Cape May Star and Wave, 26 September 1914 IIIF issue link — Page 5

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PRIMARY ELECTION RETURNS (Continued from first page) i PROGKESSIVI let 2d 3d 4th Total Vote* cast 0 2 0 6 8 Vote* rejected « 0 1 6 1 2 CONGRESS William H. Bright 0 0 0 3 3 i Isaac Bacharach 0 1 0 0 1 ASSEMBLY Daniel R Maybew 0 0 0 3 3 • Lewi* T. Stevens 0 1 0 0 11 j COUNTY CLERK " 1 Qui Bohm 0 1 0 3 4 ( William Porter 0 0 0 1 1 < CORONER Iaidor Behnnan 0 0 0 1 . 1 ' COUNTY 'EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE ^ X. H. Eldredge 0 0 0 * 1 1 J Thos. W. Millett 0 0 "« 1 J { FREEHOLDER v I. H. Eldredge O 0 0 2 2( a S. Rutherford 0 1 0 1 2 [ h ALDERMAN I Harry Hrbentha! ..^V- 0 1 0 1 2 I COUNCIL — 3 yearn. I \V. B. Gilbert 0 1 0 1 2 Taaker Smith • 1 0 2 3 George Wentxell 0 1 0 3 4 C Chat. Swain 0 0 0 2 » \ Thos. W. Millet 0 0' 0 1 II OOUXCIL— 1 year. J L. C. Aahburn 0 0 0 1 1 I ASSESSOR 1 Allan Walea .;f. 0 0 0 2 2 ( Ohaa Campbell 0 0 0 1 1 1 COLLECTOR * \ W. J. Fender eon 0 0 0 3 3 Allan Wale* 0 10 0 1 ( TREASURER ' Stephen Wilaon 0 1 o 1 2 j 1 — * DEMOCRAT I

1st 2d 3d 4th Til Voter east 31 38 79 48 216 Vote* rejected 1 0 2 0 3 CONGRESS. T J. T. Baker 45 35 69 38 117 ASSEMBLY J. E. Chamber* 15 20 29 22 86 K. 0. Howell Jr. 6 17 4 18 K. G. Slaughter 26 14 34 21 95 COUNTY CLERK K. J. Mel via 21 21 46 29 117 William Porter 29 14 25 19 87 CORONER J. Thompson 1 0 0 0 1 Betij. Inergsoll 10 10 2 1. Behnnan 0 0 0 2 2 ' H. Shiner ,, 0 0 10 1 , COUNTY' EX. COMMITTEE Adam Suelke 4 0 0 0 4 Joseph Hand 4 0 0 0 4 , Alfred Evans 1 0 0 0 1 < W. L. Ewing, Jr. 0 0 0 39 39 , H. W. Lummia 0 0 0 31 31 C. B. Shield* 0 0 18 0 18 ' Sol Needles 0 0 10 0 10 Ed Miller ' 0 0 19 0 19 1 Dr . Lummia 0 0 10 1 John N. Reeve* 0 0 10 1 •' S. W. Bennett 0 22 0 0 22 ' \W. B. Gilbert 0 28 0 0 28 V

I . 1st 2d 3d 4th T'tl , 6 W. E. Ewing 0 0 10 1 j 3 FOR FREEHOLDER v J. H Elwell 36 29 55 32 152 f ' H. S. Rutherford 0 0 2 0 2 ( ALDERMAN e j J Harry Hebenthal 34 30 51 37 151 F J COUNCIL — 3 years r i W. B. Gilbert 29 30 53 26 138 £ T. Tasker Smith 39 17 47 30 133 i Chas. A. Swain 28 12 43 31' 114 r G. P. Wentxell 23 12 46 26 107 CONCIL — 1 year. 1 L. C Asbburn 33 24 55 82 144 ! ASSESSOR ! C. T. Campbell 12- 16 32 10 70 I J. Allan Wales 37 20 40 37 184 COLLECTOR 1 L. Bennett 11 7 4 9 31 1 George S. Curtis 20 10 43 17 90 Fenderaonjr. 18 19 24 21 62 ' I Stephen Wilson 44 29 53 41 167 ! Harry Smith 1 0 0 0 1 , W. Rodan 0 0 10 1 John Bennett 0 0 10 1 STATE COMMITTE— Unesp'd Term. William Caaaedy - 7 4 20 7 38 William Hendee 0 0 0 1 1

CHARI.ES A." SWAIN \ Nominated for Council on the Democratic Ticket

WEST CAPE MAY PRIMARY Oir primary election was of mon than ordinary interest because of the number of issues either conceived or really involved. Fealty to party was pretty much broken up, as usual, iu voting for local candidates. This seem ed to be more than ever the trend of our voters on Tuesday. This under a sincere desire to secure the best and most capable men to discharge tb> duties of the positions entrusted to them as far as possible with equal, justice to all. How far complimentary this election has been in being free from personal or selfish issues remain - to be discovered after the general election. But it is to be hoped that our rr potation abroad for liberal minded and intelligent voting will receive no great shock. ' REPUBLICAN CONGRESS Isaac Bseharach 61 Griffith W. Lewis 19 Kmervoii Richard f *..... 28

Blanciiard H. White 7 <• ASSEMBLY ie Lewis T. Stevens us •r COUNTY CLERK is Ovaries C. Bohm 67 in Joseph Douglass 3 1- A. Carlton Hildrcth 53 >f CORONER I P. Behrman 21 d llenj. C Ingersoll 63 * COUNTY EX. COMMITTEE 0 George O. Gumming* gg 1 Bolton Eldredge g4 1 y Frank B. Hewitt . 43 ] e Robert H. Keith 35 ; » Harry T. Lndlam 71 ( - FREEHOLDER r Joseph P. MaeKissie - 55 ; d W illiam R. Swain ]g ] 0 MAYOR j Walter M. ""Woman go 1 Edward Morton 53 , Jamas T. Hoffman 7 ] 1 Ct lUNCXL — for 3 year. j 9 Retford Ewing si 8 David Hughes 41 J]

Daniel E. Stevens Elmer Reeves DEMOCRATIC CONGRESS .1 Thompson Baker < ASSEMBLY Jeremiah E. Chambers S E. O. Howell Evans G Slaughter 2 COUNTY CLERK Frederiok J Melvm 3 William Porter 1 CORONER Benjamin C. Ingersoll R. Hughes EX. COMMITTEE Cliarles M. Hughes 4 James Wilson 2 FREEHOLDER f " Joseph P. MaeKissie -_li William R. Swain 3' MAYOR Morton 31 Walter M. Human 1 COUNCIL— for 3 year* David Hughes 3: Steven* X Ewing 1; Reeves 12; PROGRESSIVE If. Bright il Blauchard White 1 ASSEMBLY B. Mayhew C T. Stevens 1 COUNTY" CLERK Chas. C. Bohm ? Porter 2 > A. C. Hildretb 1 ! (X)RONER B. O. Ingersoll 3 COUNTY EX. COMMITTEE Eldredge 1 Robert Keatlv 1 FREEHOLDER W. R. Swain 4 J P. MaeKissie 1 Homan 1 Morton 5 ' COUNCIL— S years. Elmer Reeves 3 Belford Ewing 4 Daniel Stevens . . 5 David Hughes , 1

LEWIS T. STEVENS Nominated for Member of General Assembly 011 Republican Ticket "j . «

\_ CAPE MAY POINT 1 REPUBLICAN congress jl Isaac Baclmruch 19 • Griffith Lewis 7 jl j Kiuersoii Richards g ASSEMBLY . / ! county c lerk "'.l j Ilia*. Bohm u < Douglass g ' j Hildrcth .'...* ig j C j CORONER : . j Behrman o ] Ingersoll ^ STATE COMMITTEE LeNoir 24 Rigor 04 COUNTY- EX. COMMITTEE Springer 23 FREEHOLDER MaeKissie 21 Swain 7T j ■ MAYOR 7 Springer 03 COUNCIL. 5 Haxzard 23 LeNoir -1 22 7 ASSBSSOR | J Ridifer . «' 8 Norman Rigor 22 I DEMOCRAT 1 CONGRESS Baker 7 t ASSEMBLY" I Chambers 4 I 3 i Slaughu-i j CLEBK Mriviu r. - i j I FREEHOLDER Swain • • " ' 1 MaeKissie 4 _ 1 COUNCIL .j~ Hazard 2 .. ... .2 fn j ASSESSOR eo , Redifer ...... 6 D*

- HENRY S. RUTHERFORD ! N :n iiatrd for (lioeeu Freeholder on ih.- Republican Ticket

il LOWER TOWNSHIP ] I he results of the Primary election , ; held on Tuesday show considerable in- ( 15 I crest for aome of the offices, although 1 the office of surveyor of the highway, 'township committee and the pound! ? keepers did not have au applicant. 2 The vote follows: 1 REPUBLICAN Number ballots cart 288 j 3 Number ballots rejected 2 . ! CONGRESS l»aac Bacharach SI 1 < Jrillin W. Lewis 26 ' j Emerson Richards 14 ' 4 Blauchard H. White 1 ' 1 ASSEMBLY | Lewis T. Stevens 128 , 1 I COUNTY CLERK »j Charles C. Bohm 148) Joseph Douglass 16 1 ' 1 A. C. Hildreth 22 f I CORONER 1 » I. P. Behrman 63 1 I Benj. C. Ingersoll 89 ' . COUNTY EX. COMMITTEE Frank Dickinson 121 ' 1 1 an k oirxnivon 131

. I Frank Kldrvdgc Jig * Daniel Schclleuger .122 8 j FREEHOLDER ' 8 Joseph MaeKissie 115 c TOWNSHIP COMMITTEE '■ 5 < loorge Dickinson 86 0 George McNeill 93 ToWNSmi' CLERK Charles U. Reeves 57 j CONSTABLE . | George llalbruner 27 j ^ T. Hu Her. -oil 2 i 4 DEMOCRAT Ballots cast 288 Ballots rejected ." 2 i ? Congress j n J. Thompson Baker 821* ' ASSEMBLY Jeremiah Chambers 38: E. O. Howell, Jr ^ 11 n Evans G Slaughter 40 . Pl j COUNTY CLERK j8' j Frederick .!. Mclvin 67 I w j William . Porter 21 i*' ir-OTTVTV I*V VVOHIITTPP ! di

j COUNTY" COMMITTEE ILeti Dickinson 59 j Augustus H. Swain 57 FREHOI.DKR Joseph MaeKissie 29 , William R. Swain 66 TOWNSHIP COMMITTEE George Dickinson 40 ! George McNeill 49 TOWNSHIP CI.KRK 'Carles C. Reeves h 57 CONSTABLE : George Halbruner 9

WILLIAM Br-GJLBERT j Nominated for City^Tonneil on both j , Republican and. Democratic Tickets I: : !.

■ - j' Ink Eradicator will remove ink spot* ! paper or fabric of any kind— 25 1 cents at the 8tar and Wave Stationery j

THE HARD LIFE OF A SOCIETY WOMAN In the October Woman's Home Companion Grace -S. Richmond begins a new serial love-story entitled "The Brown Study," in the course of which 4 preacher and his society loving sister talk in part as follows about the life of a rich woman: ~ 'Sue,' said her brother, the best ■cure for certain kinds of overwork is merely mops work, only of a different sort. I cant be idle and contented. Can you? " Idle! I should like 'to be idle. I'm rushed to death, all the time. It's killing me.' " 'Dressmakers and hairdressers and .dinner* and bridge and the opera,' said j J he. -It is indeed a hard life — 1 wonder ! you stand it.' j "'Don't be ironic.' "l'm^not ironic. I realized, long ago. that it's the hardest life in the .world, and pays the least.' ^ j "She flushed. 1 have my Parities,' she reminded him. Tm not utterly ueeles*. And mv clubs — belonging to I them is a duty 1 owe other women. I {try to fulfill it.' " 'But you're not happy.' • •Happy! I've forgotten the mean- ' jng of the word. To tell the honest truth, Don, I've been feeling for a long 1 while that I didn't care — how soon it ! ended.' ' HOW TO MAKE OYSTER STEW ' j Fannie Merritt Farmer, cookery editor of the Woman* Home Companion, presents a number of "Recipes for October" in the October issue of that pub. Among them is her recipe for ' Boston oyster stew which follows: "Put one quart of oysters in a colander and pour over three-fourths cupful ! of cold water. Carefully pick over oysters, remove tough muscle* from half of them, and slightly chop remaining half with removed tough muscles, Add chopped oysters to water drained 1 j through colander, heat to the boiling ' point and let simmer three minutes. ! through a. double thickness of cheesecloth, add reserved soft part of , oysters, and cook until oysters are ] plump. Bemove oysters with a skimmer, and put in a tureen with one- j fourth cupfpl of butter, one-half table- j spoonful of salt, and one-eighth teaspoonfnl of pepper. Add oyster liquor j strained a second time and one quart } of scalded milk. Always remember to j scald milk in a double boiler, which j the danger of scorching, j Serve with oyster crackers." j, 0 j, WHY SUGAR HAS GONE UP > j In the current issue of Farm and I ; J.idson C. Wellivcr. Washing- } jton correspondent of that publication, } j writes under the title "Wartime } Prices and Opportunities," in which he > (reports a conversation with Edwin F. J |Sweeti Assistant Secretary 6f Com- }i 1 at Washington, in the course of F ! which conversation evidence was de- | v eloped that the people of the United a States will have a remarkable opportu- « nity to develop their markets and especially their home market, as the re. _ isult of tlii* war. In the same conversation the reasons for the increase in the price of sugar wore put down so | definitely that they are reproduced be- I uciiiiiicii urn vney are reproaucea oc-

j- i "Sugar has gone up from 4 to 8 cehts | a pound, and I see some extremist* >3 | prophesying that it may go to 15. ' .beet -sugar factory in the country that III «">'t «'«™ hig profits now. ami prob|,j ably for a long time to come, j "The reason is simple. Germany i« one of the greatest sugar-producing countries in the world. Austria -Hungary and France are less, hut iniporjtant producers. Germany has supplied 1 most of the British requirements for : sugar from her beet establishments. , That supply is cut off in an hour — the jbour in which war was declared. "What i» the consequence ? Britain becomes a competitor for the canh ' sugar of Oiba. which has supplied most !of our requirements for a longtime, aside from what we produce in fhi* , coui|try"rlawaii and Porto Rico. Cuba s has had just about enough to supply j ns. though the average consumption in ithis country has been growing very ifart, especially of late yeara. j "Now Britain must go elsewhere, and bids for Cuba's stock. Y'ou can sec . what it is doing to prices in our market. • "Considering that the whole world produces only eighteen millions of tons o' sugar a year, and that seven millions of that comes from the countries now at war, ia it any wonder that fif-teen-cent sugar is predicted?" CRUELTY TO ANIMALS. Cape May County Dirtrict Society for ; Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, Office . 518 Washington Street, Cape May, N. J. ! President, Dr. S. F. Ware: Vice- President, Dr. Em! en Physick ; Secretary, (Lewis T. Stevens; Treasurer, Everett J. JerrelL Ohllckren Ory FOR FLETCHER'S 1 C.'STORIA

CBBKS WIECTOIY 1 FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Pastor, William Dyre MeCurdy. 1 Preaching on Sunday at 10.30 and 1 in the evening at 7.30; Sunday school at 3 p.m. ; Wednesday evening Prayer t Meeting at 7.30; Men's .Union Meeting 1 Saturday evening at 7.30. t FIRST M. E. CHTTRGH Rev. W. E. 1*1™. Pastor. 1 Preaching Sunday 10.30 a.m., 7.30 p.m.; Sunday school 2.30 p.m.; Sunday Praise Service, 9 a.m. and 6 p.m. ' Oaas Meetings on Thursday and Fri- ( day evenings at 7.45 p.m. Prayer Meeting, Wednesday evening 7.46 p.m. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Sunday services, 10.29 a.m. and 7.30 p.m., Sunday school 3.00 p.m.. Midweek. Wednesday, 8.00 p.m.; Y. P£.C. E., Fridays, 8.00 p.m., Junior Endeavor, Fridays, 3.45 p.m. P. E. CHURCH OF THE ADVENT. Tnfayette street, between Jackson and Decatur— Rev. Arthur Hess, Rector. Sundays — Celebration of the Holy Communion, 7.30 a.m.; Morning Prayer, Litany and Sermon, oh the first Sunday of each month, celebration of Holy Communion, 10.30; Sunday school at 3 B0 p.m.; evening prayer, 8.00 p.m. 8T. MARY'S CATHOLIC CHURCH Rev. D. 8. Kelly, Rector. Mass Sunday at 6, 8, and 10 a.m.; evening services Sunday and Friday at • p.m. Confessions — Tuesdays and Thursdays before the first Friday, from 3^0 to 8B0 p.m., and from 7 AO to 9.30 p.m. OF FIRE AT.apu TELEGRAM STATIONS. Keys may be obtained in vicinity sf alarm boxes. 26 — Washington street, near 8ckallenger's Landing. 32— Washington street, near Union 47 — Washington street and Madison avenue. 54 — Lafayette and Bank streets. 68 — Broad and Elmira streets. 65 — Pittsburg and New Jersey are. No. 69 — Stockton avenue, between Jefferson and Queen streets. No. 73 — Franklin and Washington it. 76— Howard sfc, opp. Stockton ave. 82 — Columbia ave. and Guerney st. 84— Ocean street, near Beach ave. 91 — Broadway and Grant. 92— Broadway and Beach ave. No. 63 — Perry street, near Bridge. 94 — 8. Lafayette and Grant street. No. 95 — Washington and Jackson ata. 97 — Columbia ave. and Decatur st. 98 — Washington and Ocean sts. All active Firemen, City Police Officers and Hotel Watchmen are provided with keys. NOTICE

Horse Buyers b- Chance for farmers,, teamsters, lumbermen, coalmen, expressmen, liverymen, dairymen, icemen, contractors, etc., or ig 'D f«ct, anybody in need of a horse, ^ United States ExpressStables s & c ^ No connection with any other stables. <t 435 and 437 East 23rd Street, e, ( New Y'ork City. ;; 165 Young Work Horses and ; Mares .. in good condition, weighing from 900 to 1600 lbs. il Above horses have been used in and s around New Y'ork and have been bought - green within the past two years. * Among them are matched teams suit- - able for general business. Also pavement sore mares for farm work, 30 days - trial allowed, 'if not as represented c-in be returned in trial time. No reaaonr able offer refused. Will also dispose of ( express wagons and harneM, and for tlie benefit of out of town folks, will have all horses purchased, tested by state veterinary. All horses shipped 'roe with collars and halters. Apply at offict. 435 and 437 East 23rd St. New York City fltl— 7-18— tf.