Cape May Star and Wave, 28 October 1916 IIIF issue link — Page 5

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SbbBslit 1886 'Pkon CmikHoi : THE MWJ6HT SWRt New Autumn Millinery Remarkably good Hats at very bw prices. All of Black Velvet of excellent quality, and compnsed of the newest and most cfetin&ive shapes — new Sailors, new Tarn O'Shanter effects, Tricornes and drapped Turbans. 0. L. W. Knerr 518 & 520 Washington St Cape May, N. J. i H. FAULKNER ^^ontractor Hind Builder ^^Hxeyatone Phone glm Street Cape May, N.J. Hiam IK. Cbompson anu rractical Einbalmer May City, N. J. ^^Wirst Class Automobile Service I when desired. ^H97a ^^■jffice— "Wild wood. New Jersey. L. Ewing Jr. WAGON BUILDER AUTOMOBILE PAINTER Large and Small Work I Carefull Executed Eatimate* Cheerfully Furnished W. L. EWINU. JR. West Perry Sts., Keystone Phone Notice-Gunner signs for sale at Star and Wave Stationery Dept. » j

** *■'■ I A brilliant wedding occurred at seven o'clock Tuesday night in St., John's P. E. Courcb, Broadway and Roydea stro^jK . when Miss Edna Mae Tamier, aaughter of Mrs. Jennie P. Tamier of 018 St. John street was united in marriage with Charles W. Makin, Jr., of 1106 Marion . street, by Rev. J. H. Townsend, pastor. y of the cnurch. jj The bride wore a beautiful gown of silver thread lace, with a net veil held in placf by a cluster' of pearls, and car- • ried a shower bouquet of bridal roses and ■, lilies ui the valley. She was given in marriage by her uncle, John A. Hprtei. «>re, Jr. The brjesmaid, Miss Dene B. Matthews, of West Cape May, was attired • in a becoming creation of white net over white satin, and -wore a pretty • picture hat. She carried yellow chrysi ant'nemums.' Miss Anna Makin, a niece Lof-'the groom, _ attended the couple as flower girL She wore.- a very dainty ^ white dress and. tarried cosmos. George Southard, Jr., was best man ! • and Messrs: George Crowther and Geo. ' Neulze were ushers. The wedding.' march was played, by Herbert Richard- ' 6on, organist of the church. • j Immediately following the ceremony , • | a reception was held at the home of the \ m bride's. mother for the bridal party and ! j members of the immediate families. ; While receiving congratulations of those ^ - present the happy couple stood beneath a very pretty canopy of gold and white f with a large hell in the center. The newly-weds are now enjoying their honeymoon at a place unknown to their'! many friends. Mr. andtMrs. Makin will be at home | to their friends after November 15, at , thei^newly furnished home, 1212 Wal- : nut street. — Camden Courier. A HAPPY REUNION On Sunday last Mr. William S. Van- ■ zant and brother John and their wives , took an auto ride to Leesburg, their , old boyhood town where they little exI nccted to meet sueli a glad welcome, and by far did not expect it to terminate ' in a reunion as there had been no pre- i vious -notice or arrangements made. > It had been twenty-five years since i Xlr. W. S. Vanzant :Wtd la-en* in the"vil- - lage of his boyhood days, and-' "was • ► oinewhat surprised in finding it now ■mite a town. One .Of his jovs vat in ' , finding the windmill which was attach - ' ed to his father's grist mill at the old : Carlisle landing along the Maurice River. I This old windmill is one of the oldest - | landmarks in South Jersey and the only 1 lone of its ki/id known still to be pifact f

1 and still in a state of preservation. , • As near as can he ascertained the mill . ig over one hundred years old. During I the Vanzant operation of this relic it 'Jg.'oiind .grist <»r the farmers in both ' i Cumberland and Cape May counties. I .Another surprise for the two brothers , - was that their ,-i=ter, Mrs. Frank-. Entrikeii «a* ill -c there to wcleome their . ' ptesence. ] j Like mo«t inland- towns, when one bf ' spreads and there i. a gathering' of old . cronies who are grasping for your right hand ajid bringing your memory back . to those liygone days, this was the experience of this happy, group as they strolled over their haunts as of yore. After renewing acquaintances about the town tliev were cnteilaincd bv Mr. and Mr.-. Thomas E. Henderson.* who supplied two surprise for them, first beother guests and relatives, the sec- , on . being an invitation to a venison sup- ■ "-r which was prepared by the hostess. I Those present: Mr. and Mrs. Frank En- j ril-en. Mr. and Mrs. John Vanzant, Mr. j and Mrs. William S. Vanzant, Mrs. X. 4 i T. Entriken, of Cape May. Mr. and Mrs. j ' Harold Henderson and daughter Doris, | ' of Vineland, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E. j - and Mrs. Catherine Header- ; ' of Leesburg. - -

*&n2ll ILJlP^sod, SSMI ftl^lp^Cracker. with a Flavor Flavor is not expected of ■ wdinaiy soda cracken. But ■ Uoeeda Biscuit are extraordiiuijr vaoda ■ crackers and have a distinctive appt^feiug — ■ Buy Uneeda Biscuit because they are I soda crackers with a flavor, but, above ■ all buy them for their crisp goodness. 5 cents everywhere NATIONAL BISCUIT ■ COMPANY

WEST CAPE MAY diaries Newell made a business trip to Philadelphia on Wednesday Dr. and Mrs. ij. R. Hughes and Mrs. I David Hue lies motored to Philadelphia ; Wednesday. Mrs. ('. R. Perkins and Miss Laura spent over .Sunday in Camden . I Catarrh Cannot Be Cured with LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as they cannot reach the seat ot the disease. Catarrh Is a blood or constitutional disease, and in order, to cure ft you must take In. ternal remedies. Hall's Catarrh Cure is , taken internally, and acts directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces. Hall's Catarrh Cure ls'not a quack medicine. It prescribed by one of tho best physicians in this country for year* and Is a regular prescription. It is composed of the best tonics known, combined with the - best blood purifiers, acting directly on the mucous surfaces. - The perfect combination of the two Ingredients Is what proI duces such wonderful results in curing | J. CHENeV & CO.. Props. ."^Toledo, O. 8oM by ^pr^ggtets^ price He. ) | I — m 1

Pl^v^af eBBSr mi for AFTER THE WAR- BSrv ml What the Wilson Unprotective Tariff will do to you and others when 25,000,000 European soldiers return to work -r Hff At Wages Half the American Scale : will be unavfe to Workingmen will be unable compete. Jm\ Workingmen will be laid off or work short time. I Wages will be decreased. ^^1 1 1 KLlAlirc C hU/' Cost of living will not be reduced. C. Business will be at a standstill, as it was before the war. ^Ili* fllRBn^^i| If STILL in doubt — PLAY SAFE— Avoid Disaster and VOTE for IIS Chas. E. Hughes Chas. W.Fairbanks |l II j B (For PRESIDENT) (For VICE-PRESIDENT) republican protective tariff |b ■ IIK/SB • LAKIH H h\!> B » LTfflH

Km For GOVERNOR If | Walter E. Edge "A Boaineaa Man with a Business Plan" Some Things He Did : For Business Government — Budget System Economy and Efficiency Bill* Central Purchasing Agency Abolished Useless $100,000 State Census HH For Social Justice — *|T|T~ ' Wofiingtncn's Compensation Act |Sf Women's K-Hour Working Law I lid ^ rU Prevention oi Occupstkmal Diseases Some Things He Stands For : ■f No Appropriation Bill in Excess W T5 ^Hl of State Income Home Rule for Municipalities State Road System ■MES V Business Administration. with ; AMI the Governor the Business Manager I 14 Years of State Government Experience ; Ifs Essential in Buainesi Why Not In Government

For U. S. SENATOR jlfoll Jos. S. Frelinghuysen |t wH "Let the People Decide" flj I He promoted the following laws ; ; Commission on TuberculosD In Animals I Eradicating Hoof and Mouth Disease I Re-organization of School System Live Stock Commission ~ Child Labor ^H P°eFoo,i In theU.S.Senatehe will vote for : Protection of American Industries and nR(K§/i Labor Immediate Preparedness for Defense Immediaie Establishment of a Merchant MMK Marine for Development of Commerce .« 'mflHH Practical Development of New Jersey's Harbors and MAterways IM i mEL DevriopcDcnt of Our Farming lndustpes Mfjmf > wBiHiHMH - — w 7-iM Six Yean te N. J. Senate lm| '>1^! President Of State Board of Agriculture IH l , p|H President of State Board of Educatioc l^^H . j

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j C. C- Skmhjgton -isB family have' J*" j : turned to PliiDdelpM» for the vriirtar. % Mr. and Mrs. Otis Todd, Mrs. Manfch: l and Miaa Jane Hastings of Fleishman*, « N. V-, motored here one day last week. I Mr. and Mrs. Edwin N. Morton are spending sometime at WillDmsport, Pa. >fr. and Mrs. R. Cu minings and little 1 daughter • Dorothy, are spending some ! time here. j Miss Irene Stanton ^pent the- latter pari of the week away. - • | John W. Meyer spent one day last week at Ocean City, N- J-, to attend the P. O. S. of A. meeting. Mrs." W. S. Pettit and Mrs. Thtfmas Hemmingway went as delegate^ to the • Sunday school convention st _<Soshen, I one -day this week. : v -; - ; Miss Mamie Jackson of Goshen spent Sunday here. Mr. and Mrs. Edward C Uttte -snter. j tained company Dst week. Mr. and. Mrs. Clement H. Ne**^ Is*- ' tertained Mr. Newkirks brother. Over j Mr. and Mr*. Daniel Miller anlf'tfaogh- ^ tcr Bessie, spent Saturday and Sunday | in Philadelphia. Miss C Sehellinger is ' pending the c winter with her aunt. Mrs. Elwood , Woolaon in West Virginia.- "i The cottage prayer-meetings on Tuee- , . - day evenings are well attended I Wm. P. Nichols and family hare mov- ' - ed away for the winter. Miss Jennie Donley wa9 a PhUadelphia J shopper on Wednesday ( ' Notice to Gunners \ j NOTICE TO GUNNERS i Trespassing with gun or dog on the i Waltqr Farms is positively forbidden, j k Geo. E. Walter. 1905-10-14-3t - NOTICE To All Concerned: No trespassing on - Bishop Farm. - Fishing Creek.' for any purpose what- ' ever under penalty of law. . 18S5-I2-2-1S G. G. BISHOP. ! | GUNNING FORBIDDEN [ Gunning positively forbidden on the - premises of Samuel Taylor, the Hughes ' Estate, and Joseph Stites. 1957 -3t ! NOTICE No trespassing for any purpose what- . ever on Meadow View Farm at Erma, ' X. J., under penalty of law. HENRY REEVES. • 2t-19J 0-1 1-4 Manager. j ~ New York on Fire! 1 One touch of the button and ;j a mansion hums — another j pressure and the biggest bank | in the city bursts into flames. I It's only a question of minutes j! before all New York will be jj on fire — Manhattan is at die U mercy of a fiend. 9 Read the engrossing details in j Arthur Stringer's "The Iron Claw," the starting motion | picture serial story — to be I published in this newspaper. ^ Things happen at die rate of sixty to every second in "The Iron Claw." The reader who misses it will always regret it. Read the Story | Then See the Pathe Pictures at the Theater SECOND EPISODE WILL BE SHOWN AT THE PALACE THEATRE, TUESDAY AFTERNOON AND EVE- , NING. u ! ANSWER THE ALARM ! Cape May People Should Not Delay. ! If your kidneys are inlhqned. - ' | Don't stand around and JoTtothin^. I Like a fire it will soon be beyond ton- - . j Tol. rui.

| You will get the alarm in time — j Backache, or dizziness or disorders of the urine. Heed the warning. , Give your kidneys a rest by living - more carefully. l."*H Doan's Kidni-v Pills to help stamp. | 'out the cause. • Profit by a Cape May man's exper- : George Lehman, 480 IV. Perry St., jCape May, says: "A -cold settled in my -kidneys and a ease of inflammation set j in. The kidney secretions worried me j and caused me to lgsfe my rest at night, ) a« I had to get up so often to pass them. My back was weak and when I stooped over, I had trouble to straighten up. When I sat down. I could hardly arise. After using Doan's Kidney Pills, my back wg» strengthened and the pain let up. My kidneys also became regular in action and 1 felt strong and well. The cure has lasted jjver "Price 50c at all dealers. Dont simply ask for a kidney remedy — get Doan's Kidney Pills — the sante that Mr. Lehman had. Foster -Mil bum Co., Props., Buffalo, N. Y.

| SORE THROAT if f^HSl , ac s.4^a<^fcwHd SUs tLH CI ERMA Rev. "H. E. Garrison and family bars returned heme after spending a few days with his parents at Pitman. - — Mrs. Maude Hlldreth was shopping in one day this week.. Mrs. Emma Soults accompanied her I mother-in-law to PhiladelphD on buai- ' m-ss on Wednesday. Several of our people- attended the Sunday School Convention at GoBhen on Tuesday. '•* James Long has purchased the ofBce of'the Citizens Telephone Company for a garage. Mrs. Julia Peterson was in Cape May on Wednesday. Mrs. Mary Matthews is visiting her daughter at Cape May Court House. Dennis Peterson is building a bungalow on Church street 'and Railroad aveWe are sorry to note that Samuel Garret son is still in the hospital in a serious condition. | Floyd Hoffman lias, purchased a Ford. ""Look oth, now girls." Charles Hoffman and Frank Dickinson were in the sounds a few days this week. David Hawn and family were visiting his daughter Mrs. William Biddle in PennSgrove over Sunday. The Bell Telephone Co. is getting along very nicely with their lines, and we will soon have telephone service again, mueh to the benefit of the place. SALE OF UNCLAIMED FREIGHT TAKE NOTICE that' the West Jersey and Seashore Railroad Company will expose for sale, at public sale, four sets of switch ties, consigned from R. E. Duvale and Company and L. J. Clements, -of- Orange. Virginia, to the Cape May, Delaware Bay and Scwcll's Point Railroad Company, to raise and pay the cosfs and expenses incurred for unloading charges. Storage charges and demur- | rage charges, amounting to the sum of - seven hundred and sixty-eight dollare and rsixty-on^ cents (§768.01), which charges accrue at the rate of one dollar 1 81 .00) a day on and after the 25tb day of October, A. D., 1916. Said four sets of switch ties will be expose,! for sale on Monday, the Oth slay of November, A. D., 1916, between i the hours of ten o'clock in the forenoon \ and four o'clock in the afternoon, to wit, | the hour of twelve o'clock, noon, on the - 1 si-ling of the West Jersey and Seashore i [ Railroad Company, at east end of Emer- ; j aid Avenue. West Cape May, N. J., in ; , Dte County of Cape Stay and the State i of New Jersey; aaid four sets of switch, , 1 ties having remained in the possession , of tlfc West Jersey and Seashore Rail- . road Company for more than six months prior hereto, the said consignee having refused and neglected to take the same and pay the costs and charges- thereon. WEST JERSEY AND. SEASHORE RAILROAD COMPANY. Dated October 25. A. D., 1916. BOURGEOIS AND COULOMB, 28 Law RIdg.. Atlantic City, N- J. 1960-2t 11-4 NOTICE TO GUNNERS * r)o trespassing will be allowed with dog or gun on the properties of the Eoilon Physic Estate, under the penalty y the law. 105,10.14-4t NOTICE TO P. 0. S. of A. All members of the P. O. S. of A. will meet at t -e Mall. Hallowe'en evening, -« '. October 31. HilO. at 7 o'clock t<> take

f _ NEW BCY SCOUTS i<ed :: troop of V. 8. liov Scouts and B will take up the work of *t raising the . MOTHES TELLS huW VIKOL Made Her Delicate Boy Strong New York City.— '"My little boy was s in a very weak, delicate condition as a i result of gastritis and the measles and ' , iwcmed no hope 0f saving his life. - The' doe-tor prescribed cod liver oil, but - lie could not take it. I decided to try ] \ inol — and with splendid results. It - seemed to agree with him so that now he ; is a strong healthy boy."— Mrs. Thomas r Fikcebald, 1090 Park Ave., N. Y. City. We guarantee Vinol, which contains . be-cf and cod liver peptones, iron, and s manganese peptonates and glycero- . phosphates, for run-down conditions. Mecray's Pharmacy. Cape May, N. J.