Cape May Star and Wave, 13 November 1909 IIIF issue link — Page 8

§ CAPE MAY ST AH AND WAVE 3TURDA1, NOVEMBER 13, igo9 - m ~ ChiiMM Lawir i ~~ ~ ^ ~ Chinese Laws. ! » j tiflM

\ HERE IS THE PROOF 1 That the best body-building and strengthening tonic for M Delicate Children Yftr©i I

-My ItmtoU dughter wm>| WMk. I»k. «Bd l»d BO apCMtito. I • ■mteVhol, Bad aka b«g*n to • osausas I 1

I •Mytwochlldren, who ware puny and .dm,, rapidly |>i»d •trenrth when I bugan to pi tUi VtfSt Iproredthat Vfaoluaapfcndid tooic for doBcato ckfldreo." — I lb. C ALLEN, Nor Bodford. Mom.

Vinol builds up healthy flesh and makes thin little limbs round and plump. Children love to take it We rctm people** mooey without question tf Vtool «ki mot or niMpnoh all we claim lor It «*y it. please. JAMES MECRAY, Druggist, Cape May.

There was a merchant In our town Who was oo wondrotu wire. Hp bow tie boainwi running down. tot would not ad»ertiieJ52__^ Said h- : "I cannot eee thefrenre r When trado m at ita'worat^-.- ■ Of multi plying £»r expenre": I p I'll wait;till,trode oomeaLfirat" JJ} At laat thia'morchant ill advieed. ZZZ Had naught tofdo but fall, ><4&^Z And then the'aheriff mdvertireq ~ i ~ A benkroptfauctiofl aala. Now If your bu«inoaa [you would reve. t Don1' ait and melancholy gate. LS Ae coatomera to Department Stoma I wend their way."! But advertise your|warea in the Star and Wave. The Star and Wove three thousand strong, Paaaes the hands of a mighty throng. But the merchant is slumbering and don't hear the criesWake up ! Wake up, Mr. Merchant ' and then advertise NIMKODS READY FOR ACTION On Monday next, November 15,^phe halting season for rabbit will begin, and many khaki-olsd huntsmen, fortified «ith a license and accompanied ba pack of hounds, will shoulder their fowling pieoes, and siart for the haunts of the cotton tail, and Br'er Rabbit, after running many months unmol s ted, will have to seek cover for safety. The open season also starts on Mond y for quail, partride, grouse, squirrel, wild turkey, woodcock and hnglish or rirg-necked pheasant HORSE ENJOYS REPAST WHILE LADIES SEARCH FOR BERRIES Mrs Jay Mecray. Mrs. Taskcr Sm th. Mrs. Irvin Stevens. Mrs. Albert Phillip* and Mrs. E. H. Phillips went to the woods for tea berries on Friday, November 5 On arriving at their destination tbey unhitched the horse and tii-d him to the back of the wagon, having put some hay in for him to eat. When it came time to eat their | luncheon to,their dismay they found th; t 1 the gentle equestrian during their ab- j sence had ungallantly|confiscated every J •edible i" sight, they bavin* forgotten I to tvmoje it from the wagon. They j came home with Holly berries instead of tea berrieb. They went again this week and it is sate to say the same] mishap did not ooeur again. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S C ASTO R I A OLD GLORY Hail to the starry banner; Unfurl it to the breeze; Let shcuts resound. An J joy ab iund ; Thy pulsing henrt appease. Stand up. thou son of freedom. And dotf thy hat in pride - Pay homage to Red. White and Blue. For which thy fathers died. Th a dear old emblem of the free Now knows no setting sun . From mountain mole To frozen pole. Its work is but begun. Tnen here's to dear Old Glory ! Its praises let us sing ; We'll give three cheers And prick our ears To bear the welkin ring. — U. A. Brewton. THIS IS AN EASY TEST Sprinkle Alleo'a Foot-Ease in one shoe and none in the other, and notice the difference. Just the thing to use essyv. and your shoes seem to Sold everywhere. 26c. Don't accept any auhstitute. 11-19 fit A forest Carnival will be given at Bxcelrior Holler Rink Thanksgiving evening. Awards of first, second and third oriaea will be made to the beat per»o«a. There will be fun gaiure! Admission 10 centa. states 16 cents. -■

Comets and Great Men. It is somewhat remarkable bow of- . ten the death of an eminent pernoa has been marked by the appearance of a comet A certain writer, Indeed, after going through a list of comets for 900 years, says that it Is "as If God and nature Intended by comets to ring the knell of princes, esteeming bells In churches upon earth not sacred enough for soch Illustrious and eminent performances." To mention only a few. Lotharios the Younger. Louis IL, Charles the Bald. TheotlUon. blahop of Toon; Henry II. and Richard I. had their knells thus rung by comets. Even In Shakespeare's time the comet was considered a fitting accompaniment to the obsequies of kings: Bang M the heavens with black, yield day to night. ' Cornell, Import lac change of times and Brandish your crystal tree eee In the sky. And with them scourge the bad revolting That hare consented unto Henryi death. —London Outlook. | Thoughtless Clerks. Every business has a good will cap. I and every satisfied customer is a featb- j er In that cap. Trained men at high I salaries are employed to keep tightly I In place the feathers that are already there and to add new feathers. It is ' the advertising department (bat is j most conspicuously on paged in the i feathering process, while the adjusting j department Is most characteristically ' employed in keeping ibe plums firmly i anchored. Both of these departments i '' are maintained at a large proportion- j " ate expense, which goes to show the I i value of feathers. Who. then, in the 1 organization of a business could be i I mischievous enough to pliKk the featb- ; ere from the good will cap'; Who. indeed? Yet all day long here and there : throughout some stores peck. peck, peck, go ruthless beaks, impelled by : raven brains In the beads of vacuous • clerks.— Bookkeeper. Painful. A little story comes from way back j concerning Forrest, the tragedian. It was during his last appearance 1 at Niblo's Garden, in New York. At j the time be was suffering untold tor- : j tare from the goui A sort of run- ■ way bad tojje constructed trom tbe ; stage to tbe dressing room, tor be was j quite unable to step up or down stairs. Tbe performance bad beeu "Corio- ! lanus." and i-'ortvsi was petulant from pain aud tired with bis work. He | stumbled against the runway, causing ' j such a twinge in bis loe as to make i him cry out witb tbe pain, i ! A young actor standing by unforttiI uately addressed the tragedian at tbe j wrong time. sayiDg: | "Dear. me. Mr. Forrest, ibat must : bare been exceedingly palnlui. " . 1 "Not half so painful as your acting." • i was tbe crusty response. "Never Too Late to Mend." Most of us associate ibe phrase "it's j never too late io mend" with CUan<-s . Reade's famous novel, and very i i— •■- . ly some of ns tbink be invented IT But It is really one of the most ancient gems of popular philosophy. ; correspondent of London Notes and Queries has discovered ii iu a petition from tbe commons I iy to tbe mayor and aldermen of tbe city in 1433. it must have been of a respectable age , even then, seeing that it is quoted as one of the "proverbs" of tbe period / A Failure. "There isn't enough analogy in tbe Englisb language." proclaimed tbe ■ bright yoang student. "If we say i 'male and female to distinguish sex. j why not ssy 'lion and felion' too 7' "Wouldn't distinguish." replied tbe ' practical professor, "considering both are felines."- Baltimore American. Her Very Picture. He (rhapeodlcally>-l adore everything that is grand, exquisite, super - rene. the perfect In life. Sbe (blushing coyly)— Oh. George, how can I refuse you when you pot tt so beautifully? Our Neighbor. What is meant by our neighbor we cannot doubt it Is every one with whom we are brought to to contact, ' whosoever It be. wbcm we have any | means of helping.— Dean Stanley. The Awskanor. I Romantic Gin -Oh. George, what a I sweet dream Is tore! Cynical Bus ; Driver— M'yea. and matrimony Is ths alarm dock.— lllustratad Bit*.

In lemon colored silk a Chinaae dip- ; t, kxnat talked about Chlneae laws. a "Some of oar laws, you know, are | very stimulating." be said. "For example, Chi owed money to a money j v lender. Chi would not pay. and tbe c money leoder banged blmseir q> Cbl's t doorpost Chi was condemned lu death, ti You see. he was really responsible for b tbe money lender's death. a "A son able to support his parents T ! is imprisoned for fife if be won't do q so. A eon unable to support them is imprisoned for three years, as we hold ; j -and quite rigbtiy-that there must j be something wrong with a young maD J who can't support his parents. 1 i "Our police are excellent thanks to I J '< the stimulus of our law. When a 1 , crime is committed a sleuth la pot j upon the case and given, say. thirty j j days to land tbe criminal. If the ! sleuth he himself pays the pen- I J aity of tbe crime, leas two degreesThat, too, la a just and stimulating J law. for if the police can neither prevent nor punish crime then they should be themselves ponisAd for £ their rank Incapacity."— New York-1' Superstitious Rtmodios. I For whooping cough a cooked dormouse Is good. In the eighteenth cen- J tury this remedy was employed In Scotland. Here Is another medicament ' , for the same complaint: "Watercress Is a very good thing, sir. with a Uttig, I , bit of that brown sugar what yon uses to put on to bacon and some honey 1 ; mixed with it And I'U tell you what's a good thing for croup but a riesty 1 , bacon fat fried down and afore it resolves add some pepper and vinegar. J It opens tbe pipes of the lungs, d'ye see." And If yon are adventurous you may try this for "phlegm on to the j cheat:" Catch a "dear Utile dotty j frog" and tie a bit of string to one of its back legs. Then you "keep on let- J ting It go down rour throat and puffing it up again." The narrator of tiffs I added to T. W. Thompson, who sets down these stories: "It's the troth. c young fellow, and it cleared the , phlegm out of his throat bootifuL but we wouldn't do such a thing aa that" j —London Chronicle. i Boomerang Kinks. ' There are a good many "k.uks" to be , ! learned to throw tbe boomerang skfflfully. One Is always to throw against j tbe wind If you want it to come back I to you. It is a miniature aeroplane, i ! for It literally sails against tbe wind I and is borne upward and onward by I tbe breeze. If- the player wants to j make a long distance straightaway j ( record he can throw with tbe wind. ' { but he must take care to sfclect a | * boomerang which is heavy— so heavy | j that it will not be loo much affected j ' by tbe air currents. By pointing the I j boomerang at a certain angle he can : j I make it soar aloft to circles like a ! bawk until it may be as high as 100 ] • feet above tbe earth. As in golf play- , ' ing. it is not so much mere strength ' that makes a long thrower, but the | I skill in aiming, tbe direction and in j j 1 boomerang throwing tbe way in which , | advantage may be taken of the air j ; currents.— St. Nicholas. i : t The Woman Question. . | Little Wlllle-Sa.v. psw. what te tbe f I "woman question?" F'tl-It's tiumer- ! ous. my sou. For example: What shall I wear? How does my balr look In j 3 tbe back? Is my hat on straight? etc. ■ —Exchange. I Up and Down. Algernon Ardup|H> Can't you tnake me any better {ate for room and board 1 than what you advertise - S5 up? Mrs. j ITamand— Yes. In your ease It will be $5 down. -Chicago Union. j TAX SALE Notice of Sale of Lands for Unpaid : ' Taxe« for the Oily of Cape May for , the year laittl. Public notice is hereby give" by Gil- ! ' • batt C. Hughes, Collector uf the City j. o: Cape May, in the county of Cape ; j Key, State of New Jersey, that; he will sell at public sale ail | the laics, tenements, 'hereditaments I and rial estate her>inafter mentioned. I j for tbe shortest term- fur which any ,j , perscn or persons will agree to take!] the same and pay tbe tax lien thereon.. I including interest and^cost- of^saie ! 1 Tbe said sale will take place at City j Hall, at the corner of Washington and j Franklin streets, in tbe said City of | Cape May, on Wednesday, the Fif- | -

i tcer.th day of December, A. D., 1909, at the hour of one o'clock in the after noon of said day. The said lands, tenements, 'hereditaments and real estate so to be sold, and the names of the persona against whom the said taxes have been laid on account of the account of each parcel, are as follows, via: — Alger, lot 8. sec. 17, ML Vernon Land Co., $ 8.70 John Allen, lota 16. 16. sec. 16, Derine estate. 9.82 | Adams, 806 SL John ! street. 1.86 | Jonathan Brown, estate, 12641268 Lafayette street. 18.88 A. Bruce, 108 Ocean street, _ 19L78 ! S. Brown. 880 Windsor i Wm*Bennett, estate Madison ** ** ave. adjoining Marie Bullitt. 7.88 1 J. B. Barr, lot 3, sec. 4, DeBun£ wUUtRi an rt ^ ington street, 84 8S Alice VOord, 1188-84 Lafayette / street, 11.07 Orowell, 880 Lafayette street, 81.86 Connelly estate, 1046-47 Lafayette street. - 16. 60 May Conner, 18-20 Second ave, 26.82 Charles Oox, lots 14. 16, 18, 20, sec. 11,'Devine estate, 11.07 Margaret J. Charlton, part of lot 4, sec. 16, Devine estate, 7.88 J Crean. N. W. half lot 16, Sewell plan, 5.66 O. Dillon. 820 Jackson street, 27.66 John Diamonc^ lota 6, 6, sec. 17, Mount Vernon Land Oo., 7.88 Carolina Edmunds, lot 9, Dales Terrace, Jefferson street, 8.70 Linda Freas, 805 Queen street, 28.98 D. Flynn, lot A sec. 14, Devine estate, 8.70 D. Flynn, lots II, 12, sec. 15, Devine estate, '6.66 G. Flannasan, lot 3, sec. 16, Devine estate, 6.56 Charles Foster, 1949 Washington street, 85.04 F. Gladding, 521-28 Bank street, 16.60 Halpin, estate. Broad st, 36.88 F. Janney, 716-18 Corgi e I street 46.10 Mary E. Kennedy, 670 Wash- - J ington street 68."98 i J. Parker Lansing, 408-10 Lafayette street, 88.72 j Edgar M. Lockwood estate, 818 St John street 7.88 j Mueller, 11-15 Decatur street 287.66 i] Marsden, lot 11, sec. 7, Devine estate, 12.91 ! ! Mills, 1202-6 Lafayette I street 36.04 ! I Molford estate, 110t-3 Lafayette street. 12.91 I ! ; Maris Newkirk, Ripar- | ian Rights, fr.nt917 Beach 1 avenue, 5.65 ! • John B. Newkirk, Riparian Rigbta, front of 1013-15 | Beacn avenue, 3.70 ] I | Max Nsgel, 1228 Lafayette st, 7.38 j ! Antonio A. Pessano, Riparian Rights in front of 921 Beach avenue, ' .lames M. Pullinger, lots 16, 5.55 I 18. sec. 17, Devine estate. 5.55 I Peters, yacht lots, .1, 2, I ' «. 7, 8. 9, 4.70 I Russet 1265 WashingI ton street, 19.80 ! Dr. Randall. Irta Devine estate, 3.70 Rogers. 1-4 interest stable lot on Osborn street, adj. Crowell and others. 8.70 : Rogers, lot sec. 15, Devine estate, 1.85 S. P. sb elds. 1-4 interest in stable lot on Osborn st. adjoining Crowell's, S.70 Peter Small, lots o, 7, sec. II, Devine estate, 1 1 .07 C. Swain. 237 Windsor ave. 36.8$ W. Town, 909 Beach svenue, 177.08 Jane Taylor, lot 1. sec. 16. Device estate. 1.85 i John G. Vogler, 107-13 Grant 1 street, 240.72 Georgianna Vance. 727-29 Osborne street, \ 20.29 Belle Woodson, 701-8 Lafayette street, 12.91 i Biile Woodson, 814-16 St. John street. 2.22 "UNKNOWN OWNERS" 8. 6, sec. 4. 14.76 I LoU 8, 4, sec. 9, 44.26 ; Lot 5, sec 7. 25 82 Lot 21, sec. 7, 9.22 Lots 5. 8. 10. 12, 16. sec. -13, 55.82 ; Lots 7. 9, 11. 13, 15, sec. 18, 55.32 LoU 1, i. 5. 8, 10. sec. 14, 18.44 LoU 13 to 22, inclusive, sec. 15, 86.88 , Lot 2, sec. 16. 36.88 LoU 1, 2. 8, 4. Fee. 13. 36.88 ! Lota. 7, 8, 10, 11, 12, Mt. Vernon Land Co.. 86.88 GILBERT C. HUGHES. Collector. | Dated Cape May, N. J., November 10u 1909. 11-18 St I 5 i I

COUNTY ELECTION RETURNS Senate Assembly County Cle'k Coroner ^ I x ® I £3 I "" "ff Q C AS . s S Name and Place * 2 J Zl £ J 5 I . = \S £ -fllfll! il l |U| X BO CM EC Em B, S O O. Q: « [ EC O Avalon, . 12J 9 114 194 7 1171 121 fi lljj 70 111 Oape May, lat. 811 92 211 802 ^8 203 291 III 178 Z» ltd 66 17 Cape May, 2d. 197 68 134 196 66 180 184 7< 108 121 188 46 Cape May Point 27 2 25 21 ( 18 22 6 18 17 8 11 Dennie Twp. 18: 19C 170 145 38 I4« 16t 221 16S 148 16 Holly Beach, SM7 82 166 299 61 228 265 69 1 93 P8 239J Ljiwer Twp.. 240 « 161 262 66 168 287 8116^221 9flfiS Middle, lat. 271 1H 141 297 104 1M 244 T61 88 281 lid 161 Middle. 2nd. 103 87 91 112 71 48 9f 89 lfl 52 lSul 72 87 N- Wild wood. 88 21 67 87 20 67^ 84 2t 61 74 38 41 Ocean City,. lat 144 V 101 144 97 JIT! 141 27 lfill 141 HIS " "2d 182 62 80 147 87 lid 141 41 98 197 4S| « SeaIaleOtty.lt 61 81-68 8] 1 fil 84 | 6f ffl w, J" M 1,8 « I" 21 lfid 111 * 9d lit H 106 Twp., 24< 81 149 2H 43 244 27' 7t 29ll 245 10J 141 W Oape May, 141 68 91 1M 81 Ufl 141 52 91 8; 109 97 1 2^£?od* 121 87 89 167 41 ll| 161 61 ltd M l3 120 , Woodbine. 127j 82 96 127 82 9^ IS U 9l[ 22 12l| 93 Toflx. ]aib^ IITYJ |4H

This One Chance 1 } The Columbia Indestructible Record did i. I We are selling out every wax record in the place. Regular Gold-Moulded wax cylinder records never sold anywhere" in the world before under their regular list price of 25c.— while they last at 15c. If you own an Edison Phonograph or a Columbia cylinder Graphophone, don't lose die benefit of this iilklli l" T' 1 1 I if III first and only cutM I' li||]|||[] price in the hk1 tory of the busiSfl® nessSelect early— _ _ , _ _ _ _ ' 1 while the assort- • Gold-Moulded ^mentisjood. Records Columbia Phonograph Co. Charles A. Swain, Agem IhbhbmhhhhhhhbhbhmbhhhI 1 BOTH PHONES HOTELS SUPPLIED gj TRY A BOTTLE NO. 6 I " | BLENDED WHISKEY | 1 FULL QUART 1.00 j CAMDEN BOTTLING CO. jf : | 312 AND 314 WASHINGTON STREET | PORTLAND CEMENT BtST QUALITY 1 Special prices infive barrel lots and over j Cape May Grain & Coal Company Washington Sf. Near Reading Terming I. H. ELDREDGE, Man a. Per Keystone Ptaofie No 16 A ~ v r Sell Phone No 206r GRAND CARNIVAL A< The EXCELSIOR SKATING RINK Wednesday, December 1st, 1919 * Benefit BOARD -of -TRADE V fi SpeciaJ Featured, Full Band. The Gala Night