2 Cape May Star and Whve, Saturday, May 14, 1910 . | : H
H$k| s 'BBal ALCOHOL 1 PEE CENT. Mfel A\fegettUeftqara(k«&^ if sgaassaa ■B^psnp f m ProraotesDigestkKijaeafii pi nessanlRestjContalBsndaB : Hgl OpiumWorphiK norMbttnL Not Narcotic. ^H| J*jr*MJka4EJma* ■[; E .. n Worms forvdskmsfewnsk ' ■ nesaandLoss of Sleep. He| FacSiraSe Sigoarart of Kaact Copy of Wrapper.
an' I For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have . Always Bought Bears the A v. Signature /Am * W \ ||| |/| | 1 (\ Jr : ( v/ Use ; \X For Over ! Thirty Years \ hSTORIA I i
HOTEL ARRIVALS ' 1 WINDSOR Philadelphia— S. T. Lineaweaver. E. M. uhichester, J. O. Donnelly, John ] O. Koenig, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas B' Redmond, Rosemary Redmond, J. K. ] Jaooby. Mrs. Dichnndorff, O. H. Kloch. Mr. and Mrs. Newell C. Bradley, Mr. and Mrs. O. T. Entriken, \ Catherine Entriken, Jane EL Mayers, William Harding Sterling, Mr. and Mrs. Scuter, Mr. Gabraith, Sr., Mr. Gabraith, Jr., Mr. Dougherty, Harry W. Severne, J. J Meehan, F. S. Ingram, Mrs. E. P. Pitcaime, Geo. M. 1 Gannett, John H. Wunder, George M. ' Morrow, Ed. M. Britt, P. F. Dempy. i New York— John D. Rapelge and ' wife. Gape May— Walter Homan, Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Hand. Samuel F. El- ; dredge, Wm. Porter, F. J. Melvin, ' James M. E. Hildreth, E. W. Lloyd, D. W. Rodan. M. H". Kearns. Robert E. Hand. Ocean City— Joseph Onampion, John ' Fox, Ohas. Sayrea. Laurel 8pringer— Anna Vlachoa. Laconte, Canada— 0. H. Rust Erma— Daniel Schellenger. Gape May Point— E. W. Springer, j Jno. W. Ooraon. Gape May Court House— Joseph Douglass. Sea Iale Oity— O. H. Clouting. Tuckahoe- Hope W. Gandy. Goshen— Lewis Stillwell, Sylvester Wildwood— Harry Hoffman. Bristol— L. G. Pine. Trenton— Mrs. William L. Case. New York-Mrs. W. Howatt, Mr. and Mrs. F. OomcksbankT Charles Dokes. Ambler, Pa.— James O'Hara. West Chester— W. O. Price. VIRGINIA Phi adelphia— E. F. Smith, Gardner Headrie, W. H. Beatty, W. S. Parker, Jacob Snare, Mrs. O. T. Knapp, F. Andorfer, E. F. Smith, D. T. Williams, Mr. .and Mrs. Geo. W. Boyd, Miss Elizabeth N. Boyd, Crosby N. Boyd, Mr. and Mra. Louis H. Ayres, Mrs. M. Louise Connors, Dr. O. N. Davis, Dr. Richard O Norris Irene M. Skyes, O. Hebbard, A. O. Wade, A. EL Shopp, Sister Adeline, Joe. F. Schiller, Alex J. Hosenquist, Edwin F. Cook. E. D. Saint, P. H. Barnes. New York Oity-T. H. Clarke, J.
H. McBride, F. R. Willey, Bertha j Barbur, J. Thompson. f Red Bank, N. J.— Jos. Cashman. F , Smyth, I. W. Emmons, ~H. Hewitt. , Newark— R. M. Dunton. i Racine, Wise. — Miss Margaret A. 1 New Haven, Conn.— Mr. and Mrs. 1 W. Williams. Washington, D. O — Kay Rollins. Maple Shade, N. J.— Dr. and Mra. ( B. Sickler. j Brooklyn— F. J. Glassey. f Clermont— Paul Townsend. j ( Pittsburg— Mrs. Frank Guth. SHARK OFF THE GRIP of your old , enemy. Nasal Catarrh, by using Ely's , Cream Balm. Then will all the swell- • and soreness be driven out of the I ! tender, inflamed membranes. The fits I of sneezing will cease and the dis- 1 charge, as offensive to others as to | yourself, will be stopped when the causes that produce it are removed, j Cleanliness, comfort and renewed ( health by the use of Cream Balm. , Sold by ail druggists for 50 cents, or , mailed by Ely Bros., 56 Warren Street, i New York. 1 Reliable Remedjr CATARRH JftSph Ely's Cream Balm Civet Reliot »t Onte. "* It cleanses, soothes, ■ heals and protects the diseased membrane resulting from Catarrh and drives away n Cold in the Head quickly. Restores the S< uses of Taste and Smell. Full size 10 eta. at Druggists or by mail. Liquid Creaxn Balm for use in atomizers 75 cts. Qv Brothwa M "•~etK««,TorV i ssssssi We are expecting our summer supply of Poet cards and in order to make rack room will dispose of all Birthday Cards at 10 cents per dozen. None reserved. Many of these cards sold at 6 cents each. r Just'unloaded one car load of special ■ Sweet Potato Fertilizer. REUBEN T. JOHNSON Chocolate Almonds, fresh and fine, 60 oenta per pound. Saturday only. At the Colonnade, SIS Washington street. The up-building of the Security ' Trust Company, is due to the fact that , we have ample capital, and that we have adhered to a policy which has been conservative yet progressive. We 1 offer to our patrons modern facilities for the prompt and proper transaction . of their financial affairs. tf
A Clean Man ft N Outside clotnlfoess i. less than half the betde. a man may •erub himself a dozen does a day, and still be andean. Good kaalth meana cleanliness not only outside, bat inside. It means MU WM a clean stosnads, clean bowel., dean blood, a dean liver, nod wMLi&W new, dean, healthy basnet. The oaan who is dean in this way WT wB look R and act it. Ha wffl work wife energy and think " cknn, eiaar, healthy bmufhta. ^Ha^wifl narac hs tronUnd Bvac, , hmg. s'omarh or blood ^ iSi Dr. Pierct's Golden Medical Discovery ■M Ii'iMj. hate— — Ml 'aaganfcaanhna pnsm| •Ihb Una*. no* «i_. 1 M| Aaafc. ^jMasJwsi |MiM»aJhe aarasa i j sas at. yd a^as a^snws wtmiHii and
IKE SUM LESSOH ^ ! Lesson VII.— Envy of the Ph ari-j| sees— For May 15, 1910. GROWING HATRED TO JESUS t Text, ^He That Is Not With Ma Is Against Me, and Ha That Gathereth Not With Me 8enttereth" (Matt. xti. 80) — The Common People ' Hail Christ as the Messiah. , By Rev. SAMUEL W. PURVIS. D. D. | The derll-possessed man la healed. ' Something weird and uncanny about a man" with a haunted soul, But then- ( he stands, smiling, happy aad>;wieu! eyed. It's sure as two and two. The , multitude are amazed. Only one ex- ( plana tlon. This must be the Messiah: < The voice of the common people Is uoi often, wrong. But the leaders— none i so blind. The incident of the corn * field had made them surly and angry. The upstart Galilean from despised J Nazareth too! The tide of hostility j waa rising. An Unfair Accusation. From Jerusalem to Capernaum the i Pharisees had come to get accusation j against him. That Christ was doing great things must be admitted. But : how account for it? A fact Is one , thing; to be able to explain it away ; Is another. Envy, like belladonna, enthe eye. but spoils the vlslou. They were desperately wrong headed and Incurably wrong hearted. Now they have It! "He hath Beelzebub." they unblushingly declare. Sounds weak and unreasonable, but no matter. Maybe the crowd will not notice it. Ths Gentle Reply. "A house divided against Itself can not stand." Satan is a person. Will he rise up In all bis might to put himself down? Is that your idea of the astuteness of his S itanic majesty! The crown is smiling. Ridicule If sharper than steel. They are being laughed out of court Dignity or el frontery that will stand before armies will melt before laughter. The com people may not fathom who !s right but they will discern absurdity a flash! "If I cast out devils by the devil, by whom do your children the Jewish exorcists, cast out. by the devil or God? Satan has had pos session of this man's soul house. How could I enter unless 1 were strougei than he? Then I must be his enemy And the friend of God!" He has impaled them on the spear point of tbeii j logic! Humanity's Dread Sin. "All manner of sin shall be forgiven' blasphemy against the Holy Gbost shall not be forgiven," neither In t bis world nor the world to come." (J)n t hi' barren mountains of sin this to tho timber line beyond which no plant forgiveness can grow. If this sin i so fearful it ought to he deflnci' What is the sin? Why. to deliberate! attribute to the devil that which w. kpoxv to be the work of the Holy Kpii ''You accuse me of devilish methods lu casting out devils. 1 cast then out by the power of God's Spirit. Yea that good is evil, that black I < B
d«8us coNPourna the Pharisees.
white. You are presumptuously Insulting God." It Is the unpardonub!. sin— the He of the soul! Asking a Sign. Are they e nvlnced. silence? "Show us a sigu " Do anoiher miracle t prove your claim. Not long after they were sayiug. "If thou be the Son < i .God, comedown from the cross." Say the atheist Prove to me n God. Say the man with shut eyes. Prove light Says the man stopping his ears. Pro*, sound. Nay. if one came back froi: the dead they would not believe. Titer, shall be no sign— yes. one. Retneuibc the prophet Jonas? Three days at " nights in the sea monster? So sbr! the Son of Man be in the beort of t'.i earth. Hear the skeptics making toor tj over the story of Jonah and t's. whale! Hear God's Son quoting it No less person than the president of n grant university says. It is false. N less person than Jesus Christ says. '• is true. Take your side! A couple of solitary and picturesque figures flit across the stage of Judg meat. Jonah, alone, ragged, rugged j stalks through Nineveh's streets. Tin j queen of the south, with gold, gett- | silks and Ivory, camels and retinue of j servant*, comes from 8behn to Jeru j their minds eye. bat s greater tku either hi before them.
I - ■ ■ SUGGESTIVE PESTIMS , °° Rev. Dr. Liwcott for the International Pre* Bible Question dub. «Uer>*fa wis W «■». T. & Immc D.R) (Copyright, IS 10. by Her. T. 3. Umcota D.U.1 May 15th, 1910. (Copyright. 1910. by He*. T. S. Unacott. 1X11.) Growing Hatred to Jesus. Matt xiL 28-32, 38-42. Golden Text— He that Is not with me Is against me; and he that gathereth not with me scattereth abroad. Matt. xU:30. (1.) Verse 22— What are the Indications that Teens will finally conquer the Devil and destroy sin? (8.) What are your Ideas, as to whether the time will ever oome, when sickness, sin and sorrow, win be oast out of everybody? (8.) Verae 23— Which is the most amazing work of God, birth, life, death, or mlracleef Why? (4.) Verve 24 — How is It that when a good man is praised by the people < that hypocrites become jealous, and that good men rejoice? (6.) When a man begins to under-, value or minify the good work of another, or to explain away its gracious significance. In what class do you ' place him. and what are your reasons for your conclusion? (6.) What motive prompted the Pharisees to ascribe Jesus'mlracle to Beelzebub, and what inspired the motive? (7.) Verses 25-27— By what power did . Jesus know their thoughts, and what . reason Is there to think that today he. knows your thoughts and mine? 1 (8.) Why will not a sane man pull . down his own building? (9.) Can you think erf, or Invent, any good reason which would Induce Satan to cast out Satan? (10.) Are men who are inspired with 1 hatred, capable of reasoning logical- , hr? Why or why not? (11.) What would result to Satan's kingdom if he were to begin to de- , stroy his own works? (12.) There appear to have been, at that time, other children of the Jews f than Jesus, with power to cast out devils, which power waa presumably ascribed to God, by the Fharisees. What therefore was the logical con- . elusion of Jesus' refbrence to that tact? (13.) Verse 28— What la the evidence that Jesus did cast out devils, and do other great works by the Spirit of God? . (14.) Verse 29 — What is the kingdom of God on earth? If the strong man here stands for Satan, what then are his "goods?" (16.) In order to dispossess Satan of the souls of men. what, according to the figure here used by Jesus. Is necessary? (16.) What is the evidence that the Spirit of God. to-day, does bind Satan when a soul cries to God for dellvermB(!l7.) Verae 30— Why Is the negative sin of not accepting Christ, as bad as the positive sin of rejecting Him? (18.) Which Is the guiltier anJ why, the man who sets a house on fire, or the man who refuses to put out the firat small blaze, when he had full opportunity to do so? (19.V Verae 31 — What Is the sin against -the Holy Ghost? (This question may "have to be answered In writing by members of the club.) (20T), "Verses 38-40— Why did Jesus ' imply thai they were an evil genera- ; tlon for Asking for a sign? (21.) What signs had Jesus already given them? (22.) Is there any record where a miracle alone, was the means of any person's conversion? (23.) Verses 40-41— If the story of Jonah and the whale should prove not to be historic, as so»te claim, and Jasus believed It was, what effect should that have upon our love and admiration for Jeshs? (24.) Verse j2— Why was It not Immodest for Jesus to say he was greater than Solomon? Lesson for Sunday, May 22nd, 1910. The Death of John the Baptist. Matt. xlv;l-12. „ 1825 tub 1910 PENNSYLVANIA i FIRE INSURAN CE COMPANY INCORPORATED 1826. CHARTER "PERPETUAL, i OFFICE, 508-510 WALNUT ST, \ PHILADELPHIA, PA. CAPITAL, - - - - $750,000,001 ASSETS, - - - - $7,832,624 10 SURPLUS, - - - $2,233,426 43 i DIRECTORS. . R. Dale Benson. John L. Thomson | J. Tatnall Lea, Charles B. Pugh Richard M. Cadwalader, "\ W. Gardner Crowell,. Effingham B. Morris, Edward T, Stotesbury Edwin N. Benson, Jr. R. DALE BENSON. President, JOHN L.THOMSON, Vice PresidentW. GARDNER CROWELL, Secretary, HAMPTON L- WARNER, Assistant Secretary. WM! J. DAWSON, Sec'y Agency Depart, . A. w band 8- p. bldredge HAND AND ELDREDGE LOCAL AGENTS i Merchant's National Bank Bklg, or 815 and 817 Waahtagtoa Street " Cape Mav. K J. R. M. WaotaeU'a furniture etora, 88 r-7 .■ furniture and household goooa una ■eoy purchasers of large and anall .! quantities have found that they rave ' OTtan »****« to nt R
Jj. PUjyiAJi SJAxTfl Yacht .Avenue, ScheUt&ger'ft J-ancUhg 1 1 Dealer Id all kinds of j FEED. HAY FLOUR" Lowest Prices and F">est Qualities ; i * Teleihon«95$ W. S. SHAW & SON Gneral Contractors. Dealer® is ■ j Brick, Lime and Cement. Keystone Telephone 80 A 533 ELMIRA STREET Jewelry and Watchmaking Establshed 1888 ^ Large stock of earefullyl selected goods. Clocks erf ell kinds ^ Repairing of Watches, Clocks or Jewelry promptly end sklllfully done. «UL BELFORD HARRISON 06 WASHINGTON ST. CAPE MAT Hi Keystone Phone 4D ■ ' -'A-J )pooooooooooo<pooooooeoeoftttj W. A. LOVETT f i Cox Washington and Perry Sta. ' ' x T»n rr zt -y CTTY , XTE"CKZ" TEBSET 1 < > MANUFACTURER OF ' ! : ; HARNESS, COLLARS, SADDLES AND HORSE GOODS ! ! . , , Strap wort of All Blankets, Robes. Sheets and Nets i : Upho stering tee satisfaction Famltnr® «o Hire by theday or week. I HOWARD F. OTTER 412 WASHINGTON BL Keystone Telephone 124M •' The Excelsior Boarding and LIVERY STABLE U the newest and best equipped building for the cere of - ' horses end carriages in Cape May. It contains many light i box stalls for the accommodation of private driving horses. , The rates are modest, and service will be excellent! The rink has closed down forjthe Summer, this will insure quiet and comfort for the horse. For terms write C. S. NEWELL, Proprietor. West Perry Street, Cape May. i Keystone Phone 1-03 Y r " ! YOU WILL NEVER FORGET A trip on the Hudson River VIA Manhattan Line Between New York and Albany 1 $1.50 round trip (limit 10 days. ) State rooms $1 to 3 Steamers "Frank Jones" and "Saratoga Daily and Sunday Leave Pier 39, Foot West Houston Street, New York For Tickets or rooms Write H. C. McGuire, General Pass. Agt,Pi|»39 N. R, New York or EL P. Stites, Jr, Local Agedt, Cape May. I " Si f; E.t.bn^x«d 1B»1 ^ E | "The Old Reliable Jewelry Store" s ' I® JOSEPH K. HAND (g 8 311 WASHINGTON STREET. £ _ S Watches, Clocks, Jewelry and Silverware. Repairing of all A LMk kinds promptly attended to. vC Is your Husbsutd well Dressed? IF NOT Get Him to talk it over with I Charles Seherer. ladies suits a specialty ISDaeatarSt Cw* Cfok . j

