Cape May Star and Wave, 25 January 1919 IIIF issue link — Page 7

FSotatice EVAIn COTE NOARU Ae UJ UJ | CAPE MAY STAR AND WAVE | Page Seven

— gAY You‘ READ This!

[?]

J TJ (Eres dit Spouting and ail RET Csd Sheet Iron WAS s _L.

Now is the time to purchase a pipeless novelty heater before the advance. os a stalled by an experienced heating man, one who who can tell you the p to heat your house in zero weather. Have every room warm and cozy and a cool cellar in the bargain. Thse heaters are made to last for lifetime. A lifetime free of stove annoyance. — Remember this is the only pipeless heater made in the east. | [ EC tS Sa NST E 905 2.1 (0 I oc n Philadelphia, Pa. av i:FA9 >> 6 J 90s) 200 0 ( :3 0104000. pb (ik 2s pra ieto dies: Cape May, N. J. HERBEDE JOHNSON w M. HICKEY Ob oeeti(e: 661 WASHINGTON ST. BFX bie 00.0 C00 53 1 th o +4 51 220 1 24 dct EAA of 0 c 1 SS 5 5) (3 Foy 7 Ce) o oP 0 A Ng 5 60 1 9 ~A y 1 53 5 SB tpa) je ul B 53 5° ME 63 5.04 51 1 I0 Pile) BJ a d A 1 0 CJ fle}s | 10). P S : | (O] 4 ~ ¢ | 1500 ¥ 5 lik s (Ua L 23 Proprietor |

| 5J [Ere ie tar: I [ OrcS i { 19 bet nal Making a Specialty of Store and Window Lighting. | I\ y w _C A DF. y (a) oj oll. (oy el cld f ) 3 M 3 210 23 Kepstone Phone 809-D3 CAPE MAY. N. J

RIDGWAY i([0]§}j 3 «BT-THE-FERRIES e 4:19. ®

5 (oJ 3 9 M ney, AT-THE-FERRIES | ef € 10) 30

CP ~ o ler F y o a N > Cog y A P fall 2 PWR PV q ROOMS WITH PRIVATE BATM. . _L GSF and corn mue«g wayee tf BACH ROO ADVERTISE pe o o e Pu Sn (24

cxnncmnmnnnrannuacennecennencne uwes® at.. Jy s (200 (0 S3 i ay. Nulel al s{o} DS a) ) 09:30

o organs of th: buman boty are co ° to an the kidneys. low up and com mense to lue in their dution) Took (out! Find out what the trouble e Danaver you trom your a

Get nome GOL Stil 14 wariem OH Capmelon at onee. ‘They are an old. tri preparation used all aver the world for n | their MHPAL Hitron ol ca ported. dire Tithieng! This an and will eb orlinat SEDAL prong" ~Ascept ho aubstitutee In senled puckege® ree atzes

WHAT OF DUSTING FOR TREE FRUI Dusting is a valuable adjunct to spraying in New Jersey, but cannot take its place under all conditions, is the conclusion to be drawn from two years of experimenting with the use of dust in controlling insects and diseases on tree fruits. . According to information at present svallable, the Agricultural Experiment Station advises that the following may be said of dusting in New Jersey: PEACH 1. Dusting of peach (during the growing stason) seems to control curcullo and scab in an entirely satisfactary manner, and enhances the color of the fruit. 2. Dosting (during the growing season) for control of brown rot is still uncertain for New Jersey conditions, although it has proven effective in cortain other states. 8. Dusting formulas in the market today ure dangerously variable. The safest formula (based on pres ent information) is 70 pounds of superfine sulfur, 20 pounds of hydrated lime and 10 pounds of powered arsenate of lead for the . "shuck fall" dusting and the one which follows it. For the lster dustings . the mixture should be 80 pounds of superfine sulfur and 20 pounds of hydrated lime. Ordinary sulfur will not do. The superfine sulfur should be fine enough to pass through a sieve with 200 meshes to the square inch. 4. — Dusting | (during . dormancy) for the control of peach curl and SanJose Scale can not be recommended on the basis of present information. pomme acrommment FREE OF CHARGE Why suffer with inc lon, — dyn: pepain, torpid liver, preemie sous stomach, comingupoftle laxative. "Try it. For anl divilised countrins We invite you to open an account in the Security Trust Co.-a atromg reptubslaitermaded interest paid on savis the beat incentive you can have for he saving of money. .‘

BLUE PRINT PENCILS, best grade | white, 10 cents cach, $100 per dor. Add 5 cents for postage. . Any umount, | STAR AND WAVE PUB. 70., CAPE MAY, N. J. All over Cape May you hear . it. Doan‘s Kidney‘s Pills are keeping up the good work, Cape May people are telling about it-telling of bad backs made sound again. You can believe the testimony of your own townspeople. They tell it for the benefit of you who are suffering. If your back aches, if you feel lame, sore and miserable, if the kidneys act too frequently, or passages are . painful, scanty and off color, use Doun‘s Kid. ney Pills, the remedy that has helped so many of your friends and neighbors. Follow this Cape May citizen‘s advice and give Doan‘s a change to do the same for 3 wu. M. C. Bone! »rt, 608 Lafayette St., says: "About . selve years ago while working, a sharp pain Caught me in the amall of my back I paid Tittle attention to it at first but before very long it got so bad I had to give up my work | The trouble | nearly drove me wild, 1 beg@h using Doan‘s Kidney‘s Pills getting them at Hewitt & York‘s Drug Store. Soon I noticed a wonderful change and began to feel more like myself again- I used about twelve boxes in all 2nd I can say that the cure has been 8 coo hinle one. It has been nearly & Y°ar and I haven‘t had a bit of trouble Price @c, at all dealers. — Don‘t simply ank for 8 Kidne? Yemedy-got Doan‘s Kidney PH#-t ahme that Mr. Benckert bat. ._ Pester-Milburn Co., Migre« PROC & A

be the center of the system mission To any direction to the Hinde of tran Iir. Vall‘s second premise is contained Bg woord raped itpiival r Fey wired canter bdpbinfceintadincteadinivetias suftcent to fully protect ite political and ecoriomic position?" em of international ion hax been built these world facilities, as old world‘s centers of nandis bey are not ils ao EecidL us ran productive of the maximum possibilities of Real efficles paprieg Stames » is connected with this world system but on one ide as a contributing field to be reached and en» pl atoad an aot iar tod, as a center. We must give our commerce what it needs and wi at the commerce of the old a rom the United States to the greater t of the world Reeibioal intercom munication is expensive and roundabout. By utilizing and unifying the opera tions of the existing and abundant transatlantic cable Incilities, direct connection |. can be established with every country in Europe through some immediate rearrangement, and as soon as possible some. relaying, relocating, some extension of the old and the laying of y" haid [xgeq |_ While private proj lus apected. proprietary rights shoulg hoe e faw Thu io obstruct this solution any ( nl whes prietary rights, of any wtllity ‘Tom prevent regulated or con: t operation. . The constitutional rights in each case are identical. The United States must be brought into the center of a world aystem of trical intercommunication. Irabipe and merchants must not depend upon the EAenet courtesy of any Reveal Rowived to # direct home-wire communication. is country is rpending Thousands t of millions of don ooo build Piic frees to os pete for forel the ver "essential tal" to to s o building up ap of foreign com wick, — relial intercommunication entirely ieluiined initiative and to foreign enterprise. With as many tens of millions polh co-aperation of the existing cable companics controlled in the United States, a Ryrtem could be built up. which would put the business of the United States, as it were, at the front door of every busi+ ness, house of the worl Of what use will be the expenditure of money and effort in bebalf of American commerce if there are to be no abundant available facititics of communication for th ents who apread that commerce if the ships that carry it cannot have a ready communication Without the con i any foreign nat It is to be regretted that the questions of Government ownership and supcrior foreign rights have been brought. into this cable question to handicap the solution of this big and most important

sud American standpoint by some cosordinated correlated combination of mont authority and private opet ition founded on the best traditions of private operation free from political interference and combined in a federalized corporation. here must be no question an to the tight or the necessity of the United Stater to build up a commercial inter: national wire system of which the U States is the center, instead of remaining at one side of an international system which centers in the English Channel. Nor should there he any such a spectacle as an American-owned company | ob> structing the creation of an all-American cable system. <_ 2222222 CHANCERY OF NEW sERsEY To Hazel 1. Canfield: By virtue of an order of the Court of Chancery of New Jersey, made on the day of the date hereof, in a certain cause wherein Lewis C . Canfield is petitioner und you are defendant, you are required to appear and answer to petitioners petition on or before the seventeenth day of March next, or in default thereof, such decree will be taken agminst you as the Chancellor shall think equitable and Just. The object of suid suit is to obtain a decree of divorce, | dissolving . the marriage between you and the said petitioner. NORMAN GREY, Solicitor for Petitioner, P. O. Addross;104 Market Street, Camen, New Jorsey, January 14, 1919. 1-25-19 S1-5¢, ©2222 22222, BLUE PRINT PENCILS, best grede white, 10 cents Newsbin #1 ao Haid fee Add 5 ceats for amount. | STAR Anb parcel w sok CO, CAPE MAY, N. 1.

Record Time Made in Informing Colonies That England Was at War. Tt required only atx minutes to In form the British empire (hat England was at war on the night of August 4 1914, says Lord Harcourt, who was then colonial secretary. "Ou that unforgettable night," be said io the Empire Parliamentary a» soclation, "I wan in the cablnet room, Downing street, with a few colleagues, "We were waiting for a reply, which we knew full well would never come, "I nsked him to return to my reom when be had done his work, In seven minutes he was back and before morning I received an ncknowledgment of "Bo the grim machinery of war began revolving in perfect order and with . perfect . preparation . because more than two-year« previously, an individual war book had been prepared

y Vie colon lefonne for every «ingle protectorate and Island. It was at that moment locked in the safe of each governor or commiaxloner and they knew at once what to do." LAW CLERK IS RICH Inherits Fortune After Struggling for Vears on Meager Salary, W. W. Scranton, for 30 years a rest« dent of Knozville, Tean., who strug- | gled for the last seven years to feed and clothe his wife and two sons on hix meager sulary as a clerk in a law office in Fountain City, ‘Teon, has Just inherited am estate valued at $100,000, Scranton learned of his good fortune feom attorneys for his greataunt, who dled at Galton, O., recently. Forthwith he abandoned his clerkship and prepared to enter the practice of lnw. From now on he is assured of en in come of about $330 monthly from the estate, and this totul, together with what he earns from his new profes: ston, he believes, will keep the wolf from the door. Seranton‘s mister, who resides at Galion, Inherited property worth $1, 500,000 from the greatnunt‘s estate.) The Serantons were born In Copen-! hagen, Denmark. PAYS FOR CLOTHING It Was Evidence Against Him and Ne: gro Burned It. Miss Geneva Criewell of Vondatia, Mo,, was paid $07 throuh the county elrcult court for the low of hor grid anting wardrobe. ard therehy hangs an | Interesting court story, | Miss Crswell wos in tueiihc® of the geudunting class of the Yonc iin high school. — A few digs Ls fur > numence: ment Within: Rrscn gto, stole I i

tured, but deeded to { dense by birnlng the semeneed to uo term In the tiary, but was puroled upon his prome [Ine to pay Miss Crlswell for the | etothew, Ite hms Leen aving She money at the | | tate of $5 n month and this week made | the final pryment. HOW PERFECTLY CHEERFUL1 Visiting Committee is Composed of Undertaker, Cabinet Maker and Crematory Manager. The Rotary club at Sun Francisco bas a "visiting committee" to call on sick members and to give them cheer and comfort while they are recuperating. John Smith, president of the club, when the suggestion. to name such a committee was made, promptly | sata: "I will name Charles Pruman, Prank Muhew and Lawrence Moore." Prosts dent Smith probably forgot chit TruLoe att dertakers, Muhew in president of a | casket factory, Moore is manager of | | an Oakland crematory, HONOR TO WHITTLESEY | Commander of "Lost Battailon® to Have Park Named for Him. An a trllute to the gallant Lieut Col. Chnries W, Whitterey, command er of the famous "Lost Battition who told the Germans to "go to hel It fs proposed to name one of the publte — parks at — Pitisfleld, — Mnan., "Whitticscy Park." The movement to perpetinte the memory. of this Pitte field young mun was fannched at a meeting of the local comnotl, Knight® of Colimbin . The matter Is now be fore the park ectumii«stonorn and @ fre vermble doetslan Ix expected. Concerning Running. Bald the facetious feller: . "Atu‘t it funny? A man docsn‘t ran after bes eaught a ntrect car, but his nose does ! pfter he‘s caught a cold."

ORCHARD CARE PRUNING APPLES The old suying ix prune when your knife | in . sharp,this . alrignt | ?or light pruning, but the in pruning should be done when the trees ars dormant, | unually . in — February . or whine and. air. Reasons for pruni To modify the vigor of the tree. ‘to keep the tree in good shape. ‘To open the tree top to admit sume shineand air. To . remove dead or interfering branchen. To make better fruit, indirectly, To make thorough spraying possible, In pruning old orchards which have c ert the first year as a heavy growth of water sprouts will follow such treatgrow in toward the center, Cut out the water sprouts, except where some might be left for future main lim In pruning diseased wood be sure to cut back to the live wood. Implements which have cut diseased wood should be treated to a diainfectant of formalin or formaldehyde (1 part to 19 water) before en other limbs, as diseases are spi caslly if this is not done. Cut out excessive growth from the center of the trees in order to admit nir and sunshine, as there are casential to good fruit. Then too if trees are trimmed properly the spraying will be much more effective, by being more thorouehly i ay ot c pruning of young orchards wpples and peaches will be discussed " ter. ERMA VOCATIONAL scHOoL ---»eas --. WHY NOT PRIVATE P. 0. D1 The inefficiency of the Post Office

Department under its management has become so dinguating that before long the advisability of consinging mail to ‘the hands of private industry is quite as apt to be seriourly advocated by men of common sense as the extonwion of Government controls at present . being advocated | by | theorists, bolshivists, W.W., I. W. W. .and the Sons of Rest. One of the greatest punishment« which can be visited on a man is for him to see the wrecking of the edifice which he founded. -Ben Franklin is getting his, but what did he do to deserve it ? Ipprpipinedtavocmenment ARCADIA TU, 8. A. "A bunch of sheep in every farm» yard" is a new slogan proposed to aid in the restoration of the | American sheep industry to its former acad tions, Very good, . A bunch of sheep in every farm-yard would meaimp tective tariff advocates vote in every arm home, and protecteive tariff adroeutex vote the Republican ticket. ~----mea-____ BLUE PRINT PENCILS, best grade white, 10 cents each, $1.00 per doz. Add 5 cents for postage. — Any amount. — STAR AND WAVE PUB. ., CAPE MAY, N. 4,

Tor a Quicker Stat When y Pa J rt doalt try d it all wim thi wo o fur that only Prime your m coatrols rights und c opoo mr choker to get ture and quicker nid take home of the toad off Ne ege mand not till then e button, un w ‘There are lots of other little wrinkles that prolong your battery‘s life and make car opers« tion easicr. . Drop in and. let us post you on them. Francis J. McCaffrey 3333 Atlantic Avenue $50 Ota 29 , Ma] Expert Starter and generator repairsf® We charge and repate any make of battery, We have a rental ba tery for any car hike) | yours is being repaire or charged. f