Page Two CAPE KAY STAR AND WAVE .s^ wBm
Now is the Time To Look After Your TIN ROOFING and SPOUTING norm service extert workmanship satisfaction guarantied JESSE M. BROWN 110 Jackson Street CAPE MAY M Run Your Heater This Winter Without Coat Modernize your home, install a Nokol Burn Oil and don't worry about coal supplies. Incidentally no ashes to take •ut. Regulated entirely by a thermostat in living room GEORGE W. REEVES 622 Washington Street Cape May, N. J Kill That Cold With CASCARA QUININE FOR AND Colds, Coughs G Grippe Neglected Colds are Dangerous Take no chances. Keep this standard remedy handy for the first sneeze. Breaks op s cold in 24 hours — Relieves Cirippe In 3 days— Excellent for Headache Quinine in this form does not affect the heed — Caacara is best Tonic Laxative — No Opiate in Hill's ALL DRUGGISTS SELL IT .. PRIVATE BATHS EUROPEAN PLAN RIDG5TAY HOTJSE elCVator service AT THE FERRIES PHILADELPHIA. PA. Hot and Cold Running Water in Each Room Charles York Stites York YORK BROTHERS Carpenters and Builders ESTIMATES CHEERFULLY GIVEN ON ALL KINDS OF BUILDINGS SATISFACTION GUARANTEED p. 0. Box 661 « i MECRAY'S PHARMACY Washington and-Perry So., Cape May, New Jersey Prescriptions filled by regntered Pharmacists TOILET ARTICLES OF ALL KINDS SODAS AND SUNDAES J.R. MOON. Manager 3EEE5sB«BKl«EwS«ew5«Mi
~~ • *** MICKIE SAYS -V /OWTFETYl SUAVXPO* aaeecTY—. J f • DlOJA GEE -m' «kMCU- AOfHAt"] SW3VJ PMMTOt Won ) \rt W «sva»w. ucxu>t» bo\doe vest I ) ►At"*" tW BOM, WC | ( «MCARUN. * aO.\MG s|«t. BtUOOeZ lr > ROOXJO -to "TVt' HOUSE. «OU£ I J-Owte vmhcm \ wnT fbo ©on^Yi Viux G4VJE rv -tu" OHCt OVER. « ?\ WNt got -n»Ac -to ©t cuastH ( ftu. OVER, -lW COUMTKN {tEMDOl" t *O«OM wuoocsVi PtoacssSi ABE YOU THINKING OF MOVING If so, get ki tench with as. We have I 4 BIG TRUCKS 1 TON, 2 TONS, 3 TONS, 5 TONS ON THE ROAD ALL THE TIME Tripe to Philadelphia every week. Lots from 310 up. Any point between Cape May and Philadelphia. CONEY'S X-PRESS 106 to 110 Garfield Ave, WILDWOOD Both Phoner GET YPUR SHOES REPAIRED AT T. H. TAYLOR'S 626 Washington St Cape May, N. J Overshoes for men, uversnoes women and CHILDREN. , Repairing ,nalbleSchbs Sole Leather m Sfm. Neolin Soles s Specialty Not responsible for work left over 30 days. Keystone 138-X CAPE MAY OPTICAL 513 WASHINGTON ST, O. Ye May, N. J. EVERYTHING FOR THE EYES PRESCRIPTION LENSES Specialty Keystone Phone 44 L C . , Dr. Clarence S. El dredge oculist of Philadelphia will be at Cape May for the season. Those in need at glasses or having trouble with eyes can consult him evenings or Saturdays, comer of Broad and Third ave- - nue, West Cape May. b-22-20-tf-1765 1 $100 He ward, $100 The readers of this paper win be 1 Pleased to learn that there Is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure In all Its stages and that Is catarrh. Catarrh being greatly tnfluenced by constitutional conditions i requires constitutional treatment Hall': , fatarrh Medicine Is taken InternaUy ant1 acta thru the Blood on the Mucous Bur ' faces of the 8ystem thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, giving ths patient strength by building up the con- 1 stitution and assisting nature In doing its i wo»k. The proprietors have so much fauh In the curative powers of Hall's Catarrh Medicine that they offer Ons i Hundred Dollars for sny case that It fallt to cure. Bend for list of testimonials. Address F. J. CHENEY A CO.. Toledo. I ' ^hlo Bold Wv ell T>r, t«t. 7Sc. ( ■ irBirBiffmipmii-.se 1
N' " H 1 — — IT t ■ Liyht I'p for Hallowe'en g : ■ ® t a Dim light for ghosts and spooks. 5 , ■ A bright light for the live folks ' H id Get it by using NATIONAL MAZDA LAMPS * J. ALLEN HARPER g' b electrical contractor 7 ■ C*. H.r, M J. BaHW.t*.W. taMFUeUM. 2 ■BBBBB*e*Bifie*B*BBBBB*B*BBB*B*B*B*Bi *
Tcspas1 XXSUREsCURES 6</™|LD JINGLESON says he cat I w cure any disease by drinking hot water," announced the bald board er. "He has had every disease thatIs officially recognized by the Boya'; College of Ph vol clans and Surgeon.' i and has banlshec ti
them all by thai simple means. | "Anything be- ! comes a curative Hgent If a man be lleves In It hard enough," said the star boarder. "Jasper Jones, says he was tormented with rheu- 1 matlsm for ten years, and tried J everything of which we read In the almanacs, and i the and ,
nothing did him any good until he got I a horse chestnut and carried It around | ! in his pocket. Then the rheumatism i disappeared, and hasn't played a re turn engagement since. I have talket with Jasper often, trying to point on the folly of his claim, but be refuse | to yield an Inch. 'I used to have al kinds of rheumatics before I got tha i horse chestnut,' he says. 'aBd now ' haven't a single one Who would asl better proof than that?"And echo answers who. my deal I Mrs. Jiggers. It may be that a horsi chestnut In the hip pocket Is a specifli for rheumatism. It Isn't safe to de nonnce any theory as a false alarm . "Ira Grtfway used to be alwayt groaning about his diseases, until II became unpleasant to meet him. He couldn't talk about anything else. He Ignored the crops and regarded the weather with contempt, and devoted all his great energy and talents to a discussion of the things that were hurting him. Then all of a sudden be began boasting of how hale and hearty he was. He explained that the road to health was absurdly easy, and there was no excuse for sickness anywhere. All a man hnd to do. he said, | was to get up early in the morning, before sunrise, a ,d draw In a hundred long breaths of the crisp morning air. "He made the discovery himself, and It was more Important than any modern Invention. His sincerity is shown by the fact thnt there was no possible graft connected with It. A man can't sell the morning atmosphere at so mnch per breath. Ira's great discovery was free to everybody. If I were, going to Invent a cure for anything Td compound something that could be put up In bottles and sold at a dollar a throw. The man who Invents a fresh air cure Is running benevolence Into the ground. "His cure was so cheap that I decided to try It. as I was suffering from a broken heart and a sluggish liver at that period. I set my alarm clock for an hour before sunrise, and got up In the pale, bleak dawn, and put my head out of the window to ta- • hale the prescribed hundred breaths. I had reached the twenty-seventh breath when a dissipated bee or wasp, on Its way home from a night of revelry. stung me on the nose, and I was In such haste to put a porous plaster on that organ that I didn't finish the treatment, and never tried it again. "But I knew many people who claimed they were cured of everything from the mumps, hoof and mouth disease, by the hundred-breaths treatment A •There w*as a spring on my father's farm, and I doped It with sulphuric arid and a few other wholesome Ingredients, and then began selling the water to the afflicted for ten cents a Jug. Some marvelous cures were effected. Men hobbled there on * crutches to hoy {he healing fluid, and 1 when they left they threw thefn 1 crutches away. a "For a brief session I had more I small change than any boy In the county, but m.v father returned home t from a visit and when he found out r what I had been doing, he Inter- f viewed me with a hickory pole, ad^ fop f a year or two I was busy paytpg'back 1. the money I bad collectdff&om suf- o ferers. The people who had been healed suffered a relapse as soon as n they heard the water was faked; which goes to show. Mrs. Jiggers, that tj we are entitled to a better quality of r butter on this table." r ROMEO MACCIOCCHI J h IMPORTER of HIGHEST * of ITALIAN GROCERIE8 n Olive Oil, Maccaroni, Cheese*, " Fruits and Live t J] Open evenings and all day Sunday „ BROAD AND El MTWs STREETS <> Cape May. N. J. p FLAN WORK AND SAVE _ » Start the saving hakit and opaa ' recount wttfc the Security Tree* Ca. „ A Strong tn.lRtian
MO NIHDIU r HflM FIRM ' Contains Ail Modern Equipment jj and Conveniences. 'WILL HOLD FAMILY TOGETHER 4 1 j This Comfortable House Haa Wing 'J; With Garage and Extra Bedroom 'f< —Building Will Reflect Credit ^ I to Any Farm. Mr. wutiun A. Radford wlK inem» ' questions r.nd xlve advice FREE OF "- ! COST on all subjects pertaining to the subject at building work on the farm, tor t. of ,h« paper. On account of hi» wide experience. as Editor. Author and . Manufacturer, he le. without doubt, tb» if?®*' authority on eU these subjects. t Address ell -Inquiriee to William A. Rad- - ro"5' IS° !iOT. P,ralrle avenue, Chicago, rep"] j- Incloae two-cent stamptor »| ""'By WILLIAM A. RADFORD. J For a long tinitt the hotne of the Q farmer and bis family was neglected. d It was c-onsldered the most unessential f building In the farm group. The dairy barn and other buildings for honslng ^ - live stock came first In the farmer's 'I scheme of things and little attention J or expense was wasted on the house.
Perhaps that Is one of the Important - reasons for so many young people leaving the farm as soon as they grew up and began to appreciate what real - home comforts meant But with the progress In other 1 tilings, this old Idea has been changed I and today Uie farm home Is no longer overlooked or taken up as a necessary evil. It Is now the important building In the farm group, a really attractive, modern structure with all the latest comforts and conveniences that the building profession can offer. No longer Is the farmwlfe a galley slave working Into the late hours of the night. She has learned Oie lesson that labor-saving appliances YIKve come to As a typical example of this progress in modern farm home building we have the delightful house shown here with* floor plans. It Is a building that will reflect credit to any farm and one that will serve to keep the family to-
First Floor Plan, gether. Built of frame with a brick and concrete foundation, it has an unusually well-designed exterior with a screen ed-ln front porch, an Ideal place the summer. One of the odd features of this however. Is the wing in the at one side Including a garage pleasure cars and a bedroom above for the hired help. A long driveway from the main road to this part of the house. On the first floor are five of the nine rooms which make up this pleasing home. They are the living room, dining room, kitchen, and two bedrooms. In addition there Is a wash- j In the rear, next to the kitchen, j a very Important feature In a farm j hotne as It affords the worklngmen a j chance to clean up before entering the ! In this way the wife Is saved lot of unnecessary work of cleaning the kitchen nfter they have tracked It up with muddy shoes. The living room Is large 18 feet 6 Inches by 15 feet, with a large open j brick fireplace, a continual source of 1 cheer and wuriMb during the long ! winter nlghis. This room opens Into ] <■ reception hall on one side and the room on another. The dining Is also a comfortable siae 18 by , 15 feet 6 Inches and well lighted by ' *1 trii«le window. II open- Into two bedroom*, one to the renr and we to the side. The efficient arrangement of the Beer plan la aeen in the location of the kitchen with whww to the dining mean. Bn% nlnng the Mnro
feature which means much in the heurowifb who must serve the meals In the dining room and carty them from the kitchen. ' The garage is large enough to hold • two cars, being 17 by 18 feet 6 inches.
Second Floor Plan. Upetalra there are four bedrooms, bath room and two storage rooms. The essential feature of a farm home Is plenty of room with ample sleeping quarters because the families are, as s rule, large, and there must be space
t toe the help. This bouse has not been e neglected In this case, having six bedv rooms. The bedrooms on the upper j floor are about the same size with the exception of the one over the r garage which Is rather long. This • .j bedroom Is not connected with the othr er rooms on this floor: P Certainly if there were more homes 5 lljce the one shown here on farms In many parts of the country, the farmer t would not be worried over his help. 5 It would be a prominent factor In 3 keeping his own sons satisfied because } It affords them all the comforts and 3 conveniences of a home In the city. t Home life Is essential to contentment > If the home surroundings are made attractive there will not be such a strong desire to leave them. .More- . over home of this type Is a real ; blessing for the farmer's wife. It will j do much In eliminating the drudgery , which is so frequently foundln homes. [ Her share of work, which Is at the best considerable, can be lessened and made easier, by homes of this caliber. Washing machines and other appllI ances have worked wonders In this ■ direction. I The home on the farm Is too Impor- { tant to be overlooked or passed over. I It should get the attention of every | farmer who will find his time and ef- | forts well spent. NEW ABSORBENT OF VALUE Material Uaed During the World War Put to Practical Use in Many Industries. j A new type of absorbent has come I Into use for gas masks In chemical plants. In mine-rescue apparatus, and for protection of workers in oil refineries and about blast furnaces. Its efficiency was explained before the Industrial division of the American Chemical society at Its meeting at the University of Chicago, by Robert E. Wilson, director of the research laboratory of applied chemistry in the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. This material, known as soda-lime, was extensively used as an absorbent for poison gas during the World war. Doctor Wilson, profiting by his previous extensive work on soda lime for military purposes, made an intensive study of the efficiency of this absorbent against the various arid gases used in manufacturing. As a result. It was found that the soda lime on the market before the war contained far more caustic alkali than was desirable, and a new formula and method of manufacture has been developed which gives from three to ten | times as good efficiency against varlons gases as was previously ohtainI able. This development Is one of the j many practical outgrowths of the work of the Chemical Welfare service Protection for Bird a Neither airplanes, marhine guns, bat- | ter> guns, automatic guns nor any gun j larger than o lti-gauge may be used In Alberta to kill migratory wild fowl under the titernational agreement that ha* Just It-en entered Into with the Ouited State* a* a participating factor. Motorltiats and sailboats are alao forbidden a* acreaauriea to the sport of duck shooting. What tt la. "1 •** where i In d whisky Ms heeo eetoed thnt was bnrted in real." "Jure re. It enty prove, there in aUU Ml MVBM t» hern."

