Cape May Star and Wave, 25 February 1922 IIIF issue link — Page 3

Saturday, February 25, 1922 CAPE MAY STAR AND WAVE Page Three |j

\MKKJE, J/lt KJtJI'ER J5 CftTTL %CT£Jbte: Aw Boss. That Aint no Win to Art! '

*j(ast Call I To be sure of having . i. Arcola installed promptly, telephone today. rff another few weeks every minute of your Heating Expert's time will be taken. Now is the economical season to change from spotty hot-air heat to Akcolai warm-water warmth. Remember— Arcola means an American Radiator in each room— the same radiators that warm fine homes and buildings throughout the world. Arcola means better health far the children— fewer coughs and colds. Arcolai oost comes back to you. Thousands of owners testify that it pays for itself in the fuel it saves. Your Heating Expert will furnish an estimate /roe. Telephone him today. r" AMERICAN ■i RADIATOR COMPANY Ural Boilers ami American Radiators for roerj hmMmg mood 115 N. Broad Sc. Philadelphia. Pa. PRACTICAL ELECTRICIAN A. B. LITTLE 606 WASHINGTON STREET 1 Announcement I Q I take this opportunity of announcing to the public & 5 that I have returned from the eouth where I have been C U the paat three months for my health and will again S O **** Pe»onal charge of my establishment on Decatur C Q street. Q ■^1 work will be guaranteed as to qualify and © O workmanship as in the past. W W Before ordering your spring suit stop in and get jf *£ my prices. )•£ We wiH sponge and press suits for 50 cents- M Charles Scherer § Q Deeatnr Street CAPE MAY, N. J. ft

DIAS CREEK Millard Howell, who has been in New Brunswick this winter, is expected home on February 24thMr. and Mrs- Millard Davis spent {Sunday with Goshen friends. Ellis Norton visited friends at Goshen recently. William Powell, of Court House, was here on business last Thursday. The Men's Bible Class reorganised last Wednesday evening by electing Frank T. Norton president, and Ellis Thompson secretary. Russell Dunn is kept busy sawing fire wood with his power saw on Potato Island these days. Percy Douglass is busily engaged clearing up new ground recently chasedMrs. Thomas Douglass visited Cold Spring last Monday. Several Dias folk attended the vendue of Charles Hand at Bio Grande last TuesdayMr. Simpson has been made sexton of the M. E. Church. Charles Vanaman was a Trenton visitor Monday. Edward Tuttle spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Wahl at North DiasJohn Silver and Leroy Hand drove to Cape May to see the movies Sat. urday. Clarence Howell was at Court House on business Saturday. Captain Maurice Tomiin was entertained by his daughter, Mrs- Rita Davis, one day this week. Lewis Compton, of Darby, spent the week end here with his parents, Mr. and Mrs- Lemuel Compton. He returned on Monday. lifeguard El wood Howell, ^ Ocean City, spent Sunday at home here- * Mrs. Lada Grace spent the week end at Cape May with her daughter, CarolineJoseph States and friend, of Wast Cape May, were over Sunday visitors of Reeves Douglass. Stella Woodlin is caring for the sick at Cburt House. in. uiun, mouse.

Mrs. El wood Howell entertained a number of friends at a quilting party last Tuesday- Those present were Cora Holmes, Delia Sharp, Bell Lawrence, Marj- Norton, Anna B- Norton, Edna Smarts, Ida Barr and Beatrice Cresse. , . The Men's Bible Class Social in the I. O. M- Hal! was one of the most pleasant events of the winter. Among the good entertainment features was the Hambone Glee Club under the direction of George B. Swartz, of Lancaster, Pa. KICKAPOO GOES TO ASSISTANCE The Coast Guard Cutter Kick&poo, ^ with Captain J. J. Huston in command, put to sea from here Sunday ; to assist the Coast Guard cutter Gresham in towing the disabled | •rteamer Narbo, which was in dis- ] tress, it is understood, from broken machinery, eighty miles south of Del- ] aware Breakwater. | The Narbo was bound for foreign , i ports from New York when,, off the j L Virginian coast, she ran into a Stiff s gale and machinery trouble develop J L ed. It is understood that the steam- t [ er carries a crew of forty-five men- j f The Narbo is a relief ship carryi supplies to the starving Russians. s — »» 1. Ever)- family is unanimous an one ' thing, and that is the desirability of ' > owning an automobile. v j P ' — t ; ] Change Now Mi to Arcola and you will I „ change your I b house into a I h home. U F ARTHUR G. REEVES & CO. £ (| 022 Washington St. | o: ^=====t-— -jr si t > _

A Pioneer is "one who goes before,' as into the wilderness, preparing the way for others to follow." ^ It is not always necessary that he wear a coonskin cap and carry a rifle. ^_WJien the young Alexander Graham Bell forty-six ^ yeS/s ago first sent a voice over a wire by means of an electric current he was a Pioneer, going forth into the 1 little known wilderness of electrical science. / Since that day every development of the telephone V 4 has been a pioneering feat. There have been no guide ' j posts to point out the way; no route maps to show " which were the smooth roads and which the rough ones. 4 And Bell Telephone "pioneers" who are today planning for millions of subscribers five, ten and twenty f years hence are "preparing the way for others to fol- ' low." I ' Every community served by the Bell System profits ' \ by this arrangement. A discovery in California, Texas v or Maine is at once available right here in our own ) state. If the pioneers in our company find something to improve telephone service it is at the disposal of every office in the system where it might properly be used. Only by such an organization has the Bell System of today been made possible, and only by its continuui.ui in<tuc pusmuic, ana oniy Dy its continu-

a ance is future progress assured. THE DELAWARE & ATLANTIC TELEGRAPH & TELEPHONE CO, 5 I * W. BRITTA1N Q U Diatrict Monofmr

RIO GRANDE NOTES Mrs- John Kaiby and two sons, of J Ocean Oity, are spending some time with her aunt and uncle, of this place. Edward Morton and son, of West Cape May, visited his sister, Mrs. r Silas Shaw, on Sunday. " Mt- and Mrs. Charles Oresse entertained their daughter and her husof Philadelphia, on Sunday. 1 Mrs- Edna Bndioott was a Cape '.May shopper on Monday. ! William Brown, of Cape May Oity, 1 spent Monday with his brother, War- ; Harris. Miss Eliza Reeves, of West Cape is spending a week very pleas- 1 antiy with her sister, Mrs- Fred Several of this village attended the sale of Mrs- Claries Hand, of Buron TuesdayMr. and Mrs. Nettie Hand spent with William Harris and wife, of Cold Spring. Rev. Corliss, of the M- E. Church, preached a fine sermon on Sunday afternoon, from the text "Lead me to the rock that is higher than I." OPEN CAPE MAY ROAD BIDS Sutton & Corson, of Ocean CSty, the lowest bidders when the were opened at Gape May Court on Tuesday by the Board of Freeholders for the road, to be built of concrete, from the northern end of Cape May Court House for a distance of three miles, a portion of the main seashore The bid was $118,000. 1

3 j THE OLD CIDER-MILL I if. — : • | On evenings like this, as I sit in is the glooming, my mem ry goes beck, as one's memory will; 1 give it foil sway in its erratic roaming, until it t- lands plump at the old cider-mill — the mill of my old Dad, in the old 1 apple-orchard, — th e only machinery >' the old man possessed; it ground up ] the "culls" and it squoze out the nec- 1 e tar, that thrills me this minute, down ■ under my vest- . That old cider I • mill was the pride of my boyhood, | though smug yellow-jackets contest- ' ed my right, and sometimes I landed - B an angry bald -hornet, that taught me [ ' I too well how a devil oan fight • 1 I've sat on the fence in supreme con- < templation, ami scrached my brown I ; leg, as a lazy kid will, and longed for < ■ a bumper of liquid inflation that ozz- 1 ied betimes, from that old moonshine < t still. That old apple-grinder, that I staunch old stem-winder, that dealt 1 out the juice, like an old moonshine ' • still. \ See | Arcola today f and change now to healthful hot-water warmth in your home. F. RAMSHAW 311 MANSION ST.

Join the Home Trade • Life Guard ; ! Do yon wish to PRESERVE 1 ' ; THE LUE of yonr home town t J ; If yon do, trade with your ♦ HOME MERCHANTS. ; IE NEIGHBORLY. f / Yen work for COMJf UNITY | ■ INTEREST when yen DEAL 1 : AT HOME. | ! Don't Pall a Prop From T the Town Yon Live In f by Spending Your ♦ Money Elsewhere X