CAPE MAT COUNTY TIMES iTABLIfiKED 1SSS.
Every Friday
br the
CAPE MAT COUNTY TIMES COMPANY 104 Wert Jereej Areaue, See Isle City. N. J.
CHAfi. O'COKNOR, a F. 8CHUCK.
SebecflpUoT. price 11-60 per yeer. Brtl Phone. See late City 40.
et the Port Office el Bee Isle
Advertising Rates Eflect've August 1,
ilia
And InforraaUon for Advertisers. Display sdrertlstnc. IBc per Inch,
ran of paper
Display Advertisimc. Ant page. 60c
o be furnished by the
,f advertisements ere be mi tram copy, add 10c per ringle Political Advertising, 60c per inch. Standing Advert percents, ocn r not to be changed more than two lines
a yeer:
1 inch. 1 yeer 16 1 inch. Vfc year...* 1 Inch, hL year
Larger space pro rata.
overshadowed all others In die history of the world. For tU* reason, we say that Peace it u* has * doable significance.
BOYS MUST BE CARED FOR.
With the war ended, the first question and the most natural, is -Whan
will the boys come home?”
Some are of the opinion that most , of the lads overseas will eat their Christmas dinners at the family table: others say that if they get hack In three years they will be fortunate.
Both are extremes
There Is no doubt that some of the
Americans in France will be relumed!
&t once, but compared to the number now abroad, these'Will be very few,
The armistice, which Is the equivalent of peace with condition» as they now . are In Germany, U for thirty days. ! That means that for one month at least, no troops will be removed from | their positions. After that the groat t work of "cleaning up" will be under-
taken. and ft Is safe to asstu
( this will require at least a year. Than. too. there <s the police duty, and the i enforcement of allied regulations In
I Germany, which will require troops The upshot Is that for at least an
i otter twelve-month, a large number of
‘’SJHh “ Pr ““ '>•>'****"- word: three insertions for the price of And for this year their morals and t *°- spiritual welfare—their morale—murt
Legal Advertising at rates Axed by Laws of the State of New Jersey. Next to Beading Matter. 5 per cent.'
. extra
r FxU position. 10 per cent, extra Island position, 16 per cent- extra Form* close Wednesday p.
be kept up. even as It BOWcta. TbJ War Work agencies—the Y. M. C. A. the K. of C, the Jewish WeU~re
800 WOMEN NEEDED BY SALVATION ARMY Commander Evangeline Booth
Say* War Relief Wort Must Be Extended.
r Evangeline £
Thu pap£r has enlisted Fnth the government iv the cause of America for the period of die war •
PEACE AT LAST. Peace at last! Never before has the word "Pasoe" had such special significance. and never before In the history of this, or any other country, has it
for •
t Joy
Never before, because never before has such a brutal and bloody war been .(ought and won. And never has a more righteous cause been fought for. Germany, the once proud and mighty dynasty, has crumbled and fa! William HobemoUera. the dl-lator gad Emperor, a fugitive to a country that does not want him. > At the session:, the word of peace has been the cause of double )oy Fiiyl and foremost, of course, caa the Joy that the war has ended, that awtul slaughter and shedding of the finest blood in the land has .ceased; that tooth* .* will soon again be united With their sons who have heroically left all and gone into brttk that men (nay be free, that democracy has ellm Inaiad autocracy and militaristic man Stxhy. No Joy ran. or vbould. overshadow that Joy But tbvre Is another special ns boro for rejoicing. Fur the past four
have been hit particularly bard by Unwar conditions Building material has been almost.impossible to obtain and profeUdUve in price, therefore, tag operations slopped, People ware conserving, and rightly so. and as land at the short- Is olther bought as a luxury. or ior speculation, sale of land waa practically at a stand-etlll. War work kept everyone ao busy, and keyed up to the expenditure of the last ounct of energy. m> vacations were either curtailed or not taken at all: therefore
rould have teen bad cvuditioca COBOL . with peace, ifaU will all be d. Baal Katate at tte seashore waetically a suburb at Phliadel will te la demand, land win
a hare never rpen! a day rill take an earned rani
cr of tbe Sal vet too Amy In the Untied Btales, tea teen suddenly called npoe to furnish 800 additional war t women for Franc* The nqwtat Is contained In a report Just received by her from OoL William A Balkar of the Salvationist forces, whom ate to France over a year ago to «w
“We will do all we can to fin this
and maintained. Their power for good must be continued, and their efforts prosecuted with even greater vigor than during the actual war. For with actual boetlUtlca ended, the American
soldiers, the heroes of France, will teWbik with tte American troops’ given more liberties, and encounter ~
nre temptations, than before.
The War Work Campaign, the drive of which end* this week, must be oversubscribed. Give cheerfully and lib erally—it is practlcUly the last re-
t of this k'nd you will be con
fronted with. Meet It smilingly am]
with open purse.
War Work Campaign, “snd the need Itself should Im, teas tte Americas public all the more with the absolute nsoeolty for sustain tog and cnlirglng tte war relief wort of the sevac or-
for a drive fur
fuoda. Eaci. la « vt«! cog In s vast mi chine for hnmaa relief, and each lx indtspenafble. serving :« particular
elements In Its own way.
“Tte Salvation Army was boro ts
privation and
cry sod h- w to cope wlU\ IL Perhaps that accounts In some degree for tte i success our wort bat attained eoj for
*We aro of (he common people, wad ! we toU on a practical be alt. W« learn- i ed tte lesson of how to do It In the Bmr war. when we stood at the side of Britain's troops sod weathered It out to tte end. We have tern tried by Ora. and tte mothers and fathers of America, aa In otter countries, .rurt | tte Salvation Army to do tte thing they would like to do for their men If
“With 1.210 trained workers at tte front operating from 42? huts arl dugoota. tbs Bel ration Army Is doing tea don* and will coadnua to do Its beet tor tte causa of humanity and
STONE HARBOR. Mr. and Mr» Oscar Morton have moved to Cape May. where Mr. Hot ton has work, and where It will be
handy for him.
Some of our people went, with the committee from hero, tc the War Work Campaign meeting in the high school at Cape May Court House. They report a very Interesting programme and good speakers. The campaign la now on foot. Let Stone Harbor go over the top as usual. Mrs. Ada Reynolds was down In her cottage over Sunday. Cu» Miller was a week-end visitor. Earnest and his wife also paid a flying wait to bis home here. He U working a» fireman on the Baltimore
and Ohio Railroad.
Mia. John Laraen la now staying lib her daughter. Mrs. C. O. Lrtxkus.
while Mr. Laraen la working In the
New York Shipbuilding Plant Mis* Jsanettr Ferree spent Wed-
oeaday In Cape May Coart House
shopping and visiting friends. Hog* were flying at the Coast
Guard Station on Monday after word came in that Peace waa really declar-
*“t
Mr* Troxei and Mlaa Emma Troxel apeni th. week-end In Philadelphia Mr*. Kuhit-ld was In Bridgeton for a
few day * last week.
Jake Richardson and family have >me back for tte winter on account of Walter's health Mr. Richardson, wh.. has been 01 with the influent*, had been working at Hog Island.
Mr. John liailry waa In hi* cottage hArmy Training Corps of tte Cnlrerob on Sunday fixing his boats swsy for ty of Detroit recently applied for a tte winter. furnished house and a housekeeper Mrs. Winters has closed the cottage who would not be a servant, but. as on Mtb 8t. and gone sway for the one young officer expressed It “tte winter Her many friends express the sort of woman to whom (be boys rax hope that ate will return next sum- call out •Hello, mot ter f whan they
‘ coma In tte front door." Tte boll, r m.pector visited the Homeslcknewa I station on Etactloa Day, and which War Camp •rvthln* tn —1~. (uln>]Ir< InrmiMrai>i> rarT&
“We've got your number* asyu tte
hiii W. C. C 8. to tte bomtulrk boy from “V" . camp with leisure to spend In any one
S' of no nr~ buujroO Ion,. onuo^I
‘"““dorr Hslveeon ass home Irtuj. «,.!» -1,,.. i„. o*„.„ _ n Cape Ma> over Surd*. wl*h ni. * 11 W “* C “* **'• ILrr *- IM ‘ ( T ^ 1n s » cape may over Mnday a Ufa hu m«ih ^ , owo ^ , |muted lwr . nT^lJSf f-^i ivufw'^rt IHinnlgan teing tte last to Irate herr fr ° ,n ,h * loc * 1 bn,n<h ot hu 0,r,1 l^lgv Is week anuounring a rec-epiioo that night eoHn 801. Hon.., -s to, r—”- .«■> «“ - daughter are spending a few day* 1 ,b rljUrr * _ With Ml* Herkart'i nsotter In Wesl “ ■“""“ccioeri «r all Its meetings. B Phiiadrlphla ivtarning aith te> : addrsmo^ t u him. with This Moan. B ter. Mrs. Blown who Tburadsy v * u ■< «te bottom. How did i B ' »re | they know te eras a Methodist) V Tte barracks si (Ape May. which **• forgot ten about tte little jL r* to replace those burned down, are , “Fmaonal Card" he mad# out at tte S tetag lusted, ao our men work on adjutant s r.qorat during bit first <ls> V
row pi etc tte ; tfi camp wten It was mi'y one of tte §
eadleas detnlls In (he round of do-tulsta H
Peter-on bar returned ; and doctors am] gcocial <ve.f,toe«. B » »-toto.“52r SSJ1CIS&' ^ ZS-£ su. — !
te d gon* to and s good bit ah
CURE FOR BLUES NEARJTHE CAMPS
Community Service Take* Place
of Mother, Friend* and
Home for Soldier*.
Tun young officers of tte Student
*1
Why Compare Beef and
Coal Profits?
Swift ft Cociipon/ has frequently stated
l*z profit on beef averages only one*
fourth of a cent a pound, and hence has
practically no effect on the price.
Comparison has been made by the Federal Trade Commission of this profit with die profit on coal, and it has pointed out that anthracite coal operators are content with a profit of 25 cents a ton, whereas the beef profit of ore-fourth of a cent a pound mean*
a profit of $5 XX) a ton.
The comparison does not point out that anthradte coal at the seaboard is word) tst wholesale about $7.00 a ton, whereas a too of beef of fair quality is worth about
$400.00 wholesale.
To carry the comparison further, the 25 cent profit on coal is 3^ per cent of the
$7X10 value.
The $5.00 profit on beef is only IV4 per cent of the $400.00 value. THa profit has jftti# on price fa cither **tr*. bat has less elject 00 th* price of beef than on die
price of coal
Ccal may be stored in the open air indefinitely; beef must be kept in expensive coolers bccanae it in highly perishable and must be refrigerated. Coalia handled by the carload or too; beef is delivered to retailers by the pound or hundred weight' , Methods of ha:idling are vastly different. Qal is handled in open cars; beef must be shipped fa refrigerator cars at an even temperature. Fairness to the public, fairness to Swift ft Company, fairness to the packing industry, demands that these indisputable fuels be considered. It fa impossible to disprove Swift ft Company's statement, that its profits on beef are so small as to have practically no effect 00 prices. _ Swift & Company, U. S. A.
tte malady for
found everything in t-xcWlen*. condt
-30.
Freddie Robinson U on tte week's
Cottage Renting My Specialty Honaefl and Lots For Sale
Bungalow Site*
M. SOFRONEY < Successor to l ewis Stclamaysr A Soa) ESTATE <1 INSURANCE
NOTARY PUBLIC
SEA ISLE CITY. NEW JERSEY
M.
REAL
l»te tU . emoicya. You can cage a leopard, tat you cannot ehasge hi* Fpoto or his poSrt 0? rinr. But what an Owner CAN DO fe to adert. in the first Pfee*. * Contractor who has
for integrity, result*.
Edward B. Arnett
Bem SEA ISLE CITY, K. J.
Old Show Made N«w R«P*lr Work My Spadattj New Store ITALIA ST. SEA ISLE CITY, N. I.
GAS
s for tte Caa* May County
tart vrlttaa Into a liule bu earn a^tffiaUj Uf U.
- WU t te
U the most economical and conveniaot fuel for cooking and heating. Initallation coat small; returns large. Ask us. Seashore Gas Company GEORGE WILSON, Supt
Pisatar, WWilto.U Dte* and Shipper of Iburim Star 0*8 QrBfan Salt OyMen, Oaaa Crabs

