Cape May Star and Wave, Saturday, April 30, 1910
1 " ; " \ ^ • WE ARE "UP-TO-DATE" AS USUAL "Mustard Brown" is die new shade which has just developed, in the European fashion center and has become very popular within the last few weeks with die swell dressers in this country. It is always our policy to keep our esteemed customers supplied1 with the very latest, thereby placing you in the first Rank. Having made several trips to New York during the Winter to study styles in accordance with our progressive policy we lose no time in placing this new idea before you in nobby suitings in the "Mustard Brown" shade. These are exclusive styles made Especially for us, and represent the particular choice of the market. We know these styles will make a hit with you. -Edward Van Kessel 424 Washington Street Keystone Telephone 124 X. PANSY PLANTS Sweet Pea Seeds. Nasturtium Seeds LAWN GRASS SEED. Rose and Bedding Plants in Variety Hughes and Howard Sts. Reasonable Prices W. A KNOTT X Florist Phone Keystone Wm SEE WASHINGTON THE NATION'S CAPITAL i Pennsylvania Railroad $10.75 and $1345 from Cape Maj nTiulllll^P^^i Covers all necessary expenses BuljllllllllJlliBllil'l* ; Itineraries, t lekets. and toll lnfonaatlon may ~aETl be obtained from Ticket Agents or ™ H-|r^A- ^UiljfcSsBMw J. B. WOOD. UEO. W. BOYD ^ Pass. Traffl : Mgr. Oen'l Pass Agent
LUMBER AND MillWork GEO. OGDEN & SON 11* New Prist Store John Little has opened op the buai oeee of selling paints at the comer tB Jackson and Washington streets and it is jnst the place to boy fresh paints. 3-28-tf 1001=^2.50 Fine well rooted plants. 12 to 18 inches. Large 24 to 80 inch plants 3.60 per 100. Prices reduced 26 to 60 per cent for the present to reduce our luge Stoch. Safe arrival in good order Guaranteed. Order now before Stock is exhausted. Send for circulars, mot tkm tfcfa paper. Established 1873. West Jersey Naraery, Brklgcton, N. J
1 1, H. sniTH * 5 Glothier £ 'i 608 Washington St. f A Opposite Reeding Ste. \ 5 CAPE MAY N. J 5 I. ^ Suits for $$ and "up- ^ .J Overcoats from to J X Hats, Caps, Trunks, and X X Gentlemne's Furnishing T Y Goods at Philadelphia J I [ Wall paper, wall Paper. A new and fine assortment of wal paper is new being offered by Eldredge Johnson, 818 Waahn^ton street. Whatever yoa Mad ia this line can be np-
sheriffs salfc By virtue of a writ of Fieri Facias, to me directed, issued out of the Court of Chancery of flew Jersey, on the 30th day of March A. D.. 1810, in a certain cause wherein Peter C Vergs is complainant, and Charles N. Foster, Clara E. Foster, George H. Foster. Caroline Foster and Thomas Benjamin are defendants, I shall expose to sale at public vendue, on MONDAY, MAY 9th, 1910, » .between the hours .of twelve and five o'clock p. m., to wit, at one o'clock in the afternoon of said day, at the Sheriff's Office, in Cape May Court House, Cape May County New Jersey. All that certain lot or piece of land and premises situate in the City and County of Cape May, and State of New Jersey, described aa follows : Beginning in the northwesterly side of Washington street, near Scheilenger's _ Landing, and at the southeast comer of lot No. 4, as laid out in the division ! of the estate of Aaron Schellerger, deceased, and extending thence along the ; northwesterly side of Washington street, south thirty-seven degrees, fifteen minutes west, twenty-seven fpet, j to other lands of the said Charles N. Foster; thence along the same, and parallel with the side line of lots Noa. 4 and 6, north fifty-one degrees thirty j minutes west, one hundred and two ; feet, more or less, to land late of j Caleb Warner, thence by his land, \ north thirty-seven degrees, thirty mm- j utes east, twenty-seven feet, to the line of said lot No. 4, now or late j owned by Zebulon Yorke ; thence by j his line, south fifty-one degrees thirty j minutes east, one hundred and two and j seven-tenths feet, to the place of be- j ginning. Containing twenty-seven hundred j and seventy-two square feet of land, j be the same more or less. ROBERT R. CORSON. Sheriff. • Dated April 6. 1910. Earnest I_ Bartelt, Sol'r. 4-9 fit p. f. 911.76 1825 the 1910 : pennsylvania fire INSURANCE^ COMPANY INGORPORATLD 1825. " charter "perpetual, office, 508-510 walnut st, PHILADELPHIA, PA. < CAPITAL, - - - - 9750,000.00 ASSETS, --- - 97.832,524 10 SURPLUS, - - - $2,-33,426 43 ■ DIRECTORS. I R. Dale Benson, John L. Thomson 1. Tate all Lea, Charles K. Pugh. i Richard M. Caka-alader, W. Gardner Crowell,. , Effingham B. Moms, Edward T, Stotesbury Edwin N. Benson, Jr. R, DALE BENSON. President, JOHN L.THOMSON, Vice PresidentW. GARDNER CROWELL, Secretary, 1 HAMPTON L. WARNER, Assistant Score. 1 tary. t WM. J. DAWSON, Sec'y Agency Depart, 1 menL , A. W. HAND S. F. ELDREDGE I hand and eldredge local agents ' Merchant's National Bans Bldg, or 815 and 317 Washington Street Cape Mav. N J. f o R. M. Wentzell's furniture store, 83 8 Perry street, carries a great stock of ? furniture and household goods and E many purchasers of large and small quantities have found that they save f considerable sums of money, while having goods delivered without dam- 5 age, as is not the case when purchased 1 anywhere and shipped by rail. ® Go to Thomas Soulta, Cold Spring, ^ for the things you need for the table, and family, and obtain satisfactory ■ goods at the smallest cost. Full and complete stock, carefully selected, with knowledge bom of experience gained by an active career of more ' years than that of any dealer in Lowe • Township. tf If you want anything from a paper J of pins to a pair of good gum boots , Thcs. Soults, Cold Spring, can serve < you. Local 'phone. tf ! Try he i roy i laundry Nearly every day we have the ques1 tion asked us : "Why do you call your . laundry the Troy Laundry?" Well first, last and always, all Tror LaunI dries are good ones and now a little history about Troy. Troy, N. Y. was | the home of the laundry industry— the etarting point as it were. The first ) detachable collar was made in Troy about 1848 by a lady who saw that I collars being made separate from the j shirts (it was the custom those days to I have all collars and. cuffs attaobed to a i the shirts) would save a great deal of ' labor. She called in some of the a I neighbors and it wasn't long before all ' Troy was wearing the detachable 4 k collars, and it wasn't long before a collar and cuff factory was started a | and, of coarse, the collars and ouffs had to be laundered and naturally the 2 5 laundry followed, and spread over the E country and today ranks fourth in the j industries of the U. S. A., that is in a the number of employes. The largest 9 independent laundry machinery com- a . pany is named Troy, and Is the original I and is not to the trust There are t . about 600 Troy Laundries scattered c » throughout the U. S. 5 Remember you get that shirt of yours hand ironed jf you send it to | the Troy Laundry, 910 Decatur Street. ' Keystone 'Phone 40D. Wagon calls. I j Security Trust Company has t - ample room Tor the safe storing of your , . insurance policies and other valuable c . wo*- Boxes to rent, wills kept without charge. tf
s | « jH c Trade Marks c ocsksns \ ' COHYMOHTS AC. . ^ Anro^>woain» «.t*rfc«na eyjgUromr t ssMSsSsiifeKs5 I TEN i 1 strong in 1 • Companies | j Aggregate Capital Over HQ 000,000 j \ 1 1 Represiatid by Hand & Eldredge j 1 Fire Insurance Agents. I Twenty-six years of experience. ] | Your insurance placed^ with us i j I s absolute i protection from loss | , i byifire. i < Apply to % • I I S. F. ELDREDGE | 1 i 810 Washington Street i ' - / or ; i A. W. HAND j | 815 Washington Street j i William B. Gilbert CONTRACTING PAINTER 922 Corgie St, Cape May Keystone Telephone 87A 1 Reliable Remedy FOR /^f^RS.7X ; fiATiRRii Ely's Cream Balm vcf"™' il quickly abiorbed. 1 'Sires Relict si Once. U cleanses, soothes. the diheasf /"Tiiem-n-sulung from Catarrh and drive? 1 away a Cold in the Head quickly. Restores the Souses of T .-'.e and S.uelL Full size , 60 cts. nt Druqgista or by mail. Liquid Cream Balm for use in atomizers 75 c'.-.. Brother Ss 'V.-,,. :>reet. Ko-YorV QUIOK CLIMATIC CHANGES try ' strong constitutions and cause, among ' other evils, nasal catarrh, a troublesome and offensive disease. Sneezing i and snuffling, coughing and difficult breathing, and the drip, drip of the foul discharge into the throat— all are euded by Ely's Cream Balm. This ■ honest remedy contains no cocaine, mercury, nor other harmful ingredient. The worst cases yield to treatment in ' snort time. All druggists 60c or mailed by Ely Bros., 66 Warren Street, New York. EPILEPSY St Vitus Dance, Stubborn Nervous Disorders, Fits respond immediately to the remarkable treatment that has for 39 years been a standard remedy for these troubles— OR. KUNE'S CHEAT M AA NERVE RESTORER. It is prescribed dC,UU especially for these diseases and is RR|f|A not a cure-all. lis beneficial effects ^ arc immediate and lasting. " physirree cians recommend it and druggists sell it. To prove its wonderful virtues, see will cheerfully send, without charge, a FULL $2.00 SUPPLY Address DIt. KI.IKK IKSTITtteffi Branch 100, Bod Bank, Now Jert^ FAIRBANKS' MORSE & CO Stationary andlMarine Gas and Gasol nc ENGINES FRANK BNTRIKIN, Agent. P. O. Box 158, Cape May; City, N J One 18 horse j>ower boiler, good for pound pressure 9100. One 9 horse power vertical engine 660. One 8 horse power vertical en- , gine 936. , One second hand Backus gas engine, j horse power 8160. . Good Fairbanks and Morse gas en- , gine, slightly used, 3 horse power 8146. . One slightly used T. and M. motor, j cycle, propeller wheel shaft, all com- , One new 4 horse power Fairbanks ! and Morse vertical 9200. One new 4 horse power Fairbanks , and Morse horizontal 9200. One 6x4 x6 Worthington duplex pum , brass fitted th rouehout, in fine co_ , don Ka ? ] t I ROBBER STAMPS, 3ml^T Brass or Copper Stencils for marking baskets, etc., will ba made to . drer at abort notice. , vra AM Tin statmkxt MPOTTOT t 1 817 Washington Street 1
A pretty idea of reefing tne class prophecy may be carried out with a little preparation end trouble if all the girl, in the class are willing. On the stage arrange* large frame, having a curtain in the front which be drawn aside. Each girl in the class then appears in the frame sb her name is mentioned, arrayed in the cosor carrying out the occupation suggested in the prophecy. Tne class prophet, can.be attired in the coatame of a nun, with hands clasped and eyes upturned. THE PHILADELPHIA RECORD prints every day in the year the undoctored news oi the day, only weeding out mere sensation and smut. The Record prints the actual markets, the record each day of actual transactions. Its market figures are the basis upon which the seller Mils and the buyer on use date of its quotations. It is a recognized authority. There is no other paper printed in Pennsylvania that takes such painstaking care te keep farmer and merchant thoroughly poetod. There is no other paper that more strongly appeals to the general reader who reads to be informed There is no other paper in the State ot rcniuo lvama of such wiue circulation. Gr.at Ohief of R a Daniel M. ; Stevens, of the New Jersey Reservation, Improved Order of Red Men, recently contributed an article to the Oamden Post Telegram referring to orders from which we quote : "Good , citizenship is. considered by many in the light of bow the citizen i conducts himself in his personal, : church, political and business affilia- : tions, but, te the writer, there is one ! other as great a consideration as either of these, and that is his attitude toI wards the secret beneficial.lite of his city We are informed by the Divine Master that "if any provide not for . his own, and especially for those of his ' own house, he is worse than an infidel. "And the best of -this condition of affairs is that it is not .a charity. .The good citizen is a good society man. He knows that by the prompt payment of the small amount of money necessary To the proper conducting of the affairs of his organization he is entitled by its laws to a certain sum each week that be is unable to follow hia occupation, precisely the same as he is entitled to bis regular wage from his employer when at his place of business, and the treatment accorded each one when sickness overtakes him is the same whether he ia the chief clerk in one of our banking establishments, a lawyer who can sway a jury by bis eloquence, a judge upon the benob, or the man who works in a trench upon oor streets. " In many countries official efforts are j - pushed to ascertain the causes of the j high cost of living, and substantial | progress will be made unless dema- ! gogues are permitted to muddle the r subject for their own benefit. Four years ago the British ministry ; took »it up for investigation, and have ! j published several lengthy reports. . Their main conclusion so far is that prices have advanced in all continental 1 countries, and that British workmen are not suffering more on this account than . the laboring class in Germany, France and Austria. jNo comparison is > made with the United States, tor, while the prices of food have gone up here also, the wages paid are much higher and general conditions decidedly 1 better. No single reason can account for the present cost of living. The i causes are several, and their relative ' importance can be settled only by a 1 careful, impartial examination cf all , the facts. From the committee appointed in the [ United States Senate to ;iook into the cost of living, .the first recommendation ia in the .shape ;of a bill .to regulate cold storage by limiting the time during which perishable articles may be held out of the markets, an operation that may also be used to maintain or advance artificial prices. THE OITY OF CAPE MAY, NEW JERSEY PROPOSALS FOR (AROHES "ON BOARDWALK) AND _ (ADDITIONS.TO PAVILION NO. 1.) Proposals will be received by the ' Oity Council of the Oity of.Oape May, in Council assembled, on Tuesday, the 3rd day of May, 1910, at 8 o'clock m. , in the Council Chamber of the Oity Hall of said Oity. for the construction of Arches on the Boardwalk accordance with the planB and specifications therefor, which can be »een on file in the office of .the Re1 corder of the said Oity. Proposal will also be received at tbe 1 time and place for .the alteration and repair to Pavilion No 1, in accordance with tbe plans and specificai tions herefor which can be seen on file in the office of the Recorder of tbe Oity of Oape May. F. W. WOLFF, of Committee on Property and Improvement 4-23 2t PERRY DAVIS' PAINKILLER is "an ounce of prevention" as well as "pound of cure." For bowel troubles, akin woaada, colds, and other1 86c and 60c sixes. 4-16 4t f
I fit uunUni LtuOU™ 1 Lesion W^es RebcAeA For taay 1, 1910. ; ->y|g TWO SABBATH INCIDENTS j [ ! -J i < t- ! Golden Text, -I Will Have Mercy and 1 Not Sacrifice- (Matt, xii, 7>— Faith Has Power to Make God 'a Reaouroaa Our Own— The Lortfe Day Should Be On# of Rest and Worship. Br Rev. SAMUEL W. PURVIS. D. D. Highways are rare, byways eomt mom Tbe Prophet of Nazareth and his disciples take their way through t the cornfield to the morning service ■ of the synagogue. It is the day that : the Lord bath made. The jealous Pharisees are dogging Christ's footi steps. We find what we are looking - for. Look now! Tbe diaciptas are - plucking the grain, rubbing It between , their hands. The lawbreakers! They , separate the grain from the chaff— j that's reaping and thrashlngl They blow away the huajw— that's winnowing! Says tbe clerk of tbe synagogue. 1 "They do manual labor." "And." answers a scribe, "the law of Moses salth. The Sabbetb breaker shall be stoned to death.' " Th# Law of the Lawgiver. "Again it Is written," quoth a man , to the devil once upon a day. Now ' He answersdaw from the law. "What did your hero, David, when he was an " hungered?" They looked confused. ' The wheatfieid frdes from their eyes. 1 They see tbe son of Jesse, fleeing frtrtn ■ Saul, tired and hungry, receiving the - five loaves of show bread from Ablm- . elech, the priest of Nob. They see r the weary exiles hungrily eating the sacred food— contrary to law. But the s law natural of hunger was higher thsn f the law ceremonial of Jewish code. " Life Is more than law; necessity rules r legality. Even at this hour In Jerusa3 lent the priests were engaged In kill- . lng, dressing and burning tbe sacrl- , E flees at the temple service, j "In this place is one greater than , the temple." They start! "The lawf giver Is greater thnn the law. The temple and Its sacrifices point to me." ' Is he mad? Now a home thrust! Now 3 a master stroke! "If ye knew what » this meant"— this quotation. "I desire t mercy and not sacrifice"— "ye would , not have condemned My disciples un- > Justly." They are gasping with astonr lshment. Blasphemy! s "I am the Lord yj the Sabbath." " "The Sabbath was made for man," Maht adds. Well stated. Not for com- ' merce, not for greed, not for pleasf tire, but for man. To belp keep him a r man, not a machine or a play pappeL , Here's the key to Sunday's enigma, i For the Sunday ball game, the tourr lng' car, the excursion, by rail and boat; the fishing party, the mammoth ; newspaper, the elaborate dinner and J dishwashing— all these are not the , 1 Lord's day of hush and worship. They j j are not Sunday, hut a continuation of Saturday. Shall the Lord's day be ' | Parisian or Puritanical? Neither. A - 1 day of rest and worship to recreate - body, mind and spirit. ' I* It Lawful to Heal? 3 j They're standing ndw In the white . marble' synagogue. The Pharisees t have steered a man tflth a withered j right hand to a place where Christ , must see him. Suppose that crippled E stonemason hadn't gone to church that morning. "Is It lawful to heal on the ' | Sabbath?" asks the ruler of the syna8 gogue. O Nazarene. how will you an-
jwl . K "HTKETCH FORTH THT HAND."
> swer? Six times hast Thou healed on tbe ' Sabbath. What defense? Jesus glances , quietly over their faces— neighbors, 1 some of tbem. "If your sheep should : fall Into a pit, an uncovered cistern, 1 what wou!d ye do?" There is no ani swer. Each man knows. "How much ■ more, then, is a man better than a sheep!" They are speechless. Of 1 course It is right to do right on the | Sabbath day. "8tretch forth thy hand." Happy i man! But how can he— bis arm is par- ! alysed? He acted as though than was no difficulty, and there was Rone. There ia in faith a power te make ' God's resources our own. They can : bring no charges against the Master He has done no work. Nor against the man; he merely stretched out hia hand. But the Pharisees? What's wrong? i Out from tbe synagogue they slip with ; Wealthy glances back, Jnbala, Jubalo and Jnbulum. They plot to kill the Sen of Mary.

