Cape May Star and Wave, 6 December 1919 IIIF issue link — Page 3

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Lod s FC (4 B JMET O s | 324 00 y Eto fe gO) 5 1C SOE. t a (o A 7:40| | (64 | rC 3 1 [ circa PRESSING Repairing & Altering a Specialty Decatur Street, Cape May, N. J. PLACE YOUR [oin > ji Mo hdd od Coat Now The delays and vexations due to car shortage, and other railroad troubles, strikes and weather conditions, will be avoided by placing your order now. | ig £ E00 1 tt ull 1) 51 i $9 51 2 3 "l 0) CHB A A S3 1A 5 I ) D+ € 01 54 int ult: a 1 6) 54 58 (V 143, EVE ENUM g (0 Main Office-512 WASHINGTON STREET

PNL (d (W 3 IMPROVING IN THE EARLY DAYS THIS COUN: TRY WAS BARREN OF TH LUXURIES — OP — TODAYDMPORTANT ANIMALS IMPORTED FROM SPA When one thinks about America in of — Columbus, . hardly s thought given to what the jurds who followed discovered i | what is now America. It ma s i news to man: benons to {know that the settlers from Europe had a mighty hard time securing food | that was good. One thinks of butter, eggs: beefsteaks, mutton: chops, « ang BS al j now, but there were none af these in| the olden days, fewer than foor hun- | dred years ago. |_ When the first Spamiands brought horses over with them and rode into the Indian towns the Indians were so scared they thought the end of the

world had come, Not one of them had ever seen a horse, donkey or cow before, and to find a small man manag» ing a big beast like that was almost beyond Indian belief. The first horses came from Spain into which country they had been taken from Persia and Armenia. Before the day of the Spaniards there was not one cow in: all North America. Neither were | there any sheep except the wild mountain sheep of the West; not a goat, not a pig or hog. No hens or ducks except wild ones, no turkeys that had been tamed, although America today is the home of the domesticated turkey, With the exception of the turkeys, all these things had to be brought from Europe, and Europe had first to bring them from Asin-for Asin is the oldest place mn civilization, . practically . everything oviginated in -a country so old that if you dig around for a while you come upon a buried city. If you tuke that buried city away and dig further you will find buried eity piled on bur» led eity, all of which cities have pass» ed away from all remembrance.

The first settler in America didn‘t | even have brooms, jor the broum corn. was unlnown. anid at wis. brought here: from India. toromen eume iro being hea a soot Toe ago. after the seed hai been brought from Spain. The big but lowly cabbage was nev» et seen in America until the eiuly setters brought it from Asia to Europe mnd then to. Americ Sugar was unknown to the Indians und even among settlom. . IL was in curiosity until 1764, when sugar cane was brought to Lowisuna after having been. brought to the | West Indies by Aral And apples.. Just think of it, not an apple in all America and only a few in England. All the apple trees of the world were. raised. from: little: crab upple trees brought from Siberia. There was plenty of corn, for some how the Indians in the long ago had somehow secured corn seed from Asia. Of wheat there was none; that too. had to be brought from Asia. The first white settlers didn‘t even have rice or barley or any cereal except com, There wasn‘t a domesticated sheep in all — America until | some . were brought from England in 1609, and peanuts were unknown until long after that they were brought from Africa. There wasn‘t u rabbit from the Atlantic to the Pacific. Radishes had to be brought from Asia, apricots from China und Japun, East Indies, pine apples from South America, turnips from Armenia, beets from France, car away. seeds from Germany, carrots from the Mediterannean, cucumbers and watermelons and kindred fruits from Asia. Dates from Arabin, currants from Greece, fige from Arabia, nutmegs from India, olives from the Adriatic and even the common pew was unknown until it had bee brought from Asin. Pears were growing in England, but it was more thun a hundred years before the first pear tree grew on Amer» ican soil. e Indians and the early. settlers didn‘t even have honey to sweeten things with, fos the only honey was that made by the bumble bee. and bumble bees were v caree . Honey came with | bees from Italy. | Plums were unknown. Boys of today: will probably envy the early boy settlers because those little fellows didn‘t even know the world had such a thing as castor ofl, for the castor plant was not imported for two hundfed years. Lilacs came from Persia only two hundred years ndd America must have been somthing of a wilderness, but although there were nb peppers, spices or anything of that kind, there . was plenty: of salt. There were no sparrowws in America until | they were. brought . here from England in 1856. It is a common but mistaken belief that the English sparrons after having been brought to Americs to eat caterpillars, fell lown on the job and became cereal eat" ing nuisances, This is not true. In | 1856. crankworms. were. so numerous \ that they were ruining the vegetation all over the United States, In the |eity of Brooklyn these crankworms | we e so muny webs that they bung in jelusters from the trees and the pedestriuns had to walk in the middle of [the streets. Sprays were unknown, (so the United States imported many | sparrows and in a very short time the erankworm had disappeared and the nuisance was ended. There ate two sides to ever | and so with this, for the ear had to have somthing to eat. \ | found white and sweet potatoes here. moose, bents, | buffaloes, garlic onions but no toma: toes, for up to within the memory of many living persons. tomatoes: were | raised as flower and were supposed | to be poison. Ninety years ugo there wusn‘t a railroad in any part of the American ‘Continent and it was mot until 1830 that there was such a thing as an om nils, In 1630 there were not mor | thin a hundred carriages in England and not one in America. Travelers had to go on horseback and horses were few and fur between. Chilcren. had a hard time up unti 1783 until the first cent was mad

ADVERTISE Don‘t compliin about the profits When sour business a «lumpy with competitors around y m to have you on the: jump; peet the buying public To step up and patronize A firm they never heard ofCome to life- and. Advertise. Don‘t blame the weather and the times When the patronage is poor, While across the street your neighbor Seems to prosper and endur Just investigate his methods And you‘ll find to your «urpri He‘s a chap that knows his business And the way to Advertise, Perhaps you are un advocate Of "something Just as good," Because it pays a little more, You profit you conclude, But if you‘ll only take the time. To stop and unalyze, You‘ll find it pays to get in line With those who-Advertise, You may know of hejew planets Never heard of heretofo You wel find the "youthful Fountain" hat the world i ching for; You can stock your place of business; With the finest merchandise, But the world will never know Not until you-Advertise. bnmmmomystctcrrtomaent AUDITORS SALE OF REAL ESTATE Cape May County Circuit Court, Lewis T. Stevens, Plaintiff vs, Eulalia V Lewis, Defendant. In attachment. Action at Law. By virtue of an orde: for the sale of lands, entered on the twelfth day of November, 1919 in the above-entitled action, 1 whall expose for sale at public vendue on MONDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1919 between the hours of tweive o‘clock and five o‘clock p. m., to-wit. at two olciock in the afternoon of said day, at the City Hall. corner of Washing: ton and Franklin streots, in the City C race m und State of New Jerky All the right, title und interest of Eulalia Vance Lewis in and to All that | certain lot of land and premises, situ» ate in the City of Cape May county of Cape May and State of New Jet | southoust side of Laf | joining lands (late) of lsainh Wilson. formerly S. Shorter Hawkins, Thomas D, Clark and Alexander Stidham .and | 4 butted and bounded as follow wit: BEGINNING at a corner of Isaiah | Wilson‘s lot in the old side line of La fayette Street on the noutheasierly | «ide, the said cornggsbeing now ou" im ‘the sidewalk six fect from fence; ad [ running from thence along: sa‘d Wii | ® m‘ line at right angles with she street mouth forty-eigght degrees and {fifteen minutes cast, ninety-nine feet ; to a corner in said Clark‘s line; thonee long said" Clarks line: south forty~ two . degrees /y fifty — feet to /a corner; thence binding on land of | said Alexander Stidham north forty= eight degrees and fifteen minvies wost ninety-nine feet to the side of Lafayette Street; and from thence along the side of said street north fortyone degrees and thirty mi I course) fifty i place of beginning, conta j thousand — nine hundred and . fifty ‘ square feet, be the same more or leas. | BEJNG the same premisrs which Robert E. Hand et us. by deed dated { March 16, 1901, and recorded in the | Clerk‘s Office of Cape May County, lin Book No. 157 of Deeds. at puges i198, granted . a ons eved. to | Jaseliph G. Vance in fee, frum whom said Eulalia V. Lewis inherited a onethird interest therein GILBERT C. HUGHES, Auditor, Dated, November 25. 1918 | Lewig T, Stevens, Atty | | ‘The Republic Motor Truck Company 124 cight different sizes of trucksL A3 H B ~ |Earobtie internal gear drive. | A. T. Haynes. distributer

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Buy the Extra Ply Heres Why on wat 25 to 857% ctunl Ovrestroupth it. ¥ Emel KAZ) tread and are H GUARANTEED 8000 MILES Our representative will tall you Roubrper a Had barca In buring G fro H a F ¢ H H H H a a F a i [ U t I i ( d d d pPirs

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