pw1 1.1 'WJMBfl'wwww*". l'«"- ' Saturday, October 14, 1922 CAPE MAY STAR AND. WAVE
5^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^S«^)<X<5cGe0=0«a00(X«ett5diadi»0ide^X»0=0O<)m0m0m<)Om0«c»0<><XX0<X 1 ! r. THE LAST DAT S § The entire stock of Mrs. A. D. Nale must be sold today, Saturday, October 14. Everything in this store will be hammered ft ft and slaughtered at your own prices. We have decided not to move a piece of merchandise to Philadelphia. So therefore we are © 8 going to reduce our merchandise at such a low sacrifice, that you can not help coming in to buy it whether you heed it or not g 2 For every dollar's worth of merchandise you will spend, you will have a package of two or three dollars worth of merchandise. So ft 8 therefore try and do not miss this last days sale. If you miss it, you miss one of the greatest opportunities you ever had. 8 During these four days we positively will not sell any merchandise at wholesale to any storekeeper in town. Everything must be ft ft sold behind the counter to the retail trade. We have decided we might as well give the public of Cape May the opportunity of 8/\ getting the advantage of our great bargains. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 14, will positively be the last day of our Sale. | A Few of Our Specials | 5 All our 40c or 50 dress ginghams, cretons, organdies, voiles, linens, outing flannels, crepes, muslins, pure linen towelings, will be » g sold at 15 CENTS A YARD. § ft All our 40c and 50c children's stockings, sizes from 6 to 9, will be sold at 15 CENTS. S 8 All our notions, no matter if you pick out a 50c article, will be sold at 3 CENTS A PIECE. 2
§ $1.00 and $1.50 ft Silk Gloves § 25 CENTS g 30c and 40c Ribbons 8 10 CENTS YARD g $1.50 Black Lawn I ft Shirtwaists g 39 CENTS
$2.00 and $3.00 i Silk Stockings 75 CENTS $3.00 and $4.50 Corsets 98 CENTS 40c and 50 Children's Socks 15 CENTS
and $3 White Gabardine Skirts 75 CENTS 10c Silkateen 1 3 CENTS 50c Princess Pearl I Crochet Cotton 15 CENTS
50c and 25c Ribbon 5 CENTS YARD 10c Bcldings Spool Silk 3 CENTS $1 and $1.25 Children's Wool Petticoats 39 CENTS
8 Yard Pieces vr Mosquito Netting ft 80c piece 5 Ladies' 15c Hair Nets v 5 CENTS ft 40c and 50c Ladies' § Lisle Stockings ft 15 CENTS §
8 Also full line of laces and embroideries at a very low sacrifice. Come early, first come, first pick. ft g CASH REGISTER, DESK, SHOW CASE AND SHELVING g | 418 Washington Street Phila. Underselling Co. | XXXWW XXXXXX XX »<XXXXXXX XXXX&XXX XXXXXXXXX XXXXXXXX XXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXXX)«©OaoaO»&< X
, PlgShs&ki I used to mourn about the trials of my ancestral pio- „ neers, — I've filled a million two-quart vials with briny, sympathetic tears. . .. . I've wept, because of tribulations through i which oar early settlers went, when I would hear the moist ' orations, about the old log-cabin gent. I'ved Danger* — Past sobbed at how he slew the weasels, amfi ^ „ nf skinned his thumb an'- cut his toe — an' suf-4 fered forty, kinds of measles from wadin*} miles of heartless snow. . . . O, each installment made me , g j rivel, and each recital fetched the brine, and I would ^ s set around an' snivel, about them ohl kinfolks of mine. . . v (But — times has changed, and I'm reflectin' along the^ s lines of present dread. . . . I've saw some things I weren't < t expectm1- — that any hour could knock me— dead 1 We've got 4 B the 11 ny benzine flivver — We've got the boll-necked road- j hog, toor— WeSe got the germs that eat our liven we've got ; > the bug flat starts the flul Mr' days an' nights is spent in c terror, — m never reach a hundred yean — 111 swsBer down ' my bald-faee error, about them happy pwneersl rve studied r it from every' angle — Fve yA ! , turned the subjeck Inside out, ' ] and I have learnt, beyond a , wrangh, "that I'm the one to f & woon about 1 W " ,
WARM WEATHER BRINGS FREAKS TREE BLOSSOMS MINGLE WITH FRUIT— REPTILES AND ANIMALS SEEK WATER DURING h DRY SPELL— SNAKES ON PILr GRIMACE. The past weeks of dry and warm weather has produced some unusual things and conditions among vegetation and animal life. All thru Cape L May County the trees are bearing F blossoms and in many cases the blosI * eoms mingle with ripening fruit on the same tree- This condition is particularly noticeable in the pear orchards some of the trees being a mass 1 of bloom. Berry vines are not only blossoming but in many patches strawberries and raspberries are bearing a second > yield. Some of the farmers have enjoyed October strawberry short cakes during the past week. Box tortoises, toads and snakes „ have been noticed moving toward the water seeking the moist bottoms of . dry ponds and the banks of the much
shrunken small streams. Even sal: 1 manders on foggy evenings have been seen crossing main roads seeking . ' moist ground which is necessary to , | their existence These little animals 1 about which little is known locally are • j 6eldorp_geenand then only by accident 1 wheJS -some ©he turns .-over a rotten 1 , board or 6ome similar cover in a damp . * place- _ ( The sweet potato crop in Cape May , County will be the largest in many 1 years acocrding to the farmer neigh- | 1 bors while the late white ipotato crop , 1 is suffering. E Potatoes are plentiful enough tida 1 * year, so there- will be no excuse for 1 Storing bruised and cut ones that are 1 1 so liable to get diseased < ' The flowers that bloom in the ; " spring are usually the reward of mus- 1 3 cle and perspiration intelligently expended in the fall5 FRANK TAYLOR „ ' ] i 1 Frank Taylor, colored, died suddenly : s on Sunday, October 8th. Taylor was 1 well known around Cape May, having 1 s been a summer driver for the Union 1 e T ransfer Company for the past thirty ' f five years. Funeral services "were b held on Thursday, October 12th. 1
ONE WAY TICKETS GOODJR YEAR RAILWAY COMPANIES WILL REDEEM WITHIN TIME LIMIT OR AFTER— TICKETS BEING REPRINTED—AFFECTS ALL SEASHORE TICKETS TOO. One-way railroad tickets are now good any time within a year after sale. Since war days they have been valid only twenty-four hours after sale, and in fact during part of the time had to be used on the day of sale. The time extension has really been force some time with the exception of the Baltimore division of the Pennsylvania Railroad, but the public did not know this, and at the redemption bureaus of both the Pennsylvania and Reading railroad companies scores of persons daily ask for the redemption of one-way tickets, the time limit of which has not expired and took away with them such tickets when informed they werfe valid. All the tickets of both the Pennsylvania and Reading railroads are ' being reprinted and will have on 1 their face the statement that they > will be good for a year. Why the tickets of the Baltimore division of the Pennsylvania road were not made valid for a year for long after the other branches of the system was because the interstate commerce commission for some reason no one has able to learn, withheld the nec1 essary permission. Excursion tickets to seashore points will be valid any time either in the 1 going or returning direction within ■ the time limited for which they are i sold. While the time limit for the use of tickets has been extended the comi panics will continue to redeem all tickets within such time limit or after. TOURING CAR FOR BUS LINE The Reliance Transportation Comis continuing its service beCape May and Wildwood by -using a big touring car instead of the 1 usual big busses. The larger cars : are now operated between Wildwood 1 and Cape May and Ocean City. The ■ touring car will be used to make coni nections with the larger car at Rio Grande at the junction of the roads. J
5 THE VOICE WITH I V THE SMILE _ When your Bell telephone operator answers / * -j. your call, she says ^ "Number, please?" She says it with the pleasant rising inflection which expresses better than words her desire * to serve you. T She was chosen for her ability and intelligence. T. She was trained to be quick, careful and accurate. _ She has all of these qualities. • And in addition, she has "the voice with the smile." ^ It's not just a part of her "stock in trade." The desire to serve her neighbors and friends is in ' <. her Very nature. /m, So she says "Number, please?" .rti i| \ That little word "please" takes a lot of time when II I' I Ti thousands of calls are considered. j-.tv, j| IjJl jT][[k. But its worth all the time it takes. Mr III F°r the telephone operator knows that courtesy pays. THE DELAWARE & ATLANTIC & T^L^HONE CO.-

