Ocean City Sentinel, 10 December 1903 IIIF issue link — Page 4

TALMAGE SERMON « Bt IUt. ntANK DC WITT TALMAGE. D.D..

Cblcajco. Dec. 8.—In lUU •crroon Ui« preacbcr onm a* a fitting commemoration of tbr ClirUtmaa time the heal log of family differencra and the putting a aide forever of all dlaaenalona. In accordance with the aplrit and teach-

Lake U. 14. “On aarth p

The te

ration of the birth of-Ctrlrt hat had it» tn» and real celebration not no muchla public faatlrUy arul church cetemonlal as In the family gathering around the domestic firct customs may change, new movements may transform oar social life, b Christmas family gathering maintains Its hold on society. The convict was' liberated from Bing Bing penitentiary. He had beet there for nearly thirty years. He was pardoned, a white haired old alxty-foor years. He went In a strong in of thirty-five. I'p

new world —not the world be left, but another be had never aecn. though many customs may change within a quarter of a century the tome at Christmas day neither chi la a generation or a century. Christmas day always has been and we hope always win be a family day. It la well that at least once a year the children and the grandchildren, the broth era and the sisters and the nephews and the nieces, aa well aa the fathers and a and grandparents, should he

But though God -aetleth the solitary *1 Christmas day.

i. however, that the famname. taken In Its larger relation, not always a loving and harmonious me. We do man by this stale it after the father and mother have •u anted out to their last rating e, to steep the steep of death under

iccount of the d marriage of a father or a mothire do man that today all

found at variance with brothers, slater with slaters and cousins with cousins. This nation la struck through and h with family strife. The Ap-

s. Virginia and Wart Virginia mart, have aptly been railed “the land of the fend." There famlltee hare batBad with each other for generations. There the McCoys and the Hatfields hava well nigh exterminated each otb TEhe the Howards and the Turn afa^we«might each other to the death. There the wounded John PhUlpotta shot dad the four Griffins, and he him self was found unconscious among his •lain. Bat tboagh the Appalachians can be ailed "the tend of the fend.' the whole Called Slates an truthfully be termed "the land of family strife.' If 1 were to enter your family hornet and team the Inner secrets of those homes In all probability there would be found not one family which among **» larger cmnrrttona la not cl With IntenSI elrUe.

oa that day the old quarrel may be settled and all the bard thoughts and bard words It has engendered may be for given and forgotten? I would anggrai to you today sorqc reason, why and reconciliation may hr and should b. affacted 1 would try. In the name of Jons Christ, to have over the mange; brother clasp hands with brother, al. ter with sister, parent with child and child with parent. 1 would try to d> thta because a lien tbr Christmas hell* art ringing their carol no man. no wo man. an a truly honor tbr newborn child called the Christ as b.» doing — ‘ w part to fnlfill the angel

<•- Why ? They have warty all-si ye. practically atl-been anad hy faults committed on bstb Ida They have l«v-ti caused by the at railing Hie kettle black, the ket Is retaliating by call lag the pot black.

is that they ca each Is black. 11 may not be dear who started the family tiuublr. Ii Is enough- * ‘ ‘if both part lei Usd not

x. the trouble be-. . Every lit tie white wa bear of the eon of eomr promlncnt man being at variance with hla father. An inkling of the trouble may gn Into the newaiaper or be go* Bipod about the neighborhood. Borne of oa aide with the parent We any: “Ns matter what the father may bare dime, the ana. has no right to turn hla

young man Into the world." Oaths other hand, .some of us aide with the aou Instead of the father. We any that some fathers are mean and selfish and grasp tag. They never want to git* their

Ilham 1. ol Germany that when

llic court urTist palnud a picture of

the German court, with Crown I“i ‘ Frederick's foot upon the lowest

of the throne. King William called the artlat to him and said: "Take that hoy's foot off that throne step. As long os I am king I want to hare the throne for myself." Bnt In all probability If yoo ran get to the inside facts of that qtmm-1 between the father and the son they ran all be 1 raced to a disposition In the fuller wfilch lias been Inherilid-by the son. The fattier may bare been a high strung, nervous, quick tempered, overwrought, overworked. Impetuous man. The son may have Inherited the same fiery disposition. It Is a scientific fact that opposites conjoin. not similarities. The positive and the- negative poles work together In

harmony, not the electric wl

not understand the nervous exhaustion 5 ^VV” ,T ,

under w-hleih yerar professional brother * ' *

Is struggling. IVrliaps the reason he j’ 1 ’ does not answer his sister's letters as '"I? "'., be n»d to do 1. brranaa be I. a clergy * afr, r ,|r man. a lawyer or a newspaper man *'”'r c ome Day after day be alts and write* and " rn

writes and writes. The pen la always In hla hand until the very sight of Ink and papeT has for him a repulsion. Perhaps the ivnson the brother does not v isit the sister Is because he has been uoahle to take a vacation for the last ten years. Vunr eilfficulttc* with your brother are chiefly, my sUster. because yon enanot pul yourself- In hla

and be forgiven arc eartli pence, good v Before I lie next around It will lie In to forgive or to I

RAILWAY MAIL CARS.

HKAI. ENT ATE ACiENTN.

iroleetlon of mil wo of J mTlwnv 5j«’.n

plan

The n

n the

wife te able to live harmoniously wl the hustuinel te that her nature te tlrely different from hla and to Its i ural coinpWment. Hie fathe-r and ton were cemtinuatly Irritating e other. One night there wga a domestic ' explosion. * The fattier ordeTid the son from the bouse The boy never came back. He went to live In another city. He plunged Into a life of dissipation. The father blamed the son. The son blamed the fattier Hut are tbore not grievous faults on both side*? Take, for Illustration, that difficulty which cxlsta Is-lween the daughter and her parents. There are faults there Just the name. Faults ate on both aides. The daughter may have grown up to be the pride of the parental heart. She was the Idol of her father and mother. They aenl her to school and gave her every educational advantage that mon ry could procure, but while they were giving money and. seemingly, every advantage those parents were not careful about the acquaintances their daughter was forming. They were not careful about looking up the records of the young men who were calling daring the evening boar. The result of this parental negligence was that the daughter formed an affection for man who was not regarded favorably by the parents. They did everything In their power to prevent the marriage, bnt the trouble waa that the parents awoke to the danger too late. The young £lrl waa obstinate; she married against their will. After the daughter left home she felt that -her husband and children were not wanted back In the place where the wife and mother was born, therefore she do.-* nr where they are no: welcomed, parents. In an unguarded moment, may have said that all their children wi ed of them waa their money, daughter te poor, but very proud. fur her babies How much happiness It would give on all hands If ciliattoo could he effected and If the pareuta. mnrmticring that their negllcontributed to the trouble, and the daughter, retueuibcriug that hard words, spoken In a moment of trrili not weigh against long year* of love and parental kindness.

together again and a

to forget the fanlts on both side*! What 1s true of the difficulties between parents and children te also true at the difficulties between brother* and brother*, sisters and sisters. rvUsklj faults are to be found ou Therefore what Is the practical don of all this trend of thought t You. O man. and yon. O woman, hare right to complain aliont the Injus s which others have done against i unless you at the same time have te all In your power to alone for alas which you have. Introtkmilly

xne against your

If y<ta;'will go and honestly brotlier to forgive you the wrong you hava done him. In ninety-

hundred that broth » forgive the Injus

ready t.

, . kin. atop and a . sonclllationa to t

and i

r family r

i'll Inge waa razed to ■o literally was tlie on a-omen and chlldrrn |s

d thn

a yon roady to atone for tbr evils yoo have done each other, there will be no further ra t smother the llama of family trouble by asking yonr brother glee -you the wrong* yoo bare door friend. Try It. Try It before the coming Christmas fesUv-

tea.

Family dlaarnalonx should case, and nmrdlatcly cease. Why? nearly all family troubles are caused member qf a family misjudging the motives and position of other mem here of the faintly. Because It te alImpoaslble for people In one of life to properly appreciate tbr difficulties and the trials and the worries and tbr disappointments heartache* which are continually _ring and sapping the live In other sphere* of life. Be lo read “the sign* of the lima" tbroath another’s apactadt every pair of family glass) r. has a different lent and different focus. Pm) Yoarself la Ills rises. Just study for a moment the different ways the country brother and brother look at the matter of family

snot herV position*. The brother living In the country bare that Wa city brother baa a yearly income of ISjOUU. lo borrow a few hundred dollars to help stuck the farm. The city tirotber may write hack that be cannot afford to lend any money. The country brother cannot believe that a relative having fS.OUU income could not lend few paltry hundred denars. But the city brother who receive* a alary be haring Jnst aa hard try brother. Some time ago I asked a brother minister of a large dty church ’ be tlkwl hla present field. "WcU," ■id, -of cnuAe I ought to be bapiiy on account of Ua opponunlttes for use fulness; bnt. lo tell the truth, I liked my country fl-ld far tfellcr. and 1 think larger net Income. My present church gives me ti.tXJI a year. With 11 I have to live In a fine house. ■II and have my family dress 1‘hen the year roll* around " have practically nothing, lift In tl country, though I had only Yamal! as also had very small expense «. 1 had-any garden, my horse and carriage, my cow and chickens. I had fan with them all. and al the end of the yar I Was able to are Wm. I teU y

minister u rich, bat the dty knows the country minister Is rich." The man In one sphere of rarely appreciate tte financial conditions of one In another sphere of ■isuiideralandlDga bem slid Ms ste- . who te lirtag a quiet domestic Ufe. cb a lady ays: "My I .rot her never ■were my hi tor* now as he used to He never show* me those little

poet The test time I w

right to exhim tie sent

very timer reply " Vo. my «ar. prd.a;.a rbal-te all tror. Bat the asan you are angry with yonr broth ' to, you. aa a domssUc woman, ran-

would one and all liy to foe to our brother's spcdacire

great many of the family trouble* a"' 1 ' would forever vanish from oar dark Christmas day* have n< ened hortaon. The man who travels “*S*‘l* * 1 "- , '»' about this planet with such a Christian ™ r, *‘ pence. g.«sl will lo spirit and goes from bouse to Uouag- '' Um ‘ Conqueroi from the palace of the rich to the hovel l’ l< ' , ° lli * triumph over I n of the |»».r. from the sumptuous pri- ct, cd that all the n>untr; vale office of the merchant prince to devastated between York at* the counters of the small salaried clerk “ * “* ' ~

—soon discovers that *bto world 1a not altogether a mean world, a selfish world, a heartless world, hot It te a tired world, a dbh-ouraged world, a

misunderstood world. If every mem- cnnumascs since i'**' nave wvin.-s her of a family who has hitter Iroublra •j*' 1 '' ateughter* of thonsands ti| and .triate Could realize that hla broth- thousand-. Not the -laughter of era and sisters along tbq great high- alone, but the slaughter of liean lo way* of-Ufe are struggling under bur- ! " |J ,,, ' nr, I’ ,,r "tli dens quite as licovy ns his own-al- “““ *te!cr* utsl parents and el.il.lr though their Imrdeut may Ik- made up “"f ,l "‘ Chri-tmas of Its<3 not Is In different kinds of packs and have Christmas of domestic tragedy, i.ut silken cords around them Instead of reunions. Slay II 1»- the t. hempen rope—be would be more pa- *‘ ,cn • 1| o vpr T angel* In heaven s Gent In hi* critlclam of others, aa he again Is-<-om|- llirl to sing for Joy t may hope that others will Judge him a - relative* at the manger Iwvc more charitably. Most of the sremlng con,c reconciled .nils by relative* to relatives are en- ICopyrtght l>e t, le.uu Klupsch J

tlrely unlnlenlional. Aa every man

hopes for mercy and pardon In Ihc day The seDimen) Movemmi. of Jodgment so there should be forgive- “What. In your opinion. Is the ni for one who offends another testing l«-neflt n-snltlnc from the through load vert elKv- and not through railed scttlein.-nl movement of tin- l Intention The fancied Injustices be- quarter century?" an eminent soil, tween relatives extol for Ibc most pari gist and philanthropist was asked In the distort.*! Imaginations of those rcntly. "The broadening of the mrti who have no right to Indulge In on- borlxon of the self styled upper class) Christian cud mercllea Judgments of was the prompt reply. "Many an relative* who really want to be friends, dividual learns

Family disseusi

immediately

should cease and

tse. Why? Because

Christmas oppurtunltlc* of future ApKe ily reconciliations may be very few. They may never come again. We are Intensely aboekrel at the *od.Vn depar tnn-s of our gr>-at roi-u and women. When Mr*. Emma Booth-Tucker of the Salvation Army was killed on Oct- 2P In a railroad accident tbr news wa* trlegraplKil from the Atlantic lo the Pacific. We commeut.-d u|wu the b)-au tlful coffin plate Which we saw and

•the other hair while he delude* himself Into a heller that he te elevating bis submerged fellow man. I bollrve in settlement work and all It stands for. and (.encourage It wbonevaec* sadly In need of the leaven It In-

evitably gives."

OUR SAVINGS BANKS.

According

r Intensely ;

i Unties, there arc

rU-SOT men. women and children In Called Sutra who own deposits In lags banks amounting lo $2,772..250. The average belonging to eccb

depositor Is M0!l.23.

appeara. are U tter avers In one great Philadelphia

Institution there are 23.XS1 female dcpoattora to 21J02 of the other sex. This reflects a condition prevailing generally through the country, according to Mr. Speed. Mechanics, artlsaiu, weayera and handicraftsmen, among men. furnish 92H7 of the depositors with the hank mentioned: domestic servants, fc-

inmbcr 3JMO. while

boarding house keepers and ordinary housekeeper* with accounts are I1JMU. depositors listed as "geft lemon" e are 41. of “widow* and gentlewomen" -4.000. Among men who are means of this one hunk are 3.731 porter*, wallers, lal-irers and attend ante: 2.123 agents. Uw-kkre-pcr*. clerk* and u%amen: 71)7 eunehmen. carmen,

tact for ten. twsaty. thirty yara. but draymen, rarter* and stable keeper*.

Profealonal men perbapa do not save well. There are on this bank's books

anolbcr and another .mill all are gone. but 070 Bail apolh.-rarl.-s. B hen the family plot Is once selected ,03 Uwyert „ n d acrlvcners and C32 out and a couple of grave* dug tU-reln the 1 of fht . ro „ rank , of mnk . de^j. hearae gris Into the habit of travriJog trarhrn , p rofpMl< ,„ Brt i„,. ((f f ...

profe«*or*. teachers, artists, anperintendcuta. lawyers and physicians 443 have accounts In the hank

Emma Booth-Tucker: Pro ty Oct. 28. 11103." B e w ahoekrd wlnii King llnml

and when Prraident-Cam... ___ ...... , slnated with a knife thrust. But why should wr'be ao alHH-kisl at the sudden death of thto man or that, aa with the tremendous emigration of a last host each year from earth Into realm beyond tbe grave? Tills te not a platitude. £ purposeless saying. It te a statement which ought to be pn-guaifi \ with the most tremendous Import to u* alL Can any here be aun-^tiat before another Christmas roll* around the | death augel's wing will not Jiave

tered over our beds?

Oh. my friends. If w-p are evi-r going to have Christmas nvoorlliationa we \ had better have them now. Human life at tbe longest I* short. B'bcn children have grown and scattered bow |

toon they die. A family u

after tbe death angel rails one c

habit ol

In the ume direction and the l horses to stopping at tbe ume gate. Then tbe ad truth te that when death

ty he piled It

flower* mountains high upon tlx casket, brother* may wicp over tbi dead brother, the hands may be press ed and the Ups pressed and tbe forehead stroked, hot the dead will brat

not one word. He will lid. He will not smile

givencm back to those who want _ __

forgiven. Oh. regret*, r.-grets! How children anmmoncd from distant points often hava wa wept our regret, over t0 «ce|v c unheard of legacies, the hro-

tae roffin Ud^How often that word krn lhrnl3 of fllmll „„ bm i palred * Dd lo " s brotlier* and >tn«n " “ •* «* - aometimea united.

In rase of re roof of this ncgl 'Mage of nuitl e • Injured In 'tin

their rolling stock.

OCUM CAPl

£:A Moral

Seaside Resort

Not Excelled

as a

r»i Health Restorer

JOSEPH SUTTON A CO. r.-M- 850 Isbuiy be.. OCEAN Cm, N. J

WM. LAKE, C. E., 1 I Ceils iter A.^ent.

Fishing, Sailing, Gunning, etc.:::

Isfc-ril

[. CORSOU I V8*t ) 11 o

LICENSED AUCTIONEER, No. 721 Asburt) Acetme, Ocean Cittj, N. J. R. CURTIS ROBINSON Conveyancing 3 Insurance

NOTARY PUBLIC AND

COMMISSIONER OF DEEDS

Nos. 744-46 Asbury Avenue

OCEAN CITY. N. J.

MODERN (OMENIEM ES *3»Money to loan on Bond and Mortgage.-^Sl

cn ‘,;r^r;l ^ le Traffic and its la-ne ear* w.-n* kindred evils are forever pro■keiMlie'ardtiiary hibited by deed, resiu.vd to spun- Every lover ol Tcmpcranct:, s* and baggage | Morals should combine to

I* a ninchine of I help US. eniltini net- Tl«- r

N'nfar Supply,

Railroad, Steamboats And all other

onstructcd.- Portland O

boat containing *1 sailor* and pilot is] hrougb dangerous reef) ave wrecked them. Grace Darling aeeomi her. a llgblliouse keeper rhlch he put off to res Ivor* of Ihc wrecked si

This s

. Septc

out hut

and I

medals 1

The Humai

Darling and hte daugh gave $250 to Grace, while $.-..»«> ral* by aubscrlption was Invpstivl for b " of 'ter father. SI died of roiikumption at twentysw-ven. ’ • Lewis, the life saver of New pi. Uvea al an age jatst fifty yeat with a record of half a dozen resell performed quite alone. She Is the on woman IlglitllKm

j Thousands of lots lor sale j I at various prices, located in all j j parts-ol the city, i For information apply to ; W. E. LAKE, Secretary Ocean City Asso’n, NINTH INI) JSBHI1V.

I for life I

al Sheridan a

■r aex—unles* there te »

her Ida Lewis.

lK7i. I

1 j observation.

‘ | Tbe subject of dormant aecouht; ■ eontribnlea the moat Interesting chapprosy routine of Iniesaiint addition* and subtractions to roplneed by tl. ^ C 7 e spiring search into old family roc

e look of for and genealogical tradition*. The u

npon the tombstone of the dead! grata, bitter, beartrending, bnt nseleas regret*! Regret* burning regret* In reference lo our kith and kin who are

Family dissension* should erase Date any one. oid or young, galnay this Immanent truth? But If this warn jug comes with mighty force to brothera and aistrrt how much more should It come to the father* and mother* who are angry or Indifferent with their cbllMany people are apt to Judge the children harshly when domestic Iroublra artoe la-tween parent* and their offspring. But aa men and women grow older and have children of their

-llllng to blame tbr

parent for tbe estrangement than the)

to blame the child. Hare you. |>ar

«. ever tried to win buck tbe affre a f| ( . r is of your children? Did you evei ^n, to rerall that cruel remark you core f m

made to your obstinate boy? That re a.. — i aunteonV bank

Tbe larger banka make a regular di partmem In llaelf of tbe search for tbe rightful owners of Inactive a ere They take pride in keeping this of accounts as low as possible. Tbe Bowery Savings bank of New York dty. the largest savings bank In tbe country, has only $47.1 ZK) In dormant accounts In all Its $88.uuo.0u0 of fn on deposit. In 1SW lu dormant counts amounted to $82,000. Sc yean' work has reduced them <

An account In a saving* bank die*. Bo long as there shall ox hnman being entitled to tbe kui

deposit ao long will Hut sum lie In the vault* to await the call of IM unknowt owner. The law of New York te that an account shall be deemed quiescent

after twenty-two year*, but no '

walla ao- long. Some begin to search

owner aa soon aa the account

r three years. Other* wall

t the

knife baric* Uarlf in npon the operating

O parent,-store that so-nod marriage.

" h so trampled ni«Mi the love of rblMreu. gone regularly to vl children, as you us--d to do befi nw.tber’s death? Do you semi Ibr warm, cordial Invitations

with tbclr families? Do you. the par Jamc ems. tty to Instill into your children the culture thought that their father and their make* mother are absolutely dependent for

happlueos upon their boy.- and girls' shortly after he assumed charge of affections? - *-■- ■ —-

Parents, let me ask you on* blunt

question. Supposing your children have.

all probability they hut alL*

forgive Bret? B'lio ury felt that what

e you depositor for about fifteen yearn.

' In 1894 the report showed 5.122 counia In the alale of New fork, i ting $1,443.8081)?. which had no| b disturbed for twenty year* or mi —John Gilmer Sliced la Bucce**.

f a dry sort, wl

>e of the most popular t

I of the public service the <-nipluyee* whoan ordered called upon

have—who ought

ought to he continually forgiving

the olds sweet relationships are re- Finally one t stored* Ought not the firet forglrer, tbe transfer had i chief forgiver. be you. O father. O the secretary mother, you wlm have been worshiping - Mr. Secret! Christ's feel for forty years? Ought you dispense

- • to tie you rather than your child men It will Impair the efficiency of this

membra of the department. | conriih-red 'It my dot)

o say this to you and to get your

are-retary looked up

haa not been

4i more than five years? Ought not the father and tbe mother try to

children forgiving ua re what those children

prayer you have hern saying rvi you learned H at yonr motbeCi “Forgive us

at tbr n-tllng and said;

“There was ants- a farmer In Iowa who bad three fat rat*. Ilia Hern wa* orrmin. wHli mice. One day he gave

■e ratrang There at

» porra in the hand of

safest plac of Unde Sam' too—drawing . addition to G

a cattlemen, a

minder SSG.000 a

the Indh

whole at Ihe low valuation of $8 an acre—and tills dues not lake Into consideration the oil. natural gaa apd cool to be found throughout that region, nor the leap In values that inuat follow the aeveral line* of railway now bclng constructed through the reservation—the land holding* of each Osage are easily worth fiS.850. That te to nay. a very conservative statement of the wealth of throe people muat pure 11 at not less than $11.600 for every man. woman and child of

the tribe.

0. J. HAMMELL Marble »< Granite Works ^ Monuments, Mausoleums, Statuary Work, Cradle*... CEMETERY INCLOSURES Burial Vaults, Grave Covers All kinds of Cemetery B’ork Works at P'easantville. N. J. RALPH L GOFF; CIVIL ENGINEER.

SURVEYBR.

CONVEYANCER AND CENTRAL AVENUE,

ivc, last) stationery and other printed matter—the kind you get at 744.746 Asbury avenue. Hood printing is d necessity to every successful modem business, and your standing in the business B-orld B'ill lie guaged largely by your correspondents by the quality ol your stationer)-. Leave an order at this office and get the best at consistent prices.

SENTINEL PRINTING HOUSE 744-746 Asbury Avenue, OCEAN CITY, N. J.

The most expensive anl popotamu*. a g<»si sjar $4,500. Tl..- price te $21100. ami a trained India coats about the xn tlMO a pair. Bengal opleee. A giraffe (-oats ! $150. Bnakra range fro

OCEAN CITY. 1

Charles G. Miller Is fully prepared to clean oi

Jr*. Crnlglc. In tbe ronrsc of ■e on “T1k- Silence of Life" ) Birmingham Ituakln sm-lety.

follow* of Tolstoi: -

The multitude, on being ask.*! Tolstoi's opinions wetv. nould no aay Ibat be wrote gksiiuy novel

Ik dteappre-ved of t-.lia-v... of war. of property.-of alcohol; that l.e m.w -Irv— tnd lo.lulg.-d in aa er een-niriellie-

rhlch d

FINEST GOHAGES IN OCEAN CITY .’.’.’.FOR RENT

FOR SUE SPECIIL BARGAINS

HARVEY Y. LAKE lomoblle Service. N. C. Clelland REAL ESTATE BROKER:::

S|s>k.' j Clevrulti Ml. and Asbur* Ava

^*11 Samuel Schurch „—REAL ESTATE : :

AND INSURANCE 701 Arturj Aft., Otttl Cllj, I. J.

• otlscr- a ad lt<mrdlst H..u»e. for

Ocean Ci!| Ice 3DI1CD3I do.

A. j. SMITH. Proprietor

PURE ICE BEST .'. COAL

VV <>(>]>

Oltice, No. 634 ASBUBt AVENUE

KALBACH BROS.

Electrical Contractors

MPLE .VENUE, - - WILMOOD

GRAINING...

and

GLAZING.

# *

cmtaruvLr

<^7 JOBBING

/w/

SHOP. WEST AVE., ML 7tli u4 RA STS

*1.

N. e. Godfrey

General

FURNITURE REPAIRER and UPHOLSTERER

N. JOHNSON,

plumber,

Steam and 6ai fitter.

Repairing a specialty.

Bath Tubs and numbers’

I supplies.

T3 « -A.Mbnr>- A venue

S PUCE 65S ASBURT AVE RESIDEICE E59 ASBURT AVE I

MEIVIAKIvs

life la which Ik- was found a rtiiMvly for all dlaa|*|iointmeniB of life. ly money.-and I slial everybody Vise doe* live Ity will bp saved.- Sow .

Tolxtu

hte o

-••re of mlml St Ignat > make humanity alron; •l*-* to make faumaulty I. > had tbe courage

Send In your \nias_ Advertlsruien

c. l_. LAKE -REAL ESTATE AGENT.

H. H. BODINE Real Estate Broker «. E. Cw. SiiMlk SUwl MAlMtejAiMM ; Ocenn IV. J.

M. MKTvniSL,

xiMi ok low mito)

«25 Allaullr A 1 in up

ATLARTIC- CITY. ■. J.

JACOB SCHUFF the pioneer bakert. «4.700 Attar) Atent. Octu Qlj. «. J. (mJTt ll i7T d |'.!n" 4***r- fVeddlaa

w. L. BERRY, Manufacturing Jeweler, NO. aa SOUTH SECOND ST., PhlUsdeipkia. r.. ■upalnaa a spralsli y.

PETER MURDOCH,

toOAJL and "WOOD,

Ocean City, N. J.