Ocean City Sentinel, 14 May 1903 IIIF issue link — Page 1

OCEAN CITY SENTINEL

VOL. XXIII.

OCEAN CITY, N. J., THURSDAY. MAY 14, 1903.

r NO. 0,

l»Tr.lJ> AHO

Ocean City Sentinel ""

ILLINOIS-ON-TBE-STRAND

-Br-

R. CURTIS ROBINSON

CITY DIRECTORY. CITY OFFICIALS.

SECRET SOCIETIES.

LION A KHKNCH

WK.Iilnston^l'Kinp,

CHURCH SERVICES.

"‘joIlS'otTrMlw Pr—Meal. K.

rllni*—Hand»r mornlnc. ». r-r-T -

ruH nj.pu.1 t bu;rli.^A»bnrj^«Ti Toun«. pa*lot. ' l*r«arblns, M Id :.te (k m. iB. y. Trt), idotu m eb TuaptU}-,,»eoln*. I'tajtr rarrllDC. IT qrtb.j<dr* *

I nloo Tdbcrwla Chuirb. A^uy d'n ”“r. putor. bund.) -rrltai. ptaarblui ■ I a. in. and > p. m. HaDdaj«rlu>ol. » i>. tu.

CHURCH SOCIETIES. JZ'ZJZ a uZ ‘XJftSXZZ'V.

A. H. BAKER Piwril Dlrtctor m Eabilnier..

J^JARK LAKE Undertaker and EmtKdmrr

HOTEL Bise^v^e...

Facing the Ocean Rooms en suite with Italh Appointments and Sanitary Arrangement First-class H. A. W. SMITH

THE IMPERIAL

HOTEL ATGLEN OCEAN CITY, N. J.

THE EMMETT Bf. A. BOYI.lt. IToprt,-lor GARWOOD HOUSE.

utypou.i-nm-

THE LYNWOOD

THE SWARTHMORE

. Fully equipped.

THE IDLEWILD MOORLYK TERBAnt, NEAR NlSTI

RALPH L. GOFF,

CIVIL CNGINCCR.

SaRVEYBR.

CONVEYANCER

£)R. J. S. WAGGONER, KF.aiDF.MT I’hjalHan ami UruRRlal Til Aster? Are., Ocean CUT. R. J. I*ura Drue*, tl. ele , ruaMauUj o.

B. r. ABBOTT, M. D. f Pbyalrlan and NnrKrnn. OFFICE—Oner Ceitnl ud ElftiU SlrteL J C. HUTCHINSON, M. D. IlomceopnthiMt. No. 834 Ocean Avenue. OCEAN CITY. N. J. N HOWARD BURT, M.D. 809 Wesley Avenue.

[)K. CHARLES B. RIDER Dentlut £)R. E. MILLER. I’hjklriaa and Nur|{roii

Jy\W OFFICES Schuyler C. Woodhull, 3SS Market HU. Camden, k. J. J^ORGAN HAND, ATTORNEY and COUNSELLOR AT LAW.

JONATHAN HAND, Ootinnellor- nt-L.n'\v, Slot. Maatar la fhascery. Notary Publle. CAPE MAY COURT HOUHK. N. J

J^ARRISON H. VOORHEIiS CounHellor-nt- laitw.

LOVE’S i INTUITION By MARY WOOD

crmii> to rl.nl will! Mian Mnytrrirk In | Inllmate nbxfn-'sa. And sa tin- girl | anw tUr door to I lie Ueiullful new | 1 world rloalnc Ihs oipo- tin- hand of him I

A RUSSIAN GIANT.

il llio c-niTsI l«».rl»hniiui Hill I SUpp<«r lit h.T I

ifl.T nil. and n

thrill of liridr.

o^idy

LAW OFFICES Apgar & Boswell,

LAW OFFICES Godfrey & Godfrey, a»d Lli’BuUdlue 4 **' ATLANTIC CITY. N. J. JAMES M. E. HILDRETH Counsellor-at-Law

Glass! Glass! Glass!

C. H. SHOEnAKER LUMBER CO. Twefth Street and West Avenue OCEAN CITY, N. J. HAVE juat m-rlvetl a large Invoice of Maze and Chipped (ilasa, and I lave contracted for a car of Taak aad Uas Made Window Ulaaa it lie llnret niwlei. You van Ret all als»«, from a fl*8 to a «x«0; alao all alres In Ola zed Sash.' Holtom prices at all tlmca. WINDOW QLASS AND OLAZED SASH BOTH WHOLESALE AND RETAIL : : : t Wr alao carry Hot Bed Sash and Hot Bed Glass In stork You will nut only save pennies but dullai* If you buy your i-umber. Lime, Cement. Bi^k. UUzed Sash, Glass. Nalls, mil Work. Doors. Mouldings, Coal aad Wood from the Shoemaker Lumber Co.

OUR WORK l» ..WELL BALANCED.. IT IS OHPORILT EXCELLED There Is an absence of that (sully work' often eeen wbete an luev|«Tl.. enred man ia (wmilllad to try Ills band •n a >ob. Plumbing lurk uodertakrn by lie la carried out aemidiug lo Ike aplrll and Ibe leilet of be contract. The material uaad hezudly a» apevtlled^ V« Voild Be PIum4 to EetlBiU h Toor Vert JOHKT K. OKOVKS 649 Asbubv Avenue, OCEAN CITY, N. J.

Tnzazeroa

which had fallen on Ibe circle. “Oh. what have 1 saidV abo cried and burled her fare In her cuabloiuL , But Mnflgc'a imy tMc- w as U nder aa

she stroked I In- brown U«id. “You've read us a lecture. Janie, dear." she said centiy. “but I fancy we needed It a bit. It's liorrld to talk alumt one

of your frlenda the way we talk

i. and a

all sin 1 laiow,

Alex c

t wait till t reek, and ae

■ the

new world that be opena to you. la really literary and writes thinga for other people to rend." Jane's face e'us atlll hidden. Rho waa luittlinc to overeonic lier tcura and even harder to drive out of tier heart Ibe imnaxmahle Jealousy of the hud crejit

>to It '

would ba<

love had made her and lieauty s.s-iued to cast Into the a.-a

Of ac

e had I.

al. but Youth weight

nto the s*tiles against years

stir Irnlnlug and aludy.

.touaiii Alex came. He was a slim, dapik-e youuc man. with an Impurtant manner rather at variance with hla ala.'. But lie bad a way of retailing old Jokes tliat made them serin new and a stork of •-ompllments sailed to every age and was therefore greatly la favor aioona the guests at the sleepy old fannhous.- As ladlttlng bis pretensions as a Jtiuniallat be rattled an unceasingly about laadta and liters tore. He knew this nun and tliat tuik. and. ahvrr nil. be was one wbuor name alemhl a.Miie day stand foremost In the world of tellers. The date waa

More or leas unwIUlngly Jane waa ruoi|»llrd to lloteu to many of these predict Iona, for Tooaln Alex” at ins-r Jnehipetl a fuodness for her noddy. Parhai* certain glances that fttamiluu esat In hla direction added seat to the dinar. Perhaps it waa the dnaive fashion la which the girt received hla advaoeasL t erulu It la that a Week's time bad saroed him th* very fltUng uamc of “Janea shadow. ' Yd to Jane bdsrlf rack day seemed to bring awra unhai.plness liuunion came aa oftos as ever, but at sight of A lei by bar side be Wft tbs laughing

dor."she ndilcd In a lone of surprls author. Ml«a <'arewf I heard that you defend.d him very elogoontly on aftermaui in the on-hard and said 1 good word for me tuo. For that the I .lushing girl, and In full nmonllgh Miss May brick conld read his secret If It sounded the dcntbknell to Horn I>o|h- of hir own b.srt, grnlllude t. h.T champion made her had the lielane and a gradual restoration of hla

the faniier I |in-trndrd to tie?" wit hint of wonder under his gladness. Jane raised a face radiant with the

id Joyously. “Lov<

There an- some nmu Ky lea kin. In Rkye. of there by Carlyle traveling in tbc train of Lady Ashburton. The Kyleaklneis felt a lively curiosity couccrnlug the dlatlngubdicd author, and whenever ' opiH-anil In puhlle he waa surrounded by a crowd of admiring men. women and children who had beard sensation-

al n-ports cor

w-lMiUr.''

nrlyle a.

hero worship until these adulrcn clua-ten-d round him while be waa In the midst of his M-a hath one day. Then he assailed them In language much more emphatic than clegaut. soon made them take to their beds and scamper off with all speed sight. Lady Ashburton bad prayers

duugbti

I iu

late, “be would

g these |a-Hud* ik.-cpcr. us*-d U

-ad me to tbe coffee

tbe e

e for

«lf a

sulijecta. and be would I

intent on it that be wouldn't allot to put In a word. Fancy." oak! Nell, “tliat I should he lectured to In such

way by Tummy Carlyle!"

Iir. Johnson lu all bis gresliM-as deOed the world of fasblou and opinion, living the life of a sloven. Our 01 Hr. Franklin waa like the Kngllshman In some n-s|si-ts. and be aplicared to be fond of Imitating him hi olbers. for be |><Tsls(rd In wearing a shaggy, aliabby old rap even among tbc savants and crowned beUila of tbe ok! world when U> was tbe United Htatra minister at the court of France. Every sclMKvlhoy hat beard bow Nero defied pul.llc opinion, living In riot and revelry when the souls of his countryrubbed bit bands over burning Mow row. saying. "This Is comfortable." Half a million soldiers wife at tbc same time reading the doom of death In tbe lurid flames. It was the conflict of opinion which gave birth to tbc maxim “Where Ignorance la bliss It Is folly to Is* wise." • 'oTTerlncss and taste, even those fro ■luenlly depend upon the mental standpoint ofjhi Individual olttlug Is tbe Judgment seat. One by nor the rouimuuMIe societies established In Hie t'nltrd Hlaten la Ihe early years of the last century are dy Ing out. the lati-sl In dhWHswr bring tbe Harmony s-«Veiy of tVlllatrs at rhsmoniy. Pa- k-tA 1 ^ ••“*» bare Just ls*eu aidd In a ITIthhurg syndh-atr for alsiut Kcss.jrai. to be distributed ansvng half a doacA surrlrlng members sod the heirs of deed member*. If there are any. and there certainly cannot be many In direct descent Onmmunlem evidently Is not a working prlnrlple. at when apf.lbd la ape's snr-nunded world devoted In Ibe rule at prt pru|HT1y. sisl when cellbocy It added nltlmslr destruction is made cer-

ble or not-Ap.liigdeid Itopuhllcau.

TWO OBLIGING MEN.

b,differ.

Is-fore It occurred to any r she was out of the cal

Two ladles wbt

lo her looked with anx

• floor. One 01 •ward, but Ball'

It 1s said, hmvcv

rould a.

that men! herib-d. It

Is atreugtlimed to a certain extent, ro pedally In n-gartl to bodily stature. The !>oots worn by Macbow. which scarcely reach to his knees. rea<J|_an ordinary person almost up to the waist. •clvr-year-old boy could easily

■■side o

islcx finger of Ma-

chow's right hand Is so large that a half dollar can easily Is- passed through It. A steel spring mnttivss of exlra slxe and strength had to l»- made for him and placed on a strong Iron frame. This promising youth eats at each meal at least three pounds of meat and a pro|K>Hlooate quantity of potatoes, vegetable* and bread with a relishing appetite. It Is at tbe cost of much trouble and atlll greater expense Hist the society entertains him.—

Chicago Tribune.

The Rev. Washington Gladden after a lecture nt Harvard discussed with a number of students Hie Chylstlan religion. The students, as is somctlmea tbe way with young men. manifested a lack of faith. They were not ashamed of this lark either: they seemed. on the conlrary. to be proud of JL “I." said a lad of eighteen years, a frrohman—“I am an agnostic" He spoke pompously, hla hands In hla pockets. He regarded narrowly tbe effort on Mr. Gladden lo his bold words. "You are an agnostic7“ said the cler“Wbat Is an agnostic?" Mr. Gladden asked. “Tell me. won't yon. Just what meaning you attribute to that word?" Tbe lad swaggered about tbe room. He atlll kept bis hands In his |s>cketa. "An agnostic.” be said, frownlng“wtiy. an agnostic la—ah—a fellow—« fellow who isn't sure of anything." "How doe* It happen, then." asked the clergyman, “that you're sure you're an aguostlr?"—Buffalo Courier.

A WetlloctM llory. Wellington's gram' dcce tells this anecdote of the Iron Duse's sense of Justice In the Just published volume of bis letters: "1 forget If It was nt Walmer or at Htratlilh-hlsayr that he one evening In tbe drawing room rang the bell several times, and. no servant answering It. he became extremely angry. When at last a footman appeared, tbe duke stormed, with very strong language. at his neglect of duty. I. a small child, ao far from being frightened. thought It exceedingly funny to see the duke angry and went Into Ota of laughter. This checked him. qod the footman Intcrpand, saying: Tf your grace will look, yon will aee tbe bell la broken and never rang at all I only came In for something else.' Tbe duke examined tbe bell and {ben turned to the footman ami sold. Ym. I was wrong. I am very sorry. William, ami I beg your pardon.' and llteti. turning to me. added In hla gruff voice. 'Always own when y*u are In the wrong.' “

It la easy to 'build, a record breaking >cran atminahlp. Tbe problem la who a to pay tbe hills. Two m-w CunanlTS are lo Is- built to attain a speed of 5 knots. The romiun.v roukl not aford to build sorb ships and run them n tbe dull season The British gov ■mment conaniociitly Is helping oat. To l.ulld two i". knot merchant ships raffs over gloosi.isxi Great Britain idvance* every rent of this tptiory and

>. with Intrnwt at hip with SZOtO b nlng 1 /no loos of

a day and Hon. But t,

sidy Great Britain la to pay fTM^uO per year In Hie Canard company for the priv Urge of carrying the two ship* M the naval nvrvr list thus bavtof aa option on their oar In arar Urns.

Wabash How long did II lake yoq to a that ptrturr? EY—h Artist (proudlyl I am am age upon m for seev mouths! Wabash Just aa J lb.sight You're rad alow over hero. Why. I've saw fellers In Chlrojo turnin' them things aat while ye w

them leaned slightly ft

nothing. Juat as Hie rood art or was n-arbtug for the hell ropi- a young man spied the coin and dashed out of the car. He caught tbe lady wbo bad left the car, handed 1st tbe coin, ran bark, caught the step of tbe car aa tbe motors begun to sing In crescendo amt aat down hrraUilesa.. Oik- of the two ladle* opposite him leaned forward nod said coldly. “Young man. what did you do with the nickel I dropped?" The passengers intend. An old man at Hie other end of the ear turned to hla nelghlior. "That reminds ns-." be said, "of aomeHiIng that liapls-isd to my “It was before Hie days of condactors. when we used to drop our nickels Into a slot, awl they ran down a groove to the box Is-hind the driver. "My wife hud started out with a little change aid one of tissu- troublesome five dollar goldplerra which used to be more commonly In clrculaUon than they arc now. Her eyes were not good, and ao she was nervous about her goldplece and bad It on her mind

all tbe way downtown.

•'When she took a car for borne, she met a friend and grew interested In conversation with her. She put her coin In Us- slot abacntmlwledly. Tbc driver turned aa It struck the box. You remember the coin fell Into a glass compartment Drat, and then the driver pushed 0 lever which sent it Into tbe

strong box below.

“Aa my wife beard tbe click of tbe lever she thought of her five dollar goldplece. She looked In her pane. Sure enough. It was gone. 8be went forward and spoke to tbe driver. He said be Jindu't looked very carefully, but be thought there were only, three nickels In tbo gin as receptacle when be

pushed tbe lever.

"My wife Insisted. Tbe driver said if she would ride to the end of tbe line tbe cashier at the ataUon would open the box. Tills meant n Journey of two tulkn beyond our street and my wife "An old gentleman wbo nt by the door said Is- was going to the end of tbe line and offered to give her $4.00 cents and get the goldplece at the Button. *My wife thanked him and took tbe money. When she got home, she found the Ore dollar goldplece to the

lining of her purse.

“Next day I went to tbe station. The

PNEUMATIC CHISELS.

An Industry in which piM-omatle tools •Id fair in effect a re Tutu Hon is the vorklng of granite. Up tUI a few -ears ago the granite toinlsiti.Dca which ite to Is- seen in every cemetery and the elaborately carv.-d granite blocks which are now ao popular for tbe fronts of banka and public I muses were by liand with a hammer aad chisel in uiurh the same way aa wa may supp.**- Hs- Egyptian* carved tbe ■phlnx. Now' n Jet of air Is doing the work, and instead of expending much Hum- and muscle on bis Usk the workman lias simply lo guide tbc pneumatic chisel over tbe surface of

tbe atone.

The sas-ing In mannnl labor la very great Tlx- work la done more rapidly and more . Ix-nply by these tools than by bund and. It might alao be aald. more efficiently, for a pneumatic chiael can lx- operated In recesses and out of tbe way place* in which Uxrre would not lx- room to strike a blow with an ordinary luimmer. Aberdeen Is tbe center of Hie granite Industry to Grant Britain, and there la no granite working establishment there of any con sc qnencr which lias not an equipment of pneumatic tools. The heart of a pneumatic plant la tlx- compressor, or pump, which fore.* the air Into a large Unk or reservoir. From tld* central point the air 1* conveyed In pipe* to all parts of tlx* works, and the roanectioa with tlx* actual tool I* made with a length of India rubber bone, ao that tbe workman ran move the apparatus from

Wlx-i

rould h

and a chiael In hla bands now. be has a pneumalle chisel, and be hgS~ simply to direct It In tlx* required position. The hnmlx-r of blows that ■ tool like this strike* la marvelous The Jet of compressed air operate* a piston, rhirh elllx-r a luimmer or a g-bisei lx- attarlx-d. and tbe admission of air can l«- so regulated by valves aa Ive anything from .2.0IM to 15,000 strokes a minute. Aa might be supposed. the vtliration caused by such a rapid hmvemi-nt aa this la very great A vlxlior to a granite yard Is generally given one of these pneumalle tools to bold, and nnlras be grips It tight It la apt to Jump out of hla hand. One would think that the constant use of inch tool* would Injun* the workman'*

cramp. 80 far. bow-

hlm open tbe box. There waa no goldpiece. The old gentleman had left to a rage, refusing to give hla name. He aald he had been swindled and did not want to lx* known for a fool. “We advertised In tbe papers, but wa never heard from him."—Youth's Oom-

Tbe Old Testament record* ■ notwithstanding the various ravlalous through which these venerable hooka • have [uissed, many indications of anf- 1 mal worship among the Israelite*. 1 which must have lasted for age fore tbe prohibition Inculcated li second line of the Decalogue was formulated. At a comparatively late date j “Jehovah was worshiped under the , popular symbol of a bull, while the , twelve oxen upholding the iaver to 1 Solomon's temple, aa well as the boms adorning tbe altar, were drawn f tbe prevalent bull worship." Modem research has also proved I tbe cherubim were represented to tbe form of winged bulla. M. Lenorm. to hla famous book on the “Begtonh of History" aaya that during the H of tbe kings and prophets “most suredly the cherubim, as there dearrlb-

Maort w

one occasion Bishop Selwvn waa ; down tbe river Waikato with a when tbe latter, wbo wa* very left off paddling tbe canoe, at the same time muttering that If Sclwyu were not a bishop he would—well, “go for him." In a moment the bishop told the man to turn the canoe ashore, where, stripping himself of everything episcopal, be aald. pointing to hi*

account of toe mestlag of toe M Cat-. May 1* to Z2. toe IVnnsylvsnla Bat

a. roulaa, and rondluuixi OC tlcksU, a

duty to carry out the process of cv against official delinquents during trial j and after enurirtiou. Should a ah endeavor forcibly to hold over f._. _ . second time after baring been defeated 1 for rr-dectloo he would he the to. mmt of tbe court's praoraa agi

A 1*ara- ’

as lor -too days at

let HUss altorsxplral 'WtHhomrias ao.t lu

rat of the weal cue St of erad with stiff, bristly fa guay cat la only ooe-qua

the ordinary rat of this part of the world. It has a long body and

mUaslelwhta m toe*

r of rata which do not know