— — ■ wrw tm .■m Page Six CAPE MAY STAR AND WAVE
pa: — Easter Showing in Tailor Made Suits and Top Coats... "We offer you suits of such character and quality as you will delight to wear. Come see our beautiful line without obligation to buy. We know you will be pleased with the great variety hnd we will fit you absolutely. I Best Material and Workmanship ; Guaranteed Charles Scherer 223 Decatur Street Cape May, N.J. ■ i n i B n
Jfc E.l.b, 1905 Both Phone. •c SjKfo*. TROY % mJfmcfaunJn, LAUNDRY 405 Washington St. CAPE MAY, N. J. WHO'S WHO? It's easy to tell "who's who" among the women you see in a crowd — especially women between 35 and 45. . Women between 35 and 45 invariably show the result of their home labor. Those who organize and dominate their work retain their youthful figures, bright eyes and young faces. ' Those . whose work dominates therti carry the story about with • them. Yes it easy to tell Who's Who. And among those who are not made slaves by their work you will find scafcely a woman who has. the washing done at home They send it to the Troy Laundry. Why? | The New Sale! New Materials! New Prices! w n New Curtain Scrim 20c, 25c, 35c, 60c 9 Sn New Creatones at X 18c, 20c, 35c, 55e |fj 91 New Ginghams at —I i _ 15c, 29c, 49c, 79c Jfi EK New Muslins at 15c, 18c, 25c Bj m New Longcloth, 36 inch best quality 30c Dj n* New fine dress linens (white) 45 inch . $2.00 ffl jP New white materials for waists gnd dresses, last, year's A W Beautiful . new Voiles and "Organdies, last year's price $1.75 jlj l»- New Silks, Georgettes and Crepes at present market prices. ||J rtl Last hut not least*, Millinery in *a^l the new colorings, shapes and nj j]| BROWN'S 417 WASHINGTON ST. g
Mecray Pharmacy J. n. MOON. PnoPDirroR WASHINGTON AND PERRY STREETS CAPE MAY. N. J. OPPOSITE CONGRESS*«ALL
. ' RINGS • | -ffiSk' ! j Vm vty'W i , - L<S!Hr J <?/?/} 1 »»nc j : * j&ifr'" ;''v R- [ Tho Celobratod W. W. W. ^ Rings, the largest assortment ijj&fii'lfp} ' I ®outh Jersey ! 5 OOO Beauties 1". j — to Select From Hs Watchmaker, Jeweler and Optometrist Victrolas and Records J. S. GARRISON 305 Washington Street Cape May, N. J,
FRANK ENTRIKEN & SONS Central Garage . AUTOMOBILE REPAIR WOfek EXCELLENT EQUIPMENT FOR RAPID WORK— CARS STORED- , CARS HIRKD l),\Y OR NIGHT— ALL KINDS OF AUTO SUPPLIES. , Agon's lor the Faiib.mka-Morse Gas and-jOil Engines. KEYSTONE >DA BELL 12-W - Charles \ ork Stites York YOJRK BROTHERS Carpenters and Builders ESTIMATES CHEERFULLY GIVEN ON ALL KINDS OF BUILDINGS SATISFACTION GUARANTEED P. O. Box 661 R. M. WENTZELL ' .3 PERSY STREET . if RN1TURE BEDDING RUGS LINOLEUM Estimates en All Kinds of Furniture wV ke furnished promptly. Keystone Phone. Goods Delivered.
ADVERTISE GOODS, MARKET ' tl CHIEF ADVISED FARMERS r "No money spent in developing cer- ' p tain lines of farm business will bring p better returns than a few dollars used s - in the right kind of advertising," says g Alexis L. Clark, Chief of the New n ' Jersey Bureau of Markets, in urging e | vegetable and fruit growers to adopt s j the methods of modern business p in marketing their products during , c i the coming summer. 'The time has come in the farming \ I I industry when the grower must look ! li ' as carefully to the marketing of his 1 f L goods, as he does to the growing of"j"n j them," says the market chief. "Inn I many localities newspaper advertising | o I offers the opportunity for a direct g sales route from the farm to the kitch- J en of the consumer for fresh fruit, g 1 vegetables, poultry ancCliairy fron- s I ucts. I r I "When New Jersey crops were rot- a = ting in the fields last summer, "and a ® prices of thV same product in the city j i were so high as to cause an alarming i reduction in the public demand, hundreds of consumers in nearby towns r would gladly have bought the peas, t beans and other crops at fair prices r had. the farmers told, through their v 1oca) newspapers, jflst what' they had t to offer. • V j "The experience of some farmers 1 who attempted just this thing is well I worth the serious consideration of t every grower who how has an un- 1 steady or unsatisfactory outlet for his i farm products. The average far- ' £ bier's time is too valuable on his fartii , r for him to. devote much time to re- ! £ tailing his crop, yet he must look £ carefully to the marketing end, else | c much of the time he spends on the s 5 farm is wasted when he fails to get ' i satisfactory cash returns. ' Farmers 1 i who have been pioneering in this newspaper advertising venture during | the last year have found ways and j means of handling the crops according I to their local conditions anj usually j where there's a will, there's a way." t Mr. Clark tells how one farmer Ir. j South Jersey built up a fine trade by < holding "market days'' on his place, . two afternoons cf each week. Here- y fused to sell to visitors at any other ,■ time but he widely advertised his special sales and autoists by the scdres would flock to his farm to lay in a ' supply of fresh fruit and fresh vegetables at a trifle less than they were > paying for the same tilings in the ] • city. His income from these sales ( during the last summer was several thousand dollars.^ _ Other farmers have built up a nice ' trade on weekly deliveries of truck, fruit and dairy products, advertising r
the medium of local and metropolitan newspapers to get th? business. Still other fanners use the parcel poet in delivering advertised products. Classified' ads, for the man starting in a small way, have brought good results but display advertisements have more quickly accomplished results. Some newspapers, he says, will this year conduct special pages for farm products advertising, I chiefly directed to retail buyers. "The proposed laws permitting the of Agriculture to estab- ! lish grades in New Jersey, which any can adopt and abide by in his 'marketing, will make direct selling j to consumers, and especially the mail order business, more attractive for the grower and safer for the buyer,"' says Mr. Clark. 'This law, practically give's a state guarantee on produce sold as graded stock and the farmer ■ must live up to the standards if he adopts them. The result will be that customer can order graded farm products from an advertisement and biow just what she will get. 'The farmer who advertises will get more for his goods than when he sells by the usual hit-or-miss -plan. But he must pack^his products so that they will compare lfr attractiveness with the same goods offered in city markets and. he must stick.to grade reguif he plans to build a-lurrativa, permanent trade. .At the present time, although agriculture heads the of New Jersey industries, its p>od- ' ucts are the least advertised. Withlti ' decade -it will be surprising !f f.tr- ! mors, especially through their cooperJ ative sell^ig organizations are ' not atnong the most persistent advertisers considering, as do other, industrial institutions, that the money thus spent ! one of their most necessary business expenses." I MRS. ANNIE C. LEA Mrs. Annie Cabeen Lea, widow of J. Tatnall Lea, a former president ol the First Nationual Bank, of Philadel phia, died at the Aldine Hotel Tues day morning. Before her marriage, December 6 1865, she was Wiss Annie Anderson Cabeen, daughter of Robert C. Cabeen a former president of the Fhiladel phia and Reading Railway Company ' She is survived by her brother, F vdn A. Cabeen; her sister, Miss Ellei Cabeen and her three chil dren, Langdon Lea, Mrs. William H Nicholson 'and Mrs. Harry T. Mar shall. Mrs. Lea formerly spent her sum at this resort.
I MEMORIALS I OF BEAUTY AND DURABILITYFinely hammc-ed. exquisitely carved and polished— lettered and finished according to your own taste. J 500 MONUMENTS, HEAD- ■* STONES. MARKERS, CORNER POSTS, SILLS, ETC., /r\r _ to seeeot tfspM PiMxmzQnti 'm, ■ • on ? (splay in obr show yards ^ KtSJ They represent the largest and ■ j" t finest stock of memorials ever I collected together by one con- V ' I ' ,h?' :.WPre p,,rrh'"i6'1 '"•fnr«' WE SPECIALIZE IN DESIGNING, MANUFACTURING AND ERECTING MAUSOLEUMS, PUBLIC AND PRIVATE MEMORIALS.
CAMDEN YARD *Opp. Ilurleigti femetcrjr . Bell Phono 2737 * -■•»< | iteii I'ltonc Pleasantville t
1 MAIN OFFICE AND YARD i Plensantville, N. J. Opp. Atlantic City Cemetery Bell Phone Pleasantville 1
r". " ' RKPItKSF.NTATIVKS * - » . O. J. HnmnyoH. PreS.. 117 hi/Cornwall Ave.. v/firTTToTAtlantlc City. ' . ^ L. Hap.meli, vice Pres.. Absepon. K. J.. f/ Cumberland. Cape May. - * Burlington. Ooyin and Atlantic CnuntijC. w Irin,lnht|' CA!nilLn' Si. '" f°r Cn,ndf•" Gloucester Counties. . DuBols. Clayton. N. J.. for Clayto.iURd vicinity. H. B; Hale. Cberriton. Va„ for State ol^irginia. o. j ha mm Ell co. PLEASANTVILfcE. I». J. a * — i r *
Electrical Contractor INSTALLATION OF MOTORS MAKIN6 A SPECIALTY OF STORE AND. WINDOW LIGHTING A\ D. REEVES Keystone Phone 809-D3 CAPE MAY, N. J ' V * ' READ THE STAR AND WAVE j
FIRM HOUSE OF | COLONIAL DESIGN ; .~i u House That Will Make Children Contented and Happy. « b HAS LABOR-SAVING FEATURES S Contains Nine Large, Comfortable t; Rooms, Six of Which Are Bed- b room*— Has All CcnvenL eneee of a City Home. I .1 By WILLIAM A. RADFORD. Mr. William A. Radford will aa«w-r ouestlona and aire advlre FREB OF i COST on .all subject* pertaining to ths •»e bject of building, for the readers of this •Wper On account of his wide experience ■ S? 5C.l'or- Author and Manufacturer, he la, without doubt, to* highest authority ; W ftttp rubjecta. Addre.s all Inquiries to WlUlam A. Radford. No. 1M7 Prairie 1 ?v*noe'. Chisago. TIL and only enclose I Iwo-csnt stamp for reply. "I am going to make home life so attractive on this farm' -that my boys won't care to go to- the city for ex- : eltement and variety when they grow ■ up to manhood," remarked the farmer - In his talk -to the contractor. "That , is one reason why I am planning a modern home with every convenient^ known to She building art." What he had In mind was a home • like the one illustrated here with floor ► plans. He had learned the lesson from * the experience of. muny of his neigh- . bors and be 'vas determined to profit , their mistakes. Alert and progres-q .* slve. he hod very sooii recognized "the | 1 Vital fact that to keep the children I - on the farm cmtei ted — a happy home | t life and freedom from the drudgery j ' 5 which has "so often driven, the boys to , i . the larite.r cities, just when the fdther | i I had plannetl to turn over the reins to j I tlicm was essential. | • The Jii'st Important step In his pro 1 gram v. as the farm home. This he 1 decided was to he so attractive as to < arouse the envy of city visitors. He ' •could hot have' picked a prettier and , more Charming design than the eo>- I
outai type shown in this picture. Ai ways appealing, never falling In Its JJPPularlty, although It Is one of the oldest types of architectural styles In the country. It has a homelike atmes' phere that cannot be excelled. Combined with Its qualntness- Is the modern touch of the building science. There Is something about this hospitable home that is most Inviting. Perhaps It Is the-qu^int green shutters on the windows, <he open front porch set on a level with tfie ground, the low rambling appearance, the unusual chimneys. This home Is designed for a family with plenty of children. There will he no crowding, for there are ten rooms • In all, six of which are bedrooms, and a large nursery for the smaller "kiddles." The front door lends Into a* small reception hall. Another door opening from the porch leads Into the large living room, so essential in the-tolonial"
j— 1 1 ' 2? \ o I « 1 g M/ ^ S j f* gj J ^ ^ 1 | " i ggj M j- r- S5 ^ ■ I Ss sgfersl . f .RgJI m T® I J rW ?i First- Floor Plan.
type of home, and an Ideal toungiug and resting place for the family afterthe work of the day. ' This living room is 23 by 14 feet C Inches,' with tr large open brick fireplace built In the side. | It extends the- (ull depth "of the house. thus providing for excellent Itghtfhg . from front -on* reur us wal us the side ■i on which the 1fl replace Is located.- At tjio far ciid a door, lends, to- u small bedroom. 8 -feet 6 Inches by 11 feet. ! very convenient for the men who have I to arise early. | The reception .hnll nlso opens, ifnto the. dining room on the opposite aide. This room is not quite as large as ftif .
Into c hall which give* access to snleadlng So the cellar, and to the floor At the right end, which forms a sort of wing to the mala building. 1 the large kitchen which Is necessary In farm homes wi»ere many must be fed. Off one comer la a handy lavatory. In a corner adjacent to the pan- , and kitchen a dumb-waiter has 1 been Installed, which makes the cai+y- j of food and other supplies from the storage cellar to the kitchen a very easy task and lightens much of the work which falls on the shoulders of the housewife. ToO many of these la-bor-saving "conveniences cannot be Jnry
TRS IS | i ^ 5? ^ ^ Second frtoor Plan." 1
j stalled to the farm home, because the amount of work to be done is always j considerable. Upstairs are the sleeping quarters. , .the floor plans cail for four bedlooms of various sizes, a ^throom and j a splendid nursery In the far wtag over the kitchen. The dumb-waiter Is ex- . ! tended to this room, so thar to case of the prepared^ meals can be carried direct to the sick room, "it) ad^ltlon to the dumb-waiter there Is an Invalid lift In the side hall. •All of the bedrooms have good light- , tog facilities, most of them having, ex-
posure on two sides. The corner bed; ~ 'rooms are large, 22 'by 13 feet 0 Inches >* nnd 14 feet 0 Inches square, andean be ' used as a sewing room or library If the occasion demands. It goes almost without saying that this Is a most distinctive farm home and one tha.t will inSurc a large amount i- of comfort and satisfaction to the • fanner, his wife and especially his chll- ' dren. The girls, and boys have a real t home to which to entertain their • friends. There Is electric light, .run- - nlng water, modern lavatories and bathroom. A modern heating plant to r the cellar-keeps the home comfortable s all year round. If more homes like J this were built on American farms, and 1 they can be. for they are not very ex- - - pensive, there would be less, worryover farm, help and less hue and cry I about keeping the children on the : farm. Human nnture is alike the • world over. In that U craves comfort, r convenience and attractive surroundings. That is the basis of all honest . ambition. FIGURE LARGELY IN. HISTORY Animals and Reptiles That Have Been Held in High (Reverence for Various .Reasons. I Perhaps nb animal ever butted Its I -way into the literature of childhood ' so successfully as «!id Mary's little i 1 lanib, find to <la.v no animal gets as I much petting and fantastic reverence j bestowed ypon It as does the white el e- | phanr of Slam, and the elephant to I America has its following. In Slam the worshipers believe that the soul of a 1 I dead person, perhaps of a Buddha, may be lodged In the white elephant. Con- 1 sequefttly he Is baptized, dined and I wined, and mourned at. his/death. I The snake figures as much in his- ' I tory as a pet as perhaps any other reptile or animal. The slnuousnesS of Its body, made possible by the hundreds of vertebrae In Its backbone, and- the never- wink lug eves have given It a ; fascination conducive to a belief that '• some sort of occult power Is embodied i ih It. -The undent Incas made lb the I ■ rocks of their temples, even In "the . 1 Temple of the Sun. small holes fending •' , to. circular Ipelosures for the. snake* to nest therein. It lyis been surmised that the priests probably kept in the tem- : pies a few taiue snakes In order to use t hem to prophesying. One snake always' gets a prominent place In the histories of Egypt ahd Rome — the asp which Cleopatra used to end her life because Octavlus Caesar, scorned her v hurras.— National Geographic Society Bulletin. • . ' • i •• : •- ■ % •> :■ ' ■

