Cape May Star and Wave, 19 June 1915 IIIF issue link — Page 7

PAGE SEVEN v CAPE MAT STAR ASD WATS &1TUMUY, JUNE n, uu.

THE AUTOMOBILE SALES CORPORATION invites each intending purchaser of an Automobile to a ride in the EIGHT CYLINDER CADILLAC Irrespective of the price you have in mind to pay for a car, this invitation is extended to "y°u» without obligation on your part in any way. Drop a line to us and we will arrange for a demonstration in the STANDARD OAR OF THE WORLD. AUTOMOBILE SALES CORPORATION 142' North Broad Slreel PMIidlplli H. V I • ■!] . / II1 I jl

ii !1 j. "SWIFT-SURE" FERTILIZERS Made For All Purposes. Sold at the STEVENS CANNERIES CAPE MAY AND GOSHEN - i ■ == < I DERR'S ICE CREAM ji Special Attention to Family Trade. Orders Promptly Delivered ' Factory, 314 Mansion St Dining Room, 313 WAstk*et°* £ TABLE B'HOTB DIVRIBI A S FECI ALT T KtritOM Fbont S«A _ _____ aGET AN EASY PUMPING WELL | F.GOODELL ELDREDGE ARTESIAN AND DRIVEN WELLS. Non - corrostwe j points ased exclusively. 153 York Ave., West Cape May j

|l. H. SHITH || \\ Clothier p 1) 608 WasNngtwi SI al1 h \ Opposite Kaadlag Sto. C j j 1 5 GAPE IUY I. J. | h 2 Sulta for II end rpwiHi fa ^ 1 2 C Overcoats traao ft to fit 5? H WALLPAPER. Large assortment of desirable patterns for Parlors, Dining Rooms, Bed Rooms, Halls, Kitchens, etc. Special Prices on Imported, and Domestic Plain Oat Ileal and Felt Pipers. See my com- i plete line before making your Spring purchases. JOSEPH K. HAND Jr. 315 Washington St. ' Over Star and Ware Office. I STOVES STORED— ti.50. per season. Why allow them to stand around all summer and rnstt Call Jesse M Brown to remove them.

1 TEN ; Strong Companies 1 Aggregate Capital over 150.000.000 ] ] Represented by SAMUEL F. EL- 1 DREDGE Fire Insurance Agent. 1 Twenty-Si* years of experience. Your Insurance placed with me is absolute protection from loss by fire. , i Apply to ( S. F. ELDREDGE 1 National Bank Building f Cape May. New Jersey. ( 1 t W. H. BRIGHT i Fire Insurance la any part of Cape May Ce ; HOLLY BEACH* N J < — — . s ■ " 1 JOHN BRIGHT GENERAL INSURANCE ; . 1 Real Estate and Mortgage Investments ucn uotat waowooD «.j. 1 ■ — :

: 1 Ware's Drug Shop ] (THE REXALL STORE) , Patent Medicines, Drag Sundries, j ■ Toilet Goods at Lowdst Prices; Ask to i see the Bin. Line Rubber Goods, 2 year i guarantee; also fresh stock of Pirika, • Sam o set and Hurler Candies; All Writ- < ing Paper and Holiday Goods reduced. ] Washington and Decatur Street, Deeatnr and Washington Streets ] Oh* M»y.

. I BIG TOPS COMING The Chavtc-iq ..j is on its way a ! Town a Day and will be Here , July 3. — Dress Rehearsal at Swarthmtre for Four Dc/js. Summer is here and nitli it the festive Chautauqua. If you don't believe it yon should pay a visit to . Swarthmore, Pa., where the headquarters of the Swarthmore Chautauqua are located. There is a picturesque tented city that has been erected, whole lanes of square living and dressing tents, and the big auditorium tent — all of them on the lower campus of the "Little Quaker" College — nestled among I the trees. The dress rehearsals for the! more than twenty companies which will go out to furnish the annual Chautauqua for one hundred and sixty towns this season, are on. All is bustle and activity. ( From the big warehouse to the i nearby railroad siding loaded carts constantly pass. "Big Tops"' r. re spread over the grass for their final repairs — it is a curious sight to see the absorption of the workers, each intent cn his own job. The canvas-men move their sewing machines around the big triangles of brown cmvas. which properly pieced together will later • make fourteen auditorium tents. Clerks move to and fro checking 1 the innumerable items essential to jeach tent equipment. Gangs of j husky crewmen — mostly college I hoys from the gray buildings up Ion the hill, strain and pull, loading equipment on hoard the fourteen cars which it takes to haul Chautauqua to. its opening towns. The first Chautauqua of the seasou opens tomorrow at Tow-son, Md. A little later crowds of visitors from the village of Swarthmore and from the college file into the "Big Top," for it is time for the formal rehearsals to begin. This a crowd of representative Pliila1 delphia suburbanites, eager for the to be unfolded during the next four days. They have grown familiar with Chautauqua, for Swarthmore is the home of all the Chautauquas of the Eastern United States. Apd new the performance is on. The Director, a quiet man in gray, sits in an inconspicuous corner the edge of the crowd. His pencil keeps accurate tab on the , effect which each number present- i ed has on this "test audience." Int the evening, about 11.30, there will be a "Talent -Conference" when points raised during the day will < be brought up and settled. The Dunbar SingiDg Orchestra; the Japanese Play, "Along the Road to Tokyo;" the HackettFlorenee Concert Company^ the greatest of all magicians, are on today. The Dun bars are a Ladies' Orchestra with 6ome clever stunts ■ and catchy music. They are "openers" on the "A" circuit and have a program designed in the lighter vein of Chautauqua. "The Bee," "The Pick of The song and the "Gay Jiajor" are done with tell- 1 ing effect. . With the Toyko Company a serious vein is struck. Dur- ! the day two little plays designed to give an insight into Japanese — plays done in the simple Japtraveling players style, by aof real Japs, and giving the Japanese love of flowers, some esthetic dancing, illustrations of Japanese life, are all woven into ' little love stories. It is the artistic way in which the thing is done that appeals. They create an unusual atmosphere. The audience becomes a-flutter with sympathy > for the little Japs as some of their wealth of legends and folk lore are worked in. The ladies take an 1 especial interest as the "Latest from Tokyo" are revealed. The Florence- Hackett Company is a musical company of decided merit. Mr. Hack- i eft, tenor soloist of the party comes of a musical family. His brother is now — or was, when last | heard from before Italy entered the war— playing Rjgolletti in the title role at Milan, Italy. This is Mr. Hackett 'a first experience as a Chautauqua singer. Today was the first time that he ever sang out of doors, and remarked afterwards that he was agreeably surprised to find how easy it was to sing in a tent. His voice is big, his tones remarkably rich and pure, and liis . interpretation leaves absolutely 1 nothing to he desired. Three arias frofiTtTiKV Creation ' ' by Hayden, • Nprth." "Pipes of ' Gordon's Men," '*Ah Moon of My Delight," were wonderfully done. "Mr. Hackett is an artist who has a future before him. i Miss Florence, violinist, and ;

j Mrs; Hackett, pianist for the company, were able support 1 1 With Germain the wizard, the t , final performance of the day takt ' es place. The luxury of this performance is what startles the uninitiated. With the slight stage 1 e effects afforded hy the Chautaut qua tent it is surprising to see the t finished effect of this performe ance. Germain is indeed a wonder e at the Black Art. The kids have a s taste of pure joy, and this is re5 fleeted in large measure on the , b face? of the older members of the , b audience. "The people love to be • i fooled" says Germain, and they ; 5 do. ri Table Levitytion, Slate Writing ' I — "all without the aid of spirits," 2 ' savs Germain, hard to believe 1 sjthougirit is. The miraculous » growth of an orange tree from . which real oranges and real blos- , soms are plucked and thrown to . the audience. "Miss Confettie," » with her mysterious appearance l'and disappearance, all this sends 'I the crowd home in a delightful r mood. t And now Chehtauqua lias start - . •>•'. Already the first towns hav. had the earlLr features p resent < I . to tlieui. The summer will tak- . ' 1 ii'iu to eighty or more town.-,. , Their progress will he as steady as{ r t:vk» itself.. Omvar.i tliey go, a ' town a day, and soon — almost be- j , fore we are aware — they will . ! ] reach our town. That day will'he 1 f a glad one, for these people shed . joy as they go. Their measure i J full and it, is they whcTmake Cha > , 1 tauqua 7. joyous days, l 0 ' j

CASTORIA For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years As for the freedom of the seas, ' Germany thinks that it looks like i ■ rain. Mexico is so near home that it ■ is a good place for charity to be- ( ■ gin. As a diplomat none will deny t . that Elihu Root pens a stately sig- < , nature. • * • ; Some Mexican officials may ob- ' > ject to forced fee' inc. hut the liun- , - gry citizens 1 1 • • • »- I President Wilson declines to be ■ i led out into the flowery pastures 1 [ of elocution and circumlocution. ' ... | ; American of foreign parentage ! ; are said to read the best literature, i . However, the best sellers are read ! ; by the prettiest girls. ' What a horrible choice is of- : j fered to Mexico— to be good; vol- | . untarily or else under compulsion ! j 1 Ain't it awful Mabel. I With 950.000,000 bushels of • wheat "in sight" the Standard of - American breakfast flapjacks . ought to be noticeably uplifted. , Mexico is lucky to have an . "Uncle" who is willing, benevo- . lently to help it straighten out its , troubles. Some street railway men are t talking of a strike in a way to , make one think they are desperatet ly trying to discredit their own , cause. > Probably those ferocious Belgian . women and children referred to in > the German White Book were as ' completely armed as the Lusitania. • • • | 1 i The colonel does not mind those I I fractured ribs as much as he does t his shattered reputation as a rough • rider. ' Anyway you cannot unscramble • a steel omelet. j Strange that Germany did not jl protest before the fact that the ' Lusitania was sailing armed. \ 1 C'arranza is as garrulous as the Arabian Nights barber — and about ' as convincing. 1 ... j Out of respect for the brides the 1 t would-be divorcees ought to declare a truce until July. 1 i J Switzerland might do a trej mendous business just now by exporting those Alps to flat coun- , f tries. j r • « Getting a municipal reform inl aug-u rated is almost as difficult as getting a broken window pane re1 placed.

BilDIi N0NFREEZING WATER FOUNT Vary Useful Invention for Winter Uee In the Poultry Yard— He* aa Opening at tide. A aupply of treah water la at all times essential far the health and comfort of the chickens. and te the winter time It hA hOeoU thine *> provide, tor the water will freeze tight la a few minutes after It is pat out. la claimed by none observers that water wbleb la slightly heated win congeal more rapidly than cold water. 4

Nonfreczing Fount. . ...

so tfcet this suggestion does not ofi fer any relief. A new invention to ■ take cure of the water In winter weath1 er is shown in the accompanying cat, the subject of a recent patent grant. It has an opening at Its aide where j the water Is supplied to a trough located below the opening of the reser- . voir. Above it is a sloping side walL j The fountain has a removable cover, j which also is packed with nonconduct- ' j ing material. The atmospheric pressure on the small quantity of water in the trough will retain the mass of liquid within the main reservoir so long as the liquid in the trough is sufficient to maintain the orifice or opening to the trough closed. MARKING THE EARLY LAYERS Placed on Leg of Pullet Beginning to Lay In October Helps in Selection of Breeders. The pullets that begin laying first as a rule the best layers; it Is from these pullets and bens that we should hatch our breeding birds. Colored leg bands are useful for marking birds with special points; a red band on the leg of each pullet that begins to lay In October will make the selection of breeders next spring easier. The Missouri state poultry experiment station this year had fifty pullets bred from good layers which began to lay when a little over four months old. In every case the pallets that began to ' lay first came from the highest laying hens. Of the thirteen pullets that began laying flrtt, three were Buff Leghorns. two Barred Plymouth Rocks, four White Leghorns, one Ancona, one Camplne, one Rh In eland er, and one White OrpliRfon- The Barred Rocks and the White Orpington weighed from three and a half to four pounds each; all the others from two and a half to three and a fourth pounds each.

Clean nests mean clean eggs. Clean, fresh eggs spell clean profits. All growing turkeys should have as much grain as they will eat twice a day. The American hen laid 20,000,000000 eggs last year and had a good right to cackle. The hen, after laying an egg, needs a drink of water. See that It la always accessible.. • • • An egg contains quite a large percentage of water, hence water must be supplied In plenty. As fowls have no organs for mastication, their food must be prepared for digestion In the gizzard. The cry now is for winter eggs. The poultry keeper smart enough to get them Is the one who is successful financially. Unslaked lime, coal ashes or dry dirt are good«materials to scatter over the floor and under the roosts/after a good cleaning up. Keep the hopper full of dry mash i all Of the time. This gives the chickens an opportunity to balance the grain rations fed. • • • Dressed poultry must now be of uniform size and color, and must be of good size, with a generous supply of meat on the breast • • • The Guinea fowl Is growing In favor as a market bird, the fleah coming •! to the flavor of game th»n any of our domestic poultry. • •* • The hens should barb a plaoe to roost and It sboald not be over the cows, on the (arm Implements and buggies, or In the-bsymow.

EXTRA. SESSION OF ... . CONGRESS SUGGESTED President Wilson has been nrged to cnll Conrrerg together in Oc- r tcber in extra session for the special purpose of pasting s bill au1 tborizing the Government to build, own and operate a. gre-t merchant marine so that the United States will enjoy the greatest era of prosperity ever fmown and \ ill stand as a commercial and financial giant among the nations of the earth. POWDER IH SHOES AS WEIL AS GUTO. Foct-Eaze to be Added to Equipment of HorviUl Gorpo at Pert* Way* Under the above 1 radiug the Dertoit _Free Preea, among other thinga aaya: The theory is that eoldirr* whose feet a"> ir good c-nditiri can nc'k farther .i'pnd fe«tcr than soldiers v. ',-q have ecrn<: a:l(] .bunions incased in -awbide. The Government's foot po— der order is regarded as the last word in the scientific outfitting of the defenders of the flag." The English, French and Allied a Troops constantly make use of Allen's * . Foot-Ease. It takes the friction from the shoe and rests the feet. This foot i powder, shaken into the shoes of soldiers, has long been in use in the German army, and Uncle Sapi's adoption of this form of treating and easing the feet, emphasizes the testimoqv of the , millions of people the world over, who ' are shaking. Allen's Foot-Ease, the antiseptic powder, .into their shoes, and using it in the foot bath, as the only practical and lasting treatment for easing and absolutely preventing sore feet. CAPE MAY COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT Ernest W. Kemp j In Attachment Charles H. Pease } NOTICE. I Notice js hereby given that a writ of attachment at the suit of Ernest W. Kemp, against the rights and credits, moneys and effects, goods and chattels, lands and tenements of Charles H. Pease, a non resident debtor, for the sum of Five Thousand Seven Hundred j and Fifty Dollars, issued out of the I Circuit Court, of Cape May County, on the Fourth Day of May, A. D. 1915, returnable on the Second Day of June, A. D. 1915, has been served and duly executed, and was returned on the twen-ty-eighth day of May, A. D. 1915, by the Sheriff of the County of Cape May. JJated June 4, 1915. A. C. HILDRETH, Clerk. MORGAN HAND, Attorney. 429-6-12-5t SHAKE INTO YOUR SHOES Allen's Foot-Ease, the antiseptic powder for painful, smarting, tender, nervous feet. It takes the sting of corns and bunions. Over 100,000 packages are»being used bv the German and Allied troops at the front Sold everywhere, 25. Sample FREE. Address, Allen S. Olmsted, LcRoy, N. Y.

JK(axw£ll New 1915 Model *695 17 New Features, We bare, ri£ht here, the oar (for which you have waked. It holds Jo road porfoedp at 50 miles an hour. Itoarriao ft re grown people ooasfortabty. It has left-hand jdrivo aeto. It ridee— nifty— any SftOOe «v— * officio kfrings on rear. It bat • final male of entf-akid for tHo tad the MM ate* tiree 30x3*4 Imch _ ell around. His fwfly agufopaft . I —top, iiinfchlild indipaedlj i p, I tK^ Mu y | r,Whh | j Wildwood Garage I I LOUftUK VUMNM..L I STOVES STORED— fi jo. per season. Why allow them to stand around all summer and imtl Call Jesse M. Brown to remove them.