SAiDiMf.Atmosina.iMt MAY glAB AHU WAyg **^ . . JBkiJalM i i i
RASHTJN ] Wm Rolle spent the week-end in Philadelphia. i Mrs. Annie Ellis, Mrs. Lillian Pi- ; mer and Mrs. Horace G off of Brook- ; lyn returmsd home on Saturday, having spent two delightful weeks in onr . town. Mrs. Annie Edwards and daughter, Dorothy hive enjoyed a part of the week with Pitman friends. Dr. R. Townsend and wife and Mrs. Emma Corson, met with a recent automobile_accident but are now completely recovered. During a recent severe electrical storm the M. E. Parsonage was struck by lightening and sustained considerable damage. None of the -pastor's family were hurt Steel Lee and wife of Leesburg, were Sunday visitors at the home of Sylvester > Spence and wife. Richard| Dougherty returned to his Brooklyn \ home on Monday after a few pleasant weeks with friends here. Mr. and Mrs. Albright of Sea Isle City spent Sunday with Nelson Smith and wife. Mrs. F. W. James is now home from a Philadelphia visit Miss Rettis Goff of Philadelphia has >i
bea, s root At the hoAi'HWiili ' Coombs and wife. • * The Philathesn* went on their an- | nual picnic on Friday last The ' scene of the display was at Wild wood i and despite the damp weather they had a jolly day, and a happy time to- . aether." j Walter Gallagher and wife of Millville and Theoph McKean and wife of ; WQdwood were guests of Howard Thompson and wife on Sunday « ^ Pastor Morgan and wife entertained [ their three daughters and families over Sunday. WEST CAPE MAY ' Mrs. Win. Pettit has returned to [ MQlville after spending a week with j friends. Mrs. M. Knot and daughter Elsie and Murial Hilyard of Camden spent f Sunday with Mrs. C. Willis. Sympathy is extended to the son s and daughter on the death of their i mother, Mrs. Albert Peterson. Miss Alice Brewton is spending e some time away. Miss Rebba Raker has returned home after spending som etime in a Washington. Mrs. Phillip Hess of Enna called 8 on* friends here on Monday. f
some time. t Mrs. Lemunion is still at the bedside of her mother who is very ill at h Belleplain. Mrs. C. Swain is entertaining her ° niece from. Philadelphia fop few weeks. Mr. and Mrs. Orion Reves are I the proud parents of a baby girl. i Mrs. Edgar Richardson of AKoona I is visiting her daughter, Mrs. Dohely. i 1 Mr.s Hampton Pierson is entertain- * ing company. Mrs. Clara Morton entertained com- ^ ' pany one day this week. ( Mrs. Ralph Hughes entertained ^ company over the week-end. t — — ^
Arthur Reeve* spent Sunday h» * Mrs. Albert Stevens Is entertaining mother. I J Mr. and Mrs. Aubry Hewitt have been spending some time with Mr. Hewitt's Aunt. ' CAPE MAY CteT Harry Vanzant of WesV'Chester spent Sunday with friends. Augustus Steifel and wife accompanied by Henry Smith, Furman Smith and Fred Steifel motored to Port Republic on Sunday for the day. Miss Elizabeth Stuart of Marcus Hook spent the week-end with her cousin, Miss Clara Pierson. C. E. Loper and wife and daughter Miss Elizabeth and Misa Ethel War-
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- ■■■■■■■■■*■■■■■■■■■■* S I s • coxs t S 1 CITY PIER THEATRE ■ | . , * j g PROGRAM FOR WEEK, AUGUST 38, 1920 ™ ■ MONDAY, AUGUST 10— IS ► | — AUCE LAKE— IN— g ■ "Shore Acres" ■ H Harold Lloyd— in— "HAUNTED SPOOKS" g . ■ : ■ gj TUESDAY, AUGUST SI— g K — (CORRINE GRIFFITH— IN— _ a "The Whisper Market" " _ SPECIAL COMEDY— "JIGGS AND THE SOCIAL LOIN" g ® WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER land 2— j® ® —MARY MILES M1NTER— IN— . ~ ^ "A Cumberland Romance" „ 5 FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER S— g ~ —EUGENE O'BRIEN — IN — _ 2 'The Figurehead" a -'J SATURDAY, SEPTEEKR A— J mm —OLIVE THOMAS— IN— ■ i The Flapper" ! "—"W ■
! THE FACTS ABOUT WOMAN SUFFRAGE r — STATES THAT HAVE RATIFIED j REPUBLICAN
California, Colorado, , Illinois, 1 Indiana, 8 Idaho. Iowa, Kansas, . Kentucky a Maine, Massachusetts, - Michigan, Minnesota, Montana. Nebraska,
Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Dakota, Ohio. Pennsylvania. Rhode Island, Booth Dakota, ^ " * Washington, West Virginia, Wisconsin, Wyoming.
TOTAL DEMOCRATIC
: Arkansas, Arizona. Missouri,
Ctah, Oklahoma, Tennessee,
TOTAL T STATES THAT HAVE NOT RATIFIED REPUBLICAN DEMOCRATIC Connecticut, Florida, Vermont North Carolina, TOTAL 2 TOTAL 2 STATES THAT HAVE REJECTED
REPUBLICAN Delaware, I , TOTAL 1
DEMOCRATIC Alabama, Mississippi, Georgia, South Carolina, Maryland, Louisiana, TOTAL I
ELEVEN Special. Sessions of State Legislatures to ratify the Amendment were called by Democratic Governors, to SIXTEEN Special Sessions called by Republican Governors for the sama purpose.
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J "TTOl LEGENDARY VAMPIRE was said to suck ® X the life blood of sleeping men. The Fire Vampire is ® not legendary. Its menace is ever present. £ Ara you awake to this danger? Is your property g insured and protected? I ihre is sapping the fir,rt/* '"I strength of the Nation ■ at the rate of $1,000,000 per day. Yet most of us g ,»v. no man , than if we were asleep, so that g our cwrlwwnrw aid, fire's attacks. I You need dm Hutras Flu Insurance Company's ■ Mtmdmdumuly; also its erpert Rre Prevention Service, ■ furttised without extra coat. G* both. 1%aBe or ■ writs this "Hssmus" Amemcj mdur-ttuwl IVj ratal S EDGAR P. STITES & SON mm ■ .a . jp I Hi MW
Albert Johnson mad wife visited relatives in Bridgeton the first of tbe week. Miss Clara Pierson went to Marcus * Hook, Wednesday for the week-end ■which she spent with relatives. demnisvillk Mr. and Mrs. Frank Warner of ? Germantown are the guests of Mrs. 1 • Warner's parents, Dr. and Mrs. Way. • , Mrs. Adolph Cox, Miss Dorothy 1 . Rice and Miss Minnie Way were call- ' ing on friends in our village on Weds nesday. , ; Harry Chester and family of Marcus Hook are the guests of Mrs. Han- 1 r Tfh Chester. Miss Gladys Douglass celebrated ! her fifth birthday anniversary on Monday giving a party to her little friends. Miss Roxana "Gandy left on Friday for Thetford, Canada to spend a few weeks with her cousins Vernon Smith and family. ^ Mrs. Jennie Miller and daughter, Maria, Mrs. John Carrol and sister Helen visited their aunt at Cold Spring.
Robert Graham and Mrs. Graham ; of Philadelphia were guests at the Lewis Cottage on Sunday. E. B. Lewis and a party of Landsdowne friends spent four days on the Bay, sailing and fishing not to mention eating and sleeping. Capt Frank Filder and Crew locked after the craft Mrs. Lena Booz and sister of Court House were the guests of Mrs. Grace Fidler on Sunday. RIO GRANDE Mr. and Mrs. Smith Endicott are entertaining their brother and family from Philadelphia for the week end. Robert Neal, while working in the garage for his brother Merrill on Monday aocidently cut his face. Several stitches were taken in the wound at the hospital in Wildwood. j Mr. and Mrs. Scull entertained 6ome | of their friends from tbe northern part of the State for a couple of I days. Miss Pheobe Barsby of Berwvn who has been spending some "time very pleasantly with friends here returned home on Thursday.
= GUILD DESIRES ; MORE MEMBERS; — - i: NEEDLEWORK ASSOCIATION IS , t DOING A BIG WORK, AND IS ] < REQUESTING CAPE MAY 1 WOMEN TO ENLIST THEIR < SERVICES. ' The Cape May Needlework Guild, a branch of the National Needlework ; Guild of America organized on March i thirteenth in the High School Audi- 1 torium, invites ladies who are not < members of this spendid organization < in their home towns, to become mem- : bers of this branch. Two new garments, or two newpieces of houshold linen constitutes membership, twenty-two garments ■ and one money member (any amount) or ten members and a money member constitues Directorship, a Director is given the privilege of voting - as to where the garments are sent and distributed. Any home, orphanage, hospital or any needy poor designated by a Director will receive its percentage of the garments collected by this Branch. This organization is repreented in Thirty-eight States by four hundred and fifty-one branches. CELEBRATED BIRTHDAY Mrs. Camp, mother of Mrs. John Craig, who has resided in Cape May for many summers, eleb rated her ninety-seventh birthday on Wednesday of this week. MED Charlotte Weaver, daughter of r Richard N. Weaver, aged 14, diad at I bar fcMM it Pittsburg, last Menday. I "IiiIiHi was an esaml visiter to Caps May. Bar father waa yswri Ml H MmI Mm Ma a Jo*
INTERESTING PERSONAL PABAr r| ' GRAPHS OF THE COMING AMP yj vaaoTm Mrs. A. W. DureU of Woodbury, a tS cottager here for a number ofe years « is at tbe Star Villa. Allen Wales and family motored to .-"fl on Thursday for a fiWT 36 days stay. Mrs. Robbinson and Mrs. A. W. * of Hammond, La., are at the S Baltimore Inn for the balance of the season. Mrs. Frederick D. Stovell of Wash- ^ ington street has been visiting among ! ^ friends for a fortnight. • John Long of "Chester, Pa, a former cottager Js at Congress HalL Charles McKean of St Paul is vis1 iting friends here. - 1 — — Mrs. John H. Sloan of Philadelphia is again paying her respects to her favorite resort and is registered at . r the Columbia. 1 Mr. Alfred Cooper and family of Cape May Court House are occupying .f of Porui Mbv fnr tllA cottage May for
month of August Miss Lenore Wagner and Miss Gertrude eaches o 1 Philadelphia are guests at the Baltimore Inn. Mr. and Mrs. H. Southwell of New Y'ork avenue registered at the Columbia Hotel. The have with them their three interestin little eons, Jack Harry and Billy. Mrs Margaret Green is also registered at the Columbia with her daughters, Mrs. Southwell and Mrs. F. G. Mative. Mrs. Green is an old time visitor here. Dr. Leslie Ewing and a party of 1 friends motored here from Berlin re- . . cently. Dr. Ewing is being entertain- • ed by his brother, Alan DeP. Ewing TEACHERS ARE TOURING STATE INSTRUCTORS OF VOCATIONAL AGRICULTURE ARE sfUDYING ' 5 WORK THROUGHOUT THE NORTHERN PART OF NEW JER1 SEY.
The teachers of vocational agriculture of the State are on a trip this week, August 23rd to 28th, inspecting the home work of agricultural pupils of the schools at Lenardo. Freehold, | Hopewell, Hammonton, Bridgeton, jShiloh. Salem and W'oodstown. I The trip is being made by automobile, j starting from Lenardo on Mrr.day and ending at Wcodstewn on Saturday. H. O. Scmpson. State Supervisor of Agric 'hu-al Edrcation for the State Depa-tment of Agr'"" 'Rural Instruction is in charge of the party. The "home work of the pupil'; studying agriculture i* an irmortart phaseof the work. Each pupil as a part of. » agricultural study each year must , conduct a practical farm enterprise , on his homh farm. This work is carefully supervised by the teacher who is .employed for the' calendar year ■ in order that he can be with the ; pupils in the summer months as well i as during the school year. Agricultural instruction in tlje pub- - lie schools of New Jersey is an important part of the educational de- : velopment of the state. It is destined : to grow and will mean much to the ■ future generations of farmers. The • work is Federally aided and is part s of a nation-wide movement for voI oational education. New Jersey schools in which voca1 tional agriculture is taught are found I at Newton, Belvidcre. Hackettstown, Washington, Flemington, Hopewell, Lenardo, Freehold, Bridgeton, Salem, Shiloh, Woodstown, Pleasantville, Hammonton, Egg Harijor, Minotola, Rosendale, McKee City, Cape May, Oape May Court House, Eima and 1 Woodbine. FALL MILLINERY A good assortment et hats in the popular materials and akyle. «f the Autumn season Spart aats and tarns in fait, duvetyne vahmt Mi 1 pluah. BMW dreaay «Mk aBectl 1 Q| I I g II I ■ lli Uvstefii . s^risa MB ha 1 l lhAil far th* " MBB Itt HBAMAM. Mi Fmy flhMA jj/i Bt^gn

