Calm age Sermon
Jjm Anjr'l**. 0»U M«n-h S.-Tbf «*t ao. Ion* Mnstit by ll» *nrt«it ■!- rbrtnJjl* U lb* to|rtc dlarow'l bj tbe jinsiobor In llil» »*nnoii. In wbloh Iw »hrmtt Ito*', tbonirli lb* !»*»'iy may *ro« old, lb* may main Ita yoolb and fiMafawa/NTbr t*»i U J**!" *»!*- 6. • VU»i. my ♦hlklrrn WIT* nl-oul nw." MI*fortun«* an- *.T*r.ll) rrr**nooa Tb*y are DO! m-tatC*. Tlwy live Dot a bmnlt'a exlutrure. TJkr ll«- l>**ta "f lb* Crl'la or Ut* bird, of Uie air or llw Bab of tb* Ma. tt*y bnre a* In brnli rally In flork* or awlm In arlmola If «nnfijiwini Iipon lb* *d** of -our Kortann <4bm ofren follow II with rreal r»|.ldII*. na do lb* April abown* lo-n •flw i-looda recuni afrer IIh- raln." Th*y pit* tlimn»Hv« ii|>nn **<b oib.-r In creal drift*, aa do 11b- anooflakra Tb*} loll Ibrir dMtb kwlla In rborua Aa "milblnf ania-onla Ilk* MWreaa.’* *•' "notbin* dretreya Ilk* mlafortun*" Where there la one embwary of d*.iro< lion rnamlnc there are. aa a rub-..many euiiaoarWai treadln* rbwely upon ila la-rla. Kven when they are amall and Inalsulflrainl they cripplr na by tb* p*r (tateOiT of their atlaHt. N»lnrall«ta tell ua that lb* amall. IwlanlBrant bnmminc bird aoauetlmea alikbta upon tbe bawd of a tulybty ~*t* There be alia and pecka and prefca. no mailer bow faat or bow UUdi bla hu*e winced carrier may fly There be alia am! pecka and I■*•-*« until after awhile l«« bo He* bla ama* l-eak In the brain of bis clean tie foe. wbo could m«b him a* awcfly aa t hawk ml«bt kill a sparrow. If tb* eagle rould only cel at him. Trouble la like unto tbe bummin* bird. When trouble •truck the Hand oM patrian-b Job. It bit him again •ud again Flret cam* finaocial I rouble, then domestic trouble, then ph Tales I trouble. It was polo In tbe bead, pain In Ibe heart, pain In tb* limb*, pain In tbe back and pain erery where Then — Job triod — —
planning and working for b He thought of himaelf when bla you wife was by bla able and bla little I* and clrta were playing around in nursery. Then Job break* forth In I lamentation cf my t**t which l
w«r* all about me " » 1* a [wtbctlc longing not only that lime be halted In Ita onward sweep, hot he com].elted to retrace the stag* It ha* already taken
mightiest leaaoBS of life -bow to keep ! roe I unde. I mental worker* to tbe young by twarlng part of tb* Joy# and j world hare been ana I the sorrow* of the young. j bred men dimly Ibe 1)0 you know how Thomas Chalmers old Jn yaarw Ian ; ! was nbl* lo ae.-oiiipllsb bla great work log AiMntu new of life? He 'alwaj* kept bta heart years or beyood youii* ami frenh and lorlng by osmcI TUablng to Ibe l 1.1>ua with 'the young. III* daogliter. ona colle«Tlaii of liuera. told my father that ene* to Ihla fart, darkeat days of tbe t ree battle ai ninety-four and was aril day In playing with the . offered a crown at ninety-all Titian - flying kite* ! al ninety nine was alrtuit down with Inburgh com- i tbe liiolera tn Venice wlien be waa at _ ' mw of bla .-anraaea Pop*
tlon of t'hal love It John Brown. In ttort eeaar tie- great auftior of "Kenllw.rrlh" Is pictured going through tlw .lew lind tb- *le.-t to hi* nriebboria
hou.ee and there trundling up
Fleming, a little girl of fire or alt so in nwra. In Iter abawl or bla cloak be carries her l«.t-k to hi* study. There,
while hi* pet) run* rapidly
t wrong fur ua oung hgatn or ai
e can? I trow n
if thU a
la lo abow bow are can turu back the shadow on the dial of Abax not oulr ten. fifteen, but even twenty and thirty yearn for aome of ua There la an old prurmfc wlHch aaya. -A man is not aa old as to look*, but aa old as he feel*." 1 am gafng to pfore that a man can alwaya read about Hurt) or thirty-five year* of age. even though bla hair la
»se la bridged with
year* and of our old age Umjm wb on tb* tbrewbobl of life or playing In tbe unnwiy; by stealing or nil her Unually burrowing from our married child ten their babies: by waking grandditldren come borne and lire with ua. or. If we have no married children of oar own. Iiy harrowing tb* cbIMacn of aome neighborly grandfather and • loving them aa we would our owl ' firmly gad deliberalelv nuking a with uorarlvn and with tiod. Tbongl. I may live to be sixty, seventy, eighty, ninety or a hundred year* old. I will D*rer allow tnyarlf to outgrow my fondness for little cbildreu. and my pa thy for their Joy* and aorruw*. - ■ * ' re for tbrtr daily
iatgm with yiHing peopk. •speetally with dSldrrn, la eaaeutUl In many ways for a nun'* development. It keeps hi* heart young. Ye*. It dire more than that. It tracbr* him what
itude toward
and toarard bla felk»v- .
| pi* cannot understand what this edn eating power of a child s life is upon a matured man. Wbyl, Like some of ua. tliey hare not pla.-rsl tkj}naelt» under the tutelage of children. Home mouths ago I hired a big wagon I put into this w agon Dot only ihg own children, but I went around and raided the neighbor*’ borne* and plk-d in autnr of tlirera. I w*s tbe oulr grown |m*»n among
Isaak*. Marjorie
ndy EugeneT’Irld and
-xi-etitton. they kipl young by teepiua In touch with young people. If I did m* have any halsr* of my
rwn I wi-uld adopt a«a
lefy the inroad* of time uuteas be coo JutuUy asso latea with tbe young folk* 'Wlul Mould au engine be In a ablp If t Wire it lug lotre In the bulir aaid Bereiirf 'll "'Ost t« fam-oed to It ' olta and acrewa before It can the Tesael Now. a cbUdloa*
. Okr a l*aM engine :>* Isilteil and Sir nlty before be can wi ■ uivnient. and there
aisl I-oil* as cbildreu." Thai la true There Is no acrew or bolt that hold* man to the duties o than tbe children Hut I r Ibau did Mr. Beecher. I bold that re are no Influence* more effectual keep n* yoaug while w* are pee mlng those duties Hun ilrem* dame is to watch through tbe dancing eye* of a child. Tlie bead way to amooth o the wrinkle* of old age la t# bury In Hie dimpled cheek of a amlUng girl. The beat way to I raing through the withered a liar lew threewcore yuan la to play “blind o'* buff" or “byg-and seek'' wir the Isiya and-giti* after tbe aupper ti la cleared and tbe acbool lemonbare been learned. The bent way h _ with tbe young' <5iil pity you If you cannot any enjsymeut In making t"a of December melt before t life giving rays of May or June^ |wiling our mind* year In and ye* o seek new fields for mental and i ml spiritual Investigation and appllciHatu for doing our regular work, by forcing ooraelve* to take up new lines of study, by laying to ouraalve*. "Though I may live to Iw fifty or sixty or seventy years of ag*. yet I will never reuse to be a student, and I will never ccaar to lie Interroted In tbe advancement which hi going me " Yet are find the strange fact that after they have made their on* line of work a* a t are satisfied with that anc.ro*. and cause they are aallafied they begin to wither and shrivel up and gradual'
This mental awl physical depletion which come* from being aatisflod with a past succiTO cannot be better tralrel than by aome of tbe facultle* of our old eollegro. Sow, the coOege facultle* of both tbe east and tbe wrel were originally made up of picked Tbe president* anil trustee* of tboar lualituthiiu In alinoal e.ra-y case a* lectvd tbe very briglitrst and l>e*t atn •lents of their • In****. Ttoy Mere tbe Itonor men of tbe roller** wbo naked to fill tbe I moored prufew Chairs But, marveluu* to gay. altliough tb* college fn.-ulllea of Hi* old ll Ilona In tuy day bad been recrulied from tbe brightest men. yet almost without exi-eptloc those faruHlea had o large pem-ulage of , to be alinjile rein* of fee past. They seemed to to mumuilBed a out of touch with present day erect*. They were walking “mbe root*" or Inc.imated -'datlte • laes' or pelrlfiod ex amples of liorlc or rorintblan arehllecture Tliey seemed lo be men wbu *i«o learoM one thing well, but aa soon a> they bad mastered that one Use of study all their mental faculties were then allowed tu become dormant. Thu* they withered up luto a foaultord and evnteilmed old agn. i t'ondlUon* In our
I went in college. Dr. William H. Harper. tlw great president of Chicago uni veraltv. has b.1 in thl* mighty reform As the bred of one of the greateot not
W7S- LAKE, C. E., Real 13 rettite Ajeerkt. S. GORSOH Re til Iveattite A«ent
LICENSED AUCTIONEER, No. 721 Aabunj Aocnue, Ocean City, N. J. R. CUinTROBINSON Conveyancing 3 Insurance NflfARY PUBLIC AND COMMISSIONER OF DEEDS Nos. 744-46 Asbury Avenue OCEAN CITY. N. J. KS^Money to loan on Bond and Mortgage.*i£l
RINTIN6.
rooms and hare a go.*! not before others. If
wealthy.
friends of I letter dais will now have Hi na. then do not keep lionlenlug those wbo are *HII faithful never ending tales of saw written by a phy to lie taken In amall plllfe tut In kno.-kdi.MU doses. The ptrorription wa* a sign placed In the rotunda of a Urge sanitarium In tbe crotral part of New York state. It was In a most conapb-umis irasitlcn. where all the psticuta could sec IL U thus: -Don't talk aliout your pain*
than any twenty prescrlpllona I would follows: MJsmsI mornlag! II*w do you HU you sli*|> well laat nlghl? la your headache lietterT Then Ibe perould begin to rehetirae all tbe hottra abe lay awake and all tb* pains sbe bad. By tbe time she was through the story her pains would and her net-re* to twitch tod sbe wss on tbe way to another alee].less night. It I* by talking aliout the Ioslides of old age that we Increase
bles of
trouble*, yet most pngde love to rathe misfortunes of tbe past. They never seem to be happy nnlea* they are talking aliout tbrtr ratarries And. furthermore, they never seem to to happy uuliwa you are ready to talk ‘ nut them also and to expatiate upon ■m. Benjamin Dlaraell. late premierEngland, wed understood thl* law. One day he wa* walking through one of the street* of London when be met gentleman. Thla man spoke to him as tlioagh they were old friends “Well." said Dlaraell. "how Is tbe obi com pi* hit?" With that tbe gentleman atari ed off ou a bmg account of bla
trouldes
After ttoy separated suotber nun wbo was walking with tbe English statesman at the. time Bald. THaraeU.
He baa a i-uuple of eye* a little way tack of Ids -snout, and of three are a couple of boles that extend completely tbroogh him. Three hole* connect with ever lie uare to breathe with, and tore an uncomfortable way of looking M you ■? tbe aamr time as bis cyaa. He lias a mouth, too. hut It U on the coder aide of him and convenient for business. 11 Is a funny tblng. with spines on the lips, and when yon pull Ibe lower Jaw the upper Jaw move* with It—a sort of automatic trap not unlike what you can see In any tea rent restaurant. This Is a landlubber's description, but It la enough.— Country Life In America. THE WORD DOILY.
Though tbe word dolly Is now restricted In meaning to the amall cloth that covers a deaaert plate. It had originally a mocii aider signification. It seems to have been Introduced aa a cheap and fashionable fabric, specially for summer wear, about .the Utter part of the seventeenth century, for Dryden speaks of “dolley petticoat a," and Btrele In tbe Tatter doyley milt" The name baa been long connected with a London firm, trading as linen drapers. In fpper Wellington street.
MCO. Though Ibeir name happens to be the same aa that of the atuff. there U Jio authority for linking the taro together Wedgwood reject* derivation and auggrata the Dutch dwaele. a towel, or, better still, tbe UwUa dwahell. a napkin. Tbe dully Itself uaed to b* called a “dolly napkin" till shortened by tomary naagr. Ixiudon Standard
little cure,j proudly mi wtanrem 4. give the
sidewalk na:
Whit have asylum f
tto greatest whuier When those folk* began to sing I found m singing In aplt* of myself. When talked and a*k«d •]ue*tiun> I f uiyaetf saying to tnyaelf■ Tr-«. Ju
D myself o<
re gone.
uT aald Ibis. “We do not wan'
,y college pridenaopi to math i, mental .idtanceuient. We expect them , not only to do tlieir claa* room work. ,, but to kee|i on In their original Inveatl-
do- Tbeae luiretigathmneacb year My toan. 1 pit. too' ,r * • ><• Ute wiiUr and wider Oil got there—en .n'.h.o. ’ AvA * * 1,1 > h c reaulf I ansn^rel have -l ,1 »'" 1 d of Chk-ago unl.rratty faculty I liave a M of treeber. '"■ lnc '’“rdenad In ttie future with a lot making me love Uud and at forty or fifty years of aa*
ore mauk'.-.a! and lore life and I,...- 11 wl11 ** bb-s—d with a iuind»-r of very thing Cod hat ma-le hi* theu—young In toori rouliful tairth." J' ,uu * in pori^re at aevemy or
H.w to Bo T.oas ' .Ml eighty years of age.
When are took that Ion* ride l are* ‘ ' ,>h - no " * oroT " nf I® m ' : That
Uuk U not right If I work and work hard rit
up to sixty year* of age l tore a right But ,
ywlfr to retire from work sail have a good , 1 '-"f fret If I live ten'years more 1 Intend i i,,^,
"und ko bn 1st over the bualucos to tlie boys
1 kimw If 1 ^ ^ 1 wb.‘«S5S!ri2l k....M If 1 can atop Work I van lire lhe fTwmi d„|.|ing II,
, .or. ■ '‘V " ®«ld«i.- > |, lJt br , Hil* world Ibe ,-.ui*cs „l wbb b Lugjat j-.oir idea of tb* way of atiend- .. in to Clod and M ill ye. beSd.yKur yearn .l.cnycU ,„ M ,be three ! S _
» me. All that I mu., dofc toiK ml,- Veil, my friend. If , aaa lu Mrnull rww.nUf Ob.
expect.,too of .peuding uo . Vuu a,.*, nearly all of your ■n your bab- baa become u „ ln n.e young m.-„ .„d ' IU f 0 ° *’ 1 . doou-ed WOUMU by your aide to take your place. »em. In Uw fire, Tou mu ., „, Jaur mu tna roar |«*oad time If ' daughter and your friend* what Paul tb*second place, w „ lo TlmoHiy. .ml Elijah ... to
prolong- Kllaiia, and C briat waa lo bl. disclpbw
, ,p *f ; yaa w1u In the anxiety to fit olbera to pnt on ~ ::i“ “ * Te ™T Joar own * r,uor r«> «nd your own j._ . ‘ ■»« »"ero a imin .olunUrlly I,.. ar1 throl.blng with Hie ambition, of y.ire up work ao that to caq pass a : , ouai Vou w ,„ ol) . Illk . bHT'jdd age that to U. mUerab.y un- ^ t thTb^uttre "f“’,"b even a. hap bring and fiuto a prumatare tb , mimu „ y,,. ;” i c ,, - ,U, “ B,n - rt •««
1 »oek that Hie years of his earthly Ufa
are Increased. . ^
a and effe.ia
I do not remember ever seeing him liefore.” "Why did you ask him. tlien. •How I* the old unuplalni V " “Oh." aald Dlarerll. -;all old iieuple have trow'.dre of aome aotl. and II Idea are most of them to talk about tb«u. I rarely make a mistake If l nay. 'How Is your Old complaintr It please* them to recount tbrtr troubles, and II does not hurt me" Yea, I, may not bare hurt Dlaraell when that aaan talked stout Id* troubles, but It did hurt the a|irakrr. Tbe paaXest of ways to lighten ibe l.nrden* of ukl age la lo hate them
l remark, tto ewalret of all ew youth la to try <“ Lke your place afire you f course | take for grwntrel ■laj talking to tTirtatlaiai.
b la go
Tbe peraou of tbe Ko sacred. If human bai It Iswacrllege. and tbe sacrilege la death. 1 touches a subject to become* sacred. Tbe emperor's ed only In whlsiicra. Ilia portrait la never palmed except after death. Then It la worshiped. Once a foreign ambassador sought to peror with the (sir,rail of bla sovereign- But the minister for foreign affairs regarded the offer as an outrage, and the portrait waa never accepted. The emperor's |«>wre Is boundless: bla word la law, and he owns everything, land and people, without restriction. A simple wish
Shoeetaa la tbe ■'hlllpplars. A traveler In Hu- Phillpqinra writes: •'There Is no place where shopping ti easier than In Manila, for H la almost ahaolulrty laiismstld* to buy anything you require. You «-au nr vert betena purchase. if you are ao inclined, everything you do not want- and a.>IM at that" at four times or so Its nc valor."
- ...o-kiim.JaMH.se.,,
Shocked Moilier-My boy. my boy. what became of that last piece of I left In Hie cupboard and told you no, to disturb? Little Oorar—I rated It. Shocked Motlier And what would yon Hill an art like tint? Utile Oscar— Disturbing the piece. I aupiawe -Buffalo
While I've noli.vd that Ibe wicked generally ge< wbat they deserve. Black Ami I’ve ootlced that the good
the fmeats have iiuaruadlned H
rltb tbrtr life's blood
j Old age almirid pare Us twilight hour* 1 j *» l would pass the few Intervening I and day* prior to making a long Journey , '
lime* ibla liapiiena: A man wbo n sensible all bla life lets i > fool out of him.—Atchlaon
1 Good Printing is Ibe advance agent of a successfnl business. T The neatness and correctness, the absolute up-to-datcncx* of otnlhing lhal we do for ymi. if you give us a chance, will induce you to Itecomc one of our
# Sentinel Printing House 744-46 Asbury Avenue, OCEAK CITY, .V J.
look after- the spoils Beldlug Broa. will be paring off their mortgage—410,OtO that la rightfully Mallnda' *• niarrim before Mrs. Ketcha chance to reinvest tto may whittle for rising thirty. You are. by old man Maloney's will MaUnda'a husband la hare no control of her estate except of It aa may be reprerentrd Jn bank upon tbe wedding Everything rise la tied up bard : Hie dtarrettou of Aunty I had better say at her Sbe hasn't got a thing In the against BIU) except that bla with his fattor. a of thirty year* back." good and plenty! How atn □en are." lien Ire aald sagely. Slater Keteham wouldn't le, an archangel hare Mallnda with her good WOI^, because her bad ward means keeptdg a clutch on tto money, and sbe * ao Mingy sbe even grudge* herself a good long breath," “Ton'll bring Mallnda r Trent ask ad. Denise nodded confidently, but aU at once cried: "Oh. 1 forgot! Maybe 1 can't Tto Baxter* are cor That’* wby yon found me In an
taking."
Trent whittled. "Tb* Baxter*! repeated. "How many strong?" “Old madam and Son John and Ski Sarah." 1 teniae answered. Trent tied again. "1 don't think we quit* deserve that" he aald. “Your mother la. 1 dare rey. delighted, hot how
about the squire?"
"Dad would 1-e swearing If br dared,' Denise aald. sighing. ‘ Tour dear! Hi knows If he did mother would turn 01 the waterw.irks, go to bed and atay
there a fortnight,
next Beaton's |>ariy frocks would go up
In doctor’* hills,
cr'a burdens dad and l. But for
what he'd have to anffer on awqy from home whence
aald Baxter."
"Ton’ll hare to do It In tbe end. Why now now?" Trent aald persuasively, trying to take her band. She pulled II away, hut not angrily, saying with a little Bleb: "No, Just yet. I most find
out-things."
“What tilingsy Trent persisted. Denise looked away. "They are— whether 1 want the freedom and the —the money you would stand for,” the aald at last, 'kir whether 1 truly l-llke you yourarif." “So,He It eiliter way. Just ao you take iue." Trent aald Joyously. “However, am I going to get Mallnda?" Denial- broke out. Trent chuckled. "Tell Slater Ketch am you're going lo be married und want I-lnda fur bridesmaid. Then, of coarse, abe won't mind letting along 10 help select wedding finery"— “That ahe will," Denise Interrupted. “She doesn't believe In weddings, hardly In marrying. 1 reckon she's frald If Linda area too much of the holy institution there'll he no chance of her keeping single or devoting
. _ -_w — ,. SoSy.ta lUv County or Cape May sod Mala ol - Jerwy. aamtwndW (fire bondlodaBd tl
HbfioW. A*.p-r-»k» NOTICE TO LIMIT CREDITORS.
fg^a^lesm^Hurraeah
t It I'd n
Notwithstanding Denlae waa certain ■to con Id retch Mallnda. She waa already rehearsing a fairy tala of tor-
EXECUTOR'S SALE Commencing MONDAY, OCTOBER iTth, ENTIK E HTOt'K OF Clothing, Hats, Caps and Gents’Furnishing Goods
THIS IS A BONA-KIDE OFFER AND A MONEY-HAVER. * —Estate of Ibe late— M. METVr»EL 25 AtlaatlrAveMae ATtABTIC C1TT. Bit. JOSEPH MENDEL,
I. N. JOHNSON, PLUMBER, Stum and Gas Fitter Repairing a specialty. Bath Tubs and Plumbers’ Supplies. t>ao Aaibury Avenue
H, A. W. SMITH A SON PlumbiiiE - Heating - Drainage 848 Asbury Arena* OCEAN CITY. N. J.
G. THOMAS, No. 108 Market St., PHILADELPHIA, Fine Faniig Ms.
'■re—land rroabaat atork la PhltoSlahlaT LOW -PSIOES.
N. G. Godfrey Oeoeral FUHNITUHE REPAIRER aid UPHOLSTERER
Mweu pun-is! uun 111. maua-Ki uun in MICHAEL J. NOUN TiaToM 1 niHroZ ROOFER ATLANTIO CITY. M. J. £2SL'
BKAI. BBTATK ABB IBallBABCBL FINEST COHAGES IN OCEAN CITY .■.'.•.FOR RENT Write for Prico* and Locations FOR SALE SPECIAL BARGAINS HARVEY Y. LAKE •30 ABBUftV AVENUE Aulomobile Hervlce. N. C. Clelland REAL ESTATE BROKER : 1
Samuel Schurch REAL ESTATE : : AND INSURANCE 701 Aiborj An., Ocau (Itj, I. J.
O. I— LAKE ...REAL ESTATE AGENT... Ito Asbury Arenas, Oosas CMy, K. J.
Money forjlortgages... JORDAN MATHEWS W. B.Oor. U«h and Columbia Areaaa, l-llll.aUKl.l-UIA
W. L BERRY, Manufacturing NO. aa SOUTH SECOND ST.,
E. CLINTON A CO., z err BRUSHES, 1001 iuiet, uo t l ran 1% pMit.anEi.PM.a. pa. SEASHORE FURNITURE Of Brery HrecrtpUoa al Gallagher's 43 S. SECOND STREET - PHIkA

