2 CAPb MAY STAR AND WAVE, SATURDAY JUNE 5, 1909 ' ===============^^ — s
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The w>nd You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of /y - and has been made under his personal supervision since its infancy, '"di'vZ S-cctc*u4/. Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and "Just-as-good" are but Experiments tliat trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children— Experience against Experiment. ; What Is CASTOR I A Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, I>rops 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 Fcverishnesg. 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. CENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years.
I 6ICT CREEK. Bomerg'Soffe and Mrs. Alena James drove to Court House Sunday afternoon to viait Mr. and Mrs. Fred'Peterson. E. 0. Wheaton, Charles Garretson, of Court House, came over on Monday and went drumming. Some of our people went to Wildwood and some to Cape May on Monday for Decoration Day. Mr. and Mrs. Luther Crease and Mra. George Mixner took a trip in his auto on Saturday to Buena. - Edward Hollingsead {has tie lumber on the ground to enlarge hii sitting room and build a new veranda. Mra. Edward Foster was called to Diss Creek last week to attend the funeral of the late John Cullen. The Junior League held a festival in the hall on Thursday evening which proved a success. Some of the young people from Rio Grande came over. Mra. William Eldredge spent a day last week at Stone Harbor. Mr. Eldredge returned home this week. S. C. Norbury is spending some time , at borne while the Rob Roy is in Phil- . adelphia. Mrs. Jane Bennett spent a day last : week with her daughters at Wildwood. Ralph Schellenger and Truman Hick- , man, the two County Secretaries of the j ' Sunday School were at Court House on ! Friday helping to arrange the program | for the fall convention at Ocean City j Isaiah Christian ha; been assisting the Powell brothers with their work on the Learning farm at Fishing Creek. George Stiles, of Court House, was . a Sunday visitor here. James Hoffman, wife and daughter, of Miliville, spent Sunday and Monday with Postmaster Gamp and wile at Pierce's. Mrs. Jane Schellenger and Mrs. Carlie Key called on friends at Court ] House Friday afternoon. Edward Armstrong and Thomas ; Loper, with their families visited their 1 Parents at Goshen Sunday. lA. R. Springer was here posting advertisements for the horse race to be held at Court House Saturday. """Mrs. W. A. Lake, accompanied Dr. i Lake on his trip here on Sunday in his auto. j Some of our people attended the : flag raising at Court Houre Friday. ! J Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mathews, of 1 : Fishing Creek, attended church here on i 1 Sunday. Mrs. Georgie Cresse spent Saturday here looking after her late husband's grave. At the business meeting of the Ep- {
worth League held at Ralph Schellen- 1 ger's Monday evening the fourth vice' g president had a short entertainment I , which was enjoyed by those present Miss Florence Brown, who has lately been elected to this office is taking . much interest in the work. Captain George Johnson started for . Hog Island last week in the sloop "Belle," with Walter Edmunds, mate, and they ran on a shoal in entering the I bay. The life savers had to take them , off and the boat was a total loss. He spentja few days in Vineland with his . wife and returned here on Tuesday. , Mr. and Mrs. 'Eli Johnson are entertaining bia cousin. Mr. Leach for a few days. ' . Health and muscle are developed by j the judicious exercise afforded by the 1 bowling alleys. Congress Alleys, 38 i Perry strdet, are the roost modern i , ! and best equipped. Try an eve - ing at the ancient and ever enjoyable i game. tf ! Ail lor Alios Foot-Eist. A powder for swollen, tired, hot- I smarting feet. Sample sent FREE, i Also Free Sample of the Foot-Ease j i Sanitary Corn Pad, a new invention. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, i ' N. Y. 5-15 4t j f T. H. Taylor is the Cape May Agent | j or Waldorf shoes for men and women- j : Hand sewed method. Star anb Ma\>e Ctbe Sable ; ftlflb Cibe tor map ane 3unc, 1909 | MAY JUNE A. M. P. M. Date A. M. P. M. ' \ 6.47 6.18 lat 6.1? 6.3a | 6.26 . 6.44 2nd 6.41 7.06 £.59 7.12 8rd 7.22 7.43 ; 7.82 7.40 4th 8.01 8.22 7.55 8.10 5th 8.45 9.05 1 : 8.25 8.45 6th 9.27 9.60 8.67 8.22 7th 10.16 10.36 1 • 9 88 10.02 8th 11.10 11.271, 10.22 10.48 9th 12.08 12.10 , 11.18 11.40 10th 12.23 1. 11 j 12.00 12.30 Uth 1.26 2. 20 1 ' 12.37 1.20 12th 2.85 8.27 ! 1.45 2 36 18th 3.45 4.28 « 3.00 3.52 14tn 4.52 5.25 ! I 4.14 4.65 15th 5.54 6.17 i 6.18 5.49 16th 6.52 7.08 1 , 6.14 6.40 17th 7.45 7.55 ' I 7.07 7.28 18th 8.37 , 8.43: J 7.59 8.14 19th 9.25 9.29;' 8.48 9.00 20th 10.14 10.15 ' | 9.37 9.47 21st 11.01 10.5811 10.28 10.88 22nd 11.47 11.40 i j 11.20 11.22 23rd 12.10 12.32!, 12.00 12.15 24th 1224 1.20 i 12.12 1.14 25th 1.08 204 1.09 215 26th 1.52 283 ' 210 8.10 27th 2 89 8.27 i* 8.10 4.00 28th 3.30 4.20|« 4.05 4.42 29th 4.25 5.00 1 t 4.55 5.20 30th 5.15 6.56 1 6.85 6.56 81st
[Copyright, 1909, by American I frs Association. These articles and Illustration) ! must not be reprinted without special | permission.}
BILL'S HOME FROM COLLEGE. [ Our Bill's got home from college. Where he's k etched philosophy, i He's chuck full of mettyphyalcs I An' of trigonometry- ' Bay. Is syllogism ketchin'? [ Kin you git TbudycidaysT j If you think they are contagious, m run fur ole Doc Hayes. Fur our BUI Is surely got 'em With the calculus an' Trench. Why. he says his prayers In Latin. An' be now kin cuss In French! Bay. does college make folks looneyT Tou would think our Bill was so With bis nltro 'lectrolosus. Plus NO! ah' H20. Bays BUI: "Oh. pa. why permit ma To fatigue herself to turn An' manufacture butter With that old fashioned churn T "Ron your dairy scientific. Come, ma, pour In the cream. Now perceive by aid of science ru make butter like a dream." Bo BUI poured In some y slier stuff Called "lectro calfeln oil." You'd 'a' thought It would bring buttar By the way It made things boU. But by gum. the ole churn busted. An' It made us all list scream j To see BUI a-spoutln' butter i An' all smeared with yalier cream. ! Yea. BUI Is glttln' better, i But what a concerned fool - 1 To try his latest football trick .'I On our ole balky mule! Bays ole Doc Hayes, "I cannot ass ' How BUI could stand that kick I Unless by goln' to college | His bead's got extra think." , c. a. b. ] KURIOS FROM KOR RESPONDENTS < Q. My Incubators are lousy. How the lice got there I dont know. I have ! had no hens' chicks in them, there were no lice on the eggs, and the ma- ' chines are In my bouse. Can yon solve ' : the riddle and tell me how tc get rid ? i of tbem? A. Lice lay nits. These were Uksly 1 on your eggs and hatched In the In- * cuba tor. Burn sulphur In machine, light with hot coal to prevent smoking and keep Incubator closed for half a day. Repeat In ten days to catch batched nits that were laid tn machine. Q. How do you break clucks, bow long does it take, and how soon after j do tbey lay? A. We turn tbem on range where they can't nest and put tbem on roost after dark. If this doesn't work we i fle a two foot flannel streamer to their tails— pullets two days, old hens three. I If a good laying strain tbey ought to B ! lay In a week, pullets first I I Q. My turkey torn has a big lump on E sole of his foot What la It? What e \ shall I do? j A. Bumblefoot Apply Iodine and ' j keep blm on soft bedding and remove a | roost. If no Improvement cut across 8 bell with sharp knife, remove corrup- * tion. wash with disinfectant poultice ® ! with breed and milk, bandage and keep bird cooped. i Q. Will you tell me why so many of my lncnbator chicks have crooked P | toes? s ! A. You run the machine too hot or 11 I breeders have deformed feet F I Q. Do you put feed and water In | shipping crates? A , A. No. The water la spilled, and In s winter this lands bird at destination g with cold. With feed and no water P j gets crop bound. We feed and i water well before shipping. v I Q. How do you get a rich yellow leg fl | on White Wyandottes, and bow do you n ; keep tbem so? a j A. Breed from yellow legged stock. n chicks run In wet grass when old enough. Bleechlng from age cannot v ; be helped, but birds kept free from fe scaly leg. lime and ashes hold the color b longest v Q. Have you ever seen a cracked k egg hatch? a ] A. Yes. Duck eggs often, but ben's n should be patched with good j court plaster, and this should be soaked '' and gently removed the eighteenth 61 day. h si DO NTS. b
i Dont let those bead lice suck the blood of your chicks. Just touch their | beads and throats with lard. Dont let your chickens suffer for j green food all summer. Their system | demands It Dont let droppings rot In the poultry bouse. Spread It on the ground for good crops. Don't forge^ that hen manure Is bast for the strawberry patch and ptgsou droppings for flower culture. Don't let that Iron poultry hocms roof task when a little putty win snd the Dont let the chicks In the brooder get wet when a piece of tar paper will dose the leak. Dont worry aDout what the other fallow does or doesn't Paddle your own canoe correctly. Don't let everybody be familiar with your bulldog. Your chickens may be
COLONIES YOUR CH1CKKNS. Have you yet slaromad down "crowded row," where John Bughouse uses Tenderloin tactics to produce poultry? Talk about ragam affix roosters, baldheaded hens and runts packed Is close quarters with filth sad crawlers! But "there are others" """"t millions by system on city lota until when their hot air explode tbey a nil
that word "crowding" compressed t< "ruin." Our motto Is: Hatch no more chicks than you have ground and house for. Feed these well, keep them free from lice and filth, so far as possible, and | then colonize them. By this plan we seldom lose a bird ( except by accident. Build small bouses that are easily put . together and taken apart or have them ! on wheels or runners, so they may be essllv mnrftl unit nnf rnnr i-hloto that I
have been properly weaned from hens and brooder beat Into them, fifteen or * in each house. These houses 1 should be so far apart that broods will j not mix and should be moved often, so j ground Is kept new. j The particular advantages of this sys- j tem are: Birds are fed more evenly j than In large flocks, have more room j night and day for growth, have purer 1 air, more grt-n food and space for ex- j erctoe and less filth and lice and llabll- 4 ity to disease, while a contagion is j quickly stamped out Chicks grow ] quickly to maturity, sexes may be sep- i
rated, breeders are healthier, hens lay | eggs are more fertile, stock is i on tainted ground and ground Is | evenly fertilized. The colonv plan Is In vogue on many farms for young and old stock the year ! around. A rolling stone may gather no j moss, but a rolling colony house, J with good stock, gathers lots of long I greenbacks. FEATHERS AND EGGSHELLS. | You must have two nests for each pair of pigeons, as they do the double stunt of raising one pair while hatch- j lng another. Supply tobacco stems and straw for nesting material. Tobacco stems cannot be ground up the ordinary haw] gristmill, as they simply wind round and round the grinding parts and unwind your temper. The display of fantall pigeons at the winter shows was good, but pigeon are breeding away from the The exhibits were fine In shape and action, but short on tall. The Is spelled fantall. not bobtail. The Idea that the fewer the hens with the male the more fertile the Is a mistake. In such case the ' are jealous and always scrapping, > while the male, always teasing the cuts down the egg product The hens with a rooster the more harThe Idea among some people that I are about extinct would be dls- i pa ted by a trip through the wooded hills after a snowfall. Sly Reynard still gobbles many a young gobbler, the chicken .hawk gets the blame. 1
Poultry shows, If good for nothing else, often cure a swelled head. The fellow who brags that he will win so moch after tbe show generally needs a crutch. * Chemical analysis shows there Is no foundation to the Idea that a brown shell egg is richer than a white shell •gg. It was proved long ago, however, that In many cases a brown, brawny band is more noble than a white, flabby coe. When a ben loafs around the nest out of hatching season it's a sore sign that she is egg bound. It's a picture to see our big WhMs Wyandotte cocks whack the bulldog. They go for him in a Bort of a "you-*st-out-of-bere-qulck" way that means business, and Ted "gits." He has been taught respect for the vigorous American bird.
OO LOST HOUSE.
' OOLOXY BOUSE.
COLONY HOCSE.
Women's Secrets Thore is one man in the United States who baa perhaps heard country. These secrets are not secrets of guilt or shame, but | of suffering, and they have been confided to Dr. < R. V. Pierce in the hope and expectation of advice and help. That lew o! these women blare been disappointed in their expectation is proved by the fact that ninety-eight per cent, of nil women treated by Dr. Pierce have been absolutely and altogether cured. Such a record would be remarkable if the L*,el treated were numbered by hundreds only. But when that record applies to tbe treatment of more than hall -a- million women, in a practice of over 40 yean, it is phenomena], and entitle* TV Pintnn tn tk. J--:. — I I.J l:_ ■ T -■ — ' - - ,r — — * — - ™ j w ■ , II » Iiucnnaui,
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and accorded wonts, aa tbe first of speoi all its in the treatment of women's diseases. •J**"" Dr. Pierce by letter, absolutely without charge. AD replies are mailed, seeled in perfectly plain envelope*, without any printing or advertising whatever, upon tbem. Write without fear as withculMbe, to grid's Dispensary Medical Associate®, Dr. R. V. Pierce, Prest., DM. PIERCE'S FAVORITE PRESCRIPTION 3MT a Tr^ ■ Wonk. Women Strong. • ffilOlS Wbvwem WpH.
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Charles Seherer, i ! Lately with Peter Thompson, 1 1 1 8 Walnut Street, . Philadelphia, Pa. ' i LADIES' AND GENTLEMEN'S' TAILORING. V CLEANING AND PRESSING, Ladie* Suit* a Specialty [I N 304 Washington Street-. Cape May, N. I.
rB Eei.b l»H«d 1631 Estsblishsd 1631 ? "The Old Reliable Jewelry Store" § S JOSEPH K. HAND ® ' S 311 WASHINGTON (STREET. S Lp Watches, Clocks, Jewelry and Silverware. Repairing of all Ok \ ^ kinds promptly attended to. Lp 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 Prices for a Large Lot of Second-Hand Double and Single Heaters. PLUMBING, TIN ROOFING, GUTTERING , SPOUTING CHAMBERS Telephone Connection 109 I*erry St. 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

