GROVE WOMAN'S NIECE MINISTERS PROTEST ...the trip except;tiho.food—dark, sour bread, no : butter,...

8
■If Yon Own Property in Océan Grove ‘ - V“:Seedless To Say Your Rome Should Bë Oh Our Subscription list.' Friday and Saturday local Bains. Sun Bases 6.40. Sets 7.28. DayB Length 12 Hours 48 Minutes. •Vol. XXVII . OCEAN GROVE, N. J., FRIDAY, APRIL 4 , 1919 No. 14 GROVE WOMAN'S NIECE TALKED TO PERSHING ETHEL SLHCHER, A BED ' CROSS NURSE, HOME AGAIN. . Telia of Being In Paris During Ger- man Aeroplane Baid By Night and of .Bag /Beitlm Bombardment By' Bay—As Christmas Treat Made 1,600 Doughnuts By Boadaide. Following her term of service as a-Red CroBS nurse in France lor nine months, part of the time being, spont In Paris during .the German air raids; Miss Ethel M. / Sleloher, niece of MrB. S. W. Barthel],' 9 H ock; avenue. Ocean' Grove/ recently ; ar- rived at her home In Troy, N. Y. She has an.Interesting and Inspiring story to tell. . “Of courea all of us who had the opportunity of being with our Ijoys it Franco are proud to have been' able' to help toward the wonderful things, they, were doing,”' , Miss Sleiclier said; "'but when I think,of.the.hun- dreds of boys "who have come back and all that they have done I feel' that I have v.ery little to say. I sail- ed, to Franco on .the’': steamer, La Loraine on the 15th ot Juno with Several other Red Cross nurses. There was :nothlng unusual about the trip except;tiho.food—dark, sour bread, no : butter, little, sugar, milk made, from powdered milk and: little better than colored water, no des- serts or sweets and our mainstay at breakfast, onion’ soup, which might' have been discouraging, withdut the, spirit of fun and one truly Ameri- can quality—a sense of humor ari3 • the wiBh to practice a little for what we might find (or, might not) In France. There were of course no lights at'night, and the only thing we) passed was a lifeboat tossing on the waves—when we thought the' captain most ungallant, as he made a wide .detour as possible around it — also we missed our convoy on the other side, and rather than risk a wireless took a zigzag course in, and were finally welcomed by the. moat, beautiful big ‘sausage' (observation' balloon) that hovered over us until we were safely-landed. . ‘ •'From Bordeaux we went directly to Paris and from there I was as- signed; to the,,American - Red.Cross; Military Hospital No.-6; on the fam - ous racecourse of Paris. The Vhos- pitals are all built of tents and were put up by the American Red Cross to, meet the emergency when the front lino came so' near to Paris. " The day wo arrived Paris was put in the war . zonej, and every night was raided by enemy planes and bombarded by the big Bertha during the day. We wait- ed every night for tho weird cry ot many sirens in every part of the city warning us of the approach of -enemy planes, and wthen the first night came without a visit from the Bocho X found mysolf staying up all through/the night listening for thom. . "I havo never seen anything so • wonderful as the American monl They had tihe most wonderful.: grit and stood the most terrible tfiessinga ; with a courage and spirit we , all marveled at— an d , then, bobbed up with the most Infectious spirit, half: boy, proud,of what they, were doing . —not so much as individuals; though there "were many stories told partly in fun to get ahead of the man la the next bed—but mostly proud or tihelr division. The'hoys who, had been: in the'States only a few years wero the proudest Americans of all. . - "The day General. Pershing came to.tiho ‘hospital—Wf had been ex- pecting him, but /the boys assured mo he would not come—they , said it was only another way ol getting us to .get things In extra fine shape— but he did Come, and camo to our ward. He stopped to ask me how my. men wero gettlng Wong and spoke to the men; as he passed, stopping, to talk to one of my ’. -marines, who, • though he had been moBt loud in his assurance that General .Pershing would not come, was most proud and pleased when the. General stopped by' hia bed. He told-the boys how proud everyone was of ' the marines and of 'all of our boys at tho front. ‘‘X left Franco for .. Germany De- ceinbej 1. We left Paris In convoys- pt.throo. units each, every'unit-com- prising two doctors .four niirses, a Ford touring car, ambulance and truck drivers. The roads of course wero rough, having been , heavily - traveled and shelled. We were" to ' tako care of our boys who had been "prisoners in Germany, when the .Ger- mans .evacuated their hospitals In' retreating, according to the armls- tico. - ■ • • ''Later we were culled to Coblenz ' and'- 0am/.' there sent with two Reel -OroBB .women, who had,come through/ : bn a truok, train, back to a little town .they had passed where our boya; .wore .still., cooking and eating their mess along the roadside, to do what we could' for. them ovef Christmas. /Tie .American men over ;;th6ro were- ■wonderful, not only aa:soldleis, hut; iimireal' knights guarding¡and "helping it he,, A merican ‘.-girl w h e re v e r • ‘Bho wont, in Coblenz now M. Pi’s took C. A. wa^UouBos and . .tho cpmmU ßnry.v It wea at tor dark .-.whon'; wo. A-' '.ÌU I m Ì ifiW '/ft'-- embankments, sharp curves and no ligih'ts, But; two days more would be Christmas and we needed a whole day to prepare, so we wen^ on. We ran into a blizzard and: several times I thought wo would have to glvo up, ibut we finally arrived. The new; day we made 1,500 doughnuts, with the help of the mess sergeant, by the roadside In the enow. “ChristnSas day we served. dough- nuts and coffee; chocolate candy and 'cigarettes and ihad the first maga- zines and newspapers, for -tho boyB that they had since 'hey began their m arci; and, ’-incidentally, were th e first American women .nauy had seen since they had arrived in France, and quite a surprlss to them. I shall never, forgot :*o race „1 tip. boy when he looked up,and first saw ua coming out of the hotel that' morning.. .-They. crowded into our little room as soon as we secured *.t, helping with the trimming,' getting houghs and our ireoB, sitjiug there lost in a game of checkers, writing, reading, playing 'the Vlctrola all day long; but, more than anything, just- standing near to watch or help us, and to .talk, v We opened at, 8 o'clock in the morning and closed when tapB sounded at 9 at nlgiht. / “ Coming home I sailed with teu other Red Cross women from Brest, with 1,500 soldiers and casual offi- cers'. Eighteen of the boys were tak- en sick, so we had our little hospit- al on shipboard. We, landed in Philadelphia, where we were royally welcomed. Whistles blow on -. -both 'banks- of the Delaware. A steamer came out to meet us with a band and sailed home alongside of our ship, playing for; us all the way. A Red Cross 'tug came out, drew close to. the front deck where our - boys wore gathered 'for fear of losing a glimpse of the shore line, arid threw them cigarettes and 'candy. On the pier Ice cream and cake were served, but the sweetest welcoihe of all was when one of the older Red Cross women came up and eafd:. ‘Oh, you don’t know.how glad wo are to have you back.’ That was a very won- derful welcome from our own Amer- ica, arid almost-made us feel, that she had known us and been waiting, for us!" REV. MOUNT,IS PRESIDENT OF DISTBICT PREACHERS ’Rev. Edward : Mount, of Weat Grove, Is Ohé new president of the ylijatrict fpreacherfi, elected Monday at tho; annual meeting of that body. The full roster of o’fflcors follows: President—Rev. Edward Mount, of West Grove, ' ‘ : Vice President—Rev. L, C, Muller, of Ocean Grove. Secretary—Rev. W. J. Sayre, of 'Belmatv :: * /• . Treasurer—Rev. A. C. Polbémus, of West Long Branch. -/•/.'.' Literary Committee—Revs. T. J. J. Wright, J. W. Marshall, of Ocean Grove, and John Goorley, of Asbury P a r k . ’ ' :./:/,,": - '/• Tèiriperance and Public Morals— Revs.‘ J. I. Boswell, of Ocean Grove; J. W. Lynch, of Bradley Beach, and John R. Reeves, of Keyport. Plot To Be Conveyed. lAfter-the. deed is properly signed by the secretary of the Ocean Grovo Association, the triangular plot at the Broadway gates 'becomes tho property of Neptune township lo. be used,as ,a site for a monument to the local 'buys who wont 'to war. L. 'Manning & Sons, of Plainfield, are the lowest: bidders on tho proposed memorial. • ,- .... : ' - April Ushers At Church. The followingt persons will serve as uahers.at St/ Paul’s church for April:' Morning—A. D. Clark, W. W. Côward, H.;J. Heck, J. T.; Lewis, G. E. Matthews, H. M. Moss,/ Fi G. Mount, F. W. Sampson. Evening— W. D. Bedell, Jacob Beutoll, Howard B. Davis, Earl W. Height, H. M. Ma- non, J. H. Ralqear, .David Reilly, Reuben Thomas. Le^al Services Come Sigh. ' A bill of, ?690.74'for legal.servlcea performed by : Counselor Charles Cook, Of Asbury , Park, was present- ed <to, the Neptune committee Tues- day- evening. The 0)111; which includ - ed inileagé, witness fees, ate., in con- nection with -the application of the -Moninouth Water- Company for por- mlssion to Increase its service rate, was paid. - :/ , f; ; • Conducted His First Conference. : r Rev. J. Di Bills, the new superin- tendent of this; district, held his first quartely conference at Matawan last Saturday evening and preached -there Sunday, morning. Sunday evening (he preached at Morganville and con- ducted quarterly conference after the Service; Large audiences greet- ed him,'at tfiese/places. 1 . W. Ot T. U. Meets Weekly. ; At a session of tfee Ocean Grove W. ,C. T. U it was decided to hold a meeting each week for the next eight weeks.. The names of.six iisw members have been received. The meeting of April 8 will bo hold, at the homo of Mrs; Josephine' Blaok, G5 JP41grlm Pathway, .at 2.80 p. m. /. Two Orchestras At New Monterey. Prof. -H. iM. Stillwell, a Freehold musician, Ojbb contracted 'With- tho Now -Monterey Hotel'Company, -As- bury Park, 'to;,BUPply,two orchestras. atthat'iiouqo^fhQYeomlngBummer.. MINISTERS PROTEST CONFERENCE RUMOR 155,519 AUTOS USTED Ì IN NEW JERSEY FOR 1918 THEY SAY ENTERTAINMENT WAS , ENTIRELY SATISFACTORY. Hint That Contrary Report Was Cir- culated To Discredit Ocean Grove p.nd Asbury Park as a Location For General Conference Next Year—Resolutions Adopted. Was the recent published state-, ment that certain persons were movr lng to have the New Jersey Metho- dist Conference meet permanently in Atlantic City, because of alleged dis- satisfaction of some of the members with the accommodationn provided In Ocean Grove arid Asbury. Park, an attempt to discredit the Twin ’ Cities as a location for the. General Confer;- erice noxt year? ' ' . ' There la a hint to that effect, lto t)hat as it may, the preachers of this district do not propose to 1st the statement go'unchallenged." / Jn meeting here Monday the district ministers adopted resolutlona voicing their protest- against tho statement that tho'Twln Cities/were riot able to satisfactorily entertain the . confer- ence and alsor against a plan of ced- ing to have the conference alternate ' 'between these places and Atlantic City. The preachers, further, endorsed the invitation to JiaVe the General Conférence oaeet here in 1920, arid -pledged their co-operation m secur - ing all accommodation needed by delegates and visitors. '■ The resolutions in full, as pre- pared by James D. Bills, James Wil- liam Marshall, John Goorley; James I. Boswell and Thomas'J. J/W right, are as follows: . . I “Whereas, the public preBS has published a statement setting forth that the Annual Conference hereaf- ter will meet at Atlantic City, due to the fad, - so asserted, tihat Ocean Grove and ABbury Park are not ablë to satisfactorily entertain the said Conference; and "Whereas, the said article stated that many, ministers were dissatls-' fled with their entertainment; there- fore be it "Resolved, that this preachers’ moeting record its disapproval of. the statements made, first, by protesting agalnêt a plan of ceasing to alternate between Asbury Park and Atlantic City; and, secondly, - protesting against the statement that the min- isters were (Jlssatisfled w ith their entertalninent, In view’of the 'fact' that out of over three hundred en- tertained less than twelve asked for a change of accommodation, which is probably the least numDer of any recent session; and that we record the fact that many resolutions of thanks were extended to the accom- modating hotels and oàttages, and letters of appreciation have since been received. "Resolved, that this.: preacbeis’ meeting/"endorse the action of the Ocean Grove, Association and Cham- ber of Commerce of Asbury Park In inviting the General Conference to meet here in May,of 1920. And fur- ther ho It "Resolved, that this preachers" meeting pledge its co-operation in assisting in securing accommodation and places of entertainment for tie G e n e ra l, C o n fe re n c e .’’ ■/,:,.: ■ Just how rapid the growth of the State Motor Vehicle Department has been since its establishment in 1906 is shown In a striking way in the thirteenth annual report issued .by Commissioner William L. Dill. The receipts per year have jumped in period from i67,963 to $2,431,756.- 70. The percentage of Increase dur- ing- 1918 was twenty-six,' despite the war-time -restrictions of the: manu^ facture of automobiles. With, bank 'balances, Interest and collections, idurlng December, 1917 arid. 1918; the funds ot the . depart-, ment reached the - unprecedented sirin of ?3,134.57. Of this, ?2,393,- 939.33 has actually been paid over to the State Treasurer. Mr. Dill refers with pride to the fact that tihe cost of the department to' the’State was only $18,901.71, “a trifle less than 7% per cent of Che gross receipts.’’ . The chief polio? of the depart- ment, according to Mr/ Dill, is ■ to make the highways safe for users. How well ho has succeeded In doing; this, he points-out, is shown by the fact' that tlhe .number of automobile reglstratiorislincreased from 134,964 iri'1917 to 1-55,519 in 1918, yet the number of fatalities on the , roads was only 271, a decrease of forty- eight 'from 1917. Lieutenant Graeber Home. Lieutenant Charles Karsner Grae- ber, of the Amorican army-in France, ■has surprised his family In Philadel- phia by an early return- in good health...His grandfather, Dr. Charles W.. Karsner, a summer resident / of Ocean Grovo, wh'ile. expressing the ^deepest sympathy for. the parents of our boys who sleep beneath the pop- ples In ’Flanders Fields, is grateful to the kirid Providence that, has re- turned to: their, homes both his son and grandson. .-'.v;.:-/' ; /s/::/‘. : : Application For Bond Issue. To the Public Utility Commission application has been made by , the Ocean Grove Camp Meeting Associa- tion for permission to float >750,000 worth of refunding bonds. Issuance of . which was announced In The Times, several months ago. The bonds are to be secured hy : mort- gage on the utility plants and real estate of the Association. Township Tax Rate Fi?ed. 4 Assessor ' Harry G. / Shrove an- nounces/the. tax rate per $100 of the several districts/of Neptune town- ship for.,this year, to bq ae follows: Ocean Grove, $2;4i; West Giove fleVer district, ■ -$2.80; .West Grove fire district, $2.52; Whltesvine sew- er district,, $3.06;, Whitesvillo fire district, $3.01. ’:-// . Miss Hughes Will Speak Here. ■On Tuesday evening of .next week Miss -Jennie Hushes, a missionary, frorix China, wäll spéak in St.' Paul's church, undor the ausplcos of -tho Ocean'Grove Roman's Foreign Mis- solnary Soolety. An invitation'has been given nearby ohurohes to join in this meeting. r3)R.HIREr-PrWate -<auto ambu- larioe, iiullyv,equipped;T ifcons GAVE BIRTHDAY SURPRISE ÿ; FOR RED CROSS CHAIRMAN A 'birthday surprise party was given for Mrs. Charles Jamison, wife of Township '.Coniiriltteeman Jariii- son, 7G CoriiSs avenue, West Grove, last Friday- evening -by the mefribers of the Red Cross unit of that place, of which Mrs. Jamison, is the efficient chairman. A outglass vase and a bouquet of carnations were present- ed "to Mrs. JamlSon . . .. ' In -attendance were Mrs. .. Arvilla Potter, Mrs. Julia -Slocum, Mr. and Mrs.;F. L. Hurley, Mrs. Florence Shafto, Mrs. Florence Herbert, Mrs. Johnj Lawlor, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Qulnp. Mi%. Claude Lawlor, Mrs. Sara$ Hires, Mrs. Ira Jobes, Mrs. Jacob Stiles, Mrs. ■ W alter Wright, Mrs. Mary Black, Mrs. -Garrity, Mrs., Annie Hailey, Mrs.. Jennie. Strud- wlck, Mrs. Hattie Strudwick, Mrs. Viva Barber, Miss Grace West; MIbb Beatrice West, Mrs. R. Horner. •RATIFICATION MEETING OF - 'K .’•-.LOCAL WHITE BIBBONERS Mrs. feabello H. Demarest, of Clos- ter, N. J., was tho chief speaker at a prohibition mass meeting of ratifica- tion held Tuesday evening in the Presbyterian churoh, Asbury Park. Five mlriute addresses were also giv- en, the speakers being Revs. T. J. J. Wright,, of Ocean Grove; Hiram R. Bennett, C. F. Shaw, John Goorley, and F. A. DeMaris, of Asbury Park. Mrs. É.-/F. W hittier presided and Mr»; -Margaret Asay-HeSse, of Ocean Grove,: reel ted. [forty,-five young women par-ticl- pated In a pageant .representing the wetland dry States. This meeting, waa held to introduce locally the nationwide campaign to raise $1,- 000,000 for prohibition work. RECEPTIONS PLANNED FOR . REVS. BILLS AND WRIGHT A' reception for t'lie Rev. James D. Bills, of Ocean Grove, as the new- su - perintendent of tlie district, Is to ,09 given next Monday morning follow- ing, the preachers’ meeting In St. Paul’s church'. The. ministors of tne district, and their wives will be the special guests of the Ladies’ Aid So- ciety of the church, who are giving the reception. Another- reception will be given the same evening by St. Paul s of- elal board for the pastor, Rev. Thom- as j;. J. Wright, and his family, and for Rev. J. D. Bills and family; Garbage Contractor Changed. Because of failure to qualify with tho Inquired bond, the garbago con- tract ,of Neptune township award- ed some weeks ago to Edwin Van- Brunt, of 'Hamilton, was rescinded Tuesday evening, by the Neptune committee, and the contract was awarded to the next lowest bidder, Walter White. .Dinner Party At Boscobel. At dinner on Thursday of last week at the Boscobel, Mrs. Alfred A. Farr,-of Elizabeth, entertained Mrs. G. Skeere, of Brooklyn; .Mrs. C.' Wedeinarij' of Newark, and Mrs. Hi C. Vanderhoof, Mrs. W. J. Blair, Mrs. Efiie Hamilton, Mrs. H. Baylls and Mrs. P. J. Btraasburger, of Ocean Grove. ' ' :.'/ '. •• Want Corlies Avenue Paved. Dr. Jamison, E. C. Sweet and Har- ry Whitlock, representing the Nop- trine township ^ommittee/ will go bef sfore ttie county, board of freeholders next week with a request that ,Cor- lieB avonue, Weat Grove, be paved. It Is 'hopod to have tho avenue paved be- twoori Jfain stroot and Union. ave- nue. , iv" ' ' -Jr-'. Uniforms For Township Polioe, SptUg unitorms are to be supplied •free .of .cpat-to. tho' Neptune ipollco COUNTY CBAPTtR TO PUSH REO CROSS AID W H i EMPLOY TBAINED HELP IN SOCIAL DEPARTMENT. Stores of Hospital Supplies and Clothing At Headquarters of Eaeh Branch For Use In Case of Emer- gency—Preparing For May Day Fete For Soldier Boys. For the first time since -his return from Europe, Thatcher M. Brown pr3- sided' á’t a meetilng of the executive committee of the Monmouth County Chapter of the American Red Cross ou Monday evening of this week at Red Bank. Besides Mr. Browu.. there were present of the ’.executive committee, M. A. Ricé, -chairman ot. the Military Relief Committee; John S. Applegate, Jr., chairman of the Home Service and Civilian Relief Committee, and Wellington La- Monte, secretary.' / . . The branches of. Asbury: Párk, Keyport, Red Bank, Long , Branch, Spring Lake and Middletown town- ship were represented at this- meet- irig. Mr. Brown gave an interesting talk, during which he outlined the chapter's future courso of work.. Under the peace program thb Red Cross will maintain such or- ganization as will enable it. to meet any emergency which may arise. Tho Home Service work seems to be requiring mote time and attention than any other division of the work at present. The Home Service work includes the care and assistance of the families of soldiers, as well as care of the soldiers t'hfemselves. This department was authorized to em- ploy an experienced and trained so- cial worker, , .- The Motor Corps, organized last fall by M. A. Rice, has demonstrated its worth and value many times over.. One car 'has. been assigned to the Home Service Department, where it Is kept -busy, and If the work con- tinues to grow another will doubtless be assigned to -it ,at a later dote. The manual work required ot the members of the different branches and auxiliaries is growing less and less all the time, but it is the inten- tion of the chapter to maintain thi branches throughout the county ami to maintain stores of hospital bu. p - plies and clothing at the headquar- ters'of each branch, where they can be reached'at once in case of &n emergency. ’ Auxiliaries located in the immediate vicinity of the differ- ent branches will be consolidated with the parent branch. Those main- tained at a distance from the branch headquarters will continue their or- ganization.- Mr.- Rice, who is also president ot tlhe State Board of Education, an- nounced that_the May Day Fete of the schools of'Moamouth county will be held this year at Asbury Park, and that all soldiers froiri Monmouth county and vicinity,' those "who 'have returned from France and those who were riot fortunate enough- to get Over, there; will be invited •to attend the fete. He éxpresse'd a deslíe to see as many of the Red Crofes work- ers present as attended the fete held- at the Red Bank fair grounds a year ago. Last year there were .no sol-, diera at the fete, as they - were in Frarioe or in camps training "for serious work. .This year’s fete will afford an opportunity for the- work - ers and those for whom they worked to meet and get acquainted with each other.., " . ' . '.. Miss Josephine Lémmi; the execu- tive socretary of the chapter, has un- dertaken the preparation of its his- tory; She would be glad to receivo communications from members ot the different branches and auxiliaries giving as much information as pos- sible in regard to the hiBtory of eaoli branch and auxiliary in the county. Wheri digested and compiled, iJhla history will make a valuable acqui sition to the library of Cvery memBer of the organization. GERTRUDE L. BENNEDY ■ ' WEDS BICHARD C. INNES -Miss Gertrude I^oulse Kennedy, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George A. Kennedy, and Richard C. Innes wero married on Monday of last week, March 24, at -the residence of the bride’s parents in. Rutherford, N. J. The officiating, «lergyman was Re'x- •Dr; O. Roche, rector of St. Peter’s church. New York City. The bride wore a gown of white beaded georgette; She was attended ¡by her sister, Mias Groce Kennedy, who wore tan beaded georgette. The ¡bridal tour t was to Atlantic City, Philadelphia, and Trenton. The Kenncdys are summer, residents 1 of Ocean Grovo at 86 Mt. CannCl -Way. ', C. J. MASSINGER. M. ft, phy- sician and Burgeon, corner:Main and '¡Delfiware avenues, Ocean Grove. Ot- -fico hours: Until 10 a. m.; from 1 to 2 p. m.; from fl.30 to 8 p. jn., and by appointment. Tolepbone Aflbury il-164-W.— <-80. - . "- . W. E. -Taylor, «ontraolpr and ¿milder. 98%. .Mt. ' Herman . Way, Ocean Grove.—U tf FINANCIAL STATEMENT OF ST. PAUL'S M. E. CHURCH Embracing the year ended Febru- ary 28, the financial statement of St. Paul’s ciiurch was made public through tho distribution of a print- ed pamphlet at the church last Sun- day. The Items and amounts enter- ing into tho statement are:. Receipts— Balance March 1, 1918, $4(2.41; from plato collections for “year, $1,157.57; envelopes and sub- scriptions for year, $4,145.20; col- ' lection for coal and district superin- tendent, $404.50; Epworth League Easter decorations, $10; Children’« Day collection, $30; P. M. Day, St. Paul’s Night deficiency, $21; Hale of old heater, $9.75; Mary A. Ñorenc, bequest, $500; Thanksgiving offer- ing, $30.04; proceeds of note, $150; proceeds of note, $375; total, $6,- «76:07. Disbursements — Pastor, $2,200; district superintendent, $132; sex- ton, $780; electric light (church), $153.49; electric light ' (organ), $25.60; Insurance, $155.51; repairs, $197.82; new heater and'work in- stalling, $331.40; payment on cJiurCU debt, $500; payment of note, $160; parsonage improvements. $128.98; coal, $329.20; rescue Misslori, Le- Maistre’s bequest, $100; financial secretary, $100; printing and adver- tising, $79.95; postage, $42.21; tele- phone at parsonage, $42.20; Ited Cross war fund, $61.06; moving pas- tor, $60; deficiency St. Paul’s Church Night, $21; Board, of Education, Children’s Hay offering, $30; Duplex Envelope Company, $111.25; Ameri- can Products Company, $51.25. Home For Aged, Thanksgiving of- fering, $30.64; Easter decorations, $ 20 : Interest on church notes, 51S7.70; Coast Gas Company, $6.50; sundry bills, $73.47; chorister, $388.73; organist, ' $250; entertain- ment, material, music, laundry, re- pairs to organ and extra singers, $75.78; balance oil hand, $20.16; total. $6,876.07. The total benevolences(dlscipllnary collections) of St. Paul’s the past year amounted to $2,650, as follows: Board of Foreign Missions from church, $452; Board ot Foreign Mis- sions from Sunday school, $100; Board of Foreign Missions, special gifts, $158; Freedman’s Aid Society, from church, $392; Board of Home Missions from Sunday school. $100; Board of Home Missions from special . gifts, $159; Freedman’s Aid Society, $68; Board of Sunday schools from church, $30; Board of Sunday schools from Sunday school, $23; Board of Education from church, $128; Board ot Education, Childrens’ Day, $30; American Bible Society,' $25; ‘Board'T of Temperance, Public Morals, $26; '■•/ General Deaconess Board, $7; Wom- a n ’s Foreign Missionary Society»'.;'. $291; Woman’s Home Missionary Society, $476. The distribution of ohurch moneys for the year included also these Items: Philadelphia Methodist Hospital, $18; total all other bonevolences, $479; Conference Claimants' En- dowment Fund. $100; Central office expenses Epworth League, $2; sup- • port of Bishops, Episcopal F"und, $48;,-support of retired preachers, $176.; General conference . expenses, $17; General conference entertain- • ment, $33; distrio’t- .superintendent's • support, $132. ' ' . In addition to the current expense V note of : $375 set forth above, tiu-rn : ¿ré moitgage notes on the church - pi"perty aggregating $3,1,¡10./ STATE SUMMER SCHOOL : AT ASBURY PARK JULY 9-15 isy-Ssj/iv! The• .twenty-sixth annual session;' of the State Summer School for Sun- , ,*.» day School Workers is, to be held'at . Asbury Park during the week ot 'i % July 9. According to present plans •* Bible lectures will be delivered by ^ Dr. Charles F. Shaw; of . Asbury Park; courses In .pedagogy by Pro- t1’4-j fessor A. J. William Myers, ot. tho , jV« Hartford School of Religious Peda- / gogy, and In phschology by Nannie Lee, Frayser. Eugene Foster, of - the international staff of * , U the Y. M...C. A;, will have charge of the young .people’s .'deprirtH^t^.^lS’Mi while the home' department ences will lie led 'by Miss Katharine . ■ C, -Bourne; of Foxborough, IO mT Others who will conduct classes’,'.WiHr/i are Rev. Dr. Milton , a Littlefield, , ? Miss Frances Weld Daniellscm, Mlsa Jessie El Moore, Uiss. Frances Hedden, Miss Josephine L .. Baldwin/S'iiiiiivfl-S! M i* Edith D.". Glen and Misa A.,Lewis. ' . . ***•— - - Sunday At St. Paul’s (nrnrch. The Sacrament of the Lord’s Sup- per will be held at the morning' vice; 10.30 o’clock. The Sabbath school'will: meet at '2.30 p.. . Bible atudy. The Epworth , Leagrie:|j®J&,i® arid the Junior E pw orti Liea£aie','#iU;|'^M)Ji?,i|i meet at 6.30 p. m., and foUo^fnig^i'MHfe} these services the pastor will prea^fi'iirg^!«| on the subject, “The ':s'.Ctaaew^id!*e.y^J®S »iSfcviiE!, ' Vlsltdrs the Choice.’! hearty welcome Come spend churoh of God Lord’s Day. " Bioe'President .Fire }$&Q: Reorganisation.of the Ocean Gtoyv'kmhV- fire. cammieeloners was »effected ¿Use ; - Friday nlgdit.'•whon.,Waldo.:B;^ ;Rlco7:.'.ii,';. v. . was ' elected -.president .and;- ‘William '

Transcript of GROVE WOMAN'S NIECE MINISTERS PROTEST ...the trip except;tiho.food—dark, sour bread, no : butter,...

Page 1: GROVE WOMAN'S NIECE MINISTERS PROTEST ...the trip except;tiho.food—dark, sour bread, no : butter, little, sugar, milk made, from powdered milk and: little better than colored water,

■ If Yon Own Property in Océan Grove ‘ - V“: Seedless To Say Your Rome Should Bë Oh Our Subscription lis t.'

Friday and Saturday local Bains.Sun Bases 6.40. Sets 7.28.

DayB Length 12 Hours 48 Minutes.

•Vol. XXVII . O C E A N G R O V E , N. J., F R ID A Y , A P R I L 4 , 1919 No. 14

GROVE WOMAN'S NIECE TALKED TO PERSHING

ETHEL SLHCHER, A BED ' CROSS NURSE, HOME AGAIN. .

Telia of Being In Paris During Ger­man Aeroplane Baid By Night and of . Bag /Beitlm Bombardment By' Bay—As Christmas Treat Made 1,600 Doughnuts By Boadaide.Follow ing h er te rm of service as

a -R ed CroBS nurse in F rance lo r n ine m onths, p a r t of the tim e being, spon t In P a r is d u rin g .the G erm an a ir raids; Miss E th e l M. / Sleloher, niece of MrB. S. W . B arthel],' 9 H ock; avenue. Ocean' Grove/ recen tly ; a r ­rived a t her home In T roy , N. Y. She h a s a n .In te re s tin g an d Insp iring sto ry to te ll. . ‘

“Of courea a ll of u s w ho h ad the op p ortun ity o f be ing w ith our Ijoys it F ranco a re proud to have been' ab le ' to help tow ard th e w onderful th ings, they, were do ing ,” ' , Miss Sleiclier sa id ; "'but w hen I th in k ,o f .th e .h u n ­dreds of boys "who have come back an d a ll th a t they have done I feel' th a t I have v.ery li t t le to say. I sa il­e d , to F ranco on .th e ’': steam er, L a L ora ine on th e 15 th o t Ju n o w ith Several o th e r Red Cross nurses. There was : n o th ln g u nusua l about the tr ip except;tiho.food— dark , sour bread , no : b u tte r , little , sugar, m ilk made, from powdered m ilk and: l i t t le b e tte r th an colored w ater, no des­se rts or sw eets and o u r m ain stay a t b reak fast, o n io n ’ soup, w hich m igh t' have been d iscouraging , w ith d u t the, sp ir it o f fu n and one tru ly A m eri­can q u a lity — a sense of hum or ari3• th e wiBh to p rac tice a l i t t le fo r w h a t w e m ig h t find (o r, m igh t n o t) In F rance . T here w ere of course no lig h ts a t 'n ig h t , and the only th in g we) passed w as a lifeboat tossing on th e w aves— w hen we th o u g h t the' cap ta in m ost u n g a llan t, a s he m ade a w ide .de tou r as possible a round i t — also we m issed o u r convoy on the o th e r side, and ra th e r th an r isk a w ireless took a zigzag course in , and w ere finally welcomed by th e . moat, b eau tifu l b ig ‘sausage ' (o bservation ' ba lloon) t h a t hovered over us u n t i l we w ere safe ly -landed . . ‘

•'From B ordeaux w e w en t d ire c tly to P a ris and from there I w as as­signed; to th e ,, A m erican - R e d .C ro ss; M ilita ry H o sp ita l N o .-6; on th e fam ­ous racecourse of P aris. T he V hos­p ita ls a re a ll b u ilt o f ten ts and w ere p u t u p by th e A m erican R ed Cross to , m eet th e em ergency w hen th e f ro n t lino came so ' n ear to P aris. " The day wo a rriv ed P a ris was p u t in th e w ar

. zonej, and every n ig h t was ra ided by enem y p lanes an d bom barded by the b ig B e rth a d u rin g th e day. W e w a it­ed every n ig h t fo r tho w eird cry ot m any sirens in every p a r t of the city w arn in g us of th e approach of

-enemy planes, and wthen th e first n ig h t came w ith o u t a v is it from the Bocho X found m ysolf s tay in g up a ll th ro u g h /th e n ig h t lis ten in g for thom .. " I havo never seen an y th in g so• w onderful as the A m erican monl They had tihe m ost w o n d erfu l.: g r i t and stood th e m ost te rrib le tfiessinga

; w ith a courage and sp ir it we , a ll m arveled a t— a n d , then, bobbed up w ith th e m ost Infectious sp irit, half: boy, p ro u d ,of w h a t they, were doing

. — not so m uch as individuals; though ■ th ere "w ere m any sto ries told p a rtly in fun to g e t ahead of th e m an la th e nex t bed— b u t m ostly proud or tihelr division. T h e 'h o y s who, had been: in th e 'S ta te s only a few years w ero the p roudest A m ericans of all.. - "T he day G en e ra l. P ersh in g came

to.tiho ‘hosp ita l— Wf had been ex­p ecting him , b u t /the boys assured mo he would no t come— they , said i t w as only an o th er w ay o l g e ttin g us to .g e t th in g s In e x tra fine shape— b u t he did Come, and camo to our w ard. He stopped to ask m e how my. m en w ero g e tt ln g W ong and spoke to th e men; as he passed, stopping, to ta lk to one of m y ’. -marines, who,

• though he h ad been moBt loud in h is assurance th a t G eneral .P ersh in g w ould no t come, w as most proud an d pleased when the. G eneral stopped by ' h ia bed. H e to ld -the boys how proud everyone w as of ' the m arines and of

'a l l o f our boys a t tho fron t.‘‘X le f t F ranco fo r .. G erm any De-

ceinbej 1. W e le f t P a ris In convoys- p t.th ro o . u n its each, every 'un it-com - p ris in g two doctors .four niirses, a F o rd to u rin g car, am bulance and tru c k drivers. The roads of course w ero rough, h av ing been , heavily

- trav e led an d shelled. W e were" to ' tak o care of our boys who had been "prisoners in G erm any, w hen th e .Ger­

m ans .evacuated th e ir hosp ita ls In ' re tre a tin g , according to the arm ls- tico. - ■ ■• • ''L a te r we were culled to Coblenz

' and'- 0am/.' th e re sen t w ith two Reel -OroBB .women, w ho had,com e th rough/: bn a truok , tra in , back to a li t t le tow n .they had passed w here our boya; .wore .still., cooking an d ea tin g th e ir m ess a long th e roadside, to do w h a t w e co u ld ' fo r . them ovef Christm as. /T ie .A m erican m en over ;;th6ro were- ■wonderful, n o t only aa :so ld le is , h u t; iim ireal' k n ig h ts guard ing ¡and "helping it he,, A m erican ‘.-girl w herever • ‘Bho w ont, in Coblenz now M. P i ’s took

C. A. wa^UouBos and . .tho cpmmU ßnry.v It wea at tor dark .-.whon'; wo.

A-' ' . Ì U I m Ì if iW '/ft'--

em bankm ents, sha rp curves and no ligih'ts, B u t; two days m ore would be C hristm as and we needed a whole day to prepare, so we wen^ on. W e ra n in to a b lizzard a n d : severa l tim es I th o u g h t wo w ould have to glvo up, ibut we finally arrived . The new; day we m ade 1,500 doughnuts, w ith the help of the mess se rgean t, by the roadside In th e enow.

“ChristnSas day w e se rved . dough­n u ts and coffee; chocolate candy and 'cigarettes and ihad th e firs t m aga­zines and new sp ap ers , for -tho boyB th a t they had since 'h ey began th e ir m a rc i; and , ’- incidentally , w ere th e first A m erican women .nauy hadseen since they had arrived inF rance , and qu ite a su rp rlss to them .I sh a ll never, forgot :*o race „1 t i p . boy w hen h e looked u p ,an d first saw ua com ing ou t of the hotel th a t 'm orning.. .-They. crowded in to our l i t t le room as soon a s we secured *.t, help ing w ith the trim m ing,' g e ttin g houghs and o u r ireoB, s i t j iu g there lo st in a gam e of checkers, w ritin g , reading, p lay ing 'the V lctro la a ll day long; but, m ore th an any th ing , just- s ta n d in g near to w atch o r help us, and to .talk, v W e opened a t, 8 o 'clock in the m orn ing and closed w hen tapB sounded a t 9 a t nlgiht./ “ Com ing home I sa iled w ith teu o th e r Red Cross wom en from B rest, w ith 1,500 soldiers and casual offi­cers'. E ig h teen of th e boys w ere ta k ­en sick, so we had our li t t le hospit­al on sh ipboard . W e, landed in P h iladelph ia , w here we w ere royally welcomed. W histles blow on -. -both 'banks- of the Delaware. A steam er came o u t to m eet us w ith a band and sailed hom e alongside of o u r sh ip , p lay ing fo r; u s a ll the way. A Red Cross 'tug came out, drew close to. the fro n t deck w here o u r - boys wore gathered 'fo r fea r of losing a glimpse of the shore line, arid th rew them cigare ttes and 'candy. On the pier Ice cream an d cake w ere served, b u t the sw eetest welcoihe of a ll was w hen one o f th e older Red Cross women cam e up and eafd:. ‘Oh, you don’t know .how glad wo a re to have you back.’ T h a t w as a very w on­derfu l welcome from our own Amer­ica, arid alm ost-m ade us feel, th a t she h ad know n us and been w aitin g , for us!"

REV. MOUNT, IS PRESIDENT OF DISTBICT PREACHERS

’ Rev. E dw ard : M ount, of W eat Grove, Is Ohé new p residen t of the ylijatrict fpreacherfi, elected Monday at tho; a n n u a l m eeting of th a t body. T he fu ll ro s te r of o’fflcors follow s:

P re s id en t— Rev. E dw ard M ount, of W est Grove, ' ‘: Vice P re sid en t— Rev. L , C, M uller, o f Ocean Grove.

Secre tary— Rev. W . J . Sayre, of 'Belmatv ■ ■’ :: * /•. T re a su re r— Rev. A . C. Polbém us,

of W est L ong B ranch. - / • / . ' . 'L ite ra ry Committee— Revs. T. J .

J . W righ t, J . W. M arshall, of Ocean Grove, and Jo h n Goorley, of A sbury P ark . ’ ' :./:/,,": - '/•

Tèiriperance and P u b lic M orals— R evs.‘ J . I. Boswell, of Ocean Grove; J . W. Lynch, of B radley Beach, and John R. Reeves, of K eyport.

Plot To Be Conveyed.lA fter-the. deed is p roperly signed

by the secre ta ry of the Ocean Grovo Association, the tr ia n g u la r p lo t a t th e B roadw ay g a te s 'becomes tho p roperty of N ep tune tow nsh ip lo. be used ,as ,a s ite fo r a m onum ent to the local 'buys who w ont 'to w ar. L.

'M anning & Sons, of Plainfield , are the lowest: b idders on tho proposed m em orial. • ,- .... : '

- April Ushers At Church.T he follow ingt persons w ill serve

a s u a h e rs .a t S t/ P a u l’s church for A p r il : ' M orning— A. D. C lark, W. W. Côward, H .;J . Heck, J . T.; Lewis,G. E. M atthew s, H . M. Moss,/ F i G. M ount, F . W. Sam pson. E vening— W. D. Bedell, Jacob B eutoll, H ow ardB. Davis, E arl W. H eight, H . M. Ma­non, J . H . R a lq ear, .D avid R eilly , R euben Thomas.

Le^al Services Come Sigh.' A b ill of, ?690 .74 'fo r legal.serv lcea

perform ed by : Counselor Charles Cook, Of A sbury , P ark , w as p resen t­ed <to, th e N eptune com m ittee Tues­day- evening. The 0)111; w hich includ­ed inileagé, w itness fees, ate., in con­nection w ith -the app lication of the -Moninouth W ater- Company fo r por- mlssion to Increase i ts serv ice ra te , w as paid. - :/ , f; ;

• Conducted His First Conference.:r Rev. J . Di B ills, th e new superin ­ten d en t o f this; d is tr ic t, h e ld h is first quarte ly conference a t M ataw an la s t S a tu rd a y even ing and preached -there Sunday, m orn ing . Sunday evening (he preached a t M organville and con­ducted q u a rte rly conference a f te r th e Service; L arge audiences g ree t­ed h im ,'a t tfiese/places.

1 . W. Ot T. U. Meets Weekly. ;A t a session o f tfee Ocean Grove

W. ,C. T . U i t was decided to hold a m ee tin g each w eek fo r the nex t e ig h t weeks.. T he nam es o f .s ix iisw m em bers have been received. The m eeting of A pril 8 w ill bo hold, a t th e homo of Mrs; Jo sep h in e ' Blaok, G5 JP41grlm P ath w ay , .a t 2.80 p. m . /.

Two Orchestras At New Monterey. Prof. -H. iM. S tillw ell, a Freehold

musician, Ojbb contracted 'W ith- tho Now -Monterey Hotel'Company, -As-b ury P a rk , 'to;,BUPply,two o rch estras . a tth a t'iio u q o ^ fh Q Y eo m ln g B u m m er..

MINISTERS PROTEST CONFERENCE RUMOR

155,519 AUTOS USTED Ì IN NEW JERSEY FOR 1918

THEY SAY ENTERTAINMENT WAS , ENTIRELY SATISFACTORY.

Hint That Contrary Report Was Cir­culated To Discredit Ocean Grove p.nd Asbury Park as a Location For General Conference Next Year—Resolutions Adopted.W as the recen t published sta te -,

m ent th a t ce rta in persons were movr ln g to have th e New Jersey M etho­d ist Conference m eet perm anently in A tlan tic C ity , because of alleged d is­sa tisfac tion of some of th e members w ith th e accommodationn provided In Ocean Grove arid Asbury. P ark , an a ttem p t to d isc red it the Twin ’ Cities as a location fo r the. G eneral Confer;- erice noxt year? ' ■' . '

T here la a h in t to th a t effect, lto t)hat as i t may, th e preachers

of th is d is tr ic t do no t propose to 1st the s ta te m e n t go 'unchallenged." /Jn m eeting here M onday th e d is tr ic t

m in isters adopted resolutlona voicing th e ir pro test- ag a in s t tho s ta tem en t th a t tho 'T w ln C ities/w ere riot ab le to sa tis fac to rily en te rta in the . confer­ence and alsor against a p lan of c e d ­in g to have the conference a lte rn a te ' 'between these places and A tlan tic City.

T he preachers, fu rth e r , endorsed the in v ita tio n to JiaVe the G eneral Conférence oaeet here in 1920, arid -pledged th e ir co-operation m secur­ing all accom m odation needed by delegates and visitors. '■

The resolu tions in fu ll, as p re­p ared by Jam es D. Bills, Jam es W il­liam M arshall, Jo h n Goorley; Jam esI. Boswell and T h o m a s'J . J /W r ig h t , are as follow s: ■ . .I “ W hereas, the pub lic preBS has published a sta tem en t se ttin g fo rth th a t the A nnual Conference hereaf­te r w ill m eet a t A tlan tic City, due to th e f a d , - so asserted , tihat Ocean Grove and ABbury P a rk a re no t ablë to sa tis fac to rily en te rta in the said Conference; and

"W hereas, the sa id a rtic le s ta te d th a t many, m in isters were d issatls-' fled w ith th e ir en te rta in m en t; th e re ­fore be i t

"Resolved, th a t th is preachers’ m oeting record its disapproval of. the sta tem en ts m ade, first, by p ro testin g agalnêt a p lan of ceasing to a lte rn a te betw een A sbury P a rk and A tlan tic C ity; and, secondly, - p ro testin g ag a in s t th e s ta tem en t t h a t the m in­is te rs w ere (Jlssatisfled w ith th e ir en te rta ln in en t, In v ie w ’of the 'fa c t ' th a t ou t of over th ree hundred en­te rta in ed less th an tw elve asked for a change of accom m odation, w hich is probably th e least numDer o f any recen t session; and th a t we record the fac t th a t m any resolu tions of th anks w ere extended to th e accom­m odating hotels and oàttages, and le tte rs of appreciation have since been received.

"R esolved, th a t th is .: p reacb e is’ m eeting/"endorse the a c tio n of the Ocean Grove, A ssociation and Cham­ber of Commerce of A sbury P a rk In in v itin g th e G eneral Conference to m eet here in M ay,of 1920. A nd fu r­th e r ho It

"Resolved, th a t th is preachers" m eeting pledge its co-operation in assis tin g in secu ring accom m odation and places of en te rta in m en t fo r t i e General, Conference.’’ ■/,:,.: ■

Ju s t how rap id the grow th of the S ta te M otor Vehicle D epartm ent has been since its establishm ent in 1906 is show n In a s tr ik in g w ay in the th irte e n th a n n u a l rep o rt issued .by Commissioner W illiam L. Dill. The receip ts per year have jum ped in period from i67 ,963 to $2,431,756.- 70. The percentage of Increase d u r­in g - 1918 w as tw enty-six ,' despite the w ar-tim e -restrictions of the: manu^ fac tu re o f autom obiles.

W ith, bank 'balances, In te re s t and collections, idurlng December, 1917 arid . 1918; th e funds ot the . depart-, m en t reached th e - unprecedented sirin of ?3 ,134.57. Of th is, ?2,393,- 939.33 has ac tually been paid over to th e S ta te T reasurer.

M r. Dill refe rs w ith p ride to the fa c t th a t tihe cost o f the departm ent to ' th e ’S tate w as only $18,901.71, “a trifle less th a n 7% per cen t of Che gross receipts.’’ .

T he chief polio? of the d ep art­m ent, according to M r/ D ill, is ■ to m ake the highw ays safe fo r users. How well ho has succeeded In doing; th is , he p o in ts-ou t, is show n by the fac t' th a t tlhe .num ber of autom obile reg lstra tio ris lincreased from 134,964 i r i '1917 to 1-55,519 in 1918, ye t the num ber o f fa ta litie s on th e , roads w as only 271, a decrease of fo rty - e ig h t 'from 1917.

Lieutenant Graeber Home.L ie u te n an t C harles K arsn er G rae­

ber, of th e A m orican arm y-in F rance, ■has su rp rised h is fam ily In P h iladel­p h ia by an early retu rn- in good health ...H is g ran d fa th e r, Dr. C harles W.. K arsner, a sum m er resid en t / of Ocean Grovo, wh'ile. expressing the

^deepest sym pathy for. th e p aren ts of ou r boys w ho sleep b eneath th e pop­ples In ’F lan d ers F ields, is g ra te fu l to the kirid Providence th a t, h as re ­tu rned to: th e ir , homes bo th h is son and grandson. .-'.v;.:-/' ; /s/::/‘.

: : Application For Bond Issue.To th e P ublic U tili ty Commission

app lication h as been m ade by , the Ocean Grove Camp M eeting Associa­tio n fo r perm ission to float >750,000 w orth of re fu n d in g bonds. Issuance of . w hich w as announced In T he Times, several m on ths ago. T he bonds a re to be secured h y : m ort­gage on th e u tili ty p la n ts and real esta te o f th e Association.

Township Tax Rate Fi?ed.4 Assessor ' H a rry G. / Shrove a n ­nounces/the. ta x ra te p e r $100 of th e several d is tr ic ts /o f N eptune tow n­ship for.,th is y e a r , to bq ae follow s: Ocean Grove, $2;4i; W est Giove fleVer d is tr ic t, ■ -$2.80; .W est Grove fire d is tric t, $2.52; W h ltesv in e sew ­er d istric t,, $3 .06;, W hitesvillo fire d istric t, $3.01. ’:-//

. Miss Hughes Will Speak Here.■On T uesday even ing o f .next week

Miss -Jennie H ushes, a m issionary, frorix C hina, wäll spéak in St.' P a u l's church , undor the ausplcos of -tho O cean 'G rove R o m an 's F ore ign Mis- so lnary Soolety. An in v ita t io n 'h a s been given nearby ohurohes to jo in in th is m eeting.

r3)R.HIREr-PrWate -<auto ambu- larioe, iiullyv,equipped;T ifcons

GAVE BIRTHDAY SURPRISE ÿ; FOR RED CROSS CHAIRMAN

A 'b irthday su rp rise p a rty was given for Mrs. C harles Jam ison, wife of Township '.Coniiriltteeman Jariii- son, 7G CoriiSs avenue, W est Grove, la s t Friday- evening -by the mefribers o f the Red Cross u n it of th a t place, of w hich Mrs. Jam ison, is the efficient chairm an. A outglass vase and a bouquet of ca rnations w ere presen t­ed "to Mrs. JamlSon. . ..' In -attendance were Mrs. .. A rvilla

P o tte r, Mrs. J u lia -Slocum, Mr. and M rs .;F . L. H urley, Mrs. F lorence Shafto, Mrs. F lorence H erbert, Mrs. Joh n j Law lor, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Q ulnp. Mi%. Claude Law lor, Mrs. Sara$ H ires, Mrs. I ra Jobes, Mrs. Jacob Stiles, M rs. ■ W alte r W righ t, Mrs. M ary Black, Mrs. -G arrity, Mrs., Annie H ailey, Mrs.. Jenn ie . S trud- w lck, Mrs. H a ttie S trudw ick , Mrs. V iva Barber, Miss Grace W est; MIbb B eatrice W est, Mrs. R. H orner.

•RATIFICATION MEETING OF - 'K .’•-.LOCAL WHITE BIBBONERS

Mrs. feabello H. D em arest, of Clos- te r, N. J., w as tho chief speaker a t a p rohibition m ass m eeting of ra tifica­tion held Tuesday evening in the P resby terian churoh, A sbury Park . Five m lriute addresses w ere also giv­en, the speakers being Revs. T. J. J . W righ t,, of Ocean Grove; H iram R. B ennett, C. F . Shaw, John Goorley, and F . A. DeM aris, of A sbury P ark . M rs. É.-/F. W h ittie r presided and Mr»; -Margaret Asay-HeSse, of Ocean Grove,: reel ted.

[forty,-five young women par-ticl- pated In a pagean t .rep resen ting the w e tlan d dry States. This m eeting, waa held to introduce locally the nationw ide cam paign to raise $1,- 000,000 fo r proh ib ition work.

RECEPTIONS PLANNED FOR . REVS. BILLS AND WRIGHT

A' recep tion for t'lie Rev. Jam es D. Bills, of Ocean Grove, as the new- su­perin tenden t of tlie d istric t, Is to ,09 given nex t Monday m orn ing follow ­ing , the p reachers’ m eeting In St. P a u l’s church'. The. m inistors of tne d is tr ic t, and th e ir wives w ill be the special guests of the Ladies’ Aid So­ciety of th e church, who are giving the reception.

A no th er- reception will be given th e sam e evening by St. P au l s of- elal board fo r th e pastor, Rev. Thom ­as j;. J . W righ t, and h is fam ily, and fo r Rev. J. D. Bills and fam ily;

Garbage Contractor Changed.Because of fa ilu re to qualify w ith

tho Inquired bond, the garbago con­tra c t ,o f N eptune tow nship aw ard­ed some weeks ago to Edw in V an- B runt, of 'H am ilton , was rescinded Tuesday evening, by the N eptune com m ittee, and the co n trac t was aw arded to the n ex t low est bidder, W alter W hite.

.Dinner Party At Boscobel.A t d inner on T hursday of la s t

week a t the Boscobel, Mrs. A lfred A. F a r r ,-o f E lizabeth , en te rta in ed Mrs.G. Skeere, o f B rooklyn; .M rs. C.' Wedeinarij' of N ew ark, and M rs. HiC. V anderhoof, Mrs. W. J . B la ir, Mrs. Efiie H am ilton , Mrs. H. B aylls and Mrs. P . J . B traasburger, o f Ocean Grove. ' ' :.'/ '. ••

Want Corlies Avenue Paved.D r. Jam ison, E . C. Sw eet an d H ar­

ry W hitlock, rep resen ting th e Nop- trine tow nship ^ommittee/ w ill go b e f

sfore ttie county, board of freeholders nex t week w ith a request th a t ,Cor- lieB avonue, W eat Grove, be paved. It Is 'hopod to have tho avenue paved be- twoori J f a in stroot and U n io n . ave­nue. ,

i v " ' ' -Jr-'.Uniforms For Township Polioe, S p tU g un ito rm s a re to be supplied

•free .of .cpat-to. th o ' N eptune ipollco

COUNTY CBAPTtR TO PUSH REO CROSS AID

W H i EMPLOY TBAINED HELP IN SOCIAL DEPARTMENT.

Stores of Hospital Supplies and Clothing At Headquarters of Eaeh Branch For Use In Case of Emer­gency—Preparing For May Day Fete For Soldier Boys.F or the first tim e since -his re tu rn

from Europe, T hatcher M. Brown pr3- sided' á’t a meetilng of the executive com m ittee of the M onmouth County C hapter of the A m erican Red Cross ou Monday evening of th is week a t Red Bank. Besides Mr. Browu.. there were presen t of the ’.executive com m ittee, M. A. Ricé, -chairm an ot. th e M ilitary Relief Com m ittee; John S. A pplegate, J r ., chairm an of the Home Service and C ivilian Relief Committee, and W ellington L a - Monte, secretary.' / . .

The b ranches of. A sb u ry : P árk , K eyport, Red B ank, Long , B ranch, Spring Lake and M iddletown town­ship were represented a t this- meet- irig. Mr. Brown gave an in te restin g ta lk , d u rin g w hich he outlined the chap te r 's fu tu re courso of w ork ..

U nder the peace program thb Red Cross will m a in ta in such or­ganization as w ill enable i t . to m eet any em ergency w hich may arise. Tho Home Service work seems to be req u irin g m ote time and a tten tio n th an any o ther division of the work a t p resent. The Home Service work includes the care and assistance of th e fam ilies of soldiers, as well as care of the soldiers t'hfemselves. This departm en t was authorized to em­ploy an experienced and tra in ed so­cial w orker, , ’ .-

T he Motor Corps, organized last fa ll by M. A. Rice, has dem onstrated its w orth and value m any tim es over.. One car 'h a s . been assigned to the Home Service D epartm ent, w here i t Is kept -busy, and If the w ork con­tinues to grow ano ther w ill doubtless be assigned to -it ,at a la te r dote.

The m anual work required ot the m em bers of the different branches and aux iliaries is grow ing less and less all the tim e, b u t i t is th e in ten ­tion of the chap ter to m ain ta in th i b ranches th roughou t th e county ami to m a in ta in stores o f hosp ita l bu.p - plies and clo th ing a t the h eadquar­te rs 'o f each branch, w here they can be re a c h e d 'a t once in case of &n emergency. ’ A uxiliaries located in th e im m ediate v icin ity of the differ­en t b ranches w ill be consolidated w ith the p aren t branch. Those m ain­ta in ed a t a d istance from th e b ranch headquarters w ill continue th e ir or­ganization.-

Mr.- Rice, who is also presiden t o t tlhe S tate Board of Education , an ­nounced th a t_ th e M ay Day F e te of th e schools of'M oam outh county w ill be held th is year a t Asbury Park , and th a t a ll soldiers froiri M onmouth county and vicinity,' those "who 'have re tu rn ed from F rance and those w ho w ere riot fo rtu n a te enough- to get Over, there; will be invited • to a tten d the fete. He éxpresse'd a deslíe to see as m any of the Red Crofes w ork­ers p resen t as a ttended the fete held- a t the Red B ank fa ir grounds a year ago. L ast year there w ere .no sol-, diera a t the fete, as they - w ere in Frarioe or in camps tra in in g "for serious work. .T h is year’s fete w ill afford an opportun ity for the- w ork­ers and those for whom they worked to m eet and get acquainted w ith each o th e r .., " . ' . '..

Miss Josephine Lémmi; the execu­tive socretary of the chap ter, has un ­dertaken the p repara tion of i ts h is­tory; She would be g lad to receivo com m unications from members o t the d ifferen t branches and aux ilia ries g iv ing as m uch in form ation as pos­sib le in regard to th e h iB tory of eaoli branch and au x ilia ry in the county. Wheri digested and compiled, iJhla h is to ry w ill m ake a valuable acqui s ition to the lib ra ry of Cvery memBer of th e organization .

GERTRUDE L. BENNEDY ■' WEDS BICHARD C. INNES

-Miss G ertrude I^oulse K ennedy, d a u g h te r of Mr. and Mrs. George A. K ennedy, and R ichard C. Innes wero m arried on Monday of la s t week, M arch 24, a t -the residence of the b rid e’s paren ts in . R u therfo rd , N. J. The officiating, «lergym an w as Re'x- •Dr; O. Roche, rec to r of St. P e te r’s church . New York City.

T he bride wore a gown of w h ite beaded georgette; She was attended ¡by h er sis ter, Mias Groce K ennedy, w ho wore tan beaded georgette. The ¡bridal to u r t was to A tla n tic City, P h ilad e lp h ia , and T ren ton . The K enncdys a re sum m er, residen ts 1 of O cean Grovo a t 86 M t. CannCl -Way.

', C. J . MASSINGER. M. f t , phy­sic ian and Burgeon, c o rn e r : M ain and '¡Delfiware avenues, Ocean Grove. Ot- -fico h ours: U ntil 10 a. m .; from 1to 2 p. m .; from fl.30 to 8 p. jn., an d b y appoin tm ent. Tolepbone Aflbury il-164-W.— <-80. - . "- .

W . E . -Taylor, « on trao lp r an d ¿m ilder. 98% . .M t. ' H erm an . W ay, Ocean Grove.—U tf

FINANCIAL STATEMENT OF ST. PAUL'S M. E. CHURCH

E m bracing the year ended F ebru­a ry 28, th e financial sta tem en t of St. P au l’s ciiurch was made public through tho d istrib u tio n of a p r in t­ed pam phlet a t the church la s t Sun­day. T he Items and am ounts e n te r­ing into tho sta te m e n t a r e : .

Receipts— Balance March 1, 1918, $4(2.41; from plato collections for

“year, $1,157.57; envelopes and su b ­scrip tions for year, $4,145.20; col- ' lection for coal and d istric t superin ­tendent, $404.50; E pw orth League E aster decorations, $10; C hildren’«Day collection, $30; P . M. Day, St. P au l’s N ight deficiency, $21; Hale of old heater, $9.75; M ary A. Ñorenc, bequest, $500; T hanksg iv ing offer­ing, $30.04; proceeds of note, $150; proceeds of note, $375; total, $6,- «76:07.

D isbursem ents — Pastor, $2,200; d istr ic t superin tenden t, $132; sex­ton, $780; e lectric lig h t (ch u rc h ), $153.49; electric lig h t ' (o rg an ), $25.60; Insurance, $155.51; repairs, $197.82; new hea te r a n d 'w o rk in ­sta lling , $331.40; paym ent on cJiurCU debt, $500; paym ent of note, $160; parsonage im provem ents. $128.98; coal, $329.20; rescue Misslori, Le- M aistre’s bequest, $100; financial secretary , $100; p r in tin g and adver­tising, $79.95; postage, $42.21; tele­phone a t parsonage, $42.20; Ited Cross w ar fund, $61.06; moving pas­tor, $60; deficiency St. P a u l’s Church N ight, $21; Board, of Education, C hildren’s Hay offering, $30; Duplex Envelope Company, $111.25; A m eri­can Products Company, $51.25. Home For Aged, T hanksg iv ing of­fering, $30.64; E aster decorations, $2 0 : In terest on church notes,51S7.70; Coast Gas Company, $6.50; sundry bills, $73.47; chorister, $388.73; organ ist, ' $250; en te rta in ­ment, m aterial, music, laundry , re ­pairs to organ and ex tra singers, $75.78; balance oil hand, $20.16; total. $6,876.07.

The to tal benevolences(dlscipllnary collections) of St. P au l’s the past year am ounted to $2,650, as follows:

Board of Foreign Missions from church , $452; Board o t Foreign Mis­sions from Sunday school, $100; Board of Foreign Missions, special gifts, $158; F reedm an’s Aid Society, from church, $392; Board of Home Missions from Sunday school. $100; • Board of Home M issions from special . g ifts, $159; F reedm an’s Aid Society, $68; Board of Sunday schools from church, $30; Board of Sunday schools from Sunday school, $23; Board of Education from church , $128; Board ot E ducation , C hildrens’ Day, $30; A m erican Bible Society,' $25; ‘B o a rd 'T of Tem perance, Public Morals, $26; '■•/ G eneral Deaconess Board, $7; W om­a n ’s Fore ign M issionary Society»'.;'. $291; W om an’s Home M issionary Society, $476.

The d istribu tion of ohurch moneys for the year included also these Items:

Philadelphia M ethodist H ospital, $18; to ta l a ll o th e r bonevolences, $479; Conference C laim ants' En- dowm ent Fund. $100; C entral office expenses E pw orth League, $2; sup- • port of Bishops, Episcopal F"und, $48;,-support of retired preachers, $176.; G eneral conference . expenses, $17; G eneral conference e n te rta in - • ment, $33; distrio’t- .superin tendent's • support, $132. ' ' .

In addition to the cu rren t expense V note of : $375 se t fo rth above, tiu-rn : ¿ré m oitgage notes on th e church - p i"p e rty ag g regating $ 3 ,1,¡10./

STATE SUMMER SCHOOL: AT ASBURY PARK JULY 9-15

isy-Ssj/iv!

T h e • .tw enty-sixth annual session;' of the S tate Sum m er School for Sun- • , ,*.»day School W orkers is, to be h e ld 'a t .A sbury P a rk du ring the week ot ' i % Ju ly 9. According to p resen t p lan s •*Bible lectures w ill be delivered by ^Dr. C harles F . Shaw; of . A sburyP ark ; courses In .pedagogy by P ro - t 1 ’4-jfessor A. J. W illiam M yers, ot. tho , ’ jV«H artfo rd School of Religious P eda- /gogy, and In phschology byN annie Lee, F rayser. EugeneF oster, o f - th e in te rn a tio n a l s ta ff of * , Uthe Y. M...C. A;, w ill have charge ofth e young .people’s . 'd e p r i r tH ^ t^ .^ lS ’M iw hile th e home' d epartm en tences w ill lie led 'by Miss K a th a rin e . ■C, -Bourne; o f Foxborough, IO m T

O thers who w ill conduct c lasses’,'.W iH r/i a re Rev. D r. M ilton , a L ittlefield , , ?Miss F rances W eld Daniellscm, Mlsa Jessie El Moore, U iss. F rances Hedden, M iss Josephine L . . Baldwin/S'iiiiiivfl-S! M i* E d ith D.". Glen and Misa A .,L ew is.

' . . * * * • — - -Sunday At St. Paul’s (nrnrch.

T he Sacram ent of the L ord’s Sup­per w ill be held a t the m orn ing ' vice; 10.30 o’clock. T he Sabbath school'w ill: m eet a t ' 2.30 p.. .

Bible atudy. The E pw orth , Leagrie:|j® J& ,i® arid th e Ju n io r E p w o rti Liea£aie','#iU;|'^M)Ji?,i|i m eet a t 6.30 p. m . , a n d foU o^fnig^i'M H fe} these services the pasto r w ill p re a ^ f i 'i i rg ^ !« | on the sub ject, “ T he ':s'.Ctaaew^id!*e.y^J®S

»iSfcviiE!, 'Vlsltdrsthe

Choice.’! h earty welcome Come spend churoh of God L ord’s Day.

" Bioe'President .Fire }$&Q:Reorganisation.of the Ocean G toyv'kmhV-

fire. cammieeloners was »effected ¿Use ; - Friday nlgdit.'• whon.,Waldo.:B;^ ;Rlco7:.'.ii,';. v. . was ' elected -.president .and;- ‘William '

Page 2: GROVE WOMAN'S NIECE MINISTERS PROTEST ...the trip except;tiho.food—dark, sour bread, no : butter, little, sugar, milk made, from powdered milk and: little better than colored water,

‘ 1 'W ;VvT.V-- '" ÏN .^ C '^ Î/! • J.:‘, >vV i s ^

• : •. i- ;

P A G E T W O T H E O CEAN GRO VE T IM ES" FRIDAY, APRIL 4, 1919.mmm

C O M M U N IT Y CLASSIFIED B U S IN E S S D IR E C T O R YAUTOMOBILE DEALERS, ACCESSORIES, BTC

Zacharias Garage Co., Inc.. EXTDE BATTERY SERVICE STATION

625 Main Street, Asbury Park Phone 644

■ H; M* Taylor. GENERAL MACHINIST •AUTOMOBILE REPAIRING

901 lir s t Aventte, Asbury Park, New Jersey

Mark Guy’s ■8‘Auto IonGARAGE AND SERVICE STATION

21-23 Main Street, Asbury Park •

99

Monmouth Rubber WorksAUTO TIRES AND ACCESSORIES. VULCANIZING

Opp, Railroad Station, Asbuiy Park

E. W. StosselCHALMERS AND MAXWELL ÌGENCY

AUTOMOBILES REPAIRED AND REBUILT (W. W. Embley Building)

614 Main Street, Asbury Park, Phone 209

Seacoast G arage and Supply Co.FIRESTONE TIRES Sold and Repaired.

86 South Main Street, Asbury Park

A dam s & C ulverAUTOMOBILE REPAIRING. OXY ACETYLENE WEEDING

ELECTRIC AND GENERAL MACHINE WORK Fourth Avenue and Main Street, Asbury Park.

1. M . .WoolstonAUTOMOBILE TRIMMING, TOPS, RADIATOR COVERS and REPAIRING

805 Main Street, Asbury Park Phone 714-J

Asbury Park Tire Service Co.HIGH-GRADE TIRES AND TUBES

VULCANISING A SPECIALTY 7 Main Street,-Asbury Park,-N. J.

Phone 2237 '

FOR SALE ~ ~LATE MODEL, FIVE-PASSENGER CONTINENTAL RED SEAL

SIX-CYLINDER TOURING CAE Electric Lights, Self Starter. Bargain

Address, Ocean Grove Times, 48 Main Avenue, Ocean Grove

S. B. JohnsonPAINTING AND TRIMMING

5Î3 Slain Street, Asbury Park Phone 69 M

Let Us Build For You PRESTIGE AND POPULARITY

¡By Placing Your Name in This Space

CONFECTIONER

W illiam BurkhardtManufacturer of

HOME-MADE CANDIES 33 South Main Street, Asbury Park

BAKERS

R eitz’s M odel BakeryBAKERY AND CONFECTIONERY

PAN DANDY BREAD ; 717 Mattison Avenue, Asbury Park

Branch: 47 Pilgrim Pathway, Ocean Grove

Mrs, A. I. Lake has reopened

The Lake Bakery717 Cookman Avenue, Asbury Park

with a full line of. our former standard goods, the most reliable makes of Bread, Cake and Pies-. Now ready to serve you.

COAL AND WOOD

DELICATESSEN, ETC.

W estphal’s High-Grade - .. Delicatessen and Luncheon ■

DEPORTED T ATvrVE LUXURIES OUR SPECIALTY. DINNER 12 to 1 568 Cookman Avenue, Opposât! Steinbach’s, Asburjr Park

DRUGGISTSSINMONTH’S ASTHMA AND BRONCHITIS REMEDY

For the treatment and relief of Asthma and Bronchiti®, Asthma '¡»ill he relieved in a few weeks—Bronchitis in a few day» Price, $1.00. For sale at all drug stores.. On receipt of $1 a bottle'TfiU be sent to any ad­dress postage paid.

Kimnonth’s Drug Store, 724 Cookman Avenue, Asbury Park.

Grammar’s Cut Rate Drug Store’R’F.T.T.'R MEADE AND HUYLER CANDIES

Opp. Press Office, Anbury Park Phone 82*M

Sr D . W oolleyA D. S. DRUG STORE

48 Main Avenue4 Ocean: Grove Phone 228

Fred W . Engel,PRESCRIPTION PHARMACY

Pilgriisi Pathway, Corner Mt. Tabor Way, Ocean Grove,

Phone: 804

ELECTRIC FIXTURES

Proctor-Jones Electric Co.WILLARD STORAGE BATTERY SERVICE STATION

219 Cookman Avenue, Asbury Park Main Office: 632-634 Mattison Avenue. Phone 8336

Branch Office:- 35 W. Main Street, Freehold, N. J.

FOOTWEAR

Best' Shoe CompanyGEORGS EBARCB, Manager

MEN’S AND WOMEN'S HIGH-GRADE SHOES At less than regular price.

627 Cookman Avenue, Asbury Park, N. J.

B. F in k e l..UP-TO-DATE SHOES

ALSO SHOE REPAIRING Opp 0. G. High School

55 So, Main Street, Asbur Park

Geo. HandschtichHIGH GRADE SHOE REPAESINe

606 Bangs Avenue, Asbury Park

FURNITURE

Louis SchmferlerEtBNlTURE, CARPETS, STOVES, BEDDING

FLOOR COVERINGS, ETC.147-149 Main Street, Asbury P ari

Phone 445-W,

Asbury Park Furniture; Co.HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE

STOVIS AND RANGES Opposite Postofflce, Asbury Park

Phone 1641

George E. James, Jr.NEW A2TO SECOND-HAND FURNITURE AND STOVES

Bought, Sold and Exchanged 3 and 5 Main Street, Asbury Park

Phone 1258-M

JEWELERS

Henry S. MarshallDIAMONDS, WATCHES AND JEWELRY

EXPERT REPAIRING 645 Mattison Avenue, Asbury Park

Phone 123-R

H. GoldbergJEWELER AND WATCHMAKER

WATCHES, DIAMONDS, JEWELRY, SILVERWARE AND CUT GLASS 611-613 Cookman Avenue, Asbury Park

E. StoutCOAL AND WOOD

CHARCOAL AND CANNEL COAL 805 Asbury Avenue, Asbury Pari:

Phòne 541

G. P. Farmer Coal and Supply Co.51 SOUTH MAIN STREET, ASBURY PARK

Telephone 80

Joseph P. JohnsonCOAX, and W000D

H&Y, GRADI and FERTILIZER908 Main St., ABbury.Park ; . ’•

' >v Phone 859*W '

Harry HymanTHE STORE OF HIGH-CLASS JEWELRY

Guaranteed (Formerly with John Wanamaker)

641 Cookman Avenue, Asbury Park,

TAILOE

Adam Stetter. the tailorLADIES’ AND GENTLEMEN’S GARMENTS ALTERED, REPAIRED,

CLEANED AND PRISED 408 Main Street,'ABbury Park

Opposite Postoffice

111

Order Th at Job Printing

T O D A Y

CENTRAL BICYCLE STOREBob Eberlé, Proprietor

Agent for Columbia and fribnne, ,Baby Carriages He-tire;: and Be- f paired. Roller Skates, Eto,

621 Main Street Asbury Park.

a n d give «as the t im e to t a k e pains v'--;- :■ with the w o r fc

MISCELLANEOUS

WHEN YOUR HERO COMES HOME Letus dress Jjim. up.

We will consider it an honor,

Ira A . Stricklin700 Cookman Avenue, Asbury Park. Phone 650

F. G. RhodesPLUMBING AND HEATING. FULL LINE OF GAS APPLIANCES

103 Emory Street, Asbuiy Park Phone 145-J

Alfred S. Rush t onTYPEWRITERS- AND SUPPLIES

ALL MAXES SOLD, BUNTED AND REPAIRED 308 Bond Street, Asbury Park

Phone 130-J

608 MAIN STREET ASBURY PARK, N. J.

Phone 686

V A N C LEAF

PIPELESS HEATERS4 and 5 Room H ouse . • ........... .$1456 and 7 Room House '....-............. , ... ..............................................1658 and 10‘RoomHouse. . . . . . . . . ; . . . . v , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • 85

These prices include setting complete, nsady for Are, and axe- said on guarantee they WILL MAKE GOOD OR WE WILL.

SELECT THIS WISE LOCATION AND PUT YOUR BUSINESS

ON THE MAP '

CO LE & CO.406 Cookman Avenue, Asbury Park.

Columbia Grafonolas and Records. A complete line .of Grafonolas and a full list of the Columbia records. There is no obligation io hearing It, and it is the final test. Let us play them for you.

MILLINERY

The Stewart ShopEXCLUSIVE STYLES IN MILLINERY !•

BLOUSES; SKIRTS AND DBÆS8ESHON BBAND AND MINERVA YARNS

. 580 Cookman Avenue, Asbury Park •

PAPER HANGING AND ¡PAINTING“Brighten Up Your Home”

Ira S. Ferris, Inc.CONTRACTING PAINTERS AND DECORATORS

WALL PAPERS. FAINT SUPPLIES 707 Mattisi: n Avenue, Asbury Park

. Phone 958

M etz &, Stewart Cò.PAINTING'' AND DECORATING

416 Main Street, Asbury Park. Opp, Postoffice Phone 582 :

PHOTOGRAPHY

The Farrand Studio________ S. B. Johnson <EVERYTHING IN PHOTOGRAPHY

PICTURE FRAMING, CAMERAS AND PHOTO SUPPLIES 513 Cookman Avenue, near Grand Avenue, Asbury Park

REAL ESTATE

The Beeglé Agency1. G. FR E D BEEGLO0 \

SEAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE. SELECT PROPERTIES 408 Main Street,. Asbuiy Park

Phone 2329-W *

Wanamassa Bungalow Lots on Deal LakeOwn a Bungalow. Don't pay rent.. Lots 50x100, $450. Improvements.

You can,mqke your own term s..-.N. 3. TAYLOR, Owner 3 E. WOETMAN, Agent

603 Bond Street, Asbury Park

Land and Mortgage A gency, IncffiVEST YOUE MONEY IN FIEST MORTGAGES-

W« always lave a number of good applications on hand.' 719A Mattison Avenue, Asbury Park

R. W esley M illerREAL ESTATE AND INVESTMENT COMPANY ’

INSURANCE AND MORTGAGE LOANS i P, 0. Box 364 718Mattison'Avsrrae, Asbuiy Park, N. J-;

■ • Phone 1051 vv'r-;i

STATIONERY

L / f k o ’p ï ’ie ■, NEWSPAPEEBÏv v tJOTOOTÓKEBY,

Ooçaa : Grove;..Pljosc'SOi:,'; i,»-::

m mH i

Page 3: GROVE WOMAN'S NIECE MINISTERS PROTEST ...the trip except;tiho.food—dark, sour bread, no : butter, little, sugar, milk made, from powdered milk and: little better than colored water,

New Process Invented to Pre­serve Surface of Monolith

In Central Park.

H IE R O G L Y P H S O B L IT E R A T E D ,

nigon. of W estern Climate Caused Khedive's Gift to Disintegrate. .

Painting Ancient Obelisk With Special Preparation Stay­

ed Decay— Ruined Porr tlons Restorsd,

New Yorkers mvoke one iriornlng to find in their b reak fast headlines.- tlie news th a t a zealous/park employee had discovered signs o f disintegration on die surface of the city 's most treasured antique-—Cleopatra’s Needle. ' :Plsoto- gruplis revealed that; die monolith was peeling, large pieces of sandstone hav­ing fallen from the tall shaft, carrying w ith them p art of the prized hiero­glyphs..

London’s twin sis ter of Cleopatra's Needle was reported as resting com­fortably and endurliigly on the bayUs of the Thames, and the rival port won­dered whether a preparation wotfld bo found to stay' the attacks of their

•harsher climate.Such n preparation was soon forth­

coming. A new pain t combination as a preservative for stone was invented

T H E O B E L IS K .

Tho O belisk w as proBonted to th e C ity of New York by the K hedive of E gyp t.

L ieu te n an t Com ­m ander G orrlnge. U.S. N.. a f te r a three y ea rs ' effort, ob ta in - ed possession of It and m oved It to Its p re se n t position, a t p; a n expense of nearly 110 0 ,000. I t w as fl- H nally sw ung In to .po- sltion a t noon, Jan u - %■ a ry 22, 1881. .

Tho heigh t of th is m onum ent, from base to tip . Is 69 feet, 2 & inches. The m eas- u rem en t of th e base, V sq u are th rough ita ax is, is 7 feeti 8% &Inches, Tho «intiro k w eigh t of the mono- fc.11th Is 2 10 % tons.

Since it w as q u ar- U: ried n e a r the to rrid $

• zone, it h as traversed ji< th e en tire leng th of

' E gypt, m ost of th a t £•; of tho M editerra- % n ean Sea- and tho % w id th of the A tlan- V ; tic O cean—a dls- % ta n ce of 6,400 m iles— prov ing Itself a * first r a te tra v e le r for one ¡& whoso age h a s ex- £<• o © e d e d th irty -five cen tu ries . In thfjLr course of i ts • ex ist- &> ence i t h as seen P h a ra o h and h is host going to / / th e lr d e - ’H u truc tion (in th e Rod Sea; S h lshak m arch - K lng to th e Conquest of Je ru sa lem ; Cam - byses deso la ting the l a h d ; H erodotus.P la to a n d o th e r G reek s tu d en ts engaged- Infiu rsu it of E gyptian o re ; A lexander tho

, G reat on h is v ic to ri­ous e x p e d i t i o n » th rough the land o f 'G oshon; six and a . h a lf cen tu ries of !Rom an sovereign ty ; and C hristian s tru g - j g le a t A lexandria: all \ th e long line of Mob- ;Jem ru le rs s ince :C aliph O m ar; and ; now, leaving a lto ­g e th e r Its na tive land.It s ta n d s looking u p ­on the million dwell - ors in thfs 'm ctropolis;. whoso s ite w as u n ­know n to th e E a ste rn

• world a t a tim e when th e O belisk had been In ex istence fo r tw o th ousand years.

by Dr. William Kuckru, chemist of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Many years previous coating with paraffin had been tried, but the application had not entirely accomplished Us purpose. The new painting process, however, proved a ¿success. Disintegration was halted and the damaged parts restor­ed. New' York breathed easily again.

PAINT PROTECTION• AND ITS ECONOMY.

The preservation of structural ma­terials, which may be obtained through ihe application of paint, constitute^ n m ost vital means of furthering the con­servation of our natural resources. I t Is, moreover, the m ost economical method of sustaining the nppearunce and general upkeep of any eommu-j

;nlty.■ A structu re coated with sheets bf In- rflo rubber would not be as well protect-

, ed, from decay as a structure coated with a good oil paint, This is due to die fac t that a shfect of rubber Is not

Vso durable o r as w aterproof as a thin , dried film o f p a in t The la tte r m ate­ria! IV hen applied dries to a continuous elustlc Aim containing finely divided particles of metallic, w ear resisting pigments. A square foot of such a 81m upon a wooden surface costs less th a n » penny, yet It will beaytify and protect a dollar’s worth o f surface fo r snany years. This Is a low ra te of In­surance. . . ■

Dwellings,barns, outbuildings, sheds,: l>6sis, fences, stock enclosures, wagons, Implements, windmills and o ther fltruc- tnrcs, whether of wood, iron or cement, should be preserved, tbrougl: the use idflpalnt. from rapld decay. High grade ■paint 'm ay be useti successfully for all snch purposes. Colored paints will :bo

■idund. the most saVlceablo,’ the •-■olorlne "m atte r 1ln 'tlie ;p<ilntroiJdlns from two ;(o three',veaia'to the .llfoo f the/vanUqk.

Q uery.—T he /g o v e rn m en t has launched a n educationa l cam paign to. encourage building in o rder to p u t m ore m en to w brk. ^Would n o t a s im ilar m ovem ent to , show how the old s tru c tu re s can be best and m ost econom ically repaired and m ade good a s new also help?

Answer.—It is learned th a t such a plan Is in. effect and is linked"directly with the W ashington propaganda.

Industry must be turned back from works .of w ar-to tlie Ways of peace. Employment must be found, In tlie meanwhile, for those whose occupa­tion has been Interrupted. There is no real . surplus of labor in the United States« R ather tiiére Is a shortage, which would be acute if normal çondl- ditlons were already restored, and one step towards restoring them will come with resumption of repair work.

Government restrictions, imposed;by the. necessities of the war program, have for many months past retarded or altogether prevented construction, improvement and repairs. These re­strictions are now off, and there Is scarcely a town, a city, a factory, a dwelling or a farm th a t does n o t‘reveal a crying need for prompt attention. Nothing delays such instant action ex­cept the feeling thut prices a re high for the time being and may bo lower.

That.Is not logical. No m atter what it costs to repair, tlie cost Is less than, the cost of neglect. No m atter what the cost of paint, the wind and the w eather will collect a higher bill in deterioration and decay.

Q uery.—W h a t do .you th ink of p a in t a s an investm en t, as ide from th e appearance i t lends? Does it really PAY to p a in t a house regularly , say , every th re e o r fouryears?

Answer.—Good, paint properly ap­plied when needed is the main thing in making a house last long and well. A house worth .$2,500 can bc(, painted a t a cost of ab o u t $125, In 00 years that bouse will ^jJeed about 15 paintings, the total cost of which will be $1,805. Left w ithout paint, such a house would full into complete ruin In 30 years. So taking 00 years as u basis for our fig­ures we find thut with paint a home will last tha t timé in good condition; and will cost, plus paint, .$4,375,- W ith­out paint the house would have to be rebuilt at the end of 30 years and would be . ready for ano ther complete renovation when the sixtieth year a r ­rived. Cost, w ithout paint, $5,000 for a home ready to fall to pieces. Does regular painting pay? As the old Dutch adage says: • •**

"PAINT- PAYS FOR IT S E L F ”

Query.—I have a q u a n tity -o f old p a in t on hand. Can I uso it fo r th e first coa t in rep a in tin g m y barn?

Answer.—On no account should old paint which has become fa t be used for priming either old or new work. Old paint in that condition is best used on a fence, brickwork or tlnwork. If you vain«; your barn sufllclently to, paint it, do it the justice of a good job.

U. S. Invents Anti-Rust "Dope.”Incident to the war, the government,

has faced the problem that has so long proved baffling- to commercial con­cerns of protecting iron and steel from rust. In an attem pt to solve this fed­eral specialists have perfected various forms of protective coatings. In this connection It may be pertinent to ask whether commercial uses' will not be found .also for" the so-called “dopes” which the government has Invented to bo applied to airplane wings and which' a re possessed of valuable weather-re-. slstlng and 'fireproof qualities.

E F F E C T O F COLOR UPON T H ED U R A B IL ÍT Y OF P A IN T .

Property owners who may have un­der consideration the painting of dwellings &nd o ther structures should remember th a t more durable results a re obtained when tinted pain ts are used. Perm anent coloring m aterials which have been ground by, maeliine into a high grade white pain t base have the effect of preventing "chalk­ing" and “checking,” two defects which are often observed when .white paints are used.

P R E T T Y COLOR COM Bl NATIO N S.Ground

. C oatStipple

CoatW hite L ig h t Rosa

W hite L ig h t G ray

W hit# ' L ig h t W arm Yellow

L igh t G ray Sam e Gray, a li ttle d a rk ­e r . _ •

L ig h t G ray L ig h t .Blua

Llght^ G ray Green

Ivory • i Olive Green

L ig h t Colo­nial Yellow.

Gold Bronxe

L ig h t. Blue. J -

D ark G reen

A lum inumBronze

Blue

. . iIvory T an

Ivory 'i

D ark Brow n

StencilColor

Medium, L ig h t .G ray DuU Blue,

. G ray-G reen L igh t Cobalt Blue, N eu tra l L ig h t D rab

G ra y ,s G ray- O r e i n o r L ig h t C o ta lt Blue . / G ray, B lue or. L igh t O rangeYellow L ig h t- G ray, N eu tra l D rab

Ivory or G rayish

L igh t G reen N eu tra l ,

G ray, Ivory L ig h t W arm

D rab, Me­dium Olive, ̂

W orm 'G ray , Cream .

D elft Blue, L ig h t Ivory , L igh t N eu - (tra l G ray

Brown, B u rn t U m ­ber, C ream L ight T an , 1

Cream , L igh t G ray D rab '

CONTRACTS FOE SANITARY OPEN / /. PLUMBING .w ill bo carefu lly and sclentlQ cally carried o u t und er our own Immedi­a te su p e rv is io n ,an d in accordance w ith the very la te s t ideas an d im ­provem ents th a t is rcalled fo r by m odern, up-to-date plum bing, w hen you e n tru s t your w o rk to T.homaj Angles." VT# w ill fu rn ish astlm atea cheeriulis'. an« a t prices th a t can­no t be eomipejed w ith , w orkm anship considered.

Thomas AnglesPlumber, S h eet Iron and

M etalw orker51 MAIN AVBNIIE

OCEAN GROVE ’Telephone Q65-B.

EAT LESS MEAT IF

Take a glass of Balta to flush Kidneyi i f Bladder bothers you—Drink

lots of water.

Eating meat regularly eventually pro­duces kidney trouble in somo form or other, saya a well-known authority, be­cause the urio acid in meat excites the kidneys, they become .overworked; get, sluggish; clog up and cause a ll sorts of distress, particularly backache and mis­ery in tho kidney region ; rheumatic twin? gcs, severe headaches, acid stomach, con* stipatiou, torpid liver, sleeplessness, bladder and urinary irritation. •• The moment your back hurts or kid­neys aren’t acting right, or if bladder bothers you, get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any good pharmacy; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and.your kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with Iithia, and has been- used for generations to flush clogged kidneys and stimulate them to nohnal activity; alBo to neutralize the acids in the urine so i t no longer irri­tates, thuB ending bladder disorders.

Jad Salts cannot injure anyone; makes a delightful effervescent lithia* water drink which millions of men and women take now and then to keep the kidneys and urinary organs clean, thus avoiding serious kidney disease.

S T O P C A T A R R H ! O P E N N O S T R IL S A N D H E A D

i Says Cream Applied in N ostrils j Relieves Hcad-Colds at Oncc.? J

If your nostrils are clogged and your head is stuffed and you can’t , breath*» freely because of a cold or catarrh, jusv get a Bma^ll bottle of Ely’s Cream Balm a t any drug store/ Apply a little of th is fragrant, antiseptic cream into your nostrils and let i t * penetrate through every a ir passage of your head, soothing and healing the inflamed, swol­len mucous, membrane and you get in­stan t relief.

All! how good it feels. Your'nos­trils are open, your head is clear, no more hawking, snuffling, • blowing*,, no more headache, dryness or struggling for breath. Ely’s Cream Balm is just w hat sufferers from head cnlds and cor

r/>»» V TMu »» .

Does Y o u r P lu m b in gN e e d A tte n tio n ?

I t is a lw ays beet to ca tch a leak o r a plum ber rep a ir w han i t first s ta rts ; because i ts tendency in to grow worse w ith neglect.

‘Homa-iaiad*’ re p a irs a re m ake­sh if ts a t boat, an d a re the costliest in the long ru n — place y our plum b­in g problem s o n our shoulders, and we w ill solve th ez t p rom ptly and sa tisfacto rily .

W IL LIA M Y O U N GPLUMBER

64 MAIN AVENUE, OCEAN 6R0VE, N. J,Telephone 436. '

Prank BuckT in # Metal Worker

120Î First AvenueA a b u ry P o r k

f ito V e e a n d R an ftee R ep a lro d . W orm ftlr tlo n tln g a

S p e c ia l t y L e a d e r s , G u t te r « a n d R q e fln S T o M jp h o n e 3 a i3 -R

V.M,CA. PHOTO,

The w ounded doughboy, once he ha« s ta r te d along th e road to recovery, r e ­quires two essential# to keap up his sp irits .and bring abou t a quick re tu rn to health -^am usem en t ap len ty and th e com panionship of sym p ath e tic women. The tr io show n /n tho p ic tu re consists of a Y. M. C. A. w om an w orker an d her charges, tw o convalescing young A m erican soldiers, a t one of the F rench hospita l cam ps, m ak ­ing th e hours pass spoQdlly and p leasan tly th rough th e m edium of a good, old f a s h ­ioned gam e of checkers.

FIFTY-SEVEN T WORKERS WENT

WEST IN WARr

Thirteen Women Among Those Who Made Supreme Sacrifice.

C ro ix de G u e rre C o n fe rre d U pon 13 o f

152 C ited fo r D is tin g u ish e d

S crv ice .

A T n cost of r.7 11 v«*s the Y. M. C. A, rnrrled 1 lit* IU*U Trbinglo into (he (rumps and trenches-^abroad,

nud on iiintiy occasions right up to the front liring lines. This-saerlllce was proport iountely one-iptnrler ah great as tluit of 1 he American army overseas. Of (hose fatal I lies HD ,were due to dis­ease, 11ml the remalmlor to shell-fire, .botnbs, ;:ns-fever, tirowulng . and wounds. T lilr iv n -n f those who “went wesi-’ doing their bit In the service of the ,tY*' wen?, women; tftte of whom w as I; 11 led by shell lire and another In a German a ir raid., ' ■

There also wtrre "> m»a-fatal casual­ties. These wi*re duo principally to .nutchlne gun lire, gns,' shell fire and motor transport accidents. Numerous cases .of slight wounds and gassings, \Vhich were Attended a t dressing sta­tions but. were net repcirted to head-: qtiurters, are not Included. These cas­ualties occurred In a force which a t no time exceeded 0,000 workers, of whom it is reckoned tha t'm ore than one-half never were sent to the front, being em­ployed in tin» hundreds of huts main­tained throughout the training areas^ and the •‘leave’* areas.

S lx ty-thne “V** workers were deco­rated. while in «11 more than 152 re­ceived ofileinl recondition for distin­guished servlet*. Thirteen were deco­rated with the Croix de Guerre, while fifty received other decorations. Of these, three received the Distinguished Service Cross, three the Order of St. Stanislaus, live the Italian Cnvaliere del Corona; thirty-eight the Italian w ar cross, and one the French decora­tion ,of the Corps d'Anuee. .»Seven ■were, cited fo r. the Croix de G uerre ,. and seven for other decorations; six commeded fo r ’ meritorious conduct, andi- twenty-nine received honorable mention in .dispatches. Several units were cited in their-entirety ;• th a t;serv­ing .with the Third piviston, consisting o f thirty-four men and six women, be-, lng. cited twice.- More than a score reported decorations have not ye t been confirmed.

Not one of these men under thirty was lit for military duty; but the cita­tion's. show th a t they carried on with the same courage and spirit th a t iden­tified. Americans throughout the war. These records show that they went over the top with the assaulting Waves, tha t they exposed themselves under machine gun and shell fire to m inister to the wounded, that they worked in- defatigably as stretcher bearers and that they drove ambulances into the midst of battle to rescue the wounded. Others were sacrificed in the less he­roic bu t no less necessary work behind th e ; Jlnes. Among these stands out Miss Winona M artin o f Rockville Center, L. I., a Y. M. C. A. secretary, who was tjie first American woman killed in the war. She was killed b y a'bomb during a German a ir raid upon Paris and her death made a deep im­pression on American m inis. Miss Marlon G. Crandall of Alameda, Cal., killed by shell flre.near Chalons March 26, 1918, was another of the women sacrificed in helping the soldiers.

Officials were quick to see and ap­preciate meritorious work on the part of the secretaries and prom pt to recog­nize It officially. The citation of the units attached to the Third Division by M ajor General Dlckraan, in part, re a d s :

“T h e commanding: genera l desires ,to m ak o -o f record in th e G eneral O rders o f app rec ia tion of tho p a r t taken by th e m em bers o f th e Y. M. C. A. who h ave been a ttach e d to th is division and ac tlvo- ly ca rried on th e ir w ork In all its phases- du rin g , th e tim e th a t th is division w as in co n tac t w ith tho enem y from M ay 81 to Ju ly 80. D uring tho days beginning J u ly .>14, w hen the enem y m ada tb e lr a t - tack . and for d ay s ,an d n ig h ts a tfe rw ards.t th e Y.’.M. G. A«, th rough its fa ith fu l m em - ! bers a t j h e i r posts o t du ty , n o t only w ith ' ohocoISre and cakes and ,tobacco cheered • our ‘DQjdlers, b u t w ere^of efficient ‘a s s is t­

ance to our m cdlcal staff In caring for wounded^

W hile th e m en of the Y. M. C. A. w ere w ith the . troopn in th e fron t line the young w omen of th e Y. M. C. A. w ere d e ­tailed w ith th e hospita ls, nnd tho m edical sta ff of th is division bear testim ony of th e ir m ost efficient help d u ring th e se tw o w eeks of g re a t s tra in . T he conduc t of these self sacrificing and b rave men and w omen Who hnvo so unhesita ting ly given th e ir serv ices to th e ir coun try , estab lishes a s tan d a rd of p restige , exceptional cour­age, devotion .and resource, w hich tho com m anding genera l p a rticu larly com ­m ends." ’

Among Jhe Y. M. C. A. workers from the Easrerii Depa rt went, which em­braces the sta les of New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Mary­land, Virgin in, West Virginia and tlie District of i'oltnnbia, the following fig­ured in the odicial lists sent from abroad : .

Died in P rrv lre (M en)—Judson H art Beechi-r. Mt. Kisco, N. Y., in hospital; R. i): Hush. Cam illa, Ga.. influenza; Leon A. Carle.v. t 'a ‘dwell, N’. J ., acc iden t; H ugh R Chantln-r, H ardstow n, Ky., pneum onia; Raoul i.'hauvin. Now York city , pneum o­n ia ; Hcdley II. Cooper, P ierm ont, N. Yi, g a s . a t ta c k ; .los-jpn Kdward Cohveli, Ridgetlt‘lt! I'lirk , N. .1., pneum onia; C harles C. I->1\v:t,Ih. K;iabelle, G a., pneu­m onia; li. Kayard- C u tting , New York c ity , oiM'ratloi.; hn:*ry h. Oibson, Avalon, P*u, shell lire; PU rro R G uth, A llentown, Pa., pneumo*il:i; .lo!m T. Johnson, W est P o in t, G a., tin *un’onla ; T hom as li. Jones, Brooklyn. N. V., j u. um onla; John A dam s L inn. Xt*\v Yo»*U sliell fire; W a lter H ue-M urray , I'.as't O range. N. J ., shell fire; Roy H. I’ac<*, S v .arth inore. Pa., pneum o­nia ; l l . L. Itichurdsoti, Mi»w York city, pneum onia; W. Rose, New York city, pneum onia tg a ss^d ); H. P . Seym our, Xew York city . aL'CiiVcnt: XV. W. S en t, New Y ork city , dyseiiti ry ; II. S. S m ith . N yack, N. Y.. gas a t t a d c John R .-V an Schalck, H un ting tuh . L. I., w ounded: G, 11. W alsh, P h iladelph ia, Pa., pneum onia; Robert J . W ellwood, New York city , shell fire; H a rry G. F isher. .W ash ing ton , D. C.. pneum onia. ,

W om en-r-Daisy A dam s, Halil more, Md„ pmeumonia; D orothy G ay, New York city, pneum onia; W inona M a r tin , Rockville C en ter, L.' I.; alt; ra id ; J e a n e tte Zinn, PhiUidelphia, Pa., pneum onia; Bessie Gale. S chenectady, N. V., h e a rt; Miss B lanche A. R ow iej, R ochester, N. Y . pneuirnn!». ■

Awarded Croix de Gu«-rro— Rilwln K. Kly, New York e liy ; W illiam MacDonald, Brooklyn. N. Y.; S tan ley Modra,. Brook­lyn. N. Y.; VViiiiam .Murray, Douglaston, L . L: I-;. A. Sti».'rk*!..Ntw York c ity ; H enry W h arto n , Philadelphia, P a .; H a rry W hite, Bound Brook, N. J .

Cltetl for Croix de G uerre— Frederick A m es Dawes, N ew ark, N. J . ; M urray B a rtle tt, R ochester. N. Y.;. Rov. Henryi Johnston , K ast O range. X. J .; Miss Cor­nelia Colt D avis, New Y ork .city .

. A w arded Ita lian Croix de. G uerre—Sid­ney R obert C lark, R ochester, N. Y.;' How-, a rd C llner W estfield, N. J ,; Jo h n B ea tty C a re y ,. K lmfm , N. Y.; H arvey Slgafoos Iian ey , Q uakertov.'n, P a .; A braham P erry H arr is , B rooklyn, N. Y.; H enry Seym our Jew ett, New York c ity ; W atson K ener- dlno Phillips, Ambler, P a .; G ulseppe Ron-

..ca, R ochester, N.- Y.;. T hom as A rth u r Ruddoll, Milford, Del,; P au l Savage, New York c ity ; Lerdy Crobln, New York city ;. E llio t H arvey , P arkersbu rg , W . V a.; Rob­e r t A ppleton, P assa ic , N. J .

A w arded O rder of St. S tan islas—Sam ­uel B. Valaoy, Brooklyn, N. Y.

A w arded C avalier0 del Corona—Lo Roy Corbin, New York c ity {twice decora ted by ita J lan com m ander); P au l Savage, New Y ork c ity ; Joseph F. S licker, N ew York city.

A warded D ecoration of Corps D’Armeo —-Evelyn G arnet Sm alley (by G eneral Pe- to in ), Now Y ork .clty .

D istinguished Servlco Cross—M. J . B ar­ker, J r ., U nlontow n, Pa.

Com m ended—C harles M. M ims, New Y ork c ity ; Ira H . V an E m den, M ount V ernon, N. Y. ,

If you are accustomed to wake up- with a coated tongue, foul breath or a dull, dizzy headache; or, if your | meals sour and turn into gas and 7 acids, you have a real surprise await- ; ing you, ” . V . : -iy*

To-morrow morning, immediately ;, upon arising, drink a glass of h o t w ater with a teaspoonful of lim estone. ; phcdphate in it. This is, intended to: ‘ first neutralize and then wash out of your , stomach, liver, kidneys ,and‘ thirty feet of intestines . all tlie indl- •; gestible waste, poisons, sour bile and , toxins, thus Cleansing, sweeteriing and ,; purifying the entire alim entary canaL;;

Those : subject to sick: headaches, uacltache, bilious attacks, constipation or any form of stomach trouble, are urged to g e t a. quarter pound of lime­stone phosphate from the drug store and begin enjoying th is morning in- slde-bath. I t is said that men and women who try this become enthu­siastic and keep i t up dally. I t is, a splendid health measure for i t is more im portant to keep clean and pure on * the inB ide than on the outside, because the skin pores do not absorb im puri^ ties into the blood, causing disease, while the bowel pores do.

fho principle of bathing inside is not new, as*mUlions of people practice • it. Ju s t as hot water and soap cleanse,

• purify and freshen the skin, so hot w ater and a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate act on the stomach, liver, kidneya and bowels. Limestone phos . phate.ls an Inexpensive white powdet and alm ost ta s te le ss ..

• ,- V

' For safety sake ask for “ Bayer Tablets of Aspirin.”

M U M H S n w M H SMillions of tablets sold to d a je r s

by a Brooklyn manufacturer who was , 6cntcnccd to three years in the pcni- . tentiory for selling talcum powder . tablets as Aspirin Tablets—Beware I

■When you seek relief ¡from Headache, Neuralgia, Earache, Toothache, R h eu -. matism, Lum bago, Colds, G rippe or Influenza! Colds always insist upon the gen­u ine

Bauer-Tablets/ A s p i r i n ' _

Th8 8ayer Cross'cn Genuine Tablets Proved safe by millions

Adults— Take one or two tablets, anytime, with water. If necessary, repeat dose three times a day after meals.

20-cent package—Larger sizes also. , Buy only original Bavcr packages.

American O w ned Entirely!Aspirin ïs tlie trad e m ark o f B ayer M anufac­tu re of M onoaceiicacidcstcr of Salicylicacid :

n » f j

T ry Grandmother's Old Favorite Recipe of Sage Tea and

Sulphur.

•V.

M O TO R S E R V IC E O F “ Y ”A S H O W IN I T S E L F

New York, March 5.—Purchases of automobiles and accessories to a value of $827,120.20 slacc the armistice show th a t thè overseas motor transport de­partm ent of the Y. M. C. A. still Is one of the biggest buyers In the Industry. The trucks, passenger cars and motor­cycles which have ju st been bought will carry supplies and “Y" workers into Germany with the Army of Occu­pation. .

Over $1,750,215.18 was spent by the. ’Si. C, A. fo r m otor transport «luring

hostilities, Including exepenses of driv­ers, garage arid repairs. Much of Uiis equipment was worn out before No­vember 11, and to replace It arid meet th e -n ew demands of tliè American fighting forces the additional equip­m ent has been purchased.

In December the Y. M-. C .'/i. bought In this country ’ <33 cars, a t ¿ .co st of $10*1,570.89, and accessories valued ' a t $40,788.81 During tlie same period 118 trucks were purchased in England mhd Switzerland, for w hich-the “Y" paid $410,500. Over $192,902 was spent for tires. I t takes a lot of equipment io tm nsi5on “goodieB” to our doughbys, but Uiey nurely accomplished enough 'Whll9 fighting to be entitled to ell poa- -fllbio. comforts now.V. ' ■ s

Alm cst everyone knows th a t Sag«Tea and Sulphur, properly com pound­ed, bring., back th e natu ra l aolor and lustre to th e h a ir w hen faded, streaked': o r irr'.y. T ears ago th e only way le g<r thin m ixture was to m ake it at, home, w hich Is rnuesy and trouble­some, Nowadays, by asking any drug' store for “W yeth's . .gil and Sul- p h u r Compound,'’ you w ill get a larga bottle o i th is fam ous old recipe, im ­proved by th e addition o f o ther in- grodientfl, a t a sm all cost

D on't rtay gTay! Try it! No one can possibly tell that, you darkened your mir, <ui It does It so naturally »¡id evenly. You iam p ea a «pont,q or,- B O ft brush with St and draw Mils through your hair, tak ing o ra • rr.all a tiaad a t a tim e: by m orm ns th e gray h a ir disappears, and a fte r ano ther ' p- plicetlon or two, your haär !>or>cöic-”. beautifully dark, glossy and attractive;

Wyoth'.i. aiKf- sr.a Sulphur Com- pouv.ö la a ie ligh tfu l tollet roaolsH« fo r tliosa who desire darit fealr and s. youthful appearance. I t ia n o t in ­tended fo r the cure, m itigation o r j n > , ventlon o f disease. -v-’Av-i;

ISw

WMr.í-Í

S â f I t W ithm m m

j ÂÎW8mflowers hS-\

Palm Dtcoratiom ■ !FIoral Dtsfaas ' '

P I A N T H O a P S ¿ H ; . > | Catan Gtroro Iiawreiuo Ayoau«.' OmmIurmw

V - ..Telephone 84-J

Page 4: GROVE WOMAN'S NIECE MINISTERS PROTEST ...the trip except;tiho.food—dark, sour bread, no : butter, little, sugar, milk made, from powdered milk and: little better than colored water,

A G E P O U R T H E .Ö C E A N . G R Ö VE Ä S

Founded 1*82

TRE OCEAN GROVE T IM E SW eekly Edition

Published F rid ay by E S T A T E OP G EO R G E F . R A IN E A R

Joh n E . Quinn; Editor 48 M ain A venue, Ocean Grove, N. J .

Telephone J34-R

SUBSCRIPTIONS : l<-25 yearly ; 75c. -semiannually ', 40c quarterly or 3c . per cupy, postage paid in the United Stnte*; Canadn 53c. nnd foreiKU I1.04 n year additional,

ADDRESSES clinnged on. request—always Rive former address. .ADVERTISEMENTS : Rates will 1» furnished by us upon request ¥

W itch the label on your paper fnr the eip/rat/on o ty o u r subscriptionEntered fits Bocond-dM« matt a t ttN Ooaan Grove poatofllce.

T H E T R U T H IN IT S P R O P E R P L A G E

Terms o t paym ent of the new Vic­tory L iberty Loan' are the m ost lib ­eral ever offered by the governm ent.

■, D eferred paym ents m ay lje 'extended■ oyer a period of six m onths, from

May 10 to November 11. Secretary Glass announces th a t ten .per cent; of subscrip tions would be due w ith application on or before May 10, an ­o th er ten per cent, on o r before Ju ly 15, and four subsequent instalm ents of tw en ty per cent, each on or before

■ A ugust 12, Septem ber 9, October 7 and November 11 .' Accrued in terest

, on deferred in sta lm en ts w ill be due •with the la s t paym ent. Paym ent in fu ll can be made M ay 20, If desired, the ten per cen t.. w ith application hav ing been paid p rio r to May 10-, Paym ent also can be completed on any 'Instalm ent date w ith accrued in ­terest, Term s of the F o u rth , L iber­ty Loan perm itted deferred pay-

.liients only over four months,, and the instalm ents Were .a rranged so th a t fifty per cent, became due in two

I t has come, to the ears of The Times th a t the sta tem en t w hich re ­cen tly appeared, in p rin t t o . the ef­fect th a t A tlan tic City is to be made ■the perm anent' location for fu tu re m eetings ,of the New Jersey M etho­d ist Conference, fo r th e alleged rea­son th a t Ocean Grove, and Aebury P a rk were not able to sa tisfac to rily en te rta in the recen t conference, was the first step in 9 move 'to d iscred it th e Twin Cities as a location fo r the G eneral Conference nex t year. How true- th is is we do n o t/k n o w .' T hat

P r e s s V ie w s a n d N e w s

TRIBUTE t o REV. j : D. BILLS.A n illu s tra tio n o r two o[ how the

li t t le aeron grew in to a la rge o a ^ was b rough t to m ind by read in g a lis t of the appointm ents m ade a t the an n u a l session of the New Jersey M. E. Church Conference held last week, w hen the name of Rev. -James D. -Bills w as announced as su p e rin ­ten d en t for the ¡New B runsw ick. Dis­tric t! W e recall wihen Dominie B ills w as filling th e charge a t Morga-nville w hile he w as p reparing him self to become a full-fledged m in iste r, - and for five years he looked a f te r the sp ir itu a l affairs of th e ’church in 'th a t com m unity so successfully th a t h is record there h as never been equalled. D uring h is p as to ra te there, Ihe tau g h t a d is tr ic t school in M ataw an an d in th a t w ay he secured on income th a t supported him and h is grow ing fam ­ily. A fter becom ing ordained he re­ceived an appointm ent w ith a la rger sa la ry a ttach ed a n d ’his success in ev­ery charge he filled m ade him a preacher who was much in demand. P rio r to going to Red B ank he su p ­plied the church in Ocean Grove and had du ring certa in m onths m anythe m a tte r o rig ina ted w ith members — -T- :------------ -- . -,

Of the an nual conference is.'scarcely•to be credited, because the preachers composing th a t body,’m ust be aw are, as is everybody .else, th a t e n te rta in ­m ent afforded, by these places to tne conference W hen it m et here several weeks ago was en tire ly sa tisfacto ry ; so much so th a t put of over three hundred persons a tten d in g only a few— less th an a dozen a y to ld— asked to be changed,- and even in

weeks, from Jan u ary , 16 ttr Ja n u a ry I these few cases the reason for30, 1919. In th a t loan banks su b ­scribed to r .-'¡hundreds of m illions ot dollars and then allowed the. public to pay for tihem over a 'Period of ten m onths. If sim ilar extensions are given in th is loan T reasury ofllcials said the resu lt should bo a g rea t stim ulation of popular subscrip tions, ¡because the public would have ap­proxim ately a year In which to pay to r the ir bonds.

Road-building au th o rities are p re­d ic ting th a t 1919, 1920, and 1921 will prove tlLe g rea test in the coun­t r y ’s h is to ry in the m a tte r of road construction . In view of the unpre­cedented appropriations o f rfunds fo r F ederal aid fo r road projects and the ac tiv ities of the. S ta tes in extending th e ir roadjbu ild ln g program s the' prediction appears to be fu lly ju sti-

,.Jled . The Division of Public W orks j coasti pledging to support, the" invi- a n d C onstruction Developments o f j ta lib n to r the Genera l Conference to th e U nited S ta te s D epartm ent of La­b o r is a u th o r ity fo r the sta tem en t t h a t th e re h as been a revision and

changing In tlie m ost instances was th a t friend m igh t1 be housed w ith friend. So. far as perta ins .-to . the conference church, St. P a u l’s, Ocean Grove, is be tter adapted to the needs of the conference th an any church in A tlan tic City— by reason of trie large num ber of rooms for reception and com m ittee purposes, and the

-spacious basem ent w herein were located the cloak room, parcel room, postoilice, read ing room, w riting room, lite ra tu re display, etc. There w as also availab le for conference uses Association "hail fo r side m eet­ings and the high school auditorium for lectures. These facts, then , so>

g re a t p leasure to -those w ho knew Rev. J, D. Bills in the early s ta rtin g of h is career to learn th a t 'his quali­fications to fill, the im p o rtan t posi­tion as d is tr ic t .superin tenden t have been recognized by the ■ p resid ing bishop, -who m ade the appointm ent, for they know th a t he will be as suc­cessful over m any churches as lie has been over the few he ilias been pastor of.-—tM atawan Jo u rn a l. - ,

CAMPAIGN OF LLUSTER.The a ir is fu ll ot wild rum ors and

reports of w h at the brew ers and th e . d is tille rs are In tend ing to do through the co u rts .an d In o th er ways to b rin g to n a u g h t th e , operation of. w ar-tim e prohibition and tike- E igh ­teen th A m endm ent to the Federal C onstitu tion . I t Is, .of course,, and alw ays 'has been, the policy of .the liquor dealers to keep up a cam ­paign of b lu ste r and bravado to con­fuse the public, b u t from past experi­ence it Is en tire ly safe to discount largely the value of their efforts. However, tak in g a t face value the sta tem ents they are sending ou t th rough the p ress,' w h a t significance have they? .

For instance, if the d istille rs and ¡brewers d o .a s they say they in tend to do— in itia te a referendum on th e

In Memory of Margaret Allendorph.Home a t la s t on the o th er shore, W here sadness and tr ia ls will bo no

m ore;No need of .sorrow , no need to weep. She tru stin g ly , calmly, fell asleep. - ‘

She fought the Its’h t, she ra n the I race ,

A nd 'longed to see h e r Saviour’s face; He prom ised o n H is ow n to keep. And • tru s tin g ly , calm ly, she fell

asleep. : '

She knew the tru e and las tin g F riend W ith us in youth and til l th e end; H er fa ith in Him w as ever sw eet,So tru stin g ly , calm ly, she fell asleep.

The w ay-was clear, It was no t far. H er Saviour w aited -ju st o 'e r the b a r;W ithout a strugg le , loved ones to

m eet, ' ■She tru stin g ly , calm ly, fell asleep.

■ FA N N IE A. .BRUNDAGB. Ocean Grove, A pril 1, 1919.'

MAGAZINES ARE NEEDED;NO POSTAGE INCEEASE

Also Hotel on the Ocean FrontMoney to Loan on Bond and Mortgage

G eneral P ersh ing repo rts tihat th e A m erican BOldierB abroad need read­ing m a tte r m ore th a n ever before. The supply of m agazines has drop­ped from ten tons to tw o tons a m onth, and Red Cross, chap ters are urged to s tim u la te th e supply.

T he decrease is due largely to th e m isapprehension th a t the one-cent postage for m agazines sen t unad­dressed to the A m erican E xpedition­ary Force had been increased to two cents. T he one cent regu la tion s t i l t is in effect and no addressing Is nec­essary. Some of .the m agazines th a t dropped the announcem ent to th is effect from, th e ir covers w ill be ask ­ed to renew it. Indiv iduals aro urg-^ od to send, a ll -m agazines as soon as they have read them . T he supp ly m ust be doubled or tripled.

tie the m atte r of sa tisfac to ry en ter- I ra tifica tion of the E igh teen thta lnm ént. And the Nbw Brunsw ick d istr ic t preachers in session here Monday, in no uncerta in note, paid t-helr respects to the p rin ted s ta te ­m ent em anating from down the

i m eet here in May of next year.

enlargem ent' of road-build ing plans in alm ost every S ta te in the Union since the s ign ing of the arm istice. T h is is due no t only to the pressing need for road construction , which has been suspended d u rin g the war, except w here construction was essen­tial to m ilita ry activ ities, h u t also to the obvious desirab ility a n d ’p ru ­dence of getting .-public works under way so there may be such a demand for labor as will absorb the labor surplus.' -

1 And, by the way, when you are m aking your con tribu tions to this,

■ th a t and the o th er w orthy cause, don’t fo rget the New Jersey Chil­d ren ’s Home Society, an in stitu tio n

! supported by vo luntary subscrip- i t ions.

Here, before the week is out, we've a ll se ttled down to daylight saving, th e sam e as if we. w ere used to it r ig h t along. Proof th a t It takes

. l iu t a l i t t le time for o u r people to I a d ju s t them selves to new. or s tran g e

Speaking a t a recen t public meet- Conditions.^____________ • .■ ing, George M. LaM onte, chairm an j

of th e New Je rsey B ureau, W ar Sav- j • Be ,u G, C. booster, ings, characterized th e W ar Savings ! * “ r_m ovem ent as the g rea te s t education- SAVE A PENNY CAMPAIGN al m ovem ent.ever undertaken in th e . ■ AMONG SCHOOL CHILDREN U nited S tates. He sta ted t'liat Amer- ! . - - • - -ica prior to the w ar was the r ichest | T h rif t and . economy . w ill be the country in the world in n a tu ra l rev! new slogan of New Jersey school sources and a t the sam e tim e the child ren in a cam palg i$ tb be inaug-niost ex travagan t and w asteful. “The • l,ra tc '1 im m ediately I n ^ t h e public

schools under the auspices of the hope of th e .n a tio n , lie said, lico in g g committee. Schoolboys and the new sp ir it of th r if t . I beliova th a t the governm ent will continue indefinitely the th r i f t policy. T.ie

schoolgirls will now be aible to Save for th e ir th r if t stam ps in a conveni­e n t easy paym ent plan w ith tihe co-

„ i operation of" téachers and • prlnci-■ . .War Savings. Stam ps will , be cashed r p^jsa t maturity-, b u t fit th a t tim e some T'Ite new campaigrí w ill begin w ith scheme of renew ing the stam ps w ill ! th e d istribu tion of an eight-page doubtless he in au g u ra ted ." ! booklet to each stu d en t w ith tw enty-

-, . - - - ■ *:■" ' four spaces to be stam ped by the! teacher, one a t a tim e, upon paym ent

Unlicensed dogs a t la rge in N e p - . of a penny. Upon paym ent of the tune tow nship are now the objects tw enty-flftl. ponny, the child w ill re-

• •. •• ceive a th r if t stam p to be saved, to­ot the w rath of the m unicipal au - w arda a W ar gavJnffi) s ta m p . The•thorities. A census o f canines across j ¡booklet also contains .thrif t maximath e ra ilroad track m ade som e tim e ! o f B enjam in .F rank lin and à m essage1ago w as ahle to looate 300 dogs hav - ¡ ® e. school children- from C arterin g accredited owners, enough tb Glass. S ecretary o f t h e T reasury .

m ore « tan supply the need of > g s | Gold p k c c Awards War Service,, v. over .there. T he count did n o t ta k e ! A - ... . • a , , -.• . - . = = i - -• - • :• j A t a farew ell d in n e r glyen las t

in the large num ber of m u tts ru n - 1 ,.ea r a t the H ighlands fo r the, boys dispensed w ith jiis t. as soon as a r- ¡ w ho w ent in to the,serv ice, one of the made »way. w ith jiis t as soon: as a r - (o lder inèn p resen t gave each ybung ran gem ente can be m ade to. alia te a * ® aiL, a do llar bill w ith tihe agreem ent

a* —n ¡ t h a t if the so ld ie r . re tu rn ed fromnuisance of long stan d in g . By tJhe;. Fr((nce a f te r ^ w ar aI1(1 presentedsam e token, Ocean Gro.ve can well I the same do llar bill he woulcLreceive spare a few o f the garbage can b rig - i fo r i t a. five-doHar. gold piece. Leon ■ ade, ; L im ing has ju s t received the first

■ • ~ j'goid pièce a f te r (being d ischargedI from arm y service.

In addition to a tax ra te of ?2G.14, i A sbury P a rk th e com ing summer is I to have a ro tisseri. ln ordor th a t the i

Another Kre Bell Proposed,T he purchase of an o th er lire

i people m ay be in closer touch w ith I “ la ™ bell Js ibeing discussed by th e : ¿¿the roasting 'p rocess. Ocean Grove firo board If decided3■ on, the now boll w ill be placed on

’ —T j ‘th e eng ine house a t C s n tia l avenue'• A ccording to figures obtained, th is I ^ ntI 01111 s tree t, in o rder th a t the

nftrsftn«. : Wh'ftTft __ _I , ----------------- .1

Am endm ent in th irtee n S tates^—w h at will it avail .them ? The best con­s titu tio n a l law yers of the country in ­s is t th a t referendum to the people on th is question, w hich h as been s e ttS d by the leg isla tu res In the way p re ­scribed by the United S tates Consli- tu tio n , would have no effect. And in ’ any event, if only four of the tlij>-- teen S ta tes nam ed by th e w ets ¡should stand-by the ac t of the leg islatu re iu ratifying,' it would block th e game. As eleven of the th irtee n S tates are now dry by s ta tu te or constitu tion , th e outlook fo r th e success of ta is li t t le scliSDe o l £he liquorices is n o t hopeful, even If the referendum ? were to be taken.— U nion 'S ignal.

TEL L HIM NOW.If w ith pleasure you are view ing any

. work, a mail is doing.If you like him , or you love him,

te ll h im now;Don’t w ithhold your approbation 't i l l

the parson makes- oration • As he lies w ith snowy lilies o’er'

-his brow ;For no m a tte r how you shout it, he

' iyoi^’t rea lly care abou t it;He w on’t know l\ow m any te a r­

drops you have sh ed ;If you th in k some praise is due him,

now ’s the tim e to slip it to .him , • ■ . : .’ ..

F or lie cannot read h is tombstone- when he’s dead! " ’

More than fame and -m o re than money is th e com m ent k ind and sunny .

And (ihe hearty , vvarm approval o f a friend , . *

For it gives to life a savor, and i t m akes you s tro n g e t, braver

And it' gives you 'heart and spirit, to the end;

If he earn s your praise— bestow it;.if you ljke him , le t him know

; / ' it;:- ’• 7 -L et the w ords of tru e encourage­

m ent be said ;Do not w ait ’till life is over and he’s

underneath the clover,For lie cannot read hla tombstone

when he 's dead! .— A uthor Unknown.

fN SERIOUS STRAITS.Spring Lake faces a serious pre-

dlcfllnent. W ith bone dry prohibition going Into effeot w ith in throe m ontns, all its -water -wagons w eie burned up last S atu rday n ig h t .'- '-S pring Lake G azette. ^

Unclaimed Letters. .T he follow ing le tte rs rem ain u n ­

claim ed in tihe Ocean Grove postof- flce for the week end ing A pril 3: Miss L au ra .Louise /Barnes, _L. S. Beom, Mrs. Rosie Fay, I. Haslam , M rs.' W illiam W. Kouvenhoven, Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Kouwenlioven, 68 Mt. -Hermon, Rev, D. Moore, Mies •Agnes Morrow, C. ¡L. Tamboor, MIbs B lanche R h in eh a rt.

Garage Company Buys Property. T he T ruax proporty on South Main

stroot, com prising two ihousos and two barns wns sold on Tuesday by B ert Thompson to th e Beacoast Gar- ago Company, represented by F rank S. M orris, 47 Main avenue, Ocean Grovo. The com pany also loosed tno

garago.

LIBEETY LOAN PARLEYBY NORTH JERSEY WOMEN

The W om an’s L iberty Loan Com­m ittee rep resen ting the twelve n p rth ern counties of New Jersey w ill hold a conference on W ednesday af­ternoon, A pril 11, -at th e B road S tree t” .Theatre, Newark.

>Mrs. H. O tto W ittpenn, head of th e N ew ark com m ittee, w ill presiSe. Mrs.’ Theodore Roosevelt, J r ., recen t­ly re tu rn ed from France, w here she has been doing canteen w ork w ith th è A. E. F ., has promised to address the m eeting. M ajor Guy T.VJskhiskki, form er ed ito r and o rgan izer of S tars and S tripes, w ill also appear. O ther speakers a re to be announced lat6r.

I Gharles L. Keastj . -. Real Estate and Insurancej 69 Main Ave., Ocean Grove ■ : *,

•«J

Catarrhal Deafness Cannot Be Curedby local Applications, as they cannot reach, the dl0ea«ed Portion o£ tho «nr. There 1« only; one wity. to curtí ca tarrhal «teatneaa,. and th a t 1» by. a constlttitional remedy. C atarrhal Peafñeüs Is caused-; by an In­flamed condition o r tho mucoun lining o f . tho Eustachian Tube.: When th is tube Is Inflamed.you have a rumbling sound o r Im­perfect^ bearing, and when i t 1». entirely . closed, peafneos 1b the result. Unless the inflammation can .be reduced and th is tube v restored to Its normal condition,' heating wilJ be destroyed forever. Many cases of deafness are caused by ca tarrh , which Is an inflamed condition of the mucous sur­faces. H all's C atarrh Medicine ac ts thru the blood on the mucous surfaces of the system. - - ,

We will give, One Hundred Dollars tor any case of Catarrhal Deafness that cannot be cured by Hall’s Catarrh MedJdne. Cir* oulars free. All Prugfcists, 7Gc.

jr. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O.

ONE CENT A WORDMINIMUM 26 CENTS. CASH TO

ACCOMPANY T H E ORD ER

; FOR . RBNT— 85 E m bury "ave­nue; opposite St. P au l’s church . F u r­nished room s; sing le o r on su ite ; clean and quiet. Tel. 546-M. 13tf

, FURNITURE REPAIRED,. ca.Wnet work, upho lstering , cfoTUrs of a ll k inds reseated, cane, roed and rush work. R ush them in before h ig h er prices arid we are n o t -so busy. F. B a tten , S02: F lrs t avenue, Asbury P ark . Plhorie^ 27S.—-10-1S*

FOR RENT— F in e large fu rn ished ap artm en t; one 'block from beach and A udito rium ; accommodations fo r s ix people; May to November; ?16 per week. Covert Agency, Oceau Grove.— 11-14*

PER CENT.interest is paid on savings accounts, of ijve dollars and over. One dol­

lar starts an accounts.

A.

PERCENT.interest is paid oa checking accounts

o f five hundred dollars and over.

MAY W E BE OF SER VICE TO YOU?

Trust CompanyCorner Aveaae aarf Em*ry Street -

Tdephoae 17M

Capital,' Ssrplas and Profils, 9f 59,901.00

William J. Douse . Lee W. Beny . . . William O. Rogers - Jefferson B. Fogal •

O fficers• • • . . . • • .... . . . President

• ....................... • • V losP realdsn t.......................... S*oret*ry-X reasurer

. . ■ Assistant Seoretary-Tressurer

‘f t

AUe m a n ia o f P ittst)u»0 B oston o t B oston

Detroit National of BetroltNew Jersey ol Newark

D. C. Covert AgencyE, H. CLIVE, Proprietor

Fire Insurancei

| ,Roorri 201, Asbury Park Trust Co. Bldg. || (. Asbury Park :: > I{ British America of 'Boronto Netherlands of' Holland Sj Commerce of Albany Urbaine of Parili

' • „ • M i u H M n n n u H M H U u i n i a n K U H W i„ • „ « « „ „ • „ „ „ • t , » , »

SEASON 1919' ; BOARDINGHOUSES, COTTAGES

and BUNGALOWSFOft RENT FOR THE SEASON

Wc have our rental booklet ready, which we will ;v f send upon application. We have the

. largest list in Ocean GroveProperties for Sale We Solicit Your<J?atronage

E. N. WOOLSTON <REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE

Commissioner of Deeds Notary Public ' / ' '

48 MAIN AVENUE, OCEAN GROVE

»(.ui u a u ju m iu tíj iu ü gttrugQ, •. '

Page 5: GROVE WOMAN'S NIECE MINISTERS PROTEST ...the trip except;tiho.food—dark, sour bread, no : butter, little, sugar, milk made, from powdered milk and: little better than colored water,

HOME NEWSBe a <3. C. booster.

Shad, th ir ty cen ts a pound.«. ^

A r t or Day, F riday , A pril 11.

M arch w ont o u t, A pril camo cold.

in,

Oorporal Camp D ll.

M orton M orris la a i

J o in W hite la a now apodal oUlcer o l .Neptune tow nship.

A now roee troilla ornam cnta Dr." ' Robinaon’s flower yard.

C harles M. H erm an w ill open the -W hitfield lo r the E aste r season.

R enting Is flue; seldom or never t e t t e r a t th is season o l th e year.

T he A pril m eeting of W ashington lire com pany was held la s t ompning.

Dr. J . W. M arshall viBitod the B altim ore conférence on W ednesday.

Jam es F . Mohn, of Beading, Pà., g ree ted friends in the Grave on Tues­day.

Mrs. H. Sanford F lin t en terta in ed the T hursday Club yesterday a f te r­noon.

Thé H arvey Beafood m arket on Olin s tree t w as reopened on Tues­day.

E nrou te for C hina,. W illiam P. S trick lan d and fam ily left hero yes­terday.

Mrs. E. N. W oolston, of Main ave­nue,' spen t las t weekend w ith re la ­tives in Bridgeton.

The M others’ Jew els Of St. P au l's chu rch w ill m eet a t 3 p. m., Monday, in the Church parlo r.

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Jenk ins, of E m bury aventie, a re home from a p ro trac ted v isit to EuBtis, F lo rida.

The condition of Mrs. F ra n k S. M orris; who has been i ll a t ■ her homo on Main avenue, Is g rea tly im ­proved.

Mrs. F rances Pohl, of Brooklyn, form erly of tho Broadw ay Houso, 'lia s 'leased the Llew ellyn a t 33 Broadw ay. ■

A t h is Belm ar p roperty W. H .'C ar­pen ter, of Heck avenue, is b u ild ing a la rg e g arage for the use o f h is bunga­low lessees.

Misses A nnabel Lee and Florence Carson, of New Y ork, v isited Mrs. C h a rle s 0 . P erry , 75 Heojc avenue, o a

> W ednesday. “ ' 1 '

tveekfl M rs. P ra n k wl.F or several weeks M rs. F ra n k Duane, 99. .Main avenuo. Is v isitin g h e r e is te r, Mrs. John R. Rodney, a t N ew bern, N. C.

David C. P atte rso n an d fam ily have re tu rn ed to the Jackson House, a t te r passing 't/he cold w eather p e rio d . in th e South.

John H. Em ory is around again , "a fte r be ing .housed lo r two weeks ■with a n unu su a lly severe cold, bor-

- dering on p leu m o n ia . ’ * .*

Business b ro u g h t W : : Joseph Seder, of (Newark, a sum m er resid en t of the

"'Grove a t 12 A bbott avenue,"to town on M onday betw een tra in s ;

Y esterday a fternoon Mrs. R an-- dolph T ollm an, 147 Broadway, en­

te rta in ed thè W orkers an d W inners of th e W est G rore M. E. Church.

Dr. A, E. B a llard w en t to: P itm an Grove oi: T uesday tp give a tten tio n to.’som e'business m atte rs of th e camp m eeting association o f th a t ijlace.

•'Dri C. J . M assinger a n d '' JoBeph HarriBon ¡ye. néw mombérs o t the E urek a A th le tic Club. H arrison once w as a s ta r in thé bicycle rac ing ■same.

Mrs; H ett'le M urgatroyd, of New Y ork City, w as in the Grove on F ri-

v day las t, a r ra n g in g to reopen her co ttage a t 9' Ocean avenue a t E aste r tim e. ' - ■ •

T he M issionary Society o f th e G rand A venue Reform ed Church) As-

■ ibury P ark , m et w ith 'M rs . A. Z. Ry- ersori, 68 E m bury avenue, o n Tues­day evening. ... ■; ; ; ••"' : "

Miss M ary Daniels, of Mt. C arm el' W ay, a ttended ' in F reeho ld o n Tues­day a m eeting of th e d is tr ic t p resi­den ts of th e Federated W omen’s C lubs. 'V .''j-''

. R e tu rn in g to Ocean Drove trom a • w in te r’s sojourn’ in New .York C ity,' 1 Mr. an d , Mrs. R obert L. Stovonn, J r .,

a re occupying the ir, co ttage a t 78 A bbott avenue.

: 4 H erm an Koerwing and fam ily, of .• E a s t Orange, are .again occupying the ¿‘ Chaffinch cottago a t 10 A bbott ave- >• nue, having arrived Sere Tuesday V fo r th e season. . , -, ‘

’ Jacob T. Johnson, form erly of. Ocean Grove, Is now th e ag e n t In ch arge o f the W oolley h ay and- feed.

.¡ ¿ to re a t O akhurst,'reopened on Mon­day of th is week. .

Dr. L; C., M illler, 'o f H eck avenue, y. ia B upplylng’.the pu lp it o f th e ¡Wall , O hurcht.pending the a r r iv a l of

vrAfnii*n1rlv aonQintod * m in ister.

way near th e heach^announces th a t she w ill open th e house from E aste r to T hanksg iv ing . ;

Mr. and M rs. H . B. M erritt; M ar­jo r ie an d Howard M erritt, J r ., o f Now York, a re 's ta y in g w ith Mrs. M orritt’s m other, Mrs. H . R. Wood­w ard, 115 Anbury, avpnue.

Miss 'N ettie Reed, of A bbott avo- nue, was aw arded th e door prize o f $2.50 a t tihe b a rn dance of Pontoosuc Council, D. of P ., T uesday eyenlng to: Bordèn ha ll, A sbury P a rk /

Tw elve b irth s , fo u r m arriages and th ree d ea th s comprise th e v ita l s ta ­tistics o f N eptune tow nship fo r the-

.m onth of M arch, as repo rted by R eg is tra r H arry G. Shreye.. , :

Q uarterm aster H ugh O. Tompkins, ü . S . N.y pon of Dr. and Mrs. G. L. D: Tom pkins, sp e n t la s t Sunday a t. his home here. He Is sta tio n ed for. tihe p resen t a t Rockaway, N. Y. ; .

Mrs. Id a D ow ning l a s t ' F rid a y reached Ocean Grove o n h er re tu rn from D aytona, F ia ., • h av in g • v isited relatives In P h ilad e lp h ia for sevëral daye on the hom ew ard jou rney . .

T he W oman’s Home M issionary A uxiliary p£ St. P a u l’s church w ill m eet In m onth ly session T hursday afternoon, A pril 10, a t the norne of Mrs. S ..S. W eathenby, 92 W ebb ave­nue. , • \ ■ ; !. ‘ -.

/M rs. Rose K ile y . an d Miss A nnaK iley la s t S atu rd ay moved from .7.4. H eck avonue to 86 M t. Horm on W ay. Bef -re m oving Mrs. K iley disposed of Tier household effects a t public auction.

Alonzo Slocum has moyed h isfam ily from 142 Cookman avenue to 139 % E m bury avenue, tak in g thehouse fo rm erly occupied .by Mr. and Mrs. F red R ankin , who have moved to A sbury P a rk . " " -■

Mrs. W illiam- H. 6 r r .has re tu rn ed to .her !home in P o ttstow n, Pa., .from St. P etersburg , F la ., w here she pass­ed, the w inter. I t 'i a expected she w ill v is it Ocean Grove the coming sum m er, as usual. •

: Mrs. Sarah. Selden, w ife of Jam es Selden, th e w ell-know n colored m an w ho cuts g rass and does o th e r odd jobs fo r the people of Ocean G rove/ died las t F rid a y in A sbury P a rk and w as-burled on Sunday.

I n nam e and In fac t B ennie H. W hite Ib novr the chief of th e Nep­tu n e police..' He w as reg u la rly ap­pointed to th e office Tuesday even­ing, a f te r ac tin g as chief fo r soma m onths. H ail to th e chief!

Rev. T . J. J . W righ t, pastor of St. P a u l’s church , gave a ta lk on the C entenary M ovement to the ';mem- b ir s of the official board ot th é B al­la rd M em orial M. E . C hurch, A b u ry P ark , on Monday evening. . . ;

Ocean Grove w as v isited l a s t .F r i ­day by a m in ia tu re blizzard, fo rtu ­n a te ly wjlthoiit do ing any dam age o th er th an str ip p in g som e o t the trees o f dead branches. I t was a lively blow w hile i t lasted.

• R ussell Schadt, M rs. Schadt and li t t le Je an e tte Schad t on Monday a r­rived a t th e ir home in Olin street- from a w in te r’s so jou rn a t W est Palm Beach, w here Mr. Schadt w as engaged in. the Ashing industry .

Mrs.' M* E. M um pton.-of Brooklyn, for .the coming season h a s lçaseà the D eW itt House a t 33:A tlan tic avenue. W ith M rs. F . V celler, who has con­ducted the D eW itt for. twelve sea­sons, Mrs. M um pton w as in town on. Monday. ". v.i

■ M iss E dna M arie Campbell, ot AV- ler-hurst, spen t the week a t R u th e r­ford, and a ttended th e . w eddipg of; Miss G ortriido ' L. K ennedy,1‘a -sum ­mer residen t of Ocean Grove, w hich happy, e v e n t- is .noted elsew here in The Times today. '

On T hursday : evening of la s t tweek Mr. and Mrs. George B. G ilbert, of A sbury avenue, a rriv ed ;. home from B rndentow n, F la . On F rid ay th ey ' w en t to Cam p M e rritt to v is it th e ir son H ilton , w ho recen tly re tu rn ed from service overseas.

... S ergean t R ussell Jernee ,. wim re ­cently received h is - honorable din-- charge from th e arm y and is now in the employ of the- gov ern m en t,. speht Sunday las t, w ith His .m other, -. Mrs. J . C. Jernee, 104 M t. Carm el W ay.

. C harles H;: Conover, of Mt. Tabor W ay, is now associated w ith th e PaJm ateer &. How land grocery1, a f te r tw en ty -e igh t years a t bbe one stand, first' w ith Bamm an and la te r .w ith Lehm an & Co., a t M ain, s tre e t and Cookm an' avenue, A sbury P a rk .

BUY COAL EABXY ADVICEof f u e l admhtisteatoe

S ta to F u e l A dm inistrator R. C. Jenklnson announces th a t from gov­ernm en t sources the public is ad- vlsod to buy K b nex t year’s supply of coal early . Because of the mild w ln tor stocks of coal are now p len ti­fu l and there is no hope o t lower- prices. On the con trary , an advance of ten cen ts a m outh for, some tim e t^ co m o has already been announced, so th a t in th e In terests of economy ■ i t la advisable to fill the b in s aa aoon as possible. . ”

F u rth e rm o re , i t is un likely in the n a tu ra l o rder of events th a t we shall have tw o m ild w in te rs in succession, arid an ea rly .fo ld spell nex t fa ll w ill m ean such a n . Increased dem and for coal th a t prom pt deliveries canno t be expected. U nder such circum stances th e householder who has p rocrastin ­ated in p u ttin g in- a w in te r ’s supply is ap t to su iter. It; is w ell to bear in m ind also th a t w hile now there is a su rp lus of m ined coal th is very fact has lessened production, a"nd . i t . a sudden and enhanced dem and shall exhaust tho p resen t supp ly a scarc ity ,' w ith corresponding h ig h er prices, m ay follow.

T he Governor of P ennsy lvan ia has asked the A tto rney G eneral of th a t S ta te to find o u t w hy coal prices have been increased a t th e timo of y ear when they custom arily drop. The answ er w ill probably be found in h igher wages, h igher taxes, h igher fre ig h t ra tes. Increased royalties to' m ine ow ners and fewer hours of work by m iners.

» •• ‘ • r

i C o n servative M anagem ent tampla resources and a desire to aid every legitimate business {

enterprise form a basis upon which tWs Ibank invites new business. / i

If you' liave need for a checking account we have'the facilities and desire to handle it s a f e l y . /

The Ocean Grove National ̂ Association Building;

: Ocean Grove, N. J,N. J. T A Y L O R . . JA C O B S T I L E S . T. A. M I L L B R .J. H. R A I N E A R .

. President . . Vice President

. . . . Cashier Assistant Cashier

Member Federal Reserve System

*

ÎI

!

raSSXRMA DEWINT WEDS1IEUTENANT E. M, MAETYN

Miss Irm a J. D eW int, dau g h te r of Mrs. A nna D eW int, of Ocean Grove, and L ie u te n an t Raymond-M . M artyn, of W ashington,' D. C., were un ited in ' m arriage 'e a rly Tuesday evening a t thte residence of the b ride 's m other, th e L exington, 92. Mt. Zion W ay,' Ocean Grove. T he ceremony was perform ed by . Rev. J , H. Myers, of Jersey City. - ; "

The bride wore d a rk blue georgJ e tte and b lue .sa tin . She was a tten d ­ed by Miss M ildred M orrill and was given in m arriage by h er brother, George DeW Jnt. John '. M artyn , o£ W ashington, was best m an. M e flow er g irl w as l i t t le Aubrey B ritten , o l Rhinebeck, N . Y. . M rs. L. H. T horpe, th e b ride’s sis ter, p layed the w edding m arch. A reception and d inner followed the ceremony.

On th e ir 'honeymoon tr ip Mr. and Mrs. M artyn w ent to New Orleans; in ten d in g to v is it o th e r places m the South. They will- live a t W ashing­ton, .w here the groom Is in business.

M t R T U A R Y R E C O R D

MRS. MARY HAMPTON.' In her n inety -six th y ear tars'. M ary '

'H am pton, a long-tim e sum m er resi­den t of Ocean Grove, died on T ues­day in B rooklyn at- the residence ol h e r d au g h te r , Mrs. John Connor Creveli^B^ 235 A rling ton avenue. U ntil a very few days before her dea th Mrs. H am pton onjoyed good h ea lth an d took an ac tive 'in terest in c u r re n t affairs. ' She had m any busi­ness in te rests '.an d u n til a week ago she did no t even begin to . lose n&r grip on them . She had been confined to her room about a m onth, b u t she did no t su rrender sufficiently to take to her bed u n til M arch 21.

Mrs. H am pton had been^ such a lively woman even In h e r 'o ld age th a t she w as vcry m uch liked In the neighborhood of her home, and she was p articu la rly fond of children. She was born in Greenwood, Colum­bia county, P ennsylvania , on Decem­ber 21, 1823, and was, a t the time of her death ju s t 95 years, 3 m onths and 11 days • old. Mrs. H am pton 's m aiden nam e w as T itm an , and - she was m arried early in life to Jam es -Hampton, a co n trac to r an d builder Of A shland, Pa. Mr. H am pton’s spe­cialty was bu ild ing coal -breakers. ■Ho'died in 1889 and then h is widow moved to Brooklyn and lived- w ith h er daug h te r, Mrs. Croveling, up to the tim e of her d eath ., She was a m em ber of the A ndrew s M. E. Church. Tbe funera l services are to take place on S a tu rd ay n ig h t, and w ill be In charge of Rev. W illiam D. Tuck- ey and o th e r clergym en of whom Mrs. H am pton h ad been fond, the Rev. Georgo Adams, of Bronx P ark ; •the Rev. John F. Dunkorke, of •Brldgeham pton, L. I„ and lien nephew , tho Rev. W illiam J. H am p­ton, o f P o rt RicM nond, S ta ton Is­land, haVo been Inv ited to take part.

•Mrs. H am pton had sev%n. children , bf whom, only>Mrs. . Creveling su r­vives. . .The In term en t Is to' be In E vergreen cem etery on Sunday a tte r- n'obn. ' ; ,- !■"}..

MRS. M. E. ALLENDORPH.F u n era l servlcea for 'Mrs. M argaret

E. A llondorpli, who died on Thursday of las t week a t th e residence of Mrs, M argare t N. Barnea, 102 M ain ave­nue, "were hold a t th a t address S atu r-

Mr. an d Mrs; C harles.O . P erry , of Heck? avenue, l a s t : Sunday , w e n t; to (C am p Dix to v is it th e ir eon, F ir s t i . ____ _S ergean t G eorge P erry , recen tly re - , liayT m n l 'J atu rned fro m F rance . T hey w ere j • W rlg h t, ̂ Pastor of S t. P au l scmnDanied bv Miss Mabel P e rry and church , in w hich the deceased heiacom panied by Miss M abel P e rry and C harles O: P erry , J r ., w ife and young -daughter, of Belm ar.

T he Ballade cottage a t 31 .p itm an avenue, has been leased th rough th e Woolston agency to Mrs. J. H . Gun­ning, of Searsdale, N. Y. The namo of G u n n in g is no t u n fam ilia r In Ocean G ro v e ,.as m any years ago Dr. G unning owned and , occupied th e cottago a t bcoan av en u e and Olin Btroet.

Fre s li F is h . .H arvey’siM ark e t, .53 . Olin stree t,

nbw open itor, th e season. F u ll line -IresU’flsh, o^stere and cl tuna. Or-

memlborshlp and to w hich, ns long as sho w as physically ablo, she gave conhtant a ttendance . In te rm en t was m ade in Mt. ProBpect cem tery l>y Di­rec to r F red (E. F a rry . Mrs. AJien- dorph was. e igh ty-four years old. She lived maniy years a t 89 Mt. Tabor W ay. She In survived by a sister, Mrs. Louise Dunn, of New; B runs­wick. '

Photograph On Trip Tiokets.A now r u l in g 'o f . th e ra ilroad au-

thorlM es requ ires th e pho tog raph of purchasers o f ' com m utation ;tickets betw een hero and New York to bo a ttaohed . to th e .tloka. .R eason? To

.- OFFICERS-^ HENRY C. WINs 6 r , P residen t :H; A;. WATSON, V ite P residen t IRVING L. REED,. Cashier F. M. MILLER, Asst. Cashier H .; G. STEW ART, Asst. CashierH. EARL FARRY, Asat. Cashier

-DIRECTORS T. FRA N K APPLEBY AARON E. BALLARD . .W ALTER F. CLAYTON GEORGE S. FERGUSON W. HARVEY JONESI. R . TAYLOR •HARRY A. WATSON HENRY O. WINSOR

Capital, Snrpli s and Profits $591,050.10

Resources, Î3 ,500,600.00

We will say the population of Asbury Park is 10,000. Roughly speaking, let’s assume that one-fourth of this num- berare producers. That is, they com­mand an income of money.

And let’s suppose that each one*of these anoney-earners saved ten cents each day for 300 days during this year. .

This amounts to $75,000. A ivery re­spectable amount—just proving the re­markable growth of small savings.

” A M Iig StrcHfllk to Strength”

ASBURY PARK AND OCEAN GROVE BANKE5taUi«h«d ia»9.

Rflsourcesover $ 3XK>OjOdOcOO

2 *

Asbury Park, N. J.

“klohèy ii i th e Bank M

The magic phrase has always signified ease and contentment.

“ Money in the bank,” and you are prepared to weather all sorts of financial gales. Start an account at the Seacoast and sit back «ind watch it grow.

The Interest Department pays four per cent. 0« time balances. Money deposited up to April 10 draws interest, from April 1,

• y Member Federal B e s e v t System :.|• .: jj s7m . . . . • • • « • • » • • • • • • • • • • H M M M n m * H H N N IM I im m M I I I H I I I IH M W M ÌM M H H H )«H

M I H H M H U H H M a H H M M M H M M H M H H I H . H . . . . . H k n U H M . I H m M « H U . M . m M U . . . . U . . I . . « . H . m

If A National Bank Most Be a Member o t the F e d e n l Reserve System ;

The scope in which a national bank can serve the pn never so wide and the safeguards never so

exacting as they are teday

Them O f A s b u r y P n rK

J -'I h i c was : '

offers you its facilities. We can serve you while living and care for your estate when you are gone.

James. M. Ralston,' President

Robert G. .Poole, Cashier

Page 6: GROVE WOMAN'S NIECE MINISTERS PROTEST ...the trip except;tiho.food—dark, sour bread, no : butter, little, sugar, milk made, from powdered milk and: little better than colored water,

ANTIQUITY OF DECORATIVE ART

Strange Sources. From Which Pigments Used by Modern

Painters Are Derived.

P R E S E R V A T IO N O F S U R F A C E S .

Crude but E ffec tive P ro cesses Em ploy­ed by. the E g yp tian s and G reeks of

P lin y 's Day— Noah. P ruden tly W aterproofed the A rk .

.W hether paint w as invented in an­sw er to a .need fo r a preservutive or to meet a desire for beauty is a question

• fully .as knotty as tlie; ancient one about, the relative time of ..arrival of the, chicken or the egg. It was invented, though,. and It serves both purposes equally; so whether it is an offspring of mother necessity o r,an adopted ¿on

• of beauty rem ains forever a disputed question.• The first men, cowering under the fierce and glaring suns of the. biblical countries, constructed rmle huts of. wood to shelter them. The perishable natu re of these structures caused rapid decay, and it is probable th a t the oc­cupants, seekiiig some artificial means of preservation, h it upon the pigments of the earth in th e ir search. I t is per­haps natural to suppose th a t i t . was the instinct of preservation th a t led men to the search, although tlie glories of the sunsets and llie heauiles of the rainbow nuiy have created a desire to imitate those wonders In their own dwellings, ;,‘Thç earliest record of the applica-.

tion of a preservative to a wooden structure dates from the ark, which was, according to the Bible, “pitched within and without." The pitch was a triumph o f preservation w hatever it lacked, as a : thing of beauty.

Decoration, applied to buildings first comes to Uglit with ancient Babylon, whose walls were covered -with repre­sentations of lim iting scenes and of conihat. Those* were done hi. red and the niethod followed was to paint the scene on the bricks rit \lie tinte of m anufacture, assuring permanence by baking. Strictly speaking.’ this was. not painting so much as it was the earliest m anifestation of p u r own fa­m iliar. kalsoinining.. .

The first. riejtre\y. to nient ion paint­ing is Moses, in the thirty-third chap­te r o f the book of Numbers he in­structs the. Isrsieli tes, “When ye have passed over the Jordan into the land o f Canami. then shall ye .drive out. all the inhabitants' o f thé Tand from be-

. fore you and destroy all their pic­tu res. . .

At la ter periods the .Tews adopted m any customs of the peoples who suc- cesslvely obtained , power ovér them and in the apocryphal book of the. Maccabees is found this allusion to th e a r t of decorating, ‘‘F or as thé mas­te r builder o f a new house must care fo r the whole building, but he th a t iindertaketh to se t it out and paint it, m ust seek out things for the adorning thereof.” .

Although Ilom ér gives credit to a Greek for. the discovery of paint, the allusions, to it in the books-of Moses, the painted mummy cases of thé Rg.vp- tians and the decorated.w alls of lUiiiy- ion anil Thebes fix its origin a t a period long antecedent to the Grecian era . T h e w nils of Th ebes were pa lilt­ed 3,000 years before the .coming of C hrist and' DiMï years before ’Omer smote his blootiilh’ lyre.”

s. " ; Th e G reçU s reCQgn I zed t ii e value o f paint, as a preservative and made use of something aklii to it.on their ships. Pliny w rites of - the mode of boiling* wax and painting sltips with it;“ af te r which, hé eon tin uéSi “neither the sea, nor the wind, nor the sun can destroy the wood thus protected.” . r

The Romans, being essentially a w arlike people, never brought the dec­oration of buildings to the high plane it had reached with the Greeks, For all th a t the ruins ’ of Pompeii show many structures whose mural decora­tions are ip fair shape today. The colors Used were glaring. À black background was the usual one and the combinations worked thereon red, yel­low and blue.

In the early Christian era the use o f mosaics for churches somewhat sup­planted mural painting. Still, during th e ' reign o f Justin ian the Church- o f Balnt Sophia was built a t Constantin^-, pie and Its walls were adorned withpaintings.

In modern times the uses o f paint bave come to be as numerous as its m yriad shades and tints. Pain t Is unique in th a t its name .ias no syno-

. nym and for It there is no substitute m aterial. Bread is the staff of life, but •paint is the life of the staff.

No one thinks of the exterior o‘f a wooden building now except.in terras o f paint coated. Interiors, too, from •painted walls and stained furniture down to the lowliest kitchen utensil, æII receive their protective covering. Steel, so often associated with cement re-enforcing, is pa in ted ’before It goes to give solidity to the m anufactured atone. The huge 'g irders of the sky­sc rape rs are daubed an ugly but evi­d e n t red underneath the surface coat of black. PerhapB the best example of the value of paint on steel is foumt 4n the venerable Brooklyn brjdge, on ; which a gang of painters is kept go­ing continually. I t is scarce possible. 4o think of a single, manufactured ar-

,;ticle which does not meet paint some­w here lnk the- course of its construc-

,; tWn. 8 0 has paint grown into the; ; ;veiy marrow of our.lives.

F i n a n c i a l R e p o r t o f t h e T o w n s h i p o f N e p t u n eFor Ibe Year Endini« fiecember SU M S

. ' A sbury P a rk ,’ M arch IB, 1919.•Members of N eptune Tow nship Conwalttee,

Tow nship of N eptune. N, J . 'G entlem en:— Books of the collector and tre a su re r o£ 'the Tow nship

of N eptune have been aud ited by. me fo r the period from Ja n u a ry 1, 3,818,; to December 31, liflS . 1 have riot verities the o u tstan d in g taxes by d irec t com m unication w ith those d elinquen t In th e paym ent of th e ir taxes.

In. accordance, w ith the Stato law, there should be a 'sy s tem o f book­keeping installed link ing the departm ents o£ th e collector, and treasurer, sc th a t a complète record m ay be kep t of .the am oun ts due the Tow nship hi taxes; also the am ounts expended ag a in s t tb s appropriation . If th is is done, the books would show the expenditures from m onth to m onth aild. the am ount of taxes due each m onth, I would recom m end th e In sta lla tion di such a system.

. 1 subm it the follow ing report.Y o u » tru ly ,

H. G. STEWART, A uditor. Report of W alter H. b ra v a ti , Collector, from Ja n u a ry 1, 1918, to

December 31, 1918.RECEIPTS. .

Ja n u a ry I, 19IS, balance A sbury P a rk and OceanGrove B ank . „ • . i . . , . . . . . . . . .? 3,825 42

Balance Ocean Grove N ational B a n k . . . . 18,586 72Cash on hand ...v .. . , ; .: *... . . . . .. . . 1,321 57

sReceived from taxes, 1918 . . . . . . . . . . . . . $106,022 67Received from taxes, 1917 . . . . . . . / . . . . 16,023 63Received from taxes, 1.916.........." , . . . . .*.......... ... 12,141 08Received from taxes, 1915 . . . . . . . . . . . 419 51Received from taxes , p rio r .............. 179 50Received franch ise tax . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -..i. 1,182 52Received special tax . . . . . . ' . . . . . . . 408 78Sewer construction Nov 2 ........... .,. 3,978 8 5 'Sewer construction in te rest . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 818 95Costs and in te re s t . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. V.. 3,304 43

23,733 71

-5143,479 82

01SB U RSMMENTK.E. C. Sweet, taxes, costs and in te re s t. , . . . . . . .13. Cl. Sweet, taxes, disbursed Ja n u a ry 1, 1919. .E. S. S w eet,. taxes disbursed Ja n u a ry 1, 1919. .E C. Sweet, taxes diaburs.bd Ja n u a ry 1, 1 9 1 9 . . .E.. C, Sweet, special tax . . . . . . . . . . . . . .E, C. Sweet, franch ise tax ............

W. . H. tira v a tt, custodian ..........^ .i: 0, sw eet, sower construction No, 2 . . . . . . .v ,K. C, Sweet, sew er construction in te re s t . . . . .1.E. C. Sweat, sew er m aintenance N o.; 2 . . . . . . . . .li. C. Sweet, in terest ............B. P. Btorer, deputy ..............Jacob Stiles, trea su re r sew er m ain tenance ..........Jacob Stiles, in te rest •.......... . . . . .,v .Discount on 1918 taxes .............. ..............................C. P. McDonald, road t a x .................... .'..1'., F. McDonald, county tax . ..............C. P. M cD onald , S tate sckaol ................: — ..<*Balance A sbury P ark and Ocean Grove B a n k . ...Cash bn hand ....... .. • •!• • • • • • V

40,54615,227

2021,081

408101

26,835 3,?J62

80& 44G

22 624

2,357 74

.452 7,230

44,952 l i) ,523

1,589 718

$167,213 33

173560 ;• ...117841— ï 57,026. na 00 13 77 46 73 72 •36 12 .921125 082633 ,— Ï109.B87 21

- 5167,213 53.R eport of Edw ard C. Sweet, treasurer, from Ja n u a ry 1, 1918; tò De-

Ï 2,168 58cembér 31, .1918,Balance Jan u ary 1, 1918

F eb ru ary 1.W alter H. G ravatt, collector

M arch 1.‘ .sp 11,916 36

W alter H. G ravatt, collector 2,500 00April 3.

2,604 63W alter H. G ravait, collector . . . . . . . . . . . . .Apdil 6.

500 00W alter H. G ravatt, collector .............. .. t ... . .W aiter H. G ravati, collector- i . . . . . . * . . . . . . . . . 1,094 08

A pril 20.. i : 500W alter H. Gravatt', collector 00

- May, 4;1»985 68W alter H. G ravatt, collector . . . . . .

W alter H . G ravatt, collectorJu n e 1.

. . 1,400 0 0

\V alter H. G ravatt, collector . . . - 1,700 00W alter H. G ravàtt, collector 600 00W alter H. G ravatt, collector . 408 78

Ju ly 6.. . 3,500 00W alter H. G ravatt, collector

W alter H. G ravatt, collector 600 00A ugust 3.

2,000 00W alier H. G ravait, collectorW aller H . G ravatt, collector 500 00

Septem ber 7.W aiter H. G ravatt, collector 1,400 00W alter H. G ravatt, collector

October 5. * ’ ;. * : 2,100 00

W aiter ri. G ravatt, co Hti c to r • . . . 1,400 00W alter rl. G ravatt, còl lector 1,000 00

November 16,\V alter H. G ravatt, collector

December 7... . 2,000 00

W alter 11. G ravatt, collector ... 1,244 42Walter. It. .G ravatt, collector •

December 31. / *. . . 101 41

AVaíter. H. , Qràyajtt, collector . . v ................ . . . 15,227 35W alter H G ravatt collector . : 262 50W alter H. G ravatt collector 1,081 11

? 57,626 32

.MISCELLANEOUS REVENUES, F eb ru ary 15.

Ju n e 1.

Ju ly 6.

’ Ju ly 20.

P. P. B utcher, c lerk . .

E, W, W ills, licenses .

W. J . u a k e rso n . . . . . .

11. H. W hite, licenses . . . . . . . . . / . .■• • . . . ,N ovem ber 29.

K ent N eptune B uild ing Loan ........................December 7..

Telephone commissions .............. ............December 21.

P. B. Butchor, c le rk ..................... . 1.December 28.

O. D. W C stervelt,'overseer poor . . . . . . . . . . . .F. D. H urley, perm its ..................... ...........Burroughs ..................... ...............................................P F. Dodd, sew er cpliectione, . . . . . . . . . . . . .

December 31 P. P . Dodd, recorder . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . «**,.■B. H. W hite, licenses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Notes discounted

DISBORSISMF.NTi

12

70

10

206

37

1

4080

4169

7«32

32

06

00

SO

60

50

88

00009052

5650

Roa3s . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W ays and- m eans ' . . . . . . . .

.Poor . . . .......................Police . , 1 ... ,Board of H e a l t h : . . . . . . . .Assessing arid co llecting . . . . . . .L i g h t s . . . v . . . . • • • : . . . .

.In te res t and d iscount . . .. .Garbage . . . . . . . . ' . ............•Interest .on stone s*oad ¡jonda , , South Main s tre e t c e r t if ic a te s ., D onations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

A ppropriations . .? 6,000 00. ,. , . . . . , , 2,268 00 . . . . . . 2,600 00 . 2,300 00

1,600 00 2,700 00.. . . . . . . 3,200 00. . . . . . 650 00 .

. . . . . . . ‘ ‘400 00 1,000 00 1,600 00. . . . . . 150 00 V

E xp en d o d ~ N o appropria tions made...Soutfii Main s tre e t sower r e n t . ; ............D istric t cou rt tax ............................. V, , . /B ills 1917 and .previous ............

/ 1 . *24 ,150 ,00

School monies, 1917 . . . Notes s a id . . . . . . ' . . ; . .P ire d is tr ic t No. 1 F ire d is tr ic t No. 2 . . . . . .Ocean Grove lire d istric t

Balance A sbury P a rk und Ocean Grove B ank , ., Balance Ocean Gròve N ational 3ank

*31,172 02

Ocean, Grove d istrib t, 1818 W est Grove d istric t, 1918 . H aniiiton d is tr ic t, 1918 . . j W liitesville d istric t, 1918 . Franclutse tax . . . . . . . . . . .

Ocean Grove d istric t, 1917 W est Grove d istric t, 1917 . H am ilton d istric t, 1917 . . . W hitesvillo d istric t, 1917 .

T A X E S D U E B E C E M B E E 8 1 , 1 9 1 8 .

* 31,172 <12 : . 20,000 00 . 111,000 00 ,. • '4,107 SE ,

: 928 11 6,805 .25

?174¡00:; 06 ‘ 4 52

8,024 48

*182,037 07 ,

i . . *36,676 36 12,476 63

4 ,6 6 8 05. . . 5,913 84. .. 547 41

. •*. 7,166 73 6,295 34 1,170 49 2,545 49

- * 60,272 28

Taxes due. trom ail d istric ts, 19 1 6 .................. . . * G70Taxes due from a il d istric ts, 1 9 1 6 . ................ ' i,2 0 3Taxes due from a il d ietrlc ts, p r i e r 1,033

-•$ 16.1.79 0641061E

-* 2,906 61

Less balance due on 1918 school ap p ro p ria tio n . .$ 79,357 94

3B;990 00

* 44,367 94î'he to ta l of th e above am oun t also includes

th e lire m onies duo in th e d ifferen t d istric ts. There is s ti l l ow ing school app ropria tion fo r 1918 of*35,000, leaving a halanc.e due of the 1918 taxes . ‘ ,of *16,272.28. ï'heré h as been borrow ed ag a in s t'th e to tal am oun t c^ue • | ‘41,809 03C onsisting of th e fo llow ing: . ' ..V ' . ■ ■ ■ ' ' •Noto duo Ja n u a ry 1, Ì 9 1 9 . .,* 8,309 03 'N ote due F eb ru a ry 1, 1919 . . . . . . . . . . __. . . . 20,000 00N ote due M arch 1,. 1819 ...................... . . . . . . . I ■ 13,000 00Note due Ju ly 1, 1919 • SOO 00

*41,809 03

TO LETO C E A N G R O V E

S E A S O N 0/

1 9 1 9 TO LETOCEAN GROVE

Corner Heck and Central AvenuesSixteen rooms and bath-room, 12 bed-rooms. $400 for full season. Four room cottage adjoining: can be rented sepa­rately or as annex ; $ 15 0 for full season. Electric lights, gas, modern improvements.Address Edward. G.. Stover, 474 W. State St;; Trenton, N. J.

11 Bath AvenueEleven rooms and bath-room^ 7 bed-rqoms, electric lights, gas,

modern improvements. ■ I400 for full season.Address Edward C. Stover, 474 W. State St., Trenton, N. J .

O C E A N G R O V E H O T E L S OCEAN GROVE HOTELS• • • » • ( • • • • • • • • « • • • • H I M .

ï • '.sÏ O p e n in g o f •

I T h e L a fa y e t t e IS '. A p r i l 1 5 t o t e . . *■ :. jI G o r n e r o f O c e a n P a t h w a y a n d B e a d i 'A v e n u ë 'I O c e a n Û .r o v o ; N . J . I

S ;. Sunshiny, warm room s;,full view of the ocean. For f ! comfort and refinement not excelled. Reservations can j I now be made,. Under ownership and management of I 1 A. G. DIEFENDERFER j• Telephone 1981 , . j

OPENALL1HEYEAR B O S O O B E l , Mni.ts ÂYeriUfî'

M. h , B iobkh

E M E R S O N ■ 8a Mt. Zion Way. All improvo- monts. Open all year.

.... . ; : 51. Potter.

-* 742 17$121,500 00

*182,037 07

Expended ? 7,347 46

6.416 07 3,083 34 3,041 87

998 21 3,442 39 3,062 861.417 67

300 24 811 68

1 ,000 00 826 00

* 80,286 78

262 00 432 32 241 92

« 21,172 02

The Mount Vernon• i , V . ^ «’* • • * ’ . (Mean Grovis «ud Asbury Park. Large,brighi rooms nil improvämonts,. Boardinff anft tnbiß hoard. Open all rear. M. Bohettler.

Formerly, the Bavpnnel 123 Mt. Tabor Way,1 ntsir WeHley lalce atid wltbin ousy accestì to all points of tntereafc in

Clean, stoady em ploym ent on Men’s Panamas, in a cool day-Jight factory. Easy work, very good pay, and a 2 0 per cent, bonus.

VALCO M A N U F A C T U R IN G GO.F I R S T A VEN U E, B E T W E E N RAILROAD •

AND LANGFO RD S T R E E T , A S B U R Y P A R K ; N. J . /

Stiles’ Express and Sta^e Lineis the oldest established line in Asbury Park and Ocean Grove, ¡Special facilities far the prompt and careful handling of all kinds of Punutore, Baggage, Pianos, Boilers and Safes

Large Ante Hovtng Van tor long DM )net Having- o r n o c e "..

4 7 C o H le* f l v e . , W ««t C r o v e i . M ain 6 t . , O p p o s ite. U on O f t o .O ooiso , 2 2 0 a n d Otntiiraa^j.e ta tto « .. A s b u r y P«rfc, •.

JA C O B B T Ik E S ., P r o p r ie to r

' o c e a n c r n o m .;W esIey P la ce and A fbury X ve. -

a . . . . . . . . . . . . ..C layton 's Store, ‘Main VAve.2 3 . . # . . . . , , . . , . . . ; . . . . . .¿ .....B u r t and B ead h ■: •2 4 . . . . . . . . . . . . ; . . . . . . . . . . . E m b u r y a n d Beaol)2 6 . . . . . . Ma i n ' a n d P ilg rim P a th w a y ’’

. . . . . . . . B ro ad w ay a n d Pll8rrlm P a th w a y

. • . . .M t Tabor W ay and Pennaylvanla

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...N o r th End Pavilion2* ................. .M cC llntpck an d B eaohM . ............ Clark and N ow Jersey5 3 . . . . . . . . ........Benson and ML Tabor. W ay84................. ............ . . . .H e c k And WWtfloId85.. . .......................W ebb and P e n n sy lv an ia8 8 .. . . . . . .................. ..L aw ren ce and A bbott8 9 ..... . . . . .N e w York and Stockton Ave*.

Special T aps.1-^Wlre Trouble.2—F iro E x tin g u ish ed .8—Tim e, 7 a. m. and C h le r s ’CalU 4— W ashington*.6—Eagle.7—Stokes.6 -5 5 -General Alarm. -

17. ................1 8 ... .19 ......... .. . . . . . i . . . . . .» ...........81....................8 3 . . . . . . . . . . . .

ASBU RY P A R K ................. B ond a n d B an g s ' C ookm an an d E m o ry ....C o o k m a n a n d M ain.................T h ird a n d L a n g fo rd « .T hird an d C en tra l .B an g s A venue School ..«M unroe a n d R id g e

M » ...................... L o c u s t D riv e88......... Second a n d M ain87........... M unroe a n d M ain4 1 .. . . . . ; ....................... P ro sp e c t an d M u n ro e 1« ........ Sprlngw ood an d P ro sp e c t48......... ¿ . . . .„ S p rln g w o o d a n d A tk in s44....................... M a tt ls o n ,a n d F ro sp e c t4 5 . . . . . . . . . Sum m erfleld a n d ' L a n g fo rd48...........................................A sb u ry a n d P in e47....... ........................... . .F i r s t an d L a n g fo rd4 8 . . . . . . . . . . . . . » . . .F if th a n d C om stoek49.«<........ T h ird a n d P in e61........................................... .H eck a n d S ew allU . . . . ................G rand an d M unroe68. ............... A sb u ry . an d E m e ry* 5 .......................... . . . .A s b u ry ah d K in g s ley57.. . ..........................C asino , A sb u ry A venue« . . . . .......... .............. .T h ird a n d B ond<8........... .............. ................. F i f th a n d B ondN .m ¿ . . . .F o u r th an d G ran d8 5 .. . . . . . .......................... Second a n d G ran d72 .̂......... .....Second and K ingsley-7 3................ F o u r th an d K ln rs le y7 4.................................................F ir s t a n d H eck7 5................ T h ird a n d H eck8 3............................... S even th a n d B ond8 4........................... S ix th a n d G ran d91........................ . . . . . . . . . .S e v e n th 'and W ebb9 3........................ S u n se t a n d W e b b9 4......... i . P a r k an d E ig h th .,

..S pecial T aps.1—W ire T rouble.6—6- 6 —G enera l A larm .2—F lre E x tin g u ish ed .3—C h ie f s Call.5—WeBley '8—N ep tu n e7—Cook.8—Independence.9—N o rth A sbury .

. 23—Goodwill. .24—A tlan tic .25—E n te rp rise .8—Tim e, 12, Noon.

To te lephone com panies, call A sb u ry 1300 an d aBk to be connectd w ith com ­pany desired .

1 2 . . . . . . . .is.....1 7 . . . . . . . .1 9 .. . . . . . . .21. . . . . . . .S3;.......2 5 ..; . . . . . , 33...........V,3 5 ......3 7 ......4 5 .:....4 7 .. . . . .4 9 ......5 1 . . . . . .

A LLEN H U R ST. ' * '.......................£ . . . . . Lake D rive ................... M ain and E lb e ro n ....................M ain and C orllea ..................... .M ain a n d C edar........................P q g e an d H u m e

.....................P a g e a n d A llen ................................P a g e an d S p ie r. . . . . . . . . . . . .N o r w o o d arid E lb e ro n’. t . . . , . . . . . . . . N orw ood and C o rlles ...;.¿ .w .i.N orw ood a n d C edá r. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . L a k e a n d Allenì•.................. . . .L a k e a n d S p ie r..." O cean P lac e and C orllea. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .O c e a n a n d C e d a r

W E S T GROV E.62. . ...................M ain S tre e t a n d M ain A ve.63...................M ain S tre e t and C orlles A ve.54.................................H a rr iso n and E m b u ry66....... U nexcelled E n g in e H o u se62.. . ................... ................. .C o rlle s and R ld g o72....................................W e st C orlies A v en u e85................................. A tk in s a n d T e n th92 ... . .............................. . . .R id g e an d E ig h th ;

Special T ap s. •6 -6 —g—G e n e ra l/ A larm .2—F ir e E x tin g u ish ed .*3—C hief’s Call an d 1 p. m .4—U nexcelled . . •

. 5—U needa.

13.. ¿...1 8 . . . . .3 1 .....39 ..'... 41.......6 7 .....

60 ....71 ....7 4 . . . .

BR A D LEY BEACH........................M onm outh and P aclflu ................ . . . . . . . .F o u r t h a n d M ain ..................... F if th an d H am m o n d.....................E vergreen and M adison •....................... F if th and C en tra l ................... Ocean Park and C entral .............. . . . . . . . . . .M c C a b e a n d M ain...................P a rk P lac e an d M adison .................... L aR elno and B each .................... T h ird an d B each.............. . . . . . .L a R e ln e a n d . F le tc h e r ........... N ew ark an d O cean •................. ,; ..P a r k P lace and Main

BELM AR.18 .................................... .T e n th an d F . S tre e t2 3 .... . .......... . . .T h i r d A venue an d A S tree t25........ F if th a n d O cean A venue»27.................. / . . .F i f t h A venue and C S tre e t34 ..;.. . . . . . . . .S ix th A venue a n d F S tre e t38...................S even th A venue and D S tre e t411......... ^ .F o u r te e n th an d O cean A v en u es4 3....................; .T e n th A venue an d C S tre e t4 4.............. . . . .E ig h th A venue and A S tre e t4 5 . . . . . . . .» .E leven th A venue an d A . S tre e t63 ..F o u r te e n th A venue an d F 8 t r e e t66 i.T w e lf th an d R iv e r A v en u es67. . ..........T h ir te e n th A venue an d D S tree t'

6—8—8—G eneral A larm . 3—8—8—H o u secall. 1—1—1—C h ie f s Call. 2 ta p s , te s t a la rm , g iven every even ing a t 7.80 o 'c lock . 1 ta p , b ro k en o lrcu lt. a ta p s , : n re ou t.

Now is the TimeTo Have Thai Pletore

oi Yonr Hotel. House or Collage

FRANK S. M6RHIS

Pbolofrspher and Easlman Dealer 47 Main Ave.; Ocean Grove

r . l e p b a s t t 199 -W

Paul J. Strassbsrger42 PUgrim Pathway, 50 Pitman Ave.

Ocean Grove, N . J .Telephone 1749-Aabury

Cash GrocerGoods delivered. W e giva yon QUALITY. We glvo yau SERVICE, aiid boat of a ll, vie g ive you LOW» EOT PRICES, eonelsteot w ith quali­ty and quantltr.

Albert L BrownJOBBING

Tin and Sheet M età! W orker State and Asbestos SÙngle BooIIdq

Stoves, Ranges and Fomsces ,73 esubnry Avenne,jieeanGrove

.'TreIep¿oise,^C5¿Vi' :. >.%

v;-:

Page 7: GROVE WOMAN'S NIECE MINISTERS PROTEST ...the trip except;tiho.food—dark, sour bread, no : butter, little, sugar, milk made, from powdered milk and: little better than colored water,

V y - " - -SlUDAY, A PRIL 4, 1919. THE QCEAN GROVE TIM to: P A G E 8 B V B N

LAST TH0U6HTS OF ROOSEVELT

Desired Republicans to Close Rahks and G iv e . Attention

to Domestic Issues.

T A N G IB L E E V ID E N C E O F W IS H .

Colonel Harvey in North American Re- •’ view Presents Facsimile of Pen­

ciled Memorandum L eft by ...Roosevelt,- • ; .

Theodore Roosevelt’s la s t ' thoughts "were of the great domestic Issues of his country, Issues whose ' déterm ina-; tioh will decide th é -weal or woe of the next generation. He saw. In. a united Republican party, Just giVen a vote of confidence- and a commission to formu­la te and carry Into action policies of reconstruction, the guarantee of the prompt recognition and successful handling of these domestic problems.

Tangible evidence of this isa/inem o- randüm, the last penciled thoughts of the la te P resident. To Colonel George H arvey and the North American Re-

/ 7

Y V ^ f r - iI ^ * '!t \ I

J> » 'i, •'0 È s m w rnm m

Facslmüa of Last Memorandum of Çolonèi Roosevslt, Penciled a Few

Hours Before He Died,

view the country and the Republican party are Indebted for the publication o f this Interesting document which car­ries a message i r o n him “who, being dead, yet spenketli.” In the lcudlny artic le of the current number of the N orth American Review Colonel Hnr.

y sets forth the vital Import of tills last penciled notation of Mr, Roose­velt. He says:

“Mr, Roosevelt died the acknowl­edged leader- of the great party Into which he was born. His last w ritten words, penciled by his own hund a few bours before his death and addressed In the form of a memorandum for the prilllnnt young man for whose selec­tion as -Chairman of th e National o r­ganization he was largely responsible, were these, as reproduced above lu facsim ile: •

' " 'H a y ssee him ; lie must go to W ashington

fo r 10 diiys'; see Senate and House; prevent spilt on domestic policies.'

"Here Is evidenced «a clearly ns if the , few words filled a volume Mr. Roose­

velt’s realization Of both his responsi­bility and bis obligation. The simple memorandum marked t|w inauguration of a definite purty policy, to be carried through to a not less definite conclusion. I t w as more thnn a passing thought or a mere suggestion. I t was a .Message, signifying tile need of Immediate und unrem itting vigilance in achieving complete unity of action In resolving domestic problems before attacking those of wider range soon to be thrust upon the country—a true soldier’s call first to close the ranks.

“Nothing could be mpro -characteris­tic or more clearly Illustrative of the breadth of vlslori, ilie foresight, the directness In mothod and the painstak­ing attention o t the man. Nothing, too ,'probably could have sefved his purpose better than th a t these words should have been Ills lust. Dliltcult as it is to reconcile oneself to .tile decree o f Divine Providence tha t the re­moval of th a t great patrio t u t tills cru­cial moment was not untimely, we eat'- not but realize, as he would have been

• the first, to acknowledge, th a t the last vestige of animosities which might

- have continued to Impair his highest aspirations was hurled with him, and thereby the perfect union which he so

/ ardently desirtfd against all th ings'un- l' American was- attained,

.-“Thus wo flnd the Republican party resuming full legislative authority thoroughly united nnd' invigorated by Oie peculiar confidence which so often carried It to victory In form er years."

le tte r From St. Petersburg,■Editor Ocean. Grove T im es:—

A fter a p leasan t w in ter a t St. P e te rsb u rg we a,ud thousands of o th ers a re ¿planning to- h i t th e 'long, long '.trail fo r th e Nortlh, Mr. and ■Mrs. G. H. K ern , of th e „Colum bia. Ocean Grove, le f t here .on- Marcîs 26, ■ b ÿ w ay o f A sheville, N. C., to 'spend a îew d ay s w ith Mr. K ern 's (sister, Mr. and .M ra. W. Cl: P ti t t w ill leave on A pril 12, to jo in the K èrna in A l­lentow n, P a,, a f te r passing , a ..few days in P h iladelph ia , expecting to; tie a t th e C olum bia before E&stèrj’ ■Wa a re p lan n in g to r e tu rn to St. Pe'tersjiurg. nex t w in ter, as we have leased a-sm all hotel, th e Bon A ir, o e

Seconfi avenue, N orth . •I t ia an in te re s tin g s ig h t to w atch

th e 'm a n y ac tiv ities a t the railway, sta tion . The crow ds are so g re a t th a t one would alm ost th in k of his o\vn homo stá tio n . Two 'engines are required to p u ll th e heavy tra in s ou t of; th e city . S t, P e te rsb u rg is Sadeed. a w onderfu l : c ity —-no mosquitoes, flies o r g n a ts , and w ith an ideal cli­m ate for. w in ter. A nd so is Ocean G rove 'fo r th e sum m er;,as w ell a s As- ibUry P a rk and B radley Beach. H ave Deers read ing the. ‘ ca tchy-advertise­m en ts o f A abury . P a rk and " B radley Beach In the. loóát papers and o th e r F lo rid a newspaper!', and w e s a w 'a flag p ic tu re 'o f A sbury P a rk ’s board­w a lk In a sto re w indow on C entral avenue.;- To a i l th is I s a r “P in e ,1" • and I. adm ire the sp ir i t ; tiut w h a t about Ocean Grove? N ot one word as. yét. W here can one go to spend 1 a sum m er vacation ■better th an a t Ocean d ro v e , w ith ’¡ts h igh-class en terta in m en ts, its A uditorium , its preachers, o rato rs , etc.',' and lis quiet, peaceful Sabbath? Am, su re we

, have some flno Cottages, boarding ! houses, cafe terias and hotels— one i'in a c lass by Itself on th e boardw alk; ¡b u t/re c e n tly listed as see- A sbury P a rk Ihotel. W here a re th e people w ho w ere going 'to p u t Ocean Grove on the m ap? Asbury P a rk and B rad- ly Beach : are ce rta in ly doing tiie ir p a rt, and so w e áre very anxious about Ocean Grove,

T he people of th is c ity . recently had the pleasure of hearing Billy S u n d a y .' H e w as inv ited oyer from Tam pa. A t first be »aid he did not like to preach In th e 'o p e n air, b u t finally decided to come. In h is p a rty w ere M a ‘Sunday, Mr, Rodeheaver, ■his m anager and -his secre tary , As soon as Mr,; Sunday saw the vast crowc around , .to ’ as to m ake lo ts of Ing th ere as early a s 6 a. m., be sa id , "M y, w h a t a fine crowd; ilfteen thousand , or I ’ll ea t any h a t! "

JWa Sunday- w as in command. She had th e dom inies and divines s te p ­p ing around , so a »to m ake lots o t roosii, and while she w as doing th is Mr, Rodeheaver' took charge of t-he crowd,, and i t w as no tim e ti l l he h ad them try in g to s in g th e ir beads off. Ha sang as a solo, “ I W alk W ith tbo K ing,” and gave some trom bone selections. B illy proachod .a w on­derfu l sermon,, w hich se t the people

¡ w ild w ith deligh t, f T he ;n e i t .say Mr. Sunday and ills 1 p a r ty enjoyed a- .fishing, tr ip on the

lu l f of Mexico "ór kingfiah, being I th e guests of Col. W, T. Baton, o í I M assachusetts, tin the Lotus. . B illy , landed two fine fish and Ma caugh t , six, Mr, Sunday says he would like • to spend h is vacations hero.! The past week h as been ideal for k in g fishing, ho t ' days and »mooth w ater. T he gu lf has been a live w ith k in g fish and m ackerel. T he boats have been com ing in w ith from 300 to 1,600 pounds, but now hlgih w inds and storm clouds th rea ten to p u t a k in k In the sport.

C. W. B. PUTT.St. P etersburg , F la ., M arch 2G.

Beal Estate Transfers,T he follow ing transfers of real

es ta te In th is locality were recorded in t/he office o£ the county clerk a t F reehold fo r the wee's, end ing last S atu rday :

Hele.n A. B lrdsall to H elen D, B, Olds. L o ts 1634, > 636, Ocean Grove, ?1. ,

B everly Crowell, ux, to AddisoE Showers. P a r t lo t 168, B radley P ark , f l . ' r ' v.

M ary B. Jackson, by ?hr, to Lulu: B.' Pearce. ■ U ndivided on e-h a ll lo t Union avenue, W all tow nship, $1.

Cornelius. Poland by ex’r to L ulu ,B, Pearce. L and W all tow nship, ¥306.

H attie L. and W illiam Sarto»' to Cellm a B. -Max. A 1 8-100, W alltow nship, ?1.

W illard J . S terner, iix, to F rancis H . V arney, u t Lot 1653, . Belm ar, *1-

H arry W. Schuyler, ux, to N athan H. Schuyler, e t al. P a r t lo t 228, As-

’bt*r> P ark , i l .W alter S. Mowday to A sbury P a rk

R O O S E V E L T ’ S D E P A R T IN G W O R D S TO H IS C O U N T R Y M E NCol. Roosevelt died about 4 o'clock

• on the m orning. of January 0. The previous ¿evening' a t 'a great patriotic rally in, the New York Hippodrome a

, inessngo was réad froni him, written especially fof. the occasion. In It was

-v>tli(s striking sentence: \ \ ■ ^ .' “-Wo'bovo room.for but one flag, the.

Amerlçaii ilnR an d : this ,ojtoljirtes the !| ¡r#d .■fliig. whlcli 'Symbollzes all w ars

;n¿s/n¿t. liberty nnd.-.çjylll^ntlon ju s t .as , ';.'fnuc!v;;as;-:i t . eiclÿclos any ííorojgn .flag, ;v-ojfr.ii•>niltion?'fd;i.\vhícl¿¡¿vo ríiíó'.hoíUlf,1.

■ * ;"*£4v',i$'V.wq; imvpVroóíü,sfór.!;b(it: imo ; fiorjl. loyalty, nnd-fhnt'lg lloyàjly ' tÿ tb tj "

¡SA' >'''-’i

; Same Käme; Different-Man.: Mrs. Albmhom, ïCrélaberg, : whose

husband deserted h e r in R ussia th irte e n years ; ago,',,m ade a .sèarc lï fo r him a t Long B ranch in wihicb Jo sep h K ri.esb erg , a- ta ilo r, ' had ' an em barrassing experience. . W hen -the ta i lo r sa iled a t police h eadquarters the .w o m an claim ed be was th e de- se rtèr. KrleSberg; proved h is inno­cence and th e w om an apologized.

B . N. BUCHAWOK G . A. S h o c k Sec. and Trca»,

ßuehanon & Smock buinber Go.

Dealers in

l j u m b e rMillwork and Builders' Hardware

S e c o n d , T h i r d a n d R oll r o o d ft v*»*.

A SB U R Y PARK

Sole Manufacturers ot the Albemarle brand o f Cedar Shingles,

Palate,' Oils, Varnishes and Brushes.

Sole Agents for K ing's Windsor Ce- m ent for Monmouth and Ocean, counties., .

R ealty Co. Land Jeffrey s tre e t, As­bury P ark , ?1,

V ictoria R ealty and M ortgage Co. to Ashury F a rk R ealty O i. Land Jeffrey stree t, A sbury P ark , $1.

Madleàtì Applegate to , R obert K. Sbèrle, L and A sbury avsriue, Vs- bu ry P a rk , $1.

A nna M, M iller, e t ài, to George b. Pom invillè, ax . Land F ifth avenue, Asbury. P ark , ?1.' ' W illiam M., Cherry, ux, to E lm er B. Coyte. P a r t lo t 1, A nnie sn 4 M ary Green m api-A sbury P a rk , $1.

¡Dorothy T. ,B .'an d H arold C. H àa- cosk to E sth e r T . B. D u a iie .. U ndi­vided one-oighth land, A sbury avenue and K ingsley s tree t, A sbury .Park, i l .

C harles H. Royster, e t al, by Shér- iff, to flome B. and L. Association. Land. D eW itt avenue, A sbury Park ,. 58(00, ■ : ; ; -

Bdw ard Hilsori by E x’r to Samue! Gendzler, 2 lo ts Deal, $35,000, .., (Laura Hilson to Sam uel Gendzler.

2 .lots Deal, ;?1, '■Samuel G éndzier to A lexander

Alexander. 2 lots Deal, 5100.

Make Your Telephone Moving Arrangements • W ell in Advance

M A Y F I R S T - t h e big moving day—brings with it each year a large volume of requests for changes in the location of telephones.

This year it is more impor­tant than ever that all telephone moving ar­rangements be made far in advance.

M ake Y O U R A rrangem ent* .T O D A Y I f P o itib U

N E W Y O R K T E L E P H O N E C O M P A N Y

B U S I N E S S D I R E C T O R Y1886—ANDREW J. HURLEY-1918

Mattress Making and Upholster­ing, Specimlty o f Renovating Mat- tresée. Cabinet Making and - • Be- finiablas.

Centré! Avenne and Olia Street Ocean Grove, N. J;

EEHY02PS BEDDDia STOEEMattreeaes, Bedding, Brass and Iron Beds, Cribs, Springs, Coache« and Cot*. M a t t r e s s e s renovated. Furniture upholstered. Second-band furniture bougiht and sold.51 OLOT STREET, OCEAS OEOVE

B03ESE' SALE M S EXCHAHai STABIÆS.

Goo-; earilag#, draft and road ■ bersos, ' | | South Mato Street, Am-' buiy Park, N. J . .

M. G. Q B If tlNGOMK-W- IK and BIIL9BR

Residence, No. 66 Heck AvenueOGBAN fiKOVfi, N. ■),

Q, C. P rid h am & Bro. P rac tica l P a in te rs

57 iS m b u ry A v e n u e OCBffiN GROVB, IN. J .

Y o n r A d v e r t is s is ie a l Id th is Space W ill Make Yonr

Trade 'Marie Valuable and Create Confidence

(a You and Yonr Goods

ANDREW T. VAN CLEVE Contracting: Engineer

H igh an d Low P ressu re S team in sta lla tio n s , S a n ita ry P lu m b in g and H ouse H eating

, C oofrscilas in AH olPiping and Power Work

108 South M ain S treet, O c e a n G r o v eTelephone connection

Repairing Promptly Attended To

P. O. Box 3, Ocean Grove, N. J.

SILAS W. BARTON

«IThe Overshadowing Empire”

A sensational artlo le by Jus tice W esley O. H ow ard, who discusses tho stupendous pow er th a t llos -within th o g rasp >i£ the B ritish Hmpire, •which, ha declares, la abl« to become- tbo Colossus of the Eartih bocatiee of th e developm ents of thss G reat 'War. Throe tltnes h isto ry , Ju s tice Howard sa y s ,’-it g re a t em pire" • boa arrived , dom inating •oivlllaztion, Read', tills s ta r t l in g , a n lo lo by ai g re a t-w rite r , ..

NewYopkHcraW

and B uilderResidence: 91 C orlies Ave-, W est Qrove, N. J.

Lum ber H ardw areP a in ts , P lum bers5 Supplies

Neponset W all Board38 an d 48 in c h e s .w id e , «O *o 102 In ch es long

UEWI5 LUMBER CO.ys S outh M ain S tre e t

, ,, Asburv Park, N . J .pB.PrsiBi««»

.... „• oWàei»'

Ge o r g e M. B e n n e t t

PaintingIN ALL ITS BRANCHB5

116 Heck Aretino, OCKAH O B O V E

Charles 5 . Ferris GONTRflGTIING PAINTER

Special A ttention to Jobbing 82 Mt. Tabor Way, Ocean Grove

S . BOGAN, GlazierP la te , W in d o w and W in d sh ield

G la ss . M irro rs lo r Stele. M irrors R e -S ilv e re d .

T c lc p b o n e 89S -J .61 Soatb M ata Stvv A sbu ry Parftc

JO HN N. BURTIS« B A L DIRECTOR

Open Da i and Night. F ilía le Rooms ‘ ' for Funerals.

Pilone 56? 557 Bangs A *o , Ssburj Park

FRED E. FARRYFUNERAL EIBECTOR and EM6ÜLMER

80S Main Street, À lb o ri Park L a d ; A s s is t a n t 3s«n Dai and NlgfatTelephoTe'434 . Residence telephone 434

HARRY J. BODINEFUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER

7 2 2 Msttlson A v e .. Asbury Park.Luntfraotor Service Ambulance Service

Private Auto Phone 64

Geo. B. Sexton, Funeral Director ¡fEmbalmer• V ( S u c c e s s o r to J . I I . S e x t o n )

Private Auto Ambulance1S9 M ain S lr e e l, A sbury Park B row n’s B lock , S p rin g L ake

T elep h o n e 21 T e lep h o n e 32-M

If Yon Have a

R ad ian tfireIt Can Be Done

Instead of starting the furnace merely to take off the chill, light the Humphrey

Radiantfire. It Hieans a substantial sav­ing in fuel, which is important at all' times, but especially now when fuel is high in price. But what is more import­ant, you get all the heat you need when

and where you need it.

EASY TO LIGHT AND EASY TO EXTINGUISH

FOR SALE AT THB

COAST GAS CO.709 Ninth avenue. Belmer, N. J. Telephone 5M Balmar.

Arnold aveuue, Pokst R«h u it, N.J. Telephone 138 Point Pieaaant.50 Main avenue. Ocean Grove, Telephone SStt-W Asbury ,

BveE through the war period we tried to give the best value for every cent you laid out, "and we feel that we Hay6V:';'> acomplished it. .

Now, during the reconstruction days we are making ia m e effort to gi^e our customers the greatest value in chandise tha}: is possible. Shop here and prove it.

SNYDER & ROBINS• ; X\\ - -ovVvi• »• rv • -UH- i.-'t • -.r'f ■ . ' • *> <V,‘ ÍMÍ- Vv

• {: '*i S ii1 J. ¡Ji \ .* (' »’ s

Page 8: GROVE WOMAN'S NIECE MINISTERS PROTEST ...the trip except;tiho.food—dark, sour bread, no : butter, little, sugar, milk made, from powdered milk and: little better than colored water,

T H E . O CEAN GROVE

Asbury ' P&rH N e w s N o t e s— Form ed th ree m onths ago, e ight

groups in the W oman’s League of the F irs t M. E, Church raised $550 ay A pril 1, "

'•**“?This year Asbury P a rk ’s to tal assessm ent is $14,575,707, an in ­crease of $39,200 over the 191i> as­sessment..

— About four' hundred persons at- temled the barn dance in Border h a ll Tuesday n igh t, given by Pontoosuc Council, D. of P.

— Benjam in B. Sm ith, judge of the d is tr ic t court, is a mem ber o£ tao new F ederal g rand ju ry d raw n a t N ew ark las t F riday.

p rin c ip a l L. H. Burch gave ata lk o n th e v a lu e o f hom e g a rd e n s to th e B an g s A venue M o th ers ’ C lub in th e sch o o l b u ild in g T uesday .

—(Convicted of (keeping a d iso r­derly ¡house a t 15C Main s tree t, Ne*-, son V . Giles 'has been sentenced to serve six m onths In the county jail.

— W ar is being waged on un- ' '-licensed dogs in the city by Commie*

sioiier jjéRoy. Boys are being paid iftîty cents for . each dog brought, to

, -the pound,. — F riends aided \V. C lark Ycrkes.

su p e rin ten d en t of ùhe ‘W est Side Mission, in celebrating 'his s ix tie th b irth d a y ann iversary Monday even­ing.

— Miss Mae Shepard, Miss E d ith H agerm ari and LeRoy; Duffleid '« r e the soloists a t a m usical service in T rin ity Episcopal Church, la s t Sun­day evening. , • : -

— M otor Inspector Reeyes recov­ered a t Toms R iver t.He.,.flrst e? the week two autom obiles alleged to have been sto len from W ilm ington, Dei., last, sum m er.

— A tlan tic tru ck com pare last evening gave a reception for W illiam How ell and A rth u r M iller, two of its members who have , been recently discharged from the arm y.

— Wltl> the aid of Senator Acker- son the. c ity au th o rities will fight a leg islative m easure requ iring Hie, reg istra tio n of voters for the commis­sion governm ent election next m onth.

-—Tow ards the m aintenance of the S earle ' Home, the sum of eighty-five do llars was cleared a t the fifth an ­nu a l delicatessen sale las t Saturday, lield a t the residence of Mrs. T. F ra n k Appleby.

— .Miss Helen 0 . Steeb, of th is city, an d A lbert H. W alters, of Jersey C ity, w ere m arried, last Sunday by th e Rev. John Goorley, pastor of th e B a lla rd M emorial Church.

— A fter tw elve years of service ■with the A sbury P ark and Ocean Grovè B ank as bookkeeper and re ­ceiv ing te ller, F rederick L. H all, has resigned, to become d is tr ic t m anager fo r an investm ent security..concern.

— R e tir in g as p residen t of t'he New Jersey Automobile T rade Asso­c ia tion , C harles R. Z acharias, of th is c ity , has been presented by th a t body -with a silver tea and coffee service.

— H arry Appleby, recen tly prom ot­ed to the rank of captain in the U nited S tates Army in F rance, ex­pects to he sen t to R ussia o r to P a l­estine , He Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. T .' F ra n k Appleby.

— A New ■ York syndicate , has leased the ground lloor of the P a r t­ridge & R ichardson bu ild in g and w ill conduct therein the coming sum m er a re s tau ran t and rotisseri to -be known as the Black Cat.

— S uffering from scalds received •when a naval tug boiler exploded la s t S aturday in New York harbor, W illiam G. Munroe. Jr.., Is now at (his home in th is city, 1108 F irs t ave­nu e , .receiv ing m edical trea tm ent.

H is p aren ts have» learned ttia t F re d W. Schneider, of th is "city, w as recen tly m arried in A lbany, N. Y., to 'Miss L illian O 'Donnell, o£ th a t c ity . T he groom has been in the U nited S ttaes>navy, from which' he has re­ceived honorable discharge.

—A jo in t m eeting of Burbage and C orin th ian Castles, Golden Eagles, on Monday n ig h t w as attended by man-y m em bers of th e o rder from dif­feren t parts q l the S tate . T h e -p ro ­gram of en te rta in m en t included a aeries of a th le tic events, followed by a b anquet a t w hich Mayor Macdon­ald, bf ¡Bradley Beach, w as thè '.toast­m aste r. ' . ' . -, ;

-—The follow ing officers of the La­d ies’ .Auxiliary B. P. O. E. were in ­sta lled las t F rid a y : P residen t, Mrs.A dà Eskew; yice. presidents, Mrs.

, W illiam O’B rien and Mrs. W, K. i Oevereux; treasu rer, Mrs. L au ra V. ‘ R a ln ear; financial secre tary , Mrs.

C h a rltà R ugarberi corresponding secre ta ry , Mrs. H. C. Rydell. The com m ittee chairm en Include . ways and means, Mrs. Roy Asay; press, Mrs. j ; M. G reènhaùm ; flower,, f i r s . . Isaac H uyler, Mrs. John Brown and Mrs. C harles R ugarber.

HOME GARDENS Ali AIDTO PRODUCTION OF FOOD

One enem y of Bolshevism, anarchy and >*thér social d isrup tion , the in - iiocent li t t le hom e garden, is sp ring ­ing in to life in thousands of Now Jersey’s hack yards th is m onth, Al- though the home, garden Is .a n in s ti­tu tio n which has uome to stay , i t does n o t m ean th a t th e com m ercial vegetable ráisinfi- Industry Is in any w ay injured- On the csfitrary i.he home gardens are th$ g rea te s t adver­tisem ent th a t the com m ercial grow ­ers can ljiave, because a local dem and has been created for vegetables in season.

Though the products of home vege­table gardens In 1917 were w orth ?3:50,000,000, at, the same time the commercial production of vegetables jum ped 50 per cent. L ast.y ear both professionals and am ateurs w orking th e ir h ardest scarcely, kept the coun­try in food. Vood was never need­ed inore than i t is th is year.

Tlie.-Experlment Station- and E x ten ­sion División of- the S ta te A gricu l­tu ra l College áre ready and g lad to help in m aking these home gardens a success. W rite to th e S tate Col­lege .at New Brunsw ick for bu lle tin s and advice, or ask your county agent. Seed, fertilizer and labor th is year are too precious to be w asted, even in s'maii quantities,, and there m u st be a m axim um production to ' keep the w orld from sta rv ing .

ASBURY PARK TEAM WINSDECIDING GAME OF SERIES

In th e th ird and deciding basket- t i a l l . game .between th e T w in City h igh school team s on M onday, n igh t, A sbury P a rk won from Neptune. (O cean 'G rove), SO to 20. The game w as played on.tihe Casino court.

A large -crowd .ittendod th é con­test, and each team had presen t a band of loyal supporters. T h e ,p lay ­ing w as fast and clean, and the game was won on its m erits by the P a rk 'boys. Several tim es the N eptune players made trouble for th e ir op­ponents, b u t the la tte r alw ays came back w ith the required punch.

HftVE ¥ 0 U HEA9 ÂCHE?Do your eyes »urn o r itoh ? -Do tlw y t o 1! tired, o r strained '? If so, have yoor ayes exam­

ined. Y our g lasses m ay Baorl s change,

S T IL E S & CO.FM Iaislpfrfa Ejra SpsaialW s

At 222 Main S L A S M B Y ? A B K , E ie r j Friday—Hoars 10.00 to 4 ,3 0

H H M m « u m m M M in u n M « H (

and. . -‘.-•a • '

{ of the County fEnglish tow n — P lan s a re being

made £o; a m other’s and sp in s te r 's supper .to be given by the m en o t thu M. ■£. Sunday school, in tho aea r fu ­tu re . . . .

Freehold . -™ G ertrude H anson, dau g h te r of Samuel H anson, ¿dipped and fell du ring the physical t r a in ­ing exercises a t school and broke her., arm . '- , ; ....‘ ■ Red B ank— R abbi M. Hoffm an, of. W hite P la ins, N. Y„ who w as: Inv it­ed to become the leadier of tho Jew ­ish-com m unity, of Ited Bank, h a s ac­cepted the tender.

Spring Lake—hMIss A da Jen n in g s has resigned as ¿uperin ten d en t ot th e ‘hospital, a f te r se rv ing tw o and a half years. She w ill enjoy a long rest before tak ing ano ther position,

M anasquan— Tracy M, H oskins has been elected p resident of Volun­teer fire com pany... Jam es H. Rice is vice p resident, F rederick W eb& sec­re ta ry and George P. 'E ste lle tre a s ­u re r, ' '

Belm ar— Raym ond T horne, son of Oliver <N. T horne, h as been honor­ably discharged, from the nav a l re ­serve and h a s taken a position ¡U* teacher in the P ierce bils'ineas school a t Philadelphia .

Long B ra n c h --N a th a n P . Cranm er h as been ilected presiden t of the u shers ' union of Simpson Church. S teiiley H. Green is vice p resident, Jo h n C. S m ith -treasu re r and C lar­ence S tou t secre tary . ■

H ighlands — Mrs. Edw ard . M at­thew s ihaa received compensation from the Jersey Centra- T ractioi. .Company for in ju ries sustained last sum m er w hen a car. s ta rted ■ whilo she w as a lig h tin g therefrom . .

Farm ing 'dale—-W ilbur F iandrean , who was seriously wounded in bat­tle in ’ F rance, v isited ills paren ts. Mr. and Mrs. A .M . T. F land reau , re-, centiy H e is slowly, recovering from h is in ju ries and is now a t Camp U p t o n . >-

Spring Lake:—The Spring Lake D ahlia Farm Company lias been in ­corporated by F . R. A ustin , of Tuak- aho.p, and C. H. Law rence and F red D. Schock, of Spring Lake. T he firm w ill deal in flowers and iood ..pro­ducts.

F reeh o ld —Dr. H arvey S. Brown, who le ft F reehold a year ago -and joined the reg u la r arm y, has worked h is w ay rap id ly th rough th e several grades u n til he now rank« as a m a­jo r. He is a ttached to the Seventh supply tra in ,

Belm ar— R oger Conklin, son dt Mr. and Mrs. W ilbu r ’.Conklin, of Seventeenth" avenue, has completed h is four y ea rs’ service w ith th e navy and received 'an honorable discharge. Conklin made th irtee n tr ip s to F rance d u rin g t'he -war.

D ia l— Miss Dorothy LeHih,"daugh­te r of M ayor W illiam Leith,, ot Deal, was m arried W ednesday to S tanley A. Brown, of New York. The ceremony w as perform ed a t the H otel Chatham, New York, w here the bride and ¡her paren ts have been liv ing during the w inter.

Farm lngdale— Howell -council, No. 05, J r . O. U. A. M., had a class in­itia tio n recently . The new members Include E rnest Robbins. Leon ShP' to, Thomas ICetcham; W arren Meglll, A rth u r Bound, E arl Robbins, Paul L lpplncott, Norman Meglll, Leroy Tolly and Lear L aF etra , .-

■ -4sbunj. Burk-'

TromShinbacb’sIt carries its ow n assurance of distinction. A ll the m illinery originations of the season have

passed through the hands o f those skilled modistes whose genius is devoted to work for these modes alone .and em erged in these artis­tic, out-of-the-usual creations. Tailored hats which follow the general trend o f simple' garniture and uncommon lines are no small part of the special Easter display.

ACTIVITIES KtANNED BY ,STATE ANn-SDFFBAGISTS

JAM ES BOYCE CO« <■Inc*W h o l 9 « a l 0 a n d R o t n l l D « a l o r In '

MEATS. PROVISIONS AND POULTRY

G lo v e r b ! o o in C r e a m e r y S u t t e r B r o o k f ie ld S e l e c t e d G g g e

P h o n e s i

71 a n d 12218 0 OIÍIIH (3 T R B E 1

O c e a n G r o v e , !N. J ,

How is Yo u r 'Chance to Save I f You W ant Ford Tires

The W. S. W. Ford tires are »oW direct from tbe factory to the * -consumer, Having the jobber’s and dealer’s profit«, whien means a

1* sAving of forty per oenc. to you. W. 6. W. tires have seveo-plv fabric firat-claee rubber guarantee for 8,000 miles.

LOOK AT T H E S E PRICES30x3 Plain ' .............. $12.60

2 30x3 K an t-S k ld ................¿ 1 3 .8 5f 30x3% Plain ................ 13.26

i 30x3% Kant Skid ............... 14.65 ‘3 , Tha W. ;; W. Tire Bubbcr Co. mokes Ford fire- exclusively,| which is tbo,reaBon they oon' geii a t these prices or give usyour order and we will ship direct to you from tb* factory.7 0 9 M ATTiaON AVENUE

ASBURY P ^R K

C. 0. Hayes & Co.

NATIONS LEAGUE FAVOREDBY DISTRICT PREACHERS

A discusalpn oi tlie proposed League of N ations occupied the ■ a t­tention of the ' New B runsw ick dis­tr ic t preachers a t the ir weekly meet­ing in St. P au l's church Monday morning. The discussion was open­ed by Dr. T . J. Scott, of Ocean Grove. Dr. Scott concluded th a t to obtain a •world peace a n d . p u t art and to w ar for a ll tim e i t is necessary to have sane national co-bperattoi; -f*.nd to shelve po litical prejud ice and an tae- oniBm. . -

.flttse preacher« w ere p rac tica lly unaninom s In advocacy of a League «f N ations so fa r as form ulated, bu t w ith the proviso th a t 'the p resent d ra ft be subjected to sShangets and improvements.

Next a Salvation Amy Drive, D uring the week of .May 10-26 the

Salvation A rm y w ill, m ake a drive for 112,000,000 to en large its w ork am ong th e poor, E very do llar secur­ed w ill be used in ilhe developm ent of home w ork, i t Is Bald,

T O R I C

P SE P

LENSES':

. Ë v e ry M y is . Invited

to ex&mine our glasses ; to h«T® «1»« various points ex- plnined,aúd to ask pricw

. w ithoat inourririjttheleaat obUgatlon to buy:

Wn. B. Reilly 4 Co. 518 Cooknmn Avenue -

Asbury Park •

( . Y C G . C X S ^ E ,

A nti-Suffraglate o f New Je rsey have outlined a eam paig£ designed to crea te sen tim en t a g a in s t th e pass­age- o l the w om an ¡suffrage im e a d - m ent a t th e nex t session ' of Con­gress. T he p lans were Set. f a i th a t u m eeting a£ the .N ew Jersey Associa- iion Opposed to W om an Suffrage held recen tly in N ew ark .', T h s p rincipal) activ ities w.111 be .a series of m eet­ings to -b e held th ro u g h o u t' the State, a t w hich addresses- will, he made by an ti-su ffrage" çpeakera, and tho partic ip a tio n of an ti-suffrage orato rs in debates on th e suffrage question.

R epresen tatives from Princeton , Ellizabe'tli^ Morr.istown, M ontclair, th e O ranges and ; Sum m it a ttended the N ew ark m eeting. R eports were to the effect t h a t , an ti-su ffrage sen­tim ent is grow ing, especially since the defeat o f the su ffrage am endm ent recently in the U nited S ta tes Sen­ate. An in v ita tion wa« accepted to have an ti-su ffrage speakers p resen t th e ir sids o f the question in a debate to be held soon by one of the prom i­nen t c lubs in Essex county...' a c ­quests also w ere received from some of th e N ew ark public schools for an ti-suffrage lite ra tu re , w hich m ay be us6d in school debates.

The Greatest Department Stere onthe Coast COOK’ S B EE HIVE

IVe are through our annual stock-taking, and in order id make room, fo r '.our new spring stock we. offei Special Sales and Low Prices on all our winter goods in eveiy department»

N E. Corner of Cookmon Avenue and Main S treet, Asbury Park

HARRY BANKERGRAND

RAPIDSSAM PLE

FURNITUREB u n g a lo w s a n d C o t ta g e s F e n t o t c d

Cook man and Mattison Aves., Asbury Park

A. L. Ë . Strassburger Long Distance Telephone

S T O K E S H A L L28 OCEAN P A T H W A Y

OCEAN GROVE, N. J.

D e a r R e a d e r : ; ,

In a few weeks you will be coniinjf to Ocean Grove to get yoiir pshperty ready for opening the coming summer. . Instead of waiting until the last min­ute, when everybody will be clamoring for the attention of plumber, painter, paper-hanger or carpenter, come a little earlier this year, as Ocean Grove

should be in “ trim ’’ for its Fiftieth, Anniversary celebration.

A s you may have learned, the E*st«r season is one of the most delightful at tbe seashore. The number of persoas who take advantage of it grows each year. An Easter week vacatioii will do yon a world of good, and you will be able to make all necessary arrangement* for the care of your house at your leisure. There will be no need for rusjh »nil bustle.

A trip that you have alw ays pul off as an unpleasant necessity will become a really enjoyable visit.

For your convenience S T O K E S H A L L will'open March 29, after having undergone extensive alterations. Hot and cold running water in rooms.

Whether you are an Oceaa Grov* property owner or merely an occasional visitor we shall be glad to receive you for Esster week or for a n y , time latey that may better suit your convenience. '

Should you be coming down merely for a day or so, S T O K E S H A L L will be ready to receive ou. ' . - v

No matter what the length of your stay we will do our best to make it

comfortable and pleasant. ^

Onrieason is from March *9 to October 1.

Just a line in advance of your cooling will be appreciated.

Yours very truly,

M E 6. SMssburger.