Vol. XXXII—No. 42 A NEW HOSPITAL FOR IN POLITICS …of leading professional decorators the work of...
Transcript of Vol. XXXII—No. 42 A NEW HOSPITAL FOR IN POLITICS …of leading professional decorators the work of...
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Yes, You Should Advertise Now For T hat Fall and W inter Trade
You. Need To Boost Your Business Home Folks As Weil As Ail OtherB Interested In Ocean Grove;
Should Read The Times Regularly
V ol. X X X II—N o. 42O C E A N G R O V E , N . J . , F R I D A Y , O C T O B E R 17, 1924
A NEW HOSPITAL FOR DISABLED VETERANS
PUSHING OPERATIONS ONMANASQUAN RIVER BRIDGE
F O U R C E N T S
LOCATION TO BE SELECTED BY COMMITTEE
Will Investigate Any Site Off#- ed, But Favor Tracts Of Land Comprising Not Less Than 600 Acres/Within Some 60 miles Of New York—Propose To Build Best N, P. Hospital In Country.
Disabled veterans suffering from mental disorders residing in District No. 2, of the United States Veterans’ Bureau, will have a modem one- thousand-bed hospital ;a t their disposal, as a committee, composed of General George Albert W ingate, Dr. Henry A. Cotton and Dr. Thomas W. Salmon, is busy investigating sites offered.
IN POLITICS AS A SERMON THEMEA large gang of men is now a t work ,
on the Manasquan river bridge be- ! tween Point Pleasant and Brielle. j Forms are in place for the concrete i span on the south side of tho river, !kept open to allow a secondary chan- j FAIR SEX ARE TO BE TOLD n e t flow near the Pninf Pleasant 'n e t flow near the Point shore. Piledriving is started a t the main channel fo r1 the big draw span which is to go there. Railings have been built on the edges of the fill, which was made more than half way across the river by carting in trucks the sand taken from the canal two winters ago.
The old bridge is now so rickety th a t cars are warned not to try to pass another car going the same direction and to keep down to ten miles an hour. This bridge was pushed out of shape by slides of d irt from the new bridge fill alonside it.
CLUB WOMEN INVITED TOVISIT DECORATIVE EXHIBIT
Mrs. Howard Green, the State chairman of a rt of the New Jersey State Federation of Women's Clubs, has extended to all club women of the State an invitation to v isit the annual exhi
bition of the arts-in-Trades Club a t the Several weeks ago General Frank j Waldorf-Astoria^hotel, Monday, Octo-
WHERE THEY BELONG
Members Of Ocean Grove Woma n ’s Club Will Be Guests, of Honor At/ Grove Church This Sunday Evening—Pastor Johnson Preached Last Lord’s Day Morning On “ Jesus Only.”
T. Hines, Director of the United S tates Veterans' Burealu, appointed th is committee, with the request, that i t look into available sites within , a radius of some sixty miles of New York. Many sites have been offered, and they are being carefully considered by the committee.
“The committee will investigate any site offered,” said General Wingate yesterday, but it must be remembered th a t the committee is interested in
. tracts of land comprising not less than 500 acres, situated ra ther close to New York City with proper transportation facilities.
“ We have had many sites suggested, and are investigating them all. Wo desire to recommend to General Hines the use o f a plot of ground which will give the veterans of New York, New Jersey and Connecticut the best N. P. hospital in the country, and,will take our time.”
General Wingate, who is chairman of the directors’ committee, will be glad to receive plans, blue p rin ts and specifications of any plots of ground falling within the radius mentioned, with full and complete information as to drainage, sewerage, transportation arrangements and any "other information necessary. H e should be addressed eare the District Manager, U. S. Veterans’ Bureau, 480 Lexington avenue, New York, City.'
her 20th, and Friday, October 31st. Presentation of the club membership card will admit any club woman these days.
A t this exhibition will be seen brought together under the direction of leading professional decorators the work of the country’s most talented artists, craftsmen and designers engaged in making the a r t of interior decoration a vital factor in our homes. Members of the Art-in-Trades Club will be present a t all times to answer questions.
FOREIGN MISSIONARY BOARD, WILL MEET AT PITTSBURGH
ASSOCIATION TAX REVIEW BY STATE BOARD NEXT WEEK
Township Assessor James A. H urry has received official notification that the case of the Ocean Grove Association against the Township of Neptune, on an appeal from taxation carried up from the county board, will be heard by the State board Wednesday of next week, October 22, a t 10.30 a. m., in the Asbury Park municipal offices o t
. Main street and Bangs avenue. A t the same time the tax cases of Robert M. W att, of Ocean Grove, ahd the New York and Long Branch Railroad Cofn-
. pany, will be reviewed.Owing to the fact that the township
tax map has no t been completed, A ssessor Hurry, says the S tate board will have the necessary map made, which will delai/, the issuance of 1925 tax bills for, beyond'the usunl time. According to Mr. Hurry, i t will require nearly a year to complete the
, tax ' map. ■ . . ■
NEPTUNE WINS THIRD GAME;CHATTLE COMES TOMORROW
The annual meeting of the Board of Foreign Missions of the Methodist Episcopal Church will take place in Emory Church, Pittsburgh, Mondny, Tuesday and Wednesday, November 17, 18 and 19. I t will be the first annual meeting since the organization of the board in 1907 to be held outside of New York City. The sceretares of the board, Drs. Ralph E. Diffendorfer nnd John R. Edwards, recommended Pittsburgh as a meeting place, and Emory Church extended the invitation, which the executive committee accepted.
One hundred members of the board, including bishopB,1 pastors and laymen from all over the United States and spveral foreign, countries, will be present. ;______
NEAR EAST RELIEF APPEALTO BE MADE WEEK OCT. 27
Scoring in each half of- last Satur- c day’s gridiron contest, Neptune de-'
feated Haddonfield,: 13 to 0. Six points were made in tho first quarter and seven in the third..- The Neptune team showed the effects of Coach Kelly’s careful drilling, following the game witji Flemington a week before. Life and.spirit were infused into Neptune’s play throughout the contest, and the down State team was on the defensive most of the time.. The Neptune lineup found John Moore a t righ t end; P. Moore, right tackle; Hammond, right guard; Joe.. Moore, center; Hulett, left guard; E. Smith, left tackle; Freeland, right half back; Corbo, left half back; Wilson, full back. Touchdowns' were made by Wilson and Newman.
Tomorrow afternoon Neptune engages Chattle, of Long Branch, on the homo field a t Bradley Beach.
V
Progress is b.eing made for the Near East Relief appeal which will be made in Asbury Park, Ocean Grove, W est Grove and Bradley Beach during the week of October 27th, and replies are coming in from the different churches that will furnish teams of workers who will make the calls. W. J. ■ Couse, local chairman, is pleased with the progress being made, and H arry Duffield, the local treasurer, states he will receive contributions any time from now on.
The four communities will be asked to adopt 100 orphnns, and when it is considered that a child can be fed, clothed and educated f o r .17 cents a day, $5.00 a month and $60.00 for a year, this does not seem like a very big task for so many people. 40,000 of these orphan children in the Near East are looking to America for life and happiness fo r the next year, and the local committee is anxious that these communities have a liberal pa rt in this work. I
SEEKS FEDERAL ACTION TO PROTECT ERODING SHORES
“Woman’s place in politics.”This is the subject on which Rev.
G. S. Johnson will preach the coming Sundny. evening from his pulpit in St. Paul’s church. In view of the approaching election the place of women in politics is a seasonable and reasonable topic. Not to say anything of the interest therein.
Members of the Ocena Grove Woman’s Club will be honor guests a t this service. A double quartette will render appropriate selections. All women of the community are invited to this service.
Last Sunday morning Rev. Johnson preached on “Jesus Only.” He employed as his text the passage from Matthew’s gospel, seventeenth chapter and eighth verse, “And when they had lilted up their eyes, they saw no man, save Jesus only.” The preacher said in part: .
“Tlie message of the text is that nothing must come between us and Jesus. Whatever helps Us the better to visualize and understand Him we may employ, but whatever tends to push Him into, tho background and i t self dominate our worshipful gaze and thought is a distortion of true worship. The reason of that is plain to bo seen. Man is a worshipful crea ture and must give his supreme faith and affection to something,' and the character o f th a t something will react and shape his character like unto tho something he worships. I f th a t something is a thing of sin it-w ill more and more debase him, mind and body; if he secs Jesus only, i t will lift him to the heights and fit him fo r a place above' angels. But that contrast is broader than the te x t The text is a warning against substituting inferior idcalB fo r the one true ideal, which is Jesus Christ. I t is not addressed to sinners a t all, but to Christians, th a t they beware Jest .'the very helps they employ to the better worship of God take the place of God, and they miss the blessing altogether.
“We m ust see Jesus only. He must be greater than all
JOHNSON TO .LEAVE 0 .CPJJ GROVEWILL SEVER RELATIONS AT
NEXT CONFERENCE
Says the Unsurpassed Kindness ofa Great and Good People WillGo Wit/h Him As One of theMost Pleasant Memories Of HisPublic l if e —Desire To MoveExpressed Last Summer.
At the quarterly conference of St. Paul’s M. E. Church last Friday evening, District Superintendent Wagg presiding, Rev. George S. Johnson, the pastor, said in his w ritten report that he desired his pastorate to terminate with the present conference year.
In his letter to th a t end, and which he road, Rev. Johnson said:
“In addition to my report,- I beg leave to submit the following: 1, “I desire that my pastorate in S t Paul’s terminate with the present conference year. This is no hasty conclusion, but my deliberate judgment. I so expressed my wish to Bishop Berry last June. The service I have rendered is fa r from . portect, fo r which io one has greater regrets than myself.I' have only the deepest good-will for
GAS INDUSTRY ADVISESPERSISTENT ADVERTISING
Keeping everlastingly a t it is theCOUNTY Y.i. C.
TELLS ACTIVITIESA T A C ON VENTION .D IN N E R
IN.ASBURY PARK
...0 — — uv» » .ii ro l lb iiiu u lj . n c u -nesday before the American Gas Association convention a t ' Atlantic. City by James' M. Bennett, o f the United Gas Improvement Company of Philadelphia, •
“Publicity and advertising are tools ? ,
industry and its policies and n roh-! 0ceaIl I s N am ed a M em
b e r o f Com m itl’ee For the Tbree-
. its policies and p rob-, lems to the public,” Mr. Bennett said, j "You can’t measure their effectiveness j with a slide rule or submit the results I to a formula or expect something.! definite to be accomplished in a cer-1 tain period of time. .
“Only by keeping everlastingly at i t and hammering away with facts will the goal he reached. The same 1 thing is true of sales stimulation or
Year Period—Boys Have Part In the Program and Detail Their Share of the Work.
any other activity where publicity and i , EAvard M. Willis, of Ocean Grove advertising are concerned.” I “las appointed a member of the
A lter exnlninififr Hin'f t-Vi« I thl'iie-vear ffimmiHnoAfter explaining that the gas industry was recruiting many newspaper men for interpreting that industry to the public, Mr. Bennett emphasized the fact that there is ju st as definite a technique in publicity and advertising work as there is chemistry or the engineering profession, a technique that must be learned in the newspaper office.
MILK BOTTLE WiELDED BY DOMESTIC PEACE DISTURBER
When an argument over some domestic m atter arose dt the St. El-
,, , . - , v. - - - - - - - —? j nio hotel last Saturday and Louisethe church, and predict a groat future. BHWon one of tho L.0,^rcdT or nearly four years I have had | becaniu’ ( el.ous
tne opportunity of ministering to a ■- ■great and good people, and have never ceased to wonder a t your patience and 'loyalty. Your unsurpassed kindness during my six months of illness will ever go with me as one of the most pleasant memories of my public life. ■, “If you will accept this request in your characteristic sp irit of forbearance, without debate or appeal, 1 will remain always your grateful friend hnd servant.”
Mr. Johnson is rounding out his fourth year in the Ocean Grove charge. He succeeded the Rev. Thomas J. J. Wright, now stationed at Trenton.
I t has been reported Mr. Johnson is sought by one of the churches of ■Washington, u . C. On th a t point he is noncommital.
TESTIMONIAL l u n c h e o n f o r THURSDAY CLUB TREASURER
The members of .the Ocean Grove Thursday Club a t their first meeting of the fall and winter season yesterday afternoon gave a testimonial
; omy. xie m u s t; ibncheon for Mrs. William E. Taylor, the form s and I ih»;» i . / — <•— >---- * '— ------ -.... I their treasurer for twelve of the four-j means and aids of worship. Ju s t as | teen years 0f the club's existence.
| the ‘law and prophets,' which should *"" •have better enabled the people to see and understand Jesus, took His place and blinded their eyes to His true and central worth, so do many things in these days act with similar deception and harmful results, upon us. This brings us face to face with a prevalent,, error in modern worship, which to see ! and avoid should be of inestimable worth. I t would be impossible in one sermon to show all the workings of this error.- I will denote i t in a few particulars th a t you may distinguish it wherever i t shows itself.”
The speaker then named as among the things th a t go to make up the- -c - i ’
Tho luncheon was served a t the home of Mrs. Effic Hamilton, 58 Mor* mouth Drive, Deal Beach, the menu embracing tomato bisque, celery, toast sticks, olives, pickles, creamed chicken w.Vh rice, sweet potato croquettes, green peas, rolls, jelly, cream cheese salad, crackers, ice cream, demi tasse, candies and nuts.
Club members present were Mrs. Taylor, Mrs. Hamilton, Mrs. M. E. Flint, Mrs. R. W. Stout, Mrs. J. E. Quinn, Mrs. R. M. W att, Mrs. Joseph I\ Johnson, Mrs. C. O. Perry, Mrs. H. M. Wilson, Mrs. J . K. Brownell, Mrs. E. N; Woolston and Mrs. Elizabeth Conklin. ''
.» tnviiiuci ui lucthree-year committee of the Mon? mouth County Y. M. C. A., the annual convention, of which body was held last Friday evening in the Metropolitan hotel. Asbury Park. Paul C. Taylor, of Belmar, presided a t the dinner. The committees announced are:
One Year—Harry R. Cooper, Belmar; Campion Dangler, Spring Lake; Ell- wood Douglass, Freehold; W. D, Fields, Colts Neck; William A. Gas- sin,. Belmar; E. H. Geran, Matawan; Samuel Hanson, Theodora B. Lewis, William C. Patterson, Freehold.■ Two .Years—J. F. Talcott, Sea Bright; E. A. S. Clarke, Sea Bright;H. R. Dwight, Rumson; John Hall,
colored servants!' Freehold; J. N. Hillyer, Middletown;Officer William i H- w - Buck, Marlboro; William M.
' Catlev was ca'lled from police head-1 Smith, Freehold; Howard Woodward,: quarters to silence the disturber. » e ‘T-ewwont; t Osborne, Keyport.did! But, while the silencing was going on—zam'.—Louise . whacked the officer over the jiead with a milk bottle and saturated his nice new uniform with a kettle of boiling water.Hot stuff! >
When tired from her exertions Louise submitted to arrest, first asking permission to get her clothes.Once in the quarters of the help she turned the key in the lock and, like the Arab, she folded her tent and silently stole away via a window to the street. The officer was'not to be balked by her ruse. He caught up with Louise a t Main street and Springwood avenue, Asbury Park, when she ducked into the Rialto theater.' There she was rearrested and finally landed in the Neptune township lockup.
Judge Dodd held the woman in bail to keep the peace. Sho exhibited outward and visible signs of having been in a mixup,
Three ■ Years-
,w_ . ,w u iu n u Uj) tllUsum total of this error, and come ,ber , ---- . —--------... .tween the worshipper and Jesus, con- j MRS. BEUTELL AGAIN HEADS gregations, church denominations,1 creeds and doctrines, ministers, the very order-of the service itself sometimes.
Then concluding his remarks byI'nnenniin" t-l% — ---- '
OCEAN GROVE Y. W. H. M. S.
Former Congressman T. Frank Appleby, of Asbury Park, who is again a „„„„ unu on ms leit, and thecandidate fo r th a t office, has com -, whole church may nssiBt him from municated with United S tates Senator 1 *■-*-*- ' ■ ■Edge and Congressman Bnchnrach,
' I L — I i... ' .— i -L - - 1 — ’ • ’
presenting the real message of the text Rev. Johnson said: “The realmessage of the text is that the individual has immediate and direct access to God, and nothing less than the face of Jesus should be his objective. A thousand helps . may stand on his vight hand and on his left, and the.. . .l. _ l _ - i '■ . - - -
urging them to reintroduce legislation early in the coming Congress
Meeting Monday evening n t the home of .Mrs. H. Truax, in Neptune City, the Y. W. H. M. S. of Ocean Grove elected these officers: President, .Mrs. Jacob Beutell; vice president, Miss Ruth Odenwelder; corresponding secretary, Miss Mamie Megill; recording secretary, Miss Grace Oden- welder; treasurer, Mrs. Alfa Newton; chairman of social committee, Miss Grace Megathan; program committee.
CONCENTRATING IN COUNTYFIGHT ON THE WHITE PLAGUE
Vigorous efforts are being made to stamp out tuberculosis in Monmouth county and in the entire State of New Jersey, tn order th a t the newest and most effective methods of flighting this disease may be brought to every community in New Jersey, representatives from every county in the Stato will meet in New Brunswick on F riday, October 24, to discuss and hear experts discuss "Methods of Attacking the Tuberculosis Problems."
Tlie speakers will be Dr. Samuel B. English, superintendent of the Sanatorium a t Glen Gardner on the subjest “Through Clinics,” and Dr. J . H. McNeil, Chief of the Bureau of Animal Industry a t Trenton, on “Through
, —. „. McMurtie,.Freehold;. C. V. Shropshire, Sea Bright; S. C. Stillwell, Freehold; Paul C. Taylor. Belmar, and E. M. Willis, Ocean Grove.
Mrs. C.V. Shropshire, of Sea Bright, vice chairman of the' auxiliary, read the names of that committee as follows:
Belmar, Mrs. P. C. Taylor; English- . town, Mrs. Winfield Conover; Farm ingdale, Mrs, R. H. Barr; Freehold, Mrs. S. C. Stilwell, Holmdel Mrs. D. Ely, Keansburg; Mrs. W. Jeffers, Keyport, Mrs. W. E. Bilderback; Little Silver/M rs. J. E. Harvey; Marlboro, Mrs. H. 'W. Buck; Matawan. Mrs. J.P. Lloyd; Middletown, Mrs. J. N. Hillyer; North Long Branch, Mrs. Jennie -, M. West; Rumson, Mrs. George Ivr in s; Sea Bright, Mrs. C. V. Shrophire.
The speakers a t the convention included Rev. Archibald Cullens, the first secretary of this county; Charles R. Scott, secretary of boys’ work in New, Jersey; William D. McRae, of Springfield, Mass., responsible fd f county work organization; Dr. W. D. Hepburn, and Robert S. C. .Shoemaker, of Newark, the State secretary of boys’ work.
A number of brief talks gave the boys an opportunity to tell of the ae- 1 tivities of their groups throughout the county.
STOCKING NEARBY COVERSWITH ENGLISH PHEASANTS
A shipment of 1,200 English phoas- ants from Scotland was received by the wardens of the New Jersey Fish and Game Commission last week. The birds were in oxcelent condition- . .. 1 oirtisEradication of Bovine Tuberculosis. I when they . . . _____
Mrs. Lewis S. Thompson, ot L incroft,! w li ere thcv were shipped to the Fork will preside nt the afternoon session. - ...i n.-~ a -
arrived.in New York, fromMrs. Lewis'S. Thompson, ot' Uncrpft, j where ..r ._ ... ....„ .ed River Game Farm under the direc-
------------------------ tion . f, Assistant Game Protector Har-C1TY REALTORS ON OUTING ! '^“'Iney, of Hackettstown.
- he pheasants were confined in 120 DINE'AT ST. ELMO HOTEL I crates, with 10 birds in each crate'
; Superintendent Duncan Dunn, who isOn their annual outing tne real es-1 in chnvge of the game farm, wns re-— of Mnnyunk and Rox-1 sponsible for the purchase of
every W orshipper a king arid priest - unto God. He is king in that he is
looking toward federal participation the judge of his own conscience and in beach protection expenses. character, and no authority on earth
In his letter to Senator Edge, Mr, can, and no outhority in heaven will, — —i-i. -•-? ?’ ' • ' invade his realm either to save or
behind; but nothing need or dare come i Mary Watson. With the excep- between him and God. The Bible calls to'011 of the corresponding secretary
Kean To Entertain Candidates:. Hamilton F. Kenn will give a recep
tion for the Republican Congressional and local 'candidates of the entire Stato, Tuesday • of next, week, two o’clock p. mi, 'a t his mumper home. l Ocean avenue,, Deal. Senator , Edge will be present and there will be 'a ha?
' tional speaker. At the > same place, 12.30 o’clock, there is to be a box luncheon for officers of the Monmouth
: county council, t ;, '}
■ Preachers'. Weekly Session.,!, :“Wanted, a John Wesley.” This was
the subject o f ^ paper read by Rev. Carlton Van Hook, of New Brunswick, a t the .district preachers','mooting here Monday. Drs.- T. W. Marohall and J. I, Boswell spoke on current topics. I t is expected Rev. Blwoll Lake, of Long
■ Branch, will be the .speaker next Mon- day. • • ■ "y •h , . ■ i.. - “ .
,iW. ’. E . ‘.Taylor ^contractor! iar.J
Appleby points out th a t the cost of protecting beaches is steadily mounting, surveys indicating th a t the shore line is generally eroding ra ther than building up. Large expenditures of money have been made by a score of shore communities in an efforr to check the inroads of the sea, and fu rther expenditures present a serious problem, he says.
Dr. Hann To Lecture A t Freehold.The second lecture in the season’s
course- in the Methodist . church a t Freehold is to be delivered by the Rev. Edward Forrest Hann, of Bridge- top, leader of the Ocean Grove meeting for young people. The date is Tuesday, October 21st, and the subject “The High Cost of Loving."
Candidate Miller Campaigning.hfayor Archibald L. Miller, of Red'|
Bank,,Democratic candidate for county clerk,, will campaign in this section next week. Mayor Miller,' who has been making a swing around the county, Spent, most of this week in the northern section of tho county. ,
, -R. E. Tomlin, M. D., 45* Main avenue. ..Either System of Medicine; or, Modern Drugless .Methods, , Also Eyos, Ears, Nosh and Throat; .Tele-
damn him. He is priest in the sense that he is his own confessor and needs no intermediary save Jesus Christ He needs no smoking altars, bleeding sacrifices, or silver and gold to pay for priestly prayera, for Jesus died on the cross as a sacrifice for sin, once for all, for all sin, and all sinners, and for all time. For His salvation is not beholden to minister; priest, saint or angel, for Jesus is the great high' priest of. His profession, who ever iiveth to make intercessions for Him a t the right hand of God; wherefore He is able to save to the uttermost all who come unto Him.
/ ‘That intcrpreation furnishes the only true liberty of conscience, clothes human nature with a divine dignity, and lifts up worship from groveling fear to a personal inward majesty and a fellowship with God.” .
. Salvation Army Supper.An autumn chicken supper is to be
given by th e , Woman’s Home League of the! Salvation' Army, Tuesday, October 28, a<: 611.Mattison avenue,' A?- bury Park. Supper will be served from 5.80 to 7,00 o’clock'. ’ , */V
“Home For Services.’’Harry .J.toBodine, undertaker ' and
these officers, were reelected., In the very near future the mem
bers will present a pageant, “The Challenge of the Cross.” They nre now engaged in making rompers for migrant work and have increased the financial pledge for missionary work to $140. ' '
Another Road To Be Improved.The Freehold township committee
has advertised for bids' for the improvement of the Adelphia to Elton road for one-half of the full length. The Elton end which is in much the worse condition, will first be taken up. The bids will be received nnd the contract awarded on Wednesday, October 22. I t is to be a gravel road bed with slag underneath. This is a very busy road and a three mile cut-off to the shore from Trenton;
Keyport Council Holds Record.Monmouth county has nineteen
councils of the Sons and Daughters of Liberty with a 'combined membership of 2,899 and ' total finances of $27,146.- Freedom Council, No. 36,. of Keyport, has the largest membership, 317. The council holds tho record for the smallest amount of benefits paid since January iLst; only $160. ’ The nmount of benefits paid since the -organization of tho council in 1896' amounts to $16,322.
Schndt’s Sea Food.Our sen jfoad Is the pick Of the
tntc brokers .....„ .............. .......boro, Pa., were entertained a t a dinner Monday a t the St. Elmo hotel, Ocean Grove, by the officials of the Mnnyunk Trust Company, headed by Charles Jordan, Ocean Grove was selected as the place for the day’s trip by reason of its peculiar charm in early autumn:
In the party were forty-six of the representative citizens and business men of the' placed named. They were served with a one-o’clock dinner, and after spendnig some hours here they left fob home, stopping enroute at Trenton fo r supper.
.... , — thobirds. He is a native of Scotland and is familiar with the various breeds of gam ebirds there. >
The State Fish and Game Commission also ohtained 800 pheasants from the WoDhington Preserve in North Jersey. They will be housed a t the ' branch game farm near Hackettstown and a t the present time winter quar- , tors for the birds are being completed!
APPLEBY STATEMENT SHOWS $3,000 CAMPAIGN EXPENSES
According to his sworn statem ent , filed a t Trenton, T. Frank Appleby,
Demonstration By Red Men. Republican nominee in the third con-„ , . 1 grcssionnl district, hnd a total eani-Rod Men of the shore tribes are to ,mjgn fun,i 0f $3,000 and spent th a tjoin in a big demonstration on the Sea | „„„ i, _____ n ...................
G irt camp grounds tomorrow after noon and evening. The afternoon will be devoted to athletic sports and the evening to degree team work. Herbert F. Stetser, of Camden, Great Chief of Records of the United States, will give an address during the day.
Monument For Miss Bronnder.A movement .has been started to
placo a bronze tablet-in the postoffice a t Keansburg to the memory of 'M iss Arabella C. Broander, postmistress, who was fatally injured- a t Indianapolis, Ind., while attendin|’ a postmasters’ convention. Mrs, William P. Dodd has been made treasurer of a committee to raise funds.
Pork Gets Kiwimis Convention.Asbury Park has been designated
as the meoting place of the 1925 State convention . of . Kiwariia Ciubs/ This m atter was decided a t tho convention of th a t body th is week a t AtlanticCity. The local club Was represented■ *•-................
much money. He contributed prac-i tically all the money himself, the statem ent shows.
Out of the fund the New Brunswick Reptfblican Club received $200; Alfred Brown chairman of the Ocean county Republican committee, $250; the Coolidge Club of. Atlantic Highlands, $60. The balance was devoted to advertising, clerk hire and workers.
Many Here Saw the ZeppeHn <—A good view was obtained here
Wednesday morning of the Zeppelin li1On iflh WO W !'+n -T nlroKriL-l. '■
r
southwesterly , coupse. a t about 9.25-# i; o’clock. - J
bay. Partiesre just now/,in .Barnagat-ii-i, ofBcarise' dffib ,fwehkflsh f'adii I’i ’J
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P A G E T W O f H E O C E A N G R O V E T I M E S ' FRIDAY, 0Ct 6 b ER 17,' 1924
F a ir prices consistent
G ood W o rkm an sh ip
P rom p t Service
E v e ry b od y in bu siness needs Printing’. O u r bu sin ess is to m eet that ne,ed.T o m eet it at a . price con sisten t w ith ictuai serv ice rendered— serv ice in type, ink, paper and w orkm ansh ip .
Just Phone. 7 '
T h e M y s t i c l u m b e r
Ocean Grove Times4 6 M alta A v e n u e , O c e a n G r o v e , i t . J .
You Can't Do Everything!—Even a * Jack o f a ll trades’*
can meet his W a te rloo !
ON L Y an u p h o ls te re r c a n 'g iv e t h e
craftsm an touch to a th read bare par-, lo r suite. O nly a carpet cleaner can resto re the orig inal lu stre to a rich O rien ta l ru g .A nd only a p lum ber is qualified to s to p the leak th a t floods th e cellar.
These and scores o f o th e r trades an d p ro fessional p eop le offer th e ir services an d w ares th ro u g h th e Classified Section o f th e T e lephone D irectory.
Consult the Classified Section First!It’s almost sure to tell you where to get the things or service you require.
N e w Y o r k T e l e p h o n e C o m p a n y
W bm theme litt le things yon see Jwst Telephone ’ Asbnry-ZSIS -
Bedbugs, Roaches, Moths, efe., permanently exterminated.. Harmless to Fabrics and Furnishings. No ia convenience. Rooms rated the h i m jay .
I do not put thenf to sloop for ’ a . couple ot hours, to wake up w ith renewed energy. Unsolicited testimonials Methods endorsed fcy.ih. D . S. gorem- meat. . Bats caught w ith trained ferrets only (Not • poisoned.) ESsisb- lished in this v ic in ity 30 years. Phone Asbury-2848,
J. KKNDR1CK Exterm inator . Acbory Pork
E li G ave to F ijians 1F ire-W alk ing S u c c e s s
The naUye version ot tlie origin ot the “lire walking" ceremony Is that in the distant past a Fijian traveling in the bush met an elf, whom lie suspected of being an evil spirit, says the Detroit News.
The native captured this supernatural creature uiid threatened him. To save liimself tlie elf offered as a gift any power tlie native elsnse, The Fijian chose and was grained tlie ability to bundle or walk through tire unharmed, which power has descended to members of his family even to this day. .
The “fire walking" Itself i s an Inter- esting ceremony performed by natives. So far as .observer;! have been.able to asceftaln tlie performers lyalk barefoot and unharmed on stones which are virtually red hot, having been heated for hours In a fire pit. Afterword leaves, brush and hits of wood are thrown over tlie rocks, the heat of the latter being evidenced by the smoke or llaine which Immediately hursts forth.
N e w Y o r k H a d P u b l i c B a t h s B a c k in 1 8 2 4
In: the New Fork city directory of 1824 there was a page advertisement of . the “Washington Bath. 5’lil Pearl- street, near Broadway,” and It was bended by a picture of a portable tub large enough in which an adult, person could completely immerse, and above this cut was ‘‘Marble and Tin,” which- would seem to indicate that already there were styles in tubs, and they were both stationary and portable,
Tiie advertisement continued as follows : "Has been newly painted,cleansed and much Improved; marble tubB and new pipes Introduced and baths of any temperature furnished at the shortest notice, from sunrise until 10 o’clock p. in., throughout the year. Warm' rooms during the winter. Bathing tubs to let for the convenience of those who cannot yisk the bath.
“For the accommodation of those afflicted with eruptiona of ti:-: skin and chronic complaints a fumigating'apparatus has been erected.
O ld -T im e F r u m e n ty .Few people have frumenty offered
thorn as food in (lies' modern days, although there was a time when It was served on tables in many lands and w,i« popular'
It was made by boiling whole wheat hailed in water until i t was soft, then draining, adding milk, sweetening and nutmeg fiayor,. or te make what, .was kabwjj as Somersetshire frumenty, there were added currant '; raisins and eggs. ■
Food specialists would be glad to see It brought back for the dietetic advantage of getting tlie whole wheat grain for food.—Ohio State Journal. ,
C o m p e t e n t ■
t o H o l d D o w n
t h e J o b
By ELLA SAUNDERS(©. 1924, Wenturti No.wapuper Union.)
TV/TISS PHILPOT stared in dismay LVA (lt notice her desk. Discharged. After twenty tieven years’ service. She Imd given all tlie best years of her-life to the Brackett company, Tills was her reward.
She was a grny-hnlrcd woman of rather majestic aspect. True, she had never risen very high, but she (lid understand the work of the accountancy department. She hart worked faithfully under Jennings for fifteen years. Jennings was said to bo leaving, too. Suddenly it occurred to her that It would he- strange not coming down to the office every day and seeing him.
Jennings came over to her. He laid his hand upon her shoulder. “Why, Miss Philpot 1" he exclaimed, as sho thrust out the notice and burst Into tears.
The cause of Miss Phlipot’s being fired was a general shake-up In the personnel. The old manager had retired. The new one, Bates, was running through the personnel.
“There's Miss Philpot—is she really needed?” he asked Sanderson, the as- listant manager,
Sanderson scratched his h«aq. “Weil, I suppose we could do without her—” he began.
“Thirty-five a week? We conid probably set the work done just as efficiently by a young chap of twenty- five for ten to fifteen dollars less. Mark her off!”'
That »vfts liovy MisisI Philpot came to receive her notice, financing up at the central desk, over which Bates presided, she saw him still engaged In conversation with Sanderson. They had got farther down the list by now. Miss Philpot was forgotten. Miss Philpot was all tlie time aware of Mr. Jennings’ clumsy efforts to console her. .
“Yon mustn’t take It (hat way, Miss Philpot,” lie was saying. “I’m leaving, ton, to take a position with Crompton’s, and—’’
Mr. Jennings wns stroking her hand —covertly, under tlie protection of the edge of the desk. And what was that he was saying now? Miss Philpot turned her eyes upon him incredulously.
Up a t the desk Sanderson and Bates were-having a conversation with Jennings. They seemed quite .staggered when He had-gone,
“I had no idea Jennings wns going,” said Sanderson. “Who’ll we get for the work?"
“Blamed if I know,” said Bates', “t t ’a up to you, Sanderson/’
"Wliy couldn’t .we get Miss Pbll- pot?”' “A woman head?"
“Well, you spoke of retrenching, and a woman will work for less than a man Now Jennings was getting a hundred, and Miss Philpot has worked under him for years. SJhe was working for him when 1 came Into this placu. It seems to me she ought to be competent to hold down the Job.”
"Well, we might try liCr. How much do you suppose she’d work for? Seventy-five?”
“No, sixty. She’ll jump at It, you see if she doesn't.” ’
“All right. I’ll tell her—no!” He beckoned to his stenographer. "Please take this letter:
‘“ Dear Miss Philpot: The notification sent tn you this forenoon is hereby cancelled. You are instead promoted to til! Mr. Jennings’ position at a salary of sixty dollars per week, dating, from the first prox. It is hoped thnt you will find yourself fully competent to fulfill the duties heretofore fulfilled by'—no, scratch out that second fulfilled, Miss Clarkson—‘hereto-, fore carried out. by Mr. Jennings. Yours truly.’. Tlianlt you, Miss Clarkson.’’ ,
He turned to Sanderson.' “All right,, that's finished,* he said. “What comes next on the program?”
Miss Philpot, receiving the second communication, sat down promptly nt •her typewriter nnd dictated her reply. I t reached the desk late thnt afternoon. Bates scratched his head.
“Call Miss Philpot here.” he snld to the office boy.
Miss Philpot, rather inajestlc-look- Ing,. stood beside Bates* desk,
“Well, Miss Philpot, I don’t understand. Here %ve are offering you a raise to sixty, and you state that you intend to leave us." ,
Miss Philpot glanced across the room toward Mr. Jennings. "You’ll have to ask Mr. Jennings about that, Mr, Bates," she answered. “I've taken a position with him—a life one."
S l im P e o p le L iv e L o n g e s tLife insurance companies have set
forth the Importance of not setting too fat. They claim that 30 is the magical age in the health development of most Individuals. A person Is supposed to nearly approach the normal ut thirty, they say. Under thirty one may weigh more than the average called for in the standard height, wcighl and age tables, but after tills age the longest life span prevails among those whose weights are uniformly below the average.1 ' - —
H a b its o f t h e G o r illaThe gorilla, chimpanzee and orang
outang are alike In being destitute of any rudiment of a tall, in having no cheek-pquches and no naked spaces at the base o f the trunk' and In the habit of resting on the knuckles of the hand In talking. Late Investigation shows that the gorilla spends mor of his time In the trees than on the ground. He makes a rude shelter for file mate and young, and himself sleeps with 1:1s back to the tree trunk ready for any emergency.
H is , b u t N o t H e r s .An old colored janitor’s employer
asked him why lie was sporting.around in his Sunday clothes when it wasn’t a holiday.
“Well, yon ■ see, boss,'" he replied, “Fbi celebratln’ my golden wedding,”
“But Isn't yoqr wife celebrating it with you?”
"Oh; Mandyl Site ain’t got Bathin’ to do with it. She's jeg’ my third wife."—Boston Transcript
D u m b“Dumm® Belle presents an interest
ing psychological problem," said the learned scientist. "In just what way?” asked his understudy. "Well, he’s so dumb he doesn't know he's dumb. But if lie were JuBt a wee bit dumber he’d foe so dumb that iven a person as dumb as he Is could .detect It"—Farm Life. ■
H a n g in g s S to p p e d G r o w th There stands in a field near "Oapp's
Lodge,” not fa r from Bnrford, Oxfordshire. an »k with the ■ Inscription on its trunk, "H. T>.; T. D., 1784.” It is this tree on which the bodies ot Henry and Tbomao Duddson w ere. gibbeted, after being hanged at Gloucester for highway robbery. They were .leaders of the "Dundson Gang,” who once terrorised that countryside. It Is not a large tree. Local superstition declares that it has ceased to grow since being put to that use.
FOR OVER 2 0 0 YEARShaarlem oil has been a worldwide rem edy for k idney, liver and b iadder disorders, rheum atism , lum bago a n d uric acid conditions.
HAARLEM OIL■ m m m m . ' j :
correct in te rna l troubles, stim u la te v ita l organs. T hree sires. AH druggists. In sis t on th e original genuine G old M edal.
TH E
STEAMBOAT CO.
S t u d y B a c te r iaIt was the famous French scientist,
Pasteur, who laid the foundation of modern knowledge of bacteria, and of the studies which will result, without doubt, In further great and useful discoveries. He not only discovered that (here are good bacteria, but that among the bad the dead could be used to fight the living. Hundreds of laboratories nnd thousands of students are now busy with the ■subject
K n ig h th o o dKnighthood was originally a mili
tary distinction, but In the Sixteenth century it came to be conferred on civilians, as a reward for valuable services rendered to the crown or the community. The flrst civil ftnlghi In England was Sir William Walworth, lord mayor of London, who won the distinction by slaying the rebel, Wat Tyler, In the presence of the king.
T h e T r u th fu l M a nMany business, deals are closed on
the golf links. A traveling salesman went around In 125 and the merchant with him said jileasantly “You are a, little on* ytmr usual game.”
"No, this is my usual game.”“Well," stated tlie other, "yoss may
he no golfer lint you're an honeBt man. I’ll just sign that contract you were speaking of.”
M e r c u r yTlie chief producing countries of
mercury arc Spain and the United Slates.' California anil Texas furnish the entire' nniiiunt over here. Practically the only ore which is regularly worked for mercury is' einnabnr. Mercury in the metallic state is found in small quantities only.
H o w R e w a r d s A r e W o nBig rewards In' this world ure as
sured to I hose who discover neyv and better ways of benefiting mankind. Every government, for example; protects the Inventor's profit on a valuable patent. The surest road to ail-; vnncement Is finding the better way to do each job assigned you.
O rig in o f S e ta in g C o tto n ■Tiie sewing cotton used in every
American home Is made almost exclusively of long staple Egyptian cotton. Np cotton now grown in the United States bus been found snitnble for spinning tlie finer sizes of thread, for which there. Is the greatest demand
Clear Thinking To do much clear thinking a man
must arrange for regular periods of solitude when lie can concentrate, and indulge, his imagination ■ without distraction. ’Working at night always appealed te me, because then .seat, people are minding tlielr .own buslhess by going to sleep.—Edison.
D e la y e dNorah—‘‘But, Reginald i I’m very
croat with you, really! You promised faithfully to bring our engagement ring tonight.” Reggie—“Believe me, dear, Pm sorry. The truth it—the. other girl hasn't returned it yet,”— London Telegraph.
“J u r t A v e r a g e ” P er so n sPeople who continue to be *'ju#t
average" do so becauso they are saturated with the. belief'that they can never be any more. They have thug “fenced in" .their talents so they cas- not get ln|o the pastures jpwes of greater achievement
H a p p in e s sHappy the men who early learns the
width of the chasm; between- his desires nnd needs, that he may bridge it with service and? thus, find rest on the isle of felicity.—John Grant Lyman.
Effective May 2, 1924Subject to change without notice
To New York—Leave Pleaeure Bay. week days, 7.00 a. m.
From New York to Asbury Park— Leave Battery, N . Y . C,, 2.30 p. m.
Arrive Pleasure Bay—Week days, 6.35 p. n t
Trolley leaves corner Cookman ave-, nue and Main Street, Asbury Park, one hour before boat’s sailing rime* a t Pleasure Bay
PASSENGER RATES One Way—Adults 90 Cents
Children 60 Cents
Round trip, Long Branch to New York C ity—Adults $1.50. Children. $1.00.
Does Your Plumbing N e e d Attention ?
I t is always best to catch a leak or a plumber repair when it first starts, beeaua® its tendency ia to grow worse w ith neglect
“Home-made" repairs are make, shifts at best, and ore the costliest te the long run—place your plumbing problems on our (shoulders, and we w ilt olve them promptly and satisfactori- .
ly.
WILLIAM YOUNGPLUM UEti
64 Main Avenue, Ooean OroveTelephone 428
H. w. SHOCK President
W. HABVEJY JONEB T ream w
Stray Bits o f WisdomSweet la true love, .though given In
vain, and aweet 1b death that puts aa end to pain.—Tennyson.
B u c h a n o n & S m o c k
L u m b e r G o .Dealers ia
L u m b e r
A n d M iJ I P r o d u c t s
, B u i l d e r s ' a n d T a i n t e r s ’ S u p p l i e s ,
Fireproof S torage with S epara te Fireproof Rooms
2d, 3d and Railroad Avenu esA S B U R Y P A R R
i e l e p h o n e f 3 8
Pu re M a n u factu rtd
and N atu ral
F R A N K O .T . W I L S O N
Office;
113 E m b u ry A v e n u eOcean Owe
W inter trade given my personal attention.
Order by postal ’a id or teta-
Tslephone 1888/
f ill J/:Strasstagir■ Pilgrim Pathway and' OH« Street
Oeean Grove, N. J. Telephone 1749-Asbory
Cash grocer, delivered. We giee jioe
QUALITT. We give you SERVICE. ““ UlSlJ of Oil, we give you LOWEST .PRICES, .consistent with fiuaiify and : qtuunty.
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T H E 0 C U A N G R O V E ' . T I M E SFR IDAY , OCTOBER 17, 1924
Simllur Excursion December 7
Bc« Independence Hall, Memorial Hall, Academy of Find Arts, Commercial a n d Universttjr Muwume. Fairmount Park, Zee- logical Garden, Aquarium sad the many other objects of Interest of "The Quaker City." .
Pennsylvania Ban • aThe Standard Railroad of tho World
A L B E R T L M O W N
Cornfields Become City Blocks «And Cause Biggest Telephone Job
The abnormal building boom in Brooklyn-Queens is causing a tremendous telephone growth. The average rate of telephone increase for the nation from January 1, 1918, to January 1, 1923, was 22.4%, but in the sanie period the growth in Brooklyn and Queens averaged 65%. In the period from January 1; 1919, to January 1, 1924, the telephone development was even greater, averaging 79%. Meeting the telephone demands in this area is the; biggest Job of its kind in the country today. ’ r
Girls Who Receive and Send Telegrams Over the Telephone Take
Course in Phone Technique.
Although the “Voice With a Smile" has for a long time been a term associated with the girl a t the switchboard, says the Telephone Review, the smiling voices of operators are now proving contagious to their tele* phone-nsing public. A courteous tone and a clear enunciation are being recognized aa so essential to everyone who uses the telephone that many subscribers have become "co-operators," eager to learn the principles of telephone technique so that ' they inight use their telephone to heat advantage.
With this purpose, ten young women employed by the .Western Union Telegraph Company, selected from offices o£ the*East, recently attended a special course in voice instruction, designed particularly for application to their work which consists in sending and receiving telegrams over the tele-
„ phone.These g irls ,. hailing from Boston.
Pittsburgh, Buffalo, 'Washington, Baltimore,. Philadelphia and Hew York, are chief operators, instructors, or supervisors of telephone bureaus who receive .and transmit telegrams. In a classroom at tho “Spring” Operators’ Training Department, >few York City, they studied.the secrets of enunciation, tom quality and expression, which go to make up the- “smiling voice.” .
Since one of the conveniences of a telephone -is that you may pick up the receiver and dictate a telegram to the local office of the telegraph company, it is easily seen that the correct understanding of the telegrams so received and the correct transmission of -them to the person to whom the telegram is addressed are of extreme importance. The Western Union Telegraph Company, moreover, is composed of unit offices scattered all over the country In cities and towns with main and branch offices, so that there is a considerable amount of telephone communication between offices.
Tlie girls were delighted with their unique opportunity and worked hard to attain results. The knowledge which these ' girls acquired in* their course is being transmitted by them to their co-workers, since they returned to their offices, thus spreading even further the^principles ot correct voice technique, and the precept that the “Voice With the Smile” wins!
TOLL CALLS USEDIS DISCONTINUED
• 1‘The removal of tlie Federal tax oh telephone calls In accordance with the provisions of tbs Rovenuo Act of
' 1924, effects a considerable saving to telephone users and,Is resulting in a greater use of this efficient form of communication," says the Telephone Review.
This tax has been collected by the Telephone Company for tho government since April 1, 1919,' under the provisions of the Revenue Act put into offect in that year.
A tax of five cents was imposed on i^I- telephone messages for which the total charge le more than fourteen cents and not more than fifty cents A tax of ten cents was levied on all messages for which the Telephone Company’s rate Is fifty. gents' or more. In addition the .act imposed a 10 per cent tax on leased wire service and on extra telephone facilities used for long distance purposes.
The saving resulting from the re peal of the Revenue Act will he par ttcularly noticeable on telephone calls for which the charge ranges between fifteen cents and $1, as the tax applied oc such calls meant an added payment of from 10 to 20 per cent.
The New York Telephone Company, ; together with tho American' Telephone nnd Telegraph Company, has made adequate provision to handle the Increased toll and lo n g d istance traffic thai is expected td'fol- low this reduction In charges lp r this
■ .olaea ofBertloe./
TELEPHONE SEN SAVE THREE LIVES
THRU FIRST AIDR e c e n t In c id e n ts S h ow V a lu e o f
T ra in in g t o M ee t E m e rg e n c ie s ., Hartlly a day passes that First Aid
Training does not justify its existence by helping to save lives or to alleviate suffering,, says the Telephone Review. From all r,uarters of the territory we serve come .week after- week Inspiring stories ot how the ability to render Intelligent aid In an emergency, has demonstrated its value In actual practice,
But, First Aid Training in itself Is useless unless there exist the willingness to act add the presence of mind to do the right thing at the fight time. Following are a few examples of quick thinking and quick, acting on the part of telephone workers, which happened recently.
Edward Sleininger, repairman, New York City, seeing Carmine Cappozl, a car inspector of the Third Avenue “L" enveloped In flamos, as the result of having come In contact with a scraper which was touching the . third rail, hailed a Third Avenue Railway repair car, mounted to its roof, and thence to the elevated structure, where he administered aid to the injured man by applying oil to his burns. Stein- iuger suved the lives of fifteen men in X917 while employed as aa electrician for the Robbins Dry Dock Repair Company.
John J. Chnmbprs. Installer, Hempstead, L, I.-, while working on a pole In Bcllmore, L. I., heard screams for help from a woman In a nearby yard, whose clothing had caught fire from a bonfire in which she was burning rubbish. Not waiting to climb down, ho jumped from the pole, threw the woman to the ground and by rolling and tearing off the burning garments was able to smother the flames in time to avert totality, although the woman was severely burned
Theodore A, Moody, lineman,'Plain- field, N. J., while a t work ia Cranford, was attracted by the cries of an Italian laborer. Following the man to the trench where he bad been working, Moody found another laborer lying unconscious a? the result of being overcome by Illuminating gat,■ Sending tor a doctor. Moody began to apply artificial respiration and after twenty-five minutes succeeded ih bringing the man to a state of semiconsciousness, when the doctor arrived, A hypodermic injection was administered and within a few minutes the patient was well enough to he removed to his home.
LONGEST PHONE CIRCUIT
The longest through telephone circuit In the world has been recently completed between Chicago and Los Angeles, says the Telephone Review. It is the fact that this is a through circuit instead of a “builf up" circuit thnt makes this new development im- povtant from ihe servlca standpoint.A."through circuit," as the name implies, gives a permanent, through connection between the two cities at which it terminates. A “built up” circuit, on the other hand, has to be built up for each call by connecting together a number of- shorter circuits between intermediate cities along tho line. The new, circuit Is 2,937 miles long. Thirteen through line repeaters, are'used to pick up and amplify'the sound, which give a normal transmission equivalent of twelve mllcn.
Teaching a university class by long distance telephone Is a novel expedient reoently employed by a/'professor In a western -university, according to thc Telephone Review. During the Christmas holidays the gentleman raude a visit to town noma fifty miles away from Ihe university and was unlucky enough to be detainer, there by a- liusrantin'e Imposed to check the spread of a contagious- dlsohse. Being unable to return to his work, the professor resorted to .the telephone lo teach ■ his students. Long distance service proved so satisfactory that, he was' able to conduct his classes a n d ' keep in' touch with his students fifty miles away.
A telephone Pfl'e never strikes an '.iromoblle, oxooor !r. self-dot ease, suyb tho'Tdlephohe tlUvlew
Advertising is a , sure trade builder, and first among the advertising .. mediums is the home town paper* the Ocean G rove Times
BUSINESS IN THIS OOK- jWUNITY w a r r a n t s u s in g a CERTAIN AMOUNT OF SPACE EACH WEEK, AND IN THIS SPACE ADVERTISE SPECIFIC MERCHANDISE WHICH YOU HAVE FOB SALE. EVERY ADVERTISER SHOULD AVAIL HIMSELF OF THE OPPORTUNITY THAT EXISTS M HIS COMMUNITY TO MAKE MONEY.
A dvertise in theO C E A N G R O V E
T I M E S
J u s t i P h o n e
7 A s b u r y P a r k
4 8 M a i n A v e n u e
O c e a n G r o v e
A lca ic and a Brain Broom
C ut leaf, no t factory scrap,A pure .product m anufa c tu re d a n d se a le d w ithout one h u m a n touch.In c re a s e d o v e rh e a d h a s n ’t r e d u c e d th e weight or r.a ised the price.
O v e r 2 5 0 M i l l i o nP ackages S old in' &
S ingle Y ea r - ■
\ m m 1
M a d e f o r H a ' r d W e a rYou will alw ays be satisfied w ith th e ir s tu rd y effi
ciency.S uccessful g a rd e n in g depends la rg e ly on the tools
th a t are used;
S N Y D E R R O B I N S
WSHENS
1 e l c p t o c e 2 1 8liaiw Slreel and Lake Avenne
ASBURY PABB .. HARIHVAEt 1l i ism n s
ANDREW ‘TV VAN C L E V E Contract ing E ngineer
Hi>jrh and L ow Pressure S team in s ta lla t io n s S a n ita ry P lu m b in g and H ouse H e a t in g
C n a lr a e l lB i l a A ll H r u n B c s .o t P ip in g a n ti Po m w W oe*
1 0 8 S o u t h M a i n ^ S t r e e t , O c e a n d r o v et t l q t k m o e i w n i m t l t o
S im p ly M eant H e W a s G uest a t T w o D inners
Burlington looked up from his desk, upon hearing a cheery “Hello i” und found himself looking into the face of Davidson, college chum whom lie had not suoji for sever.t| .vr:.r$, suys a writer in tlie iC;'ns;I.- City Star.
“Why,. Davy, old f'lipw!” Burlington ext'iniiued. “Where In the world did you come from and what ure you doing here?"
Then tlie two launched into explana- ;!»:»>* ami reminisreio'es* of college days. After an hour or more, Duvld- juin declared that he must be on his way. '■ ■ ’
“How long are , you- going , to be in iown?” Burling! an asked.; “Oh. two weeks ut least,” Davidson replied.
“Tls.d's/ filial Won’t you come out to tlie Mioil e for dinner Sunday? * B ur-1 lir.gton risked.
I UlvIlI -on Uesltnled a moment.■‘Tu.U l a ’i'.'.'.dy h.-ve un engagement
for Sunday”' lo> said. "Can't you make It the Sunday following?”
“Sure tiling,” Burlington agreed. ”1*11 mm* you again a week from Sunday, rlusi.”
“Dli, yes; hut you’ll s<. iae next Sunday, too,” DuvhVui told him.
.“I don’t (ju.it.* get you,” Burlington suid.. “1 thought you had another engagement for next Sunday.”
, “Sure, I iittvp/' Ibivldsun repeated, “but It !s nleo ut your house. I culled tip your wife this morning, und said •indie to her and rdo* in>il.rd me out for Sunday!”
Sees Earth a Desert W ere B irds to Perish
While t.iait fondly Imagines himself lord of the world in which lie lives lie is actually rorldag of rlie sort. The true masters of Aids planet. are tiie Insect?, nnd whileVnnn can eusljy hold ft is own against the beasts he is help- less against tiie insects. Helpless, that Is; without the help of the birds. Few have tlie faintest notion ei the inight of tlie insect world, will* h fur exceeds in number ot species, in vcruelty and in power of ’multi plication nil other living things. More than three hundred thousand different sorts . of insects have been classified. and there are tens of thousands still to be described.
Were insects left to work their will and multiply unchecked, it would be merely a matter of two or at tlie outside three years before all crops and all green things would be destroyed. The earth would he a desert.
Farmers and gardeners arc constantly at war with birds because some species eat considerable quantities Of grain and fruit. It Is, however, essential to remember the fact that tiie food , of birds consists mainly of Insects and that the bird is the one force which swings the balance of Nature against the insect hordes—T. C. Bridges In the Continental Edition of the London Mali.
Odd Fishing GroundAmphioxus Is a little creature that
lives in the sea, and also in laboratories where he serves as a specimen to students of zoology. He is something like a fish and something like a worm, and is about two Inches long. The Chinese eat him. This taste on their part lias euused the development of one of the most extraordinary fishing grounds In the sea, located In the narrow strait between the mainland and the Island of Amoy. In this limited area 200 fishing bouts are employed dally from August to April in the dredging up of ftmphloxl which Inhabit the bottoui of th e ,s tra it : In enormous numbers. The average dally cnfch of the fleet is more than 300 tons. It huB been calculated that tills represents 0,500,000 individuals, and thnt the average annual catch amounts to 1:000.000,000 amphloxl. Since most of them are not caught, the numbers of these tiny creatures nn this stretch of the sen bottom may he better imagined than calculated.
Q u it e Sa tis fa c to ry,There Ih an elderly, artist in Wash
ington who appreciates fine millinery, the Kansas City Star reports. . His young married daughter, however, wus practicing domestic economy when h hat,, a beautiful affair, arrived for little. Marie from her devoted grandparent, whose eye had surrendered to this bit of baby apparel the moment he saw It in a department store.
“That hat is 'too extravagant for this faintly," remarked tlie young mother. “I’ll -take it back and see what I can do."
A few (hiys later the graudfnther called to see the baby In the new hat.
“Do let me see lioiv she looks in It," lie said. “And how d id you like It?"
“Very much, father, thank you. They gave me two hats, two dresses, a sweater and 40 cents in change for it*
His “Office Clothes”Old Aunt Sarah whs that rare, cre
ation, a perfect laundress, and the Smith family rejoiced in her, with' the exception of Mr. Smith, .who said that he did not approve of Auntie starching.
> his pajamas. So Mrs. Smith promised that auntie should be spoken to In the matter. *
“Auntie," she began, diplomatically, “you need not be so very purflculur about Mr. Smith’s pajanu.s; don’t starch them at all; Juat Iron them out smoothly,"
Aunt Sarah looked.at Mrs. Smith re; provlngly. “I. don’t begredg'e him the wyrk, missis, I wants Mr. Smith's office clothes to look jest as well I kin make ’em.”—-Kansas .City Star,
Thomas AnglesPlumber, Sheet Iron
Metal Worker51 Main Avenue
0 C B A M G R O V ETelephone 9R5-B.
EXCURSION
SUNDAY November 9
PHILADELPHIAS p a c la l T b M i f k T r a in
L v a . A afeory P a r k 7.81 A . M.•topping u principal itatkina b»- tw «a Lone Bimneh as* Dayton.
n rsu aN iN s Lv. Ptol,a. ( Stal ina) M l r . M.
Tickets on sale two days procod. Ing Excursion.
J o b b in gmetal1 Metal WorkerMats and Aabestot Shingle Roofing
Btovs*. Rang** mad Ftur&aeotPfpei*i« B eaten
111 Abbott A ven ix . Oeean G r o v eTctopkaM M «
H. F. V nm iK G , Prop.SO Main Avenue
Oeemn Grove, N 1.Tel. Aebtary Fmrk 822
ELEOTRIOAL SUPPLIES mad FIXTURES
Telephone Asbury 59-J
F r a n k F d w a r d s
F u r n i t u r e D e a i w
Slaves. Ranges, HeatrolM 71 Seath Main Si.. Asbury Parb
Oeean Grove Greenhouses
L. P . THOMPSON P reerle to r
C u t F lo w e rs F l o r a l D e s i g n s
B e d d i n g P l a n t sLawrence Avenue, Cor. Webb. Avenue Ocean Grove Phone 1426-J
LEROY STEWARTFlans Furnished and Esiinmt .
Given for Old and New W ork All-Metmi W eather Strips
BVILW® ;FLY 80REENS and BEX EOOF2
‘408 J.m5 , Avo,,' Bradlsy Bead: * ?;T elsphdsfi lQDS-w
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i i f f m m m
T A G S F O U R
Founded 1*0
THE OCEAN GROVE TIMESWeekly Edition
Published Friday L. V. RAINBJAJt, Publisher
John E. Quinn, Editor 4S Main Avenue, Ocean Grove, N. J.
Telephone 7SUBSCRIPTIONS: $1.50 yearly; 90c. seini-&nnua!ly; 50c. quarterly or 4c. and poet-
age por copy, postage paid In the United States; Canada *2.00 and foreign $2.50 a year. ' '
ADDRESSES changed on request—always give former address. ADVERTISEMENTS: Kates will be furnished by us upon request.
WATCH THE LABEL ON YOUR PAPER FOR THE EXPIRATION OF YOUR SUBSCRIPTION
Entered as seeoml-class mail at the Ocean Grove jiostofllceTHE TRUTH IN ITS PKOPER PLACE
REV. JOHNSON TO LEAVE?Tin: himpuiu-emcnt th a t • Rev.
...George S. Johnson is to sever his re la tions w ith. S t. Jh iu l’s eliure.h a t tlie close of tlie ebuference y ear will he received w ith reg re t hy very niany persons, p o n n an eu t residen ts as well as sum m er v isitors. Severing his re la tions w ith tlie ehureh means,, of course, his rem oval from Ocean Grove, w here he has endeared him self to the people o f the place. In common w ith o thers the ed ito r of The TitiHM will g reatly reg re t his dep a r tu re i f he goes, fo r he has found in him ' a sym pathetic friend,, one who luis heen of very g re a t assistance to him in the ro u tin e , of p u ttin g to g e th e r tlie w eek ly issues o f th is paper.. H e has n ever, refused Ids aid in that d irec tion , freq u en tly at no little inconvenience and discomfort. 1» h im self and his physical Condition . We do not know to what ch arg e Mr. Johnson may go. We do know, h ow ever'tha t any- ehureh fav o red w ith his labors will he w e ll.se rved . However, We are of the firm belief Mr. Johnson will n.'l In- perm itted tn leave Ocean Grove w ilh o u l'a determ ined and
A'NevV Y o rk mini went afte r gas leak w ith a ligh ted candle. Hi: found it all r ig h t. T hree m e n were in ju red in the'explosion th a t followed. Had th is h ap p en ed 'in a eo iin try tow n what a harvest it would have heen for the c ity new.- papers.
The co u n try over the Boy Scouts a re to assist in g e ttin g out the n a tio n ’s vote on election day As a, basis fo r citizenship tra in in g th is certa in ly is one of the m ost im p o rtan t pieces of w ork the scouts can do.
W elcome to ZR-'l. The person who d id no t see the g ian t d irig ib le Hying over th is section W ednes day was out o f luck.
: I t ’s sim ply a . w aste of tim e tot a rg u e w ith tlie person who says i-Hatty. " I know b e t te r . '’
1 P r e s s V i e w s
A N D N E W S '
OPEN SEASON FOR LIARS.I lit* -season fo r reckless campaign
lies ami slander is .now on. Truth can nov'/r overtake and squash a lie, and unprincipled politicians take advau-I'dnecileti eiVnrt lic/inir uiadt* in re
tain, hi ip in his •nivsent ehar.m*. * ! this fact to gain a. few votes• <....««**.♦___ — .; anu»ng those yvho do not stop to in-
! vestigatc.A SK M A ; SK E KNOW S. \ It is right and fair, to yourself and
Noboilv in all ou r broad laud.! ,h! T m'CUSL'd- ll) discount any slander, , , • , , I against any man where the storvknow s so much about the ho rro rs ! seems to Wiry with his previous o f industria l idleness as does the ataiioii. This applies to other tluin . • , „ campaign lies. Watch out for. them.—
A m erican housew ilc, She hand les Spring Lake Gazette.'th e purse, add. does tlie week*pill'se.ly m arke ting . She knows w hat un em ploym ent. part-lim e work or low- w ages mean to the household. She knows th a tW h en the purse is low o r em pty , il m atte rs not how fli-u ;i goeds m ay lie on the market;, she must, cu rta il the purchases of m eats, groceries and c lo th ing for th e fam ily.
If every Am erican housewifeBASEBALL’S G. O. M.
W alter Johnson. Let us take off our , , ,, „ hats. Walter Johnson, who we thought
who ieiiiend-.e’M the try in g Ja y s of had been counted out. Walter
TIIE OTHER WAY ABOUT. Two clubmen were discussing the
relative merits of their wives, when one of them remarked:
"My wife looks after me, I can assure you. Why, she takes off my boots for me in the evening."
“Ah! When you come, home from the club?” suggested the other.
"N’o.—when I want to go there.’’— Edinburgh Scotsman.
victory many times; had they won, they would merely have been champions once more. They can afford to skip a year. This time, we frankly rejoice with-Washington. We know how they feel, and It is a feeling, like which there is none in this vale of tears.:—New York World.
AIN’T IT THE TRUTH?“All any man wants—” began the
tiresome Guy.“Are the things he hasn't got,”
snapped his victim "as he made for the door.—Cincinnati Enquirer.
AND BE SURE TO VOTE.When the campaign is on, go and
listen to the speakers. They are working hard; they are trying to show up the good points of the candidates and of the party platform to be sure, but they are worth hearing. If there were no campaign speeches, no meetings and no red fire, the percentage of those who neglect to vote might be larger. Take time to listen; give, the speakers a chance und vote on election day.—Woodhaven Leader-Observ- er. '
SOCIAL AMENITIES.Henham—-I don’t know w hat we
would do without our neighbors.Benham—Neither do I. They are
so helpful, you see. If you don’t happen" to remember something about your own business, you have only to ask them about it and they will tell you the whole story.—Boston' Globe.
REASON IT OUT.■ When a newspaper gives you a lot
of free advertising in order to boon! some concert or entertainment in which you are interested keep track of the lines that are printed each week and multiply that number by the regular advertising rates of the paper. Compare the results with the actual money value of any favor th a t you
the only two things- th a t a newspaper has to sell—Unidentified.
FULL GROWN.The village wiseacre entered the
grocery store, ahd approaching a pile of muskmelons picked lip one1 and sneeringly asked:
“Is - this the largest apple you have?”
“Hey!” shouted the grocer, “put that grape down!"—Progressive Grocer.
STATE TEACHERS MEET AT ATLANTIC CITY NEXT MONTH
The New Jersey State Teachers’ Association, an organization with 20,000 members, will hold its annual meeting a t Atlantic City, November 9-11, in the Ambassador hotel. Samuel H. Mcllroy, president of the association, will preside -and there will be severul well-known speakers, including Professor Albert Bushnell Hart, of Harvard; Charles Paddock, California sprinter; Dean John W .,W ithers, of New York University, and Norman Angell, lecturer, of England, who will make his first appearance in this country on the opening day of thc session.
It is expected, also, that Governor George S. Silzer and Mrs. Carrie Chapman C att will speak. For - years the convention has been held during the Christmas holidays, the date being changed with a view to increasing tho attendance.
Slump Ih Cranberry Crop.Now that the harvesting of cran
berries is about finished, arid reports are coming in about the size of the crop, i t is shown that the yield this year in Burlington and Ocean counties has been many thousands of bushels shorter than the estimates given a t the summer meeting of the
get from any other business concern. ! American Cranberry Growers’ Asso- Then take into consideration the fnet ! ciation, a t Browns 'Mills in August that advertising and circulation are before any picking was done.
THE CONFIDENCE OF THE COMMUNITY
earnThe established policy of this institution is to- and KEEi> the confidence of the community.
Eow well we have succeeded is best evidenced by the fact that our patrons not only transact their own business with us year after year, but also recommend the Asbury Park Trust Company to their friends.
Per Cent. In terest Paid On, Savings
Compounded Quarterly
A s b u r y P a r k T r u s t C o m p a n y
Caraer MaMtsvn A vew e sad Emaey Street
————— —
i - ' . ■
x
Property for SaleWe can show you Boarding Houses, Cottages and Bungalows
t or sale at a reduction in prices
nsuranceCome to us for all kinds of Insurance,
teen FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES.We represent six-
Mor!$a&esWe can place you a mortgage on your property a t 50 per
cent, of the value. ' . iNotary Public Telephone 398
Ernest N. WoolstonI n s u r a n c e
191!) am! 1921), u n d e r .'the Dem ocra tic free trad e tariff, and the millions- o f w orkm en ou t o f eni- loym ent, will earry th a t m em ory w ith her to the ballot box th is y ear, Coolidge and Duwi’s will have an overw helm ing m ajo rity over the com bined opposition of free trad e cand idates and tlie can d id a te s of the Socialist-Third paT- ty experim ent in governm ent.
A W estern paper says the most dangerous . disease a tta ck in g •Amcri'-a- a t piv-.euv is- the law m aking •. omnia o f forty-eight S ta te legisla tures and the N ational ( '-ongrevs. 'No man living today know s !’<■:• a c e rta in ly that lie is n o t b reak in g some law 'W hen be goes about- his da ily tasks.
Kin- prevention should bee.one a d a ily p ractiee and lire p revention week, ju s t celebrated , should, as lim e goes by. serve as a period fo r reco rd ing the activ ities of various com m unities which have cut.dow n' lire losses ami im proved 'Ilnur, lire-prevent ion faeililibs. ,
A law com pelling vehicles-. to stop a t ra ilroad crossings would be yo expense tn taxpayers , and fines fo r disobedience w ould’ enrich thc public treasu ry . E ver look a t th is m a tte r in th a t way?
, -Just a rem inder. The little ve low label on y o u r paper tells you th e d a te to which y o u r subscrip tion is pa id . The posta l law s r e q u ire t h a t ' su b scrip tio n s be paid in advance.
Johnson, who went down to grim defeat in New York, who they said was too 'o ld . W alter Johnson, tried and true wheelhorse of a great team, who took the box iri the ninth, faced those deadly youngsters from New York, and delivered what was asked of him. Three innings, and he was the Walter Johnson of old. A brief space, but the greatest three innings of his life.
The Giants? The Giants are our own, and we sorrow when they lose. But they have already tasted such
One Cent a WordMINIMUM 25 CENTS. CASH TO
ACCOMPANY THE ORDER
THORNLEY CHAPEL, OCEAN GROVE
Rev. Samuel Sargent, Ph.D., minister. Holiness - meeting Sunday-af- un-noon, October 19, 3.45. Subject, 'Abruh;im'.s A ltar on Mount Moriah.”—da*
For Itent.House of S rooms, with bath and
pipeless heater in cellar. Hot water gns-hoatev. A nice winter home. $35 a month. Address owner, 14. Pitman avenue, Ocean Grove. Telephone 1 3Stf.
The Broadmoor Inn will remain open during the yVar. Rooms with board or without. Well heated. Telephone. 93. Central \avenue, corner Broadway—39tf. \
The A rt of Permanent Waving.The latest Eugene Method in
strictly oil, special, full head, by Mr, Stephens, who gives that Marcel Wave effect that the ladies' so desire. The Parker Method of Hair and Scalp Treatment Authorized Practitioner Lillian Samuels, 412 Cookman avenue, AsbUry Park. For appointments phone Asbury Park 3459-W.—26tf.
4 8 Main Avenue, Ocean GroveT e le p h o n e 398 *
f TO THE PERSON THAT REQUIRES LIABILITY INSURANCE
Do you know tha t today you are being sued, in caae of accident, for your full worth? Therefore, it) behooves you to coyer your Liabilty and Property Damage for the amount th a t you aro able to pay. Put the charge on the United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company—a stock company.
Be sure that your policy hasn 't any indemnity clause a ttached to it.
See me about your Fire, Theft and Rain Insurance. I make a special study of this class of coverage. ,
L o u is E. B r o n s o nR e a l E s t a t e a n d I n s u r a n c e A g en t i
S3 Main Avenue 721 A venue jOeean Grove, N. J. Asbury Park, N. J. jj
PROTEC 1 ION.In case of fire a call will bring assistance
But when it comes to WIND STORM or a tornado, nothing short of a miracle can spare your property.
IF YOU ARE NOT INSURED, EVERY BIT OF DAMAGE IS AN ACTUAL LOSS TO YOU
Play Safe—Carry WIND STORM insurance .The Rate is 80 Cents Per Thousand Dollars Per Year
ED'WAKD I. BROWN R eal E state an d In su ra n ce
14.4 Lake Avenue 616 Mattison AvenueAsbury ParkOcean Grove Phone 1460
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HARVEY’S SEAfOOD MARKETWedding Announcements.
And the melancholy days are ju st arou n d th e corner.
An unsual offer of 50 paneled, sheets, 50 inside and 50 outside envelqpcs, a ttractively packed, in four sizes, printed, $5.50. Ocean Grove Times.—-4tf.
Suitable G ift.Cabinet of ‘250 sheets of fine paper
and $50 envelopes, secretary size, printed with your name and address, for $5.50, a t tho office of -the Ocean Grove Times.—4tf. ■. .
W ill R e m a i n O p im .A II W i n t e r , w i t h a .F u l l L in o o t
fresh fish, Oysters, Glams, Etc.A t t h e V e r y L o w e s t P r i c e s
No Gold Storage Seafood HandledA . D . H A R V E Y & S O M \
8 4 O lin S t r s o t , O c e a n G r o v e ; N . J . P h o n n 4 0 07 2 9 M a in S t r e e t , B r a d l e y D e n c h , N. J . ' P h o n o ,3 7 G
f! You H ave P ro p e rties forSale o r RentList Them WHh
THE 8 SSS M.ABENC
102 Asbury Avenue, Oeean GrovePhone 2 6 7 7 Asbury Parh
W E H A V E W W E M SFor- Hotels, Cottages and
Rooming Houses
P rotect Y o u r S a v in g sAgainst Contingencies Tuat Might Ran Into Thousands
in Damage.
H ave Y o u r Car In su redwith Us in Ibe Hartford Accident and Indemnity Company.
J . N. G arrabrandt A gencyj K E A t ESTATE a n d INSURANCE !§ Telephone 2124 , 69 Main Ave., Ocean Grove I* ’■ SloaaMaaaaoaaaatMoosaasaaaoHftaaaoaatasoMosiaaoaaaoHsaaHaaaaaaaaatNM
D C COVERT AGENCY I; ' <i. H. C.Lt V E. I’ r o p r t s t o r ' >
| Insurance Mortgages 1 Real Estate: R oom 201, A sbu ry Pnrk T r u s t C o . Bid)?. I A sbu ry P a rk| 133 B ro adw ay , O cean <j rove:n n u m n » iH M n m « U H M i» m n m M :« n>in n n u u > m m w
M M IIW W .H M .W .M M W .M .M .M M .M .M W H .w nM W .nw M W M IW IW ,i *
i“ S E A M A C ” *
Kenneth W. MacWhmey
s.™, Reai Estate : Insurance91 flecli Avenue, Cor. Pennsylvania Avenue
OCEAN GROVE. N. J. , 'Telepboae 3181 .
dit*' - i /A* *-'ii i
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!rM¥i-h&&W\",-'iMi’\ ' : i : ‘ - 'h .:■: '••.’ ?: - FRIDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1924
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T H E O C E A N G R O V E T I M E S
An unuaally large number of ̂ persons for this time of the year were entertained a t the Boscobel hotel over the • Columbus day weekend, giving the house a summer-like appearance.
Miss Janice Drew, who attends school in Newark, spent the Columbus day weekend here with her mother, Mrs. Ethel Drew, 79 Delaware avenue, going back to Newark Tuesday morning.
Next Tuesday evening the ninth rendition, locally, of the Old Folks’
Miss A. E. Cook, who recently went Concert under the leadership of Mrs. to Asheville, N. C., is located a t the Bleeker Stirling will be given, this Haywood House. ■ ̂tim'e: in . the F irst M. E. Church, As-
,,i. bury Park.Rev. and Mrs, J. N. Kugler, of P o r t . „ • , , „ „ ,
Carbon, Pa., are a t the Trenton HouBe 1 Mrs- M. E. Michael,' 15 Broadway, for a few days. | spent several weeks a t Bethlehem,
' m, . . . . „ . , Tt . T, : ., „ > Pa, with her sister, Mrs. S. C. Wor-The Misses S. A. and H. I. Bnrthell, ; man. The latter returned to Ocean
The banks and the Association office were closed Monday, Columbus Day,
The season for shooting wild fowl opened yesterday and lasts until January 31st. *
9 Heck avenue, are a t ,the Hillcrest, Delaware W ater Gap.... Miss Clara Schwartz, of Embury avenue, is a new member of the Tennent Chapter, D. A. R.
Miss Jessie Stoats, of Asbury ave, nue, paid a visit to Merchantviile relatives and friends recently.
Mrs. C. Clark has returned to the Grove from Sewall, N. J., and is located a t 90 Heck avenue.
The public auction of the Saxer restaurant fixtures takes place Monday afternoon a t two o’clock.
Mrs. Ella Steele, of New York, was the guest last weekend of Miss Laura Alday, 115 Main1 avenue.
This Friday afternoon the Woman’s Prayer Circle members are meeting with Mrs. M erritt, 10>Q Mt. Tabor Way.
Grove with' Mrs. Michael on Tuesday for an indefinite, stay.
■Miss Nettie Frysinger, of York, Pa., was a caller a t the office of .The Times on Monday. She spent several months in the Twin Cities and is expecting to roturn in the near future for a still longer sojourn.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Weaver, of Philadelphia, who have been enjoying an autumn vacation visit in their cottage a t 51 Heck avenue, leave for Philadelphia tomorrow. Mr. Weaver is a letter carrier in that city.
Rev. Edwin L, Hyde, of Pitman, leader of the Holiness. meeting a t Ocean Grove, has been Teelec.te!d president of the Ptiman Grove Camp Meeting Association. Plans are being
’ made for the fifty-fifth camp meeting next summer.
Mrs. B. Frank Wainright, 127 Mt. Hermon Way, has been entertainingMiss Helen Smith, of Sharon Springs, N. Y. .
Miss Margaret Heck is the new director of music for the Sunday afternoon Holiness meeting in Thornley Chapel.
M rs G. H. Bedell closed her cottage a t 3 Emibury avenue during the w'eek, going to her winter home a t Bay- shore, L. I.
Mrs. Harold Cottrell, of Bradley Park, yesterday afternoon entertained thjo Workers and Winners of the West Grove, church.
Tlie meeting night of the Bible Assembly Class of St. Paul’s church has been changed to the third Friday of the month.
Mr. and Mrs. 0. D. Lincoln have returned to their home, 91 Embury avenue, after a month’s trip througii Massachusetts.
Dr. Alfred Wagg, of Ocean Grove, will conduct the quarterly conference of the F irst M. E. Church, Asbury Park, .next Monday evening.
A. B. Losel and family the first of the week closed their summer cottage a t 70 Franklin avenue, going back to their winter home in Yonkers.
Lewis Height, of Ocean Grove, has . ' gone West to take a position as min
ing engineer with the Alaino Coal Company at Alamo, Colorado.
Mrs. Martha Potter, of the Hotel Grand, has taken her departure from the Grove and for the present is s ta y - ing with friends, in Philadelphia.
The October meeting of the Willard Woman’s Christian Temperance Union was held Tuesday evening with Mrs. Jphn Dey, 23 Central avenue.
Actor Charlie Greer, who has been making his home in Ocean Grove a t .{he.Billard, expects to open a winter’s engagement with a Cappy Ricks road company a t Mt. Carmel, Pa., on Christmas day. The company will tour to the Pacific coast.
Mr. and Mrs. George S. Kemble, 81 Mt. Tabor Way, left Ocean Grove Wednesday- morning for West Palm Beach, Fla., where they will spend the winter. Mr. Kemble expects to work a t his trade as a bricklayer and plasterer in that city.
William H. Quick and family on Monday closed their summer home at 10 Sea View avenue, returning that day.- to Trenton. They were followed on Tuesday by Frank McAdams, Mr. Quick's grandson, the. summer publicity manager for the LeMaistre store in Asbury Park.
Mrs. E. C. Carr, of the Billard, is accompanying H. O. Gardner, wife and daughter, of the Gardner hotel,
!'Asbury Park, on an auto trip through | tlie Wliite Mountains and into Canada.I On their return the entire party will ' proceed to Miami, Fla., for the winter.j Judge Harold E. Wells, a summer | resident of the Grove and a member : of the Ocean Grove, Association, is ac- j coinpanyiiig Senator W alter E. Edge I today on a speaking tour of Salem county. The tour takes in the farming
I districts as well as the larger towns.i ivlr. and Mrs. Frank Hi Ruscoe have j closed their bungalow and left for the • Sought, where Mr.' Ruscoe is division- 1 al manager fo r the Southern Division I of Temple Tours, Boston, • Mass. They ■ expect to pass most of the winter cov.; ering Florida in the interests of the j Temple Tours.! John Haytock, wife and daughter,‘ from Easton, Pa., were in the Grove over last weekend a t their cottage on
j Ocean Pathway., .. , ....... While here it wasContractor William E. Taylor is re- learned Mr. Haytoek’s mother, Mrs.
modelling the. front and rear verandas Helen Haytock, died three weeks ago of Dr. W. A, Robinson’s pottage a t . a t Easton, She was a summer resi-Main avenue and Pilgrim Pathway.
Miss Jane Serisenihg, of Reading, !dent of Ocean Grove.
William Mergaugey, of Oceanfinest of Miss Ida Mason, ,76 , Grove, is numbered among the fall va-
Mam avenue, lor a week, returned cationists who, under the personal d;7 home Monday of this week. ; rection of Ira E. Whyte, district pas-
The new cement culvert a t Main -senger agent of the Central Railroad, and Central avenues is about finished, left last Saturday morning for Dela- I t was constructed under the direc- ware W ater Gap. Their stay is for
M i P l $ i j
Eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither have entered into the heart of man, the things which God hath prepared for them th a t love him.— 1 Cor- intihthians ii, 9.
St. Paul’s M, E.Sunday services: 9.30, Brotherhood
clnss; 10.30, preaching services conducted >by the pastor, Rev. George S. Johnson; 2.30, Sunday school and community Bible class; . G.30, Epworth and Junior Leagues; 7.30, sermon. Prayer meeting, Wednesday evening, 7.30.
Thornley Chapel.Holiness meeting every Sunday
afternoon a t 3.45 o’clock. Rev. Samuel Sargent, minister. Miss Margaret Heek, director of singing.
Trinity Episcopal.Seventeenth Sunday afte r Trinity,
with services conducted by Rev. Randall W. Conklin, as follows: 7.30 a. m., holy communion; 10.30 a. m., morning prayer and sermon; 2.30 p. m., Sunday school; 7.30, evensong and sermon.
F irst M. E.Rev. F. A. DeMaris, pastor. Preach
ing service a t 10.45 a. m. Sunday school a t 2.30. Young people’s meeting a t 6.45. Evening sermon at 7.30. Church school, 2.30. Prayer service, Wednesday at 7.45 o’clock.
F iret Baptist.At 10.30 a. m., Dr. MacMurray will
preach. Also sermon a t 7.30. Sunday school with adult Bible classes a t2.30. Young people’s meeting a t6.30. '
Evangelical Lutheran.The pastor, Rev. Henry C. Kraft,
will preach Sunday morning. Sunday school a t 9.30 a. m. • Catechetical class a t 7 p. m.; preaching a t 7.30.
F irs t Presbyterian.Rev. Charles Franklin Shaw, pastor,
Morning sermon a t 10.30, and evening sermon a t 7.30. Church school, 2.30. Devotional service of Young People's Society, 6.45 p. m. Midweek service Wednesday, 7.45 p. m.
Pentecostal Church.Rev. William M. Faux, pastor. Ser-
vices in Park Hall as follows: Biblestudy a t 2 o’clock, followed by service for worship and sermon at 2.40; evangelistic services nt 7.45. Also ser vices on Tuesday afternoon a t 2.30 and gospel services on Thursday evening a t 7.45.
, Ballard Memorial.Sunday a t 10.30, preaching con
ducted by the pastor, Rev. E. A. Robinson;. Sunday school, 2.30 p. m,; Epworth League, G.30; evening worship, 7.30. Prayer meeting Tuesday evening at 7.30.
West Grove M. E.Rev. J. J. ‘Messier, pastor. Services
for the coming Sunday as follows: 10.30, preaching service; 2.30, Sunday school; G.30, Junior League; 7.30, evening service.
Bradley Beach M. E.Rev. Marshall Owens, pastor. 10.30,
preaching service; 2.30,' Sunday morning; reaching a t 7.30. Sunday school; Epworth League a t 6.30; preaching a t 7.30.
tion of Strbet Superintendent Reed. Hill'M rs. Warren Disbrow, who spent
the summer a t 88 Mt. Tabor Way, has gone to South Amboy, where she wili pass the winter a t 125 John street.
Chaplain George C: Stull was the a number 0f points to inspect bu ild -! Wednesd [leaker a t the local Epworth League . ings of a similar character, being the 'Reading
eight days, registering at the Crest. .
Mrs. M. E. Stout,, of Lake avenue, is on her way to Los Angeles, C at, to attend the dedication of a new $2,- 000,000 re st home. She is stopping at
Christian Science.Services are held regularly every
Sunday morning a t 10.30 by the First Church of Chrst Scieintist at Third avenue and Emory street. Theredding room is open every day from 11 a. m. to 4 p. m. Wednesday evening
meeting last Sunday evening, with Miss Eva Chamberlain as the soloist.
The subject on which the Rev. Samuel Sargent will speak in the Holiness
: meeting the coming Sunday afternoon is “Afbraham’s A ltar on Mount Mo-
'riah."The Misses Matilda, Elizabeth, Kate
and Minnie HafVner went to New York City Monday for the winter. They
• were a t 89 Mt. Tabor Way through the sumnici'.■ Mr. and M rs.' Edward Jaenocke,
•who were located p t the Asbury Park Woman’s Club the past season, have returned to their home in the Grove, 95 Heck,avenue.
M aster ; Jack Delatash, of -Middletown, was the happy guest of Joseph C. Jackson and family, 116 Abbott avenue, a t last weekend. Mr, Jackson is Jack’s grandfather.
A m eeting-of the local Women's Republican Unit,has been called for this Friday evening by the president, Mrs. G. W. Tucker, to be hold a t her
national superintendent of rest homes. December 15 is fixed as the date of
i her return home.For the winter Mr. and Mrs. George
II. Kern, of the Columbia, and Mr. and Mrs, C. Wesley Putt, of the Ivy House, have leased the cottage . of Mrs. Rebecca Cornelius a t 84 Main avenue, and they will take possession of the same on or about November lirst. Mr. and Mrs. Kern are Mrs. Pu tt’s parents.
Mrs, V. Haynes and Miss Lulu W right, of the Shelburne hotel, returned to the Grove Monday evening
. from a fortnight’s trip to the Catskills, their objective point being Cairo, N. Y. They visited on their trip the ruins of the big Hotel Kaatcrskili, near Haines . Falls, which was destroyed by lire only a short time ago.
Miss I'hebe Beswick a t last weekend was up in New York State in the interests of the Bcswick Memorial. Library , presented by. the 1 fam ily , in memory of her brother, Rev. George T. Beswick. During her travels she also lectured a number of times. The
service a t 8.Second Church of Christ Scientist
services Sunday morning a t 11 o’clock and Sunday evening a t 8 o’clock; also Wednesday evening a t 8 o’clock.
room open' daily. CornerGrandPark.
and Asbury avenues, Asbury
St. Augustine’s P. E.Rev. C. Canterbury Corbin, rector.
Low mass a t 7.30 a .,m . Matins and sermon at 11 a. m. Evensong and sermon a t 8 p. m. Evensong and address Wednesday evening a t 8.
Grand Avenue Reformed.Rev. G. M. Conover, pastor. Hours
of service on Sunday are as follows- 10.30 a. m., sermon; 11,45, Sunday school; 6.30, Junior League; 7.31k midweek prayer electing is held every Wednesday.
Christian and Missionary Ailiniue. Pastor R. L. Staley will conduct
services Sunday morning a t 10.45 and evening nt 7.45. Sunday school is at 9.43, Wednesday prayer service at 3 and Friday evening prayer service at7-15,
home, 57 Franklin avenue.Mrs. Elizabeth Riddle, 73 Abbott Misses Beswick.hpve returned to th e ir . " ^ “a tT lS ^ Y o in /p e S J i ’l’c’l meet.
1 the. winter in Brooklyn . residence for. the. winter, ^ ° o ' a t 2.15 Young Peop
Salvation Army.Salvation Army barracks, Mattison
avenue. Services 11 a. m., Sundayavenue, will spendPhiladelphia with her sisteV, accord- but spend every ing to annual custom. She left here Grove during the autumn and spring cbar„e during, the Week for th a t city. • seasons. ' ... _ , - • A
weekend a t Ocean in« 0.15.'p .-m..’evening worship at. 8. weekend a t uccnn , „Adjutant and Mrs; , Downing in
After visiting friends in Elizabeth fo r a week or two Miss IL E. Lnflin, who left 'th e Vacation House, 17 Embury avenue,-last Saturday, will go to her home a t Foughkeepse, N. Y.
6 b it u a r y
' Mrs. :A'. H. DeHaven, who recently
Shaft To Soldiers At Highlands.E. H, Wharton, representing L. L.
Manning & Son, of Plainfield, lias closed a contract with q committee representing the borough of Highlands, for a soldier's monument to lie unveiled Armistice day, November 11.
MISS MARY EVERHAM.From a complication of diseases
Miss Mary Everham died Monday a t . . . , _ .. the M. E. Home for the Aged, 63
closed her summer homo on Bath ave- Glark aVenue, Services were held fit . . . . . . . . . . , -------------- . ..n u e .i ir a t the Marlborough hotel/A s- ^ Home; conducted by the Rev. The monument will be one of the mostbury: Park, until her return , to Wir- George S. Johnson, Wednesday after- appropriate erected in this section, nungton, Del.,, later in the autumn. n00n 'a t 2 o’clock, and interment was The total heighth of the monument
, ’ On' Tuesday afternoon of this week made in Woodbine . cemetery, Long will be 18 feet. A soldier 6 feet high/ th e October meeting of the Reformed 'Branch, by Undertaker Sexton. Miss representing an overseas service man
church missionary society, Asbury Everham was eighty-five ycara old.Park, was held a t the, home of Mrs, She had been a ’Tesident of the Home
:> 2 . Byersoh, 58 Embury avenue. here for several years.
D e p o s it Y o u r W o rr ie sWhen you deposit money in this bank you also deposit your worries.
Why keep them?Open* a sayings account.
OFFICERS:NATHAN J. TAYLOR, President. TAULMAN A. MILLER, Ca«hi«r. JACOB Z. STILES, Vic© Pre«Jdent
JOSEPH H. RAINBAR, Ant. Oft*hl«r
DIRECTORSJOHN HULSHART NATHAN J. TAYLOR JACOB Z. STILES ROBERT M. WATT STEPHEN\ D.WOOLLEY ANDREW T. VAN CLEVE
CALVIN V. HURLEY T. NELSON LILLAGORE PAUL J. STRASSBURGER FRANK B. SMITH JOHN S. HALL TAULMAN A. MILLER
National BankAssociation Building
Ocean Grove, N. J.
m m t m W W MMWW— H —
A B ig In s t it u t io n B r o u g h t to Y o u r D o o rAlways anxious to serve our customers and other friends in any possible way we hare
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mmm am
n i i i i i i i iiSBURY PAHK AND
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Corner Main Avenue and Pilgrim Pathway Ocean Grove '
HARRY A. WATSON, President IRVING L. REED, Vice President,H. EARL FARRY, Cashier
FRANK M, MILLER and IRVING NEWMAN, Assistant Cashiers
A s h w r y P a r k , N . - J .
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![Page 6: Vol. XXXII—No. 42 A NEW HOSPITAL FOR IN POLITICS …of leading professional decorators the work of the country’s most talented artists, craftsmen and designers en gaged in making](https://reader036.fdocuments.net/reader036/viewer/2022070816/5f109d7d7e708231d449fa33/html5/thumbnails/6.jpg)
P A G E S I X T H E O C E A N G R O V E ' T I M E S,- v - ;
• FR IDAY , OCTOBER 17, 1924
B u tte d C h in e se C ityP la ce o f Im p o r ta n c e
The remuins o f . tin .ancient Chinese city, the walls of which, before It was
'destroyed by China’s -'flrsi eniperor more , than 2,00i) years ago, seemingly Inclosed more territory than Is within the spud bus walls of Puking, lies he* neath three or four feet ol* earth about fifty miles south of Peking, awaiting the areheologists. writes the Japan Advertiser,
About 100 years* after .Alexander the Great conquered Wgypt, or lute In the Second century B. C., there arn-e a king in the then coinpnnitiyely small China who compared favorably with Alexander In conquests und empire building and whose /empire lusted almost until the present day. This was Ch’ln Shlli Mining, or Shlh HuanR-TI (“the first emperor”) whose rule, ending In 100 H., C.« marks the close vf the feudal period nnd the beginning of the empire in Chinese history.
Shlh Munng-TI subdued tlie feudal princes, built the famed great Chinese wall and successfully defended the country against the Tartars from the north, standardized money, transportation, writing and other things which aided centralization and destroyed as much of the undent classics und trndi tlohs ns possible, with the idea that the history of the Chinese empire should begin with his reign.
SENDING PHOTOS BY TELEPHONE IS
LATEST MARVELC le v e la n d C o n v e n t io n P h o to
g ra p h s F i r s t t o B e S e n t by N ew M e th od .
S e le c te d B e s t o f A l lT ra ve lin g C o m p a n io n s
The Chinese have a fable of a man who was once .summoned to ajipear for trial under an unjust accusation. The place where he was to he tried was far distant anil the’jonriu'.v was long and hard. Jtmt before starting, tluu,c disguised figures suddenly, appeared and asked to accompany .him.
Said the Ural, “1 cannot pro ml.sc to go with ya,u all the way, hut I will see that you have comfortable loiii'lri.rs and plenty to eat and drink so long a< I am with you.” The second sal.I. ”1 cannot promise you these things, btti I apstire you. yotj sh-ill have pleaded companionship, hi tighter and conversation so long as I mu with you.” The third said, “I cannot promise you money, nor even pleasant companionship, hut I will go with you all the way, plead your cause before the judge, ami testify,mi your behalf.”
After listening to the oftYr of nil fhose and weighing eurcfnlJv their statements the poor mail decided to choose the hitter. Whereupon iIn* disguises were removed and he found the first to he rlclmA Ihe M*ci»j)d M-; friends, and the. third his .virtues. Is There any doubt that his choice u-»s wise?
H ow T ro ilope W o rk e d'"*■* In the yAatohiogritphy pf Anthony.
Trollope," ov wliich there is a rhcent reprint, appears an account of that prolific writer’s method r “Aerjording to the circumstances of tin* time— whether my other imsliiess' niight le* then heavy or Hghl,-or whether ihu hook which 1 was writing was.or wu’s not wanted .with speed—I have allotted myself so i.iaiiy pages a week. The average uumlier has been about forty. It has'been placed ns low as ”0, and bus risen to .112. And, »is a page Is un ambiguous term- my puge has been made to contain 2"'U words; and, as words, if not watched, . will have, a tendency to straggle, I have had every word ctouni ed as I went. . . , There has ever been the record before me. and a week passed with an Insufficient number of pages has been a blister to
-my eye. and a month so disgraced would have been a. sorrow to myheart.”
Weather and LeatherMany people
them of clsay their ,corns warn
.aJs l« the weather, hut Hie corn I?f probuhlymerely registering ihe dpingra In the area of.the leather Jn the ylioV. This vuries with the amount of moisture In the air. A .2 per cent Tlvjinre from normal eli'li »r way Is a h o t i g t T f o p r rjin
:stnnd without fliscomt'ort. Recently J. «A. v((V(* tin* iVew York sectionof tlie American C’liemleai society the results of ex porff dents which show
.that the Htu<uu\i «f the pinching nmy depend orr the kind <jf tanning ttscd on the*, leather. He found.tlmt chronic leather ttl»soihec| more water from the a ir than did vegetablcy-tanned calf, mnt was subject to much groaler changp.'f Iri area, with muchmore likelihood of pinching. ' .
B e t t e r T h a n a
F u r n a c e f o r F a l l a n d S p r in g
Furnace heat for the cool days of Fall and Spring is a n unnecessary expense.
Install a Radiantfire In your fireplace. T his m arvelous developm ent in gas heating bum s for hours a t the cost of a shovelful of coal.
H eats by a new p rin c ip le—R ad ian t Rays th a t send forth h ea t rays directly in to th e ro o m —Pure, odorless h e a t always available and as cheerful as a flood of sunshine.
Investigate th is w onderful i n v e n t i o n a t once.
There Is a S ite and Style of R.idiurtlsira to Meet Every R eq u irem en t. Sjh the A ttractive Designs in Our Showroom
C O A S T G A S C O M P A N YSutjUdlary
Jersey Central Power and light CorporationBEtMAH POKV'S PLEA- ANT
The. telephone line, long a highway over which man’s messages to man might reach the ear, has become also a pathway, to the eye, says the Telephone Review.
At the headquarters of the Bell System, 195 Broadway,- New York, on a recent afternoon, photographs were transmitted over a long distance circuit from Cleveland, Ohio, to New York City. Many of the New York papers raproduced-Mn their issues the following morning — the photographs delivered to their representatives during the demonstration, which was attended by a large number ot newspapermen.
Triumph In Photography These newspaper reproductions
clearly showed each detail of the originals as put on the circuit at Cleveland. and their publication brought, forth widespread commendation for the engineers of the American t e l e phone and Telegraph Company and the Y^estern JSIectric Company, who jointly developed the apparatus used In this latest triumph.
This apparatus, the result of several years of experimentation, represents the association of many recent inventions, together with the standard types of telephone and telegraph apparatus which have been readapted for this new use. Essential ‘features of this system are simplicity, rapidity of transmission and accuracy of reproduction.
Pictures Sent While Wet A positive transparency film such
as can be supplied by a photographer is suitable for transmission. As films can be used for transmission
. . . »
aiuaCTrr.rttin iiii
STII/BS’ EXPRESSS T O R A G E T R U C K I N G M O V I N G B A G G A G E
Let us help you solve your moving problems.Place your spring moving order NOW.Our men are oxp!Tienoed|furntture handlers. ’Fully equippe-l to handle pim oa, safes and other heavy goods.
The "Voice W ith the Smile" nowi comes over the wire In the form of a photograph.
Note; This photo was sent from Cleveland and received by wire hi New York City.
S T I L E S S T A N D S F O R S E R V I C EMata QUice and Warehouse
47 Corlies AvaoiK T e le p h o n e l iW A sb n ry P a rk
Ocean to-ove Oilier.Ceolral Avenue. Near Main Avenne
T e le p h o n e M27 A s b u ry F arit
F IR E A L A R MOCEAN GROVE
21. . . . . . . , .A tbury and New York. Ave,2 2 . . . . .Clayton’s Store, Main Avenue2324.25.26.27.28. 29.31.32.33.
Surf and Beach. . . ............... Embury and Beach• Main and Pilgrim Pathway.Broadway and Pilgrim Pathway ..T abor Way and Iennsylavania ...................... N orth End Pavilion...................McClintock and Beach ................. South E nd ' Pavilion...................Clark and New Jersey...................Benson and Tabor Way
34.1.......................Heck and Whitefield3 5 . .. . . . ___ Webb and Pennsylvania3 6 ... .Surf Ave. and Pilgrim Pathway3 8 ...........................Benson and Abbott3 9 ...........New York and Stockton Avcs.
Special TapsGeneral Alarm. 1 Wire
Trouble. 2 Fire Out. 3 Time 7 a. m. and Chief’s Cali. 4 Washington. ,6 Eagle. 7 Stokes.
c B eethoven R elicsPilgrims In Heptlioven’s birthplace
nt Bonn, lieriimn.v. in wliieh (ire Inei.seil ninny, relies nf the linmoelul iimsieiaii. lmiy run, see tlie tenor violin which he
' played as a boy In tlut Bonn ori-ues- tru of the Knrfurst. Wlieu Keetlav\en left Bonn in -1792 lie gave tlie insjni-
. tnent tn his readier and friend, I’'ran:: Bies, whose Krenl-grnndsun Inis pre Hen I ell it to tlie Heel! in ven niiiseitni. In the Kinne tiiliiieiim eon he seen Ihe s.a of old Italian' instruments given tn Beethoven in lMirj i»y Fnrsi l.ielmaw. sky. on wliieli all tlie lieethnveii quartettes -were lirsi played.
Something Lacking“A small boy was knocked down hy
' an - automobile recently." .says tlie Southeast Missourian. "When lie was taken to a doctor somebody Investigat-
V ed and found in Ids pockets live lops.' 73 htass buttons. 60 . nmi'liKs, two
. oranges, a wooden eig.atytte i-older. a>'■ pair of dappers, ten cigarettes, a
mouth organ nnd a Jew’s liurp.' At 3V> tlmt. thmigii.' tiie Missmirlaii refuse* to ' .. .believe lie wna n normal, boy. heenpae '■V H ie eolh'otloii did not Include a toad V or at least a couple ot wlilte rata."
.. p . ; . /• ■. '
82.84.72.91.93.94.
. . . . . . .Seventh itnd Bond
. . .'. . . . . . .S ix th and Grand Corlies and Union Seventh and Webb. . . . . . . . .Sunset and Webb. . . . . . . . . .E ighth and Park
Special Taps6------0—6 General Alarm. 1 W ire
Trouble. 2 Fire Out. 3 Time; Noon, and Chief’s Call. 5 Wesley. 6 Neptune. 7 Cook. 8 Independence. 9 North Asbury. 23 Goodwill. 24 Atlantic. 25 Enterprise. To telephone companies, ca’.l Asbury 1300.
WEST GROVE Main St. and Main Ave....M ain St. and Corlies Ave. Unexcelled Engine House.............. . . Atkins and Embury
.......... ...Prospect and Heck5 6 . . . . . . . . ' ................Atkins and Sixth52............... ....C o rlie s and RidgeS5................ Atkins and Tenth92 ........... Ridge and Eighth
Special Taps ■ 6—6—G— General Alarm. 2 Fire Out. 3 Time 1 p. m. and Chief’s Call. 4 Unexcelled. 5 Uneeda.
1 5 ...16 ...5 2 ...5 3 ...54..
ASBURY PARK1 6___ Main Street and Lake Avenue1 7 ......... Bond and Bangs ______IS...........................Cr?°l™ a.? ; BRADLEY BEACHi * .............. ......... 'rS?° j Jit t iu 1 13........................ Monmouth and Pacific28- .............. j 118........................ iFourth and Main2».......................... L-’Thlrf a" l C! " £ “ I31--................................ and Hammond31' • .............. • \ aM u n 4 n « d Ridel | 3 9 . . . . . . , . ; .Evergreen and.Mjtdison323 3 . . . .3 6 . . . .3 7 . . . .41.. ..4 2 . . . .4 3 . . . . •11....4 5 . . . .46..47.. ..4 8 ...4 9 ...5 2 ... s i . . ;5 2 ...5 3 ...5 5 . ..57....6 2 ...6 3 ...6 4 ...6 5 ...7 2 ...7 3 ...7 5 ...74...
Locust Drive. 41........................ Second and Main j
.Munroe and M ain...Prospect and Munroe 59..
61..• Springwood and Prospect.! 'C' ______I nn.l All.ln. ob. Springwood and Atkina
................Mattison and Prospect
. . . . Summerfield a.id Langford ___ . . . . . . . Asbury and Pine ........... .F irs t d Longford......................F ifth and Comstock ..................Third and Pine
Grand and Munroe .............. Heck and Sewall '. Grand and Munroe.. .. ..A sb u ry and Emory..................Asbury and Kingsley ..Casino, Asbury Avenue.................... .Th ird and Bond F ifth and Bond Fourth and Grand
.Second and Grand . . . . . . . . ..Second and K ingsley
Fourth and Kingsley. . . . . . . . . . . . . .Th ird and Bergh ___ F irst and Bergh
71..74.. 83. .
............. .-Fifth and Central
. ; . . . . .Ocean Park and Central ............ . ..McCabe and Main ...P a rk Place and Madison LaReine and Beach
Third and Beach. . . . . . . . . .LaReine and Fletcher................. .Newark and Ocean. . . ; Park Place and Main
Plumbing Heating tinning
Gaiters sad Leaders Stove Repairs ft. Rooting
Estimates Given Jobbing Given Prompt Attention ■■■;; SARADA & JEMISON
1 Winn. Avenue, Asbuiy i;ark (Rear 1223 Monroe Avenue)
while still wet, this system eliminates the delay which would otherwise be caused by drying. During the demonstration, - a picture was . taken In Cleveland, developed, sent to Now York, redeveloped and was ready for. reproduction tor newspaper purposes In thirty-three minutes for the entire operation. The actual transmission of a flvo by seven inch photograph requires less than five minutes. The dim upon which a picture has been transferred is inserted tn the transmitter simply by rolling it up In a cylindrical form. During operation a very small and Intense,beam of light shines through the film onto a photoelectric cell within.
Telephone 1989-M
Mow It Is DoneThe film la rotated a t a uniform
speed and by means of a screw mechanism ts caused to advance parallel to the axis of the cylinder. The motion of the light relative to the cylinder is therefore the same as that of a phonograph needle relative to a cylindrical record. In this way, each minute portion of the picture in turn affects the intensity of the ifght reaching the photo-electric cell. This va-' rfatlon in , the aniount of light striking the sensitive surface of the cell gives rise to a currenb which, through the agency of n vacuum tube amplifier and modulator, controls the currant Rowing through the telephone line.
At the receiving end an unexposed photographic film is rotated under a beam of light in a manner-similar to that at the transmitting end. The two films are caused to rotate at exactly the same speed and the impulses starting from the photo-electric cell at the sending end control by means of a new device known as a light valve
■ the amount of light reaching the .film at the receiving end.
Value oi invention ■!Portraits and landscapes may be
transmitted with equal clearness and the system may also be used for the long distance transmission' of facsimiles of hnndwriting,. printing nnd line drawings. In addition to the transmission of photographs for news purposes, it will be of great value to police departments In the Identification and apprehension of criminals. It may also be used tor the Identification of stolon or missing property, and in verifying signatures on bank paper and other documents.
The system is applicable for radio transmission of pictures when' atmospheric conditions are’ good.
Now that the Presidential candidates can personally address the whole United States by radio whenever they have anything to say on the issues of the campaign, the small-fry spellbinders are in danger of finding their occupation gone, the Chicago News opines.
A P ra tt family owns a car. That is, when the car is idle' it is mother’s car, when it is in use it the children’s car, and when disabled or a tire down it is dad’s car, according to the P ra tt (Kan.) Republican.
Among the inducements offered a statesman to become President is’ the assurance that he will have one of the best places from which to view a ball game, regardless of thc ticket seculators, says the Washington Star after the World series.
By reading the papers you would think there was more jewelry stolen in New York than bought, declares the Dayton News.
The old red school-house has its revenge. All the little country school houses have been painted white, but the new big city ones all seem to be built of red brick, thc Boston Transcript <'!> serves.
I t is now feared th a t the Chicago mob lynched an innocent mail. Of course, however, they w ill. make amends by offering suitable apologies, suggests the Philadelphia North American.
LEGAL NOTICENOTICE.
The YoUowlug ordinances Wifi come up for Until reading and adoption at the regular meeting, of the Township Commits tee of the Township of. Neptune at 8 o’clock p. m.,‘on Tuesday, October 28, 1924, a t the City Hull, 101 South Muln street. Township of Neptune. At that time all persons having objections thereto will be given an apportunlty to be heard,
JOHN W. KNOX, Clerk.
LEGfiL NOTICESELECTION NOTICE.
Notice 15 hereby glten that Uo • District Board* of Regiatry and BJectlo* in and for. the Township of Neptune will meet In the places hereinafter deagwed, Tuesday, Nov. 4, 192i, between tho hours of G a. m. and 1 p. m. for the purpoee of conducting a Genera! Election for Presidential Electors, a United States Senator, a Congressman, two members of General Assembly, a County Clerk. ankl_two members of tne Board of Chosen Freeholders, a Township CommHteema». an Assessor, a Collector and a Supervisor or roads. '• '*. _ _• .Places of meeting of Boards of Registry and Election; _First District, Washington Fire House, Central avenue and Olin street. Ocean Grove; Second District, Board of Trade Otlice, Pilgrim Pathway, Ocean Grove; Third District. Eagle Fire House, Heck and W'hitfield avenues, Oaoan Grove; Fourth District, R4Vj Clark avenue, Ocean Grove; Fifth District, Unexcelled Fire House, Corlies avenue, West Grove; Sixth District, 8 Atkins avenue, West Grove; Seventh District, 317 Corlleo avenue, -West Grove; Eighth District, Liberty Fire House, Monroe avenue, Whites- vllle; Ninth District, Fire House, Corlies avenue, Hamilton. . . .36-44 JOHN W. KNOX, Clerk,
Township, of Neptune.
AN ORD INANCE.AN ORDINANCE AUTHORIZING THE
CONSTRUCTION OF A STORM SEWER FOLLOWING THE LINE OF THE EXISTING OPEN DITCH FROM A POINT APPROXIMATELY ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTY FEET BAST OF ATKINS AVENUE IN THE PRESENT ASBURY PARK-NBPTUNE TOWSNH1P CULVERT, WHICH LEADS TO WESLEY LAKE; THENCE PARALLEL TO ATKINS AVENUE TO AN ANGLE IN THE DITCH APPROXIMATELY ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTEEN FEE T EAST OF ATKINS AVENUE AND ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTEEN FEET . SOUTH OF EMBURY AVENUE; THENCE GENERALLY PARALLEL TO EMBURY/AVENUE, FOLLOWING THE COURSE OF a HE AFORESAID DITCH* TO A POINT IN BRADFISKK AVJttfUE APPROXIMATELY ONE HUNDRED FEET WEST OF. RIDGE AVENUE. Approved ahd passed on first and sec
ond readings October 7,-1924.Approved, passed and adopted on third
hnd final reading October 14, 1924.MORTON MORRtS. Chairman.
Attest: JOHN W. KNOX, Clerk. . —42
PROPOSALS.
AN ORDINANCE.'AN • ORDINANCE TO FIX THE SAL
ARIES OF THE ASSESSOR AND COLLECTOR OF THE TOWNSHIP OF NEPTUNE IN THE COUNTY OF MONMOUTH.BE' IT ORDAi.iED by the Township
Committee of the Township ’of Neptune, In the County of Monmouth:
3. . The annual salaries of the officers herein named shall be respectively as follows :. Assessor. Three. Thousand ($3,000.00) Dollars; Collector, Twenty-two Hundred ($2,200.00) Dollars, In Hen of all fees for clerk hive. • ,
2. Said salaries sluill be paid seml- inontihly to said officers respectively in equal lustulhnonis.
3. AH Ordinances, or parts of Ordinances. inconsistent herewith nre hereby repealed.. • ’
4., This Ordinance shall take effect immediately.
Approved and passed on first and sefr und readings October 14, 1924,
MORTON MORRtS, Chairman. Attest; JOHN \\\ KNOX, Clerk. —42
AN ORDINANCE,AN ORDINANCE ESTABLISHING A
b u il d in g Lin e on bo th s id e sOF CORLIES AVENUE FROM SOUTH MAIN STREET 'TO SPRINGDALE AVENUE, ON THE WESTERLY SIDE OF SOUTH MAIN STREET AND ON ALL THE STREETS AND AVENUES LYING NORTH OF CORLIES AVENUE AND EAST OF SPRINGDALE AVENUE. IN THE TOWNSHrP OF NEPTUNE, IN THE COUNTY OF MONMOUTH.BE IT ORDAINED by the Township
Committee of the. Township of Neptune, in the County of Monmouth:
1. That no building1 or other structure, .or any .part thereof, whnfi 'be constructed, erected, moved or placed on either side of . Corlies avenue between South Main street ami Springdale avenue within seventeen feet from the established curb line; on the westerly side of South Mafn street wiftldn ' eleven feet from , tile es- IdbJished curb line; and’ on all the streets and avenues in that portion of said township lying nortih of Corlies avenue and east of Springdale avenue within four- teetn feet from the established curb line.
2. Any person or corporation owning, leasing or in any manner having charge or control of any bundling,or other structure, who shall violate any of the provisions of this ordinnneo may be punfsh- ed by the Townsihlp Recorder or other Magistrate before whom ,• complaint against such person or corporation fs made. The safd Recorder or Magistrate, before whom any such violator >ot this Ordinance is convicted, shall have power, to impose a fine not to. exceed1 Two Hundred Dollars. In default of the payment of any fine so imposed, any person convicted of the violation of this ordinance may in the discretion of said Recorder or Mu gist rate, be Imprisoned in the County Jail or In ainy place of detention provided by the Township of Neptune, in the County of Monmouth for any term not exceeding ninety;days. *
,1. This Ordinance shall take effect When finatly passed and published according to law.
Approved and passed on first and see- (nd readings October 14, 1924.
MORTON MORRTS,, Chairman. Attest: JOHN W. KNOX, Clerk. —42
Monmouth County Surrogate’s Office.
Iri the Matter of the Estate of Marla Orr* Deceased.
Notice to Creditors to Present Claims Against Estate
Pursuant to the order of Joseph L. Donahay, Surrogate of the County of Monmouth, made on the sijdth day of October. 1924, on the application of Ernest N. Woolston, executor of the estate of. Marla Orr, deceased-, notice Is hereby given to the creditors of said deceased to exhibit to the subscriber, executor as aforsaid, their debts and demands against the said estate, under oath, within six months from the date of the afore- eaid order, or they will be foteyer barred of their actions: therefor against the said subscriber. .
Dated, Freehold, N. J., October.6, 1924.ERNEST N. WOOLSTON.
($14.00) * 41-50. !
Monmouth County Surrogate’s Office.In the Matter of the Estate of Rebecca
J. Douglass, Deceased.
Notice to Creditors to Present Claims Against Estate
Pursuant to the order of iJoseph L. Donahay, Surrogate of 1 th e , Coqnty of Monmouth, made on the -fourteenth day of’ October, 1924, on the application of- Fanmio Douglasfl, executrix of the estate of Rebecca j ; Douglass, deceased, notice la hereby given to the creditors of sajd deceased, to exhibit • to • the. subscriber; executrix as aforesaid, their debts and demands againBt the- said estate, under, oath.', within u six months from‘ the date of the aforeaald order, or they will be : forever barred of their ac?tlons ■ therefor against the said subscriber.
Dated. Freehpld, N. J., Oct. 14, 1924, ($14.00) 42-51. ; FANNIE DOUGLASS.
On Tuesday, October 14, 1924, at 8 o'clock p, m., the Township Committee of the Township of Neptune wfii meet at the City Hall, 301 South Main street, Township of Neptune, Asbury Park, N. J., for the purpose of receiving bids for the construction of sidewalks and curb? on both sides of Ninth avenue, west of Stokes avenue, in the said Township of Neptune, ' ;
The sidewalks and curbs are to be constructed in accordance with the Township Ordinance providing for the construction of sidewalks and curbs in the Township of . Neptune*
All bids: must be enclosed in sealed1 envelopes, addressed to John W. Knox, clerk, bearing the name of the bidder on the outside.
The Township Committee reserves the right to reject any or all bids.
JOHN W. KNOX, Township Clerk,—II
Monmouth County Surrogate’s Offjce
Notice to Creditors to Present Claims - Against Estate
In . the Matter of the Estate Of Mary M.Davenport, Deceased*' ,
Pursuant to the order of Joseph L. Donahay. Surrogate of the county of Monmouth, made on the; fifth day of September. 3924. on the application of As- hury Park and Ocean Grove Bank (body corporate), , administrator with wiil annexed, of the estate of Mary M. Driven- port, deceased, notice Is hereby given to the creditors of said deceased to exhibit to .the subscriber, administrator* &c„ as aforesnld, their debts and demands against the sn Id estate, under oath, within six months from thc date of the aforesaid order, or they will be forever barred of their actions therefor against the said subscriber.
Dated, Freehold, N. J., Sept. 5th, 1924. SRTTRY PARK* nmlt rtfTSlAM finnV wASBURY PARK and) OCEAN GROVE BANK. i$14.9b) 37-45
Monmouth County Surrogate’s Office.
In the Matter of the Estate of Henry F. Evans, also known as Harry F.
Evan*. •'
Notice to Creators to Present Cl aims Against - Estate.
‘̂ Uursuo.nT"to the ’ order of Joseph L.Donahay, Surrogate of the County of Monmouth made on the third day of October,. 1924, on the application o f , Eliza- betb C. Evans, Administratrix of tho estate of Henry F. Evans, aflso known as Horry F. Evans, deceased, notice is here- ■ by given to the creditors of .said deceased to exhibit to the subscriber, administratrix of aforesaid, their debts and demands against the said estate, under oath, within six months from the date of the aforesaid order,, or they will be forver barred of their actions therefor against the said subscriber, jjiited', Freehold, N. J.F October J, 1924.
ELIZABETH C. EVANS.j($14.00) 41-50
Monmouth County Surrogate’s Office.
Notice to Creditors to Present Claims Against Estate "
let the Matter of the Estate of Augusta li. Wright, Deceased
Pursuant to the order of Joseph L. Donahnjv Surrogate, of the County’ of Monmouth, made on tho nineteenth day of September, 1924, on the application of Millie Wright Lincoln arid Clark S.. Shipman, executors of the estate of .Augusta L. Wright, deceased, notice Is herebv given to the creditors of said deceased to exhibit to the subscribers, executors as aforesaid, their debts and demands against the said estate, unde? oath, within six months from the date of the aforesaid order, or tliey will be forever barred’ of their actions therefor against the said subscribers. ,
Dated, Freehold-, N. J„ Sept. 19, 1924.MILLIE WRIGHT LINCOLN,
. CLARK S. SHIPMAN.($14:00) ’• 39-48
Notice of Settlement o f Account.
Estate of Bessie Grant 'FitzGerald, a ■ '> • '•' • • Lunatic. ; .
Notice is . hereby giyen that' the accounts bf tho subscriber* guardian of the estate of said lunatic, will be audited and stated by the Surrogate of the County of Monmouth .and. reported for Settlement to the Orphans Court of said County, on Thursday, the thirteenth day* of October A. D., 1924, at which time application will be made for the allowance of Commissions and counsel fees.
Dated September 23, A. D. 1924.($6.20)) 39-43 PAUL FITZGERALD.
Notice of Settlement of Account.Estate of Milo C, Griffln, DoceoBed.
Notice is hereby given that the accounts of the subscriber, administrator of the estate ot said deceased, wi\\ be audited and stated by the Surrogate of the' County .of Monmouth and reported for, - V Settlement to the Orphans Court: of said County, on Thursday, the Thirteenth day' of November, A- D„ 1924, a t which, time
for* tho allow-
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FRIDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1924
. . •• ' , ~r> u y s , '
f H E , O C E A N ' G R O V E T I M E S m mP A G E S E V E N /A H'
TELEPHONE MEN
FIND FIRST AID TRAINING VALUABLE
C la im s to H a v e S e e nO w ls F ly in g in F lo c k
L in e m a n a n d R e p a i rm a n S a v e L iv e s o f O th e rs b y Q u ic k
A s s is ta n c e .If there is a school In the country
in which teachers and pupils alike derive a vast amount of satisfaction from "the many hours they, spend in study and work to prepare themselves to relieve pals and suffering It is the Firet Aid Training School of the New York Telephone Company, says The Telephone Review.
An example of this is the case of Arthur Diagraais, Jr.. a telephone repair man and fir-* aid student, who
‘A. Dingman, J r , New York
hot long ago ren- d e r s d valuable flrst-aid to several people who were injured when a building platform over the sidewalk on West Forty- sixth Street. New York City, collapsed.
Dingman, a ttracted by the c r o w d w h ic h gathered w h e n the crash occurred, showed a policeman his ’radge
cd explained that he was a first-aid expert
Inside the police lines be quickly proceeded to the drat victim of the crash, whose back had beeo severely cut by a piece of flying timber. He bandaged this with the skillful care /hieh comes from first-aid training,
and then, seeing the firemen bringing a man from under tho wreckage who seemed to he injured more than any others, he ran into a nearby hotel and prepared a couch for the patient. While a surgeon who had reached the scene dressed the man’s two broken legs, Dingman washed and dressed the ants and bruises on his face. When he had done all that he could to relieve the suffering ot the second man Dingman returned to the street and attended the minor woundr and cuts of some of the other passers-by who were hurt.
Other instructors in Buffalo are proud of H. 0. Kline, Division Toll Dine Supervisor, who did credit to his
teachers when he
H, a Kline, Buffalo, N. Y.
recently admlnia tared fl r s t-a 1 d treatm ent to roan, woman and a boy who sns- fhln®4 sovere in-
g I 0 / Juries In an auto- mobile collision
at Murray Corners on the road from Buffalo > to Batavia,
The i n j u r e d ones had been
taken into a nearby house when. Kline arrived, but as they had been given as medical attention he immediately examined the three ot them and found that the woman's Injuries, which consisted s t deep cuts on the face and forehead, were the most serious.
When he had properly cleaned the wounds he applied compresses and bandages ansi then hailed a passing automobile to carry the woman to the Buffalo hospital for further treatment.
Then, after binding up the fractured wrist of the mac In tbe party, he had him taken to the hospital also.- About a week previous to this accl- dent Xli.no bad another opportunity to play the Good Samaritan when he came upon two automobiles, which had collided on a narrow bridge on the main road between East Aurora and Holland, and was in. time to bandage tbe-wounds of one ot the victims.
The resourcefulness and Ingenuity of telephone people were clearly shown when a' railroad
C- W. Holmes, Elizabeth, N. J,
e m p lo y e e was struck by a passing train and his leg severed below the knee. Claude W. Holmes, lineman, of Elizabeth,N. J. was standing on Broad Street watching a baseball s c o r e board whet’ he heard someone remark, “He must have been h i t !
Hurrying up the ambankmeht, Holmes found the injured man as he was being carried to the'.side of the track bye two other men. Realising that an artery had been severed and that the man was bleeding to death. Holmes borrowed a holt from a bystander and. using the belt and a stone, applied a tourniquet, which stopped the bleeding.
About fifteen minutes later an ambulance from the General Hospital a rrived and the surgeons replaced tho crude tourniquet with a more permanent one. They congratulated Holmes warmly or th-.- skii and resourcefulness that he had shown and then removed the man to the ambulance.
Holmes, who has been with the telephone company more than tea
, years, was recently awarded a c a r UScate tor his proficiency in first aid. ,
to 1889, says the Telephone Review, some of the headsets which the telephone g ir l ot that period wore weighed over six pounds, the transmitter, and the rubber receiver being mounted on a leather and metal frame : work. - Today, however, instead of a verltabk harness, the operator’s head- sat weighs only seventeen ounces.
It is common knowledge t.hut tawny, hnrn, and • ioiig-enred owls have increased considerably In numbers in Hast Lothian in recent years, and there is no doubt Hint they are today far more numerous than most people have any idea.
Motoring recently after the fall of darkness along n byroad between Mac- merry ami Peneaitland, writes H, M. B. in tiic Edinburgh Scotsman, i drew tlie attention of my passenger to an owl .flying overhead, and at the same time i slackened speed so that we mtgiit obtain a better view of the bird. We then noticed a second owl, and almost immediately a third and a fourth, flying over the field in our right j indeed, It seemed that there, wns a whole flock of them, as we counted ns many as- six clearly visibie against the sky nt the same time. At first I thought that they, m.ust be peewits, which often besport themselves thus after darkness, but as the birds crossed the rays of the head lamps there was no doubting that they were owls—tawhy or barn, I think the latter. Oertainiy they were not longeared owls.
Long-eared owls are, to some extent, gregarious and sociable by disposition —tlmt Is, a number of them may foregather irrespective of food or mating attractions. Such meetings ere purely social, .'and in the case of the longeared owl they may occur at any season, day or night j but I have never heard of a purely soda! gathering of brown or barn owls
Turned Up Her Nose at Everything
G ot B u lle t in C h e stb u t S a v e d H is F r ie n d
By JUDY BLAIR(©, 1924, Western Newspaper Union.)
W HEN little Mrs. Gaskcil knew for certain tlmt her htisbnnd, tlie celebrated author, had fallen for Mrs,
Myra Collins, she neither w ept nor. sat down in despair. Henrietta Gas-, kcli was a very clever little woman, much cleverer than her husband gave hef credit for being.
"Jobs, darling,” she said, “why don’t you ask thnt Mrs, Collins, to spend the weekend in the country with us?"
John Gaskell looked at her suspicions! y, but his wife’s ’expression was perfectly Innocent
"Why—I don’t know. I never thought ot it,” he stammered
"Do ask her. I know you tike her, John, and so I wont to like her, too,” ,
John Gaskcil leaped at the bait, and his wife went back to make some plea ’ Henrietta Gaskelt couldn’t talk about art or literature, but she was great on pies. And then she had heard a good deal about Mrs. Collins.
Mrs. Collins accepted her alfuslvely- worded invitation, and duly arrived. She was a made-up brunette, Mrs. Gaskell a blonde, nnd the moment She arrived war was on between the two
B o th B ird s a n d A n im a lsS u b je c t to E p id e m ic s
Dr. Herbert Fox, pathologist of the Philadelphia zoo and head of the Pepper laboratory at the university, lias written a book on the diseases of wild animals- and birds. For the last eighteen years Dr. Fox has been studying tlie tenants of the zoological garden —the only place in tlie world where such exhaustive work lias been done.
Pulling a tiger’s tooth or treating a humming bird for tuberculosis is ail the same to this mi of science, observes "Girard” In the Philadelphia Inquirer.
Dr. Fox has laid bare many startling- results. Among othere he found tlmt tuberculosis was the foe which swiftly depopulated monkey cages.
Epidemics afflict birds us they do men. The inference IS drawn that extinct races of animals and birds were wiped out by disease.
A practical result of Dr. Fox's search is thnt monkeys and other animals and birds may -now live for a far longer time Jn captivity thnn formerly.
And hi.s experiments on the epidemics among birds may give the real clew for the startling and sudden annihilation of.our. wild pigeons.
women.“Why, I thought you hnd a much
bigger place than this, John 1" exclaimed Mrs. Collins, looking in disapproval a t the little home,
John Gaskell looked uncomfortable and ills wife smiled inwardly. Henrietta had, .excelled herself on the din-
1 ner,j “Now take Mrs Collins out and ! show her the garden while I wash the ; slishes,” said Mrs. Gaskell.[ John, nothing loath, took Mrs. Col
lins oat into the moonlight. Looking
saw her husband with his arm around her. She brushed away a fugitive tear. She hnd to play the game for all It wss worth.
She left the couple discussing literature that evening, while she was busy In the kitchen. Somehow John Gaa- kell felt embarrassed. It was not like their meetings in town—of which Henrietta knew nothing.—-this open tete-a- tete, It robbed it of all excitement.
Cleanly W ild AnimalsWith every wild creature cleanliness
Is essential. Even tlie. despised rat spends a large proportion of its time in cleaning llseif. All the cats, from the lordly lion downward/ are mOBt particular about wnsliing and combing their fur. The rough tongue acts as a kind of sponge, and you will notice how u cat licks her paws and uses them to clean sucli parts of her body as are beyond the reuch of her tongue.
As a substitute for the powder so popular with feminine humanity, birds find dust invaluable. Tlie domestic fowl loves nothing better than « dust hath. Partridges, sparrows and larks roll and flutter in tlie dust until their feathers are full of it.
Isles Bird HavensAround tlie coast of Britain there
are several islands chiefly populated by marine birds. Tlie Fam es-have been the winter resort of the eider duck for generations ahd probably for many centuries. Tlie Skerries oil tlie Anglesey coast are tiie sanctuary of the arctic tern and tlie beautiful roseate tern.
Holyhead Island is visited occasionally by the whopper swan, the somewhat rare tufted duck and tlie red- brensted merganser, says the- Detroit News. I’nffin island, at. the entrance to tlie Mesial strait, is named after tlie birds that Inhabit it.
Golden IdeasI believe happiness conies out of do
ing tilings for other people, l.f sill riel) people knew tlie pleasure of giving or Helping ollicfs they would do so. It is the tiest medicine I have ever taken., When I die 1 will leave only a little for my children. I have never figured up wlmt I huvc given away in tlie last thirty years. I cannot say liow much I liuve left to give away, I know It is too much for me to keep nnd most of it will go.—Nathan Straus.
Odd Playing CardsA ptick of .Hindustani cards in the
possession of the Royai Asiatic society of England is supposed to he one thou' sand years old. It consists of eight suits of various colors. The kings nre mounted on elephants; the viziers, or those second in rank, are upon horses, tigers and bulls. Soma of. the cards have such'.curious, marks os a pineapple in a shallow cup and an object similar to a parasol without a handle, btsf with two broken riba stick'ng through the top.
ExceptionsEvelyn—Why worry? We can live
on love, dear. ;Vaughn—You may love me but thus
landlord and grocer don’t.
"Now, John, you must take Mrs. Collins to church,” said his wife the following morning. "I’ve got to cook the Sinner."
John Gaskell, a little disillusioned by Mrs. Collins at close quarters, set off with her to church. They sat through a wearying sermon and returned to find ,s dreadful odor assailing them, and Mi Gaskell almost In team
"Oh, John,” sobbed his wife, ”1 had an accident i« tlie kitchen And everything got b-bnrned.”
The hungry eouple sat down to some very badly burned roast mutton and scorched potatoes. Mrs, Collins said very little, but her eyes 'shot daggers at her hostess. She was particularly fond of good things to eat.
Then—though John didn’t notice It —the tablecloth was en old cotton one. and Mrs. Collins had a thick tumbler.
Mrs. Gaskei! brightened up after the meai. “Now, John, you must take Mrs. Collins for a w alk and. show her that elm tree that Washington sat under when lie was retreating before the British,” she said.
Sullenly John Gaskell offered his arm to Mrs. Collins Henrietta, peering through the window, saw that it didn't slip round Mrs. Coiiins' waist this time.
The two came back , rather early in the afternoon to tea. Both looked cross, an d , the bent had made the makeup nm in perceptible stains nil down Mrs. Collins' face.
After dinner Henrietta said: "Now you two go into the parlor and have a nice talk while I get tlie dishes done.” .
“Let me help you,” said John.Mrs. Collins took up a book.John accompanied Sirs. Collins to
the train next morning: Henriettahummed ns she washed the breakfast things nnd se| the pie in the oven. When John eapie back lie walked over to her and kissed her.
"Gee, I ’m glad she’s gone,” he said; "Turned up her nose at everything. I tell you, Etta, I’m happier with you over week-ends than having city folks down’ who don’t appreciate the country/*
Mrs. Gaskell smiled as she took the pies out of tiie oven. The (doom was off the rose.
Color of Cleopa'ra’s HairHistory furnishes no evidence that
Cleopatra had red hair. Ia fact, history gives us so cl.uo a t all as to the color of the hair of the Egyptian queen who "vamped” Mark Antony and Julius'Caesar The 3>rebabiUly is 'th a t she had light hair, .One of her ancestors, Ptolemy Phliadelphos, Is described by Theocritus -as having light hair and a fair complexion, I f should he. remembered that Cleopatra belonged to the Ptolemies, a family descended Irons Greek stock.
; Why Swallows Died,1 Several swqliows while In flight la the Alps dropped to.the ground in convulsions, spread out their wings and .■died. I t was found that a parasite ’spider.' Indigenous to \ Asia or Africa, hut not to Switzerland, was under the wing of each bird. The Insect had sucked the blood of the swallows sad parelyced their wings. .
A duel was fought in o forest on the outskirts of Berlin recently between two men more than forty years old who laid been lifelong frieinls. according to a Berlin letter In the Continental edition of tile London Mail.
They arc both bachelors, hut one, a merry squire, fell in love with u pretty girl of tweuty-one and was determined to marry her. Tlie other, a wealthy biisla-.-i.s mini, was certain tl.e pretty girl would make Ids friend unhappy. He noticed, tor instance, that when Ihe three of them were in restaurants the pretty girl returned tiie admiring glances of young men at other tallies,
Love is. blind and the squire saw nothing of lids. HI* friend, not understanding tiie danger of interfering in oilier people's love • affairs, hit on a plan !6 save him. lie sent the. pretty girl a love letter inviting Tier to meet him and signed i.t with a fictitious name. Two love letters had no effect, but the third' brought that naughty girl to tlie rendezvous, and lie ivrts there to sus her arrive. Ue went home chuckling and told her how he jutd tricked her and warned her to itfirre his friend alone.
But site, with tlmt touch of genius which deceives mere men every time, went straight off to her squire With tears in her eyes and the letters in her hand.
The result was the duel anil a bullet In tlie chest of the kind but thundering friend. Tlie Story litis, however, a highly moral eliding. Overcome with giief at file sight of ids friend bleeding on tlie ground, tlie squire agreed to linve nothing more to do with the pretty girl;
O b ed ie n ce to O rd ersB ro u g h t D u e R e w a rd
This story, told me by W'llltuni C. MeCloy, Who for many years was city editor and then niatingmg editor of Charles A. Dana's evening newspaper, is not printed here to encourage Insubordination in Journalistic local staffs, writes Girard in tlie Philadelphia Inquirer,
llut it concerns a Philadelphian who wns first a reporter here and then went to Mr. Dana's paper and afterward graduated into a novelist und playwright, Richard Harding Davis.
McGloy sent Davis to report an Important football game. Soon after tlie whistle blew, Arthur Brisbane, then tlie managing editor, went to Davis and asked him for his side-line badge. Brisbane had a friend who was anxious to get a cioseup of tho players.
"No, Mr. Brisbane," said Davis, "(ny city editor sent me here to report tills game, and before it is over something might happen, when I should need tills budge."
Brisbane urged that he would take the blame, but t’Dlek" insisted that he was the feliow assigned to the job and must stick to his badge.
Next day Brisbane went to McCloy and told lilin how one of ills reporters had defied a request of the managing editor. -
"A fellow like that." said the mighty Arthur, "should have ills salary raised, and I ask you to see that It is done Immediately." *
BATHING SUITS—ALL SIZES FortMen, Women and Children
From S8 c* to $1 6 . 5 0
A c c o rd in g <o S iz e
C o o k ’s ' B e e H iv e , l n c . ' * S K L H ? Kwwm-wmmrnwmwsrwmwwwwwwwmmvww
T H A N K Y O U !C A L L A G A I N !
: HANDY D IRECTOR V FOB OUR R EA DERS §
B U S I N E S S D I R E C T O R Y
Glendale fa b p s Dairy Preduots Company
MILX. AND CREAM Third and Railroad, Aabury Park
Telephone 1459
0 . C . P r i d h a m & B r e .
P r a c t i c a l P a i n t e r s P a p e r H a n g e r s
5? Emfcxry AvtauM O t t u Grove, W. 3.
A n d r e w T a v i o r
TIN AND SHEET METALAND SHEET WORKER
125 South Main St., Asbury Park Phone 2601 “
SERVICEJO H N N. BURTIS
FUNERIt DIRECTORPRIVATE CHAPEL
Ptaasfifi? 517 Bangs Ata. Asbury Parit
C h a r l e s 6 . f c r r t s G0NTRAGTIN6 PAINTERSpecial Attention, to Jobbing
82 Mt. Tabor Way, Oeean Breve
5. HOQaN. GlazierPlate, Window aad Windshield Glass.
- M ir ren Fer Sale Mirrors Re-BHyered
Telephone Wl-J 61 South Main Street, Asbury Park
EDMUND L. THOMPSON Exterior and Interior
PAINTING Eetimateo Furnished
26 Ocean Ave,, Ocean drove, N, J,
FRED E. FARRYFUHERSL BISECTOR and EiltftLMER
JIBE Sain Slreot, Atbatf Pni lists kttWiat been Qzy and Nightf relephi»M*ii kujmc? auewkeae
DAVID B. RElDYFfSSSM, IIMSfiS. MORTICIAN Pirlen: 322 Send Slreot, Attar? perk Telephone 2455 Meter Egnlpmtst
Perspiration- Persplrntinn mn.v raiuw trouble and discomfort now and then, hut if you did not perspire you would die. For reaching up through the various layers of the skin to the surface are enough sweat glands, if plneed end to end, to cover n distance of 80 mites. Through these glands Is continually passing off nil the liquid waste of the body which Is nof passed off by the kidneys. Tf the air is cool nnd dry enough 'to allow easy evaporation, no discomfort is caused. In hot weather 'the sweat-: stands in heads on the skin and has to be wiped off, . We drink more water In hot weather and svvynt a. l it Me. more because there is more moisture to dis* pose of, but even in the middle of winter persrdra Mon Is going on all over our bodies, nlmost as actively as In mid-smnmor. The only difference Is that it »evaporates easily in cold weather nnd we don’t notice it.
Tilton’s City DairyP u b v r l i t i Milk and Cream
BUTTERM ILK AND CERT IW BD ■ M ILK '
Dlatrftratar* Set ■ymkss-Oartm IW k u U 895 Seeosd AvaftM, Aabury P a rt
PboM 1877ECONOMY FU RN ITUR E HOUSE
H . Steinberg, Proprietor New and Second Hand Furniture
Store*, Bedding and Baby Carriage* PHONOGRAPHS
7 Main Street, Aabury Park, N. J; Phone Aabury 1045-W
HARRY J. BODINEFUN8IAL BIRECTBR m EMBALKfR
1007 gaiigi Ait,. Altar? Park “HOME FOR SERVleiS"
PrmtsAiitg fhiM |4
F O R A N Y H I N D o f I N S U R A N C E
Twin CiUas Jnas/an-c* Cuupany A. JL K. 3TXA8SBU&SBR, P n p .
Room S t l, Aabury Park Trust Co. Build ing. T e l 2U 6
ANDREW J. SUBLETHattreseee Benevatod and Carps4a
CleanedMattress Making and UphdMaring 692 Burlington Ave., Sradley Bead:.
Telephone Aabury SCSI
6 lVEfiEG0 6 fliTlirri OUR iiiiTffifi WilKSwher® our experts specialize r a re pairs , and installation ef ante ignition systems of all bands. Vtrh in and Icam of an r facilities osti experience; drive out and have nc more trouble with your eJectrio ap. paratus.
f . S. MORRIS, Automotive Electrician
City Is Idusical CenterTlie Moravians Bjiye given Hofhie-
licm, Pa..' a national reimtiiTlou ns a. musical center. Let! by Count Nikolas Zlnzendorf, they founded the city fdiortly before Christmas In 1741-—the season of the year suggested the name. Ilenjanfln Franklin wns strongly impressed with the fine music In their church, nnd toward the Close of the Nineteenth century a choir, under the direction of the organist, J. Frederick Wolle, became wldgl.v known, rendering for the first time in America Bach’s "St, John Passion" (In 1888), followed by "St. Matthew Passion,” the "Christmas Orations," the “Mass It) B Minor” and finally by aa annual Bach festival continuing three days.
Handkerchief’s HistoryThe handkerchief is one. of the re
finements of Roman, civilization. It came into general use in polite society during the reign o^HSSJY VIII of England. It is probably connected with ecclesiastical costumes arql may have been an outgrowth of the maniple, which was originally of line}) and worn oyer the fingers of tbe left band, and. used for tl,. same purpose, for which
>sed. Thethe handkerchief Is now pocket handkerchief was us fcd to a certain extent lu France in the TEIghteenth opritury. At this period hnndkerdfiefs were richly ornamented.. Women adopted the use of colored handkerchiefs as soon ns the taking of snuff bccatpe ap established custom.
U. S . L . O a l t o r y S« r v l c e h t a t l o n U. 8 a a d f l r s s t o n " S o l i d a n d P n e u m a t i c T r u c k T i r e a
2 8 S o u t h M uiri S i A s b u r y P a r k P h o n e 2 7 7 8
M e r g a u g e y ’s E x p r e s s a n d S to ra g e IAUTO VANS FOR LONG-DISTANCE MOVING I
Furniture Carefully Handled by Experienced Movers •Goods taken from your home here and delivered a t your home *
the same day !STAGES AND BUSES FOR ALL OCCASIONS |
90 South Main Street/, Ashury Park SPhono 619 |
BOARDING AND FURNISHED ROOMS
S t . E i m o H o t e lComer Main nd Nets York Avenues
Open a ll the year.B, R. SHUBERT
Phone Asbury Park 676
Main Avenue, Opposite FMtoClee Open AR th* Year.
Near Auditorium and Ranch Phene Aabury Park 1452 M. L B IORHN . . M
m
CENTRALIA82 Mt. Zion W ay • .
Furnished rooms, with or without housekeeping prly ilegr*,,/ Thb iq-• :/,' . board if desired.' Comfortable, homelike surroundings. Open a ll jwwr
MR and Mrs. P.: V A RLH t;
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J k A A A A ̂ Dews and Dotes ̂ ̂ ot the £oamy ̂^ ^
Freehold—Ellis Moreau lias gone to Madison to edit the Madison Eagle, during tlie absence ot Editor J. D, Cleary, in Europe.
Red Gunk—The Famous Authors’ Productions, Inc., have opened oiiiees a t 71 Broad street for the purpose of producing a series of detective story pictures.
Freehold—Tlie engagement is announced of Miss Alice D. Sickles, daughter of Mrs. Elizabeth B. Sieklcs, to William B. Patterson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Holmes Patterson.
Belford—Rev. John Willimas has resigned the pastorate of the local Methodist Church and, with his family, will remove to Philadelphia, where he will reenter mercantile trade.
Tennent—Instead of the usual services at Old Tennent last Sunday, the congregaton united with the Sunday school in a rally day service a t 10.30 o’clock in the Sunday school building.
Kbyport — The Second Baptist Church will hold a harvest home festival front October 20th to 24th. On Monday evening, the 20th, the missionaries will be in charge, Mrs. Estelle Young, chairman.
Spring Lake—After twelve years of service in the Spring- Lake postoflice, three as assistant postmaster, Frank P. Erbe, Jr., has resigned in order to take up the florist business left by his father who died on July 10.
Keyport—Lieutenant-Colonel Clyde Winterton, a former Keyporter, is one of five officers from this State selected to attend tlie Soldiers’ College a t Washington. Colonel Winterton will spend two months at tlie school.
Freehold—The fifth season of the Woman’s Club lecture course will open on Monday evening, a t 8 o'clock in the Reformed church. Prof. William Starr Myers will be the.lecturer for tho course, his topis being . “Current History.”
' Spring Lake—Sealed proposals for the improvement of Morris avenue from Third- to Fourth avenue will be received by the mayor and council until 8.00 p. m. of Monday, October 27, and a t that time- publicly opened and read.
Matawan—The Midway Hose Company is expecting a t any time now the delivery of the new $7,000 motor 'borough fire apparatus recently purchased by that organization. The machine is a triple combination com-
. prising chemical, hose and pump.Adelphia—Celery in this section
has, a severe, blight. The leaves are turning brown, and the hope of a crop in the nearby gardens is practically abandoned. County Demonstrator El- wood Douglass, has been consulted, and he reports that there is no cure.
Matawan—It is expected that the work of laying a new gas main through Main street will be begun within a short time. The work is to be done by the County Gas Company before the street is paved. The freeholders plan to pave the street in the early spring.
Smithburg—Two barns and a cow house on the Charles Higgins fnrm on the Smithburg road, were burned to the ground on a recent morning. The farm is known as the Stone House Farm, formerly owned by Mrs. Ach- sah Hendrickson. The loss -is estimated a t $7,000.
Spring Lake—Starting on October 11 the public library will be open every Saturday morning as well as the afternoon and .evening. The library gave this Saturday morning service all iast winter and will do so again this season for the benefit of both children
- and adult patrons.Keyport—The new ambulance-fia-
trol recently purchased by the members of the board of (ire wardens has arrived and is in service. I t is only partly equipped, and the members hope to have everything ready for inspection by thc borough, council on thc twenty'seventh of this month.
Little Silver—Mr. and Mrs, William Carhart, of Rumson Road, Little Silver, celebrated their fortieth wedding anniversary by giving a dinner, at Thomas’ Inn. The sixteen guests were members of the immediate family. A table lamp was presented to the couple by their children.
Keyport—A booster elub for the promotion of community interest and civic pride is now being formed in Keyport. A “Buy in Keyport” movement campaign will get under way in the near future. Members of the Booster Club will display on their places of business the club insjgnia.
S o m e S u g g e s t i o n s o nA d j u s t m e n t o f S k i r t s
- Many people still prefer ilielr skirls on a bolt sit the regulation' waist line. When this is done, writes a clothing sjKH'ialist hi the Colorado Agricultural eolleure, :i piece of belting about ,t\vo inches wide is prepared to tit the waist, and fastened with hooks ami eyes. The. skirt is pinned to this wit ii the upper edge of the skirt .extending slightly above the top of the belt, in finishing the skirt may be turned over the holt and faced down with Idas tape, nr the raw edge inay be turned under between tlie belt and the skirt with the folded edge extending slightly above the belt, and stitched by tan4 cldne.
Another .method of adjusting a skirt at the waist is to lit the belt at Hie hip line or below the regulation waist line, and then finish as above. skirts finished in this way look well with tuck-in blouses of the sports or tailored type, liut It Is generally necessary to pin the skirt firmly to the underclothing to hold it In position.
For wear with overblouses skirts should be attached to a long under- waist, or underbody. It Is not necessary to shape tills underbodj\; Instead take an easy hip measure, also the measure from the underarm to the hips, allowing for.a hem or casing for ribbon at the top. Cut a straight piece of material according to tills measure and join the ends. If tin* material is narrow It may be fully as easy to have n seam on each side, or a lengthwise strip of the material with one seam may be used, but this will be more apt to stretch as the weight of the skirt will then come on the crosswise or filling threads, which are not as strong. *
Finish the seams with a French seam and make a hem and casing at. the top and also shoulder straps. Turn under t ho lower edge and pin over the top edge of the skirt. Try on, then haste avid st-itch to position, overcast Ing the raw edge of the skirt underneath or facing with a thin straight strip rff tlie waist material.
TOWNSHIP CLERK KNOX WEDS MISS BEATKICE A. M. HERBERT
Wednesday evening Miss Beatrice A. M. Herbert and John W. Knox, both of Anbury Park, were married at the residence of the groom’s parents, Mr. -and Mrs. John F. Knox, 1404 Munroe avenue, by the Rev. J. J. Messier, pastor of the West Grove M. E. Church. The bride is the daughter of Benjamin 0. Herbert, 103G Asbury avenue. Her only attendant was her sister, Miss Edna Herbert. The groom’s best man was his brother, Thomas F. Knox. A collation followed the ceremony.
Mr. and Mrs. Knox are spending their honeymoon oh a motor trip through Pennsylvania-. They will occupy a new house a t 219 Eighth avenue, Bradley Park, on their return. Mr. Knox, who is associated with the New York Telephone-Company, is the clerk of Neptune township, which position he has filled for several years.
CRUSHED BETWEEN TROLLEY CARS, ARTHUR HOPE KILLED
Crushed betvVeen two trolley .cars a t the junction of Main street and Deal Lane bridge, Asbury. Park, A rthur H. Hope, of that.city and a summer resident of Ocean Grove, was instantly killed Wednesday evening. At the time of the accident Mr. Hope was on his way home from the Asbury Park Press, with which nufrer he was long associated, as advertising manager. The sad news quickly spread in the .Twin Cities, casting a gloom throughout the entire community, .as Mr. Hope was one of the best known and most highly estedmed citizens of. this section of the Monmouth shore. Funeral/services, private, will be held from his late home, 908 Sunset avenue tomorrow afternoon a t 2 o’clock, followed by interment in Glenwood cemetery, West Long Branch, by Uh dertaker. B urtis’
Mr. Hope married Miss Nellie, Garrison, an Ocean Grove girl, who survives him, together with a son, A rthur H. Hope, Jr. Mrs. Hope is the daughter of Mr.. arid Mrs. William Garrison, of Asbury Park, former residents of Ocean Grove. In the summer the family made their home in this place on Bpoadway. ’ '
Mr. Hope had served as assessor of Asbury' Park, carnival director, chief of the city fire department, besides occupying positions of tru st and responsibility in religious, civic and social organizations. His activities for the advancement of Asbury Park and all its varied interests were numerous and efficiently directed. I t is not too much to say that everybody who knew him—and he numbered his friends by the thousands—loved him for his sterling worth.
GROVE CITIZENS GUESTS AT BILLY MACDONALD’S PARTY
Joseph C. Jackson, Calvin H. Reed and J. E. Quinn, of Ocean Grove, were among the guests a t a beefsteak- sandwich party last Saturday afternoon and a t which William E. Macdonald, the former mayor of Bradley Beach, was the host; The party was assembled by Billy ju st before sundown near the Manasquan river drawbridge a t the foot of William J. Blair’s lawn. . ~"
The steak was .cooked on an army portable stove over a charcoal fire, and was served in appetizing style by Mr. Macdonald, who was exactly in his element as a dinner host. It is hoped to. make this uffiair an annual event.
VOTE FOR
Democratic Candidate for
Coiinfy ClerkLet the people have the search
ing1 business belonging to the County Clerk’s office go there, and not have i t go tofprivate title companies.(Paid for-by A. L. Mille
Committee.)Campaign
Long Branch—A new bus schedule between Red Bank and Long Branch has been inaugurated by the Public Transit Company, Inc., and the In- terurban Bus Line, Inc. -Starting a t 6.15 a. m., a t Red Bank and Long Branch, busses are running in both directions a t fifteen minute intervals until 9 a., m., when a half hour schedule will be in effect until 3 p.. m., and a half hour service between th a t time and midnight.
H O W ’S THIS?t; ' 'r BAIL'S CATARRH MEDICINE willM do what we claim for it—rid your system & of Catarrh or Deafness caused by Y Catarrh. •- '
• HAUL’S CATAIUtH MEDICINE con- V fllsts of an Ointment - which Quickly £ Believes the catarrhal lnflammation, and
. ?tho Internal Medicine, a. Tonic, which facta through the, Blood on the Mucous
& /Surfaces, thus restoring normal condi-Viift Sold hy druggists fop over 40 Years. t .v \‘F.: J .' Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio.
L a s t o f G r e a t R u le r sThe title of great mogul was- given
ttye chiefs of tho Mogul umpire, Lwnd- ed In Hindustan ih A. D., hv Buber, a (lesi-i-iniiU’.i iff Tamerlane, the famous Mongol conqueror.
For more than two centuries the Mongol emperors ruled India and lived in great magnificence at Delhi, which continued to be their capital until the reign of A It ha r (1 55,V l (105), when it waft transferred to Agra, says the Detroit News. They were finally conquered by the English and in l.flrtC, Shall AllIim, the lust person to whom the title of “great mogul” rightly belonged, having died, the Mogul empire ceased to exist..
The religion of the Moguls was Mohammedan,- but, aiihougir Introduced b.v them into India, it was never accepted by .the native Hindus.’
Popular Sheet Music Free.“The Bubble Song,” a hit in “The
Dream Girl,” now playing a t the Ambassador Theatre, New York, will appear in next Sunday’s issue of The New York World, Magazine Section, music and words complete, by special permission from Harms, Inc. Articles of interest, cross-word , puzzle pages, something for every member of the family every week with The Sunday World.—42
HAVE TOO HEADACHE?Do your eyes burn o r itch ? Do they feel tired or Btrained ? If so, havo. yonr eyes exam
ined. Your glasses may need a change.
STILES & CO.Philadelphia Eye Specialists
Every Friday—Honrs 10 to 4.80 224 Main S t , ASBURY PARK
T o a n d I n c lu d in g
, O c t .
BARGAINS IN APPAREL AND HOME FURNISHINGS ANTICIPATED THROUGH THE SEASON ARE RELEASED IN THIS WEEK OF UNDERPRICED SELLING.
For months the energies of this entire institution have centered in presenting for this occasion a group of sales that would distinguish if as “ the greatest savings opportunity of the year.” You will find it decidedly worth while to shop* during Opening! Week—not once, but often, for every day will offer many new a ttractions. • • "
SEND FOR A BOOKLET OF OPENING SALES
L I V I N G M O D E L S D I S P L A Y
N E W F A L L F A S H I O N S■ On Saturday charming professional models will display the latest crea
tions of French and American designers for Fall and Winter wear.
Fashion Salon—Second Floor
P dk Now Jersey
T h e t h i n l i i n g h o u s e w i f e is learning th ereason fo r th e great an d grow ing popu larity o f KIRKMAN’S SOAP CHIPS— th e “P erfect C hips fo r EVERY purpose.” < .
E n e r g e t i c , f l a k y U t i l e c h i p s .f- safe for thefinest o f fabrics, yet so active th a t they tjuickly w ash y o u r heaviest woolens. F or general house*
^ c lean in g , th e r ic h , lasting suds m ake y o u r - ’hardest tasks easier.. A nd, w ith KIRKMAN’S
SOAP CHIPS, your dishes glisten w ith a new b rilliance in h a lf th e tim e!
L i n e K i r k m a n ’s S o a p , these m arvelous littlechips are guaran teed FREE from SILICATE OF SODA, w hich m eans absolute safety to hands an d fabrics alike.