■ stone harbor gazette __________
JOHN }. TURNER Real Estate and Conveyancing MONEY TO LOAN ON 1st AND 2nd MORTGAGES ; Philadelphia and Suburban Real Estate 1 20 1 Chestnut Street Philadelphia
Justices of the Peace Commissioner of Deeds Insurance Agent Notary Public GEORGE J. RUMMEL AGENT FOR SALE OF LOTS, TRACTS OF LAND, RENTING AND ERECTION OF COTTAGES AT STONE HARBOR List your property with me and I will find a customer for you. If you contemplate buying in Stone Harbor secure my "For Sale" sheet — best locations. STONE HARBOR, N. J. WILLAM L. TURPIN KENARD N. TURPN WILLIAM L. TURPIN I SON CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS Third Avenue near 95th Street STONE HARBOR, N. J. Plans, Specification and Estimates Free Personal Attention Given All Work WANTED. Two lots, 50 feet on Corinthian Drive, bordering on Basin. Give lowest cash price with full particulars. Apply BOX 213 STONE HARBOR, N. J. JOHN GARIS CEMENT BLOCKS AND CONTRACTOR 92nd Street above 3rd Avenue. STONE HARBOR, NEW JERSEY WM. T. Struthers GROCERIES, MEATS AND PROVISIONS, HARDWARE and TINWARE, GENTS FURNISHINGS, SHOES. STONE HARBOR, N. J. We want your trade. Your patronage solicited. "Prompt Service Our Motto." — — —I im ii ' i when you yourself, you benefit the cdvonlser and benefit m. RICH. C. HILL General Contractor and Construction Work PILE DRIVING A SPECIALTY STONE HARBOR, N. J.
t-OR SALE Four lote, 110 x 110, on First avenue and Eighty-sixth street. Reasonable price, terms to suit. Apply Box 213. Stone Harbor, N. J. Four lots, 110 x 110, on Eighty-filth street, abutting on Railroad Plaza Ideal location for business. Apply Box 213, Stone Harbor. N. J. Cottage containing seven rooms. New, situated on great Channel, near Yacht Club: all conveniences. Apply Box 213 Stone Harbor, N. J. Well-built three story house, all modern improvements, beautiful lawn and shrubbery, lot 100x110. 83rd St., near Second Ave. Price reasonable, Apply, 2141 N. 8th Street. Phila.. Pa. Four lots. 110x110. Corner 89th St. and First Avenue. Two lots. 60x110 on 83rd Street near First Avenue. Two lots, 50x110 on 96th Street near First Avenue. Two lots. 70x90 on 36th St., near Sunset Drive. tl
I Two lots, 60x110 on Second Avenue , and 86th Street. Special low prices j j and terms to suit purchasers. . I Secure my prices before buying i elsewhere. 1 J Apply. ( 8441 N. 8th Street. Phila. Phone Kensington, 1804-1J.
! fi. NEWELL MU LINOS 4 tto rney-at-Law Ocean City, N. J.
NEXT WEEK AT THE THEATRES By Delbert E. Davenport. Oliver Morosco's tremendously successful play of Irish people, "Peg O' My Heart," now in its eighth week at the Adelphi Theatre. Of greatest appeal through the quaint epigrammatic utterance of the auburn-haired Peg, together with the rich humor of the lines and the many convulsive heart throbs of love and sympathy, the Philadelphia presentation has the advantage of enact ment by the same company that has to its credit a twenty week's run at the Cort Theatre, Boston, where it attracted nearly $200,000 to the box office. This delightful comedy, presented as it is, by Mr. Morosco's especially selected cast of players, "Peg" is playing to better houses here than it did in Boston. The action of the play takes place in Scarboro, England, where Peg, a wild, miscievous girl has been sent by her father, an Irish socialist, of New York, to her aristocratic relatives, in order than they may educate her. The charm of "Peg O' My Heart' lies in the beauty of the love story. Miss Florence Martin, who interprets the name part in such an irresistible manner, surprises and delights her audiences. To have succeeded Lauretta Taylor, the original Peg, and to capture the hearts of' the cold New York, Boston and Philadelphia playgoers, is a revelation to those who have watched her short career on the stage. The work of Miss Martin's supporting cast, which includes II. ReevesSmith, I-lassard Short. Alma Tell, Lisle Leigh, Peter Bassett, Lewis Broughton, Margaret Forrest and Frank Burbeck, is of superior merit, who appeared at the Cort Theatre, New York, for 004 consecutive performances. William Faversham will play a limited engagement at the Lyric Theatre in the great Paris and New York success, "The Hawk," by Francis de Croisset, which ran for a year in Paris and for twenty weeks on Broadway. The consensus of critical opinion in New York was that "The Hawk" is the greatest play of Faversham's career. It is certain that it duplicated in New York the sensation that it created in Paris. The optimism of "The Hawk" has had much to do witli its popularity. Then there is the splendid acting, the scintillating dialogue, the powerful dramatic climaxes and the charming love scenes. The cast of "The Hawk" includes such prominent players as Emilie Polini, Conway Tearle, Frank Losee, Grace Henderson, Wallis Clarke, Ethel West, Elsie Oldham. Pauline Whitson, William H. Burton. V. L. Granville, Richard Dix, Harold Meltzer and Herbert Belmore. The gowns by Doucet created a furore among the fashionables of New York. The production is a revelation of artistic taste. The furnishings always create comment because of their perfect harmony. NIXON'S GRAND OPERft HOUSE Week of April 19th. No bill offered at Nixon's' Grand Opera House in the past year or more offers strong inducements for the patronage of the devotees of popular price vaudeville than the one announced for the week of April 19tli. B. A. Rolfe's "The Lonesome Lassies," is a dazzling musical comedy by Will M. Hough, author of many successes, will be the chief feature of the all-star show. "The Lonesome Lassies,", is lavish in splendor, in dialogue and humorous scenes. This is really one of the most pretentious acts of its kind ever presented. Roxy La Roca with his famous harp, will furnish a treat for those who revel in good music, and lie has chosen the kind of music that always catches the ear of the music-lover. Philadelphia has produced no more popular artists than the Jlosconi Brothers, who call their act "Follies of Vaudeville." TLey have no superiors as dancers and inject enough comedy into their. act to make it one of the best. Weston and Young are a clever pair of entertainers. Weston is a unique comedian, and Miss Young a pretty and capable partner, in songs and dances that please. White and Calm, European acrobats, come to this country witli a novelty and have been winning favor everywhere. A series of lntigh-porvoking moving pictures will keep the comedy up to the usual standard.
WALNUT STREET THEATRE Her Specialty is Losing Stage Children. Edith Shayne, who plays the distracted mother of the lest child in "The Dummy," is a careless woman, judging from her x'Ccord in the "Lost . and Found" department of the stage. | This is the third season she has lost her child in the dramatic shuffle, and hysterics are becoming a habit of hers The first child she lost was little Helen Pullman, who is remembered as the stage child in "The l'rince Chap." -Miss Shayne lost Helen Pullman all over the United States in "Plucky and the Dream Lady," to the acc-ompani- ' ment of the splashing tears of unnumbered audiences and hysterics eight j performances a week during the entireseason. She lost Iter child tit every town, doing one-night stands on the road with George Beban in "At the j Sign of the Rose" last season, a new j child in every town, and the hysterics ^ she thereby acquired over her successive losses won her "The Dummy" engage- , ment. ] "On the road in 'At the Sign of the ; Rose,' " says Miss Shayne, "we adver- ( Used ahead, and each morning when we reached a new town 1 hud to choose a j new child to lose from among twenty ] or thirty mothers' darlings lined up ] ready for the role. You don't know | what an ordeal it is to choose a moth- s er's darling every morning after break- | fast. 1 grew very fastidious. Really, • it was like being the juuge at the baby j show, because all the other nineteen or twenty-nine mothers, as the case might | he. whose darlings I had not chosen, j were duly indignant and disapproving. ] "The fmmiesc experience 1 had was with a sweet little thing in one Western town. 1 noticed at tile matinee 1 when I let out the blood-curdling shriek ! and rushed for my 'ch-ild,' grabbing her ; and going off into the usual tit of hys- , terios, that this child didn't like it very J well, that she looked rather wild-eyed 1 aud frightened. Well, when the child j was to be brought in that night she • utterly refused to come. She bolted, and had to lie carried on screeching a. the top of iter voice. With excitement : and nervousness and a desire to laugh. of hysterics as I seized the child, and we must have amused the audience int inensely, both screeching and weeping bitterly. The next morning, at the next town, 1 selected a child with less 'temperament,' you may be sure." "The Dummy" is at the Walnut. CASINO THEATRE Week of April the 19th. i The Harry Hastings Amusement Co., Inc., Presents The Snappiest Offering in Burlesque HARRY HASTINGS' BIG SHOW With an All-Star Cast of Favorites in "On and Off the Earth" : The Laughing Sensation of the Season, with DAN COLEMAN and beautiful ; EILEEN SHERIDAN , Dances, Novelties and Feminine : Beauty Galore. Wives Find Husbands Lifeless. Failing to respond to calls for breakfast, William Leonard, 4!) years old, of . i No. (531 Liberty street, Camden, was : found dead in bed by bis wife, yestcr1 day. Audry Mizner, (15 years old, of | No. 1005 Sycamore street, also was I found lifeless in bed by bis wife. Cor- ' oner Busliey issued certificates of death ; from heart trouble. 1 Dividend for Haines Creditors. ' Creditors of the Linwood He in ; i Company, Limited, at a meeting ii t Camden yesterday afternoon declared ; a dividend of 20 per cent., and it was ■ stated that another dividend of 20 per . cent, was expected shortly. About two • months ago the concern passed into the : hands of the United Distributing Company of America.
FOR RENT Seven Room Cottage New, on Great Channel, Near Yacht Club; Three Bed-rooms, and Bath, By Season or Month. Apply Box 251, Stone Harbor f SEEDS ^[1 Garden Tools, Fertilizers, || Insect Destroyers, and j||
STATE TREASURY ISJBUROENED Hew Jersey Pays One-Fourth of Wages of Law-Required Trainmen. Trenton, April 13. It develops that the State of New Jersey is paying one-fourth of the cost of the unnecessary trainmen employed by the railroads of the State to comply witli the Full Crew — excess Nothing that has been urged in support of the proposition for repeal of this law, with power given to the Utility Commissioners to deas to the proper manning of trains, is carrying greater weight with officials and members of the than this fact, brought out William D. Edwards, of counsel for the Associated Railroads. Action by the Legislature enacting law the bill now held in the and Canals Committee of the House would result in increasing the revenue of the State of New Jerby the amount now lost to It in through the Full Crew Law. is about $93,000 a year. The way results is as follows: Under the Hansell formula used by the State Board of Assessors In dethe franchise value of railroads, which is subject tc a State tax of 2 per cent., the net revenue of the railroads is capitalized on a basis of 8 per cent, to give the franchise value. Such net revenue is the operating profit of the railroads after deduction of all expenses for operation and maintenance, including wages and taxes. Last year the wages paid to the men forced upon the railroads by this law amounted to $371,126, and U, that extent reduced the net revenues of the railroads. Tills, capitalized at 8 per cent, for the purpose of taxation, would be about $4,650,000. The 2 per cent franchise tax on that amount would give the State Treasury about $93,000. BOROUGH OF STONE HARBOR ORDINANCE NO. 5. An ordinance to prevent the dumping of refuse on the streets and other places in the borough of otone Harbor and requiring the clearing of the I. ""Be it ordained by tiie Mayor and t'ouncil of the borough of Stone Harbor, that no person shall throw or deposit upon any of the streets, sidewalks, or public places, or open lots, in said borough, any refuse of any kind, loose ashes (so as to prove a nuisance), paper scraps, debris, sweepings, kitchen washings, or any other objectionable mat*2. No builder o< contractor shall, for more than ten days after the completion of any building or structure where it has been necessary to use the public streets or highways to store lumber or any other building materials, leave any materials, or rubbish on said streets or highways. 3. Any person offending against the provisions of this ordinance shall, upon conviction thereof before the Mayor, Recorder or other competent authority, pay a fine, of twenty-five dollars for the use of the said borough. Passed this Fifth day of April, One Thousand Nine Hundred and Fifteen. S. E. HERBERT. President of CouncilApproved this Sixth day of April, One Thousand Nine Hundred and Fifteen. H. S. R1SLEY, Mayor. Attest:— Leo McCraven, Borough Clerk. ORDINANCE NO. 7. An ordinance to prevent the maintenance of mosquito breeding places. 1. Be .c ordained by the Mayor and Council of the borough of Stone Harbor, that no owner, lessee or ether person in charge of, or having the cave of any lands or premises shall aliow thereon' any pools or holes of stagnant water, nor allow any rainbarrels or leeeptacles holding water to remain uncovered, and to become stagnant, and thereby allow the said pools, holes, or receptacles to breed mosquito larvae. 2. Anv person offending against the provisions of this ordinance, shall, upon conviction of the same before the Mayor, Recorder or other competent aitluorit.y. pay a fine of twenty-five dollars fcthe use of the borough. Passed this Fifty day of April, One Thousand Nine Honored and Fifteen. S. E. HERBERT. President of Council. Passed this Fifth day of April, One Thousand Nine Hundred and Fifteen. II. S. lllSLEY. Mayor. Attest:— Leo McCraven, Borough Clerk. DISORDER Every person of sense knows what Disorder is. But it remains only for ■ I lie rare and unrsrul folks to recognize Disorder h.v translating it immediately There is no disorder in the working of Nature. Is "-a use Nature has a Master Mind to do its thinking for it. You are greater and more wonderful than Nature because you are f.ble to do your own thinking. But if you don t. vou cannot help but fall into confusion and Disorder. Big people' are masters of the trivial. ---how great' a' } art they plu.v in the censtiu'crioi: of the whole of affairs But tl'.e ordinary, fellow thinks that the mass of details that edge their way into work and service. Aud so Disorder creeps in and gets bigger and t i r spelling ««t in the end, either oriiitinvj success ignoble failure. Disorder is oasv to handle. It usually originates within the mind. So, therelore. the <-<a-reet mental attitude has to lie attained in order to drive I>isP,o convinced that, everything was made to run smoothly and you are half way to perfect order. Then watch ■ t'tlle detail's and care for the small !iffi>;r:-v that the average man usually pause.", by, and you will feel strength and courage aud power accumulating.
8. P. REEVES "THE MORRIS" BOARD BY DAY OR WEEK 84th Street Between 1st and 2nd Avenue stone harbor, n. J. David C. Chambers General Teamster, Hauling of All Kinds. Work Taken by Contract. Estimates Given. All Orders Promptly Attended To. Eighty-first Street, Stone Harbor, N. J. STONE HARBOR PHARMACY PURE DRUGS AND MEDICINES p: scription work a specialty.. Try our Compound syrup of White Pine and Tar for your Cough. Geo. Freshell STONE HARBOR, N. J. U if ' ■ THIS building For Sale or Rent; containing 2 large stores and 2 apartments of ten rooms each. 83rd Street and Second Avenue. WANTED Wanted to buy two lots, 50 feet front by 110 feet deep on Second avenue near 87th Street Station, Pennsylvania R. R. Holders having lots for sale in this immediate locality kindly submit very lowest cash price, with ternc. and foil particulars. Address Box 213, Stone Harbor, N. J. FOR SALE Two lots on Second avenue, Nos. 75 and 76, Block 88, 50 feet front by 110 feet deep. These lots were bought five years ago and include 12 Bonds, par value $1200. Will sacrifice all. What have you to offer? No reasonable iffer refused. Apply S. -SCHAEFER, 2234 Ridge Avenue, Philadelphia. for sale. Will sacrifice, make best offer. This property must be sold ;o settle estate. Four lots, 110x110, on corner First avenue and 87th street, choice residental location, also four lots 110x110, 85th and R. R. Plaza; ideal business location. for rent— furnished Seven room Cottage — new, on Great Channel, three bedchambers, by year or month. Apply, BOX 213, STONE harbor, N. J.
J tVsK , | JK %§ ■_ FOR SALE! New building containing five (5) apartments of six rooms :ach and four (4) extra rooms with large store, size 20x40, situated on corner of Second Avenue and 90th Street; central •usiness location, or will rent in its entirety. See cut FOR SALE:— Apply A. J. RUST. 1952 E. ALLEGHENY AVENUE. PHILA. Readers continue to give the Advertisers the preference.

