2 CAPE MAY STAR AND WAVE, SATURDAY AUGUST 14. i9oy
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)MSTMU J For Infants tai Children. [ I The Kind You Have j I Always Bought i i Bears th' /, v. , a Signature /Am J i of My \ W • v \ ft Jr *n ; rtJ- Usfl * 1 IkT f \j For Over Thirty Years , WOP i
BASEBALL r Yesterday's game was the greatest game that the fans of Cape May have had the pleasure of witnessing this year or for many years at this resort. The Maryland A. O. made their boast some days ago that they would make the locals taste the bitterness of defeat. They kept their word. But the victory was not banded to them on a silver platter by any means. Every run made was well earned by heart i breaking work. Oape May proved that > bar record wasn't presented to them, ! by their excellent work on the diamond in yesterday's game. Both clubs ex- 1 hibited ability seldom seen on any ex- 1 cept a major league diamond. The interest of the huge crowd of fans, the largest of the season, in the' battlo of twirl era, was greatly height" ened by the brilliant support of the ; teams ' behind them. Corkran's two i stabs of what seemed to be impossible | clover trimmers, was good to see and ! he received the applause of even the opposing team. Lawrence spoiled what should have been a three bagger ;for Weinberg by a brilliant stop'in*center. J. , Machado starred with a catch much of the same order in left Weinberg caught a splelndid game and succeeded In getting a high foul which would have landed in the street. Jefferson saved Ooikran an error by nailing a high wild throw which would j have gone over the fence. Deal, Maryland's catcher, showed ( splendid form though had the misfortune to dislocate his thumb. Score : CAPE MAY R H 0 A E Kuhn, cf, 0 2 3 0 0 Smiley, 3b, 0 0 18 1 Gorkran, ss, 0 0 1 4 0 1 Curry, 2b, 0 0 16 1 Weinberg, c, 0 0 2 0 1 Jefferson, lb, 0 1 14 0 0 L. Machado, p, 0 10 10 Heed, rf , 0 0 3 0 0 J. Machado, If. 0 0 2 1 0 Totals, - 0 4 27 14 8 MARYLAND A. C. Whitehurat, as, 0 0 0 3 0 Uhler, lb, 0 0 14 0 0 Franke, rf, 1 2 0 0 0 Deal, c, 0 0 6 0 0 Robinson. 3b, 112 10 Lawrence, If, 0 1 1 1 0 Shurner, cl, 0 12 0 0 Marsea, 2b, 0 0 2 3 0 Harlan, p, 0 0 16 0 Totals, j 6 27 14 0 a
7 " ' Cape May, 0 0000 000 0-0 Maryland A. O. 00010000 1—2 1 Earned Runs— Maryland A. O. 2. I Stolen Bases — Cape May 1 ; M. A. O. ' 1. Two base hit— Jefferson. Three • e base bits— Franke. Double plays— 1 8 Smiley to Curry to Jefferson. Struck 1 ' out — Bv Harlan'.5; Machado X. Bases I on balls— Machado ' . Umpire— Wales. e O! 1 ~ Silence ! 1 e A battle of giants. 1 8 First defeat a shut out 1 • j Both teams showed perfect form. 1 I Cape May has nothing to regret. 1 Seemed like major league ball. 1 • I The largest crowd of the season. Maryland brought their own rooters. ■ ' j They looked good. Corkran certainly starred. I Jefferson got the only two bagger. ' 1 j Franke sent one with the birds good ' 8 | for three sacks. ; Can the visitors repeat the perform- ' e I ance? I 0 That score board looked good to ' 8 everyone— no. it didn't bring bad luck. It will do you good to be one of tne 1 e j crowd which will gather at Columbia j base ball park this afternoon. Come 1 e out and see your friends, they will at J | be there, j The noisiest rooters for the visiting j ' teams are ofttimes those cheap guys ; e who steal in past the ticket seller and j j see the game for nothing. L I So long as Baltimore did it, there i; y j was no kick coming. j Saturday's game was the greatest . . ' treat that the fans have had this sum- ; | mer. After Friday's game the Interest 1 1 | waxed ^reat and everyone was anxious , 5 to see the result of the second game I ] 0 and the largest crowd that has visited | the ball grounds for many a day was j ( j | there to see the battle of two equally j ( matched teams. The result was good , 0 o see. A bunch of errors in the first | , jj inning gave Cape May three runs and j , q from the first to the ninth was simply i f . a pitchers' battle and a series of bril- 1 ( 3 lant plays by the rest of the team kept 1 1 both pitchers at their best. Hall re- 1 , 0 ceived almost perfect support and the j 0 locals played such ball as is seen only ' k 0 in clubs of the big leagues. 0 Franke, of the Maryland A. O., t 0 has been secured for Cape May by t 0 Manager Brownmiller as a fielder. , 0 Franke leads the Maryland A. O. in j 0 hitting and is a valuable asset to the , 0 local team. By apecial arrangement the. ex cur- j D sion train on Tnnraday, via Reading { i e
Vsa, Patriotism The stomach ii a larger factor in "life, liberty end the pur- j 8 suit of happiness" than most people are aware. Patriotism v c"n withstand hanger but not dyspepsia. The confirmed dyspeptic "is fit for treason, stratagems and spoils." The man s who goea to the front for his country with a weak stomach will be a weak soldier and a fault finder. ' ^ A sound stomach makes for good citizenship as well as for I health and happiness. t / Diseases of the stomach and other organs of digestion and nutrition are promptly and permanently cured by the use of 1 / | Dr. PIERCE'S COLDER MEDICAL DISCOVERY. | A I " builds up the body with mound flesh and Q I lv\ *°"d t ty L/^) The dealer who offers a substitute for the " Discovery "is n ■ only seeking to make the little more profit realized on the B B sale of less meritorious preparations. • Dr. Pieroe's Common Sense Medical Adviser is sent free I W ■ on receipt of stamps to pay expense of mailing ssty. Send I m W 21 coe-eent stamps for the paper covered book, or 31 stamps I flk for the cloth bound. Address World's Dispensary Mediral I W Association, R. V. Pic roc, M. P., President, Buffklo, N. Y. \
will leave Atlantic City at 6:80 so as 7 to accommodate those who wish to stay to the base ball game between t Atlantic City and Cape May. t OAPE MAY t R H O A K < Kuhn. ef. 10 10 0] Smiley, 8b, 0 0 1 0 0 I Corkran, as, 112 2 1 Curry, 2b, 1 0 2 3 0 Weinberg, c, 0 0 7 1 1 L. Machado, If, 0 2 2 0 0 Jefferson, lb, 0 0 8 0 0 rf, 0 18 0 0 Hall, p. 0 0 1 1 0 Totals, 3 4 27 7 2 MARYLAND A. O. Whitehurst, ss, 10 13 2 Uhler. lb, 119 0 0 Franke, rf, 0 12 0 0 Dean, cf , 0 0 0 0 0 Robinson, 8b, 0 0 2 1 1 Laurence, If, 0 1 2 0 0. Harlan, 2b, 0 0 0 1 1 | Ament, c, 0 0 7 1 0! Kronard, p, "" 0 0 1 2 0! Totals, 1 4 24J 8 4 . Oape May, 3 0 0 0 010 0 0 x— 3 i Maryland, 00000000 1—1 : SNAP SHOTS Howb that? Not so bad 1 O you Maryland An even split The locals are still the goods. Kronan fanned six. Hall struck out seven. Uhler made the first home run off a Cape May pitcher. Not nineteen straight but nineteen out of twenty. Two games away from home this week. MRS. RICHARDSON'S GIFT Everyone was very agreeably- surprised upon arriving atjthe bail grounds yesterday to see a large new score board in place of the old one. i Mrs. Charles W. Richardson made ; this'much needed addition to the ball grounds. Mrs. Richardson, though alviewing the game from her Packard, in preference to the giand stand, never fails to donate something substantial than applause for the 1 ; good of the game. The new board is the handiwork of Benj. Savage and has plain white figures a foot high which any one with , half an eye can see from any part of ! the [field. If the fans of Cape May would do bait as much as Mrs. Richardson a new enclosed ball park would tbe result before next season STAR VILLA GUESTS ENTERTAINED The guests of the -Star Villa were the recipients of an expression of good will from the waiters of tbe bouse yesterday. Upon enteringjthe dining for "luncheon a [perfect vista of flowers and palms greeted the eye, the , tables were handsomely decorated with running plants, lillies, palms, ferns and . a myriad of smaller'plants and beauti- , ful flowers, chief among them was . Oape May's standard favorite, the hyI drangeas, iu great profusion on all the tables, both dining room were resplen- , jdent with flowers and plants. Each | ! table had a style of decoration peculiar I I to itself. B. I. Gibbon, A. G. McI Causland and J. M. E. Hildreth sat at . | a table where part of the decorations ! consisted of two silver cups won on (recent races by the "Alice" and : "Meteor." Among those whose table | were particularly attractive were Mr. Dr. Vanzant, the Battles, Cap- ; tain Oresse, Dr Trainer, Mrs. Rich1 j ardson, Mr. Garrison, Dr. Ware, Mr. Mr. Wilson. I The dinner of which a large number I partook was one which met the re- | quirementa [of the most exacting pal- 1 j ate. The decorations were the compliments of the waiters of the Star Villa j the guests and was under the management of Nathan Anderson and his , i of waiters who hope to be remem j by the guests on August 12th at - ] their entertainment. ATLANTIC CITY SOCIETY NOTE j. D. Wilson, treasurer of the Tar en- | Glass Company. Tarentum. Pa , relates an incident which occurred last ] week in front of (the Hotel Chalfonte, Atlantic City, which he handa out j about as follows : "I was sitting on the veranda of the . when a well dressed woman approached a couple of men who were J j standing in' front of the .Chalfonte and excitedly exclaimed that she had been insulted on the boardwalk j "By whom and bow were you in- . suited?" asked [one of the men, wno | ! evidently an acquaintance. "I don't know who tbe fellow was," she replied, "but he. wanted to know if I was his baby. ' ' ^ "What did you say in Teply'?',asked ^ the second gentleman. t "I told him to go to h— , " was the < sizzing're joiner. And,Wil80n nearly broke his medulla , oblongata as the "lady" and her gen- 1 tlemen friends faded away.— Com- s moner and Glassblower. B PARKER'S HAIR BAL8AM Mm
BOWLING TEAMS AND NEWS Tbe fifth game of the season's aerie was rolled at tbe [Oongreaa'alleys Friday evening reeulting in the [defeat of the Stockton team. Thie makes four out of five for the Congress team Both teams showed up well, two games being within six pins of each other. Smith, 81 86 8U Anabutz, 109 69 83 Swindell, 79 78 106 Shnmington [81 80 82 Williams 83 86 77 483 898 427 | Fendereon 96 86 106 ScheUenger 81 72 88 * Oreaee 84 97 90 Eldredge 77 86 71 I F. Hughes 89 88 78 «27 428 428 Augustus J. Bender, captain of the All Conquering Cape May team, was presented with a tin loving cup. by Dr. Wm H Manning, one of the Villa Nova team. Mi ss Rae Cohen, M ias Minnie Cohen, . Mrs. H. Odenheimer, Mm. J. Odenand Arthur Cohen formed a ' party of bowlers Wednesday evening st the Congress alleys. Miss Ray Cohen holds the I aides' high soore g in dock pins. Mr. ^i d Mrs. H. Morris are seen bowling at the Congress alleys most every day. hlr. Morris is one of tbe ) beat bowlers of the season. He par- ' ticipated in the big national tourney ^ held in the Madison Square Garden. ( Mrs. Shew andJMre. Roberta bowled ( some very good scores Saturday. i The high scores have been broken in a the boys duck pins and the boys ten ] pins, the score are as follows. * Men's high score in pins, Henry * E. Sealey, 218. | Men's duck pins, W. Scott Eldredge, i 127. Ladies ten pins, Mrs. M. L. Clair, 1 168. ' Ladies duck [pins. Miss Rae Cohen, * 84. Boys duck pins, Robert Blattner. 106. Boys ten pins, Wm. O. Trainor, 204. Don't forget a nice silver loving cup given the high scores for the season . Dennia O'Brien, the able and genial chief clerk of the Congress Hall, a very entertaining and interesting comat all times, entertains his favored friends with a poem selected from bis collection which is quite large. After much persuasion has consented to loan the author a volume containing . several of his masterpieces one of which is : MY DREAMLAND HOME In the{land of the ran, 'neath the cres i of a mountain. Half hid by the oaks that have guarded it long. „ Where snakes build ' their holes in the old rusty fountain, | And the bed of the brook is the grave of its song ; ; In a garden deserted, the iiome of my childhood . Stands broken >nd old, aod the bat ' swirls at will" In and out its great hallways, that smell of the wildwood. No noises are heard; all's quiet and still. The moon, in her splendor and kindliness beaming. Oasts never a ray o'er the dank, moss T. . KT$g/ n wall ; The stars, in their revels, the eun, in his glesming. Forget the old place 'neath the dust of " its pall. 'Tig alone in a wilderness, aged and ^ crumbling, — C Where erstwhile was life and tbe C pleasures it gave. With only tbe voice of the tnunderjcloud, / rumbling, 1 To break on the ruin, the still of the ^ grave. C O, murderous Death, wilt thou always \ enfold it. L beautiful home that lives only in C dreams, Tbe home ot my boyhood' Forever I'll hold it i down in my breast, as the sea holds the[streams. the evneing of life, when thy sum- 1 mons shall call me. heart will away, and my spirit shall roam the land of the sun— it will ever en- 8 thrall me. S And my soul then take flight from my old dreamland[home. DENNIS A. O'BRIEN — i New Malay Opium Cure Being Distributed Free by a New York Soolety. Co-operating with missions in Malay- — sia. the Windsor Laboratories of New Y ork have secured a supply d the won- Q d erf til combretum plant, which has dons _ much to revolutionize the treatment of the opium habit. A generous supply of the new remedy, together with full instructions for its / and United States consular reports 1 bearing on the subject will be sent to sufferer. To obtain a free supply of this remedy and the consular reports, address Windsor Laboratories, Branch 28, 134 East »th Street. New York City. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S F CASTORI A
1 ■ / j — ii- ma EXCELSIOR SKATING * ttlill Open Tuesday, Thursday and Satunlay Evening and Saturday Afternoon. General Admission lO Cents SKates and Wardrobe 15 Cents 8 to 10.30 Evening 2 to 4.30 Afternoon Jewelry and 'Watchmaking Establshed 1888 Large stockj [of car. fully selected goods. Clocks of all kinds Repairing ot Watches, Clocks or Jewelry promptly and skflltfftl fully [done. ^ BELFORD GARRISON 806 WASHINGTON ST. CM>E MAY „ , 1 1 r Tnnnoonoooooqi W. A. LOVETT j 1 Cox Washington and Perry Sts. \ cror. ottbt iebs et 1 1 ' MANUFACTURER OF I | i HARNESS, COLLARS, SADDLES AND HORSE GOODS ! j 1 Strap work of All Kinds. Blankets, Robes. Sheets and Nets < » *»»<>0»000060<hOO<X)OOOCOOO< ""-Tn GOODYEAR'S RUBBER GOODS | M'chmical Rubber Goods of Every Kind ci uuuus oi every luna
LEATHER BELTING
I GrELxdeiri Hose, Hose Reels, Lawn Sprinltlers, |
TOWN & BROTHER 607 Market Street - Philadelphia I Upholsering In all its Branches. Furniture of all kinds. Mattresses made and renovated. Window Shades, Carpets, Mattings, etc. We guarantee satisfaction Fnriillnr- to Hire by the day or week. ARD F. OTTER 311>13 Mannlon Mreet Charles Seherer, Lately with Peter Thompson, 1 1 18 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, Pa. LADIES* AND GENTLEMENS* TAILORING. CLEANING AND PRESSING, Ladies Suits a Specialty 304 Washington Street Cape May, N. ?. En.b i.h.d 1831 EorablUhecO&ai ft v "The Old Reliable Jewelry Store" S JOSEPH K. HAND 311 WASHINGTON STREET. £ ml Watches. Clocks, Jewelry and Silverware. Repairing of all 3k m 7 kinds promptly attended to. Qb S OP AT 109 PERRY ST. Cape May, N. J. We have a full line of New Stoves, Heaters and Ranges. Odd Castings specialty. Bargain Prices for a Large Lot of Second-Hand Double and Single Heaters. PLUMBING, TIN ROOFING. GUTTERING , SPOUTING CHAMBERS Telephone Connection 109 Perry St CHARLES Y C I- K STITES YORK YORK BROTHERS CARPENTERS AND BD'LDERS CAPE MAY, N. J. Estimates Cheerfully Given on all Kinds of Buildings. satisfaction guaranteed. P. O. BOX* 661 uJM An ^ V-Mni jr.

