Cape May County Times, 13 May 1921 IIIF issue link — Page 3

CAPE MAY COUNTY TIMES. PEA TSTE CITY. N. J.

Photographs From the British Coal Strike Regions

Postal Employees Now Ready to Fight Bandits

New Field Museum Is Opened

These scenes from the British coni strike reclons show recruits for the citlseiuf defence force In front of n London hnrrncks: strlklnK miners ctrrylne the red ling In n parade at Cnstleford. Yorkshire, and I^>nl Bledsoe at work as n volunteer stoker to keep the pumps going In a Gloucester shire colliery. RULERS OF OUR NAVY

I’ostnl employees throughout the United States are being armed with army revolvers mid shotguns to le used " combat mail bandits. This photograph shows a group of employees of the Washington post office, heavily urni Ml. uardlng a consignment of valuable mull which Is being loaded on a train. Loyalty Parade of the Boys of New York City

The new and beautiful home of the field Museum of Chicago, In Grant park, was opened recently, with all the exhibits and collection* properly Installed. '•'he Illustration shows Stanley Field hall, the main corridor of the ■tnseum building. Gift That Touched Gen. Pershing

This Is part of the "Loyalty Parade” with which Boys’ week was Inaugurated In New York city. Tl e h !« nra passing the stand from which they were reviewed by Governor Miller, Mayor Hylan and other notables.

CLAIMS RICH PROPERTY

Secretary Davis at Ellis Island

Secretary of the .Navy Den hr and Assistant Secretary Roosevelt talking in Mr. Denhy’a office in the new navy building in Potomac park.

“Squatters” in the eyes of the law: Martin Montrose Moleuaor, eighty-four years old. Ids son Wllford and sister, Mra. Evelyn Holstein, are living In a shack on property in New York, now owned by John l>. Rockefeller. Jr., and once owned by the old man’s grandfather. The Moleuaor family still claims title to the land and surrounding property valued, at the pros- | - ent time, at more than $1.V),OW.OOO.! Above Is a photograph of Wllford, the j

Secretary of l-abor James J. Davis recently paid his tlrst official t EUls Island, accompanied by Commissioner of Immigration William Walter ilushnnd and E. A. Wallis, commissioner at Ellis Island. Mr. Davis Is here

shown talking to one of the women immigrants.

Hoboes in Convention in Chicago

Soldiers who lost their si Ing on an estate In Baltimore recent Pershing with a hum! woven liumimi of their love and esteem. General P tatlou.

Chicago Fariily Has Close Call

t ot New York, sailed for France 'iistructlon of the of Hatton chapel.

urn of Japan, demonstrat-'

benefit of an American ' _1,le international conferenct an that It U p .-s'lile to ic,.'!,.d because many of the delegate i with cb»p sticks. This: ur,lt '' ( ‘ 1“ > ,!l "'c the railroad guards, tograph was made In the j 18 a portrait of James Eads lt<

if holmes in Chicago lies from other parts of

> In Tokyo.

Feminine Accounting.

"My wife made out an itemised expense account for last month,” said j

Mr Dnbwalta [ Spain

"Could you learn from her statement ! gars.

s present.

INTERESTING ITEMS said to have 2f>Q,000

auntry 1

during the conven millionaire hobo” of St. I,

nhetb Female

at Washini-t i the world t

Mo>

'ought 7”

"—Blrtniogham

beck yanl. the building the tseuth the east wall of the

Automi i» la Hi

recruit hysterical!*

"When* Is it the rest of the timer*! of -Dumio. Where are our husbandsY | and In

The number of places selling b icating liquors In London 1ms steadily decreasing during the lust

years.

The city of Muskegon, Mich.. lent $10,000, without security, to t

who are out of t

iced.

for the preservation •’stringy hark” trees, tallest in the world.