CAPE MAY HERALD.
VOL. IV. NO. 25.
CAPE MAY N. J., THURSDAY, JUNE 23, 1904.—EIGHT PAGES.
Subscription—$1.00 per Year.
BAR ASSOCIATION HEEIING AIISIAKEN COURSE.
' j ’ — —
PENNSYLVANIA ORGANIZATION BASE BALL'RACKET DISTURBS
TO MOLD SESSIONS MERE. NEARBY COTTAOERS.
I
IT THE STOCKTON HOTEL SOMMER HOMES IBINDONED
Annual Bannuet lo be Glrrn on t I**! Urenlnir ofThnlr Stay HereIHstiliMCuUhrd laiurjrem Here.
Member* of the P«nn«Vlrania Bar Asaocialion will hold their annual meet 1 dr in the Stockton Hotel, Cape May, on next Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. At the opening aeaaion Preal.lent Nathamel Kwlnjt, of Unlontown. will deliver his annual add re**. The rest ot the aeeaion will be devoted to the reading of the annual report* of William Penn Lloyd,/>f Mechanicaburg, Treasurer; William H.Staake, of Philadelphia, Secrftary. and the fobowing committee. Executive—J. B. Colahan, Chairman. Law Keform—Alex. Simpson, Jr Chairman. Legal Education—Robert Snodgrass, Chairman. Legal Biography—Judge Harman Yerkea. Chairman. Membership—k>lwin Z. Smith, Chair-
man.
Grievances—Christopher HeydHpk Chairman. Unformity of Legislation—W*'ter George Smith, Chairman. ^ Constitational Amendments—S. P. Wolverton, Chairman. Revision of Law* Relati ve to Corporations—Richmond L Jones, Chairman. Special Committee on Registration of I .and Titles—M. W. Jacobs, Chairman. In the evening Henry E. Daria, of Washington, will deliver an addrea* The Law Spirit, Its Source and It* Sway.” There will be a morning session Wednesday-for the consideration of re ports of committee*, unfinished bun. neas and the reading of bills for proposed legislation. At the evening session John Marshall Gest, of Philadelphia, will read a pa par on “The Responaiye Answer in Equity Considered as Evidence for the Defendant" Another paper on “The Lawyer” will be presented by N. If. Edwards of Williamsport. The monung of Thursday will be devoted to the reriding of the following papers: “Munidple Autonomy and Coda Regulations," by Louis Richards, of Reading; “The Pennsylvania Bar and tU Influence,” by J. Levering -ones, of Philadelphia, and “Labor and the Law,” by James H. Torrey, of Scranton. Some time will then be given to a discussion of of thf papers. In tne afternoon delegatee will be ap pointed to the American Bar Association and the universal Congress of Lawyers and the annua) election of officers will beheld. The annual banquet of theaasodation will be held Thursday evening at which toast* will be responded to by Heary K. Davis, of Washington; President Woodrow Wilson, o! Princeton; R. L. Qawford, of Waynesburg; General J. P. 8. Gobin, of Lebanon, and Joseph H. Tsulane and Walter George Smith, of Philadelphia.
William F. Garreteon Dead.
William F. Garrataon, a well known and wealthy dtiaen of Goahen, died at his home there last Wednesday. The funeral occurred last Saturday afternoon. He was the father of J. S. Garrison, the jeweler, who waa formerly in business in thia < city. Mrs. Garrison
died only a few weafca ago.
The South Jersey Funeral Association held its Thursday. The meating waa givun ovar
a of Mr.
Charles F. Inweon, of Salasa, is th* prsanlsat and Rabeibart Bulloch Isaacretary.
Better Locate Diamond Klaewhere Thau Antagonise Cape May's Hammer Cottage Friends.
"Man cannot live to himself alone,’ la a declaration of Holy Writ which embodies a fundamental principle upon which is based human existence and human prosperity. Not only individual life, but the communal, sectional and national welfare is dependent upon that intercourse upon which the commercial and material interests are coexistent the world over. And upon these same lines only can Cape May-hope to advance and prosper as a seaside resort and offer proper conditions to the outside world for rest, health and recreative enjoyments. Cape May cannot aflord to don the cloak of indiflerence nor pursue any course other than that which tends to make the resort attractive, inviting and satisfying to the visitor* upon whore patronage the support and program of the place depends. Nor can any policy be effective toward the upbuilding of the place that labors to that end with one hand only, while the other M mischievously and wantoniy weakening the supports, small as they may seem of themselves, upon which the very existence of the structure, to a greater or less degree,
depends^
Now, legitimate rports, ’wisely, moderately indulged in, are commendable; but everybody does not take to the excitement, the hurrah, of rield-games. nor do such persons, in the quiet of their conpdles, feel inclined to submit to having juch thing* thrust upon them which to them can be simply an unbearable nuisance. Hence we find ourselves facing an unpleasant break in one of the beat sections of our very wealthy cottage colony, that of Columbia avenue; because of a persistence in in maintaining baseball sport* in a field in such dose proximity that an afternoon of quiet on game days is impossible, while every horse and cart in the town, it would seem, Is lined up along the sidewalks, filled with howling spectators who make life miserable for the cottage families along thesvenue. la it any wonder that several families, longtime honored patrons of the place, have felt compelled to abandon their summer homes here and go elsewhere. This Is advancing Cape itir with a vengeance. Is it not time that these families had given notice to the management, that they could not and would not remain, unless the games were discontinued in that locality, and is it no; also time that the site upon which the Sea Breeze Excursion House formerly stood way offer-
ed for a baseball field ?
If Cape May cannot live to herself alone, why maintain anything that becomes obnoxious to any, causes them to forsake us or prevent others from be-
ing attracted hither?
The diamond ihould be transferred to an outlying field, where no uncouth and noisy rabble shall disturb those whom we are so glad to hare make their summer homes among na. It is said the families who have changed their place of retort spent here about $10,000 each Let ns reason together and adopt
'&*
Gape May Owp la New York.
NEW YORK, Inna 18.—The Cape May challenge cap waa brought to New York by the American line steamer 8t Louis, which arrived to-night from South amp ton and Cherbourg. The Cape May cap was, recently challenged for by Morton F. Plant’* schooner logomar, the trdphy being In poeeetaioB of
King Edward, who woa it with hk . tar Britannia la USB, when she del
by tike King ta the a Royal Yaeht 8 to the Sew York Yaeht <
OP A PERSONAL NAIURE. the gossip of charming old CAPE MAY.
VISITORS COMING TO TOWN.
X«-»« of Much liHportanoe Gathered Among Cape May** People Y’ou May lx- Mentioned.
CAPE MAY' GIRL GUADCATES.
Mia* Lida Reeve* Neal Takes Nm Diploma. Mias Lida Reeve* Neal, daughter of Mr. and Mr*. Fred B. Neal, of Rio Qrande, was one of two hundred gradual.-* of the Class of IMM, of the Philadelphia School for Nurses, who received their diploma* last evening at the Academy of Music in Philadelphia, where the Commencement exercise* were held. The Commencement Committee, consisted of thirty-two prominent ladle*, of which Mr*. Jaquith was Chairman. The Preliminary exercises were of wonderful interest to spectator*, and consited of: Demonstrations in emergency work; Handling the rick, bsndging. etc. ‘ Emergency SUngs” was Miss Neal’s part In these exercises. There were twenty-three demonstrtrtion*, participated in by twenty gradoatas, assisted by several other members. At 8 o'clock the regular exercise* of the program began, preaided oyer by Hon. William N. Ashman. Miss Oars Birton, forSS years President of the American National Red Cross was guest of honor. The Philadelphia Orchestra furnished mask daring the evening. Miss Neal's mother, and brother Merrill, attended the exercises. «It is said Mtm Neal, by reason of her quick intelligence, cool judgment and thorough manner of doing things, is peculiarly fitted for the responsibilities which the duties of the true nurse place upon sr. Mias Neal was for several yeaas a public school teacher, and taught in Goshen and Court House schools. She has numerous relatives and many warm personal friqnds in this city and elsewhere, who will be pleased to iearn of her successful entrance ufwn the noble work she has chosen.
Fair Ibr Church of the Advene Th* ladles •( th* Parish Aid SocLsty of th*P. E. Church of the Advent are pre paring to hold a fair th* first part of Au. gust, and are asking donations from the ■am mar cottagers who are In sympathy Fancy articles of *11 kinds may be saot to th* Rev. K. C. Atom as th* Bmptre, or to Wolff’s bakery. Doe nottoe of th# time of holding the Coir will bo gives in the local p* pen. The patronage of the public la
GREETINGS TO ATLANTIC CITY’.
The mile* between Cape May and Atlantic Qty was covered in K5 minute* bv a train carrying a delegation of 100 residents of Cape Mpy in charge of MsvorMillet. This is the record run of the road. Tfife express, mule up of four coaches, was in charge of Condoctor Hinn and Engineer John Nash, and Superintendent Lovell was aboard with the party. From Cape May op to Xewfield the ■peed was more than a mile a minute Beyond that point the train had to slow for towns and for other trains. Cape May had the right of line in the sixth division. Th6y were met by Mayor Stoy and escorted to the Scarborough Hotfel, where Mayor Stoy lunched with the Cape May contingent. On the reviewing stand after the parade, Mayor Millet presented Mayor Stoy with the silken banner whicn the Cape May delegation bad carried in the parade.
Dental Partore Refitted.
Dr. C. H. Lorence, a well-known dentist who succeeded the late Dr. Walter S. Learn log at the corner of Ocean and Hughes streets, has handsomely refitted Us dental parlors and they are now the beet equipped In this city. Dr. Lorence. who la wellknown atoo in Philadelphia where he has had a Urge practice for over fifteen yean, has brought to his practice here an experience which guarantees | the excellence of work. Everything about his office has been put In anew and the dental fnrnltare U of the latest and most scientific charac ter. He has established in one of his apartment* an extracting department which U entirely separate and distinct from that hick teeth are filled. Indeed so elegantly and serviceably fitted is the office that a number of persons who have no need for a dentist bare called to eee it, admired it and spread the news to other*.
Case In Court fbr Ten Y ears.
Th# New Jersey Court of Errors and Appeals opened its June term at’Trenton Tuesday. The third cnee on the list was that of Theodore Yoorison, ot Cape May Court Room, appellant, and John H. Ben eaet, respondent. The appeal was Had March », 1804. and has therefore been In
lAw Grad aaie la the gradi Laws from the New York Law School held la Carnegie Hall. New York, tori Thursday night was E.
Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Wdliuan will go to Massachusetts an.! New York ^tate for a month sojourn. Mr. and Mr*. John II. Sloan, of I'hila. ddpius, have opened their cottage on Stockton avenue for the snumier. Fred EMredge, of Brooklyn, son of Mrs. Ella KJdredge, of this city, has been passing ■ few days with relative* in this aty. Rev. Dr. Alfred G. Mortimer, Rector of Ht. Mark's P. E. Church, Philadelphia, will ofikiate in St. John’s P. E. Church hereon Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Belfield have doeed their wipter home in Germantown and are now located on Congress street, this city, for the summer season. Mrs. William J. Sewdl, of Camden, has opened her cottage on Windsor avenue for the «ummer. Later she will entertain CapL and ’dr*. Eoliert Sewell. Mr. and Mrs. .Iones # Wister will dose their Philaddpbia home and will occupy their cottage at the corner of Beach avenue and Ocean street during the
Aire. Peler Shields, wife of the president of the Cape May Real Estate Company, has arrived at the Windsor Hold from PitUburg, and will pass the summer at Cape May. Col. James M. Scovd has returned from a trip to Boston where he made an engagement w th the editor of the National Magazine to become a regular contributor to that paper. Mrs. Alice McCrray Paine and Miss Dorothy Paine, widow and daughter qf the Ute Gen. Clinton P. Payne, of Baltimore, has opened a cottage on Columbia avenue for the season. Frederick Marcy, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry B. Marcy, who baa been at Dallas, Texas, in charge of the Western Union Tdegrmph Office there, has been assigned to doty at San Francisco, Cal. Among thone who graduated from the University of Pennsylvania were Fletcher W. SUtes, from the Law Department, and Henry Hand Eldredge, son of the late H. H. Eldredge. Mr. Eldredge will study law and enter the Law Department of the University next winter. Mrs. Albert W. Foster has left New York to join her husband who is in the central part of BraxiL It will take her 80 days to reach Rio Janerio after which abe will travel 600 miles by nil to join her husband who u superintendent of the trolley system in the interior of the Brasilian Republic. Mr. William M. Hardt who has been acting as receiver of the Fire' National Bank, has ooDeluded his labors and the Comptroller ot the Currency has substitued for that position, Mr. A. D. Lynch, of Washington, who is now in charge of the bank. It is rumored that the depositors will shortly be paid the / amounts doe them.
kinds of ladies’ fancy neck-wear at Sol Needles' and green trading stamp*
TAKE YOUR CHOICE.

