresident Angell, of Michigan University, repudiates the Osier Theory. Almost any day you may see him on the campus of the University of Michigan— a straight shouldered, bright-eyed old man, with . ■ half circle of white, straggling . whiskers running from ear to ear. after j the fashion of Horace Greeley and Gladstone. You might pick him for a i farmer, or, if you were shrewd, for an , arm chair piloaopher ; and in a measure ] you would Jbe right in both instances. , But he is more. He is President of , the second largest American university. ( James Burril Angell celebrated his eightieth birthday in January. For f thirty-seven years he has held tjie j helm of the University of Michigan. And during that period he found time j to act as American Minister to China j during the Immigration Agitation ; as Minister Plenipotentiary in the adjust- < ment of the British fishing wrangle ; on the North Atlantic; as Chairman : ' of the Government Deep Water ;Waya j : Committee, and as American Minister ! to Turkey. President Angell loves the life of the farm. He seems to know as much about wheat and corn as be does about philosophy and psychology. As a matter of fact there is nothing be so much enjoys as a long drive or ramble in the country .and the hours ' he does not spend with his books be spends in his garden.— Hampton's Magazine. MUNICIPAL SUICIDE A town whose citizens have no public spirit is on the way to the cemetery. The citizen who will do nothing to help his town is helping to dig its grave. The citizen who growls about his town being "the worst ever" is assisting in its burial. The business man who will not advertise is driving the hearse. The citizen who "knocks" and howls "hard times" preaches the funeral Bermon.— Bennington(Vt.)Banner. LABORERS WORTHY OF THEIR HIRE The Bowery Mission Free Labor Bureau is prepared to supply any number of men, for any kind of labor, at a moment's notice. Within the past - twelve months their cashier has paid out $1,468.86 for railroad expenses on thousands of worthy, ^willing and able s

bodied men, to all parta cf the country. Adress John O. Earl, Financial Secretary, 92 Bible House, New York. During 1908 The Philadelphia Record 1 printed nearly a million lines of display advertising in excess of that pub- ' fished by any other Philadelphia newspaper. This supremacy is due to the fact that The Record has a larger morning circnlation than any other Philadelphia newspaper. The same qualities of "Record" circulation that maKe the exploitation of merchandise pay. make The Record the ideal medium for summer resort'advertising. The proprietors of resort hotels and summer boarding houses seeking pa tronage from Philadelphia and vicinity, f'lould be represented in its advertis- | ing columns. Ail lr AHui FmI-Euc. ] A powder for swollen, tired, hot. smarting feet. Sample sent FREE, | Also Free Sample of the Foot-Esse I Sanitary Corn Pad. a new invention. | Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, 1 j Y. 5-15 4t , T. H . Taylor is the Gape May Agent for Waldorf shoes for men and women1 $2. 50. Hand sewed method. ! Staranb OTave tEt&e liable ' ttlflb m&e tot mas an& June, IPOS ; MAY JUNE A. M. P. M. Date A. M. P. M. 6.47 6.18 lat 6.12 6.8; 6.26 6.44 2nd 6.41 7.0f 6.69 7.12 3rd 7.22 7.4! 7.22 7.40 4th 8.01 8.2J : 7.55 8.10 5th 8.45 9.0! 8.25 8.45 6thr 9.27 9.5< 8.67 9.22 7th 10.16' 10. « ' 9.88 10.02 8th 11.10 11.27: i 10.22 10.48 9th 12.08 12.10 11.18 11.40 10th 12.23 111; . 12.00 12.30 11th 1.26 2.20 12.87 1.20 12th 2.36 3.27 ; "1.46 2 38 13th 3.46 4.28 3.00 3.62 14th 4.62 6.25 - 4.14 4.55 15th 6.64 6.17 5.18 -.6.49 16th 6.52 7.08: . 6.14 6.40 17th 7.45 7.561 1 7.07 7.28 18th R37 8.48 - 7.69 8.14 19th 9.25 9.29 8.48 9.00 20th 10.14 10.15 9.37 9.47 21 at 11.01 10.68 10.28 10.38 22nd 11.47 11.40 11.20 11.22 23rd 12.10 12.32 12.00 12.15 24th 12.24 1.20 r 12.12 1.14 26th 1.08 2.01 . 1.09 2.16 26th 1.62 2.83. , 2.10 8.10 27th: 2.89 8.27! ' 8.10 4.00 28th 3.80 4.20: t 4.05 4.42 29th 4.35 5.00 1 4.55 6.20 80th 5.16 5.56 , 6.85 6.66 81st

What Ails You) . Do yoo Cm] wMk, tired, despondent, have frequent headaches, coated toodoe, bitter or bad taste in moraiai. "heart-burn," bdehinf of gas, aeid rising, in throat after eerie*, stomach gnaw or bum, foul breath, dizxy spells, poor or variable appetite, nausea at time, and kindred symptoms P If yon her* any roa.ll.raOl. number of Ik HHS Dr. Pieeee'e- Golden Modiaal Dasoorory is made __ r Ir i> ftvag krigarntor. stomach tonic, bowel The "Golden Medical Discovery" b not a patent medicine or secret nostrum, a full list of it. ingredients being printed oo its bottle-wrapper and atteated under oath. A glance at tbcae will show that it oontaim no aloobol, or harmful habit -forming drugs. It is a fluid extract made with pure, triple-refined glycerine, of proper strength, from the roots of native American medical, forest plants. World's Pi .p salary M wheal Association, Props., Buflalo, N.Y.

THEHEARTSFARmL By ELVIRA MENDHAM. (Oepyrtcbtad. 1M, or Aaaoclatad Utarery Frees.) The road stretched while and endiem over the bills and far away. The siren of an automobile came clearly. 1 ■penetratingly, across the fields and dashed across the restful landscape. j 'Do drive slower, dear. I'm so afraid we'll ran away from all this and never be able to find It again." ; The gtrl looked out over the landscape In rapture. The -man. with bis hands on the | wheel, of the automobile, laughed I gladly as he slowed up. j Tin bo glad yon like it, dear. Of j course It Is all new to you. If you I will only learn to love It aa I do! j Eight miles more and we're at the : ranch, sweetheart. Tell me. are you | sure, perfectly sure, that you will j never regret coming so far away— that you won't wish you hadn't married me?" And for one little moment a look of donbt and fear crossed his fine, weather bronzed faceDave Clark had been bora and bred In the western Dakota hills on his father's ranch until be reached the age when his education demanded his going east to 'enter the big eastern technical college. He returned fitted by training for a civil engineer, but by nature and desire for the life on the ranch that his father had loved before him. He went along contentedly and successfully and had reached the age of thirty when It occurred to him with overwhelming conviction that there was something Of monotony as be was living. If I were only married," he said to himself, but his heart bad refused to respond to any of the wiles of the nearby maidens. He wondered in a mild ■way Just wby he had never thought of It before and that night took a train for the east. "Dave, you old miser, why didn't you come before 7' cried Bob Merrill as he all but wrung Dave's hand off when the latter walked Into his office. "Well, 1 can't figure out myself why 1 didn't." laughed Dare. That night Dave sat next to Bob's 1 sister at dinner. 8be wore a blue gown that matched her eyes, and Dave - felt- sensations that be had never experienced on the ranch, i "1 Just cant believe you're Dave Clark," she said banterlngly, ber eyes . merry and sweet. "I Just know you , by heart— how you won the last foot

1 ball game you played at college by the r most record breaking run and how no- . - body could find you after to congratuI late you— oh. ITe Just known you for j ages." ; That evening was the happiest Dave ! had ever known, and he felt as If he 1 Lad known Bob's sister all his life. > Boon after that he made a second 3 visit to the city. And this second time J when he returned to the ranch It was J with a wild happiness surging in his - heart that turned earth Into paradise, ; for Bob's sister came with him aa his 1 ! wife. ) Rosemary was delighted and bewilJ dered with the novelty of the hills and > far stretching ranches and the great coving herds of cattle and the abso lately different routine of life. For the first six months Dave tasted the cup of happiness to the fulL Then a little discontented look grew In Rosemary's eyes and dimmed their happiness. Born and bred in the city, to the city's tastes and ways, the life on the western ranch became to Rosemary a wearisome ordeaL Dave's eyes caught the shadow In his wife's, and. though ho word was cpoken, each was aware <tf the cloud. "Suppose we take a little trip, Rosenary," Dave suggested one evening when they tad been married scarcely a year. Roietnary threw down the pad Ike was writing with, and ber face ht up. "Bat* homer *he suggested heart aMi* young wlfe'TglLlnesa."" aimouncnt one evening when they had been in the dty about three peeks. Bk heart contracted with a hot

1 anguish at the look of absolute deeps It < i that cams into his wife's face. "1 think 111 leave Rosemary with you for awhile," ha continued, with a forced smile. "You see. the ranch k pretty dull aa a steady (Met, and Rosa mary might Just aa wall stay on a little longer." A look of glad relief came Into Rosa mary 'e eyes, to be chased away by one of uncertainty and something akin to ; fear. { Dave bade his wife good by cheerful • iy and took the train with a pain At ' his heart that almost stifled him. The emptiness of every room, of every . j nook and comer, at home mad* him | | like one demented In his flrat grief, j : He fought it all out at last, and under ; ] the stars he faced the heart tragedy ol i - his life. Her letters came regularly, chatty i j ; and full of her life, and be answered, as regularly, with no bint of his real' feelings. At the end of the year came a great 1 decision. He would sell the ranch. The little note of pathos In her letters J toward the end of their year apart: touched him and caused a new hope! In his heart "I'd never ask her to come back ! here." he told himself. In every lettei I - she was asking why he did not come. | Couldn't he get away? Had he forgot i ten her? She was tired of waiting? - "Yes. I must go to ber," he acknowledged to himself one cool autumn night as he ant before the fire. Outside tbe leaves were fast railing in the dusk, and the bareness of late i fall threw a somber sadness over the plains and hills. i "Another year would kill me," he ' said wearily, looking around tbe room, t "God. how t have missed her— my little wlfer He threw out, his arms In longing. She had always run to him in those first- days and climbed up on i his knees, cuddling her brown bead Into bis neck. Then came the old rancorous taunt— 1 she hadn't loved him: abe had wearied - in the first year of their paradise. No: ( after an. he couldn't go to her, for she did not need him. aDd his bead ' sank with almost a cry on his breast Tbe gust of wind that swept through the room did not disturb his grief. It was a glad Inarticulate little sob of fear aDd longing that made him start and cause bis bead to reel aa be saw a dainty, wind tossed little figure holding open the door. Just one little second, and then, before he could rise, she threw herself wildly, passionately Into his arms, cuddling her brown bead into his neck, kissing and caressing him In a very delirium of happiness. "Oh. why didn't you come, dearwhy didn't you come?" abe sobbed In a paroxysm of grief. He soothed and petted and fondled ber as be might an Infant until her emotion bad spent itself. Then when be had become master of himself they talked It all otri In the big chair by the Ore while night crept on over tbe silent, shadowy bills and the cattle lowed from afar. Overreached Himeelf. "If 8 funny how afraid rich men are Of being cheated." reflected Mr. Bates, "specially when tbey get out Id tbe country. Now. last fall one of the fur lined overcoat kind came up here. He snipped off his words as if they'd been | coupons, and though he'd come up here for rest he seemed to think somebod y'd charge him extry for It If be mentioned tbe facL "Well, the Bassett place, up on Birch hill, was for sale, and be took a fancy to It— looked Just like tbe bouse where he was bora, he said. "'But doD't you let it out" be aaya to me. "They'll be asking some fancy | price for It If tbey know I want It' ' "Well. 1 drove him up there after | he'd made up his mind, and we found | Isaac Bnasett out In the yard. " *1 hear this place Is for sale. How 1 much?" says Mr. Millionaire. "Isaac opened his mouth, but that was as fur as be got " Til give you 8950 for It; not a cent more." said Mr. Millionaire slambang. " Til take it.' aaya Isaac. "1 ain't mean.' he says, after he'd made out a check and we'd started off. •nor clost but I wont be done." says be. "Jest because I've made my pile.' "I didn't tell him." chuckled Mr. Bates, "that he'd done himself." "Had be?" questioned Mr. Bates' companion. "Sure!" said Mr. Bates. "The farm ' was put up for sale for the taxes, and i all they asked was $650. And Pve ( heard that Isaac had privately offered It for 8600."— Youth's Companion. ' The Birth of the Daisy. Tbe origin of the daisy Is told In the following legend: It was the belief of tbe Celtic people that when an Infant was taken away from earth a flower was sent- A woman. M alvlna. lost an infant son. but as sbe sat brooding and Inconsolable her attendants came running In with Joyful news. "Oh, Mai vlna." they cried, "your babe has come ; back! A wondrous new flower has come to earth; white are its leaves near the heart, but nearer the edges tinted with pink or crimson like an , infant" » flesh: When tbe wind waves it on the hillside, behold. Ha a child playing to and fro!" , And Malylna rose and looked upon ber flower and no more mourned, saying. "This flow- , sr. Malvlna's son returned, will comfort all mothers that bars lost their infants r On the Jump. "Is It really only ten minutes' walk to the station from your bouse?" asked Cttlman "What a ridiculous question!" exclaimed Subbuba. "Nobody In lovely Bwampburst ever "walks' to the station. I may say. however, that It's only about eight and a half minutes' ran." — standard >n4 Times

r 9 ) "OH. WHT DIDN'T TOD OOXX, DEAR?" SHE SOBBED.

EXCELSIOR SKATIN6 RINK tllill Open Traaliy. Thursday sal Salunlai Evening lid Saturday Afternoon. ! Also each Wednesday- Afternoonjfor begintiere^l General Admission lO Cents j Shates and Wardrobe 15 Cental 8 to 1CJ.3Q Evening 2 to 4-.30 Afternoon i| .■ '• ■-■'!■ Jewelry and Watchmaking Establshed 1888 tS Large Stock of can-fully selected goods. Clocks of all kinds. Repairing of Watches, Clocks or Jewelry promptly and aklllI ^2>V\ fully done. i ^ BELFORD GARRISON

, 05 WASHINGTON ST.

CAPE MAY N. J.

|W!^TToyett| 1 Cox Washington and Perry Sts. O ' ' O.SJPE */C.H.-3r C1TT, =1W JEB13ET O { * MANUFACTURER OF O : : : HARNESS, COLLARS, SADDLES AND HORSE GOODS g i ► Strap work of All Kinds. Blankets, Robes. Sheets and Nets A »ooooooooooo<i>oooeooooooo<s Goodyear Rubber Goods Leather, Cotton Rubber and Red Canvas B E L T I N G Rain Coats, Mackintoshes

Rubber and Oiled Clothing.

Horse Covers

- TOWN & BROTHER,

do 7 Market Street, Philadelphia, Pa.

Upholstering In all its Branches. Furniture of all kinds. Mattresses made and renovated. Window Shades, Carpets, Mattings, etc, We guarantee satisfaction Fnrnltnre to Hire by the day or week . | HOWARD F. OTTER 311*13 Mansion Street • V " ; Charles Seherer, 1 Lately with Peter Thompson, 1 1 1 8 Walnut Street, Philadelphia. Pa. I LADIES' AND GENTLEMENS' TAILORING, CLEANING AND PRESSING, Ladies Suits a Specialty 304 Washington Street Cape May, N. T. 9SS5«SS5«SS5«ISS«SWSm®SS 1 : r Eai.b i.h.d 1631 E.i.bll.K.d IftSl V* \y "The Old Reliable Jewelry Store" | ® JOSEPH K. HAND 9 j jj 311 WASHINGTON STREET. S ' 2 \ Watches, Clocks, Jewelry and Silverware. Repairing of all Jk ' L h kinds promptly attended to. ^ STOP AT 109 PERRY ST. Cape May, N. J. ! We have a full line of New Stoves, Heaters and Ranges. Odd Castings a specialty. Bargain Pricea for a Large Lot of Second-Hand Double and • Single Heaters. PLUMBING, TIN ROOFING, GUTTSRING . SPOUTING CHAMBERS I Telephone Connection 109 Perry St i _=:____:___=___===^

CHARLES YORK .

STITES YORK

YORK BROTHERS CARPENTERS AND BUILDERS CAPE MAY, N. J. Estimates Cheerfully Given on all Kinds of Buildings. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. * P. O. BOX 661