of Reading like H Yootb's Conpmon l/mTOIIB<»IMnoi\ "Sf „ -, _ ' 1 W - - . >\ The f«rontc fenHy weekly of Aoeria. f The Best lwo\ ' b>- n-inions'of Amfnaii 10171m You ^ \nti umt B3^.%^T£'£ ^^jKr 64^-^2-'°- - , 1THE YOUTH'S CO»ffV'-~N for 52 wtdn. ard tbc ltlTHafoc'cairffr. (This Ofier i» » new Yo"' 'i Cer -anion subscribers only.) ZMcCALL'S rJA<SA23Htrv-n'i~nrth for ooe year; ako choice of any IScent McCall Uros Pattern PR lit for 2 cent* extra to covct «w»aiig THE YOUTH'S COMPANION, St. Paal Su BOSTON. MA5SACHUSETTS — | ] SnellenburgS ^jl BHMCE BLOCK -NMKET //*- /?*STe£ETS^ I Don't forget that our Free Delivery Ser^ce emb races your town and vicinity, and that all purchases made by you will be delivered directly to your door, without any additional cost. Our MAIL ORDER DEPARTMENT, with its force of trained shoppers, is at your service at all times. We pride ourselves upon our promptness and reliability. We will gladly send samples, or. where that is not feasible, detailed information of any merchandise desired. If a monthly charge account would add to your convenience, just communicate with our Credit Department. Look for our ads in the Philadelphia papers. "Our Anniversary Sale of Housefurnishing Goods, t hina, Glassware, Lamps, etc., now on, is making new record* for offerings of the most wanted merchandise at • special, low prices All thru the month of November it will be wise to keep in touch with our An- <| niversary announcements - every one will be j worth reading as a money-saving opportunity." Mr. Walter M. Horaan, West (.ape May. X. J.. take« care of all I our Pefivery Service in Cape May, West t ape May, South Cape May. Gape May Point, Cold Spring, Fiah Creek. Diss Creek. I ape May Court House. Burleigh. Mavville. Rio Grande, Krma. Bennett. Whites, boro. !^en Creek and Wildwood Junction. N. SNELLENBURG &' COMPANY MARKET, 11th to 12th STS. '• * PHILADELPHIA •• i ; I Stoves Necessary IN CAPE MAY QMany of the homes in Cape May and surrounding country are heated with stoves, and if you would get the most heat from a small quantity of coal, B consult Jesse Brown Pi 110 mad 112 Jmckaoo St. Cmpm limy, N. J.
-J#**,' For each microbe and bacillus has a different way to kin u* And in time will always claim ut for thlir own. _ There are germs of every kind to any food that yon can find In the market or\ipon the bill of fare, Drinking water's just as risky as the ao-called whiskey, And ita often a mistake to breathe the air. Some little bug is going to And yon some aay, Some little bug will creep behind yon [ some day. Then hell send -for his bug friends, and j ' all yonr earthly trouble ends. Some little bug is going to find yon | some day. The inviting green cucumber get* most ! anybody's number I And the green com baa a system all , its own, Though' a radish seems nutritious, ita behavior is quite vicious * And may introduce the doctor in your borne. lohster, cooked or plain, is only ' flirting with ptomaine, And aii oyster sometimes has a lot . But the clams we eat in chowder ma^e the angels chant the louder. For they know we*ll be with them ! right away. Some little bug is going to find you some day. Some little bug will creep behind you some day ; Then hell get into yonr gizzard, if you lose him you're a wizard. Some little bug is going to find you Take a slice of nice fried onion and your fit for Dr. Munyon. Apple dumplings kill you quicker than 1 a train, Chew a cheesy midnight rarebit and a : grave you'll soon inhabit,
Ab, to cat at all is such a foolish Eating huckleberry pie is a pleasant way to die, While sauerkraut brings on softening of the brain. When vou° eat banana fritters every undertaker titters Ami the casket-makers nearly go inSome little bug is going to find you Some little bug will creep behind you some day;' that sauce that they call Chili And on yonr brcst they'll place a lily. little bug is going to find von
1 1 10 cents > » ' > y \f Yo UR well-brewed afternoon to, your j . rich chocolate, your fragrant coffee, . :s all taste the better when served with I Social Tea Biscuit. Delicious biscuit, delicately flavored, I I always fresh and wonderfully good. / | Social Tea Biscuit enhance the enjoyment of all refreshment WASTE TANBARK NOW '
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There it is again I ^ See the look of fiendish glee as he is about to ' j grasp the girl, all unaware of her impending I fate! What is it all about? What does it all mean? You will find the answer in the greatest of Motion Picture Serial stones ever printed The Iron Claw By ARTHUR STRINGER k is a story that will hold your interest from the j : reading of the first installment until the la.st excit- i ing adventure is related, k will make you realize that a new standard of excellence in Motion Picture Serials has been creaied. Arthur Stringer's stories have heretofore ap- I prared in only the highest class of n r ~azines i j This opportunity to read one of the t • . pieces of fiction he has ever produced should not be '■ overlooked. The picturized version produced jit! by the Pathe Co. is just as interesting as trie Moiy. jjj -as THE JRON CLAW j I Then See the Pictures at the Moving Pictire Jheater I ( Chapter No. 5 ) I SHOWING AT : ■ <*V-., p Palace Theatre, Tuesday, Nov. 21»t ; Read the Sfr, <4 Fmgt» 6 a»d 7 I
USED TO MAKE ROOFING r 1 1 A method for using waste hemlock j tan bark to partially replace expensive ? rag stock m the manufacture of felt • roofing has been developed at the Forest ' Product# Laboratory and is now being usi< commercially by cooperating mills, according to an announcement madr by , the Forest Service. It is state_JJuikx-iii these mills, from 20 to 30 per cent of the rag- i- being replaced by waste bark , 1 and that the quality of the finished i product 1* equal to that manufactured | 1 solely from rags. Members of the Forest Sendee who have been conducting , the experiments say that the utilization - of the bark will make it possible- to ef1 feet a considerable saving in the manu- ' factuvo of felt roofing. ' According to. the census of 1900, over ti!>8,000 tons of hemlock bark were produced each year in -the United States. After the tannin is extracted this bark C is used for fuel purposes, for which It is said to have avalue of 60 cents per ton. tl The extent of the savings rendered h possible by the new methods is pointed C "Ut by the fact that the roofing mills itf the United States have a total esti- a mntyj annual production of 237,000 tons of finished roofing of all kinds, equal _ • to about 1 1 .300,000 "squares." By a J "square" of roofing is meant 100 square | feet. The utilization of the waste bark j in this industry should, it is -ajd. enable -p j the mills to reduce their manufacturing 1 In addition to the use of tt.e bark for *"* i roofing. papers made at the Purest Prov duets Laboratory the ba-i- of SO (k-r cent of waste tanbark. have been -successfully printed* on* ., rominereial '»• I twelve color wallpaper printing maeliine. ,a and give promise „f being entirely -at isfaetqrv. Other paper of the sgtu-- , • make-np has b>-eu niud.- into fiber con- I ,,t •toils by a commercial manufacturer. |'.>i -Other uses of wa-t.- bark wbiel. ; ■ • suggest themselves, say the f or.-*t <er- |j > ice paper experts, are the u-e of hark ! 1 '<* experts, are th.- |.
lixed with ground wood for the pr.xhn - _ ° i on of wall board. ..r with sulpfke * | liners. Studies air. -a.lv made „t Mlo «' Korest Products UW.it. .rv iiidkktc ■' that it may U- po-ibl.- to" „s,. 'wttte. hemlock and oak tanbark in mai^ng fo -hea tiling paper. ear|„-t lin.-r., boftle I wrappers, deadening felt, and the like. Rubber Stamp Pads, all colors^dt tin •Id price while they last: 25 eentr each, , 2.50 per dozen; assorted i-olots, finest • ;Ualitv. After this supply is exhausted t i he price will advance 40 per cent. Star nd Wave Stationery Department. 0' j The Star n-d Wave's Stationery De- W • «rtment sells the BEST Typewriter "a Ribbon and the price has not licen raised. Oan you beat it? w| fir steamship collides with TO' babge ih delaware bat
i Wednesday morning. the steamship I Wlihelm Coldlnw rammed and sank the barge Pure Oil No. 3. about six miles I above Cape May Phipt. Capt. Collins (a brother of Capt. Joseph Collins who j ' "tloted the "Cape May" for n short "•"bile last summer) was badly injured. I I'he steamer was outward bound furl Vntilla. Cuba, while the barer was I beaded for Marcus Hook fron. New I For First Quality Rubbers so to M. C. Frymire. West Cape May. 2041 charles g. marshall Charles <5. Marshall, a veteran of the Civil -War. died Wednesday mornins at his home. 1704 Cayuga ft., after a two weeks' attack of crip. He was manager of the Liberty Stove Works. Tenth and Ifriwn ata.. where he had been employe.l fifty years. In the Civil War he was a member of„ Company c. TwenUeth Regiment, Pennsylvania Volunteers. Mr. Marshall also was a member of Welcome Lodge, I. O. a F. The funeral probably will be held Saturday, but complete arrangements have not yet been made Mr. Marshall to survived
cle&fs ih the Reuben T. Johnson flora and the latter al&tnoerat made an election bet. Ae a result, on Tuesday ereRing. Hoffman, the loser, had to wheal Snydei down to the Jr. Q. C. A. M. Hall At Cold Spring and back, followed by automobiles and the Cold Spring Bend. One of the conditions of the wauen was that the loser chew helf « pound of green hickory bark las a reminder of •'O'O Hickory" Jackson, former Democratic president.) and spit the Julne la the ear of the first animal be should come across. Riding pet his wheel an his way home. Hoffman saw what he was sore wae a cat. end steered for it to fullfjl hU debt. The cat, Which proved to be a. pole catrTesen ted the hickory juice, arid now Hoffman weans a different suit of clothes and buys tal;r cum powder by the half dosvn boxes. Snyder, the winner ate a dollar box of candy - at the expense of the loser, while on :hls wheelbarrow trip. ARRIVAL* AT HAL PUTS VILLA Waterbury. Ct. — J. H. Tsmi.m— w. L. Lukens. Frank AUman, M. J. Wall, J. P. Madden. Philander Fragrssae. R. P. Lowendea, Arthur Buler. Philadelphia — Harry H Pease. Mary Rogers. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. King. C. B. Kishpaugh. E. R. Scott, W. P. Barrows, Helen M. Robinson. E. T. Dobbins, R. ">• rvooineon. e. r. AAODDlns, H.
" L Campbell. m. m. Campbell. New fork City— Mr. and Mrs. J. Or3 rin White. Mr. and Mrs. Frederick A. Davidson. * . Lansdowne. Pa.— Mr. and Mrs. a H. * Eppelkelmer. Mr. and Mrs. R. Wlllets. e Wallingford. Pa — Mr. and Mrs. Jaa. t Spear. t — : — ' SCHOOL TEACHER x ' Off Nerviyas Break Down , Alburtis, Pa. — "I am a teacher in tho public schools, and I got into a very nerK vous, run-down condition. I could not 1 sleep and had no appetite. I was iired i all the time. Mf Bister asked me to try VinoL I did so, and within a week my appetite improved and I could sleep aU - night and now I feel well and strong." i —Rosa M. Keller, Alburtis, Pa. We guarantee Vinol, which oontaina beef and cod liver peptones, iron and manganese pepton&tc-, and glycerophosphates for run-down conditions Mecray's Pharmacy, Cape May. N. J. .' m. c. h. h. s. students to come here. ' One hundred -and fifteen students of ■ Cape May Court House High School | have been transferred to the Cape May I High School to complete their ' school term. Oj g^pg to the fire which de^ stroyed MidORg^wnshlp High School Cape Mnr (VHiil House yesterday. Notice to Gunners notice All Concerned : * No ii es passing on Bishop Farm, Fishing Creek, for any purpose whatever under penalty of law. 1835-1 2-2-1 S G. 43. BISHOP. notice to gunners Gunners or trappers are hereby forto trespass on the A. B. Miller lartn at Green Creek. N. J. 1990-Jt notice j peuulty of the law. on the properly of ' Rubber Stamp%racs. an colors, at ine ivuuuvi oi«uip%j-acs, an colors,
'old price while they last: 25 cents each, quality. After tale Rilpply is exlia.>-U-d th. , •: «i!l adiiinee 4i> |ar cent, star . and U'.ve sutionery lh« una. nr. Let Us Print Your Sale Bills make big demonstration wnd"" M"^*y l,lRl,, Die Deniucrnts of pqradc through th- streets of May. ' May Band and the Merry Concert lir'mL floats, traversed the slreeis of the ed. A large nunii er of persons from
ATTEND GRAND LODGE Robed C. Huglies and Frank Costello repre-r nted Mayflower Lodge., of Odd I Fellow i at I he Grand Lodge meeting I held ei, Trenton on Wednesday and I Thursday, -of this week. fEVEN IF 9 VOU HAD A NECK As Leo« As Thit FaOow, And lad »0RE THROAT ON^jlE hi to— m. . . . mJSi

