PAGE SIX
VI&wa Of Vbyvduj. JowitA.
West Cape May MM. John W. Mere* Mrs. MoUinax and her m
visiting her father. Wodock and grandaee Donald apent Sunday with her daughter, Mrs. Wiliam Hawelv. Mr. and Mrs. Courtland Dickinson spent Tuesday with Mr. and Mn. L. S- Hoffman. w— Wallace Stevenson, of spent Saturday with and aunt, Mr. and Thomas Eldredge. Miss Marcella Harris has accepted a position with the Selective Service Board at Cape
May.
' Mrs. Lixde Rodan is spending come time in Goshen with Mr. and Mrs. James'Burke. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reed spent Saturday in Atlantic City. David Hand, of Philadelphia, apent the weekend here with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph K. Mrs. Edmund Harris spent Saturday in Philadelphia, Cortland Reeves, who is stationed in New York in the harbor Office, spent the weekend here with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Abijah Reeves. Mrs. Howard Ewing, who was here for the weekend was called back to her home in Camden because of the sudden illness of her Mrs. William Whitehead returned home after being the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Bussell, of Philadelphia. Mrs. Ernest Filer, of Philadelphia, spent a few days in Cape May recently. Mrs. John Devine has returned home from Philadelphia after visiting Mr- Devine’s mother, Mrs. Anna Neary., Mr. and Mra. L. S. Hoffman entertained on Saturday night at cards. The guests were Mr. and Mn. Louis Faust, Mr. and Mn. Alfred Matthews, Mn. Emily Miring, Mn. Justins Hughes, Mrs. Minnie Patterson and Shangar Hand. Francis ■ Godfrey, of Philadelphia, spent the weekend hare with fas mother, Mn. Non Godfrey. Mrs. Charles Heaton and her two Children, of Lester, Pa., are spend- & a few weeks with Mr. and Mra. rlas T. Heaton, Sr.' Cold Spring MNC. AUKNTA WHLJAMS Mn. Walter Levergood, Sharon Hill, Pa., spent s few days hen with her daughter, Mn. Sian Wahtfk. and her family. Mn. Richard Ewing apent Friday with her mother, Mn. Mar) Morton, at Dias Creek. Franklin Halbruner, a first class cook in the Navy, has been promoted to chief commissary Steward. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Halbrcntr and their son William, of Eddystone, were here on Sunday. Mn. Elisabeth Hand spent Monday in Philadelphia. Mn. Franklin Halbrune played in the office of Dr. L. C. Ashbum at Cape May.
Mrs. Amanda Shaw, of Green Creek, called on her daughter, Mrs. Mildred Halbruner, on Sat-
■day.
Mr. and Mn. Maurice Fleischhauer visited his brother Harry, who is a patient at Cooper Hospital, Camden, on Wednesday. Mias Barbara Anne Sheppard, of West Cape May, spent the weekend with her grandparents, Mr. and Mn. William McKinley Mni. Emily Weeks, of Freehold, apent Sunday with _ Mrs. Marne
Snyder and her family.
Mn. Gilbert Ewing is recovering from an operation in the At-
lantic City Hospital.
Mn. Joseph Elliott has return1 home after spending some me with her daughter and her family, who have been ill at their
home in Burlington.
George Halbruner visited his brother, Warden Warren Halbruner, who was operated on for appendicitis in Millville Hospital
last week.
Erma
Mrs. Alberta Williams Warren Garre tson was the guest of honor at a party on Tuesday at his home to celebrate his fourth birthday. Guests included Dorothy Lylrins, Richard Reeves and Walter Madden, Erma, Phillip Smith, of Westmont, Mr. and Mn. Walter Garrets on, Mn. James Lykins, Mn. Cora Reeves, Mn. Jennie Madden and Mn. Phillip A. Smith,
of Westmont.
Benjamin Pritchard, of Philadelphia Navy Yard, spent
the weekend here.
Mrs. George Swelin, of W’ildwood, spent the weekend at the >me of Mn. Jennie Madden. C. Van Chamberlain spent the eeltend with relatives at Linden. Mrs. Clara Church, of Penns..rove, was a dinner guest on Sunday at the home of Mn. Em-
He is employed by the Bakery Co. Mary Whittaker, of Wildwood, spent Saturday with Mn. Elsie Hoffman. Somers Hickman, of Linwood, Pa., called on relatives here on
Sunday.
Bentley Hoffman spa ith Mn. Adels Thompson at Pleasxntville. Mn. Levan Dickinson spent a few days with her sister, Mrs. Gordon. Heed, and her family at York, Pa. and ha parents, Mr. and Mn. Frank Moya, who are spending some time there with their daughter. Mias Esther Munson called Mn Edna McPherson in Fishing Creek on Sunday. Private and Mn. Thomas Rice spent the weekend in Mexico. Mn Rice is spending some time at Harlingen, Texas with hei husband, who is stationed there. George Foster, of Wildwood, spent Saturday evening with David Hoffman. Ephriam Thompson and Mn. Annie Garretson, of Court House, called on Mr. and Mn. Nelson iarretson on Monday-evening. Mn Lillian Toxour, of South Seaville, spent Wednesday with relatives here. Mn. David Hoffman spent Friday at the home of Mrs. Fred Foster at Wildwood. Miss Irene Tozour, of South Seaville, and Private George Mehr spent Saturday evening with Mrs. William Pritchard and her family. Mn. David Hoffman, of ^ Grande, spent Monday here with relatives. Mrs. Phillip A. Smith, Jr. and her son Phillip, of Westmont, spent Tuesday and Wednesday visiting her aunt,. Mn. Frank Garretson, who is in very poor
health.
Captain Raymond Hickman, of Fort Washington, Md., spent Sum
day with his family here.
The W.C.T.U. and Women’s
Mr. and Mn. Karl Dickinson Christian Society met at the ■ .... home of Mrs. Julia Schellenger
on Wednesday afternoon.
DR.S.M. HORNSTINE said this week that March 10 and SURGEON CHDtOPODIffT April 25 ara the latest possible dates in the calendar on which Ash Wednesday and Easter, res- , pectively, may fall, according to a ; story obtained by the .' ’'rest. The last time Easter was this late was fat 1886; the next time will be “The peculiar rules for selecting Easter and A-h Wednesday were made in 825 K. D. at the Council of Christian Churches st Kicea in Asia Minor,” Miss Ben-, not pointed out According to that decision, Easter falls on the first Sunday after the 14th day of the moon falling on or .after the vernal equinox (first day of , which this yea falls on
21.
Mias Bennot said the which comes after the vernal equinox this yea begins on April 4. Fourteen days after that date is April 18, which happens to faB On a Sunday, and the next Sunday after that date is April 25, or Easter. Once the Blaster date is determined, Ash Wednesday is found by counting back 40 days — the length of Lent—not counting Sundays, thus bringing this yea’s date to March 10, Miss Bennot said. She added that if the March new moon, which came last Saturday, had fallen one day later, on the seventh, Easter would, have come on March 28, nearly a month ealia than it actually does. This is because the 14th day would then have fallen on the 21st of the month, the vernal equinox, and the next Sunday thereafter would have been the or Easter.
Some fissures opened by < quakes remain open, while c close again quickly.
... relatives at Linden, and Mrs. Enos Garretson and their daughter-in-law, Mrs. Betty Garretson, of Msyville, it Thursday evening here. Ira. Alice Bradley has returnhome after spending s few days with ha daughter, Mrs. Alice Van Buren, and her family at Wildwood. Mrs. George W. Kelly, Sr. has _jne to Germantown to visit ha ton and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Albert C. Kelly, and ha daughter, Mrs. John McDonald, in Mayfair, for the next aix Mrs. William Warren, Mrs. James Lykins, Mrs. Frank Care tson and Mrs. Cletta Spoor were in Wildwood on Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Barnett, of Green Creek, spent Sunday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Frank Schellenger. Mr. and Mrs. Hildreth Thompson have purchased a home on Charles street in Pleasantville. They were former residents of
Rio Grande Mrs. R. E. Wolcott Robert Huff, who work* for the ell Telephone Co. and has been living in Camden, has been transferred to Wildwood and is living at his home here. Mra. A. C. Kelly, who has spent the winter in Philadelphia, is at ha home here now. Ha little grandson, Lee /Shivers, came with ha. The new air raid siren has been put up by David Sculls. Private Fred Gramlick, of Fort Dix, was here over the weekend. Corporal Walter J&ggard, of Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri, is home on a furlough with his ents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter , gard, Sr. Mrs. Fannie Hand is staying with her sister, Mrs. Warren Halbruner at Cape May Court House, while the latter’s husband ir ~ the Millville HospiUl. Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Blasky have moved to Wildwood.
POINTS ON POINT RATIONING To Get Thi Most Out Of Your Budget by Elisa M. Stephenson, Our Home Service Director Select foods your family likes Tou can lead a horse to water, bnt you can't make him driidLUnlees yon can appeal to your family’s tastee your efforts and your food are bound to be wasted. Select good quality foods The rule that you get what you pay for is a pretty true one these days where food is concerned, especially with fair prices fixed by ceilings. Select foods most plentiful in market The point rationing system puts a premium on scarce items, so that by substituting one canned vegetable for another you may get more food value for less points. Preserve food value by proper cooking Plan nutritional menus. Avoid waste. Cook veg etables in covered pan with minimum amount of water to save vitamins and minerals. Boast at low temperature to avoid food shrinkage. Call at your local office for Home Service recipes. FOOD FICHTS FOR FREEDOM
0
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Cape fslanb Baptist Church Corner of Gnemey Street and Colombia Avenue. REV. F. PAUL LANGHORN®, Mlnirta. 787 Washington Street — Keystone Phone 8841 SUNDAY, MARCH 14 Morning Worship 10:80 A.M. Bible School 11:45 A.M. Evening Worship 7:45 P. M. Baptist Cottage Praya Meeting Wedneeday evening, March 17 at the home of Mra. E. E. Shields, 1185 Washington 5t All
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