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HOTEL ^ARRIVALS Philadelphia— J. Wlatar, Mr. and Mra A. C. Howland. Chas. B. Howland. Arthur' C. Howland, John B. Schuyler. Robt. H. Shaw. Geo. M. Prultt. W. H. Beatty. Isaac Lauber. John J. Orr, Wm. Eastrrday and wife, A. Barsa, E. Barsa. C. CTall, G. R. Lewie. A. W. Proctor. H. M Obermay. Esq., A. A. Tina man. J. M. Amos. C. Schoener. A. O. Gaw. Camden — Ta 8. Townaend. H. Leedom. J. S. Middle-ton. Joe. Bradway, M. B. Asken. W. R. Heffelflnger, J. A. Cash man. P. M. Smyth. New York — Geo. H. Kracht. John 8. Braun. 8. B. W. Preuaa. Atlantic City — Edwin Jonea Cape May— Mr. and Mra. A. a Little. Eaat Orange H. E. Adams. Clermont — Paul Townaend. Jacob Townaend. 8wedeaboro— Mr. and Mrs. Mayhew. Mooreatown— Chaa P. Wllleta. East Orange, N. J. — E C. Halaey. New York— a b. Wheeler. W. A. Lea. C. A. Bates, Forest B. Etter. Philadelphia — Albert Line weaver, Lewis R Lonx. C M. Battln. A. H. Wilson, i-r and Mra. John a Wemder. Haxelton. Pa.— a M. Moea. New York City — Ernest Levy. Philadelphia — Mr. HUlkester, A. a Bearmore. Atlantic City— F. F. Necker. W. C. Cape May — Anita a Hand. Jeanna a Hand, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest W. Lloyd and daughter.
SOm OA FX MAT Philadelphia — W. Doughton. W. W. Do ugh ton. Jos. Engel, H. Evans, Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Pletcher, Frank W. Smith, e W. Ha vl land, A. L. Wolcott, Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Frtathmlth. Mrs. A. L. Wolcott, John Tarffuer, Mrs. M. N. Kline, C Mahlon Kline. Dr. C P. Lowe. Edward T. Halin. Henrlck V. Von Z. Loss. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Lee, Mr. and Mrs. O. W. Ostennond. New York— W. D. Fox. C. P. Pray. C. ' R Walnwrlght, Harry D. Tolsom, T. G. Coyne, Frank L. Osvas, Charles F. Kelly, Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Coughen, C. R. Johnson, Roland Hebden, Caswell A. Mayo, W. D. Fox. Plansfleld— Mr. and Mra Jos. C. Field. Woodstown — Mr. and Mrs. G. M. Salem — Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Andrews. Bryn Mawr, Pa — Mr. and Mrs. Peter ,8hlelds. Miss Ethel A. Shields and nurse. Miss Cora G. Shields. Haddon Heights — Chas. E. Shlelda Ocean Grove — >!r. and Mrs Stephen D. Wolley. Cape May Court House — Wlllets CorPerth Am boy — Mr. and Mrs. O. W. Pa risen. Rahway — Mr. and Mra Jos. G. Smith, i D. Grace Smith. Burlington — Mr. and Mrs. Edgar R. Sparks. Crawford—Mr. and Mra C. T. Little. Elizabeth— Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Stutzlen : Roselle Park. N. J. — Mr. and Mra Geo. i H. Horning. i Englewood — Lewis W. Biory. 1 Mt. Holly— E. B. Jones. Alex Dubell. 1 Jersey City — Geo. H. White, Mr. and < Mra W. P. Rich, James Foulker, Her- i man J.- Lohmann. Lake Hopatcong, N. J.— W. M. Lit- I teU. < Plalnsfleld — XL Armstrong. Key Port— Mr and Mrs. W. E Wann. i Montclair — J. T. Munds. j i Metuchen — H. T. Edgar. | < Pittsburg — Mr. and Mrs. D. V. Jones. ; i East Orange — John McGregor Llttell, t F. A. No-tlj, H. B. Beatty, Miss Beatty. . Bridgeton — Chas. F. Dare, David H. Holcomb. Mr. and Mra Henry Gordne. Asbury Park-Mr. and Mrs. Bloomfleld. ■ Atlantic City— H. F. Baker. H. H. 1 Dealeyne. .Mr. and Mra Theodore Drake, 1 Mra vJ. H. Derroed. I * Newark— C. H. Herr, G. M. Burkens. 1 Mr. and Mrs. F. B. Stumpf. A. M. Piatt. 1 Camden — Mr. and Mra Geo. M. Benl- I ger. Mis c.lva Benlger, Mr. "and Mra L. T. Staehle. Mr. and Mrs. David Strauea — r- knd Mra Chas. Holshauer, Mr. and Mra H. G. Winner. Chas. L. ' Barrett, Cnaa M. Butcher. Trenton — Mr. and Mra i: 3. Kempton. 1 Overbrook — Theodore Campbell. « ooiioaui PhUadelhla — Mr. and Mrs. Wm. V. I Bauter. Mr. and Mrs. S. G. Rhodes, Mr. > and Mra W. F. Molyneri. Mr. and Mra J. A Tomllnson, Earl D. Edwards, Mra 1 L. M. Anstruta ' Baltimore — Mr. and Mra John D. ' Howard, four children and maid. ' Chaste — Mr. X* Jarrett, Master 11. R. ' Jarrett i HA* VTT.T.l , Philadelphia John M. Walton. D. L Btute. Morristown — Dorothy -Jng, Marjorle > . t
(One May Overcome constipation permanenUy by proper 1 personal co-operation with the bene- ' flcial effects of Symp of Figs and J Elixir of Senna, when required. The , forming of regular habits is moat lm- ( portant and while endearoring to form them the assistance of 8yrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna Is moet val- j uable, as tt Is the only laxative which , acta without disturbing the natural , functions and without debilitating and H la tha om laxative which tonvan the Internal organs In a naturally healthy , condition, thereby really aiding one la that way. To get Wat Msdclal afcta. buy the geaalwe — afartanl by the 1 Ctntarafc Fig Bymg On only, and tar aale by ah In teg ta^jlili Syrup I djlp aad E^^djdaaaaj^ never '
Aing. Royersford, Pa — -Mr. and Mrs. Josepb Bchellengtr. Newbold — Mr. and Mrs_. J. Pemberton. AUJn Mr. and Mrs-H. D. Justi, Miss Amelia Justl, Cnas. Watson, Chas. Hangstufer. J- Mrs. Chas. Hangstufer. r- E&cimsxo* TO Air 73 rBOM LEWXS L Messrs. Reeti and Salmon, of Lewes. L will begin the excursion season and signalize the establishment of steamboat t- connections between Cape May and [- Lewes, by running two excursions, one from Lewes and the other from Cape May s trip Is a delightful one. GOOD WAT TO DO *USIWB«a . .In ordering a SO cent bottle of Dr. Howard's celebrated specific for Lie cure of constipation and dyspepsia at 25c. Mecray's PhaJmecy Is giving one of the greatest trade chances ever offered to 6 the people of Cape May. If food does not digest well, lfAhere Is gas or pain in the stomadSr'lf the tongue Is coated and the breath bad. If there Is constipation and straining. Dr. Howard's specific will cure you. If It does not. you have Druggist Mecray's personal guarantee to refund the money. This remarkable remedy comes In the form of tiny granules, and can be carried In the vest pocket or purse. It Is ' very popular In New. York City, and It is not unusual to see someone after a meal at one of the large hotels or restaurants. take a dose of this specific, knowing that It will prevent the uncomfortaole feeling which frequently follows a hearty meal. Dr. Howard's specific gives quick rej lief and makes permanent cures of constipation, dyspepsia and all liver troubles.
j FREE MEDICAL BOOK I This coupon. If mailed st ones. It good for one copy of MURRAY'S CHEMICAL FACTS, an up-to-dais household medical dJctionerr. Cut out ti.ls coupon and mall It to the MURRAY CHEMICAL CO.. Ui [ East 52D St.. New York City. N. Y. ■ USSSV'S LOTION costs ICZ1S1 SOME NEWS AND COMMENT BREEZY OPINIONS" AND NEWS 1 Items Gathered by Star and Wave Reporters aad Comment on Current Events The two prize aemagogs of this state William Martin of Essex and George 1 L. Record _ of Hudson. Record talked 1 for half an hour before the State Con- * ventlon of lamentable memory, which 1 nominated Governor Fort, advocating a proposition which did not even get his . own vote. Martin makes as much noise as a steam calliope but never accom- ^ pllshed anything beneficial to the pudllc , in his life. These noisy and suspicious . demagogs apparently believe that every In public life is evil-minded, allied with the Interests, what ever they may j be, and unfit to be trusted. They have j as many panaceas for saving the people from themselves as medicine vendors and the only thing they accomplish is to convince the people that the greatest disaster which could occur to the state I or any section of It would be to elect I them to' office. ] The people of the allied resorts of 1 Five Mile Beach. Cape May County,N. 1 J., will give a banquet at the Wlldwood ' Manor, Wlldwood, June 18. at eight p. * m., as their guests to celebrate the com- ' pletion of the broad highway over tne ' meadows, connecting the island with I I the Ocean Boulevard, will be many | prominent citizens. The Whltesboro public school. Rev. ' B. 8. Atyland, B. D-, teacher, held very ' ng closing exerc.ses Friday. ' June 10th. There were two graduates 1 from the grammar grade who are now ' eligible for the high school, Alice K. < De' Vane and Hlldreth C. Lee. i The Chapel Cadets, a military organ- ' of West Cape May. which has been under the direction of Captain Theodore W. Reeves for. a number of ' years, were unable to attend the ilemmorlal Lay exercises on account of the boys having outgrown their uniand not being able to purchase new ones In time for the celebration. The Cape May Yacht Club has arranged for races to occur every week's end during the summer. A number of copies of the Star and special edition on Saturday last edited by high school students sold for ten cents per copy. Proceeds for the o. the summer base ball team. Charles A. Swain, Jr.. of this city, - notified bis parents some time previous | to the close of the school that If he J were promoted he wanted them to put out the American flag In honor of the They promise, and did so when . the news of his promotion arrived. 1 Charies is seven years old and has been 1 advanced from the first to the second grade. P. Levy. Jr.. formerly of Cape May. Is now in ike Jewelry business at Atlantic City and makes regular weekly trips to Cape May. See his advertisement < n - ths fourth page. A local pastor recently blamed the weather conditions for shortage la financial offer. nym. . . Mas Blanche Hughes Is becoming very popular aa a vocal music Umtructor. The aanual beefsteak dlnaer was given the Cape May Yacht Club Mot Kemp tea sad ma la— ft. whs has been —tee beetmei at
- PERSONAL MENTION : OFVISITORS , SOME INTERESTlNe NOTES I Stir sad Ware Readers art Re ■ qeested It Seed ia by Fkeae ar Otherwise John F. Huff and family, of Philadelphia, .will occupy the Mannheim bungs* low. Cape May Point, for tbreemonths ' and arrlveu on Wednesday. It has been thoroughly renovated and a. kitchen ad- • dltion made to it. ' Grand Master Workman John C. - Clepper and .'est Master Workman ® Frank W. Tussey visited Cape May 5 Lodge No. 20. A. O. D. W. Thursday evening. ' Miss Anna M. Tafel was one of the i 1 graduates in the Gordon School for - Girls of West Philadelphia May 1st, ' and la now spending the summer with ' her parents at Linden Villa. t J. — Minster, of Philadelphia, will 1 l occupy the Fentop cottage at No. 257 1 • Grant street this season. Mrs. R. 8. Moore was entertained over ; . Sunday by Mrs. C. »». -xewklrk at her , Broadway cottage. ( Harold M. Falkenburg and fam.iy are 1 spending a two weeks vacation with I their parents, Capt. and Mrs. J. C. Falk- I enburg. Mr Falkenburg Is employed as I a bookkeeper with the American Tobac- | co Co. at Jersey City. Mrs. Faulkenburg j Is the sister of Capt. George D. Arrow- , smith. Twenty-sixth Infantry. U. S. A. ( Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Smith have 1 changed their residence to Erma where ' they have engaged in farming. I I Mrs. D. C. Vanaman has leased lwr . West Perry street cottage to Mr and , Mrs. Newman, of Millville. Dr. and Mrs. Arthur C. Howlana. with ; children are registered at The Virginia. I Dr. Howland Is a professor In History i i Department at the University of Pe.insylvama. John B. Schuyler, representing the > Mutual Life Insurance Company of New 1 York, spent several days at The Vlr- ' ginta during the week . I A. B. Little and wife are at The ! v irglnla for the summer. Messrs. A. and E. Barsa were In Cape I May on Sunday. Mr. Barsa now has Ills j I Oriental store open for £he season. | ' They registered at The Virginia. | ] ... O. Gaw. representing Reading & ' ' Dtcklson, of Philadelphia, was at The ! 1 Virginia on Monday. Mr. Gaw Is trav- ; ' eling the Jersey coast resorts for his | 'i twenty-first summer. t Harry Mayhew and wife, of Swedes- j stopping at The Virginia. Mr. Mayhew ' who is a relative of Stephen Reeves, of ' Cape May, was In town for the ' first time In twenty years. f .... t Camdenltes at The Virginia Include . W. S. Asken. \V. R. Heffelflnger, J. A. Cashman and F. M. Smyth. Hair Monstrosities. French theater managers tn the i eighteenth century had worse evils G than picture hats to contend against. £ Antoinette, who was short even t according to French standards, set the c fashion of high coiffures, and ultra- a fashionable women prided themselves E measuring four feet from their c chins to the tops of their beads. a structures took about six boura q to erect, the hairdresser mounting a j, ladder tn the process. Some coiffures t were almost as broad as they were j with wings sticking out about a eight Inches on each side of the bead. For the "frigate" coiffure the hair was e rippled In a huge pile to represent the a of an angry sea and surmount- ^ ed by a fully rigged ship. As a con- j. sequence of these monstrosities dls- g turbances In theaters occurred almost daily until an ordinance waa Issued against the admission of women with high coiffures to the floor of the house. c —Chicago News. c 1 t Couldn't Talk. \ De 8tyle— You say that loving pair ^ of deaf motes were sitting in the parlor t and didn't cany on a conversation: ( Gunbusta— Tbey couldn't, for tbey were t holding bands.— New York Press. 0 | t 1 never knew an early rising, hard-, working, prudent man. careful of bit j earnings and strictly honest, who com- ! plained of bad Inck -Addison. ' t I & CO i De&lerin , Builderss' Supplies [ HOLLY BEACH. N. J. J
LC AMURN
His Athletic Neighbor. A young man Inmate of a boarding house had teen disturbed night afu-r . night by tte boarder In the next room | doing things with a punching bag be a ' figged up In tte room some way. Ai breakfast each morning the young muu , would look over the crowd and wop J der who tte teg puncher might be but there was no one in tight but •> bunch of women and eight or ten men with narrow cheats and retreating chins. One night be made op his mind to knock on the bag punching room eft door and ask htm to pnt over his exercise until daylight when «ll the world's awake. The man mitrjt t>«- . small enough to bulldose even 'with all i his athletics The door opened and i there, dad in a tight fitting red Jersey. - was a robust, buxom woman of per baps thirty summers. "And what did yon say to berT" the young man was asked. ! "I was so startled," replied he, "that . I asked what afterward seemed to me the most natural request I could have made. I asked her if she'd lend me s a couple of matches."— Cleveland Plain - Dealer. The Persistency of Colds. Why la it that we are ao heavily I subject to co Ida? Other epidemic dls vases mefiaies. typhoid, scarlet fever diphtheria— may get hold on us once and there is an end; It is not usual to have any of them twice. We brew in . our blood immunity. Tte poison of the : 0 lessee evokes tn us Its proper antidote. Our blood cells make a sort of natural antitoxin and keep It in stock, that we are henceforth protected ' against the (Hasans. A wall vaccina tea nurse, for trample, works with safety | a smallpox hospital, where tte very air Is infective, but her blood Is so : changed by vaccination that the small cannot affect her. By scarlet fe , again, we are. as It were, race I : uated against scarlet fever. The reac < tion of our blood against the discs*- i Immunises us. No such result follow^ i or a common cold. Ws breu ; nothing that la permanent We an • Just sa susceptible to a later Invasion 1 as we were to the Invasion that is Just over.— London Spectator. , The Festive Codflth. A correspondent of the New YorkPoet says that the codfish frequent- > "the tablelands of the sea." The cod 1 fish no doubt does this to secure as 1 nearly aa possible a dry, bracing ai ' mosphere. This pure air of the sub ] marine tablelands gives to the codfish , i that breadth of chest and depth ot ( ! lunga that we have so often noticed i glad, free smile of the codfish Is i I largely attributed to the exhilaration < of this oceanic altltoodleum. The cor respondent further says that the "cod 1 ; fish subsists largely on the sea cherry ' ! Those who have uot had the pleasure ' of seeing the codfish climb the cherry tree In search of food or clubbing the ' , fruit" from the heavily laden branches ^ with chunks of coral have missed a j fine sight The codfish when at t rambling through the submarine l does not wear his vest unbnt- > toned as he does while loafing around ' the gnjeery stores of the United States 1 —BUI Nye. A High Prloed Frloatses. * LortJ Alvanley, a noted wit and high , in England a hundred years or so t Insisted on having an apple tart on ^ his dinner table every day throughout the year. On one occasion he paid a t caterer J 1,000 for a luncheon put up In « basket that sufficed a small boating £ party going up the Thames. Being £ one of a dozen men dining together at ® London clnh where each was required to produce his own dish, Alvnn- , as the moet expensive, won blm , the advantage of. being entertained t of cost Thlsyieneflt was gained <j at an expense of $540, that being the r price of a simple fricassee composed l entirely of the "nolx," or small pieces r at each aide of the back, taken from l thirteen kinds of birds, among them being 100 snipe, 40 woodcocks and 20 ( pheasant*— In all about 300 birds. v Our Eocsntrlo Phratra. C Why do we always talk of potting p ou a coat and vest? Who puts on .i before a vest? We also say pui - ting ou shoes and stockings. Wb«. on shoes before the stockings • We also pnt up signs telling people to ; wipe their feet wben we mean their or shoes. And a father tells a boy he wUI warm his Jacket when ti'- - means to warm his pantaloons. We , are ■ little eccentric tn onr phrases ai times. An Odd Epitaph. e j The following epitaph is to be found r ! a cemetery within seven miles o! 1 York's city hall: j ! Reader, pass on; don't waste your time I O'er bad biography and bitter rhyme. | For what I am this crumbling clay In- " ' And what I was la no affair ot yours- n b In the Game. "I am In the hands of my friends " a said the political sldestepper. "Yea." replied the harsh critic, "and , " every time your friends look over their ' c tbey seem Impatient for a new a deaL"— Washington Star. l Tte Prepar Tree. Curious Charley -Do outs grow on trees, tatter? Fatber-Ttey do. my aoa. Curious Cteriay— Then what tree does the doughnut grow ou? Fatter - Tte "pantron." my ton— Furpte Cow tatete •te*. If TtaTi a MctUyn tew. •M tafia- Fifiliriifi — Pflt yea ewe hear eg a ge«4 <*ML yea MtaM las IhlMMlt
PHARMACISTS AT HOTEL CAPE MAY: Continued from First Page j. guests of the Cape May Yacht Club in ' •even motor boats. Returning from Holly Beach In time for dinner the barn dance followed. The barn dance was aunlque affair and a great success. The large ball room was decorated -for the occasion with shcafa of wheat, rakes and many other things wmch would give the appearance of a typical barn. An old-fashioned "sweep well" in one corner added much ot the rcalisticnesa of the illusion.
HOTEL CAPE MAY OPENS GREAT AITO REN MUS EVENT Saturday Jaie U the Official Ojeziif of tie Sosra of IRM at Cog by The Hotel Cape May's opening on Sat- ' urday last waa a great event and an ; auspicious one. Manager Doyle's arrangements were perfect and every detail planneo came about aa nicely aa though the house had been continuously open. ! The Premier Auto Run waa the great ' event of ut dey and the machines began 1 to arrive it 1 p. m.. one hundred ' ten coming In and with their passengers 1 filling every room In the great hotel. This resort sat up and took notice : when the 110 cars In , the second ' sociability run of Tne Motor Company ! of Philadelphia passed' under the arch ' bealae the boardwalk and finished with- 1 out a mishap. Never before had ao many motor cars started on a readability ' and never before had so many cars 1 of one (Jpgle make been seen together. 1 Eacn contestant In the run was en owner 1 anu a driver of a Premier car. ' Eacn car aa it dashed under the arch ' was numbered and courted the American 1 flags as well as green and white pen- ' nanls. the official colors of the Motor ' Company. ' Although the cars maintained the po- ' sitlon each held at the start In Philadel- 1 Phla, rrorn here on the run became a go- 1 as-you-please. The route lead through " Gloucester, Westvllle, Hurffvllle, Glass- 1 bor. Vineland. Bridgeton. Millville. Port 1 Elizabeth, Brickboro, Dorchester, Lees- 1 Delmont, Eldora, Dennlavllle, f Goshen. Cape May Court House, Schel- ' Landing and through Washing- ' street and Beach avenue to Hotel ' May. • The contestant who ran Ills car down 1 to Cape May In t be time nearest their 1 mat hems ••en I Yen i: won the Premier ' trophy, n seven loot Colonial clock of ' mas,-nliic< nt ileslcn with Westminster , chimes, and the one who came next to this time, either above or below, woii I Motor Company trophy, a silver and | Ivory chafing dish of exquisite design the third prize, a silver and clilna boull- 1 set of the latest design, and the * type ot jeweler's art. was pre- ' sented by the Cape May Board of Trade. ' The fourth prize, an after dinner coffee set ot silver and china of superb workmanship was presented by the Hotel May. The fifth prize, a tire lunch trunk containing full and complete luncheon a equipment for six persons, thermos hot- \ ties, sandwich boxes, salad pots, etc., t known as the Sheldon trophy. i Paul Kuendig, of Wayne, Pa., and C. 1 McFarland, of New York, Premier p and both contestants, generously ■ donated an additional prize, which was I awarded to the lady of the party to I most accurately the official time f from Camden to Cape May. 1 The business men of the various 1 towns at which the nfn stopped to check c in, appreciated the trade importance of I the run, and offered road trophies to the f whose time at that town was a nearest to the official time. The Vine- q land tropny was a cut glass punch bowl, representing an example of the lmpor- t glass Industry of Vlneiand. c The Bridgeton trophy, donated by the ■ Commercial League, was a silver serv- a dish. The Sportsman's Villa trophy \ was a shot gun, typical of the place, and j t- e Bellerue House trophy, at Cape May * House, was a handsome silver s Children Cry ■ FOR FLETCHER'S ; C A S T O R I A , Yachting Notes : ' The Tilley, Capt. Murry Kills in li charge, and It. E. Roland In the engine r came into the harbor 'Wednesday li ceedlng on her cruise from Sharptown. p to Patchole. Fire Island, where her e owner, C. A. Van Reusselar, Is awaiting f her arrival. The Titles' was buUt by the fi SJiarpsiown Yacht Building Company, p and Is the thirty-fifth of her kind to d built. fi 1 .ie Cape May Yacht Club gave Its n annual beefsteak supper Friday evening a at the club house dining rooms. At d least fifty members Ve re pres< nt. a The Winifred, Capt. Springer In fi charge, came In port Tuesday afternoon fi after making a quick riin from her dock « Philadelphia. tl
I Feet I 1.3 —i | I
WONDERS OF ' IRON ANB COOK VitWDT FIRE Type far Ike Star uri Wave b life aid Set kj a Mackiae Drivel ky Beclricify That electricity can be made to do "atunta. some of which the residents of Cape May had never dreamy of. waa last week at the tntereWng demonstration held at the show rooms of | the Cape May Light and Power Company { last Frluay and Saturday when hundreds of people saw, for the first time in Caps . May, what this wonderful force waa cap- | able of doing. Simultaneously with this exhibition, electricity was being har- | eased for another and exceedingly useful service In Cape May, namely, that of , making and Betting type for this paper machine which we are now using for this purpose not only baa the greatest speed, but makes the clearest and most readable type. At the demonstration held by the Cap* May Light and Power Company, were shown the Electric Toastor, Electric Stove. Tea Pots. Coffee Percolators and other labor saving and unique electrical devices, chief among which la the electrical flat-lfon, tne moder^ greatest boon, with It ail the labor and drudgery formerly associated with Ironing day has disappeared* more will she sigh over the prospect of a olg wash" to be Ironed, with it* attendant miser}-, heat, many, man* steps to be travelled between a red hot stove and the Ironing board, but Instead, will take up a neat little electrical Irot^ attach the cord to any lamp socket, and without-neat or discomfort, do twice aa much work as formerly In a given time. Irons heat up very quickly and tha curent Is not needed more than one-i.alf the time .making Hum very <cononilcal to -use. Truly, this Is an age of convenience. and that great force, electricity has only Just been directed to the relief of the long-suffering housewife. I^et the good work go on. BOAT BUILDING pairing! Railway on which to rua out boats for examination or repair. Many years of experience enables me to assure satisfaction. JOHN PHAR0.1263 LafayetteSt Keystone Phone M K. When a dally newspaper numbeT* Its readers tens of thousands who who dwell In communities remote from the places of Its publication there la prima facia evidence that narrow local play but a comparatively small part in the scheme of its existence. The . strong following of the Philadelphia outside of Philadelphia, la Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Delaware and Maryland, la a case In the point. out-of-town subscribers of tha do not read It In preference to other city dallies solely to find out what going on In Philadelphia. Their has been won and held by Its special appeal to their likings and requirements in other directions. While the Record ia a Democrat!* newspaper, the source of Its popularity cannot be sought In Its political faith, since many of Its long i me admirers staunch Republicans. Bat tha vigor and sincerity of Its editorial* compel the approval and respact of those who do not agree with their teachings; and partisanship la kept out of Iks columns. The Records news outlook la broad and far-reaching; it la alert la gathering the dally grist from all points In neighboring states and from the world at large; and, what Is no less Important. It Is fair, accurate and entertaining In presenting It. The Record makes a fetish of re- : liberality. One consequence of this la that Its dally market quotations have become the standard, officially recog- | nlzed In the courts, by which transacj tlons in produce are governed. Another Is that its sporting department Is the recognized adtnorlty In all its province. Including horse news. As a family newspaper the Record as much attention to utiltly aa to entertainment It publishes a great of Information nelpful to the It carries an Irresistible appeal to womenklnd In Its departments to fashions and household afIt prints more store news — a matter of live interest to womeh — than other Philadelphia newspaper. Its patterns are thoroughly up-to-date and In great demand. It la. In brief, for a dozen reasons Indispensable In tha family circle and clean enough to be entitled to the honored place It has was
Why Take Alcohol? Are you thin, psle, essBy tired, lack your usual vigor and strength? Then your (iaestioa must be poor, your blood thin, your mtns weak, r'ou need a tank and alterative. You need Aye's Sanaparfia, the only SaisapariEa entirely km ill ikinhnl Wa kilrir your doctor would indorse It III III! Hill, or we would not aula then. Ask tea

