PAGE EIGHT
Classified Ad Section
LOST
MAN’S black pipskin wallet Friday night. Contained papers and money. Reward. Return to Box 4635, Star and Wave office. 10-1-2t-4635
PAIR of Glasses, black case. Reward. David Fanner, 170 Learning Ave., West Cape May, N. J. 10-1-U-4659
FOR RENT
2-ROOM Apartment, 2nd floor, all conveniences. Apply M. L. Hand, 916 Queen St. 10-l-lt-4658
7-ROOM House, oil heat *30.00 month, 6-room apartment *18.00 month. Apply rear 137 W. Crocus Road, Wildwood Crest 10-1-61-4660
6-ROOM Bungalow, with parlor oil burner, furnished, all conveniences. Apply Box 4666, Star & Wave Office, Cape May, N. J. 10-1-21-4666
914 QUEEN Street. Apply 915 Queen street for information. 10-l-lt-4661
ODD FELLOWS Hall for rent for meeting purposes. Apply A. Wulff, 806 -Beach Ave. lO-l-lt-4656
TWO Apartments, first and second floor, 238 Perry street. Apply L. G. Bishop, Union Newsstand, Catfe May, N. J. 9-24-31-4651
COMFORTABLY furnished rooms, innerspring mattresses, hot and cold water, hot water heat, breakfast Aerved, reasonable winter rates. The Richman, 318 Poplar Are., Wildwood, NJ. 9-24-3t-4650
HEATED Rooms, hot and cold running water, all conveniences, $3 and |4 per week. Apply 3216 Atlantic Ave., Wildwood, N. J. Keystone phone 490. 9-24-81-4655
DOUBLE and Single rooms with heat *5.00 and up per week. 11 Broadway, Cape May. Key. phone 2393. 9-24-3t-4646
DESIRABLE rooms in beautiful frome, fit for highest class officers. Open for inspection any time. Mrs. Laura M. Bowen, 2400 Central ave.. North Wildwood. Keyston 4643. 9-17-31-4629
APARTMENTS small or large, heated and furnished, electric refrigeration, centrally situated. Apply C. R. Getsinger, 400 E. Maple Ave., Wildwood, N. J. Keystone Phone Wildwood 3250. 9-17-8t-4634
FOR SALE
1940 PACKARD Deluxe Sedan, model 160, 6 tires A 1 condition. Inquire Central Garage, Decatur St. Price reasonable. 10-l-3t-4662
SEASONED oak wood, fresh brown eggs and broilers. Karl A. Dickinson. Erma, N. J. Keystone phone 804-15. 10-1 -3t-4663
20-GALLON stone crocks. 1 soap stone stationary wash tub, some good bargains in dressers, beds and mattresses. Apply Hotel Macomber, Cape May.
10-l-3t-4664
IITE enameled crib, spring and ttress. Price *5. Phone Keyne 6041. lO-l-lt-4665
COTTAGE. Central location, six bedrooms, two baths, heated, immediate possession. Large lot. Bargain. Easy terms. Wm. R. Sheppard, Agt. 223 Decatur St., Cape May. N. J. ’9-2^21-4589
MAHOGANY dining room furniture, book case; chairs, beds and hair cloth sofa. Coats. Keystone S hone 2393, 11-Broadway, Cape lay. 9-24-31-4645 STROLLER and coach combination. Would like to purchase reed •troller. Mrs. Franr, Stimpson’s Lane, Cold Spring. Keystone Phone 3861. 9-17-3t-4640
1940 PACKARD, 6 cylinder, 4door Sedan, A-l condition. Tires in excellent condition, very little mileage. Apply Box 4625, Star and Wave Office. 9-17-81^625 PIPELESS Heater, good condition, *50. Cabinet gas range, *7-50. Apply 705 Kearney St. 9-17-3t-4626
MISCELLANEOUS
- CARD PARTY and RADIO Benefit Ladies' Auxiliary. West Cape May Fire Dept.. Thurs. Eve., Oct 15th, Boro Hall. Prizes, refreshments. Admission 28c, tax included. 9-24-3t-4648
5 AND 10 CENT SUPPER Roast Turkey Supper will be held in the Dias Creek Grange Hall Friday, October 2, 5 to 7 P.M. Benefit of Grange. 9-24-2t-4652
FRIGIDAIRE DEALER Lee V. Quidon suggests you look around your attic, garage, basement etc. Any usable articles can be tradad in on Frigidaire Ranges, Hot Water Heaters or Refrigerators. Call The Trader, Keystone Wildwood 2814 or Bell 768. 4-10-St-3476
CARPET AND RUG CLEANING Rag Stonge Guaranteed Moth Powder Keystone Phone 1371 JOHN J. O FARRELL lit E. Forget-me-not Rood Wildwood Crest
wanted
WHITE, chambermaid, waitress, and also middle-aged woman to work in kitchen. Sleep in or out Apply Box 4666, Star & Wave Office, Cape May, N. J. 10-l-2t-4666
BOY with driver’s license to deliver clothes between 4 and 6 daily, all day Saturday. Apply Gys Rief. 808 Decatur St 9-17-3t-4638
YOUNG girl or woman to stay with a Baby 2 years old occasionally in the evening. Phone 9-17-31-4637
EXPERIENCED saleslady for apparel shop. Permanent position. Good salary. Apply P. O. Box 50, Cape May.9-17-3t-4642
PLAY GOLF WILDWOOD Golf and Country Club ' Shore Rd. Rt. 4 <
Annual Dues, $30 INCLUDES GOLF AND CLUBHOUSE FB1VILEOLS HARRY AVERY. Club Pro
ALS B0WL0DR0ME Q — ALLEYS — 8 BOWL OPEN SAXX.Y
BUND AT 12 Noon to IS p.m.
4907 PACIFIC AVENUE Wildwood
Cape May Wins OverWoodstown By 35-0 Tally Scoring in every quarter. Cape May High School’s football team had an easy time with Woodstown at the up-state city on Saturday in the initial contest of the Blue and Black team’s season. The final score was 35-0. Shull Rutherford, Bob Cannone, Tom Lemmon and Clarence Cooper made the six-pointers for Cape May. Cooper was responsible for two touchdowns. Rutherford heaved a 14-yard pass to Cannone for the first score and Lemmon went over from the two-yard line for the second tally. Rutherford and Cooper each added two extra points and Bill Matthews collected one to add Cape May's victorious score. The local gridsters will leave Cape May tomorrow afternoon at 3:50 o’clock and will travel by train to Pennsgrove where the game is scheduled to .start at
8:30.
. After the game the team members will be guests of the Pennsgrove team and will be quartered in their homes for the night, returning to Cape May at 10:35 Saturday morning. In the game with Woodstown Saturday the local boys completely outplayed their rivals, ordinarily considered a formidable squad. Line-ups for last Saturday’* game follow: Cape May Woodstown Cannone le Kern Bose It.... Polk I Purnell Ig Gaunt Lehman c.~ Shoemaker Shaw rg Funk Vanaman rt Marten Parinello ......re Keman Rutherford ....qb Stables Cooper Ihb Kandle Roseman rhb Ayars Lemmon fb Foster Cape May substitutes in the game were P. Burgin, Dunne, W. Ouram, Hoffman, Childs, Schubert, Williams, Coleman, White, Kokes, Cresse, W. Purnell, Hamperian, Mathews, Brooks and Blacknall.
Caw Bias gtermiii Wm*
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There is no home in this entire community which could not use at least one of these four volumes—books without which a home is hardly worthy of its name. There’s remarkable History of the United States ... a beautiful Bible ... a superb cook book . . . and an authoritative Webster's Dictionary. Any one of them can now be yours with your new or renewal subacription to this paper at the regular rate of *1.50 plus 50 cents. Don't miss this unusual opportunity. Mail in your subscription NOW and your Book Choice will be mailed to you, post-paid.
Many Volunteers Registered For Blood Donations Oct. 19
(Continued from Page One) The article follows in part: What do you mean by the “giving of blood"? la it the same thing as the giving of blood
It is similar only in the beneficial effect to the person who receives it. It used to be necessary in a blood transfusion for the patient and donor to lie down aide by side, and the blood was pumped directly from the donor’s to the patient’s arm. The donor had to have the same “type" of blood as the patient, too. The modern way is infinitely simpler. What is called “plasma" is mixed with sterile water and injected into the patient’s veins. That blood plasma has been donated long before by some housewife, secretary, factory worker, businessman or any other healthy person between 21 and 60 who wanted to help—and did. How is it possible to preserve the blood for so long? In the offices of the American Red Cross, one pint of fresh blood is taken from the donor and sent to a laboratory. It is then treated in such a way that the corpuscles — the part of the blood which must be “typed" before it is given to Another person—are removed. The rest is reduced to a powder that will keep, ever, without refrigeration, for five years and perhaps indefinitely. Is the giving of this pint of blood dangerous in any way to the donor? No. Any normally healthy person can give his pint of blood, under the proper antiseptic circumstances, without the slightest need for worry. The Red Cross examines every donor carefully— his heart * condition, possibility of anemia, blood pressure — before accepting his blood. If he has had so much as a common cold within the past two weeks he is asked to return a little later. Does it have any temporary weakening effect on the donor? Apparently not. The Red Cross has received donations from groups of men, working in industrial plants, who left their jobs for the necessary half hour and then returned to work for the rest of the day, with no ill effects whatever. Many donors have already given as many as five or six units in a year. Does it hurt? Is it frightening? It doesn’t hurt. The blood is taken from the large vein in the thetized. And it isn’t frightening. Thf final result—the life-giving plasma—is anything but scary; it is a sort of powder that looks exactly like malted milk. Does the donor need any special equipment? Nothing except a good appetite —the Red Cross requests that no food be eaten for four hours before entering the donors' room. Since the donors are invariably roaring hungry after giving their donations, many Red Cross blooddonation centers serve tomato juice, hot coffee, soup and crackWhmt good does all this do? A blood transfusion often means the difference between life and death to a person desperately ill and in some hospital, or dying from shock and wounds on the battlefield. The United States Army and Navy have asked for two and a half million pints of plasma for use in the armed forces and if necesary for civilian casualties of enemy action. The pint of blood you donate today may save the life of someone who is fighting for your country and you.
Student Council At School Organizes Cape May High School's student council was organized this week with the selection of homeroom representatives who will serve for the entire school year. Council officers will be elected shortly at an organization meeting of the council. Senior class representatives are Lorraine Hamperian. Charlcsr Hoffman. Charles Taylor and Norma Taylor. Junior class representatives are Allen Shubert. Helen Porch. Robert Cannone and Lois Crosby. » The sophomore class is repi'esented in the council by Helen Bradley. Frank Engman. Joan Slatzell, Alfred Vanaman. Jeanne Hobver and Elwood Hicks. Freshman representatives are Donald Lear, Regina Hawkins, Shirley Blattner, Thomas Childs, Rodney Schellenger and Robert
tics and women’s and children's boots are unrestricted and may be purchased at wilL Following a freeze of five days, directive at midnight Tuesday, in which no sales of the rationed footwear can be made, actual rationing will begin on Monday, October 6, when eligible persons may apply to rationing boards for purchase certificates. Types of footwear to be rationed are hip-height boots, above-knee-height boots, below-knee-height light and heavy boots, pacs and bootees, 10 inches or higher and less than 10 inches high. The Navy is studying chemicals which will make wood as fireproof as steel.
Rubber Boots Now On Rationing List NEWARK—Rationing of men's rubber work shoes and. rubber boots, program for which was announced yesterday by Washington, is in complete readiness to start in New Jersey. This,was announced here Wednesday by James KemeyJ Jr., state director of the Office of Price AdministraAll War Price and Rationing Boards throughout the state, Kerney said, have the necessary forms and instructions to put the program into instant operation. He emphasized that only six types of men’s rubber boots and rubber work shoes will be rationed. Men’s women’s and children’s galoshes, rubbers and ar-
MERCHANT8 NATIONAL BANK Plaintiff.
CATHERINE B. I SADER AND I JOHN J. SADER Defendants. .
In the
.'n. tbe lJth day of i&ptember A. u., 1942. the subscriber, auditor .appointed by said Court In th* said cause, will sell and make assurance at public vendue, at the Sheriffs Offlo In the Court House, at Cape MaCourt House, New Jersey. —
the
:6th day of October. A. D. 1942. at ‘ ' of two o'clock P. M. (E. W.
goods and chattels, lands nents of the said defend-
piec
Ih the bulldin D _ ... i thereon erected, situa
and beln_ Cape May. State of New’ Jersey.' being Lot No. 99. on Block A. as laid down in a certain map of lots and streets, being situate at the Northeast corner of Central and Pearl Avenues, duly recorded In the olllce of the Clerks at Cape May. New Being tlie same premises which C. O. Struso & Sons, a corporation existing under the laws of the State of Pennsylvania, conveyed ti herinc B. Sader, wife of Jo.... „. Sadt-r. by deed dated April I. 1937. and of record In the Clerk's Olllce of Cape May County, at Cape MayCourt House. New Jersey. In Deetf
Book No. 691. pp 139.
Tract 2.
All that 'certain tract or parcel ol land and premises, situate, lying and being in the Borough of Cape MayPoint. In. the County of Cape May and Sts!, of New Jersey, more particularly known and designated as the Easterly one-half of Lot 100. Block "A", os shown on a Map of l.ots at Cape May Point, duly filed ”ijh the Clerk of Cope May County " ™ of Cape May
by the Con
Point
l.' Nolr, widow, conveyed . e B. Sader^by deed dated 193? and of record
ict or parcel of uate. lying and _ i of Cape May Point. County of Cape May. and State.of New Jersey, more particularly known and designated as Lot No. 99. and the Westerly one-half of Lot loo. In Block "A ". ns shown on Mail of Lots at Cape May Point, duly hied with the Clerk of Cape May County by the Commissioners of
Ine B. Sader. wife of John J. Sader. by deed dated June It. 1937 and of ecord In the Clerk's Ofllcc of Cape
Tract 4. All that certain lot of. lands and premises situate, lying and being in the Borough of Cape May Point, formerly Sea Grove. In the County of Cape May. and State of New Jersey. being Lot No. 126. In Block "E" as laid down on a certain map of lots and streets, and duly recorded In the County Clerk's twice at Cape May ' House, reference thereto. Is
Ilegin-
■ilng at a corner on the side of Lincoln Avenue. 100 f< Westerly of the Northwest coiner Lincoln and Coral Avenues, and re ning Westerly the width of 60 f. on Lincoln Avenue, and extendi .. of the width In depth Northerly 100 feet, containing 5000 square fee'
li.d by F. Mulfnrd
nan Blinds. 1 Double Metal li lete With spring and mnttre reau. 1 Rocker, 1 Floor Lan net Ian Blind. 1 Double Me complete with spring and mi 1 Bureau. 1 Chest of Drawe nir. 1 Venetian Blind. I Fr
ELDREDGE.
NOTICE OF SETTLEMENT
and stqted by the SursagESdfastSccported for settlement to the Orphans’ Court of the County of Cape May on the fourth day of November, next, at ten o'clock A. M-. at which time application will be made for the allowance of Commissions and counsel fee*. Dated September 29th. 1942. JAMES T. PALMERSAMUEL V. ELDREDGE. ProctorCape May. N. J. 10-l-5ts-pfl«.30
TIN II SNAP METAL MW. irt IEEDED TI HAKE “FWHT1II STEEL" Freshly Killed TOP QUALITY—V/f ti 2</ r Lb
FRYERS “35’ NONE PRICED HIOHER
Cfco/ct Qualify LAMB RIB LAMB CHOPS >45' LOIN LAMB CHOPS “ 55' NONE HIGHER
SHOULDER »r KAK LAMB lb 29* IEIK OP LAMB lb 25*
Lean PLATE BEEF U 13*
UI.I.U FhANKFUITERS
Long Cut SAUEH KRAUT 2-13-
All Pork, He. 1. Frath SAUSAGE “ 37*
Fresh Filial of FLOUNDEB “31' MOM PRICED HIOHER
Large BOSTON MACKEREL -17' HALIBUT STEAKS or SALMON STEAKS ’330 RED FISH FILLETS Polo Star ’ ZSo
Tokay flamins ktt> GRAPES 10 C toU rnw mW
OYSTERS S24SO M or mon oyxton to tho pint. All-Purpose McIntosh APPLES 5 >25' Firm, Juicy
Cabbage
Spinach
fancy—SNO-WHITE Cauliflower 19' I PRICED HIGHER
F,rB Ifc
i4s me
NONE PRICED HIGHER Sweet pc i aides 5 lbs 17c 1 ==NONE PRICED HIGHER
2 lbs 13c SaaoyRtltf—PANCAKI
FLOUR ‘AS te
Keebler—Setter
THINS‘nTIOenT lie
TO I IT QUAMTTTIKS

