SATURDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1915 CATS MAS STAB AND WATM — ~ Mn * _ hHNkS RHH r".** c - u a- f . rji 1 1 ■ ' ■ =s=5=ai~-~----<»— - , L
For Your Baby. : The Signature of^ la the only guarantee that you have the J Genuine , Wt AV (m A s ■' V-. p ■ H I. ~ B J| t
prepared by him tor over so yean. „ YOU'LL give YOUR baby the BEST ' Your Physician Knows- Fletcher's Castorku 111 Sold only in one size bottle, never in bulk u or otherwise; to protect the babies. The Centaur Company. Cbs&Shobt ri
GREEN CREEK | Joseph Camp w ill finish grinding crabs this week. Gapt. Alfred T. Scull is the championhook and line fisherman along abort- . Daniel Loper, who has been with | friends at Pojt Elizabeth and Millville, returned to his brother Charles, Saturday evening. Tom Holmes and wife of Holly Beach, was here Saturday. Thomas gave hi* grand father some l>-ssons on running his automobile. Albert Daw-son and wife of Bridge ton, Matthew Selover, of Cape May City; William Selover and wife and Samuel Selover, of Angle sea, were here Friday to attend the funeral of Barton Selover. , Vernon Godfrey had the misfortune , to get a scale of iron in bis eye which ^ destroyed the sight, the other eye also being in a weak condition. The doctor . gives but little hope for saving his sight. The ladies of Arbutus Temple that j sit tended the--<irand Session in Trenton last week'gave a good report of their - trip. Thir next meeting of the gTand body for both Castle and Temple will ( be held in Atlantic City. Chpt. William Wilkie, who has been working in oysters beds for Holmes , Bros., Diss Creek, bas taken charge of a , aea barge and left on Tuesday. Charles Marquet, our barber, has been < quite ill the past week but is now Sm- | proving. •« « t Miss Ella Barnes, who bas spent two , weeks with Capt and Mrs. M. M. Nor- t bnrv returned to her Camden home Friday afternoon. j Daniel Miller, wife and daughter, of < West Cape May, spent Thursday even- ■ ing with his father. William H. Thompson attended the ^ Tall Cedar meeting in Atlantic City last e week . Charles Holmes, of Court House, with g • force of men, began buQding the new n house for diaries Hollingsead, at the a corner on Tuesday. Quite a large number of our people r attended the County Sunday School c Convention at Oourt House Wednesday, j, Our fishermen are getting their fykes b In for the fall run of rock and eels. b George Johnson made a business trip to Millville a short time ago. Truman Hickman and Mrs. Edna En- t dieott, of Bio Grande, drove over to e Wild wood and Angleaea Sunday visiting t! •everml Sunday schools that had neglected to send in their annual report for the state and connty work done. C They succeeded finely, Five Mile Beach ^ reporting in full. S*th Miller. Jr., our efficient post- c; master, has had the business to increase jj to the extent that an assistant was Decenary . On Saturday evening a bright j little boy came to bless the home of Mr. ' -v and Mrs. Miller and no doubt in due 11 time will learn the art of sorting the 'e mail and help- run government affairs * as well as his father Both Mrs. Miller n end son are doing nicely, we are glad to note. 1,1 d Joshua Lloyd was converted near a T year ago in reading the sermons of .. "Billy" Sunday. He haa joined the eol- ^ ored Methodist Church at Holly Beach and is a regular attendant. But few of our men registered on
I Tuesday, tljey not being satisfied with having the election place moved from the K. G. E. Hall to the Grange Hall, Rio Grande. Somebody will want to ' be re-elected or some new fellow an office in the near future when they will iiave to look to other places than this for support. ' j The barber shop has been closed for ' more than a week owing tb the continued sickness of Charles Marquet. | The man that wins the love and affec- ' tions of a bright, intelligent girl and ' pledges his love to her for better or ' worse, richer or poorer and have a family of children born to them. Then ' seeks the presence of other women and | leaves his own to shift for herself to a very great extent and causes the home to be broken up, deserves nothing less than banishment from all society, and State's prison is too good a place for such a person. Yet we have them in 1 cur fair land and this is only putting it in a mild form. Yet they seek recognition from the hands of their fellows. Cut them out. "DONT'S" FOB MEN IN THE FORTIES In the October American Magazine a i contributor writes an entertaining and - elpful article entitled "Growing Young i at Fifty." This man tells bow he was ; old at forty-six, with death just around , the corner. At fifty he is ten yesrs ; younger, more youthful, just through obeying a few simple rules. In the folextract taken from a conversation between this man and his doctor some of the "don 'ts" for men in forties: "The things that 1 musn't do or that must limit myself in doing were numerous. A lot of them had to do with diet. Hot breads, pie crust, fried things were utterly taboo. Meats and the allowable things, however, were to be eaten in moderation. 1 should have but ' two meals a day, preferably breakfast and dinner. And if I got hungTy in the meantime, I must content myself with ■ little fruit. ■ " It wont seeem so satisfying at th% moment,' he made clear, 'as a luncheon of the kind youhre been used to, but an hour afterward you will not be hungry and youll feel a great deal •"No alcohol, you said I' I suggested.. " 'A single glass ef beer will not matoccasionally, he directed. "But no cock-tails, high-balls, or anything of that sort.' » "For breakfast I might have half a cup of coffee, and since I had been for an almost constant smoker he would not take tobacco away alto- - gether. Twelve cigarettes and one cigar, however, were where be drew the j | ■ "."Moderation," he concluded, "is to be I watchword in everything. Real moderation. And (hat doesn't mean a comparatively regular life for month, or two months, or three months, and then jumping over all the fences in a tingle night. Yon are to a strictly regular life, day after a week after week, year after year. That's your sentence. And, believe me, a are not going 'to find it half as hard as you think you will.' . "And I didn't." Read the Weekly Star and Wave 1
ELECTRIC SPARKS. Why not call "em dippylomaisl i The Czar will now share the cjm- j maud of the Russian Army with Von I Hindenburg. L If anything can be more Soporific j than tbe life story of the average inu tion picture actress, let us have it for the insomnia patients. ' Astronomer Melhish, who ban di-- ( covered hi* fourth oomet, deserves much 1 praise, though we could have worried along with the comets we had. • • b i Prize fights at the penitentiary ~-ein rather out of place, but they are more ] appropriate than readings from Brown- ■ ing or safe cracking matches. Ireland's emigration . is now ths lowest it has been since 1851 and its * population bas began - to increase, ] though slowly. This means much for the Emerald Isle. ] Czar Nicholas recognizes thst some•thing must be done, so he takes command of his armies. But Von Hinden berg bears up bravely under the blow. Winston Churchill recently first lore - of the British admiralty, likes to paint . landscapes, possible because they have 1 so few dreadnaugbts in them sailing up Dardenelles to Constantinople. f Wealth and religion seem to have but little in common. . • • • There is more or less graft in the construction of family trees. 1 . •
Out of the frying pan of courtship n man often steps into the fire of matWhat a change a wife can make in a man — and what a lot of "change" »li requires while making it. Had we known in 1912 that th.r. was going to b grave war menace we might hare elected the colonel to tinpresidency. hut perhaps it is just awell that we did not know.
1 1825 1915 j THE PENNSYLVANIA ; FIRE . INSURANCE COMPANY , ' * Incorporated 1825. j 1 CHARTER PERPETUAL ' OFFICE, 508-510 WALNUT ST Philadelphia, Pa. Capital - $750,000.00 , , Aaaeta . . . $8,002,962.21 i , Surplua ■ $2326,053 39 ! 1 DIRECTORS. ! Charles H. Barry John L. Thomson > Dale Benson W. Gardner Crowcll • 1 J. Tatnall Lea Edward T. Stotesbury ; i M. Cadwalader ' Edwin N. Benson, Jr. • Henry I. Brown ; CHARLES H. BARR^ President JOHN L. THOMSON, Vice Preeident w. GARDNER CROWELL, 2d Vice Pres. and Sec'y. '■ HAMPTON L. WARNER, Asst. Kee'y. i i WM. J. DAWSON, Sec. Agency. Dept. SAMUEL F. ELDREDGE LOCAL AGENT National Bank Building. Oor. Washington and Decatur streets. Cape May, New Jersey. ] - W. L. Ewing Jr. M WAGON BUQDER AUTOMOBILE PAINTER Larf* and Small Work i Cmfol Executed * Estimates Cheerfully Furnished S W. L. KWINO. JR. ii West Perry Sts., Keystone Phone
lr ii Professional Cards j lit-- .t..« /. " % f. SPICER LEA-MING COUNSELOR- AT-L* W Solicitor, Master aiid Examiner in Chancery. Office: Hughes and Franklin Sts., Cape May, New Jersey. F. ELDREDGE ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Merchants National Bank Building Washington and . Decatur Sts., Cape May. New Jersey NOTARY PUBLIC and Master in Chancery. Keystone Phone 35A. HBNRY H. ELDREDGE ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Solicitor in Chancery for New Jersey Member of Pennsylvania Bar. Cape May, New Jei*ey. j JAMES M. E. HILDRETH COUNSELOR-AT-LAW Solicitor, Master and Examiner in Chancery NOTARY PUBLIC Offices at 214 Ocean Street Cape May New Jersey. Phone 39A.
LEWIS T. STEVENS Counsellor-at-Law Special Master in Chancery , Supreme Court Commissioner Notary Public 518 Washington Street, Cape May, N. J. MORGAN HAND, JR. ■ CIVIL ENGINEER AND SURVEYOR Cape May Court House, N. J. i Bell Phone 5. 819 Wesley avenue, Ocean City, N. J. Bell Phone 56X. * DR. J. H. OLIVER DENTIST 1120 Chestnut. Street ! Philadelphia, Pa. (One door above Keith's Theatre) Filling- a' specialty— from one dollar up. Bridge work, five dollars a tooth. My special plates never rock. No one hss this method but myself. Will allow you carfare when you order the best teeth. Bell Phone— Walnut lill. 1 Don't Frown! You do this because you can't see well. a P1"" of K,asseB w*" smooth C. A. LONCSTRETH (pecUUst In Eye T.rtlng 222 Market Street, Philadelphia CAPE MAY OPTICAL 1 513 Washington Street Cape May, N. J. for the Eye. Prescription Lenses a Specialty Keystone Phone 44D. Ware's Drug Shop (THE REXALL STORE) Patent . Medicines, Drug Sundries, Goods at Lowest Prices; Ask to tbe Blu . Line Rubber Goods, 2 year guarantee; also fresh stock of Piriks, and .Hurler dandies; All WritPaper and Holiday Goods reduoed Washington and Decatur Street, * Decatur and Washington Streets = Cape May.
CAPE MAY COAL & ICE CO. UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT Best quality Coal at all times. Careful n preparation. Guaranteed weight. A Pure Ice. manufactured from distilled water. Prompt and courteous service. Main Office-512 WASHINGTON STREET READING COAL YARDS and laros— pERpY AND JACKSON ' TRE' ts THOMAS S. STEVENS.
u4 EejstMC Telepfcraes
Manager f
Everything in season. Sea foods and Salads, Specialties. Cottage trade solicited. Orders by phone . promptly attendedto an dth&eled
Open all the year
JOHN J. MeCANN =====a:
Wm, F. Brown : PLUMBING, STEAM and GAS FITTING Jobbing A Specialty. 417 Washington Street EstimsUs Furnished CAPE MAY cauiiicua urniaiieu vnr i . ninii
Kcrhtcce Telephone 12S A
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■osucLSAam iuu i» nan and 1. apt tb be attended with uaplaaae uot circumstance* especially when the p. removal of furniture aadplcttneabeOwS ■ t out (be defect, of .your wall papara. It L le iIm the bezt ilm« to have new papers ing done, and a por^J mailed ti W. L. b LeNolr will bring him to yah with I samplee of any description. Hi. work 1. of the beat, and hla price, more than reemaaMa. W. LENOIR «e WABHINQTON BTR«*T I Keystone Ptoae lttx. ,
Shoes! Shoesi NEW, LARGEST AND BEST STOCK OF LADIES', GENTLEMEN'S AND CHILDREN'S SHOES AT LESS THAN PHILADELPHIA PRICES. AN ENTIRE NEW AND LARGE STOCK OF jm. WALL PAPER) Which Will Be Sold at Prices to Defy Competition. Having had many years experience in the business, I only ask I an opportunity jo convince my customers that I can sell them at the lowest possible prices. Please ex amine my stock before buying elsewhere. ELDRIDGE JOHNSON,* r 318 Washington Street W. ft. SMITH & m~ 502 BROADWAY WEST CAPE MAY GROCERIES AND PROVISIONS Salt Meats. Fruits, Oranges, Bananas. Patent Medicines Hard ware. CIGARS AND TOBACCO Keystone Phone 161M W.S. SHAW & SON , Dealers In BRICK, LIME AND CEMENT. ~ ' \ GENERAL CONTRACTORS. Keystone Telephone 30-A. 523 ELMIR.A STREET M. H. WARE 516 V ashington Street. HARDWARE HOUSEFURNISHINGS BLUE AND WHITE AND GRAY ENAMELWARE FISHNG TACKLE
Established 1878
Keystone 114X
El wood L. Chambers Jere E. Chambers Chambers Bros. . DEALERS IN Fresh Fish, Oystef s, Clams and Crab' Meat 322 MANSION STREET CAPE MAY. N. J. Auto Delivery AUtO UCl envery
Keystone Phone 228D
BeU Phone 17W
FRANK ENTR1KEN & SONS Central Garage automobile repair work EXCELLENT EQUIPMENT FOR RAPID WORK. CARS STORED. P.APtl HIRED DAY OR NIGHT. ALL KINDS OF AUTO SUPPLIES. AGENTS FOR THE FAIRBANKS-MORSE GAS AND OIL ENGINES. IAD AXIU VLU ZAUiAAC},
KEYSTONE 1-90A
BELL xa-A
HENRY REEVES, MACHINIST Plumbing, Steam and Hot Water Heating, Gas Fitting. Irrigaton Plants Installed. SSTIg
177Y
116 Pearl St, West Cape May

