I OCEAN CITY SENTINEL, OCEAN CITY. N. J., TH URSDAY, .TUNE 30. 1921 T4REE I FEW WOMEN POSSESS GENIUS
I Italian Scientist Citea H.atory of tha World In Support of Assertion He Makes.
In the lilstury of genius. women ■ hare hut a amalh pla.v, dm-lure* ■ Ceeare I-..rul.r<»n, professor of legal K ranluliie. University' „f Turin. .Ilia I hliu that women of genius are rnr- eg. ■ reptluna In the world, It I. nn old oh- ■ serve Hon, lie aays, that while thou ^ panda «f women for everv hundred I en doetors In the' I'ldCd state* I not one haa ever made Hiiv^ttUi.oveay 1 of. Importnnre, and with few egI cepthwia the aiiuie innv l.e said of I other eountrles. Kven John Stuart I . Mill, who Was very purtlul h. the I reuse of Women, eonfesv.sl that they I larked originality. Kven the few who I emerge have, say* Professor Komhroso. I something virile ahout them, As t GAncourt said, there are no women of I genius ; the women of genius are men. i Women never created a new religion.' I nor were they ever at the holt of \ great |H.liiieal. artistic or nrleiulfle Efuovetneti's. Professor Lomhmso aaya women have stood In the way of all" r. dren. he says, they are notoriously j tnlaonelsitr: they preserve ancient P hahlts aud customs and religions. j If You Are Ambitious. climbed to great heights as a rule, have chosen the J..I. which held thef larger future, regardless of what It might give in Immediate returns. It waa not the large salary they were I after, but the larger opportunity. It | *a« ,the Job which gave promise of I the greatest future that they wanted. I not a "soft snap" with easy I and no future Many vocations which | pay the most money at first have the r least future In them If you must ' are tlr-n .'nrtlng out tn lire You* will » find It . "er than to make them later, k What v , »u need at the outset Is. the ' most of nil -he biggest opportunity for ■\ growth .11 : development, the Job that baa the larger possible future In It. If [ you are ambitious, you won't look for a "soft snap" ami "easy money"— ■ Orison Swett Mardett lu The New SucI cess. A Lighted Pencil. A clever little Invention for reporter! or anyone who wishes to take notes at a leeture or Jot things down where the light Is poor |, n pencil with an electrical torch attachment. A tiny fl -shllght battery la attached to 1 It by a length of thin wire and the hatf tery thus remains In the pocket when t the pencil ta In use The bulb Is just P. bark of the lead and the switch la operated by the movement of the forefinger while writing In an entirely natural manner. Alan the attachment may be moved along the pencil to *11 low for sharpening, or It can be changed from one pencil tn another, and the tiny lights In the reflector throw a strong enough glow for whatever la written to be seen distinctly. Advance (Female) Australia! Australian women are also going ahead, remarks a writer In the London Evening News. They have Induced the attorney general of New South Wales to Introduce a bill te make them eligible for election or appointment as members of either of the " houi.-s of parliament for alectloo aa lord mayor or alderman, for appointment as ii special magistrate or a Ju» ties of peace, for admission In practice aa a barrister or solicitor of tha supreme court of New South Wales, ar to practice as a conveyancer. 1 Be Master of Yourself. To be able to keep cool when all the world goes mad shows mental grasp and geunlne bigness. This grows with tha years. It becomes a part of the nature. Newly dubbed aristocracies sad the victims of andden wealth usually betray their plebeian origin by their cultivated show of authority Where the blood tsllo It rises with might to occasions, bnt seldom allows Itself to get ruffled without occasion And what a spectacle one can make af himself by getting all atewed about , aotbtng or losing hta tamper on some ltttlo thing that approximates the aero ■ark. The really big character la alow to anger and irritates little dubs by hit superior calm control. At the same time lbs exhibition of maatrry challenges the secret admiration of all ^ An is amend an onfinsnm. en. ?!dlairl&.1!mdas Thelwf/' ' ' | THK ftOARb or COMMIKSION'KRS OF THB CITY OF jUrCAS CITY HO ORDAIN. ^.HeeUon L J**"' Minn f. of I he ^ordinance [ avenues? BUeys. ^r'h^hsr^^B^hl.^rUr. rxam'is "tvi^fih' straw Fv'ydlfih nu* from the Snulhwewerir side of FlflrI Thirty - foil rl h Mfeet : on Thlnjr. fourth slnef tnrlal limits of Ocean City no anal turnpike. | Sect Kin 1, That section 0 of this ordinance of which this ordinance is an amendment ■Aall he sirwtvded^ so that sakl aartlon Shall j bus or hoses shall not take on 3ny iierson | or persons within the City of Ocean City tn | , f sskt section y. nnd to read as follows: f tbSforSlaa" ,h» ordinance erf^whlch I ZtrZJf mu'mJo boa or TjJes" shall or** hereon, "XT', hi' of this City shall hy ~oiuti.a orwvtde" » JOS. C. CHAMPION. Parsed on first end second reedinc June 71th. end will be taken up on third teedinr end final passer* Julr Sth. 1PII. at e mwtinr of mid hoard to be held al S o'clock In the afternoon, f.mmi.sionrrs Chambers. City Hall. Ocean City. New Jersey Harry A. Morris. City Clerk. '. #-K. It Pf. MAO 1
IS TAKE UP VALUABLE SPACE Too Much Q round la Wasted on Had oca. According to an English Agricultural Authority. .., It l« generally reckoned that euch #1 mite of hedge, with Its accompanying I „ flitch, lb equal to an to re of laud. An < .•d a matter of fact It'U equal' to a greut i x. deal more, for the calculation does not I tl. tnke lnfii "account the Considerable belt ' t, of ground oil euch able of the hedge ' •d which la «o matted wtih roots as to "> In- vulueleiia from the fanner's [mint ' it- ' In u lecture delivered lately at Tor- 1 ra quay. Sir. Wale, principal of the Seal ' sy Hayne Agricultural college, enlarged I x- Upon thfl subject and- mentioned tlint ' "f in I 'evonahlre particularly far too 1 rt- much lund waa occupied by hedge*. ' '-T parishes Iminetllalely around Kxeter ' 10 Then,, cover lu all S7.WM acres, ami , "• nearly halTf of all thla land la' cut up l* Into. Held, of less tluill Ave acres. ' ,r There are actually more' than eight hundred fields which do mil eYreed an ,, ' acre apiece. As a natural consequence ' a very large isroportlou of tills rich ^ mill Ik totally unproductive, the n<tmil , '•"< being Ii" lesk than eighteen . _ Ttie lecturer strongly advised that 1 ,, the redundant hedge* should Isgrubbed out and the slue of the Holds let. acres.— London 1 Hilly .Mall. Water In Wood. I All wood contains. more or less wa- ,, I ter; even the dryeat wood kiu.wn'con- n f tain* two or three iniunds of water to . 0 every 1U0 funds of weight. At.*.,- ,, , lutely dry w ond la unknown, for the t, t heat needed to old a 1 11 It would ills- f, 1 solve tht) Wood and convert It I lit A | y gas and charcoal) f, a A Swiss authority on tHe charsc- 0 r terl.lles of wood believes Hint a silf- p, I flelently powerful nod perfect micro- a I wimmI cell l» composed of crystals like grain* of sugar or salt and that thin p films of wbter hold the cry slain apart, tn r yei bind them Into a muss, « I A good mlcroiicuiie shows the wss.il ,| t cell and roveals Its spiral bandages 1. r and lis openings and envlilea, but uo ll . Instrument yet mad- reveals tlie tilt I in mate crystal, that, aa many lieljcvc. II 'do exist and that would explain why h wrater cannot be expelled from wood in without destroying the wood Itself. t Giving Away the Newlywedt. 1 I Miring our houeyiiiiH>uN my husband I aud I stayed at a hotel. We were blissfully happy and sure no one knew 1 that we were newly weds. Wp entered the dining room at dinner time trying I to look as If we were u«s| to raeh , others company, when all at once. - the orchestra struck up Uihengrln'a Welding March." As we were the . only one* entering the room, of enur-e I people laughed and ainred. The music ' . continued until we reached our table flume one had put the manager "wise." r 1 never did know what I had lo eat . that meal, as we continued to lie the attraction during the whole meal. — Chicago Tribune. Yacht club memliers w ill celchu.tc ' I the Fourth.
START OF "GREAT WHITE WAY" Firit Attempt' at Electric Illumination In New York Took Place In December. 1880. The first ' electric Illumination of a New York street waa attempted De-l-ember '.ii, lflso. when a trial was g'v, 11 to The new: system of street With the crude spparntua ilii-h in use the. result was far from brilliant: and was hut a dliu forecast the wonders to he smuupllshed tn tic future. As a result of this and other tests wii. predicted by many "expert*" flint, electricity could never tak'u the place of gas a* an economical ami eOicleiit mcthcMl of lighting streets. as It . was. however, the first eh-ctrlc display of street Illumination in the American metropolis marked the dim beginning of the "Ilreat White Way." and the triinsforniatlon of Br.««twar by- night Into n scene of darning splendor such as our grandfathers could never have dreamed of. The first display of electric lighting on a large *. ale was at the I'arls exposition of 1*78. when the wonder* of the "electric candle" of I'aul Jnh1... Iiknir. H Kuaslaii englmh-r. Kturtled the world. The Parisian display, however. was dliu and droll compared with the marvels since snximidlslied. The Mlstletos Bird. The Australian flower pecker, or mistletoe-swallow furnishes sn example of ilia Interesting partnership between plants and . birds. Although partial to Imuey. fruits and . Insects, the little swallow Is an Inveterate con •umer OA mistletoe-seed. The mistlepropagates only In the lls-urea of and wood, and lodgment la effected literally through the pecker. The missel-thrush or btorm-rock perthe same hulnlile wrvlce for the aiialletue In England. The flower pecker Is found In India. Malaysia and all Australia, except Tasmania, where the mistletoe does not grow. -The bird i- a erny, Wight-eyed chap, glossy I.!ii.-Mprk abqye, ».-arlet on tlir.mt, l.r :i«f and under base of fall, while with' a black rentral line on alidomen i.U'1 dusky 011 flunks.' Ills wife dresses mure soberly dingy above, huff on and l.jeast ; and jiale acurlvt under base of tall. The nest In a heauI little finely-felted structure, with usually suspended lu a clump of
,, CASINO CLUB t hllilrrn's Dancing f'laa* Will Start Tomorrow Morning , ance will lie the opening of the Ufl- « Friday mapping, July 1. at 10 o'clock t Thi- rlass lie sides being of much im"..parlance in the physical training nf children, is greatly enjoyed by the grown-ups. who throng the great I -ian -ballet practice, classic ikterpre- . tive nnil folks-dancing. Thi-| i- thP 1 twelfth year of the dancing cljis--: un- | .der the instruction of C. pilwoo.1 r '"urpenter. > f "Alreadv n num|iei nave joined, and . in another week I hi- entire ch, - wiT. - lie in full away. * Next We.lnes.lay evening. July «. • will In- held the second children'* 1 carnival ir. the form of a "Japanese ' Party". All children nre invited to I participate free of charge, nnd prizes w ill Is- awarded to a number of chil- ! dren by popWur vote. The fume the orchestra has res arc well nyfendtd. The loom- are heuutifully .fecorate'd. A* in the pa-t this is In charge ..r Wm. K. Harris, of Philadelphia, a summer resident here whose uiitirinc effort* . in this line nre appreciated — — tts 1-ost something? Place an ad in the SKNTlNKt, and it will Ik- quirkly returneih/ American Audit Co. ACCOUNTANTS Audita Hxntninations Systems I fi.'oiiic Tax Chas. W. Perry. C. P.A.(N.Y.) Belle, aa Coart Baildis(. PhiUdelphu. Pa. William S. Leech 6IM Ailaalic ava. - PImc Z61M i— • • •
"EFFICIENT IfeSmif MANAGEMENT LEADS TO INDEPNEDENCE PRUDENT IS THE FIRM OR INDIVIDUAL WHO PUT5? i : | GREATER EPnCIENCY IN THE MANAGEMENT OF I A FIL'SINESS. BECAUSE IT SPEEDS UP PROSPER- - ITY AND LEADS TO INDEPENDENCE. I 1 OPEN AN ACCOUNT W ITH THE FIRST NATIONAL I L' "^HANK WHERE EVERY FACILITY IS AT YOUR H SERVICE. I First National Bank ! OCEAN C1TY.N.J. !
! ' ' Goodrichlire Price Reduction applies to all sizes— without reservation j The name of Goodrich on a tire means /\ ,v Mk ji,st one thing — quality. And that quality lj^ " a'w ays r^c highest that can be produced. | Mmk lK|fSii Each tire is specially designed for the ser- " Imll nH MB IwlW'il %^CC 'f must deliver. Goodrich Fabrics, in ^ Ii lUBm BWMBHI t'ie P°Pu'ar sizes, have established themi mMM BRWllia ?e'ves as unusual values from the stand- ^ liWilPl ■ ■H9 po;nt of real economy. Silvertown Cords ^ ill!' 'n "ic'r c'ass have always held first place g I 1 1| > MTSPfeaffSUti ,n cstccni °f motorists, not only beg m| Ml HHjHj cause of their symmetrical perfection of ^ ill 1 ■■■Ha finish, but furthermore, hy reason of their g 1 1 ||||! . ■QWfll long life, complete dependability and sat- % I ■ ■PKHI Vour dealer will supply you at these fair : ^ SILVERTOWN COBIS FABRIC TIRES ' Smooth 1 30x3 |»12.00 [Safety I 32x3 II »20>2S 20^ Lower Prices s*fctY p0x3~ 13^5 safety 32x4 26.90 r,r 7?| 11 Srfkty 30x3i 16.00 Safety 33x4 28.30 The Goodrich price ttdaflioa < — ^-J * I —I K wLdid THE B. F. GOODRICH RUBBER COMPANY Silvrrtowm together wrkh Good- o4kron, Ohio richFabrictitws and Goodrich iUd , and Gray inner tubra. - ,- . - ^ ^ ^ 5 1 1 '
„ PLANS DRAWN FOR ] TWO FINE RESIDENCES it- . k Leslie Headley < 'ompanx j "f Also Sells Land at 91h "• «, St. and Pleasure Ave. ». Till- 1 A-cli.- Hi-uiHbv Com ho* m. .It-awn phiTi- nliil hiil* are Iwing :.-k- t *. II. SitdPhmker. of this city, af the' p. roini-r ,.f Tenth -t. t.fi.l tryl aw-. " r,. -U.rie-'. ami it.' e*liu.utnl t i- : a! at.iuinl f.'.'.OOO. : Tn.: Hi-ailloy Coui|iaty hn* sohl the t ,.1 land oi E. M." SuttN at Ninth -tree! V iT and Plenrure avenue. 1(H) U-rl t Ninth stmot an.l 2:V. f.s-t deep. J* Ml. Mary A. and John A. Riley. " > Philadelphia, who are having . plan* 1 •■r -or a ntfmlier of coltage* drawn h\ to la-stir Ifbudley. 1 < Mr. Hcadley i- completing plan. > j. for a residence an.l. Iw.at house .... tiie' a lay front at Seventh street for n e >ear*. The estimated cost of the ' ir f-uil.ling i*^f 1'i.OCO. He is aba draw-
Snyder Will be Orator At Yacht Club Celebration Music and Singinc of Patriotic Selections — Kvercises Heirin at 2..'? 0 P. >1. .Monday
■The u-ua! Fnm * ,.f Ju'h;>elel.ra- fu g';," ; • ,: rn : gun-Raork P.in; American 'l egion, of tfii.-i city. The program Had not l«en rv i
which . . i.N-n give,. the Sentinel IM..I the-- w.ll be two game; of bait i« the local P-Iik. <«H- in the moiyiing no-! ttu. at Iter lu the gftenmon. h I. fa -CI t-. have n big display ' • -• JjBdfli-front in the
at Tenth etieet ami Asbury Joseph McGownn and Thoi. avehue for Kit-worth Somrr*. of llurke. ..f Cliftsii Heights were «vsk:'tore Th.'i ,'U,il'""K hav® guc -I* ,,f the Mi.-sf- Steilem Iwre a J. F. Greenwood, of Philodeiphi... At'iert Smith, Piiilailelphin, la c.1 his cot luge, 10X1 Wesley uxv'iue. .< \ c-.-n.-m and fumily. R la SENTINEL ad* l>rin«~re.*ult«. V!m h ■ hi the SENTINEL.
"GOOD MORNING, MR. MOTORIST! ! null GAS "The Wonder Motor Fuel" has moved to town More Miles= - - less gallons Read the Following Testimonial: LIT BROTHERS Executive Offices PHI LA. j May 3rd, 1921 Sherwood Brothers, 21at & Packer Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Gentlemen • wish to advise you that we have given Betholine a practical test of three months, considering temperature and elements of weather, effect on motor, etc*. V Betholine has given us more miles per gallon, therefore less gasoline consumption. Reduction in carbon, no ''baok firing'' inoreased power on hills and elimination of •'motor knooking.*' Yours vary truly, LIT BROTHERS Present Dealers Ocean City, N. J. Blue Ribbon Oarage KOth & Asbury Ave. RECOMMENDED AND SOLD BY The Present Dealer*— The Future Dealer*— THE ATLANTIC GARAGE THE PALACE GARAGE So. North Coroljna Avenue Connecticut and Atlantic Are*. THE PARKWAY GARAGE THOMPSON'S GARAGE Bo«ton and Atlantic Avenue* 2103 Pacific Avenue* J. PAXON EASTERN MOTOR CAR CO. Albany Avenue Service Station . Arctic and Arkansas avenue* Satisfied l'«er* — «; LIT BROTHERS CUNNINGHAM ft MURRAY, FREIHOFKR BAKERY Contractor* WEST SIDE LUMBER COMPANY D. ft D. MACHINE £<>. JAMES FKRRW CO. OCEAN PIER & FISH MARKET U*e them for reference _ / ASK THE MAN WHO USES IT ^ PRANK L. BADER, Dist Mgr. Y SHERWOOD Bros., Manufacturers Vhoj* 1995 TANK TRUCK DELIVERY Atlantic City. N. J.

