2 Cape May Star and Wave, Saturday, May 28, 1910 i • _ _________ Sfl ' "■ 'l; ' ' ' ■ ■ "■ ~ ' ■■ ■" '
/ Hp ALCOHOL 3 PEE CENT. AVfegriablc ftrprtknSrAs jtflBl similaring tfefoodaodRe&fa ■I' tingtltfSionBdBandBwajtf SEfj Promotes DigestknifltttW £ M nessaaitoteonttlntnrtftnWmw nor.MmriL Not Narcotic. ■ Hon. Sour StowduDtonte ^Kpj Worms £onvds*ms ftwna FS ngsa «id Loss of Sleep. H|j F>cSgJ^g.°f BEf! HSiEEjs E**ct Copy ofAVrmppex.
CUSTOM! For Tjifanta and Children. The Kind You Have H Always Bought Bears tie ly v. Signature /Am i " if ; ry JjV In njr Use \Jr For Over Thirty Years CMiift
GREEN CREEK. « Mrs. Harry Lowe visited Court g House on Friday. Our High School scholars attended the reception st Court House on Fri- ^ day evening. g Mrs. Hannah Hoffman closed her T school st Diss Creek last week and is c now at home. She has been elected to teach another year at Diss Creek. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Miller, who are summering at Cape May, came up in their auto on Tuesday to look over P their farm here. * Mrs. Carrie Key was called to b Bridgeton on Tuesday to attend the funeral of Knoch Lock. > 8 Mrs. Fannie Oresse and daughter Gertrude, of Avalon, spent this week ! v with friends here. * John Newcomb and Evans S laugh- 1 ter.'of Wildwood. made a business trip 1 1 here on Saturday. Mrs. Sara'.Eldredge spent Saturday , i and Sunday with relatives at Holly ! Beach. Mrs. Kate Foster spent last week With ber sister in Phil&delphs. I ' Alexander Robinson, ot Manayunk. I spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Frank i i Hollingsead. Misa Minnie Hand went to Wild- i ^ wood on Saturday. Misa Brown, who ii attending school | , st Cape* May. spent Saturday and Sun- i day at ber home here. Mrs. Alida Norbury closed a week's , visit with Clayton friends and returned home on Monday. She was accompanied by ber niece. Mias Ada Silvers, of Bridgeton, for a weea'a visit Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Crews enter- < tained Mr. Haynes, of Philadelphia, over Sunday. , David Crease, one of our oldest residents who has been sick several weeks, is not improving any. Strawberries are selling at 10 cents a box but are not very plentiful as some patches were badly froet bitten. Edward Hollingsead was at Holly Beach on Tuesday driving a pump. Oar public aohool closed on Friday. Misa Earnest took the children to the beach for a day's outing. Both teachers have been engaged for another year They have given good satisfaction. Misa Earnest returned to her borne in Dennisville on Saturday much to the regret of one young man. Mr. and Mrs. Erza Norton, of Cape May visited friends here on. Friday. 4'Z
Edward Hollingsead, Joseph Brown Ralph Schellenger and Truman Hick man attended the Bale of the real es tate of the late Henry Brown, Trumai crying the sala. Messrs. Evans Slaughter, Warre Hawn and Engineer Rice.of Wildwood here on Monday looking over tb Beach front of the late Henry Brown came in an auto and went t May and purchased the same. RIO GRANDE Mrs. Lizzie Shsw went to Philadelphia on Saturday to visit her husband j J1 who has been away quite a while on o his vessel. j g John Morton is the proud owner of | g I a very pretty auto. | c | David Scull, with his three team j t j took a free nde over to Wild- o | wood on Saturday eveniDg. ' j Miss Ray Fisher is spending a short 1 time with friends in Vineland. J j Mrs. Mary Edwards and eon is visit- : ^ ing friends in Philadephia. j ( 1 G Thornton made a business trip to Vineland on Tuesday. | ! Mrs. Fannie Hand visited friends at - | Erms Monday. i I Mrs. Davis, of Philadelphia, is mak i I ing quite a stay with Mrs. M. Goff. j Are you undecided where to have 1 your clothes made? Are you looking : : for a first class tailor? Are you tired ' j of having to take the suit back for alterations and lose your time as well as your temper? Avoid all the unpleasantness connected with clothes and have them made by CHARLES SOHERER, Ladies' and Men's Tailor, Cape May, N. J. | OFFICE OF COMMISSIONER OF INLAND WATERWAYS State House, Trenton. N. J.. May. 10, 1910. Sealed proposals for dredging a section of the proposed Inland Waterway from Oape May to Bayhead, N. J.. i Detween Hereford and Towaend's . Inlet, will be received at this office until 12 o'clock noon, June ?th, 1910, and then publicly opened. Further ' information on application. HARRY W SCHNEIDER. Commissioner ' HENRY J. SHERMAN. 1 5 -14 4t Engneer. [ THIS WILL INTEREST MOTHERS ! Mother Gtaty a Sweet Powders for j children cure feverishness, headache, 1 bad etoraach, teething disorders, move | and regulate the bowels and destroy i . worms. They break up colds in 24 i 1 hours. They never fail. All druggists. ' 1 25c. Ask today. 6-14 4t I
Remedies are Needed Were we perfect, which we are not, medicines would not often be needed. But since our systems have become weak coed, impaired and broken down through indiscretions which have tone on from the early ages, through countless generation*, remedies era needed to aid Nature in correcting our inherited and otherwise enquired wad nrsseVtc reach the wat of stowmch weakness and mil I mm at digsetivs troubles, there is nothing so good as Dr. Flame's Goldsn Medioal Discor- r * ery, a 0romw samp Quad, eilieeted (rum native media iaal roots said lor over forty years with groat tttisitsrtou to all users. For gin i Hi, the "Dliist irj1" is a time arnvau awd milt iBilirt nwsdy. "sjssggr*."' JhaTiihTw UBm'wmmRgs,1 lit Urn Iml^I'Xi'mgaut Ssafcr may ggjjr* — -
Home Course^ In Live Stock Farming XV1I1. — Principles of Breeding. By C. V. GREGORY. Author of "Home Course In Modern Asrkculture." "Msklnl Money on the Ferm." Etc. Copyright. 1 003. by American Pres. Association. aXE of the moat Important prtn•|nlple8 of breeding Is the law nhat like produces like. This means that, otber things being equal, an animal will tend to produce offspring like itself. Coupled with this is the law of variation, which means the tendency of animals to differ from each other and from their parents. No two animals are UltJl (IWCUU. .'V
alike, and it la a good thing that this la so. since otherwise there could be J no Improvement. \ Like Produces Like. Keeping these two laws In mind, f chief means of Improving live stork • must be by selection. The variation 5 in the yonng animals gives the basis j for this selection. Tbe prog.uy of 1 two parents will differ both »sje } from tbe parents— that is. some will 1 be poorer and some better? in gen- < eral, tbe number of poorer ones will ! ha shanr annul r n the number of the be abont equal to of
better ones. Thus In nature little ( improvement is made, as both tbe , poorer and better animals are used for 1 breeders. With domestic animals man steps In and eliminates tbe poorer half or more, allowing only a few of the best to reproduce themselves. 1 According to the law of like prodnces
the offspring will tend to be iike these good parents. But here the law of variation comes in again, causing some of tbe offspring to be better and poorer than tbe parents. In this however, tbe poorer animals will considerably better than the poor of tbe preceding generation and the good ones will be better than tbe of the previous year. 'Again tbe animals are discarded and the better ones saved. In this way tbe standard of excellence is Improved from year to year. To accomplish much, improvement selection must be guided by a man who has a definite Ideal In mind. He must know exactly the kind of animal be Is working for and sbonld select his breeding stock with this type in mind. In this way is developed a strain of animals I hat are very mncb alike In all their characteristics they still tend to vary, these variations are not so marked as formerly. and a more uniform lot of animals results. This uniformity Is due in large part to tbe fact that each parent has behind it a long line of ancestors of similar type. An animal I does not get all Its characteristics I from Its parents. Part A tbem come from the grandparents, par. from the great-grandparents and part from more remote ancestors. Clearly, then, the more nearly all these ancestors resemble a certain fixed type tbe more uniform tbe offspring will be. It Is largely by continued selection that all tbe improved breeds of domestic animals have been developed. It Is this ability to produce uniformly good offspring that makes pure brcds so much more valuable than animals of couuuon breeding. \ The tendency of an animal to resemble some of Its remote ancestors more closely tbnn its immediate parents Is | tailed reversion or atavism. Thus, oc- | raslonally a calf of a hornless breed | will sbow burns, or a pig of a certain . FOB MITT.
{ breed will «how a color that is not found in " • breed today. Reversion cannot be guarded against. Tbe best I that can be done is to prevent the use of reverted animals as breeders. Mutations. . ; Any race of living things, whether 11 ! be animals or plants, will occasionally produce a mutation, or. as it is com .! moniy called, a "sport." This is an individual differing to a marked extent from the general type of tbe race or breed, if 1; is a true sport, it will produce its own characteristics In its offspring, and thus a new strain or breed is developed. This new strain Is distinctly different from the type from which It came, and Its offspring show little tendency to revert to that type. The hornless breeds of cattle were developed from sports. The nectarine la a sport from tbe peach, and tbe weeping willow Is a sport from tbe ordinary willow. Sports, when ot tbe right kind, are of groat value In originating new types and hraada. but tbey are seldom of any pnrtlenlar valne to the ordinary broader. Latent Chnmetere. A poUt^haMa of aawh^vatne Jin Cwttnad wpegel
no. xxxrv.— breeding produces um-
* i OAPE MAY COUNTY CIRCUIT . COURT NOTICE TO PROPKBTT OWNERS In the matter of the application of tbe Common Council of the City of Cape May. for tbe appointment otthree freeholders and residents of the City of Cape May, aa commissioners to estimate and aaseas benefits on lands in accordance with the provisions of an act of tbe Legislature of tbe State* of New Jersey, efitided "An Act to authorise dtiei 10 construct sewers and drains and to provide for the' payment of the cost thereof," approved March 8th. 1882. and the aever- ™ al supplements thereto and the acts, amendatory thereof. Notioe is hereby given that an order was made by Allen B Endicott, Esq.. Judge of the said Circuit Court, on the ninth day of May, A. D.. nineteen hundred and ten,- that said Court will t»- ait on the TWENTIETH DAY OF iw JUNE, A. D-. NINETEEN HUNda DRED AND TEN, at the hour of »leven o'clock in the forenoon at tbe City Hall in the City of Oape May. at which time and plice it will hear any M or all objections that may be made to ,n- said aasespm nta and why said assesses ments should not be confirmed aa In >m said report made now on file with tbe xe clerk of laid court. knifi assessment estimate and assess Said assess
benefits on land bordering on and adjacent to the sewers heretofore authorized and laid by tbe said City of Cape May on and along Michigan avenne the Sewer Diapeeal Station on Madi on avenne to Sonth street; along South street frtom Michigan avenne to Indiana avenne; along Indiana avenne from Sonth street to West street; along street from Indiana avenne to street ; along Washington street from three hundred feet southwest of Schellenger street to a point opposite the hensa of the Oape May Vnrht Club, at Sobellenger'a Landing : Landing . r
along New Jersey avenue from Madi- t son avenne to Philadelphia avenne; along Trenton avenne from Beach | avenue to tbe north side of Ccpe May avenue; and also on oontignon a territory thereto, indnding Lafayette street, 1 from a point opposite the Oape May Golf Glob property, to Schellenger's 1 Landing ; Union street from Lafayette 1 street to Washington street; Massachusetts avenue from West street to Texas avenue, Missouri avenue from 1 Indiana avenue to Pittsburg avenue ; Pennsylvania avenue from Michigan ' avenne to Beading avenue, Illinois ( avenue from Michigan avenne to ( Reading avenue; Virginia avenne ( from Madison avenue to Reading ave- / \ nue; Cape Mav avenne from Reading avenne to Pittsburg avenne; Idaho > avenue from Reading avenue to Pittaburg avenue ; Maryland avenue from 1 Reading avenue to Pittsburg avenne; \ New York avenue from Reading to Pittsburg avenue; and New Jersey avenue from Reading avenue to Pittsburg avenue. Dated Cape May N. J. May 10. 1910. HENRY EDMUNDS. — VIRGIL M. D.MAKCY, LEWIS T. STEVENS, ■ 5-u 6t Commissioners. • t Ksliable Reiasdy ■ FOR Jrb&'jfST^ I fjftTfiRRH J§ l|§ 1 Liy's Cieam Baini % " R • 1 . protects gai ! , 1. ie difc'-HAed meta-l-rune re- u; ting frc"- o-;»-r'n end drives »w»y eC'uld in the ' . -;-.t -iy. Rtsuirea ' tho Senses of 'Ik 1 Su.-ll. Fail size ^ b0 cts. r.t Drugg. . . .. !y Mai!. Liquid ■ |. tie Brother* Sb • - ' "eet, Ne«" Y«.-rk a 825 TBE 1910 PENNSYLVANIA ' HRE INSURANCE^ COMPANY h INCORPORATI D 1826. ii CHARTER "PERPETUAL. - OFFICE, 508-510 WALNUT ST, ie PHILADELPHIA, PA. ie CAPITAL, - - - 1760,000.00 ASSETS. - - - - $7,832,624 10 SURPLUS, - - - $2,233,426 48 ^ DIRECTORS. 1* R. Dale Benson, John L. Thomson J. Tatcall Lea, Charles E. Push 5 Richard M. Cadwalader, '8 W. Gardner Crowell,. re Effingham B. Morria, Edward T, Stotesbury ,n Edwin N. Benson, Jr. R, DALE BENSON, President, JOHN L.THOMSON, Vice President- 1 1. GARDNER CROWELL, Secretary. '. «" HAMPTON L. WARNER, Assistant Secre. ! tary. lC. WM. J. DAWSON, Sec'y Agency Depart, | ^ A. W. HAND S. F. ELDREDGE A. n. nasu o> r. aaun&aua
HAND AND ELDREDGE ! LOCAL AGENTS Merchant's National Bank BHg, or |i 816 and 317 Washington Street j Cape Mav. N J. R. M. Wentzell's furniture store. 83 1 Perry street, carries a great stock of furniture and household goods and many purchasers of large and small j quantities have found that they save considerable sums of money, while having goods delivered without damage, as is not the case when purchased anywhere and shipped br raih DROP BY DROP the offensive discharge caused by Nasal Catarrh falls from the back of the noae into tbe throat, setting op an inflammrtion that is likely to mean Chronic Bronchitis. Tbe most satisfactory remedy for Oetazxb is Ely YO ream Balm, and tbe relief that follow, even the first application raimnt bo told in words. Don't anffor afday longer from tbe diaoomfort of Nasal Catarrh. Cream Bairn is •old by all druggists for 10 oanta. or muted kg nyptros.,'64 Warron Btroot, > Vew.Ytrk
WILL BUY YOUR FURNITURE. Excelsior ale and torage Apartments Second hand Furniture ^ Bought and Sold Dry Air Storage , Apartments Provided at reasonable rates Call 103y Keystone Phone, Excelsior Bldg. W. S. SHAW & SON Gneral Contractors. Dealers in Brick, Lime and Cement KeystoDe Telephone 80 A j23 ELMIRA STREET Jewelry and Watchmaking ^ ^ Establshed 1888 Large stock of carefullyt selected goods. Clocks of mil kinds | Repairing of Watcbee, Clocks or Jewelry promptly and ektll- ' fully don% ; fJL BELF0RD GARRISON
f 06 WASHINGTON ST. > Keystone Phone 4D I ■ . • ' . I
CAPE MAY NJ
x»oooooooooooq>ooooooooooo<x I W. A. LOVETT < Coi Washington and Perry Sts, 1 ' CAPE Tv>Trt-v- CIT Jf , ITEYXT JERSEY' ' 1 - > MANUFACTURER OF a ' [ HARNESS, COLLARS, SADDLES AND HORSE GOODS ! i ► Strap work of All KindA. Blankets, Robes. Sheets and Nets i Uphostering In all its Branches. Furniture of all kinds Mattresses made and renovated. Window Shades, Carpets, Mattings, etc, We guarantee satisfaction Furnltur® to H Ire by the day or week. HOWARD F. OTTER 412 WASHINGTON 6t. Keystone Telephone 124M The Excelsior Boarding and LIVERY STABLE Is the newest and best equipped building for the care of and carriages in Cape May. It contains many light box stalls for the accommodation of private driving horses. The rates are modest, and service will be excellent! The rink has closed down for 'the Summer, this will insure quiet'andjeomfort for the horse. | For terms write C. S. NEWELL, Proprietor. West Perry Street, Cape May. K«*y*tone Phone 1-03 Y YOU WILL NEVER FORGET A trip on the Hudson River VIA Manhattan Line Between New York and Albany $1.50 round trip (limit 10 days. ) State rooms $1 to 3 Steamers "Frank Jones" and "Saratoga" I Daily and Sunday , Leave Pier 39, Foot West Houston Street, New York For Tickets or rooms Write ' H. C McGuire, General Pass. AgL.Pier 39 N. R-, New York or E. P. Stites, Jr., Local Agent, Cape May. i ■
! ^ Estab i.hed 1631 Eatabllahad 1631 tart | "The Old Reliable Jewelry Store" | ■® JOSEPH K. HAND S j® 311 WASHINGTON STREET. S I S Watches, Clocks, Jewelry and .Silverware. Repairing of all Lm 3b kinds promptly attended to. 63 Is your Husband well Dressed? IF NOT Get Him to talk it over with Charles Seherer, • "*■ a iniw SUITS A SPECIALTY
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