PAGE FIVE . CAPE. 2:^1. ST AL Ay D WAV.L SATURDAY. JUNE M, WML "J
f" THE LITTLE SHOP" j 427 Waahington Street \ § A- B. VAN DERVOORT | I OPEN ALL THE YEAR We have a fall line of Stamped Goods, | Colombia Yarns, f Raffia, And all materials to be found in an up-to-date 5 a Art Shop-
EsbMsM 1886 'Phil COHKllli THE Wg STORE QUALITY—The Keynote of Eclipse Shirts Elcipse is more than a Shirt — it's an Achievement. They are huiit to win and satisfy i the best trade. A host of little details— small in themselves— yet details that give Eclipse that smart quality look. Our showing is ready — so you may draw your own conclusions. 0. L. W. Knerr 518 & 520 Washington St Cape May, N. J. Buckoell University Lewkourg, Pa. John Howard Harris, LL. J, President. Summer Courses Begin June 22d, 1915, and Continue for Sii Weeks A fine place to spend the summer. Tor Bulletin giving full information, write Walter S. Wilcox, Registrar, Lewisburg, Pa. I'lai '■ 1 If yon Buffer from Kidney or rKfcfc ES&sStffLS.Ci addrru of two others similarly afflicted and FIEZ — ONE WEEKS* TREATMENT of oar reliable S.S. Kidaey and Bladder Pills. THE S. S. DRUB CO.. CARMMBTOH, OHIO. >
li Emergencies J are beet taken care : of with a glass of good whiskey. In your house — in fact, in every house — there should always be a bottle of Gin or Whiskey near at hand for just such a purpose. For medicinal p and table uae it has no equal. It is pure, stimulating and strengthening. Take our advice — never be without it S. Teitelman's ; Wholesale L WINES AND LIQUORS * 2 312 Washington Street p Both Phones Cape May , N. J SPECIALS 1 THIS WEEK , 3000 yards of Fine laces and Embroideries jnst arrived, to go on sale FRIDAY AND SATURDAY. S Special prices on these goods for two weeks. See Cir Circulars. at 1 Laura M. Brown's 417 Washington Street i SPRING CLOTHING , For either men or women should be (- tailor made. Place your order now with f Sherer, who baa had years of experience ( in producing fine clothing for. men and women. latest Spring samples and styles are now ready. SCHERFR'8 Decatur, near Washington Street Grey Bond typewriter paper, sire 8 1-2 ■ xll, 30 cents per ream while it lasts, t Only 60 reams in this lot Star and ■ Wave Stationery Dept. «
' ARRIVALS AT iTHEHOTELS VISITORS/ FR0M( OTHER LANDS WHO /AVE SOJOURNED IN THIS RASOftT RECENTLY. Pennsylvamans registered at Cape 'May Hotels: Geo. A. Coleman, John ' M.'iim, Jr., K. 11. Cob!), II. E. Walton, H. E. Walton, Jr.. II. II. Parker and wife, , A. C. Musaelmsn, « has. L. McAmilty, Mr. and Mrs. V.- M. Sh::w,»Miss M. Ziilim, ^ Mrs. Edward S. Veil-. Miss C. M. \ eile, E. Tliurneoke. Man' !h Martella, R.V. F. r D. Ward, Lel.'oy Poole, D. T. Baymer, Clias. Clarke, Mi«« 11. Mclill.n, C. II. Heath, Heath. II. H. i inigan, 1). Anderson, Mr. and Mr-. \ i . Whitney, Allen • E. WhitB- v. In 1 hh, Whitney ' Willson, i'. U iiiuiey, A. M. llitclike, ^ Judge and Mrs. J. H. 1-amallc. David J. Sharron. Dr. and Mrs. F. A. Baerieke. Miss J. Danwalter, Mrs. W. Smith, A. .1. ■ Bartlett. Mr. and Mrs. 1- A. Davis. F. G. Hoddick, E. Johnson, Charles Y. Fox. Jr., Ella P. Loag. Dr. E. L. Yanzant, Charles B. Vanzsnt, L. J. Watt, Jr.. Miss Caroline Simmons, Mr. Jas. O'Reilly, G. F. Huston, H. B. Baumprev, E. D. Oustom, G. H. Heiligan. THE MARCY Haddonfield, N. J.- — Grant Knauff. Camden — Clarence S. Dailey, Nelson S. Dailey. Trenton — Mrs. James McKever, Master James McKever, Mrs. M. Lloyd. Cape May— Mrs. Annie Kenner. COLUMBIA Philadelphia — Geo. A. Coleman, John Mann, Jr., F. H. Cobb, H. E. Walton, H E. Walton, Jr., H. S. Parker, Mrs. H. IL Parker, A. C. Musselman, Chas. J. McAnulty, Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Shaw, Miss ^ M. Zahn, Mrs. Edward S. Veile, Miss C. - M. Veile, E. Thunecke. Matilda MartelRev. Frederick D. Wird, LeRoy Poole, Rev. Frederick D. vvirti, i-enoy rooie,
D. T. Bayner, Clias. Clarke, Miss D. McFillen, C. H. Heath. Brooklyn — Geo. Leich. Chicago — Mr. J. Landakcn. | Sharon Hill— H. H. Finigan. Cape May— Mrs. T. W. Eastwick, A. B. VanDervoot. Vineland — M. M. Moway. Reading, Pa.— D. Anderson. COLONIAL Devon— Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Whiting, Allen E. Whiting, Jr., John Robb Whiting, Willson P. Whiting, A. M. Hitclike. Philadelphia— Judge and Mrs. J. F. Lamalle, David J. Sharron, l>r. and Mrs. , Felix A. Baerieke, Miss W. Baerieke, Miss J. Donwalter, Mrs. U. Smith, A. J. Bartlett. Overbrook — Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Davis. Minneapolis — Mr. and Mrs. L L. Corse, I. P. Corse. Germantown — Mr. and Mrs. L. Longhran. Bethlehem — F. G. Hoddick. Easton — E. Jobtison. New York — Mrs. A. L. Walker, A. L. Walker, Jr. Ardmore, Pa. — Charles Y. Fox,ir* Buffalo— E. A. Southall, M«. E. A. Mrs. A.-§lade. Cleveland — George STAR VILLA Philadelphia — Ella P. Loag, Dr. E. L. Charles E. Vanzant. Wilmington — A. U. Porter. CARROLL VILLA East Orange — Mrs. U. E. Lucas. Laurel Springs — Mrs. Mockridge, Mrs. H. Flemming. VIRGINIA Cape May, N. J.— Grant Knauff, Mrs. Grant Knaull. Philadelphia — L. J. Watt, Jr. WYOMING Philadelphia — Mrs. Farnces R. Wadleigh, Master and Misses Wadleigh, Miss Choline Simons, Mr. Jas. O'Reilly, G. K. Burton, H. B. Baumprey, E. D. Guston, . G. H. Heiligman. Baltimpre — Harvey Hughes. Harrisburg — Miss E. B. Kobler. Swainton— Mr. and Mrs. S. T. Bailey. Cape May— Dr.- and Mrs. F. J. Haerer. The Booklovers' Library have opened branch at Ware's Philadelphia Phar— - macy, corner Ocean street and Cogymjbia avenue. Newest books rented 2c per daj60c a month. 461-H-6-26
Mrs. Jennie C. Law Hardy of Australia, addressed a suffrage meeting at - the home of Mr. Geo. Ogden, Sr., on Washington street, Cape May, on Tuesday evening, and also spoke at a boardwalk meeting to an interested crowd. On Wednesday Mrs. Hardy held a large meeting in the City Hall of Ocean City and on Thursday afternoon and ' evening spoke by invitation in K. G. E. Hall at Bio Grande, Addressed a meeting of glass workers at Cape May Court ' House in Italian, which she speaks flu- i eutly, and closed her tour of Cape May County in Sea Isle City, before an enthusiastic audience in the City Hall. Mrs. Hardy said in part: I In 18613 the women of New Zealand, whites and Maoris, became the equals ' of men, the first women in the world to vote for a National Parliament. Not even in their wildest dreams had ' the men who had given women the bal- ; lot, anticipated the success it was going to be. In 1907 the Premier of New Zealand, Richard Scddon, was able to say to his Parliament: "There is today not a pauper in New Zealand." The Commonwealth Parliament of j I Astralia sent a note to the English Cabi- ! ■ net, signed by every member of both , I House*, stating that equal suffrage had j been the making of Australia, and that | ' ' none of the evils that had been prophe- j I sied had come to pass, but much good that had not been anticipated. Cardinal Moran told the women that it was their duty to go to the polls. ^ ' Sir Edmund Barton, first Premier of j the Commonwealth, when taunted with | the fact that he had been opposed to suf frage, said; "Yes, I was opposed to it, but I have been converted by the use the women of New Zealand and South Australia have made of the ballot." We are groping for a way to abolish the greatest degradation that has ever come to womankind, the white slave traffic. The women voters of New Zealand have done it. There is no white slave traffic in New Zealand. w You object that politics igebdirty. "Keep the women out of it."- When your homes or your children are dirty, do yon send the women away? It is the first time that I have ever beard of women being kept out of anything because it is dirty. Women have cleaned the world since the beginning of time. Give them the I ballot, and they will clean up poliJta this day of terrible war, all coun- "" Tries cry for child conservation. New Zealand has the lowest child mortality i
• in the world, for as the wife of the Cbief ; Justice said, "We consider children more ( i useful in the nursery than in the ceme- ■ tory." There are only 68 deaths per - thousand infants. In the Australian states the mortality ranged from 09 to , l 75, and the highest death-rate in any - i suffrage state is 112, which is lower I than the lowest in any place where . If the women of Colorado had not had , the ballot, the Juvenile Court as organ- • ized by Judge Lindsay, would not exist. • Politicians of all parties have fought • him bitterly, simply because he administered the laws as he found them, regardless of the social position of the of- , fender, because he placed the welfare of i the child above wealth and power. Judge 1 Lind-av has repeatedly stated that but for the women voters of Colorado be I would have died a political death many years ago. ■ The Juvenile Courts have been copied all over the world, from New Zealand to i Wherever women have had the ballot • they have brought in laws safeguarding ' workers in dangerous occupations. They r j have worked to shorten the hours of . labor, not only of women and children, i . of men as well. | Astralia and New Zealand were the ; I first countries to have the eight hour I • ' law, and to abolish child-labor. | ' For look where you will, it Is the I , women who work for the good of bu- ; manity who want the ballot. Is it the | bad wolben who want It? No, indeed, j
J From Florence Nightingale, the founder £ ! pf the Red Cross of the world, to Clara Barton, the army nurse, from Julia ■ Ward Howe, the author of the Battle i Hymn of the Republic, to Jane Adams of c i Hull House, it is the best women who a want the vote. And if laws for the benefit of women s 1 and children have been passed without £ the ballot, it is because suffragists have t I worked for them in the face of tremcn- t dous obstacles. f For 20 years we tried to obtain police t ' matrons after we had the ballot police matrons were placed in every gaol, de- * tent^on house and other place where • [ women were confined. Why is it that the people who care 1 least for the home, who do all to ruin * | it, the man who employs child-labor, 1 the man who sweats his employees, the liquor dealers, are the ones who are so . afraid that woman suffrage will destroy | their homes. Four years ago, 1 was in the western Balkans, and when I talked of suffrage , to a Mohammedan Turk, he raised his ! hands in holy terror. "It would destroy , ■ the sanctity of the Harem," was his ob- , jection. We have heard this aarae answer from , ■ New Zealand to New Jersey, yet ex- ^ • perience has proven that though suf- ) frage may have destroyed the harem, • children and sweat-shop workers have tasted for the first time the joys of ■ J home through the laws that gave them . living wages and short hours of labor.
J tf LOOK FOR THIS SI»HW JpSSJ ^ Where [ r STANDARD ^ MOTOR GASOLINE and POLARINE Ofl and Greases can be obtained City Garige Townsend Garage E!dreJge Garage Central Garage Now Hotel Cape M\y Garage George Sandgran West Cape May The Palace Garage Bigg's Garage
LOOK IN THE STRAINER I ' I 'HE next time you have your | ■*- tank filled — look in the strainer. J Standard Motor Gasoline shows | no trace of sediment. Inferior J fuels often leave a heavy residue J of dirt and foreign matter. S Standard Motor Gasoline is a I straight-distilled refinery product, not a "blend" or a "mixture." It is absolutely homogeneous, every drop like every other drop. It is uniformly ^quick-starting, whether you are running on the top of your tank or near the bottom. v. ■' B Standard Motor Gasoline costs no more by the gallon — less by the mile. It is the same "Standard Gas" that careful motorists have always insisted upon. Ask for it by name— -Standard Motor Gasoline. Ask too, for Polarine, the Standard Oil for All Motors, obtainable wherever you see the "Standard Service j Station" sign. , STANDARD OIL COMPANY (New Jeraey) Newark New Jersey ■
OF METHDOS m ' OF IT. J. S. S. ASSO. The New Jersey Sunday School Association will conduct a School of Method* at Asbury Park from July 7th to 14th. The school will be held in the h'gh school building and many note.! Sunday workers have been secured as lecand instructors. It is the uim of the manageers to make the school especially helpful to superintendents and Among the instructors for th* w.-ek Miss Stlattery. a successful Normal School teacher; Miss Annie Lee Frayser, of Louisville, Ky., a Junior grade worker; Rev. Milton S. I.ittlefiehl, who w'll give special attention "to intermediate work; Miss ILanres V\ -hi D.uiicl- . S'-n. Ivan P. Fl -ed, D\ B. S Winchester \."»d Prof. W. J Thompson The evenings will be given up to recre- . at'on, organized under the direction of the school. LOT BARGAINS Three 3-4 acre lots, highest land in West Cape May, 60x210 feet, on L*ndie avenue, a street 50 feet wide. PRICE REDUCED to $400 for a short time. Clash or easy terms. The first comes gets the choice lot — nearest Broadway. Apply to owner at 616 Broadway. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORI/I
PROFIT SHARING Still going on at the Office of the Ga* Company. A Dandy $17 Range For $12 b Ju«t a few left
j Pick up the Phone and aak for JONES# °* 4e CAPE MAY ILLUMINATING CO. V. >

