Upload
lambao
View
215
Download
1
Embed Size (px)
Citation preview
THE FIFTH WAR LOAN Starts Next Week!
The Coast Advertiser(Established 1892)
Fifty-First Year, No. 4 BELMAR, NEW JERSEY , FRIDAY, JUNE 9, 1944 Single Copy Four Cents
■ W ** ......
. Leonard Gibbs Describes Raids
Belmar Man in AAF, Has
Purple Heart, Air Medal;!
Now in Atlantic City.i
W ith his leg badly injured by an 1
11 exploding .20 mm shell, S/Sgt. Leon- i ard L. Gibbs, of Belmar, N. J. kept ! 5 J crouched over his twin .60 calibre tail j s guns, warding off eager Nazi fighter
planes as his Flying Fortress dropped its bombs square on the ship building yards of Wilhelmshaven.
" It was the craziest aerial fight I ever was in," said the sergeant. “The flak over the target was as thick as
| an , inner spring mattress, but the : German fighters came plowing right I through it, ignoring their chances of
vice being *hit by their own anti-aircraft ’ 1 fire.”
that "One of the Focke-Wulfs came
South Belmar Debt Four Local Schools HoldReduced; Receive Bids for Apparatus
Graduation Exercises: 73 Receive Diplomas
Council Meeting Opens
With Prayer for Invasion; A | ~ ,
Offers to Purchase Bor- 8 th 6 ^ 0 6 S tU d e iltS ough-Owned Lots.
Belmar Area Quota Set at $275,000In Fifth War Loan, Opening Monday
iResidents of Belmar, South Belmar township. Joseph J. Schadle is
and Wall township will be asked to ‘ chairman in Belmar proper.
subscribe $275,000 to the F ifth W a r ! Mr. Woolley stated yesterday, . , , , . , there will be no house to house can- snarling in from my right,” continued
Loan drive winch opens Monday and , ^ Instea(J ^ sub_ the sergeant in an intervlew at the
continues until July 8, it was an-( scrit,ers are asked to make their pur- AAF Redistribution Station in Atlan-
nounced yesterday by Calvin F. Wool- chases in the Belmar postofflce, Bel- tic City, where he is awaiting a new
ley, chairman of the drive for the mar Building and Loan association on j Air Force assignment. "A I swung my _ ’ ' | Tenth avenue, or at the Belmar Na- guns on him I got it. One of his .20BpltTiRr 8.r6£l °
; tional bank. South Belmar buyers are mm shells exploded in the top of my This is $25,000 more than t e quo a ajso asked to use the Belmar postof-, left leg. I was numb with pain and
set for the 4th drive, which ran las tj flce and bank, and Wall township buy- shock, but luckily I didn’t pass out. January and February, but on the ers will go to Matthews market, Glen- I kept on firing."basis of past bond campaigns Belmar j dola. | _ “Then things got sort of hazy. A
should be able to meet its quota. J j n cases where the payroll deduction time after we left the target and
Mayor Frank E. Herbert is vice [ plan is operative, employers are asked ■were headed for home I was still chairman of the drive, in charge of ■ to assist by reporting their subscrip- shooting into space. There wasn’t an South Belmar, and Russell Matthews j tions to the local chairmen In order enemy fighter near, but I was un
aware of it,” said the sergeant. |
“I knew I was hit bad and was afraid I m ight bleed to death before I could give myself adequate first 1 aid. However, with the temperature ' 50 degrees below my blood congealed and froze.”
“I had a big hole in my left leg ; and spent eight months in the hospi- ! tal, but I ’m fine now. I just passed my physical- exam for Air Cadet,” I grinned the Belmar gunner.
Sgt. Gibbs is credited with shooting down a Messerschmitt while making a bombing raid on a Focke-Wulf plant at Ank'iam, Germany.
"The FW came in level and at 400
is vice chairman in charge of Wall that Belmar may receive credit.
THE
Outside ColumnBy JAN E GIBBONS
Rabbi Konvitz Dies At Home ot Son
Rabbi Joseph Konvitz of Congrega- j tion Beth Joseph, of Newark, founded in his honor after he retired as rabbi of Gongregation Anshe Russia, died
W ALT ER E. EDGE, a bright young Tuesday of a heart attack at the home
newspaperman, became a publisher 50 ! of h*s son’ Solomon A. Konvitz, 608
years ago this week. He brought out thf a^TenUf ’, BeI“ ari; ^ e jv a s a“The Daily Guest” at Atlantic City, *T ’’
changing its name to the “Daily Press” a year later. O f courso you recognize him as the present governor of New Jersey—who also was governor in World W ar I. Mr. Edge’s career is one of the most notable in tho history of New Jersey. As a United States senator he became a member of the powerful Finance committee, and la tor he was ambassador to France. He controls the delegation to the forthcoming Republican (national convention, and whethetr the presi-
resident of Newark and had been a summer resident of Belmar for the past 25 years.
Rabbi Konvitz was in his 64th year.Considered one of the country’s leading Orthodox rabbis, Rabbi Konvitz was president several years and later honorary president of the Union of Orthodox Rabbis of the United States and Canada. He also served as president of the American Palestine ‘So-. dety. the Alumni of Slabodka Semin- MiU road’ Belmar. He wears the Pur-
, ary, trustee of Yeshivah Callege and Ple Heart’ and Air Medal wlth one vice president of the Central Relief cluster- Before entering the service in
L“ I I ICMO Un Mtno nwtnlAirn/l Qo o
yards my bullets took effect. Both engines caught on fire. I saw the gunner bail out but the pilot stayed with the ship as the flam ing mass evaporated in a gush of steam in the North sea off Denmark,” said the sergeant.
Sgt. Gibbs is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Lester Gibbs of Route 1, Old
' *"-- \ committee I October, 1942 he was employed as adential .nominee is Dewey o rB ricke r in ^ when ^ ^ Joseph gyna. cook by Dave’s Seafood Restaurant,
or whoever it may be, Mr. Edge will Chadwick avenue, New-1 Belmar.have a big part in the decision. . . . wagEdward L. Parker, secretary of the
organized, Rabbi Konvitz
Newark T J S T b J Z Z Z e ll is i was “ spiritual leade. The syna- Women’s Fellowship:gogue was named in his honor. . . . . r
Mrs. w eiia Elects OtticersSurviving are his wife,Konvitz; three other sons besides Sol- Officers for the ensuing year were
harshly critical of radio programs which undertake to give advice on
personal troubles. It s< < so ^many j omon’ Benj amin of Belmar; Dr. Mil- elected at the meeting of the Young zy,” says M r ton of New York and Cpl. Phillip in Women.s FelIowship of the Firstpeople should bring: ^ the Army; and a daughter, Miss Helen Methodist church, at their meetingquacks. Human situat.ons are com Rose Konvitz of Newark.plicated. It ’s essential to know and i ___________________
understand all the facts in order to . . . . . . A Dk i v k J A k.1them out.” This certainly SALVATION ARMY MANwork
sounds reasonable*. . . .
W E R EA D with interest A. B. d iv er’s special article in the Asbury Park Sunday Press on the churchcs of Asbury Park. Mr. Cliver recalls that James A. Bradley, founder of Asbury, established a Sunday school at Avon, then called New Branch, in 1871. . . . Ocean Grove had had public worship since its founding in 1869.
SPEAKS TO KIWANISCommissioner Edward J. Parker,
retired, of the Salvation Army, and a resident of Belmar, described the welfare work of the Salvation Army during the last war and during the present war at the Wednesday luncheon meeting of the Belmar Kiwanis club in the Evans-Belmar hotel.
Commissioner Parker, former com- carries
Tuesday evening at the parsonage, 701 D street. Mrs. Carolyn Atkinson was in charge of the meeting.
New officers are; president, Mrs. Robert Stucky; vice president, Miss
{Charlotte Robinson; recording secretary, Mrs. Dale Lawton; corresponding secretary, Miss Lillian Lindstrom; treasurer, Mrs. Robert Stewart, and chairman of program, Mrs. W illiam
Whitten.The group is a branch of the Wo-
| men’s Society of Christian Service and out activities in connection
The net debt of the Borough of South Belmar has been reduced to eighty-two one-hundreths of one per cent, it was announced at this week’s meeting of the mayor and council. The report was made in the 1943 audit report of the borough, which was turned over to the solicitor, Elvin R. Simmill, who will give a full report of the contents at the next meeting.
The meeting was opened Tuesday evening with a silent prayer, led by Mayor Frank Herbert, in observance of the invasion of Europe,
Councilman Fred Schuler, chairman of fire and finance, reported that in answer to his request, they had received bids from two companies concerning new fire apparatus. Councilman Schuler said he had asked for specifications, and that two other companies said they would send them, but had not yet had time to do so. The bids were turned over to Borough Clerk James M. Fisher to be opened at the next meeting. In the meantime, Councilman Schuler asked for further bids.
The police report for the month of May was received from Chief W illiam Brockstedt.
The board of fish and game commissioners of New Jersey asked the borough’s cooperation in the annual Governor’s fishing tournament, now underway throughout the state. South Belmar has always donated one of the best trophies for the contest, usually giving either second or third prize.
Mayor. Herbert was appointed a committee of one to arrange for a suitable prize this year.
Several bids to purchase lots in the borough were received and lead. John C. ijm ith offered to purchase lots 40 and 41, on Twenty-first avenue, at a price of $200. The bid was accepted and will be advertised. W illiam Thorney offered $110 for lots 49 and 50 on Twenty-first avenue, but was rejected. Joseph A. and Kathleen A. White bid a total of $200 for lots 49, 50, 53 and 54 on Twenty-first avenue.
Their bid was also rejected.Councilman Percy Keynton, chair
man of law and ordinance, reported that progress is being made on the dog problem, and that his committee is arranging an agreement with Jack Kendrick to solve the problem.
Councilman Keynton also requested that the 30-minute parking lim it on F street between Sixteenth and Seventeenth avenues be increased to an
Continued on Page Four
Go on Class TripMembers of the eighth grade of
Belmar public school, who will be graduated at exercises to take place Wednesday night, recently made a class trip to Asbury Park preceded by dinner served at Jane’s tea room in Belmar.
The group divided and some went swimming at the Asbury Park nata- torium and others went skating at the Casino skating rink. The class also went to a motion picture show at the Mayfair theatre.
Mrs. Ida Sloan and Mrs. Bessie Pearce, eighth grade teachers; Mrs. Ruth D. Querns, Mrs. Dorothy G. Bush, Mrs. E lla S, Ricketts, Miss Della Phillips and Lon Crandall made the trip with the class.
Wednesday afternoon the eighth grade girls will be guests at the annual luncheon given by the Belmar W oman’s club at the Calvary Baptist church and the boys will be guests of the Belmar Kiwanis club at dinner on that same day.
SEN. PROCTOR SPEAKSSen. Haydn Proctor was the guest
sneaker at the regular meeting of the ; West Belmar Republican unit Monday evening at the home of Mrs. Phillip Schmidt, Eighteenth avenue, West Belmar. Senator Proctor spoke on the proposed revision of the state consti-
. tut!on.Mrs. Irving Bennett, president, was
in charge of the meeting. The next meeting will be held August 7 at the
i home of Mrs. Elizabeth Heller, and will be in the form of a covered dish
supper.Others attending the meeting were:
Mrs. Elizabeth Stines, Mrs. Lars Larsen, Mrs. W illiam Pinkerton, Mrs. El-
i sie Thompson, Mrs. Simon Blodis, Mrs. Cornelius Conklin and Miss Gertrude Chapman.
SGT. TRAIL, GERM AN PR ISO N E RSgt. W illiam Trail, who was re-
I ported missing in action after a raid over Germany, is now reported to be
la prisoner of war of Germany, according to word received by his mo- ,ther, Mrs. Mary Trail, New Bedford 'road, West Belmar, through the In- iternational Red Cross.
| A dance will be held next Friday [evening, June 16, at the Glendola | Grange hall, for the benefit of the |Wall Township First Aid squad.
Belmar Students Given
Awards at Manasquan;
West Belmar, New Bed
ford and Glendola.
A total of 73 Belmar boys and girls received diplomas this week in graduation exercises at West Belmar school, New Bedford, Glendola and Manasquan high school. Many awards were won by the local students at the schools.
Manasquan High SchoolForty boys and girls from the
j Belmar section, including West Belmar and South Belmar, were graduated last night at commencement exercises of Manasquan high school held in the school audit >rium.
The graduation speaker, Judge Howard B. Welles, was introduced by Edward Oliver Megill of Belmar. The class president, Thomas Anthony Fitzgerald, was the presiding officer. The school g'.ee clubs, G irl’s glee club and the Mixed cho-us sang several selec-
I tions.The G irl’s Athletic award was pre
sented by Harriet Walzer of Belmar to L illian Marshall, also of Belmar. The Boy’s Athletic award was presented by Charles Raffetto to James Lattimer and Oscar Olsen, who is now with the U. S. Navy.
Diplomas were presented by Dr. Mott V. Marcellus, president of the Board of Education, who was introduced by W. Franklin Eirich, jr. Twen-
\ ty-two boys now in service received 1 their diplomas “in absentia."
Gerald Barkalow of Belmar offered the benediction which was a prayer of “An American” followed by the Recessional march.
Scholarship awards were presented to several students and Marjorie Can- onica of Belmar was presented with a
j medal for four years of service in the ' school orchestra.j The class flower is an American j Beauty rose, class motto, ‘This above all, To Thine Own Self Be True” ; and
j class colors, blue and white.
Among those from this section who ! were graduated are Leslie Eugene Allen, Gerald Hyde Barkalow, Patricia Irene Barton, Jeanne Frances Bouchard, June Meredith Brown, Dorothy Lenora Caggiano, W illiam Henry Cag- giano (Army), Marporie Marie Can-
Continued on Page E igh t
COMMISSIONERS HOSTS TO YOUTH OFFICIALS
THREE ARE ARRESTED
IN SOUTH BELMAREdward Brown, colored, of Wall
township, was arrested on a charge of disorderly conduct on Monday by Officer Brad Behrman, of the South Belmar police department. Tried before Recorder Harry W . Wilcke, Brown plead guilty and was fined $25 and
court costs. ,F rank Muro, of Elizabeth, was ar
rested for careless driving on F street by Officer Behrman and was fined $25 and costs by Recorder Wilcke.
Fred Donnelly, of Twelfth avenue, Belmar, arrested for having no license plates on his truck, was fined
$25 and costs.
Attention'. Fuel CustomersMonmouth Coal and Supply Com
pany, Inc., announces their office and yard will be closed all day Saturdays beginning Saturday, June 10th until
Saturday, Sept. 16th. 4
Telephone 2647 Frank J. Briden, painter and deco
rator, 803 D St., Belmar. 28tf
mander of the Salvation Army, is credited with being the founder of the USO club. He had 58 years of active service with his organization before retirement.
Introduced by Tom Tighe, he also told of the fine welfare work the Ki- w.anis is doing.
with the local church program.After the meeting, games were
played, and refreshments served by Mrs. Atkinson.
FO R M E R PASTOR M ENTIONED FOR B ISHOP AT CONFERENCE
The Rev. W . Earl Ledden, D.D., former pastor of the First Methodist church, Belmar, during the First World war, and now pastor of the Methodist church in Albany, N. Y., has been mentioned for the office of Bishop at the jurisdictional conference of the church now in session in Ocean City. Four bishops will be elected
at the conference.
M ISSIONARY TO SPEAK
The Rev. John Z. Moore, D.D., for ; more than 40 years a missionary of j the Methodist church in Korea, will be the guest speaker at the evening service at the First Methodist church Sunday, June 11, Dr. Moore, known as the "Father of the School System” at Pyengyang, Korea, was presented with a scroll and silver vase by the Japanese governor-elect of Korea for "distinguished service rendered in the cause of education in Korea.”
Play safe. Don’t make harsh laxatives a habit. Try new Post's Raisin Bran to add gentle bulk to daily meals . . . help you keep regular. It ’s new— it’s delicious! 4
Try Our “Liberation Punch”It ’s super and delicious. Served by
our expert mixologist in a ruby red glass. The Yacht Club, 9th Ave. and F Street, Belmar. 4
Lawn Seed 15c Lb.Swift's Red Steer Fertilizer, analy
sis 5-10-5 $2.75 per 100 lbs. Agricultur-. al lime, 80 lb. bag 75c. Lime spreader and lawn roller for rent. Davenport & Carver, 917 F St., Belmar. 4
Ro ton-oneThe perfect insecticide for your veg
etable garden. Approved by U. S. Agricultural Dept. 25c a pound. Davenport & Carver, 917 F St., Belmar. 4
At The Yacht ClubFrederick Mohlford, Pianist, plays
your favorite songs, nightly at The Yacht Club, 9th Ave. and F St., Belmar. 4
Reward to housewives. Something new for breakfast. Post’s Raisin Bran, a magic combination of crisp-toasted wheat and bran flakes plus California
raisins. 4
THE YOUTH GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS OF BELM VR—Pictured at a dinner Wednesday evening given for them by Mayor Leon T. Abbott and Commissioners Call W. Schroeder and Edward F. Lyman. Seated, left to right in the picture are: Bill Thomas, John Manutti, Ralph Fletcher, Joseph Schneider, Joseph Delaney, Joseph Evans, Don Kleva, Don Clark, Barbara Coeyman, Harriet Gross, John Kolb; standing, James Thompson, Lillian Marshall, James Howard, Louis Zawedzki, Ann Vo'a, L ity A roni:, Mary Jane Gibbons, Thomas Kelty, Bob Pringle, Audrey Coeymari, Commissioner Schroeder, Lee Thomas, Commissioner Lyman, Paul C. Taylor, Harry Cooper, Mayor Abbott, “Mayor” W illiam Clawson, and James Burke. Fellow ng the dinner, Mayor Clayson and his commissioners expressed their appreciation to Mayer Abbott, and also thanked the commissioners for their interest and help. Mr. Teylor and Mr. Cooper, m mbers of the bo?rd of the Y.M.C.A., spoke briefly to the boys and urged them to continue their close coopera ion with the borough’s governing officials. Mayor Abbott and Cmmissioners Schroeder and Lyman also spoke briefly.
(A .P . P h o to S e rv ice )
Public AccountantJoseph H. Lyon. Office now at 711
F St. Tel. Belmar 3784. 49tf
Brown’s Candy Shop Lost—English Setterj Candy, cigars, tobacco, cigarets. Black and white female English Set- Newspapers. W. O. Brown, Prop., 12021 ter. Reward Elmer Cuttrell, 1004 - F Street, opposite ball park. 4tf 2nd Avenue, Belmar. 4*
Dr. Sidney R . Vlneburg— Optometrist, 623 Cookman Av„ Asb. PU Tel. 2687. Eyes examined, glasses fitted
Retire from harsh-laxative custom- Sapclin Quality Paintser list. Add gentle bulk to daily meals enamels and varnishes. Turpentine, with new Post’s Raisin Bran—toasted! oils and benzine at no advance in flakes of wheat and bran plus choice price. All colors. Davenport & Carver, raisins. 4 j 917 F St., Belmar. 4
OptometristsDr. George M. McEneany a n d '
Dr. Joseph F. Heine, 518 Cookman Avenue, Asbury Park 154. 51 tf
OPPORTUNITY to change breakfast menu. Serve new Post’s Raisin Bran, the delicious combination of" crisp wheat and bran flakes plus choice California seedless raisins. 4
Page 2 THE COAST ADVERTISER, FRIDAY, JUNE 9, 1944
Established in 1892 — Telephone Belm ar 2900The
COAST ADVERTISERJO S E P H J . SCH ADLE , Ed itor and Publisher
M A R Y JA N E G IBB O N S , News Ed itor JE A N N E T T E L. G R E G O R Y , Social Ed itor
P rin ted and published every Friday m orning a t 701 Seventh Avenue, Belmar, N. J., and entered as second class matter at the postoffice at Belmar, N. J., under an act of Congress of March 3, 1879.
Member of N ational Ed itoria l Association and New
Jersey Press Association. Ad
vertising rate card furnished
■on request.
What Other Editors Say. . .C IV IL IZ A T IO N R E T A K E S R O M E . . .
I t is a little less than twenty-one and a ha lf years
since Mussolini introduced w hat he called "the dawn of
new history for Ita ly , aind perhaps dawn on a new path
o f civilization,” by his renowned "M arch on Rom e.”
This lapse of tim e has been sufficient to perm it an
im ita tio n of the M ussolin ian state to come to monstrous
b loom and enter the first stages of decay in the lands
o f the Germ an tribes. I t has also been sufficient to
m uster armies of overwhelm ing strength from nations
w h ich w ill not tolerate either fascism or nazism any
longer.
Now, nearly five years after the unholy alliance be
tw een these two powers of darkness plunged the world
in to war, but only nine m onths after setting foot on the
Ita lia n m ain land , these arm ies have smashed th e if way
to the heart of Rom e and have thereby not only con-
'/juered the first Axis capital but have also put an end
SU B S C R IP T IO N P R IC E : $2.00 per year, payable in advance; $1.00 for six months. On sale at principal newsstands and by carrier. Single copy 4 cents._____
“We will gain the inevitable triumph . . . So help us God”
— P R E S ID E N T R O O SEV ELT , Dec. 8, 1941.
Our Youth in the Invasion. . .Belmar remembers its young men go
ing off for the Army physical examinations. It remembers them leaving in subdued groups from the railroad station or the First Aid home on the Fort Dix bus.
Today many of these young men are on the beaches of France. They are among the tremendous legions of the Invasion army now beginning the long and
arduous march to Berlin.
It was with these boys in mind that •one received the news of the Invasion this week. There could be no jubilation. There was, instead, public prayer, and that quiet private prayer that must reach the gold bar of Heaven. It was prayer for our
youth.Spoken and written words seem of no
consequence beside the emotions that came when the church bells rang on
Tuesday morning.--- -—4) -----
THE FIFTH DRIVE . . .From June 12-26 we subscribe to the na
tion’s fifth war loan drive. The goal is $16 billion and that is $2 billion higher than the fourth drive for bonds. Since war expenses for the first three months of 1944 were oyer $23 billion, it gives us an idea of how much is needed to keep going. From all indications of the money being spent today for non-essentials, the bond drive should be over subscribed, if those spenders get wise. If money is to be circulated, for what better purpose than in a government bond, to protect the lives of our sons and the destiny of our country? War demands much of all of us. But chaps over there are more anxious to get back home to chicken on Sunday with the family, a chance to haunt the corner drugstore, an opportunity to yell at the baseball umpire, a trip to a favorite fishing spot. Give them a chance by helping to buy their ticket back home, with your purchase of
a war bond.
PREVENT DISASTER . . .“The war is not over,” says the National
Board of Fire Underwriters. It points out that while the immediate danger of bombing may have passed, the need for new and effective apparatus in the fire departments of cities and
towns is just as great as ever.A destructive fire in a war plant is equally
disastrous, whether it resulted from lack of efficient fire-fighting equipment or from a block
buster.Modern apparatus must be used to save the
lives of people crowded into hotels, apartments, tenements and houses, and those in industries under less than normal safe conditions. Much old fire-fighting equipment is becoming obsolete, and few cities have had the desirable amount of reserve apparatus.
To forestall disastrous fire losses, public officials charged with the protection of life and property, should urge that public budgets include liberal allowances for fire-fighting and salvage equipment.
We should always remember that a Cocoa- nut Grove tragedy or a fire-gutted war plant is of maximum aid to our enemies, for such destruction involves no effort or expense on their
part.
to a black epoch in the history of the E ternal City. And
it is perhaps symbolic of that wider civilization which Mus oiini never understood tha t these armies should
have been paced by men from the New W orld who
fought for Rome w ithout any ulterior ambitions of
the ir own and whom an overjoyed populace therefore
received with wine and flowers as liberators and not as
conquerors. In fact, by their valor and their sacrifices, which crushed the strongest enemy defenses before the
gates of Rome and split the Germ an armies, they have
done much to save the city from the destruction which
has so often been its fate.
For Rome has fallen before, and w ith quite differ
ent consequences. I t fell to the Gauls, who sacked it in
390 B. C .; it was largely burned in Nero’s fire in 63
A. D.; it was sacked by Alaric in 410 A. D., by Genseric
the Vandal in 455; it was taken by Totila the Goth in
546, by the German A rnu lf in 896; it was plundered by
the Constable of Bourbon in 1527; it was seized by N a
poleon the Great in 1808 and by Napoleon the L ittle in
1849; finally, the conscienceless adventurer, for whom
the best that can be said is that he did not believe his
own horrid nonsense, took it in 1922.
B ut this is a new k ind of conquest, best expressed
in General Alexander's instructions to the Rom an citi
zens which read: “Rome is yours. The future of Rome
is in your hands. Our duty is the destruction of the
enemy.” I t is the answer to the prayer of m illions who
have been trem bling for the fate of their spiritual cap
ital.
Rome has survived twenty-seven centuries of vicis
situdes. The settlement of shepherds, who nam ed the
Palestine H ‘H after their pastoral goddess, became the
metropolis of a political empire; lapsed into a centurie-- long n igh t during which the few rem ain ing inhabitants
quarried gloomily among the ancient ruins in order to
find stones for their m any hovels and their few palaces;
came to new majesty as the capital of a spiritual em
pire. As a political center its glory can return no more.
The Tiber is a little stream in this modern, world. The
rivers of power flow elsewhere.
The city remains a religious center, sacred to. m il
lions the world over. I t remains a center of civilization
for a whole world of m any religions. As F. Marion
Crawford wrote m any years ago: “A m an can no more
say a last farewell to Rom e than he can take leave of
eternity. The years move on, but she waits; the cities
fall, but she stands; the old races of men lie dead in
the track wherein m ank ind wanders always between
two darknesses; yet Rome lives, and her changes are
not from life to death, as ours are, but from one life
to another.”
In this season of vast storms mem’s m inds need an
chorage. In the newly liberated city are the roots of
the past of the whole western world. Jus t as there are
walls there tha t were ancient in the time of St. Paul,
there are records of m any generations of hum an tria l
and error, and those who stand thoughtfu lly in Rome,
the soldiers tough and helmeted like the legionaires of
Caesar's time, m ay reflect tha t there is little new under
the sun—and much tha t is both old and precious.
C iv ilization in Rom e has a t times grown like an
oak and a t times withered like a flower. Now let us
hope that it m ay begin to prosper again.—N E W Y O R K
T IM ES.
T W EN T Y-F IV E Y E A R S AGO (June 20, 1919) . . .
The Belm ar Methodist church had Children’s day
exercises a t the church. T ak ing part were M yrtle E d
wards, Harold Davenport, M ildred Bearmore, John Tay
lor, Sarah Hyer, W ilbu rta Redden, Charlotte Hausotte
and Gertrude Armes.
— 1919 —
Miss Jennie M iller, seventh grade teacher in the
Belm ar school, was spending her sum m er vacation in
Freehold.
— 1919 —
Belm ar students who were graduated from Neptune
h igh school were: M iriam Gasn, E leanor M iller, E m ily
Pyott, E lizabeth Merkle and Harold Edwards. Miss
M iller was the class historian and Miss Gasn gave the
class prophecy.
— 1919 —
Police officers in Belm ar were wearing new blue
serge uniforms.
— 1919 —
H arry Lewis o f Belm ar was graduated from the
Am erican School of Practipedics of Chicago and was
engaged in his father’s store, J. Lewis and Son, Sixth
avenue and F street, and was g iv ing relief from all
forms of foot d iscom fort to the patrons of the store.
— 1919 —
Belm ar hotels opened for the summ er season were:
New W indsor, The Carleton, The A tlantic , New Colum
bia, The Cedars, Llanym or, Cary Lodge, The Bruns
wick, Buena Vista. Pav ilions also opened were Carpen
ter’s, Keeley’s and Sanborn’s. —
ST-WS 1>CSf-X)lSf‘ATtM
D . R . F itz p a tr ic k — S t . L o u i s P o s t - D i s p a l c l i
IN S P IR A T IO N A L . . .
In fin ite toil would not enable you to ssveep away a
m ist; but, by ascending a little, you m ay often look over
it altogether.—A R T H U R H E L P S .
FROM THE FILES...of THE COAST ADVERTISER
F IF T E E N Y E A R S AGO (June 7, 1929) . . .
Robert Connelly, Belmar, was one of a group of
Georgetown university students’ delegation in the P il
grimage of the League of Sacred Heart, which sailed
on the Leviathan for Europe.— 1929 —
The State H ighw ay commission a t a meeting in
Trenton consented to appropriate $25,000 to repair the
wooden bridge on F street between Belm ar and Avon.
— 1929 —
R u th D. Querns, Edythe Cooper, H ilda Allgor, E liza beth Titus were students in the Institu te of Education
a t New York university. H ild a Morris and E leanor
M iller were students in the School o f Education.
— 1929 —
Carl Grosse had leased the store at Tenth avenue
and F street and was to conduct a restaurant there in
conjunction w ith his cafeteria.
— 1929 —
A rthu r L indem an was appointed acting water su
perintendent of South Belm ar by a vote of borough
council. Owen Dunfee was appointed chief of police;
W illiam Brockstedt, regular officer, and W alter Tilton
and A rthu r Hall, special officers.
— 1929 —
A mass Republican rally was held in the Belm ar
school aud itorium a t which all Republican candidates
appeared and gave talks. Assemblyman E . Donald Ster
ner was the principal speaker. Dr. F. V. Thompson,
president of the Belm ar Republican club, was in charge.
LETTERSFrom Our
Men in ServiceE D IT O R , The Coast Advertiser.
Hello, Friends: This is jus t to let
you know that I am receiving your
paper regularly and appreciate it very
much. W ith all the folks busy w ith
war work and so little time to write,
it really comes in handy. Since I
wrote you some time ago I have
changed by address and I would not
want my paper to get lost. I was al
so promoted to the rank of corporal
the day before Easter.
Well, here’s my best wlghes to all
of the hard-working folks of Belmar
and vicinity. They’re doing a fine job
and we here appreciate it every bit. ’
Thanks again for your swell paper
service.
As ever,
Cpl. CHAS. SC H IL L IN G ,
c/o P.M. San Francisco, Calif.
E D IT O R , The Coast Advertiser.
Dear Editor: R a ther a peculiar
heading (Somewhere in the South P a
cific) but due to m ilitary censoring
th a t’s as fa r as I can go in te lling you
where I am . Before I go on telling
about life in general over here I ’d like
to say a few words in reference to
The Coast Advertiser.
D uring m y stay in the states I spent
m any an enjoyable hour reading of
the doings in the old home town—the
home paper was always more or less
like a letter from home. I always
looked forward to each edition.
Now I w ill endeavor to tell you as
far as censoring w ill allow, about A.
P. O. 502. A t the end of each day we
manage to take a bath in the largest
bath tub in the world— that’s right—
the blue Pacific. As fa r as laundry is
concerned, we fellows have the s itua
tion well in hand. W e w ill never be
w ithout a wash tub just as long as
Uncle Sam issues us helmits. K . P . is
no longer a problem for us because
we are getting used to eating spam
and that cuts down on the pots and
pans. Read ing during our spare time
is our only relaxation and needless to
say, I ’m always happy to be able to sit
down and read the good old Coast A d
vertiser blcause I know tha t not only
w ill it be reading material, but V ill
keep me posted as to the whereabouts
and doings of all m y former pals back
home. In closing I ’d like to say the
best of luck to all m y buddies in the armed forces.
P E T E C IA LL E LL A .
E D IT O R , The Coast Advertiser.
Dear Sir: Seeing in the paper of
April 10, the announcement th a t you
have sold the local paper, I w ish to
express m y m any thanks for receiving
the paper while you were editor. So
j to whatever job you are going to in
! the future, I wish you success.
I have been receiving the paper re-
I gularly while in N orth A frica and at
m y present location somewhere in Italy.
I t makes you feel great to read
about w hat’s tak ing place in the
home town. Sb again I say m any
thanks for the paper and best wishes
to all m y friends a t home.
As ever,
Pfc. H A R O L D T H O RN ,
Italy.
ANSWERSlo Popular Questions on
RAT I ONI NG AND PRICES
Q.— I have a [number >of unused B-2
and C-2 gasoline coupons th:it br-came
invalid on June 1, 1944. M ay I ex
change them for valid coupons?
A.—Yes. The holder of such unused
coupons may bring them in to his lo
cal war price and ration ing board for
exchange. The board m ay either issue
serially numbered coupons equal to
the am ount of gasoline still outstand
ing on the old ration, or m ay evaluate
his mileage needs and issue coupons
sufficient for the remainder of the ra
tion period, but not in excess of the
coupons surrendered.
Q.— Have there been any changes
made in the point values cin cheeses
and catxned m ilk ?A.—Yes. Cheeses have been reduced
to 10 points per pound and canned
m ilk to % point per pound.
Q.—W ha t is the present point value
on canned orange juice and canned
grapefruit juice?
A.—No ration points are required,
at present, for the purchase of canned
orange juice and canned grapefruit
juice.
Q.— Is a salesman eligible for the
purchase of a new 1M2 automobile?
A.—No. UndeF the present regula
tions a salesman is not an eligible
purchaser of a .new 1942 automobile.
Q. W hen a special shoe stam p is is
sued for a certain type of shoe, cam it
be used for the purchase of another
type?A.—No. I f a dealer delivers any
type of shoe other than the one speci
fied, he is com m itting a violation of
Ration Order 17, and is subject to
penalty.
Q.— Is my dealer perm itted to reduce
the quantity o f bobby pins sold a t a
customary price?
A.— Each retailer must deliver now
the same quantity for the price
charged by h im during March 1942.
Q.—W h a t is the ceiling price, farm
or t.o consumer, on live chickens?
A.— Broilers, fryers or roasters— 38c
per pound; fow l—34c per pound.
Q.—W h a t price m ay a retailer place
on men’s straw hats?A.—The retailer of straw hats is re
stricted to the percentage m arkup
used in the summer of 1941 taken on
his average cost or replacement cost,
whatever is lower.
Q.— Is there a ceiling price on used
vacuum cleaners if sold by an ind i
vidual ?
A.— Yes. I t depends on the make of
the cleaner and its condition.
A IR C R A F T SPO T T ERS D IN N E R -
The annua l d inner of the a ircraft
spotters of Post 178A, Brielle, w ill be
held Tuesday evening at 7 o’clock at
Jane ’s Southern tea room, E igh th ave
nue and R iver road. A t th is d inner
honorable service certificates w ill be
presented to the members of the post,
as well as the ir honorable discharge
papers from the A rm y A ir Forces.
Boy Scouts Advanced
At Court of HonorMembers of Troop 40, Boy Scouts,
of the F irs t Presbyterian church, a t
tended the Court of Honor a t M ana
squan h igh school held F riday n ight
a t w h ich time several of the Scouts
were advanced.
A lbert Chew, John Keim , and R ich
ard B onk were made L ife Scouts;
Gerald Barton, Robert Applegate,
Star; John Mayer, Chester Davison,
.■Ricliard Barton, firs t class; W illiam
Lister, Charles Quakenbush, K enneth
Laursen, Charles Patterson and John Solly, sccond class scouts.
L O O K IN G A H E A D c
n G E O R G E S. B E N S O N
F E D E R A L A ID
School teachers are influential peo
ple. They choose their calling as a
rule because they love children, and love influences children. Youngsters,
in turn, control their homes and par
ents more than they realize; in ways
they don’t know about. Thus a good
teacher is a power in the community.
Any politician could cut quite a splash
if only he could line up all the teachers behind him.
The idea is not new. Starts are
made in that direction often. Plans
to halter the public schools of Ameri
ca in a bureaucratic treadmill have
come before congress four times since
1937. They have failed every time but
each new attem pt shows m o r e
strength. The most recent one, discus
sed in this column exactly a year ago,
gained enough m om entum to get
talked about from Bangor to Burbank.
Maybe N ine Lives
This latest sally on the public school
system was led by Sen. Lister H ill of
A labama, helping Sen. E lbert D.
Thomas of Utah. The .bill, (S. 367) as
finally rejected by the 78th Congress,
is dead but the senators’ ambitions
can still wiggle. H ill is cam paigning
now for reelection on a platform of
“federal aid to education,” and that's
been a hobby of Thomas’ for a long time.
The issue w ill be revived. Political problems have a way of coming to
life repeatedly until they are cured,
and this one is not cured. Teachers
have a right to earn as much in the
classroom as they m igh t get for m an
ual labor in a factory and, un til teach
ers’ pay is adjusted, state school au
thorities w ill have their troubles born
of somebody’s m istakes; maybe their own.
Money Has Power
Federal aid to education, if it comes,
w ill be federal control of schools
eventually, whether the author of the
bill wants it or not. "Whoever signs
the checks can compel obedience to
orders, even from teachers. Obvious
ly most public school systems need,
not federal support, but better state
support. There are at least six good
reasons. These are plain and practical, the others basic.
(1) Federal control would cost tax
payers more for the same results than
state control; an extra hand ling charge. (2) Federal control of schools
would make one more huge bureau
w ith an arm y of henchmen in a maze
of pyram id ing salaries. (3) Federal
control w ill ride down traditions. How
the South w ill fester a t the first suc
cessful effort to seat white and color
ed children together at school. I t
m igh t easily result in widespread violence.
W rong in Principle
The foregoing objections are prac
tical ones. B u t it is wrong in princi
ple to rob parents of their influence
in public schools. (4) Concentrating school funds in the hands o f far-away
strangers is saying to all parents,
"H ands off school!” (5) I t is also
fru itfu l o f racketeering. (6) Worse
yet, it violates the principle of state
sovereignty which is the backbone of American freedom.
Any time rich W ashington sets up a
W . P. A. for teachers, local school rev
enue will start drying up. Soon the
U. S. Treasury w ill be footing all bills
and that suggested 200 m illion dollars a year increase in pay for teachers
w ill not be a drop in the bucket. In
m any states teachers need and de
serve more pay. I f it comes the peo
ple w ill pay it and theyd better han
dle it locally. A local solution to the
problem is possible anywhere.
Presbyterian Ladies' Aid
Plans August BazarA t a final meeting of the Ladies Aid
society of the F irst Presbyterian
church held Thursday afternoon at
the home of Mrs. E. R . Reuben, 902
Thirteenth avenue, plans were made
to conduct a bazar August 17 and 18
in Ocean Grove.
Mrs. Rudo lph W ieger and Mrs. Paul
Newm an were co-hostesses. Others
present were Mrs. F rank Erving,
Mrs. Edw in Bigelow, Mrs. M. L. An
derson, Mrs. Lon Crandall, Mrs. M.
Applegate, Mrs. W . J. Sterner, Mrs.
H arry Cooper, Mrs. H arry Lyon, Mrs.
Bertha Coeyman, Mrs. F rank K au tz
man, Mrs. Doris Haberstick, Mrs. E .
M. Strong, Mrs. Henry Gilbert, Mrs.
E lla Jones, M iss Saidie J . M iller and
the Rev. Jam es R . Bell.
B E S U R E TO R E A D T H E A D V ERT ISE M E N T S —T H E Y ’R E N E W S Y TOO
TIME of TIDESBELMAR, N. J.
For W eek B eg inn ing M ay 26
H IG H
A.M. P.M.
9 9.35 9.5410 10.29 10.4911 11.26 11.4612 12.2413 0.44 1.2314 1.44 2.2315 2.46 3.25
L O W
A.M. P.M.
3.424.285.186.147.158.16 9.12
3.394.295.266.347.478.549.53
Add 1 H our for Eastern W ar Time
...— — Courtesy of -----
P A T ’ S B O A T S
Shark R iver, New Jersey
PAT and SA N D Y
BELMAR, NEW JERSEY, FRIDAY, JUNE 9, 1944 Page 3
S a d M e M a c * / - BUY MORE THAN BEFORE* %% Certificates of Indebtedness
THE FIFTH WAR LOAN Starts Next Week!BARTON’S Men’s Shop DAVE’S RESTAURANT W M . H . HURLEY Menzler’s Daylight Bakery ROYAL Meat Market
Tenth Avenue and F Street Cor. 7th Ave. and F St. 911 F Street 803 F Street 805 F Street
The Belmar National Bank G IU N CO ’S MARKETS Kramer’s Stationery Store Modern Department Store Sherman-Tailor 8C CleanerBelmar, N. J. Belmar — Sea Girt 704 F Street 10th Avenue and F Street 801 F Street
V ^ T H E R E V E R your invasion forces are
^ * fighting— at sea, in the air, on the
ground— they’re working together for vie-
tory. They know that they must depend on
each other, for only by coordinated team'
work will they win through to final victory
in the earliest possible time.
The Fifth W ar Loan starts next week.
It’s going to take teamwork— a lot of it— to
put this drive over the top. For
we’ve got a job to do. As the
tempo of invasion rises every
one of us must mobilise for
support of our fighting men.
In every city, town and
hamlet men and women like
yourself have banded together as W ar Bond
Volunteer Workers, giving their time to
taking your subscriptions for Bonds. Sup'
port them. Give them the kind of teamwork
our boys are giving to each other on the
fighting fronts!
W hen your Volunteer Worker calls, double
your W ar Bond subscription. It’s their job to
help raise $ 16 billions of money for victory dur'
ing this Fifth drive, $6 billions
from individuals like yourself.
Make up your mind to wel'
come your Victory Volunteer
with a friendly smile and an
open checkbook—remembering
that it’s teamwork that does it!
5 mWAR LOAN
HERE’S WHAT UNCLE SAM OFFERS YOU IN
THE FIFTH WAR LOAN
The “basket” of securities to be sold under the direction
of the State War Finance Committees during the Fifth
War Loan consists of eight individual issues.
These issues are designed to fit the investment needs
of every person with money to invest.
THE OFFERING INCLUDES:
★ Series F F and G Savings Bonds
★ Series C Savings Notes
★ Bonds of 1965-70
★ 1% Bonds of 1952-54
★ 1%% Notes, Series B of 1947
Belmar Stationery Store THOM AS R. H A RDY W M . T. LINS Pharmacy Mon. Coal 8C Supply Co. Sterner Coal 8C Lumber Co.803 F Street 604 F Street 1500 F Street 16th Avenue and Railroad 12th Avenue and Railroad
CARR’S Variety Store HENRY - Jewelers Madnick’s Clothing Store R IV O LI SUGAR BOWL TAYLOR’S Hardware '919 F Street 802 '/2 F Street F Street at 16th Avenue 902 F Street 9th Avenue and F Street !
Page 4 THE COAST ADVERTISER, FRIDAY, JUNE 9, 1944
South Belmar N O T IC ET ake no t ic e th a t A n g e lin e F e r re tt i
h as a p p lie d to the M ay o r a n d C o m m is s io ne rs o f the B o ro u g h o f B e lm a r , N. J. fo r a p le n a ry r e ta i l c o n s u m p tio n l i cense fo r the p rem ises s itu a te d a t 1309 F S tree t, B e lm a r , N. J.
O b je c tio n s , if a n y , sh o u ld be m ade , im m e d ia te ly , in w r it in g , to J . A. Jo e c k , B o ro u g h C le rk o f B e lm a r , N. J .
(S ig n e d )
3-4________________ A N G E L IN E F E R R E T T I .
N O T IC ET ake no tice th a t T h o m a s M u rp h y
h as a p p lie d to th e M ay o r a n d C o m m is s ione rs o f th e B o ro u g h o f B e lm a r , N. J . fo r a p le n a ry r e ta i l c o n s u m p tio n l i cense fo r p rem ises s itu a te d a t n o r th eas t c o rne r o f F i f te e n th A v en u e a n d F S tree t, B e lm a r , N. J .
O b je c t io n s , if any , sh o u ld be m ade , im m e d ia te ly , in w r it in g , to J . A . Jo e ck , B o ro u g h C le rk o f B e lm a r , N. J .
(S ig n e d ) T H O M A S M U RPJH Y .
N O T IC E
T ake no tice th a t N e lson T. A b b o tt h a s a p p lie d to the M ay o r a n d C o u n c il o f the B o ro u g h o f S o u th B e lm a r , N, J ., fo r a p le n a ry r e ta il c o n s u m p tio n li- cenhe fo r p rem ises s itu a te d a t 415-419 E ig h te e n th A venue , S o u th B e lm a r.
O b je c tio n s , if any , s h o u ld be m ade , im m e d ia te ly , in w r it in g , to Jam e s M. F ish e r . B o ro u g h C le rk o f S o u th B e lm a r, N. J .4.5 (S ig n e d ) N E L S O N T . A B B O T T .
N O T IC E
T ak e no t ic e th a t H a r ry Weinstein has a p p lie d to the M ay o r a nd C o u nc il o f the B o ro u g h o f S o u th B e lm a r , X. J., f o r a p le n a ry r e ta il d is t r ib u t io n license fo r p rem ises s itu a te d a t 16D1 F S tree t, S o u th B e lm a r .
O b je c tio n s , if a ny . sh o u ld he m ade, im m e d ia te ly , in w r it in g , to Ja m e s M. F ish e r , B o ro u g h C le rk , S o u th B e lm a r , N. J.4.5 (S ig n e d ) H A R R Y W E IN S T E IN .
Continued from Page One
hour, since shoppers cannot complete
their purchases in the 30-minute per
iod. He also said m any complaints had
been received about store-owners
park ing on F street, thereby depriv
ing customers of park ing space.
A long the same lines, a request was
made to form a restricted area from
L A S S I F I EADVERTISING ,
Call B e lm a r 2 9 0 0 S U B S C R IB E TO T H K C O A ST AD- V K K T IS K Il, the hom e to w n pap e r w it l the hom e tow n new s— it costs bu t a y e a r a n d w e ’l l m a il i t to y ou any where.
A d v e r t is e m e n ts p u b lis h e d In the C la s s if ie d C o lu m n are re s tr ic te d to the r e g u la r ty p o g ra p h ic a l s ty le of The C oas t A d v e r t is e r a nd to th e ir p rooe r c la s s if ic a t io n . R a te s : 5 cen ts per lin e (a v e ra g e 5 w ords to lin e ) . W h ite space c h a rg e d a t 5 cen ts
H E L P W A N T E D —F E M A L E
GOOD S A L A R Y — excellent tips, splen
did working conditions; full or part time. Apply Manager, Evans-Belmar
Hotel, 112 - 5th Avenue, Belmar. 4
Stenographer WantedStenographer, experienced, required by
M ON M O U T H H O T E L
Spring Lake, N. J.
Room out. Apply in Person at M an
ager’s Office on the Property.
Do not telephone. N O T IC ET ake no tice th a t A u g u s t H . R e g an ,
r a d in g as Y a c h t C lub , h as a p p lie d to he M ay o r a n d C o m m iss io ne rs o f the bo ro ug h o f B e lm a r , N. J ., fo r a p le n ary r e ta i l c o n s u m p t io n license fo r 're m ise s s itu a te d a t 901 F S tree t, Bel- n a r , N. J .
O b je c tio n s , i f a n y , s h o u ld be m ade , m rn ed ia te lv . in w r it in g , to T. A.. Jo e ck , b o ro u g h C le rk o f B e lm a r , N. J .
(S ig n e d )A U G U S T H . R E G A N .
UOS R iv e r R o ad , B e lm a r , N. J.
H O U S E K E E P E R — W om an or mo
ther’s helper for general housework,
excellent pay; four in fam ily; pleasant
w orking conditions. Telephone Belmar
1018. 4
M E R C H A N D IS E F O R SALE
IC E B O X — Porcelain, good condition,
large size. Mr. Haslam , 111 Third
Avenue.
P E R M A N E N T W A V E —59c! Do your
own Perm anent w ith Charm-Kurl
K it. Complete equipment, includ ing
40 curlers and shampoo. Easy to do,
absolutely harmless. Praised by thou
sands includ ing Fay McKenzie, g lam
orous movie star. Money refunded if
not satisfied. Yore Cut Rate Store.51-8*
PrSc«
irtctvdo
foxW H E T H E R your car is
still on the road or is
jacked up “for the dura
tion” you need Compre
hensive Automobile In
surance.
W H O M TO CALL
W A L L P A P E R
P A IN T IN G & P A P E R H A N G IN G
Exclusive L ine of Attractive
Colors and Patterns
G U A R A N T E E P A IN T IN G CO.
706 N in th Avenue Be lm ar 1578-J42tf
GANTNEReven in your garage,
your car is exposed to loss
by fire, theft, windstorm
and other hazards.
Ask this Hartford agen
cy to insure your car—
JUST C A LL . . .
Wool, Boxer Type H.nd Gabardines IF D E S IR E D
B U Y B L U E CO A L N O WB U DG ET T E R M S
Sterner Coal and Lum ber Company
Telephone Belm ar 1900BELMARBEACH SANDALS
75cBelmar
W ood12th Ave. & R .R .
Coal — Fue l — O il
Connelly-Bergen, IncREALTORS - INSURORS
BARTON'SMEN'S SHOP
0TH & F BELMAR B U Y W A R B O N D S I
710 Ninth AvenueTel. Be lm ar 1398
CookmanStore Hours: 9:30 A. M. to 6 P.
Open Wednesday Evenings
AsburyPark
M. Daily Only
Y o u C a n ’t J u s t S i t B a c k a n d L e t H i m Do It A ll...
UP TO« 5000.
YOU WAN T BUY A
DARING AND FLARINGBare your midriff—
in 1944 fashion. This
flattering 2-piecer is of
gracious Sacony-Ciella,
the heavenly acetate rayon.
If you want to buy a home
or refinance a mortgage
now carried, come to us.
You will get prompt and
friendly s e r v i c e and be
pleased to learn how inex
pensive.
K E Y S T O N ESavings & Loan
Association649 M attison Ave. Asbury Park
JVOTICKT ak e n o t ic e th a t V e rn o n H . K in g h as
a p p lie d to th e M ay o r a n d C o u n c il or th e B o ro u g h o f S o u th B e lm a r , IV J. f o r a p le n a ry r e ta i l d is t r ib u t io n ^li- c en se f o r p rem ises s itu a te d a t o08 E ig h t e e n t h A v en ue , S o u th B e lm a r .
O b je c t io n s , i f a n y . s h o u ld be m ade , im m e d ia te ly , in w r it in g , to Ja m e s M. F is h e r . B o ro u g h C le r k o f th e B o ro u g h« jf S o u th B e lm a r . __
Z, 4 (S ig n e d ) V E R N O N H . K IN G
THE C O AST ADVERTISER, FRIDAY, JUNE 9, 1944 Page 5
Charles Measure and Mrs. Palumbo to Head Local Campaign for Hospital
York. He is also survived by three
brothers, Simeon Hoelle, W a ll town
ship; Augustus Hoelle, Buffalo; A n th
ony Hoelle, Trenton; three sisters,
Mrs. A rthu r Ham iel, Neptune City;
Mrs. E lizabeth E rich and Mrs. John
Foster, Trenton.
YO U T H B R E A K S A R M
Robert Boyce, 6 years old, who fell
over a chair at his home, 719 Sixteenth
■ avenue, South Belmar, was taken to
F itk in hospital by the South Belmar
: F irst A id squad, where he was admit*
i ted and treated for a fractured right
arm .
p e o o o o o o s c o s e Q o o s o o o o o o o o s o o s o c o o s o o s c o e s o s e i s o o G o s o o & o s o ^ s o g o o o o e c o o s o o s s o o K
B E A M E R IC A N —B U Y A M E R IC A N
Better Bonds Than Bondage
M R S . M A R Y PALU M BO
Mrs. Mary Palum bo and Charles J.
Measure have been appointed and ac
cepted the position o f district chair
m en for Belm ar in the annual cam
paign for funds of the M onm outh
M emorial hospital, Long Branch.
Together w ith other district chair
men of the county, they w ill be
guests a t a d inner June 21 in the
Garfield G rant hotel, Long Branch,
when the campaign will be officially
opened.
J. Lewis Hay, of L ittle Silver, was
renamed chairm an of the special gifts
committee for the 1944 campaign at a
C H A R L E S J . M E A S U R E
dinner Wednesday evening in the
Rum son Country club. The quota for
the special gifts this year has been
set at $65,000.
Vice-chairman of tha t committee
w ill be Henry Herrman, of Deal, as
sisted by several others in the county.
The fund to be collected this year
totaled at $92,500, w ill be used for
continued aid to the worthy poor and
for a general reserve.
Other district chairmen in the vi
cin ity include: Bradley Beach, Mrs.
Rose Meisner, Mrs. Lester Rogers;
Avon, Mrs. Ro land R . W ildrick , and
Sea Girt, Malcolm Severance.
PVT. JO H N L. M A R R O N
Private M arron has sent his mother,
Mrs. E lizabeth Marron, New Bedford,
the Purple H eart medal which was
awarded h im for wounds received in
action somewhere in the Pacific area.
I t was the first word of his in jury
Mrs. M arron had received, and P ri
vate Marrotn gave no further details.
ObituaryC H A R L E S A. M O Y E R
Charles A. Moyer of 811 F street,
died Wednesday afternoon in F itk in
hospital after a short illness. He had
suffered a heart attack.
Mr. Moyer was a brother of the late
F rank E . Moyer and is survived by
one nephew, Jam es A. Moyer, of
Belmar.
Private funeral services w ill be held
tomorrow m orning at the Thomas R.
Hardy funeral home, 604 F street, w ith
the Rev. Jam es Bell, pastor of the
F irst Presbyterian church, officiating.
In term ent w ill be in Greenwood ceme
tery, Brielle. Friends m ay call a t the
funeral home this evening between 7
and 9.
W IL L IA M H O E L L E
Private funeral services were held
this week for W illiam Hoelle, 73, who
died F riday a t his home, Route 35 and .
New Bedford road, W a ll township. He
had resided there for the past 10 years
and was a retired potter and was born j
in Trenton.
Funeral arrangements were in
charge of the Floyd T. Brown funeral
home, Manasquan.
He is survived by his wife, Mrs. E le
anor Massey Hoelle; by two daughters,
Miss Gladys Hoelle, liv ing at home;
and Mrs. W arren Hinchclige, jr., New
New Jersey strawberries, so tempting this time of year, also make a delicious winter-time treat as strawberry preserves. This is the time to put them up, and here is a recipe your family will rave about.
STRAWBERRY PRESERVESBoil together 3 minutes
4 cups sugar1 cup water2 quarts strawberries
Wash and cap berries. Drain thoroughly. Place syrup in wide bottom shallow pan and color slightly with red vegetable coloring.Add berries and simmer 5 minutes. (To keep berries whole do not crowd in pan.) Allow to stand overnight. Shake pan occasionally until berries are cold. The shaking causes the berries to absorb the syrup and stay whole and plump. Put berries into jars to within one inch of top and partially seal or completely 6eal according to type of lid used. Process 10 minutes in hot water bath. Remove and completely seal if only partially sealed in the beginning. Cool and store in a cool, dark place.
JERSEY CENTRAL POWER & LIGHTC O M P A N Y
JUST ARRIVED!
A SHIPMENT of T R E L L I S E S
• FA N S H A P E
• D IA M O N D S H A P E
(May be used as a Porch Gate)
• L A D D E R S H A P EW ell built T R E L L IS finish, all white w ith green trim.
HOSETested; 50 ft. length
KITCHEN STOOLSUpholstered Tops
BATHROOM HAMPERSSelection of Sizes
TAYLOR’S“Just About Everything”
9th Ave. & F St.Phone 5 1 I Belmar
— ST O R E H O U R S —
8 A. M. to 8 P. M . Sat.
8 A. M. to 6 P. M . Mon. thru Fri.
KEEP YOUR HOME IN TOP S H A P E ..TH E W I S E H O M E O W N E R knows
keeping his home in good repair saves mo
ney in the long run. It avoids costly dam
age that may result later.
The Federal Government urges that you
keep your property in good condition. New
construction must wait until after the war.
W e will be more than glad to tell you
how Y O U can take advantage of an F H A
Title I loan, providing needed repairs for
Y O U R building.
JUST ARRIVED — ONE CARLOAD OF FACTORY RUN ASPHALT
BRICK SIDING in Red and Buff at 7'/2c Sq. Ft.
And ASPHALT SHEATHING at 3'/2c Sq. Ft.
STERNER COAL & LUMBER CO.LUMBER— COAL— MILLWORK— HARDWARE
PAINTS AND MASON'S MATERIAL
• BRICK SIDING• ASPHALT Sheathing• SHEET ROOFING
and SHINGLE I
12thOFFICE
and R. R. Aves. 11th, 12thYARD
and R. R. Avenue*TELEPHONE BELMAR 1900-1901-1902 8
l ^ s o o e e e & S K m s o a s a e c Q S Q e o s e o c o a s o o a a a e o s o e o o o o s o o c e a o g e c e o e e o o e e c o s e o e o o o c o o e e & S
11
I N V A S I O N• • Is On!
BELMAR DO YOUR PART!The 5th WAR LOAN Starts JUNE 12th
BELMAR - SOUTH BELMAR AND WALL TOWNSHIP
QUOTA - $275,000
THE BELMAR NATIONAL BANK
BELMAR, N. J.
Page 6 THE COAST ADVERTISER, FRIDAY, JUNE 9, 1944
Red Cross Has Need For More Volunteers
Surgical Dressings Room
Starts New Schedule for Summer Months.
(By M RS. P H IL A N D E R BETTS)
There is a quickened tempo, and ad
ded burdens imposed upon all work of
the Red Cross now tha t the invasion
has started. Factories doing the cut
ting of the surgical gauze have been
over-powered w ith the increased de
m and, and it has been necessary for
M onm outh County chapter to cut the
gauze for the branches and the Red
B ank work rooms.
Teams of surgical dressings work
ers have been required to go to Red
B ank on Wednesdays to cut supplies
for our workroom on F street. Mrs.
John Brandt, Mrs. Scriven, Miss E m
m a W alters, Miss Helen Spayd, Mrs.
C lara K ing, Mrs. Sarah Newm an and
Mrs. Joan Brown have gone w ith
Mrs. A. M. K n ight, the surgical dress
ing chairm an.
To date, M onm outh County chapter
has cut and packed over three m illion
sponges. The need is still great.
The present quota for Belm ar is 20,-
000 sponges to be made, inspected and
packed. In our workroom we have, so
far, completed a quarter of a m illion
dressings. Made as perfectly as is hu
m an ly possible, and a great credit to
our branch.
T ak ing into consideration the sum
mer season, we would welcome the as
sistance of anyone who is vacationing
In Belmar. A n hour or two of work
given now and through the summer,
w ill count greatly. As mostly every
woman has someone in the service, or
is interested in someone serving our
country—we feel sure tha t the surgic
al dressings workroom a t 923 F street,
w ill be able to do its share, and finish
the quota alloted to Belmar.
Beginn ing Monday, June 12, the
sum m er schedule of work a t the sur
gical dressings room is as follows:
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thurs
day—9 to 12 a. m.; and 7 to 10 p. m.
There w ill be no afternoon session.
Supervisors in charge w ill be glad
to instruct those who have had no ex
perience in the m ak ing of the
sponges. I t is very simple and easy,
and the requirements are only tha t
the worker wear a wash dress or cov-
er-all apron and have the ha ir com
pletely covered by a kerchief.
Sewing groups meet on Wednes
days at the Volunteer F ire house on
11th avenue near F street from ele
ven o’clock in the m orning to four in
the afternoon; W a ll F ire house, West Belm ar, on Thursdays, same time.
The Belm ar group is in charge of
Mrs. Ben jam in W oolley and the West
Be lm ar group in charge of Mrs. Rob
ert Gibson. You w ill be most welcome
a t either session, and the time given
is optional. W e m ust not relax in our
Red Cross service, but if anyth ing
give more time and work. The sense
o f doing our best to help our men,
who are g iv ing everything for us, w ill
m ake us happier when they come
IR O N S C O M PLE T ES T R A IN IN G
Floyd Stanley Irons, Cox-en’ whose
w ife and fam ily m ake the ir home at
812 Thirteenth avenue, Belmar, has
completed his pre lim inary LST tra in
ing at the Am phibious T rain ing base,
Camp Bradford, Norfolk, Va., and is
now a member of the N avy’s am phib
ious forces. Cox’en lio n s has been assigned to the crew of an LST for ac
tive duty.
F R A N K C A S A B U R I E L E C T E D
Frank Casaburi, Belmar, was elected
president of the M onm outh County
Barbers association at a meeting
Thursday night. O ther officers elected
were A lbert Molinari, vice president;
Theodore Miguel, secretary and trea
surer; M ichael Sciarappa, ser.geant-at-
arms, and A. Peter Longo and Louis
Gentile, trustees.
Test Your I. Q.
1. About how much territory has been won back from the j Nazis since their peak advance in October, 1942?
j 2. What people speak Lands- ' maal?
3. How much of the nation is ' still forested?
4. Have strikes been increasing or decreasing in the last three years?
5. Has the Belgian Congo done anything for the Allied cause?
home and the w ar is victoriously
brought to an end.
Junior Red Cross Ends At St. Rose School
Eighty-Three Pupils Re
ceive Awards for Work
Done During Year.
Closing exercises for the Jun io r
Red Cross group of St. Rose’s school
were held M onday afternoon in the
school auditorium .
Follow ing an opening address by
Shirley Antin , president of the group,
and financ ia l and production reports
by Irene O ’H alloran and Joan Hous
ton, the Rev. James P. O ’Sullivan pre
sented Red Cross shields, buttons and
certificates to St. Rose students who
have worked fifty hours or more.
Mrs. M argaret Newman, chairm an
of the Jun io r Red Cross, also spoke.
The program consisted of an original
sk it “Citizens of Tomorrow” and pa
triotic songs by Betty Cum m ings and
M ary Tilton, after which tea and cake
were sei’ved to the guests,
The 83 boys and girls who received
awards were: Shirley Antin , Joan
Houston, Irene O ’Halloran, M ary Til
ton, M iriam Antin , Betty Cummings,
Jane Giunco, Florence Lombardi,
Nona McGinley, Lorraine L indenman,
Doris Studeman, Phyllis Annecharico,
Loretta Giunco, Cecelia Hicks, Eileen
Jaeger, Patric ia Kelly, Antoinette
Lombardi, Geraldine McCarthy, Eve
lyn Mayer, Rose Perry, Agnes Carver,
M ary Jeanne Catino, Rosemary Cum
mings, Florence McBride, Geraldine
Menzler, Margaret W hite , E lizabeth
Clayton, Joan Cooper, Rosemary Fee,
Margaret Ford, Mary Height, Michele
Hennessey, Joan Mayer, A licia Norton,
Margaret Perry, Dorothy Ruppel,
Jeanne Commesso, Bettyanne Fay,
M ary Theresa Haberstick, Patric ia
Anne McCarthy, Carol Schlosstein,
Dolores Van Houten, Doris Welker,
Anne Marie Wells, Doris Bodeep, Pa
tricia Kelly, Joan Kirchgessner, Joan
LeStrange, Anne McBride, Patric ia
Paduano, Lorraine Ruppel, Joyce Sa-
vonis, Rosemary Sm ith, Edna Veron
and Marie Zurich.
James Lonerga.n, Gerald Armstrong,
Joseph Evans, R a lph Fletcher, Allen
Peterson, W illiam Antonides, Robert
Howard, A lexander Landi, H arry Mc
Dermott, Ronald Nix, John Burke,
Robert Coleman, Paul Flarity , W alter
Jaeger, George Kennedy, John Ken
nedy and Henry W eismantel.
R E D CROSS TO H A V E TEA
The Home Service Departm ent of
the County Red Cross chapter w ill
hold an in form al tea for the fam ilies
and friends of prisoners of war from
M onm outh county from 3:00 p. m . to
6:00 p . m. tomorrow at the chapter
house, B road street, Shrewsbury.
Personal inv itations have been sent
out by Mrs. Douglas E . Craik, county
Red Cross prisoner of war represen
tative, to the relatives of all prisoners
of war listed at the chapter. A most
cordial inv ita tion is extended through
th is announcement to any relative if
they have not already received a per
sonal note from Mrs. Craik.
Better Bonds Than Bondage
B E A M E R IC A N —B U Y A M E R IC A N
L I A B I L I T YBegins at HomePROTECT AGAINST
CLAIMSW IT H OUR
LIABILITY POLICY— 0 —
JOSEPH MAYER AGENCY720 - 9th Avenue
BELMAR, N. J.
Phone Belmar 573
EXPERT MECHANICS FOR ALL MAKES* TIRES★ M O TO R ★ BATTERY if GREASE if O /L
-----------
OF CARS..Belmar Sales and Service provides
essential wartim e services for own
ers of all makes of cars. Keep
your car in good condition. New
care are extremely scarce and good
used cars are in great demand.
• W E R E P A IR A LL M A K ES O F C A R S *
BELMAR SALES & SERVICE, Inc.709 Tenth Ave. (Opp. R. R. Depot) Tel. 1392
PAT AND SANDY BRESUN
0 0 / IT*
Belmar Marine BasinOn Route 35
FLOUNDERSNow R unn ing in Shark R iver!
GUS REGANINVITES YOU TO
MEET Y O U R F R I E N D S — and Enjoy the Hospitality of the...............
SURF C LU B BARTENTH AND OCEAN AVENUES
BELMARNEVER A DULL MOMENT *
• B U Y W A R B O N D S A N D S T A M P S •
C A S HW E B U Y
Musical InstrumentsSMALL PIANOS - RADIOS
PHO NO GRAPHS •
FRIED - NSESENM U SIC C E N T E R
Cookman and Grand AvenuesA S B U R Y P A R K , ]V. .1.
V
H E A D Q U A R T E R S F O I i
R U - B E R - O I DProducts
W E S P E C IA L IZ E IN : .
R O C K W O O L IN S U L A T IO N
ASBESTOS S ID IN G
B R IX IT E S ID IN G
M A S O N R Y
C A R P E N T R Y
P A P E R H A N G IN G
P A IN T IN G
R E M O D E L IN G
William Greve’sR O O F IN G & S ID IN G CO.
P . O. Box 186
TEL. 2837 S P R IN G L A K E
When in
JERSEY CI TYStop at the
HOTEL PLAZAJersey City's
F I N E S T H O T E L
• Finest GUEST FIOOMS
• Finest RESTAURANT
• Finest GENTLEMEN'S BAR
® Finest GRILL and
COCKTAIL LOUNGE
HOTEL PLAZAOn JOURNAL SQUARE
JERSEY CITYT e l e p h o n e J o u r n a l S q u a r e 2-0100
Why te lephones are hard to get
There are two reasons why we cannot fill orders for telephone
service today as fast as we’d likes
The reserve facilities which enabled us to meet the
service needs of Army, Navy, war industry and most
others since the start of the National Defense Program
in 1940 are now exhausted, and no more equipment
is being built for civilian uSe.
All telephone manufacturing facilities and manpower
are devoted to making communication and other elec-
tivcal equipment for o u r armed forces. Their entire
- capacity is converted to war production.
We’ve done all we can to serve as many as possible by —
Reconditioning and using every facility that will give good
service.
Converting one-party lines to serve two or ntore families.
Operating central offices beyond their normal capacity.
Taking extra-good care of equipment that can’t be replaced.
If you are waiting for a telephone, we’re sorry. The only facili
ties now available are those released when service is discon
tinued, and many of these are required for war purposes.
We’d like you to know that we will take care of your needs at
the earliest possible moment.
N E W J E R S E Y B E L L T E L E P H O N E C O M P A N Y
IpaminmmniiniimiiiDiiiiiiiniiit:
2TCIK
5
| ICT3H0 SO I
B
:]iiiiiiiiiiiit}iiiiiiiiiiiic]iiiiniiiiiiuitiiiiiii!ii[]iiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiini!iiiaiiiiiiiiHiiuiiiiiiiiiiii[]iiiiiuiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiii[]iiiiiii!iiii[]iiiiiiiiHiiiiiiinniniiiiiuiiiii[]iiiiiiiiiiiinii!miiiiii[)|i'
V a X
s a o v a a A a aa a a a o o
AHXSVd H O N a a ax a a s s a a
I s a o x v x o a a a a o s s i a jo a a a i o a 'a a H s v r c
| S M v a a o n i h j .s N a a a o s v a a H g a a a
s a i a v x a o a . v
aV T V S S .I3 H 3
| S n $ ............... ................. Suissaaa u is ib h ‘N 3 H VaNin-E
| Ofi'TS............... aomjs a[ddy 'O N n M O fia 'I '1 XSVOH
| S Z 'ii... .......aomjs -i3? ;na ‘n a a N n o a a A a v a
| s a a a x x a
j e k k o s n o d a a c iA vo H O K v a o
s a n o s
•j6kN ‘SSOW ‘S '03H1 OS jeuj|sa auoHdS 3 i i y v d - s o N i a a B M - s i 3 n 6 N v a
0 1 N 0 I I N 3 X 1 V 1 Y l D 3 d S
a o m r o x v w o x a n o x i n a aI s r c v a o a w o x s A a a a H o a i v x a o o o a r c i a a s
a a z i x a a . i v
smm ivi33dsj AVdNfis-Avaamvs-Avaiaj| d n s n $ ' * * t i 3 N N i a A i i v a| a x a ' i a n r o o
| S N o a H D N m A i i v a
| 3j|qnd 3Ht °i usdoI IMOOd ON IN IQ
ATNO XHOIN A v a a n x v s X N a iv N iv x a a x N a snonN iX N O O
SAOS HHlAHy-OH PUV
H 3 A 3 0 H 3 I S S 3 T• o x x a n x v a a «
a n u 3 A V i p u ^ X 9 0 Z
3 3 N Y ^ i n S N I O N Y 3 X V X S 3 W S t f
a a o a p w 3 3 m o hiMON sn qjiM it jsq
uosB3s .to jbsX sqj Xq ji jusj jo Xjjsdojd jnoX ips oj qsm noX j i
; : ! S S K O H H S K K f l S p u t t h v a a ri rx v a o a
s o N i i s n : 0 3 1 N V M
K o o a A a a A a x i o i a v a —a a x v a o o a a ArxvvaN |
\3%0}-l J-V9Jl-flV 1S9UIJ pUV f S M J S ^ V U ip g 1
r - N ' a v m a a lA V H id i d z n 1
m in i w m (3 H I
uiiiiiiiniiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiiHiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiciiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiHiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiimiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiinmiiiiiiiiiHirt
‘f ‘N P X '3AV H^m N 80/,
axvxsaiva ” aDNvmsNi• A o s g ‘s j a S o - g - g a e g p g S 3 J J £> p a o f q s e u io x j j l
*3UI ‘A D N H 9 V H V P M 1 3 9
tuafsfig acudS32j jn.iapaj jo xdqxadj
uoijmodMQ douvunsu[ yisoddQ jvMpaj Mqiu9j\[ yuvg AdisvptnddTij tduiDuo sfi^unoj i^nomuo
Aasjap Majyj 'jeuupg
S 3 l i n i O V d
usodaa lHeiN mo inoav >isvs ju e iu e jm b ay 6ui>|ueg p u a ip a /^
j j a i j ^ d j e d p j i u y 04 s u o j+ p j j i i q a M
• 0 A j s n p u i 'L)49 |
ja q u js jd a ^ 04 1)4^1 aunp iuojj. sAepjr^e^ uo
s s a u i s n q j o j . uado a q 40U |||m >)ueq p a u 6 i s j a p
-un aijj ' u o i ^ e p o s s y a sno [_| 6 u u e a Q p u e sja
->|ueg X j u n o ^ i j ^ n o u j u o ^ j a i j j j .o s>|U9q j a q u u a t u
||e j.o u o ip g ©Lj4_ i j^ iM a o u e p j o o D Q u i p u y
'sXep||oi| 6ui>jueq
Xep ||e p 6 a| 'aAisnpu; '1)491 ja q u ja jd a ^ 04
\ \l_ | aunp 40 p o u ad 01)4 6uunp sAepjn^e^ 6ui
- j e p a p Aasjap M a^ j.o 84945 aij4 40 ajn4Q|si6a-|
ai|4 j.o 4Dy ue> 40 suoisjAOjd 8144 04 4uensjn(j
3 D I X O N
H l £ "|01 +99J4S d ? ’3AV H+8
30IAU3SHsn9N3Mvnd
— • —
•6 ui6 jei^ 3 je O JnoA
u; psoe|doy X|a|eipauiaij Ajs |
-4.eg um q jr|0A— SC*!J 1 u jn p y
°N — s|P4U3y ° N— 9AP5
iBONO IVAjaj+eg Jn o ^ a6je i|Q
04 spj sa|qeug uuajsAg A ja j je g o u p a jg p j a u a 0
MaN jnO
1IVM nOA 31IHMa 3 9 d V H D
S 3 m n v a
I i i + s 0 Q 9 4 + A j 3 A |
o n v
sauvofliiddnHS• N O S V 3 8 H X H O I 3 «
m o t 3 N n f a v a u n i v s
ffuiuedoN V 3 1 D — S i n V l U O A I M O D ~ 1 0 0 D
a v m a a H in o s — 3 nN3AV h i s i - sit-
•+s d P u e ' 9AV H+^ *J 0 0
J L N V U n V i S E t i
Q O O d V i S
s j a v q
s a v a o - sw rvao
a a a v v o H D a a v iv : r x v o i i
s a v a v ssaaxsH O T
i i s i j H s a a a
pa>|ooo aq ppoi^sp o o j 9 3 5 s e p a i j o o Q
QOOd V3Su ;
1S39 M A0FN3
I ;aa j Q'SSS s! 'asnon atI? •I'Bau
pajBt^is ‘juaumuoui s.uo^Sums'BAi
jaAjy )jjei]5 u q
39aiyaMvya sz 3in o y •
s a d u u iQ jD j n B s y
— osiv — said oivkNOi •
IH3H9 VdS03)1003 3kNOH o
viyszzid 9
i N v u n v i s a u
Y d 3IA m
•uSiBduieoueoq XJopiA c ut 000‘000‘09$ pasiBj oguoo UBiSiaa »HX 'S
•pouad1- 61 JBituns am jo j 000‘STt puB JO J a ^ c n b aq;Sa5t]J}S Ul paAIOAUI Sja/A SJ3>[J0Ai000‘£9 s ^ s sonsiwS JoqBT jo neaana sq} :SuisBajoui
•q jano j-auo ‘8 ^ ‘s a ijp
aq ; u i uasjods si jb bu is^ ih 'X b a
-jom ’ jo snojx ijunoo aq x 'Z •saiiui aiEnbs OOO'OS^ *X
• 5 - j a n o A i s a xox s h s m s n v ■
K v a i a : « t v A n a — N v o ia a r e v a a
---------------------------------1•sioop.o 08^6 asncq a.nj aq} }B
‘SX a un f ‘SuiuaAa Xtjps-inqx }xau J9U -uip X.IBS.13AIUUB q;oz -naq; pioq n!-^ ;uaui}.n3dap aj;^[ juu iiaa q}nos aqx
a a N N i a x x a a a a i a a v i n a a s
-Biuoranaud jo asBO auo sbm. aaaq; jbu i -lag q}nos u i -Biuouinaud jo baij pub
sduinui jo sasBO xis a.ia.w a.iaq; ‘irsAY UI •jBUiiaa qjnog u; auo puB ‘diqsuA\oj I1BM u ! pa}.iodaa sasBasjp aiq-Boiunut -uioo jo sasBO xi aJaAi aaaq; ‘i z Abh 3uipuo pouad >iaaA\.-OA\j aq; Suuncr
s x a o x a a x v a w x a v a a a x ix a v a x i
•SB^otqo ' a ‘S jp j puB SU.IOH
•<I ‘.I83i!a -M X.UBH 'SJM ‘uujn^)uiBTHi^w 'S.ijaj ‘zinqog sa[.iBqo ‘S.ipj
‘JJJBIO -a ‘0 'S JIt ‘uissBuioqx Buiuig
•sjjs ; ‘XanooAi anaa 'SJpi 'iJtltun^s
‘V 'O 'Riw ‘ja jju q s Buuy ‘saw ‘sjaq
-uiBqo -sjh a.iaa\ Suipuaj^B asoqx
"paAvoj[oj pouad [bioos i B puB paAjas sba\ aaddns qstp pa.ia j -aod b ‘3ujjaaui ssauisnq aqj .ia^jy
•;sissb' oj pajsanba.j 3J8m s.xaquiaui IIB puB ‘8x X[nf 'SutuaAB XBpsanx
{ uo 5JJBJ Xanqsv ui qn [3 o S il 3U} }B ! 3A.13S oj pa>jsB uaaq SBq qrqo aqx
•a3.iBqo ui juapisa.id ‘s jsquiBqo
^^IIIIA i. 'SJW q}iM ‘3tuoq p iy }s ii^[ sq} JB SuiuaAa XBpuou uosBas 3qj
jo Suij33tu ibuij aiaq} piaq qrqo uboji
-qndaa s.uaiuoAV JB tujaa q jnog aqx
6ui|aa^| pui-j se|_|qn|Q je u jp g ^ 0 5
MaAOio'N C |s.ip{ puB 'JJ l PUB ‘-.it ‘.I3AOIO
•j? uqof ‘uanntlO aa1 Aq}0.ioa ssiiv ‘uajiq ijo aoBJf) •s.ipi 'ubu jjjoh jauBf
ssij? ‘ajjaSptH SBUioqx ‘a}}aSpiw UBaf
ssiw ‘a}}^P!M a 's-iW pu^ 'JW ‘saq -JOOA P-JBqoia ‘saaq.iooA UBaf Xjjaa ss ih ‘saaq.iooA BoaaqaH 'S.im ‘saaq -jooA 'S.iW pub u j j ‘aapCajj 'o h 's.iIM ajaAv Xj.iBd nsAiajBj aqj jb sjsan*)
■xax ‘sdqiqia duiBQ oj psxiajsuBjj uaaq a\ou SBq ajx
■SJB8X OA\J UBqj aaorn ui auioq jisia js jij siq sba\ stqj
puB ‘XWX aauis ‘•qsBAJ. ‘siAva^ jao^; jb pauotjBS uaaq SBq .iaAOio ajBAUj
•duiBo o j u jn j
-aa siq a.iojaq Xijuaaa.1 Xj.iBd n3A\a.iBj
B ubaiJS sba\ ‘jB iu ja a JsaAV ‘}aajjs h OXiX ‘JBaoio -pj [ s.iiv puB M15 ‘SJU3 -jBd siq qjiA\ qSno[.mj B' Sipuads uaaq
SBq OqAV ‘J3AOIO p.iB.wpa -j a j
a a .v o x o a a a v . u a a x a j
• j a u u j Q i p M a j e j
U 3 A J 0 I s j e a j ^ o m j[ J 0 4
j s e o Q j s a ^ u o p a u o ^ e ^ ^
i|6no|jnj uo auioffJ 3 A 0 |9 j p jB M p j
•jf ‘aiqu iiji u ouubh -s.ijm
puB puBXaM. 8aa SS!K ‘SuiqBAi Xoh •s j h ‘a o u a inBa -sapi ‘^ a z a q o . q jau
-uajx ‘[ jdu in js sapBqo uaqda js ‘Sul
-qoM. Xuuad '.laqaOAi 3(uuoh ‘s o u a
Xqqoa ‘a a u a Alia :sBiSnoa jo sju3.iBd -puB.ia JBU.I3JBUI ‘puBXa/A a 'a 'SJK puB 'jim aj3Ai XjJBd aq j jb sjsano
•jBui[aa q jno s ‘pboj poo.wu.iaji ZZ21 ‘auioq siq jb XjJBd B qjiAV ‘s su n f XBpqjJiq q jjno j siq
pajBjqapo ‘ijdu in js 'V 'O 'SJW PUB MH jo uos ‘ijdu in js UBfy SBiSnoa
Aepijfiig s 3 A J3 s q o | jd iu n 4 5 u p | y se|6noQ
•3>l!d 3-ndsuo S3AII ‘uojjng b .iubt -sjpj ‘jaqjoiu s.jaipios 3JBI aqj 3J 3qA\ ‘-Xh ‘uojSuixsq oj juas aq uia\. Xpoq aqx pooh duiBO qjJON JB3U ‘-X3X ‘311IAS3JBO ‘jaajjs a^opia 80TX }B siuoq Jiaqj spbui usj -pqqo omj puB ‘oquiBO a iipna uXiojbo ‘ajiA\. s ih "Oiqo ‘ijbuuiouio jb ‘g^6X ‘i '}0O psjonpui sb.w J3ipios aqx
•piBS s.iaaijjo SuijbSijssaui IBjidsoq sq} oj sjno.ius psip soquiBO ajBAua -B8JB diuBO aqj ui uoijaas-iaj -ui ub jb SuiuaAa XBpi.t^i jsb( pa.inoao
juapiooB aqx -uoqBjjBq ja juao Suiuib jx juauisOBidaa JaXojjsaa ^ubx b qjiA\SuiUIBJJ UI SBA\ PUB JBIUiaa ‘J33.IJS £901 J° juapisaj B sbm. jatpios 8qx •pooH duiBO q}Jo>j jo jaa ijjo SAijnoa
-xa ‘3[5iuna 'a PIBUoa qoo Xq >iaaA\ siqj psounouuB- sba\ 5pruj XiBjqiui B puB 3uipu sbav sq qoiqAV spXaJojoiu Xui.iv ub uaaAvjaq uoisqjoo b ui ‘92 ‘soquiBO 'O uou.iaA 'JAa jo qjBsp aqx
iN a a io o v ni a a riMNVkN y v m a a y 3 M y o d
•juapuods
-aj aqj pa juass jds j ‘Xoquiy q}J3d
‘• jf ‘jn o jd s 'V u s jjb av puB jauo ijiJ
-ad aqj p3ju 3s3jda.i ‘>iJBa X.mqsv ‘qaq
-aqS a SBUioqx 'qaBuiojs puB >{3Bq siq pa jn fu i puB duiBJ dasjs b uaaop
Suiqsnd sbm aq qoiq.w XSSnq a js ja
-uoa B jo doj uo UA\o.iqj sba\ spjB.wpg
•jjV uotjBJodjoo Uoijaiu jsuoo X jjn a
puB XuBduioo q jiu is ‘0 U.1B51 aqj jo j
2ui}(jom anqM g^6X ‘IZ -cl3a uo paAisa -8.1 aq ssunCui jo j jagjsqu ifl. 'H X j jb h
J3UOISSIUIUIOO joqB*^ Xjndaci Xq jjnoa
uoijBsuaduioa ui 003‘XJ pspJBMB sbm
■jBuipa }S8M ‘snuaAB s ij jn o VTrJ’Oe
-JBlupa JS3AV 'SpJBA\pa J3pUBX8]V
005*1$ a a a a v .v v v s a a v . u a a
•qBj sqj ui susdo i9oqas uaqA\ psuinsa.i aq hia\ sSuijaaui jnoas i j iq
•zj.iba\s B.iBq.iBa Pub uajjoq.iBX qjaq -Bzqa ‘japiauiqag uoijbjm ‘qaiAosBJBpi aaXof ‘uojXbjo uXiubjv ‘S5(aoppBj\[ B.ioo ‘qjju ig sqjXqa ‘p jo jj io BJBq.iBa
'laiuBa ^3IJ !MS 3-iB sjjiS aqx ’Jauuuns siqj duiBO oj o3 him sjnoas auiu puB ‘iiooo 'a uqof s.ijm ‘japBaj doojj aqx
•ajBgsiddv X jjsa pub uoj -Xbio uXjijbp i ‘sj3qui3ui oavj jo sXbp -q jjiq sqj 3jB.iq8[33 oj usaiS sba\ Xj-iBd b ‘uoissss sssuisnq sqj Supwoqo^
"1J33AV JSB] ‘JB'IU
-pa JS3AV ‘XZ doo.ij jnoag j j io jo 3ui -jaaui ibuij aqj jb passnasip 3J3a\ jaui -uins siqj dj.ij SuidiUBa aqj jo j suBia
du ^ 6 u;dujeQ jo j
sue|c j a>|e|Aj s + n o o s | j j 0
•8UIIJ jBqj jb pajaBjuoa a q
HIM saaua.i3j3j ‘Suijb j jo uosbsj X q
jusuijuioddB jo j a j q i S i p 8J-B X a q j j i •paApaaj 3jb s3uijb.i a q j ja jjB q j u n
UI JU3S S30U8J3J8J OU 8ABq SJUBOqddB jBqj pajsanbaj osjb qs[BA\ jojBuag
•juaiuaAuoa jsoui si pauiBu suavoj aqj jaA8qatqA\ jb suBijppaja IIB juas
, -ajd ‘uoijBuiuiBxa jo j pajBuSrsap bjb
sa ijp ju s ja jjip pub uoijbuiuibxb 3qj jo j iBijuapaja suo UBqj bjoui 8Apa -8j sajBpipuBa j i -uBiussa.iSuoo jp q j
I puB s.iojBU8g Jp q j jaBjuoa pinoqs sajBpipuBO -suoijan.ijsui SuiAvoqoj aqj oj aauB.iaqpB saS-m qsjB^i JojBuag XJOjsiq sajBjg pajiun ‘ajn jB jajq puB 'uoijisoduioa qsqSug ‘Xjjauioao auBia ‘BjqaStv 'sjoafqns Sui.woqoj aqj jo jsisuoa hiav uoijBuiuiBxa aqx uoijbui -tUBxa qans jo j p a b jj pjnoa aq qaiqA\ oj aaijjo jsod sssp puoaas jo Jsjij jsa.iB8u aqj ajBaipui ppioqs ‘sajBjg ps jiun 3qj uiqj(A\ qijs JI '80IA.I8S aqj ui
. .10 poqas jb jo Xbmb jUBOqddB- Xuy
o -a‘UOjSuiqSByW PUB ‘3iJBA\8£I ‘UOJU8.IX
‘q jaqBzqg ‘ u o s j a j B a 'uapuiBO ‘jjoiav
-sun.ia aw n ‘ J!D onu^n V :suoijbu iuib - x a j p q j jo j juaiuaAuoa j s o i u a q i q . w
saaBjd SuiAvoqoj-aqj jo qaiqM ajnaip ai
I[ ia \ puB q j . i i q J i a q j jo j b b X p u B q j u o u i
‘ X b p a q j q s i u J n j hia\ X a q j j i s.isjjbiu
sjipsdxa h i m s j u B a q d d B A\a>j s s i j p
s n o i J B A s q j j b p a u i u i B x a a q o j j a q i u n u
s q j j o j s q a j a p u i o a b fz a u n f u o
uoissiuiiuoo a a i A J S g ija jo 3q j ~ o j j i u i
- q n s j s n u i s q a a u i s ’oz s u n f X q boijjo
u o j S u i q s B A S . s . J O ^ u a g s q j qaB3.i j s n u i
sjuiod u o i j B u i u i B x a j o saSuBqa .10 ‘s u o i j
-BaqddB A\8>I 'U0IJBUUUBX3 s q j a > ] B I
oj pajjuujad aq hiav /laqj pue jnoq
-JBa U3J.IBA1 'M JojBuag ajBi sqj jo jsq sqj uo sjuBaqddB qB jo sbuibu 3qj P3UIBJ3J SBq qSJBAi JOJBU3g
■s3uijb.i jssqSiq aqj SuinBiu asoqj 3uouib iu jo j suoijaaps siq 351BUI him jojBuag aqx -sajBp asaqj Xq XBpqjJiq q j i i j p q j paqaB3.i 3ABq jou jsmu Xsqj 'sqodBuuy ioj[ 'Q 6X ‘X A nr ajojaq jo uo XBpqjJiq ZZ J p q j psqaBBj 3ABq jou jsnui sjubs
-qddB ' ju io a JS3Ai .10a 'SJiuiq sSb aqj uiqjiA\ puB Xasjaf a\3n jo sjuapisaj \b33i 3,ib oqA\ U3UI SunoX IJB oj usdo
sq HIM PUB ‘ff6l ‘ez Ainf uo uoissuu -uioo aqj Xq pajanpuoo sq [[ia\ uoijb
-UIUIBX3 siqx 'SWX ‘au iif ui sqodBuuy jb XuispBay (BABM aqj oj aauB.ijua
I JOJ S3JBU.ISJJB sa.iqj pUB SIBdpUIjd I oavj PUB ‘QJ-6X ‘^ in r ui j u p a JS3AV
jb XiuspBoy Ajb j!I!M 3qj oj aauBjjua i jo j sajBu.iaj[B asjqj puB iBdpuud auo | ajBUlUIOU OJ SUOIJBUJlUBXa uoijbu3is
-ap uado ‘uopsiuiiuoo aaiAjag itAto 3qj jo ssaidsnB sqj .ispun ‘ppq hiav sq jBqj psaunouuB SBq Xss.iap avb^j jo
qsiBAi. J n q jjy 'uag--\T0 X0NIHgVA\
S13QV0 AAVN ‘Am v IN IOddV O l HS1VM
StA X V d K O D JTOVH 5IA3H X V M i O H
■£ K ’ H J B A v a x ‘ ^ a a J i s P B O J H - 0901 ‘1<> J»
-uo5 aaujaAaa aiioqooiv jo jauojssiui -UioQ 3JU1S? 01 Suijiuav in .\ [93 liip om m [ apBiu aq pinous ‘Aitb ji
f N ' a S u « J O
i[jnos 'anuSAV lI3JJn .L 9SI '.lainsBaaxPUB AJBI.IJOOS 'U l M U J J O J £ >(01 JO pO.I ,-I '£ )
' f ’N 'p u « ljn f 'puoa qoanqo•iuapisa.i<i-oo|A ‘uuuijjoh vt ; jkwv
'X' K ‘aSuBJO usnos ‘a.viJQ au!ABH CSS 'luapjS'O.ia ‘ubiujjoh ’O UIBIIIIAV
: u o n B J < x U o o
p i B S J O > ( o o i s 3111 J O XU-B J O u i n j u a a a a a
o j o u i j o u n i a u i i p i o i i s j 3p\0H H 0<n s \1«
j o s a a u a p t s a j p u y s s i u b u a i u p i * n s j o i
- o a j i p u b p u e s j a a i j j o u b j o s ^ j u a p i s a j .
p u n ’ s a i u B U • a m a J B S u i a i p h o j a m ir ' S S O j p
-pB piBS ain J® uioojso[Bs puB 9snoq-SJBA\ B Ul-BIUJBIU OJ puB ‘ f ’M ‘JBlU[9a‘ja a u jS 3 ITS JB p a jn n i js s a s iu ia ju oi(( j o j a ' s u a o r i aiBsajOM M p a j iu i i a b j o j
[ O J j u o o a S B J B A a a o w o q o o i v 1° . i a u 0 ! s
- s h u u i o o ajB jc; a q j o j p and dB SBq u o u - B J o t U o a A ' a s j a f A\a.v; b ‘ . C u B d u i o o a S B
- j a A a a u b u i j j o h I B q j a a i X O K 3H V J .
a .juo .v _____
>lJaiD qSnojoa ^‘ a a H s i >3 w s a w v f , p 3 5 < Ia ;>
-OB X i ib u ij aq X e m j a j j o piBS. e u x ij t ta i i iA \ jb iv' ’a 0S: S J,B t t 6 1 'UJOS a u n f uo S u p a a u i a i iq n d ja q j - in j B j b iBAOJd -d B ib u ij OJ jo a fq n s s u ib s a q j p a jd a a -oB1 SBq i io u n o o p u o j o .<b jv P>bs a q x •paap jo ja p u a j uoc ln qsB o u i a au B iB q a q j p uB a o u B jd a o o B j o a u q j j b . aiq"B -X B d ‘ aq Pi.no.w OO'OES qojqA ^ jo OO'OOS* jo u in s a q j jo j . iB u q a a qJi>°S 3 ° H fn o - j o a a q j u i a n u a A V JSIZ u o JOBj x a j io j u a x 3 ° d B u i u o d n u .» o q s s b j f - puB ot-• s o x S J O I S B U A V O U 5I p u B a s n O i i q n d j o j
p a p a a u j o u p u B ( u i B j j a o a s B q o a n d o j
j a j j o U B p a A i a a a j a A B q j B i u j a a q j n o s
j o q S n o j o a a q j JiO _ u a u n o o p u u j o A b j ^
a q j j B q j u a A i S X q a j a q ; si a O I X O M
a r j i x o . v ri v o 3 ' i _____________
i a a a s sviTOKXi (pausis) s->T " N ' J B u q a a J s a A V
■ s n u s A V q j u a a j q s i a z\U ‘ > i J a i o d i q - s
- u a \ o x ‘ j j a u u a a ' S S u i a j i o j \3u i j ! j a \
u i ' A [ a j B i p a u i u i u a p i t u i a q ; p i n o q - s ' . ( u » j )
‘ s u o u o a f q o ' f N ' d i q s u M o x I J B A 1 ‘ p B o a
asnoH a u i j a a K u o p a j B n j i s s a s i u i a j d
j o j a s u a o i i u o i j d m n s u o o j i b j b j X j B u a t d .
B j o j ‘ T N ‘ U B A V J ° d i q s u A V O X a q j
j o a a j j i u i u i o o d i q s u A v o x a q j o j p a p i d d ' B
S B q ‘ u u i j a j t u i i j a si.Xppna SB S u i p B j j
‘ A j a a s a S B U i o q x 3B q j a o j j o u a > J B X
a o i x o . v
a o i x o K a v o a a
•jx ‘jdag uo s3 u ij33ui sji siunsaj h im puB sqjuoui J3ui -urns aqj jo j puw,s.r HIM qnp 3qx
•sjairji)
puB ‘JSIPM ’ -K IJBJOH 'S-iH ‘X iaAJoa
-OK 'V A ‘SJK H PI8!JupA•sjp i ‘js iq sn H p jB ttp a 'V s.i’AT ‘Sin
-ppo uiBiinM. 'SJPI ‘ip s sn a D Jaq ,.iv • s jh ‘m o Xibjm 'SJH 'sSao ja P.ibav
-pa 's.im 'ipMoa 'b iaiio ‘s jw ‘puB ja X jb h 'SJW ‘u io s p a u b iu jo n -SJH ‘a.ir.s
-B3H a SSlJBqO -SJH ‘j ja p js pjBUjaa •SJI\[ ‘UMO.ia S3[.IBqO SJH ‘jsm bHBa
■Buuy 's.im ‘3S!M 3!UU!W 'SJW ‘puB.ta IIlBa "SJIM ‘UAVOJa ssm oa ’SJH ‘uosui
-qoa ‘V u ib iiiim s jw ‘JJsqilO X jubh ■SJH ‘Su iu u sh 'O -M ’S.IK ‘u b u iz ju b ji
‘a ’SJH ‘u ijs n v ssiuBf -SJH ‘uosqoo -Bf b8u i -s.iim ‘uiBqujoAi. spivem -sjpt
‘qspM iubihiav -SJIM 3.1 SM psuoijusiu XpB3.qB asoqj sapjsaq juass.id s jsq jo
•siqBj qoB3 jb sja.ioos qSiq aqj oj pspjB'A\B s jsppq JioijsaipuBa qjiAV jauujp 3qj jsjjb psXBid 3J3AV spjBO -uoXa sjim Pub X^anjg -sjpi 'sni -sruo 'S.iim ‘JbXbim 's.iim papnpui j ib j -jb aqj jo aS-iBqo ui sajjituuioo aqx
•oospg 'sjim pub saXBji
auuaqjBO -sjim ‘jaSsiAi s.ijm 'Hons -.isqBH J.ioqiOH sjim 'uoXa 'sjim sjsav SuipuajjB sjuapisajd jSBa 'J3iq3ja>l -puBq b paApo3.i qoBa puB ssSbsjo^ qjIAV p3JU3S3jd 3.I3AV 3uipU3JJB SJU3p -isajd JSBd IIB PUB J30IJJ0 A\3U qoBa
•ssajsnjj ‘uuiqg p.iBqaia •sjim PUB snistuo p.iBA\pg 'sjjm ‘3u! q.iajg jjsqoa sjjm ‘jsXbim qdasof -sjim ! jajnSBajj ‘.laziBjA ‘S-iJM IXjbjbjobs guipuodsajjoo ‘uoXq 'im X jjb h 's.ijm !X jbj3JD3S 'ja u p a pa.ia 'SJJM :JU3P! -ssjd-SDiA p jiq j ‘jsSsiAi q d p p n a sjim!jU3piS3jd-aOIA PU003S ‘UAVOJa Biptloa ssiim I juap;sa.nT-33iA js jij ‘Xiionjg 'Ai.
JJUB.ia 'SJIM 3J3M P3HBJSUI s jaq jo
•J301JJ0 SuiqBjsu; aq j sba\ ‘juap
-ps.id JSBd ‘oospg a 'd 'SJH '<jup aq j u io jj uapjBS >ioo.t b qjiA\ pajuasajti
sb.«. oq.sv ‘jazjBAV tu^iIUM 'SJJM paaa -Dns o j q n p sq j jo juapisa.id sb paqBjs
-U} SBAV J.I0dU3ABa jn q j . iv 'SJIM
•Sutpu3 jj«
U3IUOAV UBqj a jou i qji.v\ ‘jB u ip a
lUOOJ BSJ S,3UBf JB UOOUJ3JJB XBpSUX
ppq sbav JBUipa jo qnp UBOiiqndsa S.U3U10A1 sqj jo jauu ip uoijbhbjsui
puB XJBSJ3AIUUB IBIJUUB qju3j SqX
*4 |up| jp iu p g jo
ju ap is a jj saujooag
fjoduaAPQ J n ^ j y 'sj|a|
XjesjdAjuuy i|ioi sen qnp ue iqndsy
L e 6 e d m i '6 3 N n r 'AVQI^Id ‘ b s i i ^b a q v i S V O O 3H1
N P. i- 4 , 7 7 7 JWt&Wlli CUOltU iiiSIUtiU
Page 8 THE COAST ADVERTISER, FRIDAY, JUNE 9, 1944
BRIEF NEWS NOTES OF LOCAL INTERESTDr. Thomas Mylod, of Brooklyn, has
arrived to spend the summer at his
home here, 407 Tenth avenue.
L t. M alcolm R . Bigelow, who has
been stationed a t the A ntia ircraft A r
tillery school, Fort Bragg, N. C., has
been transferred and is now at E l
Paso, Tex.
f have been collecting clothing locally
; for the committee, w ill no longer be
able to go from house to house, but
w ill still receive bundles a t their
home. Mr. and Mrs. Pollack will then
deliver th« clothing aind other articles
to committee headquarters in Asbury
Park.
Pvt. Edward F. Hensler, formerly
of 118 In le t terrace, is now stationed
a t Sheppard Field, Tex.
Mrs. E lizabeth Scott and her son,
Russell, of New Brunsw ick, are
spending the summer at 205 E igh
teenth avenue.
George Dorer, of Irv ington, is a t his Mr. and Mrs. Jack London have
sum m er home, 1818 Greenwood ter- moved into their new residence at 408
race, South Belmar. Tenth avenue. The Londons have------- been summ er residents here for m any
Mrs. O. H . Newman has returned years and have now taken up perman-
after spending the w inter in Stuart, ent residence. They formerly lived at
Fla., and is at her Brielle home. Mt. Vernon, N. Y.
Mr. and Mrs. F rank F. Thomas, of
Newark, are now a t their home here,
1402 C street.
Sgt. A rthu r Hotaling , jr., who is
stationed at C am p Hale, Colorado, ar
rived Saturday to spend a ten-day
furlough w ith his wife, Mrs. Jean E.
Hota ling , and daughter, Carol Ann, at
509 Tenth avenue.
The W est Belmar P.T.A. w ill hold a
special meeting on Wednesday after
noon at 2:30 o’clock in the school at
which time election and installation
of officers w ill take place.
Mr. and Mrs. E . S. Zelly, Roselle
Park , are now residing at the ir sum
mer residence on R iver road, Belmar.
M r. and Mrs. Russell Astley are
spending the sum m er at 1802 Snyder
avenue, Belmar.
Mrs. Hugo Kaiser and her daugh
ter ,of Trenton, spent the week at
the ir summ er home, 1710 Snyder ave
nue.
H arry Pyne, Harrison, form er resi-
J dent of W est Belmar, has been spend-
1 ing the week here. He is a former
| employe of the Sterner Coal and L um
ber company.
The M onm outh County Committee
for Russian W ar Re lie f announced
th is week that Mr. and Mrs. Ph illip
Pollack, 601 Twelfth avenue, who
The Rev. and Mrs. Lawrence G. A t
kinson and the ir two sons, Harold
and Ronald , are attend ing the ju r is
dictional conference of the Methodist
church in Ocean City th is week, and
are staying at their cottage in Sea-
ville
........................................................................................nummniioiimiiiimtimimiimnmniiiiiiouiiimiiiniuijij
“Always a Friendly Welcome With Refinement”
1 THE UNIQUE COCKTAIL LOUNGE
• N A U T ICA L ATM OSPHERE •
FEATURED NIGHTLY| FREDERICK WOHLFORD| A t t h e Pi . a n o
PLAYS YOUR FAVORITE SONGS
! THE YACHT CLUBg GUS R E G A N , Prop. G EO . T C A R R , Mgr.
| F St. and 9th Ave. B E L M A R
Utiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiniiu... ................................................................................ ............................................ .
Schools Graduate...Continued from Page One
onica, A lm a Margaret Caplan, Pau l
Francis Capobianco (Navy), E laine
i Coates, Helen Earlene Decker, Urszula
j Karo lina Goldstein, Doris Rose Keyn-
i ton, M iriam K ing, Shirley Irene K le in
kauf, Frederick Kolb (Navy), James
Centenial Lattim er, George Edward
Lins, L illian E thel Marshall, Edward
O liver Megill, Margie Pearl Paterson,
David Gordon Reid, Weston Phillips
Rice, Marjorie Jean Robinson, B ar
bara Lou Schm idt, George Thomas
Sagui, Derwood Shauger (Navy), Jean
E la ine Thompson, H arriet Louise Wal-
i zer, Bernadette' M ary Weisenberger
; and Ernest Zawadzki.
Also Jean Cutler, Edw ard G ifford
(A rm y), Charles Conyers Henville, jr.,
M argaret E lizabeth Lake, Doris Mae
Loesch, A line I. Miller, Alice Mary
Reed, Edw in LeRoy Woolley.
West BelmarTwenty-five boys and girls were
graduated from the W est Belmar
school at commencement exercises
held last .night in the West Belmar
Methodist church with, the address
given by the Rev. N orm an Riley, pas
tor of the church.
W illiam A llen and Catherine Hel-
frich won the P.T.A. awards for scho
larship presented by Mrs. W illiam
Donigan, president of the P.T.A.
Greetings were extended by W illi
am D o n ig an , class president, to all
those present followed by several se
lections sung by the graduates and
school chorus including: “M ah Lindy
Lou", " I f W ith A ll Your Hearts” from
“E lija h ”, "This Land We Call Am eri
ca", “The V ik ing Song", Andalusia”,
“Hail, B right Abode” and “The
Eagle."The class w ill was read by Joan
Bennett, W illiam Donigan, Carolyn
S im m ill and R ichard Karl. The grad
uates sung the class song w ith words
w ritten by Florence Barraud.
D iplom as were presented by David
Chandler, member of the board of
education. “N ow the Day Is Over”
was sung by the graduates and cho
rus followed by the recessional march.
Graduates include: W illiam Allen,
Florence Barraud, R ichard Beaudoin,
Joan Bennett, R ichard Caggiano, Jo
seph Chandler,- V irg in ia Curtis, W il
liam Donigan, M argaret Ely, Gladys
Gravatt, E leanor Harker, Catherine
Helfrich, Raym ond Hurley, A llan
Johnson, R ichard Karl, Robert Longo,
A nna M ay Marcks, Peggy McGowan,
Doris Osborn, Genevieve Pembleton,
Vernon Row, Jean Schmitt, Carolyn
Simm ill, Farli.ne Stines and Marjorie Stromenger.
Class officers were: W illiam Doni
gan, Earline Stines, presidents; Earl-
ine Stines, R ichard Karl, vice presi
dents; Catherine Helfrich, secretary,
and Joseph Chandler, treasurer. The
class motto: “W ork and W in ” ; class
colors, Blue and Gold; class flower, carnation.
Members of the g raduating class
and members of the school safety pa
trol were honored guests at the annu
al supper served by the P.T.A. on
Tuesday n ight in the school lunch
room.
Expressions of thanks were giveji
by W illiam Donigan, captain of the
safety patrol and by Earline Stines,
president of the class. Board of edu
cation members David CJiandler and
Fred Von Brook; Mrs. Beatrice Gallo
way, music supervisor, and H . J.
Sandifer, W all township supervising
principal, also spoke briefly. Re
sponses were given by the P.T.A.
president, Mrs. Donigan, and the vice
president, Mrs. Mabel Enders.
W om en who prepared and served
the supper included Mrs. W illiam A l
len, Mrs. Donigan, Mrs. Enders, Mrs.
Edward Karl, Mrs. Thelma Ely, Mrs.
j Elizabeth Heller, Mrs. Leroy Davison,
Mrs. Charles Tomlinson and Mrs.
May.
phecy was read by Dolores W inter
and the school chorus sang two more
selections, “D una" by McGill and
"A llah ’s Ho liday” by Frim l.
Mies R u th VanArsdale of Neptune C ity was guest soloist accompanied at
the piano by Mrs. G rant Haven.
The upper grades of New Bedford
school had a picnic at the home of
their teacher, Mrs. Charles A. Larson, Sea G irt, yesterday.
GlendoiaGraduation exercises of the Glen
doia gram m ar school were held M on
day n ight a t G lendoia Grange hall at j
which time six students received their |
diplomas from Mrs. Louise West, a
member of the board of education.
Those who were graduated are:
Claude S. Morris, F. Austin Fraley,
W alter Gratton, Carol Owen, Annali-
esse Wobser and Sylvia Krehl.
The invocation was given by the
Rev. H . C. Stiles followed by the
school chorus singing “On the M all”.
The upper grades of the school pre
sented a sketch entitled "The Minute-
men” and a playlet, "Happy, H ealthy
j Children" was given by the prim ary
; grades. The address of the evening
! was given by the Rev. J. J . McCall
and school chorus sang "W hen Twi- j light Falls".
Established 1912Since our funeral home la located
at E igh th Avenue and South Lake Drive, facing beautiful Silver Lake, you are assured of a Bervice not Interrupted by the noise of heavy traffic. The spaciousness of our Funeral Home enables ua to have public funerals regardless oi the number of friends your loved one may have.
Our showroom has a fu ll line ol funeral goods and when arrangement* are completed you know the entire amount of your bill. There are no extra charges.
Any questions w ill be cheerfully an swered w ithout obligation.
There is no ca.se too small for our attention
T. H . B E N N E T T F U N E R A L HOM E 804 E ig h t h A l t . T e l. 577 B e lm a r
=£->llllllllllllC3linilllllUCllllllllllllinilllllllllllt3llllllll
R I V O L I
T HEATRE= F S t re e t P h o n e 1750= B E L M A R
MAT. Daily 2:30— EVE. 7 & 9
= Sat. and Sun. Continuous from 2:30
I1U Y W A R B O N D S A N D S T A M P S A T T H E S E T H E A T R E S ! IIIUIIIIIII.....
I I
FRI.-SAT., June 9-10—
JO H N W A Y N E and
SUSAN H A Y W A R D
FIGHTING SEABEES
— S E R IA L —
“ F L Y I N G C A D E T ”
(Sat. Mat. Only)
I I
P A L A C ETHEATRE
M n in S tree t P h o n e A. P . 7099B R A D L E Y B E A C H
MAT. Daily 2:30— EVE. 7 & 9
Sat. and Sun. Continuous from 2:30
| SUN.-MON., June 11-12—
' i R A Y M IL L A N DR U T H H U SSE Y
I "The UNINVITED"I TUES.-WED., June 13-14—
| R O B E R T P A IG E andL O U IS E A L L B R IT T O N
1 "HER PRIMITIVE MAN,U
also R U T H T E R R Y in
I "PISTOL PACKIN’ I MAMA"I THU RS., June 15-
JE A N G A B IN
I I THE IMPOSTER*FRI.-SAT., June 16-17—
M A R G A R E T O 'B R IE N
"LOST ANGEL’
FRI.-SAT., June 9-10—
M A R G A R E T O ’B R IE N and JA M E S C R A IG
"LOST ANGEL"— S E R IA L —
“ F L Y I N G C A D E T ”___________(Sat. Mat. Only)_________
SUN.-MON., June 11-12—
L O R E T T A YO U N G and G E R A L D IN E F IT Z G E R A L D
"LADIESCOURAGEOUS
TUES.-WED., June 13-14—
I I
JE A N G A B IN
"THE IMPOSTER"THURS., June 15—
R O B E R T P A IG E andL O U IS E A L LB R IT T O N
"HER PRIMITIVE MAN"
also R U T H T E R R Y in
"PISTOL PACKIN' MAMA"
41 « < N C I INT HEATRE
M a in S tree t P h o n e M n n . 1432M AN ASQUAN
MAT. Daily 2:30— EVE. 7 & 9 | Sat. and Sun. Continuous from 2:30 =
FRI.-SAT., June 9-10—
M A R G A R E T O ’B R IE N and
JA M E S C R A IG
"LOST ANGEL"— S E R IA L —
" F L Y I N G C A D E T ”(Sat. Mat. Only)
SUN.-MON., June 11-12—
W IL L IA M P O W E L L
H E D Y L A M A R R
"The HEAVENLY
BODY’na
TUES.-WED., June 13-14-
J E A N G A B IN
I I
FRI.-SAT., June 16-17—
JO H N W A Y N E and
I I
SUSAN H A Y W A R D
FIGHTINGSEABEES'
THE IMPOSTER'-THURS., June 15— g
R O B E R T P A IG E and
L O U IS E A L LB R IT T O N |
"HER PRIMITIVE !MAN" j
FRI.-SAT., June 16-17— 1
JO H N W A Y N E and
SUSAN H A Y W A R D ;
"FIGHTINGSEABEES" I
\ M E N IN M IL IT A R Y U N IF O R M S 20c (p lu s ta x ) A T A L L T IM E S lOmilllllllOIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIUIIIIIIinillllllUllll.'
New BedfordRobert Trail and O liver C. Loker
son were graduated from the New
Bedford school at commencement ex
ercises held Tuesday afternoon at
W a ll church. The diplomas were pre
sented by H. J. Sandifer, W all town
ship supervisor of schools.
The Rev. Charles M. Hogate, pastor I
of the M anasquan Methodist church ,!
gave the address to the graduates. |
Follow ing the processional m a rc h !
and invocation given by the Rev. W . J. i
Senior the school chorus sang “O n the ]
M all” by Goldman. The class pro-1
FATHER S DAYS U N D A Y
J U N E 18t h
America’scoolest slacksAmerica’s favorite slacks ★America’s KOQt-ER/ZED slacks
In America’s finest summer-
slack colors, styled for long wear!
They’re the slacks you can wear
for hard work, then wash them,
and make them look like new.
Our selection is complete!
i f OddM il Trousers
to match PalmBeach coats.
I * j or for contrast
i i i i & j—also $5.95.
22% Cooler!lets in 22% more cooling air than any
other tested by independent research
Wm. H. Hurley9 1 I F Street Belmar
Men's and Boys' Outfitter
LUXURIAby
Harriet Hubbard Ayar
» The cleansing and conditioning cr« am of superior quality and purity. Keeps sk in soft and smooth.
$ | 0 0
PUu Federal Tax
D O N ’T F O R G E T
• FATHER’S DAY •Sunday, M ay 18th
G ifts for Father—Father's Day Greeting Cards.
WM. T. LINS Pharmacy
1500 F St. Belmar
Y O U ’L L F IN D A LL T H E LATEST F IC T IO N AT
LYON’SBOOK SHOP
711 F St. Belmar 3545o
FICTION
LOST ISLAND•—Jam es Norm an H a ll
STORM AGAINST THE WIND
—‘Helen H u ll Jacobs
THE LABYRINTH— Cecil Roberts
NO MORTAL FIRE— Elsa Valentine
THE HOUSE WITH THE GREEN TREE
— Kelvin L indem ann
TO R E S E R V E A N T BO O K
Call Belmar 3545
BELMAR PIANO SERVICECO M E IN and SEE the NEW CONSOLE SPINETS
• PIANOS TUNED• PIANOS REPAIRED• PIANOS BOUGHT
► PIANOS SOLD »PIANOS RENTED 1 PIANOS REMODELED
H. T. SCOTT - HUNTINGTON1012 F STREET
T E L E P H O N E B E L M A R 408B E L M A R
M ’S SOtffiltV TEA I! mill8th AVE. and RIVER ROAD (Route 35) B E L M A R
N O W OPENMRS. FRANCES W OOLLEY
WE SPECIALIZE IN
BANQUETS - WEDDINGS - PARTIESLU N CH EO N S
11:30 AJW. to 3:30 P. M . 75c 1.25D IN N E R S
3:30 P.M . to 8:30 P. M.
A W O N D E R F U L M EN U
A ll Southern Home Cooking
O P E N A L L Y E A R T E L E P H O N E B E L M A R 3778
--- G O O D FO O D IS T H E ST A FF O F L IF E . . . W E S E R V E IT ______
MENZLER’SN O W OPEN D A I L Y Except MondaysShop Over the Weekends for Monday Purchases
—Saturday Features—Meltaway Coffee Ring
VANILLA CREAM F ILL IN G
32c
Banana Cream PieTOPPED W IT H M ERINGUE
55c
Black Walnut Ice Layer 45c
Prune Bread loaf 16c
Cor n Muf f i ns doz. 30c
Menzler’s Daylight Bakery803 F Street Phone Belmar 2335 Belmar, N. J.