—menu iB««r»r4 undet t*>i» he»d for word, firn Inrcrttoo: »nd ooe*«lf ^.^ worTr.ch .ob^oro. to^ertt^ No AdvertUeuitrill nccr-pied for lew tbau 25c. lor Fir« liuerlion and ball price lor etcb gnbeequent macrUon.
WOOD FOR SALE
Wood, col any cite, lor tale. Addrese portal to Jame* E. Allen, Ocean View. K. J.
MAID WANTED
Maid lor general boueeaoik. Apply
on or alter February HUi to l»r. K. C.
Kcotl, Italia atreil and Laud., avenue, Bea lele City, K.J. Dell pbone ou.
Once more the little hamlet of Pal»ley. In Renfrew, Scotland. l« on the map, and aaaln the name of Peleley U on the tip of the tongue, a* It baa not been for aome fifty odd year*—not since the day* when every faablonable woman poaeceeed a Paisley shawl or two to lieu or other cloak or wrap. All over the land women are getting out old shawls from old dust covered trunks and finding In them a veritable treasure for this winter's wardrobe. Thera le really a big demand for old Paisleys In the fashionable dressmaker's and milliner’s shop, and some women have sold their old ahawla Instead of having ‘diem used for Ibelr own costumes. In the meantime strips
ranee n.
I Pusta
The
COTTAUE FOR SALE own ctmume®. su ««. ““—
able lor summer or year around home. p.uiey shawls are not any too For particular., addrerw Jaiueat. Alien, j and because Imitations are Ocean View, N. J- _ not very satisfactory the vogue will
■ 1 —— I remain good for months to come.
FOR REM Cashmete trimming is also fashlooAddiug machine lor rent by day or able, though one would te^bertt^
hour. Apply Thomas,, bud,am. dr.. ^
at Fort OHice. lon . Always valuable, cashmere shawls are now veritable treasures. On- wo-
ctHPKlFF'a SALE tan 0WM one toT whlch ber SHEHIFra oAt-t fctbw ^ |li000 when he bought It
B, virtue of anT^TTnl of 1-icr. FacUu, sixty yean, ago for ^r grandmother. d. IMUU. et urrt. m u.c uirecuu. And another woman possesses a lltue out <11 me .New jerwy supr^ ou hon i der ghawl. Juat a scarf s couple of
- . f«I wide »nd (oar or Jr. loo,, w.tt afoNDAi. rtuaiiAKi tata^irt*. 1 .
MU.NUAI.
betweeu me iwur. w
JC A?U>at certain lot i
feet wide ana rour or uve .ou*.
rrmVJ'ui- ends of the wot.derful cashmere work, me aHeru«oi> and the rest of plain black, which cost
uu.ee. m UB1* | 100 a century ago. These lovely old shawls are really too
aituate uu tu» ... . « „ •%,«. win
the road, a
These loveiy oiu aua" — ",. valuable to cut up for finery that will serve for only a y ear or two. But they can bo very effectively used If they are in good condition for covering a dlvaa
or low couch.
iSaTmcucd: houm «•
nuuuic Co aaiu rtaiu, '•*' —' Vtril, il peroiu to a i-rucr; l**tii<<_ -va dc(. "cat. S r«a», mia» m a
HER NEW BLOUSE.
mcuce Norm i* -- - —- to a corner; mcuce houm «' u> ar" 2S to a corner; uuucc Norm
gumma; coulauuiig -
and to be Wild b> SOBERT h. > Dated a an uar> idUi. 1“’ Uaiir) V. Hurt. All).
’ A Mods! a# Charming aa I* Is •imply
« uc* Cut.
■>u iwo'qum- Georgette crape In straw color, cot m-rr, surplice fashion and simply trimmed ,u i with a sailor color of navy satin and
NOTICE TO ABSENT DEFENDANT IN CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY To MAKV
His Luck. Kjy (bltterlyi—1 only wish I’d known aa much about you before 1 married you. He—Well. ,t was Just my confounded U k that you didn't.—Roston Tran- 1 ac»..-t. After Hia Share. Motorist (recovering from Mnashupi —Isn't that a pretty stiff Mil. doctor. Burgeon—You don't supi-*- I'm «olng to let the < '.her repair men do all thi getting rich in thia buslneas, do yourRostou Transcript.
And the An.isnt Lss*"^»
Charybdis-
The Sicilian and Italian border the stmlt of Messi twenty-five udles to the v are among the most lux, found in a cruise of the Mi Magnificent golden’ grov and oranuc mid orchard. ate. with their brilliant treat wonderfully with the almond trees which
whole region.
The strait la entered f F i.n sea. on the north, est point, the distance del Faro, on the Sicilian mainland lighthouse being not more than whole of the Calabrian sown with villages, pc the beach, while others sides of well wooded 1 mlnate In the towering
lag to sn elevation of mk.f. - ——- above the sea. Beyond th> sOTlt to the southwest loom' ever tar** ten mg
Etna, the highest volcano la Europe.
The most Important city Mtnated ou the strait L the once magnificent seaport of Messina, which boasted a popu-
latlon of 150.000 InbaMtartS
-the world s most cruel earthQualur eC Dec. 28. 1906. toeaed nearly YOOfiOO
Uvea away. .
The harbor of Messina It the targest and safest In the kingdom V* Italy, with a depth of more than thirty fathom*. Before the great calamity It was visited annually by more then MOO
vessels, which brought cargoes wheat, cotton, wool and bard war* took away In exchange lemons
anges. almonds, whies, olive te' —- vtlkm Much of li» commercejWhs end ■till is carried on with the matntand of the kingdom by means of e ferry line to VUln San Giovanni, only four end e half miles away, while BaCgto. the chief een|>ort ou the Italian side of the strait and also the chief earthquake sufferer next to Messina, is ten mllee to the southeast- F erryboate ply between these i*olnts too. SeUU, Fare, Catoua. Pellam. fk-aUlta and GalaU are minor towns ou the aborts of the atralt Homer did not accord a dcfinUybabltation for his terrible sea egeatnrea, Scylla snd Charybdis. hut marinera famlltar with the larlls of the rocks on the Italian side of the strait and with the strong eddies near the harbor of Messina saw In the mythical monsters an explanation of such dangtea. B^lla was supposed to lie a borrlble'ereatnre with six heads aud a doaen teat, who barked like a dog. Kh* dwelt la a
, lofty cave, from which sba i whenever a ship tried to r" 1 and she would snatch the men from the rigging or as thay : at the helm' endeavoring to gB M '
vesselh through the i>erlloaa _ ' CherylKlIs dwelt under a reck only e bowshot away, ou the uppoetae shore.
The second creature sucked *"
FEROCfn ON THE !
•„<! telvlni es Othelle Wes a Ter
D. auaudoned w=a Salrinl at tim-s that It waa difficult to believe that the force was at all governable. Though there would have been time Just before the fifth act to run over my Important scene with him. It was not done. In this act Dssdemona'a bed was placed In what seemed from In front to be an alcove, bo, the alcove was not boxed In. and 1 could stand
right up against tbe bed.
Before tbe art began Miss Brooklyn, who played Dcedenmna with sweetness aud appealing grace. Implored Salvlnl to l>e gentle. “Now, Mr. BalvinL” she begged, “do be careful, wox't youT’ He playfully promised When, after she was asleep, he drew the curtains of the bed aside and gaied down upon her I stood within five feet of him. The scene that ensued was st such close range very poignant I did not wonder that she had Implored him to be gentle. As be was choking her trith the pillows she kept gasping in broken whispers of real terror between her heard outcries and moans: “Oh, Mr Snlvlni: Please, please. Ur. Balvlni: - ’ Sickened and fhadnated, I watched him and 1 did not make connection with the real world again until Emilia —that vigorous and Intelligent actrees. Mrs. Bower*—made her round e» «ene at the back of the stage. caUln “Murder, murder!" Then I rush, headlong to I ago. for I knew that
must shortly go on.
Of what happened that first night 1 have no deer picture. I was daaed by the sudden transition from the darknees where I had stood and seen Dee demons strangled a few feet away to the torches of the stage and a world which In compsrisou to the one 1 had Just left was palpable acting. Docilely I harried after lago and took my ap pointed place. Brt I should no, have been In It when the rime <ame had not terror rooted me rather than given me le*,. for the ferocity with which Othello ran at lago and the rage that distorted his features were unexam pled it was one thing to have seen It directed elsewhere and another to find It plunging your wsy.-"A Super With KalvlnL" by Algernon Tassln. in
Scribner’s.
•totting Paper -— - rr—^ la deecrii'lng bow blotting paper eb-
aorbs Ink Popular Science Monthly aaya: Under the microscoi>e blotting paper when absorbing ink resembles, on a small scale, e marsh matted with shrubs, sticks and twigs, round which water is flowing. So tbe ink runs about among the fibers that together
form tbe spongy paper.
There Is e limit to the amount of
liquid that a blotter wli’. absorb, es then to a limit to the amount of water that s marsh will absorb before It overflows Tbr limit In the blotter
tbe combined capillary attraction of
u>e fibrous shreds, sticks and twigs
that togethei form the pe|>er.
Sometimes s woman la almost as sot-j ry she married a .crtaln man aa she ts| glad abe kept some other woman from
getting him.
The Olympian Jupiter. The celebrated atatue. the Olympian Jupiter, the masterpiece of I’hldlss. the greatest of all sculpture, was removed to Conatanttnop'e by Tbeoduelua L. In which place it waa dt^royed by fire » the year 475. In tills hla greatest wotk the artist sought to embody the idea of majesty and repoae and from all accounts succeeded perfectly. The famous atatne was In a altting position, forty feet high, on a pedestal of twenty and was mr.Ue of Ivory »n d S old Bo famous was It that It was c nsldaied a calamity to die without seeing lb Tbe statue served as a model for all fubeeqneut representations of majesty snd power in reiiosc among 'he
CULTIVATE JUDGMENT.
China's Food Prob'sm.
No natural resource Is too trifling to be turned to account by the teeming population of China. Tbe sea to q|ked and stralnc I for edible plunder. Seaweed and kelp have a place In the UrGreat quantities of Kbellflah no bigger than one’s linger nail are opened and made lo yield a food that finds Its way far Inland. The fungus that ig* up In tin- gras* after a rain Is eaten. Fried sweet i-Hato vines furnish the |M>or man's table The roadside ditches are baled oul lor the sake if fishe* no longer than one’s finger. Careful obucrverK say that four-fifths of the cuuverantlou auiuug common
Chinese -relate* lo food.
Wltiieut It Intellect and Knowledge Accomplish Li.ils. Intelligence. Knowledge and Judg ment were strolling along one day when they came to a young baby sleep log by tbe roadside. “Here's a chance to do some good, eald Intelligence. “That youngster ap pears to be a splendid specimen of bu inanity. Suppose we serve him dnrta!
hla lifetime.”
“All of nsr asked Judgment
DIE
YOUNG MAN Who aspires some day to fco into busiuess for himself cannot .afford to overlook the advantages of an Interest Account with the Pit* National Bank. It installs the principle of system into his management of money matters ; it provides a systematic method of accumulating the necessary capital; it gives him the prestige of an affiliation with a strong banking insti-
tution
First National Bank Ocean City, N.J.
If you are not reading the classified ads. in this paper begin now. Make it a habit It’ll pay you |us! when von
blew u
many WPS* Ft pert ■—tlibtruomes cu prw Thay forget tliat uc i.k* without straw.
squares of navy rmbroldrry gives this blouse designed to go with a suit of navy serge. Two.toned blouses occupy
Serb fcjwCe in amart anopa.
lor inis an ^ powerful Zeus, cast her Into the art:, where ber appetite |M-r*lsUd^Pt n« (■■tes changed from cattle te Alps and sremeu.—National Gborapkte Society
Bulletin
-Why uotr said Knowledge. “B) ffjnft want it tO. - .hall be able U> produce,, j
combining we _ . a very superior person. I Be«.ud the
morion."
Some momenta later when the ban> rubbed hla eye* upon a new- world be found himself equipped wllb lutelll gence. Knowledge and Judgment. Many years later the three were
again oat for a "troll.
“By the way.” said Knowledge a* they came to a spot at the roadside, “do you remember that long i three agreed to serve a certain atari” _ “Perfectly.” said Intelligence. “The
Six Persons.
Cocktail-cranberries. 1 cupful sug-
ar. x-*c.; oransa* Soup-rice. 1c ; parsley. 1c-; aeaaontng. I*-
Celery
Celery - • Subacribe f-ir the Cape Kav Coon- »h lb. chicken. Me
potatoee. «c.: crust.
tv Times. SI M ner -
MAIL ORDER BUSINESS
HERCULES TIRES 4000 Miles Guaranteed
Man. iYitk- promi-ttV rilABO HERCULES Tl RE CO.
potatcea t
Cranberries 1 qi.. loc.-. ausar. Sc ... .U Parsnips, Go : *auce Sc to Salad-apple*. «c ; celer)% *c.; dreaeIng. V I® Plum pudding and sauce S Rolls 6c : coffee. «c .« >» lb. nut*. Me.: ’» lb. cluster raielna. li- — Total coat of dinner Coat of Roaet Goose Dinner For Si*
Poreona.
pefrolt.... .*
sen water three times a day.
am! woe to the Alp caught ,n tb *
maelstrom of Its mouth !
Poets who came after the great Greek bard embroidered the legend to suit their fancy. Ovid, for ■xample. deacrllied Scylla as the beautiful daughter of a sea god who tacorred the Jealousy of one of the Immortals aud who waa changed Into a aea monster. A second tnin*fonnatton made her a rock perilous to nnvtgatqr*. 8 poets deacrilwd rhsrylidta as an —
woman who selxed anddevooredthe „ perfcot , - ^ l D telllg«ife- -atw cattle of Hercules, and In puAlahmeot thlnx about lt .u ts that, al jq ? for Ibis art the demigod s father, auj u a perfectly good bumaf is. cart ber Into the §K. fcQd ,^^^1 by all. he ha* nev
er amounted to much -has never ac qnlred that supreme distinction which be should have received with us three
barking him up."
Judgment was silent. They both
turned lo him.
“How do you account for Ur* Ac)
asked.
“1 account for It quite almply." said Judgment. “I agreed temiwirarily to go hi with yon and *ene film because there was a majority against uic. Hut it didn't seem ,o me fair Ihat he should have no much. »o I after a IHHe quleil) Withdrew mid left him to le served by
only y 01 ' two." IJfe..
The want ads. come very near to the people. They reflect the intimate life of all of us. They form a directory
" of out personal and bus-
mess needs. Is this not
l
.25
Round Trip to
PtUlADElPHIA A city rich in historic memories Sunday, March 4
Kpecial Train leaves Sea Isle City 7.16 a. m. Returning, leaves Philadelphia 7.30 p. ui.
See City Hall Towev. open Irom 12.30 lo 4 p. m.; Independence Hall, open from 1 to 4 p- m.; Memorial Hall and Academynf Fine Arta,open from 1 to 5 p. m.; Commercial and Univeraity Moaentna, FsirmouotPark and Zoological Garden and tbe manv other objects of intereat of "The Quaker City."
Pennsylvania R.R
Aftar an Electric Shock.
An t-irertive menu* of rcsusclUUoo after an electric shock la said to be a
ah*it blow on the soles of the feet C, B.k.d Clii.k.. Pi, Dinmr F.r ">■>»"< • U
.^NELLENBU^S ENTWE BLOCK-NfiKKET lf*-B*3TeF*TS ^ 1
to Sue: (tils U
Cocktail-I grs Broth—10 chin.* > Celery. 10c ; olive FlUtac—Oyator*.
butler. 6c. , 1 qt. cranberrtsa, 10- : *u*ar. &< and ealt. tc j t» pk. totstce*. 8c.; butter. Sc.:
cases, however. It I* n<-vtuany to pull the tongue from the threat, as the faction of the current 1* ,o raote a contract l"ii of tlie muscles, and the tongue Is drawn back Into the throat, completely MitUiig tbe air pa*sagn. Part | of manv fir-t aid cqll., — of a dev he w filch will grasp the tongue and hold It ’u a distended poottlon so rltat the throat to oiien to |>erenlt of
artlflilal respiration.
Rhode Island and Textilac.
The Or^t cotton tulll In the United States waa bnl't In Raw tu.kettn Washington * flr?t ndminUtrutiou. The making of textiles Uu* In- ome Rhode Island's first Industry. Some O' “OpeT-
erk In U. and It* output to about
50 1--I ; nets <
i ora in it. ooi,—» — ■ rent of the niaiiufactutd P*'" - ucts *>f the atnte. wUh-h. little.aa It ta, to fourth In the making of cotton goods snd tb'wl In tbe making of woolens
and worsteds.
Ready to Be - _ A peraon whu had got some lltrie smattering »>f euoSutclcal lore aald one novice that t r<*-odltoa were
Palisade* ef the Hudson. Tbe Pallsadr-e are slov.iy . hnuglug Tc the inneicr of a hundred years ago the) were a sheer < liJ of clear rock rising ta a gMpeaAIrtttor line from | tbe water’s edge ucaslj a thousand feel. Now they are beurtwA'd at the ; foot by immense dejsieita of lire»ke.i rock wldrb freMs have |-c mx! from tbe cliff. Ghadnaliy ibis buttress 1* growing big her Tbe upward growth o.’ t'al • supiiort lug pile to due to tbe trees—evergreens of varkiua kind* whi< h have grown : seemhigiy right out of the rocks. New York Bun Optimistic Gadsby. “Gad*by has always wanted to ll«x cottage by the aea Tfiafs the dream of hla life.” “And I liresume fate bn* doomed him to end hto day* In a Uat>" “Yes But Gadsby 1* au optimistic fellow. He still < Ung* to the mu.... glasses U- bought year* ago ’' blruiiug ham Age-Herald A Growing Thing. •Mr*. Smith baa telephoned -.x Hfi— no* about that leak." offered lire odt.v
boy.
“Olv* U a chance. »ou. -aw it» plumber, “lu a couj..e of days that Icak U be worth twice *« much" ' V/L RWhmond Tlmea IMspab h allowabla. It to . _ ' ' ' N. Ww’d.,.g army enough to ^ Cr*b*h*w IhM.t cry. Willi. t I'm not going to puu:.*t y.r, t’d* tl: «• —_ fot v.at hurried when l c.l’ed Jon A glad heart *elduut ugli*. bu, • WrtUk? Boo-boo. maul in* 1 fell c’ow: «n... Ic.,^ .-o- , ^o»erb. 1
Don’t forget that our Free Delivery Service embraces your town and vicinity, and that ail purchases made by you will be delivered directly to your door, without any additional cost. Our MAIL ORDER DEPARTMENT, with ita force of trained shoppers, is at your service at all times. We pride ourselves upon our promptness and reliability. We will gladly send samples, or, where that is not feasible, detailed information of any merchandi*e desired. If a monthly charge account would add to your convenience, just communicate with our Credit Department. Look for our ads. iu the Philadelphia papeis. Our February Sales of Furailnie and Silks—likewise of other desirable inerchamliw, at wav beluw customary prices, offer exceptional oppoituuitics during these days of coustantlv advancing prices. N A LU0R00 handles *11 el our 4<Uv«tn »* to* kk City, levatcad > lalet and Cohos'i UUt N. SNELLENBURG & COMPANY MARKET, 11th to 12th 8TO. PHILADELPHIA

