g CAPE MAY STAR AND WAVE SATURDAY, AUGUST 31, 1909 _ — — — - ■ ' ' '
60LF CLUB ,5 THE ATTRACTION j THE DAILY BAPPENIN6S ! Cl.b Boose Social Bea4(]ianers \ aid Ceiter of Interest ; | for Buy People , I I
, Tbe mixed doubles tennii tournament \ wmi tbe centre of interest at the Golf Olub Thursday. The golfers seemed wearied with the unusual strain of Wednesday's tournament and a number t of the regulars took a day off. Of those . who came up some were trying to cor- ' rect the faults developed in yesterdays' j oonteot, some were taking lessons from Dougherty. The only ones who really seemed to think that things were just as they should be were tbe cup win- i Hers, K. K. Bispham and W. W. Shaw. ■ f Of oourse tbe two youngest of the veteran golfers. Misses- Bispham and Btarr did not allow conditions to ! interfere with their usual early morning twosomer Mr. Welsh also had his usual match 1 I with the Oolonei. Later in tbe day J. j A. Baker took on tbe Colonel for i another match and when he finished W. D. Friabmuth took him on for the : last 9 of bis usual 27 holes. Bogie won < all tbe matches. D. Roberts and Miss E. Roberta, two J Atlantic City golfers, took'out cards i ' for the day and played 36 holes. L Mr. and Mrs. J. N. Mills, who have : I weekly tickets played a match in the : I afternoon. r Mrs. Me gar gee was out again this ' L afternoon in a match with Miss Me- > gargee. | G. H. Parr was not quite satisfied [ with the result* of yesterday and ehal- ] lenged tbe champion, E. K. Bispham , Just to try bis luck. Bispham calmly ' administered a gentle trouncing. ' I L. Smith was rather wearied after : his strenuous match withC.. L. Matthews so ne took on Miss A. Smith for a quiet afternoon match. W. W. Shaw and W. L. Allen took on O. O. Van Leer and his partner for t an 18 hole match in the afternoon. As all are tournament winners and asi pirants for tbe club cup it made an in- , teres ting match. ■ - •> TENNIS ' The tennis tournament began in tbe i morning Messrs. R. W. Starr and L. I. B. Morris of the tennis oommittee [ made the ^drawings at 9 :80 and play I started immediately. Mr. Levering and Mrs. V. Do Pont 1 defeated W. M. Allen and Miss M. Aileno 6-2 ; 6-2. [ T. M. Allen and Miss E. Brown de1 feated Mr. Beiler [and Miss E. Davis ! 6-2 ; 6-S. M. Levering and Mrs. F. DuPont de- [ feated R. W. Starr, Jr.. and Miss M. L Ayres, 6-1 ; 6-1. I. J. Rome Battle and Miss Ward de- \ feated Mr. and Mrs. F. B. [Shepard 6-3; 7-6. L B. Morris and Miss S. Trescott , defeated Mr. Hallowed and Miss .Reed t 6-8:6-2. Mr. and Mrs. Weaver [defeated T. ' M. Allen and MiBs E. Brown 10-8; 2-6;-1 6-4. In the second round Mr. Covering and Mrs. F. Du Pont defeated J. R. r Battle and Miss Ward 6-2; 6-1. llr. and Mrs. Weaver defeated F. B. Morris. and Miss S. Trescott 2-6:6-8; 6-0.
BREEH CREEK. Mr. and Mrs. Stewart Lowe are ente'taing his father, Thurston Lowe, of ► Wi'mington. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Camp spent Sunday with his brother Luke, at I Mayville. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Thompson sod ' Miss Jennie Woolson. attended Seaville jr Camp on Monday. Pastor Tozer and ; wife drove up Tuesday. Edmund Oompton is entertaining hie I cousin, David Long, for a few days. Captain S. C. Norbury went to PhilI - adelphia on Monday to take command r of a vessel for a trip. [• Our Sunday school had their picnic at f • Wildwood on Wednesday. \> Clarence Selover, one of the converts of last winter led the Epworth League Sunday evening. Miss Jennie Woolson, of Fishing 1 Creek, spent part of the week with her t Bister. Mrs. Harry Thompson. Mr. and Mrs. E. Eldredge have been J' entertaining her son Eugene. Uallaher < and family, of Millville, for severs days. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Rice, of Camden, spent the first of tbe week with friends here. A number of our people drove to 1 Wildwood Saturday evening. William Eldredge and Herbert Oresoe | will return to their duties at the government station today. Mrs. Deborah Thompson returned to i her son Harry's on Saturday after spending two months at Cape May with ber daughter, Mrs. Exr* Norton. Walter Schellenger made a business \ trip to Philadelphia on Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Crease and
daughter spent this week with rela- I | lives here. ' j Mrs. Edmund Fisher was summoned I to Porch town on Monday because her father Frank Vanaman had been killed by a car. She baa tbe sympathy of the communiy. j Ephraim Crease's horse stuck a nail in its foot some weeks ago and tbe veterinary consulted thinks it "is suffering from lockjaw. Its recovery is doubtful. Weak fish are biting good in the 4 bay. Coleman Selover and William Weaver caught about three hundred J weight and a drum on Monday. . | Ad far Alkas Fstf-Esst. , A powder for swollen, tired, hot. | smarting feet. Sample sent FREE, Also Free Sample of the Foot-Ease j Sanitary Corn Pad, a new invention. , Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy. N. Y. 6-15 4t ' — — — . i To put the '.brake on tbe wagon goine down tbe hill is a help to the horses. ( when the wagon is heavily loaded. But what driver would think jot applying j the brake to a loaded .'wagon going up < hill? If he did, his sensible horaes 1 would probably balk. Many a man is 1 iu tbe condition of pulling a load up ' hill with tbe brake set against him. ' ■ When his stomach is out of order, and ' the allied organs of digestion and nu- , trition impaired in [their functions, a | friction is set up which [has to be over- i come in addition to the performance of t daily^duties. A foul stomach makes a | foggy brain, and the man with a die- 1 ordered stomach has often to grope[his j way through the day's business like a in a fog. . He forgets appoint- j menta. Problems seem presented to , his mind "wrong end |to." This condi- , tion'ie entirely remedied by the use of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, i It puts the stomach [and disgestive and : nutritive system into a condition of - perfect health, and gives a clear brain, | a steady hand and a light step for the j day's duties. Dr. Pierce's medicines ( do not contain alcohol or other injur- , ious ingredi. ..ts ; they are not ' 'patent medicines" because their ingredients i are printed on the label of each bottle, 1 _ i
CASTOR I A Pot Infants and Children. Ha Kind Yon Han Always Bought
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■ PARKER'S I HAIR BALSAM ■ CImbm and beuttflcs U»« balz. ■ Praactea a luxuriant growth. ■ :,r , T i'alla to Kextore^Orxy I Can, scalp diaaaaaa ft hair facing. ^ acc.and|lf' ,r
WHAT IS WORN. ' — . ' Tha Popularity of Chockod Effects, j Hats In Gonsral. Checks Id ecru and a color are de- 1 ddedly smart. Reseda Is pretty and ] dainty, mauve Is ineffective, and pale4 blue Is commonplace. • ■ Concern I ne bats In general, they are usually flower trimmed, and the pref , I srence is ebuwn for small flowers and dusters, buttercups, sweet peas, forget | menota and moss roses. Tbe newest toque Is the kolback. j copied from tbe headdress of tbe Hun- | gartan officers. It Is made of fur and j has a straight feather at the sides, j Two ermine beads, holding a buge j
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rose or a knot of embroidered velvet ; ' end an algret. Is a favorite Idea for a j ! colffnre decoration, particularly for | White pique dresses for the street > trimmed with big pearl buttons and with bands through wblcb are run tiny black lines are $6.75. The tailored hat Is having a wonder ful vogue In Paris. So great Is tbe demand for this particular kind of headgear that designers whose specialty until now has been elaborate i hats do not disdain to devote some of their attention to It , This convenient little wrap belongs In every Infant's ontflt It serves tbe , purpose ot both hat and shawl and can be slipped on at a moment's notice whenever the temperature requires. It can be made of cashmere, flannel or > sut JTJDIC CHOLLET. I This Mat Stanton pattern may bft had In one stae only. Band 1* ceata to this on o*. dvtns number (CMS), and It will be I promptly forwarded to yon by malL If la hftftt* ■ ill fta additional two oant stamp for latter poataga. which tneoreft I mere prompt dattrory.
DECLINED . minis, A Rejected Love Story and the Letter That Came After. By E. J. BURKE. "Ills# Cecil Trarera— Mr. Philip SaunSome benevolent Individual Introduced them at the Pen and Pencil club. Saunders afterward spoke of him ss "tbe hand of fate." But then be was under the eway of the blind god and so not responsible for either remarks or his eyesight It was certainly a case of love at Brat sight— on the part of Saunders. he looked down Into the dark raised so frankly to his own he np his heart unconditionally. In i all his thlrty-flve years nothing had sent the blood rushing so riotously through his veins as the firm, warm clasp of ber hand. But he was-a quiet self controlled fellow, with a composure born of years of struggle up tbe uncertain literary ladder. So he did not hold tbe little hunri a second longer that politeness demanded. There w*fc no trace of In his manner as he sat down on tbe divan beside her and began to talk ss few men and fewer women had beard him talk— brilliantly, with flashes of wit and sarcasm relieving the underlying earnestness of thought Cecil Travers was quite unconscious of the metamorphosis she was producing. She only thought that this big blond man was not nearly as unapproachable as he looked. He was really charming. And. what was the more remarkable, he did not talk about himself. The girl fouud this an unusual experience. As reader for one of the magazines and writer of short stories she had met many men of many minds "Yet" as she had said pathetically to heraelf, "the minds always seem to turn Inward. How can they write about the world around them when they are so absorbed In self?" Her wonder grew when she discovered that he, too, was an author. She remembered now seeing his name signed to several clever sketches. He i had never tried any with the Sympo- i slum. As be talked tbe desire to read some of bis stories became overmastering. "Why don't you send something to me at the Symposium?" she asked at length frankly. He flushed up to the roots of his hair as he said hesitatingly. "I have been busy about something else, but 1 will— some time." It was his first trace of awkwardness. Cecil could not know that the "something else" was tbe novel which was tbe work of many months and which was even then seeking a pub- , Usher. Not even to her dared he- trust himself to speak of this child of bis hopes. If the world gave It a welcome — ah, then! His thoughts were busy j weaving a beautiful day dream, and Its central figure was this dark eyed ■ girl who was almost a stranger to him. He awoke to realities with a start. ! Miss Travers. puzzled at his silence. : had risen and was holding out ber " hand in goodby. I "You will come to see me some time, wfll you not Mr. Saunders?" she asked, with the frank smUe that was her especial charm. "I have enjoyed j my talk with yon so very much that I would like to repeat It I .am always at home on Tuesdays and Thursdays." I Her tone was so cordial that he j blushed and stammered over his | thanks. He called himself a fool a ; minute afterward when he found himself standing stupidly staring at the ] doorway through which she had dls- : appeared. But that did not prevent | his going home In a strangely excited 1 and exhilarated mood. The glamour of : his day dream seemed still around him. And she. the lady of his dreamhe loved her. j He whispered It to himself as he strode across the park, half fearful j that tbe flickering , lamps and tbe ; swaying branches might guess his sej eret, but In the silence of his room he said It boldly, and the confident ring of the words seemed to echo the mad beating of his heart, i It was inevitable that tbe next Thursday night should find blm In tbe parlor of Miss Travers' flat. It was , equally Inevitable that he should bend | all his energies to hide his love from ' the smiling eyes of this girl, who j treated him with an air of bon carnai radcrle fatal to sentiment. | It Is doubtful whether even cncour- ] agemeut would have wrung tlie secret from his Hps. Thb first Joy of loving J was past and in Its place had come a j flood of self distrust of self deprecia- j tlon. To his tortured mind an unbridgeable gulf of training and traditions seemed to sweep between them. She had been the petted child of rich parents, nnd on her had been lavished ■ the gifts of a college education and ' years of foreign travel. This attempt at Independence and self support had ' been treated as ber latest whim and ' humored accordingly. He had scrambled from a common school education ' Into tbe pitfalls, that beset tbe path of ' a newspaper reporter. Every upward i step had been bought at the price of • bard work. It was but a short time I since the problem of meeting his board - bill bad been an all Important one. That was tbe first of many calls, but tbe succeeding visits, while they 1 strengthened his love, gave no courage ; for Its declaration, r At last, in his desperation, a plan ; dawned upon him by which he might 1 learn his fate and yet spare her the pain of a refusal. She had asked him I
He would send her one embodying hlf two sequels for the choice of the read : er. In the one tbe lover should boldly t set aside tbe barriers of position and , woo and win bis ladylove. In the , other he should patiently bow to the I Inevitable and devote his Ufa to tbe i uncertain happiness of literary sue- ■ He bent himself feverishly to the task. For several weeks be bad not dared to trust himself to call upon her. She would understand the reason why when she read the story be ad dressed with a trembling hand. A day went by, another, a week. Saunders could not work. He could not sleep. He hannted the park and the streets where be had sometimes met her. hopeful yet fearful of meeting ber again and reading In her face til" answer. At length, when ten days hackpasse, and suspense bad become almost un endurable, the postman lefty a bulky envelope In his letter box. It was his story, and as be unfolded It a typewritten slip flnttered to tbe floor. He picked It up mechanically It was the usual rejection slip, cur: and businesslike, without an added line to soften the blow. It might have been minutes. It might have been hours, that he sat there starlDg at the scrap of |Aper. Then, with a groan, he burled his face In his arms, as if to shut out the words. His castle In Spain had faUen down about his ears. and be sat among the' ruins The sun was setting when he rose ; brusquely nnd went out Into tbe air to walk and walk in tbe hope that phys leal weariness might stifle his suffer 1 lng. The coolness of night brought u \ dogged courage to blot out the past. ' with Its day dreams, and turn to the future. But It was weary work. The end <> the week found him so worn and hag gard that his friends declared he was overworked and advised rest nnd change. "Your novel Is making such a success you can afford to do it." ' they urged. He only smiled bitterly and shook his bead. It seemed such ' cruel mockery to think that the suc- ' cess «f his • cherished novel should bring him no happiness. ' He was listlessly sorting his mail one morning when his eye fell opon a tiny blue envelope which had beer ' hidden by the others. His heart seem ' ed to leap into his throat for be r.v- ' | ognized the hand. He read: ' 1 Dear Mr. Saunders— It Is so long since l I have seen you that 1 am pining for one of our chats. To be sure. I have just come back from my three weeks' vacation, but then you had not been to see me for ever 1 so long before that. Is there anything the matter? Come up tonight, and perhaps I can explain. Yours sincerely. ( CECIL TRAVERS. , Again Mr. Saunders sat staring at a ; piece of paner, but this time it was the shock of sudden Joy. She haA never seen his story. It had been turned , down by ber deputy reader. , He made most of tbe explanations I that evening, but Miss Travers did not seem to mind. They Agreed. , To his valet no man is a hero. Even his caddie Is apt to bold the highest l.i I very low estimation. The latter dis1 covery was made the other day by a certain legal luminary who already had quite a modest opinion of his . own abilities, though he has been for - mauy years an ornament of the bench and Is himself tbe son of a Judge. During his off days he usual- > ly divides his energies between golf i and dairy farming. On the occasion 1 | in question it happened to be golf. [ and. not belug In his usual form, bo ; made a very bad foozle. He gazed Incredulously at the ground j » looked Inquiringly at bis club and. I having apparently solved the dlfflculi i problem, faced his caddie and exclaim ed. with emphasis. "Well. I am an > ass!" Tbe caddie, startled out of a dream of bliss, was too well trained to t contradict his employer, so he sc! 1 ernnly replied. "Yes. sir!" The man f of law had overlooked the other's ex1 istence, but this candid opluion recalled him to earth. He looked at the caddie, and the caddie looked at blm 3 for a brief second. Then both burst 1 Into a shout of laughter. The humor ? of the situation hud struck them simultaneously.— London Tatler. Buried In Woolen. ' In 1679 an act was passed In Eng- ; land requiring tbe dead to be buried l'i ! I woolen, the purpose being to lessen i ! j "the importation of linen from beyond | ' the seas and the en -ouragement of the : ' woolen and paper manufactures of this ! 1 kingdom." A penalty of £5 was In- j ' j tlicted for a violation of this act. and I ' | as frequently fieople preferred to lie! burled lti linen a record of the fine np- j ' : pears. For example, at Gaytou. North- j amptonshire. we find iu the register: j 1 I "1708. Mrs. Dorothy Belllngham was ' buryed April 5. In Linnett. and the f< -rfelture of the Act pa yd. fifty shillings j ' to ye Informer and fifty shillings to 1 Inpoor of the parislie." | Pope wrote the following lines on I the burial, *>f Mrs. Oldfield. the actress, j with reference to this custom: . "Odious! In woolen! 'Twould a saint " provoke." 1 Were the last words poor Narclss» spoke. I No; let ft charming chintz and brussels lace Wrap my cold limbs and shade my life1 less face. t —Chambers' Journal. 1 t An Unconventional Graduate. ; "So you've Just graduated from eol- ' lege?' 'snaps the head of tbe Arm. "And I suppose you think yon know snough to run my business If I give f you a place?" ' "I hadn't considered that phase of the matter," replies the graduate. "1 1 called to inform you that I have coro1 blued all your rivals and am willing to i 1st you Into the combination If yot< 1 will talk business."— ^ Chlcaao Poet., 1 t j
„i quantities have found that they save j goods ^th£it dam* ■ age, aa la not tbe cms when purchased elsewhere and shipped by rail, tf Tbe New. Paint Store John Little has opened np tbe bdei ness of selling paints at the comer ol Jackson end Washington streets and it is jtiM .he place to boy fresh paints. 3-23- tf l "The Grand" Motion Picture Theatre ! ia the i«pular place of resort In tbe , evenings The pictures displayed are the latest and moet interesting ob- . tainable. This is the only show of the kind now running in this city, tf The character of the Board of Directors and officers of Security Trust I Company ar such as to insure fair dealing, and a return of your money when ypu want it 3z B
I Station and Reading Terminal ■ on Filbert St. ; I ' ~ ^ » ■ PHILADELPHIA e — — ; KEYS FITTED Locks ^Trunks, Valises, Parasols, J etc. Repaired x J. DENIZOT Second floor, 317 Washington st < 9
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