Page Four CAPE MAY STAR AND WAVE ( Satnrday.Mareh 86. 1821
CAPE MAY STAR AMD WAVE 1 Published by STAB AND WAVE PUR CO. 1 (Incorporated) ^ ' ALBERT R HAND. President j CAPE MAY, NEW JERSEY • , A. LEON EWING ... Manager \ SUBSCRIPTION PRICE JL50 PER ' YEAR IN ADVANCE This paper is entered at the post- j office as second -cIsbs postal matter. X T t^eTjSerIoSp^m^^Iat'Ion j Publishing a communication in these columns does not necessarily imply editorial endorsement. I _________ v i Communications will not be"* con- , lidered unless signed. I WINTER FISHING - — m . i Vacation fishing can scarcely give I , us an idea of what a big thing ice- , . fishing has become. In one single day , fn winter, says Winston Fleming in j Illustrated World, 116 carloads of , frozen fish came into the United . States over the Canadian Pacific. j These big catches were not made ( the summer before and held till fish j "went up"; they were caught In nets through ten or twelve-foot holes in , the ice on the northern lakes in the £ middle of winter. j The first trip of the men who do } this winter-fishing may be fun, but , probably the novelty soon wears off. f The men must live for months ^at a ( time on the ice in such tents as they ] can erect there, putting up with very ( skimp comforts an3 no luxuries. • The fishing is done with huge dip i£ nets which scoop up hundreds of fish ( every time it is raised. The shaft ] through which, the net is lowered is kept open only by constant watching, { and the men must from oh'e hole ( to another to keep them all f»ee from f ice. v ] A single draw would satisfy Tne £ greediest fisherman in the States, but f up there in the fish country, tlie men j who make a business of fishing are t harder to please. One great net- { breaking haul after another is landed } each load being spread on the snow ( on top of the ice. Thus the fish pre- ( pare themselves for market and s where they are to be used at onrfe, a need no further treatment. Frozen ^ stiff, they can be shoveled like (- so f many chips into waitings bags And ( 6ent on their way to our cities, where they may be bought for less than a t third of tht price that fresh-caught fish bring. In spite of the low sell- , ing price, Canadian fish yield a fat j profit, because the fishing equip- ( ment costs so little. , - Organized fishing.crews, writes Mr. ( Winston, discard the old hand meth- ! ( od, and operate automatic nets which ( . raise and empty themselves wherirthe ■ catch reaches a certain weigm. This ( net's worst fault is that « cannot set J itself again, though in time ifcmay be j v taught that trick too; j Fish for local use are piled on to | sledges like so much cordwood, but ( those sent to us are dignified by being placed in hundred-pound pack- , ages and wrapped in sacking. This ( treatment never would do, of course, ( if* the fish Were not to be eaten soon. , Fish intended to be kept longer find . thejr way into snow-lined boxes, amlj later jnto cold-storage plants. When- | such a shipment arrives, the ^oldstorage folks open it and dip the sol- , idly contents into vats of junning ( water. The fish are so cold thaVthe , minute the water touches them it , freezes tight to them. Thus in an ice sweater, each fish is. provided with , its own cold storage plant,' where it . stays while it covers the next leg of its journey. Last year our coldstorage houses . toov in nearly ten million pounds of these frozen boarders. — (Sailors' Magazine. SIX MEN NOW REQUIRED FOR A ONE-MAN JOB Under present classification rules of the Shop Crafts^— which the railroads are now seeking to have terminated — such labor waste aj: illustrated in the following case is of constant occurrence: In order to change a nozzle tip up in the front end of a locomotive it is ' necessary: 1 — To call a boilermaker and his helper to open the door, because that is boriermaker's work; 2 — To call a pipeman and his helper to Remove the blower pipe, because that is pipemen's work; and . 8— To call a machinist and his help- " er to remove the tip, because that is machinist's work. The same three forces must be employed to put in the new tip. ~ ^ Before Federal control a machinist's helper or any handy man put in nozzle tip6 -alone. . Similarly, railroads are required to employ members of three crafts — machinists; sheetmetal workers and elec-
tricians and their helpers — to make a i repair to a locomotive headlight when J it was formerly handled by one or two The proceedings instituted by the railroads before the Railroad Labor Board in Chicago are to put an end to such practices as these, growing out of National Agreements, Rules and Working Conditions established under Federal control of the railroads. DANDELION GREENS SPELL HEALTH Nutrition Expert Shows How Foreigners are Wiser than We. "Their bbdies are starved for things. It is our foreign born rieighbors who are wise enough to realize that the best spring tonic is ; the edible green leaf of the dandelion." Miss Florence Powdermaker, nutrition specialist of the New Jersey State Agricultural College, remarked this as she looked out of her office : window at New Brunswick at the ■ and nearby field dotted with : figures — men and women, boys and girls, all with sharp knives and bags. They were dark skinned j and the women had shawls on their j '"As I look at them," she continued, , "another picture comes to my mind— . wind-swept, barren Kansas pioneer few years after the Civil War I , having. only a few erode buildings. . first bit of grass is beginning to , show and the cows are being turned ; out — many of them so weak from , poor feed and pot much of it, 'that they almost have .to be carried out. , fiRe women and children are out t<?o, . all of them- eagerly »searching the ] fields for the first bit of dandelion to ; make a 'mess of grepadt "In those days, the winter .diet was ! very motonous one- — hiead made ] from wheah and cornmeal. salt pork and bfeef, potatoes and some turnips. : there was a little cabbage stored in the cellar. There was no ' milk as the cows had scon dried up , of the poor feed. By springtime, every one was eager for 'green things' because their bodies were started for the substances which the dandelion and other 'leafy vegetables' ^contained: — Jugt as a cow cannot get along on"hats-iipd corn alone without alfalfa or some other form of leaf, so we must have leafy vegetables to supplement our cereals and root and tubvegetables. "The leafy vegetables are rich in their mineral content, supplying especially the necessary lime and iron the body. Other types of vegetables such as'potatoes, and milled 'cereals "contain very little of these two minerals. The leafy vegetables also j contain the vita mines which are so essential for proper growth in children and fot- the health and well be'ing of grown people also. The.small ' amount of proteins which they con- , tain is of 'good quality,' supplement- j , the proteins of the other vegeta- , , Besides all thi£ they are valua- j in preventing and helping to cure I constipation. "Why dq leaves differ so much from rco ts and tubers ? Probably be1 cause the part they play is so different. They are the actively working part of the plant and so have a dif- , ferent composition from the rest, j > Here is a list of leafy vegetables— 'tops, spinach, turnip tops, Swiss! chard, rape, lettuce, dandelion, kale, . water 'cress, collards, celery tops, dock, endive. And not only do these have special d lietary proper- 1 ties, but the modified leaves also contain these necessary food constituents, although " pty haps to a slightly ; lesser degree. The onion, for example, is nothing but a mass of thick-] ened leaves, so- is the cabbage, cauli- 1 ]. flower, and brdssels sprouts. Asparagus and string beans are also in this-| class, as the asparagus tip and the pod of tie string bean are modified • leaves. Issued by the State Qollege of Ag- ; riculture, March 2l, 1921. CHURCH OI?.T^FADVENT Rev. Paul Sturtevant Howe, Ph-D_ Rector SUNDAY SERVICES 8:00 A M. H<hy Communion > 10:30 A. M. Second services and ser- ; mon. 8:15 P. M. Sunday School. ; 4:00 P. M. Evensong , EETUEBED FBOM TBZ7 Mr. and Mrs. Henry 8. Rutherford . returned home on* Jfcmrtaj- nCter n delightful seven-weeks trip to Vew OrFrdnoisco ^Wh'lleL0,,r el'* ani1 Ban ■ they were the guests of their son. Clln- , ton. who holds a responsible position with a large Eaatefn corporation, and • enjoyed a number of automobile trips through the -surrounding country, prac- - Uci|hr covering the entire atate of -California. i PLAN WORK AND SAVE ) Start the saving habit and open an - account with the Security Trust Co. A Strong Institution.
THATS THE _ WORD Not Sick Exactly, Just Seem to Hate No Ambition An Awfnl Feeling Seldom Necessary Pepto-Mangan, The Red Blood Bnilder, Does Away with Languor If you don't feel like .d&htg things, you won't. If you wonder where some pepole get all their energy, the ; answer is from good food which in 1 turn makes rich, red blood. If your food does not give' the nourishment and vigor it should, it is \ rpost likely that your blood is so 1 weak that it needs a little extra help 5 for a time to build ti up to normal ] strength. Thousands of wen and women have ' been restored to vigorous health and : lasting happiness by Gude's Pepto- ' Mangan. This benefiicial blood tonic contains the very properties So vitally needed to improve the blood. : Pepto-Maiigan, if taken for a few : weeks, will enrich the blood and create thousands of the tiny red blood cells that are so "necessary to carry nour- i ishment and strength o etvery part of ] the body. Be suet to ask your druggist fm ; "Gude's" when you order Pepto- ; Mangan. For convenience it is pre- ' pared in liquid and tablet form; both possessing exactly the same medlci- j nal properties. "Gude's" is the genu- 1 ine Pepto-Mangan. Look for the | ' name "Gude's" on the package. — Advt |
Scaled bids will be received and open- £ ed at a regular meeting of the Board to > be held. Jn the Board Room, in the > Court Houae, Cape May Court Houae, > New Jersey. Tuesday, April 5th. l»tl. > for the following: V Furnlahing all material", toola .£ and labor required for the effl- V cient and proper cleaninn and £ ESTMSf £3% 3SS' ? on the trestle approaches to c the draw or the bridge known C as the "Holly Beach Bridge." in J acocrdance with the apeclflca- C tlona prepared by the County jy Engineer.--' G Specifications may be obtained upon X application to L. AL Rice, County En- V Bineer. Wlldwood. N, J. I Each bid muat . be accompanied by a S> certified check made payable to Harry A Headley. County Treasurer. In sum V equal to ten (ten per centum) per cent of the bid price. • V The Board • reserves the rlghUAo re- : if Ject any or all bids. V By direction of -the Board. f* 7 . IRVING FITCH. V Clerk. f , ? VOTZOI TO XJJDT CXIDITOBI V Estate of Muda C. EVlng Deceased. f Pdrsuant to the order of Harry 8. V Dough lass. Surrogate of the County of f Cape May, made on the S2nd day of j" March. A. D. 1921. on the application of ff" 'the subscribers. Executors, of -said deceased, notice Is hereby given; to the G creditors of said deceased to exhibit to J the subscribers bqder oath or affirms- C, tion their claims and demands against £ the estate of said deceased within nine months from the ZZn'd 'day of March A. £ 1922. or they' will be forever barred G of any action against the • subscribers, f Dated March 22nd, A. D. 1921. V LESLIE H. EWING. X ALAN DeP. EWING. V Executors. J* Samuel F. Eldredge. V Proctor. g> 8-26-9-861 _ V DET BZX.Z. VETOED ^ - On Tuesday. Governor Edwards sent £ to. the Legislature his veto of Mrs. G Ness- drastic State Prohibition En- £ forcement Biff which provided penalties G of 1600 fine or six months in Jail for £ violations similar to those of the Vol- y stead act: denied to alleged 1 offenders | Jury trials, and provided such violators y . must be tried berore the county Judges •> in the counties in which the alleged of- y fenders are commuted^ j A DIVOKCrC O BANTED y ! Mrs. Merlnda S. Hand has been grant- f1 ed a divorce from Richard R. Hand. 'V I decree was obtained by ex-Senator j" Lewis 1\ Stevens, ns counsel for Mrs. t | Hand. • C
' | SCHOOL STATISTICS > At the recent meeting of the County Chamber of Commerce In tills city, Superintendent of Schools, E. R. Bruny ate. "gave In the course of his address, the following tntereating county school statistics: showing the wonderful schoolprogress of our county schools In shout twenty years: y .1900 ' 1919 C Amount' expended for Teachers' salaries *27.«ai 83 8153.111. 09 C Amount expended for Manual Trninfftg 220 83 7.193 11 C • Total Amount Kxplteded for Schools Iti.100 00 3S1.7SS 31 C Valuation of school properties 71,810 Od' 772.089 00 !C Per qaplta cost of Education 12 05 10 83 , y District Indebtedness 13 81)0 00 506.700 00 C , "Average teachers salary' 386 00 863 00 € Total enrollment '-"lie 176ftfy ' Xj>tal number Teachers employed '68 184 y Number of High Schools....... I ' * 6 ^ N. S. KAHN 1 1 503 WASHINGTON ST., CAPE MAY § > I take pleasure in announcing an offi- 5 ) . cial opening on S 8 ; § SATURDAY, MARCH 19TH g ) ; with a very desirable line of Ladies' fur- w ! - 8 nishings, Easter Dresses, Coat Suits, g ) ; g Spring Coats, Fancy Sweaters and a very 6 ) • g Carefully selected assortment of Men's 8 ) 8 goods,- including- the celebrated DOUG- jy 5 ! ; )£ LASS'SHOES, and popular makes of Silk W j -|® and Madras Shirts and big line of Men's X ) ; g working clothes. g 5 1 S This Stock is all new and un_to the x ) 8 Minute. This means a . gretfr deal to the X ) X purchaser. / 8 5 X You are invited to come in and look X ) ■ X around, or shop in the same way you g ) g would at a large department store. 8 5 N. SyKAHN | i I = ^ \ Faint $2.70 per Gallon ] PURE LEAD AND ZINC \ j Interior Decorator, Wall Piper, Paints, Varnishes, Stains, Win- J dow Shades, PnttyvBrushes, Dry Colors, Fnmiture Polish. ] CAPE MAY AGENCY for U. S. N. Deck and Floor Paint » 1 Effecto Auto Finishes s W. LENOIR c^m^Vj. j
r00000"^ 1 Liberty Theatre j 1 Va&RiiKrfon g 8 Street X A MONDAY— IE. g Paramount presents S A WINSTON CHURCHILL'S POPULAR NOVEL JL g "THE INSIDE OF THE CUP,, 2 ' SPECIAL MATINEE TODAY J f ft TUESDAY— • 2 A BIG DOUBLE BILL j£ S • TOM MIX X 0 "The Road Demon" S X WM.S.HART § X "O'Malley of the Mounted" X 4 A ' THEIR LATEST PRODUCTIONS - fl » Two Shows V and 9 P. M. /" No Advice in Prices X WEEDNESlBtY— I ' ~ X CONSTANCE TALMADGE X 2 - "Betsy's Burglar" X W THURSDAY— " . ' ' s . 7^,,. ' S* g WELL ROGERS O ^ "Guile of Women" / *8 A FRIDAY— ' * yf George Fitzmaurice Production vr X "PAYING THE PIPER" ' 9 A Mr. Fitzmaurice directed "ON WITH THE DANCE" and V? 'THE RIGHT TO LOVE" Featuring MAE MURRAY * .Q SATURDAY— ~ : ' Q* g FRIENDLY ENEMIES g vr Cartland-Luxnley Stock Co. § Q A BROADWAY TRIUMPH ft The {freatest blending of humor and pathos ever attempted A on the stage. The play in whigh SAM BERNARD and LOUIS V yr MANN scored their greatest success. C5 XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX) r , , - r | \ COX'S 1 1 1 j NEW PALACE I X I foot of Washington street : S ^ monday, MARCH 2STH— 8^ ~ g Romaine Fielding X A Supported by aiLaU star cast in A § "WOMAN'S MAN" M ^ Romaine Yielding who has long been a star, has selected A A this story to bring back the popularity that he enjoyed from A y£, his many admirers before his enlistment in the Navy during W cTJ the world war. This is his first production since his famous Cp A Goldw.vn success "For'the Freedom of the World." A W PHANTOM FOE— CHAPTER 11 - RGL1N COMEDY V? ft PATHE NEWS ft ft TUESDAY, MARCH 29TH— 7 , ft A Here's the' show we've been advertising as JoL X "THE FINEST SHOW OF THE SEASON" and you'll all Agree A X "THE SWANEE.RIVER QUARTETTE" A A THE BEST NEGRO QUARTETTE IN AMERICA X Colored singers from the Sunny South offering plantation V£ ££ melouies. ana jazzy "bints", the like, of which have never be. ft A Yore been heard in Cape May. , Besides singing, the quartette. A ^introduces banjos, guitars and mandolins. a O IN ADDITION ft g 3 ACTS OF NIXON VAUDEVILLE § Iff The names guarantees the show. You've seen NIXON shows ft, ft and YOU know. In addition to all the above p FEAUURE A PICTURE which appeared in' the Cosmopolitan Magazine and X was written by Albert Payson Terhune — v f THE TRUANT HUSBAND ® PLEASE NOTE — The show starts at 7:15- with the feature Vf picture which will also close the performance. The vaudeville and qtiartette will appear ONCE ONLY stating at about 8:45. ft A * ADMISSION A 55 C^NTS X A WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY, MARCH 30TH and 31RT— X A The "Evening Bulletin" says that beinj^ a_ wife is the poor- VT est paid job in the world, Should this tondition continue to ex. Olive Tell in X § "A WOMAN'S BUSINESS 5 ft If it is a man's business . to make' a living for his family- ft A and a woman's business to make a home for that family ai»d-4f A Vf the man has a right to change his joh, has the woman a right A ft to change hers. A *>lay of passions, of love, of tears, of wo. ft A Man's wiles and woman's sorrows. A A : FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, APRIL 1 and 2— ... . ' . ■ A Mildred Harris Chaplin » A With Myrtle Stedman, Irving Cummings and George Stewart — A A Anita'B good-looking brother — in A X - "OLD DAD" X A The story of a girl who followed her another's footstep*— . A v« V and Old Dad who stood true to both. ' *f * ft ADDED^-the second episode, of the new scrial that started last ft A week wRh a whiz of-kdtion— V- , ft " X "THE SON OF TARZAN" X A The Most Remarkable Serial in Yeats— AND X. X LARRY SEMON g A in his iatest two reel comedy A X "THE SPORTSMAN" X (XXXXXXXXX)oO<XXXXXXXXXj©<XXXX

