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Public Library 15july iK The “Advertiser” Stands for the Best Interests of Belmar goo<KKH>0<H3onoeH3oa<H5oiHj BOTH J<>-'>G'0OOK30-0Kj7CH>a-CH3-CHJ<HKHa I c Q a a if VOL. XVin. No- 5 BELMAR, N. J„ FRIDAY, JANUARY 30, 1920 Single Copy Three Cents Belmar Post is to Stage Minstrel Show EDGAR B. SCHMIDT IS COACHING PERFORMERS Will be Best Entertainment of Its Kind Ever Staged in This Section— Well-known Soloisfa to Take Part The advance sale of tickets for a minstrel show to be staged in the Public school auditorium Thursday night. February 5, by Herbert-Worth- ington-White American Legion Post of Belmar indicates that the affair will be largely attended. Rehearsals for the entertainment have been in progress for some time under the direction—of Edgar B. Schmidt,who has had considerable experience in coaching for amateur minstrels and when the curtain is rung up next Thursday evening there will be a genuine treat for the public. Those who have had the privilege of being at the rehearsals declare that it will be the best affair of its kind ever presented in this section, both BOY’S FALL PROVES FATAL Henry Vogt Dies of Concussion of The Brain. Henry Vogt, aged seven years died early last Friday morning at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Vogt, 602 Seventh avenue, of concussion of the brain resulting from a fall received in his class room in the Public school build- ing the previous Wednesday. He fell striking his head on the iron support of his desk. Little was thought of the accident at the time, and when the boy said he was not badly hurt the teacher allowed him to remain at school. Later in the day he complained of pains in the head, but in the evening he told his parents he was feeling all right again. When the lad became unconscious Thursday morning Mrs. Vogt sum- moned Dr. Trout of Spring Lake, whose efforts to revive him proved futile and he died at 3 o’clock with- out regaining consciousness. The funeral was Monday morn- ing from St. Rose’s church, Rev. W. J. McConnell officiating. Burial was in St. Catherine cemetery, Sea DEATH OF FRANK G. LIGHT in the offerings and stage settings. . Many of the performers have more! Girt, in charge of Undertaker T. H. than a local reputation as entertain-1 Bennett, ers and soloists and in fact, might break into the professional class if' they chose to do so. i The show will consist of the old- Word was received in Belmar Sun- time minstrer circle with its inter -1 day °f the death of Frank Gordon loctor and black-faced end men who ■ Light. It is supposed that the young have been loading up with a wealth 1nian died at San Angeloe, Texas, of original jokes and stories and j where he had gone for the benefit there will be solos and duets by some his health. Death was due to a of the best talent in this section. In complication of diseases, the circle Donald Sterner will act as Light was the son of Mrs. interloctor and the end men will be ^ran^ Dunn of Salt Lake City, Utah, Jeremiah Bearmore, Oakley LaVance ?n<^ was married last June to Miss Edgar B. Schmidt and Harry Cooper: Fmma Van Note of Belmar. After (Snagde.) The musicians will be their marriage they went to Camp Kenneth Conover. Gerald Cushman, i Dix f0 reside where Mr. Light was Lester Lefferson, Howard Bearford general superintendent of the Wood and Andrew Vola. !and Cox commissary department. * The soloists will be Miss Dorothy j m U e there he was taken ill and last Wilson, Viola M, Ewart, Howard fal( he and Mrs; LiSht went }° 0khl' Bearford, Andrew Vola, Alfred Armes homa hoping his health might im- Starving People Eat Human Flesh 1000 PERSONS DYING DAILY OF PEOPLE SHOULD BE CAREFUL STARVATION, MOSTLY CHILDREN j NOT TO CONTRACT THE DISEASE Only Few Cases of Influenza Here INLET TERRACE—UNION SHOP Belmar Church People and Others Symptoms of the Disease and Pre. Have Opportunity to Give Food to ventatives Absolute the Hungry and Clothing to the Naked. The campaign for more funds for relief of the stricken people of Ar- menia and Syria (Near East) has again begun in America and Belmar is becoming interested in the matter. Never before, with all our war-giv - ing, have we had an opportunity to contribute to a cause that touches | contracting the disease and the fol- the heart more deeply. About all {lowing advice is given: we have to worry abput in Belmar is Influenza is spread bydroplets, The Advertiser is in receipt of the following letter from Paul T. Zizinia, President of Inlet Terrace Company, also copies of letters in which the attitude of Mr. Zizinia toward Union labor is made plain, i January 28, 1920 ! Editors of the Coast Advertiser, ! Belmar, New Jersey. Quietness i Dear Sirs:— Essential F .r Those in With i. ! IT ttS* M el j Terrace Company towards Union n „,.. j Labor and accordingly, I would ap- On y vio or three cases of influ- precjate jf y OU wTouId kindly publish enza have been reported in Belmar the following correspondence, and it is hoped that the borough) Thanking you for your kind court- may escape without such as prevailed when the disease Belmar Legion Adopts NAME SELECTED IS HERBERT- WORTHINGTON-WHITE POST an epidemic esy> I remain. Yours very truly, spread throughout the country a year ago. It is well, however, for Inlet Terrace Company, per Paul T. Zizinia, President Commemorates , Names of Three Belmar Men Who Lost TheiT Lives in Service the high cost of everything and whether or not we can buy a pound of sugar this week, but we get enough to eat alright. High prices do not worry those starving babies over there. There is nothing to buy we must send the supplies of food and clothing over or thousands and tens of thousands of Christian people will perish. Special offerings will be re- sprayed from the nose or throat of, and by contact with, affected persons To prevent contracting influenza cover each cough and sneeze with handkerchief. Avoid contact with persons who are coughing or sneezing. Avoid crowds. If possible, walk to work. Do not spit on the floor or side- Lester Kruzer, Harold Hoffman, Ar- thur Birdsall and Stanley Height: Those who will participate in the prove. Mrs. Light is well-known here and she has the sympathy of a wide chorus* arc: Roy Bloodgood, William c^rcle °f friends. It is expected that Robinson, Edgar Benton, Gilbert * she "ill return to the home of her Buckhorn, James Eggiman. Albert Parents, Mr. and Mrs. Rean Van Note, Gifford, Charles Measure. Lee Abbott, Albert Rearmore, Jay Pridham. Lind- ley Morris, Barney Bernstein and Russell Hardy. 'Hie program of solos is announced as follows: “Mandy,” Alfred Armes; “If War’s What Sherman Said it Was,” Jeremiah Bearmore; “Caro- line Sunshine,” Lester Kruzer; ‘Sweet Kisses,” Viola M. Ewart; Fifth avenue, after a few weeks. FUNERAL OF MRS. THEO. ALGOR Funeral services for Mrs. Theodore Algor, who died suddenly Thursday were held at her late home Monday morning at 8.30, followed by a re- quiem mass in St. Rose’s Catholic church at 9.30. Rev. W. J. McCon- “You Know What I Mean.” Howard nel] officiated. Interment in charge Bearford; “My Wild Irish Rose,” of Undertaker Hardy of Belmar was Lester Kruzer; “Mammy’s Lullaby,” Dorothy Wilson; “Blues,” Oakley LaVance; “Lord Have Mercy on Married Men,” Edgar B. Schmidt. The solos by Arthur M. Birdsall and Stanley Height have not yet been selected but those who have heard these singers know that they will be of a high order. in St. Catherine cemetery. Sea Girt. DEATH OF BAY HEAD WOMAN Mrs. Susan E. Clayton, wife of John H. Clayton of Bay Head, died Friday evening of carcosmo. Funeral services were held Tues- day afternoon at 1 o’clock from her A duet, “Because You’re You,” will late residenct and at the First M. E. be sung by Dorothy Wilson and Church, West Point Pleasant, at 2 Harold Hoffman, and the entire com- pany will sing “Jingle Jingle ,1 Happy Days”, and “Mascot of the Company” The committee having the affair in charge consists of Harold Hoff- man, Lester Kruzer and Howard Bearford, PREPARING FOR AUTO SHOW O. H. Newman, a Belmar auto- mobile dealer, was elected a member of the Automobile Dealers’ Association held at Long Branch Monday night. At this meeting drawings took place for positions at an exhibit to be held in Asbury Park March 13T:o 20 . Sixty passenger cars will be on ex- hibition on the Casino floor while at the Arcade there will be an exhibit of 40 motor trucks. LYON BOTTA STUDIO—Fancy dancing, interpretive. National classic step and toe dancing; latest social dancing and physical develop- ment; elocution and dramatic art; graded classes and private lessons in all branches for adult? and children; afternoon, 2 to 6 ; mornings and evenings by appointment. 714 Cookman avenue. Telephone As- fiury Park 1727. Mondays. Gray room, Hotel Marie Antoinette, New York City.—Adv. The Advertiser office is fully equipped to do fine book and com- mercial printing of all kinds. / o’clock. The funeral was in charge of Undertaker Hardy of Belmar. BOLD DAYLIGHT ROBBERY At Red Bank last Saturday morn- ing three armed men held up four men returning from the local banks in a Ford car with the payroll for the Sigmund Eisner company and made off with nearly $20 ,000 . The job was done by Victor Bruno of Rumson, Charles Casper of New Monmouth and Frank Grano, all young Italians who were employed in the Eisner factory. The robbery occurred within twenty-five feet of the main office of the company, where the robbfirs stepped into the road with leveled revolvers and ordered the driver to stop. The car was ordered turned around and after being driven a mile and a half from Red Bank the Eisner employes were ordered out and the robbers continued with the car to- ward Middletown. Bruno and Casper were captured at Perth Amboy Saturday afternoon as they were about to board a ferry and about §16,000 of the stolen mon- ey was found in their suit cases. Grano was caught in Philadelphia Sunday. cause. America is the only country doing anything for these people and it means that we face the program of opportunity. Do you know that in this time of peace and prosperity in our country, there are across the seas in the Near East over 1000 persons dying daib of starvation; that these are mostly children whose parents have been killed by the Turk? These children are so hungry that when an animal falls dead of starva- tion in the streets, they run out and strip the flesh from the hotly of ihe animal and devour it raw. everone to take precautions against Monmouth Co.Build’gTrades Council In affiliation with Building Trades Department American Federation of Labor January 26, 1920 Mr. Paul Zizinia, Belmar. New Jersey. Dear Sir:— It has been.reported to this Council that you will not employ Union Laborers. If this is the case will you please state your reasons for not employing Union Laborers. This Council will be only to glad to take up apy matter or trouble you have had with Union Labor, as ft is the purpose of this Council to give the Employer and the Employee a square deal so far as lays In its power. If you have any grievance this is the proper place to present the same. Respectfully, G. Cushman. Rec. Sec’y Inlet Terrace Company Belmar, New Jersey January 27, 1920 Mr. G. Cushman. Rec. Sec’y. Monmouth Co. Building Trades Council, 702-6th Ave., Belmar, New Jersey Dear Sir:— , Your very courteous communica- tion of the 26th inst. received and contents noted. You have been absolutely misin- formed in the premises—probably by two laborers, formerly good workers, v-’ho began lo spend more time talk- ceived at the Baptist church next, walk. Sunday for this cause, and for a few j Do not use common drinking cups days contributions of money may be | and common towels, made through the Advertiser to this; Avoid excessive fatigue. If taken ill. go to bed and send for doctor. At the time of the outbreak in 1918 Dr. J. W. Hassler of Belmar prescrib- ed the following preventative: Uratropia, five grains, three times a day and camphor carried about your person. Masks should be worn in the rooms of the sick, the masks to be saturated with carbolic acid solution. Caution to the sick—do not get out of bed for at least two or three days after your temperature is nor- mal. . Under no circumstance get ; 'n(, <*un io n At a meeting of the Belmar post of the American Legion held last week in the lecturt room of the Public Library final action was taken on a name for the post The nam.e “Lib- erty” had been previously chosen but after numerous exchanging of communications with the state head- quarters, it was found that another post in New Jersey already had that name so that Belmar would be com- pelled to change its name. “The Herbert-Worthington-White Post” was the name finally adopted. The name commemorates those of three men from Belmar and im- mediate vicinity who lost their lives ii' service—Raymond Herbert who died at Fort Leavenworth, Kan., October 23, 1918; Robert Worthing- ton and Stephen White, both of whom were killed in action in Oc- tober, 1918. There were a few others from Bel- pjar who died in service but who were only temporary or summer residents here. To them equal hon- or is due but the three men for whom the post was named were born and grew to manhood in Bel- mar, so their names were selected hunger-crazed people and one of tlie! In getting QUt of bed {he patient workers the other day sav, a little girl cracking something between stones. He stooped to examine what she had and found it was a none. runs the Chance of contracting pneu- monia or meningitis. Owing to the outbreak of the disease and because of the looseness He asked where she had gotten it wj{jj which the term influenza has and she hung her head while the little boy standing beside her ans wered—“From yonder in the grave- yard.” The only organization for assist- ing these poor little children is the Near East Relief Committee w7hich is caring for thousands of them. However, they have neither enough workers or enough money to meet the present demands. Dr. White, one of the workers re- cently cabled to the effect that 2000 orphans appeared before him to be taken into one of our orphanages and that he only had at the maximum, accommodations for 400. He said “The hardest task of my life con- fronted me. I had to pick out 400 from the 2000 and turn away the other 1600 which I knew meant that I was condemning 1600 little child- ren to death. If the kind people of America only knew the truth about Armenia and the Near East, they would give so liberally that from now on every little hungry child in these war devastated lands would re- ceive a warm meal and would have its life saved.” „ , , , . . , i ing “Union” than doing the work for . . . . , , of bed during your sickness. | which they were paid, hence they Human liesii is beinQ ea.en t>\ ln -1Have the necessary bed pans. etc. j were dropped—as will every other man who fails to render an honest day’s work. Although a large employer of labor both skilled and unskilled, my sym- pathies are and always have been wholly with the worker—the man who produces, and I have always been more than anxious to see to it that the honest worker received all that was coming to him. On our building we aim to employ Union mechanics only and always pay the full Union scale. I have re- cently given orders to all Sub-Con - tractors that non-Union mechanic must either join his proper Union or quit the job. Our unskilled labor, we have al- ways paid a little more than the pre- vailing local wage. When I have a job to do I want to get it done, and find it cheaper to pay the higher wage to get the good men and finish the job. With regard to the new Union in Belmar of unskilled laborers, because of the migratory character of such labor, I am a little doubtful if it will be a complete success. However, I am more than willing to lend every co-operation to the Belmar boys to give their effort a fair trial and whether their Union be a success or not, they may rest assured that the honest worker will always receive more than a Square Deal on every one of my jobs. If an 5 7one thinks he is not being treated right, a complaint direct to me will rectify any wrong. Instead of being opposed to Union Labor, I am wholly in favor of same. Thanking you for bringing this AN ICY TIME been used, and the difficulty which sometimes arises in making a diag- nosis, the following description of the symtomatology of the disease, prepared by the United States Public Health Service will be of interest: “The symptoms are an acute onset, often very sudden, with bodily weak- ness and pains in the head. eyes, back and elsewhere in the body. Vomiting may be a symptom of on- set and dizziness is frequent. Chilly sensations are usual, and the tem- perature is from 100 degrees to 104 degrees, the pulse remaining com- paratively low. Sweating is not in- frequent. The appetite is lost, and prostration is marked. Constipation is the rule. Drowsiness and photo- phobia are coiqmon. The conjunc- tive are reddened, and the mucous membrane of the nose, throat and bronchi often give evidence of in- flammation. The general symptoms, however, predominate over the local. Cervical and general lymphadenitis and nystagmus are frequently re- ported. Characteristically, there isj AAVARDS FOR BIRD HOUSES Avon Boys are Given Prizes for Their lianaiwork no leucocytosis dnring the heighfh of matter to my personal attention, I remain, Yours very truly, Inlet Terrace Company per Paul T. Zizinia President P. S. In order to prevent a wrong impression from spreading, I shall ask the “Coast Advertiser” to publish this correspondence. P.T.Z. -- BELMAR SCHOOL BOYS WIN Anticipate your needs of summer printing now and let us quote you prices. fever, so that a high white count during the first 60 hours is indicative of another disease or of complication The fever usually lasts from three Snow, rain and sleet combined in to five <jayS) but relapses are not un- making Belmar streets the first o f|CommolI) an(j complications, partic- the week the slipperiest in years. uiariy pulmonary, are to be feared. Tuesday acoatingof ice covered The incubation period is usually every vestige ofearth andpedestri-1 shortj from two to four days. The ans had to use the greatest of pre- j cause of influenza is not certainly caution to keep from falling, even known.While the weiglith of evidence Belmargrammar school team de in the middle of the streets. Toward:points, to Pheiffers’ bacillus, yetfeated Bradley Park basketball five noon the wind shifted to the south ■ streptococci( pneumococci and other Saturday in a game. Tlie score was and the sun shone brightly soften-! organisms are frequently associated j 19 to 17. The teams were evenly ing the ice so that property owners with this dfsease. It seems certain, j matched and the contest was close were able to clean their sidewalks however. that the causative agent is |lip until the last minutes of play. and Wednesday almost all walks in disseminated chiefly in the discharg- l ineup: the borough were bare. es gf the throat and nose of infected! Belmar Old-time residents say that snow j individuals. Prophylactic measures I FIdG. Fl.G. Pts. has stayed on the ground for a longer si10 Uid, therefore, be directed toward, Silverstein, f ..................... 0 0 0 period than for many years. inreventing these infectious secre- U’rving, f ........................... 2 0 4 I . , . . .. Brown, c ......................... a ^ « -------------------- tions from reaching the mucou* \ ] . , r Hn <? 2 1 5 CONTRACT FOR AVON HOUSE !membranes of other persons.” Icastd*. fi".'".*""--' 1 0 2 Robbins, Clayton and Stewart, Asbury Park contractors, have been awarded a contract for a $6,000 cot- tage in Washington avenue, Avon for H. M. Decker of Newark, who LARGE STORAGE HOUSE BURNED 8 3 19 Bradley Park FIdG. Fl.G. Pts Jacob Z. Stiles at 47 Corlies avenue, will make it his summer home. The; West Grove, were destroyed by fire J Matthew, f ....................... § The large storage warehouses of white, f ................................ 1 Moore, c ............................ 1 Bound, g ............................ 0 same contractors have just completed early last Friday morning, another cottage on the same avenue, j loss was about 5100,000. The Magill, g> ......................... 2 8 2 2 0 5 17 In the Methodist church, Avon, last week Thursday niglit prizes were awarded to boys of the borough for building bird houses. The first prize went to L. C. Hibberd, originator of the contest, and second prize to Walter Clayton. Other prize win- ners were: Francis Reid, Thomas Gagan, Fred Hansen, Harold Marten and George LaVance in the first prize contest. In the second prize contest the fortunate winners were Walter Clayton, David Cole, Martin Hart and Theodore Sofield. There were exercises attending the awarding of prizes. Following prayer by Rev. S. J. Ar- thur, Pastor of the Avon Baptist church, and an address by Rev. T. R. Taylor, the meeting was presided over by Walter Clayton and a musi- cal program given by Miss Jose- phine Kingsley of Asbury Park, and solos and ducats by Louis Norris and Stanley Dolan. An address by Dr. F. Angeny was another feature of the evening^ Mr. Hibberd has offered prizes for a contest among the girls of the borough, the nature of which will be announced later. RECEIVES MANY HONORS Col. Geo. Watson Received Seven Decorations While in Service In a recent interview of Major W. B. Bamford of Belmar with Col. George W. Watson, a summer resi- dent of Belmar who is known to cur reader from the many letters from him which have been publish- ed giving his experiences at the front, he very modestly consented to enum- erate the seven decorations which have been awarded to him: 1. Distinguished service cross, 2. British Military cross; 3, Officer of the Legion d’honneur, France; 4, Croix de Guerre, France, with two palms and one gold star; 5 Com- mander, Order of Crown, Belgic; 6 . Officer, Order of Leopold, Belgic; 7, Croix de Guerre, Belgic. We believe that this is the largest number of decorations which have been awrarded to a Belmar resident. Col. Watson entered the army as a Captain of Engineers and after spec- ializing in gas -warfare was assigned to the gas regiment in which he be- came successively Major and Lieu- tenant Colonel commanding. He was then promoted to Assistant Chief of Staff of the First Division and later to Assistant Chief of Staff of third army under Lieut. Hunter Leggett. The Advertiser stands for best interests of Belmar. the

The “Advertiser” Stands for the Best Interests of Belmar · The “Advertiser” Stands for the Best Interests of Belmar goo0a-CH3-CHJ

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Public L ib rary 15july iK

The “Advertiser” Stands for the Best Interests of Belmargoo<KKH>0<H3onoeH3oa<H5oiHj

B O T HJ<>-'>G'0OOK30-0Kj7CH>a-CH3-CHJ<HKHa

Ic Q a aif

VOL. XVin. No- 5 BELMAR, N. J„ FRIDAY, JANUARY 30, 1920 Single Copy Three Cents

Belmar Post is to Stage Minstrel Show

EDGAR B. SCHMIDT IS COACHING PERFORM ERS

W ill be Best E n te rta inm ent of Its K ind E ver Staged in This Section— W ell-know n Soloisfa to T ake P a r t

The advance sale of tickets fo r a m instre l show to be staged in the P ublic school auditorium T hursday night. F eb ruary 5, by H erbert-W orth- ington-W hite A m erican Legion Post o f Belmar ind icates th a t the affair w ill b e largely attended.

R ehearsals fo r the en terta inm ent have been in p rogress fo r some tim e u n d e r the d irec tion—of E d g ar B. Schm idt,w ho has h ad considerable experience in coaching fo r am ateur m instre ls and w hen the cu rta in is rung up nex t T hu rsday evening the re w ill be a genuine tre a t fo r the public. T hose w ho have had the privilege of being at the rehearsals declare th a t it w ill be the best affair of its kind ever p resen ted in th is section, bo th

BOY’S FALL PROVES FATAL

H enry Vogt Dies of Concussion of The Brain.

H enry Vogt, aged seven years d ied ea rly la s t F rid a y m orning at the hom e of h is paren ts, Mr. and Mrs. A nthony Vogt, 602 Seventh avenue, o f concussion of th e b rain resu lting from a fall received in his class room in the Public school bu ild ­ing the previous W ednesday. He fell s trik ing h is head on th e iron support of h is desk.

L ittle w as thought of the accident at the time, and w hen the boy said he w as not badly h u r t the teacher allow ed him to rem ain a t school. L ater in the day he com plained of pains in the head, bu t in the evening he told h is p aren ts he w as feeling all rig h t again.

W hen the lad becam e unconscious T hursday m orning Mrs. Vogt sum ­m oned D r. T rou t of Spring Lake, w hose efforts to revive h im proved futile and he died a t 3 o’clock w ith ­out regaining consciousness.

The funeral w as M onday m orn­in g from St. Rose’s church, Rev. W. J. McConnell officiating. Burial w as in St. C atherine cem etery, Sea

DEATH OF FRANK G. LIGHT

in the offerings and stage settings. .M any of the perfo rm ers have m ore! Girt, in charge of U ndertaker T. H. than a local reputation as entertain-1 Bennett, ers and soloists and in fact, m ight b reak in to the professional class if ' they chose to do so. i

The show w ill consist of the old- W ord w as received in Belm ar Sun­tim e m in s tre r circle w ith its in te r -1 day ° f th e death of F rank Gordon loc to r and black-faced end m en w ho ■ Light. I t is supposed tha t the young have been loading up w ith a w ealth 1nian died at San Angeloe, Texas, of original jokes and sto ries and j w here he had gone fo r the benefit th e re w ill be solos and duets by some his health . D eath w as due to a of the best ta len t in th is section. In com plication of diseases, the circ le D onald S terner w ill act as Light w as the son of Mrs.in te rlo c to r and the end m en w ill be ^ ran ^ D unn o f Salt Lake City, U tah, Jerem iah Bearm ore, Oakley LaVance ?n< w as m a rried last June to Miss E dgar B. Schm idt and H arry C o o p er: Fm m a Van N ote of Belmar. A fter (Snagde.) The m usicians w ill be the ir m arriage they w en t to Camp K enneth Conover. Gerald Cushman, i D ix f0 reside w here Mr. Light w as Lester Lefferson, H ow ard B earford general superin tenden t of the W ood and A ndrew Vola. ! and Cox com m issary departm ent.* T h e soloists w ill be Miss D orothy j m U e there h e w as taken ill and last W ilson, Viola M, E w art, H ow ard fal( he and Mrs; LiSh t w en t }° 0 k h l' Bearford, A ndrew Vola, Alfred Armes hom a hoping his hea lth m ight im-

Starving People Eat Human Flesh

1000 PERSONS DYING DAILY OF PEOPLE SHOULD BE CAREFUL STARVATION, MOSTLY CHILDREN j NOT TO CONTRACT THE DISEASE

Only Few Cases of Influenza Here

INLET TERRACE—UNION SHOP

Belm ar C hurch People and O thers Symptoms of the Disease and Pre. Have O pportunity to Give Food to ventatives Absolute the H ungry and Clothing to the Naked.

T he cam paign fo r m ore funds for relief of the stricken people of Ar­m enia and Syria (N ear E ast) has again begun in A m erica and Belm ar is becom ing in te rested in the m atter.N ever before, w ith all our w ar-g iv­ing, have w e had an opportun ity to contribute to a cause th a t touches | contracting the disease and the fol-the h e a r t m ore deeply. About all {lowing advice is given:w e have to w o rry abput in Belm ar is Influenza is spread by droplets,

The A dvertiser is in rece ip t of the follow ing le tte r from P au l T. Zizinia, P residen t of In le t T errace Company, also copies of le tte rs in w hich the attitude of Mr. Z izinia tow ard Union labor is made plain,

i Jan u ary 28, 1920! E d ito rs of the Coast A dvertiser,! Belmar, New Jersey.

Q uietness i D ear S irs:—E ssential F . r Those in W ith i . ! I T ttS * M e l

j T errace Com pany tow ards Unionn „ ,.. j L abor and accordingly, I w ould ap-On y vio or three cases of influ- p recj at e jf y O U wTouId k indly publish

enza have been repo rted in Belm ar the follow ing correspondence, and it is hoped th a t the borough) Thanking you fo r you r k ind court- m ay escape w ithout such as prevailed w hen the disease

Belmar Legion Adopts

NAME SELECTED IS HERBERT- WORTHINGTON-W HITE POST

an epidem ic esy> I rem ain.Yours very tru ly ,

spread th roughout the coun try a year ago. I t is w ell, how ever, for

In le t T errace Company, p e r Paul T. Zizinia,

P residen t

Com mem orates , Nam es of T hree Belm ar Men W ho Lost TheiT Lives in Service

the high cost of everything and w h eth er or not w e can buy a pound of sugar th is w eek, b u t w e get enough to eat alright. H igh prices do not w o rry those starv ing babies over there. T here is no th ing to buy we m ust send the supplies of food and clo th ing over o r thousands and tens of thousands of C hristian people will perish. Special offerings w ill be re ­

sprayed from the nose or th ro a t of, and by contact w ith, affected persons

To prevent contracting influenza cover each cough and sneeze w ith handkerchief.

Avoid contact w ith persons w ho are coughing or sneezing.

Avoid crow ds.If possible, w alk to w ork.Do not spit on th e floor o r side-

L ester K ruzer, H aro ld Hoffman, Ar­th u r B irdsall and Stanley Height:

T hose w ho w ill participa te in the

prove.Mrs. L ight is w ell-know n here and

she has the sym pathy of a w idechorus* arc : Roy Bloodgood, W illiam c rc le ° f friends. It is expected that Robinson, E dgar Benton, G ilbert *sh e " i l l re tu rn to the hom e of her Buckhorn, Jam es Eggiman. A lbert Parents, Mr. and Mrs. Rean Van Note,Gifford, Charles M easure. Lee Abbott, A lbert Rearm ore, Jay Pridham . Lind- ley M orris, B arney B ernstein and Russell H ardy.

'Hie program of solos is announced as follow s: “M andy,” A lfred Arm es; “ If W ar’s W hat Sherm an Said it W as,” Jerem iah B earm ore; “C aro­line Sunshine,” L ester K ruzer;‘Sweet Kisses,” Viola M. E w art;

F ifth avenue, afte r a few weeks.

FUNERAL OF MRS. THEO. ALGOR

F unera l services for Mrs. Theodore Algor, w ho died suddenly T hursday w ere held at h e r late hom e Monday m orning at 8.30, follow ed by a re ­quiem m ass in St. Rose’s Catholic church at 9.30. Rev. W. J. McCon-

“You K now W hat I Mean.” H ow ard nel] officiated. In te rm en t in charge B earford; “My W ild Irish Rose,” of U ndertaker H ardy of Belm ar w asLester K ruzer; “Mammy’s Lullaby,” D orothy W ilson; “Blues,” Oakley LaVance; “Lord Have M ercy on M arried Men,” E dgar B. Schmidt. The solos by A rthur M. B irdsall and Stanley H eight have not yet been selected bu t those w ho have heard these singers know th a t they w ill be of a h igh order.

in St. C atherine cem etery. Sea Girt.

DEATH OF BAY HEAD WOMAN

Mrs. Susan E. Clayton, w ife of John H. Clayton of Bay Head, died F rid ay evening of carcosmo.

F uneral services w ere held Tues­day afternoon at 1 o’clock from h er

A duet, “Because You’re You,” w ill la te residenct and at the F irs t M. E. be sung by D orothy W ilson and C hurch, W est P o in t P leasant, a t 2H arold Hoffman, and the en tire com­pany w ill sing “Jingle Jing le ,1 H appy Days”, and “Mascot of the Com pany”

T he com m ittee having the affair in charge consists of H arold Hoff­m an, Lester K ruzer and H ow ard Bearford,

PREPARING FOR AUTO SHOW

O. H. N ew m an, a Belm ar au to ­m obile dealer, w as elected a m em ber of the Automobile D ealers’ Association held at Long B ranch M onday night.

At th is m eeting draw ings took place fo r positions a t an exhib it to be held in A sbury P a rk M arch 13T:o 20 .

Sixty passenger ca rs w ill be on ex­hibition on the Casino floor w hile at th e Arcade th e re w ill be an exhibit of 40 m otor trucks.

LYON BOTTA STUDIO—F ancy dancing, in te rp re tive . N ational classic step and toe dancing; latest social dancing and physical develop­m ent; elocution and d ram atic a r t; graded classes and private lessons in all b ranches for adult? and ch ild ren ; afternoon, 2 to 6 ; m ornings and evenings by appointm ent. 714 Cookm an avenue. Telephone As- fiury P a rk 1727. Mondays. Gray room, Hotel M arie A ntoinette, N ew York City.—Adv.

T he A dvertiser office is fully equipped to do fine book and com­m erc ia l p rin tin g of all k inds. /

o’clock. T he funeral w as in charge of U ndertaker H ardy of Belmar.

BOLD DAYLIGHT ROBBERY

At Red Bank last Saturday m o rn ­ing th ree arm ed m en held up four m en re tu rn in g from the local banks in a F o rd car w ith the payro ll for the Sigm und E isn e r com pany and m ade off w ith n early $20 ,000 .

T he job w as done by V ictor Bruno of Rum son, C harles C asper of New M onmouth and F ra n k G rano, all young Ita lians w ho w ere em ployed in the E isner factory .

The robbery occurred w ith in tw enty-five feet of the m ain office of th e com pany, w here th e robbfirs stepped into the road w ith leveled revolvers and o rdered the d riv e r to stop. The ca r w as o rdered turned around and afte r being driven a m ile and a ha lf from Red Bank the E isner em ployes w ere o rdered out and the robbers continued w ith the ca r to ­w ard M iddletown.

B runo and Casper w ere captured at P e rth Amboy Saturday afternoon as they w ere about to board a fe rry and about §16,000 of the stolen m on­ey w as found in th e ir su it cases.

G rano w as caught in P hiladelph ia Sunday.

cause. America is the only country doing anyth ing for these people and it m eans th a t we face the program of opportunity .

Do you know th a t in this tim e of peace and p rosperity in our country, the re are across the seas in the N ear E ast over 1000 persons dying daib of sta rva tion ; tha t these are m ostly ch ild ren w hose paren ts have been killed by the T urk?

These children are so hungry tha t w hen an anim al falls dead of sta rva­tion in the streets, th ey run out and strip the flesh from the hotly of ihe anim al and devour it raw .

everone to take precau tions against M onmouth Co.Build’gT rades CouncilIn affiliation w ith

Building T rades D epartm ent A m erican F ederation of L abor

January 26, 1920Mr. Paul Zizinia,

Belmar. New Jersey.D ear S ir:—

It has been .reported to th is Council that you w ill not em ploy Union Laborers.

If th is is the case w ill you please sta te your reasons fo r not em ploying Union Laborers.

This Council w ill be only to glad to take up apy m a tte r or trouble you have had w ith Union Labor, as ft is the purpose of this Council to give the Em ployer and the Em ployee a square deal so far as lays In its pow er.

If you have any grievance th is is the p ro p er place to p resen t the same.

Respectfully,G. Cushman.

Rec. Sec’y In let T errace Com pany

Belmar, N ew JerseyJan u ary 27, 1920

Mr. G. Cushman. Rec. Sec’y. Monmouth Co. Building T rades

Council,702-6th Ave., Belm ar, New Jersey

D ear S ir:— ,Your very courteous com m unica­

tion of the 26th inst. received and contents noted.

You have been absolutely m isin­form ed in the prem ises—probab ly by two laborers, fo rm erly good w orkers, v-’ho began lo spend m ore tim e talk-

ceived a t the Baptist church n e x t, walk.Sunday for th is cause, and fo r a few j Do not use common drink ing cups days contribu tions of m oney m ay be | and common towels, m ade through the A dvertiser to this; Avoid excessive fatigue.

If taken ill. go to bed and send for doctor.

At the tim e of the outbreak in 1918 Dr. J. W. H assler of Belm ar p resc rib ­ed the follow ing p reventative:

U ratropia, five grains, th ree times a day and cam phor ca rried about your person. Masks should be w orn in the rooms of the sick, the masks to be sa turated w ith carbolic acid solution.

Caution to the sick—do not get out of bed for at least tw o o r th ree days afte r you r tem peratu re is no r­mal. . U nder no circum stance get ;'n(, <*un ion

At a m eeting of the Belm ar post of the A m erican Legion held last w eek in the le c tu rt room of th e P ub lic L ib rary final action w as taken on a nam e for the post The nam.e “L ib­e rty ” h a d been prev iously chosen but afte r num erous exchanging of com m unications w ith the state head­quarters , it w as found that ano ther post in New Jersey already h ad th a t nam e so tha t Belm ar w ould be com ­pelled to change its nam e. “The H erbert-W orthington-W hite P ost”w as the nam e finally adopted.

The nam e com m em orates those of th ree men from Belm ar and im ­m ediate v icin ity w ho lost th e ir lives ii' service—Raym ond H erbert w ho died at F o rt Leavenw orth, Kan., O ctober 23, 1918; R obert W orthing­ton and Stephen W hite, bo th of whom w ere k illed in action in Oc­tober, 1918.

T here w ere a few o thers from Bel- p ja r w ho died in service bu t w ho w ere only tem porary or sum m er residents here. To them equal hon­or is due bu t the th ree m en for w hom the post w as nam ed w ere born and grew to m anhood in Bel­m ar, so th e ir nam es w ere selected

hunger-crazed people and one of tlie! In getting QUt of bed {he patien tw orkers the o ther day sav, a little g irl cracking som ething betw een stones. He stooped to exam ine w hat she had and found it was a none.

runs the Chance of con tracting pneu­m onia or m eningitis.

Owing to the ou tbreak of the disease and because of the looseness

He asked w here she had gotten it w j{jj w hich the term influenza hasand she hung h er head w h ile the little boy standing beside h e r ans w ered—“From yonder in the grave­yard .”

T he only organization fo r assist­ing these poor little ch ild ren is the N ear E ast Relief Committee w7hich is caring for thousands of them. H owever, they have n e ither enough w orkers o r enough m oney to meet the p resen t dem ands.

Dr. W hite, one of the w orkers re ­cently cabled to the effect th a t 2000 orphans appeared before him to be taken in to one of our orphanages and th a t he only had a t the maximum, accom m odations for 400. He said “The hardest task of m y life con­fron ted me. I had to pick out 400 from the 2000 and tu rn aw ay the o ther 1600 w h ich I knew m eant th a t I w as condem ning 1600 little ch ild ­ren to death. If the k ind people of America only knew the tru th about A rm enia and the N ear East, they w ould give so liberally th a t from now on every little hungry ch ild in these w ar devastated lands w ould re ­ceive a w arm m eal and would have its life saved.”

„ , , , . . , i ing “U nion” than doing the w ork for„ . . . . „ , , of bed during you r sickness. | w h ich they w ere paid, hence theyHum an liesii is beinQ ea.en t>\ ln - 1 Have the necessary bed pans. etc. j w ere dropped—as w ill every o ther

m an w ho fails to render an honest day’s w ork.

A lthough a large em ployer of labor bo th skilled and unskilled, m y sym ­path ies a re and alw ays have been w holly w ith the w orker—the man w ho produces, and I have alw ays been m ore than anxious to see to it th a t the honest w o rk er received all th a t w as com ing to him .

On our bu ild ing w e aim to em ploy U nion m echanics only and always p ay the full U nion scale. I have re ­cently given orders to all Sub-Con­trac to rs th a t non-U nion m echanic m ust e ither join his p roper Union or qu it the job.

O ur unskilled labor, w e have al­w ays paid a little m ore than the p re­vailing local wage. W hen I have a job to do I w an t to get it done, and find it cheaper to pay the h igher w age to get the good m en and finish the job.

W ith regard to the new Union in B elm ar of unskilled laborers, because of th e m igra to ry ch a rac ter of such labor, I am a little doubtful if i t w ill be a com plete success. H ow ever, I am m ore than w illing to lend every co-operation to the Belm ar boys to give th e ir effort a fa ir tria l and w h e th e r th e ir U nion be a success or not, they m ay rest assured th a t the honest w o rk er w ill alw ays receive m ore than a Square Deal on every one of m y jobs.

If an57one th inks he is not being treated right, a com plaint d irec t to m e w ill rec tify any w rong.

Instead of being opposed to Union Labor, I am w holly in favor of same.

T hanking you for b ring ing this

AN ICY TIME

been used, and the difficulty w hich sometim es arises in m aking a diag­nosis, the follow ing descrip tion of the sym tom atology of the disease, prepared by the U nited States Public H ealth Service w ill be of in te rest:

“The sym ptom s are an acute onset, often very sudden, w ith bodily w eak­ness and pains in the head. eyes, back and elsew here in the body. Vomiting m ay be a sym ptom of on­set and dizziness is frequent. Chilly sensations are usual, and the tem ­pera tu re is from 100 degrees to 104 degrees, the pu lse rem aining com­paratively low. Sw eating is not in ­frequent. The appetite is lost, and p rostra tion is m arked. Constipation is the rule. D row siness and pho to ­phobia are coiqmon. The conjunc­tive are reddened, and the mucous m em brane of the nose, th roa t and bronchi often give evidence of in ­flam mation. The general sym ptom s, how ever, predom inate over the local. Cervical and general lym phadenitis and nystagm us are frequently re ­ported . C haracteristically , th e re isj

AAVARDS FOR BIRD HOUSES

Avon Boys are Given P rizes for T heir lian a iw o rk

no leucocytosis dn rin g the heighfh of m atter to m y personal attention, Iremain,

Yours very tru ly ,In le t T errace Com pany

p e r Paul T. Zizinia P residen t

P. S. In o rder to p reven t a w rong im pression from spreading, I shall ask the “Coast A dvertiser” to publish th is correspondence. P.T.Z. --

BELMAR SCHOOL BOYS WIN

A nticipate your needs of sum m er p rin tin g now and let us quote you prices.

fever, so that a h igh w h ite countduring the first 60 hours is ind icative of another d isease or of com plication T he fever u sually lasts from three

Snow , rain and sleet com bined in to five <jayS) but relapses are not un­m aking Belm ar streets the first o f |CommolI) an(j com plications, partic- the w eek the slipperiest in years. ui ariy pulm onary, are to be feared.T uesday a coating of ice covered The incubation period is usuallyevery vestige of earth and pedestri-1 shortj from tw o to four days. Theans had to use the greatest o f pre- j cause o f influenza is not certain lycaution to keep from falling, even know n.W hile the w eig lith of evidence Belm ar gramm ar school team dein the m iddle of the streets. T o w a rd :p o in ts, to P heiffers’ bacillu s, y e t f e a te d B radley Park basketball fivenoon the w ind sh ifted to the south ■ strep tococci( pneum ococci and other Saturday in a game. T lie score w asand the sun shone brigh tly so ften -! organism s are frequently associated j 1 9 to 17. T h e team s w ere even lying the ice so that property ow ners w ith this dfsease. It seem s certain, j m atched and the contest w as closew ere able to clean their sidew alks how ever. that the causative agent i s | lip until the last m inutes of play.and W ednesday alm ost all w alk s in dissem inated chiefly in the d ischarg- l ineup:the borough w ere bare. es g f the throat and nose o f infected! Belmar

O ld-tim e residents say that snow j ind ividuals. P rophylactic m easures I FIdG. Fl.G. Pts.has stayed on the ground for a longer si1 0 Uid, therefore, b e directed tow ard , S ilverstein , f ..................... 0 0 0period than for m any years. inreventing these in fectious secre- U’rving, f ........................... 2 0 4

I . , . . .. B row n, c ......................... a «-------------------- tions from reaching the mucou* \] .,rHn <? 2 1 5

CONTRACT FOR AVON HOUSE !m em branes o f other persons.” I c a s td * . f i" . '" .* " " - - ' 1 0 2

Robbins, C layton and S tew art, A sbury P ark contractors, have been aw arded a con tract fo r a $6,000 cot­tage in W ashington avenue, Avon fo r H. M. D ecker of N ew ark, w ho

LARGE STORAGE HOUSE BURNED8 3 19

Bradley P arkFIdG. Fl.G. Pts

Jacob Z. Stiles at 47 Corlies avenue, w ill m ake it his sum m er home. T h e ; W est Grove, w ere destroyed by fire

J M atthew, f ....................... §The large storage w arehouses of w h ite , f ................................ 1

Moore, c ............................ 1Bound, g ............................ 0

sam e contractors have just com pleted early last F rid ay m orning, ano ther cottage on the sam e avenue, j loss w as about 5100,000.

The Magill, g> ......................... 2

82205

17

In the M ethodist church, Avon, last w eek T hursday niglit prizes w ere aw arded to boys of the borough fo r build ing b ird houses. The first p rize w en t to L. C. H ibberd, o rig ina to r of th e contest, and second p rize to W alter Clayton. O ther prize w in ­ners w ere : F rancis Reid, Thom as Gagan, F red H ansen, H arold M arten and George LaVance in the first p rize contest. In the second p rize contest the fo rtunate w inners w ere W alter Clayton, D avid Cole, M artin H art and T heodore Sofield.

There w ere exercises attending the aw ard ing of prizes.

Follow ing p ray e r by Rev. S. J. A r­thur, P asto r of the Avon B aptist church, and an address by Rev. T. R. Taylor, the m eeting w as presided over by W alter Clayton and a m usi­cal p rogram given by Miss Jose­ph ine K ingsley of A sbury P ark , and solos and ducats by Louis N orris and Stanley Dolan. An address by Dr. F . A ngeny w as ano ther fea tu re of the evening^

Mr. H ibberd has offered prizes fo r a contest am ong the girls of the borough, the n a tu re of w hich w ill be announced later.

RECEIVES MANY HONORS

Col. Geo. W atson Received Seven D ecorations W hile in Service

In a recen t in te rv iew of M ajor W. B. Bam ford of B elm ar w ith Col. George W. W atson, a sum m er resi­dent of B elm ar w ho is know n to cu r read er from th e m any le tte rs from him w hich have been publish­ed giving h is experiences at the front, he very m odestly consented to enum­era te the seven decorations w hich have been aw arded to him :

1. D istinguished service cross, 2. B ritish M ilitary cross; 3, Officer of the Legion d ’honneur, F rance ; 4, Croix de Guerre, F rance, w ith tw o palm s and one gold s ta r; 5 Com­m ander, O rder of Crow n, Belgic; 6 . Officer, O rder of Leopold, Belgic; 7, Croix de Guerre, Belgic.

W e believe th a t th is is the largest num ber of decorations w hich have been awrarded to a Belm ar resident. Col. W atson en tered the arm y as a Captain of E ngineers and afte r spec­ializing in gas -warfare w as assigned to the gas regim ent in w hich he be­came successively M ajor and Lieu­tenan t Colonel com manding. He w as then prom oted to A ssistant Chief of Staff of the F irs t Division and la te r to A ssistant Chief of Staff of th ird arm y under Lieut. H un ter Leggett.

T he A dvertiser stands fo r best in te rests of Belmar.

the

PAGE TWO THE COAST ADVERTISER, BELMAR, N. J. FRIDAY, JANUARY 30, 1820

UNIQUE CEMETERY TEACHES LESSON

Exhibit at Montana State Fair Sent People Away

Thinking.

EPITAPHS DRIVE HOME TRUTHGreater Convenience and a Larger

Measure of Comfort in the Farm Home the Big Lesson Conveyed

by Miniature Graveyard.

Washington.—It was a neat little country cemetery, much like most lit­tle country cemeteries, yet there was

-som ething queer about it. There was the arched gateway and the customary weeping willows by it. The clipped hedge was like most cemetery hedges. The tombstones were about the aver­age run of tombstones. But. withal, there was something queer—even shocking. Then you discovered what It was. These were truthful tomb­stones. Consoling platitudes—“Too pure for earth," and that like—found no place. Instead, there were such epitaphs as th ese : “Mother—walked to death in her kitchen;” “Sacred to the memory of Jane— she scrubbed herself into e t e r n i t y “Grandma— washed herself aw ay;” “Susie—swept out of life with too heavy a broom."

Made People Think.The people' who saw that cemetery

—and there were thousands of them— may have been shocked for the Instant, but they came away with the thought that one might be better for seeing such a cemetery. For, you see, it was a miniature cemetery, three feet square, and it was part of an exhibit at the Montana state fair. Such levity with the most solemn thing that man­kind knows could not be justified merely on the theory that the things said were true— but those who saw it came away with the belief that it was justified by way of keeping just those tilings from being true. And that was the purpose of the exhibit, placed there by the agricultural extension de­partment of the State Agricultural col lege of Montana. It was meant to em- phns:;:<* ilie need for home conveni­ences. for lack of which many a farm woman has gone to her grave before her time.

Drive Truth Home.There were other exhibits designed

to drive home the same hard truth. One was a model showing a bleak farmhouse on a bare hill. At the bot­tom of the hill ran a little stream, and by the stream were barns and cattle. Struggling up the hill toward the house with two heavy pails of water was a bent old woman. And the legend w a s: “Convenient for the cattle— but not for mother.” Then there was a farmhouse with the water supply as it should be, the woman in the yard sprinkling her flower beds with a hose. And the in­scription read : “Convenient for moth­er—and the cattle, too.” Another model showed a kitchen as it should be, and another, a kitchen as it should not be. And there was the legend: “A long-distance kitchen shortens life.”

The lesson taught by the exhibit is one that the state agricultural colleges and the United States department of agriculture are trying to teach by every means at their command—great­er convenience and a larger measure of comfort in the farm home.

PROFIT IN MINTING BUSINESS

Demand for Small Coins Brings in Good Returns for Uncle

Sam.

Washington.—The minting business is a profitable one to be in, according to the annual report of Ray Baker, director of the United States mint, made public by the treasury depart­ment. During the 1919 fiscal year, the report shows, the government made $8,- 869,971 on its minting operations. Of this amount’ $4,136,700 was made through the manufacture of nickel and bronze coins.

Never before in the history of the country has the demand for small coins been as large as ft was during the last fiscal year. Pennies minted alone total 466,889,600, or about 3,- 200,000 pounds.

The melting of silver dollars into bullion also was one of the largest operations of the year. More than 191,000,000 silver dollars were con­verted Into bullion during the year. United States mints also made coins for many other countries.

Coal Car Rams IntoMan as Ha Is Bathing

Bay City, Mich.—Telford E. Hill, manager of the Mueller Chicory company’s plant, was taking a bath in his home ad­joining the plant when a freight car crashed through the house and against the wall of the bath­room. The wall fell, and a coal car came in view.

There had been two cars stand­ing on the short switch. When the train crew attempted to place more cars there they evi­dently forgot about them, and the cars were sent through the bumper right into Mr. H ill’s bathroom.

1919 Fashions Harmful Says Woman of 100

New fork.—Catherine Tibball. who celebrated her one hun­dredth birthday a few days ago at 964 Lafayette avenue, Brook­lyn, does not see longevity for any woman who follows the max­ims of dress approved by Dr. Royal S. Copeland, health com­missioner. Her daughter-in-law, Mrs. Thomas Tibball, said :

“My mother-in-law and I are entirely against fashions of dress for women. I never wore any­thing but the simplest kind of stays, and neither did she."

The centenarian was told about Doctor Copeland’s state­ment that women can wear silk stockings, high-heeled shoes, tight corsets and low-neek gowns with benefit rather than harm.

“I have never painted or pow­dered my face,” she said. “I never wore high-heeled shoes 01 low-neck gowns, yet I have lived to be a hundred years old and expect to celebrate another birthday next year. Woman’s fashions today are more than bad; they are harmful."

EASY LIFE FOR SILVER FOXES

Farmers in Canada Treat Valued Pets Like Little Aristo­

crats.

Regina, Canada.—Silver foxes on a ranch near here are epicureans and live on the fa: of the land. This need not be wondered at, for silver foxes liter­ally are worth their weight in gold.

The little aristocrats are fed as ex­pensively as guests in the best hotels. The meat served them is kept in a per­fectly regulated refrigerator. It con­sists of the choicest cuts of tenderloin steaks and pork chops, with a little horse meat added by way of variety. The foxes have shredded wheat pre­pared as carefully as It might be for some wealthy and querulous invalid. Other breakfast foods, cereals and veg­etables pamper the appetites of the lit­tle beasts.

The ranch is tightly fenced in with wire eight feet high and sunk in the ground several feet. The fox houses are constructed on hygienic plans. They are kept scrupulously clean.

The success of this fox ranch and of several others near Winnipeg has dem- onstated that the prairie provinces are as well adapted to breeding silver foxes as Prioce Edward island, the world’s center of tlie industry.

One rancher started two years ago with two pairs. He now has 56 ani­mals. He has sold $16,000 worth of pelts. A silver fox pelt brings from $200 to $2,500. Two-year-old animals sell at $400 to $2,000. He sold eight- months-old pups this year at public auction at $900 apiece. His breeding stock Is valued at close to $100,000.

MODEL’S ROMANCE WRECKED

Married Life Is Series of Revelation- to Pretty Mrs. Irene Cath­

erine Price.

New York.—Married life to Mrs. Irene Catherine Price, a young and pretty artists’ model, has been a series of revelations.

First, she discovered, she said, that her husband was not wealthy, as be had represented himself to be, then, that he was exceedingly jealous, and, lastly, after living with him for four years, that he was a criminal.

Mrs. Price is seeking an annulment of her marriage to Richard F. Price on the grounds of fraud. Price, It is alleged is serving a three years’ sen­tence in Atlanta, Ga., for using the mails to defraud.

Mrs. Price was only seventeen ana just out of a convent when she met Price while visiting her aunt in this city. He became very attentive, gave jew els to her, and a marriage cere­mony soon followed.

Then tlie revelations began. One by one her jew els disappeared. Price did not have the income he hat} boast­ed of, she said, and the presents he had bestowed upon her had to be dis­posed of that they might live.

Mrs. Price said she believed in the Innocence of her husband up to the very last minute. His pleading guilty to a charge that he had defrauded a Chicago woman out o f $14,000 was a complete surprise.

AMERICANS AID SICK GERMANS

200 Tubercular Children to Recuperate on Methodists' Donation to

Red Cross.

Berlin.—Two hundred tubercular children from German cities will be ! permitted to pass three months in the Black forest of southwestern Germany this winter to recuperate their health as a result of the donation by American Methodists to the German Rod Cross.

Bishop William Burl of Buffalo, N. : Y., member of a commission represent­ing the Methodist war reconstruction board, tendered a check to the Ger- j man relief organization mnlcing avail, able 200,000 marks ($40,000) for the work among German ifhildren.

Catch Two-Legged Whale.Victoria, B. C —A female humpback

whale having two hind legs 50 inche3 in length has been caught at tlie^lvyu- got whaling station. Manager Ruck of the Consolidated Whaling company says that In his 20 years of whaling experience he has never heard of whales having legs on the exterior.

0UND THE WORLD WITH AMERICAN RED CROSS. %

In the A rctic Circle.

m m ■ m a w ■ i JI v p ■ . p . ■ j p P ■

When You Buy Poultry Feeds ®D o n ’t make it guess-work. Y ou can elim inate the risk

by our iron-clad guarantee. T h e m oney paid for Purina Chicken C how der will be refunded if hens, w h en fed Purina Chicken C h o w d e r w ith P u r in a S c ra tc h F eed—the perfect balance for laying hens—as directed, do not lay m ore

Wherever American soldiers went during the war and after, tnere also went the American Red Cross. This policy carried Red Cross workers to far corners of the globe and here they are seen near the rim of everlasting ice and snow in North Russia. Automobiles were used whenever possible but on many journeys the reindeer pictured here proved most effective.

■ THE ■ KITCHEN CABINET

SOLDIERS LIKED THE PRINCE

M an y tim es—tn ta c t , in v a r ia b ly —the j m e n ta l a t t i tu d e w e ta k e to w a rd a n y - j th in g o f a n u n fr ie n d ly n a tu r e t h a t e n ­te r s o u r liv e s d e te rm in e s i ts a c tu a l i e f fe c t u p o n u s .—T rin e .

A FEW CREAM SOUPS.

A cream soup is sufficiently nour­ishing to serve as the main dish at

a luncheon. One of the most com­mon is potato, but the following is not common.

Cream of Pota- t o.—B o i l t e nl a r g e potatoes

and mash with a cupful of cream ; season with salt and grated onion. Blend together two tablespoonfuls each of flour and butter; add two cup­fu ls o f cold milk and cook until thick, stirring constantly. Add four cupfuls of boiling veal stock, the mashed po­tato, and bring to boil. Serve at once.

Veal and Celery Soup.—Cut up three pounds of v e a l: break the bones; cov­er with four quarts of cold water and simmer for four hours; strain and return to the lire. Add two bunches of celery, and two chopped onions; simmer until the vegetables are done. Press through a fine sieve; thicken with two tablespoonfuls of corn­starch mixed with two cupfuls of m ilk; add two tablespoonfuls of but­ter in small b it s ; reheat and serve with dice of fried bread.

Cream Veal Soup.—Chop ,fine three pounds of lean veal and one large onion. Cover with two quarts of cold water; simmer three hours; strain, cool and skim. Thicken with two ta­blespoonfuls of flour blended with a little cold milk beaten with three eggs and two cupfuls of milk. Season with salt, pepper, minced parsley, and a grating of nutmeg.

Egg Soup.—Butter six slices of stale bread; sprinkle with sugar and brown in the oven. Reheat two cupfuls of veal stock and two cupfuls of milk beaten with the yolks of three eggs. Add a tablespoonful of butter; sea­son with salt, pepper, minced parsley, and a grating of nutmeg. Pour over the toast; cover for ten minutes and eerve.

Sweetbread Soup. — Reheat one quart of veal stock and add two cup­fuls of cream which has been beaten with the yolks of two eggs. Take from the fire, season to taste, and add one cupful of parboiled sweet­breads cut in bits. Garnish with one cupful of whipped cream and a bit of minced parsley.

" H iJL L t-c yYL^urdrfLNaturally.

“W eren’t you once a hnnd-reader?”“Yes, those were my palmy days.”—

Baltimore American.

Heir to British Throne Fond of Min­gling With the Fighters, When

He Was Permitted.

In the front lines a Canadian soldier was building a fire one cold night of late autumn. Out of the night behind him came a footstep. He turned, and became doubly alert when be saw that the man was not an officer of bis regi­ment. The visitor approached the blaze, held his iiands out over it and sa id :

“This , fire certainly looks good to me."

The tone was pleasant enough, and suspicion was almost unarmed when the voice went o n :

“Have you wood enough? if you haven't I'll get you some more.”

The fire builder felt some regret that any suspicion whatever remained, but there had been a special warning against strangers not of one’s own regiment. In Response to it he was about to question the newcomer close­ly, when an officer whom he did know came within the firelit circle and ad­dressed the stranger:

“Your royal highness, it is best that yon return to the automobile at once.”

And the prince of Wales reluctantly left the lire and returned to the place where he officially belonged. It was not the first time he had left that place of his own accord and gone forward among the men. The Canadian who tells the story learned afterward that the prince’s staff had its hands full to keep him from breaking away from the official circle prescribed for him and mingling with the men on their own ground.

MUST HAVE ENVIED COMRADES

Rather Vague.“I have a fine setter at home.” “Irish, English, Gordon or Plymouth

Rock?”

Pathetic Happening in English Court That Marked the Observance

of Armistice Day.

The great clocks of Loudon boomed out eleven strokes. The city became as silent as though it were a second Pompeii miraculously swept clean of its ashes. Motor cars and tram cars creaked to sudden stops. Policemen stood like graven blue images at their posts. Pedestrians doffed their hats and stood as though they had not known motion for centuries. It was Armistice day and the city was doing honor to those youths who had expe­rienced the Great Adventure.

In a dingy courtroom a murder trial came to a sudden halt. Judge, counsel, witnesses and the prisoner stood, aud for two minutes, with bowed head, did silent reverence to those poppy- wreathed graves of France. Before the prisoner flickered visions of that same France only one year before. He again saw the faces of comrades he had loved and whom he had watched in the throes of death. Incidents of that last des­perate sprint across No Man’s Land, with death on every side, came back to him. Again he heard the shout with which the trenches had greeted the armistice. Ho had come safely through, and now—

The two minutes ended. The city came out of its trance. The somber voice of the judge resumed—“and shall hang by the neck until dead.”

eggs than w hen fed w ith sny otherration.

M ost hens get too m uch grain, a large part of w hich goes into surplus yolks,, which the hen absorbs. T h is makes the hen too fat and cuts down egg production. 1 0 0 lbs. of wheat, corn , oats and barley contain elem ents fo r 224 yolks, but only 154 w hites. T h e feed o f a laying hen shou ld supply elements for both whites and yolks in eq u a l quantity. Purina rations are rightly balanced. Based on Experi­m e n t S ta t io n te s ts ,Purina Feeds contain the following:

Elamsnts fcr Yolks Whites Purina Scratch F:cj 247.49 142.11 Purina Ohlckcn Cfccvider 132.05 2S2.35

Combined Ration 429.54 424.66

Note the larger number tfcl and almost equal propor­

tion of whites and yolks in

■ the Purina balanced ration.Purina feeds are scien-

pftjj tifically mixed and insureresults. In Checkerboard Bag.

SCU-D B Y

Sterner Coal and Lumber Co.Twelfth Ave. and R. R. Belmar, N. J.

m

m

Our Ice Cream is Pure, Clean and Cool—Plain and Dainty Mixture—but the high standard of quality is always the same.

WHOLESALE-BIU£K>> RETAIL

special Prices to £ Qdges and Churches

W . H. SA N BO R N807 F Street Belmar, N. J.

i 'ItWe Invite Comparison of Our

Furniture ValuesDon’t make your final selection of Furniture and Floor Coverings

until you have visited this store.W E GUARANTEE A SAVINfi ON EVERY ARTICLE

M ! . M A N N E R7 0 1 N I N T H A V E N U I B E L M A R , N . J .

£

•'* v -I* v v v ’I’ v V v v -I* v *!- "I* v v •!• *1* v v -I- v v •!• v -I* *!* v *1* *1* •!• • !• • !'

******

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4*4*.j. j. . j . ^ . j . . t . . j . .;. . j . .% . j . . j .

W . E. ALLENResident Architect

601 Sixth Ave., BelmarPractical Not Theoretical

f

Vf

4*V4*4*•s*4**4**

Tel. G20-R

J o s . C. S te w a r dPLUMBING ANI> HEATING

Pneumatic Water Supply System *

1106 F Street Belmar, N.

II£$1

j . s«•

r.fe n

INSURANCE MORTGAGES REAL ESTATE

The American Red Cross still has field workers in Siberia relieving dis- ‘cress and suffering among the non-Bolshevist population. A hospital train, known as the "White Train of Mercy," and which includes sterilizing, oper­ating and bathing cars, is being operated by American Red Cross personnel over a larfle stretch of territory In Siberia.

N E IL , H . M I L L E R708 NINTH AVENUE BELMAR, N. J.

The Business W hich Fair Dealings BuiltA GOOD HOME is the Best Legacy ever le ft One’s F am ily . W hy

not ow n your ow n hom e?W e can help you to secure a home.Is your property properly protected w ith good Insnrance?W e can give you valuable inform ation on the subject.

Commissioner of Deeds Conveyancing Notary Public

We Do Book ance Catalogue P rin tin g Prom ptly

FRIDAY, JANUARY 30, 1920 THE COAST ADVERTISER, BELMAR, N. J. PAGE THREE

GOL. JOHN J. CARTY TELLS WAR ‘SECRETS'

A t a luncheon of the New York Elec­trical League at the Hotel McAlpin Colonel J. J. Carty, D.S.M., Officer ol the Legion of Honor (French) ana vice-president of the American Tele­phone and Telegraph Company, was the guest ol h o n o r and made the prin­cipal address.

Radio Supplements Cables^The Colonel told of one of the most

serious problems that confronted the Signal Corps on both sides of the At­lantic during the war. There was the constant danger that the trans-Atlantic cables would be cut by submarines. If tills had been done, it would have meant that Washington would have been cut off from all communication, not only from the Allied capitals, but also from our own overseas troops.

The seriousness of such a contingen­cy Is obvious, and the best engineering brains of the country were turned on the problem. Powerful radio stations were erected at various points along the French arid American coast3. Those on our coasts were connected by wire direct with Washington.

These stations were within easy range of each other and, had it become necessary, messages would have been telephoned or telegraphed from Wash­ington to one or more of the great coastal radio stations, whence they would have been sent overseas far above the heads and beyond the reach of lurking U-boats. It never became necessary to fall back on the radio, for our Navy was entirely successful In subduing the undersea menace. As a matter of fact, two cables were actual­ly cut, but they were unimportant ones —one to Newfoundland and one to Southern Europe—and did not inter­rupt seriously the steady exchange of messages.

Another interesting . achievement which the Colonel described arose from the desire of the army chiefs to devise a means whereby messages could be sent by cable or telegraph in plain Eng­lish without the use of code, which not only delays the message on account of time consumed in coding and decoding, but which also Increases the likelihood of errors In transmission. It was known that the enemy could tap our telegraph and even our cable lines, so that some means had to be evolved whereby the message would be unin­telligible while In transmission, but would be received In English.

An Intelligent Machine.The Solution of this problem lay In

the perfecting o f what Colonel Carty referred to as the cipher machine. By means of this machine, a message re­ceived in code on the printer telegraph would be run through the machine and come out In plain English. This ma­chine was not perfected In time to be of service In France, but It was put Into successful use on the lines from Hoboken to Washington and from Washington to Newport News. — The Telephone Review, N. Y.

TELEPHONE OPERATORFOILS THIEF

■ T H E ■K IT C H E NCABINET

Another name has been added to the long list of operators who have shown their quick-wittedness and efficiency In emergencies,—that of Miss Clara Kriedemann, of East Aurora, New York, who was on night duty recently when an attempt was made to rob tlie general store of the town.

Her story of how it all happened Is as fo llow s:

“About 1 :50 a. m. I received a signal from the Variety Store, but upon an­swering It, got a disconnect signal. Thinking that possibly one of the firm might be In the store, I rang back on the line, but received no answer.

“I then called the residence of the proprietress of the store, and told her about the matter, and she suggested that I notify the Chief of Police.

“This was done and the proprietress and Chief of Police arrived at the store at the same time.

“They found that someone had en- I tered the basement throuch a window and proceeded to the main floor. Ap­parently he did not see the telephone, and knocked It over. At the time, there was considerable money in the safe, and a very nice stock, but Inves­tigation showed that nothing bad been taken, as the intruder had been scared j away by the ringing of the telephone bell.—The Telephone Review, N. Y.

Do you know what It means to be los­ing the fight?

W h e n a l i f t ju s t in t im e m ig h t m a k e e v e r y th in g r ig h t?

D o y o u k n o w w h a t it m e a n s , j u s t a c la s p o f th e h a n d .

W h e n a w o m a n h a s s to o d j u s t a l l sh e c an s ta n d ?

W e re you a s i s te r o f h e r s w h e n th® t im e c a m e o f r e e d ?

D id yo u o ffe r to h e lp h e r? O r d id n 't y o u h e ed ?

TABLE DAINTIES.

For a cake out of the ordinary, try one made from the following recipe:

Lightning C a k e . — Cream a half cupful of shortening, gradually, with half a cupful of su­gar. four beaten egg yolks, three tablespoon­fuls of milk and one cup­ful of sifted flour, with a teaspoonful of baking powder. Spread the mix­ture In a shallow pan and over It spread the

frosting whose recipe is given below ; dredge with sugar and cinnamon, and bake thirty minutes. For serv­ing, cut in strips about two inches long and one inch wide.

Frosting for Lightning Cake.—Beat four egg whites very light, gradually add three-fourths of a cupful of su­gar and a half cupful of blanched and shredded almonds. Spread on the un­cooked cake dough and sprinkle with one tablespoonful of sugar mixed with half a teaspoonful of cinnamon.

Rhubarb and Raisin Jelly.—Cook three dozen large, choice raisins in boiling water to cover, until tender. Add more water if needed. Cook until tender two cupfuls of rhubarb cut in small bits, with one cupful of sugar; shake the pan to keep the pieces un­broken. Soften two tablespoonfuls of gelatine in half a cupful of cold water, then add the raisins .and hot liquid to dissolve the gelatine: add rhubarb and turn into a mold. When cold and firm, serve unmolded with whipped cream. There should be a scant quart of ma­terial, counting the water in which the gelatine was softened.

Baked Ham.—Take a slice of ham two inches thick, parboil in water to nearly cover. Remove the ham to a baking pan, spread with brown sugar and mustard, using a teaspoonful of mustard to two tablespoonfuls of su­gar. Add the water from the pan, and baste occasionally. Rake until well browned.

varnish Not Full Protection.Wood is not wholly protected from

moisture by varnishing, which is shown by tests of the Forest Products laboratory in Wisconsin to have only a retarding effect. The woods used were yellow birch, basswood, red gum, African mahogany, white ash, white pine, Sitka spruce, southern yellow pine, bald cypress, incense cedar, Port Orford cedar, and sugar pine; but there was no perceptible dif­ference in the different species in the moisture absorbed through the coating. Three coats of high-grade spar varnish were applied to four panels of each species, two panels be­ing brush-coated and two dipped with a special machine designed to give an even coat. The panels were dried 72 hours between coats and ten days after the final coa t; and were then ex­posed 17 days to an atmosphere prac­tically saturated with moisture. The brush-coated panels then showed ten grammes ef moisture per square foot of surface; the dipped, between four and five grammes.

OLD-TIME COLD CURE— DRINK HOT TEA!

Get a sm all package o f Hamburg Breast Tea at any pharmacy. Take a tablespoonful of the tea, put a cup of boiling water upon it, pour through a sieve and drink a teacup fu ll at any tim e during the day or before retiring. It is the most effective way to break a cold and cure grip, as it opens the pores of the skin, relieving congestion. Also loosens the bowels, thus breaking up a cold.

Try it the next tim e you suffer from a cold or the grip. I t is inexpensive and entirely vegetable, therefore safe and harmless.

KNOWING YOU BY YOUR VOICE.

“W hat’s in a name'?” Nothing, yon may say, but would your answer be the same were you asked “What's in a voice?”

Have you ever noticed that when people who argue raise their voices, and begin to shout at each other, the arguments are generally growing weak­er and weaker, and each is n \ king no impression whatever upon the other7

One is apt to admire people who have “poise," but a great deal of that po-'se Is the outgrowtn ot tne excellent control of the voice. Just as one is re­pelled by a harsli, rasping, high pitch­ed voice, so also is he attracted by one that Is quiet, gentle, low pitched.

This is especially true in the case of the telephone conversation. There Is some magic or other in the wire that brings out even more that: the face to face conversation does, the qualities of tlie voice that indicate the characters o f the persons talking. Why not make a good, instead of a had. impression?— The Telephone Review, N. Y.

EUMATf STIFF ACHING JOINTS

Rub Soreness from joints and muscles with, a small trial bottle of old

St. Jacobs linimentStop “dosing” Rheumatism.It’s pain on ly ; not one case in fifty

requires internal treatment. Rub soothing, penetrating- “St. Jacobs Lini­ment” right on the “tender spot,” and by the tim e you say .Tack Robinson— out comes the rheumatic pain. “St. Jacob's Liniment” is a harmless rheu­matism cure which never disappoints and doesn’t burn the skin. I t takes pain, soreness and stiffness from ach­ing joints, muscles and b ones; stops sciatica, lumbago, backache, neuralgia.

Limber u p ! Get a 30 cent bottle of old-time, honest “St. Jacobs Liniment” from any drug store, and in a moment you’ll be free from pains, aches and stiffness. Don’t suffer! Rub rheuma­tism away.

Adv.

----------- p—------

Monthly Report of Borough of Belmar, N. J.

NEIL H. MILLER, Collector.

Statem ent of Receipts and Disbursements of Borough of Belmar, N. J.

DECEMBER 1919

RECEIPTS.

Am’t brot fo r d ................1919 Taxes .....................1918 T a x e s .......................Taxes p rio r to 1 9 1 8 ....In terest and C osts.........Board of H ea lth .............Geo Tallm an, r e n t .........Dog Licenses .................Gross Receipt T a x ...........Tax Revenue N o te s . . . .Je tty rep a ir N otes___B oardw alk repa irs noteTax Searches ...............Sew er P e rm its ...............S treet O pening ...............

8 162,784.44 20,019.29

1,354.09 330.00 226.50 124.15 ' 25.00

87.00 884.11

21 ,000.003.000.0f4.000.00

4.506.00 1.0 0

Bal. Dec. 31, 1918.5 213,846.08

4,969.54

$ 218,815.62

DISBURSEMENTS (By D epartm ents)

H ighways. (A ppropriation $12,000)

Am’t fcrot fo rd .$ 12,288.27N. H. M iller Paul C. T a y lo r . , W. N ew m an &

Sons . . . . . .H eyniger Bros. .E. D. S te rn e r .. . Belm ar Auto CoTexas Co..............N. Y. Tel. C o . . . . John G lea so n ...G. E. R o g e rs .. . . M art Rogers . . . .A. H aley ...........S. H u lse ...............Jos. N e w m a n ...W. M orris...........T. F a r le y ...........F. N ew m an ........B. H olm es...........P. H a r t ...............A. N ew m an ___O. C obanks.........S. W oolley ___J. W hite ...........A. Peel ...............H. E. Rogers . .

113.5813.74

71.96 249.80

50.0415.0513.50

2.50125.00215.00

61.50100.00

81.00 47.52 37.8034.2025.2030.96 24.4816.20 5.04

70.8837.6725.4544.73

-$13,801.07

Am’t

Police. (A ppropriation 84,000)

b ro t fo rd 8 3,606.13N. H. M iller . . Geo. B earm ore Robt. E s te l l . . . W. K. B u rg e r .. N. Y. Tel. C o .. W. A. Robinson

1.92100.00115.90100.00

3.856.80

-8 '3,934.60Lighting.

(A ppropriation 87.000)Am’t b ro t fo rd . 8 5,411.60 Coast Gas C o . . 699.84At. C. E. L. Co. 793.68

$ 6,905.12Fire.

(A ppropriation 87.000)Am’t b ro t f o r d . . 8 4,844.44C. H eyn iger..G. T alim an___P. R. L o lle r___F irs t Nat. BankF ire Note ___J. R. B row n &

Son ...........G arrab ran t &

Conover . . W. Newm an &

S o n s ...........A ndrew Peel . . W. H. C o o p e r.. W. A. RobinsonH. E. Rogers . . . W. M. B ergen . W. E. H efte r.. G. VanNote &

Son ...........

85.0085.0050.00

516.00400.00

85.45

68.00

123.2130.3510.0049.9810.00

7.5039.00

222.80-8 6,626.73

Salaries. (A ppropriation 82.500)

Am’t b ro t fo rd . 8 2,216.74N. H. M iller.H. R. Cooper . . W. E. Allen . . F. V. Thom pson W. B. Lokerson

83.8475.0050.0025.0050.00

NotesAm’t b ro t ford 8 53,295.00 Tax A nticipation

N o t e 5,000.00

-8 2,500.58

Discounts. (A ppropriation 83.000)

Am’t b ro t ford . . 8 808.13 F irs t Nat. B a n k .. 150.00

-8 58.295.00

8 958.13Bonds and Interest.

(A ppropriation 817.000)Am’t b ro t ford .$ 12,225.17Coupons ........... 1,330.00Int. and coupons 895.16

------------ 8 14,450.33Sinking Fund.

(A ppropriation 84,833)Sinking Fund Corns 8 4,833.00

P arks and Public Grounds. (A ppropriation 81.500)

Am’t b ro t fo rd . $ 1,115.50Paul C. T aylor Noah H an k in s. H. E. R ogers.. F. P. E r b e . . . .

8.2375.00 35.1750.00

Board of Health. (A ppropriation ?,1 000)

! Am’t b ro t fo rd . . 8 675.67 , B. M. B e n n e tt .. . 33.34I F. V. T hom pson. 25.00

8 1,283.90

$ 734.01Poor.

(Appropriation $500) b rn t f o r d . . $ 388 16

^usan T ru a x 147.00C. R ogers 24.00

\m ’t

Board of Education8 559.46

Ain’t b ro t fo rd ..S 7,057.50 Sal. 1919 T a x . . 8 7,057.50

State and County Am’t b ro t fo rd . . 8 21,141.48 Bal. 1919 T ax . 21,141.48

3 14,115.00

S 42,282.96Garbage and Rubbish. (A ppropriation 83.000)

Am’t b ro t fo rd . . 8 1,575.00 Wm. K e a rn e y .. . 75.00

i .$1,650.00

M iscellaneous.Surety B onds $ 100.00Postage ................... 400.00P rin ting ............... 500.00Int. on F St. Im p ... 600.00W ater D e p t. . 3,500.00F ire note ................. 400.00L ibrary ....................1,320.00Street E xtention ..1,000.00B oardw ’lk E x 1,000.00Imp. C ertificates. . . 3,000.00 C o n tin g e n t................1,500.00

813,320.00

& 2 r \ k o t fo r • 5 11,825.93N.H.Miller Post. 22.22N orth Jersey

Shore M unicipal­ities ............... 400 oo

N. H. M ille r .. . . 2L88Com. Governm ent

E lection _ ^0 00W ater D e p t... . 3,500.00H. R. C o o p e r.. 32.12N. Y. Tel. C o ... 5 65F St Paving

Certificates . '3,000.00B oardw alk Ext.D ^? .tesr v 1,000.00Public L ib rary 110.00b . P. E rb e ___ 10 00U sher Pub. C o ... 17.65W. A. Robinson 16.66W. B. B am ford 10.23Coast Adv. P rtg 44.34~ Account;P. C. T a y lo r .. .28H once & DuBois 87.50N aylor’s E xp.. 9.00S. H. B ro w n .. 23.75

S ew ers;F C S iev e rs .. 433.77W. Newm an &^ S ° n s 297.80E. D. S te rn e r . . 225.00Lewis Lum Co. 37.50J. E. N ew m an. . 80.52B. & Smock Lum

Co ................. 52 92w - E - H efter . . 3455

B oardw alk R epair A cct:Lew is Lum Co 448 31P ; 9- T ay lo r. . 38.25W. A, Robinson 667.00

Je tty R epair Acc’t.Thos. P ro c te r .. 1,451.75 B. Smock Lum.

Co ................. 694.36------------ $ 24,621.94

Total Exp. to date ......... $ 197,559.83Bal. Dec. 31, 1919................ 21,255.79

8 218,815.62 NEIL H. MILLER,

Col. and Trea.s.ti. F. LYMAN, JR., Chairm an Fin. Com.

GEO. W. VAN NOTE Mayor.

| 3 e ! m a r / V f e a t M a r k e tJ. C. WISSEMANN, Propr.

1 PRIME MEATS| AND POULTRY@ Choice Groceries0 Phone 666 8Q9 F Street Belmar, N. J.

W a n t S o m e t h i n g ?

A d ver*.ise for it in

W E A R E TH E SO L E AGENCY FOR

B U R T ' S C a n t i l e v e r S h o e s w o m e nB etw een Red Bank and Point P leasant.

JjN A W O N D E R F U L S H O E W I T H A L L C O M F O R T .

I B E S T S H O E C O . 627 c o o k m a n a v e . §( q GEORGE PEARCE, M anager Asbury Park, N. J.

Burglary Insurance inspires a feel- ingof confidence and security, whether you are away or at home. We are pre­pared to write it for you at very rea­sonable rates.

HONCE & DuBOISBELMAR, N. J.

Private A m bulance Lady A ssistant

T H O M A S E . H A R D YUndertaker and Licensed Embalmer

TELEPHONE 928-BELMAR

Office: 80 3 i F Street, Belmar,N. J.Parlors for Service Auto Service Residence: 503 9th A ve.

Get Your Next Job Printing at The Advertiser Office

%

[No! The Banker. ^Wouldrft Q uit!

When the sawmills moved out of a certain Northern woods town it looked like the finish of business there for everyone— farmers, merchants, banker. But the banker refused to quit. “If I can make dairying and poultry-keeping profitable m y bank will make money,” said he. The story of his efforts and the money-making prosperity that has come to his community is told in the current issue of

‘Me COUNTg e n t l e m a n

5 ftth e c o p y

e v e r y w h e r e

This bank aims to extend the same sort of service to this community. We should like to know every farmer hereabouts —to help every farmer make money. Come to us with your problems and let us see if to­gether we cannot boost your bank a cco u n t. As a step towards that prosperity, we urge you to read each week T h e C o u n t r y G e n t l e m a n . What­

ever line of farming you are following—livestock, dairying, poultry, grain, fruit, truck, corn, bees—there is something for you each week in the many pages of the Great National Farm Weekly. If you authorize us, we shall be glad to charge your account $1.00 for a year’s sub­scription. Or, better still, come in; let’s talk it over personally and get acquainted.

F i r s t N a t i o n a l B a n k , B e l m a r , N . J .

G entlem en:(1 ) B e c a u s e y o u k n o w m e , en ter m y n a m e for T H E CO UNTRY G ENTLEM AN for o n e y ea r a n d 1 a r c e th e e o s t .S l .0 0 _ t o m e .c h a rg e th e c o st , $ 1 .0 0 , t o m e .

(2) Here’s my dollar. I want THE COUNTRY GENTLEMAN. Sendittome.

(M y N am e)___________________________________________ _

outene

(My Address)_

(City) .____ (State)_

PAGE FOUR THE COAST ADVERTISER, BELMAR, N. J. FRIDAY, JANUARY 20. 1920

THE COAST ADVERTISER(Incorporated w ith the Coast Echo)

F. S. Berggren H. C. HigginsB E R G G R E N & H I G G I N S

E dito rs and P ublishers

P ublication Office and P lan t 704 N inth Avenue, Belmar, N. J.

’Phone 580-M

E ntered as second-class n :a tter F eb ruary 25, 1908, a t the pos* office at Belm ar, N. J., under the Act of Congress of M arch 3, 1879.

S ubscrip tion Rate (S tric tly in Advance)

One Y e a r ...................................... $1.50Single C o p y ...............................3 cent*

Advertising Rates on A pplication

All com m unications, advertise­ments, o r o the r m atte r to be guaran ­teed p roper insertion , MUST be handed in not la te r than nooiT'tws W ednesday of each -week.

All notices of en terta inm ents by churches, societies, etc a t w hich an adm ission fee is charged, fo r reso lu­tions of organizations in cases of death of meniberte, o r s im ilar read­ing m atte r w h ich is not in the form of general new s w ill be charged for at the ra te of five cents pdr line for each insertion .

Legal Notices—T he Coast Adver­tiser is a legal new spaper, and as such, ,is the p roper medium fo r all legal notices. Some advertisem ents belong to us by law, w hile w ith m any o thers it is op tiona l w ith the p a rty in te rested as to w hat paper shall pub lish them.

News Item s of Local and P ersonal In teres t Invited

FRIDAY, JANUARY 30, 1920

WALKING CONDITIONS

One of the m ost rem arkable de­velopm ents of the year 1919, was the boom in Good Roads, w hich m ovem ent m ade m ore progress in tw elve m onths than it used to in ten years. G enerous appropriations have been voted, and m any ex ten­sive pro jects begun all over the country . I t’s all to the good and m eans a w onderful developm ent in p roductive pow er for this country .

M eanw hile the need fo r good w alking conditions can ’t safely be overlooked. The m ajority of the people are s till w alkers ra th e r than rid e rs and th e ir in te rests should be considered. Good .walks help people to live fa r th e r from th e ir business or place of em ploym ent an d good w alks w ill transfo rm a d isconten ted and depressed neigh­borhood in to one tha t looks cheer­ful and w ell kep t up. It alm ost a l­w ays leads people to clean up th e ir grounds, and p lan t flowers, shrubs and trees.

Good w alks m ake a tow n look alive, they a ttrac t s trangers to be­com e residents, and they m ake the home folks b e tte r contented.

Belm ar can perhaps boast of as m any miles of good w alks as the re a re in any o ther borough of its size in New Jersey, bu t the re are h e re and there, stretches in the m ain section of the borough as w ell as the recen tly extended avenues and outsk irts w here w alks a ra lacking, o r a re in a poor condition.

A borough ord inance compels p ro p ­erty ow ners to lay w alks and curb- ings, b u t un til a few m onths ago th is ord inance w as enforced only w hen conditions seem ed to w a rra n t th e enforcem ent of it. This gave p ro p erty ow ners called upon to m ake the im provem ent reason to feel th a t they w ere being d iscrim inated against and led council to o rd er the c lerk to notify all p ro p erty ow ners in the borough w ho did no t have w alks along th e ir p ro p erty to build them. Scarcity of m ateria ls and labo r conditions som ew hat re ta rded the w ork last y ea r bu t i t is hoped th a t it w ill be resum ed next Spring and continued un til th e re are good w alks along every foot of streets in Belmar.

thus created sends p rices h igher still.

A period of h igh production costs is the w orst possible tim e in w hich to buy poor m aterial. You can’t afford to pu t h igh cost labor into

T h e T u n i s i a n P o s t s .The postal courier service of Tunis

which ran between the years 1S55 and 1S75 is described In the “Revue Tuni- sienne” by Mr. Mareel Gandolphe. The service covered the distance between Tunis and Susa up to 1868, and then it

poor stuff. T here w ill be nearly as was extended to Sfax. The distance m uch labor cost in the poor stuff, and between Tunis and Susa—a dangerousthe good articles w ill w ear tw o or th ree tim es as long. Buying the good m ateria l prolongs the life of m erchandise, and thus- helps give the production facilities of the coun­try a chance to catch up w ith de­m and. All w h ich m ust tend to b ring prices to a m ore norm al level.

If you buy goods recom m ended by you r substan tia l hom e m erchants, particu la rly at stores th a t show con­fidence enough in th e ir goods to ad­vertise them , you can feel sure you are getting the k ind of m ateria l you used to have. You w ill thus help resto re the m erchandise situation to a norm al basis. If you are in doubt, ask your hom e store people. T heir advice w ill be d isin terested for no sale is profitable to a store unless it is sa tisfac to ry to the purchaser.

FEW ER FAILURES IN 1919THAN SINCE YEAR 1881

journey over not too easy country— was performed in 24 hours and at one stretch. Only once was the Tunis

'courier behind his time, by 12 hours, and that was the result of hair-raising adventure. In 1S64 times were cer­tainly not good for couriers and way­laying on the road was not uncommon. At that period there were only two running out of the three Mohammeds, who for many years had shared the duty. Boutefeu, Beeassine and Le Chameau were names bestowed upo j them, the first because of his vivacity, the second because of his svelte ap­pearance, and the third because of his stature. The story of these dauntless three of the Tunisian postal service in the light of the latest aerial postal innovations is of almost prehistoric flavor.

1 HR 1n r s t Na t io n a l Da n klEEb E L M A R , I S J . J T .

W ith few er com m ercial reverses in the U nited States than in any

We'll Say He Loves Her.Gwendoline sighed softly, and w ept “H arold!” she biut'bered. “You do

not love me.”Thn young man started violently,

knitted his brow fiercely, and an ex­cited flush enveloped his countenance.

“Gwendoline he gasped, as he re­year since 1881, w hen the total covered from the shock. “Gwendo- num ber of firm s in business w as less! line!" he repeated. “You astound me! than half the num ber now in e x is t- ! When a man deliberately misses the ence, the 1919 insolvency statem ent last car for seven r.ights in succession, has contribu ted largely to an am inal! attempts to . learn the latest

i t - t - i < ii. * i. „ i.„,i „ i jazz steps iust to please a fair maiden,sta tistica l exhib it th a t has had no -1 * ■’ „ , .,, , , , , , . when he tolerates the cheek and nn-parallel says the W ashington S ta r s pU1}ence cf her rascally young brother, financial expert. The industria l and a n ( j constantly sniffs up his nostrils m ercantile repression of the early ; ^he hated scent of eau de cologne— to p a r t of last year, w hich w as a tim e suggest he is not a victim of Cupid's of readjustm ent, uncerta in ty and . how and arrow is a positive insult!”—hesitation , w as not sufficiently se­vere o r p ro trac ted to m ake itself m anifest in the failu re com parisons and only 6,451 defaults w ere rep o rt­ed to R. G. Dun & Co. during the tw elve m onths recently ended.

T he significance of th is show ing is dem onstrated by the fact th a t in 1918, w hen the re tu rn s wrere consid­ered h igh ly favorable, the re wrere 9,- 982 insolvencies and the §113,291,237 of liabilities of 1919 not only con­trast sha rp ly w ith the $163,019,979 j of the year im m ediately preceding, but are the sm allest since 1905. It thus appears that last year, instead of disclosing the rise in the com ­m ercial m orta lity w hich m any people had expected brought a fu rth ­er reduction of 35.4 p e r cen t in num ­b e r of failures, and a con traction of 30.5 p e r cent in th e indebtedness, w hile the im provem ent over the early years of the w ar era is, of course, far m ore striking.

Houston Post.

New Source o f Petroleum.The existence of petroleum, it is re­

ported. has been definitely established near Punts Arenas and In the north­west of Tierra del Fuego. The fre­quency of the emanations of natural gas makes it probable that the petrol­iferous deposits are large. The geolo­gists have indicated to certain pro­posed drilling companies the most ap­propriate places f %' drilling. The Chilean government takes no part in

| the actual drilling, but will continue to i further scientific explorations with a

view tn giving all aid io the search for petroleum.

THE ADVERTISER CALENDAR

January 30—Sun rises at 7.12, sets a t 5.16. Length of day 10h., 4m Moon’s phases: Feb. 4th, full moon; 11th, last q u arte r; 19th, new moon, 26th, first quarte r. Venus, M ars and Saturn are m orning stars. Jup iter w ill be an evening s ta r a fte r Feb. 3d.

P r o t e c t i o n A g a i n s t U n w i s e S p e n d i n g

Deposit a portion of your income promptly when received, to your credit in the First Na­tional Bank.

It is protection against unwise spending.

NOVELTIESHI POPULAR PRICES

Over 1000 Exquisite A rticles

to be found a t our shops

EMMA LOUISE ART SH O PS419 COOKMAN AVENUE

ASBURY PARK

319 MAIN STREET LA.KKEWOOD, N .J .

Shop Ambassador Hotel, Boardwalk Atlantic City, a fter Feb. 1 ,1 9 2 0

THE GREATESTDepartment Store

ON THE COAST

ORDER

Setting a Bad Precedent.Vialta was playing in the yard and

her mother told her it was time to come In and prepare for tied.

“I don’t want to go to bed .vet,” pleaded Vialta.

“It’s early yet; let her play a lit­tle longer,” interceded Grandmother.

“No,” her mother said firmly, “she must come in now."

Vialta came up the steps as slowly as possible. “Oh. mamma.” she ex­claimed angrily “why don’t you obey your motherT

Pre-Inventory SaleW e are offering Special Prices on all goods in every Department prior to our annual Stock Taking. . .

Great White-Goods Sale

COOK'S BEE HIVEN. K. Coruei o f Cookman \ _ ITJ a | \ | 3A venue and Main Street A S O U T y i a f K j IN *

S iN G E R A L EtU L L A H T IH E ’S s p r i h g l a k e

D EPOT T e le p h o n e S p r in g L a k e 492

Tide TableHigh

Day. Date. A.M.30—2.2431—3.31

1—4.332—5.303—6.244—7.145— 8.02

•T h is table isv ertiser by U. S. Survey.

F riSat.Sun.Mon.Tue.W ed.Thu.

W ater.P.M.2.53 4.02 5.04 6.016.54 7.43 8.31

Low W ater A.M. P.M.9.01

10.0611.05

.11 1.041.53

furn ished T he Ad- Coast and Geodetic

9.0910.1411.15 12.01 12.521.402.26

T he W eek in H istory.Jan u ary 30—E ricsson’s M onitor

launched, 1862.

BUYING POOR MATERIAL

W hen prices are high, th e re is a tem ptation to buy m ateria l of poor quality. P eople feel keen ly the need fo r economy, and jum p at any thing tha t seems low.

M erchants say m ore h igh priced goods are being sold now than ever before. A g rea t deal of it is orna- m etal stuff, bought from a desire fo r display. T his is the k ind of ex­travagance tha t is doing g rea t harm . S ubstantial and genuine m ateria l a l­so brings a h igh p rice in these times. Yet it is usually the best economy. B uying th is class of goods in sim ple styles is a po licy th a t should be en­couraged.

T he public com plains of high p rices. T he re ta ile r feels the p ress­u re and passes the k ick on to jobbers and m anufactu rers. The la tte r m ay try to m eet pub lic dem and by sub­s titu tin g in fe r io r ' m ateria l. Many people believe th is is being done on a big scale, and th a t the average quality of goods is no t w h a t i t fo rm ­erly was.

W hen goods w ea r out soon, the co u n try ’s replacem ent facilities can ’t keep up w ith deniand. The scarcity

I

Ja n u ary 31— C onfederate gunboats disabled tw o enem y ships in th e F ed­era l b lockading fleet off C harleston S. C. F oreign consuls declared the blockade broken.

F eb ru a ry 1—U nited States flag ra ised at H onolulu, 1893.

Big Eaters GetKidney Trouble

Take a glass of Salts before b reak ­fast if your Back hurts or B ladder bo thers you.

GEO. HILL, C. E.

H ictiltect

F eb ru ary 2—E nd of M exican w ar. Mexico ceded C alifornia and New Mexico to the U nited States in con­sidera tion of §15,000.000, 1848.

F eb ru ary 3—Joseph EgglestonJohnson, C onfederate general, bo rn 1807.

F eb ru a ry 4—F irs t congress, 1861.

C onfederate

F eb ru ary 5—F ren ch becam e the allies o f the A m erican forces, 1778.

Gennl.Be giving Is sharing.

Learn the luxury of doing good.

Fools seldom change their minds.

Haphazard living Is unworthy liv­ing

C A S T O R IAFor Infants and Children

In Use For Over 3 0 YearsAlways bears

the Signature of

T he A m erican m en and wom en m ust guard constantly against K id­ney tro u b le ,' because w e eat too m uch m eat and all our food is rich . Our blood is filled w ith u ric acid w hich the kidneys strive to filter out, they w eaken from overw ork, becom e sluggish; the elim inative tissues clog and the resu lt is k idney trouble, b ladder w eakness and a general decline in health .

W hen you r kidneys feel like lum ps of lead ; you r back h u rts o r the u rin e is cloudy, full of sedim ent o r you are obliged to seek relief tw o or th ree tim es during the n ight; if you suffer w ith sick headache or dizzy, nervous spells, acid stom ach, o r you have rheum atism w hen the w eather is bad, get from your pharm acist about four ounces of Jad Salts; take a tablespoonful in a glass of w ater before b reakfast fo r a few days and you r k idneys w ill then act fine. T his famous salts is m ade from the acid of grapes and lem on juice, com­b ined w ith lith ia . and has been used fo r generations to flush and stim u­la te clogged k idneys; to neutralize the acids in the u rine so it nb longer is a source of irrita tio n , thus ending b lad d er disorders.

Jad Salts is inexpensive; cannot in ju re , makes a delightful efferves­cen t lith ia -w ate r beverage, and be­longs in every home, because nobody can m ake a m istake by having a good k idney flushing at any tim e— Adv.

Established 1886

103 Seventh Ave. BELMAR, N. J.

* •

W HERE DO YOU BUY YOUR

W hen in w an t .10 not forget tha t the Buchanon & Smock Lum ber Co. of A sbury P ark can supply you. W rite o r see

Buchanon & SmockASBURY PARK, N. J.

COLUMBIA GRAFONOLASSold on the Easy Payment Plan

Come to our store and let us tell you how easy it is to buy a Graf- onola. A sm all deposit w ill bring it to your home, the balance to be paid in sm all m onthly paym ents.

Come early so as not to be disappointed as our stock is running low

COLUMBIA RECORDSY o u will always find the la t e s t records a t ou r s tore . C o m e in and h ea r the L a t e s t Records.

b u ild in g m a t e r ia l? j Furniture & Novelties

SHIP YOUR

Hides, Skins, Tallow, Raw Furs, etCito the

KEYSTONE HIDE COMPANY, L ancaster, Pa.

S . H . L i v in g s to n , S u p t .T h ey -w ill p a y to p c a sh m a rk e t p r ic e s . S a tis fa c ­t io n ^ u a ru iu e e d . W rite o r le le p h o n c f o r p r ic e s . S n ip p in g ta g s f re e o n re q u e s t.

* 'I1 * * * * * * * * <-* * * * ■!' 1-1- * f

I HEAD STUFFED FROM * CATARRH OR A COLD

V isitors to Asbury, try

Paul’s Restaurant & Luncti RoomOPEN ALL T H 3 YEAR

Home Cooking a t Reasonable Prices Cor. Main and Lake Ave.

: Open all Night. ASBURY PARK

Says Cream Applied in Nostrils Opens Air Passages Right Up.

Instant relief—no 'waiting. Your clogged nostrils open right up; the air passages of your head clear and you can breathe freely. No more hawking, snuf­fling, blowing, headache, dryness. No struggling for breatli at night; your cold or catarrh disappears.

Get a small bottle of Ely’s Cream Balm from your druggist now. Apply a little of* this fragrant, antiseptic. Healing cream in your nostrils. It pen­etrates through every air passage of the bead, soothes the inflamed or swollen mucous membrane and relief comes in­stantly.

It’s just fine. Don’t stay stuffed-up with a cold Or pasty catarrh.

Adv.

“ To c h ild ren an B nt« l o f m v rc v ."w o rm s a r« TvroHent sm d d ire c tio n s io i lo w e n . IT N E V E R F A IL S . O ne b o tt le d e s tro y e d 132 w o rm s . S to o d il l* to s t fo r s ix tv v e n rs . S old <*v*>rv\\‘h o r« o r b v m a il . 35c a h o tf ln

E s t . C. A . V n o rh e e s . M . IX. P h i la d e lp h ia ,

WHE Merchants who advertise in

this paper will give yon best values for your money.

1

Sm oking Stands, Floor Lam ps, Table Lamps, Fancy F ein Stands, R ockers, M orris Chairs, &c.

PAUL C. TAYLOR808 F S treet - Belmar, N. J.

J . N. BEARMORE H. G. CLAYTON

T H E S H E E T M E T A L S H O PS P R I N G l a k e : , n . j .

For the convenience of Belmar people and through the courtesy of Mr. Alfred Armes, 602 F Street, orders for all kinds of Sheet Metal Work and Slate Roofing may be left wiih him

R esidence Phone, 630-M Belm ar. Office, 42-J Spring Lake.

INSURANCE BONDS REAL ESTATE

List your Cottages and Bungalows for rent w ith me: I w ill secure the renters

c h a s . j . M c C o n n e l l

3 1 5 F Street, Belmar

FRIDAY, JANUARY 30, 1920 THE COAST ADVERTISER, BELMAR, N. J. PAGE FIYB

RARE FUR-TRIMMED GARMENT

An out-of-the-ordinary dress of gold •tissue embroidered w ith'yellow wors­ted in a plaid design trimmed with kolinsky tails, producing a stunning effect. The exquisite paradise is gold- shaded and puts a charming finishing touch on this unusual creation.

SKIRTS SHORTER FOR 1920

Seven to Nine Inches From Floor, De- cree of Style Committee of

National Association.

The style committee of the National Cloak, Suit and Skirt Manufacturers’ association in session recently al Cleveland, Ohio, recommended skirts from three to four inches shorter than at present for the 1920 season In its report.

■ The committee decreed that skirts next season will be from seven to nine Inches from the floor for women and abdut ten inches for misses, as compared with four to six Inches for women and six to eight Inches for misses at present.

Skirts, the style makers say, will be “frankly short,” but without abbrevia­tion. One thing to be avoided if one wishes to be stylish, Is the extreme. Tunic and plaited skirts will be worn.

Fullness a t th e h ip s will be a f e a ­ture o f m a n y o f the s m a r t s p r in g s u lt3 . Sleeves w ill f it s n u g ly .

Sport suits for spring and summer wear are recommended. Novel belts of leather and metal, and a new type of collar—long, slender and rolling— will be a detail of the suits. The Lord Byron and Peter Pan designs will be popular.

The newest wrap for women Is not unlike the old Roman toga, a graceful, enveloping garment that can be tucked up and pulled together.

“Prices of coats, suits and skirts will stay up,” said Michael Printz of Cleveland, chairman of the style com­mittee.

USE DOILIES FOR COLLARS

Vogue for Biblike Neck Decorations and Drooping Cuffs Finds Place

for Old Pieces.

With the present vogue for flat, bib­like collars, round or square, and odd- »haped, drooping cuffs, comes a chance to utilize old-fashioned lace doilies.

Two doilies of equal size are re­quired for cuffs. The linen centers should be carefully ripped out and' the edge of the lace basted to the edge of the sleeve, from which it will fall in graceful rippling folds.

The collar doily should be some­what larger than those used for the cuffs. After the linen center is re­moved decide whether yon wish the collar to fasten on the shoulder or in the back. If the doily is round all you have to do is to cut it In one place and hem the raw edges, and it is ready to be worn open either at the side or the back.

But if it is square and the opening is to be on one shoulder one side will have to be cut and faced or hemmed after being fitted and a tuck taken Irf the opposite side to make the collar fit smoothly.

Of course the doily is quite large and the neck line rather low the lace need not be cut but just worn slip­over fashion, basted or pinned in place.

Soft Vs. Stiff Collars.Tlie movement started at a univer­

sity to promote the use of soft collars as a means of fighting the high prices demanded by laundries will not exert, it was stated, any harmful effect on the collar trade. The same profit and a little more, it was explained, applies to soft as to stiff collars. The element of competition, however, is one that big concerns do not particularly like. Soft collars and soft shirts, it seems, bave always been easier to manufac­ture, and consequently encourage com­petition from small firms.

Tam-Shaped Turbans.Tam turbans, many with fitted tips

or visors, have come to usy'from France. Some of these sroary'youth- ful hats have crown bands o£/5uch fur as kolinsky, squirrel or sea l/

| - IS A J _______ i : ________ TOPICS AND TIMESA d vertiser OF LOCAL SERVICES

t

R eligious D epartm ent&

* --------------------------~ ------------------- x -------------- *

I ...................... . i

St. Rose’s Catholic Church.St. Rose’s Catholic—Seventh ave­

nue and E street, Rev. W illiam J. M cConnell, LL. D., pastor. Masses: Sundays at 8.00 and ’ 10.00 a. m. F irs t F rid ay s 6 and 7.30 a. m. W eek days a t 7.30 a. m. Benediction Sun­days at 3.00 p. m. F irs t F ridays tit 7.30 p. m. Confessions, Saturdays from 4 to 5.30 to 7.30 to 8.30 p. m.

M ethodist Episcopal C hurchThe o rder of services a t the Metho­

d ist E piscopal chu rch nex t Sunday ■will b e :

10 a. m. P rep ara to ry m em bers class; 10.30 M orning service, subject, “Coveting the Best G ifts;” 2.30 Sun­day school. M issionary D ay in the school. 7 p. m. E p w o rth League; 7.30 Evening song and serm on, sub­ject, “ Influence.” The pastor, Rev. W. J. Sayre -will speak bo th m orning and evening.

8 p. m. M onday evening the last en tertainm ent in the course a t the school auditorium . Dr. H erbert D. Ketcham w ill lecture, subject, “A Salute to the F lag.” This w ill be preceeded w ith a m usical program by Miss Greene. She w ill be ac­com panied by the Cushman orches­tra . 7.30 W ednesday evening p ray e r service.

The follow ing m usical program s have been announced fo r S unday:

10.30 a. m.—P relude, “Hom age to B atiste”, Rockw ell; anthem ,, “Hope T hou in God,” Adams; offertory,— W ely; soprano solo, “Come Unto Me”, Gounod, Mrs. B. C. Beck; post­lude in F , H arker.

7.30 p. m.— ( a ^ “p relude in G”, T u rn e r; (b) “S lum ber Song”, Rolfe; (c) “Rom ance”, Sellars; anthem , “ T hanksgiving” Adams; offertory, “D ream land”, Low ; soprano solo, “In the H ush of the T w iligh t H our”, Giebel, Mrs. Beck; postlude, H osner.

Tw elfth Avenue B aptist Church‘W h y and H ow the Christian

Should Glorify C hrist” w ill be the m orning topic used by Rev. F. S. Berggren Sunday. In the evening the p as to r w ill speak on “Some things th a t C hristian ity is subject unto.” T here are classes for all ages in the Sunday school w hich meets at 2.30 p. m. The sta te mis­s ionary bo ard have called for a p as to r’s conference to be held in A sbury P ark Baptist church next W ednesday and the churches in this v ic in ity are inv ited to partic ipa te in the evening service there. T here­fore there w ill be no local p ray e r meeting, b u t all w ho can w ill go to tha t la rger meeting.

F irs t P resby terian Church F irs t P resby terian church, Rev.

Charles Everett, D. D .,pastor. M orn­ing service a t 10.45 o’clock. Sunday school at 2.30 p. m. T he Christian E ndeavor service is at 7 p. m. and evening w orsh ip a t 7.30.

F irs t B aptist Church.F irs t B aptist church N inth avenue

between C and D streets, Bev. P. T. -Vlorris, D.D., pastor. M orning w or­ship begins at 11 o ’clock, Sunday school at 2.30 p.m. and evening ser­vice a t 8 o’clock. Young people’s meeting each F riday night at 8 o’clock.

I ______Avon M. P. C hurch

Sunday m orning w orsn ip at 10.45. P reaching by the pastor, Bev. C. ,R. Blades. Sabbath School at 9.45 a.m. Evening service at 7.30. Mid-week meeting W ednesday evening.

Avon F irs t Baptist Church.F irs t B aptist church, Rev. S. J.

\ r th u r , pastor—M orning w orship ai 10.45, Bible school at 11.45, Christian Endeavor m eeting at 6.30 p.m. and pveiting service a t 7.30 o’clock.

CONDUCTOR HAD HAD ENOUGH

Little Controversy With Passenyi r Became a Trifle Personal and

He Shut It Off.

“Fare, please!"“My money is in the box.""Nix on that stuff. Vou went right

by.”“Bet your life I did. 1 been waitin'

two hours for a chance^to get Inside.” “Forget it. Pay your fare and cut

out the bull.”“Get off your foot, I dug up once,” “Where’d you get on?”“Water street.”“Yes, you did. What happened at

River street just now?”“Well, at River street, for one

thing, a woman handed you a quarter and you bluffed her out of the change; at Hill street four people got on and you rang up three fa res; at Prairie street, when you changed that $5 gold-piece ”

At this point the conductor decided he had enough.

“Move on 1” he shouted. “There’s plenty of room up front. Don’t be blockin' the gangway."—San Francisco Chronicle.

IRASCIBLE MEN OF GENIUS

Like the Lawyers.Ex-Ambassador Gerard condemned

at a dinner in Lenox the legal red tape which has permitted the kaiser to es­cape punishment so long.

“Legal red tape and legal incongru­ities !’’ exclaimed Mr. Gerard. "This kaiser business makes me sympathize with the young lady law student who ridiculed the familiar legal plea: ^Not gu ilty ; but if guilty alleviating circum­stances.’

“ ‘This plea,’ said the young lady, 're­minds me of my little niece's excuse when she was found with a kitten in her bed.

“ ‘Gladys,’ said the child's mother, ‘I thought I told you never again to allow pussy in your bed?"

“ ‘But that was lust night, mother,’ Gladys replied, ‘and, besides—1 never heard you.’ "

A M y s t e r y .“I was peroozing along down in the

holler, taking the short cut to the cross­roads store,” related Gap Johnson of Rumpus Ridge, Ark., when—whang I —went a gun, and tilled me full of tine shot. Took me yur in tGe back, and there, and yonder, and one or two places in the legs, with a few shot lingering around permiscuss. I gave a yell, and I recken the feller, whoever he was, sorter seen what he’d done, and lit out. ’Tennyrate, I never caught sight of him, and so I don’t know uo more than the man in the moon what sort of a varmint he mistook me for.”—Kan­sas City Star.

His Way.“A father should be firm but kind,

and—” began the presiding elder.“That’s my motter, parson 1” indorsed

Gap Johnson of Rumpus Ridge. “After I’ve knocked one of my children down, in order to protect myself or to get something done, as the case may be, I ’most gener'ly give him a chaw of ter- backer, or something that-a-way, to sorter saturate his feelings.”—Kansas City Star.

William Morris a-id Charles ReadeNotable for Their Explosive Tem-

pers and Kinaly Hearts.

In some recent reminiscences Mr. Henry G. Barnwell says that the two literary men of hi!- .acquaintance who possessed the greatest capacity for in­dignation were \ \ illiam Morris and Charles Reade. .Morris was perhaps the more explosive; but his tempera­mental outbursts were so o d over a n d had rarely any sequel. The violence of Charles Reade, though frequently it, too, passed like a summer tempest, was sometimes the precursor of a prolonged literary or legal b a ttle ; for he had a passion for litigation.

“Assassination is too good for him ; the miscreant ought to be boiled in o il!” Mr. Barnwell once heard Morris roaring as he came into his presence. Inquiry brought out the fact that the villainy for which such punishment was deemed suitable was the crime of placing the pockets of a new suit in their conventional position instead of arranging them in a novel arid inter­esting manner, suggested by Morris. But the unimaginative tailor was not boiled; moreover, when, shortly af­terward. he fell into difficulties, it was Morris who advanced him money enough to set him on his feet again.

Possibly Reade, who also was a gen­erous-hearted man, might at need have shown equal magnanimity toward a cobbler who aroused his ire. The man had been recommended by his friend, Wilkie Collins, and the next time the two novelists met Reade lifted his voice from afar.

“Confound you!" he shouted iras­cibly. “That cobbler you s»ent to me is a fraud—a rascal—a rogue—a triple-dyed v illa in ! He ought to be choked with his own shoe pegir!”

Wilkie Collins, laughing, attempted some defense of his protege; hut Reade would not listen. Lifting his hands to heaven liHc an Oriental call­ing down the vengeance of the gods, he declared impressively, in true east­ern s ty le :

“May the heels <>f tlie conscience­less wretch who recommended such a cobbler be blistered, and mny his joints be cramped! May bunions vis­it his great toe and corns sit upon his little one, and the wrath of the enemy destroy his so le!”

Then, satisfied with the achievement of an impromptu curse at once harm­less and horrifying, he accepted Col­lins’ invitation to luncheon, and the two walked amicably away together. —Youth’s Companion.

Campanile to Be Preserved.The beautiful campanile of the Cnm-

brai cathedral, with one of its corner columns badly breached by sfiells, con­demned to destruction by the engi­neering corps of the army as a menace to public safety, was to have been brought down by dynamite. It was saved from Immediate destruction by an eleventh-hour intervention on the part of friends of art. The campanile will be taken down stone by stone, the material being* classified and laid aside to be put in place again when the ca* thedral is restored.—Paris Muli.a.

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FRIDAY, JANUARY 30, 1920 THE COAST ADVERTISER, BELMAR, N. J. PAGE SEVEN

:NEW YORK TELEPHONE COMPANY MEDICAL DE­

PARTMENT PROMOTES HEALTH OF EMPLOYEES

A dvertisem ent. A dvertisem ent

Employees of the New York Tele­phone Company are encouraged to con­sult the medioal department whenever they are In need of advice concerning their health. The doctors, some of whom are in attendance during the entire business day, may be depended upon to listen patiently and sympa­thetically to their troubles, to give them careful examination, to tell them what they think is wrong with them and what they should do about it. Treatment is furnished only in emer­gency cases.

The aim of the medical department is to promote good health and vitality by giving sound advice as to the cor­rection of the minor physical defects, functional disorders, erroneous habits of life, etc. In other words, to lock the stable door before the horse is stolen. Those who have incurable diseases will, of course, be told how the prog­ress of their disease may be checked and their general condition improved, but the chief object of this service is to get in touch with employees before such diseases have established a foot­hold and by calling attention to the condition and recommending appropri­ate treatment, remove the danger

This service, which is offered gratu­itously by the company,'helps the em­ployee enjoy that sense, of well being characteristic o f good health.—The Telephone Review, N. Y.

I MCA-W ORLD CAMP MEETING

THE TELEPHONE ASTAR REPORTER

In Newark, N. J., the fire department supplies tlie newspaper offices with copies of the fire alarm books in use in the engine houses throughout the city. Within two weeks after a new issue reaches the office of the Star-Eagle, each fire alarm number in the book has set opposite It one or more telephone numbers which can be called to get a "line” on the fire within a few seconds after the gong hits off.

These telephone nutnbers are writ­ten in by the city staff. Some of the men who know tlie city, north, east, south and west, are able to tell off­hand the stores, factories, etc., nearest most of the alarm boxes, and the rest are easily obtained. Precinct men, for instance, have instructions to jot down names of stores in the vicinity of the boxes they pass on their rounds.

An illustration of the effectiveness of the system was given recently when a reporter called up a small store in an outlying district to ask him about an alarm that had just come in. "No fire around here," the clerk who answered the telephone reported. "Look out­side ; moybe the fire is next door,” the reporter urged.

“H ell! The blaze is in our cellar!” the clerk yelled a half second later. “It’s coming up in the front of the store. S'iong. I got to heat I t ”

That building was a ruin before the firemen got the blaze under control.— The Telephone Review, N. 5T.

$500,000 FIREDESTROYS FACTORY

Tlie telephone again proved its use­fulness in a crisis when fire destroyed the plant of the Atlantic Macaroni Company, et Vernon avenue and Bodin street. Long Island City, causing a damage o f $500,000.

The fire was discovered in one of the buildings of the plant at 8:30 in the morning by John Cuneo, night su­perintendent of the company, who tele­phoned to the engineer that the plant was on fire. The engineer promptly blew the factory whistle as a warning to the employees on duty and turned in an alarm. This was followed by a second alarm when the seriousness of Gie situation became apparent, and finally a borough alarm was turned in, calling all apparatus from Brooklyn and downtown New York.—The Tele­phone Review, N. Y.

‘HAPPINESS IS SUCCESS”

Traveling to New York from Syra­cuse recently, D. C. Cox, division com­mercial manager of the New York Tel­ephone Company, sat near three men who were very much wrapped up in a discussion of conditions throughout the world. Mr. Cox could not help hearing what w as said.

Two of tlie men, judging by their talk, had formerly been members of the Bolshevist government in Russia, and tljey had come to this country to escape the conditions which they found intolerable. The third man, an Ameri- oan, was an electrical engineer. He turned to one of the former Bolshevists and said, “W hat is your definition of success?” The tuan replied: “The ability to be happy. That means doing a good job, for you can’t be happy otherwise."—The Telephone Review, N. Y.

The measure of a man’s life is the ; well spending of it, not the length.— Plutarch.

Everyone is bound to bear patiently the results of his own example.— Pliaedrus.

Facts are stubborn things.—Smollett. (

B ishop’s serm on, Law and Love, 99 Lafayette Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y., Jan. 21, 1920. By W orld’s pow er, Holy Ghost Com m andm ents—Acts 1. One Law giver, w ho is able to save and to destroy. W ho a r t Thou that judgest ano ther? James^4:12. Jacob have I loved, bu t Esau have I hated. A m an, preachers, w ho a r t thou th a t rep liest against God? Except Lord had le ft us seed, C hrist, we had been as Sodom a and Gom orrha. W hole w orld ignoran t of God's righteous­ness in Christ, only Saviour of w orld before foundation of w orld , to all e tern ity , C hrist end of law for rig h t­eousness to all tha t believeth in law of sp irit of life in C hrist Jesus, had m ade m e free from law of sin and death. Six years wrorid w ar, from 1914 to 1920. Seven spirits are be­fore th rone and from Jesus Christ w ho is faithful, w itfu l w itness unto C hrist th a t saved us and w ashed us from our sins in h is own blood m ade us kings and p riests unto God and h is father. To Him be glory and dom inion forever and ever. Amen. Behold he com eth wTith clouds and every eye shall see him, and also w hich p ierced Jesus on cross. All earth guilty, w hole world Bishop L. B. H eller saw Jesus, be- teen heaven and earth with pierced hands and feet at America W orld Camp Meeting. Belmar. New Jersey, Sept. 4, 1919. Bihop w ill give m an­ifestations of superna tu ral angels at Hons, F rance, (From Leader P itts­burg, Pa., Sept. 25, 1918, tha t saved w orld from Germans, advancing to P aris and over w hole w orld. Bishop give thanks to God,which gave w orld victory over Germans. T hrough our Lord Jesus C hrist I overcam e wrorld in peace. Sergt. J. N. Teehan and Corp. Rogers, w itnessess to great w hite clouds, angels a t Mons. France. B ritish facing Germans. 9 to 1. Al­lies absolute inn ih ilation , God in Christ, angels saved w orld w ar. To Him be glory and victory. Five billions, o r 25 p e r cent of $20,000.-000.000 appropria ted b y w orld w ar has been absolutely w asted. None of in te rest on §10.000 .000.000 loaned to European nations has been paid. W ilson G overnm ent p lann ing to force an additional loan $13,000,000,000 to England. D isapproval Senator Miles P o index ter of W ashington State, m ade charges to m em bers of N ew York Republican. Jan . 15. 1920 m oney 8 to 16 p er cent. G overnm ent of people by people and for people in 100 nations and Islands in W orld Bible league. Peace in w o rld ’s pow ­er, H oly Ghost Com mandm ents, Acts1. Ju ly 4, 1920. opening America W orld Camp Meeting, lfith avenue. Belmar. N ew Jersey. On A tlantic Ocean coast. 135 miles, autos, jitneys trolley, railroad , grove of trees, room for 50.000 people, houses, cottages, bungalows, tents all taken. Bishop L. B. H eller, p residen t and founder. Address to Feb.. 99 Lafayette Ave., Brooklyn. N. Y.

C hurch of Ascension. F ifth Ave.. and T enth Street, Rev. Dr. Percy S tickney Grant, Bev. Dr. Jam es Bish­op Thom as, Re\<. C harles W esley Nauman. Rev. H arold A. Lynch; P ub­lic Forum , g reatest w ork ing church for people in New Y ork City. Now unto King eternal, im m ortal, inv is­ible, only w ise God, be honor and glory fo r ever and ever. Amen. Teach us O. Thou H eavenly King.

Thus to show our gratefu l mind, Thus accepted offering bring—

Love to Thee and all m ankind.Active E dw ard H eller, 99 Lafay­

ette, Ave., Brooklyn.Brooklyn Temple. 21 H undred

Members. T h ird avenue and Scher m erhorn street, Rev. J. C. Massee D. D. pastor. And very God of peace sanctify you w holly ; and I p ray God your w hole sp ir it and soul and body coming of our Lord Jesus Christ.

T reaty , h is to ric cerem ony ending w orld w ar betw een devils and C hrist I have spoken un to you tha t ve m ight have Peace in me. W orld shall have tribu la tion bu t be of good cheer. I have overcome w orld —John 16:33.

W orld w ide Revival, Jan u ary 18th, Dean S treet C hurch 5th avenue, Brooklyn, Rev. C arl W esterdabl. Im m anuel Echoes 50 cents p e r year, Carl G. W esterdabl, E ditor, Bible Conferens, 16—18 januari. P asto r Alfred Ahifeldt. P asto r Ahlfeldt. p re- d ikar, P asto r C. J 1. E dw ards, P asto r C. A. Seaberg, Rev. David Miller, Dr. Arvid Gord. B rethern m eetings 17 Glenada P lace, Brooklyn, N. Y. Mr. Lyell M. R ader noted chem ist of Chicago. B ro ther of Paul Rader, G reat Evangelist.

T ransform ed Life. Paul Rader. F rom g lory to g lory” (II Cor. 3:18)

Jan u ary 10. 1920 Read great sermon in C hristain Alliance Publishing Com pany 318 W 39th Street, New York, Lafayette Avenue. P resbyterian church, C o rner South Oxford Street, B rooklyn, N ew York, Jan u ary 18, 1920, Rev. C harles Carroll A lbert­son, D. D.. Rev. R. P aul Schearrer, Rev. F rank L. Gosnell, m inisters. Bev. John R. Campbell, pastor. Cuy- ler C hurch (Affiliated) Rev. L. B. Ve’r- doja, pastor, G resg Chapel Branch, Rev. H arvev S. M urdoch, Buckhorn, Kentucky. Rev. J. D. Canaday, H en­derson, Tennessee. G rant us Thy r>f>ace. Lord God Almigthy. O give T hy peace by w hich we live. Amen. Communion, institute. L ord’s supper. Bishop at above com niisssion. I am a very strong believer, eat, drink, new w ith you in m y F a th e r’s k ing ­dom—M atthew 26. N ew York City T abernacle 44th St. and 8 th Ave. G. H. M einard. Supt., T hurs., F ri., Sat. 7.45 p. m. Sun. a. m. and Eve. Dr. A. C. D ixon, London, Eng.

Kingdom, covenant, governm ent over w hole w o r’d in 1 0 0 n a t i o n s and islands in W orld’s Bible League over w hole w orld. God of heaven, set up Kingdom w hich shall never be de­stroyed and kingdom shall not be left to o ther people, league w ith 13 n-itions blit one k indred nation over w orld . But it shall b reak in nieces and ro n srm e all kincdom s and shall 'tn n d forever. Read D aniel 2:41. H ;sforv. facts, all g reat kingdom s from B abylon ru le over all ea rth and

Roman taxed w orld—Luke 2. Was destroyed year 312, like w orld w ar league w ould tax w hole w orld to eternal death. T h irteen nations can­not stand against God’s kingdom of righteousness, joy, peace in w orld’s pow er Holy Ghost Com mandm ents— Acts 1. E verlasting Christ, God, blood covenant, governm ent, no end peace, in governm ent of people by people and for people.

T hirteen em pires, God’s kingdom seen, rise and fall of g reat em pires destroyed, Egypt, Assyria, Persia, Media. Syria, Grecian, Palastines, Roman, Spain, A ustria, P russia, Rus­sia, Turkey, destroyed, th irteen em­pires, 1920. W ar League of N ations w ill not m ake friends among our enemies, bu t only enem ies among our friends. Christ, flesh our flesh and h is blood our blood of life of w orld—John 6 . C hrist, pow er of God unto salvation of w orld, in pow ­e r H oly Ghost Com m andm ents—Acts 1.

W hen Com forter reproved w orld— John 16. Serm on Bishop L. B. H eller 99 Lafayette Ave., Brooklyn, Jan . 22, 1920. F irs t and last before foun­dation of w orld to all e tern ity in e ttrnal life, joy, glory, e ternal w eight of glory in e tern ity in Jesus Christ, Saviour Almighty. F irs t and last be­ginning and ending unto Him that loved us and w ashed us from our sins in His ow n blood, C hrist, flesh, our ilesh, C hrist, blood our blood, life of w orld . F ear not, I am first and last. C hrist died fo r our sins and sins of w hole w orld. I am alive Amen and have keys. Christ our life, e ternal to know God, our heav­enly fa the r in C hrist Saviour of W orld.

C hristian in holy nation, ye are j come to city of living God— Saint I P e te r 2 and H ebrew s 12, John 6 . Re­deem ed w ith precious blood of Christ, bu ild up sp iritua l house,

: Christ, Son over his own house, ta b ­ernacle of God w ith m en in holy tem ple of Lord, God Almighty, chos­en, ordaine, elect in eternal life, endless from everlasting to everlast­ing, thou art God, conceived of Holy ghost, born child, son, Jesus, save his people from th e ir sins in Em m anuel. God w ith us in ho ly nation, C hrist­ians W orld. God made w orld and m ade in one blood of all nations and islands 100 nations in Christ, our peace made peace by his own blood, God purchased his church w ith his own blood, life of God, over whole w orld in Bible League, peace in Christ, I overcam e w orld , victory through faith, spoken throughout w hole w orld by C hristians, mem­bers of church of Christ, son of liv­ing God, m ore less, seven hundred m illions Christian. Save w orld John 47:2 b y w o rld ’s p o w er Holy Ghost com m andm ents. Repent, kingdom of heaven at hand, in holv heavenly fa th e r in C hrist, in his oeople, all pow er over all flesh, pow ­er oyer all enem ies, pow er and au­tho rity over all devils and cure diseases. W hole w orld sick unto e ternal death, second death, to rm ent­ed day and night fo rever and ever. —Revelation 20. Leaves of trees, C hrist for healing nations—Revela­tion 22. Baptised w ith the H olj Ghost and w ith fire Holy Ghost pow er in Bishop. Great m ultitude saved church, no m an sects, parties o r w orld w ar league could. N um ber of all nations k indreds, people and tongues, stood before throrK great w hite th rone, cried w ith loud v< — ?, saying, salvation to our God, blessing glory, w isdom, thanksgiving, pow er, m ight be unto God forever and ever. Amen. Came out g reat tribu la tion and w ashed th e ir robes made w hite m blood of lam b—Revelation 9:17. Go ye into all w orld and preach gos­pel to every creature, saved or dam n­ed.—M ark 16 15:20. W orld w ide re ­vivals inhab ite th eternitv , C hrist pow er. H oly Ghost, God dw ell in

ririi. hum ble sp irit to revive sp irit of hum ble and revive heart, soul, m ind in C hrist Jesus, equal w ith God in all nations. People, grace of Lord Jesus C hrist, be w ith you all. Amen. —Isaiah 57:15 and Revelation 22 . L ast w ord w as God in Christ, recon- oiling w orld un to Plimself, in w orld pow er Holy Ghost Com mandm ents, Acts 1. Christian is a superna tu ral being, a new creation in Christ Jesus, fo r whom “old things are oassed aw ay, behold, all th ings are becom e new .” (2 Cor. 5:17)’.

S 9 r$0T new heavens and new earth—Read Saint P e te r 3:12. Rest w ith us in tribu la tion , com fort in persecution, and trouble, res t w ith us w hen Lord Jesus shall be reveal­ed from heaven w ith h is m ighty angels in flam ing fire. W hole w orld in tlam ing fire, w ars from 1914 tak­ing vengance on them that know not r obey npt gospel of LordJesus Christ. Punished ' w ith ever- v-shng fire from presence of Lord, Glory of pow er. Read—Thes.

Brooklyn B aptist Tem ple, T h ird Avenue and Sehprm orhorn Street Rev. .T. C. Massee, D. D., pasto r 2100 mem bers. P asto r said. Jan. 21.1920. Nation w as pagan. B ishop’s views. C hrist said : Save W orld.—John 12:47 Cod so loved w orld gave his only be­gotten son tha t w hosoever believeth in son should not perish b u t have everlasting life. God sent not h is son into w orld to condem n w orld but

m ight be saved—John 3,

W ilson League of Wrar, dead e te rn ­al. Voters in all parties -who w ould ra th e r elect m an like H erbert Hoover P residen t on an independent ticket than vote for candidates w ho rep re ­sented p rim arily nroieefs of party noliticians. N ew York W orld. Jan u ­a ry 23, 1920. Senator H iram W. Johnson opening Eastern H eadquar­te rs in New York City in his figb? for

™ ll1ir'nn P residen tial nom ination.SECITT. Korea. Jan. 21.1020, m id­

night hom e of Bislv'p "Welch w as burned. Chief r^nresen ta lihe in Korea of M ethodist Board of Foreign M issions of Hn ;fM Stotes.

Russian $500,000 0f,0 in Kold in pub­lic treasury .H c M is senators. W ash­ington. .Tan. 26. 1020—Russian Soviet o rganizations have beonr/ie “strong enough to fight w orld” . M artens. Soviet agent to U nited States, told Senate investigating committee.

Advertiser’sB u s i n e s s

G u i d eReliable Business Houses ar­ranged Alphabetically for your convenience. W e recommend this Guide of Trades People for Senrral use.

Varney DairyS uccessor- to R iverside and Clover-

dale D airies MILK AND CREAM

BOARDING HOUSES AND HOTELS SUPPLIED Your Patronage Solicited

Belmar, Avon and Bradley Beach Main Office: 606 9th Ave.,Belmar, N.J.

LEGAL NOTICES

Auto Repairing In All Branches

Oxy-acetylene W elding and Cutting

BELMAR GARAGE 504 F S treet

WALTER ERVING

Belmar Auto Co. IncD istribu tors of

N ash Touring Cars N ash Trucks

Vim Com mercial Cars. M achine Shop

804 F Street, , Belmar, N. J.

BicyclesREPAIRING AND SUPPLIESNew and Second-hand W heels

J. C. STEWARD 1106 F Street, Belm ar, N. J.

(Opposite School Building)

Herbert Electrical Co.ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS

E stim ates Cheerfully Given Jobbing P rom ptly Attended to

Established 10 Years a t 802 F St.

Belmar. N. J. Teh 'ohone 519-J

H. HausotteH eadquarters fo r

Automobile Supplies and Accessories of all kinds

At reduced Rates Service S tation fo r Goodyear T ires

1004 F S treet Belmar, N. J.Tel. 499

Boots and ShoesREPAIRED

Best W orkm anship P rom pt Service

SALVATORE MURATA 1013 F S treet Belm ar, N. J

Tw o P ractical W orkm en

Central MarketHERMAN P. LAZARUS, P roprie to r.

City D ressed Beef, Lamb, Veal and Pork. F resh dressed p ou ltry a specialty . Phone 527 J.

905 F Street. Belmar, N. J.

Coal and LumberSTERNER COAL & LUMBER CO.

Phone 9Hay, straw , lime, feed, cement, sew er

p ipe and flue linings.Sole agents P u rina Horse, D airy and

P ou ltry Feeds.Rex Shingles—Sheet Rock W all Board Yard and Office, 12th Ave., and R. R.

Belm ar.

Coal and WoodW. NEWMAN & SONS

Hay and Feed, Lime, Cement and P laste r Sew er P ipe and F lue Linings. Y ard and office,

13th Ave. and Railroad, Belm ar, N. J .

Dillon’s ExpressG. W. H urley, P rop .

Local and Long D istance Hauling

Agent Am. Ry E xpress Tel. 559

10th Are. ( Oppo . R. R. S tation)

Belm ar, N . J.

Domestic Bakery(F orm erly P opkin’s)

BREAD, CAKE AND PIES E very th ing Baked on Prem ises

D eliveries Made JAMES E. MULLEN

Form erly in Business in N ew ark 1003 F S treet Belm ar, N. J.

Phonts 592-W

John GuincoD ealers in F ru its and Vegetables,

C onfectionery, Soft D rinks, Cigars

and Tobacco.

915 F S treet Belmar, N. J.

Wm. E HefterP L U M B I N G and H E A T I N G

NINTH AVENUE BELMAR, N. J.

(Next to Bank.)

Your CarLooks shabby w ith those curta in

lights out Have them put in a t

HYER’S

701 Seventh Ave. Belmar, N. J.

Hudson, Essex, Overland Cars

O. H. NEWMAN, Agent F u ll Line of Supplies

EXIDE BATTERY SERVICE 708 F S treet, belm ar, N. J.

T elephone 513

Hutchinson’s Art ShopMINERVA YARNS D. M. C. COTTON

Exclusive Agency for ALSATIAN EMBROIDERY

Stam ping O rders taken for Em ­bro idery and H and-K nitted Sweat ers.

806 F S t (Tel. 519-W) Belm ar, N. J.

T. S. LokersonCabinet W ork in all Branches.

Second H and F u rn itu re Bought and

Sold.

801 F s tree t Belmar, N. J.

E. L. MixPHOTOGRAPHER

Ocean and F ifth AvenuesBelm ar, N. J.

New Y ork A ddress: 2291 B roadw ay

SH ER IFF’S SALE.—By v irtue of a w rit of li. fa to m e directed, issued

out of the C ourt of C hancery of tho State of N ew Jersey, w ill be exposed to sale at public vendue, on MON­DAY, THE 2d DAY OF FEBRUARY, l ‘.-20, betw een the hours of 12 o’clock s r d 5 o’clock (at 1 o’clock), in the afternoon of saidday, at the C ourt House, F reehold, in the Borough of F reehold. County of M onmouth, N ew Jersey, to satisfy decree- am ounting to approxim ately §1,270.

All those trac ts or parcels of lands and prem ises situate, ly ing t and be­ing in the Borough ot Seihiar. the County of M onmouth and State of New Jersey and know n and ries ignated as lots Nos. T hirty -eigh t T h irty -n ine and F orty , in Block T w o on m ap or p lan of Belmar P a rk T ract entitled, “Map of Belm ar P a rk T ract situated p artly in Belm ar and partly in W all T ow nship, M onmouth Coun­ty, N. J.” made by F rank Osborn, Civil E ngineer and Surveyor. Mid- c":letown, N. J., Ju ly 1908, and duly filed w ith the Clerk of said County of Monmouth, w hich lots taken to­gether a re described as follow s:

Beginning at a p o in t in the n o r th ­erly line of T w entie th Avenue, d istan one h und red and forty feet E asier ly from the co rn e r form ed by the in tersection of the E asterly line of Surf Avenue w ith the N ortherly line of T w entie th Avenue: and ru n n in g thence (1) N ortherly para lle l w ith Ocean Avenue and at r ig h t angles w ith T w entieth Avenue, one hun ­dred and fifty feet; thence (2) E as t­erly parallel w ith T w entieth Ave­nue and at rig h t angles w ith Ocean Avenue six ty feet; thence (3) South­erly parallel w ith Ocean Avenue and at righ t angles w ith T w entie th Ave­nue one hundred and fifty feet; thence (4) W esterly along the n o rth ­erly line of T w entieth avenue and at at righ t angles w ith Ocean Avenue six ty feet to the p o in t o r place of be­ginning.

Also lots num bers eleven, tw elve and th irteen in Block F ifteen on the aforesaid map, w hich taken togeth­er are described as follow s:

B eginning a t a co rn e r form ed b y the in tersection of the Southerly line of E igh teenth Avenue w ith the w esterly line of Surf Avenue; and runn ing thence (1) W esterly along the southerly line of E ighteenth Ave-

j nue and at r ig h t angles w ith Surf Avenue six ty feet; thence (2) South­e rly at righ t angles w ilh E ighteen th Avenue and parallel w ith Surf Ave­nue one hundred feet; thence (3) E asterly p a ra lle l w ith E igh teen th Avenue and at r igh t angles w ith S urf Avenue sixty feet; thence (4) N ortherly along the W esterly line of S urf Avenue and at rig h t angels w ith E ighteen th Avenue one hundred feet to the po in t o r place of beginning.

Seized as the p ro p erty of Em m a C. Voget et als. taken in execution at th e suit o f A rnold Voget, and to be sold bv

ELMER H. GERAN, SheriffVoigt & Otto. Solr’s.D ated Jan. 5. 1920. $22.44

N otice of Settlem ent of AccountE sta te of F re d A. New m an, de­

ceased. N otice is hereby given th a t the accounts of the subscriber, Ad­m in is tra to r of the estate of said de­ceased w’ill be audited and stated by the Surrogate of the County of Mon­m outh and repo rted for Settlem ent to the O rphans Court of said County on T hursday, the T w enty-six th day of F eb ru ary A. D. 1920, at w hich tim e application w ill be m ade fo r the allow ance of com m issions and counsel fees.

Dated Jan u ary 12th, A. D. 1920.E ben D. Newman,

T elephone 603-R

Pearce’s ExpressCartage, Drayage Baggage, E xpress

O rders P rom ptly Attended to F u rn itu re and Pianos Moved

E ith e r Long or S hort D istance13th Ave. and H St. Belm ar, N. J.

Public MarketChas. F . J . Beerm ann, P rop.

Lowest P rices

A Square Deal to Everyone

1108 F S treet Belm ar, N. J.Opposite School House

Claude W. BirdsallCivil Engineer

Surveyor and DesignerF Street, near 17th A ve .

Belm ar, N . J .

Reliance Market(F orm erly Beerm an’s M arket)

Choice Meats and P oultry

Ben. Temeles, P rop.

406 Main St., Avon, N. J.

Straw's show w hich w ay w ind blows

The Star Barber Shopw ill try to hold your custom.

1005 F STREET, BELMAR, N. J. Ladies’ Facial Massage and Sham ­

pooing. Special atten tion to Chil­d ren 's H air Cutting.

Give us a call. You’ll come again. Jerom e Li Castri, PrOp’r.

Save Pennies— Waste Dollars

1

O ' Some users o f printing save pennies by get­

ting inferior work and lose dollars through lack o f ad- vertising value in the work they get. Printers as a rule c h a r g e ve ry reasonable prices, for none o f them get rich although nearly all of them work hard.Moral: Gioe your printing toa good printer and save money.

Our Printing Ss Unexcelled

PAGB EIGHT THE COAST ADVERTISER, BELMAR, N. S. FRIDAY, JANUARY 30. 1920

BELMARH O M E N E W S

MAYOR’S PROCLAMATION

Mr. and Mrs. George W. Leonard are en terta in ing th e ir nephew , Don­ald Gordon of W estfield.

Mrs. R. C. Conover of 605 E ighth avenue has been visiting h e r m other Mrs. Baw den in F reehold.

Mrs. A lfred Arm es of 602 F stree t t ia s been in P hiladelph ia the past w eek w here she has been the guest o f h e r daughte,r Mrs. W alte r Shaffer.

T he N ew Jersey S tate F edera tion of W om en’s Clubs, w h ich includes B elm ar W om an’s Club, w ill m eet in A sbury P a rk May 12 to 15 inc lu ­sive.

0 . A. H elbig and son of N ew ark, w ere guests of Mr. and Mrs. F. L iv­ingston last week. Mr. Helbig came to Belm ar to inspect h is house.

T h e w om en of W est B elm ar have form ed an au x ilia ry to the W all F ire com pany. Mrs. H arry B row n is p residen t. Miss Susie Gifford sec­re ta ry and Mrs. E . S. V. WToolley treasu rer.

Mr. and Mrs. Luke Lenahan of S outh Amboy have sailed fo r Ire land w h ere they w ill rem ain fo r two m onths. Mrs. Lenahan is a s is te r of Mrs. F red N ew m an, of R ural Route No. 1.

Snow, ice an d w ate r la s t Saturday p u t all passenger cars w ith th e ex ­ception of th ree out of com mission on th e B elm ar line of the A tlantic C oast S tree t R ailw ay com pany. Tw o cars- w ere disabled on the Long B ranch ilne.

T he O rgan R ecital fo r the benefit of the N ew Je rsey C hapter, No. 1 N ational A ssociation of O rganists w h ich w as to have been given ai the F irs t M. E. church, Belm ar, Ja n ­u a ry 2Gfh, has been postponed un til F eb ru a ry 9th.

A lbert B earm ore, son of Chief of Police George A. Bearm ore, fell from a roof on w hich h e w as w ork ing la s t w eek T hursday , sp rain ing both w ris ts and tearing the ligaments loose on one elbow. He fell a d is­tance o f six teen feet and lan d ed on a concrete w alk.

T he la st num ber of the en terta in ­m en t course under th e auspices of the M ethodist ch u rch w ill be given in the P ublic school audito rium next Monday night. D r. H erbert D K etcham of T ren ton w ill lec tu re on “A Salute to the F lag .” Miss Belle F . Greene has arranged a musical program for the occasion.

MISS L EFFERTS SURPRISED

Miss E dna LefTerts of Avon w as tendered a su rp rise v isit M onday evening w hen a num ber of friends dropped in to h e r hom e in h o n o r of h e r b irthday anniversary . The evening w as spent in dancing and play ing games. At a la te h o u r a buffet luncheon w as served.

T he follow ing people en tered into the festiv ities: Mrs. E lla Russell,Mrs. F ra n k H erbert, Miss Ann Lip- p in co tt, Miss Mabel Bedell, Miss Alta LaVance, Miss E sth e r W alling, Miss Anne McMurray, Mr. and Mrs. Jam es Layton, Mr. and Mrs. C hester South­ard, Messrs. E ric Keim, George Dei- bert, H enry Voorhees, S tanley R us­sell, A lbert T ilton , George Russell, A rchie Russell, G ilbert H erbert, and Oakley LaVance.

PRIZES FOR BEST ESSAYS

A. N ational C ontest in W hich Belm ar Pupils W ill P artic ipate

On A pril 19 next, a board of judges consisting of S ecretary of W ar Baker Genera] Peyton C, M arch and Gen­e ra l John J. P ersh ing , w ill announce to the aw aiting juvenile w orld the nam es o f th ree boys o r girls w ho on F eb ru a ry 20, 1920, w ro te the best essays on the subject: “W hat a re the benefits o f an enlistm tnt in the U. S. A rm y?”

T hen on May 5, 1920, these th ree boys and girls, accom panied by p a r ­en ts o r guardians (ra ilroad fares and all expenses paid to W ashington and re tu rn for bo th w in n ers and p artn ts ) j w ill be p resen ted w ith m edals by S ecre tary Baker him self.

The aw ards w ill b e a gold medal, su itab ly engraved, to the w in n er of the first p rize ; a silver m edal, su it­ab ly engraved, to the w in n er o f the second p rize and a b ronze medal, su itab ly engraved, to the w in n er of the th ird prize.

In addition, th ree beautifu l silver cups, su itab ly engraved, w ill be p re ­sented to the w inners by S ecretary B aker to be ca rried back hom e by

them as prizes fo r the schoo ls.they attend.

T he contest is under th e auspices of the W ar D epartm ent b u t the new s­paper. “Come Back”, the official o r­gan of the W alter Reed H ospital in W ashington, asked perm ission to ' purchase the prizes. This perm is­sion w as gran ted and the school ch ild ren are rea lly com peting for prizes th a t w ere provided by maim ed and in ju red soldiers now a t W alter Reed H ospital.

T here is no age lim t in th is con­test and the little seven y ea r old g irl in Santa B arbara, California, has the sam e chance of w inn ing a p rize as has the nineteen y ea r old high school boy of Baltim ore. Sev­eral Belm ar pupils a re p lann ing to en ter the contest.

N ew Y ork s ta te h as m any times the num ber of school pupils tha t N evada has, y e t th e chance of p ro ­ducing w inners in each of these states is exactly the same.

Essays w ill b e w ritten in the class­room s on F riday , F eb ru ary 20. 1920, from notes if desired. No essay w ill be m ore than four hundred w ords in length. Pencil, o r pen and ink m ay be used blit the essay w ill be w ritten on only one side of the sheet. Essays w ill be judged s tric tly on a basis of ( 1 ) o rig inality , (2 ) expres­sion, <3) sincerity .

E ach school w ill be judge on its ow n product. T he p rincipal of each school "will appoint a b o ard of th ree judges to select one essay as the en try from his school. He w ill then fo rw ard the tn try , no t la te r than F eb ru a ry 27, 1920, to the arm y re­cru iting sta tion nearest his school.

T he D istric t rec ru iting officer will appoint a board of th ree judges to pass on the essays subm itted by the schools of h is d istric t. One w ill be selected as the best and w ill be fo r­w arded to W ashington as the D is­tr ic t’s entry.

F rom the en tries of the fifty-six d istric ts S ecretary B aker and Gener­als P ersh ing and M arch w ill select th ree national w inners. These w in ­ners m ay be boys o r g irls, o f an y color, of any age.

T he Boy Scouts of America is just now com pleting the first decade of its no tew orthy h is to ry as an organ­ization devoted to the w elfare of boys and the m aking of good citizens.

I t behooves us bo th as individuals and as a com m unity to aid, encourage and support by every m eans w ith in our pow er an organization w hich has such a splendid reco rd of p ro ­gress and service as the Boy Scouts of Am erica has to show fo r the ten years of its existence.

I t is fitting th a t w e at th is time give due recognition to th is g rea t o r­ganization.

I, therefore, Geo. W . Van Note, M ayor of Belm ar, do hereby recom ­m end the period m ark ing the Tenth A nniversary of the founding of the Boy Scout m ovem ent, Feb. 8 th, to 14th, be observed in Belm ar as “ Good T urn W eek” and I strongly urge th a t every m an, w om an, and ch ild in the com m unity Jfor th a t period at least adopt the Boy Scout hab it of doing a good tu rn to some­one each day.

Signed, Geo. W . V an N oteMavnr

TH E INSTATEMENT OFWAR RISK INSURANCE

If Made W ithin 18 Month* Sfil H olds Good

Riflwtans Taken to Mevtea.Kussia, though hungry, ragged and

distracted by various brands of radi­calism, has gone crazy now about mo­tion pictures. J. Ivan Zalkin, a Pet- rograd merchant, who Is in New Yori, said that in one block near the bullet- scarred Hotel Metropole, there are 12 screen theaters which open at eight In the morning and are crowded ail day «nd evening by rich and poor, patrician and peasant.

“The same people who went to see the Russian imperial ballet are now fairly fighting to see moving picture shows,” said Mr. Zalkin. “The films are of the amateurish sort, made sev­eral years before the war.

“When the better class films do get Into Russia I do not know what i* to become of the merchants, for all of them are planning to go into the mov­ing picture business.”

To relieve any confusion th a t m ay exist in the m inds of form er service men on account of the special p ro ­vision of lapsed W ar Term Insurance w hich au thorized reinstatem ent up to D ecem ber 31, 1919, regard less of date of discharge, announcem ent is m ade by D irector R. G. Cholmeley- Jones of the B ureau of W ar Risk Insurance th a t the provisions fo r re ­instatem ent of lapsed or canceled insurance, w ith in 18 m onths from date of discharge, upon paym ent of only tw o m onths’ prem ium s on th e | am ount of in su rance to be re insta ted ! provided the in su red is in as good hea lth as at th e date of discharge or expiration of the grace period w hich­ever is the la te r date, and so states in h is application, still holds good.

T h e provision th a t d ischarged se r­vice m en are perm itted to re insta te at any tim e w ith in th ree calendar m onths fo llow ing the m onth of dis­charge b y m erely pay ing tw o m onths’ prem ium s, w ith o u t m aking a form al application o r a statem ent as to hea lth is also still in force.

T he provisions fo r reinstatem ent do not p ro tec t a m an un til h e actual­ly reinstates. If he w aits he m ay not be in as good hea lth as he w as at the tim e of discharge and conse- ciuently m ay no t b e able to secure reinstatem ent.

“Poor’' Widow Finds $10,000.On the death Of her husband, Jere­

miah O’Grady, at Chico, Cal., a few weeks ago, Mrs. O’Grady went to work In a local hotel to support herself and "her minor child in the belief she was very poor. Now she finds her husband left property at Richmond. Contra Costa county, valued at $10,000. Hap­pening to look through a lot of letters and papers which her husband left, Mrs. O’Grady found something about land in Contra Costa county. She took the paper to Attorney Harry Davids, who made an investigation, learning the husband owned property In Rich­mond.

A Vanished Fragrance.We've noticed this since the high

cost of living got out of almost every­body’s reach: The neighborhood does not have that fragrant, spicy smell which used to proclaim the arrival of canning time in the good old days. And we hazard the guess right now that mighty few folks this year will be seen tripping across the street carry­ing a quart jar of mustard pickles or green tomato relish or crab apple jelly just for their friends to try. When one has to choose between a ton of coal tor a long hard winter or a 'bushel of tomatoes, coal is likely to .get the preference.

Cramped.“The flat suits me very well,” said

the prospective tenant, “but the kitehen won't do.”

“What’s wrong with It?” asked the atrent.

“It seems to have been cut to fit a woman who weighed about ninety pounds. My wife weighs 200 pounds. She’s got to have a kitchen she can bustle around in without getting jammed between the sink and the gas stove."—Birmingham Age Herald.

ENDED RAT PLAGUERodents Wiped Out Scientifically

and Thoroughly.

Campaign Waged by Bureau of Bio­logical Survey of Agricultural

Department Saved Large Gov­ernment Stores From Ruin.

A barrei of rats is not a pleasant thing to contemplate, but It is what Maj. O. D. Hammond, quartermaster corps, United States army, used to have to look upon every day In the great Bush terminals, Brooklyn, used by the war department for storing clothing and subsistence for the., over­seas forces. At first, he saw’ them scampering around over everything, gibbering and crawling and cutting. Then he saw them, day after day, heaped up In barrels. Then, finally, he saw them dwindle until only about a dozen a day could be found In the whole warehousing plant, eleven blocks long and from one to three blocks deep. That was after he had carried out a trapping campaign ac­cording to plans furnished by the United States department of agricul­ture.

The war department took charge of the Bush terminals Jan. 1, 1918. Some of the buildings, it was found, were from 25 to 30 years old. Every time ft door was opened into a warehouse, tt* P tm j la e ai ret* tud mice could be heard and signs of them were ap­parent everywhere. It was evident that unless something could be done to get rid of them serious damage would result to subsistence supplies, such as flour, meal, corn, rice, oats, bacon, and even clothing.

The officer in charge applied to the United States department of agricul­ture for assistance; with the result that an expert from the bureau of biological survey was detailed. After making an investigation, he recom­mended that six or eight grosft of mod­ern rat traps be purchased and that four men be put to work trapping the rats.

Maj. Hammond, in a recent letter to tlie department of agriculture, says that the plan was immediately put In operation, and was followed through­out the year. At first, the day’s catch would net a barrel full of rats and mice. At th e- end of the year, only an occasional rat or mouse could be caught, amounting to not more than a dozen a day in the entire plant. Maj. Hammond estimates that prob­ably 50,000 rats were taken during the year and that the total loss to stores, after the trapping campaign was begun, did not exceed $50.

The bureau of biological survey of the department of agriculture has de­voted a great deal of effort to devis­ing ways of trapping and other means <jf destroying rodents in warehouses. ftBd the knowledge thus gathered, with particular advice in individual cases, is available for the protection of stored products.

Language of Their Own.A "booh" and a “gob” met at one

of the entraining stations yesterday, where they serve tea and biscuit. “I don’t suppose you army men saw y our sea-going slang,” said the sailor, n-fco wore “U. S. Armed Guard” on his hatband and two overseas stripes on his sleeve. "Sometimes the rookie sailors—we call them ‘boots’ because they always draw rubber boots at the training stations—don’t savvy it, eith­er. Now, you know, in the navy the little_smoke stack from the galley or kitchen on a ship is nicknamed the ‘Charlie Noble.’ after some old sea cook of long ago. Well, on my ship one day we tells a rookie that ‘Charlie Noble’ said he was a fathead and a dub. The rookie got sore as a pup and went hunting all over the ship for ‘Charlie Noble.’ Finally he goes up to the captain himself and complained of being called names by Charlie. “Re­port to the bo’s’n, said the skipper. Ask for a pot of red paint and tell him I gave you permission to daub It all over Charlie—do a good Job of It, too.’ ”—New York Sun.

REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS

real estate transfe rs recen tly record- The fallow ing a re am ong the

ed in the County C lerk’s office: C harles H. S tew art ux, to Jesse V.

Pyle. A 34-100, W all twp., .$1.W ilson Newm an ux, to D avid W.

N ewm an ux. U ndivided 2-3 lots; 2571, 2572, Belm ar, 31.

F rances O. Jaques b y T rus.. to M argaretta F. F luhr, hus’d. 3 lots W all twp., $4,350.

F rances O. Jacques to M arg are tta1F. F lu h r, hus’d. 3 lots W all twp., j SI.

L arua E. F ran k lin to K atherine C M artin. Land T h irteen th avenue, Belm ar, $1.

L aura E. F ran k lin to Jam es V. M artin. Land T h irteen th avenue Belmar, SI.

M ary E, Johnson to E dw ard C. H ickm an. Land S ixteenth avenue, Belmar, §1.

An Unforeseen Calamity.“I’m never going to return a lost

article to anyone again,” said a Kan­sas City man the other day.

“Why?” we asked."Well, this fellow advertised a re­

ward for the return of his dog, and no questions asked. And then when I took the dog and went up and rang the bell his wife answered the door.”— Kansas City Star.

O ther papers may p r in t some Bel­m ar news, but they tell only half the story. The A dvertiser gives full de­tails of all local events.

Getting On.Old Pa Pscudds—Won’t have yon

marrying a mere clerk. You tell that young man to keep awssy until he has an interest in his firm.

Myrtle Pseadds—Why. dad, he has that now. The manager told him he'd have to take some interest in his work or he’d lose his job, and b«'s already done It.

So It Seems.“What is a provisional government,

pa 7”"Weil, most of these governments

seem to be without provisions, judging by the way we have to feed them.”

Not So Ornery as in Kipling.Now the camel hasn't any too sweet

a reputation for temper, yet we heard a Yorkshire farmer who had trans­ferred from the yeomanry to the camel corps assert he preferred camels to horses. "A horse wants wa­tering three times a day, but yon only water a camel every five days. And there aren’t no stirrups and bit.* and trappings to be cleaned and pol­ished.

"Temper? Taking them all around camels are no more vicious and nasty than horses. Why, my old Ibrahim knew my voice and would get up and come like a Christian when I called him.”—London Chronicle.

Combination.“What has become of yonr Anti-To­

bacco league?”“The price of tobacco jumped so tfint

we merged It Into the Personal $Ivott- emjr league.”

War Map on German Handkerchief.A memento of the war shown In

Popular Mechanics Magazine is a large silk handkerchief which was obtained from a captured "German officer. On ft is printed a detailed map of the western front and adjoining territory. The texture of the handkerchief ,s such that it can be carried in the pocket without danger of cracking It.

A Stay-at-Home Authority."They do tell as how th’ professor

chap wot lives atop o’ the hill yon­der 'ave just wrote a book about Mars.”

“Mars? Wot do 'e know about Mars? Why, to my knowledge, 'e ain't bln out of this neighborhood for seven yearn.”—Passing Show.

Sudden Rise In Oil.BIx—So your friend became wealthy

through a sudden upward movement in oil. What oil stock did he buy?

DIx—He didn’t buy any. A rich old rant started a fire with a can of it.

Seeds Grown by Electricity.An English scientist has had much

success with an electrical treatment to increase the germination of several kinds of seeds.

No Hard Task, Either.“Reading vers libre, are you, old

man? Well, you might be doing worse.” “Yes, I might be writing it.”—Bos­

ton Transcript.

TRAIN HITS AUTO

The south-bound tra in due a t Bel­m ar at 11.53 struck an autom obile at B radley Beach T hursday . Thoma« D illon at the local s ta tion said th a t as fa r as h e h ad been able to learn no one w as in jured . The accident delayed the tra in for a few m inutes.

Patronize2ho merchants who ad- vertiss in this paper.

KEEPING warm in simple problem

Winter is a

— 1/ you have a gas h ea te r r ad ia t ing w a rm th and a t the same t ime add ing coziness and c o m f o r t t o your h o m e — a hea te r in f ro n t of which the kiddies can play w i t h o u t fear of the flames. Such is the new Vulcan Ref lec tor hea te r .

Besides i ts a t t r ac t ive features , it has a special c o n ­s t ruc t ion which gua rds aga ins t the flames rea c h in g th e ex ter ior . Th i s is possi­ble because of a r ounded s teel p late in f ro n t of the burner .

• C onse rve coal— give you r ro o m sufficient hea t and a t the same t ime add a t t r ac t iveness to it.

Buy a Vulcan “ Chill C h a s e r ” to-day and you will be h a ppy and comfy.

THE COAST GAS COMPANY709 Ninth Ave. P hone 534 B elm ar Belmar, N. J.50 M ain A ve , Ocean Grove Phone 234-W A sbury

A rnold A ve., P o in t P le a sa n t Phone 128 P t. P le a sa n t

D. M. S A L E S E nd Saturday

M any Specia ls in A ll D epartm ents

f M j i t o h C & T O j p a m fiVsbunj Park New Jersey

Our Optical Serviceis a s pe rfec t as hum an skill an d m odern scien tific m eth ­ods can m ake it. O ur un ­d e r one roo f system of ex ­am ination , ad ju stm en t and g rin d in g enab les us to de­live r p rom ptly w ith th e u t ­m ost sa tis fac tio n . I f you do n o t know us ask you r neighbor.

Vinehnro* s h o p▼ u M . m. F o rm e r ly W . C. Wiseman’s

603 Cookman Avenue A sb u ry P a r k , N J.

FOR LEAKY ROOFS USEH etzel’s Paints •»<> Cements

STOPS LEAKS IN ALL KINDS OF ROOFING= f o r s a l e b y ---------

Shore Hardware Co., Belm ar, N. J . Paul C- lay lor, Belm ar, N. J L . Fielder, Bradley Beach, N. J .

B akers Hardware M ore, 173 Main S treet, Asbury Park, N .J . Huchanan Smock Lumber Co., 2nd & H . H . A ve., “ ’F. L. C oyte, 700 Main s tr e e t , “ •*J . C oyte & Son, 630 Cookman A venue, “ .iGreen Magerman Lum ber Co., So. M ain S tree t, “ “L ew is I um ber Co., 95 Main S treet, “ «»S n y a er & kobins. Main S treet a t I ake, “ *«J . L anzner, 1015 Springwood A venue, 11 <«

M A N V F A C T U K E D B Y

TATE OF J. fi. HETZEL, 67 Main St., Newark, N. I.

Frank E. Moyer, PRESCRIPTIOND R U G G IST I

ft TB*«?2w Corner F Street and 9th Avenue. £f THE REXALL STORE ,Belmar, N JCO a p