$P, 0(H) MEMORIAL - HALL FAVORED (Oontlnord from Firm Ocmd OWy bu only Ita droimer .acbool to wblcb to direct tu energier .and rapport. Wa arc advised tbat tbla acbool ha* reached lie maximum development nnder tbe praaent facllUlea tbat we are ottering. No effort la being made togreally. Increase It* patronage, bread** tbla locreaaed patrouage cantct be- fairly accommodated. Indeed* were k not for Iba voluntary use of ■ tbe Methodist Cburcb that la accorded tbe achool. It oould not have aucceeded even wltb lie preaent patronage of from Ova hundred to alx hundred teaobera, and yet, tbe natural ad vantagea of Ocean City, for tbla apeclal object, are raoognlzed aa supeziuflu thoae tbat ^an be afforded by any other reaort In the Slate. and we bare raaao'u to believe, If tbe facllltle* were lucreaaed. tbat It would not only" tt# . difficult to lake away tbla acbool from , Ocean City, either by political or edu- ( rational influence*, but It* develop- , ment might ultimately be carried to ( Bra or alx thousand teachers. t Therefore, If we had an admlniatrs a lion building, adequately equipped for ( tbe cxclualre uac of tbla acbool during ( tbe months of July and Auguat. It r ' would give ireaDaodoua Impetua to tbe , would give tremeodoua impetua to the ,
acbool 'a future bar* and would encour a age and atlmulate tbe promotora of j tbla acbool to tbat future development wblcb wa bava In view c Again, wa. regard Ocean City a* „ greatly lacking In attractlvene** aa a Q -deelrablr winter borne, not only for Q. fntura realdeots but for tboae already a beta, and we favor tbe InMltutlon of a a Community Bulldlog. properly beated ■ )c janltorad and maintained for tbe uae . of oor people ' during nine or ten al months of tbe year, and such school „ admlnlat ration building aa your com- .. mlllee baa planned wonld be thor-
oughly adaptable to aucb purpose ■ during tbe rest of tbe year Bach a bulldlog, for tbla dual purpoae. could be deaigoatad aa - Memorial Hall" or "Mamortal Building," and on Ibe *M* walla ot Ita mam- totrauce a suit abla tablet could be flxad with Ibe name of every boy who baa worn tbe uniform In tbla war, 'whlcb name* would atand Indelibly fixed -fuf all Uae# to come, aa an honor Iq/perlah able aa tbe broom llaalf, and all tboae who wonld paaa Ita portals would read tbem, and reeogntm tbat tbe entire adiBrn teas dedicated a a a memorial to tbe namee tbereon . Tbaiefore, wa recommend tbe tree lion of racb a Mamortal Bnlldlug upon the ground now ownad by tbe city, bmweda Fifth and Btxtb streets and Wmday and Oeaan avenues, bat euggsat, bawevar, tbat It be erected on Weetoy avenue. wUbln a reasonable dtitanea of Sixth street, bat ail" Iba gmood be flllad and graded from Wet lay aveuae eastward , to tbe extant of al Moating all unsightly and unsanitary hollow* tbat It may be a proper amtteg to each a building, and we also laeammiad that, aa a part of tbla me ■taftal acbama, tbe balance or If Meek, from Fifth I* Blxfb .treats, be , irow f ma 10 oixtn streota, be
Jald-eut ta taenia court* wblcb could ko aftamd gratis ta Iba rammer acbool dnrteg Ma aaajlon* but would yield a NtabM from I hair aaa by tbe public ganarally tbraugboat tbe year. Tfta plana of aocb a atrncture In It ftl tbab aasslona, Would couelat of a gymnattam room of a aim tbat would mat from eight hundred to one thou abad people, with a platform or stage at oaouad, wftb )ba. floor apparatua so ■tad tbat they could bo quickly removod and the faaunluga covered by flush locks that wonld leave a per . fralF mauilb floor that could bo osed Ibt nay social or public purpose with v. little eflort; whereas, n»a overhead eqatpmeal cob Id always romaln aud bat constitute any objection lo the room's m for aaaembly purpoam. Wttbln the building, we would recommend iba bonaeng of our public library and Urn eoeatto o would give m opportunity far aollclilog contrlbu i Uana to tbla library from every aource mttll H would boeomo one of great uae aod value to tbe communiiy and be _ fl*M*rly Mleuded by a librarian l-lnii. *** roon— • emoklng rooms, a freedom Y*. rg0m' bo"d f000". «e-. ta' .complete Ibe equipment, all of 1 wh_ »oaM b* exactly tba arrangew^3nt of araet oonvralenee to tbe sumtaer echool for Its am, as wall aa to wtatar aammunlty urn. We believe that racb a building will be appreel i Mad daring iba winter by every resldoMortba resort, end that tt would ■iweed tba fame of Ocean City as . _ winter boon and add to tbe comfort < and pleasure of winter guest., who. wa troat la the near futorOwill find . accommodation In hotels equipped for winter nse. Wa would recommend tbat tbla me- , mortal f Ingram be planned upon a ■Mle U> represent a ooet of about $100.- c aad wb foal congdcnt tbat, aside „ ftcm tba honor tbat It will bring tbe . ^ *• "Mtaeriai, from tbe pleasure , Md entertainment tt will give its cltl*ta M a Community Bnlldlug. it ■ w > *** sorvtoe to tba great enter pOaaof afuture rammer wbool on * Una* prove aa good a flnanclal 1 OMerprtm for tbe city as oould . be obtained from My UN or ibis ram' of taonqy In My other direction. 1 Tba commtttm oompri-rd tbe fol- f toWng oaamd: B. W. Edward* Fmf. Jama, M. Btevans. K. Curtl* r Hnlilaaoo, Barry P. Btonton, Clayton 1 Heine. Brick. Dr. Allan Corson aod J Hra. a L. Ooff.- I It waa developed at tba general dla- c m.slao at tba meeting tbat there was £ • taellng tbat, tf tba building I. to be l on net met ad, It would be far better to ■ •tart operations aa qolckly aa poaelble. I •vm 1 beach tba eoat of ma ta rial may ' bftMgb,ralbm I ban to delay beginning , th*W<** **W ,UI " wpnld be the , ami i mlml mora tat tba city toatait ' Wrtatatba nam of ooaatraetlng tbe ' btaMtafl wonld be borne by tbe mom- I 5' "l- **• l bought of mambsn of ' fbo irmmbli i waa that tba farolab- J ' pnblle sub- j L W14' coo Un sad, wltb 1
CHORCHES BEGIN ) SPECIAL SERVICES The Rev. m. m. Lewis 7 Preached Opening Sermon at Union Meetings. " Tbe special series of meeting* oflhe- " Methudi-t and Baptist congregations j e lo Ibe Methodist Church began Sun 1 " Kev. Marple M Lewis, pastor of the 1 First .Baptist Chiiacb. His subject ^ «*« ■ -The Ureateet Movement In His- , ' tory." he reading as^a text Mart I; 1 16 30, particularly 1 he* word/. "Come 1 ye after me aod I will mate you fish- ' era of men." 1 This reference !• an account of the calling of the first four disciples" Ills 1 the beglunlng of the greatest tnove1 ment lo history, the beglunldg of an ' organized Christianity agilu-t orgs::. f Ized aud Institutionalized evil, a cofij ' fliet from wbl(*b no oue can escing ' participation, lj woe the germinal of 1 all that vast social movement jtnnng ' ineu through past centurle- flowering 1 stone, tbe labor movement- for economic and "octal Justice, woman eufTragr alW the overthrow of Ibe liquor traffic beg.D wltb tbe individual by re pentance, faitb lo Christ and a sell sacrificing actum on tbe part of tlie Individual. As-dt began, so It must iiiuivioubi. ns-11 lens". " «•
always ad vauce, tbruiigh ine ludtvl f Tbe pastor than showed bow tin# " cballenge to (base four meu eamenot men who bad an tnuer revelation . of who Jesus was— they knew nothing , of Htm as tbe Son of God— but Hie moral attachment for Him. They fob J lowed from thai point and daily grew Into a deeper and fuller kuowledgr and love of Jesus uutil that moment ' when tbey recognlz -d Him asChrieh tbe Bon of Ibe Living God tbe
The pastor tbeu amid that II could be * said of all folks pre-eut that they ai least bad a moral attachment for Jesus ** Christ; no one bated Him To" them. ir no matter bow mucb or bow little a 1 talent, tbe call come* today to follow Jesus Christ tbrougb what was the e greatest movement lu all blstorv, tbe ' bringing about of tbe kingdom of God. * (he reign of God Id tbe bearle of meu 1 upbw-Ui^earili He tbeu showed bow tbla coui^ not t* brought to pass ' through world kingdoms aa Uiey were eatabllsbrd and lived on. force aud * more f.irc* He showed bow it could not come tbrougb a mechanical social adjustment alone. Hejevaaied bow ' il must come tbrougb tbe Individual J tbrougb personal regeneration, fur clr * en instance* did not make character. It was character tbat made- circumstances. 1 Wltb tbla true, be urged etrongly ' tbat Christian people catch tbe vision ' of Ibe ponlbllllles tbrougb their ener " getle folio wi ng of Jesus Christ. Pollow from tbelr standpoint of moral at. tacbment for Christ aa did these fuur ' man. aod, tbrougb following and 9 tbrougb service In accord wltb the ~ Ideals of Jeans, tt wonld not only lead ' into a fuller and richer life for tbe In- * iuiu a lunvr suu ricuer ill* lor lue in-
* dividual, bul a graatful result in service to our fellow-men. " He made applications calculated tu * awaken the conscience of Ocean City'lc me«i aofl woman In an effort to get tbem to see tbe trutb aud their posel- ° blllttaa from anew angle and of the thing* tbat could be wrought by an * awakened and aplritual Chrutlau pto. * pie in Ocean City. * to interest youths Ctwts as hows for toau mess of ' Ftrat Bsspilai church, d A young men's das* waa orgaulzed h In Ibe Pint Baptist Hunday School a last Sunday, wltb Claytofa Haloes a Brick a* teacher, aod four young, men * aiound tbe ages of 18 to 20 years. In' addition to the class on Sunday h tbe basement of Mr. Brick's liome hc being prepared as a club room.'aud the t pastor, tbe Kev. M. M. Lewis, is mi | irauglng many Inleresliug Indoor * games, rachas lhe army men liked. t lo play, aod be will Introduce Ibeui ( among tbe hoys a* tbey jg£ow iu uum here. Prjday nlgbt Is their meeting 1 i nlgbt, aud, while ibe uieetiugs are in progress lo the Methodist Church, the 1 j and young meu will gather after ' nine o'clock. ^ i vyacht club notes i 1 Past Commodore aud Mrs. Charles c 1 J Currau leave tomorrow for New f ' Orleans, golug by steamei . c Dr. and Mr.. Fredrick A. Black will- » go to Florida for a few weeks' rest. 1 Jacob Bsiswanger Is ab.ut again f and hat almost recovered from lna 1 raeaot accident. * Thomas M. Scott has accepted tbe , Chairmanship of the lawn tenuis com- , of tbe Ocean City Yacht Club, t and members are assured of auotber t successful season. i . r — 1 want some book? Tell aeisa Btrkaa si ihw C , iswbllc Llbrari. | Tbe book committee of tbe Oceau I PuWtc Library la arranging to 1 purchase a number of new books. 1 Are I hers auy Special books lb* 1 reading public would care to have lu ' library? If so, tell the librarian, J Marguerite Meebau and she w ill | tbe list of desired book* to the , commute* Id charge. The library was repepered ■ few , 1 days ago by Evan Lear, decorator, of i Ibis city. i — ■ ' deemed' advUs?" "" m(rcut*er',t>i P If , ' Tba commute* loloqk luto tbe prop- ' 1 mition to erect ■ tcmtiorary arch re- I s ported progress. The t-tnnatrd cost I I of this arch is from f IUU0 to H.ioo, n,c ' < money to come from popular *uh. i acrtptlon. j ! Mayor Champion, for tbe commit- '1 ■ lee ou headquarters for service men ■' r that the Keil.uce Fire Com) 1 ' rto"»ivd the u«e of Us rooms, I as has tbe )..ung Men'* -Progressive- I irf?**"®" 11 *•' """"f''1 'bat a bureau ! of informal lou for tbe service mau 1 i i may b* aalablwhed in the city hall I 1
s I ^ i| $16.45 Suit | i,| ,1 j | By VINCENT G. PERRY | ie ) (CopyrUrhtf^^^M^-lur, .Ncwspa"ed a dlsplap tlmi gladdi-niil Hi.'- Iiourte , j of bergnfn hunters. lMvld ljiirfl could i not In- cinsMfl aa a ImrcLln -hunter. ~ ' I-Ut Just the aaini- be st..pi~>d iu front • j of tin- w-lndofc and .n.r the ie suits 'dhq-loycd. *Thcy were all marked >• down tof ICA5. They looked very well . on thd dniumh-s and apie::red oortli ,e the price. It was for a n.-w suit be is bud e-lm.- downtown, and^these wore , „ and be went In to purchase on,-. ] Walter Mlteliell. -manamc of the I" store anil a persona! frt.-n-l of I hold's. J got aw-ay from the bargain hnnn-r. who | ' had Ih-,*ii dahuting for ov.-r an hour on | ' nhlel, -suit .w -u!d w.-ar longest and ! which would fade soonest, and irfiutof ' f<* Pave. J - "I want -a suit Walt". Pave aV] - nnunced. after he J*-<1 lei-n welcomed t by Mltcbel]. ' - j "Come right npstalra to onr fitting j ' they know It' lr for«ou.' You are the j best -adrqrtiwtueut -they have." Mltehdl started to lead the way. hut j
jOave put a "restraining hand on his ; shoulder. ( | •#Vo. Walt; I went n ready- -matt? suit — one of those $11.45 ones in niel window," he said. I *Whatr; Mitchell asked In sttrprtse. j | Joking.'" ' But Page assured him he was not. | "Well. Dave, you always hfive had I the name of being the heft-dressed [ man -at the club, and the must pnr-j ' tirular. What will Miss For-y:hc "say s Uemar. wnat win miss lor-yini- sny .«
Mltehi'll was not quite convinced of ,- {•ave's alncerlty. 1 1 It won't 'mate any differ nee to j s Heater. Why should it? You didn't n see me at -her house last night, did ; I your Pace's Injured tone showed j tl where tbe contention lay. J I "No. but I thought you were out of j tt tow-q. I didn't think II possible that ' n Hester and jS>u could. ever become nsj angry at one another as ull thai. Y'oue < a little quarrels always seem to patch \ « up quicker and easier -than anyone j tl else's." I h "Well, there Is no sign of this one '► patching up. and I lu.|.c It never does I fleeter has gone too far this time," j * Dave said decidedly. "How about the j o: suitr i w Pave did not take long In choosing ■ '■ a rait. Almost the first one he tried on fitted him, and be ordered It sent ■' to his apartment. After he bad gone " out Mitchell looked after him. pep " plexed. "Whatever hoe gofOnto Pave , '< Laird to wear a cheap suit. I don't know. God. -tbough. even It looked good on htm." he said t <S himself. "Til j bet this quarTel Is the cause of tin ^ wholf thing. ' I've beard of fellows A going to the dogs Just over a quarrel 1 sfHh some. girl, and this Is about 'the * first step down for Dave." j a Dave arrived at his apartment he- 1 fl fore the rait It was not from neces- j 11 r fore the It ,
sltyr be hnd bought the suit, but from ! foiee of habit It had been his enstorn to buy a hew suit the first of every " month, and he was going to find the ■' habit hard to break. I- "I'm never going to be extravagant e again." be said to himself as be went n through his wardrotw-. "lu send all ! i. these clothes to the Old People's home. Heaven* wouldn't some old man took great In- this plnch-bnck ; it > cost. $63, and doesn't look much in The Idea of tbe old man In his smart ' ' suit appealed to) Dove's sense of humor and he laughed for the first time ' :1 In two day* j Mitchell surmised correctly when he j ' S thought Hester was tbe cause of | , Dave's cheap purchase. Pave had al- ! ways had more money than he knew ! what to do with, and had llttla-ldea 1 how to make himself really miserable, j ' " Changing his appearance and "going ' '' on the rocks." he thought, would be 1 the most terrible things that could i 1 ' happen to him and would nff.-ct Hester ' , most. But as he sat down and thought 1 i It over tt crossed his mind that per- f . haps after all he wasn't reaching the ' , desired end. j ' , "I think I'll be a hermit." he said 1 , aloud. Buster, his pet Boston terrier. 1 1 came over to him ot the sound of his j ' voice. "Nobody loves me now." Tlie i 1 dog licked his hand by way of contradiction. Dave laughed a little more cheerily. A knock on the door at the foot of : his stairs announced the arrival of the 1 suit. Dave opened the parcel vn<! took ' out the suit. It wasn't so bad. he do- J elded,, but » was certainly different 1 from the class of clothes he was ac- ' customed to wearing. What would ' clothes matter, anyway, when "there no one to admire them? He wnnlfi j give all his money to charities, and Iemartyr In the true "sense of the word. The more he looked at the suit the more the thought of what Hester would think of tt cropped up in his mind. It didn't look had from a disbut a close Inspection showed the poor qunllty of the goods, he saw when be. tried tt on. It wouldn't be that Hester wonld ever get eloso enough to him to aee Its defects That was the worst of it. He could not help stopping to ndmlre bis stalwart figure as It api>eared j tho mirror. The thought crept Into i mind that It would not be so hard , to find a girl to Uke Hester's place but be quickly dispelled It. No. no glri t could ever take Hester's place. Un- , consciously hi* hand went Into th* wide pocket of the coat. His flnv-era • touched a ,st(ff piece df paper and he out an envelope. Very uneonf wraedly he looked at It. His name was written on tt. He open. si it r ,or " """ IU'S,"'S <vr'tlug. He took out the short note and read It . hurriedly: . "Dave liear— 1 am sorry. It was all 1 my fault and I can t do without you. 1 . When I said you couldn't come to the 1 . I didn't mean It at all. and IU 1 i heart-broken If you don't t HESIKB™ I j Dave glanced at the date hurriedly. I 1 '!*V,mU.da5'" oli She had written ' fl the day before the party. He bur- < rtrd to the telephone and was talking ' - ' ure L" lu"1 Ume "'toy i "Rtaler. will yon ever forgive me? I «ot your note." be aald. •—."ilia JUL U Mt fikUtrJiuB OA ' 1
~ ' L - 3S that t«e? Why. It was iH'Sted two flays 2 i ago. I can't forgive you. You rm-V « roe so miserable that lav party wa- a j » failure." The girls nil noticed your nb8 : sent* and whispered about tt. You did | There wis the same doubting tone, « that had hi-en ;he cause- of most e-f » their quarrels, hut Dave didn't noj; ti'ce it. 8 "I'm coming rlglit up." he said, and , ^ hang up the r.-ci-lyer before she had a- an "opportunity to refuse him tbe J rlvllege. is' Hester was,at the door to meet him. | it- j "I know tt all now." were the words is ' she greeted' him with after they got Id i Inside. "Hut how did you get that •r. {'letter? Did Walter Mitchell find It at "and give It to youT 1 gave the note to to j fathor's-nwv secretary to l*-st for tne. j d ' He remembered that he left It lu .tba II (.suit of oloAes he was wearing a! the I h | time, aad has since returned the .-ult i o- to. Mitchell's because tt was a poor fit i "But Walter didn't flr.d-ii." laughed , Dave. "1 found It lo the pocket of thla • ie ! suit— a $;«.« one. How do yon like j *iitr • i. "It's the on* dad's "secre tary liad !" j n sbe'jgnaprif. "What In the world aro | ,1 ! yon doing hi a /1C.43 suit?" " | e4c_~no you think I look terrible in tt?" j *1 "Y'ou hs-k ftllee in anytlfmc " she i smiled back; "hut I hope th.yll ti.ke tt bark, for you look Intter In your p other ones." •• j "Well. iH-forc I do I think I had 's-t- j , ' 111 Otkg out w ill be this marriage ,.j license. I secured if on the was her-.
J j rel will Jc«d to " •' , ! looked up with a «tnt!,- and said:' . , Tm through with quarrel*" : DOCTORS A BIG WAR FACTOR Mtnln-U^. Disease R*i*gat i | ed to Background. ) "The doctor has made this, world struggle one of the least deadly ever i ; struggle of the least deadly
I fought In proportion to the numbers j 'engaged. The" spade Is-tuigbtier than i ] the shrapnel, the scalpel than the , sword." the test tube than the tre-Bch mortar. Chlorine saves more Uvet a\ j Dakin's fluid and Ideacluug powder] j than It destroys as poison ftta-.'' said j j Dr. Woods Hutchinson In a recent lec- ! at the Royal Society of Medicine, j notes ^he 'London Globe. Less than one-twentieth of the wnstjage of wars three years morVTigo | due to wounds og death In bntj ; the other 85 per cenf was caused I disease, epidemics and pestilence ' In (he field and at home. I In the armies themselves the ratio : was six to nine deaths by disease to In battle or from wounds-. In this ] war the ratio. has been sixteen deaths By wiping out epidemics the doctor has actually kept the death rale among civil populations of the allied countries as low a* and In some cm«es . than, it was befor^ the war. Perpetual Honeymoon* > woman writer asks If a perpetual can exist In this modern and quotes In connection with the question what another woman said, town : "Any woman who has llred with , man eleven years can find ground ! divorce." There is much talk of kind and there are many divorce* „. mis Kina nno tnere divorce*
m | all of which are the product of jnaterlallsm, which doesn't see the dlffer--r ence hetw,-en pleasure and happiness. That fact In Its real working Is behind j all divorces and married Infelicities, it i ^rhe tan~ ls ,hat ll,™Fur<> 's material ,t j an<1 ""flu wears out ; happiness ls spir,1 1 ttnal and lasts forever. Every marrlnge must note these standpoints, for , they ore swayed by one or the tuber. Il 18 the a#e °r divorces,' hecanse materialism flourishes as never before. I It makes the husband Imimtlcnt and I the wife IntoleranL When, a couple J reaches that state they should sing old hymns together and go to prayer I meeting. Cigars and dry goods won't p ■ save them. — Ohio State Journal. ' Importance of Paraguay. j It was from Ascundon, I'uraguay, t that parties went ou{ to found Buenos , Aires, Sunta Fe. Corrientes and others j of the Important cities of the Slyer p region. Iu fact. Argentina and j | were once under the JuaUr ' diction of the governor of Ascunclon. t aud It was at the request of a I'ura- . governor that Argentina was . cut -off from I'araguuy. The first rall- ; road constructed In South America waa I In Paraguay. The first iron foun- ; dries, the first cannon and munitions j factories of South America were all ' established In Paraguay." - , Great Salmon Spawning Ground. From early In March unt'l late lo f the great annual lire, -ding , of the salmon goes 'on. Ujni 1.700 ; miles of coast line, from BrSfiol Bay . Alaska, to the Feasor river In Brit- , Columbia, the salmon swarm _ moves In regular and wonderfully reg- , ulated procession up the various fresh J and die, as did their parents four years * before. p Tempus Fugitl , A trnlnloud 'of newly drafted men r reached their cantonmenl late In the K afternoon. By the'ttgne they liad .. passed through the receiving station j and the hands of the doctors, tt was 1 v nearly midnight Several of them were ! e awakened at four o'clock the following i 0 morning to assist the cooks In prepare ! , Ing breakfast. As one well-built. sleepy drafted man got to his feet, he |. Stretched and yawned: -It doesn't j | take long to spend a night In the j army." — Everybody^ ^lagazine. Bump, ee the Head. j The lump raised by a blow. on th» . hl'ad !s Off to the resistance offered" , by the hard skull and its ,-l-sc eocuec- , tlon with 'the tin>v.-i!, I,- elastic sealp hr . many ctrvuin<-nl..,| hands of eonnee . Uve tissue The ri-sul, „f n blow wl,.-« , the aenlp U not cut I- the bruising and. [ Jae- rat,-,,, of.nmoy of the small Id, set . W e..( juries Itioad ,lr t:« . fluid n>n«t!ti<ent. serum, is noured-into the in,-- lie.- Of ti„. surrounding ,-,r. I neetlve tlsrae. whir!, Is d-~. ate. i the well known bump or 1 -i' 'if , lyk. rnosl This r.-.nnot push It, »--,d . at nil and naturally "takes the line «t least resistance. Similar humps may . formed on the skia In exactly. ,!„• , aauie v.-.y. for the shin hone al-.. is . covered only by .kin and suhcutan.-ou, t connective tisso*. t The am ot ,t,r worm Is to prn,*.- 1 *,llJl* 4U<1 tlftng ones 1 1 '
IB of stone ,-uttlnc - j I hard. soft. rn«t and terra oott* -new taetlwda have wrought great "I -b-nges 'i"te- In the large cutting plants ittnesjoae I* handled like so '' murk - wood and Is Cut .by circular "7 smoothed t«y plane* and bore-d '"las are- u--d by wo, d workers. By alii ! neons the most int, -re-sting machine * 1 n-d IU tills work Is the diamond saw. J. J . The word "diamond" i» not fancifully | "j ai'|ol,-d. for the Jed,* actually In- i ! said to worth -a boat $:. a karat. • These ,- - aledlt ' the Size of 1 '•dried |H-n- - ,n,i ire -,< In palm In In 8 -t.,' le.-tn. One of J il tie- " • twelve In, -lie. »p;:; i".t' f . 513 ,r 4 - - V"7H£;i
r, a - .,'son.l ,,-ar ll*|, ! IL- riiecbnhJL0 ZZ ;
The Bottle Trea. ■ Tin- Slerculla. Is a genus lr.rgely r.-p ! resented lb Qu.vnslaud auJ widely di»t cat the -ssl- of one of thi species of P | tt»6 coast, and In the Philippines those]; qf angfrcntly a closely -allied sjas l.-s ' are' considered wholesome when roast ed' or botH. though eaten In large t family l.-ing re-hitwl-so the^Tbcohroma world w ith cocoa and chocolate. When , the fruit splits o;«tn It Is a brilliant ' ' scarlet with an orange tinted Interior. Along the patled edge* are the seed* ' oval and black, cove'red with a rich j purple bloom The fruit being- tough long time, forming a most effective dls- ■ play lu the gloom of the Jungle— T- t P.'s London Weekly. _ < A Fiah Story. "The Inns of dear old Englabd are n picturesque." srld ttkhard LeGalllenne, J "but the f,»s! they serve Is something a terrible. £ "After, a visit to Itlenbelm palace 1 M entered an inn In the qqglnt Tillage of Woodsto- k )ks I lunched— or tried to lunch— tny landlord said to-tne: s "The greut'dook of Marlporoogh - once set In that chair you're a settin In. sir ' *' '1. that I ^ Is so? said L
"'And the dook once drunk 'Is beet out o' that same mug you're a-drinkln 5 OUtof L " 'And I 1-ot. said 1. 'I bet be refused I to eal tills fish too Well, take It . away. m» man. ' I don't want 11 w cither.' "—Philadelphia -Bulletin. » From the time when man wandered . through tlie pathless forest* bearing I on his shoulder a murderous bludgeon , with which to strikq^town his enemies , the cane has never entirely gone out of . faslflim. The modern exquisite would t f,-,-! as much at s,-a without It as did the beau of whom Steele's Taller spoke in 1708. when It said thpt the cane had "lecbnic as in,lis|>ensable a* any other of his limbs" and that with j ":'io knm-k'.ac of It upon bis shoe. , leaning one leg upon It or whistling . upon with his mouth he docs not know . how he should be "good company wttb- ' out it." it may Ik- Battering lo the vnntty of such a one to know that the ' grotesque and arabesque beads that be delights In displaying on hia walking ' stick are lineal descendants of the ' carved baton Unit the fools an.d Jest- | era of the mi ldle.agos wielded. > Mighty Ca palls. I The star Capella Is a hundred times brjghtcr and1 hotter than onr sun. If th? earth were as near to Cnpclla as tt ts to the sun ilic thermometer (If an I Instrument could he made, capable of ; hearing such a tcmperutnreij would rise I in July not merely to a hundred, hnt r to lO.bOO degrees P.! The ocians whu!d . fly off tu puffs of steam Tbesforest* i and fields would kindle 'and tiurn Ilk,- . matcliwood. ibe mountains and hills , would melt like beeswax lu a redbot I oven! The earth lu the rays of Ca , pella would be as a moth In a candle flame. - New York Journal. a Here Is nn amusing Instance of his 1 j trlonli- conceit- An Interviewer, hav a i lug obtained access to tl„- presence o! e j If he would !w kind enough to desrrib. I some of his early failures,. - I "Sir." suapia-d the trag.-dian. "I nev ' ; er bad any.' James the door!" ' ^ _ ,Wher.e " p,nched- . < you for twenty lire louts?" ] I* the giving of It t'o* yotJ" 't- "bVlf , S. ^ Pages Folles. ■ Th A" Lab<" '* Worth»- ' I I work done liy ihc brains or tl„°- lift ! I. would not |K- worth having.— Rusklm I "What's your burryP' J i attnd an^':,ry ~,K* eno,l8h " ! I ^ Kar.garoo Sinews. J s, in, SS m sewing wounds and hmdlng broker Engaged Man- l.„v-, 'me? Why. ah* £ actually counts th,- tkses I give her' ' Cynical Frtcnd-ThsP, had. Sh* may | It up after your marriage.— Boa ' Transcript 1 r
ARE you using Eclison Mazda Larxips? If not, why not? They give three times > as 'much light as the old style Carbon lamps for the same current consumption. i - OCEAN CITY ELECTRIC SERVICE of Atlantic City' Electric Company
Try an Advertisein the Sentinel . and eet Quick Results. . :i
Notice of SFlllemeul. SherilTs Salr. I tbeappSftraM^ U.°ui?l^U|P3"" " " " 1 I l""'V »IJ,1rtti2'?o*Th**1 Ptore 'or" 'n*. !, tol'j5 ' Kofihirr s'JM t'u.Klt'sncrl'r An Ordinance. ^ r'
ad ordinance 'to batld. oon.troct. rebuild, i recast rurt and repair U,r i-ublli 11 -arils ,1k n N* wVw^Tra°providlnx0mr ' th^^t^'.fd ' 1C Uerelnaftcr *, t forth. ' . n a wtdtho/tlUrl*1 rra?fertWIC Boardwalk for - '' tbe t^bwrtahliw-' LV Vm nTlreelT'iT rv- ' fl teaM,and i.-.w -n - ,. vblcb aald l'nbltr Uoardwaik 1* to uultl, ct- 1 10 SS^ttfa^o^'wer't^Vlv "dlr- ct'un l^'and " it- liuodrpl and^Ofly aai^ourrenUiOret auutio e* bu n d'r ," I "ao '] 1 1 h *r r,'1 *hlol, |. |0„r •■uohunilodm.V'-r; ' 'ri££lre; ithrTiu*!*. uml "if i\'\ '"oh *""*• *J 'ncrl' WM paaaac* jure. u. CHAMPION, j ■ " r Commlulonera. Tb* al«,, 0,a1N(^™ |':' tqvy, New Jerary. al a lueeiinc u, be held In aswrsufe^i *-»■ ak. P. In toJt city Clark.
PHONE YOUR ORDER TWO PHONE8: 205, s2Q FRED P. BELL For Things Good to Eat SEVENTH STREET AND ASBURY AVENUE Roll. tbla place to do your marketing. Meats, Groceries Fruit, 1 > and Vegetables. FREE DELIVERY TO ALL PARTS OF CITY . V OPEN ALL THE YEAR /\ ii n o u ii eemertt \w«j)-akh now - located 1\ '" v 14 uuk.nliw an1) much l,\r«;i-:k storm at s48t85o a'stt'URV .W KXUI:, DJRIXTLV OP- . POSIT!-: CITY* HALL, \YHERF \YE W ILI. Hi: PLEASEP TO HAY 'E YOU CALL AXl) INSPECT OJUR MAY OU.YKTLRS. ' ;i - :: :: 'THE MODERN HARDWARE STORE OluiK. O. Rofid ctj. @o. W. E. ALLEN-. MC*. 'T '-J , j ■ ABVERTISE ii in fr&filB Gilf Sentinel published on thursday of each weekA J« RATES FURNISHED • ON APPLICATION -Phone, 13S-J * / ) - ' i ' "7 1 * ' ' ' 'si The Summer Resort OCEAN CITY, N. J. BATHING SAFE AND UNSURPASSED FINEST BEACH ON THE COAST THE HOME OF THE FAMILY MAN . Spacious Boardwalk. Free Band Concerts During Season. Great Fishing in Ocean and Bay. The Delight of the Yachtsman. Numerous Trains to and from Philadelphia on JHiree Railways Within easy access of Atlantic City and other well-known resorts MANY/CHURCHES NO SALOON9 R. CURTIS ROBINSON •*£5BBgC-0->ta^-|*-Notary Phblis and ©commissioner of deeds - Numbers 744 mid 746 Asbuiy Avenue Ocea» Cm - . Nlw JlM„

