Page Four CAPE MAY STAR AND waAvE Saturday, May ‘.>, 1919 e= L.... amg
HaREEHEEEIEREIRIERRIRCRRORN2REORESRRERSNCEIARRARORGERRRRREROARNRORARRRDE MDJ» wih AN; F0 N :> | |a sC Erect Saturday, A Mice 51 debt: lie6i n 1a K 01 2J 1, [ Of DM iJ H »A D ETC 2 AT "J 8p \/ (3 WW (€ | S1 C e msi TC many highly dramatic moments and is ~ worth while from many points of view, particularly from those who F EC On vti STETe a t a | | ty ‘¢ : 1 (Ol I) 5 | 7.0 1:1 5 , Nazimova ON THE BEACH, OPENS wit (Thal roe mal +1 * _ «oUt oF THE FOC" |J JP PJ JJP LLJ DPP LDT IT P Li JJ JD DJJ [J J DJ UU UT DJ TTTITITI TTT UJ TT TTTM Inmans
CAPE MAY STAR ANDWAVE ALBERT R. HAND, President. A. L. EWING, Adv. Manager. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE, $1.50 PER YEAR IN ADVANCE c 3 A C CEJ. sifice as second-class postal matter. WTAR & WAVE PUBLISHING Co. A A A (O 1.63 FOR SOLDIERS HUNDRED OF HOSPITAL PATIENTS SENT ON EXCURSIONS NEW TRIPS BEING PLANNED, NEIGHBORING _ COMMUNITIES DO FULL SHARE. In the past three months the Jewish Welfare Board sent hundreds of patients on evenings or all day Sundays excursions to the nearby comammities, where the boys would be entertained by the Council of | Jewish
(Women or the Army and Navy Service Club. Nearly every week the Council of Jewish Women or the Army and Navy : Service Club entertained from 14 to 50 boys from the Army Hospital and it is a safe bet to claim that nearly every man at the Army Hospital did go or have the opportunity of going on one or more of these excursions and have the time of his life. The Wildwood Community has cer[tainly done their share in contributing: to the pleasures for the boys in this district and especially the over-seas [patients from the Army Hospital, and every man upon leaving Cape May ill long remember the hospitality that has been extended him by the people of the Cape May and Wildwood Communities. One of the most suécessful excur« sions arranged by the Jewish Welfare Board took place last Sunday, when 31 boys from the Army Hospital were sent to Woodbine by bus at . nine 0‘~ clock in the morning and returned at midnight. To say that the boys had a wonder» ful time would not do justice to the
real time they had in Woodbine. . To start off with, when the boys arrived jin Woodbine they were welcomed by a large crowd of the pretticet girls, who gave them flowers and then es corted them to their homes fcr dinner, not a plain Sunday chicken dinner, but a real festival meal where | nothing was missing. This was | something that the boys enjoyed and made them think of their own homes. Dancing and singing was | particlpated in during the afternoon . and evening. The boys had a splendid time, arriving at the Honpital | five minutes past twelve.
THE LIBERTY ProcriMm wasn Tone Pay
Monday-Hale Hamilton-in AFTER HIS OWN HEART Added-Keystone . Comedy<TuesdayMadge Kennedy in DAUGHTEE OF MINE* "SHE LOVED A SAILOR" I oe e ua o E P ve -"Love‘s False Faces" pDOcoe 20000 20000006 2000 00 noooce nin
Thursday-Emma Whelen in "AMATEUR ADVENTURESS". 5 Act-Vaudeville-5 Acts Friday and Saturday Florence Reed-in "WIVES OF MEN" All of the New York News: paper critics gave this their undivided. praise. Fashion Loving Women Will Rave Over This Basso trhuzcty [O
MISS MINNIE SELYY Miss. Minnic Selvy, | daughter . of William Selvy, of Cape May, died Just Friday, about 6 A. M., at Philadelphia, where she was visiting. Appendicitis was the cause of her death. The funeral services were performed at the A. M. E. Church, on Tuesday, at 2 P. M. The Rev. S, E. Hursey officlated, assisted by H. T. Johnson. Miss Selvy was a member of the class of 1920 in High School, and was well liked for her many | excellent qualities. . Her class presented a wreath, and called in a body to express their sympathy. The interment was performed at the Union Bethel Cemetery, Cold Spring. antamA GAME OF BALL On picnic day, so bright and gay, A game of ball the men did play. The singles played the marzied man, So you see what the teams were then, The married men stepped up to bat The single men said, "Look at that" The balls began to fly thru air The single men were filled with care. The single men with down cast eyes Looked at the others with surprise. With twenty runs and yet not done, The married men had surely won. The runs they got we will not say. W.... ‘ave that for another day, The aingle men are often seen Practiclng nightly for their team.
/ AY, you‘ll have a streak of amokeluck that‘ll — Put per-in-your-smokemotor, all right, if you‘ll Le, ring-in with a jimmy pipe or cigarette papers and ill, nail some Prince Albert for packing!
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Just between ourselves, you never will wiss-up to highspotsmokeJoy until you can call a pipe by its first name, then, to hit the peek-of-plesaure you land square On that two-fisted-man-tobaceo, Prince Albert I Well, air, you‘ll be so all-fired y you‘ll want to get a photograph of yourself breezing up the pike with your smokethrottle wide open! Talk about amoke-sport! Quality makes Prince Albert so
appealing all along the amoke line. who never before could amoke a pipe and men who‘ve emoked pipes for years all testify to the delight it hands out! P. A. can‘t bite or parch! Both are ut out by our exclusive patented Poss "U Right now while the going‘s good you get out your old pipe or the papers and land on some P. A. for what ails your particular amokeappetite I
rapier ger maittaner tep Teape Thad the feck R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, N. C,

