r Page Two , 7 CAPE MAY STAR AND WAVE satv^at, — ' , . , I I if — ■
Now is the Time To Look After Your TIN ROOFING and SPOUTING PROMPT SERVICE EXPERT WORKMANSHIP SATISFACTION GUARANTIED JESSE M. BROWN E . i DO Jackson Street CAPE MAY l\l. J. I " 1 i < Run Your Heater This Winter ! I Without Coal / j Modernize your home, install a ! Nokol Burn Oil and don't • worry about coal supplies. Incidentally no ashes to take J out. *
Regulated entirely by a thermostat in living room GEORGE W. REEVES 622 Washington Street Cape May, N. J Kill That Cold With CASCARA QUININE Colds, Coughs H)M^ l<* Grippe Neglected Colds ere Dangerous Tak* no chances. Keep this standard remedy handy for the first sneeze. Breaks up a cold in 24 hoars — Relieves Grippe in 3 days — Excellent for Headache Qoinine in this form does not affect the head — Cases re is best Tonic Laxative— No Opiate in Hill's. ALL DRUGGISTS SELL IT PRIVATE BATHS 0" EU^^^PLANj; RIDGWAY HOTJSE ELEVATOR SERVICE AT THE FERRIES PHILADELPHIA. PA. Hot and Cold Running Water in Each Rocm — — — — — — — — — I ' Charles York Stites York ; YORK BROTHERS Carpenters and Builders estimates cheerfully given on all kinds- of buildings 1 satisfaction guaranteed 1 P. 0. Box 661 ; MECRAY'S PHARMACY Washington and-Perry Sts., Cape May. New Jersey Prescriptions filled by registered Pharmacists i TOILET ARTICLES OF ALL KINDS j SODAS AND SUNDAES 1 J.R. MOON. Manager o a 1 ^ i
CAFE MAT COUNTY'S INDUSTRY KING CRABS EOR FERTILIZER Joaeph Camp, Freeholder for Cape ' May county from Middla. Township, is the King Crab King of Now Jersey, and. probably of the entire United States. Up at Pi me'* Potat bi the , Delaware Bay shore, fourteen miles North of this city, Mr. Can*) and his son Frank have just recently finished the building of a factory for the grinding of King Crabs. The factory is equipped with up-to-the-minute machinery . In one erf the wire pens at the plant Camp and Son have ten , million King Crabs. These Crabs are . only caught on the full moon in April 1 and May. » All the country folk from ] Fishing Creek to Dennis Creek gather ' or catc.i those crabs at that season ov * the year and sell them to Mr. Camp. ' Over on the Delaware side of the Del- * aware Bay the crabs 'are also caught ' in large numbers, and brought across ' Pierce's Point in soows. For many ( years the crabs were pounded up by 1 hand after having lain out in the pens 1 all summer to dry", and were shipped * to New York and Philadelphia to the { large fertilizer factories to be put in s shape for the mills; but Camp and Son * can now sell the ground crab direct to 1 the consumer. Besides being the * Crab King of the State, Mr. Camp buys and ships to New York and 1' markets over ten million 1 clams annually from off the clam beds h in Delaware Bay. g « ■ • o
"GULL DICK" . On the second of .October, 1894, the ' men on a certain lightship in Narra- - gansett Bay were looking eagerly to see whether an old friend had returned to spend the winter with them. For twenty-two years a Gull had appeared each October and flown about the ship in search of food, till April, when he had disappeared for the summer. The men on a lightship see so little to amuse them, that they soon noticed this Gull and offered him food. He on his part grew bolder until he learned to visit the ship regularly, as soon as morning came, apd to remain near it until it was tinte for him to return to the rocks, ^wliere spent the night. His favorite food was pork or fish cut into pieces as large as a hen's egg. He came closer to the ship than the other Gulls, and the crew recognized him by certain marks 1 on his wings. There was much satisfaction aboard the lightship when "Gull Dick" appeared on this particular morning, but he seemed to have taken a long journey, and to have suffered somewhat i from storms. , His plumage was ragged and his movements were rather more feeble than they used to be. The men said to each other, " 'Gull Dick' is getting : ol(l. This may be .his last winter with j i us." They gave him all the food he want- - ed, for he seemed very hungry. All , through the winter Ire came regularly for his meals, driving off the other Gulls if they came too near his food. The crew fed him for the last time early in April; the next day he doubtless started for the north, but what to him there no one knows. Old age, or a fierce storm, may have carried him off, or perhaps another bird attacked him; at any rate, he failed to return in the fall, and the men in the lightship have lost their pet, "Golden Dick." — In Bird World. • LITTLE IN A NAME The Democrats have leaned the of nominating one man because he bears another's honored name. Franklin D. has ad<jed nothing to the of the name of Roosevelt. Could Gov. Cox have foreseen the outcome of the election he would scarcely have named his home "Trail's
| ^^5=== More Light.Without Glare | ^ <5 The new WHITE MAZDA )ampis especial y use- 2 <5 ^^B \ ful because it gives such a quantity of rich, soft iliumi- X( ( 5 ^^^B 1 nation. It should be used in all fixtures where the XC ( 5 ^^B^ I '*mP ksdf is visible to the eye. you try it in one K <5 socket you will be tempted to put WHITE MAZDA A ' rf lamps in most of (he sockets in the house. See this XC 1 5 L 1T__,HBBHB wonderful larao—and be sure to see it lighted. XC Keep a box of fighting in reserve on the shelf . You 1 £ BBHSIBfl " C*n W'*re ro **** * ^ for the f ami- < J 1 rf ^ C*"on on display in dealers' stores. 1 3 :i J- ALLEN HARPER I < ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR g i a c— ■qfcW.j. sen— w-w. HIA. S iL. H *
f COUNTY. SCMODL ^1 e Th* twenty-fifth annual session at s the Association Boards of Education ; of Cape May county, occurred at the d' Middle Township High School, Court e House, Thursday, November 4th. the s program was a full one and the two B sessions interesting to the consider d able body of board members in at5 tendance. A special dinner was y served at HurreU'g which was much . enjoyed. Among the visiting speakt ere were H. N. Morse, Business Man- , ager of the State Department of Ink struction; John S. Mount, State Int spector of School Accounts; George C. , Baker, Supervising Principal, of . Moorestown,, N. J.; and Mis s Lindf etrom, of N|jr York. Addresses were I made at the morning session by the ' county helping teacher, Miss R. S. . Gandy; the Dennis Township Attend- , Officer, A..H. Urquhart and the County Superintendent. Ten quessubmitted by the State Federation of District Boards of Education, local boards of education were takop for discussion and produced interesting debates. Four of them had been, considered when the hour for adjournment for dinner had arrived. **■ At the afternoon session was a sein music given by the Middle High School orchestra, followed by singing by the high school glee club of girls„ and a solo by one of the students of the high school.
Miss Lind strom then demonstrated by means of a class of children how a e phonograph can be employed in the - training of children in rhythmic » movements and in the apprecietion of - music. These preliminary features • were much enjoyed. * The reports of the committees were J then called for and the Committee on Nominations reported in favor of the r re-election of ■ officers. President, Everett Jerrell, Cape May; Vice-Pres- ! ident, Stuart Thompson, Goshen; Secretary and Treasurer, Clement Newkirk, West Cape May. These officers 1 were re-elected by unanimous vote. The items of the program then fol- | lowed: Applicability of High School Training, J. E. Clark, Supervising Principal of Middle Township. Transportation, as managed in Burlington county, George C. Baker, Supervising Principal of Moorestown. Some School Business Problems, by H. N. Morse, Business Manager of the State Department of Public Instruction. How School Board Accounts should kept, John C. Mount, State Inspector of School Accounts. Several Jackson street properties recently changed hands and are to be j improved. 1 1
Ejta package 9 before the war H 5£a package ^B ) during the war H now! The Flavor Lasts So Does the Price! H
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\ | JERSEY COAST LEADS IN CATCH OF FOOD FISH The great amount of sea food takI en along the New. Jersey coast and .distributed throughout the country is indicated in a report of the State Protector, James M. Stratton, of the Fish and Game Commission, which shows I that during the last year, there have . been in operation, a total of 154 fish pounds, licensed by the State. In
addition to the big pound nets, hunj dreds of boats are operated by hook-and-line fishermen. No other section of similar mileage of the North - American seacoact, not even the sali mon fisheries of the North Pacific, said, can equal in volume of out- ^ put, the fish taken m New Jersey , waters. » With 154 Pounds#- and as many i mendaden pirates, is it any wonder 1 that fish are becoming scarce ?
m - b A ^°U know why rqmebi so unusual, so refreshing, so satisfying. Firat, quality — second, Camels expert blend of choice Turkish and choice Domestic tobaccos which rTT'l youU certainly prefer to either kind Mhl smoked straight f Camds blend mnirwa possible rtwit^^B^. wonderful mellow mildness— yet all ths « desirable body is there t And, Camelsnever tire your taste I H Yotfn appreciate Camds freedom ■■ from any unpleasant cigaretty aftertame or mwlenain dgaretty odor I pPta yopr oem eetMmtkn oomp are

