; In the Home Paper May Be Counted On To Precede Nearly Everybody Hereabouts Reads The Tido That Leads On To Fortune The Times Each Week To Keep In Close Touch With Local Matters

Vol. XXXII—N o . 16 OCEAN GROVE, N. J„ FRIDAY, APRIL 18, 1924 FOUR CENTS HO BISHOP’S LIMIT J. F. MOHR DIES AT COOLIDGE SUPPORT SAYS SOFT. CORSON HOME, READING, PA. IS URGED BY EDGE FOREST PROTECTION W EEK; AUDUBON SOCIETY IS STILL EFFECTIVE IN SERVICE FOR OFFICERS ARE NOMINATED WOULD INCREASE NUMBER PRESIDENT’S PROCLAMATION WORKING TO SAVE BOBOLINK GRATIFIED AT SENTIMENT BY STOKES FIRE COMPANY OF METHODIST PRELATES MANY YEARS HERE President Coolidge has designated Undiscouraged by the outcome of its FOR THE PRESIDENT These nominations were made by April 21-27 as Forest Protection efforts in the recent legislative ses­ ihe Stokes fire company at the April Week, to that effect issuing this proc-' sion, the Audubon Society meeting Monday evehing, to be voted la m atio n : | Also Believes City Like New York, Director of Singing In the Holi­ has announced it will continue its Republicans Unable To Carry Out on at the annual meeting in May: “Whereas, it is essential to the con­ campaign to transfer the bobolink from President—Neal Tompkins. j;.:, With Its Many Complicated tinued comfort, welfare and prosperi­ ness Meeting, Leader of North the game bird list under State laws to a Progressively Conservative Vice Presidents—First, J. E. Quinn; ty of the people of the what it points out (is its obviously second, Alvin Bills. • Problems, Should Have a Bish­ that abundant forests; widely distri­ End Pavilion Service and Audi­ proper designation as a song and in­ Program Because of Radical Ex- Foreman—Arthur Gregory. buted and maintained in a condition of sectivorous bird with protection Assistants—First, George Wertz; op’s Constant Attention—Some high productiveness, be forever wisely torium Usher — Ocean Grove throughout the year. One vote from tremes, He Says, and at Such a j * “ $ A conserved as one of our greatest nat­ a group of eleven Senators either ab­ of the Matters That Are’ To ural resources; and Represented At Funeral Yester­ sent or not voting would have passed Time a Man of Present Execu- j. Assistants—First William B. Gil- “Whereas, because of our constant­ the measure this year, says the so­ ciety. bert; second, G. William Schwartz, Come Before the Conference. ly increasing, need for wood and oth­ day Afternoon From Residence. tiv'e's Type Is Needed At Helm. Secretary-Treasurer — Hugh ’ O. er forest products, together with our. The New JeTsey Audubon Society , * Tompkins. Rev. Alexander Corson; D. D.; su- past failure to provide for reforesta­ With profound sorrow Ocean Grove was organized in 1910, in order, pri­ In a letter made public today United ! n ^ * ce7~.* n n ]!5 i P arrI f ? : perintendent of the Camden district tion, we are drawing upon our sup­ learned Monday of the death at Read­ marily, to crystalize public sentiment States Senator Edge on the eve of the I {?• Tompkins, Walter D. Frank- of the New Jersey Conference believes plies of timber four times as fast as ing, Pa., early that morning of James in the State against bird plumage mil­ Presidential _primary — V —solicits — »V «l»wthe OUJJ-sup- j ■Im*, , . t . there should be no limit on the tenure they are renewed through growth^ and F. Mohn, who had been long identified linery and secure the enactment of a nport n rf of his ------constituents— * for ** the •• dele­ * * The company also nominated Phrn- of office of a bishop of the Methodist “Whereas, the moat formidable with this place, first as a business State Plumage law an attem pt' at gates pledged for the nomination of eas T. Proctor, of the Stokes, for chief Episcopal Church. He will use his in­ agency of forest destruction and pre­ man and then as a forceful leader in which had previously failed, undoubt­ President Coolidge. His letter fol­ of the department and adopted a mo­ low s: ■ fluence at the general conference of vention of reforestation is fire, and, of the meetings. His death resulted edly for lack of an aggressive State tion to endorse the nominations for the Methodist Episcopal Church, which the fires which annually devastate vast from cerebral hemorrhage. organization. The Society accom­ “Responsibilities in W ashington have first nnd second assistant chiefs as will be held at Springfield, to secure jfareas, four-fifths are ascribed in or­ plished this prim ary object the follow­ made it impossible without neglect of made by the other companies. the return of Bishop Joseph F. Ber­ igin to human agencies and virtually ing year, and among other important duty, to spend but little time in the ry to the Philadelphia area for another all may be controlled and made in­ aims, set to work to secure adequate State. I am adopting this method to . four years. nocuous through. prudence, care and legal protection for the bobolink. solicit the enthusiastic support of my “We have been hearing much about v ig ilan ce; friends for the delegates committed to PARTY PRIMARIES the large number of bishops elected at “Therefore, I, Calvin Coolidge, GROVE YOUTH HEADS COUNTY the nomination of President Coolidge the last general conference,” Doctor President of the United States, do and to make a special effort, April 22, Corson said. “It seems ridiculous that, urge upon the Governors of the vari-' CONFERENCE Y. M. C. A. BOYS to poll a large vote in order that the for the sake of a few dollars, we ous States to designate and set apart popular majority for the President TUESDAY, APRIL 22 should reduce the number of biBhops the week of April 21-27, 1924, as For­ Ronald Dixon, of Ocean Grove, is will have its beneficial offect on other who are engaged in the greatest of all est Protection Week, and, wherever the new president of the Older Boys' State contests to be waged. human enterprises. In my opinion, practicable and not in conflict with Conference representing the Sunday “It has been gratifying to see the TO CHOOSE DELEGATES TO we ought to increase the number of fctate law or accepted customs, to cele­ schools of this county, elected at the Coolidge sentiment in New Jersey so Methodist bishops. . brate Arbor Day within that week. I ninth annual session held last Friday crystalized and consolidated that there BIG CONVENTIONS “A great city like New York pre­ also urge all citizens, either in asso­ at Spring Lake. The other officers are but few district contests. sents a field so extensive, and with so ciation or as individuals, all schools, chosen at that time are:. “It has been my privilege to serve . _ _ • many complicated problems, that a and the press of the land to give com­ Vice president, James Peterson, with the President both while he pre- j Polls W ill Be Open Between the bishop should give his executive at- mon thought to the protection bf our Long Branch; secretary, Harvey siilcd over the United States Senate, ■ tention to that city. forests from fire, to the end that, in JAMES F. MOHN Hartman, Keyport; assistant secre­ and since he was called to the Execu Hours of Seven O'Clock'In tihe “This time limit on bishops is .non­ the future as in the past; these for­ taries; Robert Stokes, Atlantic High­ tive Chair, Naturally, I have learned sense. If a bishop is capable, and if ests may supply us with wood, protect He is survived by his wife -and a lands; Richard Clapp, of Little Silver, to know him intimately and iny respect Morning and Nine O'Clock' in an area wants him, he should be per­ the purity of our streams, and other­ young son, James F. Mohn, Jr. There and Byron Hardy, of Manasquan. The and confidence in his judgment has mitted to serve forty quadrenniums wise serve the people of the United is also ,a sister, Mrs. C. U H effn er, new officers were installed and charged grown with this close contact. the Evening—Names of the Can­ there, provided it is for the best inter­ S ta te s .” whose husband is a minister in the by Robert C. Shoemaker, of Newark. "There are extreme differences of ests of the Methodist Episcopal Evangelical Church at Palmyra, Pa., The annual banquet was served Fri­ opinion throughout the country as to didates On the Republican and and a half sister, Mrs. John Haag, of C h u rch .” day evening by the Sring Lake Wo­ important governmental policies. This Approximately 850 delegates from Reading. Howard J. HeCk, 36 Heck man’s Club, the boys being addressed situation seems to have been greatly the Democratic Tickets. all parts of the United States and GROVE TOWS CLOCK avenue, Ocean Gove, is a half brother. by Dr. J. Duncan Spaeth, of Princton accentuated since the war. As is well from forty-four nations and territor­ Mr. Mohn had been for many years University. ^ known, the Republican party, although • Tuesduy of next week, April 22, is ies abroad will be gathered in Spring­ the director of singing in the Holiness nominally in a majority in Congres’s, the date of the Presidential prefer­ ence prim ary as previously announced. field, Mass., in May' attending the service held daily through the season THIRTIETH MEETING OF is unable to carry out a progressively at nine o’clock a. m. in the Taber­ Delegates and alternates to the Presi­ quadrennial general conference of the RESUMES BUSINESS conserative program because of these nacle. He also conducted the Sunday THE DISTRICT W. F. M. S. dential conventions of both partieB Methodist Episcopal Church, which radical extremes. At such a time it is will be chosen at that time. The polls will continue throughout the month. afternoon meeting on the North End imperative for the trahquility and sta­ pavilion. With an unusually strong The delegates from the foreign field EVERYBODY NOW HAS THE The thirtieth annual meeting of the bility of the nation that a man calm will be open between 7 a. ro. and 9 p. voice, he was particularly effective in will number seventy-eight and will Woman’s Foreign Missionary Society and patient, but with force and de­ m. at the following nine polling singing, which made his services in places in Neptune townsfiip: ; include nine women. CORRECT TIME of the New Brunswick district is to termination, occupy the White House. frequent demand at the religiouB ex­ . Among the important matters to be be held Friday; April 25, in the M. E. Calvin Coolidge more nearly meets First District—Washington Frie En­ ercises of the summer. He was also decided is that relating to the plan for church at Manasquan, of which the these requirements than any man at gine House, Olin street and Central, an usher in the Auditorium. avenue; Ocean Grove. unification with the M ethodist Episco­ Rev. C. M. Hogate is pastor, Mrs. the present time eligible for the great Works Set In Motion Again Mon­ A member of the United Evangelical responsibility. pal Church, South, which was drawn Anna Robley, of Asbury Park, will Second District—Rooms ot the- faith, he held official membership in up by commissions from the two de­ preside. Miss Wilhelmina Erbst, mis­ “From my occasional visits to N ew Ocean Grove board of tTade. day At Noon, After Being Silent the church of that denomination at nominations and which is thought to sionary to the Philippines, will speak Jersey, I have formed a positive con­ ■ Third District—Grove garage, ad­ Reading, and, was frequently a dele­ be regarded favorably by certain of­ at the afternoon sessions. viction that the large majority of the joining Ocean Grove schoolhouse. Some Months While Building gate in conference councils. He also ficials whose opinions are especially Among others who will have part in citizens of the State, irrespective of Fourth District—Residence, 84 % was at the head of a large Bible class the day’s program are: Mrs. Helen their political affiliations have been Clark avenue, Ocean Grove. valued. Operations Were Under Way. of men in that church, and had prac­ Tho plan provides for the union of Benson, Mrs. B. Fred Pine, Mrs. M. G. opposed to and unsympathetic with the Fifth District—Unexcelled Fire En­ tically closed negotiations to bring the1 ., __ the churches, with the establishment Gray, Mrs. T. B. Gates, of Ocean policy which has controlled the Senate gine House, Corlies avenue, West Poetic Sentiment Believed To G ro v e., of two jurisdictions. If accepted by members of the class—approximately | Grove; Mrs S. S. Smock, of Wicka- in recent months. New Jersey is an tho May conference tho General Con­ Have Been By Dr, Stokes. one hundred and fifty—to Ocean Grove tank; Mrs. E. V. Ackerman, of New old-fashioned State, or at least her Sixth District—Store, 6 Atkins ave­ the latter part of June for three days, people think along old-fashioned, con­ nue, West Grove. ference of the Methodist Episcopal Brunswick; Mrs. A. K. Bennett of engaging rooms at the North End ho­ servative lines, and they cannot readi­ Seventh District—Myrtle and Cor­ Church, South, will probably be called After a long silence, during which Long Branch; Miss Sadie Woolley, of tel to house the visitors. Last year the Manasquan, and Charles Goff, of ly bring themselves to an approval of lies avenue, West Grove. in session to consider the plan, which, its kindly face was sadly missed by Mrs. tlass went to Niagara Falls, B elm ar. :____ - this transition of the responsibilities • Eighth District—Liberty Fire En­ if accepted by that body, would then the residents of Ocean Grove, the town In the summer months Mr. Mohn of the Senate from that of a legisla­ gine House, Munroe avenue, Whites­ become effective. It is understood, that clock in the tower of the Association and family occupied, the Association NEPTUNE, AT OPENING OF tive body to a judicial tribunal. The v ille. • large sections of the membership of building resumed operations Monday bungalow at the corner . of Surf ave­ people of New jersey do not condone Ninth District—Fire Engine House, each denomination are in. favor of uni­ at noon. William P. Ladomus set the nue and Pilgrim Pathway, facing SEASON, WINS TWO GAMES malfeasance in office and they demand fication of the last decade is regard­ Corlies avenue Hamilton. works in motion, after replacing the Founders’ Park. When he first came that public servants false to their oath The respective tickets are: ed as highly probable through the ac­ parts of the told time-piece dismantled to the Grove many years ago, Mr. Scoring a victory, the Neptune high and trust shall be punished without tion of the two conferences. iast fall to permit of building opera­ Mohn conducted a restaurant on the ■ school baseball team opened the fear or favor. But if I analyze their R epublican Another question to be reviewed by tio n s. . ,, , | Choice for President-rCalvin Cook-' old Ross pavilion. Later he became :scheduled season last Saturday after­ feeling correctly they do not approve j j(, * Hiram W. Johnson. ;; the conference, and which will attract, The bell has not yet been attached, identified with the Baltimore Life In­ noon, playing Manasquan on the field it is expected, the attention of the en­ but there is assurance that it will be at Bradley Beach. Manasquan was of the transferring of the trying of Delegates at Large (seven to be ''3 surance Company, and rose to be the such cases from the courts to a legis- ehosen—Walter E. Edge, George E. . tire Christian world, is that relating connected up shortly to’speak its lit­ manager of the Reading district. simply outclassed and never had « to the status of the episcopacy. The tle piece, every hour and on the hour, look-in, Neptune hitting the ball hard, J r, I ••■ r 1-j A Cannon, Edith Hyde Colby, Joseph S. Services were held yesterday after­ Neither does Calvin Coolidge, and Frelinghuysen; Miriam Earley Lippin- entire system, of episcopal supervision as heretofore. noon in the United Evangelical running wild on the bases and scoring if the Republicans of New Jersey will ------is to be considered. It is not possible Tho town clock was installed back Church, Reading, and the place of almost at will. Neptune 32, Mana­ *o far as"in their power insure liis ro: S jtW L E - 3 to predict what will he the action in sq u an 9. in 1881 and was set ih motion for the burial was the Charles Evans ceme­ turn so that he can have four years to i H • •'' ^ this connection, but it is generally, re­ first time on July 4. The timepiece was tery in that city. Ocean Grove was Another jug-handled score resulted work out and solve the problems, I am • ; garded as one of the most weighty made by the Ansonia Clock Company, represented at the funeral by Dr. in the game Wednesday between Nep­ matters before the church today. It of Ansonia, Conn., arid the bell by the Charles M. Boswell, Rev. E. L. Hyde, 1 tune and Atlantic Highlands. Neptune .^ ^ th rsln atX W ^ a ' »p ' I is more than a quarter of a century Troy Bell Foundry Company, Troy, N. Howard Heck and others. j hatters were again on the rampage, since the' question has been so review­ Y. The bell weighs 1,200 pounds, and piling up hits galore. Neptune 2G, At- ed. it is inscribed with the' name' of the — “ ’ _ -----; ’ lantic Highlands 1. Reorganization of the benevolent Ocea■ ■i?.tVvens.L E!lvY"r(1 Mitchell, for sections and a commission appointed period it kept perfect time. On August Sunday School Association is to be j The New York Telephone Company eisely defined. Coolidge; Carl J. Schultz, William H. to study the. subject. The conference 29, 1887, it was cleaned for the first held at Burlington for three days, May j on Wednesday began in Newark the Kline, for Johnson. / will be called upon to decide whether time, at a cost of ten dollars. And in 1912. i13 s annr,ri d 14’.11 Severalhundred______dele- j presentation, of testimony on the vnl- DROWNED WOMAN IDENTIFIED: Alternate Delegates at Large (sev-' the nresent ten highly specialized 1889 the four dials were lighted by en)—Walter G. .Alexander, Robert . ‘.••J gates will be cared for by the cham­ uation of its property in New Jersey boards should be combined into a single electricity. In the new arrangement WAS NEWARK SCHOOL TEACHER Carey, Ogden II. Hammond, Charles ber of commerce in cooperation with before the Board of Public Utility general board with many departments, of the clock there is but one dial, Lathrop Pack, D. Harris Smith, Lewis the local federation of churches. Commissionei-s, in support of its ap­ combined into a smaller group of four which faces Main avenue. Identification was made Saturday T. Stevens, Ridley W atts for Coolidge; Sessions during the convention will plication for increased local telephone or five, or left as they are. In of the old tho of the body of the woman found F ra n k 1!. A nderson, G eorge • • C e lia ,. •,?.y9 some records oi be held in the Broad' Street Methodist, rates. For the most part, the wit­ The Methodist Episcopal Church has the Grove the following lines on the drowned and removed from the surf Charles V. Finch, George F. Hunt, :.v the Union Street Methodist, the Pres­ nesses were local real estate experts had the distinction during its five-year clock were found by Fire Commission­ near the Asbury Park Arcade on Mollie Givens Langford. Peter J. Ly- ;;V^‘ byterian and the first Baptist Church­ who gave their appraisals of the Centenary expansion movement of re­ er Waldo E. Rice, through whose cour­ Thursday afternoon of last week. She decker, Samuel A. Parte low, for John- .. es. Speakers announced for the occa­ values of the land owned by the tele­ cording the largest and generally ac­ tesy The Times is able to reproduce the sion are Prof. W alter F. Atheam, of was Miss Louise Bieler, of Newark, a son. S ri'S phone company in various municipali­ school teacher and missing from her knowledged most successful benevo­ same. It is believed the sentiment Boston University; W. C. Pearce, as­ District Alternate Delegates (twO) lent enterprise in systematic giving in was penned by Dr. Stokes: ties on which telephone buildings home a week. —-W. Burtis Havens, Herbert Willis, ;»;! sociate secretary of the World Sunday j have been erected. Their appraisals did the history of Christianity. The School Association, and Dr: H. Shel­ The identity was made positive by a f o r C oolidge; M artin J. O lsen, S a m u e l..,•' not include the value of the buildings. brother and a brother-in-law. They amount given rwas . $70,000,000 and Up in the tower the solemn old clock ton Smith, of the International Coun­ A. Loveman, for Johnson. " general interest-is therefore felt in tho Has stood for many a year. said Miss Beiler had been ill and suf­ cil. o f R eligious E d u catio n . Democratic. y Soon as erected it said tick-tock;' Tall Cedar Session Next Week. fering from nervous trouble. The church’s plan for undertaking it3 Choice for President—George S. Sil- world service program following the And ever since then the grave old . The Tall Cedars of Lebanon will body was removed to Newark ' for Centenary Movement'. cloclc • '•; Matawan Nutrition Class Gains. hold their annual Supreme Forest ses­ burial Tuesday from the home-of her z er. . -.V.vS Delegates at Large' (eight)—Lillian • sion Wednesday, April 23, in Cam­ parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Repeats each second, tick-tock, tick- The Matawan nutrition class has fin­ K. De Vanny, Frederick W. Donnelly, to ck ; •• , ished its serieB of twenty sessions for den. It has been announced that Bieler, 213 North Ninth street. lie Geran To‘Assist River Project. Edward I. Edwards, Caroline Johuson, m From month to month,"from year, to this school'year. Of the fifteen chil­ Trenton Forest, No., 4, will present Mary T.. Norton, James R. Nugent, , year,* * *"■' '■ Tindall Affidavit.Case ppened. . in answer to* a letter from j. p. dren in the class there was an aver­ the name of Rudolph L. Marshall for Thelma Parkjnson, George S. Silzer. ■ Pharo, secretary of the Port of Mon­ When friends are few or foes are near, age of 5.7 pounds or 10.4 per cent, un­ the office of Junior Deputy Supreme' The hearing in the Tindall affidavit for Silzer. mouth'Organization, asking for his at­ .Tick-tock, .tick-tock, der the average weight of children of Tall Cedar. Marshall is Grand Tall case relative to the smoker at Deal. District Delegates (two)—Edmund ' titude oil the proposed development of Says tho. solemn old clock. • their height.. Ordinarily each child Cedar of the Trenton Forest, and it is Inn several weeks ago was brought A. Hayes, Elmer H: Geran, for Sflzer. i i i the north and south branches ■•of. the would have gained during this twenty- pointed out that under his regime the before the county grand jury at Free-: Alternate Delegates (eight)—Marl- J Shrewsbury river, Congressman El­ ’Tis the old clock’s mission to say tickl week period 2.4 pounds. Under the Trentoh ' Forest' has come' up from tock, hold yesterday. A number, of wit­ an K. Garrison, Edmund; O. •Howell. ; mer H. Geran assured Mr.- PJiaro of clasB regime, however* there was an a membership of 157 to 1,800 and Arid to give the time of day; nesses, were examined, and the hear­ Jr., Florence W. Jacoby,* Henry \ T . -• hiB great interest-ih the project and bf average gain of 4.8 pounds or 200 per that he is well known throughout the ing was continued until Thursday of Kays, William J. Kirby, Elisabctlj P. Tho same each year, like the marvel- cent. United States wherever there are his willingness to assist in every pos­ ■ ..-— mm m i---- fc next week. . Norris, Sara T. Pollock, Monell Soyire, sib le w a y . ■•' "'• '••••- '-■■.?! ,••• v.. ous jrock,. Tall Cedars. I t s ta n d s a t I ts Work", tic k -to c k tic k - Blind Newsboy’s Good Fortune. for Silzer. "'••'• Township To Cart Gravel. District Alternate Delegates, (two) tock. *•*- , Miss Blewitt Junior Mayor. vMltchell W ithdraws From Primary. Unswerved, unswerving is the grave ' W alter Thompson, Mata wan'a blind Gravel Bids : were rejected by the —AdelineArlolmo VnWiYard Lawrence, GilbertvwV^ old clock.. newsboy, has .received a legacy of f 35,- Miss Elizabeth Blewitt, daughter of Clayton, for Silzer. While the naine of ■ Edward T.. Mit­ Neptune township committee Tuesday And so we say, when all is gay, ' 000 in the form of a trust fund from Mr. and Mrs. John J. Blewitt, who evening, that body turning over the chell, of Asbury; Park, appears on the Or whori the sunlight fades away. his aunt, Mrs, C, H. McIntyre, who have a summer home here at Central m atter of procuring gravel to the road Park School Bonds Carried. Republican'primary ballot as a candi­ Be true to every trust died in February at the Hotel Belle- and Atlantic avonues, has just been committee. The latter, using the, date fo r delegate to the national con- The million-dollar high schoohhojjd -iw" And say tick-tock. elair, Now York. Mrs, McIntyre left elected junior mayor of what I b township m otor'truck, will purchase' vention. that gentleman. , has with­ issue for Atibury Pork -was api^vefc.'viiV $816,000 to friends and charitable known as -ihe Ironbound District in and haul gravel from the 'Bennett,pits' by ithe voters of ithQt^clty at drawn from .the content, •lenving the purposes, and the residue

O. J. Dix, the Dodge Expert I. M. Woolston REAL ESTATE Formerly Factory Expert to Dodge Bros.,Detroit, Mich. CALIFORNIA BADGER WINTER TOPS. RADIATOR COVERS Residenoe: 26 Heck Avenue, Ocean Grove PLATE GLASS FOR ENCLOSED TOPS and WINDSHIELDS The Beegle Agency AUTOMOBILE TRIMMING AND REPAIRING G. FRED BEEGLE 706 LaReine Avenue, Bradley Beach, Phone 846-W 805 Main Street, Asbury Park. Phone 887 REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE. SELECT FROPERT2S8 314 Main Street Asbury Park. Phone 3418 Ennis Brothers Reo Cars Traylor Trucks AUTO BODY BUILDERS H. M. TAYLOR, Distributor GENERAL BLACKSMITHS SPRING REPAIRING GENERAL MACHINIST. AUTOMOBILE REPAIRING J. Walter Butcher WHEELWRIGHTS “BUY A HOME" * Automobile Doors and Wheels Repaired 901 First Avenue, Asbury Park. Phone 2045-M 1003 Asbury Avenue, Asbury Park. Phone 872-W 625 Mattison Ave., Asbury Park. 81 Embury Ave., Ooeao drew CONFECTIONERY Phone 2451-W v Exide Gandy for the Million SIGNS THE LONG-LIFE BATTERY BUCKINGHAM’S, 625 MATTISON AVENUE SATISFACTION TO MILLIONS OF CAR OWNERS STORAGE BATTERY INN Our Family Box Chocolates, Almonds, Brazil Nuts, W alnuts, Pineapple, Cherries, Dates, Figs, Cocoanut Caramels, Mints, Vanilla, Orange, Bon 511 Main Street, Asbury Park. Phone 371 Bons, etc., 55c. pound; 5 pounds $2.50.

508 MAIN STREET, ASBURY PARK Flint-Six Motor Car Disbrow’s Home-Made Candies ADVERTISING Telephone «88 Brown Bros., Distributors WONDERFUL ASSORTMENT OF FUDGE, CARAMELS, Established 1876 SALES AND SERVICE NOUGATS, HARD CANDIES, CHOCOLATES Watch Our Windows for Specials Every Day 803 Main Street, Asbury Park. Phone 186-W ■ 33 So. Main St., Opposite Ocean Grove School Harris & Wolcott 1 * SIGNOLOQISTS ’ ’ COAL AND WOOD 156, Main Street, Asbury Park. Phone 2733-R Franklin Oldsmobile ONLY AIR-COOLED CAR; - LOWEST PRICED MX G. P. Farmer Coal & Supply Co. MISCELLANEOUS T. 0. BROWN BUILDING MATERIAL SUPPLIES Beacon Art Studio 1205 Main Street, Asbury Park. Phone 866 51 South Main Street, Asbury Park. Phone 80 PHOTO ENGRAVERS DRAWINGS AND OUTS FQR ALL PURPOSES SHOW GAUDS Mark Guy’s Service Station Eisele Building, 702 C6okmari'Avenue, Asbury Park. Phone IGNITION—STARTERS—LIGHTING Joseph P. Johnson OFFICIAL STROMBERG CARBURETOR STATION ‘‘A Safe Buy Word" J.H.BORTON 21 to 25 Main Street, Asbury Park COAL, ROOFING, CEMENT and MASONS' MATERIALS 905 Main St. and 22 Corlies Avenue, Asbury Park. Phone 2249 Meats of the Better Grad® Fresh Killed Jersey Poultey Home-Made Sausage and Borapple ' We Carry a Full Line of Phone 3027 46 - Main Avenne, 'Ocean Grove E. Stout Coal Yard Howe Tires and Tubes A Safe Place to Buy Good Grades of . HOGARTY AUTO SUPPLY STORE CLEAN COAL, WOOD, CHARCOAL, MASONS' SUPPLIES Coast Writing Machine Co. TAXI SERVICE ROOFING MATERIAL 1206 Main Street, Asbury Park. Phone 81 Repairing, New and Rebuilt 805 Asbury Avenue,. Asbury Park. Phone 541 TYPEWRITERS AND ADDING MACHINES MULTIGRAPHING I 719 Mattison Avenue, Over Borden’s Stationery Store Lewis B. Howland Lester R. Weller & Son AUTO REPAIRING AND MACHINE SHOP Reliable Dealers in 129 South Main Street, Asbury Park PURITY ICE AND BLUE RIBBON COAL Van Dyke Drapery Shoppe Telephone 18-M 20-40 Prospect Avenue, Asbury Park. Phone 614-615 LACE CURTAINS, DRAPERIES, CRETONNES DRUGGISTS 414 Cookman Avenue. Phone 3093, Asbury Pane James Hardy Specialist in Prescriptions AUTOMOBILE SPRINGS REPAIRED Keuper’s WALL PAPER, PAINT SUPPLIES, PAINTING, DECORATING WHEELWRIGHTING, HORSESHOEING THE DRUG STORE WITH A OONSCIENCE GENERAL BLACKSMITHING We Deliver Anything Anywhere, Anytime Ira S* Ferris 906 First Avenue, Aabury Park, Phone 2045-R Cookman and Mattison Avenues, Asbury Park. Phones 1116-2267 704 Bangs Avenue, Asbury Park “Brighten Up Your Home” 1 Hupmobile S. D. Woolley Central Garage Oo. OCEAN GROVE’S OLDEST DRUG STOKE WE CATER TO YOUR NEEDS Finkel *s Shoe Shop WES TIN GHOUSE BATTERY SERVICE Up-to-Date Shoe Store STARTERS, GENERATORS, IGNITION PRESCRIPTIONS COMPOUNDED 43 Main Avenue, Ocean Grove. Phone 228 RUBBER GOODS OF ALL’ KINDS 504 Main Street, Aabury Park. Phone 618-M SHOE REPAIRING DRY GOOD* 17 South Main Street, Next to Rialto Theatre S. B. Johnson Adams Silk and Dress Goods Store AUTOMOBILE PAINTING SILKS, COTTON GOODS, WOOLENS William J. Firstbrook TRIMMINGS AND FUR TRIMMINGS GROCERIES VEGETABLES, FANCY FRUIT 908 First Avenue, Asbury Park. Phone 2045-R WE MAKE A SPECIALTY OF FBES^OW TBY 1 203-5 Bond Street, Aabury Park. *< n Ddhray- ! We deliver fat Oeeak Atm 710M ain Street, Asbnry Park. ;1 P&cntf 1MfT;8M Le Maistre’s Moon Cars bf a SALES; AND SERVICE “ THE STORE THAT SATISFIES” H. Goldberg Lawrence 0. Maher DRY GOODS, NOTIONS, SHOES, H08IERY JEWELER AND WATOHMA5XB AUTOMOBILE ELECTRICIANS, ENGINEERS, MAOHQRSCi _v Home of ReliableJowekT'’ 910 fourth Avenue, Asbuiy Park. Plxne 1078 Cookman Avenne and Emory Street, Asbuiy Park FURNITURE & ,Guerin EXPERT AUTO REPAIRING, OVERHAULING Frank Edwards $ i W. Hayes. Agemcy, Inc. ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES NEW AND USED FURNITURE ESTATE HEATEOLAS 1 "'JDSBUBABTQE ’ ■ A t fiMMMt Oarage, 86 So. B&an fiftne^ OcaMi ekmr* VAPO KEROSENE RANGES TWephone 16W-Asbary M e 71 Sontfa Main StreeV;40uJbtriy Park. $tum e •o e a a 301-3,6-4 JRhselo Boildlbg '702 Ooofnnan Ave, Ttwm’i'WIT —— 1— l i — !>I!S.1;!/ ■ i t C-A FRibAy; A pril: ttj ; 1024 m THE OCE \N GB DVE Til E£ MISCELLANEOUS ■' •; 11II „ IIB iflT^r W I

'. jeiaoi8on"&’ Jem ison" 10 Per Cent. Reduction in Prices' UPHOLSTERY, BEDDING, CUSHIONS, WINDOW SHADES MATTRESSES RENOVATED AND MADE TO ORDER 511.Main Street, Asbury Park. Phone.2037-M Buy Now— Save Money

*VIergaiigeyJs Baggage and Express ■lllllillUlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll S AN Er.ster promise we have HOUSEHOLD MOVING AND mUOBONG the Lord’s assurance, "I am B b b sc s to Ocean Grove and Asbary Park, the resurrection snd the life" (John 11:28) and “ Be 90 South Main Street, Ocean Grove Phone 619 cause I live ye shall, live alBo” {John 14:9). . And as an Shater blessing we have Hie' gra- Steamship Passage and Tours clous “Peace be unto you” (John 20: - . Arranged anywhere by the'-- 19). But do we cot need an Sastw NEW JERSEY-PUBLICITY BUREAU prayer, also as taught ns by the Lord, ASwlfS for every steamship line. Tickets secured at no. extra cost. that we 'may enter\ Into the meanlisg Let sis help you and reallaatlon of His' promts* and of Thomas Angles Brans T. Whyte, Steamship: Sate Manager. A. D. Bedell, Manager the blessing to which tlie promise Hoorn 14, .Appleby Building; Anbury Park. Phong S6B6 looks: forward? Here It Is, as jflven. Plumber, Sheet Iron to as: ‘‘For thine is the kingdom, and the power, and ths glory, forever.”, and For this la In the truest sensie a Proctor & Jones -Electric C o. prayer It ia the closing part of the Metal Worker ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS Lord's Prayer. “After this manner WIRING AND FIXTURES pray yfc/ the Lord said. And at ^he end occurs the sacred word, “Amen,” 51 lain Avenue confirming all that lias gone before. 0S2 Mattison Avenue, Aabur^ Park. Phone 2338 OG6AN GROVB It means "be It so.” It expresses cur Out with the Old fervent desire to acknowledge all. that 'LVtephont? 2(J5-R. the several petitions of the prayer : v? , Reitz's.Model Bakery haply and to enjoy tlie experience of REITZ'S FAMOUS PIES. FIRST PRIZE BREAD what His kingdom, power and glory involve. H. W. SMOCK W. H AR VEY JONES In with the New 717 Mattison Avenue. .Asbury Park President Treasurer Branohee—47 Pilgrim' Pathway, Ocean Grove The Lord’s Prayer is a complete rec­ ord of all that the Lord has done for Discard the old worn-out gas os* coal range now. Put in a 728 Cookman Avenue,, Asbury Piurk bb. It tells us of ”our Father in the Ruchanon & Smock ■ h '^ ! heavens,” elsewhpre described as “the beautiful, clean, up-to-date VULCAN Gas Range at a high and lofty one that inlmblteth Lum ber Go. W eternity, whose name Is holy” 'WS • . . . ■ r tude flows forth. “For thine is tha CATALOGUES | . j kingdom, and the power, nnd the glory, Estimates Given 2 The opening of tho nineteen twenty-four season forever. Amen," Jobbing Given Prompt Attention BOOKLETS | is announced lor April 11 Bastes- teaches us of resurrection . It PROGRAMS carries Ur thought to a,world beyond SIM M . & JEMISON | » o n e 1848 A. L. E. STRASSBURGER the present, In the Lord’s Prayer iva 39 Pilgrim Pathway, Ocean Grove ANNOUNCEMENTS • ■■■■ '■ ' v -• take & descent from,the Lord to our MIHIIHHWIHMIIIMMIIIMIIIHHMIIIMIIIIIMIHIHM lowest needs. But then there Is a re­ Telephone 1989-41 INVITATIONS tu rn . W h es o u r aetscte lire m at, vhen LETTERHEADS His work is wrought In us, there Is an ascent, a; rising t® Him, an aspiring to BABY CHICKS BILLHEADS Him forever, by means of all that Hs NOTEHEADS hath done. , From 200-Egg Hens -Corner Heck Avenue and Pilgrim Pathway The prayer that the Lord’s kingdom Chicks from winter Saying, farm ENVELOPES raised, mature stock S, C. W, Leg­ Now open for the-season of ..92 S. Book reservations for Easter at once. may be realized as HU forever,, is a prayer'that He may find an th* willing horns, R. I. Reds, Barred; Rocks, SMALL CARDS MRS. E. C. CARR ' subjects of His kingdom; that as Be White Rocks, W hite W yandottes, Mir,- HAND BILLS overcamt flor vs, and rose again, wa orcas, White Orpingtons, Aseoisaa, may yiel onrselvM to Him as thoaa Blaclf Jersey Giants, White isidian WINDOW CARDS in whom He can carty out Hiss full de­ Runner Ducks, Pekin Ducks, $15 per 100 up. Live delivery guaranteed; Main Avenue, Opposite' Postoffice signs, leading tc the discharge, of our parcel post prepaird; hatching sggs Send Y our O rders for Printing to Open All the Year duties in His sight with SalthfulneBa, $8 per hundred up. Circular free. sincerity and diligence before Him, It Near Auditorium and Beach .Glen Rock. Nursery snd Stock Farm, is a prayer that this state may be Dept. 11, Ridgewood, N. J. 14-17 Phone Asbury Paris 1452 '• M. L. BIOREN. strengthened In us day by day. Ocean Grove Times The prayer that tha Load's power Printers and Publishers MARTIN’S RESTAURANT may be acknowledged forever Is a prayer that Hi* love may have control LEGAL NOTICES Open AU Year 48 M ain A venue, O cean Grove, N. J. forever to ss. The Lord kingdom ia Table 3’ Hote and A Lo Carte Service the government of Bin truth; the Monmouth County Surrogate’s Office. Phone 7 A sbury Park Plate dinner 50c. Regular dinner 75 cents. Hot Cakes and Waffles Lord's pow®r is the isve which actu­ In the Matter of the Estato of Ada M. served all day. Clean and select. Horn*,-, cooking. ates that trutlj, How His po\ver Loson-, Deceased, shows- ItiMU In :tbe actlviticE of gen­ /■ 44 Main Avenue, Ocean Grove Notice to Creditors to Present Claims uine love, ranging from tbe loftiest Against Eetate ... . alma to the lowliest, even If It be only- Pursuant to th© order of Joseph L , Don- driving a nail Into a plank to make it ahay, Surrogate of the County of Mon­ mouth, made on the fifth day of March, St. Elm o Hotel more aecnt.e for another’s tread, or 1924, on the application of William H. Lo­ Comer Main and New York Avenues giving the hand to another to show a son and Theodore W, Brewer, executors UUie fellow sympathy t AU this Is a of the estate of Ada M. Loson, deceased, Delightfully located on principal thoroughfare. Central to all points of in­ notice Is hereby given to the creditors of SUBSCRIPTION BLANK power which we are receiving from Baid deceased to exhibit to the subscribers, terest Sunning water aisd electric lights in rooms. Steam heated. Open uxecutora as aforesaid, their debts and a ll y e a r. . . B. R, SHUBER^. the Lord t,e sadure and to appeur with demands against the said estate, under T H E OCEAN GROVE T IM E S greater Intensity in the other life in oath, within six months from the date of the innumerable varieties of mutual the aforesaid order, or they will be for- y # \ •“ > ~ : ■ ...... over barred of their actions therefor Ocean Grove, N. J. good will which there abound. against the said subscribers. “ Largu inougji to kt. oomfortabla, mnal! As ths sequel, that the Lord’s glory ■ Dated, Freehold, N. J., March 6,19M.; D e ar S irs: enough to be peraonal." A . xlt •_ Inn: rat* W ILLIAM H. LOSON, TBE QUEEN MART dcntial location; just .away rroia tiie aoUra of may’ be forever, it Indicate* our desir# THEODORE W. BR EW ER . Enclosed please find $1.59 for ode year’s anbserspiioa to m B - ; buBlnefls. yet convenient. Bvery oonvsalanco for the splendor atn>ttagc; each n>t>Ki with run- Wngjpratw. and' fceat; heated sun-parlor; many taprovesaant, ana aiteraMoBs. flected in our churches,: .where from American plan. 13 per day and up; European plan. 12.60 per day an. —Weekly rates, first to iast w* are H it M onm outh C o u n ty S u r r o g a te d Office* Name...... Bapoetton,Invited. A m Owneryhlp Special fowt dinner, J ' - Sundays ass* |£« . Sc a d i enu i a re«a.. *1 Second To' .Cia. Out 8panlih T«x Dodgers. in the Matter of the Estate of Emma S. Km Z. BA I Street or Box No...... Tbe SpKilil: ijovemment 1# to -rassrt Inskip, Deceased te' atrjiwe*. In lt« search for tax Notice to Creditors to Present Claims Against Estate. T ow n ...... i ....,» 8 dodgwwl' An i a e r ia l. survey o f th e ' STII/B ’ B | X P R E S S ■wuntry, !n which pictures will be tak­ Pursuant to the ordter of Joseph L; Stale- ...... STORAGE TRUCKING MOVING BAGGAGE en, !•, planned to learn th® exact area Donahay, Surrogate of the County of; Monmouth, made on the eighth day of •f til the property ield by each land­ , Let us help you solve yourjmoriiifi,problems. April, U24, on the application of Harry P. Dm M , ...... holder. ■ Inskip, John S. Inskip and Taulman A- Plsoei your spring moving order NOW. • Miller, executors of the estate of Emma Our men are experienoed furniture handlers. , S. Inskip, motice Ib hereby given to the Reetjred Payment...... > . . . . . ' 'Fired .Into O w p. of Loafers. ■•redltort of said deceased to exhibit to Fully equipped to handle pHm»e,> ifaa'and other heavy goods. the subscribers, executors.as aforesaid, Because be was unable to sleep, their debts and demands against'the «aid Make AU Check* Payable to THE OCEAN GROVK TIMES. while a half dnien men loafed in front estate, under oath, within six months from STILES STANDS FOR SERVICE the date of the aforesaid ordor, or they of his flat, la New fo rk city, Joseph will be forever barred of their actions SW* tWeejmh Wareknse Pieeas firm ffttae Borrabocas fired at toe (roup. thorofor against the said subscribers. PLU o n t th e an b acriptten blank at once and *

Foondad iSB Weekly Edition PRIMARIES NEXT TUESDAY; Lincoln. We might mke readers back even further to the time, 13(1 years THE OCEAN GROVE TIM ES EVERY CITIZEN SHOULD VOTE ago, when W ashington wrote to Lafay- 1 Published FrMnsy ssta; ' ‘‘The '.greatest danger to this SKV-- L. V. RAINBAK, Publisher Delegates for the national conven­ new republic will 'be the listlesaness John 33, Quinn, Editor tions. of the various parties will be of die voters.”. . ... 48 Main Avenue, Ocean Grove, N, J. elected in N?w Jersey next Tuesday, Ominous head-shaking and plaintive Telephone 7 April 22nd, Opportunity is thus giv­ wails are futile. Protesting avails lit­ tle unaccompanied by action. The SUBSCRIPTIONS; tL50 yearly; 90c, soml-annually; 50c. quarter!, or 4e» ami poet- en every man and woman citizen of birthright of suffrage the first rud* t&Q ase per copy, p&3ta®s paid ln the United States; 0 and foreign $2.50 legal age to declare their interest in meat of .popular government has; as­ a year. * the future welfare of the country. sumed a destructive 'liBtlesfsnesn always offer problems. Thrift is essential to «adte- AJlDKESSBS ohanged on request-ralways grive former address. The real menace lies here at home Uhrwsgh carelessness, indifference and ing1 happiness. Wisa investment ia the beat safeguard .&DVERTISEJMENTS: B ates will be fumlsh&d by us upon request. in indifference at the polls rather than selfishness. All too mat>y are appar­ WATCH THB LABEL ON YOUR PAPSR FOR THE EXPIRATION OF ently imbued with the idea “What’s for the future. YQUR SUBSCRIPTION what is going on at Washington. Ham iltonF. Kean, Begrabliean Nation- the use?” " Officers of the Asbnry Park Trust Company are Ei^pred as second-class mall at the Ocean Orove- poatofflce al Committefseman for New Jersey and It ia the duty of every good citizen an outstanding supporter of Calvin to' belong, to a' party and to participate always glad to counsel with patrons and to advise THE TRUTH IN ITS PROPER PIACE Coolidge from (he first, has been try­ in his party activities. The primaries them in the selection of safe and remunerative securi­ ing, to arouse the interest of the vot­ offer Inis opportunity by giving' the es’.: of his party,'through .'advertising privilege of assisting in thi; aoxaina- ties. Our Checking Department simplifies family ac­ Carpenters are receiving in­ President Coolidge believes the and publicity directing- attention to the tions of those who are to run for office counting. Our Interest Department makes economy creased wages. So are plumbers. people, as far as may be possible, similarity

V&y 1 •• 1 v ;/.V '■ ’ \ ' FBIDAY, APRIL 18, 1924 V; ■ ■' \ E O C E A N G TI *AOB; : - , j g

William Nease writes The Times Guertin Mra. Schaefer, Mrs. Holmes, < from his home in Pittsburgh that he L. T. Teeter Newark; Mrs. N. F. Tun- will spend his summer vacation at ison, Madge Tunison, M. T. Tunison, Ocean Grove again. He has been a Jr.,i Hillside; Mrs. E. W. W atts, Helen regular summer visitor here for many MacHarg, Lynbrook; Albert Nichol­ y e ars. son, Haddon Heights; Dr. and Mrs. E. — ♦ — . . 1R. Bickens, Annabel Lee, Dr. Anna , Mr. and Mrs. Edward Geer, Mrs. Eld- Whelan, New York; Mr. and Mra. HotcroBs buna i ridge and Mis. W alter, Stevens, from The Business Man John Kroog, Woodcliff, N. J.;Dr. Doro­ | Northampton, Mass., are the Easter thy Worthington, St. Louis; Mrs. G . Neubert's drug store at Main and i guests of Mrs. Stevens’ parents, Mr. A. Stevens, Mrs. A. W. Sproul, Mrs. The successful business man of today builds a reserve fund, for he knows Central avenues was opened for the and Mrs. Frank Tantum, of Cookman H. R. Talbot, Mrs. B. D. Forster, season today. avenue, Ridgewood; Florence W. Jacobs, South the maintaining of such a fund is a sound business policy. Orange; Mrs. E. H. Black, M m . M. H . The quarterly reports of the Ocean Mrs’. C. S. .Stembergh and son Ly­ , Lazenby, Baltimore; Mr. Each and every individual should conduct his private affairs in just the Grove banks will be found elsewhere man. 23 Olin street, together with Mrs. and Mrs W. P. M. Irwin, Sara-and same way. Open a personal surplus or special account and be ready to seize oppor­ in The Times today. I. B. Pitcairn a&d Stanley M. Smith, May Sailer, Philadelphia; J. F. Dll- tunity or prevent misfortune. —•— 93 Cookman avenue, are home from a worth, University of Pittsburgh; El- Fire Commissioner Robert M. W att winter’s sojourn at S t Petersburg, wood B. Ivins, Trenton. has been elected an honorary member F lo rid a . You are invited to open your reserve account with this bank at 4 per cent, of the Stokes engine company. _ Easter patrons at Stokes Hall: Alice interest credited quarterly. Miss Ethel K. Shaw, of; Brooklyn, Wood, the Misses Vega, Brooklyn; The local woman’s prayer circle is proprietor of the Ardmore-Summer- Mrs. C. E. Seitzinger, Isabel Seitzinger, meeting this Friday afternoon in the fleld hotel, was in town yesterday. Mrs. Nichols, Clara and Bertha Nich­ parlor of St. Paul's church. While here she received from the As­ ols, Mrs. Perkins, New York; Mrs. E. — • — .- bury Park dealer a Dodge sedan or­ W. Blackman Miss Griffith, ’White H. D. Jones and family, of Philadel­dered some weeks ago. Plains; Mra. P. L, Burrowes, Hillside; phia, are at their cottage, 181 Clark ■ ■ Grove National Bank Ellsworth Shafto and family, Passaic Mr. and Mra.' A. J. Versoy, Miss avenue, through Easter week. U Ti Richards, Eliza­ Association BuMdin? Ruth Versoy and Miss Evelyn Smith, beth; Adeline Johnson, Scotch Plains; O. G.-Stoll and family, from New­of Irvington, are among Easter visit­ Mrs P Scheurer, Katonah, N. Y.; H. ark, are occupying for Easter week ors to Ocean Grove. They are just back E. Wood and family, New York; G. H. their cottage a t 119 Central avenue. from a motor trip through Pennsyl­ Smith, wife and daughter, West Or­ Ocean Grove, N. J. vania, Maryland and Virginia. ange; Misses G, B. and E. N. Haver, N. J. TATIjOB, F r U n t A. —* ----- T. MTM.TO. Caahlar Misa Janice Drew, of Newark, is Newark; Mr. and Mrs. L Strassburg- JACOB STUM, VlM M in i J . H . HAXMBAIt, m m m C u k l« r the Easter week guest of her mother, For some days Mrs. Dice, of Wil­ er, Ethel Strassburger, Philadelphia; Mrs. Ethel Drew, 79 Delaware avenue. liamsport, Pa., has been visiting her Mr. and Mrs, Daniel Wilson, Cranbury parents Mr. and Mrs. Howard J. Heck, D. H. Mount, Rev. Thomas Tyack, While the alterations to the Eagle 36 Heck avenue. Her husband, L. A. Hightstown; W. L. Husk and family, firehouse are under way the company’s •Dice, is expected here today, to re­ South Urange; Lucy M. KUickler, truck is quartered in the Washington main over Easter. Bath, N. Y. firehouse. ■ “ ----- . Louis Heckman, leader of the Young ADDRESS BY DR. EATON TO Mr. and Mrs. William Scott are People’s Society of the Belmar M. E. Easter visitors from Philadelphia. Church, gave the address at the local REPUBLICAN COMMITTEE They are at their summer cottage, 7 Epworth League meeting last Sunday Surf avenue. evehing. Miss Elizabeth Johnson, of Before the Republican county com' . ■■ • Abbott avenue, was the soloist. mittee Monday at Freehold, Dr. Mrs. Alfred Scott, Stanley Scott and . — « — . ■ Charles Aubrey Eaton delivered an ad- Mias Laura Tillyer, of New York, Were Under the auspices of the Woman’s dress_on “How the Republican Party at the Scott cottage on Pitman avenue Home M issionary Society a Lenten ser­ Can Best Serve Our Country in 1924.’’ at last weekend. . vice was held yesterday, afternoon at Dr. Eaton declared the first need to be - > *r — ' • the home of Mrs. Loren B. Holdridge, a political program which will pre­ M. J. Woodring and family have re­ 98 Asbury avenue. There was a show­ serve all that has been achieved and With Main Street, Bangs Avenue, Emory Street, Cookman avenue and turned from St. Petersburg, Fla., er of work aprons and caps. which will carry us forward along Kingsley Street now in process of paving, Asbury Park’s street traffic presents a where Mr. Woodring operates the At­ —«— safe and sane lines by American meth­ lantic cafeteria. Mr. and Mra. Boland Monroe, Don­ ods to greater prosperity and happi­ problem in routing. - r - f - ald Monroe, Edward Wickett, Misa ness. We have got to lift the burdens Mrs. H. G. Shreve, 143 Main avenUe, Virginia Ferriss, Mr. and Mrs. W. K. of taxation from our people by tax But traffic at the city’s oldest bank runs along as smoothly as ever. . was the hostess yesterday afternoon Weeks, Misses Edna and Helen Weeks, legislation which is based upon sound for the weekly meeting of the Ocean of Newark and the Misses Dunker, of economic facts and laws, and not upon Grove Thursday Club, Paterson, registered at Lane Villa this the frenzied dreams of1 demagogues —-. w eek. nor upon partisan expediency. We Miss Bertha Rozema, 121 Pilgrim must go further in reducing the ma­ Pathway, entertained last Saturday Over Easter there will be a .reunion chinery of government and increasing evening the members of the local of the Heck family at the home of Mr. its efficiency. W e'need more business Queen Esther Circle. and Mrs. Howard J. Heck, 36 Heck in politics and less politics in busi­ n e ss.” .'— —7 avenue. They will have with them Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Fackler their sons with their wives, their The speaker said Calvin Coolidge have arrived from Princeton to occupy daughters and a number of grand­ must be elected President and that he must be given a platform upon which their summer home at 24 McClintock children. street, the Lincoln Cottage. lie can stand without violence to his —«— Edwin S. Keim, of Philadelphia, is own character or judgment,-and which will furnish him with a workable in­ The women of the Washington and the new proprietor of the Chalfonte strument of national service. There Stokes firemen’s auxiliary will hold a hotel, comer Ocean and Bath avenues, must be elected also a Congress which ,cake sale at the Boyce meat market in this season and is now in possession. STRONGER DAY BY DAY The house is to be thoroughly renovat­ will be with Coolidge in principle and Olin street tomorrow, Saturday. p ractice. ed and will be ready for opening on Friday, May 23. Dr. Eaton said: Mrs. Davis Jon2l7"of Philadelphia, “The. country is tired of the antics was in Ocean Grove yesterday on busi­ —•— Safety Deposit Department (Established 1889) Interest Department of these groups of self-styled radicals, ness.. Mrs. Jones is the proprietor of Returning to the Grove from Phila­ whose chief function is obstruction. If the Albatross hotel, Ocean Pathway. delphia, where she passed the winter. — ♦ — Mrs. M. A. Kilgore is npw established they are Republicans let them stand by their party. If they are R ep u b ­ at 11 Pitman avenue, the Harrisburg not Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Broome, for­ licans, let them have the decency to Cottage. She has with her at present ASBURY PARK, N. J. merly of W est New ‘Brighton, Staten sail under their true, colors and face her sister, Mrs., S. A. Bell, Mr. Bell Island, have taken possession of their the fortunes of war with a party of , new bungalow at 133 Franklin ave­ and Miss Mildred Bel!, also of the nue. Quaker'City. their own. To keep Calvin Coolidge in — ®— the W hite House and give him a sound platform supported by a sane and loy­ — ------■ V " : ~ ~ Harold A. Schadt has purchased of Mr. and Mrs. Frank I. Bull, of the al Congress is a task which requires his brother Russell the Schadt seafood Aurora hotel, recently came back to courage, intelligence and united action their home in Asbury, Park from a pro­ market at 47 Olin street and took pos­ on the part of American-minded peo session of the Bame Monday. He will tracted visit with relatives at Dunedin, pie. F la . occupy the apartment over the market “Harmony is never achieved by the as his home. Russell will devote his Seacoast Trust Company use of empty words or idle gesture. At last weekend Miss Genevieve entire time to his Asbury Park seafood Men are never united for action unless Flint came from the State Normal business. they feel alike. And they do not feel Aibury Park, N. J. School, Trenton, to spend the Easter alike until they think*alike. And they . holidays at her home on'Pitman ave- Charles Jenkinson on Monday re­ can not think alike until they have ris­ KtMuraea Ovar Five Millions of Dollar* opened hiB candy store at Pilgrim en above self-interest to the higher Pathway and Pitman avenue. He is ground of the common good. The cure Philip Lance, formerly of Ocean also opening a fine new store in the for the evils of faction is loyalty to Grove, now has a tonsorial parlor in i Plaza hotel, Asbury Park. This sum-- party. The cure for party evils is loy­ the Republican Club building.at Brad­ mer Mr. Jenkinson will add a bakery alty to the whole country. And loyalty ley Beach, comer of McCabe avenue to his excursion-ground restaurant in to the whole country is a moral and Main street. th e P a rk . achievement resting upon an invin­ ‘ ' • ' ♦ — . cible faith in the purposes of God for Thomas J. Preston, a member of the Last Saturday evening the Rev. the nation as an instrument in the ad­ Ocean Grove Association, is again at j Samuel Sargent performed the mar­ vancement of mankind.” 5!i Per Cent his home in South Orange, after pass­ riage ceremony uniting Mrs, Elizabeth ing the greater part of the winter at Kimberger and James D, Wood, both STATE MASONS HONOR Dcland, Florida. of Monroeville, N. J. The couple motor­ No need to wait until you have a large sum of money to put into a mort­ ' — « . ■■ ; .. ed to Ocean Grove to be married at MEMORY OF INSTRUCTOR gage. . Seacoast First Mortgage Participation Bonds can be had for a3 little as $100 John J. Saxer, of East Orange, was the home of the groom’s grandmother, an Ocean Grove visitor on Tuesday. Mrs. E. A- Margerum, 85 Main avenue. Tribute was paid to the memory of or as much as $1,000. \ He is the proprietor of tho Saxer,'res­ Henry S. Haines, late instructor of the taurant in the Manhattan building ad­ The Mozart Club, with Mra. H. G. New Jersey Grand Lodge of Masons, They are absolutely guaranteed by this powerful member of the Federal joining this office. Shreve directing, is singing this after­ when brethren from all over the State Reserve System. noon at the Lenten recital ih the First gathered Thursday of last week-in the The Association dwelling house at M. E. Church, Asbury Park. The guest Odd Fellows’ cemetery at Burlington Booklet on request. the head of Fletcher lake is being organist for today'is Mark Andrews, to dedicate a monument commemorat­ moved to the lot at Pennsylvania and of Montclair, who gave the first re­ ing his thirty-eight years as a teacher Inskip avenues, to be remodelled for cital on the Occan Grove Auditorium of Masonry. residential purposes. organ when that instrument was in­ The ceremony was in charge of stalled . Frank Sayres, of Camden, grand mas­ The paint, varnish and house hard­ . — «— ter of the New Jersey Grand Lodge of ware store of W. i Nittenger,.formerly Albert Woolman, wife and young Masons. Other members of the State on Emory street near the Wesley lake dnu'ghter are again at 93 Main avenue, lodge taking part were Andrew J. Monmouth County's Largest Trust Company bridge, Asbury Park, is now located at having just returned froni Palm Beach, Foulds, of Passaic, deputy grand mas­ 73 South Main street. I Fla. During the winter Mr. Woolman ter; Ralph E. Lum, of Madison,, senior ■ operated the motor, yacht of Florian grand warden; William B. MacKay, of Services are beinjg.held at St. Paul’s Ziegfeld and. his wife. Billie Burke,,the Collingswood, junior grand warden; chiirch every evening this week in actress. Mr. Woolman will reopen his Isaac Cherry, of Trenton, grand sec­ commemoration of Passion week. The fruit and'vegetable market at 46 Main retary; Josiah W. Ewan, of. Camden, service is continued for one hour, be­ avenue about the middle of May. past grand master; Richard C. Wood­ ginning a t.7.30 o’clock.- ward, of Bordentown. past grand mas­ Mrs. Elizabeth O’Reilly and Miss ter, and Cooper H. Prickett, of Bur­ A NATIONAL BANE WITH PULL TRUST POWEES For the Ihenefit of the junior de­ Annie O’Reilly, summer residents of lington, past grand master. partment of the Ocean Grove Woman’s the Grove from Newark, are now liv­ Club an. Easter supper was served by ing in Asbury Park at 204 Third ave­ OBITUARY. its members Tuesday in .. the dining nue. Mrs. O’Reilly is the proprietor of , room of St. Paul’s church. I the Lake Grand. 3 Broadway, arid WILLIAM H. MORRIS. •' j Miss O'Reilly is a summer clerk in the •A Civil -War veteran 1 and pioneer A SAFE DEPOSIT BOX Misses Elizabeth Plummer, D. ipostoffice. They , have with them as resident of Ocean Grove,, William S. Stubbs and Marjorie Kauffman, who I Easter guests Mr. and Mrs. Charles Morris passed away Tuesday evening are spending tho winter and spring at Remlinger of East Orange; Miss El- from paralysis at his home, 128 Heck In the modem fire and burglar-proof vaults of this bank for the protection of your the Boscobel, have gone to their homes ' sie Hoffman, of. Paterson, and Charles avenue, at'.the age of eighty-four. valuable papers, jewelry and silver gives THE SAME SENSE OF SECURITY that * for the Easter vacation. | W urth, of Newark^ Funeral services were held this after­ a ike insurance polioy gives to the property owner. It is the cheapest form o f in­ noon, conducted by Chaplain William surance in the world. For'several weeks Miss Annie Fur- | The following persons arq booked at T. Abbott, assisted by the Rev. George by, of Hackensack, is in her summer i the Boscobel for Easter:: ''Mrs. J. S. Johnson, followed by interment in cottage at 67 Stockton avenue. She I Weber, Union Hill; Florence E.,Ben­ the cemetery at Glendola by Undertak­ YEARLY RENTAL $3.00 TO $10.00 has with her two small nieces, Louise nett. Flushing; Pauline ■ Weiss, Mrs. er. Matthews. Mr.. Morris was , suc­ and Julia Clark, of Newark. Elizabeth Kent, Bessie Kent, Newark; cessively a bill poster, advertising, dis­ ■ ■ Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Benedict, East Or­ tributor, theatrical manager and candy When the State Federation meets at ange; Harry Easley. Agnes Essley, merchant in Asbury Park. He was a Atlantic City, May 7-10, the Ocean Brooklyn; Edith Cox, Bloomfield; Mrs. member of C. K. Hall Post, No. 41, G. , Grovo Woman’s Club will be, represent­ Gertrude Dearden, New York; Mrs. A. R., of Asbury Park. For nearly a ed by. Mrs. George M. Bennett, Mrs. B. Reirihold, Tuckahoe; Catherine half century he had lived in Ocean Grove. Surviving are Mrs. Morris. I The Merchants National Bank H, G. Shreve and Miss Jessie Staats.' Hayes, Mrs. John Brophy, New York; Mrs. John Burris, Mrs. E. L. Fellows, two daughters nnd four sons. The ; A Member of the Federal Reserve System At 60 Mt. Hermon Way, .John Fer- Onondago, N. Y.; Mrs.-Robert Stevens, daughters aro Mrs. Minerva VanCleaf ruggiaro ihas just opened a fruit- and B altim ore. and Mrs. Efnma Blake, of New York, vegetable market. Mr. Ferrugglaro . . . ;— # — and the sons are Hqward, Joseph, H ar­ is ,* 4S®aduate >of t h e N e p tu n e high The St. Elmo hotel will entertain riso n and M o rto n th e la st-n a m ed bo-.- TED ONLY NATIONAL BANE VS AS BURT P . school, class ofi2.A ndJia.U voa in Bel- over Easter, these persons: Mr. and Ing the chairman of tho Neptune town-1 jSIAT* ' ■ 'V.v , . ■ ,Mra. J.,H . Twoedy., Brooklyn; A. H. ship committee. / ^^gg»aarspmjpf«; m m w m s IfpiW lSW ipfi I 'A G B S I X ■THE PC grove; time: F O R O V E R 2 0 0 Y E A R S haarlem oil has been a world­ wide remedy for kidney, liver and bladder disorders, rheumatism, lumbago and uric acid conditions.

HAARLEM OIL m m s M m M , correcttatemal troubles, stimulate vital organs. 'Three sl2es. All druggists. Insist on the original genuine G old IvTr.DAt..

A Story N o Woman The Governor of North . Carolina Before Purchasing Your ) J met the Governor of South Carolina G a n . yesterday in a New York hotel. The conference is believed to have result­ Electric Lighting Fixtures for Your ed in the unanimous opinion it’s a T HERE'S many a story a woman longer time than ever, suggests tne Philadelphia North American. N e w Home can hide—and many a one she It isn’t,propaganda, however unless it does. But the story of her indif­ favors something you oppose, the San ference as a Housewife will be only Francisco Chronicle feels sure. too plainly reflected in her personal Our idea of a good wife is one who lets her little boy think his father is appearance. If she uses a poor the greatest man in the world, mod­ household soap, her red, rough and estly confesses the Dallas News. coarse looking hands will reveal The people are disgusted when it does nothing, and scared to dea’;h when it her carelessness. . seems likely to do something, the Bos­ ton Transcript says of Congress.

With the regularity of the tides as We have a very large stock of Careful, intelligent housewives election day approaches, the Czar of' know this and are as particular Hudson county predicts what will be the Democratic majority, and the re­ Williamson Lighting Fixtures, about the kind, of household soap turns prove him to be a true prophet. So long as the State leaders of the they use as they are about their Republican party are content to let and invite your inspection of toilet soap. Such women always Hague control both parties in Hudson county, Hague will remain both Our line as to quality and price insist upon Kirkman’s Soap. They prophet and Czar, charges the Ameri­ can Issu e. know that Kirkman’s is as harm­ People who live in glass houses less to their hands and to delicate shouldn’t start investigations, cau­ fabrics as the most exquisite toilet tions the Buffalo News.

soap. OBITUARY. MRS. EMMA McGARRY. ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR Mrs. Emma McGarry, seventy- eight, died at Trenton. Saturday. A p ril a, it was learned here last Fri­ 521 M ain Street, Bradley Beach day. Mrs. McGarry was a member of Trinity M. E. Church, Trenton, and AS YOUR grocer can tell you, was actively connected with a number Telephone 597 of its societies, and also the Woman’s -^^-Xirkman’s Soap is not only Christian Temperance Union. For' free from irritating lye, but is made thirty-five years she had. attended the j Ocean Grove camp meeting services : of the purest and finest materials. and was quite well known to many summer visitors. She was bom in This pure soap gives a thorough Staffordshire, England, and1 came to America fifty-eight, years ago/ For washing energy for every house­ the past ten years she lived at .320 hold and laundry purpose. -West Hanover street, Trenton. ' MRS. M. A. ENGELMAN. . Mrs. Mary A. Engelman, who died For the sake of your hands insist Thursday of last week at 40 Central upon Kirkman’s. avenue, this place, was buried in West Laurel Hill cemetery, Philadelphia, following services Monday at the resi­ dence of her grand daughter, Mrs. OCEAN GROVE’S David S. James, 1920 North Twelfth street, with Undertaker George B. Sexton in charge. Mrs. Engelman had YOUR HANDS WILL BE GRATEFUL been identified with Ocean Grove for over forty years. She was a member of the Lutheran Church of the Atone­ UP-TO-DATE ment, Asbury Park, and was asso­ ciated with the local auxiliary of the Ann May hospital. She was eighty- eight years old and in addition to the relative named she is feurvived by a grandson, Harry F. Evans, living at ANDREW T; VAN CLBVE the Central avenue address.

FRANK H. KUNST. . Following a lengthy , illness conse­ Contracting: quent upon a collapse while employed, • in government work at the Morgan A Full Line of Groceries, plant, in 1918, Frank H. Kunst died last Engineer Friday in Newark. The funeral took I Fruits, Vegetables anc/Del- place Monday at his late home in Newark, 88 Astor street, the services High and Low Pressure Steam Installation? being conducted by Dr. W. Daw­ icatessen for the Easter ■ Sanitary Plumbing and House Heating: son, bf the First Presbyterian Church, with interment in Fafrmount cemetery, Season. Our Virginia style •) Contracting in AS1 Srancflies o> that city. Mr. Kunst was a member Ptptng Aiui Pow er Work of the Jr. 0. U. A. M. and of Good­ will Council, Sons and Daughters of Ham a specialty. Headquarters Liberty. His wife, Mrs. Martha Kunst, is the proprietor of the Ocean 108 South Main Street, Oc«??n drove Side; 25 Ocean avenue, and was the for White Rose, Chase and San­ Telephone connection president of the Ocean Grove Hotel Association for several years. born’s, goods. The New York World. During the convention and until af­ Bedbugs, Roaches, Moths, etc., per­ ter election all eyes will be on the Prime Meats manently exterminated.' Harmless to New York Morning World, the paper Fabrics and Furnishings. No incon­ that was instrumental in bringing the venience. Rooms used the same day. convention to New York. A special Fresh Country Eggs I do not put them to sleep for a reduced subscription price of $3.00 for couple of hours, to wake up with re­ five months (until after the conven­ newed energy. Unsolicited testimonials tion) and $5.00 for nine months (until, High Quality Butter Methods endorsed by the U. S. govern­ after the election) has been ' made. Tfakc advantage of these reduced ment. Rats caught with trained fer­ rets only. (Not poisoned.) Estab­ prices to have this great Democratic lished in this vicinity 30 years. Phone paper, the New York Morning World,' Asbury-2843. sent to you by mail.—16. '; When these little things you see J. KENDRICK Scrutinize Your $20 Bills. E J. Strassburger Just Telephone Asbury-2843 Exterminator Asbury, Park Some counterfeit Federal Reserve $20 bills have been circulated in Red Bank., They are vcty good imitations Corner of Pilgrim Pathway and according to experts are bleached $1 bills. They are on a Chicago bank and Olin Street “EASTER" and of the series of 1914. These bills N A G L E ’S PH A R M A C Y were passed at the stores of L. Becker, EASTER CARDS PAPER FLOWERS PLANTS Mrs. L. M. Thompson and the Wagner OCEAN GROVE, N. J. Our Fountain Open’ AU Year Market on Shrewsbury avenue, and HOT COFFEE TEA . COCOA at the Red Bank postoflice. With Whipped Cream Breyer*s Icfe Cream to take home. Easter Candies. Foss and “COLD IN THE HEAD” Whitman’s Chocolates. Ib an acuto attack of Nasal Catarrh. Orders Delivered Telephone 1749 Don’t forget our Prescription Department ia equal to the heat along Thoao subject to frequent '•colas’* are the shore . generally in a "run down" condition. HALL'S CATARRH LIBDICrNE Is a Treatment conalatlng of an Ointment* to: ao used locally, and a Tonic, which acta G. M. Name’s Pharmacy Qulokly through the Blood on’ the .ftlu-, coua Surfaces, building up the 8yaUxo* The Drug Store of Ocean Grove i and making you lesa liable to "colds." • 35 Pilgrim Pathway, Ocean Grove, N. J. (Auditorium Corner) ! Bold by druggtits for over 40 Years. , } r . J, Cheney A Co., Toledo, O. IW llU lllllllln'

,a>, " , FRIDAY, APRIL 18, 1924 T H E OCEAN GROVE TIMES

LEGAL NOTICES Report ol the; Condition OCEAN GROVf NAH0NAL BANK OCEAN GROVE,' N. J . ; At the close of business March 31, 1924 • RESOURCES v Loans and discounts, Including rediscounts, acceptances of other banks; and foreign bills of exchange, ., or drafts - sold with endorsements of this bank ...... $ 887,813 G5 ASBURY PARK Overdrafts, unsecured ...... 336 18 Deposited to secure cir- : NEW JERSEY ; culaton (U. S. bonds par value) .525,000.00 All other United States government securities.. 38,966 00 ’ Total ,.v.v.v.ii...... 63,966 00 Other bonds, stocks,, securi- » T H A N K Y O U ties, etc ...... 142,807 64 Prize-Winning Meats Banking house ...... $17,535.24 Furrtiture and fixtures.... 4,800 00. 22,335 24 Lawiul reserve with Federal re- CALL AGAIN! ' serve bank 66,054 68 You can come here shopping with the utmost confidence that the Meat you Items with, Federal Reserve Bank S \ handy directory for our readers in process of collection ...... - 7,160 04 get will be choice cuts, carefully chosen from the best Meat it is possible to buy. S ...... W |.M ... Cash in vault and amount:due : from national banks ^ . 53,78515 Amount due from State banks, No matter what out you want, you will And us always willing to do our best bankers and trust companies in the United States (other than to give it to you. included in. items .8, 9, 30 )...... 850 38 Checks on other banksJn- Glendale Farms Dairy KENYON’S BEDDING STORE the same city' or town as reporting bank (other Products Company Mattresses, Bedding, Brass and Iron than Item 12). Total of items 9 ,10 ,11,12 and 13..*61,785 87 MILK AND CREAM Beds, Cribs, Springs, Couches and Miscellaneous cash items ...... 540 64 Redemption fund with .U* S. Third and Railroad, Asbury Park cots. Mattresses renovated, Treasurer and due from U. _■ S. Treasurer 1.2W.00, Telephone 1450 51 OLIN ST., OCEAN GROVE Other assets 48,973 02 The choice of the Reason’s Poultry offerings await you here, and since bo Total ...... *..$1,295,951 92 Gharles S. Ferris LIABILITIES , much of the Easter Dinner depends upon the Fowl, let us help you choose the correct MOORE & HOLSART Capital stock paid in ...... $ 100,000 00 Surplus fund 20,000 00 size for your needs. BUILDERS GONTRAGTHNG PAINTER Undivided profits...... $33,836 40 . Less current expenses, 89 Mt. Carmel Way, Ocean Grove Special Attention to Jobbing interest and taxes paid ...... 11,035 35 Telephone 3112 82 Mt. Tabor Way, Ocean Grow y v \ . ------* 22,806 05 Circulating notes outstanding.... 24,400 00 ; Certified1 checks outstanding.... 7,817 77 ■Cashier’s checks outstanding.... 184 78 G. C. P rid h am & Br© S. BOGAN, Glazier Total of itemB 21, 22, 23, ■ 24 and -25 8,002 55 Practical Painters Plate, Window and 'Windshield GU m . Individual deposits subject to check ...... i... 460,897 70 Mirrors For Sale Certificates of deposit, due ln Paper Hangers less than 30 days (other than * Mirrors Re-Silvered * for money borrowed ...... 16,500 00 57 Embury Avenue Telephone 895-J Total of demand de­ Ooean Grove, N.J. Gl South Main Street, Asbury Park1; posits (other than • bank deposits) sub­ All kinds of reliBhes to take home to complete the Easter dinner. ject to Reserve, Items 26, 27, 28 , 29, EDMOND L. THOMPSON .10 and 31 ...... i.... .1477,397 70 • Other time deposits ...... 366,936 45 and thoir eggs, banished forever in Exterior and Interior Postal savings deposits ...... 610 18 two hours. Kills all germs and makes ■ Total of time deposits everything in loom absolutely pure. PAINTING BUbjecc to Reserve, Items 32, 33, 34 and . No damage to clothing. Estimates Furnished 35 ...... $367,546 63 Telephone 1772-Asbury . Bills payable ...... 142,000 00 26 Ocean Ave,, Ocean Grove, N. J; Notes and bills rediscounted, JAMES A. HOGG including acceptances of other 228 Corlies Avenue, Asbury Park banks and foreign bills of ex­ change or drafts sold with in- dorsemerit' of this bank...... 88,798 99 !SER VICE Liabilities other than , those FRED E. FARRY above, stated 45,000 00 JOHN N. BURTIS FUNERAL DIRECTOR and EMBALUEft T o ta l...... $1,295,951 92 The Butcher FUNERAL DIRECTOR 808 Main Street, Aibui) Park State of New, Jersey, ) PHIVATE CHAPEL Lady Aislstint Opan Oaj tnd Night County of Monmouth, f 8H- a Telephone 4j4 Residence telephone 434 I. T. A Miller, cashier of the above- Phone 6G7 517 Me. Asburj PaiK named bank, do solemnly swear that the 46 Main Avenue, Ocean Grove Bangs above statement is true to the best or my knowledge and belief. T.. A. M ILLER, Cashier. Subscribed and sworn,to before me this HARRY J. BODINE tenth day of April, 1924 DAVID B. REIDY <3. WILLIAM SCHWARTZ, , FUNERAL DIRECTOR MORTICIAN FliKERAL DIRECTOR AKD EHBM.B® * -:■••• •• y • v • v,. Notary. Public. ... ; 1007 Btnga A»a.. Arta n 'P «rt.^. Correct—At teat? s ■" i Purlers: 322 Bend Slreat, Asbury Park ■ NA’iHAN J. TAYLOR, / "HOME FOR SERVICES" ST EPH EN D. WOOLLEY, Tslapfaone 2466 Motor Equlpnant FRANK B. SMITH, , ■ .. Priiato Ants. PhoaiM. . >"-1 ,. Directors. * REPORT OF THB CUflMTlOW Tilton’s City Dairy FOR ANY KIND o/ Faateurlzed Mtlk and Cream b u t t e r m i l k a n d c e r t i f i e d INSURANCE MILK , Twin Cities Insurance Company ASBU RY P A R K , N. J. DlstrtbutorB tor W alker-Qordoo Product* A. L. E. STRASSBURGER, Prop A t the close of business March 31, .1924 805 Second Avenue, Asbury Park Room 301, Asbury - Pajrk T rust. Co. Phone 1677 . Buildingr, Tel 2326 RESOURCES. Loans and! Discounts ...... $4,427,489 73 Overdrafts ...... 1,490 79 PETER MACLEARIE & SON 1886-1923 United States Bonds..... 92,500 00 CARPENTERS AND BUILDERS .Bonds,, securities,t etc...... 1,190,385 €4 ANDREW J. HTOU6Y ; Banking -bouse, < furniture and ' Alterationa and ►Repairs' fixture# .....'...... i.. IK,482 10 Storm Saah—Screens—Shutters Mattresses Renovated and Carpets Other. Real Estate ...... * 29*371 62 Plans Arranged and; Estimates Offered Bonds arid Mortgages ...... -164,053 SO C leaned Due from other Banks, etc 206,228 86 Residence and Workshop Checks and Cosh Items...... 46,316 82 A Street, Between 18th and 19th Avenues Mattress Making and Upholstering Cash on hand 161,215 77 BELMAR, N. J. Phone 601-W 602 Burlington Ave., Bradley Beach, U. S. Revenue Stam ps...... 132 77 $G,464,617 39 , LIABILITIES. Capital stock paid in.'.,.. SiOO.OOQ 00 GIVE RECOGNITION TO Surplus fundf ...,w ....; *00,000 00 IGNITION wopks Undlvdlod profits, less expenses V arid taxes - paid ...... ;. 365,487 44 Due to other bajnks, etc...... 13,436 16 S t P V l c t OUR IGNITION WORKS Individual deposits, _■ • payable on demand!, .$2,765,775 42 where our experts specialize on re­ Individual deposits on. time f...... ;. 2,1*6,197 86 pairs and installation of auto ig­ Demand certificates of deposit ...... 78,665 15 nition systems of all kinds. Drive CcrtilltHl checks ...... 12,590 81, Cashier's checks out- in and learn of our facilities and fltaflidlng ...... 12,491 58 ' ------— $5,015,723 79 experience; drive outi and have no Bills payable ,. i ...... 450,000 00 Wonderful Bargains Reserve for Interest and taxes 80,000 00 more trouble with your electric ap­ $6,464,647 39 paratus. ' '' \;j. State of New Jersey, County of Mon­ mouth, HB. '-r I, L. V- Ufced; Vice President, and H; Bari Farry, Cashier, of rthe above- naaned bank, being- severally duly ewom, r. S. MORRIS, Automotive electrician eaoh for himself deposes and says that the foregoing statement Is true, to the best of Real Estate U. S. L.. 8attory Service Station his knowledge and belief. I). S. and rir««ton» Solid nnd Pneum atic Truck Tlreg;:|| ; H. EARL FARRY, Cashier. I. L. REED, Vice President. 28 South Main Street, Asbury Park Phone 2778 Subscribed and sworn to/before me this ninth dny of April, A. D. 1924. • WALTER CARR/ PROPERTY SELLING EVERY DAY ■: -N’v - ' ■ Notary Public. Correct attest:. JAMES WILLIAM MARSHALL, . • WALTER F. CLAYTON, I. R. TAYLOR, .• ^ Direoters. . . If You Want to Own Property Made for Hard Wear In Ocean Grove You will always be satisfied with their sturdy effi­ ciency. Successful gardening depends largely on the tools BUY IT NOW that are used. SNYDER & ROBINS f F r o m ... .. • Telephone 2*8 uwt Main S tr e e t and Labe Avenne h *»p w Tl|e Covert Agency ®HEBS ASBURY PARK 1 U B S n J O Brlghie>i Ibe Corner Wtaerc Ya«t Arc 52 Main Avepae, Ocean Crove Varnish, Sbellac, Dinah Black Palais, All Colors, $2.50 a 6aBon Phane234-M I Edga r Crohn ' i : • »• ui'T'-r, m raiiv

■ 0ne Dunflrcfl P a r

AHsnncrst,H. J . . .:v'. THE OCEAN GROVE TIMES FRIDAY, APRIL 18, 1924

Presidential Pri

A p r i l 2 2 d

CALVIN COOLIDGE

ASKS YOUR SUPPORT H. CERLINA, Proprietor (Successor to C. V. La Rose)

629 M attison Jfvtnue Asbury Park Regular Dinner 76c. Chicken Dinner $1. Luncheon 75c, The Newest Hosiery HAMILTON F. KEAN Luncheonette 50c. Republican National Committeeman. CATERING Special attention will be given to catering- for receptions and In every silluring shade borrowed from Weddings spring's panorama of colors appears the newest hosiery that will compliment the smartest Easter Telephone Asbury 85-R costumes. And here awaits a shimmering array Easter Sonnet. from the finest chiffon weight to the heaviest glove silk, depending upon preference. Moderately Easter time once more is here, priced from $1.59 up. Gladdest day of all the year; Jesus bowed His thorn-crowned head, DEPENDABLE “It is finished,” then He said. A good weight, evenly woven pure He who died our souls to save thread silk hose in full fashioned; has a Now is risen from the grave; JENKINSON’S garter top, and comes in all new shades. So our Eastertime is glad, Special value at How can any one be sad? Christ is risen, is risen indeed, Able to supply our need; DELICIOUS CANDIES Let us with Him now arise, A ND trustworthy. Claim the grace which he supplies. Let us love Him and adore, Two Stores Now Open When you en­ Love and serve Him more and more. gage this firm of un­ M . M . R. dertakers you are O cean G rove. A p ril 1G, 1924. Pilgrim Pathway and Pitman Ave. taking no chances. 'H&bisrg Park New Jersey You are at liberty to Mantaloking Drawbridge Closed. inqufre rof families, While the work of putting in a new Ocean Grove whom we have .draw is under way the Mantaloking served in the past. bridge, near Toms River is closed te vehicular travel and to navigation. It PLAZA HOTEL, ASBURY PARK Silent Service is expected the work will occupy four weeks or longer. ANNOUNCEMENT We extend Easter Greetings to all our patrons and invite them to visit our new quarters

UHERAL DIRECTOR 73 South Main Street PHONE 21 ■ ASSUPV PARK,'-'] ' and view our large supply of PAINTS VARNISHES HARDWARE ALUMINUM WARE ' GARDEN TOOLS TORIC “ Everything to Work With” KITCHEN CONVENIENCES In fact everything to make work easier Everybody is Kitchenware, Hardware An extra suply of Kettles and Jars is necessary in every kitchen When buying Hardware and Tools it pays to buy the best, and Invited when you buy from us you gob the best. to examine our glasses; Right Goods Right Prices to have the various points expalined, and to ask W. NITTENGER, Hardware prices without incurring the least obligation to buy. William B. Reilly & Co. 513 Cookman Avenue Cookman Ave., Asbury Park Asbury Park Near Ten Cent. Stores

Does Your Plumbing Centennial Need Attention ? loe Repairing ;NAS '- It is always best to catch, a leak or a plumber repair when it first starts, HAVE YOU HEADACHE? because its tendency is to grow worse Do your eyes burn or itch? w ith n e g lect. ' • 8S MAIN AVENUE, OCEAN GROVE . Do they feel tired or strained ? If so. have your eyes exam­ “Home-made” repairs are make­ Your pleasure in walking or hiking ined. Your glasses may need a shifts at best, and are the costliest in is greatly marred if your sho s are not ch an g e. the long run—place your plumbing properly repaired and are therefore STILES & C O . problems on our shoulderp, and we will uncomfortable. We guarantee to re­ Philadelphia Eye Specialists solve them promptly and satisfactori- pair them right. 22 Main St-, ASBURY PARK One of New Jersey’s Great Furniture Houses We employ none but high-grade re­ Every Friday—Hours 10 to 4.30 pairers; men who have qualified in New York shops. Our prices are the same as charged in ordinary shops, PLUMBER but the work is different. LEROY STEWART r Capitol Furniture Co. 64 Main Avenue, Ocean Grove Telephone 428 Plans Furnished and Estimates L. BR0 IVN Given for Old and New Work 141 Main St, Asbury Park Jobbing All-Metal Weather Strips Pure Manufactured H. BANKER, Proprietor and Natural Metal Worker BUILDER Mate and Asbestos Shingle Ro ofing FLY SCREENS and REX ROOFS APPLIED News Room April’s Great Sale ol Cottage and Stoves, Eongm and Furnaces 408 LaReine Ave., Bradley Beach I . PipeteM Hasten Telephone 1002-w • Bungalow Furniture ! ! 119 Abbotl Avenue, Ocean Grove .V Tel>ph « a <1*1 Seacoast FRANK O.T.-WILSON Presenting many new beauties ofiineand Office: Electric Company Pilgrim Pathway and Olin StrM t H. F. VUSRING, Prop. color, sturdily constructed. MWondM5fiil '■ 113 Embury Avenue Ocean Grove,. N. J. Ooean Grove Telephone 1749-Asbary SO Main Avenne variety of low price* that will surprise you Winter trade giv»n my personal Ooean Grove, N J.. attention. Tel. Aabnry Park 822 pleasantly. Order by portal «nwd or: tefo- X J S O m O A L SUPPLIES and pbone. IIIIIH ...... ' ^; i ."y a *’,•. .'• •"’v.'.v-, ^ • “

;-:f - -’M : SOON TO OPEN i • 1 :m : f:< fc.-8 W a i f ■ I S^^the'old'-familiar corner of Haiti’. Avenue 'and Pilgrim Pathway, where This buildingjs not only a model of interior appointments, but an attrac- I the oldest bankin the Twin Cities has for' many, many years maintained an office, tive struoture architecturally and in keeping with the progress and development of :Mmk - 'tor the accommodation of Ocean Grove patrons, we have erected''* modern t e * , e husmcMsection ™™pancy nofc lftter ^ lat. 0 ur invitation to j i t *•; ? . building containing all the facilities and conveniences cl a thoroughly up-to-date tlie public to inspect it is most cordial. -Mr. F. M, Miller, Assistant*. Cashier in financial institution, inoluding water-proof, fire-proof, burglar-proof vaults for the charge of this branch, looks forward with pleasant anticipation to the greeting of ; , V. / 1 safe deposit of valuables. old and new friends and customers in his new business home. ' 1 : p THE ASBURY PARK and OCEAN GROVE BANK s »■ • • l• |tavasBi S tiABBY'A WAtSON, Pre^dent v IRVING L. REED, Vice President* DIRECTORS IRVTNO NEWMAN Asst Cashier ^THEODORE F. APPLEBY W. HARVEY JONES , I. R. TAYLOR H. EARL FARRY, . Cashier - 1KVINU HJSWMAfl, iusi. uasmer ;WAI>TEft p CLAYTON JAMES ta m v s xbW. ivra-RSWMARSHALL HARRY A. WATSON F. M. MILLER, Assistant Cashier • .GEORGE S. FERGUSON IRVING L. REED

M- m

r 1 i p The New Home of the Ocean Grove National Bank l i f e i t e mmS i l i

The one word tells the whole story. If your valuables are' in a * | ^ | | Safety Deposit Box they are safe from every harm. Burglars cannot get themi fire cannot destroy them, yot when you want your.va]—v,~ • w r’ they are easily accessible. SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES $3.00 A YEAR UPWARD ‘•’'J'f& S,

S SAVING MONEY i Why not celebrate the opening of the new. bank by; starting a. rincs Account with a ffoorf bank. Anv sum vou inav wish to'-

...... j i l f i - help you by adding interest every three months on the total amoutit‘>;S&|5$i£ , , 5 >. < ' J V ' '< ? ' ; f ^ a y ; A m c , i s / v » 2 4 v : § PA *£ TKN >5 EAN ;,GR >VE TtMES

Read Our Ads, Regularly You’ll Find It

MILLINERY With Easter comes the need of a new pair of spring Gloves, Here your selection will be unlimited, as Watch for 'Our One-Day EASTER our stocks include all of the sea­ son’s most popular styles and col­ Our display of new Spring Hats ors. A mew pair of Gloves will is unusually fine, Here you are give you that “ dressed up” feel­ Front Circle TPADK MARK PCQ. U.S. PAT. OFrlCC most sure to find a becoming Hat ing, so essential at Easter time. "KEEPS THE FOOT WELL.** that will look just splendid with yqur new Easter frock. N e w S p r i n g Every day n different bargain is offered on this table. Articles whose limited quantities do n9* jus­ FOOTWEAR tify axtensive advertising, and whose prices axe al- Don’t forget the little ones when ways far below actual value. Folks are 'beginning' f o r fitting out the folksfor Easter. to look for these specials. You will flnd them ad­ They, too, will need a new spring vertised on the first page of tha Asbury Park Press ' E A S T E R . Coat, new Hat, and a whole lot every day. Don’t overlook these wonderful one-day r* '.■■ ■'■ V ", of other things, In our kiddies’ features. Variety—that’s the word that shop you will delight in selecting FRONT CIRCLE—MAIN FLOOR—FRONT ENTRANCE expresses this season’s styles in their new spring clothing. footwear. Never before have the styles been go varied and attrac­ HOSIERY tive STo matter what kind of Shoe you have' to mini; yoij are Nothing adds more to the charm cert'aia of finding it here, as our of yoiir Easter attire than a pair N ew Spring new spring stock of Shoes is aow Here milady will Snd the of fine quality Silk Hose. We have DRAPERIES ready for your inspection. We sell daintiest in lingerie. Our large them in all colors to match any You may also wish to do a little arch preserver Shoes—the Shoe stock makes individuality of se­ costume you wish. Don’t forget spring decorating in the home. If that “keep® the foot well;” .see, lection possible. We also special­ this important part of your Easter so, visit our drapery department them today, and select & pair for ize in extra sizes. Oqr Corset sec­ outfit. ' and you will find an unusually Easter. tion md;;/ to supply /our re­ large and attractive display to quirements. choose from. Cookman and Emory MAIN FLOOR SECOND FLOOR ' Asbury Park MAIN FLOOR SECOND FLOOR

immmmtM iiHiniinmniiininiii.n f i f S u m m ——— I the gift of second sight &ad If yen have t n S M m i , fertitad* s» w t* '*egstart«t Jnst ter Kaster Bonday, an old mpentltlon jremuw* yes gesd f e t e - 9 : (Efyrtetian health for a iwthmsoatb. It seem* t umall price ter so leag a beaeflt, Jtattiml nf doesn’t Itf Hardware and Tools Acother way of tnaurisg goodi health, Eaufcr which is much more drastic, bet was often practiced as oldest days by cpas^ HGHBOMJQISTK With the coming of spring, thoughts naturally turn to fixing up. We are - tw mal&tes, was to teat * lines ■tha 8 ,i0 0 ‘y ea r « ld - t o o b o f King;. Tct-AnU»-Am«r are ready with a complete supply of needed ut«nsils and materials, U liiiiiiiiiim lliiiiihiiiiilllllllllllinili? doth oat ia a Add all night, m th a t .it j ts««*sa* with the. soW .spring .Impressed with th* «vt- HE Cbriatta festival of Eas­ Every man should have a set of tools with which to d© the odd jobs of re­ Then they washed themaelve* denctB* o f th a a n d « a t ta la r 'i. te r f u g r a fte d on to th e pit- all orer with the clear, chilly moisture. b e lie f In Im m artalk y, B v sry - . pairing around home. - The tools which we offer for your choice will help you do the s a x , ; feast which ushered bi Another qualct iupentltloit Is ,the thins 1c the sepulchw proclaim® hte the spring, and m so m e o f work better. rather riiiiecismt rustcco of ltftlcf or expectation of a futur* life, At»d«wt our custom* belong to one heaving, which is Still practice* in Kgjpt believed as Snnly aa do«. mod- - - «n and some to 'snotiier; some parte of Hi# country. On Easter era Christendom that for tbs ®oni Haven't you often wondered what «**■? Mondaj she men lift' the women, 'and th ere 5b n o death, had ts do with the Crucifixion of Indeed, the memory of man roBBith. on 'a»!*r. Tuesday the wome,: lift or Christt An a matter of fact, there Is not back to the time when he did not bsave the men. The prcccns Id per­ no conqpctlon except an Incidental one form ed b f two- lusty, men or women look forward’ to * hereafter .anti between the two. In pre-Christian joining their hands across each other’s press bis belief In some way. This days folks celebrated the renewal of belief, apparently, is inborn In human wrists; then,, making the person to upfing and sunshine at the time of year consciousness, a characteristic o t all be htaved sit down on their arms, they when EM ternow comes, and the egg, lift aim up aloft two or three times th e a g e s ot th e race. with Its suggestion of new"!!*®, was The doctrine of the resurrection i* snd often , carry him several • yards the most natural symbol lb the world. along a street In other parts tho men not new. The pagan before the Ohri* Christianity ionsecrated the idea, a» It claim 4he privilege of talcing oft the tian era glimpsed the truth. Nature were, by coloring the «gge Tea as a proclaimed It to him in the bursting o t women’s shoes on Easters Monday, rem in der e t the blood split an the tha buds and the song of the birds in and tha n«xt day the women retaliate cross—a enAom which survives In’ the springtime. In the seasons be read Franc# to this .day,. a confirmation of bis belief. The hot cross ban .•« another carious But the Christian, fortunately, has ■blend of hesthea superstition.. snd something more than the pleasing sym­ Christina symbolism Mirny c»nt;jrfcr bols of nature to fortify and strengthen before‘Christ little round loaves were ! W W W his belief la immortality, The mate baked sod marked with a cross; some rialist may read bis fate in the proc­ Much pleasure is added to caring for your garden if you have the proper,, were even discovered In the fain* of B tr Saafert of esses of the natural world, but the tools. The time .and the labor you can save will more H m pay their cost. Plan to He^cnlanenm, one of the ancient Ital­ Christian finds his assurance la the ian cities which wag batted by m wrap* f s i t r r well-authenticated, personally, con­ enjoy the double benefits of a garden this season—we have the necegsaiy tools and tlon of Uount Vesuvlus'and afterwards veyed message from the Creator Hlia- seeds, A garden planted with seeds selected from our stock are guaranteed to «aco?ered and explored Some say •e lf. ■ that these cakeswere sacrlOcedand Before Christ men merely Rpecoiated grow, because they are selected from choice plants carefully graded and packed. ottered as *ft act of. worship to .the on' the future, prompted by their be­ bsaths* gods of the day. particularly liefs' and wishes. When Be brake tiie. to the noon, called tbe faces ef bonds of deatb and became "tUe *rst hM T«a. fruits of them that slept’’ Be threw a Others assert that the cooks of that flood of JIght upon the gates of eternity day were as practical as the that forever solved the mystery maker of ours, who mark tbe toffee Illumined tbe way to the future ter all Isto small squares, so that It will break mankind. -- ap more easily when cold, j Blaster, .the anniversary of the resur­ Tt;«n came the Christians, whs sew rection of the Sob of Ood. bytats, • in this breed marked with their own nosage of tttsnrance and victory to •acred symbol a fit association with every soul.—It cheers with the proela- ■aster. They made their Good Friday mation that, all are dtlKas-; ef ihr eakaa from dough first used for the eternal. It enables men to look aeto** ' Beet, and Use bam: were- blessed by tbe grave and burl defiance at death. Snyder & Robins, the prleet and glees ant at the end of With the proper uadenta&dlag ef thl» senrle* Is church. Worshipers revei'- divine «B**.--g*,- the capability of m e ij eatly kissed the cross before . atis* becomes unlimited, for they know (But Main Street and Lake Avenue t h is l i f e lo raily th e Ji-tsi iaj, 9 ' t t syavb e l ^ j and believed that the fat­ ing ef on* would keep them from ham Wlthoct the ecaras* that this -:mg imtll next Easter. , isspites, Uf« ©old ot ■ &«; weit^ £*t liw c a . ■ ; " Asbury Park T o t tbe same reason It need ts be customary to hang a-bun op Is a boose to bring good lock, junt as the borne- O w o S d BSMrtef js a c o n tln u o to pjijv , a in t phane HARDWARE i*oe Is e«i aver, a doomay. la par- an Impsrtant part I n sho.dsloferosion of ! tn -v. 4l«i3*r Si f s n p p o a e O to soard the t h s £ a y , Tlio «o!smd egge, paeStsd la Fu sh e rs 218 H u s t l e r s from fire—« real menace ia Use a dainty colored.boaStot, appsai to ths «• iwhen SoMts.-K'cro of xrbod acd . kU M Iaa. ... thatched with strcw.inci -&«. engSaes «latost sm ktcm i r - U \ •'jy.-'t ,UIs aet :j»6ssibSo .'ti-'bo.' siesjj'.iriji., -.ware 'jfiau vboro '■<«> • m>l|M>IMIM>l>llIMw 1 2 ...... $*£ Fvi? AB usiness N ■; in Meaning toEvery MotorCar Buyer H ow Studebaker Reached the Heights ■ ■ . ■ ■ . > ■ •.:■.■'■• /..; .' The story of Studebaker haa been told by many men in man y -ways. Now let ua tell it to you. '■■>■■■ N ■• . Studebaker growth has in late years been Motordom’s sensation. Sales have mount­ ed until last year 146,000 buyers of quality cars selected Studebakers. They paid over $200,- 000,000 for them. j All must realize that a new situation has arisen in high-grado cars. You who (tre interested should now analyze tho reasons. 72-YEAR TKADITIONS The Studebaker principles have become traditions in their 72 years of existence. They ■have never wavered. ■ In all changing conditions they have brought new luster to that name. Men come and go, but a name like this becomes a heritage to foster and enhance. i That’s what we’ve done—we who have that name in keeping for a time. Studfcbaker has always been a leader. For two generations it led in horse-difiwn I vehicles, now products of the past. Most of you remember Studebaker carriages—queens of theirrtime. They were used by multitudes of people .who loved quality and style. . When motor ears succeeded them, Studebaker became the logical leader in that field. Any other place would have been an. anomaly. THE ONLY WAY TO'THB TOP $ 1 8 9 5 A concern of this age has one fact ingrafted in its fiber. Tbe only way to leader- . £kdan ship is through super-service. j The leader must excel in all you seek—in quality, in, beauty and in value. There ib no. other way to the top. Every stretch of the road is strewn with wrecks of those who tried another. - . . . - W hat others say—not what you say—determines your place in the long run. In every BEAUTY, STYLE and SERVICE field of endeavor one must accept that fact.' We had the money, the^plants, the prestige." We had the incentive of Studebaker traditions. In time we secured the men. i We told those men to build for us the utmost in fine motor cars, regardless of all HAPPILY COMBINED costs. We pledged them our good faith and our resources. ' / , People paid over $200,000,000 last year for Studebaker cars. The result is now a demand for 150,000 per year. At first sight you’ll admit this new Moon Sedan has personality—quick, Over $50,000,000 in modem plants and equipment to build the finest of fine cars. vivid, piquant, daring. Moon engineers have left nothing undone to perfect a stan­ One of these cars, built in 1918,. has run'475,000 miles. That means 80 years of ordinary service. In December this'car made the trip from coast to coast. _ dard of mechanical excellence in keeping with the most exacting requirements. THAT’S THE WHOLE STORY * Steel body. Silent roof. Rain-proof windshield with sun visor. Wide doors. ‘ That’s about the whole story. We simply followed the never-changing Studebaker Upholstered in imported silk-finished broadcloth. Every refinement possible to put principles. We gave to our buyers the utmost—values they could not match. Then they turned by tens of thousands to Studebaker cars. ' in this desirable type of oar is evidenced in the Moon Sedan, I Over 750,000. of those cars have gone out. Their performance has developed a de­ mand for 150,000 per year. Come in and see this beautiful car. W e’ll be proud to show it to you. Every increase in sales brought a lowered cost, which we promptly gave our buyers. Other Moon Models.: Six-40 Five-?assenger Touring, $1,395. Six-58 Seven Today thebe fine cars ar^ offering values which no rival can approach. They'have made us the world’s largest builders of quality cars. and Five-Passenger Touring, ,91,885, and a. Six-58 Seven-Passenger Sedan.

UGBT-SIX SPECIAL-SIX . BIG-SIX 5-Pass. 112 in. W. B. 40 H. P. 5-Pass. 119 in. W. B. 50 H. P. 7-Pass. 126 in. W. B. GO H. P. T o u rin g ...... $1045 T o u r i n g ...... $1125 •T o u rin g ...... $1750 Roadster (3-Pass)..... 1025 Roadster (2-Pass.)...... 1400 Speedster (5-Pass.).... 18&5 o G a r a g e Coupe-Uoad. (2-pass).. 1195 Coupe (5-Pass.) . . 1895 Coupe (5-Pass.) ...... 2495 Coupe (5-Pass.)...... 1395 Sedan ...... 1485 S e d a n ...... 1985 S e d a n ...... 2685 910 Fourth Avenue, Asbury Park (All prices f, o. b. factory, .Terms to meet your convenience.) T e le p h o n e 1 0 7 8 LOUIS F. LIPSEY, Inc.

807 Sumtnerfield Avenue, Asbury.Park i m xH 'M Telephone 484 m •MNCMHMIIIMllMHMHIIHIMHUIHIHMMMIHHIIMMHIIIIMmMHUUMIINIMIIIMNIMHUNMmHI (Or was He attanled by tS5 fielrarcby ot heaven? We ar*' told only what m concerns mankind, viz., the sufficient manifestation of Jesus to His people ©Ift p ia » H lj^rr ( g h t n o u f i ( £ w p A of His Resurrection. ■ ■ We can reconstruct something of the ®ar IJori Hag of Eaafer Sag events . of that first Easter morning from the Oospel accounts. First the women come and find tbe tomb empty. By Ret). Stephen Paulxtn Mary Magdalene Immediately runs HE place where the Ijord In CtH back to the dty and tella Peter and lay, from wb*nca He cam*., John about It. They rush out to th* on Easter Sunday, the first­ garden of Joseph, John, the younger born from-the dead, may An 4 when tb* Sabbath w u put. maa, taking Jhe lead. The women not have been the alt* of M arf MaadaUne, and Mary the mother have left. Peter enters the tomb and the Church of the Holy Se­ of Jamta. and Salome, had brought pulcher In Jerusalem, after all I •weet aplcei, that they might com* sees the linen clothes which had cov­ and anoint Him. . . . Te a**k Jeeua ered the body of Jesus, and there Recent Investigations Incline many , of Naaaroth, which w u ' oruolflad: He begins to dawn upon them something to the belief that Gen. "Chinese" Gor­ la risen; H* la not her*: Behold the of the meaning of the words of Jesus, don was nearer right In picking .upon plaoe wh*r* th*y laid Him.—Mark “On the third day I shall riae again.” a tomb In the rock, which has the' 1»:1. •. Mary comes back and Peter and form “of a skull," and Is probably th* ■ m BE Sabbath cam* and went G olgotha ot the crucifixion outside th* rrpM John have gone, and no one la there / m over tha (rave of Its Lord. to explain what has taken place; so dty wall of Jerusalem, as being Joseph Silence reigned In Joseph’* she stands by the sepulcher and pour* of Arlmathea's sppolnted burial place.; garden, broken only by the' out htr distress Ip tears. St. John tells us: “Now In the place mailed sentinels who chat­ Now corns* the first revelation of where He was crucified there was a ted and laughed by the the risen Christ. "Mary," He says, la garden; and In th e gardena new aep- . sealed sepulcher. We do not know the well-known voice of lore and ten­ what the dlsclplea did on the Sabbath derness, and In a moment all her sor­ day. Probably they spent the day In row 1s turned Into Joy. It Is always close retirement In some upper room. so when the risen Christ comes Into Their thoughts ■ were nailed to that a Ut*. The living Christ Is the world’s Cross oh Calvary, and their spirits great Jpy-brlnger. Without Him. our were under the heavy pall of that trag­ thoughts can only be thoughts of edy of Good Friday. death. With Him we enter Into th* We can never understand the utter conception of the larger life, of which misery and desolation of those hours : tMs Is only the outer court. ; •. between Christy death and His Kesur- Life! Death 1 They seem to b* th* S . rectton. Our faith rest# on-the cen­ very antipodes of,thought. . We have turies; and when we read ot th e C ru­ come to look npon them as mutuslly cifixion we have In mind the glory ot exclusive, but Jesus haa taught us We Can Fix It Easter morning. But to the disciples, that out of life death la to arise. all their hopes had been shattered, all The Besurrectlon of Jesus Is tb* No matter what trouble you are having with your car, we know wo can fix their plans frustrated, and all their anchor at onr Christian faith. We llv* love buried In Joseph’s tomb. A resur­ it. So, if your engine does not run os smoothly as if should, or if it seems to lack in a day when men seek positive rection did not enter Into ; their grounds of thought and action, and the power, drive in and let us look it over. thoughts at all, and therefore their enduring power of the Besurrectlon Is Some slight adjustment may. be all that is necessary—but whatever (he testimony Is the more valuable. True, not a sentiment but a fact. A senti­ they had heard Jscu* say that He trouble, we will tell you what it is. / ment haa Its day. Phases ot m ere would ha* again, but they had Inter­ feeling pass rapidly over the genera­ preted (tat In a sort of future and tions of men, like cloud* over our symMtewnse. nlch*r, wherein was never man yeti 1 . THE MILEAGE IS BUILT IN heads, but th* fact of the Risen Christ laid. Ther* laid they Jesus therefor^ - v Safes* dawn, the women mentioned retnalas. In tha strength of that cer­ In Penn Vacuum Cup Tires, the long service they, give, is the result of In our text, perhaps with some others, because ot the Jews' Preparation day. tainty Paul: want forth to hia great for' th*' sepulcher was high at hana.!7:’;|'l started for the sepulcher bearing their missionary labors. In the strength ot built-in quality that gives the service. Lasting in quality and moderate in cost are That presupposes a tomb clos*tbtha, spice* and ointments with which, they that, Piter went unafraid to hia own the two important features. ~ place of execution, and makes probabla v m expected to finish the embalming of craelflxfbn. In the strength of that, General Gordon's presumption. Bt. f. the blessed body of their Lord. A the soldiers of Christ In all. age* hav* Mark says further that the sepulCheri; renrnectloa had no place in their ■toad fast In th* faith,.quit theipselr** “waa hewn out of a rock,”- as laTiito^: thought*. They came te minister to like man, and endured unto the end. tht* tomb. ■ > ^ . the dead, not to greet the living. Their, The Caster Oospel Is the Gospikof At any rate so probable did U ap- ■ one great concern was: Who would all comfort. “If Christ be hot rlM* pear that -thla was the, garden tonb, Major’s Motor Shop help them to roll away the stone which than la ouripre*chtng vain, and your l i sealed the tomb, and which was too faith la also vain.” Bo saya St. Paul, that tn 1804 Miss Louisa Hope, an Es®- . ush lady,- and others bought th* great for their united strength? As and than cornea his triumphal shout of Heck Street and Cookman Avenue they draw near they see that the ston* certainty: “But now Is Christ risen • jtfad, formed a scdety to^ko^.tho,,':^1^1' Is rolled away, and eo little did they from th* de*4> and become the first- ^rden ’ and tomb “sacred think of a resurrection, that the open frluts of them that slept 1" That is the it and preserved on tbe

HP f :TWJEtVB

GROVER’S

Presents Two New Closed and The Cadillac Motor Car Company announces two additions Service Station to its closed car group—a new Seven-Passenger Sedan, and a new Four-Passenger Victoria Coupe. The Garage with a Personal Service These new bodies, produced in collaboration with the Fisher Body Corporation, are mounted on the standard V-63 chassis,.-with GROVER HANKINS, Proprietor its'famous harmonized V-Type eight cylinder engine and Cadillac four-wheel brakes. The Victoria Coupe and the Seven-Passenger Sedan list at $3275 Specializing in the and $3585 respectively, f. o. b. Detroit—and these prices, combined with Cadillac quality, single them out as preferred investments in their Held. Cadillac VICTORIA COUPE SEVEN-PASSENGER SEDAN $3275 $3585 Day and Night Service Prices f. o. b. Detroit, war tax extra H. R. INGALLS Repairing to All Cars Main Street, Asbury Park ACCESSORIES v ' . Storage Washing Polishing LAC 802-806 First Avenue

AsburyPark...... \ Phone 2207 Day Phone 2295-R Night STANDARD OF THE WORLD

GUARANTEED FoT the distance around the world The Chrysler Six Now On View

The Chrysler Six—the most discussed new car of 1924—is here. ISliiStlsfcs The beautiful Chrysler is ready for inspection in our showrooms. Demonstrations which are bound to establish its undoubted su­ premacy are now being booked, Make your arrangements for an early test of America’s first AMERICAN SIX, $2550 quality light/ Six. The test of a car is in MILEAGE. Time means nothing—it’s how FAR Here are some of the sensational qualities which a Chrysler your car will go, demonstration will reveal: Americans are guaranteed for 25,000 miles—the distance around the world. Top speed, 70'miles per hour, and over. This guarantee is our expression of keeping faith with American owners. Gasoline mileage safely oyer 18 miles per gallon. Sport Roadster ...... $2050 Sport Phaeton ...... $1850 Two to seventy miles per hour “on high,” absolutely without ...... 2195' Touring .....'...... ; ...... 1695 B ro u g lia m ...... vibration. Deluxe Sedan . 2550 • Four-Door ...... 2300 Ample room for five large adults, with over-all length of only 160 inches. Hupmobile Now 68 horsepower from a motor of 3-inch bore. Touring Car, Five-Passenger... .$1175 Roadster, Two-Passengei. . .$1175 Riding comfort of a two-ton car, with a road weight) of 2650 Special Touring, Five-Passehger.. 1245 Special Roadster, Two-Passenger 1245 pounds. Roadster Coupe, Two-Passenger.. 1445 Coupe, Four-Passenger 1595 Easiest steering you ever experienced. Club Sedan ...... 1425 ' The perfect safety and control of Chrysler-Lockheed hydraulic All prices f. o. b. Detroit and war tax. four-wheel brakes. Cord tires and regular equipment on all models. You have never seen or ridden in a car like the Chrysler Six— as you will enthusiastically agTee when you have enjoyed a Chrysler The Hupmobile success has been justly merited by definite superiority that demonstration ride. will become evident to you. the more closely you inspect it. It is a beautiful car, ex­ tremely comfortable and has ample power for Wy emergency, and its four cylinders insure a remarkable smoothness of operation at all speeds. Its economy has become the subject of universal comment. Therefore, you can readily understand why dis­ criminating buyers are convincing themselves that no other four-cylinder offers the dollar-for-dollar value so evident throughout the Hupmobile lino. IRVING B. CULVER lifts Main Street, Asbury Park Central Garage Company Phone 3285 D. BAIN & SONS, Proprietors 504 Main Street, Asbury Park 'm?M

The New LOCOMOBILE PRODUCT Touring

$ 5 6 5 Delivered

More people are talking’ and thinking and buying the new Overland than ever before—because it is the greatest Overland ever built, It is better looking, bet­ ter to ride in, better to drive, better value—at the lowest!, price in history. .“ The new Overland gives the decided advantage of an all-steel body fin . ished,with baked enamel. Notice the higher hood, the longer body lines, the pleasing improvements in appearancc. Tires are Fisk first-quality oversize. Tri­ plex Springs (Patented) give riding comfort equalled only in other 'cars of much longer wheel-base. And the dependable Overland engine iachiesres the extraordi­ nary economy of 25 and more miles to the Gallon.

I ....J . The New

Overland Delivered, Fully Equipped Sedan Are you tired of excessive engine vibration? One ride in a Flint Six will be a revelation to you. And when you drive a. Flint $882Delivered Six—well, you make up your mind you have reached your ideal car at last. Performance proves a motor car’s worth. Let us show you what the Flint Six will do. The Flint Six is always compared up the scale~not downward. . . Sedas $795 0oupe $750 Roadster $495 Touring $495 F. O. B. Toledo BROWN BROTHERS BROADttURST OARAGE Distributors Mimroe and Cookman Aves., Asbury Park Next to Elks* Home ’ 8 0 3 Main Street, Asbury Park BR1VE AN OVERLAND ANB REALIZE TBF DIFFERENCE Telephone 3536

V - . ■ . • r:------;---- :------—------—- *T ------—------5—r------;------*------:------—;------" ''■} m « :

V&is

Prices f.a. b. Flint, Michigan Superior R o a d s te r,..$49# Superior Touring...... $495 Superior C oupe...... §646 Superior Sodan ...... 9799 Super/orCommerctel C h q & t l a , .$395 Superior Delivery;...... $495 Utility Express CUasai*...... $55#

>;w A Still Greater ^Value I Never before has a Ford Sedan been S I sold at such a low price. I I Never before has there been such a if ] • well-built Ford Sedan—improved with || J| | finer upholstery, window regulators, [iii] and with many refinements inchassis Ib|: . construction. 111' ’ This is the family car which fully ||j | | meets every requirement of economy, 1 1 1 comfort and sturdy service. I I FARRY MOTOR COMPANY I So great is the demand that deliveries I I 1 , will soon be almost impossible. List; [|li[ Chevrolet Sales and Service your order noiv, make a small down I I payment, the balance on easy terms, 11 Main Street and Lake Ave., Asbury Park

iiiMA-f:..,: i | ford prices have never been to le a . , . ' 11(11 -■•■■‘V :'v : - I Fbrd quality has never been to kigh ■ liijj . ' . ;■

J 5 P r m w m M iin S t and Sum m erlield/Ave*, \ % h m y P a r i

m m m m m P A Q JE' 3 ? 6 : t r B T E B $ 3 V £ TIMES 5 [fut^&kYi;

TROUT SEASON IS NOW OPEN SO IS HARVEY’S SEAFOOD MARKET If It Swims We Daily Direct Receivers of Live and Announcement Fresh Fish

The Freshest and Best 28 Ocean Pathway, Ocean Grove Halibut, Flounder, Scallops, Haddock, Cod, Striped Bass, White Bass, Roe Shad, Buck Shad, Shrimps, Lobsters, Smelts, Oysters, Clams, Etc. Near the Ocean, Steam Heated • • . » * - A. D. Harvey & Sons | Running Water in Rqoms, All Conveniences • ✓ ' * •

5 4 Olin Street, Oeean Grove Phone 4 9 9 • _ - .. . • • ' _ ' . t I for terms and particulars write for folder 7 2 9 Main St., Bradley Beach Phone 3 7 6 Open Day and Night I A. L. E. STRASSBURGER

|• Telephones: 1848; - Office, 1162 / • • • > • /

MIIMMIAMIMNIHIMItlHMIMHMHftVHMINMMMMIiailMMMMtMaaaMMMNlaaiNMMMIt that makes it'Moslem. The Temple But what about noble efforts* What area is Saracen; the old city walls are about character, and service, sad right­ ■Saracen, although the foundations are eousness? What about example? : Roman. The older churches nnd a : Easter is the crowning Sunday of Jerusalem, number of substantial structures! date the year because It teaches that lessen IM O itte occupation of the Crusaders. year after year. It ever brings.forth Catering to the Easter Trade I Bxrhi CHitg of Of ancient Jerusalem there la little' the potent trutli that the life etsreai ro be discovered and much less to be the life that knows God serve# the % M t m sees, little tsrtslns as It was prior ■ • ! ' great teacher Who brought life and to the coming of the Saracens and the, Immortality to light, and find* life's dfusadem Only a few tomb* »»d the deepest and truest meaning la serv­ substructure of the Temple are left ice and worthy example. N a t u r e ’s | E\V cities 1e tbe world lave to teli the' story of the Jerusalem of There la no death'when things are bad is hintory so vaHefl-aasJ I Ohrlst. of David aad Soiomos, : considered in that Sight. The Eternal' I n g le a* J m u m lm i, th e !io}y life ts meaawed by the; immortal city of the Jews ®ad thsr thing* o f tb e sp irit, an d n o t fey th e taor- facrefl dty to which at Ea* tal tlsiagr: ot the flesh. It 1* a m atter si Two G reatest Foods I ter ali Christian eye* *r« quality, and not of qaantltv. It 1* So catastrophic have Seen ths Indestructible 'feecatsa* It la of Got "It: chongea that have taken place that lives fdr ssJI time.' Not long qaienceiit, the modern traveler In, Jerusalem can it Is iver alive and. awake to th* hull* Gombined in One Delicious Bread scarcely visualize the city a* -it ex­ is* of the beat -srorld of which human isted in the time of Christ. Ho com­ minds, snd heart*, and hands, are. plete was tbe destruction ot the old Wife ^Eternal capable. . .. dty that It has been only with tbe This, Is lift Eternal. • tt is th® Joy fastest difficulty that the sites men Htft end triumph ol the 3a*t« morn. Nature has given mankind two foods Honed In the life ot Christ have been even approximately identified. By Nmihan Howard Gltt It was probably in tbe year 2U that uiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinitiiiiiuiiHiim more nearly complete in themselves tbe crucifixion occurred, and in 70 the dty was completely destroyed by Ves- f Sutwlfa IRait* an = than any other—whole wheat and j , 'iian and Titus. With tbe exception, HE world places a premium of several towers left as monuments 1 r:- ■ :.l:. *in attainm ent . It- praises' B St milk. They are combined in to Titus, and a quarter of the city on the aifia who sets tilings miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiftum high ground, Jerusalem was razed to done. It erects hi astatue In the ground, and for a period of 60 our parka and public squares years lay in ruins. It was not until that young nanhoo nnd 186 that tbe Emperor Hadrian built on womanhood may catch inspiration the old site the new city of Aella from, his life, und' emulate his virtues. Capitolina as a home for veteran sol­ Halls of fame give him .fitting recog­ diers. Jews were rigorously excluded nition and' a large place'.1 Music, lit­ from Aella, which became a typical erature, ail art Immortalise him. ,, Greek city, reflecting all the phases of Historical lext-b.ooks • make him the Bygaatlne development. • When the hero who led that others might follftw. emperors became Christians the came Grew men come lit groups'. Epochs Whole W heat ot the dty was changed back to Jeru­ snaka them, snd they malte jreat salem, and Christian rather than Jew­ epochs. Each ; !* dependent on tbe ish memories we^cheriehed. ■other. ' \ 1 V Ia the Seventh century the Saracen* Human greatness Is largely m‘matter This Is the way the Easter bunnies captured Jerusalem, holding It mi til '«t" attainm ent’ A' m s# .1* ■ great or fix up the neet of chocolate-decorated 1099,- when It was wreeted from tha sm alt according to w h * t fee Is a b le te <•■■!** for the kiddle* of the famlly -in Moslems by tbe Crusaders, who held give, the world. But his output must the belief of the ehlldren. It for'* stormy and uncertain Wlyeam, *Jio4r visible achievem ents J*nd ta n ­ The Crusaders were drlveir trat by gible results. iaiadtn In 1UT, and. from that time Now all of thl* la well «noash. S» 100 per cent, whole wheat and milk. : until the capture of Jenuslem by the fsult^e®a‘;i)4 found, with inch rewards, British In the great World war the exes'll that graatnW tJiroegb attain­ M etm dty was under tha rule of . the Mos- ment aever telle the story, -The whole &0 of Nothing added# nothing taken away. Ism*. Saracen caliphs, Egyptian sul­ story'cannot be !reiate-i bediuse there ** Ntbnm& r tana and Ottoman Turks In torn were 1* much greatness of the ’heart : U Ja matters ot the Holy City, but It was S ie a ta era eoy. through doing, W i lh not until JB40 that the Etiropean pow­ being. 5*:-; ie a s if t »U rcaJ. ,r» How On 1 k n o w eo f er* officially recognised Moslem ouv- . in the long list effort, rather 'J m - B u a tiso I:1iav« planted a tta y s*e'd, ® - tliatjr In Jerusalem. Through the attainment, I* tht; ' gwtatoes* that Then w»toh«d a doves- grow. i mg centuries of misrule nd oppres­ counts, To. disregard effort la to wiiv- I have aeon tbe leaves » o « ,tumbllav Reitz Model Bakery sion, Christian and Jew dreamed it down. ImlM the "!*rj force' tltat holds the Than j»prin». and .a fcuddtna tree.; the day whies the crescent would be world together. - ., . Oh. Qod's outdoors as big and. wid«, (Incorporated) Srtvea oat ot'Palestine forever, a day Many of tbe finest achievement* of Eaa told Ita aecrala to m*. that haa only recently dawned. our world sr® not lasting, . They are • . .. ' . . ! ' ' ■ '-'-V New-a.t'thla eladaoro*. Eaater • • turns *-* whole, ths Jerusalem of ephemeral, Books, , nebools and Wh*a th. world Is b u rstio tt wlUtV today la « typical Saracen city. Its £hbrch«g. empires and great nations • -. , -aon*. / ■ : X ;V 47 ra irh n Pathway, Oeean Crave mot* 'conspicuous features date i!ron) have all lived their allotted time,’ a o .3Ut .ua ,feo*,U- ithe .tune at Saracen awhipatlon, acd cempttshed their quota of good, ttnfl ‘Mt.-Ji* :tw iii*.eld. jraare wren*. ■Lot -te« - J)*95S..Si.*alf- Use jv'an where Ssracea. builders used old :t&en p«rlshed. tJuch sdjiaveraents.are- ■Tfts isood,-tW -eMMa'iSiStlng-v...... • / ' ^material ffavf -the. refeo.deled :nbt failures bylejjy.mBaaStimt Ray oS ■Let >.tM eh«r|eh ■ th* :hes® is a ts lil^ lv e f tv ' ^J-lltMSMMSttt'ierrTT HHWWWWWWMHmHWWIWWMWW t heir own pecutw stamp :them mss suffer -the.itati} lot itjbll^oB. N '.And •a ttft.'M .«»»..)»•«« Fiaip AT. APE1L: 18; 1924. tf HE OCEAN - GRO'VE TIMES PAGE Fl'yTiBM:

ISAAC S. GREEN, President

LUMBER, MILLWORK, SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MANTELS, MOULDINGS, MASONS’ MA­ TERIAL, PLATE AND SHEET GLASS.: ETC. •> DEXTER CEMENT Sale Agents In Ibis Vicinity for Longman & Martinez Paints T \ T I TT FL1MTKOTC ST*. 11 IHIHGLES 111 / V SLAT* SURFACED ROLLS K H I VALLEY STRIPS II I i A LAR.GK-HCAD GALV. MAILS 1 I I I IM MV*B£R ROOFING

South M ain Street, A sbury Park Telethon* 891

Payments On the Club Phmu Enjoy Tikis R ange W hile Paying tor It

Now is the time to supply your Easter wants. We carry a complete lino of Easter candy and novelties, so are prepared to supply you. Below is a list of a few of our many items:

Assorted Jelly Eggs ,19c. lb. Easter Grass ...... Sc. Box Chocolate Rabbits .. . 5c.-10c. Easter Chickens ...... 10c.-25c. Chocolate E ggs---- ,6c: Rabbits...... 5c.-10c.-2Sc. Chocolate F ig s ___ 10c. Post Cards . .16 for be. Cocoanut Eggs . •... ,5c. Booklets ...... Sc. each Chocolate Eggs,. . . ,5 for 5c. Fresh Assorted Chocolates . 19c, lb. Chocolate IHgs...... 3 for Be. Ladies’ Purses ...... $1.49 Three Vessels Steaming Smaller Bggs ...... SOc. lb Easter R ings...... 25c.-49c. One Burner Going Canary Eggs ...... 20c. lb. B eads...... 49o. And there’s room for as many more on the level, Easter Baskets ,10o. up Ribbons...... 10c. yard up ‘ enclosed surface of the

We also cany a complete line of House Furnishings, such as Crockery, G&MB&ST CASUIST GAS MAHCE Glassware, Enamelwaxe, Curtain Material, Window Shades, eta. Everything that Six or $even things can be cleaned as a table top. A Isa the house wife needs. ‘ • cooking at s dme. Three it’s high enough to prevent bumerswill do the work be- . stooping,'" cause alt the heat is retained Compact, convenient,,.eeO" »nd put to Work. nomica!, labof saving, rt ' And note too that Smooth* See Smoothtop

. ■ . TV G« R H O D ES- ■ 5 0 8 - 5 1 0 Cookman Aye . PLUMIM® ami HEATING . / A s h m f F a ? k ■. P p b | M m y P a r k ' ’ When Qualily i i i Economy Sole ; j M ea t W esE ey ILatc BvMs®

SessadssoffSasossesoesssaoibeMs^eMelsaeijsMissessisaesBesi ;aaoai leosesoijseesece***-*^ ■::'u-v-x\-'i i■■£-•;'•'■!v:V&':’ /* ■•'•'.v;-:;.' * - = ■ -1■• M tf f c V ' TBN * * i £ S £ , j § lK L . _ - ^ ; J; f- V i'J f e j i ■ le*:1 i V i ■ P . « : I t e i l • •< W&x'Ai::" .■.".''■ii-

COOKING ELECTRICALLY

Can Be Done Better and Cheaper with It BEATS... as it Sweeps as it Cleans

Electric Washing and Ironing Machines K.8S?: f,L'. . are built strong and rugged to withstand the hard service they are subject to in hotels and restaurants Y OU want to buy the most satisfactory electric cleaner. You want the , one that will remove aU of the dirt. Then take the trouble to investigate thoroughly. There is a big difference in electric cleaners. Learn how they differ The Kitehen at Her Dreams and why. Take time to read up and, Rale lot Electric Range, Oaly 4c. per S. W. flmr thereby insure getting the right cleaner first. CHEAPER THAN GAS CLEAN—COOL IN HOT WEATHER—NO OBOR Eastern New Jersey Power Company Phone 2000 726 COOKMAN AVENUE, ASBURY PARK

gMMMMMtHHIHtimtMHMMMaMMaaaatHaftMHmilllllHHHmmtMHHtHmHMtHHNtMHMMIItMMMHMMMHIIIIVtMaMtlNftMliaiaiaiaaNMamWimHHNHtMMtHttMtW

tw N w— »—wW l> MMMfIWMMMMWMt •NIMMHIIMIMHIfMIHHaMllliamHMHMNIiaHMMIHIMlia Descent, the Illusory means w B erebi wea stupidly sought to destroy the . eternal reality of His love, His wis­ ! . ' 1 An Easter ^rn cji dom; H is soaring faith in God. .And tbe effort had foiled. How could it be $ a m t o f otherwise? How can it ever be ether w ise? lltfip Strrttal And the meaning'of Bis life was Just this—that the' reality in the life <©, l»t4. Western Ntwapapu Union.) V, of all men Is the possibility of becom­ HE churches are filled with S, J, D u n c a n Clark ing like Him, of expressing beauty anil flow ers. goodness.and truth,.of Uvlnr now and, always In the power ofthe life eternal Many people are wearing H E , season ot tlie resurrec­ ■ To him who has seta this' possibility, flowers. tion story Ims conie again. faith it. the continuity of Ufe, tn the The church bells are ring­ Throughout the Christian persistences of personality, cranes nat­ ing, people'are hurrying to world the mlmls and hearts urally and will not permit of contra­ church in a new, vigorous, glad spirit of men are turned tc dwell diction; to him. death is merely an The ehoii a are singing. The congre­ upon a fact which no nat­ Incident—-not even an Interruption—it gations sing, too.' uralistic critic of the Gospels ha® ever Is a step to the process, an1 escape iron) “Alleluia, itlleluia, alleluia I” succeeded la axplaiaing away. the shadows of Illusion into the:' full The air still holds some of the win­ Faith may differ over whether the light of reality. It Is robbed: «f. fears ter's chill within It, but there Is, too, reported resurrection experiences of and robed ln the glory cf hope. the warmth of spring to be felt. the followers of Jesus were >bjectlv The effect of such a faith and such Everyone feels'lt Everyone Is smil­ br subjective, but history records be a hope Is seen In the story of the ing, happy, gay. Preparing one’s self for Easter Sunday and the glorious season that comes o»d effective .contradiction the' com early ehisrch, a story marked by sud­ They are wishing each other "A . pelltag and transforming result upon denly intensified interest In the su­ Happy Easter." with it . cannot be any longer deferred. The most successful costumes you will see Ufe and character of those experiences. preme importance of human values by Children have been given gay Easter : in the Easter promenade will be those which were selected with infinite care ana dis­ Whatever doubt may be held as to the flaming of a splendid spiritual eggs and they have been given choco- cretion. This can only be accomplished by making selections early, carefully and whether the men and women who testl* Idealism against the background of a thoughfully. fled to seeing (he risen Christ, looked world given ever to the flesh, by the with the eyes of the body upon an ac­ Immediate broadening of sympathies in tual physical manifestation of their a race of narrow prejudices to over, Master, there can be no doubt as/to whelm, and submerge the ingrained the certainty of their conviction that prejudices of tradition and former re­ He whom they had seen taken from ligious training; by the Mnpbasls upon tbe cross, whose body had been laid Justice and brotherhood In human reia- id Joseph's tomb, survived as a real I tions, upon character and unselfish and llvtrtj presence ln their midst. I services. Men and women began to Boys’ Wash Suits ...... This faith brought together ,the fright­ live the life eternal, personality wag ■ .$1.25 to $3.00 ened and dejected group of disciples appraised in (terms of the enduring, Ladies’ Chamois Suede Gloves___ . 59o. up In tbe spirit of confident rejoicing; It and the things of-time and change fell carried them.’ through arduous labor back Into their proper subordinate s,cd bitter penseentlon; It won to them places. ELSIE SILK HOSIERY increasing adherents; It triumphed It is a revival of that resurrection over every difficulty, over all opposi­ faith which the world needs today, a Colore are tan bark, airdale, silver, peach and blush (full fashioned)... .$2.00 pair tion. It became the power of the life faith in the reality of the continuing eternal, tiring new significance to all Ilfs# and the things which belong to SILK BLOUSES FOR WOMEN life, new meaning tc all the lessons it Nothing else.cen save us from the they learned from the Master’s Ups. perverted sense of values which curses Printed Crepes and Embroidered Crepes ...... $6.98 and $7.98 We may build tbls faith upon the humanity, from the circling pursuit Beaded Crepe Blouses ...... •...... $5.08 empty tomb, but. In- fact, It had deeper of Illusion, fm n the vain struggle foundation than that. It went bsek for that which cannot satisfy,. In navy, cocoa and wood color ’.behind the tomb and the cress to the The vitai message of ; tbls Easter living Christ as th^y had known Kim. season is the call to every man to live English Broadcloth Tailored Blouses, with pockets, double cuffs, deep collars, etc. iSverythlng that they had seen of Him in the light and power of the Ufa $3.00 and heard of Him made it reasonable, eternal, and tbe assurance that to ev­ Ladies’ Black Sateen Petticoats...... Special, $1.98 ; made It logical, made it, la a senna, In­ ery man *uch a Ufe is possible. Jesus evitable. He had lived ln the power of lived It supremely. Those who dare the life eternal- It was inconceivable to follow where He leads may know that the beauty, the goodness and the Sta Joy, and, when, the world accepts truth which found embodiment In Him Hla leadership It' will And both right­ could perish, that the personality which eousness and peacp—these treasures it ■ 'they expressed could be less than for­ cam pever find w hile it grapes am id Cook’s Bee Hive ever enduring. The existence of these the shadows of its passing prids and (Incorporated) : values—inseparable from personality pomp. —tvus essential tc the' understanding ot .life as anything niore than a pur- poselesa tragedy, a futile .breath in a Cookman Avenue and Main Street ihaotlc anti wmningiess world ■late bunnies syltb isw&it' chocolflfe'atifr. ■To have iwown .Jesvis was to have prcsslwis on their, little choeolita' ’ •iksown that there is a spiritual reality 3'he Easter Message ■ ■ > fhcM ;even the^ enra.M eAlertte'ilj^'?-.:^; AsburyPark r^hlch..tronscendH the material .and the :Easter that answors, humanity’s cho'cilate!jsj«|hl(iit"',.';v'''::. j; ^temporal. This cohsdpusfies8,hsC been ideepest: Jopging, -thnt’(Promls^s fulQU- tjuicltened Ih' thK souls 1 ol JU s ifoUowr. ■iinent.of:its■Bwpoteat hope.il^oBld.brlog ' '(Ebfi'jiftfous-hatrod "erf ;«Hii foUti .'eaph one o f .uij :a ,m<>Bafiso ,w h lth ‘:wlli y«»bruin* ertss.of 'fipmeh powfcr, .the! .aEid^boauty 'ith'tevejjrdgy; w .bltm tii ^‘^hibr^thM e •>.. w « ^x !${%;!$$-; • : i. ' , ; y . riw.j.',---

W v ikti