* TW0 OOF.AX CITY SENTINEL OCEAN CITY, N. J., THURSDAY. OCTOUER !■'!. ltf-ll — - : ; . i— - — — - — : : ! =T~_ — 1,1.' .IK KHVIRY PAPERS suits far in excess' of the same effort READS . ( OI NTRY PAPERS -u far in exce** of the
Ocean City Sentinel Paimo us pBatuaaP Kvzsv Tituui OCEAN CITY PRINTING AND PUBLISHING CO. OCKAN CITY; - - NEW JERSEY Bell Phone No. 138- J Tkis jmnw jvwmrvo (ho risht to rvprt All voramun.rxtl.ms 10 thlx i«i" will r"uh«o»i» «■ * Id.orliilu top y must !•»' this ..11** i>< lour th«n Ti»-~ls, Boon. TEls Job work piorapklr aoov ly eiperienwl"
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1921 ^Eotvrod « ft. Tort -OIVv^iM Orasn f.t». THE SPIRIT OF SUCCESS Perhaps the dominant factor in keeping Ocean City going aheatl is the -everlasting belief in Its future. Everyone is impressed with the possibilities of Ocean City. It reminds one of the spirit of the* West. They just "Keep Thinking" success and earrietl on by the waves -of "Faith" which penetrate the balmy atmosphere. this "Boosting*" .momentum sweeps the "Knockers" the "Gloom Petlillers" and the "Panic Howlers" off their feet. IX) YOl" BELONG? The Chamlier of Commerce is a melting pot for idea.-. There's something in the atmosphere that brings out progressive thoughts from live Every fellow believes his pet idea is the greate-t l*>on for Ocean City. He can show you the statistical data, the perfect prospectus, the reasons pro anil con on-thls best proposition, and if the city doesn't accept the scheme it will go to the dogs right now. Those men should belong to and attend the Chamber of Commerce. The floor of the Chamlier is the place to ventilate their views and not the street comers. It their suggestions are good and sound they will have the ' ready support of the other members. If not they will be quickly shown their weakness or impracticability lb the debate that always attends publicity of any new project. Here is the big idea. Your membership in the Chamber of Commerce will allow that organization to accomplish many things. Promise yourself now that you will spend a few hours once a month in the Chamber of Commerce sjp FT TIMES GOING The .Philadelphia Bulletin takes a full page ad in Printer's Ink monthly, price f 180, just to bring home this message: "No! — Hard Types are not coming — just Soft Times going." And there you have the whole situation. Ocean City is in good financial condition. There Is more building going on in the city than ever before. Certainly building operations keep mbney circulating. People In Ocean City have plenty of "ready" money. They are spending I it but they are only spending it when you go after them. They do not bring their change to you en a si leer platter . and say, "Please, Mister, wHI you sell me a house and lot?" The coming sekson will be the great! est the city han ever known but the vacationist will have his wallet tucked deep into his inside pocket, which makes little difference as long as he brings mAiey with him. True, real estate men cannot sit at their fnahogany desks and rent cottages and sell lots over the counter. We are back to the old days of sel- ' ling. The fighter, the hustler, the gogetter, Is the man who will do busi"Hard Times are not coming — jusl Soft Times going!". LOCAL BOY AT BUCKNELL Roland C. Cunningham, graduate of the Ocean City High School, class of 1919, is attending the Buckif li University at Lewisburg, Pa., where he is enrolled for a four-years' course in civil engineering. He is the son of Hugh . Cunningham and since he was nine years' old has had charge of. the Union News-stand at Tenth Street Station of the Reading. BOOSTS OCEAN CITY Sam M. MaeParlane, publicity director of the Roomers hotels, spends his. vacation nt Ocean City, N. J. While on the Jersey coast lie visited his old friend "Bob" Dunlop at the Hotel I .a Maine, in Atlantic City, for o few days. Sam is a iwostcr for Ocean City, hnd while '. there wrote that "everything is filled" there and that several big new hotels are needed there to boom the resort community. —New Jersey Hotel Pilot. TO ATTEND WEDDING Mr. and Mrs. John Williamson, of 848 Turk place, have IcFl to attend the wedding of their -granddaughter, ✓Ruth Micheal. Miss Mieheal and her mother -pent several weeks in Ocean ■k City this summer.
•MRS I. DOWNEY CLARK WRITES OF TRIP ' One of a Series of Letters Received by This Office Recently '* "fife following is from the pj/ of J Mr* T. Dowdney Clark, of / !■ bury, whose sum me rhome J* at YJ1 Third street, this city. its. t'lafk is, an active worker in the Ladies' Summer Auxiliary of the FitVt M. K. Church, and has ju-t romaleted a - 10,000-mile trip through to* We-t. . .British Columbia.' the Canadian Roc it - n les and the- Great Lake*. j ■— t Sin'ce writing my last lettqj>waJuivc been in several places and have Veen .-ight-eelng as hard as ever. After leaving Portland, jwe next stopped at * Seattle, Washington, which is a licauy tlful city located on Puget Sound. ■. There were many places of interest to .. visit, the chief one to me was the famous locks and two canals— here we all watched different boats, bit ami I* Portland l» called the "City of Roses," but while there seemed to be thousands of them growing, Seattle also seemed to' have -as many. They are grr.wn along the pavements as well as it) yards ami on lawn-. The city is -- niunerHfOr the founder, who was a „ celebrated Indian chief, un.l a fiqe r statue of him stands at the main entrance to. the city. We took a seventy-five mile auto a ride up the famou.- Columbia River -. Highway, midst mosj magnificent lf scenery and made a 'stop at Vista Point ami visited the Vista Budding, which was built in honor of the hardy '• pioneers of '-49. About eight hundred p feet below us we saw ten men and t four horses hauling in the salmon nets ,1 filled with s^mon, which is a great" , industry tliere. We left Seattle reluctantly and went f on our way to Vancouver, British e Columbia, going there by steamer s across Puget Sound, stopping for a t dirief time at Victoria and then on to our destination, arriving there at earlyevening just as -the shallow.- wero r lengthening. It seemed so nice after a long day f on the boat ( which was crowded with people) to get there at last and wey •enjoyed our stay very much. ' It is a fine city of over two hundred and fifty ' thousand inhabitants, has many handi some buildings and the climate is sim- * ply wonderful, so cooling and In vigor- ' a ling and seldom gets above sixty-five degrees, although two day* before we arrived the thermometer rose to sev-enty-five dergees and the people "just sweltered," a* one woman said, and even the newspapers commented with big headlines upon the great neat. I * asked some of them what they would '• do if they lived in New Jersey, where s we often had to stand over ninety it degrees and many thunder showers, and they said, "Impossible, imposible " So it goes, it is only a question of ' being used to your surroundings, how- * ever, it must be great to work in such g a climate ami my thoughts turned to .. my friends in the east and the hat weather they have been having, and I wish with ail my heart that 1 could pass these cool breeze* on to them. >' After a delightful stay in Vancouver, B we got aboard our pullman anil eonn tinqgd our journey through the Canndain Rockies to l.ake Louise Chateau. It is not to be wondered at when world-wide travelers speak of this spot " -a* one of the loveliest places on earth. As you stand on the immense porches I of the hotel and in front is the beautie ful lawn sloping down to the lake, which is of a wonderful shade of light blue, standing on either side are two h big mountains of rock." while directly e between, up and beyond them the Victoria Glacier stands, over ten thousand . feet high, clothed entirely with snow and ice, from baiy to jumn^t. The
MONUMENTS Headstones, Markers, Sills, Corner Posts ,f Memorials of Dignity and Distinction >f Designed, cut find erected with particular regard for individual requirements il Yon can choose from the h largest and finest stock of . ic materials ever collected — 8 in standard granites and marbles ,,, 1 from quarries famous for the Specialise in Designing and Manufacturing j„' _ .i; '-I i-H, Mausoleums, Public and^ Private Memorials w Carfare Paid la all Purchaser* CAMDEN YARD MA!> OFFICE AND YARD >r Pleaanntrille, N. J. to °PP U"l'i*h Opp. AtlanUc City Cemetery Bell I,hoDe 2737 Bell Phone, PicaiantviUc 1 -.1 * REPRESENTATIVES A." ("cumborbnL Cap* Mar. Burllnzton. F Hs.sM. Cajmtm. N J . JSr.mdw. SaWra. GknmUr sad Baillactoo Couth* W. Da Bah, Clarion. N. J., for Clajrton an.! vivmltr II H. Hair. CKrrrlton. V». I or Stale of Virsinla J O. J. HAMMELL CO. " PLEASANTVILLE, N. J. i
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j picture i - one never to lie forgotten, . particularly in the early morning and f fleeted with startling distinctness and r Ix-auty in the waters of the lake. The p next morning a numlier of us walked y the sleep mountain trail over four II miles, until we reached a height where „ we could look down on three lake.",. s -cemingly almost under each other, p Iatkes Agnes, Mirror and Louise, while . nestliflg hack a little among the trees stood our bigjiotel with thousands of a mountain flowers blooming around itr When we reached our hotel in the t middle of the afternoon we were ail , tire-l and hungry, but well repaid for , our walk, and while our hunger was j. soon appeased by a substantial lunrh- ,( eon, yet (please don't mention it) none j of us walketl with a fjpe step the next s 'hot Our next stopping place was Banff. and we arrived there about !> o'clock t last evening and found it another beau- (, tiful spot. A little village in a little r valley, but with many interesting fea- , tures. Thi* morning we walked down t, the mountain side jfgm »ur hotel to y the village and attenileii divine serv- ( ice* in a little womlen church calleil | Union Church, which had a scaling i- rapacity of only two hundred, but" was li packed to the doors, mostly by tourists. We listened to a very helpful l sermon and joined in the hearty ennf gre Rational singing, ami I thought as . I sat on the hard seat and looked at . the plain walls and heard the old . wheezy parlor organ grudgingly giving e out it- poor tones, that no matter t whether the building wo worship in lie - great sir small, rich or plainly furnisht ed, God's children will come willingly, 1 yes, gladly, no matter where they may - be, to His house to worship when the Sabbath dawns. Being a minister's ii daughter, my interest was aroused and e 1 made friends with a lady memlier. y and found out many things pertaining ,, tn the little church, among them being the fact that the pastor receives 41-00 f per year salary there, while this is - argumented by three or four hundred h dollars more, raised by a small cono gregation of mining people where he it holds services in a tiny chapel in their d little town nearby. Most of the money d is given by the tourists during the L summer months, who are mostly very r, generous when the collection plate is j The headquarters for the Candian i. Mounted Police is in Banff, and also n the sulphur springs and the goxVTm" it ment reservation. We had a delighti. ful ride of three hours' duration this '* afternoon down among the mountain i- goats, yaks, moose ami buffalo, but we \ were not ullowed to leave the automoit bile. All these animals were in fine o condition. Then wc visited love.ly y lake Minnewhatska, where ten feet r- from the wharf the water is four hun(I dred and twenty-five feet deep. Wc v saw also after many mountain views e of great beauty, the big fields, where
two weeks ago Indians of many tribes t ,| ( some coming over one hundred and < .. thirty miles away ) held log Indian • d games, and the ground still bears the i |P impres of their feet. 1 ,( On the Train Going Through Dakota, i ■p ; we left Banff earlier Sunday evening i than l.expcrted. o I will finish on the s r> train. We are through the Canatiian i |P Rockies, which, I think, surpass the t .s Alps. 1 never expect to see again such ,f great masses of rock's, continuing for , - t so many miles, such altitudes, such I ip grandurc. such beauty of form and col- I II oring, and the hundreds of cascades 1 ,r which come down front the snow- ; i rushing merrily along as if to say. "I ; ie have something to do and must do it j now." Our train has been going 1 Through the huge grain fields (prin- g r, cipally wheatj and over the prairies of < y the provinces of Allierta and Saskatch- ( ewan, and we passetl the Iwriier line t IP last night, where our baggage was in- i spected, and are in Dakota. Here we j „ se great •elds of corn also. 1 never 1 0 saw such great fields of wheat and I oats, some extended as far as the eye « ,1 can see, but there are few small hints I K and scarcely a tree. < ,s We will arivc in St. Paul. Minnef. sota, tonight, where our party sepa,1 rates, some returning via Chicago. while nine of us, after a stay in St. is Paul and Minneapolis, go up to Duluth'. 1 ,t where we take the steamer and travel ' ,1 eleven hundred and fifty-seven miles - K on the Great Lakes, including the locks ,r of Fault St. Mnrie and the St. Claire ,p River, to Rumdn and Niagara Falls, ami down to Philadelphia and on home. This is my last letter, I realize I have y only been aide to give very brief aclP counts of this won^ful trip, owing
I journey i- over we will have traveled over 10,0(10 miles altogether, been in ■ twcntRtfive States, four provinces, in , number of line- of railroad-, over many ; river. -.'on five great bodies of water including Pacific Ocean, and looked and looked until it seemed as If there can't l>e much more to look nt. though (ben- i>. i It has been highly interesting miff i '-pent with congenial friends. r Woodhury party when 1 say that there i have stopped only at the finest hotels, : yet only one- ha* -wool. -potato*- appearei on the mend, and never fresh ; lima In-ans or gm-l corn, such a- we ' may laughingly lie called by the west"the truck patch" of the na- _ out the la-t two thousand miles of our 1 journey, with satisfied hut eager eyes over opstward to our homes j like the Israelites must have felt, when i down through the mists of ages they looked ami beheld, the promised land. 1 **MRS. T. DOWDNEY CLARK. J Lost something? Placeman ad in i the SENTINEL and it will 1* quick- j feturneil. NOTICE FLORIDA O JONES ^ 03 CSr MPS°r»i»»VjVa«cy
.Something New found J [or— he benefit at Oca.i Cily people ! s,. m » Ocean City House Cleanine ■»»'»• *• "™-, I,!l w-"' mfm>. I, _ Ocean C Ity, N. J. Comnany 73O West Avenue K«!?}i!JI?o?rrcHr 'itczazl'* / Ocean City New Jersey rinwomctittee «* JONES, ROOCRS & HASsfcLL iughet Central Pharmacy a. i- joni>. manogrr 8th and Wesley Ave. t- phone. 410 j jobbing paomptlv done WALTER TOMLIN PLUMBING and HEATING ic 138 ASBURY AVENUE ly ocean city new jersey et • - " ^ IF YOU ARE SICK AND SUFFERING AND CANNOT GET RESULTS WHY NOT TRY Chiropractic T. U. Brink, D. C. C. R. Kissinger, D. C. 938 South Apartment CHIROPRACTORS Hours 10-1 S-D Boardwalk Sat. and Sun. by appointment , City Garage SEVENTH AND HAVEN AVE. occam CITY. NMW JKN scjfc L. W. MILLER PeSORRIBTOR TELEPHONE. 203 A. This is a 3-19 B, Westing- — -frfcL house full automatic ElecFi Il -"--f Range, other styles in l»J lfll» "9 |U-^=a stock. I^et us show you the j advantages of cooking by [ electricity. Cheaper than ■ I gas and cleaner. in ijH 11 \V6 carry a full line of West*n^°USe' ^a?('a an(^ NitroP' ^ ^ w i Raymond ^ BI9 ASI0KY/5T. OCEAN C1TY.N.J.
"We h:W<- a bureau wh<tw» duty it i- P' lain I each week the country news- .nu , from all over the country. H< isyi»l ■' I'1 1"'1 "f an>|| <y^- W h'ureau d.^YdU'gc'- Thi- bureau look- over the-.- papers ami when we find a town where the. merchants are y£ not ';-.,lveiti-int- in local |U»pers »i"j„ immellintely Hood tlwt territory with- 1>] our litrraluie. 11 always bring* re- -j. j ioastedf O seal in the | hurley • flavor a\i\ Once you've \ ' I | enjoyed the \ I toasted flavor J )-ou will al- ^ \ ways want it \ «. HOTEIS Anil c or-i AUK*. Scotch Hal I 0 SANITARIUM OPBN ALLIYCAB i A quiet, highs: la's horae suitable lor invalids. Moat desirable *11 year round u home for elderly people ami for well " people desiring a quiet place for RUST. Cooking undrr supervision of a graduate i lMctilion. Register cjl Graduate Nurse always on doty, luths. Massage, Klectric, Hot-air Jtrfkcr Treatuient ^ given. B. McGIBCNY. Mlaa -.LWo/k. N. )«*• 1 ^WICYON HALL ' Ill6 Wesley ave. Ocean City New Jersey Newly furnished rooms; running water in each room; Three minutes from the Beach Mrs. Francis D. Maxwell r ^ : ————————— . MILLER COTTAGE 121 Central Avenue ; | ■WKAN CITY .NKW JKRHKY Opeu All tbe Year Hot-water Heat, LAURA I. Ml l-LICK i THE BISCAYNE NOW OPEN till nn I as water Id every txxlroora Ocean Dvrnur opposite Mratrlyn trrrac Private Hath* Booklet . # K. QLUNDIN, Owner 1 GANDY COITAGE H|3 Central Avenue Ocean City New Jersey open all the Year. Warm room- and Mas. I.vota UABBT. Prop. THE DARLINGTON 3 i 126 Centra "Tve'' '"oronT'lty, N.J. NOW OPEN M <s Jazu p. 5 Phone 3833 t DR. DAVID M. SAXE Veterinary Surgeon = 21 N. Virginia ave. AUsntk City Diseases of dogs and eats a specialty Ocean City calls given special attention ; < 1 Now is the Time to Plant Privet Hedge Thomas J. Thorn FLORIST 1128 Hay Aveflue ;- Ocean City New Jersey n — ^ .
put forth in territory where the local merchant* use their local paper.-." said l!o . enfield, advertising matin for Sears. Kqchuck & Co. SEND THEM in Semi those little personals about friends. the family yourself to the Sentinel, hut be .-"Bre to got to the offire not -later than Tuesday noon. BRECKLEY'S HOUSE AND SIQN PAINTERS .clinton l. breckl.ev. Prn Heady Mixed Paint*. I mail anil (Mi. - 9-.'U I lid 9-JU Asliury avenue. "\J, - - d« w. p. haines •' cor. ninth and wesley av e ocean city. n. j. Dr. Florence B. Haiffs lloara by App.>laimrai Allen Corson, M. D. Wesley Avenue City , Now Jersey **"lnu-rJHl«l» » a. PKTTIT, M. I). 807 wesley ave. ocean city. new jersey (Idle* llonra: V In 10 a. ni. ' *- John H. Wiiiticar, M. D. tit Wesley avenue Ocean city. n. j. Hour., (Man C'ty Tuesday W nlo-oday.j* lis. m. Friday Satarda/, ( I 30-:. 10 p. m. DR. CHAS. H. VAIL Qsleopalkic Physlciaa I'll -nines I'tilladalphlatonw Slli « (Vnlrsl 1(M Real Ealata Treat Bids PhoD# 2TS-W ^ ^ ^ DENTIST DR. WILSON Y. CHRISTIAN 809 Central avenue. Ocean City. N. J. Bell JPhone 152 Ex-ray Dingnosit Nitrous Oxide Administered / CENTRAL PHARMACY Eighth at. and Wesley ave. Phone 2 15 * ^ J. Thornley Hughes, P. D. Pharmacist in Charge ATTOBMKYS.AT-l.AW. Wootton, Harcourt & Steelman LAW OFFICES ANDREW C. BOSWELL Law Offices Master In Chancery Bouraa Bulldlni— Aabury An.«M St* ! ocean city. n. j. - ARCHITECTS L. Leslie Headley Co. Incorporated ARCHITECTUAL SERVICE , Builders 51.'. EIGHTH STREET (Eighth and Wesley ave.) Oeean City, N. J. Designer and builder of Artistic Bungalows, Convenient, Cottages, Up-to-date Apartments, Modem *y Hotels. - VIVIAN B. SMITH ARCHITECT Atlantlo City. n. j ENGINEERS Wm. H. Collisson, |r. f A -on. M. Am. Hoo. C. K. Civil Engineer and Survejor THE LUNCH EpN HOUR finds this restaurant full of people who are very, evidently enjoying themselves. For there is good fellowship here as well as good food. If jrouVnjoy the good things of life stop in here for lunch and If you are wise you'll let it be soon.
n THE HARRIS RESTAURANT « 805 Asbury Avenue '• Rreyers Ice Creiun Ocean City, N. J. W. IL Harris, Prop »

