Saturday, July 12th, 1919 CAPE MAY STAR AND WAVE
w» jm] v % pad a as 19) ar
$4! ‘794 J2(o [ IAY 5 — __ . AT-THE-FERRIES 4 // /F a
12 (oY » H §:7/518k‘) 7.94 AT-4HE-FEIRIES CAMDEN
p Raj e [of F Io y A a B 2 (a 4 A Ps ‘~ European Plan ROOMS WITH PRIVATE BATH 1607 AND COLD RUIDANG WaTkE IN EACH ROOM. STATEMENT OF THE ‘CONDITION Or Cudi Southwest Corner Washington and Ocean Streets Cape May, N.J., December 31, 1918
[?]
[?]
suity Devane bers fe ns i marg ovet Vout — ADVIAORY BOARD
[?]
[?]
ASK FOR TEITELMAN‘S Pure 1cE8 CREAM At All yall Dealers Po s (o) A 59 C B SHF 0 | 5 0 (4 04 V C |
CUREAELLO
He PB NA
Keystone Phone 211-A — Bell Phone 25 1 43 VI Af h 2111 1P eh Pival ( &g — — TaBLEs — — & p io RECC R :d | (Pte. D
MUNICIPAL PIER —
KJ a or of I ol a Asla} id |
RAMSHAW‘S FISH MARKET — 22 Mansion St. " "ees May, N. J. | f ees H 5 wee POE CC PLI meat. Fresh Fish every day, caught by our Fishing Boat.! Orders by telephone promptly Po ent E" Fos KEYETONE PHONE 73-D BELL PHONE 174 [MC RAAcC E remomp » \ LOCATED DIRECTLY ON BEACH FRONT. 30th Season Under Same Management. Foy on lg 17.0 v Pe F 3° OF Cu CD uf JounNn Tracy & co:
| ECH U 11% d F H Between Porry and Jackson Streets ROOMS BY WEEK OR SEASON
BENSTEAD‘S [BATHS Beach Avenue and Perry Street. ROOMS BY WEEK OR SEASON Latest Style Suits . Polite Attendants §! P» eit? PTTI Manager Stockton Surf Baths. FINEST | BATHING | ESTABLISH MENT ON THE ATLANTIC Coast JOHN C. LITTLE, Manager. — POLITE ATTENTION Shields 1 | ped hrs Baths BEACH AVE. AND DECATUR 87. Charles B, Shields,
son me mm mm me mo tn m aon oa me o ni e mesi on me i m on an m e a a ae Lo 99 % A b t € * _ SERVICE r Fo cima <6) <p y y TB eff T eit rd i AFV A 4.1L .20 :;) 5} palo life (t 1 far al Of 22:1] ] I | ZN. i{KR C .Z) .C), Xer. Oh a 6
— ‘*Phone Connections LLPL IJ JGT I J J 1 1 1 |
| ») A R NH 5 +d C) 1 ‘4 4 (0 pl — OT TTT TT T Anand anton onthe and
nd jumped up from the Morte chats. "But, Alec." hin wife pleaded, "I‘m Just tired of this dingy Hitle place, and baby Is whining all the time, . Mt. Cardi bas minde armngements for my | first appenratice on next Tuesdny eve | ning, . Mother Is coming over in the morning to take bnby, and I shall manage to get Into the city before dinner Ha t c . afternoon." "My denr girl, you are making & blind mistake in heeding this man‘s advice. . You will be nor" "It in uselem," nterrapted Marle, "for you to try to alter my plans, for when my mind is set I mean to cart? It out." Alec erossed the room and stood in front of the French wihdow. The moon lit up hin fnce as he glunced out upon his acres of golden wheat and cor. "Bo Mr. Cardi has succeeded at Inst," he was thinking | "Yes, his own Wittle Innocent Marle bad been pets suntled by thix miwemble wretch." All fix huppincss was to be ruined, bin little cattuze, all bis newly found Joye and comforts of farm life, and bubywhat was to become of him? He would grow up without a mothers love and care. At length he turned toward where hin wife hnd been standing, but she was not there. Bhutting off the Hight, be went upstaira. A» he passed her door he stopped.. Perhnps nt this very moment she wan packing. . Would he de o C w her carry out her plans, as she sald. and perhnp« some day she would real ize her frult and come back to him. ® * * * ® The next evening found Marle in a handsome chumber in one of the mont forhtonnble hotels of the city. She was thinking aver the events of the dns. She hnd met and rehearmed with Professor Card! as had been armuged. and he had told her of the remurknble talent she posreared, | Never . before had she realized it. An she nat gnzing at all‘ the lnxurier about her she at: knowledged to herself how wrong she had been tn partaking of such things that were all so unnatural to her; but her heart. swelling with pride, re belled agninat these thoughts. Every morning for nearly a. week she spent with a dressmaker. . Her afternoons were given for rehearsals, and in the evenings she joined Mr. rly. were all too much for her, and she Iny awake thinking of baby and Alec. and how she longed to be with them now. The next morning she arose earlier fingers worked busily with her coe | tome, she longed for her bungalow apron and heaved a sigh of rellef when found her very much excited and nervoun. Later in the evening Mr. Cardi exlled to accompany her to the the ater; Re one be of her," she consoled her‘The orchestra sounded the chord, and Marie, forgetting her troubles, bemsn her selection. — Her loud voice rang out clearly and sweetly and won the hearts of her audience. The applanse with which her first melection wan greeted delighted Marie and in the helght of her success, she renched for a tele gram, which a messenger boy slipped into her hand, and in an audible whinper, she read, "baby died this morn Ing, Alec." ‘The andlence looked from one to another In amazement, and Marie fell back tn a dead feint. ® * « * O Grandma Merili, hearing the tond notse on the piazza, dropped the saucepan.of potatoss that she was paring. and rarhed out to the front door, only to find Marle rubbing her eyes with one hand, and shielding the bump a har forehend with the other, ®, . , and it was only a dream after all" Mario was maylug, as Alec appeared on the scene a few minutes Inter, Just then bnby began to cry and Marle was spared the humiliation of explaining the dream, while all at tention wam turned to Alec, Jr. (Copyright, 1%. hy McClure: Ne — Byndlcate) giving out a very poor tons, and a gommittee was appointed to Ingul an to what was wrong and to rep on the best means of putting it right. .After an examination the mem
LIEUT. GRAVES WRITES HOME DESCRIBES VERY | INTERESTING SIGHTS VIEWED ON RECENT THIP TO ALPS. SEES CAPITAL OF LEAGUE OF NATO Lieutenant Herry Greavex han been in the service about two yearn, . He was commissioned in the Air Division, and was among the first to go to France. In a letter to his parents, he describes the nature of the country where he is now stationed. Lyon, April 16, 1919 Dear Dad and Mother: I just arrived back in Lyon tonight, after a trip to Chamonix via Albert ville, Flumet and the gorges-one of the most magnificent sights I‘ve ever witnensed. I was one of the first to risk the trip since last Fall for the road in very high up and follows thru a winding gorge where the Incre river starts.. Waterfalls or rather cascades tumbled down the precipitous sides of the canyon from the snow fields und snow covered peaks and in some places landslides had all but blocked the rond, In certain sections snow drifts still filled the narrow road and ‘ huge: boulders were all | along the route. I should hate to ha‘ve one drop * on me ms I went past, At one place a section of the canyon wall on the opposite «ide guve way and we saw thousands of tons of rock, dirt, trees und snow slide down to the bottom. ‘ Those kind of slides mre nhwnys come mon in the alps region in Springtime, when so much snow and rain softens the surface. The guides will not take anyone out now because the snow is [soft and the going. treacherous. E left Chamonix. yesterday in a very [bud snowstorm, something. unimual [for this fate in the At one place coming down we could see with» In a few feet of us the snow falling heavily but we were in rain. . We could see where the one left off and the other began. It‘s amusing in the higher altitudes for sometimes one is in sunshine while but a little diss tance away it‘s pouring, or vice versa. Today in 200 miles we passed thru three rain storms and one haul storm, each time emerging. into . sunshine. © ‘The hail storm was terrific und ace : companied by | lightning, but no thunder, We ran thru the small bail — i. mooie. bor 6 1s wide a mmared it having.sun on os while a hundred meters away it was so back as to shut out ‘farm houres very | near. . The © reason for that was that we were traveling just on the edge of a valley with mountains on the . other | aide. ‘Yesterday I returned from Chamonix via St. Julien route along the Swiss border. By a trick or cheek, an you please, I succeeded in — driving my Cadillac over the border and spending between 4 and 5 hours in Geneva. It is a very clean looking city, not as large as I had imagined it, though very interesting. Lake Lehman is a considerable sheet of water, We could tell that even though Geneva is situ« ated on the tiny end -of it. We se cured a wonderful eyeful as we loft and followed the high road to d‘Anne» cy. Annecy is the resort about which I‘ve already» written and where the — famous painting "September | Morn" « was painted and where the "St. Bernard" or "Le Chateau dt Menthon? In‘situated. On our wi msed the bridge the picture #4 ‘which I enclose. It is over a short deep and beautiful gorge 9% miles out of Anneey, — We stopped exactly in the mide dle, climbed out our mud conted car and took a good stare at it as we smoked a. cigarette, | The bridge is 640 fret long und 484 feet high. We came in from the right and went to the left. > There is a rather nice hotel just out of wight on the right to accommodate sightseers. who flock here in summer, | ‘The little building on the left side in the guard house where they stop everyone who erases either way as It is the Rwins border natrol. I also enclose a pieture of the Chateau de Memthon, which is,ane of the most graceful chateaus of Frioues, 1t really is a monastery. | The mountains you see with a little snow an are now solid white, The picture was taken in summer. T enclose also a bit of Edelweiss, the famous flower of the high Alps. . I had to buy this as it fsn‘t to be hnd this early in the son ethorwise. . It‘s supposed to be a "Porte-Bonheur," or good luck. Enclosed also is a 5 mark piece. Its real and I got it when I war at Toul in 1918, | I‘ve had it ever since. I hope it gots thru as it has a story, No, I‘m not lame-nor disfiguredanymore now than I ever was. | Lord knows I had no looks to lose but I‘m glad I‘m all here yet and still natural. The only change you‘ll notice will be a little less hair on my dome. HARRY cum 0 tm --. ror quick RESULTS PLACE AN AD WiTH US.

