Post-War World
Is Topic Of
Friends’ Meet (Continued from Paea One) Fisk University, who was one of tte organizers of the objectors’ camps, in an address Saturday "Many tfonacientious objectors in these, camps today are creative pioneers, who are studying and preparing to assume important tasks in the reconstruction which must foljow the war," he said. “Civilian public service is now low on the list of public opinion priorities because it as not yet been able to develop fully its reconstruction possibilities, but much of the work already done will be of great benefit to America after the war," he added. Two prominent Quaker educators of the Philadelphia area addressed the conference on Friday,
the importance of edu-
FREDERlCK HARRIS
Frederick Harris, 83 yean of age, died Sunday/ July 12th, at
Philadelphia following an illness _ . of two weeks. | inf in the wax • emergency by Mr. Harris was born in Fair- becoming members qf the extenton, N. J. and had lived in Cape eion service volunteer corps to May County for the past fifty Kid in carrying messages to Cape years. | May County housewives, Miss Funeral services were Lois G. Hamilton, county home
at his late residence on West Perry street,. Wednesday afternoon with the Rev. 'Robert' D. Carrin, pastor of the Cape Island. Baptist Church, officiating, ttiterment was made in the. Clayton
Cemetery, at^Clayton.
He is survived by a son, Spicer, of Philadelphia, and four daughters. Mrs. James Nicoll, of Cape May and St. Petersburg, Fla., Mrs. Frank Moran, of Clayton. Mrs. A. S. Sailing and Mrs. Fred
Klinger, of Philadelphia.
GEORGE HOLDEN
George Holden; 62 years of age, for many years a resident of Cape May, died Monday, July 13th, at 1618 West Oxford street.
cation in forming a lasting peace Philadelphia, following and urging a revitalisation of; >ng illness. Funeral services and the Quaker religion to make its Mass were held this morning at
““jS: < s.T h ^u,°tt.
Dr. John W. Nason, president N. Fairbrother officisting. Inter«f Swarthmore CoUege, told the: ment under the direction of Earl assembly here that American edu- j L. Hollingsead, mortician, was cation is building for a more ‘ made in St. Mary’s Cemetery,
abundant life and that the broader Understanding it has engendered in the past will make for a more lasting peace when hos-
tilities end. .
“We will have war again if re-
-ligion and faith are not injected
fate the peace deliberations st work at Villas,
the end of this war," declared Dr. t A viewing was held last eveWilliam W. Comfort, president ning, and funeral services wUl be .emeritus of Hsverford CoUege. 1 u - , ' , rt,ia at h,#
an address Friday night.
JAMES D. LOCKE
RIO GRANDE — James D. Locke, of this place, died Monday afternoon at Villas after suffering a heart attack. He was stricken while doing carpenter
demonstration agent, said today. Each woman volunteer has from five to 15 famUies in her neighborhood tot which she is responsible. She is charged with maintaining communication with them at all times so that in the event of emergency of a necessity of getting war-time information to thenTif-rnay be done quftkly and
efficiently.
Each township in the county has a man and woman chairmkn with a number of helpers. The volunteer corps personnel in^isCwer Township includes Mrs. George Walter, chairman; Mrs. Joseph Elliott, Mrs. Charles Sandgran, Mrs. A. S. Walker. Mrs.
linger- ^ Hcdwigne, Mrs. Edward Phillips, ^ 1 Miss Sarah S. Chambers, Mrs.
James H. Mathews, Mrs. J. B. Kaighn, Mrs. Albert Poulson, Mrs. John Sheridan, Mrs. William Jones, Mrs. George Canning, Mrs. Irene Weuhkcr, Mrs. Walter LeGates, of Cold Spring and Erma; Miss Martha Roman, Mrs. G. Howard, Mrs. E. Johnson, Mrs. Shirk and Mrs. M. Bailey, of the
Friday —_
He urged Friends to make their religious influence more strongly felt in order to have a voice in the peace which will follow the
present war.
Postwar economic chaos can be averted if American people and the government support the system of free enterprise which ’
, Philip T. Sharp’hiladelphia Quak-
prominent Phi
er industrialist, told a representative gathering of Friends Thors-
war with a great demand for its many products not now available,” Sharpies declared. "Industry will be more efficient. Wartime scientific developments can be quickly turned to peace-time products and America wiU have the greatest supply of trained industrial workers in its history to supply the increasril demands." Asserting that industry is responsible for the preservation of the system of free enterprise, the industrialist warned that industry must be fair and reasonable with labor and must never accept e situation in which labor is leas than fair and reasonable with
Industry.
Characterizing chronic unemployment as s disease, the speaker said that if men want work and men want goods, a well organized system of industry can ning the two together for national prosperity. ' America's all-out war production which is turning oat war materials is also forging stronger bonds of unity between labor, management and capital, declared Bennet F. Schauffler, at Philm- * ’ ' ‘ regional director of the
held this afternon at his late residence in Rio Grande. Interment will be made in Green Creek
Cemetery.
Mr. Locke, who was 60,’ is survived by his wife, Mrs. Margaret Locke, a stfn, Nelson Locke, of Rio Grande, and a sister, Mrs.
Irene Taylor, of Erma.
He had been ill for several
rnonths and returned to work the
day he was fatally stricken. MISS ALICE CHAPMAN Miss Alice Chapman, of 8757
Jenifer street, Washington, D. C., oied -Thursday, July 9th, at. her Sewell avenue cottage following a lingering illness. She was 42. Under the direction of Earl L. Hollingsead,. mortician, the body was taken to Washington, where funeral services were hel^ Sat-
MRS. SUSIE HARRIS
. Funeral services will be held Friday afternoon at the Allen M. E. Church for Mrs. Susie Harris, colored, 87 years of age, who died Monday, July 13th, at her home, 120 Fifth avenue, Weat Cape May. Interment will be made in Union Cemetery, Cold Spring, under the direction of Earl L. Hol-
lingsead, mortician.
Miss Lamson Soloist At Sunday Concert
Mias Martha Lamson, prominent American lyric-coloratura soprano, of the Philadelphia LaScala Grand Opera Company, a Cape May summer visitor for several seasons, will be the guest
««pn», re K .u.au uirwu>r w u.c » rt “ t 8 ‘ ^ Sunday evening conNational iTbor Relations Board. c **. at Convention Hall this week. * a speech Thursday morning. a Tra^W
*Vith dl gwnjp»_Vorkinf
groups working toward
a common goal during the present emeregney,' Schauffler Mid, individual demands are being subordinated to those of the nation, and the cooperation fostered by the present all-out effort will probably continue in the post-war
period.
A • plea for acceptance ' of art, drama and literature as mediums af religious ministry in the future was sounded by Fred Eastman, profeasor of biography, literature and drama at the Chicago Theological Seminary. “A new, free and generous world must be built in the future to reptsice the chaotic universe we know today, and the Ideas and ideals upon which this new world must be based must be -put in* terms that fire the Imagination of the masses,” Profeasor Eastman, a prominent author, playwright and authority «e the . motion picture iruiusuy, declared.
M REJECTED BY ARMY AFTER TESTS MONDAY
" (Continued from Page One)
and-other standard works in the opera houses of southern Italy. Her first appearance in her native land was made as. Hilda in ‘•Rigoletto’’ with Jan Peerce and Robert Weedy, of the Metropolitan Opera Company. . The young artist gained wide musical experience when she went to Italy and France as a child to study the violin, .While there she acquired the language of those countries like a native. The celebrated conductor, Leopoldo Mugnone, on hearing her sing, advised her to study voice and prepare for opera. Still a mere child, she sang her first roles while pursuing her studies. The distinctly American invention, the catapult, was designed at the Naval Gun Factory in 1912. It is an adaptation of the old Roman method of hurling men ever city walls.
Villi
Former Gape Priest Buried On Monday TRENTON—The chancery office of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Trenton announced Friday that the Rev. Neil A, Mooney, pastor of the Church of Perpetual Help, Highlands, died Thursday at Long Branch Hospital. He was 56. Father Mooney was born New‘Brunswick and after receiving his early education in schools in that city entered St. Charles College, Catonsville, Md., in 1902 to study for the priesthood. He was ordained in the Cathedral of the Assumption, Baltimore, by the Icte James Cardinal Gibbons June 17, 1913. First appointment for Father Mooney was the church of Our Lady Star of the Sea, Cape May, in 1918, and during the same year
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