Cape May Star and Wave, 31 January 1914 IIIF issue link — Page 2

* SATURDAY. JANUARY si. i»i4 CAPE Si AY ST AH AND WAVE : A E ... ■ • , —

■jf® Promotes DigraltaillrHfa ^■Ih; ness and ResLCoalalns netor •jBT'i Opium .Morphine norMooiL ■mm Not Narcotic. ^^MiOHxnnaa ^^8 (j^SowsS»aiLD^bm ■gf< Worms JCcBtvulaonsJevtnsfr Hpgi ncss and Loss of Sleep. y 7HB CeKTAI^^WSHJi Exact Copy of Wrapper.

iCASTBRU ] For Infanta and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the A/ A, Signature /A XT - w (\ J{^ 'n jy> Use \Y For Over Thirty Years iCASIORIfl 1

the farmers aroused HUtWOSXTZOH TO ASSESS WHEEL VAX BTXH TISI INTO ACTION AiO. OYER STATE — DESTRUCTION ON ROADS NOT DUN TO WAOONS, WET SAT. Farmers all over the alate are preSArloit to make strong protest to the MSlalaturc a* all net the passage of any Sill which will Impose a wheel tax on | vehicles of all kinds. In connection With the discussion ever keeping the toads of the state In repair and the targe sums of money needed therefor. It j has been suggested that all vehicles using the highways should be taxed and the money added to the state road tepalr fund. Farmers who have been at the State louse the past few days have been SSanlmous and outspoken in their opposition to any such general vehicle taxation scheme. The farmers declare I that It Is not the farm wagons that destroy the roads. "Practically every farm wagon that ] Carries any load has wide tires." said' aa agriculturist to-day." and Is driven ! ao al6wly that It Is absurd to say that ! It damages an improved road. Uacadam roads have always stood wagon traf- ' to all right. It la the high powered Sfty and alxty-mlle an hour automobiles that are destroying the state's food roads. The solution of the probUm It to make the motorists pay a suf■Clent tax to keep in repair the roads ruined by them." It has been suggested that if a vehicle tax 6e irapoyOS be at the rate •f $1 per wheeU*nnually. If such a »w were passed; It would require every 1 farmer in the state to pay a vehicle! Ux of from twenty to fifty dollars a i fear. In addition to the regular taxes . how paid. Last year the cost of repairing the Improved roads in this State was $1.- | 470,000. and there were hundreds of Bllea that were not properly cared for There are about 1600 miles of Improved highways In the state, 160 miles ' Bore were built last year, and the good roads system Is being extended •Very year. The expense of their upkeep, therefore. Increases annually and ' Begetting to be a serious state prob- j FRECKLES Won't Bide Tnem with « Veil; Remove '• Them With the 0 thine Prescription There's no longer the slightest need | r Of feeling ashamed of your freckles, u 1 the prescription othine— double strength j ' — U guaranteed to remove these homely , a pots. Bimply get an ouaee of othine— double 1 strength — from Mecrav's Pharmacy and ' apply • little of it night and morning : and you should soon see that even the - worst freckles have begun to disappear, ' while the Lighter ones have vanished en- ' tlreiy. It is seldom that more than aa t •unee U .needed to completely dear the •kin and gain a beautiful complexion. 8 Be aura to ask for the double strength , •thine aa this is sold under guarantee of I money back if it fails to remove 1 freckles. ; 0 1 THN BUCCRSSTtn, PARKER Money saved to make needed improve- t menu on the farm. If put by syatemat- ( lcaHy, will accumulate faster than you 1 Imagine, and the total sum. whdb ee- r cured, will enable yon to obtain lmprov- I ed machinery,, most stock, or home com- 0 forts; that will ranks the farm yield c greater, returns and make life better d worth; the living. The Security Trust Co. win kerve torn a

the grange ) (By E. 8. Starr.) The winter meeting of the Cape May L Pomona or County Grange waa looked • g forward to by all of Its pubordlnate ' granges as to be attended whatever else might betide. First, because Cold Spring •> Grange, the host, is one of Rhe pleasantest to visit and the chicken potpie : and fixings as the Bisters set out at < „ their dinner is In a class by Itself. Also, . e because the State school laws as oon- ' .. cerned county conditions were to be con- ; n sidered from the several township stand- i „ points and with Senator Gaunt and Prof. e Carlss of the State School Board to pass e upon possible misunderstandings, and. 1 t finally, because the Installation of offl- i . cers brings out the best In the county a and gives Lecturer Howell the material i j for a none-such program. Unhappily, while there waa the at- ' e tendance there was a counter attrac- j a tion for the Worthy Master. Secretary 1 . and other officials In a 'muss meeting i e nearby. In which resident owners com- I B blned to resist on unwarranted purpose i . I of the two railroads and the Public 1 j Utility Commission. Thua for the Po- i t mona. to get through by going home 1 j | time and to do justice to the dinner, only i , Pomona business could be given attent J tlon. Hojvever. the time of waiting was j . not regretted, as in the seven granges . representing every section of the county j are old neighbors and friends who rare- ' . ly meet except at these quarterly sea- J , slons. and the two hours was none too ' long for the exchange of news and crop , At 12 M„ when Worthy Master Camp f called the meeting to order, all officials ' . were In place excepting the assistant * , stewards. Truman Hickman and Miss i Lucy HUdreth and the Worthy Flora. c , j New. members obligated were. John 1 [ j and Anna Wllbraliam. Angus and Linda 8 I M- Morris. David and Annie Hughes, 8 David and Lizzie M. Rodan. Annie Mc- , I Kean and Bessie Stevens, all of Cold 1 i Spring Grange; Fred McKlssic and Wal- 1 , ter Hand, of the Rio Grande Grange; Mr. 8 . and Mrs. Young, of the Palermo Grange, 11 and W. L. Turpln and wife, S. E. Her- 8 , and wire and Mra. Charles Webb, of , the Stone Harbor Grange. " Resolutions' upon the death of Mrs. c Edna M. Cobb, of Cold Spring, were ° adopted and ordered spread upon the mlnutea. brothers Hlldreth and Camp ^^d sister Belle Matthews being the " AT" resolution addressed to the Board of Freeholders and adopted without dls- ^ "Whereas, It has been proposed • to — open up a new road, stating from Schellenger'a Landing to the Sallle —arshall Crossing, and I "Whereas. Said road will be a detri- | ment to and against the wishes of the majority of the Inhabitants of Lower I Township, and I "Whereas, A large portion of the expense of building and maintaining said road would have to be met by the inof Cape May County; therefore be It "Resolved, That we, residents of Cape County, and members of Pomona. N. J. 14. In meeting assembled, do earnestly protest against eoch a road being — built, and do earnestly request that you use all your Influence against such road being built" Worthy Bute Master Gaunt officiated at the Installation of the officers elected for two years to come at the autumn meeting held with the Mother Grange In Dlas Creek. Mrs. Gaunt acting as Assistant Steward, and as follows; Worthy Master. William E. Bate. Fishing Creek; Overseer. L. Hlldreth. Rio Grande, - Lecturer, A. D. T. Howell. Olas Creek: Steward. George C. Sayre. Clermont; Assistant Steward. El wood Douglass; Gatekeeper. 8. B. Taylor. Cold Spring; ' Mlas Maggie Ludlara, Den- ' nlsvWe; Secretary, Eli Townsend, Stone ' Chaplain. Jacob Corson. Rio Grande; Pomona, Mrs. Room P. Rlaley. Stone Harbor; Ceres, Mrs. Minnie Ma- : Palermo. There was no time for the customary addresses following the -seating- nor 1

the poem the new Master, William Bate j had prepared for the occasion. The only L bit of entertainment Lecturer Bowell I ■ cpulc find 'place for rut solo by Mrs. j . Thomas Arden. of New York - City, I daughter of Mrs. Reese P. Rio ley, and! nettling sweeter caret' - greeted' .grange - ears than her rendering of "Shannon River." Mra ArdetfS voice Is of wide - range and with the high notes so easily ' reached and sustained. It is like the sweetest bird song while the singer Is of such slight bufld One thinks of the nightingale, "voice and nothing else." Prof. Cartas had time for a few brief sentences upon practical .or vocational j training. ' The great need, h* said Is of teachers who will dignify farming as a' business and a profession and will not educate the. children Into the "blled ahirt Jobs." It-takes a* mufcb. bpslness acumen xo tan a farm aucdeajsfftlly as for any other business. The progress f making m vocational education throughout tlie state was shown 'to '"be good j and with results bearing out all that had been claimed for It. Every grange In the county was represented and some very fully. Acting Flora for the Installation session waa Mrs. Elisabeth Wallace, now of - Philadelphia, former lecturer of the po. ' mona. and as Becond master of the *Tockahoe Grange waa the first woman master of a grange In the county. Mrs. Hattie Fldler being second';' Cape May being the only county having four past masters, Miss Hlldreth, of Rio Grande, and Mrs. MadarS, of Palermo being the other two. All four have held official poal- * tlon in the Pomona The Holy Bible used In the Installs- 3 tlon oerentony was presented to Cold Spring Grange by Lewis Cressc Hand, son of ex-Senator Hand. The next meeting of the Pomona will be with the Palermo Gunge in April. . The Stone Harbor Grange at last week's meeting elected and installed K Squire Herbert as gatekeeper, and nam- - et George W. West. W. W. Beyer and Oscar Horton as the Finance Committee. The Women's Work topics sent from , the State Giange were discussed, and with the consensus of expression that _ the happiness of the world Iisb not been added to by the Increase of wealth, and, the pursuit of wealth gives more pleas- c ure than the possession. The suggestion from the Lawrence- B VI lie Grange that at least $50,000 of the State's appropriation of $250,000 for a" B New Jersey exhibit In connection with _ : New Jersey

the San Francisco Exposition, shall be devoted to farm products and fruits, was emphatically endorsed. One member was afraid that our State couldn't show sweet potatoes with the states of Washington and Oregon where they grow them a yard long, was told the Jersey grower calls that sort strings 1 and feeds them to the pigs. New Jersey i can beat the world in the short, chunky sweets that score 100 points and arc the perfection of texture and flavor. Eli Townsend vksuld back the state for apples and another member told of the grapes from the central section that the American Pomological Society declared In the greatest number of varieties produced In any one place in the world and of unqualled quality and flavor. Fred McKlssic has been re-elected assistant steward of the Rio Grande Grange and is the youngest officer for a second term in the state, having Just reached the minimum age limit when hrst elected, a year ago. The newly installed officers of the Tuckahoe Grange are: Worthy Master. Reeves: Overseer. Edgar CampLecturer, Mra. Alice Stewart; Secretary. Z. A. Townsend; Treasurer. F. R. Steward, Edward Stewart; Assistant Stewards. Walter Taylor and Martha Shaw; Chaplain. Mrs. Adele RoGatekeeper, James Homan. Mrs. Wallace was present at the Installation. KEN WHO KANE THE WORLD Men who make the world of today are making The Youth's Companion what It ' today. It la very much more than : Companion you may remember; no 'higher In purpose, but more lavish in • special Family Pages. Boys' Pages. Pages, and a constant supply of serials and shorter stories. The editorial page of Information, science and events will keep any man well Informed, while the FamPage helps on home Improvements and ideas, and both boys and girls have special pages for themselves. You do the family a good turn when 1 the Youth's Companion "aa It is today"! sent to the home. Fifty-two Issues a year — not twelve. More reading than I found in any monthly magazine at any price. You may not know the Companion It Is today. Let us send you three current Issues free, that you may thoroughly test the paper's quality. THE YOUTH'S COMPANION 144 Berkeley St.. Boston. Mass. subscriptions received at this office. See those . new baby coaches at Wentzell's, 8$ Perry street JOHN BRIGHT 6ENESU INSURANCE RmI E*Ule and Mortgage Investments ® mar uum sunn ». j. „ a|A$A4j/oVER 66 YEARS' 1 (pB Trade flams • COWTOJOHTS'AC.

PROFESSION AI. f HENRY H. ELDREDOE j - ATTORNEY- AT-LASl Solicitor In Chancery for New Jersey Member of Pennsylvania Bar. Cashier Merchants National Bgck Cap® May, New Jerea* J. 8P1CER LRAMI!?6 :5*~* COUNBELLOR-AT-LAW Solicitor. -Master and Examiner in f ^ ChincwyOffice: Hughes and Franklin streets Cape May, Mow Jstwsy. SAMUEL F. ELD HEDGE F? ■■ , ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Merchants National Bank Building Washington and' Decatur Sta. Cape May. New Jersey. NOTARY FtlpilOf > Solicitor and Master in Chancery. Keystone 'Rhpqp 8GAFLOYD C. HUGHI& * ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Office: 501 Washington Street Cape May. New Jersey. NOTARY PUBLIC Solicitor In Chancery G. BOLTON ELDREDGE ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Offices: Merchants National Bank Building Washington and Decatur Sta. Cape May, New Jersey. NOTARY PUBLIC Solicitor Id Chancery 'Phone S6x JAMES M E. HILDRETH j COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW Solicitor. Master and Examiner In Chancery NOTARY PUBLIC Offices at No. 214 Ocean Street CapS iray. New Jersey. 'Phone S9A LEWIS T. STEVEN 8 Counsellor-at-Lsw Master In Chancery Supreme Court • Commissioner Commissioner for Pennsylvania. MORGAN HAND, JR. ~ ENGINEER AND SURVEYOR CAPE MAY COURT HOUSE N. J. Bell Phone 6 819 Wesley avenue. Phone 56X Ocean City, N. J.

6 DR. J. H. OLIVER DENTIST Estey Building. 1120 Chestnut St.. Philadelphia. Pa. (One door above Keith's Theatre) Appointments may be made by Bell Telephone. Walnut 1333D. Extracting painless. You Can't Fit Your Eye with a Tape f Measure It has to be done by ! one who knows bow. > We have qualified 1 ourselves by years of study and experience. . Satisfaction guaranteed in every case. C. A. LONGSTRETH. SpecLErt Id Eye Tntigr, m Market Street. PtuMWpkle CAPE MAY OPTICAL}] 513 Washington Street Cap6 May. N. J. Everything for the Eye. Prescription Lenses a Specialty Keystone Phone 44D. W. L. Ewing Jr. WAGON BUIIOER 1 AUTOMOBILE PAINTER Luge end Smell Wck Carefull Executed Estimates CSieerfufly Furnished W. L. EWINQ, JR. West Perry Sta., Keyatone Phone M5I M. K. BROWN PRACTICAL AUCTIONEER 22 Years Experience 8«U anything, any time or my place. 8 Satisfaction Guaranteed. Terms ram- '' enable. * U1 York At«„ West Oape May. HENRY C BOHM " Dealers In FISH, OY6TER8. CLAMS. ETC. j LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES | J BEST POSSIBLE QUALITIES PROMPT DELIVERIES CHOICE OY8TERS AND CLAMS Phone No, Keystone 1-19D JACKSON 8TREET NEAR W. J- AND S. R. R. DEPOT

; 197 JACKSON ST. ' Everything in muep. See fe~te end ..led., Speehllh. , Open .11 the yam Cotteg. take miieited. .. Onien by phoa Both PtionM°™P JOHN J. McCANN Keystone Telephone, 673D.

Wm. F. Brown , PLUMBING, STEaM and GAS. FITTING Jobbfng A Specialty. "3TU'Hi£iife v™si<nr®mw Estimates Furntshed cape may Keystone Telephone 126 a rn . ,ty*| |. m ApTTgfRa HOU8EC LEANING TTMK IB HERB I ant circumstances, especially when the (!* removal of furniture and pictures brtnga out the defectr to your wall papers. It ^ ta1"? ■°be"nV d'"crip,lon- wor»tffso'l e C CL*1

f PEIRCB SCHOOL ia America's best-known finishing S school for young men and young women about to A enter business. W § Students deal with actual business affairs, developing Hp' initiative, confidence and efficiency. 7F. Commercial, Secretarial and Shorthand courses includ- X tng as much instruction in general educational subjects as the W t student may need. gv Graduates always in demand for well paying positions. " rtt Fall term begins in September. S Day and Night Sessions. W W Fof itth catalogue address W | PEIRCE SCHOOL I ^t^Record Building Philadelphia jf 8 Xf www • v WV • Wv american pride iwhiskey $3-00 per gallon express prepaid. This is an excellent article and is 100 proof. Soda and Mineral Waters Imported and California Wines and Brandies at lowest possible prices. PROMPT DELIVERY BOTH PHONES S. TEITELMAN 312 and 314 Washington St( Cape May^N. J. COLD BOTTLED BEER ON ICE Shoes! Shoes! NEW, I1ARGE6T AND BEST STOCK OF LADIES', GENTLEMEN'S AND CHILDREN'S SHOES AT LESS THAN PHILADELPHIA PRICE8. AN ENTIRE NEW AND LARGE STOCK OF WALL PAP E;R Which Will Be Sold at Prices to Defy Competitiea. Having had many years' experience in the business, I only tax an opportunity to convince my customers that I can sell them st tfcs lowest possible prices. Please examine my stock before buying elsewhere. tLDRIDGE JOHNSON, 318 Washington Street

ALL WINTER GOODS TO BE SOLD AT COST A lot of Children's $2.50 coats reducod to $1.96. $4.00 ones reduced to . . . . ,. . - . $2.98. Also a SPECIAL REDUCTION in Ladies' Coats. J. LAVENTHOL 319 Washington Street ■c (8 tora opan eVenlngg and stormy days.) 4J