i'fypm wmm - digifind-it · sun rises 5,30, sets 8.28 day’s lencth 14 hours 58 minutes,...

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All the Howi oi Ooedn, Qxove Is to Be i: ■Pound In The Times To Seep Posted Beed .it Regularly Friday. Cloudy. Temp. 62 at 9 a. m,'/ Sun Rises 5,30, Sets 8.28 Day’s lencth 14 Hours 58 Minutes, i'fypM .fill •-i ----- V«l. XXVIII OCEAN GROVE, N. J., FRIDAY, JUNE 4 , 1920 No; 2 THRILLING MOMENTS AT THE CONFERENCE PR. BUDS TELLS OP WORK DONE ' BY METHODIST BODY. just Book From Quadrennial Ses- sion At Des Moines the Distriot Superintendent Occupies Pulpit of "■ St. Paul’s Church—StidnK Mes- sages Prom' Leaders. .- •Last Sunday' night iRev.i J. D. Bills, district Superintendent,, occu- pied the pulpit at St. Paul's, Ocean Grove, addressing an audlenoo that filled the churoh’and overflowed In- to the'lecture room. His' subject was "The General Conference.” He described the building and seating of the delegates very brief- ly, and then gave a resume of the proceedings. The audience listened wltlh Intense, interest and apprecia- tion, He said In 'the conference the members are seated hy delegations, and their place In the hall determined by lot. It will bo seen that some will be more favorably located than others, The New Jersey delegation occupied the center of the Coliseum. ; The bishops are masters In the a r t'■ of presiding, and . among . them especially 'happy In 'directing, the Important business In 'this confer- ence were Bishop Joseph F. Berry, who presided at the opening and again n’t the closing session; Bishops Luther B. Wilson, Theodore S. Hen- derson, and others well known to Ocean Grove audiences. "It Is not likely that you could find the equal to our Board of Bishops .taken as a whole In the religious assemblies of the World,” said Dr.. Bills. “Wo may congratulate oiirsolves that we • were divinely guided In the selection of the new bishops, and although seventeen wero elected evory one Is a '•marked and fit mail' for the high of- '.’ flee. ' Wo in Ocean Grove take espe- clnl delight In the election of Dr. Charles L. Mead, a member of the Camp Meeting Association and long a leader of the Young People's meet- ing. ■ The Now Jersey delegation voted as a unit for him on every bal- lot, and Joined heartily In the. dem- onstration of satisfaction when ho was declared elected. . .'lI s call your attention to two yinyery great papers read In tho con* ference. Tho episcopal address read; (•.by Bishop MbDowell on Sabbath af- ternoon, May 2nd, which might be : termed 'tho. Salutatory; - Wo under - stand it was the product of tho • thought of • the board of bishops framed in the language of tho reader. The other; paper might ho 'termed the Valedictory, and was 'tho pro- duct of the brain and heart of Bish- op Berry, tho senior bishop. It was written by. him In the last few hours of the conference and read by him nt'the last session. It created'.a pro- found impression and Was received as a great, inspiration; It was the ’ . fitting .climax of a month of pro- gress In the conference of 1920." - ; The preacher outlined tho work done In the General Conference proper, the work done by the com- mittees Into which, the conference is divided, some of them equalling- the size' of an annual conference, and again by the sub-committees Into which these committees ore divided. He pointed out that muob of the work 1 b done In these committees : and sub-commlttoos and gave somo Interesting Illustrations. •’ « • ' The speaker dealt at length. with the Items of now legislation and prophesied n new day of progress for the ohuroh. He dosed, with a graphic account of tho thrilling mo- ments in the conference,. Including a demonstration of enthusiasm dur- ing the fending of the episcopal ad- dress when Bishop McDowell said, referring to the Eighteenth Amend- . m e a t; “Tho Methodist Episcopal Church puts upon Its banners In let- ters that can, o read acroBB tho world, 'No compromise, now and no nulllfleatlon anywhoro.’ ” ThiB was greeted with standing applauso and the singing of “America” by the an-' dlence. : 1 ' A similar, offoct was produced later in the address when tho Bishop said:, “However It shall bo brought about, such compromiao should ho niado between the President of the . United. States on ono hand and the 8enato of the United States on tho other ob shall secure a real and of- •fectlve League of Nations In which the Unlted States shall 'have a prop- er and honorablo placo among tho Jtatlons of the world in preserving tho peace and bearing the burdens ..' of. the world." The most Impressive and sacred -scene, .said iMr. .Bills, was the ordi - nation pf the eevoptoon now bishops, ,tho,’whole episcopal college anfl r many eldors taking part. .'Another thrilling-moment, wns on the aye and no' vote 8a)turday, May 22; on Judge1Rogere’.. decision that ; It 'Is1unconstitutional; to ask a .per- son about to bp'reoolvod Into' full i membership’ In the" Methodist Bpls- copal'Church "Do you ibeUeve In the ,. doctrines of , tho' Holy Sorlpturea-aa •;, set :forth in.-the Articles bf Religion •ofi the Mothodlst Episcopal Churoh?” The-Judgo, .was sustained pnV tho; cv, nvo, and ip’ay ,'voto byra mftjorlty' of. ■"/’ i tyerity-ono .Votes, 1 800',: to.. 808;^ It, .ftt.b^eedbdywhbn^tha'yy'.cohfcrimio'-aitor^ and whole delegations changed t’holr, vote from aye to no. And the final result was announced, nyee ; 364; noes, 461; It was also a thrilling moment when after the great debate on the report of tho •committee on educa- tion on the course of . Study;, the main item of the minority report Introduced by Harold Paul Sloan, of New Jersey, was adopted by a vote of 481 to 286. v:-,.r It was a thrilling moment, too, when on Wednesday night, May 26tU,: In the midst of grinding work J. W. Hoffman, chairman of the committee on the state of the church, presented the, report on paragraph iNo. 280. The great Coliseum was full, all tho seats In the galleries being taken by Inter- ested people who had come oxpooting this ropont to bo given. Tho ma- jority report was as follows: "That’ paragraph 280 remain as now found in the Discipline. We re- quest the General Conference to take 'the vote on paragraph 280 without debate.” For tho adoption of the minority report the vote was 269; against the adoption of 'tli’o minority report 437. The vote on the majority roport was. taken and prevailed. For tlfe ma- jority report 469; against the ma- jority report 212. It woe- likewise a 'thrilling mo- ment when In the.last session Bishop Lewis,' who was presiding, an- nounced that "Bishop Borry, ourj senior bishop, will bring us a parting word and a note of Inspiration,” and Bishop Berry rend his address, revlowlng the work 'that lind been done during the month and direct- ing tho thought Into tho quadron- nlum to corno. It was the thrill of a holy calm. Men wero In >the pres- ence of their God. The best In every nmn present was uppermost, and each highly rosqlvedj that theso things tor which the Bishop hoped should como to pass by tho grace of God and.the devoted activities of His followers. TOWNSHIP HONORS ITS SOLDIER BOYS GRANITE SHAFT DEDICATED ON SUNDAY LAST. Revs. Mount, VanHase, Marshall; Corr and Wright Fartioipato In . the ExerciKs, Attended By a Vast Concourse of Persons—-Full last Of Those In Service. Dedication of the soldiers’ monu- ment at the Broadway entrance to Ocean Grove was performed last Sun- day afternoon In tho prcsonco of an. Immense crowd of Interested per- sona, P. F. Dodd, township police recorder, arranged th details of the dedication, nml the program bf ox- orclses was In charge of Rev. Ed- ward G. Mount, pastor of the West Grove M. E. Church. Included In the throng present were 'tho officials of Neptune town- ship, members of the board of ed- ucation, the West Grove Red Cross and firomen, representatives of a number of societies, and the Ameri- can Legion and other bodies. Ad- dresses were dollvored by Dr. J. W. Marshall, vlco president of the Oconn Grove Association; Chaplain Corr, who was with Company E overseas, nnd Rev. Mount. The presentation of a largo floral pleco as a fliialo to MISS THORPE ENTERTAINS EPWORTH LEAGUE USHERS Tho usliors of St. Paul's Epwortli League were ontortalned by Miss Gladys Tliorpo 92 Mt. 54lon Way, on Thursday evening of Inst week. A business mooting wos followed by a social. , Miss Tborpo’s guests were Caro- line Ivcnst, Dorothy Osborn, Grace Konst, Eugenio Slircvo, Qenovlnvo Flint, Helen Stono, Mabel Massinger nnd Jack. SoUottlor, Harry Glenum, Haydon ’Proctor, Gerald' Stone, Borri-i hnrdt Homme.il Bruce Sliubert, Leon MoLnughlln, Harold Smith, Abram FInltle, Frank Wnrdoll and .Cooper Schuyler, ,1 • • .*r Daylight Saying Bothers Them. It Is said business men in Freehold are experiencing, much annoyance' on account of the local authorities holding on to itho old. tlmo-schodulo when other towns and the big cities have adopted the daylight saving schedulo. In gottlng their mall to tho postofllco <ln tlmo for tho outgo- ing malls, Postmaster Wilbur says, few of,'them 'have yet. become ac- customed to 't/he advanced time schedule, of the Central Railroad on whose trains the : most... important mall goes-out each day. s Meeting of WiUard W. C. T. U. .The Willard W. C. T. U. met at the homo of Alisa .Helen'Patton; 95 Mt. Herman Way, on Monday even- ing. Six now mombcre were receiv- ed. The meeting was largely at- tended, and.an Interesting program followed tho business' session. Rond- lngB wore given by Mrs. Margaret Asny/Hcsso, .Mr. and Mrs. Tevls ren- dered boIob nnd a duet, Mr.-Hesse a tenor solo, and Jack Dessalot a vio- lin solo. .. Leg Broken In Auto Collision. Clifford Lotts, formerly of Ocean Grove, sustained a brokett leg when an automobile In which 'he was rid- ing collided with another machine last Saturday night at Second ave- nue arid Main etreot, Asbury Park. Lotts, who lives In that.cjty, was removed to the hospital. Miss Jean- ette Hendrickson, one of tho occu- pants of tho second car, was Injured about the knee. Golden Eagles Memorial. At the church in West Grovo last (Sunday evening .tho Borvlco was In memory of eighteen deceased mem- hors of Burliago Caetlo, Knights of tho GoTdon lOnglo. ' Tho special exer- cises Included nn address by the pastor, Rev. Edward Mount, and a reading by Mrs. John L. Hesso. Tho oulogy was given by Rov. M„ L. Forrla. Elevator Shaft Fall Fatal. By a fall down r elevator shaft In. tfhe ' Pennsylvania , hotel, Now York. City, Waltor’ Watklnson re- cently wae killed. Watklneon for- merly lived in Deal, where he has a riuanbor of relatlvos. .. Ho, served in the war with the Twonty'-eevonth Division, IQ4th Hold artillery. C. J. MASSINGER, M. ;'D„ phy- sltlan and surgeon, corner Main and Dolawdro nvonuos. Ocean Grove.' Of- fice hours: Until 10.ti. ni.; from .l to B.p. m,; from 8.80,to 8 p. m., aad ,by, apbolntmont. TOlophone . Asbury' 60S.—-4tf , 1019. . •••.; • . "V * •/.••;k/ ; • UNDERTAKER—«drry J. Bodltio, 722.;Mtvttlson. avopuo, Aabtiry' park. •Toldplton o of each of: the thirteen who died In service. Following Is a full list of the names: Frank Acclrcl, William Allen, Georgo Washington Anderson, Tbonins Angles, Robert Roy Apple- gate. Steadman Applegnte, Thomas Archer, George Asay, Gerard Aul- ton. ♦George Barlow, William H. Barlow, Thomas Barnes, ‘Charles Russell Bedell, William Beauregard, William Bergfels, Joseph;, H, Bon- nc'.tt,.-l.ovett Burns Bird, Clifford, T. Blake, Frank Feely Bogge, Edgar R. Bonsall, Franklin C. Bono, Stan- ley Bowno, William Bowno, Harold Borden, Frank Brawnreutlier, Rich- ard Brown; Donald A. Brown, Har- old Bowne, Leonard L, Broome;- George Butler, Joseph Buxton, Al- vali Bncknlcw, Henry Burney, Hnr- ry M. Bull, Robert M. Carrlck, Stan-; ley Carrlck, ‘ Carl Chamberlain, Clnrenco Cbamberlnln, Milton Cham- berlain, Oliver Oharland, Frank Cblararons, Joseph Clancy, Albert L. Collier, Daniel H. Convery, Tlmnins A. Conte, Calhoun Cousin. Samuel S. Cohen, John E. Connol- ly, Herbert Cook, Frank Campanll- 11. ‘James H. Croeson, George Leon Croraon, Ernest R. Cranmor. Benja- min H. Curtis, Francla. C. Cyphers, Clark Dnvlson, Adolphus J. Day, Howard Boyden Davis, Willard Earl DoN.vsc. Edward Dcwis, Charles Diehl, Jacob Diehl, Louis F. Diehl. George Dixon, Henry B. Dorr, John Dorn. Leo Dougherty. Charles Down- ing. Harry I. Dodd, Earl Dofsctt, Wllllsm R. Duffy, Edward J. Drunmi, Elmer S. Dunning. Ernest I)un8on. Isadora Eilclson. William •Ennis, Snmuel Edelson, Lawrence T. Edgar, Raymond Eldrlrtge. Walter P. Elmer, Reginald Ehlers, William English, Gnrlleld L. Endy, Enrl Er- 11am A. Meeks, Charles H. Menke, George Layton Menke, Norman Me- gllj, Raymond C. Miller, Harry Mi- ner, Deaii II. Minor, Paul Morgan, William F. Morgan, Melvin Moore, Solomon-Alobncy; L. P. Morton Mor- ris, William H. H. Morris, Thomas Moreland, Jolin 11. Neidhart, Gar- rett G. Newkirk, Edward Newman, George Wlillfleld Noe, Janies Nolan, Augustus O'Brien, Benjamin Evans O'Brien. . Earl; CHagcn, Joseph O’Hagen, Ernest Olsen, James W. Osboimi Lewis Pallack, Benjamin Pallack, Arthur Parker, ; Norman Par keg, Fred Patterson; Clarence Peck, George Perry, Edward Perry,: John M. Pennell, Willard Pettit, ‘Jesse Pierce, William Dewitt Polhomus, Al|en Potter, Stanley Potter, Nor- man Quincy, William R. Reed, Al- fred D. Reed, Walter E. Reid, Wil- liam Resta, Rycrs Richardson, Lou- is A. Roscnstolh, Benjamin RoyaJ, John Sanders, Worthington Scott, Hnrpfd Sciritliorpe, Howard Schell, Edward Schanck, Pnsquale Scott!, Isaac Schlossbach, Harry Schboss- bttch, Frederick Schaar, Herbert Segur, Donald Sbenton. Charles Shafto, Marvin. Sbafto, Edward Side, Elisha D. Simms, Gordon Slocum, Eugene Slocum, Everett Slocum, John Joseph Smullen, Joseph Smith, Paul Smith, Howard Lnmson Smith, George H. Smith, Frank Snyder. Arthur Summers, John M. Spldle, Samuel II. Spencer Chnrles Vito |Sp(lr.lto. William Lawrence Sbeole, Edward -J. Stiles, Harold Sutton, Frank M. Sutton Evan W. Sutton, Wnlter H. Sutton, John' Talman, Dallas W. Thomas, Elbert F. Thomp- son, Raymond R. Thompson, Hugh O. Tompkins, ‘ Robert Tuzonow, Hnrold I. Tlllotsoii, Jnmcs Alfred Tilton, John Tinkler. Irvin Turner, Joseph R. Tustin, James F. Tustln, Jo9epli C. Tynan, Earl H. VnnHise, Joseph H .. Vnughn, George A. Vaughn, Lester Van Nest, Charles Vnssolo. Corbett Walker, L. Rcznor Ward, Lester R. Weller. Harry Wels- ford, Abrabam Westc'rvelt, Harry White, Britton White, Tracey Stults White. Alvin Whitlock. Hurry Wheel- er. Lewis Wilson, Harold William- son. Ernest Williamson. Olts Wilde. Gerald L. Wright, Henry E. Wright, “Humid c. Wright; George D. Wright, LeRoy Woolley, Harry Thomas Woolley. Benjamin Yorlo. The monument committee was comprised of Waller H. Gravatt, Peter F. Doild, Charles J. Jamison. M. 0.. representing Neptune town- ship. and Ernest N. Woolston. Ste- olien, t). Woolley nnd Frank B. Smith, for Ocean Grove, and whoso names also nnpear on the monument. , The monument site was donu'ted hy the Ocean Grovo Association. ANOTHER HEARING IN BOROUGH MATTER m WATT, SHREVE AND STOUT ARE . NOW DEFENDANTS. w m M m If m Witnesses For Plaintiffs: Testier Acain Before Special Master mar Last; Saturday In Asbury ' . Park—Case Will Be Continued At.-‘i ' Same Place Monday Horning- Robert M. Watt. on behalf of the.' ;’’1 borough of Ocean Grove, and Robert M. Watt, Harry G. Shrove and Rich;-) ard W. Stout, as petitioners 'for : the recent borough election, have been, made party defendants in the suit; toVNvvrv test the validity of that electiont-o brought by-William E. Bunn, Andrew ' , C- T. yanCleve arid Mrs. Harriet H.;1 ( Hopper. The1 third hearing In th d ^ ’i;,;' case, this tlnio of witnesses'for tbe;:i;:|( defense, lias been set for Monday,of next week at 11 a. m„ before: Special Master Dittmnr In his office’•'In" 'A*-* -V.ih bury- Park. , , . V .v-n ;'.S The second 'hearing of Witnesses vS';;Y for the plaintiffs was held last Sat- urday afternoon. The witnesses ex-^YJ^j nmlncd were Mrs. Hopper, W illiam ; ','fW E. Bunn, Mrs. Liiey D. Osbbrn, D r;.' .i/ySfj J. W, Marshall anil Miss Helen Pat-VT.yYti ton. The endeavor at this hearing t }tj* was to prove the residence status of v n :* u the members of:the Ocean Grove As- sociatlon; the manner 'of; their eleo'- , tlon, the by-laws under, whtoli the g S t S> Association Is operating, ownership:', of the Association buildings and utilities, and tho admission of cer- ■mSi :' f w II v\ ''J' I 1 | 1 MISS BONE GOES ABROAD : . TO PURSUE ART STUDIES Neptune Township Monumont Dodlcatod Last Sunday the Improsslvo services was made by Rov. T. J. J. Wright, paetor- of St. Paul’s, Oooan Grove, Rev. Frank VanHlae, pastor of tiho Methodist ohuroh- at Hamilton, offered tho pVayor which oponod tlio service. The exercises ott tho monumont fol- lowed the setting adrift of a floral raft on tlio Asbury Park hoacli. In momory of tho sailor doad. Dr. Marshall based his remarks on the words from tho fourth ohnpter of Joshua, "What mean these stones?” Ho said -'tho monumont meant for one thing, Borvlco and sac- rifice. And for another thing, it ts a romlnder that God Is always on the side of the right. Also, that It was 'the United plates army that gave tho finishing stroke to'tho Ger- mans. Chaplain Corr paid.a glowing tri- bute to the high type of manhood represented by. the American sol- diers. He said ho was proud of the fnot ho had been a member of the United States army, but ho wns proudor because that army was tho cleanest that over fought a nation's battles. .Chaplain Corr paid .tribute also to the American mothers as Uio power that gave 'tho forco and punch that broke tho German army. "This monumont,” ’s a id '.Rev. Mount,1"Is fdr our boys of Neptune 'township. And It Is for the world, for, our boys fought for the world. ‘Every boy whose name appears on It was a hero. Tho war was won by God and !the .mon ?vho hod God be- hind. them.” The speaker ooaoludod that tho best patriot, la ,ho who gives hift'Tes^'rodnhood 'to .hls «oilntry.; . •'..'•Tap:(fQ.af v.tttWpw o'f,illfo:<p.bnu- ment boar . the: names1 of' the' boys of Neptuhtf :tpwntaife1 .who,,'obllstdd Tor. the:.1riar;«.ptar;pVeopaiDg,l'thp:name vein, Charles Falardau, ‘LaRuo Fle- gal, Sanford C. Flint, Clifford Fog- orty, Edward Fogorty, Clarence L, Francis, Leon Gardner, Frank Qas- nor, Frank Gatto, John Gee, Lewis Gee, Hilton Gilbert, Edward Glashap. Eugene Goodenougb, ‘ Snmuel Goldstein, .Mcyors Goldstein, Chester Gravatt, Kenneth Gravatt, Lostor Gravatt, ‘Paul Gravatt, Lesllo Gregg, Raymond R, Qrneey, Aaron Gross, William H. Gross, Robert Hadfleld, Dougins Handley, Edward Handley, Morris Harrison, JoBepli H. Harkcy, Noll Hepburn, ‘Irad If. Hidden, Paul Harold Holmes, Grant Holmes, Raymond Horner. William George H. Howell, Elliott Hulsbart, Fred IJ. Hurloy, Jr., Norninn Hurley, Lester Hurley HubsoII Hulso, Frank Hulse, Harrison Hyer, .‘Frank Iava- rono, Elvln Imlny, Llnwood Jack- soh, Joshua H. Jamison, Georgo H, Jamison, William- F. Jamison, Ern- oat Jomlson, Donald Jobes, George R. .Tobos, Russell Johnson, William Johhtry, William Jones, Francis Jones, Charles B. Kolm, Harold Jay King, Chauncy Kirkpatrick, Gordon A. Knapp, George H. Krum, Walter W. Krum, Henry KruBChka, John Wesley Knox. Howard Lanco, Cnfleton Lano, Oscar Horner Lane, Nathan Lanb, Frank Edward Laing, Claude'Law- lor, Goorgo Layton, Chaunoy Dopow Lent,1Adelbert Lewis, T. Lloyd Lew- is, Norman James Lewis,, KingBloy Lolterson, Carl. Low, Robort CostiU 'Long; Charles Jerome . Massln'gor, Loo , Martin, Harry Marrlner, Clifford Marehall,. John .H, ,Marsh, . Georgo •Mptthows, fUrtah Matthows,1 Nolsoti R. Matthews, ,Vlotof' M alta'., Lewis Mays, Eogono MoBrlde,.; Walter. Mc- caffroy,,,Rtybbrt;;.;1,McClelland;; Frad: Miss Jessie II. Bone, daughter of- Mr, and Mrs. E. 11. Bone,, of tlio Carrollton hotel, 30 Webb, avenue, on Tuesday .'sailed from Now York for London', whither she goes to con- tinue .her studies in art. Two years ago Miss. Bone secured .the P. A. B. Wldener scholarship for excollenco in n four-years' course nt tho school of Design, Philadelphia, but owing to the war sho was unable at 'that 'tlmo to go abroad. ,• Later she was taken ill, and she js only strong enough now to. tako.advantage of the oppor- tunity given her. She will study'for ono year In the prlvato art class of Prof. J. P. Butterfield, first In London and then inter tii Paris. She will remain abroad .quo yonr. Miss Bone’s efforts in art have been directed chielly to tlio development of designs In tnpes- ■trics, curtains, etc. . Oconn Grove and assisted in the for-' i.'.'h:jh matlou of the Camp Meeting Asso- ', ; ; .elation,' As muob or the testlmpnjfj'^^fB of the witness wns based upon hear-''.:v;i,i'V!|6 say Attorney Cook for tho deton Insisted 'that It be stricken from the record. Mrs. Hopper on cross ex- - , niiilnntion snld she was opposed tO;U<),(iiY'S borough because she feared tho '; change of go 1 ’ • •• the religious Grove. The 'had contributed townrila tho expense Involved in contesting the eleotlon. ' Mr. Itiinn, the owner and, proprfo- 101 - of Grove Hull hotel on Pilgrim Pathway, testified that he had been a property holder : liere eight ye«rsji( ’ since 1912. Ho wns In sympathy , with the restrictions o f' the 'Assoela-' jfi® tlon nml the approval by that body :'f;;#;t#W of the looses for property tranBfefs.'Y “Would you be surprised; to lcarn|( Murt n large number of leases durlngS, tho years have not been approved by,‘ v-^&H the Assoclatlpn?" 'the .witness • wusHv1 , l " “ nskod l>y Mr, Cook. "I would," re- piled Mr. Bunn. “I understand all'..; such transfers must first bo approved^); liy the Association, rjpj; ; "Do-you live In Ocean Grove per- ■: mnnently?’’..-continued Mr. Cook.: "No; I go South In the winter. My.'’ .'. legal1residence Is in -Ocean'Grove',1 ".i® ,the. witness answered. , '4,?j Have you ever had a'vote for of-i;l), _» •>.. ■•••■•• - - voted. •.< ';. Secretary’s Services Rewarded. In recognition of her faithful and efficient services as recording secre- tary over a period of ten years, Mrs. William Reynolds last .Friday re- ceived from the Sewing Society of St. Paul’s church, Ocean • Grove, n blnck sweater. The presentation took plnco at 'the re'sldonco of Mrs. Frank Illckman, 102S Bangs ave- nuo, Asbury Park, where the socie- ty met in regular session'. Pussyfoot Johnson Coming. Tlio. reply of . the Antl-Snloon League of Now Jersey to tho "wet" propaganda Is to arrange for a series of mass meetings nil ovor 'the State, to he nddreased by William E. (Pus- syfoot) Johnson and , Sam Small. Mr. Johnson’s first meeting wns In 'Nownrk Inst Friday ovcnlng in the Central M. E. Church. Dates for other meetlngB Include Sunday, Juno 27, at Asbury Park. Colored Educational Day. Tho greatest lidlng colored scholar, thinker, writer, editor and sociologist, Dr. W. E. B. DuBols, Ph.-D„ from Harvard University, 1895, will bo the principal speaker nt tho educational rally and reunion to bo held at Freehold on Friday evening, June 25th. It will be Col- ored Educational Day.: . Sale For Hospital Auxiliary, . In aid of tho Ocean Grove auxlll-; ary to the Ann May Hospital at Spring Lake, a bread, cake'and deli- cntosson sale Is do ,bo hold Saturday, •beglnnlng at 10 o’clock a. m„ at the blow Centennial hotel on Main avo-' niie. The sale wil.be In charge ot Mra.C.-J.MaBsInger;, 'Ytt , | w/'vH.- .iT^tQri’i^conlrw toirl^iii' buildw;'88':'Abbotf :dye.'i Oce>in Grovo,1 STJ;P \(f tain ordinances as exhibits In tho case. Tlio testimony of Mrs. Osborn hadt.V' f.'. little bearing upon tho matter In •hand, olhcr than, to ' establish 'tho;,: '-; \.111 fact that her late husband, Rev. Wll- 1 "if 11am B. Osborn, was tho founder of r e g u la -;1;;,^'.) fleers of the Association, or In making Its laws and tlons?" “I never expected to have.” "Haye you ever, had any voice or control In any matters of tho Asso- ciation ? VNo.” “The principal objection you Iiavo(w to a borough Is that you believe would Interfere with the peace and:’.1 ,; Integrity of Ocean Grove, la it not7”';-:;V; "No; I object to the whole char-stji acter of'tho government.” •: l.(lijjf Dr. Marshall told of having been' elected a truateo In 1913. Ho sald.’ife replying to a question relative to'-'vi the election of trustees, that • thtws ’S admitted to the Association must'.bot-.l.t members of the Methodist churoh;^ men of good character and general/'';; elllclency. There is no resident,-cv qunllilcntlon, us the members comnVv.t from various Stales. Also, tiho l a y f e members lie said are men who are likely to bo more Interested In, -re-Mi' llglon than tlio average. The; wil-itriyj ness wns asked If tho prcsent ,boar^'^'■1 wns coniposod of men who would .be/,/ likely to give Ocean Grovo a raoto/;/ religious government than wbuld',!/: obtain under a borough. Ho replied,'ie, In the nfilrnmtlve. Dr. Marshall alsb’tfe,! testified ‘that the Association dwji the Auditorium, the .boardwalk,’™; parks, pavilions, tvlllltles,. etc.;; apffwld that the expenso of, bhelr . upkeep, was pnlil from the lot rentals, coaH'-?;! cessions and offerings at tho ineet-Jinii;1 ingS. V . . •It was agreed by counsel thatItiQ' j1 ;.;1 lenses of dhe "prosecutors arc uniifetf? forrn with all other le a s e s Tsfi’p e ^ & i by tho . Association from the • beglaKiyf'' ning, 1 and tfiat there is ,ao reeiaeno^.Off; requirement 'In order to obtA^VA'^ lease. 'A 'num ber of .oxfllbltsl/Vih’M '^ eluding several pertinent ordinances',' y;;i wero admitted as exhibits,.aUhtnisjiSjii Mr. Cook refused ‘to aclraowledge legal'right of the AssoclatlOn^W'S^ frame such ordinances.' 'Miss Patton road the by:lawi;Pfe;! f the Assoplation iw ’ adopted'hnYFob(«f/! ruary 5,, 1915, .and. the atneaamefitsiN'Y '•thereto n d o n t e d o f i 1:;,Ja,autol(,:.v,,1.8><;i; ^ 918; ■Mr; Cook 'dbje^tcia^fo tjh isiv, mtfi3lonoftlioBydiws,, blatdilngdhat there ;tWa -lib vtirb^t Agnktore;. blfY?; 'Te^lyYadoptd'a. ............... I. li '.I- ;■( 1.. fH i ■li I ;a ilffisBilB

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Page 1: i'fypM wmM - DigiFind-It · Sun Rises 5,30, Sets 8.28 Day’s lencth 14 Hours 58 Minutes, i'fypM.fill----- •-i V«l. XXVIII OCEAN GROVE, N. J., FRIDAY, JUNE 4, 1920 No; 2 THRILLING

A ll th e H ow i o i Ooedn, Qxove I s to B e i: ■ P o und I n T h e T im es

To S e e p P o sted B eed . i t R egula rly

Friday. Cloudy. Temp. 62 a t 9 a. m,'/ Sun Rises 5,30, Sets 8.28

Day’s lencth 14 Hours 58 Minutes,

i 'fy p M

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V«l. X X V III O C E A N G R O V E, N. J., F R ID A Y , JUNE 4 , 1920 No; 2

THRILLING MOMENTS AT THE CONFERENCE

PR. BUDS TELLS OP WORK DONE ' BY METHODIST BODY.

just Book F rom Quadrennial Ses­sion At Des Moines the Distriot Superintendent Occupies Pulpit of

"■ St. Paul’s Church—StidnK Mes­sages Prom' Leaders. .-

•L a s t Sunday' n ig h t iRev.i J . D. Bills, d is tr ic t S u p e rin te n d en t,, occu­pied th e p u lp it a t St. P au l's , Ocean Grove, addressing an audlenoo th a t filled th e c h u ro h ’and overflowed In­to th e 'le c tu r e room. H is' sub ject w as "T h e G eneral Conference.”

He described the b u ild in g and sea tin g of the delegates very b rief­ly, and then gave a resum e of the proceedings. The aud ience listened wltlh In te n se , in te re s t and apprecia­tion, H e said In 'the conference the m em bers a re sea ted hy delegations, and th e ir place In th e hall determ ined by lot. I t w ill bo seen th a t some w ill be m ore favorably located than others, The New Je rsey delegation occupied th e cen ter of th e Coliseum.

; T he bishops a re m aste rs In th e a r t '■ of presid ing , and . am ong . th em especially 'happy In 'd irecting , th e Im portan t business In 'th is confer­ence w ere Bishop Joseph F . B erry, w ho presided a t the opening and again n’t th e closing session; Bishops L u th e r B. W ilson, Theodore S. H en­derson, and o thers w ell know n to Ocean Grove audiences. " I t Is not likely th a t you could find th e equal to our B oard of Bishops .taken as a whole In th e relig ious assem blies of the World,” sa id Dr.. Bills. “Wo m ay co ngra tu la te oiirsolves th a t we

• were divinely guided In the selection of t h e new bishops, and a lthough seventeen wero elected evory one Is a

'•m ark ed and fit mail' for the h igh of- '.’ flee. ' Wo in Ocean Grove tak e espe-

clnl de ligh t In the election of Dr. C harles L. Mead, a m em ber of the Camp M eeting A ssociation and long a leader of the Y oung People's m eet­ing. ■ The Now Jersey delegation voted as a u n it for him on every b a l­lot, and Joined h ea rtily In the. dem­o nstra tio n of sa tis fac tion w hen ho w as declared elected.. . ' l I s call yo u r a tte n tio n to two

yinyery g rea t papers read In tho con* ference. Tho episcopal address read;

(•.by Bishop MbDowell on Sabbath a f ­ternoon, May 2nd, w hich m ig h t be

: term ed 'th o . Salu tato ry ; - Wo under­s ta n d i t w as th e product of tho

• th o u g h t of • th e board of bishops fram ed in the language of tho reader. The other; paper m ig h t ho 'term ed the V aledictory, and w as 'tho pro­duct of th e b rain and h e a rt of B ish­op B erry, tho sen ior bishop. I t w as w ritten by. him In th e las t few hours o f the conference and read by him n t 'th e la s t session. I t created '.a pro­found im pression and Was received as a great, in sp iration ; I t w as the

’ . f ittin g .climax of a m onth of pro­gress In th e conference of 1920." - ;

The preacher outlined tho w ork done In th e G eneral Conference proper, the work done by the com­m ittees Into w h ich , the conference is divided, some of them equalling- th e size ' of an an n u a l conference, and again by the sub-com m ittees Into w hich these com m ittees ore divided. H e pointed ou t th a t muob of the w ork 1b done In these com m ittees

: and sub-com m lttoos and gave somoIn teres tin g Illu s tra tio n s . •’ « •' The speaker dea lt a t le n g th . w ith

th e Items of now legislation and prophesied n new day of progress for th e ohuroh. He d o se d , w ith a g raph ic account of tho th r ill in g mo­m en ts in th e conference,. Including a dem onstration o f enthusiasm d u r­in g the fend ing of the episcopal ad ­dress w hen Bishop McDowell said, re fe rr in g to the E ig h tee n th Amend-

. m ea t; “Tho M ethodist E piscopal C hurch pu ts upon Its b anners In le t­te rs th a t c a n , o read acroBB tho world, 'No com prom ise, now and no nu lllfleatlon anyw horo.’ ” ThiB was greeted w ith s ta n d in g applauso and th e s ing ing of “A m erica” by the an - ' dlence. : 1

' A similar, offoct w as produced la te r in the address w hen tho Bishop said:, “ H ow ever It sha ll bo b rought about, such compromiao should ho niado betw een the P residen t o f the

. United. S ta tes on ono hand and the 8enato of the U nited S ta tes on tho o th e r ob sha ll secure a real and of-

•fec tlve League of N atio n s In w hich th e U nlted S ta tes sha ll 'have a prop­er and honorablo placo am ong tho Jtatlons of th e world in p reserv ing th o peace and bearing the burdens

..' of. th e w orld."T he m ost Impressive and sacred

-scene, .said iMr. .Bills, w as th e o rd i­nation p f th e eevoptoon now bishops,

, th o ,’whole episcopal college anfl r m an y eldors tak in g p a rt.

.'Another thrilling-m om ent, wns on th e aye an d no' vote 8a)turday, May 22; on Ju d g e 1 Rogere’.. decision th a t

; It ' I s 1 u n c o n s titu tio n a l; to ask a .per­son about to bp 'reoo lvod In to ' fu ll

i m em bership’ In the" M ethodist Bpls- copal'C hurch "Do you ibeUeve In th e

,. doctrines o f , tho' H oly S orlp tu rea-aa •;, se t :fo rth in .-the A rtic les bf R eligion

•ofi th e M othodlst E piscopal C huroh?” T h e -Ju d g o , .was susta ined pnV tho;

cv, nvo, and ip’ay ,'voto b y ra m ftjo rlty ' of. ■"/’i tyerity -ono .Votes, 1800',: to .. 8 0 8 ;^ It,

.ftt.b^eedbdywhbn^tha'yy'.cohfcrimio'-aitor^

and whole delegations changed t’holr, vote from aye to no. A nd the final re su lt was announced, nyee ; 364; noes, 461; •

I t was also a th r il l in g m om ent when a f te r the g rea t debate on th e repo rt of tho •com m ittee on educa­tion on th e course of . S tu d y ;, th e m ain item of th e m in o rity rep o rt Introduced b y H arold P au l S loan, of New Jersey , w as adopted by a vote of 481 to 286. v:-,.r

I t was a th r ill in g m om ent, too, when on W ednesday n igh t, May 26tU,: In th e m idst of g rin d in g w ork J. W. Hoffman, chairm an of th e com m ittee on the s ta te of th e church , presented the, rep o rt on parag raph iNo. 280. T he g re a t Coliseum w as fu ll, a ll tho sea ts In the galleries being taken by In te r­ested people w ho had come oxpooting th is ropont to bo given. Tho m a­jo rity rep o rt was as follow s: " T h a t’ p arag raph 280 rem ain as now found in the Discipline. W e re­quest th e G eneral Conference to take 'the vote on p arag raph 280 w ithou t debate .”

For tho adoption of th e m ino rity report the vote w as 269; ag a in st th e adoption of 'tli’o m ino rity rep o rt 437. The vote on the m ajo rity roport was. taken and prevailed. F o r tlfe m a­jo rity repo rt 469; ag a in s t the m a­jo rity repo rt 212.

I t woe- likew ise a 'th r illin g mo­m ent w hen In th e .la s t session Bishop Lewis,' who w as p resid ing , an ­nounced th a t "B ishop Borry, ou rj sen ior bishop, w ill b rin g us a p a rtin g word and a note of In sp iration ,” and Bishop Berry rend h is address, revlow lng the work 'th a t lind been done d u rin g th e m onth and d irec t­ing tho th o u g h t Into tho quadron- nlum to corno. I t w as the th r ill of a holy calm. Men wero In >the pres­ence o f th e ir God. The best In every nmn p resen t was upperm ost, and each h ighly rosqlvedj th a t theso th in g s to r w hich th e Bishop hoped should como to pass by tho grace of God a n d .th e devoted ac tiv ities of H is followers.

TOWNSHIP HONORS ITS SOLDIER BOYS

GRANITE SHAFT DEDICATED ON SUNDAY LAST.

Revs. Mount, VanHase, Marshall;Corr and Wright Fartioipato In

. th e E xerc iK s, A ttended B y a V as t

Concourse of Persons—-Full lastOf Those In Service.

D edication of th e soldiers’ m onu­m ent a t the Broadw ay en tran ce to Ocean G rove w as perform ed las t S un­day a fternoon In th o prcsonco of an. Im m ense crow d of In terested p er­sona, P. F . Dodd, tow nship police recorder, a rra n g ed th d eta ils o f the dedication , nml the program bf ox- orclses w as In charge of Rev. E d ­w ard G. M ount, pastor of th e W est Grove M. E. Church.

Included In the th rong presen t w ere 'tho officials of N eptune tow n­ship , members of th e board o f ed ­ucation , th e W est Grove Red Cross and firomen, represen tatives of a num ber of societies, and th e A m eri­can Legion and o th er bodies. A d­dresses were dollvored by Dr. J . W. M arshall, vlco p resident of the Oconn Grove A ssociation; Chaplain Corr, who was w ith Company E overseas, nnd Rev. M ount. The p resen tation of a largo floral pleco as a fliialo to

MISS THORPE ENTERTAINSEPWORTH LEAGUE USHERS

Tho usliors of S t. P a u l's Epw ortli League were o n to rta lned by Miss Gladys Tliorpo 92 Mt. 54lon W ay, on T hursday evening of Inst week. A business m ooting wos followed by a social. ,

Miss Tborpo’s guests were Caro­line Ivcnst, D orothy Osborn, Grace Konst, Eugenio Slircvo, Qenovlnvo F lin t, Helen Stono, Mabel M assinger nnd Jack . SoUottlor, H arry Glenum, Haydon ’P roctor, G erald ' Stone, Borri-i h n rd t Homme.il Bruce S liubert, Leon M oLnughlln, H arold Sm ith, A bram FInltle, F ra n k W nrdoll and .Cooper Schuyler, • ,1 • • .*r

Daylight Saying Bothers Them.I t Is said business m en in F reeho ld

a re experiencing, m uch annoyance' on account of the local au th o ritie s hold ing on to itho old. tlmo-schodulo w hen o th er towns and th e big cities have adopted the d ay lig h t saving schedulo. In g o ttln g th e ir m all to tho postofllco <ln tlm o for tho outgo­ing m alls, P ostm aster W ilbu r says, few of,'them 'have yet. become ac­customed to 't/he advanced tim e schedule, of the C entral R ailroad on whose t r a in s the : most... im portan t m all goes-ou t each day.

s Meeting of WiUard W. C. T. U..The W illard W. C. T. U. m et a t

the homo of Alisa .H e len 'P a tto n ; 95 Mt. H erm an W ay, on Monday even­ing . Six now mombcre w ere receiv­ed. The m eeting was largely a t­tended , a n d .a n In te res tin g program followed tho business' session. Rond- lngB w ore given by Mrs. M argare t Asny/Hcsso, .Mr. and Mrs. Tevls ren ­dered boIob nnd a duet, M r.-H esse a ten o r solo, and Ja ck D essalot a v io­lin solo. ..

Leg Broken In Auto Collision.Clifford Lotts, fo rm erly of Ocean

Grove, sustained a brokett leg w hen an autom obile In w hich 'he was r id ­ing collided w ith an o th er m achine last S atu rday n ig h t a t Second ave­nue arid M ain e treo t, A sbury P ark . Lotts, who lives In th a t .c j ty , was removed to the hosp ital. Miss Je a n ­e tte H endrickson, one of tho occu­p an ts of tho second car, was In jured about th e knee.

Golden Eagles Memorial.A t the church in W est Grovo la s t

(Sunday evening .tho Borvlco was In memory of eigh teen deceased mem- hors of Burliago Caetlo, K n igh ts of tho GoTdon lOnglo. ' Tho special exer­cises Included nn address by th e pastor, Rev. E dw ard M ount, and a read ing by Mrs. Jo h n L. Hesso. Tho oulogy w as given by Rov. M„ L. Forrla.

Elevator Shaft Fall Fatal.By a fa ll down r elevator sh a ft

In. tfhe ' P ennsy lvan ia , hotel, Now Y ork. City, W altor’ W atk lnson re­cently wae k illed. W atklneon fo r­m erly lived in Deal, w here h e has a riuanbor of relatlvos. .. H o , served in th e w ar w ith th e Twonty'-eevonth Division, IQ 4th Hold a rtille ry .

C. J . MASSINGER, M. ; 'D „ phy- s lt la n and surgeon, co rn er M ain and Dolawdro nvonuos. Ocean Grove.' Of­fice hours: U ntil 1 0 .ti. n i.; f ro m .l to B.p. m ,; from 8.80,to 8 p. m., a a d ,by, apbolntm ont. TOlophone . Asbury' 60S.— -4tf , 1019. . •••.; • .

" V * •/.••;k/; • UNDERTAKER—«drry J. Bodltio, 722.; Mtvttlson. avopuo, Aabtiry' park. •Toldplton o

of each of: th e th irteen who died In service. Follow ing Is a fu ll l is t of the nam es:

F rank Acclrcl, W illiam Allen, Georgo W ashington Anderson, Tbonins Angles, Robert Roy A pple­gate. Steadm an Applegnte, Thomas A rcher, George Asay, Gerard A ul- ton. ♦George Barlow, W illiam H. Barlow, Thomas Barnes, ‘ Charles Russell Bedell, W illiam B eauregard, W illiam Bergfels, Joseph;, H, Bon- nc'.tt,.-l.ovett B urns Bird, Clifford, T. Blake, F rank Feely Bogge, Edgar R. Bonsall, F rank lin C. Bono, S tan­ley Bowno, W illiam Bowno, Harold Borden, F ra n k B raw nreu tlier, R ich­ard Brown; Donald A. Brown, H ar­old Bowne, Leonard L , Broome;- George B utler, Joseph Buxton, Al- vali Bncknlcw, H enry Burney, H nr- ry M. Bull, Robert M. Carrlck, S tan-; ley C arrlck, ‘ Carl Cham berlain, Clnrenco Cbamberlnln, Milton Cham­berlain, Oliver O harland, F rank Cblararons, Joseph Clancy, A lbert L. Collier, Daniel H. Convery, Tlmnins A. Conte, Calhoun Cousin.

Samuel S. Cohen, John E. Connol­ly, H erbert Cook, F ran k Campanll- 11. ‘ Jam es H. Croeson, George Leon Croraon, E rnest R. Cranm or. B enja­min H. Curtis, Francla. C. Cyphers, Clark Dnvlson, Adolphus J . Day, Howard Boyden Davis, W illard E arl DoN.vsc. Edw ard Dcwis, Charles Diehl, Jacob Diehl, Louis F. Diehl. George Dixon, H enry B. Dorr, John Dorn. Leo D ougherty. Charles Down­ing. H arry I. Dodd, E arl D ofsctt, W llllsm R. Duffy, Edw ard J. Drunmi, E lm er S. Dunning. E rnest I)un8on. Isadora Eilclson. W illiam

•Ennis, Snmuel Edelson, Law rence T. Edgar, Raymond Eldrlrtge. W alter P. Elm er, R eginald E h le rs , W illiam English, Gnrlleld L. Endy, E nrl E r-

11am A. Meeks, Charles H. Menke, George Layton Menke, Norm an Me- g llj, Raymond C. M iller, H arry Mi­ner, Deaii II. M inor, P au l M organ, W illiam F. Morgan, M elvin Moore, Solomon-Alobncy; L. P. M orton Mor­ris, W illiam H. H. M orris, Thomas Moreland, Jolin 11. N eidhart, Gar­re t t G. N ew kirk, Edw ard Newman, George W lillfleld Noe, Janies Nolan, A ugustus O 'Brien, Benjam in Evans O 'Brien. .

E a r l ; C H agcn , Joseph O’H agen, E rnest Olsen, Jam es W . Osboimi Lewis Pallack, Benjam in P allack , A rth u r P arker, ; Norm an P ar keg, F red Patterson ; Clarence Peck, George P erry , Edw ard P e r ry , : John M. Pennell, W illard P e ttit, ‘ Jesse Pierce, W illiam Dewitt Polhomus, A l|en Potter, S tanley P o tter, Nor­man Quincy, W illiam R. Reed, Al­fred D. Reed, W alter E. Reid, W il­liam Resta, Rycrs R ichardson, Lou­is A. Roscnstolh, Benjam in RoyaJ, John Sanders, W orth ing ton Scott, Hnrpfd Sciritliorpe, Howard Schell, Edw ard Schanck, Pnsquale Scott!, Isaac Schlossbach, H arry Schboss- bttch, Frederick Schaar, H erbert Segur, Donald Sbenton. Charles Shafto, Marvin. Sbafto, Edw ard Side, E lisha D. Simms, Gordon Slocum, E ugene Slocum, E verett Slocum, John Joseph Smullen, Joseph Sm ith, P aul Sm ith, Howard Lnmson Sm ith, G eorge H. Smith, F rank Snyder.

A rth u r Summers, John M. Spldle, Samuel II. Spencer Chnrles Vito |Sp(lr.lto. W illiam Law rence Sbeole, Edw ard -J. Stiles, H arold Sutton , F ra n k M. Sutton Evan W. Sutton, W nlter H. Sutton, Jo h n ' Talm an, Dallas W. Thomas, E lbert F . Thom p­son, Raymond R. Thompson, H ugh O. Tompkins, ‘ Robert Tuzonow, H nrold I. Tlllotsoii, Jnm cs Alfred Tilton, John T inkler. Irvin T urner, Joseph R. Tustin , Jam es F. T ustln , Jo9epli C. Tynan, E arl H. VnnHise, Joseph H .. Vnughn, George A. Vaughn, Lester Van Nest, C harles Vnssolo. Corbett W alker, L. Rcznor W ard, Lester R. W eller. H arry W els- ford, Abrabam W estc'rvelt, H arry W hite, B ritton W hite, Tracey S tu lts W hite. Alvin W hitlock. H urry W heel­er. Lewis Wilson, Harold W illiam ­son. Ernest W illiam son. O lts Wilde. Gerald L. W righ t, H enry E. W righ t, “ Humid c . W right; George D. W righ t, LeRoy Woolley, H arry Thomas Woolley. Benjamin Yorlo.

The m onum ent com m ittee was comprised of W aller H. G ravatt, P eter F. Doild, Charles J . Jam ison. M. 0 .. representing Neptune tow n­ship. and E rnest N. W oolston. Ste- olien, t). Woolley nnd F rank B. Sm ith, for Ocean Grove, and whoso names also nnpear on the monum ent.

, The m onum ent site was donu'ted hy the Ocean Grovo Association.

ANOTHER HEARING IN BOROUGH MATTER

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WATT, SHREVE AND STOUT ARE . NOW DEFENDANTS. •

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mWitnesses For Plaintiffs: Testier

Acain Before Special Master mar Last; Saturday In Asbury ' .Park—Case Will Be Continued At.-‘i 'Same Place Monday Horning-

R obert M. W att. on behalf of th e . ' ;’’1 borough of Ocean Grove, and R obert M. W att, H arry G. Shrove and Rich;-) ard W. S tout, as pe titioners 'fo r : th e recen t borough election, have been, made p a rty defendants in the s u i t ; toVNvvrv test th e valid ity of th a t electiont-o brought by-W illiam E. B unn, A ndrew ' , C- T. yanC leve arid Mrs. H arrie t H.;1 (Hopper. The1 th ird h earin g In t h d ^ ’i;,;' case, th is tlnio of w itnesses ' for tb e ; : i ; : |( defense, lias been se t for M onday,of next week a t 11 a. m„ before: Special M aster D ittm nr In h is office’•'In" 'A*-* -V.ih bury- P ark . , , . V .v-n;'.S

The second 'hearing of Witnesses vS';;Y for th e plaintiffs was held last Sat- u rday afternoon. The w itnesses ex -^Y J^ j nmlncd were Mrs. Hopper, W ill ia m ; ','fWE. B unn, Mrs. Liiey D. Osbbrn, D r ; . ' .i/ySfj J . W, M arshall anil Miss Helen Pat-VT.yYti ton. The endeavor a t th is h ea rin g t }tj* was to prove the residence s ta tu s of v n:* u the members o f :th e Ocean Grove As- sociatlon; the m anner 'of; th e ir eleo'- , tlon, the by-law s under, whtoli th e g S t S> Association Is operating , ownership:', of the Association bu ild ings and u tilitie s, and tho adm ission of cer-

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MISS BONE GOES ABROAD : . TO PURSUE ART STUDIES

Neptune Township Monumont Dodlcatod Last Sunday

the Improsslvo services was m ade by Rov. T. J . J . W righ t, paetor- o f St. P au l’s, Oooan Grove, Rev. F rank V anHlae, p a s to r of tiho M ethodist ohuroh- a t H am ilton, offered tho pVayor w hich oponod tlio service. T he exercises ott tho m onum ont fol­lowed th e se ttin g a d r if t of a floral r a f t on tlio A sbury P a rk hoacli. In momory of tho sa ilor doad.

Dr. M arshall based h is rem arks on th e w ords from tho fo u rth ohnpter of Joshua, "W h a t mean these s tones?” Ho said -'tho m onum ont m eant for one th ing , Borvlco and sac­rifice. And for an o th er th in g , i t ts a rom lnder th a t God Is alw ays on the side of the r ig h t. Also, th a t It was 'the U nited p la tes arm y th a t gave tho finishing stroke to 'th o Ger­m ans.

C hap la in C orr p a id .a g low ing t r i­b u te to th e h igh type o f manhood represen ted by. the Am erican so l­d iers. He sa id ho was proud of the fnot ho had been a m em ber of the U nited S ta tes arm y, b u t ho wns p roudor because th a t arm y was tho cleanest th a t over fought a n a tion 's ba ttles . .C hap la in Corr paid .tr ib u te also to th e Am erican m others as Uio pow er th a t gave 'tho forco and punch th a t broke tho Germ an arm y.

"T h is m onum ont,” ’said '.Rev. M ount,1 "Is fdr our boys of N eptune 'township. And I t Is for th e world, fo r , our boys fought for th e world. ‘E very boy whose nam e appears on It w as a hero. Tho w ar was won by God and !th e .mon ?vho hod God be­hind. them .” The speaker ooaoludod th a t tho best patrio t, la , ho w ho gives hift'Tes^'rodnhood 'to .h ls «oiln try .; . •'..'•Tap:(fQ .af v.tttWpw o'f,illfo:<p.bnu- m e n t boar . t h e : nam es1 o f ' th e ' boys of N eptuhtf :tpw n ta ife1.who,,'obllstdd Tor. th e :.1riar;« .p ta r;p V eo p a iD g ,l'thp : nam e

vein, Charles F alardau , ‘ LaRuo Fle- gal, Sanford C. F lin t, Clifford Fog- orty , Edw ard Fogorty, C larence L, F rancis, Leon G ardner, F ra n k Qas- nor, F ra n k Gatto, John Gee, Lewis Gee, H ilton G ilbert, E dw ard G lashap.

Eugene Goodenougb, ‘ Snmuel G oldstein, .Mcyors Goldstein, C hester G ravatt, K enneth G rav a tt, Lostor G ravatt, ‘ P au l G ravatt, Lesllo Gregg, Raymond R, Qrneey, Aaron Gross, W illiam H. Gross, Robert Hadfleld, Dougins Handley, Edw ard Handley, Morris H arrison, JoBepli H . Harkcy, Noll Hepburn, ‘ Irad If. Hidden, Paul Harold Holmes, G ran t Holmes, Raymond H orner. W illiam George H. Howell, E llio tt H ulsbart, F red IJ. H urloy, J r ., Norninn H urley, Lester H urley HubsoII Hulso, F ra n k Hulse, H arrison Hyer, .‘ F ra n k Iava- rono, E lvln Imlny, Llnwood Jack- soh, Joshua H. Jam ison, Georgo H, Jam ison, W illiam- F. Jam ison, E rn - oat Jom lson, Donald Jobes, George R. .Tobos, R ussell Johnson, W illiam Jo h h try , W illiam Jones, F rancis Jones, Charles B. Kolm, H arold Ja y K ing, Chauncy K irkpatrick , Gordon A. K napp, George H. K rum , W alter W. K rum , H enry KruBChka, John W esley Knox.

H ow ard Lanco, Cnfleton Lano, Oscar H orner Lane, N athan Lanb, F ra n k E dw ard L aing, C lau d e 'L aw - lor, Goorgo L ayton, Chaunoy Dopow L en t,1 A delbert Lewis, T. Lloyd Lew ­is, N orm an Jam es Lewis,, KingBloy Lolterson, C a rl. Low, Robort CostiU 'Long; C harles Jerom e . Massln'gor, Loo , M artin , H arry M arrlner, Clifford M arehall,. Jo h n .H , , M arsh, . Georgo •Mptthows, fU rtah M atthows,1 N olsoti R. M atthew s, , V lotof' M a lta '. , Lew is Mays, Eogono MoBrlde,.; W alter. Mc- caffroy,,,Rtybbrt;;.;1, M cClelland;; Frad:

Miss Jessie II. Bone, dau g h te r of- Mr, and Mrs. E. 11. Bone,, of tlio Carrollton hotel, 30 Webb, avenue, on Tuesday .'sailed from Now York for London', w hither she goes to con­tinue .her studies in a rt. Two years ago Miss. Bone secured .th e P. A. B. W ldener scholarship for excollenco in n four-years' course n t tho school of Design, P h iladelphia, bu t ow ing to the w ar sho was unable a t 'tha t 'tlmo to go abroad. ,• L ater she was taken ill, and she js only s tro n g enough now to. tak o .ad v an tag e of the oppor­tu n ity given her.

She w ill s tu d y 'fo r ono year In the prlvato a r t class of Prof. J . P. Butterfield, first In London and then in te r tii Paris. She w ill rem ain abroad .quo yonr. Miss Bone’s efforts in a r t have been directed chielly to tlio development of designs In tnpes- ■trics, cu rta in s, etc. .

Oconn Grove and assisted in th e fo r- ' i.'.'h:jh m atlou of the Camp M eeting Asso- ', ; ;.elation,' As muob or the te s tlm p n jf j '^ ^ fB of the w itness wns based upon hear-''.:v;i,i'V!|6 say A ttorney Cook for tho deton Insisted 'th a t It be strick en from the record. Mrs. H opper on cross ex - - , [§ niiilnntion snld she was opposed tO;U<),(iiY'S borough because she feared th o '; change o f go 1 ” ’ • ••the religious Grove. The'had contributed townrila tho expense Involved in con testing the eleotlon. '

Mr. Itiinn, the ow ner and, proprfo- 101- of Grove Hull hotel on P ilg rim Pathw ay, testified th a t he had been a p roperty holder : liere e ig h t y e« rs ji( ’ since 1912. Ho wns In sym pathy , w ith the restric tions o f ' the 'Assoela-' jfi® tlon nml the approval by th a t body :'f;;#;t#W of the looses for property tranBfefs.'Y

“ W ould you be surprised; to lc a rn |(Murt n large num ber of leases durlngS , tho years have not been approved by,‘ v -^ & H the A ssoclatlpn?" 'the .w itness • wusHv1 , l" “ nskod l>y Mr, Cook. "I would," re- piled Mr. B unn. “I understand a ll '..; such transfers m ust first bo approved^); liy the Association, rjpj;; "D o-you live In Ocean Grove per- ■: m nnently?’’..-continued Mr. C ook .:

"N o; I go South In th e w in ter. My.'’.'. le g a l1 residence Is in -O cean 'G rove',1".i®

, the. w itness answered. , '4,?jHave you ever had a 'v o te for of-i;l),

_» •>.. ■ • • •■ • • • - - voted. •.<';.

Secretary’s Services Rewarded.In recognition o f h er fa ith fu l and

efficient services as recording secre­ta ry over a period of ten years, Mrs. W illiam Reynolds las t .Friday re­ceived from the Sewing Society of St. P au l’s church, Ocean • Grove, n blnck sw eater. The presen tation took plnco a t 'the re'sldonco of Mrs. F ra n k Illckm an, 102S Bangs ave- nuo, A sbury Park , w here the socie­ty m et in regu lar session'.

Pussyfoot Johnson Coming.T lio . reply o f . the Antl-Snloon

League of Now Jersey to tho "w et" propaganda Is to a rrange fo r a series of mass m eetings nil ovor 'the State, to he nddreased by W illiam E. (P u s­syfoot) Johnson and , Sam Small. Mr. Johnson’s first m eeting wns In 'Nownrk Inst F riday ovcnlng in the C en tral M. E. Church. Dates for o th e r meetlngB Include Sunday,Juno 27, a t A sbury P ark .

Colored Educational Day.Tho greatest lid ln g colored

scholar, th inker, w riter, ed itor and sociologist, Dr. W. E . B. DuBols,P h .-D „ from H arvard U niversity , 1895, will bo the principal speaker n t tho educational ra lly and reun ion to bo held a t Freehold on F rid ay evening, Ju n e 25th. I t w ill be Col­ored E ducational Day.:

. Sale For Hospital Auxiliary, .In aid of th o Ocean Grove auxlll-;

a ry to the Ann May H ospital a t S pring Lake, a bread , cak e 'an d deli- cntosson sale Is do ,bo hold S aturday, •beglnnlng a t 10 o’clock a. m „ a t the blow C entennial hotel on M ain avo-' niie. T he sa le w il.b e In charge o t M ra .C .-J .M a B sIn g e r ;, 'Ytt

, | w/'vH.- .iT ^ tQ ri’i^ c o n l rw to i r l^ i i i ' buildw ;'88':'A bbotf :dye.'i Oce>in Grovo,1

STJ;P

\ ( fta in ordinances as exhibits In thocase.

Tlio testim ony of Mrs. Osborn hadt.V' f.'. l i ttle bearing upon tho m a tte r In •hand, o lh cr than, to ' establish 'tho;,: '-; \.111 fac t th a t her late husband, Rev. W ll- 1 "if 11am B. Osborn, w as tho founder of

regula-;1;;, '.)fleers of the Association, or In m aking Its law s and tlons?"

“ I never expected to have.”"H aye you ever, had any voice or

control In any m atters of tho Asso­ciation ?

VNo.”“ The principal objection you Iiavo(w

to a borough Is th a t you believe would In terfere w ith the peace a n d :’.1,; In teg rity of Ocean Grove, la i t no t7 ” ';-:;V;

"N o; I object to the w hole ch a r-s tji ac te r o f 'th o governm ent.” •: l.(lijjf

Dr. M arshall told of hav ing b e e n ' elected a truateo In 1913. Ho sald.’i f e rep ly ing to a question re la tive to'-'vi th e election of trustees, th a t • thtw s ’S adm itted to the Association must'.bot-.l.t m em bers of the M ethodist c h u r o h ; ^ men of good charac te r and g en era l/'';; elllclency. There is no resident,-cv qunllilcntlon, us the m em bers comnVv.t from various Stales. Also, tiho l a y f e members lie sa id are m en w ho a re likely to bo more In terested In, -re-M i' llglon th an tlio average. T he; wil-itriyj ness wns asked If tho p rcsen t ,boar ' '■1 wns coniposod of men who would .b e / , / likely to give Ocean Grovo a ra o to / ; / religious governm ent th an w buld ',!/: ob ta in under a borough. Ho replied,'ie, In the nfilrnmtlve. Dr. M arshall alsb’tfe,! testified ‘th a t the Association dw ji the A uditorium , th e .boardw alk,’™; parks, pavilions, tv lllltle s ,. etc.;; apffwld th a t the expenso of, bhelr . upkeep, was pnlil from the lot ren ta ls , coaH'-?;! cessions and offerings a t tho ineet-Jinii;1ingS. V . .

•It was agreed by counsel th a tI tiQ ' j1;.;1 lenses of dhe "prosecutors a rc uniifetf? forrn w ith a ll o th er leases Tsfi’p e ^ & i by tho . Association from the • beglaKiyf'' n ing , 1 and tfia t there is ,ao reeiaeno^.Off; requ irem ent 'In o rder to o b tA ^ V A '^ lease. 'A 'n u m b e r of .oxfllbltsl/V ih’M '^ elud ing several p e rtin en t ordinances',' y;;i wero adm itted as ex h ib its ,. aU htnisjiS jii Mr. Cook refused ‘to aclraowledge le g a l 'r ig h t of the A ssoclatlO n^W 'S^ fram e such ordinances.'

'Miss P atton road the by:law i;Pfe;! f th e A ssoplation iw ’ adopted'hnY Fob(«f/! ru a ry 5,, 1915, .a n d . the atneaamefitsiN'Y

'•thereto n d o n t e d o f i 1:;,Ja ,autol(,:.v,,1.8><;i;^ 918; ■ Mr; Cook 'dbje^tcia^fo t j h i s i v ,m tfi3 lo n o ftlio B y d iw s,, b la td iln g d h a tthere ;tW a -lib vtirb^t A gnktore;. blfY?;

'Te^lyY adoptd'a. ............... ’

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Page 2: i'fypM wmM - DigiFind-It · Sun Rises 5,30, Sets 8.28 Day’s lencth 14 Hours 58 Minutes, i'fypM.fill----- •-i V«l. XXVIII OCEAN GROVE, N. J., FRIDAY, JUNE 4, 1920 No; 2 THRILLING

P A G ® TWO THE OCEAN GROVE TIMES FRIDAY* JU N E 4 ,: 1D2C. -3 , ; >•

!, FINEST RESORT ,i ON THE COAST j

__________

WHERE HEALTHi ."PLEASURE M§ET i

wIV

s fJst.l

'■Gke'juV Pathway, jOdeaii Grove, N. J..

N earb eaeli and Auditorium . A ll sleepin g rooms have e lc c ;trie lig h ts , hot and cold ru.vni'ug water; -some .en suite, with

• private hat h. E lectric bells and telephone. Season -M ay 30 to October.

M r s . V . C. H ayn es

....... ...............M.........2T h e L » a fa y e t te

G o rn e r of O c ean P a t h w a y a n d B e a c h A v e n u eO u ttu rn G r o v o . W. J .

A . G . D lC F E N D E R F E f JP ro i) r i o t d r ,

T e le p h o n e 1981i f i tH M a iM M ia o iK i t i t ia ia s i i i ia a ta o ta i iM tH a M M ta iM O iM iH i t in * *

The AtlanticI . . I* . > r \ T R t * A C O .

C o r n o r D o u c h o n e ! P I t i n a n A v i i n i i o s

O C E A N f iW O V B , in. j

m ® M a y 2 9Telephone r515 Asbury Special rates over tbe holiday

O C C A M G R O V E . N . .1,

Directly on the OGeao frontC h o r l o a ( j . S t o c k t o n

b a n e - y i l iaO orner Pllfgrlm Pathw ay ami Cnokmnu avenue, Oeeim Grove. D elightfu lly

• Situated, near lake And .ocean. W ith e r w ithout libmd.M. L. and L. A. Lane.

D eW itt HouseC afeteria serv ice in tho diidng.-room . :t:i A tlan tic avenue, Homo cooking.

Q uick, m odern serv ice . P leasan t, com fortable rooms.IN o tips. P hone connection. 1'. Voollor, P rop rie to r and M anager S

S t r a t f o r d H a l l

•»aM «taaaaM iaasaaBaaaaaaoB»iaoieaiaitM| i aaaaH iiM aaea ie io » H a iS H a iiM a

< F o r m e r ly S tm t f o u l )

7 M ain A ven ue, at the Beach

Furnished Rooms; meals optional. M. C. Hockey.

• I ) i r i v t l y F a c i n g the* O c e a n

F u l l O c o u n V iew f r o m A ll R o o m s . S o lid f o r B o o k le t . I . .T. W h it* .* ,'F io p rU to r .

c. a . m e y b k

•1 Sea View Avenue, Ocean Grovo O n e n iln r.tt *h wu>k lo tb e o w n n . .K x n u llu u l ta b le . H ooltlot. T e le p h o n e 2Ui7 .

' 5 Abbott avenue, directly opposite South End pavilion. A modern family hotel. Location unsurpassed. Electric lights in all rooms. Wm. L„ Hyka, Owner and Manager.

GUILFORD ab O cean P ath w ay, betw een ocean and Aud­itoriu m . , E le c tr ic lig h ts . H ot and cold w ater." A ll conveniences. Open M ay to October. • M iss K . D. Tum lin,

The FLORENCE 21 W e b b a v e n u e . O n e a n d 0110- h a l f b lo c k s f ro m o c e a n . T e le p h o n e 336-11.

O. M , T iiblo, Proprietor.

Oceanside 25 Ocean avenue.Mrs. Frank H. Kunst

«/!<*•THE INSKIP in Ocoan Pathway. Largo verandas,. with ocean view. Lighted with electricity. Neat whito service. J. O. Doron, E. Lloyd.

pHome Cafeteria •11 P ilgrim Pathw ay H om e’ C ooking, F . W . SAMPSON.

wsFEM PIRE •IS.Main A venue, U nexcalled location . Ono block from bench. All im provem ents.- •A pply fo r term s, E . Skillm nn.

JACKSON HOUSEI I djih'tiao. - Season May to October.

■ M M M " IL -:U i l l , Ai

Heck Ave. and Pilgrim Puth- . way. Pleasantly located near ocean and .Auditorium. Tel- ’

P. 0. Pattiersoh,

Bathing, boating, yaohting, fishing, Crabbing in siearby Shark river. -Pleasuit boats an two fresh-watcr lakes, Mae boardwalk the full length of the ocean front Two large pavilions, with or­chestra. concerts afternoon Mid evening. Boardwalk and pavilions brilliantly illiuninated at night, largest Auditorium, seating near* ly. 10,000. , Most powerful organ in the country. Great, chorus, finest singers, most gifted instrmnentalista, eminent preachers, noted lecturers.. Safe and sane amusements, moving pictures, bowl­ing alleys, mcrry-go-ronnd, swimming pool, athletic easier., tennis, croquet./' Daily, meetings for young and old in. Temple, Tabernacle and Chapel. A quiet, restful Sabhath. Safest plae;. for women and children. Tent or cottage life. N<; mosquitoes, Artesian wa­ter. Adequate train, boat'end trolley service, convenient for com­muters, Free inail .delivery, ' .

Tiie hotels and boarding houses herewith presented are rec­ommended to the consideration of intending patrons as among the best houses of entertainment in this world-famous resort.

Directly on the Beach

Telephone 137 Booklet

1*. ^ 1. 4-..JvwO*vu»'|i,->A7<s,s i-/(V

■.• O'*

HOTEL WHITFIELD l l a tw o o n S u r f 'shd B a t h ny b - i tu u s , c o r n e r o f B e n c h a v e n u e

( F i r e p r o o f 1 . ' . , . O c e a n G ro v o ,' N . J .U ilp iw ity t S i i h u n d r e d . ' O n e li lo c l t f r o m o c e a n n h d t h n 0 b lo c k s f ro m W e s le y h ik e . l .u r g n p o r c h e s n m l g u e s t r o o m s o v e r lo o k in g f l ic o c e a n . R o o m s .c n s u i te , w.i.'li r u n n i n g w a te r n n d ' p r i v a t e b a th s . N o m o s q u i t o e s . . S a n s o n A p r i l to O c to b e r . T e le p h o n e JUtfl A s b u r y . G h n iie s 'M . U e r m m i .

Grove Hall Hotel17 .P ilgrim Pathw ay

Q uality am i com fort. O cean viow from house. R u n n in g hoi anil cold w ator in room s, Room s w ith p rivate bntlis. O ur speolnlty, ;*en food and shore d inners. Bo, klet, Photic MB, , W, E, B unn , O w ner and 'M anager.

Dr. M. J. Christie IWSStSsvaflyn, will have h e r su m m e r office, (is usual, in th is hotel from Ju ly ! to Soptem bei IS.

ARDMORES U M M ER FIE LD

6 and 8 Ocean Pathway, third house from the ocean. R odeeorntod and renovated . Open May 27 to 'O ctober 1.

Telephono 2781. , hi. K . Shaw , Owner,

HOTEL GRANDD irectly faolng th e ocean. E lectric lig h ts T elephone. All outside room s. (Jnpacity one hundred . M. P o tter,

NEW C EN TEN N IALM ain avenue, cen tra lly located . M odern, F re sh vegetables. H om e cooking.

Telephone. Season M ay 29 to Sep tem ber 16.. . C. A. L ev is '• , .

ELDORADOOpposite Fletcher lake and South End Pavilion

A. AV. O H ELIN

ARLINGTON HOTELR U N N IN G H O T A N D C O LD W A T E R .IN E V E R Y R O O M . C A P A C IT V 2 0 0 .

D R . F R A N K C. C O O P E R

SURF AVENUE HOUSE(U nder new m anagem ent)

Atnerloan plan und tublo d ’ho te service. 27 S urf avenue, ono block from tho daoan; live m in u tes’ w alk to A uditorium , W esley lake, b a th in g g rounds and N orth E nd pavilion. Spuclous porohes, eam fortab le room s, hom o cooking R u n n in g w ator in room s. E . Belts, M anugor. E ld rid g e Bros., Ownors.

Sunset LodgeP aren t. T e r m s o n a p p l i c a t i o n . -

F ao ln g C entral und P lt- m ntj avenues u n d 'M o - C llntook s t r e e t Conve­n ien t to a ll poin ts of in-

I lo t nnd 'co ld ru n n in g w ate r in room s. S ta n ­d ard of d ln lng-roo ih service m ain tained . Open May to Ootober.

M r. an d M rs. M rs. J . B. Sweet.

HOTEL LE CHEVALIERC orner W ebb a n d C entral A veuuea, O cean G rove, N . J.

Centrally located. Convenient to beach, postoffloe and Auditorium. - Elebtrlo Ughta throughout. Telephone., J. F. Doremus.

STOKES HALL28 Ocean Pathway

ft. L. E. A trQ ssh urke.r ., P r o p r ie to r .

Broadway and Central Hue., Ocoan Grove, n. %G. C. PR ID IIA M . ■

Thoroughly remodeled, enlarged, and improved. Rooms sin­gle and en suite. Up-to-date in every particular. For cooking and drinking purposes only the best artesian water, guaranteed absolutely puie and free of all germs, is used at this hotel; Terms: ou application.

The A11 en hu rstCentral Avenue, Corner Pitman

T w o blocks from ocean

New House.and Fillings

Open Ju ly !Telephone

Rooms e n s u i t e , w i t h r u n n i n g w a t e r R..W-. D r a k e

Grand Atlantic HotelBeach and Main Avenues.

Rooms Daily, W eekly or Special Season

Cafeteria in Dining-Room Seating 300

European Capacity 250 Shaw & Pullen

The Ocean House72 Main Avenue-— Near Beach and Auditorium

Fam ily .ho tel. Cool an d com fortab le po rohcs: excellen t tab le ; c o q u e t an d tenn is. R atos m odornte, und special for Ju n e . Capoolty ICO.

B ooklet T elephone 231-W. ^ T " ........h I.;D unoan-Z olley

U n d er now M an ag em en t E uro p ean P lan C orner C en tra l a n d H eck A venuesA la C a n e Sorvico In D lnlng-B opm _ _ D .-M . u n d 0 . A. B arnett.

WAVERLYOn Ocean Pathway. One minute from beach. Remodeled and redecorated. Open all year. M. B. Bayer.

T U B W A R R I N G T O N22 L uke nvenuo. I n Unest p a r t of Ocoan Orovo, oloso to lak e nnd ooeun, an d

Tree m in u tes’ wnik to A sbury P a rk Casino. All Im provem ents, w ater. Flrst-ola«s sorvico In d in ing-room . H om e cuoklpg u n d e rR unn ing

th e porsosy/rsoeal supervision of th e proprietor ifdoklet.Telephone A sbury 2179-W M. H . H ennlg ;

OCEAN GROVE riOTEL39 M ain A venue, C orner of Centra)

L o ca ted on tho prlnotpal avenue n ea r tho beaoh. A udito rium , lak es an d o th e r ' a ttrac tions. C om fortable room s, oleotrlo ligh ts. A tten tive w hite sorvloe. Moderalra ra tes . T elephone 307-B. A. M. G riggs,

The Majestic\ —

Directly on the Ocean Front, corner Ocean Pathway Elevator Service Clement & Clement

The SAMPLER INN28 M ala avenue, blook m id a ha lf from ooenn. C heerful, com fortab le an d sa n ita ry room s a t m odera te ron ta l. C A FE T E R IA B ERV IO E In th e d in in g r o o m h o m e c o o k in g ; qu lek se rv leo ; reasonab le r a te s ; no tip s. . •

\ ' q M. W. N ew berry an d A. E rritzoel

Cimo• ; i 77- Moln Avenue, Ocean Grove, N. J. • ' •; :'.f ’ y ;

Dellghtfully looated on the principal thoroughfare. Central to all of :intewBt. Eleotrio lights pud Bteam heat. Booklet. „ J. M. Jones,

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vTdiy<,‘f.

F r i d a y ', i JU N E 4, ,1920. THE' dcnsAN ' GROVE TIMES'

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P A S ® Y B n O E

OCEAN GROVE HOTELS OCEAN GROVE HOTELS

Ocean AVeitue ’ Housese a w a»«rbath*. , * . . \

Directly on the ocenn front 4SyardB from boardwalk. All lignt roomi. Nearbot and cold

M, C Griffin, Owner.

Wyman Villa 38 P itm an A venue, second b lock fro m oceaa. H om e cooking. F re sh vegetables.. U nder new m an ag em en t, Jen n ie S chultz.

16 W ebb a v e n u e firs t block from - ocean. M odern conveniences. . Season M ay to O ctober. Mrs. J . A.-Simpson.

PEEK- INN 18 W ebb avenue, so rn e r B each, P eek in a t th e P eek -In u for s h o r te r long stay . H om e cooking E . O. nnd Ph; BlaoPeek,

LORAIN E 3 Ocean Pathw ay; D irectly a t th e beach. . . . . . . 8 _ .

K B ohland.L argo , b r ig h t, a iry room s.

TP. W. ah d M.

OCEAN FRONT U nder new m an ag em en t. > On tho ocean front- E leotrlo lig h ts . L arge, airy , o u tsid e room s.Mr*. F. Me Her, formerly of the Ee VasBar,

BROAO VIEW Oh Broadw ay, fifth house from ocean an d S ou th E n d Pav ilion , facing F le toher lake, E xcep tionally fine, la rg e room s.

. A . SlNDPBRO.

IVY HOUSE 24 M ain A v en u e .. F irs t blook from th e ooenn. Season M ay to N ovem ber B ooklet. T w elfth season.

LAYMAN & L E W IS .Cor. Main and Bench avenues. Remodeled and improved. I*ocati*n central to all points of in­terest. The cuisine, under our personal man­agement. Open Mayi to November i, Special

rotes June and September. Heated soring and autumn. Booklet. Phone t766rR. Geo. H. Kern.The COLUMBIAORMOND P itm an avenue, corner B eaoh. F irs t

block from ocean. M odem .Telephone 274-J . . J . P . D unn .

OLIVE HOUSE Corner H eek an d Beaoh avenues, one blook from th e ocean an d cen tra lly lo ca t­ed; Season M ay to O.otober,

_■ M rs. A , U, N K W M A N ,

Osborne Cafeteria P itm an an d C entral avenues, near A udito rium an d beach. Furnish-, ed ro o m s .: A. M. Y ahflklte.

Ocean end of Kmbury'avenue. Loca­tion robBt desirable, one minute from beach, unobBtructed- ocean view from all rooms, spacloua piaeaaa, electric

lights throughout. Twenty-ni«th aenaou.; Open May to October . . M. RverngutmDIAMOND STATE

PARK VIEWT e le p h o n e ai7£*J

S3 Soa View Avcnuo, one .block . from ■ Ohsioo, Noi ~ lu g g roundO ssieo , N orth E n d pavUlon an d liuth-

C apaelty 125.- R A. W ain right.

8 Senvtew avonud, ex ten d in g to 7. A tlan tia av en u e ; ha lf block from ocean, au outside,airv room*. Season Mny to October, Telephone saS-J ' ~R. C . E van s, O w ner,

THE CARROLLTONHousekeeping prlvtlfljreH. Convenience*.

HO Woub iivcniw. Or>« and half bio ika from ocean. Coti- yonlent t> bulbing grounds, Au­ditorium, -etc.

>Mr«, E. A, Bone,

F U R N I S H E D R O O M S A N D A P A R T M E N T S

The RooseveltL. A. Hdferluunp

Ottruar,of KwwUHitd AUiuillo ttvenuea, Oceu,u Orovo, Now Jetsey -Aliic block.from boitoii nnd puvllton

Huperio.rTUrnl:*Uod rooms to rant. In moHt Imvut.lfiii pnrt of tho Girovo, convenient to all pluooaof inter-Jul. Appointinonin UrHt-oluBH,

THE MARINE28 Ocenn avenue, corner Broodway, svorloolclng th o la k o an d ocean. E xcep­tionally .b rig h t nnd a iry room s. D irectly opposite S o u th E nd Pavilion. Tlio ooolest spo t in Ocean G ro v e .. ‘ ■ M. J . Snow

The LILLIANFU R N ISH ED 'B O O M S AND L IG H T H O U S E K E E P IN G . C H IL D R E N

ACCOMMODATED: 24 B a th nvoaue. Unexcelled location, Second block from beach, Jiear N orth E nd Pavilion G ran d ocean view.

M rs. W. H . W righ t.

Main Avenue House19 M ain avenue, ono b lock from beach . T horoughly renovated . R oom s

. sing le an d en su ite . H ousekeep ing privileges.U n d er new m an ag em en t an d ow nership .

P hone Blfl-J. M. B. H onnlg .

OCEAN GROVE h o t e l B o c e a n g r o v e h o t e l s

Main avenue, opposite postoffice. Within easy access to all places of interest Full dining-room service. . J, A. Henry.

. . 34 Qfieun P ath w ay , Ocean Grovo, N. J ,Second B lock from th e Ocoan : . L. B. Jon es

Fifth House, from ocean M a r ie V i l la 9 Maiu Ave.

M, A, DupuyE xce llen t table. R ates m o d era te ,' Hotel Martin 77 E m b u ry Avo.

Telephone 237-J M. K . H opkins

HONEYSUCKLE Corner of Beach and Surf avenuoB. One M o c k from th e ocean, Open

■ Jlino 16. M rs. W illia m Sheneany, Prbpriotor,'

CORDOVA Tw enty-six W ebb avenue. ' N eur the new S outh E nd Pavilion. E xcellen t service. P hone 335-J, A; E. M ichael.

The Wilmington 44 Heok avenue, co rner of Central.N ear th e beach and A uditorium . Alt larg e, cheerful room*. T elephone, n. H. H k c k .

II B C D f t r r i l ''50 Surf avenue. Second block from ocean. H a E . r i U L . L l l N ear h o t and cold sa lt w ater b a th s . ' Home I n -m,-: f a * aooiiiug. . j ; S. Cooper.;

HEARING ON APPUCATIOl : FOE GAS BATE INCREASE

H earing on th e ap p lica tion of: the Coast Gas Company to advance Its service raits to two dollars per 1,000 cubic fee t w as heid In N ew ark on T hursday of . la s t ' w eek by the Public U tility Commission of New Jersey.' Opposition to th e proposed increase was en tered by Bradley Beach,' N ep tune City and Belm ar.

P residen t Joseph Mayer on behalf of the' gas com pany offered a num ­ber of oxhlblta to show operative problems due 'to strikes, tra n sp o rta ­tion difficulties and the Increased cost' of labor, fuel, e tc. A tto rney W ard K rem er, who appeared for .Bradley Beach and Nepfline .Clity, said h o b el loved i t inequ itab le to the public to impose a- perm anent schedule of ra tes , to . ho:; effective over n, period of y ears ,.an d based up­on .conditions du ring a tim e w hen conditions' w ere not no rm al. Mr.. Krenior also developed ‘the fac t th a t the valuation of 'the com pany's prop ­erty fixed fn tho exhibits subm itted , and upon w hich a re tu rn would, bo allowed If the application wore g ran ted . Is h ig h e r limn the app ra is­al m ade by 'tho commission in 1918, Mrl Mayor insisted, however, tlliat the prcsont application w as m ade w ithou t any th o u g h t of ea rn in g K re tu rn upon th e com pany’s.s tock Ju t. Simply id defray the Increased, cost of operation .

Tho h earin g wns continued for one weak.

P h ilip M. W agenhals , P ro p r ie to r 29 A bbott avenue, th ree m inu tes from oooan. H lgh-o lass room s. Open all year

Kilby uriy Ave., o n e block from A sh ing p ier,\ a n d five m inu te* fro m A u ditoriu m . H ouse

k e e p in g prlV tieae optionB l’. ( T a b le board If deni red . A ll sa u ita ry l>edB\ o p e n a ll y e a r , M r s , Ji P . Thom pson,

Bide-a-Wee SO; BROADWAY.ocean a n d lak e v H om e com forts;

SeconS block from beach.ocean a n d lak e vldw. Speoial J u n e ra tes ,

M rs. H arvey Buolser

85 Embury Ave.T elep h o n e 546-M

O okvenlent to beaoh an d A uditorium * H ousekeep ing p riv ileges. /In d iv id u a l d ib ln g -ta b le i. O pen all year;

, G IF F A R D , O w n er a n d ,M a n a g e r

m h 1 m .m w . a 1 A c W ebb A v e ., tw o b lo c k s fr o m ocenn,The W etumpkafegg&gsawtO p e n s year.L . B, M ulford .

THE SEACROFTT o le p h o n n 1782 A n b u ry .

H S « iv ie w a v e n u e n f ll i houne fro m tb e oconn. C n p a o lly « ifh t y . A l l u p -to -d u w Im p ro v o m o n iB . H o m e 00 m forte, Itntee o n n p p llc a llo n . B o o k le t.

£lutob«r & H u lae, P ro p rie to r* .

The STEWART Firss block from i.oean. H dusekeop28-Maln avocuo. Unexcoiled locution.

in g privileges. C afe teria n e x t door.• - Mr*. M. K. L)oi-gherty.

GLENMERE f>5 E m b u ry avenue, L arge , p lry room s. All Im provem ents, N t.er bei'.on an a A uditorium . H ousekeep ing priv ileges. Mrs. J . H . L ane.

Windsor C entru l an d W ebb avenues, tw o blooka from lake, b a th in g pavilion und lish ln g pier.L a rg e , b lig h t room*, w id e porclie*. H o u sek eep in g p riv il­ege*. J . F VIDbert.

The Embury 57 E m b u ry avenno,' th ird b lo c k f ro m ocenn nnd n e a r A uditorium . " ’ ' *

EATHROP

Speoial Ju n e and Sep­te m b e r ra tes; Season lig h t housekeep ing .

. M rs O . I,. GIDI1S.

78 M t. H erm on W ay, two bkioks from A uditorium ., C om m unicating room s, sin g le an d double. H ousekeep ing priv ileges. C. V, Goodwin

,*i P T n r t f t A E I T 71 M 18 A bbo tt ayenue, co m er o f Beaoh.■‘ID IHUIb LI f AN'BM»giim ‘gwaeWGIdorf

K. L a m b ert, o w n er an d proprietor.

U n d er n e w n ianngem ent. 76 M t. H erm on W ay. F o u r short b lo ck * fto m ocean. M odern. A la c a r te 1 serV icelin dtn ing-rodm . O pen a l l y e a r . Phone j65-R. «... - . . - ^M r*. C . W nrd Putnam , O w h e ro n d M an ager.

Mul ford 21 Oil 11 S tree t. O ne blook from obedn. FUR-', NI6HED ROOMS.

. Light.housekeeping. M

Real Estate Transfers.The fo llow ing tran sfe rs of real

estate In th is locality w ere recently recorded In the office of the- county clerk a t F reehold :

E d ith B. an d W illiam T. Moseley to E th e l K , Shaw , Lot 494 N and S., Ocean Grove, ?1,

‘Mary F. and H arry Morse to EllenG. N esbitt. Lot 79G, Ocean Grove.

I 1.Sidney S. S tearns by adm in istra ­

tor, 'to George H. Cook. P a r t lots 1124, 1126, Ocean Grove, ?1.

L illian T. A llen to A rthur E. Ttp- llng. ! 0 i 312. Ocean Grove SI.. 'M argaret IN. B arnes to Isaac N.

H ebberd. L o t 95, Ocean Grovo, $1.Isaac N. Hebberd, ux, to M arshall

V. McDuffie. Lot 95, Ocean Grove, ?1.

tsaac N. Hebberd, ux, to M arshnli V. MoDuffle. Lot 00, Ocean Grove,U . ■ .......................

H a ip llton C. MoErldo by Ex’r, to ■Emma A. orem us. L ot 1247, Ocean Grovo, $ 1 . '.

L ida C. and Rlohord Bush to Thomas J. B e h a m .L o t 171, OceanGrove, 41. ■ ■■ '• ’ ;. y . .

H a rry W. Pullen , ux, to George L. Goodrich ux. L ot 440, Ocean Grove, $1.

Alice M. W asson to R obert II. Baxter, ux. Lot 1130, Ocean Grove, SI.

E liza J Bulkley by E x 'r, to Al­fred E. Clarke. Lot 49, Ocean Grove, ?3.000.

M aria B ryan t, e t al to R obert L. A ngster ux. L o t 505 N, Ocoan Grove, 4 1 .

Phebb J. Vos6, e t nl, to Flossie E. Mangam et al. Lot 679, Ocean Grove, $1.'

George W. B axter u x ,. to AgnesH. Opdyke. Lot 128, Ocoan Grove, SI.

A nnie J . and, P h illip - Lance to K ate M P utnam . L et 166, Ocean Grove, $1.

John C. Croveling, ux, t o ' M ary S. Haytook, L ot 476 N, Ocean Grove,SI. V .

R icha rd L. W hite ux, to .Myrtlo V. Bagshaw. Land . Monroo avontie, •Neptune tow nsh ip , 41-

R iohard E. K . R o th fritz by T rus , ■to Nelson J, 3choen. Lot 152, Brad­ley P ark , $200.

'Buchanon & Smock Lum ber Co. to Clarence L, Y ates. Land Newark avenue, flradioy -Beaoh $1.

J. M-IIton Sickles to N ellie F. Sickles. ..and N ew ark avenue, Brad­ley Beacth, $1. 1

Goorgq S tah l, to John -Glcfllngor, ux. Lots 952 B radley Beach, $1.

Jam es A. B radley to H ow ard F. Gluck. L and LaRelrio avenue, Brad-, ley Beach, 41 .800 .

• •Sonora T. Reed to Joseph . J. Im ith * ‘ *■" ' - ....**'■ '

Damp M eeting Association. Land LaRelno avenue, Bradley Beach,. $-1,

James A, Bradley io Ocean Grove Camp M eeting Asoolation. Land Sixth avenue, B radley Bench, $1.

Eliza J. Hetzel by Ex’r, to Thomas A. F. B anderm an. P a r t lots 517, S48, Avon, $6,500..

Tliohias A. F B anderm an, ux, to .Charles B .-'Hetzeel. P a r t lots 547, 54S, -Avon, $1. •• • ’

Henry T ilton , ux, to Mary E. Do­lan. Lot Sylvhnlu 'avenue, Neptune City, $1. ■ ... -.

George C, M iller,' et al, to M argaf- i t E. Ivons. .Lota 267, Avon, 4 1 .

Ira Lane, ux, to A. Qulntim Coles, nx. Corner Laird s tree t, nnd tu rn ­pike, Avon, $1. '

B U S I N E S S D I R E C T O R Y

m. g. m r r mGONTRAGTOR and BtlLDBS

Residence, No. 66 Heck Avenue . t)CCAN GROVE, N. >1.

Q. C. Pridham & Bro. Practical Painters

47 E m b u r y A v e n u e

O G H A M G R O V E , N , J .

GEORQE M . .BENNETT

PaintingI NALL ITS BRANCH BS

116 -Heck Avenue, OCEAN .GR0YE.

T e le p h o n e 1772 A s b u r y

B E D -B U G San d th e ir eg g s b an ished fo rev e r in tw o hoars, K ills ail g erm s and m akes e v e ry th in g In room abso lu te ly pure. N o d am age to clothing,

JAMES A. H0G€s BRADLEY BEACH

JO H N N. B U R TISFUMERAI OIREDTOS

Open Dai and Night, Priiaie Rooms for Fnnotali.

Phone EB7 517Bangs Aie. Asburj Pari

KENYON’S BEDDING STOBE, ; mM attresses, B ed d in g /B rass f.. d In : 'fs% Beds, Cribs S p r in g , Oouchet and y r’L.tfl cots, M a t t r e s s e s renovated* F u rn itu re upholstered . ,5 i o m ; s t r e e t , o c e a n i e o v e 'v|

. . . . . . . . ™* ” - — . . , - AySCharles v? Ferris

' CONTRACTING PAINTER - j Special Attention to Jobbing 82 Mt. Tabor Way, Ocean Grove i .

5 . BOGAN, Glazier ■■P l a t e , W in d o w , a u d W lu d s b le lS . . ,v

G lam s, M i r r o r s t o r S a l s ,

%- M ir r o r s R e - S i lv e r e d .T e le p h o n e 808^J ; '

61 S o u th M a iu . 'S t , , .A s b u r y .P a r k :3 i $ $ ^

WmFRED E. FARRY

FUNERAL DIRECTOR a n d EM B M .U ERSQ6 Main Street, Asbury

Lady nstlslini Ontn Day and MightT elephone 434 R etid en ce te lep h o n e 4M

HARRY J. BODINE;FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER

722 Mattlson A»«.. Asbury ParkL u n gm otor Service P rivate An toAm bulance Service Phone 64

Geo. B. Sexton, Funeral Director f Embalmer(Successor to J . 11. S e xto n )

Private Auto A m bulance

USE KICE FOE POTATOESIS DEPARTMENT’S ADVICE

20-22 AbbottAve,Ode blooit trcffi ocean and SouthEpti PnvlHop: privileges

House]q ; J

iSmlfhv./Ikrt 479,'’Bradley Beacb, 41. ; iWtllHaan ; O, Havens hy Bx’r, to ®rcddrt«k Oennrlah. 1 lo 93... Dj H euv ' $8,)( 0. i

I:'.1’ .' LTflm’rfa I A; ) nrnrtlnw'. j n : hndnn ! HlVlllfl

■ T hai the use of rice .for, i)otatoes, a . su bsiitu tion already made by many Uivll'.y ho use wives, cuulp b e i.'Von iuoro widely, adopted w ith I'i'iillt, Is a suggestion of the United States Depuvlment of A grieulture , i'iom pted by the p resent -high prices »f puintoes. The departm en t's food rjieclaUsts point out Unit potatoes fire approx im ately four-llfths w ater mid ofiu-llfth food m alerlul, w hereas in rice, as well as In most other, eru ius, the proportions are p rac tica l­ly reversed; Under norm al condi­tions th e prices • of -these two . com­m odities usually are :8ttcli us to som ew here nearly equalize the two from ' the standpoint; of food cast.-;

R eeenlly, lunvover, potatoes ltavo sold from .$1 -.to $1.50 per peck, which m eans about 7 to 10 cents a pound, w hereas rice has retailed a t 15 to 17 cents,’’a pound So long us the price, of the. two foods Is sitls- e tnn tia lly in th is relmtionshlp, It Is obvious front a comparison of the ir food con ten t th a t n given, sum of money enn be spent more econom­ically for rice than tor potatoes.

EVENING SESSIONS WITT,FEATURE FIELD MEETING

Three big evening sessions are to be an im portan t featu re ot tho an­nual sum m er field m eeting which th e S tate A g r ic u ltu ra l. College .and E xperim ent S tation w ill -hold a t . the College ; Farm,. N ew • 1 Brunsw ick, Ju n e 16-19 inciusive. Hoit David H. Aganb. cf Throe:B ridges, Is to deliv­er. an , addrEss. on "The- Farm er: and; the L eg islatu re” a t- th e first of these m eetings on W ednesday; Juno 16. Com m unity singing, led by I. T. F rancis, county ag e n t , for . Essex, has been planned to .a d d to the so­cial aspect of the affair, w hich w ill end wl'th a reception' to all the 'fie ld m eeting guests, given, by tbe experi­m ent sta tion : and college stalf.

One of the .big a ttrac tio n s prom­ised for th e evening’s en tertainm ent] is s ing ing by the Caldwell com m uni­ty' chorus, six ty of -whom'■■'County.. A g en t/ Francis, th e ir loader lias consonted to b ring along w ith him. This chorus mmie a lingo 'hit a t 'l a s t y ear’s ' field m eeting and w ill be re­membered w ith ploasure by those fo rtunate enough to hear it.

AID YOUNG PREACHERS TOATTEND SUMMER SCHOOL

Ju s t retu rned from tlio Goueral Conference sessions, Rev. J. D. Bills, of Ocean Grove, la s t Sunday m orn­ing preached in the Bradley Beach M. E] Church on "T he Divine N a­tu re ." He also pfesentod, by re­quest of the pastor, Rev, . J. W. Lyqoh, the cau'BO of young preachers who desire to a tten d the1 school of theology il't Ocean Grove th is sum ­m er He said th a t m any of the men Who en te r th e m in istry have not had a sufficient opportun ity for theo­logical tra in in g , and th is ie an ef­fo r t by Bishop B erry , presiden t of- th e Ocoan Grove A ssociation to m ake, it -possible fo r - these mon Co get in touch /1th 'teacher:, of tho best . cholarahlp. I t w ill b e .a g roat school and 'the men. w ill be glad to corns if they can m anage the. ex­pense of carfa re and board. This, he continued; ;w as a n effort to ra ise a fund, to holp the m en m eet theBC hedem ary expenses;

•Pastor L ynch d lreo ted th e u sh e rs ,. who, passed down th e . aisles : and, so-, c u re d . abou t fifty d o l la r s ': in a few.

159 M a in S tr e e t; A s b u r y P a rk T e le p h o n e 21

B r o w n ’s B lo c k , S p r in g L a k e T e le p h o n e 32-SI

file Fuel with tlie Trouble Taken Out

Industrial and Miscellaneous Gas Appliances

to be had at our salesroom

BroilersBake OvensCake Griddles

Confectioner Stoves ■ .Combination Toasters, Broilers and Griddles

Gas Fixtures Glue Heating Pots Hot Plates

Heat Distributors— two or four holes Heaters Lamps

Hotel Units • Laundry Stoves Laundry Irons

' Melting PotsSoldering Stoves

Tailors’ Stoves Toasters

Waffle Stoves W ater Heaters

Stoves

Tubing

AT YOUR SERVICE31

COAST GAS CO.a ® ;

m m; t vl!

709 N iu th avem to. Beltnnr, N. J . T elephone 531 Bolmnr. A rnold avenue, P o in t P leasan t, N . J . T elephone 128 P o in t P leasan t.

50 M ain avenue. Ocean O tove. Telephone 23-i-W A sbury

/S t i..-.

u r n. s i "i;m

■'M,’.v

" A?:

"j li'-’i - Ms i sOnly the Freshest and Best

Fish, Clams, Oysters, Lobsters, E te f l lPrompt Delivery to Hotels and Cottages.' '-.•••

Harvey’s Sea. Food Market jUMM52 01in Street, wear postoinee Ocean Grove,- N,

T e le p h o n e A s b u r y 4*0 -

729 Main Street, Bradley Beach P h o n e - S ia '/ '. '/ j / ; D a y o r NlBh^/.-;|;;:,

JL & M SEMI-PASTE PAINTSMAKBS BEST PAOnwW BARG LONGBST",

Oostto yoa $ 3 .6 6 a Gallop when made ready m m&

M tBm Ifte 6<^or,*a en d g e t oDyeay jse m y fcocft. SoM fey P o a ic re W K Q O fttia te ta a itM S S , C:2et-ao . t3.

Page 4: i'fypM wmM - DigiFind-It · Sun Rises 5,30, Sets 8.28 Day’s lencth 14 Hours 58 Minutes, i'fypM.fill----- •-i V«l. XXVIII OCEAN GROVE, N. J., FRIDAY, JUNE 4, 1920 No; 2 THRILLING

T H E 0 C E A U GROVE T IM E S FTCTOAV, TOM I, 1M0.P A G E F O D B ■ . ■• : ■ .-■■•■:■■- ■■■■.■■■■ ■■ ■ J . - - - - ■ - ■-------’

Founded 1882 ' ' W eekly Edition

T H E O C E A N G R O V E T I M E SPublished F riday by

KSTATE OF GEORGE P. RAINEAR John E . Quinn, Editor

•IS Main., Avenue, .Ocean Grove, X. J. Telephone 7

SUBSCRIPTIONS: « i » postage' paid In the

• yearly: 7."te. senU-amuially:. file. .quarterly or Jc. per copy,, , ........... U n ite d S t a t e s ; I -.1nail:! #1.?:, a n d f prolan JJ.Sj a year,

ADDRESSES changed on request—always dive form er address. . ADVERTISEM ENTS: R ates will be furnished by us upon request.

W a tch th e fa bat on ra tir p a p er for th e e x p ir a tio n of y o u r su b scr ip tio n

Entered as second-class m ail; a t’tho Ocean Grove postolllei

TH E TRUTH IN ITS PR O t'K lt PEACE

A record breaker is the term ’ ap t­ly to lie ascii In rel'erriny . to the -tliroiijj of ■ Mrmm'kil..Day visitors .in

■ Ocean Grove. T h e 'lik e litis' never . been witnessed h e re , thus early in: 'the-season, and the ho te l and board­ing house keepers who opened their,,|

I ■T he title of travel Itns a lready se t

hi tow ards Cli lea go. P rac tica lly all of dhe delegates do the R epublican N ational .Convention, wiil'oh ' irieCIS o il-June Stli, have now been chosen The. p relim inary contests, us be- Iween cand idates for the nom ination

places of. business to accom m odate j.bave.been m arked. by a been r lya lfy the host undoubtedly reaped a re- I and a tense sp ir it liorii of -the gencr im inerativo re tu rn , as in alm ost ov- ! al feeling th a t ah ovqnvholining ylc- cry case a.crow ded house was tlie lory Is surely forthcom ing In No- rule. Ill .sonic Instances npplieunlU I veinber. Popular preconventiou ill- w ere tu rned away. A nother Centura | i errs I 'is aroused to an ex traord inary connected w ith th e 'p re sen ce uf^-thu j d e g re e and undoubtedly the g athcr-

lip liday host w a s 'th a t the ren ta l of / lag irt Chicago will be the g rea test m any, rooms and apartm en ts for .the j In the p arty 's h.snmmer-Avns effected. W lntt does a ll j ■ ...---- .th is portend? The Knowing ones | The decision, of the Supreme say it m eans a season th a t w ill top j Court of the United S tates rolativo an y th in g Ocean (Jitoyo; has ever .,0: ;t |a . coustitti'tlonulity of the know n. One th in g tuny be said w ith j Ktghleent.li Amendment is expected ce rta in ty a t th is dime and Unit is, j- Mmidaj-. The proponents of prolfi- lteyer before was there so gi'cal a tie-, jj,i;i |„„ believe It wit! he declared that, xnanit in th is place for cottages, anH'mlmcnl l ia s , been properly terns, bungalow s' and -summer ratified. So say. all of us.board,:-, -----' . . . . ■

| Semf'torial .inquiry reveals th a t Based da (ax records, It Is call- tfeineiid'ojis. stints-.have been oxponjl-

vtl ia tlie pvecohvenUon cam paigns of Presidential ; eantlidales. They coine high, hfit we l'unkl have 'em, It seems.

Salary. Increases of liiofe flinii a m illion dollars have been g ran ted the school teachers of Newark. This Is (lie most sinlsfuctory answ er to. the ihfenlenetl sho rtage of teachers.

m a iled 'th u t the people o f .th is cotta- . try will expend tills year a billion i dollars on candy. Vet they couVplnlii of sugar shortage. The estiiiialc for ; th is ytjar's. Consumption , of so ft . ‘ d rinks and beverages fo r,ce rea ls In ' wliloll much su g a r Is used is ¥750,- j.

; 000,000. The expeuililiires on cig­a re tte s for the year is esfim ated n t ¥800,000,000. anti on - jew elry be- tween ¥ 100,000 .000 a n d ..¥000.000,- 000. tobncyo nml snail' ¥800.000.000, cigars ¥810,000,000, niinllsion to places of am usem ent ¥750,000,000, chew ing glim ¥50,000,000 anil so on.A con'ipnniilvol.v sm all fraci loll ofth is vast am ount of money, It ispointed nut, If It were saved and ill- : ♦ — » .

■ vorted Into productive Investm ents L IT T L E PROSPECT n r ;(p jywould do much tow ard reliiil.illiai- j DECLINE III E 00D PRICFS

• lug in d u stry and providing capital ! —:—■ "" 'fo r miiiiy essential lilies o f cnipnicr- ; O/lleials; o f ihe deparim ein of agri

- cial ac tiv ity . ' ,

P r e s s V i e w s ' a n d N e w s .

Giv e t h e m a f a i r d e a l ;There is no In stitu tio n o f a

business n a tu re to w hich w e a re a ll more Indebted th an tlie postofllco. T hink, if you c a n ,'w h a t would h ap ­pen if Hie m alls ceased, to'.be tra n s­m itted . Y et If notion ho no t taken soon tlui't catastrophe w ill bo upoa us. Tlie: postoflice Is being w recked. We are not a llud ing lo the g rea t in ­ju ry caused by tu rn in g nn -Institu­tion designed, to fac ilita te free In ter­course lii'to an- engine of po litical propaganda and for suppression of free speech. O u r .-renders know w hat th ey th ink of th is phase of th e su b ­ject. - We know, th a t they th in k w ithI I S ,. :

N o, w hat w o have in mtiid Is tlio na tional sta rvation of Hie postofflco,

-or,.. if you prefer of the postofllco w orkers. These fa ith fu l men who are on duty tiny IA, day out, in cold and -heat, th rough snow add Ice, arc ' being driven by ac tual necessity tii rcllb(|iilsli th e ir jobs. A s th in g s nre It is nut ju s t to the ir fam ilies or themselves Unit they should hoid on lo n g er, On Inadequate sa laries, a t the host nr tim es, they have 6oen prices soar to su it th e . most o u t­rageous proli'teers, w hile th e ir pay tins rem ained, substantiality the same.

Give the postofflco employes a fa ir deal.—-Irish W orld.

RAPIDLY PAYING CLAIMSOF .WAR RISK INSURANCE

PATCHES ARE HONOR’S BADGE.H usbands, fathers, uml b ro th ers

have boon -d igg ing .lip and w earing their garm ents of nti'te-bollum .Writ? age. A d istinguished United S tates Senator. ,Mr. T h o m a s ,. of Colora­do, pointed w ith pride iii Ihe- Senate C'-hrimlicr, .itself tiie o ther day '.to Ills patched , clothes and to his four-year- old-shoes.' W hile riot yet absolutely,

nli- rigueitr In m an 's lUlirc. pntchos bid fa ir In ' become selective badges of d lsllncllon , Arid If the W omen’s ActIvitles Uvnacli o f 'th e D epartm ent of .lustice should join In t h e g rea t m nscnllne Obi Cio' Movement, anil go In strong for reefed ' sk irts, the crash', of tum bling prices tills fall will he heard above all 'Iho election uproar.— H arvey 's W eekly.

S ettlem ent of 127,151 Insurance claims, -for death and to tal perm a­nent d isability , and represen ting a to ta l value of ¥1.135,525,173.45,’ is announced by D irector R. G. Chol- meley-Jonca, o f the Bureau of W nr lilsk Insurance. Only 5,110 claim s nre pending; and in tbeso cases th e clnlm nats n re benoflclnrles In m any Innlimces resid ing in foreign coun- tnies W here d isturbed conditions render com m unication Impossible,

It now requ ires only about live days from .receip t o f final.. evidence of death In a n .In su ran ce case foT -the issunnce of the first 'chcolc, and frequently cases have'--lieeii' handled e.vi'ii ihrir'e raplilly Ini the Compensa­tion noil Insurance Claims Division of itlio.Bureau. • ,

In cases or to tal porm nnont dis- nhlilly, ntcil have been exam ined, the aw ard made, rind the first chock pjnried "Hr tlioir -hands, nil w ith in a very few hours.

EXAMINATION TO BE HELD HERE ON SATURDAY, JUNE 12

•Laws 10 revolutionize iiolilics. ‘‘his eimnlj-y? Good. I,el them ; •■niicl-ed as sooii as possible;.

I Oh, June?

w h a t Is so rare as a day ia

T he so ld iers ' m onum ent a t ' the B roadw ay en tran ce to Ocean Grove, and w hich was form 'ally dedicated las t Sunday afilornooii; is a fitting m em orial to the th irtee n boys of N eptune tow nship who paid the su ­prem o sacrifice du ring 'the late, t i ­tan ic s tru g g le and to 'the several h undred o ther local boys who en­listed 111 the service. In enduring bronze and Im perishable g ra n ite the

l euitiirt! see little prospect of a de­cline in the prices of fopdsluAs for a t least Olio year, IS, G. M ontgomery,

, liuiui rif Ihe foreign m ark e ts section ;o f the dcpartm eat,, says:

' ‘;AIHi(iitgli " the exporiatlon of foodsatilk.. decruaseil approxim ately 50 per cent, d u rin g April as eout- pared Ith April la s t year, food prices gcneriilly will not decline, because of the decreased acreage planted.

•"Ino price of m oat products has dropped stead ily d u rin g th e lust m onth, bun It h a s no t d ro p p ed . to

nen an ex ten t th a t , the public .I ..... the ^; realizes th a t if lias bccoinu cheupur

w j , S l V m !.As. thiiB pprpouintcO. Tno m onur .stcjuxiI’ -ot-- prleus ulocrcasintf i t is .mol’d

m ent Is a work of ant, and .Ha loca- likely th a t a few of tlio, essential t-loa could n o t liqvo been more- bap- ! comnMidiiUlos Will go t\l 111 h ig h er,”p lly chosen, Ia every p a rticu la r tlio m em orial is a credll to th is tow n­sh ip and t.n ri people, wlio be­lieve in doing Ihlngs la Die r ig h t way.

■ Sw at jtho fly how; and swnl

lie sa id .. "The shortage of acreage p lanted th is year Is duo largely to 'the , fact th a t there tiro not as litany,'pcopio on tlie farm s us heforo the w ar, because Industries th a t pay inore money have

d raw n oil labor, to ilie cities. More than ,500,011(1 soldiers loft Hie farm s

lilm j t„ kn lo war, and not mnre 'tbnu 10good and hard. 'B y k illing Iho first fly of sp r in g you destroy . Its mil­lions of prospective descendants in the sum m er. The house fly Is a groat a n d .a c tiv e sp reader of disease. I t Is the duty of everybody to wage ceaso- leBS wnr nn him . ad ex term inate him,Every ncciim ulatlon of garbage or . ,filth of any ltlnd Is n hot-lied for lly ) LARGE WAITING LIST NOW

per •cent. Of I h is nnm bor rottiruoil,! lie pojirfeil out. - '

"D iirliig the w ar the not produc- llon of foodstuffs Increased m ore than 12 per cent., and tills Increase wns more Ilian absorbed by the oxportn- ion of rood to, the E uropean cqun

l.rles." " •

devclopmeivt. Clean np and wipe o u t a ll t-bc breeding places of the fly. E very lly seen should lie In­s ta n tly k illed ; le i none escape. E te rnal vigilance niul Instant, (loath ".o th e disease gcrm -carrter Is the p rice of health and safety. Sw at the l ly on sigh t.

S ecre ta ry of A g ricu ltu re M eredith

FOR TELEPHONE SERVICE

Is convinced thatU liorc is n large op- j j , - -'D ortunlly fo r 'th e D epartm ent, of Ag-p ' j . rlb u lttire to assist In the economic

u pbu ild in g of Alaska. As one moans a | , t o ti l ls end, lie Is ca lling ntilontlon W 'i'. tbe favorable sitim 'tlon for the •’(TV, estab lishm ent, of paper m ills In the

te rrito ry , and offering cooperation ■by.'making availab le national forcBt

,'pulpwond on term s th a t will provldo igi'yA-.saiftsfactory opera ting basis. W el-I

come an y th in g and everyth ing th a t prom ises to rollove th e paper short-

11.All'. J r■r.'i- 'f e f e p f eIlwi'-Jithp .friendsh ip of every

gIjlp tV e.arc In. favor of peace; wo w ant nritlon on

:— . . . .........f e J D i . i v ow n-independence and preserve

B0Verals n ty u nder the of ° ur own c»P*K»l at Washing-

In spile of the .fact th a t the Now York Telephone Company since th e first of the y ea r,h as Installed nil u n ­usually large num ber of new tele­phones In Its New Jersey te rrito ry . Hi ere are today 11,070 app lications fo r service w alling to lie filled. New telephones to the num ber of 13,011 have been placed In scrvlco du ring Ihe four m onths ending May 1st, an accom plishm ent t h a t s tands o u t as a g rea t achievem ent when viewed In th e lig h t of the shortage of raw and fabricated nu tter la Is, transp o rta tio n dlfflcultles, constan t d istu rbances In th e Industria l .world and a ll the o th ­er.'obstacles- th a t- ’hay o' stood In. th e way of production for many m onths.

To In s ta ll theso , telephones -has m eant the add ition of thousands of mile's of wire to Ihe system , the tnaiiiifnotiire, tran sp o rta tio n and In­s ta lla tio n of new. sw itchboard; fac ili­ties and cen tra l office equipm ent, the .construction of new build ings and Iho en largem ent -of ex is ting s tru c ­tu re s arid the em ploym ent and tra in ­ing of hundreds of now operators who woro needed to h and le th e se r ­v ice'-required by th e new subscrib­ers.

Anniversary of Rebekahs.On Tuesday evening th e th ir ty -

second ann lyorsary o f A tlan tic Re bokali ’ served.A sbury

SIGNS OF RIG FR U IT CROP.If abundance of bloom m eans

abundance a f ' fnilL Aloiniiiiiitti cquii- ly o rchard isls may expect lo harvest bum per crops- th is year , of. apples, pears, peaches and cherrjes. Seldom have f ru it trees' of all kinds shown such a t w ealth of blossom. . T he ulhole (.'ouiilryside, as soon from lA in or autom obile, IS a ilellgh-t to -the e.ve. while Ihe fragrance of tlio apple hl.iissoins adds lo Ihe pleasure. •Untorluiiatuly for- th e 'quality- of tlio fru it ninny arahards. won't uiiprunod t-liis year because Ike ow ners could not command Hie necessary labor a t ■pruning tim e. T h is m enus sm aller h iid ' less perfect, f ru it.— Mufinsqtian C onst Sltir.

W ljE R E DID i tE GET IT?A man who wife knocked, down on

Main s tree t, S atu rday lllgUt by un auto, w as-helped up by hystnftders anil asked if lie was h u r t. He re­plied. "I don 't know, hu t wlntt Is th a t tr ic k lin g down my log; hopo It Is blood." I t wns found lo bo n sm ash­ed bo ttle rif w hiskey.— Freehold Monmouth Doiuocrot.

JU ST YOU WAIT. ■■ The price o f su g a r m ay keep our

women from canning th is sum m er, b u t those Uia't hrivc. th e vote will do some canning of -a dilfcrcnt. and most nnplcasrin't kind th is full.— Hood Illvor (O regon) News.

SEAC0AST DISTRIBUTINGGOVERNMENT LITERATURE

A scries of lllnslrriilcd artic les bn Hie govoinm ont of the Unllod S la tes Is being d istribu ted free among Its p a tro n s ' mid frlondH by t-lio Senconsl T rtist Company, AsbUry P nrk .-i

“ 'l’bese artic les, a lthough w rlttbn In popular form ," says F ra n k V, 11. Young, of flic Seaconst Company, “ will lie of real educational value. They are to bo m ailed d irectly io the homes ot thlB com m unity w ithou t charge. T ills plan- Is In kooplrig w ltfr th e new Idea th a t ovory progressive financial In stitu tio n o w es 'a broader service 'to Its comriiunlty. The mod­ern imak Is no longer only a place whore m oney Is deposited a t . one window and draw n a t another.; I t Is ra th e r a cen ter of ■ constructive and liolpfill Inform ation to w hich anyone may b rin g h is finnnclal problem s wl'l'h snfo confidence of finding a solii'llon: for them.

“The sto ries a rc designed to show the honofits th a t each of us dorlv'os from the seTvico of tlio govorn- m ont.”

The U nited S ta tes Civil Sorvlco Commission Una announced an ex­am ination fo r th e county of Mon­m outh, lo bo hold a t Ocean Grove, Freehold, 'Long Brm ich and Red BnhK, on Sniturday, June, 12, to fill tlio position o f rurnU carrie r a t Long Brunch, and vacancies 'th a t m ay la t­te r occur on ru ra l routes from o ther postofilces In th e above-montioriod county.

T he exam ination w ill be only to clllzoiis who arc, ac tu a lly domiciled In the te rrito ry of a postofflco In trio com ity and wim moot tlio o th er ro- 'qulromonts so t fonlh. In Form No. ■19.77. B oth moii • and womoii, It unalHred, m ay erilcr th is exam ina­tion, bii't n jipoln tlng offlccrs linvo the legal right to specify' Iho b c x desired in requesting certlfichillon of ollglbles.

• • • m n n m m M m m n m n i u i H n H W H .

COTTAGES and BUNGALOWS Some Fine

HOUSES ARE RENTING FAST| Please List Your House Soon as Possible i

Fire Insurance—Best Companies

Gharles L KeastReal Estate and Insurance

69 Main Ave., Ocean Grove

Moving Days

M0RIUARV RECORD

MRS. UANIN'All M. O’HANLON. Mrs. H annah Maps O'Haiilmi, wid­

ow of Dr. Thom as O 'llan lon , passed uway Iital Suniiay bvuiilng lit the resldotteo of her d'uughtov, M rs, Lot It. W ard 121 AH. llerm ou W ay. -Prl- v.ile fiinoi'iil services, conducted by Rev. T. J . J . AVrlght, pastor of St. I'lliiI's church, .wore held a l t-iio house W ednesday evening, and yen-. I'cnlny In term en t was mndo In tho cemetery a t P rlncblon. Sho Is su r ­vived, besides Mrs. W ard, by . four iluuglilers mid th ree sons—M iss i t ’.albei'ine O 'llan lon , of Ocean Grove; ,] Miss Laura J. O 'llan lon, of Snnta Burlm ru, Gal.; Mrs. Dallas II. P la tt , o f Los A ngeles O il.; Mrs. Samuel Alvbrd, of H artfo rd , Conn.; John R, O’Htinlon, of llayw nril, C.al.;. Thomas 0 ‘iiniilon, of M orristow n, N. J .; arid J. T hornley O’llan lo n , of San F rnn- ciscq. Tlie husim nd of the deceased, •tlio Into Dr, O'-Ilnnlon, wns a moin- lier of th e Ocean Drove Association. For m any years ho was president ot Pennington Sem inary, In whioh po­sition- hu became vory well known th ro u g h o u t tlio S tate. H e was niso long tho leador of tho Ocean Grovo Bible Class u'l tho sum m er services In th e Auditorium .'

When making, your summer arrangements . let us suggest that you keep iii mind the pro­

per protection of yonr valuables, your jewelry, deeds, securities, valuable papers and heir­looms by the use of our safe, deposit depart liient.

A good, roomy box may be rented for $3 a year, a larger one for $5, and . storage space • may be secured at very reasonable figures. -

L et us show them to you.

Corner iHsrltison Avenue and Emory Street

Telephone 1700

Capital. Surplus and Profits, J153.900.00

W illiam J . Couso Leo W. B erry . . , . W illiam C. RogersJollerson B. FogalM arguorlto H am pton"

Ofiloera:.P resid en t

. . . . . , f . . . . . . . . .Vico P residen t

. . . ; . . . . . . . Soorotary-Troasuror A ssistan t 8oorotary-Troaauror• • AWUstant Treasurer

BENJAM IN F; PIN E.Ill b u t a few weeks, Bonjnm in F.

Pine d led -n t 135 I-Ieck nyomio 011 Tuesday n ig h t, of h arden ing of th e a rte ries , hlri Pino' wns sovonty-:' e ig h t years oid, n menit c iitte r by trade. He is survived by 11 widow, two dntigli'fora mill throe Sons. Tho sons are W illiam II. and ;iB. F red Pino, of Ocean Grovo, und A. F . , Pine, of Somervlllo. Tho dnughtors aro Mrs. Edw ard M. Hopo, of A sbury P a rk , and Mrs. R obert E. Davison, of Spring Lake, Services woro hold nt tho house tills -Friday afternoon,- followed by In te rm en t In Groon-

A lls m o e t a o l P lt tsb n r o B oofon #1 B o sto n

.D eluolt N o t io n a l o l B c lr o ltN e w J e r s e y o f N e w a r k

- I II U IU U II*wood comotery, MmiaHfiuan, Tjy Un« dortalcor Fnrry. v

D. C. Covert AgencyE. H. CLIVE, Proprietor

Fire InsuranceRoom 201, Asbury Park Trust Co. Bldg.

Asbury ParkMISS FRANCES M. DOWNER.

L ast Sunday n ig h t MIbb F rances M. Downer died a t -lior homo in Oconn Grovo, 74 Asbury nvonue. Sorvlcos wore held a t Wic house W ednesday nftornoou In cliargo of Rov. D avid A. M acM urray, pastor of the FlrBt B ap tis t C hurch, A sbury P ark , and in te rm e n t was mndo In Mt. P rospect comotory by D irector Hurtle. Tho deceased Is survived by a sister, Miss M arla A. Downer, a t tho above riddro8S.

New Pictures At Scenario.W ith now p ic tu res r ig h t off Broad­

way, like "Tlio G arter G irl,” s lu r ­r in g Coflnrie: Griffith, tho Scenario niotlon p ictu re playhouse Is proving Its popularity . Sinco tho o p en in g 'a week ago tlio Scenario lias enjoyed excellent patronage. Popular prices prevail. . N ext week’s fea tu res i r e : Monday, M argarita F isher In "Tho H ellion ;" Tuesday; Tom Moore -In "D u d s;" W ednesday, n lV star cast I11 fW-ho’s Your. S erv an t?" 'T hursday, Nornia’ Talhmdgo 111 "A . D aughter ot Two W orlds;” F rid a y , Alico B rady In "Tlio T ra p ;” Saturday , Corinno Griintli In “ Tho G artor G irl.”

Thursday Club’s Officers. Omcors for th e ’ensu ing y ear elect

ofi by ..the T hursday Club are;- P re si­den t, M rs /H . G. Shreye; secre tary .

ONE CENT A WORDMINIMUM 25 CENTS. . CASH TO

ACCOMPANY THE ORDERFOR RENT— 'Klght-tnoom liouso,

woll fu rn ished ; gus, olodtrlc llglrta, bath , largo porches; opposite F le tch- -f-r lnko; 0110 block to boaoh; prlco ¥000; Juno 15 to October. Address, Idoal, Ocean Grovo Times.— 23*

FOR RENT— E lgh ty -o lgh t note plnyor p iano 'fo r sonSon 1920 for fifty dollars, Including records. Address P. O. Box 01, Ocean Grovo.— 16tf.

FOR REN T— Modorn olght-room cnttago, Including firo place, ba thw ,. - ••• w y(«vv, v u iu igas ran g e and h o t w ator hoator. Wos- loy lako,. Oconn Grovo, ¥.800, Address P. O. Box 01, Ocean Grovo.— 15tf.

Correct English- HOW TO B SE IT

j A MONTHLY MAGAZINE $2.50 the Year

Send 10 Cents for Sample Copy

B e tflo h A m e r ic a a l T o ro n to C o m m e r c e o f A lb a n y

N e th e r la n d s o l H o lla n d U r b a ln e o* P a r is

»

i

Cottages, Bungalows and Boarding Houses

FOR SALEW rite o r come and see us.

Lot us w rlto yo u r insurance. Wo roprpsent tho follow ing com panlos: Home, C ontinen tal, ’N orthorn Assuranco, F lrom an’oF und , Am orloan, N orw ich Union, G lens -Falls, 'Am erican Eagle, A m orlcan 'C ontro l, Camden, S tandard , N ow ark, G irard , an d o thers, Also F ld o llty and C asualty and Am orlcan S u re ty Companies.

D o ,you w a n t to borrow money on m ortgage? I f . so, wo can accom m odate you.

EN.WOOLSTONREAL K T A T E and INSURANCE

Commissioner of Deeds Notary Public V.;

48 MAIN AVE ; OCEAN G ROVBa_ _ , r-__ v i 1 w v m w m v * M t v t i i i u i i x u JDLUOXXIM17,1 ■ V - leiep n p n e 3 9 8 ^ ^ ' ; ; ^vui v n ii tttim ui m yvuumng- [ A flburr' P ark t 8t-ate ofllcerfl a tto n d - I th© seoflon w as weld a t th e homo of I : v

^ p i . - a o v . ’F ra n k O.^Lk,wdon. ’ ’ W lnoi*. / " ’

Page 5: i'fypM wmM - DigiFind-It · Sun Rises 5,30, Sets 8.28 Day’s lencth 14 Hours 58 Minutes, i'fypM.fill----- •-i V«l. XXVIII OCEAN GROVE, N. J., FRIDAY, JUNE 4, 1920 No; 2 THRILLING

F R ID A Y ,.JU N E 4, 1920.

P e r s o n a I I n t e l l i g e n c e

W illiam H am ilton , of A llendale, w as a patron of the Queen 'th is weak.

■ — i-----Jo h n T. Reid w ill open h is cafe­

te r ia in the G rand-A tlan tlc hotel about Ju n e 15.

— * — 'E lec tric ian V lerlng, 47 M ala av e­

nue, h as added an a u to 'truck to -h is business equipm ent.

— -i : - - - .Miss E m ily Fullw ood, of B alti­

more, h as reopened th e K enilw orth, o n -th e banka of W esley lake.

— -i— -Mr. anil Mrs. F ra n k E. Boncdlct,

e l N ew ark, are so ttled for the sum ntcr a t 8 W ebb avonuo.

— 4 ~E dw ard IV. Beeglo, of Yonkers, la

th e guest of Mr, and M rs. H arvey Johnson,' 140 Lake avenue.

- 4-----Mr. an d M rs. J . W. Stanley, of

E ast Orango, a re located for th e sum m er a t 100 Cookman avenue.

— 4-----Mrs, Mary Hudson, m atron a t tho

Homo F o r tho Aged, is passing tho \yoek 'w ith her m other a t Nyack, N. Y.

* ,Mrs. W. A. Cross, of tho Tower

H ouse ,'lias gone to Aniityville, Long Island to rem ain u n til some timo in th e fall.

H —Mrs. P. C. C lark, of A sbury ave­

nue,-' le ft th is m orning to spend tho sum m er a t Cllntoiidale, N. Y., on the Hudson.

Mrs. A. J. W ym an, who passed tho w in ter a t S t . , Petorsbug, F la., is again a t Wymnti V illa, on P itm an avenue.

• T. 11. B ickorlon and fam ily have moved down from P h iladelph ia , to open th e ir sum m er homo a t 31 Webb avenue.

— t —Judge H arold B. Wells, a membor

of tho Ocean drove Association, de­livered -the M em orial Day uddrcsa a t BorUuntown.

II. 0. Halsey and fam ily aro again occupying 10. Hock avonuo, the ir sum m er homo. They cornu from E lizabeth.

» - ■Mr. and -.Mrs. Theodore W illiam s

have moved from 22 Seavlow avenue ' to 187 Alt. lle rm on Way for -the

sum m er. *-----

W illiam II. q u ick and fam ily; of T ren ton , opened an d occupied (lur­ing tho week th e ir ’ cottogo a t 10

•Seavlow avonuo.— 1 -'

Mr. and Mrs. W allace Rood, 119 •Abbott Avonuo, ontontalned over

. M emorial Day th e ir nephew, E arl E rb , o f Potw tow u, Pa.

— 4-----Mrs. M ary iE. Knowios, of M orris-

viite, Pn., ju s t across the river from T ren ton , is located for 'tho sum m er a t 34 Surf avenue,

k—-Mrs. N, J . Holmes, 108 Main .avo­

nuo, o Je r Inst weekend onlortaluod ■hor cousin, Miss Carolyn Holmes, of New H avon, Conn,

— 4— •Rov. T. J . J . W righ t, pastor of St.

P au l's , Ocean drove, preached a t F ir s t M. E. Church,- Red Bank, la s t Sunday evening,

( ' -Mrs. Samuel Poieloy of P h iladel­

p h ia , has 'taken poss'eBBio.. of her suthm or residence, th e W oodtown, 70 Mt. Horm on Way.

' — -4r—•Mr. antt Mrs. Percy Baxter , nnd

tho form er’s fa ther, K. H. B axter, of .O range, aro se ttled n t 0.1 Cookman :avenue fo r .th e seaaon.

'—Mr. .and Mrs. Juraes Davison, ;f

E a s t Orange, are loca'tod for the sum m er a t the .Reachwood ap art- m onts, 80 -Main avenue.

Mr. and Mrs. C hris Cantlldgo nre again a t 10 A tlan tic avenue, for tho sum m er, hav ing snovod down from T ran ion du ring tho week.

■ ' — 4— 'F red W heeler, a carpen ter, du ring

the week moved from Souith Amboy to th e ,-ottage a t 68 E m bury avenue, w hich he recen tly puroliasod.

— 4— - ■|A. . W.. Reynolds and fam ily have

taken-possession of the cottage a t 52 C lark avonuo, m oving over from 'th e Colomar. Houeo, A sbury Park.

Mr. and-M rs; John E. P erry have re tu rn ed fro ta a w in te r’s Btay a t St. P etersburg , F la, Thoy a re In tiheir cottago nit 83 Cookman avenue.

. ----- 4— -.George A, K ennedy an d -fam ily

have arrived from th e ir w in ter home a t R utherford , and a re se ttled for th e sum m er a t 85 .Mi Carmel W ay,

: '• — —Dr. and Mrs. J , D, B ills la s t S a tu r ­

day arrived', homo from a lrionith’a a t- tohdance a t the soseions of tho Gen­era! Conference in Dos Moines, Iowa,

■ #-----„-;!-Hezhor Ward, of Prlneijfon Col-'

?ege, tspani the Memorial Day. week­end .'at his home In the Grove. He is the-eon of Mr.. and .MfB,- Lot R, ■Ward.- ' '

■ 0 - e e l : ~ r r f ^ l Having lansed her Ocean; Grovo

cottage at' 74 Lake .’avenue for the summer, Miss Hulda J. Leonard will go to hot home at Prattsvillo, N, Y.,' today. T / / / / ' / .

..'Mrs.' t 'O , Lipp and • family,-.-“ of -

Ph'tlftdolphia/ In, posscasiqii':.o f tent'^o,. 9 Bethany ; black,', YwBlchv has. t i d e h k i i i c r home

i fortijnan'ir -years andn1so> iho suiririter, horns ’df'DM" slather b

JaterMrdfsJ.AC, Yoiicg,

• • v l f i f c / O C H S A ! ? ,- G R O V E t i m e s f A O J r i v »

' (Mrs, -J. D. Sherm an, ow ner of th e B ryn M aw r, h av ing leased th a t, -ho- .tel for th e sum m er, on Tuesday w ant to L ancaster, Pa., for a n 'Indefinite stay . '

4-----. 'Mr, and Mrs. Oliver Sabold, of

P h iladelph ia , form or sum m er resi­den ts . w ere am ong holiday visitors ■to the Grove, s ta y in g a t th e M an­chester,

■ -----4-—-Mrs W alter Anderson, of Maple­

wood, and Miss Adelaida A rlag , of Brooklyn, visited th e ir sis ters a t 'the A m herst from la s t S atu rd ay u n til ■Monday.

' — 4-------- .Dr. and Mrs. George H. Dickey,

of F lush ing , wore num bered am ong Decoration Day visitors. They occu- piod tho Dickey cottage on Mt. Pis- gah Way.

— 4—Joseph Green, wife and son, ac­

companied by Mrs, G reen 's m other, Mrs. E lizabeth Boegle, m otored hero from Plainfield on, Monday to v isit relatives.

Dr. J . W . M arshall gnvo tho ad­d ress at- tho unveiling of it m em orial tab le t for service men la s t Sunday ovepilng .fit-' 'tho Mariosq.uan M. E. C hurch. 4

4-----C aptain Jenk ins, of the Salvation

Army,, will give the address' a t tho Ju n io r lEpworfih -League m ooting Sunday evening a t St. P a u l’s church.

4—llev. nnd Mrs, H enry Hess sp e n t'

tho week in th e ir cottago a t 70 C en tra l avenue. Rov. Hess Is pastor of tho Broad S tree t M. E. Church, P h iladelphia.

E rn est F. W oolston caaio down from P ennington Sem inary to spend the M emorial Day weekend w ith his paren ts, M r. and Mrs. E. N, Wool- stoh, s i M ain avomte;

4--- ’M rs. Harvey Bucher, of P o tts-

towii, P a„ is tho new lessee of tho Bido-n-Wee, .29 Bruudivuy, facing F le tcher lake. Furn ished rooms are oiTeriid a t th a t house.

'Mrs. A lhort B. E vens, of Paterson, was a t 'tho LoPierro over tho Dec­oration Day , holiday.' W ith Mr. E vans sho w ill re tu rn In ter for a m onth 's s ta y a t th a t honso.

' -----4----Under forces directed by Super­

in tenden t Davis, tile A uditorium , Temple and Tubernaolo are being ’Miousc\-cleaiiod" in an tic ipation of opening day, Suntluy, Jiuio 20.

_,—,-----The .cottage a t 29 A bbott avonuo,

the Sinrvls, bus been lonsod tor the sum m ur by Philip . M. Wugonliuls, of Newark, Ho purposes keeping it opcq for boarders nil tho year.

4-----By courtesy of W. A. Lonvitt, J r .,

The Times has boon faV o red w llli a copy of the 1920 Y ear Book of theAsbury P ark F ish ing Club. Mr.L eav itt Is one of tho club’s trustees,

4-----Mrs. W illiam F ra n c is and Miss

M argaret F ra u d s , of Tioga, thoP h iladelph ia suburb, - woro w ith the form er’s m other, Miss A nnie Lnoy, 104 Wobb avonuo, over last week­end.

4-----'A. luncheon will be sorvod the

members of the women's Bible class of itho F irs t M, E. C hurch, A sbury P ark , th is F riday ovonlng a t Sam pler Inn cafoturln, Muiu avonuo, Ocean Orovo.

— t — • r’JDr. L. C. Mulior, of Heck uvonuo,

gqva u b rie f address In the Bradley Bbach M, E. OUureli iusl evening, w hen "Tho Nazarltio," a can ta ta , w as presented by tho cliureh choir and chorus.

M to f^ V a r '. 'tp e ;

'Mr. und Mrs.- Will lair; Dosondorf, of E ast Orailge, wore hero Monday and urrangott to pass tho sum m er a t 'the . W ilm ington, Thoy w ill cako up th e ir q u arte rs there tho la t te r -p a r t ot iioxt week. ■ ■

F ra n k Kinney, Mrs, K inney M id Mrs, Busan M illor arrived las t Sat­urday and took possession o ’ ten t No. 6 Alt. Carm el Way. Mr. Klnriuy Is chief clerk of tho fre ig h t s ta tio n a t '.N o rth P h iladelphia,

— 4-----.R each ing hero last F riday even­

ing, Kirk.A*; H u le tt and fam ily spout the weekend . In the ir cottagli on tow­er Broadway. They m otored hero frOn East Orango in a now W inton six belonging do Dr. H u ie tt.

- t -----Airs. W. H . Bkirm is back from a

sho rt v isit w ith T ren ton friends and is occupying her sum m er residence ait 19 Ocean Pathw ay. D uring the w in ter she lived a t B ancroft-Taylor Home, 74 Cookman avenue. '

4-----Mr. and Mrs. Davis Jones, of P h il­

adelphia, wero a t the A lbatross over Memorial Day. Thoy. w ent back to tho city on Monday. Mrs. Jcnes w ill re tu rn lioro to open th e A lba-, trass for the season on Ju n o 11.

■ -----H —” . 'Jqeop t C. Jackson, Steplion D.

W oolley, Dr. George Taylor, N. J . T aylor and Calvin, H, Rood ropro- ssantod Ocean Grovo nt the an n u a l d innor of th o Howell Tow nship As- soofatlo.n last S atu rday a t FOrmlng- dale,

(-----M rs, M ary C ottrell McMahon, who

0led In 'P h ilad e lp h ia on 'M onday, w as th o s is te r pf Charles C. B row er, of dcoan Grove'. Mrs. McMahon passed aw ay <at the homo of bar daugh ter, Mrs.- F ra n k N.' W inslow, 129 Mail-' holm s tree t,

■Air, and M rs. Jam es M artin , fbr-

m erly of 'the U nited S ta tes hotel,' have gone to ' E aston , P a ., ;Jtor- 6ft lndaflh lte stay , v M r .. M artin Is su f- fe r ln g 'frb m .a n Infection of th e r ig h t foo t an il;i c a ll probabllU y h e wJJ! m - t e r - p e h o sp ita l a t E aston to r -tfeat^' ifieh t.' fii'.'-i: r

Rev. Sam uel P. Lace'S, who is w ell know n here, -will pass the sum ­m er a t P o rt M urray , N. J ., Instead of com ing to Ocean -Grove, as has been hid eutom for m any years. Ha liv es ' In N ew ark a n d 'fo rm e rly ow n­ed the M arine property on, tho ocean fro n t a t th e corner of Broadway.

4-----Mrs. Lewis B. Atulford. c ; P la l j -

fiold, is tho*new ow ner o f 45 Wobb avenue, tho W otiim pka House, to be conducted as an a ll-year house ot fu rn ished rooms, ivitli o r w ithou t housekeeping privileges., Tho. Wo- tum pkn is only a sh o r t d istance from the ocean.

■ . -----4-----Samuel D. G ilpin and fam ily ara'

again in possession o t te n t No. 4 W esley -Place, w hich lias been the ir sum m er homo for six years. Mr. Gil­pin is the ed ito r and p rop rie to r of the American Review of Shoes and L eather, published, in Philadelph ia, and he finds tim e also' to practice law.

— *— •M rs. F . H. Peterm an and. Miss

M ildred P eterm an , of L im erick Square, P a.,, paid 'their first v is it to Ocean Grove d u rin g tho twe'ok, stay ­ing w ith Mrs. H arvey B ucher a t Blde-a-Weo, 29 Broadway. Thoy were charm ed w ith tho place and promise to re tu rn a t a no-d istan t day.

41— -Mrs. J . P. Thompson, w ho 'com as

from .Plainfield, is now in tho hoard­ing business a t Ocean Grove, having recently purchased the cottago c.t 24'- E m bury avenue, w hich she calls K il­by Lodge. The Lodge w ill bo kept open tho year th rough , w ith board If desired or housekeeping p riv i­leges.

4——Mrs. C. A. Cox, form erly ow ner

ami proprieto r of th e New Philadel­phia on Ocean Pathw ay , has ju s t purchased a residence a t G erm an­town, P a„ m oving to th a t place re­cently front P h iladelph ia w ith h er d augh ter, M rs . Evelyn W iltbnrgor, and hor grandson, Constnnt W llt- borger, both of whom havo boon fre- quont v isito rs to Ocean Grovo In pnst years.

EAGLE EIRE LADDIES AREENTERTAINED BY WIVES

Tho meiubdi'B of tho Eagle truck company were -eutortd lncd by their wives liisl evening a t Curpulitor'a pa­vilion, Belmnr, In re tu rn for tho many courtesies show n tho ladles by the llronron du ring the p ast w inter. Tho festiv ities Included an autom o­bile lido and a launch sa il around Shark river, followed by n playlet, "T ickets, I’louse," nnd n supper,

The com m ittee responsible for tho urrnngcm cnis was composed of Mrs, Melvin Moore, Mrs. Ilussoil Hol­brook, Mrs. JoBopli H. R a lnenr,' Mrs. H arold C arpenter, Mrs., F rederick A, Sm ith, Airs. Lewis How land and Mrs. C harles Clevenger!

DeWitt Cafeteria Opens Tomorrow,'Newly refitted, thoroughly .equip­

ped nml b rough t up to date In every particu lar,, th e D eW itt ca fe te ria Is to he opened tom orrow a t d inner. Tho d in in g room Is spacious, lig h t and ulry, whllo tho service will bo found prom pt und sa tisfacto ry . Tho Do- W ltt Is nt 33 A tlan tic avonuo nnd F rederick Vooliur Is 'the proprietor.

Arrested Nisht Loiterer.On n disorderly charge Bonjam ln

W ray, colored, of A sbury P ark , waa finod fivo do llars and coats Wodncs day by Judge. Dodd, In tho .township pollco court. W ray waa irrcstcd Tuesday n ig h t In Ocean Grove by Officer Havous, who found him lo it­e rin g am ong 'tiho ten ts on Stockton avenue. ____ ' . ■

Reformed Churoli Synod.Y esterday th e one hundred and

fourteen th session of the ao n o ra l Synod o t tho Reformed C hurch in A m erica wna opened In A sbury P ark a t tho. G rand .Avenue Reform ed Church, The mootings w ill be con­tinued over tho Sabbath, closing Monday. . -

Sent To Jail For Want of Bail,T ow nship Police Recorder Dodd

on Monday com m uted Oulsoppl Go luck; to th o county Jail In defau lt of ball. G aiucia is charged by Ben­nie H. W hite , Chief of the N eptune pollco, w ith hav ing m aintalnod n disorderly house a t 1016 Springw ood avonuo,

Aviator Had Narrow Eaoapoi'Lieut. John St. Neil, av ia to r, had

a m iraoulous eacape from serious in ­ju ry Monday when his m achine foil 1,209 i^eet w hile doing a ta il spin nt tho DeLuxc field -I|i W est Dmil. 8ti Noll w as fo rtunato to get oft w ith outs and b ruises abou t 'the face nnd body. .

Coaoh Clark To leave.To become .offcctivo a t the close of

the p resen t schooi torm, th e resigna­tion of W ilbu r C lark, physical direc-r dor nnd coach, has boon -handed to the N eptune board of education. Mr. C lark h a s rnado.no plan's for tho fu- turo . - ■ ■

Tenor Young’s Daughter Weds,Mlse Alico B. Young, daughter of

Tnnor Johr; Young,- n taombor of tiia Criterion Quartette, t e ; married in New York- Olty last Saturday to Charles L. "Hunder, of New Durham, N. J; It is expected'the couple will >pend tho summer In Asbury Park.'

-I Officers .Of Dental Soqiely.Dr., G, LJ D. Tompkins, of Q-oean

Grove, waa recontly eloctcA treasur­er of the Coutsty Dents! iloclaty. Otb4r;- st)w omcors nre: Dr/ W. T. Robinson;' president;", Or,, W. .T, Truex/ vica presldent; Dr,-Fred ,T.- 'Newndn, se>rstary,'. i i ■!'.; ’"LJ-'b -V-,'.'-: r-'-'-LY:

I

i

The Home Bank for Home PeopleHome people, in justice to themselves, should open au account in the Home

Bank.Our experience is at your disposal. Our advice may be had for the asking.

All you have to do is to come in and talk it over with us.We want you to feel that this bank has a personal interest in .your fmancial

welfare, for upon your success depends in large measure our success. As you grow in business we grow.

It is no small part of our business to save money for yon.A safe deposit box is the proper place for your valuable papers. We can

rent you one at a small cost,

The Ocean Grove National BankAssociation Building:

Ocean Grove, N. J.N. J. TAYLOR . T. A. M ILLER.

, l5resident . C ashier

JA C O B ST IL ES , J . H. k AINEAK.

. . Vice President A ssistant C ashier

M em b er F e d e r a l R e s e r v e S yste m

“Adding Strength to Strength”XiI OFFICERSX 1IENRY C. WINSOR, Picsldont.| IT. A. WATSON, Vice P residen t

IitVING L. REED, Cnsliier E. M. MILLER, Asst. Cuslilcr II. EARL FARRY, Asst. Cashier.

DIRECTORS. T. FRANK APPLEBY WALTER F . CLAYTON GEORGE S. FERGUSON W. IiA RV EY 'JO N ES I. R. TAYLOR HARRY A. WATSON HENRY C. WINSOR

Capital and Surplus $300,000.00

Resources; $4,000,000

T r u s t F u n d sWe administer estates, execute trusts,

act as guardian for minors and care for the interests of absent clients.

An individual M A Y do it w ell; we . M UST do it well.

ASBURY PARK AND OCEAN GROVE BANKEstablished 1809.

nnmajiiinimniiiiiiiiiiiiiiifn.Y.miim..inmiiiiiiikiLit.i».ijrAfifaTmin»Htm2Taraw

• •M M N IIIIH M IM IX M IM IH aaX M aaiM iaaM IM IIIX IH IIM X M IM atl IM M M N II

Seacoast Trust CompanyAsbury Park, N. J.

What the Government is Doing lor YouWe have cause in every way to feel proud of our country, but we are

as a nation too little informed as to the activities and actual benefits of our Government. To remedy this situation locally we have secured the exclusive right to. distribute a series of attractively illustrated folders and booklets in which are given new and interesting facts about our Govern­ment and how we all share its beneficent influence.

We will gladly send one of this set each month to those who will re­quest it, and as a permanent container for this valuable information we will present a substantial brown and gold portfolio upon personal call’ at this institution. No obligation.

Member (federal R eserve System

•M H f W UXIM M X—

x A N a tio n a l B a n k w it h / A ll T r u s t P o w e r s| _ — . »-----------— —

5 T h e B a n K o f F r i e n d l y S e r v i c e•• The succcss and growth of a bank is built up directly on the advancementj and prosperity.of its customers. A s they are successful so is their bank,| There is need of the closest co-operation that both should prosper.1 • The officers, of the Merchants National Bank take a deep personal inter-| est in. the affairs^of each customer and endeavor to render a service that is bothJ friendly and helpful, and that counts for the advantage and success of the cus-S tomer as well as of the bank,• '".■■■ * / • ; .

j the merchants national Bank• .. " ■; * ' - - ’ ■ , ■ j - ■ ,*| . A s b u r y P a r k , N . J .• - .. . 1 ■ • . ' .' ■ • . • . . ■• ’ •TT’T— ^ . ‘ ,— W 1 . 1—:— ■ . ■ . . , . , . ,

1 ..J-I/ ' l l i e .Qnlir Natipiial;;Bank^ in Asbuiy-’ParkjJL./.

Page 6: i'fypM wmM - DigiFind-It · Sun Rises 5,30, Sets 8.28 Day’s lencth 14 Hours 58 Minutes, i'fypM.fill----- •-i V«l. XXVIII OCEAN GROVE, N. J., FRIDAY, JUNE 4, 1920 No; 2 THRILLING

'P A G E 8 XX m k O C EA ji' GROVE ,^m iE S .:

HOW EUROPE CAN ESGAFECOLLAPSE

We Must Aid by Extending Credits. Says Davison.

GRAVE MENACE TO U. S. A.

European Ruin Would Involve America—Starvation and

Disease. Rampant.D es Moines, la.—Spunking before the

General,Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church. Henry I*. I lav Ison, chairman .of the Board of Governors of tlto League of lteil Cross Societies,' sa id :

As chairman, of the. Convention of Hed Cross Societies, composed of.rep­resentatives of twenty-seven nations tha t' met recently In Geneva, I am cus­todian of authorita tive reports recoinl- Ing appalling conditions among mil­lions of people living in eastern Kh- rope.

One of the.most terrible tragedies In the history of the-human race Is being enacted within the.broad belt of torri-, tory lying -between the Baltic und the Black and Adriatic Seas.

This area Includes the new Baltic States—-I’olivnd. (>.eehd-Sl»)vakia, the Ukraine, A ustria.H ungary, Uounmnln,

. Montenegro,- Albania mid Serbia.'Tlur reports which come to us make

it clear that, .hi these war-rnvuged lands' cl v! I lien I i o n h a s broken down. D iseaso;; hereuVeiiieii t'* aml suffering a re ’p resent in practically every liousi*-'. hold, white food a n d ;clothing, are tn- sunieieat to make life' tolerable.

Meii, women ami. children are. dying by thousands, tihcl over vast once-civi­lized areas there are to .he foiinjl ue l-; thor hiedidtmI ai»pMat ie o s imr ni.ed iml skill sitllicitMit to cope-witb the d in n s / tall h g pi agues. ..' : . ‘

Wholesale .starvaiicn is ih ro n to n ed , in , Bolntid I Ids summer unless she can procure fond supplies in farad- quanti­t ie s / There are now approximately250.000 ete;es. of typhus In Vohimi snid In the an»a -netatpIim 1 1 »y \*olIsh I rpops. ’

W orst T yphus Epidem ic in History.Tills is already one of Die worst ty­

phus epidemics In the world's history. Tn Ballot n whole uevns m v' crippled and bu<lnc^s suspended. In same dis­tricts l.here is bill njie* doelor to cnHi150,01.111 pen pie.

In the t Undue, we n e re tntd. t.vphus and 11tilileu/.;i hove ulTeeied must of the populalii'ui.

A repurl fruit* Vienna, iluied IVbru- .«ry l “. sn id : *:*l‘l»eie m e rn Puli'* fur. three went;s. pe.ilh sjatks tliruuch ilie S treets'of Vienna und lakes unhinder­ed toll.

Budapest, aeeprdii.g In uur Infnrmn- lion, Is eat* vast-city of misery and suffering.. Th»* nuiiihcr of. iteuths la double,that of births. <lf tin* Idn.diiu children In the se'liuuls, 1 ill),non are de­pendent on public clinrMy. There an*150.000 workers idle.

Typhus nnd smallpox have Invaded the four countries composing (V.i‘cho- Slovakia, and there Is lack of modi- clues, soap titid physicians.

In Serbia typhus bus broken out again. ami there are hilt 1!UU physicians to miidsU.T to the needs op that entire count ry. . '

In Mnnlenogro, whore food Ift run­ning short,, there are but th e piiysl- clnhs for a pnpuhitb.m of <1511,000.

Am erica Overflowing W ith Riches.Ueturalag to the fu lle d Sinles a

few weeks ago with all these horrorH ringing In my. ours. 1 found myself once more in a hind whose grmmrluB were ovorllowlng, where health, und plenty nlmtimleii and when? life and activity nnd eager enterprise were In the full flood.

I linked myself: "W hat if I Ids plague, nnd famine' were here In tlx* grunt ter­ritory - lief ween the Atlantic -seaboard and the Mississippi valley, . which roughly parallels ilio extent of these ravaged ebuniries and that (15.000,000. of our own people .condemned to Idle: ness by lack of raw tnaterhil . nrnl whose Helds had been devastuled by Invasion and rapine were racked by starvation and pest Hence and - If wo hnd lifted up our voices nnd Invoked the attention of om* brothers In hap­pier Europe to iiiii' own deep inlserlru nnd our cries laid fallen oa deaf ears, would we not In our despair exclaim against their heartlessness!”

Only Three Ways to Help Europe.There are only three ways by which

these stricken lands can secure sup­plies from .the outside world. One Is l>y payment, o n e 'b y credit, ataj the third is by exchange of commodities. If these peoples..tried;'to buy materials und supplies in America nt Die present m arket Value o f 'th e ir currencies Aus­tria would have to pay forty Dines the original cost. (Jernamy thirteen times, Greece Just double, Ozeclib-Slov'nkln fourteen times nnd Poland fifty times. These figures are otlbial and. an; a true Index of the economic plight of these countries.- I t Is clear, therefore, that they can­

not give us gold for the things they must have, nor Turn* they either prod­ucts or securities to offer in return for credit. If only they could obtain raw m aterial which these bile millions of theirs could convert into manufactured products they would have something to tender’the world In return for Its raw

. material,* food nnd medicine. But ft they have neither money lior credit fidw are they to take this first great step towards redemption

One-half the. world may not eat • , while the other half starves. How

long do you believe the plague of ty­phus that |s taking n hideous • death toll in Esthonln and Poland nnd the

> Ukraine nnd enffng along the fringes • of Germany nnd. Czoelio-Slovnkln will

0 confine Itself fn these rerpote lands? / v ”, Only Inst' SnPininv ottr health.com-

mlasloner of New York, Dr. Copeland, sailed for the other side just to.racas- ure the danger and take precaution against such an invasion.

This is one menace at our threshold. Tho other, more threatening, more ter­rible, Is iho menace of the world’s ill will. Wo can afford to die, but to be despised forever as n greedy and pbar-, isaical nation Is n fate that we must not incur.

The French government has many serious problems to solve, but the French peasant Is working and the French art!sail, while still sadly in iuhm.1 of. raiv m aterials, lias not lost his habit of industry and thrift. The most encouraging fact about, France today is thitt ber people are alive to the se­riousness o f France’s problem, anil tbpy are golttg forward bravely to solve th a t.problem. /

Italy, despite ber g reat shortage of raw m a teria l,. Is 1 noking forward and not backward. Italy can be • relied upon to do her part 1.

Knghmd Is meellag* the problems of reconstructlot; just as those who knew her past.should have expected her to meet them!

Plan to Aid Central Europe.It Is not for me perhaps to give In

detail n formula Tor solution o f the world’s ills, hut as I have, been asked tmmy titties, “W hat would you do?” I am glad to give my own answer.

Accordingly,. I would ask :1 / T lm t ( ' on gross immediately pass

it hill appropriating a sum not t o ex- coed $500,000,000 .for tho use o f . Cen­tra l and Eastern ICiiroptV ..

2. T hat Congress cull upon the Pres­ident . tp u'ppblnt; a nonpolitical com- inisslon of th re e . Americans, dlstln- gut.shed for their character and exec­utive ability and commanding the .re­spect of tho A aiericah’ people. .Such a cotninlssion should Include' men of they type o f ''.'General lVrshlngi Mr, Ilpover o r e.v-Feci^'tary I wouldlrivi*st iliat cotmnlsHlon with cdipplete

' power. " / . : ." / 'y ■' d. I would ;have th e commission In­

st rue.tod' to proceed a t once, uce<unpu- nied by-, proper p»*rsoiitu‘l; to survey conditions in Central and iCn.stern Ku- fopi* ami t hen, act for t he rest oration, of those; countries under such condl- .tbins aiidupon such-.ternis as the chin*' inlssjpn itself m ay deeiile to he p rac ti­cable and effect lye. ■ Among the con­ditions should ho .provided that there should In? tio local Interference with the free and unirammcled exercise b.v the commission of its dWh prerogative of allocating niaIcrlals. thtvcrniiienl.al politics ‘should he elim inated; unrea­sonable a n d p re ju d ic ia l harriers he-' tween the various couiil.ries should be nanoved,' and.such suhsiantial guaran­tees jih may he n.va.Iiahh* slnudd he ex­acted ,lh onlei1* that :the conditions Int- poseil should..he fUjJUIed. / '*-

•I. As. to .Ihiniicinl = terms, I sjiotild nuVUe. thetu liberal. T wiUihl charge n<? interest for the lirst three years; for the next three years, .d per cent,-with provision that such Interest .ndgijj he funded .If the economic t^mdltion.s of ■th.e country wi*re tint npiirpnclditg nor­mal, o r i f I is excd.iaago.'ciMtd j | hois were sp adverse as-, jo maki* payment an- flujy .hurdehsonij*; 1. should nitike, t lie m aturity of • tlie dhligatipri 15 ' years from . Its date, ami I should; have no dimiit as t o l l s tihiii paytneiltr /5 ; Imiiiedlntel.v the plan was adopt­ed T would, have our government in­vite other governments in a position to assist, to participate In' the under? inking. ;

(». To set forth, cwnpleloly my opin­ion. I should add that in. Mid final In­struct ions the American people, through their government,; should say to t lie comuvlsslen:

• / ‘Wo want you' to go.and do th is job In such a iiiirnner nH,.afte r study, you think It should he done. This Is no ordinary umlertnkIng.' The Aui'erlcan people trust you to see th a t It )s done

■ rlghl/j ' .y / ■;:: J would tilsosuy to the commission:’ “ Dse so much of this money ns Is need(*d.” .I’erspnally, I am confident that with the assistance and co-opcrn- tlon. which would come from o titer parts of .tlie ,worhl the ,sh in of $500.-’ (Kit).000 from tho , United State's would

' lie more than enough to s ta rt these countries on their way to self support

-rind tin* restoration of normal condi­tions. v .

The whole plan, of ’course, Involves liiany practical considerations/ the most serious of whlcii Is that of ob­taining the money, wlielher by Issuing additional U herly lionds, an inci;casu In. the thiullng (leht or by taxation. But I llilnk wn. could properly say to the tniasiiry detuirtm enf: • •/ “ We know how serious your flnnn-, clal proldeuis are ; we know..tlio dllll cuMIch: wliich are liiiniedhitely con-

' frpnling yoi>; we know the impdrtnncu oftle llalloii. aijfl w(» kliow Dmt the gov- ciriinient imist .ecdiioiriize rind tha t In­dividuals must economi/.o, but- We, also know that tin*, Ajiierlcan giiveni.mont advanced J? 10,000,1)<j(Mj(j0 to Its a I lies t o a tf a In vjclbry a ltd ponce, < lertaln- Jy it Is worllf malcliig the addlfional ndvuhe(\ in-order to reailze the. peace for which we have already strfiggled, for nqDiIng Is more cerlairF than that until honniil comlltipns urn lestored'fp Milro|a* t here can be no pencu.” .;

.Above all JhlngH, l.-would say that whalever action • Is taken should be taken Immediately; Tlie crisis Is - ho acut e- that \ lie sit nation do/s. not ad­m it of delay, except with the possibili­ty of cpJikcfpiunceH -one ha rdly da re«

’ conteinpjate,: ;Tiio sit nation tha t I have spread out'

here Is fa r beyond'.the scopc o f Indl vldiini charity. Only bv the action of governments; diir own pnd the others whose resources enable them to co-op­erate, can aid be giver) In sufllclent volume. I !a rn u Iso con Aden t flint our action would be followed by the gov­ernm ents of (Jrent Britain, of HoIInnd, o f , ;thf* Srnndlnnvlnn cbuntrles, of

.Spain and Japan, and th a t France and Belgium nn/1 Italy/ notwUhstrindlng oil of tliolr losses, would help to the best o f their ability. .

TOOK AHEAD—GET GOOD IDEAS—

WORK HARD.”How H. B. Thayer, President of the

American Telephone and Telegraph Company, became by his own efforts one of the biggest executives In the industrial, world. — ‘‘Interest" the real touchstone of success.

The ,clianees: arc tlmt If ninety per cent, of thu men who have been .reallys u c c e s s f u l ,—wlielher In inaUIng liiiaipj' or In reachlau a 'poslllon o t d j s i i l t y

nnd power,—were askiiil how they.suc­ceeded -111 cllinhlnp lo tlic top, their answer would lie, "Perseverance, hard wprk, and concentration,"

The "olllce liny lo president" story al­ways is liiterestlns and the story of Ilie career of II. 11. Thayer, president of the Am erican' Telephone & w'ele- ftrupli Cenipnny, as told in Forties Mnpazlne, adds nnnther to tho series.

Mr. 'Thayer for years has lind n rep- titxtlon for "ernchiag luiril nuts," as Ilie late Theodore N. Vail expressed It.

No m atter what prohlein was put to him, .'dr., Thayer, fotiiid some, way of *«ivltip .It. "NaiiirnI)y," said Mr..Vail, “ my laierest was aroused In such, a mail and I lmve tyalclieri him and worked 'with him ever since. ■ He can get thlups done belter limn novone 1

H. B. THAYER’.'

nave ever iissociutcd wlih. Ami, a fte r all, Isn't this the hfphest ■ tirliml'o, that 111# man in any oritanlzallou can win?"

Quiet, persistent, and impressive,— ' hut a n t . dlsnpreeahly nppresslve, Mr, Thayer fiersevcn'd until lie hreanie one of the hlppest exei'titives Iti the Indus- tt'hii or tillilly world'.' '.tliiee lie stiirts a tlilnp ho never plves tip. lie Is cool, elear-heailcd, very direct, mil elTuslvo. He lias ail exlrnonllintry faeulty for I'oneeiili'allnx on whatever In* has or< hand, whelliei' It he work or play. A IIiIiik wtirlll (hilliit.Ul all, lie eonshlerB worlli ilolrn: well.

Connects with. W estern ElectricAltlimitrh he went In and'.

Brnilliatcd lie had Ho aiahltion to enter liny of tile professions: he wiitiled to pet tilth litisjiless. He seeured a plneo on the railroad a t Ihdlows l'nlls, Verrnont, hut oillre w o r k . In li smatt Vermont pined offered little opportu­nity for deyeloiiment or iidvnaeemeiit, so he got Tn loileh with, a Ver­monter. W ho had ninile Ids lhnrk In (Tileasn, with the result ItmI he was offered, and RUidty accepted, u hctsln- ner's. joh 111 the olllee ef the Western Kleeirle f'ompnny, mnnnfueturers of nppiiratus far the Ilel! .Telephone peo­ple, •

Mr. -TIm.ver's first work was tmiklUK out sliipplnuTlekels mid Inilexhip i 'n p y hooks. A 111 lie Inter he was promoted to nmltlnft oat hills. Kven thus early, lie demeiislrilled llmf he was iisIiik his head as well as Ills hands.

“ We were always KetlliiK iiiieslldiis,'' he remarked reialnlsecnily, "as to wheWier we had tli?s or Hint In stocif. This often neeessllatod .Iminie.vs of discovery lo Hie slock mom,, Involving ellmlilna over and tumhllim over hur- rels and Jinxes, ellltlhliip up to Had out" the eonlen ls 'o f shelves, et eelera. It struck me Him II would he n aood plan to lmve a hook showlna al ii planeo cxaelly how many artleles of all differ-: cut kinds wo had In stock. As snoti ns I meiillnaed Ilie idea, I was I old Hint I emild no ahead and pel up such a hook."

And so it was UtrhMjiltoiir Mr. T h ay e r's ’entire career. To him a .loll was no'treadm ill to lie paced nieehnn- tehtly day gfler day. It was ilie iueiins h.v which lie meant to [aoLwess, and all Ills powers .won I Into nniklnK a siieeess of Ids ttw kj In every joh lie had, Ida Inlttntlve was noticed find earned pro­motion afte r promotion for him. Not satisfied with merely imndllaii office work, lie made n point of pell Inc Into tho factory frequently and leainlnc nil about the making of the goods he was ■writing n h o u t..

The result.of his Interest In Ids work' whs that one dny he wris told to get ready to go to New York ns manager of the branch of the Weetern Electric there. At This flme he was only twen- ♦r-flve years of age; among the 200

employees In New T drk many w ere twice his age. • .

Accustomed though he w as to look­ing ahead, Mr. Tlinyer dld no t a t once realize the magnitude of the opportu­nity opened up Ity Ills transfer to New Vork. In a comparatively short,time! Mr. Thayer's branch was selling more than the Chicago house.

Remarkable Growth The W cslern E lectric Company,

which Mr. Thayer w as thus helping to ■ huild up so soundly and rapidly, vvns •founded hefore the telephone was in­vented.

Indeed, It w as the. country’s largest mrtmifnctmVr of things eiectrlca! be­fore Hell exhibited his “ta lk ing . toy“ nt the Centennial Exposition a t I'll 11 n- delpliln In 1S7C. Not only had It fur- nlshed supplies for the. telegraph com- panles, hut It had very-early begun to open tip a modest export business. When Mr, Tlmyer tool; hold In New York lie found tlm t Ills company..was hound by contract' to sell telephone apparatus only to Hell companies, luit that the Hell companies were free to buy from anybody they chose. ' He accordingly directed; his attention to cnltlvntlng Intiinnlo relations with the'- Hcll people, nnd Ills ability not merely to furnish the tilings ordered hut to make suggestions tn them for Improve- m eats greatly strengthened the rela­tions nnd Increased the business, Prom "00, the New Vork force-first reiiched the 1,000 mark mid then more, passing llio parent plant., In' 1002 Mr. Thayer w as promoted to the position o f vice-president. A fetv years Inter lie assumed the duties of general mil linger am! W hen, In 1008, President Horton retired! there was only one man considered for the presi­dency. •

Meanwhile, Mr. Vnll, who lind le ft the Hell Telephone In 1R07, n flet bav­in, been Hie main factor In setting It oti its feet; was again cnniimimU'ered by Ilie directors oh finding themselves beset with dlllleiiltles 111 the panic year of 1007. It did net take this cleiir- e.ved veteran long to size rfp wlio whs who: in' 1000 Sir. .Vnll iinnoxed Stiy Tlmyer ns vice-president, of Hie Amerl- cii ii Telepltohe & Thlegrniili Coinpiiny.

Hut when the! Clayton net was pnssed, lii 101.1, decreeing-.Hint no of- ilcer or any carrie r could lie tin otileer or loleresled In any supply cotnpuiiy,It was derided (hat Sir. Thnver could reader Ilie' most valuable services 111

.the niiiiitifiicliirlng end of ilie busi­ness: :s« he again look up the presi­dency of Western Electric,

Here Mr, The,ver again.m ade liislory. To-day Ilie company has faelorles and liraiielios In every liiiporlnii! roiiniry Ihrniighoul. Ilie world. Allhough very elosei.v eoimeeied w llh Hie (otophone, as It hod always boon. W estern Elee- Irle has hullt up a alguiilie luislilessTn

: n 11 kinds of eleelrte supplies h n lh a f hniiie aiiil nhroad. Indeed, its sales to oilier eompaiiles and to tIn* piildle now r t least equal the Imslaoss done wltli Ilie Hell Telephone.Coiupaiiles. West* el'll Eleelrle’s nppni'iitiis bus heconio slumlord nil over the earth'. Its sales last year exceeded $1:11,000,OIK),

In .Time, in 1 SI, Mr. Vall luimlnnted Mr., Tlinyer hs his successor to the presidency pf thp Amcricim Telephone

'i'elrgraph Cciiiipmiy, Mr. Villi' tio- eoniliig elinlrman ol’ th e 1 hoard.

No Royal Road to SuccessMr, Thayer's Ideas on how to

achieve success vary considerably from those of tho average man, In tha t he places no stress upon snlnry or sav­ing. Wlmt he does say Is th is :

"D on't think of yourself nt nil. Don’t vaste an. hour of your time scheming or planning to get promo­tion, Don't worry iiimut how-big liti Increase In .your snlnry you. can coii-

' trlyo to get—don't let youf. mind dwell on money nt nil If you can help I f

"Throw yourself, bods', soul, and' spirit, Into w hatever you a re doing. Become so Interested and so engrossed In your tasks th a t you have neither tim e,'no r inclination to think about yourself or your prospects or the possi­bility of n 'r a is e ’.”

Mr, Thayer’s chief characteristics^ are his resourcefulness, his ingenuity. Ills Industry, Ids modesty, his socia­bility. Achievement, not money, should ho the guiding stnr.of.'the "man entering the business world. T lm t ac­complished, money will follow,

"A man can live 'decently on a small am ount of inoiio.v, The trouble with tn<S*t people, however, is th a t they are anxious to;put up a bluff that they are richer than they are. There's noth­ing - but foolishness, discontent, anil trouble Ih tills way of living.

" I t’s Uiciis Unit count most. When a man read ies the executive stage he- slioiilil not lilt himself become so clut­tered up with detnlfs that he has no tim e to think out new plans or policies or Improvements.

Each Man Finds H |s Level.‘‘Most men when they enter a bu sh ,

ness, particularly n largo > business, feel discouraged over the slow rate of progress they make for a -y ear or two or longer. They are Inclined to get ft inui tbolr lieuds tlmt It doesn't m atter very much whether they do their work better tlmn the other fellow or not, that everybody is tronted pretty much the same, the industrious felloiy faring no bettor than the fellow 'who (ioi ftn’t exert lilnisetf to do his b es t

"Now, If there’s one thing life has taught-me It is tlm t this way of think­ing !(• id! wrong. Sooner or Inter each man finds Ids level, ju st ns w ater finds Its level. The man of superior merit r is e s ; the slacker slides backwards.

"Make the most of your Job, what­ever It Is," nnd your Job in time will mnke the most of you,—the most of which you arc ' capable.”

Mr. Thayer’s rlso 'w as duo largely to the fact that he took so grept .an lit-' te re s t.ln his work, realizing tlmt .he w as fitting himself for duties; th a t would bring both greater compensa­tion and greater reputatlon.-vTlie'Tele­phone Review; N, x . ;; , ' ; . ; ; - : n ' : : V

'* ftm mUM 'In ■- M il# , m f

Tite

Mercantile Section of

is now

the Commercial

grrr A train of circumstances has ■ brought about thfs result,

and the Asbury Park Board -w of Trade[pledges the public

that every efforttwfll bef made to maintain this position.1

Lumber HardwarePaints, Plumbers’ Supplies

Neponset WaU Board32 a n d 48 I n c h e s w id e , GO to 102 In c h e s lu n g

LEWIS LUMBER GO.U5 South Main S treet

A sbury P a rk , N. J.M i l l on P rc m la ra O ranch Y a rd . S o r in g L ak e , N e w J e rs e y

ANDREW T. VAN CLEVE Contracting Engineer

High and Low Pressure S team Installations S an ita ry P lum bing and House H eating

C o n fa ra c ltn a I n A ll B r a n c h e s o t P ip in g a n d P o w e r W o r k

108 South Main Street, Ocean GroveT e le p h o n e c o n n e c t io n

R epairing P rom ptly A ttended To

P. O. Box 3- O cean Grove, Ni J,

SILAS W. BARTONC arpenter

and BuilderResidence; 91C orlies A ve . W est Grove, i \ . J.-

Stiles’ Express and Stage Lineis the oldest established line in Asbury Park and Ocean Grove, Special facilities for the , prompt and careful handling of , all kinds of Furniture, Baggage, Pianos, Boilers and Safes

Large Anlo Moving Van for Long Distance Moving ' o r n o e s '

♦7 C o r l la e f iv e , . W e e t Q ro vo i M a in S t., OppoO lto A aeoct- l lo n O ffic e , O c o a ii C ro v o i 226 M a in h t , a n d R a i l r o a d e ta t lo n ,/ V e b u r y P a rk .J A C O B S T IL B O , P r o p r ie t o r

T e le p h o n e 2208 R . C . M . S c h a d l

Schadt’s Fish MarketFish, Oysfers, Clams

Soft Shell Crabs, Crab Meat, LobstersS p e c i a l B a l t s t o B o l d s o u d 5 f ? s la n ia n 1 s

• >Jlve U s a T r i a l a n d J a d g e f a r Y o p i s e t l'■' '■ ■- I .. S- 47; OlinfStreeti opposite rirehome, Qpean GroyeV;;

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T H E OCEAN ' GROVE TIMESFRIDAY, JU N E 4, 1920 P A O B S E V E N

LEGAL NOTICES '.

& CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY.OUR FUTURE SONG LEADERS

To P e te r F. B u rn s : 'By v ir tu e of an o rder o f th e

C ourt of Chancery of New Jersey, m ade on th e day of th e d a te hereof,

.in a certa in cause w herein M argaret J. B urns is petitioner, and you are defendant, you a re requ ired to ap­pear and answ er petitio n er’s pe tition on or before th e 15th day of Ju ly , next; or, in default thereof,' sucii ile: cree w ill be taken against you as the Chancellor glial! th in k equ itab le and- Just. .. . . ,

The object of said su it is to ob­ta in a .decree o f divorce, dissolving the m arriage betw een you and the said petitioner.

Dated May, 14, 1920.' PATTERSON .& RHO.UE, :

Solicitors of P etitio n er, P .: 0 . ad­dress, 701 M attison avenue, A sbury P ark , - N .J . 21-25

This announcement is to thank our many regular patrons for a continuance oi their cus­tom and to advise them , and also prospective patrons, of the enlargement of our Ocean Grove branch,.

The increased space w ill help greatly in serving our rab­idly growing trade.

As heretofore, the quality of our various baking products w ill be maintained at the high­est standard.

w aving JIit» a rm s To m u l frn Is rhthfir inadcMjujitt;;: To ho n good song .roqnfTosevery, oaiii’o of good will, joy, ami •*n*. tliuslasm fhnL r«n ho exrprossofl (u rliytlun of motion nn<l O lm nnof hinn-

Tho viporhtors who hnvo t.niinerl for soveral \vt»oks liav e ' riilight tlio spirit, wiifdi, otjW Ion rued, Jiis iy o n rtis for “slngjiig crowds.” , The ncconi- pnnlst, too. Is recruited from Micy ranks, mid is the ofthe Jea’der. • ..

; W henever the o p era to rs g a th e r to-, ge th e r a t an y occasion, large; or sm all, you will see tripp ing up to th e rescue, one o f tJieso S'otig I.endlng g irls and an

•accoinpanist. »ko m ore ‘‘o f f - k e y n o in ore up roar caused by one group in the re a r singing Largo, w hile th e con- .ter^sectld ii slugs 'Afddorafo, nnd ’tlie fro n t i’rosto. - . ;j The Xcuv York Telephone Conipaiiy

Community .Singing Class hitls f a ir ; to be so popular (hat Its scope -win. prob­ably he extended. Tlio orlghmtor of this movement, .Miss M. p. Spencer, supervisor, of employment, certainly, .has Its hiterosf nt heart,, find will ad­

vise and encourage any who have hay Inclination to express themselves InSljllg.

Up to the present time the Class Ims Jnehidhd repn-stmtatlvos frnin tlio ex­changes In Lower M anhattan, N. Y. C„ nnd a few in lirooklyn. Those with n rent Inve of music and singing who have signified the desire to lie num­bered nmong the pupils are chosen to .represent their, exchanges, .

Who enn vie with the rollicking. Joy­ous spirit of n: large group of girls when they burst forth with,

“Ja ila, Jn dn,■In da, Jada, Jing, Jlng, .Ting."

or“X’se got n gal, nnd you got none,

L’il Liza Jmic.”,Tlio'Glass .Is over. Von hurry home,

your fhet Iitu'dly touching the ground,- your head In the clouds, nnd your lips hui'mntng the Inst refrain of the sweet melody."Ju st a song nt twilight, wiien.1 the

. lights nre low. , .•And. the dickering, shadows softly , eoino and go.”

—Tlie Tclcphono Review, X. V.

"Gome, girls, V now all together— Sing I” . - ’ .“.There are smiles tha t make tis happy, There arc smiles th a t make us hluo.”

“If nny one Is under, the erroneous Impression that it js.a simple m atter, to lend a crowd of pevsoiis singing anytune whatever, ju st try It." That is wliat J . L. T urner' stiys In ' flic New York Telephone Company Community Singing Class, which meets a t 105 Broadway every Wednesday and Fri­day evening.—nnd a very new-fashion­ed and delightful class It Is,.too,.There tlio persoii wild believes It Is easy to be the Lender -marches bravely to the front and discovers thu t ju st henting "one, two, three, four” hy frantically

If every house in town had in it a. lavatory made by T he T ren­ton Potteries. Company,, every property in town would be w orth .more money iri dollars and cents, would have greater selling value;- and would appeal .to people who rent. T h e

Trenton Potteries Company

3 ore mhde In mnny deslRns—to linr-\ §| monizcwith surroundings. They nro p . made of vitreous china, white all tho: H way through, . cannot, rust, never ' H' chanKC color, never lose the nUrnc- g ., tive finish that is a delight to every § woman. •3 - Their, ocpearancft will plenuo you *gg- £rently» Their convenience' Will 3 please you more. Come in and sepS how nice they are . .

Thomas AnglesP lu m b e r , S h e e t I ro n a n d

M e ta l W o rk e r31 M A IN d V B N l I B

O O B A N G R O V fi

T elephone 265-it.

47 Pilgrim Pathway, Ocean Grove

AMERICANISM

TO MAKE PAJAMAS Clean, steady employment at good w ages, with a forty (40) per cent, bonus added to each pay and a Christmas bonus besides. We pay carfare if you live out of town.VALCO MANUFACTURING CO.

MAIH PLANT AT FIRST AVENUE AND LANGFORD STREET, ASBURY PARK ANNEX AT 422 MAIN STREET

Pure M anufactured and N atura l

F rank O. T. W ilsonOffice:

NO. 108 HECK AVENUE , OCEAN GROVE

D eliveries are niade daily. Twice on Saturday.

Order by postal card o r telephone.Special a tten tio n to the' sm all

trad e th is season, w hich w ill . be served prom ptly as heretofore.

B ills collected weekly. •Telephone UO'K.

PATTEN BINEEven through the war period we tried to give the best

value for every cent you laid out, and we feel tha we have acomplished it. •

Now, during the reconstruction days we are '.making the Same effort to give our customers the greatest value in mer­chandise that is possible. Shop here and prove it.

SNYDER & ROBINST e ie p b o n e 21 |8

Pa i n t Main Street and Lake Avenue h a r d w a r eUSHERS ASBURY PARK . U U S l U l t S

NEW YORK AND LONG BRANCH STEAMBOAT COMPANY ' .

Subject to change w ith o u t notice.Baily -;-

Leave New Y ork .W est T w elfth St., N ’. R ., 2 p. m. B a tte ry L anding, 2.30 p. m.

Leave Long B ranch fo r New York: •Rockwell Avenue, 6.50 a . m . ' P leasu re Bay 7 a . m .A r. ’Segbrigiit, abbu t 7.30 a . m. : A r. H ighlands, abo u t 8 a. m.

No fre ig h t received a t B a tte ry . No fre ig h t received Sundays o r holidays.]

L ast car w hich connects ' .witli: boats for. New York leaves Cooknmn avenue and M ain stree t; Asbury P ark , ...one hour, before steam er- tim e a t P leasu re Bay,FARE FROM ASBURY PARK TO

N£W YORK $1.08 .

Seacoast ElectricSuooessor to F . S. M orris

ELECTHICAL COITTHACTOElectrical Fixtures a>nd Electrical Supplies D o es Y o u r P l u m b in g

N e e d , A tte tr t ion ; ?•-.I t la alw ays best to catch a l e a k ';

Dr a p lu m b er ''rep a ir, w hen I t firs t •!'$!, s ta rts , because' its tendency I t g row 'w orse w ith negloot, • -k'.V

’’Home-enado’. re p a irs a re sh if ts a t .b e s t , a n d aro th e cosO lest in th e long, ru i t—place your ln g prpblejnb on o \a we w ill 'solve '/th em ip ro m p tly / 'i-aa ijE sa tls lao torlly . - * ,

WILLIAM YOU MGPLUMBER

frank BuckFin MetalworkerL 1 2 0 I F irst Avenue ' ,

. i l W f i i r y P a r k -

I t o v e e q i i d R a n O o e R e p d l r e A ; W a r m f t l r H e o O n G Q > . !

cm do r e , O u ttoro , , , >P d n e o u u f i „ TR

i s

CENTENNIAL SHOE REPAIRING CO.

., At Your,-.Service; \Vork Done. Wliilo Yon Wait - .

„ Also 8hoe Shine Parlor. - ; Ml DOMilBtH) ;& .0. ^ 5 N E |^ ^

Avenue." O c k n Grove

v Palm Decorations - f lo r a l ,D e s ig n s ' 1'

> DE'AH T H O M PH O N *,0.ceonGroy6.-''::,r..':E a v ^

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v

v-j?r'V't,v\

p a g e e i g h t

w ® p l #, M m 0 ' \ ' " '"•X■•■•; ••-, ;,V.-,".',:'s'jt.;,‘ !''i.-. ’.'

T H E ; 'OCEAN GROVE . TIMESm ernrnm *-, m s m m m

' " r ' i . . • ' ' _•■ , ' 1 , , ' \ / i

PUPILS PLAN VISITS TOGAME AND I7SH SOURCES

of the CountyMarlboro— Tlie

F reehold road has as to construction.

H ighlands— A clock a s a m em ori­al for tho P. 0. S. A. w ill be placed

. in the M ethodist church ‘tow er.■ Freehold — B uild ing operations

h a v e b e e n s ta rted a t, the ru g m illw here an addition is being erected for looms. ’ / ■. .” /' F reehold— W ord h as been receiv­ed from John Neumeyer, s ta tin g t h a t h e arrived safely a t Southam p­ton, England.- ...

F r e e h o l d — Mrs. W aite r G. B arber, of B ennett s treet, recen tly sa iled onth e Caronia, -for E ng land , w here s h e w ill v isit relatives.

"Glendola— Tlie N athan M orris fa rm a t -Glendola w as sold recently through H all & L am bert 'to lsa ac V anD illen, a re tire d grocer of P as­saic. • . -

K eyport— C. Leon G arrison, h as recovered h is autom obile, stolen some n ig h ts ago from in fro n t of a

■ local theater. I t was located In a N ew ark garage.

F reehold — A nnouncem ent has been made of the engagem ent orMiss F lorence Clay, of P h iladelph ia , form erly of F reehold, to W alte r Ash­m ore ,‘of P h iladelph ia .

P o r t M onmouth— -Miss L illian C. H endrickson has been chosen secre­ta r y of h er class of 300 m em bers in th e RnndolplHMaoon College for W omen a t L ynchburg. Va.

K eyport— Two persons took th e exam ination held for e lerk-enrrier of the local post office,, these being H arry Disbrow and E v ere tt Cokclet. R e tu rn s have no t as y e t been re-.

. ceived.

F reehold— 'The officers o f th e F irs t N ational Bank have been in structcu by the board of d irec to rs to open a sav ings departm ent, and they expect to have it iii. operation on or before

, duly, first.

Adelpltla— Miss K etn M, ^*a d s®' dau g h te r of Mr. and Mrs. W. l’_ Madge, and Johiii P.. P hillips, Of E lizabeth , were m arried la s t Sunday in th is place a t the home of the b rid e’s parents.

ila ta w a n — T. F ra n k Appleby, of A sbury P ark . R epublican candidate for the Congressional nom ination, on Thursday, evening of las t week spoke a t It"m eeting of tlie M ataw an R epublican Club.

V illa P a rk —-Tile foundation for- tlie new Villa P a rk chapel lo com­pleted and speci.llcations- for the su p e rs tru c tu re -are in the hands of con trac to rs for bids. The eontrac^ w ill probably be aw arded .in n tew days. . ••

S e a G irt— On the afternoon andevening of Saturday , Ju n e 12,. a Ja panese garden ' p a rty w ill he held a t th e residence of. Jam es B arber on

‘ T ren ton Boulevard, Sea G irt, for the benefit of the organ fund of St. U rie l’s church.

A von The' local a u th o ritie s havec o n tra c te d fo r a tw e n ty -fo o t g ra n i te s h a f t to be e rec ted ill th e p a rk a t th e r a ilro a d s ta t io n a s a m e m o ria l to t l ie lo ca l m en w ho to o k p a r t in tlie l a t e w a r . f t is to c o s t 43 ,500 anil w ill b e fin ished In S ep tem ber.

Englislvtowifi— New officers of the M issionary Society a re : P resident,Mrs. Job'll A. S tu lts; -first, vice presi­den t, Mrs. W. E. A nderson; second vice president, M rs. W alte r T. H aw ­th o rn e ; secre tary , Mrs. C harles T. W oodward;., trea 'surer, Mrs, Charles R E nglish : se c re ta ry of lite ra tu re , Mrs. George Di .VanDonherp, . .. . ....

Oceanic— Mr. and Mrs., Ja lnes E n ­r ig h t have announced -the engage­m en t of th e ir daugh ter. Miss Mary Lee E n rig h t, to W ilfred E ldreil. son of Mr. and Mrs. ‘ W illiam E ldred, ot San Diego, C alifornia . Mr. E ldred is a g rad u a te of H arvard , and is con nected w ith th e-U n ited S tate Grain corporation in New York and Wash-, ington.

Several schools p lann ing educa­tional tr ip s fo r pup ils a i th e end of the term are a rra n g in g for vislta to two S ta te in stitu tio n s ot .unusual In­terest— th e S tate F ish H atchery , a t H ackettstow n, and th e S ta te Game Karin, a t F o rk e d ", R iver: A t both places there is m uch to in terest the young people and the S tate F ish .a iia Game Commission has assured tnen i a h earty welcome.

This . Is th e hatch ing season a t both establishm ents. A t H acketts­tow n, m illions of fish are being hatched every week. One of tho most In te res tin g spots Is the nursery , which corresponds to the brooder th a t hovers m otheless chicks a t a pou ltry farm . Ju s t as the baby chick needs no m other hen to teach i t to sc ra tch for. a living, the baby, tro u t requires no ' advice from par­e n t-fish in seeking .its livelihood. T rue to in stin c t, tiny tro u t fry, only a few days old, try to leap the m in ia­tu re falls a t the . end of each sm all tan k . I n ’th e outdoor ponds, feed tim e show s th a t th e appetite o f the tro u t increases w ith Its age. There are scores of ponds, every one hold­ing som ething o f in te re s t fo r v is it­ors, young or old. The hatchery is se t in one of the m ost picturesque landscapes in the . Schooley m oun­ta in section.. A t Forked R iver, th e v isitor now finds thousands of baby pheasants. In the deer parks nre num erous spot­ted faw ns— if he is lucky enough to see them before they see him. Baby bunnies in the rabb it pens; tin y quail chicks and young wild tu rkeys a re sothe of the o ther members of the game farm population a t th is season.

Enirafrement Announces.The engagem ent o f . Miss M iriam

hi. Johnson and H ugh O. Tpmpklns, both of Ocean Grove, is announced Miss Johnson Is th e d a u g h te r’ of Mr. and Mrs.; Josoph P . Johnson , 78 Lake avenue, and Mr. Tom pkins la the son of Dr. and M rs. G. L. D. Tompkins, 115 M t. H erm on W ay.

FRSnAY, JUNE 4,, 1920.

Watch For1 Milo Griffin,R e tir in g as secre ta ry of W ashing­

ton Are com pany a f te r a term , of tw enty years, MHO C. Grlffln was presented la s t n ig h t -with a gold w atch approp ria te ly inscribed. S tan ­ley Leland succeeds Mr, Grlffln as secre ta ry of th e com pany. ;/

New Express On Central.T he C entral ra ilroad has placed in

serv ice a sem i-seashore, express tra in , leav ing New Y ork daily a t o’clock p, m.y a r r iv in g a t th e local s ta tio n a t S.45. . •

OCEAN GROVE BOARDW ALKA fternoon a t 3.00 All acuta 20c.

E ven ing a t 7.00 an d 9.00 Ail sea ts 25c. Children 20c.

P rices in clu d e w a r tax

W EEK OF JU N E 8MONDAY

MARGARITA FISH ER in ‘.‘T he H ellion .”

CLOSE OP SCHOOL TERMIS SET FOR NEXT. WEEK I

TUESDAY TOM -MOORE

in “Duds.”

Commencement exerptsee of the g ram m ar d epartm en t of the Nep­tune schools will be held on T hurs­day afternoon of next week nt two o’clock. The address to the class is to be delivered by Rev. T. J , J . W right, pastor of St. P au l’s church . Diplomas will be presented by H enry D. C’hontberlaiii, p resident of the board of ed ucation .. There are fifty- th ree members in ihe-class.

The. exercises of the h igh sohool .g raduates .will be held on F riday evening:. Ju n e 11. the class num ber­in g thirty.; Rev. .V H enry R. Rose. D. D„ of Newark, will he the o ra ­tor, nail President Cham berlain will presen t the. diplomas. M edals will ,be given byhtire. supervising princi­p a l, 'P a u l Y. Eckert.

WEDNESDAY — Special A ll-S tar Cast in “ WHO’S YOUR SERVANT?”

YEARS

HERBERT HECK WINS INSILVER MEDAL CONTEST

A. silver medal declam atory .con­te s t was held in th e Bradley Beach. M. E, Church on W ednesday even­ing by St. P au l’s Loyal Tem perance Legion, of Ocean Grove. • The silver m edal \yhs aw arded H erbert Heck. This oilier con testan ts were E d ith Cook, Josephine C ook,'M arla Chand­ler, M iriam Lee,.Caro.l Handley and Raymond Anderson. The pastor, Mr. Lynch, presented the medal.

Miss M athis, S la te secretary of the \V. C. T. U., A rcher Tevis am i one of the members of the church acted as Judges. All of the contest­a n ts ' were commended for th e ir ef­forts. A nother pontest will be given' in the neat’"fu tu re.

In

THURSDAY NORMA TALMADGE

“A D aughter of Two W orlds .’1FRIDAY

ALICE BRADY in "T he T rap.”

SATURDAY COURINE G RIFFITH S

■'in ’’The G arter G irl.”

A Family Reunion,E dito r Ocean Grove Tim es;

The five organ izations of tho W om an’s Home M issionary Society of St. P au l’s clmroli will celebrate the fo rtie th .b irthday of the N ational So­ciety on the evening of Tuesday Ju n o 8 th , a t B ancroft-T aylor R est Home, 7-1 Cookman avenue. Al! m em bers of the three ad u lt aox llla r les, including honorary members and an y friends des iring to jo in th is C hristian and paitriotic society are cordially invited. The ch ild ren ’s societies will he represen ted by th e ir leaders and an appointed represen ta tiv e from each. Tho brief program , show ing some reasons why we ceie b ra te th is ann iversary Ih ro u g h o u t nil our borders, w ill begin prom ptly n t 8 o’clock. T.bc m usic w ill bq ia charge of Miss R uth M arshall. A so­c ial h ou r and .refreshm ents w ill fol­low. w hich will Include the cu ttin g o f th e b irth d a y cake. Some p a r tin g w ords from honorary m em bers w ill conclude ‘th is p leasan t fam ily re-

■ u n io n .. ■MISS VAN MARTER.

- Ocean Grove, Ju n e 2, 1920.

- ■ InsteadRogers Continues With Trust:

of. leav ing th e A sbury’P a rk T ru s t Company oh' Ju ly 1st, as

iSM '-'-liehad ' p lanned, W illiam C." Rogers ’con tinue w ith th a t in s titu tio n .

M j:/M r, R ogers on W ednesday w as re - i !®i&S&tbcted se c re ta ry a n d y t r e a s u re r , ;of

’ •the company. ... ^

OSPREY CLUB MEMBER TO.GRADUATE IN MEDICINE

Louis F. B urkiey, of E aston , Pa., is a mem ber of: the settlor class ol' Jc lte rson Medical College, P h iladel­phia, to .be graduated tomorrow a t iiooii. The commencement exercises w ill be held in th e Academy of Mu­sic In th a t city. Dr. B urkiey is well known iii iJceau Grove; where he has spetit- many sum m ers w ith h is ' p a r­en ts . H e is a mem ber of .'the Osprey Club, a local o rganization . ... >

Dr. Burkiey w ill be located, in the hospital a t E aston for a year, com­m encing Ju n e 17-. The Burkiey fam i­ly will be delayed un til A ugust in com ing to tlie Grove 'th is year. T heir sum m er home is a t 5G F ran k lin ave­nue. '•

Parkers Given Farewell.A farew ell m eeting w as held aP

the residence of Mrs. N. J. Holmes, 108 M ain .avenue, on Tuesday even­in g for Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. P arker, who are soon to -re tu rn to th e ir m ission school in India. T heir frienda lu Ocean Grove and- A sbury P ark wore present and the p resi­d e n t of the \V. F . M. S. presided. Follow ing addresses by Mr. and Mrs. P a rk e r, refreshm ents w ere served. Dr, F. A. DeM arls presented the guests of honor w ith a su bstan tia l token of esteem.

Distillers Arrested.Charged w ith operating a whiskey

s til l a t 30G. M yrtle’ avenue, N eptune tow nship, 'E llsw orth V anB runl and A ugustus F aller were arrested Tues­day n ig h t by the tow nship police. T he ou tfit of th e d istille rs was con­fiscated and. removed to tlie tow nship offices a t 75 'Soutli Main s tre e t by Chief W hite, Officers Thompson and B o y ce , land Com m itteem an W h it­lock. -- J

$100 Reward, $100 ; • !•..Catarrh In a local disease greatly fnflu-

•nced by constitutional conditions. I t therefore requires . constitutional ■ trea t­m ent HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE Is token internally, and acts through the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of the Sys­tem. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE destroys the foundation of the disease, gives the patient strength by Improving tho general health and assists natiirs In

ansDicINa railsjto cure. .

This "week a galaxy of popular s ta rs and plays.

“ The G arter Girl.* New; r ig h t off Broadw ay; first and on ly run here.-

L E N S E & I

. . IEverybody is

Invitedto exam ine o u r g ia se e s ; to have th e variutts points ex­plained,m id to ask prices w ithou t in cu rrin g the least obligation to buy.

tf m. B. Reilly & Co.518 Cookman Avenue

Asbnry Park

Whur-onE Y E G L A S S E S

: — Steifibacb Goldea Anniversary Sales offer greater opportunities than any . Bales that have been inaugurated to lower cost of living.

No one advertisement can contain a complete announcement of sales. Tbore is j ust one way you can profit to the full by these; opportunities, and that is to come in when you have plenty of leisure time and look for those items which are best suited to your needs.

The Stein bach Store has been re-created The underlying principles, which have contributed to fifty years of success are, of course, as immutable as the planets, but physically Steinbach’s has undergone a*.' complete transforma­tion. Each department has been enlarged and made more beautiful! The present service idea has been carried a step further than any store has ever carried it before.

We cordially invite you to visit the store.during the Golden Anniversary celebration.

MEN’S SUITS TO MEASUREAt Extraordinarily Low Prices

We do not conduct a custom tailoring department, but for this sale have made arrangements to make men’s suits to measure for less than the same fab­rics could be made up in ready-made garments. ; "'A.

Prices $47.56 and $58.50 iComplete range in light-weight custom weave*, including serges, finished

and unfinished worsteds, flannels, tweeds, cheviots and homespuns. No addi­tional charge for extra sizes.. ’

This sale will positively end Saturday, June 5, at 6.00 P. M .

1886-1020

ANDREW J. HURLEY Mattress Making

UpholsteringMattresses Renovated and Carpets Cleaned .

-ucHTRAL AVENUE AND OIIN STREET OCEAN 6R0VE, N.J.

L.: . . C J O B B I N G

Tin and Sheet Metal W orker Slate and Asbestos Shingle Rooting Stoves, Ranges and Furnaces ;

109 Abbott Avenue, Ocean Grove■■ T e le p h o n e 2 U 8 -B

’s Dresses at Half PriceStreet and Afternoon, Evening and Sports Models

The beautiful dresses used as window, displays on opening day , will be offered Saturday'at one-half their marked price. Clever styles for street' wear, charming styles for afternoon occasions, dainty creations for evening functions and custom tailored models for the sports enthusiast.

W onderful Fabrics Selections .Crepe georgette, crepe meteor, taffeta, chinchilla satin, fan ta soi and

crepe de chine— every new and conceivable color, all sizes.

Sale is for Saturday, June 5 , onlyThese dresses are displayed in onr costume room. ■

0 \sbunj Pai-k New Jersey

H . W . SM O C K President

W . H A R V E Y J '»N E S . • T rensurer

BuchanOn & Smock Lumber Go.

L u m b e rA n d M 111 P r o d u c t e

Buhdeui’ and Painters’ Supplies

Fireproof S to rag e w ith S e p a ra te F ireproof Rooms

2d, 3d and Railroad AvenuesA S B U R Y P A R K

T e l e p h o n e 7 2 8 . '

Paul J. Sfrassburgcr42 Pilgrim Pathway, 50 Pilman Ave.

Ocean Grove, N . J .••

Telephone 1749-Asbury

Goode delivered. We giro you QUALITY. We give you BBRVIOB1, and beet of all, we giro you LOW­EST PRICES, consistent wfth quali­ty and quantity

Drurgtat, ?Jo. "TeSUmontats t . „ V . J . Cbeney A Co., Toledo, Qh

NICK AQUILIN0O C E A N G R O V E 'S

Boot and Shoe MakerALL W ORK DONE BY HAND

W A LL ST R E ET , R e a r o f I h e P o s to f f l c o Ant! South Side of North End Hotel

I am half-soloing and heeling; w ith a new process. A positive cu re for corns a n d bunions.

W hite oak le a th e r used.

DOMINIC COBSO VShoes Repaired and Machine

• , Finiohed. .. Shoe Laces ...

A ll han d wotVc; lea th e r findings B est Wihite Oak L ea th e r Used

5 1 Main Avenue, Ocean Grove, N.:7 ,

HAVE YOU HEADAGUE?Do yoair eyes bum or Itch ?

' Do they............lap} tired or sttalned? I I bo, bnve yovr eyes ex am ­

in ed . Your glasses m ay need a change.

s t i l e : s & co.PWlatolphia Eje SpeolsHih

At 222 Main St., ASSOSY PASS,, Eioij Friday—Hours 10.t)0 to 4,30

JAMES BOYCE CO., Inc.W ho le sa le and

• v r 1 II D e a le r In

MEATS. PROVISIONS AND POULTRY

B r o o k f i e l d C r e a m e r y B u t t e r B r o o k f i e l d S e l e c t e d B g g e

3 0 O b l N S T R C B T

O c e a n G r o v e , IN. JP h e n o s i

71 a n d 1221

D’ALMAINE & D’ALMAINELicensed Chiropractors

P nlm or School G rad u a tes

84 Main Avenue, Ocean Grove, N. JOffice H ours: Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday, 9:00 A. M. to 12.00 M.V and by appointment.

Neiy Y ork Office, B oom s 908-909 Brolcaw B uild ing , A nalysts an d oonaultutlon freo 1457 Broadw a

S P E C IA L S IN S IL K S; ' ; F O R S A T U R D A Y a n d M O N D A Y

Georgette Crepes, $2.25 yd. S ilk Poplins, Plaid Silks >'. . . S2.49 yd. . Plaid Taffetas, Crepe de Chines,' $2.-79 yd. S ilk Nets .

Messaline Satins; $2.79 yd,

>1.39 yd. $2.49 yd,. >1.50 yd.

COOK’S BEE HIUE ASBURY PARK' ■‘"'-•JHBBSEV;-:,

Rosemary US[lii .1 90 Mount Mlon Way, Ja , a?or Auditorium; .;Bloo£troinrEfeM

rjo e n