- I • The "Find You Have Always Doug":t, and wliich has been in use for over 30 years, has ' me tho signature of j* ^ and has bacnraado under his perfjr s • sonal supervision since its infancy. 'Arttvy /■cc/cAtM Allow no ono to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and " Just-ae-good" are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Tn fimts and Children— Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless snbstitute for Castor Oil, Pare* E goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It » contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic a substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms f and allays Feverishness. It cores Diarrhoea and Wind t 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. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Signatureof^^^^ The Kind You Have Allays Bought In Use For Over 30 Years.
CAPE MAY DEFEATS MERION C. C. LARGE CROWDS SEE OOtD SAKE Bennett Star Bitter For Merion Bats Ont Borne Ran and There Are Star Plays A Plenty The base ball game Saturday be j tween Oape May and the Merion I Cricket Club, captained by Fletcher | W. Stiles, was a very interesting con- 1 _ tep^fcetween teams well matched, and ; ~~ was witnessed by a large crowd. The borne ran hit by Bennett of the visitors was one of the features and there were a number of star plays on both sides. The score: OAPE MAT R H O A E ' L. Machado, If 2 1 0 0 Ol Smiley. 8b 12 12 0! Oorkran. ss 0 0 1 3 0] Carry, 8b 2 4 4 1 0; Weinberg, c 2 3 12 1 0 Jefferson, lb 118 12 Heed, rf 0 0 111 J. Machado, cf 1 8 0 0 0 Hall, p 0 0 0 8 0 Totals 8 14 27 12 8 MERION C. O. Brokaw, 3b 112 8 1 Hare, c 0 0 4 3 0 Bennett, lb 1 2 10 0 1 Archer, 2b 1 8 8 4 2 Stitea, If. p 1110 0 Orolind, cf 0 2 2 0 0 Weymouth, rf 0 0 0 0 0 Hicbner. ss 1 1 0 2 0! BUis, p 0 12 10 Totals, 5 1124 18 4 Gape May, 1 0 5 0 2 0 0 1 x— 9 I Merion O. O.. 0 1 0 2 1 0 1 0 0—5: Earned runs Oape May 6 : Merion 3. Two base hits— Archer, L. Machado, Weinberg. Three base hits— Gurry. Home runs — Bennett Double plays — Hall, to Curry to Jefferson. Struck out— By Hall 8; Stltes 3. Bases on balls — By Hall 2 ; Stites 3. Umpire — Blakeley. MARGARET L.'toLAN DEAD Mrs. Margaret L. Tolan, [aged 58 years, wife of James P. Tolan, late of 728 Pasayunk avenue, Philadelphia, died on Saturday last in Philadelphia, whither she .had gone for treatment. The remains were brought to Cape May yesterday and the funeral will occur tomorrow, Tuesday, 17th inst Mass at St Mary's Ohurch, at 10 a. m. Interment[at Cold Spring, N. J. ei
« GALA NIGHT AT THE STOCKTON , The occasion tendered to Lucien O. i ! Carpenter, the director of dancing at f j the Stockton on Friday evening last 8 * was a delightful'ai .. exceedingly charm- ' | ing affair. The children in the early ' E J part o'f the evening certainly looked j very pretty and as they marched and j . j went through their different evolu- , I tions, rounds pf applause greeted them | from all sides of the'spacious dancing i ! hall by their admiring friends and de- < j lighted audiencee f present A feature 1 j long to be remembered was the efforts ' j of Mr. Gossler's graceful little daugh- ' ter Ruth, who is but two and a half : n years and.has had but few lessons from , r Mr. Carpenter, bids fair to be quite an , ' artist. The older on, a had a most enjoy. | able time until late in the evening and i B i the whole affair was pronounced by all B a most pleasureaole success. YACHT CLUB NOTES ; The county races held here Saturday j 0 | were the most successful of any held , | under the clubs colors this season. The ■ ; entries were large and the'events close. , ; The rough harbor lent just enough 2 thrill to the races to make the partici1 pants eager to win despite the difficul- 1 ties and everyone was soaked'that went j _ around the course. The summary : 8 First race. Class A speed boats, , three times around course. Act. Time Cor. Time j i Meteor 19 m 40 sec 20 m 17 sec ' Swallow 20 m 25 sec I i Swallow received 37 seconds time allowance over the meteor. Special race, two times around course. , 0 Toothpick 16 m 84 sec ~ j Second race, Class B, two tiroes around 5 1 Actual Corrected [• Hoyden 20 m 86# a 13 m 48^ s i Arrow 19 m 11 sec 14 m 18 sec - j Mary O. 22 m 39 sec k j Lady M. M. 28 m 48 sec _ | Third race, Cruisers, two times around I course. Actual Correcte d j Edith 32 m 87 sec 19 m 14 sec £ Neredes 32 m 36 sec 21 m 87 sec if I Cora 32 m 67 sec 24 m 10 sec i. i — — Jaquette and Newell, the cement ; ,e side walk specialists, are still rnshing j the new walks and by next spring we j t. predict that bricks will be a scarce j i. article. j
Fads for Weak Women Nine-tenths ol all the sickness ol women -Ai due to some derangement or^diV •very day by Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription It Make* Weak Women Strong, Sick Women Well . It seta directly on the organs effected and ia at the same time a general restorative tonic for the whole system. It cores female complaint right in the privacy of home. It makes unnecessary the disagreeable questioning, examinations and loeal treatment so universally insisted upon by doe tore, end so abhorrent to •very modern ■ rmiar ^ Wo shall not particularise here ea to the symptoms ol those p miliar efcntinna incident to women, hot thoee n an* iag fall mfbrmation aa to their symptoms and means of positive erne aire referred to the People's Com- — — not Seme Medical Adviser- 1008 pages, newly revised and up-to-date Edition, aeot fnt on reoeipt of 21 one- . •cat stamp* to cover cost of mailing anfy; or, in cloth binding for 31 stamp*. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo. N. Y. ^ A
I ■ ii Mailing Money ! On the Farm i IX.— Clover and Alfalfa \ Crowing • By C. V. GREGORY. I Author of "Home Course In Modem i Agriculture" 1 Copyright. 1909. by American Press c Association t E THERE Is no crop grown on the f farm which Is more necessary . or more profitable, all things considered, than some legume. ^ a crop Is profitable from the 'Standpoint of the returns from an and doubly profitable when the , of the soil Is considered. On the farm where much stock Is kept 5 legumes serve another purpose, that of furnishing cheap protein. j Clover Versus Alfalfa. Throughout the corn belt clover is i the most Important legume. In west- j era United States alfalfa Is largely t grown, while In the south cowpeas, t soy beans and vetch are the principal ( legumes. The legume best adapted to t your own locality Is the best one to grow, at least until careful experiments have shown that some other Is more profitable. In the west, where the soil Is loose and dry. alfalfa sends down Its long roots to a source of per manent water supply and yields abundant crops. Farther east where the water table Is so near the surface of the ground that the plants have "wet feet" during a considerable portion of the year, it does not do as well. In states east of the Missouri river clover Is much more desirable. A small patch of alfalfa may be grown, but It does ( not fit Into the system of farming £ well enough to be adopted on a large ! j scale. It cannot be sown with the small gralD in the spring with any . surety of geltlug a stand. The seed Is ' j expensive, and the hay is more dilli . cult to cure than clover. ] Alfalfa does not come to Its prime j for about three years, so that It In uqt ( profitable to plow It up the second , year, as Is done with clover. For this ( It does not work well in the ( standard rotation of corn, oats and clover that meets with so much favor the corn belt. It does oot fit In with ( the rest of the work as well as clover , either, as the first crop must be i-ut , Just when the corn Is being laid by. , When a good stand of alfalfa has been ( secured It yields twice as much as | clover, but this extra yield Is counter- ( In most Instances by Its dls- , advantages. , Getting a Stand of Clever. ' ] The question of getting a stand of| ] clover is a troublesome one on many j i farms. This Is due largely to Improper I I methods. The first point to consider! I Is the soil. Land that has been farmed 1 a number of years Is likely to be acid. I a condition which makes it ill fitted ; ( to grow clover. This acidity can be i overcome by adding ground limestone I as suggested in article No. 2. A seed bed In good tilth and free • from weed seeds Is also an important ' consideration. Little clover plants are . I very tender and cannot well compete : with weeds or force their way through clods. Land that has been, kept rea- i I sonably free from weeds the previous j season Is best for clover. Snch land, j prepared as for oats as described In | article No. 4. makes an Ideal seed bed for clover. Clover seed should be tested for germination before sowing. If It does not germinate very well a larger amount j
si* RIO. XVTl— BUTTERPI.Y ON BED CLOVEB | j to the acre will have to be sown. The : seed should be cleaned carefully with a clover seed grader to remove all weed so ds If purchased It should be j examin.d very carefully to see that It ] contains no weed seeds. If much of < the seed Is badly shriveled It should be I discarded entirely. This matter of test lug the germinative strength of seed before the regular sowing Is made does oot receive the attention which Its importance demands. It needs uo argument to show that It is the part of prudence to make certain that this essential factor In the seasons cam palgn 1s proved to be callable of fulfilling its requirement. The eye Is by no means an Infallible jndge of grain offered for seed, and a more searching Inquiry sbonld be made. Where clover Is sown wltb timothy abont eight pounds of the clover to four of timothy |K>r acre Is the proper amount. In a short rotation, however. It Is better to leave out the timothy and use ten or twelve pounds of clortf. Not all of this seed will grow the first year. The outer coat of a clover seed Is very hard, and a considerable proportion of It does not soften enough to sprout the first season. It will comi up the next spring and thicken the stand. Seeding With 8matl Grain. On light soils, especially If the spring Is dry. the clover may be mixed with :
In the soil or wbta the seti Is rather wet at dm* of sowing the chancse are that much of the clover seed will fall to come up at all if put In eo deep. A better way ia to go oyer the gramd with a wheelbarrow seeder after the oats bare been disked In and cover the clover seed with the barrow. Most drills have a grass seed attachment which sows the clover broadcast between the to wb of small grain. The harrowing which follows drilling wUl cover the clover seed. Drilled grain, especially if drilled north and south. Is a much better . nurse crop than that sown broadcast " sun gets In between the rows to . little clover plants, and they grow " mnch more rapidly than they do In broadcasted grain. Late grain does £ not make a satisfactory nurse crop. stools out too much, and the ground - Is so dry and hard when it Is finally j harvested that the spindling clover cannot make* mnch of a growth before winter. A luxuriant fall growth Is the best guarantee against winterkilling. Marly oats or barley make an uuree crop. They do not stool out lunch and are ripe early In July, thus giving the clover several months i In which to grow before It Is stopped by fcvoxtng weather. The first fall's growth should oot be cut or pastured a crop is wanted the following year. 3 is needed to bold tbe snow to protect the tender roots. In the spring ^ the clover field should be examined a early to see how It has come through ' the winter. T.ie stand may need thick- ' I
no. xvm— UMsnre w hud. enlng by scattering a little seed over '
some of the thin spots, or the whole - field may possibly be so badly dam aged that it will be necessary to plow I It up. Curing' Clover Hay. Clover should be cut as soon as it If full bloom and before many of the heads have turned brown. If cut earlier It Is sappy and hard to cure. If later It becomes woody. As soon the cut clover has wilted a little In the swatb It should be thrown togethInto light windrows, preferably with a side delivery rake. Cured In this way the leaves are less liable to become brittle and shake off. Wei! cured clover leaves are almost as valuable for feed as bran, so care should be takeD to save as many of them as possible. As soon as the hay hac cured sufficiently In the windrow It should gathered up with a loader— If one be bad — and put In the barn. Clover has the reputation of being u troublesome crop to harvest, and many farmers are shy of It on that account. | Is true that clover growing for profit i demands a good deal of Intelligence, I bot that Is also tbe very factor which ' ! success In all agricultural enterprises. With proper attention to the of the plant and with the exerI else of a modicum of judgment In Its culture and harvesting there Is nothing to be feared for the outcome. Where It Is desired to obtain a crop of seed the second crop should be used. The first crop seldom fills well and Is always more valuable for hay than for seed. Most thrashing machines have a clover bulling attachment. It should be carefully adjusted so as to get al! the seed. A bushel to a bushel and a half of seed per acre Is a good yield. The yield of hay Is from one to two tons to the acre for the first crop . and a little more than half as much for the second crop. Where the fields are fenced the second crop may often be pastured to advantage. Alslke clover finds u place on land 1 _ that Is too wet for tbe red variety. It J does not yield as well, but It makes j better pasture. By loosening up the 1 sod In the low corners of tbe pasture , I with the disk and sowing four pounds j of alslke to the acre Its value may be ' j greatly Increased. In seeding a field to , j red clover It Is well to scatter a little ' alslke In tbe low spots It will be sure ! to grow whether the other doee or oot. Handling Alfalfa. What has been said about alfalfa does not mean that It Is Dot to be j grown at all except in the drier re- | j glons of the west but that It Is to be Introduced Into new regions carefully and od a small scale. Tbe surest way | to get a stand of alfalfa Is to tallow tbe ( land during the spring and early sum- j mer. About the middle of July a seed bed may be prepared and tbe alfalfa sown at tbe rate of twenty to twentyfive pounds to the acre. If the ground I la not too dry a stand will usually be secured In this way. since the fallow- ! Ing will have destroyed most of the , weeds. The objection to this plan Is that no crop Is obtained from the land A mare economical way la to start with a crop of early oatB or barley. As soon aa th's la harvested tbe land should be uisked thoroughly and tbe , alfalfa seed sown. If tbe ground is so dry and bard that tbe disk will not , take hold It will have to be plowed. Tbe main thing la to get tbe seed in as ' quickly as possible. The chances of securing a stand are much Improved ] tf a thin dressing of manure Is given the land before sowing. After the alj falfa once gets a start tt la very hardy ' and a good ytelder. giving four to six tons of bay a year. It should be cut | when about one-tenth of tbe plants are in bloom. Tbe second spring a disk ] ran over tbe field will split up tbe crowns and 'thicken tbe stand, discouraging tbe weeds and loosening tbe soil aa well. i t i
EXCELSIOR SKATING RINK ttlill Open 1 Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday Evening and Saturday Afternoon. General Admission IO Cents I and Wardrobe 15 Cents 1 to 10.30 Evening 2 to 4.30 Afternoon Jewelry and Watchmaking fEstablshed 188S " 1 LargeJ Btock^of can fully selected goods. CJocka of all kird a > Repairing of Watches, Clocks or Jewelry promptly and skill- a fullyCdone.) BELFORD GARRISON WASHINGTON ST. CAPE MAT N J * yooooooooooo<i>oeooooooooo<x . W. A. LOVKTT : j1 Coi Washington and Perry Sts. > 1 ' O-fiJPU hdAT CTTT, KXW TEHSB"5T 1 * 1 ^ MANUFACTURER OF < > - 1 j! HARNESS, COLLARS, SADDLES AND HORSE GOODS ] ] C > Strap work of All Kind*. Blankets, Robes. Sheets and Nets < > x>00000000000<l>000000000000 ' GOODYEAR'S RUBBER GOODS | 1 Mechanical Rubber Goods of Every Kind LEATHER GrELxcLe^rr Hose, Hose Reels, x BELTING Lawn Sprinltlers, | TOWN & BROTHER 607 Market Street - - - - Philadelphia I U phots ering In all its Branches. Furniture of all kinds . Mattresses made and renovated. Window Shades, Carpets, Mattings, etc. We guarantee satisfaction Fnrnftnre lo F ire by the day or week. HOWARD F. OTTER . 311-18 Manafon Street Charles Seherer, Lately with Peter Thompson, 1 1 18 Walnut Street, Philadelphia. Pa. LADIES' AND 6ENTLEHENS' TAILORING. CLEANING AND PRESSING, . Ladies Suits a Specialty 304 Washington Street Cape May, N. I. mj Eatab lahad 1631 EalabllahadClSSl # ^ | ^ "The Old Reliable Jewelry Store" \\ X JOSEPH! K. HAND \ ; S 311 WASHINGTON STREET. S > A Watches, Clocks, Jewelry and Silverware. Repairing of all L \ | attended to. ^ h SI OP 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 • SingleH eaters. PLUMBING. TIN ROOFING, GUTTERING , SPOOTING CHAMBERS , Telephone Connection l©9 Perry St i — - ^ y l — » * ; CHARLES YORK STITES YORK , 7ork brothers i CARPENTERS AND BU'LDERS CAPE MAY, N. J. | Estimates Cheerfully Given on all Kinds ot Building*. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. P. O. BOX1 661

