I page to— CAPE MAY STAR AND WAVE "
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THE GOOD ROADSJ'ROGRAM ROAD BOND ISSUE OF $40,000,000 ] CAUSING WIDE COMMENT AND DISCUSSION THROUGHOUT ENTIRE STATE— GOOD ROADS ASSOCIATION WORKING FOR ITS PASSAGE. The Good Roads Association is battling for the passage of the $40,000,000 Road Bond Issue and every Agricultural, Commercial and Civic Organization in the State has received ' a letter urging its passage. The matter was explained before the last meeting of the Cape May County Chamber of Commerce and since at other gatherings by members of the State Highway Department The good roads program proposes to complete within the next five years the State Highway System, including ! • bridges, to take care of modern traf- i fie conditions. To place all township and country _ roads in good travelable condition and to establish a patrol system to maintain all roads to a high standard from the present moneys derived from automobile licenses. This it is proposed to do without any increase in taxa-i. tion. The Good Roads Association pro-', poses to accomplish this by using the revenues derived from the present * one-mill tax under the Edge Act for borrowing on a building and loan plan. 1 They say that the savings effected , in maintenance of improvements over ! unimproved roads will more than pay the interest costsReports from Trenton show a tendency among the House and Senate to approve the Bond Issue, and a belief that it will be the best way to insure good roads for the state from everyone's standpoint. The matter as to whether Waned- 1 ~ ite or some other manufacturer of I road surfacing will get the contracts ! for road building is a matter to be handled from another angle, so the j men at Trenton say, and does not enter into the Bond Issue question. One fact concerning the Bond Issue which will be of interest to all Cape May County is that the issue will in^ elude all State highways and approved sectors. The section embracing the Cape May-Lewes Ferry is included and should the issue go through moneys will be available for the continuance of that project so vitally interesting to the County. . The Good Roads Association letter as sent out this week is as follows: Statements emanating from various quarters, and appearing recently in the newspapers, are tending to blind the people of the real issues involved in the $40,000,000 State Highway System Bon<j Issue, which the •voters will pass upon at the General Election, 'November 7th. Conspicuous among these statements are those which, in effect, warn ■ ■ the public not to approve the Bond Issue because the last legislature did , not prescribe that money derived from the sale of bonds should be spent only for the construction of highways let -under contracts based on so-called open specifications. This is not one of the issues involved in the Bond Issue proposition ■&:' r"—~ : . 7~ d
however, for whether that proposition receives popular affirmatiod or nega- ^ tion the question of open and closed specifications still remains. The real issues involved in the $40,1 000,000 State Highway System Bond Issue are: 1. Shall the State complete a the construction of the* State F [ Highway System within the next s five years? 2. If '.so, shall the present 11 "Cash" or "Pay-before-you-use" 1 method of financing the cost of the work be retained by increas- '' ing present taxes or imposing ° new taxes? 3. Assuming that increased or f new taxes are out of the question 1 and that the cash method of fl- ^ nancing the work must be aban- f doned, is the deferred payment ' method, as worked out in the $40,000,000 Bond Issue Scheme, ' the one for the voters t^juJopt? These questions show the* real is- ' sues that are at stake, and the Good Roads Association of New Jersey is | anxious for your help in placing them c in a clean-cut and understandable * manner before all of the voters. 1 As has been said before, neither ' adoption nor rejection of the HighwayBond Issue will solve the closed specri- ' fications and shut out bidding evils, i 1 jThat is a legislative problem. The 1 j bond issue is the voter's problem. 1 | Meantime these matters should not [ be permitted to distract the public ' mind from the real fundamental rea- * ' sons for the Bond Issue and the serf- s ous consequences that are likely to ! 1 follow failure to provide the money * necessary to complete the construe- I jtion of the remaining highway mil- J ! eage and bridges of the State -High- * . way System by the end of 1927, at the 1 | very latest. [ j Yours very truly, ' : Good Roads Asso. of New Jersey, ' Secretary. 1 i ' WARDENS HAVE LICENSES FOR . | WOODCOCK HUNTERS 1 f , | Arrangements have been made by ( » the State Fish and Game Commission , »j whereby sportsmen can procure from j . state wardens, the special woodcock . : hunting license required under a new ! . law for those who would hunt woodt ;eock before the opening of the upland I . game season or between October 1 , . and November 10. This special li- , r cense, costing 2 in addition to the ( . regular hunting license, may be pro- ( „ cured also from the office of the com- . mission at Trenton. The game laws limit upland hunt- , ing, during the above period, to wood- | r cock. As there is no other excuse for carrying a gun in the fields or woods during this period, an upland hunter y without a special woodcock license 0 makes himself liable to arrest. A heavy penalty of $100 for each viola- . tion applies to the killing of other e protected game during this periodj Six woodcock is the daily bag limit a hunter may take. Reports from numerous parts of the state indicate H | that early flights of the birds are on " -and a prospect for excellent sport, d — • - n NOTICE TO GUNNERS y • it All persons are forbidden trespassd ing with gun or dog on the property formerly owned by Balfoura Stites, i- deceased, under penalty of the law. n Mrs. Samuel Taylor-
CO. COMMITTEE REORGANIZES; BECKER, OF AVALON. 1 IS ELECTED CHAIRMAN— TWO ■ WOMEN VICE CHAIRMEN CHO- * SEN FROM OCEAN CITY. j t The Cape hfay County Republican executive committee met and reorgan- o for the year at Cape May Court t House Monday afternoon- i EdWard Becker, of Avalon, was t elected chairman, and of the four vice . presidents chosen two were from j. Ocean City. They are Mrs. Harry t Headley and Miss Ix>uisa T. Corson, i •Mrs. Headley and Miss Corson were j elected vice presidents on motion of j Edward M. Sutton, of Ocean City. < The meetinMvas called to order by 1 J. Albert Harris, of Wildwood, the re- j tiring chairman of the committee. j Short speeches were made by Sena- i tor Bright, the nominees for the offic- j es of assembly, sheriff and surrogate, ( Mayor Champion and Chas. Foster, ] nominees for county commissioner, \ and former Senator Lewis T- Stevens, I of. Cape May City. All spoke strongly for harmony , among the rank and file of the Re- c publican party and all pledged their J support to the whole Republican tick- . et. " 1 1 < I
BACHARACH FOR UNITY WILL VISIT ALL COMMUNITIES j IN HIS DISTRICT TO ADVOCATE , REUBLICANS FORGET DIFFER- : ENCES AND ANIMOSITIES. Representative Isaac Bacharach in j open letter to Cape May County ! this week puts up a strong plea for members of his party ; , to forget past differences and animos- ' ities and unite in common interest for ' the general elections. j In fact the Congressman makes no ' bones of declaring that it is the duty of all good Republicans to do just that. The past primaries and the incidents connected with it are evidently fresh . in Mr. Bacharach's mind and many of his good friends agree that it is time harmony and that harmony has needed for some time .past The text of Mr. Bacharach's letter * Sept 30, 1922. Star and Wave, fy Dear Editor: May I take occasion, through the columns of your very excellent paper, express my thanks and appreciation to the voters of Cape May County for their support of my candidacy at the rimary election? While I had no opposition for the | nomination, yet I am so happily gratiwith the; very flattering complimentary vote which I received, that I ■ish to make grateful acknowledgnent to the Republican voters of my District for the magnificent expression of support accorded me; and I shall make every earnest and honest effort to continue to merit that support and friendship by a renewal of my oft repeated promise to continue serve my constituents in all things , the very best of my humble ability. Now that the primaries are over it the duty of all true. Republicans to forget any differences or animosities that may have intruded during the primary campaign, and to , rally to the united support of the Republican candidates. The people of the State have spoken, and I endorse, without reservation j qualification, every candidate that I ^ been nominated on the Republican ticket as it affects the District which j 'r represent and the State and Nation ; in general. ! The eyes of the country are focused on New Jersey; we have much hard work to do to overcome the oppositionreturn of Senator F relinghuysen to the United States Senate; the election of Senator Runyon as Governor of our State, as well as the election of our candidates to the National of Representatives, our candidates for the State Legislature, and our candidates for County and Muni- _ cipal offices, are all necessary for the absolute success of the Republican Party and an expression of confidence n the administration.- of President ' I hope that during the few weeks remaining before the general elections I may be able to personally visit s every community in my district, at which time I shall be happy to pre- „ sent to the people of the District the accomplishments of the present National Administration which I personally beKeve to be sufficient to warrant the commendation and approval - of the people of the country expressed i by the election of all Republican can- , didates for office. Very truly yours, ISAAC BACHARACH.
Sheriff's Sale ) By virtue of a writ of Fieri Facias, ^ for sale of Mortgaged Premises, to C me directed, issued out of the Court J of Chancery of New Jersey, on the j 14th day of September, A. D., 1922, in- S certain cause wherein Mary E. J Hawn is complainant, and Viola M. J Hawn, Vernon Hawn and Horace S Jackson are defendants, I shall expose * sale at public vendue, on j MONDAY. OCTOBER 23, 1922, S between the hours of twelve and five 4 o'clock p. m., to wit, at one o'clock in i ; the afternoon of said day, at the Sher- * office, in Cape May Court House, * i Cape May County, New Jersey: J All that certain mortgaged prem- ; ises, with the appurtenances, in the I * 1 of complaint in the said cause par1 ticularly set forth and described, that ; . to say: » All of the following described lot of J ; situate in the Lower township, > the county of Cape May, and state , of New Jersey, joining the lot of land ' • to Charles Shaw, butted i and bounded as follows: Beginning at 1 a stake set up for a corner ten feet to ' the North of the line of land belong- ■ to E. A. Warne, from thence and ' . bounded by the line of land belonging to the said Charles Shaw. North fif- , ' ,ty-one degrees and thirty minutes | • thirteen perches and eight links ' , a stake for a corner, thence North i degrees West twelve nerch- | es to a stake for a corner; thence South fifty-one degrees and thirty j ' minutes West thirteen perches and I • eight links to a stake for a corner; ' r thence parallel with the said E. A. j Warne's line South fort'-one degrees East twelve oerches to the place of Within which bounds is I contained one acre of land be the same | more or less. Being the same premises grantd and conveyed to Andrew I Hawn, by Albert E- Husted, by deed | . bearing date the twenty-fourth day of ' June, A. D. 1893, and recorded in the I Cape May County Clerk's Office in J Book No. 109 of Deeds, pages 292, &c. , Excepting thereout and therefrom a" j ' that certain lot or parcel of land | ! granted and conveyed by the said ' . Andrew Hawn, to George Hawn, bv I Deed bearin" date the first day of I November, A. D. 1895, and which said I deed is recorded in the Cleric's Office 1 | of the county of Cape May, in Deed r Book No. 120 pages 879, &c. i I Amount due under decree is $528.35 7 jwith interest and Sheriff's fees to be , added. MEAD TOMUN, Sheriff, r September 27, 1922. ' J. Spicer Learning, Sol'r. } 9-30-4t-pf $22 44 ' NOTICE TO GUNNERS "s All persons are forbidden trespassv ing with gun or dog on the Loring f farm, under penalty of the law. Mr. Tubbs.
yj> Let Us Do AH Your Washing Ij )■( ROUGH DRY SEMI-FINISH FAMILY WASH 2 W DAMP WASH BLANKETS QUILTS RUGS, ETC. V jS Our Shirt and CoUar Worlt WiU Please You g g TROY LA UNDRY g HARRY E. BALM. Prop. V g 405 WASHINGTON STREET & & >e0s<)30s<)80^)e<)c0c00^>«e05030cc»0c0o0oc5o0o050oc )oC M WE HAVE THIS WEEK FOR SALE THE FOLLOWING CARS: H , .8 CADILLAC 8, 7-Passenger, Perfect Condition. & ; ■ TWO DODGE TOURING CARS, Good Condition. C I ONE DODGE SEDAN. . FORD SEDAN. Starter, Lots of extra equipment. ; ^ I OVERLAND, 5-Passenger. i_ j i H 1922 FORD TOURING CAR, Starter. ^ H TWO 1-TON TRUCKS, good condition. [ V? All Cars in Good Condition and Guaranteed as Represented. H : CAPE MAY MOTOR SHOP 1 H HARRY L. KEHR, Proprietor ; || West Perry Street at the Bridge
' XflXBXBXBXBXBXBXflXBXBXBXBXBXBXBXflXBXflXBX B B We Have Several g | GOOD BARGAINS 1 if IN USED CARS | ! s I 3 TWO SEDANS— NEWLY PAINTED— MOTOR HAS 3 / BEEN THOROUGHLY GONE OVER i! S One Truck Chassis, motor and chassis good__. $200 ■- B One Runabout in good running order. Make an offer. jg K X Ford Town Car, good body, motor and tires are first '^jjl class $200.00 ■ - * 1 5 Reo Touring Car, motor, body and tires first class, $225. « B B ^ S Overland Touring Car, good buy at $200.00 n ■ r, a GOODYEAR N. S. TIRES (firsts) 30x3%--. $8.50 g » 3 (Next week only) d m jig IF YOU ARE CONSIDERING A NEW FORD CAR, WE S * I WILL GLADLY CALL. TERMS IF YOU SO DESIRE. » * s II i i 19 a 1 :;| Focer & Mecray I ;; g Authorized Ford Dealers fl al 3*C if CAPE MAY NEW JERSEY £ - | B " BXBXBXBXBXBXBXBXBXBXBXBX B XBXBXBXflXflXBK """• ' 7 5 ; ' 1 " 7

