SATURDAY, JULY Jl, l»U- (JAPE MAX STAB AMB WAV Jt PACE Mff
personal ; mention " Ii (Continued from first page-) \ ti maker, of Uermantown, are at the CSial- a fonte for the season, and are having a 1, .delightful time, enjoying the pleasures > of this resort. <1 , Mr. and Mrs. Broadnar of Washing- j ton, D. C-, are at the Mueller Cottage for v two weekfc * Miss Lucy Cole, of Seaville, daughter J . of former Prosecutor Eugene C. Cole, q is spending a week with her friend, Miss | f Florence Ware, of Cape May. I f air. Harvey S. Bennett, Mr. Herbert J R. Schooley, and Mr. J. Gearhart Crate, I yf Collingswood, left early yesterday I - for an exte?f3ed auto tour of South Jersey. They will viiit Cape May, Stone ' Harbor and Wildwood, making a short | stay at each place. Mr. Arthur F. Carter, of Washington, D. C„ drove fo Cape May, Saturday, in his new ail-cylinder Pierless car, and is stopping on Perry Street with friends ^ and relatives.Mr. Edwin 0. Mann, of Washington, * D C . .arrived Saturday evening to spend a week or so with friends on Perry Street. Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Hagan stopped at the Marine Apartments for the week- * end. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Dentkla Mills, of k "Castlefinn." Bryn Mawr. Pa., have t taken a cottage here, and will spend the l< balance of the summer. t Frank Walker, of Philadelphia, spent k the week-end with friends in West Cape L May. f Mr. and Mrs. Mary Mavbin Hart and f Mr. and Mrs. Spencer K. Mulford. Jr., g of Ogont*. will, spend the balance of the h Mr. J. 1». Parker will leave to-morrow for a trip up the Hudson -before return- p ing to Atlanta, Ga. t R. C. Meeker, wife and son, who have < a very attractive cottage on New Jersey j Avenue, will leave shortly on an ex- t tended tour, along the New England coast, visiting all the principal towns on t the seaboard. They, will also ^spend ii some time in the White Mountains, be- ( fore returning to Cape May, for the rest p of the season. The Meekers have a t sixty horse power machine, of the very li latest model, in whirh they will make the trip. t - Mr. and Mrs. Horace Smith, having • S been obliged to forego their usual Eu- v ropean trip on account of conditions on a the other side, have taken a cottage in a Cape May, and are entertaining no end of people for week ends, mid-week and f all the time in their characteristic open- s handed way. Mrs. G. Heide Norris, Miss Sophie t Boric Norris and Mrs. Garesehe Norris c are in Cape May to spend several weeks. I Mrs. Richard W. Omerod and Miss Anna Watts. 259 South Sevent<-enth C Street, have come to Cape May to spend 1 the summer. C Mr. and Mrs. Edward Savon. Jr.. who I have been occupying a cottage on Corgio ; < Street, since the beginning of the sea- ! ' eon. -have some very fine portraits of j-1 children on exhibition at their home. I ^ Miss I suits Elliott, of 338 South i 1 Nineteenth Street, who has been so-j' journing at Yarmouth, Nova Scotia, for i several weeks, will come to Cape May ( about the middle of August, for the rest ; I of the season. j 1 Mrs. Win- W. Finn, of Xorrietown, is -1 in Cape May for the summer. Mr. and Mm. George E. Daniels, of i ^ Glenside. will spend the remainder of | ^ the summer in Cape May. I1 Mr. and Mrs. A. Felix du Pont, of I " Wilmington gave a supper and dance at j 1 their home Wednesday night, when the . 1 Carney's Point young men were invited j over to relieve the terium of their busy ! lives. Mrs. du Pont is now in Cape May ! ( to spend a few days with Mr. and Mrs. ' Nicholas Pennman, of Baltimore. T. Foster Thomas, a prominent attorney of Philadelphia, has taken eottoge No. 215" Windsor Avenue. Mr. „ Thomas and his family are very much j pleased with Cape May. g D. OL Dunoghue and family are very ( comfortably located for the summer, at a 211 Perry Street. r G. Howard Shriver and family have h taken a cottage on Perry Street for the r summer. Mrs. John B. Love, who at one time was a large property owner in (.'«)*- May, but who has not been hen- for several seasons, is the guest of Mrs. Mor- ' ria, on Columbia — Avnnn, — - weeks. Miss Anna MacCardle. sang to large and appreciative audiences in the 'Presbyterian and Baptist Churches, on Sunday last- < #7* Mrs. Gilbert Harvey, is living at the' corner of Columbia Avenue aqd Howard ^Street, for the season. Mrs. Harvey is a leading member of the Philadelphia Country Club, and is captain of the] ' Woman's Tennis Club. She is an ex-, pert tennis player, having won several I medals and prizes -in championship I games. ^ - n ~
Mrs. George Garrett is occupying her Urge and beautiful cottage oh Perry ( Street, where she will remain all sumA jolly crowd from Hotel Columbia Wednesday evening for Wildwood, Mrs. J. B. Mails, of MontcUir, N. J., , chaperoning the party. All the plaesof the carnival were entered into with much zest, even to the snake walk led by Miss Placid Truchsess and Harry Mecray, the expert rifle shooting done by Mrs. J. B. Maus and Mr. P. E. Taten^was a splendid showing of how well we could be protected if necessary. those present were Mrs. J. B. Misses Ella Placid and Irene Tjuchsess, Miss Emma Swain, Miss Kehr. Miss Scull. Miss LydU . A. Ottinger, Miss Lucy H. Ottinger, John anil Harry Mecray, Mr. P. E. Taten, Mr. Lafayette Miller, Mr. Edward Hughes. Mr. Jack Maus. CAPESWiif AT LEWES TRAVEL TO LEWES, DELAWARE AND TRIM THAT BUNCH BY THE SCORE OF 5-3— CHINESE UNIVERSITY WILL OPPOSE THE CAPES THIS AFTERNOON. Tuesday's Daily Star and Wave. About one hundred fans, all trying to a stiff upper lip and a smile on their faces, some sucking the juice from and others chewing away on | their chud of chewing "gum, trying to the seasickness away, jolleyed to ( DeUware, on the pilot boat, J. Edmunds, to see their team dethe Lewes aggregation in a close score 5-3. One person was sick on the editor will not mention any Manager Humphreys^, presented a | patched up team with Frank Shields on the sick list, be was left home; Ben. filbert, our lightning right fielder, has to the Federals; in other words, the Ocean City nine. Humphreys started the game with three pitchers in the line-up, Drummond center and McKenty in right, with Gibson on the mound. The two former pitchers both cracked out two hits, while the latter registered one. Elirman also two hits. (fepe May was first to score blood in the second inning, after Ihirbin died. singled, then Gibson followed with another single. The locals added another "in the fifth on a base- on balls, sacrifice hit and a sacrifice fly. 1-ewes forged ahead in the sixth on four hits. The locals came back in the seventh and tied the acore on two hits. The home boys sewed the game up in the eighth, banking two runs on a base on balls, sacrifice hit and triple by and a squeeze - plav. The line up: MAY R. H. O. A. E. Town, if 1 0 0 0 0 3b 1 0 0 4 0 lb 1 1 15 0 0 2b 0 0 1 7 0 ! Drummond, cf 1 2 2 0 0 .I)urbin. as 0 0 2 3 0 I rf 1 2 0 0 0 1 Ehrman. c 0 2 7 1 0| ---- -- "i | Totals 5 8 27 10 0 j ' .LEWES R. H. 0. A. K. Horsey. 2b 0 12 1 0| > Joseph, ss 1 1 0 4 0 1 ' J Davis, e 1 1 14 0 1 : Myers. 3b 1 3 1 3 o| I Miller, ef 0 1 I 0 I); j Ingram, p 0 0 0 5 1 ' . j Arthur, lb 0 1 9 0 ft If 0 1 0 0 1 : j Hocer. rf 0 1 0 0 0 . ' j Totals 3 10 27 13 3 ; 1 j May 01001012 0—5 ; i -ewes 00001200 0—3 I NOTICE Notice is hereby given that an ordi- j ' entitled "An Ordinance concerning 1 ' and prohibiting the keeping of the *' within the limits of the City of ' Cape May," will be read a third time and placed for final passage at the regumeeting of the Board of Health to be 1 Monday, August 2nd, 1915, at 8 p. in the Council Chamber. DR, A. L. LEACH, President. ' ; WM. PORTER, * Secrctarv . 1 7-17-3t ^ I EAT ANYTHING. ANYTIME I ■ Relieve that after-dinner distress, re- ■ move the cause of lassitude, drowsing ncas and headache, the symptoms of INDIGESTION, take nature's remedy PET rCXT1? Sickly clears SEyEN^i,^ BARKSE^S ! ^ ^ ,, , . stomach. Clears JV blood and eradicates Uric Acid. m Price 60 cenU a bottle at all drag- ■ gists or from the proprietor, I Ino ho, M llm, SL. few Tsrk Ot,. ;
arrivals at i the hotels i VISITORS FROM OTHER LANDS WHO HAVE SOJOURNED IN THIS I RESORT RECENTLY. 1 COLUMBIA. I Philadelphia— Mr. ssd Mrs. H. H. Parker, H. Slough, W. A. James, F. G. Pretty, A. D. George. Bristol, Pa. — W. H. Boron. ' Germantown — Dr. and Mrs. R. L Petfield and daughter. Chicago— Mr. and Mra. A. W. Martin. v Cape May — Ella T. Corson. Ardmore— Mrs. T- R- Pierpoint., Montclair, N. J. — Edward Hughes. New York— Jack Maus . Haddon Heights— H. McConaghy and wife. Montvale, N. J. — H. A. Morriss. OONONIAL. Philadelphia — Miss M. Boyd, Misses ' Giilan. Chicago, ni— Mr. and Mrs. R. H. ' [ Baericke. STAR VILLA. J Philadelphia— A. W. Allen, Miss E. 1 ' Hall, Mrs. G. W. Allen, Mrs. R. A. Bal- 1 linger, Miss N. Ballinger, H. C. Kornenia, A. R. Davis, wife and children. LAFAYETTE. ' New York — J. A. McDonnell, V. Pack- ' ' er, H. B. Ekerf. ' 1 Atlantic City — Miss Shydell, Miss Cal- "J Baltimore— Charles J. Brooks, Mrs. 1 Chas. J. Brooke, Stephen Griffin. 1 ELWARD. Philadelphia — Mrs. Hoffman, Mrs. S. : Nichols, Wm. McAllister. . 1 1 Baltimore — Lillian Kellock. VIRGINIA. Philadelphia— A. Smith, C. R. Hender- 1 son. ' Mattinsburg, W. Va. — A. H. Shepper. ' CARROLL VILLA. ' ' Moorestown, N. J. — W. C. Stokes, •j BALTIMORE INN. Baltimore — Mrs. O. levering, Mrs. H. ' M. Rogers, F. B. Addison. WINDSOR. ' Philadelphia — Mrs. D. Rcanwell, Rev. ' J. Seanwell. Loretta Scanwell, Mr. D. | ' ' Dear and family, M. Crease and wife. ' 1 ' Baltimore — Mrs. Wm. S. Weldon, Wm. ' S. Weldon. I1 ' WYOMING. St. Louis — Richard Hennessey, M Hen- M ' uesscy, Mrs. M. C. Hennessey. . ' 1 Philadelphia— A. O. Gaw. I THE FEDERAL AND JERSEY COMBINED GAME LAWS 1 Fisherman and Gunners will Note the 1 ' Resume — The Catch and Bag Limits — 1 Would be Well if Sportsmen Note the ' Several Changes. 1 The game laws of New Jersey, com- ' ' piled by William Stein, of Camden, in ' ( accordance with the federal regulations ^ for migratory birds for 1915, are as fol- | Deer, bucks and does over one year old, ( only one deer a year may be taken, last ( I three Wednesdays in October and first ( Wednesday in November. I Quail, rabbit, squirrel, only the male < j English ring-neck pheasant, ruffed I I grouse, prairie chicken, Hungarian part- I ridge. November 10 to December 13. 1 ' I Female English ringneck pheasant, < | closed until April 15, 1910. Reed bird, (bobolink or rice birdi. September 1, to October -31. I ( | All small shore birds not designated ! j j by nunie under the open season, little.) ' brown, sandhill and whooping cranes, j I .curlews, upland plover and wood ducks. • closed until September 1, 1918. 1 Shore birds, only black breasted plover, I golden plover, jacksnipe or Wilson's 1 . ; snipe and greater and lessor Vellowlegs, J ! September 1, to December 15. i< j Rails, coots, gallinulcs. marsh hen or ' ( mud hen. September 1 to November 30. ' | WiHxIeoek. October 10 to November 1 . 1 30. Penalty 8100 for taking any game 1 , jtlje killing of which is prohibited from 1 , -October 10 to November 9, both dates in- < f elusive. One half of penalty goes to in- I . . Water fowl, except wood duck and 3 , swan, November *1 to January 1. 1 Skunk, mink, muskrat, otter (may 1 only be trapped), special law permits shooting in Salem county above Mill ' creek in season, November 15 to April 1. < 'Raccoons, between sunset and sunrise, ' October 1 to December 15. < Brook, brown and rainbow trout and land locked salmon, April 1 to July 15. Bhrek- fat-o. Oswego batcv-whitc bass, calico bass, crappie and pike perch, June 15 to November 30. Pike and pickerel. May 20 to November 30, and January 1 to January 20. Black, calico, rock and white bass, < crappie. pike perch, pickerel, pike, white < and yellow perch and trout. June 15 to ; December' 1. , It is illegal to take or have in possession!- in any one day more than twentyfive trout, ten land-locked salmon, ten • black bass, ton quail, three En^Uah-pr ( ring-neck pheasants, tliree Mungarian ( partridges, ten woodooek; three ruffed t
grouse, twenty ducks, tea geeee, tea brant, ten rabbits, thirty marsh hens or mud hens. To catch or keep trout under six inches in length; black or white base under nine inches in length; pike perch, pickerel end pike under twelve incbea in length; calico or etrawberry base or crappie under six inches in length; striped bass under ten inches in length.' newsofThe churches - Church of the Advent. Lafayette Street, between Decatur and Jackson Streets, The Rev. Grant Knauff, Priest. Ninth Sunday after Trinity, August 1, Holy Communion, 7.30 and 10.30 a. m> Church School, 250 p. m. At evening prayer at 8 o'clock Sunday night, the Rt. Rev. Paul Matthews, D. D., Bishop of the Diocese of- New Jersey will make his visitation at the Church of the Advent, preach, and minister the Sacrament of Confirmation. All are cordially invited to be present. Wednesday, Holy Communion, 7.30 a. m. Friday, First of the Transfiguration, Communion, 7.30 a. m., evening . 7.30 p. m. i Presbyterian Church. The Indies of the congregation will hold their annual sale"" of home-made cakes on the morning of August 7th in Jthe churchy basement. Orders may be left with Miss Stites, at 303 Washington Street, and at the office of the Columbia Hotel. August 15th has been designated as "Green-back Day," at which time an opportunity is given to make an offering for the reduction of the manse mortgage. A special musical program is being arranged. Mr. Allan Moore, tenor, of Philadelphia, is expected to assist in the music Sabbath. METHODIST NOTES. 1 ' Old Home Day. ■ The official board has designated Sunday, August 22, as "Old Home Day." A ( committe is working bard to make the ' program for the day one of great interest and inspiration. Former pastors will | be present to fill the pulpit, and special music will be a pleasant feature of all the services. As a motto for the oecas- ' ion, the following has been adopted: "A in every home, and every family . represented at public worship." A serial sermon will be an odd Innovation on Sunday next, when the minister will preach both morning and evening , upon "The Wealth of a Christian." The morning discourse will deal with 'The of Thought," while the evening topic will include "The Christian InheriIn This World and the World to Come." All visitors to the city arc cordially invited. POLLYANNA GROWS UP The Second Glad Book by Eleanor H. Porter. Hundreds of thousands of readers of The Philadelphia Record • know Pollyanna, the delightful little girl wli" brings sunshiue into every home she en- j ter*. They made her acquaintance when j H. Porter's "I'qllyanna— The Glad Book" was published serially in! The Philadelphia Sunday Record. Many readers have pronounced this ' the most entertaining story ever pub- 1 lixhed in The Record and it has been | praised everywhere by pritics as being H full of throbbing life and its realities j a ami a strikingly good example of gen-.; ' Now another "Pollyanna'' story isi about to begin in this sa.me newspaper.' The Sunday Record has succeeded in se- j i j curing the rights to publish serially the j book "Pollyanna Grows Pp," by the ] versatile author. It will be found j fascinating as the original success | and fully up to its quality. It deals t with later and more mature experiences of the same charming heroine and her friends. It is a story that will bring a sure and swift response in the hearts of and old. It is a real "sunshine one which every member of the family will enjoy. The first installment will be printed in the magazine section of The Philadelphia Record on Sunday, August 1st. local newsdealer will fill your order for delivery. Children Cry j fOR FLETCHER'S CASTORI A Divine service at Si. Mary's Church | during the summer. Masses, Sundays at 0, 8 and 10 o'clock at a. Week days at ' a. m- Sunday and Friday evenings j at 8 o'clock. MECAN.O — Thearaphy. druglcss cure for rheumatism, nervousness and a positive cure .for constipation. Will rest amp build up a rundown condition. Hotel Devoii. Phone. 83-7-21-3t
COLDWELL LAWN MOWERS Nothing but the best of materials and workmanship enter into the construction of Coldweil Lawn Mowers. They have been con-, tinuously on the markets of the world for more than forty years. PRICES RANGE FROM $3.00 TO $12.00 A 14-inch Ball Bearing Mower for $4.00. CHAS. A. SWAIN B6-J JiCKSON SI. CAPE UT, ft. J. Spring^ 1915 If yon are now a customer of ourt, we believe yon will agree that we fulfill every claim we BMtke. If you have never bad your clothes made by us we hope you will five us en opportunity te demonstrate the superiority of our service on yoer new Sprint Suit i GYS RIEE LADIES' AND MEN'S TAILOR 424 Washington Street Cape May, N. J. I Keystone Phone 190D NEW FEED STORE OPEN West Cape May, N. J. A FULL LINE OF FEED AND POULTRY SUPPLIES, GARDEN SEEDS AND TOOLS. J. SIMKINS, 506 Broadway 'njgi v A. KENIC r\ SHOEMAKER A All work done by hand. / RUBBER SOLES A SPECILTY Repairing while you wait. Workcalled for and delivered. ALL FANCY WORK GUARANTEED 105 Jackson St, Cape May, N. J. All Trimmed Hats and Flowers AT COST A full and complete stock for the Baby, Miss, Young Lady, and the Mother. P enty of Pretty Wreaths and Flowers to suit all. We must have the room for our Bathing Goods for Men, Women and Children. j Washington Street MRS. E. TURNER , BIGGS' GARAGE Cape May, N. J. L R. Cresse, Prop. Auto Supplies and Accessories. All kinds ef tires Repaired and Vulcanized IIJE aim to know everything about Jfvjl Good Tailoring. We toy our utmost to plesse our Jm \7jiM Hi customers. LtffaL I We know there's a comeback on iraf / | :lir^ every sale — The Customer, a Kick, or I L ' r f® the Goods. • W H 1 I iiil We don't want the kick or the ILLS goods, but We Do Want the Customer. 1111 I'll That's why wo always give satisfac If JOHN F. GORSKI I H Tailor ® Next to Post Office Cape May, N. J.

