LX1V No. 39. Reelected Chairman Neptune School County G.O ...
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dĂłyiwñWBi .October 16th, a t 7.45 . , Th0 bp'ok, Copyrighted, o'clock^ '; /: Âż ,/.--vâs -!;. .-. by/.tho. CordĂłn: Compqnj
â-ââ Now-York city, with ill:: ÂżAlbert;:; & ;/ :^ M tu o p , ^eafpfcntw. ' Qnd 'jaTl^klnaa of : roofa imĂ ny r unlvBrsitieĂ /^ and ^ 'e r«cd ,â . Ă^ O .td : ll.BĂH-J
'ĂźV .- '^ lw Ăm S w S S S m m s m Ă m B i
j. A Dujr Only From riesponi Ibl« Mer* chant«. OoMĂčIt Times Adverilnlngi
i Columna For Store« of Proved >âąâ :. . Integrity, 'â
Reelected Chairman County G.O.P. Comntittee
Rewarded For Excellent Service in Last Yearâs Campaign; Senator Proctor Heads Speakersâ Bureau; Headquarters 109 South Main St.
Jo h n W . K nox, c le rk o f N ep tu n e to w n sh ip , w as ve-' e le c ted c h a irm a n o f th e M o n m o u th coun ty R ep u b lican
; execu tive co m m ittee w ith o u t oppo sitio n a t th e m ee tin g of â th e com m ittee in E reeh o lcL T u esd ay -n ig h t,-â â ------
Tho only circumstance that kept ./. the election, from being unanimous
âą0 was the action of Hetrickâs Asbury ark committeemen and women in refraining os a unit in voting âfor
â or agninst anybody." This was gen- eraly considered o n ly 'a technical gesture that belied the fact that inÂdividually Asbury Parkâs represent tatives also favored the selection
I of Mr. Knox.I Praising the organizational abil-I ity of the chairman in last yearâsL successful election, Albert Woolley, %?*head .of Long Branchâs committee-
. men and women, placed the nanio of 'K nox in» nomination. He had
âhardly completed the nomination when George Hunt, vice chairman of the Asbury Park unit, rose to explain th a t he had been instructed in the absence of Mr. . Hetrick, to say th a t his'group would not vote fo r or against anybody. '
fc. â â â The election proceeded smoothly, P with the election of the following
officers: vice chairman, Mrs. EmÂma ' VanSchoick, of ÂĄRed Bank; secretary, Miss Ruth Sisco, of Bel- mar, succeeding Mrs. Emma Nes- bit, of Spring Lake; treasurer, Herbert Brown, of Keyport'; serÂgeant-at-arms, George W. ConoÂver, of Atlantic Highlands, to sucÂceed Jesse Green, of Long Branch.
The veteran Fred Price, of Red Bank, acted as temporary chair-
? vm an during the selection of the permanent chairm an,. assisted by th e followlng judge of election and tellers: Adrian Chambrlain, RayÂmond Woolley and Mrs. Hannah Greetin. ,
Sheriff Morris J , Woodring, who is tho committeeman from tho firgt district of Ocean Grove was unable to be present on account of illness. State Highway Commissioner' E .1
â Donald Sterner also sent his reÂgrets on account of urgent highÂway business requiring his presÂence inT rentonr ----- ' â â
of whorrt spoke briefly: J . Russell Woolley, for county clerk, to sucÂceed Raymond F, W yckoff, who died in office this spring; 3, StanÂley Herbert and H arold McDerÂm ott, fo r re-election as assemblyÂman; Dorman McFaddin, former mayor of Long Branch, and Edgar O. Murphy, of Farmingdnle, for fo r freeholders/ A summing up of the good points of all the candiÂdates was delivered by S tate SenaÂto r Haydn Proctor. Mrs. Geraldine Thompson,- state; committeewoman and member of the board of the AllenwOdd hospital, also spoke in behalf of the ticket.
Proctor Heads Speakers BureauChairman Knox announced that
Senator Proctor would bo in chargo of the speakers bureau in the camÂpaign and th a t permanent headÂquarters would be opened this week a t 109 South Main street, Neptune.; He will be iavailable.there ;to renÂder any/assistance needed in' tho .campaign.
.Leo J. Warwick, of Long Branch, was named chairman of the DemoÂcratic county executive committee ati its .organization .meeting on the same .evening. Mrs. Rosa Bergen, of Matawan, was chosen vice chairÂman. The other officers named werqr Mrs. Mae -Karp, of Rumson, assistant secretary; J o s e p h Schwark, of Long Branch; treasurÂer, and- Mrs. Louise-Gatta, of As- bury Park, secretary.
ST. PAULâS AUXILIARY MEETS
Following the election, Chairman Knox introduced the candidates chosen in the recent primary, each
K p o ĂŒ N D t a b l e m e t m o n d Ay
â jvTopics of General Interest Discuss- , * ed By Ladiesâ Group
'1 The Ocean 1 Grove Round Table8 held its regular meeting Monday
evening nt-the home : of Mrs, A. Dr ' Riley, '98 Mtr Tabou Way. Topics
of general interest were discussed.A talk on the original trylon â nnd
-, perispherc Was, given by Mrs. -Lou- âąJse :.Ruscoe; a reading concerning
Dr. Lee DisFovest bdvising the, [ British and. French Embassies. in I .Washington â dn the use of short/â wave radio â waves ; in treating
â wounds in field hospitals, was given by Miss" Victoria North, while a talk âPeggy Stevenson InÂterviews Yankee Clipper PassengÂers,â was given by Mrs. Edith R akestraw .. Miss Laura Lane read an article on âCanned Crabs Sec-
pU-ret Out,â and. the presldont, Miss Gertrude! Orvis, read an article on some incidents in the war
. âW hatâs in a N am e?â w asreud r by Mrs. Carolyn Hatfield, and Miss
' Mae'-Perkins read of âLincoln the Bootblack.â ,The origin of willow trees being credited to. the sending of a basket from .Smyrna .was told by Miss Lillian Brigham, and: Mrs.
., Charles Baldwin, .of;iCnldwell,i told »:of the Pen and Poin t club of that ; city. ' The . additiohal aid being -Bought for the blind of New Jer-
:x-sey wo» discussed by Mrs. -E.' L.Roff, and th a t Kansas City; has
vibanneai'^he - 'h o v e l,.. âG rapea.'of. Wroth,â was told by Mrs. Rake- straw.; Miss Mary Elliot : Dunham rcadâon article on the French acadÂemy honoring Daguerre.
Othors.present -were the hostcBs,- Mrs. Riley and -Mrs. - Elizabeth .â Wills. â The next m eeting. will be r.heid October 0 a t the homo of, tho
Misses Sara and Victoria North, 46 ..»Abbott'avenue.f' . : Vy/;, ------- âą â â - â ' ' . .
Endeavor Chorus to Rehearse-, Y.? Tho- Philadelphia Christian En- . deavor >âą Union Chorus, ' consisting âą'of over 260 ivoices, will hold its
'^regular,'monthly rehearsal' in .the A rch Street M. E. Church, on Mon-
. flay, .October.,: 2nd.;;;The . Union «? Chorus,/'which.consists of Young iPeqplo, and'their -older friénds^from nil ⹠parts, of Philadelphia and vi-
*>dnity, i s , ĂŒndĂ©r thĂ© direction of ip ro fJ v Raymond- L. Lyons; / The
^.Chorus' has'1 .sungat' all o f the U ni ^ ib n âs 'nllies-'held since 1932, and >ls :-^aw,-})rtparingvt6 sing a t Phlladal- 'iphia 'U pionâs/rally,- when Dr. Ross ; stover will ' head - a ;. âKeep-.Smiling Program" i in . the. Bajrtlst Temple,
v Broad and âBcrks: Streets, on Mon-
F irs t Fall ; Meeting . Held; Monday . A t The Home -,
. St. Paulâs Auxiliary of the Home, fo r the Aged had their f irs t fall meeting a t the Home on Monday afternoon. ' The President, Mrs. R. J . Cornelius, presided. The amount of $48 from the sale of; âBricks" for-thenewHom eW Esreceivednnd so far'. $166.00 .has been received from the sales with more to be turned in Inter. Dues received at this meeting were $13.00.
Plans were outlined for-a numb e r of social functions for the beneÂf i t o f the Home to be held throughÂout the Fall and W inter, the first one being a cafeteria supper in; St. Paul's Church on Friday, October 13th. There were fifteen members present - âą Mrs, .Cornelius, Mrs! E. Mount, Mrs. Allen, Mrs. L. C. Briggs, Miss Drake, Mrs. W. TayÂlor, Mrs. Wall, Mrs, Stapleton; Mrs. C- Hatfield,' Mrs. Long, Mrs.' Loson/Mrs. Kilshaw, Mrs. Binkley, Miss R. Hawkshurst, Mrs. Bickel, Mrs. C. W. B. Putt.
- - » -
Ocean Grove In University Text
PUBLIC SPEAKING BOCK CĂN- ; âą TAINS DESCRIPTION " ; - ,
Bucknell University Professorâs Book Fon Public Speaking Class Has Included Reference to âSfjuare Mile of Godâs Countryâ
Students, many of whom are unÂfam iliar with the past,-present and future greatness of Ocean Grove, will, read a brief description of w hat has made the âsquare' mile of; Godâs countryâ iam ous when studying tho public speaking text book recently written by Professor Robert T. Oliver, of Bucknell UniÂversity. . ;
Professoi1 Oliver has included in his; book,. âTraining fo r Effective Speech," ; a speech by George . W. Bain;; titled -; .âPlatfprm.., ExperiÂences." Mr. Bain, who was was born a t Lexington, Ky., in 1840 and spent- most of h is,life as a ChauÂtauqua ;and LyceĂŒni lçcturer, was known as âtho 'g rand old;m an of tho platfornj.â-â'; âIn â th is speech,â tho author adds, âhe , gathers toÂgether- the fru its of his long and varied experience in addressing 'all kinds of audiences ÂĄ under nil.' sorts of, conditions.â , y- ,V ; *V ' i 'f ir . ÂĄBain wrote. â.âOne ; whp . Had hoard.mo, many; timessĂ id:;Ni Why do you-'do better a t Ocean Grove th an anywhere eise :I.iheap, you?! Miy .answer, was: ,âBĂšcĂ usĂ© bf conÂditions. The great s,:; Auditorium seats ten thousand, the atmosphere is invigorated; by the salt sea â breezesj a choir of-.five . hundred sing, the audionço In to a' receptive mood' and the; speaker is borne from climax to climax on wings of applause.â ..vi;.-,.'-..
th is 'year , Inc.. .of us' '
OâROUUKE NAMED BY IV 11. Ă!
Neptune Iâolicemnn Ih Scrgcaut-ttt- Arms, of State Group
Jam es OâRourke, NepUine police officer, was named Sergentnt-ut- arms a t 'th o annual cqnventron of the State .Patrolman's Benovelent association; The group met thls wcolt- iii. Atlantic Ity und re-elected Harry B. Gourley, Paterson, presiÂdent. â â ;
In a resolution to, the State Motor .Vehicle department, the asÂsociation asked a return to the old large-size automobile, . . . license plates, charging th a t this yearâs new small-size plates are âconfusÂing- and difficult to r«ad.â V
Policemen throughout the . State have frequently criticized the plates which ĂĄre about half the size of thq previously used plates and bear; much smaller . letters. These letters are used in combinn- tion at- the beginning oftKiTfegis- tratlon and often become confusing a t a distance.
COUNTY CHAIRMAN
Township Clerk John W. Knox W-ho was, rcclected.Chairman of the Republican County Commit-
. tec
Faculty GuĂšsts of the P. T. A.
ANNUAL RECEPTION LAST NIGHT IN HIGH SCHOOL
New Principal of Grammar School, - Charles Cowan, Introduced ' 'by
Supervising Principal Moulton; Program- of Student EntertnĂŹn- ment^Given
The annual reception to faculty members of the high school and thĂš Ocean 'Grove gramm ar school was held Vast night in the high school auditorium by tho Ocean Gtrove-Neiitune P. T, A.- . About one hundred parents and teachers attended. A student program was presented as entertainment.
-Dr. O. J. Moulton,' supervising principal, Introduced the new prinÂcipal-of the Ocean Grove ^chool, Charles Cowan; also the new first" grade teacher, Miss Florence H artÂley, and the new sewing teacher, Miss Virginia Brown. All the othÂer, teachers-took a standing bow aa their name was announced.
The Freshman sektĂČtte' sĂ ng.twp lullabys. from . Jocelyn by Goddard and from Pinafore. The members were Edwlna Forbes, Mclva PowÂell, Jean-Lane, Marion Swinnerton, ^Virginia Shipley, and Elizabeth Palaia: Two dances iii; costumewere given by Dolores Malmsbury, accompanied by) Eddie King. WilÂliam Homer played guÂĄtar.and harÂmonica selections. Games followed In; which' the: whole group partici-, patcd. .- .; 'A corsage Was. prcsented to' the new president, Mrs.' Archie GrifÂfith, by. the retiring president, Mrs. Elmer Beattie. ; Corsages and boutÂonnieres werc also p resen tei tĂČ-tho guests of the' evening,- the faculty members. , , "; Announcement was made of a ?lTom Thumb Woddingââ- and fashÂion show, to be held on October 13 by'the Ways and means committec.
The attendance award' for- the high school was .won by Miss MosÂer s room 17 and for the grammar school by Mrs. Wilgusâ second grade room.
The October meeting will be Fathersâ, night and the speaker will be County Superintendent Thomas B. Harper.
New members received last night were Mrs. Elizabeth Covert, Mrs; G. Hubard, Mrs. Joseph White, Smojinski, Mrs, T. L. PoWell; Mrs. Norman Hannahi Mr. and Mrs. Horbert' 'B.' Jones,â,Mrs! Bertha A rÂtis and Mrs. Ralph , Cottrell, ; ; â â ;/ Following the program refrcsh-
mcnta were served in the cafeteria.-
; .--Tapty, delicious sandwiches of all kinds and light lunch, a t Nagleâs Soda Fountain, 43 ,Maln Aye.âad»
Optometrlst-Optlcian ,, Donât Neglect Yoar Eyes ; r âą ÂżV Dr.- Joseph F. Heine , âą518 Cookmkn A»eâ A. P . Tel. 1S4
; . /m i i i |-j - -, - ,
The Methodist Home for the Aged, 63 Clark avenue, this week announced a 16-week drive, to s ta r t a t once, which will bd waged to gain the; unpledged balance of $400,000 needed in the drive to conÂstruct a new home in Oceaii Grove. The new structure will'be; built on a site facing Flotcher Lakej bound- ed.by New York.andrStiOckton-ave- nues and Pilgrim Pathw ay.;
Sanford C. Flint, president of the Homeâs board of trustees, made the announcement; of the drlvd and also said th a t James A. Mac A rt, of Calvary. Methodist church, E ast Orange,'ÂżwpuM direct the extensive campaign.,.'. The new director will select several district chairmen and assistants in the New Jersey and Newark conferences.
The district superintendents of the two conferences '.m e t!a t the Home to meet with 'Mr: Mac A rt and discuss the jilans. ThoBp presÂent Were Dr. Leon Chamberlain, New Brunswick district; Dr,"ThomÂas S. 'Brock, Trenton; D n C. D. Whitten, Bridgeton; Dr. E . F , Hann, Camden; Dr. Edgar Washa- baugh, Newark; Dr. Carl Qulmby, Jersey City; andl Dr. P. H.; HolloÂway, of the Paterson district. ,- : . - .
'/ â 'âą>WORKERS LAY PIPE LINE
Home To Drive For Moro Funds
SEEK PLEDGES : FOR .â3100,000 BALANCE ON NEW: ROME
James; Mac Art,. E ast -Orange, - Named Director o f Campaign; Will Select District/ Workers. Superintendents -â Meet At Home To Discuss Plans
CLASS PLANS SUPPER
Association Men Construct Line to W ater Grass Plbt
Ocean Grove Association workÂers this week begtm work on the laying of. a pipe; line; along the grass plot to the east of Ocean avenue. The pipe line will replace a line laid early th is â. summer- to carry water for grass on the site which was dying because of the long'diy spell;
The new plpo will be; a permaÂnent job' and will carry -water that the famous grass stretch, along the Ocean Grove ocean front'w ill not suffer from future dry spells. Ocean Grove has beenâ famous for the long unobstructed stretch bf ocean front and will further add to itsAjeauty by keeping a green plot of grass along.the ocean.front. ^
Hoffman BacksNew U.C.C. Law
SEEK TO AMEND STATUTES ; ON CONTRIBUTIONS V
Bill Would Eliminate One Per Cent bf Wages Given by Workers for Compensation; Bill to Make New Jersey Law Mesh with Federal Act.
Bllla arnemling the UnemployÂment Compensation Law of Now Jersey to, bring about- the eliminaÂtion of worker;;â contributions: bf one. per; cent . of wages received were introduced In both branches oi the Legislature this weeky folÂlowing â the recommendation of Executive Director Hai'old G.-HoiT- man. in the House ' of Assembly theâ trieasure .introduced by AssemÂblyman 1 Oscar Wilensky. of PasÂsaic,.was moved: to tho floor withÂout reference and immediately passed,. In the Senate; ; Senator Charles E. Loizeaux, of Union, sponsored the -repeal -measure.
In addition ;to eliminating . workÂersâ contributions, the bill .will make the; New Jersey UnemployÂment Compensation Law- mesh-.: in with the recent) amendment to the Federal Social-:Security Act. proÂviding fo r .a $3,000 cut-off for the employers' tax-under the Federal A ct. The, b i l l ; also makes techniÂcal , changes m l,other Sections of the law so th a t the employer, may â have a- clear.âÂżonceof of the .various: provisions.'. Repeal of the workersâ contriÂbutions, sections of the New Jersey ldw, will soon become . effective January 1, 1940 if the Senate conÂcurs; in the Assembly action and the measure , is signed by Governor A.,, Harry Moore. New-., Jersey workers .haveâ been contributing about $11,000,000. annually since January ,1, 1938. Employers are now. paying intp the fund approxiÂmately $31,000,000 annually 'at the ra te of .2.7' p e r cent. In recomÂmending the repeal of workersâ conÂtributions, Executive Director'HarÂold Hoffman stated, âExperience in thd Payment bf benefits and the col- lecti*ri of.; contributions has indiÂcated th a t the sizeiof our reserves niny bo m aterially reduced Without threatening the stability of the fund.â 1 '
-»ââ âââFire Board To Hold Session
â The -Ocean Grove, bqard o f fire commissioners are â scheduled to meet tonight in,special session to discuss .plans fo r th a replacement of tho boiler a t the Eagle Hook and itiiddor: houBe, 'Main avenuo. Tho present. boiler: in that firo house was found to bq beyond repair: a t a recent ,inspection by heating engK neers. . :'
M B IA N i :Onl>:.:.Tdior
C afeteria 'Supper To Be Hold In Church By Bible.Group
Plans for a cafeteria supper .1.. ; be given on October i!0 have heen: completed by the'Assem bly Bible j class of St. Paulâs church. The sup-, per will be held in the Junior room of the church, and will be open to the . public.« A...'regular monthly business session â of the class 'will- be held/following; the supper.
Thq committee ill charge of the supper includ.es Mrs, George Cat- ley, Chairman, 'Mrs, Jacob Glock-. ler, Mrs. William Gillan, Mrs. CalÂvin Reed, Mrs. Jerome. Allgor, Mrs. Ida' Mason, Mrs. .. Chai'les Lalgn, Miss Ida .Mason,.'Miss JesÂsie Sutherland, Mrs. Charles Rake- traw , Mrs. Louis Samuelson, Mrs, Mrs. Mm'ie~Kinn.isnn~Gcorge Cat- ley, Archie Griffith, Frank H. Av- erill, Charles Laign, John H. Wall and Jacob Glockler, âą ' / *
. â -- - âCOMMITTEE CHAIRMAN
Neptune School Study Bus Route Problem
State Senator Haydn Proctor Named Chairman, of Speakerâ.} âą Committee by County ReÂ
publican Committee..
Testing Machine For Highways
WILL REPLACE WORN-OUT EQUIPMENT IN USE
Transportation Committee to Report on School Bus Routes and Plans to Eliminate Overloading. - Todd Authorized to Make Advance PurÂchases to Effect Savings.
T h e tra n sp o rta tio n c o m m ittee o f th e N ep tu n e tow n -. sh ip J ifia rcL -o L jid u ca tiiiiiâw a s -a u th o r iz e d ,â:it th eâboard-âs -
Contractors Do Not Receive Pay- .. mĂ©nti- Until: Highways Are TestÂ
ed and Approved. EddystoneCorni Receives Order On Low.Bid of $14,810
Sta te â Highway Commissioner E. Donald Sterner today authorized the purchase of a modern hydraulic testing machine to replace worn- out equipment in the Highway DeÂpartment Laboratory.
The order will be placed with the lowest of three bidders, the Bald- win-Southwark Corporation, of Eddystone, a t $14,810. The new equipment will have a capacity Of 400,000 pounds, an increase of 100,- 000 pounds over the one now In use, und will g rea tly . increase the range of work- that may be handled.
Commissioner- Sterner has develÂoped the Laboratory- to determine whether materials' offered, by;bidr. dors are of specified grades. .The "intricate, ; scientific '. Instruments which Commissioner, has obtained are playing a more .important role In the inspections governing every phase of highway construction.
Under - the : modem : practices Which- have been devloped. a conÂtractor docS not reeeive full payÂment until final laboratory.reports are received. Iii . the ; construction of ii concrete highwi-iy oms of the tests / is madd ĂČli- the cores or cyl- irnlers of concrete taken from varÂious sections of the pavement after the concrete has âcuredâ ĂČr hardenÂed foiâ 28 klays, T he cbrĂšs: disclose a t once whether the concrete has been laid, a t, th e proper thickness, whether- the right steel reinforceÂment has/been used, and whether the prope,r proportion of ingrediÂents has gone into the mix.
Compressive strength,' or' the pressure in/pounds- which a core of concrete will withstand before it breaks, is one of the.qualities, disÂclosed by the testing; machine. To obtain long-wearing 'pavem ents, New Jersey under its own . cement; formula' is thĂš most exacting of all the states in the Union in the high standards, it has established goÂverning tbe compressive strength.
NEW LIGHTSâ * FOR ~TRUCKS
reg u la r m e e tin g W e d n e sd a y , to in v e st ig a te v ar iou s rou tes fo r th e sc h o o l bu sses to e lim in a te any o v e r lo a d in g ot' th ebusses. T h e c o m m ittee , w ith th e d istr ic t c le rk , A lfr ed P.Todd, will study a plan of rerout- \ , -ing the busses to equalize the ram - sides of the h i g h school building
- - - âą âą âą were completed and the accounthad been, paâd
The board authorized Mr. Todd to make any purchases of m ateriÂals in 'th e , future Which will be needed foi- school use and Which m ight be purchased at a saving!, Two years ago Mr. Todd puri;hased a supply of pencils a t a low figure, the pencils not being used, how- . ever, until this year. Had the purÂchase been made a t the: present time, the price would have been almost double that paid- by. .the clerk a t that time This advance, purchasing . has brought, about many savings on necessary materÂials, as prices on school materials are generally -Increasing.
The board, on . recommendation of the supervising principal, Dr, Onsville ,1. Moulton, authorized the, purchase of'a sound motion picture . projector and the enrolling in the Templt University film library. The projector, Dr. Moulton said, will be a great aid in teaching, as films, on all subjects arc available through the university library.and from other sources. The sound equipment also can be set up as a small public address unit in the auditorium a t the school or in, the gymnasium. /
The school, board ordered the purchase of a-gross of composition .' trays for the school cafeteria. 1
A fter an investigatin of the conÂdition of the piano in the school asÂsembly hall, the board authorized the purchase of a piano to replace the one there, and allotted funds, for repairs to a piano In the school gymnasium.
ber of pupils carried in the three school bussess.
The board authorized thĂš comÂmittee, headed by Earl Woolley, to make a study of th e . condition and ' experiment with routes to make the least possible, work for the students and t o , stop overÂcrowding of the busses The board studied, on maps of the' township, severa) proposed routes, / but no ; action was taken pending 1âeport Of thu committee. . â
The transportation committee also recommended a plan whereby the attendance officer, Miss Janet, V. Bouse, would use her own car for school business and be; repaid on ' a per mile basis. The plan is used with various other school offiÂcers and has proved successful; The recommendation was made as an alternative, to the replacement of the school/car now being used by the attendance officer. This car; seven' yeai-s old; was pointed ĂČĂčt as being needful o f, repairs or .reÂplacement. The board authorized the use of the. per mile plan for a trial period. ;
The clerk reported tho new fire escapes -on the', north and south
DR. WEECH IS PREACHER
lĂev. Van Hook Attending Occan City Conference
On Sunday, Dr. Carlton R. Van Hook being ĂĄway attending the
annual conference the guest preachÂer at- fit." Paulâs Methodist church for both morning and, ovening will be Dr. Rbert W. H. Weech, who will; take for his themes; morning âThe Wonderful NainĂ©,â ail'd for the evening, . âWhen the Woiâld Seems Wronii Side' Out.â MidÂweek prayer service Wednesday eveiiing, 7.46 oâclock.. A cordial welcome is extended to all. our. members and friends1
The ushers ââ for October a t the church" a re ,m o rn in g ,. N. HendÂrickson, W. Kennedy, R. Stirling, E. Smith, H. Kresge, jr., R. Ham- inan, S. Hoagland, anil W. Perkins,' Evening,'J,- Ralnear, sr., C. Rook, R. Cunliffe, D. OâReilly, C. âą Dodd, H. J. Heck, O., Stoll, J. Whitworth;
The regular usherâs union meetÂing will be held at the church TuesÂday evening.
Highway Show Plows To; Be ProÂtected By âStop Lamps"
State Highway, Commissioner, E. Donald Sterner today extended his safety program to: keep New Je rÂseyâs highways open during ..snow storms by ordering the puiâchase of âstop lampsâ to be attached on 200 trucks equipped, with "snow plows. ' ,,
âThe new equipment will suppleÂment the standard i-ed lights on our combination snow-plows / and truck,â said - Commissioner 'SterÂner;â in opder to reduce the hazÂards of accident?. The ÂĄnew lights â will-bo of greater candle power-to pornlit' visibility, fo r longer ;dip- distinccs and to give adequate wanting th a t caution ÂĄ6 required.ââ/
. .QceaiivGroye, P h w fm a c j- :^ '<âąâ Quality drugs; low-
T a wAnm 1 fitwtoa' nanill
Evening Group ;, Passes' Budget
WILL CREATI-: S100 SCHOLARÂSHIPS IN GEORGIA SCHOOL
W. H. M- S.1 -Auxiliary met Tiies-
' The board was also asked to inÂvestigate the construction of a n . â incinerator a t the Whitesville school. Herman Johnson, board member from that district, pointed out that a t present there is no safe place for the burning - or dispossi- tion of waste papers The jani- -, tors at the building have been., burning the wa?te. papers in the school.yard, but Johnson condemnÂed the-practice as unsafe. - / ..,
Bills totaling'-â$11,5'!5,02 were approved for payment;
Miâ. Todd, was also authorized to attend a convention of . the NaÂtional âAssociation of Public School Business- Officiali; to be -held :;iii-:â October in .Cincinnati, Ohio. .
Dr.-Moulton also; announced that,, the physical education departm ent; of. the Trenton State'Teachers coĂŹr/. iege will again/visit, the. .Neptune.' high ' school physical , educai ion âą classes.. The senior class â of ti.u collegi visited the - local /deptir:-;. ment last year and this yearâs senÂior class elected to visit Neptune; ' to observe the work of ilie physi- cal education iustructors tinti cl-.ts-
day at Shelburne hotel, M rs./ses. The group will be the guests Ortha Ilillkirk, Bancroft-Taylor | of the high schopl a t luncheon a t Home superintendent is speaker. ^ Iu> si-âh.ool .cafĂ©tĂ©ria; â
The Evening Auxiliary of the; - Travelling In South Dakota . Womans Home Missslonary Soci-, A lben Bcs,vick| brother of thb \ i . Sfc P au ls .chuteh, at_ il».; Misses Beswick, ti Webb avenue,regular meeting Tuesday ⹠evening, hag taken a trip through the Southvoted to approve a budget for tl»j Dakota region where the 1!Úswick year of $135, Of which $100 Willi jtot»- region where the Beswick be used, for ji. scholarship . for a family : owned a ranch on the praiy
t i, r ^St- ome', ie not fa r from the Sioux Indian Ccdartown, Ga. Thp^meeting was I reservation. Mr. Beswick is renew.-
af Ăźflf home-of the president,, jng- severai. old acquaintances .onw SS| Vi « p h, -,u e , the trip .and gathering informationhotel,'Ocean Pathway, with n io rq |on the (|ust stol.ms that 4 âąthan thirty members, and friends, that sccti0n. The Missses Beswick attending. âą -J motored to South Dakota two yeai;tI r t e «veningâs devotions were led (aB0 ;ind experienced a dust stohn by Mrs. Carrie.Stany on, who spoke j wj,j,e there. The Rev. George T. on Pau ls letteiss to thei Philip-, Beswick, their-brother,-^.prached tb pians Her talk concerned the abun- the sioux In(|ians ÂĄn Dakota.dance of riches in Godâs bank, and she encouraged ; all to enjoy these riches. Group singing Was led by Mrs. Raymond Manley.
The speaker of the evening was
Slout Named By CommitteeThe newly elected R'epiibiican âą - " ' ?âą
executive committmen and women ' â ; â Mrs. Ortha Hillkivk, superintend-.-from the ten districts of Neptune - i ent of the Bancroft-Taylor Rest anti Ocean Grove organized Mon- ' ; '.Home, Cookman avenue. Airs.] day night with the election ; ofHillkirk .spoke explaining the I Richard W. Stout as c h a i r m a i u , ; - i ! 'duties of the-m anagement of the; The twenty 'committeeitien âą -aridâ âviiRS-iS Home anti the comforts to be hail; women, two from each tiisti'ict;H/?;: ? ^ 'h there. Tlie Home is one-of the, formed"a permanent civic improyo--/V'-i-vi-'..','/ National projects of the Womanâs ; ment group. Charles 'Phillips'wdS'-'-âi^-'.'.^it Home Missionary Society; j chosen secretary. A resolution cn-, -v'
;Mrs David H- OâReilly spoke . dors.in'g John W. Knox,'nf Neptune,âąbriefly about the plans for the , for reelection .as chairman - o f/th e ' tSi&SMother's Jewels childrenâs socicty,: Monmouth county, Repubjicah- This church group is sponsored b y : ecutive. committee was unanimous-the Evening Auxiliary.
Following the business meeting';ly adoBted. ...... , -w. y-w-
leetinga l/v-.^;;1;/;;ââ -/: ;. v.'r
â1 -âą tnO' Calif.. West Tn'rfMfreshmcnta being served - . ..._hostess,- asĂąistedV by; Miss;, Mary Watson. MĂ3s Glendora Wecke, Mrs.;1 ' WIĂŹhĂŹiWaĂ-W-' ITmaU e-
Calif..; West.IndieĂ /eriiiiĂšS',$46-u p j ',^ ;CompletĂłtravel -Bervice^/vEuroj)
ome.Go'
LX1V No. 39. OCEAN GROVE, NEW JERSEY, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 29. 1939 F O U R CEN TS
The Buslneio of the Times Job Ins Department is to (Mease
Each Customer. Test Us,
![Page 2: LX1V No. 39. Reelected Chairman Neptune School County G.O ...](https://reader036.fdocuments.us/reader036/viewer/2022062408/62ac1a02206b4e26bc6e7f2b/html5/thumbnails/2.jpg)
S P E C I A L G A S R A T E F O R A U T O M A T I C G A S W A T E R H E A T I N G A N
FRIDAY, OEPTEMDIĂft SO, MM» > i
Bell Telephone Building at Worlds FairTermtiiek Division' of tho E. L. Bruce Co. âą
Hi> cu vi; « complete evolution of tli wood eating; pest nnd outline'«! a-pluti of extermination; The Board has experienced considerable diffiÂculty with iermiteis a t the high
County Notes
Rcsltlents of thĂ© beachfront secÂtion lit Mitmisqunn lust week took nmmila . before U it Mimmmiih
school', nnd it lilts beenâtliseovered' that they have n|so Infested the Brniid Street School.' The repreÂsentative was authorized to make n survey of the two, buildings without obligation, to the Board, and make recommendations a t n latei- mciâtihc.
One of tiie worst fires in the hisÂtory of Jhitavvan razed 'tile plant of the Hutchinson, Inc., plumbing supply company, early last SunÂday morning. Damage was estiÂmated at ?75,000: The plnze was discovered by Frederick Fowler, gntemaii at the M ain.Street c iq ss - iit'jf o f the New. York and Long Branch railroad, who turned In the alarm. Fire companies from five towns battled the blaze which swept' through the- two story brick build-
in g and large one-story frame ad-
.County tax hoard a t Boimar oniis- sessmenU of their property by the thivu-niaii' "mtmieipnl assessment commission at, Manasiiuan. The
.more than a score of property .owners,, including the American Timber - company, Philadelphia, owner of most of the beachfront haul, contend that increases' orderÂed by the commission are unwarÂranted. Assessments v.-ere raised 10 per cent over ' t he 1038 levy in some instances. ..
What politicians agree was. one of the least eventful primaries ever held itr this part of New Jersey reÂsulted last Tuesday- mainly in the approval of candidates whom noÂbody opposed. There were almost no contests und barely; fifteen per cent of the voters in the county bothered to go to the noils.' The only real fight was in Asbury Park, where the Hetrick and Smock forces .waged war for control . of the. local membership in the county committee. This brought out 4,000 000 votes and resulted in a victory for the Hetrick forces. There were several squabbles, and one judge of election was arrested,
Sheriff Morris J. Woodring anÂnounced last week that he is coopÂerating with the Federal Bureau of Investigation in it3 campaign a- gainst espionage, sabotage and vioÂlation:: of American neutrality.President Roosevelt recently called on . the federal bureau io take Charge of such investigation and J. Edgar Hoover, F. 'B'. I. director, asked law enforcement officials ..throughout; the country to cooperÂate with liis department. Sheriff Woodring asked that all suspicious acts be.reported to the federal auÂthorities. .
âą u 1 onmou11 i couuty l-H club memÂbers, exhibiting for the f irs t time a t :he Middlesex .county fair last week, brought home several prizes and honorable mentions in cattle, poultry and vegetable exhibits.
An alarming- picture, of the work o f termites was given , to members of the Freehold Board of EducaÂtion, at their meeting held a t the Broad Street School, last riday evÂening,- by a representative of the
^ « i i t i i A l i t i i t i l i t i i i i i i i n i i i i i l i i i i i i f i l i i i M i u i t i u i i i i i i i i i i i i i i t i u n u t u i n i i t i i i n i i l i u i i i i i i i n i i i i i r a i i i i u i i t i i i R n i i i i B i i i t w n c
| JTTT Get the home town news by subscribing, to f | The Ocean Grove Times. $ 1 .5 0 a year . | | J ) anywhere in United States or possessions. , f
H t y i i R i i i t u i n i i l i l n u m a i m n i i i i i i i i i u n i i i t i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i m i i U i i i i i i u i T i i i n i n n i n i i i i i j i i n T n n i n n i i i i n n M i J i lu f :
W here m odern magic distilled from c u rre n t re sea rch »n com m unication^ laborato ries will be oh view In -W orld-of-Tom orrovviLexhibltlon-ln-New_York.-Bundincifront8_on_thojr.heme:Pla2a_nfiar-TrvlQn^and_Rerlsphetef-
dition. The flames spread so quickÂly that it was impossible t o . reÂmove any of the contents of the buildings.
Police later arrested .in RochesÂter, N, Y., James G., Roun, 19, an escaped inmate of the Jamesburg Home for Boys» who confessed set-, ting nre to the building to help in his escape. v While the. building burned, .Roun stole a suit of clothes from a nearby house and escaped.
The Kingâs College on the MarÂconi tract in Wall township open: ed its. second .year last week with 30 per cent increase in enrollment and auginented curriculum and facr ulty. â . â â
Stormy weather lies ahead of the poultry industry of sta te and natÂion if economic repercussions of the European war spread, through the land, in the opinion of repreÂsentative poutry men who met at New Brunswick last Thursday for the third annual New. Jersey poulÂtry breeders* institute.
Two murder indictments were handed up by the April term grand jury last Monday afternoon before Common Pleas' Judge J. Edward Knight. One is against Mrs. Lena Stromers Lee, 2D, of 3 i l Hume avenue, Allenhurst, charging her with the murder of her husband-, F rank Lee, 33, power company lineman and a special policeman, a t their home the morning of Sept. 4, Labor Day. \ âą
âA d d r e s s U r ĂŹ ĂŹy io w n , ' B u t H e lp S e n t - in 3 M in u te s
That the âSpirit of Servlco" associated in the public mind with the telephone operator perÂmeates other branches of the teleÂphone organization as well was demonstrated recently when a
woman calling P a terso n
bus&iess office of tho New Jer-
W K sey Bel! Tele-Civ phono Com-
- pany,explained that she was
n; v. . too ill to come ^ to the office in
*------âââ âąâ person.Marie Draeger CeioreM rs.
Marie Draeger. service represenÂtative, could obtain tiie woman's number site, heard a crash .and moaning at the other end of the line. Promptly, with, her assoÂciates in the office, she went into action. Fortunately tiie woman hail given her iast name. They conÂsulted the directory, found-one line listed under that name busy but no one talking, nnd promptly, called a neighbor .and sent him' to the house. Less than'.three minutes had elapsed between the crash nnd the sending of help. Tito neighbor called in a few moÂments to say that ho had found the woman unconscious on the floor, and that In falling she hajl hUher head against u chair.
WITCHED TO
regard less of its a g e , make,, or c o n d itio n . . .
» if traded in n ow on
âą Y ouâll bid a fond farewell to furnace tending when you T R Y Gas H eat on our amazing Trial offer and prove the lot»' cost, G et full details today and see what youâre missing! Gas gives unmatched comfort and convenience at lowest cost.' Use the equipment all winter long. N o obligation to buy. Stop in or phone for your FREE estimate and Trial Heater today;
A S K Y O U & N i l G H B O R
1 0 6 9 M o r e F a m i l ie s H a v e
J o i n e d th e S w in g to G A S o h
o u r lo w r a t e !
_ p ay yeor s ,on«bW Pâ*â
Hundreds o f families in .your community, many o f Them you« friends and. neighbors, have, switched to clean ¥oo% automatic
Gas H eat and P R O V E D the low cost. W hy wait? T R Y Gas H eat this winter and end furnace tending forever.
JERSEY CENTRAL POWER & LIGHT COMPANYY O U R G A S C O M P A N Y B Y S Ă S .T e le p h o n e , A sb u ry P a rk 660Ă
Si.E-39
Telephone, Asbury â Parle ÂĄ66QĂ
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m ĂŻ S P ;
, . J ? i « M Y , s b P T O Ă l p p i i ' Ăą O ; ' io flo âą.
r*$f, . **âŠÂŁâą -, $ 0 if â ,» 7 \ âąâą . .* âą * âą > '-!$ âąâ / â âą!$*$'7 .,:, ; ''V' 'V, 'V> 7 '7 '> , â â '. ' ';â , â ' i .â "' ' '»âąâą 'ĂŻ , ,.7
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r«
P A O f i T n B B B
' 'Township o f Weptunc-PubSic Notice)!Salo of Lands for Unpaid Toses/ Aflsooamenta cind Munict
, ' pa l Chargesâ *Year .1037 and'Piripr1âUBIiId NOTICE In liorcby given that Waller H.' Oravatt, Collootor olr u u m u n v i i u i u .is Jioreoy yivou m u t n u u u r uihyuhi uujjuuwi u»
T u x es In (in i for the Township of Noptuno, In tlio County of Monmouth unii Sitato of Now Jorsoy. will on Woanoaflny (ho fourth any of October. ltraD, n t a p, mâ In tho City H all of tho TowiiBhlp of Noptuno, 137 Houth Main Street,«a 111 nil I in liio.v-liyiJ.ttll o i inÂź Auwimiiiyui nwpuim . ouuiu mum biiuuv» Noptuno* Now Jorsoy, soil tho lands, tenements, hereditam ents and -rea l ostato herolnaftor described to m ake tllo am ount ohargeablo again st said lands on tho
., f ir s t day of July, 1039, a s computed in tho tax salo list, together w ith intorcst ion said am ount from tho firs t day of July, 1031), to tho dato of salo and/ tho cost olT saltvnt-publio-V onduo to~6UOh-nQrflon-or-porfion8-ns~Tvlll~mir«chaso tho samo subject to rodomptton a t tho lowestâą ra te of interest, butn no ca so in e xcess of â e igh t nof cont-.pet-annum .â T h ls-sa lo -lsâmado
under,tho provision of a n A ct of the Legislature of tho Stato. of -.Now-, Jersey en titled ; âAn Aot for Tho A ssessm en tand Collection of Taxosâ, RovlBlori of
1 1018, approved M arch 4, 1018, and tho Acts supplem ental;thereto-and amonda- ' to ry thereof; the salÂź lands, tenements, hereditaments an d -rea l estato to bo
sold and tho names of tho persons again st whom said taxes, assessm ents and other «municipal charges have l>een mado on account of each parcel,.* together w ith the am ount due thereon are a s follows: >
W alter Hi G ra v a tt
Block: -3
5 .8 âą
3 âąâ âąâą âą' âą 0 0
11 12 14 16 âą 17 1724
26
27-2807
1 L .«I Ă5253545657 GO 60 67
* «9.717584n96
â .90 :97104105 112- 113*124125 143,
OCEAN GR0VB Lot« âą
354-855 . 431' V ;
P . 511533 I....-,-P . 533S. 585588624785768-&751
' 719âą 640-642-644
485 S. .- 479h r - â â 411-413467-409 : -Ă,
âą 463,W1
-883 .318 1602 P . 657 ;SSli - -
â i i i i' 1690 .
1614y&2%891#170-172-
âą 188 292 .
'297 âą110 .
>813100618051054-1056 â
'929 .48- . V:.-:.6457 .793 1691 1791 1168 1099 1340 '1376< _243 âą. . ..
âąW HITESVIIXE12 -v -w .j:,13
136712,i l9 79 / « 2018-19 P. 1 11 âą55
03*94
106-107 âą168 sC6 âąâą
âą -8 * V. !âą : 10 .
. . â .6 .. ; âąâą -, r' 1Ă4 / * âą- --'V -
. . 90-91 .. 'âąâąâą : â *,'. r 65 /â .âą i4 â â âą
230. .âą . 274- V; âą:. - i6 âą . ».
âą591 ..592.
âą537 ; âą âą- "11?* ;.r.v
'332. 1 38- v : .
50 -. â 17-18- i âą âą*i ;: 5-6*7-8
74-81--. v -r*âą69-88, 89-91, 92 *
, 12-39-40-41-56-57-5862-35A & B 15-10A & B
i \ ' 21 âą ; âą. â. 2-3-4-5 âą r
' 'âą/. 6-7 13-14
' 2 . -âąIS ; : â 96-97137-138 ,
âą; 149TVE8T GKOVE
/P . 9-P. 10
COLLECTOR V . : ' : OCEAN GltOTE . .
O w ner'- Amounts âą:.' Rachel B vana . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ; 771.84
George Combs . . . . . . . . . . . , .-.v. 243.84H enry Patterson . . . . . . r . . . . . . . -447*68.M ary Burns & Hazel Bull . . . . 710.42Alex & -Isabella' Brown .. v . . . . 249.50A gatha Rend all . ................... 177.58Isabella c O utcault ............... 200.33Florence - B ragg ........................ . 64.45George Gormer ............... 604.77E va Cowan ......... 418.46Lina Cronk âą....... 829.19Grace H. Davis ................ 238.43Edith and Allen B ryan .......... 2,511.44Theodore W. ^3aker .......... 374.61Jn a e M0KI0 . C. . . . . . . . ........... *. 631,03Elisabeth B e c k e r ; .......... 143.81Elisabeth . MacDonald .............. 302.09Eugenia, Cooper;....... 468.20Eugfenia C60per 1,135.82AJonsto Ameli ISfitate ........ 580.88Alonzo Araell E e ta to 861.34
â * âą 389.92532.43 315.52m u
BflA S3 A8ĂA24A2CA .2CA28A20A37A37 A37A87A37A :38A30A-40A43A . 44 A 2B 2B ; 0B 7B7B : s7B9B30B11B14B .14B15B15B16B15B16B16B19B21B20B21B2G3C3C3C3C
L aura H oferkam p .. E d ith M TBurdett i . . ... E m m aS .-H ardy . . . . .Sarah Albee â ----
perklna_John*Q.-PacKard .................Louisa I. Dredger . . . . . . . . . . . .V irginia Donaldson .*............Clarence M atthews ........Elizabeth .Anhurst .....................W i l l i a m E f f l e Josenhous ... . H arry C. Clayton . . . i .-i . ; . . . .Sal lie* Paisley E sta te .............Marlon 1. Dewis ...... ..............E. B. & Annie H arm an . . . . . .H enrietta Conn .............Isabella Fllntoft E s t a t e ............B ert H. Post . . ; . . . . . . . .Thomas H unt ....................Norman B. Smith ..........G arret I. Snedeker . . . ; .........Emily E . H e in L t,..:- .,........George-H. C utter s J .. E lla-A . Smith .Lina Sampson E sta te Helen HepburnBella Retchelderfer . . . . ----M ary Trout . . . . . . . . . . . . .
' Thos. C. M artin ..........Sadlo & E dgar Bills . . . . . . . . . .
âSusan Heck E sta te ............' Hedwlg T. T a p p e n ....* ..
J . L. Swan ..........W IIIT E S T IH E E
Addle V. Dorsey . . . . . ,Daniel Landon ............. ; . . . . . . .Ho\vard Tantum ................... .Victoria Vona âNannie B. Holland .............Archie Strain i . . . . . . . . . .M argaret Hopkins .....................William Henry Bennett ..........John Cranmer . . . . . . ,John Cranm er ......................
. B arbara Farabough.....................Lucy De Cou .............Lucy De Cou .-. . . . v . . .Gulseppl Gmchetto . . . . . . ----Ellen T. G o rm a n .....................Ivins G rant . . . . . . . . . . . . .
âą M alissa Jeffries ' .....................Lydia Van B runt ...........
. Fannie Holland ............... ...........Augustus Moody . . . . . â ; . Augustus Moody . . . . . . . . . .Annio Aring .......... .Leland A r t f s . . .Edward & Ida Clark ..........M ary Evans : l . .Asbury Park .Bldg & Loan . . .
. Home Bldg & Loan V..: Home Bldg. ,& Loan . . . . . . . . . .
Priscilla ClarkSimone Meadows ...........Alice D; Key / . . . . . .Reserve Bldg & Loan ............Ruth Guerin- . -----
. Jam es Valenti . . . . . .V......... ;...Joseph Valonti . . . ; ..............V era Taylor ........... . . : . . . ; .Cologer Cavaleria .11. . ^ /^ . . .M arie C arter V : ........ ;;Chas. R. LeCompto ----- . . . . . . . .Catherine Van Note .......... âąGeorge A lden;'. . ........................H arry B anker « - . ' ........
â W alter B. Dixon W aiter B. DixonW alter B. Dixon ............ ........John Cleveland â ........... .W alter.B . Dixon ----- . . . . . . . . .William Layton .....................R ufus Bennett ------Sum m ltt Grocery Co. . . . . . . . . .Louis F . Diohl ........H arry W hite . . . . , J;-.,...Annie Smith Patton .................Jam es & B essie.P lckott ..........F ran k & Bridget N apolltan ..
. Rush W illiams v,â . WEST GROVE
F arm ers Coal & Supply Co. .. Meyer PopokJ . S. Tomchln . . . . .... . . . . . . . .Ida- Pow ell. . . l. . . . .
âąFannie Belle Brooks .............Edna SimmsLon Plttenger ...........
. F lin t & FultonFrank Smith, trustee .......... ,Theodore Hpghson ..E sther Heyer ................
. A rthur H. Pharo .......................âą Anna W; F rancis . . . . ^ . âą
Mae Evernham . . . . . . . .âą E. J . K irby-âą. ................George W . Odgers ...... .............. F rancis Morria .......................... Felix Petillo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ' . . .uâJohn Stew art ........â. ' i . . . . . . . .Felix Petillo ..................... ......Orra Smith ___ ,v. . /Joseph Vetrano .........Joseph V etrano ...........Felix Petillo
; J . H. . Ashby, William Braxton ........:.Henry Tomford J r. ........... .M auro TrOppOll ; .v.r*. V:. . .V iola M. W hite . . . . ...............David A rc h e r .............................Eugenia S; Cooper
âą ClarenCe Slater. ........................ AnnoJ'L. Volk ... i,--. ..........
Jam es Henry Voorhees ............L illieB ellia w . . ; . .....................
. Adam S te t t e r --- . . . . . ,S Adam Stetter .................. ;
John W alton *:.; . . . . . âąM ary C. Shafto ............Leo Smith , . . . ; ' . . . . ; . . v . ,Chas W. Jones Serv Sta. . . . . .
âą L ester & Christine F rank lin ..Jam es H. H a y n e s ..........Robert Jam es C urtis . . . . . . . . ^Ocean Grovo N a tâl Bank . . . .
âą Ocean Grove N at'l.' B ank ----' Ralph â Applegate: Roger Marcello ..........................
u:R .'J^H lm polo .............; Nicholas Pavla ...........................âą Chas. A. Palm ateer, J r .
E llio tt Sculthorpo .....................Floral H urs t ........ .'.................... "Clifford P arker ..........
SHARK R IV ER HILLS Ellenore AuBtln W ilbur âą K e t c h a m . , . . - . . . . . .A : Y. Smith & J., M atthews ..Jos. S. Thorno'1 IJohn G. D unseath .............J T. L u c k e r . . . . ; ; G ertrude & .-Hugh Holzman .. . M ary McKinley & Mao Pennl-. -well .v .C.\ F . Eberhardt H a rry G. Louser J . .
387.5456.06 67.73
290.34 ,189.28 249.45Ă» lĂŻl360.42531.43176.56139.92412.00
-189.26178.26374.86283.64140.64324.59627.42 480.66139.44347.45
. 84.62605.35264.97175.65295.46
âą 7.22 191.3043.92
162.70103.10
âą 67.06 134.45133.54270.95 59.76
177.04 269.39 âą92.1895.46
157.60 140.83 .21.9120.0454.61
187.74114.53
. 7.14 . 257.23 188.22177.59 166.22 107.38 173.8559.7933.6031.60 41.57
' 24.9855.60
âą 59.4828.4117.47 15.14
111.1449,?8
137.57 128.7889:9891.25
126.48140.5328.06 20.68
125.33201.92180.43 335.02
8.86178.48
4.S927.34
1,971.44289.4161.9549.6067.41 8.33
19.45<181.99302.60241.0184.49
290.3289.37
111.63205.61293.53 16.13
131.6092.44
252.05 75.91
141.74 89;87
453.74 . 92.71
24.98 116:29281.54 254.06'155.97 240.7784.4984.49
134.98 . 153.89.
71.3871.38
114.74157.06
. 251.42365.88109.7 24.0:
179.96 161.2558.98
161.72 . 396.10
244.07145.72249.65212.98171.0853.11
17.03 16.288.37
26.010.54
26.7013.71
âą 17.6613.0339.11
Mario Berlanbach . . i ......v . . i -âąv-8,68M ario Hammel, 26.01W alter & C lam B urchett 8.70
' Nan F. Hagen Young * 7»45F. A, & Rose Young ....... .'
â -Alvin & Jos. M artin ,..'.;-Louis & C lara D ietrich r . . . . . .â Rhoda Smith ..........
E. JJVanklin & F . M arie Cooper- L illian Pateh . . . a ____-Shark R iver H ills Co.Hu V irglnla F r itts ...... . . . . . .Bertha LeDonne» ; . . . . . . . . . . . . . âą
- V era D; T a In te r ,.M ichael. D^Lucas .H. C..K a lb . . . . , ..Vi. , . . v. 1 . . . . .,H. C. Kalb;-.. i . . . . . . ..Em ily DcnnlstohCharles Schlegel .......... .
1 H arrie t C h a d w i c k .? P ran k & M arie ^ a l . . . . ; ........
Jam es & M artha Grelg . . ,
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. 59-61 3 V . v y 38 29 6.43-44-4344-49
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29-30 ... 38-39 21-22 44 11-12 35-16
_26-27-----
Oftlrda Cockroft llorrod , , «hark Xlivor iMIts Cd, . <: Oiçûr. Hoonlff' .......
L im an Boyfl .Dlnha Diamond . . . . . . . . .D iana Dioirtond . . . . . . . . . .
: H elena' ĂL B attlnfl . < ÂĄ . . . .Goorgo L .B )u m o '. . . . . . .John J.; E llio tt Carmine B, WhKo . . . . . . .Thoresa Sullivan ......... . .Carmine & Dolia "NVhlto .
âą Nelllo Sullivan ........__W llUam-IL-J iogg-
M ary Nlodbal
! ;
I
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; 1622-3 1865-8 -
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âą 2847-50 2813-4 2819-22 âą
. 2851-2-3-4 ' 2905-8 âą W -:
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â 3005-6 âą7 0008-9-10 âą
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. 2266-7 âą -2301-4 2311-2-3-4
.. 2315-G .. . :âą,..2345 2171-2 2245-6 / â2073-4-5, 2141-2-32090-21242091-42120-3 . . ,
âą*. . 2145-6 ^1725-6 f
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. 3939-40 3968-9 . .3921-2-3-4 3539-40 3720-3 P.26 20
âą 24 .7-8-24-25-^27
â . 4-5-H277-8-9-10-21-22-29-30
' N.33 âą '.âą 34-35
34-35 .....37-38 - " ' â .â
147-148 1 17-18 âą
217-8 âą
, 3-10âą 29-80 .
35 .. âą- .90-3 'P.104-P.105 109-110 âą;1-20 ; âą
â .. âą 1.
Lucy J . Campbell Lucy J . Cambboll Morrlsoy & W alkor Inc. . .Carl S o n k o r .........Wm. H. & Leona Aah . ..Geo. R. Perkins i .-.K atherine B. L u k o ..........Shark R iver Hills Co.Clifford A. H all ...............Ewald S. Tlllmos ...........âąJohn D. Schwera . . . . ,Florence L. Cline ...........;Maggie Connolly . . . . Morrlsey & W alker Ino, , Shark-R iver Hills Co. F lo ra S m ith '................. .
âą Henry & C lara M ills -----Helen D. Stanton ..........John E. Saunders Hazel K. H. Em ery'
âą Thos SnuartlnoEileen M ann' . . . . . . . . . . .Shark R iver Hills Co. ....Sylvia Gottlieb . . . . . . r . .Reinold K lass .........R obert & M auda Clark 7 E. W ynn . v . .Olive Seacord E s t a t e ----Leona W ills ............. .....Chas. Âżc Regina Weltach . Louis & F rieda Seery ..Alice A. Aspland ............Louisa E. H. Normand Donald K. Batchelor . . . Elizabeth Welndlcek . . . . Mrs. W . G. K raereter . . .
-C aro lln eâPeterB0nâ 7r:T77
66-67 , 24 âą
35-36 - 26-27 1 1-10 13-26 8-9 23-24
'-38
12-14 _. 23,24-25 ' ,31-32-33 r-:
31-35âą 36-40/ 16-20 ,
19-20 .. 1-4 ' * .âą
26-27.-.. âą' 28-29, ;âą. 'âą..âą
30-3121-24. .51-62 1-4 â â '
. 5-6-7 40-41 âą,, '. .
âą 6-20.: 17-18-19-20 , 5-1822-30 V 18-21â.
- B 7 . âą
N athan Paul 7 \ , Grade C. Kearney . . . . . . . .
' P e te t & Jesslo CampbellI ' M ary Thompson :.- .. . t ...;. <
P earl Setzer ............... .Rose Y o u n g ........Clarence W. Tyrrell ."....-., F . R. ThompsonM. B. H arris, E x .............A nna O. B. Rose ...............,Chas. Schlegel ........Jacob & Helen ElckenbushM arie Louise M a lle tto ........M arie Louise M alletto . . . âą âąH enrie tta Wells ........ .Lucy âą Montross ..........Charles Montross . . . . . . I w.A ltha P a r k e r ......P e te r F. Gough Inc. . . . . . .Charles J . CorwinShark River Hills Co .Wm. & Florence Lackaye . A lbert Sc Dora Dleffenbach R. J. &.D. E. Becker . . . . . .Russell S. Davison . . ; . v. . .K athryn M ajor .....................
1 Phoebe A. Bulm an .. . j t . . . ,Sccoda Holding C o .............. .I-Ilram & Gladys JelilffW illard V. Sm ith ___W illard V. Smith ...........J . F red HamblinC lara Anderson ..........Henry A. JohnsonMichael O'Brien! ............Lillian Wood .................
-. Henry A. Johnson __N. E. H e lw lg ..........M ary Vian . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7Nettlo H a rt . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .H erbert & Ruth Harnlsch Shark lllver Hills Co. . . . .Henry .A. Johnson . . . . . . . .
âą âą Anna H. Peterson ' . . . . . . . . .L aura N. Klllhorn . . . . . . . . .
, Thos. Squartlno ..........C arrie ' G. Segur ( : C arm ine.& Della W h ite .. .
â Joseph W itting . : . . . . V irginia Dabaghlan . . . . . . .
.. H arry K. Parker . . : i . . .. -Ira &. K atherine F orresterâą K atherine H erring . . . . . . . :Elizabeth Gulste .........M ary Keeloy ............. .Geo. L. Anderson . . . . . . . .
â Nobel &â E. Mary Colfax E rnest W. Mandevllle - . .. .
. Frederick A. Naylor . . . . : . F re le rick A. Naylor . . . .Eugenia S. C o o p e r .Eugenia S. Cooper . . . . . . . .Ada Meehan . . . . / ...........
. Paul W lndm ullerâ ...........;i- Helen F . M. B utler . . . . . . . .
M argaret Anderson __ _M aurice P .1 Herllhy .........1 ver Clark Steele . . . . . . . .Carm ine B. W hite v.
.... Robert Conover .........
. .John- L;- Donnelly âv rjv rr7 .âą Edith Prentice .........E rnest W . Mandevllle
HAMILTON. F annte Nishman . . . . . . . . .Lena Sameth . . . . . . . .7 - âą ..
. Max- -Llpschitz . . . .7 . . . . . .M orris Cohen ..- . ; . .â. . . . . . .Joseph Schrler . . . . . . . . .Sarah Scheiii ......... .J . Scheln : . . ... ............TIlllo Llbeowltz -. .......Rebecca K atchka .........
; M arie B abst . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .K atherine McCombH arry Stern; ........ ".
âą' H enry. S. Cohen .................âą K atherine McComb ...........
âą A rthu r Gettleman .........M orris Gettloman M orris Gettleman Jacob Berm an ......... .
. H arold Spainer ................ E lla Sc Louis Schllen!. . . . . .H a rry Stern . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .A lbert Ivurtzman .......M athew Jonap ...........Louis Joriap . . . . . . . .iIsaac Rubenstoin K atherine McComb- . . . . . .Samuel E nder ---- ---------Benjamin E nder . . . . . W iliam Gettleman
. M ax Horowitz ............ ..â David ShurK atherine JfcConjb -----John &rAnna Schwemm-. K atherine McComb . . . . . . . .K atherine McComb . . : â
â Isaac -Ltebowltz R. Leveson . « . . . . . . . . . . .
. Rose Lasow ........................E va P e d o ls k y ......... .Joseph Celnlck . . . . . . . . m .,Harrj* Gurlen ....................E sther Davis Bresnlck . . .Lotiis N. H a lp e r n ..........H .â Jaeger ___. . . . ___ ___Ely Ferber ..Dora Felntuch . . . . . . t.-..7Richard Richardson .........Michael . F e rran te Edith G ardner . . . . . . . . . . . .Michael F e rran te ___ . . . .
. I r a Lane . . . ........... .y.A; Clyde G ray ....................I ra LaneM arvla Emmons . . . â
. Otto H allberg .................â Isabelle & Byron K n igh t.... John F. W elsh ...................... Edith R u b y ...................
L au ra Stout E sta te ...........Jam es W. H iller .........F red & Rose Young âF red & Rose Y o u n g .......LouIb Letsche ...............P. A. Peterson ; * r , .Amy Quackenbush .......
âą George Reid ............ ;K atie Jonap . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Alvina -Hennessey . ...........
' .Alvina Hennessey ...............H a rr ie t Beckter . . . i . . . . . . .Thom as P. E vans .......A rth u r H illpot ...........
.Nellie P r io r â. . . . . . ......... .Elizabeth S p re n g ...................Bertucelli ; . T.<. ..........Sofie W elskoff ...........
â .George L.-Blum e .................â F . A. & Rose Y o u n g 7
M afr P . T a ft .........T ..J . Donahue . ........... . . .
. M arie Johnson . . . .7 . . . Thos. S te rre tt E sta te . . . . . A. L. C hristian t .K Collins & ,W W ern h am ..M ary A.* C urtis ...........W. &C. Green .'..Selma Shenbaum
âą M ary A. C urtis ..-M ary Aj C urtis ..
. Jennie Loughlln D ella Fanning ..Theresa^ B lschoff C larence Wilson Wm. Myers .....A ugust. Ezekfel .E lsie Dackerman Lillie Von Culln . . . fl. E . B. H eath . . . .
, S. E .B . -
39.11 15.603.72 7.467.45
11.10 60.2030.057.45
13.05 âą *3.20
13.053.20
-20.-09-13.37r 'ÂŁ49
26.01 26.01
130.8JI 6.25
13.03 20.0113.0331.01
.-20.3626.01
â 6.5413.03 26.01.
ICO.413.96
, 10.0720.0813.0514.4513.0513.05 9.99
23.41 40.0926.72 26.01 18.339.96 8.90
14.7327.41 26.0132.06
' 19.2826.01
^82.72.7.40
12.2319.28 26.01 26.01 26.017.41
13.03 26.01 10.32
- 52.2248.28
.13.4913.03
. 39.1119.28 26.01 26.0119.2829.04 18.803.03
, 27.71 19.64 19.G6 26.01 23.2639.1132.2033.4519.28 38.52 14.77
1-830 26*272* 8 B0 0-103-331 32-234-333 31-32 .5-339 15-166-338 29-30 .8-386 25-20-2714-341 3-4ir,-340 . 17-18-19 .529 ' 4Ă-W.47525 âąSĂšc 9 W,2Seo 9 'âąâ 10: _
''T^awronce Croasen . . . . . . . .Lillian O rrHennnn ^(Ilmrotifl .........Fred II,; K rnm ef . . . . . . .Olivo Van B runt Mrtry McKeon ShannonAnna C. Schmidt ....... .Anna Schuler .. . . ..Sarah M. NĂČwman E sta te
. Roger StrevcH . . . . . . . . .Francos S. Munck, f ; . . . . v.Minnie M anners , . ;
7âJJon r y -fk -Hn yâB rower âr-r-â -
45.32 32,57
. 42,50 IH. 28 13.37 20.01
«50,55 7.90
29.81 432.05 615.19 â 5.91 124:34
ntl»e*4yâlineâot ........... .......... ...............nue fifty-seven rind two one hundredths feet to the point, o r place of beginning.
Subject, to tho same restrictions, covÂenants and :i'oservatlons ..contalfled in deed 'from. Interlaken E sta tes,; Inc., . to Andrew J . C. Stokes and H arry, SchnaÂbel by deed dated Oct. 4, 1927 and re Âcorded In the. Monmouth County Clerk's Office In Book 1424 of Deeds;
SJ page 296 &c; â a , , ^ « n f- (â«ini'iv n t i Seized, as the, property of E d n a , B .
o t ⹠» »
Monmouth County. Surrogateâ» 0ifloc7 In the m atter of the estate, of : . j
- Ăda H. Creshull, deceased . , Notice to creditors to Present Claims
A gainst Estate, ' .; {Pursuan t to, the order of Joseph L.
Executors o f ' the esta te of A da H. Creshull,1. deceased,: notice is hereby given to the creditors of said deceasÂed to exhibit to âą the subscribers, ExÂecutors aS aforesaid,:: their debts and demands against the said estate, under oath, w ithin six months from the date of the aforesaid order, o r they will be forever barred of the ir actions thereÂfor again st the said subscribers.
Dated; Freehold, N. J. September 6, 1939. :âą ' " j 'âą' - â Child, Rlker, M arsh Sc Shipman,
Counsellors a t Law, .744 Broad Street,
Newark, N. J .ProctorB.
Anna H. KUlcbrew,3000 W est Grace Street,
Richmond; Va.M orris Jones, ;;
49 Ellingtonifitgeet,
Dated ÂżAugust 28,. 1939 ; ĂIcDermott & Flnegold, Solârs. .
(144 lines) 36-39 Fee SC0.48
CHANCERY Ă-416 : .SH E R IFF â SALE?âBy virtue ot . writ' of fi-. fa. to mo directed, insued- out of the Court of Chancery of the S ta te ' of Now Jersey, will be exposed to .sa le a t public vendue; on- Monday, tho 9th day of October, 1939, between tho hours of 12 oâclock and 5 oâclock (a t 2 oâclock) in the afternoon
I of said day, a t the .Court House In the Borough of Freehold, County of Mon- â mouth, Now Jersey, to natlsfy a deÂcree of said court amounting to apÂproxim ately ^16,500.* AU the following tra c t or parcel of TlĂ ndrarid-prĂšmises-hĂšreintfter-pitTCieuĂŻ- larly described, s ituate lying and beÂing Irt the Borough, of Bradley Beach
............ in the County of Monmouth and. Ăź5HĂźteMehmouth County Surrogateâs Office of J^ew J e rse y .. 7 7
Tâ m n i to r of thn PHtate of Beginning a t the corner formed by. in the m atter of tne estate^or -tho lntersection of thĂ© norihwĂ«sterlyH elen M. Baldwlpi Deceased , Iliie of Madison Avenue with the south-
Notice to creditors to Present Claims âwesterly line of Second Avenue,-, andA gainst E sta te I from thence-running (1> along the said
P ursuan t-to | the order o f Joseph L. lino of Second Avenue north flfty. e.ight
â36-40 ($10.00),E a s t Orange, N. J.
Donahay, Surrogate of. the County of Monmouth, m ade - on the th irtieth day of August, 1939, on the application of L ida C. Lewis, AdminlstrtriX of the estate of Helen M. Baldwin, deceased, notice is hereby given to tho creditors of said deceased to exhibit to the subÂscriber A dm inistratrix as aforesaid, their debts and demands against the said estate, under . oath, w ithin six months from the dato of the aforesaid order, or they will be forever barred of their actions therefor against thesaid subscriber.
D a ted : Freehold, N. J., August 30th, 1939. âą * . . âą âą â
L ida C. Lewis,57 Cookman Avenue
Ocean Grove, N. J.Patterson. Rhomc and Morgan, AĂbury Park, N. J.
Ăr- Ăñ i âą Proctors52 *2 I ~"35-39 ($10.00) âą2o!oi13.03 19.4504.73 2G.0113.74 23.58
.108.72 : . 26.01
. 3.70 . 27.37
26.0113.03
; 19.2826.0126.0138.52
âą 10.2939.28 19.51 39.J>191.54 52.229.95
13.0313.0319.2839.2833.03
. 9.9526.01 3.60
27.37 25.15 26.01 26.01
52.22â 7.98
9.95
âą 5.96 3.50
. 12.04 5.975.29 8.05 2.647.93
V/ âą -7.931.477.931.477.935.96
. 5.58' 1.40
2.031.47 2.211.471.475.29 8.81 2 211.477.935.46 1.39
.-âą 1.971.45
, 5.2919.6L5.52
12.74 *.933.971.47
. 1;S63.97
- 1.4710.572.63 2.735.46
â âą5.292.64
64.04 . 6.54 âą 130.70
9.7765.3314.55
.211.2930.31
137.63126.56
...64.9368.74 64.93 32.42 62.843.90
âą 155.70 125.97
13.6911.492.62
148.02â >7.40âą 7.76 .5.12
âą 12.88 12.88 74.02 14.81
â J-14.80 26.0t
3.70 58.17 7.41
' 8.38Ăš 8.69
7;84 13,09.
â 26;2L : . âą 6.-24.
22.965.245.245.24
11.37 11.48 10.47 22.198.38
39.2622.96
CHANCERY 1-412 SH E R IFFâS SALE:âBy virtue of a
w rit of fi. fa. to-m e directed. Issued out of the Court of Chancery of tho S tato-of Now Jersey, will be exposed to salo a t public vendue, on Monday, tho 2nd day of October, 1039. between tho hours of 12 oâclock and 5 o'clock (a t 2 oâclock) In the afternoon of said day, at-tho Court House In the Borough of Freehold, County, of MonÂmouth, Newf Jersey, to ,sa tis fy a deÂcree of said court amounting to ap Âproxim ately $3,238.
All tho following trac ts or parcels of land and promises hereinafter particuÂlarly described:
FIRST TRACT All th a t certain lot, trac t or parcel of
land and premises, hereinafter parÂticularly described, situate, lying and being in tho Township of Neptune, In the County of Monmouth and State of New Jersey, a t W est Asbury Park , N .J . -" .Beginning a t a point in the easterly line of Atkins Avonue (formerly F irst Avenue) d istan t five hundred and fifÂty-seven feet northerly from the north east com er of Sprlngwood and Atkins Avenue, thence (1) easterly, a t right
Blacksmith at89 Carries On
Spends_80 Years Over Ap- vil and Still Is Active
At His Trade.OLMSTED FALLS, OHIO,âAuÂ
gust ybn Braiise, stalwart, 89-year- old blacksrnith who has spent 80 years over the anvil, Is one of the leading citizens of this northern Ohio community because he speaks six languages fluently and fashions horseshoes that the best 'thoroughÂbreds .wear., . .
Eighty years ago, in a .drowsy old German hamlet, nine-year-old August poked his nose into a blackÂsmith shop, picked lip a hammer and startled the village smith as h r struck the anvil.
"I want to be a blacksmith.â1 heâąshouted. . 7 ; .
And thatâs how he became a blacksmith; Today he Js Ohio's old- «st blocksmlth, working every day In. his little white shop and houst bore that he built with his ownâTuz-â
degrees forty five minutes west- eighÂty six fee t; thence (2) a t right angles to the .said line of Secqnd Avenue south thirty-one degrees . fltteen minÂutes. west one hundred fifty feet: thence (3) parallel with the »aid \llne of Second Avenue south fifty eightâder grees forty five minutes east one hunÂdred, twelve feet and ninety four hunÂdredths Âżof ,a foot to. the aforesaid line; of Madison A venue: thence (4) along the said line, of Madison Aviemie north tw enty;ohe degrees four. Ininute.s east one hundred, fifty two feet, and forty hundredth« o i ;a foot to the aforesaid line of. Second : Avenue - and, the point and place o f beginning. .âą:âąâąâąâą; âą' . : >â v:
The above desscriptlon is In. accordÂance with a survey made by N alrt RoT gers. Civil Engineer,-. d'ate<i November 16, 1928. 7 ; V :;â âą<âąâ V,...-;'; 7s : B eing ; the same premises conveyed to Joseph: Silverman, Jr.. by deed from W illiam E- Hunk^le and Bertha.. Hun- kele, his wife, recorded May .3, 1926 in Deed Book 1350 o n . page 71.
Seized as the property, of Joseph Sil- vbrman, Jr., e t als.; taken in execuÂtion a t the su it of New Jersey Realty Company, a .corp ., and Fidelity Union T rust Company, a corp. nnd to be sold by / .â -. . - *.. âą
MORRIS J . WqOl) HING, Slierlif â Dated : August^ 29, 1939/ âą .â M cCarter & English; Solâl'e.
(55 lines) . 37-40 . . Fee $23.10
angles to Atkins Avenuo to tho wesÂterly lino of Union,Avenue, thenco (2) along tho westerly side of Union Ave-
. J l e a th .. . . . . . . . . ; :y . . 1L73H e a t h . â 11.73âą â â J â * - Ă rr : -â 1 H Ă
nue to the' intersection of same with Atkins Avonue, thenco (3) southerly along tho easterly line of Atkins AveÂnue to thĂš pince of beginning, being a part of Lot No. 8 in R ance âH.M
SECOND TRACTAll the undivided one-half intorcst in
all those certain lots, trac ts or parcels of land and premises, situate,, lying and being in tho Township of Ocean, In the County of Monmouth and State of Now Jersey known and designed as Lots 5, 6. 7, 8 and 0 In Block 17.
Beginning a t the corner formed by the Intersection of the southerly line of Park Boulevard with the westerly lino of W alnut Avenuo os shown on said inap, running thenco (1) north sixty-thrce degrees thirteen minutes west ond hundred feet along tho said southerly line of P a rk Boulevard, thenco (2) south twenty-six degrees forty-seven minutes west one hundred and sixteen and twenty-four one hundÂredths feet to the northerly lino of North .D lttm ar Drive, thence (3) on a curved course following the said lino of said North D lttm ar Drive one hundÂred and ten and seventy-nine one hunÂdredths foet to the cornciv formed by tho Intersection of tho said North DlttÂm ar Drive w ith tho said W alnut AveÂnue, thence. (4) north twenty-six deÂgrees forty-seven minutes east along said westerly lin e -o f 'W aln u t Avenue one hundred and fifty-five and cighty- threo one hundredths feet t° the point o r place of beginning.
Also th a t parcel of land oxtending from the northorly lino of South D lttÂm ar Drive to the high waiter, m ark of Deal Lake lying between thĂš easterly line of Lot No. 20 and the westerly line of Lot No. 19, In Block 21, extendÂed northerly to said high w ater mark ; also /th a t parcel of land extending from tho southerly line of North D lttÂm ar Drive to the high w ater m ark of the arm of Deal Lake lying between the westerly line of -Walnut Avenuo and tho westerly line of Lot No. 5 In Block 17 extended southerly to said high w ater mark.
I t being understood aiid agreed that no land under the w aters of Deal Lake Is conveyed by the w ithin deed.
Subject to the same covenants conÂditions and reservations contained In deed from Julius E. D lttm ar, single, to Andrew J . C. StokĂšs and Harold McÂD erm ott dated November 20, 1922 and recorded in the Monmouth County Clerkâs Office In Book 1205 of Deeds, page 1571 Sec.
THIRD TRA CT..... ;All the undivided one half interest
In all those certain lots, tracts: or parÂcels of .land and ' premises hereinafter particu larly .described, situate, lying and : being in th o . Township of Ocean, in the County of Monmouth and State of New. Jersey, being, know n. and desÂignated as Lots Numbers Twenty-one and Twenty-two in Block ten a s shown on a revised m ap entitled '.âM ap of In-'
IX CHANCERY OF NEW. JERSEY ;>TOâALiCE COFFERi ^
âąâąâ â ;âą By . virtue of. an ordeR of the Court of Chancery o f New Jersey vmade; on th e 'd ay of the date, hereof, in a cause wherein Township âą of Neptune* âą; in the County of Monmouth is complainant* and Alice Coffer is defendant, you are required to a p p ea r, arid, answer the bill, o f complaint, on or before -the N inth day of November,' 1939,. ot- the said bill will be taken as ÂĄ confessed against,-you. .7 . v .-;.;.7.y-;
Said bill is. filed to foreclose:a^ cer tificatO: of tax sale : given by7 W alter H. Gravatt,. Collector of . Taxes, to the Township of : Neptune, dated December 9, 1931, which covers .lands in tho Township of -Neptune, In the County of Monmouth and State of New J e rÂsey. ."âąâ 7777 7 ::-7- 7-"',i;i;; And you, ALICE COFFER a re mad«
a :defendant-becauso-you-are-tiie ownÂer of the premises described In t,he bill of. complaint, and have an interest in the premises. ;v7 '-..v . y- âą
Dated : September 8; 1939 Vâą Richard W . : Stout, ; .
. Solicitor for complainant,; ' .. ::7 -\:7 â. 7.;Electric Building,
Asb u ry Pa rk , Ne w J ersey,' ' H37-40.7'.;; r.;'V-.
IN CHANCERY OF NEW J EKS EY
TO: LUCY G. SHEPPARD;>By virtue of ah; order of the Court
of Chancery . of New Je rse y : made on the day of the date, hereof, in a cause whereinâ Township of Neptiine, in the County : of Moilmouth :is complainant, and ' Lucy G: Sheppard, e t als.,.ia re de-, fendants, you are required, to appear and answ er the bill of complaint, on or before the Sixteenth' day o f No- vefnber, 1939/ or. the- said bill will'. be taken as confessed against you. 7 âą:: Said bill is fl|ed to foreclose a , cerÂtif ica te of tax sale given: by, W alter H.. G ravatt, Collector of Taxes, to the. Townshipâą; of Neptune, dated â â October 18, 1933,. w hich; covers lands hi the Tow«iship of .Neptune, In the County of Monmouth and State, of New Jersey,. And. you, LUCY G. SPIEPPARD, are made a defendant because you are the owner of the premises described in the bill of com plaint,-and have an inÂterest in the premises.
Richard W .'S tout, 'Solicitor for complainant,
Electric Building, ..Asbury Park, New Jersey.
D ated: September 15, 1939 â38-41 -
getThands 37"years pgo. :Everyone in the,, countryside;
knows the big-muscled, gray-haired ' man of the forge and anvil, whose horseshoes are shipped to all parts of America to be tacked to thf speeding hoofs of thoroughbreds.
R oam ed Over E orope.But the slightly stooped blackÂ
smith also is noted among his neighbjrs for his linguistic feats which he learned as a youth when he wandered over Europe, learning to speak the language of each counÂtry he visitedâEngland, Germany, France, Russia, Poland and SlovaÂkia.
He was born.in a tiny German village. At 15, after swinging a smithâs hammer for six years, he had learned to shoe oxen.
During his wanderings, he.stayed in Russja until a dispute arose over his papers.
*âI didnât have any,â he said, *âbe- cause I had just walked into the' country.â
He started back, landing finally in France. With the outbreak of the Franco-Prussian war in 1879, Von Brause enlisted in the German army and served one year.
Nine years later he set out for America. He left his wife and chilÂdren in Germany and came to Cleve- land. He worked there several years, finally taking out citizenship papers and sending for his family.
Does Good Business. âąâIn 1901 he moved to Olmsted
Falls, built his shop and home and has been doing a good business. Ha owns thousands ofjron toolsâhamÂmers, tongs and all sorts of gadgets âwhich he made iiimself.. He used to make heavy shoes for farm horses, but since the modern: ;
.tractor has pushed_the horse into- pasture, he now devotes most of his
^time to fashioning fine, light shoes for racing horses, âą.»
Von Brause lives alone in his litÂtle white house, with only his dog for company. Three children in Cleveland and one in Louisville, Ky.» . visit him frequently. .
Strong and healthy, he Is proud ol his title of Ohioâs oldest blacksmith.
âI eat anything,â he said, âand after Iâve worked.hard all day, I .turn in and read anythingâbut Iâll have to admit that I need my glasses to read.â
As for present-day Germany. Von Brause said:
ââThe old Germany is gone. Things have changed and it isnât the same.â
But his anvil, forge and his flourÂishingâtradeââ Vell, thatâs, just the same as it always was to m e/â he said. âą?.'.: . 7 v . âą'
CHANCE ItY 1-443 ' SHERIFF'S- SALE:âBy; vh'tlie ofWi
w r i t . of fi; fa. to- me directed, issued . out of the Court of ' .Chancel y ,'oi ; tne SUite of. New Jersey; will. be exposed to sale a t public vendue, on Moiitiay, the 23rd day of October, 193:»; hecwue,i the hours, o f 12' oâclock. and 5 Âżo'clock (Ă t 2 oâclock) In the afternoon of .said day,; a t ; the Court House in ' the BorÂbogli of Freehold, County o f7 Mo»-: niouth, New. Jersey i ty sa tJsf-y a ' ileV cree o f. said court/am ounting to ap- proxlinately:-$2,149,-7~---~-'^-;- " -âą
All the following ' t r a c t o r parcel of land and premises hereinafter particuÂlarly described, situate, lying and being In the Township of ; Neptune, V.i the County of Monniouth and State, of New Jersey, . known and designated as L ot Numbered Ten Hundred and .NineÂty Seven (1Ă97) on the southwest /corÂner, of;. Abbott Avenue : and Pilgrim Pathw ay, a t Ocean (Srove, New: J e rÂsey, on M ap of. L o ts of Camp Ground o f ,âThĂł Ocean Grove Camp Meetingâ Association' o f the Methodist EpiscoÂpal Church. , âą.; âą . â âą...
ALSO h- certain Indenture Of Lease fo r âą said premises made by the said Ocean Groyc. Camp Meeting; AssociaÂtion unto one ; Charles . W. ' BlcKiey,'
OLGA FROCKS NEW FACTORY
inen, N. J .( Ju ly l» « bca.e 1 ; 60 , asBlBiiçd. transforred and set o.âor toMary , Terhun© *
Branch, _ - _which map- Is duly filed In , the Mon. mouth County' Clerkâ» Office a t F reeÂhold, N. J., bounded and described as âą f o l l o w s âą,âąâą ' 7 . . . v , ,
Beginning a t & point in the southerÂly line of Grasmere Avenuo, distan t five hundred seven and sixty-eight One hundredths feet eastw ardly from /the southeast comer^.of said .Grasmere Avenue and Chestnut Avenue, thence (1) southerly along the eas t line of Lot
âN um ber-T w enty; one hundred th irty- fou r and eighteen one hundredths, foot to vtho southeast corner of said Lot Number Twenty, a s shown - on said trfap, thence (2) easterly 1 along the re a r linĂ©s o f said-lots Numbers Twon- ty-onĂ© and Twenty-two, fifty-eight and ninety one hundredths feet to the sou theast'com er' of said Lojt Number Twenty-two, ' thence (3) northerly a - lony the eas t line of said Lot Number Twenty-two. ono hundred "forty-two and s lx ^ - th re e one hundredths! fe e t:t o . the
, . .. by A n n ie D . Laing(widow) by aaslgninent. of lease bearÂing date . Ju n e .15, 1934, .and; recorded in the Monmouth County C lerks Ofllce in Book 1655 of â Deeds, pageV200.
: TOGETHER, w ith .all and singular th e , premises mentioned and ' deabribed In said Indenture of / Lease and the buildings thereon,^' w ith the^^appurte- nance?, and the ieriri of years thpreih mentioned yet to come and unexpired, w ith the privilege ;of .renewals fo r a like ' terin -of years - forevetv/'-^.'Vy: â 1 >: >1
-SUBECT, NeviertheJesiB,: to ; the rein«, covenants, conditions and provisions In said Indenture o f Lease -mentioned;
âą'. S e iz e d a s the âą property of Ada: K. Terhune, et. als., taken in âąâiakecu'tton a t th e ; eult of Dorothy. A. ?Hart-^and to -b e âsold
: MORRI8 J v W OODlilliG , SherifT.â D a ted September 18,1939. . r l -
Firm Moves to New Iât. Iâleasant Home
Olga Frocks, of Point Pleasant, which for ei|{lit years has main- . tained its factory a t 80S Main street, Asbury Park, opened n new factory in Point P l e a s a n t on Monday. , Many of the employees are residents of AsburĂż Park. The Main street plant of the com- e pany in that city, beinp -discon-. tinued-
There were refreshments and openinp: ceremonies presided over by Father Walenta, pastor of St. Mary's by the Sea, an Episcopal' chui-ch a t Point Pleasant.
The business is owned by Mrs. , Olive F. Gates and her daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and M rs..Har- . vey Young, who. established. it some twelve years ap;o. They manufacture regulation .size un-i custom made suits, dresses and sports -wear. The executive offices have always been maintained a t ' Point. Pleasant 'and the new facÂtory has ju st been.constructed <yi-' posite them in Richmond avenue a t / the, corner of New York "avenue:
The new building, was erected bvr G. A. and H. L. Becker, Inc.; arid .; is a model industrial plant qf flre- :::* proof construction,, with modem V; lisrhtingi arid ventilation.- ; '-Rccire'fC ation rooms and a lunch room fo r 'â
are in the basement. ..-.yStatem ent of the 0\vnpn,ltij), ^Innut'C- .
I. menl,.>-Titc. '.Of Ocean Grovo - TIineB." 'puhllahei'-v:.
weekly at- Ocean Grov^.â N, J ,, for ^crtem ber 15, 1933.â- . *"â ' Editor. PuLllahor,. and.'«wner." c r D. Krt-flffe,' Ocean Grovo, Js". J;â T hat th e ;,Known bondholder, mort-^-j.
pagce,-and 'othor security 'ho lder.ow iw .1. Inff or hoUlhlg l .p e r cent ur n-.oro.of ', 1 to ta l am ount -. of bond*.,' inortfraKeR.'.or-'/ l . i , M k A t t r l f l f l t . I f . I l f n C h t 'A I I .A H * . L ~ k
W Mm Ă©
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P A O Ă F O U RFRIDAY, SEPTEMBER CD, 1033
THE OCEAN GROVE TIMESPoMtafced W<l«rilOMfcn I*. KllKHOK, Killlor (in.) lâatill«*«
HI.XTV-l'Oint MAI!» AVKNItK, flUBAN fljism :, TtV.YT JF.IINF.T TtUeho«« ĂKfl.VNK lâ WIMtll.t. l.tii-nlK<lll<ir
The Point of View
k i 'im n iii 'T lO N H ' ji.fiO vnuvly ; sentl»nnuunlly * nunrtcriybV ^ l Ăź . ; ^ V copy. v S S S & paid ĂŻn the Uniletl «lato« : Cunailtt 13.00 anda IĂź ĂŻ Mi I âSSk Ă rhiiiittntl nu rinitieulâal wnyy (tlvc forntor ndilrcwi.A D VRI RM K N l^:.. Ttn te« wl 11 b* otj. rurjue«.
W A T C H T U R L A t l U L O N * V O l M l l ' A P R I l - E Q t t . T H R - R X U t l t A Ă KV OU R S U nSĂTUPTĂĂN^
Rttti'iâfd a* m'coml-eltvftH m:\il nt. iho Oeoan Orovo pos*.ofl\coTH E TltUTII I S ITS ĂMlOPElt I»LAĂR
Hunting Season Ort October 22
WATEKFOWL AND WOODCOCKam tn preach oil âModus nml the SEASONS LISTED
Prophets -Suld'the business man'; .âa 4 'Âż-«1m.fl. t o n ."IMJIkc.-toL-eomc^but-proflts-nre-
Shot to piect'H nhtl I wouldn't In: Ducks and Geese. >\oler-foiVl Population'âReported GreatÂe r This Season. Woodcock SeaÂson Open» October 15.
New M asters io r Europe?. T he w orld h as m a d e a trem en d o u s lo t o f h isto ry in
th e p ast fe w : w e ek s. It had b een th o u g h t th a t R u ssia fearecf G erm an y an d G erm any fe a re d R u ssia . N o w th e se m ig h ty nation's h a v e co m e to g e th er â fo r h o w lo n g no one k n o w sâ and .th re a te n .to b ecom e th e d o m in a tin g p o w ers o f E urope, if in d eed th e y do not try to e x ten d th e ir d o m in Âion fa r beyond th e ir p resen t lim its. ,
Crushed b e tw e en th e se tw o m ig h ty fo rces, b ra v e litt le P o la n d is b a tte re d d o w n lik e a sh ip b e tw e e n tw o m ig h ty iceb erg s . It w o u ld lo o k on th e su r fa c e a s i f a g ro u p o f d ic ta to r g o v ern m en ts h ad g o tten to g e th er w ith th e . id ea of m a k in g a n ew d iv is io n .o f a g o o d part o f the e a r th âs surÂfa c e . ' . '
â W here d o es th is le a v e E n g la n d a n d .F r a n c e ? T h ey w ill not p rob ab ly su f fe r a n y a tta ck from R u ssia , w h ich is m ore con cern ed w ith its problem o f liv in g u n d er Com m un ism th a n in sp r e a d in g o u t os'.er W e ster n E u ro p e . B u t H itler is now fr e e to co n cen tra te a ll h is m ig h ty p o w er on th e w estern d em o cra c ie s .
N ations, are n o t a lw a y s a s s tro n g a s th e y look on th e su rfa ce . G reat an d m ig h ty p o w ers w h ich o n ce issu ed or d ers to th Ăš w h o le w o r ld , w e n t to p ie ce s ,1 b eca u se th e y ig Ânored fu n d a m en ta l la w s o f hu m an life .
T h ere-is th e c la ss ic s t o r y o f h o w D an ie l th e p ro p h et in terp reted th e d ream o f N e b u ch a d n ez za r , k in g o f th e C h ald ean s. T h e k in g d rea m ed th a t h e sa w a g r e a t im a g e m a d e up o f g o ld a n d s ilv e r an d iron and brass, b u t its f e e t w ere m ade largely , o f c la y . T he c la y w a s an e le m e n t o f w e a k n ess , and w h en h it by .a s to n e ,. th e im a g e f e l l and w a s broken to p ie ce s . Som e g r e a t n a tio n s w h ich r ise to m ig h ty p o w er th ro u g h a c ts o f tyranny, l ik e w ise fa l l .and are broken to p ieces , b e c a u se lik e th e im a g e w ith f e e t o f c la y , th ere is so m e th in g w e a k in th e fo u n d a tio n on w h ic h th e y are bu ilt,
F ighting InstinctShoulfj a boy be en co u ra g ed to f ig h t or n o t? I f y o iir
y o u n g ster k e e p s -c o m in g h o m e w ith b leec iiiig n o se and scra tch ed face; and it a p p ea r s th a t he g o t in to a f ig h t w ith th e k id s on th e n e x t 's tr e e t , sh o u ld you te ll h im to
â stop it, or a d v ise h im to g iv e a s g o o d a s h e g o t?W h en a boy k e e p s g e ttin g into f ig h ts , th e su sp ic io n
a r ises t h a t he is tr y in g to m a k e h im se lf th e b o ss o f the n eig h b o rh o o d . Y et so m e rou gh k id s d o n ât a p p re c ia te th e k in d ly fe e lin g s o f a' g o o d boy , w h o ju st w a n ts to g e t a- lo n g w e ll w ith e v ery b o d y . T h ey th in k h is g o o d n a tu re is ju s t w ea k n ess. T h o se /r o u g h fe jjo w s n e e d â g o o d - l ic k in g ,- arid 'yout boy may h a v e to g iv e it to them . A fte r h e p o lish Âes th em o ff , he is l ik e ly to live a p e a c e fu l life . M ost boys h a v e a t le a s t o n e-fig h t., b e fo r e th ey e s ta b lish , th e ir p la ce in th e kid w orld . A:., : '
F or f if tee n y e a r s O cean G rove h a s had a bran ch o f th e M onm outh cou n ty lib ra ry lo ca ted , a t th e W o m a n âs club h ou se . It m ay not be k n o w n th a t th e group o f p u b lic -sp ir iÂted w om en w h o h a v e k e p t th is library open e v er y F rid a y a ftern o o n over,- t h e .y e a r s ha v e serv ed w ith o u t p ay . T h ey d eserv e th is public r ec o g n itio n o f u n se lfish serv icej
M in nesota , Iow a , K a n sa s and South D a k o ta g o v ern o rs h a v e d ec id ed th at T h a n k sg iv in g th is y e a r w ill be he ld on th e sa m e o ld d a te . G la d to k n o w so m a n y c h ie f e x e c u tiv e s h a v e n ât b ecom e a f f l ic te d w ith th e la tes t N ew D e a l d isea se , c a le n d a r itis . '
B eg in n in g on O cto b er 6 w e w ill p u b lish in .serial fo rm â'T h Ă© D im L a n tern ,â b y T em p le B a iley , d e sc r ib ed a s a b ea u tifu l love sto ry by one o f A m e r ic a âs b est k n ow n a u Âth ors. T h is is in k e e p in g w ith oiir. custom o f m a n y y e a r s o f p u b lish in g ea ch y e a r tw o or th r e e .n o v e ls by o u ts ta n d in g a u th ors. W e a p p re c ia te th e m a n y le tte r s , o f co m m e n d a tÂion rece iv ed from rea d ers . ;
T h e in v ita tion to th e w o r ld -k n o w n au th or a n d b ish o p to In d ia , Dr. E. S ta n le y J o n es , to co n d u ct the ca m p raeet- in g se r v ic e s n ex t y e a r h a s m et w ith th e a p p ro v a l o f a ll lo v Âers o f O cean- G r o v e r -T h a t-h e -w ill b e ^ b lir tS 'a c c e p T T s th e d e v o u t w ish o f a ll.
A local minister said to n locnl business mnn the. other tiny, "You must come to church next Sunday!
plecei .. ... _ _____Interested.ââAltoona, Kitn'.,. fTi'l bune. â -
âWhat arc the duties of u Knight of the G arter?â asks a correspondÂent.. We donât know; but we imÂagine they are fairly elastic.â âąMontreal Star.
On the road to war there are no service or rest stations a t svhich democracy can gain a breathing spell.âDetroit Free Press.
Loaning money on com a t far abovo market market price is ÂĄrood for lowu farmers, but hard on KanÂsas and Nebraska farm ers whohave to buy The government jslikely to own practically all the corn Iowa has to sell.âJewel County Republican.
Here ÂĄ3 1: sentence taken front a letter received only a day or two ago by a Baltimore woman from tin Snglish physician: âI hope that America may. be spared to keep
I nliyeâthe-to iâch -o f -learniirpf~nhd common sense which Europe is n- bout to extinguish.âBaltimoreSun. .
âA physician declares that PresiÂdent Roosr.valt is in condition to stand a third term.â W ill. some one now please examine the coun try ?âThomason, Gn., Times.
Lack of close relatives in New York is keeping many people away from the fair.âPittsburgh Post- Gazette.
Unquestionably American comÂmunists, seeking to explain Mosr cowâs newly found affinity for Germany, are red in the face.â Greensboro, Nf._- C., Daily News.
Another consolation about beÂginning a t the bottom' is th a t you have less distance to skid.âGreens boro, Ga., Herald-Journal. .
Sheriff. Woodring III At HomeSheriff Morris J. Woodring has
been confined to his home, GO Webb avenue, for several days by illness.
j T h e ..weekly n e w s a n a ly s is b y J o se p h W . La B in e 'w ill be a reg u la r fe a tu r e o f th is p a p er from n o w on. T h e w a r in E urope m a k es th is a n a ly s is d o u b ly in te re stin g .
N o w th a t he h as madia a d ea l w ith S ta lin n o .doubt H itle r w ill g e t o u t a sp ec ia l R u ssian ed ition o f â M ein K a m p fâ w ith sev era l c h a p te r s d e le te d .
V ;--------I K â âW e en v y the n e r v es o f th e m an w h o can still- c e n te r
his e n tir e 'a tte n tio n on th e p rob lem o f w h a t tea m w ill w in th e W o rld S e r ie s in O ctob er . â
T h e b u stle is b a c k in s ty le b u t .w e are w illin g to com - p rom ise i f th e y d o n ât f o l lo w it w ith th e o ld fa sh io n e d cr in o Âlin e sk ir t.
' , Lfet Us hope the only need Americans w ill ever
v p r ^ g a rh S S sn,aSkS WU be aS P1'OĂ:eCtĂOn asainst foreign
KNIGHTS BEGIN SIXTH YEAR
First Meeting of Year Held AtClubhouse'On Olin Street
The Ocean- Giove Knights of Honor Young Mens Club opened their Sixth year with a meeting Monday night at the clubrooms at 50 Pitman avenue.' Church School started for the members last'S unÂday with twelve present.
Five members were made HonÂorary members because of absence, they are Donald Fulton, who went to Drcxel, George Coder, Idaho uniÂversity; Harold Rainear, Ohio Wes-, leyan. Daniel Gjilnn__and William Hulsknmper. moved to north Je rÂsey.
The clubâs membership stands at nine active members, ten inactive member's and Hina honorary memÂbers with Alvin Bills, Otto Stoil and James Herbert as advisors.
Thtj Knights will have, their seÂcond annual Musical in the Church on October 12, Elmer L. Smith is Charman of' the Committee and Hadford Catley nnd - Raymond Beekmun are assisting. . .
Edward Holl, athletic manager, announced that the Softball team had won three fourths of its games and had finished third in tho CounÂty Church Lpugue. H e also stated that the club would place a .team in the Leagues Basketball .TournaÂment.
Nominations wore, made for the election of .officers and committee, heads, the election will take place a t the next meeting.
William Mite Kay,.secretary, read h<i minutes of the June meeting,
and Raymond Beckm an,.treasurer, read the financial report.
Jack Whitworth presided over the meeting. âą
Leo Beliissen lead the club in the Flag Salute and Prayer-.
' âą _________South E nd'Q uartette Sings .
The South End Quartette sang Sunday a t the meeting ofl fhe As-'! sembly liible class a t St. Paulâs church. Members of the group are Samuel Eisenberg, Rev John N. Kugler, Dr. Samuel Moston , and William CrozieK Miss Glendora Weeks accompanied the group. I)i. Samuel Lawson is the teacher of the Bible class. .
Approve Deal Road. WorkState Highway Commissioner E.
Donald Sterner today granted the application of Dea' fo r-$521 in State aid for the bituminous surÂface treatm ent Of Roosevelt aveÂnue. The improvement will extend four-tenths of a mile a t a width of twenty feet. ^
More Leave fnr'CollegesThree more Ocean Grove students
left this week fc: colleges. They are Margaret Rohland, 32 Beach avenue, who left for Trenton State Teacher:, college; Theodore. Eld- lidge, 143 Mt. Hermon Way, PennÂsylvania State and Donald Fulton, 111 Franklin avenue, leaving for Drcxel.
f f l r c u n d t b t Z o w n
^'he State Fish and Game ComÂmission today anounced that New Jersey's waterfowl season will opÂen this year on October 22 nnd continue until December 5 and adÂded that from reports eminatlrig from the breeding grounds obtainÂed by the Federal Government and Ducks Unlimited, the waterfowl â population in the waters of the State will be greater this year than in the last few years.
The season will open on Geese, Ducks, Coot (Crow Duck) and WilÂson Snipe and Jacksnipe. The time for hunting has again been fixed by the Federal Government from 7 a. m'i, lo 4 p. m., for Geese, Ducks and Coot. Other migratory birds may be taken from 7 a. m.
l-to- sunsetjâA-Federal "Stamp is re Âquired for the hunting of ducks and geese.- .âą;âąâąâąâ .-. -, âą . .' .âą
I t is unlmyful to bait or shoot over, baited water or land; to use live decoys, or to use any gun exÂcept a shotgun not larger than ten gauge and holding not mo.re than two shells, Thei-e is. no open seaÂson on Wood Duck, BrĂ nt, Snow Godse, Ross's Goose or Swan.
Thd State Fish and Game ComÂmission also announced that the woodcock season will open on OcÂtober 15 and remain open until NoÂvember 14. A special State license is required for the hunting of woodcock. The daily bag limit is four woodcock and the possession limit-, two daysâ bag.
âą â ----------FITKIN AUXILIARY MEETS
Ladiesâ Group Met Monday a t the Home of Miss Aitken
Thirty-five memberss arid friends of the Ocean Grove Auxiliary of itkin hospital met in their first fail session a t the home of Miss Elizabeth Aitken, 112 Lake avenue, Tuesday.
Mrs. . Charles W. Day, presiÂdent, presided, opening the meeting with a prayer, In the absence of the treasurer Mrs Frederick Schultz, Miss Isabel Ryerson was appointed treasurer pro terns
Three new -members were preÂsented: Mrs. William E. ThomÂson, Mrs. Charles L, Poole and Misss E . M. Strow.
Mrs. Robert Meredith» chairmen of the Work Group, announced that the first meeting of her comÂmittee would be held on. Tuesday, October 3rd, a t the Womanâs Club House iiiJDcean Grove. Mrs. Louis C. Briggs; in charge of Coin Cards, reported receipts of eleven dollars lor the day. âą>
Forâ the âSinking-fund,-"'' Mrs. George Goodrich reported 11 balÂance of $247.90; the Flower collectÂion amounted to $2.02 \ .
For the October meeting the folÂlowing will serve ;;n hostesses: Mrs. Day, Mrs, Lida Hutchinson, Miss Lena Egner, Miss Florence Egner, Mrs. Eethel L. Thompson, Mrs, Frank ' Slocum, Miss Mary Day. Miss Rose Hawxhurst, Mrs S. E. Wilson and Mrs. Harry Truux, This meeting, which will be held October 30th, will feature a sale of jellies, cakes, and fth er food:! to raise a special offering for the hosÂpital;-
âą â -PROFESSIONAL SERVICES
HARRY EDELSON COUNSELLOR AT LAW
Offices 550 Cookman Avc- A P
Through thla column of the doings of Ocoan Grovers, wo hope to bring about a friendly nnd Into- riinte feolln to make up this Bonshore resort community, Contributions >vlll always be appreciated, and Ocean Grovers are urged to consider this as their column about their doings nnd for them.
âąWith everyone going home for the winter, or going nway to School, .tho.'beachfront hns t&ken on a rather lonesome look. The concesÂsions are gradually closing up, and the crowds of a few weeks ago are gone from the sand. The fishing pief, however, is still quite crowdÂed', and the fishing club is still actÂive with their plans and drive for an extension of the pier for an adÂditional: fifty feet, so that the â.âbig onesâ' 'will not be getting' nway all the time. - ,
Thd Association' is also plarinihgan extension to the steel jetty im Âmediately north of the piei', and this should help to save the new section of that structurei from deÂstruction in any - of the regular. Norâeasters experienced along, the shore during the course of a year. This new je tty will also go a long way in helping to build' up the South end beach, so' that bathers will have a larger beach to "batheâ on. A few are interested in talkÂing with the gni, friend,and lying on the sand, while some actually do go in the wnter. âą
The Unexcelled fire company went on a trip to the New York Worldâs Fair Sunday, and according to reports from those on. the trip, everyone enjoyed himself to the limit- Touring the fair grounds seems more fun when you are with a group of friends,, even though you donât see as much, because every one has different ideas bn whnt he thinks ought to 1 be seen first. Usually the day is just about over before you get to see anything nt nil.
Out fo t Jimras,' Valentino, and I Womlcr Who'a Kl*slng Her Nove,
Thene old timers. coupled wlth some af the -newer enea, combined to moke up a very Intcrcatlng nnd entertaining' show.â , With tho eld s o n t v âyou cori go as fa r db you Hke with me in my
â ' â âle,â
an Occan Grov« summer resldont â a bcalnnor In tho game of ohuffie. board, »cored a; win -over; tho St Pctersbarjr veteran cholnplon by â cores o t 70-23; -2 to 70, and 81-21.Frfink -J, Ferri»rm anager-.of the Occan Grove .tennis club,"another âą f irs t year pl8y«r;~' reached, the semi-finals defeating two St. Pet. erabur« players,â --- 7 . 1
Dr. Finkb, in winning, brought the first championship over held by Ocean Grove or Asbury Pork on the shufflcboard courts. . The trophy awarded to the winner, wan â '-jfl a desk size silver cigar lighter.
SEORTS DEPARTMENT:Tonight thé Ncpt- high school
fodtbalT teitm faccs its first foe of the current) season when i?: battles: under the arc lights a t Belmar a- galnst a fighting Rumson eleven.Tho local boya have a Btrong team plans were made several years and should capture- their, inuwl ,2g0 to bring a ahuffleboard; tout- tussle, although the going ÂĄ11 not noment to Occan Grove by âą Mr- be as easy as m ight be thought. FeVris; 'anĂŽ> investigation made Conch ©ill Woolley has twelve let- conerning thd construction of sev- termen on his â squad, and â several ornl ahuffleboand courts here, but '' promising younger jlay e ra ,. among j h e plans never were completed them being Bill. Bullock, a f irs t and the itournament"never reached team prospect, from Whitesville, Ocean âą Grove. .and Bill Kruschka, a 206 pound . . . .tackle who looks promising 011 the , Shuffleboard ÂĄs an up ana com- defense. mg sport among old and young a-
Among the regular) on Wool- like, and local playersâare regular-, , . - , r,3, on 'u ââ.âJ1' ly making their mark among theleys roster are Arnie Moore, back- mMe experienced players. Ocenn field ace, and Chris Devoy, c°-cap- Âżrove has one court, which has tain of the squad with Moore.. Both proved to be oxcce|dingly popular, aro f irs t string playd 3 and the Âżurjn(f the summer season just Neptune chances will rest heavily . ( . .â jon their shoulders. Petlllo, L en l-, ' 'â . --------ban,- Long-and- G atley-are-allTe- â Flaslrfroni thF fron t: The foo t- turning letterm en and will sec ac- ball game scheduled with Lake- tion with the Red and Black as wood for Saturday, October 14, has they go on toward a successful been changed to October 13, Fri- season on the gridiron. day, a t Lakewood field, under their ^
Ocean Grove developed another nEW arc i^ h ts . champion this week and almost A nd conpratulationn to Coach mode a clean sweep a t the Asbury and Mrs. Woolley, who are the Park . shuffleboard f irs t annual proud parents of a' btjby girl born tournament. Dr. Charles H. Finke, this week
The. police department wild gnme division is,'fo r tho first time since the closing of the Auditorium, without any animals in its cage. Heretofore, the police have cornÂered three small possum and one largo one, all of which were picked up. by patrolmen around tbe tent area. The animals were taken by the S. P. C. A. nnd released in the woods to the west of the city, So now the cages arc empty and Chief Catley and the boys are on the lookout for some other animal to bag.
Of course the police have caught numerous stray dogs and cats, bub these come under the heading of domestic animals nnd do not reside in the cage reserved for. the wild type of animal;
Ask
DR. GERTRUDJ5 HEWITTCHIROPODIST , ' .
117 Main Ave. Phone 4789 Were a Millionaire, Look Out. Look
any old timer nbout the times he had the most fun and without exception heâll answer, âIn the good old days.â
So many older folks are so sure about it th a t there must be someÂthing to their contention. NaturalÂly, not having lived in the âgood old days,â we cannot say whether or not we" would wish to change, but judging from the songs they sang then they m ust have had a pretty good time. In the pictbre âTlie Star Maker,â which played at the Reado theatres recently, there were many of the older Gus EdÂwards tunes, and judging from the response from the audience when Bing Crosby, starring in the veÂhicle, asked everyone to join in on âSchool Days,â even the younger generation of this day likes them. The show was full of the old ones including. Sunbonnet Sue, Heâs Me Pal, In My Merry Oldsmobilc, If I
_ M i l l ! â . ; â t _ - i rx.â.L r~.
Dr. nnd Mrs. Van Huok On TripDr. and Mrs. Carlton V in 'IIook
this week motored to Westminster, Mdâ whereâ Carlton Van Hook, jr., is entering the junior class in WesÂtern Maryland college.
Classified Advertisements' Advftrtleernenta for these columns aliould .be in the ofllcG of ,lThe
Times" NOT LATER THAN .11! O'CLOCK NOON T hursJay of each.veeK. â âą : âą
cent pep won»
!
CLASSIFIED AD EATB25 wonls OK LESS ..................... .......M ore than 25 w ords .5. times fo r the price of four.., âą
Copy malted in. given to representative or brought to OJHce pe»*. Honally must bo accompanied by cash or stam ps to cover cost-. Copy accepted over phone aa a courtesy and conven ien t to customers BUI« dvo Immediately upon presentation
imnuutniuuuii»
MODERN Furnished Apt., 3 rooms and bath, unusual, reasonÂable. Also rooms, all conveniences. 91 Mt. Carmel Way.â39*
THREE-Room apartm ent, heat, $25 monthly, furnished or unfurÂnished; two-room apartm ent, 515; rooms $10 monthly. Electric and gas.. 18 Webb avenue.â36-10â
FOR SALE\or Rentâ14 1'ooms, steam heat, ren t'fo il $000 a year: $3,500. 14 rooms, $2,000. Houses yearly, Mary L. Walker, G4'/4 Mt. Hermon Way -âSO*
_______ GARDNER for idealwinter living, /Block from theatres, close io basMesa section. $15,00 per month up. Bath $25.00 and $30.00 per month. 'Well heated,-- 37-41* âą
ROOFS OF all kinds appliedâand repaired; work guaranteed. E stiÂmates cheerfully ?.;iven Cnn fiÂnance. William Krayer, i i CenÂtral avenue, Ocean Grove. Phone A, P, 4058-Jâ41* âą â
MURRAYâSââThe Pants House of Asbury Park.â 805-807 Lake avenue. Just off Main St.â28-32
SPEND your Fall and Winter at F m Inn. Large, steam heated rooms. Running water in cach roon>. Modern home-cooked, meals. Rates reasonable. 13 Embury Ave. -35-39*
ANTIQUESâAnnual Clearance sale of fine restored antique furÂniture. Bureaus, tables, chairs, mirrors, etc. We buy restore-sell, 137 South Main St. Phone 8691-i â34
BASE ?LUGSâinstalled comÂplete, $1.S5 up. Exhaust fans, ?12.- B0. -Electric service on anything. Call Newman Electric Co. Phones A. P. 1103 and 1104. Day or night,
UPHOLSTERING, draperies, slip covers, box springs.' Harry Miiberp:, Inc., 518 Bangs Ave., opp,. Steinbach Co. Tel A . P. 2170â 11-15.
UPHOLSTERING â Furniture, box springs, mattresses renovated. Innerspring mattresses made from your old hair m attress. Called for morning, returned same day. Otto Spies,;-.1220 Munroe Ave., Tel. 3070-11-15
W e Sell-You BuyP eople a re alw ays seeking some sa fe inÂ
vestm ents. W hy no t investigate tom e o f these, barga ins, now being o ffe red to th e P ublic in O cean Grove.'
T h ere a re tw enty-six d iffe ren t k inds o f inÂsu rance protection, w hich a re c o v e red . by our tw enty-tw o la rge insurance com panies.
W in ter an d a ll the y ea r hom es, a re now being m ade ready , fo r you r inquiries.
Ernest N. Woolston Real Estate and Insurance
Forty-EigKt Main Avenue Ocean Grove, N. j.
T e l e p h o n e 3 9 8 "
1
1 ' REAL ESTATE . / ' ' - 1_ For Sale: Beautiful home on Occan Pathway, Ocean Grove. 12 12 Rooms, eight of which are large comfortable bedrooms with |I running water in them. Lavatory on Âżach floor. Baths, on first 11 and second sleeping floors. Hardwood floors. Hot air heat. TwoS lovely porches from which one can view the ocean. Every modern 1
convenience. Lot 45 x 60. Asking Price $10,000 and it's worth it. IMortgage to suit. I
INSURANCE |There is an automobile accident every '/z minute, and. 34,000 |
deaths yearly are-caused by automobiles. No matter how careful §a driver you are, you never know when your car may bring death . 1or injury. The United States Fidelity and Guaranty policy and |the service that goes with it arc your best protection. |
SEE ME BEFORE YOU BUY BURN OR BORROW . |
LOUIS E. BRONSON !: Real Estate and Insurance - |
s Telephone, Asbury Park 1058 53 Main Avc., Ocean Grove §âfiiiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiiiii)iiiiiiiiiiaiiaiiiiiiiiiniiifniiiaiiiuiaitiiiiitiiiitiimiiiitiiiis:i»iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiit)iiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiRniiiinimi^vtDaommI
iBtcwtà MauauiocunicM <n «it*u m it icnranvnm u rn nam nofMKsmanni nw« im a A M a n t
FOR SALE32 Rooms, fully equipped Cafétéria, good location44 Rooms, furnished ..........13 Rooms, furnished ........ .......................... ..9 Rooms, furnished ............ .................................7 Rooms, furnished ......................................6 Rooms, fu rn ish e d . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
See these and other bargains before you decide to buy Full list of summer cottages for rent.
10,600 8,009 2,500 3,590 â 2.1C0 1,509
â i
!
I
1 -Representing none but the best insurance companies, we g are prepared to write oil kinds oi insurances.
ALVIN E. BILLS AGENCY HREAL ESTATE MORTGAGE LOANS INSURANCE Telephone 2121 78 Main Avenue, Ocean Grave
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BUY YOUR FUTURE HOME AT. METHODIST C ^K TB O -O C SA K OKOVfe; -, , | .
Thousands o( peoplo th? camp moetlntf serrices each summer, | ; Hestrlcted to P ro testan ts only. Ocean Grove Auditorium w ill/s e a t | 10,000 people. Only town whore autos aro no t allowed to stand o r run * on Sunday. Police D epartm ent very efficient. Our F ire D epartm ent is second-to none. Dank, PoBfc Offlee, D rug Stores and M arkets.
PO R SALEâHEMODELED HOUSES V v â 'Xako Avenueâ13 Dooms and^ B ath , Good Ilea t; $5,iob.(io âą â
109 Em bury A re n n e^ -r Booms and B ath , H o t W ater H e a t i$3,750.00 g : 73. M t. Hermon Wayâ7 Booms and B atli, Good H e ^ âą:
: v V*' v â ' Inconie $150.00 Yearly, $3,900.00.* ' , âr ;V - â v -^ T H E il .p A B O il I N 8 ^ r V :v :; ;^ i ; S :;;;
A bbott ArenueâS Booms and B ath , |3 ,100,00 'Heck Avenueâ0 Booms and .bath ; $1,900.00 .
J. A. HURRY AGENCY
Information Bureaui 6 6 M ain Avenue 6 1 C lark A y ehĂčeâ,. |
'â T elephone 4132. Ocean Grove, N . J . âą . - â jrd<«phondS87-lCi5 I
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' FRIDAY, OEPTEiĂźDEIl 20, 1939
Membont oi tho Republican ox- scutlvo committee of Neptune township, hold a reorganltatlon movtlnir (n tho Green Pnrrot tea room, Monday evening.
Rov, Newton M. Connhnnom Central Methodist church, Point iâlottinntj-wlll-bo-the KUOiHipenkei- In tho West Grovo M. E. church Sunday. Rev. George VV. Yard 1» attending the niinmil convention In Occnn City.
Tho m arriage of Mian Imui'a Voorhecs, daughter of Air. iirtd Mrs, Jumes Voorhees; 1311 Sixth nve- nue, to Paul Mueller, son of Max Muoller, 1C08 Munvoo avenue, has been announced. : The couple were married November HO, 1938, a t Fredricksburg, Virginia.
1 Un«c»ll«d Firemen At FairMembers nf tho Unexcelled fire
company, Nontuno, visited tho Now York World'» Fa ir Sunday. Tho group mndo tho trip In three charÂtered busies nnd loft Noptun early Sunday morning, returning Sunday .flight, â -
nkoop, riflo nnd plutÎt shooting, plug casting ami othor conto/its, In. cludlnir a su it ball'gam«. Tho ovem In sponsored by tho affiliated clubs, ;of- which, tho Ocean O ra n fishing club Ik one.
IN AND OUT OF OCEAN GROVE
Bodlnt TuMtral Jjomt
O. C. Neldcnsteln. 47 Webb ave- nue, th is week loft for his winter home in Brooklyn, N, Y."
Ocean Grovo school was in ses- siononly a half day on Wednesday due to tho inclement weather.â Mr; and Mrs. Charles 0 . BaldÂ
win, of Caldwell, a re vacationing in Ocean Grove a t 61 Abbott aveÂnue.'. â â 'â â âąâ ;'âą 'âąâą
Miss H ary Hallging is moving fro n r 88 Lake avenue to 71 Asbury , avenue, where she Svill remain fov the w inter.1 âą T: Mrs". Mae Strollflliy has closed
; th e Marie . Villa, 9 Main avenue, and returned to her home in BaldÂwin, L. I. âą
Miss Mary Whitehead, of tho 'Bancroft-Taylor Best Home, is 'âąvisiting' with friends In upper New York State.â Mrs. Jessie Cook, of Manasquan,
- visited with her Bister, Mrs, Harry; .Hendrickson, 142 Mt. Hermon Way, on Wednesday.
-~-TheOcean-Grovo-flrBt-aid*squa(i removed F. Voeller from the De- -Witti House, 33 Atlantic, .avenue, to his home in Bloomfield.
M rs .'F . C!are Cyphers, GO As- bviry avenue, returned Monday
. from a vacation a t Buck Hill Falls ,Pa.
Miss Ruth Pigueron,' 64 BroadÂway, has returned to her KinderÂgarten and school a t New York
. city. . â â B. F. Chillman has closed his
cottage a t 132 Broadway and left fo r his winter residence in Gulf-
. port,'.Fla.Mrs. R. W. Terhune baa closed
her cottage a t 97 Heck avenue, and has returned to her home in WestÂwood; N. J . â â
â â â W. 'Y. Scott closed his cottage a t 110 Stocktoni avenUe thia week and left fo r his winter residence at Toms River, N.-Ji
The Friendly Circle of Oceah Grove will meet Monday afternoon a± the. Home ; o f : Mrs. J . L. Martin, 80 Ma'in avenue* '
Officers Wlliiant Denham and A rthur Barkelow, of the Ocean
- ;Grove: police department, are on their annual; vacations.
Mrs. T. F. Harper, of . Coleman,âą Ga,, is visiting her sister-in-law,- , Mrs. A. E. Harper, a t the Sun-.
ligh t 31: Embury; avenue.Miss Adelaide Jantzer has left
' her summer Home a t 7 P itm an ave- ; ru e and returned to Brooklyn, N.
Y., for the winter months.Mrs. George R. Haines is closÂ
ing the Majestic hotel and cafeÂte ria and returning to her winter residence, in Moorestown, N. J.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Harper; of Atlanta, Go., are guests of their aunt, Mrs. A. E. Harper, a t the. Sunlight, 31 Embury avenue.
Miss Mary Kennardj who has closed the Eilwood hotel, has mov-
- ed to 85 Main avenue, where she will make her winter residence,
! ; The cottage of H. M. Thompson, B9 BroadVyay. was closed this week and Mr. Thompson returned to his
" winter residence in Bayonne, N. J.Miss Rose Maguire and ;niecc,
; Miss Gurney Ayers, have returned to Elm hurst, L. L, a fte r spending the summer a t 75 Cookman avenue.
Hairy. Mitchell, 147 . Franklin avenue, this, week accepted the poÂsition of supply manager of the J. Davis . Hardware Co., Long Branch. ' y.";. The Misses M artha and Annie .Cannon have returned to, Owenâs
'M ills, Maryland, a fte r ' spending âąthe summer months Ă t 97 Main avenue. .. â :â . J,
Mr. and Mrs. N. Zazzara, and son Guy, were visitors during the week-end a t thé home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles - M, AVilgus, ⹠138 Broadway.
âą Mr. and Mrs. William ' E. LudÂwig, 13(3 Lake avenue, and Miss Olive Riley, 132 Mtv Tabor TSfay,
â âwere visitors Saturday in Hacketts- , town, N. 3.âą The outside trim of the Eagle hook and ladder, house, Main and Whitfield avenues, is being paintÂed under the direction of Fire Com- inissioner Jam es Boyce.
; Mrs. M. K. Serby- and daugh- > ters, Miss MĂ iioft Serby and Miss
âą Lois Serby, -45 'Bath avenue, are : returning to their winter resiÂ
dence in" Yonkers,- N. Y.Mrs. A. Jessup and Mrs. G. Koh-,
lev returned to Troy, N . 'Y., on Saturday afte r spending two weeks
, with the form erâs sister, M rs.' C. '. M. Hatfield, 37 Embury avenue.>âą ' Mrs. Thomas Bartram, Mrs. Flo- â rence Wiser, Miss Oda Huch and
Miss Alice M yatt, of Philadelphia, 5' a re spending several days with S' Mrs. Bdith Davis, 94 Main avenue, f The Executive board of thĂ© "'âąâMotherâs Circle of St. Paulâs church ' Avili meet Monday evening a t the - home of the president, 9G Webb
avene.âr" >Ă; Miss' Elizabeth BToch, ' who has ? spend the summer with Miss Lulu ;:: Wriprht a t. the â Shelburne; Ocean' Ă Pathway, returned to her; home in ââą " Brooklyn, N. Y., this week.
. âą âą Miss May ' Perkins, of Winter A 'P a rk , Fla., who has made her'flum- â m er home a t 37 Embury avenue for
the past ten years, returned this ; week frdm a visif with; friends in'
Troy, N. .Y.After âspending four, months in
Ie- th e irâ.cottage. a t 77 M t. -Pisgahâ âą -Way,' Dr. and Mrs. G. H. Dickeyâą left -Tuesday for' their winter resi- :â,Vdence. at-. ' âąUniversity'*' Gardens, a Great Neck,.L. I. , «'.â.V.-'v?:f.,. A mechanic from the Ahrens-Fox
f ire engine company this woçk at- .fc tnihed gate-valves to the new cn- ifefelnâofHhe-fE.iHv Stokesrfite! 06111-=; 5 jay,< No,, 3, ^A-'red p in k er lighf
i f e * m m -
SpdrtBmcn Plan Field DayTho Monmouth County FederaÂ
tion of Sportsmenâs clubs will hold a field day and picnic Sunday at the Wayside Rod and Gun club headquarters, Wayside. All sportsÂmen and their families arc invited to this event, which will feature several shoots. There will be trap,
R o o f s FRENCHDRY CLEANING
CO.Slate, Tile, Asbestos, Slag â and Built-up Roofing
Sheet Metal Work Warm Air Heating
Ventilating
Estimates Freely! Given
J.N. BEARMORE & CO.
919 TTiIrd avenue. Asbary Park ( âą
Tel: 1858 âąâ â
O B IT O A R T
ATTRACTIONS AT THE ASBURY PARK THEATRES
, M rs . m a r i e f . s w a i n .Mrs. Marie F . S'wain, 74, wife of
William C. Swain, 49 Clark aveÂnue, died Monday in Fltkin hosÂpital, Funeral services were held Wednesday afternoon a t the MatÂthews and Froneiohi funeral home, Asbury Park. Interment was in Hamilton cemetery. Besides her husband, she is survived by a sisÂter, Mrs. Louise Lenau, Newark.
INDIVIDUAL A nd R e tu rn Clothes
STERILIZED
^ REAOES ~
MAYFAIR
â MRS- J . Bi SOLLY âąMrs. J . B. Solly, who has been
a -summer resident here fo r the past fifty years and in recent years summered w ith Miss M artha A. Simnions, 27% Main avenue, died on Septem ber 23 a t the hom e. of her.daughter, Mrs. .W. A. .Wilson, in Frankford, \ Pa. Besides her daughter, she is, survived by one son, J. L. Solly, of Frankford, and a grandson, William A. Wilson, jr .
One Week Starting Friday, Sept. 29th
FRED MacMURRAY MADELINE CABBOI.I.
in We invite the people of this community nhri surrounding vicinity to. .avail themselves of our complete banking facilities which include the following:CHECK ACCOUNT
SPECIAL INTEREST ACCOUNT CREDIT, DEPARTMENT
. TRUST DEPARTMENTTRAVELERSâ CHECKS
' SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES
E ach deposit account a t th is b an k is insured up to $5,000 by th e F edera l D eposit In su rance Corpora* tion.
W E SOLICIT YOUR PATRONAGE
R. HARRY. GILBERTWord has been received here of
the death on S u n d a y of R. Harry Gilbert, a summer resident since 1913 a t T ent 15, Stockton avenue. Mr, Gilbert died a t his home in Park Ridge, N. J., a fte r a lingering illness., He is.survived by his wife; Adda S. I. Gilbert, and two grandchildren, Mrs. John Bano- Vic and Kenneth Charles Gilbert, and one brother, C. DeWitt GilÂbert.
Y REAOE'S
FARAMOUATrFour Days Starting Saturday, Sept. 30th
Prevue Fri. Nite RICHARD GHEENE
RICHARD DIXM ain St., A sbury P ark M ain Ave., O cean Grove
M em ber. F edera l D eposit Insurance C orporationNEPTUNE SCHOOL NOTES
M A TTHEW S arid FRANCIONI
Funeral DirectorsThe oldest Undertaking E sÂtablishment in Monmouth'C o u n ty .-; ;. ';Y ;
Continuous Service First-Class Ambulance Ser- vice.
704 Seventh A venue A sb u ry P a rk , N. J .TelepSocr, A ilinrr P a rk SI
âHERE I AM A STRANGERâ
Weds., Oct, 4th f r e i d a i n e s c c r t
âWoman Doctorâ. . AlSO ;
The'Fight for Peace
CALENDARMonday, O ct,' 2âLibrary comÂ
mittee meeting. Boyâs Physical Ed. class captainâs meeting.
Tuesday, Oct. 3âFreshman class meeting, election of officers. Girl Leaderâs Corps.
Thursday, Oct. 5âLibrary comÂmittee meeting. Soccer game Vs Long Branch a t Long Branch, 3.45 p .m .
Friday', Oct. 6âFootball game vs Roselle Park, a t Belmat field, 8.15 p. ml.
In; the assembly Friday, ât1ire4 new cheerleaders were se- le c ted b y th o stu d en t body^arid, facr ulty. They, are Lesley Robinson, Fred Osborn and Leon Emmons. The other five members of the double quarte t are: Elizabeth Me L ean ,' Virginia Lopez, Madeline Busch, George Phillips, and DougÂlas Hayden.
The band th is year will present a more brilliant front with three new twirlers in addition to the regular drum major. The new twirlers arc Madeline Busch, ShirÂley Rogers and Doris Stout. The drum m ajor is Virginia Stout. There will , also be two stand-ini for drum major who are Betty Thompson and Jeanne Brophy
The annual Senior play will be given in the auditorium on NovemÂber 10 and 17. The characters for the play, âThe Full House,â are as
âąfollows: Wm. Römer, an English servant; M arieTParker,'a maid; Shirley Giles, Mrs. Pembroke; Sally Loomis, Vera Vernoii; DorÂothy Farfell, Mrs, Fleming; Harry Faby, â Nicholas Kins; W arren Ridgeway, Georse Howell; MarÂgaret Fauver, Daphne Charters; Jeanne Brophy, ; Ottiiy Howell; Herbert Megill, Jim Mooney', a policeman; Chai'les Jackson, a policeman and Paul Schluter, Ned Pembroke, J r , _
SHADOW ÂżAWN BOUGHT
West Long Branch Gets $1,000,000 Estate for $100
giuiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiinininiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiuiiKI ELKSâ BEAUTY SHO P II L a& les A rtfstlo.lTolr Bobbing =g Perm anent W are« a Speela ltr a t s i : *2.0B, »S.to and *t.00. _g Sic. P e r Item , J F o r J6c, g g At<0 B arber Service gI S28 Cookmon A re., Astmrj- Pork |I Telethon« SiSJ., |
r , re a o e s
ST. JAMEJS | Investment Information and| Advice Is But One ofI Our Many Services
f The First National Bank of Bradley Beach | Bradley Beach, N, J.I . M em ber F edera l D eposit Insurance C orporation
I The Largest Hat Shop In Asbnry Park| The Largest Assortment of the L atest Fall Hats= - Including Felts, Velours, Suede Velours| Also Largest Assortment o f MatronâsI And Sport H ats A tj 98c a n d $ 1.85| PARIS HAT SHOPE 4 3 6 Cookm an Avenue, A sbury P ark1 Open Evenings Telephone 4831-J^inuiuinliiimhlnim)iiiiiiniiiinmiiiiiiaiiiiii,u,iiiii,iiiniiniiiiiiiitiii)iniiinii»u»iiiiiiiilniul)iiin»innnim
Four Days Starting Friday, Sept. 29th Prevue Thurs. Nite
JOEL McCREA BRENDA MARSHALL "Espionage Agenl"Three Days Starting
Tuesday, Oct. 3rd Prevue Mon. Nite
BORIS KARLOFFROGER PRYOR
ââThe Man They C tu ld Not Hang"
PARKERâSFISH MARKET
(W. ,C. PARKER)- SEAFOOD OF ALL KINDS
FREE DELIVERY 51 OLIN STREET
OCEAN GROVE TELEPHONE 7012
DRESSMAKING ⊠O E S IG N N lG ALTERATIONS
â âFrom Evening Go«» to S k irtâNo Jo t Too Big o r Too 8tooU
Reasonable prices.Onaronteed W orknan ib lp
MBS. M. SlBDEarAIT M t CoolnaBn ATft- A s^n rj Vazl
Socond Floorâpto n e , A, P . 11 J*
RĂA0ES âą
LYRICOne Week Starting : . Sat., Sept. 30th
MYRNA LOYTYRONĂ POWEĂĂ
âThe Rains Cameâ
. I f y o u âre going to more, le t' Sheffield Farm s give you a lift. Let us know when and where youâre moving. , .
Having Sheffield Milk â on t im e -â for the first breakfast in your new liome is a helpful detail. S till more helpful is the prom pt, courteous ser- v ice w h ich â S heffie ld m ilkm en give every day of the year.
Ju st speak to your Sheffield m ilkm an, or c a ll, y o u r S h e ff ie ld Branch. Start prompt Sheffield service the very firs t m orning i n ' your n e w h o m e ..* T U N E I NCapt. TIn Healy't ^-r-rTTN^ S eoftfc t S tam p Cfub of Ibe Air, fiwmWflmgS ÂŁvery Monday, M Tm lL Sw jl
S H E F F I E L D F A R M S
SeatkftA i s. ic
HISTORY
Tho ?4,000,000 Hubert T. Parson estate, Shadow Lawn, a t West Long Branch, was sold a t sheriffâs sa le . this â week for a itominal. bid. of $100.
The , IBotough. of .W est Long Branch bought the property,: subÂject to a: $32,608.09 tax lien, after the mortgagee, the Frcm kir Coi- poration of Jersey City, and P arÂsons failed to put in on appearance. / .West Long Branch intends, after Chancery Court âą has confirmed the. sale, to advertise'.the property for sale, with, a minimum price-fixed covering Âżaxes and other costs!
The original .house a t Shadow Lawn was built by John A. McCall, head of the New York Life InsurÂance Company; During 1916 PresiÂdent Wilson used jt- as a Summer. White.-House-.. In 1928 the; strucÂtureâ was destroyed by fire and Parson built the present limestone building of five stories containing 85 .'rooms/ 80 baths, .a swimming pool and a theatre ' accommodating 600;persons. . r
Vrtiile -whiting for that, house to bp built, Parson,- who'.\yas>presi- denl; of tlie i'- W : Woolworth, ComÂpany, 'tonatructedi a ' 33-room1 ;tile briok ;liou6e -whic;h'. nlfeo; is in /th e
âąSixty';ncrot,â|>loee.5f'vi
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RADIO jCABAsbury Parle
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Monmouth Garage JFireproof â . |
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D ead ' v S t o r a g e . ^ # âą . $3 . M ontli |
Phone 636 !. A t H«ck Sitreet Bridge g
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6 4 M ain Avenue/ O c tAlso ON SALE a t A bingdon bi
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T 7 ! iWĂM
P A G E S I X
W f , . . x ' ; - T . . . ., . 0 - ' r ; , ' â '* â ' V â ' â >
< ' ' , â \ r 1 < ( ; FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 29«' 1030;. <âąâ..-
Our Unyvclcome Guest Thereâs it queer old fellow who lives
in our town, ;Heâs lived here for many long!
ây e ¥«'AHe seeiiied ut first to be friemliy âą to all, âą' ;â â â â â â â Or at least thatâs the way it- apÂ
pears.. He tries to get close to your inÂ
nermost soul, - .And soon he lias secrets to tail,He begins with "They say but 1
hope its not true;- Though it may be, I know very
"They sĂĄyâ bu t fo r pity, sake, don't ever toll, .- .
. âThey1 sa°yâ he^ g t^ ^ a i r th e cash
: V J n ^ e hR a c |eU'ack; do you think
And Ochave you heard , the latest 1
Of that deacon down there in the
âThey^'sayâ heâs as crooked asÂżrooked caii be, oy , âą
And for worse men you need neve
âThey sayâ there is trouble th a t s brewing down there,' .
In this once pleasant home of the
A nd T can believe it, âthey sayâ it
But Iâm not one .tha t picking old
.Tho* heâs not half a s nice as he was years ago, . â ' ,
And âthey sayâ her face tells the
Avluit * a shame that they should thus drift apart,
.Hereâs a se e re t-H c has grown fond of ale. âą ,
âThey sayâ Widow W right has forÂgotten her grief.
And her caps she has set for anÂother, , ,
And she made such a fuss wjiey her husband was dead,
Her grief she could not) well smoÂther.
Now they say she appears conÂtented and gay,
As though she had never been uf- flicted, - ...
I donât understand how it all comes to pass,
And the facts they are not contraÂdicted.
0, hereâs one thing more you might like to hear,â
John and Jennie â they say are engaged, ' .
Now to me it would seem a pretty good match,
But the parents, both sides are enÂraged;
But young folks will be young folks, and theyâll have their way,
In spite of what parents decree, They aré trying to break up the
match so âThey sayâ,But df course that is nothing to me. AVell I must be going; Iâve made
quite a call,I hope youâll return-St some day ÂĄ
' I like to be neighborly, no'gossip; ara I ;
I steer clear of a tattletaleâs way. If there's aught I despise in. this
sir( cursed world,Its the one who goes peddling the
. news,'.They say there are many around
on this earth,But their friendship I surely reÂ
fuse.Mrs. W. B. Dingman
Ocean Grove, N. J.September 29, 1939
W E E K L Y N E W S A N A L Y S I S B Y J O S E P H W . L a B I N E
Congress, L ik e E n tiie Nation Not Certain of 4 B estâ Course~T<rPreserve U / S . T ^ ĂŒ tr a litĂż
(EDITORâS NOTEâWhen opinions arc expressed in these columns, they are those of the news analyst and not necessarily of this newspaper.)
â ' â - Released by-Western Newspaper Union, 1 'âą/ âą â âą ; . V-
C O N G R E S S :A d m o n i t i o n i *
"I have come back to JTashinston With an open mind. Whether I vote ÂĄor repeal oj embargoes or retention of them, my vote , . .. uiilt be lor the means which I believe best calculated to keep the United States out oj war. That use must do*
Illinoisâ Sen. Scott Luca», » mid- dle-of-the-road Democrat, was bold enough to admit publicly what most of the nationâ! 531 legislators adÂmitted only to themselvei: That no man could stamp hi* foot and say there was only one way to keep the U. S. out of Europe's war. But a few who took their seats in Franklin Roosevelt's third special session (and the nationâs twenty-fifth since 1787) were highly opinionated, 100 per cent positive that only the arms
Color Glamour .I watched the sun fling the earth
a spectacular, good night.The western sky wus a field of . crimsen iind golden glory.
The water in the Sunset-Lake ,was a sheet of flame.
The roofs of the houses, blushed rosily under the warm regard
Of the Orb of Day and every pane of glass a t thc'Berkeley-Cartoret
gleamed like polished brass.Dusk was spreading a silver-gray
Veil, fine as a brideâs tulle, Between my eyes and the sunset. , I Had.almost forgotten there was:
so much beauty in the world. The âsuii had. left- a âą rosy glow on
. âą the horizon'.Above it ÂĄ# wash of crocus yellow
â a blonded witb the blue sky to make a younfi loaf green.
High up floated clouds of mauve and gold and crimson, like tat-
â âą " tered banners flung to thebreeze.." i \ ' \
How I love i t all in its ever chang- :: ing values!!-
â , âą Some days there were_orily =bluesf ~all tin ts and shades; âą
Sometimes ju st green with nothÂing else bu t sparkle; iAnd sometimes i t was a stiidy of
gray, sullen and menacing with no suggestion of color
Mrs. Clyde Robe Meredith Baltimore, Md.September 29, 1939
y j ; Mi dsummer Shower; The crickets have been singing,â Incessantly this day.
Overhead the sky th a t once was f-s ,. blue
Has been filled with clouds of gray. âą' /: -.' The little sun th a t can be seen
ILLINOISâ LUCASLike many, he didnât know,
embargo they pushed through conÂgress 'three years ago could keep America neutral. Among these, few were Idaho's Borah, North Dakotaâs Nye, Michigan's Vandenberg and Missouriâs Clark.
But national leaders, being mereÂly men, were confronted with the same confusion as the natjon: The more they thought aboutâ arms emÂbargo vs. "cash and carry,â the more they argued about straight inÂternational law vs. specific neutralÂity legislation, the less positive they were about everything save one fact, that the U. S. must keep out of war.
Day before congress opened, poliÂtics found itself "âadjourned" for 85 minutes. To the White House went Republicanism's 1936 standard bearÂers, Alf Landon and Col. Frank Knox, to talk with Franklin RooseÂvelt, John Nance Garner and conÂgressional leaders of both strip'es.Even the President was apparently convene. John Lewis' Congress forconfused, for there were rumors he industrial Organization planned tohad decided to supplement straight. mect San Franclsco 0(;tober 10.âą'cash and carry" (whereby bellig- But - â no , of be.erents could buy pay for_ and haul lwceâ these ,w0 warrlng iaclions,away arms in their own ships: with ,â V â , ^
When the President left the floor, so did 17 isolationists of the Borah- LaFollette-Nye-Clark school. RingÂing in their ears was one presidenÂtial admonition: . "Let no.... . group . . . assume exclusive protectorate over the future well-being of AmerÂica ,/>. . Let no group assume the exclusive label of the peace bloc. We all belong to It.â
After the 17 met, Californiaâs crusty.Hiram Johnson made an anÂnouncement: "We are ready ' tofight from hell to breakfast.â
A S I A :M y s t e r y
Amazingly brief was Japanâs reÂaction when the U. S. abrogated Its lOil trade treaty last summer. One reason was the immediate upÂsurge of interest In Europe's dogÂfight. But one thing led to another, Japan made peace with Russia, and British-French Interests In the OriÂent were left to fall under Japanese influence. These problems settled, pugnacious Nippon dusted off the U. S. treaty abrogation, mixed It with America's decision to reinforce her Pacific garrisons, and concoctÂed from these ingredients a puzÂzling diplomatic issue.
Something was in the air. On three successive days Tokyo newsÂpapers carried what were obviousÂly government-inspired editorials which said things like this: fl, "Should the U. S. strengthen her present policy it can be supposed that Japan would bo compelled to assert her right to existence."C.â Following the decreasing Anglo- French Influence in the F ar East . . . the U. S. Is threatening to come forward and , . . protect its rights and interests in China, thus giving-rise to a .greater likelihood of Japanese-American friction.â e. ââNeither Japan nor the United States seeks war . . . We desire to judge the situation: coolly . . ."
7 Trying to figure out this uncalled- for War talk; the Chicago Daily Newsâ A. T. Steele -radioed from Tokyo that he thpught the Japs were being prepared for "any future drastic American move.â To othÂers, It sounded like Tokyo was makÂing a propaganda buildup to justify anti-American moves in China.:
L A B O R : ;P e a c e i n W a r t i m e
Taking his eyes a moment from Europe's bloody picture show, Franklin Roosevelt glanced at doÂmestic aflairs and suddenly realized that October is U. S. laborâs big
. month. At Cincinnati the American Federation of Labor was ready to
old-fashioned International law. His thesis: One principle of internationÂal law never disputed is that belÂligerents have the right, to purchase anything they need in neutral counÂtries. . â '
Only concrete results of the con-, ference.wera the platitudes everyÂone ..expected, ' announced' by White House Secretary Steve .Early:
(1) "The conference with unaniÂmous thought discussed the primary, objective of keeping the U. S, neuÂtral and at peace.
(2) "There was complete accord that . . . the whole subject . be dealt with in a wholly nonÂpartisan spirit.â
Next day, at 2 p. mâ the assemÂbled houses of congress heard Mr. Rooseveltâs recommendations:
'Let those who seek to retain the present embargo position be wholly consistent and seek new legislation to cut oil cloth and copper and meat and wheat and a thousand other arÂticles from all the nations a t war.
'I seek - a greater consistency through repeal of the embargo proÂvisions,and a return to international law . , . .. I. give ypu my deep and unalterable conviction that, by the repeal . . . the .United States will more probably remain a t peace than If the law remains as it stands toÂd a y- . ' . . V . '
"May you, by your deeds show â.he world that we of the United. States are one people, of one mind, one spirit,' one clear resolution, walking before God in the light of the living.â
and internal warfare is bad busiÂness in a time of world war.: SoĂłn, however; there were indiÂcations the White . House would move for peace, as it has done the past two years. The President conÂferred with A. F. of L.âs Daniel
T H E - V a R :W o r d s
Guns still boomed at a nearby Polish outpost ,when Adolf Hitler rode triumphantly into Danzig.âą "We greet jrou . . Theâcity Isdecked for you,â shouted Albert Forster, who ls Der EUQ];rer-s lntnstrKonrad-Henlelni- 1 "I am happy to greet you, my faithful gaulelter,â answered the man whose, armies were even then wiping up the., spilled blood of PoÂland. Then - h'e launched info a speech which, the British ministry of information' shortly called ."full of the c rass ' misstatements which usually fall from his (Hitlerâs) Ups.â Typical âmisstatementsâ :C "The Duce-.(Mussallnl) made proÂposals which Germany and France accepted but Britain refused."C âPoland chose war because the western powers stated that the GerÂman army was worthless, that the German people, were low In morale and that th^rc! was c breach beÂtween the German people-and its leadership,* .ÂĄn.'âBritain should be happy that Germany; andi Russia reached an agreem eht-'.ihoy are. now relieved of . . .' uncirt^lnty."
Next day,'it? the New York stock market boomed in hopes of a long v a r , B r i t a i n Prime Minister Neville Chamti^rlain answered him: "Among , th iâ /ftatay misstatements . . . 1 wish to refer . . . to the statement that the French governÂment agreed, to Italian mediation while His Majestyâs government re- fused." âąâą
'Our purpose . . . is to redeem Europe from perpetual and recurÂring fear of,German aggression. No threats will Reiter us or our French allies from this purpose.â
On the third,day-French Premier Edouard Daladier had his inning, tracing step-by-step every broken promise that litters Adolf Hitler's trail froAâ. the reaffirmation of LoÂcarno to, the rape of Poland; Then:
"Germany already has prepared the dismemberment of France. Maps showing â France amputated have been printed . . But France has arisen . . . We will end the war only when we can ensure the security of France.â
I n t h e E a s tCompleted was , Russiaâs- valiant
"rescueâ of: 11,000,000 white RusÂsians and Ukrainians (plus, several million Poles)- who were "left to their fateâ when the Polish state col-
When America Talks to Ship at Sea Voices Talce-Qff and Land in Jersey
F ew intions A re
Bay^ GuessâPurpose
âIs this where all the SOS calls aro heard?â .âą
Altaost invariably this. Is the first question of visitors who come out on tho salt marshes of New Jersey to see the home of shlp-to-Bhore'teleÂphone service to and from'ships plyÂing the Atlantic and other oceans. The service will ue ten years-old this December. >.V-. i:,;
The transmitting station for ship- to-ehore telephone service, where the telephone voice of -America in boosted In power many hundreds of thousands of times and hurled over the waves to the â particular - ship desired, is located at Ocean Gate, below Toms River. Many persons, seeing the network of antennae on the edge of Barnegat Bay from boat or ÂĄthe bridge leading to Seaside Heights, mistakenly think the sta- tlon. supplies electric power to comÂmunities in that vicinity. ->
The i-receiving station, where teleÂphone: voices from the ships »re plucked from the' air, revived 6nd sped oh land wires to any telephone in the country, Is secluded on the marsh at Forked River and few per-
sons are aware of its existence. A man, who had previously visited both stations as a guest of tho American Telephone and Telegraph Company which operatea.them, returned with a friend and explained It all to him personally. Through with ( Ocean âą Gate, he went to the; less imposing building at Forked R iver.,
âNow thla. is merely :an observing station,â he remarked to his friend, âNothing Interesting, ever happens here.ââ As luck would have It, a t that moment a circuit was estalillshed with the Empress o f Britain which was on a world cruise. The radioÂman Bpoko up. "Yes, Emprcs>T You are now In the Indian Ocean? When do you arrive at Bombay 1â NeedÂless to say, both visitors were aston- (shea. ,.;-v U -i.. V
English is used exclusively In speaking with .ships' operators.* However, from long experience the operators a t Forked R iter can Wen- tify ships almost h r soon as their signals cohie on the air. ' ' ;';- V
The two stations are operated as a unit, and the etaff hie'settled Into ah integral part of the'community life along that section of p f i shore.
Ăș e i Ă S i k Ă â in Tlieii!:ĂĂšir ;
CanMtsract iien-Hereâs good oflviee Iot a âąweman during her'
..... #â "** *- âą'*' â tâ*ierâ nge- <u*u*Uy-Ăroni 38'to- C2)j who-iearS 'B h o 'l l l o s e b e r o p p o n i - t o m e n i w h o w o r r i e s ' about hot^OwhWr-low-olipflp.-dlixy-iiMUs,-about^ho t-floah«r»-*08».o t-pspr^itay-* p«UBu p s e t n e r v e s a n d m o o d y H p o l l i .
J u i t g e t m o r e i r o n h a i r , 8 h r * , s l o e p a n d i f âąj use got moro iroau atr. o nr*, moep aim n - you need a reliable âWOMAN'Sâ tonic tako Lydia E..rinkham*a Vegetable Compound,
' " 'â â â*âą Naturo ___ . injoy 11ing jittery nerves and those disturbio*sympÂtoms that often accompany change of lue.
Plnkham'a U .WELL WORTH trying.
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COWBOYS AT STATE FAIR
Mounted Scout Troop, W restling v Shows Tomorrow Evening âą fTomorrow afternoon Rodeo Ray
and his Western cowboys and cowÂgirls will stage a rip-snor.ting show before the grandstand a t the Ti-en- ton State Fair, and there will be also an exhibition of stunts by the girls and boys of the Mounted Scout troops connected with thd 112th Field Artillery. Saturday night a wrestling show will be staged as p a rt of the revue .
On Sunday, October 1, Ralph Hankinson will present the s ta r dirt-track drivers of the country in a thrilling program of auto races.-'
All the exhibition buildings have been filled to capacity throughout the early part of the week and on the midway the Cetlin and WilÂson- Shows have been pleasing with âThe World on Parade.â
I Wilbur R. Guy erf . Successor to ' ' . |I WILLIAM YOĂN« r ;
I PLUMBING AND j HEATINGI Estimate« GivenI «4 Main Avepue, Ocean Grove I ' Telephone 428 v ; -,S. iâ.1 âą : â ' iQnttmii4iim(i*nsinii«uiiiĂĄnuiauuwur*<sueuu>su*ii*><»w<>
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MADAME PERKINSĂFhal can you do?
fo r theââÂżi Is setting ip the hills<
. And Save for a breeze,, crickets have stopped, ., y
â j The world around me is Still.'$$âą&' Yes, there goes th e nun, the fev- JjV j â erish sun. . ./-âą That looks like an orange pool.
â {V Now I will rest, fo r i t will rain- And the evening will be cool.
Jean Lillagorc "E iadley Beach N. J . .September 20, .1939 . . . . .
N O T A B L E SIn the news
. DUKE OF WINDSOR wasnamed major general of British expeditionary forces and planned to go back to France, ;
CHARLES M, SCHWAB, native of.Loretto. Pa., who rose to conÂtrol billions of dollars in the steel Industry, was buried a t New 'York. â
KERMIT ROOSEVELT, »on ofthe late President Theodore Roosevelt, reportedly renounced bis U. S. citizenship and became an Englishman to jolri the British ministry of shipping.
Tobin, a leading advocate of labor unity. At his press conference he assured reporters he would address a messdge to the A. F. of I>: conÂvention, and that "it would be a good guessâ to say the message probably would mention peace.
Secretary of Labor Frances PerÂkins also, did a little campaigning. She told how both factions have asked representation on the new war. resources board. Her quandiy: If you appoint a representative of both factions, will they carry their light into the board? Or can you appoint only one-representative and say that he truly .represents 'a ll laÂbor without bringing protests from the other groups? .
M I S C E L L A N Y :T h a n k s g i v i n g
Because President Roosevelt proÂclaimed Thanksgiving on Novefnber 23,' and because Gov. George A WilÂson designated November 30, the Clayton county, Iowa, board of suÂpervisors proclaimed a third date, November 16, âso as not to coniUct with the dates set by the President and the governor.ââ
BELGIUMâS \irORRYi f ill history be repeated?
lapsed under Germanyâs invasion. Nazi and SĂČviĂšt chiefs conferred in Moscow on Poland's new partition, presumably ; deciding . to leave a small, hamstrung _ buffer state. Lithuania and Slovakia were each given a small slice of the Polish pie. .
But as war ebbed in Poland, other eastern nations grew fearful. RuÂmaniaâs neutrality was threatened outside and inside: â(1) on the north by Russian-German proximity: (2) on the east by an expected -Turk- ish-Russian pact which might close her Black sea outlet; (3) Internally by violence, illustrated in the assasÂsination, presumably by pro-Gcr- mans, of anti-Nazi Prime Minister Armand Calincscu.
Meanwhile Der Fuehrer's last- growing eastern empire suffered growing pains.- ', While millions of sullen Poles presented a constant threat of rebellion, . London and Paris heard . insistent reports of upÂrisings among Czechs and Austrians.
I n t h e W e s tFor the moment,' fighting died
down along thĂ© â Saar front while both sides took time out to; move up fresh trpopB. But France was fearful on two counts: (1) about70 Nazi divisions were being moved from Poland to âthe western front; (2) Aachen, the town from which
'Germany jumped into Belgium in 1914, was evacuated o( civilians and became a concentration point for Berr Hitlerâs troops. Was history about to 'be repeated?
A t S e a . i j . ' âą t _.As the British airplane carrier
Courageous went down, its 573 dead boosted Britainâs, sea toll to 761. Prime Minister,Chamberlain reportÂed 31 allied « neutral ships had been sunk by U-boats, also that the allies1 have sunk seven or eight German subs. , .'Ănpparisonv In April; 1917, peak mpnth of the World warâs sea fighting, average British tonnage loss per week was 127,000, or 39 ships; For the; week ending September 19 In the'present;w ar, Britain lost 45,000 (onS, or 13 ships. Biggest U. S! concern in the Bea war: Several American cargoes had jccn confiscated by Britain; a t least .tie American steamer, the Wascos- ta, had been stopped and searched by a Germaq sui .
j Three Items for $1.00 I Raymondâs Beauty Shop I! 727 Bangs A venue ;i âą - Asbury. P arkI Telephone for Appointment, 2208 !iniuiillitluiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
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BREADDAILY
R eitz M odel B akery 47 P ilg rim P a th w ay
âą OCEAN GROVE'âtntiiaiiaiwimiiai'aitililiiwwiiiitiiHlHtnilllilll
N O T ,M UCH TIME LEFT TO SEE T H E . -
WORLDâS FAIR!S e e it a n d s a v e on th e se '
to Pennsylvania Station, N.Y.
O N E -D A Y O U T IN G S
to - N e iA ify o n h
J o n MON. OCT. 2 ^ W E D . OCT. 4
-â âą TRIP FRI. OCT. 6
Lfiiives... Ocenn firoyc-Afih.urj Iâarb, 8,44 A .1 M* Returning, ticket« goo«i only on tra ins leaving X. Y., >V. !8rd St., 6.15 1». ?r. and fl.15 r . i r LlliertySt., 6.:J0âR. M., ami n.ao 1». M, Ncwnrl;Itroml St., (J.4i I*. .M. .«ml D.42 1». M,on ilttto of snle.
GO. BY TIlAIIi .In safety,-speed and comfort. Avoid traffic Jams and hazardsâ get there . rested^ and on time. Save nioniy ,' top I
W hen the o ldest res id en t w as a youngster w e supplied
OCEAN GROVE
, Catley & Williams, ProprietorsMILK, CREAM AND
BUTTERM ILKFrom Monmouth County Farms
Phone 1970 142 Lawrence Avenue, Ocean Grove
Fiery Itching SkinHome Treatment Eases
Unbearable SorenessâDistressTherft U one iimplÂź yet inexpensive way
to ease tho Itching end torture of Eczema* Itching Toe* or Feet Rashes and many other externally caused, stem eruptions ana thatisto apply Mooneâs Emereld Oil night and morning end people who suffer from such embarrassing* or unsightly' skin troubles would be wise to tiy it.'
Just a*lc any first-class druggist for an original bottle of Moone's Emerald Oil end refuse to accept anything else. It It such a . highly concentrated preparation that .a small bottle lasts e long time end furfhermoreâlf .lhft clean, |)pwinuL peneÂtrating. oil that Mps promote heeling fell» to give you fv)j; Âżrd ccMnpIate'iatis- fectjon youcsnMv^y^ur^mo^rsfundfd.
S P E C IA L L O W F A R E S.To.New York . i'v
Ask any Jersey Central TIcR«)t â A gent. nbont lo ir I weeh-end âą and
v 00-day fares .
Contuit jtnty Ontfal Thutt A&tnts for addiÂtional information. Cbildrtnunder } ytart ofagt earrita FREE. Chi Una under 12, rtduud fart.
W EEK -EN DHudsonTerminal
^ : Penna. StationRound Trip In Coaches
CO-EVERY SATURDAY AND SUNDAYSATURORYS-Lt. Anbury Park-B.io A.M. SUMDAYS-LV. Asbury P«rk-7:39 Ai M.
S t a n d a r d T im »R e t u r o l n i â f i a i u r d a y o r S u n O n y E r e a t n a o n u p e c if le d t r n J n * , o o m u l t f t g e o t f o r f ly e r .
O N E DAYHudson Terminal
Penna, StationRounC S T r i p t o C o M h c e .
A l t e m a t o M o n d a y s , T u e a d a y n , W e d n e a d a y « , T h u r s d a y s a n d F r i d a y s . F o r d a t e s , s c b e d u le s , e t c . . c o n s u l t a g c c t s o r f ly e r .
Avoid Highway CongestionâGo By. TrainâHave Moire Time at the Fair. From Pennsylvania Station, N. Y.» t(i Worldâ* Fair Station, 10 Mlniitat â10 Cents, via Long Island Rail Road.
See the HIT SHOW of the FAIR RAILROADS ON PARADE
Also See âąRailroads in Building
Railroads at Work .
PENN5YLVHNIRR R I L R O n O
A slender girl, carrying a dim lantern symbolic, of eternal hope, was his only guide to happiness
.he love of JaneBatnes is Evans Follette⻠only opportunity to rehabilitate himself. A roÚlan- ' choly dreamer, hé was left completely discourag^ ,; : by the war, and looked to her for^guidance and ,-! for love. Though she returned his affection, she ' , . was encouragé^ by .unforseen, draiinstances- to ' marry wealthy,' rakish Frederick- fowne. Her-' decision, which remains in doubt until thé final.
' chapter, is one youâU applaud. ± ' \ âą"The Dim l^n tem â-'.'is a completely hyman,/ .
all-absorbing story by Temple Bailey, one'of.' - 1 ; â Americaâs most widely read authors. Youâll enjoy
every fascinating installment : V
T H E D I M L A N T E R NS E R I A L L Y I N T H E S E C O L U M N S
STARTING FRIDAY, 6
. . .
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w m m m - lĂŹ:,')-;!:.-
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2?, 1030
30 YEARS AGO<Bdttor*a N ote: Items â a m
taken (ram tbe back file« ot the Time* (o r the year t M9.)
September 25, 1909Ocean Grove was given, the covÂ
eted opportunity of seeing thĂ© A tÂlantic fleet pass- this way. , While the eighteen vesselB in the fleet were perhaps four miles off shore,
. they could be seen plainly with th e naked eye. Several thousands
.. « f persons lined the boardwalk to witness the sight. ' â ... Announcement of the marriage o f Hugh Moore, Jr ., of W est Grove, to Miss Cora Smith, of Gomo, has been made. The groom is interestÂed in the ,Moore fru it and vegetable market! pn Olin. street. The young couple were married in. Newark on September 6 . , ,
. -Improvments to tho Eagle t^uck house on Main avenuo havo been
âcompletedâIn;addition:to;the'front-j extension recently.made,, two stalls have been constructed in the rear, together with a room fo r the driÂver. William Sherman; of Asbury Park , has been engaged as the perÂm anent driver of the Eagle truck
.â team . . ~ âą â â '. " ,George F. Rainear, recently apÂ
pointed- postmaster, has resigned the post of township clerk. His resignation, will become effective the! day following the November
; election. -i-;. Mrs. Wesley B. Stput, Lake , ave nue, will represent the New Je rÂsey âConference a t the National convention of the Womanâs Home
^Missioriary Society,in Los Angel- es. W hile.nt the convention,.Mrs. Stout will visit the Ălaska-YoĂŒkon exposition, .. , - , â
â Next Wednesday the firemen of W est Grove will leave, for New-
. burgh, N. Ym where they will take pa rt in the big parade in connectÂion with the Hudson-Fulton expoÂsition. Firemen from the UnexÂcelled and Uneeda companies will m ake.the trip . âą
â â Samuel A. Reeves is having .a cement sidewalk laid ground his property, a t Main, Delaware and Heck avenues. r!;vv! : :?vâ : V'V-
15 YEARS AGO(E ditor's N ote: TBeee Items a t»
taken from the back lltee oi the TlmeB ; 16r the yoar 1824.)
; . . 'September 26, 1924 âąH arry G. Shreve, a former asÂ
sessor, was nominated-to th a t poÂsition in the primary returns tabuÂlated this week. Shreve defeated Dr. Charles ' Massinger for thĂš nomiÂnation.- Edward SwĂ©et was nomiÂnated to the position of township treasurer, . defeating the incumbÂent, A rthur Pharo, of West Grove. John S. Hall, o f W est Grove, was high-m an in a field of four- for the nomination - of township comÂmitteeman, his nearest rival being Harold Sampson, of Ocean Grove.
H The usual a rray of lost articles was turned in to Auditorium SuÂperintendent G. G. Hamilton; The lis t-th is year included false teeth and âeven a lipstick." i One woman is reported to have lost her skirt, another , a diamond, atid one man even lost his temper. No better place could be had to lose a temper than the Auditorium, the superinÂtendent remarked. âOf course we didn't return it to him.â âą âą'
A new $100,000 grand stand was built a t the . site of the Trenton S tate fair, to accommodate the exÂpected crowds.: The new structure will replace one destroyed by fire las t spring.- The new stand is of steel and concrete. !., ;
A septic tank, said to be thĂš largÂest in the state, will be completed afcout'th e f irs t of th e month, acÂcording to officials. ; The tank coat about $200,000.
Miss Belie Hauser was elected recording, secretary of .the Asbury Park W - C. T. TJ.' a t the regular
-election of officers held this week. Mrs. E. F . W hittier was elected .president for her eighteenth, terni..
The Saga of a Home-Made Trailer ;
A T exas journalist built Mmsetf a trailer, loaded in his w ife an d 11- year-o ld son and sta r ted on a 2,000 mile trefc fo r th e N e w Y o rk W orld's Fair loith , $50.00 in his pockets. H is experiences are re - counted in th e fo l lo w in g . story:
By TOM CAUFIELD(who. covers police, fire alarm s, boll w eev ils and a ll n e w s in and a bout th e Brazos B o tto m s o f C enÂtra l T exa s fo r the Waco Times- H erald). _ âą
WORLDâS FAIR, New York â Frances and the eleven-year-old and I have seen the Fair and all the folks back in Waco told us it couldnât be done on the CauSeld bĂ nkroll. The speedometer on Ancient History II reads 2,000
| miles from Fiith_and-Austin:-the wallet is out $50, and weâve got $10 left. I âve ju st wired the boss
- for; the $25 he promised me to get home on, and if the chewing-gum and bailing w iie on the tra ile r and jaloppĂż ' don!t relax their holds during the homeward 2,000 miles, we . shall, have made the whole junlcet on $85.
- We spent à little over $1.50 each : per day on thé Fair Itself, counting
i ! admission a t the gates. Thomas, ith e eleven-year-old' and' Frances,
> - the woman who tells me how to drive, and "I walked and walked and looked and stared, finally beÂcoming convinced th a t the best parts of thĂ© Fair are frĂše. We could while away two weeks here lookÂing at, the free shows, and never
: repeat and never suiĂŻqr from what ; the slick paper w riters call ennui. We are leaving only because a wolf , is howling a t a door bearing the coat of arm s of a certain small âątown newspaperman, in Texas. <
Nothing Like the Brazos We stood and gulped when we
saw the illumination at the lagoon of nations last night. Nothing like that along the Brazos, nor anyÂwhere else. â
-A lightning bolt h it a,telephone post as our car-traller combination passed it on the road to Knoxville, coming up. I t smashed the post, splattered our car with splinters, made an outrageous noise, scared us stiff. We saw it all over again, free, a t the Genera] E lectric show here. They made 10 million volts for usâBANGi and we thought we were back on the Tennessee highÂway in the storm.
We fought good roads and bad coming up. General Motors showed us all good in a panorama that 27,- 000 people a _day look_atâGM parked us in upholstered chairs, started a public address explanaÂtion from the chair' arms, and showed us the highway system of 1960. > -,
If it hadn 't been for that roads
Here Is Tom Caufleldâs homemade trailer In which he, Ms wife and son traveled all the way; from Waco, Tex., to see New York Worldâs Fair.system display, we m ight have thought, in the aviation building, th a t m an was fixing to leave the ground for good; but GM gave us hope for the highways. We could hardly get the boy away from the aviation display. Instead of w antÂing to ride on the carnival gadgets, he wanted to go back and look at the,model wind tunnels, th e cross section of the Yankee clipper, and things like th a t
Need for.AdjectivesWe heard the Voder. That's a
contraption we had read about, a sort of talking typewriter. Pretty girl punches keys and make a comÂbination of hisses and grunts that sounds like Charlie McCarthy a t his worst, bu t is understandable.
I never was m uch on adjectives. The one adjective heeded around here is âmarvelous." Give me enough synonyms for that, insert them as needed, and thatâs the Fair. , 'â
Thereâs a moving m ural in the Ford building. Pistons, cogs, things like th a t fixed in the wall, all movÂing. Time for one of the sjrnonyms. In the same building, walls hung all round with a one-piece yellow curtain made of spun and woven glass.
More free stuff; the City o f Light, w ith 1(#,000 individual bulbs; the . Forw ard March of America, showing how lighting has changed. Theyâve got a fountain iunnirig over the exit of that buildÂing, and-when l-lost-Erances and Thomas, by getting mixed up on a rendezvous, they waited an hour for me there, perfectly satisfied, While the fountain splashed outÂside.,. Theyâve got a real ship parked
in a pond by th e New England building. Theyâve got life-sized toy monkeys climbing, tries in a toy exhibit and real monkeys climbing on a rock inside the Frank Buck enclosure. The irock is higher than the bamboo walls, so you can see the monkeys w ithout going in.
Escalators and Ramps .. A bout transportation;âą th is fair is great on savlhg'shoe leather. It has to be, i t is so big that unless there w ere a lo t of escalators and moving belts the cobblers would have a field day a t every exit. You go up into the Perisphere on an escalator, and ride around it on a moving belt; and thereâs the movÂing be lt a t th e GM building. EveryÂwhere you find ramps Instead of steps, and the ramps are exactly calculated to ease your legs as you go up or down. Streets and walks are asphalt, and the. buildÂings generally, have rubber comÂposition flooring. And if you want to ride, it costs a dime for a bus, from any point on the grounds to any o ther point.
If your feet do get tired (and they oughtnât to often if youâve got the right k ind o f shoes, which is important, especially to the WoÂm en) you can stop in a t any of the first aid stations and get a free foot treatm ent to, ease them.
Now fo r th e Tariff .â Letâs count the.-cist;ââ after you
get td New York. Figure ypuâre ita.a trailer^-tha tâs $1 to- get over the George W ashington Bridge, which is the best way for a trailer; 76 cents a night at the trailer camp; a few cents for m ilk and whatever o ther groceries you rieed for eatÂing a t th e camp; 25 cents toll over
Whltestone Bridge for your car (leave the tra iler a t .camp) and 25 cents toll back again (or ride a bus, fare ten cents each); 50 cents . to park in the parking grounds a t the Fair; *75 cents admission for; adults, 25 cents for ch ild ren ;-25 cents each '"for th e Perisphere, which is a m ust because it is the Fairâs symbol; 10 cents for the Town of Tomorrow, which also ought to v '.a m ust for any houseÂholder, and gas and oil.
We ate d inner a t one of m any restaurants in the FĂąir grounds. My wife had chicken and m ushÂrooms w ith coffee for 60 cents. I ato a salisbury steak w ith coffee for 60 cents, and lam b chops for the boy cost 75 cents. For lunch w e had ham burgers ancUpio, which-ran-us 20 cents each. It costs a nickel for pop or root beer a t any of a dozen stands. We got to the F a ir for lunch one day and had dinner there that night. We had breakfast in camp next day, lunch a t the Fa ir and pulled out la te that afternoon for home. . .-'.y
Seeing New YorkYou can see something of New
York while youâre a t the Fair, for:, the m ere cost of gasoline. The night we arrived, we took a 50- mlle drive across town, along the Hendrik Hudson Parkway and back from .the B attery up BroadÂway to Times iSquare, then back to camp. We had a volunteer guide âone of the officials a t th e camp;
The policemen go out of their way to help a visitor. One of them talked to us for a half hour about .things in general while we waited 1 for an open-top bits next m ornÂing for a sightseeing trip in ManÂhattan. In fact, any New Yorker goes out of his way to help a Fair visitor.
We felt so much a t home that when we parked our car to catch a bus to the Fair on our first dayâs visit, we forgot to make a note of where we left it; ju st walked away from it like we would have done in our own home town. And beÂlieve i t o r not, we found it when we came back in the rainâw ith the help of some of the passengers on the bus! .
Bear in m ind that the cost of coming to New York depends on how you are willing to come. We had a camp trailer, slept in it, using a trailer camp o'pce, a cabin one night during a pouring rain, using school'grounds twice w ith the perÂmission of ru ra l neighbors, and parking-three âtim es'a tâfllling sta Âtions. I t took us six days to g e t her e! . ; ; âV \
T hat $85 is an education worth thousands, for a boy of. 11,, and worth plenty more for his father and m other.â Rrtrinlli jreyn thĂ© y nrYork I Icraid-Tribune, . ", v
HOTELS "â ROOM ING HOUSES
Beautiful Innersprlngr MattressesSaarantoed all novr material,, ralne
i i , for 19.05 CashM attresses non orated . 13.05
Simmons B ea a tr B est Bedding SI OLIN 8TBEET
OCEAN GBOVE âą Tel. 0710
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D A Y âS
Ererythmi from Soup lo Null.M i» i to n u e h » h o u ld d t t e i t Iw o p o u n d i o f fo o d
M U f . W h e n y o u e a t h e « * r # * r e w y , « o « n # o r r i c h f o o d i o r w h io y o u i r « n o r ro u a , h u r r i e d o r e n e w ; p o o r ly â y o u r i to m a c h o f te n p o u r s o u t to o Bruch f lu id . Y o u r fo o d d o e s n 't d f e e i t a n d y o u h a t e i a j . h e s r l h u r n , n a u s e a , p a in o r l o u r i to m a c h . .You fe e l t o u r , i l c k m d u p ie t a l l o v e r.
D o c to r» u r n e r e r u k e a l i n U r a f o r * tom « c h i ? « « jw r o u » a n d f o o ll i l j . I t t a k e s th o i e
l i t t i e b la c k ta b le t s c a l l i d O eU *ana f o r I n d l n i t t o a * t o m a k e th e e c c e u ito m a c h f lu ld i h a r m l e u , r e l i t* « d U tr M i t n .n o t im e a n d p u t y o u b a c k o n y * u t f e e t . B e lT ef la a o q u ic k i t I t a m a z ln f a n d o n » 25» p a c k a g e p r o r M l u A s k f o i B o l l - a m f o r la d lg M t l M .
EXTRA ^KAVES! EXTRAlCOMFOnrt
w m m
NERVOUS TENSION âShows In both face and âąim»> You are not fit company for
yourself or anyone clro whcri you are Tense, Nervous, "Koyed-npf1., Donât a lia out on your,dure ot good times. Tho next timo ovcr- -taxed nerves make you Wakeful, Restless, Irritable, try the soothing
« effect of . ' -'âą DR. MILES NEBVINE â
âą Dr. Milos Nervine Is a scientific ' formula coox-r: pounded under the super** , vlslbn of skilled chemists In one of Americaâs most'
â m odern lab b ra -,- to n e s . , vr"'Why donât Ton tr j It T _âą
to r» .: BottJc* »1.00AtTOUrâprdifltor»-;
I Tea. Room s1 Gift Shop 1f âąâąâą (*âą: : w : > [ 2 j Jf 48 Pitman Avenue' II ' Ocean Grove g
NORTH END
S Alleys âFacing' W esley Lake
10 A, M. to 12 (M idnight) | Instructions Free t ^ Beginners
Taxi ServiceCall
A . P. 8900C e n t u r y C ab Go.
Office, ,608 Bangs Arenue
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TRUSSESA N EW SANITARY TRUSS, VERY LIGHT
IN W EIG H T F it G u aran teed
F ree C onsultation PRESCRIPTION SHO P 5SO Cookm an Av/enue
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Also Famousâ n
Motor. Boats 1iV âą . - ; o n 0 :: j
Wesley Lak^ || B etw een A sbury P a rk I ; , and. O cean G rove â . |
SPEED W A Y CARS I 3rd. A ve ¿¿ B oardw alk |
= ' A sbury P a rk âą sOBSTACLE GOLF J
tThe. G o lf-Course w ith I 1 the w in d m il l) , â 1
!âą:; 4th Aye. .& B«»ardwalk p |f A : I S l 1
f Howard L. Smithss -.âąâą 'âą ' m| (8uco*w*r to Ansie* ft ,Smith) 5
I Plumbing ÂĄTinning and Heating |
S HARDWARE j| Paints and Oils 1I 'â â â â â ' V. " ji 51 Main Avenue Ig â â §âąI O GKAN ; GROVE, N. J |I T e l e p J t o n e .'4741, â . I 'i :: - Vf-Vv ..!' : ' : atfunfufnan«iialiaiiiita(ttnuD(iuam»iaaMait«»un
New Yor|tMotor CoachesLeave O cean Grove A ssociation O ffice
7.20, 7.50, 8.20, 9 .20 ,10 .20A . M.
1.20, 3.20, 5.20, 7.20, 9.20P .M .
D aily E xcep t Sundays Reservations must be made-on
. all -coaches . v--.. .
DAILY One Day
. 5 0 ExcursionGood Or AH CoaefietcrrecTivc aiPT. âŠ
Sundays, Leaves from L ake a n d H eck S tre e t '
A sbury P a rk , N .'J . T«l. A sbury P a rk 339
Albori Pirt-Kii York Truitt Co.
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i m | H E T IM E S advertisers need oa r trade andI I I . # ' ⹠⹠» âą' â âąâąâąU y _ f c i e n i . . . . ------ â -------
try to buy H a t hom e. W e a r e anxious to see o u r hom e com m unity th e cen te r o f com-
m ercial an d social activ ity . Com m unities grow an d p ro sp er th rough com bined e ffo rts . C ooperation an d team w ork m ake fo r resu lts . T ra d e a t home.
_ 1V ii i i i i i i i i . i i ! a i i i i i i : i i :u i i i iu i( i i i : i i i i ( ! a i ! i i ia t i« u i- . i« - . i r i r i i ii t >. i i - i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i « i i « i i i ) i i i . i i i i i i i i i i i i a u n i i i i a : : a i i i i i a a f M a K
CROCKERY
O f course you w an t the b est an d m ost reasonable. G et i t a t the
G U T R A T E S H O PH ouse F urnishings, H otel, R estau ran t a n d B ar Supplies1 C. M a i n S f r o A f Telephone, Asbury Park 1147I D O O U in m a i n o c r e e t 0 p po3 itc Main Avenue G*tes
AU TO BO D Y REPAIRS
ST. ELMO HOTELO pen AH Y ear
Corner Main and New York Avennes Individual meals served'fcr d*y or week
B. B. SHUBERT .American and European . Tel Asbury Park 679
MELITA11 VafB Arenne
âTke.Frl«nilT noBH>_loT tsâ Booms and a f a z t a .n t i . n»n«In* wai
otean. 'Ttlephone Aalilrjr F a rk j t l l . ,Oar r a t » aro alw ays m oderate
VAN COTTAGE 40 Central Avenue. O perali year. Hooma only, durlDK .tnĂ© -.. ouimnor. Spedai rates, nntil June 28 and and after SepW TeL 1951-Bi/'- ; â
7}V. â A, M.'-YAN' Ă3KXTB
V ^ b ^ y vana New, Jersey AvenuĂšs
B epalr Body, Fenders and F aln tlag
N i c k A n t i c h
b i g D IP ICE CREAM
BIG D IP ' P â © âą PINT 18câ 2 Pta., 35c.DOUBLE LOOSE CREAM, 23câ P tn « c â Qt.d i p B I G D I P ;
- ' Phone 8292 52 Olin Street
CEM ENT AND CONCRETE W ORK
F Ă B I O B A T T A G L I ASIBEW AUiS and CURBS FOUNDATIONS -,211 Bangs A venne, Neptune, N. J.
CEMENT BLOCKS CONCRETE BULKHEADS
Telephone Asbury Park 8938
CLEANING AND DYEING
NEPTUNE CLEANERSCLEANING. DYEING AND PRESSING
. ALTERATIONS OF ALL KINDS Called For ond Delivered * p â ftNs.
1148 Cerlies Avenue, Neptune, N. J. _
JEW ELR Y, REPA IR IN G
B. FEDDES«7 MAIN AVENUE, OCEAN 6BOFK, » . .
JEWELEn°A^DC i Ă t c h BEPAUĂ8 ^X T R A -B e.t Prices Pati t n OK OoM. AppraHod Free.
l a u n d r ie s
LOCKSM ITHâ HA RD W A RE
TERRYâSGLASS INSTALLED
u . LINE OF 5c., 10c., 25c., UP7-9 Main Street, Asbury Park " Tel.
R A D IO
Crosley and Gruno'w.410 Main Street, Aabary Park, N. J.
SP«.ĂźaĂŒ*ing in Repair of All Makes o f w Refrigerators. Authorized Dealer
Telephone
TAXIS
M ergaugeyâs Taxi» 80P T H Âż ^ BĂŠ T BD SaEa ALL H
W IN D OW CLEANING
S H O i lE W I N D O W C L E A N IN G C O .66 Sew York Avctiue, Ocean Grove
FLOOR WAXING DONE BY MACHINE Phone 4343 âą E . HERTFELDEIt
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T H A N K Y O UC A L L A G A I N !. . . . âą ....... âą -, -. . . . . . . . , âą âm
A HANDT OIRECTORT FOR OUR RKADBRS I
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
A . J . O B R E C H TSuccessor to L. SniderNEW SPAPERS
53 Main Avenue. T ei 528S Ocean Groveâs .Original Carrier
E D M U N D L . T H O M P S O NExterior and Interior
Painting BitlaatM P«r»lihod
rj C M tan At«» Oeeaa Orsi* n sa* A»*»rr Park 46*8-B
A N DREW TAYLORTUT i n BBBBT METAL
WOBKBB >f Soatk Mala Street, Askcry Faxk
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Alate and Shlajris lUMilag o t All Âż ta d sStoves and P a n a ce a
âą IW A M ort At^ , Ocean Grove
A n d e r s o n C D . C o .79 Delavare Atreaue, Ocean Grove
PAINTING and DECORATINGPAMR HANGING and WALL TSXTURE Telephone A. P. 414^-W r
Phones: Asbnry Park 680-8156-JTHOM PSON & GILLAN P a in in g a n d D ecorating
83 Franklin A venne,-'- . Ocean Grove, N. J,1 Ă ' â â
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Frank S. Morris J âą Electric Co. ; J
Electrical Contractors Iâą ' V: ! iAuto Electric 'Service s Refrigeration Service Engi-. |
. aeem âą; âą .§Batter^ and Tire Service, .1
V â 4 7 M ain Avenue. O cean G rove
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Hoffmann Coal Go,^ard. Fifth: Ave-i Âżad ;.Uiitli'C â3