Cape May Star and Wave, 6 August 1942 IIIF issue link — Page 6

FACE srx

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West Cape May MRS. JOHN W. MK»r* Marcus Scull spent Thursday In Philadelphia. SUIT Sergeant Edward Sandgran spent several days here with his wife. Mr. and Mrs. A. Shive are ■pending their vacation in the borough. Mrs. Margaret Bailey, of Philadelphia, is spending some time with Mrs. E. Ptsiston. Mr. and Mrs. William Stanton are entertaining Mr. and Mrs. William Carter, of Philadelphia, Miss B. Street, Mrs. Elysee SchilUnger and Albin Schillinger, of New York, at their Fourth avenue cottage. Captain Theodore Bennett has been spending some time with his family here. Mrs. William Eldredge entertained at a luncheon. Their guests were Mrs. Wilford Swain, Mrs. Kennard Ramshaw, and her son Kennard, Jr., Mrs. S. McPherson, B. Berrell, Mrs. Fred Ramshaw, Mrs. Helen Halbruner, Mrs. Reeves McPherson and her 'Bon Reeves, Jr.

Mrs. Herman Pedarson and her daughter Patricia have left for Ohio, where they will join' Mr. Pedarson. Harry Schellenger, of Philadelphia, spent the weekend here with Eis family on York avenue. Belford Lemunyon has been transferred to the Third division of the U: S. C. G. Mrs. Malcolm McDuell entertained Mr. and Mrs. J. Edmunds, of Salem. Mrs. Thomas Welsh and her daughter, of Brooklyn, are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Matthews. Mrs. Emma Cherry has returned to Avalon after spending two weeks with Mrs. Elizabeth Oliver.

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Cold Spring Mrs. Alberta Williams Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Crease and their family have moved tc Avon where he is employed. Adna R. Elliott, of Fort Benning, Ga., is spending a furlough here with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Randall Elliott. Joseph Crouch, of Alabama, is spending a ten-day furlough here With his wife. Mrs. Annie Hawn spent Mondr with her daughter, Mrs. Elizabel Search. Mr. and Mrs. Hollis Hoffman and their daughter Alberta, of Haddonfiekl, are spending their vacation at their cottage at Cape May Beach Estate. Mr. and Mrs. Courtland Dickinson spent the weekend at the Lemunyon cabin at Atsion. Mr. and Mrs. John L. Munday and their daughter-in-law, Mrs. Sara Munday, spent Sunday with Paul Munday at Fort Dix. Benjamin Marcy and Mrs. Ida Hack, of Haddon Heights, spent Monday evening with Mr. and Mrs. William Search. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Elliott ■pent a few days with Mr. and Mrs. Chester Ford at Burlington. Mrs. Sarah McNeill, of Pitman, was a recent visitor of her sis-ter-in-law, Mrs. Mae Hoffman. Harry Winkler, of Jersey City, spent a few days here with his wife. Miss Lillian Denham, of Bear, Del., spent a week here with her sister, Mrs. Edna Sheets, and her family. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Foleys and their children, of Marlborough, spent a week here with relatives. Mrs. Nat. Morrison and her family, of Coatesville, Pa., spent a few days with her mother, Mrs. Belle Hughes. Walter Y. Shaw, of Merion, Pa., r t the weekend with his wife is summering here. Mrs. Clyde Heathcote and her family, of Rio Grande, called on Mrs. Sydney Ellis and Mrs. Elizabeth Parker on Sunday. Mrs. Joseph McPherson spent Sunday afternoon^with her mother, Mrs. Ethel Miller, at Wildwood. William Parker, who is employed in Camden, spent the weekend here with his wife. The Rev. and Mrs. Gordon Cook, "of Rio Grande, and Mrs. Annie Hawn were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Learning Hand on Tues.‘ Miss Natalie Hand made a business trip to Browns Mills on Tuesday.

Cape May Point MIS* JANKT BAIR Mr. and Mrs. R. Warren Carson, of Frankford, Pa., drove down on Saturday for a visit With his parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Carson, on Yale avenue. Mrs. Ada D. Guest recently visited Mrs. J. Fryant for a few days. Mrs. Joseph Tannebaum and her daughter Beverly were the guests of Mrs. Howard Cornell and her family for a week reesatly. Miss Katherine Wilson, of Philadelphia, has closed her cottage on Princeton avenue after two weeks' vacation with Miss CatherIne Marshall, also of Philadelphia. Harry Stulcher spent the weekend with Mrs. Stulcher at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Bretherick. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Creamer, Of Penns grove, are enjoying weeks at their bungalow on 0<

Mrs. Alberta Williams Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Barnett and their children, of Green Creek, called on his sister, Mrs. Emma Schellenger, and'her family recently.' Miss Frances Garretson spent last week in Philadelphia. Mrs. Rebecca Dickinson has returned home after spending a few days with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Mayer, in Philadelphia. Mrs. George Kelly spent a few days with her daughter, Miss Lillian Sharp, in Philadelphia. Mrs. Frank Garretson and her son Warren spent a few da_ys with relatives in Philadelphia. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Barry, of Downingtown, spent the weekend here with relatives. Miss Barbara Lee Dorne has returned to Philadelphia after spending two months here with her grandmother, Mrs. Lelia Foster. Robert Forsythe and Dixon Ouram are employed at the magnesite plant at Cape May Point. Mrs. Rosalie Bailey and her family, of Mauricetown, spent a few days here with her mother, Mrs. Minnie Pierson. Mrs. Mary Burfard and hexfamily, of Mauricetown, spent Wednesday here with relatives.

with Mr. and Luther Garretaon at Court House. George Williams and his brother Edward have returned to Philadelphia after spending three weeks with their grandmother, Mrs. Caroline Williams. Mrs. May Mass, of Frankford, Pa., spent two weeks with Mrs. Alfred Jackson recently. Mrs. David Mason and her daughter, Mrs. Helen Ivory, of Camden, spent a few days here with relatives. Amos Hickman, of South Dennis, spent a week here withy his sister, Mrs. Bertram Snyder. Larry Jackson is spending a week with his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Jackson, while his mother, Mrs. Everett Jackson, with her husband in Maryland. The Rev. and Mrs. Rodger Hawn, of New York, are spending a few days here with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Hawn. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Butler and her mother, Mrs. Sadie Harvey, and Mrs. Audry Ledden, of Gloucester, spent Friday evening with Mrs. Annie Hawn. The Rev. and Mrs. S. F. Sliker have returned home after spending two weeks at Montrose, Pa. Harry Deer and Ella Kertz, of Wynnewood, Pa., spent a few days with Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Kertz. Mr. and Mrs. Chestin Robbins and their son, of Roebling, spent

Please Avoid l tuu’Ci’ssary (nils to Washington

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TITH the war effort of 28 United Nations centered upon it, Washington is probably the busiest city in the world. It la fast outgrowing its physical limits—and its tele-

phone facilities.

Long distance calls in and out of the capltol city have doubled within a year and are still inaeaslng as the war effort moves

toward its peak.

Materials for further telephone expansion now go for weapons of war. To help meet this situation, we ask you to avoid unnecessary calls to Washington. If you must call, please be brief and call when the lines are less busy: before 10 A.M.; 12 to 2 P. M.; 5 to 7 P. M. and after 9 P. M. Your cooperation will do much to help relieve the congestion on telephone lines and speed the drive for Victory.

NEW JERSEY BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY I

JhsuuL Liu Tlo SubAiiijudsL f&i, in, Summ&A,!

Jjd ua AstJwst yoiL. Cape May Coal & Ice Company 512 WASHINGTON STREET

a few days here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Richard SttefeL Misses Evelyn and June Lloyd, of Haddon Heights, spent a week with Misses Ruth and Dorothy Repp recently. Mr. and Mrs. Orville McDonnell, of Philadelphia, spent a week here with Mr. and Mrs. William Foster. Charles Matthews, Joseph Roop and Kennard Matthews spent Monday in Philadelphia on busi-

BROWN IS PROMOTED ■rry Morris Brown, son of Ethel O. Brown, of Cape May, has been promoted to the rank of staff sergeant in the U. S. Marine Corps, it was learned hero this week. Sergeant Brown enlisted in the Marine Corps in December, shortly after the attack on Pearl Harbor. He is at present stationed somewhere on the west coast.

Rio Grande

Mrs. Harry Brandt and her two children are visiting relatives at

Monroeville.

Orville Hoffman, phia, spent the weekend here with his sister, Mrs. Harry Eldredge, and her family. - Miss Bessie Walton has ed from Philadelphia, where she has spent several weeks caring for her sister, who v— ——’~

Thomas Fleming, who has been lending some time at Mrs. John _aeket’s, has gone to Ocean City to visit his mother, Mrs. Estelle Fleming. The Ladies’ Aid Society held a special meeting at the home of Mrs. Warren Harris on Monday evening. .Mr. and Mrs. Jack Riley, of Washington, D. C., are spending

Cossty Mss Wlss

Costsst Prize

COURT HOUSE—For the first time a Cape May County man is winner in the current Cape May County fishing contest. Director P. H. Jackson, in charge of the seventh annual event, announced today that Walter Whitaker, of 1105 Simpson avenne. Ocean City, is the winner of the weekly draw-

parents, Mr. and

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Mrs. Emma Fisher is Mr*. Etta Fisher at Stone ___ _ Merritt Croker, of Philadelphia, is visiting. at the home of his aunt," Mra. David Morrison. Mrs. David Morrison went to Philadelphia on Sunday for a few days.

mite bis entry ha •ortunity of being a weekly prises are i

drawings and not on t iar fish hooked. Every i has a chance if he i

entry card. ,

That July v . for fishing in Cape May County is indicated by the large ber of entries received for contest, Jackson said. Pier and partv boat fishing has been unusually active with large catches of weeks and kings being made from the piers. •

GOOD FOOD is an. important part of any vacation. Assure yourself and your family of the BEST by patronizing the places listed below. All are at YOUR service.

The Washington Inn 801 Washington St. • Cape May

■Famous for Excellent -Meals and Service. Keystone Phone 723 iiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiuiiiiiiuuiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiimMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimin

WELCOME CAPE MAY BIBLE AND MISSIONARY CONFERENCE

Scuptih'

LUNCHEONETTE CANDY STORE

Cor. Beach and Perry Streets

Douglass’ Restauraiit

419 Washington Street Cape May, N. J.

Excellent Food

Good Service

LIKE A MEAL ABOARD SHIP. DINNER AT Sunset Beach Restaurant

shore of Delaware Bay near the Concrete Ship. HOME COOKING A SPECIALTY.

HOTEL GLENWOOD 609 Hughes Street RESIDENTIAL 1 SECTION—NE1AR THE BEACH WHERE THE BEST OF FOOD IS PROPERLY PREPARED AND CAREFULLY SERVED. ALL ROOMS WITH RUNNING WATER. , MAUDE E. MITCHELL

Patronize these Advertisers.

BATTEN COTTAGE and TEA ROOM ' The Home of Good Food

Featuring our home made rolls, relish trav and !

Open All Year

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Moiyit’s Seafood Restaurant WASHINGTON and OCEAN Sts. (formerly at Schellenger’s Landing)

Try Our Seafood Platters Steaks, Chops and Regular Dinners

A Good Place for Good Meals . KEENAN’S Restaurant 311 Washington Street

HOTEL MACOMBER on the Beach The homiest place in town Rates Reasonable Food Good

Always A Good Meal... That’s the reason Cape May folks and visitors make the Terminal their dining headquarters. TERMINAL Restaurant 634 Washington St.