Cape May Star and Wave, 6 August 1921 IIIF issue link — Page 7

Saturday, August 6, 1921 CAPB MAY STAB AMD WAVE Ffcjft Owi »*"0 — - * «-

nw< on Summer Showing in Tailor Made Suits \ and Top 'Coats ... /.>- L ' We offer you suits of 'such character and quality as you will delight to wear. Come see our beautiful line without obligation to buy. We know you will be pleased with the great variety and we will fit you absolutely. * Best Material and Workmanship Guaranteed Charles Scherer 1 1

223 Decatur Street H hi*

Cape May, N. J. - ^ -o

I Vulcanizing I AUTOMOBILE TIRES REPAIRED § § 8 years experience in renairing all Q § Tires and Tubes. Work 'positively if H guaranteed. We carry in Stock the a , 5 GENERAL TIRE noted for its fine g 5 appearance and long mileage. Fab- /J Q ric tires are guaranteed for 7,000 w . • § miles and Cord tires for 10,000 miles, it 2 C. E. HOLMES s A 403 Washington St., Cape May, N. J. § KEYSTONE 425 OPEN-^iA, THE YEAR THE GLENWOOD 7^\ TABLE UNEXCELLED 509 TIUGHES STREET ' CENTRALLY' LOCATED CAPE MAY, N. J. Mrs. Lillian Rott, Prop. , ^ g j . \ KEYSTONE PHONES CAPE MAY 1-78— WILDWOOD 1-73 Konowitch Brothers GROCERIES, MEATS, PROVISIONS Butter— Eggs— Fruit— Produce— Etc. Orders Promptly Filled SM?»rS,"M " '"wk^WOOD™"" (Electrical Contractor... INSTALLATION OF MOTORS MAKING A SPECIALTY OF STORE AND WINDOW LIGHTING A. D. REEVES KEYSTONE PHONE 0O9-D3 CAPE MAY. N. J. / Cape May Electric Shoe Repairing Shop A. SuDAK NEbLIN SOLES AND RUBBER.HEELS A SPECIALTY "* Wc. make a SPECIALTY of IU^PAIRING SHOES WHILE YOU WAIT Bootblack in Building for Ladles and Gentlemen. Shoe Sundries and ^iQCTnda of Polishes Jor Sale. -505 Washington Street" . . Cape May, N. J, R. M. WENTZELL 33 PERRY STREET Furniture Bedding Rug» Linoleum Estimates on all kinds of furniture will be furnished promptly. ^ KEYSTONE PHONE GOODS DELIVERED

I A RELIABLE BUILDER ) Otis M. Townsend 218 Ocean St. Cape May, N. J.

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DEUYKUXS IN ANT QUANTTTT OF LUMBER ta any length, width ar Urickkneas far any parpaat whatever— that's the offer we make yon today. Wp nut hare ample stocks of Masoned. measured timbers in onr yard to bo able to make sack a broad offer. We have! And onr prices wfll save yoa money. Ask for oatiauteo.

GEORGE 0GDEN & SON CAPE MAY, N. L CHAMBERS FISH MARKET Fresh Fish of All Kinds in Season Soft Shell Crab# and Fresh Picked Crab Meat PHONE ORDERS WILL RECEIVE PROMPT ATTENTION = Keystone Phone 206 Bell Phone 17-W i JERE CHAMBERS, Prop. ; 316 and 318 Mansion St., Cape May, N. J.

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2 Violin Instruction | ; O ^ THE LEADER OF THE CITY ORCHESTRA W J 8 rGUSTAV BLENK g O Has opened a summer course for Violin pupils. Q \ Vf Arrangements Can Be Made at )5 i 2 Convention Hall g 1 Charles York Stites York yoRk-brothers Carpenters and Builders ESTIMATES CHEERFULLY GIVEN ON ALL KINDS OF BUILDINGS SATISFACTION GUARANTEED P. 0. Box 661

Da you know you can roll $ORaed OdamSsSr lOcts from ona bag of ij GENUINE v HuilDurhah ; TOBACCO I a

COMPLETION OF j TURTLE GUT ROAD ' k TO OPEN TWO MILE . BEACH FOR BUSINESS * '• 8 The completion of the Turtlo^Qut 1' Road will mean th^opening of Two a Mile Beach ■ for commercial activity i' and it has long been the aim of busir j ness interests in Cape May County s to have Cold Springs Harbor devel- s opeti as a comme; mat' harbor. The greatness of the project can oily be t estimated by the amount of effort v spent in its development. - It is. re- g ported that the Pennsylvania Rail- I road Company may in the near fut- fc ure run all of i" •> cars over to Two I Mile Beach on tracks which will be a on the west side of the road. This s would take away from Wildwood b Crest the stoking of the engines, turn table and all other objectionable t features objected to by cottagers and 1 residents for years. t The opening of Two Mile Beach as \ a commercial development will mean £ millions of dollars to the State of £ New Jersey, Cape May County and 1 the financial institutions of the beach. The Board of Freeholders of i Qape May County -are actively en- 1 gaged in securing tke co-operation of 1 the State and Federal authorities in i insuring the permanency of this Turtle Gut Road- — - i

f Everything for QUALITY - nothing for show 8 q^HAT'S.OUR IDEA in making 1 CAMELS— the Quality Cigarette. / "Why, just buy Camels and look at the package! / It's the best packing science has' devised to keep lt cigarettes fresh and full flavored for your taste. x ' Heavy paper outside— secure foil wrapping inside =i and the revenue stamp over the end to seal the pack- *: - ' X • age and keep it air-tight And note this! .There's nothing flashy about the Camel package. No extra wrappings that do not improve the smoke. Not a cent of. needless expense^ that must come out of the qualify of the tobacco. Camels wonderful and exclusive Quality o 1i merit alone. / Because, men smoke Camels whq>^ant the r- taste and fragrance of the finest tobaccos, -expertly hiujf II blended. Men smoke Camels for Camels smooth, Si irifes refreshine mildness and their freedom from cigaretty aftertaste. j Camels are made for men who think for them- - '• .selves. » '

Samel R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY, Win»Itm-S»l«m, N. C. .

DEBONAIR KATZ OUT ON BAIL FINED AND SENTENCED FOR RUM SMUGGLING BY JUDGE ELDREDGE, HIS ATTORNEYS GET HIM OUT ON $2,«M BAtLSentenced to six months in the Gounty jail and fined $500 to boot on Friday, Emanuel Katz, proprietor of the Hotel Whittle of Atlantic City, appeared in his haunts Saturday and greeted .his friends who were lamenting the incarceration of . "Manny." Katx was tried at Cape May Court House by Judge Henry H. Eldredge, who denied him a trial by jury and imposed the; heaviest fine and sentence possible ordering Katx to begin serving his sentence at once. His stay in the lock-up was -short, his attorneys securing his release on a writ of certiorari for a review of the case by State Supreme Court. The order came from Supreme Court Justice Katxenbach who was found at his summer home at Spring Lake, N. J. Bail was fixed at $2,000. Katz announced to his friends that did like the Court House jail. , "At that ila^ot ruch a bad place," •said he, "I had ice cream and cake and the sheriff is a bully good fellow who promised to make my stay pleasant as possible, but I am goto defer serving tlvat sentence as long as I can. I have no desire to. spend these torrid days in a stuffy jail." Katz was captured as a result of the, activities of Wildwood people who testified that they saw the truck into* the Richardson .Channel Fish plant and come out laeaq^/with the later captured in Ocean City. Katz got away in a Stutz roadster after knocking Chief of Police Johnof Ocean City from his running: 1 - Federal and local authorities are trying to prove that the captured load is only one of many shipped in tl>e same manner. The two Wildwood drivers of the truck were tried and sentence suspended- Katz was arrested in Atlantic City and later and sentenced./ # In the meanvnno there- is nc let up, 'it appears, in rum traffic and reports 1 from Atlantic City show that that is as wet as ever but the wet: ' 'ness costs a .bank roll to annex. Coast Guards Not Instructed In the mean time there is considerable of watchful waiting on thk = eraoie oi waiciuui waning on ujm

I part. of the Jersey coast guards wh6 are daily expecting orders to joht in the patrol 'of the coast for. smugglers. On Friday twenty air and seaplanes swept across Delaware Bay, sixteen taking a course along the coast and four running the shores of Delaware - Bay Reports' have it that- - they were scouting for mystery ships iUid booze in wholesale lots"/- — PILGRIMS' £11 1 r «J0 FEET LONG Admiral Bowles Finds Mayflower . Had Beam cf I'O Feet Xiie dimensions of the Pilgrim' ship Mayflower, ar. gleaned from records of Lloyd's of -London, were given in a recent . address by Rear- Ad- • miral Francis T. BowlS, as length, 90 feet, beam 20 feet, depth of hold ^ . 12 to 14 feetHe said tb^, figures were obtained.' , after a personal research into May •> flower history in Connection with the celebration; of the- tercentenary' the landing of the Pi!grims;He added that the- records gaVe the Mayflower's capacity as "100 tuns" which was the unft' for measuring Bordeaux wine at the time Pilgrims sailed - In sueing for "hebrt balm," the -- complainaoJ$ permits her feelings (?) to he. torn in shreds She invites the turning of the knife in the alleged wound on account, of which she is sueing. It sounds like sqrt of a "balmy" proceeding, doesn't it? > It has been computed by a clergy- , man that Solomqn's Temple cost $4,. ^ eoo, 000,000. It must have been a cost plus 10 per tent -job. ' •- . ,• Ignorance is bliss — particularly in the matter of knowing the cost per - mile of driving an automobile.

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