Ocean City Sentinel, 12 April 1923 IIIF issue link — Page 6

OCEAN CIT\- SENTINEL. THURSDAY. APRIL 12, 1923 • _ . — ^

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GAPE MAY LEAGUERS I BANQUET MINSTRELS MISS BALL HONORED >

OVER EIGHT HUNDRED DOLLARS RECEIVED AS RESULT OF ENTERTAINMENT J The member- of the Young ' Men-* Progressive League of Cape -j May City, evidenced their appreciation of the aervice* rendeml the , body by the minstrel troupe and j all who helped to make the recent • ^ entertainment the signal success it! was. by inviting them to a royal! <— l» Over eight hundred dollar* was j „] netted to the treasury or the or- u ganiigtion as the result of the1 c

«ple»Srf\ performances. besides furnishing for the city delightful entertain mant for two evenings. Prof. L. A. Rode*. City Superintendent of Schools officiated a* ■ toast master, as to the manner born. "Boots" Lever, captain of the University of Pennsylvania Track , Team was the orator of the ins . , ing. The term orator D by no | means misapplied. Mr. Lever prov- ! , ed that not only was he a miracle cu uui noi amy was ne a miracie

an the track, having broken the , world's indoor records in Philadel- 1 | phia a few week* previous, but a c master of public speech as well, | holding the attention of his au<ii- , enee completely. t Edgar P. Stites, Jr., spoke of the difficulty they found in keep- t ing Cape May before the world j r during the winter season. County , Superintendent P. R. Brunyatc r compliments. 1 the organization for! t the wonderful musical talent it j t had discovered and developed and |, expressed the hope that the Harjmony Four, consisting of William | n Hill, Harry Hughe*. John MeCray!/ and Leslie Hand, would use their ' talent* to bring cheer to the sick i 9 and shut-ins of the community. < The toast master congratulated . , the members of the troupe for the • splendid co-operation and harmony:.' existing among them. Nothing ■ less could have produced such ex- : a cellent results musically ann finon- , dally. dally.

Mias Ionise Ball, supervisor of , music at the public schools came! J in for a great ovation and a hand- > some present as an acknowledge- - 1 merit of the services she had ren- ■ tiered with the troupe. Those present were: Steve Gid- < drag, Harry Holmes, Lewis Haw- j ley, John Myers, Charles Snowden.l • Thomas Hughes, Harry Hughes,1' Floyd Hughes, John Mecray, Les- ! 1 lie Hand, James Hand, William i Hill, John Meldrum, Ray File, Frank Miller, "Boots" Lever, Rob- ' ert Sawyer, Miss Louise Ball, Lron , Ewing, Gilbert Downs, '-William E. Presser, William Thompson, L. A. ' i Bodes, Frank B. Mecray, E. K. Brunyatc, Charles Shields and Ed-; gar P. Stites, Jr. r The menu was ns follows: | Sc. Roast Vermont Turkey j Maryland Style Celery Sweet Pickles Gherkins I Candied Sweet Potatoes ' £ Maahwl Fetetaee French Peas ' Stewed Tomatoes Sweet Com J lee Cream Cake Pie ■ Demi Tasse Cigars and Cigarettes Mr. and Mr*. W. D. Bonsai! and J Mr. and Mr*. Alex Colville, Jr., of t Philaddphia, spent the Easter at 14S2 Wesley avenue. advearnse in the sentinel I I

RECOVERS STOLEN MACHINE ■ FOUND IN WOODS AT NORTH- | FIELD BY MARK

ENGLISH The automobile, bearing a New i Jersey license No. IS 13113, the proj perty of Leroy Bourgeois, of' this, ' I city, which was reported stolen onj last, has been recovered. ; It transpired that Mr. Bourgeois ' who is a member of the firm of j and Bourgeois, and a prominent real estate broker, had j parked his car near Eighth streets ' !and the Boardwalk, Thursday afternoon. to participate in the trap ' between teams representing local and Hammonton Kiwam- ! " Clubs.

* ' Returning after the match, he | ' '' found his car missing and imme- j , ! diately notified the police of it. H j Fliers were immediately sent out ' ' a to all police departments within a ' T : hundred mile* radius and a dili- . gent aearch was instituted. ! * Sunday morning word was re't.ceived to the e fleet that the ma- " 1 chine had been found in the woods i ' 0 back of Northfield by a man nam- | ed Mark English from the vicinity. f e Mr. English notifie<l the owner ' e ami Chief of Police Johnson ' 1 * the machine back to the - r 'jdty. • ' The car bears the marks of * rough usage in the hands of the thieves. f In an effort to check the opera- ' > tions of automobile thijves, which ' may be haunting the coast resorts, fj Chief of Police Johnson issued a - request to all owners, impressing r ! them the necessity of seeing ' | that their machines are securely ' i locked when parked on the streets. ClrmlslKin. Eli-..' m*i i"l l-J ! s* ,- j Art ®f Consrr-- o< Annan M. 1111. -< ; ( I-UBIT o I Cmpr Mu ^ >:il>ia*lW Levi* L. Barr-:'. xj ,r h«> ! ' >i>d awja tan h* H ih» Man Naawtr ^ n( iW Ocvwn Cilar SmtiaaH. and that :hr

i y»l*Gi"a' aae^gsndall^a *^towa|4'on i PTsdlwL-pPj! ftau OwiW K. J jOcnaa^Ctar.^N. J. _ , i una* r4 aatllraaaaa ol alor-'khoklrra owa- " j lot*! aaAuuct of atork.) Onaaa Ou PaleUne^Md^PiakUaMiM Od.. IchJ!" S. ^*Mtoaa.°Ownin air. • N. J. : I. L. Barrnl. OnaD Cil*. K. J B P. Saallh. Ocnaa tlly. N J. : A R " J." 'Thai i-.ndholdara^aBd Hoitni Buildms aaal [awn AaaDCialaoak : Itnmn Cttj. N. J, 4. Thai the two patarrafhi tut ahinv lioMera. and aofjrilj hi.ldera. if any.^ cooI wh-r* lha .-ovkho'kk-T <.r"aaaortlynhoHar ! appeara upon the hooka of tba ix,ta)par.> ■ ariveti alao that the aaid "two i«rarrai4i< > motain nawmrnta ^mhr.rinc aUBant'ctockhoLdera "aad <nc!i!'"n"ol<^!'wl^,"S KK a pi ear upo* the hooka of the company ae trnataea. hold atock and awuritiea in a LEWIS L. BARRETT. Masaaor Ninth day of April, lt-1. P11ANK E. DARBY. Notary Public. . 1 'Ms commiaaion pxptree April ZS, lttTl 1

iCOM. HEXAMER : ENTHUSES OVER THE CALIFORNIA SPIRIT

INTERESTING LETTER WHICH MIGHT BE READ WITH PROFIT BY ALL , j In our last issue we published an 1 account of Commodore William E. , Hexamer journeying to the Pacific , , Coast, there to mm an Imperial ; Delegation from Japan, i Commodore Hexamer had not . long arrived in San Franeiso»,.be- • fore he was made to recognize evidences of what he aptly terms "the California spirit" — the genius i which has made the California " ' cities and resorts the envy of the ■

i Bearing in mint) how sincerely ^ i interested Commodore Hexamer is i in Ocean City and its future, the , c. unsel in the accompanying letter 1 might be with profit taken to heart ami put into practice. California Spirit Worth Copying I often have heard of the Cali- : fornia spirit. T was not in the ho- : tel 24 hours before I received a . t fine engraved card from two bank-1 £ ing institutions of Frisco, stating, b , they would be only too glad to as- ; £ i sist me with any banking 1 ilesired ' to do while in California. Then I had a call from a gentle- ; „

_ the Chamber of Commerce. He > extended me an invitation to take i interesting points p! their city.It though: of Ocean City and it is wowh while to copy — a splendid j i lea— when visitors from a distance come to Ocean City, il would 'be well worth -while for Our banki ing institulioiis and our Board of ..I Trade to da jjkewi-e. I tell jreu W. E. HEXAMER. Ocean Cit)- Spirit shoud bes ..me ^ known. SHORE GIRLS TO ( LASH SATURDAY" ■ <»cean City Girls' Five and Allan- , , tic City Five to Meet at Temple Saturday evening will witness a -pectacular basketball gome pla>- r , e.1 let ween two rival teams of the =• fair sex on the Temple Court, Ocean. The Ocean City Girls' Five, formerly of the Tripoli basket ball'',' team of Philadelphia, will meet the Atlantic City Five, erstwhile know as the Blatt aggregation. * Plav will begin at 8 o'clock ar : some sensational feats are antici- :: pa ted. The your.g ladies will play ~ acconiing to the accepted rules ' .i ; the Eastern League. The lineup for Ocean City wid ORDINANCE No. 22( ' U

... t I-. tTw. *;T. L^t*" "f *** E| °£"isS;V trE.-j'i: t [KISSS ; City ! J <>■*'» aigj ^ Sw- 4. That th* cowlrmct. whra «.»nl- j ■ «• k« umpororily ftaascvU hy :hy 'rw^r*£gI..°w?,^fi.tly1|ic"T j : day of wh^h thT»» .7 ! „ IMd by Oty CWrk. j S*c. - Thi. onkoiM 4oH tokr *(- j „ , V the expjrwtkiw of teo days from |

^ I .] NOT1CT licro and otrtmd readlnn at a naetiar of 1 New Jones, held Aerit Vth. IV21. and will 1 '-.be taken op on third readme and Snal ' ] pa— ix- at a maetinr of aaid Board In be ' |[tV.-»n City. New JeraQ. April X. 1»22. « i " HARBY* A MORRIS. 1 c"' ;

I How About $14,310,200,000 While the New York slicker* are busy trjing to steal a few i hundred thousand dollars from one another calling the accom , plishmcnt a day of good business, while the Broadway lounge lizards arc cluttering the streets of our cities and boring u.i , with their silly chatter, the great American farmer comes along with a production of goods worth #14.310.200,000 for the veat 1922. When one thinks of this accomplishment in terms of sertrne to America, everything else vanishes from view. The crops harvested during the year were worth $8,961,000.000, while the value of farm animals and animal products footed ■ up to $5,349,200,000. The outlook for 1923 is even brighter. The spending power of country America almost staggers j the imagination even as it is, and with a steady growth in sight. The year 1922 shows an increase of nearly $2,000,000,000 ! j over 1921. What the increase for 1923 will be is speculative. Texas led all the states in 1922 in the value of farm crops , and animals, footing up to a value of $1,001,500,000. Iowa came 1 second, and Illinois third. It is the farmer nnd the demands of the farmer that keep i the manufactories of the East busy and hold labor at its task. ' How important it is that each should understand the problems and ambitions of the other, the fanner and the bricklayer, the mill worker and the farm hand—the real men of America, the sustainers of American life. On With the Motor Power Every mile of gi»«l roads laid by states, counties, towns and villages has a bearing on the nation's business so far reaching that it would puzzle the mind to follow it to its logical con- ; elusion. Of course, the natural tendency is to look at the bene- j fits that cone- nearest and soonest to hand, liencfits which are j indisputable, providing unwise financing of such improvements 1 d«H * not more than offset the good that is hound to be gained. • Itejiorts from all over the country show that interurhan i freighting is on the increase due to good road building, particularly where the terminal facilities of rarlruads &tv congested. , This means more motor trucks, more men at work, more money earned, and a consequent greater spending power. Haulage of j farm products to shipping stations spells more business for the i farmer, nnd bettor still makes his marketing more elastic. \ of bus transportation in districts where the street car has not shown its nose u vet. bringing business into the small towns. Trade is rapidly increasing;' particularly where the merchant has vision to send -lis message to the outlying districts through the local press. America today is on the eve of. a development in motor ; I I rucks, omnibuses, and large and small farm tractors that in point of volume will Hnrpa» the development of the railroads. Some of the -railroad men view- the situation with a certain - br'-'ng <-f alarm, but there is nothing to fear. It is the aami ! fr.- iful sucetre that haunted the mind of the printer when the ; •'< •: • r acbitie came into being Where one man was at •.ork under the old system there are fifty at work today.

f probably Include Miss Jean Blun- - ilen. Miss Betty. Btonden, -Miss • Frances Lynch. Mi. .- Gladys j - Hughes. Miss Gerfru-le Stemn-er and Mis? Virginia L-amnreaux. all1 1 j{ Fliiis'lelphia. ^untfirtfrs I

LISTENING What tetter title could be found t on artk-le than the word. I.IKrK.MMi. Very often \ou see the , sign. "Stop. Ixsik. Listen." We - ink ■-are to listen to the w.-rltl s !-al- ' lira:?. Listen to tin music of the -h-dr. T.Utt-u to the sermon from fdidt l isten !.. :ke i, ■' Josus <"hrl«t.' r Through -the curt my of tlie \l To-'ASTEIt ne«-Kpa|«r sendee.'; IMry. tbc^n tiler is aide :.- 1 oiissli'ls "f l«l«-rs th. i n«e thi- ; can Is- found in Awerl.-a. It U in ! raluaUl-. n..t only to tbe small t * Is- to tlw larger japers. l^t me urge you and j our reader* ' listen tc the radio service which . Is broadcasted from r - pulpit evesy ,

d Sunday . Remember the dlfferem* ' la tfm.- Thrisonf von on the I'aHlV h" will U-X- I-aclfle time; lu th. miajntalu section, there Is a differ enre of two hours in time: in tl.t ' middle weat there D a dlff. ten.i of two hours iu time: in the )ji«teii i ' section there I* three boar* differ ' 'I osi'-r "the T^lP-'r'sfatTTTfronr th' I lakes ill Maine, f r : : the froze! » Hu.ls^of the'smith. !t -m the bean ' tirul plains of California, from tin , f, id? of Mi'Xlixi. from the *tar i t 1' :ht«l lands of Texas, telling us ol • the -I we arc doing and tin A i slmoldn't you listen? . jt We leeio broadcasting every Sun -, :.y morning at eleven o cl-*-k | = Tern- your instruments ami let u? ' Praise Mr. Perry ami roopcrat. : I with him in thl i great servl.s- thai { !•!:: •« . f -Motional irovcr it i ".c heard thi oughout Amerie— > |_— |-

J ! ORDINANCE No. 122 j Ao nrdir.,r.— > toyooi. cgoa. rrttde aod | j S^i old P™. ' ft Sm. 2. That old Blmisssa Aiwa he of -.he eeuidDlsd and* of the City of tVeon CUT. Se» Jerwr. and the m. ^ i 1 'he |4*n. sod tperlfieollnr... hereinafter: j }

9a. X. That the roadway, sidewalks and ■ I curb Os'f he as moxidrd la l? an. and * and an Ole la th» C!t t Cterk'. OITW Bee. 4. That the work cnteondated. under^Uds OrdhHUMO. as to -.he ixwt srat the See. S. jjbat 21* roatran. wher. sward- 1 and t aacre sad the rorpcrste seal r.f •! las tart, sad attested hy City Clerk. j TU -1— NOTICE ^ ^ j Baard^o^Cosaciitdonerx 5 Oreaa^Clty. j he heH in Cawimissioa Cbamhers. City , Han. Orenn City. New Jersey. April Xti. I l»a. SI three r.-rlark in the afteronon City Clrrk. ady-4-lf-Zt To know how good a cigarette /-v really can be made' 1 you must try / ^STRIKE ^VrreTOASTro^v Jr. - - J FOR RENT HEATED APARTMENT i From April 16th to June 16th . BARON 412 I 1th Stiert !

FIRE ALARM SIGNALS 14 — Sixth and Pleasure avenue. 17 — Eleventh and Bay avenue. _ j 18 — Fourteenth and Bay avenue. 35 — Seventh anil West avenue. 42 — Second and Asbury avenue. 43 — Fourth and Asbury avenue. . 45 Eighth and Asbury avenue. 46 — Tenth and Asbury avenue. 1 45Thirteenth and Asbury avenue 49 — Sixteenth and Asbury avenue 51 — North and Central avenue. 54 — Sixth and Central avenue. 57 — Elevnth and Central avenue. 67 — Twelfth and Wesley avenue 68 — Fourteenth and Wesley ave. 73 — Fourth and Ocean avenue. 75— Seventh and Ocean avenue. 76 — Ninth and Ocean avenue. 82 — Second and Atlantic avenue

911 — Bay ave- and Battersea road l 9C — Boardwalk at Moorlyn terAn ordinaar* tn Or tote errlain land. . - * t.y ths City of Ocran City. Ne* ( ; r^um^|n1i7bl'ad ' t^* See. 1 That all that land a.tuats In thr .. City of Orean City. Caiw May County. New i ri.fth ^and SUth Strasu. br Tral^fr/rel

Itecineina- at thr point of interasrtion j ' r <>r^tiaw wtotheaatrrly ^litir of ^Orran Avenue j h| 'irot ' of Edurati n of Oeron City. New Jer^r. ; and aaid iWrd of eonveyanee to he for the- ( JOS. C. CHAMPION WM. H. CAMPBELL E. A. CORSON • | 1° mid"0" A*" •'"ITci "r HARRY A. HOOK ^ • latroduead by Iiireet.tr Corson St reel . ir. the Cily of Ocean City. New , ' Jersey, and providing the terms and con- |

THE 'BOARD* OK* COMMISHJNKKS OK » THE CITY OF OCEAN CITY DO OH- 1 1! !Ci!.on 1. That the AUaaUr •' nt'y "rIi li^l? Com I « Tu'7*-"' n ^^rf^ta^a RoJd W^m ' j bulkline" line at Station Road Meal . and t «?Th <Jplan*'i''ix-Jm^l h^wim/*hirh i< '. thoriard to he reioratnl and the track' r Inain tamed, shall be laid and mainlatneil ' t Atlantic "city ^ Rall'rrod' Company and SI ^ ' "hercTftir'tar laid on Haven Ave- * nue and North^ Sl reel, the aaid Atlanta I * paying and aidewalka m il Crowe, *^ilh ■ * if the aaid [aria of the ureeta and aide- ' J walks are no; «. retwirad Md^mainlamW. . Jdit1onhfor public travel, approved hy I he ; ■| without objections upon or by the said : Railroad Company. | ■| Section 5. That the aaid Atlanti* CUy •

I Railroad Company shall Ind— " harmleaa the City of t^" '' - I z ■snj&sss? i v-'LdJ1 mil' il*^ -ihSjmw^'jir ! id aaid'B IfaU road* thocoujehfata. incliaiine'^roadwae * ^?4 wulka and if the aaid Utlli,, lil..d"..oTS'pGU?Mtr / Chi i public by raaaon of »*l'l*-rark^0J* * i Comiiany upta< ten ila yc !%■,„ f s.ven to mid Railroad : ,?"n«ee" » I ;hT°' ^ '*'"«|4,>UlbS i la rdir' 'i'"ty, RaHroar'c^ii^l'^''0|'u^* 41 ' .h*iMin"Utn^I*iliIir,hihyM.i'',**!i™ nfa , md* i all^Ove term, and condition, of thaa cri I Section 2. Thl. ordinance than - j Cily Railroad Com piny d.an'l.l!1™1 .lint- I he City Treasury the rirex2" i pclatiiw and pohliahinr iha aama = - final "pa™iro">'r""0n ,nm' SS* wnTbTuka^p V, !fi : .Hdi.. ami Sa.k p.mase , Z ,J" I aaid Board to ha held on the 2Mk a,, I April, 1*23. I IIARP.Y A. HORBS. ady-4-I2-3t.

S / Ocean Laundry Company Haven Avenue r / * * * Telephone x Bell 117-J * * ♦ * Try Us Please Then Tell Others * * * * ^ A Select Service Which Is Saving, Sure and Satisfying Try Us — Then Swear By Us New patrons will pirate mention Ms advertisement. —

Read the SENTINEL and keep in touch with all local affairs Job Printing uj|j] Book Work Process Embossing k j8|j==l Legal Blanks vf Ocean City Printing and Publishing Co. \ 744-746 ASBURt AVENUE KSl __ PHONE ^ 138 J