C*>ft May CooMy'* Home Newap^er
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Two •venues for the reduction r of tfm crime wm sopears to be actmty in promotinj the * influence of every organization for training Ac youth of the count t in pMht of upright manhood, and such changes in wr oimmal procedure as wiil make the mflb of
CAPE MAY tCOUNTY TIMES
3, the
In its i«w
' Ocean City News
■ earaeet pkc fdr united actran the part of -the dtize.it of that
’ by the growth
Not oaty is rail tnuuportafiOn cawary to the growth erf Ocean City, but it is. neccwary to the growth of. every resort in Cape May Cauaty, but Ac kind of tramportaoor. needed, and lei ’ which the •esorts have been fight-
scveral years csnnat he
, secured if the patronage of the I rauroada is to be cut and dashed
, by motor buses.
Nothing is settled until it is
the question of bus competition with the railroads would be largely answered, and the two placed on a more nearly equal and just
isis.
Where large numbers of people are to be moved long distances quickly, eS for example the traffic between New York and Phtladel ptua to the shore retorts, buses cannot take the place of the t ailQuick and frequent service from Philadelphia to the Cape May .County resorts for large numbers of people it a necessity if the resorts are to grow expand “to their full poanbiliand any competition that would hinder or curtail such acrdd prove a detriment to the resorts, which they cannot afto sit idly by and see menIn this matter the interest of the resorts is tied up with that of the reilroids, and in standing, by.the reads we are merely ing for our own bttt wdfs furs duns um psoDccrrs Whatever may be p< anions as to the worth of the Sesqui-Centennial as an exposition, we believe it must be admitted that it has been cnunei ful as a .means of Cape May County, her resorts her agricultural The money spent by the
Hirer
mi m Aret «he burden of taxation
t vyur-' have been bmud Mr »W»- and as passmger carriers are «mw ^ j,
e Ac great-
Aa iaa Ue City l Mo.yUv eve Rev. Lewis t we got out of wan it. Here is a question. We - of crime w rve before. Not ve got i Aift in daas, which u a bwl
mger
mg into direct competition with the railroads in many instances. This would not be objeebonahie were they on the same footing the railroads, but they are re The railroads have had to bui their lines at a heavy cost a kaintam roads and stations at a heavy < d it ion have to pay heavy taxes into the State treasury. Then are respossnhie they inflict and do pay out thousands of dollars for damages. The but
any of these i
Uy to ■
They
the thoroughfares built by the State wiA taxation of the general public, the hy the railroads helping to keep up the roads the busts run over. .They maintain no stations, but use the public streets for parking
that the authori-
hands full
s all, the tarn they pay in no wise
ate for the wear and
Ary inflict on the highways.
ire they are irresponsible
' from the viewpoint of damages, as
i few of them could |
I Leopold, the two
hnsnals of that ed the electric i breadth to be
r life, will be eligible
the neat nine
( of the taw-breakers i Ae aide of justice lunistration of just** kk and sure mth bond individuals a* youths will he en
These are some of the inequalities in the bus situation that Aould he corrected. Their should be made sufficiently high to compensate for Ae damthey do the streets and highways; they should not be allowed noncpolite city streets and should be made to provide t, by insurance or otherwise, to provide for possible damages. Where bus lines provide mean* of transportation between town* where rail service it inadequatr ndabout—e* for example the Shore But Line between Cape May and Atlantic City—Ary fill real oaad and are • great consumer, end also for short di» nee travel, where rail ctxnmuni
two is infrequant-
Within these limitsrion* end iib Ae tax** properly rsted, and | Am ahould hr fixed without fur ■Art hesitation by Ac authorities.
"GOSH, rrs HARD TO CHOOSE THE RIGHT ROAD"
No less, to he praised are the farmers of Ac county who have oexperated so heartily with Publicity Director Hall Ae products of their fields and ordures for a fresh display each day f jr the exhibit. Srsqui crowds may en up to
tof *faa*«
That Ac exhibit
day, presenting everything fresh each morning, gives it an added value that is incakulaUe. With the Sesqui now complete and the exhibits all in place, the crowds from this time to Ae dree of the exposition will il be more observant than were the earlier crowds, ard it will our fanners to send Ae very best of their prodvrt* for exhibit boo purposes. The ripening of the fall and maturing of the fall vegetable* will add to the beauty and attractive less of the
display.
Next year and in Ae years to immediately follow, Cape May County will gamer in the dividend! from this year's investment, and the interest rate will be a good owe. It will pay Cape May County folks to visit the Sesqui and see the exhibit of their own county and give Mr. Hall a word
UNLESS aD farts are at variance with Ae surface indications.
flood tide, and is new receding as the Bolsheviki leaders learn by degrees that its tenets are impracticable and cannot succeed. And it is possible that once it gets
good start the tide rapidly as it rose.
upon this despicable practice, but have bad no effective way * *• with it. Until the ai elation waa formed there was no way of lettirfg people know where they could gel fair treat-
Ration Has Faith in Religion Philadelphia Ledger: Concrete evidence that the nation's faith In the effectiveness of religion is profound is found in a compilation of contributions given last year to the leading demoninatlons. According to an estimate by Dr. Luther ■- Lore Joy. president of the United Stewardship Connell of the Churches of Christ In the United States and Canada, chuck workers contributed' a total of MM.aoo.ooo. of which Protestant groups gave ~"~*
American tourists traveling ‘ for i admire and for to sec," also to visit dressmakers, milliners and get sway from prohibition spent In France last year lt26.lW.000— a great deal of money, and real money. It would be a pity if misunderstandings about debts that may nevsr be paid should make American* in France so uncomfortable as to cut off that yearly tribute to the French dressmaking Minotaur. We want Franco prosper, and It is pleasant to have Americans leaving hundreds millions In France, bringing back
>-*7 of ik. *o.u., ro, u..
mfho had tried to build im a * Da cat nolle congregaby f^r^elSlS ^ UoM "M.OOO.OOO. J— *av,
lections would provide for earry-
res ou the cost of con-
struction during Ae first few years a* bridge operation. As a matter of fact the toll receipts hsv* been ter beyond the estimate made at the beginning of tbs year. Moreover. roadway toll* ought not to
po riant earning assets
which have not be
The double track apace on either aide of the roadway la yet to be put to aorvtce, and should prove an Important contribution to the bridge re Tenure, while other p0>llc utilities are likely to make uae in the future, of the bridge crossing. Tl.e bridge will not develop It* maximum service to the public, or Its full earning power until three track facilities shall be employed. and only then can it* full effect on the ferry service be de-
Compleu service of the reuclrea that there shall be direct mil connection between Pnlladrl phis and the shore, with the suburban territory of New Jereey |y. between, and It would be a i to the public as well bj added source of revenue to bridge. U the Commissioner* were be**, effort* n u>-
I rati i
lice, whether on the pert of one of the two rallroed enterprises in the field or in the Inspiration of ah electric railroad. The present
ijr recede a* motorbua aervloe Is useful, but It
dons not measure up to the oppor-
tunity which the bridge afford* to the n*d of the public. A HARVARD sesrotist tell, u*
Aat Ae moon is receding from Hoaastjr’s Roadside Symbol •a. Then U Mhin. in i New Jersey Agrlculiure: FarmAc earth. There u nothing ut i ^ ^ Iook vllh Uvor Ait, however, to alarm eraahore: upon the roadside market *«oAc distance it! elation recently formed In New • sr.. * century, and AM Will not notice- j falthlnl to if* standards of bon
ably rtriucc Ae •
mt of their
SOCIETY can be regenerat ed, the human race can be adanccd only by moral principle* ifluscd through the multitude." Bancroft.
IT is the people that give power and can take it hack.”— John Marshall.
periodical hi* good*. Is Indicated to touriste by mean* of a •Ian With the name of the as■OL'latlon on nn ear of corn. Prospective buyers will In lime come to look for this tneianla and have ooofidrnce In those who dis-
play It.
As enrollment In the asaoetatton Increase*, the practice of eoms roadside dealer* of wiling Inferior, deoeptiiely packnl produce will be broken up. For s long lime, tionmt farmer* have been looking with consternation
flAtfafry and Ae Seeplen* Kan Philadelphia Inquirer: Mr. Irene* da Point’s nug___ tion that chemistry may yet produce n race of supermen i can lire without sleeping rather a terrible one. The presumption is that, if the waking hours were not Interrupted, much could be accomplished In a lifetime that la tmposeibls now. Wbnt of it* Could the gain outweigh the Ions in any concelvcircumstances? None can pun area a few sleepless night* •nd not Join In the Anetent Mariner's apostrophe: "Oh Sleep! It la a gentle' thing. Beloved from pole to pole!” And when Mncbeth bad murdered sleep be summed up the consequences in vividly imaginative Unguage. Mr. du Pont'* superman might be less than man rather than more. The steady, unrelenting uae of all bln faculties, the constant pressure of the visible world, with fio merieful momenta of obllrton, would either make him s mere mechanical function or under-
gave
Ill.500.aa0 and miscellaneous organisation* 910^00,000. Much
nf ibis momry «
Two new Ideas In prohibition enircement. “Shoot to kill" orders e sent to prohibition ofB particularly to a squad of forty Custom* men recently appointedfor special bootleg worit. If the bootleggers run away they
mestic and foreign missionary service. This generosity attests the constantly increasirg power of spirituality as that force is applied to the everyday tasks of
the Church In the
the receipts from fiat bootleggers. The Informer will get one-quarter of what the Oov-
>0 Repeal Possible Christian Selrnce Monitor: "There is absolutely no possibility of the repeal of the Volstead Act.” ‘ That U what Henry Ford thinks of thi- pr-»h , *>"i'»n situation in the United State*, and bis opinion is not that of lere theorist, either, for a* explained In a reeeel i"*rr. view. "We sever have had drunkenness |n our plants. We eliminated that before prohlblilon besnn.” He considers that the United States has outgrown alcohol and the saloon, been use "they haven't any place la na
Industrial age." Tw# Sides Te Thl*
Philadelphia Inquirer:—A Western pastor rises to a defense of the automobile n* a mean* of brlngtna people to churrh. The I point la. though, does It bring them to In the some proportion It I* keeping them from?
the .ft.
pre-nit*, ire the favorite forme of escrewe of Harvey S. Firestone, •iArnt lire mamiferterrr. Oeoally the*e are *up|>lrinented by Ihcnic*. But winter and *um- . the horseback ridmg ha. It* place Is Mr. Pire*tooe'» week. While nt prefer* outdoor riding, he u*r* Indoor ring If the weather l(
rating, regular hour*, rrWr ami total ah*Utobacco and alcohol are
Moderate
be careful, a* he real Ur > that nourUhinrnt and not quantity make for good health, luncheon and break faat are light " H* never drink* tee or eoffee except at break fail, at which time he ha* a cup of weak coffee. By rigid adherence to I hear timPle rules of health, Mr. PireatoM U able to be the active head of a great Im.lnea*. lo find time to .pend farming which U hit hobtij and to enjoy en eccatlunal varatiou with Henry Ford and Thoms* A. SdUon.
This show* energy, but will it discourse* men that one dollar's worth r fifty dollars' worth of booties whiskey' Young Krlshnamurtl from India has arrived and cornea to free from our "materialism." Hs will welcome a* Hercules In the Augean aUblss. This earnest, sincere youth is. among other things, an excellent horseman, a good sportsman, and waa an Infant prodigy. He was carried each nlaht to a lent la bis Vs be dreamed, so his friend* say. "the Master" appeared and save him Instructions. At the age of twelve hr wrote bis 'At the Feet of the Master. 7’hat does not n Divine inspiration. Christian Heinrich H- Inecken. who died in 1725. "before be was five years of aae." He waa able lo converse plainly at tea month*. When one year old, he knew by heart tbe most Important parts of the Pentateuch. At twe years ol aae be bad mastered sacred history. at three be waa thoroughly acquainted with history and geography, ancient and modern. **•.. and profane, and spoke French and Latin. He devoted btmaelf to religious study In his fourth year, and lo church history. And thU i no ''yarn" but historical facta, rowds flocked to Lubeck to sec him. and a year before he died he waa taken to see the King of Denmark at Copenhagen. Ill* death before the age of five, should warn parent* sot to drive talented children. Whatever our defects may be In ic United Slate*, we cannot be accused of dividing things up. When un American gets « big piece of anything, he keeps II and adds lo It. The Way of Ae World Nature's funny oftenllmao— There's fat Prterllla Hay She's afraid to eat most every-
thing
And gets falter every day I And then- la little Lucy Brov Siuffa down a great Mg dinner She want* to gain a dosei pounds And Is always gelling thinner
A *ery small boy waa standing In the middle of a country lane with a large shotgun when a •nanged came atone and asked him: What are you hunting, mile * Utile
husband out regularly and Irregularly. The sky la brightest bluest, but Irv Fitch says UV ferent with * Friendship helps, of coureq, 1 you never heard * * * alone bring In i "The heights are whether they be la spiritual or social.
"Should a man propone to girl on his knee*'." t • tiifler that or i
A single man doesn't anyone to sympathize wilt I eo ne feels good nearly all
Still If Ae ua re enough league work they could get a without IL No delusion about the Jateogd Pom a divorce report — *>31, ns Apt marriage la nothAC but a delusion and a raora.” '' 1 He: Life would be all right except for two things. She: And what are thayt.^ * He: Blonde* and brunettes. ^ A moth 1* no fool, tackles anything i eult U Acre Is around. Skmbo, who had bad i eek*' hard Ufp on q ' battlefield, wa* asked by an oCicer. “Where are you f bo?" The young woman who ) that her face should realise time have to « for depreciation.
day nun have t Home for Aged Apples. Gilbert Smith. ' picking qm flf| lagatlne asked. "What'a AAT 2 lady a mngnalne?" .._P“ “?««<"• *** enttttafl The Talking Machlse World* New Jersey eonrt ban bnt£ a man baa a legal right A nil* bis home. Yao, snaps Judgn
r n prairie flower Groaring wilder hour by hourf I Sot marr. <d—now you see I'm M tame s* I can be. f nSX TABLE FOE SEPTBaB High TIM •M. IVM

