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One Word can tell the story of con- r ..-tfit' ft. ' : ft >•’ • ft Take inventory of your printed sup­ tinned buolness activity in the com- plies. If you need anything, The Times stands ready to give : munity—Advertising. you service.

AND TUB SHORE TIMES

VOL. LXVII No. 10 OCEAN GROVE, , FRIDAY, MARCH 6, 1942 FOUR CENTS RESIGNS STATE POST une High School Basketball Fire Chief Outlines Shore Blackout Called Success; Wardens Wins Conference Finals Fire Bomb Fighting Latest Methods .of Combating Moulton, Fountain Incendiaries Described by Officials; Civilian Defense Last Second Toss 8y Roy Harvey Brings Office Approved What To Save ^ For Defense 42-40 Victory To Scarlet Fliers Over Fire Chief David TI. O'Ueilly out­ \Yhat to Look for in Your Attic Ocean Grove Records No Violations During lined today the latest methods of Beds made of brass or. iron'; elec­ Manasquan; First Team To Win ighting fire bombs approved by the tric cords.- They contain (copper Raid Alarm; Dr. Moulton Tells of Plans for U. S. Office of Civilian Defense, wire; elect ri c to a s ferg, iron heaters, fans or any electrical equipment;, Protections In Schools; Championship Second Time ‘Everyone must know1 what to do hard ware, door knobs,: hinges, Raid Wardens Plan Neptune high school’s un­ junior varsity player, to stop what in case of an aid raid attack,” said keys, locks, . trim, springs,. etc.; appeared to-be either a defeat or the Chief, “not only so,we can keep kitchen . utensils, .old knives, pans, Showing of Defense Motion Pictures defeated Shore -Conference the need for another overtime fire damage as low as possible, hut pots, scissors, etc.; lamps and light­ At a meeting of the Ocean Grove air wardens and basketball team regained game. Neptune 'entered the final ing; fixtures made of brass, pop- also so we can all face such an ppY or- iron;• ornaments, metal ash. assistants at the Eagle fire house Wednesday nigjit Super- the crown it once lost, and two minuted of play with what ap­ imergehcy with calmness and self- trays, bowls, J statutes,: (vases, / etc.; vising Principal Onsville J. Moulton described the. meas­ became the first team to win peared to be a comfortable six ftonfidencc. P a n ic is the only thing porch and screen furniture made of metal; vadias, broken parts con­ ures that have been taken in the schools in case of air raid the cham­ point lead, hilt soon found the mar­ to be afraid of. gin cut and then the score tied as “The two, pound magnesium taining, metal; screens made of warnings. He realized, he said that many parents felt pionship a second time, and af­ brass or copper; toys, sleds; ice George Morris, Bill Rogers and bomb is the type military authori- forded the 1,300 fans one of the skates, roller skates, etc.; vacuum that their children should be sent home at such times, but John Campbell, of the Manasquan | ties expect will be used,’’ the Chief cleaners, broken parts made of most hair-raising finishes of any declared that the. war department ———?— . ; — —— aggregation, dropped shots to tie E. Dbnaiu Sterner continued, “and, depending upon metal.. conference tournament battle. The ordered that all children be kept meeting resort. In some cases, the score at 40-all with but six | conditions when you. find a mom!/, What to Look for in Your Cellar game, in doubt up to the final sec­ Who resigned as State Highway in school. This plan will be car­ wardens reported the householders seconds to play. Campbell sank use either sand or water spray on .Coal stoves that are no longev onds, was won on a spectacular Commissioner this week, was the used; fireplace equipment, andirons, ried out here. “The children have a bit tardy in extinguishing the the tying shot after stealing the it. Wait about a- • minute ho one hand shot by Roy Harvey, guest speaker at the regular grates, pokers etc.; fire extinguish been organized into groups with house lights, but upon warning ail ball from Harvey, as he attempted fore attacking it, so as to be surojers; furnace parts, old grates. giving Neptune a 42-40 victory. communication of Ocean Grove older ones in charge. At Nep­ complied with the blackout rules. to pass to Dick Giles. Penetrating allr. 11 the violent sputtering is oyer. floors.doors, etc.; ti'oniron rm/land nSM.'olnickel nnvtcparts The game meant much to . the. Lodge, F. and A. M., Monday tune high school and grade school In a meeting immediately follow­ the Neptune defense, Campbell Then,; if the bomb has riot set lire of old gas stoves; pipes, picces of Neptune team and fans, for it was Night. iron, brass or copper piping; the gymnasium has been chosen as ing the blackout, Chief Air Raid sank a slow, tantalizing shot, to to surrountling conibiisitkles, it cati just one year ago that the Mana­ Plumbing; plumbing fixtures, hath a place of assembling. Warden James A. MeRel! com­ tie the, score, and considerably, be covered with sand, dumped into squan blue and grey brought de­ tubs', faucets, sinks, etc.; radiator Chairman James Me Roll also in­ mended the men on their work, and raise the hopes of the Manasquan a.metal pail iind removed, from the parts, ice trays, inside linings, feat to the .Neptune squad in an troduced Ross B. Fountain, assist­ urged all to' insist- on persons*' in faithful. . ■ premises.” - . , ' etc.; tools, all old tools. exciting overtime game. Mana­ ant’director of civilian defense .foi\ their' districts respecting Jjie war­ Onc-IIand Shot Scores Sterner Resigns State i “But if the bomb has started a What lb Look for in Your Garage squan won th at game by a 36-32. Monmouth and- Ocean counties, den’s authority during an air raid After the basket, Giles, who had - fire: by .thei .time its violent reaction Automobile Parts. Batteries, Giles High Scorer Highway Position —L_ chains, license plates, parts of who spoke on the. work being done or blackout,. . . been sparking the Red and Black ;; is - o ver, Ayater spray,(mus t l ie.' uspc j/ motors, tires and tubes; bicycles in Monmouth county. There was Observe. Area From Blimp ■ Neptune led most of the game, throughout the contest, quickly After Scrving Seven Years - Be careful, never to .let a solid behind the playing o'f Dick Giles, and tricycles; garden tools, lawn an attendance,' of more than 100 On the night of the blackout* passed : the ball to Harvey, who Belmar Man Leaves Post-for stream strike (the . bomb, -because mowers, hoes, pick axes, rakes who led the game's scoring with volunteer wardens antacK newspap newspapers in large bund* ft (.Continued'on Iriigrc :t> a garden hose or any fire cxtin- j , lied two wav cent, blackout; The twelve districts j area. Any. violations, could be eas- the capacity of New Jersey High­ i...... •. open cardboard wisher containing water or a water j baxes, lay Hat, tie in'liundiesr stuff of Ocean (Irove reported 100 per,. ily: spotted from the air, and two way Commissioner, E. Donald Ster­ solution. However, since water- small Waste paper into burlap hags cent effectiveness. • j instances "in:, the(immediate shore ADVERTISING BRINGS ner this week announced his resig­ supplies’ may fail during a raid, il ;“'ft us'n£ “lazed ■ Next week’s meeting will be j area :were noted and reported to* Eddowes To Sing ADDITIONAL INQUIRIES nation from the post, after point; paper should be segregated; DO is unsafe to depend on garden.hose. Thursday evening in the Eagle flr.c !police.; Many instances . were re­ ing out to Gov. Charles Edison/ NOT SAVE waxed paper, cello That is why fire extinguishers phane of butcher paper. house instead of the. usual W ed-; pdrtcd to ollieials‘on patrol*, in the At Belmar Services ' A sure sign of interest in that “harmony in the state admin­ which are self-contained sources of IIow to SaVe Rags nesday evening.’ • .•. . r ' .. | many towns, of citizens refusing-; Walter Eddowes, Ocean Grove’s the north this istration” was the most important water are recommended. . Burlap bags, keep separate; cot­ -Morton Morris, -/-.assistant' to to extinguish cigarettes during the minister of music during, the sum­ sunimcr is the replies received thing during this war emergency. . “By ‘thumbing:the stream at t’no ton and other textile bags keep Chairman McRell., announced th a t! blackout, and in all cases 'th e of- mer season, and Dr. Allan M. to the advertising which the Sterner’s resignation was accept­ separate; waste material, clothing, nozzle opening, you can use the a series of five unusual defense, j fenders', were, hailed.(into court and Frew, of Glasgow, Scotland, have Noptuno township publicity ed by Governor Edison as of April shorts, suits; towels, etc., stuff into been secured as the song leader and department is running in the pump/tank soda-acid, foam pi; load­ hags or make into bundles. ' . motion * pictures will he showrhown in fines ' imposed; Officials in . the 29. ed stream types of extinguishers Suggestions for Rubber Salvage the Neptune liigh • sehonl aiulitor- ; towns affected .made it clear that preacher, respectively, for the week Florida papers at this time. In his letter to the governor, for the necessary spray, when Arctics, overshoes, rubber boots, iunv Wednesday, March! 25, cntit- I no violators would be ilcult with of services sponsored by the Prote­ Replies to the advertising Sterner stated that “in the face of hose, gloves, hot water bags etc, working on the bomb itself, and lecl, “The AVarning,”’‘‘London ;Fir«» [lightly, for it was impressed on the stant churches of Belmar. .being received here are run­ the rapid development of the war How to Save Tinfoil and Tin their normal , solid stream on fire Raid,” “A ir Raid Warden” and. public.’ that the test blackout was The services, which will be held ning far in excess of last year emergency, already bringing the Remove foil from cigarettes, started by the bomb. The purpose ••War and Order.” ' There will die ; just as important -as real one, from' March .8 to March 15, are when the same schedule of ad­ enemy’s attacks to our nation’s candy, tea, etc.,. and. flatten, out;; of the water spray is to make the remove plastic tops from tooth­ two showings,7:30 mil 9:30 .p. in. (should the need arise. being publicized greatly, through­ shores,; it is my belief that the vertising; was run,.according . bomb .burn itself out as fast, as paste tubes, etc. Admission will be free to the pub­ Fire-Lights Burn out the county, and.arc being list­ harmony of the /state admimstra- to Publicity Chairman Ralph possible. . , , lic. ftft ft- . In Neptune and Ocean Grove red', ed as Belmar's community effort tiori ,is of transcendent iinpoi*tan'ee.v W. Johnson. He believes there “Because a bomb m ay penetrate •Woman’s Club to Meet Call Blackout Success lire' .alarhV box * lights' were left for Spiritual defense. Meetings .With rthis : thought- in mind I am ■'wiiTtnrheld afthe First Methodist the roof of a house'Vnd come to Onkialsftcvtawing'FhMa'y. hTght’rr Inirning during the test by perpiis- " is a tendency on the part Of' unwilling to permit my personality Ocean Grove Woman’s, Club will' 'rest on the attic floor, it is a good biackput, reported it oneof the sioir of the state council, however church each evening, and in addi­ many folk who follow the sun to prolong the controversy over the hold a regular meeting Thursday, idea to remove combustibles. so as most' successful' yet /held .in tlie in .the event of n real raid; air’raid-' tion,. Dr. Frew will speak at Mana­ state highway department.” Marcli 12th, 2:30. p. m. A straw to stay in Florida until they to limit the things that can catch country, and listed but five viola­ wariiens i-.'iil be instructed to break squan. Neptune and Asbury Park Sterner wrote the governor , that vote will lie taken'itt this meeting arc ready, to come, directly to fire.” tors' in the entire nrca affected, Ihc-fire light bulbs to complete the high schools and at tho Belmar he had already told him he planned for th e' officers of president, first north Jersey shore. There . which included : all . of Monmouth blackout. The red'lights are plain­ public school. to retire from the highway depart­ vice president, treasurer, corres­ Eddowes is .ijio music director at co unty nnd Ocean county as far ly, visible from ground positions, will be longer stays here when ment at the end of the year to re­ Miss Anti Brown ponding secretary and .trustee. the famous Carmel Presbyterian south as- Oc'eati Gate and Tains but, it was. reported, are not as they do come, as the restric­ turn to his private business in Bel- Mrs. Wiliiam . Magee is chairman church, Edge Hill, Pa., where, he i Usable to ail- observers .as are blue inar. . He pointed out that the need W ed Saturday on nominations. River, ■ : • tions on rubber will cut down • Ocean Glove wardens, or. the lights used by some towns. > directs five choirs including more for his returning to manage the The guest speaker. Mrs.- Shirley the number of hop, skip and sounding of the alarm, patrolled Tests have been held to deter­ -than two hundred singers. Beside Sterner lumber business in Belmar Rev. Samuel J. McBurney, pastor Chapman Hempstead, from tho jump. their district arid-not one viola­ mine whether, the red or blue fire : being minister of music at Ocean had been emphasized by the death of Emmanuel Baptist church, New­ Eaton Paper company will speak tion was reported ' in the camp alarm box lights are more visible Grove, ho also directs the Penn­ of his father recently. ark, took as his bride . Saturday on “Tlie Art of Letter Writing.” from the air. and to date findings sylvania state federation of Men’s afternoon, Miss Ann Brown, daugh­ Bible classes and the Pennsylvania te r of Lewis C. Brown, 128 Mt. have , shown: the blue to be more visible from tin: air, .but less visi­ State Sabbath School association. Tabor Way, anil the late Mrs. Grove W o m a n Glad Son Is Doing ble from ground observation posts. . ftrf" i t —-v; — / V" Neptune Assessed Valuation Drop Brown. The couple were married However, instructions, will be -given -. in the First Baptist church by Itcv. as to the procedure to be followed Dr. F. Russell Purdy, tho pastor, Shown By Assessor Alvin E. Bills “God’s Work* y In Bataan should a raid occur. . ft ’ .- Calls After Air assisted by. Rev. F. Dudley Bahrcn- Up • ft.. ■- ■ I the- churches at -Englishtdwn and ■ . Officials also warned that, (in- ft burg, pastor of Mt. Bethel church, j The assessed valuation of Nep­ each year a-part of the reduction An aged mother this week found I Heights and is a member of. expected- -test' blackouts ftmay ftrieft Alarm 207 Percent Millington. A reception at the Instructions' of State and local tune township oii .which all taxes was granted. The result: was a comfort in the knowledge that her the New Jersey conference. held frorii; time-to,time, and urged Santcndcr Tea Room, Asbury Park; Civilian Defense authorities to use will he levied this year is exactly stecady reduction, but not as fast son, -although he is in constant Mrs. Oliver is particularly inter-' tlie public to follow; calmly, the followed. ' ■. telephones only for essential calls $470,438 less than 1941. ft" , as Mr. Bills felt it should be made. danger tit his post on the Bataan c-stcd ip a recent magazine article same instructions as were given for The bride was attended-by: Miss during a blackout and for some Assessor Alvin E. Bills fixed the For instance, last year; Assessor peninsula, is doing “God’s work.and whicli tells’ol., the duties and activi­ Friday’s test; ft . time afterward were heeded to a valuation at $9,397,120.00 for Bills1 valuation of : $9,446,922.00 Helen Oden welder, of Ocean Grove, God’s will.” ties of the chaplains in the- fighting as maid of honor, and tho brides­ Warning was also given concern­ considerable, extent while the lights 1942. The Monmouth County was increased by the county board Mrs Mary R. Oliver,~ a 'member hand at Bataan. The article in ing the unnecessary, rise of the maids were Miss • Jane Brown of were out during Friday’s “shore Board of Taxation approved the by $330,642.00, so that county.-and of tlie family at tho Methodist part told iif the daring exhibited' telephone imniedinfely after. the Interlaken, niece of the bride', and blackout," hut records kept hy the figure this week. statetaxes were levied on the high­ Home for the Aged, 63 Clark ave­ hy some chaplains, Who remain' in blackout, foi-. it was pointed out, Miss Beverly Valiant of Ocean New Jersey Bell Telephone Com­ For several years, starting in er figures and local taxes on the nue, follows, the reports from the the front lines witli the .soldiers, in tlie event of a real raid, it would Grove. Mr. McBurney, son of Mrs. pany show that, immediately after 1932, tlie county board and the lower figure. Philippine war area closely; ‘ foy aiding With - letters, 'insurance lie during this period that emer­ Samuel McBurney of Brooklyn, the all-clear was given, when in local assessor, Mr. Bills, have been This year the decision is unani- these reports are iter only contact papers and other documents of the gency calls would he going over the and: the late Mr, McBurney, was event of actual- disaster telephone in disagreement on'the township mpus and all taxes, county, state with her soil, Lt.. Col.. Allred C. Oli­ fighting- men. Chaplains are not wires,- and private conversations attended by his .brother, Dr. II. lines would he most needed for assessed valuations. The assessor and local,, will be levied on the ver, jr., in charge of Protestant above crawling in the grime, and would possibly block , or: interfere Stewart McBurney, of Brooklyn, emergency use, calls mounted far would reduce the assessments and new reduced figure as fixed by Mr. chaplains with Gen. Douglas Mae jumping tip to wave their fists at with emergency calls. . '• the county board would add them Bills. as best man. His ushers were. Rev. above normal in volume. A rthur’s fighting forces. Japanese dive bombers, the article V------In the blackout area as a whole hack on to the tune of anywhere Since 1932 the reduction in as­ Russell G. Jones of Bloomfield and ■ Mrs. Oliver, who is 85, and has continued, and reported that more, Rockets Seen Offshore telephone traffic, which had been from half a million to a million sessments for Neptune township John Binns of Maplewood, been, a resident at the Home , for and more soldiers arc turning to The’ bride wore a white satin running about twenty-five per cent, and. a quarter. made hy Mr. Bills amounts to $7,- the past six years, received her last the religious aid given by the Ocean Grove: aijd /other shore princess gown with a sweetheart above normal just before 9:30 Not discouraged, the assessor 000,000 in round .figures, resulting word from her son in October, blit chaplains during the stress of the police departments reported sight­ neckline, trimmed With lace. Her when the blackout started, dropped reduced year after year and the in a saving of thousands of dollars a .cablegram*- to his wife in Califor­ battle. It is no longer.tin unusual ing a single red flare offshore " veil was held with .a tiara of pearls during the fifteen .minutes of dark­ board kept-adding back on, but in each year to Neptune township. nia,, told those in the United States- sight to see the doughboys rending shortly after ’11:30 • last night. and she carried roses and sweet ness to less than half normal vol­ that he was still well. Lt. Col. their Bibles while sitting oil duty- Reports were made to Coast Guard Continue Special Services peas. - The maid of honor wore ume. But with the “all-clear” at Oliver’s wife and daughter lived next to their machine guns. headquarters, but as yet no infor­ Continuing the special services aqua taffeta, and carried talisman 9:45 telephone calls during the en­ ! ParteloW’Haussling with him in Manila up to two Increased praise is constantly mation as to the cause for the sig­ for the Lenten period, Rey; E. N. i-oses and sweet peas. The brides­ suing fifteen-minute period until years ago. He has three sons, being given the chaplains for their nal has been established. Engagement Told Hunt, pastor of the West Grove maids .wore old rose 'taffeta with 10:00 p. m., were 270 per cent, of A native of Atlantic Highlands, roles in the war, and every bit of The signal was spotted by Pa­ Methodist church, announced the bouquets of roses and sweet peas. normal, and from 10:00 o’clock the chaplain received his education it makes Mrs. Oliver all the more trolmen Raymond Anderson and services for the coming week. Mrs. McBurney chose a pale blue until 10:15 continued more than Mrs. Mildred S. Partelow, .103 iii the public schools there and at happy and confident that her son Thomas Devlin on patrol duty. Following the regular services on gown and matching hat. double normal volume. Central avenue, this week an­ the University of Virginia and will return safely as a reward for They reported the signal just south Sunday, Rev. Stimson Smalley, Mr. and Mrs. McBurney will go nounced the engagement of her Princeton. "H e served as pastor of Ills part in doing God’s work. of tlio Fletcher Lake outlet. FEATURES daughter, Miss Virginia Partelow, pastor of the Neptune City Me­ south for two weeks and will later - : ------v — ' In This Issue to Sergeant Jacob Haussling, III, morial church, will return to the reside a t 202 Montclair avenue, Warning Against Chain-Notcs l’lnn Spring Institute Preliminary Summer Pro­ eon of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Houss- West Grove pulpit on Tuesday, Newark. The bride was: graduated ft An order issued by the post office The Spring Institute of the Ocean Power. Company Declares Dividend gram for 1942 ..page 2 ling, jr., also . of Ocean Grove, March 10 and on Friday, March 13. from Neptune high school and at­ department this week warned Grove and Willard W. C. T. U. will The Board of Directors of Jersey Cartoons, “Regular Fellers” Rev. Hunt will preach on spec­ and Rube Goldberg ...page 8 Miss Partelow is the granddaugh­ tended, the Philadelphia School of against the sending of any endless convene Tuesday, March 10, tit Central Power & Light Company Serial ------...P a g o 7 ter of Mrs. Henry A. Strobell, and ial themes on Wednesday, Thurs­ the Bible. Mr. McBurney was chain scheme involving the use of 2:30 and 7:30 p. m., in the Sunday have declared the- regular quart Times Crossword Puzzle page 8 the laty Mr, Strobell, • former 'New­ day and again on Sunday, March graduated from New York Univer­ defense stamps or actual cash. School Temple of the church. erly dividends on their preferred Sports : .page 3 11, 12 and 15. On the latter day, ark florist. Sergeant Haussling is sity with the degree of B. C. S., Such schemes, it :was pointed out, Rev. Everett Hunt will • be the stock, payable April 1, 1942, to HYotir School,” by Dr. Sound­ he will preach on “Christ’s Call for B. S. and M. A. At the Eastern ers ...... page 7 a grandson of the late Mayor are illegal arid are a violation of speaker of the afternoon, and Rev. stockholders of record on March Volunteers,” in the morning and in Weekly News Analysis, by Jacob Hnnssiing of Newark, and Baptist Theological Seminary1 he the postal fraud arid lottery laws. Verne Leslie .Smith will give the 10th. The dividends arc $1.75 per the evening on “Almost.” received hiB B. D. degree and from Edward C. Wayne page 6 is now stationed at Camp Blan- Persons, discovered mailing such message in the evening. Mrs sharp on the seven per cent pre- Home Town I,. Q. Quiz, .page 4 On Sunday, March 8, Dr. Hunt Temple Seminary his S. T. M. ding, Fla., with Battery D, 35th material - will bo suiriinoned to Archie" Griffith and Mrs. Bleecker)fenced stock; $1.60 a share on the The Week in History.. .page 7 will speak on “Come In,” at the ./ft: — V ■/ "On The Record”—Popu­ Field Artillery. / m Stirling will be the solosits. a .-s*x Per,c®»t* $1-875 a share .on - morning service and “The Gift, of show cause why fraud warrants lar Recordings .page 3 No,'date has been sot, for 3ne Federation to Meet playlet will be given by the follow- t*le ^ve nnd °no-hnlf per cent pre- Life” in the evening. The regular meeting of the should not be issued against them. wedding. ft. •; ftftft ing young people: Herbert Da­ ferrcd stock. AND THIS WEEK Federation of Fitkin Hospital Mail found to contain any chain Eugene Curtningham's New ■: : > Optometrlsi-Optlclan . EASTER GREETING CARDS: vis, Charles Weaver, Ruth Hannah, Dr. Joseph F. Heine Finest selection at Openshaw’s, auxiliaries will be held Monday at letter material will not be deliv­ Tasty, delicious sandwiches of .all “W estern” Sorial,, “Red DeCopppet Hall, Monday after­ Barbara Stubb and Barbara Young. (kinds and light .lunch at Nagle’s : Range” starts. Begin It now! Don’t Neglect Your Eyes “The Greeting Card Store,” 60 Every one is invited to attend. 518 Cookman Ave.. A. P. Tel. 154 Main Ave., Ocean Grove,—Adv noon,- M arch 9,; a t 2:30.; /. ft. ,/•./ ered. • (Soda Fountain, :431 Main Ave.—ridvft

'Yt A'--1,'" i- ;r -? •? S , \ l l v »>:- J*i• • < i« >7 ?!' ■;f *■ v\*., > ? . ’t!'/ r e :5 > VM ■: .'vw PAGE TWO FRIDAY, MARCH 6, 1942 south 70 degrees nnd 7 minutes enat IN CJIANCKltY OF NEW JEUSEY - r LEGAL NOTICE 12G0) feet nnd 10 Inches more or less, U.S. 'Army. Insignia of Rank to tno westerly lino of the right of way To—VERNA M. DALEY, BERNARD COMMON LAW. I-H7 of the New 'York and Long Branch DALEY nnd STANLEY A. WOOD­ Ocean Grove Preaching Services, Conferences, Slir.lllFF’N SAUB—By virtue- ;l llnlltoad Company aforesaid and RUFF.: ./ 1942 PRELIMINARY PROGRAM writ *»r Ii. fa. to nm direct oil 1 thence (4) southwardly hy nnd along liy .virtue of . an order of tbe Court Camp Meeting, Auxiliary Meetings out of tiie New JriSoy Supreiiic t’ourl, the westerly line of the right of way of Chancery made on'the day of the w il! Ik; cxpoacal to nalc at. jmtdje■ ven­ Commissioned Officers Of said New.York and Long Branch date hereof,' in a cause wherein the due. on iM«»mla>*. tlie.--litl tiny of.M arch, Uallrond Company, hy a cur.vod llu*\ Neptune Building and Loan Associa­ it* i^. he l Ween thc.houiH of I2 o'clock as.located more or less to the place of tion, et. nl., are complainants, and June 14 10:30 A, M.—Bishop E. G. Riohardion, ol the Philadelphia ami j o'clock (at 2 ..clock War Time). heglimlng. (•race IL; Woodruff, Individually, etc., Area. 7:30 P. M. Dr. Veine Leslie Smith, pastor of . St. In ilu» afternoon .*•; .-aid day. a t th1* Being the-same*'promises conveyed el. als„ arc defendants, you are re­ Paul’s Church, Ocean Grove. Court House in. It*-' iMrrnfch f,:' ■’1 ‘ / by Beal Holding Corporation to J.ieal quired to appear and • answer the bill hold. n o t ..\l e i.'o tith ,. New . Jt«i>: Coif Club by deed dated. February of complaint on or- before the Twent­ June 21 10:30 A;'M.—Dr. Iiuyman Kistler, President Beaver College, Siy, p. >alist.v .f ,:u»lament., of - said liniii' and recorded hi the Monmouih. ieth day'of April, 1D12, or the said bill Jenkintown, Pa. 7:30 P. M.—Dr. H. N. Holmes, of New Ci.i:.-: . :i t 1/ n|lpruMi.haiely W ■ - County • ClerkV filllce In Book PMM of will be taken as confessed against >mi. .y.r,y Herds, page ifit!. •, Said bill. Is (Hod In foreclose two York. AiCMiie defend,, t k lit. •.iisK*. and' ( Also, nil furniture. Hxtures, furnish­ .certain mortgages made by (5eor.re June 28 10:30 A. ,M.—Dr. Lynn Harold Hough, Drew Theological Inn ::— .if .any; t». th e follow - ;; ings;. appliances, tools, .equipment, and Joseph Woodruff (did (»race Woodruff, Seminary. 7:30 P. M:—. *■ j L>tOT :i: ... Ti.vtit ':»f 'P t liViln. ; il, . • Seized as the property of Deal Uolf ship of Neptune, County of Monmouth s. ill . I'. Alllli'U Chib, a corporation of the- State of and Slate of New Jersey. Church, Dayton,. Ohio, ■liii.l: ivlf.- li. I ►*,*. * I i.I.illV i-lnli,: nfl-iil-.ii.i! N ew .Iersev, taken hi execution al lh< And you, VERNA M. DA LEV nml JulyO-8 'Preaching Mission, Dr. Werner; July 9-11, Dr. J. Branscomb 'MuiUWAilll '1 I'lMt.'. I'li.l'll S.DIlliV suit of Allonhiiist National Rnnk an.1 STANLEY A. WOODRUFF, arc made July 11-18 Woman’s Society, of; Christian Service., in Trust Company, as trustee, n national defendants because you are two-of. In . nit"il jnuik'U):*! iy banking eorpm-ailnii. and to he sold by Hie owners of said nmnlsos. nml you. July 12 10:30 A. Mr, 7:30 P. M.—Dr. John Branscomb, Methodist i * t •.<(” ! «•*'•( I a s.- fid i. ;\V < ■. ;'; * ' ■ / . JOT IN T.’ l-AWI.BY., Sheriff. BERNARD DALEY, are made, n (Ict Church, Tampa, Florida. It -vil nid iiif a f : :i. on* a t : i n . I he.; .11 n e ol Paled February 17. 1M fendanl.because you are the .husband Uleliard W; .Stout.-Attorney.1 of. Verna -M. Diiley and have or-may July 19 10:30 A M., 7:3s? P. M.—Dr. E. G. Homrighausen, Professor a ■* »•}• land- . foi'ai.odv, pwtied .Jiv five* ■ MAjOU r fr>'renAHT Princeton Theological Seminary. AVIIiijia:' I !a:1i:tv/iiy..-.*lL \hyqiu. .nisi* * th e > (GOLO) i (120 lines) • !>-12" $.".2.t>2 claim to have an Inchoate, right of so: 11 hiM’lyylhio of a -mi.-t .of la ml fin. m- curtesy In said premises. ■■ . Ju ly .-20-26 Music Conference, W alter D. Eddowes, Ocean Grove i • r J y.' i no wii, a s h e • ■ I n*t 11. i: i tin 111 -. ini j NOTICE OF IM'IILK; SAM-: OK RICHARD W. STOUT.'. Minister of Music. I l.-iiilri 'Usr.j. . fiuviv.'. nald ; jm>1 n r 1 wiiiif . LANDS ANI) I* It EM IS ES IN TIIE • Solicitor for Complainant. July 20 10:30 A. M., 7:30 P. M.—Dr. Roy L. Smith, Editor, Christ­ disja of1 -fec.t'a ad 'tt oe.-hes, un/ash red TO W NSll IV (> K N E 1»TUN E, 1N • . Electric Building, u*«- s t er! j'.- ;a I «» ir.*- sa id ’. I i he -• fro n t a : in a r - , TIIK-COUNTY OF MONMOUTH. Dated, February Hi, 1!*42. ian Advocate. • I.!-- h d ijii'.ai'en rjii'ith * •t-.en.t.heasi -•■pym vvi: Asbury Baric, X. J. July 27-Aug. t Conference on Evangelism, Drs. Roy L. Smith and of Vr Ir:i -l. i.i’ liiti'l eouv. ycd .io ihe. I t. al j Non -Commissioned Grades NOTICE is hei'chy..given that on —jl-12 c.;;*|?- * Midi I*v (h e A lh u u k ' i W s i; l|«;:(Uty MMtesday, the tenth day:, of March, ... Will Houghton. : ^ i . v •• vlO.VI.1'11i It«*»' .\l;ly. - It!*!", a.jiii; B'42. aL two-thirty in the afternoon, IN gUA Kt'Kltr. OK XU1V JKKSKV July 31—Founders’ Day Exercises.. l •■'•i.rded ’ iji J tt|u k :.|'^ - '‘'j,f d*;* • o:r .PUK-1 * at tho Neptune M’ownshlp Mcatliiiiaii- crs, EI7 South .Main Street, Neptune, TO: EMM I EL M. CAMMETT, or her August 2 10:30 A. M.—Dr. Haloid Paul Sloan. Pastor Wharton ...... ii,itgpelie; iie* dle polnl- ■ New Jersey, the Township of Neptune; . respective heirs, tlevisees or per­ Church, Philadelphia." 7:30 P. M.—Salvation Army Serv­ ,-d M i P ‘;*7.- < 11.-no, tb.-'O1* d y a ty e s a n d 1*1 j in the County of Monmouth^will offer sonal representatives, ami bur or ice, preacher to be announced. :rniiiues’rw,»yt aliaiir ;-al»l alin'v d.-- . at public sale, to the highest' bidder; their grantee or grantees, or his, her . >. rih-d ■|iiiu.2:isVf<-.‘*l u jid •a hiches.D i o r ,.. at a piiuhmim sale price of MMvo Thou­ or their heirs, devlsee.s or personal August 3-7 Rescue Mission Conference. le>s. .to-1 be- eeui-r- *?r bl'noU liu.\.ol f. sand Five Hundred Dollars ($2,50U.t)0) representatives, "JuHN DOE,” luis- August 9 10:30 A. M., 7:30 P.M—'Dr. F. Crossley Morgan, Pastor i ; > fn b r * JidlcV a n d dhi.- mirth >h?»: . all the right, title and interest- of tlie 'band of the said Ethel M; Cammeil, Presbyterian Church, Concord, North Carolina. :l ).*,il I .a U v. " ‘ • suld townshlj) acquired a t a ta.\ sale said name "John Doe" being llell- ih m cO <2i-.•‘oMihi a.'-i 'iMv.. : , b a , ' . i e - , and the - foreclosure of the equity of . tIons,. STATE OF NEW JERSEY, August 9-15 Bible Conference, Dr. F. Crossley Morgan. Unire of- I ».;;il ‘ l/ak- umil It -i:r- j redemption thereof In and to the fol­ UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, August 1G To be announced. • .i.useetN ;a- course of; south; 2:! degrees > ^,EQ6EArrr lowing described lauds and premises: HARRIETT V It EEL AN I) and JOS- August 19-25 United Presbyterian Young People’s Convention. ‘ !i*. •niiuiil-s w.-se. fioci :lie. biginnltry: (4Xf Grade.' AU those certain lots, tracts or par­ EHH C, VREELAND: August 23 10:30 A. M. Dr. 0. F. Blackwclder, Washington, D. C. ■ poilit. 'V . " I cels of.-land ami premises, situate, By virtue of .a certain -decree of the • thcuce'CD/horih ;2:’. «l--7*.rc<:H. nun - j lying nml being . in the Township of thnirt. of Chancery of .New Jersey made 7:30 P M.—Dr. Daniel Polirig, Grace Baptist Church, ices :■ I!*:; :V<>; to jn»*: play ni by i Ncptuhe,. in. the County of Monmouth on the twenty-seventh day o f Febru­ Philadelphia.. ■ . . ginning;.- • s-.r • • . .r • . and State of 1 New-Jersey, nnd known ary, H»42, 'hi. a cause wherein .Town­ August 28-Sept. 7 Camp Meeting, Preachers, Drs, J. W. Hamilton, Also all- that ■inter or pared-td land and designated as Block 40, Inn or.s, ship of Neptune, hi tbe County of Mon­ ' J*i. Ih(\;;!!■)*'iv.taV " d I '■•eU .hr- Cie;. on • the M'ax Assessment Map of the mouth -Is complainant and . Ethel M. St Petersburg, Fla., and E. Stanley Jones, Famous Mis­ ' i v.tpd nf .Mipimonih.. a nd - .Suiii.'' .'Mi- Township of Neptune; and upon the. Caimnett, et. nls., nro defendants, you sionary and Author. Dr. Joseph Fort Nowton will address . .;!.;iw,vy - .nlor.f .p;ii'M*-;tl;u l.'-.. d-- following terms and conditions:— are retpilred to apjiear on the twont.v- : ■ >,-i:i! I;:is . f.>Ib»vi>:- : * • - * ; • .• •;v ; PRIVATE • 15J..CLA35 ; > The sum . of One Thousand Dollars llrst day of March, ISM2; at the hour- • the.preachers’ meeting on two occasions. -■ "15.■gi,iiii"t»,V :1 *-.t• • I. iVh .'(5I? Grade) (o Graded to be paid at the time of the snlo and of eleven o’clock lu the forenoon. East­ Sept. 13 10:30 A. M: Dr. George W. Henson, President, Ocean Grove we>*Iorlv- .IbicYof.- ilic. -riuhl•-:.'|d';' Way. *d , tlte balance paid SliOQ.OO each year. ern War Time,'lit the olllce of AVard Association. 7:30 P. M.—To be announced. t h.-; S ' v . " Yoyl; -aiIei; Bra.ie h '. II*.. Upon the payment of the full purchase Kicnter,-'Esq., '.'02 Electric Building, i-ha'.).'■'/ Mil ip i niy 7 ( ^tviu/V’Jy- ; .Be‘- • N'-.W: M.bl and. ci.nwycd by ilnv b.ibl Atlan- A. D. i;»0« and' recorded in. the Mbn- price an Assignment of Lease will be t»OI Bangs Avenue, In tho City, of A.s- Bevui a'ud Fa rminadnb.yPnjirp'pM M»u*- *tle (.'iia-i '.It,-airy -.C o m p a n y in , D aniel moiith' County t’lerk's Dlllce aforesaid delivered to tin* successful bidder. Any btu-y Park, t.'ounty of Mon.mouth and; p a ’i y ) win•)•;i thi;./>.aIII:Hirlit. «if .way.;is'. V* I 'a y 'bV/.hi.-eil lb, ti.-d' d a iid a r y P.*. U'«» | ; in Book 77.S of l.iccds at .pages 477 etc. bidder who falls to romnlolc bis pur­ State of New Jersey and pay or cause ■< iri.«V.-;’»:lcd -‘ b v .'/ t l iubMle i - / lib ;/ i«'.-iiViti;il:; .in . tby' .A lo n m o atlr . I'buiu.v tbem-e. . (2) as i.lu* . magnetic needle chase will forfeit .to Hit? Township anv to be to the complainant the sum of 11!: III did.; • I tiV.l • r V < ■a vi.''hiv. i :• .CJcrliV "«»tlb'.-. at i- rcdmlil..- New J e r - pointed hi A. D. I!i0:l iiortli 1 degree deposit, paid. SlCi:i.20. for principal ami interest upon t Inf. i iitid. AvTiii h-' bbvl. ;.fj*iin:..'the pm ./••v via Biio.i 722 of. Decils- til tiagiv and.t! :iiiimin>s east by and along, the JOHN W, KNOX, a certain cortKlcale of tax sale held Ci.: I. I V >' I :i 1. i o 1 i.” fi .AC..vfW;;,.(l|yV ,-so. s'n Id-easterly line of said '-tract of land 'Clerk. by the Townsliip of Neptune, In the . i I »! f r» ;*.i . m ■ i.b'. ’.t!, * ! yrnit'o *'i li-'ii'i'c.u s11 In : m ag iid le m-i-dli- p o in t- sold and conveyed by'.the'-.said At- Hated, February 17. Hi 12. County -of- Monmouth with Interest to tm MAmftss mvE lan&eo ■- Boad to - L*. -.Todfj c i' ^•:w:*b_. .. hV.ilin'!*.: d:i A.. J C . Is;i!! t 11 north'. 7D; d.-gn.-cs \ Hc «’p:tsl Itealty Company to tlie Deal, —1*-10: March 21. 11*12. together with com- , .y ,V r-.i p.'dr; lb:! | »vu V/J-;;: .'Ml*;'4' i.:i'nd .1 \ . ic.TtuiJc.- w c stv alo h u th e iniddl.e'i; (•olf -iMiib as.aforesaid. 7l*!i' fot*t nml S plalnau't’s taxed costs in this still, and . 11 .:i.! V.*|• it«■'•• |>'. fI'• 1' 1 • <'■>-Vd ■' O '■(ill V"Is,a '•<•( i lbii* blVs’aid ; D riniim ond-.Itoad.- t-* f e d i Inches tnot-e ,m* less |n the middle of READ THE OCEAN GROVE upon fulling to appear and pay to 11... fi .i :i • v 4 •’ F i-V* i'.- ft ri / .'i: ,y t > V f t h . y .. ■ Vi’n.i''i(i inviii-.j n-.ii-,.' nt*-less, t<>';r -.tone- the public road called Bo-eld Avenue: TIMES FOR LOCAL NEWS i-omplaiiiunt the iiforcsaid amount dti“ :. n.-I • ••’.'ti*. t;idnI'V.Mhi.'*'•',’f. tb0.V **:>i i.n.'.'t hi -n a ly ' »)f a trai l' of land tfienee CD by and along the middle it. .von. bhhel .M." (Muninctt.. or liei* ■'• ■ »»f • i.-i't-U* 1-*;li’*itt11if.-*•;?liyri'oti :.; sahl>i »•'«]*; ..ojiv,' ri.fly : th e' sit Id MM* I line of the. said piddle road called . ------—V -- respective heirs', devisees or personal ,*• • I ? r, . V« * • *ii t i.edi i;c ; j j.: i Vi h . e < V. • a 1 .m !; * • 1111 ihy 'C'Hiipuiiy in .the I lo* eld Avenue, as the magnetic needle 'representatives,.and per or their grai.- net •; •f-; la V'I;;. i \ ; i I ’ c o i f t ‘j III * by':','l7V.;i da 11 d May M!*. pointed at the date , last sifor'es'alil IN ’42 IT’S III* TO YOU li-e or grantees n r Ids, her cm* their Americans felt a glow of pride fire from the U. S. S. Petrel. I'l.-irs. devlse.es' or personal- represeupi-: ' when they learned that the U. S. Their approach to the attack ^l>it.i*iiS!>iil>>.i:it>iii;f,ii,iill.t|’,iji..«i Wr. ST()UT. Solicitor :or (VMii|*lalnam. . Aguihlado, . and a battalion, of entrenchments .they stopped to re-* pisSsietive -: Handy - For impersonal . . • Eleetrjr* Btdldhie. Marines landed ..at Cavite, across form their linos, and then rushed Asbury I'nrl;. N. J. I *ated : Mareh I.. Ilf 12. : the hay from Bataan Peninsula. across bullet-swept rice fields with *-i(i-ii .:•* . . V Soon their. leader, Lt. Cub such determination that; the enemy Correspondence ■ ;;' George F. Elliott, received orders, broke and fled, although they were to cooperate with the Army in an greatly outnumbered tlie charging FCSPEFENSE rCfiDITENSE JjZs / vicinity, and lie led his men to the Marines. BUY attack in what was called the Bat­ In earlier years tlie Spaniards m o m t si.0 0 MA bUNITED u y \/iF3 UNITED tle of Novcletn. • . iuul found Noveleta impregnable. STATES KlrYIhBL . SAVINGSSTATLS PjTj SAVINGS Through the blinding rain and Yet, so well had the Marines car­ v///j ryvk^llos U SI AU ns PS mud the Marines had to cross a ried out their part of the progrum narrow causeway before they could that they, suffered only a few '.Jsm.s-.xrrm deploy and. go into action. For a casualties and soon joined forces ;^IAUY.n.'. KIIUv-CHISM 210:1 N. CHARLES STREET BALTIMORE, MD. while they were supported by gun­ with the infantry.

(Blank For Correspondence)

N. \ V. ■ X POST CARD Place One Cent Stamp Here So Long, Boss

It seems as though sue get a letter something like this about • ADDRESS HERE), every day:

"Goodbye boss, I'm o f t to fight the Japs. With so many of us leaving, you're going to be pretty busy taking care of a ll those customers. I guess they'll understand, though, if you're a little Order Form slow in getting around. Harry can take over for me when you teach him all the things I OCEAN GROVE TIMES learned. Be sure to take care of Mrs. Gorton’s range, and'don't forget Mr. Burrow's refrig­ Ocean Grove, N. J. erator.. Keep those defense plants- running Please send me New Moderne Bordered Post Cards at 100 for $1.00. I enclose check or money . back there, and I 'll do my part up in front. So order with order. [ ] White, blue border, blue print long, boss, I 'll be back to fork soon." j ) Grey, wine border, wine print

Jersey Central Power Sk Light Co* i • (Print narhe arid address oxactly as they are to appear. Abbreviations will be printed as given.) ' ♦ V ".-. Ordered by ...... —...... —

■Address ...... -...... ——......

j^iiumn""— .... union 3

a ;.;v FRIDAY, MARCH 6, 1942 PAGE THREE JUST HUMANS S P O R T S o f ™ E ™ E S • § « ROY HARVEY’S ONE HANDER Jernstedt Heads BRINGS SECOND CHAMPIONSHIP Class Al Bowlers F. L. W. (Continued from Tnffo 1) reserves to finish’the game. ; , During the past week several seconds ticking off on the clock, Monday's game ran the Neptune changes: have taken place in tlie Harvey finally took a chance and total to seventeen straight in the “Bowl for Victory” classic stand­ broke through the Manasquan de­ current conference, and presented ing. The most important was an­ ..On The Record.. Dashes and Flashes— fenses in the foul circle and sank the Fliers ‘ with their best season nounced by Edmund Tamar, of the That game Wednesday evening a one-handed frantic attempt at record, in many years. Rois & Qiiackenbusli lanes,1 Pater­ “On the Record's” first five hail everybody on the edge of their a score,1 The ball passed clearly son with his withdrawal from favorites were very well received seats until, and even after the final through the net, and with it came entry,-after rolling, a perfect. game last week, and by the response to whistle/had: blown,-and the Nep­ Neptune’s second Shore Conference of 2 0 0 , plus double century marks bur selections, plus our visit to tune boys should be proud of them­ championship. CHAMPIONS for 751. Mr, Tamar foil, lie would the juke joints hereabouts; plus selves for the. record they have, am­ Ermon 'Jones, Neptune’s lanky, Semi-Final Score be getting money under false pre­ our listening to Allan Courtney's assed this1 season.. .For Coach Ken center, playing a great defense Neptune (55) tenses, if he advanced into the 1280 club over. ..WOV/ plus listen­ Townsend, it is a double1 victory, game, scored' eight points—a far G F Pts. quarter finals, as he rolled the .'100 ing to the .Make Believe. Ball Room for it is the. first time in the cry from the tournament record Falier, f * - 3 3 9 game alone without a fotil line run. over WNEW, plus jooking into our eighteen years he has been coach­ breaking total of 21 scored in the Horner, f 2 1 - 5 lie hud entered, the army this week private crystal ball/plus anything D,' Stratton, f 5 ing that he has had an undefeated semi-final on Monday, but vital to 2 1 as a commisioncd officer, else you can think of, we have the Neptune victory. Henry Fal- E. Stratton, f - 0 0 1) ■ team, and now it comes that his Hulse, f 0 0 0 Frank Jernstedt of Belmar Bowl­ compiled the votes for the first team is the first to win the Shore ler, flashy forward, netted seven Jones, c 9 2 21 ing :Ccnter, lias hopped hack into five favorites for this week, and lo Conference championship for a sec­ as his total. Ray , Horner, Neptune Rohland, c 0 0 0 first place with a 715 for class A. and behold, Harry James’s “You ond time. i . .Now, with the State Hannah,, g 2 0 ' ■ -1 forward, though scoring but one 2 But don’t misconstrue this moan­ Made Me Love • You” apparently Tournament ahead, the boys are point on a foul shot, played one of Giles, g .. 1 2 . 0 Harvey, g 1 1 3 ing as Jernstedt just tops the class was only a flash in the pan, for it all, set to add further laurels to his -best defensive games/ as the Martusceili, g - 1 0 2 A list at. Belmar and not in every has been surpassed completely by. Scarlet Fliers went on to the last- their record, but even if they DeRose, g 0 .-, - 0 . a establishment where one might the same maestro's arrangement of should be beaten, Neptune can and second victory. . ---' ------22 11 55 think, fn the quarter finals, more “I Don’t Want to Walk Without does feel mighty proud of its Neptune trailed during'the first than Class A winners from You Baby.” . Rumson (ID 200 boys...... quarter, but came ahead in-the various establishments will com­ This new leader has sold more Manasquan has always been a second period, and outscored the G F Pts. Boyle, f . 2 2 pete for the $300.00 defense bond. than two 'million.recordings since “ He’s So Mean. Manne. He Wouldn’t Give a Drownin’ Feller a thorn in the Neptune hopes, for Big Blue in.the third quarter, but 0 VanBrunt, t 3 , 3 9 Clarence Kelly, Rahway, moved it first eanm into, prominence, ac­ Drink,' lust year it was the Blue and Grey fell behind in the last quarter Rehvig,. f - • 1’ (i 2 cording to Columbia's figures, and’ Corrigan, f O' 0. : o into first place in Class B with a that wiped out the Neptune scoring, as Manasquan put on its bus really hit the jack/ pot ;n. chances of making it a second determined, but futile, bid for a Hammond, e - 7 1 15 similar 715 score,-.'while Adam Ur- Baynton, g 4 9 votes, so we are forced by public championship then, and now they second tournament battle. 1 Sota of the Wyckoff recreation tops Fanning, g o 0 ,0 tiie field in Class C with 007. . John: opinion to list it as number one. . THE 12@C;KETBO©K almost dampened the spirit in Wed­ Semi-Final Monday West, g . . 0 (j 0 The rest of the field remained nesday's game. , .it was one of the Branin, g; ■ 0 0 0 Rusigmiilo, Rogers Broad aiul Mar­ In tho semi-final battle on Mon­ —— pretty, much the same with largest crowds at- a tournament __ -■' ~ ket alleys, Newark, is out in froiit day evening, the Neptune Scarlet 17 ; 7 41 Woody Herman’s arrangement ot ■ game, and all agree that1, they with Class D,-while Mike Orosz, Fliers, led by Ermon Jones, who Score by Periods jr., Perth Amboy Recreation “Blues in the Night” still popu­ really should lmve given the, ticket set a new tournament record with lar enough to hold it in.the second man a hit more money, so great Neptune 13 7 10 19—55 pounded out a 555 in’Class Ii. his 21 counters, went on to smash Rumson 9 -7 —41 slot. There are many,'’ many a r­ was the thrill of the game. .It was 8 . 17 Knumi Jacobs had an excellent a fighting Rumson squad by a 55V Referee, Pingatore. Umpire. Pcz- series to place her among Class A rangements of this blues selec­ the eighteenth straight victory for 41 score. Ted Hammond, spark­ zolln.: tion, but Woody'seems.,to have tho the Neptune squud this year, and women with. 054 total. Her 2d 7 plug of the Rumson attack, netted game gave her this high spot, as a best, judging by the responses. .In well—we’ll just wait and see what his team 15 points as.he and. Jones Neptune (121 G F Pls. representative of Fords Recreation. the -third position, we added tlie more comes along, battled the gnnic practically be­ votes, and found that the Merry Radio listeners are still laughing Falier, f i ll . 1 7 Gertrude Suchorski, Perth Amboy, tween themselves. Horner, f - . Macs with their, fast clap-clap over that broadcast from a prison 0 1 1 tops Class B group with 5(19. Doro­ Neptune stepped ahead in the D. Stratton, f - 0 1 .1 thy Karabinas, Hackensack Recre­ “Deep in the Heart of Texas” have when the prisoners faced the mike Jones, c , ' 4 ft very opening minutes of the game, 8 ation gained the number one posi­ overcome Glen! Miller’s “Moonlight and sang, “We did it before and and never went behind in the game. Giles, g . 8 1 .'17 iinnnah, g . 0 ■ 0 ■n tion in Class C with 531. One lit­ Cocktail,” which barely . held in we can do it again,1’.-, .of course Ahead at the end of the first the five a t all and. fell to the fifth they were being patriotic, but com­ Harvey, g 3 2 8 tle girl we must give credit to and quar-ter by a 13*8 margin, the slot. Sammy Kaye, with “A-l in ing from a group in their posi­ she didn’t make any hones about Neptune team battled to a first ■ 18 8 42 the Ariuy” came through and took tion, well...And did you hear Ed it either, was Grace E. Young, of half score of 20-17. Rumson, here Manasquan (40) the' fourth position in the ^ five Hill, who was sports editor of the Rahway, she toppled the pins for lost their chance at closing the : G F Pts. favorites. Freddy Martin’s “Greig Asbury Park Press hot so long Hurley, f 3 7 a three game total of. 168 in Class scoring margin,' as they found it 1 Concerto,” which held the fifth ago, earning some easy money Newman, f 0 (1 0 E. Hats off to a real sport. exceedingly difficult to find the slot, failed slightly and was over­ over the "Take il or Leave it” Ehret, f . 0 0 ’ 0 11 1 w . ------—V . basket from the foul line. Morris, i 5 0 io come by the Miller • recording's show on WOR-on Sunday even­ •In totals it was found .that-Rum­ Paynton, f 4 2 10 BOWLING AVERAGES In the contenders field there are j ing?. , Ed walked away with §35 Dempsey, c - .n 1 0 Ocean Grove Teams still some up and coming pieces,J before you could say Sal Hapatica son had missed fifteen of twenty- Ferriera, c 1 1 :i though, with Blue Barron, Freddy- ...E d is now with the New York two foul tries, while Neptune con­ Caniphell, g 2 . 1 5 G HS TP - Av. McKnight, g World-Telegram.., .And Johnny verted eleven of their seventeen. •0 1 0 0 S. Blair 57 258 10521 184.33 Martin, Glen Miller, Sammy Kaye, The second half proceeded Moore, g 1 1 0 2 Knight 59 232 10810 183.19 Shop Fields, Marty Malnick, Rus/ Pandolphc, who used to thrill them Roetzel, g 0 .1 Chafey 22 231 3808 173.2 Morgan, and many others all;with at, Neptune with his football runs, smoothly for the Neptune squad, ' ,— ------and when the score hit the half- Ward 62,243 10074 172.10 good recordings that arc gaining lias been named the baseball coach 17 0 40 Batdorf 57 223 0725 170.35 at Asbury Park, succeeding Ed century mark in the fourth period, Score by Periods Holbrook 01 224 10370 170. in popularity all along. For one Carleton, who is the faculty mana­ Coach Ken Townsend sent in.his .Neptune 3 10 10 13—42 Francis 59 228 0948 108.38 there is the “Train Song” of Kay. Manasquan 0 10 9 15—40 Shaw 53.224 3890 107,45. JCyser’s gang, with Sully Mason ger of the athletics, and is retiring Thompson,‘jr. -55 225 9129- 100 . from the baseball diamond coach­ Referee, Pezzella. Umpire, Pinga- Sampson doing the "sjnging and .doing it tore. 5-1 223 8774 102.29 ing staff...And bowling will start 1 Hannah 28 230 •1523 161:15. well.. Another Kyser hit is “Hum­ again tonight after a week's lay­ Lyon- 45. 204 7213 100.13 pty-Dumpty Heart” with Ilarvv C. Wilgus •17 253 7-138 158.12 Babbitt, a swell tenor, doing the off because of the blackout, with Eldridge 52 200 NATIVE 'fO F.Fi'* . • 8208 157.44 vocalizing. So here ' they-arc for GROW IM BO’-Cw: the Eagles 2 at Fair Haven W. Brown 13 214 2030 150.2 500 FOUS05 V? yAUP "WE BtlUCi-I.r- Washington at West Long J Herbert 32 .179 4935 154.7 this week: SZrVP Ku3B?R A32 NEEPEP FOR W & iv SOMCtlMES VJCtGh EVEW/M EPIUMTANk. -TMi • MOCHAS 2 Branch; Eagles 1 a t Red. Bank 2, Heckman •iS 214 7.300 152.-.! 1. “I. Don’t Want to Walk With­ SQPOUNOSf and the Wall 1 squad at Stokes. F. Wilgus 53 201 7742 148.1 out You,” Harry Janies. . *. Borden .00 230 8570 142.50 2. “Blues in the Night,” Woody ' ------—V — Gregory 57 105 8094 142. 1 Herman. ' ^ TH-E TIMES OW N’ SUBSCRIPTION NOTICE: The •Beck 33 100 ■1441 134.19 Thompson, sr. 15 207 1918 127.13 3. “ Deep in the Heart of Tex­ Times will be $2.00 a year after J. Thompson 22 157 2883 129. as” M erry Macs. April 15, 1942. All new or re­ Bills 54 18G 0932 128.20 , L “A-l in the Army,” Sammy Q nM .A u .m d newal subscriptions received in Ailes 13 186 1094 1 21 . Schwartz 37.151 .. 4408 119.3 Kaye. / advance of that date will be ac­ —V— 5. “Moonlight Cocktail/’ Glen SolaUon In Next Issue. cepted at the present rate of $1.50. •REMBMBEttJEARL HARBOR! Miller. IN. ’-12 IT’S UP TO YOU t » 3 « 3 6 7 a » 10 U

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No. 2 HORIZONTAL 40 To knock territorial against ; 1 Rodent 41 Because . division 8 M ajestic 1 4 To transmil 42 Biblical 57 Sheep 9 V ast ago 8 Withered garden VERTICAL 10 Fabulous 'NO WONDER CH ILDREN ARE OFTEN CON FUSED .By.RUBE GQI.DRERG % 12 M alt 44 To attach 1 Hindu re­ . bird beverage 47 To sanction ligious hero 11 Tc acquire 13 Fencing officially 2 Cry of with diffi­ COME H SRG AT ! HAu’e M O Kld-K. I 51 Swiss canton sorrow culty 0/V2C.S, V..SARR670 VJELL, 1 HAMETdx sword 52 Raised 17. Stop! boM e b a l l y 14 Grasped 3 Stretching Do M’t You tCMou) coniM G.eiTHeR, platform muscle 19 Land •5UR£, 1 GOT A g eo eg e - yiie. CEO - I OUJM S ix 15 Male adult Firse ewG w e, It’S wroM g To 18 Disaster 53 Poetic: •1 Prefix; half m easure GOT IOO S H A R e S L o ts IM CAUBaewiA, sufficient TlMO -STUFFGtb B o A s t 18 Brazilian 5 F in ial. 22 Child OF C6M SoLlbATGt> -A H A L F IW T E R e s T 54 High, craggy A b .o u t drink 0 Ancient . 24 Artificial b o s s J A PAIR. w j h a t ; Ea m a m a , -to a c e s s IM T H E 1 TURAJEASY" hill Greek language booRKAjoe. conm w y '20 To run or- SKATES AML Vbo’d e l/xi FLoRlbA, S p f q e G o o b j slowly 55 Unit of force counselor 25 Kiln TVWO S U I T S BoMh S A W L I OlAJAJ AMDs Co M’t o w e MT 21 Conjunction- 56 Swedish 7 To clamdr 26' Playlet of owbera- K- G'CTr? Answer to Punle No. I. 27 Cuts off MY oujaJ i 22 Plaything 28 Son of Adam u u e A R . H o n e 23 God of love | 27 Malay 29 Tip gibbon, 30 Food fish 29 Center 32 Opposite 30 Outer 33 Hot garm ent SO Note of scale 31 River in 37 F ru it Siberia 38 Clever 32 Ditch 40 Recalcitrant 33 Coquettish 41 Sloth1 LiTTce wAReexj 43 To act AW L ThteA i 34 Italian for 44 Carved •j,l,; G ers A BAWUM6 th<-: • --1LS w a y “yes” nepiRs his . T o R A I s e ’ 45 To exult V , . o m r f o r f-HlLC-ReXJ IS 35 Volcano in 40 To employ bACs TALICIMG TO SGT A/J , M artinique ic io Ilio W-.-> THIS- eXAMHjE t’ofA 47 To append L I K E T H I 5 . 87 Evil m m m 48 S a la ry . 38 Siamese coin 3 3 3 49 To fasten V- ■ .....niiiiiiiii«ii,iiiiiiiiiii,iiiiiiiiiii,iriHiiiiif«it,i'iit,iii:i,ii«([|jiiriiii',ii, iiiHfii,‘i , ii,n, I(ll,j,,,iii, .... unuiu.ii...... 39 European Scries B-4Z— V TfW R e te o is e . 50 Digit '^AG'a'f’OUR FRIDAY; MARCH'S, 1942 Aaria m ii THE OCEAN GROVE TIMES LETTERS TO NO INTERRUPTIONS, PLEASE And Shore Times THE EDITOR SALE-ADVANCE SPRING HATS Tutilislicd Friday Turbans, Berets, Toques, Bonnets HOMBIl 1). liU K Sfli:. l-MItor »m t voldishei Editor Times: $1.19 and $1.95 FltANK 1,. WlliOUS, lineal Kdltor As a resident of Ocean Grove for S.IXTY'-FOUIt MAIN AVKNUK, OCEAK GHOVK, JTKW .TEItSEY A ll. Colors and All Sizes ’ Telejihoim 7 : many years and a present taxpay­ Flower Trims, Belting and Straw Combination and Solid Straw SUB S C11:1LTI6 N .f»d •• yea rl y ; $ I * 00 aomKtn finally-:: 60c.';' quarterlyo• 4 p. er, I. would like to enter the Home Spring Hat Excitement—Pretty Flowor-trinimed Toques, Bonnots aud |«istngo pos.Vage paid In-Uic United Slates j .Canada:$2.00-and Town' Quiz' and* submit herewith nml sailors “go everywhere.” Youthful Sailor Typo Brhnn designed ' * l-'tmnwi. £2.f»Q a yvar, ■ " for women. Every type. Scoop two at this Advancco Sale Price. ADT>itEKSI?;S eltajiV Vi • nii’ ’ r e q iin s i^ a lw a y s give. foriiVei* ad d i-sss. my- answers to your questions in ; APV Ki JTI sI0MENT-'i.: iWtOK' will be- furnlslied. -by•• us on ;iieciuc'flt7.:. • •. tlie. February, 20.th issue of the W -V TC ll T H E i.A U U L ON Y o u I t !?A P151V FQ iVTI 112 KXPllVATIO.N* OF ’ PARIS HAT SHOP y'^-4 • V •’ You is. sruscuiPTioN ' '.<■>Occan Grove Times,.viz:';-./,;;>■'• ; i;': Day & Brother, g ■ ■ 436 Cookman Avenue, Asbuvy Park >l‘J:dere«!. assoeuiidrelass mall Open Wed. ’till 9:00, Sat. 'till 10:00 P. M. Tel. 4831-J -/■v ■ np tlRv‘ ; 2 . ^15,500. :‘;!; - o x ■ %'■ SIATIONAL G D lTO R IA i- - • Ui/vri it •;;< I rove ■ j 'ostoJiiep; y’ V. : 2 . Keyeast. (not Keywest) was ^ ^ASSOCIATION : ^ . N.OTH IP . "k Avon, Ocean Park was , .Tin* jn iilj j Mlli.M-rlidliiu prleir-'iviM ' 1 ^ I'L u n & v t _ adv nitrt‘vUV * 2. 1N> < m A p r i l . l .‘» : . i l v F r e n t s Bradley . : Beach, Ocean ;i »>n i h s |n i i # | s . Beach was Belmar. . • ill: tim'Tii in its I'iiiicKi; I’i.aci-: •J. General John G. Patterson. Wall street is located dirCei- THE PIONEER OFFICE. Advance in Subscription'Rates ly in the rear of the Asso-; ; • ’ ItujfinnijtR- April lii the yearly subscription price of cialioii Building, runiiiim; Inquiries are being received for summer renting 1lio Tii.iUN' wiil ad v ance .to S2.IH) :i year. The newsstand through from Alain avenue prici ■: ill iie live eeiit.- a copy. , to Olin street.; and Houses are being listed in the rental departm ent Very truly yours, 1 las increase, has .been m ade necessary by the advance Asbury Park, N..J. ; , ; for the coming season. r. t'Oets in 'e\ery activity connected with newspaper mak- Frederick A. Smith. lujrj- ■ ell . th ' .iifnoase in cost of: newsprint. (Ed. Note: AVe appreciate Mr. -oOo- ■y .Ibeisvvthe,,increase, uiv the,-price ol the Times in Smith’s interest in our Homo Town' ever : • iriy yeai-s. • .:.:> XV'"' l - /. Quiz, anil note that even .Mr. Smith, We have some special bargains for sale in smaller who has been interested in Ocean ! , o (. eiii - i t id action-v. ere open al this time. GVOve r«»r many years, has missed houses and bungalov/s. Are you interested? AW could have cut down on the size of the paper and questions, two and four. However (liscoin.nucd ail special features.* A. few weekly papers we do acknowledge. Mr. Smith’s -o O o - have done lhi-. catching us on; Keyoast, behig tho former name for Avon. Well, it’s Insurance is not a luxury but a sure necessity. ()r v\e coitld maintaiiv standards by increasinir the all in fun. and is interesting to look Are your homes and household goods properly tlie s al,script ion price. .We chose the, latter, course be- hack on the history of our Ocean . cause.;.\vi,v;.|‘elt7lliat bur readers would want us to maintain Grove.) • . - protected? - and improve standards and not go backwards.- . News Note Helped . ■ It 'S with pleasure that we lanndunce the beginning D o w n Editor Times: -o O o - this wee.levof the .new. novel by Eugene C unningham , fre- Wo wish to 'thank, you .for your, • M e m o ry iitiO.nt coijli'ib'utor to. tlie Saturday .Evening Post. We can. advertisement for books and maga­ La n e (ilsb ahncujnce.'thiit we have scheduled for appearance in zines to be left at the Ocean Grove E. N. WOOLSTON the Times, during 1042 tlie new novel,■ “Ghost Plane," b.v Association oflice for the Victorv: Book Campaign and hoys in the 4 8 MAIN AVENUE . Arthur .Stringer, of. Mountain .hakes. X. J„ to be followed camps. Your notice has brought a Matcli I. 1927 March 3. 1912...... by a serial,story by a particular favorite of Times readers, groat; number of books, which are' An informal discussion on The On the basis of all opinion of T e l. 398 Ocean Grove, N. J. Kathleen Xbrris. Those who remember that delightful being sent iuvay.-.as fast as possj- advisahility of the establishment the Supreme Court, the railway love story, "Irish Eyes. ’ by .Mrs. Norris,:which appeared hle.’ • 7 '‘ of a icereatitih. park for children station at Aclmry Park came into in the,-.* colum ns in l!)4b, will look forw ard to lver new UespectfuUy, of school, age look place following use for the first Time on Sunday The Library Committee. the regular .'meeting of the town­ as the first Sabbath train to stop novel with anticipation. - . 1 Ocean Grove, N. J.7 . ship committee. Considerable in. there since the founding of Ocean :W'-: ,_ ^ .y — tere.st was shown in the plan. Grove halted to lake and unload Bargains In Ocean Grove Real Estate . .- i ■■ A Lump of Coal ■ ..The new building: of the tin 11: passengers. The engineer of the S Embury Avenue—6 rooms, full lot, term s ...... $1,800 Pictures iaiyc. ivcentiy been published showing a. hew Home Town I. Q. Quiz eroft-Taylor lfesl home was to he train received a bouquet of flowers, S.I Luke Avenue—7 rooms, 2 baths, pipclcss heat ...... $4,000 i S Ilcck Avenue rooms, bath, heat, furnished ...... $3,200 1 plane built, almo-l entirely bf plastic inatei-iaif?.: is a dedicated 'with appropriate servi­ and a great.-time'Tvas made of the —12 11 ces; Bishop TV.: F. Anderson wns event. 5 M t. Tabor IVay—10 rooms, bath, heat ...... $3,500 beautiful lookimr mb A good,way to know about the I Webb Avenue—10 rooms, bath, hot water heat, furnished $6,000 istoiy. of your home town is to to speak anil.Mrs, M. E.. Stout, of Residents wore quick to take ad­ ; Broadway—10 rooms, 2 baths, licat ...... $8,000 Unbelievable as 'ft may seem, coal supplies essen- follow these f|iiestioiis ami alls'- Ocean- Grove. \yas to present the vantage of a situation whereby ■ liai '.ingredients for ani.ny of. the. plastics used . in modern wers each week: I low maiiy are. Home for dedication- The building hundreds of oranges were washed S A PROTECTION THAT HAS NEVER BEEN ISSUED £■■■'■ BEFORE! ■p.;.::\y ■y.iast.i'i.ii': io n -H 'o r y.-'iiigs&fffiiselages. . fairing#', you. ■.uisweiiiVg'.’ Allow Uyenty being dedicated replaced one de­ up;onThc Ocean Grove lieach. .'Ap­ parently they laid come'from spina | , You; your wife,, your children may be hurt in your auto. * £ radio.ateiina masts, trim tubs, control pulleys, pilot -wilch Jioihts ;i i|uesthm and see how stroyed by fire, in Tehi'imry,'lll2li. I This was never covered before, except under a special acci- 5 lai'ge aksrore yon' nmke.' Aliss Kathleen- Strasshurger. oirshore vessel,, and weft in-good | dent policy. 1 lvUils )>ibin veiilil.itoi s/md cameras. . • , , president 'of The Junior - Woraan's eondition when found. Now, we can add/a revolutionary endorsement to your auto I I 1. There are oiily three slieels liitf nnlinir 1?AI. f k C l 1 Ike nAttnunmn i' h a I. i .L. l.rt,._:i.t r Th. des'giKl'-'and ..burltlers of airplam s (ire find­ club, of Ocean Grove, was 111 charge Neptune high school vvas To .open i liability policy. For $9 to $11, tbe coverage,includes hospital, I :.iii Oee'uiv Grove. .. Wliat in ; ■| nurses’ and doctors’ expenses up to $250 for each one injured. | ing th ‘ jdasUvs fropr coal, provide i '.seid.ial malerdds for ,1 heir names ? of a.siu'pRse: program at the regn- its,baseball season 011 April sixth ! Take advantage of it. : lar'dVi > .'•*.• me. y add byti.a iM'anes, •'W herew as ihe first i'resn lar-mov.ting ol Jbe group/: Airs. K. nt Long Branch, in the first.gume •II, floyiUon,, of AVoodbriclge, dis­ of the. East Jersey, high-, school SEE ME BEFORE YOU BUY, BURN OR BORROW;. !-o 'd.'si . ; ' iid'i.c'.'d'frora Vdin furnishes mnbyial- \yiiter pump driven in Ocean 1 trict vice (president was n VO.itu - league schedule,. f«'.r h’.il. h'i .( e? .iilV!' ;U't.:Vl\v laicli i i'ienc'ils clock-, re .- Grave': What was (he. name 111 given the. widl '.’ ut •the meeting, A Red Bunk man, charged 'with LOUIS E. BRONSON, Realtor i 'o.;.'. '• *t rv b ,n. i.fgfillc. . la.din. cabiV - \y-lvirp 1 wns hnilf./lir.kg the j IJunahl Glmlmtrs assumed the deserting his children, narrowly 1 , 53 Main Avenue Tel. A. P. 105S Ocean Grove, N; J r- 3 •sV;'vii!ev!dps;7:f.":‘;b ■.Lnhei'naele. the. 'young pen- j leadership■<>\ tire Kureka Alins.trel:' .. averted receiving a coat of tar and 5iii(iif im ...... "a 1 celdnhiue to tlie Am -ncai: .pie's .(enji)leVfn;A ThnfiilyV ! taking the plme id Al Todd., who f lathers whop he was saved from returned to ill. lirst lnve, the end an angry-.mol) h.v. police who lodged ^"■ti»n*wnTCiJnii'»'w:Aeaio*tiOf9ii«uiiiiriininii«liniiiBetortintntniriiAtii*niAtuAn»iirrtiawiiMiiw»^*"»‘in.^ " o' ■* . i i • id cii.i ir'aindu modi misaveioi illci’', • c'lb'.pt l ■ ■/.. 1 ' Many, ponpkv know'tile, t’aker- niipi’h sqiit, him- in' the borough; jail. Tim ;>ii‘d;'t in-1 Ih it, name alum . Vati■ .A X ..T'' ■■ v:. ;. : ./ W'luYi: wan thi; .' real name ceived aiid /both exceeded .tlie (lii'ii soon after his wife died. ..per.ieX ryaii>if that •• ■: • ch.'ni-. if ida are, in given lire tabernacle when nnnuint ill ajiprojiriittions for the (Wesley Lake was drained .to re­ G Room House, 3 'Bedrooms, Bath, Hot Air H e a t...... $2,500 I pmelmse, the Neptune township -c«jr.jU. i ‘ or- w'Up ,tl>c ' nafb'nd fi 'ourciis ihdertries ■ ach it. wiis lniill f lieve tiie condition existing in sev­ 9 Rooms, Bath, Steam Heat. Can Be Used As Private Dwelling I •Wh 11 $t I’aul'- chnreh vvas committee' rejected/ the bids and : or 3 Apartments .....'...... $3,500 | a# min.i'C od i n’.ia..' , i. f p v w it, hiiVe been .i.jitiol.ly levo- decided to i eadverti.se for. the pur­ eral South Main street stores, was dedie:ite(l,iwhn'i)fe;iche:l 11 Rooms,.9 Bedrooms and B ath...... $3,150 j . luti.iHii7.tngU?UHr«jmjimi11*5 ,/ oui- v\mcTiea.n staifdiirdfof )i\> the dcdiealory sermon, and chase’ of Tf Ford soil tractor;, lit a where collars w re .Hooded by the /ing. This 1" but* another if'iiimoii to ehaik:up 1 or individ­ ,'whnl otliof .oliject iri Ocean Inter date.. -TheTractor .was to ho­ cyn' llowiiig of Wesley Lakc. broo 2 Lots in Interlaken—High and Dry—Owner Is forced , to 8acrl- | fice at fraction of the original cost ...... $1,500 ual (o.portnnily, aiid enterprise, in our country. ' Grove cai'ries his imme? ; used 111 road work Ahout $C0 wortli of vaUmhles. 4 ' -/---- —V— — ." • were stolen when thieves . gained INSURANCE OF ALL KINDS 2 Answers to l.ast Week's .Question's •. You need . not. tell all tbo truth, ■ v* .x; ■ ..a The Small Bank ' cut i'll nee to the home of George ;K /The North End pavilion was unless, to those, who have a right •lam i 's Truslow Adams, the liistingui.sheii : Amtiriean >./-’ 'known as . Ross’s l’avilion, to'know K ail. But let all you tel! Benson, Franklin Tivenue, by fore .hisiori; ii. receiiil.vi.said this: “To insure, if lhe light is . and the South; End pavilion be truth.—Horace Mann. ing a side window. ALVIiN £. BILLS AGENCY ■wonf end when it is won, what we ;ire really fighting, was known as lallagore’s. REAL ESTATE MORTGAGE LOANS INSL'lf AM U ’ ' | Tl. . Five presidents have' spoken fm— uje-A hi erica 11 -way of. life and our American dveanv Telephone 2124 78 Main Avenue, Ocear. Grove :of-'iIs the job. amUthe niost ihiportiiiit here. 'They wove Grant,: Gar­ field, McKinley. Toddy Roose­ . jol}. l'C.p and lor years, to come, of the small-bank.’-’ ./ velt nnd Wilson. Classified Advertisements , .T'dw/aqf-,ifs.:realize how great- a-.part banking.-plays: 3. The lirst pofmiment cottage Ailvt'rttsQmontH. for these columns should be in the ofiloe of "The ^rtiiTr ini'irini'iii'iiwiiiimi'MWii'MM'iW'lMHiiwiiiiiiiiiiiiii nm n iiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiihikhiIi miim ng hiiihhiihii>l • in the American ideal. Ranking makes it possible1 for men erected here was the Pioneer Times'.' NOT LATER THAN 12 O'CLOCK NOON Thursday of Ca«*h to; gr into business—to build . .Homes-—to ikeep going cottage,.AsburV avenue, near w eek. . .tiiro.o. ii periods of-adversity— to servo their follows. And' Pilgrim Pathway,: and was . built liy If. Y. La near, of CLASSIFIED Al) HATE TO-DAY’S BARGAINS flIAY BE GONE TOMORROW the .-hy.id f>ardc,:Svi.tli dts-'cUise.; contacts with local people, Warsaw, N. Y. ' 25 wovds OR LESS .x...... 2l>c. * (11 Room Hotel, Running W ater, Cash required $3,000;$12,000.00 More than 25 words ...... • 1 cent i>er wotM Abbott Avenue, (Rooms- and Bath '...... $2,500.00 jk (is. ir.p.ortant as I lid liiggest liinincial .institution in the •1. The New York and Long 5 times for the price of four. • 8 Copy mailed in, given to rcpresenlativo or brouglit to office per­ Mt. Pisgah Way,: 6 Rooms, 2 Baths. Heat,...... $3,700.00 greatest ■,c'l,Vs The small bank did much to build the Branch' railroad served be­ sonally must be accompanied l»y cash or stamps to cover cost. C ojjV Main Avenue, 20 Rooms ...... j ...... $2,000.00 accepted over phone as a courtesy and convenience to customers. Heck Avenue, 17 Room s...... $3,500.00 Amor: ii/we know—and the small bank will, be a domi- tween those two cities, with Rills duo immediately upon presentation. • Main Avenue, 6 Rooms and Bath ...... $3,300.00 nant; factor ir. building the .■greater America .of the days stage connections to Ocean Grove,, .and the Farming- iuiuuniniui'uni»«»>nniumi..iiii»mmiiin!ii!iiiiiiii;mimu;iiriuuiiiiijiirtaiiiiifii«riiiiuit:ii» 100 Ml. Tabor Way, 6 Rooms and B a th ...... $3,700.00 to come.' Corner Property, 10 Rooms, 2 Baths, One Car Garage, dalo and New Egypt rail­ Double Porches Overlooking Lake and O cean...... $3,900.00 road.. which Van as far ns CARPENTER and Builder—R. E. METAL WEATHER STRIPPING ... ./. Remodeled—63 Broadway, Corner property. 8 Booms and Mnnasquan, connected tho Whitfurd, . jobbing a ‘ sjiccialty. and Furniture repairing. Send for B ath/H eat, $6,500.00. Hard Truth Driven Home Make your Repairs Before Spring Grove with Philadelphia. estimates. E. Pease,' 520 Cookman HURRY TO HURRY ,, W; is f rot won .with brave words and stirring Rush. 88 New York avenue. Leave avenue, Asbury Park.—23-27* 1 The Ocean Grove Auditor­ orders at Howard Smith’s, JIain REAL ESTATE INFORMATION BUREAU •bands. . Wars: are won .with deeds. Wars are. won .with ium is known as the “Silver avenue1.—1 0 “ . FOR SALE or RENT—Rooming production.' Wars are won through the full, uncomprom­ Anniversary Monument” be­ W A N T E D—Mortgage . monev houses, apai'tnicnts; 12 rooms;:Jake, ising cooperation of government, of labor, of industry and cause it was completed just $2,000 and $1,500 on good proper­ $4,250; 4 apartments, 8 bedrooms, J. A. HURRY AGENCY ties in Grove. Also cottages for $550; 9 rooms, $3,000. Mary L. 66 MAIN AVENUE of all the people. ./. '.'v' s ■■/y///y:., twenty-five years after the Walker, 6 ;lVii Mt., Hermon Way.— OCEAN GROVE founding of the resort,' in sale or.rent. J. C. Perry Agency, 09 Main avenue—38tf . 9-13*.. ■. .;/■/ ■; Telephone 41*32 ; ' Residence 387-R . Our warfwill be won or lost on the home front. ■ Vic­ 1891. Ocean Grovo wiis tory depends oil whether we: can make and deliver .the BARGAINS in stoves; heaters founded in 18fl9. FOR RENT—Houses and Apart­ and ranges. Also repaired and in­ endless quantities of planes and ships and guns and am- ' ------— V------ments. SALE—Investments and stalled. Newman Electric Co., 131 munili.'.,: that our. troops and our Allies so sorely need. OBITUARY bargains at all prices. Insurance South Main St; Phone 1104 A. P. all kinds Consult us about your tf Tlisgraceful lal/or disputes have cost our military Car. Semons Agency, 124 Mt. Ta­ WILLIAM II. HAGUE bor Way.—8-12* 1 UPHOLSTERING, DRAPER­ forces untold quantities' of weapons^—and the lives of * Word bps' heeir received of the FOR SALE—Pilgrim Pathway, IES. slip covers, : box springs. Joseph Sauta many rmnr Petty officialism inis played politics while death of William Raglcy Hague, 12 rooms, fui-hished all year house, Harry Milbcrg, Inc., 513 . Bangs .war rages throughout the world, arid, slowed production of Hackensack and New York; and nip improvements, located near Ave., opp. Stoinbach-Kresge Co still more. Rogus reformers have hampered and reviled for many years a summer resident Wesloy Lake, Auditorium tint) Tel. A. P. 2170—51* ; ;/ ■/■ Realtor industry at a time, when our greater','need rvas machines of Ocean Grove. Ho was nearing Beach, $3,000. Brewer and Smith, his ninetieth year when hq died, at 701 Bangs avenue. Phone- 250.— MURRAY’Sr-T'The Pants' House COMPLETE MORTGAGE APD , and tools, not fdeologies. 48 tf , y q t Asbnry Park.” 805-807 Lake his Hackensack home 011 March 3. avenue, Just off Main St. Boya INSURANCE SERVICE The people of this nation are now demanding in no V- T:‘ ' ROOFS, and Asbestos Silling ap­ and; Men’s needs supplied.—T3tf DR. F. F. WESTWOOD plied and repaired; work guaran­ uncertain voice that government; industry and labor co­ teed. Estimates given. F. H. A; NO+HING TOO SMALL OR TOO LARGE Dr. Frederick F. Westwood, a re­ UPHOLSTERING — Furniture, operate so that productive enterprises of this nation—the William Krayer, 77'A Benson ave­ box springs, n)uttru£se3 renovated,' XV: FOR US TO HANDLE plane and tank factories, the motor plants, the oil' and tired dentist, formerly of Philadel­ nue, 0:can Grove. Phono A. P. Innerspriiig muttresses made from phia, died at his home jn Long 4058-J.—47* metal and .coal industries, the power plantswhich moti­ your old lmir mattress. Called .for Branch, Sunday . afternoon, after morning returned same day. Otto 29 South Main Street, Neptune k FOR A GOOD NURSE, call A. vate the machines of industx-y—can turn the blueprints several weeks illness. He wns the Spies, 1226 Monroe Ave. Tel. P. 44C8-W.—10* (Directly Opp. Main Avenue Gates) of war needs into realities. • • son of Rev. John R. Westwood who 2070.—9 tf The'disasters in the.Pacific show what we may expect held pastorates in the Philadelphia uul New Jersey Methodist confer- Phones: 8443-8449 in the future unless we changs the piddling policies of the (CoutimiHl un U'ugo S) Advertise In The Times and Save Time % p a s t FRIDAY, MARCH 8, 1942 FA OB FIVE1

Pfe, Douglas Stirling, of the Ma­ OCEAN GROVE rine barracks at the Norfolk Naval: List Women IN AND OUT OF base, surprised his parents, Mr. and H O N O R R O L L Ji thought for tho Week Gtid Mrs. Bleeeker Stirling, 12. Pitman U* S. O . Center avenue, Sunday by coming up for By Verne Leslie Smith, I OCEAN GROVE Pastor of St. Paul’s Church g a visit. Pvt. Stirling arrived: on Services for the United Service Brig, Gen. William H, H. Morris Major. John S. E. Young his mother’s birthday, adding to Organization carried on by. the A TRIBUTE Miss Alice McGeorge, grand­ Capt. Norman Campbell the festivity of the day. While Ocean Grove Woman’s Club and This story is built upon intangible impressions and a smattering of daughter of Mrs. George Hake, here he also visited his brother, friends, are given two days a month Capt. Richard R. Stout facts ruvealod at a recent Ocean Grove gathering, *•. Main avenue, has returned to New Richard Stirling, and Mrs. Stirling with Mrs. Frederick Schultz and Lt. Com. Edwin Young Ten years ago a young men’s class was organized in St. Paul’s York after a week’s visit here. in New York. Mrs. Harry Hulit chairman. Those Lt. Com. Theodore Schlossbach Church; An unusual coniradship developed aa. these, lads of kindred having served or contributed with Lt. Joseph Young . interests found helpful fellowship together, and this intimacy of friend­ Miss Ann O’Reilly, of the Ocean Miss- M ary Waklor has been | - b y * | ship still remains in a class of depleted numbers. cakes or money are: Mrs. Schultz, Ensign Kenneth MacWhinney Grove post office staff; is confined named chairman of the Hospitality . v A program was developed about interests congenial to youth, com­ Mrs. Hulit, Mrs. Ethel Hillpot. Ensign Cordic Weart; petitive sports, entering winning teams in the athletic meets of this to her Asbury Park home by ill­ committee of.'the Assembly Bible £ Eugene Cunningham $ Mrs. Dorothy Salvador, Mrs. Frank Sgt Jacob Haussling legion. But that was not all. ness... class of St. Paul’s church, and will Mount, Mrs: Clifford B. Ilennig, Sgt. Harry Mulliken ■ The program was built on a service motive, and during this decade be assisted by-Mrs Violet Gillan, $ v 73 pounds of meat, 3,314 cans oi food. 1,231 Christmas Joys, many Mrs. Helen L. 'vVilgus, 37 Ben­ Mrs Thomas Houston, Mrs. Charles Sgt. Robert Williams ft ® . WNU Release V Mrs. Calvin Reed, Mrs. Stubb, Mrs. A ■ V quarts of ice cream, and 31 cheer baskets have been distributed in our. son avenue, is confined to her home Van Hoesen, Mis. Frederick Engel, Sgt. Frederick Van Clcef community! Nov has this work been-purely loco!, for substantial dona­ Salisbury, Mrs. Minnie Cole, ’Mrs. with a severe attack or the grippe. Mrs, Robert C. Meredith, Mrs, • Corp. William Hughes STARTS THIS WEEK tions have been made to the Biitisli-American Ambulance Fund, nnd Ridgway, • Mrs. Brundage, Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. W alter H. Litch­ Henry C. Erbacker, Mrs. Charles Corp. Robert IIolTmier e in ie e ifiii'rio v two completely, equipped hospital buds have been provided for the vic- Algor, Mrs. II. Allen, Miss Olive. hUlisLK y.N Ntilll.h: 1 nc . tjms of wav, a service totaling; over $500! And now. with new needs, field, Asbury avehue, and Giles II. Petitto, Mrs. Edward MacVVillianis, Corp. /Roydon Ferry. RiJey and Miss Mabel Riley. Times will be $2.00 a year after j although tho group is .now .small in numbers, no loss than 893 cards, Hull fisli, Lake avenue, are vaca­ Mrs. Ralph Wiggiu, Mrs. Grover Corp. Wesley Riley April 15, 1942. All new or re-'j stamps,' letters, and gifts have been kseiit to Ocean Grove, men in the tioning in St. Petersburg, Fla. James, Mrs. Jacob Beutell. Mrs. Ira Corp. Adrain Schont?, ncwal subscriptions received in ■ service , of tlie. country! • ...... Cadet William T. Kresgc ... . , , , , , Nor.is that all. For who can tabulate tbe incentives toward ideai- Ferris, Mrs Homer D. Kresgc, Mrs. atlvance of tliat date '.'.ill be ae- . ism the. high motives ot living. ■ and the modes of habit which The James Ackerman Federa­ Seaman Wilson Kennedy tion, of Fitkin hospital, will bold n Tax Collections Charles Poole. ceptcd at the present rate of $1.50. ; havo lieer. woven into the fibre of personality through this .unusual Mrs. ’Arthur Soger, airs, J. E. "Seaman James.Gravatt ‘ fellowship and servic’d.? Surely Another has been in our midst! Nor regular meeting Monday afternoon j i 4^ Seaman Robert If. Meade in DeCappet Hall, at the hospital. Newborn, Mrs. Irene Jackson, airs. are church; school classes to be'scorned! Out of little acorns great Over February 1941 Pfc. Milo Gibbons oak trees: grow. , George Faikner,Mrs. Annie Lord, All Hail the Knights-of Honor o f' Ocean. Grove! Frank Slocum, Embury avenue, Tax collections for tbe month of Mrs. Isaac Stapleton, Mrs.. II. W. Pfc. James Hendrickson who has Ijceii confined to liis home Pfc. William Perkins PALACE February were reported at- $09,- Allen, airs. William aiugee,. Mis. HHADLEY REACH by illness for over a month, is now 152,30 by Collector Walter II. Gt;i- May Whitney Thompson, Mrs. L. Pfc. Douglas Stirling FKI. ami SAT. M aid) tJaiitJ 7 able to be out and around again. vatt at Tuesday’s meeting of the B. Scimable, airs. C. P. Towner, Pfc. Howard Scmoas . Pvt: James L. Bennett “New York Town” Strassburger’s ;. WOOLMAN’S Miss Sully Williams; a senior at Neptune township. committee, lt airs. Edward Bernhardt, airs. Fred Me Murray Mary Marlin: Charles Richardson, airs. Frank . Pvt. Barry Chamberlain Syracuse university, spent the was noted that collections are run­ SUN unit .linrtTi '' ami !»” Market i Quality Market weekend with her parents, Mr. and ning.considerably. in excess of Feb­ Slocum,. . Pvt. Clifford Cole Pvt. Richard DeHart ^Skylark". Pilgrim Pathway and Olin Street Mrs. Watkin Williams, 75 Heck ruary,last year. The Misses Mary Morris, Helen W ith Pyt. George Daniels Telephone Asbury Park 3719 : 125 Heck Avenue avenue. : Included in the total was $57,- Gipdhili, Estelle Randall, Marjorie C l a u d e t t e Colbert,- Brian Ahcnic Thompson, Elizabeth Aitkeii, Betty Pvt. Harold G. Dunkerley T F K S . a tnl \V K D . >Tu rr li ~i u a uVl I j | Ocean Grove Mr. and Mrs. J, it. Lohmann, are 509.33 for 1942 taxes; $0,109.40 for D ontl.K FEAT I’It J’/ The Oldest Independent General Thompson, May Martin; Mamie Pvt. Reginald Hurley returning to . their Ocean Grove 1941; $42 for 1940 and .prior, and P vt. Robert Ham men MSan DiegoM M arket in Ocean Grove I Telephone 963 hopic, 33 Pitman avenue, tomor­ $2,447.58 for tax title lions. Cost Megill, Edna Carpenter, Dorothy Ray McDonald, Bonita Granville Reopil. Agnes Day; M yrtle Gra­ Pvt William Hulskampcr ’ AL*» ■ • row, after spending the winter nnd interest on the latter amount­ Pvt, Evan E. James ed to $048.11. vatt ami air, Howard Smith and “Broadway Limited? Full line of Fancy Groceries season in New York. Pvt. Grover A. James, jr. , W ith | Fresh Capons On motion of Committeeman' o thers.- Victor McLuglen Frederick Van Cleaf, jr., son of Anyone wishing lo contribute, • Pvt Homer D. Kresge, jr. and Poultry Harry A .' Whitlock, tlie appoint­ • TIlTtTspTv. "Miiri'li 12 | Fresh Killed Fowls ...35c Mr. and Mrs! Frederick Van Clcef, Pvt. Osmar Kukor m i n u . i : -k u a t i u i : ment of Charles Jackson as a "spec­ so. that this work may be. Continued 120 Main avenue, has been advanc for the boys in 'uniform, should Pyt. Russell Major “Mexican Spitfires’ Baby” ial officer without pay was ap­ I Chuck Roast ...... 27c ed to tho rank of sergeant at Cha- get in touch with. Mrs. Schultz, 52 Pvt Earl R. G. Smith • w i t h proved by. the committee.' ' . Lupe Velez ; nutc Field, 111., where he'is a mem­ Heck avenue, telephone 68G7-J. . Pvt. Edward Thoms PRIME MEATS |Smoked Tongues 3lc ber of the wenther squadron. Committeeman Ralph W. John­ Boxes have been, placed in local *; -----—V------“Two Latins From son reported on attending a meet­ Tbe next meeting of the W. S. stores for contributions, and all : Uhtil, recently one loiie Marine Manhattan” E Felin’s 2-lb Tin of ing of the New. jersey State, coun­ commanded the . entire - army at C. S Circle in charge of Mrs. food served to., the hoys m uni­ With Joiui Davis Fresh Vegetables 1 Scrapple cil on the boardwalk for discus­ Pago Pago and also acted as po­ 'Kill, mul "SAT. .IfiTri'ii lit nml” Jacob Beutoli, will be held oil form a t Y. M. C. A. is purchased sion of plans for improving busi­ with tho.money contributed. There lice chief and local judge. “Corsican* Brothers” Fresh Home-Made March 9, at 7:45 p. m., a t the home ness during the coming summer. W ith of Miss Lulu E. Wright, 85 Mt. is a need for home-baked cakes to IN ’42 IT’S UP TO YOU" Douglas Fairbanks;, Ji'. Fine Selection Sausage . Hermon Way. The transfer of the liquor license serve in. the; U. S.-O. building. A in the name of Lewis Atkinson, BIRD’S EYE | Strictly Fresh Country Dr.-.George W. Hensen, presi­ committee wiil serve at the Y. M. L. nAZATSKV Riverview Tavern, Shark River C, A. Monday,- March 23rd, 9:30 FROSTED FOODS I Eggs dent of the Ocean Grove Associa­ Islands, to Arthur James Watson w- Guarantee tion, was. a visitor here during the a. m. to 9:30 p: m, in three hour 1 Featuring— 1 was approved; shifts. Yon Will Not Have Yoot early part of the week, coming to —------v — — - Tronble If Yon Ilrin& the shore from his'home in Philu -V — Yonr BhoeB To | an OIL WAVE j V. at. I. Commandant ST. ELMO HOTEL delphiu. PRESS VIEWS THE JUST WRIGHT I \ Circle E, of St. Paul's church Major General John A, Lejcttnc. Open AH Year AND NEWS former commandant of the Marine ORTHOPAEDIC I Rayinond's Beauty Salon I W. S. C. S., under the leadership Corner Main and New York Avenues Corps, , was later the cumiiiandatU | HAIR STYLIST \ of Mrs, Violet Gillan, will meet SHOE REPAIR SHOP individual meals served by day or week Monday afternoon at the Bancioft- LABOR NOT MONEY! of the Virginia Military Institute. | 727 Bangs Avenue | ■ 203 BOND STREET ■ B. It. SHUBERT Taylor Rest Home. An anonymous .letter writer in | Asbury Park' \ American and European Tel Asbury . Park 67J the New .York Sun-utters an im­ ASBURY PARK, N. J. Dr. A. C. Brady, New Brunswick | Tel. for Appointment 8220 j district superintendent, will be the portant truth'about tlie financing of modern wars when he says: RUG CLEANING guest speaker.at the prayer meet­ ’TiiaiitiiirifPl'itiifiitiilKliltillulilliiH'llll'llliliiliiti'tur ing lit St. Paul's chm-cb oil Wed- “When the’ country begins, to Rugs ar.d Carpets Elec­ think less in terms of money au i OoiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinatiiiiiiirfM iuiiiiiimiiiaitiuiiiBi'g ncsday. evening. trically Shampooed more in .-terms of leadership,' we i.BRAKE SERVICE ' | Talk ii Over First Work done or. your own HOT Mrs.' A. 'Martin' am! .d au g h ter,j^ start toward 1 BATTERY SERVICE I Alice, summer residents, of Ocean ; lhl, w.„, >r montv !llono fioor in your home, or if you prefer, it may, be taken out HOME-MADE E CARS-INSPECTED = i (Jrove, are spending the .winter. >q | WQn wm. Ger|lmllVi IlaIy- riml to my shop. ;■ STORAGE TIRES | Daytona Beach. Fla. Mrs. ;a n d jjup..p; wh(. ,v - llilnl.„..p-u lol . With Yom Bank TWENTY-FOUR HOUR Miss Mart,., expect, however, to ^ e 0 ,,I;1 1)()t imv, stiirt(!() Ult, age, eoiild hot SERVICE BREAD i NEPTUNE Ii splmd next sveek m St. Petersburg, present .one,’’ Investment information and .Florida, on Rugs removed from the DAILY- 3 P. M. | AUTO REPAIRS tj Next to military leadership in house Advice is But One of Mrs. Frank G, Mount, president the field of battle what counts in 1 Auto Repairing l| «f the Ocean Grove Woman’s Plain Weave Rugs Completely this war is production at homo, Reitz Model Bakery 1 RAY ELLIS Our Many Services club, and Miss Edna Carpenter, MOTH-PROOFED j The real reservoir of any nation 47 Pilgrim Pathway | Stockfon and So. Alain St. ? j Mrs. Charlotte Erhaclier, MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION ;” 5'ji... llie manpower of .its people, Brierley’s Rug Cleaning OCEAN GROVE | • Ocean Grove. Tei. 7.727 s James Pettitc and Mr hied ... jjoney js mereiy „ system'of hook- Service 9,i»ii»i'iii»ii»«iiiiai‘ii'i,iiii«iiiiiiii«"i"aM».i*iiin«ii* - Schultz, members of the club, rye,'-e keCping by which work done is ac- 69 Main Ave., Ocean Grove The First Nation?.’ Ear.k of Bradley Beach hostcsscs nt the Asbury Park! counted for hy a token which pass­ Phone A. P. 4741 and 4427 ^(UIillll|ll||l||lll1l|l|l!|ltllJ|liatllllllllli|jl||i|t1f illlllllll’aa Brad t-1 Beach, N. J. . - U. S.,0. Home “snack bar.’! es .from one hand to another in ex­ WILBUR R. GUYER ; William O. Denham, 130 Broad­ change for some desired object. iiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiniiiniiniiitiiMmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiii'i I Ca ll I Successor to S way. a member of the Ocean Gyovo It is. misleading to think of a 5 WILLIAM YOUNG j police department, who is now a government us paying money for patient at the Belfnar hospital, is I RADIO GAB I what it uses. It pays money with i Asbury Park e j PLUMBING AND j improving steadily and hopes to one hand and takes it away, with CONVENIENCE be able to return to his home at an the other. In the long run'it mlist I HEATING j early date. take away more than it pays be­ CHECKING ACCOUNT Harry Byrnes, 75 Abbott ave cause even the officials who do tlie ! Estimntcs Given • s Slate. Tile. Asbestos, Sian | , 1 2 6 ; I s nuo, was .tiie recipient, of many j taking have to- be supported, • 61 Main Avenue, Ocean GroveJ No Minimum Balance Required. tfood-will wishes from his many This tax' business is merely a | . and Built-up Roofing 1 i Day and Night Service I | Sheet Metal Work S • Telephone 428 f friends around Ocean Grove, on , nmtter of governnient bookkeeping | Also Stand At Police Booth, ? No Monthly Service Charge. Monday when he marked his 89th jn which all persons who receive § Warm Air Heating | I North End I I •; birthday. Byrnes, a former resi­ 1 Ventilating | ?iiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii>iiiiiaiiiiiiiiinaiiiiiiiiiiiir' tiaMiMaaMMaaaaaaaaaMaaaaaMaa No Charge for Deposits. wages keep the books for tlie gov­ ^iiiiiiaiiKiiiiiniiiiiiiiifiiaiii lafiiiiaiiaiiiiiaiiaiiaiiiiiaiiaiiaiiatiai'aiiiiitMaiiauiiifiiiMaiiaiiaiiiuaiiaiifiiaiiaiiaiiaiiaiiiiiai'j dent of Philadelphia, has lived in ernment by accounting for wiint I Estimates Freely Given I You. Pay Only for the Checks You Write.- Ocean Grove since 1894. they have received and handing Mr and Mrs. Louis Laurtinzcn, part of it over to the tax collector. f J.N.BEARMORE ! A Book of Ten Checks for One Dollar. of Lewis, Cali, visited with their | Only A Few Copies Actually tlio. government is con­ I CO. j Each deposit account at this bank is insured up aunt, Mrs. V. Fields, 114 Mt. Tabor scripting r.he labor of its people. & Way. Also • visiting Mrs. Fields, Whatever money; there is will | 919 Third avenue, Asborv | I Remaining!! to $5,000 by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corpora­ •were Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Bulner, eventually be perfectly useless un­ | Park | tion. of Paterson, and Mrs. J. Armitt, less the people give that labor | Tel. 1858 | of Easton,-Pa. fully and freely.—Bridgeport Conn. WE SOLICIT YOUR PATRONAGE Joseph Wister, former sexton of Telegram. . St. Paul’s church, and now a mem­ I HISTORY ber of the family of the Odd Fel­ WHERE IT HITS HARDEST. Asbury Park and Ocean Grove Bank lows Home, Middletown, Pa., is 1 Increases now planned in income I " OF ’ ' : Corlies Avenue Main Avenue Main Street celebrating his 92nd birthday on taxation will hit tho middle brack­ NEPTUNE OCEAN GROVE ASBURY PARK March 12, at which time his friends ets hardest. The top brackets are Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation here are planning to give him a taxed to tlie hilt already, and the card shower. low brackets are poor revenue It has been announced that Har­ producers. The expectation is thnt old Williams, son of Mr. and Mrs. workers earning five to fifteen Funerel Home ofMatthews, Francioni and Taylor Watkin Williams, 75 Hock avonuo, thousand a year may have to pay SEVENTIETH ANNIVERSARY EDITION has passed his New York State cer­ lip to four times as much in direct 38-52X5- tified public accountant examina­ taxation next year as they will S u ffe r D is tr e s s Looking Forward to the Diamond Jubilee In 1944 tion, Mr. Williams is connected pay this year.—Winston-Salem, Lik A t T h is T im e— with the firm of Haskins and Sells, N. C. Republican. If this period in a woman’s life New York. makes you cranky, nervous, blue at times, suffer weakness, dizziness, 112 P A G E S After an illness of three months, hot flashes, distress of “irregulari­ when his life for a time was des­ .GOING TO VISIT- ties” — Try Lydia Pinkham’s Vegetable Many Full-Page Illustrations paired of, Albert E, Robinson FRIENDS in BELMAR? ompound — made especially for visited hiB winter cottage, hero at women—famous lor helping relievo distress due to this functional dis­ 64 Heck avenue on Monday, ac­ turbance. . $1.00 a Copy $1.10 by Mail companied by his son and daugh­ GO by B U S Taken regularly— Lydia Pink­ ter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs, Irving ham’s Compound helps build up re­ S a v e r .’ir ami rubber, time, sistance against such, annoy tag Robinson, of Orange, Ho was taken effort mul mopey.: Spare your symptoms which may betray your suddenly ill in the early part of car the wear nml tear of costly- age faster than anything. Also very abort tftps. -' effective for younger women to re­ December with appendicitis and lieve month Iy cramps ... underwent an operation at the Thousands of women report re­ 64 Main Avenue, Ocean Grove 7 Cringe Memorial hospital. Ho has COAST CITIES markable benefitsi:Dot a bottle of- Lydia Pinkham'3 Compound today Yetirgd from: active wqrk as a car-' CO ACHES, INC. fronr. your druggist. B'bllov.' label On Sale Here Or At Local Newsstands \ Exclusive But inexpensive directions. WORTH TRYINCH ■ luiitiHiiiitiniiJni latiiuuii! 704 Seventh Avenue, Asbury Park, N. J...... ' C l? -M. F i i . PAGE SIX FRIDAY, MARCH 6, 1942

WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS ' By Edward C. Wayne Good Neighbors

Java Defense-Gains •i>iii!Hiii i mercial and social activity. Communities grow and | ( E D IT O R 'S NOTE— uphihms arc expressed in Ihcsc columns, they arc those «f tlio. new - .;isialy-i unil not ucressurily «>f this .newspaper.) | prosper through combined efforts, Cooperation and | ______i U c lt -.'C :! b y W estern Ncwsjianer Cnioiv' ; : ______5: team - work make • .for results. . * Trade at home. ': | WARDELL’S DAIRY SWUM:* jBB-B;.*:- ruai:atiai.aiikiiantitaiiai»..... as best they.might. They.landed on chained lo .the few. Russian roads, 4 force.- , row experience near Freehold re­ or both. a rocky coast where half their num­ ..The, guerrillas were ambushing ber were battered nnd browned with­ WASHINGTON: ;Germans, destroying not .only, trucks- cently when, while driving toward War May Upset Cluss Trip out a chance. Approximately. 175 • but tanks as well, and. slaughtering Freehold, east of Jerseyville, his The annual trip of the Senior #2\THAiNK YOU' 1 men were rescued from the. two Cleaning V]) sue); of them as fell into their hands. car struck a tree ah.I lie w a s in­ Class of Hoffman high school will wrecked ships, ; ... • ■ ■ The national;capital, which was un- j One leader of such’a band.told a jured about the head. Turning to be affected by tlio tvar, it was re­ CALL. AGAIN | der fire ever since The Douglas^Cha- newsmaii that he.and his fellows had go back to Asbury I’ark, lie be­ vealed, when the Board of Educn. BURMA: ncy boondoggling figlil started with | blown up two large German trucks 1 '!:N N ] i 0 y A a ANDY DIRECTORY FOR OUR READERS f the OCD..:■ as a cgnlral . point, had i came dazed alter driving a half tion at South Amboy met. 9 ■ * = All-fntliu Command • and .that, three members -of the mile and pulled, to the side oi the I f tile seniors go to Washington B S started thcLjob of self-cleaning with j: trucks’ erdws had been.shot to;dcalh "i ii ail »• f(tin tittutuiultm ttitllinliltitiu*!. I n l hI n Ii if ii « n $ n »i > i n »' i * i11 • » » n n, i n t n> 11:111« n 111 g i, m > i/ *n i „,,»t,, t „ tll t, ^ The closing of Rangoon, though'' President ,R oo so ve Lt *1 a king a leaf, road and fell asleep! they,will be unable to visit three rnucti belter defended and bitterly 1 by/lhcir own superior officer for per­ out of‘his own notebook" and finding . mitting the trucks .to be destroyed. Awakening about 7:30 in the points '.customarily included in tin: BUSINESS DIRECTORY contested than had been. Singapore, that 1(5 . agencies were engaged .in morning, passersby noticed that lie had given the Japanese a long stride housing activities'alone. . l The Russian'guerrillas had ranged : toward the demobilization', of , the . in;, age from 10 to 33; '• was injured and the Hoivell state Burma road. •' .. 7 /The senate and house had.not been :; police were summoned. They tool; 'idle in the. selfcleaning..matter, ei­ Though the Chinese wore believed LABOR: him to the blliee of Dr. II, 13. Mason A. J. OBRECHT Tel. 4I63-J Estimates Given already to have developed 'another ther, for, they had repealed the pen*- sion. bill'., which already -had. been and .after being given first aid line of communication, partially if. Not So Quid D. W. CLAYTON 1 signed-by the' President.' treatment, lie was taken in the NEWSPAPERS net completely ruining this objec­ Labor troubles,, which had beeh Potter & Soil ambulance to Fitkin F irst a a s s Work Only . Tlie"President had not signed it as almost' nonexistent after Pearl Har­ Painter -Decorator tive for the Japs, , it was;proof of hospital, Neptune, for shock, loss ed areas. 5 3 Main Avenue. Tel. 5 2 8 3 the fact that something-drastic would such, but it had ..been a. rider on- bor had hurled; the nation into! war,: Paper Hanger another bill,- and-thus had become of blood, and bend injuries. have to be done about .the'reinforce­ began cropping up somewhat over: Ocean Grove’s Original Carrier 1 2 Yt Heck Ave,. Ocean Grove ment of the British defense of In­ effective. (he nation, though the federal go.v^ Maiine had been employed at a dia, or more territory would 'fall . But the national outcry had been ernmcnt was not delaying to have Bordentown diner. He hud visit­ into the Nipponese.hands. ■ • terrific, and the congressional. rc- them settlpd as rapidly and force­ ed Trenton and Newark, endeavor­ Phone: Asbury Park 4279-M The Chinese were -.'holding the peal had followed with but few.con­ fully. as possible. EDMUND L. THOMPSON ing to enlist in the armed services. THOMPSON & GILLAN northern sector, , but the British, hav­ gressmen of either house willing to Congress, too, was having its ta­ He was denied enlistment because Exterior and Interior ing been driven back from the Bilin put themselves on the spot as vot­ bor difficulties. A proposed-wartime Painting ‘ Painting and Decorating river fortifications, had to fall back ings pensions for themselves—after he was born in Germany. He ex­ found inadvisable or impossible for suspension of the 40-hour week Estimates Famished Paperhanging on Rangoon, and the work of.de­ the outcry. ' . caused’heated debate with charges plained that lie had always been the seniors to visit Wnshingti stroying all military goods m the, under, the Impression that he was is customary. 98 Cookman Ave., OeeaK drove EASY PAYMENTS Representative Reed of Nev.; York of “labor despotism” being hurled Phone Ashnry Park 4038.K ARRANGED city which.could not be.moved was. was perhaps most frank, for while by Representative Cox of. Georgia. an American citizen. Plan for Traffic Lights I)ox 73 Ocon.il O i - o t o , K, j . the signal for the closing of the port; most c o n g re ss­ Later, in answer, Sidney Hillman, Operator Captured by Japs It was a tough 4B hours for the-' men had said ^ labor , chief of the war production American military mission-, there, they had 'voted jgf board, said enactment of the pro­ Willard D. Hammond, jr., well for it was their duty to see that the for the ’ previous yc posal would “result in confusion and known operator of the fishing boat A. L. BROWN NEPTUNE LAUNDRY the commission meeting by Mayor final shipments of thousands of .tons measure without.-? demoralization . . . " “Shangri-La" out of Brielle yacht T in a m ith CASH AND CARRY of AmericanVlease-lend goods start­ co n sid erin g it Notable among the difficulties basin, was one of. the civilian em­ Leon T. Abbott. Slate and Shingle ALL SERVICES ed on its rail journey.up the Burma much, if at all, had been, one in St. Louis, where ployees at. Wake Island captured Roofing of All Kinds 20% Discount road to the Chinese before the Japs said: "I was not' power company employees had Stoves and Furnace* got in. ' by the Japanese, it was learned Telephone 8142 Nept. Highway & Corlies Ave. called away by. a ; .threatened a strike which would last week by bis aunt, Mrs. Wes­ Neptune, N. J. Some of this, it had'-been reported, telephone call, I have crippled a whole defense , in­ 108 Abbott Ave., Ocean Grove . faced destruction, and among what 'was not out cat-: dustrial area. ley Salter. . could not be moved were hundreds Hammond went to Midway Is­ . ;ing a sandwich— . An add strike occurred at San of Amcricnrwnadc trucks ’which had I was;not talking . Pedro, where the Bethlehem Steel land in 1940 and was later trans­ H O T E L S not been assembled after shipping; with a const-ilucht ferred to a construction project on Hep. Reed ; company, was building .SOI,000.000 DRESSES MADE TO ORDER ROOMING HOUSES The British had made their, last at the • time — 1 Wake Island just prior to its eap- Beautiful Innereprlng Mattresses worth of destroyers for tlie navy! . DESIGNINGEvening Gowns, - ALTERATIONSSuits, Coats, Street guuranteod all now matorlul, vnlne • stand at the Silvang river, and there, wos in favor of the. bill." jturc by the Japanese. He had in good positions, they covered the . The men did1 not walk out, but Dresses, lteusonnble. $20 for 28.05 Cash. He was not, however, recorded as planned to return home early in “No Job too Big or too Small” Mattrossea Renovated...... $2.05 final - removal ..of Icase-lcnd goods, voting against repeal. they worked' eight hours and then MRS. 8EIDEMAN Simmons Boautyrost Bedding nnd destruction of British matcrm’; quit, going back to work again, at December hut had postponed his 820 Cookman Avo^ Asbury Park 51 OLIN STREET The OCD stjll was iiu» center.of the usual lime, refuging to work - a regular stop arid go signal. Second Floor—Phone A. P. 1171 OOEAN GROVE Tel, 8712 aft :::k. 'Senator Byrd of 'Virginfa: 10 departure until April. hour shifts as they said life'com­ Willard D. Hammond, sr., is an i, Gk: : said’that his investigation of pany demanded. . MISCELLANY: ju.j.' . 'ng over $2,500 in the OCD (iHieinl of the company holding a .incmrV-.^ . \ictur.s, baseball players, . There. also, had been dispatches construction contract at Wake. HISTORY OF OCEAN GROV13 David H. O’Reilly Washington: BWP3 said that tc::- fbntba,! -.citdchbs; track men, • tennis from llte West coast that numbers Illustrated of employees had'refused to work Young Hammond has a twin XI.UCTJtlCAJ, CONTlt/lCTOR tile mi 1 Is whIeh d:>’'isot .prodace., pi :. newspaper and magazine brother residing in Maplewood, 112 Pages—$1.00 on Washington’s birthday, though By Mall 21.10 Or.lors Altonilcd to Promptly goods for the am , .t services; v/.u ; social- workers, army, and No More Fin Ball Games .. not be able la dbtn.n machinery by -...*-. • olTiccrs, doctors, -engineers, specifically. requested, to. The day. Hsllmntes Furnlslioil came on Sunday, but many factories In coinpliaiice with the sweeping ! Ocean Grove Times the middlc.of 1942, . -*\. . nuGiCs,- .ex-public -ofiicials', lawyers’ 1 04 Mu In A veil no 121) A libott Avenne, Occult Grove and ofhers im every walk of life.” reported,. large numbers of their; decision of; the New Jersey su- Cleveland: A labor-managoment; workers stayed home on Monday. 1 Ocenn Grove, N. J. Phono 4713 dispute, according to reports; was Many, had quit after Mrs. Roose­ piemocourti which upholds the crippling, the output of a' concern velt's: resignation, but it was evi­ The unions had demanded double ordinance of the Township of Tea- wholly engaged in making airplane dent that the rest-' of them were pay for the -holiday and employers: neck, N. J., outlawing the posses­ otighfare. and bomb parts. under fire, with the senate: on the had refused this demand. Hence the ion and use of pin ball or baga- big holiday lay off. Washington: Skyrocketing. mili­ firing line. - - : . '.*.. ‘telle machinos, the prosecutor’s tary demands for wool, caused -by BATAAN: MISSIES: office, through Chief - County In­ the imminent job of clothing sev­ vestigator George H. Roberts, noti­ eral million more soldiers were said Bomber Campaign D'aging In fied every chief of police in this to be calling for sweeping reduc­ Perhaps a rather grisly humor ful and appreciating hqart. tions in the amount of wool avail­ had been shown in the dispatch from Reports from Australia that the county to confiscate the machines able for civilian clothing. Bataan that the men of General Aussies were digging in from one end a t oncc. DOWTMRK Baltimore: The OPA said it would MacArthur’s command were plan­ o f.tho "eastern coast to the other Supreme Court- Justice Perskic. seemed to make it dubious that any soon fix rent ceilings in this defense ning to take up a collection from who presides over this county, ....d o n 't txiaghi t?et p!eaiaot, s-o-o-t.h-I-ici-8 extensive aid for Java would be sent To relieve \ Klief from a cmishdaetooccidwlthfnaious / . area, probably heralding similar ac­ their own pay to have a bomber sent wrote the opinion'and it was stat­ tion throughout large sections of the them. ’ by Australia. Misery of COLDS . Smith Brothers Cough Drops. Ybu get that re- 5^. ■ However, according to correspond ed; “We have no hesitancy in; L iq u id ® lief for oaly a nickd a bc.y- Why pay more? ’’VWB' country, It would have been, a “one-day Aj*J Both kinds taste delicious: Black or Menthol. Asst; Buenos Aires: Argentina, in ,a story” jf the newsmen had not taken cnts,'the spirits of the Australians factually and legally stamping the T a b l e ts significant action, has informed Italy it up at President Roosevelt's con­ as they faced increasing evidence pin iinll game as a game of chance. S a lv e that they have a defense job of their 6 6 6 Nose Drops BROS. COUGfi DROPS that she no longer can represent ference. The President said: The pin ball machines involved are Cough Drop* her in the Western hemisphere. “If anybody will tell me how. I'll own tc, consider, were uniformly nothing mofe than ingeniously de­ good. .• . ’ Try “Rub-My-TIsm”— . see that they are sent.” . . signed and purposely. constructed A wonderful Liniment BLACK OR M EN T H O L- FRIDAY, MARCH. 6, M 42 PAGE SEV EN

upon children whether they wished | “YOUR SCHOOL* it or not. They could not turn bn U TTLE MAty/ AVXUP av ie-M»Bgi*iW,egrtePP S I a. tap and obtain water; they had By | Dr. CarJeton M. Saunders = to carry it from a distant* well hr ALL. S E T 3 Principal, Ocean Grove School i spring. Heat was not supplied by. P O B THE '.iiaiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiitiiitiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiitiTv means qf tin oil, gas, o" coal fur­ GANCE. ONE DILEMMA OF PROGRESS- nace;''wood had to be’ cut and MARV',2 IVE EDUCATION gathered. Countless other jobs an.i (Ed. Note: This article, chores such as milking tho cows, which will appear in two parts, feeding the stock, cleaning the was written in lUii!) by Dr. stables or cow barn, gathering the Saunders, and, in ft . measure, crops, preparing the g ro un d fo r By EUGENE CUNNINGHAM prophesies the need for self- sowing, and keeping the house ip © EUGENE CUNNINGHAM W.N.U. fe.Et.EASE , discipline on the. part of stu­ order al! gave opportunities for self-discipline. Fortunately some CHAPTER I dents. The article has been unpublished . until this time. of these back-breaking jobs have been eliminated in our material The 20 Bar herd was strung out - Part one follows:) ./ Y ou ’R e ’iie rir- dance over a half-mile ot tho.flat. Behind Many aspects of progressive prosperity and progress, hut it is ' Trie CfflSTS. i w e W O N ’ T BE the lead cattle tho straggling col­ also a blessing that all have not F IP T / C E N T S- LET' education are praiseworthy. It has BUY FIFTY CENTS \ m a v im s - - dances umn moved forward toward that dis­ humanized teaching. Teachers are disappeared. . It is also fortunate 77 IP. WE DON'T tant plume of gray smoke that that about fifty per cent of our . WORTH o f DBPENSrr =. v WHIP OUR > beginning to realize that children st a m ps ,.... ^jV-ENeMiES. m marked a train on the new railroad. population is still rural. But pro­ Con Cameron was one of tho eight are human beings and that . even owing riders divided between tlie j>edagogues are worthy of respect gressive education .first took root two sides of the herd. He was small, as individuals with separate and in our urban centers and, while it muscular, quick-moving, with alert distinct personalities. Consequent­ is slowly spreading to our rural gray eyes in a smooth', square* face. ly, there has been much said, and populations, it is here that~self- He looked younger than his twenty written, during the past few yearn disciplinc is most needed. Wit­ years, in spite of smali, reddish of . democracy'; in educational ad- ness the crime statistics of urban mustache and shaggy hair and the communities as compared to those heavy tan of a month’s hard trail­ ministration. Teachers are being ing. Like the other riders, he was liberated. Must fuzzy thinking ex­ of rural areas. Associated with IM ' ATCJBB aVMblC ATg1 very shabby. His dusty old Stetson ist in this area of education but, the growth of urban centers of and too-big boots and . patched flan­ like the democratic process itself, population came the .breakdown in nel shirt and once-green . trousers answers are slowly being evolved. family life and of the churches. gave him a trampisb look. He Progressive education in its Both . of these factors intensified I L L T U N E ZW f-THATS THE MOST looked down at himself and grinned stages, with its emphasis on hu­ the problem of providing situa­ OUT THE IMPORTANT THING one-sidedly. ’ :'.*•*' tions in which self-discipline was ALKA- ¥0011 HEAR TONIGHT ‘ Nothing that can’t be cured in manizing education, placed a pro.-, taught to youngsters. The decline Wild Horse," he thought. “If the mium upon self-expression. Chil­ SELTZER a ; of the apprenticeship system with ANNOUNCEMENTS; regulars draw fifty a month, I ought dren were to do as they liked, — I f CfC-. to get half that, or about thirty dol­ regardless of what they liked.. If its negation. of genuine Work for lars. For Buzz Upporman is a a child thought it part of his edu­ many of the younger, generation mighty square boss. Pancho, here, cation to throw an ink bottle across likewise complicated the problem. doubtless goes with the other horses, What are some solutions for this and I haven't got enough to cover the room at the wall to see the ink splatter and; trickle down he was dilemma in which progressive edu­ the hull and bridle. But I’ll- make cation iri our cities finds itself? out! One thing sure: I was lucky merely, expressing himself and tlmt when I headed for Texas.” was part of his experimental learn­ (Soate solutions will be dis-, A big bay steer edged out of the ing; This is perhaps ftn extreme cussed in the second . part of column and began to work wolfishly example of. progressive education this article, appearing next to the side, behind Con. t As il he ■.in its earliest days but it shows to week.) . had eyes in his stubby tail, Pancho j what dire lengths self-expression spun about and jumped into a lope. Con gave easily to the sudden move­ ! can go when unrestrained. Educa - IN ’12 IT’S UP TO YOU ment and let. Pancho head the steer. Con sat Panclio the sorrel beside Caratnba’s bay. : tors who. believed that this was the Tm Tho wise sorrel nipped file bay true education soon revised their THIS WEEK IN HISTORY M ILLIONS suffer less from Headache, Acid Indigestion, Distress rump and grunted reprovingly, then , got and politeness out of him while Asa. I could drive in or not drive philosophy, hut most retained the of Colds "M orning After” and Muscular^ Fatigue because they in. And I’m well-knowed' 'among • have heard—and believed—Alka-Seltzer radio announcements. took Up his jog. again. Carambn they’re - ripping ,the hide off him. : idea that children should express' To these millions, the relief obtained by the use of Alka-Seltzer cowmen. If something was to hap­ March (i—Massacre of Alamo, Vear lifted his voice in a Comanche You bring up a herd of longhorns themselves, under prbpcr guidance., is worth for. more than the genuine enjoyment they get from the war whoop—not lor any special rea­ and if you don’t know the ropes, pen to me, therc’d be'trouble-with 1830; . b ro a d c a s ts. , .' and that self was still very, very; The most important purts,o£ our ratho program, both to you ana son, Con knew, but only because* you’ll get skinned when you sell to ;somc salty customers, plenty of ’em, ' March* 7—Byrd . Antartic group Lowe is ’a'stranger. Brock stands important. It is with the idea that to us, are the commercial announcements. Once you have tried the spirit had moved him. one of the buyers in the ring. I f .. . .reached New Zealand. Alka-Seltzer we believe you will'agree with us. you don’t like the price and decide in with the. crowd, that runs -'Wild many modern schools arc having But try Alka-Seltzer'because it is an unusually effective medi­ From the “point" Car ahead, Buzz '*.; , 17)30. Upporman loped his bald-faced you’ll ’ship „somcwhcrcs ’ else for a Horse, He’ll try some shenanigan; ’ (iilliculty. Even John Dewey in his cine not because you enjoy the radio programs. horse toward the "drag" of the herd. fair offer, something’ll likely happen keep Lowe from getting away." hook,; "Experience and Education": March 8 --Stam p Act passed. by WHY ALKA-SELTZER IS SO EFFECTIVE When he came to Con,, he turned to you, and your longhorns they’ll Lowe had Treed himself, of the per­ has confided that the now .educa­ English House ' uf The pain-relieving analgesic in Alka-Seltzer is in complete solu­ end up in that buyer’s iron that you tion, ready to .ease the distress as soon as you swallow it. The about to ride with him. He was sistent buybr, looking nil around the tion in a number , of instances has Lords. painrolicving action is made more effective by alkaline buffers. wouldn’t deal with.” • room with his faint, pleasant smile,, inches above six feet, a narrow failed- to interpret this phase of hi v March ii—Supreme Court uphold The alkalizing elements in Alka-Seltzer reduce excess stomach shouldered old man with the arched Near the corrals a fat, red*faced, Now he went oul, anti Brock, anger r!,v *; * acidity. •' ■ v nose and small dark, eyes of an In- and noisy man came to meet the 20 very plain in the set of.his; la t.back, philosophy: as he .conceived’ it. conviction of* Eugene Get Alka-Seltzer the next’ time you diatr. As a veteran trail boss he Bars. With’’him was n short, very looked after hlrn. Then, he whirled Many children arc growing up be­ V. Dobbs, 191!). pass a drug store. • had few equals in either experience wide man, who had huge hands and and wont waddling toward tlie gam* ’ lieving tlmt they can create their L a r g e p a c k ag o 60# March 10—Monitor defeated Mer. Small packago 30# or ability. the bulging gray eyes of. a short- bling side of the Drovers’,- where' own laws of behavior without rimae in first battle of ' “Well, it's Wild Horse tomorrow, tempered person. Con observed the Try a glass of Alka-Seltzer at your men were crowding about the- reference 'to th e . rules* already laid ironclad*ships; I8 G2 . ^Drug Store Soda Fountain. son," he greeted Con. "See that expensive gray Stetson, the tine, games. .. Ho disappeared .hut enrpe down by society in the past. broadcloth suit,- the gleaming kid quickly in sight beside Dynamite March 11--Start of famous bliz­ engine smoke? Hard to believe it’s What we need in .education today, more’ri fifteen mile off, hub?’ boots, of this man and wondered if Downes.* The stocky, dandified mar- • zard of 1888. is not less emphasis on proper self- “X was just watching it. And that’s he were'the buyer Buzz: Upperman • shal ol W ild Horse listened to March 32-7-End of "usso.Finnish had dealt with. Then, as if settling Brock’s rapid talk with a blank face, expression but much, much more . Trail’s End . . .” war,; 1940. “Well," Buzz Upperman drawled some argument with the fat man. the. as they Went down the room toward emphasis on self-discipline. Pro­ reflectively, "I been * trailing cattle dandy said snarlingly: a door in a plank partition wall. . gressive educators are hot alto­ MSI XMtUtMkSI W«ibii ■„«ii $ in ,| 1111, ;< one place and another, it's a good "I’m Big He of Wild Horse! They Upperman said his brief goodbyes gether to blame- for this lack of many year. now. But this sashay better not forget it." to the ex-20. Bar men and banged self-discipline which many of our has boon crowdeder than ary three "Dynamite Downes," Caramba Con on the shoulder with ■ a hard ' young egotists lack. Much of it or four drives I ever made, all pu! whispered to him. hand. When he had gone, Caramba lies in the fact that children of to^; together. Well, you're some differ­ Buzz Upperman was promptly as led- the way to the faro layout. ent from the tramp kid that hit our good as his promise, when the herd Baldy .was already there, besides day are not impelled to impose camp, that night' with old Zelotus had been turned over to his buyer; townsmen and cowboys from other • discipline upon themselves.. When Imel’s freight outfit. You filled out He took Con and Caramba in charge herds. He pushed silver onto the. our country was predominantly plenty on 20 Bar beef and beans and discouraged the latter’s moves painted queen'of the layout and the rural, conditions moulded charac­ and lots o! hard work. And you toward tlie inviting doors, of Wild dealer, blank-faced as the grizzled ters, arid discipline was forced made a hand, son. I’m free to teil lookout above him, glanced at the Horse saloons. When a barber shop _ V _ ------you that. Nothing wrong with your had done all possible for them in the layout, and dealt. When Baldy won, i riding and roping and shooting—and way of baths and haircuts and he threw back his head for a yell. plenty that’s all right with ail ot shaves, he led the way to a general Then, meeting the sour stare of the ‘ami Funny . . you picking tip store. lookout, he swallowed and drew in . things like th at,. around Chicago A black Stetson, blue flannel his winnings. THE CALL TO THE COLORS stockyards." shirts, waist overalls, heavy woolen "If a. man was to win quiet, 'Well, it’s as 1 told you: Uncle trousers, boots, a blanket coat, a would that be all right?" Caramba IS A CALL FOR DOLLARS! Hugh worked around the yards. new slicker, the old man chose" for inquired in a meek voice, of the He’d lived in Texas a tong tim e- Con and paid for. Caramba out­ lookout. "I want to know because 1 all his life, maybe—until Aunt Hetty fitted himself at the same time and A d v e r t i s e aim to come down on that lovely made him come back to .what she admired the figure he made. . rack of chips there .like a pan of called civilization. I think I was "Now, we'll have a couple drinks," milk off a top shelf." born In Texas, but they never actu­ Upperman told them. ‘T got busi­ "Come after us! Come a-run* ally fold me so, or told me much ot ness at Vacaton and I’m riding the ning!" the lookout invited him. anything.' Neither was a talker. And train tonight. I hope you boys get Caramba began to.play. He won, they were both killed in an excur­ out of town with something in your, lost,, won again. Baldy. had little sion,train accident lost year.” pockets and nothing through your better luck. Con watched until he ' Dig deep. Strike h a rd .' Our "When we hit Wild Horse, you'll hides." . understood something of .the system j be free to start out and whittle olt boys need the planes, ships, and In. the great barroom of the Drov­ by which bets were made on the guns which your money wili help Why not get these extra sales? your chunk of living. You keep that ers’ Saloon were cowboys from fpur deal. He risked five dollars pres­ saddle and horse and all the rest of or five herds besides the Bar, ently and won, lost his winning, on to buy. his stuff. Then, I'm going to buy 20 freighters and merchants and buyers another turn, won three times. Then Go to your bank, post office, or .you a new rigout from John B. to and other men of less apparent oc- he missed Caramba. ‘ Future customers, who perhaps box-toes. You draw fifty dollars for •;cupations.; . T ■ y*y.*‘.V v . v ;'■ V,r ■; "Him?” Baldy said. "Oh—he savings and loan association. your work—and you earned it!" The red, loud buyer whom Con Tell them you want to buy De­ “Why—that's a lot more ’than went off towards the front door with 1 had seen taking the 20 Bars came a fellow. Don’t bother. He’ll be fense Bonds regularly, starting do not know you are nowin bus­ expected! To say nothing of the in and stopped to talk with Upper­ horse and saddle—I certainly .do back." . ; . now. man, who called him Asa Brock. But when twenty minutes had thank you! I—" . The two discussed future herds, but gone without sign of Caramba, Con ‘‘Ne’ mind! Ne’ mindi No reason all the time Brock’s restless little lost interest in the game. He was iness, can be reached through a-tall why a boy with your educa­ green eyes were wandering as if he tion and your natural bent can’t own more than forty dollars ahead. hunted somebody. And when a tall, "I’m going to hunt up that bron­ Bodine Tuneral Borne his own outfit quick I” dark young man came into the Drov­ the columns of this paper. That night, when the herd was co," he told Baldy. "Caramba. Established 1900 ers’, he cut short his discussion of "Oh! Going to quit on us, huh?" bedded down on the flat, Con lis­ conditions. 1007 Bangs A re., Asburjr Park tened at the fire. The veterans off­ the lookout said unpleasantly. "Take "Hurry back, Upperman," he said Jos©t>b B. Ely, M gr. T gL guard were talking of the spree they some of our money and right away with a quick, mechanical grin. you want to pull out winner." Our servlcris available to all re- Intended to have with the trip’s gnrdless of financial circum stances. Con had been looking at the tall Baldy looked uneasily from Con to wages. man. He noticed his neatness and “Well, you bright young fellows the lookout. Con, facing tho griz­ want to watch out for Dynamite the smooth, deliberate way he had zled man, drew a long, slow breath. Downes," Buzz Upperman warned of rfioving. He watched Brock wad­ "Yes, I’m quitting," he told the dle up to him, slap him on the shoul­ lookout flatly, meeting the narrow, them grimly. “If you think just be­ der and.wave toward the bar. The cause Milam Fant ain’t marshal dark eyes levelly. "For now, any­ young man smiled very slightly and way. I know it the custom for now, that you can waltz la and teat shook his head. ’8 f Howard L. Smith j up Wild Horse by the roots, well, you cowboys to quit you losers, b u t 1b it got another think coming." "Young fellow name’ Nevil Lowe, a downright rule?" ‘ from the Territory," U p p e r m a n said. A big, bearish cowman who had | PLUMBING J >‘WeU, I ain’t going to have ii bit "His first time here. Drove up. a ot; trouble,” Caramba prophesied. been losing heavily threw back his UT herd of awful good steers. But, head and laughed roaringly. The herd was early on the move mostly, he. has got horses, some of | Tinning and Heatings The Ocean Grove Times next morning. Where the flat lifted the finest I laid eyds on in a Jong, "Don't ruin your own game. It's slightly. Con sat-Pancho the sorrel long time. Brock wants the whole the likes of us, not the hoemen, that and The Shore I imes beside Caramba’s bay, to look layout, but this Lowe knows prices. you live off of. But that's because | HARDWARE j across and slightly down at the 6hlp- He told Brock flat that he ain't driv­ we’re easy-going. Not because we plng pAlnt. ing for the benefit of sharpshooting have to be crowded. In fact, when | Paints and Oils f "1 suppose they just started with buyers.* He gets a decent price or we’re crowded too far, we ain’t Sixty-Four Main Avenue the. corrhls,” he said thoughtfully, he drives on." . • . ’ • easy-going . . . Says Keith Yoker— “ then built tho town westward, us- 1 who’s got most of his growth—and . "He looks like a man who can 151 Main Avenue f trig the railroad tpr Main Street." take care of himself," Con said ap­ all his teeth . , “Just about,” Caramba agreed. "Rafter-Y Yoker,". Baldy whis­ Telephone ? Ocean Grove, N. j. provingly. "Reckon Brock will pay | OCEAN GROVE, N. J. | “She’s long antf skinny as a copper- h fair price, as he paid you what you pered. "Richer’n Croesps. Hell on head, snake. Just about twice as asked?" . stripedy wheels in any kind of fight, deadly as a copperhead) All they "Cases ain’t the same. I wa? .and Kobby knows it!". Phone 4741 | ask from a pore cowboy Is all he’s holding the downhill drag on Slick ' - (TO BE CONTINUED) aaMuifl»n»ii>nfafntmiti»MMiirT#ntiMnirfWHn»mnMt»i»ttiti»aaj»rnmiiMfgai FRIDAY, MARCH 6, 1942 PAGE EIGHT Mrs . Lillian Morton, is recover­ one riaying F. B. I. Conducts NEPTUNE NEWS NOTES ing from recent illness at her home Mrs. Chas. Weaver 1424 Sevdhth avenue, tb e Poet’s Corner Mrs, Elwood Watson is recover­ Part In Defense Raids In County 3ing from several weeks’ illness, Named Class Leader Mrs. D en a Grant, Fourth avenue, There Will Be Stars at her home, 1229 Eleventh avenue. Unprecedented Demand f» is a medical patient in Monmouth Sergeant George A. Johnson has There will be moon and stars Services Reflect^ Part of The regular business meeting of Federal Investigators, State," 1 Memorial hospital, Long Branch. just completed a ten day furlough Even though mad war te Louise Fox Philathea class . was Patrick J. O’Leary, 211 South County and Local Officers in | spent with his parents, Mr. and May take its. hideous toll— v Organization in Training held on Tuesday ■ evening, at the Atkins avenue, spent Wednesday Mrs. Burris Johnson, -1220 Corlies Armed U. S. Forces Surprise Raids; Much Con­ Of all the earth. home of Mrs. Joseph Sanford, 89 in Jersey City. avenue. He is now attending the Mr and Mrs. Paul Greetin, jr., Above the blackouts along our Embury avenue. M r s . Helen Dare, traband Equipment Found Officers Training school a t Fort . New Jersey’s important part in I-Iaddbn Heights, were weekend Bcnning, Georgia. shores teacher of the opportunity class of g u e s t s of his parents at 211 Stokes' training and equipping the ’ na­ Liberty Council, No. 52, D. of A., And into the dark night, the Bradley Park school gave .fin . Sweeping, down in six Monmouth avenue;. held a Betsy Ross party Tuesday tion’s armed forces was reflected ; Mr. and Mrs. George Grossman evening in Red Men's Hall, for Will shine the stars above, in an unprecedented demand for interesting, talk, on Her; work- with, c o hi munilies Tu esday. e veni n g, fed - aid entertaining Mrs.: Grossman’s the children, and also displayed enil* state,; county and local polic.e;- members celebrating their birth­ telephone service in 1941, the New mother, at their home, 300. South days: during Marcti. There will be shelters God some of their hand worki ,v.- coniploted nineteen siirpvisc raids Jersey Bell Telephone Company’s Atkins avenue. The W. S. C. S. of the W est men need hide hrr yneinyJsjliensf. taking; into; t’lisrj Mr; and Mrs. .'Nathaniel' Jones, Grove Methodist church, held an annual report discloses. More tele­ ; Reportsi; were given hy the offi­ And echoing out above the crash toil yseveral’ aliens -:/ a nd.. sci z i n g a j Freehold, were recent visitors at all-day meeting Wednesday. Busi- phones were added to the system cers.ami committees:- it.was . de­ the home of their • daughter and and roar, large;, • quantity., .ofcontraband! meeting, luncheon and program. than in any previous year, and the cided to sponsor; the work of V.ais1-: family, 113 South Atkins avenue,. There will be moon and stars etiuiphient dncluding guns,, binocu­ increase in calls was the greatest ing part of the money toward the.' Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Van Income Tax Material But there will be.small homes, lars, maps, cameras, letters’ writ­ Dusen, 1111 Corlies avenue, an­ in the company’s history. gowns of the Ceceiian Choiri Cb»4 Left standing still—- ten in German, Italian and Japan­ nounce the marriage of their No. A TAILORED beret with a Both revenues and expenses tributions of $5.00 ^ach'were pledg­ daughter,-Miss Dorothy Vnii Dusen, Waiting for sad hearts to return. • ese, and much; shortwave radio matching suit is in keeping reached new high levels as a re­ ed by Mrs. Joseph Porter and Mrs. to J. Bernard Neary. son of Mrs. Have you filed your Federal in­ with the woman’s; eye for uniform­ equipment. . _ sult of the record volume of busi­ . Charles; Weaver.: • Anne Ri- Neary. and the late come tax return ? If you come Theie will be moon and stars ity this spring. The March issue of • Raids were made on homes and Thomas E. Neary, Oswego, N. Y. ness handled, but the additional Plans were . completed for the within, the group from whom re­ Even though mad war, Good Housekeeping Magazine fea­ j stores in Ocean Grove, . Asbury The ceremony took place in New tures a gay matching suit and beret. expenses, including higher taxes, Jersey. Food •Demonstration, tp be York city, February 25th. Both turns are required, you: have only Nothing can forever in man’s heart Park, Neptune, Deal, Red Bank and The serviceable neutral background more than offset the rise in reve­ given on Tuesday afternoon, April Mr. and Mrs. Neary are-teachers until midnight, March 16, in which Erase .Gods love and peace. •' West. Long :Brbnclv'with J Fed­ of the material is enlivened by two nues. Income available for inter- . 28. . in the Palisades. Park school. to file a return. Single persons The stars will shine above, colored stripes. eral Bureau of Investigation ofli- Mrs. Mary Steelman, 1413 Sev­ est' and dividends for the year Installation of officers •: wasc o n - who earned as much as $14.43 a And give the Everlasting Light, ccvs .taking part in investigations, enth avenue, "was hostess to the represented a return of 3.58 per­ ducted by the - class teacher, Div Rainbow Circle of the \V. S. C. S., week for the 52 weeks of 1941; Eternally in the Heaven.’ for the second time within a month. cent. on the average assets of the Lucia Grieve., Those installed we re of the West Grove Methodist or married persons living together Jean J. Eastley. Chief Issues Call Raids' to date have. been against company, compared with 4.14 per President, Mrs. Charles Weaver; church. . 1 ; 7 V;V' v-. who had aggregate earnings of as only enemy aliens, under F..B. I. M ran d M rs. WUlhinv Asmiin and Elmira, N. Y. cent, in11940. ■ vice president; Mrs. William much as $28.85 a week for the V — For Fire Reserves investigation and "surveillance. daughter,, Ramsey,: were weekend ‘‘Requirements Met” Heihtz; *secretary, Mrs. .Rutherford guests of Mr. and - Mrs.; Fred John­ year, are required to file returns. Hungry Sea Gulls Those taken into custody were “Despite the problems and diffi- Triminer; treasurer Mrs. Warren son, 204 South Atkins avenue. The instructioiis attached to tho ,5 taken to Ellis Island for deten­ Over the frozen lake the sea gulls Firo Chief David H. O Reilly cu]tics involved, requirements for Fulton; Corsages were presented Mrs. Lydia Garrabrant, 1222 forms describe the method of pre­ after reporting that only a few serv;cc were met, und service tion and further questioning.! NiiitH avenue, is ill.at her home, paring returns, but if further in­ fly - . > , to . Mrs. • Weaver and; Dr*' Grieve, in zones of air their lovely wings men had responded to his call for I wcre well maintained,” F. B. I. officials revealed that the .Mr; and , Mrs. Johp C. Burke and formation is necessary it may lie and to the retiring president, Mrs! son:James, South Atkins ave­ ■ apply; . v'V fire reserves, announced that a sec- (tester 1; Barnard, president of majority of those detained have 108 obtained a t the offices of the col- Ellerslie Davis; - M rs. Raymond nue. spent Sunday with '.relatives They come to rest upon the icy end organization meeting would be ^ compnnyi states in the report, been either, “in or. around” Fort ill Englishtown. • leotor of internal revenue, deputy Manley had charge of the devotions waters, ' : held at the Stokes fire hpuse, Olin ,.To accomplisl, thcae rosults it' Monmouth and Fort Hancock, thi* Mrs. Emma Slocum, a funner col lee tor or ^ an V internal revenue which followed; the •■installatipin in friendliness to man that never street, on Tuesday, evening. The Was necessary to secure and in- two major Army posts in the resilient of 112 South Atkins ave- 1 igeiit in charge. They make ho . A social hour foUbWed- with liirs.' mie, is now a resident of the Metho­ falters-— , . chief urged all men, not connected sta]| facilities to expand nearly county.’ • charge for. then* services; . •! George;. Patterson *; as . coJiostess^ dist Home for the Aged. And iiian with understanding ill with some other branch of defense. evcry part 0f the state-wide sys- Despite the order by President Miss'Minin' Eberhardt,,'1132..Cor­ If income tax returns arc placed Others attending were Mrs.- A Ivin iii,, henert, work, to report at this meeting, Roosevelt at the outbreak of tho lies avenue, spent, the weekend in the mail, they should be posted tern, and to.add a large number of Bills. Mrs. Elnier Smith, Mrs.. Earl Will feed theni bread, that life for, ho said, the need for fire re­ war requiring all aliens to surren­ w ith'her sister in N.vack; N. Y. in ample time to reach the col­ .employees to the telephone organi­ • Height. Mrs.; Norman Hannah. Mrs. Russell Polhenius, 120.5 shall not 'depart.' serve workers is great in the face der,cameras, radio and oilier equip­ lector’s office oh or before the due zation. ’ < • . . Mrs. Joseph Kaiser, Mjss. Lillie Ninth avenue, was a recent visitor 0 gulls evolved in pearl’s traiis- of the current emergency. ment, raiding agents revealed that date—that is midnight on ^March "The events of . the year empha­ Truax, Mrs. Rolin Priest, Mrs. Jos- in New York ciily. . lucent colors M Other branches of the Ocean the raiding group had found much Miss Doris Combs.' 310 South At­ 10 for calendar yeai% returns. Tax­ sized the reliance placed on the cph Porter Birth of the purple sea and sea Grove defense effort continued in of. this eontrabraiul equipment. !, kins avenue', attended the Y.nle payers subject themselves to a pen­ telephone, not only by industry-to , freshman promenade last Friday . tremors ' ■ . their training this' week, as tire The next meeting will he held at alty for failure Ip file returns on .0 speed war production,; but by all evening.'. Of -sun beams ' and tiie shadow’s three, classes on first aid work the home of Mrs. Elmer Smith. time. j agencies, military 4 and civilian, Al 3:00 o’clock Sunday after­ misty spray, being conducted, by the Ocean 50 Abbott avenue. . .• noon. in the West Grove Methodist Taxes due on a return filed for charged with the conduct of the church, Miss Kathryn Louise 1 Wo hoar your friendly voices oil Grove first aid squad continued war and protection of the country .the calendar, year 1911 nmy be j Height, .daughter of Mr. and Mrs. our way. •.'■' . their meetings on Monday, Tues­ paid in full at the time of the filing from attack,” stated Barnard, who ~ Harry Height. 1343. Corlies'avenue, Laura Van Hosen. day and Friday evenings at the of the return on or before March reported that the company, through. ' ; became the bride of John Norman OcOaii Grove, N. J. I : Eagle fire house, and the air raid Frank, son of Mrs. Marie Frank, 10,; 1942. The tax may, at. the special,groups created for the pur­ —-V---- —' warden’s group listed plans for of Oceaiiport. Rev. Everett N. option of the taxpayer, he paid in pose, .worked closely with these Hunt, pastor, performed a double 'h i,: Be Still their regular meeting on Wednes­ four equal installments instead of agencies to ensure that their re­ ring ceremony before nil altar, Peace that passeth all understand day evening at that fire house. a single payment, in \yhich ease the quirements were met quickly day banked with palms and white ing in the midst of trouble, and In the meantime, Fire Commis­ gdalioli. Mrs. Arthur H. Ever: first installment is to be paid on or night, and that their facilities care, AC - ' ^ > sioner James Boyce reported the ett, Arlington, sister of the bride, or before March lfi. llic second bn were adequate. The men and Is the golden language of silence completion of a blackout cmcr was matron of honor, and George or before June 15. the third on or women of the telephone organiza­ '•Is A ll I t C o sts to R u n a 2 5 -W o rd Thompson, Brooklyn, was tiie best whose eloquence offers a prayer. gcncy first aid station at the before September 15. and the tion, lie said, “have responded ad­ Ad, in the W ant Ads for one in­ man. After the ceremony n.recep­ A silent language is spoken from Stokes fire house. All windows on tion for the immediate families was fourth on or . before December lo, mirably, in the best traditions of. sertion (cash rate). Additional every stroke of an artist’s brush, the .apparatus floor of the fire given at tlie Caroline tea room. 1942. If- the taxpayer elects to the industry, in accepting their re­ Who makes his subject alive with house have been permanently -cov­ Words lc. a.W ord. Upon "their reliini .fioiti a motor pay his. tax in four, installments, sponsibility for meeting effectively trip to Virginia, the couple will re-' out words just with n gentle ered. and the room has been made each of the four installments must the great and urgent demand for side on Wolfhill avenue, Oceaiiport. . hush. ready lo care for any injured dur­ Franklin R. Dodd, 1 iii South At­ lie equal in 'amouiit, but any in­ 7 service which war-time need has . 0 0 The Lord, silently offers a prayer ing all blackouts. Because of the kins avenue. is recovering from an stallment may be paid, at the elec­ presented." when comforting a liroken heart, permanent covering on the . win­ For Five Consecutive Insertions. attack of bronchitis: tion of the tiixpuyer, prior to the The company spent $11,798,009 Mr. and Sirs. Delbert Davies, Be still, and dry those tears away. dows, light for first aid work may for new construction during 1941, 1532 Tenth avenue, are'tlie parents U*n,e prcRcribcd for its piiymenl: Remember I’m your friend and God. he used without danger of expos­ i of a son horn in Fitkin hospital.' if an installment.is not paid in full including large increases in tfie The virtue of silence is priceless, ure on the outside.' The room in Mrs. Josdph Wanlell and. soii; on 01. before the.date fixed for its central office facilities serving mili­ BUY - SELL - RENT Asbury• Galiles, has joined Mr. I . , , .. ’Tis. wrapped ill a blanket of gold, use is the one used to house the tary establishments in the stale. Wardell in Pittslnug. Pm, where j,0 'P»yn»#nt,.thc whole, amount of the lie who • has it to offer will find, first aid squstd ambulance. Nearly all of the 195 central offices, is slntioncd.' I tax romaininir unpaid is required has offered tho host to be told. to be paid upon notice and demand, and nearly. 1,000 of the private , WANT-AD WAY: Private John W. Burke, Fort ' • A.'Do Santo. Pix. spent the weekend with,his from tlie collector. N. y. A . Instructing branch exchanges serving indus­ 'wife. 1304 Eleventh avenue. The tax must lie paid to tlie Elizabeth, N: J. . ; ' f. I .. try and business, in the. state, had Edward Min'ter. , Haddonfiqld, ' V -- eollecior of internal revenue for Youths For Work to be replaced or increased in snent. Siindr.v with his family. 1329 Itcd Cross Workers capacity during the year, some Ninth avenue. • the .district in which the taxpay­ The Red. Cross ladies, this angelic more than once. Additions to the P H O N E 7 er's return is required to bo filed, State Administration Preparing group, wire network totaled more than that is, to the collector for the dis- 7,500 Out-of-School Youths for Ask For the Ad-Taker Arduously toiling home, shop, or 140,000 miles. trict in which is located the tax-, Essential Defense Jobs; payer’s legal residence or principal coop, '/' '. Tlie growing scarcity of materi­ For the humane cause of rendering 182,000 is Nation’s T o tal. place of business, or if lie hois ho als. used for telephone manufac­ legal residence or principal place .' aid ; ture, due to their increasing di­ To tlio.se who fall by bludgeon or Geared to the nation’s effort for of business in the United; States, version to production for war pur­ THE TIMES keen-edged blade; all-out war'production, the Nation­ poses, led to a rigid program of 64 MAIN AVENUE then to the Collector, of Internal al Youth Administration..in New Revenue at.'Baltimore',,Maryland. These sublime souls in solemn conservation of supplies and equip- • New Jersey is now preparing 2,750 The tax due, if, any, should be silence move in a sphere ment. As a further means of con­ Where silently their aid reaches out-of-school youth for essential serving materials and facilities, paid in cash at thff collector’s office, jobs as part of a nation-wide total or liy check or money order paya- far and near. now customers in many places With reverence of the Red Cross of 182,000, it was reported by Ber­ wore requested to take party line hle to “Collet'tor of Internal Reve­ nard S. Miller, State Youth Ad­ nue.” tn the case of payment in we . speak, rather thnn individual line service, CHECK YOUR » DISTANCE" ttlUHG it knows one tongue to assuage ministrator. ; .' and other customers were asked to cash, the laxpayer should in every Production of planes, guns, ships, I oi-ma a® hawuauo instance require nnd the collector1 ,_.pain and aid . the sick ; defer unessential service better­ WITH THB CURVE On merciful' errands they tanks and munitions of all kinds ments sucli as additional extension should furnish a receipt. In tlie for the armed forces is urgent and use nf payments made by .check through dentil's dark hour. telephones and better grades .'of by preparing young people for jobs or money ' order, hoWeyer, the can­ It is. God;' tiiht; gran them . - service. . strength, endurance, courage a::.' in ‘ factories, shipyards' and arma­ Avt'd fl.r'i p«of; ptriod »ioe. pTooJ«B celled check or* the money order The number of telephones in 13 11:33 Lll ments plants the NYA in New receipt is' usually a sufficient re­ power service at the end of the year was You Red Cross workers wh these Jersey and throughout the country A w>«LL’»p«ofc period ceipt. 825,434, a net increase in 1941 of Avz'd (Mi pio l p«iad 7 1:30 P.M. virtues pursue is making its most important con­ 53,337. An average of 3,516,000 2 P. a to 4:30 P.M. Will be sustained and God cver.’.U; tribution to the wnr program, Mil­ calls a day were made during the ally w ill: commend you.; ;; ’ ler said. year, 269,000 a day more than in Dolly Make haste,. America, with your NYA mechanical shop and pro­ fre1)i< tund 1940. Toll and long distance mes­ I* tfphel B.FEDDES magnanimous- contribution, : duction projects are giving on-the- sages totaled 98,000,000 for the Htm (m ay Isoj Oillaau Buy bonds', stamps "and help 11:1s job training to approximately 1,550 year, over 10,000,000 more than in (•fttral QSItt JEWELER meretious institution. young men and young women in 1940. 7. '. ■ Watch Repairing David II. Seideman. New Jersey nnd 83,700 nationally. V------Asbury Park, N. J. - ■. In work shops organized along in­ DR. WESTWOOD Best Prices For Old Gold (Continued from Tngo 4) — Y—------dustrial lines these young people Appraised Free SUBSCRIPTION NOTICE:' The arc getting practical experience ences. He was a member of St. NDER PRESSURE of war action, New 57 . Main Avenue Times will be $2.00 a year after through the production of goods Paul’s Lodge No. 41, F. and A. M., Ocean Grove , ’ Jersey's use of longdistance telephone Hoffman Coal Co. April 15, 1912. All new or re­ and learning their job through Philadelphia, and very active in U Post Office Building service lias become the greatest ever known. Field Street, Avon, N. J. newal subscriptions received in doing a job. The types of work Methodist church work. The calling reaches three high peaks each Telephone,. Asbury Pork 5Z67 advance of that date will bo ac­ carried on in NYA shops, includes He is survived by his wife Ar­ cepted at the preccnt rate of $1.60. metal and mechanical work, radio menia Cloughy Westwood, and day with deep valleys in between them. In and electrical work, woodworking three brothers, Rev. Herbert W. the peak periods all lines arc heavily laden, DON'T LET and industrial sewing. ostwood, pastor Methodist church. and the traffic is naturally heaviest on the Practically all New Jersey shops East Bangor, Pa., John R. West-, circuits to military and war production CONSTIPATION are now open to young women as wood, a former member of Phila­ New t ork : - SLOW YOU UP well as young men, and girls’ ac­ delphia Stock Exchange, and Fran­ centers.'lllb s u . Motor Coaches • W hen bowel B o r o s lu g g is h — w h o n y o u tivities have assumed a greater im­ cis W. Wcsttvood, of tho Philadel­ For best service under these conditions Leave Ocean Grove feel irritable,, headachy and everything portance than they ever had before. phia National Bnnk. and to. make the- most .effective all-round Post Office you do is an effort—do as m illions of folks One of the greatest production Funeral services were held at his Effective June 28, 1941 do. Chew FEEN-A-MINT, the modem use of the wire network, we suggest that you (Daylight Saving TImo) chewing gum laxative. FEEN-A-M INT needs is for power sewing machine homo, Long Brahch, Wednesday, looks and tdBtcs like your favorite gum operators, and NYA girls are with interment. at West Long make only your “must” calls in the peak 7:20, 8:20, 10:20 A. M. —you’ll like its fresh m int flavor. Sim ply : , 3:20, 5:20, 7:20,9:20 P. M. Branch. •• periods and your other calls in the valley 1 20 chew FEEN-A-M INT at bedtimo-aleep being given workTexperience train­ Daily Except Sundays ■ without being disturbed —■ next morning ing in ever increasing numbers to The Westwood family have been periods when more lines are available. Heeerrotlonfl mnBt .be. made, on gentle, effective relief. You’ll feel like a oil coaches m illion, full of your old pep again. A gen- meet this need.. comine to. Ocean Grove since 1886. Call, when you can, before 10 a. m.;* .erous family"" y supply of FEEN-A-M INT Rev. John R. Westwood preached costs only 10?, the last sermon of the camp meet­ between 11:30 and 2 a t mid-day; 4:30 and DAILY so Excursion One Day . Good On All Coaches ing the last year of his life, 1901. 7 p. m .; and After 8:30 atnlfeli may excite the Heart Dr. Fred Westwood stayed at the - Sundays, Leaves from Qa« trapped In tbe itomuh or collet mar act Ilka • ' Buy Defense Bonds and Stainps . . tuir-trigger on tbe beart action. At tba lint «!cn of Arlington for many summers'. iBte-; Lake and Heck Street dlitma smart men and women depend on Bell-ana - Invest in Viftoty lAsbary Park Tablet* to let gas free, N o laxattTO but tnado of tbs was a great one for getting pooplo faiteet-actlng medic In ei known for srtnptomatlo relief togethor and was very well known-; Tel. ABbury.Park.8S9 of gaitrlo hyperacidity. If tho FinST TRIAL doesn't NIW JIRSIY BILL TELIPHONE COMPANY proTs Bell-axu better, return bottle to tu and recelre by tho people who stayed the , Asbury Park-N.Y. Iramit Co. DOUBLE Money Back. 23c. at all drug stores. —------FEEN-A-MINT Arlington. '.. .■ V-. w '