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YARD BY YARD LIFE IS HARD INCH BY INCH LIFE’S A CINCH —Anon T I ME S CLASSIFIED ADS BRING RESULTS AND THF, NEPTUNE TIMES Vol. LXXIV, No. 43 OCEAN GROVE, TOWNSHIP OF NEPTUNE, NEW JERSEY, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1948 —*. a n d of the independence, of the United , States of America the I73d . FIVE CENTS Society Appoints Nominating Group Election of Officers In No- vember; Committee Chair- men Give Reports A nominating committee was chosen at the regular meeting of the St. Paul’s Woman’s Society for Christian Service, Tuesday night, and the election of officers will take place at the next session. The new leaders will serve until May, 1950. Mrs. B. H. Decker, Mrs. Clifford Kunckel, Mrs. George Burrows, Mrs.. T. W. Martin and Mrs. H. D. Kresge are on the committee. Mrs. . Charles Poole, president, presided. Mrs. Leslie Vreeland, de- votional leader, used as her subject, “Christian work in Alaska." Mrs. L. B. Mulford, first president of the society, gavé a brief history of its , organization and growth throughout the years, this being the eighth' anniversary of thé W.S.C.S. Reports on Supplies ; Mrs. Alexander Anderson, sec- retary of supplies, reported on' the recent Christmas Supplies party held at the church. Relief packages totaling $100 value were sent to India, Pakistan, Korea, Burma, Ja- pan and the Philippines. She also stated that supplies -\Vcre sent to Hospital International in the Do- minican Republic and to the Ban- croft-Taylor Rest Home here. A $10 CARE package ' was sent to Poland. - • ■ . -. -: The .society contributed $35 to the Frances Nelson Scholarship fund, a conference project. This will enable a= student to enter the Deaconness " Training school in Kansas City, Mo. Tl.ie sum of §5 was also contributed to Japanese missionaries. _ - - Mrs. T. W. Martin, membership chairman, reported the. following new members: Mrs. J. B. Hulit, ' Mrs. Ella Murphy, Mrs. Charles Dennerlin, Mrs. Stanley Watson, page live, please Clubwomen Enjoy Card Party, Lunch Over ninety members and guests attended the Vail luncheon and card party yesterday at the Ocean Grove Woman’s club. Mrs.. Fred Schultz, club president,-announced the State federation convention to be held Thursday, Oct. 28, at the First Methodist church, Asbury ■■Park.- . A silver tea will be held by the club in Nov. with Mrs. Anna De wint chairman of the committee. Mrs. Harry Hulit, Mrs. C. B. Hen- liig, Mrs. George Burrows, Mrs, George Wilfong, Miss Lulu Mae Cooper, .Mrs. Charles Warner, Mis. William Sutherland, Mis. Samuel Ilotlierlngton, Mrs. Freil Engel, Mrs. William Magee, Mrs. George Paterson and Mrs. Joseph Black- ley. Attending yesterday’s event were Madeline Moore, Edith A. Piper, Mrs. Taylor S. Hamilton, Mrs. Russell. C. Woolley, .Mrs. Ralph Wiggin, .Mrs. Walter' Drill, . Mi’s. Anna DeWint, .M»'*• A'»)11 Farrell, Mis. William Magee, Mrs. ' Frederick'Engel, Mrs. George Da- vis, Mrs. George Paterson, Mrs. Fre'd Schultz, Mrs.' T. Ay. , Martin, Lois Warner, Mis. Charles War- ner, 'Mrs.', A: Wilson, Mrs. Henry Harley. - Also, Miss Estelle J. Randall, Mrs. Victor M. Sutphen, Mrs. John M. Dey, Mrs. B. H. Decker, Mrs. ■■■ "■ / : page nve, please. Two Films At Benefit A double feature movie, “The Man Darius” and "The Trail Blaz- er” will be presented on Thursday, October 28, by the St. Paul’s aux- iliary for the Methodist Home. The films will share the program with musical selections by Mrs. William Gilbert, soprano, and Mrs. Edwina Owen, pianist. The event will start at 2:30 p. m. and will include tea and refreshments. Mrs. Bleecker Stirling is general chairman. REDECORATE YOUR HOME with BEN-MONT PAPER DRAPES 98c window set, 2Vi yards long. Stripes and Florals. Thompson and Gillan’Store, 47 Main AVe„ Ocean Grove. A. P. 2-G636. adv NAGLE’S MAIN CENTRAL PHARMACY All-year service. Drugs of quali - ty for prescriptions. Docjors advise Nagle's. Hours 8:30 a.m. - 10 p.m. adv. MEMORIAL CROSS Married October 9th In Trinity W. Hyatt Snyder, of Rox- boro, Philadelphia, and a sum- mer resident of Ocean Grove for. many, years in the tent- colony, is lighting the 18-foot Memorial Cross on the Ocean Grove Auditorium, facing the sea, the week of October 23 to 30 in memory of his late wife, Lydia D. Snyder. Lodge 238 Honors 13 Past Masters Ocean Grove Masonic Group Holds Annual Dinner, Pre- pared By O. E. S. Past Masters Night was eele brat Monday night by the local Ma- sonic Lodge, No. 238, in Masonic Hall, Pitman avenue. A dinner was tendered to the Past Masters by the ..Craftsmen’s . association, pre- pared and served by the ladies of the Order of the Eastern Star, un- der the direction of the Worthy Matron, Mrs. Bea Erhardt. Entertained . at the head table by Wor. Master Arch M. Shaw were Rt. Wor. Charles M. Egan, district deputy of the 17tlj Sfason- ic district; James J. Dooner, PGC; Louis E. Bronson, PGC, and first Master Of Ocean Grove Lodge, and the following Past Masters: Wil- bur P, Osborn, Edward C. Sweet, J, Edward Little, Edwin, U. Brand, Charles P. Todd, Claude tiawlor, Gustav C. Grob, Howard B. Peter- son, Homer D. ' Kresge, James Bruce Dodd and Noel' W. Deane. The ■ dinner . was also- attended by 75 members of the fraternity. Francis C. Edinger, Past' Master, was unable to attend the dinner and arrived in time for the meet- ing, which was attended by two hundred' members of the craft, with every Lodge in th e. district represented. It-is planned to make the dinner mi annual affair-' The Eddowes In Wilmington, Del. "Thirteen Nights in God’s House," October 20 through Nov. 7, a program of music and evan- gelism, has beeii arranged for the Union Methodist church, Wilming- ton, Del., by its pastor, Rev. George II. Pigueron, jr.; summer resident here at 83 Broadway. . Rev. Pigueron is presenting Mr. and '■ . Mrs: W alter; 1). Eddowes, Ocean Grove Auditorium minister of music and organist, respective- ly, on the program with Robert C. Smoot, jr., youth speaker and con- ference leader; Howard Ellis, who presents the gospel through art, iiild Harry Denman, .Methodism’s great evangelist. Arthur Abbott, tenor . soloist in the Ocean Grove Auditorium and the -lloly' Trinity church,' Phila - delphia, Is one of a group of out- standing musical features. Other: who will share in Wilmington’s great musical event and who have appeared hero during the summer months are Marcella Defray, harp- ist; Robert Heim, baritone; Doris Winder,'gospel singer; Harry Mar- tyn, baritone; Luanne Elliott, so- prano, and Frank O.- Winstead, tenor.-The Alexis I. DuPont Glee club will,make its, first 1948-49 ap - pearances --■ -. • ........ Study Group Monday The Parent' Study group under the sponsorship of the Ocean Grove Parent - Teacher association will hold its first meeting Monday night at 8 p. m. in the sewing room of the high school at which time Miss Marian Duckers, school nurse at Rumson, will be the guest speaker. Her topic will be social hygiene. The leader of the study group is Mrs. Charles Whilden. All parents are urged to attend the meeting. Celebrates 5th Birthday Little Mary Jane Gibbons, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Richard F. Gibbons, 137 Abbott avenue, celebrated her fifth birthday Sun- day and on Monday was hostess at a family, party in honor of the oc- casion. Her gtlests were Patrick F. Tierney, jr., Carl Hoffman, Mrs. Jane Hoffman, Mrs. John Gibbons, Fay Alice Gibbons and Richard Gibbons, jr. Refreshments were served. Senator Herbert Says GOP Sweep Dewey and W arren‘Will Need Republican Congress, Declares County Senator Mrs. Paul Price Ridner Wearing a period gown of starched chiffon, fashioned with a eaught- up hoopskirt and a long 'train, awl carrying a white prayer -limit with orchid marker, Miss Alice Jean Nltsclimau was', married Saturdav after- noon, October SI, at 4 p: m. . to Paul-Price Ridner. The ceremony was performed in Trinity Episcopal church, Asbury Park, W ith the Rev. Dr; Randall. IV. Conklin, officiating. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter W. Nitsehman. 1 Main avenue, and the bridegroom, ail officer on the Ocean Grove r dice .department, is the son oi’-Mr.'aiid ■M-rsVPaul 11. Ridner, 071-i! Mt. I ,-rmon Way. The bride and groom have now returned from their weildj ,- trip to New England and Canada and are now at home at 1-17 Clark i enue,. Ocean Grove. State- Senator J. Stanley Herbert, of Monmouth county, yesterday predicted a Republican sweep, on November 2 in Monmouth county. Herbert stressed the importance of full participation in the coming election by the voters of Monmouth county. He emphasized the im- portance of giving the new nation- al administration a Republican Congress. Said Herbert: “Jhe election of Governors Deiv- ey and Warren is assured on the basis of national reports, including New Jersey. But we must not for- get that as President, Thomas E. Dewey must have the support of a Republican .Congress to achieve the unity and strength necessary to meet the challenge now threaten- ing world peace, and security. "In this connection, the election of Robert C. Hendrickson, Republi- can candidate' for United State: Senator, Is essential, Bob Ilend rickson Is a veteran of both World wars with an intimate knowledge of foreign affairs. He has had many years of legislative experi- ence as a member of the State .Sen- ate, and as Senate President. This, and his experience as' New Jcrse MR. AND MRS JOHN DE If ARDE PURCHASE THE DUN-HAVEN Announcement was made re- cently of the purchase of the:. Dun-Hayen hotel ,oil' beautiful. Ocean Pathway by Mr, and Mrs. John Dellard.e, '■ owners and operators of the Ormond,. .20' Pitman avenue, corner of Beach avenue. Mi', and: Mrs. ,\ De.Harde operated the'75-ropm, Dun-Haven last season-and are', now credecoratihg the hostelry throughout, In preparation fof the 1949 season. re e n In Town Square CHAS. C. PHILLIPS HEADS COMMUNITY CHEST HERE The Shore C o hi m u n ity Chest, seeking $95,000 for sup- port of eight welfare agencies serving this ■ area, begins its drive on Tuesday. Charles C. ' Phillips, 1402 10th avenue, Neptune, Including Occan Grove,- Bradley Park, Asbury -Gables, Whitcsvllle, Hamilton and Shark River Hills’ Volunteer workers arc need- ed in the Township and those willing to serve In tho annual ’ . shore .campaign should report to Mr. Phillips or to The Ocean Grove Times office. Agencies that ' arc partici- pating In the Chest, receiving the benefits according to their approved budgets, are the Sal- vation Army, Y.M.C.A., Shore Council'Girl Scouts, Monmouth Council Coy Scouts,,Child Wel- fare Association,. West' Side Community Center,. J e w i s h Community-Center and.the As - bury Park B6ys’ Club. The Times will publish the names of township workers in the, ten-day drive next . Friday anil the half-time results .of the campaign. The ('best needs your sup- poii. The ageiie.ies that benefit are serving, you and the shore coi'.inumllies; ont Two Stone Jetties Siale Navigation I>iT roti or Reports On .Ocean Grove Erosion Projects Recreation Commission Ar- ranges Second Annual Event For Youngsters, A Hallowe'en party under flood- lights in Auditorium Stillare for the . youngster? of Ocean Grove was arranged by the Recreation comnil.-rlon at its- meeting Tues - day night. The party .was set.for Saturday, October 30, starting at 7 p..m. A committee, bended byr Mrs. Charles P. Todd, is .planning- -the party . features. Preliminary’.ai - ’rangemonts call for the children i'i Association Votes Repair Of Organ World-FamOus Auditorium Instrument To.Be Recondi- tioned Before Next Season .. ,.. masquerade to . . lilarch ,: thrOitgh State Treasurer,: qualify him to ¿1« Tiioi-iiicy'Ciuipyl i'vhere \he,: judges a tine job in -Washington as United \Vili be siutiiiiied. lia^srof gooclie: States Senator from- this State. "Equally important is. the elec- tion of a RepublicanCongressional delegation from New Jersey. Our Republican Congressmen have done an outstanding job, This Is parties ularly true of .our own Represen- tative James- C. Auchincloss, who is a eandidiile for reelection. He and his associates on the New Jer- sey Congressional ticket are worthy of full support by New, Jer- sey voters' ¡it the coming election." Ocean Grove needs about $200,- 000 to fight erosion of Its beach- front.’-' r -::' , This was the opinion of James K.' Rankin, acting director of the navigation (ii'visiun of the state de- partment of conservation.. The spe- cial coastal erosion committee in the state 'legislature, headed by State Senator J. Stanley Herbert, of Monmouth county, heard this estimate recently from the naviga- tion officer. : ' The. state has approved a $100,. 000 stone jetty for Occan Grove; of which It will pay fifty percent. The plans are now being drawn up Stockton Chapter Holds Open Night Richard Stockton chapter, D.A.R;,. held its Guest night Tues- day evening at tho .Ocean Grove Woman's chib with the Regent, Mrs. J.'Crawford Ogden, in the chair. The meeting was opened with prayer by the chaplain, Mrs. Fran- cis Winfield. The Regent greeted the members and friends, intro- ducing .Miss liucknahi, Regent of Governor William-Livingston chap - ter, iilul 'Mrs. John.Cooiicr, Regent of Tennent chapter (apples,: , doughnuts will .l.ej'-ilisirlliutv.i,' a the building. . ' , The. conimi j~Io,i? served 300 chil- dren last prizes ' that; residents -and'"-busi úéss firms.- How- ard L.;Smith i? agaiü tinti man ,<>f thè prize committee; and'is prepar- Ing a wir.-îow di-i'lây.'.av^his'ilïurd'- vare s'ore, 51 JlaiiV avenue, whçie. the prizes w i l l v i e w ; - ; . Joseph A. Thema,:.n\ai\;iger of the Ocean Grove association, re- porled that childrei' - lecortls would be played over. the. Auditori- um' tower-,unifie system and that group singing, would be one:of. the features of the party. In the eyeilt of rain, the'party will be staged in the Hatinah-C'ros- man V.F.W. rooms., As ifoteil In The Times last:week, the Ocean Grove f'nmpnieeting as- sociation met last Friday to review construction and repair plans to tm completed'before next season. The ..board also voted major repairs to tlie .world-famous Auditorium or - gan. 'The organ was built in 1908 by the Hope.-Jones Organ company at a cost of $20,000, orie-haif of which was donated by. 11 ope-Junes. The organ was .dedicated as a memorial to Bishop James N. i'itzGerahT, a former president of the Ocean Grove association. In 1930, after luwiiig been ir. use for 22 years, the old-cirgan was moilernized ,by . Earje .1. Ii^ach. a student and en- gineer under Hope—lones. - Before: the J!!-!!* season opens, the firm of Earle 'J. Beach and soi; will instali new remote control re- lay equipment- from à ’ .ie- keyboard t.. the.pipcs-at a c-nst òf -fó.tì'iT and will repair tHe.hitfh -.pies-urc. be!-- lows, co-*ii.g S12-I. • The, relay e/piipment \vjtl reiilacé tlie present electroM'néu'maiii:'..cquipnien.t, the btisié pal -.-of wiiic’t ¡s .tlie original li't'Siihstalla.tiu::. ..The escape of air i i the*■ bellow.- t- noted Inst sea- ' silt,, tiie tiist ¡'.«dure since the con- :strii':tion of tiia organ. h'orlvléy Chapel .-¡rrt-'i' .this- .weeK. -the association j jrrahtivif '-lij’e, comi fat to R'obevt - fi-iiiiWc, of-: N'etnunc’ „Cit.v. " T h e and- .candy i ' t ‘ni>-trM'>iio a o f 'T ’r - tricy leave j s;?1-;c-t|-this week, t year and hwiiidtt! 1 OnI ç r i wvie 1 c,iewid in 1 lie ;. were covi'i'it'Uieti- 1.hives Ur-t week,aiidjcop»tniction ■ progriss will be ¡yúhlWhej.'in future ia.'llííri,' . ; .- • '- ., ' . ;Trtis-ieos' r.rteiiiiir.g last Friday’s iiVeetliig : ih P'ndndeìpliià were Judge: Harold il..W ells,'oi Bortleu- ¡¿•.v:i;VWi'.iiti'.i'. E.‘: Thomson, of Mt. Airy, Pa.:- Ilc.v. I’urman A. De- Mr.l'i-, c-f .Lr.t'.o S'.lvci ; Rev. Rob- ert C. Wells; of Philadelphia; Rev. .1. E. Waihabaugi-i. oi Movi-istown;. Rev: nisVtpii' w; .I acol.s. of . Rehö- iioth'.BfiiVch. Del;: Rev.. Harold Paul ‘Sloan; of-Philadelphia; Howard W. Selli.v. -of. Boston. Mass.; Frank C. Xropert.' 'of : Hull :lonfic|d; F rank B- .Smttlv o:’- Ocean (iiove; Joint S. :Ÿco,.; ..of : Mr- . Airy. Pa." Rov. Cljilt.'le ■ C. C'c.’e. of-New-York city; Rév; E. F. Hami.i of Bridgeton; Rev. George.G. Dilworth. of Drex- c! Hill. I’a.: George C. Miller, ’of o.i^.-o^eñn^riiplo-.v.ooit; Kiusey Ñ. Merritt, of - i ¡ . . ' Eiizabeth; Howard L.' Smith Avithtlie--Oofii'iv. Grove; Jtiim, U. Dixon.- of Girl Scouts Now Begin *18:* 19 Year ImcrmeiiSat.e- troop Grovo Gill Scruti,' H t » protraili ’ for the y.ear first mcenuK last Friday. . A 'nike V.F.W. Auxiliary Purchases Prizes Mis. Philander Uctts. an ex-Ke- giiMi t,.w.as a s ii oil tojrivo a short ou’trj t in by Claude \V. Hi* (Uull, Township 1Vine of “ What The Daughters DoA of Neptune engineer. - .! *^!10 .■ sawi. <<On ICiiis. -. island iho The township has filed an applU. I^*A.K. furnisjies the only ocetipa- cation for a seemul sloue 'jetty to l|onaV theraj)y ilepiuimcht there;, complete Ocean (.1 rove's antUero -1 ^funuai tv\r. Cit.^onsliip:, sioir project au.J- this petition will i pi'in.'i i i s e 01 the.-Manual on \)v* taken • u 1 Viler von s i* .! era lion b yr tli e ,f A '* v• 1!' ♦Us-i'-.Jn U a ju in R'. ;4 ne, llllji. . Scout Í Will ■■ rr.r :ri and. will'provVde iV.ciivown Vuìn'h va '. FéHjleîr. «;t \.\ 0 : cook. Grace: Kirs,!,, is -in' chare,- ' " 00 ;bi* first ai.i ánd.Na spensi lile , for u'ú¡ IllCnr. • ’• Sénior troop lö' GirUScOtus.: im y ejieg u iij hc¡ v. :;::;c:.-, Interlaken.; Rev, Lniiis W. Mitchell, ! of - :P!-.i!adclphia. : riiid Rev. Harry ;Tay!or, .of East, Orango., : i . flie Rév. Dr.'Geoi'ge W., Henson, qeiation. was . t^n.a.;gy','"r-rr.v; ....... ^ ‘':u'ä0 .(,i iUne55- Kopdla -is.rc- j " — -— %•- . '.'S .iackÍiO usé- Ocean .Grovi. conservati.ui 'dcparimeni in prepai- í " ,r ein;;e,:snip. 1 lie out- ! mgs. t,,.r the year-and are. ar r i - llig Its next year's budget. " | "•'T-rk -ir, tills. sucLcty ,is|e n t wei-ltpig on ' various: types ' théi,edri^atioóál;.pro¿raíii epiiductcd» jewéîvv. ; Tue’ Uoo^’ ^agäii'i; * Iti'.’.i i «..i 'f.t.itii .i..*« ..ni» i . .... ,1 .. «1 1 ! ... a !. Senator Hor!u.*i t ' revealed Üiat ;i . • - • r • • his -committee Is.drafting a to the legislature on New Jersey! l; f h Ù i^M tóbx coastal protect,,,;, and will -ask for i of S0;, (1(, ^ . u ril,Vv emergency iumis ifi 10*19 to prò- ¡ teet tlie beachfront. and c.).’-; E i \{erìalitó € irelè .'iU-rnT.i Wr..;. (.liildeii Ci-vi-le nci-.;;(n:sei Sd Mt. er'htiiiid-the Zella ?.. Paul's church f-hbst'Os -Mr The, state may find It necessary to set up a priority system for the allocation of appropriations, ln- said, because of the demands for érosion funds. He said some com The purchase of prizes for the nlunitics cannot meet 50 percent hi lilvon c 11 ni Inuin an nni'f if ■ta lin children’s Hallowe’en party to be held in Ocean Grove on Saturday, Oct. 30, was voted by the Haiinah- Crosman V.F.W. Ladies auxiliary last night at its regular meeting, Mrs. Joseph Gondék, presiding. The auxiliary also approved the motion to purchase hats for officers and members of the group and planned the annual Christmas din- ner and party for. December 16. Merchandise club winners were Mrs. Ouida Packard and Mrs. Mary Stackhouse.; :V :,-'i: :vs ,^ Attending were Mrs. Robert Mc- Clelland, Mrs. Joseph VanBenscho- ten, Mrs. Flora Brown, Mrs. Harold VanBcnschoten, Mrs. Albert White, Mrs. Richard Clark, Mrs. Joseph Sandford, Mrs. Joseph Gondek, Mrs. Elmer Jacobus, Mrs. Albert Meeks, Mrs; Frank Holl, Mrs. George Downing, Mrs. Thomas Hogan, Mrs. Raymond Klopliaus, Mrs. Herbert R. Bush, jr., Mrs. Charles Gravatt, Mrs. Eleanor Smith, Mrs. Norman Hnnnnh and Mrs. George Paterson. of tho cost of erosion work and may require special cooperation. Assemblyman Merrill H, Thomp- son (R.-Monmouth) said seashore counties are penalized because leg- islators cannot be “sold” on the seriousness of erosion. State Sen. Frank S. Farley (R.- Atlantlc) suggested the legislators be given a tour of the state’s coast to "show them what is going on.” .. Monmouth, Ocean, Atlantic and Cape May. counties will be studied by the committee which includes as members Senators Herbert, Far- ley and George Redding (R.-Cape May);' Assemlilynian Thompson, James E. Fraser tR.-Atlantic) and Nathan Smith (R.-Cape May), and tliroe public members, Andrew Henry, Atlantic City; Walter Kep- ler, Capo May, and William M. Birt\Vell, Asbury Park. FREE!!:— 5 x 7 Enlargement with every complete roll of Film we de- velop and print. WILLIAMSON'S STATIONERY . . , — lOtf endered by Els a' Bromioclie, national -solo', ist- oi the Veterans of Foreign Wars'. ’■ ^ -The guest speaker,.' Jlajor Wil- liam Jackman, spoke oil “A Chal- lenge to-Political Thinking”. After a very enlightening talk the guests entered into a “quiz program” when many questions were asked and answered. . Refreshments were served by the hostesses: Miss Branford Smith, chairman, Mrs. Frank Allen, Mrs. Edwin Beattie, Mrs. William Gay, Miss Maude Gay, Mrs. Cranage Tilton and Miss Mary Jana Swartz. - *— ,, Student Christian Delegate make yjiycinl? Ohrlsvnias Joys; i'o.r.i, . _ , • • •■ i the O.liininu'.uh'- C-an;:.'.: :Or;;a:ilz;i-i;;^s'-V^j!' :, group j-tiou for Social-- SeH'ice ■ arAi -th . ( ' Cerebral Pal-y e!:--., : t Mot.nv.'Ujh ' Ka' ‘ M«ininviai . hqípital.. : :Thrye . mcniiiei'S' rc»c.o:,*iy. lielpt’d ; in epare literature for- the ciirreV.t/Uom. .. . TI -.2,.. '■ re urn the dominoli pintes at the- nmnity Chesi drive,. .They.;wero; -.- _ -.. Gretcl. Swolinzky, Jar.et Sandford and .Shirley Hemphill. u> Mr-', ii.' W: Allen, -P. -S'. Cnvvycrot't, '.tiorin-i ,Eng- Jan'!; 'v;is Avel^iiiiait'lioiiie. ■ ' '.ii - Pn-eilla Fn-ter led devo-, tiitus; Ail-■■members.;were.asked to Miss Louise Noren, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.'Edwin Noren, 8 Pit- man avenue, was a delegate last weekend at the eastern conference of the Student Christian Movement. A second-year student at Rider col- lege, Trenton, she represented the college's Trinity club at the 3-day sessions at Hilltop, Downingtbn, Pa. Delegates from fifty colleges and universities discussed the topic, “Can Students. Be Christians To- day?” 1VETTLIN AUCTIONEER Call A. P. 2-1490 » ' —15lf Major Dimond Promoted Major Victor Dimond, command- ing officer for the Salvation Army in the shore area, has been pro- moted to Senior Major. Noticc of his advancement was sent by Com- missioner Donald McMillan, terri- torial commander in New York. Major and Mrs. Dimond came to Asbury Park, July -I, 19-10, fi'om Springfield, Mass. The local corps now has a band and chorus, a sen- ior membership of 133 and a junior membership of 00, as well as a Sunday school enrolment of 109. The women’s organization, known as the Home league, has, a total of 110 members.' Mirny programs are carried on for the young people. HAfcLMARK HALLOWE’EN- THANKSG’V'G, XMAS CARDS Ocean Grove . Stationery “THE FRIENDLY STORE” 53 Main Avenue ..v";’.-' . .—I2tf AUCTIONEER and APPRAISER B.- G. Coals, -ion Bath Ave., Lone Branch, N. J. Phone 6-3599.—adv. November' meeting. Mrs. Carl Herschel gave a talk on “Alaska,” using a map for illustration. Re- freshment's . were served by. the hostess during the social hour. Attending were .Mrs. B. S. Crpw- croft, Mrs. II. W. Allen, Mrs. S. J. Lawson,'Mrs. C., A. Bilms, Mrs. W. E. Albright, Mrs. J. B. Hulit, Mrs. William Russell, Mrs. Alfred Cuth- bert, Mrs. G. A. -Istey, Mrs. J. A. -Williams, Mrs. D. C. Stackhouse, Mrs. Henry Webster, Miss N. W. Foster, Miss Alison Martin, Mrs. A. L. Spafford, Miss Isabella Hath- away, Miss C. Winchester and Mrs. J. Brandt. * ----------- Police Granted Increase A $5 increase in-weekly pay w as granted to piembers of the Ocean Grove police department by • the association at its quarterly meet- ing last Friday. The department consist« ' “. "V."f Willis AtkiriSon .and 13 officers. T11E HE1.EN SHOP Cn^r 11me Jewelry & Gifts. Misse«. Children'« Weniine Apparel GO Main Ave.. O.G: Opp Posi-Of^pp. —IStf v.*s;tt‘L. »-riiM m , û.-'i

Society Appoints Married October 9th In Trinity Senator ... · Charles Poole, president, ... 2Vi yards long. Stripes and Florals. Thompson and Gillan’Store, ... hundred' members

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Page 1: Society Appoints Married October 9th In Trinity Senator ... · Charles Poole, president, ... 2Vi yards long. Stripes and Florals. Thompson and Gillan’Store, ... hundred' members

Y A R D B Y Y A R D L I F E IS H A R D

IN C H B Y IN C H L I F E ’S A C IN C H

— A n o n

T I M E S

C L A S S IF IE D A D S

B R IN G R E S U L T S

AND THF, N EPTU NE TIMES

Vol. L X X IV , N o. 43 O C E A N G R O V E , T O W N S H IP O F N E P T U N E , N E W J E R S E Y , F R ID A Y , O C T O B E R 22, 1948 —*. and of th e independence, of the U n ite d , States o f America the I73d .

FIVE CENTS

Society Appoints Nominating Group

E le c tio n o f O fficers I n N o ­v e m b e r; C o m m itte e C h a ir ­m en G ive R e p o rts

A nominating committee was chosen a t the regu lar m eeting of the St. P aul’s Woman’s Society for Christian Service, Tuesday night, and the election of officers will take place a t the next session. The new leaders will serve until May, 1950.

Mrs. B. H. Decker, Mrs. Clifford Kunckel, Mrs. George Burrows, Mrs.. T. W. Martin and Mrs. H. D. Kresge are on the committee.

Mrs. . Charles Poole, president, presided. Mrs. Leslie Vreeland, de­votional leader, used as her subject, “ Christian work in Alaska." Mrs. L. B. Mulford, first president of the society, gavé a brief h istory of its , organization and growth throughout the years, th is being the eighth ' anniversary of thé W.S.C.S.

Reports on Supplies ;Mrs. Alexander Anderson, sec­

re ta ry of supplies, reported on' the recent Christmas Supplies party held a t the church. Relief packages to taling $100 value were sent to India, Pakistan, Korea, Burma, J a ­pan and the Philippines. She also stated th a t supplies -\Vcre sen t to H ospital International in the Do­minican Republic and to the Ban- croft-Taylor Rest Home here. A $10 CARE package ' was sent to Poland. - • ■ . -. - :The .society contributed $35 to the Frances Nelson Scholarship fund, a conference project. This will enable a= student to en te r the Deaconness " Training school in K ansas City, Mo. Tl.ie sum of §5 was also contributed to Japanese missionaries. _ - - •

Mrs. T. W. Martin, membership chairman, reported the. following new members: Mrs. J . B. Hulit,

' Mrs. Ella Murphy, Mrs. Charles Dennerlin, Mrs. Stanley Watson,

page live, please

Clubwomen Enjoy Card Party, Lunch

Over ninety members and guests attended the Vail luncheon and card party yesterday a t the Ocean Grove W oman’s club. M rs.. Fred Schultz, club president,-announced t h e S tate federation convention tobe held Thursday, Oct. 28, a t the F irs t Methodist church, Asbury

■■Park.- ■ .A silver tea will be held by the club in Nov. with Mrs. Anna De w int chairman of the committee. M rs. H arry Hulit, Mrs. C. B. Hen- liig, Mrs. George Burrows, Mrs, George Wilfong, Miss Lulu Mae Cooper, .Mrs. Charles W arner, Mis. W illiam Sutherland, Mis. Samuel Ilotlierlngton, Mrs. Freil Engel, Mrs. William Magee, Mrs. George Paterson and Mrs. Joseph Black­ley.Attending yesterday’s e v e n t were Madeline Moore, Edith A. Piper, Mrs. Taylor S. Hamilton, Mrs. Russell. C. Woolley, .Mrs. Ralph Wiggin, .Mrs. W alter' Drill,

. Mi’s. Anna DeWint, . M »'*• A'»)11F arrell, Mis. William Magee, Mrs.' F rederick 'Engel, Mrs. George Da­vis, Mrs. George Paterson, Mrs. Fre'd Schultz, Mrs.' T. Ay. , Martin, Lois W arner, Mis. Charles W ar­ner, 'M rs.', A: Wilson, Mrs. Henry H arley.- Also, Miss Estelle J . Randall, Mrs. Victor M. Sutphen, Mrs. John M. Dey, Mrs. B. H. Decker, Mrs.■■■"■/ : page nve, please.

T w o F ilm s A t B e n e f i t

A double feature movie, “The Man Darius” and "The Trail Blaz­e r” will be presented on Thursday, October 28, by the St. P au l’s aux­iliary fo r the Methodist Home. The films will share the program withm usical selections by Mrs. WilliamGilbert, soprano, and Mrs. Edwina O w e n , pianist. The event will s ta r t a t 2:30 p. m. and will include tea and refreshm ents. Mrs. Bleecker S tirling is general chairman.REDECORATE YOUR HOME with BEN-MONT PAPER DRAPES 98c window set, 2Vi yards long. Stripes and Florals. Thompson and G illan’Store, 47 Main AVe„ Ocean Grove. A. P. 2-G636. adv

NAGLE’S MAIN CENTRAL PHARMACY All-year service. Drugs of quali­ty fo r prescriptions. Docjors advise N agle's. Hours 8:30 a.m. - 10 p.m.adv.

MEMORIAL CROSS Married October 9th In TrinityW. H yatt Snyder, of Rox-

boro, Philadelphia, and a sum­mer resident o f Ocean Grove for. many, years in the tent- colony, is lighting the 18-foot Memorial Cross on the Ocean Grove Auditorium, facing the sea, the week o f October 23 to 30 in memory of his la te wife, Lydia D. Snyder.

Lodge 238 Honors 13 Past Masters

O cean G rove M ason ic G roup H olds A n n u a l D in n e r , P r e ­p a re d B y O . E . S .

P ast M asters N ight was eele b rat Monday n ight by the local Ma­sonic Lodge, No. 238, in Masonic Hall, Pitm an avenue. A dinner was tendered to the P ast M asters by the ..Craftsmen’s . association, pre­pared and served by the ladies of the Order of the Eastern Star, un­der the direction of the Worthy Matron, Mrs. Bea E rhard t.

Entertained . a t the head table by Wor. M aster Arch M. Shaw were Rt. Wor. Charles M. Egan, district deputy o f the 17tlj Sfason- ic district; Jam es J . Dooner, PGC; Louis E. Bronson, PGC, and first M aster Of Ocean Grove Lodge, and the following P ast M asters: Wil­bur P, Osborn, Edward C. Sweet, J , Edward L ittle, Edwin, U. Brand, Charles P. Todd, Claude tiawlor, Gustav C. Grob, Howard B. Peter­son, Homer D. ' Kresge, James Bruce Dodd and Noel' W. Deane.

The ■ dinner . was also- attended by 75 members of the fratern ity . Francis C. Edinger, P a s t ' Master, w as unable to attend the dinner and arrived in tim e for the meet­ing, which was attended by two hundred' members of the craft, with every Lodge in th e . district represented. It-is planned to make the dinner mi annual affair-'

The Eddowes In Wilmington, Del.

"Thirteen N ights in God’s House," October 20 through Nov. 7, a program of music and evan­gelism, has beeii arranged fo r the Union Methodist church, Wilming­ton, Del., by its pastor, Rev. George II. Pigueron, jr.; summer resident here a t 83 Broadway. .

Rev. Pigueron is presenting Mr. and '■■■. Mrs: W a lte r; 1). Eddowes, Ocean Grove Auditorium minister of music and organist, respective­ly, on the program with Robert C. Smoot, jr., youth speaker and con­ference leader; Howard Ellis, who presents the gospel through art, iiild Harry Denman, .Methodism’s g rea t evangelist.

A rthur Abbott, tenor . soloist in the Ocean Grove Auditorium and the -llo ly ' T rin ity church,' Phila­delphia, Is one of a group of out­standing musical features. Other: who will share in W ilmington’s g reat musical event and who have appeared hero during the summer months are Marcella D efray , harp­ist; Robert Heim, baritone; Doris Winder,'gospel singer; H arry Mar- tyn, baritone; Luanne Elliott, so­prano, and Frank O.- Winstead, tenor.-T he Alexis I. DuPont Glee club will,make its, first 1948-49 ap­pearances --■ -. •

‘ ........S tu d y G ro u p M onday

The Parent' Study group under the sponsorship of the Ocean Grove Paren t - Teacher association will hold its first m eeting Monday night a t 8 p. m. in the sewing room of the high school a t which tim e Miss Marian Duckers, school nurse a t Rumson, will be the guest speaker. H er topic will be social hygiene. The leader o f the study group is Mrs. Charles Whilden. All parents are urged to attend the meeting.

C e le b ra te s 5 th B ir th d a y

Little M ary Jane Gibbons, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Richard F. Gibbons, 137 Abbott avenue, celebrated her fifth birthday Sun­day and on Monday was hostess at a family, party in honor o f the oc­casion. H er gtlests were Patrick F . Tierney, jr ., Carl Hoffman, Mrs. Jane Hoffman, Mrs. John Gibbons, Fay Alice Gibbons and Richard Gibbons, jr . Refreshm ents were served.

Senator Herbert Says GOP Sweep

D ew ey a n d W a r r e n ‘W ill N eed R ep u b lican C o n g ress, D e c la re s C o u n ty S e n a to r

M rs . P a u l P r ic e R id n e rW earing a period gown of starched chiffon, fashioned with a eaught- up hoopskirt and a long 'tra in , awl carrying a white prayer -limit with orchid m arker, Miss Alice Jean Nltsclimau was', married Saturdav afte r­noon, October SI, a t 4 p: m. . to Paul-Price Ridner. The ceremony was performed in Trinity Episcopal church, Asbury Park, W ith the Rev. Dr; Randall. IV. Conklin, officiating. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W alter W. Nitsehman. 1 Main avenue, and the bridegroom, ail officer on the Ocean Grove r dice .department, is the son oi’ -Mr.'aiid ■M-rsV Paul 11. Ridner, 071-i! Mt. I ,-rmon Way. The bride and groom have now returned from their weildj ,- trip to New England and Canada and a re now a t home a t 1-17 Clark i enue,. Ocean Grove.

State- Senator J . Stanley Herbert, of Monmouth county, yesterday predicted a Republican sweep, on November 2 in Monmouth county. H erbert stressed the importance of full participation in the coming election by the voters of Monmouth county. He emphasized the im­portance of giving the new nation­al adm inistration a Republican Congress. Said Herbert:

“J h e election of Governors Deiv- ey and W arren is assured on the basis of national reports, including New Jersey. But we must not fo r­get th a t as President, Thomas E. Dewey m ust have the support of a Republican .Congress to achieve the unity and strength necessary to meet the challenge now threaten­ing world peace, and security.

"In this connection, the election of Robert C. Hendrickson, Republi­can candidate' for United State: Senator, Is essential, Bob Ilend rickson Is a veteran of both World wars with an intimate knowledge of foreign affairs. He has had many years of legislative experi­ence as a member of the State .Sen­ate, and as Senate President. This, and his experience as' New Jcrse

MR. AND MRS JOHN DE If ARDE PURCHASE THE DUN-HAVEN

Announcement was made re­cently of the purchase of th e : . Dun-Hayen hotel ,oil' beautiful. Ocean Pathway by Mr, and Mrs. John Dellard.e, '■ owners and operators of the Ormond,. .20' Pitman avenue, corner of Beach avenue. Mi', and: Mrs. ,\ De.Harde operated the'75-ropm, Dun-Haven last season-and are', now credecoratihg the hostelry throughout, In preparation fof the 1949 season.

re e n In Town Square

CHAS. C. PHILLIPS HEADS COMMUNITY CHEST HEREThe Shore C o hi m u n i t y

Chest, seeking $95,000 for sup­port of eight welfare agencies serving this ■ area, begins its drive on Tuesday. Charles C. ' Phillips, 1402 10th avenue, N e p t u n e , Including Occan Grove,- Bradley P ark , Asbury

-Gables, Whitcsvllle, H am ilton and Shark River Hills’

Volunteer workers arc need­ed in the Township and those willing to serve In tho annual ’

. shore .campaign should report to Mr. Phillips or to The Ocean Grove Times office.

Agencies that ' arc partici­pating In the Chest, receiving the benefits according to their approved budgets, are the Sal­vation Army, Y.M.C.A., Shore Council'Girl Scouts, Monmouth Council Coy Scouts,,Child Wel­fare Association,. West' Side Community C en ter,. J e w i s h Community-Center and.the As­bury Park B6ys ’ Club.

The Times will publish the names of township workers in the, ten-day drive next . Friday anil the half-time results .of the campaign.

The ('best needs your sup- poii. The ageiie.ies that benefit are serving, you and the shore coi'.inumllies;

ontTwo Stone Jetties

S ia le N a v ig a tio n I>iT ro t i o r R e p o r ts On .Ocean G rove E ro s io n P ro je c ts

R e c re a tio n C om m ission A r ­ra n g e s Second A n n u a l E v e n t F o r Y o u n g s te r s ,

A Hallowe'en party under flood­lights in Auditorium Stillare for the . youngster? of Ocean Grove was arranged by the Recreation comnil.-rlon a t its- m eeting Tues­day night. The party .was se t.fo r Saturday, October 30, sta rtin g at 7 p..m.

• A committee, bended b y r Mrs. Charles P. Todd, is .planning- -theparty . features. Prelim inary’ .ai -

’rangemonts call for the children i'i

Association Votes Repair Of Organ

W orld-F am O us A u d ito riu m In s tru m e n t T o .B e R econdi­tioned B e fo re N ex t Season

.. ,.. masquerade t o . . lilarch ,: thrOitghState Treasurer,: qualify him to ¿1« Tiioi-iiicy'Ciuipyl i'vhere \he,: judges a tine job in -Washington as United \Vili be siutiiiiied. lia^srof gooclie: States Senator from- this State.

"Equally important is. the elec­tion of a RepublicanCongressional delegation from New Jersey. Our Republican Congressmen have done an outstanding job, This Is parties ularly true of .our own Represen­tative James- C. Auchincloss, who is a eandidiile for reelection. He and his associates on the New Je r­sey Congressional ticket are worthy of full support by New, Je r­sey voters' ¡it the coming election."

Ocean Grove needs about $200,- 000 to fight erosion of Its beach­fron t.’-' r -::' ,

T his was the opinion of James K.' Rankin, acting director of the navigation (ii'visiun of the sta te de­partm ent of conservation.. The spe­cial coastal erosion committee in the state 'leg islature, headed by State Senator J . Stanley Herbert, of Monmouth county, heard this estim ate recently from the naviga­tion officer. : '

The. sta te has approved a $100,. 000 stone je tty for Occan Grove; of which It will pay fifty percent. The plans are now being drawn up

Stockton Chapter Holds Open Night

R i c h a r d Stockton chapter, D.A.R;,. held its Guest night Tues­day evening a t tho .Ocean Grove Woman's chib with the Regent, Mrs. J .'C raw fo rd Ogden, in the chair.

The meeting was opened with p rayer by the chaplain, Mrs. F ran ­cis Winfield. The Regent greeted the members and friends, in tro­ducing .Miss liucknahi, Regent of Governor William-Livingston chap­ter, iilul 'Mrs. John.Cooiicr, Regent of Tennent chapter

(apples,: , doughnuts will .l.ej'-ilisirlliutv.i,' a the building. . ' ,

The. conimi j~Io,i? served 300 chil­dren last prizes ' that; residents -and'"-busi úéss firms.- How­ard L.;Smith i? agaiü t in t i man ,<>f thè prize committee; and 'is prepar- Ing a wir.-îow di-i'lây.'.av^his'ilïurd'-v are s 'ore, 51 JlaiiV avenue, whçie. the prizes w i l l v i e w ; - • ;. Joseph A. Them a,:.n\ai\;iger of

the Ocean Grove association, re- porled that childrei' - lecortls would be played over. the. Auditori­um' tow er-,unifie system and that group singing, would be one:of. the features of the party.

In the eyeilt of rain, th e 'p a rty will be staged in the Hatinah-C'ros- man V.F.W. rooms.,

As ifoteil In The Times last:week, the Ocean Grove f'nmpnieeting as­sociation met last Friday to review construction and repair plans to tm completed'before next season. The

..board also voted major repairs to tlie .world-famous Auditorium or­gan.

'T he organ was built in 1908 by the Hope.-Jones Organ company at a cost of $20,000, orie-haif of which was donated by. 11 ope-Junes. The organ was .dedicated as a memorial to Bishop Jam es N. i'itzGerahT, a former president of the Ocean Grove association. In 1930, afte r luwiiig been ir. use for 22 years, the old-cirgan was moilernized ,by . Earje .1. Ii^ach. a student and en­gineer under Hope—lones.- Before: the J !!-!!* season opens, the firm of Earle 'J. Beach and soi; will instali new remote control re­lay equipment- from à ’.ie- keyboard t.. the.pipcs-at a c-nst òf -fó.tì'iT and will repair tHe.hitfh -.pies-urc. be!-- ■lows, co-*ii.g S12-I. • The, relay e/piipment \vjtl reiilacé tlie present electroM'néu'maiii:'..cquipnien.t, the btisié pal -.-of wiiic’t ¡s .tlie original li't'Siihstalla.tiu::. ..The escape of air i i the*■ bellow.- t - noted Inst sea-

'silt,, tiie tiist ¡'.«dure since the con- :strii':tion of tiia organ.

h'orlvléy Chapel .-¡rrt-'i' .this- .weeK. -the association

j jrrahtivif '-lij’e, comi fat to R'obevt- fi-iiiiWc, of-: N'etnunc’ „Cit.v. " T he

and- .candy i ' t ‘ni>-trM'>iioa o f 'T ’r- tricy leave j s ;?1-;c-t|-this week, t

year and hwiiidtt! 1 OnI ç r i wvi e 1 c,iew id in 1 lie ;. were covi'i'it'Uieti- 1.hives Ur-t w eek,aiidjcop»tniction ■

progriss will be ¡yúhlWhej.'in futureia . 'l l í í r i , ' . ; .- • '- ., '. ;Trtis-ieos' r.rteiiiiir.g last Friday’s iiVeetliig : ih P'ndndeìpliià were Judge: Harold il..W ells ,'o i Bortleu- ¡¿•.v:i;VWi'.iiti'.i'. E.‘: Thomson, of Mt. Airy, Pa.:- Ilc.v. I’urman A. De- Mr.l'i-, c-f .Lr.t'.o S'.lvci ; Rev. Rob­ert C. Wells; of Philadelphia; Rev..1. E. Waihabaugi-i. oi Movi-istown;.Rev: nisVtpii' w ; .I acol.s. of... Rehö- iioth'.BfiiVch. Del;: R e v . .Harold Paul ‘Sloan; of-Philadelphia; Howard W. Selli.v. -of. Boston. Mass.; Frank C.

Xropert.' 'o f : Hull :lonfic|d; F rank B- .Smttlv o:’- Ocean (iiove; Joint S.:Ÿco,.; ..of : Mr- . Airy. Pa." Rov. Cljilt.'le ■ C. C'c.’e. of-New-York city; Rév; E. F. Hami.i of Bridgeton;Rev. George.G. Dilworth. of Drex- c! Hill. I’a.: George C. Miller, ’of

o .i^ .-o ^eñ n ^riiplo-.v.ooit; Kiusey Ñ. M erritt, of - i ¡ . . ' Eiizabeth; Howard L.' Smith, of

Avith tlie--Oofii'iv. Grove; Jtiim, U. Dixon.- of

Girl Scouts Now Begin *18:* 19 Year

ImcrmeiiSat.e- troop G rovo Gill S cruti,' Ht» p ro traili ’ for the y.earfirst mcenuK last Friday. . A 'nike

V.F.W. Auxiliary Purchases Prizes

Mis. Philander Uctts. an ex-Ke- giiMi t,. w.a s a s ii oil tojrivo a short ou’t r j t in

by Claude \V. Hi* (Uull, Township 1 Vine of “ What The Daughters DoA of Neptune engineer. - .! * !10 .■sawi. <<On ICiiis. -. island iho

The township has filed an applU. I^*A.K. furnisjies the only ocetipa- cation for a seemul sloue 'je tty to l |onaV theraj)y ilepiuimcht there;, complete Ocean (.1 rove's antUero-1 ^funuai tv\r. C it.^onsliip:,sioir project au.J- this petition will i pi'in.'i i i s e 01 the.-Manual on \) v* taken • u 1 Viler v on s i *.! era lion b yr tli e ,f A'* v • 1!' ♦Us-i'-.Jn U a j u i n R'. ;4 ne,

llllji. . Scout Í Will ■■rr.r :riand. will'provVde iV.ciivown Vuìn'h va '. FéHjleîr. «;t \.\0 : cook. G race: Kirs,!,, is - in' chare,- ' "00;bi* first ai.i ánd.Na s p e n s i lile , f o r u'ú¡ IllCnr. • ’•

Sénior troop lö'GirUScOtus.: im yejieguiij hc¡ v. :;::;c:.-,

Interlaken.; Rev, Lniiis W. Mitchell, ! of - :P!-.i!adclphia. : riiid Rev. H arry

;Tay!or, .o f East, Orango., : i . flie Rév. Dr.'Geoi'ge W., Henson,

qeiation. was. t ^ n . a . ; g y ' , ' " r - r r . v ; ....... ^ ‘':u'ä0 .(,i iUne55-Kopdla -is.rc- j " — -— %•- .

■ ' . ' S . i a c k Í i O u s é -

Ocean .Grovi.

conservati.ui 'dcparimeni in prepai- í " ,r ein;;e,:snip. 1 lie out- ! mgs. t,,.r the year-and are. ar r i ­llig Its next year's budget. " | "•'T-rk -ir, tills. sucLcty , i s |e n t wei-ltpig on ' various: types’ ' théi,edri^atioóál;.pro¿raíii epiiductcd» jewéîvv. ; Tue’ U oo^’ ^agäii'i;

* I t i ' . ’ . i i « . . i ' f . t . i t i i . i . . * « . . n i » i . . . . . , 1 . . «1 1 ! . . . a ! .Senator Hor!u.*i t ' revealed Ü ia t ;i . • - • r • • his -committee Is .d rafting ato the legislature on New Jersey! l ; f h Ù i ^ M t ó b x coastal protect,,,;, and will -ask for i of S0;, (1(, ^ . u ril,Vvemergency iumis ifi 10*19 to prò- ¡ teet tlie beachfront.

and c.).’-;

Ei\{erìalitó € irelè

.'iU-rnT.i Wr..;.(.liildeii Ci-vi-le

nci-.;;(n:sei Sd Mt. er'htiiiid-the Zella ?.. Paul's church

f-hbst'Os -Mr

The, s ta te may find It necessary to set up a priority system for the allocation of appropriations, ln- said, because of the demands for érosion funds. He said some comThe purchase of prizes fo r the nlunitics cannot meet 50 percent

hi lilvon c 11 ni I nuin an nn i'f if ■ ta linchildren’s Hallowe’en p arty to be held in Ocean Grove on Saturday, Oct. 30, was voted by the Haiinah- Crosman V.F.W. Ladies auxiliary la s t n ight a t its regu lar meeting, Mrs. Joseph Gondék, presiding.

The auxiliary also approved the motion to purchase hats fo r officers and members of the group and planned the annual Christmas din­ner and p arty for. December 16.

Merchandise club winners were Mrs. Ouida Packard and Mrs. Mary Stackhouse.; :V:,-'i: :vs,

A ttending were Mrs. Robert Mc­Clelland, Mrs. Joseph VanBenscho- ten, Mrs. F lora Brown, Mrs. Harold VanBcnschoten, Mrs. A lbert White, Mrs. Richard Clark, Mrs. Joseph Sandford, Mrs. Joseph Gondek, Mrs. Elm er Jacobus, Mrs. Albert Meeks, Mrs; F rank Holl, Mrs. George Downing, Mrs. Thomas Hogan, Mrs. Raymond Klopliaus, Mrs. H erbert R. Bush, jr., Mrs. Charles Gravatt, Mrs. Eleanor Smith, Mrs. Norman Hnnnnh and Mrs. George Paterson.

of tho cost of erosion work and may require special cooperation.

Assemblyman Merrill H , Thomp­son (R.-Monmouth) said seashore counties are penalized because leg­islators cannot be “sold” on the seriousness of erosion.

State Sen. Frank S. Farley (R.- Atlantlc) suggested the legislators be given a tour of the s ta te ’s coast to "show them what is going on.” .. Monmouth, Ocean, A tlantic and Cape May. counties will be studied by the committee which includes as members Senators H erbert, F ar­ley and George Redding (R.-Cape M ay);' Assemlilynian Thompson, James E. F rase r tR .-A tlantic) and Nathan Smith (R.-Cape May), and tliroe public members, Andrew Henry, Atlantic City; W alter Kep­ler, Capo May, and William M. Birt\Vell, Asbury Park.F R E E !!:— 5 x 7 Enlargem ent with every complete roll of Film we de­velop and print. •WILLIAMSON'S STATIONERY . . , — lOtf

endered by Els a' Bromioclie, national -solo',

ist- oi the Veterans of Foreign Wars'. ’■ ^

-The guest speaker,.' Jlajor Wil- liam Jackm an, spoke oil “A Chal­lenge to-Political Thinking”. A fte r a very enlightening talk the guests entered into a “quiz program ” when many questions were asked and answered. .

Refreshments were served by the hostesses: Miss Branford Smith, chairman, Mrs. Frank Allen, Mrs. Edwin Beattie, Mrs. William Gay, Miss Maude Gay, Mrs. Cranage Tilton and Miss Mary Jana Swartz.

- * — ,,S tu d e n t C h r is t ia n D e leg a te

make yjiycinl? Ohrlsvnias J o y s ; i'o.r.i, . _, • • •■ i the O.liininu'.uh'- C-an;:.'.: :Or;;a:ilz;i-i;;^s'-V^j!'

:, group j-tiou for Social-- SeH'ice ■ arAi -th . (' Cerebral Pal-y e!:--., : t Mot.nv.'Ujh ' Ka' ‘

M«ininviai . hqípital.. : :Thrye . mcniiiei'S' rc»c.o:,*iy. lielpt’d ; in epareliterature for- the ciirreV.t/Uom. ... TI -.2,.. '■ re urn the dominoli pintes a t the-nmnity Chesi drive,. .They.;wero; -.- _ -..Gretcl. Swolinzky, Jar.et Sandfordand .Shirley Hemphill.

u> Mr-', ii.' W: Allen, -P. -S'. Cnvvycrot't,

'.tiorin-i ,E ng- Jan'!; 'v;is Avel^iiiiait'lioiiie. ■' '.ii - Pn-eilla Fn-ter led devo-, tiitus; Ail-■■members.;were.asked to

Miss Louise Noren, daughter of Mr. and M rs.'Edwin Noren, 8 P it­man avenue, was a delegate last weekend a t the eastern conference of the Student Christian Movement. A second-year student a t Rider col­lege, Trenton, she represented the college's Trinity club a t the 3-day sessions a t Hilltop, Downingtbn, Pa. Delegates from fifty colleges and universities discussed the topic, “Can Students. Be Christians To­d ay ?”

1 V E T T L I N AUCTIONEER Call A. P . 2-1490 » ' —15lf

M ajo r D im ond P ro m o ted

Major Victor Dimond, command­ing officer for the Salvation Army in the shore area, has been pro­moted to Senior Major. Noticc of his advancement was sent by Com­missioner Donald McMillan, te rri­torial commander in New York. Major and Mrs. Dimond came to Asbury Park, July -I, 19-10, fi'om Springfield, Mass. The local corps now has a band and chorus, a sen­ior membership of 133 and a junior membership of 00, as well as a Sunday school enrolment of 109. The women’s organization, known as the Home league, has, a to ta l of 110 members.' Mirny program s are carried on fo r the young people.

HAfcLMARK HALLOWE’EN- THANKSG’V'G, XMAS CARDS Ocean Grove . Stationery “THE FRIENDLY STORE”53 Main Avenue..v";’.-' • . .— I2tfAUCTIONEER and APPRAISER B.- G. Coals, -ion Bath Ave., Lone Branch, N. J . Phone 6-3599.—adv.

November' meeting. Mrs. Carl Herschel gave a talk on “Alaska,” using a map for illustration. Re­freshment's . were served by. the hostess during the social hour.

Attending were .Mrs. B. S. Crpw- croft, Mrs. II. W. Allen, Mrs. S. J. Lawson,'Mrs. C., A. Bilms, Mrs. W. E. Albright, Mrs. J . B. Hulit, Mrs. William Russell, Mrs. Alfred Cuth- bert, Mrs. G. A. -Istey, Mrs. J . A. -Williams, Mrs. D. C. Stackhouse, Mrs. Henry W ebster, Miss N. W. Foster, Miss Alison Martin, Mrs. A. L. Spafford, Miss Isabella H ath­away, Miss C. W inchester and Mrs. J. Brandt.

— * -----------

Police G ra n te d In c re a se

A $5 increase in-weekly pay w a s granted to piembers of the Ocean Grove police departm ent by • the association a t its quarterly meet­ing last Friday. The department consist« ' “ . "V."f Willis AtkiriSon

.and 13 officers. •T11E HE1.EN SHOP ■ Cn^r 11 me Jewelry & Gifts. Misse«. Children'« W eniine Apparel GO Main Ave.. O.G: Opp Posi-Of^pp.• —IStf

v.*s;tt‘L. » - r i i Mm, û.-'i

Page 2: Society Appoints Married October 9th In Trinity Senator ... · Charles Poole, president, ... 2Vi yards long. Stripes and Florals. Thompson and Gillan’Store, ... hundred' members

P A G E T WO OCEAN GROVE TIMES, OCEAN GROVE, NEW JERSEY FRIDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1948Rutgers Inducts Two. New Trustees The BEST I KNOW in

L I T E R A T U R E T H A T L I V E SBy JOHN FRASER

Formerly Religious Editor “New York Hernld-Tribune”By ROY LEVER, Attorney-at-Law

there w as; much' less land than called fo r in the contract th a t George must take off $3,000 from the contract price. George replied that it was a mistake and th a t lie would not sell the property a t all now. Bob now applies to the court to compel George to convey the land th a t he actually owned but with the deduction of $3,000. George counters with the conten­tion that it was a mistake and asks the court to rescind the contract on that ground.

(Suppose you w ere m ade a Judge fo r a day,, how w ould you decide th is case? In th e FIRST p a rag ra p h a re th e fac ts of a rec e n t case. In the SECOND p arag ra p h is a s ta tem e n t or t h e . law to be app lied to those fac ts . B efore?ou read p arag ra p h THREE, decide

o r.-you rse lf ju s t how you w ould d e ­cide th e question If you w ere th e Judge'. T hen read p arag ra p h THREE and see how th e case w as ac tually d e ­cided .)

Charter Is Im m ortalThe nge of C haracter is coming.

Already the unrest of the p ast two decades is gradually disappearing. Great hearts have the pulse a t last of the world’s G reat H eart. The capital of a too strongly competi­tive age is becoming th e capital of a less selfish time, and will have vastly, more intrinsic value.

Commercial wealth, it is true, adds to one’s personality. A man plus his farm , or his lands,, is some­thing more than the man alone. He is a combination of human and m a­terial potentialities. A man with character is more than his natural endowments and their special training. He is these plus the wealth of in tegrity and upright­ness of which he has become pos­sessed in the world’s struggle. Genius is not character.

So, too, Character is' the vitaliz­ing, reshaping, accomplishing, self­saving and community-saving force .which oiio. must possess in addition to liei'odity and environment. A s tagnant pool, a dry mill-race, or; a .cinder, is not a more forceless thing than a characterless man. .

I t is, iui-thcrmdro, an ..attribute of capital that it multiplies itself when skilfully manipulated. This is the chief fascination of wealth. 11 hem:« its own legal ra te of inter­e s t and, under: unusual ■ demands; often 'rapidly doubles and quadru­ples'. itself.' A ch aracter well.begun, not only steadily increases ill pur­

chasing power, but under g rea t exigencies multiplies into th e he­roic and immortal worth.

Men may destroy my reputation, but I m ust commit moral suicide before my character dies. No tru th , a t first glance, seems so unwel­come, so crushing as th a t o f self­accountability. “I am to blame” are the hardest words one could u t­ter. This same tru th however is the diviriest p a rt o f man, the salt of his spiritual nature.

The Great Accountant invests this capital. Words v ib ran t with tenderness, deeds • quick wtih un­selfishness, sacrifices endured by pierced bodies He puts a t in terest in the evolution of the race. When He strikes the balance E ternal Life will be found to your credit.

The true capita list is a . foe. to poverty. The rich m erchant-prince is the humblest man of his kind if -he be a steward of God’s wealth. The noblest character is the poor­est in spirit, and though he possess all the beatitudes, walks lowly among men, holding them to him the more closcly, all greatness is meekness and the h ighest' quality of true exaltation is Humility.

C haracter lifts us up to God,.and leads us. down to men. Through it alone is the g rea t discovery made that God is in humanity. To know that fac t is not to fail of Life or Ilciiveh.*—Rev. Dr. It. O. Ayles- w«r(!i, from '‘Character and Capi-

CONS1DER THE CASEToday’s Case. Involves: REALTY C.ONT'KACTS

George agreed .to sell his proper­ty to 13ob. fo r -$7,000. They drew up a contract of sale wherein it was s t à t e d th a t George: was to convey a certain ..tract of land, which he;believed: he owned relying on the dimensions a.- shown on the city’s tax map. Bob made n deposit of. Sl’.tìbÒ.- A fter signing the con-: trac t Itoi). had a 1 search inaile of the prem ises aiu.l the" search’ disclosed that, the H ad ' w a- in. fact much sm aller'than the area described in the contrae;. ile w r.c to George and i him. that inasmuch as

Generally a contract will not be reformed for a m istake on p art of one of the parties. However it may be recmded if the mistake relates to a material feature-o f the con­tract, and if it is such grave conse­quence that the enforcement of the contract as made w ill-be uncoil- sioiialde. ' if i t occurred notwith­standing the ^exeicise .of ordinary diligchcu-lij- tl\e party making, the ini-iaVe; and the other party .can be returned to status tjiio.

mu-life ijs\ , \ j ■ : , ' . - ' I . I

V , ; ,

K ' S i i : ' , \ " ■■■ > : - .W :i >dl ;.ii1>v;i';ii^i/-nhove-[liL*'• ll t .y l , '; , 1 '

' I ‘ I i\o >the Mio*.- where it ■V'wai -banv.

Ap.i! -ani liii.- i- .luppilicsi. the -.ime— ' ’

Tînt 'cottili'. not'.fiiid: it.- name To fit m ir golden fraine.

- — .LAURA \A X ÏIOESEK Ocean Grove. X. J. /..r. •

, “The F r ien d lies t P lace h i T ow n” -

SERVING BREA K FA ST, LUNCHEON A^JD D INN ER ' . _

>Ve Do A ll O ur O wn B ak ing ' Homemade Pies, Cakes

And Dinner Rolis B angs A venue anil Em ory s tr e e t

ASBUHY PARKT elephone 2-9005

■ , NightAViicn the,'iu'o(>iilight.,is kissing

The w aters/Ami '.hi', iiirils. they'iiavo.ibiwir

To then : iieslV; ■T is .hen « e -àie ihiiüônifo , - ' : :

The DEANS 55 E m bury A venue. O pen a ll y ea r. H ot B rea k fa st served to th e p u b lic from 7:00 to 11:00 a, m . W rite fo r ra tes .

Phone A sbu ry P a rk 2-5023-J .

62-A MAIN AVENUE O P E N - A L L - Y E /.R unning-W ater-in -R oom s — C en ter of a ll A ctiv ity

' ; ' B eacli-R estauran t^A udito rlumR ates-o il-R equestRICHARD EGEDY ' •

A S tone 's T h row to

Phone-A . P . 2-8341 GEORGE A. BREUR

ST. ELMO HOTELOpen All YearCorner Main and New York Avenues Individual meals served by day or week 11. R. S1IUBERTAmerican Plan Tel. Asbury P ark 2 -0 6 7 8

"s Pav 4 0 hours wo"/forweekends thotidi

hour increase

611 Mattison Avenue v Asbury Park

Five Friday Evenings - Oct. 1-29■ “ L I F E & JO U R N E Y S O P S T , P A U L ”

U s in g V isu a l A id s — F ilm S tr ip s

Sunday Meetings at 11 a. m. and 7:45 p. m. Sunday School and Bible Classes — 2:30 P . M.ivesshed Maj. and Mrs. Victor Dimond Capt. Dorothy Edwards

YOU ARE CORDIALLY INVITED!

o f l u m i a , Y -, a k e i l .A '»al - p i ' - i . d o i d,

m o r t a i e m p i i n e . T h e n ; s h u n t t h y j t

; - ' i t : w i l l c a r e e s ' - T h e T a c e o f C o d , in i.

■ / A I D A M A U I :

O c e a n G r o v e a n i l ;;Elizaliel.il .

S u n d a y , O c t . 17, IMS

they m ust have still further rale nnd faro increases.

. D em ands U nreasonableThese employes have bad substantial raises during and since the w ar.T heir average week­ly earnings are higher than the average weekly earnings of workers irv manufacturing indus­tries. They have more job security than the average worker in American industry. They also enjoy paid vacations, a retirem ent Bys­tem and o ther advantages more generous than tiie average worker receive?.

In contrast with the demands of these 16 . unions, which add up to the equivalent of 48c an hour, the Conductors and Trainmen recently settled.their wage request for an increase of 10c an hour. ■

R ailroads Run for Everybody—■ Not Employes Alone •The; railroad industry m ust serve not one b u t m any groups—producers, businessmen, ship­pers, passengers and the general p u b lic - n ight and day, every day of th e year. These unions are proceeding in u tte r disregard of th is im portant difference between railroads and o ther industries. Industrial p lants can be shu t down over, weekends nnd holidays, bu t freight, mail, express -hnd passengers m ust continue to move. Everybody who enters rail­road employment knows this.

Strike T hrea tOn September 18, 1948,’ the leaders of these 16 unions began taking a strike vote. But the threat of a strike will not alter the,opposition of the railroads to such unreasonable demands!

r i A i i . u o A D S m i :,s t o p e r a t e aro u n d th e c lo ck e v e r y d a y a n d n ig h t o f th e y e a r .

Although they know this, leaders of 16 rail­road unions are demanding a five-day, M on­day through Friday, week for one million railroad employes.

They want. 1 8 hours pay for <10 hours worl^ — in itself a 20% wage increase.

T hey also demand a minimum of 12 hours 'pay for any work performed on Saturdays, .-Hid 10 hours pay for any work performed on Sundays and holidays. 1

On lop of all this they want an additional increase of 25c ah hour.for every employe!

1 U S E D F U R N IT U R E |1 We Buy and Sell |= Almost TJverything =1 ANTIQUES CURIOS |? Call A. P. 4610 s| BLUME’S QUAINT SHOP || ' 69 South Main S treet | init«ii>n»«|*,l*,l*IIBII<t,ai|*ll>>lttl,ll|,l|lllll*ll|ll,il,TI1111**

To serve tlie increasing number of Ocean Grove residents who use the Pathway Market for all their shopping needs.

Fresh Meats — Produce Delicatessen — Frozen Foods

Grocery Free Delivery

You’d Pay the B ill!' 'Summing up these demands, they moan th a t these upion leaders seek to force the railroads to givtywe million employes an annual raise which tSaiId average $1500 per.employe!:

■The total cost of this would be n6 less than I's. billion dollars per year, which is more th a n . twice the expected not income of the railroads this year. . , “ : . <■, . , 4 .

You’d pay the bill, because if these in­creased costa are forced on the railroads.

JE W E LE R . Watch Repairing •BEST PRICES

PAID FOR OLD GOLD APPRAISED FREE 67 Main Avenue ,

Ocean Grove ■Post Office Building

COR. PILGRIM PATHWAY and OLIN STREET OCEAN GROVE , A. P. 2-1749

UOOM 211 • U J L 1U EKTY S T R E E T . NEW YO RK G, N. Y.

We are publishing this nnd o ther advertisements to talk with you a t first hand about m atters v*ich are im portant to everybody.

Page 3: Society Appoints Married October 9th In Trinity Senator ... · Charles Poole, president, ... 2Vi yards long. Stripes and Florals. Thompson and Gillan’Store, ... hundred' members

T i r s i M e lh u rtw t P i lu t s (:i)y .......... 128 i :m 'ih ........ 135 . 1271e r . . ..... :.......... 100 133 .H.f ....... 17.1 150« .

In tivù ìiio.- tu' .The Times, • nave \V:’ • V iì-Cti li of■ j ii-.-ni years pa.<t<■■ mi Î'iîîîîtire, we.‘ili- po': '.Uh :V:c* ûHk::\>\vilper- . ..i ’ ; " : V-. "Sí: vi : :n¿f ,oitr‘ l'oad- ¡ li-::-.;!':: i l» ni. .::,T ■ t:-,e 'tifir l i» • thè■JBBfo. The oh-''-'-'inpii last week

Æ i m b -■ Mv:^: U:>1 i,v nmay a? therfSalpiip: 1 >:• Oliver ü , ,.r iciideiH ofa È a p S te i l: .vv, ' Aiiioii"- the• ' r-' y.' ■ a::sv.oyed r The 8gjÉ% à;j i'iiiiv.-' vjue::y;. ,‘iiJo you'vveog-f'iiv .itl* ’!*:)••: v * j 'e , Pro. •£ ï£ Ê z2 i£ 2 :. ■:) '...-«ni! Ciissell!-!. ScHiiVr. :ir>\v "Ifÿin-i ill r.t : '. f W;u les; U.' Hubi,- !i; of : Brooklyn;i'ïy--:iia:i Thé Oçoaï,; Orùve /Çmé?'!. Ed->¿•1 ii-!iet;ymn'ib this are:vàn.|. a membei'of: ■ Mi il (■:' éduc’atïi.’ii: Richard U'.-Sloilt, itttoi'- if Xetïvtme. a: I NVilbli::'!Osbiirn. retifed

Mr.-, Hu'»îvc-!! .n iiiy ; : i The Tuile.-:, “ í ; .tiiifi': piloto .is Pro-lVs>„r :Vhn.l\. HU >: owned .a' ji-h m arkeKat; <r::e time m Ocetin(i.rove and laici' iti A i.'.try i'ark , !: ’! am f i lm ''. thin pilotó,ite hi-ti ueu-'i ni y *■!■• lu- -, ilinyai'il W. A meli. ow of lhobhlyn, in Fren.-h. ili tifL'iiiiV»;::.:! for. i ’ritiyiît'li itili vel;. ity." ■

ASK ABOUT OUR TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE ON YOUR OLD RANGE

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1948 OCEAN GROVE TIMES, OCEAN GROVE, NEW JERSEY P A G E T H B E R

The tw in-d ty . sports w riter sta tes: “To be a popular boss you nave to be la x . in discipline and negligent in your duties as coach

. or manager.” WE WONDER?Neptune's Scarlet F liers lace ¿he

Big, Blue of Manasquan on the gridiron tomorrow (Saturday), The game will be played on the south county field and promises to be a stirrin g tilt as the F liers fight to hold their undefeated, unscored on record.

N eptune-now stands second in the Shore Conference rating, tying A tlantic Highlands. The Leonardo Lions, coached by Arnold Truex.'o Neptune alumnus, has top rating in the Conference, undefeated and untied in three games.

The Fliers and the Lions faco

next Saturday afternoon, Hallow­e’en, when anything can happen.

One of the spark plugs in .th e current Peddie grid machine is Dick Hennig, of Ocean Grove, who plays righ t half-back. While a t Neptune, lie was a.varsity lineman.' A good ball carrier ■ and blocker, Honnig has helped Peddie take two out of throe games to date, including last Saturd.-iy’s encounter with Poly Prop in Brooklyn, which Peddie won 32-0. On Saturday, Oct. 80; The Old Gold and-Blue, will lake on a powerful Lawronceville team at Higbtstown as is featuro of. Fall Homecoming Day:. L ast year Law- rencevUle eked out a 0-0 win and in 27 previous encounters, Lmvrence- ville lias won 1.0, Peddie 8 aiid 3 have ended iii tie score.

NORTH SHORE CHURCH HOWLING LEAGUE

Team Standing Oct. I t \V. L.Belmar .Methodist .... 8

WITH NAME IMPRINTED

YOURB ox of 50SELECTION

O th e r D E L U X E C a rd s W ith N a m e P r in te d — $2.50 U p

Ocean Grove Timesfi t M ain A v en u e , O cean G rove, N . J ,

St. Paul's U sh e rs .....O. G. Brotherhood ...1st Presh'y A. P........1st .Methodist A. P. .1st Methodist Pilots ,Bradley Be. Moth. ...

,0 . (1. Craftsman ....Itigli .'i games, DeHart .....2nd liijjt} 3 games, Arthur Injlividual high, DeHart ..2nd individual high, Anhui'

Team h ig h 3 games, O. (J. Broth­erhood—2328.

Second team high 3 games, St. Paul's Ushers—231!).

Team high 1 game, erhood—SI-I.

Second team high Paul's Ushers—802.

First Methodist A. P. (0)Taggert ........... .Armstrong .... .Stoll .....................jHaight .......... '..(Jueleh

02!) 72-1Bollitar Methodist (3)

Nuivmail ...... :....... M l .112B artlett ................ 127 132

! '

O. C¡. Ur.ot.fi-

Bennett ......... .Donibroski Eckert .....

M3 141 150134 - 170 ' 180 122 148 179G07 733 780

O. G. Craftsm an (1)•McClure ............ 125 00D a vis ........ 1 88 141Sawtell ....... 122 108Nitschman ......... 153 103Shaw .............. 122 144

090F irs t Presbyterian A.

FrancisDay- .... .C. Pullen .. .1. Taylor .. Alton ........X. Taylor.

712 P- (2) 128 110105Hili331

00157151102172741122I8Í)135110MO

g a ine, 728 713 ¿S3Bradley lleadi Melltodi.-I (0)

II. Kirills .... ...:..... 10!) l l n 124Megilj ........... ...... 137Bridge .................. 135Blind ......... 120Blind ..'.......:!..... . 120

Stirling ...........DeHart .........Nóttáge

130 147180 210....... 151755 811

S(. Paul's Ushers (1)Stirling ............... 133 150W atso n 117 157Blind ................... 120 ......Kunckel ................ 138 170A rth u r .. . ..... 203 157Borden ...................... 142Trimmer ..................... .....

.150 ! 88 1 138;750 j

!100 '

YOURmRvm

Market1-3-5 M ain S t. . .

F r e e D eliveryA sb u ry P a rk

A.P. 2-2311-2

c I Roasting uB*Jc lb- Chickens

Rih-Veiî! o r l.anii) Chops - - ih. 69c

135

O. (». Hrotherhootl (2)r«.«nuy

1 1 2 1 K rc^i* o 135 IíoiLon

O IL B A S E »W ASH A B L E P A S T E L W A L L PAS&iTH

t A f f C I T O N ^ S S B i E Y T ) 'oductH 1863 • 1948 E ig h iy -r .sa co lor fu l years o f q u a lity

I <lllO M 'p.¿(k2, & (filia n47 ¡Main A ve., O cean G rove

Tel. A. P . 2-f>(>:!<¡ -

Hydrangeas, the bUie-i'ink kind that many per.-ens have iii their gaiilens, .-onieiimei fail to pi;,'luce (lowers. ■■. |

All nf those form their flower \ buds for the next year's, bloom. as the tips of the . shoots. If these buds ure cut oif in pruning, tliere «•ill be no blooms. Also, they are likely to be killed .by cold On all the older 'v a rie ties there will he little or no bloom. Some of tile newer florists’ varieties Will pro­duce a few flowers 011 growth of the current season. -

To protect these against S in te r injury, as soon ..us most- of the j leaves have fallen, draw the stems! loosely together .and tie them with | some soft material. Around ea -h , plant place "chicken wire high! enough to top the buds. Then .pack; loosely-.with straw or dry leaves: I

it Would be wise .to place 0:1 doth or some similar inateviai over 1 the. t.Op; This ¡jyi.il ¿hed iaiii wliiel, j might compact the: stuii'ing and j expo.-e the buds,

f'(;.rt:>talks can be phu^d around j the plant ¡0 protect it. Long .-tr.'r.i "may also be u.-ed'.for-the same pa.i- I pose. Same ' gardener» wrap tlie : plants in burlap, afte r .tying- the-j shoots toget'nev; The-e examples | may surliest, other nieaii.-." The purpose of the covering is thiel'iy tn keep the sun oil', thus ¡uevent­ing niitch Sai> -nioveme,!: din ing j winter.

In any of these operations, be careful n o t to break oil; or dai^iige tiie tip buds, in which ale already laid down the beginnings of the llower iiuds for next year,

I)cl M onte IV a i 'ic s ta ll t a n - -Esvi'iy .ftmii P e a s No. t can - - ( a m p b e ll’ii T o m a to Soup 2 f a n s -

- 1!)c- îOc - ’ 10C

F ancy Red KipcTonmlQO| box 19c-C H O I C E .

Cooking h r E aling Apples ! Il>s. 25c

r r s P H L U P s T A R P A N

R E G U L A R C P

O M A T I C3 8 - 4 0 I n c h e s W i d e .

Just One And Now--

D -^Ve set out to prove that the place to buy your gas range is PHILLIPS , . . and the gas range to buy is TAPPAN.

Thanks to a fine public and a wonderful product, our goal has been reached. We are now recognized as the gas range headquarters for the Jersey Shore and TAPPAN has become the gas range every housewife wants in her kitchen.

TIME PAYMENTS ARRANGED COME IN— See and Try the NEW Tappan

EOOAR PH ILLIPS & SON 9 INC., 1 4 2 0 9 th AVENUE, NEPTUNEPLUMBM&

We Sell-We Irisfall-We Service

S E E T H E N E W T A P P A N

NOW ON DISPLAY AT THE ASBURY PARK O FFICE OF TH E JER SEY CENTRAL POWER & LIGHT COMPANY

(JUST WEST OF NEPTUNE HIGHWAY)

Give to the Shore Community Chest.

Page 4: Society Appoints Married October 9th In Trinity Senator ... · Charles Poole, president, ... 2Vi yards long. Stripes and Florals. Thompson and Gillan’Store, ... hundred' members

P A G E P O U R OCEAN GKOVE TIMES, OCEAN GROVE, NEW JERSEY FRIDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1948

And Neptune Times P ublished F riday Tel. A sbury P a rk 3-0007

HOMEIt KltESGK, P ub lisher WILLIAM T. KRF.SGE, Editor. Sl'XTY-FOUll MAIN AVENUE, OCEAN GROVE, NEW JERSEY

SUBSCRIPTIO N S: S2.b0 y ea rly : $1.50 sem i-annuallv : $1.00 q u a rte rly and 5c. and postnRo per copy in U nited S ta tes; C anada $5.00 and Foreilin $6.50 a y ea r. -

ADDRESSES changed on req u es t—alw ays give fo rm er address. ADVERTISEM ENTS:. R ates w ill be lu rn isliud b y 'u s on request.

WATCH TH E LABEL ON YOUR PA PER FOR THE EXPIRATION OF YOUR SUBSCRIPTION '-1. •

TH E TRUTH IN ITS PROPER PLACE

NATIONAL £DITORIAL_ ^ '.A S S Q CIA TIQ N

t ^ / y i u n t c A —

E ntered nsKOiïoiiii-eln.ss m all a t the

Ocean «Trovo . postonico

An A II-o r-N o tlu n ji C hoice

S ta te w e lfa re in s t i tu t io n s w ill no t 'su ffe r if th e v o te r s on e lec tio n d ay re je c t th e “ 950,000,000 S in g le P a c k a g e B ond Is su e D eal".

T h a t is th e co n te n tio n o f th e N ew J e r s e y T a x p a y e rs A sso ­c ia tio n , and it is eu rre c t. R e je c tio n o f th e bond issu e w ould p ro m p t th e L e g is la tu re to ta k e e m e rg en c y a c tio n to p ro v id e fo r - th e in iiiied ia te . need s ;o f th e S ta te 's m en ta l a n d w e lfa re in s t itu t io n s . Su ch ac tio n w a s su g g e s te d by G o v e rn o r D risco ll hi his In idgo tiino^sage la s t J a n u a ry . T h e h e ed s of. th e s t a t e ’s

■ nK’iita) and w e lfa re i iisn t i it io n s a rc g e n e ra lly rccogiiizc'd.T h e \ o to r v.iuv e n ti t le d .to h a v e th e th r e e p u rp o se s fo r

v- l.ich th is bond i s - w . i s in te n d e d lis te d s e p a r a te ly : - ( 1) Wel- ia ro ,iíi< 1 m e n ta l in s t i tu t io n s ; (2 ) .R u tg e rs U n iv e rs i ty , (.1)

K ’ . - i v - a n v [»ron 'V iïp '' i l i a t i v in s c o n d i t i o n 1 w i l l b e . ' r e m e d i e d b y

>s i e w ¿ l i t « . ip i l l o n s , o f t a x p a . m s . n w n e y ?-

The Point of ViewBritish Meat I’rices . . . And

British Meat!Advocates of strict “controls”

and new rationing plans, both the “standby” variety first requested by President Truman, and the la- te rly . requested “broad controls,” have pointed to the comparative meat prices in Britain, under con­trol, 'a n d . in the United States, without control. The British In fo r­mation service, which is usually about as accurate as was the old U; S. Office of W ar Information, comes along now to brag th a t in 'Britain} socialist “accomplishment” has made possible a price of only 28 cents per pound for beef ribs; 4-1 cents per pound for bacon; 50 cents per dozen eggs; potatoes, seven pounds fo r 16 cents; and-soon. i- i ; . i ;\ ; ' -i " ' .V- ; : :Sounds lovely, doesn't it, in com­parison to some American prices, where socialist "accomplishment” has not yet been allowed to take full sway.. But : . . read on!

According- to the same British information source, the English housewife is allowed “20 cents worth of meat per person per week. (Three cents worth of this m ust be in Argentine corned beef.). Of ham ami bacon, she can g e t two oimces weekly; bf butter, folhv ounces; of eggs,. OXE!” Quoted prices on un­ni; inned items almost' uniformly: rtin far. higher than -m the - United States. _

,lu-■ Vi'hat advantage cheaper t:\n.ioti p: kos aro on items that are pi at ticaily niiiol.tainablg under so-,< i:ili>l ifiitfóhìpiishmcnt -the liifdr- nurtjiin jeiivice tails lo state.— Kr.id. Okla., News,, Tneie i- uni' gm i'iiinien; wo.kei (ledeial, -iate..and loca!) fo t every 11' adult Americans; If half of ¡hem were laiil end to end in the Atlantic Ocean* _they would reach lriun Puerto liieo to Africa—and, after-survivor benefits were paid,; the '.tiixpayers would, saxe. ¡57,3(50.-1. 000,000, in yearly pay roll-.—Tax Outlook. .

^■iiiiiitniiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiuiiilinniginitiiiininBHiiinimiilimilç

DOWNMEMORY

LANE!

1 9 1 8

Xo Choice For Them A Moscow newspaper, comment­

ing upon our political outlook, re ­marks;; that “ordinarily Amcrjeans do iiot have'any choice' in elections but this year it is different'.'.’

Because of lieijry Wallace's third party,- it says, “ the m asses”, can vote for a "policy ol peace, in ter­national cooperation and demo­cratic freedom,”

Too bad the Russian masses-can- not have that privilege. All they can vote is the ticket drafted by J o s e p h Stalin, headed by Joseph Stalin , and tabulated by Joseph Stalin.—Washington, 1). C., News.

Russian doctors sny prolonged ■leep has been proven effective in treatm ent of stomach ulcers. A little more sleep would probably have prevented them in the first place.—Enid, Okla.. News.

- ' - - - . ; ; . ' ! ,11 U - I ! 1. : ¡ 1 , i III \ i t i l i U , UU U llL'lN

'• 1 ' o i i e i j i i - r a e i 'i i i - i i t t o . f i n d m o r e g o o d n e s s-An Afneriiv vepv\UUc,_ T^ibcvia,

o\VL‘S ! t s -i on ! ul i n ¡4,' to - th e e lF o rts o f Americans. . : - *

' - : ' - -- iii'o.Uii'rliood and peace.; T h e p ro g ra m 's e x tre m e ly' >Ki - . ‘V i - n o w i n i t s t h i r d y e a r u n d e r t h i s s a m e

- ;u : : . " o r , iw v m .v > w i t h o u t c o m m e r c i a l s — s h o w s t h a t y o u c a n

• !,- - s iu 'C ii 's .-u ii - l iy g i v i n g , - n o t . j i i s t b y s e e k i n g - t o g e t . • B y a l l . i - . 'j .mi t o ' t h i " - I ' f r o g r a m n e x t - S u n d a y .

T ak in g C am p a ig n S e rio u slye lec tio n will fmil th e

> th e polls' fu lly T h a t d o e sn 't im p ly th a t

n o tic e to a ll po- w o rk e rs know

'. 'i i’i i !i(i; thi ii'J ji'ea ii b u t te re d o n ; ~..':'.ii:;'.fl\ tiie y a re linr iroin'j- to le t 't h e i r ;:)o-.-<is tell th e m how to .vote. T h e w o rk ­e rs k n 6v.' t h a t ' t h e p n se n t lab o r law s w e n t th ro u g h th o fires of t'-» o T ru-rin ii'-vetof■> an d w e re jm t on th e s t a tu t e s b y a n h o n e s t fiiid. a ijfc ( |( .in g re ss ,; ;. .. ' i' i: i ’;i

All vi.ii i'< .ari- i:11-■ • t o v e r th e h ig h c o sts o f l i vi ng an d th e te rr if ie sp e n d in g sp re e s o f th e T ru m a n a d m in is tra t io n . W ho a m o n g th e m is th e re t h a t docs n o t know t h a t o u r P re s id e n t is f a i l in g to convince th e A m erican people t h a t he sh o u ld be e le c te d ? On Uiei-othci' hand 'it.- is 'a lm o s t a-conceded fa c t t h a t th e : Republicans'.-, w ill w in th e H o u se , S e n a te a n d th e P re s i-

“ L o g n ia ch y (w a r o f w o rd s) is th e .v e ry .d e v il ,” s a y s G eo rg e B e rn a rd S h aw w ho lik e s-to .k eep h is re a d e rs r e fe r r in g to th e i r d ic tio n a rie s ; W h a t b o th e rs th e W e s t is w hen th e R ed s p lan to t u r n fro m w o rd s to sh o o tin g

I’tione 8318 >

JOSEPH’S BEAUTY SALONAll;- Branches^ O* ; BEAUTY CULTURE

FE 'A T U R IJiO T H E K E WCOI/D P E n i l AN EN T W A V E ■ H i t Corllea Aye. H ep tane , K . J .

For Quick Sale9 Rooms, 5 bedrooms, bath, hot air heat, corner, $6,500; 10 Rooms, 7 bedrooms, 3. baths, hot w ater beat, ?13,- 500; 12 Rooms in two ap a rt­ments. hot air heat, corner, 89,5(10; 15 Rooms, corner, hot w ater heat oil b u r n e r ,

SI 1,000.

B e sure-—in su re w ith

ALVIN E. BILLSR E A L E S T A T E

IN S U R A N C ETelephone A. P. 2-2121

78 Main Avc., Ocean Grove

C a n d id a te T ru m a n on h is w e s te rn sw in g a sk e d th e v o te r s : “ W h y do you w a n t to u p se t th e a p p le c a r t n o w ? ” N .ever d id a c a n d id a te l e a v e .h im se lf m o re w ide, open fo r th e o b v iousanswer. --..^o^i-i'.-'.i

T o m D ew ey h a s th e on ly re m e d y fo r k e ep in g C om m ies o u t o f th e g o v e rn m e n t: “N e v e r ta k e th e m in .”

All TypesGENERAL

INSURANCEOtto G. Stoll, Sr.1 1 9 C e n t r a l A v e n u e

OCEAN GROVE, N. J .. Phone A.P. 2-5652

■ n . * • ......... ■ ■ .T ■ ■ r r n sa ♦ ■ v*. •.•:»* y.' . |niiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiitiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiDiiiiitiiiiiiiiiaiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiaijaiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiitaitiiiiifiiiiliiifiiiitiiiiiini,F if teen Y ears Ago Thirty Y ears Ago

1 9 3 3 ----------Deaths during the week were:

Mrs. Florence R. Miller, 130 Heck avenue; Mrs. M argaret J . Glessner,27 Abbott avenue;. William D.Jones, summer resident a t 7 Heck avenue; Mrs. Alice A. Gravntt, widow of Henry F. Gra.vatt,, resi­dent of Ocean Grove fo r about fo r­ty years, 144 Em bury avenue.

Neptune lost to Woodbridge high school, 7 to 20. Loading 7-0 into the third quarter, Neptune weak­ened because o f lack of replace­ments. Frank- Eckert gave Nep­tune its lone touchdown and Sam Vetrano the, extra point. .

Mrs. W. II. Carpenter, 81 Heck avenue, was again chairman of the annual Red, Cross drive in Ocean Grove.’ Officers of the Occ-an Grovc-Nep-

tiinc p'.T.A. were; J trs . Marjorie MacWliiniie.v. pi’esideilt; Kenneth .Russell, vice president; Mrs. A .M .Aiistiiij secontl vice president; Mrs,Joseph Hill, secretary; M is.'A lyih Bills, treasurc-r; Mrs. Cl W. \Vood- worlh, blstin-ian.-M rs . Mai-garet Asay Hesse w a s .Hie newly-olec-.tt'il. Jiresiik'nt I'f the Willard W.C.'I .t.'. Miss i Klizaijeth iium m er:! iwiiSl chairman ; oC the medal contests and essays: in the grade schoiil. M is..W alter Voight was elected ikdeiiale to the state convention.

A celebration; in Bradley Beach marked t'ne payment’ of. a ten per-; cent divltlonil liyithe'j'eapeiieil F irst:National bank. The lir'st year of operation was . so successful th a t the board voted $25,000. to ho given out in 800 dividend: checks. In a year’s time the bank's total depos­its had more than doubled to $060,- 000.

------Use Classified Ads

in THE TIMES

Harold A. Tillotson, .son of Mr. and Mrs. F.-'W. Tillotson, summer residents here a t 7 Webb avenue and winter residents of Greenwich, Conn., was in France with Com­pany A, 102nd M ilitary Police, 27th Division, U. S. Army. He was ac­tive in Auditorium activities dur­ing the summer months and was an early member of the Ocean Grove Rough Riders and the Children’s Chorus. He wrote to his friends here th a t he often saw Paul Mor­gan and Francis Jones, from Ocean Grove, in France.

1 Miss : Sara Graham ' Voorlils, daughter of Sirs. Emily W. Voor- his, ¡57 Delaware avenue, and Wil­liam J. Anderson, of Bradley Beach, w ere married. The groom was associated with the Seacoast T rust eo. a n d ' the bride was a teacher of mathematics and history in1 Asbury Park high school.

The Ocean Grove un it of the Red Cross lelected onicers: Mrs; W. II. Carpenter, chairman; Mrs. M. L. Vail, vice chairm an; Mrs. N. J. Holmes, assistant vice chairman; Mrs. William K. Taylor, secretary; Miss .Margaret Collins, treasurer; Mis. L. 1!. Ward, publicity chair­man; Mrs, Fred Pine, Mrs. S. .A. Reeves, Mrs. 13. Frank W ainwright, Mrs. William A. Robinson, Mrs. Fred A . Smith, M rs. .Harold Car­penter, Miss - Beatrice. Carpenter, superintendents-.of Instruction.

Dr.. C. J . Massenger, of Butler, N. J., became a permanent resident of Ocean Grove, opening medical offices' lit Ills home, corner of Main and Delaware avenues.- •

The Public Health Service at Washington, D. 0., announced that it was mobilized for a national campaign against the induenza epi­demic sweeping the country.

Members of the Stokes fire com-

GOOD IN S U R A N C EAND

GOOD S E R V IC E

— Leading Companies —FIR E .. . . LIABILITY

AUTOWorkmen’s Compensation

LIFE & ACCIDENTALL EXPENSE

HOSPITALIZATION PLAN

Walter E. Hammer20 Wolib .Avenue OCEAN GROVE-

Call A. P. 2-0Í20-.I

T11E PIONEER OFFICE

Wc have several ..homes and apartm ents, furnished, to rent for the winter.For Sale

W'c have a fine summer bungalow, six rooms, 3 bed­rooms, bath, partly furnished.§6 ,000.A fine bungalows 4 rooms, 2 bedrooms, bath, gas forced heat, gas refrigerator, insu­lated. Furnished, new tele­vision set, . ..

$10,300.

E R N E S T N .

W O O L S T O NAGENCY

48 MAIN AVENUE Ocean Grove, N. J.

Tel. A.. P. 2-0398

NEW HOMES .' I N

NEPTUNE TOWNSHIP25-Year Mortgage

•iVi% In terest R ale ’ 5% Cash—Veterans10% Cash—Non-Veterans

EXCLUSIVE WITH

Oliver BrothersReal E state Insurance

50 MAIN AVENUE OCEAN GROVEA. P . 2-4533

For SaleAilaniic Av. . . . « cottage a t< the ocean .. ........... $12,500Iiroaiiway , . . beautiful home ...... $18,000Cookhian Av. . ; . córner, magniticcnl home $18,000

.Cookman Av. . ; , 1 5 room co lta le , corner ...... $11,000. tFor Rea! E slale & Insurance of every description

SE E M E HEPORE Y O U B U Y , n u n » O R B O R R O W

Louis E. BronsonREALTOR & INSUROR

53 Main Avenue Ocean Grove, N. J. . Phone A. P. 2-1058

IMMEDIATEPOSSESSION 'Of this beautifully furnished home and income property overlooking the occan. Three baths, hardwood floors, full basement, oil heat. Over 12% rer turn- on investment.A new small home of finest pre-war construction —: tile bath, lavatory, hardwood floors. Full basement, autom atic heat arid hot w ater. .A lovely eight bedroom home and income property,.overlooking the ocean. Fully furnished and o f finest all-year construction. Tw;o baths," lavatory, garage.HOTELS. — SELECTED ROOMING HOUSES & HOMES

MARION SMITH, BrokerA. P. 2-2809 ‘ 12 New York Ave.

EXPERTS AT DISTORTION B y M A C K E N Z I E

/ v 'W we've eor Ÿ H éA N S V V Ê R 5 - ,

( a m o HQW - J j

pany Voted to biiy $300 worth of Liberty Bonds.

Charles Hendrickson and Byron Holmes were elected ofllcers of the Liberty class in St. Paul’s Sunday school .by its members. iJIrs. II. J. Ileck was teacher.

ST . PA U L’SÒCEAN GROVE

“Renewing’’ is tlfe theme of the message fo r the 10:45 o’clock wor­ship service, to be delivered by Dr. B. Harrison Decker, pastor of St. Paul’s, Sunday. The choir anthem will be, "The Lord’s P rayer” by JIalotto and "The Lord Bless You and Keep You" by Lutkiii, Organ numbers by Miss Mount will be, “Pastorale" by Franck and “Piece Heroifiue” by Franck. Yearly awards will be presented to the members of the Cccilian choir by the chairman of the music commit-

tee, Alvin Bills, assisted by Mrs. Earl Height, president of the Mother's guild, and Dr. Decker.

“The Light th a t Condemns” will be the sermon subject a t the 7:30 o’clock service. The choir will sing “Thou W ilt Keep Him in Perfect Peace” by Peace. Ruth Gilbert, soprano, will sing as a solo, “ My Soul Is A th irst For God” by Stickles. M is s Mount will play, “Chorale on, ‘Nearer My God to Thee” ’ by Bingham. ;

Sunday school, 9:30 n. ill. Otto G. Stoll, general superintendent. Assembly Bible class a t 2:45, Rev. B. S. Crowcroft, teacher. Youth Fellowship a t 0 p. 111.

The total degrees awarded by Rutgers- University up to 1940, since tts founding in 170G, includ­ing the New Jersey College for Women, were 13,765 earned de­grees and 913 honorary degrees.

£l'llllllllllllllrllllll||ll|llll!KII||l|lllll||!|J|||||ll||J||||j]|||||l|||||||j|||||||||!||lt|j|||||||||||!||||lt|l!l||||j|||||||||lll|IIIIIIMj

? Two S a cr i f i ce s !| SUMMER HOME—Four bedrooms, garage, completely fui'-| liished, two porches with ocean view, lVi blocks from ocean,| north side of street—

L O W E S T P R IC E , $7,500

| YEARLY HOME—Four bedrooms, u ltra modern kitchen com-| -plete, hot a ir beat, automatic gas domestic hot water, two | porches, expensively furnished, in first class shape both decora-| tively and structurally, centrally located—\ L O W E S T P R IC E , $12,000

! * -------

J . A . H U R R Y A G E N C Y66 M A IN A V E N U E

T e lep h o n e 2-4132

O C E A N G R O V E

R esid en ce 2-0387-R

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LET US FINANCE YOUR NEW CAR

L o a n s M ade U n d e r .

Bank Agent PlanC o n su lt

A L V IN E . B IL L S , R e a l E s t a t e a n d In su ra n c e G ro u p M em b er

The FirstNational Bank of Bradley Beach Bradley Beach, N. J.

MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION

F O R T H E C O N V E N IE N C E O F D E P O S IT O R S O V E R W E E K E N D S A N D H O L ID A Y S

IN O C E A N G R O V E — N E P T U N E A N D A S B U R Y P A R K O F F IC E S

CHECK ACCOUNT , -vCHECK MASTER ACCOUNT , '

SPECIAL INTEREST ACCOUNT CREDIT DEPARTMENT

T r u s t d e p a r t m e n tTRAVELERS’ CHECKS

SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES3 CONVENIENT BANKING OFFICES TO SERVB YOU

ORGANIZED 18S9

MAIN AVENUE OCEAN GROVE

M em ber F ed era l D eposit In su rance C orporation MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM

.C o rifea A v cn o e N eptune

M ain S t m t A sbu ry P a r k

Page 5: Society Appoints Married October 9th In Trinity Senator ... · Charles Poole, president, ... 2Vi yards long. Stripes and Florals. Thompson and Gillan’Store, ... hundred' members

FRIDAY., OCTOBER 22, 1948 OCEAN GROVE TIMES, OCEAN GROVE, NEW JE R S E Ï P A G E F I V E

In And Out Of Ocean Grove

M iss-M ary Elliott Dunham, 99 Mt, Tabor Way, was a recent vis­itor in Newark. -

Miss J. Sutherland, 25 Heck ave­nue, left this week to spend the w inter months in New York city.

' Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Crosby, 66 Mt. Tabor Way, left la s t Friday fo r their w inter residence in St. Petersburg, Fla.

Mrs. Michael J . Schmitt, 7 Surf 'avenu e , is a surgical patient in

F itkin hospital. She underwent an operation two weeks ago and is improving rapidly.

M rs, Anne Ridgway, 98 Heck avenue, suffered a heart attack la st night and was removed to Fit- kin hospital by the Ocean Grove first aid squad.

Mrs. William Trautwine, of Had- donfield, left la st Thursday afte r Enjoying a ten-day v isit with her aQusin, Mrs. Samuel E. .Lawson, 104 Mt. Hermon Way,

Mr. and Mrs." Richard Johnson, of Jersey City, enjoyed several days this week with their grand­mother, Mrs. I. A. Hopkins, 123 Main avenue.“ .Miss Mary, E. Boas and nicce, Miss Emily B. Broyfogel and ¡Miss Mary E. Thomson, have returned to Reading, -Pa., afte r spending

. the summer a t the form er’s cot­tage, -1 Vs Heck avenue,

Mr. and Mrs. Alvin 13. Baisden, form erly of Belleville, N, J., have

.taken possession of their new year- ro u n d home, 30-32 A.blfott avenue. The sale was announced by the E. N. Woolston agency.

Roofer Bill Krayer, of Ocean Grove, discovered a thin coating of ice on tho roof of the Altenhurst hotel, corner of Pitman and Central avenues, while on a repair job there Tuesday morning. I t was: the first sign of approaching winter.,

Mr. and Mrs. A .-P. Stackhouse, of the Surf Avenue House, left to­day for their winter home in Pros­pect Park, Pa., planning to be back ill Ocean Grove on November 2 to

. cast - their ballots in the General Election.

M iss Audrey Jonos, George P a t­erson, jr., Miss’ Ruth F ran iis and Robert Denbigh, nil of Ocean Grove,, attended the Pigskin Hop of Rider coliego last . Saturday n ight a t the Staccy-Trent hotel, Trenton.

M r.'an d ', Mrs. J . Hann have closed .'tho El * Dorado hotel, 5 Broadway, and have returned to their winter home in Summit* Mrs. Hann attended the. bridal shower on Tuesday for Miss. Elizabeth Dunn, 90 Abbott avenue.

Mrs, J . W. Shepherd returned last Friday to her winter homo in Scranton, Pa., afte r enjoying the summer a t her cottage, 8-1 Stockton avenue. Mrs. Meta Lancaster, who enjoyed last,w eek in- Ocean Grove

..’ as Mrs. Shepherd’s guest, is now ! vacationing in A tlantic Gity.

. Dave O’Reilly, Jacob Bentell, W alter Anderson and Ted Pierce arc on the ticket committee fo r the St. Paul’s church Ushers banquetoii-Tuesday evening, Nov. 9. The event will also be Ladies n ight aiid motion pictures will Jje on the pro-

■ gram .Mr. and Mrs. Elias B. Baker, jr.,

of Plymouth Meeting, Pa., are p ar­ents of a boy born Monday in Bryn Ma\vr, Pa., hospital They have named him W arren Credo Baker. The baby’s grandmother, Mrs. Eli­as B. Baker, sr., and great-grand­mother, Mrs. Warren Baker, reside here a t 9 Surf avenue.

Mr. and Mrs. Henry B. Schmidt, 59' Clai'k avenue, have returned from their two-week wedding trip :.o N iagara Falls, Canada and the New England states. Mrs. Schmidt, the form er Edna Proctor, reports they arc happy to be back in Occan Grove and to g ree t their friends.

Mr. and Mrs. Byron Holmes, residents of O akhurst for the past tw enty years, are moving today to 130 Main avenue, the home they purchased recently. Tho property had been occupicd for many years by Realtor and Mrs. Charles J. Heinz. Mr. Holmes is an employe of the Ocean Grove post office and spent h is.en tire boyhood.in Ocean Grove, living here with his parents on Heck avenue.

The Oliver Brothers agency, CO Main avenue, announces ‘ the sale of 131-131 >/j Abbott avenue to Mr. and M rs.'R ichard F. Getshall, of Jersey City. Mr. and Mrs. Get- shall will move in the very near fu tu re and will occupy the prem ­ises the year-round. .The sale o f 51 Heck avenue to Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bossert, operators of Stiles Ocean Grove Taxi Service, was also announced. Roy Lever was a tto r­ney fo r all parties in the transac­tions.

Dr. -R. 2 . Tomlin lias moved to 32 Em bury avenue temporarily.

Mrs. Caroline L. Rausch has moved to 114 Mt. Tabor Way.

A member of the Ocean Grove Fishing club and a summer resi­dent here fo r the pa§t 47 years, Richard M. Brown has returned to his winter home in Irvington. His son-in-law and daughter and fam ­ily, Mr. and Mrs. G. Goewey, Ruth and Richard, returned early last month. . The fam ily group enjoys their summer here a t their cottage, 52 Clark avenue.

H o ld s O c to b er M ee tin g

The October meeting of the Lu­cia Grieve circle of St. P aul’s church was held la st Thursday a t the home of Mrs. R. B. Trimmer, 13G Clark avenue. Mrs. J . W arren Fulton led devotions and Miss Myr­tle Chapin reviewed the study. Mrs. Alvin Bills conducted the business session. The November meeting will be held a t tho home of Mrs. Joseph Sandford, 89 Embury ave­nue. Others present were Mrs. B.H. Decker, Mrs. Joseph Sandford, Mrs. Carl Herschel, Mrs. Charles Weaver, Mrs. H arry McCloed, Mrs. William Marshall, Mrs. Ray Man­ley, Mrs. Nellie CunlifTe, Mrs. Rebn W iolert and Mrs. Joseph Keating.

* ------------

6V GEORGE S. BENSON-}(>irding'

Scdrctf. ^rkanscs

G o v e r n m e n t a n d R a i l r o a d sThe America ii railroads arc being

put increasingly on. the spot. They had tough limes during the depres­ión years of the Thirties. Some of them wciit bankrupt and remain that way, despite the tremendous volume of wartime business. Times are good.on .the railroads now, tooN They arc hayling all the freight they can haul. Well, then, asks tho pub-. lie, if business is" so good, why can’t the railroads keep on granting wage increases?Folks coming to our town ride the Missouri Pacific. Although' it. went bankrupt in 1933, this railroad- now lids on order §35 million worth of new. cars and locomotives. That’s an' example of how a bankrupt rail­road has t o . pay out money. And : that’s not all. Its gross revenues were up 54 per cent in 1947 as com­pared with 1929,- and net income was up 40 per cent. But here’s the catch. Its taxes have gone up 173 per cent!

G o v e rn m e n t T ro u b leAs a matter of fact, payrolls and payroll taxes/took more than half the gross revenues of tlie railroads in 19-10J At the- same time, the rate of return for stockholders, based on property valuation, has dwindled to around 3 per cent. Not more than 3*V per cent is the estimate, by the Interstate Commerce Commission for 1947, and this does not include wage, increases. That’s mighty poor investment! • *

Everybody. seems, to be-unhappy about the railroads. The various un*r ions are usually ready to complain about wages. Yet management finds wage increases coming, with no profits to absorb them. And some­times the public gets sore. Pretty soon somebody gets the bright idea.. We’ll just let the government taka the railroads over, and that'll settle everything. They just th ink ,it will. That's what the trouble is now. Gov­ernment trouble.

S o m e O n T h e R o ck sIn my opinion, the extensive gov­ernment regulations are fundamen­tally to blame lor the railroads' fail­ure to make ends meet despite the greatest volume of business they . ever had in.peace time. American railroads are probably regulated by government more than any other major industry. In years when rail­roads see that profits are too small, or even non*cxistent'as in 194C, they may petition the government for rale increases.These may bo granted or they may not. Some relief was granted the railroads early this year. But these prospects were at once swal­lowed in wage increases, und addi­tional increases are being ’ asked even though many .railroads are al­ready on the rocks. If things go on for another decade in this manner, we shall see a great and important industry fold up completely.

The future of our industry depends much upon tho future of our rail­roads. Yet, unless railroad credit can bo restored, unless the lines are permitted to earn enough money to pay fair dividends and attract new investment, to keep equip­ment and properties in good condi­tion, then it will not be possible to keep paying good wages to em­ployees. In this critical period, .wage increases’ may be the burden that breaks the railroads. If the rail­roads are crippled, or if govern­ment ownership comes, the public will pay and pay and pay.

Girl Scouts In Region Program

i-ocal G irls T a k e P a r t In O p en in g S ess io n o f C onven­tio n H a il C o n fe ren ce

During the Battle of. Princeton an American, cannon shot passed through tlie wall of Nassau llall and destroyed a portait of George "II which was hanging there. The frame, however, remained intact and today still hands in -Nassau Hall and contains a po rtra it of Washington.

Eighteen Ocean Grove Girl Scouts, from Interm ediate troop 24 and Senior troop 15, took p art in the opening ceremony Wednesday of the Region 2 Girl Scout conven­tion a t Asbury Park Convention Hall. The region includes New York, New Jersey, Panama, Canal Zone and Virgin Islands.

The ceremony was a choral read­ing, "Freedom’s Plough,” by Lang­ston Hughes. Thelma Mount, min­ister of music and organist of St. P aul’s church here, conducted the large chorus of 125 Girl Scouts from various troops of the Shore council. Miss Barbara Fielder, of Belmar, was organist. Soloist fo r the group was Miss Norma Levy, of Senior troop 37, Belmar.

Mrs. Donald McMurray, of In te r­laken, and Mrs. Alfred P. Todd, of Ocean Grove, were co-chairmen for the affair. Mrs. J . II. Hemphill and Mrs. Charles P . Todd, both of Ocean Grove, served on .the com­mittee and worked in the reg istra­tion booth, with Mrs. "Robert Hol­brook and. Mrs. Clifford DeHaven, also of Ocean Grove.

Girl Scouts from here partic ipat­ing were: Troop 15—Shirley Hemp­hill, Janice Todd, Rosemary Har­ley. Carol_ Russell,. Patricia Tit- couib, Janet Samlfonl, Joan Mar­shall, G ret el Swolinzky and Joyce Jurhibi'amlt; Troop 2-1—Marilyn

VanClcve, l ’eggy .Marshall, .Mar­ilyn Hopper, Nancy Estelle, Helen Herbert, Edna Thoma, Janet Hunt­ington, Elaine F itting, Meta Davis and Anna ICrayer. -

Four Receive PTA Hallowe’en Prizes

L E T T E R S T O T H E E D I T 0 I t

Auchincloss Ahvnys.on the Job EDITOR,' TIMES:

In the W ashington maelstrom we all know how much diance a new Congressman of the House' minority has of getting anything done for constituents. Congress­man James C .. Auchincloss is not only of the majority party which it is conceded will also be the m a­jo rity in that branch for the next two years, but he has the addi­tional advantage of seniority.

Himself a veteran, M r. Auchin­closs has been indefatigable in his •efforts in behalf of veterans. He has also won bis light fo r Federal aid for checking beach erosion and he's pressing for extension of the inland waterway, lie lias helped reduce padded U. S. payrolls and taxes. lie has faithfully sought to protect the Interests of our farm ­ers, fishermen, commuters. One of the hardest workers in Congress who is always on the job, he takes issues direct to the people, as with aid for Greece and Turkey. When lie found chiselers were charging for services of the government sup­posed to be free, he advertised it and asked constituents to let him do it. What more could w o seek in a public servant'.’ Let’s all empha­size With our ballots our approval.

(Signed) B. B. BtDBBlTT Long Branch, N. J.

Oct. ,18 1948 * ----------FIR E ALARMS

Ocean Grove; New .York and Asbury Avcs. :... .....Police Headquarters ..Surf and Beach.-.................„.Embury- and Beach Main and Pilgrim Pathway..Broadway and Pilgrim P ath’y Mt. Tabor and Penn. Avenue............. ;. North End Pavilion ...............McClintock and Bench ........ .".......South End Pavilion ."...Clark and New Jersey...Benson and Mt. Tabor Way.......................Heck and Whitfield...............Webb and Pennsylvania.. .Asbury and Pilgrim Pathway Benson and Franklin ...................Benson and Abbott...; New York and, Stockton.......................Heek and Lawrence ...Olln S treet Firchouse .... ,..............Main and Beach

• Special Taps 5—5—5 General Alarm. 1 Wire Trouble. 2 F ire Out and Ambu- lance Call. 3 Time 7 a. m. and Chief’s Call. 4 W ashington E n ­gine 1. (i Eagle Truck 2. 7Stokes Engine 3.

15.1G....52... 63.:...54....5G....02....72....81....83.... 85....80.. D2.....

Neptune ....Main S treet and Main Ave. Main S treet and Corlies Ave. , Unexcelled F ire House .-.............Atkins and Embury;..................Prospect and Heck ....................Ridge and Embury ..................Corlies. and Ridge ......:............... Corlies and Union.............Seventh and Stokes.’............ Ridga and Eighth :........ ......Tenth and Atkins..................'...... Sixth and Atkins .....Eighth and Hamilton

Special Taps 0— 0—G General Alarm. 2 Am­bulance Call. 1 F ire Out'. 3 Chief’s Call. Time 1 p . m . 4 Unexcelled. 2—2—2 Police.

Scarecrows, ghosts and goblins, clowns and Parisian flappers were much in evidence at the Hallowe'en masquerade of the Ocean Grove Parent-Teachers association Mon­day evening in the Neptune high school gymnasium. Mrs. Philip Kirkpatrick, program chairman, led the grand march around the gym a t which time the judges se­lected the most outstanding cos­tumes and prizes were awarded the winners.

Mrs., John Williamson and Mrs, R. B, Gillum were selected as the most original; Mrs. Albert Strass- burgcr, the prettiest, and Peter Zirkle, the funniest. A fter the awarding of the prizes Donald Stacey led the group in several games.

The gym was decorated with corn stalks and masks made by the pupils in the 3rd and 1th grades. Mothers of the pupils in these grades were the hostesses a t tho cafeteria where refreshm ents-were served the guests a t the conclusion of the evening's fun. Tlie mothers were under the leadership of Mrs. George Cole, Mrs. Clifford de H a­ven, Mrs. Vina T ro tter and Mrs.. Gillum.

A 1 short business meeting was held prior to the masquerade at which time tho president-, Mrs. R.B. Gillum, presided and called for reports from, the various commit­tees. Mrs. Carl Meyer, chairman of the-membership committee, report­ed a 100 percent membership through the Oth grade and that only four more n i 'e r . i - 'w e t e nec­essary to. make it I1') jiercent for. the entire school.

Mrs. Donald Lippii:.-oit read the president's message rejd 'Howard' Christ, treasurer, gave his, report. M rs. Charles WhiMoil urged the’ parents to attend tin- Parent Study Group which will , hold- its first meeting Monday, October' 25, ill the high school sewing room, at which time Miss Marian Hackers,: school nurse a t Runison, will be the guest speaker.

The 2nd and 3rd grades were

Clubwomen(C on tinued from Pafie 1) '■

C. G. Herschel, Miss E. II. Liin- ning, Mrs. Ellis Pierce, .Mrs. Wal­ter Dawley, Mrs. Jo-eph II. Black­ley, Mrs. W. 11, Sutherland, Mrs. William. II. Gay, Miss Maude Gay, Mrs. William L. Clarke, Mrs. BenII. Thompson, Mltjs B. Hathaway, ..Mrs. F . Harper, Mrs. .Ida Mac- Dougal, Mrs. George A. Isley, Mrs. Henry B. Schmidt, Mrs. Charles Hagen, Mrs. Caroline L. Rausch, Mrs. Jam es L. Goodwin, Mrs. Jos­eph Sandford. Mrs. John Meyer, Mrs. Frank Mount, Mrs. Katherine Brandley.And, Mrs. Frank Muller, Mrs. Gladys L. Hopper, Mrs. John Hillig, Mrs. F. M. Lindsloy, Mrs. William Huggan, Mrs: Richard Kingdom M rs.'J . H. Lohmann, Mrs. Fred L. Schultz, Mrs. Elias B. Baker, Mrs. Samuel H etherington, Miss May Cooper, Mrs. \Y. F- Day, Miss Ag­nes Day, M rs. J . B. Rudhart, Mrs. Louis Samuoison, Miss Mae E. Ful­ton, Miss Jennie C. Fulton, Mrs. Jam es Monahan, Mrs. Samuel B. W atson, ilrs . William Brosnan, Mrs. Frank Vogel, Miss Mae L. Lane, Miss Laura A. Lane, Mrs. Charles W. VatiHoesenj Miss Mary Elliott Dunham, Miss Sarah R. Wise, Mrs. Samuel E. Lawson, Mrs. Grover Ii. James, Mrs. Melvyn F. Pulley. Sirs. Joseph II. Weber, Mrs. Cleo Campbell. •

— * —

The Bureau,of Public Safety es­tablished in the Rutgers University Extension Division in 1937, con­ducts courses of train ing for police chiefs and tratlie officers,, crime' prevention schools, and courses in highway and industrial safety.

MATTHEWS, FRANCIONi

& TAYLORFUNERAL HOME

Exclusive bul InexpensiveDANIEL L.' FRANCÏONI THOMAS W. TAYLOR

704 - 7th Ave. Asbury P ark Phone A.P. 2-0021

awarded the attendance banner and each slass will receive one dollar for having, the most parents pres­ent a t the meeting.

Others present were Mr. and Mrs. Peter Zirkle, Mr. and Mrs. Al­bert Strassburger, Mrs. Dorothea Bush, Mrs. A. LeRoy W ard, Mrs. William Oliver, Mr. and Mrs. Don­ald Lippincott, Mr. and Mrs. A r­thur Morse, Mrs. William. Krayer, Mrs. William Schwartz, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Whilden, Mrs. Rich­ard Gibbons, Mrs. John I-Iancox, Mrs. Norman Hannah, Mrs. Joseph Corirossi, Mr. and Mrs. H arry Packwood, Joseph A. Thoma, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Stacey, Howard. Christ and others.

Society(C ontinued iro m P age 1)

Mrs. Jam es Goodwin and Mrs. E. M. Starm er. Mrs. George Adding­ton, a charter member, was rein­stated.

Observe Prayer WeekMrs. Henry Smith, member of

the Christian social relations com­mittee, presented a paper on civil rights. Mrs. G. L. D, Tompkins, spiritual life secretary, announced that the Week of Prayer, s tarting Monday, Oct. 25,'w ill be observed by the society. Wednesday will be a quiet day of prayer and medita­tion with a service in the evening a t the church, taking the place of the regular prayer service. The OnaW session will be held a t the. Bancroft-Taylor Rest Home on F ri­day from '3 to ■! p. ni.

Mrs. George Egner, vice' presi-' d e n t,. introduced Mrs;. Ruth..Rug'- gec, who sang two ■ soleciiim.-.. •‘.Prayer’ Perfect." anil "In the Time of Roses,!' accompanied by Mr.-., Ted I'ierce. .!

Movies on Alaska were shown j by the pastor,’ Rev. Dr. 1!. Harri- j son Decker Hostesses at the door ‘ Were members of the Ethel U arpst i circle, Mrs. Ida MacDougal, leader.

A ttending 'w ere Mrs. Elsie. Bui- man.'Mi's. Elomi. Conover, Claribel. Winchester. M rs. Henry-G. Burk- iiardt, Mrs. Arnold Huegg,’ Mrs:', ltose Ki.-enhauer, Miss Anna Btirk- hard, Mrs. Joseph Patterson, Mrs. Emily Hickson, M rs. James L. Goodwill, Mrs. John Ii. Sauerbrun. .Mrs. T. A. Pierce, M iss Cornelia, Farrington, Mrs. Bleccker Stirling, .Miss K ate E. H art, Miss May E. Houston, Miss Gertrude E. Res- seguie, Miss Priscilla W. Foster, Mrs. M abel Hodgson Mrs. Alice Ci'ossloy, Mrs. Frank M. Sopher, Mrs, Lewis B. Mulford. Mrs. S. W, Eise’nberg ,. Mrs. C.. George Ander­son, Miss-Alice M. Gilroy, Mrs. B. Ilarrison Decker, M rs. .Henry Smith, jr., M iss Lulu W right, Miss; Mabel Wright.

Also Mrs. George Egner. Mrs. William A. Gav, Miss Maude C. Gay,- Mrs. Anna I.. Martin. Mrs! G. C. Henderson, Mrs. Neal Tomp­kins, Mrs. George Tompkins, Mrs. Anna Farrell, Mrs. Ralph Wiggin: Mrs. T." W. Martin, Mrs. II. Wood-

wardt Mrs. J . Sandford, Mrs. Alvin Bills, Mrs. H, D. Kresge, Mrs. F lora R, Brown, Mrs. A rthur J. Clark, Mrs. Violet Gillan, Mrs. Ben­ton E, Deen, Miss D. G. Gelston.

Also Helen Gledhill, M argaret Laird, E. Mae Comfort, Mrs. Elean­or Kissane, Mrs. Stanley Watson, Mrs. J . B. Hulit, Mrs. George Ad­dington, Mrs. E. L. Murphy, Mrs. Clifford Kunckle, Mrs. Carl G. Herschel, Miss Isabel Hathaway, Mrs. Celia J . Woolman, Mrs. Ida M. MacDougal, Mrs. George A, Isley, Mrs. Caroline L. Rausch, Mrs. Charles Dennerlin, Mrs. Charles L. Poole, Miss Elizabeth Strow, Miss Anna Hardy, Mrs, Charles A. Bilms.

And Mrs. Iteba Wielert, Mrs, W ilbert W estcott, Mrs, Frederick Newman, .Mrs, Alexander Ander­son, Miss M ary Elliott Dunham, Hannah Beswick, Mrs. F rank Pru- den, Mrs. E. N. Woolston, Mrs. Marie H. Rand, Mrs, Leslie M. Vreeland, Mrs. Edna E, Schmidt, Mrs. Louis Samuelson, Mrs, H. Al­len, Miss Jennie Fulton, Miss Mae E. Fulton, Miss Phoebe Thomas, Mrs. Lewis Gay, Mrs. William Spratt, Miss Constance Palmore, Mrs. Estelle Stone, Mrs. George Jackson,. Mrs; H arry Jordan, Mrs. Edwin Noren; Mrs. William Suth­erland, Mrs. Alfred Cuthbert, Mrs. W. E. Albright, Mrs. Ray Manley and Mrs. Sadie Leuhart.

C l a s s i f i e d Ac l v e r t i s e n i e 111sA dvertisem en ts fo r these colum ns should be in th e office o£ "T he

T im es” NOT LATER THAN 12 O'CIOCK NOON T h u rsd ay of each w eek.

TH IRTY -FIVE CENTS 1 ce n t p e r w ord

CLASSIFIED AD RATE25 w ords OR LESS ............... .......................................M ore th a n 25 w ords -............ .......................................5 tim es fo r th e price of four.

Copy, m ailed in. Riven to rep resen ta tiv e o r broufiht to office, p e r ­sonally m ust b e accom panied by cash o r stam ps to cover cost. Copy accep.tcd over phone as a cou rtesy an d convenience to custom ers. Bills due im m ediately upon p resen ta tion .

WANTED—2 or 3 rooms with light housekeeping privilc^o.? for two adults. W rite, John Deliaido, 20 Pitm an avenue, Ocean-(»rove , — 13

WA X T K D — J1 y t he • year—fur- 'iii.«hod .apartm ent for two adult.«,- sta te 'm onthly,.rental, what floor, how heated anil particular*'. \Vrko Box Ocean Grove Times ottjee.

W ANTED— The Manleys are looking fo r a home. Any sugges­tion?, please call A. P. 1-0009-M, Dead-line December 1st. —43*FOR SALlv—T hree-quarter bed spring and inner sp ring 'm attress, good a>: new and'spotless, complete $10; a!>o ¡5 ft. ¿olid mahogany book ca^e with door?. $ L0. 80 Abbott Ave., Ocean Grove. —43

; F Oii. £ A LK — FI ti rer.ee cabinet oil neater, practically. i:ew. one. ;)Aii ;;èr, roa.>oitable. "01. AM)i»:i aVê- 1 ; : ii a,- Ocean Gio.vo. •.. ‘ ; ; :. • > •¿—•1 :j .:.'r j :.H O I.

C io v e .; o ra to r I ;bath;».'h e a te r .SS.'iÔO.s.pee.t.

•S K FO U SA 1- K — Oi.-en n [■M ór Ieri; ¡zed a ml newly dee - ôr rnr>m hnu.-o ;W.iih - r.v.i i f .Ai•' <îi 1. ai»i»>V g.as • w atèr . (.'■Vu ven ¡en 11 y _ ! oça ùy 1. -.Price For., appooiàtméiu to -/in- Pilóne A (sfyw r y , ' Park-It;FOR RK.XT:— Furnished apart-' ni en î, t wo or t!i ree roo ni s a ìli ! i « à t h. o il. heat: :• TO M t.;' Ilermdii:---'.Wajv Ocean .Grove. . < . * r-137FOR KENT — Furiiishc<I apart- ment\ lovely four rooms and bath, suitable for two or. three aduIts. heat,, hot water,, gas, electrio and; re i* r i ge ra t or- furnished;. -$75 per in on t h, yearly. 55 CI a rk a ve n u e. Ocean Grove.5 Phone A. P.i 1-10SM.

;■ — 4 3 -

FOR, RENT—3-room furnished: apartm ent, electric \ refrigerator.^ pri vat e ba t h roo m. • i>7 M ainavenuc. Ocean Grove. A. P. 2-8315?.!. —FOR .RENT—3-room apaitm eiit. all utilities furnished, a<lults onlv. Tel. A. P. 1-Ü2ÍJ4-R. —43"GARAGE FOR RENT — $5 month; inciu ire, P21 F rank Hit ave­nue, Ocean Grove. -—13" I

• OARAGE FOR. RENT — Until AI ay -, .1. .o 11 e-ca r ga rage at 2 7 Su r f ; aveñiKv inon^hJv. Wi'iie, A. P. iStackhoiise; 71ii Eleventh avenue,Pro^fiec». ; Par!;, Pa. ' • • —43-47*• FOR .SALE — f\ rooms; bath, J'.eai. f tir: i.is he-1. .$7000. ii rooms, !<ath, gas -h e a t,: I'urnishe.d. $8800.♦) ltH.invs. bath, •heat, furnished, i ; m Hi M. ,S ein on.» ; Age n cy, PJl M t. Tabor. Way. . 1 • — 13r:‘■ .FOR; S.VLK—l»aby carriage and baby c.rib..both ili vmy.^good condi- . Vî?âsonable. .Íi0 Mt. Carmel ■\V ay.'Ocean. Ci rove.. 43*

FOL'Np—Pretty wjiite female : kit ten • with' black m arkings. I f owner doe> not claim, home wanted for this and . two others. Box 20, Ocean Gr^ve Times olRce. — 4 3 <‘FOR RENT — Choice furnished apart me nt 13 Ocean Pathway. Three-iaoins and bath-to May lo th , adults;: o n ly .1 all utilities, $85 per nioiitlu. 4 3 >I* OR RENT—Large and small warm rooms, light housekeeping. The Nor manda le, 00 Mt. Zion Way.■ • - . . ■ -• — 13FOR-SALE—-Electrical ref** a tor.. W Ostingliouse, tine condition, $100; dresser, chest, $5 each; ta ­bles, chairs. Clark avenue. -

— 43^*

■ M atinee Dally 2:30 Evening 7 &: 9 Continuous Sat.. Sun. & H olidays |

i . HKADLEY REACH a

- SAT. — OCT. 22 - 23 DENNIS O’KEEFE

MARSHA H U N T ,“T-.MEN”Serial—“ SUPERMAN” ^

S atu rday M atinee O n ly"

B

I

I

i„|S U N . - MON. — OCT. 24 - 25 . •?I GLENN FORI) |A EVELYN KEYES “MATING OF MILLIE” ■|T U E S V- WED. — OCT. 26 - 27 fI JOAN FONTAINE ‘ gi “ LETTER FROM AN *UNKNOWN WOMAN'

ROY ROGERS.I “SPIUNiiTIMK IN. THE 1 > ^^ s i i c i u t A S “ ; : ;

FRI. - SAT. — OCT; 29 -, 30 '. -.fSCOTT B it ADV |“CANON CI TV“ • i

■ ■ B ' É J I m .' BJ-.* O A

WOOLMAN’SQuality Market125 Heck Avenue

T elep h o n e 2-0963 O cean G rove

WE ARE GLAD TO

ANNOUNCE THAT ALL

MEATS HAVE D R O P P E D - IN PRICE

HOl\SE;. WANTED _ 7 ,,r 8 rooms, - adults. 11» childrci).. Year­ly rental. Call’A. 1' 2-7240-M — 12-1.1

FOR- SALE;—Asbury Ave.. near bridge, 8 room,- .anil bath, pliis rdoin and bath apt., .hot air eo;il heat, sale .'■s,5(1(1. Webb Ave,, In Mftiis.’ iiifludinp It-rbom apariment: one bat 11.■.three IaVatorie.!, steam heat.--.-al«, partly :urni.=hei, >11.0 0 0 . Brewer and Smith," Real Estate ami Insurance. Eanfrs Ave.. A-l.ury i ’arl;. A. P. 2-0250.— lit:'

1 liK.N'T— Two store rooms, separately or both together, or, Mair;- avenue, ^nod location. Apply .‘Jox y-A. Ocean Grove Times oifiee.- ’— 43»

ROOMS FOR KKXT—All .Yftar Comiort—üèstwell Mouse, .'Jl Surf Ave.. Ocean Grove Double $12 vvlc., single $8 \vk; Tel. A. P .’2-l§0ti: — !5tfFOR RENT — Twin bedrooms, running water, oil heat, near As- bury, S' 10 weekly; single, Í7'. SII Mt. Hermon Wav. Ocean Grove. A. I’. 1-1310-M — U-45FOR SALE 13-i’00.m house, seven large bedt'uoms; o'-rdom apartm ent lihd 3-room apartm ent, bath, 2 lavatories, nicely furnished.' steam heat. best-, location; $10,500. terms. A. P. U13-10-M -4 1 -1 5> :x f!tu .siV K d r e s s m a k in g ;— Custom iinish, alterations, o 11 i I - dreu's dresses iind party gowns.- M rs. E. L. Ludovici, U4 . Emburv Ave. A. 'P. 1-15H5-R. — lOtfWILL MANAGE—or rent small hotel, Ocean Grove, next two sea­sons. option to. buy inter.. .W rite Box SS. Oeean Grove Times Ofticei ■’■-! ' ' 30-43'■ROOFS — All' tS'pes repaired and rerooted, asbestos, brick and stone, siding, Rockwool insulation, alumi­num combination windows. Free inspection and estimate. K ahlert Roofing Co., 700 3rd Ave., Asbui'v Park. Phone A. P. 1-1057. -3 4 tf

1MERRV CHRISTMAS — Say it With a photographic g re itin p card, .'vices tc fit your purse. Apply, i>4 .Main avenue, or phone A." P. 2-2272. -42 -1 3*\\ AN1KD -— Family of three aduhs want to rent furnished rooming-house on yearly basis. Can be summer or w inter homo. Pos­session betwectl November 1 and dune 1 iiuying considered. 'W rite, Mrs. Richards. 144 West 75th street, New York 23, N; Y. — U-15*W ANTED—To rent furnished or unfurniihed house. 2 or more bed­rooms, adults, write til* phone eve- I nigs, Chase, 77 Abbott Ave. Phone A. P. '2-5055-R — 43*FOR RENT—Furnished, 4-room bungalow; until May 15. $10 week, rite Hansen, S208 F t. Humilton Parkway, Brooklyn '!>, N.. Y.

— 13-44*, FOR SALE—3 bungalows, fu r­nished, good condition,' excellent income. * Corner Delaware and Clark. i?-l,500. Write, Hansen, 8208 F t. Hamilton Parkway, Brooklyn 0, N. V. ■ _43-44*APARTMENTS — Two; each o c -. cupying entire floor,.four exposur­es, separate entrances, can be utilized jointly by congenial coup­les; three rooms each, shower, au­tomatic hot water, electric and gas included in ren t; freshly painted and clean as a pin, block to ocean, four blocks to business section of Ocean Grove and Asbury Park. To . May. 23 McClintock St., Ocean Grove." A, P. -1-149Ó-J or Spring Xake.2-G14.i-M, ■ — -39-43*

CARPENTER JOBBING - Re­pairing, Remodeling. Ceilings, Cabinets, Closets, Floors, Doors, Walls. W, L. Anderson, 92 Mt. Hermon Wav, Ocean Grove. Phone A. P. 2-7123-M. — 43tfMURRAY'S—“The Pants House of A sbury ' Park.” 805r807. Lake avenue. J u s t off Main St, Boys and Men’s needs supplied.—53tfCORSETS— Spencer, all sizes, in­dividually designed, fittings in your own home. - Call fo r appointment. Mabel S. Hall, 709 ;Nepturie.High­way, Neptune, Phone A. P. 2-3749.—27tfTAILORING and fitting fo r men and women. I f you have a garm ent .tha t needs to be altered, you will be pleased to le t K. Boufarah do your work—a t 14S A bbott Ave.—7-51tf

WE FINANCE NEW CARS— Loan two-thirds of cost. Charge §4.00 a year .per $100 through a lo­cal bank. You save money, estab­lish credit; insurance premium In­cluded in loan. Alvin E.’ Bills, Rfial E state and Insurance. 7 8 'Main ave­nue, Ocean Grove. 18t£MORTGAGE — Funds availnblo Ocean Grove. Call A llenhurst 3- 9393. -, . —2 t fROOFS of all kinds applied and repaired w ith-m eta l edgf S sti- m.Tes given., William Krayer, 77 Mi Benson avenue, Ocean Grove. Phone A. P . 2-4058-J.— 40* — '47W ILL BUY china, glass, lam ps, bric-a-brac, jewelry, silver, antique furniture. Best prices paid for one piec.i o r many. Alice Sand, A. P.

2-2623. 3/12/48*

Page 6: Society Appoints Married October 9th In Trinity Senator ... · Charles Poole, president, ... 2Vi yards long. Stripes and Florals. Thompson and Gillan’Store, ... hundred' members

r A G E S IX f OCEAN GROVE TIMES, OCEAN GROVE, N EW JERSEY FRIDAY, OCTOBER 22; 1948

■ W E E K L Y N E W S A N A L Y S I S

'Security ÊoeiüelS fiefs Serlln SBiepsi@1 issile; P éeting Staffs 'M m ; lussila Proposes Big Four Parley

' By Bill Schoentgen, WNU Stad Writer(E D IT O It 'S NOT K : Wlicn opinions a r c p re se n t fn ihrsi* co hi m ns. th ey o re those of"* . . . . r<lW ch trrti N ew sp ap e r LT oluii*-

D E B A T E : •I n c o n c l u s i v e

For better or for worse the U. N. security council-had become wed­ded to .Hi*»..problem of what to do about Berlin, but tV.cre" was no honeymoon. • •Russia had l\\vco!:cd flic .ffeciir- ity council debate. and although An­ti re i V’ i sb in si; v. Sr; v: y t.. (\ elo gn t e , at­tended l he . iirs*t n.u:e ti:v: vin U»'dy he remained fc- nvoi^sV'ii^ly aloof from the pnuvt.-'.lipui in; spirit.

TIIAT F 1 liST sessi:- n‘. was not only inconciiitfivti;.-. but' downright, i dull. Ko-o!io. wouitl have thought • that the 11. men mulling over. th is.;; world crisis in the Chaillot palace •, in Paris were engaged m delibera­tions of so momentotis n nature that they might turn the . balance for j

new s nu aljM * unti nut n e c c i a rii y of tills . n cw sp ap crJ

E x ‘ V i c e ’ T w i c e

X^ence or War in tho- world.While yishinsky sat dourly and silently—piny ins» the. part of. the vi­carious withers to the hilt—-.the Amcri ca n and F r c p eh delega tés read polite tirades against the man­ners and morals of Soviet: motives and’, politics.WHEN'-THE TWO western speak­ers were done,-Juan A. Bratr.urjlia of Argentina, acting- president, of the council, was forced; simply to drop the who!e bi;<ir.t*vs. '-lomporári- ]y at lc-nst. with.a hnllow lirj-1. T V r f A T iO X * After the French dolo^io. ^ *coiv.piL'ted his\ revieV.*;* Bran;ui;lia. waited e x p c c * a :r.;!y.-. fo ra t i :v.c, • th on, observed '■miidiy ' ' tn.it. •_ since i:e didn't 5 r«or,i" to. •. há ve; P. tiy*■. more speakers on t1:e :. 1 i;■ tt i le - iv'.oe.t;r,j’ v.H-ukl be-' rv:cú¿;*:c.vt;.. ¿y.L-

Former Vice President John •Garner and President Ilarry Tru­m an, also a former vice presi­dent, staged a cheery reunion when Mr, Truman came to i ’valile, Tow, in the course of his pre-election campaign tour. The two are old buddies from .way back, and the visit didn’t hu rt, the. President any politically, cither, because. C actus'Jack is a mighty popular m an . in Texas.

P r i c e B r e a d ?Evei*. r i n ro i !!c p r ic e of w h c a t d c •

c T .ii 'H tu n d e r th e im p e tu s 1 o f t h i s ' vvaY'.s' b ii :v !iv r cr(;',i n good m a n y in* l^.:Uijn-h)uMicdpiA n-,cH cans liav o b ee nVi j.u• ’.VS':bit tY.e )'/viee pi brond v:as

L E W I S I A N :A n t i - T r u m a n' It was an accomplished fact-that sooner or la ter John L. Lewis would, have his say about the 1948 elec­tion, feeling as he obviously does ; that- no ‘political campaign would be complete without his having ex­pressed an opinion on it.At the. United M in e Workers’ 40th convention in Cincinnati the UMW chief shoved his foot in Mr. Tru­man’s campaign machinery by turning a sour and sarcastic eye on the President’s bid for re-elec­tion.PRESIDENT Truman is “danger­ous to the United S ta tes/’ said Lewis, and he had his mine worker convention delegates agreeing with him. They made it clear that they would not go along with the “bulk of AFL, CIO and other independent unions now working for Mr. Tru­man's election..While the delegates chcercd anti applauded his criticisms, Lewis de­clared that:. "Ilarry Truman is totally unfit for the position. His principles are elastic. He is careless with the truth. He has no special knowledge of anything. Ho is a malignant, scheming sort oi individuar who is dangerous not only to the. United Mine Workers but dangerous to the United States of America.”

PROCEEDING oratorically in this vituperative vein, Lewis devot­ed 25 of the 50 minutes he took for his specch to derogating the Presi­dent in general and specillo terms.. He charged that Mr.' Truman ve­toed the Taft-Hartlcy labor law only “ior the record of his campaign.” He said the President prosecuted the mine workers and had : them fined twice “because ho was too cowardly to send me to ja il.”"1 WAS WISHING he would put me in ja i l / ’ Lewis went on remi­nis centiv, "which is what a- white man would.have done rather than rob', you.” .John L. . Lewis was saving his opinions on Gov. Thomris E. Dewey, the Republican candidate, for a lat­er phase of the. UMW convention!

Lewis doesn’t especially Jike Dewey, either.

; : r: Alvi XG 'INDUSTRY leaders, in-t h a t t h e s c o tí i:-¡ t y .co i::: ¿11 m í gl* t e-.la y fu rih i.T .fe rm a i • mc(luc»tio‘:i'1 * . . . . .the oír ciucce- ihnt .^ ^ ^ U c ra U c /f c M ^ o n ro v e r 'r c c ^ lnil the 13or)i:i b loe^cie^m ) Pnces W-<!*Ijia F.v.ir Uiviyvn ìniinsl.òi'S líiilíh!. ta k e up. - live ciiiire 'C eim aii /qiU’s.-tion .

131G. F O U R :M o r e T a l k s ?

Russin. y/!ic : her;. the • Kreml in •' adv

• ■ i i t-isi‘ being kept, aloft, : have ■ aWd;-w.ith •• som c justification—■(■■thc'.'t. • the'“. prvseht.V'cqsis. of. bakery . ; p¿t’ od s ' i'c 1 lee t s. ‘.'a • remarkable y|:achiéVc.\nçnt'' in -. resisting■*.inflation- ’¿rÿ-,;î uros/• 1 They ; base ’ th is . contention on bu-

..j'reA'u of labor siiitistics,figures which mit ted ' it or ; r.'A, wns; dUsati¿fiédV5 M iò^am oRg oilier - things, : that the with the* w:iv its pet Rcrlin/ situa-.^baker t ^ y is paying $2.53 for the t ion wa be in % ;h:: nd le-d; • : Tlie;' Sbvi-; .foinvma jOr ingredient 3 of bread that cis wu n <J. j i '<*. .1 he ; h nn d s- : of, | c v î^th i m S 1.0 ü i n 1039.the U. N. a ¡vi ; .in'-1! ie •;hands'.;or\ti><v|.; vTi ¡AT •.Fl.GO.nES'' out to an in- 1314 Four forwiin'1nil nisi èrsi".;' ’vi''-terboéo oí/la3-per cent in: the cost of ’ -XiVK.V \'.’f HLK’'the Uriit<:’d’ Nall9ns.';;’ rr*w1 ■. n:a ic-r¡ ñ l ; ; yet the American wa ? dveid i h\i t o' . clT?cù3S.; the"; if ?Uo,; ìh(: usèwi s’ paying on the average Soviet F< : - ii ■; ?.,! in isíer. .Ví.:. ?|L'i Mb.l-v 'only.' nlyuVt G3 i>e V cent more for. her et«- v v; :. ? . r > : id iivj i note > -'to' {11: e.: 1 li ré :»il ..U'.a.n du r ir. i\ . the. 11)35-30 ; bast U .S ., r r ; : : i n 1 í i rid • .T*r a n c¿ ur i ñ 3 -^period u s ed hy í he burea ii of 1 a bo r that:!*. í-, i-. ; ; :*■ f ■ > r ¿ i lí n- .:ri i n is 1 e r s; mcc*t • Y¡ s Ni t > i c $ in c ôm j) u í Í n g /its. c ost-of ♦ to c »r* s ? -.1 :• b «ih : ih ir: - Ber Un. cr is is ■ ; U v; n g 1 i 11 des; 7 " -

nr.fi tV .-.'proîj.î'N-n- oí Germaity -’as p [/-.La.st Xòvember, DLS figures show, w!'.'<!e- . . . . . i’.oUr.-reached a. record of 104 por’It v.-;:s ñ pociii..:\r/dovc')opn'&nt, i-c¡pj.j G\;or the base period, and in inasmuch a 3 i t s e t the w e s t c r n n a - ¡ uecember v:heat of tho typo used tiotis to v.-^dc.rín^ .; ' au ' i or kread flour hit a record high ofh iV.v • t : î e ^ v.: e l.s ' ; ■. «¡5k§1 . - f 2 1 -1 .per c c n t over. tño base,- .*Vr. dcould * ify svich ' a c o r e t i n vic.v c: : '-'..v.rgrant . f! -fA : :i.*i ' :.t . ' . . f . Àthedi. illu:,.;-' cow : 1 had cr. U-

Molr,*-. hû'.vevur,th a t **r.r: U . - X ; i p :: :r !t y . cò lin e ;!. c¡ d ..f

v-HH'i'h» J :U ;v ;^ r i! i( trK :U ^ i:s fc e ^ U e ; th e ;n so !v es ,!(!o p o s i^ h a s b ee n . d is c o v e re d " . a rc

; of f. 'v' '

I'iiv . Ì ' P rô ii '.i c i n j; i h e s ta ff of. life 1 co v e ry flops c o m p le te ly . O r it it

ilv .: t:.-!.’;-. filS i’ni/t b r e h i .-riOv.Ti’ ,o v - r ■„ n , V;V,,;l,nd n,r'rV,r,.;ról-.y-b»!:'OM an ti p a w n i n g . . , ...... ..of ai! a ,r. 1 r-.'.V;c' ia .irn d ■ '.u i o£ C o r . j . : ^ ' wa}; ? t c c J.t, it '£ s til l In. liii, a s th e aI¡¡vs :hrí!K.cont':a'!¿.(i:- ■ .:; nV ■ ■ " . '

Ml fhn^n:is3Ìa ;ra4tì<l,.;5!Ì!‘i''-'J{i!':v A S S IS T A N C E • ;

Statesman

Cordell Hull, former secretary of state* observed Ids 77Ui birth­day anniversary quietly, a t 15e- (liesda naval hospital where he has been a patient for the hast two years since his retirement from the high public office. Doc­tors told him he tynuld be able to leave the hospital soon.

¡although : flour and . wheat, prices 1 irive itlid . koittc>vhat veccntly, the :i!<'s!r ..iisod _ in :blend- nowvon tjie gi- .ee. ra' sijc 1 vcs .was purchased by

U R A N I U M :N c i v F i n d

Practically nobody, except tbq people who look for it and work ■ the ta /e r several '.vseks a.gp 'when J with it, luio’.vs much about uranium . [aces v 'tre up. !—the raw m aterial of splitting’! OK .THE FOUR major bread in-'¡ atoms—but the world-wide search •• urcrUciits—floor, s.usar, 'shortening j for that metal is constant, often | ¿r.il inilk-^-only -^us'ar now has a ¡ronctic and of inestimable impor- i trr.vei- ’J[:S 'tr.d«x!. than bread. {tatice.

Anti s till a r .o th e r fac lop .vyhich Sias I CLA IM S TH A T " a n o th e r u ra n iu m

M ov, w r.j ..r'.vr.e .con tro l ■ o v e r ' .iir .. tra n s p o r t . !o pi'cvc-iit iilae».- m a r h e t ' F a r . P r e s i d e n t m o n e y d e a ls . • •• •. F o rm e r P r e s id e n t H e rb e r t H oover,

U . S ,■■. A iriu a ssad o r. B ed e ll. S m .ih . w.ho know s w h e re o f h e s p e a k s w hen h a d ag ree d , w itn th a t co n d itio n . Mol- , ,,, ^ .¿ „ g on ,he rlgors ,0{ bcing thootov ins sted. ?nd. quoted him as ; „„uon’s chit! executive,'has a'earn- saying: It is;quite understandable ! : •paign under way now-to odd-more-th e S o v ie t g o v e rn m e n t w ish es to j ^ th e : ¿ aW n c t w hoh a v e c e r ta in g u a r a n te e s a g a in s tutilization of air transport for il; legal currency deals or black m ar­ket operations. Satisfactory guar­antees of such kind could easily be- secured.”

IF SMITH’S statem ent is correct, Molotov reasoned, then the Soviet Union believes it is possible an agreement may ,reached be­tween the four powers on ”a mu­tually satisfactory ¿asis.”. Anyway, Molotov continued right­eously, he couldn’t see what all the fuss was about. He claimed there was. no • blockade ;o fB erlin , adding that the “defensive, pro­tective measure” did not threaten international peace‘ and security;

9 n e More: A llia n ce' Sen. Chan Gurney (It., S.- D.),' chairman of ihe senate armed serv­ices coramittee, has"propojet} a iorr m al militai^ alllàner- that would pledge the U. S. to fight if the na­tions o i western Europe were to.be attacked by Russia.

He announced that he would ask the next congress to approve his proposed alliance and to back it up ’witb a new lcnd-lcase program to help rearm western powers.

could act as "operating vice presi- donts” assisting the president.

HOOVER IS chairman o! the non­political government reorganization commission which will recommend additional cabinet members to act in that capacity.

He did not specify how many will be urged beyond th# present nine» man cabinet, but members of his commission s a id th e flgur« under consideration was.three.

"Every presidenthasrecommended additions to She cabinet," said Hoo­ver. “There are nearly 80 independ­ent'. agencies of the government running around loose in addition to the nine cabinet •departments,”

Members ol the commission have revealed that among the additional cabinet departments that have been considered—but not.decided upon—. is a social security department, in- eluding public health, public works and education. They ore separate bureaus now.

THEREORGANIZ A.TION commis­sion, which is working on all angles of government reorganization, was appointed under an act of the last congress. President Truman ap­pointed a third of the commission md the senate- and house each named a third. ' *

Selected RecipesIJORDELAISE SAUCE

‘ 1 clove garlic, finely chopped 2 tablespoons finely chopped

parsley ¡1 tablespoons butter, melted Mix together chopped garlic and

parsley, and s tir into melted but­ter, making- a 'smooth paste. Spread over .broiled steak and put ill hot oven 2 minutes before serving. Yield: -1 servings. .

liUEADED SWKETHREADS i i pound sweetbreads 1 quart w ater X teaspoon salt1 tablespoon vinegar or lemon

juice1 egg, beaten2 tablespoons waferi i cup fine bread crumbs Lard or drippings for frying Salt to season Pepper to season W ash sweetbreads.» Add water,

1 teaspoon salt and vinegar or lem­on juice. Simmer 20 minutes. Drain and remove outer- membrane, Dip sweetbreads in egg diluted with ‘2 tablespoons water. Koll ill bread eruntljs. Brown in hot laid o r drip­pings. Season-w ith ¡a lt and pop- pcu. -I servings.

CAUI-’OUNI.Y CHICKEN Vt pound ground pork1 pound ground veal .1 teaspoon salt

■ % teaspoon pepper- .1 tablespoon chopped green pep­

peri i cup grated pineapple, drained Dread' crumbs2 egg, slightly beaten 1 ..tablespoon watOr Lard for browningCombine ground hieals, salt, pep­

per, w ep ii pepper mid pineapple; shape like a chicken leg.around a wooden skewer. Combine beaten egg with water.-,Koll “drum sticks’’ in bread crumbs, then'in egg-water

mixture and again in bread crumbs. Let stand fo r 30 minutes in the refrigerator. Brown in hot fa t; cover closely and cook slowly for 45 minutes. ‘1 to G servings.

m m m m i m

Y j ~ y; /¿& z? t¡:< z ( f r a t t eFAM OUS H OM E E C O N O M IS T

ICINGS: Whop you apply icings and frostings to cakes, don’t daw­dle—do it rapidly or it will begin to set and the frosting will have a worked-over nppearaijce. F ro st a two .layer cake by inverting the lower layer and spreading the frosting over it, then placing the upper layer (righ t side up) on top of it. Apply frosting to the sides of the. cake and then heap the re ­mainder on top, working it into swirls with the knife or spatula. If (lie frosting ' begins to "se t” while you are still applying it, dip the spatula into hot w ater, shake oil' the excess w ater aiid then con­tinue to spread. . . . Save ex tra dish washing by putting four triangles of wax paper on your cake plate so th a t the broad sides of the trian ­gles protect the outer edge of the p late, from being smeared with frosting. The. points of each tr ian ­g le , should extend outside of the dish leaving square uncovered area in the center of tho plate. I’laco the cake over this area and. frost it as above. When finished, slide the wax paper out from under the cake. Behold -■--the dish is neat and clean and ready to place oiv the table. No handling or shifting it from one plate to another.

Hecipe of (he Wools Spicy Cream I.ayer

1 package layer cake mix1 teaspoon vanilla ;2 teaspoons cinnamon

1 teaspoon nutmeg 1 teaspoon allspice Vi teaspoon ginger Vi teaspoon clove (ground)1 envelope plain gelatin Vi cup cold w ater Vs p int heavy cream Mi cup confectioners sugar 1 teaspoon almond extract 1 teaspoon vanillaAdd the 'flavoring? and spices to

tho cake mix, then add other in­gredients according to the direc­tions on the package and bake. When the layers are cool, prepare the cream filling by soaking the gelatin in Vi cup cold w ater and then adding >/i cup of scalded cream. When well combined, s tir in the rem ainder'of the % cup of cream and chill until slightly thick­ened. Whip until it reaches spread­ing consistency. Sweeten and fla­vor with confectioners sugar and

vanilla and almond extract. Spread between the layers of cake and over the top. .This may be served immediately or else put into, the re frigera to r until serving time, Serves 8.

A LITTLE OF THIS AND THAT; Ever get a splinter of steel wool in your finger? P re tty pain­ful,'. Isn 't it? You can easily elim­inate this trouble by using a spring type clothes pin to grasp the steel wool pad. I t acts as a handle and can be adjusted quickly when the pad becomes partia lly used or ready to discard. . . . If you scorch, p art of a garm ent slightly while ironing, immediately sprinkle the area with w ater. Should the scorched spot still remain visible, it can usually be removed by soak­ing in lemon juice and then bleach­ing in the sun. However, a heavy scorch or burn generally cannot be remedied with much success. . . . Keep the coffee pot sweet and clean- by doing the following about once a month: Scrub the pot thoroughly inside and out, fill, with' w ater, add Vj teaspoon bicarbonate of soda and boil about five minutes. Rinse out and dry and you’re read y for another delicious cup' of the aro­matic brew.

f< r

PUMPKIN and MINCE PIES

6 5 c e a c h

HMTZ BAKERY43 P ilg r im P a th w a y 111 E m o ry S t r e e t

O cean G rove A s b u ry P a r k

g g t " f e t t

É J l ; - v v-Jmd'Á

ït~ïâk:x ■/*:

| | © f i ;V

jiiSir,;! -in th e . •.w lldcrriess is thr- 1 b e c o m in g .jn o re - .a n d m o re fre q u e n t . tri''un!in!J e o s is .o f o ilie r e l i.in e n ts -iii- } A nd m o re o fte n th a n n o t, th e dis-

ife 11if-h 'its- lab'ji:, machinery: d.^irj- : does turn out to be- a possible¡ source of. supply the. whole thing is immediately wrapped in atomic se- ' crccy' and the world hears nothing more about it.The latest o£ these discoveries, an­nounced recently by Columbia uni­versity, might turn out to be pro­ductive enough to be of vast sig­nificance to the world.

SCIENTISTS have unearthed o ' new, green mineral which was found clinging, to mine walls In the Bel- gian Congo. It is o relative of the yellow carnotite, from which the U. S. gets its domestic uranium in the.Rocky mountains. Carnotite ia one of the two best sources of the atomic element, uranium.Whether the green mineral -is plentiful 1» not yet known. It now is being analyzed at Columbla.uni- verslty. Like the yellow carnotite. it contains about 60 per cent uratfi- um.If the new mineral proves a good uranium source, the discovery might ba the most Important of its kind since the atomic bomb first burst upor the world, Mora than 100 minerals containing uranium are known, but the element has been toc^difllcult to* extract,F O O D , C O A L :R o o t o f E v il.

Two shortages, food and coal, ore responsible for most of (he discom­fort and quite a few of the major troubles in the world, a report by the United Nations - economic af­fairs department says.

Scarcity of basic foods and coal have lamed reconstruction efforts, provided an impetus to inflation and generally upset the world's-econorriy by reducing human strength to work and produce.'

J S R S i Y C E I N S T J R A i L — the first U . S . railroad to use this type of power in regular commuter-suburban service — is again increasing its tieet of Diesel-Electric locomotives.

o T h is sleek, 2(J00 horsepow er Diesoi- E lec tric locom otive is one o f six now in rogulur Suburban^C om m uter -Service on tho Jersey C en tra l. T hose sing le-unit, double-end loco­m otives are th e first o f th e ir kind to be usee! by any railroad in th is typo of service.

And m ore Diesels are on th o way ¡ Jersey C en tra l recently placed orders fo r 14 new 1500 h .p . general purpose D iesel-E lectric loco

. m otives, 12 o f which will be assigned to S ub u r faan-Com m uter Passenger Service. D eliveries on these new u n its hav e already s ta r te d , and a ll lo c o m o tiv e s s h o u ld b e in s e rv ic e by M a rc h , 1949.

When these new Diesels are in service, they will furnish Diesel Power for 61 passenger trains, accommodating 25,000 passengers daily. B y late winter, almost 50% of all our passengers will be nerved by Diesel-Powered trains, includirtgallpas- senger trains between Jersey City and Raritan ter­minals, and 80% o f the Jersey Central service on the Neui_York and Long Branch Railroad.

In add ition to th e expenditu re o f m ore t&an $3,000,000 for D iesel-E lectric locom otives.

th e Jersey C en tral is’add ing to its D iesel-EIee- ’ trie facilities w ith th e construc tion of new. servicing facilities. N ew servicing facilities a t Jersey C ity , built u t a cost o f $210,000 are now in -u se , a n d 'a shop is u nd er construction a t E lizab ethp o rt, th e cost o f which is estim ated a t $850,000. N ew locom otives and new se r­vicing facilities will give th e Jersey C en tral one o f th e m ost m odern su b urban electrifi­c a t i o n s y s te m s o f a n y r a i l r o a d in th e U nited S ta tes .

Genera ting theirow n power, Diesel-Electric locomotives are no t dependent on overhead wif-es or th ird rails, b u t can operate wherever- there are tracks. T hey elim inate th e necessity o f changing engines where electrification ends and perform w ith efficiency during severe w inter w eather th a t usually ham pers o ther types of electrified system s.

Yes, the new Diesels will be coming to your town with increasing frequency—provid­ing you with m odern, m ore dependable, more efficient service—on the Jersey C entral, th e ' leader in adopting th is type o f power for C om m uter-Suburban Service.

. K V ,1/VII J E R S E Y C E N T R A L L I N E S■4-

The BIG L illie Railroad

Page 7: Society Appoints Married October 9th In Trinity Senator ... · Charles Poole, president, ... 2Vi yards long. Stripes and Florals. Thompson and Gillan’Store, ... hundred' members

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1948 OCEAN GROVE TIMES, OCEAN GKOVE, NEW JERSEYLEGAL NOTICE

BALLOTS pecial M unicipal E lection , B orough

o f A von-the-the-S ea , N ovem ber 2, J048, To vo te upon th e p u b lic question

p r in te d below, if in favor th e reo f m a rk a cross ( v ) o r p lu s ( 4- ) In th e sq u a re a t the le f t of the w ord YES, and if opposed th e re to m a rk a cross ( X ) o r p lu s (4_) in th e sq u a re a t th e le l t o f th e w o rd NO.

YESNO

Shall th e o rd inance proposed by pe- • tition and p rov id ing a s follow s:

"A n O rd in an ce -to A m end an O rdi­nance en titled ‘An O rd inance to A m end ‘A n O rd inance am ending S ec­tions V and VII of a Resolution re la t­in g to A lcoholic B everage Control, adop ted Ju n e 29. 1934,’ adop ted M arch 13, 1945." adop ted J u ly 22, 1947.- T he B oard of C om m issioners o f the

B orough of A vo n -b y -th e Sea do o rdain as follow s: .

1. T h a t S ection V II of th e said o rd i­n an c e adopted J u ly 22, 1947 be and th e th e sam e is h e reb y am ended to re a d :

VII. N ot m ore th a n one p lenary re ­ta il consum ption license an d n o t m ore th a n th re e seasonal re ta il consum ption licenses, w h ich seasonal re ta il con­sum ption licenses shall be issued on ly to ho te ls con ta in ing fifty (50) sleep ing room s or m ore , and not m ore th a n one p len ary d istrib u tio n license shall be issued and ou tstan d in g In th e B orough of A von-by -the-S ca a t th e sam e tim e.

2. This o rd inance shall ta k e effect w hen passed an d pub lished accord ing to law ."be adopted?

—43

P A G E S E V E N

S uperio r C ou rt of N ew Je rsey C hancery D ivision—M onm outh County

(D ocket N um ber 159—17«)

TO: ALKEKT KOllIUXS, INC., a co r­po ra tion , COAST IŒ AI.TY COM* I* A NY, a co rpo ra tion . IXIZA1ÎKTH D. CUASTKIt. ASHUUV PAItK NA­TIONAL DANK AND TKUST COM- I'A.VV, .T rustee ;»ml ex e cu to r under th e last w ill and te s tam e n t of G eorge A. Siimeli, Deridaseli, T IttiO II. M ill-: O f SON. IIAIMtV S. riiU O U.SON.K U T ii !.. r i : i io i ;s < )N am i g j :o k g i : S. I'iiitC U SD N , Tru.sti*cs in dissolu­tion o f Coast U ealty C om pany, a co rpo ra tion ivlinse c h a rie r ita»; hum . revoked . STATIC OF NKW .IintSJiY. A.SHL’UY I’AUK AND O CM: A N C.ÏÏOVÜ HANK. A l'O O COItl'OKA- TIO N , a co rpo ra tion , O CO KG li li.

M onsT A D T , R eceiver o f th e O cean G rove N ational B ank, D ean, Inc,» a corporation , EDWARD MURPHY, WILLOW M URPHY. EDWARD G A T- TLING, HENRY W ILSON, LUCY WILSON, W ILLIAM BELL, FRANK HILL, MRS. HILL, w ife o f F rank H ill, A. RUSSELL COBLE.By v irtu e o f a ce rta in decree o f th e

C ourt of C hancery of N ew Je rse y m ade on th e d ay o f the d a te hereof; In a cause w here in th e Tow nship o f N ep­tune , in the C oun ty o f M onm outh is com plainant, and A lbert R obbins, Inc., a corporation , e t als, a re defendants, you are req u ired to- ap p ear on th e 8th day o f N ovem ber. 1948. a t th e h o u r of eleven o’clock in th e fo renoon. E astern S tandard T im e, a t th e office o f J . S tan ­ley H erb ert, Esq., 601 Bangs A venue, A sbury P ark , N ew Jersey , and p ay o r cause to be paid to the com plainan t th e sum s of $3,190.53 and $243.98,' fo r p r in ­cipal an d in te re s t upo n ce rta in certifi­ca tes of ta x sale held by th e T ow n­sh ip o f N eptune, in the C ounty of M on­m outh , w ith in te re s t upon ce rta in ce r­tifica tes from F eb ru a ry 1. 1948, toge ther w ith com plainan t's taxed costs in th is su it and upon failing to ap p ear and pay to the com plainan t th e aforesaid am ounts due it, you, th e said d efend ­an ts, o r an y one or m ore of you claim ­ing by, from or un d er you, w ill b e ab ­so lu te ly d eb a rre d and fo reclosed of and from all r ig h t a n d eq u ity of re ­dem ption . of, in and to th e said prem ises described in th e decree h e re ­inabove re fe rre d to , and ev e ry p a r t th e reo f, and y ou an d each of y ou a re req u ired to , de live r up to th e com ­p la inan t, all deeds, pap e rs o r • w ritings in y o u r custody o r pow er re la tin g to or concern ing th e said p rem ises o r any p a r t ^ o r c o |. !cH A R D w STOU»p

• A tto rn ey fo r com plainan t 601 B angs A venue A sbury P a rk . N . J .

D ATED: O ctober 13, 1948;-4 3 -4 4 . ■■ ,

Circle Welcomes New Members

M r s . G eo i'iie M il la r a n il H r s , George. S to tt wore welcomed -hs new member.-; of the Ocean Grove I-’riondty circle of the I-’irnt I'rc.s- ihylcriun chun-li, Asl>w;y l’nrls, a t it.-:, mc-etniii lluiitliiy nf.ternofin with M rs, William lios.--, ‘JO Abbott ave- mie.

Maud Cay led devotions and jjavo a ta lk .on Christian training

Navy’s 173rd Year Wednesday, Oct. 27

Wednesday, October 27, m arks the 173rd birthday of tha United S tates Navy and the 27th observ­ance of Navy Day, established by the .Navy League of the United S tates in 1922. While the Navy is proud of its post accomplishments i t is conscious of the importance of progress and improvement.

The 18-ship postwar construc­tion, including the CVA-58, the 05,000 ton flush deck a irc raft car­rier, and th planned conversion of 33 other warships will provide advance prototypes required for the Navy of the fu ture engaged in atomic, w arfare / Naval Aviation is keeping pace under a program pro­viding for the construction of 1,165 planes during the fiscal year. 1949. The total air strength will reach 14,500 planes by July 1st of next year. The Navy had 41,272 air­craft a t the end of World W ar 2.of children, ..Mrs. Farnk B. White brought “echoes" of the fall m eet­ing of the Women’s association of the church. Miss Emma Matter gave a reading. Refreshments were served.

Others present were Mrs. Wil­liam Gay, Mrs. J . Kugler; Mrs. F. Kngel, Miss .Mae Lane, Miss Laura Lane, Miss Emma Aitken, Mrs. F. Ochiltree, -Mi's. M. M. B arret and' Mj-.s. Cleo Campbell.

_ i

The first intewollegiate■footlia'll game w played in Xew liniiis,- wicli! Nov.'. G, 1 -SiV.i, Kulgei's .heal­ing Princeton C-l,

Of tho 1,165 new pianos, 673 ore to ba je t fighters, including 176 o f , the McDonnell two-engine je t type. In addition, the procurement pro­gram; includes 42G attack aircraft; 82 patrol planes; 18 transports; 37 helicopters, and 28 of undetermined type.

In addition to the flush deck su­per carrier, 1030 feet long, the post-war shipbuilding program in­cludes an ti-sub m arin e cruisers, four destroyers, six high-speed sub­marines, fou r destroyers and three anti-submarine submarines. Today, the Naval forces total 277 combat ships and 488 minor and auxiUiary vessels on active duty, plus 11,882 in the Reserve or. “mothball” fleet.

The peacetime strength of the Naval Reserve on July 1, 1948, passed the 1,000,000 mark for the first time in history, The Navy plans to add 175,600 men to this total.

The regu lar personnel of the Navy, now includes 4-1,000 officers and .303,000 enlisted men. The Ma­rine Corps totals 6,787 officers arid 79,015 enlisted men.

~ rJ l . *JLy¿ iZul O P T I C I A N404 Emory St ree t, A iim y P*rk, N .J.

"Quality Beyond Question"

Dally from 3 .m to 6 p.m.; epen Tues,, Wed., S a t until 8 p.« .»elepnone: Aabuiry Park 2-H00 or Residence Asbury Park 3-8531.'Jen Years with C. Frederick Drake, Inc,

Order your, supply now. Be com­fortable la ter: Don't be left ou t in the cold w hen the first chill blart- s trikes w ithout w arning. We‘r*i ready to s»erve you prom ptljv

F U E L O I L

20-10 Prospect Ave.; Asbury Park Asbury P ark 2-0GÍ5'

• r i ' ' ' I i<9i -Z mModerne '

Personal Postcards. ' V ' ■ . --.crt

Distinctive - Handy - hor Impersonal Correspondence

1 0 0 f o r $ 1 . 1 5

JOHN JONES Ü-1 Main Avenue Occan Grove, N. J.

(B la n k F o r C o rre sp o n d en c e )

Personal Postal FLA CK ON 10 C E N T '

STA M P H E R E

(ADDRESS H È R E )=

fSs ?

tIf»j5*>Ì 1«toiI1

O rd e r F o rm

OCEAN GROVE TIMESOcean Grove, New Jersey

Please send m e ..................New Mojlern Bordered Post Cards a t 100 for $1.15 (postpaid.) I enclose check or money order with order. (Out of town add 8c for Postage and Insurance.) ■

: ‘ " - »( ) W h ite , b lu e b o rd e r, b lu e p r in t( ) W h ite , w in e b o rd e r , w in e p r in t

(P rin t name and address exactly as they are to appear. Abbreviations will be " - as given.) • •> O rd e re d b y — ------- ----------—— -— -— --------

tA d d re ss — -------------- — -------- .................— ------—

I

Re-elected every year . . since Ihomas A. Edison firs!' invented him . . . Because he gives more &INEXPENSIVE DEPENDABLE SERVICE

A sh Y o u r Local D ealer lo slum ' you

Ii:$ M odern E le c tric A p p lia n ce s

E C - in v iS

Always The Best The Best All-ways.

PLUMBINGSteam and Hot Water Healino;

Winter Air-Condi I toning Painting - Carpentry - Masonry

Headquarters For. . “ Y O U N G ST O W N ” K IT C H E N E Q U IP M E N T

“ D E L C O -H E A T ” O IL B U R N IN G E Q U IP M E N T

“ B R Y A N T ” G A S H E A T IN G E Q U IP M E N T

' .. "A N D E R S O N " G A S R A N G E S

, P L U M B IN G F IX T U R E S

W A R M A IR F U R N A C E S :;,.V ,

p i p e l e s s f u r n a c e s ■

H E A T IN G B O IL E R S

; E L E C T R IC D IS H W A S H E R S

“Permaglas” or “Bryant” Gas Water Heaters Pipe Cutting and Threading

Choose The Best - It Costs The Least

T h e W m . R. H o g g C o., Inc.900 Fourth Avenue Asbury Park

Plione A. P. 2-3193

RE A li THE OCEAN GROVE TIMES FOR LOCAL NEW S

E D M U N D L . T H O M P S O NExterior and In terio r Painting:

Estim ates F urn ished 134 Broadw ay, O cean G ro w

P hone A sbury P a rk 2MS-J

JOHN LAURPainting, Paperhanging

A lte r a t i o n s W ork G uaranteed at^ Lowest Price A. P . 1-0232-W 84 M ain Ave;) O. G.

David H. O’ReillyE L E C T R IC A L

C O N T R A C T O R129 Abbott Avenue Ocean Grove Phone A. P. 2r*716

FARRYM E M O R I A L H O M E403 - 3rd Avc. A sbury P a rk 2-0434

FINANCES ARE A- M ATTER OF YOUR OWN CHOOSING

WM. P . WALTON, J r .‘M gr. L ady A tte n d an t

A. M.-AUSTIN .CAlii’ICNTI-'U and BUILDER

Weal lier Stripping Kstimiiti’.s fiiven TKK» A. !'. 2-702MV 11,3 .Ml. Tabur Way, Ocean rove

'i el. A h. P li, 2 -7 2J0 -M W A T é I ini cl C L O C K

. H É P A IR IN G K. 1. I'KAIiI.HV .

•Î7 M.lin Avi*. — O ccan G rove 20 V<*ars With HAMILTON U A TCII CO.

Uv S. A IR RIDE TIRESIt Is Sound Kconorav To Have Smooth Tires USCAPed. We Guurantee New T ire MileageCustom Tire Co.

JO H N II. OTT.1200 Main St. H ra d ie y Beach

{ N e a r S to c k to n A ve. G ates)

Telephone A. P. 2-10240 FOR

OCEAN GROVE SELF - SERVICE

LAUNDRYOpen Monday Evenings

Until S O'Cloek 55 OLIN STREET

! i . BRAKE SERVICE ! i BATTERY' SERVICE•’■I CARS INSPECTEDj s STORAGE TIRESI NEPTUNE I AUTO REPAIRS ie

I . Auto Repairing1 RAY ELLISI Stockton and So. Main St.1 Ocean Grove. Tei. 7727

C L E A N IN G - P R E S S IN G

45 P IL G R IM P A T H W A YOpen Wednesday Until 1 P . M.(Opp. O. G. Association Office)

F R E E CALL and DELIVERY Service

Phone A. I*. 2-1189

i ALADDIN’SLAMP !" ! G I F T S H O P !| (F o rm erly L ln sters’) |

1 UNUSUAL GIFTS FOR I | ALL OCCASIONS |f ANTIQUES BOUGHT OB SOLD 1 I FUK N ITU nE R EPA IRIN G =1 CHAIR CANEING =5 QUALITY LAM P MOUNTING |

| 159 S. MAIM STREET |§ A. P. 1-0817 I?inini!i;ii,.i;iiii»;niiiimiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiniiiintniiiiniu

Sunday PaperisLAKE & EJ10RY STREET WESLEY LAKE BRIDGE 7 A. M. to 1 P .M .

D A I L YNEWSPAPERDELIVERY

O cean G ro v e N e w s S e rv ic e 53 Main Avenue Tel. 2-5283 R. L . JVADDEIX, prop. ■

Page 8: Society Appoints Married October 9th In Trinity Senator ... · Charles Poole, president, ... 2Vi yards long. Stripes and Florals. Thompson and Gillan’Store, ... hundred' members

REFERENCE^TO R E L IA B L E BUSINESS H O U SE S

O C E A N G R O V E T IM E S , O C E A N G R O V E , N E W JE R S E Y F R ID A Y , O C T O B E R 22; iD 48

LEGAL NOTICE M AllOUEUITE E. APl'LEHY nnd I. OUANT HOOTT, Rtmrrilnn nd litem fo r Francos Cnrolc W nrllck, Unvld Gi?»rRO W nrijck, Husnu JUJnford, and T lionins W. A ppleby, in fa n t d e fen d ­an ts.l l y victim o f n t 'o r tn in ciecrco o f the

-Court o f C hnncery o f Now •'Je rsey , H induoti I ho 15tlt dny o f O ctober, 1JMB, In n.citiisc? w iiorcin Tow tiship '-of N ep­tune , in th e C ounty o f M onm outh is com plnlnnnl «ml A sbu ry" P a rk T ru s t Com pany, e t als a rc defendan ts , you a rc req u ired to ap p e a r .on th e 12lli day of N ovem ber, 1 WO, a t the h o u r of e lev ­en o 'clock in th e forenoon, E astern S tan d a rd T im e, a t th e Office of j . S tan ­ley H erbert, Esq., GOl B angs A venue in the C ity of A sbury P a rk , C oun ty of M onm outh and S ta te of New Je rsey , and pay o r cause to ,be paid to th e com plainan t 1he sum of $811.05, for p rinc ipal and in te res t upon a ce rta in certificate of ta x sale held b y the Tow nship of N eptune, in th e C ounty of M onm outh, w i th ' in teres t to D ecem ­b e r l, 1947. to g e th e r w ith th e com plain­a n t’s taxed costs in tills su it, and upon fa iling to a p p e a r and pay to com plain­a n t th e aforesaid am oun t due it, you , th e said d e fen d a n ts o r any o th e r p e r ­son c laim ing by, from o r u n d e r you, or an y of you; w ill be abso lu te ly d e ­b arred and -foreclosed of and fro m all r ig h t and eq u ity of redem p tion of, in and to the prem ises described in th e decree? here inabove re fe rre d to, and every p a r t the reo f, .and th a t y o u d e ­liver up to th e co m plainan t all deeds, papers *or w ritings in . your, cu stody or pow er re la tin g to o r concern ing th e said p rem ises o r an y p a r t th e reo f.

RICHARD AV. STOUT , A tto rney fo r com plainant-

• ‘ GOl B angs A venueA sbu ry Par.k, N ew Je rse y

DATED: O ctober 15, 1048.— 13-M. .

when now energy Is needed to com­plote projects.of tlie year (such «3 Clothes for Friendship), Mrs. Strunk said.

Tlie Shore Girl Scout Council has been devoting its energy th is year particularly to Clothes fo r Friend­ship and expects to have attained ill 1 of its objectives by year’s endi Mrs, Strunk declared.

Special activities are designed for each day of Girl Scout Week and the troop members expect to follow, th is , schedule. Sunday is Church Day; Monday, Homemak- ing Day; Tuesday, Citizenship D ay;• W ednesday, H ealth and Safety Day; : T h u r s d a y, International Friendship Day; Friday, A rts and C rafts Day; and Saturday, Out o f Doors Day. -

H O T E L a n d r e s t a u r a n t s u p p l i e s P R O P E R T Y R E C O N D IT IO N IN G

OF COURSE YOU WANT THE BEST AND MOST REASONABLE Get it a t theShore .Restaurant Equipment Co.

(Form erly Cut Rate Crockery Co.)K it c h e n E q u ip m e n t a n d F u r n i t u r e

H ouse F ju rn teh in g s, H o te l, R e s ta u r a n t ' a n d B a r S u p p lie s

n s - O Telephone Asbury Pk. 2-1147"lO lUaill O i l t l.I Opposite Main Avenue Gates

^PL U M H IN G SKILLED MECHANICS forHEATING ■ ‘ ■ each c ra f t will give you^ ^ ^ O I L I W I W E R S ^ ^ t h e B E S T in It E A L

C O N T R A C T IN G ^ s^*v »S1IEET s e r v i c eor JOBBING . ^ ^ C A I U * E N T R Y ^ ^

" ™ E ■ PAINTING '— ^W M It. IIO G G C O „ In c . MASONRY900 4 T li AVE. — ASBURY PARK Tel. 2-3193 o r 2.-3194

MILK AND CREAMR E P A IR SO B IT U A R YAI.I. MAKES REPAIRED — GUARANTEED

The MAIN : VACUUM; CLEANER ; Co.1(!1C MAIN STREET — ASIÎÜUV PARK

A iliiirv IVirk1 ‘2**’ü5.-. ■ • 15AGS. itHLTS, lH lUSHES, Etc.FREE INSPECTION* • PICK U P AND DELIVERED

W A R D E L L ’ S D A I R YBAIRY PRODUCTSNEPTUNE, N. J . Telephone 2-1916

WILLIAM H. HEA.M Funeral seviees were held Tues­

day afternoon, Oct. 12, fo r WilliamII. Beam, of Ocean Grove, who died Oct. S afte r an illness of two years. The services were conducted from th e ' Halsey funeral home, Westwood, N. J., where Mr, and Mrs, Beam were residents for. 37 years before moving here three years ago, purchasing a home a t 31 P itm an avenue. They, had been summer residents of Ocean . Grove fo r nine years. Mr. Beam was a member of St., P aul’s church. Dr. Roy H, Mills, of the Westwood Methodist church, officiated a t the services. Burial was made in G e o r g e W ashington Memorial Park, Parnm us, N. J . He is sur­vived by his ’Wife, Mrs. Grace Beam; a daughter, Mrs. George Amelander, and one grandson, John Amelandei', both of To,meek.

M IL K A N D C R E A M

Catley & Williams, Proprietors MILK, CREAM, BUTTERMILK FROM MONMOUTH FARMS 112 Lawrence Avenue, Occan Grove Phone A. P. 2-1970 m o v i n g " ■ - " s t o r a g e — " e x p r ^ s i n g

A. G. ROGERS, I n c .STORAGE AND MOVING I’hone A.P. 2-2093

A O EN TS..................... 931 A sn u R Y AVENUEALLIED.V A N LINES ASBURY P A R S , N. 3,

C E M E N T A N D C O N C R E T E W O R K

FABIO BATTAGLIA!t ^ « Ä " S r o r s P A T i n s s , c o s c r e t e ^ ^ b u I k h e a b s

S8 N 1 C TANKS, CESSPOO LS 1 Si-.TSÇI A venue, N eptune, N. J . Telephone A shury P a rk 2-8938

A S B U R Y P A R K S T O R A G E A N D M O V IN G CO., Inc.NEW MODERN STORAGE WAREHOUSE

For STORAGE or MOVING — CaiE'A. V. 2-0870 N eptune Illglnvay No. 35 a t; B angs Ave., N eptune

POUCHES — »KICK STEPS, rillE I'L A C K S, CHIMNEVS

YOUMANSOKNEÎïAIi M.ASONUY — PLASTERING

and COLD I.VUIAN* S V litS G HI).a . p . 2- i n i

s’C-iinTK d i» ivr.wAvs -COU, AH15CUV AVE iUiiry. I’iirk.

P L U M B IN G , H E A T IN G , T IN N IN GC L E A N E R S A N D D Y E R S F R E E ESTIMATES- Qallus ßtos.

K L T .S A N D D R A P E R I E S O U R S P E C IA L T Y 201 HON’ D S T IIE K T , A S Ü U R Y P A R K

U U n ' f t i u l E i v c t n r j A f l u i r y A n n u e m i l l U u P r o n i l , A « l ) i r j r a i * . tierna < ; r o /Ip Snmwfir> 40 i ’ J l i r r l r . i P n t t l w n y •_____

MRS. LESLIE E. MOLINEUX Mrs. Susanna Bailey Molineux,

85, a form er resident of Ocean Grove for many years a t 5.7 Broad­way, died last Thursday and fu ­neral services were held Saturday in St. Luke’s Episcopal church, Me- tuchen. Burial was a t Scarsdale, N; Y. Her late husband was Major Leslie E. Molineux, She is su r­vived by one daughter, Harriot, of Metuchcn, and four sonsj Edward, of A tlanta, Gá.; W alter, of A tlan­tic . City; John and Howard, o f lletuchen. .

All Kinds Repair Work, Gutters, Flashings Plumbing, Heating and Tinning 153(1 EIGHTH AVENUE NEI’T lGiri Scout Week Oct. 31 to Nov. 6

P A IN T IN G — P A P E R H A N G IN G33. Atlantic—Phone A. P. 2-5587 19 Heck—Phone A. P. 2-1188'

Bylsma and BrainPAINTING—PAPEEIIANGINO—DECORATING

Worh Guaranteed a t Lowest Price E stim ates Cheerfully GivenRO O FS A N D S ID IN G

S T ACE Y Roofing & Supply Co.131'/, ABBOTT AYE., OCEAN GROVE P h o n e

UootlnR and S iding o t .a i l h inds—C om petent M echanics A .P .2-6S74

t; .SKJSVK’E ON PREMISES.Till A Vl'NUE, NKPTL'NE

( Al l. 1 0 1 ! AND DELIVER I’. i-OOL'i — E.vpert Tailoring

MRS. EMMA L. IIAINESMrs. Emma L. Haines, widow of

H arry Haines, died last Friday in Fitlciri hospital, A resident of Bradley Boacli iit 110 McCabe ave­nue, she was the sister of Miss Emilie Reininger, of Oceaji Grove. Other survivors are a son, H arry L. Haines, of the Bradley Beach address, and two grandchildren. She was a member of the F irs t Church of Christ, Scientist, Asbury Park. Funeral services were held Monday n ight a t the Joseph R. Ely funeral home, Asbury Park, and burial was in Fairm ount cemetery, Newark.

RADIO—HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCES410 Main Streot, Asbury Park, N, J. Telephone 2-5630

RADIO REPAIRS24-hr, Service... B ring to store

Brieriey?s Rug Cleaning ServiceR I G S A N D C .V H P E T S ” T H O R O U G H L Y C L E A N E D

IiY B E I N G E L E C T R IC A L L Y S H A M P O O E D 3.19 F r a n k lin A v e n u e T e l . A . P . 2-1127 O c e a n G ro v e

S C O T T ’SC O A L A N D F U E L O IL .

Thompson Coal CompanyO I L WOOD AND CHARCOAL “ BLUEmill Main Street, Neptune, N. J . Phon

Venetian Blinds■ . C U STO M M A D E

M easu red a n d In s ta lle d

At MAIN AVE. Gates 20 MAIN ST., A. P. t > L E P IC K 'S S E R V IC E S T A T IO N

WASHING, SIMONI/.INCi, TIRES, BATTERIES TIR E REPAIR - LUBRICATION — A.P. 2-9068

TAXIS 411 Main S ireet BRADLEY BEACII, N. J.•t:» MAIN AVENTE- • W. Ii. NAGLE

NAGLE'S Main - Gentrai Pharmacy"Doctors Advise Nagle's” ’PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED BEST QUALITY DRUGS

William II. Demarost is the only graduate of Rutgers University ever chosen to be its president.PHONES

Asbury Park 2-695Ò and 1-0615E L E C T R IC IA N

R a d io R e p a i r in gOPEN ALL YEAR ¡tin and Centrai; Aves.

F «nera! Homee s ta b lish ed 1*8*

I!}- l.3 to Jo h n N. B n rils

511 Second .Avenue, Asbury Park SYMPATHETIC SERVICE REASONABLE, . REFINED

Lady A ttendant Phone A. P . 2-0567

Estnbtlsliecl 1800 1007 Bangs Ave., Asbury Park

AN OUTSTANDING SERVICE

WITHOUT HIGH COST!JAMES BUCKLEY, M anager

Telephone 2-4525. A K C A IJM —T )«<; i . uim ol 1 Io a v J» •A R C A D I Af'I.OitCtt .SHOP AN'!» GRF.eSIlhVHK K. linl II. Jusk.i, ITunPLANTS AMI IHSII GARDENS, CUT ri.OU'Klt.V. WEIIIliNO FLOWERS, COKSAtiES, FL'NEItAI. DESIGNS, 1 LOWERS U\ WIllE Sunuiif rfit-ltl CookPian Aves. i:"',ne: A. P.-Z-Z445

FLOOR LA YIN G — SA NDING’FI.OOU i.AYiNG - SANDING - WAXING - ItEKINIS1IING

WALTER HANSENFLO O R CO N TR A C TO R — In d u str ia l and R esidentia l

R.D. 2, 377 W. Bangs Ave., Neptune Asbury, P ark 1-1189

For Refrigerators Washing Machines Automatic Water Heaters

C A L L

Edgar Phillips and Son, Inc.P L U M B IN G — H E A T IN G

1420 N in th A ve .—-N ep tu n e — T e lep h o n e A . P . 2-1676

R. White MorrisE n g in e e r in g & S u rv e y in g

D eputy S u rveyo r o f E a ste rn D ivi­sion of New Jersey ,

DAVIS AVE., PT. PLEA SAN T T e l: p t . P lea sa n t 5-0955

WILBUR R GUYERSucctssor to

WILLIAM YOUNGPLUMBING AND

HEATINGE stim ates Gives

91 Heck Avenue, Ocean Grove Telephone A. P . 2-0428

F U R R IE RJl. Sariatt FURS Ready To W earR epairing

A sbury P a rk

PhoneA. P. 2-4060Made to O rder

627 M attlson A venueRem odeling —

D ry Cold Storage When yonr m otor ca r misbe­haves, when the trouble is diffi­cu lt to locate come to McGee. Our - dentine, electrical 'in stru ­m ents quickly locate th e cause fo r many troubles, elim inating costly tear-dowiss and « h e r jsme consuming work. W e will then make th s necessary ad ju s t­ments o r repairs to fa ll custom­e r satisfaction. Indeed, in such way and m anner ns to cause you to think favorably of McGee when again trouble m ay arise, Yes, McGee has the key to care- free-motoring. 'And M ¡ G e e knows how to ‘ use 'the k e y . to make your m otoring a pleasure and to help make ifc safe, .Get to know McGee — come to 110? Mam Street; Asbury P ark .T O C A R E -F R E E

'.v v -M O T O B IN G .'

Howard L. Smith JlSlilSI» Time Passes.-Quickly! 11 J l Winter is just head-and§ f homes with Automatic

.Anthracite aW IL L E N JO Y T H E . C O M FO R TS '■ - ¿ j r e lM L X

O F S U M M E R W A R M T H A L L W IN T E R •

G A R A G E — ST O R A G EOldsmobile Sales and Service v Est. 1925 iPhone A. P . 2-4670

Billy Major’s Seacoast Garage86 South Main Street, Ocean Grove STORAGE—BY DAY - WEEK - MONTH

T h e Hardware S to re of Ocean Grove

CallRADIO CABP L U M B I N GT IN N IN G a n d H E A T IN G

H A R D W A R EP A IN T S a n d O IL S

• 51 M ain A v e n u e O C E A N G R O V E , N . J .

P h o n e A . P . 2-4741

Phone 2-1138 24-HOUR SERVICESIIAFTO’S GARAGE

STORAGE—BATTEHY—'TOWING SERVICE—REPAIRING Corner Corlies Avenue and Main Street Neptune, N. 1

Asbary P ark

LAUNDRY Heat Equipment Go.Ml ■ — ' NEPTUNE, N. 1,

Phone A.P; 2-4543N E P T U N E L A U N D R Y ALE SERVICES— Wfet Wash, All Flat, Shirts; Wet and 'F lat, Finished, Blankets. SAVE-—Try Our Cash and Carry Service.8 Stokes Ave, Cor, Coriies, Intersection H’w'y 33 and 85

DAY AND NIGHT SERVICE 115 SO MAIN ST.