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When you read the Coast Ad­ vertiser you are gaining the Each resident is a cog in the ma­ sa" o k~r\v!~d»3 of things worth chine which helps a community while in your community as your toward greater growth, increas­ friends. It spreads the news. ♦ ed prosperity, and making it a oust SU toerti befit- place in which to live.

Vol. 46; No. 39. BELMAR. NEW JERSEY, FRIDAY, FEB. 14, 1930. SINGLE COPY, 4 Centa THREE NEW MEMBERS MARSH & WERTZ ELECTED TO SCHOOL BOARD FETED AT DINNER POSTMASTERSHIP DECISION Chrysler Record Breakers BIGGEST VOTE IN BOROUGH HISTORY Eulogized at Testimonial Banquet in A. P. Property Purchase Turned Down by MAY COME IN 3 WEEKS Eleventh Avenue “Don” Marsh and “Pete” Wertz, Vote of 556 to 217 Chrysler automobile record-breakers, were guests of honor at a dinner ten­ OCEAN INN GOES QUESTIONAIRES BEING STUDIED a In the biggest vote ever cast at a dered them by more than a hundred UP IN FLAMES school board election in Belmar three CEDARS’ PARADE friends ’and admirers in the Asbury- old members were thrown out and Carlton Hotel, Asbury Park, Saturday Civil Service Commission Still Pondering Over three new ones elected. AND INITIATION evening. Second Fire on Sixth Ave­ Following an excellent repast pre­ The referendum on the purchase of nue Completely Destroys Problem Settled Prematurely Two the Eleventh avenue and F street Elaborate Ceremonial in Le pares? by J. Walter Butcher, proprietor of the hotel and an enthusiastic “fan,” Building Weeks Ago gion Home Next Mon­ Thomas Burley, Jr., secretary of As­ bury Park Chamber of Commerce was day Evening The northern portion of the Ocean introduced as master of ceremonies by Inn at Sixth and Ocean Avenues, was The postmastership of Belmar is in the questionaires regarding them are Borough Attorney Joseph Megill of burned to the ground early Thursday “status quo” and likely to remain so still under consideration and that the The American Legion Home will be Bradley Beach. morning and the remainder of the for some time. second edition of eligibles will be sent the scene, next Monday evening, of an Mr. Burley set the ball rolling with­ building gutted. In the meantime petitions are flood­ to the Republican county chairman elaborate initiation ceremony to be out any palaver, by calling on Mr. ing Washington wastepaper baskets. within a few weeks. staged by Tall Cedars of Lebanon, As- Answering an alarm shortly before Marsh. In a terse talk “Don” de­ 5 o’clock the three units of the fire de­ Congressman Harold G. Hoffman Whether the board of civil service bury Park Forest, No. 39, following a scribed the trip south and north, stated to a representative of this paper commissioners will get through with street parade. partment arrived on the scene as dwelling lightly on the difficulties they flames shot across Sixth avenue, great­ Monday, that it will probably be three their arduous task before Mr. Hoffman The parade will include delegations had to contend with, and giving a lot ly hampering their work, and the Weeks at least before any decision is vacates his seat in the House of Rep­ in full regalia from Port Richmond of credit for the success of the trip to whole structure, from end to end was made. resentatives or not is a moot point. and Tottenville, Staten Island; Plain- others. He stressed in particular the ablaze. The nerves of the citizens of Belmar The congressman states that he has field, Perth Amboy, Keyport, Long invaluable aid given them by the Stan­ The origin of the fire is riot definite­ will have to remain on edge possibly more than 200 postmasterships to sub­ Branch, New Brunswick and Wild­ dard Oil Company’s agents along the ly known, but the fact that the whole until St. Patrick’s Day, acording to mit for approval. wood. route, who oiled and gassed their “77” building seemed to be burning at that statement, and anything is liable Most of them have gone through in Weather permitting, the parade will with forty gallons of fuel at a clip in once, is suspicious, in the opinion of to happen on the day set apart for the the regular way, acocrding to the rec­ start at 8 o’clock from the Legion under six minute stops. the firemen. glorification of the Saint of the Emer­ ords. Home to F street, along F street to He paid tribute to the Baltimore po­ The firemen devoted their efforts to ald Isle. Why Belmar’s is still held in abey­ Sixteenth avenue, and return by the lice department, one of whose motor­ keeping the blaze within control and Mr. Hoffman, with a twinkle in his ance, the political dopesters declare, is same route. cycle cops led them at a breakneck preventing burning embers and sparks eye, said that the “appointment” had that there has been some static Inter­ The work of initiation will be put on pace through that city’s traffic in un­ from spreading to other properties in been a little premature. ference on the air between the head­ by Present Grand Tall Cedars of the der twelve minutes. the neighborhood. quarters of the Republican County visiting lodges. About 500 are expect­ Mr. Wertz followed with a brief The questionaires regarding the This is the second fire in the same Committee and the Sen­ ed to be present at the ceremony. speech in which he thanked all who qualifications of applicants have not building within a few months. ate. Following the initiation a buffet had cooperated in making the trip a yet been thoroughly investigated by Damage to the property, which is supper will be served and an enter­ success. the Civil Service Commission. Through personal touch with theTwo owned by Paul J. Gleitz of Spring J. RAYMOND BERGEN tainment given which will include Mayor Joseph Mayer said Belmar That the solons who compose that United States Senators, the Coast Ad­ Garden street, Philadelphia, is esti­ property for school purposes was vot- vaudeville acts by professional talent. felt justifiably proud of the achieve­ board consider Belmar of more vast vertiser learns that no specific word mated at $20,000. ’ ed down 556 to 217. The committee of arrangements is ment of one of its most progressive importance than any other municipal­ of protest against any “eligible” has Votes cast numbered 842. composed of Grand Tall Cedar F. business men, “Don” Marsh, and his ity in the state, is evident. yet reached them. Petitions, they J. Raymond Bergen received 533, M. E. BIBLE CLASSES say, are as plentiful in Washington as i Ralph Shibla, Senior Deputy G. T. C. companion in success, Mr. Wertz. They The fact still stands out that the Charles J. Markus 454 and Alexander AT ITALIAN DINNER snowflakes in the northwest. They I Mortimer L. Smith, Jr., Junior Deputy had put Belmar more prominently on name of an appointee has been decid­ 1 N. Steel 383. They are the new mem­ | G. T. C. Louis Brodstein, Scribe Henry the map and it had no feeling of re­ run from dog catcher to United States The men and women of M. E. church ed upon by the powers that be, and I bers of the board. L. Dangler, District Representative sentment that they had chosen its Treasurer and only add to the rubbish I Bible classes enjoyed an Italian din­ only awaits ratification. J. Harry R. Cooper, William P. Frazee John L. Worthley and Senator E. Don­ suburb Asbury Park, as the starting baskets’ contents. Anyone can “get ner Tuesday evening, served in a set­ Official reports from the Capital and J. Egbert Newman, who sought ald Sterner. point. up” a petition, they say, but few of state that the applications and the Commissioner Bernard of ting of St. Valentine decorations in the them are ever seriously considered. FIRE SIGNALS GET Bradley Beach congratulated that bor­ Sunday school. Mrs. William A. Barton was in FIREMEN GUESSING ough on being the home of both men charge assisted by Mrs. Sarah Seltzer and said the town was perfectly will­ UNIVERSITY WOMEN While Volunteer Hook and Ladder ing to lend them to Asbury for the and Rev. II. B. White. After the din­ HEAR PEACE TALK ART EXHIBIT AT Fire Company and Goodwill Hose pleasure of entertaining them for a ner, games were played and prizes were hunting for a fire at Eighth ave­ night. awarded. The first lecture on World Fellow­ WOMAN’S CLUB Among those present were Rev. and nue and F street, signalled out at Box Gus Edwards, representing the Chry­ ship and The Problems of Peace, giv­ 4 Mrs. H. B. White, Mrs. Sarah Seltzer, 17 from police headquarters at ten sler Company presented Mr. Marsh en under the auspices of the College Mrs. B. B. Smith Talks on o’clock Monday morning, William Gun- and Mr. Wertz each with a gold med­ Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Smythe, Mr. Woman’s Club of Monmouth County and Mrs. Walter Longstreet, Mrs. deker raced Union Company’s appar­ al, embossed with a model of their car was attended by about 250 clubwomen Old Masters Amid Fasci- Hester Cooper, Mrs. Hettie Nichols, atus to 511 Fourteenth avenue and and suitably engraved. in the Monterey Hotel, Asbury Park, Mrs. Sarah Garrison, Miss Elizabeth nating Display found the fire out. Milton T. Kamm, secretary of the Y. Tuesday. Curtains in the west bedroom win­ M. C. A. eulogized the guests for their Merrit, Mrs. Ethel Houtain, Mr. and Two more lectures in the series are dow of William Garafolo’s home at courage and ability in achieving such Mrs. J. N. Garrabrandt, Mr. and Mrs. scheduled for February 18th and 27th. The commonly accepted belief among that address had caught fire and been a feat on their own initiative, and, as W. A. Barton, Mrs. Samuel Woolley, Mrs. Peter O’Connor of 200 Tenth ave­ men that dissemination of gossip is extinguished when the firemen arriv­ amateurs, surpassing the professional and Mrs. Birdsall. Mrs. John Kissock, nue is president of the Monmouth the prinicpal function of women’s or­ Mrs. Laura Davidson, Miss Dorothy ed. A call for the firemen had been record. County branch. Tickets for the two ganizations was completely shattered phoned in to police headquarters and Police Chief William Maas of Nep­ Davidson, Mrs. F. Griffith, Mrs. How­ coming lectures may be obtained from last Friday at Belmar Woman’s Club. 17 called by mistake. tune, Lieutenant Clarence Mooney of ell Clark, Mrs. Ella Thorne and Mrs. her at a nominal charge. Surrounded by a fascinating display Asbury Park, Mr. Butcher and Mr. James L. Bowers. of art treasures, brought by members, EXCHANGE CLUB TO Raymond of the Standard Oil Com­ WINTER OVERCOATS each with its own interesting history NAME COMMITTEES pany, added more eulogies to the heap. ST. ROSE’S SOCIETY FOR POLICEMEN and invitingly displayed under the Mrs. Marsh was pushed into the TO PRESENT COMEDY supervision of Mrs. Carl Schongar, William Hefter, president of Belmar limelight by Mr. Burley and gracefully Members of the Police Department Mrs. Benjamin B. Smith gave a talk The Romance Hunters, a comedy in Exchange Club, stated at the regular thanked those present for the honor will be equipped with new winter over­ on Italian art. dinner-meeting in the American Le­ shown her husband and his compan­ three acts, by Elizabeth Gale will be coats of uniform style within a few Mrs. Smith reviewed the rise of that presented by St. Rose’s Dramatic So­ CHARLES J. MARKUS gion Home, Monday evening, that ion. It was really worth the anxiety days. Measurements were taken Mon­ school from its inception to the works ciety in the public school auditorium reelection received 372,361 and 319 names of committeemen for the ensu­ she had gone through during their day for outfitting each officer. of Raphael, ilustrating her lecture with Friday evening, February 21st. votes, respectively. ing year will be announced next Mon­ trips. The coats will be cut on the model prints of the paintings of the old mas­ The program will be interspersed Mr. Cooper lost out by the narrow day evening. Miss Peggy Deering, for her wonder­ worn by the state police, knee-length, ters. Her talk was as eagerly listen­ with several dance and musical num­ margin of eleven votes. The year’s program of activities will ful assistance in mapping out all the with shoulder straps and lapel collars. ed to by a large group of members as bers in which Vincent Ely and Mary Paul C. Taylor acted as teller, Mrs. also be outlined at this meeting. important details entailed by such a They will be police blue in color. would a program of jazz have been by Isham will have prominent parts. Prof. Walter L. Babcock and William Lok- trip was presented with a handsome a like number of the "superior sex." A. J. Hollywood will be in charge of erson as judges, and Dr. Fred V. WAR MEMORIAL bag, large enough to carry a week-end KIWANIANS HEAR The medal awarded the club at'As­ the music. Thompson as chairman. TO BE ERECTED wardrobe of a young lady of fashion TALK ON LINCOLN bury Park Flower Show was exhibited Mr. Bergen expressed deep gratitude today. and a report on the garden depart­ KENNETH MAYER MADE for the splendid vote cast in his favor. An ordinance for the improvement Dancing followed the speeches. Rev. Allen N. Nettleton was guest of ment made by Mrs. Frank Erving, MANAGER OF GAS CO. He wishes to thank the people for the of the triangular park in front of the Belmar was represented by Mayor honor and speaker at the weekly lun­ s chairman. confidence placed in him, and promis­ American Legion Home and the erec­ Joseph Mayer and Mrs. Mayer, Mr. cheon of the Kiwanis Club in the Mrs. H. F. Schmidt, president o f the Kenneth Mayer will shortly leave es to do everything in his power to tion of a monument to Belmar’s war and Mrs. Edward F. Lyman, Jr., Mr. American Legion Home Wednesday. club, reported that friendship chests Belmar to take up his new duties as heroes was passed on first reading, and Mrs. Charles J. Markus, Mr. and Mr. Nettleton chose for his subject for Philippine children had been dis­ manager for the Jersey Central Power Tuesday evening, by the Borough Com­ Mrs. Charles Keiderling, Jr., Mr. and "Abrham Lincoln” in celebration of tributed. Cardinal Troop, Girl Scouts, and Light Company of the Dover dis­ mission. Mrs. Harry Pflug, Mr. and Mrs. J. the great emancipator’s birthday. have promised to fill two chests with The amount to be expended is not Charles Turner, Miss Mildred Gordon trict. useful articles for girls of school age, to exceed $4,500. and Louis Barr. MARCEL WAVE SEASON and the Girls’ Club of the M. E. Church ROOM FOR RENT OPENS MARCH FIRST and of the Belmar Neighborhood Guild NOTICE C. OF C. OPENS each one. Room in private family, breakfast in­ Don’t wait until the Spring rush to EMPLOYMENT BUREAU The open season for Marcel waves Friday, February 21st, has been set cluded $7.00 per week. A dandy loca­ have your paperhanging and painting begins March 1st. apart by the club of an open civic tion. Gentleman preferred. Box 11, done, let me give you an estimate now The Belmar Chamber of Commerce This information was conveyed to meeting, when suggested improve­ Coast Advertiser. and save you money. has opened an employment bureau at the borough commissioners Tuesday ments in the borough will occupy roll HOWARD REESE, its office, 706 Eighth avenue. evening when an application for a li­ call session. Mayor Mayer is sched­ NOTICE 721 Sth Avenue Belmar, N. J> The local civic and fraternal organ­ cense to open Fred’s Beauty Salon on uled as principal speaker. izations are cooperating with the Ocpan avenue was presented to them. JOHN BARULICK, former manager HOMES CLEANED Chamber in endeavoring to find work The application was referred to SPECIAL NOTICE of the George T. Manich & Co. Serv­ Have your home cleaned by Louis for the needy. Mayor Mayer, for consideration on his ice Station at 18th avenue and the Heckman, professional house cleaner return from a vacation in the South. The annual meeting of the share­ and caretaker. Estimates are cheer­ INSURANCE State Highway, has opened a Service holders of the Wall Building and Loan Station and store at 8TH AVENUE fully given. Eighteenth Avenue near FIRE, AUTO, PUBLIC LIABILITY C. OF C. LABIES’ NIGHT Association of Belmar, N. J., will be Briarwood Terrace. Phone 1412. For Advice, Information and Rates and the N. Y. and L. B. RAILROAD, held at the office of the Association, where efficient, expert service will be Consult The Chamber of Commerce Ladies’ 706 9th avenue, Belmar, N. J., on Fri­ given to old and new patrons. APARTMENT TO LET—At 710 10th JOSEPH MAYER Night will be held in the American day evening, February 28th., 1930, at Avenue, between Post Office and 9th Avenue and Railroad Legion Home Wednesday, February 8:00 P. M., for the election of Direc­ MUST SELL AT ONCE Building Loan. 4 rooms and bath. Ar­ Belmar, N. J. 26th. tors and three Auditors, and for the eola heat on or before April 1st. In­ A,feature of the evening will be a transaction of such other business as To Make Room for Swimming Pool quire KASDAN, F Street, corner Fif­ $3.25 FOR A $4.25 PAINT ladies’ orchestra, which will provide an may come before the meeting. Large House (Lambert Home), and teenth Avenue. Telephone Belmar 559 Selling Post “80-20” Lead & Zinc Paint entertainment during dinner and for L. D. EDWARDS, WITHOUT SALESMEN, direct to Small Bungalow; corner of Fifth and dancing afterward. Secretary. house owners, saves $1 a gallon and Ocean Avenues. Submit offers to A LE X STEEL HIGH GRADE PORTRAITS results in better paint in these 3 ways: JOSEPH MAYER MORE WHITE LEAD..LESS ZINC... fulfill the duties imposed upon him. Real Estate' and Insurance SHIPPED BEFORE IT SETTLES. Mr. Markus and Mr. -Steel are equal­ 9th and R. R. Aves., Belmar, N. J. RICHARD T. SHINN Only $3.25 for a $4.25 paint. Freight ly grateful for the trust placed upon prepaid. The saving is yours. Write Photographer THOMAS R. HARDY them and will use every effort to merit for particulars; sell to yourself. NEW OFFICE HOURS it. 807 F St. Belmar, N. J. CHARLES H. POST PAINT CO. 177 William St., N. Y. Dr. Daniel Traverso of 705 D street, FUNERAL DIRECTOR Mr. and Mrs. Cyrus B. Honce left corner Eighth avenue, anounces the LICENSED * EMBALMER Thursday for an extended trip to Ber­ WILLING TO SELL AT A following new appointment hours: 2 muda. RITE ELECTRIC CO. SACRIFICE to 3 P. M.; 7 to 8 P. M. and on Sunday, ON JURY DUTY THREE FAMILY HOUSE 7 to 8 P. M. Telephone Belmar 928 Open Day and Night f Among those who will serve on the Dependable Electrical Work Suitable for Rooming or Boarding Funeral Home 604 F Street, Belmar, N. J. petit jury from Monday until the end House PIANO AND VICTROLA FOR SALE of Any Nature of the term are the fololwing from Apply For sale, cheap; Upright piano, in very Belmar: Nelson T. Abbott, Jacob Ep- 704 F St. P h o "« 2423 PETER MacLEARIE good condition; also victrola, in per- Private Auto Ambulance Service worth, Rev. Peter Morris and Howard 1805 A Street, Belmar, N. J. 'feet condition. 704 E street, Belmar. Slocum, THE COAST ADVERTISER, BELMAR, N. J,

f,4,4*4,4'4,4'4,4*4,4*4*4*4*4*4*4-4*4-4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4,4*4*4*4*4"i*4*4*4*4,4 4* V CALLS IT PEACE 4- 4* 4* 4- WITHOUT VICTORY 4* Phone 2145 4* 4* 4- | Seeing Big League | 4* f 4* 4- t 4* 4* 4- Return of Hawkeyes Fails f 4* 4» The Jewelry And Real Estate 4* BASEBALL 4* 4* 4* 4- to Arouse Enthusiasm. * 4* 4- 4* 4* HARRY PFLUO 4* 4* 4- 4- Offiee of t Characterized by the Daily Iowan, 4* 4* I 4- University of Iowa student newspa­ 4* ESTIMATES CHEERFULLY GIVEN 4* 4* 4* per, as “ a peace without victory,” By BILLY EVANS 4* 4* 4- the Western conference action in rein­ Sportswriter, Big League Umpire 4* DESIGNER AND BUILDER 4* + t stating the Hawkeyes has failed to and General Manager of the 4* 4* 4* Cleveland Indians 4- Specializing In Alteration Work 4- 4» arouse much enthusiasm on the Old 4* 4* 4« Gold campus. 4* 4- 4- L. J. Leader There was obvious disappointment, “It’s a rotten ball club,” was the 4* 4* which in some quarters merged into opinion I expressed to President Brad­ 4- 607 Twelfth Avenue 4- 4* Belmar, N. J. 4*t outspoken resentment, over the con­ ley of the Cleveland club in December ference barring the way to further 4* J of 1927, just after he and several ^4"4"4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4,4-4*4**M*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4 4* Is Now Located At attempts by Iowa to seek reinstate­ other capitalists had purchased the 4* ment of eleven athletes. Hawkeye ath­ American league franchise. I 4* letic officials who were openly jubi­ “What do you think of the ball club 4* 4* lant when news of Iowa’s reinstate­ 4- 4* now?” It was President Bradley 4- ment first reached the campus later speaking and the time was early June, Phone 210 4* refused to make statements when they W e Design 4* 4* 1928. The Cleveland Indians, the 4* learned that a plea to have the ath­ early sensations of the American , 703 10. Ave. Belmar 4* letes restored to good standing would league, were resting securely in sec­ be turned down. ond place with something like thirty W . E. Hefter and Build While athletes themselves all denied t i games won and fifteen lost. Cleveland PLUMBING-—HEATING ± ± reports that they would leave Iowa, had finished sixth in 1927. they were almost unanimous that the “ No one is more delighted with the ^.4a4*4*4*4*4a4*4*4*4*4*4'4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4**i conference refusal to consider a rein­ Complete way the club is going than me,” I re­ Ninth Avenue statement plea was unjust. Mike Far- plied, “so far we have fooled every­ roh, three sport star and co-captain (Next to Bank) body, no one more than myself. I To Suit You! elect of the football team, said: ‘‘It hope the boys keep it up all season, is the .greatest disapoointment of my BELMAR, N. J. but if you want to know what I think life. I am certain a rehearing should Protect Your Income of the Indians, I still insist it’s a All Work Guaranteed be given all of us. I had no idea we rotten ball club. If the pitching ever would be barred from further compe­ stops and Langford quits hitting, we SJ3I5I5IS13ISI3J3ISJ5ISI31SJ3MSEISMSISISEIBM tition.” Against Fire will just naturally fold up.” As fandom knows, the pitching sud­ Knute Rockne, football coach of If your income is dependent on the uninterrupted denly stopped, when Uhle and Shaute Notre Dame, will lead another group could no longer win consistently. Like­ N A S H I use of any building, you can insure yourself against the of tourists to Europe next summer. wise, when Langford started hitting loss of earnings that would cease for a period of weeks Rockne’s health has improved suffi­ nice pop flies instead of doubles and ciently to permit him to devote some or months as the result of fire. triples, with an occasional home run, CARS I time to the details of his trip. the offense quit as badly as did the William V. McCarthy, head coach of Business Interruption Insurance is as important to pitching. From second place, the In­ baseball at New York university, will dians began to slip and it wasn’t long your safety as Fire Insurance on the property itself. act as Rockne’s representative in the until the spring phenoms were in the Let us explain it to you. East for the European tour, while Dr. second division. H. A. SMITH R. N. Blackwell, business manager of athletics at Southern Methodist uni­ Ordinarily, one likes to have a so- versity, will serve in a like capacity called expert opinion substantiated by Designer and Builder in the South. performance, but I am frank to con­ fess, here was one time I was willing In the summer of 1928, Rockne led P honeBELMAR 14 AUTO CO. 1 THOMAS D. JOECK a party to the , which P hone 1342 was the largest movement to Europe F St., cor. 8th Ave., Belmar {a * REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE ever directed by an individual. I I3IB/BISIS(SI3l3ISISIBiSi313ISJ3EI3lE!I3l3I3ISMSI3 1700 A Street | 708 Ninth Avenue Belmar, N. J, CENTRAL MARKET The boy’s there, so you say when Herman F. Lazaraus, Prop. fiM**I**t*^**’I,**I**I*t,I**I**,I,*»I**I**I**I**.I**I**I**I**I**?**I,,*I**I**I**I**I**I**I**i**I**’I**I**I'**I**I**I**I**I*,j Babe Ruth hits a homer. Ditto for what you say when Charley Hyatt Belmar - - New Jersey of Pittsburgh university shoots a goal City Dressed Beef in basketball. Ruth takes his cut and Lamb, Veal and Pork Phone 1124-W the ball goes places and Hyatt takes his shot and the ball snaps the laces. Fresh dressed poultry Charles, who is captain and for­ GIRLS WANTED ward of the Pittsburgh team, has been a specialty. overloading the big time box scores LEON T. ABBOTT for three years. He recently hit his 908 F Street BELMAR We offer you clean, PLUMBING AND HEATING CONTRACTOR high mark by picking up 27 points in steady employment, mak­ one game. Anybody who can do that ing Pajamas. You need Estimate* Given in a major engagement must be good. Hyatt did his high scoring act in a not be experienced. We recent game against Montana State. HUTCHINSON ART SHOP will pay you good wages 415 13th AVENUE BELMAR, N. J. It was his twelfth and last field goal while learning the trade,- that gave Pittsburgh their winning Exclusive Agency for which will enable you to margin of one point. COLUMBIA AND MINERVA Black-haired and boasting the build earn $20 to $25 a week. of a good, rugged halfback, Hyatt has YARNS remarkable endurance. And the pace Joe Sewell, Who in 1927, Was Voted never gets too hot for him. the Best Shortstop in the American VALCO MFG. GO. League. D. M. C. Cotton Alsatian Embroidery First Ave. near Railroad In the University of Iowa corner of to have my judgment as to the the wrestling ring has always sat a ASBURY PARK Schraft’s Chocolates strength of the Cleveland club be all TELEPHONE 519-W winner in the 145-pound class since wrong. I would have much preferred Albert Montgomery set a precedent to have the Indians stick in the first Embroidery Stamping last year by winning in all of six dual division and make plenty of money and meets. “Monty,” who is a medical stu­ rather than drop into the second di­ dent, won the conference crown with S. DRESDEN vision and be a big loser, simply to Hand-Knitted Sweaters RIVOLI SUGAR BOWL three eliminations and was third in have my opinion of the club stand national intercollegiate competition. up. However, by August, the Indians 806 F ST. BELMAR, N. J. Ladies” and Gents: Allen Whitten of Bayard started out had proved my judgment was correct 902 F Street Belmar, N J. j against the strong University of Okla­ as to the strength and weakness of TAILOR homa squad recently with a fall in the club. It was a bad ball club. THE MERCHANTS V-HO ADVER nTc3iiiiiiiiniic3i!iiiiiiiiiiaiHiiuuiiiuuimiiiiiiaiinitiiiiiic3iiiiiiniinciiiiiniiitiiE3iiiiiiiiiiiiE3iHiutHuic3iiiiiiiiiiiiaiiHimiiiinuuiiiinnaiim two minutes to uphold the tradition. TISE IN THIS PAPER WILL GIVu , PHONE 443 He is a junior. When it was apparent that the club wasn’t going anywhere, that it would YOU BEST VALUES FOR YOUR EIGHTH AVENUE AND F STREET After 35 years of association with probably finish sixth, if we kept our MONEY. BELMAR. N. J. the sport, both as a player and an veteran strength in the lineup, we HONCE AND DUBOIS official, Dr. Sumner Hardy, president decided to throw caution to the winds, of the California Lawn Tennis asso­ put all our available young material ciation, has announced his decision to into the lineup, forget about whether retire from all tennis activities. we won or lost, figuring finishing sixth didn’t mean a bit more in the final Realtors - Insurance - Mortgage Loans analysis than if we finished last. It The British Olympic council, at a was a cold move, such as few clubs recent meeting in London, unanimous­ have made in mid-season. 706 Tenth Avenue, ly decided that the association should Qur /advertising be represented at the Internationa] The first radical move made was Olympic congress in in May. the shifting of Joe Sewell from short Belmar, N. J. The question of allowing competitors to third. The year previous Sewell to receive payment for loss of salary had been voted the best shortstop in Phone 503 was debated, and its was decided the the American league. However, it British Olympic association’s delegate was apparent that Sewell was fast S ervice to the congress will oppose any effort slowing up, that he was failing to get e|e e^e |» »Je •Je »Je »Je e|e e^e •J* *1* *1* put forward to allow amateurs to re­ balls by a step that a few years pre­ ceive such payments in any guise vious "he would have handled with IF YOU WANT whatever. ease. In some circles the shifting of a good shortstop to third base was re­ Means More Sales garded as too drastic a move. Joe First Class Workmanship Missouri Girl Champ Sewell was well aware that his legs were beginning to play him false, that For You, SEE his career as a shortstop was fast coming to a close. He welcomed the Mr. Business Man shift to third. Our only fear in mak­ ing this move-, was the question as to When you begin advertising in this paper you start FRANK BRIDEN whether or not Joe would be able to handle bunts, also slowly hit balls on the road to more business. There is no better down the third base line. He soon or cheaper medium for reaching the buyers of this Painter & Decorator proved he could do it. That one proof SHOP—702 Seventh Avenue made all our 1928. experiments worth community. RESIDENCE—512 Seventh Avenue BELMAR. N. J. while. There was no better third baseman in the American league in WE CAN ALSO PROVIDE 1929 than Joe Sewell. Some other things we did was try Artistic Printing a Johnny Hodapp at first, used Eddie Morgan at first and third, and gave OF EVERY DESCRIPTION all the young players under contract ATRONIZE OUR a chance to show their stuff the mo­ ment they became available for major league play. By these experiments P we proved there was no better third ADVERTISERS sacker in the league than Joe Sewell; that Lew Fonseca could do a good job at first; that Eddie Morgan wasn’t cut out for an infielder; that of the THEY ARE ALL BOOSTERS new outfielders, only Eddie Morgan Advertise It In This Paper was able to give immediate help; that AND DESERVE YOUR BUSINESS pitcher Wesley Ferrell looked like Miss Lillian Hayes, the Missouri quite a prospect. Also, we learned skating champion in the women’s di­ more than ever what the Cleveland n WILL BE SOLD vision, who recently won out in a club needed was power at the bat. tournament at Forest Park, St. Louis. (©, 1930. Bell Syndicate.) THE COAST ADVERTISER, BELMAR. N. J

WHY WE BEHAVE Early Day Prohibition LIKE HUMAN BEINGS By GEORGE DORSEY, Pb. D„ LL. D.

Four-Wheeled Machines and Human Machines DRACTICE makes perfect. Even a * car “drives” better after the first thousand miles. And as for Mie driv­ er himself! At the end of the first day he ever drove a car he was a wreck. For two reasons. Fear lest he wreck the car: too emotional. He suffered enough in an­ ticipation to lose a dozen cars, several legs, ribs, eyes, lives. Other fears it under his belt moved him deeply: was it safe, any possibility of its blowing up, would the gas hold out, etc.? He did not know his car; it was a great unknown, the unknown is always a threat. He did not know his road, nor its manners and its customs, its curves and its grades. The new way is always a threat"; what is around the corner? The other reason. His own motor mechanism was tired all over. Through­ out the day his muscles had been tense, taut as fiddle strings, keyed up for emergency action. Now he drives three hundred miles a day; is as fresh as a daisy; has a MOTHER ? Fletcher’s Castoria is a harmless Substitute for good time, sees the country, talks his Castor Oil, Paregoric, Teething Drops and Soothing Syrups, hat off, smokes a dozen cigars. Does i prepared to relieve Infants in arms and Children all ages of not give his car a thought the whole day. He is as automatic as his en­ Constipation Wind Colic gine. Same car, same road, same driver. 'Flatulency To Sweeten Stomach And the same process in every act of Diarrhea Regulate Bowels Little Turtle, Miami War-Chief learning, beginning with the act of standing up or the first walk in life. Aids in the assimilation of Food, promoting Cheerfulness, Rest, and GmWlkinson'sTV-oKibiHori’OuJer We have time for the high spots in Natural Sleep without Opiates /a/ Facsimiles of Manuscripts, Courtesy life if we have learned how to cross United States Military .Academy, West the routine valley by force of habit. To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of Point Do you know which stocking you put Proven directions on each package. Physicians everywhere recommend it. on first this morning or which trousers’ leg you filled first? Do you recall how The next year, however, when head­ you felt tha first time you ever wore quarters were at Detroit, the use of a dress suit, or how long it took you liquor by the soldiers was causing so to put it on, or to learn to tie a bow- much trouble that Wilkinson was knot? Can you bathe, shave, and Isu. forced to issue an order prohibiting Its dress in six minutes? I can do it In *.j £* a **A. sale to them. less than five. PLUMBING A HEATING Within the last year or so the state A skilled performer at the piano or W e Specialize on Repair Work * * - /* * & £ of Michigan has received widespread typewriter or on the tennis court acts publicity because of its famous “ life- like an automaton. But no mere auto­ Electric Water Pumps and Repairs for-a-pint” liquor law, especially whe» maton—human or otherwise—ever £ A « - , several women were convicted under makes a great performer. that law. And these convictions were For this reason: heightened sensi­ JOS. C. STEWARD another example of “history repeating tivity of the central nervous system PHONE 620-R BELMAR 1106 F ST. itself,” for the first conviction and Increases the response of the reflex punishment of a woman liquor seller arcs. A tap on flexed patellar tendon A'Wef- Celebration of was the result of Wilkinson’s order elicits no kick when one is asleep. ■Washington’s Birthday of July 12, 1797. The woman was Lydia Sleep means that central has hung up. Connor, described as a “ follower of But try out the knee-kick with your By ELMO SCOTT WATSON their country and this time they were the army,” in the report of the court teeth clenched or your fist tightly dou­ martial at which she and two men Phone Belmar 601-W A LTHOUGH we think of pro- further authorized to bring their cap­ bled up; more kick. Get real mad; were tried. All three were found guilty A hibition enforcement as a tives to New In fetters. As more kick. FRAMES MADE TO ORDER MOSQUITO FRAMES but only the woman was punished. strictly modern American a reward for their enforcement work A good habit is a well-learned habit STORM SASH SHUTTERS What her punishment was is recorded "We promised that they should have a put to useful purpose. Plans Arranged and Estimates Offered V ® question, yet the fact is that thus in the orderly books: here, as in many other pres­ piece of cloth for a coat beside the The competent driver guides his car ent-day problems, is a curi­ brandy which such persons should The court finds the prisoner guilty as a clever boy his bicycle; the right ous instance of “history re­ carry, and hq who brought In the first of the charge exhibited against her, muscles-work to the right amounts at PETER MAGLEAR1E & SON should have two pieces.” Of this in­ and sentences her, under the General peating Itself.” The pass Order of the 12th. Instant, and the the proper time and in proper order. ing of the Volstead act did cident one historian says “The piece 23rd. Article of the 13th. Section of A car, or a curve, or a hole, or a honk CARPENTERS and BUILDERS not bring into being the of cloth can be understood, but one the rules and articles of war, to be ahead, is stimulus enough for eye or ALTERATIONS and REPAIRS wonders what these temperance ad­ drummed with a bottle suspended about first prohibition enforcement officer. her neck, with the Rogues March, to­ ear; the.adjustment is made as though Residence and Workshop, A Street Belmar, N. J. That title belongs to an Indian chief vocates did with the brandy; perhaps gether with William Mitchell, a pris­ it were a reflex, as easy as pie. It Bet. 18th and 19th Aves. and he was given his appointment they sold it back to the Dutch!” oner convicted of the like offense, her is an acquired reflex. Oratam, however, was not the only more than 250 years ago! right hand tied to his left, through All our habits act by force of habit chief who was destined to be con­ the Citadel in front of the troops, In the middle of the Seventeenth because these paths are worn. We cerned over the liquor question. Amer­ paraded, thence through the streets of the town, thence to and around the awake in the morning and “before we century the Dutch in New Netherland ican history is full of cases of Indian were engaged in a series of wars with front of the Barracks of the soldiery know it” we are at the breakfast ta­ leaders who saw with alarm what in Fort Lernault, thence out of the the neighboring Indian tribes. Finally ble, or possibly “come to” only when the white man’s “firewater” was do­ fort to and along the main street, and BE SATISFIED a permanent treaty of peace was con­ ing to their people and who protested, out of the west or southwest gate of some headline in the paper catches our the town not to return therein or eye—perhaps already half through our cluded in 1660, the leading signer of usually in vain, to white authorities to Are you always satisfied that you are getting which was “Oratamin, sachem of the within the lines and fortifications of breakfast. And yet, before we “ came stop the sale of it. One of the out­ the troops of the United States, on the value you should for your money in— savages living at Achkinheshacky standing of these was Chief Little penalty of receiving such punishment to,” we went through a thousand acts: dressing, shaving, etc., etc., some of FURNITURE AND HOUSEFURNISHINGS (Hackensack), who declared himself Turtle of the Miamis in Indiana, con­ as may be inflicted upon her, by sen­ commissioned by the savages of Tap- tence of a court martial. them really complex performances re­ queror of Generals Harmar and St. Look over our large stock and let us quote quiring delicate adjustments. paen (Tappan), Rechgawawanc (Man­ Clair during the Indian wars after the When these sentences were pre­ hattan), Kichtawance (Kitchawank) Yet there were a thousand re­ prices before you buy elsewhere. Revolution. After his defeat by “Mad sented to General Wilkinson, he acted and Sintsinck (Sintsink)” to act on sponses available for that breakfast Anthony” Wayne at the Battle of Fal­ upon them thus. “The sentence passed their behalf. But this treaty did not stimulus. The stimulus was not neces­ len Timbers, Little Turtle settled down upon Lydia Connor, a notorious of­ end the troubles between the two sarily followed by a yawn, a stretch, near Fort Wayne, Ind., and devoted fender, Is to be carried into execu­ M. MANNER races, for in 1662 Oratamin (whose push covers down, one leg out, other his efforts to trying to improve the tion at six o’clock this afternoon. 703 and 705 F Street, Belmar, N. J. name is also spelled Oratam, Oratamy, leg out, slippers, etc.—one conditioned lot of the Miami tribesmen by teaching However highly merited, he remits so Oratan and Oraton) complained to the reflex touching off another. But that them to learn to “ walk in the white much of the sentence passed upon Dutch authorities of the illicit sale chain of reactions had been performed man’s road” and to avoid the pitfalls Mitchell as relates to drumming and o f brandy to his people. so many times that the paths connect­ placed in that road by the white man. he flatters himself that this instance ing up these countless reflexes had Jts^g As the result of this protest there During a visit to the East in 1796, of his clemency may not be misap­ been worn; all the other possible paths appeared in the official records of Little Turtle visited the yearly con­ prehended. as no further indulgence of response offered more resistance be­ New Netherland this entry: ference of the Society of Friends, at must be expected.” cause they had not been worn by con­ Baltimore, and appealed to them to In the case of Frazer, the other man, | E. S. Morrison Company | Whereas Oratam, chief of Hacklng-- stant action. heseky, and other savages have com­ use their Influence to stop the trans­ Wilkinson was even more lenient prob­ A habit, then, is an act so often re­ plained several times that many selfish portation of liquor to the Indian coun­ ably because Frazer was very promi­ peated that it runs itself: it does not people dare not only to sell brandy to try. Accordingly the Friends addressed nent in the little town of Detroit, the savages in this city, but also to need our conscious attention; we can a memorial to congress asking that and by dealing lightly with him the carry whole ankers of it into their give our attention to something else. country and peddle it out there, from this be done. But nothing seems to general may have hoped to curry favor REALTORS } The average mortal has only one which, if it is not prevented in time, have come of it, for In 1802 and 1803, with the citizens. This Wilkinson was habit. The one stimulus which rouses many troubles will arise, therefore, the we find him making a personal appeal not an admirable character, it will be director general and council of New him from sleep carries him through to the legislatures of Kentucky and remembered, for later in his career Telephone 1206 Belmar | Netherland, not knowing for the pres­ the day and back to bed and to sleep. ent of a better way to stop it, author­ Ohio for their aid in suppressing the while commander-in-chief of the Amer­ AH days look alike to him. Saturday ± ize the said chief together with the liquor traffic among his people. ican army, he was guilty of what 709 F STREET BELMAR, N. J. Sachem Mattanouch to seize the brandy closely bordered upon treason, more night is also conditioned into the brought into their country for sale and Mention of “Mad Anthony” Wayne chain; no fresh stimulus needed for those offering to sell it, and bring recalls the fact that a regular ration so even than Aaron Burr, upon whom them here that they may be punished the greater odium of the conspiracy the bath 1 His body’s clock is likewise of liquor was considered an indis­ set for Sunday. That day, too, goes as an example to others. pensable part of the soldier’s daily with the Spaniards in the Southwest The Chiefs Oratam and Mattano are fell. So there is reason for reading in by according to schedule, and when hereby authorized to seize the brandy fare during the early days of the Unit­ done is itself the stimulus to resume brought into their country for sale, ed States army and in that respect a cynical frame of mind the following a new week. One habit after another, THE BICYCLE OF together with those who bring it, and unctuous words: its use by Wayne’s forces during the like a chain, functioning as one. Works conduct them hither. campaign against the tribes of the Old SUPERIORITY Done at Fort Amsterdam in New With respect to William Frazer, the like a clock wound up for life. Makes Northwest was in accordance with the Netherland the thirtieth day of March, commander-in-chief will observe that a perfect clerk, “ hand,” or maid. For real riding qualities this custom of the day. The original manu­ as he can never be indifferent to the 1662, This one-habit mode of existence is bicycle excels all others be­ script “Orderly Books” of the western feelings of any person, should the transgression have originated in mis­ fine; it gives the brain a complete cause it is manufactured with Evidently the two chiefs were effi­ army, commanded first by Wayne and apprehension, he regrets the occasion; rest. The possessor need never have regard to smooth, flexible, run­ cient “ prohibition enforcement officers” later by Gen. James Wilkinson, are otherwise, he hopes the process may a thought 1 He is a skilled performer, ning equipment, and strong, for there is no further mention of preserved. in the library of the Unit­ be received as evidence of the impar­ but never great, on piccolo, at lathe, sturdy frame worn plus beau­ trouble for fifteen months. But it is ed States Military academy at West tiality of his administration, and of the ty of design. Every compon­ duty of the court, and that it will have behind counter, or on a stool. He does evident, too, that prohibition then, as Point, and in them are some entries ent part of these bicycles on the effect to prevent a repetition of not even make a good soldier. There now, produced bootleggers, for in June, which make curious reading in these the offense which cannot be permit­ sale here is made of the best 1663, Oratam and other chiefs again ted or pardoned. must be visceral dynamics—generally materials obtainable. days of the Eighteenth amendment. called “guts” — behind a bayonet appeared before the authorities, com­ For instance, on July 4, 1792. when The measures of the general since charge; and high-strung central— plaining that brandy was still being headquarters of the expedition were he took command of the post have JOS. C. STEWARD been directed by motives of public called “brains” —in control for a sharp­ carried among their people. “On being at Pittsburgh, Wayne issued a gen­ 1106 F St. Belmar utility, and the effects are visible to shooter. The difference between ac­ told that we tried to prevent and had eral order for “a double allowance of all. Acting above personal considera­ tion in an automatic machine and in authorized Oratam to arrest Dutch­ spirits to the troops today, being the tion— he abhors every emotion of a BishiTp* vindictive spirit and disdains the a human genius is brains. men who came into their country to anniversary of the independence of the peddle brandy,” reads the record, “they principles of a narrow and Insidious (© by George A. Dorsey.) United States.” On February 21, 1796. policy— bound by the solemn obliga­ replied that they were cheated by the at Greenville, General Wilkinson or­ tions of public trust, and personal Dutch, who said that the general had honor, he will sedulously guard the in­ A True Helpmate dered that the soldiers were to be terests confided to his charge. And it As an Advertising Medium given his consent, and showed a let­ allowed to “draw an extra gill of The Welfare . Worker—Is it true will be a source of pleasure to him, that your husband does absolutely ter giving permission to sell brandy whisky” with which to celebrate Wash­ should he, in the discharge of his duty In their country, also thaf" they had ington’s birthday. The same extra al­ give satisfaction to citizens and aliens) nothing toward the support of his but this is a secondary object. The* family? taken away a large quantity of wam­ lowance was authorized for the cele­ THE COAST ADVERTISER pum, whereby the savages were en­ first, is the promotion of the national The Laundress—No, It ain’t true. bration of St. Patrick’s day on March interests and the approbation of his tirely impoverished.” 17, although it was accompanied by a superiors. The commander-in-chief is Why, he hardly ever goes out in his Again they were told to arrest the warning that “the brigadier-general here to render public service, not to flivver but he brings back a washin’ court popularity, or subserve the ac­ fer me to do. Brings the Desired Results! wh.it* men who brought liquor into will have no riot or drunkenness.” commodation of individuals. THE COAST ADVERTISER, BELMAR, NEW JERSEY, FRIDAY, FEB. 14, 1930,

HONORABLE MENTION The Coast Advertiser FOR NEARLY 100 The Life-Savers. By Albert T. Reid LOUIS BARR HONEY IS USEFUL Ninety-seven pupils of St. Rose's Owner and Publisher School received honorable mention for J. CHARLES TURNER passing the mid-year examination with an average of more than eighty per IN ZERU WEATHER Editor J* CB.AS| cent. Publication Office and Plant The names of these successful stud­ 704 Ninth Avnue, Belmar, N. J. ents follow: Mixed With Water It Has Telephone 2083-W Senior Year Been Tested as Anti­ E. Kazanski, R. McGowan, Florence Entered as second-class matter at the Daegnealt, Jane Ferruggiaro, Anna freeze Solution. / ______Post Office at Belmar. New Jersey Hahn, Edith Toole. , Prepared by the United States Department under the Act of Congress. Junior Year of Agriculture.) John Rockafeller, Kathleen White, Another agricultural product finds a SUBSCRIPTION RATES Mary Newman, John McGowan, John new use. This time it is honey, ■AOVBUTis, SPECULATION BLACK HILLS Single Copy ...... 04 Giunco. ioney, mixed with water, has been Three Months ...... 40 Sophomore Year tested as an antifreeze solution by CAMPERS STOP Six Months ______.75 HERE AT YOUR Amy MacKenzie, Henry Pillion, Ger­ private motorists and state agricui- O W N P E R IL One Year ...... $1.50 trude Briden, Edith Canepa, Mary ural colleges. Practically all reports Fitzgerald, Charlotte Morehead. if these experiments have been favor- In ordering the change of subscrip­ Commercial Class ihle, says James I. Hambleton, apicul- tion address, please give the old as Mary Downey, Pauline Mihalic, Law­ urist in charge of the bee culture well as the new address. rence Keating, R. Rischman, Clara aboratory of the United States De- Wynn, Francis Arrants, Margaret Bri­ .artment of Agriculture. News Items of local and personal in­ den, Albert Richter, Margaret Mc- Proper Proportion. terest invited. Tague, Dorothea Reid, Christina O’Con The proper proportion of honey to nor, Clara Vetter, Francis Galluccio, ivater varies according to the lowest Katharine Mihalic, Thomas O’Connor, temperature expected, says Mr. Ham- Mary Curcio, Regina Mackemull, Jas. fileton. Where zero weather is ex Catalano, Helen Anderson, Clare pected, equal parts of honey and water Smith, Caroline Harvey, Mary Ward, ire commonly used. Such a mixture Hazel English. negins to form slush at zero, however Eighth Grade and a greater proportion of honey is Lawrence McCormick, Octavine Maloof required for best results at lower tem­ James Fisher, Albert Sarada, Mary peratures. In the northern part of the UNEMPLOYMENT Wagner, Marie VerOn. United States and in Canada a mixture Seventh Grade of three parts of honey to two of wa Margaret Pryor, Violet Cleary, Agnes ter, or even two to one, may be best. In establishing an employment bu­ Dillon, Alfred Ferruggario, William A quart of alcohol added to each reau, the Chamber of Commerce has Palardy, Richard Ringkamp. iliree gallons of the mixture will im­ added one more feather to its cap. Sixth Grade prove the circulation. Belmar is no more fortunate than its Catherine Reichey, Margaret Fitzger­ To make the solution, use a cheap neighbors in suffering from the worst ald, Virginia Gorman, Eileen Smith, grade of extracted honey, stirring it seige o f unemployment in its history. Catherine Winters, Mario Catalano, Ri into hot water. Heat the mixture to The borough has been kept busy dol­ ta Andrews, Edward O’Reilly, John a#boil and skim off the scum. If al­ ing out aid to the needy and civic or­ Murphy, Helen McCue. cohol is used, stir it in and boil from Fifth Grade three to five minutes. Fill the rad­ T. F L e ld ----- y ganizations have been repeatedly call­ AorotfAjTER. / ed upon to help out families in dis­ Emma Finkbohmer, Walter Van Gleve, iator and maintain the level by adding tress. These conditions are not ap­ Helen Mackin, Alice Mangan, Eleanor water as needed. parent to the general public, but are Paternoster, Florence Ericson, Margar­ Mr. Hambleton cites a number of ad­ an intensive reality to those who an­ et Van Note, Michael Isola. vantages of the honey mixture. Be­ swer the appeals of the poverty Fourth Grade cause it boils at a higher temperature stricken. There are many in Belmai Francis McGowan, Robert Maloof, than water there is no loss from evap­ SOCIAL AND PERSONAL who are willing and anxious to work William Nerney, Mervin Sutphin, oration, and it is necessary to add Mrs. Kenneth Mayer returned home at any job that will help them keep Grace Palumbo, Sophie Wagner, Ruth only water from time to time. Honey The Rangers Dance will be held Sunday evening with her baby son. the wolf from the door. There are Keating, Alice Palmer. solutions expand much less than wa­ Monday evening at the Masonic Tem­ Mrs. Mayer is convalescing from a se­ many jobs to be done if people would Third Grade ter when freezing, and when in proper ple in Manasquan Friday night, Feb­ vere illness. but fook around. It is a foregone con­ Walter Crofton, Joseph Sturm, Mary proportions they do not freeze solid ruary 28th„ at 9 o’clock. The pro­ ceeds will go toward purchasing Sam clusion that the Chamber of Commerce Huggins, Dorothy Reichey. but form a slush. This tends to Brown belts and swords for the ran­ Members of the American Legion will be flooded with applicants for Second Grade eliminate the danger of bursting rad­ Georgianna Winters, Peter O’Connor, iators. . Furthermore, says Mr. Ham­ gers. Auxiliary will meet this^Friday after­ work. It will be a hard task to find bleton. some motorists may find it ad­ noon in the First Presbyterian Church, it,—unless the merchants and house­ Thomas Murphy, Martin Cooney, Wil­ liam Clinton, Edna J. Keene, Genev­ vantageous for use in the summer Miss Jane Dolores Ferruggario, Red Bank. holders help. They can do this by when long steep grades or heavy pulls daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Santo Fer­ notifying the secretary of the Cham­ ieve Maloof, Mary Elizabeth O’Connor, Jeanne Marie Carton, James Hughes. are encountered, for it not only freezes ruggario of F street, is suffering from Charles Allen, son of Mr. and Mrs. ber of Commerce of any odd job re­ Not That Its Any of His First Grade at a lower temperature but boils at a a sprained arm received in a basket­ Thomas Allen of Sixteenth avenue, quired to be done, however small. Mary Weisenberger, Barbara A. Geb- higher temperature than water. ball game. sailed Monday for Russian ports as a Cleaning up, fixing up,—anything by Darned Business, but Our hart, Mary B. McGinley, Gertrude Avoid Leakage. cadet engineer on one of Henry Her- which a needy man or woman may Thompson. When honey is used as an antifreeze Nosy Correspondent Would Mayor Joseph Mayer and Mrs. May­ berman’s fleet of steamships. earn even a small amount. This is mixture it is important that all gas- er are enroute to Miami, Fla. not an appeal for charity. It is a cry ST. ROSE’S SCHOOL gets, pump packing, and hose connec­ Like to Know: The Belmar Girls’ Club will present for help. Answer it! ROLL OF HONOR tions be tight. A slight seepage Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Zager and a play entitled “Ten Days Before the around the hoSe connection is nor Where is the “Hub of Belmar’’? family of Tenth avenue, returned Wedding,” Thursday evening at 8:15, The following pupils of St. Rose’s serious, but any considerable quantity home from a motor trip to New York February 27th„ in the Grammar school leaking into the engine may,- cause City yesterday. auditorium. THE WAR MEMORIAL School achieved the distinction of a Will the people be as much inter­ place on the roll of honor for January: considerable difficulty. Should honey ested in the Morrow-Frelinghuysen bat Senior Class reach the cylinders and valve heads, tie as they were in the school election? Sam Rosenfeld, who is now located This Friday evening, at 9 o’clock, Anne Keating. it will carbonize, making it necessary at Phoenix, Arizona, writes that he Miss Mary Isham will open her danc­ With all factions in agreement, a Junior Class to remove the engine head and clean If the “NUMBER GAME” is still expects to be back in Belmar in June. ing studio with a St. Valentine dance monument to Belmar’s hero dead of Kathleen White, Robert Fisher, John out the residue. played in town? in the Coast Gas Company building on the World W ar is to be erected at last. Giunco. Mrs. George Hayward and her son Ninth avenue. No more fitting place for such a me­ Sophomore Class Are there many “hunches” among its George, left for Miami, Fla., Wednes­ morial could be chosen than the space Gertrude Briden, Edward Coll, Lawr­ devotees? day. A Colonial card party will be held by in front of the American Legion Home. ence Dessart, John Lister, Amy Mac­ Powder Coated Rag W ill the Woman’s Club Friday, February A park is to be laid out on the trian­ Kenzie, Henry Pilion. Prevent Short Circuits Are A. & P. “in on the know” ? Mrs. William Murray of Seventhj 21st. Costumes and favors will take gular plot at the entrance to Eighth avenue, celebrated her birthday W ed-' Commercial Class A short in the high tension wires on a colonial color. avenue and a doughboy monument nesday in New York. With Mr. Mur- j William Bryan, Howard Murphy, John leading to the spark plugs, caused by Is a prominent BelmArite in line for placed on a pedestal in the center. ray, Raymond Murphy, and Miss Kath- j The monthly meeting of directors of Guteridge, Alden Neylon, Thomas moisture, usually occurs where the Jacob R. Leffert’s place on the Coun­ This will make ‘ that, approach to Bel­ leen White, she motored to the city, the Kiwanis Club was held Monday O'Connor, Lawrence Keating, Francis wires are clustered together. ty Board of Taxation? mar worthy of the town and is sure dined and witnessed the show, “Heads Arrants, Albert Richter, Robert Risch­ When this happens, dry the wires, Sgenlng at the home of Paul C. Tay­ to attract the attention of travellers Up,” at the Alvin Theatre. man, Daniel Walker, Catherine Han­ one at a time, with a cloth on which is What, in the contents of that letter lor, 51U Sixth aveiffie. along the highway and induce many lon, Catherine Mihalic, Helen Ander­ placed a generous amount of either to Washington, made it necessary to who would otherwise pass through son, Barbara Comer, Regina Macke­ soapstone powder or face powder, recall it? ABRAHAM LINCOLN the Board of Education in New York. town, to pay our beach a visit. The mull, Caroline Harvey, Clara Wynn, preferably soapstone. In drying the Miss Shipley is a native of Eastern view of the lake on the way down, the Pauline Mihalic, Dorothy Ried, Mary wires entering the distributor cap he Where is the Belmar Motor Vehicle Abraham Lincoln’s Birthday was Feb­ fine residences en route and the vista Tennessee, the land of patriots and or­ Applegate, Margaret Briden, Margaret careful not to remove more than one License “Bureau” now in embryo, to ruary 12, 1809. He was the sixteenth of the ocean cannot fail to impress McTague, Frances Galluccio. be located? President of the United States and ators, and is descended from the same anyone and is likely to result in many Eighth Grade was born in Nolin Creek, Ky. He ancestry as Daniel Boone and Abra­ additions to our list of summer of res­ Edward Applegate, Lawrence McCor­ Who will be Inspector? was a plain, wise, witty man and oc­ ham Lincoln. Her great grandfather idents. Eighth avenue has been stress­ mick, Albert Sarada, Hewlett Sealey, cupied the President’s chair during the was a worker with aPtrick Henry. Her ed in this paper as the main approach Hugh Sweeney, Mary Elizabeth Dillon, Is the Fourth District to have a Fire Civil War (1860-1865), and by whose grandfather was an orator in the to Belmar and its improvement advo­ Louis Hahn, Octavine Maloof, Isabel Company? issue the union was' preserved and cated. The Borough Commission and Yeck. slavery abolished from the United cause of Henry Clay. Her father, Dr. the Legion boys have done a big thing Seventh Grade Who is going to present that apple States. Lincoln stood for America E. S. Shipley, and his six brothers, for Belmar. Violet Cleary, Dorothy D’Arcy, Agnes wagon as suggested by H. G.? Free and Slaves Free. The passing of were devoted followers of Abraham Dillon, Mary Fredericks, Evelyn Hines, time is bringing out Lincoln’s great­ Lincoln. When Miss Shipley was a Anna Hurley, Mabel Lynch, Janet Does the Sugar Bowl group of sol- ness—his noble proportions, his won­ O’Connor, Ruth Palumbo, Jas. Bond, ons miss its Red Bank deserter in its derful vision of the future. The event child her mother taught her to imi­ CHAIN STORES AND CREDIT Paul Buhler, Frederick Dimmick, Ed­ settlement of local problems? in his career which to the end of time tate the style of speech of Henry Clay ward Hines, William Manning, Leo Drying High Tension Wires With will be linked with his name is his is­ and Landon C. Haynes, explaining how McConnell, Anthony Mihalic, William Powder-Coated Rag Avoids Short suing on September 22, 1862, the What hit the roster of the Friars the voices of the old orators sounded One of the preposterous claims of Palardy, Richard Ringkamp, James Circuits From Moisture. Club? Emancipation Proclamation whereby the chain stores as an excuse for cut­ Van Note, George McConnell. he set free five milion negroes, doing like thunder on the mountain-side. wire at a time unless it is well under­ ting prices is the cash and carry sys­ Sixth Grade away with slavery in the United States About the rugged characters of the stood how to replace them. How the Five-and-ten Essex is run­ tem of saving delivery cost. It is, Evelyn Giunco, Mary eating, Marion forever. He is an example and an in­ borderland, Miss Shipley created a fas­ Keeping the wires and the outside ning? however, just a shrewd disguise for Kelly, Agnes Louise Murphy, Cather­ spiration to youth unparallelled in his­ cinating entertainment, illustrating of the distributor cap exceptionally her theme dressed in Coonskin cap denying credit to their customers. In ine Scannel, Eileen Smith, Catherine Is that all-year-round apartment ho­ tory. His life is a splendid example of clean and using soapstone in the man­ the larger cities the effect is less con­ Winters, Ralph Napoli, John Murphy. earnest purpose, hard work, humane and leather hunting jacket, the style ner described will result in keeping tel a dream? spicuous than in the smaller communi­ Fifth Grade feeling, integrity of purpose. of dress famous in the time of the he­ the rubber insulation in good condi­ roes of the borderland. She takes her ties, particularly where the chain Marie Sommers, Michael Isola, Arthur Is it true that capital for its erec­ Abraham had a favorite poem; one tion and no trouble will be experi­ audience on a happy and picturesque stores have driven out the local mer­ Kuntz, Charles Smith. he constantly repeated: enced from rain. Of course, this sug­ tion is coming from “outside?” Fourth Grade “Oh! Why Should the Spirit of Mortal visit to the people along Boone’s Wil­ chants. gestion applies only to ordinary rub There are times in the lives of the Ruth Keating, Grace Palumbo, Doro­ Be proud?" It was written by Wil­ derness Road, building up the history ber-covered high tension wire. Spe- What’s the price of Highway clams? most honest of men, particularly those thy Hahn, Helen Keene, Mary Keene, liam Knox and may be found at of the country from the time “Daniel cai high tension wire covered with with families to support, when they the library in “Werner’s Readings, Boone killed Bar on tree, 1760,” to the Robert Maloof, George Mangan, Will­ varnished fabric should not be treat­ Is the Seventh Avenue R. R. cross­ meet with reverses through poor busi­ iam Nerney, Peter Flood, Vincent Ap­ days of the Civil War. During this ed in this way. Such wire should be ing approach to remain a permanent No. 43.” ness conditions, lack of employment, Of interest to all will be the fact visit she sings the songs Dennis Hank plegate, John Keene. wiped with a clean dry cloth only.— danger spqt? sickness, death in the family, and the Third Grade that Miss Elberta K. Shipley of New and Abraham Lincoln sang at the rail Popular Science Monthly. splitting and in the church, her origi­ like, and when their need of credit is Margaret Ida Gekhart, Margaret Roy­ How long will it be before a certain York, who visited Edgar S. Werner & nal song “My Daniel Boone Gun,” con­ imperative. The local merchant has al, Dorothy Sommers, Joseph Sturn, young gentleman around a gas empor­ Co. a few days ago, is a relative of taining the history of America’s Pion­ long recognized their needs in adver­ George Finkbohner, Theodore Kazan­ ium on Ninth avenue, will have a mus­ Abraham Lincoln. The Journal of Commandments Made for eers. During this visit she also tells sity and extended credit liberally. He ski, George Dorer, John Redmond. tache ? American History Vol. V. 1911 says has dealt with the human side of their Second Grade Those W ho Drive Cars “Abraham Lincoln’s great-grandfather how Drusilla Pusley has been carrying her tombstone about on the mountains lives. He has never hesitated to co­ John Bond, William Clinton, Richard Just what motorists should do to He has been trying to raise one all was Robert Shipley. Nancy Hanks, promote safe driving has been given for forty years, of how Lobelia Mc­ operate with the residents of his com­ Dorer, James Hughes, Peter O’Connor, winter and how? wife of Thomas Lincoln and mother of munity in extending them credit to Randolph Steelman, Catherine Apple- by the Automobile Club of Southern the President, Abraham Lincoln, was Cracken, the Moonshiner, gave the of­ tide them over the unpleasant situa­ gate, Jeanne McCarton, Mary Eliza­ California in a list of “Ten Command a Shipley on her mother’s side.” ficers of the U. S. Court “a piece of tions in which they might find them­ beth O’Connor, Alice Keating. ments.” Thfiy are: BOXING BOUTS AT Miss Shipley’s poem “Abraham Lin- her mind.” And then how Aunt Belin- dy fell into the bumble-um bees’ nest. selves. First Grade Keep your car in sound condition : THE ASBURY ARMORY horn," marks the epochal achievement But the chain stores’ system is one James Doran, John McConnell, Rich­ keep your car under control; keep your of Liberty and Union in the United The story of Little Wes, a pathetic re­ of cold-blooded indifference to the hu­ ard Pryor, Barbara Ann Gebhart, eyes on the road; never fight for the This Friday evening promises some States, and her poem “The Unseen cital of the woes that beset the people of 1860. The poem “Abraham Link- man side of life. Were the family of a Mary Hughes, Mary B. McGinley. right of way; go along with the pro real entertainment for the lovers of Statesman,” reveals the plan for horn”—a tribute to his memory in the man, who might have been a regular cession; be courteous; know your local fisticuffs at the Asbury Armory, when World Liberty and World Union, and tongue of the common people, reveals customer of the chain store, starving traffic rules; take pride in your driv Jimmy Donato of Red Bank, will min­ how the Law thundered from Mt. FIREMAN CONFIRMED the majestic spirit characteristic of the to death, the hain store would not give ing skill; don’t mix liquor, worry <■ gle with Howard Arts of Newark in Sinai shall be established between Na­ anger with gasoline; study local mu ■ Tennesseans from the days of the Rev­ him ten cents’ worth of merchandise the final bout. The supporting card is tions by The Unseen Statesman, On recommendation by Acting May­ and experiment for shorter and Ips olution to the present generation. on credit. The chain store code of full of good talent, too. whose hands move to assemble all Na­ or Thomas S. Dillon, C. J. Heim’s elec­ All her stories are heart-thrilling -“cash and carry’’ practically interpret­ congested routes. tional Parliaments. tion to membership in Volunteer Hook and inspiring, as well as educational. ed means “cut and crush’’—cut prices LOTS FOR SALE—Ideal locations. Miss Shipley, besides being a clever and Ladder Company of the fire de­ The poem "The Unseen Statesman” and crush competition—with the con­ Trolley and water front convenient writer, is a teacher of Dramatic Art, partment was confirmed by the Bor- hangs in the Capitol in Washington, sumer holding the sack.—Thomas J. ---- 'i Commission Tuesday evening. Good opportunity for right party. In­ a lecturer at The American Museum Sullivan. quire at 600 F street, Belmar, N. J, of Natural History, and a lecturer for D. C. Lowest Estimates on 4j4-4-4-4-4-4-4-4-4-4* 4-4-4-4-4-4-4-4" 4-4-4-4* 4-4-4-4* 4* 4* 4-4-4-4* 4-4* 4-4* 4-4*-i 4- H I G H GRADE 4* 4- Th e N ew Ford 4* 4- JOB P R IN T IN G 4* PETER’S NORTH SITE BARBER SHOP 4- T u d o r S edan Look no further— our job printing department 4* 4- 4- Established by James Bresnahan, 1894 4- can take care of you adequately. Equipped with 4- 4- 4- 4- £525 the very finest printing machinery, manned by ex­ 4- (P- O. B. Detroit, plus 4* Kemodeled to meet the needs of the present time. charge for freight and f 4- delivery. Bumpers and perts, and operating under a system eliminating 4- 711 F Street Between 7th and 8th Aves. BELMAR, N. J. 4- spare tire extra.) ,4 - 4- every particle of waste, we are prepared to quote 4* 1 4* you the lowest price in town on any job, big or 4- Winter or Summer—Always reliable, same treatment as you pan get 4* 4* 4- small, simple or elaborate. 4- in any of the best shops, anywhere in the country. 4- 4- 4- 4- In addition we are prepared to turn out work 4- Prices and hours as in all the best shops on the 4- 4- 4* that reaches the very peak of perfection— ex­ 4- North Jersey Coast 4- 4- tremely neat, and up to the highest standards of 4* 4- 4- 4* A SMART, good-looking car, yet more than merely smart modern typographical art. 4* 4- 4- and good-looking. An economical car to drive because All work finished as soon as promised and de­ 4* 4* 4- o f its low first cost and low cost « f up-keep. Built to give livered on time. 4* 4- 4- 4- you thousands of miles of faithful, uninterrupted ser­ 4- 4- vice under all conditions and in all kinds of weather. 4- 4* 4- In other words, you are buying more than beauty, •peed, comfort and safety when you buy the new Ford. The Coast Advertiser You are making an INVESTMENT IN RELIABILITY 704 Ninth Avtaue Belmar, N. J. *M I«I1 save you many dollars a year in repair bills.

BELMAR SALES & SERVICE OIL CHANGED FLATS FIXED Thomas D. Joeck, Prop. CARS GREASED TIRES & TUBES 709 10th Avenue, BELMAR, N. J. Telephone Belmar 1393 4* Mill Phone: 2978 Belmar Residence Phone: 601-W. Belmar 4- t t VETERANS’ SERVICE STATION | Belmar Sash, Door & Glass Co. | SINCLAIR GAS AND OILS CARS WASHED W. A. ROBINSON, Jr., MILLWQRK 17th Ave. and F St Prop. Belmar, N. J. SASH, FRAMES, DOORS, MOLDINGS, HARDWARE BUY RETAIL AT WHOLESALE PRICES Builders’ Hardware and Painters’ Supplies THE BELMAR DRESS CO. Warehouse and Yards, 17th Ave. and R. R. SO. BELMAR Women Suffering Sure Relief Offers Silk Dresses at Bladder Irritation ^Makes you Feel Better" If functional Bladder Irritation row $3.95 and $5.00 disturbs your sleep, or causes Burn­ IN DIGEST I ing or Itching Sensation, Backache, 25 ce Leg Pains, or muscular aches, mak­ 6 B ell-a n s In all the Latest Shades and Styles ing you feel tired, depressed, and discouraged, why not try the Cystex Hot water 48 Hour Test? Don’t give up. Get Sure Relief Stunning Models in Frocks and Ensembles a t Cystex today at any drug store. Put it to the test. See for yourself how quickly it works. Money back if it doesn’t bring quick improvement, r ELL-ANS and satisfy you completely. Try $8.75 W orth $15.00 Cystex today. Only 60c. FOR INDIGESTION 254 and 754 Pkfis.Sold Everywhere Designed and Tailored in LUMBER MILLWORK OTJR NEW DAYLIGHT FACTORY and sold | DON’T WORRY! <- m m DIRECT TO THE WEARER j j j g l | If you want a house to live in—anything | Saving Two Intermediate Profits | from cellar to chimney top—or fuel to “Always Something New From Factory to You” keep it warm, we can supply it. at PHONE BELMAR 1900 ______• 5 7th Avenue and R. R., Belmar, N. J. STERNER COAL & LUMBER I COMPANY S 12th Avenue and Railroad Belmar, N. J. NO SECTION IMMUNE HARDWARE PAINTS COAL During the last thirteen years, records of the U. S. Weather Bureau show that slightly ALL KINDS OF INTERIOR AND more than 1,400 tornadoes have occurred in H ,4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4,4*4*4*4*4*4’ 4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4«4*4*4*4«4.4.4.4.4'4* 4* 4*4 PORCH FURNITURE the United States, with property loss exceed ing $173,000,000 and 3,861 lives lost. The aggregate loss of lesser windstorms, Take No Chances! SPRAYED it is estimated, has doubled the above totals. S T O P A T EXPERT WORK AT No part of this country is immune to tor­ nadoes or great windstorms. Windstorm ABDILL’S South Belmar Insurance costs little and protects every Furniture Exchange form of such damage. Service Station for We’ll be glad to give you cost and other GUY BIRDSALL, Prop. details. “SUNOCO” GAS NOW LOCATED IN OUR NEW HOME SEVENTEENTH AVENUE AND F ST. THOMAS D. JOECK AND Real Estate & Insurance P hone 24 708 9th Ave., Belmar, N. J. ALEMITE Lubrication by High DUCO LAQUERS AND ENAMELS « Representing the Best Equipment on the Shore. Pressure Gun INSURANCE COMPANY OF NORTH AMERICA NEW AND USED FURNITURE The Oldest American Fire and Marine Insurance Company Getting the Alemite grease to parts which cannot be reached by hand methods FOUNDED 1792

4 4-4-4*4-4* 4-4-4* 4* 4-4.4* 4-4-4-4-4-4-4* 4* 4-4-4* 4* 4-4-4* 4* 4-4-4-4-4* 4-4-4-4*4 Consult your Insurance Agent as Battery Charging and other - 4. Telephone 581 Prompt Deli 4- you would your doctor or lawyer SERVICE 4* BELMAR PRODUCE MARKET

| ABDILL’ S SERVICE STATION White Rose Groceries Fruits and Vegetables PEARCE’S EXPRESS

| Highway and 6th Ave. Belmar FERRUGGIARO and CAFOBIANCO, Props. LOCAL AND LONG DISTANCE MOVING

TELEPHON KRET.M A "R. onAa 805 F Street BELMAR, N. J. BAGGAGE PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO

13th Ave. and H St. Phone 2264. Agent N. Y. Transfer •HH*4,4-4-4?4-4-4-4-^4-4*44*4--!-4-4-4-4*4-4-4*4,4-4-4-4**F-H(«4~I..|~$~j.-H h4-4* 4* 4-4-4-4-4-4-4-4* 4-4-4*4* 4-4*4* 4-4-4-4* 4-4-4-4-4-4-4-4-4-4* 4* 4> 4.4. 4. THE COAST ADVERTISER, BELMAR, NEW JERSEY, FRIDAY, FEB. 14, 1930.

NOTICE NOTICE SHERIFF’S SA-LE—By virtue of sun­ The following resolution was offer­ dry writs of fi. fa. to me directed, is­ Notice is hereby given to the legal ed by Mr. Mayer and moved its adop- sued out of the Circuit Court of the Charles F. Worms voters of the School District of the U.S* Gas Projection For ti«n. County of Monmouth, in the State of Borough of Belmar, in the County of WHEREAS the Third District in New Jersey, will be exposed to sale at Monmouth that the annual meeting Last Year Was 9.2 Gain the Borough of Belmar has had more public vendue on MONDAY THE SEV Carl A. Meyers for the election of three members of than six hundred votes cast at the ENTEENTH DAY OF FEBRUARY, Board of Education will be held at the Preliminary estimates 1930, between the hours of 12 o’clock last two successive elections atid REAL ESTATE BROKERS School House on TUESDAY, FEBRU­ made by the American Gas whereas the County Board of elec­ and 5 o’clock (at 2 o’clock) in the af­ ARY 11, 1930 from Seven o’clock P. M. Association indicate that pro­ tions has requested the readjustment ternoon of said day, at the Land and to Nine o’clock P. M. and as much duction of gas in the United States in 1929 was approxi­ of said district and the creation of a Mortgage Agency, 701 Mattison Ave., FOR RENT OR SALE ANYWHERE longer as may be necessary, to enable mately 9.2 per cent, greater new district: in the City of Asbury Park, County of all the legal voters present to cast than that in 1928, reports NOW THEREFORE BE IT RE­ Monmouth, New Jersey, to satisfy 205 Tenth Avenue Belmar, New Jersey their ballots. the New Jersey Public Util­ SOLVED that the Third District be judgments of said Court amounting to PHONE 3075 Three members will be elected for approximately $1,612.00. ity Information Committee. readjusted and the boundaries of said -hree years. Approximate figures reveal All the defendant’s right, title and WE SOLICIT YOUR LISTING ON ANY KIND OF PROPERTY Third District be fixed and establish­ At said meeting will be submitted a total production of 586,- interest in and to the following: ed as follows: We Never Buy or Sell on Our Own Account the question of voting a tax for the 600.000. 000 cubic feet o f gas Beginning at a point at the inter­ All that lot of land or curtilage situ­ following purposes: in 1929 as compared with a section of the center line of Eleventh ated in the Township of Wall, in the For Current Expenses...... $47,000 total o f 537,200,000,000 cubic Avenue with the center line of Ocean County of Monmouth and State of iiniK!mmiinimiiuiiiic3iiiiiifiii!iuihU!!iUii[2iiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiniiiimiiHiniiiiimiHin!iiimiminiiiiiiiiiiiiumiiiiiiiii[3iiiiiiiiiiiiciiiiiiii; For repairs and replacements... 7,000 feet in 1928. Avenue and running thence westerly New Jersey, described as follows: Be­ For Manual Training ...... 2,000 Domestic sales by manu­ along the center line of 11th Avenue ginning at a point in the easterly edge factured gas companies of and its extension to where the same in­ of the highway leading from Manas- The total amount thought to be 340.000. 000.000 cubic feet in tersects the north westerly line of the quan to Ocean Grove at a point form­ necessary is ...... $56,000 1929 compared with sales of Borough of Belmar in Shark River; ed by the intersection of the southerly The following proposition will also 325.700.000. 000 cubic feet in thence southwestwardly along the line of Lake Avenue as shown on a be submitted: 1928 showed an increase of Jos. Mayer 14.3 per cent. Sales of gas northwesterly boundary of the Bor­ map of “Rodgers Park” now on file in RESOLVED that the Board of Sd- ough of Belmar to a point in the cen­ the Monmouth County Clerk’s office, ucation be authorized to purchase for for industrial - commercial ter line of “L” street produced North­ and the easterly line of the highway school purposes, at a cost not exceed­ purposes totaled 165,000,- wardly and 200 feet from the south­ leading from Manasquan to Ocean ing One Hundred Eighteen Thousand 000,000 cubic feet in 1929, a erly line of River Avenue; thence Grove; thence (1) easterly, and along Real Estate and Insurance Dollars, including the necessary ex­ gain o f 11.8 per cent. Gross operating revenues northwardly along the center line of the southerly side of Lake Avenue, as penses incident to the purchase of the were approximately $548,- shown on said Map, one hundred and property, the plot of ground situate on '"L" produced 300 feet to the norther­ 000,000, a gain of $21,000,- eighty feet; thence (2) southerly and the northerly side of Eleventh avenue ly boundary line of the Borough of 000 over 1928, and the num­ between F Street and the Railroad, to­ Belmar, in Shark River; thence west- parallel with the highway leading from ber o f customers at the end wardly along the northerly boundary Manasquan to Ocean Grove eighty gether with the buildings erected o f 1929 is estimated at line of the Borough of Belmar to the feet; thence (3) westerly parallel with thereon, said plot of ground having a 12.200.000 as compared with extreme northwest corner of the Bor­ the first course, one hundred and BONDS INSURANCE frontage of Five hundred (500) feet on 11.841.000 at the end of ough cf Belmar; thence southwardly eighty feet to the highway leading Eleventh avenue and the same length 1928. Miles o f gas mains along the westerly boundary line of from Manasquan to- Ocean Grove; Surety Fire, Automobile in the rear and being one hundred increased to 107,000, an in­ the Borough of Belmar to a point in thence (4) northerly, along the high­ fifty (150) feet in width on F Street crease o f 5,000 miles over the center line of Finley Avenue, dis­ way leading from Manasquan to Ocean Burglary, Plate Glass and One Hundred fifty (150) feet in the 1928 total. tant 150 feet south of the southerly Grove, eighty feet to the point or place Contractors depth along the Railroad. line of 16th Avenue, thence easterly of beginning, together with the build­ Compensation BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that along the southerly line of the Bor­ ings thereon, one of said buildings be­ Serial Bonds in the amount of One1 ough of Belmar to the center line of ing a one-story stucco garage and Hundred Eighteen Thousand Dollars U. S. Street Railways Set “L” Street produced; thence north­ and shop building, about twenty-four to pay for the said land and buildings, erly along center line of “L” Street to feet four inches in width and thirty- including the necessary expenses inci­ New Record For Safety center line Thirteenth avenue thence three feet four inches in depth, and | Let us Insure Your Happiness by Protecting Your dent to the purchase of the property, the other of said buildings being a one § be issued in such sums and for such Only one passenger out of every easterly along the center line of Thir­ 280.000. 000 carried was fatally in­ teenth Avenue the various courses story bungalow building, insulite en­ periods as shall seem best to the said closure, thirty-two feet in width and Board of Education, as provided by jured on electric railways of the thereof to the center line of Ocean Home from Fire and Burglary United States in 1929, reports the thirty feet two inches in depth, the law. Avenue thence northerly along the New Jersey Public Utility In­ same being erected in the rear of said Dated this Thirtieth day of Janu­ center line of Ocean Avenue to the formation Committee. That rec­ ary, 1930. center line of 11th Avenue the point garage and shop building. ord is not even closely approached or place of beginning. Seized as the property of Charles D. Consult Us at NEIL H. MILLER, by any other form of public trans­ BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that Polhemus, taken in execution at the District Clerk. portation. Electric railways of a new Election District be and the suit of Lewis Lumber Company and The only persons who may vote in ad­ the nation carried approximately same is hereby created and said Dis­ John H. Combs, and to be sold by dition to those registered for the last 16.000. 000.000 passengers in 1928. trict shall be known as the Fourth WILLIAM R. O’BRIEN, Sheriff. preceding general election are those Credit for this record is largely District of the Borough of Belmar and Dated January 2!, 1930. 9th & R. R. Avenues coming of age since the last general due to the accident prevention work that the boundaries of said Fourth Dis­ Paterson, Rhome and Morgan, and election (and possessing all the other carried on by the transportation trict be fixed and established as fol­ Owen C. Pearce, attorneys. qualifications of voters) who register industry. Many companies have low s:. 1 BELMAR, N. J. Phone Belmar 573 with the district clerk at least two separate departments headed by Beginning at a point ht the intersec­ SHERIFF’S SALE—By virtue of a days prior to the school election. trained safety engineers who in­ tion of the center line of Thirteenth writ of fi. fa. to me directed, issued Jan. 31—Feb. 7— struct operators of street cars and Avenue with the center line of Ocean out of the Court of Chancery of the buses and who also instruct the Avenue and running thence westerly State of New Jersey, will be exposed ...... general public how to avoid acci­ dents. Nationally the toll of acci­ along the center line of 13th Avenue to sale at public vendue, on dents is showing a gradual de­ to the center line of “L” Street; thence Tuesday the 25th day of February, I Telephone Belmar 3042 J crease except in automobile colli­ southerly along the center line of “L” 1930, between the hours of 12 o’clock sions. Street to the southerly boundary line and 5 o’clock (at 2 o’clock) in the af­ SNEEZING of the Borough of Belmar; thence ternoon of said day at the Land and easterly along the southerly boundary Mortgage Agency Office, 701 Mattison DANGER Electric Bill For Home line of the Borough of Belmar to the Avenue, in the City of Asbury Park, AHEAD! easterly line of the N. Y. and L. B. county of Monmouth, New Jersey to j DR. H. J. GLENNON One-Sixth of Auto’s Upkeep Railroad; thence northwardly along satisfy a decree of said court amount­ Sure Sign of the easterly line of the N. Y. and L. ing to approximately $1,897.00. I VETERINARIAN j A man handy with figures has B. Railroad 150 feet to the southerly All the following tract or parcel of 3C a Cold. Gheck computed that the average six-cyl­ line o f 16th Avenue, a southerly boun­ land and premises hereinafter partic­ inder automobile, traveling 11,009 miles a year, uses $189 worth of dary of the Borough of Belmar; thence ularly described, situate, lying and be­ it now with gasoline, oil and grease, comments easterly along the southerly boundary ing in the Township of Wall in the | PINE &L STS. WEST BELMAR, N. J. § CAMPHOROLE, The 2 -in-1 line of the Borough of Belmar to “B” the New Jersey Public Utility In­ County of Monmouth and State of Vapor Treatment, before it de­ Street; thence southerly along “B” formation Committee. New Jersey, situate on the northerly velops into a cold or a serious This is more than six times the Street to the southerly boundary line side of Wall Church Road, and known 7, . - of the Borough of Belmar; thence illness. For all colds in the average annual bill for domestic and designated as lot No. 28 on first electricity. Electric service is, in again easterly along the southerly head, throat or chest. plan of lots belonging to Estate of fact, perhaps the cheapest item in boundary line of the Borough of Bel­ James Craig, deceased, and the lot ad­ the average household budget. It mar to the center line of Ocean Ave­ How One Woman Lost joining and immediately to the north averages about 8 cents a day. nue thence northerly along the center thereof, and more particularly describ­ Both the automobile and electric line of Ocean Avenue to the center ed as follows; service in the home have passed line of Thirteenth Avenue to the point Beginning at a log wood stake in the 20 Pounds of Fat out of the class of luxuries and are or place of beginning. northerly side of the public road lead­ now considered everyday necessi­ AND BE IT FURTHER RESOLV­ ing from Wall Church to Como Sta­ Lost Her Double Chin— Lost Her Prominent Hips—— ties. ED that a description of such read­ tion, said beginning point being the Lost Her Sluggishness Although the average price of justed Third District and Fourth Dis­ southwesterly corner of lands of W. electricity for home use today is trict be filed in the County Clerk’s Scott Pierce; thence running (1) along lower than pre-war prices, the gen­ Office and a duplicate thereof in the Gained Physical Vigor — Vivacionsness — a Shapely Figure eral cost of living is approximately the westerly line of said Pierce’s land Vf'A— C”V i”/ k- m W n C1 Vi i1‘ -4 f -2 F'i S* -4 V '4 W) V *J'4 i-'l VIV'4 Borough Clerk's Office and that a north eight degrees ten minutes west, 70 per cent, above pre-war costs, copy of this resolution be published one hundred twenty seven and twenty If you’re fat—remove the cause! according to figures of the U. S. Notice also that you have gained Labor Bureau. in the Coast Advertiser. five hundredths feet to a stone; thence KRUSCHEN SALTS contain the in energy—your skin is clearer—your Seconded by Mr. Joeck and adopted (2) still along the westerly line of six mineral salts your body organs, eyes sparkle with glorious health—you by the following vote on Roll Call: lands of said Pierce, north eight de­ glands and nerves must have to func­ feel younger in body—keener in mind. tion properly. In the affirmative: Messrs. Mayer, grees thirty seven minutes east four KRUSCHEN will give any fat person Radio Aerial a Menace Dillon and Joeck. Negative: None. When your vital organs fail to per­ a joyous surprise. hundred seventy and fifty eight hun­ form their work correctly—your bowels Board of Commissioners, dredths feet to a point; thence (3) and kidneys can’t throw off that waste Get an 85c bottle of KRUSCHEN Hung Near Power Wire JOSEPH MAYER, Mayor. north eighty five degrees'eight min­ material—before you realize it—you’re SALTS (lasts four Weeks). If even this Radio aerials are harmless THOMAS S. DILLON utes west, along the southerly line or growing hideously fat! first bottle doesn’t convince you this pieces of wire unless they are in­ THOMAS D. JOECK lands of Mattie Bennett, to a stone; Try half a teaspoonful of is the easiest, safest and surest way to stalled too close to a power wire, lose fat—if you don’t feel a superb J. A. JOECK, thence (4) still along lands of said KRUSCHEN SALTS in a glass of hot and then they become a serious water every morning—in three weeks improvement in health—so gloriously Borough Clerk Bennett, north sixty six degrees seven menace to life and property, re­ get on the scales and note how many energetic—vigorously alive—your minutes west, fifty two and fourteen pounds of fat have vanished. money gladly returned. SUNDAYS marks the New Jersey Public hundredths feet to a stake; thence (5) Utility Information Committee. i'f February 16, March 23 Here’s Instant Relief along the easterly line of land of W. The aerial may break in a high Parker, south eight degrees, thirty- | EXCURSION TRAIN wind and make contact with the From Bunion Pains seven minutes west, five hundred two it Leave Belmar...... 8.25 A. M. power line with disastrous results. and thirteen hundredths feet to a Investigate s ! Once § See Flyers or Consult Agents Here are a few precautions to fol­ and Soft Corns point; thence (6) north eighty one de­ I a l l s t e e l e q u i p m e n t low when installing a radio aerial: This is tne j u a S T OPPORTUNITY we are going Never throw an aerial wire over Actually Reduces the Swelling— Soft grees fifty minutes east, six and three tenths feet to a point; thence (7) a power wire. Do not install an Corns Dry Right Up and Can to give you to purchase our lots I Pennsylvania Railroad aerial below or above a power or south eight degrees ten minutes east, W U 't.'t-.U . . '1 Be Picked Off If'A—*C telephone wire. Do not attach an one hundred twenty seven and forty AT LAST Y E A R ’S PRICES ranging from $100 up aerial to a tree unless precaution Get a two-ounce bottle of Moone’s ' nine hundredths feet to a point in the Emerald Oil (full strength) today. Every is taken to see that a spring sup­ northerly line of the aforesaid road; port or counterweight is used to well-stocked druggist has this, and it will thence (8) easterly along the norther­ Situated near the new highway, leading from Bel­ reduce the inflammation, soreness, and offset the swaying of the tree in a pain much quicker than any remedy you ly line of said road, fifty one and two mar, n which $100,000.00 is now being spent and wind. Be sure that the supports ever used. tenths feet to the place of beginning. whie leads to our tracts. Chief Justice Resigns of the aerial are secure and use Your bunions may be so swollen and Seized as the property of Abram at least N6. 14 wire. Under no inflamed that you think you can’t go Miller and Nellie Miller, his wife, et. circumstances should aerials be at­ another step. Your shoes may feel as if al. taken in execution at the suit of All is provements obtainable. These lots will be tached to electric light or telephone they are cutting right into the flesh. You Sophie Adler and to be sold by adv; ad January 1st, 1930, poles. Power and light com­ feel sick all over with the pain and tor­ WILLIAM R. O’BRIEN, Sheriff. panies are ever on the lookout for ture and pray for quick relief. What’s to Dated January 27, 1930. these hazards, but occasionally a be done? If y i are wise and know true values, you will radio owner carelessly installs an Two or three applications of Moone’s Geran, Matlack and Emerald Oil and in fifteen minutes all Lautman, Solicitors. sign _.p for as many lots as you can afford to car­ aerial which escapes notice until the pain and soreness disappears. A few an accident occurs. more applications at regular intervals and METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH ry. /re will take as low as the swelling reduces. Morning Service: Prelude, “Grand And as for soft corns, a few applica­ Choeur,” Harris; Processional; So­ LITTLE GIRL, 10, EATS SO tions each night at bed time and they just ) Per Cent Payment Down— Balance on prano and Tenor Duet, “Gently Lead MUCH MOTHER AMAZED seem to shrivel right up and scale off. Us,” Jerome—Mrs. Truex and Mr. Gar- Terms to Suit Druggists guarantee Moone’s Emerald rabrandt; Offertory, “Flower Melody,” Oil to end your foot troubles or money “My 10-year-old daughter had no ap­ back. Paldi; Anthem, “Ten Thousand Times HOICE LOTS ARE FOR THOSE WHO Ten Thousand,” Sheldon; Postlude, William Howard Taft, the only petite. Then we gave her Vinol, and man who ever held the two highest now she eats so much we are amazed.” “March of the Noble,” eats. ACT QUICKLY —Mrs. J. Joosten. Evening service: Prelude, “Sortie in offices in the United States, President and Chief Justice! of the Supreme; Vinol supplies the body important Free to Public G,” Hosmer; Processional; Offertory 'Court, resigned because of ill health.! mineral elements of iron, calcium with The only place in the U . S. where catalogs and “Dreamland,” Smith; Anthem, “I’ve Mr. Taft is 72 years old and was ap?! cod liver peptone. This is just what advertising matter covering any line of business Found a Friend,” Brackett; Postlude; S. McMICHAEL thin, nervous children or adults need, or product can be obtained Free and Without pointed Chief Justice by President Obligation is the American Industrial Library. “Hymn of Triumph.” Harris. 717 s'entlt Avenue BELMAR, N. J. Harding ’ in 1921. He served?'as, and the QUICK results are surprising. W rite for Business Advertising Matter you are Choir director, Mrs. M. I. Truex. President from 1909 to 1913. The very FIRST bottle brings sound interested in; same will bepromptly forwarded. Phone 2122 Organist, Miss Belle F. Greene. sleep and a BIG appetite. Vinol tastes M1ERICAN INDUSTRIAL LIBRARY delicious. Frank E. Moyer, druggist. FutittesristiBniUiail, Oiinado,Illinois THE COAST ADVERTISER, BELMAfo NEW JERSEY, FRIDAY, FEB. 14, 1930.

On Top of the World' Mr. Advertiser: MODERN THINK! USE YOUR HEAD!

If you have been fooled by the WALL large circulation talk of out-of- PAPER town Newspapers,— Have you seen our wonderful new modern If you have been paying a high ) wall paper patterns? If not, do come in rate for your advertising space be­ and see them and let us give you a free esti­ cause the out-of-town Newspaper mate on your work. boasts of a circulation of 10,000 or more pbr day,— . Phone 1578-J

Consider GUARANTEE PAINTING CO. 706 Ninth Avenue Belmar, N. J. What circulation has the out-of- ♦ town paper in the territory you are Estimates cheerfully given on all painting jobs. serving. Compare these local cir­ M, p Doherty, a Brooklyn steel erector, swinging out from the 69th _ ol the. . . new - Bank of Manhattan buildinguuaiuwig in will nail JUCCl,Street, lOto 1UUKlook UOWT1 down culation figures with those of your y rth Tower and the money center of the world. The New Yc btock Exchange is the low building in thecenlerofthe pjcturej^ " Home Town Paper and see if the ORDINANCE No. 59, BOROUGH OF advertising space is worth the dif­ SOUTH BELMAR ference in rate.. An ordinance to amend an ordinance 'Twas a Long Way to Tobermovy Boston*$ 1930 Tashion^ entitled "An ordinance to fix and de­ — — ------— —— termine the salaries of various Bor­ ough officials.” REMEMBER that your Home­ BE IT ORDAINED by the Council of the Borough of South Belmar, that an ordinance of the Borough of South town Newspaper is the one that is Belmar entitled “An ordinance to fix and determine the salaries of various read thoroughly by home-town Borough officials” be amended to read as follows: Section 1. That the salaries of the folks—those in the community you following Borough officials and em ployees shall be as follows: expect to serve. (1) Collector and Official Tax i Searcher, Six Hundred ($600.00) Dol lars per annum, which compensation EVERY LINE is of interest to shall be in lieu of fees. (2) Tax Assessor, Three Hundred ($300.00) Dollars per annum, which them because—It is all the news of compensation shall be in lieu of all fees. their town, its doings and its peo­ (3) Borough Clerk, Three Hundred ($300.00) Dollars per annum, which compensation shall be in lieu of all ple, gathered first hand and given fees. (4) Borough Recorder, Two Hun­ full value. It is not buried in scat­ dred ($200.00) Dollars per annum, which compensation shall be in lieu of .all fees. tered corners as in your out-of- (5) Borough Librarian, Fifty ($50.00) Dollars per annum, which compensa­ town newspaper. tion shall be in lieu of all fees. (6) Borough Attorney, Four Hun­ Women of Boston dressed in Colo­ nial attire like that worn by Miss Em­ dred ($400.00) Dollars, which compen­ sation shall be in lieu of all fees, ex­ ma Payne in the picture will be pic­ Neither is your advertisement. It cept in litigated matters, the drawing ''N eptun ^T r^T t.T oh ^s! New Lund land t^ r u n '^ th 128'ton .s^hoone'‘ turesque sights on the streets next and preparation of bond issues, work Summer, when the Old Colony cele­ -dft; Atlgg brates the 300th anniversary of before the Public Utility Commission is not LOST in a conglomeration and services rendered in special pro­ founding of Massachusetts Bay./ ceedings of any nature authorized by of type that means nothing to the ■the Council of the Borough of South Belmar, for which service the Borough big majority of readers. Attorney shall be entitled to additional compensation. (7) Regular Uniformed Police Of­ It is Home News to Home People ficers of the Borough of South Bel­ mar, appointed as such, Sixteen Hun­ a r e n 't y o u t h e in the Home Paper. dred $1600.00) Dollars per annum, pay­ ' n e w BOV WHO 1A0VEP/ Yes-THIR able semi-monthly, which compensa­ INTO THE H O U SE - A N ' MY tion shall be In lieu of all other and UP TH E 'NAME. (TH WILLIAM No matter how large a circulation further fees to which they might oth­ ,\ S T R E E T ? erwise be entitled to under the law. HENRY HARRIS* Section 2. All ordinances or parts ANPREW an out-of-town Newspaper has, it of ordinances inconsistent herewith viACoe 60NCH are hereby repealed to the extent of cannot bring customers from the said inconsistency. Section 3. This ordinance shall take effect when passed and published ac­ larger municipality to you. When cording to law. The above ordinance was introduced you advertise a product in an out- and approved on its first reading, Feb­ ruary 3rd., 1930. The Borough Coun­ cil Will consider its final passage and of-town newspaper you are helping adoption at a meeting to be held on Monday, February 17th„ 1930, at 9 P. pay the advertising bill of the deal­ M. in the Borough Hall, at which time any taxpayer may present suggestions or objections to same. er who is handling the same prod­ Approved: February 3rd., 1930. Y&H/AND HAVE. Adopted: V V: [YOU ANY BROTHERS A t o * uct in the community where that FRANK HERBERT, OR SJSTERS ? /'M T H E Mayor. o n l y JOHN F. CARLTON, 319 Y 7 0 newspaper has most of its circula­ ______Borough Clerk. F COIL t-in£ StPVICE T H E N E W 1930 CHRYSLER THERE’S A STRONG ATTRACTION (or those who insist that “Silence is Golden.” We heard of a man who told T h i e f N i g h t his wife that he could darn socks and (X in the sew on buttons and when he refused tc do it, she knocked him so cold that ii The Gem In the took two weeks for him to thaw out. ... and in the daytime, too Our washing and greasing service has a strong attraction for those seek­ EHIND the mask of "Free Hot Water Ser­ ing a car as smart as a new whistle. B vice," your furnace coil is in reality, a thief Let us show you what we do in the Motor Ring working night and day, stealing away one-fifth way of brightening up your car. Our your coal, robbing your furnace of one-fifth its washing and greasing methods mean efficiency, causing you extra work and worry, results. and giving you inadequate hot water service in return. Don’t be deceived into thinking your furnace coil heats your water free. It doesn’t even do Bergen's Garage SCINTILLATING BEAUTY it cheaply. W e can show you facts and figures to prove that 611 F street, Belmar, N. J. your furnace coil wastes enough fuel in the winter months to pay for Automatic Hot Water Service the year 'round. Read the special offer outlined at the left. Then come in or IN EVERY LINE phone for a demonstration. N CHURCH NOTICES * * First Presbyterian Church Ninth avenue and E street; Rev. Paul Newton Poling, Minister. Suuday services: Sunday school at 9:45 a. m. is Now on Display in Our Morning worship at 11:00 a. m. Erening Worship at 7:30 p. m. Christian Endeavor meeting *1 J e r s e y C e n t r a e 7 DO o’clock, Wednesday evening. Methodist Episcopal Showrooms Power and Light Co. Seventh avenue and D sticet- Rev. Henry B. White, Minister. Sunday services: 9:45 A. M.— Sunday school. 11:00 A. M.— Public worship. ORDINANCE No. 58, BOROUGH OF for the purchase of said truck. 6:30 P. M.— Epworth League ser­ We Welcome Your Inspection SOUTH BELMAR Section 3. That temporary improve­ vice. ment notes or bonds of the Borough 7:30 P. M.1—Public worship. “An ordinance providing for the pur­ of South Belmar, to bear interest at Prayer meeting on Wednesday chase of a one and one-half ion Ford a rate not to exceed six per cent per evening at 7:30. truck, with dump body and dual annum, be issued in manner and form wheels, for the use of the Highway provided by law to provide the neces­ Department of the Borough of South St. Rose’s Church sary funds. Belmar.” Mass—Sundays at 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 and WHEREAS, the Mayor and Council Section 4. This Qrdinance shall 11 A. M. of the Borougn of South Belmar, the take effect when passed and published Confessions—From 4 to 5:30, and D. L. MARSH, Inc. governing body thereof, deem it nec­ according to law. 7:30 to 8:00 aSturdays. essary that a one and one ha!: tor The above ordinance was introduced Rev. Wm. J. McConnell, LL. D., pastor Ford truck, with dump body and dual and approved on its first reading, Feb­ wheels, should be purchased for the ruary 3rd., 1930. The Borough Coun­ use of the Highway Department of cil will consider its final passage and First Baptist Church Telephone Belmar 1556 said Borough, adoption at a meeting to be held on Ninth avenue, between C and D NOW THEREFORE BE IT OR­ Monday, February 17th., 1930, at 9 P. streets. Rev. P. T. Morris, D D. DAINED by said Mayor and Council M-, in the Borough Hall, at which of the Borough of South Belpiar: time any taxpayer may present sug­ Pastor. Sunday serices: 703 9th Avenue Belmar, N. J. Section 1. That a one and one-half gestions or objections to same. Morning worship at 11:06 o’clock ton Ford truck, with dump body and Approved: February 3rd., 1930. Sunday school at 2:30 P. M. dual wheels, be purchased for the use Adopted: Evening service at 8:00 o’clock. of the Highway Department of the FRANK HERBERT, Young People’s meeting each Fri­ Borough of South Belmar. Mayor. day evening at 8:09 o'clock. Section 2. That the sum of Eight JOHN F. CARLTON, Hundred and Fifty ($850.00) Dollars be Borough Clerk. and the same hereby is, appropriated Calvary Baptist Church Thirteenth avenue and E street; Rev. Allen N. Nettleman, Minister. Sunday services: Sunday school at 9:45 A. M. Morning Worship at 11:00 A. M- I E. HABERSTICK & SONS Evening Wroship at 7:30 P. M. £ EXPERT PLUMUERS Mt. Olive Baptist Church FOR SEVERAL YEARS LOCATED AT Seventeenth avenue and F street Rev. J. J. Davis, Pastor. Sunday 1002 F STREET BELMAR, N. J. serv ices: Morning worship at 11:00 o’clock. H A V E CHANGED THEIR LOCATION TO MORE ADEQUATE Sunday school at 12:15 o’clock. Premises at Evening service at 8:00 o’clock. Prayer meeting, Wednesday even 415 Eighteenth Avenue ing. at 8:00 o’clock. SOUTH BELMAR WEST BELMAR M. E. CHURCH Rev. J. S. Smallwood, Pastor Up-To-Date in Every Detail Services, Sunday: Sunday school, 9:45 A. M. Sacramental Service, 11:00 A. M. Epworth League, 7:00 P. M. Evening worship, 7:30 P. M. "The Little Nurse f o r Prayer meeting Wednesday evening. LXttle Boys and Girls meeting Friday after Sunburned Nose noon at 3 o’clock. Use plenty o f cooling EVERY THREE MINUTES . . .

BumsteadsWonnSyrup ♦ . . every working day Mentho&mm “ To children an angrel of mercy/’ Where directions are followed, IT NEVER Heals gently, quickly and FAILS. Despite scarcity and enormous ' cost of SANTONIN, it contains full dose, antisep. Really btcod sixty years’ test. Sold everywhere or by mail. 50c a bottle. Est. C. A Vo

Today New Jersey has more than 670,000 telephones — Benjamin Franklin said: “Drive thy business or it 47,000 more than a year ago. will drive thee.” Prudent is the merchant or busi­ Never throw an aerial wire over a power wire. Do not install an aerial ness man who plans well for the future. You will below or above a power or telephone wire. Do not attach an aerial to a find the service of this Bank a valuable aid to your tree unless precaution is taken to see NEW JERSEY BELL that a spring support or counter- business. TELEPHONE COMPANY weight is used to offset the swaying of the tree in a wind. Be sure that the supports of the aerial are secure A NEW JERSEY INSTITUTION BACKED BY NATIONAL RESOURCES and use at least No. 14 wire. Under no circumstances should aerials be at­ tached to electric light or telephone poles. Power and light companies are ever on the lookout for these hazards, but occasionally a radio owner care­ lessly installs an aerial which escapes notice until an accident occurs. THE COAST ADVERTISER, BELMAR, NEW JERSEY, FRIDAY, FEB. 14, 1930. ______1 1------:— ...... ' i ------Taps ...... 54.00 SHERIFF’S SALE—By virtue of a SHERIFF’S SALE!—By virtue of a. Interest on Delinquents SUMMARY OF PROCEEDINGS .88 190.43 writ of fi. fa. to me directed, issued writ of fi. fa. to me directed, issued out Balance January 1st, 1930 out of the Court of Chancery o f ‘ the of the Court of Chancery of the State 11,845.51 12,035.94 BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS OF THE BOROUGH OF BELMAR, N. J. State of New Jersey, will be exposed to of New Jersey will be exposed to sale DISBURSEM ENTS sale at public vendue, on at public vendue, on Operating Labor 633.45 Tuesday, the 4th day of March, 1930, Tuesday the 4th day of March, 1930, MONTH OF JANUARY, 1930. Repairs 18.37 between the hours of 12 o’clock and 5 between the hours of 12 o’clock and 5 Number of Meetings, Five. Supplies and Expenses 47.42 o’clock (at 2 o’clock) in the afternoon o’clock (at 2 o’clock) in the afternoon Light and Power 57.30 of said day, at the Land and Mort­ of said day, at the Land and Mort­ Interest on Bonds gage Agency Office, 701 Mattison Ave­ January I, 1930 1,875.00 gage Agency Office, 701 Mattison Ave­ Administration and Office Expense nue, in the City of Asbury Park, coun­ nue, in the City of Asbury Park, coun­ Adjourned meeting. 174.29 Insurance ty of Monmouth, New Jersey, to satis­ All Commissioners present. 20.00 ty of Monmouth, New Jersey, to sat­ Note Redemption is fy a decree of said court amountng fy a decree of said court amounting Communications received and filed. 4,000.00 6,825.83 Balance January 31st, 1930 to approximately $6,061.00. to approximately $20,387.00. Resolutions:— 5210.11 12,035.94 In the first place, 24 shares of the ALL that certain lot, tract or parcel Appointments for the year. J. A. JOECK, of land and premises, hereinafter par­ J. A. ojeck, Borough Clerk, Collector-Treasurer, Accountant of the Wat­ 00th series of shares of the capital Borough Clerk. ticularly described, situate, lying and er Department, Clerk of the Board of Health, Registrar of Vital Statistics stock of the Asbury Park Building and being in the Borough of Avon-by-the- JOSEPH MAYER, Mayor. Loan Association assigned to said As­ and Official Tax Searcher. Sea, in the County of Monmouth and J. W. Dillon, Deputy Borough Clerk, Water Department Cashier and Li­ THOMAS S. DILLON, sociation by Norman T. Downs and Teresa V. Downs, and in the second State of New Jersey, known and des­ cense Clerk. THOMAS D. JOECK, place, ALL those certain lots, tracts or ignated as Lot No. Three Hundred and Joseph Silverstein, Solicitor. Board of Commissioners. parcels of land and premises, herein­ Twenty-six (326) on a Map of Lots en­ Leon Anschelewitz, Recorder. after particularly described, situate, ly­ titled “Avon-by-the-Sea, formerly Key Clarence Stines, Building Inspector and Acting Health Inspector. ing and being in the Borough of Nep­ East Beach, Monmouth County, New William K. Burger, License Collector. ORDINANCE No. 258, BOROUGH OF BELMAR, NEW JERSEY tune City, in the County of Monmouth, Jersey, surveyed by E. G. Harrison & Winslow M. Brackett, Chief of Police. and State of New Jersey, and known Son, 1883” and described as follows: William K. Burger, Special Desk Sargeant. AN ORDINANCE PROVIDING FOR THE IMPROVEMENT OF THE TRT as lots Nos. 62 and 63 on Map “A” of BEGINNING at a point on the west­ Special Police at desk, John Voget, Samuel Newman and George Bear- ANGULAR PARK OPPOSITE THE AMERICAN LEGION BUILD­ Avondale Terrace made by Niart Rog­ erly side of a street thirty feet wide more. ING IN THE BOROUGH OF BELMAR, NEW JERSEY AND FOR ers, C. E. dated August 1, 1910 and fil­ between Sylvania Avenue and Garfield Patrolmen:—Peter F. Cummings, Charles Bennett, Raymond Stines, THE ERECTION OF A SUITABLE MONUMENT THEREON AND ed in the office of the Clerk of Mon­ Avenue, distant one hundred and sev­ John Maloney, Leslie Thompson, Spencer Clawson and Albert Isola. o ™ RsamTeNG THE MONEY n e c e s s a r y p o r th™ m S mouth County at Freehold, New Jer­ enty five feet southwardly from a Payment of bills. sey, September 9, 1911 and more par­ stone set for a monument in the west­ BOROUGH 0°FRS e LmT r BY ^ B° ARD ° F COMM^SIONERS OF THE ticularly described as follows: erly corner of said street where it ends January 7, 1930— 109th Session. \ BEGINNING at a point distant one in said Sylvania avenue; thence extend All Commissioners present. 1. That the triangular park opposite the American Legion Building in hundred and five and sixty-four hun­ ing southwardly along the westerly Communications received and filed. he Borough of Belmar be properly graded, terraced and improved pursuant to plans and specifications as prepared for the same. s. dredths feet (105.64) westerly from the line of said street twenty five feet to Resolutions:— northwest corner of Sylvania and Av­ a point; thence extending westerly Fixing the hour of the next meeting at 8:30 A. M., instead of 7:30 P. M. 2. That a suitable monument be purchased and erected thereon in com­ memoration of our War Veterans. ondale Avenues; thence (1) northerly from this point and the point first Payment of bills. mentioned, at right angles with tha 3 That a sum not to exceed $4500.00 be and the same is hereby ap- along the westerly lines of Lots Nos. 67, 66 65 and 64, one hundred and said street, between parallel lines to January 14, 1930, 110th Session funds‘aa d thr any °r aH °f the ab°Ve purposes' to be financed by current thirty-eight feet and three hundredths the easterly side of Main Avenue; the All Commissioners present. ” , ”d the lssuance of bonds or notes as provided by law during the year feet (138.03) feet to the southerly line northerly boundary line thereof being Communications received and fled. 1930, bearing interest at a rate not to exceed 6 per cent per annunT of Woodland Avenue; thence (2) wes­ one hundred and twenty two feet and Resolutions and Oridinances. cording to lawthLS ° rdinanCe Sha11 take effect Passed and published ac- terly along the southerly line of Wood the southerly line one hundred and 1930 Budget passed on first reading. land Avenue fifty feet to the northeast twenty-five feet and six inches in Payment of bills. 1930 andethprR ° inag ° rdinanCe was approved on first reading February 11th., length and both said lines running par 1930 and the Board of Commissioners of the Borough of Belmar will consider corner of Lot No. 61; thence (3) south­ erly along the easterly line of Lot No. allel with Sylvania Avenue; bounded January 21, 1930, 111th Session its final passage at a meeting to be held on February 25th„ 1930, at the Boiv 61, one hundred and twenty-one and on the north by Lot No. 325; on the All Commissioners present. ough Hall, at 7 P. M„ at which time and place any taxpayer may present su g­ gestions or objections to same. y present su£ seven-hundredths feet (121.07) to the east by said street, on the south by Lot Communications reoeived and filed. Passed: northerly line of Sylvania avenue; and No. 327, on the west by said Main ave­ Resolutions:— thence (4) easterly along the norther­ nue. Confirming election of Donald Hurley to membership in the Union Fire Approved: ATTEST: * ly line of Sylvania avenue, fifty feet ALSO Lot Number Three Hundred Company. J. A. JOECK, Borough Clerk. more or less to the point or place of aqd Twenty Seven (327) on the afore­ Payment of bills. A ttest: BEGINNING. said map. BEGINNING at a point on the west January 28th, 1930—112th Session BEING the same premises conveyed JOSEPH MAYER, Mayor. unto the said NOMAN T. DOWNS and erly side of a street thirty feet wide All Commissioners present. THOMAS S. DILLON TERESA V. DOWNC, his wife, by between Sylvania Avenue and Garfield Communications received and filed. THOMAS D. JOECK LOUIS M. FINE and ALVERETTA C. Avenue distant two hundred feet Resolutions:— _____ Board o f Commissioners. southwardly from a stone for a mon­ Granting to Miller Urkin, owners of property, south east comer of FINE, his wife, by Deed dated April 7th, 1926, and recorded in the Mon­ ument set in the southwesterly corner 13th Avenue and F Street, permission to erect a gasoline station on their prop­ $100.00 MONTHLY FOR SILVER LAKE JUNIORS mouth County Clerk’s office at Free­ of said street in the southwesterly cor­ erty. LESS THAN CENT A DAY ner of said street and said Syivania Instructing the Borough Engineer, Claude W. Birdsall to prepare a new TWO GAME VICTORS hold April 8th, 1926 in Book 1339 of Silver Lake Council, Jr. Order bask Deeds, page 427, etc. Avenue; thence extending southwardly map of the Borough including the Rhode Island Point Section. 23 Year Old Company Sends Policy Seized as the property of Emma along the westerly line of said street Appointing Mrs. Bertha Haberstick as Over-seer of the Poor. etball five won two games this week Free for Your Inspection Monday on the Legion court, when thi Clayton Stickeler et als. taken in ex­ twenty five feet to a point; thence ex­ Adopting the 1930 Budget on final reading! ecution at the suit of Asbury Park tending westwardly from this point Authorizing the Tretsurer to sell Tax Sale Certificates, No. 39, 1928 and Belmar team defeated the Alpha Gam DES MOINES, Iowa—$100 monthly ma Five Jr.’s of Asbury Park in ; Building and oLan Association, body and the point first mentioned at right No. 27, 1928. income and $1,000 to $2,000 at death is Shore League game and Wednesda; corporate, and to be sold by angles with the said street between Establishing a new Election District to be known a3 the Fourth Dis­ paid under a Real Accident Policy night the Point Pleasant A. C. Jrs. a WILLIAM R. O’BRIEN, Sheriff. parallel lines to the easterly boundary trict. costing-less than a cent a day, issued the Ocean county court by a score o Dated Jan. 30, 1930. line thereof being one hundred and Payment of bills. by National Benefit Accident Associa­ 45-30. Durand, Ivins & Carton, Solicitors. twenty five feet and six inches, and tion, Dept. Box 1859, Royal Union Johnson and Measure were higl the southerly line one hundred and RECEIPTS Bldg., Des Moines, Iowa. 10,322.40 scorers in the Point game, these tw< twenty nine feet and one inch in 1929 Taxes ...... This splendid policy is issued to men, SHERIFF’S SALE—By virtue of a 307.49 men scoring a total of 29 points be length and both said lines running par Interest and Costs (Taxes) women and children over ten years of writ of fi. fa. to me directed, issued 478.33 tween them. Jacobson played a fin. allel with said Sylvania Avenue; bound Tax Title Liens Redeemed ...... age. It may be carried in addition to out of the Court of Chancery of the 1,403.44 floor game and was the Juniors bes ed on the north by Lot No. 326; on said Assessments (Sewer) ...... - ...... any other insurance. Medical exami­ State of New Jersey, will be exposed 1,496.01 defensive player, holding his man to : map; on the east by said street, on the Assessments (Water) ...... nation is not required. to sale at public vendue, on 307.35 single basket. south by Lot No. 328 on said map; and Assessments (Gutter) The National Benefit, nearly a quar­ Monday the 3rd day of March, 1930, 30.00 Britton of the home team gave i on the west by said Main Avenue. Building Permits ter of a century old, has paid many between the hours of 12 o’clock and 5 11.00 clever exhibition of foul shooting Seized as the property of Benjamin Tax Search Fees thousands of claims. It does not em­ o’clock (at 2 o’clock) in the afternoon 24.00 making thirteen fouls out of fifteei Temeles et als. taken in execution at Board of Health ...... - ploy agents and saves policyholders of said day at the Court House in the 125.00 tries. His foul shooting kept th the suit of Monmouth Title & Mort­ Moving Buildings ...... the tremendous cost of agents’ com­ Borough of Freehold, County of Mon­ Pointers in the running. gage Guaranty Company and to be House Rent ...... 25.00 missions. mouth, New Jersey to satisfy a decree 307.00 Those who played on the Silver Lak sold by Licenses ...... - ...... The policy will be sent for free in­ of said court amounting to approxi­ 2.23 team were Measure, Hausotte, John WILLIAM R. O’BRIEN, Sheriff. Miscellaneous ...... - ...... * spection. Send no money. Write, giv­ mately $1,581.00. son, Sterner, Lyon, Davenport, For Dated Jan. 31, 1930. Sewer Taps ...... —...... -...... 60.00 14,899.25 All the following tract or parcel of ing name, address, age, beneficiary’s sythe. Cook & Stout, Solicitors . name and relationship. Examine pol­ land and premises hereinafter particu­ 36,413.56 Balance January 1, 1930 icy in the quiet of your own home; no larly described, situate, lying and be­ A son was born to Mr. and Mi agent will call. If satisfied, send $3.50 ing in the Borough of Spring Lake in SHERIFF’S SALE—By virtue of a Paul Brand of 411 Thirteenth avem for a full year of insurance. Write to the County of Monmouth and State of writ of fi. fa. to me directed, issued . Tuesday at Ann May Hospital. T DISBURSEMENTS day without obligation. New Jersey, bounded and described as out of the Court of Chancery of the boy is named Donald Edward. GENERAL GOVERNMENT: follows to wit: State of New Jersey, will be exposed Salaries ...... —...... 689.14 BEGINNING at a point in the north­ to sale at public vendue, on Printing and Publishing ...... 53.35 erly side of St. Claire Avenue, distant MONDAY, the 10th Day of March, Office Supplies and Expenses ...... 21.00 three hundred feet westerly from the 1930, Publicity ...... 580.00 northwesterly corner of St. Clair Ave­ between the hours of 12 o’clock and 5 Insurance 8.15 1,351.64 nue and Fourth Avenue; thence (1) o’clock (at 2 o’clock) in the afternoon Rivoli Theatre of said day, at the Court House in the northerly at right angles to St. Clair POLICE DEPARTMENT: Avenue, one hundred and fifty feet; Borough of Freehold, County of Mon­ Salaries ...... 1,732.41 thence (2) westerly, parallel with St. mouth, New Jersey, to satisfy a decree Supplies and Expenses 85.32 1,817.73 Belmar, New Jersey Clair Avenue, fifty feet; thence (3) of said court amounting to approxi­ southerly at right angles to St. Clair mately $5,261.00. FIRE DEPARTMENT: THE HOUSE OF VITAPHONE Avenue one hundred and fifty feet to All the following tract or parcel of Equipment ...... - ...... -...... 243.97 Pictures Changed Daily—Matinee 3P .JL tjie northerly line of St. Clair Avenue; land and premises hereinafter particu­ Signal System Expense -...... 77.47 321.44 thence (4) easterly along the last men­ larly described, situate, lying and be­ tioned line, fifty feet to the point or ing in the Borough of Belmar in the HEALTH AND CHARITIES: place of BEGINNING. County of Monmouth and State of Sunday, February 16th— Poor Relief ...... 36.97 Seized as the property of Matilda New Jersey. Salaries ...... —...... ------25.00 61.97 WILLIAM ROGERS and IRENE RICH C. Morton, et als. taken in execution BEGINNING at a point distant fif- with star cast in 100 per cent talking picture in at the suit of Manasquan Building & ,ty feet (50) feet from the intersection of the westerly line of “B” Street with SEWER MAINTENANCE: “THEY HAD TO SEE ” Loan Association, a corporation of N. Talking Comedy—“The Gang” the southerly line of Eighth Avenue, Labor ...... -...... - ... 885.55 News J. and to be sold by Supplies and Repairs ...... 56.11 WILLIAM R. O’BRIEN, Sheriff. and extending from thence (1) south­ erly at right angles to said Eighth Current Expenses ...... 57.90 999.56 Dated Feb. 3, 1930. Avenue one hundred fifty feet (150); Benjamin B. Pearce, Solictor. thence (2) westerly parallel with the GARBAGE AND WASTE: Monday and Tuesday, February 17th and 18th—2 Days said Eighth Avenue fifty feet (50); Labor ...... -...... 615.60 Broadway’s 'Greatest Stars, Hollywood’s Lavish Splendor, a Musical CHILDREN ALMOST HATE thence (3) northerly again at right an­ Contract ...... -...... - ...... 800.00 1,415.60 Romance of Dancing and Singing CROSS, NERVOUS MOTHER J. HAROLD MURRAY, NORMA TERRIS with special cast gles to said Eighth Avenue one hun­ dred fifty feet (150) to the southerly STREET MAINTENANCE: Hear them sing “Dance Away the Night,” “Deep Love” and others “My children almost hated me, I line of said Eighth Avenue fifty feet Salaries and Labor ...... 754.88 “MARRIED IN HOLLYWOOD” was so cross. Thanks to Vinol, my (50) to the place of Beginning, thus Supplies and Expenses ...... — 49.85 Metro News nervousness is all gone and we are bounding and describing Lot No. 1521 Street Lighting ...... -...... - 1,513.59 happy again.”—Mrs. T. Johnstone. on a plan or map of the lots of the Snow Removal ______- ...... 86.40 2,404.72 For 30 years doctors have prescrib­ ed Vinol because it contains important Ocean Beach Association, duly filed in the Clerk’s Office of the County of BUILDINGS AND GROUNDS: mineral elements of iron, calcium and Wednesday and Thursday, February 19th and 20th Monmouth. Borough Hall Supplies and Expenses...... 180.63 cod liver peptone. The very FIRST Some Show—All Talking Seized as the property of Morris Goodwill Hose Co. Supplies and Exp...... 18.12 bottle brings sound sleep and a BIG VICTOR McLAGLEN, EDMUND LOVE and LILY DAMITA in Dorfman et als. taken in execution at Volunteer H. and L. Co. Sup. & Exp...... 41.60 appetite. Nervous, wornout people are “THE COCKEYED WORLD” the suit of Liberal Finance Corpora­ Borough Yard Supplies and Expenses..... 1.00 241.25 The Serial “The King of the Kongo” Matinee 3 P. M. surprised how QUICK Vinol gives new life and pep! Tastes delicious. Frank tion, body corporate and to be sold by Pathe Review WILLIAM R. O’BRIEN, Sheriff. E. Moyer druggist. • PARKS AND BEACH FRONT: THURSDAY NIGHT—BELMAR CHAMBER OF COMMERCE Dated Feb. 7, 1930. Labor ..-...... -...... 47-40 Door Prizes to be given away INSURANCE Anschelewitz, Frankel & Barr, DEBT SERVICE: Solicitors. Serial Bonds ...... 11,500.00 FIRE, AUTO, PUBLIC LIABILITY For Advice, Information and Rates Interest on Bonds ..... — ...... 12,830.00 24,330.00 100 PER CENTERS Consult Friday, February 21st— Special Children’s Matinee 3:15 P. M. Hundred percenters in attendance JOSEPH MAYER 1929 Reserves ...... - ...... -...... -—...... au.ui WALTER CATLETT, SUE CAROL and DAVID ROLLINS at the weekly luncheon meetings of 9th Avenue and Railroad Board of Education ...... 10,000.00 in All Talking Picture, Singing and Dancing Belmar, N. J. Kiwanis Club for 1929 were reported CAPITOL IMPROVEMENTS: “WHY LEAVE HOME” as follows: Tom Dillon, Stan Dodd, Ordinance No. 251 ...... - 167.31 Vitaphone Acts Pathe News Tom Hardy, Malcolm Harris, George Sewer Construction ...... - 42.80 44,172.53 METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH Morning service: Prelude, “Grand Heyniger, Frank Lyon, Len Newman, Cap Pierce, Ed. Smock, Adolph Sny­ 7,140.28 Chorus in C,” Maitland; Processional; Balance January 31, 1930 der, Jay Sterner, Willard Sterner, 51,312.81 Anthem; Offertory, “Souvenir Roman- Saturday, February 22nd tique,” Nevin; Anthem; Postlude, Doc Watkins, George Jenney and Ed. The Two that Thrilled You in Sunny Side Up “Royal Pageant,” Marks. Broege. Claude Birdsall and Bill Hurley each missed one so they’re al­ WATER DEPARTMENT JANET GAYNOR and CHARLES FARRELL Evening Service—Prelude, “Vesper Song,” Hosmer; Processional; Anthem; most perfect. RECEIPTS “THE LUCKY STAR” Offertory, “Starlight,” Kohlmann; An­ Water Rents ------______131.55 Talking Comedy—“Railroadin’’ Pathe Sound News them; Postlude, “March in F.” Ewing. A. Blum and Ben Konowitz attend­ Turning On and Off ...... 4.00 Choir director, Mrs. M. I. Truex. ed the New York dog show Wednes­ Organist, Miss Belle F. Greene. day. THE COAST ADVERTISER, BELMAR, N. J

OUR COMIC SECTION

Feen-a-mint is the answer. Cleansing action of smaller doses effective because iV e e < / you chew it. At your druggists— the safe and scientific laxative. Pain!

The man who wouldn’t drive his motorcar half a mile when it’s out of order, will often drive his brain all FOR CONSTIPATION day with a head that’s throbbing. “Valuable Booklet/* Written on conducting an auction sale of stock and farm property, Such punishment isn’t very good by an auctioneer of 40 years of unbroken for one’s nerves! It’s unwise, and success. Price 41. Jess Gaskell, Perrysburg.O. it’s unnecessary. A tablet or two of Bayer Aspirin will relieve a head­ ache every time. So, remember S t u W o o m this accepted antidote for pain, and spare yourself a lot of needless suf­ ssst Go\xaY\s fering. Read the proven directions and colds wear down J and you’ll discover many valuable answered that question years ago. your strength and uses for these tablets. For head­ It is not. Some folks still wonder if vitality. Boschee’s' ee’s it really does relieve pain. That’s Syrup soothes instantly— aches; to check colds. To ease a ends coughs quickly. Re* W p spre throat and reduce the infection. settled! For millions of men and lief GUARANTEED. ^ For relieving neuralgic, neuritic, women have found it does. To rheumatic pain. cure the cause of any pain you must consult your doctor; but you may Boschee's People used to wonder if Bayer always turn to Bayer Aspirin for Aspirin was harmful. The doctors A t all immediate relief. druggists Sy r u p

“Alarm Clock” Worked

Of course you can understand why Hon. E. N. Kirby, for twelve years this is so: we all of us have natural poisons in our bodies that make us Mayor of Abilene, Texas, who feel headachy, sick and low in our has discovered secret of success. minds. Nujol, which is as tasteless and colorless as pure water, helps to much as any other machine. After a absorb these and carry them away, few days you will be surprised at the easily, regularly as clock work. difference in the way you feel. You Instead of drugging and irritating can get Nujol in a sealed package in your body with pills, cathartics, any drug store. Nujol may change Your ■laxatives, and other habit-forming your whole outlook on life. Get a drugs, give your body the internal bottle today and give yourself a Kidneys lubrication which it needs, just as chance to be well! Deal Promptly with Kid­ ney Irregularities. Between Friends Wasted Energy F bothered with constant backacha Ibladder irritations and getting up Nell—Is it really true that you’re The chief fault of a single-track at night, help your kidneys with going to divorce Bob? mind is that it uses up so much energy Doan's Pills. THE FEATHERHEADS Felix Does the Hero Act Bella—Yes, I’m tired of being alone. hauling empties.—Capper’s Weekly. Used for more them 40 years. En­ dorsed the world over. Soldby Defeat From the Greek dealers everywhere. “Is your new cook energetic?” The alphabet takes its name from 50,000 Users Endorse Doan's: “ No; she was badly vanquished in a combination of alpha and beta, the James A. M cClard, Retired M erchant, first letters in the Greek alphabet. 90S Hobson Avenue, Hot Springs, Ark., an effort to whip some cream.” says: “ M y kidneys didn't act right and my back ached for quite a spell. The use of Doan's Pills quickly rid me of this attack/*

Jet Contents 15Flukl Dratjyi DOAN’S PILLS A,,Stimulant Diuretic to the Kidneys

fflaSaSSgssesBp W hen ALCOHOL- a PER “ Garfield T ea Similatin$th«frodbyIk$d» I Was Your tiwtlheStownctianndBgg^ Grandmother’s Remedy Thereby Promoting Digestion I For every stomach Cheerfulness ahdJwLCjJJ* ff and intestinal ill. ip ssiS C T This good old-fash­ fiscf* c/(MDrSAffUtiSfTQ** j Pvm pkn* * ioned herb home S enna remedy for consti­ g r pation, stomach ills W f c * ■ and other derange­ are upset AhdpfulR«^*L_ , ments of the sys­ Constipation and 1 an/Famlsh««*“ I tem so prevalent these days Is In even reailUntftwrfrom-ialafc1^ f greater fqvor as a family medicine than in your grandmother’s day. Baby ills and ailments seem twice as serious at night. A sud­ thfAM, anwun ca den cry may mean colic. Or a THAT sudden attack of diarrhea— a con­ dition it is always important to check quickly. How would you meet this em ergency—tonight? tion always on hand. But don't safe easy way befor© Have you a bottle o f Castoria keep it just for emergencies; let worse troubles follow. Take* ready ? There is nothing that can it be an everyday aid. Its gentle take the place of this harmless influence will ease and soothe the HALE'S HONEY but effective remedy for children; infant who cannot sleep. Its mild O F HOREHOUND AND TAR nothing that acts quite the same, regulation will help an older child The tried home remedy for breaking or has quite the same comforting whose tongue is coated because of up colds, relieving throat troubles* effect on them. sluggish bowels. All druggists healing and soothing—quick relict For the protection of your wee have Castoria; the genuine bears tor coughing and hoarseness* Chas. H. Fletcher’s signature on 3 0 c at all drugs**** one—for your own peace of mind UsePIke’s Toothache Drops. —keep this old, reliable prepara- the wrapper...... mi mi.... ■■iiinnr THE COAST ADVERTISER, BELMAR, N. J,

high at the back of the head and Favor Black Hats widened out over the shoulders. A Glacier Finally Give* more conservative version of the Up Body It Long Held and Jeweled Pins same collar—what is called a boule, a After 83 years the Gradez glacier, modified Medici line—is used with in East Tyrol, has delivered up one of less formal coats of tweed and the its dead. The body of the man, a Paris Women Are Not Wear­ like. gamekeeper called Mattersliorn, was ing Colorful Chapeaux; Tuck-in Sweaters Popular. brought to light like that of a dead The smartest of the new sweaters Rip Van Winkle, in almost the state Tuck-in Sweaters. are of the mock tuck-in type and are in which life left it 83 years ago. properly bought as a part of a defi­ The upper part of the body was well The women who appear at fashion­ nite ensemble. This type of sweater, preserved, the features were recog­ able places on the Champs Elysees a very short-waisted affair, has an at­ nizable, the sporting rifle of a pattern and Place Vendome at afternoon teas tached belt which goes over the yoked long obsolete, and the telescope and are the barometers of Parisian fash­ skirt and its great advantage over the hunting knife of the dead man were ions. Their appearance is the final real tuck-in is that it will stay se­ unimpaired. His watch marked the test o f the acceptance of any mode, curely In place through the most hour at which it is recorded that he says a Paris fashion correspondent in strenuous activities. fell into a deep crevasse. The body the New York World. One of the most amusing of the was laid to rest in Kals, in East W hen Food A recent tea at the Ritz provided a new sweater suits from Goupy comes Tyrol, after its journey of fourscore number of conclusions as far as fash­ in a fabric known as corduroy jersey years to near the melting point of the ion is concerned—both as to what has in a soft beige tone. The sweater is glacier, by the dead man’s great-grand S o u r s already been accepted and by way of split up the front and finished off with son, who had for a moment the un­ Lots of folks who think they hati» promise for future styles. tailored lapels between which appears Your health is too important! canny experience of looking on the “indigestion” have only an acid condi­ For example, there remains in Paris, a jabot of russet crepe de chine. The You cannot afford to experiment features of his ancestor. tion which could be corrected in five the continued ratio of all-black hats sweater has a broad attached belt of with your delicate bowels when or ten minutes. An effective anti-acid to hats of any other color—four of russet suede which fits snugly over coated tongue, bad breath, headache, Satisfied on the Farm like Phillips Milk of Magnesia soon the black to one of the others. Fully the wrap-around skirt of corduroy jer­ gas, nausea, feverishness, lack of According to the results of a survey restores digestion to normal. 80 per cent of the women at the Ritz sey. appetite, no energy, etc., warn of conducted by one of the largest mail­ Phillips does away with all that were wearing hats with no spot of Another fabric in the sweater de­ constipation. This applies not only; order houses in the United States sourness and gas right after meals. It color, except for jeweled pins of some partments about town is boucle. This to grown people, but more particu­ through its department o f home eco­ prevents the distress so apt to occur kind. is used, in a solid color, for a sleeve- larly to children. That’s why a nomics, farm boys and girls are more two hours after eating. What a pleas­ A large majority of the black hats family doctor’s laxative is always satisfied with their lot than are any ant preparation to take! And how were smart little ones, made of satin. the safe choice. other young people in the world. good It is for the system! Unlike a There were several versions of the Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin is Three-quarters of a million young burning dose of soda—which is but small Agnes turban of black satin. prepared today under strict labora­ persons residing on farms were ques­ temporary relief at best—Phillips One woman wore it with one of the tory supervision from fresh laxative tioned as to their future plans. Nine­ Milk o f Magnesia neutralizes many I t isn’t the pipe that causes these new hat brooches—a bar of brilliants herbs and other pure ingredients, ty-three per cent of the girls replied times its volume in acid. embarrassing moments, Mr. Puff. with a graded waterfall of the stones. and exactly according to Dr. Cald­ that they intended to remain in the Next time a hearty meal, or too rich This fringe hung loose, and glittered It t the tobacco. Isn’t it time you dis­ well’s original prescription. country and more than -80 per cent a diet has brought on the least dis­ with every movement of its wearer. Today, millions of families rely of the boys had made plans for ca­ comfort, try— covered Sir Walter Raleigh— patron One sees some of the new larger on Dr. Caldwell’s judgment in the reers in the rural districts. saint o f pipe smokers, w ho discovered hats, with full brims that are twisted selection of their laxative. For how good a pipe can he? His favorite at the edges. These appear in felt Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, in Of the Coinage of Words and straw combinations, with the fa­ bottles ready for use, sold in all Whoever would counsel us to coin smoking mixture really is milder. It miliar arrangement of straw crown drugstores, is now the largest sell­ no new words, no new phrases, no really is just about the richest, mellow-i and felt brim.' In spite of the special ing laxative in the world 1 new idioms, since the English lan­ est, mildest blend of choice Burleys treat that goes with wearing straw in guage is already full enough—let us midwinter, there will probably be very youve ever smoked. pay no heed to him. We have the few of these hats on the street before A Household Remedy richest language in Europe now, and March. It Is practically impossible to The Following: Inventions for Sale— Railway For External Use Only all because our forefathers paid no Tie, Flux. Fish Lure, Toilet Seat Cover, T ie - wear them with fur-collared coats. heed to the fly-blown Priscians of their Back-Clasp for Windows, Vacuum Cleaner* How to Take Care o f Your Pipe Time Station Indicator, Renewable F u se, Hat trimmings, perhaps, you’ve no­ Hanford's day, but, when they needed a word, Brush Preserver, Automobile Lock, Ash D u st (Hint No. 2) When breaking in a new pipe, ticed, diminish in quantity year by made it, or stole it, little caring if Eliminator, Cotter Pin Extractor, C o m b in e d smoke your first few pipefuls slowly. D on’t let Balsam of Myrrh Number Plate and' Tail Light, Safety D im ­ your pipe get hot. Fast burning discolors and year. This winter they are at a mini­ mer, Cardboard Box Opener, Automatic F is h Money back for first bottle If not suited. All dealers. its synonym was lying ready by. burns the wood and bakes the oils in the to­ mum, and are consistently of the hat Enough can never be as good as a Hooker, Window Structure, Rail Joint C on ­ bacco before the pipe is properly “ seasoned.' nection, Boxer Toy, Threshold Gauge, D o ll material or simply do not exist at all. T ire Send for our free booklet, “ H ow to Take Care feast, when the feast is of vivid and Furniture, Slipper, Awning, Ice Screen, There is only one ornament permitted Chain, Frying Pan, Ladies’ Hand Bag, A w n ­ of Your Pipe.” Brown & Williamson Tobacco expressive words.—J. Y. T. Greig in ing Ring, Hyacinth Glass, Bed, Stove P ip e Corporation, Louisville, Ky. Dept. 95. to any well-dressed head these days, “Breaking Priscian’s Head.” Cleaner, Automatic Coin Changer, T e r m in a l m \IUOUS? Puller, Tie Plate and Joint Brace, Ice R u n ­ and that Is the jeweled pin. ner, Garment Support, Safety Appliance fo r I Take NATURE’S REMEDY Railway, Loading Device, Nursing B o tt le Green and Red in Limelight. jf B jf — N?—tonight. You’ll be “fit 1 Workers of the World Container, Auto Burglar Alarm, R e a p er Preferably, it is a detachable one— The national bureau of economic re­ Thresher Attachment, Auto Side Signal, M o­ ■ S J r ! an<* *ine” morning-1 tor Storage Battery Alarrii, Combined Sash. all the better if of a fine quality. I tongue clear, headache gone, search says that about 39 per cent Lock and Signal Switch Actuator, Greeting Even the smartest woman is not above ■ appetite back, bowels acting j of the population does the work which Novelty, Lamp Filterer. Vehicle Extracting S i r ’W ^ l t e r pleasantly, bilious attack forgotten. Device, Auto Shield, Animal Poke, S a fe ty letting her opera diamonds double for supports themselves and the remain­ Bank Booth Structure, Hinge Construction, For constipation, too, Better than Burglar Alarm Switches, Egg Case L id , the tea hour. All the best authorities any mere laxative. ing 61 per cent. Last year there were Dough and Jelly Roll Roller, Gas Saving Device, Railway Car Shield, Match Recep­ suggest gem colors—crystal in lieu of A t druggists— only 25c. M ake the test tonight 46,580,000 workers and about 72.726,- R aleigh tacle,Ventilator, Condiment Holder. H a rtle y ** diamonds, and any green and red FEEL LIKE A MILLION, TAKE ' > 000 other people dependent upon Reliable Patent Sales Agency, Inc.,Bangor,Me. stones that suggest ruby and emerald. them. The side of the hat is the place Sweater at Top Combines Oxfo‘d Smoking Tobacco Gray, Light Gray and White. Cen­ TO-NIGHT for the pin, and it must be placed as TOMORROW ALRIGHT THE LIFE-SAVER OF CHILDREN ter— Pearl Beige Jersey Sleeveless. Ingratitude No opium, no nausea. 50 cents at druggists, o r near the face is possible. For example, “Don’t answer the bell, Mary.” KELLS CO., NEWBURGH, N. Y. there was one at the Ritz—a black Below— This Sweater has an Inter­ esting Motif in Orange and Brown. Goose Got Revenge “ Mem?” velvet hat that was part of an all- “The gentleman at the door has T h e I d e a l black-velvet ensemble, trimmed with A gun battle was staged in Califor­ less tuck-in blouse which is worn with nia between a wild goose and W. J. polished the doorknob very nicely black fox furs. This hat rolled a cardigan and skirt of knitted tweed. while he was waiting. I appreciate abruptly off the face and flared out Speedy, of Pittsburgh. Speedy killed The counters are peppered these days the goose, but the goose, with strength his efforts but I don’t want to buy Vacation Land wide at the sides. Just over the tem­ with sweaters of the versatile type anything.” Sunshine All Winter Long Old Household Utensil ebbing, shot the hunter. With others, ple, a jeweled pin of the clip type, which may be worn outside or in, de­ Splendid roads — towering mountain An old “coffee mortar,” which was was slipped upwards, catching brim Speedy was hiding in blinds when a pending on the whim of the owner. Unwelcome Rest ranges—Highest type hotels— dry in­ used in olden days when coffee had to and crown together, so that the pin flock of geese appeared overhead. The vigorating air — clear starlit nights— Hand knitted or pseudo hand knitted “Have you ever thought of retiring be ground by hand, is owned in Flu­ formed an accent In the framing of hunter picked the leader and shot. California's Foremost Desert Playground models are particularly favored and The goose dropped into an adjoining from political life to enjoy a well- vanna county, Virginia. The mortar, the face. Write Cree & Chaffey one economical shop shows a hand earned rest?” which is made of wood, is about a Another Interesting jewel for the blind. In its death throes it kicked knitted figured front with a machine “ Yes,” answered Senator Sorghum; a i m S p r i n g foot in height and an inch thick. At hat is the fob-pin mainly because of over a shotgun of one of Speedy’s knitted back and defies you to tell the neighbors and the charge struck “but always with a shudder.” P CALIFORNIA the top the bowl is about six inches its pendant that is usually In motion. difference. Patterned fronts are popu­ In diameter, and slopes to a rounded Originally intended as a shoulder Speedy in the hand. WHITE LEGHORNS lar and the designs are generally of Every man makes up his mind that Chicks. Write for 1930 prices n ow . bottom. An iron “ mauler” was used brooch that would carry a concealed the modified geometrical type. Oriss O A K RIDGE FARM, STU YVES ANT, N . T. to do the actual grinding. The mor­ watch swinging in its fob, this new Go out of your way to favor a the next traveling bag he carries shall cross lines of a contrasting shade and friend. You can’t have too many. cost more. W. N. U., NEW YORK, NO. 7-1930. tar originally came from Scotland, small checked patterns are much in and is believed to be about 200 years evidence. One very smart outfit com­ old. prises a sleeveless slip-over sweater of rust with diagonal lines of white Mud to Burn dividing it into small diamonds. With A hundred thousand tons of mud this is worn a cardigan of solid rust fuel have been ordered by an elec­ color. ANNOUNCEMENT! tricity works on the Rhine. A German For Southern wear, soft zephyr company has discovered how to make sweaters of crocheted lace weave are the mud in the bed of the River Em- much shown. This idea is often scher into a useful substitute for coal. worked out in a heather mixture, For thousands of years rich combusti­ with three tones of the same color ble matter has been washed down the appearing in the circular pieces river from the Westphalian coalfields. which make up the pattern. In black and white it is especially striking. Wise Judges are we of each other.— Necks, for the most part, are of the Richelieu, V type, although some of the less flattering crew variety are to be found. The necks are often accented by the Schiaparelli type of trimming in which imitation jabots and collars are woven into the sweater. A few ostrich flecks appear to enliven some r.o.s.Touoo.®, of the models but these have a dis­ concerting way of rubbing off on the blue serge arm of our escort, and a very fine angora, in solid tones, is urged by the conscientious shops as a THIS HEW PRICE MAKES THE substitute for women who do not hold with the vogue for hand knitted models. WHIPPET THE LOWEST PRICED Variety of Colors. In the matter of colors, tans, browns, bright yellows, pinks and OF ALL 4-DOOR SEDANS dead white are advocated for sweat­ Mother of Four ers and for those rather daring one- Hat at Top Is of Peach Felt, Rolled- piece dresses of lacy knit in several It is Willys-Overland's 1930 Babies ' Back Brim. Center— Colored Linen tones, which will startle the golf links. Straw, Bands of Appliqued Felt. These, which have a decided waist­ ‘‘Although I am only 22 Below — Bright Green Straw, line and a definite flare, are an amus­ contribution to economical years old, I have four babies to Trimmed With Bands of Black ing successor to the one-piece woolen care for. Before my first baby Patent Leather. dress of the winter season. transportations impressive was born my mother urged me Skirts for the early months will be piece of jewelry has graduated out of mainly crepella and will be either of to take Lydia E. Pinkham’s the useful and into the ornamental the yoked or plain wrap-around type. reduction on a great car Vegetable Compound because class. The fob-pins that appear The flare is now derived from in­ I was so terribly weak. I had to around Paris have nothing to do with genious concealed godets and circular with a great future...... lie down four or five times a watches. But they have a use in that insets, placed very low and no one day. After three bottles I could they are perhaps the most decorative wearing plaits will have the audacity o f any jeweled trimmings, without be­ feel a great improvement. I still to show her face at the better coun­ ing outre. try clubs. take the Vegetable Compound At the Ritz party, one of these fob- In the matter of blouses, the smart whenever I need it for it gives pins was part of a cinnnmon-and- woman has a choice between the tuck- me strength to be a good corai ensemble. Crepe dress and in and the rather newer surplice type, duvetyn coat were both in cinnamon m o W h i p p e t mother to my family.”— Mrs. with a belt to mark the waistline. brown, with a reddish note in the Vern L. Dennings, 510 Johnson These appear in satin or flat crepe, Medici fox collar. Necklace and pins for the most part, and egg shell, nude Street, Saginaw, Michigan. on the frock were of red coral, and dead white are the colors to be matched by the red coral fob-pin on watched. Paquin is responsible for WILiyS-OVERLAND, INC. the hat. an amusing satin model with rows of The Medici collar on this coat was diagonal shirring across the front. T O L E D O , OHIO of the kind that has become almost The V neckline is finished off by a a uniform with Paris women. It ap­ half collar, which turns hack to the pears mainly in fox—gray fox espe­ right side and ends abruptly in the cially stiffened to stand unbelievably center of the hack. THE COAST ADVERTISER, BELMAR, NEW JERSEY, FRIDAY, FEB. 14, 1930.

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WASHINGTON and LINCOLN WERE TRUE TO THEIR NATION

The one was the Father of his Country, the other saved it from disintegration. Each rose to the highest office in the land, and administered it with dignity, courage and nobility. They were builders who made America what it is— prophets to whom we owe our wisdom-idealists to whom we owe our ideals. It is the example of their lives, and the principles of square-dealing they formulated in their declarations of national and international policies, that we strive to emulate in our relations with those who come in contact with us in our business activities. Washington and Lincoln had the national spirit— which is only a magnification of the community spirit so valuable to us all. When we boost our community, do all within our power for it, trade in it and build in it, we are following in the footsteps of the two great Americans whose birthdays we celebrate this month. The Coast Advertiser, Belmar, N . J.

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LITTLE GIRL, 10, EATS SO MUCH MOTHER AMAZED MBS. HAYES ENTEBTAINS “My 10-year-old daughter had no ap­ I tuberculosis home located in Union petite. Then we gave her Vinol, and The Belmar Neighborhood Guild, j county. Besides this work the guild now she eats so much we are amazed.” ■ n which is affiliated with St. James ! aids in any church work that it can. —Mrs. J. Joosten. Members include: Mrs. James Cham­ Vinol supplies the body important church, Bradley Beach, held a Valen­ tine tea at the home of Mrs. L. L. berlain, president, Mrs. L. L. Hayes, mineral elements of iron, calcium with Mrs. Moses Crane, Mrs. Charles Con­ cod liver peptone. This is just what Hayes, 701 Thirteenth avenue, Belmar, ners, Mrs. Charles Heyniger, Mrs. Har­ thin, nervous children or adults need, Wednesday afternoon. Cakes, valen­ and the QUICK results are surprising. tines and fancy articles were on sale riet Mazza, Mrs. James Price, Mrs. The very FIRST bottle brings sound and a good sum was realized. Herman Blaicher, Mrs. John Haulen- sleep and a BIG appetite. Vinol tastes This guild was organized about a beek and Mrs. Herman Hausotte. Two delicious. Frank E. Moyer, druggist. year ago and is at present taking care new members joined: they were Mrs. of three children in Bonnie Burn, a May Clark and Miss Della Hale. LOCAL STUDENTS IN HIGH SCHOOL PLAY I I M 4 I The following Belmar students of Asbury Park High School are included William Howard Taft, the only in the cast of “Page the Prince,” to be man who ever held the two highest presented in the auditorium this Fri­ Guaranteed Tires 'offices in the United States, President day and Saturday evenings: Anita and Chief Justice of the Supreme Monseigle, Helen Ferris, Bessie Barr, FEBRUARY Court, resigned because of ill health.' Elthea Longstreet, Bessie Klitzman, at Mail Order Prices Mr. Taft Is 72 years old and was ap­ Rita Anschelewitz and Earl Bennett. pointed .Chief Justice by President Harding^’ in 1921. He served as President -from 1909 to 1913. Free to Public R adio Sale BumsteadsWormSyrup The only place in the U. S. where catalogs and advertising matter covering any line of business *‘To children an ansrel of mercy.” Where or product can be obtained Free and Without directions are followed. IT NEVER Obligation is the American Industrial Library. FAILS. Despite scarcity and enormous W rite for Business Advertising Matter you are cost of SANTONIN, it contains full dose, interested in; same will be promptly forwarded. stood sixty years’ test. Sold everywhere or by mail. 50c a bottle. AMERICAN INDUSTRIAL LIBRARY Est, C. A Vocr’ ees, M. »».. Philadelphia Engineering Building, Chicago, Illinoi* $50.00 Allowance on Your Old Set or Victrola BELMAR FIRE ALARMBOXES 15— 14th AVENUE and “F” STREET Fada I EVEBY SET GUAB- Brunswi’ k 16— 6th AVENUE and “F” STREET ANTEED FOB ONE 17— 8th AVENUE and “F” STREET Spartan YEAB—ALSO ONE Temple YEAB’S FEEE 18— 10th AVENUE and “F” STREET Stelnite SEEVICE 19— 12th AVENUE and “F” STREET Buy Direct at Either Store! Radiola 23— 3rd AVENUE and “A” STREET 25— 5th AVENUE and “A” STREET HINES’ AUTO SUPPLY CO. +■ «•*» This Offer Holds Good 27— 2nd AVENUE and “B” STREET State Highway at Bridge :tr 29— 5th AVENUE and “E” STREET Entrance to Belmar sr 31— 13th AVENUE and “D” STREET Asbury Park Store: Main at 1st Ave. March lo th Only 34— 7th AVENUE and “D” STREET B3B 36— 10th AVENUE and “C” STREET 41— 14th AVENUE and “A ” STREET 44— 8th AVENUE and “A” STREET 45— 11th AVENUE and “A ” STREET THE PRINTING EQUIPPED 47— 18th AVENUE and “A ” STREET 53— OAKWOOD ROAD and RIVER BRESNAHAN DEPARTMENT 55— 12th AVENUE and RAILROAD TO TURN OUT 57—“L” STREET and RIVER ROAD O F THE YOUR EVERY RADIO SHOP 59— 9th AVENUE and RAILROAD (NEXT TO PALACE THEATBE) 2— 2—2—GOODWILL HOSE CO. ADVERTISER NEED IN 3— 3— 3— UNION FIRE CO. 114 Main St., Bradley Beach, N. J. 1 L O N G , 2 SHORT— FIRST AID. PHONE 251 FOE BEPBESENTATIVE TO CALL IS FULLY PRINTING Po7’cTelephonel700 l