PAGE SIX
QI«gf<Uq»targti&»g
THURSDAY,
yimvA Of yisuaJibij. JownA
West Cape May
Mm. John w. M*r*» Ur. and Mrs. Richard Stiefe] and their daughter spent Sunday at Woodbine. Mr. and Mrs. William Dawis, of Philadelphia, were the weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hughes. Miss Betty Savage spent a few days in * Philadelphia. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Bennett and their family spent the weekend at £lver»on, Pa. Mrs. Henry Yocum is spending a week with her son, William Fox, of Elkton, Md. Staff Sergeant Edwin Sandgran, of Aberdeen, Md., spent the weekend with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Sandgran. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Weeks entertained Harry Dove, of Hackensack, recently. James Ewing spent Wednesday in Philadelphia. Mrs. Rose Burke spent a few days with her daughter and her family in Camden. Mrs. Edward Henderson, Wildwood, is spending a few days in the Borough visiting friends. Mrs. Beatrice Ewing of the O.E.S. entertained the following Past Matrons at dinner: Mesdames Mabel Hewitt, Lena Hughes, Ruth Miller, Vesta Olsen, Charlotte Stevens, Dorothy Eldredge, Ethel Brown and Tryphene
Ware.
David Hand, of State Teachers College, Glass boro, spent the weekend here with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Hand. - Mr. and Mrs. Frank Gallaher entertained on Sundav Mr. and Mrs. James Burke ana Mrs. Lizzie Rodan, of Goshen, and Mrs. M. Matthews, of Cold Spring. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Gallaher entertained over the weekend Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Falkner and their Children, of Springfield, Pa. Miss Olive Douglass has returned home from the Atlantic City Hcapital. Leslie Morton, of Camden, spent the weekend here at his
home.
Warren Lund, of Philadelphia, spent the weekend with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Lund. Mr. and Mrs. George Cresswell, of Bridgeton, were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Shaw re-
cently.
Mrs. Frank W. Hughes, of Cape May Point, spent Saturday at the Court House. Orlanda Lafferty spent part of the week at Atlantic City. Mrs. Allen W. Hand was given
ed to Penns grove on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Milton Capps, of Collingrwood, spent Saturday evening at the home of Mrs. Mary Pearte. Franklin Halbruner spent a few days' furlough here at home. Mrs. Charlotte Batter-sol is very ill at the home of her son, Thomas Battersol, at Pennsgrove. Mrs. Mary Barnard spent a few days with Mr. and Mrs. Harry Whilden here. Mrs. Gross entertained friends from 'Philadelphia on Friday eve-
ning.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Schellenger and their family, of South Dennis, are now occupying the tenant bouse of Mrs. Carolyn Taylor. A pot-luck dinner was enjoyed by the Happy Hearted Class at the Chapel on Thursday evening. Richard Ewing returned home from the Atlantic City Hospital on Sunday and is recuperating. Mr. and Mrs. David Huber spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Hollis HolTman at Haddonheld. Mr. -and Mrs. Clinton Elliott, of Audubon, spent the weekend here with relatives.
Erma
Mrs.
a dhrprisc pot luck party on her birthday. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. Rodney P. Hand, Mr. and Airs. Harold Hand, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Schellenger, Mr. and Mrs. R. Clifton Ware, Mr. and Mrs. Clifton Rubicam, Mrs. Harriet Ware, Mrs. J. 0. Rutherford, Mrs. Harry VanZant, Mrs. Harold Roop, Allen W. Hand and
William Hickey.
Mrs. Clarence Saycr and Mrs. Frank Bennett were hostesses at a tea given at the home of Mrs. Sayer, 601 Broadway, on Friday afternoon, and had as their Mrs. Earl Hollingsead,
Mrs. Electa Curtis, Mrs. Henry S ~ •enter, Mrs. Alwilda Stevens, rs. Lottie Briant, Mrs. Thomas Hemingway, Mrs. Thomas Eldredge, Mrs. C. H. Newkirk, Mrs. Edward Harris, Mrs. Daniel Hand, Mrs. Edward Phillips, Mrs. Willard Markley, Mrs. Leonard Sandgran, Mrs. Charles Folk, Miss Marie Frim, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Hunter, Mrs. Laura Smith, Mrs. May Smith. Mrs. Kunz, Mrs. Devine, Miss Viola Schellenger, Mrs. Nan El well, Mrs. Albert Stillwell, Mrs. Harry Jackson, Mrs. John Long, Mrs. Charles Heaton, Mrs. Etta Learning, Mrs. Leslie Poulson, Mrs. Ernest Pfister, Mrs. Harry Lemmon, Mrs. John Corson, Mrs. Linda Smith, Mrs. Elizabeth * Dischert and Clarence Sayer. Mrs. Hollingsead led the devotional service and Mrs. Foulk S ave a reading entitled "Aunt arson's Story". Mrs. Sayer gave a talk on the celebrated negro scientist, George Washington
Carver.
Cold Spring
Miss Olive Douglass, who is recuperating from an operation at Atlantic City Hospital, was brought here to the home of her sister, Mrs. Norman Taylor, on Sunday. The Hymn Sing will be held in the Dias Creek Methodist Church on Sunday evening at 8:45. Dr. and Mrs. Wilson Miller moved from Rahway this week ■md are now occupying the late Edward Learning homestead. Irwin Swain is stationed at Baltimore. Mrs. Belle Hughes, of Coatesville, spent a week here with relatives recently. Frank McPherson, of Camden, spent a few days here at his home. Floyd Halbruner, of Holmesburg, spent a few days here with his family. John McPherson, of Salem, ■pent the-weekend here with relatives. Harry Winkler, of Jersey City, spent a few days here with his wife, Mrs. Lucy Winkler. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Ingersoll and their grandson. Warren Ingersoll, have closed their home hers and have -gone to Chester, where he has employment. John Williams has returned home from the Neva! Hospital at New York. Mr. and Mrs. Randall Elliott and Mrs. Frances Jackson motor-
Catharine Matthews and her son Billy and daughter Jean Matthews, motored to Washington and spent a few days with Mrs. Edna Foulke and her family. Augustus Swain and hi* daughter, Mrs. Thomas Rice, motored to Philadelphia on business Friday. Lieut. Raymond Hickman, Fort Dix, spent the weekend here with his family. Mr. and Mrs. John Y. Johnson entertained Mr. and Mrs. Frank Reed, of Ocean City, at dinner on Thursday. The Sunshine Class was entertained at a St. Patrick party at the home of Mrs. Alvin Mason with Mrs. Frank Schellenger as hostess on Tuesday evening. Everett Jackson spent Sunday his home. of Pleasantv: parents of a baby girl, bom at their home on Tuesday. They were former residents of Erma. The Epworth League held a social in the hall on Tuesday eve-
ning.
Mr. and Mrs. William Ivory, of Camden, spent a week with her brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Mason. "Mrs. Edgar Woolson entertained the W.C.T-U. at her home on Thursday. The Rev. and Mrs. L. V. Brewin, Ivins DeCamp, and Mrs. Roy Coffin and her daughter,' of Paulsboro, called on Mrs. Bertram Snyder and her family on Friday.
Rio Grande MS*, ft. K- WOLCOTT
spent the grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Jos-
eph Long.
Mrs. Robert Stebbins entertained the Ladies' Aid Society of the Methodist Church at her home
on Wednesday evening.
Mrs. Margaret neai, of Newtown Square, Pa., spent Sunday
here with her children.
Mrs. Wilmon Taylor, of Cold Spring, is visiting her niece here,
Mrs. Ellas Robbins.
William McCarty and George Fulla#rr, of Ocean City, spent
Friday in Philadelphia.
Miss Theo Jaggard and Mrs. John Skellinger were Millville
visitors on Saturday.
Mrs. Annie Lloyd and Frank Hallman spent Sunday at Atlantic City with her daughter. Emelio Scalzetti, of Philadelphia, spent Sunday here with his daughter, Mrs. Arthur Cresse. Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Entrikin entertained Mr. and Mrs. John Orr, Mrs. Ella Wattis and Edward McCoombs, of Philadelphia,
on Sunday.
Robert Huff, of Camden, spent the weeknd here with his mother, Mrs. Helen Huff. Clarence Jones, of Philadelphia, brought his father home on Mon-
CORRECTION i item appearing in last week’s West Cape May notes to the effect that Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Oliver, their daughter Marjorie and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bennett attended the Sportsman’s Show in Philadelphia recently was incorrect. Mrs. Oliver is a patient in a Philadelphia hospital. The others attended the show after isiting Mrs. Oliver.
Bologna purchased by the U. S. Navy during the fiscal year will total about 2,535,000 pounds.
Club War Aims Are Outlined United Effort—Victory” is _ jme of a statement issued this week by officers of the Cape May Khranis Club in which they quoted an article recently appearing in the Kiwanis magazine, written by Fred G. McAlister, of London, Ontario, inters national vice president of wanis. "Victory is the guardian of the four freedoms but Victory itself has four ‘*"* J ‘ They are and Velocity. ^ ■st of all we have a valid cause. Already Kiwanis has put into circulation its guide-book of home-front activities entitled, ‘Your Community in the War 1 . “The second factor in Victory is Vitality. In the ring it is not Only a long arm and hard knuckles that count, but a fighting heart. Our fighting forces at the front are the forearm. Back of that, now, as in no former period of history, there must be a vital, active, fullblooded, forceful, national life. “Third, Visibility. A prophet said, ‘Without vision the people perish.’ In this year’s statement of its current objectives, Kiwanis says under the heading— ‘Meet the Present Emergency—promote an intelligent understanding of the issues involved,' and Kiwanis proposes, particularly on dates of national importance, the sponsoring of patriotic rallies and citizenship meetings as one means to create a mass will to ‘ > the war. Fourth, there is Velocity. The handbook of dictators has called this a war of movement, and by using organization, coordination, mechanization and motive power they have swung the bulk of their weight against each objective in succession. Four tons of war materials back of each man, the German General Staff claims to have thrown into Rus-
sia.
"Velocity is not a matter of The first Secretary of the Navy was Benjamin Stoddert, a resident of Georgetown, Md., who took office May 21, 1798.
penetaml motion. It is a matter of building the trap stoutly, setanything to do with set ■Fringing it, but all _ _ going to have all that we & with building it," the Kiwanis - ' '
by di York,
Sweet Rotate Sale Stroeg In N. J.
New Jersey sweet potato growers moved tonnage equivalent to S1 cariots into consumption through the Atlantic Commission Company, produce-buying affiliate of the A JtP Tea Company, during the week ended March 7, the
organization reported today.
The “sweets" reached consum-
through retail outlets served ” tribotion centers in New . Albany, Buffalo, Philadel-
phia, Pittsburgh, Scranton, Altoona and Baltimore, H. A. Baum, general manager of the baying
organization, said.
Most of the pnrchzses were made direct from buying areas through the company’s field office in Riverton, with a steady market prevailing during the period, the
report said.
IN HOSPITAL Mrs. Horace Ware has returnI to her Washington street home from Hahnemann Hospital, Philadelphia, where she recently underwent a major operation. Mrs. Ware is now rapidly convalescing.
A letter from George Washington deploring the lack of naval strength was read in the Continental Congress November 1, 1775 and the next day $100,000 was appropriated for a naval force.
Our New Location — After Monday, March 23, will be 668 Washington Street. May we continue to serve you? fisuudif. Salon. Moving from 412 Washington St.
Keystone 2731
M. L. DIETTER1CH, Mgr.
Funds available for First Mortgage loans on improved Residential properties. Cape May City applications will
be considered.
FIVE MILE BEACH BUILDING AND LOAN ASSOCIATION ROBERT J. KAY, Secrets it 101 E. Wildwood Ave^
Wildwood, N. J.
Hh
ANCHORAGE CA
AT THE LANDING
Put ia at THE ANCHORAGE far a
^ real evs “
fftft...
ta ... A regular pert of call oa the course of aB fan bound
CHOICE WINKS, LIQUORS AND WEEKS —:s_ PINE FOODS ORCHESTRA AND DANCING SATURDAY NIGHT
Court House Marble Yard EXPERIENCED MARBLE CUTTERS MONUMENTS AND MEMORIAL STONES Wm. B. POWELL CAPE MAY COURT HOUSE. N. J. Orric* 1Q4-R-2 Bcu. Phones Residence iai
11 wlthdrewala paid on ar All maturities paid In f maturity date.
1942 TAXES First Quarter Taxes Are PAST DUE. Second Quarter Taxes Are Due May 1. You can earn a discount by paying all of 1942 taxes now. 7$> interest is added to past due taxes. Plan NOW for the payment of 1942 and PRIOR Taxes. CITY OF CAPE MAY
Come on legs-only 10 to go! 7 Since we can’t get tires for their cars, forty-three of our meter readers and collectors are riding bicycles. One of them wrote ' us this note: •Dear Boss: Since I've been pedaling this muscle-buster around I know what a baseball player feels like when his legs begin to give out! But I can take it if it's going to save rubber. I don't get around as fast these days. So, if people wonder about their bills, you'd better ask them to look at the dates. The bills may be for more days than they used to be. That makes quite a difference, you know. You may be riding a bicycle yourself, soon, so come out and I'll show you how.”
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