PASE THESE GAPE MAT STAR AMP WATE SMTADAT, OCTOBER >, HE, 4
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TheOldest School I Th* >•« balldloE of P*lro# W ■ ch»»l on PlBO Btreot. won of JT-. ■rood. U th. most complotolr W equipped ettr privet* pebool Solid- T. tag la tto Dsiud lulu W WitursI llrtl OB foot aid**: two Qj •levator*; dlnlfiE-room: arm**- W slum, and all othsr school facUl- Uf Tks list ochool roar opens, to W Soptombor. la tbs Bow bulldlac. uj Baslnsss and Boerotarlal coursor JR for rouse men and rouns women. W Bond for catalosoo. and booklet X of views of tbs new bulldlac. W PEIRCE SCHOOL | ^ Pi me Street, West of Brood, Ojf \ Philadelphia W 562— 7-3l-8t
B. S. CURTIS & SON NO. 324 DELAWARE AVE. CAPE MAY CITY, N. J. PLUMBING, STEAM FIT TI.\G AND GAS FITTING JOBBING PROMPT LY ATTENDED TO Keystone Telephone 133D. A. D. Beeves, Proo. D. W Croon. Sec. REEVES & GREEN ENGINEERING C0.,j«c. ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS, S 1PP UF.S AND PLUMBING. STEAM AND HOT WATER HEATING Machinists, Consulting Mechanical and Electrical Engineers. Agents for Peerless Mazda Lamps, Electric Irons, Tans. Stoves and Fixtures. i Estimates Furnished Phone — Keystone 4 14 M j *05 WASHINGTON ST. CAPE MAY, NJ CHKIJREN ARE WILD OVER fTjl ■ A POSTAL CARD BRINGS YOU A COPY rJT ZZTu~n M P$VWi SOMETHING TO DO H SAFETY-FIRST H II INVEST YOUR MONEY WISELY | j HlK It ia an act of wisdom for you to invest BS W/i your money wisely. \J^ SAFETY should be FIRST— then interest al 1 A Safe Investment for your funds is an HB VI Bank and now is a very good time to fRfl q ; r 3 PER CENT INTEREST |1 PAID ON TIME DEPOSITS H SECURITY TRUST CO. Southwest Corner Washington and Ocean Streets Cape May, N. J., June 30th, 1915
RESOURCES Time and Demand Loans .$1,563,583.45 Bonds and Mortgages .... 242,281.0'' . Stocks and Bonds 577,038.63 , Overdrafts, 32.12 Banking Houses, Camden, Cape May and Gloucester 130/100.00 Cash and Reserve 337,594.55 ] $2,850,530.14
LIABILITIES. v ' Capital s 100,000.00 6 Surplus 100,000.00 t ' Profits, 87,682^1 J DEPOSITS 2,560,847.23 - . V for taxes 2,000.00 $2,850,630.14 =
Three Per Cent. Intei am. allowed on Time Deposits. < Aets as Administrator, Exoeutor, Guardian or Trustee. = Wills drawn and kept without chargeSafe Deposit Boxes for Rent ia Burglar-Proof Vault. ADVISORY BOARD. II
J Spicer Learning, Chairman Dr. James Mecray Aaron W. Hand Reuben T. Johnson Sherman S. Sharp.
Henry C. Thompson, Secretary. John B. Huffman Albert G. Bennett Hon. Robert E. Hand Dr. Wilson A. Lake
I | TIN ROOFS I AND SPOUTING 1 j ! Require attention all the year. I ! If yours is nearly gone ask for { an estimate now. I I 5c and 10c House Furnishing Goods I : m i j | Of All Descriptions, at I 1 JESSE BROWN ; 110 and 112 Jac<>on St. Cape May, N. J. IRON .Is FOR EVERY FENCE i u I PURPOSE BH I s No Matter for What Purpose You Want Iron Fence We Can Supply Your Wants For Residences. Divisions on Property Lines. Cemeteries, Private RuiyiAft Grounds, Cemetery Lot Enclosure*, Church and School Property, Court House* and Jails tins sccti^for The Stewart Iron j race o'flbe lowest prions, which puts^rn Beautify and Protect the ASD SOUTH 1AFAYETTF STS. > Cemetery Lot 1 . . E. W. DAVID Exp°e™ce REGISTERED PLUMBER 1144 WASHINGTON ST. CAPE MAY. N. J Keystone Phone 209 Y York Stite. Yorl YORK BROTHERS Carpenters and Builders CAPE. MAY, N. J. Estimates cheerfully given on all kinds of buildings SATISFACTION ■ I 'A 1.' ANTEKD P. O. Box 661 ~~~ Columbia Laundry
- THE LAUNDRY'S ON TIME at your house each week if you deal with the Columbia I-aundry. That'* only one advantage you secure through us. The real benefits are "cleanliness and carefulness such as youjjever imagined could exist." AfteE-'Vou gH^Tour shirt back from the Columbia Lnuraft^ week after week, in perfectly good Condition, youH understand what our motto means to your pocket book. Think this over and send for us at once.
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A call on either Phone will bring our wagon to your door CONGRESS STREET AND BROADWAY PROMPT DELIVERIES ASSURED goto HTCTbohm 232 JACKSON STREET FOR FRESH FISH A a ken from his own fish pound'daily ALL OTHER SEA FOODS IN SEASON Both Phones Prompt Deliveries
LETTER FROM MISSIONARY i (Continued from second page.) — , Having no idea of life in a real house, 1 he at once proceeded to break every rule of the Home. He misplaced or broke j the other boys' belongings, gathered j i up and ate all the odd scraps of food' that he found, and quarreled from morn- ' ing till night. Finally he had inspired I _ so much terror in the boys' bosoms that i one night when he could not be found ' , at bed time, little Mehand who sleeps next to bim. -aid, "I am afraid to go to - bed. I know he will come back in the night and slit my throat with my thumb-nail." (an imaginary method of f killing in Kabylia.) In the two months ^ that he has been in the Home he has j j changed unbelievably. No longecr thin j ^ or wild looking, be is an attractive % sight walking erect in his neat blue L clothes, shoes well polished, face and i clean. His mental progress has I been as pronounced as his physical. He no longer runs off to avoid punishment, rarely touches what is not his, does his work like a little beaver, and is beginning to make himself understood in , French. He listens attentively to the ( reading and explanation of the Bible in i ■Kabyle, his face shining, hi* lips moving ' soundlessly to the truths that penetrate hi.- understanding. | The change that lias taken place in , Ferhat, and that will go on taking place ( in him until he be a fearless, intelligent , C hristian uian, is not due to any extra..r.linarv treatment on our part. What lias happened to Ferhat would happen to any boy taken into a real Christian home, feeling shame for tin- first time i in his life at seeing other boys so much better looking, better dressed, better behaved than Tie. What we have done for Ferhat we can do for hundreds of other boys in Algeria, thus sowing the seed which will result in the ultimate christianizing of thousands, if we are given the lin-ans to provide a suitable Home and to support the boys. REBAH. .Kebab, our thirteenth bov, recently began to. complain of an indistinctness of vision. We took him at once to an eye -pceiali-t who said that the boy had been suffering for some time from the sore eyes peculiar to North Africa . I T he malady had beconu- chronic, and j slight cancers had formed inside both i lids. The doctor said that in a short ! time the boy would have lost liis sight. Now. by ea refill treatment for a fewfew months, he may be entirely cured, "hi in our work here we have a -chance to save the sight as wyll as the SouK of mjniy boys, provided that w-TNX- able to accept all that ask for oiir\h.Tp. MEHAND. It is hard to associate Mehand. inv helper, the alert, well bred young man. with the primitive little fellow who must have existed in Kabylia. according to his own stories, ten or twelve years ago. He tells many amusing anecdotes of his childhood, one of -which I cannot refrain from repeating. He had a tooth-ache once which endured for several days. As dentistry is unknown in Kabylia. lie was at his wits' cni- to know what to do. At last, ren- ■ dercd fearless by pain, he went to the blacksmith and begged him ft> extract the aching teeth; The blacksmith refused at first, but finally yielded to the little fellow's pleadings. He seated him upon his anvil, opened his mouth to its pincers and commenced to pull. But the tooth would not budge. So Mehand went home, having had enough of dentistry for one day. But that night tins tpotli ached worse, than ever* So lie p/csenti-d himself again next morning at tin- blacksmith shop, determined tQ lose either tlie offending tooth or his head. This time the blacksmith grimly exerted all his great, if clumsy strength and broke the tooth into bits. Whether out of obstinacy, or whether the nerve was killed the ache -was cured: and Mehand went awav firmly believing in the great skill of his dentist. SALAH. The mother of Salali. our eldest boy, died last week leaving him an orphan entirely dependant on our Home. MatGod help us to do always what is the best thing for him! The evening after his mother had been buried Mehand found the poor fellow in tlie field beside the house, and weeping bitterly, and by r liis side sat Ferhat. weeping too. and trying to comfort Salali by telling liini of bis mother. It appears that tlie mother of Ferhat had died when he was quite little, and that liis father had married again, a > savage, brawling woman who conceived a great dislike for the boy. "One day," , he said, "she took me into the woods and tied my hands behind me like this, (showing how it was done). Then slie piled leaves and branches around me and set fire to them. It got tejTibly hot and I liegan to scoreli. I shrieked and ' shrieked, and my older brother heard 1 me and came and set me free. That niglit he hit my step-mother In the head with g board and put out one of her eyes." Do yon wonder that the
» wftDti ens umucsf II 1NRW flNK PNfnUI It ia a ware mistake lor SMtbwa to Mg" lect their ache, and pain, and suffer h alienee— thia only leada to ehriafc **- and often shortens life. If yoor work D tiring: if yoor mm m* excitable: if yon feelWiuid wmrj or depccM^rem ^hou IdJecowAat very demwU to invimrate the fatooi. strengthen the tiasaes, Mhb the oeraao i and build strength. • Scott', ia strengthening tfaooaands af mothers-— and wll b^lp yon. Mo llBlh Ai Scon h Spwae. MnwSmd. W. f. | ■- | poor boy was ill-behaved and savaga looking whrn he came to uat So we have 'an interesting little family. It would warm the hearts of thoaa who contribute toward tbe support of our boys, if they could see the merry little fellows trooping into tho dining room, or see tbem at night kneel- ! down in their white "gandouras" to pray for those American, far away w-hose hands have reached acro.s the sea | to make them happy, July twenty-fifth. 191$. , J. DAVID TOWNSEND, Director of Home; REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. The following is an abstract of con-, veyances entered for record in th« Clerk's office here for week endSeptember 24, 1915: Township of Upper. Edison Ijppincott et ux to Washington Corson, et ux. Lot on S. W. aide 1 of grantor* homestead fartn at Palermo ' to Cape May. containing one acre. Borough of Woodbine. Irad L. Oxley to Wm. H. Oxley. Loi ; 13. 14 and 15. block 12. section A. 1 Township of Dennis. ' Adolpli Edwards, et ux. to Somera ' Corson. $350. Ixit at Ocean View, ad1 joining lands 1 te of John Price, ooar taining 1 8-10 acres. Sea isle City. ■ Susanna. Ledig. Ex., to Charles Giori dano. Lots !Ki and 91, block 58, South - section. Township of Middle. ' ! Wihhvood Extension Realty Co. to Milton Kutz. Uts 29 and 30. block 8. Township of Lower. 7 Sarah K. Shaw et al. to Gordon B. > Yearieks. $100. Lot on East side of i main Baysliore Road, adjoining lands of 7 Alexander McKeandec'd. eon taining VI Cordon B. Yearieks to Sarah Heming1 ! way. .--71 si. Same a- above. 1 James H. Shaw to Herbert S. Shaw. I -*1 14. Jait in Fishing Creek, adjoining - lands of Caleb Shaw, Clinton Hand and ' others, containing 4 acres. 2 roods and James H. Shaw et ux to Herbert 8. r Shaw. I ait in Fishing Creek, being 8. " \V. i-iuner oL lot described above, containing 1 acre. I rood and 20 perches. City of Cape May. Kale S. Hand et vir to Mabel G. Rich- • ard-oii. $2500. I.ot on S. E. side of ' Washington Street and N. E. side of 1 Jefferson Street, adjoining lands of Isaac • Smith on N. K. side and Kate Hand on « S. K. — Cape May County Gazette. • HOW FIRISWESTCIPEIHY? Not so Far that the Statemens el Xta Residents Cannot Be Verified t Rather an interesting case has been developed in West Cape May. Being so near by. it is well worth publishing here. The statement ia sincere— the i proof convincing: . Michael H. Holland. 136 Learning avenue West Cape May, N. J., say* : "For almost a year. I was afflicted with kidney trouble, brought on by a heavy 1 cold. 1 had pains in the smalt • of my back and at times was unable i- to sleep well, getting up in the morning Tired and unrefrcshed. Whenever I stooped or brought any strain on the • muscles of my back, sharp pains dartcd throughout my body and I often felt s miserable. 1 was also subject to headaches and dizzy s|iells. during which my sight blurred. l>oan's Kidney Pills gave me prompt relief and I continued tnkr ing them until completely' cured. I f have had no trouble since." 1 Price 50c. at all dealers. Don't aimply ask for a kidney remedy — get ' Doan'a Kidney Pills — the same that Mr. Holland had. Koater-Milburn Co., Props.. Buffalo, N. Y. - r* FALL CLOTHING ' For either men or women should ba f tailor made. Place your order now with 1 Sherer, who has had years of experience i in producing fine clothing for men and women, fattest Spring samples and 1 styles are now ready. 1 " SCHERFR-S i Decatur, near Washington Street. 1 -o • Your stove will be needed soon. s Jesse Brown. 110 and 111 Jackson Street, will furnish new pipe and erect , tlie stove on short notice. t Grey Bond typewriter paper, size 31-2 I xll, 30 cents per ream while it lasts. I Only 50 reams in this lot. Star and i Wave Stationery Dept. — o f See those new Baby Coaches af i Wentzell's, 33 Perry Street. l

