Cape May Star and Wave, 15 January 1910 IIIF issue link — Page 3

^ ' " ' I ■ CAPE MAT STAR AND WAVE. SATURDAY JANUART 15 ,1910 — 1 " 'i ■ ' 'BsggggggBrii'iiiiMiyi-MBBaaia^M

r , - ; — - 1 feW-^v: ' ' - ■ rgr ^^sbb^^HiBSHBB Do you know what a Removable Platen is < If you learn about it, you will see that a I typewriter without it lacks a feature that is essential — so essential that eventually all Bjjv , typewriters will try to have it. The one 1 typewriter now offering, this feature is the ! Smith Premier i Write us for information as to what a Removable Platen is and what it does. THE SMITH PREMIER TYPEWRITER CO.. Inc. Syracuse, N. Y. Brancbcr everywhere.

Not in A Trust. b - The "Pinou" Lt toy Plow wtic > x pot on the market ten yean aro by > •,» one of the strooxcst Enanrial corpor- » all on, "No< la a Treat." Built by > | M BMhaaln with aeveral acocia- > 1 tiotu of plow bnilden back of them. V I . By aroidin* all weak points of other > I . makesof Plows and with our Tip 1 1 1 w I Experience, we produced the Per- w A L • U led Eaay dralt Lc RtyPRm* > V *fiar W,draw™nrae0that0'9wel? > I loacer." adapted to aU the hard eoa- m r ~ ~ ditions yea hare to encounter. w % Nate the <»a» threat that will sot rkokc wp I Patent Square Steel Jointer and > - $ Lets* wt.fi—— i^-r ptaws are llshter and stronser and aasier to draw and W | LE BOY BLOW COvI* Roy, N. Y. J Z Active *"■»" tell " in nil towns. II yon cannot End LE TOY PLOWS, y '•> flWlVM 1 SOLD BY wnrm* S. T. fULMAN WEST CAPE MAY ICE b£333 222330 _ L 1 "PLATE" ICE J f LEHIGH JEDDO AND SUSQUEHANNA COAL ™ | gj Charles S. Church j! i 9 Keystone Phone 76. Jackson and Perry St q . bBEHSBSBSEBSB 33SSBB33aB&i* MEN SUPPLIES STOVES Tin roofing in all it$ branches. ' JESSE HUE. H|OWE muNsioi HTRKITT Cape Mar CM/. "Iew Jersej ■ELr-tr.

DIAMOJffi a CO. DEALBRSIN Builders' Supplies i HOLLY BEACH N J LUMBER I AND MILL JftORK freoFQE ogdeii k son ; The New Paint Store i John Little has opened up the business of Belling paints at the corner of . Jackson and Washington streets and It , is just the place to buy fresh paints. S-23-tf Go to Thomas Sou] to, Cold Spring, < for the things you need for the table, and family, and obtain satisfactory goods at the smallest coeti Full and complete stock, carefully selected, Iwilh knowledge born of experience gained by an active career of more years than that of any dealer in Lowe Township. tf

SHERIFF'S SALE By virtue of s writ of fieri facias, de bonis at terris, on a writ at/ execution to me directed, issued out of the Cape May County Circuit Court, New Jersey, I will expose to s^le at public ven due on MONDAY, JANUARY 10, 1910, between the hours of Twelve and Five , o'clock p. m., to wit, at one-thirty o'clock in the afternoon oi said day, at the Sheriff's Office, In Cape May Court House, Cape May County, New Jersey. A two story frame bungalow, about twenty-four feet by forty-three feet In sire, and the lot of land or curtilage is particularly described as follows: All that certain lot of ground situate in the Borough of North Wildwood, (formerly Anglesea) Cape May County, New Jersey, described as follows: Beginning at a point or the Northeasterly side of Tnird avenue, distant three hundred and fifty feet Northwestwardly from New York avenue: thence Northwestwardly fifty feet and extending Northeastwardly, between parallel lines of that width the distance of one hundred feet, being lot No: 416, In block 66 on the recorded map of Anglesea. The names of the owners of the said lot or cartilage whereon the ; said building® erected, and on which this lien is claimed are Arthur H. Green and John Car row Du Bosq, who have an estate in fee simple therein. Seized as the property of Arthur H. Green and John Oarrow Du Bosq owners and builders, defendants, and , taken in execution at the suit of the F. ' E. Smith Lumber Company, clatmont. I ROBERT R. CORSON, Sheriff i Dated December 7, 1909. s H. H. Voorheea, Attorney. I p. f. (11 as mi 6t

Wall Paper. n duction In spring style* 626 Washington at In decorating your rooms look at my new stock of Wall Paper Burlaps, Lincrusls. Walton. W. LENOIR WOLFF'S BAKERY '406 and 400 Washington Street. Finest products of finest quality. Every detail under my peaonal supervision. tr to ma the WOI,FF QUALITY stand foitthe highest excellence F. W. WOLFF mi I^T iTTFllli eMi

Ypu will appreciate the quality and convenient* of the TCmWrEN la. eandeneeat light »o math better if yen |tn It a trial In year own borne — yoa may have one er * more, ef any type, for a month free. This light I* unequal ed for oewlng sj er reading. CAPE MAY LIGHT AND POWER COMPANY 420 wa8hington st. TELEPHONES cape may city. — — ■ ;

FACTS FOR A CONTEMPORARY. I The Newark Evening News recently Said; « Former Mayor Weaver, of Pbiladelphia, bad the courage to tell the plain truth mt the banquet of the Veatnor Yacht Olob at Atlantic Oity last Tues- ■ day night. He said the Federal Gov- • emment had spent more than a. million p dollars at Oold Spring Inlet, near Oape « May, when the money might have been * devoted to deepening the channel in ti the Delaware Bay and River and in °! i m proving more important porta along J the New Jersey coaaL « Of oourna this roused Senator Hand, of Oape May, who defended Congress- " man Gardner and the others who nursed « along the Oold Spring Inlet scheme ; f but Mayor Weaver held his ground « easily, because he was right The u Oape May expenditure was specifically " intended, in large part to benefit the °j Pennsylvania Railroad, and but for *> that Company's traffic interests, and it ti influence with Congressmen, the Fed- * era) Government would hardly have °1 considered the expenditure of so much * money in such an out-of-the-way plsoe. «' There are other ports in the State A where, in the interests of navigation, a million dollars oould have been more c wisely spent, but they were not backed * by railroads and exploited by real es- h tate concerns created with intent to * benefit by federal appropriations. " The statements that "Mayor Weaver * held his ground easily because he was t right" is distinctly untrue. Senator ii Hand, suffering from a oold which * hindered his speaking above a whisper. n routed him horse, foot and dragoons, j, because Weaver was wrong, and the 1< Senator received the vociferous ap- jj plause of the entire company for bis e skilful handling of the situation. The k splenetic, narrow-chested little ex- e Mayor was also almost utterly ingored at the conclusion of the banquet. ' It is one of the mysteries why such a paper as the "News" should feel called I upon to attack Oape May so viciously on so slender a basis as an indifferent | 1 press notioe of an incident such as that . which occurred at Atlantic Oity. The childish sympathy with the | 1 views of "dead ones" of the Weaver t type should at least t>e withheld until t the editor is better informed than he ' , is. He should Iknow, at least, tost at 5 ' the time the great Oape May "harbor | t project received its appropriation, the I 1 Passaic River was also swarded i $760,000, not through any Newark in1 fluence but through the Oape May in1 fluenoe which was exerted as a matter of loyalty to the State at large. The ! securing of this appropriation for the ' Passaic was so promptly accomplished that the "News" never got the oppor- . tunity of expressing its approval, or • disapproval. The ..News" states that " "The Oape May expenditure was [ specifically intended to benefit the 1 Pennsylvania Railroad, etc." This 1 will be a surprise to the Pennsylvania ■ Railroad, but we would be glad to j have it true, tor the interest of the s Pennsylvania Railroad would be as . > valuable an asset as we could have. ■ Unfortunately, however, the Pennsylvania Railroad has never indicated any particular interest In our waterways. "Befoh de wab" the advani tage po seased by Oape May over other ' locations on the coast, was its accessibility by water, steamers plying bef tween New York and Philadelphia, "calling" at Oape May both going and soming and passengers from Philadelphia and New York and contiguous points were brought in large numbers. Special steamers brought other passengers from Baltimore and the South. With the advent of the first railroad in 1868 this means of reaching Oape May ' f began to diminish in importance and 1 r the railroad .influence has been charged 1 ever sinoe. With systematically hindering the use of watei| routee to Oape 1 May in order to monopolise the freight 1 and pa—arger trafllc. The editor «T 1 the "Netie" wiH'eee that the designs- ' tieti of Oape -May aa an oat-ef-tbe- ' way place la a dlsplgy at Ignorance, as 1 well as of spleen. It is more easily ae- ' cesstble by water than any marten the coast ^and probably the only one ted oli^lUed 'for 'tSTaiSr M ] passengers from efmsps f • J Another Mt of. infonnetion amy j prove interdbng to the editor of the 1 n .. . i

nod 1868 will show that that body fifty yaarn ago, recognised the necessity for harbor facilities at Oape Slay for the protection of vessels engaged in coastwise trade and memorialised Congress in a resolution passed in joint . session to provide such a harbor by erecting a suitable breakwater. This memorial was passed without a dissenting vote. Congress took it up for consideration and the document is still in the archives of the government. Tie opening of the Oivil War alone, provented its proper consideration at that Oape May it as old a settlement aa Newark. Its men have been enrolled in the National armies and navies in every war in which the original colonies. under the British flag, or the United States'ever engaged and the name of more than one of them is high the roll ot fame. It has s* good a right to consideration at the hands of the United States government as any section of this broad land. The development of a harbor here is in accord with natural law and the government should have provided it many yean There have been several prominent citiaens of Central and North Jersey who have had a complete change of heart after ir.ve<tigatiing Oape May and its harogr and waterways. From looking upon these developments in somewhat the same way as the editor of the "News" they have discovered their error and have become enthusiastic champions. Let the editor ef the "News" try this remeay, make Cape May a visit and investigate. Do not look to the discredited Weavers for but try to show a little to the State by ceaaiDg to condemn great enterprises within its borders without reason or knowledge. A wise man will not utter vain knowledge nor fill his belly with the east wind. » Rsliabfs Remedy : 1 n n . (£&*«« * ;Ks9F > i« quickly obio-*"— Gives Relief si Once. ru ~ It clean-.es, soothes, heals and prolecfs SlIgtfmfiuMm the diseased memresulting from Catarrh and drives a Cold in the Head quickly. .Restores the Senses of Taste and Smell. Full size eta. at Druggists or by mail. Liquid Balm for use in atomizers 76 eta. Brothers. 66 Warren Street, New York You Can't Fit Your : Eye with a Tape . f Measure It has to be done by [ one who knows how. We have qualified ourselves by years of \ study and experience. < Satisfaction guaran- 1 teed in every case. ! LAUMcmns, "hHiIu ia Bya TmtUaf. 0 1 m kfarfart Street, nfigMe "Thou good and tasteful laundress,' ia often the exclamation of oar patrons when they see the beautiful work we send borne to them. That ia pprticoarly the case with ladies fabrics -to bewashed and ironed. If anyiblngi they really look better than new goods when they leave our < hands. We have exceptional facilities for doing laundry work expeditiously and thoroughly, and without injury to the moat delicate TROT LAUNDRY Mt D»e«tar StrmL D rop portal or oall. Keystone Phone 40d .. WAGOW CALLS j -yMa .myw't I . ntnuf ■ — -