PM.au \ CAPE MAT STAB AMD WAVB Srtuniay, July 16, 1«21 ' L ■■■■■■(■(■■■■(■■I
The best fabric tire made for heavyservice N or rough roads — RED-TOP % Extra PlyrHwr Tread 30 x 3i $22.00 Reduction on ail styles and sixes A New Low Price on a Known and Honest Product I WEST END GARAGE | fl J. T. Bennett & Co., Propt. n Q On Wait Parry Strait .... J art Over Railraad A 0 Prompt and Skillful Attention to S 1 YOUR MOTOR 1
Q Specialists in jCt Ignition Work A Battery Service © Acetylene Welding ^X0=0o0e0c0o0o0o0«c0c0
Sides & Service Accounts v for a Willard and Western K Electric Batteries ©
WHWMWHKHSHSHSMffiHifiMifiMiliB •n ■ ■ I FERTILIZER § L£ B ■ L*t us have your orders for your late crop. N jjj S'fl to $12 reduction on all the better grad- ■ ifi es. Also want to call your attention to the 2 | McCORMICK MOWERS I :| the universal mower that does the work. 5 ALSO POTATO DIGGERS B | We are agents for several of the best B £ makes. TRUCK GASKETS AND HAMPERS H I R. T. JOHNSON. Est. ! A. H. SWAIN, Manager 1 ERMA. NEW JERSEY 3 ■sfiasaffinsaifiBifiBsatfiByiBsnuia
NEWS OF INTEREST TO LOCALFARMERS DOINGS IX THE FIELD OF SCIENTIFIC AGRICULTURE. Don't let your land bare and idle this fail and winter. Cover crops, especially legumes, not only help hold the plant food already in the soil but add to it. If in doubt as to, the best cover crop for your farm, consult your county agent or write to the College of Agriculture at New Brunswick for information^ These hot summer days the farm animals need more water to drink just as you and the hired men do. The horse will be grateful for a refreshing drink between meals, and the cows and chickens will express their thanks for an abundant supply of cool clean water in terms of more milk and eggs. If you would be surd of getting a crop of egg-plants, cucumbers, cantaloupes, as well as other garden vegetables, witch out for the plant lice. A nicotine spray will get them, but <lon't wait until the under sides of the leaves are covered before you begin the treatment If the New Jersey fanner would succeed in growing alfalfa, he must be sure that his seed comes from the proper source. Foreign-grown seed as a rule has not been satisfactory for New Jersey conditions. But there is a great deal oL/oreign seed on the market at this fshie, especially from furkestan, Italy and South America. Some retail dealers are unknowingly selling foreign seed as donfestic. It is said that some of this foreign seed has been shipped intcNthe western seed-pro-ducing -states and reshipped from J those states as domestic seed. As poor seed is one of the most import- . ant causes of failure with alfalfa, we j cannot be too careful on this point: { Tests indicate that Kansas iseed i? ' as good as any for South Jersey, and ? Northwestern seed for North Jersey, ? considering the division line between » North and South Jersey to run from ) Trenton Junction to Princeton and } Nfw Brunswick. , .Alfalfa has demonstrate itself to , be onte of the best cash crops is the state- Compared with other hay, alfalfa stands high in food value. It ' is also hardy when grown under suitI able conditions. Last spring when I severe freezes killed the other cjovj ers, alfalfa livid "through. ! A SAVINGS ACCOUNT AND I HEALTH ' Chiropractic is a new sciehce I which has been tried and proven to I be one of the best methods, when I properly applied, of assisting nature . to regain normal function. The brain, t spinal cord, and the nerves are the means by which impulses are sent ! out by the governing nerve centers I to regulate and control the growth, I circulation, breathing, digestion, as- | siinilation and elimination of waste | products. Any interference of the nerve along its course, which will hinl 'cTS^f nerv.e impulses to reach their ' I destination, will cause impaired nerve stimuli and functional disturbances called disease- Pressure on the : [ nerve may occur anywhere along its I course, but most often where it passes out thru the intervertebral foramina. Slight displacements, or sub- | luxations of the vertebrae will narrow that foramen, or opening, and : cause pressure on the nerve, which I will impair the nerve impulses. Dis- : I ease is the result. The Chiropractor's work is to adjust the subluxated ver- 1 | tebrae and displaced tissues to their normal position, thereby relieving I the pressure ' and 'tension on the nerves and bring about normal nerve i I function. This is called health.— Ad-"" I vertisement. , , , . INJURED IN AUTO CRASH Millville Child, Injured in Wildwood, : Declared in Serious Condition I The Sunday afternoon local Pennsylvania .Railroad northbound train , struck a large" touring car, badly ' damaging it and seriously injurirjg I one of the. occupants. The car was I driven by John CJ. Long, 30 years I I old of -Millville. With Kim were his | wife and (laughter, Saraji,. seven years old. i- : j The child was thrown; from, the I car when the train hit it and receivI cd concussion of the brain. Her con ditlon is critical. The mother escaped injury by jumping from the machineThe father's injuries are minor. The "accident' happened at Lincoln avenue and -the Pennsylvania Railroad. The child is now at Kelchner's Hospital, this city. ?
' RADIO CONCUSS I SHOWS £S VALUE CAPE slay STATION DOES ITS PART IN DIRECTING BATTLESHIP DIVISION FIVE FROM e HAMPTON ROADS TO BOSTON. ,1 A remarkable demonstration of the t peace-time value of the radio comt pass, a war development, was furnt ished during the recent passage of e battleship division five of the Atlan- .. tic Fleet from Hampton Roads to Boston, according to an announcement at the Navy Dept. The entire n voyage was made in a heavy fog and ^ navigation all the way was accom , pi ished by shore radio 'compass stations, submarine bells iand soundings, (j not a light or fixed kid to navigat: s tion being sighted on the trip. y "From the time departure was take en until Boston lightship was picked up not a light vessel or lighthouse was seen," says a report from Vice a Admiral H. P. Janes, commanding the i- battleship force. "The fog was so n dense that during mosf. of the passt age the ships astern of the division i, flagship were invisible. Had it not s been for the radio compass station u the arrivavl of battleship division five would have been greatly delayed. This practical demonstration of radio d direction .finding is a clear indication t of the military value of radio come pass stations and of the necessity for continued development along this s lines' "Radio compass stations have now ■1 been established along the coasts so 8 that vesels at sea in -foggy weather - can communicate with the stations 1 and in a few minutes establish their • correct position. About 250# ships t now receive the service each' month, It was announced." In the trip of, the battleship divi1 sion of the, Atlantic fleet, the Cape 5 May Radio Compass Station which is ' located alongside the Coast Guard - Station, did its full share in directing a safe passage for the big boats. , — AS RUSSJA "PROGRESSED" ' "I stand for government ownership of the railroads and nationalization of the mines; for health insurance, ' old- age pensions, sand employment in- ' suranee — all progressive measure's," declares John L. Lewis of the Federa ' tion of Labor. Those policies are progressive, all right, but they prog1 ress directly towards the sort of thing that has rained1 Russia. Nationalization' of industries - and the various phasfes of so.cial insurance are merely polite names for insidious class legislation that would inevitably • destroy this government if they gained the ascendency1 • It costs a lot to live in America, ' but, after. all, it is worth the price. location'oFfireTlarm"! TELEGRAPH STATIONS Keys Can Be Obtained in Vicinity of Alafm Boxes 25 — Washington Street, near Schel- > lenger*s Landing. 32 — Washington Street, near Union. 47 — Washington Street and Madison Avenue. 54 — Lafayette and Bank Streets. 58 — Broad and Eimira Streets. 65— ^ttsburgh and New Jersey Avenues. 69— "Stockton Avenue, between Jeffeieon and Queen Streets. 73 — Franklin and Washington Streets. , 75 — Howard Street, opposite StockAvenue. 82— Columbia Avenue and Gcerney Street. 84 — Ocean Street, near Bgach Avenue. 91 — Broadway and West Perry Street 92— Broadway and Beach Avenue. 93 — Perry Street, near Bridge. 94— rSouth Lafayette and Grant Streets. ' 95 — Washington and Jackson Streets. 97 — Columbia Avenue and Decatur Street. 98 — Washington and Ocean Sheets. SPECIALS 51.25. Batiste Bloopers for 75, cents. $2.00 Chemise for $1.25. " A New Lot of Royal Shirt Waists and BON TON AND ROYAL WORCESTER- CORSETS - B. T. HAZLETT 323 WASHINGTON STREET Cape May, N. J. '
LBBAL ADYKRTTSnfG . SPECIAL MASTER'S SALE ■ By virtue of a decree to me directed,- issued out of the Cpurt of ChmnS eery of the State of New Jersey, in a i. certain cause in partition, wherein Frederick Arnold et ux., a ft eom- ' plainants and Louis W. Arnold et als., i. are defendants, bearing date thetwentieth day of June, 1921, I will expose to sale at public auction to the highest bidder on MONDAY, AUGUST 1, 1921 " at two o'clock in the afternoon, on the r premises a£- the , west corner of De - catur Streets and the Beach Drive, id o the City of Cape May, in the County of Cape May and Stale of New Jersey, , e ALL the two following described d lots or. parcels of land situate at the - west corner of Decatur Street and . Beach Drive, excepting the beach and strand lying between high water ' mark (that is, the southerly line of - Beach Drive), and low water mark of the Atlantic Ocean, In the said City and County of Capo May and State ■ of New Jersey, and are Lots marked d and designated Numbers Twenive five (25) and Twenty-six (26) on a e certain diagram of Atlantic Hotel propeity and Lots sold by Alden C. Scovel, Master^ hi Chancery, on the 0 thirty-first day' of. August, eighteen - hundred and seventy-px, at public n sale at the said City of Cape May and , therein bounded and described as one ' lot, vta:— n BEGINNING at a point in the old e center line. of said Decatur Street,. at L the East corner of Lot No. 24 on said diagram sold by the said Master to William King; thence (l)^outh- " eastwardly along said center line of • Decatur Street to the Beach or shore . r of the Atlantic Ocean; -thence along the same line extended to TOW water mark of said T)cean; thence (2) along said low water mark of said ocean, v westwardly until a distanee of sev- „ enty and five-tenths feet is obtained measured on a line at right angles with said ceijter line, of Decatur 8 Street; thence (3) northwestwardly r on a line parallel with said center s line of said Decatur Street -to the northwest side line of Beaeh Drive; '' thence same course continued and binding by Lot No. 27 on said dia- - gram, one hundred and seven feet to a Lot No. 24; thence (4) Northeasts wardly binding by said Lot No. 24 " on a course at right angles with said ' center line of said Decatur Street, ? seventy and five-tenths feet to the place of- beginning. Containing of upland clear of' beach, and streets, Six . thousand five hundred and seven square, feet of land 'more or less. AND ALSO ALL that parcel of land ffow.ed by Jde water lying in the City and County of Cape May and State of New Jersey, described as ' follows:— BEGINNING at a point in . the high water mark (at full spring • tide) of the Atlantic Ocean in . the • southerly line of Beach Drive, fifty feet westerly (measured in said line of Beach Drive) from a point in said ■ line of Beach Drive where the cen- j • ter line of Decatur Street produced r southerly would intersect said line of . ^ Beach Drive; and running from ; thence southerly and at right angles : with the exterior line established by , ! the Riparian' Commissioners of the ; State of New Jersey, and laid down . on a Map entitled "Map of Cape May City in the County of Cape i May, N. J,, .shoeing the . exterior, line established in front thereof by the Riparian Commissioners of -the State, of New Jersey 1876" filed in the Of- • fice of fhgJ5ecrctary of the State of New Jersey at Trenton, nine hundred and sixty-five feet more or less -to said exterior line; thence westerly < along said exterior line twenty-eijfht 1 and fifty-two hundredths feet; thence northerly -and parallel with the line first ran down to said exterior line. ' , -nine .hundred and sixty-seven and fifty hundredths feet to the high water mark aforesaid of the Atlantic Ocean, at a point formed by the intersection of the southerly line* of Beach Drive with the westerly line of the land now or late of Victor , Denizot, produced southerly to said Beach Drive; thence Easterly along high water mark aforpsaiij'of tne Atlantic Ocean to the place of beginning. / SUBJECT to any rights heretofore , granted by the Legislature to the City of Cape May in and oiler, the beach strand lying u<>twe#n high' and ■ low. water mark of said Atlantic . Ocean. AND. FURTHER UNDER , AND SUBJECT to the right to. erect, build and extend the Southern or I Ocean end of the Cape May Ocean | Pier, twenty-five feet westward from the East line of the "fJrooerty lastly above described; with the hereditaments and appui±6Bai»«!Sr' Including the estate andrWiterest in dower of the defendants Theresa K. Arnold, J widow of Frfderick Arnold, deceased, in the saidf premises, and including - the inch^Nfe right of dower of the defendant E'sie Arnold, wife of said Charles C. Arnold-, and the inchoate right of dower of the co-complain- . ant Caroline Arnold, wife of the com- " -plainant' Frederick Arnold in said premises. Conditions will be made known at the time and place of the sale. JAMES M. E. HTLPRETH,. Special Master in Chancery . j .of New Jersev 214 Ocean Street, Cape Mav, N.J. ! J. SPICER LEAMING, Esq., Solicitor of ComnJainants. Hughes aifri Fpuiklin Streets. Cape Mav, N. J. Dated July 7th. 19?1 7-9-4UPF $43.52 . ' . Fat men should take up witlWirth ; control. ' ' > I Good taste is a merchantable commodity. I Le?t we forget — health is the basis of. wealth. '! -
Sheriff's Sale By virtue of a writ of plurire exel ration. Fieri Facias, to me directed, , issued out of the Court of Chancery . of New Jersey, on the 22nd day of t April, A. D. 1921, in a certain eanse 5 wherein Li da J. Calhoun is nomI plainant, and John S. Newman and , Joanna J- Newman are defendants, I shall expose to sale at public .vendue, on . MONDAY, JULY 18, 1921 . between the hours of twelve and five I o'clock p. m., to wit at one-o'clock in , the afternoon of said day, (Standard . Time) at the Sheriff's office, in Cape May Court House, Cape May County, ] New Jersey: , All that certain mortgaged premtsI es, with the appurtenances, id the j bill of complaint in the said cause r particularly set forth and described, ' j that is-tb say: — I All that certain tract of land situ- , ate in the city and county of Cape - > May and state of New Jersey: BeI ginning at .the N. W. Cor. of Mary- - land and Reading Aves. and extendi ing thence West along Maryland Ave. I 180 ft hy North 125 ft. Being lots . Nos. 964 to 969 inclusive, on plan i "A" 'Cape May Real Estate Comi pany. ». : Amount due under decree is $1,- /" j 237.94, with interest and Sheriff's . fees to be added. The above property will be sold 1 subject to taxes and municipal claims t since January 1st, 1918. i MEAD .TOM LIN, Sheriff. r Dated June 22, 1921. " Horace F.- Nixon, Sol'r. [ 6-25-4t-pf$13.26 [ CAPE MAY COUNTY ORPHANS' t COURT ; In the Matter ot\ ON PETITION the Estate of I FOB SALE OF r ALLKROT. ! ' haynes, oromro Deceased. J SHOW CAUSE. • ROSALIE G. HAYNES, Adminia- ! tratrix of the estate of ALLIRRO T. . HAYNES, Decefsed, having exhibdt- , ed under oath a true account Of the . personal estate and debts of- said deI ceased, whereby it appearing that ■ the personal estate of the said Allirro T. Haynes, deceased, is insuffi- - ; cient to pay his debts, and requiring . the aid of the Court in the premises. IT IS, on this second day of June, ' in the year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred and twenty-one, order- , ed that all persons interested in the ( lands, tenements and hereditaments . and real estate of the said AlHrro T. ; Haynes, appear before this Court on ' the third day of August, A. D., 1921, ' at ten o'clock in the forenoon, to : show cause why so much of the lands, ; t elements and' . hereditaments and | real estate of trie said Allirro T. \ | Haynes, deceased, should not be sold as would be sufficient to pay his debts. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that this order be published hi thp "Star and Wave," one of the newspapers of 1 the County _of Cape May, and] State of New Jersey, for six weeks, at 1 least once in each week. 1 • HENRY H. ELDREDGE, 1 , Judge. ■ 6-4-7P677-P. F. $24-86 PLAN WORK AND SAVE Start the saving habit and open an account with the Security Trust Co. A Strong Institution. U. S. MAIL LINE s Am— «— 4F.1IHI n— "i— tai- Wr 2J-A* 14-3— ,2» JT.wVi ilw— -KbX>^WZ7-a— High SUnd.rd Serrlcr to Snuinl and Thlrdtlr— tmm ay.'hi i1 5 1 "tiy vfe MSfcS! " abx itru. , i jTfehSis U. a. MAIL STEAMSHIP CO. MRS. JANE BROWN DRESSMAKER 821* Corgie Street "Cape May N. J. KEYSTONE PHONE 169-R

