Cape May County Times, 18 May 1923 IIIF issue link — Page 9

HUiCTiTTn

EDITORIAL PAGE of the CAPE MAY COUNTY TIMES

caps ooramr ran ViTLUAM A. BAmMT (Hrntnl nuuM Ernr rritw *>T <!■« cafe wt corair ran* co. (Ineorporat*®) J11..UC a;*-“* OCCAM CITY. M. J. w«t .SEA ISLE CITY. N. J.

rtuladdphU U f, Building. A. F. Smith. AdrertlfinK Keprt-onUUT*-SabscrtptiM Price, f 1.M Per xeer In Advj Adv* Appiicatlo*. I'nit.d TrpotMUe oM N.w J«W Pr— A«cUOo». -CtlonJ EditortAl 1

Enl,™4 ,t th. Po« OM'c *18~ ,,i. cur. N. J.. “ s«»iia<a.» K.uer

The cireulAtke «l the CAPE KAY COUKTT TIKES U taisei thee UJ other Aew^lApee i* Ceje Ait Couitj. Ahrertijen ire w£-

eeeorff ihd •» ihrUrf toieethe rfiom pnatod ml tuailed up ThnndAj.

JED DU BOIS

EETTRES

The Fire Mile Beech Jourael. of Wildwood, wee publlehed for the first time Uet week under the new management. ImpdrUat ehangee In Hie publication are announced to take- place thU week, my* the limor (N. J.) Time*. The new owner* are Mayor Court right Smith, Percy H- Jackaon, Harry F. Greavee and Loaning Meyer» Mr. Meyer* who Is well known In Salem county, has risen for many year* principal of WIMwood schools, and Mr. Greams was formert) iwher is the schools there. The Journal was foondeC In 1890 by A P. Foster; the actual »^*<>ag *«i done in Elmer nnU* lt*S. l»>o Jed DuBoU waa an employe the Times offlee, later porcka (hr paper aad thus has had a continuous touch with It since Its first la-

BETTEB DELIVERY

IV PROSPECT.

Those subscribers of the TIMES ho so frequently hare Just cause to complain because they receive their paper late, will be glad to know that the newspaper la at last about to receive a certain brand of attention to whleb. In this country at least. It has not hitherto been accustomed. It la welcome Intelligence and matter for congratulation that the postmaster general has decided on a policy to bring about transmission of newspapers with a promptness and a regularity previously accorded first claas mall only. Every one knows the discomfort and inconvenience and even the fidgetiness and bad temper occasion-1 ed by the non-arrival of the daily newspaper at the usual time. This j remark applies to delivery by carrier i but It Implies for more forcibly when . the delivery la by mail. In the former case the deficiency may be supplied et small outlay by tending around to the corner store or to the street vendor, but there la as a rule no such remedial method possible when the recipient .Is located at a distance and the malls have failed to function with accuracy. To bu^neaa men and women the prompt delivery of their newspapers may be Just as fmportant aa the delivery of their letters and often la more Important. In other countries there is no distinction rjade In the nandltng of first and second claas H»«n and the postman places letters, postal c«Ards and newspapers In the hall door box at the same time. Hence It la that foreigner* In this country have often been pusxled to understand why when a letter and a newspaper arrive on the same ship the former reaches them sometimes a full day ahead of the Utter. The postmaster general U about to change all that. If It can be done. He recofuUaa that the demand for quick transfer of newspapers f reasonable one. and he has taken the first practical step to insure speedier transmission of domestic and foreign newspapers by announcement on the subject containing valuable auggestiona both to postal employes and to newspaper publishers.

A Good Spring Tonic Mixture

t<. make the sale to the ne s» of May first. Including not only the newspaper plant but the building erected many years ago by Mr. l^uBola In which It was housed. Mr. DuBois has long ted with tha public affairs of Wildwood. He waa one of the first Board of Directors Marine National Bi and hat been a director continuously

since.

Without tha strenuous newspaper responsibilities which bo has shouldered so long It would seam that tor •while at least. ••Jed" would “feel like a cat In a strange garret.” some of tha Times readers may n-t know that tha retiring WIMwood Hltor t* the eon of Mr. and Mrs. W. 0 DuBois. long time reeidenu of Elmer or nearby. It may be tnler•wiin* to note that when ha entered 'be Elmer Times offlee. aa an apprentice. hi* wages were II.SO per week «h» firm three months. I*.00 # per the second three months, etc.. h i»lng 50c par week eeeb three tni.nihs aa was the mis In this and hundred* of other printing offices. h »»' not lung before be became proficient In tha businase offlee es In the I**" l*»*r offlee f.ieman 'a well ea r nfidentlal frle-d of the then ' and proprietor, the tatiaaete relation continuing op to lb# preeTb* acquiiBtanes of Mr. DuBois had decided that he was e eo a Hissed

GRADUATED

Louise Lorraine

From bathing girl and minor ro.se » the “movies" to leads In comedies and later In leading rolee In serials in which she faced many wild beast*, then to star parts Ir. feature pictures, been the record cf pretty Louise Lorraine, who is known to al! lovers of motion pictures.

The* Mek^ ! t os Shews M Yowr Fnho

THE FINGER NAILST HE subject of the finger nails and 1 their isdleatlooe has been to ached upon, bet Is cootinosd be canoe than la mach .bat can ba gained from a detailed study at these horny protoctisos tor the tips of the Ungers, to tort. In

feeeed to be able to reed Or* pest, present and future study at the Anger nails.

th th "a*

An act recently eased by

lature of Indiana provides for a system of graduated lies use fees for cnto mobile^ auto-trucks and other motor vahMae. The maximum is 11 SO a year tor eevan aad cse-half ton trucks, and a total weight of trw-ka loads combined baa been fixed at twelve urns. That is a sensible, practical pUu.' though it may be that the maximum of fttO la too New Jersey should follow the exampleGof Indiana. There 1 * not / State In the Unloa that ha* a greater traffic by commercial truck*; there is

WHAT DIES?

' By DOUGLAS MAUOCM j

“WtaskiNamer By MILDRED MARSHALL

badly

damaged by heavy {ruck traffic, aor

not a state wboea rqada

’ truck

If toe nails deocrlbad <vcur on spatulate dngero—Chat la. Angers which hrneilen at the sod or tip—end the Ummb M abort, the owner, man or woman, will have a passion tor tidying np. arranging aad rearranging hi* or htr surrounding*, aaeking always to attain the perfect loo of orderllneaa.

Whet They Prove. Baqdall—Tbero'e no use talking, the

that has prepared to spend so much money for highway improvement. Few atatee have lower li-

cense fees.

A.large share of the burden of road construction and malntalnance should be put upon the parties whocause the damage, and who make groat profile out of the transports- j Uon business by com Deling with the steam railroads, which must build' their own tracks on private rights | of .... .04 M. »—> * i "'' tba trucking companies aeeape Tbe| present plan la fair to neltbet the,

railroads 4or the public. 00WG1ATULAT10W

The TIMER congratulates thej Wlldeood Leader on Its first edition i In 1U new plant, a alxtsen pee* b°‘

Th, utant wrinkle to Ccton couny >• le Put eowaty priaonee* at work • ‘"nalauM ■wqeltar It looks ,k * * «ood stunt. Criminal# don't but If they learn

_ of rtew .ews. muturo. t»4 advertising- It •# * highly crod liable edition, and editor Wlllee, nertt* pralaa for his energy and enterprlM whtsh nmd. the ie«* po-i Me. Ve wish lor the new Under n In eg and useful Ufa. and n pros On* point nt which the TIME'I

however, with Ihe

MES YOU MAY MARRY Ry t. R. PEYRBR Has a Man Like This Proposed te VeuT Symptom*: Young. Jumpy, well groomed. Is always saying be Is going to do this, or going bore or there. Whan be lore, be l* always too late te mak* his eat*.

bUmee th* trolley or the bus or the train. Never yet baa kept e da'r with you on time. Always apologetic, yet never seams

IN PACT The alona dock bee not haso made yet that will wake him ap. Pronertptien te Rrtde to Ret ifi Ret your docks ahead. Do *s oat lue* your band or your

THE FEAJTUT There la n pt ■ In a movie show. He alt# in the gallery—I Bit below He enteth peanuts, at least a peek. And droppeth shells right down my neck. Klolse knows that her husband la In love with hie stenographer, for sheTound In his memoramdum book the words: Get theatre tickets for R. U. R-!” Folks who never do more t they're paid for. never get paid for more than they do. There are two classes of traffic fools—Joy-ridera and Jny-walker.«

Th* very oak above the grave Speaks Nature's coo tin ally. What dlasT Not. certainly, the Dm. Whet dlenT Tne bud, the rose, th. need. Barb baa Its time end baa Us turn. One needs his garden but to road Of life's eternity to learn. That every springtime will diseloon. What dlesT Mot. certainly, tha roan.

What .

ml The urn will fade, the

But still the midnight has It* Mara, Th# day will have Us light and toade. The ena again when night Is done. Whet dies? Wot, certainly, the eon. What dlesT The fiver fin da the eon. The eea the sky. the iky the bill— The hill shall give ns presently The fiver from the mountain rd. With star and tun again to gleam. What dice! Not. certainly, the stream. What dleat Shall only nee thing dleVOod's mind In human mind* ex-

God may give us our relatives but we even up for them by having the

privilege of selecting

friends.

•'Nerve" has various meanings. For Instance, it takro one kind of nerve to flgbt a bull, and another

kind to shoot it.

“I wish now." said a aReaker in Court Houne. recently. "toBax your memory—* A wail arose from a rparae looking gentleman In a front seat: "Has it come to thla?" he

said.

Th^ policeman who confrosed to stealing seventy-six Fords bp* beeq sent to Jail for six months. This la a noble effort to make the punish meat fit the crime. 'Ttiat's me all over Mabel." eal.1 th# poteon Ivy aa a girl with a pimp lad tee* went by. Almost aiybody can write e book, but It lake* a genius to c<impose the ■tuff printed on the Jacket. A normal child 1« one that reaches Its sixth birthday about the time It acquires th* nickel habit. gEla There are glrla to take the promen-

and rasa live cn, and I

Expire, this apafit within my broestt

own jg death the end of all the planf

What dies? Not, certainly, th* man I 1C t>r McClur. Nempapw SraSlola.)

There are girl* to take the d'me. There are girl* to take canoeing In the good old summer-time.

Thera* re girl* who shine In parlor*, .•as awing a wicked line. There are girls who mak* kings look

agaJr.

i Sut non* compare with min*.

He Uvea at Whit#

•whlto

Uad*,. is on He circulation

The masthead of th# Lead#, •mm, week announced the "Largest Cireu- j | ,„id her Just how beeuliful Ution »f any newspaper in Ctep# May 8b, was. how sweet end telr

County " For oewal months p**i How lightly, gracefully ah* dnneed. , ix»un«r m cjMm - A* «bo' eb, tripped on air Bom, young doctor* have a hard ftb* TIMER has *** go when 1 begged. ' Just on* email (iq, god other* get a car.dy-feo mldsnd on, of u* muat n# “* hlaa." | die aged silent who thinks she ha*

— flfae yielded to my insistence.

billet of Mercer county by the name The line of inert romatance ^ h(>rs an4 how fooluh Mli d ,m has Just bad hi* driver'e Mow loB ^ gglrt aeesu to barreeeed you felt: remember the

be here ir Slav, perhaps the advei- other -i^kt when you User* In the atiset ear* will get bat- wcrld'e record ondurnne#

a changa

Popular Tour. Approximately 800.000 automobiles toared the historic battlefield of Get tysberg, «'a, last year. Caro Own every state In the union were found touring the 22 miles of government highways

Angela, from th* Greek ang-<ioa, 11 timing messenger, whleb the Rom ins intferpreted ea “heavenly meaaengur" and hence “angeL" Angelo* first became proper In the Byiautin* empire. It la believed to have begun as an epithet since It comes to light In EonrtanUno* Angelos, a young man of noble family whoee beauty caused him to be the choice of the Princes* Theodora Komena in 1100. Because of the beauty of the family, Angelos became mde of thb Venetians brought It to Greece end a monastic saint, who preached at Palermo and waa afterward murdered by a wicked count whoee evil deods he had rebuked, waa one of the first to The Carmelites claimed St Angelo as a saint of their order and the name, la both Its masculine and feminine forma, caught th* fancy of Italy. bersrse popular In the other nations, due perhaps to He Inseparable association* with beauty, and also to the fashion of complimenting women as angels. The derivative Angelica Is noted in romance as the faithless lady for whose sake Orlando lost bis heart and senses. But she was s gratuitous Invention of Bolardo and Afisto, for Spanish ballads and rofiler Kalian poets mak* him the faithful hcsbuul of Alda. However, Angelica obtained that character for beauty which he* made the name popular through the centuries. It has been a particular favorite with authors through all eges of literature, particularly 1c mldYlctortan fiction, where Ha hart tag* of fragile, vlrtuoua beaaty fitted H exceptionally for the name of Its heroinea. Angela, from time Immemorial, has been applied to tha duff?, youthful, unsophisticated type with curly hair and wide inn-went blu, »)«•»- The French call her Angriique end Angellnc. England has ev.-’red th# derivative Ang-lot Anglola. Angtoleitta and Anglolota are th, Italian forms. Th# Teutonic V«ralo*M are Eagoi and Engelcben. Ancela is pobob sod Anjela and Anjellna have been evolved In Bohemian. It Is fitting that th# pure baaaty of Angela should have the peart aa her tallamanlc Jewel. It assures her charm and purity and popularity Should ah* dream of pearls, she will find new faithful friend* Monday to hcv lucky day. when eh# wear# a peart, end T be# lucky number. (• hr •*• wa^wr SrfeStMi*. teal

A young Ocean City chap bad proposed to a beautiful girl. The girl, blush.ng and weeping a little. Lad accepted him. He folded her In hi, arm*, pressed hi* lip, to hgn end

whl*pe*ed "Deerrot. 1* this time you have ever loved?"

the girl sighed, ' but K'a #o nice that

I hope It won't be the last.”

"Let'# nettle down.” aayt a New Y?rk editor, and w, hasten to add that It might be a good Idea for a lot of people tc settle up at vh* same

time.

11 Fri. _

19 Bat. >0 Run. 21 Mon. 22 Tue*.

„ 21 Wed.

|2« Thura.

Yea." J5 Er;.

2« Sat. _

27 Bun. 21 Mon 29 Tue, 30 Wed.

21 Thur*.

9:43 S 49 10:Id 10.:i lu:67 11:06 11:41 11:62 12:1< 12:35

12:60

3: C8

6 69 Ttoa * 19 9:33

6:32 5:32 7:30 5:27 0:15

442 6:21 6:03 6:66 1:41

2:64 6:68

4:07 10:00 10:41 6:10 11:00 11:44 5:06 11:56 12:16 7:04 12 41 12:62 7:6? 1:36 1:45 8:4'.' r 27 2 37 9:38 2:19 1:28