2 Cape May Star and Wave. Saturday, February 1©, 1910 -n mi II 'i • II- I I liMWf m
I J J ALCOHOL 9 FEB CEBTI" A\%gftaHe PrepWiantrAs sunltadn$teIWanlfeftfe J tlB&flgS«MsifaasdBo«Bif Promotes DtgestkmOtaftl ness and RraLConsains ndfcr Opium .Morphine nor Mood. Not Narcotic. jkjttfouikSBaiman jStJf' ) ( rtSMSS I Worms ConvdMonsJewnsk ncss and Loss OF SLEEPftcSmsk SignamtrfExact Copy of Wrapper. T
il Vi CASTORIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have. Always Bought Bears the A, a. Signature / A\l f\ $ 'n rtX Use \j For Over Thirty Years ICASIDRIA
SCHOOL WORK IS DISCUSSED | i STATE SUIT. BAXTER'S VIEWS i Ciltiral ud Industrial Training i Should go Band ii Bud ii ! c Public Schools J An article dealing with industrial j •ducat ion is included in the annual re- t port of State Superintendent Charles , J. Baxter, which has been sent to f Governor Fort While a believer in f this form of education, Mr. Baxter ( holds that it is essential to maintain a { proper adjustment between it and purely cultural education and that neither should be exalted to the ex- ' elusion of the other. He says : "We have in the past formulated, re- t formulated and revised our courses of f study, and though the effort to im- , prove them has been earnest and honest ( we are now confronted with the fact t that tney are not adapted to the needi ^ of all pupils. The articulation between t aebool life and practical life, though c not distinguished by its absonoe, ia not as complete as it should be, and because of this a spirit of unrest and dissatisfaction prevails. r Xduoaton for culture is being as- 1 ■ailed and discredited, and industrial « eduoation is being exalted. Tbe latter c having been too long neglected, the ' present tendency is to swing the pen 1 dulum too far in Its direction and un- I duly to m'nimiae the education without 1 which the pupii cannot be properly 1 •rained in mind, manners and morals c and fitted to become a valuable social c - and civic factor. Tula is neither fair ' nor just, for if we consider, even for c a moment, our wonderful development ' as a nation and as a State, it must be ' admitted that, though our system of 1 public education has not accomplished ' all that has been possible, it has proved ' very far from being a failure. * SHOULD GO HAND-^N HAND ' We should not exploit industrial education to the detriment of that which ia cultural, nor blindly adhere to 1 the cultural to tbe neglect of the in- I duatrial ; for neither, as the oonserva- * lives on the one hand, and tbe extrem- ' lata on the other, would have us be- 1 Have. is the "whole tiling." Both '
are needed to put the pupil in touch with his environment, to give him a proper attitude of mind toward practical life, and to fit him for the varied duties incident to our complex civilThough tbe bent of tbe pupil's mind is vocational and his natural endowment such that be can best serve himself and the world in an industrial capacity, bis humanity and the spirit of sovereignty and spark of divinity within should neither be forgotten nor purposely ignored. The State owes him, and it is 'to ita interest to give him. an opportunity to obtain the development essential to good citizenship, to insure him his inheritance as human being, and to enable him to ' be far more than the animal that simply works, eats and sleeps. The bead and the band are inter- ' dependent, and the work of each i« the better for tbe correlated training of ' both. Only the education which trains both head and hand is truly rational, and only that which trains head, hand and heart ia complete. That wbloh either the |head or the hand to tbe 'neglect of the other is sadly misand, no r matter what the future occupation may be, fails to develop the highest order of efficiency. GERMANY TOOK INITIATIVE Germany was the first to accept and make a practical application of the [ theory that the hand ia precise and expert in accordance with the degree of intelligence that guides it, and to •his is due the skill of ber operatives and the excellence of her manufactured products. In the per capita value of manufactured output Rhode Island holds first rank among the sisterhood of States, and New Jersey stands second. We need it) this respeot to rank second to no other State or country and we shall not so rank if we are sufficiently wise to adjust our educational lever so that it will lift from tbe bottom. There is no reason why the label "Made in New Jersey" should not possess tbe same magic and be aa reliable a guarantee of excellence as the other familiar label "Made in Germany. " Both the trade school and the industrial school are destined to become important factors in our system of public education, but Ithe present duty Is not simply to establish them, but to make ready for them, and this can best be done by those who have the work al-
!?"• -■ ready »n hand. The introduction if E any other agency will serve only to » squander valuable time and energy in expensive and useless experimentation, and delay tbe accomplishment of practical and permanent results, i Though experience teaches a dear | school it does not prove to De such to those who learn from the experierrt* of others. Massachusetts and the province of Ontario have each tried industrial I commissions and made tbe discovery " that the ends sought may be moat surely and beat attained through tbe agency "of the regularly constituted and along established educational machinery. VITALIZING ALL WORK ■ To make ready for trade and industrial schools, forms of handwork and manual training adapted to tbe ages and attainments of pupils from the first to the eighth grade inclusive, should be introduced into all, instead of a portion of our schools. This will virilize all school work, and those who think they need only the education which they blindly imagine comprises I all that is cultural, will be quit* as much benefitted as those wh-> will engage in industial pursuits. Where the conditions are favorable, we should | give manual training a vocational | trend in tbe seventh and eighth grades, bo that pupils" who otherwise would' leave sohool at an early age would be induced to finish the grammar school course. Any feature of school administration which tends to iengtbeh the I average of school life subserves the ► highest interests of both the child and tbe State. Such combined academic and industrial basis iB tbe lowest that should be I seriously coas'dered, and, if it is to be I successfully established, we must beI gin at the beginning. Means are always essential to the accomplishments I of ends. When work is to be performed workmen must be secured. The first
important step is to see that all, instead of a porton. of.our teachers, shall i be duly qualified to correlate head and i band training in their daily work. Up- - on the great majority this will impose 1 difficult requirement, and they will - need all possible help and encouragement In anticiption of this new deI parture we have given the instruction . in our county institutes an industrial . trend, and the " Oape May Sohool of I Agriculture, Industrial Art and ^ Science" has been established. , The service of the two educational . factors is now in greater demand than 5 ever beforehand neither has ever been , so much in need of liberal support . from the State. Owing to an unfortu- . nate perversity of circumstances, the , appropriation for the current fiscal , yearj of the former was materially redaced, and that of the latter was discontinued. Each of these official acta injthe interest of retrenchment j was an error, which we trust will be | promptly corrected by the Legislature j of 1910." i t
Fads for Weak Women 1 Nine-tentlu of all the sirknres of women it doe to some derangement or dis•rarydeyby'*"* distinctly feminine. Sock sinlrnres oen be cored— i» eared Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription It Makea Weak Women Strong, Sick Women Well. » eeSa dlreedyon tee nrfrne Aet.i nnd fe ct the eeme time e — erel rectncetive tonic tor the whole system. It owes feasie complaint right ia the privacy •< bores. It makse — sci.ssry the diengreeebfe questioning, examinations end 'ZZrlZZ*—* ■■■■»' to* by doctors, and en abhwrent to jj iu'li,!1 fl.' ** > 1 "j «* £ wssHagfeg tofcni nil as to toair ii gift a mi —toil 1 1 iM 1 1 —to are sMasito to «ba Pugls'i Cam-
| "the travelinq salesman" comes to the 0arr1ck theatre, philA. . for two weeks beginning monday. februars 21 The offering at the Garrick Theatre, Philadelphia, for two weeks, beginning Monday, February 2lst, will be I Henry B. Savage Harris' producttion I of James Forbes' latest comedy, "The I Traveling Salesman." That Mr. , Forbes baa written a worthy successor J to "The Chorus Lady," ia evidenced ! by the fact that "The Traveling SalesI man" is now in ita ninetieth uninter- , rupted week, and at present is filling I its fourth New York engagement. I The story of the play concerns a typical American "drummer" named . Bob^Blake.who finds himself marooned in a small Indiana town on Christmas , Day. Here he is thrown in contract _ with Beth Elliott, tbe pretty tele- . graph operator at the railroad depot, | and tbe oase of love at first sight in I which they become involved furnishes t the necessary romantic thread of tbe ( story. There is much comedy of the hilarious order in the play, and Mr. Forbes' original slang expressions, which contribute so largely to the success of "Tbe Chorus Lady," are in [ evidence all through tbe four acts of ' "The Traveling Salesman. " * The company which will be seen at | the Gamck Theatre is tbe original : New York aggregattion of talent | which played for nine months at the ' Gaiety and Liberty theartres. Frank J. Mclntyre, well known through his comedy work in support of Robert Edeeon for several seasons, plays the title part, and Gertrude Caghlan essays tbe role of tbe pretty telergaph operator. In tbe supporting cast are William Beach, Arthur Shaw, Sarah MeVicker, H. U. Blakemore, Percival T. Monroe, Richard Ogden, Robert Dudley, and others. Matinees will be given en Wednedaya and Saturdays. Tbe Atlantic City Press hot air artist ia at it again. Listen here: "Accurate lacuada called yeatardav from the local Weather Bmeaa indicated that during tba^arboiaat month <* January, whan tbe aatotonta reMdmtoef Maw Teak, Philadelphia and haaMa of other ImHUaa in aiaaa ptaxhnity to Atlaiitfe Oily ware aaffar-
TWafartU retpactfully submitted J to ear newspaper friends in Gape May. Long Branch and Aebory Park, who pride thamaelvas on their ability to periodically reaat as as "hot-air artiste," not with a view to exultation, hot merely to try and convince them that Atlantic Ofty's aocceaa is built upon a foundation of facta." NOW wouldn't that jar you. There hss|heen no more scow at any Cape May County resort than at Atlantic, probably not so much. But Atlantic makes a play to steal all the credit as usual. It must make anything as pure as snow hesitate a long time before falling in Atlantic City. . STAR MM HIMIIOE TABLE February March A. M. P. M. Date A. M. P. M. 13:59 12:54 1 11:16 11 £8 1:46 1:36 3 11:48 12:10 2 39 2:30 8 12:86 12:80 3:32 8:41 4 1:3b 1:34 4:36 * 4:46 6 2:32 2:87 6:18 6:40 6 8:40 4:07 6:06 6:80 7 4:46 6:16 6:62 7:16 8 6:70 6:10 ' 7:86 7:68 9' 6:83 6:58 ' 8:18 8:48 10 7:17 7:46 9:08 9:28 11 8.-03 8:26 9:46 10:18 IS 8:46 902 I, 10:81 11:08 18 9:80 9:46 > 11:18 11:66 14 10:14 10:42 I 12:09 13:16 16 11:01 11:34 12:64 1:12 16 11:66 12:10 • 1 :12 2:32 17 13:82 1 K)1 > 3 0 4 3:67 18 1:38 2:28 i 4:22 6:12 19 '2:54 3:56 - 6.28 6:18 20 4:06 6:07 - 6:18 7:06 21 6:10 6:03 3 7:08 7:48 22 6:07 6:48 i 7:55 8:28 28 6:65 7:38 t 8:87 9:06 24 7:37 8:03 - 9:16 9:40 26 8:16 8:36 1 9:62 10:18 26 8:60 9.-06 i 10:22 10:48 27 9:22 9:38 • 10:50 11:16 28 9:44 10:01 e 29 10.-07 10:28 1 30 10:33 • 11:06 31 11:03 11:48 | WINDSOR HOTEL w. T. BRUBAKEh Manager. 1 ' Midway between Broad Street s Stat on andReading Termina 1 on Filbert St. European. 11.00 per day and up g American. S2-50 per day and up ,1 Tbe only moderate priced hotel of reputation and consequence, to [ philadelphia >i -^mmmamm^^mammmmm t e R. M. Wentzell'a furniture store, 83 e Perry.etreet, carries a great stock of furniture and household goods and many purchasers of large and Bmall quantities have found that they save 5 considerable sums of money, while having goods delivered without damage, as is not tbe case when purchased anywhere and shipped by rail. j * I. H. SillTH £ 5 Clothier 5 d W W : 1 608 Washington St, t 1 Y Opposite Reading Ste. A ' % GAPE MAY N. J * d j m s ^ Suits for ^5* and up- ^ 1 ^ wards. ; ^ Overcoats from $7 to ^ n 5 *5 s 0 m e X Hats, Caps, Trunks, and ^ e ^ Gentlemne's Furnishing ^ '• W Goods at Philadelphia W ' m prices. ^ I 1 Reliable Remedy t FOR : CATARRH • Ely's Cresn B jlra e Girt, Usual *. OBCO. y- It cleanses, soothes, h heals and protects AmmimiMHl the diseased mem. e brane resulting from Catarrh and drives b sway aCold in the Head quickly. Beatores ,1 the 8ensea of Taste and BmelL Full size . (0 ots. at Druggists or by mail. Liquid Dream for use in atomizers 75 eta. • By Brothers. 66 Warren Street, New York 4 If you want anything from a paper of pins to a pair of good gum boots . Tboa. Soolta, Cold Bpridg. can aarra I you. Local 'phono. tf I- Vuurupar. VaU Puyar. a, • — . ! B 3
1 ' ■■ ■ | Leather, Cotton Rubber' Red ^ — f BELTING! Rain Coats, Mackintoshes | Rubber and Oiled Clothing Horse Covers! TOWN ft BROTHER 607 Ihrktt Strret .... | U FUPMAja SMIJJI Yaoht Avsnue, Schellinggrt Dealer in all kinds of FEED. HAY FLOUR ' Lowest Prices and F;-»est Qualities Keystone Telephone 95* W. S. SHAW & SON Gneral Contractors. Dealers in ^ tr . ~ _ . Brick, Lime and Cement Telephone A 523 ELMIRA STREET I / •' ■ I ~ ■ Jewelry and Watchmaking fEstablshed 1888 Large stock of carefully! selected goods. Clocks of all kin& Repairing of Watches, Clocks or Jewelry promptly and skillfully done. * BELFORD GARRISON 8 05 WASHINGTON ST. CAJPE MAY N J ^ Keystone Phone fD • 6 n^XToYETTj: < 1 Coz Washington and Perry Sts. • > { ' CAFE 1711' Y , 1TE722" 3XESET « ► MANUFACTURER OF < ► harness, collars, saddles ard horse goods ! | ' > Strap work of All Kinds. Blankets, Robes, Sheets and Nets 1 1 I Upholstering e In all its Branches. Furniture of all kinds. Mattresses made and renovated. Window Shades, Carpets, Mattings, etc. We guaran. j tee satisfaction Furniture to XI Ire by the day or week. HOWARD F. OTTER 412 WASHINGTON St ^ Keystone Telephone 124M \ — I Charles Seherer, I Lately with Peter Thompson, 1 1 18 WalDut Street, Philadelphia, Pa. , ladies' and gentlehens' tailoring. i gleaning and pressing, ► Ladies Suits a Specialty c ) 225 Decatur Street Cape May, N. I. Keystone Telephone 25D ' m ^ Esi.b l.h.d 1631 n.t.bll.hed 1631 A I I "The Old Reliable Jewelry Store" | i ll JOSEPH K. HAND J > X 311 WASHINGTON STREET. S 1 L m Watches, Clocks, Jewelry and Silverware. Repairing of all A I la kinds promptly attended to. CO
FAIRBANKS' MORSE & US > Stationary and Marine Gas and Gaaoli ENGINES FEANK BNTRIKIN. Agvnt, F. O. Box 158, Cape mot City, N J e One 18 horse power boiler, f good for ' 100 pound pressure $100. ! One 9 bone power vertical en1 gine $60. One 8 bone power vertical en* ' glue $88. One aeeood band Baekaa'gaa engina, 4 bona power $1SK , r Good Fairbanks and Morea gas an- > pwpriter whMl ah^t. ^ omfgSrSsrcrg
W. H. BRIGHT Fire Insurance In any part of Cape May Co. HOLLY BEACH, N. J. DIAMOND & CO. Dealer in Builders' Supplies HOUY BEACH N. A

