Page Six CAPE MAY STAR AND WAVE
BELL TELEPHONE | &> 103 FRANKLIN BANK BLDG, PHILADELPHIA, PA. The Accounting System Co. Accountants Auditors Systematizers bemmmmmmmnemene . o di CM IF hie al 3 he id hi 1 a | -All a [0] , | Le] Ae UL (its a dit Pure Milk and Cream Delivered at your door EDWARD H. PHILLIPS, JR. CAPE MAY. N. 4. Keystone Phone 156-y SANITATION EXCELLENCE
CB) DARY BETWEEN BUFFALO & CLEVELAND AGNIFICENT fol 599.0151 v : tak) aft 2: hpth 12,60, 4... otfiet — "erry oF BUFFALO® BOEFALO- Dally, May Int to Nov. 15th -OLEVELAND — Hepsi- as
CRUMB aCGE Lasting qualities of ise depend upon the con : dition of the water, the manner of storage and the efficiency of delivery. Ours is good clean-water ice, manufactured from distilled water and kept constantly at a temoerature below freezing point. | i oy wh 81.93.33 34 : 4 (4 % £6 } 61 (wy a FV EE EU Ug OCU Main Office-512 WASHINGTON STREET FRANK ENTRIKEN & SONS [er """ 0A Wef TCTs AUTOMOBILE REPAIR WORK RQUIPMIDT POR RAPID WORK. Ca%S SToRB® CAR MIRED DaY OR NIGRT, ALL KINDS OF AUTO SUPPLOM AGENTS FoR THE FAIRBANKOMORES Ga# AXD OIL ExGbras. «BTBTORE 140A BEL 19-w y Pl T P CCC I
[?]
WALL PAPER AND PAINTS, WBF DOW, — SHADES — CLASS, . Of PAINTS — FOR . AUTOMORILE® ENAMELS, GOLD BRONZE, ALUM INUM BRONZE, VARNIsEES W, LENOIR as JACKSON Stait Keystone Phone 205 NM.
20 t ty o co WA ci B P 3s PERRY STREET . $508 59 o 1 at ty ca sili cs cud u) 1 0 (elli 51 0 er clllite fir cle) B 560 "4 otimates on all kinda of Furniture. will be furnished promptly Keystone Phone Goods Delivered TEysroNE PHONES CAPE MaY 1.72 — WILDWOOD 1Konowitch Brothers Nes s Per ad o c 5 c Bli n of tn M u 3 3 p E4 ODS ESI Butter Fg Fruit Produce Etc. Orders Promptly Delivered A04-10 Washington Street MA0G-00 Pacific : CAPR MAY WILDWOOD
he: : (o} — 3 tb dill — 7 t A J of the Salvation Army THE DOUGH@OY‘8 FRIEND. I‘latnfiela.-"Shorty" Hale, beloved of itoughboys, is preparing to take the mame hustling part in the Home Bervice Fund campaign of the Balvation Army that he Ald in the big war, In ofela1 capuctty "Shorty" I Adjutant William T. Hele. | He In attached to the Salvation Armmy‘s Plainfield cormw Few or none of the oversens rellef workers . uequired . more . popularity "Whorty" is more given to metion than to tulk except when on the exhorting stand for the Salvation Ariny, and so it is protnble that the reil story of his personal part in the great struggle will never be written. . He was in command of the "Lizzie" which conveyed Cuptain Allison Coe of the
ADJUTANT WILLIAM
Salvator ny Trom poMmt CC along the firing line with the First Divislon, A. E. F., on the French front. ‘There is scarcely anybody now. who duess‘t know that a "Lizzie" is a Ford car. ‘The Ford car, like the Salvation Army, was a subject of occartonal rid: teule before the war, but its record of service on the shell battered roads in the cones of action giver It a unique piace in the motor history of the war. "A Ford could akip and Jump around where unother car would have been helpless," mays "Bhorty." "The fact that it offered a mmaller target wa also an advantage. "l never forget one time I was @riving down a eamonflaged | road There was a hole In the camoutiice h it I ca r G
observation batloon, . Immedintely after this the shells began dropping In front | and in back of me, ripping up the rond | and the land alongside of It.. My cue | was to get out of the way ar soon it possthie. . There were so many. shell! holes In the road that T bad to rheng | and ut times mmike a detour to. the| roadside. | That little ‘Lizzle‘ hopped | along as mhobly ax a chamois, | If I hud had aby other car I doubt if I would be here to tell the tale,. One whell dropped so close beind me thiit | I thought It exploded under the rear of the car. The concussion was nome | thing frightful. Little ‘Lisle wns als | moat picked up bodily, but shot Fight | along und got me out of a place where It would bave been nure death to stuy | I guess the observation. balloon had | spotted two of our naval guns which were mounted beside the road." His Baptiom of Shelifire, Adjutant Hale had about as liberal a treatment of Bosche shellfire an any American non-combatont. ‘He wax in | the thick of it at Solssons, Mont See | and in the Montdidier saltent. I "At Solssons," be says, "it was something. terrible, | This was one of the places where the Huns bombed the hospitals. I saw fifteen wen of time | Fifteenth Division of Scotch. Highlanders killed by a single serial bomb, At another time I saw a bomb from ! an neroplune kill Colonel Clayton, i | southerner, seventeen of his staff .and | a — Frenichwoman . who . was . working wbout the colonel‘s quarters," The Salvation Army is a mmilltury | orgentzation. . It 1s the church mill- | tant, Its forces not only fight poverty, disease, distress and the devil, but obey orders whether fighting or help« Ing others Aght. But there was one time when they disobeyed ordern-and were. offtclally commended for It. "They" were a group of Suivation Army Inv Before the Someone batile they were ordered by the United Stator army ofger communding to keep at lest forty kilometers . back of the front line trenches. When the metion got hot c forgot all mbout the order and atthe front. huks to stop them and they went just wh they were needed, no: matter how clove to the front it war, | After? the battle the provost marshal‘ com mended them very highly for thele aplendid work and told them that, as m oC atom of Jess value than the service they were rendering, they could thereafter go ns far front me they wanted to. "all of War women were skilled in first al4," says Adjutant Hale, "and all had diplomas: for this work. It was something more than a desire to shine as heroines that took them into the hell of fire." S.«y Comers for "Bhorty." __Thare were no couy sormats or sof
[?]
dotedfini s nti n D35 A Comfortable | ° SEL R FF? t £ e i td , r NV a #95, It certainly makes a big difference to your health and pocketbook, when your feet and legs are snug and warm in sturdy U. S. "Protected" rubber boots, Seas may rege, spray may pelt-but heavy service, double-duty "U. &" is reinforced for hard usage and wards off wet and chill. ‘There‘s comfort, economy and thorough reliability in U. S. "Protected" rubber boots. They outwear ordinary rubber boots because they are built staunch and true by patented process. During the war the Government probably used more U. S. "Protected" rubber boots than of all other makes combined. ‘The "U. S. Seal"-trade mark of the largest rubber manufacturer in the world , is on [abet Agert of "U. S." It is placed there for your guidance and protection , 1 Look for this seal. Wear the kind of U. S. "Protected" rubber boots that your meeds require. . Your desler has it or can get it quickly. United States Rubber Company New York
P ec. when they were sleepy and dead tired. "We had mo billets" he sayn. ometimes we slept in dugouts, some:; timex in the open field, sometimes in.] a barn and sometimes in the ‘Lizzien" One reason the doughboys are: so strong for the Salvation Army in be seuse when they were in that state :echnically . known. as "busted". the Sulvationtsts . would stake . them | to. whatever they wanted, provided that wimething were to be had.. "Shorty" sells about It In this wise: "My job waa to bring supplies. When the boys didn‘t get paid: for wmetimex na long an four months, we jawboned‘ them.. What‘s that? Why, we trusted them. Invariably If they were in « position to do so they paid is back a soon an they possibly could. Df course mt times mome went into wattle after they bad. obtained somehing from us on trust and were killed. That wiped out the debt. Some were wansferred and rome taken to hosptnls, and there was really no way they rould find us and liquidate. Of course we didn‘t expect them to, "On one occaslon we ‘Jnwboned‘ n regiment of donghboys for a whole ‘ruckload worth thourands of francs. There were cake, candy, nuts, noups, mzors, knives, | blades, | pocketbooks, «rips. handkerchiefs, towels and oth°r things in: variety.. That: regiment went Into. battle: immediately after, ind in one morning nine hundred of ‘hem were gassed, Thero wasn‘t much thance for a proft from that cariond af supplies 1 Bpoaks Highly of Med Cross, "Our girle made from twelve thon sand to fifteen thousand doughouta a day when our boys were In action, and the Red Cross made chocolate, | And right here I want to say that you can‘t speak too highly of the ed Crom, . it wan a great Sight to #00 the boys gather around the doughnut pota, ‘They were mostly armed. with aticks and prodded right into the hot grease for tham, It was a COMMON Mbt to soe |one of the boys aat a dosen doughnute sne after the other. I saw one dough. boy eat fifteen egge at one altting, — It was a common thi for seven or eight to go down in succession. "The doughboys liked religion, at least the brand we handed out.. They would flock to our mestings. Many were held in dugouts. After one meet ing in the open we made room for the [Fifth Artitiery band to give a coneart, (Fifteen minutes after: the band dis. permed an aeriat bomb fell 08 the spor where we and the band had been and ;tore a hole in the ground about twenty feet in diameter and alght fost 899. !_‘Bhorty" ip a natural born optimiat. He is sure the Salvation ArMY ®! #9 away over the top in its big drive Gut ime the week of Maz 1928 «
"Ihe aoughboys will give it a boost," he says, "that will make every body sit up and take motice,"
SALVATION ARMY‘S PEPFUL CAMPAIGN Expectations Are That New Jersey Will Do Her Share Nobly in Coming Drive. Newark -With a live wire at its head in the person of former Governor Edward C. Btokes, . the | Salvation \rmy‘s Home Service Fund campaign ‘n New Jersey hus taken on a pep and enthontasm which speak well for the ~waspect of sending the atate‘s $750,000 muota away over the top. As state vlee presidents and county chairmen Mr. Stokes has nelccted some of the xiate‘s most eminent citizens--anch ms| John — Grter | Hibben, . preddent . of Princeton University, and Dwight W. Morrow of J. P. Morgan & Co. In making his selections he has carefully balanced the various shades of rellg> fous and political beliefs, ‘The Salvation Army in non-sectari« un and non-politiea)," raya Mr. Stokes, "and every sectarian and partisnn feeling are submerged in the one desire to serve a truly bumenitartan cause. Fraternal. civic and other organizations are volunteering their active services, en mnsma, for the Salvation Armp. For Instance, the Rotary Clu of New: atk, cne of the Iivert organizations of business men in the country, will take over the principal work of the drive in that city. In Bayonne the Elks have assumed responsibility for the collection of fund More than that, ther have boosted the allotted quota from $8,000 to $10,000 an a minimum ond are going out for a total of $23,000, Doughboys Are: Enthusiastic, "We are receiving the most enthusiastle support from: the doughboys from overmeas. They have a debt of gratitude to pay to the Balvation Army and they are going to pay it in wholehearted fashion, "The public should remember that not a penny of the comparatively small sum allotted to the Salvation Army from the United War Berrice Fund is mvallnhle for home service. . Thap should alno remember that by provid Ing n fond for home service they wiil greatly incrense the efficiency of that service by releasing the officers and workers of the Army from the time commiming task of al-the-yearround collections of nlekies and dimes, We are in an age of economy snd efcien€7, and this alone should be a suficient r9400R 495 Supporting this drive."
One of the Interesting: featuree of the — omni, . which. extends . from May | 19. to 20, — Inclusive, . will be Doughnut Tmy, May 21. All sorte ad speci stunts have heen or wiil be are ranged for this oceasion, . Many locally tes are planning to have rentlife repr resentutions of Sulvation Army Innalei leooking doughouts for the boys in the trenches. FOR — SALE-QUARTER | HORSE Kimbal Motor, varinble speed Runs either direction. Perfect condition habtiidiisiniica ivietirofedtaredianed A. COMMISSIONERS‘ SALE, Pursuant, to un Order 4 ccc Iuet Common Pleas of the ay f of Cape M wade on the 22rd. day of ‘April fog the Natter 95, the Appltertinn f lutehinaon for pai dering and directing BAY, fel Bnd, DAY OF JUNE m (ah «‘clock in the afternoon rot at. pable Mpi, Prancix Aor Ent tn De i m iy, New Temes, the following acrlh reets of land | with the apparIthaces, p x i. "Tidn. Jot, or piece: of tand attunte in Ancuintoginhop county «B of Car butted and x" Deginitin at a, sor: ner bn the miditte of the main road lead L m, being ex Bust, ten perce Norm Habit -one degrees thirt-tno . percinn. to aforpaid rond; thence nine. deere Ten perohis to (e place of beatrouine Coftaming two ners, Be The min All that certain trnct of meadow otning meadow — vene and a the , H yikes Tlmem ne how and N3 yras by | bk line North | seventyonine d fortycive. mnlnutes Party bet

