Cape May County Times, 4 December 1925 IIIF issue link — Page 9

C*pe li»y County', Home Nevrapnpe,

CAPE MAY COUNTY TIMES

Friday, December 4, 1925.

x>8 co*rA!rt i City. N. 4. ■

I th»t machinery, a* well u dlroctr lB, * Ter J r department of the bualBu * 1 ‘x keyed up to the t J* 1 *™ point of efficiency and It “ herf ,h »t the Secretary Klvee wedlt to prohibition, and all will **ree that the man whoae brain 1 U clear and nerve* are aleady la the more efficient worker. While Mr. Hoover make* prediction*, a* he U only deallns with facta. It I* perfectly plain that the record of the past Bve r**r» win be bettered In the next , flT * »“d that continued Iner In efficiency and productivity - decrease still further the coat of r I'vlng.

of 919.M9 to

the X»SI ad-rertU!nr and every cent of l*

; O&CAHTHE

■ TAiDKR.SHIP COSTLY ■More we succeed In completely deetroylnjc the American merchant marine, the likelihood U we will b**e spent more than double the of mlllloor It would have coal any other nation to' build a shippln* background for the protection and development of *orid trade. If we are to follow the recommendations of H. |D*ltsa. the investlcator appointed President Coolldfe. then furr vast expenditures are cera to result, if we don’t, then

of tremendously must be faced.

eeals Is an Investment which will pay bly dividends. The work accompllahed la Cape May County by the local Health L*a«ue, through the county nurae, made possible by the sale of the Uttle seals, aided by the liberality of the Board of Freeholder*. U too well known to need a rehearsal here, and the annual appeal made by the League for a liberal purchase of the seals should meet with whole-hearted Cape May County hi wonderfully Neased this IMS. and the letters beacue. encloslnx ZOO of the little meeaencers of health, which have bees mailed throu*hout the ty. should be clad I y received and the full amount—|Z—promptly returned In the accompanying addressed envelope. It will be the winter’s best

Investment.

of publicity ea com- ]

I Its advantage* Wildwood. Ooaaa CHy.!

give the*' aa tadasate ; Kadreds of people]

of It only ky Its '

has oae of the aalhst 1

see are of ao avail He la mad* aceasl sad aow. the year of 1 1 the am six mouths of jj is the time to bring a itagea to the attantlon 1 1 public. Upon the i 1 are aad the Cham- J

of larpa proport City la to prod I by the' '

t to la sight; wlU the {

•ilugly the rchait marine is our greatc*< a condition that surely I have caused amusement In * days e

The

pcndltare of million* upon milat In Washington, the added exare* reeultlng from coo tinchange* In the Shipping from Admiral t Lasker are equalled only public Imagination by the sight I hundrada of great ship* being | or drt by the government | nd of them and curtail even - loan. The coat of maln- ” of the fabled White Deit shrinks to nothing along k of the cost of America ownp • -e has been s steady decline i shipping situ*I nnoo the time Admiral Ben- [«** turned down on hi* pro he people of » the tact that bant marine to e or leas than an earner! can railroad ease American t It to an gram d unle t 'ack of it the support of sple. and that t o' the country Knity millions of the Ame lire. Cut of thoae jf our population few r the Irterior have any of the shipping probi they certainly hare been appreciate the fact that a ships are a costly prop-

LOOKUTO 4

LOVQ WAY AHEAD Political writers for the metropolitan newspapers, basing their prognostications on the result ol the caucus selection tor Speaker of the Assembly, for which Senator Mackay la given a large are of credit; are touting the Bergen Senator aa a candidate for Governor three yean hence, and are pitting against him for the nomination. Senator Bright, of thto county. Three years to a long time ahead in these days of rapid-lire political changes to select cardites for office. Both Senators may be In the "has been" class before that time or conditions may have ao changed that neither will be available. to just as safe a prognostication that there will be soch an Independent sentiment among the tank and die of Re publican* three years that the nosnlnatlon will be worth ll'Ue to any man now prominent In politics.

Sayings of

Prominent People

* rth of Red Cross seals nth rate from tubereu173.4 for 106.0M of

In 1924 New Jersey

t 1249.904 worth of the k-nger* of health and rular death rale was * reduction In thirteen *r'-- one hundred P*r

‘'teeing the death rate |r*»d white plague

“The tact that r Is* is violated does not mess that that law to

Ford.

Senator Cousens of Michigan -I doubt If genera’ shelving of business lor the lure of golf to conductive of prosperity."—J Harry

Tregoe of the of Credit Men.

“When It wa* discovered that two people coo Id together roll a heavier stone than could be done

•The American natioa tns be-

come a natioa of grabbers, and as s people we are affi tried with »

national mouth disease. We ought to think more and talk lea Former Gov. Brumbaugh of Penn. “No matter how rich a n may be. unaeaa it tea rich tn the

simple oome* of the cities. Tillages

cannot endure."—Mr*. John Sherman, president of the General Federation of Women's Club* The requirements of wome have been the main basic crosi of war.’—Admiral Bradley Flske.

thl* hadneas In other

&

Views and Reviews

k'-rful decreaac I" ike j Mina C. Van Winkle, WasbI ‘tun tuberculosis to | ington Police ' " *

h - to the work of the!

I . aoclattor made poa- The natlos _

1 ,o,ut* u. *

familiar

brutal war. the steady encroach

t , m-nt upon our liberties to made

but the ■ , hu becM* of the callous and

. . .... _ .... J — - ^4* i **f1 -

"Solitary” Confinement Philadelphia Bulletin: There is an outburst of sentimental protest against the repent that New Hampshire proposes to revert to aolltSLry confinement for men convicted of crimes of violence. It to true that solitary confinement engenders bitterness In prisoner*. But to rank It as torture to going rather strong, although students of the Count ef Monte Cristo school of ppm that such X 1

mad.

Of course nobody Intends lect men to dungeon incarceration for years, incommunicado to all the world. Humaaity forbids. But there to room for suspicion that a moderate amount of solitude would not hurt most of onr young thugs- It might conceivably be made the opportunity for learning specified and required lessons that would do good. As a plain matter of commonsense one of the troubles cf modem society to Its super-grigarloos-ness. Individual life and home have given place to mob life and mob philosophy. The ruck of yo«<ng gangsters are gangs'ers because of the gang. They do not learn to become bandits, burglars and roughnecks in the seclusion of their own rooms, or in the dally

life of their famlli<

The average young man who will sit down for an hour in private and make a list of the subjects of thought that come Into hto mind during that time wHl there-

by get a surprising line own handicaps. The dii

between the worthless and the worthwhile things of life to learn ed by reflection. A modicum of voluntary confinement to the recourse of most people who think. Surely It to not torture to make a criminal think. The chief objection—Jf there be warrantable

I, objpellon, to lb, •***"*”■ — ».tn«t women - 18 lhat ,he prisoner Is likely to

brood and not think. If he only

could be made to think crime and its consequem

Ms lost opportunity, it might be torture for his soul, but It would

do good.

in the election of every public offlclal chosen by popular vote. We hear a lot about making It compulsory for all to vote, but too little about the statutory Interferences with qualified voters who try to cast their ballots. Speed la The Senate Camden Courier: Although nobody ever speaks of him n« days, the country still has a Vice. is Dawt

will be In Vice President Daw* won’t be -noosing-when hto vote to needed. Probably the flrrt Important easure to come up will be the Revenue bill, the tax

Tempting opportunity for the stand-outers, the argufler*. the long winded debaters. What are the obetruetiontots

going to do 7

Old rules are still in force. Filibusters are Feasible. s a shadow in the I chicken yard. The hawk to Eying overhead, keen eyed, ready to pounre on any unwary loiterer. ‘ the shadow of Dawes. some Southern Democrat show signs uf readlner* to launch Into a three day speech, with long readings from the encyclopaedia

fie rite the Election Law

largely responsible aDth , DklDJ . attitude of oar citiien- Trenton Times: W. Mayo — t ful war now being ih , p -_saniuel Cntermyer. Is'Tvr ^^,, of Eliaabetb. who was 1 r and Indirectly, tot ^ quite prominent In New Jersey e means of bring- -Serer before have the people of .ffain. twenty years ago. „ could not afford America lived under such bene BUX|caiU that "the election tows rt medical service beenl circamstasos* Today there )( , alnwM jed so that any member of , , h -^, h center, to not a boy or girl tn thto country _ Umily he given the poser - S .,™ck at In toon health who to not In a post- , vear on the registry list , has Struca ^ ^ arcumulalr enough to In- r0 , rrB a]] me mbers of his family ,ht c " —- * competence for the older Uvll>fc u „der the same roof—not

i."—Mrs Anthony Wayne onl} . foT ,h„ general election, but . D. A. R. head. to vote at the primaries."

■jittcy to*® 8 - k** 1

that the H

! muntty to J i-A loss of the I

local and county

| .over stop t° j “A high

^ 'a^d'death. The fundional vala»: that to.

r be wholly rwallaed. ha. a

! help kill time and delay —and a wiser brother

will

This Week

B, Arthur j THAFK THE ATMOSPHERE. BIRTH C0HTR0L! 00 SLOWLY.

;

I WEAR A MUSTACHE! HO.

A HEW ELEMENT.

Ethel Bunnel. a young girl In the University of Illinois beat fiftyeight men tn a cattle- Judging competition, and that tost sur-

prising.

Women bad ue good Judges of animals to exercise discretion In picking out their husbands. Nature has given them power to see clearly and form sound Judgment at a glance. | Many a husband who thinks he did the picking was In reality the | one picked by a natural bom Judge j of live stock. | .A new comet to discovered In the I constellation of the Hunting Dog. a small comet. Fortunately we have ! learned not to be afraid, even of big ones. Wc no longer ring church bells to frighten the comet away, as our ancestors d measure, and catalogue It. We ought to get to our knees and thank Heaven for that wonderful. greatest of all shock absorbers. our atmosphere. Scientists are surprised shower of meteor*, unusual at thto time of year. They are supposed

Musing? j Office

pour into hto ear the warning "Hist! Beware of the Dawes!" Made to order for old Hclland-

marta.

The country wants action—no mistake about that. And Dawes says the Senate methods are obanlete, obstructive and inemcleiit. The Senate will be on trial before the country. It will want to look good to the people. It doesn't want to be caught by any swooping hawk. And so we may get the promised lax reduction without long agonies of debate. It looks as though the first round would be Dawes'. Mn. Fackert Still Popular Gloucester County Democrat: The Trenton Times thinks that "Mr*. Lillian Felckert has nothing of public favor by i of her husband going to Rer.o and obtaining a divorce after month*’ residence there, because the courts of cue's own State ought to be good enough to family troubles." The Tiroes might have added that New Jersey tow to not so illiberal that a good case mu t go so far for a fair hearing and Just verdict.

Aik Dad, He Knows

Dtoillusioned Wife:—“It seems you're always broke now. but before we were married you said you

had plenty of money!" Hobby:—"I did then."

Wise cracking sailor to cr horn tourist. “Don't fergit to c yer pot 'oles, the tide's rtoln'!"

Charles Curtis, Kansas Master Political Strategist

Can Aid President In Fight With Western Radicals—So Says William Allen White. Who Thinks Fellow Kansan Can

Wrest Reins of Authority From Congress

to be connected wtih the “Leolde" showers that bombard the earth once in thlrty-tnree years. If It were not for our atmospl function, which melt* the me great blocks of stone would bombard our earth, and soon nobody would be left alive to make o rations or record*. The Important thing In the lion of children to affection—not money. A child's start In life depends not on the father's bank count but on the mother's love and respect for her children's father. A man sincerely devoted to hto wife gives hto children the right start if he gives them health and character. without money. As to numbers, you never can dl. Alexander the Great tie and only. Caruso followed after eighteen younger brothers and sisters. Nature to wiser than birth control or eugenics. The mother that wants children has the beet chil-

dren.

The good , and learned Bishop Collin* Denny, speaking tn North Carolina, advises men to s mustaches as “their badge masculinity. - We hesitate to disagree with any bishop. It's like a hoptoad arguing with a locomotive, but there are many signs of “masculinity' without a mustache. Alexander the Great, who made the smooth face fashionable, was masculine enough; also Caesar and Napoleon. They were three fairly masculine “he-man" types, with no mustache. On the other band, the marmoset, feeblest and most timid of the monkeys, baa a mustache and so has the sea lion, vep- masculine. You can't tell. Everything In the visible universe from the egg to an oyster to the big star Aldebaran to made up of fewer than one hundred differ-

ThU to the t Bert Darby. 1 thing in th the family. Peggy Joyce I believe In i gels married

while.

True T* 1 Liule Isadora into the croeenr a dime down oa panted: "GlnuM animal cracker*.

The penlteatl*»T I _ for a Journalist—It

to every family la The next day h intention ot eat*

Of aU the eoc In Sunday ] And so that hto gang. I'd transfer I in :ieu of Lady 1 Who's not M U And ao to soett wrath

And tot him spoil ka And ao to Bad a tank 9 Katrinka'e power*. I'd give her Happy I And send hi If only I wen The things I'd I I'd put you on the : you're such A funny creator*! Man to not th* only b

Brown: "Did : fool rooster* enr

morning?"

Mr*. Brow*i ~Y«e. dear." Brown: “I wonder wbal earth they do that for." Mr*. Brown: "Why. da remember, dear? Ye* early one moral . you crowed about tt far a a

The arteries are aot I

things that h

by. There to the 1

on't last loag." Wild life Isn’t really i pearing. It's Jast moving t

cities.

"Were yo* excited wedding day?" Excited? Bay. bride ten dollars and i

Of i

hun-

® higher standard of lhe 1 are woven ‘nrxtricaMy taxes he man who falls death of t ad maintain effl- j P®* 11 - uatneas, ao matter vide with ' leas, will be hope- mnnity life | ia the race. that of < es aot akaae mean way to rt a of the totem tax end t

That to worth considering:

n> * y to the suggestion that once a» * voter has registered, his na

shall remain on lhe list unlll he

goal to reach ellher dln or moves Into anothei

. knd furnishes an aim for the mosi vo||BC dfctrict; and the p repos I

ls direct s ta _ worthy human endeavors "—Prof tlon lhat personal registration be as any « | T g gmlddy. Irish Free State Min- ellhel . roa de general or aboltobed <«. and premature ^ ^ stales. entirely: that absentee voting. »e icmmunity ha* - ^ ,blch ha* been greatly abused, be

SS T ™ B*** 0 “ d JuU * t • POOn ‘ ,l ‘ 10 ,b * I primary 4 U« *

‘ d.rect * k-** ‘“Romeo:-“DO W, J£ thw gvneral revision of our

^ « tbl. n ‘ >thir -* election la£ to badly needed To reduce to honey- to nr _-Ye«. There are too many obstacle* In

anTS r. r^Tto

H«t cross R '.led off under the moon

deed are bopriesiy stupid, four hundred hopelessly indifferent ninety ramie brained, nine can analyse and sense the moving factors of of the worid. and one ia best capable and wishful of marshalling those forces, putting them in harness and boldly grasping the reins to drive. Such a man to Curtis of Kansas, the man to whom William Allen White saya President Coolidge must look for the salvation of his power and prestige, providing always Presilenttal power and prestige are destined to be preserved, and lb* head of the nation be restored a* leader of our political destinies. White may vpeak truly. He may prove a prophet. The avowed determination of Dawes to clip the wings ot the Senate and thus reestablish leadership In the execu live head of government may make the Kansas editor s prediction die a-bornlng: but if the upper house stands Arm undei fire of our hero with the reversible pipe. If the Senate give defiance to the raving* of the mob. then unquestionably the President must grasp a hand such as that of Curtla to lead him safely across the political rapids.

His Rise To Power

Why Curtis? Because he to the

const II utional right i

A few are missing, and two scientist*. Jaraslav Heyrovaky and Professor Dole Jack, announce the discovery of one more, which they

call "dvimagau.

with. Borah with bis hrlHiance and Independence casts hto shad- That new word, “dvimagau." will from the Hudson to the Golden live milliotia of year* after every Gale: the nation knows and ad- language now spoken shall have mires him: the people like bis completely vanished from use and fighting power but they analyre memory. him. They can't analyze Curtis. Knowledge and intellectual Curtto move* behind the scenes, power arc International, independNo calcium operator baa yet been | ent of race. It to well to remind found quick enough to throw the i the world, nursing Its racial hatred, spotlight upon him. He moves that the six greatert minds in with the self-reliance and silence j mathematics and astronomy were of the panther, and Is equal in born of six different races—Coperdetermination to attain hto oh- j nicus. a Pole; Tycho Brahe, a Dane ycctlve. He knows men. he knows | of Swedish ancestry; Keppler. Gcrllfe. the senses moving Impulses, man; Galileo. Italian; Descartes. From the great heights of his ; French; Newton, greatest of them Western mountains he views the j all In pure mathematics. British. of struggling humanity be-| low. quick to put his finger on the H e Stuck Ta It forces that make the mannequins • Robert Fulton years ago squirm and wiggle. Charles Curtto Said he'd make the steamboat go. full size man. Just as he !s no i And stuck to It. '* man. despite the oft repeat- Robert's friends began to Jally. uurndo that he has reached Called the steamboat Pulton’s the pinuacle of preferment while ] Folly. running errands for the railroads. But lhe darn thing went, by Half hto life has been spent tn golly, getting other men Job*. "Tbr riff He stuck to it. raff of lhe nation." cry hi* enemica. "They all died poor." re- Every t pile* Curtis, writing a master for Paris brief in lour short words. Curtto Ole an affidavit thst their marihlmstlf has not too many dollar! lal relations are perfectly frtendto hi* name, yet he to perhaps the ly. master politician of hto time. If :: the lime shall come when be must Mary had a >lttle tomb. help Coolidge probably he will do (The plot begin* to thicken)

Woman killed - while '

mass City am _

laws last yaar. Anything tj

the back-to-the-Ce Real Estate Agrnt: why you hsaitate. T plantation to a barg

deciding whether 1

Customer: "Say. . which end ot the car «

off?"

Conductor: "Either i sap. both ends stop."

TIDE TABLE FOR

ter

;=;sf I—Thurm.

<—FH.

91

ids,

... Jt*

I B .« 1G.U MAI 10.H 11.M n.M talk U.Z4 uj; 117 US z i* ait