IPCAL TEIM^f MAKJES DEBUT BUDGET FURTHER …ist Contributes “The May Day Mystery,” Considered...

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lYort Need Anything . The times .,,•: i, . Stanite Ready To Give Yon Semce ':; ' • ■r V .‘*W '- lt'ft R . nr ESTABLISHED ur lljt AS TUB. OCEAK OBOTE BECOBB V.'VOL. LVIII— N 0 . 8 J OCEAN GROVE. NEW JERSEY, FKIDAY, FEBRUARY 24,. 1933 Four C ents IPCAL TEIM^fMAKJES DEBUT TOMORROW AT METROPOLITAN Richard Crooks, Whose Parents Reside Will Appear as Des Grieux in “Manon”—The Climax ofTen Years’ Preparation . Richard Crooks, aon of Mr. and Mrs. .Alexander S; Crooks; 69. Em- bury ^avenue, -will make his Metro- politan Opera debut tomorrow after- noon as Des Greux in. “Manon?’ Tho Now York Times commented' very favorably last week by saving “it is probably not overstating the matter to remark that no American tenor making a debut at the Metro- politan Opera. House ever approached that momentous event with a bigger popular public than Richard Crooks.” Tho singer, though still a young man, •has been before the public for ten years, in. concert and radio. “The conditions for radio work in America and Europe are very differ- ent,”"Mr. Crooks said recently. ‘'The programs. here are largely deter- mined, jn my case at least, by the request1 numbers of those -who write in- asking for special ’favorites.. These requests are carefully com- pild.'and the. selections for the most part made from- among them where "this is possible. “ The arrangement is not entirely satisfactory. It tends to move in' a circle. People all over the country hear certain songs, like''them, write • in r about : them, -and then,', they ]are . given again. The radio public cannot be expected to be as familiar with musical literature as a musician. If the singer Could introduce songs more freely, I feel sure that thepub- .lic could be given richer and more varied .programs. “For example; there are the beau- tiful songs of Mozart, . Schubert, Brahms, Schumann and Wolf. They are ynot widely known among|the radio public, and they should be; for although the word. 'classical’ music raises ominous doubts in the minds of those not acquainted with the lovely and often simple melodies of those composers;' although some of them doubtless think of all that is gay and tuneful as ‘popular’ and all that is heavy and complicated as ‘classic,’ this is largely because people who make this {distinction are un- familiar with the ‘classics' and scared off by the name. ..If they 'heard the songs, themselves, unheralded by this forbidding term; if they made the acquaintanc of Schumann’s ‘Song of Provence,’ for example, with its gusto and swinging rhythm, or the delight- ful humor of Wolf’s ‘The Drum,’ or the. tenderness and ecstacy of Strauss’s ‘Dream Through the Twi- light,’ there is no reason why they shouldn’t like them as much aa ‘popu- lar’ music that, being widely dissemi- nated they already! know. , COHEN'S LATEST NOVEL IN TIMES FIRST INSTALLMENT WILL -A?. :- PEAR NEXT WEEK <. Famous Southern Writer and Humor- ist Contributes “The May Day Mystery,” Considered one of the Best of his Longer Tales, ior Times Readers. The Times, has secured, the exclus- ive serial rights for Octavus- Roy ~ ; Cohen’s latest hovel, “The May Day • Mysteiy," which will begin-in next ... week's issue of this paper. Cohen’s - stories have, appeared in .the past in pleading magazines; including the Sat-. ..- urday Evening Post, and he is known i to thousands -of readers. In this • tale Detective Jim Hanvey, a figure familiar to Mr. Cohen’s readers, makes his first appearance in a story -of serial lengttu V\ • the Btnnlhghaifi-Soiitherh college at Birmingham, Ala. His first work was as a civil engineer. Be quit that to engage In newspaper work and was employed In the editorial departments o{ such papers aa the Birmingham Ledger, tho Charleston Nows and Courier, the Bayonne (N. J.) Times nnd Newark (N.J.) Morning Star., He was admitted to the bar In South Caro- lina In ISIS.and practiced law for two years before devoting himself entirely to writing. During the war he served as a lieutenant In the navy. His story. “Tho May Day Mystery, will run serially In these columns, nnd every reader will enjoy It GLOCKLER IS NEW BIBLE CLASS HEAD COUPLE OBSERVE 49th ANNIVERSARY: RETIRED NAVY MAN AND .WIFE; ARE SURPRISED BY FRIENDS | Shore Residents For Past Ten Years1 and Their Many FrlendB, Enjoy! Surprise Party Given In Honor of- Mr. and Mrs. George Gardner. r , •Mr. and Mrs. George Gardner wereji pleasantly, surprised by a' number of their friends laBt Friday evonirig who-1 gathered at their home at ;82';01in' street, to'honor, them on the. occa-; sion of their forty-ninth wedding anniversary. Mr. amd Mrs. Gardner were planning to spend a quiet even-, ing at home when their friends, ap-' peared at the door with greetings and armsful of gifts. - V- The couple who have sp|ent the post ten years in this section, resid- ing here and in Asbury^ Park, origi- nally caine from Brooklyn. Mr: Gardner, a retired machinist, was ai(| one time a chief petty officer in the United States Navy. He can still remember vividly his . experiences among them being the polar expedi-. tion sent in search for tho “Jennette", ill-fated vessel that was lost in tho| far north in 1881. Still active andj in good health, Mr. Gardner still- re- members th? six months that he; and his, companions .existed on walrus meat and water. Their many friends joining with them in the festivities of the occason tho couple still very much in love with each other, enjoyed the gayety of tho celebration. Refreshments wero served late in the evening. ' Among those present were Mr. and Mfcs. Burt Reid, of Asbury Park Mr. and Mrs. Frank Reed, Sea Girt; Mr. .and Mrs. George FerguBon, 'Bel- mar; Captain George White, Bradley Beach Mr. and Mrs. Charles Varider- veer,; Freehold; Mrs. Bessie Lons- bory, Freehold; Mr. and Mra. Peter Brown and Miss Bessie Drake, ofthis place. To Hold ‘Tom Thumb”. Wedding. A.Iom: Thumb wedding and-‘recBp-;] tion will be staged in .’tho Steinbach auditorium, fifth floor, March. 4, at 3 o’clock. It is being sponsored by the Woman’s League of the First Metho- dst Church of Asbury Park, and directed by . Miss Emma G. Edwards. Fifty children will take part. LADIES’ AID IS WELL RECEIVED SUCCESSFUL COMEDY DIRECTED BY MRS. BLEECKER STIRLING Mrs. L. C. Briggs Carries off part of Old-Fashioned Mother well. Re- quests to Repeat Have Been Re- ceived by Director. Beforo • a large audience the Ladies’ Aid Society presented a roar- ing comedy, “Asa Old Fashioned Mother;’’ on Tuesday evening in St. Paul’s church under the able direction of Mrs. Bleecker Stirling. The pro- gram was shown in three acts with Mrs. L. C. Briggs as the old-fashioned mother, Mrs. Leon Ridgeway, as lead- er of the village choir, and Miss Eve- lyn Allen as accompanist. Tlie cast of characters were: De- borah Underhill, ; Mrs. Louis C. Briggs; Widder Bill Plndle, Mrs. Leon BUDGET FURTHER CUT $14,000; DEFEATED CANDIDATE WOULD TURN OFF CORLIES AVE. LIGHTS Township Committee Presents New Budget With Heavy Salary Cuts and Listens To Objections. Final Hearing Tuesday Evening, March 7 Operating under the new State laws repealing mandatory statutes, the Neptune township committee on Tuesday night lopped off approxi- mately $14,000 from the 1933 budget presented two weeks ago. This sav- ing was njade almost exclusively by salary reductions. A general reduc- tion of tea per cent, was enforced, which added to the ten per cent. Vol- ■QriJJKS; tv 1UUU1 JUIU JL 4UU1C, i ,. .. ' • ’ , - , Ridgeway; Miss Lowiz Louvina Cus- j untary reduction of the current year tord, Miss Glendora Weeks; ;Isabel made a total reduction of twenty, per Simpscott, Mrs. August: Stollj Glori- -cent, in, - salaries. For instance, a aria Perkins, ■ * Miss Betty Mount; patrolman’s. salary that, was origi- Sukey Pindle, Evelyn Crabiel; John naliy $2,500 will ngjv be. $2,000. Underhill, Rutger Stirling; Charley ' The budget presented two weeks Underhill, Frank Mount; Brother ag0 ca]]ed for $169,786.70 to be Jonah Quackenbush, John H. Wall; ^ b taxalion; the new budget Gosling, August Stoll; ^ ?l55>916.7() to be raised Jeremiah Gosling, August Stoll; Enoch Rowe, Harold O’Dell; Quintos' Todd, Alvin W. Allen. i by taxation. The biggest single item feated candidate for township com- mittee, “is beside the point.” v Smitli finally charged in despera- tion that the whole budget was a piece of political trickery. This charge was vehemently denied by Chairman Gracey, who assured, thei crowded chamber that the committee had done everything possible to cut the‘budget to the bone and/at the same time keep the departments functioning as near as possible. The chairman asked Smith ,for a constructive suggestion as to how he would cut the budget further. Smith replied by saying it was the commit- tee’s job. Further pressed for a con- structive suggestion, Smith answered, that every light on Corlies avenue should be turned off. “I have; turned off all the lights nnd the- radio in my house," said Smith, ami the township Besides the ■ leader, Mrs. Ridgeway, . the village choir was composed of , £ rom $55,500 to. $46,560 for 1933. the following: Mrs. John H. Wall, | When the time for public hearing Mrs. Fred Terhune, Mrs. Mario Kin- arrived Thomas J. Smith, defeated Miss Mary Walker, Mrs. I Democratic candidate for township in the budget,, police, wns reduced should do the same on Corlies nve- SUCCEEDS FRED TERHUNE WHO DECLINED ANOTHER TERM nison, Miss Mary George Catley, Mrs. Carrie Holmes, Miss Katherine Richmond, Miss Lu- cille Dunn, Miss Isabel Schaffer, Mts. Rutger Stirling. Requests to repeat the entertain- ment |have been received by the director, Mrs. Stirling, ajid it is planned to do so at a further date to be announced. Many who heard the program expressed to Mrs. Stirling their appreciation. Ash Wednesday Program, St. Paul’s. A special program will be present- 1'ed. at St. Paul’s church on Wednes- day evening which will include spec- ial music by the choir and an inter- esting sermon by the pastor, Dr. H.. P. Fox. The program coming on Ash Wednesday, the first day of Lent, will be of unusual value to those attend- ing. commtteeman last year, made i t . an occasion to deliver a political speech. He appeard. to be flabbergasted by the size of the reduction, and hard put to find a point on which to hang an objection. He got involved in the fine points of bookkeeping and was referred by Chairman Gracey to State Commissioner Darby. -He ob- jected to sidewalk curb interest being put in the budget, pretending not to understand that such interest iri the final settlement is added to-the assessment against the individual property owner as required by law arid good ’ bookkeeping. He decried the laying of sidewalks and curbs in out-of-the-way sections of the town- ship, yet it was brought out that he was one of the leaders of a delegation from Asbury Gardens two years ago who demanded such ..improvements from the township in his own local- ity. “That, however,” ,said the de- TOWNSHIP HEALTH OFFICER 99 t,^i^ocTA\a;s boy cohbn This talented southern author and i". lawyer has thrilled and entertained ■V^i'inintoria of ,American readers. His .V‘ . stories aro In demand iri everymagu- '"; zlno In America. The opportunity to publish his books Is ?ought by every i iii; book publishing house In the nation. . Mt\ Cohen, made his. first?;success .with his southern iiegro stories. Thqy met with Instant popularity, and bnllt K.;i;,'circulation for the magazine that car- ried them. Bnt ho Is a versatile writer -arid has created many characters that are -known to American readers.- ; b Among theso Is Jim Hanvey, detective extraordinary, nnd It Is' Jliri Hanvey fe around.which Is woven the action and the humor, of “The. May Day Mystery,” :‘_K ,v pna o£1he most popular of Mr.Cohen'i stories.; - ',s'. ..>v ' Mr. Cohcn Is a native’ of the.’South si'iCyo^iwhIcb,.;heIf w rites;. He; was .born Exchange Cafeteria Supper Precedes Annual Meeting and Election of Assembly.; Bible Class;: Succeeding Frederick -M . Terhune as president of the Assembly Bible Class, Jacob C. Glockler was elected1 at the annual meeting of the class held last Friday night at St. Paul’s, church. A cafeteria exchange supper in charge of Mrs. Marie Kinnison, preceded the meeting. Other officers elected were: Teacher, Rev.. 'M. E. Snyder; first vice presi- dent, Mi$. Jennie- Handley; secoiid vice president, M is.; M. Elizabeth Lay; secretary, P. L. Shibley; assist- ant secretary; Miss Victoria North; corresponding secretary, Mrs. -Fannie Brundage; treasurer, John H. Wall; assistant librarian, Albert' L.- Brown; pianist, Miss Glendora' Weeks; pub- licity director,- John H. Wall. The nominating committee,included Jacob C. Stockier, Mr. arid Mrs. George Catley and Miss Mary Walker. Dr. Snyder and the pastor, Rev. H. P. Fox, commended the work of the retiring, officers and welcomed the new ones., . The class will present its annual play March 28, when an “Old Folks’ Concert” will be given under .the direction of Mrs. Bleecker Stirling in the church. ■ " During tio meeting a report was presented by, the treasurer stating that the year’s receipts had totaled $417^46/of which amount $363.05 was expendedr An-additional $183.02 'was raised - for missionary work. . . \\William: Stanley Applegate, Health Officer of the Township of Neptune,; is -wandering ; around ■ •- .these 'days taking a lot of good-natured kidding from his friends as a result of a suit brought against him for $40.20. Not that Officer Applegate is in any fear of having.to'pay.the suit bat because of the unusual facts surrounding the case.’ -V .. ■ .v, It seems that Officer Applegate had the; home of Martin Earle, 1108 Em- bury avenue, quarantined. • And the reason for the quarantine was be- cause ono of the roomers at the place had contracted scarlet fever. Now James Robinson enters the case as a roomer who was quarantined and. so was forced to curtail his: busiricss enterprises which happened to be the profession of caddying.- That is chas- ing: around a golf links with a bag of clubs slung over one shoulder. Robinson figured that being forced patient while she was sick he esti- mated to be worth twenty-ftve'dollars. So he added the fifteen and the twenty-five and immediately entered suit against Applegate for <$40.00. The case wgs tried before Justice of tho Peace Cox at Deal. The Justice after a lengthy discourse and after it had been satisfactorily proven that Applegate had in no way authorized Robinson to take care of the patient, reserved decision in the case. Doctor A. W.. Sweet, of the State Department of Health, B. H. Obert, Health Officer for Asbury Park, and Clifford Errickson, also conriectod with liealth work in this , section, wore; interested , witnesses to the trial before Cox and after the case had been closed temporarily, spoke in favor of Applegate and explained the laws in matters of this kind. The importance of the case lies in the fact that if the charge. is al- to discontinue business which brought j lowed ,it would set a precedent in him five'dollars a week was some- thing to sue Applegate for, so he fig- ured the three weeks that he was forced by the quarantine worth fif- teen dollars even if there was sev- eral inches of Bnow on the ground at the time. Arid for services rendered to the BYES ■Have them thoroughly,,fexnmlned. It means bo mudh to your health and happiness. . Dr.. Joseph F. Heine, Optometrist, 518 Cookman avenue; Telephone Asbury Park 164.— 15tf. 'Sixteen (16) full pages of comics nue. Turning to the crowded assembly room Chairman Gracey asked: “Does that suggestion 'meet with the ap- - proval of the citizens?" There was no answer. Smith sat down and the chair asked for further remarks 1 under public hearing. P..Linster, South Main street, then took the floor. He wished to express to the committee his belief that tiiey had done a good job. He said that he had' got) behind in his taxes in the past and that the committee had always shown him every considers- ; tion and that hie had never) been denied any information or • courtesy when he sought it. He believed that tho new budget showed, conclusively'that the committee waa • working for the interests of tho tox-^ payers. His speech was greeted with applause. ..... -.*J ■ ' The committee then went into the passage of’bills. The new budget will come up for final hearing on Tuesday evening, ; March 7. __ _ ..'-ii: RELIEF FIGURES STILL MOUNTING AN INCREASE OF 55,000 PERSONS FOR MONTH OF JANUARY health work and would result prob- ably in other suits. Applegate con- tends that he only carried out his duty as a health officer and was in no way liable personally. Yet . tho case, wasn’t a case and'still is a case for Justice of the Peace Cox still bos tho “reserved decision” sign out. Dr. Nichols Addresses Preachers. Dr. Milton Nichols, pastor of the Ai;cb - Street Church, Philadelphia, formerly of :the' New Jersey Con ference, was the gaest speaker at the weekly preachers’ meeting held . Mon- day morning ' at ,:St* Paul’s church. Dr.- Nichols spoke ,on the . life nnd work of- James' Whitcomb Riley, cKaracterizng .the • American poet laureate. Ho gave a sympathetic in- tcrjiretation of tlie poems of' the American poet. * '• ; ; - Monday’s-.meeting' the' group roill bn riddressed bv Rabbi ,R. B. Happy Heart Girls Organize. Miss Hepburn’s Junior Sunday School class has organized as the Happy Heart’ Girls, and will meet at the home of Lririra R. Woodwarth, 61 Delaware avenue, tonight. The newly elected officers are Jeanne Austin, president; Graco Pyne, vice presi- dent; Laura Ruth Woodworth, secre- tary; ; Doris Brennecke, financial sec- retary. The otb.er members are Lil- lian,Joriea, Mary Janb Kresge, Doro- thy; Cole’and Bflttv Thompson. County’s Total Shows Increase of 902 in Month’s Time. Peak is Ex- , pected Early in.March. ... Vanishing resources and continued unemployment, forced new applicants onto New1Jersey’s relief roster at the rate of almost 1,900 a day during January, if: was disclosed at State relief headquarters, Newark, today/ During the month roughly 55,000 individuals were added to the total receiving subsistence from State and local governments an increase, of ap- proximately fifteen per cent, during the month which raised the total to OFFERS REMEDY FOR SICK WORLD DR. FOX’S SUNDAY MORNING SERMON AT ST. PAUL’S Tells What is Wrong With the World A World. Sick with Lust, Ignorance, Nationalism and SclGslmess.. “The Healing of the .Seamless Dress," proved an intriguing subject.' for a scathing indictment of world - conditions by Dr. H. P. Fox at St. Paul’s church on Sunday morning. He chose a3 his text,. “I am come, that ye might have life.” . This is a sick world, Baid the speaker. It is sick of war. War, a constantly recurring epidemic, that destroys vJithout discrimination, not only-life and property, but the vital 428,093 individuals at the beginning ^achievements of the toil and thought of February. The tnjnd of growth in the emer- gency relief.load of half a mllion in- dividuals an the relief roster by the State Relief Director Chester I. Bar- nard at the State-wide mobilization end of March, forecast last fall by for relief, will be reached or exceed- ed early next month, after which the size of the load is expected to gradu- ally lessen. . In Monmouth county the number of persons receiving relief increased to 6,678 over.5,776. for th)e month of December. \•’ . Octogenarian Party.: .1 On Tuesday afternoon at St. Paul’s Parsonage 103 Broadway, Mrs. Clara Dale will bo entertained at an octo- genarian party birthday. All Grove who aro aro invited to- he guests You Wreck Them, We Rectify Them. I and, sacrifice and faith of men. Tho world is ’ sick of nationalism.* J-gl Nationalism that blinds men to the virtues of other people and 'begets hatred, jealousy, and suspicion in . ; human hearts.- -•' Tho world is sick of ignorance.; Millions of men aro alliterate, but : other millions while literate/' ari»!.- without mtellectual attainment -or; v. cultural refinement " Ignorance that ’. A; chains not alone the feet, of men, but: the souls of men. ' . y5 The world is sick of lust.' “Lust; : .: that exalts, tho ammal ,a n d '.^ ^ i(^ ^ V j appetites to places of suprcmafty tKat v:;-^ debauchcs sex relations; the image of .Go'd, reducing riofln ^to. ; levels low'er than .the •khnp.xffl'.'i■ •-S 'iu rights of ^ot&ctfs and 'fi

Transcript of IPCAL TEIM^f MAKJES DEBUT BUDGET FURTHER …ist Contributes “The May Day Mystery,” Considered...

Page 1: IPCAL TEIM^f MAKJES DEBUT BUDGET FURTHER …ist Contributes “The May Day Mystery,” Considered one of the Best of his Longer Tales, ior Times Readers. The Times, has secured, the

lYort Need Anything . The times .,,•: i,. Stanite Ready To Give Yon Semce ':; ' •

■r V.‘*W'- lt ' f t R . nrESTABLISHED u r l l j t AS T U B . OCEAK OBOTE BECOBB

V .'VOL . LVIII—N 0 . 8 J OCEAN GROVE. NEW JERSEY, FKIDAY, FEBRUARY 24,. 1933 Fo u r C en t s

IPCAL TEIM f MAKJES DEBUT TOMORROW AT METROPOLITAN

Richard Crooks, Whose Parents Reside

Will Appear as Des Grieux in “Manon”—The

Climax ofTen Years’ Preparation

. Richard Crooks, aon of Mr. and Mrs. .Alexander S; Crooks; 69. Em­bury avenue, -will make his Metro­

politan Opera debut tomorrow after­noon as Des Greux in. “Manon?’

Tho Now York Times commented' very favorably last week by saving “it is probably not overstating the matter to remark that no American tenor making a debut at the Metro­politan Opera. House ever approached that momentous event with a bigger popular public than Richard Crooks.” Tho singer, though still a young man, •has been before the public for ten years, in. concert and radio.

“The conditions for radio work in America and Europe are very differ­ent,”" Mr. Crooks said recently. ‘'The programs. here are largely deter­mined, jn my case at least, by the request1 numbers of those -who write in- asking for special ’favorites.. These requests are carefully com- pild.'and the. selections for the most part made from- among them where "this is possible.

“ The arrangement is not entirely satisfactory. I t tends to move in' a circle. People all over the country hear certain songs, like''them, write

• in r about : them, - and then,', they ] are . given again. The radio public cannot be expected to be as familiar with

musical literature as a musician. If the singer Could introduce songs more freely, I feel sure that thepub- .lic could be given richer and more varied .programs.

“For example; there are the beau­tiful songs of Mozart, . Schubert, Brahms, Schumann and Wolf. They are y not widely known among|the radio public, and they should be; for although the word. 'classical’ music raises ominous doubts in the minds of those not acquainted with the lovely and often simple melodies of those composers;' although some of them doubtless think of all that is gay and tuneful as ‘popular’ and all that is heavy and complicated as ‘classic,’ this is largely because people who make this {distinction are un­familiar with the ‘classics' and scared off by the name. ..If they 'heard the songs, themselves, unheralded by this forbidding term; if they made the acquaintanc of Schumann’s ‘Song of Provence,’ for example, with its gusto and swinging rhythm, or the delight­ful humor of Wolf’s ‘The Drum,’ or the. tenderness and ecstacy of Strauss’s ‘Dream Through the Twi­light,’ there is no reason why they shouldn’t like them as much aa ‘popu­lar’ music that, being widely dissemi­nated they already! know. ,

COHEN'S LATEST

NOVEL IN TIMES

FIRST INSTALLMENT WILL -A?.

:- PEAR NEXT WEEK <.

Famous Southern Writer and Humor­

ist Contributes “The May Day

Mystery,” Considered one of the

Best of his Longer Tales, ior Times

Readers.

The Times, has secured, the exclus­ive serial rights for Octavus- Roy

~ ; Cohen’s latest hovel, “The May Day • Mysteiy," which will begin-in next ... week's issue of this paper. Cohen’s

- stories have, appeared in .the past in pleading magazines; including the Sat-.

..- urday Evening Post, and he is known i to thousands -of readers. In this • tale Detective Jim Hanvey, a figure

familiar to Mr. Cohen’s readers, makes his first appearance in a story

-of serial lengttu V\ •

the Btnnlhghaifi-Soiitherh college at Birmingham, Ala. His first work was as a civil engineer. Be quit that to engage In newspaper work and was employed In the editorial departments o{ such papers aa the Birmingham Ledger, tho Charleston Nows and Courier, the Bayonne (N. J.) Times nnd Newark (N.J.) Morning Star., He was admitted to the bar In South Caro­lina In ISIS.and practiced law for two years before devoting himself entirely to writing. During the war he served as a lieutenant In the navy.

His story. “Tho May Day Mystery, will run serially In these columns, nnd every reader will enjoy It

GLOCKLER IS NEW

BIBLE CLASS HEAD

COUPLE OBSERVE

49th ANNIVERSARY:

RETIRED NAVY MAN AND .WIFE;

ARE SURPRISED BY FRIENDS |

Shore Residents For Past Ten Years1

and Their Many FrlendB, Enjoy!

Surprise Party Given In Honor of-

Mr. and Mrs. George Gardner. r ,

•Mr. and Mrs. George Gardner wereji pleasantly, surprised by a' number of their friends laBt Friday evonirig who-1 gathered at their home at ;82';01in' street, to'honor, them on the. occa-; sion of their forty-ninth wedding anniversary. Mr. amd Mrs. Gardner were planning to spend a quiet even-, ing at home when their friends, ap-' peared at the door with greetings and armsful of gifts. - V-

The couple who have sp|ent the post ten years in this section, resid­ing here and in Asbury^ Park, origi­nally caine from Brooklyn. Mr: Gardner, a retired machinist, was ai(| one time a chief petty officer in the United States Navy. He can still remember vividly his . experiences among them being the polar expedi-. tion sent in search for tho “Jennette", ill-fated vessel that was lost in tho| far north in 1881. Still active andj in good health, Mr. Gardner still- re­members th? six months that he; and his, companions .existed on walrus meat and water. ‘

Their many friends joining with them in the festivities of the occason tho couple still very much in love with each other, enjoyed the gayety of tho celebration. Refreshments wero served late in the evening. '

Among those present were Mr. and Mfcs. Burt Reid, of Asbury Park Mr. and Mrs. Frank Reed, Sea Girt; Mr. .and Mrs. George FerguBon, 'Bel- mar; Captain George White, Bradley Beach Mr. and Mrs. Charles Varider- veer,; Freehold; Mrs. Bessie Lons- bory, Freehold; Mr. and Mra. Peter Brown and Miss Bessie Drake, ofthis place.

To Hold ‘Tom Thumb”. Wedding.

A.Iom: Thumb wedding and-‘recBp-;] tion will be staged in .’tho Steinbach auditorium, fifth floor, March. 4, at 3 o’clock. It is being sponsored by the Woman’s League of the First Metho- dst Church of Asbury Park, and directed by . Miss Emma G. Edwards. Fifty children will take part.

LADIES’ AID

IS WELL RECEIVED

SUCCESSFUL COMEDY DIRECTED

BY MRS. BLEECKER STIRLING

Mrs. L. C. Briggs Carries off part of

Old-Fashioned Mother well. Re­

quests to Repeat Have Been Re­

ceived by Director.

Beforo • a large audience the Ladies’ Aid Society presented a roar­

ing comedy, “Asa Old Fashioned Mother;’’ on Tuesday evening in St. Paul’s church under the able direction of Mrs. Bleecker Stirling. The pro­gram was shown in three acts with Mrs. L. C. Briggs as the old-fashioned mother, Mrs. Leon Ridgeway, as lead­er of the village choir, and Miss Eve­lyn Allen as accompanist.

Tlie cast of characters were: De­borah Underhill, ; Mrs. Louis C. Briggs; Widder Bill Plndle, Mrs. Leon

BUDGET FURTHER CUT $14,000; DEFEATED CANDIDATE WOULD TURN OFF CORLIES AVE. LIGHTS

Township Committee Presents New Budget With

Heavy Salary Cuts and Listens To Objections.

Final Hearing Tuesday Evening, March 7

Operating under the new State laws repealing mandatory statutes, the Neptune township committee on Tuesday night lopped off approxi­mately $14,000 from the 1933 budget presented two weeks ago. This sav­

ing was njade almost exclusively by salary reductions. A general reduc­tion of tea per cent, was enforced,which added to the ten per cent. Vol-

■ Q riJJK S ; tv 1UUU1 JU IU JL 4U U 1C , i , . . . ' • ’ , - , •

Ridgeway; Miss Lowiz Louvina Cus- j untary reduction of the current year tord, Miss Glendora Weeks; ;Isabel made a total reduction of twenty, per Simpscott, Mrs. August: Stollj Glori- -cent, in, - salaries. For instance, a aria Perkins, ■ * Miss Betty Mount; patrolman’s . salary that, was origi- Sukey Pindle, Evelyn Crabiel; John naliy $2,500 will ngjv be. $2,000. Underhill, Rutger Stirling; Charley ' The budget presented two weeks Underhill, Frank Mount; Brother ag0 ca]]ed for $169,786.70 to be Jonah Quack enbush, John H. Wall; ^ b taxalion; the new budget

Gosling, August Stoll; ^ ?l55>916.7() to be raisedJeremiah Gosling, August Stoll;Enoch Rowe, Harold O’Dell; Quintos'Todd, Alvin W. Allen.

i by taxation. The biggest single item

feated candidate for township com­mittee, “is beside the point.” v

Smitli finally charged in despera­tion that the whole budget was a piece of political trickery. This charge was vehemently denied by Chairman Gracey, who assured, thei crowded chamber that the committee had done everything possible to cut the‘budget to the bone and/at the same time keep the departments functioning as near as possible.

The chairman asked Smith ,for a constructive suggestion as to how he would cut the budget further. Smith replied by saying it was the commit­tee’s job. Further pressed for a con­structive suggestion, Smith answered, that every light on Corlies avenue should be turned off. “I have; turned off all the lights nnd the- radio in my house," said Smith, ami the township

Besides the ■ leader, Mrs. Ridgeway, . the village choir was composed of , £rom $55,500 to. $46,560 for 1933. the following: Mrs. John H. Wall, | When the time for public hearing Mrs. Fred Terhune, Mrs. Mario Kin- arrived Thomas J. Smith, defeated

Miss Mary Walker, Mrs. I Democratic candidate for township

in the budget,, police, wns reduced should do the same on Corlies nve-

SUCCEEDS FRED TERHUNE WHO

DECLINED ANOTHER TERM

nison, Miss Mary George Catley, Mrs. Carrie Holmes, Miss Katherine Richmond, Miss Lu­cille Dunn, Miss Isabel Schaffer, Mts. Rutger Stirling.

Requests to repeat the entertain­ment |have been received by the director, Mrs. Stirling, ajid it is planned to do so at a further date to be announced. Many who heard the program expressed to Mrs. Stirling their appreciation.

Ash Wednesday Program, St. Paul’s.

A special program will be present- 1'ed. at St. Paul’s church on Wednes­day evening which will include spec­ial music by the choir and an inter­esting sermon by the pastor, Dr. H.. P. Fox. The program coming on Ash Wednesday, the first day of Lent, will be of unusual value to those attend­ing.

commtteeman last year, made i t . an occasion to deliver a political speech. He appeard. to be flabbergasted by the size of the reduction, and hard put to find a point on which to hang an objection. He got involved in the fine points of bookkeeping and was referred by Chairman Gracey to State Commissioner Darby. - He ob­jected to sidewalk curb interest being put in the budget, pretending not to understand that such interest iri the final settlement is added to-the assessment against the individual property owner as required by law arid good ’ bookkeeping. He decried the laying of sidewalks and curbs in out-of-the-way sections of the town­ship, yet it was brought out that he was one of the leaders of a delegation from Asbury Gardens two years ago who demanded such ..improvements from the township in his own local­ity. “That, however,” , said the de-

TOWNSHIP HEALTH OFFICER99

t ,^ i^ o c T A \ a ;s b o y c o h b n

This talented southern author and i". lawyer has thrilled and entertained ■V i'inintoria of , American readers. His .V‘ . stories aro In demand iri everymagu- '"; zlno In America. The opportunity to

publish his books Is ?ought by every i iii; book publishing house In the nation.

. Mt\ Cohen, made his. first?; success .with his southern iiegro stories. Thqy met with Instant popularity, and bnllt

K.;i;,' circulation for the magazine that car- ried them. Bnt ho Is a versatile writer

-arid has created many characters that are -known to American readers.-

; b Among theso Is Jim Hanvey, detective extraordinary, nnd It Is' Jliri Hanvey

fe around.which Is woven the action and the humor, of “The. May Day Mystery,”

:‘_K,v pna o£1he most popular of Mr.Cohen'i stories.; - ',s'. ..>v' Mr. Cohcn Is a native’of the.’South

si'iCyo iwhIcb,.;heIf writes;. He; was .born

Exchange Cafeteria Supper Precedes

Annual Meeting and Election of

Assembly.; Bible Class;:

Succeeding Frederick -M. Terhune as president of the Assembly Bible Class, Jacob C. Glockler was elected1

at the annual meeting of the class held last Friday night at St. Paul’s, church. A cafeteria exchange supper in charge of Mrs. Marie Kinnison, preceded the meeting.

Other officers elected were: Teacher, Rev.. 'M. E. Snyder; first vice presi­dent, Mi$. Jennie- Handley; secoiid vice president, M is.; M. Elizabeth Lay; secretary, P. L. Shibley; assist­ant secretary; Miss Victoria North; corresponding secretary, Mrs. -Fannie Brundage; treasurer, John H. Wall; assistant librarian, Albert' L.- Brown; pianist, Miss Glendora' Weeks; pub­licity director,- John H. Wall.

The nominating committee, included Jacob C. Stockier, Mr. arid Mrs. George Catley and Miss Mary Walker.

Dr. Snyder and the pastor, Rev. H. P. Fox, commended the work of the retiring, officers and welcomed the new ones., .

The class will present its annual play March 28, when an “Old Folks’ Concert” will be given under .the direction of Mrs. Bleecker Stirling in the church. ■ "

During tio meeting a report was presented by, the treasurer stating that the year’s receipts had totaled $417 46/ of which amount $363.05 was expendedr An-additional $183.02 'was raised - for missionary work. . . \\ ‘

William: Stanley Applegate, Health Officer of the Township of Neptune,; is - wandering ; around ■ •-.these ' days taking a lot of good-natured kidding from his friends as a result of a suit brought against him for $40.20. Not that Officer Applegate is in any fear of having.to'pay.the suit bat because of the unusual facts surrounding the case.’ -V.. ■ .v,

It seems that Officer Applegate had the; home of Martin Earle, 1108 Em­bury avenue, quarantined. • And the reason for the quarantine was be­cause ono of the roomers at the place had contracted scarlet fever. Now James Robinson enters the case as a roomer who was quarantined and. so was forced to curtail his: busiricss enterprises which happened to be the profession of caddying.- That is chas­ing: around a golf links with a bag of clubs slung over one shoulder.

Robinson figured that being forced

patient while she was sick he esti­mated to be worth twenty-ftve'dollars. So he added the fifteen and the twenty-five and immediately entered suit against Applegate for <$40.00. The case wgs tried before Justice of tho Peace Cox at Deal. The Justice after a lengthy discourse and after it had been satisfactorily proven that Applegate had in no way authorized Robinson to take care of the patient, reserved decision in the case.

Doctor A. W.. Sweet, of the State Department of Health, B. H. Obert, Health Officer for Asbury Park, and Clifford Errickson, also conriectod with liealth work in this , section, wore; interested , witnesses to the trial before Cox and after the case had been closed temporarily, spoke in favor of Applegate and explained the laws in matters of this kind.

The importance of the case lies in the fact that if the charge. is al­

to discontinue business which brought j lowed ,it would set a precedent in

him five'dollars a week was some­thing to sue Applegate for, so he fig­ured the three weeks that he was forced by the quarantine worth fif­teen dollars even if there was sev­eral inches of Bnow on the ground at the time.

Arid for services rendered to the

BYES■Have them thoroughly,,fexnmlned.

I t means bo mudh to your health and happiness. . Dr.. Joseph F. Heine, Optometrist, 518 Cookman avenue; Telephone Asbury Park 164.—15tf.

'Sixteen (16) full pages of comics

nue.

Turning to the crowded assembly room Chairman Gracey asked: “Does that suggestion 'meet with the ap- - proval of the citizens?" There was no answer. Smith sat down and the chair asked for further remarks 1

under public hearing.

P..Linster, South Main street, then took the floor. He wished to express to the committee his belief that tiiey had done a good job. He said that he had' got) behind in his taxes in the past and that the committee had always shown him every considers- ; tion and that hie had never) been denied any information or • courtesy when he sought it. He believed that tho new budget showed, conclusively'that the committee waa • working for the interests of tho tox- payers. His speech was greeted with applause. .... .-.*J ■'

The committee then went into the passage of’bills.

The new budget will come up for final hearing on Tuesday evening, ; March 7. __ _ ..'-ii:

RELIEF FIGURES

STILL MOUNTING

AN INCREASE OF 55,000 PERSONS

FOR MONTH OF JANUARY

health work and would result prob­ably in other suits. Applegate con­tends that he only carried out his duty as a health officer and was in no way liable personally. Yet . tho case, wasn’t a case and'still is a case for Justice of the Peace Cox still bos tho “reserved decision” sign out.

Dr. Nichols Addresses Preachers.

Dr. Milton Nichols, pastor of the Ai;cb - Street Church, Philadelphia, formerly of : the' New Jersey Con ference, was the gaest speaker at the weekly preachers’ meeting held . Mon­day morning ' at ,:St* Paul’s church. Dr.- Nichols spoke , on the . life nnd work of- James' Whitcomb Riley, cKaracterizng .the • American poet laureate. Ho gave a sympathetic in- tcrjiretation of tlie poems of' the American poet. *'• ; ;

- Monday’s-.meeting' the' group roill bn riddressed bv Rabbi ,R. B.

Happy Heart Girls Organize.

Miss Hepburn’s Junior Sunday School class has organized as the Happy Heart’ Girls, and will meet at the home of Lririra R. Woodwarth, 61 Delaware avenue, tonight. The newly elected officers are Jeanne Austin, president; Graco Pyne, vice presi­dent; Laura Ruth Woodworth, secre­tary; ; Doris Brennecke, financial sec- retary. The otb.er members are Lil­lian, Joriea, Mary Janb Kresge, Doro­thy; Cole’and Bflttv Thompson.

County’s Total Shows Increase of

902 in Month’s Time. Peak is Ex-

, pected Early in.March. . . .

Vanishing resources and continued unemployment, forced new applicants onto New1 Jersey’s relief roster at the rate of almost 1,900 a day during January, if: was disclosed at State relief headquarters, Newark, today/

During the month roughly 55,000 individuals were added to the total receiving subsistence from State and local governments an increase, of ap­proximately fifteen per cent, during the month which raised the total to

OFFERS REMEDY

FOR SICK WORLD

DR. FOX’S SUNDAY MORNING

SERMON AT ST. PAUL’S

Tells What is Wrong With the World

A World. Sick with Lust, Ignorance,

Nationalism and SclGslmess..

“The Healing of the .Seamless Dress," proved an intriguing subject.' for a scathing indictment of world - conditions by Dr. H. P. Fox at St. Paul’s church on Sunday morning. He chose a3 his text,. “I am come, that ye might have life.”

. This is a sick world, Baid the speaker. It is sick of war. War, a constantly recurring epidemic, that destroys vJithout discrimination, not only-life and property, but the vital

428,093 individuals at the beginning achievements of the toil and thoughtof February.

The tnjnd of growth in the emer­gency relief. load of half a mllion in­dividuals an the relief roster by the State Relief Director Chester I. Bar­nard at the State-wide mobilization end of March, forecast last fall by for relief, will be reached or exceed­ed early next month, after which the size of the load is expected to gradu­ally lessen. .

In Monmouth county the number of persons receiving relief increased to 6,678 over.5,776. for th)e month of December. \ •’ .

Octogenarian Party.: .1

On Tuesday afternoon at St. Paul’s Parsonage 103 Broadway, Mrs. Clara Dale will bo entertained at an octo­genarian party birthday. All Grove who aro aro invited to- he guests

You Wreck Them, We Rectify Them. I

and, sacrifice and faith of men.Tho world is ’ sick of nationalism.* J-gl

Nationalism that blinds men to the virtues of other people and 'begets hatred, jealousy, and suspicion in . ; human hearts.- - •'

Tho world is sick of ignorance.; Millions of men aro alliterate, but ■: other millions while literate/' ari»!.- without mtellectual attainment -or; v. cultural refinement " Ignorance that ’. A; chains not alone the feet, of men, but: the souls of men. ' . y 5 •

The world is sick of lust.' “Lust; : .: that exalts, tho ammal ,a n d '.^ ^ i ( ^ ^ V j appetites to places of suprcmafty tKat v:;- debauchcs sex relations; the image of .Go'd, reducing riofln to. ; levels low'er than .the

•khnp.xffl'.'i ■•-S'iu

rights of ot&ctfs and 'fi

Page 2: IPCAL TEIM^f MAKJES DEBUT BUDGET FURTHER …ist Contributes “The May Day Mystery,” Considered one of the Best of his Longer Tales, ior Times Readers. The Times, has secured, the

TWOFRIDAY, FEBRUARY-24j 1033 '

1 i !

BUY INDEPENDENTB UY from the independent merchants of your local

community, hire local labor, support local in­dustry. Give your patronage j large or small as

t may be, to business firms of your own locality. I ley are the men who help to build your community, not the chain stores. They have the welfare of your com­munity at heart, not the chains. Support the inde­pendent merchants, your neighbors, or the prosperity of your community will be indefinitely destroyed. Take this case cited by former Judge. Ward; Kremer as an example: '

“There are six chair* stores in Bradley Beach doing an.average of $1,000 a day, which nets them a total of practically $300,000 a year. The money does not go into the banks for any length of time, if it goes there .at all. Many of them return their money to their' home qffice. by postal money order.” . S'--.'

“The effect on the mechanic is this. When they have any painting to do they send a large truck from their home office to do this work. ; When, the independent store owner wants work done he ‘hires the local artisan, who in turn spends the money in the vicinity and. the merchant that he spends it with in turn spends it with another, making a cycle which is of endless value to the community.” iii-

THE truststhat Theodore Roosevelt broke up when he was president are pikers alongside the great chain stores of today—not only groceries and

laundries, seeking to destroy fair competition, but meats, drugs, baked goods, accessories, building sup­plies and everything imaginable that the independent merchant deals In. The amount of business, the mo­nopoly, and the manner in which these great chains conduct their business is mmense in comparison with the trusts that were broken up in Tl eodore Roose-

V

| P. J. Strassburgei

I Pilgrim Pathway and Olin St., Ocean Grove

General Marketa City Dressed Meats and. Poultry

Louis E. BronsonHeartily Supports the Above

See Me Before You Buy, Burn or Borrow

53 Main Avenue, Ocean Grove

itiiiiiiiuiiniiinftMintuiiiiHtitiHiniuinitiiiDninininiiiiniitaiiaitiiiaiiiitiiiiiiaiiniiiiiiiaiiiifaiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiBiiiiiiiifiiiii'

! ■ * * ■ B

Seacoast Laundry1112 W. LaReine Avenue, Bradley Beach I

Telephone, Asbury Park 3324 1

E. FRANK SWEET, Proprietor f* ; ' • 6

" ' '■ .2. . 5

I' • Hill’s Drug Store.1 Mattison Avenue and Bond Street I \3BURY PARK

1 Leading Independent Drug Store on'the

I North Jersey Shore

| WM. J. KORBON1TS, Proprietor

PiersallY Tonsorial ParlorsScalp Treatments^ Massage Work and

Hair Cutting All Done by Modern

Electric Methods

52^ Main Avenue? Ocean Grove

Two Barbers

Norwood Tire Co. ^ 1■ ■ g

626 Broadway, Long Branch

DAVID PESCOE, Proprietor ; |

___________ - - > S " 1

Merritt’s Quality Meat Market53 Olin St., Ocean Grove

T«iephone 2672. {WRIGHTSON MERRITT, Proprietor1 * Seaside LaundryI Corner Steiner and Midwood Avenues

J NEPTUNE

| Clarence Morris, Manager

fnaitBiwi... .......... ,IBn*ManBiiaiiBiiBjia!iaij'aiisii«iiMiaiiBiitiiaiifn«iitiiaiis|inivifaii*iitnsiniiiiisiiBiiaiiciiBiiBiiBiiBii

Everything 3terillzWl |

^ Progress LaundryI I Ridge aad Waihingtoa Avenues

Asbury park g

Telephone 760Q J• .'!./■ g

........minim.. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiitiiiiiuiiiiuiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiijiraiitiiiiiiiittiiiiitii/nKinatiiiim,),!,,!,,!,, ,

CHATFIELD’SGreeting Cai us and Stationery

60 Main Avenue, Ocean Grove

I!

I

Page 3: IPCAL TEIM^f MAKJES DEBUT BUDGET FURTHER …ist Contributes “The May Day Mystery,” Considered one of the Best of his Longer Tales, ior Times Readers. The Times, has secured, the

V S i * £• &-V :-FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1933 i>

County News Notes

l i e Monmouth County Firemen's Association held their February meet­ing Sunday at the moving picture theatre, Fort Monmouth.

. Tho affiliated' Republican cluba of- Monmouth county have gone on rec­

ord as being in favor of establishing . a Stato park at Sandy Hook.

■ Rev. Alphonse Dare, pastor of the ' First M. E. Church, Red Bank, has

asked for a change in pastoral rota­tions after serving two years at that place.

.. The Manasquan Board of. Educa­tion has adopted a resolution calling

' for. a' twenty per cent, reducton in the salaries of all school teachers, effect-

; ive.July 1 . '"-A i

Alfred E. Blakemara was reelected to the post of member of the Sprng

' Lake Board of Education for, a three jear term.. The school budget for $29,000 was approved.

Freehold school , employees will continue to comtribute ten per cent,

tof their salaries to the Board of Education for maintenance of school

.expense' until July X.

After serving as organist for the \paat nine years, Mrs. J. D. Voget, of

Belnjar, has resigned her position at the Church of St. Uriel the Archw angqj, due to ill health.

The failure of automobile drivers to clear paths for fire‘trucks responding to alarms at Keansburg, has led to the organization of a fire .police squad .who are to clear tbe -wa,y for the ap­paratus.

The Monmouth County Branch of tho American Association of Univer­sity "Women, were visitors at the State Hospital at Marlboro recently, as tlie 'gue3,ts of Mrs. J. B. Borden, wife of the superintendent of the hospital. ’• /■:»

A meeting of the Monmouth County Fire Chiefs Association will be held in the Eagle hose company fire .house, Keyport, on Monday even­ing at 8 o’clock. All chiefs, ex-

• chiefs and assistant chiefs aro urged . to attend. t

The New York and New Jersey Steamboat Company have donated the old steamboat Fannie to the bor­ough of Keyport if they will remove the boat at their own risk. The boat will be broken up by unemployed and

. used for fuel.

Union Beach must again vote on the school budget for that place fail­ing to approve it on the first elec­tor. If the budget is again defeated in that borough the governing body

• Will be forced) to draft and approve a budget themselves.

The, Spring Lake Heights borough council .will hold a special meeting in order to decide whether or not they will take over, the Independent firo company of that place. ' At present the lire company is not a borough project. ’.rV .V:y\vv;''

■ ■■':. Members of the Board of Freehold­ers of Monmouth county are opposed to the abolition of the four man State highway commission. ' Atlantic,' Cum­berland, Sussex, Bergen and Union county freeholders are also opposed to the measure and advocate its

• retention.

_B. P. 0. Elks, No. 128, Meets Elks' Building, Cookman avenue and Hock street, second and fourth Friday.

Mizpali Shrine, No. IQ, Order *f White Shrine of Jerusalem. Meets in Masonic Hall,'Ocean Grove, first and third Saturday at 7.30 p. m. Hlgjh Priestess, iMrs. Beulah Swain, scribe, Mrs. Eliza Evans. ,.. Star of the Sea Ledge, No. 24,

Shepihcrdp of Bethiehom. Meets every. Monday night, Mooso Hall, Lake avenue and Emory street.

Scriba Council, No, 25, Loyal Ladies . of Royal Arcanum. Meets American legion Home, 509 Sewall avenue, 'first and third Tuesday 8 p. m.

- Regent,-Mrs. Sadie B. Slack; Secre­tary, Mrs. Anna Jarasovis.

Sitting Bull Tribe, No. 247, Im­proved Order Red Men. Meets Red

., Men's Hall, 1140 Corlies avenue. Sec­retary, Dr. Stanley D. Palmatcer.. Coast City Council, No, . 813, Royal

. Arcanum. Meets American Legion

. Home, 609 Sewall avenue, second and fourth Tuesday at 8 p. m. Regene, F. C. Drake; secretary, Walter Quolch.

Burbage Castle, No. 02, Knights of Golaen Eagle. James G. Parker, N. C. Harry C. Mauch, M. of R. MeetB overy Monday night in the

V Stricklin Building, 702 Cookman ave- ' itue.

Canton Monmouth, Patriarch Mili­tant, I. O. O. F. Meets second and

•fourth Friday , at 8.0D p. ® ., in Red Men’s Hall, Manasquan.. ... Captain,

' S. Caddick; Accountant, James .• S. •'Smith;

‘ J 'Lady Chester Lodge • of Rebekah,I. O. O. F. Meets first and third Fri­day evening at'.708 Main street. Noble •Grand, Mrs, Martha Bennett; Re-

, - - • —' • -j, • ' v V - - ■ 'Carding Secretary, Mrs. Ellen E. Eisenberg.

West Grove Council, No. 278, Jr. Order United American Mechanics. Meets Rod Men’s Hall, 1140 CorJioa avenue, every Wednesday evening. B. B. Burdgo, Councilor;- Walter H. Barton, Recording Secretary. .

WanomasB ribe of Red'Men, meets every Wednesday in Republican Hall, Bradley ■ Beach. Secretary Stanley Falmateer, Avon.> Atlantic Encampment, No. 22, 1. 0 .

0. F. Meets second and f *« th Tues­day at 700 Main street. Chief Patri­arch, William Challender; Scribe, W. X. Eisenberg.

Queen Esther Lodge L. L. O. No. 890. Meats 810. Cookman avenue, first and third Friday.

Primrose Lodge, Sons of St, George, meets second and fourth Tuesdays in Moose Hall, Lake avenue and Emory street. ,■ ..- -'' Harold Daley Post,' No. 1333, V. F. W. Meets at 10 Main street, Asbury Park, seco«d and fourth' Thursdays. John L. Schneider, 'commander; Charles - H. Falardeau, adjutant; Benjamin E. O'Brien, quartermaster.

Jordan Link, Order of Golden Chain. Meets Winckler Hall.

Asbury Park Council, No. 23, junior Order United American Mechanics. Meets 810 Cookman avenue every Wednesday at-8 p. m. Counselor, P. Rushton; Secretary, Henry D. Cham­berlain. ■ v- Z \ '■

Tecumseh Tribe, No. 60, Improved Order Red-Men. Meets 715 Cookman avenue every Tuesday at 7.30 p. m. Sachem, Walter Holmes; Chief of Records, John N. Ennis. ■

Monmouth Lodge, No. 107, Knights of Pythias, Meets Winckler Hall, Mattison avenue, second and fourth Friday'at 8 p. m. Willard R Smith, Charicelor Commander; Charles Haas, Secretary.

Twin City Chapter, No. 67, 0. E. S. meets the second and fourth Friday evenings in Masonic Hall, Asbury Park. Worthy Matron, Mrs. Ber­nice Irwin; Secretary, .Mary E. Charles. - -

Asbury Court, No.. 21, Order of Amaranth. Meets in' Masonic Hall, Ocean Grove, second and fourth Saturdays at 8 p. m. Mrs. Ida. R. Kautzman, Royal Matron; Miss Pearl Van Dyke, Secretary.

Liberty Council, No. 62, Daughters of America. Meets Red Men's Hall, 1140 Corlies avenue. Councilor, Mrs. Gertrude Buck; recording secretary, Mrs. Florence Taylor.

Liberty Temple No. G, Ladies of Golden Eagle, meets evei'y Wednes­day in' Moose Hall, . Lake avenue and Emory street.

American Legion Post, No. 24. Meets first and tWrd Monday at the American Legion Home, 509 Sewall avenue. Executive Committee second aitd fourth ; Tuesday, ' Commander, Dr. W. F. Jamison; Adjutant, Vance Jefferis. Auxiliary meets second and fourth Monday. Mrs. Thomas J. White, President.

B. Mi Hartshorn Camp and Auxili­ary, United Spanish War Veterans. Meet second Monday every month, Library Hall, Asuury Park. John Fitzgerald, Secretary, Wanamassa.

P A G E - T H B E B j l

McCARTY OPPOSES

GAME COMMISSION

HIMSELF A MEMBER, WOULD

ABOLISH OWN JOB./-.

QUIET YOURn m m - a - , .- Iff

.— Alice Fischer (picture ‘above) says she is "the hap­

piest woman, in the world,”' “I often used to urfsfe 1 ■

was dead. Coulcln't sleep; couldn’t enjoy myself. It seems as though I had tiled every nerve medicine made, but, without any benefit un­til I tried Dr. Miles’ Efier- * uescertf Nervine Tablets, They certainly proued tfieir , worth for me. I am th&.hap- piest woman in the world and I don't mean maybe."

• Mrs.. Alice. Fischer» « « • Neirrona, SlMpleu, Crmnkr,

w .w •“ « Headache.Nenrom Indlic illon,. take Dr. Mila' Effervescent Ner*iuirTablets;

Lost 20 Lbs. of Fat In Just 4 Weeks

Mrs. Mao-West pf St. Louis, Mo., •writes: “I ’m only 28 yrs. old and weighed 170 lbs. until taking ono box of your Kruschen Salts just’4 weeks ago. I . now weigh, 160 lbs. I also have more energy and further­more I ’ve, nover had a hungry mo­ment."

Fat folks should take one half tea­spoonful of;Kruschen Salts in a glasa of hot water in the morning before breakfaat—it’s the SAFE, harmless way to reduce as tens of thousands of men and women know. ., :

For your health’s sake ask for and get Kruschen at any drugstore—tha cost for a bottle that lasts 4 weeks is but Q trifle, nnd if after the first .bottle you aro not joyfully satisfied with results—-monoy bock, i-

Newfield Farmer Appeals to Sports-

: men. .More Game can bo Developed

at Less Cost if Albright Bill is

: Passed Consolidating Departments.

George S. McCarty, of Newfteld, N. J., a-member of the New Jersey Fish and Game Commission, is certainly frank in saying just what. he thinks of - the commission of which he is a member.' In a letter to the Times on Februaryi 18, he writes:

“The present fish and game com­missioners have spent a lot ,|of the sportsmen’s lidanao money to keep themselves in 'non-salaried jobs. It ’s about time the sportsmen of the State'ask them why they are so de­sirous of holding these non-salaried jobs. ■'■' ' ' ' ■ ■ v .-

“Mr. McCarty says that he is 100 per cent, for Senator Albright’s bill No. 105 which consolidates the-Fish and Game Commission with the Board of Conservation and Develop­ment. Continuing, he writes:

'“Bf this' bill is passed, within three lyears New Jersey can be made a real game State, and it will be done. Fifty thousand pheasants can be produced by our farmer boys at the same cost as 12,000 under the present State game farm system. Forty thousand rab­bits can in the same way be had for th cost of 20,000 imported from the West. A farmersportsman program can be put in operation at once that will open up. to guuners thousands of acres now posted, and at the same time give the farmer something in return for the use of his land.

“Forty fire wardens can be . used as game wardens, which will, supple­ment our regular wardoii force. The 305 deputy fire wardens can also act to protect game.

“This is ithe best opportunity the sportsmen of. New Jersey have ever had to reorganize their game depart­ment and1 set up a fish and game gov- erniiilent that will be a model for every State to follow..“Every gum club and every other sportsmen’s organization s,hould pass resolutions endorsing this bill and send them to their Stato Senator, also to Senator Kuser, chairman of the Senate Committee on Economy and Reorganization.”

No More Rats or Mice After You Use Bestyet.

It’s a sure rodent killer. Try a package and prove it. Rats killed 'Owith Bestyet leave no smell. Cats and dogs will not touch it. Guaranteed, Fifty cents for large box; and it is ready to use just the way you get it. Don’t take out word for this. Try a package aiid, if you are riot more' than satis­fied, we will refund the money. Sold arid guaranteed by

. Angles & Smith, Ocean Grove. ; Howard C. Hulse, Neptune. • Berger Hardware. Co., Neptune.

—Adv. 21. V

TO NEW YORKBy DE LUXE

M OTOR COACHHeck Street and Lake Avenue

MONMOUTH GARAGE; Leave Asbury Park

10.00 A. M.-j . 6.00 P. M. , '

Leave N. Y., _ Capitol-Greyhound Terminal, 51st St. and Broadway

9.00 A. M.6.30 P. M.

Asbmy Park-New York Transit Corp.

Operated by Rollo Transit. Telephone Asbury Park 339

M A IL S C H E D U L EEffective Horemer 17, J988

SCHEDULE OP T H E AB B IT A t* AND

• DEPAH TU BE OF M A ILS Ocean Grorc, IT, J . '

H A ILS CLOSE F O tt Now York—8.00, 10.46 a . : m.t 1.06, 8.50

0.23 p. m.Now York und W ay S ta tion .—8.09 a.

I«., 8.50, 0.33 p. m , 1 Newark, N . J .—8.00, 10,45 a. m., 1.05,

3.50, 0J3 p, m. .. I ’ tlladelplifa, p o.-^8.09, 10.45 a. m., 3.1ft, 0.50, 0,83 p, m.

Tronton, N . 1 ^8 .00 , 10.46 a . m., 8.10,5.50, 0.23 p. m. - .. Prooliolil, N . J .—8.00, 10.46 a . in., 0.10,

0.50, 0.83 p .m . •Koil Bank, N . J .—8.00 a. m ., B.6», 0,23 W. i ’

„ Loner B rand !, jr . J .—8.00 a. in., ».C0, 0.33 p. m, •

Point Pleasant aha W ay Stations— 0.38 a. ni„ 5.44 p. m.

^ Aslmry rn rk , N. J .—8.00 a. m ., 1.05, 0.38

M A IM A JtttlV B FK O M

,0'S0 “• * *

S ^ ? ^ ! ' 0"6- 8'30' 10'2°Plillndolphln, l'n.— OJO, 10.20, 11,00 o'.

m.,, 6.00 p. m.j .— 8.»0, 10.20 a . M „ 1.25,

2.50, .3.50, 0.30 p. m . .„ Tronton, N , J.— 0.30, 11,00 n . ta—3,50. 0.30 p. m . ' .

Ijonif Branch, Jf. I __ 0.30, 10.20 n.3.50, 0.30 p. m.

Hod Hank, N . J .—0.30, 10.30 d. m., 3.50, 0.30 p. m.. FKoholil, N . j ,— 0,30, 10,20, 11,00 n.6.30 p . m . , • . . . ;* _ \ ,.

ToJnt p leasant and W ay Stations—S,50 ft. to,, 4.40 p.m . . 1

Asburjr P a r t , it. C.30, 8.C0- a* ro., 1.80 u.30 p. m« .

A ir Mulls Close a t PostoBlco For Clilcnero, Ill^-g.oo n. m ., 1.05, 0.23 p. m. fo s Angelos, Col.—0.33 p. m .JloHlon, Miihh.— fl.33 .p.- In,srinml. F in__1.05, 0.23 p. m.St; elcsbnrif, p it;— B.ss p. m .

JO S E P H ' ItAIJfEAB,'Postmaster.

The standard of the “PERFECT” Richardson & Boyton Range is satis­faction to you—thc satisfaction that comes from food well cookcd, ' from the constant assurance of a servant that neyer fails.

ANGLES § SMITHPlumbing

Tinning land Heating

Hardware■ Paints and Oils.

51 Main AvenueOCEAN GROVE, N, J.

Telephone 4741

N E W A R K o r $ 4 Hound

N E W Y O R K J . T r i p

SUNDAY, F E B R U A E V . 26(U Loaves Ocean, Grove-Asbury Piirk

. 8.37 A .

W E D N E S B A Y r M A B C H ’is t ' ’ Leaves Ocean Grove-Asbury Park

8.30 A. M . ■:• RoturninB' tickets good on any New Jersey Central train , except the B lue Comot, on date of sale. Con-

- su it ticket agents to r leaving times from stations riot shown in . this advertisement, and additiona l in- ., formation. O ther excursions bn Sunday, March 12th, and 'Wednes­day, March . 15th. ’

New Jersey Central

| ROOFING CONTRACTOR |

rr 69 South Main St., Asbury Paris |

.o Phone: 1377 ||-Rc-tooflng Over Old Shingles |

SianiuiiiiuiniuniinuiinkuaiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiininaiiiqiS:

£--Vv«Y,v:;’fe

| W ilbur R. Guyer f! Successor to |

| WILLIAM YOUNG |

I PLUMBING AND |

I HEATING 11 Estimates Given «

1 64 Main Avenue, Ocean Grove |

1 Telephone 428 |

i;i«ii«iiii:iiii»riiiiiiii!iiiii»iiifiiaiiaiiiaaiiiH«iiaiiiiiBUiiiiiii§

LEGAL NOTICES LEGAL NOTICES

LEGAL NOTICES

S H E R IF F ’S SA liE .—By virtue ot a w rit o t ft. fa. to me directed,-issued out of the Court of Chancery o f the State of New ;Jeraoy, w ill be exposed to sale a t public ’ vendue on Monday,' th e ; 20 th day of March, 2033.-between the hburs of 12 o*elock.and 5 o clock ( a t , 2 o’clock) in the afternoon of said day, a t tho Court House In /the Borough of FreeholQ, ^County or M onm outh. New Jersey, to satisfy a 4©- cree of said court am ounting to approxi­mate ly . $5,927.00... V.: "... ‘'■/'■'"'i-

A ll the follow ing trac t • o r parcel: o f land •! and premises hereinafter • partVcu- larty described, situate; ly ing .,ahd being in .the Township o f Neptune, in the County of Monmouth and State o f Nevr;

■Jersey, kiiown and designated as. lot ’No- One hundred twenty-one; • •; on the North side of M ount Tabor W ay, on tho m ap1 o f lots of camp ground of tho Ocean Grove Camp Meeting Association .of the : Methodist lsplacopal Church, w ith a ll a nd . s ingular tho premises therein mentioned and described and the bu ildings thereon, together w ith tho appurtenances. .' Being tho samo premises demised and le t to H . li. Foote by said Ocean. Grqvo c am p Meeting Association; by lease dated September-30, 1S8U,: and recorded In the M onm outh County Clerk’s Office, in B ook . -4U o f Deeds, page *165, and b y several mesne assignments o f ioase assigned, transferred and set over to Ernest Taylor- a n d C la ra . V , Taylor, his wife, by E liz a ­beth McCulloy and W illiam McCullQy, her, husband, by assignment o f lease datod Juno 14, 1923, and recorded In tho Won* m outh County Clerk's Ofllco in Book 1$24 o t peeds. page 188.,■ r.*And, also,* a ll tho estate, right, tltlo. Interest, term of. years. yot to cotno and Innoxplred,: property, possession,' y lajm

TOWNSHIP OF NEPTUNE—BUDGET NOTICENotice ,is hereby giyen that^tho follow ing local budget and tax ordinance was

approved by the: Township. Committee, of the Township of Neptune, C ounty-of Monmouth, ,on February 21, 1933. A hearing on the budget and tax ordinance w ill be held a t 101 South M ain street, Neptune. N . J ., on Tuesday. M arch 7, .1933, a t •’M; 7.30 o'clock p. m ., a t which time and place objections to said budget and tax .'1: ordinance of the Township of Neptune for tho year 1933' may be presented by any taxpayer o f said Township o f Nieptune.

Local budget o f Township o f Neptune. County of Monmouth, for the fiscal year 1933. • • ■

• This h tu ^e t shall also. Constitute the - tax ordinance. Zifj

't A N O R D IN A N C E R fitjA T IN G TO T AX ES-FO R T H E Y E A R 1933. ;\ Be it ordained by the Township. Committee o f the Township of Neptune, County;

o f Moninouth, th a t there shall be- assessed, raised5 by taxation and collected fo r : the year 1933, the sum of One Hundred Fifty-Five Thousand Nine Hundred Sixteen; Jv- Dollars and Seventy Cents ($105,910.70) for the purpose of meeting the appropria- . tions set forth in the following statement of resources and appropriations for the : ilscal year 1933. 1 *:

BUDGET— 1933

Am ount of Surplus Rovenuo $27,351.18. (Estimated.) . -

A N T IC IPA T ED R E V EN U ES■ Licenses . ;. ...iv ';V .»V i< i-. i c.V. i

Fines and Penalties . . . . . . . . . . .v . . . • . , . . . . . .Fees, and PermltB . . . . . . . . i , , : . . . . .Interest and * Costs . . . . . . . y. . . . . . . . . .V..Franchise ; Tax . . . . . . . . . . . . . .% . . . . . . . . ; ......... ........

•Gross Receipts Tax I . ; . . , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .v . ; . /Poll. Taxes . . . . . . . ..........:Bus Gross. Receipts ........: ^Motor Fue l Tax ....................................... .... . > ■ *........ ■'Searches . . .............................. .............. ..........................Sale of Garbage '.*•........................ .........................................

Am ount to be raised by taxation . . . . . . . . . . > . . . . . . . . . .

, Total Resources

A PPRO PR IA T IO N SGeneral. Government.:

Adm inistrative and Executive; . 1 *Advertising of . Advantages -----Election^ v . i . . . i . . . . . . . . . . . . .Parks arid Municipal B uild ing . . . . . . . .Insurance . , . ; . ; . . . . . . . , ; . , . . . . . . .Assessment and Collection o f Taxes Foreclosure Cost and Collection, of Delinquent Tax.L ibrary ; . . ; ; . . . . . . . ,In terest on Current Loans ........D iscount for Prepayment of Taxes . . . . , . . . . . . .S ...’• Ci vie ; Observance ... IV* i-p...Police; . . . . * ............: . ' . . . . . . . . . .Repair and Im provem ent'o f Streets .... ... .............. .

, Engineer . . . . . i . ; . . . j L igh ting of Streets . . . . . -.> >.... i . . . . . iGarbage and Refuse Removal • . . . . . v. . ; . . . . r'.v.v

.. Contingent- v . ; . r , . ; . .H ea lth and Charities; - .

Health: - . ; . . . vM,!. ' . . v . .;V ....

Debt Service J ;Paym ent of Bonds ................. . v .

. Paym ent o f Capital Notes (3% App, Temp. Notes)...Interest on: Bonds ...... ..................................................In terest on Capital, Notes . ........... ................;. ;V ...Interest on Sidewalk and • Curb Notes .. . , . . . . . : . . . . . . . .

M andatory Item s:. . , .. ’ • vOver Expenditures 1930 . . . . . . ■ . . .Over Expenitures 1931 ................................................. .Interest Deficiency Note Emergency Appropriation.Unexpended Balances . Deficit, 1 9 3 0 , i .. . . .Unexpended Balances Deficit, 1931 . . . . ....Unexpended Balances Deficit, 1932,Taxes Cancelled, 1930 (More than three years old)>..Taxes CanceUed, 1931 (More than .Ufciian iicura old) v. >Taxes Cancelled, 1932 (More than three years o ld ) . . :P rio r Years' B ills . . . . . . . ; ; ; --- . . . . . . „

* Over Expended, Reser^'e -for 1930 Bills . . . . --Sundrv Accov»nts Receivable— Uncollectible Township’s Share of Assessments (Schools) . . . . . . . . .Ahsqssments Refunded and Cancelled ........... .Deficit, Miscellanoovis Revenues A n t i c i p a t e d ..........D ue from Emergency Relief Division--................ .—

. ' V- Total Appropriations .... 4. . . . * . . . . . . . . . . . . :... ___________ ___________

This Ordinance shnli take effect as provided, by ;law, ; . .Approved February 21,' 1933. .

• . R A Y M O N D R . o n ACE Y. Chairman.;;/^A ttes t: John \V. Knox,.C lerk. •,

1933 1932 •% . 6,000.00 $ 6,000.00

1,000.09 1,000.00 •600.00 . 1,200.00

14,500.00 20,000.00 /16,000.00 24,000.008,000.00 8,000.00

None • ' None -;';1,000.00' 600.00;

12,476.00 12.434.i0r f: :400<00 7oo;oo v'; .400.00 400.00 .

% 59,375.00 i 74,324.49 - -V155,916.70 ^149,973.60 . , '

$216,291.70 ♦224,308.15 iii

$ 16,170.00 ‘ «. $.10,000.00'.:. 3,500.00 6,000,00 . v-

600.00 ", 500.00600.00 . 100.00 •

4,400.00 3,800.00 •8,300.00 9,500.00 -v;1,000.00 2,600.00

500.00 500.00 ;. 32,224.00 24,300.00 : •

3,000.00 , None'v,.-. 125.00 200.00

46,660.00 ; 55,600.0016,600.00 ; 20,000.00

250.00 ■ , 250.00 n. 8,b00.00 11,000,00 >,14,000,00 10,000.00 V• 100.00 100.00-

■ 3,800.00 4,800.00 13>500.00 3,600.00 ^

8,000.00 8,000 00 : V6,000.00 •5,000.00 *

! 8,800.00 9,200.004,000.00 4.0Q0.QQ V :

' 4,200.00 . 4,200.00-

. . None ' S.lV V;None 33.30.:;.-:None 9,700.00■None • 960.38 •391,22 1*817.04 -

4,000,00. >None. =':•None 1,881.81None 677,30 :i551.56 ■ •• '‘’'None327.89. ‘ ' 646.75, >’None • 107.46x1

. 10.00 '•■• -N.of^i• Nono ■ ‘ 897.72 -

117.8R ' 022.2015,f,00.00 None :1,264.15 • ' 'Nono -di

$215,291.70 $224,308.15

anil demand, wlmtsocvor, (is 'V«ll In law as In equity of tho said party of tlio Him part, In and to the stilcl,,demised, pjoml- s{jq and overy p a rt and parcel thereof, w ith the appurtenancoH.-. Arid also tlio. said Itidentura of lease and -every clause, article and ‘ conditiontherein'Expressed.* and- contained, to naveand to hold the sa id indenture of lease arid other hereby granted premises, unto the said party of the second part, their executors,1 adm inistrators and assigns, to them and their only proper use,, benefit and behoof for and during a ll the rest, residue and remainder of the said term nf years yet to come and unexpired.. Sub­ject. nevertheless, to tho rents, covenants, conditions and provisions in the said in­denture of lease mentioned. ■

. Being also the same premises .dul> nsstend, transferred and set ,thcrsaid E m es t Taylor and C lara V . Taylor, his wife, by: E lizabeth McCulley and WU-. Ham McCulley, her husband, by a cor­rective assignment of lease bearing oven date herewith and, to be recorded here-

W Seized as the property of Ernest. Tay­lor, et.- als., taken in execution a t tho suit of DHiie F . A nde r^n . et. aK, Execu­tors and Trustees of WVMam S. BroW^i deceased, arid to, be; sold by _ „

H O W A R D H E IG H T , Sheriff.Dated February I f . 1933.Andrew J . Conover, Solicitor. _ ■

(73 lines) 8-11. 132.70

IN CH A N CERY OF N E W JE R S E Y .

TO L IL L IA N I. W O L T E R and her un ­known heirs, devisees r and personal representatives,1 • and :JUrs. John it.

. W o lte r ,: wlfo of John B i W o lte r ,. or in > the alternative, Jan e Doaj, said last-.

mentioned name' • being flwitious, and- being Intended, to designate the wife

of John R . W o lte r i • 'B y virtue of a certain. Order of tho

Court of C hancery of .New Jersey, made on Janua ry 2C, 1933, in a cause wherein Russell V . Dow ning Is complainant, and John R . W olter, et. als., are defendants, you are required to appear and answer the B1U ot C om plalnt therein, on._or before March 27, next, or the said B ill w ill be taken as confessed agaist you.

The said B ill Is filed to foreclose a , cer­tain mortgage made by Lillian; I . W olter and John R . W olter to E d ith Vincent, bearing date March 12, 1929. and em­bracing lands and premises situate in the Township of Neptune, Monmouth Coun­ty, New Jersey, and which m ortgagors recorded in .Book 902 of Mortgages for Monmouth County, on pages. 187, etc.^ which mortgage has been assigned^to tnq .complainant; and you, L illia n L Wolter, and your unknown heirs, devisees and personal representatives; j are 'm ad e , de­fendants because you are tlie owners, or possfess an Interest in- the said premises sought to be foreclosed,, and described in said R i l l : w . .

And you, Mrs. John R . Wolter, wlfo of John R . W olter, or In the alternative, Jane Doe, said last-mentioned mype being fictitious, and being Intended- to. designate. the wife of John R . Wolter, are made a defendant because you are the w ife o f Jo hn R . Wolter, and th e 1 owner, or- have an interest in the said mortgage, sought to bei foreclosed.

Dated, Janua ry 30. 1933. - •SA M U EL J . R IC H ,

’ - ' ! Solicitor o f Complainant, “ “V- . 810 B road Street,j-5-9 ; \ -r • >.;. Newark,vN , J . -

S H E R IF F ’S” ” S A L E ^ B y v i r t u o ^ o f ^ w rit of fi. fa . to mo directed; issued out of, the Court of Chancery of the State of New Jersey, w ill be exposed to., sale a t publid; vendue, on Monday, the 27th -day of February, 1933, between tlie hours of ,12 o’clock a n d fi o ’clock (a t 2 o'clock) In the afternoon of said day, a t the' Court

• House i n t h e Borough of Freehold, County o f jMonmouth. New Jersey, to satisfy a decree of said court am ounting to approximately $2,765.00. , . '

I n the first place, eleven ■ shares o f the 71st series o f shares o f the cap ital stock of the Asbury P a rk B u ild ing arid Loan* Association, assigned and transferred to said AscsOciatlon by the defendant E liza ­beth Tyler; and

In . tho second .place, - a ll “th a t certain lot, trac t o r parcel of land and premises, hereinafter p a tlcu la r ly " described, eltuate, lying a nd being in the Township of. Nep­tune, In the-. County , o f . Monmohth and « State* o f New JerseYt known a nd desig­nated as L o t No. G on a certain m ap en­titled “M ap o f Lots a t W est Asbury P a rk Mon. Co. N . J .,” mado by N la r t Rogers, C. 13., August 20, 1909, show ing a ro3ub- dlvision o f lots, Soctlon No. 2, W est Aa- bury Park . Said lo t Is moro particu­larly described as fo llows: vj.V* B eginn ing a t: a p o in t In tho easterly lino o f A tkins Avonuo distant twenty- n ine feet a n d eleven inches tiorth- erly .from tho northeast corner o t. A tk ina

Avenue and Em bury Av'enuef-extending V.. thence (I) easterly . parallel w ith tho northerly lino of Em bury Avenuo ninety- ! seven, feet and eleven inches (97.11) to a » point;* thence (2) northerly twenty-seven . •feet ten and one-quarter inches (27 R H i) ' to a point distant, nlnety-olght feet arid nine Inches (9S 9) easterly from tho east­erly line of A tkins Avenue on a line paralle l w ith tho northerly lino o f E m ­bury Avenue: thence (3) westerly par­allel w ith tho northerly line o f Em bury Avenuo ninety-eight feet and nine inches (98 9) to-a point in tho easterly lino o f - Atkins Avenuo: thenco (4) southerly. .• along tho easterly lino of A tkins Avenue vi> twenty-eight feet (28) to tho point or place of beginning.

Being the same premises convoyed* to tho said E lizabeth Tyler by Patsy Scnllo and Jenn'lo Scallo. his wife, by deed dated. ' November 24, 1925, and recorded; In the .^ '; Monmouth County Clerk's Office In ^gook '1329 of Deeds, page 332 etc.

Seized as tho property o f E lizabeth Tyler, e t als., taken in execution a t tho su it of Asbury Park B uild ing and Loan. Association, body corporate, and to bo sold by

H O W A R D H E IG H T , Sherllt Dated Janua ry 23, 1&33.Durand Iv ins & Carton, Solicitors. ,

—5-8 (128.14)

S H E R IF F ’S SA LE—B y virtue of a w rit • of 11. fa. to me directed, issued out of tho Court ot Chancery of tho Stato of New Jersey, w ill be exposed to salo a t public venduo on M ON DAY , T H E 27th D A Y O F

F E B R U A R Y , M M , i ;botween the hours of 13 o’clock and ‘ C o’clock (a t 2 o’clock) In tho afternoon of • said day, a t tho Court House in the Bor- , ough of Freehold, County of Monmouth.' : New Jersey, to eatlsfy a docreo o f aa id '. court am ounting to approximately. $16,- •;* 610.00. • . . ■ ; . •

A ll the follow ing ;tract or parcel o f la n d > V and prernises hereinafter particularly, de- : B cribed , situate, ly ing and being In th e ' ^ Township of Neptune, In tho County o f . ;! Monmocth arid State of New Jersey, known - and designated as L o t Number ninety-three . (9.3) on tho north side of Main Avenue Qn: M ap o f Lota o f the Camp; / . : Ground of The Ocean Grovo Camp Meet- ing Association of .the M ethodist Eplsco- pal Church. . • • ' •;= \j

Also a certain . Indenture • o f I«ease fo r Hr said premises made by the sa id Ocean's ;^ Grove Camp. Meeting Association TuiJto one Jerem iah Lyford dated M ay 15, 1873, arid . recorded- In the VMonmouth County- Clerk's Office in Book. 304 o f Deeds, p a g o ' •%’ 294, and by : subsequent- mesne assign-;.;,,'-^ menta, assigned; transferred and set oVer ■ unto tho said Edw ard S. Hammell- a n d ^ :’-> A nna Bi H am m e lL h is w ife, by Carolyn K . Rem ig, single, by.^asslgnment o f leaso dated February 3rd, 1931, and recorded ; ^ lei. the Monmouth- County Clerk's Office in ' ;-; Book 1549 o f Deeds, page 200, In so fa r aa said lease, affects Lo t No. ,93 as above; .,4 described. . .. . ;;. • . •. -• .;• '-v'*-<■.: :■>.:* :v

Together w ith a ll a nd s ingu lar ' thb.' v-.': promises mentioned and described In sa id v -'V.f:

, Indenture o f Lease . and the thereon,'w ith the. appurtenances, arid: tho hr* term of years therein mentioned, yet to como and unoxpired. W ith: tho privilege. - of renewals for a yko term ’o f years for­ever. ,. . .' • •>; x-i

Subject, nevertheless, ^to tho rents, covenants, conditions and provisions in >'•’ said Indenture o f Lcaso mentioned. .

Seised as the property of Edw ard 8. -. Ham m ell, et. a ls., taken in execution a t the su it o f P itney C. Havens and to bo V; sold by . •-*; \

H O W A R D H E IG H T , Sheriff. ; :.- Datod, Janua ry 21, 1933. - Edw in P. Longslreet, Solicitor. -‘V ; . -v

-5-8 ($22.68) . A-

Notico of Sale.

To Betram Lo V e in : . 1 j£:On Monday, March *6. 1933, a t 10 o’c lofk -

in tho forenoon, I w ill sell ono M arm onJ^;' Coupe,' 1930, Serial No. 1741588: Motor No. S?288i; for storage owing $90.00 to ;; Charles H . Tate’s- G arage ,-under the Garage L ien Ac t o f - New- Jersey; ■ att Tate’s > ‘

' Garage, 1001 F irs t Avenue/ Asbury^Parlrt- >.\' *■:" *" •-1 %: <.‘-t-.•;-

^ R u th J . Tato,*. :A ttorney l u . F a c t fo r T&te’a *;.v.

s-d ■ .* Notice of Sale* •-

To. Ja rv ld b . ’ A r r in g to n : !-, . Taka notica on Monday, K a re n

a t 10 o’clock In ; tho,- fohm oon.. I--'WUl r . „ one Dodge Truck, 'Serial No. 8954. r M o to f >

Page 4: IPCAL TEIM^f MAKJES DEBUT BUDGET FURTHER …ist Contributes “The May Day Mystery,” Considered one of the Best of his Longer Tales, ior Times Readers. The Times, has secured, the

1‘v*$5«» Wu;''«t)'«! aJ".:

l;- m ^m :'’ f'--

P A G E FOUfe

FOUNDED 1882 WEEKLY EDITION

THE OCEAN GROVE TIMESPublished F riday - , • : .

HOMER D. KRESGE, Editor ind'Publfahcr FORTY-EIGHT MAIN AVENUE, OCEAN GROVE, NEW JERSEY

' ' , . Telephone 7

! ~ D O N A LD M. L E L A N P . Local Editor

SU B SC R IPT IO N S : $1.50 yearly; $1.00 sem i-annpally: 50c. quarterly or 4c. and '"postage per copy, postage pa id In tho United States; Canada $2.00 and foreign $2.50 a year. ' • . , , , « •

A D D RE SSE S changed on request—always give lormor address. . ... .A D V E R T ISE M EN T S : Rates w ill bo furnished by us upon ronuest. .

W A T C H T H E L A B E L ON Y O U R P A P E R F O R T H E E X P IR A T IO N O F — , YOU R SU B SC RIPT IO N

Entered assecond-class m a il a t the Ocean Grove posloftlce.

T H E T RU TH IN IT S P R O P E R PL A C E -

Hoover’s Farewell Address. upon the call. “Withal, it is

. Republicans here eagerly >'« an humble frame of mind awaited Mr. Hoover’s Lincoln that, the drys gather. They Day address before the Na- are themselves largely respon- tional Republican Club in New sihle for their recent defeats. York in which it was rumored While they slept the enemy that he might let fall some ■ waste their fields. They hint regarding his future politi­cal course. Instead Mr. Hoover sounded two keynotes only in his brief address, which will be his last major utterance during his presidency and as such significant: it is notable, first, that he called upon his defeated party to put aside partisan polities and cooperate with their opponents in prob­lems involving .public welfare and, second, that he urged his country’s aid in making possi­ble a world return to, the-gold basis.

Comment here is to the effect that the address with its sound suggestions for the averting' of domestic, as well as world-wide catastrophe, is a continuation of the policy which has distinguished his entire public career—a -/ear­less analysis of a critical situation, the offer of a sane solution, all conceived in a' selfless desire for the utmost benefit to the public at large.

The President’s forecast that the American people will recall his party to power and that this will be accomplished largely through the youth of the nation was probably a ■significant comment on the re­cently organized National Re­publican League headed by Vice President Curtis.

There is an element of sad-

aro not so much disposed to reproach those who have been their friends in past years but have bowed to, the fury of hos­tile-assault.- They, are rather prepared to pledge better things for the future.” Speak­ing of the representatives of the brewers, Dr. j Wilson adds: “Nothing further is iheard of the prevention of the return of the saloon.”

P H

. - .

doing more than your cbriipetr- tors or predecessor ; that has pushed countless meji into high places., Think of that,, you young fellows? who wonder why you don’t get ahead!'

LOCAL EDUCATORS

ATTEND CONFERENCE

t f i i p p M l

A.^ERIDA'if; 'FEBRUARY -24 :iC33

O. J. MOULTON SPEAKER AT

STATE GATHERING, NEWARK

“My W ork is Done.”

A letter from the late Calvin Coolidge, written a few days before he died, was recently made public by Edward T. Clarkj an. intimate attache of the late ex-president at the White House. In this letter Mr. Coolidge said, among other things, “my work is done,” and “I feel worn ,out” He asked this friend to discourage all talk of running him for presi­dent in 1936. »

The American people have worried a gOod deal in former years for fear some president would become such a power that he would want to serve a third term, and perhaps be­come almost a dictator. But the histoyy of presidents shows that like Mr. Coolidge, they are pretty .well worn out after two terms. If the duties of this office keep piling up, one term will be enough to crush therjl. We must not drive our

ness in the close °f President ■ . . ,— j ~ 1 i . 1*1 CulUCilLkj tU - vllwll LclbiVu bU

'Hoover s term, which even his , ,. .• political opponents will admit.They will acknowledge that at least his administration has been scrupulously honest, arid that while the country still!

Members of Local School. Board: Also'

. Hear Discussion of Finances. Un­

likely that Neptune Will Change

Fiscal SchoolYear.

* Financial problems, of the New Jersey schools was the subject of the discussion lit the educational confer­ence held . in Newark on Tuesday., The local school district was repre­sented by Supervising Principal Onsville J. •Jl'oulton, Mrs. Anna T. Dey, John Stout and Roland G. Reighton, of the board of education, and member-elect Irving Crabiel.

At the afternoon session Principal Moulton was one of the speakers. He described the steps that have been taken to meet the emergency here and told of our. system of scrip payments in detail. Dr. Charles H. Elliott, commissioner of education, presided, and the principal speaker was Pro­fessor Harley L. Lutz, professor of public finance at Princeton, who dis­cussed the financing of public schools... The new law permitting school dis­tricts to end their fiscal year Decem­ber 31, the. same as municipalities and counties, will undoubtedly come up at tonight’s meeting of the Nep­tune township board of education. Judging by the unofficial comment of board members there is little enthusi­asm foe .the change which is not com­pulsory If the local board were to leopen its budget and faise money only for the six months period ending December .31, 1933, it would be in the postion of having no funds to oper­ate for the balance of the .school year and-would be compelled to borrow, which would be next to impossible, or again issue scrip. The present fiscal year, which runs from July, to July and for which the budget has already been passed, will probably remain unchanged.

Will Rogers Picks A Story For This Spot

By WILL BOGERS

TTHE most embarrassing thing ; for an honest guv. I suppose, is to be suspected when he ain’t guilty, and I reckon that does some­times happen. For. instance, a fel-

» s s l i ! I P P

low was telling me about a young man that took his girl out riding, away out in the, country. Well,'the girl thought he was an awful nice young man, and it was a fact,— he was awful nice. Bo this here girl was terrible surprised when this young man pulled up in a lone­ly place, since it was late at night. The young man just kept his hands on the wheel, and he looked kinda scared or troubled: she couldn’t tell exactly which, because it was pretty dark. .

“Well," says the young lady, “I , gues I can get out and walk Some!’'

“I ’m ’dam glad to hear that," says he, “since I just discovered that we’re out of gas and some­body’s got to help me push the car along.”

Axurfctn Nrwi Xfeatani, Inc.

it was given to the present owner by his grandmother, Clara S. Dale, daughter of Conrad and JoannaAndress. ! . ’ : •'• -j .

WOODRING TO RUN TURNER’S

that such election comes near being a death sentence.

Advertise or Quit. „■

■ “If I- did not feel I could af-

! f0?'f t0 af^ertise^my business,” pressibn, /he has labored un- >“ ld a f lesman the other day tiringly and done his best to ‘ I would simply quit. l eant restore prosperity. ' , see how anybody, can expect

Whether faulty policies of to make a. real success m any hi?; prolonged ,the depression,' kind of business today, unless or whether the country will *e- lets people know what he

come around in time to his *as to 'sel1’ an/ ^ theJ economic views, are issues that havAe ^ PayfoJ SO°ds.” will be-long debated. Noth- Ambition and advertising go ing is, gained by going into together People are keenly them now. The country will an*lous Jnow what goods be grateful to Mr. Hoover for !wh^ e ^ can getall his effort, and it wishes him best for least; money.rest and refreshment from his A co" cf n that, af1vertlses arduous labors. The presi- somewhat persistently, ,s dency takes a. teriffic toll from ^ounf t o Public attention,

a man’s strength, which all of f e°Ple * * * / lts ™*!ccs wlthus sincerely regret. Any man' keen interest, and they come

who has ever held that office -I" to see those gooth*. And ifthey see them, and they aregood goods, they will buy.

has acquired a vast fund of in­formation and experience, and . , .. . . . . the country will always listen Advertising opens the door to

respectfully to his views.larger trade, and if a concern can enlarge its trade, it is its own fault if it fails to go

Call To Temperance. ahead.A nation-wide.call has been -- — —

issued by the temperance Postmaster to President.• forces for a conference to .be The little- town of West

held in Calvary Baptist church, Salem, 111., ihas just celebrated...- Washington, D. C., on March - the 100th anniversary of the' f|>.7 and 8. This will probably, appointment of Abraham Lin- jr be one of the most important coin to be postmaster of their ^gatherings of temperance lead- b u rg .H e took the: place Of

<i;jers in a decade. The charge some old ,timer who was con- ;:>is made in the call that “legis- sidered to. have neglected his : lation is being proposed not to work. Young Abe was so de*- serye the interests of temper- terminned to make good, that

• arice but to afford the greatest he put letters in his funny old Si-possible facilities .for the hat, and1 carried them around | manufacture and. distribution to the scattered homes of the 3 of intoxicants.” j neighborhood.i Clarence True Wilson, gen-1 That was the extra touch /; eral secretary o f the Board of . that igave him his start. .. He i Temperance o f the Methodist; was determined to do more

I St. Paiil’sChurch Notesf

Mr. Raymond Bartlett, director, and Mrs. Dorothy Gravatt Winter- stella, organist, have arranged the following program of music for next Sunday. In the morning: prelude,Simple Aven;" by Thome; anthem

by the Junior Choir; offertory, “Le Cygnc,’1 by Saint-Saens; anthem, "In Exile Here We Wander,” by Hosmer; postlude selected.- In the evening: prelude, "The-Lost Chord,” by Sulli­van; antherii, “Hear My Cry, O God,” by Kopyloff; offertory, “Songs My Mother Taught Me,” by Dvorak; duet, “Love Divine,” by , Stainer, Henrietta and Raymond Bartlett; postlude, selected.

The pastor, Dr. H. P. Fox, will preach next Sunday morning, on the subject, “Standing Fast,” and in the evening his sermon topic will be “Laws That Can Not Be Repealed.”

The Church School is held Sundays at 9.30 a.: m.; The Assembly Bible Classj at 2.30 p: m.; The Young Peo­ple’s Service, at 6.30 p. m.

The morning, service begins at II, o'clock and the evening service at 7.30 o’clock.

The midweek prayer service is held Wednesdays at 730 p. m.

The public is cordially invited to attend these services.

OWNS CENTURY-OLD, WATCH

Will . Open Modern Cafeteria in

Asbury P^rk.

Morris Woodring, proprietor of the Grand Atlantic, is planning to open

cafeteria on or about May 1 on Cookman avenue near Kingsley street, on the premises formerly oc­cupied by TurSer's Grill. Due large­ly to, popular demand from numer­ous friends and customers -who have urged him to open a cafeteria in As­bury Park along the same lines as tlie Grand Atlantic, Woodring has taken over the old Turner place and expects to open up a modern up-to- the-minute establishment - operating on the same plan as the Grove cafe­teria, which has been catering to summer visitors, for. years , arid is widely known throughout the State.

The proprietor of the new estab­lishment said that the game service and the same high quality of food, served in as fine a style as that at the Grand Atlamtic in past years will be ttoe goal of the new establishment.

Woodring, who has been succeess- fully engaged iri the cafeteria busi­ness here for many years took over the reins of the Grand Atlantic and Has since built up a reputation along the shore for his fine meals and hon­est dealings. . 1

Shore Hardware Club at Ansonia.

The Shore Hardware Club held their monthly meeting and dinner at the Ansonia restaurant, Asbury Park, on Thursday, February iii. Mrs. S. M. French, who operates the Sterling cafeteria in the Grove, in, the sum­mer, is the new. manager of the An­sonia restaurant.

ONE GENT A WORDHEADLINE 10 CENTS

MINIMUM 25 CENTS. CASH TO ACCOMPANY THE ORDER

WANTED—Heated, apartment by widow, unfurnished by the year. Must be reasonable. Reply box 15; Times Office.—8* \

^Episcopal Church,

J " ’ ' •

comments than the other fellow, I t is

Nat Thompson Prizes Gift of Great

Value from Grandmother.

Not Thompson, 20 Occan avenue, is the proud possessor of a ladies gold watch made one hundred years ago. The maker’s name, M. J. Tobas, of Liverpool, Eng., is en­graved on the inside of the back case, with the. legend, "patent lever, full jeweled.” On the outside of the back is engraved the figure of George Washington standing beside his horse which is held by an orderly. On the face of thq watch, adorned with large numerals; is-, engraved a beau­tiful hathor scene. The case is solid gold and the whole is protected by a black polished metal container. As watches Went in those day3 it' was a valuable ono and its value to lay for its gold alone would be considerable, not to mention its sentimental value.

The watch was the engagement gift of Nat’s great grandfather, Conrad B. Andross to his Urido-to-be, Joanna Handley, whom ho married in 1837.

. "5 v-'rt ' ■■ - '-.,J v--'-,-'.

. ULMER’S EXPRESS-Local and long distance hauling. Trucks for hire. Daily trips to New York and Philadelphia. .1410 Corlies avenue, Neptune. Telephone 368.—S3-6S

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I BEST LEHIGH I

I GO AL ||! Nut Per Ton ----— ____ $11.50 ;

Stove Per T on------ -$11^0 5S Pea Per T on-- ’._______$10.00, \jj Cash on Delivery " ;

| i HOFFMAN COAL CO. { i Office Yard i 1 927 4th Ave. 5th Ave, & R. R. i I ; BRADLEY BEACH j | Phone Asbury Park 5267 or 3560 ! I ,"............................................i. .................. .

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| Albert L. Brown I JobbingI TIN AND SHEET

j METAL WORKER f|j.- Slate and Asbestos Shingle

. Roofing, Stoves, Ranges and | • Furnaces, Pipeless , Heaters |

s .lOE) Abbott Ave., Ocean: Grove, i ; . Tclephono 3142 ' |

YOUR DUTY TO YOUR HEIRSIS. TWOFOLD: '■ .

1. You should : have your'' attoriidy" 'draw your Will in the proper legal form. ' “ " ' ........ ■ .

2. You should select a competent, responsible

Executor and Trustee.The naming of this Bank as Executor and Trusteo

insures that the'plans expressed in your Will will be carried out intelligently and economically.

W IL H A M J . COUSB President

U d E w. B B R R Y , Vtco president JO S E P H F . M U I4 JN . Trust Officer

JA M ES FO RSYT H , V ico President and Cashier '

National B akecS TRUST COMPANY-"Gnnmercial,

i in tn in i in i i i iu i i i i i i i ...... .................................................................. ..

ifrT!,- v Easton Z. Bear.is in town-over tho :weekond.

:ubii ■ 11 bi i si 11 in up ii ati ■ nan ■ m if ciiaii iii ■ ii«ii i ii»i i« ii*f «ii* i*i*i*h iiiiii ■ ii*n »u iiii i mb ii«i 11 iii** lit ■ ri i ii Bii*

&rnest JY, £s)oolston■ V I:-:.::.:;' Vv v - ‘V ^

Real Sstate and ' insurance

Jel*p£0x /LA Mato j/fyenwsd e ta il (Jrove. /few . Je rsey

Properties

FOR SALE FOR RENT

Insurance of All Kinds 1Mortgage Loains

• \

A GOOD THING TO REMEMBER— ;C

A BETTER THING TO DO

IS TO WORK WITH THE CONSTRUCTION GANG; AND NOT WITH THE WRECKING CREW!

SEE ME, FOR A 64 ROOM HOTEL, two blocks from the ocean. Ideal for/a cafeteria (none of which , are located in this location). Can be purchased or rented on reasonable terms.

IN THE FUTURE, SEE ME, BEFORE YOU

BUY, BURN OR BORROW! ^ : V '

LOUIS E. BRONSON, t

53 Main Avenue, Ocean Grove, N. J.

Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Bloom,,.of Nep: tune, wUl shortly move to 99 Embury

avenue. • .,

’ Mr. and Mrs. Fred Terhune, of 89 Embury avenue, were:-in New York

: S. ' this week. -

’AS;', 1 Mr. andi Mrs. Charles-Jenkinaon,: of Sea Girt, are away on a trip through

' '-the South.

.'. irif. and-Mrs. R. C. Meredith have moved, from 130 Broadway to 110 Embury avenue., •• • . V

Mra. WiUiam Taylor, of Abbott |r " .avenue, is -visiting this,week with her |i ' sister in Pottstown, Pa.

■ I; .. - Ann Wier, of Passaic, is a guest I a t the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles

7 Weavr, 66 Abbott avenue.

- Rutger Stirling who has been con>- |' ? fined to hiB. home With tonsilitis is

now able to be out again.

Mr. and Mrs..Philip Reynolds and family;' have moved from 87. Heck avenue to Mt. Hermon Way.

I Mrs. Herbert Miller, of 116 Broad-- r way • was guest: of -honor at a bixth- : Jay dinner-in Rahway last weefc . 5

Mhf. and Mrs. Irving Steele, of-103 [ ■ Embury avenue, are moving to As­

bury Park on-the first of March.

§V . A n entertainment to be presented r in St. Paul’s church by the Ocean

Grove W. C. T. U. is being, planned.

-*sr- ^,.7 Mrs. . Laura Strow, of. South ' Orange is in town at her summer

T V home,30 Bath avenue for a few days.

* ' The ladies will hold a covered dish exchange precding the March m’eet-

- ing, the, proceeds to be used for the flower fund. .

f f v : . Ruth rNittinger, 47-Cookman ave- pue, was operated1 on at the Fitkin.

i i , - hospital, after being seriously ill with pneumonia.

’ *. • . Miss Elizabeth Clark of Elizabeth, ft: : ■ was a weekend guest at the home of iteflMrs. Marjorie -MlacWhinney, 137 . Clark avenue.

The healing of the seamless dress - is by our beds of pain. We touch

TC.- - /.Him in life’s throng and press, and wo - ore whole, again! > '

| - Ruth Nittinger who has been in . Fitkin hospital for several weeks

M y , with plural pneumonia, is reported | a s steadily improving.

ifi' ’ The regular meeting of the Home4 for tho Aged Auxiliary will be held

; f Monday afternoon at three o’clock, att . the Home, 63 Clark avenue;

. - ' Mr. and Mrs. Raymond R. Gracey left on Washington’s birthday, on a motor trip to Niagara Falls and ex­pect to return homo Sunday.

• The Woman’s Prayer Band will : meet, at the home of Mr?. Josephijjj.

Black, 70 Central 'avenue, on Mon f t day afternoon at three o'clock. "

Mr, and Mrs. 'Frank Butcher, of 113 Broadway, motored to St. Peters- burg on Monday, Whore they will spend the balance, of the winte?. - -

Mr. and:Mr3. Charle3 ,Cruger, .Mrs. Frank DeSauta and Miss Elizabeth Koch, of Brooklyn, were guests of -Miss .Lulu E. Wright, 85 Mt. Hermon Way, over last weeekend. '

Mr. Howard Heck has improved both hs houss, -84 and 80 Heck ave­nue, by putting running water in the rooms. The work being done by Jacob Beutel, of 98% Embury avenue.

Miss Beatrice Robinson, a summer: resident of Ocean Grove, has just re­turned from a visit with Iver sister Mrs. Lawrence Kolb at Elmira, N. Y, Tho .Robinsons’ winter homo is in Glen Ridge. --

Miss Florence Marshall, guest of Miss' Elizabeth Reed, 119: Abbott avenue, is spending the week in Connecticut, where she. is visiting her mother. Miss ’Marshall will return to the Grove on Sunday.

Alvin Bradley spent a short time in. the Grove last .Friday while on his way to his winter home in Phila­delphia. He visited in Newark,' Orange and Mtintclair,"at the latter place slopping with Arthur C. Styles, who Bpends Us summers here.

Dr. 'R. A. Hulse, .69 Main avenue, returned on Tuesday from a ten day vacation cruise to Nassau and Havana. 1 He was accompanied by Dr. Clarence Johnson, of New Rochelle, N. Y.

Boy. Scout Troops 9. and 41, at­tended Wednesday midweek services at St. Paul’s. Dr, Fox praised Troop 9 for its recent exhibit at the Con­vention- Hall, and Troop 41 for its successful minstrel show in the -high school.

James J. Dooner, 103 Central ave­nue, sailed, for Panama on Saturday on the Mauretania, with the party of the Imperial Potentate of the Mys­tic Shrine, to inspect the chap'ter in Colon. He expects to return on March 2.

“The Old 'Folks’ Concert” will be presented under the direction of Mrs. Bleecker Stirling, by the Assembly Bible Class. The affair is to be given on Mnrcti 28, with the proceeds going towards the printing of the church Beacon.

Kurtecuboc Class met at the home of John Syms, 83 Embury avenue

FOR SALE: We have a complete list of Ocean Grove proper­ties for sale and many outside the Grove.

FOR RENT: See us for homes and hotek of all-sizes .for rept, by the season or year. • .. '• INSURANCE: Recent fires on Cookman Avenue and Main street, Neptune are concrete examples of the necessity of keeninu your property fully covered by insurance. " , ,

With weather conditions, such as .we fend at the Bogan store fire it i8 not difficult to imagine whole blocks of homes being destroyed .You may take every precaution but someone in yowl neighborhood may be very careless. '

We write insurance of all kinds. Consult with us freely at any time. Let us check your present policies. I

J . N. Garrabrandt AgencyREAL ESTATE

, Telephone 2124.

MORTGAGE LOANS INSURANCE

78 Main Avenne, Ocean Grovo

ELLEN H. C LIV E. ■ IU, .Tradlno

■ D. C. Covert Agency •

Insurance Mortgages , Real Estate

Room 201; Asbury P&rk Trust Co. Bldi;■ Asbury Park

133 Broadway, Ocean Qrove ,s. ,

; ; . Our sickness and our sin, individual , arid international, will be cured when,

with repentant faith we seek fellow­ship with Him whose, life is truth.

Mrs. W. H.- Carpenter who has been a guest at the home of her brother, William Hull, in New York City, has

’ ' returned to iier home, 81 Heck ave-v niip ’ ' ...

D. Decker and family, of : Norristown, PaT, are spending-a few ■"days-.at their summer home,, 99 Em­bury; avenue, While it is being reno-

■ vated. -"r

Qn March 7th at the Ocean Grove Woman’s Club there will be an open; meeting of the civics department to which all women interested are in­vited?

Mr, and Mrs. Herman Metzger re­turned o>r. Tuesday from an extended visit "to Atlanta, Ga., and are resid­ing in, .their apartment at 60 Main avenue. :.

The- Washington fire company held . their annual Ladies’ Night 'in. tho form of a covered dish supper Wed-

-mesday' eveiiing, February-:22nd, in -.the Are house. * ■ r:

' A Washington and Lincoln display of art objects mado by John Cox, 30-

, Heck avenue, is a feature of the, window- display at Angles & -‘Smiths Hardware store.

f' Mrs.-Louise Muollcr, 92 Embury avenue, ontertaincd her bridge dub

’p& tV 'a Washington birthday dumer _ on Wednesday at, tho Ansonia restau- • ront, Asbury Park."

J,

1 30 YEARS A(10 rriiMiiiiiliiiiiiiilflliiiiiiiillliiiiiliiliniiiailillailllJiiKiiltiiiiKiiiAf

(Editor’s Noto: These,items are taken from the back files , of TJie Times for the year of 1903. • r?

1 Neptune News Notes I

William Bottorff is a patient in the Fitkin hospital.

Mrs. J. W. Reynolds, of Atkins avenue, spent Tuesday in Linden and Elizabeth. _

:,:'Mr. and Mrs. Ivins B. Grant, of ■Myrtle avenue, visited in Newark bn Wednesday.

Mrs. Grace Hanson, of Tenth ave­nue, was a New York City visitor on

Week Ending Fdiruary 21, 1903.

Seven rainy Sundays in a row was the weather forecast. "- ■ r; ':-

The school orchestra concert was held in the high school building on Friday evening. .

Owing to wire trouble the main. Wednesday, thoroughfare of the Grove'was daTk Mrs. Charles Davison is recovering on Tuesday of that week. j from an operation at her home on

The Ushers’ Union of St. Paul’s Tenth avenue, church 'were to discontinue the Mr. and Mrs, Edward’ Rose and weekly booklet after this wek. hi friends of Corlies avenue, spent Sun-

The tail end of a Western ijUzzard ^ in Newark, hit this section early in the week Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Hunt, of'As- with the resultant snow plows and ' bury Park Gardens, were recent visit- heavy boots. • • • ors in Atlantic City. -

•Wiilie and Marion English, residing V Mr. and Mrs. James F. Ayres, of at 55 Abbott avenue, entertained Corlies avenue, visited relatives in fjheir '-,young, friends with a Valentine . Jerseyville on Sunday, party, at their residence. The guests Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Megill, of of the occasion (Let’s see how many Atkins avenue, visited relatives in you ; can remember) were: Myrtle'‘Belmar Wednesday evening,

playback, Beatrice Frejich, Morgue- , - Miss Ella Patterson, of Fort Plains, rite Downing, Marion and Eleanor v^ ited Howard .Httlse and family on .Todd, Sarah .Van Middlesw.orthy.Ger- Eleventh avenue -last Sunday, aldine Walling, Florence Van Schoick, Mr ^ ^ Kenneth c of,Leola Moore, Florence Covrngton T e n t h a v e n u a n n 0 U n c Q thf Ella , and Marguente Jackson, Alice f iHewitt, Anna Ballard, Lillie Schultz, °f “ S0 Pltk,» h^P-tel.May Cornwell, Abbie Lyons,: Esther Mrs. Mildred Cottrell and daughter, Laverty, George and Charles Todd, °f Spnng^Lake, visited Mrs. Bennard Edwin Dewis, Curtis Walling, Robert #*4 family last evening.Miller,- Laurence ' Miller, Howard '. Mrs. Cora Irons, of Corlies avenue, Van Schoick, Harry Heale, Robert is nbrsing Mrs. Elizabeth. Hurley in Williams, Willie and Harry Lyons and Asbury Park Gardens during her ill- Henry Miller. ness. ' . '

..— - —--- -— Mr. and.Mrs. Martin Nist, Jr., .ofSeventh avenue, were Sunday guests of Mr. Nist’s parents near Farming- dale. ■ : '

Miss Vivian Robbins, of Stokes avenue, was a recent guest of Mr. and Mrs. Abram Marks, in Lower Squankuin.

Mr. and: Mrs. . James M. Strudwick, of Atkins avenue, were recent guests of their daughter, Alice Strudwick, in Philadelphia.

First National BankAVON-BY-THErSEA

Safe Deposit Boxes Now Available at

$3.00 a V^ar and Up

Complete Banking Service Member of the Federal Belerre System ;

Under the United Btatea Oofernment Bnpeirlslon :

A

B. Thbmaa ?Fenna, President Ernest 12. Meauler, Cashier

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OFFERS REMEDY

FOR SICK WORLD(Concluded from first page)

It is holdenThis is a sick world, of' divers diseases.-

Y o j i can not cure war by disarma­ment; it will help cure, but’ it willnot cure the disease of war. We „ ...

: must illumine the '-minds of men with „ M ss : Shirley Anne McDowell, of ui. -«.«« ^ 1..=, « . • uiuiuwjr . . » » | . . w ' • nd filI the hev t„ of men Shadow Lawn Manor, spent Wednes- Monday evemng. One new' member. PUt.G the maladv. ^ay with her aunt, Miss Edith Me-

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f CONFIDENCE JUSTIFIED J| Considerable , business comes to us from

Ocean Grove— that little separate city whose |B purposeful people are, with characteristic |

determination, working through the difficulties |of these unusual times. ;

I We appreciate their business and we prize | their confidence. It is not, and shall not be

; misplaced. -.3I . 1

{ Neptune Bank $ Trust Company 1| Corlies and Atkins Avenues ' “

I NEPTUNE II ISiiiiiiiiiaitiiiiiiiriiu*uiii«wiiiii|iniiiniiimiiii«ii«iiiiaiiiiiaii*ii«Miiiininiii*iiaii»iiiiiiiiiiuiniiiiiii»iiiaiiiiiiiiiii«)i«niii«ii«riiiin3

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i Mergaugey’s Express and StorageLocal and Long Distance Moving

Furniture Carefully Handled by Experienced Men

Taxis and Busses for Hire by Hour, Day or Trip i

DE LUXE BUS SERVICE TO

NEW YORK CITY DAILY |

Telephone 619 90 South Main Street, Asbury Park |

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Hi

was voted in, Donald Ross. The next meetng will be held at the home of Herbert Miller, 115 Broadway. This will be a social meeting.

Charles M. Wilgus, son of Mrs.

You can not cure nationalism 'Dowell, on Corlies avenue, merely by teaching men the equality. Mrs. M. D. Gravatt has returned of. races nnd' the -values j>f raciaol . to her homo, Tenth and Atkins'ave- varietyl nucs, after several weeks’ visit with

You can not cure the hurt of ignor- her daughter in Youngstown, Ohio. Helen L. AVilgus, 137 Mt. Hermon 'kance by the mere routine of instruc- Mr. and Mrs. William C. Van Ars- Way, was elected president of j )• j0n; dale, of South street, Manasquan,Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity at | You can not cure lust by the reve- announce the engagement of their Rutgers, where he is a member of 1 lation of its swift and awful conse- daughter Mrs. Elizabeth Van Ars-the Junior class. He was also chosen steward of the house.

The American Home Department of

quences; or save men from selfishness by proving it is suicidal.

The world is sick, what can we.do?

the W o ^ n ’s"Club‘Swm^eet M ^ w . i The wpr1 . is s!ck becausf afternoon at the club house. A sic^ mon- an< women whose bodies, demonstration and social hour will be and souIs are inf\cted with disease,

included in the meeting. The s0urc£s of th,s s,ckness seems

dale, to Austin A. Hurley, son of Mrs. Elizabeth A, Hurley, of Asbury Park Gardens. • -

Mrs. Louiso Wardell of Freehold, will bo in charge Of the demonstration.

‘'The Woman’s Foreign Missionary Society of St. Paul’s church will meet

to, be many. Its immediate causes s^em to be. of infinite variety but its> primary cause is sin!

Sin that resides in the human per-, sonality, that .|makes. meiL to fling

, The .Hamilton Ladies’ Aid Society met at the church or. Wednesday afternoon. Plans were riiade to hold o turkey supper at the church oiv

Thursday, March 3, at 2.30 o’clock in themselves as barriers across the “ ‘ 'l . Tthe Sunday School room. The Mys-, pathway of . Him who walks tho Thursday evening March 2. Pot hick

tery Box, in charge of Mrs. H. P ., world with pierced feet. Sin that “ r tFox will be a'feature of the program, makes men to call light darkness, and . . . . . . A..r?V. *All arc cordially invited to attend. darkness light. Sin that makes man '™ ‘t^er, Mr. and Mrs Albert War-

■ " , 1: to lift his 'An in defiance against the ^ ^ * - •Walk through the Gospel pages, oin. Woolley, Mrs. Sarah Newman, Mrs

the sunlit ways of Palestine with that ful mcn and women arc sick a„ j they Josopl, Wardell, Miss Irene Tilton:radiant prophet of Nazareth who de- mnke ^ worW slck. Miss Mae Martin, Miss Eyengeline

nounccs. scribes and .phariaeeB with j. ^ ^ the 0* the-old 5,I.art“ ’ ch'e Ja5.kB0.n’invectwes that bum like acid, but , Testanjife whose. volccs ' wiH hever Theodore Hopler, Mrs.. M. I. Free-

n n m o n n f n w in n i l V rt . • - ' ■ . m f lf l A f l t l (VI r « A n U K 'k . XV n n IV flQ w n l ,• „ x ua iam uni, .wnusu voiuus w in wcvui ; , A1 . i ,

hear the cry come unto me all ye die becauae they apcak immortai and man and Mrs.. Almack, who was wcl-that -labor a h f are heavy .laden and 1 universai truth. Hear them — comed nto the society as a new mem-wiii' give you rest, : pare the world to a human body cov-

ber.Rev. J. L. Howard, pastor of Villa

Hamilton church this evening.

Free As a Bird.

Groce

C. . . . . . .demonstration of a voting machine -you, saith the Lord. Though your at the club house on March 7, a ll: sins be as scarlet, they shall be as day. In the evening Dr. D. Guerin, white as snow. Though they be redof the New Jersey State hospital, ; like crimson, they shull be as wool. Free as a bird, I soar into the upper will be one of the principal speakers. I Open the pages, of- the immortal . ajr.

'book the New Testament; read the The dust of earth no more upon ir.y Mr. and Mrs. Pedro Riesgo, of qnjejj and vivid utterances of Paul, , wings I bear.

New York, summer visitors of tho at once-a great philosopher and a Far out across the sea, my fearlessGrove, were the guests over tho past supreme Christian as he - diagnoses weekend of Mr. and Mrs. Lees , tlie diseases of the Roman empire Bropme at their home, ~117 C°°kmaih : ^nd because of thom, prophesises its avenue. Mr. E. J. Moore, of. Glovers- j dostracttoiu" Read John’s vivid im- ville, N. Y., has also, been spending a, nginery as he tells of the devouring

effect of sin, but hear theni say, I saw a great multitude which no man could number,-who made their robes white in the blood of the lamb.

Surprise Party for Mirs. .Wall.

Mrs. John H. Wall, of BlO.sCook-

few days with Mr. and Mrs.-Broomej

.The executive board of the Ocean Grove-Neptune P. T. A,, will micct in tho high school library on Tuesday, afternoon, February 28, at 3.16 o’clock. The regulir: meeting willWke place on. uisday, e v l^ l^ a t AsBury Park, vas the7.45. Thb will be Fathers’ Night honor at a partyand an interesting program has been . J- , ,, . * -planned, of which John G. Syms MrS'

. -V .,i Claude Richmond, 141 Cookman ave-c airm n. j nue. The party was .preceded by a

The - world' is sick. ■ Men ■ and j birthday-dinn'ur. jig saw puzzles and women aro sick. They are sick of other games were enjoyed, through- sin. Tho disease can hot bo cured' by j out the evening, and at eleven o’clock Intellectual, much less by. material a buffet' supper was served.process. These may help indeed may be invaluable. But the deep spiritual recourses of men must be vitalized by fellowship with God. - Sin ‘ must be expelled by Faith, Hope and Love

Those' present were Mr. and: Mrs'. Jamej; Crozier, .Mr. and Mrs. Clifton Geargb Hall,' Grace; .Hall, Mr. and Dunri, ,Lucille - Dunri, |Jr. and Mrs. Harold. Bills, Mirs.- Dorothy Gra-

Rnymqnd,Bartlett, s., .Claude iRfAaiotid and

flight I take;No store is there, with me, witil the

-land I make.And if my way be long, arid dreary

be my flight.I’ll tako it w ith a song through the

dark hours of night!And if my wings should droop above

the'shoreless tide,The hand, of God will stoop and draw

me to His side.Lucia' C. G. Grieve.

Ocean Grove, Feb. 20. 1933.

jBiiBiiBiiBiiiiiaiisiiaiiBiiBiiaiiaiiiiiBiiBiiBi!fliiaua!iiiiBiiBiiaiiaiiBii%

| Matthews & Francioni |® ■ 5 ‘ " Succossom to II : ‘OEOKOE Bi SEXTON 5

.'y/.'1- ‘ ‘ ■,' - * ^

I Funeral Directors I• - <’ .. , a| The.^Oldest Undertaking Establish. || : ^ inen t ;. lni Monmouth Connty |I ■’^ ^ r i ' jV ’ConllttoiiB Service' |

| .vj_yir8t«Class Ambulance Sorrlce |

1 159MainSf., Asbury Park, N.J. I

8-y ^ MhitB*. Aaiwnr .Pork.8i:j;V. :|

M T S T E R Y$1 O c ta V u s

ioi.'iSM

A story that abounds In the Cohen humor, with that famous detective character, Jita Hanvey, in the

leading role. A fast moving, colorful, humorous,mystery story that will 'keep.every reader awaiting

anxiously for the next installment. An unusually

good serial that; will’j>e printed in these columosj.

D o N o t M i s s t h e O p e n i n g C h a p t e r s

\Jhe Maif £ayM ystery”Starts Friday, March 3

m m

l i f e

Page 5: IPCAL TEIM^f MAKJES DEBUT BUDGET FURTHER …ist Contributes “The May Day Mystery,” Considered one of the Best of his Longer Tales, ior Times Readers. The Times, has secured, the
Page 6: IPCAL TEIM^f MAKJES DEBUT BUDGET FURTHER …ist Contributes “The May Day Mystery,” Considered one of the Best of his Longer Tales, ior Times Readers. The Times, has secured, the

^■HiUitiiiiiiMBtiiiiiiiiu.inBhsnvuiiiiiiaiiiiiaiiiiiaiiiiiiuiiiiittniiiBtiBiiitisitiitBiiiitiiiiitiiiKirviiiiiiiiiii.iuiitaftiiiinitittitniiiairBiirL

HE' TIMES, advertisers. need our trade and friend- |ship. When you need anything first try to buy |it at home. We are anxious t© see our home |

community the center of commercial and sdciai =activity. Communities grow*, and prosper through com- §bined efforts. . Cooperation and team work make for |results. Trade at home. - |

■ Sniiinwiii.......................................... tiniuiiiiniiiiiiiiiiii.......... ....................... ................. »n .......

AUTO WELDING

SCHULTZ WELDING WORKS•“I f We Can’t Weld It—Junk It” .ELE C T K IC A N D ACET Y LEN E

Auto Rad iator Repairs Phono A. P . 2750- - Fender Body Uopairo

Asbury Avo. and Noptuno H Ichw ay ____________ Aebury Park. K.

CROCKERY

E sse x C u t R a te C ro c k e ry C o .

IS South Main Street, Opposite Ocean Grove Gates

A Full Line of House Furnishings at Cut Rates"S' ]“■ ' More for Your Money or Your Money Back ..

COAL AND WOOD

JOSEPH P. JOHNSONC O LO N IA L COAL

COAL, MASONS' M A T ER IA LS , F U E L O IL

DOS Main Strcot, Asbury Park Phonos 494(M£Ul

WELLERS’ INC.601 Main Street

Asbury ParkTelephones 614-616

THOMPSON COAL COMPANY B lue Coal • . GOAD, W O O D A N D C H A R C O A L B lue Coal

1015 Second Avenue, ABbury Park. N. J . Phono 360

• Avon B ranch,; 320 M ain Street. Phono 2300.

DAILY BAKING

REITZ’S MODEL BAKERYB R E A D —R O LLS—P IE S

L A Y E R CA K E IC S .O P A L L K IN D S

47 P ilg rim Pathway. Ocean .G jovo’s Only Year-Round Bake Shop.

FLOWERS

Tree Surgery Landscaping

J . C . R O S T E R , In c .v) F L O W E R S B Y T E L E G R A P H 'A N Y W H E R E410 Summerfleld Avonuo, Near Heck Street Bridge, Aebury Park . Tel. 1660

GARAGE—GOODRICH TIRES

Phono 1430 Twenty-four H ou r ServiceSTORAG E—B A T T ERY S E R V IC E —R E P A IR IN G

SHAFTO’S GARAGECor. Corlies Avenuo" and M ain Street J Neptune, N . J .

FIRE ALARMOCEAN G ROV E

21.....................New York and Asbury Avea2 2 . . . . _ .C layton’s Store, M ain Avenue2 3 ............................................Surf and Beach2 4 .................. . ; . .Em bury and Beach2 5 M ain and P ilgrim Pathway2 6 Broadway and P ilgrim Pathway

.27 ..........M L Tabor W ay and Pennsylvania2 8 ..........North End Pavilion2 9 ..........McClintock and Beach21. ........................... . . . . .S o u th End Pavilion32......................— C lark and New. Jersey83...................BenBon and M t Tabor W ay3 4 .................... ; . . .H « c k and Whitfie ld3 5 . . . . . . .W e b b and Pennsylvania3 6 . . . . . . . . . . . . . S u r f and P ilg rim Pathway8 7 . . . . .......................... . Benson and F rank lin

' 38.............................. . . . .B e n s o n and AbbottW 89..........................New York and Stockton

41............................. . . .H e c k and Lawrence' ^4 2 ................................. O lin Street Flrehouse

4 3 . . ; ; . . . . . ' . . . , . . . . . . - M ain ahd Beach

» . Special Taps6— 6— 6 General A larm . 1 W ire Touble.

. 2 F ire Out,- 3-Time 7 a. m . and Chief’s .. 2 First-Aid ‘Squad. .

F ire-Chief, Raym ond R. Gracey, Eagle Company.*

W E S T : G ROV E

16....... ............M ain 8ti*eet and M ain Ave.: 1 6 ................M a in Street and Corlies Ave,6 2 . . . . . . . . . Unexcelled Engine House63;..................... A tkins and Embury6 4 . . . . ................: ...................... ...................... ......................Prospect and Heck

■66....................A tk ins and Sixth Avenue6 2 .....................................Corlies and Ridge72............... ..................... ..Corlies and Union

.8 6 .......................................A tkins and Tenth5 2 . . . . . ................... R idge and E ighth

Special Taps

6—6— 6‘ Genera! A larm . 2 F ire Out, 8 T ime 1 p. m. and* Chief's Call. 4 Unex­celled. B Uneeda. -

B R A D L E Y B EA C H

J J . . .... .................. .M onm outh and A tlan tic3 1 . . . . . . . . . . ............N ew ark and Madison

39....... .................... Evergreen and Madison4 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . F ifth and Kent4 3 . . . . .P ark Place and Ocean46. . ...................... ...................... .LaReine and Ocean47............... ..................... .Fourth and Ocean5 7 .. . . . v. . . . . Ocean P a rk .and* Central , 5 8 . . . . . . . . . . . , . . .LaReine and Central6 9 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ; . . iF if th and Central6 1 . . . . . .Ocean P a rk and Fletcher Lake6 6 ............... ; ...................... .F ifth and Fietcher Lake16 7 . . . . . . . . .Third and Fletcher Lake7 1 . . . . . . .- . . . . 1 LaRelno and Fletch&r.Lake73.i L . . . . . . . P a rk Place and M ain7 4 . . . . . . . . . . . . McCabe and M ain7 6 . . . . . . , . . . V ; Brinley and .M ain7 6 ...................... .V. . . . . .Fourth, and M a in7 7 ............... Evergreen and M ain7 8 ...........................Burlington and M ain83...................................... Second and Beach

Special Taps

6— 6— 6 General A larm . 1 W ire Trouble. 2 F ire Out. 9 Chiera Call. 4 Pioneer Co. No. 1 - 5 Independent Co. No. 2. 6 Bradley No. 3. Telephone 240. <-Fire Chief, Edw ard R . Schumard,

Independent Co.F irs t Assistant, W illiam Poland, B rad­

ley Co. No. 3.

WfeltfliTine v ...2 1 . Springwood and Springdale22 .... . .F ishe r and Bangs 2 3 ; Fi sher and Springwood24. . . . . . Myrt l e and Maple2 5 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .M yrtle ’ and Stratford2 6 . . . Myr t l e and Munroe2 7 .. . . .- . . , . . . . . . . . v . . A s b u r y .and Anelve28 ; . i . . ♦•... Stokes and Munroe2 9 . . . . « . . . . . . 7 . . . . . . . .Stokes , and Stratford82 ............................. . . .M u n ro e and Oxonta

C. ME

FOR REAL ESTATE IN HEPTUNE TeleplwM 563.S-R '334 FISHER AVENUE

Thlrtj Year* * the Sine Pits

D. S. L . Batteries . EstabliBhad 1810 foi,W heel A lignment , •• • A . P . 27781

FRANK S. MORRIS, INC. -Tires, Tubes, Batteries, Vulcanizing, Auto Accessories, Brake,' Tire, and,

Battery Service, General Auto Repairs.82 South M a in Street, Ocean Grove. . •• • . .

LAUNDRIES

A LOCAL LA U N D R Y E M P L O Y IN G LOCAL LABOR

Phone 57fin ' C . E . W eaver, Owner

NEPTUNE LAUNDRY■ C O R L IE S A N D STOKES AV EN U ES

SEACOAST INDIVIDUAL SERVICE LAUNDRY CO.W ET W A SH , 26 LBS. F O R .81.00— ONE D A Y SER V IC E

W e Do A ll Types of Laundry W ork ,

A ll. Clothes Washed Sepaately. E.: F rank Sweet, Owner.• 112 W est LaReine Avenue, Bradley Beach. Phone 3324’

MILK AND CREAM

TAYLOR DAIRY CO.Catley & W illiam s , Proprietors

. M IL K , C REA M A N D BU T T ERM ILK • F R O M M ON M OUTH FA RM S

142 Lawrence Avenue. Ocean Grove • Phone 1970

PAINTS

STOCK’S PAINT COMPANY ■ Painters’ Supplies, Wholesale, and Retail

17 South Main Street, Asbury Park, N, J.

SHOES

M. E. TEITELBAUMSHOES FOR ALL THE FAMILY

NU-5IATIC SHOES, 55,95

Constant Comfort for Women, $2 to $6,I f You Want Your Shoes Repaired Right, See M. E. Teitelbaum

Main Street, Bradley Beach

SKATE SHARPENING

SHORE CYCLE RENDEZVOUSBOB EBERLHJ, Proprietor

Agent for Columbia, Iver Johnson and Other" Pope Made Bicycles Complete Repair Shop. Roller Skates; Children's Vehicles. Eaby Carriages

Repaired. Skates Sharpened.C17-681 Main. Weet, Asburj; Park. Phono 'S U M

UPHOLSTERING

ERNEST B. JEMISON. "'U PH O L ST E R IN G , B E D D IN G , CUSHIONS, W IN D O W SHADES,

M ATTRBSgES REN O V A T E D and M A D E TO O R D E R

611 M ain Street, Asbury Paris. Phono S037-M. A fter 8 P . M „ House, J801-M

RADIOHOTEL CORP.

ANNOUNCING-! IS

H O T E L F L A N D E R S

West 47th Street and West 48th Street. “In The Heart of Times Square” .

One Block from Rockefeller Center

New York City

3 0 0 L A R G E R d O M SOffering

Maximum Value—Minimum Rates

Rooms .With Use of Bath, 1 person ----- -- !____________ $1.50Rooms WMt .'Clse c-? .Bath, 2 persons---------------- ..$2.50Booms . With Private Bath, 1 person .— ------ -------- ---$2.00 .EosMfJ.WiUt Prfrats Bath, 2-persons ——___ — ____ ;___ ____ $8.80Large Comfortable Suites, 2 or 3 people_________ ___________ $5,00

Special Weekly'Rates on Newly Furnished, Redecorated, ModernizedRooms .

MAKE THE FLANDERS YOUR HOTEL ON YOUR NEXT VISIT

TO NEW YORK—YOU’LL LIKE IT! '

FRED W. BIZEL, Resident Manager

Under Same Management

HOTEL CAMBRIDGE60 West 08th Street, New York, near Central Park

AN EXCELLENT RESIDENTIAL HOTEL

Newt of the

ni n iii i m m n i mi n n m i iuii mumii ii nil rai i m ui i n u i n u iM HMurtl lua miiiuu

St, Paul’s fll. Ocean Grove.Preaching sfervlco : 11.00 a. m. and 7.30

p. m. Sunday school, 0.30 a. m . Epworth League, 0.30; Jun ior League, 6.30. prayer service, Wednesday, 7.45 p. M , Rev, Ham ilto ji P . F ox ,’ past,*)!*.

Trinity Episcopal, Asbury. ParkrServices conducted1' by ti»e rector, Rev

R andall W . Conklin, aa follows: . 7,30 a. m .( holy coinuiunlon; 9i30, Sunduy school; 10.45 a. n i.,/morning prayer and sermon; 4 p. in., Vespers. ••

First M. E., Asbury Park.Rev.- Edaon R . Leach, pastor. SUnday

school a t 9.45 a. m. Preaching service, 11.00 a. m. Young people's meeting a t 6.30. Evening service a t 7.30. Prayer services Wednesday a t 7.45 o'clbck. v

Salvation Army, Asbury Park.Salvation’Army barracks, Mattlson avfl-

nUe. Services 11 a m. Sunday school a t ■ Voung people’s meeting *6.15 p. m.

Evening worship a t 8. Ensign and Mrs. Georgo E. Anscftnbe, offlcors in charge.

OFFICIAL INFORMATION

West Side Mission.'027 Springwood avenue, Asbury Park.

Mrs. Bessio A . Brand, superintendent. Saturdays, .8 p.-;m., Mrs. Brand, leader. Sunday school 2.30, in charge:‘o f George H . Cutter. Sunday, 2 p. m ., evangellstUi meeting. Tuesday^ children and young pepdple's m eeting; Mr;3. Bessie Brand, leader. Thursday evening, George Sabln, leader.. * •

Pentecostal Lighthouse... 005 Sewall avenue, Asbuy Park . Rev** Albert Evans, pastor;' Sunday , school 2.00 p. m .. preaching service, 3 and 8 p m.. young people’s meeting, 7.30; prayer meetings, Tuesdany and Thursday even­ings, 7.30 o’clock. • ■1‘

Home For the Aged.63 Clark avenue, Ocean Grove Every

Wodnesday a t 2.30 p. in. D r. J .. W . Mar- . shall, .chaplain, conducts a religious ser­vice, open to a ll members o£ the Horn** and any friends of. tlic» Grove. Sacrament o f the Lord’s Supper administered first Wednesday, of every month.

Lutheran Church Of the Atonement.First avenue and Heck street. Rev.

Carl I-I. M iller, pastor. Sunday school, 9.30 a, m. Morning service, 10.45. Vesper service, 7.45 p. m. .

Ballard Memorial, Asbury Park.Sunday a t 10i30, preaching .service con­

ducted! by the pastor, ;Rey. H . L^.Brad- way; Sunday school, 0.45 a m .; Eplyorth League, G.45 evening worship, 7.3$. Prayer meeting, Tuesday evening a t 7.30.

Grand Avenue Reformed, Asbury Park Rev. Otto L . F . Mohn, pastor Sundar

achool, 10 a. m .; divlno worship, U a. m..and 7.30 p. m .; prayer meoting, Wednes­day, 7.30 p. m . , • . / • • •

First Baptist, Asbury Park,-Sunday school and adult B ible class, al

10.00 a. m.;* a t 11 Rev. C. Gordon Bown- ville, w ill preach. Also sermon a t 7.45. Men's Brotherhood, 9.45 a. m. Young People’s meeting; 6.45. Prayer meeting, Wednesday, 7.45 p. m., Bible Class follow­ing.

Gospel Hall, Neptune.204 Ridge avenue^ near Tenth. W or­

ship meeting each Lord’s D ay a t 10.30 a. m .; Sunday school a t 2.30 p. m .; gospel meeting, a t 7.30 p. m .; B ible read­ing and prayer Thursdays a t $.00 p. m;

First Presbyterian, Asbury Park.Dr. Charles F . . Shaw, pastor. Sunday

■chool a t 10 a. m. Preaching services a t 11 a. m . Even ing Bervice a t 7.30 p. m. M id­week service Wednesday a t 7.45 p. m. Y oun t people’s society Thurartay, 7.45. p.

Township Committee.Raymond R. Gracey, Chairman.John W. Knox, Clerk and Business

Manager.John S. Hall, Chairman of Finance, fiarry Whitlock, Chairman of Police. Charles Loveman, Chairman of Roads, Ralph Johnson, Chairman of Light,

Poor and Publicity. .

Tax. Collector.Walter Gravatt.

Tax Assessor.Alvin E. Billn,

Treasurer.Arthur H. Pharo.

Attorney.Richard W. Stout.

Cashier.Waiter Gravatt.

Chief of Police.William Maas.

Road Foreman.John Whiter

Township Physician.W. A.. Robinson, M. D.

Overseer of Poor.Janet V.

Building Inspector. .Harry Whitlock.

Engineer.Claude W. BirdsalL

Police Recorder.J. Edward Knight.

Auditor.Elmer O. Stevens.

Publicity Director. .George C. Stull.

Board of Health.Members of Township Committee*

the Assessor and Township Physi­cian.

Health Officer.Stanley Applegate.

St. James Episcopal, Bradley Beach,Services conducted by tho rector,-Rev,

E,: J.- W a len ta as follows: . Holy • Com­munion Sundays, 8 a. m . ; Wednesday;8.00 a^ m . and first Sunday <n the month111.00 a. m ; M orning prayer and sermon,11.00 a . m .; evening prayer and sermon,7.30 p. m. Church School and Bible Class,9.30 a. m. Last Sunday In the month, Children’s Eucharist.

Christian and Missionary. Alliance.016 Asbury' . avenne, ABbury Park.

Preaching services Sunday -at 10.45 a. m. and T.30 p. m . P rayer meeting Wednesday, 3 p. m. Prayer and praise service F ri­day, 7.30 p* m.'- Sunday school Sunday. 9.45 a. m . Rev. C. Donald McKaig, pastor. ’ ; . ■; ■

• West Grove M. E.Rev. W illllam Gufllck, pastor. Services

for tho. coming Sunday as. follows: 9.45,' Sunday school: 11.00, preaching service ;- 6.30, Epworth League: 7.30 ev.enlng ser­v i c e . / ; • ■; - . '.w. -■

Hamilton M. E Church.Rev. I. S. Whitaker, pastor* Sunday

school, 9.30 a . hi. Preaching at 10.30 a. m. and 7.00 p. m. Preaching a t Wayside by Rev. W hitaker on Sunday afternoon a t 3.00 o'clock, following Sunday school a t 2.00.

Firsht Church of Christ Scientists, Asbury Park.’

Services are held regularly every Sun­day morning a t 10.30 by the F irs t Church of Christ Scientist a t Third avenuo and Emory street The readlnsr worn ia opfcn every day frpm 1 p. m. to 6. p.. m . W ed­nesday evening service a t S,

Church of the Ascension, Bradley Beach.

Brinley and Fletcher Lake avenues. R igh t Rev. Canon John J . : O ’Hara,; Rector. Sunday masses: 7.45, 9.00 and 10.30 o'clock. Week day mass, 7.30

; o'clock. F irs t Friday mass, 7.00 o'clock.\ Confessions for Saturdays and first F r i­

days, 4.00 to 5.00 o’clock and 7.30 to< 8;30 o’clock. '

Second Church of Christ Scientist, •- ABbury Park. ^

Second Church of ChrUt Scientist ser­vices Sunday m orning a t U o’clock and Sunday evening a t 8 o'clock:, also Wed-

I nesday evening a t 8 ! *<ead!ngi room open daily . Corner \irwno and As- bury avenues, Asbury Part-

Bradley Beach M. B.Rev. Lawrence Correll,’ pastor. Sunday

school a t 9.30; preaching Bervice a t 10.45; Epworth League a t 6.45; preaching a t f.SS.

REG’LAR FELLERS isimme /ouldn’t.Hear of Such a Thincr R v fJ R N P R V P M F C

Board of Education. 'John B. Stout, President.Mrs. Anna T. Dey, Vice President.A. P. Todd, District Clerk.Roland Reighton.Augustus B. Knight.Edmund L. Thompson.Irving Crabiel Milton T. Wright.Leroy Hurford.Harvey L. Sykes. ,Onsville J. ‘ Moulton, Supervising.

Principal.H. A. Titcomb, High School PtineJ-.-

pal,Samuel Edelson, M. D., School Physi­

cian.Janet V. Bouse, Attendance Officer.

Neptune Fire District No. 2. " Herman Johnson, President.

Albert Reed, Secretary.Milton LeCompte, Treasurer.

William Johnson Eugene Slocum Charles Diehl

Postmaster.Joseph Rainear.

In Charge fJeptuna Branch.Percy Eldridge. . , '

Board of Adjustment.James Strudwiek, Chairman.

. Wnrren A. Piersall, Secretary. Joseph Lane.Earl Woolley.

Walter Tarayovis.

Ocean Grove Fire District.Dr. William A. ItoMosoa, President,

L. C. Briggs, Treasurer.James Boyce.Harry Reeves.C. VL Nagle.

Neptnne Fire Djafcdct No. l i Frank R. Dodd, President. . .

Leroy Garr&brant, Treasnrer.Earl Lawlor, Secretary.

Edgar Phillips.George Tiedeman

Ocean Grove Board of Trade, Inc. Auditorium Square Public infer-

i- atior. bureau, telegraph ocd tela- phoRr; enter. Railroad and steam­ship literature. S. D. Woolley, presi­dent; G. C. Stoll, executive secretary*

Ocean Grove Hotel Association, Inc. President, Will E. Bnnn; secretary, F. E. Rohland. - •

Ocean Grove; Csunp UtxtlBf hJUUK Gharlsa M. Boaw«U, Presldaat.. Alfred Wagjf, Vic;> Pres!i»«at,

George W. Uexusof., Setretery..John E. Andrus, Treasurer Emeritus. Lot R. Ward, Treasmrer,Melville E. Snydex, .General Superin­

tendent. ; x William Catley, Chief of Police,Harry Ayrca, Superintendent . of

Street Department.

How To Care For

Varicose _ Veins' Apply a gecerouu amount of Emersld Oil to tho swollen veins .and sores. Let it v penctrato. Feel liio magic relief! Now tiad' yaui leg with e bandage three inches'wiijo '■ and long.enough to givs the Eecessaiy sup- -

I .irt, '.finding it upward from tho snfcl to tbo knee, Uio Tvay the blood flown in its • eins. Stops the ijuId, Begins al oticn to heal ilie ulcers and broken veins;; Just M-:- low t:;!‘ ri.T.pIo di;'.'ctior:i and yon tore to te helped; Your, druggist won’t keep

-y*M'ctoney unless you exc,■.’f;f?!

Page 7: IPCAL TEIM^f MAKJES DEBUT BUDGET FURTHER …ist Contributes “The May Day Mystery,” Considered one of the Best of his Longer Tales, ior Times Readers. The Times, has secured, the

NEPTUNE SCHOOL NOTESVol. VIII. No. 11

Neptune Girls Defeat Red Bank-

Last Saturday afternoon the Nep­tune EVeshman, Sophomore, Junior nnd Senior girls defeated Red Bank basket ball teams in the local gym. The girls on the Freshman team were:. Annabelle Jemisoii, captain, Florence Gant, Sara Lee, Dorothy Pavia, Lois Hill, Dorothy Brown and Betty Lyon. The score was 22-7, in Neptune’s favor. The Sophomore team was made up of Evelyn-Pharo, captain, Lillith Nicholls, Kathleen Aitken, Ada Marter, Elsie Reighton, Virginia KulwCin, Nora Howes, Doris Morrell, Joyce Rahm and Evelyn Moulton. The score was .26-14 in Neptune’s favor, '

The Junior team, Susie Smith, cap­tain, Juanita Wright, Maud Tilton, Dorothy Bush, A nna Heidmark, Mil- -dred Dorothy, Mafipn Kims and Ruth Walzer. The score was 14-10 in Nep­tune’s favor. The Senior team was made up of the following: Alice Bilms, Bertha Bennett, Lillie Free­man, Hepsie McKenzie, Marjorie Thompson, captain, Shirley Coder, Betty Grieg, Mary Metcalfe, Pearl Reed’, Marguerite Gigson and Wilma Crawford. The score was 34-21 in Neptune’s favor. -Sarah. Murphy was scorekecper.. Ruth. Hart was . time-j keeper. After the games each Nep-| tune girl took a Red Bank girl to the cafeteria where refreshments. were served, in order to get better • acquainted. The girls- on ftTie: rie- freshment committep .were Margaret Adams, chairman; Ruth Bilnis, Anelva Reitz nnd Marjorie Kresge.

16, in the assembly:. ' Anelva Reitz, Geraldine White, Betty- Lyon, Emily Yarrington, Esther Brilliant, Helen Jones, Catherine NewhaUBen, Flor­ence Westervelt, Sara Lee, Rita Hor­ner, Dorothy Brown, Lois Hill, Mar­ion Moulton, Margaret Haines, Flor­ence Gant, Annabelle Jamison, Myrtle Hart, Dorothy N. Brown, Janet Bush, DOrthy Asay, Hilda Phillips, Muriel ■Smith, Ruth Hnrt, Sarah Murphy, Ada Marter, June Thompson, Eleanor Lopez, Millicent Sutton, Barbara Applegate, Edith Emmons and Doro­thy Pavia. The emblems were pre­sented by; Helen Spangler.

Swimming Club Formed.The swimming club meet at the

natatorium every Friday. The club is divided into three groups: Begin­ners, inteermediates, those who can swim the length of the pool or more, and advanced,'those who have passed all the other tests and are ready for junior life saving. The following girls went last Friday: Betty Lyon, -Joyce Rahm, Virginia Kulweiri, Janet Bush, Helen Miller, Ruth Mulford, Sarah Murphy, Ruth Walzer, Chris­tine Milne, Dora Maragoli, Muriel Pennington, Grace Qrrak, Florence Pollack, Elsie Reighton, Eleanor Syms and Marjorie Kresge. Betty' Lyon is head of swimming. Mr. Woolley, practice teacher, instructed the girls. '-I

A Junior class meeting was held Tuesday. Edward Van Note, presi­dent, presided. They discussed the prom to be held May 19. Juniors must pay their dues before that tim*”-

Many of the eighth grade girls of Ocean Grove are planning to make ■their graduation dresses with the aid of Miss Strassburger.

The Reds and Blacks are' getting ready for the contest. The Blacks elected Margaret Haines head of Stunts. Don’t forget the cntest is ■March 17.

A Washington program was given in the assembly on Wednesday. Bradford. Jones took chanre. Mr. Titcomb gave a reading, on Washing­ton. A moving picture was shown, entitled, “Life of Washington.”

NEPTUNE

DOWNS

WIN TWO GAMES IN WEEK TO

CONTINUE WINNING STREAKJ :

Girls • Receive Athletic Emblems.The following girls received G. A.

A, emblems on Thursday, February

Washington Program. .

The: Ocean Grove grammar school gave a Washington program in the assembly Wednesday morning. ■ The program opened with a song, “Amer­ica," followed by a Bible reading, Rose Moore; Lord’s Prayer; hymn, “Battle Hymn of the Republic”; patriotic anagrams, sixth and seventh grades; recitation, “February Mem­ories,” Irwin Milligan; song, “Little Month of February,” grade three; play, “Lonesome Abe,” sixth, sev­enth and eighth . grades;.. selection, “Stars and Stripes Forever;” primary orchestra; recitation, "Original Class Work on Lincoln and Washington,” Virginia Smith, Daniel Gillan, Betty Hahn; play, “The Big Three,” grade five; song, “George -.Washington,” story, “Training for the Presidency,” Betty Gibbons; playlet, “How George Told the Truth,” grades two and three;., recitation,- "Washington, a General,” Virginia Kein; closing Bong, "Star, Spangled Banner”; march, “First: In . . Air,” grammar ■ school orchestra.

Face Red Bank Tonight on .-Local

. Court After Turning Back Long

Branch and St. Rose. Will Face

Long Branch in First' Tourney

.Game at Morristown. : ; • I';; .

The Neptune, high school five have come; through another successful week after defeating'Long Branch on Tuesday night by the score of 25-20, and the’ St. Rose five of Belmar on Saturday evening by tho score of 22- 10. Tonight the Red and Black toss- ers take on the Red Baric high school aggregation and ' will undoubtedly take them into camp. , -- Playing at the Neptunt gymmasium before one of the largest crowds of the' season, the Neptune quintet, after trailing the Branchers during the first half, broke loose in the final period to knock over the Long Branch five by 25-20. Long Branch, playing the last two minutes withi four men, was unable to check the Neptune of­fense. . Neptune on the other hand, had their defense working smoothly and to advantage. . ■ 7 v

Sinking nine- of the thirteen trys for foul goals helped the local five- immeasurably in their victory ; Scor­ing for the locals was fairly evenly divided with Monroe carrying* off hon­ors for high man. Mooy, with four points,. Young with, five and Brow®,

-with five and Vctrano with three 'ac­counted for thc Red arid Black’s tally.

Tonight the Red Bank aggregation will face plenty of opposition in the Neptune team who have continued on thc winning side of the ledger and have every expectation of remaining there.

Neptune faces. Long Branch again on March, 3 at the Mbrristown high, school court in the first encpunter of the State Tournament. By virtue of their two recent wins over the. Branchers, Flack’s charges should experience little difficulty in downing their first tournament opponent.

JfALEMAN

^ F O R H A L L

W.C.T.U. OBSERVES

MEMORIAL DAY

OVER EIGHTY ARE PRESENT AT

FRANCIS WILLARD DAY

Mrs. H. I. Benson, President, Pre­

sides Over Program in Charge of

Miss S. E. Greenhalgh. Loyal

Legion Will Hold a Rally in Red

Bank on March 24.

The Ocean Grove W. C. T. U. celebrated Francis Willard Memorial

Day on Tuesday afternoon at the Bancroft-Taylor1 Rest Home, with Mrs. H. I. Benson presiding. More than eighty were in attendance.' After.the opening song service, led

by Miss Madeline Halleran, the Union repeated the Shepherd Psalm, and Mrs. H. P. Fox led in- prayer. Mrs. E. J. Brown sang, “0 Love That Will Not Let Me Go.” Miss Harriet E. Emersqn> of Sunset Rest, too much

of an invalid to attend the regular meetings was present, and in. a. few words of greeting, she expressed her loyalty to the W. C.;T. U.. The ,name of a new member was received, Miss Martha Breaky, and “the youngest member” was presented, the ‘little son of Mrs. : George Hall. Mrs. Benson spoke of the recent death of Miss Cora Buschmann, at one time treas­urer of the Union, and always a loyal member.

Miss Irene Cummings, who was ?. delegate to the Monmouth county conference held at . Freehold last month, gave an interesting report of

-flic meeting, quoting some of the - words of Mrs. Nina Frantz, State

president, and Mrs. Ella Christner,- Stato corresponding secretary. Miss Cummings,' having beem recently ap­pointed director of the Loyal Legion of Ocean Grove W. C.T. V,, spoke of the first meeting she had with the children last Friday, thirty-six being in attendamce. Miss Mabel Vaughn announced a Loyal Legion Rally to be held at Red Bank, March 24,. The program, in. charge, of . Miss S., E. Greenhalgh, was well carried out. Mrs. Elsa Bremiecke sang, “In

' Christ - There is. no East nor West.”Then followed a march by .several

who represented foreign countries, each bearing aloft the flag o f, her country. As they marched to the front, and encircled a globe of the world, several members of the Union surrounded them singing, “Wind the Ribbon Round the Nations,” passing a long white ribbon from hand to hand, as they marched around the circle. :

The collection -for the afternoon was sent to the Frances Willard Me­morial Fund, and contributions/to the "Feed the Hungry Fund,” amounting to $2.70 were received at the door.

HOLD RARE COPY OF PAPER

Sheet Published in 1800 Contains

Account of Death of Washington.

An original copy of the'Ulster County Gazette, published at Kings­ton, Va.,- on Saturday, .January 4, 1800, carrying the death notice of George Washington and an account of the funeral is in the possession of Mr. and Mrs. George, Gardner, of 32 Olin street. 1 /

The paper, yellowed with age and handling is still ini good condition and is printed with the old-fashioned type and set by hand. The paper Was purchased over fifty years ago by Mr. Gardner’s father, who was at the tim employed in Newark. It lias been kept in the family and is con­sidered of exceptional value.

The sheet, composed of four small pages folded in the magazine style, was published by Samuel Freer and Son, and was one of the first papers established in Virginia.

A Plant From: the Far East.

The Arabian primrose, Amebia Corriuta, says A. C. McLean, New Jersey Agricultural Extension Ser­vice, is a native of Palestine1 and Eastern Asia. It can easily be grown, however,‘by the New Jersej gardener who is anxious to give his planting distinction and vivid color. A member of the forget-me-not fam­ily, it grows from twelve to eighteen inches high and has a wealth of sun­ny, yellow flowers spotted with dark brown when they first open. As the flower ages the spots gradually dis­appear.

Sow the seed in early spring wher­ever the plants are to bloom and thin them put until they are from eight to twelve inches apart.- Thte seed generally comes w ith the husks in­tact and they should, of course, be removed before planting. . The Arab­ian primrose will not thrive in an acid soil, and should be grown in pne that is in a good condition for the growing of most gardjoti vegetable, crops, " It is sometimes necessary to apply lime before starting the

KENTUCKY ATHLETE RECEIVES

AWARD NAMED EOR HALL

The Feats'of “Norm” Hall Recalled

by Announcement' of Winner of

Annual Scholarshp Highly Prized

At Yale. '

Tow ship Committeeman John, i'S. Hall ha3 received word 'that the fourth 'Norman Hall Scholar, at Yale has been, named—Walter . Adelbert Marting, of Pineville, _Ky\ He is one of three brothers who have gone to Yale. He played Freshman-football and baseball after coming, from Exeter and is a'varsity football amd baseball man with the prospect, of being a first-string quarterback next fall. Ho belongs to .Cloister.

The story of; Norman Hall, of Nep­tune high school championship foot­ball and basketball teams, is a story that never grows- old at Yale.. His old friends here will enjoy hearing it again as told by W. F. L. Lush, in his newspaper column “Second Gues­ses.” .' - - y

“Norman Stewart Hall was borm in Neptune, N. J;, August 26, 1903, the' Son of a real estate broker of moder­ate circumstances. From the time that 'Norm’ played on Central Jer­sey championship football and basket­ball teams at little Neptuno high he resolved to go to Yale. He left high school to work his way at Mercers- burg Academy, waiting on. tabic and at other jobs. He found time to play on , the football, basketball and track teams: Studies did not come easily. He was told a Bmall college that did not require College Board Examina­tions might be easier to enter—but his mind was set on Yale.

"He transferred to ‘Kiski.’ There he first exhibited the almost super­human strength that later was to stamp him as one of the greatest all­round athletes Yale ever had. In an interscholastic track meet for ‘Kiski’ he scored 29% points—five points more than any entering team—by placing in the hundred-yard dash, shot put, discuss, hammer, low hurd­les, high jump andlfjiole vault.”

T writer goes on to describe his feats at Roxbury school and finally at Yale—the goal of years of ambi­tion, where he won victory after vic­tory, until Christmas vacation, 1928, he was drowned in Crahford' while trying to save a classmate and his sister who had skated through thin ice. " , ^y :. -;.W.

Later that "• classmate, Leonard F. Genz, and other classmates, raised $10,000 to establish the Norman Hall scholarship, of which it has been said that there-can be no finner monument to any man, no greater recommenda­tion in latey life, than to have been known as a Norman Hall scholar!

D. Y. Class Plan Entertainment.

The D. Y. Sunday School Class will hold a stereopticon entertainment in the Sunday- School room on Monday evening; February 27th, on Kentucky Mountaineers, and Dr. H. P. Fox will give , his persoMal experiences with the Mountaineers. One of the'fea­tures of the entertainment will be a handicraft exhibition of rugs, quilts and crocheting work. Anyone wish­ing to place any articles for this ex­hibit should see Mrs. Fox at the par­sonage. ' Marjorie Kresge will give a reading and Mary Hoy will render two solos, “Loves Old Sweet Song,” and ‘Joyce Kilmer’s “Trees." Miss Glendora, Weeks’ ■ -class' will candy , for sale. -

Eureka Club Wins. /

Eureka Club of Ocean Grove de­feated the Red Men Lodge No. 295 recently at the Eureka club rooms, 50 Pitman avenue, in a match game of quoits.

Eureka A. A.—L. Opdyke, 48; W. Danielson, 46; Clayton, 50; L. Kelsie, 37; F. Van Nat, capt., 46; Ti Buh- man, 42; Mulford, 61; -M. Mitchell, 55. Total, 385.

Red Men Lodge No. 295—Bishop, 47; dimple, 42; Martin, 33; R, Bowne, 34; Wonobough, 51; W; Bowne, 34; Pearce, capt, 25. Total, 296.In the play-off Mulford and Mit­

chell defeated Wonebough and Bishop 50-44/ - • J

Those who wish to arrange for games with the Euneka Club can dp so by writing to Harry Mitchell, 29 Cookman avenue, Neptune City.

FRIDAY, ;,PEBRU

SUFFERS FRACTURE OF HIP

Mrs. H. B. Dorr Entertaiits D. A. It.

The February meeting of the Rich­ard Stockton Chapter, D. A. R,, was held at the home of Mrs; II. B. Dorr, 67 Main avenue, on Monday evening. 'Mrs. Marjorie MacWhinney was assistant hostess. Mrs. Edwart Jaeneeke, vice president,, presided and welcomed Mrs., Lyman Allen, Mrs. Hamilton/F p x and, Mrs. Edna Hill Sa guests. ;-:H .. -

After a short , business meeting Mrs. Allen- read' several selections from “An Epic Trilogy," volume! 1,- by Lyman 'Whitney Alien. Doctor H. B, Dorr rendered several. violin solos, accompanied'by Mrs. Hill,

Miss Emma Sturgis, Summer Resi-

. dent, Injured by a Fall. -,

While visiting the Grove -on Wash­ington's birthday Miss .Emma 'Stur­gis, of Newark, fell from the back porch at the home of.Mrs. A. V. Bar- low, 90 Webb avenue, and fractur.ed her hip. She| .was rushed to . the Long Branch hospital by the Ocean Grove ambulance on Wednesday afternoon. -

Miss Sturgis and her sister, Mrs. P. Miegel, were here visiting their other sister; Mtb. C. L. Merritt, 63 Mt. Tabor Way--. They went to look- at their summer cottage at 86 Webb avenue and then called on Mrs. Bar- low, where the accident occurred. -Miss Sturgis was not- in the best, of health and her condition is said to be serious. '

OCEAN GROVE

MARKET125 Heck Avenue, Cor. Wbitefield

Tel. 2991 FBUE DELIVERY

SPECIALS THIS WEEK --

: -. •-• r«f Poona

Prime Rib Roast 23c. Small Smoked ' HamsSmoked Tongue Canadian Bacon Gobel’s Sliced

Bacon Allentown ScrapplelOc. Taylor's Pork Roll 29c; Fosgate Farms

\OPg£

and

Ocean Grove BankIn Liquidation

ANNOUNCEMENT

The agency office in Ocean Grove will hereafter be open only-between one and two o’clock P. M. daily, except Saturday, so as to permit safe deposit box renters to have access to their boxes.

F. J. FITZPATRICK

Special Assistant Deputy Commissioner of Banking

’ \

“ W e ’ve been a little ,

worried about y o u ..

rr>HKEE busy weeks had slipped by aiid J-.she had not written home. No wonder Mother and Dad were worried.

•Would you telephone? We bejieve you would, If you realized the happiness and relief from atudety that your, call would bring to those at home. Easy to do... liitle ih cost.

TYPICAL 8TA.TION.TO.STA.TION RATESt.Day 7 p.mi 8.30 p.m.

50 miles 45c - 35c; 35c100 miles 60c 50c 35c150 mile* 80c 70c 50c

NEW JERSEY BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY

A s t d e f r o i n convenience, h ea lt h and known value,

Frigldaire now costs less than it earns -w: %

How can a Frigldaire earn anything, you ask? The answer Is it earns by-saving food spoilage. Two and a quarter mil­lion owners no longer know except from memory what It Is to throw away food that didn’t keep . . . Thousands have re­ported food savings that average $7.70 a month/and savings In refrigeration, costs, averaging $3.22 a month.

It not only pays for Itself but Its pur­chasers within the.reach of everybody. Until February 28th it’s delivered to yogr'home free. You put 25 cents a day In the meter until it’s paid for .After that you save considerable money monthly

That's glorifying the American Quar­ter, aiid It’s Glorifying THRIFT.

33 E2-i The Mcter-Ice P lan o f Purchase Ends Feb. 28

The Importance of the Hair •The woman who is.annoyed by'hair difficulties

■ will f i n d ' '• BORDEN’S TRANSFORMATIONS

a valuable acquisition,.providing a coiffure of: nituralncss and chatra. -

Borden's Hair Pieces art renowned lor exquisite' qualities—Thc"Ja ' ndHiti on: ♦«- the permaneht vav« industry—‘Spim. ( cnifort, Spfttg. • • : •• THE. BORPEN MACHINE and METHOD:PATEMTEp;?

Beauty Coliure.Imporled Pat^TrunfotmiUont.Coimetici

BORDEN’S HAIR SHOP“ 538 Cookman Avenue