COFFEE
Fr^sh from the Roas
'The Best the Market Affords
delivered to your Door at the same price as a
ae Counter, ranging from 20c to 60c per pound.
Teas of every description 10c to $2.50
Quarter pound.
Stritly Fresh Roasted
R*1 Home Made Peanut
* Pound
MILLER’S
THE HOUSE OF GOOD COFFEE
2407 Atlantic Ave.
/Phone your orders early 270. Free
' Monday, Wednesday and Saturday mornings.
EGGS
DIRECT
rom the Farm
Served Right at Your Door
DROP POSTAL OR PHONE
SOMERS POINT 54-R-12
fjVW
J. SCHRAMM
PROPRIETOR
We Specialize in Day Old Eggs
Ventnorites Invited to Inspect
Farm
i
Here is Your Chance
| Many residents have desired to
j put in an extra Bath Tub, Toilet,
j Wash Basin or an additional Hot
Water Radiator but have held back
on account of the prohibitive cost.
j A Recent Purchase
of Government Supplies of Salvaged
Fixtures enables me to make you a
proposition that will allow you to
install what you need now at a price
far below the present market value.
V Sample Fixtures
are now on display, set up complete
at my show room. Come in and
look them over, get the prices com
plete including installation, and you ,
will no longer delay the work.
HARRY COFFIN
pv v
r Lumoinu
a ivrrv
nnu
ur a nriMr*
non i mu
v 5201 Ventnor Avenue
Open Evenings for your Convenience Phone 7694-W
I _ • ’
KEATING'S
CONVENIENT STORE
N. E. Cor. Troy
and Winchester Aves.
(Opposite Troy Ave. School)
Groceries, Candies, Cigars, Cigar
ettes, Bread, Milk, Ice Cream
The' Best Merchandise
The Lowest Prices
Courteous Service
A Convenient Store that will
do Everything to Warrant your
Patronage Telephone 7659-W
if
Kodaks and Supplies
The Only Fully Equipped
Optical Work Shop
and Grinding Plant
IN ATLANTIC CITY
Maryland Avenue and Boardwalk
ATLANTIC CITY
Orders taken at 5402 Winchester Ave
nue or 3 N. Cambridge A venueB
TELEPHONE YOUR TROUBLES
TO
John G. Gibson & Son
PLUMBING
AND
HEATING
Estimates Cheerfully Given.
Repair Work on Short
Notice a Specialty
112 N. SACRAMENTO AVENUE
| c PHONE 7145-W
H. G* Harris & Co.
| JUANITA APARTMENT BUILDING
I Surrey and Atlantic Avenues
JOHN B. PATTON, Manager
Everything in
Real Estate
Ventnor Property a Specialty
Furnished cottages or apartments by
month, season or year
INSURANCE
Ventnor Realty Co.
Atlantic and Little Rock Avenuet
Phone 7049-W
List Your Properties with Us
for Quick Action.
Is Your Property Fully Insured ?
We Sell >
FIRE, AUTOMOBILE AND LIABILITY
INSURANCE
Hand Painted Glace and Parchment
Shades for Floor, Table and Boudoir
Lssipsri!so Ebfs Frssse*
For Sale
WEBB’S ELECTRIC SHOP
16 S. Kentucky Avenue
Phone 565-J
..... • ■ - ’ ; _
ADOLPHUS GREEN
Plastering Contractor
JOBBING PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO
11 N. Victoria Avenue j
Bell Phone 7657
ttOSLD IS OoR KIKLi)"
Going Abroad
STEAMSHIP
TICKETS
0
See Mr. Shreve
303
Foriiom
'Chicks-Drafts
Guarantee
Trust Biulding
PHONI
471
WATl* AND BAIL TRIPS
NEW COMEDY
Opens Monday at Apollo.
One ol' the 'dramatic treats of the
| season will be disclosed to the theatre
going public Monday night at the
Theatre when Sam H. Harris
will present for the first time on any
! stage "Tj'he Turn in the Hoad,” a new
comedy by A. E. Thomas.
This occasion will take on added in
feres' because it will mark Mary Ry
a-n’a 'return to the stage after a tetire
| r.ront of over a year. Miss Ryan is the
featured member of the cast that Mr.
Karris has assembled to interpret Mr.
Thomas’ play.
ih author of “The Turn in the
Ho;'*” wili be remembered by theatre
devotees as having written “The Rain
bow," “Just Suppose” and “The Cham
pion”. In his new comedy Mr. Thom
as has epitomized an experience that
sooner or later befalls everyone. He
lies told the story of a woman who
comes to a turn in the road of her af
fairs, a turn that leads whither she
knows not. It is just such a situation
that everyone confronts at some time
in life, and the playwright has asked
and answered the question “What lies
jr.it around the corner?”. “The Tiirn
in the Road” is neither melodrama or
farce: it is a slice of life in play form,'
brimming with humor in its exposi
tion. '
■ANY NEW SONGS
In Globe Attraction for Three Days.
Will Oakland, the celebrated Ameri
can contra tenor, who will be seen at
the Globe Monday, Tuesday and Wed
nesday, in the melodramatic comedy,
“Their Chief,” will introduce many
new songs during the action of the
play. A pretty love story, with ro
mantic youth as the dominant note, is
the basic theme of the play, and the
author. Ellen Craig, has woven a won
derful vehicle for Mr. Oakland’s debut
as a singing star on the legitimate
stage. It is a play for everybody. No
expense has been snared in making
the stage setting worthy of the star
and play. A Broadway cast of players
will support Mr. Oakland, viz.: James
Heenan, Chas. W. King, Crank McNel
lis, John Carmody, Fred Griffin, Lou
Ripley, Elizabeth Carmody, Billie Bow
er, Cecil Summers, Jack West and' E.
Loeffler.
'The Easy Road” at Colonial.
Gladys George, leading woman for
Thomas Meighan in “The Easy Road,”
his latest Paramount picture, which
comes to the Colonial Theatre for three
days next Wednesday, enjoys writing
so much that she writes for her own
amusement. Miss George has stacks
of manuscripts written by herself, but
she has never attempted to commer
cialize any of her work. The pleasure
lies in the writing itself. Coincident
with this is the fact that Miss George
portrays, in the new picture, the role
of a wealthy girl who falls in love
with a novelist.
“Now what could have suited me
better than to fall in love with a novel
ist?” asks the pretty leading woman.
In the supporting cast are Grace
Goodall, Lila Lee, Arthur Carew, Lura
Anson and Viroa Daniel.
What kind of a wife should a man
choose, the pretty little vase flower
who holds up her charming head and
inspires her husband with sweet glan
ces and little vanities, or the practical
brainy girl who digs in and helps her
husband to fight -his battles and to
overcome his obstacles?
Sir James M. Barrie makes it quite
plain which kind of love is the most
enduring, in “What Every Woman
Knows,” the new William DeMille Par
amount picture which opens at the
Virginia theatre tomorrow.
The story is laid in England and
bcotland and shows how a young poll
tician wins fame and success, uncon
?.cj?us the fact ^at his brilliant
little wife who types his speeches, is
injecting therein the real secret of his
popularity. At the height of his ca
reer, he falls in love with another wo
!’Ut.i.t.he wise wife a,so Proves
cqua. to this emergency and handles
the case in a manner that brings hap
piness and reconciliation.
II
Rendezvous Park Has Two Orchestras.
Atlantic City dancers now have an
opportunity of dancing continuously
A novelty never heard of down here!
The big new spacious auditorium at
Rendezvous Park has two orchestras
which furnish the dancers with unin
terrupted music in the afternoon and
evening by the famous and original
Central American Marimba Band and
chestranOUS a0u"son's California Or
In the very nea,r future the man sum.
ment will make announcement of spec
if no,velt,y nlghts- You can dance
at this handsome auditorium every
afternoon between two and five o’clock
and every evening at eight o’clwk and
continuing until twelvef d
THE LOVE CHEF
New Comedy to Open at Woods’.
Doris Kenyon will play the leading
feminine role in “The Love Chef”,
Edgar Selwyn’s new comedy in which
the Selwyns will present Leo Carrillo
at the Woods Theatre, next Sunday
and all week preliminary to Its New
York engagement. Miss Kenyon is
equally popular on the stage- and
screen. She was last seen in the so- ;
called “legitimate” theatre in “The
Girl in the Limousine”, and played op
posite Thomas Meighan in "The Con
quest of Canaan” in the moving pic
ture version of that delightful story.
In the cast-will be seen in support of
Mr. Carrillo and Miss Kenyon, Anna
Mack Berlein, Mary Robinson, Harold
Russell, Marie Marjeroni, Horace Bra
ham, Jack C. Grey, Ricardo Boselli,
J. T. Chaillee, S. Sidney Chon, Basil
Stratti, Elizabeth Kennedy, Lewis Korr
son, Eleanor Williams, Clarence Bel
laire, Ida Darling, Paul Wilson and
George Le Soir. „
SMILING THROUGH
Opens at Globe on Thursday.
In “Smilin’ Through”, which will
bring Jane Cowl to the Globe Theatre,
for three nights starting June 9th,
with a Saturday mat., there Is every
indication of a new record business
for this theatre, the gifted star has an
opportunity to show the lighter side
of her emotional gifts, for this play of
Allan Langdon Martin’s gives Miss
Cowl a dual role. It is also a roman
tic theme concerning a lovely girl of
Irish blood, whose sweetheart goes off
to war when the girl’s uncle denounces
him. The denunciation is due to a
tragedy that occurred many years be
fore, involving the uncle’s own ro
mance. As this tragedy is enacted,
there is a play within a play, and also
several remarkable fantasy scenes.
Pictorially, “Smilin' Through” is re
puted to be exquisite. Sentimentally .
it is said to be sufficiently saccharine
for any palate. As a love story, with
Jane Cowl to Interpret it with her
famed beauty, it is known to be de
lightful. The play is further known
to be unusual of the several plays
which have come from the war stress
and trends to some extent on the spir
itualistic ideas which have been so
much considered since that time.
tiiim puce
Dance Lovers Go to Garden Pier. ‘'-J\
One ceases to believe that fashion is
fickle when one sees its faithfulness to
that irresistible pastime, dancing. Of
all enjoyable social diversions, the art
of the "light fantastics” stands in a
distinctly individual class, at once
wholesome and exhilarating—and fas
cinating in a superlative degree.
At the Garden Pier, where dancing ■
is the main and only attraction, the’
quaintly beautiful ball room with its -i
unique decorations, is thronged with
enthusiastic groups of dance lovers.
The music, that vital factor to thei
perfect enjoyment of this recreation,,
is furnished by A1 Davidson's Orches- -
tra, which is composed of selected mu
sicians from 22 bands. The ensemble.
form one of the finest and highest sal
aried groups of players in the city.
That this innovation has proved to be
phenomenally successful is evident a
from the great number who make the
Garden Pier their gathering place.
Admits to Forty-one Attractions.
After your one nominal admission at
the door, all amusements are free on
the Steeplechase Pier. All the maze of
fun-producing attractions are in con
tinuous operation and cost nothing ex
tra after you enter the portals. There!
*\«Pprt for everybody on the pier,
been Popularly termed the
Mirth Place of the Nation.” You are
bewildered in your selection of which
attraction to enjoy first. A tour of the
pier consumes hours and the time flies
before you are aware of it
Billy Hayes and his Versatile Sere
naders are scoring a big hit in the ball
where there are now two danc-'
ing sessions daily. This big attraction
f®thered a wonderful following
v„ih ™ V£ry short period °f arri
Tbe Versatile Serenaders are al
ready known the length and breadth
of the resort and are winning new
arireadlS ,appearanc«- They are
sn^n^
-Mrwsrs
and specialties rePert°‘re °f nUmbers
one of the most fa
Shed in%h if StRge aCtors’ dis«n-' •
guisnea in Shakespearean and heroic v
CVS in “Dream Street/’The
*/ "• Griffith master picture to he
LufdavsVT Yirginia Theatre,0 for
PerhaDsTh1"" "K Satul'da>'> June 11.
„„£?rl aps tlle greatest of Mr. Power’s
the draifm "f his Performance as
House” i ' om-raui ill ine