Cape May Star and Wave, 29 July 1916 IIIF issue link — Page 5

PERSONAL ' MENTION L INTERESTING PERSOrJa PARA ' GRAPHS OF THE COMING' AWL . . GOING .OF CAPE MAY VMITOR2 1 f. AND RESIDENTS EACH DAY. & BfT. Cornelius W. Twing, of River rajp*! N. J., conducted the services at St ' j WinX Episcopal Church last Sunday ' ] ■Kbd will also conduct the services next t Son day. Mr. Twing and family will ; r occupy a cottage at Cape May Point for ■ R«everal weeks. j Rk Mr. and Mrs. F- E. Jameson of Pitts- j Hhorgh, are making a short stay at the . Hotel Cape May. W. a Whitman is makking a short j , BvUit from Piftsburgh. , V Mr. and Mrs. H. S. Hanley, of Pitta- j K burgh, are registered at the Hotel Cape i j !' !" A party from Pittsburgh included Mr. . 1 l and Mrs. H. Wallace, Miss M. Wentz. ' 1 I Mr. J. R. Porter, Miss R. Wallace and j 1 I Mr. 8. B. Warmaa. T Mr. Luey C. Phillips is among the 1 I many visitors from Pittsburgh. j' f Mr. and Mrs. G. W. R. George of | 1- Pittsburgh are spending several weeks I here- Is • Mr. D. E. W. Cleesy is making a aho.t f visit from Pittsburgh. R Mr. W. S. E. Rodgers of PitUburgh is f spending several weeks here. ! , 1. 4 Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Rersinger, Mr. , _• Rowland H. Rersinger and Mr. and Mrs. ' . ■ Richard H. Norman arevnaking a short , visit from Baltimore. ,J" , r; The Misses E. J. Smith, M. H. Smith . and E. A. Smith of Baltimore are male- , ing a short visit here. Mr. J. Holmes Whiteley of Baltimore i is making a short visit h^re. Mr. William M. Paaaapar of Baltimore , is' stopping here for a short time. Mrs. W. R. Abeil and Miss Emily j Kenney of Baltimore are registered at , the Hotel Caps May. ... Mrs. Edward McKeon, Miss Pheobe Q- ' McKeon and Miss Elsie McKeon of Baltimore are registered at the Hotel Cape May. I > Mr. A. L. Benngarne* and family, Mrs. C W. McClees and Miss C. Aahbrook are visiting from Baltimore. Mr. and Mrs. Norman James motored £ here from Baltimore this week. * Miss Elizabeth Atkinson is making a abort visit from Baltimore. Mr. H. W. Williams of Baltimore is , making a abort sojourn here. _ | : Mr. Edward //Brooks, of Baltimore, ■ , - is making a short visit here. Mr. and Mrs. J. Ployd Argahjht of Baltimore are registered at the Star Villa. Joseph B. MeCall, president of the Philadelphia Electric Company, and two sons ' Joseph B. McCall, Jr., and R. MeCall, arc P- stopping at the Hotel Cape May. Mr. Luther E. Hewitt, of Philadelphia. \ who was recently elected president of the American Law Librarians' Association, wife and family are summering at 216 Windsor avenue. Mr. and Mrs. C. Paul Hagenlocher and child are spending a short time at the Hotel Cape May while on a visit from j I*hiladelphia. . Mr. L. A. Biddle, prominent among ' Philadelphia affairs, and Mlie. Dueobre Of Paris are stopping at the Hotel Cape , May Miss Eleanor H. Verner and Mr. H. Heller-nan are making a short visit from ! Philadelphia to Cape May. j! • The Misses Emma C. and Clara V. ! t Gemrig, of Philadelphia, have leased aj '.' cottage here and have as their guests! Miss Adelaide M. Roberts and Mr. A. M. | Roberts. Mrs. Anna 0. Megary, of Philadelphia, is summering at the Columbia. Miss L. A. Kiukle and Miss El. L. War- 1 ner, of Overbrook, Philadelphia, are making a visit of two weeks here. Mr. and Mrs. H. t. McCreedy, of Phils- j delphia, are making a short visit here, j Mrs. Maxwell Stevenson and Miss Hel- | en Stevenson are making a short visit; i from '"Philadelphia. j Mrs. A. B. Eberhach and Mrs. P. Brom- , ley, of Philadelphia, are making a short , sojourn here. Dr. Witmer Stone, curator of the Acad- 1 amey of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, and also editor of the "Auk" the official organ of the American Ornithological Society, will occupy the Hildreth ! cottage on Perry street. Mr. Ray Duffield and wife are located j in their cottage on Grant street for the j " summer. Mrs. Jere Chambers is spending a few ; days with her daughter, Mrs. Ray Duffield on Grant street. Mr. Ed. Heash and family havy return- ; ed to Cape May, Mr. Heath taking his [ former position at the power house. : Mr. John E Lonabaugh and family oi -Philadelphia, are spending their vacation with Mr. Lonabaugh 'g mother on York avenue. Mr. Lonabaugh is in the Auditing department of the P. R R. terminal at Broad street, Phijadeitf^ Dr. Alexander Maicy, who now resides | in Riverton, is risitbg relatives. Mrs. Rebecca Burr, Mi* Anna Osw pwttVarte, of -MedTBrd. ' Mrs. Walter

Shinn and daughter Miss Anna of Motmt MJ MS, dcrow, of Moorestown, are being enter- j Jtained by Mra. Maggie Oliver. . 1 Miss Maybdk A. Reel and Mr. George , H. Reel, Jr., are making a two weeks stay here. Miss Charlotte- Kimball, of Orange,, is visiting here. " ' Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Davis came down on the initial trip of the Cape May to visit Mrs. Davis' parents, Mr. and Mrs. ; I James Taylor. j ! | Mr. and Mrs. John McCoy of Wood- • have leased Mrs. Richardson's cot- • 1 1 age on Jackson street for the summer. Mrs. William Ballinger, Sr., is moor- I j ering from a recent operation that was j performed at Bridgeton. I • Mr. and Mrs. James Rock and two sons, Molvin and Bennett, of Washing- i ton are visiting "Mrs. Bock's parents, Mr. 1 1 and A. G. Bennett on Madison ave- i ■ j Mrs. Florence Iredell Berger, who is i the Secretary and • Treasurer of the i ! Chronicle and News of Allentown, is j , ' summering at her cottage at 200 Howard i _ street. The Chronicle and News is Al- ! 1 foremost newspaper. I Mr.' and Mrs. A. G. Bennett of this city ' , visiting their daughter, Mrs. Heroert ! Johnson, of Hammonton, N. o. ' . ' Miss W. L. Booth, of Philadelphia, is!' now living at her Grant street cottage. ' s 'i ' 'star and wave advertisement SHOWS ITS VALUE 1 1 On June 11th, Mrs. Harry G. Bennett. '■ ; of this city, lost a gold breast pin that J ■ she prized very highly. After consider- , - able worriment at the loss she decided • to place an advertisement in the Star . and Wave which was done on July 8th. j 1 four weeks after the_*rticle was lost, ! ' and on the second insertion of the ad- 1 ; vertisemenl a high school girl of Cold j : Spring sent word that she had found : the pin. This is but one of the many 1 ! eases where the Star and Wave adver- • itising has done remarkable service. j r| :: BOWLING ALLEY NEWS j Ladies' score on duck pins 81 was won ' - Mrs. McCurdy. Gentlemen's score on ! ' , ten pins' was 191 taken off by Mr. Oliver ; ! A rata, of St. Louis. For the week end- } ' ing, July 22d, Mr. Orata also has scored I • for season prize and come up with Mr. ; c Gus Hines, making the score tie at 237. 1 Miss Virginia Ambler holds the season 1 ' -core of 98 on duck pins for ladies. j 1 DICKINSON-CHESTER I On the evening of July 18, 1919, Mr. ' ' George Hand Dickinson, of Cold Spring, j 'N. J., and' iliss Selina ,H. Chester,, of , >_ West Cape May, were united in matri- 1 mony at the home of Mr. and Sirs. Louis j ^ S. Hoffman, 92(1 Broadway, West Cape ! r ; May, by the Rev. J. L. Landis. ! i Slay the new voyage of life on which ; ' ; they have started be all and more the | 1 useful and happy career; their many j ■ friends wish them ever to enjoy. v • "STICKING UP" THE AMERICAN t i AU the political -team calliopes of the • - Democracy are now united in a scream- j ] ing chorus, of frenzied adulation on ae . count of the Treasury statement for the , end of the fiscal year. The figures, to be sure, are impressive, j I j The total ordinary receipts, as shown i , by Mr. MsAdoo's new and improved and I > decidedly misleading form of statement, amount to no less than $777,480,487.97. i Yet Of this vast sum only 821 1,869,- j , 1222.34 were derived from' the custom 1 houses, and all the other five hundred . j and sixty-six millions were taken almost j ( directly from the purses of the Ameri,jcan people. Since July, 1914, there lias not, been a ' i month w-hen the receipts from custom- | , : bouses equalled those taken from our j jown people by burdensome and odious . | direct taxation ; and for most of those . ; months "the sum taken from our own ] ; pockets by Jlemocratic taxation has been | . | nearly or more than double that which .. j has been exacted from the foreign pro- . jducer for the privilege of entry in to the t ; markets of this country. j Reduced to elementary terms, the fig- . .ures over which Mr. McAdoo chortles go t j gleefully show that for each dollar which j the foreigner paid at the custom house . | for the support of the American govern - . 'ment as administered by the Demoe cratic party ,the American citizen was . compelled to put up 82.67. In other b ; wordl, under the beneficent operations jof "the "new freedom" it costs more d ; than two and a^ half times as mnch to e | he an American living and doing busij ness at borne as H does to be a foreigner r doing business in "our land. | Five new boats belonging to the Toyen i. ! Risen Kaisha Company of Japan are to s he added to the line plying between South America and Japan. The boats r are of 7,500 tons each, and the Japanese . Government will subsidize them. Mean d while, McAdoo and Wilson are getting e ready to frisk the public for $50,000,000 I for a Government owned line to carry jw dae to inefficient s management to he made up by taxation, in all probability. That is the way we

i j 9 \\ rHEN lunch or supper b VV seems a long time off an d^ou 're hungry, eat keep you gomg m«Jtime — -but so light and crisp and

UNCLAIMED LETTERS ; List of unclaimed letters remaining in Cape May P. O. for week ending j 26,1916: -x- | j Brembrey, Mrs. Leverder (2). ,| Averly, Mrs. ytdim. Collins, Capt. Geo. I Fletcher, Miss Alma Ferguson, Mis* Virginia ' Warrant, Mrs. Rosa ! Garrett, Mrs. George L. j Crease, C. M. I (Jrotz, Evangelist Milton \ i Haines, Edd i Harvey, Rev. B. F. 4 | Hirst, Miss May I Irwin, Mrs. Wm. B. Jervis, Vernal j Johnson, Mrs. ' Jones, Mrs. Rosie " Keys, Miss Rebecca N. j "Miller. Miss Gertrude , Nicholson, Arnold Olcott. Thomas W. ; Palmer, Mrs. Ketmah S. I Parker, Chas. H. v I Penickk. Mr*. J. C ! Stanford, Mrs. Maria | Speakman, Miss Janet 1 Scott, Miss Fannie Wheeler ,"Mi*g Cora " j Williams! Mrs. Alice E. I Williams, Miss Emily • In calling for the above, please say ad- ; vertised. SOL NEEDLES. P. M. Box files for bills, letters, receipts. ! well made and indexed, at 25 cents each or 82.50 per dozen. Star and Wave Sta- 1 tionary Department.

PATRICK J. STAFFORD -J j Patrick J. Stafford, aged 75 years, I j ilied suddenly with heart trouble on ® j Thursday last at his residence at Cape *■ ! May Point where he has been living for jtlie past year, having come here from * ' Philadelphia. He is survived by t ' widow, two sons and a daughter. High requini mass was said on Saturday at I 8 o'clock at the church, of Mary !» I after which the body vis taken to C the Hol v Cross cemetery., in Philadelphia, S . for interment. .- ( ' I SOME LITTLE THNGS TO DO 2 The life guards should devote part j of their time daily to clearing the litter from the beach. The music pavilion should be painted t white. ! f The city carpenter should traverse the ? boardwalk, once a week or oftener. and drive down nails which are working above the boards continually and are apt j to catch the gowns of ladies aiyl cause pedestrians to trip and perhaps falL 1- _____ . 4 An wdTsantr should be passpLdeelg*- - ing grass grown and weedy vacant lots a I nuisance and requiring owners to dear < |. them off and keep them trimmed. If i [ owners fail, the city should, do the work l end charge it against the lot. I i. The sidewalk ordinance should be en- 1 h' forced and the wealthy outlaws, who i l. ignore every city requirement, should inot be exempted from its operation. .

Fmt H.pti.1 Unort will 4 M byj> a quartette from New York and PhBa- ^ delphia. This is the best quartette that 4 the two cities can give and will b- long j remembered for he excellent musical attractions. The quartette consists of * Miss May Farley, soprano; Miss Marie Lcughney, contralto; Mr. Austin Hughes, ® tenor; and Mr. John Vandersloot, baas, j] The pianist will be Mra. Georgians Briant. The special music will be given at both the morning and "evening/ services. The program is as follows: f MORNING, 10.30 I Doxology Lord's Prayer Gloria, Baptist Hymnal No. 216 - Anthem, "O Lord Most/ Holy" . . Harker t Responsive Reading No. 7 f Contralto Solo, "Gloria" . . Buzzi Peocia C ilvmn No. 317 C i>uct, Soprano and Tenor, "The lord is my Shepherd" Matthews j I Scripture Reading . Pastoral, Prayer, with response - Offering Bass Solo, "O God Have Mercy" Mendelssohn Announcements * No. 486 I "Ebenezer" < Quartet, "I Have Longed for Thy ' Salvation" Rossini i No. 313 , Benediction EVENING, 7.45 1 No. 56 "Even Me" Warren Solo, "With Verdure Clad," Hsydn * - Contralto and Bass, 1 "The Lord is My Light" Dudley Buck Announcements. Anthem, "The Day is Past and Over," .., Gilchrist PAST IL The Quartet will sing the Sacred Can"The Conversion," by Harry A. ( Matthews, with introductory selections , from the "Oratorio of St. Paul," by , ( Prologue by pastor. AT THE < CHURCH OF THE ADVENT ' The. retreat at Ihe Church of the Advent, September 9th to 11th, will be . for lay people and not for clergymen as ■ erroneously stated in last week's of the Star and Wave. The re- ; ; treat will be conducted by the Rev. George Cynde Richardson, rector of St. ' Mary's Church. West Philadelphia, a • preacher and one of the coming i of the church in Philadelphia. I Advertise in the Star and Wave.

ATTRACTIONS AT THE STRAND and RED MILL THEATRES Management J. P. COX CAPE MAY, NEW JERSEY Week of July 30 to August 5 — y -

STRAND THEATRH PROGRAM w-s. SATURDAY. JULY 29. Ann* Held Tn — "Madame La Presidente" SUNDAY, JULY 30. Blanche Street in "The Warrens of Virginia" MONDAY, JULY 81. j Mary Pickford in I "The Foundling" TUESDAY, AUGUST 1st. Mme. Petrova in ! "Playing With Fire'" WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 2. Charles Ricbman in "The Man from Home" THURSDAY, JhUGUST 3. Charlotte Walker in "The Trail of the Lonesome Pine" FRIDAY", AUGUST- 4i" Mary Pickford is . "The Dm of "A Tomoiwi" SATp^DAY, AUGUST 6. \ John Barrymore in ' ^ "Nearly » King" MATINEES THIS WEEK ... . Monday, Toeeday, Tlubaday aad fiat-

RED MILL PROGRAM SATURDAY, JULY 29. 1 Kathlyn Williams and William Farnum in "The Spoilers" by Rex Beach * SUNDAY, JULY 30. Tom Moore and Ethel Clayton tn "Dollars and the Woman" MONDAY, JULY 31. Douglas Fairbanks in 1 "His Picture in the Papers" Wm. Collier i n "Better Late Than Never" TUESDAY, AUGUST 1st. ( Charles Chaplin in ( "The Firman" Helen Holmes in* "Whispering Smith" WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 2. , Mary Miles Minter in "Emmy of the Stork's Nest" THURSDAY, AUGUST 3. Billie Burka in 1 ... vi , - "Peggy" FRIDAY, AUGUST 4. I Dorothy Kelly and Antonia Moreno ha "Tha ffipmi , Tsapptarion" SATURDAY, AUGRKT A i Lionel Bjnty Ml M "Darfm Dhvorca"

J. L. La'ndi*. ThU popular young couple at M H alter the wedding occupied their new 9 home, thoughtfully provided by the ^ And their many friends wish them great joy aad sureeea in their Baw 1 life. BATTING AVERAGES At bat Hits P.C Fricke 53 19 ^ Dav^s 55 W MS f Walinger 46 15 .3^5 Calhoun 50. 10 JffiiVra Shields 64 20 412 .1 Byrne 62 15 488 '•* Gibson 39 It 482 Collins 29 7 £tt. 31 7 428 Hudock 55 11 400 > 3 jB. William* 3 0 .000 SATURDAY'S GAMECAPE MAY, >; G1RARD F. C^oAfter laying over for two days beof the rain the Ckpee gave an exhibition game with Girard Field Oub of- ^Philadelphia on Saturday and worn by the score of 1-0, the winning run bemade in the seventh inning which the last of the game. MONDAY'S GAME— WILDWOOD, 6; CAPE MAY, 4. After eight straight victories Cape May lost to Wildwood in. the second of ^ the inter-city series of the season by the score of 6-4. The series now stands as follows: — W. L. P.C. Cape May 1 1 -500 Wildwood 1 1 -500 The box score of Monday's game was as follows: CAPE MAY R. H. O. A. E ' Shields, If 1 2 4 0 0 ' Hudock, 2b 1 1 2 2 0 ' ss/Si; 0 1111 Calhoun, p '*% 0 10 6 1 Davis, lb 0 0 11 1 0 Byrne, Sb"-^. 0 0 1 2 0 Gibson, rf 0 1 2 0-0 ' Wadlinger, c 1 0 2 0 1 Clancy, cf 1 0 1 0 0 s A 0 24 ir 8 1 WILDWOOD b P. H. 0. A. E - Myers, 3b I 1 2 8 I • Trautw'n, el 0 1 2 0 0 - Vail, rf 0 0 1 0 4. . 1 Read, lb 0 0 12 0 1 : Shellenberg, ss 1 1 2 1 0 Thumb, 2b 1 2 0 2 1 R. Landberg, c 0 0 6 0 2 McGowan, If 1 0 1 0 0 Barries, p I 0 0 5 0

Krug. c t. 1 0 2 0 16 5 27 12 5 Cape May 00004000 0—4 Wildwood 0 0005001 x— 6 THURSDAY'S GAME— I | CAPE MAY, 9; WALBR00K, 6. Cape May defeated the strong Walbrook Professionals of Baltimore Thursday in a fast game by the score of 9-6. The feature was a fly catch of M. EicSelberger in the second inning. WALBROOK A. C. R. H. 0. A. H Omere, rf' 1 0 0 0 I West, 3b 0 1 3 2 1 M. Eichelberger. If 1 1 1 0 0 Hunter, cf 1 1 3 0 0 C. Eichelberger, lb ... . 1 0 10 0 1 Peck, p 1 0 0 1 0 . Griffith, ss 1 1 0 4 0 Kines, c 0 1 6 3 I Brown, 2b 0 0 1 4 I 6 5 24 14 5 CAPE MAY R. H. O. A. E Shields, if, c 1 2 3 0 0 Hudock, 2b 3 0 4% 3 l Friche, ss 1 3 2 2 3 Calhoun, cf .2 1 0 0 0 Davis, lb 2 2 11 0 1 Byrne, 3b 0 0 0 2 I R. Williams, rf 0 0 1 0 0 Wadlinger, c 0 0 5 1 0 Gibson, p 0 0 0 7 3 Clancy. If 0 0 0 0 0 9 6 27 15 9 Walbrook 6 0000000 0—6 Cape May 0 2103300 x"— 8 IN MEMORIAM In loving remmcbranee of Edwin H. who departed July 25th, 19^2. Sweet is remenffirH^of 'a jfear pc>n and Whom tie Lord g*ge us and hath taks« * , s.,#wmy, •»> ,'fw •« "• '■•- ' ' -r. To abide in * happier land forever, Among the anf^. fh^.ring each day. rump, amp inni8— ,