Ocean City Sentinel, 2 July 1903 IIIF issue link — Page 1

OCEAN CITY SENTINEL

VOL. XXIII.

OCEAN CITY. N. THUK^PAY. JL LY 2, HKKI.

NO. 13.

Ocean City Sentinel

Law offices Schuyler C. Woodhull

B» CTHt/t IM HICKSON

jy[ORGAN HAND, ATTORNEY and COUNSELLOR AT LAW.

CITY DIRECTORY.

CITY OFFICIALS.

JONATHAN HAND, <Joun«ellor- nt-1 >n \v.

''ifc-UTirjlMurjBloD-Br. JL T^ A

SECRET SOCIETIES. » 1 I 't?Cun ! |“Tl!u"'«U)“r.'Vi'ii r".7;r.,z

J_JAKKISON H. VOORHKKS C'ounwellor- nl - I„n>v,

r k u

WrdlirMU) r.pnlag in K. of r. lu.ll.

r w*ll*<w, kwpvr ul rvoorU*. CHURCH SERVICES.

llonrd of Tru.tvvv-^rwM^nl. IL^r. Koftln-^l-ln— 34o-tlii.. ^ui.du) morning. LK, J.

lhl!n) K ^f b TruaM^fKT , |‘. ,l OulM4. rfwlAvnl. Klimlhnn njWjUTJJ fOB. ^ rim luru.l Lburj-n., A^burj^ntvnnv ^bvMwb luiodnv wrnlDV. 1‘injvr lura-llftc. ^nuT^IonJr’of'itv

ATLANTIC CITY. N. J. JAMES M. E. HILDRETH CounsclIor-at-Di^ I'hntuvry j- NullrUoi for nrmn OH}

CINERARIAS’ In bud mid bl PARIS DAISIES whH» and yr FUNEKAL DESIGNS THOMAS J. THORN FLORIST 1124 Central ave. QHARLES L. HOFMANN REGISTERSO ARCHITECT

UuDIki^uf Ihv uun *j llv i omimmlon »rKl. Au»u.tlnr'. Ilomnn (Wlbolir CauRib. A.bur, nvruur, bvtwvrb Tblrtwnlb and

rrnjrf nMVHlog. WvUuv-.l»^ r.riuug.

J««m H Tf..»vr. irenvu vt. CHURCH SOCIETIES.

turr^iiTonl'lf "iK "Adrtrl 0 K^bln~n U '■ ^ S^S ,! SKSr , 54

us

^ Lad in' Anillyrfvorlvly luv»U SiL-sSrssKi;

Junior Kadanrar nru-ij mvvu nrh WvdnUj nfUrnoou in llu- cburrb nl 4 u'rlork.

bnillbavmtar>; Min

r.“a

EDWARD STONEHILL BRICKLAYER and PLASTERER

All work lu maanii imr l>raia|>Uy allaodvd Ui... liri|{liton 1‘Inco OCCAM O/TY. M. J.

WRITE MHi^r MAIIAKIMIX naM I'kKUiJHl Ala.

Tirr.

A. M. TOWN*KND luaacaimow niara aaiaci

SUSHORE FURNITURE Gallagher's 43 S. SCCONO STREET. • RMILA

i J* S. WAGGONER, , >• u -.^NT- , ) DAI I AND THE Pb>alrl*n and l»ruKK>al [AINW MAN YJl Atbary A»c.. t>cc»n CUT. R. J. j I o ITlA'1

l-nrv Dm*. Tlnv HUtfonarT. ConfncUonvrj.

nd. onvunUr on bund

T. ABBOTF, M. D., I*li) alrlan and NniKron. OFFICE-Urur Unini ud Elttu SUwl

T C. HUTCHINSON. ML D ' ’ IlomoeopntbiMt. No. H34 Oooim Avonu OCEAN CITT. N. J. urrirr Honm-TUI is a. a>..» u. 11. |^ > HOWARD BURT, M. 809 Wt-sley Avenue.

rnroful, nif n

Irimbb-''

LAW OFFICES

Apgar &l Boswell, I KY AVAufT'K nruiVuiYlITIl WTIlMr.'T j

LAW OFFICES

Godfrey & Godfrey,

£)K. CHARLES B. RIDER

*• I>ontiMt*«

759 ^bur) Avenue

0R. E. MILLER.

Fhjklrlan and Nnr|{eoii

G. THOMAS. No.^p8 Market St., PHILADELPHIA, HMdqnartar. ni Honib Jvraa) tor Fioe Family Sroceries. f«lilpr., ILuMln*. 1 Iflrd Kvrf, Itullrf mill luird liTAUnnUr or CMpiTlitt lJ> " 1 TrOW -PRICES.

$2.00 WORTH of RED STAR STAMPS FREE AT A. H. Cotton’s Grocery Store

mssj&swB.s.’s t2.Mo.rtk.I R.d M., »t..| . It...

^The llaat l»r«mluivi» tivar Olvwn I by an/ HUtup On. vltli Hvd Star NUni|a. j I A. H. COTTON, No. 433 Asbury Avenuo j

Glass! Glass! Glass!

C. H. SHOEHAKER LUMBER CO. Twefth Street and West Avenue ocean cm. N. j. IIAVK ju* mwived a l.rw InroRa of Mate and Chipped UUu and have nnararted lor a ear of Tank and (U> Made Window Ulau (tl** - llui«4 niwli'l. You rtan pel all nlac, from a lixH to a Rixil); alao all »Im— In Ulazed Saab llottom iirlrwn at all tliurnc

W> al*o earry Hot lied Sash aiwl Hot Bed Ulaaa In .t..'k V.hi will noTonly nave iwiiiitcw but dollam If you (May your l-umher, Umr. Cement, Brick. Ulaicd Sash. Ulaaa. Nails, mil Work, Boors, Mould Inga, Cool sod Wood from the Shoemaker Lumber Co.

wm

THE ONLY WAY rigid In In' eni|>loy a : ...PLUMBER^. Who dor. not list ? to rpiwrlmnil nr make gurmr* - o ••know how:'tdumU't Vt RueltU the "liov Hut" SUKt ever no long ago,-but we keep un learning nrw thing, every day. And you'll learn a lot about how well work can be <ionc if you tanp'oy ui to do it. J O IIIV K. OKOVBS 649 Asmav Avkm.uk' OCEAN CITY. N. J.

I-Mll UjltOI. 1 l>nce-nn<l

its crowd. Wben sober, ml a ead. When In bln ibomugii 1 ulinirtaii and nuld ns wnn mrouw- with n vnhgiau to drink with a KvuUoniau. Ue luid 111 luiroitu.nl by a g<««l frhmt of a lord, lie waa

•d u

Hill) h

I rang., dislike lo lilin cai llrat sight. 111 ,.r ..air*.- tlu.1 didn't count. Tlinl Ivml Bale luot made dnrka and

nay do many tblnga It

raluable tla. It.a

blm for

h1 unnll: from In-

DEAD CITIES.

mew fhat my mnativ lied I kiv* . hr- lied If. nave L-rd liale'a retmtatlon That rmneo waa In lie' cabinet after ti«* left tut the oninlry II waa not U* I , me to assert or argue. ln.W4^rr I aald | not a word neire. but aere,gad ttiv re . t t>uke In humble aplrlt and went alvait ' , my dutlca Aft.-r that I checked off ; , the |ir.i,«Tly every day. tnk'ng the j

a I a

and II

1} itaya before the lor. and maater fortunale •.an a hiding plan- pre me I saw the i-nllri nry Ogun-a and a J.'*''

lulled dnkbit aa e.u4ly aa If he haf

L. I f.

all h

r li ft II

lard had not In. with a rurkma

"Yea, air." t replied. “Tea. atr, be picked up Severn I new thliura at ilegent atre.1 the oflur day. and that the rbarwoman might not be tempted vc larked tile cabinets Do yoo

few the keys, atrT"

'm! I I'm! I think not. Rtevrna I

think I will be going."

is I do not know what explanatlona my maater made. If any. but I know I made none. How could I. a gentlrman'a "man." accuse a blue

blood -of thievery t

ailed for a rbalr. d down day for ly Iwgua aside la

I If be ■uufry as

■ fore | had oppidluult he captain. TtnTi I aald “I Imp inirdon. atr. but u.rd Dale la off In Ida bi -Why do you askf

TALMAGE SERMON

1 patriotic theme

1 hr dra

beer naMiw yeaterday can Regi'iit afreet. PiThapa

evens lead Dab. I» slightly ir matter la conflitrntlal and « furthiT You had la-at ha-k eta after this and put the

■Ur poilieL"

aa nil all until laud Bala, mania of plunder In hta aoul. ■In. Maat.T laid slipped out nrfer of an boor before. My

1 the alttlng room

He went a

Ho enli-red a drag emporium and Mid to the dark In a rigorous tone, without a trace of shame or diffidence: "Give me a tadtle of the best hair roatorer you've got" The clerk looked at him with some aatoaiahmeoL Interpreting hla look, the customer MU: “Yes It'* for tnyaclf, and I'm not ashamed to My an. either. For yean I're laughed at the references made to my balrh-es poll. I considered It a good Joke, because I'm still young, and thousands of older men than I still bare all their hair, and I don't regard ahaencc of It aa a algo of ags "But I're changed my^mlnd now. 1 want hair on top of my bead. The last straw earns today, when I went Into a restaurant where I're been In the habit of dining with a friend. This friend la only a few yean younger than me. but be baa a thick shock of hair, which gives him a rather youthful a plan ranee. “Well, when the waiter came to take my order he nodded, aa usual, and then remarked, rather Impertinently. I thought: "'Where's your bob todayT "—New York Telegram.

Maxtmlmw. the giant Roman em-

powder hard mrfcs between bis fingers and do other seemingly Impossible things. When angered, be often brake the Jaw of a horse or with hla fiat Hla wlf.

foam ley 1 didn't know you wets oeqoatutrd with Mias LovrtL Bhr asked me last night If 1 knew you. Iloamb-y That waa idee of her. What led her h> aak yoo that. I won der» (Viamiry Why -er-l had Just asked ibl Imagine any

fhollle-l went down to a rather toformal affair tost evening, desk boy. and. gwailoua. I sas inmpsllad to ness a dreadful sight! -Horrors! What wm Ur "A fstkiw without evening drees totlag breakfast food for supper.- Haiti more Herald.

to tbs audience

Virginia illy, to Mon•ven polltbwl .a pi tn Is fewer limn fifty p-'-ide

the Dc-lsratlnn of ln4t**|it.|ML'n«-e and I their application to the later .ondltlooa ir own tlnww. The text !» I'mlm erk S. “That I may rejob: to the gladneaa of thy nation " When a child la horn tie- att.mdlng physician mnkea out a birth eerttlbwtt. This important dnronwmt la wmt lo the fireproof blinding where are prewcrvsd da The omtaakni of r the lmpnd>cr filing

Hpringflidd. Kan nough in build a f:

and the hyilrants were Iddden In the pratrle graaa. At Itaratogm a fiMMiap theater llmla none lo tread Its I wards tore the wandering tramp At Fargo Spring* the FJH.101 mluadbniiar la-U rlnjpi when tin- wind I* strong, but do chlbtren ionic. These dead Knnaos towns an- the fading monuments of as rainfall of the western imrt of the state. A talent Tray waa fouml to he burled In Us own ruhldati. That alao was the fate of Yam Util In the Utter fifth* It a prnaiieraua gnhl camp The pUtben were exhausted, but new urns i- found fartln r up the stream Tbf luipatleut gold ateliers diwrted the old gracel from the new placers wets washed down main the old town and -ctl Ita bulhUnga Now only the gable of a large livery barn emerges from the anil to show whirs Yam Hill was. I‘erbti|ts when MaeauUy'a Mew Zealander t>tines to aketeh the ruins of LoiKlon bridge an anltqnatlan col: league may dig up Yam Hill and draw all aorta of nmtlaalona as to the civilisation of prehistoric Ainertca. Nor ate thtwe dead towns to be found In the mining and seniUltd ragin'11 only. At the Junction of the 8arannab and Bund rivers In Georgia are now only fields of grain and grosing sheep. Yet there once stand I'clersburg. a regularly UM out and pnagteroas town of the days before the railroads came. Now there la not a single

The railroad unmade I-etersburg. aa It intnadt- dnorna of otter towns rr first making them —fhlcsgo I

Benator Turner of the Alaskan boundary roinmbndnu Mid the otter day: “When I go to rhnrrb 1 am aa allcut UU I leave. Hut 1 waa not always an. In the little MtaauurT town of Edna.

ty disorderly etmrehgoer. day. when I waa about had a strange minister to preach. 1 Mt with four or fire other lads, and we made a great deal of noise. The stranger put op with time, liven be looked be Mid. to reprove any from the pul|dt—In fact. I

young man. and each time be n a more hea'henlaii maun re. At the end of the aerv me of the mistake I haf young man waa a lunatic.'

newspapers aa the Hou Blank, exmcmtwr of magreaw I lost the grantor pail of my law practice, hot I cai that hsek anil wane mote with It nay reputatkui In tla- district has Increased, as a whole, by my service at Washing mu. FlMmlatly I am ari thnuaaial iWUlsrs worse rdf than I befun- 1 was ebstid I two get hark too The feature that bothers

Braves te Dratb Wli A rase of a native Hawallak who waa hew Ira t„ de.H, with a Itlbb to tbs bauds of a kuhuna. or native mra rarer, la ntswlrd from the Island of IU' wall. The rlrtliu was III to bed. and, a Her bring trawled hys regular phy■dilaiL aent lor a kuhima, haring toots faith to the natter -nutdblne man." The kghuna de. larad that the patient

basting. Bnd then the kuhmva resumed sprratbina The man dbd as a r of tbs hrallog The kotitaa baa

Molds' Oh. I don't It now. to aw I’ve brant anmr of tl about their bats.

damage Years hrner the tack of It might disinherit the child of largo property inter.*!* and Involve many would be belts In Intennlnatde legal* strife though the birth certificate of an Individual may In' vigilantly guard'd ■ not an ca ref ally preserved as la birth certificate of a nation Then I as well aa the Intrinsic above the ptira of allrar and gold If pirallib' It Is carefully housed within the sacred ball wbenda the nation was horn. The paper upon written the Drrtaratbm of Independence la the American nation'* Irtrth certlfbste Other natlona came

of srolutlon. hot the (tnltod Btatrs of America sprang Into existent*- to a day, and this Declaration announced to an astnntebrd world an July 4, 1774 the birth of a new member of the family of nations Aa the young King Alfoaau Kill of fipaln. haring been born after the draft] of hta father, baa

ileus of being born a king. 10 the American Goddess of Liberty at her first appearance took her place In the world m a aorcretgtf The document In which she declared her sovereignty and her rights constitut'd the old Independence hall of I hltadelphta the moat sacred building In Aaoerksn history, atm* within lu walk Is that Mcrad birth chamber In which waa first racked the cradle of this newborn national Infant. It publtaJos to the world that the mea who signed their names at the foot of that Immortal

going to lay down upon my desk a faadmUe of this Immortal paper. I do this for two reasons First, It la thr last Sabbath preceding

fitting

— on Is that o few weeks ugw after the death of a very dear friend, the facsimile of the Declaration of Indipeodenu- which I now place before yoo came Into my possesstoo | hare read It over and over again I have read H to rblragraphy of Thomas Jefferson t to the hand writing with which the trading slahomes signed It I have road U with all Ita oorractfcm* tuterllueattuua. 1 have read It entirely different feeltoga from those with which I used to regard It when

1 and

of our practical Ursa. The IVcIaratloo of Indepradeoce wi the startling culmination of manly li tolerance of Injustice. The dsramei wm not a* some people suppra.-, tl raault of a tong and carefully planned conspiracy extending over many years. It seemed rather to have been the growth of the moment. It wm erystaUUatVm of srottmrata the results of which but few men could frn The Brlttah ministry had not aattrtpatrd It rndther had thr Amerlcga people Wheu thr First tYvntlnental grass assembled In l*hUalVffphU. no »ept. S. 1771. tteve waa probably not one

Adams of Itaatow "Before the 17th of April. I77J." wrote Thomas J "I had lever heard a whisper position to arparale from tbs country “ "When I first tank c» of tbs army, Jwly t. 1773, I abhorred

George Washlagtoo In ooe cd hla 1st-

The two countries in every part af thrtr make op were our They Many (w

(ran of prominent Amertoans wrv Ik* moat part edOratsd Is Kngltah ohoula where they wove taught to ravetuon- the Btlttah king When Richard Henry Lee ana* aa the ( srabto Tlh of Jane. lT7o. and read the following raaotarian' "Braolved That

aUtra and that they ara absolved from •U alleglaan to the BrttM — own hoy was at that time •w* of hla toachcra when a vl ad. “Who la that boy r "He

listen to American pntlllaaa. It 1 a-rttreti Ise-suse King Georgs with fatuity <if rpy*l ami Imperial aaI* Imaglred that he, had the right lifer.v his will ua a fienpta aa raaolate as himself. He heUerad that It

taxation without I Wicked r*.hellion sgsloet divinely n etlluted sutbortty. It was wrttteo Is

n Ha ir std> , though they

to this year of grar ttvet. with oor hands nprm tills venen hie and sa'*nl arrofi. w* may Irani tl mighty lesson that the rrally tl

power af juattoe. and of JoetVs a. This Is the hhdort.-al teaching of Rnglands mistake In 1770. Wo

able and. an h te tegtalstton that would maka one for the rich turn and another fue

tabor. Beware of a

stare* and grind down labor while tabor. with an tamest heart, la randy to give capital a full day's work for a fair day s wage Oor taws should totledrhev tyranny of capital nor tyranny of labor bat

Tit. only when a

tar tons between them. Tt la only

tit honestly tries to a. Jus tiro and afford cpial p all Ita subjects that tt rails

the robes of Immortality about

turns When a

of Its an-mlngty hrlphws am* such a govi-nimcut Is pavlag the way (nr It* own dlnlutcgmttau Had King Georgs

profiting by till* giw Interwoven with our nathdul Id rblMbood. might alwsy* hr Just to the ea*. the Weak and the poor as »«dl . the rich, the It ' " ‘ - —

Including alike the people of great wealth, of modiewtr wraith, the people who employ otbcrv the peotila who am

May God always raatlmto to gtv* to ■a fur thr offirv of chief exerattn men who arv preoldenta of the whole people. who will at* that the govcrmaaaai ta not a Wall street hireling nr a gtgaowill pratral the rh-h a* well a* poor, black as well a* whit*. Jew aa well aa in'* vtrtor as well m

Adams, rharts* Frai and Junlcr. sad have add'd When t speak