\ ' >r '* ' f SATURDAY, AUGUST 7, 1915 CAFE MAY STAR ANB WAYM ■ .1.1 ■ II I 9 ,
PERSONAL MENTION ! (Continued from first page ) |
Avenue, have returned to their home in < Ardmore. '■ Mr. and Mrs Joel Cook Huber were entertained over the week-end at the ( home of Mr. and Mrs. E. Spencer Miller, i 3rd, at the attractive Miller cottage on Columbia Avenue. i Mr. arid Mrs. D. B. Cunningham and i their son EIwoOiT Oririninghatn, of the ] well known Cunningham piano firm of i Fhiladelhhia, are spending a week at the I Columbia. L. E. Converse, of New York City, is .staying at the Columbia -a few days. Miss Mabel Richardson has as her ; guest, Miss* Vemetta M. Crooks, of i South Orange, N. J. Miss Crooks graduated from Maryland College in 1914. Mr and Mrs. H. Walker Hand, at their | attractive home at the corner of Wash- I ington Street and Madison Avenue, ate i entertaining as their house guests for the week, Mibs F. D. Van Scoy, of i Bridgeliampton, N. Y.; Mr. and Mrs. I Herbert fi. Wright, Masters Donald and < Gordon Wright, of New York City, and Miss Ida May Wcmple, of Springfield, I Mass. i Luther K. Price, of the editorial staff - of the New York Sun, is visiting in Cape May. Mr. Price, who is a latge property I owner in Cape May, has just recently I returned from a visit to his brother Wil- ' liam Price, who is a prosperous merchant in Detroit, Mich. The weekly afternoon tea party at the Windsor occurred as usual on Wednes- i day afternoon last, and proved to be a ! • great success. A large number of guests j werr ii'W.taini.l and s roost piijovabl-." i afternoon was apont by all. Among those ! noticed in the tea room were: Mr. and Mrs. B. Homer le Boutillirr, Mr. and I Mrs. K. R. Hill, Miss A. M. Ramsey. < Mrs. D. T. McConnell, Rev. and Mrs. ( Knauff Rev. W. H. Graff. Judge H. R. i Starbuck. Mrs. J. G. McCulloch. Misses I W. R., Tyler, B. L. Fitler, Reese, But-!' ler and Ruoker, the Misses Halpin. the ( Misses McClennan. |l Mr. Frank I. Daily, of -Philadelphia. 1 < is visiting his father, John I. Daily, at ' the Windsor. j ( The blisses Butler, two very pretty ' I and attractive young ladies from Indian- j apolis, are at the Windsor for the sum- ; r The Rev. Dr. Wm. H. Graff Is again ! at the Windsor, where he will spend the ' summer. Rev. Dr. Graff is a noted s Episcopal clergyman, of Philadelphia, i and is well liked by his Quaker City j • parishoners. and other friends. . I Horace E. Smith, who has been in a < Philadelphia hospital for several weeks i > has recovered and is with his family at ( ( their beautiful cottage on Beacli Ave- ! Miss Margaret Yardlev who is spend- 1 ing the summer in C'ape May, is enter- | ' taining her friend. Miss Lea Reed. ' Miss Sophie Worth has as her gusats Mr. and Mrs. J. Hutchinson Scott. Jr.. of 2222 Rittenhouse Street, Phila- 1 ■ delphia. Mr. and Mrs. Jeremiah O'Day whose ' pretty romance of two continents culminated by marriage in Cape May. a few days ago. will leave ahortlv for a tobr of Scotland and Ireland, and points 1 on the continent. Mrs. William N. landis. of Philadel- '
phia, after a very pleasant viait of three I weeks with Mr. and Mia. Frank Cas- i sedy, has returned to her home. Mr. Landis was also a week-end visitor with his sister, Mrs. Cassedy. I Mr. and Mrs. Edwin D. Page are occupying their cottage on Stockton AveMr. and Mrs. Bancroft Mellor, of Gennantown, are in Cape May for the Mrs. F. Boas and her daughter are in C'ape May, as guests at the Chaifonte for a few weeks. Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Carver, who have a cottage on Decatur Street, for the summer, have gone on a tour to other points.' Mr. Carver has gone to Arizona, on a business trip and will not return before September. Mrs. Carver is visiting friends at Glenbury, Lqke George. | i Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Parker and family, of 1735 North 23tli Street, Philadel- ' phia, are occupying their cottage iu ' Cape Afay, for the season. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Humphries, Miss Edith Humphries, Owen Hum- • phries, and Colwyn Humphries, of Narberth and Woodside Avenues, are spendi in]g the summer in Cape May. Mr. and Mrs. Willard A, Speakman nad family are now in Cape May, and taken a cottage for the remainder ! of the season. Mrs. Artliington Gilpin, at her cot- , tage, has as guests for several weeks, her son, Mr. Arlington Gilpin, Jr., and vife, of Germantown. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Cannon and their three attractive children, of Ooncord, N. ' C.. are spending August at the Stockton \ ilia Mr. an<T Mrs'T. Spencer Miller, 3rd, Mr. and Mrs. Joel Cook Huber and Miss i Alvr. Sargeant, left a few days ago on a motor trip to New York, where they . j will spend a few days at the Waldorf | Vstoria. and upon their return will have j as their guest, Miss Anna Steele, of . ■ X«v-v York. Rev. and Mrs. Duckworth of Toronto, Canada, are spending a few weeks in Cape May. They are guests at the ' Chaifonte. Rev. Duckworth is president of Trinity College. | I Mr. and Mrs. H. N. Rodenbaugh, of |( I Washington, D. C., are guests at the , | Chaifonte, for the season. Mr. Rodeu- 1 • I bough is a prominent bridge engineer, | . j with the Southern Railroad. || Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Trimble and ' | family are guests at the Chaifonte. for the month of August. Mr. and Mrs. Burk Baker, of War- ; renton, Va.. are here for the season and | arc staving at the Chaifonte. Prof, and Mrs. Sharpe, of Lynchburg, - . are -spending the month of August at the Chaifonte. - Prof. Sharpe is a , • member of the faculty of the Univerjsitv of Virginia. I Rev. and .Mrs. "S. T. French, of Bruns'wiek. Georgia, are in Cape May, for ; several weeks. Tliev are staying at the j Chaifonte. I Mrs. Wieklif Rose, and the Misses | Rose, of Washington, D. C., are at the ! . Chaifonte while enjoying the pleasures | of this resort. Mrs. Rose is at the head of th- Rockefeller Foundation. !! Mrs. Campbell and her daughter of. Washington. D. C.. are in Cape May. fori' the season. They are at the Chaifonte. | Mrs. Campbell is the wife of Judge Cgmpbell, of the Supreme Court, of the' District of Columbia. Mrs. Davis Young and daughter, of Germantown. are guests at the Chal- • fonte. Mr. and Mrs. Brazier, ot Charlestown. West Virginia, are in Cape May
"Right on your own desk, now!" "That Bell extension telephone," said Rthe Boss to the Office Manager, "will stop that 'pardon-me-if-I-use - your - telephone', time-wasting nuisanca "It costs but half a dollar a month, too, and I guess we've been spending ten times that amount a week in worrying along without it" |l Mr. Man-with-one- ■ M telephone, let our Busi- 1 M ness Office tell you A w, about this efficiency II |i booster. 1 M The Del. & AtL j ft TeL & Tel. Co. s tf C- B. Smith, W/ District Manager, AtlimSc City, N.J. m " J I
£3 tell ' V&Pm m v ; : ||JH
' for the remainder of the season, and - staying at the Chaifonte. Dr. Arthur Hopkins, of Philadelphia, i is a Cape May viaitor who ia staying at th? Chaifonte. Mr. E. Sydney Page, vice-president of ' the Gerard Trust Company, ia is Cap; May for the rest of the season. He F and his family are staying at the : Stockton Villa Mr. and Mrs. X. Myers Fitler and 1 family, of Grey stone, Torresdale, Pa., " have taken a spite of rooms at the Marine apartments for the month of August. ' Miss Partridge, one ot the Public r Ledger's society reporters, is staying at * the Stockton Villa 1 Mrs. Dr. Davis, will give a card party at her beautiful Stockton Avenue eot- ' I tage in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Tyson, on' the ll'th of August. Kenneth Sr Clark, of the editorial I staff of' ''Musical America," the New York weekly. Is spending the week at * the cottage of his uncle, CoL J. Granville Leach. Mr. Clark, who was graduated from Princeton University with the class of 1005, is the composer of four of the musics] plays presented by 1 the Princeton Triangle Culb. He has ' also written many songs for the pro- ' fessional stage. J. E, Junkin, first vice-president for the Realty Securities Corporation of ' Miami, Florida, is in Cape May for the ' month of August. Mr. Junkin was night foreman of the Star of the Cape, i r thirty years ago. 1 STONE HARBOR. - An auto ran and basket picnic is to ' come from Mullica Hill some pleasant day in the last week of the month, made up of old neighbors and friends of Wil- , ^ liam H. Fox and wife now residents here. J The committee of arrangements here on j ^ Friday week, and reporting favorably j j are Walter Jones and family, York j Woodruff and wife, Mrs. Parker and son. I ' Miss Moore, Dr. Downs and wife. y j Joseph White and family and Rev. J Lawrence ami wife, with their lunch j making up five large automobile loads, i The chairman of the House Committee [ 'of the Yacht Club, David Risley, ha« promised the use of the Yacht Club, and ' Reese P. Risley as chairman of the ' Woman's Cimmittec of the Stone Har- 1 I j bor Grange, with her committee will as- 1 sist Mrs. Fox in receiving. The visitors represent the Mullica Hill Grange largest in membership in the state, and of which ! | the State Master, Senator G. W. E. j Gaunt and wife have been members from the first, and from which Mr. and Mrs. ! ' Fox will bring their demits to the Stone ! Harbor Grange. They also represent i the Methodist Episcopal Church of their ! district ' and of which Sister Fox is an ^ ; active member and worker. The pur- : !«>se of the visit is to make the ac<|uain- J . t a nee of the grangers and Methodists ■ who are Sister Fox's new neighbors, and I to consider building a club house on the ! | plan of St. Mary's bungalow, except to ' be for member^ use only. The rim has| ^ over 50 automobiles listed and more are { * _ expected. For "cats" it will be a basket j f luncb, and probably the largest that has j crossed the state. ' i Dr. Anna Howard Shaw will speak on I ' ; Suffrage in the Wild wood Hippodrome j on Saturday. August 14th, at 8.15 in the [ ^ evening. Admission will be free. Parties j »f visitors are expected from all over] i the county, as this will be for most peo- J pie here, their only opportunity of a ' lifetime to bear the famous Dr. Shaw. I ; More thau twenty years ago. Dr.1 Shaw addressed the Seaville Camp 1 =j Meeting and the leaders of that meet- j ing take great interest in her return to I | the county as a world celebrity, j I)r. Shaw's life has been very event- j ful. She was shipwrecked at the age | of four while on a voyage to America. | Her childhood was pawed on the front- j j ler, in the wilds of Northern Michigan, I win Te wolves howled around the cabin ( •at night, and frequent Indian attacks! , had to be warded off. j Dr. Shaw is now president of the National Woman Suffrage Association. No ••lie should fail to hear her address in Wilcwood on the fourtenth. QUARANTINE CHANGES IN NEW JERSEY. An order effective August 2, reduces that portion of Hudson County quarantined against the foot and mouth disease to an area lying within a three mile radius of infected premises at Secaucus. The same order frees the States of Kentucky and Wisconsin entirely, -and reduces the quarantined area in Illinois and Pennsylvania. NOTICE Notice is hereby given that an ordinance entitled "An Ordinance concerning Swine and prohibiting the keeping of the same within the limits of-the City of Cape "May," will be read a third time and placed for final passage at the rcgumeeting of the Board of Health to be held Monday, August 2nd, 1915, at 8 p. m. in the Council Chamber. DR, A. L. LEACH, . President. WM. PORTER^ . Senretary. 1 ■j 9
ARRIVALS AT THE HOTELS f ! VISITORS FROM OTHER LANDS e WHO HAVE SOJOURNED IN THIS RESORT RECENTLY. HOTEL CAPE MAY. Philadelphia— J. G. Doak, F. L. Luck-■-nbark, Henry R. Hallo well, John B. c Laird, Charlep S. Chester, C. Howell, t E. Shuyer, Mr. and Mrs. W. Cross, Mr. and Mrs. Keeler, A. Conover, C. M. e Kline, A. L. Wheeler, H. Rosengarten, . R. D. Este, Thomas EvanB, M. Ma wry, C. B. Morris, Jr., R. M. Pheller, A. C. Yarnall, C. Swell, Percy C. Madevia, , Jr., S. L. Meade, R. K. McCall, A. M. r Maris, R. R. Birdie, C. H. Wetter, Mr. j and Mrs. H. A. Perkins, Miss M. H. . Welter. Mrs. C. G. Welter, Miss Dorothy Perkins, Alfred Potter. ;l Pittsburg— R. G. McKinney, M. G. f Cochran, 3. D. Colberg, H. E. Green and . wife, J. D. Oliver. s Baltimore— Mr. and Mrs. A: Hack, . Miss Eleanor Hock, Mra. M. W. Harden, Miss A. Daly. Miss T. Daly, Miss Everer field, D. J. M. Craighill, W. D. Morrow, f Mr. and Mrs. E T. Bartlett. SEA CREST INN, s New York City — H. L Savage, Mrs. . Jno. A. Savage, Miss L. K. Savage, j Philadelphia— Mrs. R. W. Rutherford, j Miss Anna Rutherford, Miss Inez Cochran, Clias. A. McBride, wife and daugh0 J ter, Preston Stratton, Burton C. Kelly, t J C. C. Halbruner, D. C. Hunter, Mrs. Jos. t Martin, Mra. A. M. Wallace, Mr. and . Mrs. Robt. M. Wallace, A. B. Mac- , Xaughton, B. S. Buckwalter, Miss Helen „ ! Buckwalter. y j Bridgeton— Lillian M. Hall, Miss Lida Ij j S. Zibn. , Glen Bidge, N. Y. — Luther E. Price, | William E. Price. 'OLD VETERANS MEET AFTER FIFTY YEARS. ' | Captain A. C. Gile, Cape May, liad the ' | surprise of his life yesterday when a * white hatred gentleman walked into his office and introduced himself as ' John L. Harvey, of Philadelphia. Our j readers will appreciate the feelings of ' ! these two old comrades, when they are told that these two gentlemen met for ! the first time yesterday, since the close ' j of the Civil War. Both were members ' of the C8th Pennsylvania Volunteers, .Captain Gile having belonged to Com- ' , pany C and Comrade Harvey to Com- ' pany E. Mr. Harvey was color bearer, ' ■ and carried the colors at tlie battle of r j Gettysburg, where the 68th was so ser1 ; iously decimated, that after that decis- " j ive struggle the regiment was detailed " i for Provost "Marshall duty, under Major * j General Patrick of the Army of the ^ , Potomac. It fell to the lot of this ^ ' regiment to escort the prisoners, taken ^ - by General Meade, to New York Har'bor, and guard them there until after ' the war, when the regiment was mus- . tared out. Some battles besides Get:. tysbu{g, in which this regiment participated were Mine Run, Locust Grove and many others. It will be of interest to Cape May people to know that e|Mr. Harvey made the furniture t/tr the 0 old Stockton Hotel. «" THE HORATIO CREW. " j Eeverybody here loves Bertie. a ; H? of the mountainous name; He's a winner with the ladies. r- That's what they all exclaim. P , And then.— there is Judge Starbuck, j • Likewise a winner he — 0 j As a sailor man and a sail boat fan, j j He's at home upqn the sea. e j Now. not to slight the ladies, * '• On the staunch Horatio — ' - : Tlier 'se good Ma Hill, ahe's with us still i '• | As queen of the boat you know, a , Mrs. Pfeil as Lord High Admiral, s Miss Fitler — Commodore; Mrs. Clephane neat, and quite petite, - Well versed in naval lore. 1 Laya the courae as navigator, a While Doc. Leach attends the wheel. I When not attending others Who somewhat ill may feci.) - Then with sky-pilot and parson, 8 Our Messrs. Knauff and Graef, Tho high or low the wind may blow, e With them aboard, — we're safe. f In the sailing party send off, L Where Mrs. Plumley shines as guest f And the Hidden? three, all put to sea, ' With the Captain and" the rest. Then "Hurray" for the good Horatio, ■ Three cheers for Cap. Tony, too. let's all prepare, for a treat so rare, - Si xt lunr to meet anew. ; — Charles P. Hidden. i 0 f pi vine service at Si. Mary's Church - during the summer. Masses, Sundays at " 6, 8 and 10 o'clock a. la. Wrcl; days at ! 7 AO a. m. Sunday and Friday evenings I - at"' 8 "o'clock; MECAXO — I'licarapliv, drugh-ss cure for rheumatism, nervousness and a positive cure 'or constipation. Will rest • and' build up a rundown condition. Hotel Devon. Phone. 83-7-24-3t
COLDWELL LAWN MOWERS Nothing but the best of materials and workmanship enter into the construction of Coldwell 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 3H-7 JiCKSON ST. CAPE MAY, N. J. ■ ' ii —
L .... I Spring^ 1915 If yon are now a customer of ours, we believe yon will agree that we fulfill every claim we make. If you bave never bad your clothes made by us we hope you will five us an opportunity to demonstrate the superiority of our service on your bow Spring Suit GYS R1EF LADIES' AND MEN'S TAILOR 424 Washington Street, Cape May, N. J. Keystone Phone 190D ih.ssssssss b ; NEW FEED STORE OPEN West Cape May, N. J. . ' A FULL LINE OF FEED AND POULTRY SUPPLIES, GARDEN SEEDS 9 AND TOOLS. J. SIMK1NS, 506 Broadway
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v_ A. KENIC SHOEMAKER All work done by hand. RUBBER SOLES A SPECILTY Repairing while you wait. Work called 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. Washington Street MRS. E TURNER BIGGS' GARAGE Cape May, N. J. L. R. Cresse, Prop. Auto Supplies and Accessories. AH kinds of tires Repaired and Vulcanized
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117E aim to know everything about Good Tailoring. We try our utmost to please our customers. \ We know there's • comeback on every sale — The Customer, a Kick, or the Goods. We don't want the kick or the goods, but We Do Want the Customer. That's why we always give satisfac tion. JOHN F. GORSKI Tailor "N«xt to Post Office Cape May, N.-J. " v

