- - . - • - ■ -V ■ •; , «• - - -- — r-7T -- v -~ - . . ■ W, ' K-fonBRH PAGE SET EN CAPS MAT 8tAR At>D WAVE Saturday, august 7, wis \
Emergencies are best taken care of with a glass of good whiskey. In your house — in fact, in cxtfy house — there should always be a bottle of Gin or Whiskey near at 'hand for just such a purpose. For medicinal and table use it has no equal. It is pure, stimulating and strengthening. Take our advice — never be without it. S. Teitelman's Wholesale WINES AND LIQUORS 312 Washington Street Both Phones Cape May, N. J Buckneli University Lewisourg, Pa John Howard Harris, LL. President. Sunnier Coirses Begin J ace 224, 1915, and Continue for Six Weeks A fine place to spend the summer. For Bulletin giving full information, write Walter S. Wilcox, Registrar, Lewishurg, Pa. Grey Bond typewriter paper, sire d 1-2 xll, 30 cents per ream while it lasts. Only SO reams in this lot. Star and Wave Stationery Dept.
EibHsM 1686 'Pbose CoiikHoi HIE 0MH1 STORE | QUALITY — The Keynote of Eclipse Shirt# ' Elcipse is more than a Shirt — it's an Achievement. They are built, to win and satisfy 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 1 I draw your own conclusions. 1 0. L. W. Knerr 518 & 520 Washington St. J Cape May, N. J. , SPRING ~ CLOTHING For either men or women should be tailor made. Plaoe your order now with Sherer, who has had years of experience . in producing fine clothing for men and ; women. Latest Spring samples and . styles are now ready. I SCHERFR'8 Decatur, near Washington Street. i
Special Summer Sale Ofi Oxfords Ladies' and Children's White Shoes and Ladies' Black and Tan Oxfords LASTING TEN DAYS JULY 22 to 31, INCLUSIVE Children'* $1.00 White Button Shoe*, tize* 6 CA- . »ol0>/2, ^ Misses $1.20 White Button Shoe*. 60c La diet' White Button Shoes and Oxfords, 68c You have your pick of the entire stock of £ 1 CA P«r $2, $2.50 and $3 Ladies' Ties for Pair This is a rare bargain, and the summer is young yet— but the entire stock must go regardless of cost REUBEN T. JOHNSON Erma, N. J. f
• 1 This Little Irrigator Is a Two-Horse- Power Gasoline Engine, and has a double acting pump mounted on wheels, and will pump one thousand gallons of water per hour at a cost of 5 cents for ^ gasoline and oil. t It will save you and your family hard labor and valuable time, not only iu pumping water, but in grinding or shelling corn and sawing wood. The pump can be disconnected in an instant. i
Price, complete $55.00 jJL
Send for a deecriptive " circular, or call at factory for demonstration. Manufactured by
M. SUBBER Keystone 11-D Woodbine, N. J.l
DERR'S ICE CREAM Special Attention to Family Trade. Orders Promptly Delivered { Factory, 314 Mansion St Dining Room, 313 St°* ! TAlilB'SOTI X>1*»BS A IMCIALTT GET AN EASY PUMPING WELL ! F.GOODELL ELOREDGE ARTESIAN AND DRIVEN WELLS. NOD - cmwy. wal ndnhaly. 1S3 York Am. Wort Cap. May '
1 1. H. SillTH | .8 Clothier p p 608 Washington St. jj > «n Opposite Roedlng Sim I ; | CAPE MAY *. J. p Overcoat a from IT ta III S 7 1 S Hate, Oepa. Trunks sad ^ h Qk Gentlemen-, Famishing Oo«a» ' k Jk et Philadelphia prime. j k tV'/AV/MkJ TEN . Strong Companies Asiregate Capital over ISO, 000,000 Represented by RAMUEL P. ELDREDGE. Fire Insurance Arent. Twenty-Six years of experience. Your 1 Insurance placed with me is abeolute 1 protection from loss by fire. Apply to H F. ELDREDGE Merchants National Bank Building -Cape May, New Jersey. W. H. BRIGHT Fire Insurance In any part of Capo May Ce HOLLY BEACH. N J JOHN BRIGHT GENERAL INSURANCE Raul Estate and Mortgage Investments (ICR NlLDINl WttSMOC l.j. Ware's Drug Shop (THE REXALL STORE) ! Fa tent Medicines, Drug Sundries, Toilet Goods at Lowest Prices; Ask to I see the Blu. Line Rubber Goods, 2 year j guarantee; also fresh stock of Pirika, < ar.d Huyler Candies; All Writ- I ing Paper and Holiday Goods reduced Washington and Decatur Street, I Decatur and Washington Streets ' Gap. May. t Wentaeii e, IS Perry street, win give you bids on furniture, carpet aid fittings for your entire bouse and put tt ' In olmef for roa. j i IF MOTHERS ONLY KNEW j1 Mother Gray's Sweet Powder, for!' Children relieve Ftvcrishness, Headache, j 1 Bad Stomach, Teething Disorders, move \ and regulate the Bowels and destroy j worms. They Ireak up Colds in 24 hours. Used by mothers for 26 years. All Druggists, 25c. Sample Free. Address, A. S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. 1
B
parker's 1 HAIR galsam t t ForRmtn^y Color ud j I
CASTORIA ! Ftr Infants and Children lnUs«ForOvsr30Yaars 1 : STOVES STOKED— 9 1 .50. 1 season. Why allow them to stand 8 around all summer and rust? Call Jesse t Brown t« remoTe them. t I £E VENUE STAMPS You may obtain Documentary Revenue Stamps of various denominations by calling on the Seeurity Trust Company <■ sorner Washingtoa and Ocean stinsU. } H.^YB®MP80N. Maaagur. ] Tar Rent" cards carried in stock tt x each All kinds mi sign cards made to v order. Mar and Wave Matiaaery De-
HYDRANGEA FAMOUS HERE HRDRANGEA BROUGHT HEBE FROM ■ JAPAN, FINDS CONDITIONS HERE I ! IDEAL FOR GROWTH.— GARDENS I ; ARE GAY, BUT THE BLOSSOMS | ! WILD AND FICKLE. | If the gardens bad voices, this is the ' I reason when they would sing songs of ' ' triumph over the gardeners, for, while I the gardens look like rampant wilder- 1 | j n esses of color and beauty, the blosioms | of late July and August have little 1 j value except as outdoor decorations. . One cannot g« about decorated with a : corsage bouquet of the Lily Auratum, 1 ' for instance; nor, if one is ill, can this 1 I or any of its sister lilies be a very ac- • I ! ceptable gife, for their resplendent ) . beauty is accompanied by such a power- 1 | fully sweet odor that it will drive even . a user of musk out of the room after a few minutes. | ' Tall spikes of gladioli are just now at ; their prime, but they, too, are most ef- i . fective when growing in the garden, for j 1 I n< thing will make them graceful in a ll lvr.se or, indeed, any receptacle. There 1 ! hi *• rows of blazing eannah, red and yel- 1 low. quantities of scarlet geraniums and ' scarlet sage; but pick them and they i scatter their petals in a protesting show- • ■ r almost as soon as the gardener gets 1 them indoors. As for the sweetpeas now in bloom, • they have no stems at all. Heliotrope, 1 1 flagrant and delicious, takes a strong < • I old on the affections of all flower lovers ' hut heliotrope has a strong and positive 1 [ c'islikc to coming indoors or being worn, and turns quite brown with age and dies when taken from its parent stem. Of course, the china asters, which are i in profuse bloom just now, can be util- I . ized, as they last a long time and are very showy, but they are stiff, independent old maids of flowers and dont com- ' bine well with anything. 1 But Cape May's Avorite, the Hy- 1 drangea, is always beautiful, whether in ' the garden or in a bouquet, for with its ' magnaficent clusters and delicate color- 1 ing, it surely must be crowned, the queen of sea shore flowers. 1 HYDRANGEA. The Hydrangea, the pride of Cape 1 May, is a genus of shrubbery plants , bearing opposite leaves and large heads ■ of showy flowers. 1 The Hydrangea Hortensis, the common garden species is a native ef far- J av.ay Japan; that home of flowers, where every garden and every view is like a delicately tinted -water color.'" Cape May has a right to be cntbus- 1 ip'tic about this wonderful- flower, and 1 to c!a:m it as her own, for this is the ! only place in South Je-scy, where the ] low-.- rc» bes such a hig-i degr«e of p. r- t Other resorts have tried to cultivate 1 this plant and have failed, owing, no ] doubt, to the condition of the soil. 1 "Newport" is the only other resort i that has been able to bring the Bydran- < gea my where near to the higb stan- . dard, wbicb it has obtained at the 1 Cape. | Probably one of the most peculiar things about this beautiful sbrub is that ( the same plant does not always have < the same colored flowers from year to t The younger plants shade from a t i pure white to the most delicate shades ' , of pink. As the plant ages, the flowers j t j will shade from pink to very light blues j • and as is often the case, one hush will ' f I have a profusion of both pink and blue j c j floflwers. The older plants are general- 1 ' |)y flowered with a darker shade of blue t which is the color of the matured t hydrangea. f MRS. GEORGE W. BOYD'S BEAUTI- 3 FUL GARDEN. j When Mrs. Boyd said she was going s to have a garden, those who were wise in such things shook their heads ana £ said^-"Well, many things, chief of t which was of course "How can flowers i in what a ahort time ago was sand hills?" But Mrs. Boyd had faith that sand, and her faith has been : b justified. Out of the desert in a few j p summers has blossomed a fair garden, 1 0 a delight to stroll in, with flowers old j J fashioned and new,- and eo mtny andjl various, that it is hard t$ know who e to |c begin a description of them. I s But surely^ a pen-picture of the gar- | den would not be complete were not | some mention made of the guiding spirit j » of it. Mrs. George W. Boyd, who in ' u spite «f havjng a large family at- all i ii times, and many social duties, has found h time to plan and select the flowers for her "garden by the sea." And here a t line of Lowell's is recalled which just d applies to Mrs. Boyd, "She doe.ti little kindnesses, which e other leave undone," t for it was truly a floral kindness to a plant that negletfted wayside flower, and Eggs, in her garden or roses, e But there it it, and looks fine too, with fl its orange and lemon contrast, and »:1foliage. x o And -there is a wildhig of the salt
=»T meadows ^£0, in tine leaf, gut not in ! blossom yet, the Marehmallow. There I aie several plants of it and t-V . 1 above the — I Ip.rkspus, pinks and mu--i:id fern and pholx, while lip and down across I Them rioted the morning glory vines." I On the white fence of graceful design ' I which encloses the garden on the west. Here also the Sweet Peas flauflt their 1 Dresden colors, and the Nasturtiums ; their barbaric ones, and in stately rows ' of them, stands My Lady -Dahlia i with blooms of deepest crimson and ■ some of lemon yellow. j , 1 But here a breath of Mine is borne on 1 • the breeze and stopping to crush the , fresh green leaves in our hands we see , ! other flowers dear to those lovers ! , of old time gardens. Bachelor's But- ' , 1 tons, Stocks, Sweet Williams, Poppies, | • Zannias and a large bed of wall flowers. ' 1 ; And near them the Hardy Coreopsis . makes, a golden showing and Miss Mar- j I igold an orange one, with Four O'clocks ; t near to tell the time o'day. But now the royal purple of the , • Heliotrophe lures us that way and with1. . its perfumed breath stealing over our ' 1 • ! senses, we leave it tc look at the Ga- j • I I lardias, which will soon be in full bloom . ■ • and the Aster also will make a brave-, showing later. We come now, to a walk ' 1 I which is bordered with Box Trees and , - leads us "to qne of the quaintest corners | ] • of the garden — an angle formed by two ' 1 1 sides of the house and lighting its depth ' , like a flame, is a great clump of Tiger , Lilies, the bees are seeking in their , spotted throats, indeed the whole gar- 1 ] ; den is a happy hunting ground for those | 1 busy honey seekers, the bees and but- ' ; : terflies. , Roses there are a plenty, Dorothy I 1 Perkins is trying here best to get pos- 1 session of a garden seat, the Cut Bush ■ Rose, is here and has made a great ' . growth. Leaving many other flowers ! unmentioned, we must now turn to the j . Hydrangeas, which cluster around the ; .use on three sides. They have made wonderful growth in a short time srnd . - one of the largest single blooms in the 1 town is to be seen on the south side of 1 the house, just one great bloom nestling ' - alone in the cool greenery of the leaves. I The "white scrolls of the sea sui^jes," ; on the silver sands within a few feet of this beautiful garden and the ' flowers toss tnd flirt with the wind that j ■ over the sea, but they hold their ' 1 own and blossom and smile at us in an , | 1 enchanting way and in one of the youngest gardens in New Cape May. j MRS. R. WALTER STARR'S GARDEN . ( Contributed.) ' ! The garden of Dr. Starr, which ad- J joins that of Mr. George W. Boyd, isi^ bIbo attractive. The., two gardens are I separated by a low fence, and practical- , 1 t ly make one long bank of beautiful ' ' nodding and mingling with one ( another in gorgeous profusion. There is one tall Dahlia drakly crim- | ■ which bows to Mrs. Boyd's Dab- t • in a most friendly way. The doc- ' tor's wife is a lover of the garden beau- 1 tiful and takes great interest in her , own. There is a great border of Sweet ! t Allyssium, which flings its sweet breath J 1 about us as we stand and drink in the ' loviliness of the flowers. The Gladioli rise in their slim beauty from the Nasturtiums which cortainly ij do grow well in Nevfr Cape May, and we ;J all know how the Hydrageas grow there. 1 j Mrs. Starr has a border of pink ones | that claim our instant admiration. The^ shows well against the white I of the porch. j As Dr. Starr's cottage was one of the in the new town, so also, in his gar- t was tile first Tamaris planted. Tho < I excites almost as much interest as the Hydrangeas, being well known r many visitors here, and like that blooms in Cape May as it does no j where else. 0 is It was introduced to our gardene many 3 ago, by Henry C. Lea, one of the ' r greatest historians of his time, and who f spent so many summers in this resdrt. t The Tamaris has escaped from the ' t gardens and now its green plumes, t tipped with pink, bloom here and there * ia the meadows. K Passing down Ocean Street to the I j every one Is attracted by the 1 d glorious masses, and countless numbers j. I of pink hydrangeas at the cottage of : q B;_ S. Kunkel next to the Oolonial c; j Hotel. The large heads of delicate j q color make it one of the most beautiful J f I spots in the city. It : t J I. J. Pocher's yard on Lafayette Street - 5: j which has been mentioned in these col- o before is one of the most beautiful .u Cape May and contains some very fine e I c The home of Dr. Nome, on Beach t is flanked by beautiful hy- p n Among the hotels which have given « especial attention to the hydrangea, are D the Hotel Cape May, Colonial, Lafayette, fi and Star Villa. it On Jackson Street nearly every prop- . b erty has a profusion of these lovely j a .. |h Decatur and Ocean Streets are bowers d of pink and blue hydrangeas. " "Jbi Old Washington Street, is sot to be el 1 -i
WHAT CATARRH IS I It has been said that every third I person has catarrh in some form. I Science has shown that nasal catarrh ; often indicates a general weakness ! of the body;, and local treatments in the form of snuffs and vapors do little, if any good. To correct catarrh you should -treat Its cause by enriching your blood with the oil-food in Scott's Emulsion which is a medicinal food and a building-tonic, free from alcohol or any harmful drugs. Try it. Scott & Bowne, Bloomfitld , If. J. j outdone jby other sections of the city. On 'its beautiful lawns are to be found I of the finest hydrangea to be seen : anywhere. I I On the corner of Columbia Avenue , and Ocean Street, stands a large vacant I surrounded on three aides liy the .finest hydrangea in town. FINE HYDRANGEAS. I I Tuesday's Daily Star and Wave. | A home which deserves especial men- ' tion for- its beautiful hydrangeas, and 1 1 which was inadvertently omitted from the Hydrangea Number, is that of T. ' | Woodward Trainer, on Broadway. Mr. ' | has one of thhc most attractive ' ^ and delightful summer homes to be : found anywhere. The design and architecture of the house, the large green 1 1 and the exquisite hydrangeas on 1 three sides of the house make it a picworthy of an artists skill. j v MISS HYDRANGEA. j 'flower of delicate hue, ' j Tinted by fairie wand. ' : Bathed ia the seaside eaHy dew, I Goddess of Eden land. • Since to our shores you wend your way, 1 J Whither nor whence care I, ■iYou are the idol of old Cape May, 1 . And this is the reason why ; ■ Fairest of shrubs to me thou art, "x Clustered in pink and blue, I And I would most willing give my heart ; To linger for aye with you. I In the maze of the evening mist, ■ | As over your tiny bed, ' 1 pray that I may by you be kiri, Let never a nay be said. •• , Charles Albert Brewton. :| 0 HOW FAR IS WEST CAPE MAY? so Far that the Statemens of Ita / Residents Cannot Be Verified Rather an interesting case has been developed in West Cape May. Being . near by, it is well worth publishing ( here. The statement is sincere — the 1 proof convincing: ' , -Michael H. Holland, 138 Learning aveWest Cbpe May, N. J., eays: "For I almost a year, I was afflicted with kidney trouble, brought on by a heavy j cold. I had pains in the small 'of my back and at times was unable , to sleep well, getting up in the morning 'tired and unrefreshed. Whenever I stooped or brought any strain on the | muscles of my hack, sharp pains darted throughout my body and I often felt , miserable. I was also subject to headaches and dizzj spells, during which my I sight blurred. Doan's Kidney Pills gave 'me prompt relief and I continued takjing them until completely cured. I have had no trouble since." Price 50c, at all dealers. Don't sim1 ply ask for a kidney remedy — get ; Doan's Kidney Pills — the same that Mr. ! Holland had. Foster-Milburo Co., j Buffalo, N. Y. BEACH HAVEN FIGHTING MOSQUITOES. Tuesday's Daily Star and Wave. The "Jersey Skeeter" is proverbial, • there is no use denying it. The thing to ■ do is to try to get rid of the pesky mosquito, instead of foolishly trying to make ourselves believe that such a thing . does not exist. Everybody who comes here soon finds it out. Most people who ' spend their vacation in Cape May, come here from places where the mosquito is rarely, if ever, seen, heard or felt. As soon as such people' get here, they meet the ubiquitous pest, and they carry with them, wherever they go, vivid recollee- , tion of the mosquito. The insect, it seems, has a means af making an im- | pression on people, which remains for I some time. ' The United States government has , demonstrated to the whole world that is possible to rid a locality of mos- ! quitoes. It has done so in Panama. Government experts say that the mosnever travels more than five miles I its breeding place. If this be true, |then if proper methods were adopted, this nuisance could be gotten rid of in Jersey. Cape May is on the point of the -main land, and by draining, and .using expert methods on a region, covjering a radius of ten miles ,this resort r I could be made a really delightful place , to live at during the hot sFason. Beach claims to have gotten rid of the mosquito, and makes the boast that while other resorts are suffering from mosquitoes, that city is almost entirely free from tbem. That city is not satisfied with what it has accomplished, .but is going right on, in an attempt to j absolutely rid itself of the pests. What | has been done in other places can be I here. Not in a day, or in a sea•ot), ' but by persistent and continuous , ( effort. V

