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^■■y ALCOHOL ] PER CENT ] ■Sljtf I AV^gelabif PrrprtkntrAs! ■n slmiJa ingtteftodanlRegda ■BBH; lingtlf SimdBa^Bowdiof j ■B? Promotes Di$estkm£ltafii ■j ' nessaadRratContalnsneter jj Ophmi J^orptine nor Mineral £. H Not Narcotic. ■I j*+,souikSfazma* i ■ ' 2S.V" , ■1 i Apcrfect Remedy rorCtedpt Hon. Sour StonadLDtaritM H{| Worms £onvnis»ns.Ffwridt ^■1 ness and Loss ofSleep. BE Facsimile SiRnal-K of 1 ■B: NEW YORK. Exact Cop) of Wrapper.
IMSTNU I For Infanta And Children. ■The Kind You Have I Always Bought l| Bears' th' L t Signature /Ajl °f xW ' aJr ln or / Use \f For Ov^r Thirty Years ICASTDBIA
ELECTRIC LIGBTING | advances' IMPROVEMENTS OF VALUE i Tbe Inventions and Discoveries Which have perfected this Means of Lighting ! With what industry, art, science or | ' craft could a man be identified which j 1 is making swifter advancement than 1 electric lighting? j 1 -"In the hurly-burly of every day life | ' >we are bo engrossed with our own pur- j t suits, that we take for granted the , ' things around ua, without thinking of the strides which made these things ' 1 possible. I Today people ride 'beneath the Hud- | f son River in a tunnel just as non- 1 v cbalantly as thev rode in the horse I c car ten years ago or as they rode in t the prairie schooner a hundred years ] a back. The times are so 6trenuous, de- ! 1 velopment in all lines of activity so in- 1 tense, that we fall into the advantages | h offered us by modern improvements [ ^ without inquiring into tne causes which j u made them possible. ** j p Half a dozen years ago we bought ! ^ lamps, which were globes with some ' wires in them which really burned, j t gave light and replaced darkness t or | f, a number of years there was no appar- 1 • ent development and then suddenly^ there was a ^number of wonderful im- L provements. L Various freak styles of lamps came 1 „ upon tbe market; lamps with distorted J w filaments, and lamps of grotesque j n shape, but all of these styles failed tc I w deliver more light at less cost fori f( which people were {beginning to call, j a And then came the Gem lamp, the L> beat of the carbon lamps. 0l For a long time there bad been noth- j n ing between the little incandescent ! t, lamps and the huge arc. The incan- j t, descent, so to speak, was in the celly j and the arc up on the roof, and there j p was no intermediate steps ] o The word "Tungsten" appeared on j oi the vision of the lamp buyer. What 8j la "Tungsten"? was asked. Is there any intelligent light user in tbe United ' States today, who has not heard of the w Tungsten lamp? There never was 01 launched an illuminant of any kind ; tl
1 which created the interest the Tung- j sten lamp has. Tne development ot j tbe Tungsten lamp surpassing all pre- | | vious advances in the maufacture of ! I incandescent lamps, has been made j I possible through the production of the I ! rare metal Tungsten in prsc'ical form ' for filaments. The filaments are produced by forcing a paste made of pow- ; dered Tungsten and a proper binding [ material through fine holes drilled in j diamonds. After drying, the binding ; material is removed by a special treat- ; ment and the particles of Tungsten are j welded electrically into a continuous | wire. Placed in a glass globe from ! which the air has been exhausted, we a lamp that will give you twice much light with 1-3 leas current consumption than the old carbon lamp re- : quired. The Tungsten really pays for it ! self in a short tim& i Thus, aside from its economv, as a 1 | source, the Tungsten electric ! represents the hV^hest efficiency , , | the reason that (its light is pore', ! white, containing each of the seven , < I colors of the spectrum in such propor- 1 j tion as to bring out the true value of I < I color in any object upon which its i 1 falls. It was not until the Tuogsten lamp j , had been thoroughly testedjandjits relii- \ . bility ascertained by the various' man- ] | ufacturers, that the{Cape May Light & < j Company recommended its use. - | now. after one and a half year's j i I rri al'here, hundreds of them have stood j ] | the test with gratifying results. In \ J the Company has such confidence j , I in the lamp, that it has arranged that ( iany one desiring it may have a free i (•trial of the Tungsten by merely apply- t ) iDg to their office. The enthusiasm • j with which the free trial proposition 1 j received, has led the Company to ' make a special inducement to people ' I who have not heretofore used electricity " illumination. They are offering, s absolutely free of cost, a full set of j Tungsten lamps (six in rumber) to any t wiring their house or store and s making application for current, benow and October first, provided 1 house or store in question has not previously been wired, or supplied with * 5 current, and that not less than three , l; outlets are placed. Thus anyone deto enjoy the advantages and n economy resulting from the use of this i wonderful illuminant, can do so, with- t out any increased cost to himself over- j i* old lamps. I '
,i ■ weakest link, the body ], . ' , no stronger than it* a R there '» weakness of stomach, liver or loafs, there is a «T chain of liie which may snap at any time. Often this so-called ® , w^kness •• oanaed by lack of nutrition, tbe result of weakness or disease of tbe stomach and other organs of digestion and nutrition. Diseases and k weaknesses ofl the stomach and its allied organs are cured by the nse of Dr. K **'*•?' Medical Discovery. When, the weak or dissastd stomach is^\ h cured, auesws of other organs which tat m remote from the stomach but which h bars their origin in a diseased eondition of the stomach and ■ iz- : . othm organs of digoatioo and nutrition, me cured also. Jtk ,, ' lis sfssj mmm ham a strosg atommch. w it Tata tha mho rm rwtsinwM " Dlacov ■ - P orr" mm * yom mar harm m atroaj atom. mohmm* matromthomr. u Gtvaw Avar.— Dr. Pierce's Common Sense Medical Adviser, «J new revised Edirion, is sent fraa on reoeipt of stamps to pay « «peme of mailing mJy. Send 21 one-oent stamps for the P hook m psper covers , or 31 stamps for tbe cloth-bound vol- ^—£3 |; nam. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce. Bnfcfo, N. Y. n
THf SIDdY SCHOOL, Lesson XI. — Third Quarter, s For Sept. K, 1909. TOE INTERNATIONAL SERIES. Text of tha Lasso n. Acts xxi, 1-17. Memory Verses, 13, 14-rColdan Text, Acta xxi, 14 — Commentary Prepared by Rev. D. M. Stearns. [CopynjJjt. 1909, by Anwi oan Press AaodsUeo ] When the time came to leave Tyre the disciples there, men, women ami children, accompanied Paul's party out of the city down to the shore, scj all kneeled down on the shot* and prayed. What an object lesson for those who mny have been looking on! There are always some watching us who draw their own Inferences from our conduct as to whether we are worldly or other worldly, whether w are for the most part ln communion with earth or heaven. Some who bear the name of Christ hike been known to shrink from praying before others or even asking a blessing on their food. What can He think of those who are thus ashamed of Him? (Matt, x, JS. i As at Mlletns, so here at Tyre we hare soother painful separation when Paul and his companions set sail find the friends from Tyre return to their homes, but we "trust that all hearts were more than ever turned to Him who is our continual habitation (Ps. lxxi, S) and from whose presence some day we shall go no more out. One day at Ptolemals, where they also found brethren, and then to Caesarea, where they tarried many days in the home of Philip the evangelist, who had four daughters, virgins, who did prophesy We recall that Philip was greatly used of God ln Samaria and then to lead the Ethiopian treasurer to Christ, afto: which he preached ln all the cities from Azotus to Caesarea (Acts vlii. 40), but that seems to be the last we j have heard of him till now. God gave ! to tbe churches apostles, prophets. - 1 evangelists, pastors and teachers for t the perfecting of the saints, for the J work of the ministry, for the edifying . of the body of Christ (Eph. iv. 11. 121. : and were it not that Philip Is still ! I called the evangelist we might think : that he had become pastor of the i church at Caesarea and that Cornelius - and his household were members of - that church. There are so many thlncs i
we are not told and we are curious ! enough to want to know, but we must , wait to find out why we hear nothing more of Philip's active ministry and to learn what he was doing at Caesarea. 1 Then these daughters of his— in what i sense did they prophesy? Concerning it ail It comes to me con- : "tinually that there is only One with whom we have to do.* and If we are filling the place He assigns us. bo Its service small or great, that is all He requires of us. whether other people know much or little or anything about It. He appoints to every one his work and says "occupy till I come" (Mark xili. 34; Luke xix, 13). ne knows in what part of His field His plants will thrive best and bear tbe fruit thai lie | desires, so it Is ours to quietly abide ln Him and see no one but Jesus only. may imagine what a time of prayer and praise and study of tbe word these days in Caesarea were and how I they would listen to rani deolnrin - j what things God had wrought by his I ministry (verse 19). for as he after- ! ward did at Jerusalem be probably did also and elsewhere. Whlie at Caesarea a prophet from Judea named Agabus by a striking object lesson foretold that at Jerusalem Paul would arrested and imprisoned, upon j which the disciples there as well as I Paul's own companions besought him I not to go to Jerusalem. Paul's reply I tbem all was that be was ready. ; not to be bound only, but also to die at Jerusalem for the iiume of the Lord Jesus (verse 13). Compare his words the Epbeslan elders at Mlletns in chapter xx. 24. Both of these are splendid utterances of n whole hearted servant of Christ who would not by any persuasion of friends be turpcil aside from what he believed to le the Lord's way for hiui. When they saw j that he would not be persuaded thev simph- ceased urging him and sulci. "Tbe will of tbe I-ord be done" (verve i Being joined by several of the disciples from Caesarea and by an old disciple from Cyprus named Mnnson. who was to lodge them, they In due time reached Jerusalem anil were gladly received by tbe brethren Thus ended the third missionary Jour Concerning the will of the I-ord t. which tltey desired to submit when they found that they coald not per miade Paul not to go to Jerusalem there can be nothing greater or higher and when His will shall be done on earth as in bearen that will be the kingdom of God on this earth. Our Lord Jesus could say, "I delight to do Thy will, O my God;" "My meat Is to do the will of Him -that smt me and to finish His work" (Pa xl, 8; John 34). In proportion as His will is done In us now. that good and accept able and perfect will of God (Rom. xil 1, 2). we have Just that much of the kingdom In us. a foretaste of eternal I glory. May we ever say from the ' heart cheerfully. "Thy -will be done " It possible for us to think that we " are In the will of God when we are simply working out our own will? It to be feared so. I could believe that Paul was right In resisting all the entreaties of his fellow believers and laltorers unto the kingdom and to go to Jerusalem at any coat were it not that the Spirit said to F«nl that he sbonld not go (verses 4. The disciples said to Paul through 8pirtt that he should not go. . . ■ i . 1
<;STjll| WE ' a* m ma nnRGMK t, ^ L_ We are now offering the following LEGAL BLANKS on sale at the Star and Wave Office and others will be e added from time time : 1 Agreements for Buildings. ' Agreements to Convey Lands. Assignments for Mortgagee. 1 BUI of Sqfe. : Bond and.Mortgage. Chattel Mortgage. , Administrator's Deed. Executor's Deed. , Warranty Deed, i Three Days Notice to Tenants. " Thirty Days Notice to{Tenant>. ' Bel ease of Liens. 1 Powers of Attorney. Proxies. Complaints .Warrant i Nomination petitions ' l Also v Typewriting Papers Mimeograph Papers " 1 Carbon Papers Backing Paper Box Paper Pound Faper f Music Paper v Drawing Paper Photo Mounts Photo Covers Foolscap, legal cap, bilicsp, letter and note paper. Blotting paper infull sheets or cut in usual size, 10 pieces assorted colors, 5 cents. Marry^ other kinds of turners. Sole agents for Edison Phonographs, records and supplies. Stationery of all kinds. All the popular music. Banjo, violin, guitar strings, and other musical eupplies. Edison records cpn be heard before purchasing.
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304 Washington Street
Cape May, N. L
®S®S«®SSS$®S«I®S®$«®SS®S®SS WD Eatab iihad lftSl E»t*blUhed;i&ai ft | "The Old Reliable Jewelry Store" > S JOSEPHS K. 5HAND £ S 311 [WASHINGTON STR"ET. \ A Watches, Clocks, Jewelry and Silverware. Repairing of all 3k I A kinds promptly attended to. Lm «S8®9$SSMfcSSSI8SS»S®VSS«Vs3f I ~ = 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 lud Single Heaters. PLUMBING. TIN ROOFING, GUTTERING , SPOUTING CHAMBERS Telephone Connection 1 09 Perry lit
CHARLES YORK
ST IT ES YORK
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