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Perfection‘s Price In Tire Building A tire-makor‘s firet problem is to decide hew much he can is, and every ether question in tire A super-tire, sueh as The Brunswick, can be made only by a comsern which knows wel and appreciates that there is nothing emelusive in the tire industcy except high standards. Sines 1048 the House e: Brumowick has held first place in every lime it entered. Brusswick Tiree, as more and more moterists come to know them, will certainly be awarded that er I Acar Ar Areadhes aatrmvct C, aoe e o Hie SOA & a (nt M -" " e " 7 i c He
C. E. HOLMES — 403 Washington st. Cape May, N. 3. ] rom Tram | 206 iipontaied Eppbracd Formerly Halpin Villa foul y TU ® a id F v, il THOROUGHLY RENOVA! Steam Heated A. de P. EWING, Proprietor
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__ HOTEL RIDGWAY At tuu -ressims [ef V ° [2756 ‘(
FECA{e "el F y y A s B 2 (oy y A Bod European ] « FT — ROOMS WITH PMVATE BATH ; _ cue aie hae uterane waren ni ade then. yy ~
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HAVE YOU SEEN THE >I s > 50 : 3 B Fe LINE OF MOTOR TRUCKS IN FIVES %-TON DESPATCH 1-Ton bey cale I 14-TON TRUCK — p Boils fhe k 1 L+ $%-TON DREADNAUGHT ‘Torbensen Poh ty Sma a p 23 pepe vlleite dopane fibra vibes helpaicacs Thre l ys emre Foe °e " Pe 22 Cd A postal brings a Republic to you. ] FEF 0, OCD | sas Washington Street — Cape May, New Joran pefbiperaryry +467 etwrapdil fan ift pred bei 4 mc part of Cumberland County.
NOW IS THE TIME Luci 15) 6 Caldwell Lawn Mowers, Wood and Steel Grass Rakes, Garden Hose 25 ft. Sections to 500 #, vel Travells, Spades, Shovels, r e oe ak et C . o We c A Pruning Shears, Sprinkling Pots. poarcted Blades and Snathe. A Full Line of Screen DoorsWindow Screens-Poultry Wire, Galvanized. Black and Copper Screen Wire. (o : 6 V. 19 > I Wey 2 bi. f 805-307 Jackson Street
WINTER COAL NOW The delays and verations due to car troul POF R CNC
whHaTt WINDSOR MEANS IN ENGLISH | HISTORY «--. 18 A GOOD NAME FOR A BRIT: 188 RULER INSTEAD OF ONE OF GERMAN ORIGIN Windsor." Just two centurys mgo the German so 1 ascended the throne of Engnd, and the Stuarte were supplant d by the Guelphe. Of all the fire| great-grandfather , Frederick of Bohemia, who started the 80 year‘s war, | could not speak a word of English and really hated his new kingdom; but La was the connecting link through «« Stuarts . between the . last of | the wuelphs and first of the Normans, ancestor of Henry VIL was the great Edward III, whose father was the por For aver a thousand years, Windsor Unatle has been the abode of Royalty. Edward the Confessor al men Cd it; Méward the First built one of its towers and Edward the IH created in its halle the the famous Order of the Garter. — i C300 0 e Ad Monmouth" disported with his friends; where Edward of the White Rose, and Heary of the Red Rose: ull procid the famous pede rome duvet here Shakespeare strolled and wrote. o s ci CL _ homages of Reser, and Leicester and Raleigh and Drake and all those great of the golden age. Here it was Wolsey thrived and bluff King throw off the foreign influences of Rome aad Spain. In fact, Windsor land; the England of the roast bee age; the England of the fearless rover; and the steady archer; in f written; the Zngland where the Eng: lishmen . reigned before the . Stum or the Hanoverian were foisted onts the throne. But through ull the changes of dy nasties in Windsor has remained th abode of Royalty. ‘There lie the bone of not a fow wenrers of the ermine in the vault« beneath the chapel, an there where his Hanoverian ancestor He it in fitting that George V shoul bury the German. titles and revive the ancient glories . of the Englis Nation — in the title of — George 0 Windsor, — For there is the heart o Engin a thousand years of he history; a monument of her glory the proudest name the King could adopt, "English Windsor." THOMAS B. BLYNN
GEORGE CREELS FUNDS WERE LEFT IN MUDDL& NCASHED CHECKS DisCoYR®ED ON THE FLOOR OF HWW OFFICE IN PUBLIC In. FORMATION _ COMMIT. ini thoughts and explanations of the dministration at a time whon crilC 2cn~ a he was appointed in August as IMarch, April, May and June of this year and had been permitted to nowsmulate in a safe without any effect whatever for collection. "He also turned over to me . his count in fhe Union Trust Com of receiptd from the division of Films and Hasinis balance on account of the American Security and Trust Company of funds received for aubscription | for the Official . Bulletin. Later in going through the files I found several thourand dollars worth of checks which had been turned inte the committee in connection with final mocosnting . of various persons . to room. The amount recovered by me from all sources to date totals $800,000, In addition I find that money had beea left in some banks in Russia wich were taken over by the Bolshevild. I found $10,000 in the hands of am auctionser in New York, the result of a sale of office furniture, because no ome would answer his letters. won aptagem- — PUBLIC WELFARE FIRST «- Officials of the American Federation: of Labor and of the four railrond | brotherBcods recently met in the city of Wushingtor and declared thatI American labor will exert ite influence to the utmost within C ML. tition to defeat the vicious amtstrike provisions in the Cummins bill and other measures of slua« L3 character. In the recent Industrial Conferemse Mr. Samuel Gompers took the pest tion that "every controversy betweem employer and employees: should be subject to arbitration and that the employer: should be compelled. to tract with representatives of organized labor, and in cuse of disagreement the controversey . must be edmitted . to arbitration." There: canbe mo compulsory arbi« tration without its corollary, compulnosy nervice. Mr. Gompers has made it clear that he would not permit an employer to close his shop against employees who seek to incite their fellows to attike. . This compulsory proposition has its "other side of the shield"--refusal of | perraisaion . to Iabor to strike, ‘The proposed raibray legislation prohibits both lockouts and striker and imposen similar penalties‘ on the promoters of each, Ruilrowi« ure in a clues with all other public employee — they. ure in the service of the public. In the oninjon of its promoters its fur-reaching hardships which would follow a collective strike of railroad employees justifies the anti-strike portion of the railroad legislation. ‘The law does not contemplate taking away the jndividual privilege to work or not ms the worker pleases unless the exercise of such privilege . infringes upon . the rights of the public. The public welfare must come first. NEW YORK HERALD betst0000004.4 common KNOW — YOUR goods, know your customer‘s

