Ocean City Sentinel ! j R. CURTIS ROBINSON Bditdr and Proprietor OCEAN CITY, . . NEW JERSEY g Bell 'Pbooc No 66<X ^ job work prows pily Son. by f, . .H i THURSDAY. NOVKVIBKK IX, 181.1 * ^kWMroa^ (Ity. ^ It I* belter lo h»ve won and In.i " llian oerer lo have won al all. ^ , Local. Republicans are uot dl»- 1 ono raged. They're buckling down attain lo win a victory the next time ^ Woin.KK If the Pennsylvania Kail- ' mad caro running down title way are " ever really given a good cleaning dur- " log the fall and wlote; months. Home-' ' time* It doesn't look as though they " Thky tall u* that President Wilson wai extremely gratlflari over the elec- « Hon raw Ha In New Jersey. Accord- f Ink to the thing* Democrats w-re tell- * tng us, 81 ate Democratic victory meant I the approval of Wilson's policies, ■ which I* all boah. With a mildly f arrayed party acatnat a divided -.party I there la only one ooteome— and that's l what t^jipened lo thl* State, In *plle _ of Gowermr Stokes' valiant and hrll- c I lent flgWT < Tax outcry now arlalog again-tail* , present mode* of dress, the Indecent , play* and the freak dance* of the c time*, ludlcatea a return to saulty of „ society after ao attack of hysterical , freaklsm lo which Indecency ha* t played far too moeb of a part. Tb* , healthy after-thought of the country. , particularly of the feminine part of It, , h- recovering fro as thl* attack, as ( atlaalad by tb* constantly, growing , protest* and raaoiutlous of dub*. t aoatatie* and prominent men and wo- , m*n denouncing the present darlgerou* , ActDUilKO to the Newark 8lar, , Represeutatlv* Lewla, of Maryland. , the father of the parcel post, want* to , *** the system made a practical agency to radno* tb* cost of farm product*. It la not tbat now, because or the prohibitive weight limit and the abnormal pound rate*, which forahort distance* arc four to elx time* tb* cost of service Mr. Lewi* would raise the : weight limit and reduce lb* rate* ao tbat produce can be marketed direct lo . the coaaomer, and b* figures that It would bringdown price* In citlas forty r per cent. Tb* postmaster general. . with tb* content of tb* Internal* , make tbaea change*, which -would [ . glee tb* parcel pod It* right function u *a the natural carrier of retail ehlp. Cap* May Cobhty I* not only * showing lb rapkl and steady progress " In the growth of l_)X seaside resorts, ''
but in tb* eabalantlal developments in the rural auctions of the ccnuty. •ay* tb* 'Wild wood Han. Thl. feet wae shown at the recent meeting of the Cape May County Hoard of Agrleollofe. At tble maiding the report of tb* ctope In the count* within the poet year— which will be need by tb* Herniary of lb* Mute Hoard of Agriculture in bb next annual report— we* reed. Tbta report abowa tbat the average ybld |*r acre for corn to be twenty- (It* bushels, wheat twenty bnebebi twenty-live busbeb, bay one and * half tons, whit, pm.rra. a**an«y-h*e oasntls, sweet potato** forty busbeb, apples llfly barrels, puatbei one hundred and thirty baekeb, and grspo. one hundred thousand pounds. The report nlao showed an unusual locraaae in the farm products lu tb* oounty, u wall as Ui* substantial Improvements being made In tb* farms. ... Tmszazz Th* great American beu has always been a Una bird. Nevertheless, she I b growing fast Twenty years ago ( ah* required aaslsUnct from lire hens t of tb* world In order to meat the I American demand for her products, t Today she not only supplies almost ' the entire American market, but b a Mg factor In supplying the world. ( figure* Just published by the Depart- J mewt of Commerce show that during " ' tb* Steal yaar ISIS the United' Htate* b exported ovar 21 400,000 dozen of eggt, t again* 1400,000 dozen ten years ago o and IIS, 000 dozen twenty year* ago. h Tb* IMS expon* Included S),409.a8o II down of Whole eggs, valned at M4»l.655, and of 967 AM worth of yolks and t eanned eggs, making a tidal of over a P quarter of a Mlllon eggs axjiorted dur- ft tug Ibe year. The great American heu tl Mill laoalvma Hub aasktauue frum tb* b oulsld*. hot comparatively little We a dnrtng the fiscal year IBIS, NPi 1471, 70S dozen; yolks, 11 227,457 pound* . and dried eggz, 30.284 P tSSSSldoSSiS0"" I' °» a xr.p. | • «ApL James H. Ingeraoll and wlb. . Conductor A A. Hbarp aud family c and Mrs. 8. l\ Usndy are apendlng a 1 mootb ef Ibe buollug season at Mr. t Appointed Jssiiins. I B. B. Htltes, a committee arli-cii-d -fur ' reported al the meeting u ef (be Hoard of Kducatiou Tuesday i evening that Mrs Alice Inger«>ll had . been appointed jauitress of ibe new," school bolldlng. Her salary Is tffl * - cabndar month. , ~rr»i n iTM~ai*i c»~ ' ll! Mrs. J. B Haucoek aud sou, I. kIkc have returned from Pennsylvania ' Mats i Collage, where auoriier son.1 ' Tbe>' atlende I •" lb* *2Pennz>lvauls Day" exercise. .i si «»"-nior T*..er •a# priiiat. i ' this WllK Owk We r vices. ' J1, yfom ^flkabaid at fe 45 in tb* morn. ' b 'J W'"« at 7.45. Hun- b fKSUSWJU"*"""'
ISDHDAY IN THE jj LOCAL CHURCHES1 > y |ii StrongSermousand Bxcellcnt ® Music Heard by Congregations. The churches In Ocean t 'lty were all j( well filled al Ibe services on | , The lie*. Thnrmsn H. MriYiy.ofjt Pa., preached al both morn j, ing and evening services His morn-'i (heme was "Internal Ufa." t He said In part: "Kleriisl lib de- !a Hon lo God, and second, pur relation t Hod out nf all the besrt, mind, soul , and slrength. We muet arkunwladgr In every sphere of our life and be wholeheartedly loyal to Him. My - neighbor Is the amrvbo ueeds me. ] The lawyer asked Jesus who was Ills ; neighbor and Jesus replies by telling ( him lo whom he could become.* | neighbor. "Kterual life Is possessed by • man ( when lie has banished fre^a his life all < intellectual aud profeaatooal pride, all , •octal and racial exclusivanam; when , be lizs banished from his life all malice aud revenge aDd lo thai pure human | fellowship seeks the man who Is down. | lias compassion on him, and helps i him rise." <f y Al Ibe evening service Mr. McCoy < used as his theme "The Imperishable . Crown " He plctnrad Nero seated lu , his royal palace, . wearing a golden i 1 crown, surrounded by- all (be pomp , and splendor thai his vast empire i ; could afford, and than spoke of thai t other king who, though bnqnlshlng In , prison dungaou awaiting azacullun i 1 by the crnal Nero, wort a crown. Not i 1 on* of gold, bat one of righteousness the prisoner. In bis lest days i destined lo oulllvc Naro (n all his , 1 earthly glory because tb* apostle bad < : spent bb lib In enriching humanity. < spreading llie goapel of Christ i ' throughout the world. Man's lib < 1 does nut consist I tribe abundance of th* things which be possesses, but It 1 consists In (lb moral convictions, hb humanitarian sympatbias, and In bb < ' willingness to enffer for the cans* of a I 1 human freedom. , 1 W* can all obtain an Imperishable i ' crown, a crown of llfo. Just as the ■ ' golden harvest Is tha crown of the i ' grain of wheat, ao a richer and fraar i mankind will b* the crown of a life | planted In the soil of service. "Except i a grain ol wheat fall into tb* ground , ' and die, It abtdctb alona," and again, | ' "he that loseth bb llfo shall And It." i Tba Roman soldiers platted a crown < nf tborne and mockingly put It on tb* ( Havlonr's brow, but tlm* has removed i crown, and t.Tirlatbnlty today Is i but the Imperishable crown of that | llfo willingly laid down for the good y of Hi* race. , Wh*n w* approach the evening of , life, may wa all b* able to aay, with | of old. "I bava fought a good c tight. I have kept the faith. Heoca- a there ta laid op for me* crown ! loviu IIWIS »■ imu up lur me a crown
of rlghtaonsnem which tb* Lord, the r righteous Judge, will give In that day. " Of In the First Prasbytarian Church, i- on Monday even log. the pastor, the n Rev. Cbarba H. Rohnar, began a vary le Inletestlng and timely aerlaa of aerie moos to young mao. bb tbam* being 1. "The Yuuog Man sod tb* Tempi* of u, tb* Human Body." Tb* aarmona are ,a being delivered under lbs auspices of je »■* t'brlMlao Bndaavor Moclaty.wblcb y has Ita varioos committees at work j upon tbam. a The flawar mmmlttaa bad a vary is pretty decoration arranged about the i, chancel and pulpit, conalatlng of I y white car* nations, chrysanthemums i d aud ferns. i 0 Tba Rav. Mr. Bohner took as bb text t e I Corlnfbbus 6; IB; "Your body b tb* I » tsmple of lb* Holy Ghoal." He said | R In part: "The biggest asset tbb nation has Is t not tba gold In lb treasury vaults, nol • s (be corn and wheat piled mountain t a blgb In Its granarbs, bat the boy In d despised kuee-b roaches. Than Is t a notblng In Iba world ao wall worth J 1 looking after as tba boy. and tbaro Is I i. being In tb* world ao much b I neglected a* tha boy. a i "In oar ettltud* toward boys we • . need to adopt tb* motto of B K d . Jacob* lu his Sunday school work, k [ b nothing loo gobd for the o ■ Prof. Jamas, of Harvard, says 1 , that f<H]r-flflb* of tb* oonverolons n i under th# age of twenty, not ou* I ten after twenty, on* In twenty after r l or one In a hundred after forty, i Professors Co# and Mtarbnck agree ■ that 'from ten lo sixteen we have the > , plastic mind, lo a receptive aisle, and ■ , ao up nnlll twenty. Beyond I experience shows that susoeptl- < to religious Influences rapidly I 1 with passing yaar*. Tbb t tba tlm* whan th* character b ' i poised In the balance. This Is the t 1 psychological moment.' I "It b to young men, therefore. In ■ this period of adolescence that I wish I to address this series of talks. If 1 I ; but help oue youth to grow Into I , honorable and noble Christian I shall feel amply repaid for all I I the thonght and labor I shall have 1 1 *" expended In their preparation. i "No building Is so well made as a 1 temple. Klrot, the plans are all care- ' r drawn np. Then tb* bust work- : are secured, ami. It frequently t j happen, that years are spent lu build- ' Ing. Paul says our bodies are temples * , —temples of tb* Holy Ubost— aud It * j should be our ambition to make them f j the strongest and beat poaslble bodies, f i The most famous man In the world •' today, without doubt, b Theodore 1 ; Roosevelt— a man of splendid phy- c stque Yet his Inheritance of physical * strength was small. He was a sl.-klv d child, and had It not been for a strong ^ "IK l»w*r, which determined to ' 'develop bb weak body, be would have M .lived lib life, no doubt. u a f«»ble "I .[..valid But Theodore Roosevelt *e| I M hb weak body to such discipline th,. . I by tb* time b* was thirty years of age j on.e ,be strongest men. 01 physically, lo lb* ooonlry. hi J "The great danger to Ihe body b on lis
I I Ihe side nf self-indulgence, Anything r Ithst harms llie body, end prevents H *' j from living the best possible machine | for doing Ihe work of life. Is lo It re-" gardislss s deadly enemy . (Keiuenilwr I young man, ilial your -iiody is the | temple of Ihe Holy filiost. Do rod j whiskey cask, a beer-batrel !»<> not ! -mike cigarettes unlit your v*aml | trembles, sod you are black under Ihe ! | anything thai will dtlUe them. Take , ^ ! siiythlug lhatdepreses. I>kv * your lips, aud do uot let anything harmful pass between them. Avoid, | kind, for nothing so rosrs and drflles | llie temple of the hurosir body as j ■ The Rev Mr Bobuer'. I l.eme uezl Muodsy evening will he The -Vouug Msu and the Chamber* of llie Imagination." PIKST M X. < The fourth sermou In theserlr-of "Mouulalu-peak i 'hammers" wa* preached by Dr. Haines In Hi* First Methodist Episcopal ' Church oil Ssbbstb evening, tils eharacter sketcli selected from the life .f Joseph The text— a double oue wa. .sleeted from tlenesb 37: IB: "Behold this dreamer cometh," and 40: 4h: "And 1 Joseph was thirty years old when lie stood hef. re Pfcsraoh."" i Why Uod calls a man or s woman hero and there lo be set apart for tralnlug for special work b a facl thai ' must be left lo Hb wisdom and forethought tbat I. ever planning for the welfare of mauklnd, said Dr. Hatne*. '* A rail-splttter. a taooer or a muledriver on a canal low-pat h. according I our usual measure of values, would ' 1 not seam to be llie places or avucallons - ' look for the potentialities of future greatness and leadership. "Can any 1 good thing com# out of Nazareth?" I wa. answered by the lifr work of Jr-os. I the Hon of Uod I The sketch for this svenlug, said Dr. \ > Haloes, has for Its consideration ' Joseph, ibe besutlful and symmetrical character, who Is the Inspiration of , one of Ihe II uest poems nf the Orient I and lo whom several chapters are dr1 voted lu lb* Koran, r Hb life may be considered as hsvlug I distinct periods, i Klrot, as a youth of seventeen, i dreaming dreams and trying lo "flud i himself," as every young person most do, during the period of youih when a ' boy b neither a man nor a boy. but a i position of both, when amollnus i and Imaginations are raging aud ' struggling for mastery. How much ' needs the patient, sympathetic I understanding and appreciation of hb I own people! Tbb Joecph did not have , brothers did no enjoy hb Intezpre1 tstlon of his dream wtieu their sheaves were bowing down lo bls sheaf. Nor : did bb falber understand the boy whom he so dearly loved when be lold 1 the fat her of bbsecond dream. The boy ptraonallly and power struggling expression, and that new consciousness must express Itself snd must Just as surely ba misunderstood It b ever so. "A prophet U not with-, out honor aave In bla own coontry" and among bis own people One of lb* brtgbest and most pro-
• found thlnkers.of the last generation, " a teacher of many yaar's experience as a post -graduate Instructor In phlli, osopy, was hardly known upon the e streets of hb own native village a id y hb books not read by that people xj 1 To lurn Ihe dreams aud Imaginative I air-castle building to account, yontli ' f must bavt high ideals sud worthy e conceptions of llfo Ibat are usually 1 f given by correct home training. | i Aa a type of Christ, Joseph bad I < many things In hb llfo lhal would ' point onwatd to "The Coming One." I e noted literary men of tb* past baa < f the result of low Ideals and lack < • of spiritual ballast aDd balaocs Wa I aball aver think with sadness of Burns ■ I and Byron and Poa, whose surpassing I I library ability simply needed moral pur poa* aud poise. I Joseph, without doubl, felt the mas- I i terful tbrobbtngs ol power within htm- I self and evidently purposed lu bb lo be true lo himself. The second period In hb develop.meat— and tbb also comas to every youth Ibat determines to roach tb* 1 mark of efficiency— was hb tastlugs the drill of actual apprenticeship In preparation for a great lifework. Being sold Into Egyptian bondage by ni* Jealousy of "hlaowo," ba b amploykd In tba boua* of a servant of I'hsrsub who baa high Influence In Egyptian court, and, being removed for\ hb nnnaoal beauty and parity, a Ally woman attempts bb ruin by b*r Unlawful Infatuation. Not yielding lo his tempter, h* flees from aln; and, laaetng hb cloak In her possession aa b* fleas, she, humiliated and angered by her failure lo entrap his produces Ihe object lesson of hb Innocence lo Irjr lo prove hb guilt. Rut a purposeful U<d has coui trol always of Hie outcome of every 1 i worthy effort toward a high Ideal. 1 > and. In order to have him protected from the danger of temptation, allows lo he Imprisoned, in which place : i has lime lo gel steady and ready for Ihe next step, which Is to he Into a 1 i position of grext and lusting power. I The Interpretation of the dreams of 1 Ihe baker aud butler of Ihe king is a • - Inrm.ni n..» faaa -igiilflaanc* ' when the great king has a dream and 1 nreds an Interpreter of an evsnt thai 1 ■ |o hsvs world-wide significance. J It was not easy from a surface view 1 greatness lo servs apprenticeship « lo a prison, where, lo "endure hardness" was a stern ue<asslty, but gold aod steel are brought lo value, by relinings, and character can only b* . formed In the school of rugged exper- * c "I am Inclined to tblok thai tb* * consciousness of Inherent power was a 11 of Inspiration and Joy to Joseph * during all hb testing*." said Dr. I nines b j Ihe dreamer of dreams frankly ci as he Interprets thr dreams of T 'others, Ibal Ihe power Is nol lu Inm c. self but b of Uod Modesty I. an al- T I preaaut attribute of real great- ol ness of character, aud when Pliaroab hb drram of the fat klne and the *n lean klne, the full ear of corn and th. tr
MILLER BROTHERS ^ DEN N A HEMSLEY DCNN'S CELEBRATED ICE CREAM During alteration- In our l.-e I ream Far lor. I operated without i«l#rr"|d«"i 'nT*" w til be delivered a- heretofore ( LAWRENCE M. LEAR I 1 N C.GODFREY Upholstering, Awnings. House Furnishings 657-659 ASBLRY AVENUE OCEAN CITY. N J ESTIMATES CHEERfULLV GIVEN mMn tNTTT*" S~S"T p tr**"""" "rw" m-'-c rate, trsxrau: hxt-t can a Yard and l-awn work alleude-t 1 • promptly. Ml am i- " -» *"•' g; I EILMEIR H. CRANE! rn M O MOOULV N T t R R A C C OossnCny rvwwJw rmmy | Interior Decorating
UFWt^ck II ideas
ill ESI flsDury Avenue
Foreign and Domestic Wallpaper EDWARI) J. BOKTON R. Curtis Robinson dfo Conveyancing and Insurance Notary Public aad Commissioner of Deeds Noa. 744-46 Asbury Avenue OCIiAN CI TY, N. J. Mousy ta Loan on Kond and Mortgage
■' " " " ' J is blighted ear, made known lo him lie d Is advised by th* "dreamer nf dreams" | ^ to select a msu of deacretlou to an| * manage the affairs nf Egypt as ttiat j h during Ibe years of plenty there may j f be 1 "conservation" of corn energy i y lhal will make It |>osslhle to feed tliel people duriug llie years of absolute!' it famine. Tha king al once reragnls.es 1 1 the "man of Ibe hour" and Joseph Is put next to the throne lu power. I Hb careful bo sin ess management of ' s aflalre of th* kingdom, from an t aooDomlc and political aland point, has e tba admiration of all thoughtful . a of affairs who had carefully read g bla history. L| Tba next period of Ins history Is tb* real last of character. Mauy a man , p baao able to aland the rugged drill , period of adversity who lias Inst hb : , head whan b* suddenly Hnds himself - thrust Into a position of affiuence and ' p power. Tbb young man. Just In the , j prluie of early manhood, holds htm,e self wall In band. He evidently does 1 la not aa*um* any airs. He Is Urge ' s- enough to stand before Pharaoh to p fac* an economic crisis In Egypt, and " lo properly care for Ibe Interests of . ia Oodts great purpose when bb own I it brothers cams to him for food for n themselves and hb aged father and a. his own brother. a Aatbey bow down before him. as b tb* great ruler of Egypt, he doe* not >1 **J In word or deed. "I told you so." a and remind tbam of hb dream lo the s. wheat field, nor does bs allow hb d brotherly sympathies which he Inb staolly feels as he looks al them lurn I, mauce of hi- duty. He plaus lo ler a 1. God's purpose hare Us perfect work. T v and lu doing so thinks out under I. divine guidance how to hest care for " d hb fallier, now an aged man. and to -a let God's great hbtorlc movement go ' a forward. y "The affecllng meeting wlin hi. , , wbeu he makes himself; 1. lo them, the sending down for •' ,f father, the assignment by Pharohali a of the laud of Goaben for hb family; a aud llialf eeaxlngduau tu Egypt,' -aid' ' 1 Haines, "mskes a beautiful story 1 that It you once start to tell It to j youth you will not be allows.! to stop ' * r Until you finish itwlth all of it (iriental K p aettlng." ' Tb, S,s Jura r^x V »' The Jury reform amendment having ! \, beeu carried, It will go lolo operallou I ' November -J5. li provides lhal the chanoellor shall name a jury coiuuils- ' , *lon Id each county, the commission ! 1 consist of Ibe sheriff of lb* county, ~ , Who shall b* of political faith opposite I that of th* commissioner designated 1 the chancellor. In first-class H counties ihe commissioner will receive ^ ' a year: »7.50 Id secoud-clsu couiiibs and FaW lu all olher couuilehe" jnT't""1 "" "hs' shall hold no „|"r? pj" '"'m.^'dur I I I
Fall Planting Now b ibe Tim, lo Arung, lo, ! PLANTING HEDGE, TREES. 1 SHRUBBERY. ETC. J« .< 'Thomas J. Thorn • 1128 Bay Avenue I Prices and' Vorli Right. Both ' Phones. > Ji ji ji : , Lawn Work f " m)T pnlraera Vr^ m raT.f long 1 satisbrtory. Kstimm »> clwerfuSly ^'u'cT S. M. PONTIERE BI6 Asbury Ave'nue Ocean City Title and Trust Company of Ocean City, New Jersey CAPITAL $100,000 SURPLUS $30,000 ' use. TlTlta II.UII SCASC-I, C
n "lite TO R s : Bankinr by Mail 1 Specialty Try ail Advt. in The Sentinel ' and Get Results)
High in Efficiency! LOW IN COST ()cl'/ni City l:lcctric Light C«rnipany 14 I OLD SOL'S (iRFATI:5T Lamps rival pHlillll j CITY GAS LIGHT CO. j ]' Bell Phone 18 Inter-State"" Pl< .e t.-,4 A j SUTTON & CORSON CO. General Contractors Grading and Street Building " 7^9 ASIH'kY AVI-.M K Oi t-xn City, |< i s»'V HEADQUARTERS For auyliiing you waul lo know uiioui i Imililiiig. ' Ate vim unfviilcd h«.« plan v.itii h-nw ' Y.m irr ,n <1. .1 I ' 11 . ..me and see our splendid . oi lection ol up lo date piuuWodH you like t.. have vour i.lca- i.f a Ii.ium- .!«-m I-mx-! .■-! know what ;t would cost to buil.l ? Ate you unfamiliar witli liuiUliiip* nuicnals ' Y..11 .nv >111 .t..l inn its and cost dix ussol. ' • Arc you undecided who to i^m- l.uil.i yotn lions.-' li «.!i ot the lincst buildings in (Vcan City. " V JOS. G. CHAMPION BUILDER Eighth St., Opp. Penna. R. R. Depot YOU SHOULD HAVE A Reliable Builder To erect your Ocean City cottage. You cannot span- the runto look after it closely yourself and must depend upon the honesty ol the contractor. I have bnilt for a large number of people and could u-iti vou lo any or all of them. . o Send for the list of names and photographs ol the houses Otis M. Townsend (th St. Opposite P. 0. BUILDER -"T I L. S. CORSON, Seashore Cottages a Specialty — — Hotels and Bungalows ■ Contractor and Builder. Everything h., >tun.ii..K Plans and S}>ecifications Furnished. Estimates Cheerfully Given. KE8I DKNt'S — bin Asbury Avenue OFKIt E- 745 West A 1 eiiu*
Allen Scull THE BVlWiPEft Eieara *,yi> Ocnu.v HrE. Rhone Connections Walter V. Hess CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER JOBBING GIVEN SPECIAl ATTENTION Office 1017 Asbury Avenue °CL*I*CIT> NEWJEBStv' " c w jLnatr
:l B-4-U-BILD-KUM-C-US j ''There'* a Rcjkun" ^ Call us up J '' al""1 "°rk j Ocean City House Bldg. Co. .. Wu 11 Smith. President Raii-h M. Townskxi. Tua-m.-r ! ^ Bekj F Vot'NO. Secretary B.II Pl.on,. 3».x Offigg- Bfly Aye <>et |()th at)d t l j GOCD PAINTING f JULIUS E. JOCHER, Jr I *-usocc*N.a Painttn^an&2>CC0rattnfl 0 ^ |R an Advertisement in I the SENTINEL ^
• uniutri-a. ,-.r OTIS M. TOWaSElD builder * "n-il-F.0. Plans and Specifications prepared without charge Spencer B. Swan jobbing Carpenter CSTiMSTCSanO PLANS ru#NIXu»; JOHNJ. SEAL BU'I-DFR WILLARD 8. 8TEELMAN j Contractor and Builder r ^ ^ N'- J-w, | GI-OltttE W. HARRIS | Contractor, Builder and Jobbing i No I J W Fourteenth StreeT" 4oCI AN CI I Y, N. J. j A. a. WINKLER j PRACTICAL ^LUMBER S O Msmi « g I4mi 6E0. 0. ADAMS & BRO. PLASTERING. RANGE SETTING kktwk LA YIWC, fctc., tu. All Work in Mason IJae Hrompuy 'Attended To. OCEAN CITY. N J ALIil.KI (i. GILBERT, PRACTICAL HOUSE PAINTER 1S-15 Asbury Avenue, BRECKLEY'S HOUSE ANO SIGN PAINJtRS CLINTON L. BRECKLEY, Paos Beady M lu-d PalilU. I^arl and (III. 9JU and 9-JL- Asbury aveuu. UF1ULKV A A 11.4 UN Reading Coal Real Estate and Search Company of Cape May County. N. J. ! FIDELITY TRUST CO. TITLES INSURED FARM PROPERTIES BOUGHT ANO SOLO Cape May Court Ilonse, N. J. IRA E. WALL 725 Central Ave. ' Ocean City New Jersey Plain and Decoratire Paperhaneer A Post Card will bring our service to you. L. A. STEELMAN 8UCKSMITH ami BHCailWl i Practical Horseshoeing JOBBING DONE PROMPTL* Clam ind Ofllri Tottji 3 Agent for Stewart's Iron Works iVj I'laln and Ornamental Iron F*nf*' 1 1 r.m Callings and Window Guard'Seventh St. and Haven In Examined WitlMl DdP1 1 1 A. IV. ELY loua illull, Av*»a* ATl-AWTlt' LIT*. *• *■ spur. r«i uo, r— LX.LU.PX1 .aa. twu raaaa."*'*

