8
— 18 pTn'iro l i i i i i i ® i OTAITT? TTMIK! ^ i ll/I I i Business Is Gtood. The Wise Cheek Your Printing SuppUe*. If , • . Yon Need Anything' Tho Times Stands Ready To Give You Service ESTABLISHES CT 18J*’AS'T M OCEAS CBOTB RECORD OCEAN GROVE. NEW JERSEY, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 15. 1933 Four G ents MANY NEPTUNITES AT COLLEGE. 'MRS. LAY’S DAISIES WIN PRIZE Graduates of Local High School Con- Gaiii Second l*lace in Women’s Club tinue Studies. &&*}' Division. Optimistic Report Hails Recent Services as Hav- ing the Largest Continual Attendance Ever % Recorded— Expresses Gratitude for Spiritual and Financial Success of Various Daily Meet- : .ings and Musical Programs Rev. Charles 'M the following survey activities for the .Times: The. 1988 Benson at Ocean Grove . began oh Sunday, June 11th “and closed oh . Sunday, September 4th, ■when, despite the steady raih more than 2,000 persons joined in the un- broken annual “march around Jeru- salem." The unusually, timely and Christ-exalting sermons by outstand- V. ing ministers of various denomina- tions, super-excellent music by the 1 —- Tmvi duriner Among the Neptune high school At the twelfth annual Elbeton graduates who have entered colleges Hdrticidtural Society.' flower show, during the past two weeks are Wil- held: in the Asbury Park Conventipn liam Schwartz, West Virginia Wes- Hall; last week, Mrs. Albert N. Lay, leyanj Dorothy , Wood, Miami- Uni- .137 Broadway, was the winner of the versity, Ohio; William Ammann-and second prize in section 203, table ~ " " *' a ----- ters of the gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ seeking a heart warming and soul stirring message concerning gos- pel advancement.; On ^Saturday, August 26th, a t 7.30 4 /. m. and daily thereafter up to and including Sunday, September 2nd at 10.30 a. m. and 3 p; m; on September 2nd, Bishop Arthur J. Moore of tho Methodist Episcopal Church South, and one of America’s most efficient I evangelists, delivered sermons that for passionate evangelism, gospel elb-, quence, sermonic power in warning * the ' - ** bVI(, Mtvwnv. -------------------------- , Milo Gibbons, Guilford; Wilma Craw,- in: the yard of J _ ford,. Tennessee Wesleyan; Louise had been turned over by her-to Miss Kelcec, Barnard; Hepsije McKenzie, Edith Ilagermah, chairman of the Virginia State College for Negroes; decorations committee of the Ocean Frank Hurst, Wofford, S, C., and 'Grove Women's Club, who entered Chester. Steele, Coast Guard. School them in the show under her name, at' New London, Conn. All of these !;The division of the exhibition under who have been mentioned are enter- which Mrs. Lay’s flowers were enter- ing^the,stated colleges as Freshmen. ed'Mvas that entitled, Women’s and Among those who are returning to Garden clubs. First prize was award colleges are Rosalie'Voight, New Jer- ed.td-Mrs. Robert Mason, of-Oakhurs sey; College for Women; Robert Cre-, while Mrs. E. E. Bemheinier, of Deal, lin, University of Pennsylvania; Kat'ic was ^lie recipient of third prize. Miss Vanderhoof, / Connecticut Women's Hagerman also entered exhibits in the College;.Charles Wilgiis, Rutgers Uni- still-life section, for which no nien- yersity; Merle Shubert, University of tion was received. TOWNSHIP SCHOOLS OPENED i MONDAY WITH 2323 PUPILS Record Gain of 148 Over First Day Last Year. Expect Greater Increase by End of Month. High School Will Carry On With One Less Teacher— The Faculties of All Schools, With Changes, Are Announced Maine: Our best wishes go with all of them! '. ~ PREACHER URGES LOVE FOR CHURCH WAS I During the recent camp. meeting services, Mrs. - Lay donated daisies to the Auditorium ushers. HOTEL OFFKERS ARE RE-ELECTED xiona, oupci-tAw.— ------- . _ best trained choir we have had during ; theyears,. and of which Mr. Walter Eddowes was director, with Clarence Kohlmann as organist and Mrs. Wal- r ter Eddowes at the. piano, and a trio ,of high' class cometisls; the spiritual - atmosphere created by various daily services for children, Mrs. A. H. Leo,' p leader, Young People's Meeting, Rev. •’ George; G.'Dilworth, leader , in’, July, ' and Rev. Robert C. Wells, leader in August; Holiness Seekers, Rev. Dor- sey M. Miller, leader in July, Rev. . Alfred' Wagg,- leader in-. August; North End Beach Meetings; George , :C.'Miller, leader; South End,';Rev. . Alfred Wagg, leader; Central, Bleeck- er Stirling, leader; Twilight, Blanche Stoney Johnson, leader in July, Rev. : , S. B. Goff, Jr., leader .in August; In7 : temediate Young People’s and Adult . Bible Schools, taught by Mrs. A. H. Leo, John Yeo and Dr. F. A; DeMarisJ with additional gatherings for family . worship at 7 a. m., Rev. John Goor- 'ley, leader; arid for Inspiration at 3.30 p. : m> conducted by Rev Elias B. Baker— all these,, with the gener- ous religious and financial responses of the largest continual gatherings of worshippers we have had, and the im- pression made by the splendidly or- ' ganized band of ushers with William aided; in sin, Ua n ^ Vtocdribing t^heWareWards ASSOCIATION PRESIDENT of righteousness as declared in SPEAKER SUNDAY MORNING God's Word ~ nu^;r,4-». iieurum uui ... thirty years, and in response to which . stitution sinners were saved at the altar and other parts of the building and Christ- ' — —— nftnan. .1 sinhers^werfe saved at the altar and Grove Pays.Floral Tribute to him. PRESIDENT. WILL E. BUNN PRAISES ACTIVE MEMBERSHIP National Association. Proposed Hotel Code and Broadway Gates. Show Little Concern over . Present Situa- . tion Of Hotel Code. .- vices and in, the after meetings aisnop meeting. AbSUL'iUHUll, yi,cuv<twM _ Moore was assisted, by Homer W. morning service in the Auditorium Rodeheaver, who is’so well known for last Sunday. Dr. Boswell, who has his acceptably to such occasions, been a member of the Philadelphia n„ r.lnainir nicrht when every j Conference for fifty-thrPe years, read .: > awuixvw _ ------. _ E. - Thomson as chairman, producing the best camp meeting re- sults of any held heretofore at even this world renowned Christian sea- shore resort. , The camp meeting opened on Fri- day, August 25th at 7.30 p. ni. with the administration of the Lord’s Supper to 2,600 communicants, among 'Whom at one table gathered; 325 ministers with their wives or other loved ones. > Beginning on Saturday, August 26th . and-continuing up to. and in - cluding Saturday, September 1st, Dr. ' E. Stanley Jones, the most sought '■for religious teacher, delivered ad- : dresses at 10.30 a, m., and in his Own analytical, suggestive, teaching spirit- ual style stirred ministers and lay- men as he presented his ideas of Christ's economic, racial and foreign missionary program for His King- dom. This man of God conducted' ' two afternoon1round table hours for ministers only at which the Taber- nacle was filled with earnest minis- the scripture from the second-chap- I1UU1IMU. ,'Va.v .. .. _____ _ Christian life by standing and asking for an interest in our players; Then followed a consecration service which for numbers and spirit1 cannot be' In - scribed, In it ministers, official meh, various departmental workers, under- privileged professing Christians and others publicly renewed their cove- nants. to God. After prayers for them,-duringthe singing of the hymn “When we all get to Heaven; what a gathering that will, be,” the multi- tude waved their handkerchiefs and shouted for joy; and a scene remind- ing one of the Day of Pentecost, be- cause of the demonstration, was wit- vtuoc yx (lllC -------v_„T -rr, the Lord loveth tho gates of Zion more than all the tabernacles round-, about.” Adapting the phrase to mod- ern language, Dr. Boswell quoted, “The Lord loves the' church rather than the buildings thereabouts.” 'The preacher voiced his regret that there are so many diversions to,, at- tract people away from church and criticised those churches which have done away, with • their • evening ser- vices.: To. succeed, he said,, a church must be made up of members who will attend and participate in its ac- tivities. Money is actively connected with the church, he admitted, but there must be a love for. the place « i J?._ J i. nessed, to the flig h t^ o f ttiose in- be donated for its tensely interested in __ religion today. As the electric flag was waved, the great choir arose and sang the “Hallelujah Chorus” and theh the audience turned to see the electric Cross and ; Crown- glowing; and the Doxology was sung as it has never been heard before in our Audi- torium. When the Benediction was prohounced the people with unanimity declared '“never hjive we observed such a closing during the' past years.” In finances the offerings’ of the people as given on Dollar Day. amounted to $900; on Thank Offering Day $1,800; and on Camp Meeting Sunday, $2,300., will enable the Asso- ciation with their other resources to close another year with all obliga- tions met. cause. He gave three reasons why one should love the church. First, he out- lined, one should love the church for what it means to the children. Every child has a right to a. home, educa- tion and. ^ pw.*edge .(^r^Jesus _®jrist, j b ^ rd in ^ tVeiV employees. AcMVding continued President Boswell. Parents I ^ g unnj Ocean Grove- hotel owners ST. PAUL’S DAY NEXT SUNDAY Dr. Fox Will Lead Services at . Auditorium. ... J ,j~v On the coming Sunday, September -17, St-Paul’s church will begin its • autumn schedule of services by hold-’ PLAN TO REOPEN SEACOAST Kelly Suggests Preferred Stock Sub- scription Scheme. A plan for the reopening of the Seacoast Trust Company,..' Asbury jiu- . Park, has been prepared. by Colonel the | William H. Kelly, commissioner ..of 1 ’ ’ ’--- --- inotirflMdfl -nnH will be represjentative shore men. The plan would require each depositor to au- thorize the bank to use the entire balance of - his credit in purchasing preferred stock at a par value of $10 per share. The committee consists of Nelson ui u .5 u..—.., ______ J. Schoen, Harry R. Ingalls, Saviero "vices in the Auditorium ha sproved a : Peluso, Edward T. Mitchell, George " - in ti,. W. Pittenger, and Rt; Rev. John J. '**-•' " tt-'- O -. . Reelection of officers was the high- light ol! the September meeting of the Ocean Grove Hotel Association, .held in Association Hall on Tuesday night. All officers and members of the execu- tive committee were proposed for re- election by the nominating committee and were reeinstated without opposi- tion. They are , President, Will E- Bunn; first vice president, Edward J. Borton; second vice president, W. L. ■Hyka; secretary, Frederick W. Roh- land; treasurer, Frank G. Mount. The executive committee consists of Mrs. •G. F. Drake, Charles Herman, Mrs. I. ;A. Shaw, Mrs. K. I. Duncan-Zelley, May Evemgam, Mrs. S. B. Cole, Mrs. F. M. L’Hommedieu, Mrs. A. L. New- man aid Mrs. Mary W. N. Wright. The nominating committee was com- prised j of " Dr. Warren’- L. Wallace, chairman;-Mrs. -A. B. Harmon, Mrs E. A. Weeks and Miss A. -M. Van Skite.. - •; A report .by treasurer Mount was approved and filed and president Bunn praised the membership co.mmittee for the work it has done in securing Ocean Grovers in the State associa- tion. Bunn also read those parts of the proposed hotel code which define a hotel and enumerate the maximum hours- and minimum wage restrict - ions. The proposed code also under- takes to restrict the allowance which hotel proprietors may charge for A total of 2,323 pupils, 148 more than :last year, registered at the Nep- j tune township schools on opening day 1 last Monday. At the high school, operating with, one less teacher,, 525 were reported as against 469 in 1932. The Ridge. Avenue school was the only one in the township at which, a decrease in enrollment was reported. It is expected that by the end of Sep- tember all of the figures will show, a' decided gain over the present number. Statistics as recorded at the various' schools and compared with the open- ing day of 1932 are as follows: School 1932 1933 High School --— — ----- - 4G9 525 Bradldy Park : ------ 520 549 Ocean Grove 227 .253 Ridge Avenue — --------- 507 504 Summerfield ------- 187 214 Whitesville .......... ----- 265 '278 Total ---------'— —i l —2,175 2,323 Onsville J. Moulton is principal of the high school with Katherine A. Chevalier as secretary. The special teachers include: E. Elizabeth Adams physical education; Margaret R. Mar- shall, art; Jessie N. Van Brederode, music; Ben S: Dillenbeck, boys’ physi- cal education; Percy.Frake, manual traning; Marjorie G. Hussey, do m estic. science; Helen Parkinson, foods; Howard Peterson, manual training; Kathleen M. Strassburger. home economics; Gertrude Gibbons, librarian. The teachers in the Neptune high school include: Harry A. Titcomb, principal with Mary F. Gracey, sec- retary; William Ballentine, Elsie Bul- Speneer Woolley. Other teachers re- turning to their’ former classes in- clude Dorothy M. Bone, Marion P. Cox, Dorothy M. Drew, Hazel E. Gas- ' kill, Eleanor C. Harris, Helen L. Har- ris, Myrtle A. Jackson, Gertrude M. Meeker, Iris L. Messick, Mary E. Shafto, Eleanor T. Watson. In' the Ocean Grove £rade school Muriel Vetter is the only new teacher, added to the former staff including: John Cowan, principal; Jean V." C. Gillan, Lillian S. Gordon, Lillian T. Kinney, Isabelle H. Lowerce, Eliza- beth W. Plummer, Mary B. Watson and Helen Wilgus. At the Ridge Avenue school, there will be no changes in tho faculty with Miss Anita Moore, principal and Marjorie Sofield, secretary. The staff includes. D. La Barre Asbury, E. Dolores dc Garcia, Mary S. Dempsey, Ruth Du Bois, Margaret A. Duckers, Anabele E. Eaton, F. Celeste Foster, Thelma Hicks, Edith T.. McDowell, Farilla E. McKinnon, Annabelle Mit- \> ehell, F: Mildred Moore, Julia Neil,' Leila ;B. Pratt, E. Victoria Rogers, .;. Grace H. Sutphin, Bessie O. William- son, Bernice L. Withers, Mary. J. H.- .- Worde. The staff at Summerfield with Guy E. Quinn as principal is unchanged with a single additional teacher, Miss Elizabeth Gilbert, The others are: Joan S. Dangler, Harry C. Mauch, Jean M. Shaw, Carolyn E. Tilton and Sarah A. Wilson. At Whitesville, three hew teachers have been added. Carl Bair, Jr., Reba , Bradway find Dorothy Mailer. The other teachers returning there are: Beulah Hall, secretary to the princi- pal; Marion E. Barnett, Estella W. man, Marion S. Cleaver, Joseph Cush-1 'A' man, Thomas N. Davidson, H. Mar- I Fleckc'fpir M Dorothy . E. gery Felter, Howard W. Flack, Ern-1 est R. Holmes, Leslie' V. Jefferis, J. Edward.Little, Morris M. L ong, Flor- ence E. McConnell, - Emily1 A. Rice; Kenneth G. Russell, Anna K. Scholl, Huberda V. Wall and William P, Woolley. In addition to a hew secretary -at Bradley -Park school, Miss. Beulah Sturm, Raymond Warwick is the principal with three new teachers, George Placek, Vesta .Wnltgra and Shutinsky, Eugenia B. Snedeker, Jean M. Turner and Gertrude Van Hise. . S Other employees in the Neptune school system returning to their for- mer duties are: Alfred P. Todd, dis- trict clerk, Edna H. Brand, secretary to the clerk; Anna S. Bier, nurse;. Ella M. Borden, cafeteria; Janet V. Bouse,' attendance officer; Samuel.: Edelson. M. D., physician, Clifford I. Jones, dentist and Walter Smith, bus khiver. .'UUVUIlllX abubumv ____ ■ing the annual St. Paulis Day" in the ) vvimuin o . . ilClljr , VW4iui..uo.v„ _ Auditorium, with services at 11 a. m. banking and insurance, and will bi and 7.30 p. m. Dr. Fox,'pastor, will ! submitted to depositors and stock preach at both services. In the morn-1 holders through a, committee of six ing, his subject will be, “The Search ' ' for Reality/’ while in the evening he ; , will speak on “The Sower.” . '• ’ The combined junior and senior ■choirs will furnish the music, at these . services under the direction of Ray- .mond 'B artlett. The annual .resumjp- •tion of the autumn schedule with ser- *- 1 : l’-> and the State can furnish the first two but only an active church, with Sunday school for children,: can sup- ply the third. Other reasons for one’s loving the church,'ventured Dr. Bos- well, are the significance of its mean- ing to seekers after Christ and those who have been converted.” He related the story of his con- version. At the age of sixteen, he said, he was an employee in a brass foundry.- ■ A . chum of his attended a revival .meeting ahd was converted. For the next three nights and days, he (Boswell) lived in a state of un- certainty and: indecision. Finally, he attended the revival meetings. and was convertefd. Two nights later,, he joined the Methodist church at Whar- ton and 18th streets, Philadelphhia, and saw his mother: converted the same night. “I have been an ‘Amen’ proicher. ever,f since. Hallelujah with the thought of it.” • The points that have been outlined, plus the practical illustrative story, reveal what the church meant to a seeker after God and then a convert- ed man. “The church of God is the greatest institution in all the world,” stated Dr. Boswell. When 'a- person admits that he is uncertain and'.weary of the life he is living, one would not in vmw uuw..,— ........ popular and successful feature in the • program at St. Paul’s. •AUGUST RELIEF SHOWS DROP . NRA ahd Summer Developments Furnish Jobs. ; ; Progress' in reemployment condi- tions in the State were reflected dur-' ing the first half of August by with- ; drawals of 9,482 persons from lipts of the State Emergency Relief Adminis- tration. Reports from 897 munici-. ' palities show that at mid-August 393,- = 950; persons were, aided as against |403;432 the latter naif of July. feiViTwo - factors operate during the sUmmcr to cut the relief tabulations. :-.One was the national recovery :pro- ; gram and tho. other the opportunity Yfor seasonal summer emjiloyment: at , recreational I’resorta and- on farms, : -With-September here the latter factor .’’wiUUdisappear considerably ah'd. it Is ' possible t h a t ‘Borne . of the ; summer vworiers may again have tp apply for help. . . , , , Colonel -Stull Back at. Bayhcadj Rev. G'eorgo C. Stulli will; Vesumo Jiia,pastorate at Bay Head church on- Sunday after a summer’s - recupera- ^tioh. During his absence,the.duties of : minister at that church wpre fulfilled S'— ' rtniin'n : dvnVG: O’Hara. According to Kelly, the Sea- coast bank, Which was the first in this district to close J n , 1931, should be able to open witli nearly $l,00O,(K)0 of sound assets. His plan has been used in ^other reorganized banks in this vicinity. ' ■ ' _____ “Heroes For Sale” at Strand. “Heroes For Sale,” a story of tho tragic situation' in which soldiers re- turning from the war, found them- selves in the current picture .at the Strand Theatre. Richard’ Barthel- mess, who has not beeh seen ih'^hese parts on the screen recently, is .starred in this productidn.- Next Monday, and Tuesday Loretta Young will appear in , “She Had to Say Yes.”, “Mama Loves Papa,” with. Charles Ruggles and. Mary Boland. . Wednesday - pnd Thursday, and'"M ary Stevensj ,M. D.,” starring Kay-Francis; Friday and Saturday, will close the'week. ; Women’s Club to Hold Benefit Show. V-.The Ocean Grove.'. Women’s Club annual benefit show at the :Strand refer him to a moving picture or an i ----- automobile ride, said the preacher.1*''’0 faith and confidence which those Rather he would be advised to visit! present ■_had in his ability to direct -- -i i. „..,i i-™.. tha \ the affairs of the association;;. -Tn purchased -at any:'of the following placed:;;; Cliatfield’s stationery .store, Mn a - /IMtnr r tfYrf*‘ . can rest easy on the code restrictions as far as this season.is concerned. President Bunn pointed out that the term “hotel” as defined by the new code is “any place ,in the .United States offering for sale accommoda- tions arid food, or sleeping accommo- dations Hvithout food,' either- trans - iently or. for a stated period.” There fore any, place here selling board and room, regardless of the number of rooms, ia . a hotel within the mean- ing of the code. The value of united action through membership in the Ocean Grove Hotel Association should be apparent to every local house en- gagd in the business, he said. Upon the recommendation of the president nnd motion by Charles Her- man, a sum of $50 was'contributed to the national association as a token of appreciation- for ;the work, that unit-is doing in the interest of all the hotels of the United States. The sec- retary was authorized to correspond with the .Ocean Grove Camp 'Meeting Association and convey official thanks for the use of, the Association Hall. It was reported that .plans for a sign over the'Broadway entrance are being discussed. ' : ;; Before,,. adjournment, • '•: President Bunn expressed his appreciation of TOWNSHIP PAYS COUNTY $10,000 a church and hear the pastor tell “that sweet story of old.’’, . President Boswell urged the mem- bers of Bis' congregation to; return to their respective churches .with a dif- ferent attitude toward that institution. Ho exhorted all to become active participants in all of the,,.church’s various functions. Ho closed with the statement, “May ond of-.the out - comes of Ocean Grove be-' *1 have learned to, love my church more and more.' Robert C. Wells led the opening prayer at the service and-the entire congregation recited the -•ApoStlcs’ Creed. The choir sang “Speak to My Heart.” ; President Bobwell ^revealed that one who -prefers to, call himself “a lover of 1 Oceart Grovti” ‘-donated the flowers that were placed in front of the pulpit and dedicated them to Dr. Boswell. BUSINESS MEN HOLD MEETING DELINQUENT TAX sale 1931 COMING SOON FOR Discuss NRA and- Plan for Improve- ments. „ A meeting of Ocean Grove business men to discuss plans for improve- ment of local conditions was held in WashingtonrStokes firehouse Tues- day evening. Attorney Haydn Proc-. tor was chosen permanent chairman. No. definite action was taken other' than the passage of a resolution au- thorizing the chairman to appoint a committee of five to draw up plans to be reported back at a future meet- ing. " . ‘ ' • - The discussion centered around the NR A. and a series of complaints col- lected during the summer by Col. G. C. Stull, publicity director of Nop- ■ tune township. Those regarding : a few “wild parties” had been -taken care of by the police. Regarding the Copy of Board: of Freeholders Resolu- tion Received by Committee and Substantially Acknowledged. Com- plaiht Against Joe Shure’s Junk Yard. Neptune township this week paid $10,000 on taxes due the county for 1932-33.. A copy of the resolution passed recently b y . the Board . ’of Chosen Freeholders regarding delin- quent taxes was received by Clerk John Knox and read at the meeting of the township comniittee_ Tuesday j NRA,_ George C^Pridham" proprietor annual report, he hailed the member ship of; the Ocean- Grove Hotel Asso ciation as 'one of the most active and loyal in the country. - : HEALTH RECORD FOR AUGUST Stanley Applegate Health Officer Makes Report. Birthday Party.;1 - : . Mr. and iMrs. Charles C. Beechell, who are • spending the': summer at 137 Abbott:avenue, recentlyi gave'a birth- Thfeatee,” o i "the boardwalk: at tho day party .'in honor o l Helen McMunn, North End, will he hold during tho of Jersey City. The following guests entire week of Sopfcember 25. Al- were -present: Bnbo.;< Bpwner, of though the women’s tlqb will sell* no Brooklyn;. Margaret ■ Sweeney, Doro- ticlcotB-at the,theatre,.they.may b e ...................... * For the first time since December, 1929,. arid, for. the second time in the past twelve years, tho month of Aug- ust did not have' any resident com- municable disease reported to Nep- tune Health Department,. according to ealth;,: Officer Stariley Applegate. Six cases Wefe reported that were non-residents of Neptune. They were two caaes .nf whooping cough; ,one case of tuberculosis; two cases of in- fantile'paralysis; one case of Broncho pneumonia.*'; Two cases in resident and four; cases ,nim-resident of dog bites wore reported. . The Diphtheria Prevention Cam- paign will again be/ offered to the people ofj-Neptune-township in;c.o- operatiph'?with the; Noptmie township Board (rfiEducationJri;;.^',1 .. / i';1 .111 ' . - ' "•:-•£V:' EYES uj. w te w<>>ii»»r , -------- ----- nis.1?t- Like.most of the other muni-| of the Occan View hotel, did riot see cipilaties, this township is delinquent . how the rrvle wmiM hrinci re ief in its payments to the county and the committee instr6cted, the clerk to ac- knowledge the resolution and advise that payments' would be made as rapidly as possible.' .; ( . \ . In the. meantime, Collector Walter Gravatt is preparing a list of delin- quent properties for the year 1931 in Ocean Grove, and Neptune which will be sold for taxes within the next few weeks. Harry Steinberg, 47 South Main street, appeared before the commit- tee to complain, that, he was charged with three merchantile licenses. He was advised .that if he confined his retail selling to 47 South Main street and used his other, two stores for storage purposes only he would be ['charged for only one license. This he consented to do. o-.i; Joseph Shure's auto bono yard was again the subject of complaint when Mamie Watson, 226 Fisher avenue, appeared before the committee and 3 il—* 1 b.iFPdmH Rfivprn how the code Would bring relief to Ocean Grove hotels who made no :,-V. money this year and he did not see how they could make any money in ' . competition w ith certain parties who . offered rooms at ruinous rateB. It was charged that some, few offered. rates tis low as fifty cents a night. . : • Paul J.1 Strassburger proposed a y-- :; unifoi-m opening of stores at 8 a. m. The chairman was authorized to ap- point a Committee of .two to arrange f • such a mutual opening hour. Leads World in Telephone Density. ; The United , States has, 19,690,187; telephones, or fiifty-six per cent of the world’s total, according to a survey by the American Telephone and Tele- graph Company. _ • , ;, The nation has 15.8 telephones for',': . ^ i n n '’ 1 ; : j The complaint was turned over to the police ■■ ;,department for investigation. School scrip turned into tho collect- or’s office during-August in payment of taxes amounting to $5,552 was ordered credited to the school dis- trict in payment of 1932 monies due. - Stamps for .Collectors,; U. S^.and Foreign. Albuihs and-Supplies. Hill s, 700 Mattison, Asbhry Pork.—28 Adv. tries with more than 100,000 tele- ,; phones may be reached by phone'.;U? from this country.'s Nineteen acean liners have radio-telephone service; — — -—tmm i - : Stokes Firemen Parade' a t' Coney.- ! A group; of local firemen, with the . aid of the Stoke3 tonipany emer- gency truck, represented Ocean' Grove ‘ ^in, the'Firemen’s Mardi Gras dt Cone; ’ ........................................Island. Tuesday night. After.parad ' Jacob Beutell, VPlumb'ihg and Heat- ing *t! Coney, tho group took' in; th ing.; 98%' Embury avenue.Talv 8468.’ Bights;.'ar,.d returned to Ocean Grov —A d v . ' : t f - y V- early ^/Wednesday • morning. • Thoao-' Albert E^RobiMon,Jobbing carpcn»

18 pTn'iro liiiiii® iOTAITT? TTMIK! ^ i Wise · — 18 pTn'iro liiiiii® iOTAITT? TTMIK! ^ i l l / I I i Business Is Gtood. The Wise Cheek Your Printing SuppUe*. If , •

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

— 18 pTn'iro l i i i i i i ® iOTAITT? T T M IK ! ^ i■ ■ l l / I I i Business Is Gtood. The WiseCheek Your Printing SuppUe*. I f , • . Yon Need Anything' Tho Times Stands Ready To Give You Service E S T A B L I S H E S C T 18 J * ’A S ' T M O C E A S C B O T B R E C O R D

O C E A N G R O V E . N E W JE R S E Y , FRID AY, S E P T E M B E R 15. 1933Fo u r Gents

MANY NEPTUNITES AT COLLEGE. 'MRS. LAY’S DAISIES WIN PRIZE

Graduates of Local High School Con- Gaiii Second l*lace in Women’s Club tinue Studies. &&*}' Division.

Optimistic Report Hails Recent Services as Hav­ing the Largest Continual Attendance Ever

% Recorded—Expresses Gratitude for Spiritual and Financial Success of Various Daily Meet-

: .ings and Musical Programs

Rev. Charles ' M

th e following survey activities fo r the .Times:

• T he. 1988 Benson a t Ocean Grove . began oh Sunday, June 11th “and

closed oh . Sunday, September 4th, ■when, despite the steady ra ih more than 2,000 persons joined in the un­broken annual “march around Jeru­salem." The unusually, tim ely and Christ-exalting sermons by outstand-

V . in g ministers of various denomina­tions, super-excellent music by the 1 —- Tmvi duriner

Among the Neptune high school A t the twelfth annual Elbeton graduates who have entered colleges Hdrticidtural Society.' flower show, during the past two weeks are Wil- held: in the Asbury Park Conventipn liam Schwartz, West Virginia Wes- Hall; last week, Mrs. Albert N. Lay, leyanj Dorothy , Wood, Miami- Uni- .137 Broadway, was the winner of the versity, Ohio; William Ammann-and second prize in section 203, table ~ ‘ " " * ' a -----

ters of the gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ seeking a heart warming and soul stirring message concerning gos­pel advancement.;

On Saturday, August 26th, a t 7.30 4/. m. and daily thereafter up to and including Sunday, September 2nd a t 10.30 a. m. and 3 p; m; on September 2nd, Bishop Arthur J. Moore o f tho Methodist Episcopal Church South, and one of America’s most efficient I evangelists, delivered sermons th a t for passionate evangelism, gospel e lb -, quence, sermonic power in warning

* ’ the ' - **

b V I ( , M t v w n v . -------------------------- ,Milo Gibbons, Guilford; Wilma Craw,- in: the yard of J _ford ,. Tennessee Wesleyan; Louise had been turned over by her-to Miss Kelcec, Barnard; Hepsije McKenzie, Edith Ilagermah, chairman of the Virginia State College for Negroes; decorations committee of the Ocean Frank Hurst, Wofford, S, C., and 'Grove Women's Club, who entered Chester. Steele, Coast Guard. School them in the show under her name, at' New London, Conn. All of these ! ;The division of the exhibition under who have been mentioned are enter- which Mrs. Lay’s flowers were enter- ing^the,stated colleges as Freshmen. ed'Mvas that entitled, Women’s and

Among those who are returning to Garden clubs. F irs t prize was award colleges are Rosalie'Voight, New Jer- ed.td-Mrs. Robert Mason, of-Oakhurs sey; College for Women; Robert Cre-, while Mrs. E. E. Bemheinier, of Deal, lin, University of Pennsylvania; Kat'ic was ^lie recipient of third prize. Miss Vanderhoof, / Connecticut Women's Hagerman also entered exhibits in the College;.Charles Wilgiis, Rutgers Uni- still-life section, fo r which no nien- yersity; Merle Shubert, University of tion was received.

TOWNSHIP SCHOOLS OPENED i MONDAY WITH 2323 PUPILS

Record Gain of 148 Over First Day Last Year. Expect Greater Increase by End of Month. High School Will Carry On With One Less Teacher—The Faculties of All Schools, With Changes, Are Announced

Maine:Our best wishes go with all of

them! '. ~

PREACHER URGES LOVE FOR CHURCH

WAS I

During the recent cam p. meeting services, Mrs. - Lay donated daisies to the Auditorium ushers.

HOTEL OFFKERS ARE RE-ELECTED

x io n a , o u p c i - tA w .— ------- . _best trained choir we have had during

; th e y e a rs ,. and of which Mr. W alter Eddowes was director, with Clarence Kohlmann as organist and Mrs. Wal-

r te r Eddowes a t the. piano, and a trio ,of high' class com etisls; the spiritual

- atmosphere created by various daily ■ services for children, Mrs. A. H. Leo,'

p leader, Young People's Meeting, Rev.•’ George; G.'D ilworth, leader , in’, July,' and Rev. Robert C. Wells, leader in

August; Holiness Seekers, Rev. Dor­sey M. Miller, leader in July, Rev.

. Alfred' Wagg,- leader in-. August;N orth E nd Beach Meetings; George

, :C .'M iller, leader; South End,';Rev.. Alfred W agg, leader; Central, Bleeck-

e r Stirling, leader; Twilight, Blanche Stoney Johnson, leader in July, Rev.

: , S. B. Goff, Jr., leader .in August; In 7 : tem ed ia te Young People’s and Adult . Bible Schools, taught by Mrs. A. H.

Leo, John Yeo and Dr. F. A; DeMarisJ with additional gatherings fo r family

. worship a t 7 a. m., Rev. John Goor- 'ley, leader; arid fo r Inspiration a t 3.30 p. : m > conducted by Rev Elias B. Baker— all these,, with the gener­ous religious and financial responses of the largest continual gatherings of worshippers we have had, and the im­pression made by the splendidly or-

' ganized band of ushers with William aided; in

sin, Ua n ^ Vto c dribing t^ h e WareWards ASSOCIATION PRESIDENT of righteousness as declared in SPEAKER SUNDAY MORNING God's Word ~nu^;r,4-».

iieurum uui ...th irty years, and in response to which . stitution sinners were saved a t the a lta r and other parts of the building and Christ-

' — —— n f t n a n . .1

sinhers^werfe saved a t the a lta r and Grove Pays.Floral Tribute to him.

PRESIDENT. WILL E. BUNN PRAISES ACTIVE MEMBERSHIP

National Association. Proposed Hotel Code and

Broadway Gates. Show Little C o n c e r n over . Present Situa-

. tion Of Hotel Code. .-

vices and in, the a fte r meetings aisnop meeting. AbSUL'iUHUll, yi,cuv<twM _Moore was assisted, by Homer W. morning service in the Auditorium Rodeheaver, who is’so well known for last Sunday. Dr. Boswell, who has his a cc ep ta b ly to such occasions, been a member of the Philadelphia n„ r.lnainir nicrht when every j Conference for fifty-thrPe years, read

.: > a w u i x v w _ ------. _■ E . - Thomson as chairman,

producing the best camp meeting re­sults of any held heretofore a t even th is world renowned Christian sea-

■ shore resort. ,The camp meeting opened on F ri­

day, August 25th a t 7.30 p. ni. with the administration of the Lord’s Supper to 2,600 communicants, among

'Whom a t one table gathered; 325 ministers with their wives or other loved ones.> Beginning on Saturday, August 26th . and-continuing up to. and in­cluding Saturday, September 1st, Dr.

' E. Stanley Jones, the most sought '■ fo r religious teacher, delivered ad- : dresses a t 10.30 a , m., and in his Own

analytical, suggestive, teaching spirit­ual style stirred ministers and lay­men as he presented his ideas of Christ's economic, racial and foreign m issionary program for His King­dom. This man of God conducted'

' two afternoon1 round table hours for m inisters only a t which the Taber­nacle was filled with earnest minis-

the scripture f r o m the second-chap-

I1 U U 1 IM U . , 'V a . v . . .. —_____ _Christian life by standing and asking for an interest in our players; Then followed a consecration service which fo r numbers and spirit1 cannot be' I n ­scribed, In i t ministers, official meh, various departmental workers, under­privileged professing Christians and others publicly renewed their cove­nants. to God. A fter prayers for them ,-duringthe singing of the hymn “When we all get to Heaven; w hat a gathering th a t will, be,” the multi­tude waved their handkerchiefs and shouted fo r joy; and a scene remind­ing one of the Day of Pentecost, be­cause of the demonstration, was wit-

v tu o c yx (lllC -------v_„T-rr,the Lord loveth tho gates of Zion more than all the tabernacles round-, about.” Adapting the phrase to mod­ern language, Dr. Boswell quoted, “The Lord loves the ' church rather than th e buildings thereabouts.”

'The preacher voiced his regret th a t there a re so many diversions to,, a t­trac t people away from church and criticised those churches which have done away, with • their • evening ser­vices.: To. succeed, he said,, a church must be made up of members who will attend and participate in its ac­tivities. Money is actively connected with the church, he admitted, but there must be a love for. the place

« i J ? ._ J i .nessed, to the f l i g h t ^ o f ttiose in- be donated fo r itstensely interested in __religion today. As the electric flag was waved, the great choir arose and sang the “Hallelujah Chorus” and theh the audience turned to see the electric Cross and ; Crown- glowing; and the Doxology was sung as i t has never been heard before in our Audi­torium. When the Benediction was prohounced the people with unanimity declared '“never hjive we observed such a closing during the' past years.”

In finances the offerings’ of the people as given on Dollar Day. amounted to $900; on Thank Offering Day $1,800; and on Camp Meeting Sunday, $2,300., will enable the Asso­ciation with their other resources to close another year with all obliga­tions met.

cause.He gave three reasons why one

should love the church. F irst, he out­lined, one should love the church fo r what i t means to the children. Every child has a right to a. home, educa-tion and. ^ pw.*edge .(^r^Jesus _®jrist, j b ^ rd in ^ tVeiV employees. AcMVding continued President Boswell. Parents I ^ g unnj Ocean Grove- hotel owners

ST. PAUL’S DAY NEXT SUNDAY

Dr. Fox Will Lead Services a t .Auditorium. ...J

,j~v On the coming Sunday, September -17, S t-P a u l’s church will begin its • autum n schedule of services by hold-’

PLAN TO REOPEN SEACOAST

Kelly Suggests Preferred Stock Sub­scription Scheme.

A plan fo r the reopening of the Seacoast Trust Company,.. ' Asbury

jiu- . Park, has been prepared . by Colonel the | William H. Kelly, commissioner ..of

1 ’ ’ ’--- ---inotirflMdfl -nnH will be

represjentative shore men. The plan would require each depositor to au­thorize the bank to use the entire balance of - his credit in purchasing preferred stock a t a pa r value of $10 per share.

The committee consists of Nelson ui u .5 u . . —. . , ______ J. Schoen, H arry R. Ingalls, Saviero

"vices in the Auditorium ha sproved a : Peluso, Edward T. Mitchell, George " - in t i , . W . Pittenger, and R t; Rev. John J.' * * - • ' " tt- '- O - .

. Reelection of officers was the high­light ol! the September meeting of the Ocean Grove Hotel Association, .held in Association Hall on Tuesday night. All officers and members of the execu­tive committee were proposed for re- election by the nominating committee and were reeinstated without opposi­tion. They are , President, Will E- Bunn; first vice president, Edward J. Borton; second vice president, W. L. ■Hyka; secretary, Frederick W. Roh- land; treasurer, Frank G. Mount. The executive committee consists of Mrs. •G. F. Drake, Charles Herman, Mrs.I. ;A. Shaw, Mrs. K. I. Duncan-Zelley, M ay Evemgam, Mrs. S. B. Cole, Mrs. F . M. L’Hommedieu, Mrs. A. L. New­man aid Mrs. Mary W. N. Wright. The nominating committee was com­prised j o f " Dr. W arren’- L. Wallace, chairman;-Mrs. -A. B. Harmon, Mrs E. A. Weeks and Miss A. -M. Van Skite.. - •;

A report .by treasurer Mount was approved and filed and president Bunn praised the membership co.mmittee for the work it has done in securing Ocean Grovers in the State associa­tion. Bunn also read those parts of the proposed hotel code which define a hotel and enumerate the maximum hours- and minimum wage restrict­ions. The proposed code also under­takes to restrict the allowance which hotel proprietors may charge for

A total of 2,323 pupils, 148 more than :last year, registered a t the Nep- j tune township schools on opening day 1 last Monday. A t the high school, operating with, one less teacher,, 525 were reported as against 469 in 1932.

The Ridge. Avenue school was the only one in the township a t which, a decrease in enrollment was reported.I t is expected th a t by the end of Sep­tember all of the figures will show, a' decided gain over the present number. Statistics as recorded a t the various' schools and compared with the open­ing day of 1932 are as follows:

School 1932 1933High School - -— — ------ 4G9 525Bradldy Park :------ 520 549Ocean Grove 227 .253Ridge Avenue — --------- 507 504Summerfield ------- 187 214Whitesville .......... — ----- 265 '278

Total ---------'— —i l —2,175 2,323Onsville J. Moulton is principal of

the high school with Katherine A. Chevalier as secretary. The special teachers include: E. Elizabeth Adams physical education; M argaret R. Mar­shall, a rt; Jessie N . Van Brederode, music; Ben S: Dillenbeck, boys’ physi- cal education; Percy .Frake, manual traning; Marjorie G. Hussey, do m estic . science; Helen Parkinson, foods; Howard Peterson, manual training; Kathleen M. Strassburger. home economics; Gertrude Gibbons, librarian.

The teachers in the Neptune high school include: H arry A. Titcomb,principal with Mary F. Gracey, sec­retary; William Ballentine, Elsie Bul-

Speneer Woolley. Other teachers re- • turning to their’ former classes in­clude Dorothy M. Bone, Marion P.Cox, Dorothy M. Drew, Hazel E. Gas- ' kill, Eleanor C. Harris, Helen L. H ar­ris, Myrtle A. Jackson, Gertrude M.Meeker, Iris L. Messick, Mary E.Shafto, Eleanor T. Watson.

In' the Ocean Grove £rade school Muriel Vetter is the only new teacher, added to the form er staff including:John Cowan, principal; Jean V." C.Gillan, Lillian S. Gordon, Lillian T. Kinney, Isabelle H. Lowerce, Eliza­beth W. Plummer, Mary B. Watson and Helen Wilgus.

At the Ridge Avenue school, there will be no changes in tho faculty with Miss Anita Moore, principal and Marjorie Sofield, secretary. The staff includes. D. La Barre Asbury, E. Dolores dc Garcia, Mary S. Dempsey,Ruth Du Bois, M argaret A. Duckers, Anabele E. Eaton, F. Celeste Foster, Thelma Hicks, Edith T.. McDowell, Farilla E. McKinnon, Annabelle Mit- \> ehell, F: Mildred Moore, Julia Neil,'Leila ;B. Pratt, E. Victoria Rogers, .;. Grace H. Sutphin, Bessie O. William­son, Bernice L. Withers, Mary. J. H.- .- Worde.

The staff a t Summerfield with Guy E. Quinn as principal is unchanged with a single additional teacher, Miss Elizabeth Gilbert, The others are:Joan S. Dangler, H arry C. Mauch,Jean M. Shaw, Carolyn E. Tilton and Sarah A. Wilson.

At Whitesville, three hew teachers have been added. Carl Bair, Jr., Reba , Bradway find Dorothy Mailer. The other teachers returning there are: Beulah Hall, secretary to the princi­pal; Marion E. Barnett, Estella W.

man, Marion S. Cleaver, Joseph Cush-1 'A'man, Thomas N. Davidson, H. Mar- I Fleckc'fpir M Dorothy . E.gery Felter, Howard W. Flack, Ern-1 est R. Holmes, Leslie' V. Jefferis, J.Edward.Little, Morris M. L ong, Flor­ence E. McConnell, - Emily1 A. Rice;Kenneth G. Russell, Anna K. Scholl,Huberda V. Wall and William P,Woolley.

In addition to a hew secretary -at Bradley -Park school, M iss. Beulah Sturm, Raymond Warwick is the principal with three new teachers,George Placek, Vesta .Wnltgra and

Shutinsky, Eugenia B. Snedeker, Jean M. Turner and Gertrude Van Hise. . S

Other employees in the Neptune school system returning to their fo r­mer duties are: Alfred P. Todd, dis­tric t clerk, Edna H. Brand, secretary to the clerk; Anna S. Bier, n u rse ;. Ella M. Borden, cafeteria; Janet V. Bouse,' attendance officer; Samuel.: Edelson. M. D., physician, Clifford I. Jones, dentist and W alter Smith, bus

khiver.

. 'U U V U I l l lX a b u b u m v ____■ ing the annual St. Paulis Day" in the ) vvimuin o . . ilClljr , VW4iui..uo.v„_Auditorium, with services a t 11 a. m. banking and insurance, and will bi and 7.30 p. m. Dr. Fox,'pastor, will ! submitted to depositors and stock preach a t both services. In the morn-1 holders through a , committee of six ing, his subject will be, “The Search ' ' —fo r Reality/’ while in the evening he

; , will speak on “The Sower.” .■'• ’ The combined junior and senior■ choirs will furnish the music, a t these . services under the direction of Ray- .mond 'B artle tt. The annual .resumjp-

•tion o f the autumn schedule with ser- * - 1 : l’->

and the State can furnish the first two bu t only an active church, with Sunday school for children,: can sup­ply the third. Other reasons fo r one’s loving the church,'ventured Dr. Bos­well, are the significance of its mean­in g to seekers a fte r Christ and those who have been converted.”

He related the story of his con­version. A t the age of sixteen, he said, he was an employee in a brass foundry.- ■ A . chum of his attended a revival .meeting ahd was converted. For the next three nights and days, he (Boswell) lived in a state of un­certainty and: indecision. Finally, he attended the revival m eetings. and was convertefd. Two nights later,, he joined the Methodist church a t W har­ton and 18th streets, Philadelphhia, and saw his m other: converted the same night. “I have been an ‘Amen’ proicher. ever,f since. Hallelujah with the thought of it.” • ■■

The points th a t have been outlined, plus the practical illustrative story, reveal what the church m eant to a seeker after God and then a convert­ed man. “The church of God is the g reatest institution in a ll the world,” stated Dr. Boswell. When 'a- person admits th a t he is uncertain and'.weary of the life he is living, one would not

in vmw u u w . . ,—........popular and successful feature in the

• program a t St. Paul’s.

•AUGUST RELIEF SHOWS DROP

. NRA ahd Summer DevelopmentsFurnish Jobs.

; ; Progress' in reemployment condi­tions in the State were reflected dur-' ing the first ha lf of August by with-

; drawals of 9,482 persons from lipts of the State Emergency Relief Adminis­tration. Reports from 897 munici-.

' palities show th a t a t mid-August 393,- = 950; persons w ere, aided as against |403;432 the la tte r naif of July.

feiViTwo - factors operate during the sUmmcr to cut the relief tabulations.

:-.One was the national recovery : pro- ; gram and th o . other the opportunity Yfor seasonal summer emjiloyment: a t , recreational I’ resorta and- on farm s, : -With-September here the la tter factor .’’ wiUUdisappear considerably ah'd. i t Is ' possible th a t ‘Borne . of the ; summer vworiers may again have tp apply for help. . . , , ,

Colonel -Stull Back a t. Bayhcadj Rev. G'eorgo C. Stulli will; Vesumo

Jiia,pastorate a t Bay Head church on- Sunday a fte r a summer’s - recupera-

^tioh. During his absence,the.duties of : m inister a t that church wpre fulfilled

S'— ' rtniin'n : dvnV G :

O’Hara. According to Kelly, the Sea­coast bank, Which was the first in this district to close J n , 1931, should be able to open witli nearly $l,00O,(K)0 of sound assets. His plan has been used in ^other reorganized banks in this v icinity . ' ■ ' _____ •

“Heroes For Sale” a t Strand.“Heroes For Sale,” a story of tho

tra g ic situation' in which soldiers re­turning from the war, found them­selves in the current picture .a t the Strand Theatre. Richard’ Barthel- mess, who has not beeh seen ih'^hese parts on the screen recently, is . starred in th is productidn.- Next Monday, and Tuesday Loretta Young will appear in , “She Had to Say Yes.”, “Mama Loves Papa,” with. Charles Ruggles and. Mary Boland. . Wednesday - pnd Thursday, a n d '"M a ry Stevensj ,M. D.,” starring Kay-Francis; Friday and Saturday, will close the'w eek. ;

Women’s Club to Hold Benefit Show.V-.The Ocean Grove.'. Women’s Club annual benefit show a t the : Strand

refer him to a moving picture or an i -----automobile ride, said the p reacher.1*''’0 faith and confidence which those R ather he would be advised to v is i t ! present ■_had in his ability to direct -- -i i. „..,i i-™.. tha \ the affairs of the association;;. -Tn

purchased -at a n y : 'of the following placed:;;; Cliatfield’s stationery .store,

Mn a - /IMt nr rtfYrf* ‘ .

can rest easy on the code restrictions as fa r as this season.is concerned.

President Bunn pointed out th a t the term “hotel” as defined by the new code is “any place , in the .United States offering for sale accommoda­tions arid food, or sleeping accommo­dations Hvithout food,' either- tran s­iently or. fo r a stated period.” There fore any, place here selling board and room, regardless of the number of rooms, ia . a hotel within the mean­ing of the code. The value of united action through membership in the Ocean Grove Hotel Association should be apparent to every local house en- gagd in th e business, he said.

Upon the recommendation of the president nnd motion by Charles Her­man, a sum o f $50 w as'contributed to the national association as a token of appreciation- fo r ;the work, th a t unit-is doing in the interest of all the hotels of the United States. The sec­retary was authorized to correspond with the .Ocean Grove Camp 'Meeting Association and convey official thanks for the use of, the Association Hall. I t was reported that .plans fo r a sign over the'Broadway entrance are being discussed. ' : ;;

Before,,. adjournment, •'•: President Bunn expressed his appreciation of

TOWNSHIP PAYS COUNTY $10,000

a church and hear the pastor tell “th a t sweet story of old.’’ , .

President Boswell urged the mem­bers of Bis' congregation to; re tu rn to their respective churches .with a dif­ferent attitude toward th a t institution. Ho exhorted all to become active participants in all of the,,.church’s various functions. Ho closed with the statement, “May ond of-.the out­comes of Ocean Grove be-' *1 have learned to, love my church more and more.'

Robert C. Wells led the opening prayer a t the service and-the entire congregation recited the -• ApoStlcs’ Creed. The choir sang “Speak to My Heart.” ; President Bob well ^revealed th a t one who -prefers to, call himself “a lover of 1 Oceart Grovti” ‘-donated th e flowers th a t were placed in front o f the pulpit and dedicated them to Dr. Boswell.

BUSINESS MEN HOLD MEETING

DELINQUENT TAX s a l e 1931 COMING SOON

FOR

Discuss NRA and- Plan for Improve­ments. „

A meeting of Ocean Grove business men to discuss plans for improve­ment of local conditions was held in WashingtonrStokes firehouse Tues­day evening. Attorney Haydn Proc-. tor was chosen permanent chairman. No. definite action was taken o ther' than the passage of a resolution au ­thorizing the chairman to appoint a committee of five to draw up plans to be reported back a t a future meet­ing. " . ‘ ' • -

The discussion centered around the NR A. and a series of complaints col­lected during the summer by Col. G. C. Stull, publicity director of Nop- ■ tune township. Those regarding : a few “wild parties” had been -taken care of by the police. Regarding the

Copy of Board: of Freeholders Resolu­tion Received by Committee and Substantially Acknowledged. Com- plaiht Against Joe Shure’s Junk Yard.Neptune township this week paid

$10,000 on taxes due th e county for 1932-33.. A copy of the resolution passed recently b y . the Board . ’of Chosen Freeholders regarding delin­quent taxes was received by Clerk John Knox and read a t the meeting of the township comniittee_ Tuesday j NRA,_ George C^Pridham " proprietor

annual report, he hailed the member ship of; the Ocean- Grove Hotel Asso ciation a s 'one of the most active and loyal in th e country. - :

HEALTH RECORD FOR AUGUST

Stanley ApplegateHealth OfficerMakes Report.

Birthday Party.;1 - :. Mr. and iMrs. Charles C. Beechell, who are • spending the': summer a t 137 Abbott:avenue, recentlyi g av e 'a birth-

Thfeatee,” o i "the boardwalk: a t tho day p a rty .'in honor o l Helen McMunn, North End, will he hold during tho of Jersey City. The following guests entire week of Sopfcember 25. Al- were -present: Bnbo.;< Bpwner, ofthough the women’s tlq b will sell* no B rooklyn ;. M argaret ■ Sweeney, Doro- ticlcotB-at th e ,th ea tre ,.th ey .m ay b e ...................... *

For the first time since December, 1929,. arid, for. the second time in the past twelve years, tho month of Aug­ust did n o t have' any resident com­municable disease reported to N ep­tune Health Departm ent,. according to ealth;,: Officer Stariley Applegate. Six cases Wefe reported th a t were non-residents of Neptune. They were two caaes .n f whooping cough; ,one case of tuberculosis; two cases of in­fantile'paralysis; one case of Broncho pneumonia.*'; Two cases in resident and four; cases ,nim-resident of dog bites wore reported. .

The Diphtheria Prevention Cam­paign w ill again be/ offered to the people ofj-Neptune-township in;c.o- operatiph'?with the; Noptmie township Board (rfiEducationJri;;.^',1..■ / i';1.111' . - ' "•:-•£V:'

EYES

u j . w t e w < > > i i» » r , -------- -----nis.1?t- Like.most of the other m uni-| of the Occan View hotel, did riot see cipilaties, this township is delinquent . how the rrvle wmiM hrinci re ief in its payments to the county and the committee instr6cted, the clerk to ac­knowledge the resolution and advise that payments' would be made as rapidly as possible.' .; ( . \

. In the. meantime, Collector W alter Gravatt is preparing a lis t of delin­quent properties for the year 1931 in Ocean Grove, and Neptune which will be sold for taxes within the next few weeks.

Harry Steinberg, 47 South Main street, appeared before the commit­tee to complain, that, he was charged with three merchantile licenses. He was advised . th a t i f he confined his retail selling to 47 South Main street and used his other, two stores for storage purposes only he would be

['charged fo r only one license. This he consented to do. o-.i;

Joseph Shure's auto bono yard was again the subject o f complaint when Mamie Watson, 226 Fisher avenue, appeared before the committee and

3 i l—* 1 b.iFPdmH Rfivprn

how the code Would bring relief to Ocean Grove hotels who made no :,-V. money this year and he did not see how they could make any money in ' . competition w ith certain parties who . offered rooms at ruinous rateB. I t • was charged th a t some, few offered. • rates tis low as fifty cents a night. . : •

Paul J .1 Strassburger proposed a y-- :; unifoi-m opening of stores a t 8 a. m.The chairman was authorized to ap ­point a Committee of .two to a rrange f • such a mutual opening hour.

Leads World in Telephone Density. ;The United , States has, 19,690,187;

telephones, or fiifty-six per cent of the world’s total, according to a survey by the American Telephone and Tele- graph Company. _ • , ;,

The nation has 15.8 telephones for',': .^ i n n ' ’1 ; :j

The complaint was turned over to the police ■■;,department for investigation.

School scrip turned into tho collect­or’s office during-August in payment of taxes amounting to $5,552 was ordered credited to the school dis­tric t in payment of 1932 monies due.

- Stamps for .Collectors,; U. S^.and Foreign. Albuihs and-Supplies. Hill s, 700 Mattison, Asbhry Pork.—28 Adv.

tries with more than 100,000 tele- ,; phones may be reached by phone'.;U? from this country.'s Nineteen acean liners have radio-telephone service;

— — -—tmmi - :Stokes Firemen Parade' a t ' Coney.- !

A group; of local firemen, with the . aid of the Stoke3 tonipany emer- gency truck, represented Ocean' Grove ‘ in, the'Firem en’s Mardi Gras d t Cone; ’

........................................Island. Tuesday night. A fter.parad' Jacob Beutell, VPlumb'ihg and Heat- ing * t! Coney, tho group took' in; th

ing.; 98%' Embury avenue.Talv 8468.’ Bights;.'ar,.d returned to Ocean Grov —A d v . ' : t f - y V- early ^/Wednesday • morning. • Thoao-'

Albert E^RobiMon, Jobbing carpcn»

f k t d a y , S e p t e m b e r ; i s , 19 3 3

bend the criminal, then/ that'falling, took over the Investigation itself, Mwra eould be no comiptldr- that would revert to destruction of honest Investigation and expeditious solution of crime; W hat Is more, I believe that day will come,

‘Phe detectives of the United States will be like its soldiers. They will never know their next point of call. Shey will operate under centralized orders from Washington. Ihey will have a t their fingertips a complete International Identification bureau. They. will, use radio, telegraph, tele­phone- photography, fingerprints,- ber- tillon measurements. Use, in fact, ev­ery science known to criminal detec­tion. And they will succeed In their job. only sa they succeed In the indi­vidual .‘tasks of solution laid upon their shoulders, And more than that, they will walk through absurd extradl-

. tlon folderol as a fireman goes through a wisp of smoke.,

Crime. will be against society, not against a county or a city or a state. Prosecution will be by society, not by a politically-controlled, organization dependent 'for a. living upon the votes of a few communities. Crime wll* be B high menace to the deceniy pf lifs, tho administration of business and the sanctity, of tho home. It will be treated as such, Then solution will be sure In the vast majority of cases. Thes prosecution will be genuine and speedy and efficacious. Then a change of venue will temper Justice with mercy ..and . ''mercenary" with justice.

Until than the country will stagger along under ever-increasing police and prosecution costs. It will carry the endless burden of county bonds and' county taxes; And by every lndlca» tlon, crime will constantly Increase. How many of America's great cities are solvent'today? Why?

America, with the most outrageous . murder rate ever known to a civilized land, is In my judgment, the most law- abiding nation on earth. This is trae because America stands for more ridic­ulous and polltlcan-mado laws than any other country. Technical Segal expressions are the fruit of legalized law-makers justifying their own ex. istence. They have specialized to suctt an extent that their complete success is the rout of comfaon equity and av­erage .comprehension. Strictly speak­ing, not a single, American Is free from the taint of criminal activity.

He may speed' in his motor car. A crime! He may not sound his horn, A crime! H em ay run a wire to light his chicken coop and forget that he should apply fpr a permit A crime!I could go on forever.

Millions of laws govern Americans and the greatest of the legal minds have not the slightest idea of most of them,'nor their import A favorite courl procedure is .to face a situation requiring adjudication, then cast back as far ’ as necessary for a precedent by which to judge It. In this age. when the machine and science and Invention have altered the whole course of human life, legal lights fre ­quently cast back for precedent to the judgment- of men- who never dreamed of a horseless carriage, who read by the light of -a tallow candle, bathed In an iron tub, let their teeth decay as the years passed, andbecapse It traveled 25 miles an hour damned the railroad, train- as » device of: the devil for the destruction of man.

This must pass.. America will throw off this yoice' of archaic habit. The people, fed lip with Main street mur­ders, idiotic legal subterfuges- and. outright corruption, will assert them­selves. They, will put a direct ques­tion. They will want and they wll] get a direct answer.

, i’otr will be entirely sate in the .prognostication ..that when they do get it It will cotrie from,one no less, 'than Uncle Sam himself. When the beard of that gentleman bristles with Indignation and h is. mighty biceps writhe for. a whack at the desperado who Is the national problem , and the international disgrace, things will hap­pen.' Not until then! ■

Scotland Ynrd offers a lot America can learn. Half as efficient as the New Sork police, it Is twice as effec­tive, Mussolini offers a ponderable thought to Americans. Undertaking government when his country was crime-ridden and virtaally hopeless of deliverance, he has cleaned St np, pol­ished it renewed Its public pride. He offers It as a aa»p!e of what cen­tralized power can do when it comes

: to decapitating a monster .spawned In Ignorance, nurtured or. the milk o r murder, trained to the brass' Kiiackie and the blackjack, and fat­tened upon the lethargic and some­what hopeless iBcomprcbensIoE of » great people with too much faith in those .who have usurped the power* of their local governing functions.

Call s cop! Call a cop by all means. .Bat may .God grant that- he will, Ag­ora lively, wear striped trousers, a spangled coat,-a flaring plug hat and a Rowing beard. Then • I* will be the cop who will spell' deliverance for American business and home life. He will be Uncle Sani.,

When housework’s : doneBy JOHN H. PUELICHER Astrican Bankers Assoeiijslci .

BANKING in Its long career has-been compelled to withstand many seri­

ous shocks, but It rah Into the most p e r p l e x i n g en-

, tangloment of Its,*v‘v whole history since

a'* the general break-down of values In

■ 1329. The commer-s c i a 1 structure of

t h « entire world ■: s e e m e d to have

beer, shaken from Its foundations and

■ H tlie marvel is that the b a n k e r , with

' everything break-3. H. PUEL3CHER 1 B S d 0 W n a l l

around him, w a s able to come through as he has.

General business failures, agricul­tural stagnation, income losses, - capi­tal losses, Inabilities to meet debts and. therefore inabilities o£ bankers to pay back depositors when loans were not jiaid, were the reasons, In most Instances^ for the bank falluree.

No profession, no department ol life Is without its weaker elements, but had proper jonsideratioii been, given to the relatively few lnstances In bank­ing, had exaggerated and startling, headlinee been kept in true proportion, had banking, not been used as. a target for political self-seeking and with vote- seeking motives, had unfounded - ru- .inorg not been spread the people's con-' fldence might have -been retained and far less serious would'have been their financial losses, for many banlt failures were caused that need not have hap­pened.

There were factors in our banking . experience which every earnest banker deplores—factors which many had worked years to eliminate., which it

•was fearfully recognized would, ag­gravate any difficult days whlch might arise. One of the worst of these was due to political regulation which char-

• tered many banks that should never have been chartered.

That there-have been incompetence and dishonesty In banking Is admitted. That the instances that did occur were used grossly to . increase, fear In the public mfnd, we affirm. We shall con­tinue to strive for higher attainments in our profession and strive for laws that require competence incs ability in management. .That we cannot leg­islate honesty and unselfishness Into either a banker or a borrower must be conceded, but dishonesty, wherever found, should he punished.. It: ’is as true In banking as elsewhere that no m atter how: good the law, dishonest and Incompetent men can mako ii In­effective. Good laws are essential. We must strive for ever better ones, but their enforcement will come only as the public recognizes that It is a mat­ter not of laws or codes alone but of the men who administer them.

it’ s time for fun

7 A. M., wake husband three limes . , . 7:45, breakfast. . . 8:30, dress . . . 9:30, order food . . . a full day’s schedule right up to the arrival of the husband at 6 P. M. How to put in such a day and still be bright and cheerful for the evening? How? Many women say “Watch your diet, brink milk with every meal.” . . . Sheffield Farms Milk, the extra-pure, exlrfl-protected, extra-good milk. Sheffield, ‘ the milk with 92 years of dairy experience behind it. Sheffield? the laboratory-controlled health-food. You’re sure of Sheffield! Delivery tomorrow? Certainly I

SeaCecl G R A D ETelephone, Asbury Park 2000

The Public's PartOur people must be brought to real­

ize that the welfare of our country de­pends sipon Its banking system, that the strength of the banking, system de­pends upon, the public's faith and understanding and the vast majority ?£ banks, because of faithful aervica ren-. derod, evcii through the whole of this general breakdown,, had the right to expect the trust and confidence of the people.

In every great catastrophe, no mat­ter what its nature, no matte? what its causa, someone must hi; crucified. The banket was this time selected. In the late, 80’s, political agitation started a tirade against the-.railroads. Some rail­roads may have done reprehensible things, but the agitation became so' general and so violent as almost to destroy one ot the fundamental factors in the progress of a country. Today the" same thing has been done to the banker- In spite of ali that has hap­pened, the fact remains that even most of the banks which failed are paying out infinitely better than are invest­ments in almost anything else.

WHY PAY M O R E ?Reduced Rates Now In Effect

PhonePhone

The standard ot the "PERFECT". Hichardsoit & Boy ton Range, .is satis- faction to you-—the satisfaction that comes from foot?w ell cooked, from the constant assurance of a servant th a t never fails.

Office: 600 Bangs A venue, opposite E lectric Building.

Rates for Asbury Park and Ocean GroveF o r O ne J k F o r E ach

& | | | ” ' Passenger I U C * ; A d d itio n a l— T " PassengerPlumbing

Tinning'and Heating Hardware

Paints and Oils51 Main Avenue

OCEAN GROVE, N. J . Telephone 4741

SltOrMNO AND STEAD'S BBIVISG KATES ALSO .iEDUCED, CALL US FOB PBOMrT A.ND COUBTEOtJS SERVICE.

Bankers Aiding AgricultureState associations of bankers Ii)

many agricultural states are giving time and financial support to encour­age practices among tbeir farmers that will bring about better farm results.

The major activities reported from ono state to tho AfTlculturai Commis­sion of the American Bankers' Asso­ciation which Is nationally active In promoting this line of cooperation are as follows:

1. Drought relief work: Local banks have played a vital part in this work, being represented on the county com­mittees for .passing on all seed loans. T h e s e committees met practically every day during the spring to para on the loans in order to get as quick action as possible. A total of 914 ai> plication-; were received and handled by one committee, 833 being granted.

2. Four-H Club w o rk : B a n k e r s helped stimulate 4-H Club work, financ­ing many iaembets who otherwfc could not have enrolled. They also helped finance fifteen 4-H Club dele­gates, to the state club convention,

3. Livestock feeding: The banks co­operated with the Extension Service, in the state.and the railroads In la- creasing the amount ot livestock feed­ing. Assistance was given the feeders in securing finances for their feeding operations.

4. drop Improvement: The banket? took part in the crop standardization program ot the Extension Service and encouraged the farmers to use pore seed, .and, in tnafcy cases made leaps

.tor this pnrpoBe. '

The Cadillac Restaurant165 MAIN STREET. ASBURY PARK •

Greatly Enlarged and Facilities Improved for Serving Yira OCR SPECIALS.

Club Breakfast ---------— — — —---------------- 25c.Luncheon (Fail Courts) <---------— ——- —----------— 45c.Sea Food or Meat - — —•— v -— ---------------------- --—— 65e»Turkey, Chicken or Steak — ----------- — ------ — ---------- 75c,

Open Day and N'nrht THOMAS MiLQNAKIS, Proprietor

For Thirteen Years Proprietor of Grove R estaw sat, Ocean Grove

POCKET” MUSItyGS

A psychologist objects to herd think­ing, but, pshaw,-what most of as think is what we’ve heard I

W hen the oldest resident w as a youngster we supplied

OCEAN GROVEI see where a fellow: wrote 10,000 words on a postcard. Maybe he has a grudge against his postmaster.

In try lD g to merge tbo army and navy, congress falls to make the effort ns interesting as when • the army and navy merge on the gridiron.

The Japanese alphabet has 48 let-, ters, making it possible for the Jap­anese language to haye tho world's richest shop.—Indianapolis Newa, ■

fay lor Dairy Co

» A G E T WO

Call a Cop* ••

By Charles Francis Coef E m i n e n t C r i m i n o t o g i i t a n d A u t h o r o f| *, M r . * * * Q a n g a t c r , ’" 'S w a 8 , ’ , ' 'V o tc t * *

. . . a n d o t h p r » t a r t l i n g c r i m e a t o n e s .

THE REMEDY FOR IT ALL

A I I T 1 C L E N o . :

IN A recont: notorious case three grand juries; were conducting sep­arate Investigations of the saint!

crime. Three prosecutors were, seek­ing solution of the crime and convic­tion ot the same criminal. Three state governments were trying to find what they ought to do about It.

During this time tlie criminal was living a riotous life on the proceeds of his endeavors. That is .not unusual, but it Is ridiculous. The cost Is b& yond all sense nnd reason. . It Is as criminal as tlie crime under investi­gation, •

A man shot a man in New York. He dragged the body to New Jersey anfi

. dumped it , there. Then he dashed to Delaware to hide out. Tliey foar.t. him there. .Three Investigations were

■ begun to determine what to do witir.■ him and where to do I t Two extra­ditions were necessary to bring the killer to trial. Mounting taxes and in­finite, delay for offended society 1

That Is a simple, case. Take anj three states and counties ,and the same ,,’ould be true, Ali this abete the criminal. He s*uns to another, state solely to accomplish the very delay that accrues.

While juries meditate, what to dc shyster lawyers produce a . habeas corpus and the criminal has flown the. coop before there. Is any legal Instru­ment to hold him. This was all toe frequently true when the killing .-as a. gang one and the habeas financed by millions In bootleg money It' is equally all top true that the prosperity and safety of th e criminal have been predicated , upon' his money and its corruptive power. Legal-technicalities Save served to liberate many a killer, and those technicalities have been discovered and allowed only because i)f influence.

The connection between tlie police and tho criminal Is tlie most disas­trous faced by society. Perfect it and society is utterly defenseless, It has , some to Its greatest fruition under, prohibition. because of lack of sym­pathy for the law and the. ease with ’.vhlch millions have trickled into un­worthy palms. The criminal always has It on tlie police who have taken bribes. They have i t on prosecutors seeking, re-election and Judges de­pendent upon the samo thing. It taE aiade a vicious circle.

Well-plahned murder is almost im­possible to detect and convict. This is due to the planning and-the appar­ent lack of motive in people who had opportunity to kill. We may know the cause and the source of murder' bat we cannot prove them In court. So murder becomes easy, i t was easy be­cause,of this connection between the law and the law-breaker. Such con-., aectioris are inevitable in great cities with laws like prohibition battering a t the foundations, of honest enforce ment

Now how break up that connection? With . bootleggers turned racketeers and kidnapers, how handle them? The kidnaping will die away because no one can. protect it long. The rack­eteering will continue because busi­ness And» it cheaper to pay, tribute than to risk life and property fight­ing.. 5Tet we must break np the rack­ets.

It Is .my judgment that federal, ac­tion is the only'solution. Uncle. Sam- With his long arm can reach over extraditions. He can batter down al­liance between lew and crime. He can step Into a -city and demand the facts. He can do that because he will not long remain in any one city. Mot long, enough for his officers to get tangled In the web of dirty money that flows in the urban streets of America, The federal officer may. not £e more honest" inherently than the local one. But-he has-ar, esprit de corps which only ..passing contact with, local con­ditions never can shatter

1 favor a national police force for■ criminal investigation and prosecu­

tion. 1 feel that, the people of the county soon will be forced to demand

• it America's great'. cities hare don- bled police forces In the last SO years, and the crjtn rates have, increased twice as much as the police!

I see no need of county govern­ments. They are an expense, a cum­bersome method of maintaining po­litical patronage,, nnd generally a hindrance to direct and economical government Why the cltv or village Should arrest a man for . .r-, only

, to have him tried by the county and Imprisoned by the state, 1 shall never nnderstand. If I rely upon political

: surveys by purveyors of political patronage, of course I might see a good reason for such round-about

■ methods. But I do not rely upon . those. That Is a political chicanerywhich long since has perished In the

; minds of a tax-burdened, crime-rid*' den people.

If every city in the Onlted States did away with Its criminal investlga’- SJoa police and turned that function over to the federal government, I be-

■ neve crime would be reduced jo Its xaiutmum in very brief time. If cities handled traffic, protected life and property end policed as the uniformed

i force generally does, there would be : r.o important corruption. I f , ' when j major criminal offenses were recorded I In nix? city, the federal government

,: I gave that city three days to appre-

: FRIDAY,: SEPTEMBER, is,; 1988:

JOBLESS PROFESSORS TO INSTRUCT NEEDY

Offer College Course to the Youths Out of Work.

Port Royal, Va.—Twenty-five stu­dents and six professors gathered In af high-celled room under the slated sloping roof of an old building here bave brought- Into existence Dr. A. O. Hill’s depression days college for finan­cially harassed young men.

The purpose of Port Royal. college. Doctor Hill explained, Is to bring to­gether college teachers who are with­out appointments bccaase of the de­pression and students who, owing to financial stringency, are unable to con­tinue. In existing institutions.

Instruction' will bo available ia tlie classics, modern languages, English literature,- art, philosophy, history, government, economics and sociology.

No degrees wll! be given, but Doc­to r Hill hellevea that when the per­sonnel of hi* faculty becomes known end the methods of the college ex­plained, other Institutions will accept Its credits. Ho nlans to have one .full-time professor to every six stu­dents.

No time will be devotedito athletic!! end no money spent In this direction. Thera wll!. in fact, b e , no athletics other than bucIi as the students impro­vise for themselves. 1

Cost About $250 a Year.The total cost'to each student will

be. .$250 annually, which will cover tuition, board, lodging and ianndry. Students will not be permitted- to work for wages when not engaged In class­room or study, which appears to be an

. unnecessary rule, if tlie appearance of Port Royal is any Indication of the opportunity to work,, but they must care for their own rooms and take turns In waiting on tables and cash ­ing dishes. .

Professors In the. college, Doctor Hill went on to explain, will get aotb-

, tng !ri return for their services except their board, which tho $250 paid by each student will care for. Class- .-ooins and dormitories will be in old houses and halls In Port Royal, long out of use, which have been leased by iheir owners a t fees that arc said to !;e below tlie deadline of moderation.

Just how Doctor Hill was led to se­lect Port Royal has not been revealed, but "the eternal fitness of tilings" may have been a factor. The depression •hit the town long before the depres- ■ slon college was thought ot.

Once Important Port.Nestling close to the turbid waters

ot tho Rappahannock la a setting of ancient, spreading trees, Port Royal still retains something of the grace and elegance, and all of the leisurely atmosphere of early Colonial days when It was a place' of Importance and a bflsy port

Just across the. Rappahannock and within sight Is a crumbling pile, over­grown with rambling vines, all that ia left of tho house in which President James Monroe was born, and but a little way farther Is the site of Wash­ington’s birthplace.

According to tradition. Port Royal . was once thought of as the permanent site of the capital of the United States and came within two votes of being selected. . ;

But as the years went by things hap­pened to Port Royal. Railroads took away Its river trade and presently s modern highway, cut through a mile to the west, left it In virtual Isolation.

The president of the new institution <Doctor Hill calls It Port Royal col­lege, but th» natives speak, of ft as Depression or Hard Times college) is a graduate of Dartmouth and for­merly was Instructor ac economics at Sprlngflelt college He ia a staff member of tho Brookings Institute.

Husband Pleased After Wife Lost

BULKY FATREDUCED 21 POUNDS—SKIN , CLEARER AND FEELS

MUCH BETTER

"I’ve lost exactly twenty-one pounds with three jars of Kruschen and om iio happy to get rid of th a t bulky fa t. My, husband is very pleased .vith mi;. My akin- is clearer and I feel so much better sine: I’m not so liea%’y on my feet. Friend:- say £ look much better.” Mrs. Norma Spickler,

:Maugansville; Md.To get rid of double chins, bulging

. 'hips,' ugly rolls of fa t on. waist and upper arms SAFELY and without discomfort—a t the same time build up glorious health and acquire a clear 'skin, bright eyes, energy ahd ’vivs - ciousness—1.» look younger end feel i t—rtake a half, teaspoonful of Krus­chen Salts- in a gljisa of hot water every, morning before breakfast. *

One Jar lasts four-weeks and,costs bu t a trifle a t any drag- store the. World over. , Make tmr® you ’gat Kruschen because it’o SAFE, Money back if not satisfied.

OFFICIAL INFORMATIONTownship Committee—-Raymond R,

Graeey, Chairman; John W. Knox, ■Clerk and Business Manager; John S. Hall, Chairman of. Finance;

. H arry S. Whitlack, Chairman ; of Police; Charles Loveman, Chairman of Roads; Ralph Jahnson, Chairman of Light, Pool* and Publicity.

Tax C ollector W alter G ravattTax Assessor. - ----- . . . Alvin E. BillsTreasurer — -------- Arthur H. Phare.A tto rn e y Richard W. StoutCaahic --------------- Wall • GravattChief of Police ----------William MaasRoad Foreman ------------ John WhiteTownship Physician .

W. A. Robinson, M. D.

Overseer of Poor — —Janet V. Bouse Building Inspector - -Harry WhitlockE n g in e e r----- ——Cl&ude W. BirdsnliPolice Recorder — J . Edward KnightAuditor - - r -------—Elmer 0 . StevenePublicity Director -—-George C. Stull Board , of Health—Members of Town­

ship Committee, the Assessor and Township. Physician.'

Health Officer — Stanley Applegate

Board of Education—John B. Stnut, President; Mrs. Anna T. Dey, Vice President; A, P. Todd, District Clerk; Roland Reigliton- Augustus B. Knight, Edmund L. Thompson,

• Irving Crabicl, Milton T. Wright, Leroy Hurford, Harvey L. Sykes, Qnsville J Moulton, Supervising Principal; H, A. Titcomb, High School Principal; Samuel Edelson, M. D,, Schoo! Physician;' Janet V. Bouse, Attendance Officer.

Neptune.Fire District No. 2-—Herman Johnson, President; Albert Reed, Secretary; Milton LeCompte, Treas­urer; William Johnson, Eugene Sloeum, Charles Diehl.

Board of Adjustment—James Strud- ■wick, Chairman; W arren A, Pier- sall, Secretary; Joseph Lane, Earl V.ooliey, W alter Tarasoyis.

Postmaster—Joseph Rainear, In charge; of Neptune Branch, Percy Eldridge.

SHORE’S NEWEST SENSATION

Little Brownie .... iiiiniiiiiiinii....mmamimmit..................... niiij

kac

T H A N K YOU

Wesley Lake, North End Ocean Grove

A G A IN ! Ig A HANDY DIRECTORY FOR OUR READERS IS'lltllXllllllliiiiUiiliiiuilllllltllillllltlllttfllllltlllllHllllltll llltltllltlllllllllllllliiiiitilH lltlU lltK llK IU Itlllim tU lllillltllU ti?

B t r s i i s r E S S d i r e c t o r y 7

WATER SCOOTER

Drive Your Own Power Boat an * Half-Mile ours e

Wesley Lake and Ocean Ave. Asbury Park

Ocean .Grove Fire District—Dr. William A. Robinson,' President; L. . C. Briggs, Treasurer; James Boyce, Harry Reeves, C. M, Nagle.

Neptune Fire District No. 1—George Tiedeman. President;. Leroy Garra- - brant, -Treasurer; Earl Lawler, Secretary; Edgar Phillips, Frank R. Dodd; - ' \ - J ; ■

^ j i in ic m r a iB H iE ffiS H iffin im G iiffli ir ii iin i ii iisu iK a iia i 'n iu ii im i.'i i im ii in r a in u a u iu u iu i'

N ew YorkNewark and Elizabeth

n.lS Pennsylvania Station ...B!5pd **.* S t. U d 7 t h A v e .

$ 1 .0 0 Hudson Terminal' 1 b » b ik I Cor tla n d t a n d C liu rcb

- T r ip S t r a c t s ■ ’= j ;Sunday, September 17 ; Wednesday, Sept. 20

Daylight Saving Time ■ Leave Pt. Pleasant 9.11 A.' M.

See Flyers or Consult Agentf

Every Day' Round-trip fares one-day limit to Newark and New York—reduccd as much as 10%. Also reduced fares on rour.u trips with 30-day limits. New faster schedules now in effect.

.Ocean Grove Board of Trade, Ine.r— j . Auditorium Square, Public infdr- j 1 mation bureau, telegraph and tele- j phone center. Railroad and steam- j ship literature. S. D. Woolley, ! president; G. C. S tu ll,. executive 1 secretary. , • . f

Ocean Grove Hotel Association, Inc.President, Will E. Bunn; secretary,

■ F. W. Rohland. -

PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD

CENTENNIAL

Ocean Grove Camp Meeting Asso­ciation—Charles- M Boswell, Presi­dent;., Alfred W sgg, Vice President; George W, Henson, Secretary ; John B.-. Andrus, Treasurer Emeritus; Lott R. Ward, .Treasurer; MelvilleE. Snyder, General Superintendent; William Catley, Chief of Police: H arry Ayres, Superintendent of Street Department.

W e Employ High-Grade Repairers.

Our Prices- A re Reasonable. The W ork the B est

TRICARICO 63 Main Avenue, Ocean Grove

Phone 8960 Call and Deliver Service

WILLIAM E. TAYLOR• CO.VTKACTOa AND B U IL D E R

A lterations -A dditions R epairs .84 A bbott A venue, O cean OroTe

Telephone J*6E

ANDREW TAYLORTJX AND S H E E T M ETA L

W O B K E B South M ain S tree t, A sbury’ P a rk

P hono 2601

Tiiton’s C ity DairyP asteu rized M ilk find Cream

BUTTE BM ILK AND C EB TIF1ED M ILK

D istribu to rs fo r W alker-G ordon * P ro d u c ts ’=905 Socond A renue, A sbury B ark

P hone. 1877

Travel, Tours, CruisesW IL LIA M C. GBAY

T ra v e l A gency 305 Bond Street# A sb u ry P a rk N . J .

T elephone 1594 •No E x tra C harge for. Booking H ere

M. DARO BARBER SHOP305 Bond S tree t. A strary P a r t

Export on Ladies' and Children's Work.

All Hair Cuts, 35c.M ICHAEL. DARO

(F o rm erly w ith H eryS

G. C PRIDHAM & BRG.PRACTICAL PAINTBliS

PAPER HANGERS 71 B roadw ay. Ocean Grote, 'N, J,

CHARLES W QUERINGC A lirE X T E K A ND B U IL D E R > J o tib ln j P rom p tly A ttended To

E s tim a te s F am ish e d , P hone ISSg-ii 148 A bbott A T e n u e , Qec&n Grovd

Edmund L. fhompsonExterior and Interior

FaintingE stim a te s F u rn ished

28 Ocoan A renne, Ocean G rore Phono A sbury P a rk 2258-B

Ellen H. CliveTrading os D. C. Corert Agency

Insurance and Real E sta te Ocean G rove and A sbury P ark

T eteph on cs 2606 and. 346

Telephone A sbury P a r k 1464*BWATCH, CLOCK, AND JEWELRY REPAIRING

E. I. FEAGLEY20 Vonrs w ith H nin llton lV otch Co. Clocks Cnllcd fo r and DollYered

130 3In ln ATonue O ccan G rore

David H. O’ReillyE L E C T B IC A L CONTBACTOB O rders A ttended to P ro m p tly

E stim ates F u rn ish ed 120 A bbo tt A venue, O cean Grove

P hone 4718

HARRY J. BODINEFUNERAL DIRECTOR and EM8ALMERi007 Bangs Ave., Ashury Park

“HOJIE FOR SERVICES” Private Auto Phone 64

AUTO PAINTING

Perfection Auto Reiinisfaing Co.12 Lincoln Place, Neptune. Near W eller’s Coal Co.

Duco Refinishing Body W ork W ashing—-Polishing— Simbnizing

i Our Prices Very Reasonable.- Satisfactions Guaranteed. | Over Twenty Years’ Experience. Immediate Service.

AUTO WELDING

M AIL SC H ED U LEB ay lfg h t 8 av lag . T im e M ay I» 1888'

S C B E D I/L E OF T IIE A B ttlV A L AND D E P A B T U B E OF M AILS

O cean Grove, N. J . .M A ILS CLOSE F O E

N ew Y dtk—8.D9, 10.45 a , m ^ 1.05, 8.598.00 p . m .

Ne^r Y ork an d • W ay S tations—8.09 a. m „ 8.69, 8.00 p . m ,

N ew ark , N ., J .—8.09, 10.U a . m „ 1.05,8.59, 0.00 p.. m*.

P h ilad e lp h ia , P a .—8.09, 10.45 a . m., 8.10,8.59, 0.00 p. m.

T ren ton , N . J .—8.09, 10.45 a« m ., 8.10,8.59, 0.00 p . m.

F reeho ld , N . J ,—8.09, 10.45 a . ra.f 8. 10,8.59, 6.00 p . m.

B ed D an k , N» J ^ - 8.09 a . m ., 8.59, 8.00 p . m .

Long B ranch , * N . J .—8.09 a . m . , . 8.59,8.00 p. m.

P o in t P le a sa n t an d W ay S ta tio n s— 0.44 a m „ 5.44 p . m.

A sb u ry P a rk , N . J ^ - 8.09 a . m., 1,05, 8.00 p. m.

M AILS A B B IV E FBOM N ew Y ork CIty-^8.40, 10.20 a . m ., 1^ 5,"

2.50. o jo p. m.N ew Y ork an d W ay S tations— 0.10, 10,20

а . m.', 1.25, 9.50, 8.SO p. m.P h iladelph ia , • P a ,—8.40, 10.20, 11.00 a .

m.. 8.30 p. ro.N ew ark . N . J ^ - 8.40, J0.20 A . m „ 1^ 5,

9.C0, 8.50, 8.30 p . m . •*T ren ton , N. JV—6.40, 11.00 a . m ., 8.C0

0.30 p. m.•Long B ran c h , . N . J r - 8 .40, . 10.20 a .

8.60, 6.P0 p. m.Bed B ank , N. J ,—6.40, 10.S0 a . m., 8.50;

б.80 p. ra.F reehold , N . 8 .40, 10.20, 11.00 a*,

6.30 p. m.P o in t P le a sa h t an d W ay . S ta tio n s—8,58

a . n i . , . 4.40 p.m.A sb u ry P a r k , ^ . J ^ - 8.io , 8.50 a . m n WO

6.30 p. m.„ - •

ALLKIEV0SOF*

A ir M alls Close a t Poatopiee F o r C hicago, 111.—8.09 a . m „ 1.05, 8.00 p . ' W Los A n/riles, Cal.—6.00 p« m« • Boston,'il:aBB.—6.00 p. m .3IIftml, F la ,—1.06, 6.00 p .m .. . 'S t. P e te rsb u rg , • F Ia^—8.00 p. m ,

JO S E P H U A IN E A B . P o stm as te r.

D A Y ’SIce Cream

G ARD EN

Candy Gifts48 Pitman Avenu^

Near Auditorium Ocean Grove

SCHULTZ WELDING WORKS“ If NVo Ciin’t wold I t—J u n k I t ”E L E C T IIIC AND A C ETV LE N E

A uto R ad ia to r R epa irs P hone A. P . 2750 F ender B ody R ep a irs A sbury Aye. an d N eptuno H ighw ay ' A sbury P a rk , N. J .

CROCKERY

Essex Cut Rate Crockery Co.15 South Main Street, Opposite Ocean Grove GatesSpecial Rates for Hotels, Restaurants and Rooming

Houses. Let us give you an estimate before, you buy and convince yourself.

DAILY BAKING

PcA T E N T SAND TRADE-MAiRKS

C . A . S N O W B e C O .Successful Practice since 1875. Over 25,000 patents obtained for inventors in ev.ery section of country. Write for book­let telling how ' to obtain a patent, with list o f clients,

in your State.

710 6 th St* Washington'; D. C

REITZ’S MODEL BAKERYBREAD—ROLLS—PIES—CAKES—FRESH DAILY

47 P llB rim P a th w a y . . Ocean G rove's O nly Y ear-R ound B ake Shop.

REPAIRING—BATTERIES—TIRES

DAILY TRUNK arid BAGGAGE SERVICE

Tp and From New York, Newark. Phil- adelphia. S pecia l R ates on Part Loads

JERSEY COAST TRANSFER CO., Inc.” Telephone, Asburjr Park 6070

U . S. L . B a tte r ie s E s tab lish ed 1919 TeLW heel A lignm ent A. P . 2771

FRANK S. MORRIS, INC.T ires, Tubws, B a tte r ie s , Vulcanizing-, A uto A ccessories, B rak e , T iro an d

B a tte ry Service, G eneral A u to R epa irs .82 S ou th M ain S tree t. O cean G rove.

PAINTS

STOCK’S PAINT COMPANY, Painters’ Supplies, W holesale and Retail 17 South Main Street, Asbury Park, N. J.

STATIONERY AND GIFTSLONGSTREET’S STATIONERY, PARTY AND GIFT SHOP

G T tE E T H ra C A M S a s p e c i a l t y —h o t e l s u p p l i e sLovely V arie ty of $1.00 G ifts.

E tT B B E lt STAM PS M AD E TO O BD EB—W A TEBM A N FO U N TA IN P E N S • 708 M attison A venue. A sbu ry P a rk . P hone 6708

WATCH YOUR HEELS

Crooked, rundown heels, - often means rundown nerves and sprained ankles. They cause to break down instead of to w ear out. Have your old comfortable shoes soled, and heeled properly and en­joy walking.

M. DeMARCO Shoe Rebuilder

ELIABLE ESPONSIBLE EASON ABLE

SHOES SHINED3 Main Street, Asbury Park

Near Rialto Theatre.

T H B E S

^iiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuKiiiiiiiinarjiiiiiiiititiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiinig

I DRY I1 CLEANING I| While You Wait ]

1 French 1| Dry Cleaning Co. || 631-633 Mattison Avenue| Asbury Park |

i Telephones: §

} 2364 and S916 f

.=tiiiiitiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiii[iiiaiiiiiiKii[iiiiiiiiiaitaii2 _

| Albert L. Brown |I Jobbing I1 TIN AND SHEET |

1 METALWORKER 1| Slate and Asbestos Shingle . .= | Roofing, Stoves, Ranges and | I Furnaces. Pipeless Heaters | I 109 Abbott Ave., Ocean Grove g| Telephone 3142 |

/iiiiiiiiiiiittititiiiiijiiJiiiaHiiiiiiaiiitiiitiftiiiiiiiiiiitaiiiiiiiiiiK

I B E S T LEHIGH I

| COAL I= Cash on Delivery i

1 HOFFMAN COAL CO. J | Yard, Fifth Ave. a n i Railroasi |

1 Telephone Asbury Park 5267 |S . ♦ ; C3 .

^iiaiifiiaitiiiaitiiiiuitiiiiiiiitaiiitiaiiitiiiiiiifiiiiiiiiiitiiiitiani^ ;

LEGAL NOTICEMONMOUTH COUNTY COMMON P I jE A S

COUBT.

W illiam H . • W e a rt,Recolver of tho O cean G rovo N a tio n a l B ank ,In liqu idation ,

PlaintlfT, ) i n A ttach m en t.vs.

M a n ' A. D iefenderfer and A lexander G. D ie­fenderfer,

DofendantB.

N OTICE OF A TTA CH M EN T.N otice is he reb y g iven th a t a w r i t o f -

a tta c h m e n t, a t* th e s u i t of W illiam H . W e art, R eceiver of tho O cean G rove N a ­tio n a l B ank, in liqu idation , a g a in s t th e r ig h ts and cred its , m oneys a n d 1 effects, goods and cha tte ls , lan d s an d tenem en ts o f M ary A. D lefondorfer an d A lexander G. P ie fe n d e rfe r (no n -res id en ts) , f o r th e sum of ono th o u san d e ig h t h u n d red fif ty - seven do llars a n d . fo rty -seven 1 cen ts (?1,857.47), issued o u t of tho M onm outh C ounty Common P lea s C o u rt on tho firs t day of A ugust, A. D., 1933, re tu m a b lo on tho tw en ty -second d a y o f A ugust, A . t>., 1933, has been served an d d u ly executed , and w as re tu rn ed on tho te n th d ay or. A ugust, A. D„ 1933, by tho S heriff o f tho C ounty of M onm outh.

Joseph McDermott,• Cleric, •

D ated , A u g u st 25, 1933.K rem er, Keupet* & P ro c to r, «—35-38 . A tto rn e y s .’

- -AT i STILES' STORAGE WARE-

a o y s E , 1112 Corlies Avenue*

' - ' Neptmse.Uader Msasgemei-t of .laioV;

^REG’LAR FELLERS jttnmie Meets With Some High Finance By GENE BYRNES

P A G E F O U R

H i S i tm 1 1 ’ m I B i i i i i i i i i i P i^ : . ' - FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER !E>j.1933 !.

FOUNDED 1862 V WEEKLY EDITION

THE OCEAN GROVE TIMES• ‘ P ub lished F rid a y • ' • v;’’'".'".'"--.

. H O M E R D . KR.ESGE, Editor and Publishet FGRTY EIGHT MAIN AVENUE. OCEAN GROVE, NEW JERSEY, :

, Telephone 7 - •UICirAlib GIBBONS, Local Editor ‘ . *

SUBSCRIPTIONS: Jl.iiO yearly; $1.00 semi-annually; 50c. quarterly or 4c. andpostage per copy, posing1® paid in the United States; Canada $2.00 and foreign

• |2.50 a year. * : • ■ . . •ADD11KSSI5S changed on request—always give lormer address.AD V 1C ItTIS’KM BN’T S : Kates will 1)6 fnrnlslied by us upon reriuest.

W.ATCH T H E ;L A B EL -O N >YOUR P A P E R F O R T H E E X P IR A T IO N O F ,.■ r o t rR s u b s c r i p t i o n V>.-

Entered as second-class mail at tho.Ocean Grove postollice . ; •

• .. . T H E T R U T H IN ITS P R O P E R PI^ACE '

C r e d i t a n d D e b t.If one were .'to judge-by the

headlines'! appearing in the metropolitan papers day after day he would be persuaded tha t the most im portant thing in the world is credit. Make credit easier,, give every man more and.more credit. W here­as the worst thing th a t can happen to the average man is to make credit easy for him. Prior to the 1929 debacle we had years of easy credit. The borrowing of money from the bank was abput as easy as buying a pound of sugar a t the corner grocery, lintil the whole nation piled up a mountain of debt tha t a thousand individual Croesuses could not remove. Credit was urged upon the business man, the industrialist and the farmer* Upon the expectation of the continuance

■ of wartime prices the farm er particularly had cre.dit forced upon him by all m anner of gov­ernment agencies, insurance companies and banks, until the nation today wallows in a sur­plus of farm products a t ru in­ous prices— and debt.

Anyone who knows the average farm er from actual living on the farm (not mean­ing the great wheat growing combines which are not farm ­ers in the accepted sense but g reat industrial organizations) knows how slowly and pains­takingly he accumulates a sur­plus. His stamina and inde­pendence, everything tha t made the nation proud of him, were the result of his fear and hatred of debt. Yet debt was made the easiest thing for him to tumble into.

If the glib government agents who persuaded farm er after farm er th a t he. needed' a new milk house, a new silo, a new barn and persuaded him to run into debt for it could be bound out to th a t farm to pay\ off the mortgage it would be ju s t retribution. Wp know of no labor more worthy of Her­cules than th a t of the . job of paying off a $5,000 mortgage on an average farm even in nor­mal times. I t demands all the resourcefulness' and economy of a real d irt farm er. His h a t­red of debt, consequently, was not learned from a copy book but from hard experience and the experience of his fa ther before h im ..

And now ‘the government’s remedy for all these bureau­cratic, errors is more and more debt and easier and easier credit. The nation ought to be thankful th a t the banks, at least, have waked up and are now applying the brakes, W,e

. prophecy th a t no coercive measures are going to compel them to do with the ir deposi­tors’ money w hat they would not do with the ir own.

al development through lec­tures, musicales and classes. During recent years the scope has broadened to include many

.civic enterprises, so that they have be.come very influential, in their various communities, and a help to all sorts of wel­fare organizations. Commun­ity Christmas trees providing needy children with clothing as well as toys, hospital ai-j committees, educational \\;ork in cooperation with the schools, and many other enter­prises enter into the work of an active woman’s club.

Not the least of the tesults. accomplished is the develop­ment of the latent powers of the members. Often a retiring and little known woman when serving on a. committee re­veals unexpected ability. She acquires confidence and be­comes a much greater influ­ence in her family and group than she has ever been before. The gift of organizing is a very valuable one as large tasks re­quire united and well directed effort, and the executive abil­ity acquired ' through these clubs reaches out into many lines..... Under the broadening infi- ence of joining in some effort for the common good, petti­ness disappears, the spirit of narrow criticism is replaced by a larger appreciation of the en­deavors of others, and the life of the community cannot fail to . reflect the inspirations de­rived from these movements.

JU ST HUMANS By GENE CARR

<A3i*v

‘1 Sent for Jimmie Dugan to Whip Him, Not You.” ‘Well, He Paid Me T’bat for Him.”

much less while he still is in them the former Secretary of Treas-tht. nnhliV cprvire Thp -nullin' flnd?r Ho?ver regime, Ogdentne puDllC sen ice. in e pUDllC wh0 ls gaKj to have vast Alaskahas already bought’ 'and paid claims. Among other Republicans fn v liitf w isH nm ” • ; whose activities are in the public eyeIOl hlS \\ lSClom. __ i Js form(,r Senator James Watson of

- | Indiana. I t looks as though IndianaT h o se w h o p la n to g o a w a y Republicans would send Mr. Watson ~ , . . . _ , , ; back to Congress as a representative

in S e p te m b e r a i e u r g e d 'to . re - in the House from his home districtmember St. Paul's C h u rc h D ay , 'Xh'.ch started him on the road to

, . . . ' ,, j political fame for,ty years ago. Mr.morning and evening m the i Watson would not be the first distin- Auditcjrium, September 17, the Ruished gentleman to turn to' the , . , , . 0 , „ - : House a fte r serving in . the Senate:biggest event.in St. P a u ls an-, there is Rqpresentative Wadsworth nual calendar. Dr. H. P. Fox New York to bear him company.

• n ' 1 « . 4.1.• and- rumor has it th a t ex-Senatorwill deliver the sermon a t both , Heflin of Alabama is about to. follow services and the Junior and s,,'t- Senator' Sheppard - is .in a o " . i • -11 . J 1 strenuous campaign to induce his con-heilioi- choirs Will participate, j stituonts to stand by the measure-of-

— j bis-heart, the prohibition amendmentm i „ i i • i ,, .' — doomed to-failure, however,—whichThose who like their vaca- j may give his Seiiate seat to young

tions away from the “ madden- I Representative Bailey, son of the re- ... , ,, .. .. . ,, , , i doubtable Senator Joseph Bailey, whomg crowds find September : once m ade,history under-the Capitol and October the most beauti- ' dome. Seth' Richardson, formerly Re-

, i. 4.T.-..........- ,, I publican Assistant Attorney GeneralfU.l t im e o f the y e a i in t h e , has ; just joined a very Democratic Grove, Each ' year h a s also I corporation a t Washington—the law se e n s u m m e r c a f e te r i a \ a n d | f’" ’m J °seph E. Davies, r e s t a u r a n t se rv ic e c o n tin u e d I f o r a lo n g e r .p e r io d in th e fall.

6 ..

HE position which this Bank holds today re­

sults from its consistent meeting o f the needs of. its depositors in all cases permit­ted by a sound banking policy

N a t io n a l B ank% ;: s t r u s t Co m pSavings— - ®Commercial, Trus t \

..... iii|,i,i,i,i|,i|,,|»i>,||ii|1|i,ii,||,ii,|i,i,*n,|i,ll,llll,yHll,*H,,,*li*I!*.l,.,,ir ;

In all discussions of the NRA code as applying to local hotels it becomes increasingly apparent th a t a code of mini­mum fa ir prices is as-im port­ant as a code covering work­ing conditions. When rooms are rented transiently as low as fifty cents a night, ' as charged a t the businessi men’s meeting Tuesday night, th a t is unfair competition because it is business taken a t a loss and consequently demoralizing.

'After all, isn’t it. safe to as­sume tha t conditions of the past ' summer were abnormal and tha t in the long run vaca­tionists will gladly pay w hat cleanliness, service and pleas­ant' associations are really worth? They always have in the past. Therefore .it would seem to be good judgm ent to set a minimum price for the Grove th a t shows a fa ir profit- and stick to it. Certainly it should be possible to bring about such a universal agree­ment, as every house t h a t rents rooms, even though it be a private home, is classed as a hotel under the new hotel code, th a t is before the presi­dent for signature. ■

W om en's Clubs.The season. is approaching

when the activities of the •women’s clubs will begin and many women all over the country are busy completing plans fo r the year’s work. The summer has seen groups gath­ering to form ulate these pro­jects and the calendars will announce . many, interesting meetings and pursuits which may be expected in the coming months.

Formerly the women’s club vmovement. waV largely preoc-i

And no\y the gossips who can’t, let Professor Moley rest in the " well- earned'peace of the Astor editorial sanctum, are. convinced ‘ that neither the London incident nor. the Hull- Moley fqud ivas responsible for the. resignation of the professor from his post of State; it has been decided that a latent and traditional personal rivalry with some other adviser in royal favor flared into open flame— with the result ju st noted by the world and his wife.

Velvet Picture H»tThe wide brimmed picture hat of

black velvet Is the best thing that has come along for many a day;' if you are the type to wear any big; hat Rt all. ’ ’ A .

JlllllllllllllliliririlltlllllllflllllllllllllIJflllliltlKltltlllllllllllll':

Washington I Current Comment j

{liiitiiiiiiiiiiiiaitiiiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiii^

Washington, D. C., Sept. l i , 1933.With the return of the President

to the Capitol on the evening of our national Labor Day, the ‘second six- month span of the current adrninis-; tration is entered upon with a definite consciousness of achievement. A resume of the six-m.onth program might not be ■ amiss a t this time-r- before the-forces of the administra­tion tighten tiieir belts, a fte r a brief holiday; and prepare to continue the battle for. national prosperity; The bank holiday, on the very heels of the. inauguration, belongs now to poli­tical history; the special session of.-Congress \vhich bent so1 amazingly to MASON WORK—All kinds; plast-

‘ H V erinS> brick work or concrete. In-" h<i f,nnal3 of natl°n,al pi e‘ ' William Crelin, 66 Clark avenue,nomena, and the measures fed to the Oman r .m m q7./in

legislative-mill have become fact and — - - - - ' ' ' ' ■______ i__£may be briefly recalled and summar- ! FOR RENT—September 15 to May lzed; the Civilian Conservation Corps.‘ 15, modern 8-room home, centrally

275’?°9_ unp™P!°yed X oun£ men> located. Furnace, fireplace, combina­tion range, all modern improvements. Reasonable. Times Office, Box 100.— 37* • ' • ■

ONE CENT A WOBDHEADLINE 10 CENTS

MINIMUM 25 CENTS. CASH TO !• ACCOMPANY THE ORDER

Us To Prevent Fire j| Fire Prevention Week, October 8-14 || ERNEST N. WOOLSTON |I Real Estate and Insurance || 48 Main Avenue, Ocean Grove, N. J. || Telephone 3 9 8 ' , | ....... i n ...........m i .............m u ...................... i i i i i i in i i i i i i in i i i i i i i i i

“Taking in W ashing.”If members of President

Roosevelt’s “brain tru st” were so poorly paid- th a t they had to “take in; washing” fo r a liv­ing there would probably be ah; excuse for their selling govern­ment facts fo r personal profit. Such, ■ how ever,, is fa r from being the situation. They are well paid indeed and hardly need to seek outside occupat­io n s to, earn a living.

Referring to this practice the American Society of News­paper Editors has issued the. following bulletin “No pub­lic official is justified in- selling

the slash in veteran benefits; the eco­nomic reorganization of Federal de­partments, largely affecting Wash­ington; ,. the $3,300,000,000 public works fund; the ?500,000,000.fund for States' relief; the industrial recovery act; the change in banking procedure; the inflationary power vested in the President; the Tennessee Valley de­velopment; the refinancing of farm and home mortgages; the legalizing of 3.2 beer; the consolidation of farm credit agencies and a farm adminis­tration, to adjust .prices; and abolish- surplus. I t has been a brilliant six months for Washington as the na­tional hub of the great machine; it has lived among events of history- making significance; it has seen new figures of national importance come— and some few, go; it has had a dis­astrous Federal department upset; it has witnessed the sifting of the diplo­matic chaff from the wheat; it hiis a t ­tended the launching of industry’s greatest power, the NRA, and count­ed the Blue Eagles going up in win­dow a fte r window. It can be truth-, fully said that the citizens of Wash­ington are sincerely and whole­heartedly “doing their part." If the Capitol is a criterion of the senti­ment of the nation, the ' administra^ tion should have a deep sense of gratification and cooperation. , '

Former Vice President Curtis has been ‘vacationing here with his brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Everett Gann—the latter’s auto­biography, by the. way, is due off the press in October and is awaited with interest fo r its comments on "inside stories” of the Hoo.ver administra­tion when the lady in question played such a prominpnt part. . The genial ■Mr. Curtis is just back from a busi­ness trip to Mexico—the next-to-the-; last news of him concerned gold' mfc-l ing, but he. has, apparently, nothing to say about Mr. Roosevelt's gold riln- ing- concession last -week, which will

FINANCIALLY RESPONSIBLE tenant wants yearly lease November 1st, six or seven room detached house, Ocean Grove, unfurnished or furnished. State full description. Address, Lowest Rent, Box 25, Times Office.—37-38*

In exchange for a Fifteen Room Boarding House situated on lot 50 x ISO feet in the “HEART of A sbury . P ark 's BEST Hotel Dla- trict.” Owner wishes a small home. : ? >. % :If interested, communicate With . <

LOUIS E. BRONSONREAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE

53]MaIn A venue, Ocean Grove, N. J.■ Phone Asbury Park 1058.

! , FOR RENT. Room with or without board, refined private home in Ocean Grove, near Asbury Park. Reason­able.rate. P. O. Box 21; Ocean Grove, N. J.—37* - r-,

FOR SALE^M idwest radio, short and long wave combined, .practically new, $35. Inquire Mrs. Reitz, Reitz Bakery, 47 Pilgrim Pathway.—37*'

FOR SALE—Estey organ in good condition, sweet tone,- suitable for home or other use; price reasonable. Inquirt Box 300, Times Office.^-37*

HANNAFORD HOUSE, room and board, large double room and board, $20.00 a week. 83 Main avenue.—36-39* ; ',;

Swedish massage for women and children a t reasonable rates. Practi­cal nursing. 119 Main avenue.—81- 84*

v .STILES TAXI Service will continue year around service. We thank you fo r ;paBt patronage and tru s t to con­tinue to serve you. Telephones'3427, 7525.:—87-10

EVERGREEN TREES. Special Sale of large sizes, 5 to 10 feet. Wonderful specimens. . Twenty varie­ties, $2.00 each. Your choice of thou­sands. Less than ‘ half wholesale v a lu e .' Never Tjefore have strictly high class trees been offerd so low; Smaller sizes in same- varieties, still •lower. / See our exhibit- a t Trenton

''Nelson's' Fnrm NnrRfirv.' In t.

FOR S ALE-FOR RENTPROPERTIES TO MEET EVERY NEED

LET US SHOW YOUOWNERS: Now is the time to list your properties,'

fo r w inter and yearly rental and for sale.

Insurance of All KindsThe wise owner says: “No, sir! I don’t w ant any

‘bargains’ in insurance. ’ I w ant all the protection and . service th a t money can buy.”

J. N. Garrabrandt Agency' REAL ESTATE MORTGAGE LOANS INSURANCE Telephone 2124 78 Mniri Avcnne, Ocean Grove

Keep Young with ' Your CMdrenDon’t give them a cross nagging m o tto

to remember. A happy home depends upon •■■ yon. I f yonr work is a burden—if the diQ. dren.annoy you—do som ething o b o n tlt today. Start taking Lydia E . PinUum'a

! Vegetoblo Compound. I t will steady ytmf neryen—give yon that extra strength m d energy you need.-

By actual record, 98 dnt of 100 women Bay, “I t helps me.” G ivoito fair chance to ! help you too. Sold by oil chemists.

M M

;^uiiifiii;MiiiitiitiijiMiairiiiiiiiitiiiii!iinitiiniiifnit.iiiiiiiin3

|; In 0 Oat of Town jSiiiiiiiiniuiiiai»iiiiiiiimiiiuuiiiiiiiiniiiiailiiiniiiiiiniiiiii3

' Mr. and Mrs. Philip Reynolds. 10= MtJ Hermon Way, have moved to Philadelphia. •

•Misses Ann and (Nell Perkes have .'moved from -96% Embury avenue to

Asbury avenue.Mrs. J. A. MsKnight and on Hoy,

of Paterson, spent the weekend a t 97 Embury avenue.' • . ..

Mrs. M. E, Brown, of Irvington, ib a guest a t the home of.M rs. HeniJy Smith, 94 Broadway. • ,

Miss Helen Nelson, 93 Webb' avenue,. is .spending a two weeks' vacation at'

Buck Hill Falls, Pa.N at Thompson, 26 Ocean avenue,

is recovering from a serious attack. .. of summer pneumonia.

Mrs. Minnie Wienrick, of Newark,• is a..guest a t the home of Mrs. Wil­liam Russ, 82 Broadway.

George Young, Mt Hermon Way.' will leave on Saturday fo r New. York

where he will visit relatives.Mv. and • Mrs. Frank Evans and

family have removed from Belmar to their .home a t 109 Broadway.

Mrs; Emily Bal? has returned to her home in Philadelphia, afte r spending tlie'su'mjner a t 31 Broadway.

John H, Wall, Lake avenue, who was operated or. recently in Fitkin liispital, is reported improving.

Mr. and Mrs; Howard Patterson, o f New York., have closed their sum­mer home a t 9(1 Abbott avenue.

Mr. and Mrs. L. Vance Jefferis and daughter Betty and Helen Jones, spent last Sunday a t Ocean Gate.

Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Cramer, who spent the summer a t 18 New. York avenue, have returned to New York.

Fred Terhune, 89 Embury avenue.1 lias beer, confine! to his home since las t Sunday with an attack of the.grip.

.Mr, and Mrs, B. B .. Cleveland, of East Orange, are spending a week' with Mrs Anna Farrell, 88 Mt. Zion Way.

Mrs.- Joseph Jackson, who lias been iii for the past two weeks, is report­ed improving a t her home, 11G Abbott avenue.

Mrs. Julia' Kurtz, of . Roslyn. Pa., spent n few days with Mrs. Frank Bipple, a t her summer home 83 Mt.- Zion Way.

Harold Williams, son of Mr. and Mrs. Watkins Williams, 75 Heck ave­nue, has entered his Sophomore year a t Drexel.

E, J. Moore, of Gloversville, N. Y., spent the weekend as the guest oi Mr. and Mrs. Lees Broome, 117 Cook­man avenue.

I Mrs. G. H. Bedell and .Miss Nettie Gild,ersleeve, 3 Smbury avenue, left th is week fo r-th e ir winter honie in Bayshore,'L. I.

Miss Florence Yeast,- 34 Abbott •avenue, is spending a .two weeks’. vacation with her grandmother in

Philadelphia.Mrs, Sarah E. Height has returned

to her home a t 98 Embury avenue, a fte r spending the summer a t 76 Main avenue. "... .

Mr. and • Mrs. ; Henry Smith, of -Maplewood, are guests a t the home of Mr. and Mrs. W arren Hulskamper, 94 Abbott avenue.

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Weaver, who "pent the summer a t 10 Heck avenue, have returned to their winter home,

, 68 Abbott avenue. .Mrs Rebecca Judge, Mt. Pisgah

Way, has returned to Germantown,- Pa., where she is; a teacher in the

Friends school. ■Mrs, Alfred W. Kiddle, who spent

the summer a t the “Magee Cottage, 95. Embury avenue, ha i returned to ■her New y o rk home. - • .

Mr, and Mrs. Thomas Carrick, who spent the summer on Lake avenue, have returned to their V inter home, 18 New York avenue.

Mr. and Mrs. Burt White, who spent the summer a t the Gibbsonia, have returned to their winter home in West Long Branch, ,

A fter spending the summer here c t 88 Heck avenue, Miss Florence Wake­field, returned on Saturday to her winter home in Trenton.

The regular meeting of ths Ladiesi Aid of St Paul’s church will be held Wednesday, September 20, ' a t the church a t 2.30. p. m. . • ■

Dr. and Mrs. Robert Wilson, 121 Broadway, visited relatives inlRiver- side, N. J., hud Allentown, Pa., sev­eral days l a 3 t week.

Mrs. Wilbur Guyer and sons Billy ond Edward, 91 Heck avenue, have returned from n two weeks’ vacation

..at Mahonay Valley, Pa.Miss Helen Bouteli, of Flemington

is a guest nt the home of her aunt arid uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Beu - tell, 98MT Embury avenue.

Mrs. M. E. Bell and daughter Daisy, of Jersey City, who spent the sum­mer a t 97 Embury avenue,'have re- tnjrijed to their winter home,

W alter Smith'ond son Malvern, of East, Lansdowne, Pa., were weekend guests a t the home of Mr. and Mrs. ;B. W. Davis, 94 Main avenue. .

Mr and . Mrs. W. ,B." McKiro, . 92 Webb avenue, aro entertaining their- grandson, Master Stewart McKim, of New York, for several' weeks.

A fter spending the summer at-- Stony Point, N. Y., Mrs. Lillian Wuld-- ron haB reoccupied h e rh o m e a t 95

Webb avenue for the winter.- Miss Eva Quientc-r Sms -returned to her hdn>? Sn Schuylkill H aven .Fa ., ntfce; spending the summer with sier. parents. a t ,’,81 Mt; 2iev. W a y , : . -

■ 'After'1 a t'p easan t'B U im er a t fto -\Vhitfleia,'-Mri;ond:;Mr?. A; -A. . W at­

son on Monday left fo r their whiter home in E a s t; Liverpool, Ohio.

Mr, and Mrs, Charles Diringer and son Hunter, who iipent the summer a t 70 Broadway, have returned to their winter home in Union City.

Mrs, William Buchanct: and daugh­te r Belif>, returned to their home in Bloomfield Wednesday, cfter spend­ing the summer, on Webb avenue.

Mrs. C. K. Ryder, who sp en t. the season a t 79 Broadway, has returned to Pennington Seminary, Penningtdn, N. J., for her eleventh year there.

Mrs. O. W. Greer, ,24 McCiintock street, will, re tu rn on Sunday to her winter home in . York, Pa;, accom­panied by her son, Frank G. Greer,

Mr. and Mrs, Leo Taylor, of Plain­field, were visitors, on Tuesday a t tlje home of their cousin, Miss Mary Elliott, Dunham, 96 Mt. Tabor Way.

Mrs, lames Marshman, evangelist, has returned to her home in Wilming­ton, Del., after prolonging her sum­mer stay in Ocean Grove one week.• Alvin Bradley, who was active ih

the Tabernacle and North End beach meetings during the ccmiccr, returned to his home in Philadelphia tirf Mon- duy. - '

Miss Charlotte Smith, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Smith, 21 Webb avenue, and s member of the training class a t Fitkin Hospital; is ill a t her home. , • •

Lees Broome, Jr., 117 Cookman live- nue, returned ho;ne from a three months’ : vacation 'In ' the .Adirondack Mountains as the guest of his. uncle, E. J . Moore.

Rev, and Mrs. J. N, Kuglor and daughter Dorothy, closed their cot­tage the Trenton House, 78 Mt. Zion Way, last. Saturday ami returned to Philadelphia.'

W ilfred Pine, son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Pine, 123 Cookman avenue, who recently under-,verst an appendicitis operation in ■ Fitkin hospital, is re­cuperating a t his home.

Mr. and Mrs.' James W. Maloney, a fte r spending their thirty-ninth "sea­son a t their cottage, 80 Franklin ave­nue, will return this .week :to> their winter home in1 Jersey City. ,. -

Mr. and Mrs. _J. W arren Hulskam­per'and family, 94 Abbotti avienue, re­turned last week from an. extended automobile trip through. Pennsylva­nia, including Pittsburgh. •

Recent guests, a t the /home of Mr. ap’d . Mrs. Fred Terhune,- 89 Embury avenue, were Mr. and Mrs, Joseph Hermann, Mrs. . J . . A. Penny and daughter Doris, of Union City,

T h e a u th o r ,of “ Queers Anna's Lace," our nev, serial, ' ias a real place in American literature, and unusual qual­ifications for writing sliis story, depicting as it does the part the wife plays in the ac­tivities of an American politl-

, cal leader.Mrs, Keyes is a native of Vir­ginia, born at tho univorsity of that state; educated at pri­vate schools in New England ■with‘finishing courses in Ber­lin and Switzerland. Married Henry Wilbur Keyes, former­ly governor of New Hamp­shire, and later United States s.enator from that state.Mrs. Keyce is the author of such successful works of fic­tion .‘is "The Old Gray Home- etead," “The-Career of David Noble," and' many short sto­ries. ,As the .wife of a United States senator Mrs. Keyes has had £ prominent place it, ;he ffi- .cial' social life at Washing­ton, and her description of that life forms a setting for tho plot and action of this new story.

F L. Strickland, Sr. of Brookline, Mass., has returned to his home there after his fifty-first season in Ocean Grove. This :year he stayed a t the. home of 'Mrs. Alice Holt, 10‘S Heck avenue, Lydia Howard, of New York, granddaughter of Mr. Strick­land, visited him for three weeks while he.'was here.

I St. Paul’s Church Notes ITiiaiiiiiaiiililHaiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiaitiiiailauliiiiiiliiuiiiijiiiiaiiinair

The public is cordially invited to attend these services. .

The Midwe.ek Service is held' every Wednesday eyening.at 7.4E,

The Church School will-be held in the church - ex. Sunday morning a t 9.30 and the Assembly Bible Class, in the afternoon a t 2.30,

Tiie -morning and evening church services will be held next Sunday in

Miss Isabel Van Slyke,. who spent I the_ Ocean Grove Gamp Meeting . Audi- the summer nt .157 Embury avenue, rtorium. The pastor, Dr. H, p , .Fox, will re tu rn this week to . New jersey Will preach a t the eleven -o’clock College , fo r Women, where- she is morning service cm the subject, “Thepresident of the Junior class.

Mrs. Emma Williamson, who has been the guest of her daughter-in- law, Mrs. Estelle.Williamson, 99 As­bury avenue, returned to her home in the Bronx, New York, Sunday.

Search -for Reality,” and a t the seven- th irty o’clock - evening worship his topic will be, “The Sower.”

The following program of music for next Sunday has been arranged by Mr; Raymond Bartlett, director, and Mr. Clarence Kohlmann, Organist.

After spending the . summer here as tho manager of irie Barbara I"

J.' Heck, 36 Heck avenue, Mrs. ; anthem by the Junior ‘Choir; tenor

• here in the morning:. Prelude, “Liebestod,” House fr<jm Tristan-arid Isolde, by ‘.Vagner; r, Mrs. < rfhom bv the .Tunioi- C.hnir. f-nnm*T-, T ir. i . , ,— ---- . i uiiw icii* v y wiu u u iiiu i \v iiu ir: LUJiUi

F. W. Richmond returned last w eek 1 solo, “He Shall Give His Angels to her winter home in Terre Hill, Pa. j Charge,” by. Scott, Mr. Bartlett; offer-

Ocean Grove Chapter, Order of the to rJ', “Andante” from. String Quar- Eastern Star, wilt hold a card party ‘-otto by rschaikowsky; anthem, n t the Centennial hot.-i, 65 'Main ave-! Break Forth into Joy,” by Simper; nue, Ocean Grove, on Friday evening* P°stluae, Toccata, by. Bach. In the SeptemBer 15th. Games s ta rt a t 8 eveninj?: Prelude, “Magic of Night," o'clock. . by Kohlmann; anthem, .“O Lord, Our

n/r *• TT • ‘ xxt 1 -.r ' Ctovemor,M by Gadsby; tenor solo, **OMrs., H arry Woolman, Mrs^ C V. Lord Most Holy,” by Franck, Mv.

field; visited relanves of the Hutchin- Bartlett; offertory, “Reverie,” by son,-.all of Ocean Grove, and Miss Strauss; anthem, ‘‘Prayer of Thanks- Minnie ‘■'hay, evangelist, of Haddon- frivng,” by Kremser; postlude, “March field, visited relatives of the H utchin- Pontfical,” by I .ejnmens. sons in Hightstown on Saturday. ; . _______________

Pension From CarnegieThe annua! meeting of the Ocean Grove W. C. T. U. will be held iii St. Paul’s church on Tuesday, Sep- I G o e - to L lo v H C\pnr<rntember 19th, a t 2.30 p. m, • Reports! ¥ , f ; , , 7 "of departments will be given. Every London —David Ll-.sd George, Brit- member is expected to be present. . 4 Grand Old Man" ' the; rar,

I , .. i receives, a pension of $10,000 yearlyWilliam !Uid Hamilton Fox, sons of Dr. ami M rs-H . P.'Fox,'w ill leave J ° m ?*f„Unlted States’ accora,n« t0 next -week fo r Randolph Macon Everyman.,Academy, Front Royal,. Va. William i' Lloyd George and John Burns, It Is will enter his Senior year while H am -; claimed, are Carnegie political pen- ilton is entering his Freshman year, sionera. .

'M iss Beatrice B ritherton and Miss Ca! aeel* h*c“me nFlorence Scott, workers in the John Radical and .controlled sev-Hall Memorial Church/ New York, Badlcel newspapers, he Is saidhave returne:: to their winter home, to have endowed four Radicals. Two They were summer guests of the of them are Lloyd George, and John Misses Rothbaum, a t 98 Embury ave- Burns. The other two were the late nue- - . | Lord iforley aod the late Thomas

Miss -A. B Phillips, a teacher in Burt, who was a member of parlla- the New York school system, has re- . ment. Burr.B receives $5,000 annually, turned to her home a t' Prince B ay. —____Staten Island Miss PhillipK expects to returr. to her summer cottage at 10 - Abbott avenue for a few 'cek- ends.

Students inaugurateS afe D riving C am paign

Hanover, N. H,—Automobile accl-Miss Carol W .' Wroe, o f Washing- . . , . , . , . ■ton, visited Miss Josephine Lewis at aeHts in whlch mn"7 students were the Whitfield a ’few days; Also Mrs. InJUittd last year ovor football game Robert IN'. Broekwsy and'.daughter,'! week-ends bas caused raiaeoplta$ 8tu- Miss Louise- Brbckway, of E ast dent-governing body a t Dartniouth, to Orange, stopped a t the W hitfield this’. Inaugurate n safety drive- to promote past week. i safe driving. Wind shield stickers,

The news has ben received here t h a t ' bearing the caption “Dartmouth Col- James Jenkins, Jr., iox; of M r. and lege Safety. Drive,V huva been issued. Mrs. James' C .; Jenkins, 12 Embury - On the back of the stlckcrs each drlv- avenue, was married last July to Miss er will sign the following pledge: “I Kathryn Sggleton, of. i Philadelphia. wm drive to promote safety, and the Sun j and 8°od name ot the college.*’

Mr. and Mrs. J . Ross Imith, 24 » . . . , ' M n •Ocean Pathway, left on September I l n e t t O r I jU u tl VC1 on a vacation trip to the Pacific coastvia Yellowstone, Park, where they O f iS r e a a O n i in p s p o l i c esojourned du ng ■ lie early p a rt o f ' Nashville, Tenn.—Police confess thatthis week. Upon their return they they ore slightly mystified as to what will reside a t their .vinter home in Frank Green, twentytWy, n former Jersey City. bakery employee, wanted with 1,000

Mr. aiid Mrs. Henry. Smith,' 94 loa™»of braid. A bakery t ^ , * Wbieh Broadway, formerly of Forest Hill, be lavcbargcd with ateidlng. was found Newark, anrsounce the engagement oi Wrecked oil a highway seven miles out their daughter Florence. M. Smith, of town. No trace of tho.bread has to V. Philip Kirkpatrick, son of Mr-Vboea found; . " , /- ’.iand, Mrs.*'Wifliam H._ Kirkpatrick, of ■ ’> r ~ ....... -Neptune 'No date has been s e t- fo r ; B iblical'Dram a a t Spring Lake. • the wedding. . .. v,;.- . ; 8

I . The biblical Iram - “Thirtv Pieces Evcrdeen Rozema, one.of 5 t .P a u J ’s- of Silver,’’vWill bo'->-i«iionted a t the

church girls, who-Haa;been attendin’' - Spring Lako Community House, on the Newark' norm al1 school, has , left Friday eveninij, September .29 under fo r the ..University of ;,Vienria'.where- the direction o fiM r: \Carolyn Stan-

;wili, apecializb .in German lan- yon;'.for the benefit of the Christian guago and.literature, ghf. was pwardr 'Endeavor-SocietyVof the Cofno M» -P. ed a scholarship.-fpf the h igh^uaU tx.ichu^h.w .E^paraals 'syH ll be heir, ia of.•(scholastictwofs.deno'.'.at^tho .nor,,.1 S t.. PauVs 'chorch’ on;;Tuesday;- Sen- jirial,achool.-;t ''.v?.r,*:V-r''7,i;i^-.v,';;^'/.'.?:,',Vv'tembee'19i':at.-7,4S

DESCRIBES FARM' i ' ADJUSTMENT PLANAgricultural ■ College Preeident ‘ Says Federal P rogram Seeks

to Coordinate Production with Reduced Exports

The Federal farm adjustment pro­gram is partly guided by tho belief that i-xporls of-agricultural commodi­ties will not .soon recover Its volume of five or ten years ago, in the opinion of F. D. Farrell. -President Kansas

•Agricultural College, writing in the Au­gust hsuo of - the American Bankers Association Journal. , '

"Nobody knows whether the farm adjustment .program will succeed,’’ writes Mr, Farrell.' "Its sponsors de- scrlho It frankly as an experiment. It 'seeks Lo socialize agriculture at least to tho extent thht farmers, In what Is believed to he the public interest, will restrain their production activities and that processors, distributors and con- sumers will contribute something to­ward paying farmers for exercising this restraint. The adjustment pro­grams dellnitely are based on tho fact 'that prices are determined primarily by supply and demand. They also are

.'based on the assumption that the ex­port business In'agricultural commodi­ties wUJ not soon return to its volume of live or ten j-ears ago.

Dependence ors Publio Support ,’ “The plan offers wheat OTices in­

surance for 1933, 1934 and J.935, for the domestlcaljy consumed portion of the wheat crop. The insured price is to be sufllcien’tly high to give the do­mestically consumed portion of the wheat crop pre-war purchasing power. I t tho plan is as effective as Its spon­sors hope it will be, the reduction in supply may influence wheat prices so that the entire wheat crop will have

-pre-war'purchasing power.."If tho adjustment- program suc-

ceeds, its launching probably will-mark tho end of an era of extreme individual­ism in agriculture in the United

; States’* says Mr, Farrell;'"Recent fundamental changes led

Secretary Wallace to' say, ‘What we really have to do ia to change the

^Whole psychology of the people- of the United States.' This is-a large order. I t Involves the whole program, of farm adjustment as well as the larger na­tional economic program, of which farm adjustment le a part. I£ the people decline to participate In the program to' the extent necessary to give the experiment a fair trial, we shall never knoiv whether farm ad­justment as now proposed would have succeeded or not If it had been given a.fair trial."

BANKERS PREPARE FARM FINANCE BOOK

Tells Bankers a n d , Farm ers W hat to Consider, in Making

Sound Loans

A' liook on "Making Farm Invest­ments Safe" has been prepared by the . Agricultural Commission of the American Bankers Association, sum­marizing material published \>y Jt dur­ing, tho .past ten years. I t presents a compendium of scientific facts. prac- tibo .and experience in farming, with timely and helpful suggestions to serve as a reference and guide in the daily routine of banking and farming;. From it practical workers in these fields can obtain an idea as to what extent and in what manner farm . loans;should he limited by soil erbsion,.: w;eeds, plant diseases, rodents ana fire hazards, etc.

The book ate* indicates ho'w; rauch is-added to the security af; a farm loan by the farmer who keeps counts and practices good, business: methods, as well as the extent to which Scans, are safeguarded by crop rotation, produc­tion of legumes, judicious use of com- mercial fertilizer^ tho use of quality seed and the providing of home grown feeds.; .

Ahother section sets forth the pre­cautions that should be exorcised by both -the banker and farmer when negotiating loans to increase or im- prove.dalry production, or beef, sheep, sw ine.or poultry production, os well ns whet factors should be 'considered in tho etonomic marketing of products and tho .way efficiency in production affects efficiency in marketing. Many other everyday details of farm life that have a practical financial slgnili- cance are treated in tho book, A par­ticular Important section deals with experience with farm leases and an­other with directed farm credit.

■ " ■ ■ P'A.«ra- w’t v j ; . ':;;4 . ... .iiiiiilii«tiriitiirmiii]iinin,iiuii[|inriii[|iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiii[i,i;iiiiiiiiiiii,i,liii,i,iII,|1||„j,||l||||,ll|I|„l„llI1||1IInIn,||I||IlE,

1 . ' P R O T E C T Y O U . 'A G A I N S T

I FIRE. THEFT, LOSS and FEAR M| B oxes Rent for 93, $5, $7.50 and $15 -I The M ost Space for the Price |

Asbury Park Ocean Grove Bank !| M a i n S t r e e t | A s b u r y P a r k , N . J .

■ M a i n A v e n o i e ' | O c e a n G r o v e , N . X 1

iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiniiiriiiiiiiiiifiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiitiiiijiiiiiiiitiijiii'iiiiiiiriiiuitiuKiii nii,!,,!,!,,,!, nigriiiiitisiiKiiinnriBii *

y'liiiiiiiiininiiiiniiiiiiiittiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiKiiiiiiiiiiiJiiiiniin'iniiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiinijniiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiniie,

712 Mattison Avenue, Asbury ParkK inm onth Building

$1| M en ’s a n d W o m en ’s S u it s

\%fu

| We Call for and Deliver |

| Telephone, Asbury Park 444 I

NO SOLICITORS CASH AND CARRY NO DELIVERIES

Shoe Repairing Prices Slashed!

6 9 ccH a l f S o le s : Ladies’ 0 3 Men’s

Rubber Heels Jfarfor.

Branch of Miami Beach, Fla.606 BANGS AVENUE, ASBURY PARK

Between Steinbach’s and Montgomery Ward

^ t ! l l l l l l l I [ l |I I I l l I I I | l l | l l t l l | l l | I l l l l l i l | l [ l l l l ! I I |[ | l i l l ) | l l l l l |v 4 f l l t l t l l t < I l l l | l l l l lV I I I i l t l | | l | t t l l i t | l l l t l l I l t [ | l f t t t l l l< l l t i t l l l t l l |} ( I l l l t l I I { f ! m

Comfort and Style ji n §

Summer Footwear iAt Reasonable Prices jj708 Cookman Avenue |

Aibury Park, N. J. |

Shoe Outlltters for Men, Women and Children i1 *' ’ ’ • v S;iiumH»HiiHiniiiii»iiiiiiii»iiiiiiiiiiiiii«iiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiniiiiiiiiiininiiniiniiiiiiininiiimniiig

Jacob Grossman

QUAKER INN:il Main avenue. Splendid luncheon, S5e.; Daily Platten Dinners, '40c. and 50c. Poultry Dinner, 75c. Rooms. TeL 7526.

M. B. STRATTON. .

Bank ; M ak e" Best Record tnR.-F- C. Loans Repayments.Among, tho loans of $2,819,000,000

made- by tho Federal Government through the Reconstruction Flnanc: Corporation, the highest percentage of. repayments, official reports show, has beon made by tha .banks, Indicating the return of stability aa tho chief un­settling' element of imbllc fear hns boen'Jlifted from them.

T ha1 Reconstruction Finance Corpo- ra tion1 has authorized cash advances, fully scoured' by sound collateral, to 6^78 hftnks slno^ J t began operations ' In Febpiary ,;lJ3 ; ’and m ade'actual . disbni^^mentsVto'theuirln tho amoun t of -|i,321,873,000, Of thiB amount, how-' ovor;; 1545,078,000, or.over 41 per coat,’ ha».been:r?Jald by tho'fanks. All ’other e l i te s ?pf;s borrowers>ioi\blned hav6 i roraldabbut W per jeent'ottheir, loan*.';

1 3 0 YEARS AGO !.iBiiiiiitiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiijiiniiiiitiiiiniiiiiiki!

(Editor’s Note: These items aretaken from the back . files o f , The Times for the yea.r of 1903.) ■

September 12, '1903.Rev. C. H; Y atm an ' held his last

Temple Service of the season on the preceding Sunday.

J. L. Hesse, director .of music a t St, Paul’s, visited friends in South Jersey the preceding week.

H arry Harsin and Elizabeth Grdw- etl, both of Asbuiry Park, were to be married; on the' following Tsasday.

Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Nittinger, of Philadelphia, celebrated their twenty- seventn wedding anniversary on the preceding Sunday.

St. Paul’s Sunday School and F irst Baptist Sunday School of Asbury Park held their annual excursion- to Lakewood th a t week.

Among nominees for various posts in Asbury Park were Frank L. Ten- Broeck, William G.. Burroughs, Milan Robs, Thomas A. Seger. and Theodore Hulick.

I Matthews & Francioni j| Sn«ee«eore to =| GEOBOB B« SEXTON |

| Funeral Directors jB The OMkrt V a M a ita e X-«aU](b*' | J ew»- 'ie KteessMiHk Oaontr '• i OMHosoi Stcrlse

osa ' Biwlo* '704 \7A,Ave^iibaiyPaHc, KJ,

-, M-Sufcrg." cucnipc su

Former SenatorGeorge H . M o t u n id i

“Not since Winston Church­ill’s significant political eov- els of :i generation ago ' has there been n. book which tvUl stimulate and quicken cariosity as QUEEN ANNE’S LACB does.”

| Wilbur R. Guyer |J Successor Vs || WILLIAM YOUNG |

I PLUMBING AND 1I HEATING Im - g-'| Estimates^ Given s| 64 Main Avenue, Ocean Grove I 1 , Telephone 428 I

R O O FSOF ALL KINDSNo Charge for Estimates

Kelly Roofing Co.6S South Mais StreetAslrat}' Pare,

Telephone 1377 :

P A G E S I X FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER {15,1938

•50 is foe regular price o f this remarkable EASY WASHER we are now offering . . .

fo r a short time o

$at

. 5 0

This is the best buy iii a w ashing machine i t has .ever' been o u r privilege lo offer o u r custom ers-^and frank" ly, it ia an offer we.tlo no t expect to be able to duplicate soon. .

Form erly, a t §79.50 , this EASY Washer was one o f the m ost popu lar models in the whole EASY line o f hom e laundry equipm ent. Yet today— and fo r a few days longer while our present stock lasts—-w e are offering these brand new m achines——in crates, just as they were received from the fac to ry< ~ at $59.50, a saving o f § 2 0 .0 0 !

We believe this is the last chance we will be able to . offer you, fo r some tim e to come, to buy a genuine EASY W asher, with all the fea tu res offered in this EASY Model, a t a price so low.

These are, the things you'll icant to Jcnom about this EASY WASHER

First—and f oreinost— is the fact that i t is an EASY Washer, . which means a lot to discriminating buyers, EASY Wash­ers, you know, art; not made to'sell at a price. They are made to EASY’s quality standards—the highest attain­able. If you buy an EASY you Unato you arc getting the most for yowr money.

Second—Tltis* iSASY Washer is equipped with an electric pump that empties the water for you when you have fin­ished washing. No more heavy buckets to Mft and carry* he pump does the work for you. The lowest price

ever quoted on an EASY will} electric pum p..

Tfiinl—Large capacity. Other EASY’s have larger ca­pacity, but this model is a good family size—equal to or greater than most washers that cost a „reat deal more money.

Standard wringer with balloon-type rolls; porcelain en­amel tub; and sturdy construction offering a hundred other mechanical features expected in EASY quality washers.

J ersey Central P ower & Light Co.S 3 jELEC— SP-9-3

Let Us Arrange a Demonstration fo r You

Telephone* 342 and 4848 3NfP ( 0 « m t

D im tory

Asbury Park Chapter No. 671, lad ies of the Moose, meets every. Friday in Moose Hall, Lake avenue and Emory street.

Lady Chester Lodge ol Rebekah,'I. O. U. F . Meets lirst and third F ri­day evening a t 700 Main street. Noble Grand, Mrs. Elizabeth McNichol; Re­cording Secretary, Mrs. Ellen E. Kisenuerg. ’

West Grove Council, No. 273, Jr. Order United American Mechanics. Meets Red Men’s Hall, 1140 Corlies avenue, every Wednesday evening, 13. 15. Burdgo, Councilor; Walter H. Barton, Recording Secretary.

Wanamassa Tribe of Ked Men, metis every Wednesday in Republican Hall, Bradley lieaeh. Chief of Rec­ords, Stanley Paimateer, Avon.

Queen Esther Lodge L. L. O. No. 290. Meets 810 Cookman avenue, first and third Friday.

Primrose I.idge, Sons of St. George, meets, seconu .and fourth Tuesdays in Moose Hall, Lake avenue and Emory street.

Harold Daley Post, No. 1333, V. F. W. Meets a t 10 Main street, Asbury Park-, second and-fourth Wednesdays. Harold I. Tillotson,' commander; John Sanderson, adjutant; Benjamin E. O’Brien, quartermaster.

Jorda- i Link, Order of Golden Chain. Meets Winckler Hall.

Asbury Park Council, No, 23, Junior Order United American Mechanics. Meets 810 Cookman avenue every Wednesday a t 8 p. m. Counselor, P. Rushton; Secretary, Henry D. Cham­berlain.

Tosumseh Tribe, No. CO, Improved Order Ked Men, Meets Red Men’s Half, Corlies avenue, Neptu.ie, every Tuesday a t 8.00 p. in. Collector of Wampun, F . O. Jones; Chief of Rec­ords, John N. Ennis.. Monmouth Lodge, No. 107, Knights of Pythias. Meet? Winckler Hall, M attison avenue, second and fonrth- F riday a t 8 -p. in.; Willard R. Smith, C hinrelor Commander; Charles Haas, Secretary ...

Liberty Council, No, 52, Daughters of America. Meets Red- Men’s Hall, 3140 Corlies avenue. Councilor. Mrs. Gertrude Buck; recording secretary* Mrs. Florence Taylor.

B. M; Har.tshorn Camp and Auxili­ary, United Spanish W ar Veterans. Meet ■ second Monday every month, Library Hall, Asuury Park, John Fitzgerald, Secretary, Wanamassa,

Liberty Temple No. 0, Ladies of Golden Eagle, meets every Wednes­day. in Moose Ilail, Lake- avenue and Emory street.

B. P. O. Elks, No. .128; Meets Elks’ Building, Cookman avenue and Heck street, second and fourth Friday.

Mizpah Shrine, No. 10, Order of White Shrine of Jerusalem. Meets in Masonic Hal], Ocean Grove, first and-third Saturday a t 7,30 p. m. High Priestess,--IBS, Beulah Swain, scribe,

j Mrs. Eliza Evans.'; Stas: of the Sea Lodge, No. 24, | Shepherds of BptliJehem. Meets i every Monday night, Moose Hall,

Lake avenue and Emory street.| Twin City Chapter, No. 87, 0 . E. S. : meets, the second and fourth Friday j evenings ir= Masonic Hall, Asbury j Park. Worthy Matron. Jean M. ! Srjiitfi; Secretary, Mary B, Charles,! Ocean Grove Chapter, No. 170, ' Order of - Eastern Star.- - Meets j Masonic Hall, 50 Pitman, avecs®, set1- I ond and fourth Tues.day a t 8.00 p. m. {'Matron,. Mrs. Edith ,K. Porter; secre- ' tary, Mrs. Jean Marshall.-

American Legion Post, Nc, .-24. Meets first and ttord Monday a t the American Legion Home, 509 Sewall avenue. Executive Committee second

j and - fourth -Tuesday. Commander, ( William Donor; Adjutant, . Vance i JefferisL Auxiliary meets second and I fourth Monday.. „Mrs. Anna Wanser, I President. ' ■'I iicriba Council, No. 25, Loyal Lsdiea I of Royal Arcanum. Meets Odd Fel­

lows Halil 708 Main street, second l and fourth Friday, 8 p. m. Regent, j F.'crence Drake; secretary, Mrs. Anna ■ Tarasovis.

Neptune Chapter, No. 25G, Order of the Eastern Star., Meets Red Men’s Hall, Corlies avenue, second and fourth Friday a t 8 .p. m. Worthy

! Matron, Myrc'.e McGarvey; secretary. Florence .Tolhurst.

Ladle. Auxiliary of Washington and S tokes' 9re companies. Meets second and fourth Mondays; 2,80 p.

Im, Mrs. Bertha Ferris, president; Mrs, William B. Gilbert. Secretary,

Asbury Lodge, : JIo.. 142, F. &A. M. 'Meets northeast corner Cook­man avenue and Main street, .first and third Tuesday, a t 8 p. m. Master, Ellwood Salsbury; Secre'ary, Frank 'Pullen, P. M. ,

Burbage Castle, No. G2, Knights oi Goloun Eagle. James G. Parker,-. N. C. Harry C. Mauch, M, of R. Meets every Monday night in the Stricklin Building, 703 Coikman ave­nue.

.-Ulantic Encampment, No. 22, I, O. O, F. Meets second and fourth Tues­day- at. 70G Main s tre e t. . Chief Patri­arch, Joseph W. Foster; Scribe, .tames

; S. Smith.1 - Canton Monmouth, patriarch Mili- ! tant, I. O. O. F. Meets first and third i Saturdays, in I. O,..O, P. Hall., Red jBan'li.' Chev., A. B, Barnes; Clerk,! Sydney,Caddick.I. i’ride of Monmouth L. L. 0 . I,. No. 302. Meets Newman's Hall, Seventh, avenue, Belmar. -.

Neptune L. O. L. No. 6G8. Meets 810 Cookman hvenue, second andfourth Friday.

Asbury Park Council, No.- '816, Knights of Columbus. Meets BOS Summerfield avenue, second andfourth Thursday a t 81). ni.

Pride of the Park Council, t\o. .15, Sons and Daughters of Liberty.Councilor, Miss Elva Pearce; Record­ing Secretary, Mrs. Jennie Emmons,

Trinity Chapter, Order of De Molay, meets sdcond and fourthThursdays in tho Ocean Grove Ma­sonic -lodge rooms, Pitman avenue, Ocean Grove.

Oce^n Grove Parent-Teachers’ As­sociation meets Neptune.High School. President, 'Mrs.. Marjorie MacWhin- ney; secretary, Mrs,,'Joseph Hill.’ Mothers’ Circle meets St. Paul’s Church. President Mrs. William E. Taylor; secretary, Mrs, Harry Mock- ridge.

Jordan Lodge, No. 247, F , & A. M. Meets Masonic Hsll, 80 Pitman »va- nue; first and third Wednesday a t7.30 p /m .'.M as te r , Dr. Sidney Vine- burgj Secretary, Rred Lane.

Neptune Lodge, No. 84, I. O. O. F . Meets 706 Main street every Wednes­day a t 7.80' p. m. Noble Grand; Edward Havens; secretary, James S, Smith. ’ ;

Women’s Club,' of Ocean Grove Regular meetings f.eeond Thursday of each month a i 2,30 p. m. a t lub house, 89 Mt, Carmel Way. President, Mrs. Lees Broome; recording secre­tary, Mrs. Paul Chatfield,

Eureka Club, of Ocean Grove. Meets Masonic Hall, 50 Pitman ave­nue. H. E-. Blauvelt, president; Car- wen F. Dodd, vice president; F rank Van Nest, secretary-treasurer. . '

Ocean Grove Lodge, No. 238, F . &A. M. Meetis Masonic' Half;, B0 P it­man avenue, first and third Monday a t 8 p.| m. Worshipful M asbr, H. Barker. Fiiege;. Secretary; Char.les S. Porter.

Corson Commandery, No. 15, Knights Templar. Meets,, northeast corner Cookman avenue and Main street, first- and third Thursday a t 8 p. m. Secretary, H arry ,Hulit,

Pontoosuc Council, D. o f P„ meets first and third Tuesdays of each

i'month, in Moose Hall, Lake avenue and Emory street.

Asbury Park Lodge, No, 253, I. O. O. F„ 706 Main street, every Thurs­day, 8 p m. Noble Grand, William Mikoiasi; Secretary, John F. Knox.\ Corinthian Castle, No. 47, Knighta

of Golden Eagle. Meets Monday evening? in Mikado . Building, 810 Cookman avenue, a t 8 o clock. C. J. Collard, M. R.

Atlantic i,odgt! o f Rebekah, I. O.O. P . Meets first and third Tuesday evenings a t 706 Main s tre e t Noble Grand,' Mrs. Alice Carter; secretary, John F. Knox. '

Coast City Council, No. 818, Royal Arcanum. Meets A m erican ' Legion H-jrr.e, K09 Sewall avenue, second and fourth Tuesday a t : 8. p. m. Ssgent, H. D. Kresge; Secretary, F. C. Drake; Treasurer, Fred Quelch.

Asbury Court, No 21, Ordc of Amaranth. Meets in Masonic Hall, Ocean Grove, second and fourth Saturdays a t 8, p. <n. Mrs. Selma Schultz, Royal Matroh; Miss Pearl Van Dyke, Secretary.

Asbury Park Lodge, Nc. 258, L 0.0 . F. Meets Thursday evenings r.t 706 Main stree t Noble Grand. George 0 . -Voll, Recording1 Secretary, W alter Voli .

Loyal Order of •• Moose, Asfcury Park Lotfea No. 1401 Meets. Moose Hall, Lake aventjo and Espory i-treet, every.Xhnrsday a t 8, p .m . Eetwetory, George’;Avison. v.V-

Directly on the Ocean Front

Opens Decoration Day

Closet October 1Steam B eat

Running W ater Private B a tis

Modem Booklet

H. W. WILLIAMS, Ownership '

Management

Also ROUND APARTMENTDial 2-3261. Furnished or Unfurnished. Summer or Yearly Rentals.

Whitfield HotelSURF, BEACH AND BATH AVENUES

Aqe block from ocoan. Ono of tho bost oqnlppod ho te ls in Ocoan Oroye. Snltos w ith p rlro to b a th .- ro o m s w ith p riv a te to ile ts. F o u r Jargo porches w ith ocean tIowb, FreBh vegetable* a n d sea food. A m erican a n d Em ropean r i a u . F irep roo f.

H ates com m ensu ra te w ith p re se n t conditions.P hone A sbury P a rk 1091.

CHARLES M. HERMAN, O w nerslilp-M anagem ent* .

Season* M ay 27 to S ep tem ber 1B| 1083.

| rjr.,-, s5 TH IR TEEN TH SEASON S

| GRAND ATLANTIC HOTELo • ... ^• a n d •

[ GAPBTERIA ]• O pen U ntil O ctober 15 j: FAM OUS SUPREM E BLEND CO FFEE \• - - •5 Beach an d M ain A venues, O cean G rove j; A lso o p era tin g th e n e w GRAND A TLA N TIC CAFE* || TERIA, 204-10 Cookm an A venue, A sbury P a rk J5 M. J . W OODRING. !• • ' . • ' ■ ■ I ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . I . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

S Twcnty-eighf Ocean Pathway, Ocean GroveS Run on American Plan« Will Open its Dining Room on July 1 for the Rest of the SeasonJ Anyone Wishing to Reserve a Table may do so on Short'Notice.S All Home Cooking. Fresh Fruits and Vegetables,• Rates on Application |S Phone 1162 MRS. A. L. E. STRASSBURGER. j

••••••••••••aataaa»(aaM*M*MaM«M»aaawa>««itia«MaaaaiaaaaaaaaHaaa»a

5 HOTEL AND CAFETEaUA• 28 Main Avenue Ocean Grove, Telephone Asbury P ark 1905.• Cheerful and comfortable rooms, with hot and eofd running \ j• w ater a t moderate rental. Open fo r guests from May fifteenth to f• October first. 'I The SAMPLER INN CAFETERIA will open for its SEVEN- i; TEENTH SEASON , on THURSDAY, JU N E TWENTY-SECOND. < S with the same good h'ome-cooking and courteous service.• MARY W. NEWBERRY WRIGHT, Proprietor. S^aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaanaaaaBaaaa»aaaa**»«M»M«H*aaHaaaaaM» ^

A R D M O R E -S U M M B R riB L D6 and 8 Ocean Pathway •

Overlooking ocean; Hot and cold running w ater in all rooms. Booklet, Special June and September rates. Phone 2784-Asbctry,’ E, K. SHAW, Ownership Management. -

CORDOVA26 W ebb A venue ' .

F irst-class family, ho te l, cosy an d hom elike. N ear beach , Excellent m eals. R unning w ate r in rooms. C apacity 76. A m erican an d E uropean . Phone MRS. A . MESSER E, O pen a ll f e a r . O w nerahip-M anagem ent.

S t . E lm o H o te lC om er M ain and New Y ork A venues

B. R. SHUBERT :O pen A ll Y ear , Telephone,^ A sbury P a rk 67fi

]\ LLENHURST HOTELT ■ C o n n e r C e n t r a l a n d P l t m s n • I I B l o c k t o P o a c h V ■ * 0 0 1 1 8 5 1 a n d S R o o m A p i a . ■ ■ G . F . D R A K E

CAFETERIAS AND BESTAUBANTS . ,

M A J E S T IG G A F E T B R IAAT MAJESTIC HOTEL

The only cafeteria on the ocean front. Light airy dining room. Popu­lar prieei;. Phone -190. GEORGE R. HAINES, Owner and Manager,

“AS YOU LIKE IT ”

S a n d w ic h Sh oppe.60 Main AvenUc. Opposite Postofflce, Ocean Grose.

Try our famous club sandwiches. ' ■Special Club Luncheons, 35c.; Lamb Chop or Steals, Full Course Dinner, 60c,''

OSBORNE BOUSE and CAFETERIA, PiiEisn and -Centrai avenues, near Auditerium and licach, FnrnM ife

rooms. Open June 29.: Phone.- Afei, Under Basse Mahagonicnt, . ;;■ • • • VAN COTTAGE; 40..Central A venue.' Open all-Y ear.'.., • I

-Rooroa.:. A; M. VANSKITB .Roiinln^ W ater:

Wouldn’t You Like More Honie Comfort

In tins modern age every prudent person rightfully seeks the easiest way to accomplish his daily tasks. In your home, c o m fo r t is right* fully a first consideration. Have cobifort this coming winter with an Automatic Gas Heating SyBtem. Be done with discomforts o f fire tending, ashes, inadequate heat. We would like to send on request 'a booklet we have just published

' on this subject.

AUTOMATIC THERMOSTATIC CONTROL OF YO UR HEAT.a y ,

The easiest way to provide heat in your home is by installing Automatic Gas H ealing.lt won't coat so much either...there are several types of gas heating to choose from, and now is the right time to have our experts prepare a survey showing the cost that will bring this comfort and happiness to your home this coming winter.

instead b rin g the South to you, fo r th is winter and every other winter. The heat is Automatic. ,

THE COSTO n Sept. 15 , g a s hom e„ heatin g ra tesareredu ced to 5'A, cents p e r lO O .cu. f t . , p lu s a $ 3 m onth ly

custom er Charge.

THIS IS THE

W A Y YOU TEND

THE FURNACE

1. Where there is no ccllor2. Or use the old furnace«•3. Or use new equipment

JE R S E Y C E N T R A L P O W E R a iG H T C S

r r .P A G E S E V E N

Newt o f the ■

ChurchesSt. E>aurs M. Ocean Grove.

; p re a c h in g ae rv ice : 11.00 a . m . a n d 7.30 p ." m iS u n d a y school, 3,30 a . ni. E pw orth le a g u e , ju n io r le a g u e , U.30, P ra y e r service, W ednesday, 7.45 p. M. Rev. .H am ilton p , F ox, p a s to r . .

. .Trinity Episcopal, Asbury . Park.• S ervices: conducted by- th e rec to r, Rev.

R an d a ll W. Conklin, a s fo llow s: 7.30 a.m i,.ho ly com m union; 9.45, S unday school; 10.45 a . m„ m orning p ra y e r a n d serm on ; 4 p.: m ., Vespers. ■: •. .

West Side' Mission.927 Springwood avenue, A abury P ark .

M rs.' -liesHlo A. B ran d , superin tenden t. S aturday;;. 8 p. m ., M rs. B ran d , leader. S unday .school 2.30, in ch a rg e o f G eorge H . C utter. S unday, 2 p. m ., evangelistic m eeting . T uesday, ch ild ren an d young people 's m eeting ; M rs. B essie B rand, leader. T hursday evening , G eorge Sabin, leader.

F irst Church of Christ Scientists, • Asbury Park.

Services a re held re g u la r ly every Sun* d a y m orning a t 10.80 by th e ,F i r s t C hurch o f C h ris t S cien tist a t T h ird avenue and EJmory s tr e e t T h e rea d in g loom Is open ev e ry day from 1 p. m . to 5 p. m. W ed­n esd ay evening se rv ic e a t S. ■* r •

Lutheran Church Of the Atonement.F ir s t avenue a n d H eck s tree t. Rev.

C a rl H. M iller, p a s to r. S unday school, 0,30. a . m, M orning serv ice , 10,45.. V esper serv ice, 7.45 p. m .

- Ballard Memorial; Asbury Park.Sunday.^at 10.30,- p reac h in g serv ice con­

ducted by the p as to r . R ev . H ., L .B rad- w a y ; Sunday school,. 9.45 a m .j 'E p w o r th League,- G.4 5 .even ing . w orship , 7.3$. P ra y e r m eeting, T u esd ay even ing a t 7.30.

Grand Avenue Reformed, Asbury Park Rev. O tto L . F . M ohn, pas to r. Sunday

school, 9.45 a . ir t .; d iv ine w orship . 11 a . m. a n d 7.30 p. m .; p ra y e r m eeting , W ednes­day , 7.30 p. m.

First Baptist, Asbury Park.'- Sunday school an d a d u l t B ible c lass a t 10.00. a. n v ; a t 11 Rev. C. G ordon Bown- vllle, will preach . A lso serm on a t 7.46. M en’s B rotherhood, 10 a . m . Young P eople’s m eeting, 6.45. P ra y e r m eeting, W ednesday, 7.45 p . - m .

Home For the Aged..63 C lark avenue. O cean G rove. E very

W ednesday a t 2.30 p . m . R ev. W . C. Y erkes, ac tin g chap la in ; conduc ts a re li­g ious service, open to a ll m em bers o f the H om e and a n y frien d s o f the Grove. S acram en t of th e L o rd ’s . Supper a d m in is ­te red first W ednesday o f every- m onth .

F irs t Presbyterian, Asbury Parle. D r, C h arles F . S haw , p a s to r . S unday

s c h o o l 'a t . 10 a . .m. P re a c h in g serv ices a t11 a . m . E ven ing serv ice a t 7;30 p; m .' M id­w eek serv ice W ednesday a t 7.45 p . m. Y oung people’s, socie ty .T h u rsd ay , 7.45 pi

Gospel Hall, .Neptune.204 R idge . avenue, n e a r ,. T en th . W or­

sh ip ... m eeting each L ord’s . D ay a t 10.30 a . xn.; , S unday school a t 2.30 p. m .; gospel m eeting a t 7.30 p. m .; B ib le read* ing an d p ray e r T h u rsd ay s a t 8.00 p. m. nesday evening a t 8 o’clock. R ead ing room opeii daily . C o rner G rand and A s­bu ry avenues, A sbury P a rk .

Hamilton M. E. Church.R ev . Sam uel It. L a th am , p as to r. Sunday

school, !i.30 a . m . P reach in g a t 10.45-a . m. an d 7.30 p.. in. '■ P each in g a t W ayside by R 6 v.\ L a th a m on Sutu\ny- a fternoon a t 3,00’ o’cliick,. follow ing S unday school a t " 2 .U0 . • . . ' •:

Second Church o f Christ Scientist, • Asbury Park. .. r. j

Second C h u rch o f C h ris t S c ien tis t s e r- i v ices S unday m orn ing a t 11; o’clock an d j S unday even ing a t 8 o’clock ; a lso W ed-

TIRE ALARMOCEAK GROVE

2 1 ............. . . . .M e w York an d A sb u ry A ves2 2...................C lay ton’s S to re , M ain A venue2 3 ................................... .............S u rf a n d B each2 4 . . . . ................. .. .E m b u ry a n d Beach25.. . ...................M ain a n d P lig rim P a th w ay2 6..............B roadw ay an d P ilg rim P a th w ay2 7..........M t. T a b o r W ay an d P en n sy lv an ia2 8 ........................... . ......... N o rth E nd P av ilion29. .......................M cCIintock an d B each31 .......................................South E nd P av ilion3 2 . . . ........... C la rk nnd N w Jersey3 3 . . . V.B enson an d Mt. T abo r W a y8 4 . . . ........................... Hflck. an d W hitfield3 5 . . . ........... W ebb and P enn sy lv an ia3 6 ........................ S u rf an d P ilg rim P a th w ay3 7 ..................... .. .B enson a n d F ran k lin3 8 . : . . ........................... :. .B en so n -an d A bbott39........................ N ew Y ork an d S tockton4 1 . . . . . . . . . . : .................H eck an d L aw rence4 2.....................................O lin S tre e t F lrehouse4 3 ................... M ain an d Beach

Special Taps 5—5—5 -G eneral A la rm .. 1 W ire Touble. "

2 F ire Out. 3 T im e 7 a . m. and C h ie fs 2 F irs t-A id S quad. 1 .

F ire Chief, R aym ond R. Graoe.v, E ag le Com pany.

i.Christian and Missionary Alliance,616 A suu ry avenue,- A sbury P a r k . ;

P reach ing serv ices S unday a t 10.45 a. m. and ; 7.45 p. m . P ra y e r m eeting ' W ednes- [ day, 3.45 p. m .. S unday school S unday, i 1.45 p. m . :

West Grove M. E.R ev. W Illllam Gufflck, pasto r. Services

•for th e com ing S u n d ay a s fo llow s: 9.45, S unday schoo l; 11.00, p reach ing serv ice ; 6.30, B pw orth L e a g u e ; 7.30 even ing se r­vice. : ' . • V ; , - • .

Bradley Beach M. E.R ev. E d w ard W . G raham , pasto r. S un­

day school a t 9.30; p each in g serv ice a t 10.45; p reach ing a t 7.30., ' •

W E ST GROVE M a in 'S tre e t and M ain A venue. . . . M ain S tre e t and C orlies Aye.. . . : . . --------- U nexcelled F ire H ouse. . . / ................... A tk in s a n d ' E m b u ry •............................ Prbsp.ect an d He.ck...................................R ldgo an d E m bury ..................... Corlies and RWlge.....................................C orlies a n d U nion...................................Seven th a n d Stokes

R idge a n d E ig h thT en th a n d A tk in s

First M. E., Asbury Park.R ev, E dson R . L each , p a s to r. Sunday

school a t 9.45 a . m . P reach in g service, 11.00 a . m. . Young, people’s m eeting a t 6.30. E ven ing serv ice a t 7.30. P ra y e r serv ices W ednesday a t 7.45 o'clock.

15..16..5 2 ..53..54..5 6 . . . .62 .. . . .7 2 .........81........8 3 : . . . .85........ ...................... ............ ....... ................

........................................... .S ix th an d A tk in s92................................. ..E ig h th a n d H am ilton

Spceka* T aps „ 6—6—6 G e n e ra l ' A larm . 2 A m bulance Call, F ire Out. 3 C hief's Cali, T im e 1 p. m. 4 U nexcelled. 2—2—2 P olice H ead ­q u a rte rs . .

Pentecostal, Liehthouse.905 Sew all avenue, A sbu ry P a rk . Rev.

A lbert E v an s, p a s to r ; S unday school. 2.00, p. m .. p reach ing service, 3 an d 8 p. m.. young people’s m eeting , 7.30; p ra y e r m eetings, T uesdany a n d T h u rsd ay even* Infis, 7.30 o’clock.

Salvation Army, Asbury Park. . S alva tion A rm y b a rrac k s , M attison av e­

nue. Services 11 a m . S unday school a t 2.15.. Y oung people 's m eeting . 6.15 • p.' m. Even ing w orsh ip ; a t 8. E n s ig n a n d M rs. G eorge E . Anscom be, officers in charge . '

Church of the Ascension, BradleyBeach.

Fieldi: Br.'nley a n d F le tc h e r L ake avenues. R ig h t Rev. C anon J o h n J . O’H ara , R ec to r. S unday m a s s e s : 6.15. 7.15, 8.15, 9.15, 10.30 o’clock. W eek d ay m ass, 7.30 o'clock. - F i r s t • F r id a y ' m ass , 6.30, 7.30. Confessions fo r S a tu rd a y s an d firs t Fri* days, 4.00 to 5.00 o'clock an d 7.30-to 8.30 o'clock.

St. James Episcopal, Bradley Beach.Services conducted by th e rec to r, Rev.

E . J. W a le n ta a s fo llo w s: H oly Com­m union- S undays; 8 a . m .; .W ednesday,

,8.00 a. m . an d f ir s t S u n d ay in the m onth ,11.00 a . m . M orn ing p ra y e r an d serm on,11.00 a , m . ; even ing p ra y e r an d serm on,7.30 p. Jm. C hurch School a n d B ible Class,9.30 a . m . L a s t S u n d a y . In th o ! m onth. Children’s E u c h a ris t a t 10 a , m . ; P ra y e r service, S a tu rd a y , 5;30 p . m .

Low Bus FaresChicago . --------------- $16.50New York —— —-:— $1.50Washington, D. C_______ $5.50Jacksonville, Fla. ---- $25.50New Orleans — ------ ----S28.00Los Angeles,. Cal. —'---- $41.25Winnepeg, Can. --------- $33.75Montreal, Can. — -----$11.50Buffalo, N. Y. --------------- $9.50S t Louis, Mo. — — $19.00 Knoxville. Tenn, — — -$17-80

GREYHOUNDDEPOT

LAKI5 AND SUMMERFIELD AVENUES

ASBURY PARK, N. J. Phone 339

B E A B L E T BEA CH.........................M onm outh an d A tla n tic • .......................N ew ark a n d M adison....................... .E v e rg reen a n d M adison...........................................F if th an d K en t............................P a rk P lace a n d O cean ............. .L a R e in e a n d O cean " ,

F o u r th a n d O cean O cean P a rk a n d C en tra l

i , . .L aR eine a n d C e n tra l. . . . . . . . . . . .F if th an d C en tra l, . . . . .O cean P a r k and F le tc h e r L a k a

. . .F i f t h a n d F le tc h e r L a k e ... . . . . . . . . . . T h ird an d F le tc h e r L ake. ; . . . . : . . .L aR ein e an d F le tc h e r L a k e '. * .. . i . . . . . . . .P a rk P lac e and M ain• * ■.•••'......... M cCabe a n d M ain

. . . . . . . . . .B rin ley an d M ain . .F o u r th an d M ain .E v e rg reen a n d M ain• '• • • •• . .B u rlin g to n an d M ain

Secopd a n d ' B eachSpeclnl Taps

6—6—6 G eneral A larm . 1 W ire T rouble. 2 F ire O ut. 3. C hief’s Call. 4 P ioneer Co. No. 1. 6 Independen t Co. No. 2. 6 B rad ley No. 3. 1 long 2 sh o rt. F ir s t A id. Telephone 249.

F ire Chief, Jo h n E stelL

W hitesyllle

21 • • .................Springw ood a n d S p ringdale“ ...........................................F is h e r an d B angs23..................... F lBher an d Springw ood

........................... M yrtle an d M aple25.....................................M yrtle an d S tra tfo rd

.........................................M yrtle nnd M unroe

...................................... '.A sbu ry an d A nehre28 .......................................S tokes a n d M unroe

.....................................S tokes a n d S tra tfo rd32................................. M unroe a n d : O xonla

C MEFOR REAL ESTATE IN NEPTUNE

Telephone 6S35-R 334 FISHER ATENOtThlrtr Vsac* In We Stas Pin

" y jjijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiirtJiiHiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiinHiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiii .... .

/

CsfH/rlgkt'fty

| Interesting romance, with the social life at the|; national capital as a setting. Written by a dis-| tinguished woman author, wHo has had a proin-! inent place in that life.

TJie Wife of a Former United States Senator

This is the first of a number of new novels planned for publication in the Times during the fall and win­ter months. Any one, when published in book form, will cost $2.00. Subscribe now and receive the Times

regularly each week for a year. $1.50 a year anywhere in the United States and possessions.

■ 11

I - ' l y

V. ' i. v• ii ■£& 'H-r a ‘iafizg' ' v rrl : 90 : & -M

’ v , , ;.v> ...........fes1 , >.y-

P A G E E I G H T • " ' j-FRlDAY, S&PTEMBER 16; 1933

Chelsea Groceteria, hie.60 Main Avenue, Ocean Grove, N. J. Telephone 4375

MR A , T h e Store of Quality Merchandise at Reasonable Prices t t E

Following Prices Effective Week of September 15-21WE DO OUR FMT

CARUSO

Pure E gg N oodlesCellophane Wrapped

1 Lb. Pkgs, 17C.

- -. ..SUNBEAM

E vaporated M ilk(UNSWEETENED)

3 Tall Tins 17c*

SUNBEAM

COFFEEVACUUM PACKED

One Lb. Jars 2 5 c «> SUNBEAM

SHRIM PFANCY PACK

Ten 0z. Jar 19C»

SUNBEAM "

■ PU RE JELLYASSORTED FLAVORS

7 Oz. Jar 10C*

SUNBEAM- '

DILL PICKLES

Tall Jar 1 0 c .SUNBEAM

CREAM CEREALT he.H eart of the Wheat

Large Pkg. 1 S c .

SUNBEAM

SPINA C H

Largest .Tin % 5-C %

, SUNBEAMPECAN or WALNUT

MEATS'.:-;,'.

Tall Jar 15c.SUNBEAM

SPA G H ETT IWith Cheese and Tomato Sauce

IS Oz. Jar 1 0 C .

' SUNBEAM...

ROLLED O A T SQUICK AND SLOW COOKING

Large Package. 5 C m

CERTIFIED

V anilla F lavor

Eight Oz. Cruet 1 0 c «SUNBEAM

S A L A D OILExcellent for Salads and. Cooking

Pint Tin.. 1 7 C «

DAVIS'

CO CO M ALT

Half Lb. Tin 2 3 C ,

SUNBEAM

CHICKED SO U PWit h r ic e

m 0z. Tin 10c.SUNBEAM

A PR IC O TSIN HEAVY SYRUP

Largest .Tin 19c»

SUNBEAM

PUM PKINEXCELLENT FOR PIES

Largest Tin 1 5 c *

SUNBEAM

M O LASSES(NEW ORLEANS)

Large Tins 3 5 c #

RUTGERS* CLASSES FOR UNEMPLOYED

SEPTEMBER 23 IS FINAL DATE FOR ENROLLMENT

Originated Last February, Plan has Proved Successful. Applicants must Interview Dean. University Begins 168th Year Today.

Rutgers University wil! continue this year .to admit without charge to the regular courses in the men’s col­leges unemployed male residents of New Jersey oyer thirty, years of age. Announcement to this effect: was made this week by Luther II. Martin, Kegistrax-, who explained that ad­mission will be granted to those men Who can show evidence_.of unemploy­ment and who are.unable to pay the regular prescribed' fees. The plan, he added, will apply only to the scheduled. resident courses, ant! not to evening- or extension, courses. .

Although the University began its lG8th year today, enrollment for. the unemployed will remain open until September 23., Local residents inter­ested . in the plan should. get in touch sis soon as possible' with the .Regis­t ra r a t New Brunswick.

Each applicant will be required to interview the dean of the college of the University, in which th g courses desired are given. Admission will be granted on condition that the stu­dent meet all class assignments, that he' provide himself With necessary

books and supplies,-'and th a t he ob­serve the same rules governing other students.

The divisions of the University which will admit qualified unemploy­ed taen include the college of arts and sciences, tho college of agriculture, the schools of engineering;, chemistry and education, and the department of ceramics. '

The plan was inaugurated 'a t Rut­gers last_ February, when twenty-five men registered in different courses, the majority of whom did satisfac­tory work. ;

ne School'Notes 1 .

School Calendar, 1933-1934. -One session-Columbus Day, Thurs­

day, October 12.

School closes . fo r Thanksgiving holidays—12.30 p. . m., Wednesday, November 29. . '

School reopens—Monday, ■■■ Decem­ber 'i „

• School closes, for Christmas holi­days.—Friday, December 22.

School reopens—Wednesday, Janu­ary .8, .

Holiday—Lincoln’s Birthday, Mon­day, February 121

.Holiday—Washington’s Birthday,Thursday, February 22.

School doses for E aster holidays- Friday, March 23.

School -reopens—Tuesday, April 3.

Holiday—Memorial Day, Wednes­day, May 30.

School closes—Friday, June 15,

School in session, 183 days. -

A beach party for the high school faculty was giyeti Thursday evening1 a t the Belmar beach.

Mary Jane-Loveland and Mae Seale, former students of Neptune, have re­turned to the high school.

A group faculty meeting was held in the high school auditorium, Satur­day morning4, September 9, a t 9.00 a. m. The-speakers were, Doctor John Sparge, assistant commissioner of elementary education,. William i£ Smith, county superintendent of the schools, and Mrs. Anna T, Dey, mem­ber of the board of education,

OBITUARY

MRS. HARRIET W. HAVENS.Funeral’ services fo r Mrs. Harriet

W. Havens, who died.Monday a t her home, DG Lake avenue, Avere held there on Wednesday - afternoon, Rev, G. Gordon Brownville- officiating. Interm ent was made in. Riverside cemetery, Toms River. Mrs. Havens, a widow, is. survived by a son. Dr. W alter P, . Havens, of Farmingdale, and two daughters, Mrs. H. May Gul- ick, of Bradley Beach, and 'Mrs. Gold­ie Trimble, Ocean Grove.

QUEEN ANNE’S LACE. ois not a story diat “just happened.” It is a story that owes its conception to the fact that from girlhood I have lived in a political atmosphere, and ' its.' Jbirth to the’ fact that none o f the stories that I have read written- about political life from the outside looking in— even ’When written by authors of distinction— has-.seeped to me to- ring, quite true. My novel is not a thinly veiled auto­biography, nor is it the b io g r a p h y o f som e woman. I have -known. - well. It is a composite picture drawn from life as I have seen it.

STRANDBOARDWALK AT CASINO

H ouse o f H its "

The Pick oi the Pictures

Ad u l t sl l SEATS LL TIMES

I R j t , NOHIGHEI

& . CHILDREN, 15c.w to o o w r w iT

NOW 4 S H O W S D A ILY 4

1 —S— 7— 9

Now Playing “ Heroes for Sale”

'..' '• ' WithRICHARD B A RTHELM ESS

Mon.; and T iie3 . Sept 18-19, “SHE HAD TO SAY YES'

With ', Loretta ' Young.

W ed, and Thurs. Sept. 20-21. C harles R uggles and

M ary Boland■>. in

“M AM A LOVES P A P / ’?

Fri. and Sat. Sept. 22-23.“M ARY STEVENS, M. D.”

Starring K ay Francis

This remarkable story, in­te re s tin g as f ic t io n , and d o u b ly in te re s tin g as an authentic picture of official social life a t the national capital, is to run serially in these columns.

Telephoning is convenient a n d low in cost • G o 18 m iles fo r 15 cents; 2 4 miles for 20 cents • . onywhefe in New Jersey • JERSEY BEU .TEUPHONE COMPANY

< U lll r il ll l t l l l l l l l l l l» H « !il ll l . l lh « lllU I1 lf ( IH II tl lll l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l I l t"

INeptune lew s Notes I'.itliiiiiiilii-ililtiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiinKillfiitiiiiiiiHaiiiiiiiiaiiliiiitii;

Ward Miller, Myrtle avenue, spent Sunday a t Esiing Lake. ,

Miss Hilda Kosbaum,- Tenth ave­nue; spent last week in Connecticut.

Aleck Gray and family have moved in the Lane apartm ent on Atkins ave­nue.

Mrs. George Haley, Coriies avenue, visited friends in Marcerville on Mon- day.

Mrs. B. B. Burdge, Leonard ave­nue, recently visited, in Newark and Paterson, • . . . . . -

Millard Grant, Myrtle avenue, has gone to spend the winter in Denville, New Jersey.. .- Miss Pearl Crowell, Summerfield,

spent the weekend with Madelyn. :Me- gill, Atkins avenue.

,Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Sofield are oc­cupying Mrs. J . L. Applegate’s apart-: ment on Sixth avenue,

Mrs. Joseph Reynolds spent Fri­day with her brother, Edward Rose and; family,. Ridge avenue.

Mrs. Emma, Matthews, Lakewoo'd, was a recent guest of'-Mrs, Jane Le Gompte; Atkins avenue.

-Mrs. Dora Rbse,.Kidge avenue, visit­ed friends in Lakewood and Point Pleasant on Thursday.

Mrs, M argaret Humphries, and sis­ter, 1219 Tenth avenue, visited rela­tives in.'Philadelphia, last week.'

Rev. and Mrs. W. B .. Guffiek a re on a two weeks’ motor trip to Mrs/Gvif- fick’s home in Jersey Shore, Pn.

Mrs. Fred La Force, of Claremont, N. H., is visiting her daughter, Mrs. Jennie Thompson, Eleventh avenue.

Mrs. William Young and daughters, Mildred and Jane, Eleventh avenue, have returned from a visit in Newark!

Mr. and Mrs, I. B Grant, Myrtle avenue, left Saturday fo r Sydney, O., and the Century of Progress, Chicago.

Mr. and Mrs. Leon A. • Cottrell, Steiner avenue, wero weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Miller in Eliza­beth. -.

Mrs. Fred M. Esteile, Coriies ave­nue, visited her. sister-in-law, Mrs. Jesse Matthews, in Southard last week.

Miss Annette Le Compte, Atkins avenue, has returned from c motor trip through the Middle West and Canada. -

Mrs. G^crge Miller end son, of Arl­ington, spent last week with her par­ents, Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Ireland,' Ridge avenue.

•Mrs.. George Humphries arid ttoh ha-,-:' returned to their home on Tenth avenue afte r spending several days in Philadelphia.

Mr. and Mrs. William Holmes an-; tertained relatives from Wilkes- Barre, Pa., nt their home on Atkins ayenue last week.

Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Kelly, of 1215 •Sixth avenue, aro the parents o f a daughter born in the Fitkin hospital last Friday sught.

Mrs., Fred-Thompson, of Eleventh. ,avenue, was removed to: tho Fitkin hospital ' Tuesday afternoon by the .-Neptune first' aid squad. -i'< Thei-junibr division of the Neptune Gartfena Comtriinity ci(ub,'.. r«nnned

their regular meetings a t the club house las t Monday evening.

Mr, and Mrs. Leroy E. Burke, VII7 Sixth avenue, are spending their vacation motoring in the Poconc Mountains. They will also spend some time in Trenton, their former home. -y :■■ •■ Members of the West Grove M. E, church auxiliary of the Horns fo r the Aged, Ocean Grove, conducted their September meeting Monday. evening, a t the home of Mrs. John Burke, 106 South Atkins avenue,.

Mr, and -Mrs, Newton Mount, 120 Sylvahia avenue; and Mr. an-J Mrs. Howard Bedell, of. Villa. Park, left Sunday fi?r a two weeks’ motor trip They wil!. visit the Century of .Prof ress, Chicago, returning by way of Lake' Michigan and . N iagara .Falla,

A card party f or the benefit of-the ways and means committee .of the. Neptune auxiliary of,F itkin hospital, was held Tuesday evening: in the Un­excelled fire House,, Corlie; avenue All games were provided and refresh­ments, were served downstairs*.

Miss Gladys Allgor, whose engage­ment to George Parker, of Smr.mer- iield, was recently announced, was the recipient of several useful- gifts a t a shower in her honor a t the home of Miss Geraldine Potter 1111 Eighth avenue'. Those attending were the Misses Maude Tilton,:Anno. Heid- mark, Lilly Ennis; Ruth - Mulford, Mary Jane Schwartz, Gladys Algor, Doris Carl; (Mildred ' Carl, Susie Smith, Beatrice Merwin’ and .Geral­dine Potter.- Mrs. Charles Van Nest and Mrs.' Algor were also present.

j th e Point o f View {

Now, when Europeans tw it us be­cause we iiave no ruins, we can point to the bills we hold against them.— Toledo Blade.

Bernard Shaw thinks Heaver, would be the best place to live. Hard place • to get to, though.—Omaha Evening World-Herald. ,

. The prince of optomists is he who believes th a t poverty and work may be abolished nt the same .time.—Bos­ton Transcript.

When funds run short, many poli­ticians seem ready to make “shock troops” out of school teachers.—In ­dianapolis Star. t

As a general ruin the man who cays “I say w hat I think” would, if he lived up to th a t statem ent, be ra ther silent.—Dayton Daily News.

Chicago is said to have spent $10,- 000,000 for beer in three weeks. That would seem like a lot of money if paid out for education.—Toledo Blade.

William Beebe, who went a half mile down into the aea, discovered th a t we bn the surface cannot appre­ciate a real depression.—Oakland Tribune.

1 County News Notes JM iu im iiiunm um im m u itiiu tiiiiu iiiin iitim nn tjm iiiiirttiiu iiitm im w tiu tjii

It, is expected th a t the Shark River bridge lit Belmar will be reopened Oc­tober 12.

The Addison Club, of Long Branch, has filed papers. of incorporation a t Freehold.

For tiie rest of the season, bathers a t Bradley Beach, Avon and Belmar will not be' required to exhibit tags.

The NRA committee of Freehold, plans to publish the names of all merchants there who do not. sign up to the administration’s program.

H arry ' L. Hopkins, federal relief administrator, was the speaker a t the meeting of. th e .‘Monmouth county organization fo r social service, held a t Lincroft yesterday.- ,

Of th e . $323,690 in 1932 first class railroad taxes, which the State comp­troller distributed to county treasure;s Wednesday, Monmouth received J ll ,- 900, which; will, be used fo r school purposes. 1

Charles Loveman ‘‘IRA ChairmanColonel H. -; Lester -Eisner, S tate

NRA chairman, on Tuesday appoint­ed Township Committeeman Charles Loveman as chairman for .Neptune Township NRA.

Scientists who propose to' change to or electric dollar "'Quid be surprised to -know how much of a. shock we get out of the possession of the kind now in use.—Macon Telegraph.

Some heaven-sent genius has in­vented a machine th a t deals the hands fo r a bridge game. Now we may ex­pect a device that will administer a kick on the shin to a careless bidden, —Milwaukee Sentinel. •

OCEAN GROVEMEAT MARKET

R A . 58 Main AvenneFormerly 135 Heck Aveaue

Telephone 2091 ww«*wt Free Delivery

Jersey Fresh Hams 17c. lb.

Pure Country Sausage 7 23c. lb.

Fancy Beef Liver 21c. lb.

Prime Rib Roast 21c. lb.

Prime ChuckRoaafc 16c. lb.

Jersey .Fowls'v ;k2 1 c . Ib i 'V .^ ;;-

Jersey Central cpoewer & Light

CompanyThe Board ef Directors has c la ren th e fo llow ing re g u la r quarterly dividends:

514% Scries Preferred,N o. 9. Rate: S1.37}4 6% Series Preferred, . ,

N o. 25. Rate: $1.50 7% Series Preferred,N o. 34. Rate: $1.75

payable on October 1, 1983 to stockholders of record a t the do»». of business September. 10, .1933.

L H . Fetter, Treasurer. ■Ki

GARDEN STATE GROCERS

127 Heck Avenue •■ Ocean Grove

F. O. Jones S. C. Burdge Phone 9024 Free Delivery weu'nn

t h e iv o r y Fa m il y 1’IVORY SOAP

2 Larg-a Cakes 17c.

iv o r y So a p v3 Medium Cakes 16c.

IVORY FLAKES '?:- Large Package,21c.. '-vl;

IVORY SNOW 2 Packages 2Sc.

Kellogg "i ' ■ CORN FLAKES : y.i'&g “Over? Freshr-'Flavor- Perf^ct’ r: V' ' Package.;7c. '

, / JELL-O '. All-'.; Varieties,.