EIGHTH OCEAN CITY, N. J., OCEAN CITY SENTINEL, THURSDAY, 'AUGUST 10, 1922 •
SEEK GOLD IN THE ARCTIC Adventurers Are ■p* Projecting the Coasts of prfin Bay And «J>avla Strait. One or the reany pathetic ztortt* of ■nicni history is the mutiny of Hedry BuilssD'a crew when be was exploring j 1 the arctic waters at North America, and his abandonment with his son. In that vast inland sea that bears his 1 name, a writer In the Brooklyn Eagle 1 remarks. Many Uvea have been eacrl- ' Seed In the quest of the North and [ South poles Sir John Franklin's and ' the Jeannette'a parties In the north and the recent Scott expedition =? the ' aouih only need be mtfctiom-d. 'r Plans are afoot to open np tne Baffin v bay region to commerce. For many ' years small steamers have been maS- "■ log summer Halts to Hudson bay to l 1 trade with the natives, and the Cans- * dlan government Is building a railway ' to one of Its ports. Railroad and com- J1 merctil development of Alaska by : 1 Anp-rlean enterprise has caused pros- !' porting of the mineral resource* of a the coasts of Baffin bay and DavU " strait with the result of finding, at the former place, gold In sufficient quant!- ~ ties to Justify development and coal [! of excellent qoallty along the latter. [' The latitude is about the same as that " of the Yukon region and only a few " ' degrees north of that of Nome, which '* has developed Into a large community. " So impelling Is the lure of gold that the hardships of an arctic climate will a not deter adventurers from hazarding 's their lives against the wealth said to '• be buried under the eternal snow and J" Ice of Baffin Island. ^ CHAUNCEY'S TURN TO LAUGH £ ft Close-Fist ed Farmer Learned Some- el thing About the Value Legal to Lights Sat an Service*. Ulgm on no aoreon.
Chauncey M. Depow, In writing the story of his Ufa, recalls his first law case. It was In PeekskllL The client was a farmer and he wanted an opinion on certain property rights. Depew spent a week In looking np the points of law that had bearing on the case and when be had flnlahed charged the modest fee of $5. "Too much." cried the farmer. "But It's taken me a whole week to prepare this," protested Depew. "Dont make no difference," declared the farmer. "1 figure ILBO la all ITS worth and that's all you're going as let-" About a week later the man came te the office again. "Mr. Depew," be said. "I had some doubts about that opinion of yottra, aa I took it down to New York and showed It to Mr. . And what do yon think be charged me. Jo*t for readln" that opinion of yours and pub ting his O. K. on it?" "How much." demanded Depew, on excited. "Five hundred dollars r Canada's Bird Refuge. It la something for one bird to tell another that Canada has created a series of reserves In the prprtnee ct Quebec where birds are safe from manmade troubles. D alike moot bird refuges, Perce Sock, a picturesque Island near Perce village; the east and north rilffs of Bonaventore Island, three mileaffurther away; and the northernmost of the Msatlslen lslsnds, 124 miles out to mo, have been set apart specifically to protect birds whose valne to mankind Is chiefly their beauty as A pert of nature. There Is no attempt to argue, for ezumple, that the gannet the klttlwafce, or the rasorbUi auk should b# protected because they "help the fanner" ; they are protected simply because they are birds. No haman being may steal an egg from their nests; no weapon dangerous to their welfare may be brought wchln a mile of their island sanctuN sturslly an other birds are equally safe, and the refuges will be a help toward carrying out the purpose of the International treaty for bird prolan ion. Yellowstone Park Qrows. Yellowstone national park Is expected to grow L265 square miles larger as soon as the present congress' ! reaches a bill neglected by the last session. The proposed extension, 80 i miles to the south of the established j buundsry, as described In Popular 1 e-M' . hanlcs magazine, takes In Jackson 1 lake and the wonderful mountain j scenery about It, part of tha famous Jackson's Hole country. Besides providing the only variety of scenic beauty now lacking In the park, the addition Includes the summer grazing ground of America's last large herd of elk, and eoAie of the finest tront-fishlng water In the country. Fish Had False Teeth. A fish wearing false teeth was hooked In the Gulf of Mexico, near Indian Rocks, Fla, by A. L. Anderson of Independence. Jodge Anderson waa Invited to go out In a boat with H. H. Ingersoll, a well known resident of Indian Rocks. During the day thsy brought up a specimen of the "swell toed" or burflah variety. As the hook was pulled out It brought with It a front plats with four false teeth attached to a gold bridge. Later It was learned by the astonished fishermen that a few days before a visitor from Olds mar, a nearby resort, had dropped his teeth WUfi bathing.— Kansas City 8 tar.
LANDMARKS LEFT BY JEWS Many Cities of Spain Can Shew ths Remelns of Streets and BuildInge They Occupied. In many big towns in Spain there j are beautiful remains /Of the ancient - Jewries, the streets and buildings havi log been preserved Intact to this day. i There are, for Instance, says the Jewish TAgebUtt of New York city, several fine residences which belonged to wealthy Jews before 1*92, especially the two' beautiful synagogues In Tie ledo. with their Hebrew Inscriptions. , In Cordova, an important part of the ' old Jewish quarter still exists, and ! -there Is a beautiful little synagogue , with Inscriptions around the building. : which Is situated In a street, named ) Colic Malmonldes. In Seville there are four churches which were formerly ' synagogues. One of the most beautl- ! fut Jewries Is that of Cordova, the ■ birthplace of Mulmonldea (Rambatl). i It Is built In a fine Gothic style, and the old communal house Is now used as a school. In Saragossa there are ; whole streets of the old Jgwry still preserved with residences of Wealthy Jewlsh denizens. Another old Jewry U 1 that of Pontevedra. which Is supposed to have been the town where the a!- 1 legod Jewish forbears of Columbus j lived. There are thousands of Span- > lsh families bearing Jewish names, and they know they are of Jewish extraction. Several members of the Spanish nobility are also of Jewlth origin. It is very remarkable nhat the Jewish type Is even still preserved with such purity In those parts of Spain which have large Jewim communities, especially Ar.dalusliand Catalonia. Never can one see In Europe such beauti- . ful types of woraenwMi their wondereyes, natural eleghieer-aad most attractive elasticity and dignity 'as are be found In Seville and Granada.
, ALL HAVE FAVORED NUMBER : Inhabitants of Various Countries Show Marked Prefereneo for Numerals to Their Faney. Some curious conclusions have been j ; reached as the result of what are j called the "preferred -numbers" of the Inhabitants of different countries. The , basis of the Investigations had to do with the various denominations of 1 I money, postage stamps and other me- , diums of value. , II appear* that nearly all races evince a marked preference for the , numbers two, three and five and their multiples. The Mahommedans, however. avoid the use of the number three. ' Among the French and other Latin , peoplen two and five are more popular 1 than three, while the English prefer | two and three and the German* three and five. The Chinese are said to resemble the latins in their choice, while the peoples of India have a strong liking for two. The number seven Is most used in the Slavic countries. The higher numbers are not much used except In Spanish-speaking countries, as 1 eleven In Salvador, seventeen In Mexl- ' co, nineteen In 8paln. The people of t Hawaii are said to be fond of thirteen. i •«, Mediterranean Quill. | i In the Mediterranean no bird Is bet- j ! ter known than the quail froffi the,1 ■ Spanish littoral to the Arabian hni- j i sides. Twice a year It passes over the ; great Inland sea. northward In spring, 1 and south ward in September and Octoi ber. Its coming is quite a festival,., and many an outstanding bill and many a peaaanfa overdue rent U paid > at Its expense. When It goes northward In May to It* nesting place In the i middle of Europe the sandy Italian i sea beaches are lined In the line of Its flight with fine netting loosely held up by stakes, and the unhappy Utile ; quails, flying low over the aea, plunge Into these, and are securely held by ; the falling meshes. No fewer than seventeen thousand have been received In Roane In one day, and In the small Island of Daprl, near Naples, one hun- , dred and sixty thousand are sometimes ; taken In a season. Odd Eccentricity. Among th«J wealthy eccentrics of England was a man who lived near Hastings. His fad excited much atten- ' tlon and amusement among his nelghr hors. Punctually at noon each day he : would appear In his front yard with 1 ! a crimson turban on his head, his feet | ! covered with richly embroidered and ' j Jeweled sandals, and with a coolie 1 i cloth round hit waist Then, abso- ' ! hrtely Indifferent to the boots of the 1 ' people In the street, he would flrctj pray aloud to the tun. "the father of. light and good," and Immediately aft- ' erward prostrate himself before a j • quaint miniature Idol with diamond : eyes. What made his eccentricity re1 markable was the fact that he was not 1 of Eastern origin, nor had he ever been converted to any religious faltli or cult of the East. Japan's First Railway Station. 1 The old atone building of the Sh|mbashl station, which la familiar to aD > the foreign resident* who came to i Japan before the .completion of the . Toklo station, la to be moved to the i compound of the Meljl Shrine, which i la In course of construction at Yoyogi. • This building was the first railway t station bnllt la Japan and It la at the s same time one of the oldest buildings of foreign style In the capital. The - station was constructed when Japan's . first railroad was opened between r Yokohama and Tokto In 1872, under I the supervision oof an American engineer. — Yokohama JouraaL
S GIVE DUE CREDIT TO JOSEPH " Aooerdlnp to Biblical Record, He Was the First to Engage In ^ "Prof! toe ring." There Is sacred. If not-MrtorlcaL ert>t dence, that to Joseph belongs the I credit, or discredit, of being the first ?■ profiteer on record, says i^ew York j '■ Herald. We are told thai he hgd r" enough forethought In the fsee of on1; ° approaching famine to buy and gar- 1 / }' ner Into the Egyptian storehouses nil ; , • the nvallable food, mostly corn. In' the ; , "• surrounding country. The Bible tells j j ' how much was In those storehouses, 1 d and relics of those times have been | ureefthrel, giving evidence Ahat the ' amount stored In each place lfcs care- > <1 folly recorded, showing that Joseph i '• was a man of careful and methodical , But the ^portaut and significant e fact Is that Joseph secured possoe- ' slon of all the food to provide for a | I ' famine he had predicted. Joseph was " 1 wise. He cornered the corn and held o • on to It. so that when the famine t • arrived and starving people came • - fiom surrounding lands begging for < ' food. Joseph sold at a good profit ( 1 He had all the corn and other food - j there was for hundreds of miles " . about. The famine even reached as * . I far as Cansan. the land from which ; » I he had been sold Into slavery by I . his brothers, and yet he received his . a i ' brothers and sold them food — but j i i always at a profit He finally had In i his possession all the gold, silver and i even the land ronnd about ^ i Joseph was the big business man of . Egypt. He "generously" surrendered 1 " his political control of Egypt to Pharaoh, but kept the economic control to ■ himself. H ' MUST THROW JBgf POIS0KS AU Living Thlngb~ Suffer If They Db h Not Obey Inexorable Law of Nature. h Living things are constantly throve- n log off materials which, unless re- r moved, will act as poisons. Crop* ; y : ulust be rotated, because the noil con- 1 j( dltlons produced by any one crop pre- 1 . vAit* the development of the same ' I kind In immediate succession. The same thing Is true of the bu- '■ ! man body. It Is constantly throwing off, through the akin and lungs, materials which must be removed In order v that the body may maintain Its rigor s and health. The qnallty of air we t; breathe and that envelops our bodies > v determines In large measure our ptiya- r leal, intellectual and emotional conditions and activities. The best air for * the body Is that which Is cool, dry and r ' kept constantly In motion. ' When Bleeping, the air should be kept in circulation as much as posst- * blc, although one should not sleep In a a draft. Fatlgtae la a poison which Is h thrown off by sleep and the sleep, to , , do whst Is required of It should be ' 1 quiet and restful. Bees Are Brainy. h What a bee does not know la snp- ' poaed to lie not worth knowing. Lon- . don Answers says. That may or may not be true, but the two following In- (t ddenta— one of which was witnessed . ! by the writer — testify to the remark- J , i able sagacity and efficiency of bees. On one occasion a hive waa being a . "spied upon" by a wasp. When a wasp ascertains that a hire Is worth attackIng. be carries' the newt to his friends, " and sometime* succeeds In ousting or r I severely worrying the'bees. While the v I wasp scout was noting around, the r bees stayed )n the hive, but every time i , the wasp approached the small en- ,, trance bole a bee came out and walked 1 s i round In a circle, doing sentry work i tin the wasp departed^ An hour later a wasp — presumably i the scout— was found dead on lta back ' > on the top of the hive, and the bees 1 i were busy again. v I ' | Dust en Ocean's Bed. To an enormous extent the bed of ' the ocean la covered with lava and ' pumice stone, says the Family Her- v aid. 8tm more remarkable la It to find r the floor of the ocean covered In many , psrts with the dost of meteorites. ' ; These bodies whirl about In the hear- s : ens like miniature comets, and are | for the most part broken Into In- , | numerable fragments. We are all fa- , ' -miliar with these .heavenly visitant* t I as shooting stan ; but it has been only ■ lately discovered that this cosmic dust ' forms layers at the bottom of the deep1 est sea*. Between Honoluln and Ta- ' hlti, at a depth of £.350 fathoms— over i ' twojnlle* and a half — a vast layer of H-rtujualerial exists. Falling upon land ' - this Impalpable dust la. Indistinguishable; but, accumulating for centuries , | In" the sea depths. It forms a wondrous 1 story of the continuous bombardment ' of this planet by cometary bodies, i ————— • _ I t World's Debt to Scotsman. The a team-engine la Scotland's chief, 1 though not her only, contribution to the material progress of the world. Watt was lta Inventor, we might aK - ■ most write creator, so multiform were* i I | the successive steps. Symington by i > ' the steamship stretched on# arm of It » 1 over the water. Stephenson by the » locomgtlv* stretched the other over i the land. . Thus was the world brought . under its sway, and conditions of hur man life transformed. Watt *Dd Byms tngton were bora lu Scotland within ■ a few miles of each other The b Watt engine appeared In 1782, the i steamship In 1801 ; the locomotive I thirteen years later. In 1814. Thus r thirty-two years after Its appearance, ■ Watt's steam-engine had conquered •oth land and sea.— Andrew Oaraegl*.
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' DR. JOHN HANDLEY ' APPLIES A GOOD STRONG SWITCH j j (Continued From Page One) [the 'power Jn it vlf to -make such wan- 1 ■dais of infinitely les* trt-quent occur-; jrence- if it ostracized the offender in- i I »t<a<l of opening its armv t» receive; | him as a hero and saint I Dr. Handler's words recalled a ! statement made some years ago by a " I young man who stood at' the har wait- ' ! ing sentence for the murder of his ! l' i " "Society must share. in my guilt if |° not in my punishment" ho said. "Until twenty-seven years of age I "moved ' of studious hahits. Nobody took no- 'j j tity. uninteresting to thorn. Then a a j friend in liantering. rynical mood. a mild scandal around my • : ft was whispered I was car-i° , eying on a liaison, with a woman who;8 j actually did not exist, and instantly J" became a subject of interest. Men • , and women who never realized ^ cxI isted before iiettcd mc and threW a thousand temptations in my way. I ! was nothing until a fictitious scandal 5 I became ^associated wijh my name : ' !' j then I became aOBcro." The only cure for such conduct, j ; j said Dr . Handles-, is for the clean;'' | public of America to show in ' an unmistakable manner its resent- ; ^ i menl and rise en masse for the pro- | ^ j tcctkm of the American home and the 1 ^ : honor of our womanhood. ' Dr. Handlev took the opportunity i . here to inject some very excellent f I advice to young people contemplating L ' | marriage. He denounced the mar- " ' riagc of convenience, marriage for *" ! wealth and for social prestige, dcclaring that nothing could substitute true 1 [love to cement the union of two pcr- | sons m the close intimacy of wedded 1 j life.- . '
Albeit. "Dr. Handles- did not lock 1 Uhe door of hope against the man or r [Voman who in a weak moment had i sinned. "It is easy to make a mis- " take," he said, "and to the person > who sincerely desires it. as easy to j ^ I repent a ml reform. But it is a enime j ' j against the lasvs and the traditions of j * • our land and against the !aw»-o£ God j " ! continue in sin. I We must defend the home at any [ 5 [sacrifice. The sanctity of the home j ' / and the purity of womanhood must j * protected and the commandments j i of God kept "inviolate. j , Society must make it easy for every j ' man to be good and hard to he evil." | ; The music of the service was of a j high standard of excellence. Miss Myrtle C. Eaver performed at | " the organ with the skill of a master. / [The three selections which were given t during the opening recital were of a tl varied character and demonstrated the j f ; lady's musical versatility in a remark- it •able manner. M The torn selections given by the • ; quartette in which the chimes were j introduced w»i unforgctablc. Sim- " ' pie melodies sung in a reverent spirit r ! without any attempt at vocal gvmj nasties with the pealing of the chimes. [ 1 [ they seemed to suffuse around the | J[ \ congregation an atmosphere «of deep i spirituality and devotion. ( The old and very familiar duet, "W atchman. What of -the Night i- 'ij i sung by Mcssrti Only and Maeix-i- ; Ian. was an artistic performance, : ; while Miss Lena Buehn'j interprcta- 1 tion of Hanlcy's musical setting to ' Cardinal Newman's words, "l-ead Kindly, Light." did much to reconcile ' ; to several features in4)l song over i j which we have so far Men unable to , enthuse. Dr. John Handlcy made the an- ! nouncemcnt tliat given the necessary j support and co-opcration. Prof. Conly j propose* to have a large chorus par- [ [ [ ticipatc in some musical programs ' during the season. The idea can- ) mends itself highly and should appeal j '
i to all lovers of music. With a chorus] ,.f' fifty ^if-cs. the .quartette could | i essay with comidcncc tlie performance J ■of exccrptyffrpon some classic ora-f Storio or sit red cantata for an even- ! OCEAN GTTYCOUNTRY CLUB ESTABLISHED GTS FUTURE (Continued From Page One) City Country Club include four cigh- 1 I tecn-holc courses, the first of which i will lie ready for usc by tltc heginging j of next July. I In addition splendid facilities will be made for cricket, trap-shooting, saddle horse riding and first -class tyneis courts, together with all the varied activities and recreations of I metropolitan hotel. Situated on the bay front, it will j | also command all the outdoor ^interests j jot a seashore resort — bathing. Iboating ; and splendid fishing. The hay also | i offers every requirement for aquatic | ; sports and water carnivals. Tlie Ocean City Country Club will | differ in one particular and important ; feature from the vast majoritv oft' similar institutions. Its activities wilj ; not he confined to the summer. Rather 1 it is |>roposad to make it an all-the- | year-round center of sOeial interests: iand recreation. It will have a con-' ! tinual flow, of patronage, and prob- , I ably during the winter season lie as . i attended and as busy a hive i | of activity as in the summer ; in fart. - : as important a winter resort as it I will a summer vacation locale, i Tlir club home will operate all tlx- * i year with accommodation for about one hundred and twenty-five rooms, equipped with the most modern ap-/ pointmrnts. and furrtished with all • the convenience* and comforts of a first-class metropolitan hotel. Tlie proposed plans include a .fireproof ! structure of more than ordinary archi- •. tectural beauty, with grounds', surrounding artistically laid Tlie Ocean City Country Club will differ in still another important fca- j turc from- the majority 'of such in- j j stitutions.' in the sense that it will not j lie merely a lycal organization. It! I will tie cosmopolitan in the highest 1 degree , drawing its membership irtWf^ ! every State in the Union. North, j I south, cast and west will meet ub<^n j i' oi closest intimacy and fellow- ; ship in the Ocean City Country Club, j I Situated as it is geographically, the Atlantic City as it will to Ocean City. As a matter of fact, the people of Atlantic City are already regarding I it as one of their future assets of no I mean value and importance, i The directorate of the Ocean City | Couufrv Club has been selected with I the "tit most care and circumspection. All atA gentlemen of unimpeachable representatives of the very ' I highest "type of American citizenship; ' selected also for the advantages and i [the prestige the club may draw forj ' its future development from their j • presence and influence upon the bodrd. j The financing and the accountancy of j I the club is under the jurisdiction of I j ok the largest and most reputable j ! tanking establishments in the city of j Philadelphia. Finally it should be added and cm- ! j phasized the Ocean City Country Club j I las been founded and will he main- 1 _ taints! In perfect. harmony awl accord- 1 j with tlie spirit and character of Ocean . , | City. Tig, traditions • upon which I j Ocean City was founded, and which, , despite all. it will retain, are the . j foundations upon which the club rests. , ; Invitations to membership have been . , extended to a number of persons residing in Ocean City. Atlantic City. : , Philadelphia and New York, i It requires no great power of imagination q^rcalize that the Ocean | City Country Club will ultimately j prove to be the most valuable social I I and financial asset to Ocean City. The i treeing of the toll bridge, the erection
isTof tlie Beach Front Hotel will mean1 d | much "for the prosperity and future e | progress of .the city. With due rr--fspcct it is said the new club am! its " | golf courses, togrthcr with -other j recreational advantages will mean ! To succeed the Hotel' will need a I |utronagc of a different class to that [which it now receives. Tlie golf j courses will be the allurement. To : j prove a financial gain the hotel 'will » I need an all-thc-ycar patronage. The "" Country Club with its attractions will ., ■f supply the patronage, i This the pioneers of the hotel movci mcnt have forsccn and many eff them 1 . j arc seeking to lAcnmc affiliated with , the club. • \ j ft is also antjdgstionably true that j many persons— wer^ itxiuci-d to pur- ' j chase stock in the hotel with the as- 1 , surance that the golf fotirsc would lie in readiness for the opening of the . hotel, or as nearly so .as humanly ^ possible. - With expert outdoor sport cnthusi- | 1 1 asts and golfers as Harvey Y. Lake . | pushing the project to a speedy eon- j i summation the golf course will bc'ihi ' i readiness for the first contingent of j ; r hotel guests. Tliere is infinite satisfaction also j I ' in die knowledge that the moral cali- ( j bre of- patrons the Country Club will \ jjt draw will be in every respect desirable J 1 both .for Ocean City's Ocean Front j Hotel and for Ocean City. : CHURCHILL HUNGERFORD ABLY CHAPERONS LARGE PARTY TO N.J.
" ( Continued From Page Orte) "■ | the genial host, all thorougMy tn- ■ The tournament was made tlie occasion for a. large and representative | ' ^ gathering of the clans, but no sensational records were made. '"j Dr I. W Pinkham. tin- popular " |cfiib champion of the Ocean City Fi»hJ* I "Doe" carried away llw laurels in J event No. 4. for tin- average of five Lv ()r i'inkham's average score reachi cd the margin of 3*1 feet I inches. I " Tr» him also fell the honor, of the j " j finest achievement of the day. a cast , [ measuring 370 feet B inches. Incidentally the genial doctor has I 0 added another collection of trophies to his already well-stocked museum. Henry W Stclwagon. a former president of the Ocean City Fishing o Club, entered the lists, rendering a fine account of his skill in the art. Mr. Stclwagon followed a close second in the average of three casts in a thirty-foot lane, and ranked fourth p in the longest of five casts, event No. e «. I ; Inasmuch as it became necessary to 4 | begin the return journey, before the r | program was completed, full particu- j r lars arc no, to' hand These may j I. j come for the next week's issOc. f Next Saturday at Ocean City, the f I premier evem of the gear will be | e J staged, when all teams affiliated with if | National Association of Surf Ang- j i ling Clubs, will compete for the Ocean i I- [ City trophy. ib | The Ocean City Fishing Club holds I •- the trophy for the present year, and j <h) will not yield it without a hard fight, j n It is anticipated that this year more h ! teams than ever will enter the lists, ■ i, vine appearing for the first time on te ! the field. s. 1 It will he a gatliering of the big ■n : chiefs and the champions. Weather :- conditions being favorable some senir, sational records may be established. : FINANCIAL CAMPAIGN ^ ' (Continued From Page One) i and ice cream and drinks were proT duccd. mi In tlie awards for the night Dhri-
GAMP ELECTION AT : GERMANTOWN GLUB STARTLING RESULTS ARE i: BROUGHT TO UGHT IN A NOVEL BAIX0Z i ; v " —y — There arc all sorts and conditions 1 -of elections conducted over the world; but the election conducted ' at the Germantown Boys Club, for 1 novelty surely excels all. ' 1 A defeated candidate at a poli- ' tical election knows the people do 1 | not want him; -but he does not know happily what they think of j him. L. The boys of the Germantown , Club made no attempt to conceal . i their opinions- }nd some candidates were most certainly surprised when e L hte result was- made known. - j Following we append an account tj of the ballot, and allow our readf $e» to imagine what must have been the thoughts and feelings of 1 ! the respective candidates. ' Germantown Boys Club Camp ' Camp Election; — Week of Aug. 7 J I. Most Popular. Mr. and Mrs. PitLs. - 2. Who thinks (he or. she) IsI Horace Vogelc- | ;!. Most AmbWrnncNorman Grijj 4 ljiziestL^oraee Vogele- , Ji 5. Handspfnest, Russell Bowers. , j G. Who Thinks (he or she is), | Alice Robertson. '• 7. Most Cheerful, James Straub. i s. Biggest Grouch, Geo. Paulling, Jr. j <». Funniest, Roloff Dewsnap. j 10- Who Thinks (she is), Isa- -. ibella Carr. ,- ] 11. Biggest Eater, Isabella Carr- . i 12- Smallest Eater, Charlotte Bainbridge. r 13. Who Thinks-(she is), Mrs. Pyffer. , % f >4. Clumsiest, Russell Clark. 15. Biggest Bragger- Horace n Vogele. v lfi. Most Inquisitive, Horace i. Vogele 17 Quitcst, May Collisoni- ' 18. Noisest, Horace \tog£le19. Most Polite, Jos- WcDonald. r i 20. NeatesL May Colllson. | . '21. Most Careless, Russell Clark. '* -22. BrightesL James Cunningham. r 23. - Who Thinks (he is), Rolloff s Dewsnap. a 24. Best All Hound Camper, James Staub. 25- Best Swimmer, Jamef Staub n 26. Best Oarsman, Henry Ward, h ' 27 Best Fisherman- John Carr. i. j 28. Who Thinks, (he Is)- John i Carr. i 29. Best Entertainer, Norman r Griffin. 30. Best Thing In Camp, Eats. skin "A" carried away the silk flag c I once more. In Division "A" Floyd ej Simms and his teammates won tlie h "we arc it" pennant ; in division "B~ ;. j Thomas Mould maintained the honn I ors. In division "C" they went to ! Roy- Darby, and in "D" to Hans |, Burkhardt. , ! Due to tlie hilarity which prevailed j it was impossible to make final ! j award- The Goat goes to Tfoyd U. •e , Stmms for i-crmancm ownership. In s. j division "A" Simms retains the "we >n arc it"; in division *"B" it goes to Thomas Mould : in "C" to John R. ■ Jones and in "D" to Elmer Jackson K Pearl. The silk flag goes to Chairman Fogg of division "A" for permal- ncaffooBpership. /The meeting broke up before any figures on "star salesmen" were availIt able. However, tlie re are numerous V men on the organization who merit 1 this mark of honor. Even though the exact number and names may never be available Ave all know that »- thrv worked' and/ worked hard to make Ocean City's^gTWtest need a
OCEAN CITY YACHT CLUB FAIR ill j lOtlx, lltli, 12tli |(| THESE ARE YOUR OPPORTUNITIES, TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THEM 1 i (I) To have the truly Inspirational Panoramic View which Aviation alone provides. (2) A new machine with a 450 H. P. Liberty Motor which has only seen j x_>20 hours of Service. ' ' i (3) An experienced Pilot who has flown 1800 hours, and who has carried well over 5,000 passengers making over 2000 safe landings. (4) A charge which Is In reach of All. FLY TO-DAY In the 5- Passenger Flying Boat "ALBATROSS" NIGHT8EEING FLIGHTS, Local, S5 per Passenger II] ATLANTIC CITY, Return, - - Sio~|ifcr Passenger III SAFE - SWIFT - STEADY - SURE! Our motto, "Strictly Straight Flying and ALWAYS OVER WATER." We never take a chance, |||| and give ALL patrons absolutely the Best that Aviation can give. >sj J- K- C. MOWN a DR I.O* THOMAS I

