CAPE MAY STAR AND WAVE Lc _ day January 18, 1919
eoveeaseesresnnressavectreenteo 0 torerent 8 DAUGHTER OF EVE! CH Cho A SELLS immurtinaics Peale ineumemimartineenitinnttnmna if: When Hester Malone tripped in from Yer ride, the delightful tang of an strands tg, she tugged at the gensrous en @olding collar of her mofish coat and Meoked about her for a receptacle for b Apacnnd In the tiny kitchenette ghe erpled £24 p af (A UL! green necktle, decorated with Infinmed *trecides" and a dismond horerboe. "I get ya," coolly annonneed Jnmle, peleasing her. He jahbed at the self starter button. If only it had been Jed1 Jamie, seat» ad on her right, hadu‘t noticed the scar. Hester smothered m groun. She Soved Jed and Jed only. As Hester was luckily endeavoring to believe that she wanted to "pound etpro the rest of her life, Jed came ck. *I went you, Hester," he cried. homers -sed "Ive needed you Yor wo tong, doar," be expisined. "but #fifs lttle fellow who was crippled for two years need: ed my ruperfiuous cash, . Hes 0 K. now. I‘ve Just been out thert to see him and make sare. Don‘t tell me I‘m too lata" "Then -lt wasn‘t the scar . Jed?" gasped Hester. "The scar?" he repeated. "Hester, what are you talkifg aboutt-oh1 my Betug a true damghter of Ere, she L : ord. «Copyright, Mut, by MeCtere Mewmpapse B __ Arstieats)_
MANY ROADS To LONGEvity People Who Have Reached ‘Advansed bud w No Means Unanimous as to the faba Path, Records ahow prov! more women live to be centenurians thin men, . When the cenats of the United Sttes win taken to 1000 it was found that 6,204 persons between the ager of ninety ‘five and ninety-nine were living, ond of this number 8.508 were women. Miss Rila Work, who reached the age -of-one hundred and five, gave as the rerson for her long life that abe boppedfcncedieedidlt s snr Bhobiediretall paied Neve, who lived to be one hut dred and ten, gave an her reason that the never lacked resources and was alwaps busy, and Mrs. Sylvia Dunham, aged one hundred and one, lived to en: Joy the enthusiaam of 22 prosidential campaigns. . Born in July, 1800, at the | age of five she rode in a stuge coach, at forty in a canal boat, at. ninety-olne In. rn electric car, and at one bundred In an eutomoitle, Abraham lived to be one hundred and mevent-five years old and Sarrh C Ebe meven years old, nnd Isane, their son, lived to be one hundred and eight, but whether a year wi reckoned then ne we ho now is not known. <Wifinin Glidstone lived to be eightyINSOMWIA NoT HARD To cure Easy to Tell ‘the Cavies of the Affilo. tion and Remedy ls Matter of Cammon ‘Benes. *There are two kinds of Inomnla, Srid‘eact has Ith cure," ‘a doctor enld. oue wey aos as mat or vede Faviraediies tn. The as Tecame your head pfiriig( (Abo! pillow, wide.awake, and the most vivid and feverish thoughts whirl through your wind for houre. At last, sick with ex‘Bavation,. you fall asleep, but it‘s too oe A #4 l said in rhythm which otherwise be sald mt all; paraphrase a pessage of poetry into prose and the dishevelment the ghost wil have escaped. A good many champlons of free verse would pethape dispute this. if q Helping One Another. We do far more than we think to stendy one anothers principles, to hold one another up. A tought of many a mian in the bour of temptatlon. . The remembrance of wife and child hns barred the way to many & wrong transaction. ‘The quiet courage of ev LD a that does ite best bour by hour and accepts as part of the day‘s work the loser and penalties that sterdfnstly doing right must often bring-this ts the highen. courage of all. Many people add tnnccessarily to their own anslety by assuming cures that do not belong: to them-shich form no real part of their duty or their work. Some of those burdens are pure creations of one‘s own er éited or morbid tmagination, white others appertain to the life or duty of others and not to us-Exchange. Carrot and Radish Seed. ‘California is the largest producer of @earrot seed. . Sncramiento and Yolo counties rank first. with Sun Jorguin. Contra Coste, Santa Clare and: Sun Benito counties ranking as minor pro: ducers, In the production of radish seed the mituntion ix reversed, the éoant counties of California producing the bulk of the crop, find the river Gistrict being unimportant ux a. producer. — It fw also grown in the Prctfe Northwest. | Beet seed Is grown. in both the river and conat districts of ‘Cailfornts, but is probrbly grown more extennively around Ractamento than Bs‘way other portion of the state. Let: tuce seed is grown almost exclusively sear the const rections of California,
COOK-PRO TEM By ELIZABETH GOLDEN, It was a typloal summer botel ve runde. . At least so thought a perspit ing and very much disgusted young wun, who looked up at it from the buttom of the steep and very dust? bill. "An Adamloms Eden, TH warrent," be muttered, taking another look aboad nt the long: walk. still before him. Brown an a young fadiin from weeks of outdoor camp life and corered with dust and porspiration, cer tainly no ome would rave receguized In this very bodraggled young mam, Max Harding, whone aristocratic mort we was a guest at the‘ botel on the hill. Bcowling fercely, he dragged his heavy suitorse up the path, only to be met at the veranda stepr by a pam pouk-looking | Individual | who . effecteally barred bis further pregross. "Can‘t cease up the front way, Sel: Bbe‘s not one of the butterfliet that you are always objecting to, She is a gratuate of a domestic nctence gollege, and she knows no end of things. But walt-she‘s promined. to ait at our table tonight, and you‘ll see bod " "Well, no sign of your divinity yet. mother," ‘naid Max. some minutes intut, when they had started their dinLootiiliy ...... ~A y — "sho‘a changed her mind." | "Mo, here nbe comes" sald Mre. Harding, and straight to their table came the lady of his afternoon‘s adhoaiad Lifting her eyes to acknowledge the Introduction, the color flooded] Into the gitf‘s face, and her eyes asked innumerable quertions as she recognized Lo "Did you know that Katie, the cook, teft this afternoon?" asked the girl of | Mre. Harding, some moments later, when she was herself ngein. "Good gracious," gmzped that lady, "Who ook her place?" | "I di ." maid the girl, quietly (d wring ; ancer with the young man op- | posite her. "I promined Mr. Lane that 1 would try and mee If th hotel | eouldn‘t. run a ‘connerention kichen,‘ so now I‘m eook, pro tem." "Why, my dont, aren‘t you clevert‘ | exclaimed his mother, Inoking at her | son with nn "Ltold-you-no" expreasion, Fust theo the waltrers entered the | éining room with Hguld refreshments | elinking in a ailver pitcher, | "By the way, Miss, Cabot," aald Max, | "since I understand that you are ‘up‘ in such mattere-what drink: would you recommend as the most ccoling and refreshing for there bot days. as well as, most economical?" "Why." said the girl. drintily ratetug her giass as he rained his "whp y shrub, of courne," ninifoiiioersiLiaewediiizniiecard met in a look of complete understand. ng. botainimnfony Ce ARe: tntbantainc anand
HEADQUARTERS JOHN MECRAY POST No, 40 Grand Army of the Republic January 13, 1919 WHEREAS, It has becn . made known to the officers and comrades of John Mecray Post 40, by: authentic information that cannot be doubted, that it is now the purpose and inten« tion by those in power at the "Capitol" | of this State of New Jersey, namely the "State House Commission", and by thier authority to take away and remove the regimental and | Battle: Flags of the "C-vil. War" from the Rotunda of the State House in Tren-| ton: and- i WHEREAS, Those eame Battle Torn | Flags and Emblems of Liberty, which were born by the Heroic Boys of 61) and ‘65 and withstood maby fierce: battles in defence of Liberty and Freedom, in a war that seriously affected the Financial and Industrial prosperity of our country at home and abroad, that cost four hundred thousand loyal lives; that made three hundred thousand Union soldiers and sailors cripples for life; and that left more than a taillion devoted mothers, widows, als ters and orphans to mourn for their Loved ones who did not return, andWHEREAS, It was decided . upon, long years ago by the State House Commission and the Grand Army of the Republic as the most suitable place for them to remain, and it has been the depository of these flags for years past, THEREFORE, Be it resolved that the officers and comrades of John Mecray Post 40 Grand Army of the Republic do most earnestly ‘protest against the removal of the sacred emblems and "Old Glory" battle scarred flags, which are now . so dear to all the Veteran soldiers and which are to us a Vivid Remembrance of our Boyhood days and as goldiers and our great struggle for Democracy and Liberty, those Flags are like the Boys that carried them, they are fast aging and time is showing on Both. THEREFORE, We do most earnestly trust and hope that those Flags will not be removed from the proper place assigned them as long as the last reia- ; nant of the Flags last, and the survivor of that Victorious Army | remain | alive, because they are not only a‘ glorious memento, but a recollection.
and History of brave and gracioun mantiness before God and mon, ind un unselfish Heroiam that was Patriotic, By Command of JOSEPH H. BREWTON, Commander. uscd James J. Donk, Adjutant. ervmarorts-coreurrt ADS MAKE NATIONAL UNITY They Are Daily guide to Good Things Tim Hawkina prom his feet on the rome festooned porch railing in an Oregon suburb and reads the same motor car advertiscment that Cousin Peter in studying as he rides homefrom work in Philadelphia. In Arizona you can buy the ‘mame tooth pmste and tobacco that are used by the folks in Maine, California fruit growers advertise their oranges and lemons to the people of the East. New Hampshire factor» les make ice cream freesers for Texas households. There can be no division in a country no bound ‘together by tante, habit and curtom. You can meet up with anybody in both read the same advertisements. Advertising is the daily guide to what‘s good -to buy. Advertisements give you the latest news from the front lines of business progress. Reading advertisements enables you to get more for your money because they tell you where, what and when to buy. bnompraret cccommprrnd Yacht Club Klects Officers At a meeting of the Corinthian Yacht Club of Cape May in Philadelphin, officers were elected for the coming year. | Frank B. Bower owner of the schooner Elxic I, was chosen vice-corsmodore; . A. F. . Bancroft, secretary and treasurer, and Charles D, Mower was elected measurer. The meeting followed.m banquet and no formal business wos taken up. \«--mgae --- BLUE PRINT PENCILS, beet grade bioondindinmdonndb ined aithond Co Ca C SE amsunt, — STAR AND WAVE PUR CO, CAPE MAY, N. J.
THOMAS DOWD Thoma: Dowd, n wran of the 1 War, aged 80. year, died Home, at Keurney, N. Saturday of last week. . Du he il War, Mr. Dowd war a member of the crew of the Battleship P.qum. The funeral nervices occurred he home of George Holden on Tucsday morning. | Interment, Catholic Cometary. .=------«meee ___ STOCKHOLDERS MEETING The annual meeting of the Stock« holders of Cape May Building and doan Association will be held in their rooms No. 508 Washington Street, Cape May, N. J. on Monday, January oth, 1919 at 7:80 P. M. at which meeting the Auditors will report the Value of the different Serfas of Stock. The Officers for ‘the yebr will be elected, the bist Suria will be opened for subscriptions and mich other busthess tranracted as shall come before the meeting, it is hoped the Stocke holders will be present to take part in the business thet comes up for action. Cape May, N. J. January 4th, 1919 H. 8. RUTHERFORD 1-11-19- 6-3t omas A «-----ameen __/. BLUE PRINT PENCILS, best grade ‘white 10 Frag «or $1100 yer dos Add 5 .cente postage. a aran AND wave POM CO, CAPE MAY _N.‘3. wom — m game_FIRE ALARM BOKKS 4-Washington ‘BL., mene Schellengarh Tending. 32-Washington St. near Union. 47-Washinglon Bt. & Madison Are. d4-Lafayetttc Bt. & Bank, 88-Broad & Rimira: Bis, 65-Pitteburg & New Jersey Ave. 60-Btockton Ave. near wueen St. 73-Washington & Franklin Ste. T5-Howard Bt. & Btockton Ave. 82-Columble Ave. & Gnerney Bt. #4-Ocean St. near Beach Ave, #1-Broadway & Grant Bt. §2-Brosdway & Beach Ave. A8-Perry St. & Cape Jaland Creek. 94--lafayette & Orant Sta. 96-Warhington & Jackson Ste. M-Oolumbla Ave. & Decatur St. 6-Warhington & Ocean Bte.
U 1 1 1 ‘] M { | | 4 i dn.2 j y s 1 500 ( To} 1 (0) S43 50 W. L. Stevens, Inc., operators of the Cape May and Goshen Canning Factories has purchased one of the new Fordson Tractors and has been demonstrating same on his farm in West Cope May. | This machine takes the place of four teame of horses, one will plow with a double plow 8 acres a day, and is operated by one iman. — The machine runs on coal ofl, besides it can be used for Harrowing, dincing, rawing wood and general farm use. . Jay Mecray is the Cape May agent.
y Bt it £ of 54 The Ford Motor Company has continued the manufacture of all designs of Ford CarsBedansTouring Cars-Run-abouts and Trucks. & BEE JAY MECRA

