CAPE MAY STAR AND WAVE Saturday, June I, 1919
BELL TELEPHONE | F} 16} FRANKLIN BANK BLDG. PHILADELPHIA, PA. | O Co iP ake C d
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Systematizers Phillips‘ Dairy Farm he 1 a | 1 a |O].4 | Ble] si e_ 91 Tin a al Pure Milk and Cream Delivered at your door EDWARD H. PHILLIPS, JR. CAPE MAY, N. 4. Keystone Phone 156-7 SANITATION EXCELLENCE ~ up DAILY BETWEEN BUFFALO £ CLEVELAND (0h: % 1 # Colu boy Cel piu Wf cl a oF 0.2 6 O4 1 tO hE "secAMOBEE® — The Great Ship Nery of SME — "civ of BUFFALO® Pakatan dbnesnnne nid enne nmrmmmmmmmacs BUFFALO -- Dally, May ‘Tet io Nov. 15th ~CLEVEAND duct ‘ocranbl uast en esmipe | evner tens essas ei Lasting qualities of ice depend upon the condition of the water, the manmer of storags and the efficiency of delivery. Ours is good clean-water ite, manufactured from distilled water and kept constantly at a temverature below freezing point. ‘;
| it sy y 633 J : $ (4 0% £0) 6J CAPE MAY COAL & ICE CO. Main Office--512 WASHINGTON STREET L CUL COLON [SSH K3 [orsi ( 101 B eL TEF C AUTOMOBILE REPAIR WORK | mEceucamt wquipmENnt For RAPID work. Cars STomk® cars | HIRED DAY OR NIGET ALL EINDS OF AUTO SUPPLIMS | AGENTS FoR THE FAIRBANKE-MORSH G&S axD OIL ENGDRS «xveronk Lees smUL i2-w ___ Wall Paper and Paints WALL PAPER AND PAINTS, Win DOW, SHADES, GLASS, OM PAINTS — FOR . AUTOMOMLR®® ENAMELS, GOLD BRONZE, ALUKINUM BRONZE, VARNiSEES Afi Ac te}1°d 4s JACKSON stain Kevatone Phone 305 M. R. M. WENTZELL _ | 33 PERRY STREET . | Bil Z 5 23 5 1 3 64 53 cll ca chad wo 0 Ces 73 0 Cer cle a 0 Lo ci t 0, Eatimatee on all kinds of Furniture will be furnished promptly
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KEYSTONE PHONES CAPE MAY 1.73 — WILDWOOD 1-7 arn, eye ea £ Tet an on 14 1 503 fe 5 1 57 030 1a c te E53 COS ES Butter Eggs Fruit Produce Etc. Orders Promptly Delivered
ao Washington Street CAPE MAY
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21 PIECES OF BONE REMOVED FROSL SKULL The soldier to whom the following letter was written. it a patient in the Hospital here. — He has had 21 pieces of bone taken from his skull, and is now waiting an operation which will transfer a shinbone in the place of the removed particles. Camp Dodge, lows, Apr. 80, 1910 Private erry Hughes, Gen. Hospital No, 14, Cupe Muy, N. 4. Dear Friend Hughes: i This will be something of a surprise for you probably never heard of me but I am sure that you will be glad to hear something ubout how you got to the hospital. | On the night of October 6 you were brought in from in front of our lines | seriously. wounded. . You had re- ! ceived this wound October 4. in the ! morning and had isin out in front all the time. . Part of that time you were where the Huns could see you but most of the time out of sight. . Our company was in the woods just behind you und some of the men heard your calls for first aid. — Not being uble to locate. just where. the sounds. came from, nothing was said in their reports to the Captain. . During the afternoon of October 6 as I was stand: ing near our company Headquarters you were seen sitting up on a little knoll. Looked to me ax though you were hunting cooties, can‘t tell of course, maybe you were, After speaking to Captain Hull about the matter 1 made up my mind to go out ‘and bring you in. When we got down to the part of the trench that was nearest to you there was nothing to be seen of you. We at last decided it was just a trick. of the enemy to get us to come out after someone and get shot for our kindness. Several of the men said they would go with me if there was to be any rescue work done, After searching the ground for some time we gave up. Field glasses were used, we called, we went as close as we dared to the edge of the timber but you were not to be found. When it got a little darker two of us, Put. Marsh of the 12th M. G. Batt, and myself started out with very little hopes of getting back as the Huns had all that ground covered with machine guns and were shelling it regularly with all sizes of big guns. We did not go very far when we found some men who did not need any help from us as they had been killed in trying to go over the raise in the ground where you had been in the afternoon. Wo was much closer to our you that we decided to go on and try to find you. After n long search we found you huddled up in an . angle of the German trench trying to keep
ut of the cold and damp. At the time Marsh: was keeping. watch for for: he Dutch would see us and open fre n us, So I was alone with you and had to get out the best way possible. There was no other so I bundled you on my back and carried you in. The Dutch got: some idea there was something up and sont up a ar shell, You are not a small man und when I hit the dirt with you on my buck, you almost mashed me. But even then they did not hit any of us although they threw dirt on me with| their machine gun bullets. After y ing on the ground for sometime I started again and brought you . in safely. Then it was up to me to gro back after Marsh who by some way had been separated from me just about the time the star shell went off, When 1 got back to where wethad found the first man there was Marsh waiting for me to come back as he decided that 1 lind taken you on into our tinzs . This man was not severly wounded as you but his wounds had bled much more and he was very weak He could not so the two of us carried him in and took both of you down into the dig» out where cur company. hud . their headquarters. . There a first aid man from the 12th M. G. Batt. | dressed your wounds and we left you in the care of one of the Medical Detachment of our Company, | His name is Johnson, 1 think. ‘The reason for leaving you there was that our outfit got relieved and. there were no. stretchers for us to take you out on. The next day Johnson told me that he had seen you put in an ambulance and that you would be all right in a few months, The other man‘s name was Elmer Tabbert out of the same company, and ust news from him, is that he admitted to a Hospital in France and was in — Base Hospital N on November Sth, with a slgtht wound fin his right leg, Didn‘t look very ati |sten 1 <aw it that might. The Wa {Pepartment has promised to get fur {ther information about him, and whe they. end it you will hour from m [asain When I returned to 15. S. for dis ebmure, a deter was send i the Wa Department, a P pour address fand the "Y" just this week sent it to {me. [- WA say a few words about myself
1 was in Co. E. 56th, from February 10th, 1918, till they sent me to Officers | Training: School, at | La Vallevonne.! (Ain) France. | When the Armistice! was signed. I with a great many more asked to be sent out. back to our com» away from the school. We were sont panies or anywhere, just so we got| to Le Mans, and stayed there till} Fob. 9th. when we left France for home. — We landed in Hoboken Feb, 22nd. and I was discharged on Morch | 26th, 1919. 1 am now | working in Camp here in Red Cross work. Trusting you will soon be at home and that you may not suffer any se bility from. your. wounds (Very truly yours, ARTHUR M. Haxmrox Care Red Cross Hdq Camp Dodge, lowa. NOTICE The Cold Spring Presbyterian Missionary . Society will meet at . the Residence of Mrs. McKain on Second Avenue, West Cape May, June 11 at a‘clock P. M.. If stormy, the follow» ing: dav. PE ancommemand Don‘t ride Bicycles on the sidewalks.
NAZIMOVA OF THE SEA "Out of the Fog." the latest sercon drama in which the great Nuzimova seen, will be the special attraction June 9th at the LYRIC THEATRE, and is a powerful and intense story of the sea-dealing with elemental hu man emotions and passions, This play, which was adapted for the screen from the stage drama by H Adams, . " ‘Ception — Shoals," from eveated such a. furore during its long New York run, brought to Nazimova much of the fame which she has nttuined as an actress or supreme emotional character. . The story: has all the moods and changes of the vast sen about which it centers storms and passions of human tragedy, dull and cloudy days when the heavy and onshrouding fog of despair rolls in to hide the horizon but which later . is dispelled by the blazing sunshine of romance and love which wive a happy ending to the gripping dramn. mamma acommmnnd Don‘t parkautomobiles in the busimess section on Washington Street. _m4e4_FOR QUICK RESULTS PLACE AN AD with Us.
AHICKO PREPARED According. to co reports,. all but 50 men of Wissahickon. will be transferred to the Section Base, . in order to make room . for the . large bunch of men which are expected hore in a week to ten days. It was at frst thought that onl (the new detention. cianp. at Wissae hickon would be used, but more recent y states that the entire camp [will neces utilized. The men ar come . here from Deer Island. is suid. m»ewHOSEITAL TO REMAIN | i Another persistent rumor "is being \foated that the General Hospital No. H1 wilt be absndoned immediatedly, It [became known here today that . the Commandant is not in favor of me ing for at least three months, . and {perhap«. longer. + He cs the stand that a removal now would necessitate the immediate |eveinam Pammlond uou s The case was presented to Washing» ton authorities last week, and it is thought that the | hospital will remain.
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E have the honor to announce that we are now prepared to entertain applications for loans on automobiles. any kind and anywhere in the State of ) oe E oC a Ee t a rt a Soa RT a quick decisions and all business strictly confidential. Nout Jersey Indemnity Company 7406 Broad @trect, Newark

