Fields Helps to Make .r • "Standard" the Best Gasoline
(I ^^raLrJr\ "PETROLEUM varies greatly according to its source. ~ IvKASOlByir ) A Some crude oil is best for one purpose while other Nji^i^V grades are, ? u per io I' for different products. In many years of experimental work we have discovered that fS ~-tE~i our widely varying sources of supply — covering almost j T every developed -field — are of great value in con tributing to the ideal balance in gasoline. Hm!5w You cannot get out of the motor anything more than ytiiiyf you put into it — via the cauburetor. No amount of skill | j | in operation will make a one-sided gasoline act like a i I "balanced fuel.' * A one-sided, gasoline may be quick-starting, or be effiIII _hl cient in some other one respect, but it is not capable '■ h rW} °f delivering the all-round efficiency of a w.ell-balanced Jj -tinK I gasoline. A gasoline of proper balance can be depended L J £ djflu W upon not only for quick-starting but for smooth-running, " -r\m 1 maximum mileage, and a clean motor as well. I ' It is the easiest thing in the world lo test this improved 'll^ l h — — - gasoline yourself. Wait until your tank is nearlv empty l^l I and then try out "STANDARD" MOTOR GASOLINE ?IS2!13H on hills with which you are familiar. | You can buy it wherever you motor. I STANDARD, OIL COMPANY i L w$ ^ (New Jersey) ; — .
MRS. JANE BROWN DRESSMAKER 821 Corgie Street Cape May N. J. KEYSTONE PHONE 169-R in artistic colors. W. LENOIR j "^-Cape Mav. New Jersey
| FISHING CREEK (Staff Correspondent) ( Mrs. Carl Schwerdt is -entertaining J . her mother, Mrs. Handsome of Fox- i ' chase, Pa., for a short time. . t Quite a few from pur village attended Seayille Camp Meeting on • Sunday last. • Enoch Miller, Jr., is having a new. < » bungalow built in Erma. - 1 Mrs. Lemuel Schellenger is enter- ' taining Miss Elsie Bradway of Phil- i ^lelphia for a few days' ' Ralph Sheets has purchased a 1 Ford .Sedan.- ' •Alfred Raff is having a front porch ' added to Jtis home; , • - < - The village extends its sympathy < to Learning Ewing in his bereave- < merit. Mrs. Ewing passed away' on : Tuesday last. - Richard Hemingway, wife and son, ' Mr. Hoffmire an5 Mrs. Montgomery;' 1 of Oak Lane, "Pa., are visiting Jacob ' Barnett for a week. Mrs. Eleanor Williams entertained 1 ; company from Atlantic City for. a < few Jays last week. Good taste is' a merchantable commodity.
HOLINESS CAMP MEETING The eleventh j'ear of- the Holiness' Camp Meeting at Erma-Bennetts "will begin on September 9th 1 and will close on September 18th this year. . .. This catnp is directed by the Cape May Holiness Association in q grove at the rear of the. Tabernacle M. jjL Church which is situated qn Wc gravel- road about half Way between the Reading and 'the Pennsylvania , rftilway stations; | Evangelist Willidm O. Nease, of ■ Olivet, Ohio, will have charge of this -season's, meetings and- j- War Lowman ami Airs Lowman wili . conduct the song services. The Reverend Myrtle Pelley, of Ohio, will conduct the children's, meetings every afternoon. Special 'days win include Special all day meeting .Thursday, Septem- ■ 15th and Missionary Meeting Am ■ afternoon, September 16th;. ; Arrangements have been made' for ■ boarding and lodging at a nominal ■ charge aijd teiits will be rented >for ■ 82-00 for tlte entire camp. " \ . If you want anything in Cape May ; advertise in the STAR & WAVE.
TIDE TABLE j ;. - ; • , ..j TIME FOR HIGH AND ) LOW WATER AT COLD SPRING , INLET, HEREFORD INLET, DEDUCT FIVE MiN- > ' H£ES ► . Copied from the. U. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey .Almanac published , the Department- of Commerce, , Washington, D. C. AUGUST TIDES A'. M. f P. -M. . ' High- Low High Low 18 7 23 1 24 7 38 ' 1 35 19 . 8 01 2 03 8 15 2-18 20 8 37 2 -38 f 51 2 51 21 - 9 13 3 12 9 25 3 27 . -22 - 9 47- 3 45 ltr 00 4 03 ,23 10 23 4 18 . 10 37 ' 4 43 24 11 03' 4 54 . 11 20 5 .30 , 25' 11-52 5 6 24 26 0 14 « 31 12 52 7 30 27 1 22 7 89 2 00 8 39 28 2 34 8 51 3 08 9 45 29 3 48 '9 58 4 13 10 45 30 4 46 11 01 5 13 11 41 , 31 6 43 11 59 6 09
ASK PROTECTION FORJBOSSING SAFETY GATES Ah*l NStfcH-i MAN ARE NEEDED AT BUR-' LEIGH FREEHOLDERS THINK, j A committee h« been appointed to discuss the placing *>f a .watchman | and- safety gates at • the Burleigh , crossing, where ' one man was killed and four injured last week, with officials of .the Pennsylvania RailroadCharles Sloan, of 4251- Main street, Manayunk, was the man who was 1 killed. The committee was named by the Cape May county board of .freehold- j - ers, the boards of liable of Wildwood ■ and Cape May and the city commissioners of both cities.. Six years ago • an entire family Was killed at the. i' saiue crossing- - ' . Dr. Clarence S. Eldredge, Eye Spe- 1 cialist, of Philadelphia, wi|l be at Cape May for the Season. Those in I need of Glasses or having trouble | with their eyes can consult liim Evenings andT" Saturdays, Broadway and| Avenue, 'West Cape May. - 520-5-21-tf j
IIBFRTY DF PRFSS UPHELD BY HAYES POSTMASTER GENERAL DBCLHf ES TO ACT AS CENSOR tl' CEPT IN FLAGRANT CASES. - J Postmaster General Hayes recently ' ■ 1 informed the newspaper publisher* ' and editors of the United States thsthe does not propose to constitute *} himself a censor of the American . ... j press, nor will he permit the Postoffice Department to exercise any form of censorship. - Publications clearly' violating the Federal statutes prohibiting the ad. vocacy of "treason, insurrection, ot forcible resistance_to any law of the United States," M*r. Hayes announced, will be denied the use of the mails, as the law specifically provides, but no discriminations will b« made in the matter of second-clas* mail privileges. ■ -■? The Postmaster General's position was made plain in a statement addressed to the editors and publisher* in connection with the announcement that second-class mail privilege had been restored to the New York Volksieitung. Records to be Public In the future, Mr. Hays said, no sewset will be made of proceeding* . against publications adjudged in vio* _ lation of the law, and, therefore, non' ""mailable. The records in all such cases will be made public, and editor* and publishers will be urged U challenge any case in which they believe , '» the department "goes beyond a fair interpretation of the law." The Postmaster^ General's statement follows: "The New -York Volkszeitung "has made a new publication for secondclass priivleges- This application has received the usual consideration" of i the department and has. been approv- | ed- | "I want to again call the attention of the publishers to, the fact that I am not, and will not, allow myself to ! be made a censor of the press. I be- — ■ ! lieve that any publication that is enI titled to the use of the mails at all is- ; entitled to the second-class privileges I provided that it meets the requirements of the law for / second-clajs j matter. A publication once entered as Second-class matter is', -entitled to the very best and most prompt servt ice and to the least possible interfer- ' I ehce with its constitutional freedom of thought and action. Re- Tects Freedom of the Press "1 are, however, placed upon me by certain statutes responsibili-/ ties in this connection that must W upheld so long." as the law remains as . • » Lit is. I wifT-at* all times act with j moderation and consideration for the j freedom of the press, but I must and " will enfdrce in good faith, without | evoking technicalities, these . statutes declaring- certain matters unmailable, one of which is the act of June 15^ 1917 ,4,40 S- 230), providing thatiJS-', '"Every letter, writing, circular, • postal card, picture, engraving, photograph, newspaper, pamphlet, book or other publication , matter or thing of any kinTl containing matter advocating or urging treason, insurrection orNoi-ciTile resistance to any law j'of the United States is hereby declared to be nonmailable,' and another of jn which in Section 211' of the Penal j C^le of the United States, which dei clares that there shall not be carried I in the mails any obscene, lewd, lasci- . vious, filthy or friltecent matter, and -yal?p 'matter of . a chariict'er tending, j to incite arson, -murder or assassiria1 tfon.' -• j-' Promises Full Publicity 1 '"We intend, however, tRat there, I ! shall "be no secrecy .in regard to any 1 1 matter which, under these laws, may I be held to be non-mailable. We will I have the actual copies of any news- ' I oaper or periodical that may be with;j held from the mails, available to rep- " sentntives' of the, press and others - - j interested, '•together with a complete 0 j file of each case. I am . not only ! making these- records available*, but ^ 1 1 hope that the newspapers will riot pass unchallenged or unnoticed any .case in wh'ich, in th6ir opinion, the department goes beyond a fair' ih- ' terpretation. of the Jaw, if such case ? should arise- No one can feel stronger than we do on ihe importance of . 5 upholding the freedom of the press, renlembering that. I must uphold the ' specific stntu'es on- the. subject to which I have alrend-- refeired- . WILL H. HAY'S." . - COMMISSION GOVERNMENT . " . LAW % t! " " V . 1 Is a publication 'written by .the 3 j ndnYLewis T. Stevens, former State---Senator of New Jersey. If you are active in a Commission i 1 Government City you should have this publication on your desk. I ALBERT R. HAND, Publisher,

