Cape May Star and Wave, 5 March 1942 IIIF issue link — Page 2

7

FACE TWO

(Eagf Man Star agftMawr

Caps Wju} JhiA (x)osk

Mra. Anna Bootie has been tertaining he/ son-in-law and daughter for several days at the home of Mrs. V. M. D. Marcy. Mr. and Mrs. William Bradford and their daughter, Miss Joan Bradford, of Philadelphia, spent the weekend at their cottage, 1009 Stockton avenue. Clifford Brooks, of Philadelphia, enjoyed the weekend in Cape May with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Amsbry Mitchell Brooks, at Benton avenue and Jefferson

street.

Mrs. Samuel M. Schellenger was a Philadelphia visitor on Wednesday. v Miss Doris Hoffman, a student at Lebanon Valley**College at Annvilie, Pa., was a recent guest af her mother, Mrs. Charles R. Hoffman. S Mr. and Mrs. Wilbert Cinder have been spending several days here with Mrs. Cinder’s mother, Mrs. August Wulff, Mr. and Mrs. Cinder are making their home in Philadelphia. Mr. and Mrs. Kussel Bryant, who have been guests at the Batten Cottage for several months, have returned to their home in Haddonfield. H. Wilbur Bircks, of Philadelphia, an annual summer resident of this resort, spent Wednesday in Cape May, overseeing his property interests. Mrs. T. Lee Lemmon . spent Wednesday in Philadelphia. Mrs. J. Stratton Ware, of Bayonne, joined Dr. Ware for the - weekend at the home of Postmaster and Mrs. Lemuel E. Miller, Jr., where Dr. Ware has been convalescing for the past week, i Both returned home during the week, accompanied by Mr. and Mrs.-Samuel M. Schellenger. Miss Marjorie Masella, of Wilmington. Del., spent the weekend here with her parents. Miss Susanne Partridge enjoyed the weekend at her home in Ventnor. Miss Estelle Black, who has been confined to her home for the past three months, resumed her duties at the Cape May Coal and Ice Company this week. r Miss Louise Stevens spent t^e weekend with friends in Atlantic City. w George Roth, of Philadelphia, spent the weekend here with his gurents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Clarence Taylor, of Blackwood,

Mr.

visited his parents,

j Mrs.. Carl Taylor, on

Mrs. F C. Deputy, of lllmo, Mo., is visiting her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Jones, at their Washington

street apartment.

Wallace Stuard, of Ardmore, Pa., enjoyed the weekend in Cape May with his aunt, Miss Cecilia

Hickey.

Mrs. Horace Boardman and her son Herbert, of Birdsboro, Pa., have been visiting Miss Edith Edmunds, at her Jackson street

home.

Mrs. L. Dietterich, of Philadelphia, spent part of the week here with her daughter, Miss Betty Dietterich, at the El Drisco. Mr. and Mrs. Kaymond Faulk■r and Mr. and Mrs. J. Clarence Gallaher returned to Cape May this week after several weeks' trip to Miami, Florida. Miss Mary Bellangy, of Phila^ delphia, spent Sunday here with relatives. Harold Alden, of Philadelphia, joined Mrs. Alden here for the eekend. Miss Dorothy Blair, of Philadelphia, spent the weekend in Cape May with her parents, the Rev. and Mrs. Samuel Blair. Mr. and Mrs. Peter Dellas, companied by Miss Dorothy Kieeffe, visited Norman Dellas at Fort Dix on Sunday. Mrs. Earl Bolton has returned to her Hughes street home after spending several months at her former home in Oil City, Pa. Her daughter is now visiting her for some time. Mrs. Edna Devlin entertained Mrs. Edwin J. Peters, of Allentown, Pa., during the week. Lieutenant («G) Charles Swanson spent the weekend in Cape May with Mrs. Swanson and their daughter, Sally. Mrs. Swanson returned with Lieut. Swanson -rto New York City for a few days. Mrs. Donald Lear is spending several days in Newark as the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Rosenfelder. Lieutenant Commander and Mrs. Edward Scarlett with their son and daughter, Billie and Priscilla, spent Monday in Atlantic

City.

Mr. and Mrs. Gustave Sautter, of East Orange, have been guests of Captain and Mrs. Walter Russell for several days. Mr. and Mrs. William Lex, of Philadelphia, were visitors in

SHIP VIA CAPE MAY TRANSFER BE SAFE (Daily SsAvks

PHILA. OFFICE 18 S. FRONT ST. Phones Key. 9946-5111

*rd 1670

ALL GOODS INSURED

Phone Key. 3520

Cape May during the week, overseeing their property at Columbia avenue and Franklin street. Mr. and Mre. Harry Rafferty and Mrs. Sullivan, of Pittsburgh, motored here during the week to oversee their property interests. Mrs. Grace Hamburg spent pari of the week in Germantown, Pa. David W. Hughes, of Philadelphia, entertained guests at the home of hi* parents, Dr. and Mrs. Frank R. Hughes, over the week-

end.

Miss Ada urqunart, of Pittsburgh, a member of the summer colony younger set, was a visitor in Cape M&y during the week. Miss Urquhart spends the summers here with her parents at their cottage. Dairy Machines Given Priority Because of the importance of dairy products in the “Food for Freedom” program, use of critical materials for the manufacture of dairy machines and equipment will be permitted in 1942 at a relatively high rate, according to A. S. Walker, chairman of the Cape May County USDA War Board. “This does not mean that dairymen can delay in ordering necessary- new equipment or that possibilities for repair and reconditioning of old equipment should be overlooked,” Walker pointed

out.

The effect of the program is to restrict materials going into new farm machinery to an average of approximately 83 per cent of the 1940 manufacturing year, and to permit the use of materials for repair parts at an average rate of about 150 per cent of the 1940 level. Allocations of essential materials for manufacture of dairy machinery and equipment, attachments and parts, follow: Milling machines (complete units) 206 per cent of 1940 level. Cream separators, depending on capacity in pounds per hour, from ' to 213 per cent. Milk coolers, depending on type, from 130 to 179 per cent. Butter-making equipment, 144 per cent. Other farm dairy equipment, expressed in terms of total weight of all metals and rubber, 122 per cent. Attachments and parts for all items in this group 190 per cent.

HOME FROM HOSPITAL Mrs. John McCann has returned to the home’ of her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs - . Logan B. Taylor, from the Atlantic City Hospital, where she recently underwent a major operation.

Twenty-eight states shared in U. S. Navy shipbuilding operations during the fiscal year ending June “ 1941. itiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHliliiiliiiunililii

-BASIN FISH MARKETOPPOSITE SCOTTY'S WHARF OPEN ALL YEAR - Keystone Phone 1392 FISH - OYSTERS - CLAMS BUY THEM WHERE YOU SEE THEM OPENED

CHECK YOUR LONG DISTANCE CALLING WITH THIS CURVE

T TNDER PRESSURE of war action, New V/ Jersey’s use of long distance telephone service has become the greatest ever known. The calling r^jks three high peaks each day with dee&tteys In between them. In the peak period* all lines are heavily laden, and the traffic is naturally heaviest on the circuits to mUitary and war production

centers.

For beet service under these conditions and to make the most effective aU-round use of the wire network, we suggest that you fwir* only your ■’must" calls in the peak periods and your other calls In the valley periods when more lines are available. Call, when you can. before 1* a. m.i between 11 J* and 1 at mid-day; 43# and

7 p. and after 83# at night.

Buy Dtjtnx Bcnil snj Sum ft v Into in V'utory

NIW JtttIT gill mt’NONI COMFAIir

| 1 i Why Gamble with | | Laundry Service? | E It’s so silly to take = § chances with your family E S laundry when we offer a = = laundry service that is § S absolutely dependable. S = Hundreds of satisfied § = customers will bet their E S last chip on the uniform = 5 excellence of our work. E E Phone Keystone 4350 £ 1 and see for yourself. E | Columbia Laundry | “ 314 Congreas Street E Keystone 4350 E iimniiiiiinimiimiMiiiiiiiHiiuiiMiiir

\. m.;

M and ^

PHILADELPHIA CAMDEN By Bus $2-00

Mas 5% Federal Tex BUSES LEAVE CAPE MAY •7.00 A.M. 1.10 P. M. t8.10A.M. 6.10 P.M.

TERMINALS P. R. S. L. STATION Woshiagton and Ocaaa Ave4aes PHONE: I ELL 21i-J. KEYSTONE 411 TERMINAL RESTAURANT 600 WasUagtoa Straet PHONE KEYSTONE 1070

dtinlA Joh 9iomamakahA.

HOW MUCH DO YOU VALUE YOUR MILK SUPPLY? By Virginia Reynolds The cow is man's best friend. If you had to choose one food on which to live you should select milk. UnaMed, it provides satisfying nourishment and contains the important vitamins and is considered the most nearly perfect food. It is also one of the cheapest foods because every drop is usable and rid; in nutrition. It furnishes lime and phorpborus for bones and teeth, proteins for building muscle, iron for the blood, carbohydrates for fuel and energy and vitamins for life it-

self.

Milk may be a great influence for good or bad. Milk inspectors tell us that in a sample of poor milk there may* be millions of bacteria in each cubic centimeter. In so called “pure” milk there must not be more than 100,000 bacteria per cubic centimeter. Certified milk must have less than 10,000. After the Board of Health and distributors of milk have seen to it that we have as nearly perfect a product as can be obtained, then it is up to us homemakers to do our share. Just look on the doorsteps in your neighborhood. One glance at the milk bottles on the steps will reveal to you that the hoiftewife not co-operating. It is the duty of everyone to provide a suitable place for the milk to be delivered (if you do not take it : immediately). No matter where the milk is left, the first thing to be done is to wash the bottles before they are put away for when milk is delivered it is exposed to dirt, weather and hands. It is easy for us to leave the caps off when we are using milk, to pour cream back into the bottle after it has been on the table, or milk that has been delivered on different days. Each of these habits makes the army of germs that much greater. Milk inspectors tell us that the homemaker is the weakest link in the chain for pure milk, for, although their control over the germs may be almost won, it can be 'lost by carelessness in the home. The two following recipes have been popularized by the Duchess of Windsor. SALLY LUNN WITH MILK 2(4 cups sifted flour 3 teaspoons baking powder bi teaspoon salt bi cup butter (4 cup sugar 3 eggs, beaten 1 cup milk Mix and sift flour, baking powder and salt. Cream butter, add sugar and beat well. Add eggs and blend well. Add flour

mixture, alternately with i a small amount at a time, b mixture unto smooth. Torn into greased loaf pan and bake in hot oven (400F)- 85 minutes or until done. Serves 6. CHICKEN SUPREME 4 cups diced, cooked chicken il cup chicken stock 4 tablespoons butter 2 tablespoons browned flour \ teaspoon mice bi teaspoon ground cloves bt teaspoon salt Dash of" cayenne H cup cream bi cup sherry 5 hard-cooked eggs Simmer chicken in stock 10 minutes. Melt butter and blend in flour, spices, salt, cayenne and cream until mixture is smooth. Add chicken, stock and sherry; stir constantly over low heat until thickened. Add grated yolks. Simmer 5 minutes. chopped giblets. Serve on toast or in patty shells. Serves 8.

ALFALFA ASSOCIATION DISBANDS THIS WEEK The recent disbanding of the New Jersey Alfalfa Association denotes the wide acceptance of alfalfa as a field crop in the Garden State, H. R. Cox, extension agronomist at Rutgers University and secretary of the association since 1921, said this week. The disbanding is the result of the accomplishment of those two purposes. Savage Shifted To Baltimore Post Lieutenant Walter B. Savage, of West Cape May, has been transferred from the Quartermaster Replacement Center at Camp Lee, Va. to Company A, 77th QM Battalion, Holabird Quartermaster Depot, Baltimore. The 77th Battalion is a light maintenance battalion assigned to the First Army and Company A is being activated at Holabird. Lieutenant Savage is taking a course in engine repairs along with his company duties at the Motor Transport School at the Holabird Depot. He was -■ stationed at Fort Dix the Rents and Claims section handling real estate matters for 14 months prior to the outbreak

You can’t qualify now as a real patriot merely by writing letters to the “voice of the people” column in your newspaper denouncing the nation’s enemies.

No'discipline is so effective as that which is self-imposed. —Topeka Daily Capital.

iiiimimimiiiiiiiimiimiimiiiimiimiii

If you're looking for buyer* for anything from a hairpin to S a house, tell the public what you £ hare for aale, the price and where it may be aeon. To be sure of reaching a Urge markot of potential buyers, place your message In the Classified Section of The Star and Wave. Low Coot :: Big Dividends Call Keystone 900 or Bell 90 7iiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiimimiiiiiimmiimmiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiimiimmimiiimii>

]. S. GARRISON WATCHMAKER and JEWELER

CAPE MAY CITY

Olo Gold. Silver and Diamoi

iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimmiiimiiiimmiiiiiimmmmmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii

WENTZELL’S — FURNITURE —

mi urn | “If We Satisfy You, Tell Your Friends, If Not Tell Us” | 1 ROBINSON’S EXPRESS

ioton Street. Cape May. N. J.

£ KsvaTONE Phone 8480

Bell 448 =

PUBUCffisEgyiCE

£ DAILY TRIPS: Philadelphia. Wildwood and Cape May = = PHILADELPHIA OFFICES: 84 North Front Street Bell. Mar. 8386 Keystone Main 7887 F GOODS DEUVEREO SAME DAY

NEW EBBITT HOTEL 150 ROOMS IOth a H Bra.. N. W. In the Business District WASHINGTON, D, C EXCELLENT ACCOMMODATIONS AT MODERATE RATES RATES: Singles 62.00 up — Double 63.00 up Special Rates for Family Groups or Large Parties Friendly Atmosphere Fine Food STRICTLY TEMPERANCE HOTEL GEORGE C. CLARKE, General Manager

ARNOLD PRESSBURGER pc

■brand flay by JOHN COLTON GENE TIERNEY HUSTON • MATURE • MUNSON

THURSm MARCH 12 11C Bargain Day 22C A New, Exciting Mystery Adventure! CHESTER MORRIS HARRIET HILLIARD RICHARD LANE

COMING!!! FRIDAY - SATURDAY, MARCH 13 ■ 14 BETTE DAVIS MONTE WOOLLEY ANN SHERIDAN

“CONFESSIONS OF BOSTON BLACKIE”

“THE MAN WHO CAME TO DINNER”

CASINO WILDWOOD, N. J. FRI. - SAT. - SUN, MARCH 6-7-8 Fred Astaire Rita Hayworth in

SHORE WILDWOOD, N. J. FRL - SAT. - SUN, MARCH 6-7-8 Ginger Rogers Adolphe Menjon

“YOU'LL NEVER GCT RICH”

“ROXIE HART"