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RED BANK REGISTER Uiuad Watklr, Ennui u B«oond-Cl»ii tUtttr at tb* Po.t- RED BANK, N. J., WEDNESDAY, JULY 10,1929. $1.50 PER YEAR PAGES 1 TO 12. VOLUMELII, NO. 2. gllt, at Bid Bank, N. J.. nndir th. Act oi M«rob i, (179. HEAVY AUTOMOBILE TRAFFIC. A HQRSEBACKING PARTY. CLUBHOUSE IS OPENED. SAFE AND SANE FOURTH. CHURCH SUPPER AND FAIR THEY SAVED THE BIRDS. OVER 600 DOGS IN SHOW. TO LAY A CORNERSONE, Efficient Work ! Done by the Red Only Two Pernons Brought to Hos- Bank Police the Past Week. pital fur Treatment. ANNUAL EVENT BATORDAY AT CALVARY BAPTISTS TO HAVE A GAMES AND SPORT IN FRED E. PARTY IN NEW HOME OF FLAY- ;VERETT CHURCH EVENT TO A TRUE NATURE STORY FROM The heaviest automobile traffic ERS' BOAT CLUB. It was a very safe and sane fourth ATLANTIC TOWNSHIP, RUMSON. PIG DAY TONE MST. through Red Bank this season took HAULER'S MEADOW. f July at Red Bank. Only two BE HELD JULY 27TH. persona were treated at the Red place Sunday. The state highway Thirty-Eight Children Had the Time It. Was Officially Opened Last reparations Are Being Made to Bridge Builders Found s Neit With Bhow Given by the Monmonth Coun- Services Will be Held All Day and was crowded with cars all day. Late Wednesday Night With a Danco Bank hospital for injuries due to Serve 300 People—Cake booths, Five Young Birds In It Under tile

SAVING GAME FISH. rier at this place, who wai serloualy frmrmua.,:» ™ xawu ••••••>• injured In an automobile accident How tJnder-Stee Fish May Solely b about a year ago, is ilowly improving. lawn Mowers Returned to the Water. He suffered several broken bone! in : the accident. ••• Sharpened Thousands of game fish, capture Edward Leuck and family are en- ' * Old Iron under size, or larger fish whlc] .-• Hand mower* and blades ol sportsmen may wish to return to thi tertaining Mr. Leuck's sister-from bone and power mowers by an on tft« purchase of water, may bo saved from injury II Vnlon City. Jelectrio sharpener. Band mow- the fishermen will use proper pre- Mrs. Thomas Cooney spent moat tha, tW8- Blodoa ftocordlng to a new Westinghouse cautions in handling the fish, ac- of last week with her daughter, Mra. (tea. I also sharpen horse cllp- John Collins of Scobeyville, Open a cording to Dr. C. F. Hunter, of Fall- •pert and all sharp edge tools. ADJUST-O-MATIG Bade, a memb6r of the New Jera«; i Mr». James P. Stofflet and two eons - ••- • • ... v. • - fish and game commission. of Newark and Miss Grace Orberg of B. A. HICKEY Electric Iron • "Never handle a hooked fish ex- Kldgofleld Park have been visiting „ EVEBKTT, N. J. cept with wet hands," said Commi: MIB. Stoffiet's slater, Miss Emma O. This Westlnghouse Iron is both adjust* Holmes. '•" Phono Bed Bank 180S-W. ;• able and automatic. Set it for any aioner Hunter. "Dipping the hand In to water before releasing tho catel Mrs. Barbara Cox of Brooklyn, a Accouirt ironleg heat you want to use. The will avoid injuring the delicate scali former Hummer resident of this place, Built-in Watchman keeps it at just that formation end setting up an In died recently from a paralytic stroke. heat until you want to change It* A real fjammatlon that later means death tx She was burled Saturday afternoon '^oiitrHjutionrto easier ironing •• » and the fish. In returning a fish to thi In the Presbyterian church yard here. better ironing. Price, $8.75. lake or stream, let It slide gently in Several Shrewsbury residents attend- Specialize in WESTINGHOUSE ELF-CTRIC ft MFGi CO. to the water, do not throw it." ed the service at the grave. at Bamberger's Office* la all Principal Cities "Fish that are to be strung on Miss Helen Callery, daughter of Represents U?e* Eh line and kept alive in water for late: Patrick Callery, who makes her home Second use, should not be hitched thtougl •with her aunt at New York, U the gills. Any .injury to the gills spending the summer with her fath- : Mortgage will prove fatal to the fish. Py er at this place. • = threading a line through the under- William Layton and famlly"of this i^E.welcome new7charge^accduritB. Thm Sign of a jaw of the bass or other fish, the place and Mr. and Mrs. Carl Stevens This is one of the many services enjoyed Loans. WtuUghow catch may be kept healthy and In and son Kenneth of Red Bank spent good condition for days, if desired. four days last week camping on a by Bamberger'patrons whereby^anyone "I have seen bass kept alive a week lot Mr. Layton owns on the WlkolT v Applications Given on a jaw hitch and later liberate' farms development, bordering on the |W.tb a regular) salary'or J income | can' r Buy From One ol These pealors. because the angler decided he di Tlntern lake. Mr. Layton will soon M Immediate Attention not need them,' "And two or threi build a bungalow on his lot Mn. avail himself of the convenience'a charge years later I have seen big bass tak Layton, who injured her back in a KEYPORTt en from'the same lake, bearing thi fall two weeks ago, is improving rap- account offers. Jersey Central Power & Light Co marks of the jaw perforation, indl idly. A Local, Friendly eating they had suffered no aerloui injury while in captivity." Robert Fierce Is harvesting hay for Organization MATAWANi Valentine Pflster of Eatontown. When the highway was widened a ' ML HE.'Bamberger'Plan^of"Deferreil August Kattner, 146 Main St. Riverside Mortgage Walnright—Savage. catch basin and curbing was in- stalled at the Intersection of tho high- 'Payments is another convenient method] & Finance Corporation RED BANK) Miss Katharine M. Wainrigh way and White road. A fire hydrant daughter of Mrs. B. F. Wainrigh is near the curbing and, Blnce the W paying? It enables one*to' purchaspurchasee' Jersey Central Power & Light Co of Farmingdale, was married Tue; Brad St. N»t'l Bank BldR.. curbing has been put down it 1B Im- Allen's Electric Shop, 18 White St day, June 26th, to George K. Sav- possible for the firemen to attach a additional^comforts for the home'and: R«a Bank, N. .'. age, also of Farmingdale. The cere- B C. H. EnniB, 16 White Street. Buctlon hose to . the fire hydrant. mony was porformed by Rev. Fred- Changes have been made to the pay for them gradually out of his current] erick Price, pastor of tho Fair Hav- streets in other parts of the town IWtl en Episcopal church. After an auto- since the fire hydrants were installed income. mobile trip tho couple returned and in several places It Is difficult for Farmingdale, where they will maki the firemen to attach the hose to the tholr homo. The bride was a. teach hydrants. The Monmouth consoli- er of Latin in the Red Bank hlg dated water company will scoon raise school for peverai years. the hydrants in these places. Miss Mary Aiken of Elizabeth spent the latter part of last week L. Bamberger & Co. Big Class Naturalized. The' July naturalization class •with Mr. and Mrs. Eugene BrookB of Freehold numbered 120. The oathi Euttonwood. "One'o'f America's were administered Monday of lasi Harry Worth, who has been playing SIEINBACHC0MR1NY week by Judge Jacob Stelnbach, Jr. the leading part in "The American ASBURY PARK Among the new citizens were Mrs, Tragedy" at the Shubert theater at Great'Storei" Marie Hilger end her throe daugh- Detroit, Is spending a few weeks' va- ters Elsa, Maria and Margaret am cation with his sister, Mra. Matthew Newark, N. J. one Bon Frank. The three rlster W. Greig. Mr. Worth will resume his are well known as musicians. duties ae an actor after his vacation.

Jailed for Cutting Woman, Individualistic Millinery John Williams, a Freehold colored man, was sentenced to six months in the county jail last week on charge of atrocious assault and bat- Sponsored by the Millinery Salon tery upon Fannie Mason, also col- ored. Williams claimed that the woman cut him, before he attacked her with a knife. She was taken to L BAMBERGER & CO. the hospital for treatment. Georgette Hat •One of,Ameriea'iiGreat.Storem-f—'.Newark, A Narrow 3Ksrj*pee Mr. and Mrs. Frank Stanhope of You May Telephone Your Order b' $6.00 Keyport were on the New Jersey A clever little affair of georgette in special train carrying Klwanls dele Calling Market 0001. a modified vagabond blyle appropri-, pates home from Milwaukee when he train narrowly escaped a dis- ate for tennis, golf, and all spectator astrous w^eck as the engine left the sports wear. Intricately stitched, and track and fell 1n the Welland canal in peach, orchid, shell, .white or near Buffalo beige. SHREWSBURY NEWS. A Barn on the Evan Jones Farm Transparent Struck by Lightning. (Tho Red BAnk Regliter esn ba bomb pach week In Shrewsbury from Richard Brimmed Half Qeoka at tbt postofflce.) A ham on Evan Jones's placo was $16.50 struckjjy.lightning Friday night. Thi ham caught lire, but Mr. Jones am A group of large, formal hats for tea- his .family put out tho fire befon time, afternoon and kindred coca- much damage was done. A rail fence olons. Some fashioned with lace, post back of the barn was split In others with fltfo Swiss' haliy-and sfhi - - ' ' pieces and a locust tree near by wai others of the finer straws." set on fire. ' A cement driveway has been pul STEINBACHS—Second Floor. down in front of the firehouse. Thi fire truck was kept In the garage o George Silver, Sr., while the drive- way was being laid. Raymond Sanborn has bought i new Chevrolet truck. A stray 32-caliber steel jacketc bullet went through a sun porch win- dow of Robert Donovan's house an> through a window of the man build- ing on Fourth of July night. Mr. Donovan fnund the bullet on his liv Mid* Summer ing room floor. Ho notified the state police and they are investigating the shooting. Joseph J. Breslin and his son QPPOHTUMITY John, who arc in the rug business, loft Sunday on a three weeks' busi- ness trip to the West. John Breslin who was formerly employed in th rug department of John Wa,namak- cr's New York department store, i now in the business with his father. Mr. Breslin is having his house here i repainted. SALE I Charles Weldorholt has returned b I work at the Eatontown plant of the i Tide Water oil company after enjoy OF FLJKNITLJl^E i ing two weeks' vacation. During his -Now, in the middte of the season we have put vacation he motored to Lake George. George Poole, Sr., a patient at thi Bare-back: Battling Fashions greatly reduced prices on our entire stock of Allcnwood sanitarium, recently spen ,.Reed and Fibre Furniture.'• You can buy now and save money and not a week with his family here. Tho women of the Presbyterian Qo,iii forialJ^IcwiSport only for the summer, for any of these Suites will be useful in the living room church held their lnst thimble be. last Wednesday at Mrs. Frank or enclosed porch next winter. Quackenbush'g in preparing for the annual church fair, which will be STICK REED SUITES. held tomorrow. Colonel and Mrs. David Wood and ' 4-Pc ,;. :.:^: $8S;2s family of Santa Fe, New Mexico, aro Bare-back Riding .;'. Keg. $117.50. visiting General Robert C. VanVllet General VanVllet is Mrs. Woods's , 4-Pc : $82.50 father. Reg. $110.00* ••':• : ,', ••• ' Francis O'Brien has Riven up his job with the William O'Brien plumb- Buch Suit* Ing firm of Red Bank. 3.95 to 15.75 - 4Pc. $67.50 George Cox, who makes his home On Our Beaches! Reg. 590.00. with Benjamin John Parker, was Btre-ba

4 k 4 k THE FOLLOWING DEPARTMENTS WARRANT SPECIAL CONSIDERATION: CHECKING ACCOUNTS CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSIT carrying balances of one thousand dollars or more receive interest issued for any amount, bear interest at rate of 31 on deposits re- at the rate of 2% on daily balances. maining thirty days or more. t SPECIAL INTEREST DEPARTMENT SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES Interest at rate of 4% is paid on any amount, large or small, begin- in our fire and burglar proof vault at $3 per year and up ware' ning the first of each month. Accrued interest is credited April provide the best protection available for valuable papers. t first and October first.

• • • "N BANKING BY MAIL Travelers Checks And Letters Of Credit can be conducted with this institution with safety and convenience. issued for convenience of travelers. We have a large clientele doing business with us in this way. Complete and modern facilities always available. We desire your business, which will have our best attention.

V it V The Second National Bank & Trust Co. Y «k RED BANK, NEW JERSEY V i DIRECTORS BENJAMIN J. PARKER J. TRAFFORD ALLEN CtfARLES ALLEN, JR. HARRY G. BORDEN GEORGE HANCE PATTERSON GEORGE C. HOPPING MARCUS M. DAVIDSON RICHARD APPLEGATE FRANK McMAHON LEWIS S. THOMPSON ff ^1<^1~1~1~1~1~1~1~1*^^ Pace Four RED BANK REGISTER, JULY* 10,1929.

not be at the caprice of fate In h CHAKTEB No. USJ8. NOTICE. [ifclt. fn whlah caiVlt muit be Kor each and every n-!ns.p*e(lan ihtrt old days. He should be beyond thi Reserve DUtrict No. 2. Notict Is hereby given that th» follow. trench, oat at a uniform grade, shall be a tee of two dollan and ti).j THE RED BANK REGISTER.] necessity of a job to get hit dai RKPORT OP THE CONDITION OF Ins Plumbing unit Dnlmn' Cb .40 states have old age pensions. S 4. Other bonds, stocks and at> BUT BY •'• ORDINANCE. drains leading from sinks and *««» tray* iS. YnrYUd amil open UHirht courts muit ' curities owned 782,711 24 AN ORDINANCE OF THE BOARD OF eral other states have appofnte THE • •h»U nottb* ltis than two Inches In dism- alwny* be properly grnded, cemented, • Telepboaea: —Red Bank 18, commissions to study pension plani 6. Banking house..(229.0*1.$0 HEALTH OF THE BOROUOK OF flannel! or v,rcll paved and properly drained;* Rod Bank 1S0O. In the meantime things are might: Furniture and I GOLDEN, SHREWSBURY, MEW JERSEY, ES- • 19. A deep teal runnlna trap with extra when the drain la connected with" the T fixllirej 2, RULE TABUSWNC A PLUMBING AND Ions outlet and two bra«» cleanout PIURN houAo {train it muni be effectively trapped, The Ked Banl Register tough on old folks out of work am DRAINAGE CODE. must b« pUced on th« hoiiao drain at an 44. Whenever It ahull be conilderid by ' !• a member of on old follfs haunted by the faar o 7. Real estate o-wned other ' BE IT ORDAINED by the Board of accessible point near the house wall: thi* thla Board thai nny buildlnir^orpartthere- losing their jobs and of visions o than banking house .'. 26,149,08 Health of tho Borough of Shrewsbury, trap must brfuralth«4.v.th two h*nd hole* of, is unfit fur humttn habitntion by rei* THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 8. Reserve with Federal Re- / N«w Jersey: for eonvsnltnc* in cleansing, th,e cover of son of It belnir in n condition dangerous ^The Aasoelated Pran la eJCluilvely en- the poorhouse, Many of these ol nerve Bank 192,$7S.71 1. The said Board a hill ippolnt • wafer, must bt properly fitted and made t» health,; t>r to be likely to cause sickness folks have others who are depend 0. Cash and due from banks.,.. 171,497.79 plumbing and dralnsga lmpeotor whoi* «ai nnd *Jr tight. * • >.,? amnrg tho occupants, and nollCi of suth titled to tha use for rtpubllcation of all 10. Outside checks and other Ban** dlepatchae credited to It or cot other- ent on them. term of office shall be one year, or until 20, Zvny houie drain shall have an decision ihnl) havo been anixed conspicu- cash items .: 8tO55.s8 ,hls successor ia appointed. It shall b« th« inlet for fresh air, not less than four ously on the build I nit or. nny part thereof. wiia credited In this nretr and also the *. • • 14, Other assets 10,440.80 duty 01* the said inspector to Intptut plans Inch e i In d Is miter, entering on the houie HO decided to he unlit for human habita- loaal new* published therein. is ot all plumhing .and drainage required to aide of th« trap, and leading to the outer tion, antl personally nerved on the owner, There Is no reason why a big, ric Total ..14,581,802.36 Equipment important, and be filed with this Board, and to Inspect air, opening at tome place shown on the neent or lespec, it the sam* inn be found country like the United States snoult LIABILITIES. and test the work required to be done approved plant, not * less than ten feot fn the State, requiring nil persons therein WEDNESDAY. JULY 3. 1929. treat Us old people in this way 15. Capital stock paid in $ 150,000.00 hence "we have thereunder, and se'( that tho same is in ac- from the nesrest window. No cold-air box to vncate Hueh buildiner or pk»t thereof, for Nearly every civilized country ha !fi. Surplus 150,000.00 cordance with said plans. He ahatl be for a furnace shall be so placeil that It can tha reason to he utnteU thcitin as afore- 17. Undivided profit*—net... 158,028.64 required to execute a bond fn the sum of draw air from this in Jet pipe. fwiii, such hulMJnjr nr part thereof shall,' TOWN TAIJC. old age pensions. When this coun- IS. Reserves for dividends, surrounded ourselves with the lat- five hundred dollars with numeiant surety, 2.1. All cast-Iron noil nnd wnstt* pipo within ten dayw therij'aftor, be vncnted, or try takes such action, a mighty for- contingencies, etc 6.000.00 Q be npproved by nnicl Board of Health, and fitting:* must be extra heavy, eound, v.'I thin nuch uhortrr time aa in tha said ward step will have been made to- 21. Due to hanks, Including est working tools of our profes- and file the same with said Board,, condi- free from holes and crack*, ' notice may ba specified. Civic Advancements certified and cashiers' tioned for tti<3 faithful performance on his Weights of pipes to hoi 4t>, Ko person Hh»11 let pr occupy, or wards making this world f every year'at renewal lee of ten dc-1- line of soi1 l pipt it ,sh*M rest at its foot on one of the two scholarships offered 60 E.FRONT ST. • • • RED BANrC. ars. a pier or foundation to prevent settling, or or nlley connected with or belonging to th» of the church and .it is now aimed to Monmouth county pupils. He is Have you read tho Want Advertiee- on suitable hangers. All joints in cast- Biime. The ownir or lessea er arfy ttns* , to fit up the other half as a com- PHONEJt557 K. A Master Plurpber ahull he held re-. mpnt' houao and dwelling house or part H Abram Etkin, son of the late Samue menta in The Register this week? ponsihle for the violation of any rules of Iron drain loll or waste plpei nust ba thereof, shall thoroughly cleanse all th* f munity center. Etkln. Maybe there is just the thing adver- hn Board of Healt_ h la, .y Journeyme. n filled with oakum and lend and_ hnnt_ l rniims, passnirert. fltfilrs, ftoora, windows, • • • e e . tised that you are looking for.—Ad- lumbfts or Others In hia Smploy, No osulkeed ss ,to, mmake them fri-i ti^ht hn>] doom, walls. ceilinRs, privfei, ceBipools vertisement. aster Plumber shall permit the Use of the atnount of lead ua«d phal h« nonott l nml rlrnins thornnf nf the hou*e or part of Aside from indicating that Red is name by any other person, either for h i d Another event of general interest than twelve ouncesj to each inch in diam- the houtie of which he Is the owner or Is the cornerstone laying which is to Bank schools have a high standard he purpose rff obtaining permits Or dolnif eter of the pipe Bo connected. All wrounht Iff see, to the sntfifnctfnn nf thla Board, as - any work under his license. iron pipe shall have can tiwht acrcwcrl often an shall bc required by said Board* * take place Sunday, July 21st, at the this winning of scholarships for two 6. The licences granted under such rules joints. Lead pipe shall have wiped. Joints*. oncp at lenat in every yenr, j Calvary Baptist church at the corner consecutive years is noteworthy for ind regulations may be suspended or All soli pipe shall be nt least four fnche* 47. No premises shall be rented, litj I of Bridge avenue and River street. another reason. All three of the boys evoked by the Board of Health when in diameter. All brass pipes for waste and . Muster Plumber, firm or corporation or vent pipes must he thoroughly nnnenleii leased or occupied ns n tenement house or 'he new church is an attractive ad- are the sons of Hebrew parents who he licensed representative thereof, shall seamless drawn brans of atundnrd iron dwelling liuune unions nalrt premises' shall * rlol&te liny of theta rules and regulations have H plentiful supply nf ^Jiure water so Jition to tho buildings of Red Bank. emigrated to this country. Many idSurpassing All Previous Offerings!^ pipe Ullage, connection with braRS pipe nml thnt the en me ma/ he adequate snd foreign lands are not provided •with >r the Plum bin jf Code or shall refuse or traps or between brass pipo mid iron pipn The former church is to be used as calect to make necessary corrections to must not be made with slip Joints or reasonably convenient for the use of the a community center. the same educational facilities as ex- couplings. Threaded connections on hrans occupanU of aald' houne, work of which the Board of Health or Its 48. There shall be two tests; • • • ist here. It Is perhaps this reason uthorized a cent withhold approval, within pipe must be of the same size of pipe anil which impels foreign-born citizens of Ive dnys after notification thereof, A H- bo tapered. All drain connections must be I-'lrst:—'The «cwor to ceanpool or septlo v The things mentioned above were :en»e issued to any person, firm or cor- made with waste fittings only. tnnk, nfter it is laid and joined beforf it the United States to urge their chil- e g ony. is covorcfl up. < not easily brought to pass. They re- >orstion nhslJ fmrnediatclj- become inoper- 3434. Th*Th ™ sbnJbJll be no ttraps njaced oon dren to make the most of the educa- ONE DAVSALE tive at the time the ssid representative verticai l soil or waste pipes, All channel* Second;—The tall snrl vent pipe* *« per I t i Al h quired a big lot of work and sacrifice. tional opportunities offered here. leaves the employ of such person, flrm or In direction nf cast or wrought iron plppn rules trovernlntr the sRme. . " The people who put through these 40. It shall bc the duty of the plumblnff orporation. A Master Plumber's license shall be made with curved pipes and nil Inspector to send the certificates of ap- things not only increased 'their own ihall not be transferred to imy successor, connections with Y brunches and nne-iix- provul of plans and the certificate of ap- gelf respect but they also increased At any rate these new residents de- THURSDAY tor shall it be transferred to any person teenth or one-eiffhth bends If possible proval of plumbing: nystem to' .the owner inrier any circumatAncea. 2B. Soil, waste snd vent p'PCi fn nn ex- the respect of other folks tor them. serve a lot of credit when their chil- inhliMid of to the plumbers, 7. Before any portion of the plumbinsr tension must be extended above the roof nf 50. All urinala within hulldinffi* muit They are helping Red Bank by what dren win distinction in their studies. nd drainage system of any building shall the main building when other wise thi>y he Rimed earthenware fastened with brass I they have done and what they are Thero are always plenty of people to ie constructed or reconstructed, there would open within twenty feet of the win- Well Made - Ready io Hang ihall be filed in the office of the Board of dows of th« main house, or the adjoining scrcwM trj marhle nr Blate slahs not leas y doing and they deserve credit from praise pupils who win prizes, and it thnn four nnd one-half feet hitrh. A nutm Health n plnn of rirnwing and written rie- house. slnb of morbid or ulnte contnininR1 not lest iverybody, regardless of race, color is right that this should be so; but rlption. thereof, signed by the owner snd 26. When lead pipe U used to connect thnn four nqunre feet must be placed. pr religion. , ,i >- the part parents play In bringing this lumber showing the said, plumbing snd fixtures with aoll or waste ptpen or to under ench urinal, the waste of which must Irainaffe syRtem entire from its connec connect frnps with vent pipes it must not 'be'trapped nnd vented, about is usually lost sight of. One ion with the cesspool or vault bo lighter than D-plpe. reason why the great "American SASH CURTAINS 61. The sediment pipe from kitchen throughout the - entire building, together 27. AH connections of lead with Iron melting pot" functions eo well Is be- with the lorn tion of nil fixtures, trapi, ven- pipes must he made with n brnsa sleeve or ratine bollcrfl must be connected on th* Glorifying the Horse tilating pipes, etc. No portion of the (aid ferrule of theaama slic a* the lend pipe, Inlet aids ot tmpn, cause these folks from abroad are Regular 69c Grade 'lumbiiiK or drainage work ahull be exe- put In the hub of the branch of the iron 52. All vent pipes ahnl! be connected - by a Gymkhana Party. fired by the same old pioneering uted until said plans and drawings snd pipe and caulked with lead. The lead pipe In the foot of the noil line with a Y spirit which animated the original rritten descriptions thereof, filed as afore- must be attached to the ferrule by a wiped branch and ono-clffhth hcnil. '• A new way to glorify the horse t e r y a ip f>3. Any mlsundenitnrulinjr arising fce- settlers In this land. They quickly be- Practical summer curtains that iald, shall have been approved lit writing jointjit . Alt connectionti s t lendld wastet nndd at>d at the same time to have a lot will Jet in plenty of air and \y the Board of Health. After a plan hai- vent pipes shall be made by means of wipedd wecn tho plumbinpr In ^ pee tor and .master j of fun was shown last week by Mr. come useful citizens and good Ameri- ieen Approved no alterations of the same Joints.i hll b d journeyman pjumhers shnil be submitted ' cans, and there is no better proof of sunlight. 90 hall be made except upon the written ap- 28, Every water closet, urinal, ulnk, to the Plumbing' und Ttulldinir Oommltte* and Mrs. Fred E. Hasler of Little of the Board of Health for settlement, anil this than the way their children ale "cation of the owner. Written deecrin- bisin, wanh tram, hath and every tub or Silver. They gave a gymkhana party icnt shall he submitted on blanks provide set of tubs and hydrant waste pipn mu"t he Uuir tl.-cUI.ui niiHll W flnal. Or hornoback party for their daugh- making the most of their public Two styles to select from — U hy the.Bonrd of Htfnlth. Said tt«ncrip< separately and effectively trapped. Urinal 54. It fihsll bo the duty of the plumbinft j infpector to report nil plHtiH.nnil work In-', school opportunities. tltF « ahnil clenrly explain" nil portions of plEtformn, if cnnrn*cfi»f| fn /Jrafn pipes, ! ter, and while 38 children performed lawn with all over printed pin proposed construction not clearly set ptictcd by him to thin Unard at each and. , (Town Talk continued on page r muflt alto he properly trnpprd, nnd n feats of equitation more than 200 dots in red, blue and green; or, crisp dotted Swiss orth in the plans or drawings. The work supply of water to arranged nn to al- every meeting, Klvinir the name of the > grown-up folks looked on. It was a list be executed strictly in accordance ways maintain the ne&1 of anirf traps. Tn r nnd plumber fining: the work, the lo- * novelty for this section, but in Eng- in white with bands of dotted prints in blue, th the approved plans, , drawings • and nn case nhrrll the waste from n bath tub. cntion of the work, the number of plumb- land, the native country of Mr. and Game Warden Honored. green and gold. All guaranteed fast colors. leseriptions. This regulation also applies or- other fixture be connected with n. witter inc fixtu 's Installed in ench nnd every 0 any extensions or alterations of exlst- closet trap. No automatic venta or me- job nnd liethcr the job Is connected with Mrs. Hasler. such wholesome sport James M. Stratton of Long Branch, ng systems with the addition thnt In chanical trapn shall be uncd except in the newer or cesspool; nnd the Secretary Is to is common. The party •• proved sochief protector of the New Jersey uch cases a plan of the old system aft welt case of repairs, and when used ' In such record untd report in n book provided for popular that it is likely that others fish and game commission, has been RUBY LANE STORES .3 a plan nf the proponed change* must be cases, mutt be of some approved type n»it- thnt purporte'. may be held hereabouts this sum-honored by the board with a testi- led in the oftlce of the Board of Health, Infactory to the Plumbing Inspector. All fifi. The Wnter Cnmpntiy, when requent- 28 Broad St., Red Bank. 620 Cookraan Ave., Asbury Park 'rawinfra and descriptions of the plumb- bath tub traps must.lie of brann. Whore •d"»o tn do l>y tho Doard of, Heslth. shall mer. monial. Mr. Stratton has served IR and drainage of buildings erected prior tt is Impracticable to vent in old building*, turn off xvntrr in nny imiliVwfr wbi»re «n- • * • thirty years as a game warden, 1 the passAge ot, thin, regulation may be Non-Syphon D-lead traps mny be u«ed. All flPliilnrv cnrulitlonH fxlat. A shut-off VRIV* which is said to be a record for the need on file).in the office of the BoBrd. traps must be set true with respect to on each ?idc nf nny nnd nil wnter meters Horso breeding has become quite 8. When the plan of any plumbing or their water levels, and must hayc n wn- nhntl he in»tn)led In -icrordnncc with the entire country. ainace system Js filed with the Inspector ter seal of at least one nnd one-hnlf inchon. renulrement nf the Water Company, an industry in Monmouth county r Secretary of the Board ot Health, a fee Traps with Interior chamber or mechanism nml n pipe nf not lean than thri-c-fnurths (luring 'the'past"few-years,-A- large To Visit Europe. f one dollar shall be collected for each are prohibited. ot nn Inch for wnter supply nhaJI be fn- •um of money is invested and the in- id every plumbing-fixture that In placed E0. Trnps must fee placed fl!< nrnr thr mnllcd in nny building used for a dwell- Mr. and Mrs. John Toon, Harry T. house or barn or other building and ton- flxturen as practicable, and In no cn^r ihfiH injr. . dustry gives employment to many Pitter, George Oakley, Mrs. Harry ectcd with pipes for use In safne, to de- a trap be more thnn two feet /.rom the fix- 5R. Ai>y pei-Bon or rcrspns failing to persons. Anyone who does anything Walker, Charles Barbour, Mr. and ray the expense of Inspecting? the plans ture. Each and every trtip nh»U h& pro comply with or vinintinR nny* of the pro- .to glorify the horse and to make -nd of fllintr and J2.50 for superintend/nil •fleeted from ityphoiiagc and be vontij/itn visions ot this ordinance, or'interf«r4na In Mrs. Alfred Jackson and two sons the tasting of work as provided in pira- by an nir-plpe hranched into tho soil pip' nny wuv with nny Inspector or officer In horseback riding more popular is and Mrs. Harry Hardiman of Free- grnph 40 at this ordinance. ' above the highest* "fixture, or connected lh« prrformnnco of their duties aa..herein helping the horse Industry. Aside hold will sail Saturday, July 20th, with a special pipn erected for v et Matin i? mnnired shnll upon rnnvlctlnn -pay a fine from that, it is refreshing to see a A VERY SPECIAL SALE !). The Board of Health nhall be notified with a special pipn rected for vet Mati fnr ench ofTcnne of not Ics than Ten DoU for England to visit relatives and promptly hy the plumber when the plumb- ppurposep s onlyy, in which case tho arer a Inrp, nr>r more (han One Hundred Dollars, ing nnd drainage work of any buildintc/or h il t b ied fii it sport or amusement introduced friends. the special vent must be incr unri upon .failure to pjiy such fine as may which is not of the standardized sort. any portion thereof, ia completed antl ready passes upward so as to correspond to the hn imponfiil, may bo imprisoned |n th% The one valid criticism which is for Inspection and tenting. All inspections combined area of oil branch vents passing County Jail for any period not exceeding and testings shall be mnde an soon into it. ninety 7. This ordinance shrill Inke effect lm« ments is that nearly everybody is a notice tn the Board of Health must be eter, and for traps under other fixtures meilifllely ui>im its pn-^nagc nnd pliblicatloV spectator and no one gets any ex- uncovered for examination at the direc not lens than one nnd one-hnlf inches, for according tn tew. ercise except a few highly trained tion of nnid Board. more than 1 Vj inch vert and not exceeding WILLIAM H. TITNE, Trrsldent, professional performers. It is out of 10. No privy vault or cesspool fthall be four, it shnll be increased to 2 Inches in- ALFRED UltOVER. Secrctftry, HANDSOME constructed or maintained in and upon any side diameter. For moro than eight it Board of Health, the general run of things to see any- property in the Borough of Shrewsbury shall be increased to 3 Inchon in*l<]e (linrru Tfornunh of Shrownbury, N. J« one making his own fun or amuse- where said property fronts upon or ad- eter. Where n P or half S trap is lined Atloptoti July 2, 1JJ29. ment, instead of paying someone else joinn any ntrcet or thoroughfare wherein within 3 feet of a vchUlntinjr unit pipe it a public newer iriny now or hereafter be shall be considered 1i vented trnn, nnd not SHERIFF'S SALE. ; to do it for him. By way of a constructed, havintr more thnn V* inch full to the foot. "fly virtue nf a writ of fi. fn. to me 61* change it is good to see "homemade" 11. The owner of any land upon which Water closets without vent from crown of rooted, issued out of the Supreme' Court of ' VOILE bend are not Allowed" rnore thnn 3 feel Itio Slate of New .Ter*oy, will be exposed tc* , recreation or sport, whether it is nny building Is now erected or which may horsebacking or anything else. [ bc hereafter erected, nnd used as a dwelling, from a ventilating noil pipe. All nddithnn) xnlc nt public vendue, on Mondny, the 29th | store, factory, workshop, Kara Re, or for :losets ver 3 fee" t• "from ventllntinK soil Board of Health, the extension tn be Moomouth, Nnw Ji»rspy, tn nntiufy a iudff« shall be connected with the said public ment of nnlil Court amountinif to approxi* and Old Age Pensions. not less than four inches In diameter, Tho mutely $1,2(10.00. sewer. vent pipes must always hnv i continuous The problem of finding employ- ; 12. No build!nit or premises shall be slope, to ovoid collect inn wnter by con- All *he (U'rc-ndnnL> riKht, title and In- ment for men and women wno are '. connecter! with any ewer, cesspool or densation. tcrest in and to the following: , $3.69 ALL that certHin lot. trnct or parcel of more than forty years old is receiv- vault without filing plan of the pro- 32. Overflow plpei from fixtures must ted work with thi ret* ry or Inspector In «ach case be connected on the inlet [find nnrj proml'ici. nituttte, lyinff and ba« ing more and more attention. Many ! of the Board ot Health. A fee of 12,60 side of the trap of the same fixture. Ic In the Township of Mldillelown, Coun* newspapers, periodicals and maga- Value is $5.98 I must be pniil for the Inspection an«J super- 83. * No safe under any fixtures shall bo ty of Monmouth nnrl Stnto of New Jersey, zines have been discussing It. Signs | Intending of this work. This rule applies provided with any drip, waste or notice nEfilNNINf, nt a stnkr standing on th« nuth P.de of Riv»Rlde Drive, said etak« are on ail sides that people of ad- , to ail oewers whether on private property pipe. The waMe pipe from refrigerators j or in public streets or aileyn. Before Uf- shall In no case he directly connected with liointr in the nnrthwtMt corner of premises vanced years who are capable of i inc the drnin from the building* to the any soil or waste pipe or with drain of ownfii l.y O. M. nettmnn: thence (1) tn a working are nnding it increasingly These beautiful dresses are the sea- ecwer. nnutherly direction nmi nlnnc thewesterly sewer, cesspool, or vault, and after the line of landn.of nald T'.-ttmnn 010 feet difficult to get jobs. son's very latest models. We are trench ia uradud, the bottom of the trench 34, Water closets must never be pieced I must h<< cnr^fully rammed to avoid ait- In an tmventllated room nr compartment. more nr losn tn n point in the high water Not Only showing these in dotted and flower- i tlinj of drnin. Care must be taken In In every case the compnrtment must lt« line nf the North Shrewsbury river; thence ihe filllnc a( trench to avoid the Jarrlnsr open to the outer Rfr, or he venliialed by (2) hcKinninjr njrafn nt the nforesitid be- In alack time:, these older folks ed effects. Trimming's are of tace KlnninR and running In a westerly direr* Beautiful and buttons. Can be had in sizes 16 nnd breaklnir of pipe. Every bulldlnff means of a shaft or air duct of not Je** tion alone the southerly nlde of Riverclde, Ore the Ural to be laid off. Even in must have a neparate »ewer line frombulla- than 144 square Inches siren. drive 400 fe>t, move or less,, to a point, prosperous times many concerns re- to 50. . itlC to curb. Not' more than six tollcti shall 35. All water closets within the houn« which point U the northeasterly corner of fuse to employ men and women who —but also durable, sani- ! h« connected on a slnslo four-lncb vent pipe must be supplied with wnter from sennrntc lands now or formerly of• Efi*:arH P. Walk* I or *cwer line. ' tanks or cisterns, the water nf which i* ; thrnce (R) unulherly R\OD,; the ensterl/ »ire more than forty years old. ThiE tary, economical. Isn't that This assortment is very much I 13. When the (trnunrl I* made or flllefl used for no other purpose. A group of ^r; thrnce (<8) Houlherly R\OT),' the ensterl/ »tate of affairs has probably nlways larger and the styles are more at- 1 In. the drnin extending from the iew«r. closets on the eame floor mny be nuppllei. j line of Innds of Edward P. Walker. BS3.TI existed but never to such a pro- the kind of finish you want j cesspool or vault io the foundation wall from one tank. Fan elopett ami hollow n pnint in the hl«h wnter mark of ta tractive than any we have offered nuat be of cxtrrf heavy cast-iron pipe of I plunger closets are prohibited. North Hhrowshury rivpr; thcncn (4) ea»t<> bounced extent as today. It scenic I for your walls and ceilings? tcl. 36. Water losets when placed in prly nlnn(T tho hlith tvatrr lino of the North t6 be a direct result of the new for a much higher price heretofore. 14. Where e «oi! consists of a natural ynrynrdd. must bee o anfrcarranfrctll nn to bboo cn Shrewsbury river 400 fpet, more or Itli, mechanical oge nnd of modem meth- ted of loam fij sand, the drain may bo veniently and adequateldtl y flushedflhd, nnd theii to cndftiK point of fhn ft rut course. d lidil thln water supply pipe,* and traps, must he pro- Together with nil tho rijrht, title and (n- ods of rapid mass production. Hours hard, nalt gl«ifd and cylindrical vnre pipe. :h lection must ha wetted tected from freezing. The comiiartment lrrr.it nf the'party of the first jjaft In and pf work are shorter than In olden ; hefore applyln-ads the cement and the tpa ot mich water closets must bc ventiint- to so much of tri« mild Riverside drive lit times, but work has been speeded j between enqh huh and,tha small end of. the ed. , llca in front -of «nd ntljoiniiiR sntd prem- ise!!, tojrethcr with nil the ripnrinn rluhti tip and the older folks have difficul- TRIANGLE SPORT SCARFS next section must he completely »nd unl- Jlnln water Teidfrs. when . in- A SPECIAL SALE j formly filled with Portland cement. Cire side of any buildintrbildi , must heh off cnBt-irnii, of tho pnrty of the flrnt pnrt, if any, In ty In keeping up the pace. These I must be taken to prevent any cement with leaded joints, wrounht iron with nnd to no much of nny Isnd between the folks did well enough in the old i beinc forcefl into the drain to become an hiRh wntor murk nnri the low water mark screwed joints, D-lend with wiped joints, or of the North Shrewsbury river us llei In dpyfl when working hours were long- WITH HEAD BANDS ! obstruction. Nn tempered-up cement •hsll of copper with soldered joints. Whun outni'ie of , ! DP used. A'rtraiirht edge must be uied of th« buildinn nnd connected with the front of nnd ndjolrtlne the premlieo here- «r and work was done at u more This is a rich, flat finish that , inside the pine, and the different »ectlon* drain it raun, if of eheet metal with nUp in dencribcil, leiBurely, rate, but under the fit-* gives to walls and ceilings that h« laid in perfect line on ttie bottom end joints, be tapped beneath the ffround, the SPIKPII nn the property of Philip J. Lana- conditions many employers refuse SHANTUNG SILKS i tidesid . tap btlnff arranged so as to prevent freez- ler. individually, nnd Philip J. Lankier and subtle air of quiet refinement. At The Very Special Price of 15, Where a build ins: ti *o 1>* connect- tnsr. In every cas« where a leader opens Herbert M. Lnnftler. executors of the last to put them on the pay roll. : ed with a sen-rr, cttspooll, or vaultlt. It muttt r.ear a window or a light *hnft it. mutt he will nnd testament of flrnce E. H Lankier It is washable, and Is not A be connected by a drain not lias than four properly trapped at Itn bat*. The joint be- ileceaseil, taken In execntlcn at the mlt of /inches In diameter, having a fall of not less tween a cast-iron leader and the roof muu ihn I>pbnnon Iron Company, * hady cor- affected by moisture, and will $1.25 a set at $1.00 yard be made at* tluht and water ttfrht by pornte, and to Ii 'It Is useless to quarrel with facts 1, than one-qunrter of in inch to the foot Id by or to say that the old time way of "here po*-sil)le. Old drains can be used for mtsm of a brass ferrule and lead or cop- • IIARI1Y N. JO1ISON, Shtrllt. not rub oft a \ r.ew constructions only when found by the per pipe-properly, connected. nntcil June 2H. i:i2[). work was better than present meth- Value is $1.50 ' Inspector of thin Board to conform In ill 38. Bain water leader* must never be Qiilnn, Parson. & norpmus, Attorneyj. ods. Apparently thero is no possi- Lu-Co-Flat can be applied over Sold elsewhere at $1.50 I respect* to the toTegolnti regulation's gov- u»pd ht »oil, waite or vent pipri* nor sJtn'J !!U->128,Bi bility ,bf a return?*) tho way things ernin? new drains. The fee for insptctlon any soil, waste or vent pipes bo uped as plaster, wood, metal, brick, 1 fhnll be the same as for a new initalla- used to be done. The present sys- a leader. . Monmoulh Counly Surrogata'a Offlc. '| burlap, wall paper, or any pre- | tlun. 3D. No steam exhaust, b!ow-ofT pipe, or tem seems destined to stay imd It These are all pure Kilk nnd 33 inches viously varnished, painted or They are heavy-all pure silk and I IB. Where there t» no lewer In the drip pip* from n ft earn hoilrr »hn)\ enn- ii more than likely that the pace wide; Can be had in nil shades in- j meet on which a buildind faces and It is n*ct with the e«wer or with nr.y drain, mil wflll be even more rapid Jn ihe fu- enameled surface. I necesoary to ronitruct a prh'tts icwer ptpe or waatt* pipe: inch plp« must can be had in assorted patterns and chsrse intos tank or conilemcr fn ture. cluding black and white. They arc to connect with a seWer on an adjacrnt let us hdpyouukatheeclerra also washable. One of the season's ! street nr avenue.. It muit ht laid outilde • luitable outlet; to the-, d • * . colors. • . , j the curb', under trifr roadway of the ltrent, I hamonixe with your funuhinff most popular silks. j and not throupb yards or under htru»«». ' 40. Every new plumbinjr - Economic lawe are merciless and No drain and no lewer connections shitl be teited by pluBninc the noil line • rftercenary if left tc themselves. They h-j laid without a special permit from the of foundation wall, and all the vent and Board flf Health. wtiti pipes, wherr fixture itt)oc\i\ mustb be uiedd . *mok« or p*pprnnlnt U*t will niiowtT in- lii«t !)./• Bn , period nf each year so should old 18, All horliontal draindrain* wltnlltnln anandd stead of water test. In slterttior.?, nddl- muntliR from lna Jl..order, nr they will be age be the golden, halcyon period of JACOB.5TEI.NBAC/.' a distance of atx //ee t beyonbdd the walll t tions or extenilons of any plumbing iys- the life of each utcful citizen Evcr\ R. Hance & Sons bfldi hll fc f caitlron at 10BroadSt.,RedBink RED BANK REGISTER, JULY 10,1929. Pace Fivt HOHTICULTUBAL EXHIBIT. through ftie South. Mrs. Wlllgerodt was formerly Miss Loretta Borden of It WUI be Held at A»bury Park Next Long Branch and the wedding took •• November. place last week at the Long Branch Hear Ye! Hear Ye! Garflold-Grant hotel. Thoy will stall Prof. A. J. Farley, secretary of the housekeeping shortly in their new New Jersey atatahortlculural society, home here. !: The Biggest T&ll Cedar Event has announced that the 1929 annual Miss Catherine Atkins of Brook- meeting and exhibit of that organi- lyn IB visiting her grandparents, Mr. |: '• Ever Held in New Jersey in Years zation, scheduled for Aibury Park, and Mrs. Walter S. Force. Credits or Exchanges. will be held on November 20th, 21«t Colonel Austin, one of John C. to July 31st. and 22d. Schenck'a employees, has bought a The exhibit will be staged in the Nash sedan. new arcade and the enclosed portion John Hoppitig of Summit spent the of tho boardwalk now being con- last two weeks with his uncle, Jesse JULY* structed by the city of Asbury Park. Schofield. Because the facilities for exhibits William Domldion and family en will bd larger this year than ever be- tertalncd New York friends over the le first Annual Circus fore, a committee of the society has week-enrl. gone on record in favor of an exten- sive commercial exhibit of horticul- John Murphy was a recent visitor tural machinery, equipment and sup- at Delaware Water Gap. plies. The various meetings held by Fred Owens has bought a Pontlac & Auto Show the society during Its annual conven- coach. A Yearly Event Here That Smashes All.Records for Value Giving Stephen Lackatosh of Long Island tion will take place in two solarlums was at his farm hero Saturday and This is a wonderful opportunity to the woman who knows good merchandise to save on purchases —OF— facing the boardwalk and adjoining Sunday. the new arcade and casino. A ban- J. E. C. Layton has already picked of all needed goods whether for use now or later. quet will be hold in the Berkeley- tomatoes. Mrs. Mary E. Brower of Carteret hotel, convention headquar- Neptuno is visiting Mr. Layton and ters for the society. family. Bay. View Forest, No, 18 James C. Hendrlckson of Middle- Long Cloth Linen Toweling Bass aro plentiful In . tho water 5,000 Yards town is chairman of the special com- company's lolio at Swimming river. AT THE mittee In charge,of preliminary ar- Large wide-mouth bass were caught $1.69 Piece Printed Voiles or 20c Yard rangements for the meeting. Serv- laBt week by John Plew of Long ing with him are John H. Hankinson Branch and Daniel Hancock of Red English long cloth, full yard- Full width all linen, for hand, High School, Keyport of Glen Moore; R. P. Huleart of Man- Bank. wide, 10 yards to the piece, Dimity kitchen or glass use; checks, aaquan; Ellwood Douglass, Mon- Miss Margaret Infuhr, Miss Eda mouth county agricultural agent; E. Morin, John Sloane and Cheater soft needle finish. Regular 29c Yard plain or with colored borders. A. Mechllng of Moorestown; and Pro- Nevlns of New York were week-end $2.00 piece. All new and up-to-date print- Regular 25c and'29c yard. fessor Farley. Prof. M. A. Blake, visitors of Mr. and' Mrs. Robert Mc- SATURDAY JULY 20, 1929 chief of the horticultural division at Claln and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Lan- ings, vat dyes, guaranteed the state agricultural experiment sta- gendorf. washable, 36 to 40 inches Table Damask tion, Is chairman of the exhibit com- Donald Bryant and family of Tren- Bath Towels Afternoon and Evening mittee. Other members include E. E. ton have been visiting Louis P. Des- wide; fine combed yarns; Beyer of Mount Holly and W. Ray-trlbats and family. 50c Each much better grades than most 39c Yard mond Stone, Bergen county agricul- Elsie Leonard, daughter of Charles 58-in. mercerized Table Dam- tural agent Leonard, Is spending two weeks' va- One case Martex drop thread's stores sell at from 39c to SOc Come with the Whole Family and cation at Jersey City. finest grade, extra heavy, blue yard. ask, assorted designs, good MNCBOFT NEWS. Mr. and Mrs. John Killelea spent borders only; large size, 24x- wearing and washing grade. the early parL of this week at New Regular 59c yard. Have a Good Time One of Edward Boughton's Gaaollno York. Thoy will sail Saturday on 46. Were $1.00 each. Pumps Struck by Lightning. the steamship Adriatic for a six weeks' trip to Ireland. Flat Crepe de Chine One of Edward Boughton's gaso- Charles Johnson, son of Richard Our Regular $1,011 Grnde. Girls' Dresses line pumps was struck by lightning Johnson, Is employed, for the sum- Luncheon Sets and set afire Friday afternoon. The mtr on John Crawford's farm at , $1.39 Yard 59c Monster Street Parade at 6 p. m. flrc was put out with eand before Holmdcl. $1.69 Set any damage was done. This was the Mrs. Jnmes G. Rowe, Jr., who has The best all pure silk heavy Wash Dresses, choice 59c—of second time lightning struck the been sick in bed, is slowly improv- 50x50 all linen colored border pump. ing. Her mother, Mrs. Brooks of Cloth, half dozen 13-in. Nap- weight crepe in this country, styles, made of fast dye ma- Mr. and Mrs. John Olewlne of Baltimore, has been visiting at this kins to match. Were $2.69 set. even at the regular price, 39 terials; sizes 2 to 14 years. Visiting Forests Brooklyn and two grandchildren place. Regular $1.00 values. from Elizabeth have moved to Mrs. Many of Mrs. Payne Whitney's inches wide; 30 shades. : Conover's house here for the sum-yearlings have arrived at her farm mer. Mr. and Mrs, Olewine occupied here from Kentucky. They will be Seamless Sheets All Kinds of Outdoor Attractions the house laBt summer. broken and trained at this place. Fine Wash Goods Bath Mats Harry Sprung has begun a hbllow Miguel A. Rodriguez-y-Castillo of $1.09 Each tile chicken house, 20x80 feet, on his Grienta, Cuba, was a visitor last 4- Were 5So to 70o Yard. $2.00 Each Children's Matinee, 2:30 P. M., Prices—Children farm. James T. Sodon of this place week of Frank H. Horton Billard Double bed 81x90 size, good is helping with the work. Mr. Mr. Rodriguez-y-Castlllo and his weight, close weave, very dur- 39c Yard Sample line high grade Terry 25c, Adults 50c Sprung's Blstor, Mlsa Sarah Sprung father have charge of the Cuba Printed Linen Handkerchief Cloth Mats, large size patterns and of Brooklyn, is spending two weeks' sugar plantations of the American able, Better Value Brand. Our Printed Piques Printed Crepes Evening, 7 and 9 P. M., Prices—SOc and 75c vacation with her brother here. Mr. sugar refining company. Mr. Billard regular $1.39 gtade. Broad Cloth Dress Linen* colorings of, the best. Value Sprung's two children returned last is employed at the company's New Suiting Prints Normandy Voiles to $3.50 each. week from a visit with Brooklyn rel- York, offices. atives. Joseph Nusseneldt of Brook- The harveetlng of rye has been be- lyn returned with them and ho will gun at Brookdale farm. The farm Porch Cushions stay here the remainder of the sum- this year has an unusually la Fancy Linens Handkerchiefs General Electric All-Stecl REFRIGESATOR mer. 59c Each crop of rye. Values $2.00 to $3.08" Each. Christian H. Martinson and son The Five Corners' tearoom sign Assorted lot Cretonne, crash 14c t GIVEN AWAY Christian of Jamaica, Long Island, at the crossroads was slightly dam- former residents of this place, have aged when it» was hit by an autoist and sateen covered, square $1.39 Each Fine quality Jap Linon with i; on display at West Furniture Co. returned from an automobile trip to Sunday morning. and oblong; extra well made. Discontinued lines and sam- hand embroidered corners, in Michigan. They returned home by beautiful designs. 3 for 40c KEYPORT, N. J. way of Canada. Did anything happen hereabouts? Have sold up to $1.00 each. ple pieces of the finest linens Mr. and Mrs. Harold Wlllgerodt You'll find out all about it if you read —in Scarfs, Rounds, Buffets Value 19c each. have returned from a wedding trip The Register.—Advertisement 5-Pc. Scarf Sets and Vanities. Point de Grad, Venice, Madeira, Ambassa- Ladies' Neckwear 69c Set dor, Russian Filet and others; One 18x50, one 18x36 Scarfs, a chance to pick up a rare bar- 47c 3-Pc. Buffet Set, all pure linen gain: Fine Organdy', Voile and Lace with heavy lace edge. Were Collar & Cuff Sets.- All new $1.25 set. summer colors and plain Tre-Jur white. Value to 89c. Bath Towels Bath 25c Each Powder Kleinert Silk Shields Pretty borders—pink, blue, 37c Pair ICB YACHTING AVIATION green, gold; double absorbent 47c All Silk Shields, in size 3 cres- yarn, good size; for beach or The famous powder scented cent shape. Very good assort- home use. Value 35c each. with Jolie Memoire fragrance, ment of colors. Regular price, in colorful tints of blue, green, 50c. lavender, etc.; limited quaiiti- Bed Spreads ty. Regular price, $1.00 box. $2.00 Each Wood Bead Necklaces Interest Computed the Merchants Way 72x90—-81x90 colored stripe 49c genuine Ripplette, gold only. TENNIS Ladies' Bags Newest vogue in Chokers, as- Will Make You Richer Day by Day. GOLF 72x105 — 81x105 Rayons, sorted colors to wear with Piques. Various colors. Were $1.29 each summer dress. Value G9c. $2.98 to $3.25. Leather and straw, in back strap, pouch, envelope and top Yes, and by night, too, for every hour your money is handle styles, in all colors; Writing Paper in this fast-growing institution it is working for you Kitchen Towels wonderful value. Were made 27c earning interest on both what you deposit and on the 17c Each to sell at $1.95. Linen finish Paper and Cor- interest which this bank credits every three months. Startex brand, part linen. respondence Cards of excep- POLO White with all the wanted tional quality, 24 envelopes Interest compounded and credited the Merchants way SWIMMING colored borders, hemmed for. Silks Reduced and 24 papers to the box. builds up worth-while balances more quickly than any use; also loop for hanging. $1.19 Yard White and colors. Value 45c. Regular 25c each. Close-outs while thry last—all our l'rint- other bank in this community. ed Crepes nml other plain and laney weaves. Stamped Pillow Cases Woven Madras Were $1.69 to S250 Yard. 95c Pair That is one reason for our remarkably rapid 40 in. Printed Crepe de Chines 25c Yard '32 in. Woven Stripe Tub Silks Fine quality Tubing 42x36, in growth. Small and large accounts welcomed and if For men's shirts, pajamas, 40 in. Plain Crepe de Chines hemstitched ends and hem- HUNTING you are not already a Merchants convert, won't you boys' blouses, dress wear and 40 in. Brocade Carisse Satin stitched for crocheting. Reg- accept this message as a personal invitation to join MOTOR BOATING other uses; stripes in all color- 40 in. Plain Celo Crepes ular price, $1.15 pair. ings. Former price, 39c yard. 40 in. Black Satin Charmeuse with us where your hard-earned money brings "you Ladies' Belts the largest yield. Shower Curtains Curtains Panels 44c $2.98 Suede Belts, IV2 inches wide, Rubberized high grade Sateen 85c Pair 85c Each in red, blue, tan, rose, btack in pretty patterns arid color- Values $I..ia tn Sl.SII. and all correct colors. Value RIDING Curtains are ruffled, with and YACHTING ings, 2x2 yards, with metal in- without valance, also flat .cur- 59c. serted rings. Were $3.98 each. tains; the panels are fringed or hemmed, in Rayons, Nets Cor^elettes & Girdles White Dress Flannel : MERCHANTS TRUST COMPANY and others; aH are 2% yards • • •' 95c •• • long. BROAD STREET, REP BANK $1.79 Yard Several choice models to 54-inch all pure Wool1, choose from;, both in Girdles sponged and shrunk, for coats, and Corseluttes; enough to OFFICERS dresses or skirts-; real apodal. Rayon Undies say they are regular $1.50 val- KENNETH H. MCQUEEN, Prtsidmt Regular $2.25 yard. 79c ues at 95c. JAS. D. OTTBKSON, JR. , Vice-President and Tnasurer EDQAH N. MCCLEES Vice-Presiitnt and Secretary ARCHIBALD L. MILLER - - Vkt-Pmidtnt J. ERNEST OLIVER Step-ins, French Panties, ' Assistant Secretary Summer Blouses Shorties and Bloomers, made Silk Hosiery DIRECTORS of super rayon all nicely $1.39 ARCHIBALD L. MILLER JAMES D. OTTEBSON, JR. WARREN H. SMOCK JOHN GIBLON CHARLES R. ENGLISH $1.25 trimmnd, in combination of JACOB YANKO KENNETn H. JlQ RAY H. STILLMAN PAULOSCHWALD "ARTHUR C. STEINDACH Now a real sale of Blouses to colors—very special values, A wonderful value, 45 gauze G. HAROLD NEVIUS JOHNJ. QUINN FKED W. ROBINSON FRANK E. PRICB JESSE MINOT help out your wardrobe for silk from top to toe, picot top. worth up to $1.50 each; Sale All the season's best shade*— balance of summer. Regular Price, . "The Bank That, Banks on Red Bank" $1.98 values. $1.65 quality. * PftCft RED BANK REGISTER, JULY 10,1929. <<<*y*x^^^^ SALE OF FINE BROOK FABM. MIDDLETOWN VttJLAGE NEWS. • » « » • I • It MM » 3 » • • M H M M M M tf H f The Thomas Archer Place Bought by Church Bulletin Board Wrecked by 'I • MONEY TO LOAN a Plalnfleld Man. Lightning Last Friday. The Thomas Archer farm of four The outdoor bulletin board in fronl NEW PiVCK SOUTHERN acres In Atlantic townihlp near Plna of Christ church was wrecked by FARMS $1,000 to $1,000,000 Brook has been bought by a party lightning last Friday afternoon. A from Plalnfleld for $600. A small bolt of lightning struck a tree and Country Homes house Is on the property. The new glanced off and hit the bulletin board. owner hag moved on the firm and An electrlo light pole in front of Her- Shore Estates PEAS - - - 3 Can. on First Mortgage. he expects to improve the house. Mr. ber L. Pease's houBe was struck by Archer died about a year ago with- lightning. Considerable damage was All Forma of INSURANCE No. 2 Cans Good Quality Early June Variety out leaving a will. Walter D. Fields done to crops and roada by wash- WHITE-PACH, Inc. | of Colt's Neck, who Is overseer of the outs. Stat* Highway RED BANK. Telephone 2100. poor of Atlantic township, was ap- Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Graves are ; Eatontown, N.I. Phone 17S pointed to settle the estate and lie spending the summer In New Hamp- made the sale. shire, where they formerly lived. Mrs. Borton and her daughter of TIMOTHY R. HOUNIHAN Title Company Sold. Newark are spending the summer UNITED SERVICE The Monmouth title and mortgage with Mr». Henry Stark. guaranty company has bought the Charles Steuerwald, who has been Contractor and Builder assets and title of the Aabury Park In poor health for some time, was SPECIALIZING IN JOBBING guaranty mortgage company, to- taken to a New York hospital last CONTRACTOR SCREEN AND STORM ENCLOSCBES gether with its building at Asbury week. GROC3ERS XeJephono U4O-3I 160 Bridge Avenue. Bed Banlt, N. J. Park. The purchase places the total Mr. and Mrs. Charles J. ttendrlck- and BUILDER resources of the Monmouth company son and their daughter of New York at, $7,000,000 and its capital and sur- have moved to their property here for ilus at more than $1,500,000. RED BANK, N. J. Barretts Approved Roofer the summer. Mr. Hendrlckson bought BRAND PHONE 2318. a Chrysler automobile a few days Office In EUosr Building New Fort Monmouth House. ago. Room 3 Mrs. Grace Gray of Jersey City has The congregation of the Spiritualist T.l.phona 2018. had a house built for her own use on Methodist church Is meeting at the J. H. White property which she recently bought home of Clinton Health. Services are Jobbin, of All Kinds held Sunday and Friday afternoons Estimate* CbMrfolly FuroUhtd at Homestead Park at Port Monr Imported From Japan—Fine For Salads General Roofing and Sheet Metal Contractor mouth from Benjamin and Walter at two o'clock and on Tuesday even- Mills. The cost was J1.800 and the ings at eight o'clock. Mary Heath Skylights Ventilating work was done by James H, Verran Brokenbaugh is president of the con- Experienced Mechanics Modern Equipment ', of Port Monmouth. gregation and the church Is com- Complete stock of materials. monly known as "Mother Heath's Thomas Jardine Fort Monmouth House Sold. church." Thomas Harris was home over 35 WHITE ST., RED BANK, N. J. Louis Aspllnt of North Bergen has RINSO iQ Sunday from Long Island, where he RIVER PROPERTY »+»«»•»••<>«< >••••«•««»•< bought a six-room house on Vlering Is employed as a butler. He made ane at Port Monmouth from Mrs. —and— AAAAAAAAAAAAAAA*AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA>AAAAAAAAAAAAA A,A,A4A, the trip in a Pierce-Arrow automo- 2PKGS. | Henrietta Morris for $1,500. The new bile which was a gift to him from wner is now occupying the house. his employer. ARTISTIC HOMES The sale was made by George J. A Ford automobile was abandoned Alston Court; Bast Front St, Freibott of Port Monmouth and the Sunday night near the Lone Pine price was $1,500. BED BANK N. J. Comet Brown RICE HERSHEY'S You can never tell just roadside booth. It was towed to Russell Groves's garage. The own- Phone 76. FLAKES 2 COCOA * what the ne*t fellow is Fort Monmouth's New Family. er has not yet shown up to claim it going to do. Auto insurance Joseph Duffy of Newark has moved protects your car from the in the house on Main street at Port Monmouth which he recently bought LIFEBUOY SOAPv-ITie other man's reckless driving. rom Nantor Hobhaus. The lot is J. H. PRICE 2 cans , It will keep away constant 75x150 feet. The house has six rooms. MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS Health Soap 3 cakes worry if you Insure your car. A garage is on the property. George REPAIRED. BLUE TIP Cvery car . Freibott of Port Monmouth made Violins • Specialty. Need? Money? LIBBY'S CORNED he sale. Bowi Rehairad. MATCHES , • ow/ter s/iou/d We lend money on BEEF No. 1 can <• "Think ol the Future" Water Witch Beach Ixit Sold. 28 W««t Froct Sir-.,. monthly payments, The Peck sales agency has sold a (Over Chambers faint Shop.) FLAG CUT REF. lot on Beach Boulevard at Water from $50 to $300. Witch Beach to Mrs. Ellen A. Smith GRE-SOLVENT, ijAftt BEANS 2 cans 31 Westfleld, New Jersey. The lot Is Easy to pay back. 2 cans ...... ,. .i.i.i. . . 25c 5x93 feet and Mrs. Smith paid $850 7 T : N. Y. State's Best 'or it. She will build a summer home Lawful interest only. HAWKINS BROTHERS the lot - _ .' Aeroplane All applications strict- INSURANCE HOLMDEL NEWS. ly confidential. CLEAN SWEEP BROOMS No. 6 each 49c A Severe Electrical Storm at This Quick Service. 10 Monmouth Street Ground Floor Place Last Friday, Insurance A hard thunder shower, accom- Loan $60 Repay $0 a month CLEAN SWEEP BROOMS No. 7 Phone 352 Red Bank panied by hail, struck this place last Loan $80 Repay $8 a month • 59c Friday afternoon. Fields and roads You have protected your prop- Loan $100 Repay $10 a month ere washed out and considerable erty against fire but, suppose Plus Interest. lamage was done to crops. A num- FRESH PACK WAXED PAPER - >er of telephones were put out of an Aeroplane should fall on Other Amounts in 3 pkgs. 25c :ommlsslon. Trees were struck with your house or outbuildings. ghtnlhg near houses occupied by proportion. t ohn Long, Ansel White and James We can protect you from this HIRES ROOT BEER EXTRACT Lattimer. Several radio outfits were to*. 23c ut out of order. worry at very little cost Mrs. William Major of Edison, MONMOUTH Pennsylvania, Is visiting Mrs. John INTERNATIONAL PKG. SALT 2 pkgs. 9c Mortgage Money Sherman. Mrs. Sherman's daughter Elizabeth is visiting at Edison. LOAN COMPANY About $36 was cleared by the re- Hylin & Salz cent bread and cake sale held by the 7 Broad Street, women of the Reformed church. It is Realtors—Insurance, Bed Bank, Now Jersey. Here Is a Real Bargain If you wish funds for additional property; expected to hold another sale the Open Wed. Eve, 1 to & latter part of July. Register Building, Red Bank. to enlarge or extend your business; to ac- More than the usual number of - Phone 2548. FANCY FLORIDA GRAPEFRUIT c t turkeys Is bring raised on the farms quire a business or home, we can be of hereabouts. Last year the turkey raisers were very successful in this HEARTS, in No. 2 cans advantage to you in any of these cases. section and this has apparently 19 caused the business to be carried on "THEBE'S NO PLACE LIKE HOME" At this time we have moneys to be placed to a. greater extent. The first six weeks are usually the most critical When built or re-modeled by f on First Mortgage Loans for individuals • period, and most of the young tur- keys have passed this stage. The and Trust Funds, in sums from $3,000 to turkeys are cared for mostly by Carhart Construction Co., Inc. farmers' wives. BUILDERS U. S. G. Coffee $20,000, to remain for permanent invest- Bernon S. Prentice has beautified "IS SOME COFFEE" c his porperty with ten box bushes 40 Mechanic Street. 27 Garfleld Avenue, ment. . which he bought from Miss Cath- Bed Bank. N. J. erine Stllwagon of Everett. Atlantic. Highland*. N. J. Try a Pound Today at ' Garrett Emmons, who lives with Phone for estimates. his son, Holmes Emmons, Is con- Bed Bank 2B8S Atlantic Highlands 210 Applications have immediate attention and fined to the house with sickness. Most of the farmers have "plowed consideration. off" their asparagus crops. The sea- son is about ended. A few of the farmers started dig- Established 18S4 Telephone 111 Leader Coffee ging potatoes last week. Th» po- I tatoes were disposed of at stores at "HERE IS GOOD VALUE" Red Bank and other places at the rate'of-$5 a barrel. Apparently the ALEXANDER D. COOPER Hawkins Brothers early crop will be light. 58-64 BROAD STREET RED BANK, N. J. \ Real Estate, Insurance and Mortgage Loans. MARLBORO NEWS. Sale in Effect July 1 lth to July 17th % 10 Monmouth St., Red Bank, N. J. Miss Ruth Ely Making Trip WINDSTORM INSURANCE Through the West /HE FOLLOWING IS A LIST OF NAMES AND ADDRESSES OF (Ground Floor). Telephone 352. Harry Hennessey spent part of A Good Coverage at Very Low Rates, last week at Philadelphia, having XHE UNITED SERVICE GROCERS MEMBERS STORES: gone there to meet his parents who were on their way home from Flor- ida. $ Miss Helen Magee Is on a ;ix Stores Located in Stores Located Stores Located weeks' trip to Vermont. Out of Town (Cont.) Out of Town (Cont.) Mrs. Lulu Maffhan of Freehold Red Bank: was the guest of her sister, Mrs. ® George Hayes over the Fourth. GEORGE W. BRAY WILLIAM DOR T. M. GILES Realtors Work Together Mr. ana Mrs. Arthur Delcisur are 8 East Front St. Bray and Thompson JVTCB., Belford, N. J. stopping at the H. I. Schenck's Tel. B. B. 608. TeL Keansburg 622. East Kcansbunj, N. .1. Floyd Yonkauske and family spent Tel. Kcanaburg 923. Sunday at Ocean Gate. The members of the Red Bank Real Estate Board George Strickland, Jr., Is at Camp ANDREW CITARELLA E. RUNYON arc all Realtors. Ockanickon. 73 Monmouth St. Bedford. N. J. ROBERT B. RORKE Mrs. Voorhees and . children of Tel. B. B. 942. TeL Keansburg B3. 217 Secley Avc, Jersey City are visiting Mr. and Mrs. They work together. One of their great work- Keansburg, N. J. together features is the J. J. Klngman. LUIGI NANNINI MIOB Ruth Ely and a party of FRANK HERTLE ToL Keansburg 011. friends have gone on a trip to Yel- 196 Lelghton Ave. lowstone Park, by way of the Great Tel. B. B. 1832. Hailef, N. J. Multiple Listing System! Lakes, to Chicago by auto, and by TeL Eeyport 038. I. M. WALLING train the remainder of the way. McNAIR'S MARKET 18 Main SI., Keansburg. N. 3. •Under this syslem all the. mdmbers of the Red Bank Rev. William Combs and family 19 E. Front St Real Estate Board or Board of Realtors get busy on sell- of Onelda. N. T., visited Mrs. Nettle JOHN AZZOLINA TeL Koansburg 610. ing your property when it is put in the hands of any mem- Wells and Mrs. H. L. Sehenck re- Tel. B. B. 372. S5 Miller St, cently. Highlands, N. J. FRANCIS KILDUFF ber of the Board, unless you specially do not want this Misses Marjorie and Dorothy Ely WM. F. REILLY i Even the oldest inhabitant Leonardo) N, J, done. The left on Wednesday on the "Carmanla" 21 Pearl St OTTO GAUTSCHY TeL At Highlands 211. for & toUr of Europe. They will visit Tel B. B. M8-B. France, Germany, Holland, Belgium US Bay Ave., Multiple Listing System! and Switzerland. CAN'T REMEMBER! FRED W. MEYERS L. M. THOMPSON Highlands, N. J. Mr. and Mrs. William Blair have TeL Highlands 1200. Whlto House Store. is a great help when it comes to selling a piece of real estate, returned from . a delightful trip 185 Shrewsbury Ave. . v Centra St, for eifiht firms put your property on their active list at once through the Berkshires and Adiron- OUR SCORE years and more from now, the Tel. B. B. 1H5-W. for sale. dack!). Foldest inhabitant will probably rack his brain, » TUNIS H. LANE Leonardo, N. 3, Mildred Croxson of Freehold Is trying to remember when this roof of Johhs- GEORGE C. WOLF Miller St, near Bay Ave., ToL At Highlands 448. visiting her grandparents, Mr. and Highlands, N. J. These are the members of the Red Bank Real Estate Mrs. H. W. Buck, while her parents Manville Asbestos Shingles was applied—and he Hudson Ave. and Harding Rd. CITARELLA BROS. are on a trip to Canada. TeL Highlands 1210. Board: won't be able to remember; • i TeL B. B. 2072. Llttlo Silver, N. J. Joseph Keane has a broken arm, the result of a fail from a step lad- Tel. Bed Bank 2181. HAWKINS BROTHERS, 10 Monmouth Street r This roof is permanent Time and the elements OSCAR A. KEMMERER der. Stores Located WM. A. HOPPING, Broad Street and Linden Place The funeral of Howard Smith cannot destroy it Fire will not burn it. Water 285 Bay Ave, LUCIAN D'ANTHONY Highlands, N. J. HENDR1CKSON & STOUT. 2 Linden Place formerly of this place, was held »t will not rotit Rairr, wind and sun cannot injure it Out of Town: Mlddletown, N. J. Freehold on Sunday afternoon. TeL Highlands 1109. HYLIN & SALZ, 42 Broad Street Mrs. Charles McQueen has re- Let us tell you how little a permanent roof costs. CHARLES LANDA TeL Mlddlclown 273. A. L. IVINS AGENCY, 42 Broad Street turned from a visit at Brooklyn. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Goosley hav« Atlantic Economy Store GEORGE SCHMIDT FRED J. FINNERTY LAND and LOAN CO., 12 Mechanic Street started houBe keeping In the Lyl» IS First Ave., Naveslnk and Linden Avcs., 41 Itlver Rond, > MORJUSEY & WALKER, Keaiubur Hayes house, which they purchased JjHONMOUTH ROOFING CO. Atlantic Highlands, N. J. Highlands, N. J. Kumson, N. ,1. R recently. ALLAIRE & SON AGENCY, Inc., 60 Broad Street TeL A. H. 38-J. . Tet Highlands' llTt: Tel. Rumson 318. The Register never disappoints— Johni-Manvttle Approved Roaten your printing Is always done at the >•«•*••••• time promised—Adtejctisemest. • - •• Keansburg, N. J. ' RED BANK REGISTER, JULY 10,1929. Pace Seven the worn out road. Folks living on glvon up work at Signer's Red Bank New Steamer Service. BUSINESS OF THE BANKS, this road, as well as other people who actory. The Central railroad announces tho use It, would appreciate action In- Miss Elisabeth O'Brien of Redresumption of its evening dinner and TELEPHONE MW-J. stead of excuses. If the three town- Bank recently visited Mrs. Patrick NOW OF»BPSf! INCREASE OF |l,87B,S0« SINCE twilight sailings of its steamers. The got together and made Im- Carton, Jr. Sandy Hook will leave West «d JUNE OF LAST YEAR. provements tho expense to each mu- Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Grant were street at 4:50 P. M. and Cedar street nicipality would bo small. at Merchantville over the week-end. at 5:20. The Monmouth will make The Shingle Lodge Tho Thirty-Two Bank* In the Coun Pickerel, bass and catfish are plen- the twilight trip, leaving West 42d ty Had Deposits of $78,187,410 on HIGHLANDS, N. J. ON STATE HIGHWAY. B. A. SHOEMAKER tiful at Swimming river. There were Temperance Union Conference. street at 7:40 and Cedar street at June SOUl—Three Banks at Bedmany fishermen at the river over the 8:05 P. M. Bank Have Deposit* of »li,9M,09S. Fourth. The state women's temperance un- j Ions of New Jersey, New York and ! Delicious Chicken Dinner with Waffles $1.50 Monmouth county's 32 banks had Pennsylvania will hold a conference Let Luke Find Tour Home, deposits of $73,137,480.10 when state- EVEBETT NEWS. at Ocean Grove next Tuesday, Luke Longhead's department of Also Coal, Wood, Feed, Hay, Straw ments were called for on June 20th. Wednesday and Thursday. On Tho Register every week tells of de- Thla is an Increase of *1,875,392.69 Mrs. Churlea Kelly Sold Several alrahle homes for caie.—Advertise- Wednesday night sixty speeches will ment. Shore Dinners Bridge Parties Tea ; • and Grain aince last June but it is $4,726,747.30 Doom to Antique Collector. be given in sixty minutes. A patri- less than the high mark reached last Mrs. Charles Kelly sold several old otic pageant entitled "Columbia'3 VNAAAAAA/V\/VX'VN/\A/\AAAA.NAAA^ October. The three banks at Red doors last week to a Freehold an- Warning" will be presented on the PeatMosB All Kinds of Poultry Feed Bank had a total of 914,934,003.96 In tique collector. The doors wore taken closing night. deposits. The following table shows from an old house on Mrs. Kelly's Baled Shaving* the deposits and the loans and dis- farm and they were snkl to be more counts of each of the banks; than 200 years old. They wore fitted CHARTER NO. 8287, DEPOSITS. with wrought iron hinges. The an- ItESERVB DISTRICT NO 3. Selling LEHIGH and WILKES-BARRE Second National, Red B«nl(....l9,«27,121.77 tique collector said they worn valu- REPORT OF THE CONDITION Or Aiburr Park and Ocamn Grov. . able because of the hinges and pan-The Second National 3ank and Tmit Con. PLYMOUTH COAt bink 0,«61,m.S2 cling. pan? or Red Bank at Red Bank, In th« Satco&tt Trust Co., Aibury State of New Jeney, at th< dole of busl- For Twenty-live Yean, Park «.056,S8J.OO Friday night locust trees were ness on June 29, 1920. Broad Striat National, Red struck by lightning on Jnmea Ixmg's RESOURCES. 1- Loan, and dUcountt t 4,794,923.96 Bank M02.M8.27 farm and at Nicholas Jacibiu's place, 2. Ov.rdr.IU 3.U7.SS Anbury Park Tru.t Co 3,8«9.8(«.«< Week-End Shoppers Save Real near St. Catherine's church, The 3 United Statea Government LITTLE SILVER, NEW JERSEY Loni Branch Truit Co 3,809,786.49 damage was confined to Ihc trees. «ecurttl«i owned 125,000.00 Cltlceni National, Long William Ford had a lnrge display 4. Other bondi, *tocki and ae- Branch 2,830,780.10 ruritifts owned 8,101,961 22 I.ona Branch Bankinr Co 2,818,705.DC of expensive fireworks Thursday 5. Dunking house 1316,000.00 Flr.t National. Spring: Lake .... 2,606,537.<< night. Mr. and Mrs. F'or.l entertained Furniture and Money When They Shop in the fixturei 11,216.20 Firmira k Merchants. Mata* friends on Thursday from Everett, 3S4.216.20 wan 2.085.88B.7Z Red Bank, Eatontown and Jersey 7. Real estate owned other Flr.t National, B.lmar „ 2.0SS.418* City, than banking home 2<,924.65 Koyport Banking Co. 2.017,367.0 Frank J. Kelly has returned horns 8. Reserve with Federal Re- National Freehold Binklnc Co. 1.917.063 6 serve Bank 449.666.09 from Long Branch, where he has9. Cash and due from bank* 389,781.00 Stores Where Qudty Counts! Tint National, Frathold 1.817,5230 been staying since ho dislocated his 10. Outside checki and other Atlantic Highland! National 1.7(2.213.1 loft shoulder in an automobile acci- CBBh items 6,614.72 PIODUI National, Karcort 1,741.849,0 11. Redemption fund with Ooo.n Gro»« National ...___ 1,609,(22.0 dent at that place, about two weeks IT. S. Treasurer (ind due Reg. 20c Frathold Tnut Co _ ..„• 1.523,555.6, weeks ago. He la rapidly Improv- from U. S. Treasurer S.750.00 J Merchant* Tnttt jCo., Bad ing. 111,234,195.52 Bank _., 1,504,822.9! Mayonnaise 17c Francis Neville of Headden's Cor- LIABILITIES. Manasquan National ...„ l,S86,B13.0 ner and his cousin, Daniel O'Brien of IS Capital stock paid In ....I 500,000.00 Better Mayonnaise is not made. New Jarier Truit Co., Long Jersey City, were Saturday visitors 16. Surplus „ B00.0OO.00 Branch -... - l.lSl.tSV.T 17. Undivided profits—net.... 278.693.23 Farmers National. Allentown.. 1.186.809.48 of Donald Hickey. Francis is a for IS. Ftesurvcs for dividends, Reg. 20c Reg. 25c Kellogg's or SAFEGUARD YOUR Central National, Freehold 1,118,288.8 mer resident here and Daniel has contingencies, etc. 1)9,172.67 Firat National. Bradler Beach 1.072.919.4, spent several summers at this placp. 19 Reserves for Interest, California Finest Cooked Post Toastiea- TRAVEL MONEY. tnxes, nnd other expenses Matawan Bank 1,084,364.0: Mrs. Joseph Magoc Is entertaining accrued and unpaid 60,812.53 Keanabure National 1,030.321.12 relatives from New York. 20. Circulating notes out- Allenhurit National and Triut Frank Haley has resumed his farm standing 74,600.00 Tuna Fish Corned Beef Corn Flakes Take no chances with your Co 816,231.88 work after having been laid up with 21. Due to banki, including First National, Eeabrlirht 604.643.70 certified and cashiers' First National. Avon 641,450.1 rheumatism. checks outstanding 55.047.94 pkg »9c travel money—it may be Patrick Viscusia of Now York has 22. Demand deposits 3,290.5(0.74 First National. Eatontown 388,081.7: 2.1. Time deposits 6,207.822.66 lost or stolen. The safe First National, F.nelUhtown... 370,765.20 opened his house at this place for the 21. United StateJ deposits.... 17.996.86 First National, Farmingdale.... 324,589.0' summer. 26. Bill:* payublc and redis- way is to carry with you Daniel Foley and family of Peeks- counts v 100,000.00 »78,137.1B0.ll) Reg. 15c Apple Cider kill were week-end guests of Mr. and (11,234,195.52 our Travelers Checks. They WANS AND DISCOUNTS. Mrs. Joseph Eustace. Edward Eus- Second National. Red Bank....l!,791.9S3.9< Stnte of New Jersey. County of Monmouth, OSCO Pure tace has been visiting at New York. ss.: White Distilled Vinegar 2 - 25c are cashable everywhere- Asbury Park and Ocean Grove Mra. John Snlffon entertained I, Wm. B. Lyman. Cashier of the bank , 8,958.600.40 Zachary Taylor of Little Sjlvcr and nbove-named bank, do solemnly swear that arid so convenient you Seacoast Trust Co., Asbury the above statement Is true to the best of Park E,563,419.86 Mra. Agnes Tillotson of Oceanport my knowledge and belief. Reg. 5c Trefz Beverages 6 bots. 25c should not be without Broad Street National, Red on Friday. Miss Mildred Sniffen WM. B. LYMAN, Cashier. Loose Wiles Bank _ 2.899,103.87 spent Thursday at Delaware Water Subscribed and sworn to before me this them. : 5th dny of July. 1929. Asbury Turk Trust Co 2,546,095.60 Gap. (Seal) KATHERINE H. WHITING, OSCO Ginger Ale, J Lone Branch Trust Co 2.396,072.0' Frit)! Kwald entertained New York ' Notary Public. Sunshine Hydrox CltizenB National, Long friends on Thursday. Correct Attest:— Branch 2.072,106.91 Leslie Stout of Red Bank was n GEO. C. HOPPING, Long Branch Banking Co 1,817,407.73 11ENJ. .1. PABKEU. Ib34c Lime or Lemon ^ Flnt National. SprlnB Lake... 2,436.712.84 Thursday visitor of William Dziczyc MARCUS M. DAVIDSON, Farmers & Merchants, Mata- and family. Miss Marlon Dzlezyc has Directors. Rob Roy Pale Dry Ginger Ale (ctn) 12 bots $t*.25 w.n 023,751.48 Flrat National, Belmar 2.021,240.42 Malted Milkies BROAD STREET NMOML BANK Keyport Banking Co 1.541.822.20 Mavis Chocolate Drink :..,...bot Sc National Freehold Banking- Co. 026.795.1 Red Bank..N.J. First National, Freehold :.. 1,840.363.79 Ib25c Atlantic Highlands National.... 1.925,411.85, Ward's Orange Crush .„.„...... botSc Pooplen National, Keyport 071,386.08 Plun bottlo deposit. •. •.-•• Ocean Grove National _.„ 1,629,951.07 Freehold Trust Co 1,092,582.63 Merchants Tmit Co., Sed Bank 1,162,166.3 Reg. 15c Manaiquan National 980,948.0 New Jersey Trust Co., Long Branch 1.058,582.11 Tomato Catsup 2 & 25c Farmers National, Allentown.. 1,609,564.92 Central National, Freehold 1,358,753.62 First National. Bradley Beach 862.914.93 Bad Breath asco Matawan Bank 1,071,661.88 P.&G. Allions Keanaburg National 1,035,501.04 Allenhurst National, and Truit Co 662,418.50 Corn Flakes Malted Milk Naphtha Soap Flnt National, Seabrlght 172.961.87 Flrit National, Avon 140.463.80 hig pkgs -I -g c C of miles have proved it First National, Eatontown 220,081.14 7 "^ 25 Flrit National, EnBllshtown.... 301,498.10 First National, Fnrminndale.... 288.216.13 Is Optional One pkg One pkg Seedless America's finest medium- 157,973.355.84 and Both for TINTON FALXS NEWS. You Can Have It Prim Rice Raisins 15c priced automobile John Covert In an Automobile Acci- The Blcecst Bread Values In Town! dent Near Bed Bank Last Week. or You Can Use 49c—39c— 10c Saved ! John Covert's automobile was in a Full Strength—Full Flavor— collision with another car last we&k Full Aroma. Bread on the Newman Springs road near Red Bank. No one was hurt, but damage was done to both automobiles Supreme and to a front yard. Mr. Covert re- Big paired the damage to the yard. asco Wrapped Mr. and Mrs. Helm and their son Loaf if Philadelphia spent the Fourth with ERNAS Mrs. Charles Dreycr. Mrs. Frank Schultz spent from Coffee Victor Bread pan loaf Sc : Thursday until Sunday at Asbury The Penetrating Park. ECAUSE of the type of performance it Mr. and Mrs. William F. Reid have Everyday Needs Sensibly Priced! opened their boarding house for the Antiseptic B provides, the Oakland All-American summer. They had 25 boarders from Tanning's Bread and Butter Pickles jar 25c Salndn Black Tea _: - tb pkg 25o New York over tho Fourth. ffSCO Finest California Teaches big can 21c Mazola Cooking Oil ;_ pt can 29o Six is gaining recognition everywhere as Mrs. Euble of New York spent last 4SC0 Sliced Haw. Pineapple No. 1 cnnl7c week with Mrs. Edward Stoothoff. Unpleasant breath and unpleasant (fSCO Pure Vanilla Extract _ botJSo Mr. and Mrs. Sherwood of New taste are instantly destroyed by this Finest California Cherries tall can 33c (fSCO Finest Corn Starch pkg 70 the outstanding value of its price class. or York have been visiting Mrs. Cath- most efficient and most delightful anti- Del Monte Cooked Spinach big cHnlOc Pure Fruit Orange Slices tb Mo. For since its introduction, it has carried erine Farrell. septic mouth wash— Fancy Strawberries or Raspberries Baby Ruth Burs or Beech-Nut Gum 3 pkgalOo Charles Murphy has given up his (Buffet Size) _ _ can 12Hc Delicious Beauty Pops (5 in pkg) 3 forlOo position with the Monmouth county fJSCD Pure Spices (Whole or Ground) pkg 7c thousands of owners millions of miles; hunt club farm and he has gone to Shotwell's Vanilla Marshmallows 5 lb ctn 89o and, more emphatically than anyone hlladelphia, where he formerly BECAUSE (ISCD Peanut Butter tumbler 10c, 17o, 26c Crlsco (For Shortening, Cooking, Baking) ived. Shredded Whole Wheat Biscuit pkg lie tb c%n 23o Misses Ethel and Elsie Dreyer are it penetrates far below the surface, in- Ivory Soap _.„ .—__«.. ~.»~3 med. cake819o else, those owners will tell you that the spending a week at Ocean City. Quaker Puffed Rice ..... pkg 15c Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Bennett, Jr., to the tissues and between the cells, Quaker Puffed Wheat pkg 13c Ivory Soap 2 large cakes 23c Oakland of today is America's finest and their two children of Sea Girt deep into the gums and the further- 4SCD F«ncy Stuffed Olives bot 12!$i% 23c Extension Window Screens __ eachlDo spent last week with Mr. Bennett's medium-priced automobile. Come in! randmother, Mrs, Samuel J. Ben- most recesses between the teeth, nett. cleansing perfectly, hardening thp See and drive the All-American Six! It Albert Stoothoff has a new Pontlao cabriolet. gums and retarding Pyorrhea. In Our Meat Markets for the Week-End! wins on every basis of comparison* And A big lot of fence posts and rails were delivered at the farm of the we are prepared to make a liberal allow- Monmouth county hunt club last VERNAS is vastly more effective week. They will be used to repair than any other antiseptic because MILK-FED COUNTRY VEAL! ance if you have a car to trade. fences which are damaged when the club holds hunts next fall. "It Penetrates." Loin Veal Chops Delicious Rib Veal Chops Kandolph Reid bought a Bulck au- tomobile and a Ford automobile last Oakland All-American Six. $1145 to tWS, }. a. b. week. The Ford la fourteen yearajjold lb. 50c Veal lb. 45c Pontiac, Michigan, plus delivery charges. Spring covert and Mr. Reid paid only $10 for It, but FOR SUNBURN and Lovejoy Hydraulic Shock Absorber* included in list it "trots right along" as good as a Cutlets prices. Bumpers and rear fender guards extra. General new car. His brother, William F. Gently bathing the skin with VERNAS Breast Veal RumpRoast Veal Motors Time Payment Plan available at minimum rate. Reid, bought a Studebaker automo- will take away all the pain and discom- bile last week. lb. 58c lb. 32c R. F. Wlnslow and family of As- fort, and you will get your tan without lb. 25c bury Park have moved in the Land- suffering for it. strum house on Water street which Consider the delivered price aa well ihey recently bought. ARMOUR'S QUALITY SMOKED MEATS! SA the llat price when comparing The school grounds have been Your Druggist has VERNAS. Keep a automobile values . .'. Oakland* plowed and graded by John H. Car- bottle always handy. It has many Large or Small Star Hams . '. . . . . lb. 32c Pontlao delivered" prices Include ney. Grass seed will be sowed. Theodore Pints, who is employed at uses. Very effective for coughs and only reasonable charges for han- New York, spent tho Fourth at his dling and for financing when the home here. colds, sore throat, skin irritations, Shank Half of Ham lb. 32c 1 Butt Half of Ham lb. 34c Time Payment Plan U used. Allen K. Crawford has returned wounds and cuts, nettle rash, insect home from Kentucky where he spent several daya in the Interest of his bites and inflainod tissues. Vogt's Skinless Frankfurters . . . . . can 25c wholesale butcher buslneBS. TENDER—DELICIOUS—TASTY. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Tomalne en- T. F. Morford Motor Car Co., Inc. tertained a large number of relatives Don't accept a substitute—Insist on and friends from Philadelphia over Lean Smoked Boston Butts . . lb.30c 21 Mechanic Street, Red Bank. the Fourth. the penetrating Ira Shcppard Is having an addition Sliced Dried Beef . lib. 20c >f two rooms and a-'ha^throom built the delightful :o his house near Swimming river. VERNAS William F. VanNote Is doing tho lib. pkg. 19c work. (/, ' • , OSCO Sliced Bacon The road between this place and HOME ANTISEPTIC OAKLAND .lncroft la in very bad condition. It s in three townships, but each town- Fancy Smoked Frankfurters . . lb. 29c , Instead of improving the road, ALL-AMERICAN SIX il&mei 0>« othsr munioiptllUcB tot rRODUCT OF .GENERAL MOTOBB. RED BANK REGISTER, JULY 10,192P.

chicken and all vegetables in season,. She lay In the gutter of the atreot Mallory, both of Bed Bank, were e being poisoned because he only r»UBUC NOTICE. upward* of an hour before she was married by Rev. R. F. Butler at tho Jj»d two other dogs left. An ordinance «ntitled "An OrtttniRM YEARS AGO IN RED BANK Mro. Skidmoro waa a daughter ol Providing for th« construction UDon Bor- Thomas and Mary Card of Navetlnk found. home of the bride's aunt, Mrs. Fboabe Mri. Ella I* Soden died of periton- ough property of an addition to tht prcMnt The couple had three children, Thorn- W. B. Hoenemann of Newark, a Richardson of Emanuel Court. itis at the home of her father, Cap- ffaraire, located on tha icyth ltd* of Oh«t« HAPPENINGS OF OLD IN AND former principal of the Red Bank A horse owned by W. H. Dennis of tain David A. Walling of Tinton nut street, in th« borough of Rtd Bank, a5».Skldmoro and Mrs. George Wall- tho total coit thereof not to exceed 12.600" ABOUND OUR HOME TOWN. ing of Atlantic Highlands and Ben- Oakland street achool, received a per- Little Silver and driven by his daugh- Falls, after a sickness of three weeks. w»* introduced by the Mayor iyid Coun- VanBlerck Junior jamin Skidmore, who lived In themanent appointment aa principal of ter Delia, ran away and threw Miss She was 23 years,old, cil of tha Borough of Bad Bank on Juna Incidents Culled From tho Register West. The couple had eleven grand- one of the Newark publlo schools. Dennis out of the wagon. She wa» Edward Haley, Jr., Infant son of17th nnd on July lit. U2Q, w«i finally badly cut and bruised. adopted and approved by tha Mayor. of the Second Week in July children and six great-grandchildren, . Miss Emily Peaxsall of Oceanic was Edward Holey of Lelghton avenue, A. JR. SH1NN. A four-cylinder four-cycle portable Twenty Years Ago, Thirty Years The grandchildren were Benjamin appointed teacher of the Green Grove Three dogs owned by Arthur E. died very suddenly of Infantile dis- CUV Skidmoro of1 Red Bank, John Skid- publio school. Smith of Fair Haven were poisoned. eases. Ago and Forty Years Ago. SHERIFF'S SALE. more of Little Silver, Edward Willis Miss Ella Johnson and James S. Mr.'Smith felt very bad about these (Continued on next page.) By virtue of a writ of fl. in, to ma di- Inboard Marine Motor. Forty Years Ago. George Walling, Mrs, Jamea Fowler rected, Uiued nut of ths Court of Chan- Fishing In the river was uncom- Mrs. Richard Byron, Myrtlo and Lily cery of the State of New J«r»ey, will be THE WORLD'S MOST EXQUISITE LIVING ANTIQUE BOXWOODS exposed to axle at public vendue, on 'Mon- Costs no more than a large outboard motor monly good. James Bunnell caught Walling nnd Thomas and Willis Skid- day, the fifteenth day of July, 1D2B, be- 180 perch with hook and line hear moro of Atlantic Highlands. AT LAST CAN BE SECURED AT A REASONABLE PRICE tween the hours of 12:00 o'clock and 6:00 b'eloek (at 3.-00 o'clock, daylight Bavins and half as much to operate. the Mansion house above Hubbard's John T. Hcndrlcksoh, who lived on time). In the afternoon of laid diy. at bridge In one tide. His mother went the turnpike between Middletown the Court Houie, in tht Borough of Free* Ashing with him and she caught 75 and Keyjiort, died of cancer of the hold, County of Monmouth. New J«ra«y, > See this motor at our factory. to latiify a decree of Bald court amounting perch. John B. Bergen and Dr. Ed- stomach, aged 63 years. He had been to approximately $23,575.00. win Field were tho best trout fisher- laid up three months, Mr. Hendrick- All that certain tract or parcel of land men of this season. Mr. Bcrgen's ssoc n left a wife and two children. He and premlaes, hereinafter particularly .de- biggest catch in one day was made scribed, Bitunte, lying and being in the ! was also survived by h.is father, who Borough of Red Bank, In the County of in Pine brook when he caught nine- lived at Matawan and who was 85 Monmouth und State of New Jeraey. Be- teen trout and Dr. Field's highest years old. The funeral was a very ginning at the point of Intersection of the catch in one day was made in Hock- large one and the bearers were John westerly lino of High atreet with the Van Blerck Motors, Inc. hockson brook when he caught sev- H. Wllloy, Benjamin Taylor, Gcrar- »outher|y line of East Front •treet; thenct (1) westerly along the southerly line of enteen. Benjamin Doughty of Fair dus C. Morris, Fitzroy Walling, Hen Eait Front street fifty feet to a point; Haven was the beat soft crabber thence (2) southerly at right angtea to RED BANK, N. J. ry Frost nnd Benjamin Griggs. Eait Front atreet, one hundred, forty-seven along the river and he caught an Mrs. Ellen Cavanaugh, v/ite of Mi- feet, more or less, to a point in line of average of thirty a day. Joseph chael Cavanaugh of Little Silver, died Undo of now or formerly WUHa A. Clay- Boskey and Will Soffel each caught a ton; thence (3) easterly at right anslea Works: Fair Haven. Phone Red Bank 1208. of peritonitis. She was-44 years old with the tecond courae herein, fifty feet to tring of 150 perch. Wcakflah nnd flat and had been sick only two days. Her a point In the westerly line of High street, fish were plentiful at Atlantic High- husband and five small children sur- at Clayton'a northeast corner; thence ii) lands and a couple of fishermen who vived her. She also left two sisters northerly along the we»t«rly lin« of High went off to sea from Atlantic High- r.nd two brothers, they being Mrs. • treet, one-hundred, forty-seven feet, more lands caught fifty blueflsh in one or leas, to the point or place of beginning. John Norman of Colt's Neck, Miss Five years ago we began bringing these century We have 5,000 feet of hedge in the English Dwarf Being tame premises described in deed tide. Sarah Flatley of Red Bank, Thomas old evergreens to New York selling them direct from variety which has been appraised as the most interest- made by Grace £. Traver and Arthur E, Flatley of Occanic-and John Flatley, the car and warehouse to the Estates, and during this ing and wonderful hedge in the entire South. T.ireo Traver, her husband, Frederick 0. Fiahar A number of insulting and indecent and Jennie E, fisher, hU wife, Charlea 1* anonymous letters were received by who lied in the West. time have placed more than nine thousand of them oh thousand feet of this has been placed on three differ- Fisher and Louis B. Fiiher. executors of oil can depend residents of Red Bank. One of the A concert was given at Grace Long Island, Westchester and New Jersey with not a ent Estates on Long Island and put together as Itthe Last Wilt and Testament of Elliabeth dissatisfied customer and only two replacements, which Marvin Fisher, deceiued, to • Arthur G. persons who received these letters church under the direction of Pfo- originally grew without any loss qr shock Whatever. GofT. dated August 10, 1926, and record- was Daniel H. Applegate, the post- j lcssor Harold K. Allstrom. About 25 is convincing evidence that they are prepared properly We have thousands ot th« small edgings for flower, ed fn tho Monmouth County Clerk'e Office on an master of Red Bank, and other let- people were present and the vocalists and sold at the lowest price owing to our method of and rose' garden borders at a price In the reach of all. in Book , page were Miss Adele Knapp, Miss Ger- handling them. Subject to rsBtrletlom contained fn tht ters were received by young married Will be glad to make an appointment to visit you deed last aforesaid. • women and girls, making charges trude Smith, Mia. Japhla Clayton, personally. Seized in the property of Arthur 0. Oboy grocer! against their characters. It was sup- Professor Allstrom, Fred Conklin, We carry In stock several hundred specimens from Golf, et at*., taken in execution at tha ault posed that all of the letters were George Cooper and W. Legrand How- March 1st to June 15th and August 15th to December of Warren H. Smock, trustee, and to be 15th of assorted sizes to meet most planting require- sold by The grocer who handles Oboy Bread has written by two or three persons but land, HARRY N, JOHNSON, Sheriff. their identity was never discovered. Mrs. Jennie Kirby was elected Po- ments. No plant Is too large or order too small but Royal Oak Boxwood Farms Dated June 13. 1020. a high standing in his community. His cahontas of Mnssabesio council- of that we can secure them In case we don't have them C. S. WasBum* Proprietor. Nursery, Marlon, Va. Wilson ft Smock, Solicitor!. Mrs. Janetta L. Patterson, mother In our New York stock. (64 lines) '122.81 products are the finest and purest that he of Arthur A. Patterson and. Mrs. Red Bank. Mrs. Maggie Hesslngcr N. Y. Offlte, 460 Eleventh Ave. Tel. Medallion 4323 can get. His choice of the bread he sells Amelia Spinning, who had recently was elected Wcnonah, Wallace Ben- died, left a will directing the disposi- nett Powhatan, Mrs. Elizabeth At- you is proof of that. tion of her silver and chinaware, her kinson chief of records and Mrs. The next time youVc in his store, ask him about furs and various household goods Laura P. Thorpe and Mrs. Clara Oboy. He'll tell you how immaculately clean it is — among her children and grandchil- Walsh collector and keeper of wam- that it contains only the most nutritious flour—how dren. The real estate was ordered pum. an exclusive system of baking gives it a tempting, divided In equal shares among her Assessor Albert L. Ivins of Red children, subject to the life right of Studebaker announces leasing flavor that's new. Then buy Bank was caught in the rain while oh a loaf and prove it to yourself. Serve her husband, Stllwell Patterson. his bicycle. He rode very fast in or- it sliced for dinner nnd toasted for Harry Payne of Red Bank took a der to get home before getting thor- breakfasl.Tbefamilywiir'entUun/1 party of young folks to the Highlands oughly wet. His bicycle slipped on on a Saturday excursion. Among his the wet road and he took a header. Oboy Country Club Sandu'icftei: Dutter guests were Miss Mattie Allen, Miss He was skinned and bruised on vari- •lice* of Oboy toaitt.. On each slice layy Annie Applegate, Mies Kittie Bussell, ous parts of his body. thihi n cuts of cookekdd eausaee . CCove r withh . • weli-»easonedtomatoaauce and sprinkle the Misses Allaire, John S. Applegate, A surprise visit was tendered a larger, Jiner witit h gracegrced cheesecheese . LaLyy a ststrip of baca o Jr.. George-K. Allen, and two young Thomas Maurer Worthley, son of on etch lattdu/icdihh an d bakbk e in ah hot o men from New York. During their until the btcon is crisp. John A. Worthley, Jr., of Front (Conrtwr O»ltn**tor stay at the Highlands one of the New street, in celebration of his four- Bread "York men fell overboard and was res- teenth birthday. The party was •lltWWWW«»««HWWIMIMWWHIIMIIMIWWet» cued by Harry Payne. planned by Flossie Phclps and Lulu Florenz Harrison Wise, aged four- Weybrccht. About 25 guests were teen years, son of Thomas Wisr, present. caught the biggest soft crab ever Amzi Fostcn, young son of Amzl known to have been taken in the M. Posten of Navesink, fell out of a Shrewsbury river. It measured 17 V- DICTATOR cherry tree and landed with his chin Notice toHors e Lovers Inches from the end of one claw to on the top of a picket. Fortunately the end of the othor and'it woighod the picket was rotten and broke off ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTEEN (115) INCH WHEELBASE ldVj ounces. nnd the boy escaped serious injury. . ' • _», • Now Standing For Service at Mrs. Rachel Ward, her son-in-law, l>ut his chin was sore for a fortnight- Joseph A. Keating, Elsie Keating, Ram Drum of Red Bank, who had aged three years, daughter of Mr.bcon crazy for many years and who Keating, and Kate Lawlor, a nurse used to march up and down the WOODLAND FARM girl, lost their Hve3 by their carry- streets of Red Bank beating a drum all being struck by a locomotive at and kneeling in the middle of tho at a lower price RED BANK, N. ! the Schanck Conover crossing near street and praying, was sent to the j Oceanport. insane asylum. I Jacob Frick took out a party in Harry Allaire, son of Dustan Al- his . The wind fell and the laire of Red Bank, was stunned by boat had to be left at Oceanic and lightning while at Highland Beach, the members in the party, comprising Young Allaire was leaning against a Jacob Frick, Will Soffel, Matthew pole when the pole was struck by Taylor and John Taylor, had to walk lightning and he was knocked In- home from Oceanic. sensible^ Henry Carroll's horse ran away John S. Applegate bought a lot on at the factory near the Southern railroad station the .south sido of Riverside avenue, while the wagon was loaded with nearly opposite his home. The lot beer in bottles and kegs. Before the waa 22x50 feet and extended from horse could be stopped a lot of bot- Riverside avenue to West Front 1UDBBAKEKS famous dictator Six, the finest dent in The New Dictator'Six, asI in• itsTompani6iTcaf,~ tles and a keg of beer had fallen out street. Mr. Applegate paid $600 for car ever built and sold at its price, now becomes a of the wagon. tho Int. S The Dictator Eight. Captain Leonard X.. Seclcy bought \,.Arthur Gardner, who lived in the still finer car—offered at a still lower price! a and started making regular Dorsetl building at the corner of Studebaker's unique One-Profit manufacture alone trips from Red Bank to New York, Monmouth street and Maple avenue, The whcelbasc has been increased to 115 inches. It permits such a car to be sold at a price lower than that carrying farmers' produce. The boat went fishing down tho river. He got got so little business that the work seasick and during his seasickness he is fleeter, lower—smarter in line and color—smoother of any Studebaker closed car in history. was abandoned at the end of four lost his false teeth overboard. weeks. Mrs. Deborah W. Edwards, wife in its supple power—than even its champion predeces- Come take the wheel of The New Dictator Six, A new boat club was organized in of John C. Edwards of Eatontown, the western part of Red Bank by dioti of n -tumor, aged 78 years. She sor, The Dictator which sped 5,000 miles in 4,751 min- or Eight. Whatever you drive now, you will be George Francis Wise, Edward Soffel. nnd her husband had celebrated their utes. Stndebaker performance, which holds every official impressed with The New Dictator's champion qual- Henry Denlse and Charles Beattie. A 5f>th wedding anniversary in the soiling course was laid out from previous JUly. stock car speed and endurance record, is strikingly evi- ity, at its low One-Profit price. Hubbard's bridge to River street. William H. Posten, Jr., of Atlantic Miss Sarah Elizabeth Glassey, Highlands bought a plot 100x100 feet Gems To Let r on Second avenue for $3,600. Two •>--\\< h.l"r of Thomas Glas.sey of Red US-inch wheelbase. has reached precisely correct tempera- Upholstered arm rests at each side of Chestnut Horse, 16.1 H. Age 5 Years. Bank, was married to Frank Flnklc, houses were on the lot and these son of Joseph W. Finkle, by Rev. N.houses had cost $6,500 a few years Oilfiller, gasoline filter and cranicase ture for highest operating efficiency. rear seat, which is 46 inches wide. A. MacNichol. previously. ventilating system insure maximum en- Timken taj>ered roller bearings in rear Miss Kittie Tlce, daughter of Mrs. A cow owned by Charles M. Patter- gine efficiency. Hardware of soft Butler finish, further A. C. Tice, formerly of Red Bank, son of Shrewsbury got a potato in Its axle, front and rear wheelsiand steering beautified by an etched design. was married at her mother's home at throat and choked to death. A few Lanchester vibration dambener. knuckles. Ocean Grove to Frank W. Dearing of days previously a cow and calf owned Rubber engine mountings. Double-drop frame of new compound Full-vision, full-ventilated bodies of New York. by Mr. Patterson were killed by a Fuel fiumfi insures constant, adequate flange design—far costlier but sturdier, steel over hardwood foundation—the A party of 35 friends visited Miss trolley cur. accepted fine car coacheraft. ! Ethel Patterson, daughter of Charles Mrs. Thomas Callahan of East Oce- flow of gasoline, regardless of speed or safer and permitting graceful lowness Patterson of Shrewsbury avenue, to anic was run into by a horse and grade. of body lines. " One-piece steel core safety steering help her celebrate her fourteenth wtigon and was knocked insensible. wheel. birthday. Thermostatically controlled cooling sys- Hydraulic shock absorbers, front and The pet dog of Frank Tompkina of tem retards flow of water Until motor rear. Fully adjustable steering wheel and Atlantic Highlands bit tho two-year- old child of a boarder at the Pa- front seat. vilion hotel and the dog was shot. Amplified-action 4-wheelbrakes which Christopher Hollywood of Red Bank, who did a big business in rais- stop The Dictator )n half the distance ing carrier pigeons, lost many of his accepted as standard. ! young birds from ravages of rats. ! Mrs. Mary Chambers of Brond Tontish-proof chromium plating of all j street dic-d of dropsy at the ago of 84 exterior brightwork. : years. She left a married daughter , who lived at Brooklyn. Coincidental lock to ignition and steer, j Dennis S. Bru3nahan, a wheel- ing assures Dictatorowners lowesttheft i wright of Eatontown, was married to insurance rates. I Miss Ella S. Curley of Marlboro by j Rev. J. K. Manning. ( Mrs. Annie Major of Rod Bank nnd Thel)ictatormaybedriven^Ow//«/i«r j Jules Levy, Jr., of Hartford, were hour the day it is delivered— the result | married at the bride's home by Rev. of advanced engineering, precision ; J, K. Manning. , workmanship and careful inspection. I Charles K. Champlln of Red Bank, Le Pierre of Tannvilie ; who afterward became a greal show • man, claimed to be Red Bank's cham- Brown Horse, 16.1 H. Age 7 Years. ' plon swimmer. j Ambrose Matthewi, Jr., of East Red Bank, was the first Red Banker MODELS AND PRICES These two fine thoroughbred stallions have to buy a safety bicycle with pneu- been placed here by the United States Army Ke- niatio tires. President Eight r » ' £1785 to $2575 mount Service in order to encourage the breed- Mrs. Mary L. McDermott was We know that you. will be Commander Eight V « 1495 to 1675 granted a divorce from her husband, more than pleased If you Commander Six » t « 1350 to, 1515 ing of better horses. James McDermott. The parties lived | call No. 801 nnd have our at Highlands. DcLuxe busses take care Dictator Eight t t t » 1185 to 1435 FEE Howard Bailey, son of John Bailey, ol that outing, picnic, etc. NEW DICTATOR REGAL SEDAN, Six wire wheels and luggage grid standard equip mint, $Tlt)J. DicUtorSix t , , , , 99510 1195 had a dozen friend» to help him cele- Courteous, careful chauf- S10 brate his eighth birthday. feurs and comfortable, easy DICTATOR SIX CIUB SEDAN,tfiojf. DICTATOR SIX FOUR-DOOR SEDAN, $iops- ErskineSix »»»»» 860 to 104.5 C. D. Borden and Rev. Thomas riding cars. DICTATOR SIX Court, ^ppj. Prices at tbi factory. Bumpers and spare tins extra. PRICES AT THE FACTORY At Time of Service. Hastings each built a very fine barn Lowest rates. on their properties at Rumson. FAEMERS may make arrangements for Allen Crook of Lppnnrdvilla dleo" of 125 Broad Street. Tune In "Studebaker Champions" Sunday Evening 0:16 Eastern Standard Time. Station WtAF and NBC Network appendicitis at the age of fifteen having either stallion meet them for breeding years. purposes at Lincroft, Holmdel or Freehold dur- A frea puhllo library and rcadlpg ing the months of April, May and June, by com- room was started at Atlantic High- lands municating with ITHOMAS H. MCKNIGHT Thirty Yean Ago* WOODLAND FARM Captain and Mrs. John H. Skid- 29 East Front Street, Red Bank. . TELEPHONE EED BANK 155S more celebrated tho fiftieth anniver- sary of their wedding at their home Phone 705 EDWARD FEAKES, Supt. at Navesink.' About 100 guests were at the celebration A big ciambake served, Wh|gi injlgded roast .1, -.,.,: RED BANK REGISTER, JULY 10,1929.

Pallce, took over the shop and engag- fishing boat, fell and sprained his AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA (HEMPTI SALE. YEARS AGO IN RED BANK ed t> New York barber to run the ankle. He was laid up upwards of By Tlits* ol s writ if t. fa. a week. U place. 2ry*of th*** ° * ** Miss Grace Bowman, granddaugh- Fred Herdon of Atlantic Highlands .ipoa^d to aala at ,uU. », Why U it so many ihrewcl buyer* order (Continued from laat page.) ter of Hiram Seeley of Belford, and was rescused from drowning while Farmers Attention! pay, tha t«atttya.e.ak_,» „ ,„,. hold. County of Monmouth, M«» Itttn. friends paid her a vlalt to celebrate •onage. Walter Spinning of Branch avenue to lati.f, . daaraa of aal< Caurt »«UrW her birthday. John McCarthy of Shrewsbury, who was knocked down by an automobile We have fifteen trucks and can give you .in» to apprenlraajtoly II.BIa.OJ. •*™~*^ J. V. Borden was elected a&chem of waa employed In John C. Aul's tailor driven by an Asbury Park man and All that certain lot, traat or airial tt the best service if you ship to New York or the n the Bed Bank lodge of. Red Men. shop at Red Bank, was badjp burned hia .shoulder blade was fractured. described}f?*.r£l , ".'?»[•.••situate. • fii!»" f. »rtl««Vly Other officers were George H. Lewi", on two fingers by fire crackers on John Snedeker of Eatontown sold Darwin Smith, and Jacob Bolllnger. the Fourth of July.; hie house and lot on Lewis street Wallabout Market. Monmouth and State of Naw'jtnay? ... Mra. J. Smith Conover of Atlantic Klnnlnt at A point In tha daughter Eleanor, Mr. and Mrs. Wil- pasture lands of Ocean and Monmouth Counties, liam Walters and their daughter Eliz- abeth, and Mr. and Mrs. VanNote and their son Reginald of Long it costs no more than ordinary milk. TRY Branch, and ot^ier relatives from 800,000 Ocean Grove. TiltonU Butter and Eggi, Chtelm, Dennis Leary of Sacramento, Cali- Buttermilk and Sour Cream. T/kwta fornia, who had left Lincroft forty Tilton's Grade "A" Pasteurized Milk-the milk superior dairy productsytM brought years before, paid his first visit to to you with' the same exacting car* JV&v CHEVROLET Sixes his old home after leaving that place st In 1869. Ho spent most of his time that makes little bodies strong and healthy, also as Tilton's Grade "A" Pasteurised with hla sisters, Mrs. Nora Man- Milk. To get them daily at your on the wad since Jan.1 ! ning and Mrs. Ellen Doren of Red home, order direct or through the Bank. He owned a fruit and veg- keeps grown bodies vigorous and robust. Drink it Tilton representative. etable farm of 200 acres in California. Today's Chevrolet Is scoring a huge nationwide Miss Rose Eiscnmann and William ? H. Bennett, both of Everett, were at every meal —it s the milk for all. success because it represents one of the most married by Rev. Garrett Wyckoff of sensational achievements in automotive history Holmdel. The couple had kept their wedding a secret but It was quickly —o Six in the price ranie of the four. found out by tho young folks of Ev- erett and vicinity who gathered to To have Tilton's Grade "A" Milk delivered to The Chevrolet six-cylinder engine delivers Its their house and gave the couple a calathumplah serenade. your home daily all year 'round, write or phone. power freely; quietly; and easily throughout Captain Asbury" F. Little of the the entire speed range—delightfully free from steamboat'Sea Bird on her trip from annoying vibration and rumble. Combined with Red Bank to New York picked up two men off Sandy Hook, who were this remarkable six-cylinder smoothness are clinging to tho bottom of an over- equally remarkable speed, power and accelera- turned canoe. Tho men had been drifting about a long time., before From Keyport to Barnegat tion—and an economy of better than.twenty they wero rcscuaed. miles to the iallon. Miss Susie May Simpson, daughter of John Simpson of Headden's Cor- ner, and Harold R. Goodchlld, o'on of In addition to such sensational performance Rev. Horace R. Goodchild of Middle- the Chevrolet Six offers the outstanding advan- town, wero married at the Belford tages of Bodies by Fisher. And no car ever Methodist parsonage and took up their homo in Red Bank. TILTON'S CITY DAIRIES provided a more Impressive array of modern The statement of tho financial con- convenience features}—adjustable driver's seat dition of the town was made and Asbury Park It waB shown that the town had Lakewood and W one-piece windshield in closed models,' spont $77,531.78 in the first six Red Bank easy action clutch and gear-shift, ball bearing months of 1009, as against $27,632.89 (24 Second Street 305 Second Avenue Broad Street steering, and Instrument panel complete even to spent during the first halt; of the XeL Lakewoed 82 lei. Red Bank 30 preceding year. Tel. A. P. 1677 theft-proof Electrolock and electric motor Dr. Russell G, Andrew of Naveslnk temperature indicator! died of paralysis after a very short sickness.- Ho was 69 years old and was the only physician at Naveslnk. Ho left a widow and one daughter, E$AD3TKR..'525 The COACH Mrs. Charles A. Mount of Locust Point. "•• Bttma Mlrnry 595 Frank Mount, son of Cornollue S. $ Mount of Maple avenue, sprained hla count. dnkle while playing baseball and George Conk of Front street sprained '675 595 his ankle-while running to get out Ml prteu /. o. b. /acton of the way of an automoble. Hint. WcUtm Richard K. Fox, who had bought Distributora Of several properties In the eastern part COMPARE the delivered price an well aa tbe Hat price In of Red Bank, bought additional coqafdarlng automobile values. Chevrolet'* delivered price* lands which made his total holdings Walker-Gordon Product Include only reasonable charges for delivery and financing. S3 acres. The land had cost him an average of $1,000 per acre. Wlllinm Casry, a conductor on tho Tilton's Dairies are also, Red Bank and Long Branch trolley, struck his. head against one of the distributors' in' this sec- Iron girders of tho troljey bridge near Shrewsbury and .a long gash tion of the state of tb.e was cut in his head. well known Walker- RED BANK MOTOR CO. 'Lester Conover, eon of Mrs. Wil- liam Conbver of Riverside avenue, Gordon Certified Milk Mechanic St and Globe Court Red Bank and Edward Coyne of Wallace street were both burned on the hands and for infants; AcidophiluB Telephone 1720 face by tho discharge of blank cart- ridge pistols. Milk and the other fa- Mrs. William Cook of Oceanic gave" birth to a tson weighing fourteen mous Walker - Gordon pounds, Martin Torran, the Holmdel barber, dairy products. I* closed his shop and moved to Fair OF; THR Haven, His brother-in-law, < Frmlt 3 end expects to bo gone months. Grosso, a Seagirt boy. need to two months in the il last week on a charge ? an automobile belonging >ther. race Emmons of lower i suffered a fracture 1 hip a few days ago. She was the Freehold hospital for

>ccupied house at Long vned by Isaac Fisher was fire early Friday morning, s estimated at $2,000. excelled flre company of ownship has taken inthlr- smbcrs, formerly members eeda fire company, township policemen have the township committee o their pay from $2,100 a ,500 a year. Jele Ely of Engllshtown : Wednesday fof Europe, aur England, Scotland and nination will noon be held Id to secure a postmaster lia, t Apparatus. ! committee of the Free- nigh, council has rccom- hat a combination hook r truck and pumping en- ought. The committee at- tended that Monmout'u ipany be combined with hook and ladder company Tiber of Commerce. ber of commerce has been REP SANK REGISTER, JULY 10,1929. Page Eleven FRED C. KEBN, BRIEF ITEMS OF NEWS. ,- .. . ARCHITECT, (Continued from lut page.) Monmouth Motor Haulage Co. .",)•• HAKOLD A. LAIUM, T. The wedding of Miss Mary , E. PIANO STUDIOS CafiMERCIAURT Madden, daughter of Patrick Mad- ./•™«' Sjreimd National Sana Bu|l4ln| '• Daily transportation between Asbury Park, Long den of Freehold, to George Martin, BROAD * WALLACE STS, RED BAN* Jr., of Neptune will be celebrated In (Hoonn la md 131 I'hon" n»0. , . ;sjiUDIp . Btudlni open marnlntfi. nerpt KrlOlyr. Branch Red Bank and Newark and New York. St. Hose of Lima church at Free- 'Km »100 to 12:00 o'clock. Ortan letiofia hold tomorrow afternoon at three can bf nrraniied bjr droiptcllv. pupils «•« o'clock. hava >c»i> Ui organ. Alio tnaeblni «i Light and heavy hauling. rt\s\ nnitera for eoncprt an*l_ radio work. .; _ On Long Cruise. FISCIIKH A CBOWELU George M. Brltton and Edward W^ LAW OFFICES, Phone Atlantic Highlands 246. CARLTONJHEATBLDG., Young of Keyport are on a two 89 BROAD STREET. RED BANK, N, »• •ROOMS, REODAMK- months' cruise on the ship Junior RICIIAIU) J. MABTIN, Annapolis, which was formerly a TITLE SEARCHING AND ABSTRACTS, submarine chaser. The cruise will ej Broad Slrcl. Phoita 435. take them through the Great Lakes. WILLIAM MATTHEWS, M.D.,— Jailed lor Blx Months. Eye. Ear, Noia nnd Throat. Offices In former Second Nation*) Beak Joseph Attardo, an Asbury Park Building. 858. A FACT FIVE YEARS AGO AND STILL-A-FACT TODAY barber, was sentenced to six months Residence phone 116. Omen hours: 0 :O0 to 11:00 A. M.: t :D0 U In the county Jail last week on a 9:00 P. M.. nnd by eoralntmint ut a c ear S Y e as 3rou n charge of deserting his wife and A A AV "^ °^ ' ^ ' ^ Chrysler ^ ' 3 t the motor car WILUAM A. HOPPING, child. He was fined $500 and costs. Real CataU Brokar, I / industry to the point Invariably reached in any industry of The $500 Is to bo given to his wife. » Linden Place. BED BANK, N, J, Public Parking- Space. QUINN, PARSONS & D0REMU3, cconom c Douglas Gariicl haa leased Rail- C0UNS1XLOBS AT LAW. Tree's A ' importance. + That Is the point where revolutionary road BQuare, a thoroughfare owned Whltfleld Bulldinz. Bid Bask. by the Central railroad at North Joho J. Qtilnn, Theodore D, Pareoni, Long Branch. Mr. Garrlel will op- 'I Thomm H._Dorfmoi ^ j7 S*-T\ Improvements and advancements begin to render the original erate an auto parking ground for ALSTON BEEKMAN, COUNSELLOR AT LAW. the convenience of bathers. Omcel. 10 Uroa.I at.. BED BANK, N. t. Invention obsolete—when previous practice is brought to afull stop. + That never Child Falls Twenty Feet GEORGE D. COOPER, Jesse Brand, Jr., our-year-old son CIVIL ENGINEER, of Jesae Brand of Long Branch, fell ElectnclCookeMisJmrelconvenient \\n Successor to George Cooper, C E. happens until the newest product provesjts right to precedence, by reason of greatly twenty feet from a railroad trestle Patterson Building. RED BANK. N. J. last week and landed on a concrete GEORGE K. ALLEN, Jr., C. E., and simplified design, greater efficiency and Operating results that are radically different" abutment. He suffered only a slight GEORGE F. RANDOLPH, C. Ei'. Aqcitwufe concussion of. the brain. I;IV1L ENGINEERS AND SUKVEY/OHa, Saturday Evening Pott _JSO_Broad_Strset. Red Jlank. N. J. Death Follows Operation. WALTER C VANK.EUREN, 'T NUy17,1924 George Skelding of Freehold died CIVIL ENGINEER AND 8UKVEVOR.' at the Spring Lake hospital last Broad Street National Bank BuiMlati Friday week of pneumonia follow- "I merely set the Rid BenkjW. J. ing an operation lor appendicitis. ! OR. HAROLD J. STOKES, He was 45 years old and waa a DENTAL SURGEON, S« Brparf Street, EUner BuUdin,, weaver at the rug mill. Electric /Timer and the Heat Control Rooma 4, 5 and 6. Office Eouca 9:00 to 6:00 o'clock. Borough Clerk Rewarded. Telephone 1501 ._• Miss Margaret D. Pyle, who has WILLIAM A- WIRTH, been borough clerk at Allenhurat for *'T NO longer need to be home hours before meal-time as I did before I OPTOMETRIST, WHAT CHRYSLER HAS DONE twelve years, was presented with a X got a Hotpoint Super-Automatic Range. Now, I prepare the dinner; Reglsttr UId«., Broad Str««t gold medal by the commissioners Pfaont 88, R.d B.nk Office tiaun: 9:00 to 6^0. last week in recognition of. her long Evening! by Appolntm«nL It is hard to recall the day when there public mind; By Easter, 1924, It had and faithful service. in the morning, place it in the oven and set the controls.? I always were no Chrysler cars; difficult to re- come to stand for leadership—a claim SHERIFF'S SALE. Sheriffs to Meet. have the perfect assurance that when we come home to dinner, the By virtue of n writ of fi. fa. to m« di- member a time when the flashing undenied to this day. rected, isnued out of the Court of Chan- The first annual convention of the lood will be cooked and ready to serve. cery of tlie Siate of New Jersey, will b* Chrysler wings had not yet appeared on exposed to aul« pt public vendue on Tuei* Fads come and go: Some motor cars New Jersey sheriffs' association will ( the world's highways. And yet, that was be held at Asbury Park August 2d day, th« twenty-third day of July, l j29, have their brief hour of popularity and ;*'And it will be better than when I had to fuss with it in a hot, stufiy b«tw«en the hours of J 2 00 o'clock Jtnd not so long ago—only fire years, in fact. then are forgotten. Chrysler's unprec- and 3d. John A. Butler, under sher- 5:00 o'clock (at 2 :l)0, o'clock, duylltht m»- iff of Monmouth county, is president Inu time), in the afternoon of snid day,'ftt Where it has taken the average automo- edented leap into a position in the van of the association. kitchen." th« Land und Murtt;aire Agfiicy OHlee, 701 of the industry was neither forced nor Mattiaon Hveniie. in the City of Aihury bile ten to twenty-five years of gradual, Boy Falls From Aiito. Park, County of Monmouth, New J«riey. accidental. That place was won by to satisfy a decree of Hjiid Court amount* plodding growth to achieve public Bruce, the five-year-old son of ins to npproslmatoly tlG.aSl.OO. acclaim, Chrysler has risen swiftly to a inherent worth and undeniable value; Harry D. Hance of 'Freehold, fell ALL thoae lul^, tracts or parcels, of foremost and topmost ~ place in the Today, Chrysler is firmly entrenched at from his father's automobile laet tnnd and premi^cn, hereinafter particular- week when he accldently opened the ly Oescribed, nituatr, lying and being in tft* industry In less than five short years! the top, offering the finest performance Borough of Higliluntb, in the County of in its history; A ride is a revelation;' door. A gash two inches long was M on mouth and State of New Jersey. cut In hie head. ' UEUINNING at n point in the northeast- What Chrysler has done is without erly till* of Bay avenue, where the asm* ptraUeL Overnight, a name became a CHRYSLER "75"-$15J5 to 11795-Blght Body Mount-Walters. , SUPER.AUTOMATIC lnWra«cta tha Buuthtasterly side of iae» Drift avenue anil from thence running (1) symbol of speed, quality, beauty and Styles. CHRYSLER "65"—$1040 to tlUi— Miss Sarah Mount, daughter of northeasterly, alunff the southeasterly sld* Mfetyi At Christmas, 192 3, the Six Body Styles. All prices /. o. b. factory. Harry P. Mount of Manalapan, and ELECTRIC of Sea Drift avenue, one hundred feet to Chrysler dealtrt extend convenient time paymentt. John Walters of Freehold were mar- Lot Number Four in Muck "L" on "Amend* Chrysler emblem meant nothing in the RANGES ed Map of Water Witch Development Com' •r — JT5 ried Tuesday of last week. Tho pany'a Property. Water Witch, New Jer- groom Is employed at the Freehold sey," thence (2) southeasterly, along th* rug mill. Mo«l»!iUI Awe-malic EI dcilrtd, alt. side of Lot Number Three nnd parallel with of M. Hecht's property at Freehold Range, ilirouth cooling. the first course, one hundred feet to tha CHRYSLER last Friday morning. Two automo- northeasterly sid« of said Bay. avenue, tS)\ CH*y*LII MOT'OII PIOOOCT thence (4)- northwesterly along said Bay biles owned by Mr. Hecht and furni- I avenue, forty-sewn feet to the Beginning. ture and fixtures were also con- I BEING all of Lots Numbers One nnd sumed. j Two in Block "L" on the "Amended May jot Water Witch Development Company** Boy Dins After Operation. JE5.SEFCENTRAL I Property, Water Witch," nfore-aid. Lester C. Cranshaw, twelve-year- ANDY'S GARAGE Selied as the property of Mlchele Tim- old son of Lester Cranshaw of Mat- Powervand Light, Co. pano et als.. taken in execution «t the tull Corner Maple Ave. and W. Front St., Red Bank, N. J. &wan, died at the Long Branch hos- of Edward Benkert und Ida Benkert, hi* pital last Thursday week following wife, and to be sold by HARRY N. JOHNSON, Sheriff. Phone Red Bank 2124. an operation for the removal of his Dated June 24, 1026. tonsils. Edwin P. Longstreet, Solicitor. 45-53 Broadway, Tel. Long Branch 204 Boy's Leg Broken; Give Luke Longhead the Job of Supplying Your Wants. (51 1.) V21.4S Michael F.Ico of Deal, six years It pays to advertise, in The Register, old, was struck by an automobll while crossing a street last Wednei day. He suffered a broken leg and •was taken to the Long Branch hos- pital -v New Fire Truck, Spring Lake Heights borough has received its new American-La France fire engine. A carnival will be held the latter part of this month to help pay for the apparatus. Found Large Pearl. Franklin E. Bennett, an Asbury Park fish dealer, found a large pearl In a hard clam last week. Values ranging from $1,000 to $2,000 were set on the pearl by Jewelers. Kicked by Home. Artomas Burdgo of West Farms was kicked on tho chin by a horse while working on the Grossman farm last week. Two stitches were required to close the wound. New Bank Director. G. Roland Moore, a civil engineer WHAT YOU GET at Manasquan, has been elected a director of the bank at that place to fill the vacancy caused by the death Is Even More Important of Dr. Clarence A. .Non-ls. To Build at Freehold. Than What You Paq Frank E. Jones, who recently sold his farm near Freehold, has bought a lot on the Clayton development at Freehold and will build a house on Kfotorearvalue Isn't determined hy tvhat beauty, comfort, and performances It for his^ own occupancy. you pay for your car ... it's what you get Oldamobile la powered by a big 62-horse» in return (or your money that'* power high-compression engine 'which Death from Pneumonia. important. delivers speed to fulfill every desire, re- Clarence Hulse, formerly of Glen- markably swift acceleration, and power to That'* why thousands of motorists are dola, died Thursday at the state hos- carry out the heaviest: assignment. In pital at Trenton of pneumonia. He turning to Oldsmobile from all price addition to fine performance, Oldsmobilo groups—both above and below Oldsmc was 43 years old and la survived by provides the style and comfort advantages his mother and one son. bfle'e price range. of Bodies by Fisher, with spacioy* inte- Those who have owned lower-priced car* riors, deep-cushioned seats, and luxurious Death of Child. .gain, in Oldsmobile, performance, luxury, upholsteries and appointments. Further, Muriel Applegate, seven-year-old *tnd riding qualities which far butweigh Oldsmobile'e standard equipment include* daughter of Harry Applegate. of jthe (light additional cost. such item* as four Lovejoy hydraulic Spring Lake Heights, died Sunday of { {Those who have been accustomed to more shock absorbers, fall-length vertical radi- last week at tho Spring Lake hos- •expensive cara find that Oldsmobile gives ator shutters, and gasoline and tempera*; pital of blood poisoning. them all the fine car advantages they ture gauges on the dash. Investigate Oldsmobile yourself—remem- In Training Camp. demand—and at decided aavinga in both Raymond Finegold and Nathan criminal cost and operating expense. bering that what you get is even more important than/what you pay. Drive an Flnklesteln of Freehold are at the /Those who have been driving cars in Oldimobile Six and compare it, point by officers,1 training camp atPlattsburg, rOldsmobiln's price field discover that the point, with cara of all prices. Judged by New Tork. Both are students in name amount of money invested in Olda* dollar-tfor-doUar value, you won't find a the Freehold high school. Come see the beauty and variety which Essex offers at no extra cost In mobile bays a far more satisfactory auto- more profitable investment than Oldamo-. mobile—froth the standpoint of day-in- bile—the fine car of low price. Invent* Airship. •nd'dayout dependability as well as in Hugh J. Roes, a Cllffwood colored every other way open to proof Essex has proved its right to dare. It chal- man, has applied for a patent on an airship which he has constructed. It lenges the performance, the style, the luxurious comfort of any car at any! TWO DOOR SEDAN Consider tha la one of the lightest types of air- Delivered Prie* ships yet made. price. No other gives you back so much for every dollar you put inJ pr.ce t* w*U m the I Buys Apartment House. price when conpariiig . The VIKING automobile valuci, Charles B. VanClcaf has bought an * '^Ss new 90*Ua-nee VJ « Eight ae raedfara $875 apartment house on Sunset avenue A big, adult-size "Six". Fine wheel brakes, radiator shutters A Wide Choice of Dolor ptv *^M btlflc in the Old* factories, by OUuDoblU t. o. b. factory, ta«fn« price, include only n*. at that place from the Sixth avenue crat. -

S-W-i^ RED BANK REGISTER/JULY IP,'1929.

BODY FOUND IN SUBF. Police Believe Woman Found at Deal Committed Suicide. The body of a woman whoso name! •was Johanna Cordts but whose home address Is not known was found at Deal last week. In a aummer house a few hundred feet from where the body was brought ashore the police found the woman's coat and hat. Thu woman's name was on a card in her I pocketbook. Police at first thought | the woman had drowned but this ASBURY PARK "THE HOUSE OP HITS" theory was discarded when Dr. Har- vey W. Hartman, county physician. | XHKEE FBRFOBMANCES DAILY-2:30. 0:40. 9:00. SATURDAYS & HOLIDATS CONTINUOUS. after an examination stated that the; woman had a fractured skull. It is EAST FRONT STREET, TELEPHONE SI. RED BANK. thought she went in the water to end her life but died of shock before Evening much water had entered her lung.-.

LAST TIMES TODAY! WOMAN THIEF ARRESTED. . Wraps Identified by Asbury Park Woman ! ... Protection Again Who Lost Fur Coat. ,1 Cool Sea Breezes William Haines ™ "A MAN'S MAN" The New York police last week ar- j — * ^ ____^^__„_ rested a woman known as Margaret | Stelke on a charge of committing ! I OFFICIAL MOTION PICT0BES several robberies in wealthy Brook- $15.95 to $29.50 lyn homes. After her arrest a large quantity of clothing was found store.! Immense squares of in her New York apartment. Mrs. Victor Levine of Asbury Park Jden- transparent summer vel- tided the woman as one who was em- vet and chiffon, or of Schmelling-Paulino ployed by her for about a week-ami when she left Mrs. Levine missed a brocade and chiffon. .A INTERNATIONAL HEAVYWEIGHT BOXING CONTEST. mink coat valued at several thous- particularly stunning de-, and dollars and a silk dress. sign in magenta and sil- COLT'S NECK NEWS. ver; another, with very V A U DEVI L. L. E feminine bow at the The Reformed Sunday-School to Have a Flcnlc Tomorrow. throat, of burnt orange The members of the Sunday-school transparent velvet. Oth- THURS., FRI., SAT., JULY 11th, 12th, 13th of the Reformed church will have ers in mauve, black and their annual picnic at Clark's Land- silver, etc. •irjR tomorrow. They will meet at 'thc church at half-past eight o'clock .'. in the morning to make the trip in Bteinbachs—First Flooi ! automobiles. GLENN TRYON F.ev. J. A. Thomson preached the sermon at the funeral of Mrs. Rob- .' The Star of Broadway in His Latest and Greatest Picture ! ert Hankins of Fair View last week. .•••. Mr. Thomson was formerly pastor of the Reformed church of Middletown village and Mrs. Hankins was a mem- ber of that church. Frank Hyatt has a new automo- bile. Walter Conover Is the first farmer in this locality to dig potatoes. He sold ten barrels of potatoes for $50 last weeft. Everything indicates that the early potato crop will be small anil prospects are not very favorable for a big late crop. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas McGulre and their daughter of Newark, Mrs. Al- bert Hagerman of Brooklyn, Mrs, After-Six Gowns Catherine Parker of Freehold and Mr. and Mrs. Harvey "Willis of Red Bank were guests of Mrs. Asher Crawford part of last week, i Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Sullivan of Chicago aro spending a month with for the Chic Feminine Resorteer He's a knockout- for laughs! ! Mr. Sullivan's mother, Mra. Daniel s Who? Why, the boy who ; Sullivan. invented the automoboat and \ Thomas Pellow of Seabrlght has swept the capitalist's daugh- I moved to the former Heyer sawmill property which he bought a short Are Of Smart Silk Moires, Of Point d'Esprit, ter oil her feet. II? s the -time.-ago. He expects to sell the house "smartest, slickest, funniest | which he now occupies and to build character you ever saw—In i a house near the mill pond. Of Taffeta And Silk Net, Or Of Panne Velvet one of the snappiest, speed- j There will not be many wild black- berries in this section. The berries Sun-Back iest comedies' ever filmed. were virtually cooked on the bushes SEE IT. ; during the recent hoi* dry spell. I Miss Elsie Birman of New York is Lingerie spending the summer with her aunt, $29.50 to $75.00 iirs.' Louis Plotkin. as well as its informal hours on #sands and courts and links. $2.95 to $5.95 i tii'ul in this section. Many have been run over and killed by automobiles. Truck" farmers in this locality are For this former occasions, the Fashion Salon shows a stunning elec- With sun-cut dresses for. ;.ouraged because of the low prices tric blue gown of panne velvet.. .a host of clever bouffant frocks of taf- daytime and the tradi- id for early produce. tional evening decollet- .'fi-3. George Decher entertained a feta and silk net in fairylike pastel shades. ..exquisite gowns of point _-o number of relatives andfrrlends age, one finds this new _:u Newark over the Fourth and d'sprit, of lace and of moire. • type of lingerie nothing "A clever .•.i-.day. The heavy thunder shower last short of imperative! comedy Thursday made gullies in many fields Each gown has been chosen for its lines...characterizing important Vests, chemises and .ir.d ioad3 and did considerable dam-I starring a a?'! to crops k j fashion trends of the season...for its sterling fabric and its feminine costume slips at Stein- clever William Matthews's logi^ cabin cHarm. * bachs are of crepe de south of the village was in laree'use comedian" for picnics over the Fourth yffl the chine, glove silk or "sil- week-end. All of these partles%ere Women's And Misses' Sizes ver sand." A Universal Picture held by strangers. The asparagus season has endel Nearly all the farmers have "plowi StelnbachE—FASHION SALON—Second Floor Stelnbachs—First Floor ; off" their crops. . If Final Chapter—"THE SCARLET ARROW" The Colt's Neck gun club Is grow-S ing inmembership. It now has more' than forty members, No date has yet been fixed for the annual harvest home of the Re- ( A U D E V I L, L, E formed church, but it is probable • that it will be held early in August. : Junior Misses And Small Women MON., TUES., WED., JULY 14th, 15th, 16th RIVER PLAZA NEWS. Choose These The Firemen Save an Automobile ATTRACTION EXTRAORDINARY ! From Destruction by Fire. An automobile owned by a stran- Martin Johnson African Expedition present ger caught fire on Hubbard's bridge last Friday afternoon. The firemen Frocks were called out and they quickly ex- tinguished the blaze. The damage most Ihviiling Qctim&er JUmed)/ was slight. For Sports — _ _. ' 1 ^9 The 500 club did not meet last week on account of Thursday being For Teatime the Fourth. The club will' meet Thursday afternoon of next week at I For Informal the home of Mrs. Irving Rink of Red | m Bank, formerly of River Plaza. Evenings Mrs. E. K. Conover and Miss Edna MARTIN Conover of Liiurolton, Long Island, spent the week-end with Mrs. A. H. JOHNSON'S Sutphln. The visitors moved a short time ago to Laurelton from Denver. $16.50 African Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Kraft have Summer Footwear itbnr moved from Red Bank to the'housc on Manning street which is owntcl by the Monmouth lunmber company. to $19.50 Dr. and Mrs. Manuel Roblnso*:. spent part of last week with Mr.-. Of Colored Kid Robinson's parents, Mr. and Mi- i It's a varied and versatile col- Robbins of Troy. They made the tri, in Dr. Robinson's new automobile. lection of- frocks. ..some bright Miss Esther Decker sailed for Of Colored Linen in summer's high shades, some Europe last week. She will meet ;• girl friend In France and a tour will classically white, some smart in be made of that country and Ger- their printed effects ; . . these many. ' Of Woven Colored Leather Mrs. O'Mara and her daughtei, latter are usually the ensembles. Mrs. Rosers, of Jersey City apent A chiffon frock, for instance, the Fourth with Mr. and Mir,. Marckstein. Mr. and Mrs. Marckstein $6.00 to $16.00 with a transparent velvet are now on nn automobile trip In jacket, i tt scene you will the Pocono mountains and other parts of Pennsylvania. never" I. Harold Wood is having an ad- Perfectly charming shoes! . . k Enchanting in pastel Sleeveless styles with huge col- dltlon built to his house near Quig- blue or green linen, embroidered with a pastel touch of lars are featured. So are pic- ley's creek. A number of telephones In this color. A new" hand painted crepe de chine slipper in turesque little organdie models. PRODUCED UNDEB THE AUSPICES OP THE AMERICAN MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTOHT. locality wX. t&fi Ti&WAtefi ftll RED BANK TER limed Wwklr, Enttnd uf BuosA-OlaM lUttw »« tha Port- VOLUME LII, NO. 2. sOoa tt Bad Bank, N. J, cndti tkt Act of Vlanh », 1I1». RED BANK, N. J., .WEDNESDAY, JULY 10,1929.' $1.50 PER YEAR PAGES 13 TO 24

"barrel roll," When he landed he ly all the concession proprietors real- A SCRAP ON A BUS. BIG EVENT FOR AVIATORS. waa cheered by the crowds, Thaized a profit. stunt contest lasted about an hour Many of the visiting pilots stayed FLORISTS' CLUB MEETS. SIX BARNS ARE BURNED, Two Passengers "Mixed it Dp" With- CLEARED $90Q AT A FAIR. A GREAT BOXING SHOW. and the spectators were treated to at Red Bank while the meet was out Hurting Each Other Much. MORE THAN 80,000 ATTENDED in progress. A GATHERING LAST INGHT AT BIG FIRE ON BRODEBSON ES- UNION FDBEMEN TO USE MONEY FAST BOUTS ON THE BASEBALL all kinds of stunts. A scrap took place on the Red FOUR-DAY ABB MEET. Erio Wood In Rolland Chilton'8 The Red Bank air races organi- MOIXY PITCHES HOTEL, TATE AT SHREWSBURY. Bank-Rumson bus last night while FOB YEARLY EXPENSES. FIELD LAST NIGHT. Waco was second In tho stunt con- zation will hold a two-day air meet tho bus was bound for Red Bank. Only One Accident to a Plane and test. It was the flrBt time he had and circus at the Red Bank airport Tho Club Will Have Large Displays Fifty-Six Valuable Saddle and Polo Tho principals were William F. The Fair Ended Last Thursday Night The Westslde Firemen Did Not Hake No One Injured—Receipt* at the flown Chllton's plane. Capt, Rogers next year, at the Red Bank and Asbury Fark Ponies In the Stables But All But Lyons, a colored man of Fair Haven, —Firemen's Parade a Feature—A Any Profit, But They Expect to ' Field Amounted to About $1,500— of Virginia with a service Curtioa Showsr-John I. Sickles of Nave- Two Wore Saved—Nearest Hydrant and William F. Atwell of Seabright. Tent Booth, Destroyed by Flre Hold Moro Such Affairs Soon- Another Meet Next Year. Hawk was third. Capt. Rogers was TROUBLE FOB STOBEILEEFER. slnk a New Member. 2,300 Feet Distant. Friday, Crowd Well Satisfied. tho only sorvlce pilot In the con- Atwell is a white man and a native The four-day air meet, sponsored test. Ho talked to the crowds Concern Went Bankrupt After B«d John I. Sickles of Naveslnk Joined Six large horse barns, a feed house of the South. Union fire company realized about About 800 persons attended tho by tha Red Bank aero club, which through tho loudspeakers afterward Bank Man Sent a Chock for $400. the Monmouth county florists' club and a Bhed on Christian Broderson's Lyons got on the bus" at Fair Ha- $900 at its annual fair, which ended boxing bouts at Red Bank last nlgbt marked the official opening of the arid, said tho exhibition .of Mr. Lund- last night at a meeting at the Molly property on Sycamore avenue at ven. The bus was fairly well crowd- Thursday night. The fair was well for the benefit of Wostslde flre com- Red Bank airport, was ono of tho was ono of tho finest he had ever Ralph B. Tomalne, a storekeeper on Pitcher hotel and John Plum of Shrewsbury were burned to thed and Lyons asked Atwell to move attended and it waa a success from pany. Financially It waa not a profi- biggest and' most successful under- seen. Walter Shaffer In a Pitcalrn Shrewsbury avenue at Red Bank, had Deal was proposed for membership, ground Wednesday afternoon by a over and make room for him tp many standpoints. A fruit dish, do- table venture for the firemen, but taklngs&vim a social standpoint ever plane and Llndbarger In a new an unfortunate experience a few daya Tho club was formed a shcrt time firo of unknown origin. The firesit down. Atwell refused to donated by Reussllles' Jewelry store, on tho other hand they lost DO held at' Red Bank. From the finan- Standard transport plane also took ago. He ordered some fixtures for ago by retail and wholesale florists started In the hay loft of the tower so and an argument took place, was won by Mrs. Sybillah W. Pai- money. Tho receipts about equalled cial side the meet was not as success- part in tho contest and made a very hla store from a Boston concern and of Monmouth county to pro-note barn, so named because a large tower which ended In a scrimmage. When mentler of Westside avenue. Mrs. the expenses and the firemen are sat- ful as was expected. Tho money creditable showing. The transport he sent a check for $400 to the con- better fellowship and co-operation was on its roof. William H. Foales tho bus stopped at Red Bank At- Sarah E. Ivlns of Westslde avenue isfied with the result The boxing raised on contributors' certificates plane was the largest of the fleet of corn. A few days later he was noti- among them. Frank Dean of little leased the property and he conduct- well beckoned to Policeman Louis donated a handmade quilt,'which was show waa put on to introduce this was $3,700 and the money taken In stunters. fied that the company had gone bank- Sliver is, president ed riding stables and boarded polo Hcndrlcks and asked that Lyons be won by Edward Denise. A firemen'skind of sport at Red Bank, and it at the airport during the meet was rupt and that the fixtures would not The club will have large floral dis- ponies and saddle horses. Fifty-six arrested. Lyons was taken to the parade was held in. connection with la planned to hold n series of auch about $4,500, this being. S6.500 less Miss Amelia Earhart, who flew be sent to him. A receiver has been plays at the annual flower shows of of these horses were In the stables town hall, and a summons was the fair and Oakhurst flre company affairs during the summer. The fire- than was anticipated. • The amounts across the Atlantic ocean, and Elea- appointed and when the affairs of the Monmouth county and Elberon when the fire broke out. All the served on him to appear before Re- won a prize of $20 for the flrei com- men, when they talked things over awarded In prize money and the ex- nor Smith, seventeen years old, hold- the concern are settled Mr. Tomalne horticultural societies. The Mon- horses but two were released and corder William J. Poulson today. pany outside of Red Bank having last night, thought that they; did penses for advertising, printing, er of the women's endurance record, •will receive part of his money back mouth county show will be held at driven from the burning buildings Who struck the first blow Is a mat- the most men In line. Independent mighty well to break even,' and grand stands, labor, etc., were great. attended the meet Thursday after- on the same percentage basis at the the Red Bank armory in Ocrober Laddie, a saddle horse owned by ter of dispute. Lyons says that At- and Relief fire companies of Red they bestowed much praise oh H*r- It was provided that the subscribers noon. Tho son of Mayor William other creditors. and the Elberon exhibition will be Mrs. Charles S. McVeigh of Rumson well did and Atwell says that he did Bank had the Bamo number of men ry Feeney and his assistants who would share the profits and losses Thompson of Chicago was also a at the new Aabury Park casino the would not leave its stall, and it was not strike Lyons at all. Last night in line and they split a prize of 510 managed the matches. later burned to death. Lipstick, one equally, but the actual expenses and spectator. early part of August Russell Hodg- Atwell had a lump on his jaw where for the Red Bank company having Tho fights took place on Hunter's actual income has not yet been com Tho spot landing contest was won kiss is chairman of the club'ii exhi- of Herbert Franklin's string of polo he had been hit by Lyons. the most uniformed firemen in the ponies, lost its life when it became baseball field on the Newman Spring! pletely figured out. by Clarke Smith of Now York. He PUBLIC DOCK PROJECT. bition committee and his assistants parade. road. Powerful lights wera directly brought his plane to a stop in eleven are Mrs. Margaret Todd and An frightened after being turned loose More than 30,000 persons attended and ran back into the burning build- Henry Hlgglns was chairman of over the ring and the spectators,'lil- the meet, Sixty airplanes were at feet. Orvlllo L. Stevens was second MATTER DISCUSSED BY "AIB thony DeFaslo, both of Long Branch. the fair committee and he was as- ting In the darkness, saw every with 45 feet and Clyde E. Pangborn Alan D. Field of Eatontown and ing. Harry I. Caesaf, who kept his AMBULANCE DEDICATION. the alrpo»i'2*m' July 4th and on no polo ponies in Mr. Foales's barn, lost sisted by nearly all the company's move of tho battlers. George W«ltt day were/there leas than 35 ships on third with fifty feet. HAVEN OFFICIALS. Mies Rebecca Ralston and John firemen and the ladies' auxiliary. The of Long Branch acted as referee of There wero four contestants In the Koster of Asbury Park. several hundred dollars' worth of the fleld^ .The Standard Oil, Texas, eQuipment. Tack, owned by Mr. MANY ATTENDED CEREMONY fair is the Union firemen's only large some of the bouts and Eugene and Tide Water oil companies had parachute jumping contest. Although Borough Loses Fight for ClaRslfled source of income and the profits will Romaine of Paterson acted In this airplanes at tho airport during the the object of the jumpers waa to aim Postofflce Station, But Will En- Charles Schneider, proprietor of Foales and other men who boarded OF EATONTOWN CORPS. be used to defray the yearly ex- deavor to Get Delivery Service— the Floralhurst flower shop at Red horses on the property, was saved by capacity for tho other matches, htfr meet The Standard Oil company's for a certain spot In the field, all Bank, suggested that the memberB penses. ter Davis was the announcer. Every ship was a Lockheed Vega, a hlgh- landed outside of the field due to the Other Fubllo Matters. the Shrewsbury firemen. The build- The Members Collected Sunday Af- On Friday one of the tent booths Join in buying stock and materials ings were more than sixty years old ternoon—Monroe Eisner of Red bout was fast and the devotees of wlng monoplano with a wasp motor. strong wind. Tho conteBt was de- A discussion was held at last needed for their businesses. He Bald was destroyed by fire. The tent waa flstlana declared that they got moi-o The Texas company's piano was a layed until nearly dark In hopes that They were built in the early days of Bank Presented an Expensive First used as the candy booth, but it was night's meeting of the Fair Ilaven they could, buy necessary commodi- Monmouth Park. Aid Kit to the Corps. than their money's worth. Th» Curtlss Robin- and tho Tide Water, tho thirty-mile wind blowing across council regarding a publio dock. ties In larger amounts and receive empty when the flre occurred. The opinion was generally expressed that company's machine was a Challen- the field would subside. At 2,000 feet Mayor Ferd Salmon stated that Li- a larger discount than by buying The (Ire broke out shortly before More than 100 persons attended tents used at tho fair were rented if tho Wc3tDido boys keep on it&g- ger with a Curtlss O. X.-5 motor. tho wind was blowing fifty miles an onel O. Lancaster of S. S. Thompson IndivlduallyJ Ho said the stock and one o'clock. The alarm for ththee dedication of the new ambulance from the James Bell company of ing high class matches of this kind The Russell Lobo pa'rachuto com- hour. & Co. has offered to draw plans for materl8cla~~^ould be ~ bought under Shrewsbury firemen was given by of the Eatontown volunteer am- Newark. there will be a big Increase in the pany of New York was tho only par- John Marchewks of Mitchell field, a dock without charge. All the the club's name. If this plan were Policeman Otto Herden. When the bulance corps Sunday afternoon un- A ten-dollar gold piece will be dis- attendance. achute company to have a plane at der a grove of shade tree3 on E. C. posed of on the co-operative plan at the field during the races. Long Island, came nearest the desig- councilman expressed their approval carried out, a fund could be created firemen reached the burning building Tho principal fight was between nated area and he was declared the of the project and Mr. Lancaster by tho members to make the club's the tower barn was almosf destroyed Waters's property. Charles Breess the flre company's next meeting. Mlko Frantz of Freehold and Eddie Governor Morgan F. Larson and winner. Ho gave tho crowd a thrill will be Instructed to go ahead with credit stronger and bigger. Mr. and five minutes after they arrived prealdent of the corps was master of Marks of Perth Amboy. The Perth ! his secretary, Georgo Hanson, were as ho failed to open his chute until ithe plans. At present the borough Schneider "was appointed chairman the tower and roof fell. A southwest ceremonies. Tho invocation was giv- Amboy boy Is the more clever box- distinguished guosts Saturday after- ho was about 500 feet from the has no publio dock. of a committee to Investlgata the wind carried the flames to the other en by Rev. S. H. Williams, pastor of er, but Frantz "packs a stronger noon. The governor praised tho ground. One jumper landed in a treo, The borough has lost Its fight fcr project and other committee mem buildings, which were soon in a fiercethe Eatontown Methodist Zion MURDERED IN BROOKLYN. wallop." Frantz hod the test of'tlio Red Bank aero club for the way In and was slightly hurt. Tho other a classified postofflce station. A bers are William Mears of BuniEon, blaze. The buildings were away back church. Other, speakers were Rev. battle until the sixth round, when he which they had conducted tho meet Jumpers besides the winner were telegram from Congressman Harold Peter Peterson of Asbury Park, Fred in a field and the nearest fire hy- John J. MeEsler, Rev. Leroy Y. Dil- LITTLE SILVER MAN VICTIM OF withered beneath some mighty blows and he said the Red Bank airport James Pierson, Erlo Ropert and G. Hoffman stated that the applica- Hanson of Belmar and D. J. Per- drant was about 2,300 feet distant. lener and Mayor Leslie D. Seeley of that Marks got In on him. The fight was one of the best he had seen. "Chick" Hennessey. tion had been refused by the post- kins, a greenhouse Raleamrm from The Shrewsbury firemen did not Eatontown, Rev. C. M. Crammer of A MANIAC. was stopped in this round. Frajitei The cups and prizes on Saturday Irvlngton. Oceanport, Rev. Frank H. Shermer was virtually knocked out on W« I were presented by the governor. A 25-mllo light plane race for office department, but tbat efforts have sufficient hose to reach from the of Atlantic Highlands, acting pastor Henry Jackie, Aged 63 Years, Found grand prize of- $250 and a silver cup will be made to obtain village deliv- The club will hold a picnic next hydrant to the fire. The Littlo Sli- feet; but he was too game to quit; Other distinguished guests were of the Eatontown Advent church; E. Dead on a Brooklyn Street Last and the referee had to put an end i Grover Loenlng of New York, vice and second and third prizes of $150 ery service, which means carrier fall and William Mear8 wan appoint- ver and Eatontown • flre companies Donald Sterner and J. Newton Wil- Saturday—Another Man Was and $75 respectively was tho first service from the Fair Haven post- ed to head the arrangements com and Relief company from Red Bank to the battle. He declared Markil president of the Keystone-Loening liams, both of Belmar; Captain Wil- Found Unconscious Nearby. the victor. The Perth Amboy boy'is J airplane corporation; and Sanford event on Friday's program. The office. mittee. Many members will attend were called. The Shrewsbury fire- liam G. Kieb from the national Red other events wero a conBolation race An ordinance for sidewalks on a clambake Tuesday, AuguBt 6th, men flooded the roof and sides of the Henry Jackie of Little Silver was well known at Red Bank and hewM,' Saltus, vice president of thn Luding- Cross headquarters at Washington roundly cheered when ha won. ton-Phlladelphla flying service. Mr. for small planes, an altitude race and both sides of Clay street, between. at the Green Gables hotel at pleas- house with chemicals and this pro- and Edward Hopkins, captain of the murdered last Saturday at Brooklyn. Loenlng presented tho cups anda parachute jumping contest. About Pearl and DeNormandle avenues, ure Bay. The bake Is being held by tected (he house until the other fire- Keyport first aid squad. Mr. Wil- His body was found on a street at Al Mazzucca of Red Bank- asd-j prizes Wednesday, afternoon. 2,000 persons visited tho airport dur- was passed on Its first reading and the North Jersey floriBts' association. men came. When the other com- liams is chairman and Mr. Hopldns Brooklyn by a policeman. Near this John DeFelice of Cllffwood fought 1 ing tho day and more than fifty n publio hearing will bo hold July The next meeting of the club will panies came hose was laid to the is assistant chairman of the Red spot was found another man beaten hot six-round go. Mazzucca la rathe William E. Wlnklo, president of planes wore on the field at one time, barn and the flames were kept from into unconsciousness. The Brooklyn slender. He has long, wavy hair > tho Erunncr-Wlnklo aircraft com- 23d. be held at Freehold In August. The Cross life saving and first aid or- i William McDonough of New York Harry Y. Smith of Harrison ave- arrangements for the meeting will spreading to the house. The flre was ganization in Monmouth county. Cap-' police believe that both men were he looks like a poet, but ba r pany of Forest Hills, Long Island, In a Gypsy Moth plane won the first not completely out until nine o'clock victims of "The Grlnner," a maniac can fight/as he showed lut nil won the opening contest of the meet, nue was reappolnted constable for be made by a committee, of which tain Kieb gave tho principal address raco and Jack Curtis In anothor Gyp- three yearn. Mr. Schneider Is chairman. at night. Several firemen were al- and he commended the ambulance who terrorized the WUHamsburg sec- In his battle with his jj a 25-mlle r*ace for standard open sy Moth was second. Clarke Smith of most overcome by the heat. ' tion of Brooklyn several years ago ponent. On th« other hanovBiil cockpit ships with original typo Cur- A resolution was adopted endors- corps for forming on organization of New York in a Monocoupe easily won ing the widening and deepening of About twenty of the horses In the this^kind and for having such a fine with lead pipe attacks. wood boy is some fighter, too. ,1 tlse O. X.-5 motors. His tlmo for tho 25-mllo consolation race in 15 Jackie had been staying with hiB pair were very evenly. matched, the dlBtance was 10 minutes 21.4 sec- the* Shrewsbury riyer channel for a r-arna -were owned by Mr, Foalea and ambulance. minutes, 10.5 seconds. Carl Newhound the others belonged to wealthy resi- sister, Mrs. Rose Holler of Quedhs, the Red Bank boy had a »had«'U>». onds. Park P. Reed of tho Philadel- of Mitchell field, Irving G. Hay and distance 600 feet south of tho High- MEETING OF THE LIONS. Monroe Eisner of Red Bank, ac- who identified the body. He had left better of the battle. Tha referee fl»- phia airport and R. S. McKIm of Val- lands bridge. dents of Shrewsbury, Rumson, Riv- Joseph Hopkins were second, third erside drive, Seabright, Mlddletown tive In Monmouth county Red Cross her home Saturday to look for a job. clared Mazzucca the winner and tb* entine and company of New York and fourth respectively. This race A letter from Mayor William H. F. HOWABD LLOYD WAS THE work, was guest of honor. Captain His death was caused by blows on crowd gave him a great han&iJuit- were second and third respectively. R. White of Red Bank stated that and Eatontown. Most of the horses was for pilots who had entered In I SPEAKER LAST NIGHT. were polo ponies, which are used at Larson of the Neptune township first the head. The man who was found to show there were no hard feelingsi They finished within two and a half previous events of tho meet and had the matter of changing the name aid squad was present and he Bald unconscious was revived and told the two fighters embraced ond»h(jolu minutes of the winner. Irving Hay of Front street at Red Bank to the polo fields at Fort Monmouth not placed. The Club Balsed $8,750 for the Re- and tho Suneagles, Rumson and Deal .the Neptune first aid squad would be the police that a tall stranger had hands at the conclusion of the fray. and Jack Casey of the Red Bank air- River road to correspond v-ith the glad to loan their pulmotor to the attacked him. During the past week port were next and Clarke Smith of Captain J. Donaldson, flying- a name of the same. road > through cent Air Meet—The Club to Give country clubs. It was several hours "Angel Face" Joe Lucia of; BM Its Annual Outing for Crippled before all the horses were caught and Eatontown corps If BUch equipment three other persons were attacked in Bank and Buster Brown of Rcwellft New York was last. Ho finishedTravclalr, captured first prize in the Fair Haven and Rumson will be was needed at any time. Crescent Brooklyn. three minutes after Mr. Winkle. altitudo race and Jack Thropp of placed before the city planning com- Children on Tuesday, August Ctb. taken to the barns of Joseph Meyers, fought a very fast six-rounil bout. Now York in a Cessna was second. F. Howard Lloyd, superintendent Loomis L. White and Benjamin John band, under the leadership of Dan- Jackie was 63 years old and had Both of these boys are sixteen years Carl L. Milkreit of Westfleld in a mission. iel S. Morris, played before and af- lived at Little Silver twelve years. Mr. Donaldson climbed 1,000 feet In A bill of $21.25 from Arthur E. of the public schools of Mlddletown Parker. ter the speechmaking.' old and both have been in thu fight- Cessna nosed out Jack Casey, pilot- 52 seconds and Mr. Thropp's time township, was the special guest and Mr. Foales about three years ago At one time he worked on the es- ing game only a short time. Last ing William Barclay Hardlng'fl Baker for chickens killed by dogs The CorpB collected $157 In cash tate of Charles P. Doolger of the night's fray was Brown's «econd for the distance was 1 minute 7.5 was referred to the borough attor- speaker at the meeting of the Red bought the business at Shrewsbury Wright-Whirlwind Waco, in tho sec- seconds. Richard Boyer, piloting a Bank Lions club last night at the from William Stonebridge, who had during the afternoon. They also re- Rumson road. For the past six years fight. He is as "hard as nall»" and ond race, a 30-mile event for stand- CcBsna, was third. ney. Molly Pitcher hotel. Hia subject ceived a present of a large Johnson he had lived In the center of the hiB recuperative qualities aro won- ard ships. Mllkrelt's tlmo was 18 started it and had made it a very & Johnson first aid kit from Mr. Arnold Phlpps, a student at the was the "The Public Schools." He profitable undertaking. Mr. Stone- village. He leaves a widow, Mrs. derful. Once Lucia knocked Jhlinj minutes 25.7 seconds, 1.7 seconds bet- touched on thB different methods Eisner. The kit will be carried In Marie Jackie, and three children. down for the count of seven. Later ' ter than tho time made by Casey. E. Lakehurst naval air station, captured bridge moved to Westbury, Long Is- the ambulance. tho parachute jumping contest, land- ELKS'FAIR NOW RUNNING. used In teaching and he spoke of the land, where he was employed as a The funeral is being held today at on Lucia had Brown grpzgy and J. Devereaux of New York In a Cess- inequalities of the distribution of Mr. Messier, chaplain of the corps, Brooklyn, with' burial at Evergreen staggering, but the plucky Robelle na finished third, eight seconds after ing 218 feet from the landing circle private instructor by Mr. Garvin, a on the field. Captain Arthur Starr, school moneys throughout tho state. brother-in-law of Anthony N. Brady. was chairman of the dedication com- cemetery. boy managed to pull through each Milkreit. Others entries were Wil- IT OPENED AT BED BANK IAST He cited deficiencies which he said mittee and his assistants were Ar- time. He gave Lucia some good, liam A, Hughes of Newark, W. Par- an instructor at the Lakehurst sta- In the old Monmouth Park days the tion, and William French of New SATURDAY NIGHT. existed in tho compulsory school law thur Cain, Clyde Hayes and Ralph OPEN-AIR MUSICAL CONCERT. wallops, too, and the battle was not ker Runyon of Spring Lake and J. D. and he urged the public to take a property was owned by tuclen Apple- Lewis. one-sided by any means. It. went Curtis of Farmlngdale, New York. York wero second and third. by of the firm of Appleby'& Johnson, Saturday was governor's "day at the Bain Prevented Its Opening on greater interest in the schools. who were great race horse men. Mr. Mr. Kieb, who la staying at Red It Will be a Feature of the Shrews- the full six rounds and Lucia was A 25-mlle raco for cabin ships was Scheduled Date of Friday—Many Bank, will give lessons in first aid bury Presbyterian Church Fair. declared the winner. meet and Governor Larson and mem- Schenck S. Thompson, president of Appleby built the horse barns and a and life saving work to members of scheduled to bo the third event of berB of his staff wero special guests Attractive Booths With Fine Lino large residence, which was afterward An open-air musical concert will Brookdale Kelly, a colorei Red the day, but this race waB pontponcd of Merchandise, the S. S. Thompson contracting com- the corps at the Eatontown munic- and instead a relay raco was held of tho committee. About 1,000 per- pany, waa the five-minute speaker. destroyed by flre. Mr. Appleby owned ipal building five nights a week for be a special attraction tomorrow Bank boxer, was knocked out in thn fa," open cockpit ships. William Mc- sons witnessed tho closing events. A Tho annual fair of the Red Bank He told of the danger of permitting the stallion Salvatore, which defeated three weeks. The first lessons will night at the annual fair of thefirst round by Chick Murof»ky if ' D^Qough of Now York in a Gypsy women's race, which had been lodge of ElltB opened Saturday night, drivers of trucks to give rides to Tenny In one of. the most spectacular bo given this week. Shrewsbury Presbyterian church. Elizabeth. Kelly is a wonderfully Moth biplane was first and William scheduled for Saturday, was can- the heavy shower of Friday night friends- or strangers. races ever run at Monmouth Park. The concerfwill start at eight o'clock clever boxer and he looked like a Winkle, Park Reed and Alvln W. celled duo to a lack of entries. In preventing its opening on the sched- The Lions will give their annual This race led to a match race be- and it will comprise piano solos by sure winner at the outset. He hit Smith of New York wero second, ts place a relay race was run for uled date. In spite of tho intense heat outing for the children of tho Oak- tween the same stallions at Sheeps- Harold A. Laros of Red Bank, violin the Elizabeth boy almost at will and third and fourth respectively. planes of 800 cubic Inch piBton dis- large numbers have been attending hurst home for cripples at Atlantic head Bay for a purse of $10,000,DROWNED AT SEABRIGHT. solos by Arthur Lettaii of Spotts- perhaps this made him over confi- placement. This was won by Pilots the event. Seven attractive boothB beach at Atlantic Highlands on which at that time was looked upon wood and vocal solos by Mrs. Mat- dent. All of a sudden, much to the Freddie Lund, an employee at the William Smith and J. Thropp in 7 ay an enormous stake. This race waa thew W. Grcig of Shrewsbury and surprise of the spectators, Murofsicy Troy, Ohio, Waco airplane factory, have been laid out in horBcohoo shape Tuesday, August 6th. Last year Ihe minutes and 47 seconds. on tho rear of the home grounds and Lions entertained more than 200 also won by Salvatore. BROOKLYN MAN LOST HIS LD7E Eugene Wenzel of Red Bank. The let loose a wicked left uppercut oxecuted some of tho most difficult fair opens at eleven o'clock tomor- that caught the Red Bank boy flush flying stunts In a sport model Waco, Lieutenant C. Austin won tho race fine lot of merchandise 1B carried. children at the outing. Clarence Mackay bought the prop- WHEN BOAT UPSET. for army planes, making the dis- erty from Mr. Appleby before the row morning and lasts until late at on the Jaw. Kelly was knocked out. owned by Rolland Chllton of Keyport. Dancing on an open air platform is It was reported that through the night. It will be held on the lawn It was said that he had been out of Lund is regarded as ono of America's toncp of 25 miles in 11 minutes 23.6 one of the big attractions, especially efforts of the Lions $8,750 was raised Monmouth Park track was closed. Stgnard Johnson, Aged 41 Years, seconds. Lieutenant John Willis fin- He also owned a large string of thor- of George Harold Nevius's home and the ring a long time and was out of premier stunt pilots. Exhibitions, in for tho younger element. Among to help meet the expenses of the re- Was Drowned Saturday Night in many booths have been arranged for practice. Many persons expressed ished second and Lieutenant F. PCIB- those who are working In the various cent air meet at Red Bank and that cughbred raco horses, Banister and the Shrewsbury River—Brother of stunt flying were also given by other ley In tho third army piano was the sale of various articles. the opinion that the Red Bonk boy flyers. booths are: the receipts from the meet amounted Meddler being among them. Charles Victim Was Saved. would give a better account of him- forced out by engine trouble. to about $4,500. . Hill of Rumson waB Mr. Mackay"s Lndlea' auxiliary tooth—Mrs. "Walter B. Signard Johnson of Brooklyn, self the next time he fights. About 1,500 personB attended Orvlllo Stevens In an Avro-Avlan President Eugene M. Magce ap- trainer, CUP FOR HOSPITAL NJ|ME. Wednesday's races. At various times won the short landing contest, stop- Connor, Mrs. Robert Fox. Mrs. Frank aged 41 years, was drowned Satur- Davio Jones of Freehold scored a during the afternoon between 35 and Welnhilrner, Mrs. Vincent J. Eck. Mrs. WIN pointed an athletic committee con- The late W. S. Fanshawe bought day night in the Shrewsbury river ping within 3G0 feet of tho tape. J. linm Onkei, Mrs. John-Kwlk, Mrs. Weber, sisting of Edwin R. Conover, James the farm and stables from Mr. Contest Being Held by Campaign technical knockout over Joe Fe.eney 40 airplanes were on the field. The Thropp was second and Jack Casey MM. Elmer Pey. Mra, James Hncker, Mrs, at the foot of Church street at Sea- Committee of New Hospital. of Red Bank. Red Hooker and K14- smallest plane on tho field Wednes- R. Wilde, P. Broadus Powers and Mocliay. Richard Williams was his bright He and hla brother, George third. Carmlchnel. . Theodore D. Parsons. This commlt- trainer. George Hughes, now of Sco- Soden, two boys twelve and elwen, day waa an Aristocrat monoplane. A Cnnily—Mm. Richard McAllister, Mn. :ee will function for three months. Johnson, also of Brooklyn, had been In conjunction with tho campaign years old respectively, foutfht a, Stinson-Dotroltcr, owned by the Stof- O. L. Stevens of Long Island In an idwnrd Collins. bcyvllle, had charge of Mr. Fan- on a trip up tho river and were get- for funds for tho new Red Bank hos- Avro-Avrian piano won tho balloon It will arrango the nnnual clam- shuwe's yearlings. Mr. Broderson draw. Another drawn battle took fens Aircraft corporation of New Groceries—Samuel Greenblatt. ting ready to dock at the foot of pital a cup will be awarded for the place between Andrew Sorrell of York, and a Bellanca, owned by tho bursting conteBt from twelve con- Aluminum—Wllll«m Ookei. baks to be held In August, select a bought tho property about Six years Church street when their boat cap- most suitable name for the institu- testants, who wero sent in tho air team of golfers to represent the club ago from Mr. Fanshawe. Asbury Park and Oscar BUM ' «f Flights Interstate, Inc., of Now York, Lamps—Harry Kaplan, William Ltfko- sized. George Johnson was saved by tion. The new building will serve Long Branch. were the two largest ships. at ono minuto Intervals. The win- wltz. In an all-day contest hgalnst mem- Saturday night an employee of Mr. •eorge Sherman, but Signard did not Red Bank and the surrounding com- ner waa tho pilot who broko throe Blankets—Edward Wllbjr, Milton SleK- bers of the Rotary club next month Broderson's was walking through reappear, The river was dragged munities and the campaign commit- Ono celebrity who was; Introduced, On Thursday Carl Milkreit won the balloons In tho quickest time. Mr. frled. and arrango athletic events. Mr. to tho gathering was Wlllla Patter- first raco, which was a 25-mlle free- one of the large cow barns on Mr. for his body Sunday without success tee has decided to change the name Stevens'B time was two minutes and Linen—Edward Collins, Jerry McConvey. Conover will represent tho Lions In Broderson's farm on Broad street Monday afternoon the body was of the hospital. Suggestions should son, tho well-known Red Banic box- for-all event. His time was 13 min- i4 seconds. Herman Braunllck of Refreshments—Elmer Shelley. William completing the plans for tho golf er. He trained Al Mazzucca for lust Coyne. Norman Crlffln, Frill Gustin. and ho saw flames coming from un- found near Normandle, about two be sent to the Prize Name commit- utes 48.4 seconds, E. J, Deveroaux Springfield In a Waco "9" was sec- contest and Homer Methot will repre- insulated electric light wires in the night's battle and Al's improved was second and William E. Winkle Dancing—Miss Eliiaketh Costello. Mils sent the Rotarians, miles from the spot where he was tee at the campaign headquarters nd and Mrs. George Kounz of New- Mne Degenrlng. William Dowd, Eugene Ke- building. Tho Shrewsbury firemen drowned. at 23 Broad street. Red Bank, not showing was generally attrlbuVd to was third. Other contestants In the ark was third. This event was one this fact. Another well-known man- order In which they finished were W. ousb, John Fix, P. Broaduo Powers received tho wero called and the electric current The funeral will be held this af-later than Monday, July 15th. Tho f tho most Interesting contests of Auto tickets—Samuel Curtis, Join Wall. attendanco prize at last night's in the building was shut off before name will bo selected by the board in the boxing gams who saw tn» 8. Wade, William McDonough, W. L. ho meet. ternoon at Brooklyn and burial will' show was David Boyle of Kllisaneth, meeting. Tho prize was donated by any damage had been done. be made at National cemetery at of trustees and the campaign com- Case, J. D. Curtis and Irving G. Hay. Saturday afternoon Irving Hay Mr. Conover. who has many friends at Red Bank, Mr. Hay's time was nearly three min- OFFICER ARRESTS WIFE. John Sagurton, chief of .the that place. Mr. Johnson was a ma- mittee. Mr. Boylo has been lnt«n>«ted In gave two fine exhibitions of stunt fly- The Lions will meet again next Shrewsbury firo company, did com- chine foreman and served In the titea more than that of Mr. Milkreit. ing, using Rolland Chilton's special Tuesday noon. Harold Allen will in- pugilism since the time that fight- Mr. Mllkrelt and Mr. Devereaux both Fair Haven Woman Complained That mendable work at Wednesday's fire navy In the world war. Besides the BRIDGE PARTY AT HOTEL. ers boxed with bare hands. He la had Cessna monoplanes. motored Waco plane. Chief's Wife Annoyed Her.. troduco the special speaker. Jesse In directing thn firo fighting and reB- brother mentioned ho leaven another The meet came to a closo with the Tuller will bo tho five-minute Bpcak- n manager of boxers and lamv of The free-for-all race of 25 miles cuo work. His work was praised by brother, John Johnson of Seabright, Mrs. Lyman C. Vanlmvegcn Enter- the boys who took part last nig lit three army planes flying in forma- Joseph Herdon, Jr., chief of police er. Ira Crouse will present the at- Shrewsbury borough officials and by with whom the drowned man and tained at the Molly Pitcher. Thursday was won by Carl Mllkrelt tion. of Fair Haven, waa obliged to arrest tendance pr.'ze. wero taught by him. of Westfleld, his time being 13 min- fellow firemen. his brother had been spending the Only ono slight accident marred his wife lost week. Miss Pearl Mack week-end. Mrs. Lyman C. Vanlnwegen of nutes, 48 and 2-6 seconds. E. J. Dev- tho meet and this occurred Satur- of Fair Haven made a complaint that Presbyterian Men's Outing. Monmouth street waa hostess at a ereaux of Now York was second and day afternoon in tho short landing Mra. Hcrdo'n was annoying her and Tlje annual outing of the Brother- Woman's Club Card Party. liincheon-briago party yesterday af- Boat Club Auxiliary. • William E. Winkle of Forest Hills, contest. Tho pilot was required to cut using abusive language. Mrs. Her- hood of the Presbyterian church of Final arrangements aro being Addition to a Restaurant. ternoon at the Molly Pitcher hotel. The Players' boat club auxiliary Long Island, was third. Others in the his motor at an altitude of 500 feet don was brought by her husband be- Red Bank will bo held Saturday af- made for tho card party which the Lloyd Hawk is building an addition The tables wero decorated In yellow mdt Inat night at tho now FlayarV contest were Irving Hay, William J. nd land over a tape thirty feat fore Justice Gilbert M. Keith, who ternoon, July 27th, at the Forsgato Woman's club of Red Bank will hold to his restaurant on the south side of and white. Mrs. Lester Maps of Long clubhou.io at Fair Haven and m»d» McDonough. W. S. Wade, W. L. Case high. One of tho planeB did not dismissed tho case. Mr. Herdon has farms at Cranbury. Care will leave Thursday afternoon, July 25th, at the Monmouth street at Red Bank. Hla Branch won tho first prize, Mrs. Ar- arrangements, or a luncheon, ,iwinv> and J. D. Curtis.. have speed enough to make a prop- now made a charge of assault and tho church at half-past three o'clock homo of Mra. Richard K.. Fox of business has grown steadily since he thur Nelson of Long Branch the sec- mini; and card parly next TUMday The thirty-mile race Thursday af- r landing and fell to tho field. battery against his wife and a hear- to take the picnickers tr> Oranbury, Branch avenue. Mrs. Charles White opened It a few months ago and ond prize and Mrs. Edwin Farrier of afternoon at the .-lut). After tha but* ternoon was won by Potcr Brooks, The propcllor waa broken, ono land- ing will be held tonight before Jus- Tho outing Is for members of tho will be in charge of the party. Mrs. more room is required for this reason. Rumson the third prize. Tho con- lness session last night cards and r«x his time being fifteen minutes. Jack Ing gear strut was smashed and one lct Elmer C. Walnrlght. brotherhood only and they will make Allan Frost is chairman of the re- Tho addition will be 25x5(1 feet and solation prize went to Mrs. Holfacker freshmeats were enjoyed. , Casey came in second eleven seconds' of the wings was slightly damaged. reservations with Fred G. Dunnell of freshments committee. Mrs, Fox Is It will cost $2,000. Elmer D.ey Is do- of Atlantic -Highlands. Other guests after the winnei and William Van Tho Standard oil company through Notice. Foxwood Park, Little Silver. rapidly Improving from the Injuries Ing the work. wero Mrs. William Worth, Mrn. Lu- Typewriter Unadquailert. B. King waa third, 41 seconds aftor which she received In a recent auto- rnan Reed, Mrs. Frank Wo'dohouse, Typewriters rented, bnugbt and its Red Bank plant distributed air- My wife, Ethel Herdon, having left mobiio accident. Mrs. Clark Worthley, Mrs. Charles •old. Tiubin's, 88 Broad atrMt, Red Casey. Walter Shaffer was fourth. plane gas and oil rce to all planes my bed and board I will not be re- Every Wednesday Night Wanted, Young Man Bank.—Advnrtlstment Armstrong fifth, Fred Lund Blxth, nt the field during all fpur days of tho sponsible for any debts contracted Is Victor night at Tustlng's, Mon- willing to learn clothing and furnlsh- McClaBltey, Mrs. John H. Cook and Carl Milkreit Bcvcnth, J. Thropp meet. About 1,000 gallons of-gasoline by her. mouth street near Broad street Pennsylvania Glanls ishlng buBlness; no experience neces- Mr?. Robert Sinclair. Basnbal! Friday Night. eighth and Edwin Magrudcr ninth. wero given away. The Tydoll all com- Joseph Herdon, Jr. Radios, rolls, orthophonlc victrolas, to play Red Bank Baseball, toam sary. Apply by letter to J. Krldci, • «>».» • si: of David and Red Sank-at •Advertisement. records and pre-eminent makes of Sunday afternoon at Hunter's Field, Red Bank.—Advertisement. Outboard Motor Hunter's Flild at 8;1B.—AdvtrtMh The stunt contest was the fea- pany also had a truck at tho field upright and grand pianos. Bring thu ture of the afternoon. Five planes and dlstlbutcd gasoline and oil. . at 3:15.—Advertisement. for sale; J028 Johnson ' Standard ment. Baseball Friday Night. family tonight—Advertisement Tho Super-Salesman. Twin, flrBt class condition. Demon- •«..<».•„,•— took part and Fred Lund of Phila- Concession!) were conducted -by House of David and Red Bank at Tetley's For Typewriters Luke Longhead in The Register stration. Telephone Rod Bank 822-M. IWbnl! Tonight delphia waa the winner. He flaw Felix Santangollo and Mlllard F. Hunter's Field at 6:15.—Advertise- English Setter,PuppUvi. and adding machines. 17, Broad talks to over 36,000 peoplo every -Advertisement. Alamandein of Cuba at HuntM'f his own Waco machine. He stayed Tctley of Red Bank, the Shrewsbury ment for sale, four puppies thirteen weeks streot. Red Bank.—Advertisement week.—Advertisement. Field, at 6:18.—Adv«rtl»«m«ne, in the air the longest of all and dairy company and Elmer Waln- old, sired by Champ Beau Laverack, ^. ^, Sewing Machine Sale. Pennsylvania Giants Rent nn Electric Hewing MeDfaina, completed his performance by en- rlght-, Jr., of Shrewsbury, and Ed- out 'of nicely bred bitch. Can be Hemstitching and Plaiting. . Baseball Tonight. to play Red Bank Baseball team g W SBtilfi ftfild doing tfcl ward Finnlgan of Highlands, Neat- Bee advertisement on page 20.— aeen at G. L. Thackers farm. Holm' Sco advrrtlBSDient on MB* «U» Advertisement.' ^ 4eL N. J.—Advertisement. See advertisement on page 20,— AlamanderB.. of Cuba at Huntor's Sunday afternoon at Hunter's Field, yiai thirty-seven will b« prizes for those who do not Cook, Jr., o( Newman Springs roai sed the proposition of having a law plete the sale of a. lot on the south Elizabeth Read. Doctors wen JameB C. Riohdale of the Phalanx, made her will last month, Bh« ON years In the geological service of take part In the card games, at a holder of the epeed record at th macted in New Jersey requiring th side of Madison avenue to William called but Mr. Read had died. Thi who died a short time ago, left e dered that all her property b« di- New Jersey, his reaches the con- well as for the players. Miss Rita Elkwood Park track of theSeacoasi grading of potatoes according to th, Crawford of West Red Bank. Mr. and body was conveyed to Albert W will which was made March 25th, vided equally between her fcleter, clusion that poopl* In gontral do not Dunne will he the hostess mid she motor speedway corporation, wo: standards required by the United Mrs. Meglll moved to Morris Plains Worden's Red Bank funeral horn 1025, and which waa witnessed bj Mrs. Sue M. Buck of Tronton Junc- like to be advised against spending will bo assisted by Mies Eernloa four raoea at the track on July 4t] Slates. a short time ago in order to get to a and prepared for burial. Henry Campbell and Edwin R. Con tion, and her cousin, Mm. Maud money. Donaldson, Miss Margaret O'Keefe' and Sunday. The track Is a ml dryer atmosphere than that of Red Mr. Read was born at Colt's Necl over of the Broad street national Alico Merrltt of Westdeld, Now Jer- Regarded as the oldost state geo- and Mlas Cola Finn. It was stated that Long Island and sey. Mrs. Buck was mads execu- and one-eighth around and Mr. Coo Maine potatoes were selling in New Bank, the doctors having given this on January 31st, 1867, and he wai bank. Mr. Rlchdale left nil hk logist In the country In the point of property to his four sons in equal trix; of the will. The wltnesstB Wero service, Dr, Kummel spent years In has made the distance In 54 1-5 sec York and other markets at higher advice to Mr. Meglll. 62 years old. He was a son of thi IN HEMORIAM. onds. More than a thousand pec* The lot sold by Mr. Meglll is 60x183 late Thomas H. and Hannah Thorn shares, these eons being Frank, Guy Susan M. Woodward of Ocean Grov« an effort to keep prospectors "from prices than could be obtained for and Walter Taylor of Asbur/ Park, In loving memory of mmy brotherter,, PauPaul pie were at the track on July 4tr Central Jersey potatoes, because of feet. Mr. Crawford paid $2,000 for it. ton Read. Ho moved to Red Ban: JameB O., Jr., and George. Ouy nnc wasting money In a. useless sdaroh F. SehrofldeSehroflderr, wwhho ""went t liVf in FFrance ami two horse races were held 1 the grading of New York and Maine Mr. Meglll opened up a tract of land j when he was a young man and hai George Were named aa executors o Henry B. Pope of Manasquan left for things." He stated that moat fre- July lot, lois. addition to the automobile racei potatoes under the United States by cutting a street through tho dead worked at the freight station man: tha will and their judgment of th all his estate to his wife, Blanche I, quently he waa unsuccessful. EDITH K. SMITH. The events Sunday comprised tlire standards. The conference decided end of Madison avenue to Branch years. Ho was an active membe: equal division was requested to bi Pope, and to his son, Henry Alex- "For years," he recalled, "I have automobile races and there war* that the time was not yet ripe for avenue and the tract on the south of the Red Bank Presbyterlai regarded as final by the othar ehl ander Pope, In equal Sharon, and been trying to amputate paoplo from IN MEMORIAM. church and was a member of th dren. Mr. Riohdale in his will r( these two persons are the execu- their hopes and It has been a dif- In sadd find lovllovlnfin r memory of ourr belovebloved about one thousand spectators. the passage of a law In New Jersey Bide of the street was laid out Into soon andd brotbrothertherh , LLcRDR y CurliCliCurliMMM , whh o de compelling the grading of potatoes lots. After the sale of the lot yester- church session! Surviving him art quested that the property he ownei tors of the will. Jessie B. Van- ficult thing to do. They think they prtd thi Uf Jl The first automobile race on Jul; at Merchantvllle should bo part ol parted this Ufa July 11th, 10210288 . 4th waa a ten-mile event for semi- under the United States system, but day to Mr. Crawford, Mr. Meglll has a son, John S. Read of Eatontown, Scholck and Benjamin B. Pearce know where they can strike oil, or just on« yesr ngo you loft u«, an agreement was proposed by only one lot remaining. He says he and six brothers and sisters, thej Frank's share of his estato and tha wore the witnesses to tho will. ' coal, or water or almost anything How ve miss your smiling face—. stock cars, Mike Peeler ot Pert! his son George should be given tw, But you left us to remember Amboy was the winner. The .M. & which dealers in Central New Jersey Intends to keep this lot so that he being Misses Janio and Hannah Corlles Clayton of Manasqunn left you can imagine and In spite of would refuse to market any potatoes will have a place to build a homo in Read and Roland Read of Re years to purchase any or all of hi sclentlflo Information to the con- No one can ever take your plaee* M. garage of South Amboy and Clar- property at the Phalanx. all hla estate In trust for ths use, ence Harris Of Bed Bank wtJic eeo not graded over a one and seven- case he should over desire to return Bank, Charles B. Read of Colt' benefit and support of hli wife, trary, they will go ahead and spend Iu thhee lonely hours of night eenn d day, Neck, Dr. H. W. Read of Freehol hundreds and ofton thousands of Thoughts of you arar e alwayl s n ond and third respectively. Eimei eighth Inch belt, which is the size to Red Bank. He says, however, Mrs. Lydla R. Patterson of Ro Sarah M. Clayton, as long as oho Tim, dont make tha^ wound leia sore. Cottrell of Red Bank started in tin; set by the United. States. that If he should receive an offer of and Professor Thomas T. Read o lives. At her death tho estate ia to dollars. They just don't want to be Nor Btop our lonslng for you, dear. Scarsdale, New York. Bank, mother of the late Captalu saved from spending money." race but was forced out before h This agreement was Blgned by $4,000 for his last remaining lot, William A. Patterson of Mlddletown be divided equally among; all hla MOTHER. FATHER AND. BROTHER. finished. All the cars used in thli Arthur McChesney, A. Robert Kehs, which he regards as a fair price for Rev. John A. Hayes, of the PreL township, made her will last Sep children. Mr, Clayton'a son, Harry Dr. Kummel, a graduate of Bololt event were Ford specials. Monmouth County Farmers Ex- It, he would be tempted to sell it, byterlan church conducted the fu tember. She left $10,000 to hei B. Clayton, is tho executor of th« College, Wisconsin, the recipient of RESOLUTIONS. The second lace was ten miles iu change, A. J. Holland and R. D. even though his present Intention is neral Sunday afternoon at M daughter-in-law, Mrs. Ella DCBL will and the witnesses wero George the degree of Master of Arts from WHEREAS, on July lat, 1(120, Cod In Mis to hold it as a site for a possible Read's late residence. Burial wa Kcelcr and Benjamin B. Pearce. Harvard University and of Doctor Almighty Provlri£nci> thought It best to length and was won by Mr. Cook Hartman of Freehold; Rooney & volse Patterson, widow of Capt. Pat- remove from our midst our beloved all- In this race he made eleven miles Ingllsh Co. of Engllshtown; Worth- future home. at Fair View cemetery. The bearen terson; $4,000 to her sister, Carrli of Philosophy from the University ter, Mary E. Hlder, » member of Fidelity In nine minutes and forty seconds, ley Produce Co. of Marlboro; Reed The property Mr. Meglll bought at wore Edwin C. Gllland, Charlei A, White; $1,000 to her niece, Mnbc of Chicago, Joined the geological sur- Council, No. Tl, S, & D. of L., therefore Wolbaok, Japhla Clayton, Albert'T, Bordiuk—Olsccsky. vey of New Jersey In 1892 and start- BE IT RESOLVED, That while we mourn Clarence Hayward of Newark, Ed & Perrlne and John M. Laird of Morris Pla(ns contains nearly half White Haviland; $4,000 to her r.iece, our lose and regret that wo shall see her no gar Reid of Pletlnneld and L. M. Lin Tennent, James H. Graham, Ed- an acre and In addition to an ex- Doremus, G. Howard Llpplncott anr. Carrie Browor; $500 to Flora Mao Miss Anna E. Bordiuk, daughter ed to study the glacial formation In moro on earth, we, the officers and msnl* coin of Newark were 2nd, 3rd and ward Dllatush and J. Edgar Wilson ceptionally well built houso the gar- Josoph Koehno, members of the'Pres Donald; $200 to Jehu P. Applegato of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Bordiuk, be- the state and Interpret the glacial bera, do hereby extend to the family otlr 4th. if Allentown; Chamberlain & Bar- den Is provided with largo beds of byterlan church session. $1,000 to Eva Martin, Lizzie Sween; came tho bride of Theodore T. Ols- history. heartfelt Hyinpathy In thla, the hour of :Iay of Cranbury; R. W. DHatush flowers, Including many roao buBhes, For months, he tramped through their treat" truulile. A tea-mile cup raco waa third on and JoBeph Boyle, to be equally di ceeky, son of Mr. And Mrs, Ignatius T1I.UE MARTIN, of Dayton; H. H. Hutchlnson of the care of which Mr. Meglll says CIVIL WAR VETERAN DEAD. vlded among them; $200 to Cnptalri Olscesky Sunday afternoon at St. the northern part of Now Jersey, dig- MAIIY VANBnUNT, the program end this was also won Robblnsville, Grover Brothers, Belt keeps him pretty busy all the time. ging Into this soil formation and ANNA K1BK. by Mr. Cook, who made too dls Eugena Butler; $100 each to Alberl Mary's church at Colt's Neck. Both nett & Forfnan and Schanck & Reed Duryea and MrB. George Kamy: ani tho contracting parties live at Sco- that, chipping off pieces of boulders Committee, tance in less than ten minutea. Hay- t Hlghstown; Bennett & Clayton Wiillam H. Davis of Bed Bank Diet! and taking observations in what- Attested;- Sunday hi His 01st Year. $500 to Fair View cemetery to hi beyviUe. The bride was given in mar- ETTA w, SMITH. ward, Lincoln and Reid were 2nd, !o. of Prospect Plains; Schlckedanz •AWN TABTY AT SHREWSBURY. nsed for the perpetual care of thi mlage by her father. Rev. C.J. Farran, ever smalt caves he found. Realiz- 3rd and 4th. Harker of Elmer; Joseph H. Court- William H. Davis, a civil war ve' plot whero her father, William W tho rector of tho church, performed ing that sand and gravel pits were A five-mile- match race botweon ney & Co. ond James I. Hutchlnson Mr. and Mrs. Ganvood Fhlfer Enter- oran and a resident of Red Bank hal Sherman, is burled. All the rest o: the ceremony. , . to bo extremely Important In the RESOLUTIONS. tained Friends Saturday Night WHEREAS, In Illi Divine 1'rovldenoe, and Mr. Cook and Kenneth Morris of & Son of Windsor; and Trenton a century, died Sunday at tho horn her estato of every kind was be- developing of the State, ho plotted IIRI ue a lame leg and the race was con- in his estate.. Tho other half of thi with orange blossoms. Tho attend- parted brother and that It also be printed 'n flfteen-pound special packages and Hampboll and Virginia and Eleanor The body was prepared for burlai ants wore crepe costumes of differ- Is approaching the three-score-and- In Tho Bed Bank ReirtsMr. ceded to Mr. Conover. Mr. Muhlln- Campbell of Brooklyn, Mr. and Mrs. property on Leighton avonup was brlnk drove his own horse and Mr. 'ound ready sale in Chicago at prices at Worden's funeral home. The fu bequeathed to his son, Morris Felsh- ent colors and they carried boqueta ten mark, but there Is hardly an Baapootfitlly submitted, much above that paid for potatoes Christian Schwelka and children neral was held yesterday afternoo; ot pink tea roses. indication of It. His mind Is a store- H. c. MCLEAN, Conovar's horse was driven by Alex- Emerson, Irllne, Raymond and Rob- man, and all tho rest of hia estate ander Heyers of Lakewood. of similar quality when sold by at tho home of Mrs. Glassey on Har- was also bequeathed to Morris E'elsh After the ceremony a wedding house of geological data as tie glean- K. 0. LUM, weight from barrels or sacks. This irt of Bloomfleld, Mr. and Mrs. Au- rison avenue and was conducted b; ed It in New Jersey and even a most RAYMOND K, CONKLIN. Another trotting race between man. Morris was made executor o: breakfast was served at tho home ot July 2, 1820. Committal, mme plan may perhaps be suitable gustus Ebert and children Dorothy, Rev. James Dykema, pastor of the will, which was made three years the bride amid decorations of pink remote question can bo answered horses owned Jpy MrB. Jerome Rico Tor the sale of Monmouth county po- Tanet and Robert of Maspeth, Long Reformed church. Burial was mad' off-hand. of Fair Haven and Arthur Clayton ago. Howard S. Hlgglnson and Inez and white. About 250 guests wero ates in Now York or Philadelphia, island; George Cole, Jr., of Newark, at Fair View cemetery. S. Barber were tho witnesses. present from Red Bank, Scohoyvllle, The stress of business has kept of Belmar was won by Mrs. Rice's nd if found oucoosoful would in- and Cornoll Murphy, Jr., of West The bearers were William Munso! Holmdel, Phalanx, Colt's Nock, Free- him from the field latoly. With the horse, which was driven by Pntriok n-ease considerably the profits of po- Virginia. and George Duncan, Sr., of Re Mrs. Christina Groessle of Mid- hold, Perth Amboy, Iselln, Brooklyn creation of tne State Water Policy Callanan of Fair Haven. Alexan- tato farmers. Hero Is the story as Bank, Thomas Melrose of LonL dletown township bequeathed to her and New Yorlt, Music for dancing Commission, however, which will Too Late for Classification. der Heyers drove the Clayton horse. '.old In Printer's Ink: TWO FAIR HAVEN LOTS SOLD. Branch and Otto English of Brad- BOH, Charles. Groessle, all her house- was provided by Roy McDougall'a take over the duties of the State BTAR SEDAN for Bole. $30. good rubber", William Beuchler of Perth Ainboy, ley Beach. Among those who at- hold furniture, furnishings, silver- motor In {rood condition. Phone 1181-Rj orchestra. Department of Conservation and De- or call at il East Sunset nvenua, Red a profeasional race driver and track 'OTATOES ARE PACKAGED AND Bought Twelve Years Ago for $350; tended the funeral was Mr. Davis' ware, jewelry and other articles of velopment so far as tho regulation of manager at Elkwood park, attempt- personal property In her home at Mr. and Mrs. Olscesky left for an Sold Monday for $1,100. sister, Mra. Charlotte Cranmer o: automobile trip in the Northern New Jersey's potable water supply FOR sXLE, celery and csbbano plants. • ed to break tho track speed record ADVERTISED. Bradley4 Beach, who Is in her nine- Leonardo. This son Is also to re- Twolye years ago, Joseph Eck of states. Upon their return they will is concerned, he anticipates return Charlea F. White. Drnnch svenue, Llttl* In Mr. Cook's. Chevrolet special. The tieth year. ceive tho house and lot whsrc she Ing to his haunts of years ago. car skidded on one of the turns, Test Shipment of Michigan Potatoes Richmond Hill, New York, bought lives on the payment of $3,400 to livo with the brlde'a parents. Tho gllver. opposite Foxwood Park.* Fifteen-Pound Sacks ia Sold two lots on Parker avenue at Fair bride received many gifts, including Dr. Kummol was elected as thi GLADIOLI blooma for mile. Chiirlea F. made a tall spin and plungid in DIED OF PARALYSIS. his mother's estate. All the rest o; White, ilranch nvenue, Little Silver, op- the bank at the side of the truck, Suciicessfully with the Aid of News- Haven for $125 each, or $250 for tho Mrs. Groessle's property, Including cash. She is a graduate of the Red first president of the American As soolatlon of State Geologists and was poalto Foxwood Park,* Mr. Beuchler was going between 75 paper Advertising in Buffalo, N. Y., pair. Each lot was EZxl35 feet, mak- the $3,400 to be paid for her prop- Bank high school and BHB has been SjSWING MACHINES—Portable clectrle, by Co-Operative Organization of ing a plot 104x135 feet. The lots wen Mrs. Henry L. Bennett of Centervllli reelected for several terms. I and 80 miles an hour when the car Died Last Tuesday. erty at Leonardo, Is to be divided omployed as a clerk by the C. E. Con- elitfhtly used, nimrantcert, J27-50, Auto- skidded. The front part of the Potato Growers. )art of the Prudence O'Brien prop into nine e.qual shares, of which one over company. Mr. OlsceBky is em- 1007, he was a member of the Inter- matic Willcox A Gibh*, latest model, guar- racer waa badly damaged tut Mr. irty, which hail recently been bough Mrs. Minnio Bennett, wife of Hen- share is to go to each- of her nine ployed as a salesman by the Bordon national Geological Congress hel anteed. $1G. All mafeca new mHchlncs Itnil A successful experiment in packag- and laid out in lots by the Land an ry L. Bennett of Centerville, died In Mexico City and was again • nil kinds repaired. I'\ It. Woods, 38 White Beuchler was unscathed. ing, labeling and advertising potatoes children. These children are Freda company of Asbury Park. street. Rod Bank, phone 2148-J. Loan company of Red Bank. Tuesday of last week from a paraly- Joerger, Mollle Dlppel, Fred Groessle, delegate whem the Congress met In FURNISHED room for rent, m-luatc family- A ten-niile race opened the pro- ,n flfteen-pound retail cotton bags, tic stroke. She was the daughte: Toronto in 1013. AH Improvements. Iu Gold street, Hei made recently by the Textile Bag Mr. Eck kept the lots until Mon- Barbara Taylor, Hannah Hornich, gram Sunday and L. M. Lincoln in lay of this week, when they wen of the late Timothy and Francei August Groessle, Benjamin Groessle, STATE FORESTS. Bunk.^ a Deusenberg waa tho winner. Hay- Manufacturers Association of Chlctt- WANTED, collector and salesman; must raid by William N. Worthley to King- Clark. Charles Groessle and Kate Schotte LOOK OUT FOB ABMY WORM. bo year around resident and have car, ward was second and Reid was third. o In co-operation with the Michigan New Jersey's Forests Bringing In Write to P. O. Box 20H, Asbury Park, ••otato Growers Exchange, indicates Ion Grover of Fair Haven for $1,100 Besides her husband she leave; Freda Joerger and Charles Groessle A ten-mile cup. race was won by n addition to paying $1,100 tor th, four children, Joseph Bennett ol are the executors of the will, which Weather Conditions Favorablo Foi N. J.« Michael Peeler and a five-mile match ;he practicability of retail packaging More Revenue Than Ever tieloie. wo lots, Mr. Grover will also pa;. Keansburg, William Bennett of Fal was made October 10th, 1925. (By The Associated Press.) This Destroyer of Lawns. HOUSE. lot rciit. five rooms, modern im- race between the three fastest cars many of the BO-called bulky farm provements; rcannnahle rent. Telephone iroducts, including white potatoes, 109 for the sidewalk and curb which Haven, Mrs. Dewey Walker and State owned foreBts In New Jersey (By Tha Associated Press.) at tho track waa captured by Mr. ras put down in accordance with an Henry L. Bennett, Jr., of Hazlet. Sh( Sarah C. Hulsart of Ocean Grove H15, or address 14 Worthley street, Ktid Cook. Hayward was- Becond and weet potatoes, string beans, aspara- eft a will which was made Septem- aro bringing in moro revenue thlf E. E. Evaul of tho agronomy di Dank.* gus and celery. -• Tdlnance recently passed by thi also leaves three sisters and twe year than ever before, according t< partment of the State Agricultural THREE LOTS in Knlr Hovtn for sale, gool Lincoln was third. Hayward also lorough of Fair Haven. brothers, Mrs. George H. Loshen 01 ber 22d, 1D23. She bequeathed to location; cash or easy terms; very reason- has a Deuaenberg racer. The association made a preliminary Giendola cemetery $150, tie income William M. Baker, associate Btati Experiment Station, warns lawn own able. W. Malms, 2? East Front street. Red • ,— i », Keyport, Mrs. William Arneal of Cen- urvey of Chicago produce dealers, from which Is to keep her burial forester, who said that tho division ers to be on their guard against an Bsnk_^ Events for the coming Sunday are NEW FAIR HAVEN BUNGALOW. tervlllo, Mrs. Frank Niblott of Cen- of forestry and parka In the state Invasion of tho army worm this sum- time trials, semi-stock car raco, 25- •ocers and housewives to learn their terville, Timothy Clark of Center- plot and the plot of Asher Howland FOR SALE, three lots on highway near In good condition. Her son, Martin department of conservation and de- mer. Headdcn's Corner; or will exchange. mile race, ten-mile cup race, and .ttltude toward the proposed market- no of Joseph FIcone'8 Building: ville and Jesse Clark of Highlands, What hnvo *nu 7 W. Mahns, 21 Bast g of potatoes in sealed retail bags, A. Sheridan, is to receive all money velopment, would Bhow an Income A cool and late Spring has pro- Front street. Red Dank.* handicap and consolation races. Tho Bought by Robert J. Hunting. Funeral services were held at hei vided conditions favorable to the de consolation race is for drivers who 'orty per cent of the produce dealers she has in the bank on inteest and of about $8,000 for 1929, or moro than LOTS FOR SALE on the new high- nterviewed favored a retail sack of Robert John Hunting of Nev late home on Friday in charge OL a mortgage held by her daughter, 18 percent of the cost of main velopment of the worm, which usual way at Eatontown; prices rcnaonable have entered previous raceB in the Rev. H. D. Stratton of Trenton, a ly makes its appearance In neglect- and easy terms. W. Mahns, 27 East Front lay's program, but have not jilnced. ther fifteen or twenty-five pounds; York, a brother of Tony Hunting, Emma Barmore, on her property. ;nance. proprietor of the Hunting theater, former pastor of St. John's church All her personal belongings were be- ed lots and fields, tho agronomist street, Red BjU!^*____ 0 per cent were indifferent, and 10 of South Keyport. Interment was in The ultimata aim Is to make th NEW BUNOALOW for sale, all Improve. er cent were opposed to the plan. has bought a new Spanish type bun queathed to her daughter, Emma says. After defoliating plants in Green Grove cemetery at Keyport. forestry service solfsupportlng anc those areas, the worms move on in monts; very reasonable: small down pay- JUSTICES TO BE JUDGED. It was learned that tho average galow at Fair. Haven on Popufli Barmore, and she Is also to receive that can be accomplished, he said, ment and balance building and loan. W. street, near Hanca road, for $7,00C he houso and lot In Ocean Grove. mass formation to the lawns, ruin Mahns, 27 Kant Frontjitreet, Red Bank.* etall sale of potatoes in, Chicago Is ./hen the state legislature authorizes ing them in short order. tVllllam B. Mead and Gilbert M. fraction over seven pounds. The from Joseph C. Plcone, a Red Banli DIED AT DAUGHTER'S HOME. All tho reat of tho estate was di- tho acquirement ot additional lands I/)TS*rFOa~SALE~on~RT^r»idc~driVV; building contractor. Mr. Hunting vided equally between these two chil- In outlining control measures for 60x100; wonderful opportunity; cash or Keith to Appear in Court. .esoclatlon argued that by putting up for carrying on a large scale tim- easy terms. \V. Mnhns, 27 East Front otatoes In fifteen-pound sacks the will take possession of hla nnw bun- Mrs. Angelina T. Peters of Fair Ha- dren and they were made the execu- ber operations program now being this pest on lawns, Evaul suggests street. Red Bank.* • Fred of Highlands, who rents nit retail sale would be Increased, galow on August 1st. The building ven Was In Her 86th Year. ors of the will. conducted in a small way. After flv< rolling to crush tho worms, or poison STUDEBAKEirtourinir car lor sale: will' a store from Recorder William B. 'he grocers were quick to sense this has not yet been completed. It is William N. Tilton of Hamilton, in j'ears of experimentation the for- ing. Spraying tho turf with a solution sell for 950; In gond running condition. Mead, is being sued for three months' 26x40 feet and has five rooms nnd a Mrs. Angelina T. Peters, who made of one pound of lead arsenate to 50 James Purgarle, 6 Parmly street. Run- oBsibility. They considered also her home with her daughter, Mrs, Neptune township, left $1,000 to each estry service feels that It has all th< son. N. J.» . rent by Mr. Mead. A hearing will be bathroom. The lot is 50x200 feet. of two daughters, Eleanor L. and Information necessary to make the gallons of water gives effective con- at the package would eliminate Warren H. Brokaw of Lincoln ave- trol. Where it is not feasible to FOR A nrut class river property see Jar- held before Justice Horan of High- aste, save labor and provide attrac- Mr. Picone Is building a similar nue, Fajr Haven, died Sunday from a Carolyn E. Tilton. The sum of $1,000 development of woodlands profltabl dine, Alston Court, Red Bank, phone lands July 22d. On July 27th Mr. bungalow on a nearby lot, which U was ordered placed in trust and the n a monetary sense either to the roll'or spray tho lawn, a poison bait 76. See pnffo fl. ve storo and window displays. general breakdown at the .age of 85 is advised. This can be mado by lube- Mead will appear before Justice Gil- Field workers of tho association in- also 50x200 feet. The building is ex- years. She was born in England and accumulated Income and principal itate or to Individual owners, It was GOOD acrid 1c hnrne for sale. Thomss M«- bert M. Keith of Red Bank on a pected to be completed about Augusi rdered to bo paid to Mr. Tilton's itatod. Ing 25 pounds of wheat bran and one Gulre. phone Ited Blink 846. srvlewed 650 housewives in Chicago, came to this country when she was pound of powdered load srscnate charge of disorderly conduct made by .mong whom the chief appeal of 1st. _ young. She moved to Fair Haven daughter, Audrey Wllma Tilton, At present the state owns 27,000 DOO CLIPPING n npeclnlty. Joseph Leon- Mr. Koch. when she leached the ago of eigh- LcreB of forest land and the Division with the juice of three oranges or ard, 267 West Borgtn place. Red Bank.' acknged potatoes was uniform qual- from Mount Vernon four years ago, lemons. To this should bo added Mr. Keith has applied for a review ,y packed under brand with a shlp- LOITERERS FINED. The funeral was held Monday nigh teen years. Tho UBQ and income of if forests and parkB atlvocateB in- Sundays only.* of his conviction by Justice Jere J. all the rest of his estate ho left to enough low-grade molasses to form FOR SALE, three-liurner BUB stove, with t-r's guarantee. They declared that at the homo of Mrs. Brokaw. Rev, rcaslng this amount as frequontly a stiff dough. The bait should be oven att'ehei Mrs. O. C. Carew on a charge by Mr. Mead that iany grocers for convenience during They Wero Shooting Crap on the Harry Bright of the Fair Haven his wife, Emma G. Tilton, aB long s circumstances permit until 200,000 Bordcn, 110 Monmoutli street, phone Red as,, She should live, with tho priv- distributed In small pieces through- h Rd he (Keith) had failed ,to file the nec- ush hours prepare five, ten and Sunengles Golf Club Grounds. Methodist church conducted the crea or one-tenth of tho total area Ban_,0£8-J. < ssrtry papers of a case. This matter ilege of using as much of the prin- out tho Infested area. ftecn-pound paper bags of potatoes The mana£§ment of the Suneagles service. So.}o3 were rendered by Eu- if the state la obtained. Then, ac- CADILLAC phaeton lor tnle reasonable, will bo heard before Judge Jacob gene M. Magec. Yesterday morning :ipal of the estate as might be nec- iordlng to Mr. Baker, forestatlon The caterpillar-like army worm Is 1 advance, but that it would be pre- golf club at Eatontown Is deter- issary to keep her in as comfortable Call Red Bank 708. Mcir.bach. Jr.. July 24th, Mr. Mead crnble to have the package filled, tho body was taken by Albert W. vork along the lines already deter- naked and measures about one and LOST, black patent.leather heel protector, is a justice of the peace besides be- mined to prevent loiterers from a manner as she had been accus- one-half Inches In length. The head ealed and labeled by the shipper, hanging around the property. On Worden, Jr., to Lodi, New York, mined upon would yield tho state a with elnstic flttnchciil; In or near busi- ing a recorder. where burial was mode. omed to living. At his wife's death (ivenue of five dollars an acre evory Is grconlsh brown and speckled with ness section of Red Bank. Finder please "he cotton bags could be used later Sunday seventeen men who v/ere .11 that remains of his estato is to black. Tho genoral color of tho phone Red Bank 1085-VV.* ir lettuce, dust cloths, polishing ar. HOUSE fof r rent, fivfive rooms, all Improve- shooting crap on the place were ar- io divided equally among his chll- worm Is greenish with a dark stripe mnmentst ; twt o minutes' roomswalk , froalml Improvestation-. TO BEGIN SERVICE SOON. loths and the like. rested on a charge of loitering on DEATH OF A LAWYER. .ren. Mrs. Tilton was appointed ex- "I do not moan," he explained, on each side and a broad one down 218 West Front street' ,wal phonk froe m133 statio4 Ren d A test shipment of 2,400 fifteen- private property in a disorderly man- icutor and tho witnesses were WU- that the state should itself enter the the back. Bank. . ___ Zlg Radio Station at ScobeyviUe to [ Pound sacks of ^'Chlet Petoskey" po- ner. They were fined $7.50 each by Arthur Smith of Locust Point Died lam A. Berry of Asbury Park and umber business, Tho Idea wo have LOCAL REPRESENTATIVE wanted—A Ti- tatoes. top brand of tho Michigan po- Justice Andrew J. Reid of Eaton- ieen working on is to build up ault- Wild birds, domestic fowls, skunks, llable firm sk ll f ne In Operation Shortly. In His Sixtieth Year. '. Scott Branson of Bradley Beach. and toads aro tho most Important I Into growers exchange, was made to town. The chnrge was made by Jonathan A. Tilton of Wall town- ble forest regions with certain sec- Service between the New York and j Buffalo. N. Y. ThV. Slocum as witnesses, appointed beds, tables, chairs, Ice boxes, ma- wore not satisfactory. Tho company tleboro, Vermont, where burial was e forest as a whole. Wo advortlBo In chines, pianos, radios, antiimes, com- will carry on a radio tolegraph busi- the growers. No culls. No leftovers Puritan Dairy rinnt. mado. IB executors her sinters and Drothor, Card of 1'Uttnlu. from the pickings of other shoppers. Margaret Carley, Nettlo P. Layton hat locality that suoh a. tract Is plete dlnini;. living and bedroom suites, ness and It will compete with the Thomas McGuIre, 27 years old, of vallable for timber operations and We wish to thank our friends and suites. Red Rank Auction House, 99 Western Union and Postal telegraph All clean, uniform, choice potatoes— Riverside Heiphts, one of the oldest Died In Her 35th Year. nd Daniel J. Lawley. She dlitrlb- neighbors who helped In any way rach a big, plump, well-formed fellow. :ie .highest bidder Is allowed to get during our sad bereavement caused Monmouth street. Red Bsnk.- ' companies. It In owned by a group employees at. tlie Shrewsbury plant of Mrs. Anna Marldnlenn, wife of Frptl ted diamond jewelry nn-J otiior j {J," wo^'MuciTof'lt becomes cord- You can get Chief Petoskeys in clean, ewelry among Nettie P. Lnyton, by the death of Mrs. Robert Hanklns. USED TRANSPORTATION—1028 Oakland of Buffalo bankers. the Puritan dairy company from Maddalena of Shrewsbury .avenue, wood, for which we are receiving 25 Robert H&nkins and Family. cabriolet, wlTb wheels, iikt new; 1028 attractive cotton sacks, each contain- point of service, suffered a badly ^argaret Carleyy. Minnio Lawlewley and ing 15 pounds—1 peck. And you'll died Sunday at the Long Branch hos- cent3 a cord at present. For every —Advertisement. ^ontiac Isnriau ledsn, two 1028 Chevrolet sprained bark Mondny while loading pital at the age of 34 years. Besides da Carley Wells. The sum of $495 load of gravel obtained from the for- ns, 1KI27 Oakland sedan, 1027 Fontlaa BEATEN BY ERRORS. find a hundred handy uses about the milk cuns at the dairy. He Is con- inch was bequeathed to Rohort Ar- Card of Thanks. otipe. 1027 Ford coach. 1!)26 Dodge twelve* house for the empty sacks. her husband she leaves sovcral chil- eat lands, our bureau Is paid 15 cents fined to bed nnd is under the caro of dren, She was born in Italy and had old Edwards and Ida fijwards by private enterprise. We, tho family of the deceased Bagged Flaying Lost tho Game for VTho Chief Petoskey trade-mark on Dr. John B. Boyd. Mr. McGuIre is lived a number of years at Red Ickes. The sum of $5,000 wag left "In the cedar foreBts of South and Dora Wiggins, wish to th&nk the the Monmouth Club Sunday. the clean cotton sack la your guaran- a son of Thomns McGulro of Head- Bank. Tho funeral was held this in trust, the Income from which Id Central Jersey," Mr. Bakor went on, White Rose Juvenile club, No. 13, the tee of quality—your surety that today den's Corner nnd ho waa formerly a Alphonso Davlaon club and friends The Monmouth athletic club's base- morning at St. James's church. A o be paid to Kormnn H. Carley, "It becomes necessary to thin out who gave flowers and curs and —tomorrow-next week-you will al;J ^rtncrorhisir'athor InThe'm'i'lk'b'us- .dopted son of Mary C. Edwards, ball team, playing on its home dia- 1 roqulpm mass was chanted by Uev. the growth periodically. That Is how 'heir services in our houhurr of sadness. mond ut Atlantic Highlands Sunday, ways get the same high-graae select- -iness. Tohn B. McCloskey. Burial was made s long as he lives, nnd at hU death It comes about that from these state GratefullGtfll y yours, ed potatoes. Go this week to the it Mount Olivet cemetery. ho said sum of $5,000 is to bn-ome lands 40,000 saplings wero Bold be- was defeated by the Fort Monmouth stores whose names appear below." The Family, team by a score of 5 to 2. It was Beach Party. , lart of tho residuary estato. All tween last October and May. These —Advertisement..-, • the rest of the estate was loft In wore destined to bo cut up Into not tho fault of the pitcher for the The fifteen-pound Backs sold for Instead of the regular meeting of William Decker's Baby Dead. Card of Thanks. g Monmouth club's team that the 10 cents to 12 cents more than thi equal shares to her sisters and bro- lengths suitablo for various kinds of the ladlps' auxiliary of the Red Bank Marie Decker, two weeks old. thor named abovo. We take this means to thank our er coupe, 10 _i foldler aggregation won. TrjB Mon- market price on potatoes of similar lire- department nrxt Monday nlfrht poles, especially fence poles, bean rlends and neighbors for their many Sturiobnktr roadnter, 102(1 I'nntlac coupe, mouth club had a new pitcher from weight and quality. They sold read- rlnughter of William Docker. Jr., of Michael Gohring of Allenhurot be- poles and polos for the support of lOn Chevrolet roneli, 11)25 Packard coupe, a beach party will be held at Sea- Maple avenue, died on Monday. Eur- acts of sympathy In our great sor- Newark who allowed only four hits. ily in the better class neighborhoods, bright. Euch member is requested queathed one-third of his estate to newly planted trees. row caused.- by the death of our bb- ;lght-cyliaricr; 102(1 Euscx conch, 1024 Ragged playing In the Held lost the hut lagged In the poorer"- neighbor- to brinpr a lunch and moot af Lib- nl was at Mt. Olivet cemetery. each of two nieces, Carolina and "Wood of this kind has had Its oved husband and father, John Read. game for the Monm.outh club. hoods. Total costs to the potato ex- erty llrehoufie at seven o'clock. Those Dorothy GehrinK, and tho rv,-naln- heaviest salo In tho metropolitan dis- vVc especially wish to thank thoae Next Sunday afternoon at three change were 18 cents per peck nnd having cars are requested to bring I,ot Luke Find Your Home. inp third of, the estato wiu be- trict. Wo have sold some of this ma- who sent flowers and who loaned au- queathed In equal shares to the five, omobllesbll . o'clock on tho Atlantic Highland! tho scllinR price- to F. P. .Coward & them for transportation. Luke Longhead's department of tcrlnl to individuals or private con- 1 children of a nephew, Frank Wnl- Mrs. Jane E. Read, field the Monmouth club will play Son was 21 .£cents to retailers, who [ _ _ he Register every week tolls of de- cerns, but our biggest customers are Mr. John S. Read, th* Sheridan Caeeyi of Brooklyn. xabie homes for sale.—. zers. The will was made January tho municipalities and county units. I in turn received from 2T to 35 cents It pays to advertise in The RcEiBter. 16th, 1928. Caroline Gehrlni and Elizabeth Read. The Newark, East Orange, Hahway, —Advertisement RED BANK REGISTER, JULY 10,1929. Pape Fifteen BACK ON THE JOB AGAIN. ARTICLES 7OR SALE. FARM PRODUCE. BUSINESS NOTICES. EMPLOYMENT. REAL ESTATE FOR RENT. REAL ESTATE FOR SALE, REAL ESTATE FOR SALE. ANDREW J. HILUpaptr hanging and dec- YOUNG police dog, thoroughbred, for •«.•. BOD for sile, thirty jeaj-s old. TbomasH, MAN with sales ability, between agss 25 SIX large rooms, bath, with all improve- BEAUTIFUL sU-room fr»m« hoaie, ga- Richard WyckoB Recovers from In price reasonable. Mrs. E. SUlnle, Cen- Grant homeiUad, on Everett road, one «rating; exterior and Interior painting. and 32, to take over established business ONMOUTH oowt, IWMUM. ri«»".a: 14 Worthier street. Red Bank, phone ment*; perfect condition* garage; 147.60 rage, chiekan bous* and eleven Jot*. In- Jury Inflicted by a Hod Doe. Ur and Maple avenue, Atlantlo Hlghlandi, and a half miles from Red Bank. John tf. of International Correspondence Schools in month. 33 Waverly place, pbone fttd cladtnr home lot; only one and A half prowtl.s, bvulnas. prop.rll.j, (utory Richard Wyckoff of Fair Haven, N. J. ______Grant R. D. 1, Red Bank. Northern New Jersey. Previous experience Bank 357-R. blocki from Shrewsbury river. Price rea- •I'". «»'»". dw.lllnts. A lln* t« tilt COMBINATION coat and gas rang* for. BOARDtNG. modern improvements, hot as salesman unnecessary. Studen of I. C. sonable, PUce ready for occupancy, S. «"!«• -IU *"'•>« foil fsrtloulsrs. Luk.i's who waa bitten by a mad dog a law aod eold running water, COD trail? lo- S. preferred. Must have automobile. Draw- HOUSE tor rent, six rooms, all improve- Rialtr Oillcs. Osmpb.ll'1 Junction, BsUenl sale; Thatcher BS. In good condition: «*- CUSTOM HATCHING—Have anlargad l ments, two-car garage on First street, Gill. 486 Fairmount •venae, Jersey City. fe •nnable. David Simpson, pbone Bed Bank cated ; rates reasonable. Hudson Hooia. ing account and commissions. Established •«*H.. Jw.. I'hnna nun,. K«»nibiclWBIlBJUUr» V DV4e02MIH. wanks ago, has finished taking treat- my capacity and will again take; 181 Hudson avenue, phone Red Bank. 041. debit. Training assistance at start. Call EaHMde Park. Apply 230 Mechanic street, FOK SALE on Third street, 7sir Haven, HVK-R00M English bungalow,—wlffi ment to prevent rabies from develop- B09-M.* eggs to hatch; 8 cents each* Why HOWARD WHITE, 61 Portland road. for interview at 142 Market street, New. Red Bank, phone 2309. house of six rooms; elecMe, gas, water spsea for rooms on isaond floor; Holland ' ing. He has resumed hie,painting BOAT for sale; new sixteen-foot skiff, bother with * hen? Charlei D. Cleve- Highlands, N. J., bouse mover, founda- rk, or write for particulars. HOUSE of seven rooms and bath, fin- and heat; plot 16SxS00 feet, facing two fatat, Ul, batb, fireplaas, gas, water, ,l schools. Owner, 37 Hubbard avenue. Red __±_^^**S2*fo K\jpnt work; can clip hedges or cat lawns. Call Bank, phone 1206-M,* quire it 47 Washington street, phone Red there and he left the place for a few speaker, tubas, storage A battery, B KAY for sals; have about fifty tons a. 129 Broad street, phone 382, Red Bank. Bank 1761. VALUABLE business property for saU; batteries, complete; sacrifice, all for *25 112 per ton; ten tons for HOD cash. W. at 47 Westside avenue. Red Bank.* lot on corner of West Front strait ami mlnuteo. When he returned he found PAINTING and paperhnnglnic estimatei DESIKAHLE ollke for rent la the Eisner FOR SALK. six-room house, lot 90*07 tttt. George DeMldowItz, River Plssa, Red 1. Bridge, Weit Long Branch, phone Long cheerfully given. Elmer H. Stout. 8& POSITIONS wanted—Cook, Swedish', ten building. Apply at the office of Sigmund Maple avenue, po which Is located two Ml» Callahan unconscious on theBank.* Branch 662. years' experience, $76; chambermaid- corner Church and Compton streets. BeU stcre buildings. Is bereby offered for sals. South street, Red Bank, N, J.. phone Eisner Co.f or telephone Red Bank .1100. ford, N. J. Shade, fruit and Uwn; reason ground with blood streaming from FORTSALE, five acres beit Ear4y tomatoes TWO HUNDRED bushels of ear corn for 166G-R. wBiUeBB, J66; houseworker and care of GARAGE for rent, in Rumson; an estab- Applr to J. Trafford Alien. «fl Blvcrtlda children (German) experienced, $60; Hol- for selling: sickness. Sacrifice $2,000, avenue. Red Bank- wounds made by the dog. Mr. in township and early applet. D. B. sale. G. Howard Conover, 47 Broadway, THE HIGHEST prlc lished business. For particulars phone Luker's Realty. Belford. N. J. Soltel, Llncroft road.* Freehold, N. J.. phone 183. ______prices paid for liva chick- land couple, cooking, butiering, chauffeur, Rumnon 433. FORTY bouses at Bed Bank. Fslr Havi"! Wyckoff lassoed the dog and It died ens. Joe Baker, 230 Mechanic street, eight years' experience, $125, Anderson NO PLACE like home—For sale, cozy and Rumion, loeludlns rlvtr properties, SINGLE COMH White Leghorn pullets for phone Red Bank 2309. ' Agency, Ward and Grant avenues, Sea- THREE-ROOM apartment for rent; iteam bungalow, all furnished. In Keanshum, lor you to choose from If foil ar. inter.st" a inort time later, Mr. WycUoff wan BOAT for sale. Swampieott , sale: eight and ten-weeks old; grown on heated; all improvements; corner Wal- «d in buying. P. K. Kennedy. 0B East PAINTING and paper hanging work done bright. N. J., phones 425 Rumson lot 60x105 feet; good shade and high 1st; J bitten on hU thumb by tho dog and combination sail and rowing, with large grata range; good condition and ind lace and Spring street Telephone Red JJSSL?JtkSL?J"'tkJ'J Bank, phone 208«. by the day or contract- Let us give you 1312 Hohoken.* Bank 2065. Or call. $1,600, $500 cash, balance $ZB per month, It wa« for this reason that he had to complete equipment, Harry Purvis, healthy, H. L. Roach, R. F. D. No. 1, Red an estimate. F. S. Guernsey, Ph6ne Rum- Luker's Realty, Campbell's Junction, Bel- MEA1, ESTATE for anis or rent. IiTordir undergo special anti-rubles treat- Bank, phone Middletown 1318-F-13. son 819, 60 East River rond, Rumson, N. HALL for rent; third floor, 10 Broad ford. N. J. to give best service to clients, owners Stone Church, Locust, N. J. EIGHT ACRES of fine standing timothy HELP WANTED: Cooks. $90 -r street, for lodge, dances or entertain- ara requested to send detailed description ment Mr. Wyckoff spent twenty and clover hay for sale; also some al- houseworker1 for adults, $80; lately ments. Can be rented by the year, month FOR SALE at Rumson, corner lot, 62x168; of property, with terms. H. U Fraas, MONEY to loan on bond and mortgage. four blocks from Shrewsbury river; salt year* In the West and he became an falfa cheap. Ray H. Stlllman, State high. landed girls, $60. Agency, Ward and or evening. Apply R. Hsnca & Sons. 12 Bf£»j_s^re*t, Shrewsbury, N. J. FOR SALE, ten weeds' old Leghorn pullets way, Eatontown, N, J. " Apply to A. L. Avlna, Register building, Broad street. Red Bank. water bathing beacb; $1,200, including CHICKEN and truck farm for sale; *M~ expert lassotr there. He states that from pedigreed stock. Phone Red Bank lied Bank. Grant avenues, Seabrlght, N. J.* curb. This is a real bargain. George 829-It Levy, Sycamore avtnue, Shrews- FOR SALE, 200 healthy eight-weeki-old rOR BENT, store rooms on Monmoutb teeo acrea, nicely located; sell'mil your hb law many wild animals In the street, Red Bank, for rent; favorable lo- Gangs, 1492 Maple avenue, Hillside, N. J. eggs right at tho door. A g«od home and bury, N. J. .__ Leghorn pullets; have a large surplus. ORIENTAL and domestio rugs and FOR SALE, roadstand; living rooms and West, but that he never saw any aa Kenneth I, Smith, Shrewsbury, N. J.. near MAN WANTED—A national organization crtion; moderate rent. Apply at the ofnse a good living for someone; poultry houses FOR BALE, Model 28 Stalled- sedan, 200 carp at* shampooed and dry cleaned. of Sigmund Eisner Co,, or tolephone Red cellar, electric; lot 50x125 feet, corner; for 1,400 l.yeri, runnin« water, concrete) bad as the big dog which killed Miss h. p. Hall Scott, one year old, all ma- firehomo. Call to see them after 6:00 has an opening for man of good charac- P. M. Old carpets made Into ruga. Eag ter. This Is a permanent position with an Bank 1100. $2,600, $500 cash. Also two and a quarter floors: all conveniences, B. L, Atwat.r Callahan. hogany; in commission and In perfect con- assured income; experience not essential, acres land, S900. Luker's Realty, Belford, Krf Bk dition; forty railei per hour; cost $8,600. YOUNG Guernsey cow for sale, with calf rugs woven. Telephone or a postal LODG E room for rent. Desirable room N. J.. phona Keansburg 602-M. asking *8,B00; Immediate1 delivery. "--Re*d one week old; extra good family cow, a» we give thorough training. Apply 9:00 available for ass second and foursn 'SEVa "— " FIONEEBS' BIRTHDAYS. card will bring our truck to your to 10:00 A. M., Room 201, Third avenue Thursday nights of each month. Apply SIX-ROOM house for sate, as good as new; |kne Bank Works. Thomas Haher, Freehold, N, J., B. D. door. Monmoutb Carpet Cleaning and Broadway, Long Branch, N. J, If?;! > '<>** 'O' "l«i «»• b.au^ Phone Holmdel 30-F-4,* at the office of Sigmund Eisner Co. all improvements; cellar-like basement; tiful lots at Sllverwhite Garden,, on. Thomu R. Leonard Is 88 Years Old Company, telephone Mon mouth Beacb FOR RENT, stores, offices, flats, houses, very nice country location; twelve minutes of the dnest and fastest jrow'jg section. FOR SALE, thirteen-ineb richly cut 2260-J. WHltarjo Great, proprietor. apartments; improved; all locations. Just from Red Ban4c. Address Six-Room House, In Red Bank. Buy no-* ar.d «am neat and Mrs. Mary Leonard la 38. glass punch bowl with base, eleven MISCELLANEOUS. off Broad street, at 12 Mechanic street. drawer M, Red Bank. years Increase. Or will build to suit. BUSINESS NOTICES. Make a itart now for a borne nest T«a» handled glasses to match, Sterling sil- Land & Loan Co, HOUSE for sale or rent. Vanderveer & Address P. O. Boi til. Bed Bank. Thomas Henry Leonard and hla LET'S TALK about signs now. Moyan M. L. McCOLGAN, nurseryman and land- WANTED. »««] e«lv«i, but eattl. and Birdsall, phone 1465 or 190-J, Bed Bank. ver and cut glai* ladle, and nine-Inch Sign Co., manufacturers of commercial scape contractor; ffradinff, driveways and FOR KENT—A Broad street store; excel- elster-ln-law, Mrs. Mary E. Leonard pig.. Top market price* paid, cash. lent central location; building 19x65, eOR SALE, farm of six acrea; ten-room glais salad bowl. Address O. P. B., out-door and all types of electric slgni. walks constructed. -Broken flagstones for LARGE cjuntry home of twelve rooms, all house, hot water best, electriJ and gas; pioneer residents of Atlantic High- Hf&h class, lowest prises ana reliability. from April 1st Apply 12 Mechanic street, Improvements; garage; lot 109x449x166 drawer M, Red Bank.* sale. 20 PInckney road. Red Bank, phone A. E. Crawford Co, Tlnton Fall.. N. Tha Land & Loan Co. «/e acres: fruit: on highway. Terras can lands, observed their birthdays last 110 Oakland street, phone 2431-J, Red 1401-W. K phona EatontowD 161. feet on river; owner moving away. Ad- he made. Caleb Laker. Bel/ord. N. J.. week. Mr. Leonard Is 88 years old Bank. FOURTEEN vacant houses and apartment* dress 255 Liberty street, Long Branch, SEWING machine for sale; excellent con MONEY to loan on first mortgage in sunlit for rent at prices ranging from 136 per N. J. phone Keansburg 802.M. and Mrs. Leonard Is 88. Both are WE BUY and sell old shoes; men's arn from $2,000 up. Prompt service. Tho PHONE Keansburg 602-lf: for .ale n ditlon. Phone Red Bank UP.* ___ boys' only. Strand Shoo Renewry, 20 SEWING machines; any mak> of levins month and upwards, p. F. Kennedy, 46 HATCHERY, fruit and poultry farm for enjoying good health. MOTOR BOAT for sale, Aqua Flyer. 18- Land A Loan Company, 12 Mechanic machines repaired at abort notice. Re-East Front street. Red Bank, phone 20ft I West Highland avenue. Atlantlo High- West Front street. Red Bank. street. Red Bank, sale; twelve acres, fully stocked; good lands, six lots. 60x175 feet: S760 etch, or Mr. Leonard Is author of a history foot, second season, like new: salt wa< KLMER C WA1NUIGIIT, justice of the pairs, part., oils, etc. Hemstitching a FOR RENT or sale, bungalows and bouse3; road, (rood bouse, good market. Price ter fitted; all mahogany. Completely equip. O. L. GRANT, Everett, N. J., carpenter specialty. Singer Setting Machine Com- some bargains. Fourteen acres land near will HPII the plot for $1,200; water, gas and of Monmouth county entitled "Prom peace. All complaints receive prompt and builder and house painter; all work $15,000 cash. Address H. F. P., drawer c Caleb L. Luker. Belford. N. J. ped. 12 h. p. Johnson motor. Wilt sacrifice attention. Accounts and checks collected. pany, 74 Monmouth ttreet. Red Back, Keansburff, suitable for poultry farm: only M. Red Bank. Indian Trail to Electric Ball." He la guaranteed; charges reasonable; by day or pbone 1677. $6.500., Caleb L. Luker. Belford, N. J., MONMOUTH COUNTY. N. J.—Remark! for $500. Can be seen at 0. P. Irwin's Day and eight sevlce. Pattersoo avenue, HOUSE, corner, 100 feet frontage, lawns; generally known aa the "Father of contract. Alterations and repairs. "Ready* CHICKENS wanted: will par blftbe.t phone Keansburg 502-M. able, beautifully situated country estate. Boat Works, Red Bank.* near Broad street Shrewsbury. N. J, phone Cut" homes erected. Call, write or phone three large bedrooms, maid's accommoda- few mlnutea' drive from Red Bank; 140 Atlantic Highlands." He has been BOAT for sale cheap. W. Pontln, Little Red Bank 4. Mlddletowit 796-F-21. market prlcea for fowls and broilers. TWO up-to-date apartments for rent, newly tion, two bathrooms; unusual balcony, open acres, on concrete highway; flno brick secretary of tho Central Baptist Silver Point road, Little Silver. N. J.* MASON contractor, estimates cheerfully Call or write Alex Zwkkl, 89 North decorated, all modern improvements, fireplace; large sun porch, heated through- residence surrounded by besutlful shade given. Eugene Soysr, 89 Eadaon ave- RED DANK Window Cleaning Co. WeBroadway, lion* Branch. N. JMpboDe reasonable rent. Write B. Marks, 44 High out; double garage. Stewart, Silverside trees, improvements; prodnctive fields. church slr^ea the (Church was started COW for sale, fresh thoroughbred Jersey make a specialty of cleaning windows of 1500. itreet, Perth Arnboy, N. J. cow, with calf two weeks eld. Phone nne, Red Bank, phone 1467. stores, office*'and private residences. Rates avenue, opposite Thomas's Inn, Little Sil- woodland and brook; large road frontage. In 1893. Mrs. Leonard Is the widow Red Dank 1048-R. FLAT for rent; four nice large rooms and ver. N. J. A real buy at 128,000; terms. See Merritt reasonable. Satisfaction guaranteed. 49 DINNKRS—Shrewsbury Manor offers R. Lamson.,8 Weat Main street. Freehold, of Capt James Leonard. FORSALE, beautiful .high pedigreed Pek- LANDSCAPE gsrdener. Pruning Washington street. Red Bank, phono 2818. bath; all improvements; rent $85 perFOR SALE or rent on Broadway, near excellent home cooked dinner, at month; in Doremus building. Mechanic N. J. ingese puppies, out of first price winner. by experienced men; spraying, lay- EXPERT automobile washer now la charge street, near Broad street. Apply 12 Me- Long Branch, large strip land, 300 feet Bed Bank Dog a Winner. Address Mrs, J. Bore hard t, Belford, Mon ing out of grounds, large or small. of the wash stand at the Boro Busses, SJ.&O. special Thursday and Sunday. chanic street. Land & Loan Co. on Broadway,' 700 feet deep. Fine location NEW BUNGALOW of four room, and bath mouth county, N. J. Inc., -Globe Court and Mechanic- street Phone for reservation 1495. Bed for gaa station, roadside stand, factory or for sale: garaz.; all improvements; small Advice given as to what, when and STORE for rent at 8 Wallace street, just any purpose. Mary Edwards, owner, 833 "Arno of Keansburg," a Gorman po- FOR SALE, Hoover potato digger, goo* Get your, cur washed whO* In town. Bsrv- Bank, Sycamore avenue, Shrewsbury, down payment, balance like rent. 27 For* an new. Apply Eugene Warden, River- how to plant. T. H. 8tileB, 17 Harri- lc« guaranteed. of! Broad street; excellent location. Ap- 3roadway, Long Branch, N. J., phone man avenue. Fair Haven. N. J. lice puppy owned by Chorlos Dresser son svenue fled Dsnk. phone IDOL N. J. ply 12 Mechanic street. Red Bank, Land Long Branch 182. •of West Front street, Bed Bank, won side drive and Dlosoom Cove road, phone INSTRUCTION—Anneae Behool of Music; FORTY LOTS for sale; South Delford, Red Rank 267-J.* ' expert instruction on violin, mandolin, and Loan Co, ______along highway. Bur from Luker: tarmi first prize In Its claim at tho dog show YOUNG rabbit hound dogs ftuysale at 82 guitar, ukeleie, steel guitar, banjo, eaxa- WB LOAN money on home furniture with- FOR RENT; house of nine rooms and bath, BUNGALOW of four rooms and bath, to suit. He will build bungalows, help NEW FLOORS made perfect at sroaU cosU out removal in snms from 126 to 1800. all Improvements; 10 Wallace street, at Rumson last week. Shrewsbury avenue, Red tfiank, phone Have your new floors finished by a floor phone, clarinet. Instruments Bold and re- all Improvements; price $4,000. Two- finance same. Estimate, cheerfully srivea. 607-J. y Paired. 47 Washington street, Bed Bank. Repayable monthly, lawful Interest, prompt near Broad street. Your own broker or Caleb Luker. Belford. N. J. machine iu the first place—it saves money phone 1751. service. Write phone or call. Industrial owners, The Land & Loan Co., 12 Me- family house, ail Improvements, COOKER spaniel puppies for sale, black In the end. Pbone Ralph B. SIckela. Red Loan Society, Inc., 175 Smith •treet, chanic street. Red Bank. J10.000. Also lots, all niics; easy SIX-ROOM bungalow on Main .treat. Bel- and red; dam, daughter of Champion Bank, for estimate. PerthJVmboyJ^yhIjei ford, for ealet also alx-room boas, as Midkift Miracle Man. Edward. Gibson, CAR washing my speoialty. I guarantee BUNGALOW of five zooms and bath, all terms. Apply owner. Canevari, Wolf Mlddletown, near depot, S3.000: three acre, WANT ADVERTISEMENTS. phono Eatontown 130-J. EMPLOYMENT- "SPIRIT OF MONMOUTH." ia an Italian improvements; for rent furnished. Rob- woodland, near Keanaburg. aultable for you a satisfactory Job. Let me prove weekly newspaper that covers the coun- Hill avenue, Ocennport, N. J.* (Continued from preeeairur P8g«.) ELEGANT pouter ptegeons for sale; feath^ my ability, Cbarles A. Jones, c-pert auto- HELP supplied of all nationalities, for all ert Doughty, Pearl street, Fair Haven, N. chickens 11,600. Caleb Luker, Belford. mobile waiher at Boro Busses, I no.. Globe ty and is read by thousands of Italians. J. Call after 5:00 P. M. N J, erod feet. Como and see them. Dr. kinds of work, specializing in farm- Advertise in it. 152 Monmouth street, ARTICLES FOR SALE. Becker, Pearl street, Fair Haven, N. J. Court and Mechanic! street. Red Bank. hands. Write or call at 3. Berger's Agen- FLAT to let, BIX large rooms and bath, IT QUICK1 Lot 50x150, residen- cy. 88 West street. New York City, phone phone Red Bank 2607. HIGHLANDS. X. J.—For eslo and wnt( TOP SOIL, fill dirt, ifrad Ins of ail kind*, PEDIGREED Boston puppies for sale; also all improvements. Inquire at 18 Reck- tial street, near bus line. Red Bank; located within S00 feet of river, flv»- ajio roadways built: Laltewood Band, Hector 8^48. COUNTRY BOARD. Shady Knoll, Fair Ha- less place, or phone 680-W. ______low price; terms. Two other lota 48x160. two stoves and fifteen acres of alfalfa and CABPENTER work wanted. Ail kinds ven, N. J., excellent home-cooked meals: room hoaao; water, sas, electric light; for washed gaelgravel,, flagg, , cinderscinr, , bblue stone. mixed hay, J6.00 an acre. Anderson Farm, of Jobbing attended to by an ex- MIDDLE AGED woman would like a posi- FOUR-ROOM bungalow, with improve- 17 Harrison avenue, phone Red Bank sale, $1,850, terms J350 down, balance Pl bl Hd O Rlt tion an housekeeper in private family or tennis court; rates moderate. Booklet, 1991.* Prlao reasonable. Howard O. Rosevelt. West Long Branch, Monmouth road. phone Red Bank 283. ments, et Fair Haven. Apply Earl ing, 120 monthly. Six teen-room apartment ttbou* 1080. Red Bank. perienced carpenter. Write or phona widower's home. Address Housekeeper, Johnson & Frake, phone 434. house for sale, $6,500; terms $1,000 down. FOR SALE, eighteen-foot sloop, bird clan Marvin, 81 Plnckner road. Red Bank. drawer M, Red Bank. DINE In the country at Open Door Coffe< DUTCH colonial house, six rooms and BOSTON terrier puppies for sale, thorough- two suits of sails, one practically nev. FOUR-ROOM apartment, furnished, all im- bath, two porches, two-car garage; built balance $50 monthly; less 10% far cash. bred, beautifully mnrltetl. Prldham, 311- Phone 2108. Shop, formerly of Broad street. Red Will accept (rood bonds. Sculthorp Realty completely reflniahed; new deck, new rig- lanK. now at Shady Knoll, Hance road, provements. 6 Riverside avenue. Can three years; lot 76x150; beautifully land- verslda avenue. Little Silver, N, J,, phone ging, hull absolutely sound: $300. Philip $50.00 WEEKLY guaranteed to five be seen any time; garage. Phone Red scaped; one mile to Broad street, or sta- Co., 1X4 First avenue, Atlantic* Highlands, R«d Bank 2701.* Fair | Haven. 100% home-cooked dinners. Townley, phone Rumson 670. HEMSTITCHING. Mexican, gold, silver, alert men with autos; an unusual Phone Red Bank 283 for reservations. Bank 1416-W. ' . tion at Red Bank. 17 Harrison avenue, .BOSTON terrier puppies for sale; Foy OOSUNCS for 'sale, one and five weeks etc., buttons, pinking, plaiting, em- opportunity for go-gettera; hustlers DOUBLE HOUSE for tent; six rooms each phone Red Bank 1891.* HOUSE for sale or rent; Ideal location In ally bred. Sire, Champion Million Dollar WANTED, permanent board in pleasant Little Silver; near depot and ,bus; ilx old; Toulouse geese. L. Schnltzke, route broidery, trimmings and novelties. Mai- only need apply to Finkelateln's, 12 location in Red Bank or Fair Haven by side; all improvements; one block from FOR SALE— Look, a family homa of Blink; dam* noted winner. Short screw querads suits for blre. The Handy Shop, railroad station: with or without garage. nine rooms and bath, near bus line; rooms and bath; modern Improvements; talli, typically marked. Taylor, 06 BrOtii] 1. box 206. Red Bank, Everett road, N. J. West Front street, Red Kank, tonight Brentleman and niece: one large room and garase, garden, fruit: size' 67x200, In- 16 Broad street. Red Bank, one smaller; private family preferred. Joseph WUdanger, box 117, Red Bank, twenty minutes* walk to Broad street; • trait, Freehold, N. J, ______between 6:00 and 8:00, or Thursday phone 1360. 50x350; two-car garage; fruit, chicken quire at 47 Washington street, Hod Bank, COMPLETE furnishing* of six-room IF IT'3 real estate you want we have iu Moderate terms. Addrean Miss H. B. •phone 1761. FOR SALE!, adding machinal, desks, anfes. Demarest & Krahnert. Pbone Red Bank morning from 8:00 to 0:30. Brings, 368 Middlesex avenue, Metuchen, runs. 17 Hariflon aveaue, phone Red Bank typewriters, filing eablneti. Everything house, including living room, and FOUR-ROOM apartment for rent; electric 1991.* 829-M, or Eatontown 87-R. Main rffice, lights, heat nnd every improvement, in- LARGE two-story store for sale, including for tha office. Call As bury 6440, Sutler's dining room suites, practically new. 1 168 South street, JBUtontown; branch office. cluding gaa range; $40 per month, Tct- FOR SALE, new colonial bungalow, kitch- shelving and counters, with tour flnUbeti Office Epulpmsnt Co.f 417 Bond street Apply ntr 14 Gold street, or James Sycamore avenue, Shrewsbury, N. J.___ AGENTS wanted to sell our new spring DINE and dance at the Hotel Rivercreit. en, dining room. Jiving room, one bed- living room J "ia rear; located at Tin ton line of Alice Ann dresses direct from our excellent meals at all hours; comfort- leys, 17 Broad street. Red Bank. ' PELESa heators completely Installed MarnBcij'd, 4 West Front street, Red FOR nail papering, painting ana ffecorat- room and bathroom; lot 50x137; garage. Falls, on corner of paved county road to anywhere, $08 to 1160. Pips furnace Ing see Q. A. Miller, Church and Comp- factory. Liberal commission. Write Bel- able rooms overlookinerlokng ririverv . Newman HALF of double .house; also four-room Price $2,850; $150 down, balance like rent. seashore; csn be used as grocery, genera] •itlmates; neat guarantee. Terms. Stoves, Bunk. tou streets, Belford. Thlbaut's wall paper. mar Dress Co* Seventh avenue. Belmar. SpringSi s roadd, near bridgebid. PPhonh e 1872187. 2apartment furnishedih , and four-room Edward Hayes, 17 Church street. Fair Ha- stoie. £11 ing station. W onderfu! oppor- ranges, heaters stocked. Catalogue prices. Estimates cheerfully given.. Postofflco ad- Red Bank.* apartment unfurnished. C. W. Crozier, ven, N. J., phone Bed Bank 495. tunity. Bargain. Phone Eatontown 204 Drop card or phone; representative will dress Belford, bos 66. Phone Keant- Fair Haven. FOR SALE, some nicely marked thorough MEN WANTED, t o men wanted to live ADVERTISING is today one the best pay- HOUSE of seven rooms, gas and electric: or_address Box 1S6, Oceanport, N. J. cftlL 0. Merrltt, authorized branch Kal« burg 873-W. in tenant houhouses s andd work on .farm.farm. ing professions. Learn advertising or iSIX-KOOM house for rent at 14 Gold BUSINESS property oV~State~hlBhway for imuoo Stov« Co., 404 Newnrk avenue, brad fox terrlerpups; male $15, female commercial art. We teach it in ail [ta two lots, corner property: price $3,300. Bradley Batch, N. J,, phone 2020-R, $5. Thomas Firth, Freehold, N. J., R. F. J . Q. ESCHELBACH A BON, 126 WeBt Middletowiddl n Stock Farm, TThomah s S.il Fieldd, street, bath and all Improvements. Ap- Edward Hayes, 17 Church Btreet, Fair Ha- oale; new, six rooms, all latest improve- Front street. Red Bank, phone 1276. phono 861, Red Bonk. brunches: also landscapes in oil or water ply at 4 West Front street, foot of Broad ven, phone Bed Bank 495. ments ; large pavilion; opposite school at BOAT for sale; 02-foot raised deck cruisvr D. 1. " Auto accessories and valcanixlng. color. Call or write for further informa- •treet. Red Bank. . Jamea Marascio, Eatontown. Suitable any line of business. ATLANTIC Employment Agency, licensed tion. Terms reasonable. Evening lessons FOR SALE, well established ladies' ready- "Crescent," in excellent condition; 85 GOOD dairy or family cow. Wolf Hill and bonded. We furnish competent male BUNGALOW of four rooms for rent; i Will rent or fell at b\g sacrifice, property h. p. 4-cyHnder Buffalo engine, run only Fnrm, Eatontown, N. J. Ask for Mr.THE OVERHEAD door for garages, fac- from 7:00 to 9:00 P. M. Avon Art School. to-wear shoppe In Atlantic Highlands; at free and clear. Wolf, phone Lafcewood 800 hoars. Boat taken In on purchase of tories, warehouses, etc.; any site, any or female help for any requirement. Sani- 602 Main street. Avon-by-the-Sca, N. J. ter, gas, electric and heater; near East _ sacrifice. Completely equipped with Price. ^^__^^_^ opening. Let as call and explain. Mou- tary Barber Shop, 61 First avenue, Atlan- Front Btreet; rent $22. Edward Hayes, 17 rack*, hangers, show cases, caih register 1461. Corsair cruiser. Can be seen at Dlckman'i WILL BOARD convalescent child for sum- yard. Oarlock eV Brcweter, distributors of mouth and Ocean counties representative tic HiKhlands, N. J., phone 821 or 683. Church street, Fair Haven, N. J.. phone and all necessary fixtures. Will sell very FOR SALE, several new houses, bunga> BOATS for sale, one fourteen-foot Ralph B. Slckels, Red Bank. Vincent DImlceli, proprietor. mer or longer; good nursing and care. Red Bank 495. cheap to a cash purchaser. Owner de- lows; six rooms, bath, hot water heat Connlr cruisers and Chrii-Cr^/t mahogany Address W. B. C, drawer M. Red Bank. runabouts, 11 West 42d street. New York varnished skiff for sale. David HIGHEST prices paid for all kinds or live GARDENER, married, experienced flowers, GARAGE for rent on Monmouth street, sirous of leaving town and needs cash. all improvements; flno locations, neat Broadway; low taxea. Buy your home—' City, phone Chlckerlng 5611. Thompson, 2 Center street, Seabrlght, poultry. Jacob Becker, 273 Shrewsbury vegetables, greenhouse, landscape and WANTED. u«ed hot water heating system near Broad. Inquire of A. T. Doremus, Write or call at The Atlantic Dress Shoppe,r avenue. Red Bank, or phone 1633-W, Red construction work, would take charge of boiler; must be in good condition; suit- 44 Rccklesa place. Red Bank. 43 First avenue, Atlantic Highlands, N. J. pay like rent. Dont pay for other people's phono 216. Bunk. able seven-room house; state size and property with hard-earned dollars. Pierr*. WE BUY and sell everything. Red. private estate. Thoroughly experienced with SIX-ROOM house for rent; bath, gas, elec- DESIRABLE property, center of Red Bank, U. RlfZAU, remover of dead antmali. live Btock, Address Married Gardener, price. Address Gray. Oceanport, N. J.* Edwards, owner, 833 Broadway, Long Bank Auction Bouse, SB Monmouth drawer M, Red Bank. tric lights and other-improvements. Rent for sale; reason for selling, old age. Branch, N. J., phona 182. Lonsr Branch. CHERRIES for sale, in any quantity de Phone Red Bank 2240-W. WANTED, one or two good SJx4 auto tires. $S5 per month. Apply 66 Linden place. Address Desirable Propert/. drawer M, Red •treet* pbone Bod Bank 1084, aired; nil sprayed fruit; varieties ara WEST SIDE Employment Agency, 286 TEACHER wishes position during the sum- Also have two good 83x4 tires for sale. Red Bank.' BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY—Butchers j oxheartM, May Dukes, white ambera. Anna Bank.* Meat and vegetable market for ssle; lo- Shrewsbury avenue. List with us for mer months. Addreaa E. J. Costlo, Mat- Phono Red Bank 47-J.« ROADSTANDS for rent; large and small RIVER FRONT lot for sale overlooking ifOR SALE. pulleys, hangers and VhaJtinR, V. McCloskcy. Mlddletown, N. J., phone reliable service, Pbone Bed Bank 2716. awan, N. J., R. D. No, 2, or phone Mata- cated Keyport, central, corner Front and a grinding lathe for aharpenlnir lawn MONEY to loan on first bond and mort- vegetable stands. Palmer avenu.e »nd R.imsnn Country club, 100x300 feet; hisrh NIddlotnwn 79B-W. Mrs. J. M. Jones and P. L. Jones, agents. wan 207-M. gage; large and small sums; James A. and dry; may be bought for the ridiculous Broad streets; rent cheap, Ions lease. Pric* znoweri. hedare shears, ete. standard reg- FOK SALE, first class Hoover potato dig- State highway, Keanubure Gateway, John reasonable, part cash acceptable, balsnee by ister for business ofllce; also reamers ami CARPENTER work wanted; contracting or FRENCH GIRL, cannot speak English, Cnrlcy. 6 Elm place, phone 2368, Red Bank. Damato.* price of $4,000. Hadley-Hall. next to arrangement. Good reason for selling. ger, In good condition, as I hav« sold my day's work. Joseph E. Hulse, White wishes position doing housework In small Carlton theater, phone 1888, Red Bank. anvil. Call Rumson 433. fnrm; reasonable price. V. VanDorn, Half- WANTED, ceiling fans. Address Box 112. COMFORTABLE seven-room house for Equipment: Beit modern show eases, re* road. Little Silver, N. J., phono Red Bank family. Miss Muller, Rowlocuat, Rumson Leonardo, or phone Atlantic Highlands rent, on bus line, convenient to stores MINIATURE ESTATE, eight and one-half frigerated window display, Hartford auto* CONCRETE, gravel and mason sand for lie rond, near Red Bank. 2O4G-W. road, Rumson, N. J.« 662. I tie. II. Rltzau. phono 2240-W. Red and school, one-car garage, full screens and acres of ground, over 400 feet facing on matic refrigerating machinery, cork and SEWING MACHINES—Sale of used m«- UPHOLSTERING and reflnUbing of allCOUPLE, German, chauffeur-butler and awnings with house; excellent neighbor- the beautiful Shrewsbury river; with an concrete icebox for fruits and vegetables. Bank. chinca. See advertisement on page 20. kinds of furniture. Frank Howard, 66 nurse-governess ; A-l references ; desire hood: $55. Hadley-Hall, next to Carlton excellent brick house of ten rooms andApply M. Shumsky, 131 Smith street, Perth BUILDING ftravel for Bale at the Horsfail A-l FLAT TOP eas stove for sale; coit Harrison svenue. Red Bank, phone 2081. steady position, go anywhere. Address H., | LOST AND FOUND. theater, phone Red Bank 188EU three baths. Artistically situated, worth Amboy, N. J. • farm, Newman Springs road, first house $65; will sell cheap; uied three months. drawer M, Red Bank, or call Red Bank 678. eit of bridge. Phone Red Bank 1581-M. CONTRACTOR, wall decorating, paper CAMEO lavalliero lost last Monday week, TWO splendid homes in Little Silver for $100,000, can oe bought for $50,000. Had- Apply 67 White street. Red Bank.* banging and Textone and exterior BOYS WANTED for finish department. between Liberty hose company's on rent; on concrete road and bus line; rea- ley-Hall, next to Carlton theater, phone FOR SALE or rent, new colonial houM SOD for Bale; acres of good clean sod, painting. 3. Cann.Eza.ro, Main Btreet. Key' Red Bank 1SS8. FOR SALE, avo-pieee living room suite, Donald's DcLuxe Laundry. 44 Marlon White street and Broad Btreet: valued aa sonable. Hadley-Hall, next to Carlton thea- of six rooms, sun room, bath; to* Miadletown, Stock Farm. Thomas S. also cabinet Vlctroln. with sixty records. port, N. J., telephone Keyport 807-11. street, Red Bank. keepsake. Reward if returned to 34 Broad ter. phone Red Bank 1888. HERE is your chance to buy one of these Field, phone 861, Red Bank. cated 138 Lexington avenue, Seq Roy Price reasonable. 61 East Bergen place, OLD FLOORS resurfaced lik« new- Let street. Red Bank.* FURNISHED APARTMENT, Twin Gables. forty splendid building lots, fully re- "WOOD for aale, oak and pine; fireplace phone Red Bank 2888 (evening only.)* us give you an estimate for resurfacing WANTED, girls to work on flat work iron- stricted, at your own price and terms; gas, Quackenbush, 86 Hudson avenue. Bed and stove lengths t also cord wood tot er. Donald's DcLuxe Laundry, 44 Marlon FOUND, gray curley h»1red Airedale. Mrs. janitor Bervicc, elevator, tile bath, river FOR SALE, Royal uprlnht piano; electric your old floors by machine, which ire have street. Red Bank. George Kaney. 50 Foster street, River privileges; breakfast nook, supplied frigid- .ter, electricity, sidewalks and curbs; on Bankr,phone 2287.» •ale. J. H. Carney, phone Eatontown recently added to our equipment. Phone bus line. Hadley-Hall, next to Carlton 19-K-21. washing machine and Quality gas range; Plaza, phono Red Bank 501-J. aire; rent $100, Possession July 15th. John ehcap. Mrs. Stanton. 95 Broad street. Rnlph B. Slckels. Red Bank. B. Prothero, 81 Monmouth street, phone theater, phone Red Bank 1888. 1*0UR show oases for sale; eight and nine Red Bank.' YES. It will be done right If your car Is $50.00 WEEKLY guaranteed to five Red Bank 952. • WILL SELL or exchange one-family six- FIVE-ROOM bungalow for sale, all im- foot show eases, all electric lighted; will provements ; almost new; lance sun FOR SALE, four English setter puppiei, washed at the Boro Busses, Inc.. wash alert men with autos: aa unusual ROOMS FOR RENT. IDEAL APARTMENT of three rooms, Twin room house in good neighborhood for a dlipose of same fay May 15th. Put a de- stand. Charles A. Jones, expert washer. opportunity for go-setters; hustlers house with four, five or six bedrooms. porch; nenr station and river; price $5,000. posit on them now. Will sell right Tct- thirteen weeks old, sired by Champ Beau APARTMENT of three rooma and bath. Gables, $80. Also three, four, five rooms Address Bungalow, drawer M. Red Bank.* Lavorack, out of nicely bred bitch. ' Cnn CONTRACTORS and builders. When you only need apply to Finkelstein's, 12 all improvements, for rent. 8 Linden at Riveraldc Gardens; four, five, six rooms John B. Prothero, 31 Monmouth street, fey's, 17 Broad street, Red Bank. are thinking of having work done, by phone Red Bank 952. FOR SALE or exchanEce. modern house of be seen nt O. L. Thacker's farm. Holm- West Front street, Red Kank, tonight place, opposite Strand theater.* , at Les Gertrudes. J. B. Prothero, 31 Mon- BARGAINS in furniture. We carry one 01 del. N. J.* ___^_ day or contract, consult Earling. Johnson mouth street, phone Red Bank 952. LEROY PLACE, just listed; an ideal home, twelve rooms, three baths, well located tha largest stocks of used furniture and & Frake. We have our own lumber yard. between 6:00 and 8:00, or Thursday FURNISHED hourse for rent for summer seven rooms, all modem improvements; in the Oranges; lot 100x150; price $56,000. bouie furnishings In the state. Buy COL- months or longer; nice location, near FIVE-ROOM bungalow, all improvements, Monmouth county farm or water front DWELLINGS, garages, jobbing, etc ir morning from 8:00 to 0:30. river. Mrs. P. A. Chaunxy, corner Pearl screens, awnings, garage, etc.; $13,000. tenti of homes outright, or sell on commis- AUTOMOBILES. you wish work done right and at the for rent; possession July 15th; $35 per Owner leaving town. John Prothero. 31 dwelling, lesser, equal or greater value ex- sion. Gaorge H. Roberts Co., In J.. State right price, call Kalph B. Slckels. McLaren Avenue end Clay street. Fair Haven, N. J.. month, James A. Curley, 6 Elm place. Monmouth street, phone Red Bank 952. change considered/ Address P. O. Box Highway (one mile north o( Red Bank.. FORD ONE-TON truck for sale, 1926. in street. Red Bank. _^ RED BANK Employment Agency and phone Red Bank 493-M.* pbone I Red Bank. 145. Seabrfsht, N. J- . Fhnne Red Bank 2871. good condition: good rubber. May be RIVER PLAZA, four rooms, bath, garsge: AUCTIONEER—George H. Roberts Co., Nurses' Registry, 46 Riverside avenue, FURNISHED room to rent; nice location. FLAT for rent, four rooma and bath; hot all modern Improvements; fruit and OPPORTUNITY—Profitable farm, two TOP SOIL for »alo; hay pressing and wood ieen any evening between 6:00 and 1:0O Mrs. I. E. Battersby, proprietor. Courte- Call evenings after 5:30 P. M. 61 East • water heat, gas nnd electric. Apply at and a half miles lo Kefl Bank; sixty •awing done. Plowing done by the aero. o'olock. William Toomey. Everett, N. J-* Ina- auction specialists, phono Red Bank ous service, efficient help; references in- shrubbery; lot 60x100: $5,000, Terms ar- 2871. Bergen place, phone Red Bank 2838.* 92 Shrewsbury avenue. Red Bank. ranged. J. B. Prothero, 31 Monmouth acres, mostly fruit; good varieties. Lars* Driveway* graveled, etc, John Carney, ATTENTION—Used car owners I We have vestigated. Practical and trained on call. colonial house; three brooks. Also iu,t> phona Eatontown 1Q-F'2t. for Hale at extremely low prices the be- MONEY to loan on first bond nnd mort- Telephone Red Bank 1422. ROOMS for rent on river bank, furnished. HOUSE for rent, six rooms, near Broad street, phone Red Bank 952. gags on Improved real estata worth Apply 59 Rector place. Red Bunk. street; water, gas, electric light, good able for country estate. Priced right. CANARY birds and gold flsb for sale. We low listed part* and bodies which may be RELIABLE middle aged woman wishes po- SIX-ROOM HOUSE in good neiehborhood. Phone Middletown 272-F-42. just what you ntad to put your old cardouble the amount loaned. Alston Beek- ROOMS for rent. Blnftle, or for light houae- yard, paved street; rent reasonable, Call all improvements; good lot, garage, new- now have a full line of canary birds and man, attorney. 10 Broad iitree* Red Bunk sition as housekeeper; careful, good keeping:, furnished; all improvements: at 76 Mechanic street, Red Bank.* LOTS on east side of Madison arenue; stxe gold flab; also bird and flsb supplies. W, buck in shape j Brand new body to fit plal-'-i iok; no objection to a couple of ly decorated; price $5,250 to quick buyer. omi-tmi chnssia, still crated, first 150 take* SUPERIOR Window Cleaning Co., phone private home, No children. 42 Rector John B. Prothero, 31 JMonroouth street, 40x150. For particulars phono Bed W. Kennedy A Sons, 41 Broad streit. Red children. Address Reliable, drawer V. Red place. Red Bank.* Bank. „ it. Che violet touring body, will fit102 5 Red Bank 2*78. We make a specialty of Bank.' KEAL ESTATE FOR SALE. ihone Red Bank 952 Bank 1023-R. tr lP"fi chassis, (15; Chevrolet, four-door cleaning windows In private residence!. FURNISHED rooms and board: Ideal FOft PRINTED matter phana or write Day and night service. MEN wanted for picking apples. H. Rit- Service Sales Agency, Belford. Business eedu'.i body, 1024 chassis; $30: 1924-1025 location, on the Shrewsbury river: mod- HILL SITE for sftlfi, with acreage, of about cards* stationery, etc., with free cut pic- Ford coupo body, {20; Essex coach body, _ tau, phone 2240-W, Red Bank. erate rates. Frivold's, 188 Riverside ave- sixty acres; overlooking river and ocean. turing your business, $2.95 a thousand. will lit from 1924 to 1927.chassis, $80. Al- JOSEPH L. KNIGHT, suotlonea^ over BOY wanted as a dishwasher nnd to holp nue. Red Bank, phone 2771. Large barn and house on property. On jo radiators, motors, rears, wheels, tlrei. twenty years' experience selling In kitchene. . Atlantic Hotel. Fair Haven, Brown*s dock road or McClees road, to Riv- Phone Keanfburg 602-M. rims, '..{.rings, dump bodies, and motor parts JJ. , phonh e 46565. ReRdd Bank.Bk" NICELY furnished room in an ideal loca- erside drive and Red Bank. J. F. Andrew, ANTIQUES—Currier &. Ives prints, cherry goods at auction, t sell anything any- tion ; all conveniences; gentlraan pre- for P'utiac, Oakland, Chevrolet, Star, Ford, COLORED GIRL -wanted to care for baby ferred. 81 South street. Bed Bank, phone Navesink. N. J. and mahogany "Wlnthrope desks, old Hudson. Essex. Dodge. Gardner and others. where. Phone Red Bank 727-VV. aoorn rrilrror in pine ami mahognay. Re- and do upstairs work; must be neat and 1017-M. Private home. FOUR LOTS, 25x100 feet each, for sale. Joseph Has s as. 28 Emm on • street, phone nave a good disposition. References. Call Warren place. Keansburg. Apply to N. pairing and reflnlshinjr by expert cabinet 1082. Long BrancT.. maker. Hellerman's antiques, S8 Washing- BARTON CHAMBERLAIN, contractor anil Red Bank 1389.* APARTMENT for rent, five roomi *nd Murray, Moran place. Keansbure, N. J. ton street, Rumson. N. J. SEVEN PAS3ENGER Huflnon sedan, good builder; jobbing especially. 161 Soutr. AMBITIOUS persons wanted for educa- AT ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS! must Bell A Timely Tip for imint. flno motor, SIKO; four passenger tr«et. Red Bank, phone 1615-W. tional work during summer; guarantee bath; $37.50 per month; near Broad four-room furnished buntralow; bath, all STOTOIt BOAT for sale, eighteen-foot run- WIIlyi-Knlght coupe, 1027, splendid con- street. Apply Red Bank Real Estate about type, Thompson Quad Elto motor, FLOORS RESURFACED—Wo specialize In alary and commission; high school train- Improvements, two enclosed porches, fruit, dition J575. Time payments. Bthn, Hud- ing necessary, teacher training preferred: Co., former Second National Bank berries; price $2,800. $1,000 on mortgage, the Farmers Hereabouts. little used. Seo Dickman'a boat worsts, son avenue. East Keaniburg, N. J., phone making old floors look like new. New Wharf avenue, RedBnnk, floors also rennlshed. Estimates cheer- training given; promotion and extra building, Red Bank. 6%. Addres9 P. O. Box 316, Atlantic Keansburg 658.* . fully given, Crozfcr & Son, Fair Haven, bonuses. Address L. Hatficld, drawer M, Highlands. N. J. TWENTY small pins for sale. Mlddletown FORD~SPEEDSTER for aale: factory body Red Bank.* FrCBh vegetables, fruit, egga and farm produce ot Stock Farm, Thomas S. Field, phono 8G1. N. J.. phono Red Bank 1082. PORT MONMOUTH bungalows, houses and nnd top; very cheap. Apply Hap Handy, YOUNG WOMAN wishes two Joys' work a FURNISHED room for rent. Apply 63 lots for sale. Bungalow and two lots. various kinds are now in. demand and this demand Red Bank. Vr Haven. N. J.* Berzen place, Red Bank. SPEED BOAT for aalo: $850. T, J. Wren, LANDSCAPE gardener; new grounds week, Monday and Thursd«y. clcsnlng $1,800; lots $250 each; easy pay menu, will last until late in tho fall. Many farmers in OR SAIiK, 74 Harley-Davidaon motor- laid out and planted; old grounds Ironing; no washing. Coll Red Unnk LARGE, nicely furnished room, near bath, r bathing. Buy while they last, only 49 Little Silver Point rond. Little Silver, cycle. Can be seen at Grover Parker's, 948-J." for rent to congenial couple: no other Improved and beautified. Tress and left, Lukcr'fl Henlty. Belford and Camp- this vicinity have moro fresh produco than they 13 Mechanic atr«et. Prlo» $125. Motor YOUNO LADY, high school graduate wlsh- oomers. Phone Red Bank 1197.* bell's Junction, phone Keanaburt? 602-M. FOB SALE. Wurlttter electric playor No. 0184 In good shape.* shrubbery sprayed and pruned. Ad- es position as full or part time typist. FOIt SALE, eix room bungalow, electric can use, but they have not enough to warrant ped- piano, nlckla-ln-ilot style; good con- vice gladly given, M. Butterbach, Address T. O. Box 184, Red Bank, or tele- and gaa; lot E0xl20; $3,200. $500 cash. dling it. Other work limits their time and th« FOR SALE, "38" Plerce-Arron motor Phone Red Bank E04-R." REAL ESTATE FOR RENT. dition; reasonable to quick buyer. box 882, Fair Haven, N. JH phone 3&lsnce monthly ; possession at once. Nine- prices they would get for their goods at retail A. W. Smock. 26 Boardwalk, Kcans- and 1925 Locomobile motor in per- Red Bank 2042-J. MIDDLE AGED colored woman wnnts a FOR RENT, house of seven rooms and teen lots l*4ins liitrhwny; JR.500, part ca»ri. place as plain cook or freneriil house- bath, hot water heat, open fireplace,one -Luker's hu-alty, Belford and Campbell's would not be sufficient to psy them for tho trouble. burg, N. J. Phono Koimsburff 89. fect condition: 1025 Locomobile via- SHOE REPAIRING; flrat class workman- worker. 41 Proitpect avenue, Red Bank. car garage; best residential section. R. H. Junction, N. J., phone_ Kehnaburg^SOS-M. For these reasons a large portion of their aurplui torla sedan; parts for 1025 and 1086 ship; hand-sewn work specialty. Red Phona 162.* Vanderveer, 49 Branch .venue. Red Bank, FOR SALK, ih Highlands, on the hill, bun Chevrolet! and Dodges, Oc««nport Bank Shoe Repairing Co., next to Miller's phone 1465. galow «f eLx ro ; $2,f*00; (600 down HOOVE ft potato dlaner. first class condl- Hardware Store, 80 West Front street. Red. COOK nnd first floor worker wanted; small produce is wasted. tlon. Eugene Warden, Riverside drlvo and HOUSE for rent, five rooms, modern lnZ }f kers '*"'!*• CampbelJ'B Junction, phone Auto Wreckon, phont Eaton town Bank. family. Phone 205-J. Red Bank. t B ta b r t U2 Blossom Cove road. Thono 257-J, Bed 412.* ...... ,.,_.. „.. mnn experienced provements; reasonable rent. Telephone ' l .. " - V g_ . '^; : Bank.* _____ . CAUi'UNTER and builder. General CM- WORK wanted b 1415. or address 14 Worthley street, Red BROAD STREET, corner property of nine Many folks in towns are anxious to buy from tha bookkeeping— — •-'«•*»*»-.'»»i,st,. Bt-i»iat,scllini%r nuannd uuDiiiunh a 14_ru* FIVE-TUBE Freshman raill'oi for lale, in pairing, estimates given on all kinds if t ne; would fill In temporarily during vaca- Bank.* rooms, two baths, hot water heat, fire- farms, where they are sure everything they get ll USED and rebuilt trucks for sal*; various buildings, blu» prints furnished; prices place, sun porch, larpe lot: price reduced parfaot oondlUon: 14.00 each. Here is a makes of from one to flv« tons capacity. reasonable i kll work guaranteed, A. O.tion period. Address H. C. II., drawer M. FIVE-ROOM bungalow for rent, all im? real bargain. Apply 41 Liberty street, RedBank. provements; $35 per month; ponession 59,000 for quick snle. John D. Prothet/., fresh. It is no trouble for theae people to go to Sold with guarantee. A. Vetnstra. White o(T. phone Hed Bank 826-M. 31 Monmouth street, phone Jled JBank 652. Long Branch,-K. J.* truck distributor. 277 Oorlles avenne. As- HOUSEKEEPER wonted; younn woman id July 15th. Jarne* A. Curley. 6 Elm place, the country as they cherish tho chance for an out- UAV13 your clothes cleaned at tba Cl:r Phone Red Bank 2368. TWENTV-rlVE ACKEs"foi~6ale~houTB~of FOR SALE, uprlsht piano with bench: al- hury Park, N. J. • Dry Cleaning and Dyeing Works, 9 M«- take charge and do generul house- six rooms, hnth. burn, chicken houses, ing. If you have fresh eggs, vegetables, mlllc and so genuine colon in] mnhncrany bureau, FORD one and a half ton truck for sale. ebanla street, near Broad street. Red keeping In A small home for two men. BUNGALOW, fully furnished, for rent, garage, farm implements, orchard; $25,000. Pbone 061, Red Dank, or write 427 East Guy Cooper, State highway, Headden's Hank. Phone 2117. William Ostrov. DH- Good plain cooking and muat be neat. Ad- all improvements; garase attached, butter on your table every day think of the peopls prMor. Terms to suit- Convenient location. John Front street. Red Bank.* Corner. dress F. L. S., drawer M, Red Bank." beautiful lawn and shrubbery; four months. B. Prothero, 31 Monmouth street, phone who are not so fortunate and give them a chanco of FOB SAUOuii •I«trIc~llgnTT3o6 "lights. 5300, Longer period if desired. No small FOR SALE. Harley-Davidton motorcycle. In PLUMDINQ aad heating; estimates Mr< PAIIT TIME or day's work wanted. 14 children. Apply to C. P. Kemp, Little Sil- Red Bunk !>52. ten h. p. Fairbanks Morso engine, kern- nlshed. Joseph W. Fox, 116 Pinekn«r Morford place. Red Bank, Mrs. Wilson." buying theBa luxuries by advertising what surplus seiner gaiollnef six kw. generfltor, Fair- excellent condition. Inquire Cecil DsIUn- rondj_Jted Bank,_phone 28l7.^_ _,___ __ ver, N. J.« FARM nenr Red Dank for a ale, containing banks Morse, driven from engine: complete Uch, Haslet. N. J. ______mr WHITE woman wishes day's work to do, about thirty acres; largely In fruit, ap- you have in my department of Tho Register. HUDSON, four passengar sport model, for l'EWitiTEirheadquarterB. Type writers or would do laundry In or out, 276 Me- FOR RENT, nine rooms and bath, nil Im- ples ; spleiidiil condition. I'ric* JB.fiOO. W, switch board, sixty *et cell batteries, Ave rented, bought and sold. Trubln's. AS chanic street, phone Red Bank 1274.• provements ; two-car garage; rent JGO h. p. General Electrlo direct current motor • ale; Simplex rings; condition guaran- Proud Btreet, Red Bank. per month. Call 20i2-M. Red Bank.* A. Hopping, 8 Linden place. Red Bank.* and startlna box. Can be neen at Knoll teed. Smith, Bed Bank lSSO-R.* ^^ WANTED. Englishman )r Scotehmnn to LOT FOR"SA"LE7Tocated between Red Bank "Tha Mora You Tell Acre Farm, Tin ton Falls. N, J., address FOR BALE, four balloon tlre> and tubes; JEMENT blocks, sidewalks and mason thutch n small roof. Telephone 2402, FOK RENT for summer months, nine-room and Shrewsbury, size 50x250. Price Tha Quicker You Sell." Eetontown, R. D. No, 1, phono 274, Eat- plenty of good service In them, Hayei, work; nliu rockface. Pater DePontl, 245 Red Bank." attractively furnished house, on Shrews- $1,000; cood .oration, W. A. Hoppina,' & in tow n. i Shrewsbury ovenuo. Red Bank. Phone Red bury river at Little Silver Point. Phone Lidljd Bk^ Pearl street, second house from Clay Rank U08. GENERAL houseworker wanted, white, few mornings. Red Bank 1886. jj _ Btrect, Fair Haven. N. 3.* hours e&ch dsy, for couple in small FOR BALE, bed spring 81,00, portiere* FOR RENT, store and four-room apnrt- SIX-ROOM houso for sale,, toilet, bath, $2.00 pair, boy'i popular books. 26 centi DOG CLIPPING a speclnlty. Joseph apartment, mld-riny dinner; must be nent cas. water, cood locution. Price 15.000; «ach, canoe paddle 76 cents, polo mallet Leonard, 2BT West Bergen place, phono •nd able to give references. Phone even- ment. 208 Monmoutb -eet, near rnil- FARMPRODUCFi 1262-R. Fed Dank Sundays only.* road station, all-improvements; steam beat, make offer. Jnnies A. Curley, 6 Elm place, 11.25. Indian clubs SI.00. Phone- Red Ings R?d Bank 1053.* phone 236S, Red Bttnk. ______FOR SALE, ptgi, six to eight w«sk» old; THRESHERS and tinier*. Maher Bros., electric lights; $75 per month. For further Dank 874 after 7:00 p. M,* . WANTED, experienced hand Ironera^ Ap- particulars Inquire Joseph J. Rodgen, 95 NE^V five-room house for »s.le, all Im- FOR SALE, Bolen saiotine tractor with 'also rye. James Hickey, phone Holm- box 40, Holmdel, N. J. Phones Holm- ply Rumson Laundry, £0 Center street, South street. Red Bank. Phone 093 or provements; flreptnee, steam heat; 1350 attachments. Phone Red Bank 820-K. del 10.F-31." de) 80 and Holmdel 29. Runfton, N. J.» 639-M, Red Bank. down, balance as rent. Jamei A. Curler, Levy. Sycamore avenm, Shrewsbury, N. J-_ CHOICE White Leghorn pulleti for eala, STEEPLE JACK—Flasr poles and stacks GIRLS wanted; steady work. Apply at fl Elm place, phone 23Cfl, Red Bank. fifteen weeks old; fl.SK, some 11.00 each. HALF of house for rent, six rooms and Fbn~SALE two boaTillful'~rnaiT7o7ker palntad;.all klnrff of high work done. Rumson Laundry, ?0 Center street. Rum- FOR SALB. rent or exchange; new four- Spaniel pups: one red, one black. Sired W. Cuttrell. Everett road, Everett, N. J., P. S, Guernsey, 89 Eist River road, Rum- «on. N. J.» bath (corner), all improvements: hot phon* Middletown 7D6-F'14.' . son. N. J., phone Rumaon 319.• air heat, stationary tubs, gai ranae. room cottage nn corner plot located on by Champion My Own Desire; three and WANTED, youns man willing 'to learn screens, with or without garage; reason- the highest point In borough of Estontown; a half months old. Show "stock. E.. S. HORSK "for sale, strong, heavy worker. ODD JOB9 nt any kiml hy day or contracL clothing and furnishingfrn ingss buinssbusiness.. N able rent to good party. All light and full price $1,600. Will Accept sood car as Thompson, Riker street. Highlands, phoae Swimming River Farm, Joseph Ucrgl, F. S. Guernsey Co., 60 East, River roa<3, experienci e necessary. Applly bby letter to large rooms. Sohel, 84 Wallies street, part payment. Ceorse StUlman, 121 Broad aWftadAUe&M " JJaotoft, N, J.« _ Bums on, N, J,, pi? one BID,* •T, Krid.eJ, IUd Bank, Shone 2540, Red Bank.* ' •treet, Eatpntgwn. N, J,» .. A .- A.-f\ '• '^"is Paea Sixteen RED BANK REGISTER, JULY 10,1929. •onion of the legislature and make they permit themselves to be deluded the legislature repeal this law. The by political bunk, after ail their ex- THE RED BANK REGISTER. governor apparently Isn't in any hur- periences along this line, they are Spiritualistic Services General Painting ' JOHN B. COOK. Editor. ry to do this. Some newspapers have getting only what they voted for. Cbonh of DMot Low and Spirit Estimates cheerfully furnished. OEOSQE 0. H/LNOE. Aueetat* Editor. even gone eo far aa to picture thi ROTH Weefc-End Specials Fionas* Avairat auid Bamlsvard, THOMAS IBVTVO BBOWN. governor of the state grabbing thi UBONASDO; N. J, David Wilton, Jr. PublUhar and Butlnata Manasa*. legislature and demanding that thi 21 MAPLE AVENWS. legislature come back to Tronto: Fiftieth Anniversary A few carefully selected items Jthat combine rxmm nujvcu STEVZNSON BED BANK. Subscription Prlaiai Ont yaar and repeal the law. It seems to me Six nonthi that the governor if every bit as re-of the Asbury Park Press. Tbna mentf sponsible as the legislature for th The Asbury Park Press last Sun- QUALITY and ECONOMY. Tha K«d Bulk Betlltn passage of this law. He signed il day Issued an edition of 120 pages in 1 after the legislature had passed it, If a member of celebration of its fiftieth anniversary, and It ni his signature which made the paper being fifty years old that Swift's Regular THE ASSOCIATED PRESS the measure into a. law. Long Island Ode H>. FRESH- Tilt AtloolaUd Pnil la Btltiinlr an- day. The edition was more than a Mtta4 to tfct *> place at Holmdel to Bernon S. Pren- of them put up a peep in the legis- bridges; of mall delivery and wire- Muencher Brand Malt per can 50c tiea. Nine years ago Mr. Butcher lature to defeat this measure. less; of the growth of the towns and oought this property for $21,000. Last villages of the county; and of all Caps 2 gro*B 3Sc other matters of growth and advance- week he sold it to Mr. Prentice for And if the Republican governor 518,000, In other words In nine ment. 97c 'b. Short Forequarters of O'fe Ib. Cappers from 75c to $223 was to hot for economy as he was • • • years' time the farm lost one-seventh declared to be. and if It's such a bad «* LAMB *« of Its value through no fault of Mr,measure as these papers are saying, The Asbury Park Press has reason Butcher. The reduced worth.of the why didn't he veto this measure In- to be proud, not only ot Its anniver- Sale on House Furnishings. land was due to the fact that It Isstead of approving It! Wasn't In- sary edition, but of the general char- becoming harder and harder to make creasing salaries and increasing the acter and quality of the paper en a living out of the soli. state's expenses to the amount of every day of the year; and every FIXTURES—NEW AND USED. two and three^uarter'mllllone of dol- newspaper man In the county lifts his hat in recognition of the high' quality ROTH & CO. A loup of $3,000 on an Investment lars enough for one session of the "Exclusive Befallen of Quality Heata Since 1888" 25 East Front St., Red Bank, N. J. of $21,000 is large, but In reality thla legislature! Why was it deemed nec- of that newspaper. doee not pafnt the picture as bad as essary Also to pass a lav which, ac- 4 MONMOUTH STREET, Telephone 506. RED BANK. N. J. DELIVERIES MADE. It really Is. Thin farm was sold for cording to thenewspapers of thn a country estate and not as a farm on state, will put $300,000 additional which to make a living. For thla rea- costs on the people. eon Mr. Butcher received more than A. L. Davison the actual farm land value. There la Commercial Body Uttls or no demand for large farms The platform of last year, declar- ing in favor of decreasing' the ex- Building and Repairs except for special uses. In the few 60 Broad St., Instances where they have been sold penses ot the state, was pure and of All Kinds. ¥ for the sole purpose of raising crops, simple bunk. Every candidate for JULY SALE Red Bank. Phone 1444. Elaclismlthfnc, Repairing, Auto the prices paid have invariably shown office on this platform must have ¥ laughed up his sleeve when he told Springs, Solid Truck Tires, a much greater shrinkage in land Pneumatic Truck Tires. values than was true in Mr. Butcher's his audiences at political meetings ¥ that he was pledged to reduce ex- Service Firestone Station, cue, Established over 25 Years. • a « penses if he were elected. The great ¥ In summing up the reason for agri- increase in expenses shows what he really must have had In his heart WHARF AVE., BED BANK. cultural distress many people blame Telephone I05O. ¥ it solely on overproduction, resulting when he was uttering* this bunk. in low prices for crops, and on mid- a 9 a NATIONAL^**" ¥ dlemen's profits. Tha need of co-op- The people will pay the bill. When :t pays to advertise in The Register. erative marketing Is stressed. This ¥ reasoning la all right so far as it*************************************************** Cor. MAIN & WILLIAM STS., foe*, but It leaves out of considera- RED BANK, N. J. tion on* great factor which has prob- ¥ ably had almost as much to do with 47 BROAD STREET, bringing the farmer to his present (Formerly Prown-Cooper Co.) Woodbridge, N. J. ¥ low estate as the things mentioned Hbove. ¥ • • • This great factor la the tremendous Surf Bathing Pavilion Main Street, Manasquan, N. J. ¥ ln«r«a«i In taxes which the farmer has to pay and the tremendous In- (Incorporated) ¥ CUT trease in living costs for the farm- W. While everything that the farm- SOUTH OF PENINSULA HOTEL SALE IN ALL THESE THREE STORES ¥ tr has to sell has declined in priori, •varythlng that the farmer has to ¥ buy costs much more than ever be- NOW ON! fox*. Taxes have increased terribly SEA BRIGHT, N. J. ¥ for the tiller of the soil. One expert on taxes, in a statement to some of UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT. 7 ¥ SIZE the daily newspapers the other day, Misses Silk Hose Folding Iron Boards .50 Phillips Milk Magnesia ; 31c declared that taxes for the farmer GET YOUR BATHHOUSES NOW ! Fure Thread Silk—Regular si.00 Value. have increased 300 per cent since the All Sizes and Colors. ¥ .60 California Syrup of Figs , 34c ' world war. This is three times as RATES—}3S per Season for Individual Houies. much taxes per acre as farmers paid (40 per Beacon for Family Houses, accommodating six ¥ 1.50 Agarol - «6c baforei the war. New tariff rates and persons. Time Payment Plan—first payment, $10; week- 29c 1.00 Nujol 57c the creation of trusts has also tn- ly payment, 55. Individual Bathhouses, 60c; with Suit, ¥ ersased the cost of things which the 11.00, 1.25 Pinkham's Compound ,. 75c farmers buy. A tariff bill haa been Crass Porch Rugs ¥ .60 Sal Hepatica , .! 36c prepared which will greatly increase Hours 8;00 A. M. to 7:00 P. M. 3x6 feet. Regular $1.00 each. A Good Value. this Indirect taxation if it is passed. ¥ 1.00 Squibb's Petrolatum ...'. 63c • • • BATHING SUIT GIVEN AWAT EVERY FRIDAY MORNING. 59C each $1.49 each .40 Castoria 23c There are no visible signs that TUNE IN ON WJBI BETWEEN 9:00 AND NOON ¥ 1.00 Listerine , 64c farm taxes or farm living costs are. FOR PARTICULARS. .60 Forhans Tooth Paste 34c coming down. There Is a possibility Palmolive Soap Step-On Garbage Cans ¥ of higher prices for farm crops this cake .50 Kolynos Tooth Paste '... 27c Forking Space for 800 Cars. Free Parking to Patrons. In Colon. year, but this is more or less a gam- Beach Parties given strict attention by appointment, life guard 6c ¥ .60 Pond's Cold Cream 35c ble and things may not turn out eo In attendance 8:00 A. M. to 7:00 F. »!. favorable as now aeoms probable. ¥ .50 D. & R. Cold Cream 34c With the outlook for agriculture as Children's Underwear $LQQ each bad aa It Is, the wonder is not that HAROLD J. MACE, Manager. ¥ Bay Rum, pints 75c . more and more farmers are quitting Georgia Rose Bath Salts 59c the soil and that more and more ¥ farms are ahandoned. The wonder is ••»•••••••**••*••»•••••••••««•••••«•••«••••••««»•• Men's Union Suits 1.50 Rubberset Shaving Brush 1.00 that there are any farmers left to till Sites 38 to M, Full Cut. ¥ the soil at all. They must have a 1.00 Gillette Blades, 10s 69c real, genuine liking, for their work or they would not stick to it under such 49 suit ¥ Georgia Rose Cold Cream, 8 o/... 75c discouraging circumstances. Better C times may be in store for thorn as a Men's Golf Hose ¥ 1.00 Upjohn's Citrocarbonate 83c result of their persistence, but before .50 Zonite 36c this is brought about there has got Your Opportunity ¥ to be a big reduction in the burdens 49c Bayer's Aspirin Tablets ,100s 73c farmers are compelled to pay In high ¥ taxes and high living costs. 1.00 Ovaltine , 72c To Buy A Used Car. Bamboo Rakes ¥ 1.00 Ovoferrin1 72c Political Platforms The following cars are in perfect condition Regular 50c Item, ¥ .60 Bromo Seltzer 38c with many thousands of miles of running to be and Political Bunk. JTOR BOYS AND GIRLS. 29c each ¥ .60 Ipana Tooth Paste 28c Everyone knows that political plat- enjoyed by the buyer. Sizes 2 to 12. forms are pure and simple political ¥ .25 Listerine Tooth Paste 16c. bunk. This has been proved over and Flit ft pint) .50 Aqua Velva 32c over. Yet the politicians keep at it BUICK—7*PASS. SEDAN 29c "it • lUsular fioo Site. ¥ and political orators make chuckle- .25 Johnson's Talcum .....: 14c heads of themselves telling at meet- $180.00 Down—Balance $26.43 a Month. ¥ ings what a great document their 100 ft. Sash Cord 29c can .25 Woodbury's Soap 16c political platform Is OAKLAND COACH—5-PASS. 69c hank ¥ .50 Mennen's Shaving Cream 31c Take for instance the political plat $180.00 Down—Balance $26.43 a Month. Bread Boxes ¥. .85 Pnlrnolive Shaving Cream 23c form ot the Republican party in New r J2.00 Seller—In Bed, Orange and WMfc, Jersey last fall. That platform told Clothes Hampers ¥ .65 Barbasol 39c what an awful thing It was for New Just 100 to fo at this Hall Price. Jersey to have a Democratic gover- PAIGE COUPE—2-PASS. Square with Two Shelves. nor and It told how the Republicans $240.00 Down—Balance $35.02 a Month. White, Blue and Green. ¥ would reduce expenses If the peopli $1.00 each ¥ would only elect a Republican gov. $1.98 ornor. LILLYS-KNIGHT—Model 66, 5-Pass. Sedan ¥ * • ,* $240.00 Down—Balance $35.02 a Month. Well, the people of New Jersey Cannister Sets Window Screens ¥ - elected a Republican governor. And XN BLUE ONLY. how did the platform work out? Why, For Flour, Sugar, Coffee and Tea. the Republican legislature and the PEERLESS 5-PASS. SEDAN ¥ Republican governor between them $360.00 Down—Balance $51.75 a'Month. spent two million, seven hundred ¥ thousand dollars more than was 49c set For a Real spent last year by a Republican leg- CHANDLER—5-PASS. SEDAN Shower islature and a Democratic governor. That evidently waa the price the $220.00 Down—Balance $32.16 a Month, Rag Rugs people of the state have already paid WxM—Nlco Patterns. ¥ for having a Republican governor KLENZO for half of one year. THESE PRICES INCLUDE 69c each • • • FIRE & THEFT INSURANCE. : Now it turns out that this Republi All the largo sizes Ibat told for lie, IDs and *9c * ran legislature passed a law, which woa signed by this Republican gov. Colored Vegetable Bins einor. whereby it is declared that We Aim to Make a Friend When We Sell a ' All Colors. 59C each |* BATH SPRAY public utility corporations win be re- Used Automobile. lieved from living up to contracts they have made with municipalities. Items on$1.0 Sale in0 Al eacl Department.h . See our Windows for Daily Specials. Extra large nickel-plated apray heads. Patent- Till* will put upwards of $300,000 more taxes on the people. This law SHOP WITH US AND SAVE ! -)s{ ed clincher ring which prevents pulling off the is said to have been prepared by a 1 public utility lawyer, Introduced in ->* faucet, common with most other sprays. Heavy, tit* legislature by a. Republican, Fred H. Van Dora ™*?9«y.e»: NEW JERSEY. •econd day of Augmt next, or tha itld bill fandants becausi you ova tht land I d#- live rubber tubing in three pastel shades. passed by the legislature and Bent to O BALTAZAR SAD Eli A nd i'lIANCES 8ADBJ1A. hli wK«; will be taken M confoattd Kfftfnnt you. • ertfeid In i«fd mortff«f«. the governor for his approval, and The said bill f» flUd to fonelon a cer- Dated Jun* 21. U29. Monmouth Street, Red Bank, N. J. By virtu* ei an order ok the Court of tain mortgage glvtn by Btluzar Ssdori promptly signed by him. uneatr of N«w Jariay, ma la on tha day WILSON * 8M0CK. and Frances Badar*. hii wlf«, to Nortnl Solicitor! of Complainant, • • • . t tha / RED BANK REGISTER, JULY 10,1929. Pace Seventeen PERSONAL. / MEW JERSEY FARMERS. Mr. and Mrs. J. Carle Anderson of NOW IN THEIR NEW HOME. m Monmouth County Surrogate'* Offict, NEWS FROM KEYPQRT Main Btreet. In tho matter ot the estate of John E. Tay- Mrs. Annabel Uatteaon of Spring Many of Them Take Steps to Pre- Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Shultz of Broad Newly Married Fort Monmouth Cou- FIRST CHURCH OF ior, deceased. INTHOL for street has taken a pojltifin In the vent Over Production. street have as their guests Mr. and ple Start Housekeeping. CHRIST/SCIENTIST Notice to creditor! to present claims office of the Feck Sales agency on AMERICAN LEGION HOME SOON Mrs. William Shultz of Altoona, Pa. against estate. New Brunswick, N. J., July 10 Mr. and Mra. Joseph F. Luker, who 54 Broad St., Red Bank. N. J. jl Pursuant to the order of Joseph L, Doii- SUNBURN. Mechanic street (AP)—Seeking to make his Industry TO BE DEDICATED. Miss Georgia Bauer of First street were recently married, have started nhay, mirrm:ji.te of the County of Mon- Mr. and llrs. Harry Campbell are, Is spending several weeks in Cali- housekeeping in Mr. Luker's new mouth, mailc' nti tho thirteenth day of moro stable, the Now Jersey farmer fornia, where she la the guest of her 3avtcM Sunday 11 A. M., S r. ii. JPJune, 1029, mi OIR tipplinitinn (if Ruyniiwi., KATSIN & GREEN spending a few weokn at the Throck- is turning a receptive ear to eco-Marriage of MIM Marion Smith to house on Campbell avenue at Port E, Tanvy, executor of the cxtatfi of John morton hotel at Allenhuret. nomic Information upon which to Charles Borneman It Announced— ulster, Miss Emily Bauer. Monmouth. Mr. Luker is employed Sundar-Scbool—B:80 A. M. B E. Taylor. ilcce;isi?l Red Bank has a new growing, may bo safely expanded, or Mr. and Mrs. Edgar A. Walling Chevrolet coupe, Mr, Sweeney Is em- whether a policy of retrenchment company met in tho ilrchousc on SUNDAYS Silverware Repaired ployed during the summer by Alfred have returned from their wedding Thursday evening of last week. The July 21, should be followed. trip to Canada and are occupying hostcas was Mr3. Charles D. Lam- and Replated Like New. jervls, a painting contractor. Tho New Jersey farmers arc finding August 18, September 22 Mr. and Mrs. Paul H. Bycr of Hag- their residence on First Btreet. bertson, who served refreshments •-AMERICAS it necessary to pay closer attention Mrs. Henry E. Ackerson, Jr., of following tho meeting. Tho next EXCURSION TRAIN erstown, Maryland, have returned to thcso problems because of an al-Maplo place entertained several of Direct to Pennsylvania Station, REUSSILLE'S home after a week-end visit with Mr. meeting of the auxiliary will be held 7th Avenue and 32d Street most never-falling supply of farm her friends at bridge last week. In tho llrehouao tomorrow. and Mrs. Charles K. Humrlchouso of products of mnny kinds arriving In Daylight Savins Time finest and 36 Broad St., Red Bank Drummond place. Prizes for high score were awarded Thomas Turner of Now York Is Leava Red Bank - - 9:42 A. M, eastern markets from both distant to Mrs. Herbert R. West, Mrs, John visiting his aunt, Miss Elizabeth S. Returning, leaves New York, Pcnna. Miss Lillian Ryan of Hoimdcl Is nnd nearby competing regions. Jer- B. Hoke, Mrs. Horace S. Burrowcs, Sta. 6:20 P. M., Hudson Term. 6:10 a new employee at tho Pearl street Eoymcn are working to meet this AckersoB. P. M., Newark (Market St.) 6:42 social service office. Miss Ryan grad- Mrs. John C. Osb.ornc, Mrs. E. Fran- Joseph R. L. Jackson has a new P. M. competition, and at the game time cis Ehrlich, Mrs. J. Harold Hendrick- Chevrolet ccupe. uated this year from the Red Bank they, aro attempting to reduce the Gon, and Miss Belle Rosevear. Other! high school. Sho was an honor minimum tho chances of glutted mar- Ernest E, Pesoux and family and loiiif to Age student In the commercial depart- guests present were Mrs. VanWalker, Mr. and Mrs. P. O. Weigand were kets. Mrs. George H. Conover, Mrs. Her- Ortlcy Beach visitors on Sunday. Pennsylvania Railroad Thcro are three trying periods in a ment. man of Deal, Mrs. Paul Ash, Mrs. N. Miss Irma von Glahn of Linden Since the 1029 outlook for New Mr. and Mrs. Frank I. Switzer are woman's life: when the girl matures Jersey was mado public, Mr. Knowles Hodgson Rosevear, Mrs J. Arch Mac- spending a vacation with their to womanhood, "when : a woman place and Miss Marcla Parliman of estimated moro than 3,000 farmers of Ewan, Mr3. Harry B. Weat, Mrs. F. Brooklyn are on a BIX weeka' trip Palmer Armstrong, Mrs. Samuel D. cousin, Mlsa Anna Cowles. gives birth to her first child, when a to California, tho Canadian Rockies tho state have modified their pro. Joseph Moher and family of New 666 Haven't you had that desiro to go spinning through the water In ductlon program for this year. This Walker, Mrs. Rufus O. Walling, Mrs. a safe, comfortable boat? There's no reason why you can't. woman reaches middle age. At and the Groat Lakes. York aro visiting Mr. Mahcr'a moth- U a Prescription for these times Lydia E. Finkham'u obtlmato ia bnoed on reports 'sub' Exart V. Sllcox, Mrs. Harry S. Sklar, er, Mrs. Mary Mnhcr. Phono me for a free demonstration. Better yet, let me eiplain Mr. and Mrs. Grandln Schonck of mltted by agricultural agents In 10Mrs. Arthur S. VanBusklrk, Mrs. J. Colds, Grippe, Flu, Dengue, how you can have that boat 3011 most desire. Vegetable Compound helpa to re- West Front street arc tho parents of Leon Schanck, Mrs. Thomas L. Mor- Mrs. Stephen D. Lambertson en- store normal health and vigor. *a daughter born last Friday at tho counties. tertained tho ladles' aid of St. John's Billious- Fever and Malaria. The present situation with regard rison, Mrs. Arthur W. MeFarland, Long Branch hospital. Before her and Mrs. Ira M. Amaorge. church on Tueaday afternoon. After It it the most speedy remedy known HAVE 200 USED WRITE OR PHONE FOB > LYblA; E PINKHAM'S marriage Mrs. Schcnck was Mlas Lil- to Ireo planting furnished an ex- Lho business session a social thour BOATS FOR SALE. TAKTIOULARS. amplQ of how farmers aro being Mr. and Mrs. Hewitt W. Wharton NOTICE OF SETTLEMENT OF ACCOUNT \tECEt4BLE COMPOUND lian Schenck. followe1 d and tho hostess sorved de- Estate of Edward L. Crltchlow. deceased. Mrs. Albert S. Miller of Irvlns guided by the outlook report. Grow- of Broad street and Mr. and Mrs. Hcious refreshments. Those present Notice Is hereby itiven that the account iLVOM U PIMiHAil MtU. CO- Ll'WUASS. ers of peaches and apples were Carlton R. Wharton of- Main Btreet were Mra. John H. Bahrenburg, Miss of the subscriber, adminietrator of the ei- Demonstrated by place returned homo yesterday from were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ed- tnte of sairi rierpRsed, will be audited and the Long Branch hospital where she warned against extensive plantings Anna Cowles, Mrs. Mary 'A. Cowles, stated by the Surrogate of the County of underwent an operation for appen- of theso frulta because the present win H. Wharton of Ocean Grove Mrs. Florence LeRoy, Mrs. Hattie Monmouth and reported for settlement to FLOYD E. BRADY dicitis. tree population of tho country points over the holiday. Aumack, Mrs. James Ward, Mrs. El- the Orphans Court of said County, on Best Place to ovor-production for some timo to Mr. and Mrs. Thomas W. Brown mer A. Bahrenburg, airs. William Thursday, the first day of August. A. D. Mr. and Mrs. Paul dc la Rcussllle 1629, at which time application will be. Phone Red Bank 2640 Fair Haven, N. J. —in— of Knollwood aro at Atlantic Cjity come. Growers are following this of Lynbrook L. I., were tho guests of Hyer, Mra. Joseph Hyer, Mrs. Ella made lor tho allowanco of commissions and tvhero Mr. Rcuoaillo la attending the advice according to reports gathered Mlsa Ella A. Brown of'First street Bedlc, Mrs. Emiel Pimper, Mrs. Wil- counsel fees. Monmouth County featlonal convention of retail jewelerB. from all sections of the state as only last week. liam Conklln, Mrs. Harry E. Mauee, ot.d Juno 20th. A. D. 102D;- enough apples aro being planted to Arthur Sllcox, son of Dr. and Mrs. Mrs. Theodore A. Bailey, Rev. and THE SECOND NATIONAL BANK . Anthony Flnelll of Hance road haa meet normal replacement needs, or AND TRUST COMPANY, to Buy a Good been made foreman of the new J. E. D. Sllcox, who has been spend- Mrs. Henry Johnson, Miss Hyldali Of Btd Bank, N. J. Eisner factory at Long Branch. For three percent. Thero haa been little ing several weeks at Camp Ocklnlck- Hyer, Mra. LeRoy Clark, Mrs. Dan- the past fifteen years ho has been or no planting of peaches. on, has returned. iel .A. Clark, Mrs. Dyson Woodhouae, ' NOTICE. Now Is The Time Mrs. William E. Woolley, Sr., has Mrs. Roellf LeRoy and daughter Vir- An ordinance of the Board of Health of foreman of one of thn department Tho outlook was moro optimistic the Borouuh of Red Bank prohibiting Ba- USED CAR of tho Eisner factory at Red Bank. In treating of tho state's poultry In- been vlstlng Mr. and Mrs. Charles ginia, Mrs. Samuel H. Walling, Mrs. rmre owners or proprietors, both public and Woolley at Greenport, L. I. private, and owners of automobile wash- Mr. and Mrs. Grovcr A. Burdgo of dustry, pointing out that there was Frank P. Sproul, Mrs. H. Alvln Wall- stands from permitting or caujinir sand, See Our •New York are spending a month with loom for a slight expanalon this year. Mlsa Marjorle Lockwood has re-Ing, Mrs. James Morrell, Mrs. Fan- oil or Erease. ns well as all solid sub. R.L. SAXE Mr. Burdge's slater, Miss Emma Such expansion ia taking place, ac- sumed her duties as a student nurse nie Holmes, Mrs. Andrew J. Latham stances, to enter or flow into any of the in the Methodist Episcopal hospital sewers or lines leadinB thereto of the HUDSON & ESSEX DEALER Burdge of Linden place. cording to reports from hatchery- and Mra. Stephen D. Lambertson. BoroUEh of Red Bank, and from permitting Mrs. Dolores Dwyer of Wallace men and breeders. in Brooklyn after a three weeks' visit Tho society will hold a chicken pot or caujinc snnd. oil or grease, as well as (Next to City Hall) street entertained guests last week with her parents' Mr. and Mrs, N. B. pie supper in the church on July all solid substances to rise in any catch Beautiful Rose Display Lockwood. 18th. basin or pit level with or above the over from Jamaica Plains, Boston. FORT HANCOCK ACTIVITIES. flow pipo therein leading to any sewer iim Broadway, Harold Johnston of Brooklyn was Morris R. Cohen has purchased a Mlsa Llllle Crook of Brooklyn is and providing a penalty, passed its secon a week-end visitor .of his cousin, Mrs. Men From Military Camp to bo inPlymouth two door sedan, visiting her Bister, Mrs. William F. and third reading and was adopted July a Select for Fall Planting, Long Branch N. J. William H. Francia of Newman This Vicinity This Week. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Hendrickson, Kennedy. Mrs. William Crook, of Phono 327. Jr., have returned from an auto trip RED BANK BOAHD OF HEALTH. Springs road. Tho largo group of New Jersey Brooklyn ia spending several weeks W. A. CLAYTON. Set Opeo Erenings and Sundays* Clinton W. Harrison of New York., through the New England stales. ~with her daughter, Mrs. Kennedy. men designated to take summer Mrs. Elizabeth Morales has re- Mpnmouth County Surrogate's Offica, formerly of Red Bank, spent tho military training at Fort H»noock Mrs. Hattlo S. Tilton of Brooklyn CUT ROSES Fourth with relatives at Red Bank turned from a visit in Kinkston Can- was a recent guest of Mr. and Mrs. In the matter of the estate of Sarah C. v enter tho second phase of field work ada, and haa been visiting her moth- Hill, deceased. Charles Busch of New York spent this week. Under Lieutenant-Col- Joseph R. L. Jackson. Notice to creditors to present clalmi _FORr- the Fourth with his daughter; Mrs. er Mrs. Ella A. Brown. The Hazlet fire company was called against estate. onel Wagner n3 senior instructor, J. Leon Schanck has purchased a Pursuant to the order of Joseph L. Don- 2 dozen only $1.00. Walter Herman of Newman Springs the field work will be carried on In out to a lire on Thursday afternoon nnny, surrogate of the County of Mon- road. the vicinity of Rod Bank, Eaton new Hudson sedan. when a building noar the railroad mouth. made on the fourteenth day of June, Tire Service Robert Rcusslllc, son of Paul de la Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Crammer spent station caught fire, from sparka of a1029, on the application of Edward S. Al- town.and Long Branch. over the holiday with Mr. and Mrs. laire, executor of the estate of.Sarah C. TELEPHONE 2112 Reussille of Knollwood, ia at a camp Today tho officers at Foit Han- passing locomotive; Hill, deceased, notice is hereby eiven to at Wpmelsdorf, Pa. John Bcidleman In Washington, N. tho creditors of said deceased to exhibit to cock will celebrato tho 154th anni- J. ths subscriber, executor as aforesaid, their D. & D. COMPANY Postals have been received In town versary of tho quartermaster corps. MILLIONAIRE KILLED. debts and demands affalnit the said estate. from James Arnone, who Is on a trip This is a gala occasion for which a . Mr. and Mrs. George Lobcr of New under oath, within six months from the Our Service Car is to Italy with his father. Jamea was York wore gucBts last week of Mrs. date of the aforesaid order, or they will ROSE SPECIALISTS quartermaster vessel will bring down Frederick A. Duggan Fatally Injured bo forever barred of their actions therefor a former Register newsboy. A beau- about 200 gucBts from Governor's Lober's parents, Mr, and Mrs. Tim- In Auto Crash. a cams t the said subscriber. Monmouth Road, Long Branch. N. J. always ready; tiful souvenir card was received at Island. An army dinner will bo othy Regan. ' Dated Freehold, N. J.. June 14, 1929. The Register office this morning sorved nnd this will be followed by Mr. and Mrs. Paul G. Zlmmermann Frederick A. Duggan, seventy years -EDWARD S. ALLAIRE. PHONE EATONTOWN 40. from James showing he hart not for- a danco at tho government theater. and children, former residents here, old, -reputed multi-millionaire of Little Silver, N. J.VAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA^AAAAAAAAAAAA/ Steam Vulcanizing. gotten his home newspaper folks. now of Mystic, Conn., were guests Spring Lake and Trenton, died of Mrs. Graco Orum of Mechanic last week of Dr. and Mrs. H. T. Hop- Injuries last night he received when street Is visiting her son, Rev. B. R. TRUSTEE FOR BANKRUPT FIRM kins. his automobile crashed into the ma- Balloon and Truck Robert Mount, son of Chief and chine of A. M. Moreland of Pitts Lawaon of Paulsboro. Mr. Lawson Edward W. Wise Appointed for burg at Spring Lake. Mr. Duggan Tires in Stock. will shortly take a now cflSrpo at Shrewsbury Coal and Wood Co. Mrs. Aabury Mount, has returned Providence, Rhode Island. Mrs. Orum tfrom a two weeks stay at Camp was owner of tho Imperial porce- was formerly Mrs. Grace Lawson of A a hearing yesterday before Ockanlckon. lain works at Trenton and at Man- Red Bank. Adrian Lyons, referee In bankruptcy, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert F. Lawson asquan and principal owner of the Misses Mildred, Ida and Virginia Edward W. Wise of Red Bank was sailed Wednesday on the S S "Co- Monmouth Hotel at Spring Late. Wood of Crosswlclts In Burlington appointed trustee of the Shrewsbury lumbus" for Bremen, Germany. They Rufus Pearce, his veteran chauf- John Hansen county are spending a week with coal and wood company, which has will tour through northern Europe feur, waa critically injured. their grandfather, W. H. Adcock of been declared bankrupt. Tho assets for three months In their automo- 42 West Front Street, of tho concern aro $10,000 and tho li- bile returning from Hamburg, Ger- Bridge avenue. Do You Bead Them? «• i m abilities $24,000. Raymond Sanborn, many in September. little Silver Manor The classified advertisements in RED BANK, N. J. AOED COUrLE END LIVES. former owner of the Shrewsbury coal Mr. and Mrs. Albert W. Anderson The Register contain worth while op- and wood company, Is now manager of Gcrmantown are spending their portunities for everybody.—Advcr East Orango Man nnd Wife Had Rel- of tho former P. E. Gordon yards; vacation with the former's parents, tlaement atives at Eatontown. Frederick Sutter, 78 years old, of East Orange nnd his wife Johanna, 65 years old, were found dead In the kitchen of their home Thursday af- LotS $1.00 « ^ek ternoon ~by their nephew. Mr. Sut- ter is a brother of Jacob Sutter of Eatontown and the family had plan- ned a reunion last Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Sutter committed suicide, Have you ever envied people who have made lots of money on Real death being due to asphyxiation. v Their heads were covered with a 3 Broad St. Red Bank, N. JT. Estate? Have you wanted to do it yourself? But have you been un- blanket and they woro seated near an open gas heater when their bodies able to pay a lot of cash money for some real estate? Well, here's were found. For many years the BumsteadsWormSyrap your opportunity. Surely, you'll never miss $1.00 a week. And in a •To rim.Iran aa wwl of i „, „„,.. couple feared becoming a burden flir«>ei(«» aro fal limed, IT NEVER upon the younger members of their Always the Best Meat at Lowest Prices! FAII,S. Dftinite ecarcltt and «aonneai family. few years—even a few months—even before you've paid for the lot runt of V'ANTOMN. it contaloa fall daM. btood dlxtr jtMim" test, sold « """ ' in full—you may turn around and sell it at a real profit. or by nuill, 00o » bottle. BACK FROM STAY IN CANADA. RUMPS MILK-FED FANCY FRESH-KILLED Rat. C. A. Voorhoca. M. D« '," Edward Davis, a Designer, Worked NOTICE. OilU'fi rf Con:; tnic tin« Qunrlormaittr, on Several Churches There. Never before in your entire lifetime have you ever seen lots in this V'uri Mtinnifmth. N. J. S'-nlcfl proponili Edward A. Davis and family of VEAL rti-lrrn Mtninlnid tirtic, July 2t\h, 1020, a(lU Hance road, Fair Haven, returned FOWL wonderful location at our low prices and on terms of $1.00 a week. tlii-ii niumfil, for runiishiliK nil tnlinr, cfiMip- last week from Montreal, Canada, nit-iit, mmcnitl IIIHI ]'i'i[ot tiling all work for where they have been living tho last And what makes this offer so entirely exceptional and truly startling, the rniiHtrudioii vt Civo fonr-fnmlly apart- lb. ii.i'im iiinl it liai'Iii'lur ofHcrru1 quarters eight months. Mr, Davis is a do- j Imildinp. I>l«ii» anil upoi'iricntinnfl will Itn Blgner of stained glass and while 42c in addition to the low price and easy terms, is the wonderful location funij-ilicil iiiirni rct'i-iitt «-f crrtifled check at Montreal he mado new windows 34C •*•• for *^in.V*. I'liuii tuny li0 ai.cn h«ri nn4 m tin- niiii-d nf the (itiiiKtruotihi.- QuHrttr- for several large churches. His big- of these lots in a most beautiful community, offering 20 minute bus ma.Mor, au Whitclmll direct, Now York MUTUAL SLICED • City. gest Job, which required several SHOULDERS OF SPRING service to Red Bank and Long Branch. Let me take you to the prop- months work, was In a church at MnnmtMitli Comity 3urrogate*B Offlc*. Verdon, near Montreal. In ML, m.iutr nf thu c.Livtu of William 0. BACON erty and explain this wonderful opportunity. , Miiiimm, iti>ccdfl«il. LAMB ;'Nnti-'' \D I'H.jlEord to prtient olftlma Cburcb Notes. iMjr.'iiimt h> th* onl«r ot Joupph tM Tit>n~ Services aro held Tuesday nights ahoy. Stur.^iiM of tt.o CuUiity bf M«»- at eight o'clock and Friday and Sun- niKiiUi, m-'iili1 mi Uit) loi)tli iiif«i. nulls* U h«f»hy Light and Truth. The church, is lo- uiv.ii ti) Tim .'rt'diluri >'( in ill (Eitaeanod dr cated on the new state highway at cxhil'it lu Iho Kiil)-M-rlh.>r, *'«. ftf• 30c HORTICULTURAL TOUR. of Bt Dorothea's church. Is enter- taining his brother and sister from Will be Held la Cumberland County Philadelphia. August 6th. Theodore Lewis Is a new employee of the street department The College Boys Are Here! Watch Our Motors in The summer meeting; and tour ol John Erving has fully recovered TheJSewest and Latest the New Jersey stats horticultural from injuries he received last week society will be, held in Cumberland wh«n he was hit by an automobile county, Tuesday, August 6th. Sep- while riding his bicycle. This store as agent for Pictorial Review the Coming Races! is the arate fruit and vegetable tours will The new ambulance was called out Now la the DM to bav* your Outboard Motor* overhauled start from Del Bay farms at Bridge- Saturday night to take three acci- patterns, highly endorses the efforts of these Slender French Heel ton at 10:30. A short meeting will be dent patients to !h« Lonsr Branch young men. We know you will find them cour- and put in siiape for the comlni boating waion, wblob wtll Ira held on the training school grounds hospital. On Sunday morning It was one ol the bluest Bed Bank ha* ever had. Featured in the new at Vineland at two o'clock. There called to an accident at Oceanport teous and considerate. A kindly hearing will /. will be commercial exhibits of horti- but it was not used to carry any We alio repair your Boat*. Marine engines repaired and ONYX No. 300, a service- f / t, cultural equipment and competitive of the victims to the hospital. Ar- be appreciated both by them and by us. overhauled. exhibits of fruits and vegetables. A thur Cain was the driver on both sheer silk from toe stationary spray plant In operation, occasions. The Eatontown ambu- Estimates jladly furnished on both Motors and Boats. modern grading and fruit cleaning lance corps has had its ambulance ' to top stocking at equipment, new varieties of peaches, only a few weeks and It has answer- Al Blaney Sherwood Seeloy Work called for and delivered. • the Cedarvllle auction market, a big ed sixteen accident calls. New York University, -2S New York University. 'JO the extraordinarily canning factory and acres of fruits The Sunshine club will meet this and vegetables are a few of the in-afternoon at the home of Mrs. Fred- LOW PRICE OF teresting things to be seen on theerick Baden, Sr, Monte Newman Sam Traunstein tour. _ Mrs. Harry HawklnB of Matawan Columbia, '32 •pent Monday with her parents, Mr. Riders, '32 GEORGE T. LILLEY Must Return Wine- and Mrs, Luther Boyce. Judge Fake of the United States The officers and teachers of the Sig Wenger 1.Z5 OTHER district court has ordered the return Presbyterian Sunday-school will Harold Ruderman New York Unlrenlty. 'SO Distributor of of eight barrels of wine, 65 bottles meet next Monday night to plan for Harvard Medical. '33 Team Captain of wine and twenty cases of beer the annual Sunday-school picnic. CAILLK OUTBOARD RACING AND HEAVY DUTY MOTORS ,/ SPECIALS to Daniel Rapolla of Matawan on Mrs. Charles Bennett and son have SPECIAL BUILT BOATS FOR OUTBOARD MOTORS (n a complete the ground that the prohibition of- returned to New York after a week's $ixe range BARE LEG HOSE ficer who seized the wine and beer visit here. FAMILY AND RACING exceeded his authority in not hav- Mrs. Charles Covert and family of $|.00 ing a search warrant. this place and Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Hamlet of Hamilton will spend Sun- FRIVOLD'S BOAT WORKS day at Atlantic City. Mrs. Hamlet All Silk. Died After Injuries. Frank Ingallina of. Keyport, 38 Mrs. Covert's daughter and she 138 Riverside Ave., Red Bank, N. J. formerly lived here. years old, died at the Newark city Telephone Red Bank 3771. hospital last Wednesday after in- The Presbyterian I'll-Tri club will PICOT TOP juries he sustained when he was meet tomorrow night at Mrs. Carl struck by an auto bus. His left leg Whltehurst'a. AD Silk Sheer, Samuel Stryker has returned to inaiiH^ was so badly crushed it was neces- work at the Gulf company's distri- $£.49 sary to amputate it and the shock bution plant after having been Jaid caused his death. up a week with a sprained back. Quantity Limited. Albertus Wolcott, who Is employed New Cure for Neuritis. by the Frugality bulb farm, has John K. Applegate ot West Free- started building his new home on hold claims to have discovered a new Wikoff Road. remedy for neuritis. Mr. Applegate Mr. and Mrs. Chester Apy of ATTENTION suffered from this aliment in his irooklyn were Sunday guests of Mr. right arm several months. Recently and Mrs. Wolcott. he mashed one of his fingers with Mrs. Llda Bennett is confined to INC. a hammer and since then has nother house with sickness. been troubled with neuritis. THRIFTY 1? BROAD ST., RED BANK, N. J. Mrs. Amy Stephenson of Has- brouck Heights spent the latter part! EATONTOWN NEWS. of last week with her mother, Mrs. Elizabeth Patterson. Mrs. Patter- Annual Chicken Supper at St. Doro- son's son, Llewellyn, who is spending SHOPPERS... the summer with Mrs. Stephenson, thea's Church, on August 7th. also spent the; week-end with hie (Tha Red Bank Register can bj bou»ot mother. each weak In E»tontown (rom Noblt Moo- An Authority on Fishing, a member of this firm, ma; be Mrs. Edgar Wood of Trenton and consulted on all requirements and will be clad to give in- The annual chicken supper of St. Mrs. Frederick Wise of Atlantic City formation about local conditions. Dorothea's Catholic church will be OERE is another group of values indicative of the GELATINE DESSERTS held on Wednc 'day, AugUBt 7th. have been visiting Mr. and Mrs. A&P The supper will be served on theFloyd E. Wood of College avenue. **• taw-price policy that enables A&P Food Stores make an excellent church lawn from five tn nine Earl Hathaway is redecorating the to offer you, week in and week out, the popular crowning note lot Summer-time o'clock. In case of rain it will be Interior of Charles Shlck's house Special in Fishing Rods for held in the church basement. One on Lewis street in which Mr. Hatha- foods at prices that make worth-while savings a meals. They are easy to prepare. way lives. Last week Mr. and Mrs. hundred gallons of gasoline and a surety. They can be nude tvttb sliced fruits ten-dollar gold piece will be contested Hathaway entertained Mrs. Andy for. The gasoline has been donated Norwall of Bayonne, George Nlles of! In sea>on_..garnlBhed wltb whipped SURF CASTING Newark, and Mrs. James Niles and ! by Fred Hlll.fi> daughter Margaret of Long Branch. oream or served wltb a sweetened The best Surf Poles obtainable, from 6 foot to John Bennett has gaven up his po- Harry Trobe of New York, a for- l sition at the distribution plant of SWANSDOWN CAKE FLOUR sauce. l /l foot tips, running from mer resident of this" place, visited FOR CAKES OF RABE GOODNESS large pkf. the Tide Water oil company. old friends here on. Saturday. *-! tiro. Efland Holti h&« relurnid Buy a supply of these desserts. from Pennsylvania, where she spent Harry Hullck spent Thursday at $5.00 to $18.00 five Weeks with Rev. Robert Kemp Delaware Water Gap. Keep them on hand for your emer- and family. Mr. Kemp was a for- Harry Kauffman of Kearny was QUAKER or MOTHER'S OATS mer Eatontown minister. Sunday guest of Frank Marcella , gency dessert needs. Your choice and family. POPULAR BREAKFAST CEREALS pbj. BOAT RODS. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Breese of At- ot all papular flavors at this un- lantic City were Thursday guests of Sylvestor Fary, a patient at the A]-' Deep water fishing, 2 joint poles, lenwood sanitarium, visited his wife ' usually Ion price Mr. Breese's parents. Mr. Breese's and family here last week. from 5 to 5% feet, from son, C. Wesley Breese, and family BLUE LABEL KETCHUP of Boston are now visiting at this Adds Zest to Meats small bob JAGG large bot AiAid d $3.00 to $7.00 pjace. REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF The annual Advent Sunday-school IT WILL PAY YOU TO VISIT OUK picnic ia being held today at Clark's 1 DEPARTMENT BEFORE BUYING ELSEWHERE. WE HAVE Landing. 5" [ A FULL LINE OF ACCESSORIES FOR THE , .t th. dose o?b«L?™FEhih£i EVAPORATED MILK The newly elected officers of the RESOURCES. WHITEHOUSE BRAND tall cans GELATINE INCLUDING: -. Sons and Daughters of Liberty lodge Ifscounts $1,226,866.32 were installed Monday night. Mrs. Other" "bondiV"siScks'Vnd"i.r 188'" Reels Leaders Sinkers Barbara Heyer of Red Bank, deputy curities owned ..:. laa57rtftt Squids Hooks" Rod Mountings of the lodge, conducted the Installa- Banklne hou.e SISl.OOoloo ""'•""•8l ENCORE MACARONI DESSERT tion ceremony. Miss Iva Dangler Is Furniture »nd fix. Bait Boxes Slickers, etc. 21,000.00 SPAGHETTI OR NOODLES A pkffs. 4 Sd"h the new councilor. , , — 182,000.00 Mr. and Mrs. Bert rfeed of Staten Real estate owned cither than Fast Power Boats, Motors, Hulls Island and Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur bankinj house J.006.83 .ash and due from banks 326,646.87 Marine Hardware Boyce of Perth Amboy -were week- Outside checks and other esjsh end visitors of Mr and Mrs. Elwood BLUE PETER SARDINES Chris-Crafts, Sea Sleds, Herbst Runabouts, '<'•** 313.31 IN PUBE ITALIAN OLIVE OIL Rennie. 'ther assets 124,112.18 Thompsons, Boyd-Martins, De Wites, Mullins, Several residents of this place who Total »l,966,!04.76 are members of the Long Branch LIABILITIES, and Other Makes. Loyal Orange ladies' lodge nttended Capita! stock ; t 200 000 00 Surplus fiO,000.00 a service at the Long Branch Simp- Undivided profits—net 20,619.32 ALL BOATS ARE IN STOCK. son Methodist church Sundfiy night Reserve for interest, taxes and with members of the Long Branch other expenses accrued and Demand a demonstration of the boat you wish unpaid 2,474.08 lodge. Members of the Long Branch Due to banks, including; certi- to buy. Orange men's lodge also attended fied and cuhiers' checks the services. This Friday Is Orange outstanding _ 58,813.90 Demand deposits „.... 891,861.62 Timely Needs at Men's day throughout the world. Time deposits 624,723.44 Eatontown women who attended the Other liabilities _ „ 117,812.50 services are Mrs. Philip Patterson, FEUERBACH & HANSEN Mrs. Charle3 Pla, Mrs. Spencer Pat- Total $1,366,304.76 terson, Mrs. Earl Hathaway and Itate of New Jersey, County of Monmouth, On the Blannsiiuan River at Brlelle. FS.: Thrifty Prices Misses Marie and Margaret Scott. I. Preddent. KENNETH H. McQUEEN. ind Treisurer. J. D. OTTERSON, JR., of i Telephone Slanasquan 2336. Mrs. J. Charles Schlck was out he above named institution, do solemnly ! Sunday for the first time since she ear that the above statement is true to was injured in an automobile acci- ho best of my knowledge and belief. PHECK this list of timely needs. You'll find that dent nine weeks ago. She was con- KENNETH H. McQUEEN, President. ^** a number of these items have escaped your at- IMMIMIIII J. D. OTTERSON. JR., Treasurer. fined to her bed six weeks. Her Subscribed and sworn to before me thi' father, William Worthley, who is th day ot July, 1029. tention and that you need them. Use this list of one of Eatontown's oldest residents, (Seal) SARAH PORTNER. • Notary Public ol New Jersey. values to check against your pantry supplies. And spent Thursday with her. Correct Attest:— Frank Patterson has a new Dodge WARREN H. SMOCK, : of course, the prices are unusually low. sedan. JACOB YANKO. FRANK E. PBICE, BEVERAGES Father Charles J. Farran, pastor Directors, ! OUR A&P Food Stores has a BRILLO Y complete stock of the popular Keeps pots and pans clean, LARGE boverages. Why not buy a case or an assortment for warm weath- sparkling and spotless. PACKAGE er refreshment needs. 17c ) engineers approve C & C GINGER ALE CANTRELL ft COCHRANE IVORY SOAP FLAKES 2 bot&. 25c A gentle soap for dainty LARGE AlWord fabrics. Note this price- PACKAGE PIEL'S or TREFZ 21c 6 bots. 25c CLICQUOT CLUB SEC WARM WEATHER SUGGESTIONS bot. 18c WHOLE MILK CHEESE ft. 37c GINGER ALE bot. 15c atlhe thwtre~TiQi ' TIRES SWEET MIXED PICKLES qt. jar 29c We have the size you need GRAPE JUICE A&F BRAND DILL PICKLES qt. jar 25c E give you more leisure pt. bot. 19c qt. bol. 37c DEVILLED HAM .....y4 can 18c Whours for your enjoyment TjMSK ALL-CORD tires WELCH'S GRAPE JUICE UNDERWOOD BRAND when we do your laundry •T are standard equipment pint bot. 29c MUFFETS for Breakfast 2 pkgs 25c work. No longer burdened on every car we sell. These WHITE ROCK WATER QUAKER MAID BEANS ...3 cans25c by wash-tub worry you can sturdy tires are endorsed by pint bot. 15c find time for your amuse- leading automotive engi- ENCORE OLIVE OIL ft pt. can 33c HIRE'S EXTRACT ALL 5c CANDY or GUM 3 pkgs. 10c ments; for those little relaxa- neers—they give unusual For making root beer. tions that mean so much to mileage. ... bottle 23c NBC NABS .....3 pkgs. 10c modern woman. Phone us We sell Fisks for all makes now to call for your laundry of cars, and give expert FISK BALLOON—A per- bundle. Rerviep «>* it« fire* for +ir«i fectly balanced tire, built to service, aee us nrst tor tares. &„ wgheststandirds known These values may be had at any. A&P Food Store the week of July 8th to July 13th, inclusive. to the tire industry. Red Bank Steam Laundry JOHN HANSEN 42 W. Front Street, Red Bank, N. J. 62 White St. Phone 1659 PHONE an. The Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co. i EASTERN DIVISION

" • I'*•*IT "• '"* ** "* • f lniiiiriiilftiltiiBiii it \. RED BANK REGISTER, JULY 10,1929.

LITTLE! SILVER NEWS. Jr., have moved Into their n»w home Shrewsbury A P0ST0FF1CE ROBBERY, at Oceanport. Woman'* Club Outinf Today—Col- John Bates has returned to his po- lege Students Here. ANNOUNCEMENT! ASBCBY PARK OFFICE ROBBED sition at Fort Monmouth after a Hand Laundry ' (Th* R«4 Sank fUjrlitw >aa ba bought month'a vacation. OF ,,,h »Hk la Uttlt 8UT.I it tha Union Mr. and Mrs, Fred L. Ayres have N«m Stand at th< daoot and at Gaow Open Door 5 Shrewsbury Avenue. * Quukanbuth't *tnanl atora.) returned from a stay of two weeki TENNIS Safes Blown Saturday Night or Early at Dayton, New Jersey. Near Alrvlew Flying Field. Sunday Morning—Valuable Moll The Woman'* club la holding an Ai I am thinking; of (ormlnr a Tennis Club In Red Bank, tkoM Coffee Shop and Money Orders Overlooked— outing today at Mantoloklnj?. who would be Interested In joining; a club of thU kind wilt* (or Called for and delivered. Left Tools Behind. Thirty college students are em- Information to (Formerly on Broad St.) Burglars late Saturday night or ployed by the Western Union tele- INTHOL for All work done at reasonable early Sunday morning-blew three graph company in experimental work Luncheon & Dinner price*. safes In the Aabury Park postofflce here for the summer. W. S. GRAY, Tennis Professional Now located at Shady Knoll, and got away with stamps and cur- Mr. and Mra. Alan Fields have SUNBURN. Hance Road. Fair Haven, ft Wet wash, rough dry and Onlibed. rency valued at $36,150. The thieves moved from Silver-white Gardens to FOXWOOD PARK. LITTLE SttVER, N. i. Phone Ked Bank MS. overlooked some valuable mail and their farm at Eatontown. ' KATSIN & GREEN Tel. Red Bank MIL money order forma valued at Miss J. M. Stcphenson and .'-ri. nwnw $100,000. Most of the haul consisted Arthur Knowlson of New York and of stamps, the cash amounting to Mr, and Mrs. William Blum of Wood- only $150. side, Long Island, spent the week- I Fix Clocks Store* ftfoic Everywhere In Jtrwty Fiflr ytarf •iptrltnea and th* but end with Dr. and Mra. H. E. Sheffield. tqulpp«d clock repair shop In tha county• The robbery was discovered at 6:30 Anson Sherwood of Detroit, form- Sunday morning, when Thomas Ry- erly of this place, was a visitor here an, a clerk, opened the office. He F. F. COLEMAN laBt week. IS R.ctor Plaw, R.d Bisk, N. J. NAEH4OO Immediately notified Postmaster Har- Mr. and Mrs, Edward Worthley, ry Harsln and police were soon at Fboaa 2011. WAO&* the World in Motor Car YMue work en what clues were left. The condition of the safes showed that the work was that of experts. BTANDABD SIX "400" SEDAN Oxy-acetylene torches and electrical- ly fired fuses were used In blasting $1040 open the safes. The police arrested F. C. Clemence of Cleveland, Ohio, at 3:15 Sunday morning; three blocks from the post- office. Residents of that vicinity had notified the police of Clemence's sus plcious actions. A gun was found on him and It was learned ho had a po HATS READY TO WEAR lice record in Ohio. . It is believed that one of the burp lars had secreted himself in th building before It was closed at nigh'

CANT GET INCREASE. Freeholders Have Not Yet Approved Salary Raises. STOTDARD SIX "400" Attorney General William A. Stev- ens has notified the board of free- Fancy Milk-Fed Fowl holders that the new law raising the Each bird averages 4 lba. and U to $ salaries of sergeants-at-arms in dis- absolutely fresh killed $ trict courts from $1,500 to $2,500 a year was not mandatory. Since the law went Into effect the sergeants- 970 1204 at-arms In the Asbury Park and Roasting Chickens Long Branch district courts have 4 to4H lbs. each. Kl 49 Delivered, Fully Equipped been presenting vouchers based on the $2,500 salary and payment h- been withheld. Mr. Stevens said tlv are not entitled to this increase • Regular Fresh Hams /PAEEittoacjrcarinits field,and you'll find the car til the freeholders flx the salaij Your choice of whole or half V> you-would rather have is the Nasb "400" Standard Six. the new figure. HIGHLANDS NEWS. Chuck Roast Comparison confirms its style superiority. Comparison of Cut from first quality beef ; Firemen Made $600 at Block Dancc- Only once in a blue moon is there a hat as dis- this carwith others at its price also brings out the faa that B*xing Show Monday Night (Tba lied Bank Heglster on ba bourni, •ach week ID Highlands at'Dedle'i drag tinctive and smart as the Dobbs THORNTON Libby's Saner* Kraut the "400** high-compression motor is smoother in its itort, and at Joseph Stamen's •tore.) In large size can The fire department cleared about ... daintily fashioned of light weight Dobbs 15. action, more dynamic in its power, ahead in engineering $600 at the block dance last week. excellence. Here are 7bearingsinstead of 3 or 4, Bohnalite Most of the money was realized from felt in an alluringly becoming manner. All MOLAND'S FAMOUS advertisements in a souvenir pro- invar strut pistons instead of the cast iron type, full prcs- gram. A boxing show will be held sizes in beautiful colorings. Philadelphia Bacon next Monday night at Kiuec's pavil- Sliced, in half pound packages snre lubrication for dependability and durability. ion for the benefit of the fire depart- 25. ment. There will be four six-round bouts and three four-round bouts. And at no extra corf, this car is equipped with Lovejoy hy- The light, company's substation at REDUCED! Fresh Made Frankfurters Q«_ this place was struck with lightning draulic shock absorbers,,chromium nickeled bumpers, during the storm Friday night. Two ib. 9»mit transformers were burned out and WOMEN'S AND MISSES' «pare tire, tire lock and tire cover; items customarily sold the town was without electric ights for a while. A passenger plane on Cottage Hams as^extras." the Way from Atlantic City to New Ib. '42. York landed in the river until the DRESSES Selected and Boneless storm was over and then continued on its way to New Yorlc. SNEDEKER-NASH CORP. The Seaside Kltchon was damaged To All Kinds of Delicious by fire last week. The blaze was put $9.95 869.50 ,,J MONMOOTH ST.. Pbone 2537 RED BANK. out by the firemen. The building Is Luncheon Meats at a owned Jack Bahrs and has been un- Good Saving to You 123 FEBST AVE, Fbone 105 ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS. occupied for some time." MODELS. FOE EVERY OCCASION Miss Jessie DeYoung of Staten Is- land was arrested July Fourth by Policeman James gunner and was PiUCES EFFECTIVE JVLY 11, U, IS arraigned before Recorder William 15. Mead on a charge of driving a car while drunk. She was fined $200. She p STEEP HILLS - could not pay It and was sent to jail at Freehold. The next day her fine UAGVEf VUUiET CO. was paid and she was released. Plans for the new school building CODER 7 Broad St. Bed Bank. !5 Bay Ave.. Hlghlandi. 23 Monroouth St.. Red Bank. 204 Broadway. Long Branch. have been.completed. They were in- "HOUSE OF JFASHION" Bpected at a meeting: of the school 38B Monmouth St.. Red Bank. SOS Broadway. Lone Branch. trustees last night. 79 BROAD ST., RED BANK, N. J. 71 Flrit Ave, At Highlands. 150 Main St, Asbnry Jar*. Rev. Walter S. R. Powell, William Fehlhaber, Leonard Hardy and Gil- BED BANK 1021. Campbell's Junction. Belford. 60 Carr Avenue. Beansburf. around bert Parker have returned from>a stay at the young men's Christian as- sociation camp, sixteen miles south of Mount Holly. A number of boy scouts made a »•<•4N^<^^«^3^^ sharp trip to Bronx Park a few days ago. Stephen Griffin and Sherman Smith are leaving this week for a stay at Camp Burton. curves Granvllle Smith of Baltimore is vis- HOT WEATHER IS COMING ! iting- Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Cornelius of Monmouth Hills. The Epworth league held a beach party Monday night at Normandle. The New Jersey court society, com- Summer Comfort posed of judges and court attendants, held a banquet last week at Conners's hotel. Starts SEABRIGHT NEWS. Patriotic Rally at Methodist Church With —Coko Sale Saturday. (The Red Bank Rtelsttr can ba bought eacb week in Seahright at tho stores of Morris WehmaD and H. Lcfkowiti.) > Your Both services at the Methodist church Sunday were largely attend- A ed. The Lord's supper was observed n tha morning and a patriotic rally Feet BRILLIANT was held at night. Among tho lodges represented at the night service were PERFORMER the Odd Fellows, Knights of Pythias, Select a pair of t SUNSHINE: Shoes. ...and keep Coor and American Mechanics, Rebckahs and The Whippet's higher com- Daughters of Liberty. Tho speaker Comfortable. wnt new F. A DeMaria of Red Bank, pression engine gives more thr district superintendent. than 20% added horsepower The Methodist Sunday-school held WHIPPET 6 SEDAN beach party Monday nlfjht. A — with faster speed and mrcllng will be held tonight to mnlit greater hill-climbing ability. final plans for the annual cake calc Sport Shoes, White Shoes — fancy "a/.«.4. iSTiuu, $OOff on Saturday afternoon of this week Whippet is the only low- •W tfuifudmt mtjta « ••»••»••«•••••*»»>»»«»•«»»«' BOY BICYCLIST HURT. ATLANTIC WGHLANDS NEWS. The Autolst Went on Hln Way After Young Men Bay Cabin Cruller— INTHOL for New York and Keansburg He Struck the Boy. Bible Contest Awards. NELSON & BENSON SUNBURN. Daniel Brlenza of Newark, aged (The. B«d Bank RuUMi tag b. booth! , July and August Schedule. •ach week In Atlantic Hlghlindi at th* BOAT AND LAUNCH BUILDERS nineteen years, was struck and run • tor., of William UK anil N, Brown.) down by an automobilo on the state DEALERS IN KATSIN & GREEN MATE BATTEBY. NEW YOBK. highway in Middletown township Mrs. William Dunphy of South SALE street underwent an operation for Gasoline Motors, Fittings, Electrical Equipment, Etc Weekdays:—9:30,10:30, 11:30 a. m.; 2:00, 4:30, 5:30, 8:00 p. m. last Wednesday afternoon. The boy OF USED was oi\ a bicycle. Ho had ridden to tho removal of a goiter last w«k Builders of toe Famous Sea Brlsht Surf Skim and, Potrer Skiffs, Saturdays—0:30, 10:30, 11:30 a. m.; 1:00, 2:00, 4:30, 8:30, 8:00 p. in. at a Boston hospital. Agbury Park and. ho was on his way y Row Boats Always In Stock. • ,' • Sundays & Holidays:—0:00, 0:30, 10:30, 11:30 a, m.; 1:00, 2:00, 3:30, home when he was hit by the car. Mr. and Mrs. E. Walt Havens of 4:30, 5:30, 8:00, 0:30 p. m. The autolst did not stop but went on Seagirt spent part of last week with SEA BRIGHT, N. J. v LEAVE KEANSBUBO. N. J. his way without the boy recognizing Mr. and Mrs. Earl Cordova. Mro. him or obtaining the automobile li- Samuel H. Cleeland and Miss Betty PHONE BUM8ON B5S-J. Weekdays;—7:00, 0:00 a. m.;-12:00 m.; 2:00, 3:30, 5i30,' 8:00, 10:00 cense number. Cleeland of Fair Haven were gufbts p. m. Sewing The accident occurred in front of of Mr. and Mrs. Cordova one day Saturdays:—7:00. 9:00, a. m.; 12:00 m.; 2:00, 3:30, 6:30, 8:00, 10:00 Mrs. Catherine Sullivan's home. The last week. FEDERAL LAND BANK William Halleran, Joseph McVey. p. m. boy was cut, bruised and stunned. Mn. Sullivan assisted him to his Howard Gaffcy, Leroy Gaffey anJ Sundays & Holldays:-7:O0, 11:00 a. m.; 12:00 m.; 1:00, 2:00, 4:00, feet and walked with him to her Harold Kelly have bought a cabin Farm Mortgages 5:00, 6:00, 8:00, 9:00, 10:00 p. m. house, where 'she applied first aid cruiser from William Mustoe of Red Bank. KEANSBUBG STEAMBOAT CO, Machines treatment. Later the boy was taken Announcing to the Red Bank hospital and he re- A cake sale for the benefit ot the turned homo the next day. Presbyterian church will be held on To Saturday of this week at Roberts >•»•»»•>•••»»•»»••»»»»•••> $15 $40 KUMSON & White's store. 3% Henry C. .VanNote has been under PRIMROSE HOUSE Band Concert July Fourth Marks observation In a hospital at Wash- Victory rark's Ninth Anniversary. ington, D. C, in an effort to deter- If you are now paying I mine what Is wrong with hts left

fired It left the field open for the Lin- UNION BEACH NEWS. a wedding supper for Mr. and Mra. Anthony Wlnglcr of Jersey City. Tbe DEFEAT NEW YORK POLICE dy and tha Tern. The Lindy took tho SUNDAY'S RACE Daniel* Kiddles Gave Annual Be- lead at the otart and led tho chase peopla wore married at Brooklyn Harry Quinn's Garage cttal on Friday. and are spending a week here. IIUNTEB'S BASEDAIXEBS WON around the entire course. Captain GEOBGE W. BRAT'S LINDY Powers's Tern was hard hit by tho The Daniels dancing kiddles gave Mr. and Mr«. Joseph Farrand and TENNIS EASILY SUNDAY. frequent squalls and at one tlmo ho . AGAIN A WINNER. their annual recital on Friday even- Mr. and Mrs. G. Templeton of Jer- ing at the Florence avenue nrehouse sey City were visitors at tha home Bacqaota Matrons In one tour, best cut Guaranteed sixty days. was forced to head his craft into the Esty, New Red Bank Fltcber, Al- wind and, take in the . This .This Was tho Llndy's Second Win In with a very large attendance. Eleanor at Mrs. M.J. Sappsh last week. lowed Only Four Hits and One a Week—Tho Elisabeth Finished Cullen won first prize, a pair of gold The Tuesday afternoon sociable for Prices from $2.50 to $10.00. caused him to lose a lot of ground brocaded toe slippers, Isabello Mc- Bun—Four Games Scheduled This and from then on it was only a mat- Second In a Field of Four Start- the boneflt ot Union Beach Catholic Tennis Bacquets In stock. Tennis Court Construction a Specialty. Week. I era. Lellan second, a silver loving cup, church was held at the home of ter for the skipper of the Lindy to and Christina Barclay third, a sliver Mrs. M. Bogdanovlc. The sociables Telephones K«d Bank 2183 and Humson 624. Esty, a Montclalr righthander, sail his boat "safe" and "tome home George W. Bray's Lindy took her loving cup, tor selling tickets. The have been discontinued (or the sum- pitcher for tho Red Bank baseball with the bacon." second win of the week Sunday children are under the instructions mer. W. S. GRAY, Tennis Professional. team Sunday afternoon and turned The third official event of the sea- morning when she captured the race of Mlsa Lillian Daniels with studios Mr. and Mrs. D. Morton aVe spend- back the New York police depart- F0XW00D PARK, LITTLE SH.VEB, N. X son is called for Sunday morning at of tho 2-1-foot knockabout class and at Newark and Union Beach. ing a few days at Lakewood with ment's aggregation with only one half pact ten o'clock. Repairs will be with tho win Increased her lead In William Whltaker and cousin, Jos- their daughter, Mrs. Ryan. run and four hits. The safeties were made at onco to tho damaged craft points for the Beason trophy. eph DeChagas, were week-end visi- Mrs. P. J. Morgan has .had her well scattered and the tally was un- and it is expected that a fleet of six The raco was twice over the club's tors at Kingston, New York. house wired tor electricity. •AAAAJ earned, coming by virtue.of a double knockabouts will be ready for thocourse in a modern south to west Bteal and a bad throw to the plats Ruth and Laura West motored to Mr. and Mrs. Joseph McCoy are starting gun Sunday morning. wind. Tte starters were Mr. Bray's the mountains In New York state driving a new Chevrolet coach. Hunter's men collected eight hits off Lindy, Sarah Clay Brown's Elizabeth, Bill Buddy, a former Southern league last week with Eugene Manning, Mayor William H. R. White's Dol- where the latter must remain for hie WILLIAM O'BRIEN twlrler, and countered four tallies. The Register never disappoints— We Want to Serve Notice! phin and Henry Applegate's Naomi. health. Five of4he hits were hard doubles, KEYPORT^TILTWINNING. The boats wero slow In getting ready your printing la always done at tho that our HOOD TIRES are four of which came in the fifth in- Mr. and iln. G. A. Vogellus gave time promised.—Advertisement. ning. Porter and Brookholtz pound- for the start and It was nearly eleven equal to two ot other makes. ed out a double .and a single each. BASEBAIX TEAM WON ITo'clocS k when the committee fired the The example Is simple enough. Ked Bank's inflelders turned in a preparatory gun. All you have to do U to buy TWELFTH GAME THURSDAY. It was a nip and tuck race be- pair of snappy double plays, but one ot our tires, put It on your HIGH GRADE SERVICE they were inconsistent. Many times tween tho Lindy, the Elizabeth and they were not on their toes and inIt Trounced Bed Bank at Bradley the Naomi for the first stake off the' car and be convinced that It Approved and Improved addition to bad throws outright er- -Beach by a Score of 10 to 13—Both Mlddletown shore. The Lindy took will outwear two of the cheaper rors were made by Pecora, Hunter Teams Collected Thirty-Six Safe the laurels at the first turn with the grades ot tires. You know there Klizaboth right at her heels. The Heating Plumbing Roofing and Bliss. Hits. Is but a slight difference in the The Red Bank baseball team also Naomi, although having the better The police team was deputed to be berth for a greater part of the dis- cost and the upkeep Is smaller Water Systems Copper Work the strongest nine that has ever represents Bradley Beach and it met the Keyport athletic association at tance and could have held her con- In comparison. Try one and represented the New York police de- tenders off at the stake, fell off and you'll find out. partment. George Sullivan, a form- that place Thursday afternoon, re- Earthen and Iron Pipe ceiving its worst beating this season. sacrificed her favorable position as er Southern leaguer, was behind the the stake was neared. Storage. Wo Handle the American Radiator Company's bat, Kunn of the old Howards of The contest was slow and loosely played, many spectators leaving be- On tho leg from the Mlddletown Cars Called for and Delivered. ARCOLA HEATING SYSTEMS Brooklyn was at first and Sergeant shore to the buoy in Fisher's cove the Daniel Tlerney, who formerly played fore the seventh inning ended. Marv Paxson was the winning pitcher and Lindy and the Elizabeth had a OPEN ALL NIGHT. RED BANK and SEA BRIGHT with the Newark and Montreal clubs close brush. The Elizabeth estab- in the International league, was inCharley Clayton was on the mound A skilled auto repair service for Ked Bank until the ninth inning lished an overlap on the Lindy and rightfleld. Whitney Weiler showed Captain Fisher of the Lindy carried that disturbs competition. It up well at short and the throwing •when he was relieved by Gordinier, WHITE MARKETS) we can't Bx your car— Ik of Ward, a rising young outfielder, who previously played in rightfiold. the Elizabeth well off the course, al- was outstanding. Paxson had a slight edge on Clay- lowing the Naomi and the Dolphin If you're stuck by the waysld* ton for pitching skill, but it was not to take a" shorter course and turn simply USED CAR The box score is: a creditable game for either twirler the Fisher's covo buoy ahead of the QudlitY Meats ^Poultry EED BA: as both were wild and easily hit. The former leaders. Phone Red Bank AB R H PO A two teams 'collected 36 hits. The boats trailed to the Guyon's Newman, if 3 X 1 5 0 Bradley Beach played without two point mark when on the beat home- 1029 CLEARANCE SALE Porter, 2b .4 1 2 5 3 ward on the first round the boats Hunter, lb 4 0 0 S 0of its regulars and was over con- NOTICE. fident until Keyport had tho game changed positions With the Lindy and Cor. Broad and Front Streets, Red Bank, N. J. TO CREDITORS OF THE GLENWOOfl 1925 Buick. Standard Sedan Esbcrt. cf. 4 0 0 8 2 tho Elizabeth taking first and second MAUSOLEUM COMPANY, BODY COR- Brookholtz, c 4 1 2 & 0in the bag. Hunter's men were in- PORATE: , " • 1926 Buick Coupes, Sedans and Coaches Blisa, 3b 3 0 1 0 0consistent at bat, on base and in the place respectively, which they held Tel.2037-W. FREE DELIVERY. In pursuance of an order of the Court of Erickson, rf 3 0 1 0 0field. Paxson had them popping up to the finish, the Lindy winning over Chancery of tlio State of New Jeriey, mad* 1927 Buick Brougham, 5 and 7 passenger sedans Pecorn, 6 4 0 0 1 1 the Elizabeth by only a few seconds. Selling Quality Meats at Reasonable Prices. on tho second day of July, 1029, In * often when hits meant runs anil they oauBO wherein Glenwood Cemetery, body 1927 Packard Sedan E»ty, p 3 1 1 0 0failed to make the best of many val- The Dolphin finished third and the certiorate, la complainant, and Gttnwoed Naomi fourth. Ellwood Powers Tern Mausoleum Company, body corporate, 1* Total 32 4 8 27 6 uable chances. Dave Macintosh re- Fresh-Killed 1925 Marmon Touring fused to go in aa a pinch hitter and did not get away with the starters, defendant, notlco h hereby given to th« NEW YORK. but waa sailed over the course by creditors of mild Company to preient to 1928 Buick Standard Coupe AB R H TO AHunter has dropped him from his c John S, Applesnte, the receiver of 1*14 team. William Borner within the time limit Company, at his office. No. 34 Broad 1928 Hudson Brougham acDonalil, If 3 0 0 2 0 and she was given the usual credit of street, In the borough of Red Bank, County Kuhn, lb 4 0 1 10 0 Thursday's game was Keyport's 331. (3 to SM 16. Average) 33lb. of Monmouth and State of Now Jcrair* Also cars from $100 Up. Ward, cf 4 0 0 2 0eighth straight victory. They had one point for finishing. their, sevcrnt claims and demands against Sullivan, c 3 1 0 4 2 played thirteen games when they said Compnny, duly verified under oath ot All these cars are in good mrining condition Weiler, SB. 3 0 14 1met Bradley Beach and had lost only affirmation, within three months from th» Thompson, 2b 4 0 1 1 3 48c doz. Strictly Fresh Eggs 48c doz. dato hereof, or they will be excluded from and ready for demonstration. Tierney, rf 4 0 0 0 0one. The Astoria athletics defeated RED BANK FIGHTERS WE the benefit of such dividends aj may here- them by a count of 5 to 1. after bo made and declared by said Court Cotean. 3b 4 0 1 0 1 from the assets of said Company. ? No Reasonable Offer Refused ! Ruddy, p 3 0 0 0 2 The box score is: VICTORIES FOB WILLIE PAT- Lean Smoked JOHN S. APPLEGATE, Total 32 1 4 23 0 KEYPORT TEKSON AND JOE LUCIA. CALA c Receiver nf Glenwood Mausoleum Company^ AB R H PO A body corporate, Score by Innings: Carhart. rf. r> 4 3 1 0 Care Applegate, Stevens, Foster A Reui* H. L.. ZOBEL New York 00010000 0—1 Fattcrson Knrned a Decision Over eille, , , A. Manuel, BB 7 1 2 4 3 Bed Bank .. 00013000 X—4 Eddie Barton, "The Pride of Long 19 HAMS 19lb. • 84 Broad Street, Red Bank, N. J/ Perrine, Sb 6 2 2 3 4 Dated July 3, 1029. Sea Bright, New Jersey. Summary—Errors—Peeora, 2, Bliss 1, StillwaBon. lb 5 2 0 8 0 Branch," and Lucia Knocked Out Hunter 1, Colpnr 1, Thompson 1. Kuhn 1. -. Manuel, 2b 6 3 5 4* 3 His Opponent—Ono Drawn Battle, 49c lb. Brookfield or Cloverbloom Butter 4QC ]b# Monmouth County Surrogate's Offlca. mHMHoiimMMiMmiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiHit Two-base hits—Newman, Porter, Broolt- all;, ct 6 12 3 0 In the matter of the estate of Cham Felih« holtr, Erlcltflon, Eoty. Sacrifice hits— Diet!,. If B 1 Si ,0 fl Willie Patterson, "The Pride of man, dcccnaoii. Erickson. Left on bases—Red Bank 7, Red Bank,' and Eddie Barton, "The Notlco to creditors to present claim 4 New York 8. Double plays—Porter to G. Manuel, c 6 0 S S 0Pride of Long Branch," staged the Fresh-Killed Hgninst estate. Hunter: Egbert to Porter. Runs batted Paxson, P 5 2 0 0 0 Pursuant to the order of Joseph L. Don* principal light. In a serjes of bouts LONG ISLAND c ahay. Ourrosoto of the County of Mon- in—Newman 1, Porter 1, BrooRholtx 1. Total '. 61 16 20 27 10at the Ocean View clubhouse at Long mouth, made on tho fifth day of July. Stolen bases—Sulli»an, Newman. Strike 1029, on tho application of Howard 8« outs—By .Esty 5, by Ruddy 4. Bases on BRADLEY BEACH Branch Friday night. Barton start- Ilintfinson. administrator with will annexed, Everybody Drives balls—Off Esty 4, off Ruddy 2. Out when AB R H PO A ed off like a whirlwind and he had 29; DUCKS 29 lb. of the estate of Cham FeUhman, deceased, hit by batted ball—Egbert! Newman, If. 6 i 6 I)tho advantage In tho early roum notice i» hereby Riven to the creditors ot 'ecora, S3 1 2 3 .1 but later on Patterson punished him eald decemed to exhibit to the subscriber, This afternoon Red Bank will play lunter. 2b, , 3 8 2 0 oi'mlnWtrntor, etc., na nforenald, their debts an exhibition game at Fort Hancock Egbert, cf. aovurely and had things pretty much 36c lb. Blade Cut Rib Roast 36c lb. And demands nffiilnfit the Bald eitate. und«/ 6 '11 8 0 his own way. Nevertheless Barton oath, within six months from the date of with the Alnirmndrls of SanDomlngo, Brookholtz, lb B 1 2 6 0 the aforesaid order, or they will be for* a Used Car Bliss, 3b 0 0 1 put up a good game fight. Patterson who are making a tour of the United Fresh-Killed ever barred of their Hctiona thereto! States. Oma, whom John McGraw Gordinier, p, rf. •. * • 3 0 110 was declared the winner by the against the aitiri subscriber. Klein, c ;.. 5 1 2 6 0 has christened as the second Babe referee and the decision was popu- Stewing c Dated Freehold, N. J., July Bth, 1029. 1928 Packard 7-Pass. Sedan, in fine order; bar- Clayton, p, rf. .. 6 1 1 0 4 HOWARD 8.- HIGGINSON, Ruth, is a member of this team. Fort lar, as was attested by the cheering. gain price. Patterson had Barton groggy In the Red Bank, N. Jj Hancock officers are having a holi- Total 41 13 IS 27 6 day today and admission to the game fifth round. It seemed to a good Chickens 29 lb. The RegtBter'a motto—"A paper 4 1927 Marmon 8-Cyl. Sedan, in fine order, just Scoro by iLnintrs: is free. Later this afternoon Red many of the spectators that Patter- every home."—Advertisement Keyport 30011056 0—16 refinished. Bank will meet the Alamandrls team son "let up"- on his opponent after Bradley Beach .. 10203013 3—13 that round and took things easier. It at Hunter's field. The game will Summary—Errors—Clayton 2, Hunter, 1928 Chevrolet, like new, 6 wire wheels. start at a quarter after six .o'clock. was apparent that he was a much llein, W. Manuel, StillwaBon. Two-bnae more skillful boxer than the Long Stujlebaker Sedan. The be-whiskered House of David hlts-^Nowman 2, Pecora, Brookholtz. Gor- nine will meet Hunter's team here dinier, Klein, Carhart, A. Manuel, Perrine, Branch boy. . / Studebaker Coach. ' #1 • Friday afternoon at a quarter after Dletz. Stolen bases—W. Manuel 2, New- "Angelfacc" Joe Lucia of Red six o'clock. The bearded players man 2, Carhart, Perrlno, Craig. Sacrifices— Bank knocked out JOB Herrlera of son. Bs'bert. Buns batted in—VV. Man- Dodge Sedan. were defeated several weeks ago by Long Branch In the first round of uel 4, Hunter 4, G. Manuel 3, Brookholtz a preliminary match. Cadillac Touring. Red Bank, but they did not have 3, A. Manuel 2, Dletz 2. Pecora '2, Gordi- their regular lineup at that time. nier 2. Carhart 1. Stillwaeon 1. Craig 1. Jimmy Donato of Red Bank Cadillac 7-Pass. Sedan. Their first string players will be on Egbert 1. Left on bases—Keyport 15, fought a draw with Charles Wells of FISCHER'S the team Friday night and Jack Bradley Peach 12. Double plays—Perrine Newark. Doughty little Jimmy was Grish, their southpaw twlrler, will be W. Manuel, to StillwaBon. Perrine to the aggressor all tho way through, Stfllwagon. Strike outs—By PaxBon 3 by BUY QUICKLY, IF YOU WANT A BARGAIN. on the mound. The Davids have been but his opponent was bigger arid Clayton 8. Bases on balls—Off Paxson stronger, and Jimmy did well to earn winning consistently the past several 7, off Clayton 6. Hit by pitcher—By Fox- 1OO% WHOLE WHEAT weeks and they have been drawing on—Hunter twice, by Clayton—Carhart. a draw. large attendances at all their games. Sunday afternoon Red Bank will KEYPOIIT GRABS ANOTHER. J.W. Mount Co. contest with the Pennsylvania col- ored giants, an aggregation equally VANVLIET WINS TOURNEY Sayreville Defeated In a Fast Game as strong as the Bacharach colored Sunday Afternoon. ' Phone 515. giants of Atlantic City, who badly DEFEATS COBNWELL FOB THE Sensational fielding and airtight defeated Red Bank several weeks pitching by both teams featured Key- RED BANK, NEW JERSEY. ago at Bradley Beach. SHBEWSBUBY TITLE. port's- 0 to 2 win over the strong Sayreville club at Falrmo'unt Park, Benjamin F. VanVllet Victorious Sunday afternoon. The Keys had Over E. Allaire Cornwell In An-little difficulty in winning behind the RACED IN HEAVY WIND. nual Tennis Tournament In splendid twirling of Bill Forst, Tren- Straight Sets. ton righthander, who allowed, the THREE BOATS DISABLED BE- Benjamin F. :VanVliet of Shrews- heavy hitting Sayrevillo nine but five hits, two of which were of a scratchy FOBE THE STAKT. bury won the Shrewsbury Invitation tennis tournament by defeating E. nature. A of Sayreville hurlers Allaire Cornwell of Hod Bank in the yielded but three hits to the Keys, George W. Brnj's Lindy Defeated but the victors bunched each of their Elhvood Tower's Tern, the Only final round match on July Fourth. Ben won In a rather decisive fash- blows with passes and clever bunt- Other Boat to Start—Third Official ing to tally their five runs. Walt Kaco Next Sundny Morning. ion In straight sets, the scores be- ng 6-0, 6-2, 6-4. Manuel drovo in Keyport's first two George W. Bray's Lindy sailed by Allaire did not appear to possess runs in the Initial frame with Fred Fisher and Ernest Hall, and sufficient stamina to meet his op- scorching single to center. Two and with a pick-up crew of three gathered ponent's varied strokes and Ben had passes and a pair of sacrifices en- from the crowd of spectators at the he match well In hand from the abled the Keys to score two more In Monmouth boat club just before tho start. "Shake" rallied in the last set the third, and an error by Burke, Other Breads starting of the race, romped home to and led at 4-1, only to drop the next former Newark Bears' infielder, per- a holiday victory in the race for sea- ve games and the match. mitted Dietz to come across with the That's the reason "Good Will" used ion point3 on tho President Augustus By his victory Ben gained his sec- fifth and final run In the fourth, a cars are the biggest used car values M. Minton trophy. The Lindy was ond leg on tho Cornwell memorial pass, and another duo of sacrifice money can buy. That's the reason old followed home by Ellwood Powers's bunts driving the local left fielder cuotomers return again and again to cup. Allaire has one leg on tho cup. around the bases. The losers scored Tern sailed by her owner and with Three victories are necessary to gain FresK at the Seashore make their purchases from our used William Borner at the sheet. their first run in the third when carstock. Theyknowthatevery"Good its permanent possession. Tho same Hamilton's single fell between Walt Will" car has been carefully checked, Much to the disappointment of the pair have fought out the finals for crowd of onlookers as well as to tho Manuel and Aggelakos, Smoyak Bcor- and reconditioned whero necessary. three successive years. VanVliet won IIng from second. Rupp was hit by a 1927 FORD SEDAN— They knowthatourwritten Guaranty, fleet captains and their respective two years ago and Cornwell last i Everything new but thmast after the head- ter's team will meet the Brooklyn stay was released cracked her mast Let Luke Find Tour Homo. Luke Longhead's department of Royal colored giants, who tvere de- FISCHER BAKING CO. and she was also withdrawn. The Register every weelt tells of d?: feated by Red Bank about a month NEWARK, N. J. With three of the five boats dis- eirable. homes for oale.—Advertise- ago. The Baltimore Black Sox' are GOOD WILL USED CARS abled before the starting gun wa*. ment. . scheduled to play here tbU month, •RED BANK REGISTER, JULY 10,192&, Page Twenty;Tnree

ARCTIC MESSAGE. FATHER OF OUR SCHOOLS. before the enemy" at the battle of leaves were served as greens in a which can be traoed and assessed tagious. They sweep through an en- Monmouth, the haughty general time when ons of tho popular hot without a great effort." tire household, an entire city, an en- WlwfcM Forwarded to Offlcertl WUfl Robert tyOrd Devoted M»ny Tear* started on his road to disgrace from drinks was made by simmering Tho department belittles "the pro- tire state, attacking the young, the by. Red Banker. to This Line ol Work. this place. soured beer over a fire. Crusts of filing pseudo-sclentlOo theory that adolescent, the middle aged, anil fre- farmers shift taxes on the consum- quently carrying off the aged, the Naw Brunswick, N. J., (AP)—Rob- When Great Britain and the col- brown bread were added to the The flret word from the Xrbtlo ex- onies engaged In the French and In- beer, and the mixture was sweetened ers ot their goods." The survey weak, and the debilitated. pedition haa44d W UouUnant-Com- ert Balrd Is often called th« father showB thoro is no shift of tho bur- To prevent a cold it is essential, of New Jersey's fliibllo school system dian war, the brilliant soldier came with molasses. The tea leaves In mander Donald B. MacMUIftn. which over to this country about 1704 to preparation for the table were boiled den, and the tax on rural landown- first of all, t.n keep the body resist- left Maine last month, was received though many others contributed to ers tends to stay wncro placed. ance at a high point of. efllclcncy. t» rise and development. take a hand. When trouble between thoroughly, drained, dished and but- ywtcrday lit a radio mossago from Great Britain and the colonies began, tered. "The New Jerseytax is based upon Thi9 moons that tho body machinery Dr. William P. Kendall, a member of Although ho was not born In New tho selling value of tho land," tho Hlmuld bi> ln;pt In ii"°d order ft all 1 Jersey, nor did be die here, the best Lea aspired to the leadership ot the Tho Bottlers were as fond of their f thB expedition, to MB wlfo «• So"" colonial army and never was rocon chocolate and sausago as of their report said. "The theory of the com- times. Good whol jaome food in yreeport, Maine. Tho mossago road: years of his life were devoted to the proper amount, plenty of slocp, the j Circulation clled to Washington's appointment coldslaw and soup and In those days plete shifting of taxes upon tho con- "Arrived at Ked Bay (Labrador) welfare of tho state. Balrd was born careful attendance to tho voiding of 1 In Fayette county, Fa., in 1788, and to that high position by Congress. when It needed no physician to cause sumer assumes that the landowner this P. M. (July 7.) Flrut Iceberg Ho was Jealous of him all his life and tho inclusion of sauerkraut In the at tho margin of cultivation will the body wastes, the taking of reg- \ aeen today. All well and apparently graduated at Jefferson college in ular exerci.io in the open air, kenpinn [ 1818, His earliest connection with did all In his power to dim Wash bill of fare. Chocolato and sausage abandon his farm after tho Im- hippy." ' lngton'a brilliance and his reputation were boiled togother, Berved in a position of tho tax and Invest his the body clean, keeping the mouth ] Tho mesoago was forwarded to New Jersey was In 1819 when he and nose clean, the avoidance of hot, : went to Princeton to study theology. as a general. All this tho com- bowl and eaten with a spoon. capital and labor in tome other en- Mra. Kendall by John M. Hollywood, mander-ln-olilef bore with patience, As "kohl-salat," or cabbage Balad, terprise. But he would derive no stuffy, dusty rooms, the avulduncr- j With influence •on of M, h. Hollywood Of Peters Balrd taught an academy there benefit In euoh a case if all other of exposure to sudden changes of for five years, sometimes filled pul- However, when Lee's conduct on the ooldBlaw ga.rnlBhed meal after meal. place. John la a student In the Mass- battlefield at Monmouth assumed a The Dutch came to call It "kohl- properties are equally taxed. Ordi- temperature, the prevention of tho: achusetts Institute of technology and pits and wrote for newspapers of tha narily a farmer continues to stay on chilling of tiie body either by cold or ; day. In 1827 he became the New Serious character that imperilled tho slaa," and from, these two foreign for tho eummor 1B employed in tho colonials, General Washington words tho designation of today la tho farm, and as a result agricultural wet, are all protective measures. It new wireless station at Scobcyvillc. Jorsoy agent f6r the American Bible supply will not decrease. and prices should be borne in mind, however, Society. Appalled at the amount of thought it time to report tho mattor said to have been derived. to Congress. Hot breads were In vogue, short consequently will not rise. There that even robust persons may con- lgnoranca he found In the course of tract colds from people who have at the Smallest Cost TOtJB. cakes, made with butternuts nnd fore, a tax on agricultural land will his work, he determined to do some- A court-martial was ordered by cakes were features even of the stay where it is placed in the first them. , thing about It. He talked and wrote congress and Lee himself concurred. instance; that Is, tho farmer pays State Association to Visit Connecti- upon the subject constantly. He probably thought hia past exploits morning meal, as they are to this cut In August. and his fine reputation as a general day in Pennsylvania. Soupan was tho tax." Kough on Davis. ., In 1824, Princeton had a nm print- well salted Indian mush, boiled and m i m> New Brunswick, N. J, (AP)—Piano Ing press which printed religious would enable him to escape the proof "Thnt was rough on Davla." is what the business man wants eaten with milk and molasses. It COMMON COLDS. "What?" (or the annual summer tour of tho journals and pamphlets. This was of his misdeeds. The famous court- was the standanl Sunday meal al- -New Jeraoy state poultry association, of great assistance to Rev. Bair'd in martial opened In New Brunswick. ''He stepped on a pleco of orange though occasionally o. raised biscuit, They Aro the Most Prevalent Sick- peel, fell, and wan arrested for giving to secure trade when advertis- which will bo hold in Connooticut thla spreading 'abroad the lamentable Borne sessions were held there, but called swdlback, took its place, This year during tho week of August 5th, conditions he found in New Jersey others were held at Morrlstown, at ness In tbe Country. a street performance without a li- biscuit was made in large quantities, The most prevalent Illness in the cense." ing. It is not only the number were 'announced today by L. M. for the education of a majority of Paramus nnd the last ones at the bushels at a time, and dried In tho Black, Btato poultry .specialist. and; children of the poor. As soon as it house of "Mr. Kennedy at Pecks- United States Is tho common cold. over until It became as hard as a The word "colds" moans an acute Ono Foot In the Grave. of copies a newspaper PRINTS, secretary of tha poultry association. could be done, schools for the teach- Kill" on August 12th. rock. The tour ID bolng mado ot tho in- ing of reading, writing and arith- infection of the lining membranes of Dolly—She married a very old man, General Lee conducted his own de- Vegetables of tho Colonial perl6d tho noae, tonsils, throat, and larger vitation ot tho Connecticut poultry metic were opened as charitable in- fense of tho three charges brought didn't she? I understand he had one but its character and where it association, whoso members visited stitutions, There had been colleges were few in number and poor In bronchial tubes. The procosB may bo foot in tho grave. against him; first, for disobedience quality. Tomatoes, cauliflower, okra, even moro extensive and amount to New Jersey last summer. They wish from a much earlier date for the bet- of orders; second, for misbehavior Polly—That's what she thought, CIRCULATES; what is admit- to entertain tho Jorscymon thla year, ter and wealthier qlaises, but noth- lettuce, sweet corn, egg plant and a general infection of the entlro too; but ho still continues to buy his before the enemy on tho same day by rhubarb had not been hoard of. Po- body. All of tho breathing appar- and plans aro already under .way ing for tho children of ordinary making an unnecessary, disorderly shoes by tho pair. ted in its columns and whether for a joint meeting of the two state parents. The fine schools that wo tatoes, cabbage, beans, and Indian atus, excepting the smaller terminal and shameful retreat, and third, for corn in Bcason woro practically tho portions in the lungs, may Be In- Monmouth County Surrogate'* Office. associations, havo today had tholr beginnings as disrespect to tho Commander-in-Chief In the mutter of the estate ot LyJin U. the readers have confidence in The start will bo made from Pater- charitable religious, undertakings. only vegetables to bo had. No im- volved, and aB a rrtatter of fact tho In two letters dated June 28th and proved varieties of peaches, pears, disease may, and often does, spread Patterson, deceased. eon on Monday morning, August 5th, In Princeton a public meeting was July) 1st. Notice to creditors to present claim* and it is expected tho party will re- held In 1837 at which the principal plums or melons had been Intro- to these, thug producing pneumonia. aKairiHt estate. the publication. He wants to This greatest generals In the army duced. Grapes were uncultivated in It is not neceBsary to describe a Pursuant to the order of Joieuh L. Dmi- turn to New Jersey tho following business was a resolution to raise who woro present af the battle of nhuy, surrogate of the county of Mon- Friday afternoon, ' Approximately tho then enormous sum of $10,000 for New Jersey save for a poor wild cold. Everybody Is familiar with it inouth, made on the cij*Mh day ot July. know whether a newspaper is Monmouth testified at the trial, variety. Apples were plentiful but in all its variations, from tho simple 1929, on tin* apnlk'nllim of CeorKe II. BOO miles will bo covered during tho the support of missionaries and the among them General Maxwell, the flve-day tour. Tho trip will bo mado establishment of schools In destitute no farmer of that day had any know- ordinary coryza, which is a polite White, fexecutor of the estate of Lydin It. read in the homes and whether Marquis Ho LaFayotte, Baron Von ledge, of grafting. " running at the nose, to the sore Patterson, deceased, notice is hereby Kivt"i in auto busses. parts of the state. Stouben, GehoralB Wayne and Scott, to the cretlltoi-n of said deceased to exliil.it ^The scenic Bear Mountain route Robert Balrd visited every county When a New Jersey farmer by the throat, the aching chest, fever, and to the subscriber, executor as aforesaid, Lieutenant-Colonel Hamilton, Lieu- name of Newbold invented the first generally "knocked-out" feeling. The their debts and demands ivKainnt the Raiil the money he spends is actually will be followed by tho Jereoymcn explaining tho advantages of estab- tenant-Colonel Fitzgerald and others. estate, under oath, within flix months from 1ft tholr tour to Connecticut. Stops lishing free schools. He did a tre- cast iron plough some 200 years ago, cough, tho snoezo, tho headache, and the date of the aforesaid order, or they There were other occasions, too, It took him 20 years to sell his new the varying degrees of inefficiency will.be forever barred of their actions there- a loss or a gain. will be made at two chicken farina n/endous work In arousing public which had given rise to suspicion of along the route, and tho party will opinion for free schools and his tool. People were prejudiced against which a cold produces are, alas, only for against tho said subscriber. his loyalty to tho Commander-ln- It claiming that cast Iron poisoned too woll known. Common coldB occur Dated Freehold, N. J.. July Rtri. 1029. arrive at Storra, tha location of tho labors bore fruit at the next session Chlef and the flag under which Gen- GEQROE, H. WHITE. Connecticut agricultural college, In of tho legislature which passed an the soil and ruined tho crop. Seed in epidemics and aro distinctly con- \Littlo Silver, N. J. oral Lee was then fighting, and his was sowed by hand and when har time for the annual banquet of the act appropriating $20,000 a year for conduct at Monmouth was the last 7 poultry association. This event will vest time came, the rye, wheat, and stablishlng and supporting the com- straw that broke him. The evidence buckwheat were cut with a sickle open tho annual farmers' week at mon schools. - was overwhelmingly against him. the Connecticut institution, nnd the while the oats, like grass, fell under Twonty-one persons were trained Tho court was very considerate and tho scythe. Jersey group will romain in Storrs as teachors and schools were opened lenient with General Lee and grant- tha following day for tho poultry in all sections of the state. ed him tho time to write out his do- program. They will' Inspect tho Balrd, following his work In New fanse and even extended it when he FARMEBS' TAXES. Btorrs International egg laying con- Jersey became Interested in several asked for it. | Don't Forget The j tent, where a pen of Whlto Leghorns religious organizations. He traveled They Pay more Than Their Fair In this year's competition has an ex- The verdict, delivered August 12, much In their behalf, at one time 1778, Bald: "Tho court do sentence .Share ot Public Expenses. Red Bank cellent chance of establishing a new making an extensive tour of south- world's record for a ten bird entry. ern Europe- to aid the work of Prot- Major-General Lee to be suspended Possession of visible tangible prop- A. number of Connecticut's most estant churches. from any command in tho armies of erty la responsible for the imposition Buccessfu^poultrynien will bo visited Later he became interested in the the United Btatea•" ot disproportionate taxes upon the on Wednesday and Thursday. On temperance movement and went to farmers of the nation, the state de- Register tholr farms will bo oeen modorn de- England and the Scandinavian coun- SHOKE HISTORY. partment of agriculture announced recently upon completion of a sur- velopment;* in tha scienco of poultry tries. He was In Stockholm in 1840. long Branch the Pioneer Among Fair Haven | vey of conditions in New Jersey and raising thlit have enabled their own- • i m ers to increase egg production, to Summer Resorts. the entire country. obtain a more uniform and healthy MONMOUTH BATTLE RELIC. Ashury Park, N. J., (AP)-The Tho report points to enormous de- growth of young stock, and reduce North. Jersey shore dates Its popu- velopments of commerce and indus- Rutgers Has letter "Written Dny Af- larity as a summer ; resort back losses from diseases and parasites. ter the Battle. try in cities and towns during the is the ideal newspaper for those Results obtained by the Connecticut through the dim past to the day past two decades. It asserts these poultrymen in their "grow healthy New BrunBwIck, N. J. (AP)—A when It wnuld have been supposed "new forms of wealth created con- who are looking for a medium chicks campaign," aro expected to letter written on tho battlefield of colonial colonization cares would stitute intangible personality, seldom | Firemen's Fair | interest the Jersey poultry farmers. Monmouth and beliovcd to contain have been too burdcnBomo and the taxable." Contrasted is the farmer to reach buyers. It has the right As an added attraction, a tour of the first news of the result of the wlldneS3 of encircling aborginul life In the rural districts "in possession inspection will bo made at tho'U. S. engagement with tho British troops too menacing to allow early settlers of visible tangible property, easily naval submarine base, located at has been obtained by the- Rutgers to think of establishing a summer reached by administration and heav- kind of circulation, uses every New London, Conn. Not only -will university library. The letter, writ- home •where the cooling breezes blow ily taxed by It." tho visitors bo shown through the ten tho morning after the battle by from the dca. care in keeping its news and ad- shops and other buildings at the Colonel John Taylor, a tutor at Rut- Yet history discloses that the fore- The survey shows, the department base, but opportunity also will bo gers from 1777 to 1701, to Colone' runners of the stately mansions and states, that legislative bodies are fol- vertising columns free from cb- provided to inspect a submarine. John Nellson of New Brunswick, has thousands of homes which now dot lowing traditional methods of Im | July 27^Aug. 3 j been given to Rutgers by Mr. and tho coast were the tents and rough posing taxes, levying upon tangible huts of Dutch patroons and early property and Intangible personalty jectional features and it has THE MOUNTAIN Z.AUBEL. Mrs. Frederick W. Parker of Newark. The letter tells of Washington's English occupants of New York, personal command, of the British r< erected on the wooded slopes of the gained a reputation for cleanli- Sunday Tourists Are Wantonly De- Navesmk highland probably as early stroying This Flower. treat, and of the American loss. The letter was written by Colonel Taylor as 1650. There was Indian, occupancy ness that makes it a welcome (By Tho Associated Proaa.) on behalf of General Dickinson, June prior to that time, but it Is not of , The pink and white blossoms of the 20,1778, and was sent to Colonel Neil- record that the Red Men sought tho weekly visitor in the Home Cir- so-called mountain laurel, or as much son "near the Scotch meeting house." seashore for any other reason than of it as has escaped the Sunday tour- Tho letter reads: to garner the wealth of food the Overalls-' cle. waters of, the Atlantic provided. ist, have begun to dot tho mountains 'Dear Col.: and marshy hollows of Now Jersey And among the many towns and Tho Gonrl. has received your two cities dotting tho broad expanse from tfoB another season. letters for which he thanks you, and ' The thousands of subscribers Residents of the' pine section re- Sandy Hook southward, Long Branch would have answered them himself is the pioneer resort along the North port tho plant more profuao than but bolng so much engaged be has ever. Tho highways are hedged with Shore. Tradition has it that Cap- that take THE RED BANK not had time. Gcnrl. Loo's division tain Philip White, a British officer, the blossoms, a deoper pink tit color had a severe engagement with the than usual. first owned the coast line of what is REGISTER every week make enemy yesterday In which he lost a now Long Branch. From other This native plant of New Jersey, number of men, but maintained his sources, however, the original own- an army of readers of which popularly known as laurel or sheep ground with a much greater loss on ership is credited to Ebenczer War- laurel, is no kin to tho laurel with the side of the enomy. In tho after- dell, a descendant of Ellaklm War- Which the brows of conquering Greok noon His Excellency commanded in dell, who sympathized with the any newspaper would be proud. athletes were crowned. Nor doca it person with a division of fresh British and had his lands confiscated bear any likeness to tho European troops, in which battle he drove tho No Country Weekly newspaper laurel. In fact "laurel" is a mis- In consequence. enemy near two miles, took a num- John Slocum received a grant of nomer, and to speak correctly of the ber of prisoners, and their dead and plant, one should call it "Kalmia/ land In Shrewsbury township In 1670 published occupies such a pe- wounded. Among the dead aro found but before securing complote title It Botanists bestowed that name In two colonels, one of them was Col was necessary for him to buy out culiar position. It stands alone honor of Peter Kalm, who brought Monckton. The militia had a Bklrmish tho rights of the Indians. Tho man- some specimens back to Sweden in with the enemy in the morning In ner In which this was done forms an —in a class by itself—and is 1748. Kalm mado a tour of this sec- which we at first got drove. We af- amusing; chapter in the history of tion of tho United States and then re- terwards rallied, and drove the ene- Long Branch. turned to tho University of Abo with my with somo loss, wo had two men Slocum, of great size and strength unique in the fact that it is the many plants and shrubs up to that wounded. Wo are again on the march offered to wrestle any Indian who time known only to the New World. to tho lines of the enemy. What they might be brought against him, Slo- largest Weekly newspaper in The family of flora Is known as are about this morning we have not cum to be given tho title to all the Ericaceae. In tho samo family with yet been able to learn. Our men arc land he could walk around in ono pages and circulation in the tho laurol aro included such flowers in high spirits. The Genrl. desires day if ho threw the red man. Tra- an the much sought after whlto and you to continue in that part of the dition is silent as to the forfeit Slo- country. pink azalcaB, tho rhododendron, tho country whero you at present are cum was to pay should he be thrown fast disappearing arbutus and the nnd act in such a manner afi you Slocum gnlnod the first fall. Then wlntergreen. shall think most conducive to the both fell. Tho third time tho Indian Tho whlto azalea appears In tho publlck good. We last night got was thrown again. Slocum secured Every town, village and ham- northern counties of New Jersey and some whiskey, a part of which you his land and gave part of It to two also in tho pino barrens. Tho plnlfc can have by sending for. If you can brothers. Sections remained In pos- let within a radius of many azalea is to bo found moat plentiful send a kagg, I will endeavor to get session of tho family until a com- on the Capo May peninsula. , Tho rho- two gallons of wine for your own use paratively recent date. miles of Red Bank has its sub- dodendron thrives on the cool moun- You may send to Engltshtown, and EHakim Wardell bought a Bcctlon tain slopes and along tho Delaware if tho liquor shall not be there, It of land from the Indians outright, scribers—and every town con- river. The arbutus Is found In the will be about one and a half miles in giving four pounds for it. Ownership sandy plno region, and the winter- the rear on the Princeton road. ot this land was later credited to tributes to the trade of Red groen both among the pines and in In behalf of the Genrl. Captain White. From other sources the mountains. All these flowers are (Signed) It Is ascertained that tho property Bank merchants. They can profusely natlvo to New Jersey. J. Taylor." before the war was In possession of Tho laurel changes the color of its It was immediately after this battle Ebenezer Wardell, one of the de- reach these people with their blossoms according to Its location. In that General Leo, mentioned in tho scendants of Ellaklm, and it was the Sussex and Warren counties, high In letter, went to the famous old inn at former residence of Ebenezer that the wooded mountains, it Is p/ro Kngllshtown and there penned the was first used as a boarding house. announcements at a time when white. On tho low, open ground, In two letters, disrespectful In tone, Watson in his "Annals" soys: the pino barrens, and about Farming- which historians say. more than his "In consequence of the war (Rev- advertising has reading value dale, Toms River, Lnkcwood, Ham- conduct on the field of battle^ led to olutionary) the plnco was confiscated. monton and Mnys Lading, its color Is his court-martial, In the dining The house was first used as a board- and hundreds read no other pa- a deep pink. room of the inn, George Washington ing house by Ellisfon Perot of Phil- Dr. C. M. Hneriscler, ansnc.lo.io plant wrote the three charges against Lee adelphia In 1788. At that time the per. The business man who pathologist of tho New. Jersey Agri- nnd tho order notifying Lee that ho whole promisos were in charge of cultural Experiment station, anyB the was under arrest ono old woman, loft to keep the laurel Is undoubtedly diminishing, al- place from injury. Of her Mr. Perot starts out on an advertising Tho EngllBhtown inn stands as one begged an asylum for himself and Gives an though It Is still abflndant over ccr- of tho historic structures of Mon- Uin remote areas. mouth county. It was built in 17S2 faihlly, which was granted provided campaign cannot cover this No legal measures have hc-on tnkoti by n man whoso name perished with he could get beds and bedding from to preserve tho plant, other than )iln body. No over-night guosts aro others. Being pleased with the place, field without through tho gcnrrnl 'protective iitn- now entertained In Its quaint bed- he repeated hla visit there three suc- tutes which prohibit tin; .rolled Ion (if roiims, although tho place Is main- cessive years, taking snme friends trees nnd living plants from WOOIIH tained an a place of refreshment. with him. Even Break without tho consent of the owner. There is, however, ft strong effort I"1 FOODS OF LONG AGO. Ing put forth by various garden am GENERAL LEE'S TKIAL. nature clubs to educato the public Settlers Here Ato Queer Dishes In Convicted of Unseemly Conduct Be- Colonial Days. The Red Bank Register to protect wild plant llfo. fore Enemy nt Battle of Monmouth. The laurel is among Now Jorm (By The Alioctatod Pron.) half dozen most attractive flowering (Ily Tlie As>ocl«t«

Divorced" ; DIALOGUE BV FREDEWCsFAHW Wear Clean —wlth- HATTON See ami Lowell Sherman Hear the Clothes. Cyril Chadwick Most Effective Betty Francisco J Aerial Duel Ever Two July Jan Garber's Band. Screened !, Fox Movietone Newt Also Another Dollar Days! Special Feature Leon's WED., THURS., FRL, JULY 17th, 18th, 19th and Fox Movietonews WHERE RUGS AND Thursday and Friday, A HENRY KING Production 3 DAYS—Comm. THURSDAY, JULY 18th HOUSEHOLD GOODS 1 Greater Than "IN OLD ARIZONA" , ARE BEAUTIFIED. July 11th and 12th.

"Thru Different Eyes" MAIN OFFICE & WARNER EDMUND, PLANT: BRING S FLOORS OF She Goes to War SUPER-ECONOMY VALUES. —WITH— BAXTER LOWE 70-76 White Street, ALL TALKING Red Bank, New Jersey. Eleanor Boardman and a great supporting cast

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