REAL ESTATE - DigiFind-It · 2015-02-03 · jcb, on recommendation of boro engineer Claude W....

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l i e a b o o s t e r . D o n ’t k n o c k . L e t ’s m a k e B e lm a r B e a c h t h e f in e s t r e s o r t a l o n g t h e J e r s e y

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a t 8 P . M.

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MYSTICS TO CLASH WITH MAURER A. C.

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h e l d t h e c o u n t r y f a i r , S a t u r d a y , ; j jo rJ u n e 27 , M o n d a y , J u n e 2 9 , T u e s d a y , j 'p h e m a y o r a n d c o u n c i l o f S o u th J u n e 3 0 , a n d W e d n e s d a y , J u l y 1. ; B e lm a r , M o n d a y n i g h t , a p p e a r e d b o M a n y p r e t t y a n d c o s y b o o t h s a r c f o r e B e lm a r c o u n c i l in s e s s io n a n d b e i n g e r e c t e d a n d t h e e n t i r e p l o t | a d v i s c d t h a t t h e s l a l e b o a r d o f h a s b e e n w i r e d w i t h e l e c t r i c l i g h t s , h e a l t h b a d i n f o r m e d t h e S o u t h B e l- T h e l a d i e s o f t h e c o n g r e g a t i o n a r e j m a r p e o p ] e , h a t t h e U m c h a d

p r e p a r i n g m a n y f a n c y a r t i c l e s fo i r j v e (j -w h e n t h e y s h o u l d h a v e a m o d s a l e s a l o n g w i t h m a n y g o o d ie s t o j c r n s y s l e m o f s a n i t a l j o n . e a t . T h e m e n a r e v e r y b u s y w i t h , T h e r e p o r t m a d e |Q S o u th B e J m a r t h e i r m id - w a y , g e t t i n g t h e v a r i o u s , )y t h e ^ b o < jrd sh < n v e d t h a t B c l .

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cIe'*' v , . . . ' h i g t h e f a c t t h a t B e l m a r ’s s e p t i cA h a n d s o m e r e e d l i v i n g r o o m s e t | t a n k e v c n , h e n w a s in a d e q u a 1 fc { 0

w i l l b e a w a r d e d o n t h e s h a r e p l a n j h a n d J e a p(>ak , o a d M o v o r B i r d .b y t h e m e n o f t h e c h u r c h , w h i l e ' s a „ r e s p o n d e d w i f h t h e i n f o r m a .t h e y o u n g l a d i e s o f t h e p a r i s h w i l l ■ U o n t h a t h e h a d ,.(,C(,i w d w o r dc h a n c e o f f a v e r y v a l u a b l e c o u c h f r o m t h e g ta te , f o l o h v in g „c o v e r i m p o r t e d f r o m E u r o p e a n d e y th n { J h c e n ? i r e mw h i c h i s Of g r e a t v a lu e . T h i s h a n d j }). g e n o u „ hs o m e p r i z e w a s d o n a t e d b y M rs . J . j t a k „

T h e o r c h e s t r a w i l l p l a y f o r d a n c i n g i y o u i n a d e t h e e i g h t h o u t to S t c r - j M c G r a th o f I n l e t T e r r a c e . A ll t h e j p t j e d M d t h , ^ el1 * f !ne v e r y e v e n i n g f r o m 9 .3 0 t i l l m id - : n o rS ( a n d b y t h e w a y , B i l l R e s t a j p e o p l e o f t h e c o u n t r y s id e a r e c o r d - f b i e n c e d 1 h e b o a r d sn i g h t a t t h e S h a r k R i v e r H i l l s c o u n - ; c e r t a i n i y h a d h i s o ld w a l l o p o i l e d , i a l l v i n v i t e d t o c o m e o u t a n d h e l p i 0 p j n j 0 n '

s e a s o n wri l l b e g iv e n , S a t u r d a y a f t e r n o o n , J u n e 2 7 th , f r o m 2 o ’c lo c k

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t o 4 o ’c l o c k , a n d in t h e e v e n i n g s e l e c t i o n s . C o m e e a r l y a n d s t a y t o f r o m 7 t o 9 o ’c lo c k a t t h e B o a r d - e n j o y a f a s t , c l e a n g a m e o f b a l l .w a l k o f f i c e o f M o r r i s e y & W a l k e r , _________________B o a r d w a l k a t T h i r d a v e n u e , A s b u r y j r DIAMOND C H I P SP a r k , b y A d o lp h S n y d e r ’s S h a r k -______R iv e r H i l l s C o u n t r y d u b o r c h e s t r a , j W e l l , B u c k , o ld t o p , s o m e b u n t j

t r y c lu b . u p a j a g a b e R u t h .T h e s a m e o r c h e s t r a h a s a l s o b e e n j N ic e w o r k , H a s b r o u c k , k e e p i t

e n g a g e d t o p l a y f o r d a n c i n g e a c h 1 u pe v e n i n g a t t h e S h a r k H iv e r H i l l s , f>jd y o u s e e R u d d y t e l e s c o p e o u tC o u n t r y c l u b , t h h o u r s b e i n g f r o m s t .v e r a ] t i m e s a n d c o n v e r t h i t s i n t o9 .3 0 u n t i l m id n i g h t . S e v e r a l i n n o - ] o l l f sv a t i o n s i n o r c h e s t r a l n u m b e r s a r e j Say> B u c k N e s l e y c e r t a i n l y p u t p r o m is e d b o t h a t t h e c o n c e r t s a n d j ,, ()f p e p j n j 0 t b e c r e w . C o m ed a n c e s . ̂ j on< g a n g ; i e f s b e l p h i m o u t . M o re

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i a l l y n a m e d a s K . o f C . o r C a s e y ’s n i g h t , a n d s e v e r a l f e a t u r e s e s p e c ­i a l l y f i t t e d f o r t h e o c c a s io n w i l l b e p r e s e n t e d .

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e d t h a t w o r k o n a n e w w o o d e n j e t t y a t th e . f o o t o f T e n t h a v e n u e w a s a b o u t h a l f c o m p le t e d a n d t h a t s i m ­i l a r l a b o r w o u l d s o o n b e s t a r t e d o n o n e a t E l e v e n t h a v e n u e . O ld j e t ­t i e s a t t h a t p o i n t h a v e p a s s e d t h e s t a g e o f e f f i c i e n c y , i t w a s p o i n t e d

o n e o f t h e m o s t s p a c i o u s a n d a t - ; Q o n ’t p a y a n y a t t e n t i o n to t h o s e n u e . w a s f in e d $5 , W e d n e s d a y n ig h t : l ° i a i s eJ o l im o n f K in M i n i ___________ _______________ a 1 i ______ l L r> — n __________ I n n a n c e th e w o r k w a s p a s s e d o n

a b l y c o m m e n te d o n b y t h e m a n y | d a y . | w i t h m a & r c U t h e ^ b o T o “s i d e w a l k ! 6 1 OUt t h i , t ^ le T e r>»h a v e n u e p a -v ! s i t o r s t » A s b u r y P a r k s n e w s u - N ic e w o r k , P a u l . T h e o ld e y e h a s i n s t e a d o f t b e s t r e e t s . C o o p e r r e - 1 V w a s h i a p r e c a r i o u s c o n d i - b u r b , a n d e v e r y e f f o r t i s b e i n g m a d e j b i t i t s a p p l e o b s e r v a t i o n , a n d f r o m c e n t l y h a d u n e g r o n e i g h b o r a r - i l ’0 n (*ue t 0 t *l e w a s h i n g a w a y o fto h a v e t h e d a n c e s a m o n g t h e c h i e f s o c i a l d i v e r s i o n s t h e r e .

A l f r e d K a s d a n , a g r a d u a t e o f t h e A s b u r y P a r k h i g h s c h o o l , g r a d u a t ­e d t h i s y e a r f r o m S t e v e n ’s I n s t i t u t e o f T e c h n o l o g y , w h e r e h e r e c e i v e d t h e d e g r e e o f m e c h a n i c a l e n g i n e e r . I*e w i l l r e t u r n t h i s w t c k e n d f r o m S t e v e n ’s , w h e r e h e i s i n s t r u c t i n g

c h e m i s t r y .S y lv ia K a s d a n h a s r e t u r n e d t o

B e lm a r f o r t h e s u m m e r . S h e h a s j u s t c o m p l e t e d h e r j u n i o r y e a r a t T u f t ’s c o l l e g e .

R e g u la r S a b b a t h s e r v i c e s w i l l b e c o n d u c t e d in t h e C h u r c h o f t h e H o l y A p o s t l e s , B e lm a r , N . J . , a t 1 0 .3 0 A . M . o n S u n d a y , J u n e 2 8 th , b y t h e R e v . F . A . D . L a u n t , w h o w i l l p r e a c h t h e s e r m o n o n t h a t o c ­c a s i o n . H o ly e o m m u n io n w i l l b e c e l e b r a t e d a t 7 .3 0 A . M .

n o w ' o n j u s t w a t c h t h e t e l e p h o n e r e s t e d o n a c h a r g e o f k i l l i n g h i s k i d ’s sm o k ,e , ; c h i c k e n s , t h e c a s e b e i n g d i s m is s e d

W e l l . S t e w a n d B u r n s , w e c a n ’t b y t h e r e c o r d e d w i t h t h e a d v ic e f o r g e t ^ y o u l f in k y l a d s , s o w e ’l l j u s t t h a t b o t h n u n s h o u l d b e m o r e . a m - b i d y o u s t a r t s o m e th i n g , S tf tu rd & y , i a b l e . B e s id e s - t h e f in e , B o r o R e - s o w e c a n u s e t h e o ld m i l l i n y o u r , c o r d e r H o u s e l d e l i v e r e d a s e v e r e r e ­i n t e r e s t n e x t w e e k . j p r i m a n d t o C o o p e r , w h o w a s w a r n -

-------------------------- | e d s e v e r a l t im e s b e f o r e b e i n g s u m -R IA L T O T H E A T R E O P E N S S A T . - m o n e d i n t o c o u r t .

t h e s a n d b e t w e e n t h e w o r n o u t j e t ­t i e s .

C o u n c i lm a n E d w i n B . B ig e lo w , c h a i r m a n o f t h e N i n t h a n d T e n t h 1 a v e n u e c o m m i t t e e i n t r o d u c e d a n d h a d p a s s e d a r e s o l u t i o n to h a v e t h e i m p r o v e m e n t w o r k o n t h o s e a v e n u e s a c c e p te d a s a c o m p l e t e d j c b , o n r e c o m m e n d a t i o n o f b o r o e n g i n e e r C la u d e W . B i r d s a l l .

T h e s a m e c o u n c i l m a n , c h a i r m a n

P l a n s f o r a F o u r t h o f J u l y c e l e ­b r a t i o n i n B e lm a r t h i s y e a r w i l l b e f o r m u l a t e d a t a m e e t i n g o f t h e C h a m b e r O f c a m m e r c e iofitflK Es 4SE® p r o p o s e d c e l e b r a t i o n w a s i n f o r m a l ­l y d i s c u s s e d a t c o u n c i l m e e t in g , M o n d a y n i g h t .

D i s c u s s io n w a s a l s o d i r e c t e d a t a n o t h e r a r r a n g e m e n t f o r t h e im ­p o u n d i n g a n d d i s p o s a l o f u n c l a i m e d d o g s c a u g h t in t h e l o c a l d o g c a t c h ­i n g c a m p a i g n . M r s . W i l c o x N ix o n , s u p e r i n t e n d e n t o f M o n m o u th c o u n ­t y S . P . C . A ., r e p o r t e d t h a t f o l l o w ­i n g s e v e r a l c o m p l a i n t s f r o m b o r o r e s i d e n t s s h e v i s i t e d t h e b o r o p o u n d s a n d f o u n d t h e d o g s w e r e n o t b e i n g c a r e d f o r p r o p e r l y .

B o r o C l e r k A . D . B u r g e s s e r , h o w ­e v e r , s a i d t h a t t h i s r e p o r t w a s a r - r o n e o u s . t h a t M r s . N ix o n h a d b e e n u n a b l e t o m a k e h e r s e l f u n d e r s t o o d w h i l e s p e a k i n g t o t h e ^ c a r e t a k e r o f t h e p o u n d s , w h o , h e S a id , w a s d e a f . M rs . N ix o n o b t a i n e d f o o d a n d w a t e r f o r t h e d o g s a f t e r h e r i n v e s t i g a t i o n a c c o r d i n g t o h e r r e p o r t a n d a l s o h a d s e v e r a l o f t h e m d e s t r o y e d b y . l e t h a l g a s .

T h e m a t t e r w i l l b e l e f t in t h e h a n d s o f t h e p o l i c e c o m m i t t e e , C l a r c n c e R . S t in e s , f o r d i s p o s i t i o n .

O n m o t i o n o f C o u n c i l m a n S t i n e s , p a r t p a y m e n t o n a h i l l f o r a f e n c e s a i d t o h a v e b e e n b r o k e n d o w n by i c e d u r i n g a h o s e d e m o n s t r a t i o n t w o w i n t e r s a g o w a s m a d e t o W . E . H e f t e r . T h e a m o u n t o r d e r e d p a i d w a s $ 3 0 0 w h i l e t h e t o t a l b i l l a m o u n t e d t o $ 5 0 0 . I t w a s s t i l l t h e c o n t e n ­t i o n o f C o u n c i l m a n S t i n e s t h a t the- b o r o s h o u l d n o t b e r e s p o n s i b l e f o r t h e e n t i r e b i l l a n d a r r a n g e m e n t s

j f o r a d j u s t m e n t o f t h e b a l a n c e a r e u n d e r w a y .

O n t h e r e c o m m e n d a t i o n o f C o u n ­c i l m a n E d w i n B . B ig e lo w , c o u n c i l c o m m e n d e d t h e s t a t e h i g h w a y d e ­p a r t m e n t o n t h e p a v i n g o f t h e s t r e t o h o f R i v e r r o a d b e t w e e n 8 t h a v e n u e a n d F s t r e e t .

D E V E R E U X S T A T E E L K S H E A D W i l l i a m K . D e v e r c u x o f A s b u r y K h e a v e n u e p a v i h o n c o m ­

m i t t e e r e p o r t e d t h a t p r o g r e s s w a s m a d e i n o b t a i n i n g t h e p r o p e r

\ J T h e R i a l t o T h e a t r e , o n e o f t h e _______ — • I tw e l v e o f a s t r i n g o f t h e a t r e s o p e r - 1

Y O U N G P E O P L E S ’ M E E T I N G a t e d b y t h e B e lm a r T h e a t r e c o m - 1 P a r k , w a s c h o s e n a s S t a t e P r e s i

T h e Y o u n g P e o p l e s ’ m e e t i n g , a t j p a n y . w i l l o p e n fo i t h e s e a s o n a t | d e n t o f t h e e v i s e a t i n g a r r a n g e m e n t s f o r t h e p a v i l -t h e F i r s t M . E . c h u r c h , o n S u n d a y ; E i g h t h a v e n u e a n d O c e a n , t o m o v - . n k h t H e S io n f in d a l s o t h e b o a r d w a l k W i the v e n i n g a t 6 .3 0 , V i l l b e i n c h a r g e | r 0 w e v e n in g . M anager E m m o U h a s b o t d ,̂ A s b u r y P a r k ' la ^ n ^ fh J e r ^ j , i d o f t h e m a y o r b e w i - l f u r t h e r

e d c a p t a i n o f t h f v a S ^ b a s k e S l j s p e a k e r w i f i b ^ p r c s e n t t o a d d r e s s ! o p e n i n g s h o w at* a p o p u l a r j C i ty ^ ^ ” " ,e ^ o T r f w h o i c o l s l l e r a L

F I R E D E S T R O Y S G A R A G E

m a t i c s o c i e t y , a n d i s a s s i s t a n t e d i - | w e lc o m e , t o r o f t h e c o l l e g e p a p e r .

B e n K a s d a n g r a d u a t e d f r o m t h e A s b u r y P a r k H ig h s c h o o l , l a s t

H A V E Y O U R H O M E S C L E A N E D B Y L O U IS H E C K M A N . P R O F E S ­S IO N A L H O U S E C L E A N E R A N D C A R E T A K E R . E S T IM A T E S A R E C H E E R F U L L Y G IV E N . 1 8 th A V E ­N U E . N E A R B R IA R W O O D T E R ­R A C E . P H O N E 1412 .

B e r g e r ’s , S e v e n t h A v e . a n d F S t.

‘ F O R S A L E — O il R a n g e , 3 b u r n e r s , b l u e f l a m e . $ 1 5 f o r q u i c k s a le . S l i g h t ly u s e d . A p p l y T e r h u n e , 1901 B S t r e e t .

THOMAS R. HARDYFUNERAL DIRECTOR

Licensed Embalmer PRIVATE AUTO

AMBULANCE 604 F St. Belmar, N. J.

T e l e p h o n e 9 2 8 B e lm a r O p e n D a y a n d N i g h t

F O R S A L E — F u r n i t u r e : B la c k T o p D e s k , T a b l e , B e d s t e a d s , e t c . A p ­p l y 707 N . L a k e A v e n u e .

W A N T E E D — S a le s la d .V'T'Tv a t

I a n a l l I b e e n t;.sf

'•'-’S t. T h e t h e a t r e h a s r i n g a d d r e s s a n d w a s a p p l a u d e d f o r ! 'h e b e s t s e a t s t o b e o b t a i n e d w i l l'•>’ l y a r r a n g e d . f u l l y f iv e m i n u t e s .

F O R R E N T — B u s in e s s w o m a n c a n h a v e p l e a s a n t f r o n t r o o m w i t h l i g h t h o u s e k e e p i n g p r i v i l e g e s ; p e r m a n e n t i f d e s i r a b l e . A p p ly r e e f 6 6 7 N i n t h A v e ., B e lm a r , e v e n in g s .

L O S T — B la c k L e a t h e r I T n d e r - a r m P o c k e t b o o k b e t w e e n L a k e w o o d a n d O c e a n G r o v e , c o n t a i n i n g d i a ­m o n d b a r p in , W . V a . a u t o t a g s , a n d P h i l a d e l p h i a W b r a r y c a r d . R e ­w a r d i f r e t u r n e d t o 47 A b b o t t A v e ., O c e a n G r o v e , o r 5 0 2 W o o d ­l a n d T e r r a c e , P h i l * . , P a .

F O R S A L E — U s e d F u r n i t u r e : c h e a p , a t 211 T h i r d A v e ., B e lm a r .

F O R R E N T — G a r a g e . T h i r d A v e n u e .

I n q u i r e 411

Special Bargains for Saturday

Z E V I N ’S5=10=25c=Store & Up

s h o r t l y b e i n s t a l l e d .S t r e e t s o f t h e b o r o w 'e r e r e p o r t e d

t o b e i n g o o d c o n d i t i o n b y C o u n c i l - 1 m a n E d w a r d F . L y m a n , j r . , c h a i r - | m a n o r t h e h i g h w a y c o m m i t te e .

904 F Street Belmar, N. J.

F o r m e r P o s t m a s t e r C y r u s B . H o n c e i s n o w o c c u p y i n g th e / S h e p ­h e r d r e s i d e n c e o n F i f t h a v e n u e , w h i c h h e p u r c h a s e d r e c e n t l y .

O n a c c o u n t o f n e x t S a t u r d a y b e ­in g F o u r t h o f J u l y , t h e F i r s t N a ­t i o n a l b a n k w i l l b e c lo s e d .

( F O R S A L E — B ic y c le , c h a i n l e s s . $ 1 0 f o r q u i c k s a le . A p p ly T e r h u n e , 1901 B S t r e e t .

F i r e o f u n d e t e r m i n e d o r i g i n d e ­s t r o y e d a f r a m e g a r a g e c o n t a i n i n g a n a u t o , o n t h e p r o p e r t y o f W i l l i a m S t u d e m a n , C u r t i s a v e n u e , b e t w e e n 1 6 th a n d 1 7 t h . a v e n u e s , W e s t B e l ­m a r , a b o u t 11 o ’c lo c k , W e d n e s d a y n i g h t . T h e b l a z e w a s c o n f i c e d t o t h e g a r a g e , w h i c h , w i t h i t s c o n t e n t s w a s c o m p l e t e l y c o n s u m e d . B e s id e s t h e W a l l t o w n s h i p d e p a r t m e n t , S p r i n g L a k e , S o u th B e lm a r a n d th e B e lm a r f i r e f o r c e s r e s p o n d e d .

T O O P E N N E W H O T E L J U L Y 1

T h e n e w B e r k e l e y - C a r t a r e t h o t e l a t A s b u r y P o r k , w h i c h w a s b u i l t a t a c o s t o f $ 3 ,5 0 0 ,0 0 0 w i l l b e f o r m a l l y o p e n e d J u l y 1 s t . T h e h o t e l h a s 4 0 0 r o o m s .

M A S O N S T O B U I L D T E M P L E

T h e O c e a n G r o v e M a s o n ic l o d g e w i l l b u i l d a M a s o n ic t e m p l e a t t h a t p l a c e a t a c o s t o f $ 5 0 ,0 0 0 . A t a m e e t - j n s l a s t w e e k $ 2 0 ,0 6 0 w a s p l e d g e d t o w a r d t h e c o s t o f t h e t e m p le .

— W E D O J O B P R I N T I N G —

A N e w A s s o r t m e n t o f H a t s H a v e J u s t A r r i v e d A t t h e

A N N A M A E M I L L I N E R Y S H O P 807 F S t r e e t B e lm a r , N . J .

T H E O D O R E H . B E N N E T T

FUNERAL DIRECTOR 710 N i n t h Ave. Belmar. N.

F o r P a r t i c u l a r s , R e a d A d o nI n s i d e P a g e

NEW SHOES AT FALCO’STony Falco announces that he has added a new

line of shoes to his shoemaking establishment, located at 1006 F St. Mr. Falco will carry a complete line of Bates Shoes for Men, Women and Children. His prices will be unbeatable in Ihe county.

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— W E D O J O B P R I N T I N G —

OWNER WILL BUILDOffices to Suit Tenant

atTENTH AVENUE GARAGE BUILDING

For information Phone 1158 Belmar or your own Broker,

#*.*•

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—NOW OPEN FOR BUSINESS—“ S o d a F o r T h o s e W h o A p p r e c i a t e ”

RIVOLI SUGAR BOWLWe Have Your Favorite Candy

S C H R A F F T ’S J O H N S T O N ’S A P O L L O ’S

902 F Street Belmar, N. J.

REAL ESTATEMORRISON S EDWARDS

709 F Street Belmar, N . J .PHONE 1206

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Telephone 447

A . S . R O S E N

R e a l E s t a t e B r o k e r702 9th Ave. Belmar, N. J.

s«ui&iaams&&&&&& v..-

E COAST ADVERTISER. BELMAR. N. J

FOR OVER ZOO YEARS

Branded in the V alley

H A tfl rr MADEt o x f t A s u a s OUR COMIC SECTION

By M ARTHA P IE R C E h a a r l e m o i l h a s b e e n a w o r l d ­w i d e r e m e d y f o r k i d n e y , l i v e r a n d b l a d d e r d i s o r d e r s , r h e u m a t i s m , l u m b a g o a n d u r i c a c i d c o n d i t i o n s -

W N U S e r v ic e

A S the day died, three horsemen rode down from the m ountain and

struck into the tra il th a t leads across the mesa. They rode in silence, save once when the leader half turned in his saddle and spoke to the rider nearest him.

“How fa r is it, J im ?”“Jim lifted his hridle reins, and his

horse spt-ang alongside the big gray of the leader.

“ ’Bout th irty m iles yet,” he said briefly; "w e’ll m ake it by nine o’clock.”

Along the Concrete^ HAARLEM OIL

correct internal troubles, stim ulate vital organs. Three siies. All druggists. Insist on the original genuine G old M edal.

Expedition Goes to Film Floor of Sea

An expedition of scientists , u nder the leadership o f a F rench archeolo* gist, hopes to m ake a moving p lc tu rs of a sunlcen Rom an city in the Medi­te rran ean w ith a newly invented un­dersea cam era. They also hope to sa l­vage treasu res of g rea t value.

In some p a rts of th e M editerranean it is possible to distinguish objects 100 fee t below th e surface. This m akes it ideal for the tak ing of subm arine p ictures. The operator, lowered over the sh ip ’s side in an ingeniously con­stru c ted arm ored cylinder, w orks a cam era and a pow erful light pro jector,

An artificial screen has been de­vised to m ake the objects stand ou t clearly in subm arine photography, by filtering a chemical fluid into the w a te r from above. I t reflects the artificial light, w hich otherw ise would be lost in th e darkness of the w ater.

T he moon climbed up over a high bluff and looked down upon a little valley w here a sm all, sw ift stream ran through green meadows. In the midst of the valley one tree stqod like a sentinel n ear a low log house set a stone’s throw from the brink of the stream .

A fire th a t leaped upon th e hearth and flung its ruddy light through the sm all w indows served to light the rude interior, its uncertain gleam s h a lf re ­vealing, ha lf concealing the rough uncouthness of a m an who sa t before the fireplace holding a child upon his knee.

“Now tell me,” he w as saying, "w hy you didn’t go home w ith Mrs. P o tte r today, when she rode all the way over here on purpose. Mrs. P o tte r’s right about it bein’ too lonesome for you to s tay here wlien I’m out in the hills. It is m ighty lonesome for a little girl like you. You b e tte r let me tak e you over tom orrow .” She shook her head until her m isty h a ir flew out like an oriole.

“W ho’d keep house for you?" she asked, as if th a t question settled the whole m atter.

He laughed weakly. “You do take p re tty good care of your old dad, don t you? And you’re all th e housekeeper he’s had fo r a good spell now.”

"Since ma w ent to heaven,” said the child gravely.

H e s ta rted and looked a t her cu ri­ously.

“Who told you th a t? ” he said, a l­most roughly.

"Told me w hat?”She was looking a t th e fire intently,

and had a half-absorbed expression. ."T h a t ma w ent to heaven. Oh, she told me herself, before she went, and she made me prom ise I'd come, too. She told me all about the angels and God and everything. She said the angels w ere all around, every place, and since she died I know It's true, 'cause I ’ve seen ’em. T here’s one right there in the fire now. I’ve been seeing it ever so long. A little baby angel w ith its wings spread out to fly. See, pa? Right there, In the middle of the b righ test—see?”

“No,” said the man, slowly, “I can ’t quite make it out.” Suddenly he started .

“W hat’s th a t.”H e opened the door and looked out.

T hree men on horseback confronted him. H e was covered instantly .

“We’re onto you,” said one lacon­ically, “say your prayers.”

H e grew pale beneath th e bronze, but he faced them resolutely, and stood a trifle s tra igh ten

"W hat does th is mean, m en?” he said. "W hat have I done?"

The leader laughed grimly.“W hen a m an’s too handy w ith his

b randin ' irons he’s ap t to run up against trouble some day. You’ve got about two m inutes to m ake your las t will and testam ent.”

At last, a fte r a m inute as long as years, he spoke stum blingly, as If w ords of en treaty cam e hardly to his Ups.

"You have homes, men, and little ones, maybe. T hink of the child, and have m ercy.’’ H e caught her up sud­denly and held her before them.

S tartled by the sudden movement, the big gray reared and paw ed the air. T here w as a sharp report and a shrill* scream through the stillness of the v a lley ; then the fa th e r stood look­ing stupidly a t the limp and senseless thing he held in his arm s, and the sw ift red stream th a t dyed his sh irt sleeve.

T he big gray had bolted, and a fte r a moment of horrified w aiting the tw o who w ere 16ft wheeled the ir horses and rode away through the night leav­ing th e outcast alone w ith his dead.

The sun climbed up over th e high bluff and looked down on the green valley w here the one tree stood by the low log house. Under the tree a man w as stooping over a little mound by the Side of a long one, patting it soft­ly and babbling to him self about his baby, and th e litle angel in th e fire. A fter aw hile he w andered aw-ay hat- 'ess and coatless tow ard the mountain.

C heap Clothes are always the most costlyO u r p r ic re s a r e k e e n b u t w e n e v e r c o m p e te w i t h t h e c h e a p a n d t a w d r y .

H tN R V , FOB g o o d n e s s

5AKE 6ET AHeap o f th a t c a r

WE O D 6 t f T

TO HAVE 6 A 9 [m a s k s w bem m coo o u t

ypH 1XE RQAP

W e s e l l C u s to m - m a d e ( J lo th e s

o n l y a n d w e b i d f o r t h e p a ­t r o n a g e o f m e n w h o w a n t g o o d s e r v i c e a n d t a i l o r i n g o f S t e r l i n g M e r i t . F o r b l o a t e d fe e l in g : a n d d i s t r e s s e d breath­

i n g d u e t o i n d i g e s t i o n y o u n e e d a m e d i c in o n s w e l l a s a p u r g a t i v e . W r i g h t ’s India® V e g e t a b l e P i l l s a r e b o t h . A d v .S e e o u r V a lu e s a t

OIL PVRNER.(Copyright, w . n . u .)

Pigeons’ H om ing InstinctBelgium claim s the credit of per­

fecting th e m odern rac ing pigeon. All our B ritish b irds a re descendants of pigeons Im ported from A ntw erp, B rus­sels, and Liege. W riting in th e y e a r 1765, John Moore, an au tho rity of th a t date, says:

"T he original of these pigeons cam e from B agora (B ussorah) In P ersia , be­ing som etim es brought by shipping, and som etim es by caravans. . .Such is the adm irable cunning and sagacity of th is bird tha t, though yon carry them hoodwinked tw enty or th irty m iles—nay, I have known them to be carried th reescore or a hun­dred, and then tu rn ed loose—they will Im m ediately hasten to the place w here they w ere b red .” Even the ancients bred and used homing pigeons, and they w ere common in the land of the pharaohs th irteen cen turies before C hrist.—London Times.

B. BUSCH1 2 th A v e . a n d F S t r e e t

B e lm a r , N . J .

MICKIE, THE PRINTER'S DEVIL Neither "Prophet” Nor " Profit

/ T M e v a E , u m o W / v s -----------

sTYAE F O O R X H P R £ S I D E U T

O F 'T H E U U V Y E D /-----------

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v u $EY WOU D ou r EUEki VOiOVU j VMO "THE V\£E ?REf?\OEkir 19J MOR-! VJwo WE GcOVEPUOft VS, UOR, j

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BAGGAGE SERVICE

From

HOUSE TO HOUSE

M E V . \

T e l e p h o n e 362

W atch C u tic u ra Im prov* Y our S k in .O a rising and re tiring gently sm ear the face w ith C uticura O intm ent. W ash off O intm ent in five m inutes w ith C uticura Soap and ho t w ater. It is w onderful w hat C uticura will do fo r poor complexions, dandruff, Itching and red, rough hands.—A dvertisem en t

LOCAL AND LONG

DISTANCE MOVINGM U C H , O O V O U ^ UO j m o o 'k e A

P E ^ WOSS .A R O O U O M E R E .

Transit InsuranceVJElX VJHAOOA VA 'TVWVJK. \ AKA * T Saving a R ubens Ceiling

Such is the bad effect of London’s sooty and im pure atm osphere th a t the R ubens ceiling in the Royal U nited Service museum, W hitehall, once the banqueting house from w'hieh C harles 1 stepped out to th e scaffold, is in dan. ger of being destroyed. T he ceiling, pain ted by R ubens in 1635 by o rder ot C harles I, is divided by gilded mold­ings into nine com partm ents. A lready it has been resto red five tim es since it has been restored* five tim es sine* it w as completed.

PROPHETBelmar

T e l e p h o n e 362

Got SomethingYou

Want to Sell?Moat people have a piece of furniture, a form imple­ment, or something else which they have discard­ed and which they d o lon­ger wont.These things are pat in the attic, or stored sway in the b a m , or le f t lying about, getting of less and less value each year.

M echanical P honeThrough the adap ta tion of a ph o n o

graph principle a device has been In­vented to answ er a telephone m echan­ically and w ithout hum an aid a t the receiving end. T he pseudophonograph receives the call and replies, “No one is in, bu t you may leave a m essage," which, should the one calling desire to do, it will inscribe on the phonograph record.

WHAT’S THE USE

■You F e llas duck h e re c o m e SomeLADIES TO CALL r ON ,T H E MRS

A D D I S O N , 1 b L »

G E T IN TH E

c l o s e t Th e r e| r lEUX GETS FREE

VALET SERVICEin h is h o t e l , so,

LIKE A HOSPITABLE HOST,

HE ALWAfS SENDS HIS

FRIENDS' P/4NTS D o w n t o g e t Them p r e s s e d

WHENEVER Th e y

HEED IT.

Sure ReliefF O R IND IG ESTIO N

(TvW INPIGESTIOW J

|C3 ^ P w ^ ^r6~BELL-AN SHot water

wm I Sure Relief

WHY NOT SELL THEM?Somebody wants those very things which have become of no use to you. W hy not try to find that somebody by putting a want advertisement in

THIS NEWSPAPER?

ELL-ANS25<t AND 75* PACKAGES EVERYWHERE

T h i s I s Y o u r O p p o r t u n i t y

- S E I Z E I T N O W !A g e n ts w an te d to se ll o u r lin e o f b e a u t ifu l la d ie s ' R a y -O n S i lk u n d e rg a rm e n ts . F o r p a r t ic u la r s w r ite

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I ^Iti'r IN NO CLOSETi 'm out in <T T T B The Public )„ h a l l /

No one lives in th e house In the valley. They say th a t when th e moon is full fire leaps upon the deserted hearth and flings a ruddy glow through the windows, and he who listens may presently hear the shrill scream of a child, and the c la tte r of fleeing horse­men across the mesa. B ut o thers say it is a myth, and one can see nothing but the moonlight reflected from the windows, and hear nothing save the dismal and long-drawn cry of a coy­ote.

( C o p y r i g h t . )

FIRST AID TO BEAUTYf A M D C H A R M

g s o m a r s a n o t h e r - e a u t l f u l fa c e a s t h e b le l i n e s o f fatigue o f f e r i n g c a u s e d by a c h in g fe e t . ALLEN 'S ISE the Antiseptic, l i n g P o w d e r , in s u r e s t c o m f o r t . I t i t a T o i­le t N ecessity . S h a k e it in yo n r sh o es In the m o rn in g, Sh op all d ay— D an ce a ll e v e n in g - th en let y o u r m irror tell th e s to ry . T r ia l p ack ­ag e an d a F o o t-E a a # W a lk in g D oll s e a t

F ree . A d d re ss A llen 's F o et-E ase , Le R o t . N. ? .So ld a i D ru g a nd D epartment Storgu .

A D V E R T IS E th e b ea t th in * y o n hav* in s to ck a t y o u r s to re in th e n ex t Issue o f th la paper. F ea tu re I t P u sh it s tro n g , T h e n s it in y o u r s to re and h a rv e st th e p e cu n ia ry fru it o f y o u r w isdom . 11 n n «

Reggie’s F unny R em ark“Father, I w ant you to hear some of

Reggie’s good th ings; he’s full of humor.”

" I heard the funniest of them the o ther n ig h t; he asked me to be his father-in-law

£)lV*M«-ra Utile*

T H E C O A S T A D V E R T IS E R , B E L M A R , N . J .

c x x x x x x o o o o o o c x x x x x x x x x x x x :

§ Chivalry Is Not Dead, §

8 It Wins Man Jail Cell oo C edar K apids, Iowa. — Who O8 says chivalry is dead? X p Mrs. M ary B razakas had been 0 3 arrested by prohibition officials Q 0 on a charge of bootlegging, and, Q H being unable to furnish bail, w as o Q sent to ja il. She had told the x Q officers th a t she w as a widow p9 w ith five children and sold S 0 moonshine to support them. p Q A m an appeared a t th e ja il X Q and asked if he would be per- Q R m itted to take his w ife’s place p 0 a s the children needed her. H e Q 8 was questioned and it developed p p th a t he was Mrs. B razakas’ hus- Q 8 band. H e w as inform ed th a t a p Q place could be found for him, X p so an inform ation w as sworn p Q charging him w ith m oonshining x p and he occupied a cell adjoin- O X ing th a t of his wife. 8

Dreadful Condition of Mrs. Fullerton’s Health Remedied

by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound

C le a rf ie ld , P a . — “ I c a n n o t b e g in to te l l y o u h o w m u c h L y d ia E . P in k h a m ’s V e g -

— ... e ta b le C o m p o u n d h a sh e lp e d m e in e v e r y w a y . B e fo re ta k in g

I c o u ld n 't s ta n d onM u? ^ee t w ' t h ° u t

p a in s r u n n i n g a ll W f th ro u g h m y w h o le

bo d y f ro m m y w a is t >11^18pBB |K d o w n , j u s t l i k e

th r e a d s p u llin g . Iw a s n o ^ 10 a n y

x '" w lm w o rk . My m o th e r j | | | ^ / j p , y , m e to t r y th e

f i -w C om ­p o u n d a n d I h a v e fo u n d g r e a t b e n e f it , a n d I n o t o n ly r e c o m m e n d i t f o r such t r o u b le s , b u t t o b u ild u p th e w h o le sys­te m . I h a v e u s e d i t f o r m o s t e v e r y ­th in g t h a t g e t s w r o n g w i th m e . When I b e g in to f e e l n e rv o u s a n d i r r i t a b le I d o n ’t s to p lo n g in g e t t i n g a b o t t le o f th e V e g e ta b le C o m p o u n d i f I h a v e n ’t g o t o n e in t h e h o u se . I t g iv e s a fine a p p e ­t i t e a n d m a k e s a n e w w o m a n o f m e . Y o u m a y u s e t h i s te s t im o n ia l in m y o w n to w n o r a n y w h e r e else, a n d I w ill a n ­s w e r a n y l e t t e r s I r e c e iv e .” — M rs. R u sh F u l l e r t o n , 525 S . 2 n d S t r e e t , C le a rf ie ld , P a .

I f y o u a r e s u f f e r in g f ro m n e rv o u s t r o u b le s , i r r i t a b i l i t y , g iv e th e V e g e ta b le C o m p o u n d a f a i r t r ia l . F o r s a le by d r u g g i s t s e v e ry w h e re .

QUALITYk R e id , M u r d o c h & Co.k Established 1655

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ARCTIC ICE FLOE

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fori

Nome, A laska.—A fter narrow ly es­caping being carried to sea on a cake of ice while m ushing around Cape Thompson, fa r w ithin the A rctic circle on the north coast of A laska, and ex­periencing o ther harrow ing adventures on an expedition of mercy, Mrs. G. O. Brady, governm ent nurse, has re turned safely to K otzebue sound, a dispatch relates.

Mrs. Brady sta rted north M arch 27 from Kotzebue w ith Superintendent Chance to give medical a tten tion in native villages and schools. T hree hours a fte r the departu re Chance and Mrs. B rady were overtaken by a bliz­zard and w ere forced to take refuge in a native cabin a t the mouth of Noa- tak river a f te r 14 hours of blind driv­ing in a tem perature of 30 below zero.

W hen the storm subsided they con­tinued to Point Hope, 800 miles north of K otzebue sound.

On the re tu rn trip Mrs. B rady w as accom panied only by a native musher, as Superin tendent Chance had pre­ceded her. Exceptionally high winds w renched free ice cakes upon which Mrs. B rady and her guide w ere round­ing Cape Thompson, and carried them seaw ard for more than a mile before a reef stopped them and they could m ake th e ir way ashore.

O ld-tim ers describe the tra il from Point Hope the m ost dangerous in the northland.

plus participation o f profits.Safe deposit boxes $2.50

per year and up.

Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers Co-operative

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2 0 5 W est 33 d St., N ew YorkOpposite Pennsylvania Station

" A C C O U N T S O P E N E D BY M A IL ’

B y J O H N D I C K I N S O N S H E R M A N

r IE F ourth of Ju ly and Thom-

T aji Jefferson are naturally closely associated in the m inds of all good A mericans. Monticello may now be added for th t reason th a t a move-

■ ment Is well under way torestore his home at C har­

lottesville, Va., and m ake it a national pa trio tic shrine.

The memory of Jefferson deserves well of his country. It w as he who m ade th e d ra ft of the D eclaration of Independence; he was the th ird P resi­dent of the U nited S ta tes and his o ther services w ere many and distinguished.

Jefferson w as born April 13, 1743, «t Shadwell, Va. H e died a t Monticello Ju ly 4. 1826—on the fiftieth anniver­sary of th e D eclaration of Independ­ence. So Independence day next year will be the sesqulcentennial of the D eclaration and the centennial of Je f­ferson’s death.

Jefferson w as graduated from W il­liam and M ary college in 1762 and was adm itted to the b a r in 1767. He was a m em ber of the C ontinental congress, 1775-6, and signed the D eclaration. In 1776 he was a m em ber of the legisla­tu re of V irginia and a leader in impor­tan t legal reform s. He filled these o ther positions: G overnor of Virginia, 1779; m em ber of congress. 1783; m in­is ter to F rance, 1784-9; secretary of s ta te , 1790-4 ; vice president, 1797-1801; P resident, 1S01-9. He founded in 1819 the U niversity of V irginia a t C har­lottesville.

Montlcellr is to be restored, so fa r as possible, to the condition in which it was left by Jefferson. This task has been undertaken Jointly by the Thom as Jefferson Memorial Foundation and the American In s titu te of Archi­tects through its com m ittee on the preservation of historic m onum ents and scenic beauties. Prof. Fiske Ivimhall, chairm an of th e a rch itec ts’ comm ittee, hopes not only to restore the law ns and gardens to Thom as Je f­ferson’s period, bu t also to re tu rn to the h istoric m ansion much of the fu r­n itu re . The Foundation w as estab­lished on tlie one hundred and eightieth ann iversary of Jefferson 's b irth , April 13, 1923. The following D ecember th e Foundation, by making a paym ent of $100,000, took legal title to the beautifu l colonial mansion, the e s ta te consisting of 640 acres of land and priceless Jeffersonian relics.

W hen retiring from the Presidency, Jefferson expected to be the “H erm it of M onticello,” but th is w as not to be. A continuous stream of visitors came to the place. I t w as said a t the tim e th a t “everyone in the U nited S tates of any en terprise sooner or la te r found his way to th is ex trao rd inary her­m itage.” H e him self w rote a t one tim e th a t “an ox lasted only a dayvor so.” Sometimes he had to p repare fifty beds fo r a night. H is v isitors a te him out of house and home.

Then, on top of the g radual dw in­dling of his resources, the prerevolu­tionary debt of his w ife’s es ta te be­came due in England and nearly half of his fortune was sw ept aw ay a t one blow. An indorsem ent for a friend cost him $20,000. F inally he had to sell his library and sold it to congress for $23,950.

In order to avert th e blow th a t wag pending. Jefferson petitioned the legis­la tu re for perm ission to dispose of his property a t a fa ir valuation by lottery, lie said : “By th is m eans I can savethe M onticello house and a farm ad ­joining. to end my days in and bury my bones. If not, -I m ust sell house, and all here, and carry my fam ily to Bedford, w here I have not even a log hut to put my head into.” T here was some opposition in the legislature^vbut the bill passed.

ifSiyjta&s thi-vAi.« A

' t u m v m m M m t lD o n ' t l e t b a b y b e t o r t u r e d b y s k i n t r o u b l e !

A p p l y R e s i n p l O i n t m e n t a n d s e e h o w q u i c k l y

t h e i t c h i n g a n d b u r n i n g s t o p s _

R e s m o l M ore SoGen. Hugh D rum said on a visit to

W ashington:“I9 have been read ing a num ber of

w ar books lately, some by G erm an gpn- erals, some by English and French ones, and these books have proved to me th a t every b a ttle of the W orld w ar w as a victory—n victory for both sides—and no general had a defeat or slip-up from the beginning of the w ar to th e end.”

G eneral D rum laughed.“To e rr is hum an,” he concluded,

and to lie about it is more so.”

G igantic BridgeA bridge half again as large as New

Y ork's Hell G ate bridge is shortly to span the harbor of Sydney, A ustralia. I t will allow the largest liners to pass below it, and will carry four railroad trncks, as well as roadw ays and walks T he chief fea tu re of the bridge will be a single arch of 1,650 feet span ; tl i to ta l length, including approach spaces, will be 3,770 feet. The headroom for sh ips will be 170 feet a t high w ater, and th e top of the arch will be 450 feet.

W hen the news spread, public m eet­ings w ere called and subscriptions for Jefferson 's use w ere sta rted . A loan or g ift from the treasu ry w as sug­gested, but Jefferson would not hear of th a t plan. He s a id : have spentth ree tim es as much money, and given my whole life to my countrym en, and now they nobly come forw ard in the only way they can, to repay me and save an old servan t from being turned like a dog out of doors.”

The action of the public made the last days of his life easier. But the debts still hung over the estate. Upon his death subscriptions ceased to come in. The lottery was a farce. The executor disposed of the estate , the land g o in g 'a s low as th ree to ten dol­lars an acre. The proceeds w ere not enough to discharge the obligations. T he executor made up the difference.

T he Thom as Jefferson Memorial Foundation is now engaged in the task of freeing the es ta te of debt. The movem ent has the support of men and women of all political faiths. P resi­dent Coolidge, accepting appointm ent as a member of the board of gover­nors, s a id : "B ut I cannot too earnestly assure you of my conviction th a t your organization is perform ing a useful service in encouraging th e preservation of those shrines and m onum ents of A merican history, which m ust bring inspiration to the American public.”

Jefferson w as versatile and Ingen­ious. He was an am ateu r arch itect of no mean ability, for one thing. He m ade the plans for M onticello and su­perintended its construction. The plans for the U niversity of V irginia w ere his.

As a fa rm er he w as in advance of his time. H e practiced ro ta tion of crops, had a fancy for im proved live stock and Introduced new fru its and vegetables.

Jefferson’s early home—the house of l)is fa th e r a t Shadwell, near by— w as burned in 1770. He lost all his books and p ap ers ; a negro servant saved his violin. T he previous year Jefferson had erected a story and a half brick building, which a fterw ard formed the sou theastern p art of his mansion. So he moved to Monticello a t once, bringing his m other, b ro ther and unm arried sisters. He not only built Monticello, bu t was his own in­terio r decorator and landscape gar­dener.

A touch of rom ance is supplied nt Monticello by a litt le tw o-story house a t the end of the long row of servan ts’ quarters. The upper room opens upon the lawn made by leveling the moun­ta in slope. T his w as Jefferson’s bridal cham ber New Y ear’s day, 1772. Mon- ticello was only partly built and a blizzard was blowing. But the room had its own fireplace and was secluded from fam ily and servants. H is bride

was M artha W ayles Skelton. The mar- rlage was happy and gave him one son anc. five daughters. H is w ife died in 1782.

This little house will be restored. So .will Its companion house, a replica, on the o ther side of the lawn. The first one was la te r used to accom­m odate guests. The second one was w here Jefferson had his law office and kept the accounts of his estate . T rad i­tion says th a t he som etim es used it as a refuge from his hordes of visitors and guests.

H e r e w a s b u r l e d T h o m a s J e f f e r s o n , a u t h o r o f t h e D e c l a r a t i o n o f A m e r i c a n I n d e p e n d e n c e , o f t h e S t a t u t e o f V i r ­g i n i a f o r R e l i g i o u s F r e e d o m , a n d t h e F a t h e r o f t h e U n i v e r s i t y o f V i r g i n i a .

This w as the inscription, in accord­ance w ith Jefferson 's wish, on the orig­inal obelisk over his grave. Congress, in 1882, replaced th is w ith one more ornate. The original now stands on the cam pus of the U niversity of Mis­souri a t Colum bia—a site w ithin the Louisiana purchase made from F rance during Jefferson’s adm inistration .

Thom as Jefferson’s fam e, based upon his actual service to his country, is secure. For th is reason the prom otion of a Jefferson cult, which apparently seeks to m ake of him a superm an. Is deprecated by many.

F o r exam ple; Jefferson w as not the “au tho r” of the D eclaration of Inde­dependence. T he com m ittee of five, ap­pointed by congress to p repare the document, in structed him to d ra f t it. H e pu t into w ords sentim ents and phrases which w ere on every m an’s lips, as is shown by the M ecklenburg D eclaration of May 20, 1775. The com­m ittee revised Jefferson’s d r a f t ; con­gress amended its revision of his draft. T he American people, a rticu la te through congress, w as the real au thor (if the D eclaration of Independence.

A g a in : The Louisiana purchase from F rance 1n 1803 of the territo ry between th e M ississippi and the Rockies w as a stepping stone in the m arch of the A merican people across the continent. B ut Jefferson w as a secondary factor only. H is envoys to F rance had au­thority to buy the mouth of the Mis- slsippi for $2,000,000. Napoleon forced them to agree to buy the Louisiana territo ry for $15,000,000. The whole deal w as unconstitutional. Jefferson was aghast. The E ast alm ost seceded from the Union. B ut congress had to ra tify the purchase, to save the te rri­tory from G reat B rita in—which was perm anently balked In its designs on this w estern em pire by Andrew Jack ­son, January 8, 1815, a t New O rleans, one of the "Decisive B attles” of Amer­ica and of the world.

T ra in s carry ing daily about 75,000 passengers a re au tom atically handled by electrical sw itches a t the G rand C entral term inal in New York city.

New York’s HomicidesJump to 387 in Year

New York.—D eaths from homicide in American cities during 1924 reached the highest ra te on record, w ith New York showing a slight increase, a l­though its record is low fo r cities of more than 500,000 population.

The deaths from homicide in New York, which with the figures on o ther c ities a re given in an artic le by F red ­erick L. Hoffman, consulting s ta tis ­tician of the P rudential Insurance company of America, published in T he Spectator, an insurance journal, a re 6.4 per 100,000 of population for 1924, or a ltogether 387 persons. In 1923 the figures w ere 5.2 per 100,000.

The average fo r the 77 cities cov­ered in the survey is 9.9 homicides per 100,000 population, making New York’s record 3.5 less than the aver­age for the country.

The records of o ther large cities a re : Philadelphia, 7.6, a decrease of 1.8; Chicago, 17.5, an increase of 3.9; Boston, 5.1, an increase of .8; P itts ­burgh, 12.1, a decrease of 1.6; Newark,6.3, a decrease of 1.0; St. Louis, 21.7, a decrease of 4.4; C incinnati, 15.3, a decrease of 2.S; San Francisco, 8.0, a decrease of 1.9; Los Angeles, 14.2, an increase of .9.

The highest death by homicide ra te recorded is given to Jacksonville, Fla., which had 58.8 per 100,000, but which was a decrease of 2.9 from the year previous. T he lowest record w ent to Concord, N. H .; Malden, M ass.; New­ton, Mass., and Lawrence, Mass., which reported no homicides a t all during the year.

New York s ta te ’s record Included : Auburn, 2 :7 ; R ochester, 3.3, And Syra­cuse, 4.3, all decreases.

New Jersey ’s inc luded : Bayonne, 8.1, increase of 7.9; Camden, 6.3, an increase o f 2.9; E lizabeth, 5.7, a de­crease of .1; Jersey City, 2.6, an In­crease of .3; Passaic, 7.2, an increase; Paterson, 2.1, a decrease of 1.5, and Somerville, 5.0, an increase of 4.0.

I n s i s t o n h a v i n g D r . P e e r y ’s “ D e a d S h o t ” f o r W o r m s o r T a p e w o r m a n d t h e d r u g g i s t w i l l g e t I t f o r y o u . 372 P e a r l S t . , N . Y. A d v .

F riend ly L ittle G am eSam —L isten heah, boy, je s ’ w hat

kind of life is you been livln’?R astu s—Oh, ordinary, je s ’ ordinary.Sam — Well, if yo’ pulls any mo’ aces

o u t o’ yo’ shoe, yo’ ordinary life is goin’ to m ature.

Tell YourShoeRepairman You JWantS P r i n g - S T E P

T h a t’s D ifferent“I don’t th ink I ’ll stop here. H e is

th e roughest b arb er I have ever seen!” “Oh, th a t 's his w ife in the c h a ir !”

J A i/ c r I N D I G E S T I O N

Dvspepsia

instant

W ^ V ^ r tiir as ̂f™encL druggist

R u b b e r H e e l sA B etter H eel to W alk On

Mod for tho b e s t shoe so le you overbad*

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D e s c r ib e y o u r c a s e fo r sp e c ia l in- H s tr u c t io n s a n d in t e r e s t in g h o rse

Book 2 A tree.W. F. YOUNG, l i e . , 510 Lymas S t , Springfield, M au.

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A Modern $ Bathroom

In Case of AccidentW herever th ere a re children, acci­

dents are l i k e l y to happen. P o r t e r ' s P a i n K i n g S a l v e h a s p o w e r f u l h e a l i n g a n d a n t i s e p t i c p r o p e r t i e s . R e c o m m e n d e d f o r b u r n s , c u t s , b r u i s e s , s o re s , w o u n d s , c h a p p e d a n d c r a c k e d s k in , b o i ls , p i le s , f e lo n s , i t c h , c o ld o n t h e c h e s t , c r o u p , l u m b a g o , v a r i c o s e v e in s a n d e c z e m a . M a d e o f h e a l i n g d r u g s c o m ­b i n e d w i t h l a n o l i n e ( p u r e w o o l f a t ) .

Admits “Birth” Was Hoax to Make Husband Happy

New York.—N at Bass, w ealthy cloth­ing m anufacturer, who for n ine months proudly regarded him self as the fa th er of a baby boy, recently w as disillu­sioned. Mrs. B ass has adm itted to As­sistan t D istrict A ttorney Pecora th a t she bought the in fan t from a baby home for $75 and pretended it w as her own son, because her husband longed for an offspring!

The publicity a ttached to the s ta te ’s investigation of th e infantorium of Mrs. Helen Geisen-Volk, w here 44 chil­dren have died since 1918, led Mrs. Bass to confess her hoax. She said she feared she might be called in the investigation. She told her husband first and then Mr. Pecora.

It was a t the Geisen-Volk in s titu ­tion tha t the baby was placed In bed with her. she said. H er husband was notified that the stork had arrived Vow he refuses to keep the child.

C o m p le te w i t h n ic k e l p l a t e d f i t t i n g . S e t c o m ­p r i s e s 5 f t . e n a m e le d b a th t u b , w a ll b a s in , c h in a t a n k a n d s ip h o n to i l e t b o w l w i th o a k s e a t . F u l l l in e o f p lu m b in g a n d h e a tin g : s u p p lie s . W r i t e f o r c a ta lo g u e . M . S C H L O S S M A N & SON. S 4 5 T h ird A v e ., N e a r 3 6 t h S t . . N e w Y o rk

fo r the Perfection o f Y our Complexion Thla pure snow-white cream remove# all discolorationa. blemishes, patches, pimples, etc., and produces a soft akin and crcaray complexion. A t drug or dept, stores or by mall prepaid. $1.25 . Send for free Beeuty Booklet Agentswanted. PR . C. H. BERRY CO., 297S Michigan Ave., CHICAGO

give w arning of danger. Satan se­duced both and subsequently they both shared his punishm ent. Accord­ing to ano ther authority , peacock fea th e rs w ere usually used as funera l emblems, hence the Delief th a t they cause bad luck.

th e ir places of abode. T here -Is a

G arden of Gethsem ane In Y o r k s h i r e .

Clydebank has its Holy City. P a r a d i s e

c r o p s up five times, Nineveh t h r e e

times, while Salems and Zions a b o u n d .

—London Times.

Walked From Jericho

a l Green’s\ N ° w e r

I I f ° r C o n s t ip a t io n ,( I n d ig e s t io n a n dV n C j j f v P J T o rp id L ive r

\ A v / S u c c e s s f u l f o r 69 y e a r s ./ 80c a n d 90c b o t t l e s —

--------- A LL D R U G G ISTS

W. N. U., NEW YORK, NO. 26-1925.

The man who, in a recent police- court case, m entioned th a t he had tram ped to London from Jericho, did not, of course, mean th a t he had jou r­neyed on foot from Palestine.

T here are no few er than s is J e r l olios recorded in the ordinance survey of England, and from one or the other of them, presum ably, he had come.

Our ancestors w ere pious folk, and prone to bestow S crip tural nam es on

SAVE YOUR EYES!U s e D r. T h o m p s o n ’s E y e w a te r .

B u y a t y o u r d r u g g is t ’s o r U ffl Jfcliver, T r o j . N‘. Y . B o o k le t.

A ncien t SuperstitionThere have been various theories

concerning the origin of the super­stition relating to peacock feathers. According to the M ohammedan tr a ­dition. the peacock and the snake were placed at the en trance to Paradise to i

A c t iv e , M id d l e - a g e d M a n t o B o o k O r d e r sf o r s h r u b s , ro s e s , t r e e s , e tc . P a y w e e k ly . E x p e r i e n c e u n n e c e s s a r y . E q u i p m e n t f r e e . P r o t e c t e d t e r r i t o r y . B ig o p p o r t u n i t y . F o r d e t a i l s w r i t e W e e k s N u r s e r i e s , N e w a r k . N .T .

Cheer H im UpF irst M osquito—T h a t’s sure a de-

Jeoted-looklng fa t man, over there.Second M osquito—Yes, I think I ’ll

go over and give him a shot in the arnv

F R E E T U L I P B U L B S — S e n d 35c ( n o s t a m p s ) f o r p a c k in g a n d m a i l i n g a n d w e w il l s e n d • a m p l e a s s o r t m e n t o t l a r g e t u l i p ? . V A L - L E N T G O E D B U L B C O ., B e l l i n g h a m . W a s h .

- /T H E C O A S T A D V E R T IS E R , B E L M A R , N . J . FRIDAY, JUNE 2(5, 1925

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P u b l i c a t i o n O f f i c e a n d P l a n t 70 4 N i n t h A v e n u e , B e lm a r , N . J .

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E n t e r e d a s s e c o n d - c l a s s m a t t e r a t

t h e p o s t o f f i c e a t B e lm a r . N e w J e r s e y , u n d e r t h e a c t of Congress.

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flews I t e m s o f L o c a l a n d Personal I n t e r e s t I n v i t e d

if a o r d e r i n g t h e c h a n g e o f s u b s c r i p ­t i o n a d d r e s s , p l e a s e g iv e t h e o l d a s w e l l a s t h e n e w a d d r e s s .

F«*i«« A d w ttto * R npw tintillra AMKHCAM PRESS ASSOCIATION

New York C k ln ia , Drtridt, Saa F n a d u

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T h e o p e n i n g o f B e r g e r ’s n e w s t o r e a t t h e c o r n e r o f 7 th a v e n u e a n d F s t r e e t m a r k s t h e b e g i n n i n g o f a n e w e r a f o r t h e m e r c a n t i l e s e c t i o n o f B e lm a r .

I s a a c B e r g e r h a s b e e n i n t h e l a ­d i e s ’ w e a r i n g a p p a r e l l i n e in A s b u r y P a r k f o r a lm o s t t w e n t y y e a r s , c a ­t e r i n g to a l l c l a s s e s o f p e o p le .

A l w a y s g iv in g t h e b e s t y a lu e s . a l ­w a y s r e a d y to c o - o p e r a t e in a l l m a t t e r s r e l a t i n g t o t h e a d v a n c e ­m e n t o f c iv i c , r e l i g io u s a n d b u s i ­n e s s m a t t e r s .

B e r g e r ’s w e r e t h e f i r s t a p p a r e l s t o r e o n A s b u r y P a r k 's b o a r d w a l k , a n d i n o p e n i n g th i s s t o r e i n B e lm a r t h e y h a v e in r r r tn d h e l p i n g B e lm a r g r o w a s m u c h a s t h e i r o w n F e n e f i t .

T h e y w i l l c a r r y t h e s a m e h i g h g r a d e m e r c h a n d i s e t h a t m a d e t h e i r A s b u r y P a r k s t o r e s t h e m e c c a f o r t h o u s a n d s o f a l l y e a r s h o p p e r s . ' a s w e l l a s s u m m e r v i s i t o r s . T h e y a p ­p e a l t o t h e r e s i d e n t s o f B e lm a r a n d v i c i n i t y t o c o - o p e r a t e i n m a k i n g th i s v e n t u r e a s u c c e s s .

Borough of Belmar, New Jersey Proposed Ordinance

A N O R D IN A N C E P R O V I D I N G F O R T H E P U R C H A S E O F C E R T A INE Q U IP M E N T O N T H E B E A C H F R O N T O F I H E B O R O U G H O FB E L M A R .B e it O r d a i n e d b y t h e C o u n c i l o f t h e B o r o u g h o f B e lm a r :t . T h a t c e r t a i n e q u i p m e n t b e p u r c h a s e d f o r u s e o n t h e B e a c h F r o n t

a s f o l l o w s :( a ) C h a i r s a n d B e n c h e s f o r t h e B o a r d w a l k a n d t h e S h e l t e r P a v i l i o n

a t F i f t h A v e n u e .( b ) T h e n e c e s s a r y l i g h t i n g f i x tu r e s f o r t h e S h e l t e r a t F i f t h A v e n u e .( c ) T r a s h r e c e p t i c l e s f o r u s e a l o n y t h e B o a r d w a l k .( d ) O t h e r n e c e s s a r y e q u i p m e n t .2 . T h a t a s u m n o t t o e x c e e d f o u r t h o u s a n d d o l l a r s ($ 4 ,0 0 0 .0 0 ) b e

a n d t h e s a m e is h e r e b y a p p r o p r i a t e d f o r a n y o r a l l o f t h e above** p u r ­p o s e s , t o b e f i n a n c e d b y c u r r e n t f u n d s a n d t h e i s s u a n c e o f b o n d s o r n o te s a s p r o v i d e d b y l a w d u r i n g t h e y e a r 1 9 2 5 , b e a r i n g i n t e r e s t a t a r a t e n o t t o e x c e e d 6 % ' p e r a n n u m .

3. T h is o r d i n a n c e s h a l l l a k e e f f e c t w h e n p a s s e d a n d p u b l i s h e d a c ­c o r d i n g to la w .

A. D . B U R G E S S E R ,B o r o u g h C le r k . .I t w a s m o v e d t h a t t h i s O r d i n a n c e b e p u b l i s h e d as required b y l a w ,

a n d t h a t t h e M a y o r a n d C o u n c i l o f I h e B o r o u g h of Belmar consider t h e f in a l p a s s a g e t h e r e o f a t a C o u n c i l M e e t in g , to be held on the 29tE 3S? 6 ! J u n e , 1925, a t t h e C o u n c i l C h a m b e r , B o r o u g h H a l l a t 7 :3 0 P. M .. at w h i c h t im e a n d p l a c e a n y t a x p a y e r m a y p r e s e n t s u g g e s t i o n s or o b j e c t i o n s to s a m e .

Borough of Belmar, New Jersey Proposed Ordinance

A N O R D IN A N C E T O R E B U I L D T H E T E N T H A N D E L E V E N T H A V E ­N U E J E T T I E S :W H E R E A S , t h e T e n t h a n d E le v e n t h A v e n u e J e t t i e s r e q u i r e r e ­

b u i l d i n g , a n d .W H E R E A S , t h e cost of t h e s a m e i s e s t im a t e d not to exceed six t h o u s ­

a n d d o l l a r s , (iUG.QOO), now th e re fo re ,B E I T O R D A IN E D b v t h e C o u n c i l o f t h e B o r o u g h o f B e lm a r :S e c 1. T h a t a h e T e n t h a n d E l e v e n t h A v e n u e J e t t i e s b e r e b u i l t . S e c . 2. T h a t a sum n o t lo e x c e e d s ix t h o u s a n d do lla rs ($ 6 ,0 0 0 .0 0 )

is h e r e b y a p p r o p r i a t e d f o r t h e p a y m e n t o f s u c h w o r k .S e c . 3 . T h a t im p r o v e m e n t n o t e s o r b o n d s h e a r i n g i n t e r e s t n o t lo

e x c e e d s ix p e r c e n t p e r a n n u m b e i s s u e d f o r t h e p a y m e n t t h e r e o f .A. D . B U R G E S S E R , -

B o r o u g h C le r k . . , .I t w a s m o v e d t h a t t h i s O r d i n a n c e b e p u b l i s h e d a s r e q u i r e d b y l a w ,

a n d t h a t t h e M a y o r a n d C o u n c i l o f t h e B o r o u g h o f B e lm a r c o n s i d e r t h e f in a l p a s s a g e t h e r e o f a t a C o u n c i l M e e t in g , t o b e h e l d o n t h e 2 9 th day_ o f J u n e , 1925, a t Ihe C o u n c i l C h a m b e r . B o r o u g h H a l l a t 7 :3 0 P . M ., a t w h i c h t im e a n d p l a c e a n y t a x p a y e r m a y p r e s e n t s u g g e s t io n s o r o b j e c t i o n s to s a m e .

F O R E W A R N E D

C h ie f H e y n i g e r ’s w a r n i n g a g a i n s t c a r e l e s s p y r o t e c h n i c a l d i s p l a y s o n J u l y 4 i s t i m e l y . T h e c i t y h a s a n o r d i n a n c e f o n b i d d in g u s e o f f i r e ­w o r k s . a n d i t s h o u l d b e o b s e r v e d . I t w i l l b e r e c a l l e d t h a t b e f o r e t h i s o r d i n a n c e b e c a m e e f f e c t iv e , t h e r e w e r e n e a r l y a l w a y s o n e o r m o r e s e r i o u s f i r e s , w i t h c o n s e q u e n t h e a v y d a m a g e s a n d s o m e t im e s lo s s o f l i f e .

T h e C h i e f ’s a d v ic e , s u m m a r i z e d , i s w e l l w o r t h r e p e a t i n g :

“ D o n ’t s e t o f f f i r e w o r k s c lo s e to a n y s t r u c t u r e , e s p e c i a l l y o n e o f f r a m e . K e e p t h e m a w a y f r o m t h e p o r c h e s .

“ A v o id u s i n g c h e a p lo v c a n n o n , p i s t o l s , e tc . , i n w h i c h p o w d e r c h a r g e s o r c a r t r i d g e s a r e u s e d . M u c h o f t h e F o u r t h o f J u l y l i f e lo s s f o r a p e r i o d o f y e a r s h a s b e e n d u e l o t h e s e d e v ic c s .

“ I f a f i r e c r a c k e r o r o t h e r n o i s e - m a k i n g d e v ic e f a i l s t o g o o ff . w a i t b e f o r e i n v e s t i g a t i n g ; o t h e r w i s e i t m a y e x p lo d e s u d d e n l y , a n d f a k e y o u o r p a r t o f y o u , w i t h i t . ”

C h ie f B r a c k e t t h a s a l r e a d y i s s u e d h i s w a r n i n g , s o t h e r e i s n o r e a s o n w h y t h e n o i s e y , d a n g e r o u s p a r t o f t h i s i n s p i r i n g d a y s h o u l d n o t b e e l i m i n a t e d . T h e c i t y w i l l o f f i c i a l l y mark t h e a n n i v e r s a r y o f o u r i n d e ­pendence.

Notice To BiddersN o t ic e i s h e r e b y g iv e n t h a t s e a l e d b i d s w i l l b e r e c e i v e d b y t h e B o r ­

o u g h C o u n c i l o f t h e B o r o u g h o f B e lm a r , N e w J e r s e y , f o r f u r n i s h i n g a O n e o r T w o T o n T r u c k w i t h a u t o m a t i c d u m p b o d y to b e u s e d f o r c a r t i n g a s h e s a n d r u b b i s h a n d to b e f u l l y e q u i p p e d .

B id s m u s t b e e n c lo s e d i n s e a l e d e n v e lo p e s a n d s p e c i f i c a t i o n s a n d d r a w i n g s o r p h o t o s o f the* p r o p o s e d t r u c k s , t h e t im e f o r d e l iv c i y , a n d th e p r i c e m u s t b e i n c l u d e d i n t h e b i d . *

B id s w i l l b e o p e n e d a n d r e a d i n p u b l i c a t t h e r o o m s o f s a id c o u n c i l . B o r o u g h H a l l , B e lm a r , N . J * o n J u n e 2 9 . 1 9 2 a . a t 8 .0 0 P . M ., D a y l ig h tS a v in g T im e . ' . . . . . . n i i . c

T h e Borough C o iw ic il r e s e r v e s Ih e r i g h t to r e j e c t a n y o r a l l b id s ifd e e m e d to t h e b e s t i n t e r e s t o f t h e B o r o u g h s o to d o .

B y o r d e r o f t h e B o r o u g h C o u n c i l o f t h e B o r o u g h ° [ }^ ^ £ ' S E R

J u n e 19 , 1 9 2 5 . B o r o u g h C le r k .

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Notice To BiddersN o t ic e i s h e r e b y g iv e n t h a t s e a l e d b id s w i l l b e r e c e i v e d b y th e B o r ­

o u g h C o u n c i l o f t h e B o r o u g h o f B e lm a r , N e w J e r s e y , f o r f u r n i s h i n g a n d l a y i n g a b o u t 500 L in . F t . . 8 ” V i t r i f i e d S e w e r P ip e o n F i f t e e n t h A v e n u e , in s a id B o r o u g h , a n d o p e n e d a n d r e a d in p u b l i c a t t h e r o o m s o f s a i d C o u n c i l , . B o r o u g h H a l l , B e lm a r , N e w J e r s e y , o n J u n e 29 , 1925, a t .8 P . M ., D a y l ig h t j

S p e c i f i c a t i o n s o f p r o p o s e d w o r k m a y b e i n s p e c t e d b y p r o s p e c t i v e b i d - i • je r s d u r i n g b u s i n e s s h o u r s a t t h e o f f i c e o f t h e B o r o u g h C le r k .

B id s m u s t b e e n c lo s e d in s e a le d e n v e l o p e s a n d g iv e t h e p r i c e b id p e r l i n e a l f o o t a n d t b e h i m u s u m b a s e d o n 5 0 0 L in . F t . , a n d b e a c c o m p a n ie d b y a c e r t i f i e d c h e c k f o r a s u m n o t l e s s I l ia n 1 0 % o f t h e l u m p s u m b id .

T h e B o r o u g h C o u n c i l o f t h e B o r o u g h o f B e lm a r . N e w J e r s e y , r e ­s e r v e s t h e r i g h t to r e j e c t a n y o r a l l b id s if d e e m e d t o t h e b e s t i n t e r e s t so f t h e B o r o u g h s o t o d o . .. „ , r. u t » i v, „ m t

B v o r d e r o f t h e B o r o u g h C o u n c i l o f t h e B o r o u g h o f B e lm a r . N . J .A D . R l .R G E S S E R ,

B e h n a r , N . J . , J u n e 19, 192 5 . ‘ B o r o u g h C le r k .

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S e r v i n g o v e r 1 ,475 s q u a r e m i l e s o f o t r r i f b r y i n N e w J e r s e y , i n c l u d i n g l ; i7 c i t i e s , t o w n s a n d s m a l l e r c o m m u n i t i e s w i t h e l e c t r i c i t y a n d g a s .

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b e t r a y e dT h e i r f i r s t c o n v e r s a t i o n

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s h e w a s n o t f a s t i d i o u s .

A T a distance she had appeared unusually neat, immaculate.

B ut upon their first face-to-face meeting he discovered th a t her teeth were not clean. And he soon lost interest.

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L iste r in e T oo th P ast* >'leam teeth a new waj>. 4 1 lo st our chem ists have discovered a po lish ing ingred ien t th a t rea lly cleans w i th ­out sc tu tch ing the enam el— a difficult problem f in a lly solved.

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Notice To BiddersN o tic e is h e r e b y g iv e n t h a t s e a l e d b i d s w i l l b e r e c e i v e d b y t h e B o r ­

o u g h C o u n c i l o f t h e B o r o u g h o f B e lm a r , N e w J e r s e y , f o r f u r n i s h i n g a m l l a v i n g a b o u t 6 0 0 L in . F t . o f 6 " C a s t I r o n W a t e r P ip e o n F i f t e e n t h A v e n u e a n d “ D ” S t r e e t , in s a id B o r o u g h , a n d o p e n e d a n d r e a d i n p u b l i c a t t h e r o o m s o f s a id C o u n c i l , B o r o u g h H a l l . B e lm a r , N e w J e r s e y , o n J u n e 29, 1925. a t 8 P . M . D a v l i g h t S a v in g T im e .

S p e c i f i c a t i o n s o f p r o p o s e d w o r k m a y b e i n s p e c t e d b y p r o s p e c t i v e b i d ­d e r s d u r i n g b u s i n e s s h o u r s a t t h e o f f i c e o f t h e B o r o u g h C le r k .

B id s m u s t b e e n c lo s e d in s e a l e d e n v e lo p e s a n d g iv e t h e p r i c e b id p e r l i n e a l f o o t a n d t h e l u m p s u m b a s e d o n 6 0 0 L in . F t . a n d b e a c c o m p a n ie d b v a c e r t i f i e d c h e c k f o r a s u m n o t l e s s t h a n 1 0 % o f t h e l u m p s u m b id .

‘ T h e B o r o u g h C o u n c i l o f t h e B o r o u g h o f B e lm a r , N e w J e r s e y r e s e r v e s t h e r i g h t lo r e j e c t a n y o r a l l b i d s i f d e e m e d to t h e b e s t i n t e r e s t s o f t h e

B o r< B y ho r d e r o f d t h e B o r o u g h C o u n c i l o f t h e R m o u g h ^ o f B ^ j m a r ,RN . .T.

B e lm a r , N . J „ J u n e 19 , 192 5 , '________ B o r o u g h _ C le r k .

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What About a New Refrigerator?

This is the time of year when a refrigerator must give real service, and we offer the best refrigerator values of the year to make it worth while for you to buy one now. Washable white enamel so that it is easy to keep spotlessly dean. Generous food and ice compart­ments. Dry air circulation. Get your refrigerator now —it will save you money, if you do.

4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*

4*4*

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4*i4-4-4-4*4*

4*4*4-4-4-

PAUL C. TAYLORF St. & 9th Ave. Belmar, N. J.

4* 4*4"

4* 4*T

£ . ^ . | . . ^ A . j . . | . . j . . | . . f « |M | M j . . H ^ 4 * 4 ,4 , 4 '4 * 4 * 4 , , ?*4*4*4*4 '4*44*4‘* J* -H * 4 * 4 '4 " li

s M I

-a n d a Snow Shovel is the only kind

you’ll need!

T w o " f i r i n g s ” a y e a r !

L i g h t t h e p i l o t l i g h t i n

t h e f a l l ; t u r n i t o f f i n t h e

s p r i n g . T h a t ’s a l l y o u n e e d

t o d o w i t h t h i s m o d e r n

I d e a l G a s B o i l e r e x c e p t

few: o c c a s i o n a l i n s p e c t i o n .

T h e w o r k l e s s l u x u r y o f

h e a t i n g w i t h g a s h a s b a n ­

i s h e d c o a l s h o v e l s , a s h

c a n s , a n d c a n v a s g l o v e s

f r o m m a n y a h o m e . G i v e s

c l e a n , e f f i c i e n t h e a t a l w a y s .

C a l l a t o u r s a l e s r o o m s a n d

i n s p e c t t h i s b o i l e r , o r s e n d

f o r i n t e r e s t i n g b o o k l e t .

A n e s t i m a t e f o r y o u r

h o m e c o s t s y o u n o t h i n g .

JERSEY CENTRAL POWER & LIGHT CO.

R ed Bank • Long Branch Belmar Asbury Park

Point Pleasant

OUR new g a s heating rate m akes it easy

BumsteadsWormSyrup“ T o c h i l d r e n a n a iu reS o f m e r c y . ” W h e r e d i r e c t i o n s a r e f o l l o w e d , I T N K V f iR F A I L S s c a r c i t y a n d e n o r m o u sc o s t o f S A N T O N I N , i t - c o n ta in s f u l l d o s e . S to o d s i x t y y t e s t . S o ld e v e r y w h e r e d t b y m a i l ,- 5 0 c a b o t t l e . ^E s t . C . A . ^ Jo o rh e e s . At, i> P h i l a d e l p h i a .

Now In Full Swing

Steinbaehs G reatest $ 1 0 0 , 0 0 0

P u r c h a s e S a l eReally $175,000 worth of bargains in this crowning

event of the season that began at Steinbaehs today and continues today and tomorrow.

Just a year ago, we held the most successful $100,000 purchase event in our 55 years, and anxious to offer even l>etter values than that memorable sale featured, we ad­vertised in the Newr York Times of June ninth for

$100,000 Merchandise for Cash

Manufacturers and jobbers responded with prices fjir better than we ever anticipated—and the result— we purchased .§175,000.

i > t n n b a r l j ( H m n p a t u j

A sbury Park, Heut 3era?yp(•4* 4**1* 4* *1*4*4* 4*4* v* 4*4* 4* *1*4* 4* *%**!* *1* *1*4*4* *

B O X IN G A T L O N G B R A N C H

T h e O c e a n V ie w A . C . o f L o n g B r a n c h p r e s e n t s i t s a n n u a l w e e k ly s h o w , F r i d a y n i g h t , w i t h t h r e e c o r k n g e i g h t - r o u n d b o u t s b e t w e e n s o m e

o f t h e j u n i o r l i g h t w e i g h t c o n t e s t ­a n t s in t h e m a in b o u t , f e a t u r i n g A l. C h i t t y o f N e w Y o r k w i t h B e n n y C r o f f o f N e w a r k . T h is b o u t w a s a r r a n g e d t o s e t t l e t h e d i s p u t e t h a t

I a r o s e , w h i c h o n e o f t h e s e b o x e r s i s h o u ld h a v e t h e c h a n c e o f f a c i n g | o n e o f t h e j u n i o r l i g h t w e i g h t b o y s

a t t h e n e x t b ig N e w Y o r k b o x in g s h o w , w h i c h J i m m y D e F o r e s t n o w w o r k i n g o n . T h e o t h e r t w | e i g h t - r o u n d b o u t s w i l l b r i n g tc g e t h e r T o n y Z i r r i l l i o f P h i l a d c j p h i a , h i s f i r s t a p p e a r a n c e a t tl: c lu b , w i t h B e n n y H a b o r f o f N e ^ a r k , a f l a s h y b o x e r , w i t h a g o i p u n c h . I n t h e o t h e r e i g h t r o u n d s ^ J o e C a n a n c r e o f C e d a r h u r s t t a c | le s C a r l K a h n o f N e w Y o r k . I n d i t io f l t o t h i s t h e r e w i l l b e a r o u n d a n d o n e f o u r r o u n d b o u t t h e e v e n in g .

FRIDAY, JU N E 26, 1925 Coast A dvertiser, Belm ar, N. J.

Greatest ENTERTAINMENTS Anywhere

S PEND (his week at Ocean Grove and Asbury Park — the ideal Coast of America- Surf bathing, pool bath­

ing, fishing, golf, tennis, beautiful drives, good roads, unsurpassed scenery, dancing and entertainments.

T HE vast t —earn Grove Auditorium, with 8000 seats, opens Saturday, .Tune 27th, with super photoplays.

Stanley Rhodes, one of America’s greatest (Organists and David Soles Tyson, the brilliant young American tenor. The best entertainment, anywhere for the money.

¥ ........* « * * w a n n i - M - T f i i i ' X

89Iaili

Iis

MOVINGN A Y L O R ’S S E A S H O R E E X P R E S S

^ J . J . B I E R , P r o p .“Known to the

Public forI STORAGE R E G U L A R S E R V I C E nearly. |

1 BAGGAGENewark Jersey City New York Trenton Philadelphia

5 1 6 8 t h AVE. p h o n e b e l m a r 3 6 2 R. R. STATION

HaifaCentury”

I

TRY OUR FAMOUS

D e l i c i o u s

B r e a d

T h e F i r s t N a t i o n a l B a n kB E L M A R , 1ST . *_J.

BELMAR BAKERYA. MENZLER, Prop.

809 F Street Belmar, N. J.

% *

*

THOROUGHLY MODERN BANKING SERVICE

The service of this bank is thoroughly modem —ever elert and in keeping with the require­ments of commerce- We extend to you eve^y courtesy and facility of sound banking.

S U N . G A M E A T L O N G B R A N C H

N e x t S u n d a y , a t t h e N<;."W00d 1 F i e l d C lu b , t h e N o r w o o d s w i l l c r o s s b a t s w i t h t h e s t r o n g D a n b u r y te a m f r o m D a n b u r y , C o n n . M a n a g e r L lo y d o f t h c N o r w o o d s h a s a d d e d m u c h s t r e n g t h t o t h e h o m e c lu b , a n d w h e n t h e y f a c e t h e D a n b u r y ’s o n S u n d a y , t h e b a s e b a l l f a n s w i l l s e e o n e o f t h e s t r o n g e s t t e a m s e v e r e s s e m b le d i n M o n m o u th c o u n t y , a n d o n e t h a t c a n b a t t l e w i t h t h e s t r o n g e s t o f o p p o s i t i o n th a * m a y c o m e to b a t t l e t h e m . T h e s t a r t i n g t im e f o r a l l t h e g a m e s t h e N o r w o o d F i e l d c lu b , f o r m e r l y t h e H o l l y w o o d H o r s e S h o w G r o u n d s , w i l l b e 3 :3 0 P . M .

•f*+

t +

+

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*■*+4*+

f c H

JOSEPH C. STEEL MAN has opened up his Upholstering

Shop at 8031-2 F St.

His line includes all kinds of Mattresses, Pillows, Beds. Cots and Upholstering in all its branches.

MATTRESS RENOVATING A SPECIALTY

. . . . . . . r l b * * * $* * * * * * * * * * w - h h j

T — +V ****•fr *******

t *

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B A S E B A L L

S u n d a y , J u n e 2 1 t hNORWOODS

vsYONKERS of New York

Hollywood Horse Show GroundsG a m e S t a r t s 3 P . M .

* * * * * * * * * + * * 4* + + *

i * + + + *

+* * * * * *

C h a m b e r s Gas RangeC O O K S w i t h t h e G A S T U R N E D O F F !

t

A N e w E r a

I n C o o k i n g

E f f i c i e n c yCooking feats which were im possible before the invention of the Chambers Range shows you how you can save more than half of your gas hill, end for all time the drudgery of pot-watch­ing and basting, free your hours for the dozens of things you want to do, and cook food bet ter, with the rich juices and de­licious flavor kept in.

A Full Meal Cooked with only 25 Minutes Gas

A Layer Cake baked with only 10 Minutes Gas

A 10-lh. Ham baked with only 45 Minutes Gas

3 Vegetables cooked on one burner with only 15 Minutes

Gas

Come in and let us explain these modern ranges

B O X I N C fOcean View A. A. Long Branch, N. J.

F R I D A Y , J U N E ! 1 9 t h

Phone 1708■ - - _ i—— ........................ ......................

Eight Rounds AL. CHITY vs BENNY CROFFNew York NewarkTONY ZIRRILLI vs BENNY NABERF +Philadelphia Newark j*

Eight Rounds JJOE CANANERE vs CARL KAHN +Cedar Hurst New York J

Eight Rounds 4.One Six Rounder and One Four Rounder J

PRICES— $1.10, $2.20, $3.30I- - r * -!* * 4* v * * -I* * v * * * * * *!* v *2* * *'• v * * * v * * * *1* * * * * * * * * *

WILLIAM HOERSCH120S F St. Near 1 3 th|Aveoue Belmar, N. J.

Phone 749 Belmar Trolley Passes Door

IN C H A N C E R Y O F N E W J E R S E YT o W i l l i a m G e r l a c k a n d M rs . W i l ­

l i a m G e r la c k . , a n d W i l l i a m G e r - l a c k ’s h e i r s , d e v i s e e s a n d p e r s o n a l r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s , a n d t l i e i r o r a n v o f t h e i r h e i r s , d e v i s e e s , e x e c u t o r s / a d ­m i n i s t r a t o r s , g r a n t e e s , a s s ig n s o r s u c c e s s o r s i n r i g h t , t i t l e o r i n t e r ­e s t :

I iy v i r t u e o f ani o r d e r o f t h e C o u r t o f C h a n c e r y o f N e w J e r s e y , m a d e o n t h e d a y o f t h e d a t e h e r e o f , i n a c a u s e w h e r e i n A n n a M . S u l l i v a n

'i s c o m p l a i n a n t , a n d W i l l i a m G e r ­l a c k a n d M r s . W i l l i a m G e r l a c k a n d W i l l i a m G e r l a c k ’s h e i r s , d e v i s e e s a n d p e r s o n a l r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s a n d t h e i r o r a n y o f t h e i r h e i r s , d e v i s e e s e x e c u t o r s , a d m i n i s t r a t o r s , g r a n t e e s , a s s ig n s o r s u c c e s s o r s i n r i g h t , t i t l e o r i n t e r e s t , a r e d e f e n d a n t s ; y o u a n d e a c h o f y o u a r e r e q u i r e d to a p p e a r a n d a n s w e r t h e b i l l o f s a i d c o m p la in a n t o n o r b e f o r e t h e T w e n t y - n i n t h € a y o f J u l y n e x t , o r t h e s a i d B il l w i l l b e t a k e n a s c o n f e s s e d a g a i n s t y o u .

' t h e s a i d b i l l i s f i le d t o q u i e t t h e t i t l e o f t h e s a i d A n n a M . S u l l i v a n to c e r t a i n l a n d s a n d p r e m i s e s s i t ­u a t e i n t h e B o r o u g h o f B e lm a r in t h e C o u n ty o f M o n m o u th a n d S t a t e o f N e w J e r s e y , d e s c r i b e d a s f o l ­l o w s :

B e in g lo t n u m b e r F o u r t e e n H u n ­d r e d a n d F o r t y - l i v e (1 4 4 5 ) a s l a id d o w n o n a p l a n o f l o t s o f t h e O c e a n B e a c h A s s o c i a t i o n , d u l y f i le d i n t h e C l e r k ’s o f f i c e o f t h e C o u n ty o f M o u m o u t h , a n d b o u n d e d a n d d e s c r i b e d

N ts f o l lo w s , t o w i t ; F r o n t i n g , o r in w i d t h f i f t y f e e t 011 t h e n o r t h e r l y s i d e o f E ig h t h A v e n u e , a s l a i d d o w n o n s a i d p l a n o f l o t s a n d e x t e n d i n g b a c k f r o m th e n c e , N o r t h e r l y t h e s a m e w i d t h f i f t y f e e t a t r i g h t a n ­g l e s t o s a i d E i g h t h A v e n u e , b y a n d b e t w e e n t h e w e s t e r l y l i n e o f lo t n u m b e r F o u r t e e n H u n d r e d a n d F o r ­t y - f o u r (1 4 1 4 ) o n t h e e a s t e r l y s id e t h e r e o f , a n d t h e e a s t e r l y l i n e o f lo t n u m b e r F o u r t e e n H u n d r e d a n d F o r ­t y - s i x (1 4 4 6 ) o n t h e w e s t e r l y s i d e t h e r e o f , o n e h u n d r e d a n d f i f ty f e e t in l e n g t h o r d e p t h t o t h e r e a r l i n e o f lo t n u m b e r T h i r t e e n H u n d r e d a n d F o r t y - f i v e (1 3 4 5 ) a s l a i d d o w n o n s a id m a p .

A n d y o u a r e m a d e d e f e n d a n t s b e ­c a u s e o f a c e r t a i n c o n v e y a n c e o f th e a b o v e d e s c r i b e d l a n d s b y d e e d f r o m W i l l i a m N . H i r s t a n d w i f e to W i l l i a m G e r l a c k , d a t e d O c t o b e r 30 , 1880 , a n d r e c o r d e d i n M o n m o u th C o u n t y R e c o r d s o f D e e d s in B o o k N o . 458 o n p a g e s 67 , e tc .

A n d t h e s a i d W i l l i a m G e r l a c k i s s u p p o s e d lo b e d e a d , a n d t h c s a id M r s . W i l l i a m G e r l a c k , i f l iv in g , m ig h t c l a i m s o m e i n t e r e s t a s t h e w i f e o f W i l l i a m G e r l a c k ; a n d i f y o u o r e i t h e r o r a n y o f y o u c l a im a n y t i t l e t o , i n t e r e s t i n , o r e n c u m b r a n c e u p o n t h e s a i d l a n d s a n d p r e m i s e s , y o u a r e r e q u i r e d t o a n s w e r t h e s a i d B i l l , b u t n o t o t h e r w i s e . ^D a t e d . M a y 2 8 , 1925 .

L Y M A N M . S M IT H , *S o l i c i t o r o f C o n i n l a u w t t ,

______14 VVf-si B J a f k w c l i S t r p e t ,

j.t

11 N e w JP g g S L

HOW’S t h 5 ? .H a l l ’ s c a t a r r h m e d i c i n e : w u t

d o w h a t t f e c l a i m T o r i t — r i d y o u r s y s t e m . o f C a t a r r h oi~ D e a f n e s s c a u s e d b y 'C a t a r r h .

H A L L ’ S C A T A R R H M E D I C I N E c o n ­s i s t s o f a n O i n t m e n t w h i c h Q u i c k l y R e l i e v e s t h e c a t a r r h a l in f l a m m a t i o n , a n d the I n t e r n a l M e d ic in e , a T o n i c , w h i c h a c t s t h r o u g h th e B l o o d o n t h e M w o u b S u r f a c e s , t h u s r e s t o r i n g n o r m a l c o n d i ­t io n s .

S o ld b y d r u g g i s t s f o r o v e r 40 T e a r s .F . J . C h e n e v & C o . . T o lo r ir v O h ln .

K l l J J i A t U L U M H A B 1I V C /

F O R H E A L T H

I t i s e v e n b e t t e r f o r y o u t h a n d r i v i n g a c£fr. Y o u w i l l g e t p l e n t y o f e x e r c i s e w h i c h y o u w i l l n o t g e t i n a n a u t o . T h e r o a d s a r e g o o d a n d y o u w i l l e n j o y m a n y a s p in o n t h i s g o o d b i k e i n t h e e a r l y m o r n ­i n g o r l a t e a f t e r n o o n , C o m e lo o k i t o v e r h e r e .

J O S . C . S T E W A R D 1 10 6 F S t . B e lm a r

F O R R E N T — F l a t , five room s, a ll i m p r o v e m e n ts a n d b a th , i n c l u d i n g h e a t , a t c o r n e r S ix teen th A v e . a n d F S t . A p p ly a n y r e a l e s t a t eb r o k e r . 1

—WE DO J O B P R I N T I N G —

W A N T E D — B o o m o n l y , S a t u r d a y s a n d S u n d a y s d u r i n g J u l y , A u g u s t a n d S e p t e m b e r f o r c o u p l e a n d c h i ld . S e n d p a r t i c u l a r s t o I . M. D a n ie l s , 5 1 5 H o r t S l r e t t . W e s t ­f ie ld . N . J .

T H E C O A S T A D V E R T I S E R . B E L M A R . N . J .

5 E 3 S E 9

A D V E R T I S E R ’S B U S I N E S S

■ G u i d e »

Phone 210

W. E. HefterPLUMBING — HEATING

(Next to Bank)

9th Avb. BELMAR. N. J.

W here Do You B t* Your BUILDING MATERIAL?

W hen in w ant do i A for get that the Buchannr and Smock Lumber / As­bury Park cau »upof/ you.

W rite or »**

Buciianon & SmockASBURY PARK, N. J.

BICYCLESRepairs and SuppHea

Baby Coach Wheel*

and Tire*«

Base Ball Goods

Opp. Public School

1106 F street BELMAR

^ ®SJ3M3EISJSiB)3/S®SJSElEJSJME!J3lElSiSJttljl

N a s h a n d

C h e v r o l e tCars and Trucks

M achine Shop

BELMAR AUTO CO.

Dillon’s ExpressG. W. Hurley, Prop.

Local and Long Distance Hauling

610 Sixteenth Avenue

BELMa H, N. J.Phone 569

1;

1 +*4

S. DresdenLadle's and Gent's

T A I L O B

E IG H T H A V E N U E A N D IF 8 T R E E 1B E L M A R , N . J.

I "John Guinco

Dealer in

F R U IT S and PRODUCE Park and Tilford Products

and Tobacco

915 F Street BELMAR

H. HausotteHeadquarters for

aU kinds ofAUTO SUPPLLIES

Service Station for Goodyear Tire*

11th A v * . and r U Bel

Phone 49

804 F Street BELMAR IMSlBJSISlS

! e iuscHLadies and Gents

T A I L O R I N G

All Kind* of Merchandise Bought and Sold

1112 F Street BELMAR

Phone 14

Central MarketHerman F. Lazaraus, Pi opCify Dressed Beef

Latnb, Veal and Pork Fresh dressed poultry

a specialty.

908 F Street BELMAR

I*************

Phone 357-M

B. GILMANC A R P E N T E R * B U IL D E R

General Contractor

13ng F St Belmar. N. J ■*»****»

W e D e s ig n

a n d B u ild C o m p le te

To Suit YouAll Work Guaranteed

M ' '1

• • X :^ ,. '} t ■

i i l l "v '

H . A . S M IT HDesigner and Builder

Phone 323 Jsl 1701 A Street

Belmar, New Jersey

GIRLS WANTEDW e o f f e r y o u c l e a n , s t e a d y e m p l o y m e n t m a k i n g P a j a m a s . Y o n n e e d n o t b e e x p e r i e n c e d . W e w i l l p a y y o u g o o d w a g e s w h i l e l e a r n i n g H ie t r a d e , w h i c h w i l l e n a b l e

1 y o u t o e a r n $ 2 0 t o $ 2 5 a w e e k .

Valeo Mfff. Co.First, Ave. near Railroad

ASBURY PARK

FOR OVER 40 YEARSK A IX /S C A TA R R H M XD IC XNB ka«

used eucceeefully la the treebaeutU—O ii WCatarrt.HALL'S CATARRH MKDICINS eon-

&■■'««. tlHU Sold by e

reduttnc the all 4ruciile»«.

n s v

Phone 5QSJ Phone 3(3

Belmar Storage WarehouseSeparate Rooms

701 Seventh Ave.

1 ******* "^Trrrmrrrrrjgirj.

if!

Phone 52G-R

Erving & FreerAUTOMOBILE

REPAIRING

Oxy-Acetylene W elding and Cutting

504 F Street BELMAR

0. H. NewmanHUDSON and ESSEX

Full Line of S appliesE X I D E

Battery Service 708 F Street BELMARPhone 513

W. A RobinsonC A R P E N T E R

andB U I L D E R

Jobbing Promptly Attend­ed to. Estimates Cheer­fully Given.

601 EIGHTH AVIS, BELMAR, N. J.

Phone 518-R

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V> /vV ,JS

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.• X m• - .§? .

U V:U “H A R R T * (Oar g e n u in e B A j

m o n d i “ F o o l F i t te r " No. 3 ) —m adej a n d d e s ig n ed e sp e c ia lly fo r tbe; y o u n g m an v h o w a n ts a ih o « with: e x c lu s iv e t ty le a n d a t th e u m < tim e does no t s a c r if ic e one b it ot, Cf^nlor* an d Q u a lity fo r i ty l ia h ap* p e a ra n c e . T h e G re a t faT o r iho -w a th is t ty le a t *7.00 p ro v es b e y o n d a d o u b t its W ell M erited P o p u la r ity .

Low or High Cut Price 96.75

LEWIS'T E N T H A V E N U E A N D F S T R E E T

The M erchants who a d ­vertise in this p a p er w ill jive you best values fo r your .noney.

Hutchinson's Art ShopExclusive Agency Tor

COLUMBIA YARNS

D. M. C. COTTON

ALSATIAN EMBROIDERY

Telephone 519-W

EMBROIDERY STAMPING

andHAND-KNITTED SWEATERS

806 F S t. Belmar. N. J.

PRIME MEATS*

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andPOULTRY

BELMAR MEAT MARKETJ. C W ISSEM AN, Prop.

809 F Street Belmar, N. J.

Announcement

GEORGE G. TITUS is again ready to take your order

for Ice

Mr. Titus bought out the Bel­mar Ice Company and is ready to serve his former customers.

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Phone 251-M For Ice

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T H E H O M E Y O U W A N TFOR THE

PRICE YOU LIKEChoose Your Idea of a H om e from 1,000 Plans

F R E D H U B E RCONTRACTOR and BUILDER

Phone 1231 -R Sixteenth Ave., at Briarwood Rd.

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Belmar, N. J. £

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ADVERTISE IT WITH US— IT WILL BE SOLD

. . WIRING

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FIXTURES APPLIANCES

NEWMAN’S ELECTRIC SHOPELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS

W estlnffhoon Mazda Lamps pi Easy Electric Washers

Universal Electric Vacuum Cleaners mm

•• 804 F S t , Opp. Post Office Phone 116

H o n c e a n d D u B o i sRealtors - Insurance - Morgage Loans

706 Tenth Avenue, Belmar, N. J.

Phone 503

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Religious £?rtioni -----------------

PJrat P ra ab y te rlan Churoh Oomer ot Ninth avenue and E i

The Rer. Andrew Richard*, A.B., Th. ft., paator. M&oae phone Bilm ar 3SS-M..

Junior ChrUdan Endeavor Serrlo* art 10:00 a. m. Dirlne Worahip a* 10:45 a. m. and 7: SO p. m. Blbl* Sohool at 1:30 p. m. Christian Sta* deavor Serrloe a t 7:00 p. m.

Flrat M etho d is t Episcopal

Corner of Seventh and D street*. Rev. Edward Harrison Cloud, pastor, Sunday School, 9:45. Worship, 10:8* a. m. and 7:30 p. m. Strangers we> come.

F irs t Baptist Church

First Baptist C h u rc h , N in th a v * . nne, between C s a d D s t r e e t s R e v . P . T . M o rr is , D . D ., p a s to r . M o rn ­in g w o r s h ip b e g in s a t f t o 'c lo c k , S u n d a y S ch o o l a t 2 :30 P . M., an<t E v e n in g S e rv ic e a t 8 o ’c lo ck . Y o u n g p e o p le ’s m e e tin g e a c h F r id a y ev ea* ing a t 8 o ’c lo c k .

Mi. Olive Baptist Chnreh

M t. O liv e B a p tis t C h u rc h , S e v e n ­te e n th a v e n u e a n d F s t re e t . R e v . J. J. D a v is , p a s to r . M o rn in g •wor- ihtp b e g in s a t 11 o ’c lo c k ; S u n d a y school a t 12:15. E v e n in g se rv ic e a t I • ’clock. P r a y e r m e e tin g W e d n e s ­d a y e v e n in g a t 8 o 'c lo c k . S t r a n g e r s will f in d a h e a r ty w e lc o m e .

BELMAR

17— E ig h th A ve. a n d F S t r e e t18— T e n th Ave. a n d F S tre e t .19— T w e lf th Ave. a n d R iv e r Rd. 2 S —T h ir d A ve. a n d A S tre e t .25— F if th a n d O '-ean A v e n u e s .27— F if th Ave. a n d C S tre e t >84— S ix th Ave. a n d F S tre e t .80— S e v e n th Ave. a n d D S tre e t .41— F o u r te e n th a n d O c ea n A v e s43— T e n th A ve. a n d C S tre e t .44— E ig h th Ave. a n d A S tre e t . .45— E le v e n th Ave. a n d A S tre e t .63— F o u r te e n th A ve. a n d F S t r e e t , 67— T h ir te e n th A ve. a n d D S tr e e t .

SP E C IA L TA PS 1-1-1, C h ie f’s c a ll . 2, T ap s . T e s t a la r m g iv en e v e ry e v en in g a t 7.39i o ’c lo c k . 1 ta p , B ro k en C irc u i t ; 2 ta p s . F i r e O u t, g iv e n a f te r Are in- e x tin g u is h e d .

M -I - M - l l | j | j M U H -H - H -H

“ Texture"W A L L P A P E R S

that look like rich brocades; tike gay and co s t ly ch in tzes; like lovely watered silk, with harmonies of delicate flowers,laid upon their lustrous sheen . . .Wall Papers likef;eous patterned leath il<

E ar­n e r ;

ike regal tapestriesAnd none of them costs more than you can af­ford to pay!It wovdd be a pleasuro to s h o w y o u wh a t "texture" means in mod­em Wall Paper. Why

j f not come in and see?'

F R A N K B R ID E N J r . & SO N P a p e rh a n g lr .g a S p e c ia lty

P A IN T E R S a n d D E C O R A T O R S 102 F S tr e e t B e lm a i, N . X.

’0U READ theOther Fellow’s Ad

I \ l [♦ Y ou a re r e a d in g th is o n e .'I ' T h a t sh o u ld co n v in ce y o u

th a t a d v e r tis in g in th e se c o lu m n s is a pro fitab le p ro p o sitio n ; t h a t i t will b r in g b u s i n e s s t o y o u r s to re . T h e fa c t t h a t th e o th e r fe llow a d v e r tise s is p ro b a b ly th e r e a so n h e is g e ttin g m o re b u sin e ss th a n is fa llin g to yo u . W ould i t n o t b e w e l l t o g i v e th e o th e r fe llow a c h a n c e

T o R e a d Y o u r A d in T h ese C olum n s?

T H E C O A S T A D V E R T I S E R . B E L M A R . N . J .

The S T A R S E D A N

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The Star Sedan has a room y, five-passenger body o f verysmart design—cowl level with hood and windshield, totp lo wand level, broad windows, including the rear, and crowned fenders.Four wide doors are hung on three hinges, each with double latches aud anti-rattlers.Upholstery is wool broadcloth of pleasing pattern. Hord- ware is neat dull metal finish. Side windows can be easily adjusted.Seats are low and deep with backs set at a comfortable angle. The solid front seat is most convenient, and af­fords stability to the body. There fs plenty of leg room under the cowl and i nthe rear, and the inclined floor board forms a comfortable foot rest.

Agent for]

D u r a n t C ar a n d

M a so n R o a d k in g T r u c k sThis truck is the best on the market

for the money

SHERMAN SALES & SERVICE CO.I 18th Ave., F St T,L I2S6-;| Belmar, N. J.4 . 4 . • |.4 " 4 » 4 ,,|« 4 , 4 , »!**!»*H**!, *i**J*4“ H ,4 , 4 “ H , 4 , 4 ~ H

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L O T S F O R S A L E

I SHARK RIVER HIGHLANDSWest Belmar

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91*2*:« Low Prices Easy Terms

Reasonable Restrictions

Ideal Location

MVVVvVVVVVV $ 1 9VVVV i i

E . B . B i g e l o w

Telephone Belmar 709-Rg% Tenth Ave., Opp. R.R. Depot Belmar, N. J* §V A

I n Pit iiCapital and Surplus .............$600,000.00Resources over .................... 84,000,000.00

UluiuASBURY PARK, N . J.

Every Banking FacilityExecutor, Trustee, Administrator Guardian

Safe Deposit B oxes Banking by MailInterest Paid on Savings Accounts

May W e Serve You?

9vVBE SATISFIED

A rt 7011 •l'way* satisfied that you are getting the value you should for you money in—

£ FURNITURE end HOUSEFURNISHINGS?♦5*v

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Look over our large stock and let us quote pricei before you buy elsewhere.

TVL. M A N N E R701 N IN T H A V E N U E BELM A H , N. J.

PATRONIZEth e m erch a n t* w h o a d v e r ­t i s e in th is p a p e r . T h e y w ill t r e i t you r ig h t

The Merchants who ad­vertise in this paper will give you best values for your money.

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iWe have the only exclusive Ambulance in Belmar. Our Ambulance is used solely for the removal of the sick and injured, and no other purpose. It is not a private car converted into an ambulance, neither is it used to remove dead bodies from the streets or Hospitals. We pay no GRAFT; we have but one price for Ambulance Service in Belmar.

Ambulance Service to Long Branch Hospital, $10.00Ambulance Service to Spring Lake Hospital, $ 5.00

In the Bennett service, there is no worry— no anxiety

Every detail of the funeral is handled withaccuracy, satisfaction ind privacy

THEODORE H. BENNETT Funeral Director and Licensed Embalmer

HARRY E. S. S. BENNETT Graduate Embalmer of the,Renouard Training

of New York

OFFICE: 710 9th Ave. Residence: 1201 B St Telephone Belmar 577, Any Hour, Day or Night

3 0 E 3 0 Z 3 0 D 0 E

Telephone 59S-WX O E 5 4O

Do

J U L IU S A . A B R A M S

M I L L W O R K

We Make Anything In Wood Do

18th Avenue Belmar, N. J.

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SPECIAL PRICESFur Coats Repaired, Cleaned and Glaced $5.00 Cleaning, Pressing, Repairing and Remodeling

Orders called for and delivered

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A. B L U MTH E TAILOR

Eighth Ave. Phone 510-J Belmar, N. J.

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F R A N K P . E R B ESpring Lake Florist

TREES SHRUBS HEDGE PLANTS, Etc. BEDDING PLANTS . - CUT FLOWERS, Etc. Funeral Designs - Wedding Decorations

307 Ludlow Ave., near Third Spring Lake, N. J. Telephone 59

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Phone Belmar 704-W

BRICE BROS.—Electrical Contractors—

WIRING FIXTURES MOTORS

611 12th AVENUE ’ BELMAR, N. J.

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Phone Conn. Satisfactory Work Guaranteed

ERNEST NORENAUTOMOBILE and SIGN PAINTING

A SPECIALTYP A IN T IN G a n d D E C O R A T IN G

509 Tenth Avenue Belmar, N. J.

O K I

P A T R O N I Z Ethe merchants who adver­tise in this paper. They will treat you right.

AdvertisingIn thispaper will bring good returns on the money invested

M O T H E R ! Fletcher’s Castoria is a harmless Substitute forCastor Oil, Paregoric, Teething Drop* and Soothing Syrups, prepared to relieve Infants ia anns and Children all ages o&

Constipation Wind ColicFlatulency To Sweeten StomachDiarrhea Regulate Bowels

Aids ia the assimilation of Food, promoting Cheerfulness, Rest, and

Natural Sleep without OpiatesTo av o id im ita tio n s , a lw ay s lo o k for th e s ig n a tu re o fPjg>T? directions ot each package. Physicians everywhere recommend ft.

P l u m b i n g & H e a t i n gWe Specialize on Repair Work

Electric Water Pumps and Repairs

Jos. C. StewardPhona 620-R B E L M A R H 06 F S t

PRIDHAM & BRICEContractors and Builders

Plana Furnished Estimates Given

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419 14th Ave, Belmar, N. J.

•H "! 1 H H- H - - H --l-fr*-H M - -H - J-+ + + -M--M M MjfeP h o u Belmar B

STERNER COAL AND LUMBER COMPANY

LUMBER COAL MILLWORKSASH FRAMES DOORS MOULDINGSS o b AgeaU BEACON POULTRY AND DAIRY FEEDS MASON MATERIALS REX RUBERCID and BIRO'S ROOFING

—BESTWALL WALL BOARD—Office: 12th and Railroad Ave.Yard: 1 1 th, 12th. and Railroad Avenues. . . .BELMAR

■H I I » * * *■» H H H W W W W - m I H J 1 t | j ].■1 j | ^ !■ |<,4 , 4 ~ H » | < | | .

l Phone Belm ar 601-Wi- FRAMES MADE TO ORDER MOSQUITO FRAMES

STORM SASH SHUTTERSPlans Arranged and Estim ates Offered

PETER MACLEARIE & SONCARPENTERS and BUILDERS

ALTERATIONS and REPAIRSResidence and W orkshop A Street Belmar. N . J.

B e t 18th and 19th Aves.

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B fts b U fh o d 1908- T f l t p b o M

E. HABERSTICK & SONS a c c a s a o r s t a W M . A L L S P A C H

Sanitary PlumberGas Stum i—. «m ■ 1 ...........................

1004 F Street, bet. 10th and llth Aves. B E L M A R , N . J .

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P ATRONIZE O U R A D V E R T I S E R S

T H E Y A R E A L L B O O S T E R S AND DESERVE YOUR BUSINESS

TH E COAST ADVERTISER, BEI-MAR, N. j F R ID A Y

R I V O L I T H E A T R EF Street Belmar, N. J.

R I A L T O T H E A T R E8th and Ocean Aves.

Opens Tomorrow NightVVtih ALL STAR CAST In ‘THE BELOVED BRUTE”

PROGRAM FOR NEXT WEEK

M O N D A Y , J U N E 29 th -

PROGRAM FO R NEXT WEEKNAZIMOV A In“ML SON”

M O N D A Y , J U N E 2 9 th

VIOLA DANNA In“FORTY WINKS’

T U E S D A Y , J U N E 3 0 th

OWEN MOORE In “THE PARASITE”

T U E S D A Y , J U N E 3 0 th -

ALL STAR CAST In “THE SPANIARD”

W E D N E S D A Y , J U L Y 1st-

ALL STAR CAST In TWO SHALL BE BORN W E D N E S D A Y , J U L Y 1 s t

CONWAY TEARLE InTHE SCHOOL FOR WIVES'T H U R S D A Y , J U L Y 2 nd-

VIOLA DANNA In “FORTY WINKS’ T H U R S D A Y , J U L Y 2 n d —

ALICE JOYCE InTHE WHITE MAN

F R ID A Y , J U L Y 3 rd -

ALL STAR CAST In \ ‘ THE SPANIARD”

F R ID A Y , J U L Y 3 rd -

ALL STAR CAST InONE YEAR TO LIVE

S A T U R D A Y ,/U L Y 4 th —

CONWAY TEARLE In “THE SCHOOL FOR WIVES

S A T U R D A Y , J U L Y 4 tli

NAZIMOVA In“MY SON”

F I R S T P R E S B Y T E R IA N C H U R C H S E R V IC E S

T b e s e r v i c e s a t t h e F i r s t P r e s ­b y t e r i a n c h u r c h o n S u n d a y a r e h e ld a t e l e v e n o ’c lo c k in t h e m o r n i n g , a n d a t s e v e n - t h i r t y i n t h e e v e n in g . A t t h e m o r n in g s e r v i c e , t h e p a s t o r , R e v . A n d r e w R i c h a r d s , w i l l p F e a c h o n t h e B iu e L a w s , a n d i n t h e e v e n ­i n g w i l l t a k e f o r h i s t h e m e , “ F o o ls F o r C h r i s t ’s S a k e ” .

T h e m u s i c f o r t h e d a y i s a s f o l ­l o w s :

M o r n in g S e r v i c e O r g a n P r e l u d e — “ I n S u m m e r ”

S t e b b i n sO r g a n O f f e r t o r y — “ A l t a r F l o w e r s ”

L a c e yS o p r a n o S o lo — “ J e s u s O n l y ”

R o to l iO r g a n P o s t l u d e — “A l le g r o C o n

M o to ” • S h e p p a r dE v e n i n g S e r v i c e

O r g a n P r e l u d e — “ S u n s e t ”F r y s i n g e r

O r g a n O f f e r t o r y — " E v e n i n g M e d i ta ­t i o n ” A r m s t r o n g

S o p r a n p S o lo — “ R e s t W k h T h e e I n H e a v e n ” H a r k e r

O r g a n P o s t l u d e — “ M a r c i a ” S t u l t s

D R O W N IN G V IC T IM B U R IE D T h e M o n m o u th P l e a s u r e c lu b , a f f i l i a t e d w i t h t h e K u K lu x K la n , w h i c h r e c e n t l y p u r c h a s e d t h e M a r ­c o n i w i r e l e s s p l a n t i n W a l l t o w n ­s h ip , o n S h a r k R i v e r , w e s t o f B e l­m a r , W e d n e s d a y , -w o n a $ 2 8 ,0 0 0 a s ­s e s s m e n t c u t w h e n i t a p p e a l e d a $ 1 0 8 ,0 0 0 a s s e s s m e n t t o t h e M o n ­m o u t h c o m i t y t a x h o a r d , o p e n i n g i t s a p p e a l h e a r i n g a t b o r o h a l l , S p r i n g L a k e .

O v e r 1 0 0 a p p e a l s w e r e h e a r d b y t h e t a x b o a r d , w h i c h w a s p r e s i d e d o v e r b y i t s p r e s i d e n t , A l b e r t L . I v i n s o f R e d B a n k . A l a r g e n u m ­b e r o f a p p e a l s w e r e g r a n t e d a n d s e v e r a l h e l d o v e r . T h r e e e x e m p ­t i o n s w e r e a l l o w e d e x - s o ld ie ,r s . T h e h a r i n g s w e r e f o r S p r i n g L a k e , B e l ­m a r , M a n a s q u a n , S e a G i r t , B r i e l l e a n d W a l l t o w n s h i p .

T h e c l u b c u t in a s s e s s m e n t w a s ■ g ra n te d d e s p i t e t e s t i m o n y t h a t t h e a m o u n t i n v o l v e d i n t h e p u r c h a s e o f t h e p r o p e r l y b y t h e c l u b w a s $ 1 5 0 ,0 0 0 . T h e a s s e s s m e n t w a s d e ­s c r i b e d h y c o u n c i l f o r t h e c lu b , F r a n c i s S to n e o f A s b u r y P a r k , a s e x c e s s iv e . A p p l i c a t i o n w a s m a d e f o r a r e d u c t i o n to $ 6 5 ,0 0 0 , b u t t h i s

I w a s d e n ie d .

T h e b o d y o f C l a r e n c e W h i t e , 22 , s o n o f M r . a n d M rs . F r a n k W h i t e o f E i g h t e e n t h a v e n u e , W e s t B e lm a r , w a s f o u n d l y i n g f a c e d o w n w a r d in a f e w i n c h e s o f w a t e r o n t h e n o r t h e ] y e d g e o f C o m o l a k e , W e d n e s d a y , b y t w o b o y s w h o w e r e g a t h e r i n g w a t e r l i l i e s in t h e l a k e .

Y o u n g W h i t e h a d b e e n m i s s i n g f r o m h o m e s i n c e T u e s d a y m o r n in g . A c c o r d i n g t o h i s p a r e n t s , h e w a s s u b j e c t to e p i l e p t i c f i t s , a n d i t i s b e ­l i e v e d t h a t i t w a s o n e o f t h e s e f i ts t h a t c a u s e d h i m t o f a l l o n h i s f a c e in t h e s h a l lo w w a t e r a n d d r o w n . A p p a r e n t l y h e h a d a l s o b e e n g a t h e r ­in g w a t e r l i l i e s , C h ie f o f P o l i c e A n ­d r e w J . B r o w n o f t h e S p r i n g L a k e p o l i c e d e p a r t m e n t s a id , b e c a u s e s e v e r a l p i c k e d l i l i e s w e r e f o u n d n e a r t h e b o d y , a n d h i s t r o u s e r s h a d b e e n r o l l e d u p , a s t h o u g h h e h a d b e e n w a d in g .

F u n e r a l s e r v i c e s w e r e h e l d t o d a y f r o m t h e l a t e h o m e , R e v . S a m u e l B l a i r , p a s t o r o f t h e W a l l M . E . c h u r c h , o f f i c i a t i n g . I n t e r m e n t w a s m a d e i n W a l l c e m e t e r y , i n c h a n g e o f U n d e r t a k e r H a r d y .

O F ASBURY PARKForemost In Feminine Fashions

For Twenty Years

A n n o u n c e T h e O p e n i n go f A

N E W A P P A R E L S H O PO N T H E C O R N E R O F

7 th A v e n u e N and F StreetS a t u r d a y , J u n e 2 7 t h

F I R S T M . E . C H U R C H H I T S S T A N D IN G C O A C H IN E F ­F O R T T O A V O ID C R A S H

A n E s s e x c o a c h b e l o n g i n g t o L o u is S i l v e r s t e i n , a l o c a l r e a l t o r , w a s d a m a g e d i n a c o l l i s i o n w i t h a S tu t z l i r e e n g i n e f r o m t h e G o o d w i l l H o s e c o m p a n y w h e n t h e d r i v e r o f t h e l a t ­t e r a t t e m p t i n g t o a v o id c o l l i s i o n w i t h a n o t h e r A re e n g i n e f r o m t h e s a m e c o m p a n y a t E i g h t h a v e n u e a n d E s t r e e t , T u e s d a y n i g h t a b o u t 11 .30 .

T h e t w o e n g i n e s w e r e r e s p o n d i n g t o a f a l s e a l a r m t u r n e d in a t E ig h t h a v e n u e a n d A S t r e e t . W h e n o n e e n g i n e d r i v e n b y J e r r y L e h m a n l e f t t h e f i r e h o u s e i t w e n t to F s t r e e t a n d t u r n e d d o w n E i g h t h a v e n u e t o ­w a r d t h e b e a c h . T h e s e c o n d m a ­c h i n e , d r i v e n b y G e o r g e B e r g e n t u r n e d e a s t t o E s t r e e t a n d c o n t i n ­u e d s o u t h t o E i g h t h a v e n u e . T h e m a c h i n e s m e t a t t h e c o r n e r .

R a t h e r t h a n s t r i k e t h e t i r e a p p a r ­a t u s , l o a d e d w i t h fi e m e n , D r i v e r L e h m a n , i t i s u n d e r s t o o d s w e r v e d to o n e s id e , s t r i k i n g t h e E s s e x c o a c h , p a r k e d o n t h e s o u t h s i d e o f f e ig h th a v e n u e . T h e c o a c h w a s u n ­o c c u p ie d .

F o l l o w i n g is t h e m u s i c a l p r o g r a m a r r a n g e d f o r t h e S u n d a y s e r v i c e s a t t h e F i r s t M . E . c h u r c h :

M o r n in g S e r v i c e P r e l u d e — “ C a n t i l e n e ” D u B o isP r o c e s s i o n a lA n th e m — “ K e e p S in g in g ” M ile s

J u n i o r C h o i r O f f e r t o r y — “ R e v e r i e i n E M i n o r ”

K o c hA n th e m — ‘I W i l l L i f t U p M in e

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P r o c e s s i o n a l tA n th e m — “ B le s s e d A r e T h e y T h a t

S e e k H i m ” W i l d e r m e r eP i a n o S o lo s

E d w i n K u h n o f P h i l a d e l p h i a O f f e r t o r y — “ R o s e L e a v e s ”

H o p k i n s S o lo — “ T a k e T h o u M y H a n d ”

V a n d e r p o o lM is s C o b b

A n th e m — “ 0 E y e s T h a t A r e W e a r y ”F a r m e r

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