Paw Six CAPE MAY STAR AND WAVE 'Saturday, July 22, 1922 ! — - ■- ■■■- — I '
§ If You Want Results | § Advertise in the § c JsTAR & WAVE § : fi fi e x If you have any print- i ° g ing to be done call § « x Keystone 90 and we * : § will immediately give § j Q _ l «■ ' § an estimate of the % ft )=( 1 X work to be done. i — $ | OUR JOB PRINTING g 1 and | | DIE STAMPING g Q X $ Departments are com- g g plete in every detail XXXXXXXX xxxxxxxxx xxxx
REPUBLICAN WOMEN ARE CAM- ] PAIGNING THROUGH SUMMER There is to be np let-up in the ac- 1 tivities of the New Jersey Women's . Republican Club during the hot j weather. One of the most interesting j features of its work is the series of schools to instruct women in political j speaking and campaign work which 1 are now being held uitU^t the direction of Mrs. F. W. Van Ness, of East Orange. Mrs- Robert S- Huse, of Elizabeth, also speaks at all of the schools, giving the principal reasons why women should support Runyon and Frelinghuysen. To date schools , hare been held for the women of Atlantic, Burlington, Essex, Hudson, Mercer, Monmouth, Morris, Passaic j and Somerset counties. Over four , hundred women have been in attend- , ance, which will mean an unusually ( large number of trained workers in those counties in the fall campaign. . "Similar schools have already been ar- j ranged for Camden, Cumberland, Gloucester, Middlesex, Salem and Union counties, and all the twenty- . one counties will be covered befof®^. the primaries. In connection with this work a nor- ; mal school for campaign speakers will be conducted by Mrs. Van Ness at the Hotel Montery, Asbury Park, on July , 27th and 28t'r- The speakers will be in addition to Mrs Van Ness, Mrs.] Robert S. Huse and Mrs. E. F. Feickert Attend?"ce at the normal school will be limited to women who have al- 1 readv attended local schools, or who , have' had some previous experience in speakeine. In addit:"»n to the schools, the New Jersev Women's Republican Club has j held a • seri e« of luncheon conferences with Mrs. Feirkert, and in some cases Senator Frelinghuysen and Senator •F"nyon. as ti e syeakers. Such lnnrheo*rs ho*"* been held in Cape May, Lambertville, Perth Amboy, Morristown. Tom? River. Raritan (at Senat r Frelinghuvsen's home), and at Phillinsburg. AH of these have been count v a^airs and the attendance ha? ranged frc.ni "ifiiy to three hundred women. Simila^ conferences have siniiaj coniereiu.es
been "lanned for Mount Holly, Camden, Woodbury and ".Elizabeth- | Republican women's headouarters have been opened in Newark, Jersey, City. Kearny, Trenton, Morristown j and Paterson. and others will be open- , ed before Labor in Hackensack, Camden, Perth Amboy, New Brunswick, Somervi'.le and Elizabeth. These headouarters are carried on under the direction 'of the local units of the club in these countiesThe Republican women are planning to set the pace for the men and to make it a good fast oneCHILDREN'S DANCE SUCCESS The Children's Novelty Dance, held last Friday afternoon at the Conven- 1 tion Hall, was such a pronounced success, that another and even more successful one was held yesterday- Professor Gustav Blenk, city music conductor, plans a series of these affairs to last throughout the season. On these occasions the hall is turned oVer for the' enjo'-ment of the children. Teddy bears, dolls. souven>s and nrizes are given to the winners of the contests and special music is played for the little, folksProf- Blenk is again keeping things moving on the pier with community sings, novelty dances, concerts and evening dances which are more largely attended than ever^ before. ^
PLANS FOR BIG SEAVILLE CAMP ONE-TIME FAMOUS SOUTH JERSEV CAMP MEETING WILL BE REVIVED THIS YEAR. A PROHIBITION SPEAKER • "Seaville and Salvation" will echo . through the old camp grounds here [ again for the fifty-ninth season when i i the annual camp meeting gets started ■ on July 27 to continue until August ; - 7, inclusive. Old-time leaders will p j again direct the daily services and - noted Methodist orators will fill the ' | pulpit in the auditorium on the two 1 big Sundays of camp! ; I The Rev. Clarence True Wilson, of (Washington, D. C-, national prohibi1 tion exponent, and the Rev- Freder- - ick Brown Harris, of New York city, *"H»all be the main speakers on the first . ! Sunday of tKe~cShlp meeting, July 30, 1 while on Sunday, August 7, District e Superintendent Alfred Wagg, the y j Rev. R. M- Howeils, of Philadelphia, ® ; and the Rev. Howard E Hand, of j Coatesville, Pa-, will preach, ill Three special days of rallies will - ] precede the camp meeting proper, j 0 i with Epworth League dav on July 27, temperance da*". July 28, and missipn- *• ary day July 29. s I Sunrise services will be directed by |S the Rev. Benjam:n Collins. Mrs- ® Homer will lead the children's ser- ,. vices and the meeting for young peoi*, *°e every evening, before the regular ;- service, Nwill be conducted by the Rev. l- Charles Rhubart- A® array of wellit known Methodist pastors will preach n at the main morning, afternoon and is : evening sendees to be held daily id | while the camp is opene Some years ago the South Seaville camp meeting each year was the mec- ;
|ca for hundreds of South Jersey people daily during the time the sen-ices , were being conducted. I In those days straw rides, busses | and prjyate vehicles of all kinds made | the journey from as far north as Mill- , ville. It was then that the little cot- > tages were built on the erStmds for i some of the devotees came such a i distance with horse-drawn carriages that they could not return home the same day and so remained for sevI eral davs or even the entire week. With the advent of the automobile and the hotter roads the use of the cottages' was no longer popular as the owners could easily make the, trip to camp and back home again. ( 1 Another feature which shattered/ • the popularity of the camp was the • - multiplication of the summer resorts . south of Atlantic City and the im- 1 proved train service. Evert now many cars stop at the camp giounds and i ■ after the occupants have looked over] 5 the situation they turn the headlights i for the nearest or more distant re- ( sort and seek their amusement thereIt is thought that this year the ser.- ■ vices will be interesting enough to ats tract some of the lost prestige back- • • • = "April Showers," hit ef "Bombo," Once so pretty to hearr5 After ninety days of rainfall, ? y Strikes like a dirge on the eat-. Wonder what Pollyanna would sky. about this weather.
lUSH JETty FOR I TURTLEGUT FILL!CO. BOARD FREEHOLDERS AP PROVE PLANS. WORK 0N|ls GRASSY SOUND BRIDGE TO BE «; I PUSHED ~ j These are busy days for Uje Chosen * ; Board of Freeholders of the county i and the members have each an allot- 1 ted task. | In line with the demand of the , grand jury that the board commence] civil suits against various contractors ■ to recover for alleged skimping of 1 _ road contracts, application was made to the New Jersey highway depart- 1 . I ment for a boring machine to be used j Mechanic street. Court House, and on Beach avenue, Cape May, to as-j j* certain whether or not the paving is i-P of the depth called for in the specifi- locations. On Tuesday a letter froni|the department stated that the ma- £ chine could be had at a cost of $50 i per day and it was ordered to be used ( o on the streets named -as soon as it . was in this section. The borings on Mechanic street are to be tinder the direction of Freeholder Swain, of Mid- , die township, and on Beach avenue • under the direction of Freeholder Eld- j redge, of Cape May. , ! . Plans and specifications for a orusn pile jetty on the ocean side of Turtle Gut Inlet fill were approved, nnd the cleric directed to advertise for bids ' for the work. This jetty is to be built : to protect the fill whidi close? Turtle ; Gut inlet and provides a driveway from Wildwood Crest .to Two-Mile 1 Beach- : A resolution was adopted by the board requesting that the state ap- ] ! propria tion of $7,000 be made avail- • j able at once for the building of the , bridge across Grassv Sound, on the j ' new road from Burleigh (main sea- ' ! shore road) to North Wildwood. The . necessary rights of way have been j ' procured by county counsel, and the, > work is now ready to be pushed] . ahead- Borings for the bridge struc- [ ture are now being made- ; JOHN HOWLAND— SERVANT? J ' My attention has been called to a , ' recently printed article on the early i history of Cape May with a reference k to the descendants of John Howland f "man servant of Gevernor Carver- » Inasmuch as the reference to the an- : cestor seems to point him out as oc- j cupying a senile position in the Pil- ] grim band it is proper that an explanatory note should be added. | | All writers upon the subject of Pugrim history and all students of the subject have realized that the word ; "servant" as used by Bradford and - other writers of the Colonial period S does not of necessity have a servile • meaning, and in Goodwin's "Pilgrim ( Republic," the most reliable work ever published upon the subject, the words > "apprentice" and "employee" are > used as the modern equivalents- In ( this sense the young man who began ' 1 his medical studies under the direc1 tion of a physician like Dr. Samuel t Fuller, cf the Mayflower, was called 1 a servant- So also a law student of j the time was called a servant. So a Elder Brewster, when a? a young man he acted as secretary to the ambassa- > dor to Holland, was called a servant— in this case by Bradford — who unf cioubtedly sneaks of Howland as a - servant with the same meaning. | Goodwin in his repeated explanation of the word "servant," says the ' term could not be applied to a man t of Howland's ability in a servile , >, sense and that he .was undoubtedly , t secretary to the first Pilgrim Qovern- „ or, John Carver. . — I It is a pity that a single statement , b by Bradford should be singled out as f a description of one of the most famous members of the founders of i, Plymouth and this nation. A fair description of the ancestor of so many r> I of us in this county i? this: John ", i Howland was one of the signers of; i- the compact in the cabin of the May- , flower (certainly no one" in a servile I J position signed that declaration of ^ v .rights and obligation.-) ; his name aps- J pears with Winslow, Bradford, Standr- ' ish and Alden udou a document as- )- ! suming resoonsibility for the financial and moral liabilities of the Colony; jthat uDon his death an entry was i." I made in the records of the Colony ac- , knpwledging his loftv character and j worthy sendees to the Colony; that v as a young man he sen-ed as secreitary to Governor Can-er. le Surely no one with the slightest surely no one me y,
Lhistorical instinct or fitness for writ- f ing upon the subject of colonial his- p 1 tor>- would have allowed this obsolete i usage of Bradford to appear in mod- a ! ern print without an explanatory ^ note PAUL STURTEVANT HOWE. d TABERNACLE RALLY The endowment committee for the _ Tabernacle Cemetery will hold an all ^ day meeting tomorrow. Rev. George . [ S- Young will be the speaker of the . , day. Reports *will be given of what ] ; has been done and what the commit- ^ i : tee expects to do. I 1 Some of the oldest settlers are I ; resting here- The cemetery is in need „ ,Vof attention and it is with this aim ; that the energetic committee is de- . ! ' voting its time. | . It is a shame that this, one of Cape ■ i May county's, most historic spots r ! should be neglected arid it is hoped ^ ; by the organization that has started 1 ' this $5,000 drive that every person 1 having a ■ relative or friend buried at j . Tabernacle will donate some amount, i from five to two hundred dollars, for i the improvement of this resting place] of the dead | The fund is in caxpful hands and the i corifenittee is supervised by church . trustees. All who are in any way -interested in this please do their bit towards the improvejnents planned. H COMMITTEE i
IN CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY To John Wiley and Lucille Mann Wiley: By virtue of an order of the Court of Chancer}- of New Jersey, made on the dav 0f the date hereof, in a cause wherein Mutual Liquidating Company is Complainant, and you, John Wiley and Lucilje Mann Wiley, Harrington Oonrnan'- and the City of Cape May are defendants, you are required to ' plead, answer or demur to the >bill of said Complainant, on or beIfore the eleventh day of September next, or the said bill will be taken as 'confessed against youThe said bill is filed to foreclose a 1 mortgage made and given by John iWilev and Lucille Mann Wiley to Z. Graves, Trustee under (Deed of Trust, bearing date Decem17, 1912, and duly recorded in the 1 Clerk's Office of the County of Cape | May in Book-No- 113 of Mortgages, ipages 369, A , and is now held by : Complainant herein by various assignments; and you, John Wiley and ' Lucille Mann Wiley, are made defendants because you own said land or some part thereof Dated July 10. A. D. 1922. I SAMUEL F. EIJ)REDGE, Solicitor of Complainant. Merchants National Bank Building, Cape May City, New Jersey, 7-15-4 -pfll-90 ORDINANCE An Ordinance authorizing the improvement of a certain unimproved Township Road, pursuant to the provisions of Chapter -4517, P- L. 1916, and providing for the financing of the cost thereof. WHEREAS, it is uroposed to improve the Tabernacle Road from Main Seashore Road Westward to Scheli lenger's Corner, Fishing Creek, in i the Township of Lower. County of • Cape May, a distance of 2.1 miles, > more or less, and \ I WHEREAS, the estimated cost of ! i said improvement is $6,000.00, and 1 1 WHEREAS, it is proposed to make • application to the State Highway 'Commission for State Aid in the amount of seventy-five per cent, of the I estimated cost of the improvement, in 'accordance with the provisions of Chapter 217, P- L. 1916, and ! WHEREAS, provision has hereto- , fore been made by one or more budi get appropriations in the amount of • $1,500.00 for the Township's share of . ' said improvement; . BE IT ORDAINED: - 1 1- That the Tabernacle Road from - 1 Main Seashore Road, Westward to | Sch el lenger's Corner, Fishing Creek. ■ in the Township of Lower, County of > Cape May, be improved in accordance I with the attached application. i 1 2. That the sum of $6,000 00 or so 1 much thereof as may be required, be » and is hereby appropriated for the i above improvementr 1 3. In order to temporarily finance - ? the above undertaking, temporary im- : provement notes are herd)}" authorizi ed under the provisions of Chapter i 1 252, P. L. 1916. as amended, in an am- - ount not to exceed the sum of $6,000.1 00. Said notes shall state in general 1 terms the purpose for which they f are issued, and shall be issued in such 3 amounts and at such times as may be i determined by resolution of the . Township Committee. The form of - note, rate of interest and date of maturity shall also be determined by ~ resolution. I 4. The following matters, as pro- . 1 vided by Chapter 252, P. L- 1916. as amended, are hereby determined and declared: . (a) The probable period of usefulness of said improvement is ten yearsi (b) The average assessed valuations of the taxable real property (int' eluding imorovements) of the j Township of Lower, County of Cape May, computed upon the three f next • ereding valuations thereof, I is $556,166.00. (c) The net debt of the Township of • Lower, County of Cape May, is f $5,500.00. ] (d) The statements required by Section 12 thereof have been made and ? filed as required. | 5. Any and all moneys received from the State of New Jersey, and !' from contributions made by residents '] or property owners on account of said (1 im-rovements shall be applied to the ' reduction of the tempo ran" notes is- _ sued on account of the said improvement. 6. That the Township's share of ' the cost of said improvement, includ- !" ing interest on temporary notes issued to finance such improvement, will be paid from moneys appropriated "
the Tax Budget of 1922 for Roads. All ordinances or parts of ordin- g inconsistent herewith are here- ^ by repealed. — NOTICE j The foregoing Ordinance was introat an adjourned regular meeting of the Township Committee of I Lower Township, Cape May, N. J-, ( held on the twelfth day of July, A1922, and a hearing on the same will be held at the Township Hall, Lower Township, Cape May Co., N. J-, r Jersey, oh August 2nd. A. D.. ( 1922, at the hour of seven-thirty o'clock (7.30) P. M.. Standard Time- > WILLIAM C. HOFFMAN, k Cleric. J 1 7-15r2-r*fl8.90 r t . 1 1 I ! Hotel rack cards at Star and Wave ( [ '{ ..r - j • | IF You Wish t [ j "HUNTS NEWS OF THE i j THEATRES" i 2 mailed to your home each week send j 1 your name and address to HUNTS THEATRES ] 1 Wildwood, N. J. I Please specify whether Wildwood or Cape May issues are desired. •
Af • PITH IAN • A J L ; ERECT A FITTING % MEMORIAL Our equipment, professional experience j and immense stock of quality memorials are at your disposal An inspection of our plant, where none but skilled artisans are employed, is cordially invited. Here one can view memorials of every description in the various stages of construction. O. J. HAMMELL CO. PT.F.ASANTVTT.T.F., N. J. CAMDEN, N. J. memorial craftsmen fob more than Ml TZARS Cape May County Title and Trust Co. (SUCCEEDING THE REAL ESTATE AND SEARCH CO.) Cape May Court House, N. J. Acts as Executor and in a Fiduciary Capacity Title Insurance Municipal Bonds for Sale Money to Loan on Mortgages Searches Briefs of Title Conveyancing
I SPORT HATS, SWEATERS, ALL IN . THE LATEST STYLES. AT REASONABLE P.ilCES B. T. HAZLETT > 323 Washington Street f NOTICE TO LIMIT CREDITORS ' Estate of Mary Louise Warrington, Deceased ' Pursuant to the order of Harry S. i Douglass, Surrogate of the County of I Cape May, made on the 27th day of ' June, A. D. 1922, on the application i of the subscriber, executrix of said k deceased, notice is hereby given to . the creditors of said deceased to exhibit to the subscriber under oath or affirmation their claims and demands f against the estate of said deceased within six months from the 27th day ^ of June, A. D. 1922, or they will be i forever barred of any action against
the subscriber. Dated June 27th, A- D. 1922. IRENE MELVIN WILLIAMS, Executrix. SAMUEL F. ELDREDGE, Proctor-7-l-10-pfl5.54 r===±============= \ DINGERS OF i GDLO , OtM May People Will Do Well te Heed Them. Many bad cases of kidney trouble resalt from a oold or chill. Congest ed kidneys fall behind in filtering the 1 poieon-laden blood and backache, dizziness and dlaorderea kidney action follow. Don't neglect a cold. Use Doan's Kidney Pills at the first sign of kidney trouble. Pol ■ ] this Cape May resident's example. Joe Stratton, city fireman, 610 LaSt., says: "I can recommend Doan's Kidney Pills as a good, re liable remedy. My kidneys were weak and disordered and It I got weak and took cold I was In tor a bad spell of backache that hurt me ' to bend or do any stooping. MornInge I was tired out and felt dull and kidneys didn't act rgiht. I used Doan's Kidney Pills from Ware's i Drug Shop, and they went right to . the spot and soon rid me of the j , backache and that tired run down feeling." | 1 60c, at all dealer*. Foster-Mflburn Co.. Mfre.. Buffalo, N. T,
| SET TOUR SHOES REPAIRED A* T. M. TITIrOXT IKS Washington Street Cap# May, A Full Line of Ball Band Rubber -loots and Over Shoes, Fresh Goods :ust received from the Factory. Reel ring in all Its Branches. Not responsible for work left over ,0 day a Csystons Phone 138-X ARE YOU THINKING OF , - MOVING If so get In touch with ua. We kavarf 4 BIG TRUCES M . I tON, t TONS, $ TONS, 5 TOI^j ON THE ROAD ALL THE TIME Trip* to Philadelphia every week. Lots from $10 up. Any point between Cape May and Philadelphia. CONErS X-PRESS | 106 to 110 Garfield Ave, Wildwooi Both Phones j VIRGINIA HOTEL t JACKSON STREET NEAR BEACH
Under New Management RATES $3.50 per day and up— $18.00 per wee^ and up J. J. STOCKER, Prop. . THE ELWARD * DECATUR STREET and BEACH Mrs- Edward Nittinger, Prop. Equipped with Running Water Private Baths Music by Charles Free's Orchestra Rates Reasonable NOTICE Dr. Clarence S. Eldredge, occulist, of Philadelphia, is at Cape May for the season. Those having trouble with their eyes or in need of glasses can consult him Saturdays and evenings, Broadway and Third avenue, jWest Cape May-

