Cape May Star and Wave, 28 February 1914 IIIF issue link — Page 5

PAGE FIVE CAPE MAY STAB ASP WAVE ■■ SATURDAY, FKBRUARY M, m " " nf Unit "" — ^ MM Nmhmm Ma ■ land situate, lying and being in Wild-

SHERIFFS SALE. By virtue of a writ^of Fieri Facias, for sale of Mortgaged Premises, to me directed, issued out of the Court of Chaneerv of New Jersey, on the 11th day of ( February A. D., 1914^ in a certain cause wherein Charles W. Qjpwn, administra- , tor is complainant, and Thpmas J. -Rose, is defendant, X shall expose to sale at - public Vendue, on , MONDAY, MARCH 23rd, 1914, , 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 Chpe May Court , House, Cape Hay County, New Jersey: ] All those certain lots or parcels of land ] situate, lying and being in Wildwood , Crest, on the Five Mile Beach, in the ; county of Oape May, State of New Jer , aey, known and designated on a plan of , lota of the Wildwood Crest Company as , lots Noa 1, 2, 8, 4, 5 and 0, block No. 0«, , and are bounded and described as fol- f lows, to wit: Beginning at the point of intersection , •f the notheasterly side of Rambler f Road with the northwesterly aide of At- , Ian tie Avenue, and extending thence , northeastwardly along the northwesterly side of said Atlantic Avenue a distance of two hundred feet to the southwesterly side of Primrose Road, and 1 thence at right angles thereto to said Atlantic Avenue, between paYallel lines in length or depth northwestwardly (with a width of two hundred feat and binding on said sides of said Rnmbler and Primrose Roads), a distance of one hundred feet, containing twenty thousand square feet of land, strict measure. Also all those ^certain lots or parcels

wood Crest, on the Five Mile Beach, in the County of Oape May, and State of New Jersey, known and designated on a plan of lota of the Wildwood Crest Company as lots Nos. 17 and 18 of block Nos 89, and are bounded . and described as follows : Beginning at the point of intersection of the soutbeaaeriy side of Philadelphia 1 Avenue with the northeasterly side of ' Road and extending thence (1) southeasterly along the northeasterly side of said Rambler Road, a distance of sixty -eight feet to the northwesterly side line of lot No. 16 of said block No. 69 ' shown on the plan of lota aforesaid ' thence (2) at right angles to said -Ram bier Road northeastwardly along saic line of lot No. 16, distance of seventv feet to the dividing line between loti 18 and 19 of said block No. 69 at shown on said plan of lota; thence (3] at right angles to said last course north westwardly along said last named dividing line a distance of ninety-two feel the southeasterly aide of Philadelphia Avenue aforesaid; and thence (4) south westwardly along the southeasterly sidi of said Philadelphia Avenue, a.distanor of seventy- three hnd five-tenths feet tc the (Kiint or plaee of beginning. i COLEMAN F. CORSON, Sheriff. ! Dated February 25, 1914. and Smatherr. Sol'rs. 2-28 -4t p. f.— 814.60 CASTOR I A For Infants and Children. The KiBd Yoa Hare Always BoogM SjAAun. ot

FERTILIZER'S FERTILIZERS Increase your yield per acre by using the Brands of • VIRGINIA-CAROLINA CHEMICAL COMPANY The Largest Manufacturers and Sellers of FERTILIZERS In the world, because they grow the Biggest Crops ALL GRADES FOR ALL CROPS i Two Cars of Fertilizer have just arrived. Now is the tim» 1 to get it right out of the car and insure easy handling ' f Eastern Sales Office ^ I VIRGINIA-CAROLINA CHEMICAL COMPANY , 24 BROAD ST., NEW YORK CITY ; white to tm ros owe or v. o. c. co/s Ajnru/.z. almawac j FOR SALE BY CAPE MAY GRAIN & COAL CO. ' Cape May, N. J. J. SIMKINS, Manager Frost-Proof Cabbage Plants e Gas be planted in the open ground any time during the montha of February, u March or April. Freeting weather will not injure them, and they will mature & headed Cabbage two or four weeks earlier than home grown plants. We want the people of our community to ham from actual testa the - N protts to be made growing early crops of Cabbage from these plants. ® We have contracted wish a company to grow us a supply of plants for debveiy during the months of February, >Lrch and April. VaCieties: Early I Jaraey and Omrleston Large TypeW.k, -field. Succession and Earlv Flat Dutch. Pries.: By Mail postpaid 35c per 100 or $3.50 per 1.000 planta. By Express ftuyer paying the express charges which are very low) 500 plants Tor $1.00; I m lots of 1,000 to 4.000 at $1.50 per 1.000; lots of 5,000 and over at $1.25 per 1,900 planta. Shipment direct from growing station at Yonges Island, S. C. B| Planta guaranteed to reach you in good condition and to produce satisfactory b< crops of headed Chbbage, or we will refund purchase price. fo ai TERMS CASH WITH ORDER. No Shipment sent C. O D pi As a further inducement to introduce these plants and to increase the U simulation of our paper we will give 100 plants postpaid free for each yearlv tn •ASH WITH ORDER SUBSCRIPTION cither new or renewal. By getting us ,D a few new subscribers you can secure what plants you neeed free. ^ The Star and Ware and 100 frost proof cabbage plants at $1.00. 8< BEND ORDER DIRECT TO 11 of ai Star and Wave Pub. Co. si CAPE MAY, N. J. a m.,* \ ■

f : ' Letter and Money in Unsealed Envelope Intact a Uy ASHING TON. — The postoffice department is very careful ^not to allow j » Information to leak out about the inside workings of its offices. but the """ • that one of the most remarkable cases of bonmai cue oi me most remaraaoie oi Hon-

esty that hae ever happened in the history of the department occurred In Baltimore. A woman who is employed by one of the large department stores In that olty has a daughter at school tn a Catholic convent tn Plalnfield, N. J. Recently she wrote her daughter a letter and sealed It in an envelope. Sho also wrote at the same time to the mother superior of the convent and, inclosed $60 In bills. She failed to seal the latter. The money was loose tn the envelope and conld be plainly seen. It was the woman's intention to mall her daughter's letter and then to purchase a money order with the $60 she had placed In the envelope addressed to the mother superior. , At the corner of Charles and Lexington streets she dropped the money tn a letter box. She did "■ she dropped the

not discover her mistake for several hours, but when she did she at once noti- | fled the officials at the postoffice. A telegram was sent to the postmaster i at Plalnfield. N. J., to look out for the letter, as it could not be found In the | Baltimore office. On Thursday a telegram was received in reply stating that j I the letter had passed through the postoffice at Plalnfield and had been : delivered to the mother superior of the convent and that all the money wan ■ In the envelope when It was received. I The woman and the members of the firm where she 1b employed could i i not say too much in praise of the honesty of the postoffice department- It | was perhaps the first time in the history of the department where a letter i had been dropped in a box on the street unsealed with money in full' view and delivered intact. The letter was collected from the street box by an employe of the Baltimore postoffice. It was handled by several men when It reached the postoffice and when it reached Plalnfield It was again bandied by several employes of the postoffice in that city and delivered by a letter carrier. Every man who handled the letter could not help seeing The money, j and yet It reached Its destination. j Dearth of Small Bills and Silver Dollars THERE'S a great scarcity of dollar bills, and even a greater void In the j matter of silver dollars. To that large part of our population that will not be called upon to pay any income tax this Information mar wit «i«. ! ment of novelty. The scarcity of the forms

of money narped does not affect the average man as seriously as it. does the hanks of the country, south afid west, where there is urgent dembed for the small bills — ones, twos and fives, and the big silver simoleons. in their trouble the banks have appealed to Uncle Sam and Ms representatives In the United States treasury. But even your Uncle Samuel is ahy on silver and the small bills, though actually rolling In wealth In gold coin and gold bills. It has come to that stage where a banker nflght send over $100,000 in $20 gold certificates and request Treasurer Burke or some of his assistants to turn over $100,000 In ones, twos and fives of silver certificates, and the messenger would have to carry back the hi* w the w_J of gold certificates, for he 1

would be turned down flat by the treasurer. In the currency trust funds, the general fund, etc., there are stored $49L- j 736,000 In silver dollars, but the only way to make an Inroad on this Immense i fund Is to present silver certificates for redemption, or to offer an equal j amount of silver certificates partially destroyed, soiled, etc., the reason being j ■ that the millions of silver dollars are covered by paper silver certificates for j an equal amount. ( The coining of silver dollars was stopped by the act of 1904. People the east do not care particularly, but out west specie payment Is stlU ' exacted and down south the big dollars are wanted for paying laborers, who ' demand them, knowing that they are not counterfeits; that they "feel good." and "will not burn up. If placed under the cabin floor and the cabin Durns down." Just a Few of the Troubles of Office Seekers NO ONE In tbe world knows the troubles of the office seekers better than ' Joseph Tumulty, the secretary for the president While every congress- < *•» • """" j hundred, or possibly thousand, office seeking : j wuwu.cu, v, UlUUBdUU, UU11X BCCUUK J

constituents on his mind, each of the leglsla- j , tors takes the problems to the White House, where they are dumped in landslide fashion . J | on the blond head of Mr. Tumulty, who. there- j fore, gets the griefs of a nation of unsatisfied 1 politicians. j * He was sitting In his bright and attractive 1 office, which overlooks the sonth lawn of the . , White House as It slopes gently toward the , k Washingtob monument one day. and there en- j , I' lered a Democrat of long experience. He was | | a congressman who Is known to be as tmmov- |r I able In his Democratic principles as the foun- j 1 datlons of the Capitol itself. 1 1 "He came directly toward me." explained It * Mr. Tumulty to Tom Pense. who was Wood- j row Wilson's publicity man in tbe campaign. ; » uson s publicity in tbe

"and there were not only tears In bis eyes, but they permeated his voice as i ' welL , t " 'Joe.' he said, 'here I have worked bight and day to get jobs for severa! hundred of my constituents, and the best. I have been able to land up * to date are four measly little postmaster jobs. And now when 1 get them c all appointed along comes AI Burleson, the postmaster general, who wasn't , anything but a representative In congress, the same as I am. and he sends ao a note asking me to specify that these men are of goodk moral character. ' what's moral character to do with a postmaster? Didn't they have a enough moral character to vote for Woodrow Wilson? I tell you. Joe. the 1 country's going to the dogs." v Sam Buying Lots of Washington Property b UNCLE SAM owns a saloon In Washington. Let It be said In haste, lest tremors be caused, that he will get rid of It quickly. v He is not paying a license fee. mixing drinks nor giving bis nephews a along the downward path. Unc^ Sam Unc%

bought a lot of property in order to make room a new building for the state department, and the 'saloon happened to be included In the purchase. By the way. the saloon which Uncle Sam bought was quite a noted, one In its day. havbeen the gathering place of men of note national affairs for a good many years. It been known as the saloon of mild drinking and mild manners, with more of a Bow of soul than of bowL It will pass, however, and 4n Its place will a marble palace, where future secretaries state will sit to recommend man for office and Incidentally to decide the fate of nations. The new structure of the state will rise, on ground Inst hack from Pennsylvania ,rnmin — ground Just from on uie north and Fifteenth street

on the west, diagonally across from , the treasury department. By and by Uncle Sam intends to buy all tbe buildings on the soot* of the avenue, thus to make a park encumbered with nothing but publlo structures and which will extend ultimately from a point on the river near i Georgetown straight through to the capital. *

1 """ ■ * The Fad Remains 't No amount of misrepresentation by the peddlers of alum baking powders, no juggling with chemicals, or pretended analysis, oil" cooked-up certificates,, or falsehoods of any kind, can change the feet that Royal Baking Powder r has been foand by the official examinations to be of the highest leavening efficiency, free from alum, and of absolute parity and wholesomeness. ! Royal Baking Powder is indispensable ; for making finest ajid-Ynost economical food. ■ — -j ^

• OPEN LETTER. An open letter to. whom it may , concern: , One <5f the chickens you stole while ' . | men slept on the night of February 19th, | ( 1914, was a blind, sick rooster. As yon ( did not know that it had an incurable disease I will take this opportunity to inform you what you ate. Are you not , , ashamed to be branded a chicken thief, and steal from those who never did you a wrong. Shame on you. I presume you are the one who stold the colored ' preachers chickens, and Rev. Mr. Lake's white hen. and my black hen, when you j stole the poor blind, sick, diseased I rooster. 1 would have gladly given you that blind, sick chicken, if you had come . and asked for it, as I did not know what j to do with it,( rather hoping it would | j die, as 1 disliked to kill it. I was really ! I sorry to lose the black hen, as she- left almost daily an egg which I gave to ' i one that was not well, and needed fresh j eggs. By taking that blind, sick rooster ' and black hen you deprived the sick of 1 the eggs. What a mean and wicked man you are to steal the preachers chickens. They did not see you. but there was I one who saw you, and will call you to ' account. Y'ou will not fare as well as 1 Eat the Irishjnqn, who stole Mikes pig. ' His conscience troubled him. He went ' - to the Priest and made confession. "Pat" I j said the Priest, "that pig will meet you 1 I at the judgment." "Father, do you say 1 | the pig will be with us there?" "Yes, : j Pat the pig will be there." "O father I 1 | am so glad, I wilLsay, 'Mike, here's your ' |P'g-'m Unless you repent and confess, you , 1 .will be sent to that place (with other J chicken thieves) whepe you will be in torment, where the worm dieth not, and 1 the firhs are not quenched, because you ' stole tha poor blind, sick rooster, and ' the other chickens. j 1 J. R. WILSON. | £ — WOODBINE COMMENCEMENT. C Exercises incident to the annual com- f mencement at the Baron de Hirsch Ag- I ricultura! School were held here on Sun- I day last. There were present delegates | » from several slates to the number of 38, t (the storm interfering with the arrival of « many »f the gu.-sts. The exercises were t j begun on Sunday and will continue all » I the week, with examinations and demon g j perintendi-nt. delivered the address of j welcome to the delegates present, Joseph « I Rabinowitx. Mav/r of Woodbine, also * I made an address; as did A. Roscnfeld. II.. * L. Bayard, RrfLert D. Maltby, d.-an of' i« the college; /Eli Grecnblatt on behalf of j the farmers, and Prof. H. T. Sabsovitch. I I It was brought out in the annual re- J J port presented by Superintendent Cohen n that Hie graduates of the school had d been uniformly aurcessful. The students ri with whom the superintendent asso- B in extolling flu- character of the ii instruction received at the institution G and said that their efficiency in the ac- R tual problems of the farm had been ai greatly increased; that scientific L methods in all rases made it possible not vi only to make the land more productive. S] but to introduce intensive practices In R all the work performed. P< One of the portions of thq report that- n« received with special gratification n« "as the statement that demands were d< constant for graduates of the Baron de R

| Hirsch Agricultural School, as it had become reeognircH 11-st ttiq inalpifqitMl Has ( thorough, and that capable farmers were produced. " . - ' The young men in attendance, it was brought out .in the reports and addresses come chiefly from the large centers of 1 population, giving an illustration, it was saty, of the strength of the "back to ti e farm" movement, which was one of the aims of the school. The students were not dreamers, it was pointed out, but. sturdy young men who' ft . -re determined to make a success of life, who realized the future that scientific filling of the soil provUed and were preparing to take up their Share of the world's work. ! TIIE BOY SCOUTS The Boy Scouts of America have formed a Troop at Cape Muypith Captain W. ( F. Dent as Troop Master. His couim.sBion numbers 12,iitl3, wh-cb shows how extensively the idea liu.-> progressed in this country. The Troop is made up of twenty -eight boys who ure over twelvo years, and twelve between ten and twelve years. This is a strong and good start and should be a stimulus in building up the physical side of the boy's The motto of the Scout, is "Be prepared," with this before him at all times, acting as an incentive, he is ready to obey the call and do his duty. Before ho becomes a Scout a boy must promise "on my honor, I will do my beet." | | 1st. To do my duty to God and my country and to obey the Scout law. I 2nd. To help other people at all times. | 3rd. To keep myself physically strong, mentally awake, and morally straight. The troop have had several hikes, ai d , the kindness of the Board of Education they have the use of Washingtea Hall every Saturday from 4 Is • P. n. j The Rev. Mr. McCurdy lias been very helpful, as has been the Mayor, W. M. Superintendent of County A. W. Hand, H. B. Moyer, Ph. principal Cape May High School, Lk C. Ogdcn, William Porter and Dr. V. j D. Marcy, in effecting the organiza- | tion. The troop are at present taking ~ company drill. United States Army tactics, physical instructions and the work of a tenderfoot, which is the first grade of the Boy Scout. . I Dr. Marcy lies .-Imfge of the first airf The third clause of the «c«mt is • splendid one. To keep myself phve rally strong, mentally awake mid morally straight, lias the right ring aln-iit it. ft a fine tonic for any red bloode-l hoy. I Members of the Troop are: I Stephen Gidding. Charles A. Swaia. Stephen G. Garrison. Paur I,. V unett, Harry S. Ewing. Snmii-I !•'. Eldredge .Jr., Howard M.~ TruJin-- ' an : H. El dredge, T. Millrf Hand Wia. IT Weaver. Thomas H. Weaver. "Carl H. Seherer. Wm. T. Scherer. YliiYr--' (nbDaniel J. Green, Jr., P. ! !l. Marvin Evans. Alex C. Lewis. A. Ellison. Oscar B. Mm - is. How - ard E. Richardson, St ill well E. Eldn-dge, Tenenbanm. Harry E Ronp Irving Truling, Leslie Hand. .Monro Wilbur De Turk. J B. Welluian, E. Gall&her. Leolin I. Tire Oiu. Charles Bcllangy, Donald Bennett, William Gibson. William Shannessy. Edward Cummings, Gregory OgOscar Tcnenbaum, Edward Davis, Miller.

High Calling of Motherhood _ I jr demands the utmost precaution in maintain2^ J ing health at high efficiency. £ V ~ / It is doubly important and nothing in the world is so needful as Scott's Emulsion, good cheer and sunshine. Scott'a Emulsion makes the blood ■t-T* \ rich and pure. It contains the vital fleshand bone-building properties \ ment. It strengthens the nerves JPI k and creates energy and vitality V J Expectant and nursing mothers B, if f \yj always neaci Scott's Emulsion. R WT YOUR DWUOOIST HAS IT U-gl