i'-iT..: ' y 4." ; ■ ' 7"-' -■ «. * ■ " ' Page Two CAPE MAY STAR AND WAVE Saturday, May 27, 1922
on tops shoes urims at t. h. tatxoh-s ■M WMhlngton Street Cap* Map, V. 3 a Full Line of Ball Baud Rubbe! Boots and Over Shoes. Fresh Oooflt lust received from the Factory. kcpa! rl n k In all Its Branches. Not responsible for work left over bo days. Bsystons Phone 138-X ARE YOU THINKING OF moving If so bet In touch with da We hare 4 BIG TRUCKS I TON, 2 TONS, 5 TON8, 5 TONS ON THE ROAD ALL THE TIME Trips to Philadelphia every week. Lota from $10 up. Ahy point between Cape May and Philadelphia. CONEY S X-PRESS KM to 110 Garfield Ave, Wildwood. Both PKo— ,-A. At Your Service! Telephone * Keystone 90 when you want something or have something to sell. •* The Star and Wave classified ada will bring the results- 10c the line of six words. Iho man wtthont a definite aim in Ms to baLplaaaly diaablod. Money baa fci propar plane and is a staunch Cdand In <jf straw. Stmt now with tha Security Tnua Builder's Hardware & Household Supplies M. H. WARE 516 Wash. St. Key Phone 114 -X mm ink HAS been respcxv sible for thousands of business successes throughout the country. Everybody in town | may know you but they don't know what you have to sell Airertuiig Will Help Too I Dr. F. G. Steinbach ' „ Veterinarian WILDWOOD, N. J. Both Phones NOTICE Second hand furniture and stoves vfeought and sold. Alward W. Hill■man, 209 -Perry street Keystone 'Phone, 58-M- Stock room, second •floor, Excelsior Building, West T'er>ry streeL 1-14-22-tf Wm. F. Brown Plumbing & Heating Leave orders at store. 417 Washington Street CAPE MAY, N. J. St. Mary's Schooljof Music 516 Lafayette St. PIANO, ORGAN VIOLIN Evening Classes lr- —
; ready to fight - ship worms VISITOR FROM FAR EUROPEAN •er WATERS DOESN'T MIND THE BRACKISH WATER . AND DESTROYS PILINGS Thurlow C. Nelson, of the State experiment station, fears that tne increase of- the European pile worm, or burer, in Barnegat hay may result 'in I great damage, and he has begun a crusade against the borer. % Mr. N41soi( is the biologist of the State experiment station who is carre rying oh experiments in oyster culture that were begun years ago by his father, Prof. Julius Nelson, also connected with Rutgers College and the 18 State experiment station. He has a > station at Tuckerton, on the marshes, and last summer another station was ^ maintained by him in a tide creek between Bayville and Cedar creek. It * was here that he discovered the presence of the European pile worm, or borer, when a platform he had rigged on small piles in the creek collapsed, and he found that it had been edten off- An examination showed him the iL piling had not been eaten by the common teredo, or borer, of these waters, = but by a visitant from Europe. He then made investigations and found that the European teredo had penetrated into brackish waters, and, in fact, unlikd the native borer, which dies soon in fresh water, could live for a considerable length of time in fresh river waterThere is danger, says "Professor Nelson in a letter to the Toms River Courier, that the piling of the Pennsylvania railroad bridge, that of the state bridge, from Washington street to Seaside Heights, and of all the docks and bulkheads in the salt or brackish waters of Barnegat bay and | its tributaries, may be eaten off by these borers should the breeding season this summer be favorable to the borer. He urges that all piling be inspected before the breeding season begins, which may be expected in Barnegat bay in June. He Ays all infested wood should be removed, as r one infested piling might be the _ means of losing an entire bridge or dock through the spread of the borer. * Creosoted piling is not so susceptible b they may be entered through knots or scars, or, if the creosoting had not , to tie borer as ordinary timbers, but been well done, it would not be much According to Professor Nelson, a national committee has been formed to fight this menace in a nation-wide campaign, under the auspices of the National Research Council, and in conjunction with several regional port committees- The importance of fighting this borer is shown by the fact that in San Francisco -bay, in the sum- . . mers of 1920 and 1921, it did damage placed at $15,000,000. The pile worm was found in San Francisco harbor as early as 1913, but it did little damage for several years. Then came a sum- ■ mer of small rainfall, and consequently the waters of the harbor were saltier than usual, a dpndition that resulted in rapid breeding of the borer and its spread in all that water area The Euro Dean pile worm so far : seems to have no natural enemies in American waters to keep him down. 1 He is effectively provided with weapons of defense, in that he can retreat | : into his hole in the wood and lock : i ========= t
- r ■ his door after him with his bit of i shell- The only, method of fighting menace suggested is the frequent in- 1 i spection of piling or Other wood in - 1 . water and the removal of any wood ! \ where the borer is found to prevent j f t further breeding and increase of the !
SPRING CONFERENCE OF REPUBLICAN WOMEN 5 The Spring Conference of Republican Women, under the auspices of the New Jersey Women's Republican Club, held on Friday and Saturday, May 12th and 13th, at Haddon .Hall, £ Atlantic City, was well attended, E there being over five hundred present. D The Cape May Club was well represented, Mrs. Henry Rutherford, president, and a number of ladies being in r- attendance,1 The speakers were Mrs- Seymour )r S- CromweH, chairman rural sAoo'.s n committee. State Board of Education; Mrs. Lewis Thompson, Republican woman meiriber of the State Board of Institution and Agencies; Miss r_ Katherine Wiley, secretary of New 1~ Jersey Consumers' League; Airs. J. jg R. Shermefhom, chairman New^Jer- , sey Social and Hygiene Conference; " representatives of the State Teachers' a Association and State Nurses' Assos ciation- ' The guests were Mrs. Harriet Taylor Upton, vice chairman National [j Republican Executive Committee; .. Hon- E: C. Stokes, chairman New Jer'r sey Republican State Committee; U. d S- Senator and Mrs- Joseph S. Freyl linghuysen, Senator and Mrs. William N. Runyon, U. S- Senator Walter Ee Edge, and Roji. Hamilton Kean. !_ The club was honored by an address . by President Harding, who with Mrs. g Harding, received an ovation when : j they appeared. He congratulated the 1 ,. women on the use they had made of I n the ballot and urged them to affiiliate j (, with one of the parties. He told them i e he believed that women can play their j „ part best only when played under reg- j ular party organization. Mrs. E. F. Feikert, the presiderjLof the club, presided at all sessioflS! The subjects for discussion were; | , "Women on Party Committees." and t : "Better Co-operation with the Press." j , Women are urged to co-operate ' 'r with the members of Men's Republi i can Clubs and have them visit their ■ . clubs more frequently, also to request 1 . the men to serve jointly with the , ladies on committees. 1 [ The discussions following were most | 1 j interesting and educating and those j 1 , present declared it a rare theat and I 1 opportunity to study things political | 1 i NEST WITH BIRD EGG FOUND IN , j r BUNCH OF BANANAS ; A bird's Best with an unbroken egg j 1 t in it was found in a bunch of bananas ' , from Cuba on Saturday by employees ' , of the Phillips & Hughes Grocery ■ storeThe bananas had traveled 100 miles ' to this city and had been handled | } roughly in loading and unloading . > from the steamer. Then, with more | * handling, they "ere sent to Cape May. ' A small boy who sat opposite a j ' very stout man in the train seemed ' ' to be fascinated. His ardent gaze be- ! gan to annoy the fat man, who dt- ' 1 manded, angrily: ' "Why are you staring at me?" 1 ^Please, sir," replied the lad, " "there's nowhere else to look.!' j
ltrytwff iifll After the lapse of fifty-seven years n the spirit of the defender of the Union )*, still lives and under the providence 1, of God we have been permitted to 1, witness another Memorial Day. t. Jhey ha\e been preserved to see the fruition of their labors in the peri- petuity and stability of our country n in the honor of our unstained flag, and in the unquestioned supremacy r among the powers of the world, s Never in the history of our country i; have the conditions been more hopen fu! than at present- Peace and prosd perity are entering upon a new era is of advancement; The Veterans of the k Civil War feel that it has been a I. wonderful privilege to have had their ■- lives prolonged to see the promise of ;; the present day. This -privilege has brought dirties— first, of unremitting personal efforts for the State; second, of watchful care against false doc- - trines, and third, of constant effort to .1 transmit to the future generations ; the blessings which attack the liber- ■- ties of our land. i. The one ardent hope of the Grand - Army of the Republic has been and i, still is that our effort to instill into the minds and hearts of the youths a pure and unalloyed love of country s and to teach them thfe blessing of a . free country and the noble traditions i and ideals left to us as a heritage 1 1 by their sires. f| In the many years past a comrade i of each post in every state of the 1 1 Union has visited the public and i r parochial schools. He is a 'patriotic - instructor, to teach the boys and girls I the lessons of true patriotism and deI votion to our great republic and to j honor and respect the great founders : and leaders of our country, so that I I they may become good citizens and ■ they in turn teach the youths of the , coming generations the lessons they? have learned, so that they may know ■ ; and understand that we have a great ; country because of the great men of : . vesterday and today who were devoted to lofty ideals of democracy. ; I Great thoughts come out of great , 1 characteri While life is preserved to us we will . continue that dedication of ourselves I to the cause of the liberties of man- . kind which possessed our youth and ' the exemplification of that spirit of F raternity, Charity and Loyalty [which has characterized the years of ; our riativitv, and when the bugle call i of "Taps" will sound the signal for ; I rest and sleep and the echoes faintly • die away, it will be a fitting tribute to our deceased comrades- His light i is out and his sDirit has silently van1 1 ished and winged its happy flight to t a home of rest, there to Dass in last • review before our supreme command- . er on the great eternal camping A C. GILE, Patriotic Instructor, Post 40, G. A. R. CHILD HYGIENE NURSE Report fcr April, 1922 Visits to expectant mothers, 5. | Visits to babies under one year, 39I Visits to children of pre-school age < 3- < I 47- ) I Cases on visiting list, 69. < I At the baby keep- well station. 43 J and 15 ore-school aire children < weighed and measured and advice < | given for their care1 Inspections of school children, 122. | Defects discovered, 4.
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For Sale By DAVID P. CROWELL CAPE MAY NEW JERSEY Weathers All Weathers on Land or Sea f //\
Why You 've Never Been Satisfied With Home Enameling HAVE you ever been disappointed with the bathroom, the chair, the kitchen sink, that you enameled yourself? Would the old color insist on showing through ? Perhaps you did not use a good quality of enamel. But— more probably you did not use an andercoating Remember, next time, the undercoat is essential. For a surface as smooth and white and almost as hard as porcelain use two cans of Phoenix Undercoating to every can of Phoenix Marbleite EnameL As to quality of this long lasting, economical Phoenix Marbleite Enamel— it is the same that gives a ship shape , interior to the crack ocean liner and the luxurious private ' yacht. A paint that lath at sea, lasts longtr still on land. PHOENIX PAINT AND VARNISH CO., PHILA. - i - n
4 ¥HS-REfcIANCE TRANSPORTATION CO. TIME TABLE > ' M EFFECTIVE MAY 28, 1922— SUBJECT TO CHANGE n Leaving Cspe Msy for Wildwood and Ocean City (Northbound) e A.M. A.M. AM. P.M. P.M. P.M. P.M. P.M. 0 M*y 7J) 0 9.00 11410 1.00 3.00 54)0- 74)0 Ml i £ WiMVood — 74)0 9.00 1L00 1 00 3.00 54)0 7.06 Mb £ e £io Grande 7.25 9.25 11.25 1.25 3.25 5.25 7.25 Mfc Whitesboro 7.30 9 JO 11.30 1.30 3-30 5 JO 7J6 9J8 y Court House 740 9.40 11.40 140 3.40 540 7.40 940 Goshen 7J2 9J2 11J2 1-52 3.52 5J2 7.52 9-52 > ■ South Dennis 8.00 10 00 12.00 2.00 44)0 6.00 8.00 10.00 South Sea vi lie 8.08 104)8 124)8 24)8 44)8 6-08 84)8 1048 ) Ocean View 8-14 10.14 12.14 2-14 4.14 6.14 8.14 10.14 - Seaville : 8.20 10.20 12-20 2 20 4.20 6.20 8^0 10-20 - Palermo — 8£5 10.25 12J5 ' 2.25 4-25 6.25 8J55 10.25 * m 7Z7— H0 10J0 1240 2-50 6J0 8-30 10 JO e 34th Street Ocean City — 8J5 10.35 12JS 245 445 645 845 1045 a 8th Street, Ocean City „ 840 1040 1240 240 440 640 840 1040 f ( South bound) * A M- A. M. P. M. P. M..P. M. P. M- P. M. P. M. ' 8th Street and Ocean 9.00 11.00 1.00 340 540 7.00 9-00 H OP ' 34th Street, Ocean City__ 9.10 11.10 1.10 8.10 5.10 7.10 9.10 1LI0 Marmora 9.15 11.15 1.15 3.15 5-15 7.15 9.15 1L15 Palermo 942 11.22 142 342 5.22 742 942 1142 Seaville 947 11.27 1.27 347 547 747 947 1147 Ocean View 945 1145 145 3J5 545 745 945 » « , South Seaville 9-40 11.40 1-40 3.40 540 7.40 940 11.40 South Dennis 947 1147 1.47 3.47 5.47 7.47 947 11.47 Goshen 3943 1143 143 343 548 748 948 1143 Court House X0J5 12.05 2-05 4.05 645 8.05 1045 12.06 ' Whitesboro 1015 1215 2.15 4.15 6.15 8.15 10.15 1245 ; Rio Grande 10 20 12.20 2 20 4.20 6.20 8.20 10.20 1240 Wildwood 10.85 1245 245 445 645 845 1045 1245 ! Cape May 1045 12 45 245 4.45 6.45 8.45 1045 12.45 Leaving Cape May for Wildwood on the Hour from 6 A M. to 11 P. M. Leaving Wildwood every Hour on the Hour from 8 A. M. to 1 A M. , — — PRACTICAL ELECTRICIAN . A. B. LITTLE j 606 WASHINGTON STREET S Bell 44-W Keystone 8-A ' CARTING OF PROMT ATTENTION . ALL KINDS TO ORDERS Long Distance Hauling From Cape May to Philadelphia RANDOLPH JACKSON EXPRESS TO HIRE 802 QUEEN ST. PhoM 143-T UP E; MAT, N. J. Don't Throw Away Your Old Timer Cases We positively end Ford Commutator trouble and use i the old corrugated shells. Rush dual contact roller runs packed in grease. Makes starting easier. I Hickey Garage ♦ Cape May, New Jersey LENSES REPLACED FRAMES ADJUSTED cape may optical 324 Washington Street Cape May, N. J. Prescription Work Our Specialty Eyes Examined by Improved Methods L. C ASHBURN. Mgr. Charles York , Stites York YORK BROTHERS Carpenters and Builders ESTWATES CHEERFULLY G! LEN ON ALL KINDS OF BUILDINGS SATISrACZl I GUARANTEED P. 0. Box 661 f KEYSTONE FOODS™! KNOWN AS THE BEST II Poultry, Pigeon and Chicks [J
0 KEYSTONE U CHICK FOOD R SCRATCH FOOD / 1 MILK MASH || j GROWING MASH l' y PIGEON FOOD \ fi EGG PRODUCER II Powdered Buttermilk
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KEYSTONE [1 GREEN ALFALFA U MOULTING MASH DUCK FATTENING If GREEN HEALTH FOOD I] LAYING MASH ' KEYSTONE MEAT |j DRIED SKIM MILK I
JlhANDY Supplies — Remedies DANDY M scratch A5K YOUR DEALER tAASH II P ** Keyatone Fooda^mro^i^cJFrMhDi^y^^Pure^^^x^^^^ PRIVATE BATHS EUROPEAN PLAN RIDGW AY'HOUSE . ELEVATOR SERVICE // 2 AT THE. FERRIES PHILADELPHIA PA . Hot and Cold Running Water, in Each Room 3 ' ...... " v

