r 8ATURDAY, MAY 2, 1914- , CAP* MAT STA* AM9 * AT* ■' . ™ ■ "■ - ■ ——i ■ ■ ' ■!'. i ■ 1 «'i 1 i .-jaea— & ■ . .. , ... U.I.J, ■gg^eaa«BnBrtiMfcgg^— ana*—
I Children Cry for Fletcher's
The Kind Yon Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of /? - and has been made under his per- ! . ^//^/9^-Z- sonal supervision since its infancy. V&tfTy, J<ccc/UM Allow no one to deceive yon in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and " .Tnst-as-good " are but » Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of > nnil Children— experience against Experiment. What is CASTORfA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. For more than thirty years it has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation. Flatulency, Wind Colic, all Teething Troubles an<r Diarrhoea. It regulates the Stomach and Bowels, assimilates the Food, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Pahacea— The Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of In Use For Over 30 .Years The Kind You Have Always Bought
the old time taverns STORIES OF OLD TIMES AND OLD CUSTOMS IN CAPE MAY COUNTY WITH ALLUSION'S TO ANTI-SA-LOON SENTIMENT. By Joseph R. Wilson. ' (Written for the Star and Wave) (Continued fom last week) Mac key Williams who kept the Ridgeway House in Philadelphia for many years, came to Dennisville, and built the Qatzmer House. It was largely patronized by gunners and sporting men. ^ The necessity of these Inns and Taverns was passing away. The railroad had taken the travel. The old stage* coach \ and the toot of the stage man's horn was heard no more. The temperance sentiment was growing. The liquor business was losing caste. When the time «une for a renewal of his license it was refused and the house was closed. Mr. Williams died shortly after. Mackey Wllliams was considered one of the most genial and the best man ever in the business. Gentlemanly, courteous in demeanor. accommodating, full of fun, occassional!}' going on a frolic, driving two or three horses on a tandem string, for be was a lover of horses, full of wit and jokes. One day at Cape May Court House they had a terrapin dinner, ktackcy being a connoisseur, decided the aoup and dinner was made of snapper. After dinner he got on his hands and , feet, commenced crawling. His friends called "Where are you going Mackey?" | "This loggerhead I just ate is taking me to Crooked Creek Swamp just above here," was his reply. James J. Ludlam kept a tavern in 1 South Dennis. This was considered as orderly and well kept as any in the . county. He would not allow any rowdylam or drunken men to loiter in his bar*rx>m. Yet he would have his periodical
FOR STOMACH TROUBLE" John W. Skillen of Sidney, Ohio, Has Found a Remedy. Experts declare that the reason Gtomach disorders are so common in this country is due to hasty and care- ; less habits of eating. 8tom&ch troubles and run-down conditions Usually go together. John W. Skillen of Sidney. Ohio, j •ays: "I had a bad stomach trouble fer years, and became so weak that t could hardly walk or do any work. My appetite was poor, and it seemed Impossible to get any relief. Since saMny *YinoT I find a remarkable improvement in my Health, my digestion Is much stronger, and I have gained In weight. I would net be without ftTnoi." Vino! makes weak stomachs strong because it strengthens and tones up the weakened, tired and overtaxed nerve' at the digestive organs. Vinol la easily assimilated by the weakest fmschs. and is delicious to the taste. Try a bottle of Vlnol with the nnderstandlng that your money will be returned If tt does not help yon. r. 8.— Stop scratching, our Sam
sprees, keeping on one until he became 1 so sick he could drink no longer. Then ' he had his fears, would not allow a j I lighted candle near him, fearing it would j | ignite his breath, and he would blow up. j ( After one of his long dissipations ho ( thought he was going to die. He sent | . for his neighber, Jacob J. Price, to pray i with him. As he entered, he saw Mr. | I Ludlam sitting, 'an object of respair, un- ! shaven for weeks, the tobacco juice com- [ j ing from his mouth, flowing down his [ : face on his shirt front. He said, "O, * Jakey, I think I shall die, don't you 1 think 1 had better join church." "Yes, I Uncle Jim." What church shall I join j Jakey?" "Well, Uncle Jim, I think you . ought to join the one that uses the most | • . water." Uncle Jim recovered. A few I i years after his license was refused, and that tavern passed out of existence. Mr. Ludlam died shortly after, and that j ■ house was/open for prayer meetings by I his widow who was opposed to the busi- | , • ness a long time before it was elosqdi ■ About four miles above Cape May near i Bennett's Station, was a Tavern kept by Mr. Hoffman. Being in close proximity i to Cape Island it had quite a patronage. | > The house wis demolished many years I ago. The site is now used for farming. ' Moses Dalby opened a tavern at t Goshen and kept it many years. When a young man I made that place my - home. There was very little drinking at ■ J this place. One of the guests at dinner > one day was quite boozy. He called for r liquor, filling acup half with coffee, he 1 filled it with liquor, saying he liked his t coffee half and half. The people of ■ Goshen were very much opposed to this j [■ place. They made a remonstrance and i • | it was closed as a tavern. ® I The Pierce's Point House was kept by 8 Hugh Holmes for a long time, and then I closed Op business as a tavern. T i At Town* Bank a house was kept for a ' 8 j long time, near a race track. Tbous- j J ands of people would congregate there to \ witness the races. The house was closed > 8 a long time ago. I At Higbee's Beach a public house was* ' _ I kept by the late Joseph H. Higbee, when j I ' the line of steamers run from Philadel- ' phia to New York, the beach was the J landing place 'for passengers to he conI veyed to Cape Island as it was then < I called. This plantation and beach has I I been in the family since the grant of I I land was given by King George of Eng- ' 1 land. A sand plant ia erected on the I beach. Thousands of tone of gravel and • I sand is exported all over the United ! J I States. Germany, Canada and other ' countries. ^ At Cape May Point John Little kept . a j the Comfort Cottage a long time. John I I Corson afterward lived and died there, - but was not licensed for quite a time beS fore it was abandoned. 9 There was a house at Green Creek \ kept for entertainment for many years. j On the sea aide road leading to Bees- £ ley's Point, John Smith kept a licensed house for a long time. There was also ; one at Bees ley's Point, p 1 At' Cape May City was the Tontine 1 House, Atlantic Hotel, United States ' Hotel, Washington House. The Arctic, • Stockton, feoogresa Hall, The Rudolph, £ New Columbia, The Ebbitt, The Arling- • ton. The American, Green's House, the Shield's House, Qnidort's House, Man O sion House, Old Columbia, Mason House, t There was one where the bakery npw stands oa Mansion Street. [ j
The passing of all licensed house is near at hand. It is in the air, in the saloon, in the churches, on the streets, in the courts, in halls of legislature, state i and national, and will soon be in the statute books of these United States of America. People of all classes are awak- - eninj^ to- the absurdity of permitting these agencies of sin and destruction which are costing the cquntry huge sums of money as well as untold misery, want disease and eviL ON THE LJQUOR LAW "Laymen's Guide to the Liquor L&ws of New Jersey with a Digest of Supreme Court Decisions and Suggestions for Law Enforcement." Such is the title of r. pamphlet just 'issued by the Anti-Sa-loon League of New Jersey. It is prepared by Samuel Wilson. Assistant Superintendent of the League, vlto lias had eight years of very active experience in connection with New Jersey Excise conditions. The book is copiously indexed and written in form so that it is valuable for guidance of Law and Order Societies, Temperance Organizations, and Patriotic Citizens who wish to know what can be done and how to do it in securing obe'dience- to law on the part of saloon keepers. The work would appear also to he of value to lawyers as a, key to the complicated liquor laws, and saloon keepers would jind it valuable in telling thorn what not to do. Anti-Saloon League of New Jersey Ordway Building. Newark, N. J. Rubber Bands at Star and Wave Sta fionery Department. Consult Jesse Brown on Tin Roofs and Spouting. .
Diabetes Loses ' Its Terrors ''specialist believes cure has 8 1 been found for this dread disease. ' Diabetes no longer itoed be a terror to ■ I those who have become victims to this dread disease. * 1 As the result of extensive experiments, 9 1 a specialist announces that a simple * | plant growing wild in Mexico, is a spec1 j ifie in the treatment of diabetes, quickly '> reducing the specific gravity and sugar. 1 restoring vigor'and builcRng^ up the sys1 torn. t I Thi6 harmless vegetable remedy should ' relieve the patient of his worst symptoms 1 in the most aggravated cases, within a '• week, and to prove it, we will mail a 50c t package for 10c to help pay distribution r cost, with free booklet of special value - to the diabetic, containing latest diet lists and exclusive table of food values. r ! giving percentage of starch and sugar y | (carbohydrates) in 250 different foods. y ' Diabetol herb is sold under guarantee of satisfaction or money refunded. g | Tell your afflicted friends of this offer and send 10c to-day for a full sized 50c package. Ames Chemical Co., Dr*t., 444-C, Whitney Point. N. Y. ft " You con get Diabctal from Mccft^p , Pharmacy, at the regular price, r * ' ; . Sheriffs Sale * By virtue of a.writ of Fieri Facis 'or sale of Mortgaged Premises, to n J i8 reeled, issued out of the Court oi j a1 eery of New Jersey, on the 21st d of i April, A. D., 1914, in a certain se wherein Sallie E. Schellenger is *» ' plainant, and J. Harvey Bennett -ux n ' et als. are defendants, i shall cxpdBe to I sale at public vendue, on I MONDAY, MAY 18th, 1914, i between the hours of twelve and five '* I o'clock p. m., to wit, at one o'clock in o the afternoon of said day, at the 1 Sheriff's Office, in Cape May Court 1 House, Cape May County, New Jersey: . | All that tract or parcel of land and 8 premises hereinafter particularly den scribed, situate in the City of Cape May, - | in the County of Cape May, and State e of New Jersey. » I BEGINNING at a point in the north - | westerly side line of said Washington n Street, at a distance of three hundred s j and fifty and three-tenths feet northf easterly from the northeasterly curb i line of Jefferson Street, as now located, being the corner of a newly established 6 , division line between Louis C. Sayrc d and Sarah Adelia Smith, located Fori vember 13, 1905, and running from r I thence north, forty-two degrees west j two hundred and seventeen and threetenths of a foot to the southeasterly t j line of lands belonging to the heirs of n Charles Foster, decrased ; thence along , i their line north, forty degrees east, one " hundred and twenty feet, more or less " j to a corner standing in the line of lands now belonging to Catharine S. Morris; k tlience along said line south, thirty-nine . degrees and fifteen minutes east, two hundred and seventeen feet, more or '' less, to the northside of said Washingd ton Street and southwest corner of o ; Mary H. Doak's lot ; thencd along the j north side of said Washington • Street, | south, thirty-nine and a quarter degrees * j ire-t, one huundred and fifteen feet to es the place of beginning. c, - COLEMAN F. CORSON, Sheriff, h. Dated April 22, 1914. Samuel F. Eldredge, Sol'r. £ 4-25 -4t p f 1 10 B0 OkiiimOrr : •AWR.*
PROFESSIONAL HENRY H. ELDKKDGE ATTORNEY -AT -LAW Solicitor In Chancery tor New Jsraey j Member of Pennsylvania Bar. Cashier Merchants National Bank Cape May. New Jersey. J. ffPlCKR LteAMDTO counsellor- at-law Solicitor, Master and Examiner In Office: Hughes and Kranklin streets Cape May, New Jersey. SAMUEL F. ELD HEDGE A TTO RN K Y - A T -LAW Merchants National Bang Building Washington and Decatur Sts. Cape May, New Jersey. NOTARY PUBLIC Solicitor and Master in ChanceryKeystone 'Phone J6A. FLOYD C. HUGHES ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Office: 403 Washington Street Cape May. New Jersey. NOTARY PUBLIC Solicitor In Chancery Q. BOLTON ELDREDGE ATTORNEt-AT-LAW Offices: Merchants National Bank Building -Washington and Decatur Sta. Cape May, New Jersey. NOTARY PUBLIC Solicitor In Chancery ' Keystone 'Phone S£x JAMES M. E. HILDRETH COU N SELLOR-AT-LA W Solicitor, Master and Examiner in Chancery NOTARY PUBLIC Offices at No. 211 Ocean Street Cape May. New Jersey. _ Keystone 'Phone 3»A LEWIS T. STBVEN8 Co u nsellor-at- Law Master In Chancery Supreme Court Commissioner ' Commissioner for Pennsylvania. MORGAN HAND, JR. CIVIL ENGINEER AND SURVEYOR , CAPE MAY COURT HOUSE, N. J. Bell "Phone 6 SIS Wesley avenue. Hell 'Phone 66X Ocean City, N. J. > DR. J. It OLIVER DENTIST Estey Building, 1120 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. 4(One door above Keith's Theatre) AH* Appointments may be made by BeH Telephone, Walnut 1233D. Extracting > painless. You Can't Fit Your Eye with a Tape ^g3»l Measure stfAjk It has to be done by \ one who knows how. < i ' We have qualified ; m ourselves by years of , s fSJ' study and experience. < i fl|H Satisfaction guaranc J iiiK* teed in every case. . C. A. LONGSTRETH. Specialist in Eye Testing. e 222 Market Strees. Philadelphia r CAPE MAY OPTICAL' - f 543 Washington Street Cape May, N. J. r KvepyAag for tbe Bye. c Finn<Ti(ion Lenses a Specialty Keystone Ph*ne 44D. W. L. Ewing Jr. 1 wagon buttder , [automobile painter f Large »nd Small Woik CarehkHy Executed 1 Estimates Chesrfully Furnished ° W. L. EWTNO. JR. West Perry Sts., e Keystone Pheae t i m. k. brown PRACTICAL AUCTIONEER 2S V,.. . n Ben aaytbtefc Bay tuaa or Bay yiam. nabto. |, 111 Yosk Ave. Wot Gaps Ma*. d ; HENRY C BOHM Dealers la F - FISH. OT9TERS. CLAMS. ETC. f LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES BEST POSSIBLE QUAUTl* ,s PROMPT DELIVERIES CHOICE OYSTERS AND CLAIM 0 Phone No. Ksystoae l-to© * JACKSON STREET NEAR if W. J. AND 8. R. R. DMFOT " JOHN BRIGHT ' '■ iEML OSEUSU » UkWial »
*° Keren. See feede sad eelede, TyniiMn Opa an the year. Cotter, treda aolkited. Oeiee by pkatt promptly attended to aad deliveredBoth Phone*. JfW J. McCANN Keystone Telephone, 8SP&D. Wm. F. Brown PLUMBING. STEAM and ®MS FITTING Jobbing A Specialty. 3 1 J (Mansion Street , Estimates Furnished cape may Keystone Telephone 128 A
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HOUSECLEANINQ TIME IB HIM ami ia apt to be attended with unpleasant circumstances, especially whan «M removal of furniture and pictures brtagn out the defects to your wall papers, ft Is also the beat time to have new pap aw - Ing done, and a postal mailed toW. L 1 LeNotr will bring him to you wlM samples of any description. His woMt Is of the best, and his prloas more tkflb reasonable. w. lenoir «T4 WASHINGTON STREET Keystone Pbone lSlx.
ib..VVa.-h-9-Vh . ■ a > > dy . iff (y^le f c J I ^ ? fPEIRCE SCHOOL is America's best-known finishing w school for young men and young women about to m enter business. t Students deal with actual business affairs, developing CR initiative, confidence and efficiency. £ Commercial, Secretarial and Shorthand courses- including as much instruction in general educational subjects as the Mr § student may need. Graduates always in demand for well paving positions. m Fall term begins in September. X Day and Night Sessions. A F*t l9th catalogue zddrcsa Mr I PEIRCE SCHOOL f Record Building Philadelphia X
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[A GOOD TALE bears repeating — that is why we never get tired repeating that our goods always g've enthusiastic satisfactiew whether it bd rare wines, high grade whiskies, gins, brandies or cordials. You always get the best that you mm procure anywhere, whether it be in imported or domestic goods, at
S. TEITELMAN 312 and 314 Wa»hin«ten St Capa May, N J. PROMPT DELIVERY RBTH PHONES SPECIAL PRICES FOR WHISKIES AND WINES FOR EASTER OOJJ) BOTTLKD BEER OK 1GK
Shoes! Shoes! NEW, LARGEST AND BEST STOCK. OF LADIES', GENTLEMEN'S AND CHILDREN'S SHOES AT L1M THAN PHILADELPHIA PRICES. AN ENTIRE NEW AND LARS® STOCK OP WALL PAPER Which Will Be Sold at Fmm to Itoty Onmatortiirb Having had many jemm' cfaiiaaaa ia ta* had—, I only aac _ tffi apportnnity to convince ay cetoaew that I oaa toll them at 4a to* cat possible prieec. Please snwiM ay steak hefaM buying cla» ' ELDRIDGE JOHNSON - 318 Washangton Street . - ■ , - WATCH FOR THE WAGON Aa the roads are rapidly improving, we will now " be able to supply our customers in the County regularly with a full line of Spring and Sunaaser stock which wo will sell at the leweet possible prices. WATCH FOR THE WAGON A LAVEKTHOLm Wiit ,l Si.

