Cape May Star and Wave, 5 April 1919 IIIF issue link — Page 8

ence tos Ci Saturday, April 5, 1919

CLASSIFIED ine saue R MODEL 135, bru Six Packard Touring car reasonabl Mes. C. W. RICH No. 1, Cape May, New Jerse ror 1917 Forp ip Tourine Can" At Ford Taxicab, 1 small 5 | nger Buick, 1 nice Panel de-| e: s 1 beginy body with top. The condition and are (oaitaiie Fa Ford or other | small cars will be demon: strated fvertully. £" HARRY KERR, $* Perry: Strreet, Cape ic L_ lll nln ___ FOR SALP-SEA BRIGHT SKIF 22 feet I .g, 5 horse power Lathrobe and a 100 fathom gill net. Ag ta Prive Lak C2 x"4 Washington Street, Cape May, N. apaa aedved yor sate raree "ICE have PLATES and of these will be in" sold at & bergaim| Apply Star and Wave Pub. Co. | wnnnnn~_nnnnn nne FOR SALE-SIX WEEKS OLD PIGS April. Farm, Henry Reeves. Mgr., Erma, N. J. 241 329 at. wornnnnnno nne mmennmmmmmms hud bona commidle Teresitenid AND REC. ords in A 1 condition. Apply to 213 Windsor avenue. | Keystone Phone, 316. 238 8.20-2t. HEEnnnnnoponpmmmmmanpermnsciand FOR SALE-FORD CAR 1N FINE Condition, good top and. wings. Suitable for Huckstering, carries 44 baskets, Apply to A. H. Swain, Erma, N: 4. 242 3-20.9t CHOICE LOT FOR SALE. a. CHOICE AMW JERSEY AVENUE LOT FOR BALE, FACING THE OCEAN. — BIG BARGAIN IF PURPech Vo 90 o 3 0 collie h au cP 1919. 237 3.20. CHARLES T. CAMPBELL Cape May, N. J FOR SALE-& HORSE MOTOR phase £20 voit in first class runai Too ooo nroane Co. " by the General Electric Co. App A. D. bigg ate tigrediy-wilinzzne National Bank Building. i 12 Pg WANTED * Help wanted. in ‘Gold ‘Leaf Fovpre Both sexes. Good wages, steady em ployment. . 250 3:20 2t THEO. W. REEVES, Mar location. . Quick sale. . Prefer near or with frontage on Bay

waxnteD_ragms. LAN 8URB. URBAN HOMES, LOT "My methods: mean a sale." List and sell now, give posseasion when convenient, have hundreds of buyer. waiting. "No sale no charge." Write to-day S. L. Beilin 508 Landis Ave., " Vineland, N. 276 46 t.| WANTED-ONE pyrs HORSE Power Motor and one two horse e a ca May ____________ WANTED-LAUNDRY WORK BY the piece or hamper. | Apply to 721‘ Osburn Street. 45 LOST-PAIR OF NOSE GLASSES, in a case, held together by rubber bands, in or near tho Presbyterian . Church about forr weeks ago. Finder. will please return or notify George D. biecasih «ab C. A. PROPOSALS Sealed Bids will be received . and publicly opened at The City Hail, Cape May City, N. J. on Tuesday, April 16, 1918, st 10:00 o%clock a. m. for fur- | nishing a Concert Band of not less | than seventeen men including the Conductor; from July 4, 1919 to Beptem- ; ber 1, 1919, both inclusive; two Con- } certs per day. The right is reserved to reject any or all Bids. For Forms | of Proporal, apply to Wen. | Porter, | City Clerk « By order of JOSEPH H. HANES, J. SPICER LEAMING, i |

War Camp Community Service {

The new entertainment programine of the War Camp Community Service may be suid to bave fairly begun on March 20, when the Glee Club of Hampton Roads gave their fine concert to an audience of 800 persons at the Pier, | lt is safe to say-and many are saying it-that Cape: Muy was never more . pleasantly . entertained than on this occasion.. The programme was varied from grave to gay, with every number sung as only Ped well-trained singers could. render it. The concert demonstrated the value of good entertainment, and Cape May seemed a happler and better town the next day. If all the entertainments shall measure up to the standard thus set, there will surely be no one ques tion the expense and effort expended. Following is the revised programme rendered-Mr, Jerry Swineford acting as director and E. V. Bower as accompanist: I Comrades in Arm A Capital Ship .. With Mr. Sutter De Sandman __..__.___... Protherce John Brown‘s Baby Glee Club I I Solo Group ___________.__.. Selected Jerry Swineford u Calm As The Night _...... Bohm ‘to Bring Salvation Down _._. Negro Laughing Song Glee Club hi Five Minutes With the Quartette I Pa C ag |and Rueckert. ° v Nosh funconboemenmremens With Mr. Justi Mulligan Musketeers ___.... Atkinson vi Solo Group ..... ___ Whistling Mr. Schott VIP ; The Americans Come (1917) ... Poster ; Spring Will Return With You (1919). ~ O‘ Hare ! As the two last numbers on the programme are doubtless new to most {people, they are printed here: b La Americans Come" A. blinded (otament speaks to his son: Oh, that my blinded eyes could see! "What is the cheering, my little one? Hasten, my boy, to the window run, And see what the noise in the street may be. I hear the drums and the marcing feet Look and see what it‘s all about! Who can it be that our people gre With cheer and laughter and joyot shout ? apie aid ‘ "There are men, my father, brown and

And they carry a banner of wonith a mighty Now I see white stars.on a field of bluet" gumen: wal You say that you see white stars on the blue ?" Look, are there stripes of red and white? t must be-yes, it must be true! Oh, dear God, if I had my sight! sten, my son, fling the window wide Let me kiss the staff our ting swings lud nd salute the Stars and Stripes with pride, or, God be praised, the Americans come!" (Copright, J. Fisher & Bro.) "Spring Will Return With You." Words "by May Stanley, Music by coffrey O‘ Hara. fou may come back when all the world is white with drifting mow, Vou may come back in Summer time wicn the sweetest flowers grow; o in Auton when the woodlands all in gold and crimson burn, t Springtime, deur. will come d to me when you return. (Copyright, 1919, by Chappelle #" Co., Ltd.) While on the subject of the new enertainment . programme, hing should be said of the attitude of the War Camp Community Service to commercial amusements. . That attltude is not one of opposition. . Until communities provide sultable recreation facilities for their people, those who furnish good amusements at a

oo far and become a dunger und & menace, | But used in moderation and i= recreation, and not for vicious ends it value can hardly be overestimated It is in answer to this need of pror recreation, und not at all mx opposing exi g amusement . fncilitie= in town, that the War Camp Community: Service has planned its new ontertainment programme, . As probably everyone understands, this programme sorks to meet the needs of the men in uniform for good entertainment at a low price. Everything that will be presented will be given with this pur pose in mind. If it were possible to do so, there would be no charge. . But the price will be so small that it in felt that mo one need be kept away. If there are any of the "boys" who are temporarily "short," they . are urged to make that fact known, and they will gladly be provided with tickets. It would be most unfortunate if the very persons for whom the entertainments . are given | should | be es 23 The question may be asked why, if the entertainments at the Pier are-for soldiers and sailors, civilians ure admitted. There are two principal rem: sons. In the first place. the soldiers the boys of most of their pleasure of attending. In the second place, the War Camp Community Service has sought opportunity for bringing enlisted men and civilians together as much as possible, believing that such association is one of the very best means of overcoming the abnormal conditions which war and the preparation for war tend to produce. . To make the camp town as much like o nA Aved toward developing the morale of which we have heard so much and which has been so much in evidence among our soldiers and sailors during and since the close of the war. As an evidence of the interest of Headquarters in furnishing entertainment at the Pier to men and women in uniform, is the recent coming of Mr. G. G. Carr as entertainment director, whose chief duties will be the supervision of all entertainments, including dancing. | Mr. Carr has had much experience as a dramatic director, both in this country and in England, During the war he was for a time instructor in flying for our men in Texas, Having been mustered out of the English Army, Mr. Carr is now free to give hi valuable assistance here in Cape May Mrs. Graham, the efficient and loys office secretary of the W. C. C S. left for a short vacation last week Special thanks are due and hereb;

xtended to the officers of the Merhants‘ National Bank for permitting | W. C. C 8, sign to be placed on the nost conspicdous corner jof the bank wilting. This, however, is only one ; if many: Rouftesies extended. by thel ank. to the Service since its comin | more thun a year ugo. f | The illness and. romoval this week | o a hospital near Foleroft, Pu. of the Rew, W. 8. Catlett, pastor of the Bapt Church of Cape May. furnish the | eceusion for saying that. better friend ad helper of War Camp Community m sma Mr. Catlett has not only sympathized ith the purpose and plans of the Service but hax given largely of his time, counsel, and strength-agiven too, when it must have taken much of his energy. Special mention should .be made of his own and Mrs. Catlett‘s leadership in matter of the furnishing by his church of the delightful suppers and entertainments twice a woek for the benefit of the . soldiers. and sailors in and about Cape May-all of which have been highly appreciated by "the boy®", the memory of which will abide as evidence of . the . real Christianity which prompted the service. It in earnestly hoped that a brief period of rest at the ood will restore Mr. Catlett to his place en a dc tarved he has so earnestly and faith fully labored. The next entertainment at the Pier, one that promircs to be more popular than the Glee Club concert, is the play: called Sick-A-Bed, with a cart of thirteen persons, to be given on! Thursday, April 10. Town Topics say: "You may not lmugh yourself sick over ‘Sick-A-Bed,‘ but you will certain ly laugh yourself sore! The play is by Ethel Watts Muinford and has been given with great success at the large training camps. The movies on Tuesday last attract ed a good audience, chiefly, of course, of the men in the service for whom the pictures are provided, though civi[Mana for reasons mentioned | above, were admitted. It in expected . that [there will be movies every Tuesday. ‘The music, under the direction of Mr. Price, was the best part of the enter a IN MEMORIAM In loving memory. of James Monroe Weldon, who departed this . life on April 3, 1912. 279 WIFE AND FAMILY For Sale | 10.000 BRICKS: AND 600 FEET OF | [41 INCH CAST IRON PIPE, sult. | ABLE FOR WATER OR GAS MAINS APPLY R. 8. HAND, 705 Jefferson Stroot Cape May, N. I.

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| Por OEE O you know that the one great EP most, poultry raisers make is i in feeding scratch feeds to DY lay? This more than any other one thing is the reason their hens don‘t lay Scratch feeds won‘ hone lay-just so A Snieyigrite hile of pow hmae made yor oid ¢ f a r" a Pe abundantly is ptr tn Dry Mash- W ie Hoc aguttiadde ya Co. Itis Somiiiation a d y ground, cors Snead feed, a combination faiea fooda and seve CyeuS COAL [oR to the fullest extent with the nited States Fuel Administration, and help Win The War. In these chilly days‘a good Oil Heater is an efficient s 41 bstitute forCoal. Ral :i (4 (f :) rog wil 0) 1 B a 1 9. t ced U ss be obtained from CHAS. A. SWAIN 305-307 JACKSON STREET CAPE MAY, t-: Wy R (£1 ) > >4 6 Together with the oil cans and the oil. | Fad ; % 68 M # A, Bit 3 a | 2 REPUBLIC | hiy} 08} al MOTOR TRUCKS ~***~__ BUILT IN FIVE SIZES

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