V" SATURDAY, jrUNl is, 1916. CAPE MAX STAR AND WAVE PAQB i'I fl
i USD FOR MOTHERS n wuvui vyn muinuw • R is csnvcndct&e for mother* to neglect their ache* end peine end suffer fa silence— this only leads to chronic sickness end often shorten* life. If your work is tiring; if your nerves ere excitable; if yon feel languid, weary or depressed, yon should know that Scott's Emulsion overcomes just such conditions. It pnii iim in concentrated form the very elements to invigorate the blood, strengthen the tisanes, ndorish the nerves and build strength. Scott's is strengthening thousands of mothers — and win help yon. No alcohol. 6cott ft Bowse. BlnomflrM. N. J.
180,000,000 RUSSIANS ON THE WATER WAGON In the May American Magazine Captain Granville Fortescue writes an article entitled, "Battling for Warsaw." It is an account of the great war on the eastern frontier of Germany. Following is an extract: "When Russia went to war the Czar with a stroke of his pen put one hundred and eighty million people on the water wagon. And, believe me, this water wagon 'ikon' is no bluff. It is harder to get a drink in Russia today than i^ is at Lake Mohonk. How wise was this edict of the ruler of Russia is now shown in the condition of his army. Their fighting effectiveness is higher than that of the French and fully equal to the English, measured by the physical fitness of the units composing the forces. On the other hand, the German soldiers nearly all carry flasks of whisky or ! other spirits. Ivan the Siberian knows this, and I fear that the fa- ' mous edict is sometimes broken when a hatch of prisoners is gathered in. The flasks are certainly ' contraband of war." Freckle-Face Sua and Wind Bring out Ugly Spots — . to Hemove Easily I Here's a chance, Miss Freckle-face, to ] try a remedy for freckles with the guar- f antee of a reliable dealer that it will not i cost you a penny unless it removes the < freckles; while if ft does give you a f clear complexion the expense is trifling. Simply get an ounce - of .othine — dou- ( ble strength — from Jas. Mecrav or any > druggist and a few applications should [ show you how easy it is to rid yourself , of the homely freckles and get a beau- ) tiful complexion. Barely it more than I one "ounce needed for the worst case. t Be sure to ask the druggist for the t double strength othine as this is the f prescription sold under guarantee of * money back if it fails to remove c freckles. p
1 NAVEL ILL IN COLTS 1 There is experienced considerable difficulty among breeder* of n drift horses in combating what is commonly known as navel or jointe ill. It 1s particularly prevalent r with draft colts, and as the name ■ implies is evidenced by an enlarge- * ment of the joints, particularly the ' knee and hook. . According to the « Animal Husbandman at the New Jersey Experiment Station it is caused bv an infection of the navel of the colt at the time of birth, in instances where the mare foals in a - dirty, filthy stall, and where sanitary precautions are not practiced at foaling time. If the box stall is thoroughly cleaned and disinfected and clean straw or litter used as s bedding, very little danger from s joint-ill will be encountered. Pror viding, however, that the umbilical ; cord is properly severed, it is well r to cleanse the navel stub tliorougli- - ly with a 3 per cent solution of carIwdic fieid, paint with iodine, and : dust daily with boric acid. If nect c.ssarjt-the umbilical cord should be i tied with a silk or a catgut cord, , and thus infection from this source ' prevented. The New Jersey Exi periment Station further states 1 t that there is very little that can 1 i be done in case the animal is once i • infected; hence any efforts should , lie directed at precautionary meas- 1 ; ures. [ 0 GIRLS— STUDY THIS MATTER BEFORE MARRYING ( In the May American Magazine Geo. . J Fitch, the famous Illinois humorous , writer, begins a new two-part love story . entitled. "Cupid vs. Geography" — a humorously alarming prophecy. The scene i- laid in Washington and the principal . characters arc the Hon. Morton B.'Mor- j gan, a rich young congressman from i New York, and Miss Elsie Simmons, the : beautiful, unmarried daughter of an Ohio congressman. Mr. Morgan is sueing for Miss Simmons' hand, and the young lady, who has advanced ideas 1 about women's rights, and so on, in- ' sists that she is going to pick out a husband from the right kind of a state. In the following extract taken from the story she gives her reasons for turning ' down a young man from New York, and 1 one from Delaware, to say nothing of 1 several young men from the South: ' "Proposing seems to be the chief oc- 1 cupation here in Washington.' said Miss ' Simmons. *A New Jersey young man ' proposed to me before I'd been here a ' month. I told him that if I married ' him and went to live in his mosquitostate and should die and leave i some helpless children, he could take all c the money I had left— unless I was care- t ful to make a will — and could marry i some other woman, and she pould live" ( the money and make the children sell if she pleased. He couldn't un- } =============== ' 1 I
Grand Opera Artists For Chautauqu;
mnjfJTLE OPERATIC COMPART TO APPEAR OH OUR PROGRAM.
We "unmet ben m jrtcnire or the t ttmml which 1 wHl appear oo the afternoon and even- J 1* of-tke dmi day at our Chautauqua, c This company Is camposefe St artists t who have won laurels In grand opera. ( Mme. TeUa Farm McKlnnle was prt- 1 ,#a. .donna with Mme. Schumann- ( • Hetnk'a "Love's Lottery." Rose Held- 1 enrefch, contralto, was with the Na-j i ttonal Grand Opera Company, and she j 1
well as Mme. McKlnnle sings In Swedish. German and Italian. J. Allen Grubb is one of the beat teiw on the platform; Burt McKlorp< was with SayasCI English Opera Company, and Margaret pianist. Is a pupil of the famous IGodowsky, Berlin. Their program will Include solos, quartets and an operatic sketch In costume.
■======-=======——— "Cape May Bond" An Exceptionally Fine Paper For Commercial Work of all kinds Give it a trial. STAR*® WAVE PUBLISHING CO.
d er«tan d, either. He seemed tb think I f "'But you're not,', said Mr. Morgan 8 hastily. 'You are a little nervous and excited,1 but ' t "'Thank you,' said Miss Simmons. 1 e 'His old state is a back number of i - forty counts anyway.* A Delaware 1 e young man had the nerve to talk mar6 riage, too. Down in Delaware they 1 V only put a man in jail for a year if he ' S marries more than one wife, and they I 1 make a widow divide her 'husband'* ' 3 estate with his relatives. They haven't ' 3 made a law for women in that State ' . since the Revolution, and yet "he wanted 1 ] mo to go down there and trust to hi* 1 S kind heart and long life. -I told Aim ' j I'd give three cheers for his state g hut not a cent more — that it wasn't 1 l worth it.' - * 1 '"And the Southern men,' said Miss ' ] Simmons, laughing; 'it's killing to sec 1 how they take a -fittle common sense. . Women and negroes totter along on . about an equal footing in Southern 1 laws. They give us both the same ' . careful consideration in voting, and as ' > for child labor, mothers' pensions, j . minimum wage, social evil regulations i . and other women's laws,- they haven't . . looked up their meaning in the en- ; cyclopedias sis yet. I've pointed this ] i out to four Southern men who have - - made mc the rapst beautiful speeches | this winter, and not one of them was . even polite when he left.'" • ;
Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASIO R I A Wentzeii a, SS Perry street, will give yon bids on furniture, carpet and at- 1 - tings for your entire bouse and put II in Diane for yon. STOVES STORED— «i.5o. per season. Why allow them to stand o i around all summer and rust? Call Jesse t ■ Brown to remove them. t, ' LEGAL ADVERTISING - sheriff s sale t By virtue of a writ of Fieri Farias. 1 , for sale of Mortgaged Premises, to me ^ directed, issued out of the Court of Chancery of New Jersey, on the 24th | ^ day of May, A. D. 1915, in a certain j r cause wherein Cape May Building and I Association is complainant, and ' Frederick W. Wolff, et ux et als., are defendants, I shall expose to sale at public vendue, on MONDAY, JUKE 28th, 1915, the hours of twelve arid five o'clock P. M., to wit, at one o'clock in the afternoon of said day, at the Sheriff's office, iu Cape May Court House, " May County, New Jersey. _ Thirteen share in the forty-fifth serof the capital stock of said Coini plainant Association and certain mort-
gaged j remises, with the appurtenances, in the bill of complaint in the said cause particularly set forth and described, that is to say: — All that certain lot of land and premises situated on the southeasterly side of Broad street, in the City and County of Cape May and State of New Jersey, adjoining lands of Dr. Charles Reed, Mrs. A. M. Ivey and others, bounded as Beginning at a corner in the southeasterly side line of Broad street, which is also the northeasterly corner of said. I Reed's land, and running thence south- ' earterly, binding by said Reed's line, one hundred and twenty feet more or less, to lands now or late of Joseph H. ■ Church; thence, by the same, a north- ] easterly course, sixty-two feet, more ■ or less, to the line of lands of Mrs. A M. Ivey; thence thereby, a northwester- ' ly coui se, one hundred and thirty-nine feet, more or less, to the aforesaid southeasterly side line of said Broad stree ; thence binding by said side line, a southwesterly course, fifty-nine feet to the place of beginning. Containing sev- | en thousand eight hundred and forty- . nine square feet of land, be the same , more or leas. Being the same land and premises conveyed to Daniel Church by the last will arfd testament and a codicil thereunto annexed, of Jeremiah Church, deceased, of record in the office of the Surrogate of the Cbunty of Cape May, aforesaid, and which Socrates T. Church, ' having become seized of under the said list will and testament, conveyed to 1 Joseph H. Elwell by deed dated the ' sixth day of February, A. D. 1897, of ' record in the office of the Clerk of the ' county of Oape May in Book No. 142 of ' Deeds, page 81, etc., and which the said 1 Joseph H. Elwell, by deed bearing even " date herewith and intended to be forth- " with recorded, granted and conveyed to 1 the said Frederick W. Wolff, in fee 5 Together, with all and singular the 1 machinery, shafting, belting, pulleys, • ovens and fixtures generally now in or upon the said premises used in the op- 1 eration of the baking business now con- i ducted on thejaid^premises. f OOLg^K F/G0RS0N, Sheriff. Dated ,TuneM>iW5f 1 Jas. M E.'Hildreth, Sol'r. 6-4,4tjpf$'l5.00 1
WHAT IS GAPS MAY BOND? j The question of "What is Cape May Bond?" is frequently asked. In answer] we will say that Cape May Bond is a paper of unusual quality suitable for pea and typewriter alike. lids paper . is made at Holyoke, Mass., ef the best rag stock, and is slowly dried in lofts to insure a uniform quality and to make it as durable as the highest priced paper on the market Cape May Bond is made exclusively for the job priniting department of the Star and Wave Publishing Oo, of Cape May, and is sold at moderate prioos Our reason for having this paper made to order is to insure patrons the best value for money expended. A postal card will bring samples of Cape May Bond with envelopes to match, without obligating you to purchase. Soda Fountain Open The Soda fountain -af^Mecrav's Pharmacy is now open. The equipment is an entirely new idea of the most approved sanitary design. The fountain is attended by a young lady and great care will be takes in the service.
POULTRY FOODS XAYLOB BB06,llTitota«8tt»ri. Cswlm, nTj! LEGAL ADVERTISING PETITION May 4. 1915. To the President and Members of the Council of the City of Cape May: Gentlemen;— , We, the undersigned property owners, owning property on Lafayette street between the Atlantic City Railroad and John's street in the City of Cape May, do hereby respectfully petition your honorable body to forthwith lay a sewer upon Lafayette street in the territory aforesaid, and we would further impress upon you the fact that the Board of Health has at various times, endeavored through, your own order, to have this small piece of sewer to relieve the unsanitary conditions prevailing within the above named terAnd your p-titioners will ever pray, JOSEPH ELWELL, 027 Lafayette street. P. F. MATTHEWS, 632 Lafayette street. WM. M. ALLEN, "25 Lafayette street. A. T. HAYNES, 631 to 639 Lafayette street. 6-5-2ts 3
LUMBER - AND Mill Work geo. ogden & son Meadow View farm Vegetables and Produce ERMA, N. J. Phone 24X A. H. FAULKNER Contractor and Builder Kaystocc Vhona aim §28 Hughes Street Cape May, N.J. PRIZES FOR Best Crops Prizes will be awarded to any farmer , in Capo May County showing the best . crop from one-half bushel of oats, corn , wheat grown in this county, as fol- • . 1ST PRIZE, OATS $10.00 " 2ND PRIZE, OATS 5.00 ] 3RD PRIZE, OATS 250 PRIZE, WHEAT, 5.00 2ND PRIZE, WHEAT 250 1ST PRIZE, CORN 5.00 , 2ND PRIZE, CORN 250 ; Products tor be Exhibited at Court 'at the meeting of the County 1 of Agriculture, first Friday and in Novepber. J JOSEPH CAMP, Pierces P. 0. I County Board of Agriculture
r || it I is ' * IS ' . ,
I, ,1,.,,^. HORSES FOR SALE
f Constantly on hand all sorts of horses from the beapest to the best, any sire to land. Just write what you want and I will send it on 10 daystrial and y wiU take it away if not satisfactory. You peaitiewljy k take no chance as the animal Must Suit Yon. Remember that the guarantee is good en Hones Cows sold at Auction as well as at private sales. Most of Cape May County horses come from ° Woodbine, on account of square dealings. MAX POTASHN1CK
Jul
Woodbine, N. J.
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SPECIAL FOR SPRING at Laventhol's ' A very nice tine of silk Crepe de Chine waists and very latest style in skirts. REASONABLE PRICES. 319 WASHINGTON STREET Store open Daily WHEN FURNISHING A SUMMER home whether it be a cozy bungalow or a magnificent mansion, it is of • importance to secure the aid of a reliable dealer. Your comfort and pleasure depend on your selection not for a day only as with many purchases, but for years to come, and a large percentage of the cost can be saved by the advice and assistance of an experienced dealer. WENTZELL'S, 33 Perry Street Refrigeratore of tried and proven quality. New. importation of mattings. New Linoleums, Crex Grass Ri^gs. Everything in house furnishings. Come in and see. ^
ajBj WINDSOR HOTEL clsv i & near the beach open all the year Y 7 Large Sun Parlorf. Electric Elevators iTHEWINDSOR 0pen anJ s"*" Heal capejiaynj. MBS HALPIN iFUss HALPPt Tk- M9.rv Comfortable Surroundings. Special ine lviarcy rates for Winter and Spring. Open all the Year Excellent Table. MRS. T. C SINK MILLER COTTAGE 934 PERRY STREET v Now open, excellent table, comfortable rooms, good service, convenient location Keystone Phone 58-8. H. H. McPHERSON. siaaH^z MRS. GEORGE i. COOPER 511 Lafajelte Street Caps May, Hew Jersey THE HARRISON NsSSS*~° MRS. C D. HARRISON Cor. Perry and South Lafayette Streets, Capo May, N. J. HOTEL DEVON J. L. KEHR, Proprietor Lafayette Street Cape May. New Jersey BELLEMERE COTTAOE MRS. E. SMITH , 103-11 Perry Street, Cape May, N. J.

