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103 YEARS YOUNG: HE'S FOR HARDING -If I shomld Utp to M^aa other 100 Mara old I certainly would never vote 2or a member of the Democratic party for President or any other national ofBee." Bo declares "Grandpa" Albert Vogel. SOB years young, of Jeaanette, Pa., who gat his first vote in a presidential elecgtes for Polk, voted for Abraham Lincoln and has voted the Republican ticket ever since. Next month he will rote for Harding and Goolidge. —Tell the country I am for Harding sad Ooolldgs and America first," says jtr. VogeL "I want no Wilson League
mi Rations. President Wilson's autocracy and tha wastefulness of these he gathered about him as his official family was to be expected. It haa bean a Democratic trait for years." "Grandpa" Vogel takes a dally con gtttutiooal over streets near hit home la Jeannetta Occasionally be preaches a sermon from one of the Western Pennsylvania churches with old time vigor. He started life aa an assistant Jgmpllghter In the Capitol grounds at Washington when be was fifteen years «ld. He often ran errands for memfears of Congress and can vividly recall tha eloquence of Henry Clay and Daniel Webster and other famous Statesmen of that period. He saw An draw Jackson Inaugurated In 1832. Later he became a Methodist minister.
ALBERT VOOBU
ROITOR8 PAY VISIT TO MARION STAR AND FIND A RIAL PAPER. -If President Harding la aa b'lg a success as Editor Harding ha will go down In history In tha Hall of Fame," writes J. Gabbert of Riverside, CaL, la an article Just published on his return from Marlon, where be visited Harding's paper. "We found Just tha sort of a paper a future President might be expected to edit," says Mr. Gabbert "and the visit to us came nearer te being an editorial conference than a political "We found men working for Editor Harding who had been with him for periods varying from 20 to 88 years. Wa found that Editor Harding follows closely every detail Incident to the publication of hla paper. He knows what pay the helpers on the floor get Jest aa he knows the amount ha pays Ma manager. He can handle type like (fee rest of us, and it would keep my foreman busy to beat him on setting ep a stick of 8- point type. He knows how to make np a paper like a veteran eed ha la Just as mnch at home In the feualneas office looking over the adver(Mng accounts." i
#£3 THE AMERICAN fri. JFJ RED CROSS INtoffi !!%*:= PEACE TIME fK " y With the Soldiers There remain in army hospitals i throughout the country more than 26,OK) soldiers still being treated for wounds received overseas. Red Cross workers give them the same sort of friendly aid — only more of It — that was given during (he war. Furthermore, the Red i "rosy Is teaching' these Uds occupation at which tbey <-an later make a living and 'a keepinc In touch with their. Iiouie folks 'n order that no Mpendenis may sutler for lack of funds
KEPT OUT OF WAR, NOW SERVES COX Publisher's Son Escaped Military i Service Through Democratic Nominee's Influence. Young, able-bodied, rich, a strapping big fellow, who possessed all the physical equipment of an American soldier, save, evidently, heart. Robert P. Scrippe was kept out of the war through Administration Influences. He was exempted. The local draft board of Butler County. O., rejected his plea and held that there was no valid claim for his exemption and that he should surely don a uniform and shoulder arms, but Secretory Si War Baker's law partner, Tom Stdlo, was employed to save tha youthful slacker. / Governor Cox took a hand In the e aae, and finally, by White House decree, he went stot free. Hla mnltl-mllllonalre father, E. W. Scripps, controlling owner of the Bcrippa League of Newspapers and the Newspaper Enterprise Association, a powerful comblaatlen, threatened to overthrow the Administration rather than permit either of hla sons to answer the call ef Uncle Baas. Administration Exempts Slacker. Having helped to re-elect Woodrew WUsen President en the Issue. "He kept us oat of war," tha eldsr Scripps demanded that hla aooa be kept out of war. And the Administration kept them out Young Robert Scrippe, who had never done any real newspaper work, was given the title of Assistant to the Publisher of the Scripps League of Newspapers to create an excuse for bis exemption. Finally be was ordered borne from Camp Sherman by Governor Cox, after he had been In uniform for ton daya All these facta and more of an equally astounding and discreditable character were brought out by the Kenyon ; Senatorial Committee, which subpoenaed yeaag Bcrippa to Washington to explain his activities In the present campaign. Now Supporting Cox. He la today editor la chief of the Scripps League of Newspapers and the Newspaper Enterprise Association and la putting out dally pink propaganda sheets of a lurid and sensational character in support of the candidacy of Governor Cox. 8amples of these sheets were submitted to the committee, and Senator Reed. Democrat, frankly denounced the | propaganda as "rot" and manifested 1 extreme Impatience and disgust with 1 the yon ug man's loose talk about a : ' "8enate oligarchy" and criticism of the 1 8upreme Court , Young Scripps, although he did nol ' fight for hla country in 1017-18, insist- ' [ ed that he was doing It all through love i of -country and In the "public Interest," < ' without any pay from the Democratic , committee or thought of obligation for keeping him out of war. The draft-dodging aspects of the case, as brought out at Washington, are not unlike those of young Bergdoll " | of Philadelphia, which -resulted in a 1 Federal prosecution for conspiracy to ' evade the draft J Fifth Cousin Roosevelt devoted his speech at Provloence, R. L, to a defense of eight years of Democratic ad- | ministration. Six weeks Is a very short , . time for doing mod along that line. The Cox slogan seems to be "Misrepresentation Without Relaxation." ~ PROPOSALS FOR BULKHEAD Borough of Cape May Point Sealed proposals will be received and - opened by the Board of Commission- \ ers of the Borough of Cape May Point, ; at the Commissioners room in the ; Springer building, in said Borough, at . eight o'clock in the evening, on Mon- ] day, October 18th, 1920 /or the con- \ structi on of a Bulkhead on the ocean * side of the high-water mark, be- . tween Coral and Whilldin avenues, in | said Borough. Blank proposals, spec- ; ifications and other information will • be furnished upon application to Har- 1 ry Bell, Engineer, Cape May, N. J. | Proposals must be enclosed in sealed j envelopes marked "Proposals for < , Bulkhead. To be opened 8:00 p. m. 1 ■ October 18th, 1920." A certified \ ' check for 5 per cent, of the bid, pay- < ' able to the-^order of the Borough . ' Treasurer mustTaccornpany • each bid. ] 1 The Commissioners reserve^ the right \ \ to reject any and all bids. \ JOHN T. HUFF, ! WASHINGTON LE NOIR, ! MILTON H. BAIR, Commissioners. 10-9-20- 2t- 1583 pf$5.40 i
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MICKIE SAYS ^ ^ — > <xd sib* «ceuoo» Auog»s> /as uom) uc mmt aoivrov ©o ku* JAOtoS kDMtt1\S\ua ONTOL UC I [oent sow*, atsovxs wtova-ru'l «msn o» -tw ctEPUAwr -mart" u d I PAID «"T FOR TU' "TWht VMUVM / nu1 ORCUS VJAS VMMtC POOR) NfcARS AOO sssss. The Radio Spark Intensifier For Ford Cars, Trucks ana Tractors Price $3.00 Increases efficiency Eliminates 76 per cent of your motor trouble Overcomes broken Porcelain trouble Will fire through Oil, Grease or Carbon B. F. ARERS Bridgelon N. J. County Agent Cape May County R. S. MITTER Cape May Court House FOCER AND MECRAY Cape May iartaCAPE MAY OPTICAL 613 WASHINGTON ST, /Cave May, N. J. EVERYTHING FOR THE EYES PRESCRIPTION LENSES Specialty Keystone Phone ML Dr. Clarence S. El dredge oculist of Philadelphia will be at Cape May for the season. Those in seed of glasses or having trouble with eyes can consult him evenings or Saturdays, corner of Broad and Third avenue. West Cape May. 6-22-20-tf-1755 B. T. HAZLETT Full Line of DR Y GOODS and NOTIONS Everything for the Ladies L arge stock of BATHING SUITS and CAPS 323 Washington Street Cape May City Help Forge an ENDLESS : CHAIN of Home Trade Dollars Tha dollar *^nt with tha ' HOKE MERCHANT will osm BACK TO YOU. Hs mm tha dollar to pay mat To pay taxes. Ts pay wages. A dsllar seat est of town ro- : ■Mm it fro* eiremlatM* Make year dollar A LUX la the hMM trade CHAIN.
CAPE MAY COUNTY - Q~ JPlgifl g -« ; John iTsickels, Plaintiff, vs. Ocie L Coyle, Defendant Action at- Law. In Attachment Notice of Attachment NOTICE is hereby given that a writ of attachment at the suit of John E. Sickels, against the rights and credits, moneys and effects, goods and chattels, lands and tenements, of Ode I. Coyle, a non-resident, for the sum of fifteen hundred dollars, issued out of the Cape May County Court of Common Pleas on the 26th day of August, 1920, returnable on the 15th day of September, 1920, has been served and duly executed on the 26th day of August, 1920, and was returned on the 14tfi day of September, 1920, by the sheriff of the County of Cape May. A. C. HILDRETH, Clerk. Ernest W. Lloyd, Attorney, 624 Washington Street, Cape May, N. J. 10-2-20-4t-1506 Sheriffs Sale By virtue of a writ of Fieri Facias, for sale of Mortgaged Premises, to me directed, issued out of the Court " of Chancery ef New Jersey, on the 28th day of September; A. D. 1920, in a certain cause wherein Li da Ludlam is complainant, and Maggie E. Mawley, et jus., are defendants, I shall expose to sale at public vendue, on MONDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 192S, between the hours of twelve and five o'clock, p. m., to wit, at one o'clock in the afternoon of said day, at the sheriff's office, in Cape May Court House, Cape May County, New Jersey: All that certain mortgaged premises, with the appurtenances, in the bill .of complaint in the said cause particularly set forth and described, that is to say: — All that certain lot or piece of land situate, lying and being in the borough of Holly Beach City, on the Five Mile Beach in the county of Cape May . and state of New Jersey, bounded and described as follows, viz: Beginning at a point on the Southwesterly side of Rio Grande avenue at the distance of forty feet northwesterly from the westerly corner of Holly Beach and Rio Grande avenues and running thence (1) along the said southwesterly side of Rio Grande avenue and in the northwesterly direction a distance of fifty feet to the dividing line of lots Nds. twenty-nine and thirty and running thence (2) and at right angles to said last course and in a southwesterly direction between parallel lines of that width or breadth a distance of one hundred feet to the r rear and dividing line of lots fronting on Hand avenue. Containing five thousand square ' feet of land strict measure. Compris- ' ing all of lot thirty <30) and a part r of lot No. thirty-one (81) of block f No. thirty-eight (88) on "map of Holly Beach City" as recorded in the office of the Clerk of Cape May county ■ at Cape May Court House. N. J. * Being the same premises conveyed ; to the said John F. Mawley by deed . from Lydia D. Johnson and Lorenzo C. Johnson, her husband bearing date ' of October 18th, A. D. 1899, and intended to be forthwith recorded in said Clerk's office. Amount due under decree is $907.53, with interest and sheriff's fees to be added. MEAD TOM LIN, Sheriff. Dated Oct. 6, 1920. Lewis Starr, Sol'r. 10-9-4tpf$20.74-1577 X - GET YOUR SHOES REPAIRED AT T. H. TAYLOR'S r 626 Washington SL Cape May, N. J OvPTshoPS FOR MEN, i/vers>noes women and CHILDREN. Repairing ,N' ALbr7nches Sole Leather "gflmr. Neelin Soles a Specialty Not responsible for work left over 30 days. -4 Keystone 1S8-X The most blindly partisan thing in North Dakota is the non-partison league.
! MEMORIALS I ' OF BEAUTY AND DURABILITY Finely hammered, exquisitely carved and polished — lettered | and finished according to your own taste. BOO MONUMENTS. HEAD- _ STONES, MARKERS, CORNER POSTS, SILLS, ETC., \jr TO SELECT FROM A^llOIZUIKGlIZtf §« on display In . our show yards mM at PleaxantviDe and Camden i They represent the largest and I i finest stock of memorials oyer I , collected together by one con- V -> H I cern. They have been cut from \ -x— fthSjfl standard granites and marbles \ — ^ JPflt 1 ■ that were purchased before i ' n prices advanced to the present | , _ m. — j figures. WE SPECIALIZE IN DESIGN7NG. MANUFACTURING AND ERECTING MAUSOLEUMS. PUBLIC AND PRIVATE MEMORIALS. CJ UXEliUVZWX.-XljO.
CAMDEN YARD 1 Opp. Haricigh Cemetery Bell Phone 27S7
I MAIN OFFICE AND YARD Ploannntvllle, \. J. 0"p. 't'antli- Chy Cemetery I Ibll Phone PlruantvOlt 1
REPKRSF. X TATIVE8 > O. J. Hammell. Pres.. 117 N. Cornwall Ave.. Ventnor, for Atlantic City. A. L. Hammell. Vice Pres.. A '.-•pen, N. J„ for Cumberland: Cape May, Burlington. Ocean and Atlantic Counties, i F. Height. Csmden. N. J.. for Camden, Sa'.em ard Gloucester Counties. W. DuBols. Clayton. N. J.. for Clayton and vicinity, j H. B. Hale. Cherriton. Va„ for Ptate of Virginia. O. J Ha VJMELL CO. PI.EA SANTVTLLE. N. J V" * PRIVATE BATHS EUROPEAN PLAN RIDGWAY HOUSE ELEVATOR SERVICE i AT THE FERRIES PHILADELPHIA, 1PAHot and Cold Running Water in Each Room I ' Run Your Heater This Winter Without Coal Modernize your home, install a Nokol Burn Oil and don't worry about coal supplies. Incidentally no ashes to take out. v Regulated entirely by a thermoatst in livirg room GEORGE W. REEVES 622 Washington Street Cape May, N. J
ARE YOU THINKING OF MOVING If so, get in touch with us. We have 4 BIG TRUCKS I TON, 2 TONS, 3 TONS, 5 TONS , ON THE ROAD ALL THE TIME Trips to Philadelphia every week Lots from $10 np. Any point between Cape May and Philadelphia. CONEY'S X- PRESS > 106 to 110 Garfield Ave^ WILDWOOD Both Phoner
ROMEO MACCIOCCHI IMPORTER of HIGHEST QUALITY of ITALIAN GROCERIES Italian Olive Oil, Maccaroni, Cheeses, Fruits and Live Chickens Open evenings and all day Sunday BROAD AND ELMIRA STREETS Cape May, N. J. WANTED— USED TYPWRITEBS must be visible and popular make. Star and Wave Pub. Co.
1 I Light Up for Hallowe'en I Dim light for ghosts and spooks. A bright light for the live folks Get it by using NATIONAL MAZDA LAMPS J. ALLEN HARFER 1 5 ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR S «M> Willi H I St Cw H>t. N. ). MFfac«<7-W. br*« Pko« *H-A. p

