$1.50 a yeai town topics h. strunksy praises ...single copy 4c.. v**» t ' $1.50 a yeai vol....

8
Single Copy 4c. . v**» T ' $1.50 a Yeai VOL. XVII No. 6 BELMAR, N. J., FRJ DAY. APRIL 28, 1922. Single Copy Four Cents RECORD DAMAGE DONE BY FOREST FIRES ALLENWOOD HOSPITAL PARTLY DESTROYED—MORE THAN 50,- 000 ACRES ARE SWEPT BY FIRE Lakewood, April 28—Fire which laid waste 150,00 acres of timber land and which destroyed a hotel other home in Lafayette Wednesday Town Topics The Senior Christian Endeavor society of the Twelfth Avenue Bap- tist church will hold a sociable in the church this evening. A special program has been planned. JOSEPH R. GASSIN DIES IN HIS EIGHTIETH YEAK Among the very pretty bungalows; that have been completed is that of i Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Bishop in Surf I avenue. Mr, and Mrs. Bishop with a party of friends arrived in our! other home in Lafafette yesterday I city Sunday to open their lovely under control of volunteer Are de -1 home for the season, partments after an all-night battle, i * * * Meagre reports from the east side of the Barnegat peninsula indicates that a dozen farmhouses were de- molished by flames there. Brush blazes have been burning briskly along the coast for several days, but the most serious of these start- Mrs. M. Wolins and Mrs. R. J. War-j shaw o f Brooklyn are spending | awhile with Mrs. Bishop in herj new home in Surf avenue. ¥ * * Mr. and Mrs. M. Tcpper of Brook-j Joseph Rogers Gassin of River road, died of complication follow- ing a lengthy illness, Wednesday at his home. He was in his 80th year Surviving are his wife, two sons, William A. residing at home, and Joseph E. of Washington state; three step-child ren, Charles E Parsons of Roselle, Frank J. of Ma- plewood and Miss Helen O. Par- sons of Belmar; a sister, Mary 3 Gassin of River road and three brothers, Charles E., Fred and Ja- ' vk's, all of Washington. Mr. Gassii was an aclive member of and an elder in the Mrs! Presbyterian church. Funeral services were held {*I- hous“ Thursday afternoon, conducted by Rev. Eeverett of the church with which Mr. Gassin was affiliated. Interment was made in the family plot at Glendola. H. STRUNKSY PRAISES FIREMtN FOi! SAVING THE ATLANTIC SCTEL GAIN 100%I N FUNDS FOR PROTESTANT CHURCHES FOLLOWING IS THE COMMUNI- CATION RECEIVED RY THE EDITOR. ed in Lower Squankum, two and a |lyn were visitors to our city as half miles from here, late yesterday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur It spread rapidly and broke into i Bishop, three lines, one pointing toward Greenville, another toward Point Jacob Rosenfeld, president of the Pleasant and the third toward Her j B°ard of Health, is now dealing in bertsville and Manasquan. I a" kind of beverages. At Allenwood the tuberculosis hos- J * » » pital housing forty patients, was j I homas Dillon, Roy P. Hutton threatened. Smoke filled the build- j and Harry C. Cooper motored to ing, but volunteers, by pouring wa-1 Newark on Sunday, ter on the roof, saved the structurej , , , from igniting. The patients were removed to a field back of tthe hospital out of the danger zone. Thousands of rabbits, squirrels and birds were driven to the fields by the fire. Several' outbuildings in Allenwood were destroyed. The blaze was checkcd in the lines pointing tward Greenville and Manasquan, and the entire volun- teer'corps moved toward Point Pleasant. Miss Helen Jaeger, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. Jaeger of F street was married last night in New York City to Abe Finkel of that place. * * H. C. M. Quelch attended the Grand Council session of the Royal Arcanum this week at Lakewood. * * * Miss Marion Crosson of Thirteen- th avenue visited relatives Sunday SENATOR 'U IT A RECORD Senator William Mackay of Ber- gen county has earned the confi- dence and applause of the people because of his successful fight in behalf of proper legislation to curb profiteering landlords. It was his efforts that made possible the anti- profiteering law now on the State the measure landlords will not be TO PLANT MEMORIAL TREE A tree is to be planted on the lawn of the First Presbyterian church property in Belmar tomor- row afternoon in memory of the late Mrs. S. E. Everett, wife of the pastor. Rev. Charles Everett. The- ceremony is to be held on the an- in Brooklyn. * + * -Mr. Benjamin Horowitz, Mr. Sam- uel Horowitz, Miss Sid Horowitz Miss Pauline Weisman, Mr. and Mrs. Leibowitz and Samuel Saun- ders of Boro Park Brooklyn spent their week-end with Mr. and Mrs. Greensaft of 11th, Avenue. » K * Mr. Dave Barr, Joseph Barr, niversary of Mrs. Everett’s birth, Nathan Steeples and Mr. A1 Brun the exercises opening at 3 o’clock The various organizations of the church will participate in the pro- gram which will include brief ad- dresses and music. APPLICATIONS for PLATTSBURG wasser all of Belmar Spent the week-end at Gotfried’s Hotel in Long Branch. ¥ ¥ ¥ Dr. and Mrs. J. W. Hassler will arrive home next week from St, Petersburg, Florida. Dr. Hassler will open his sanitarium on May 8, * * * G. Barnett will occupy their sum- mer home on Ocean avenue next Lieutenant Colonel Betts of 100 Tenth avenue, Belmar, of the 301st Reserve Engineers, announced to- day that he has received blank ap- plications for the Citizen’s Train-! week, ing camp at Plattsburg this summer ; « * * The camp opens August 1 and con- Mr. and Mrs. Barnett have rented tinues thru the month. The purpose out their house at 101 Second ave- of the camp is to train men for a nue to Mrs. A. F. Hensler of New- reserve corps of the army. Thej ark. age limit is 18 *o 40. fThe colonel stated that he would be glad to give an application blank to anyone interested, fThe government pays carfare to camp and return, boards the soldiers and loans a uniform, making the cost of the camp very slight. , Beaumont Glass of Fifth avenue, arrived home this week from Hav- ana, Cuba, where he spent the win- ter. * + * Members are requested to be pre- sent without fail at next Monday evening’s meeting of the Herbert- BELMAR CLUB ENTERTAINED j Worthington - White Post No. 151 BY MRS. H. C. STEVENSON 1American Legion. Important mat- AT CAMDEN, N. J .1jcrs wj]j j)C discussed. Mrs. H. C. Stevenson, of G2o Penn j ^any tickets have been sold for Street. Camden, N. |J., entertained. cjam bake to be held at “Yellow Bank” this Sunday under the aus- the Belmar Club at luncheon, Thurs day. April 20th. Her guests includ- ed Mrs. J. :T. Solmson. Mrs. Joseph Weed, of New York; Mrs. Charles N. Schneider, Mrs. Elizabeth Shee- hy, also of New York; Mrs. E. S. Oliver and Mrs. Fayette Simonson, of Newark; Mrs. Joseph H. Forsyth and Miss Mary Parsons of Camden. The decorations were of spring flowers and the color scheme laven- der. Cards followed the luncheon. Mrs. Oliver and Mrs. Schneider were week-end guests of Mrs. Stevenson. LOCAL GIRL ENGAGED TO JERSEY CITY MAN Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cohen of 1401 F street, announce the engagement of their daugher to Harry Feinstein a prominent business man of Jersey City. No date has been set for the wedding, but will probably be held in the fall. Miss Cohen is well known and very popular. She received her education in the local school and Neptune High school. Mr. Fein- stein is in the hardware and fur- nishing business. piccs of the Loyal Order of Moose. Editor of The Coast Advertiser Dear Sir: Please allow me to express my gratitude and appreciation of the heroic effort our friends made to save the Atlantic Hotel when it was menaced by fire a week ago last Thursday. I was told of the bravery of the fire- men, the work of the boro offi- cials and the effort of the prominent citizens of Belmar to preserve the hotel by which they had stood ever since it was built. The sympathy of our friends is compensation for the loss sustained and it encourages further activities toward mak- ing The Atlantic deserving of the beautiful Boro in which it is situated We have contin- ually improveing the place and we shall continue to do so. Plans are already made for an addition to the 15th Avenue cottage; the erection of new bathing houses; the enlarge- ment of the children’s dining room; the installation of addi- tional lavatories. On top of the kitchen will be built a structure consisting of a large children’s play room and a doz- e” outside sleeping rooms. We are happy the hotel has survived the fire and thankful lo our friends for their effort. In appreciation of this we are planning a banquet to all who participated as soon as the ho- tel opens so that we can thank thorn in person and have them with us the escape of mirrht have been an irre- parable loss Hyman Strunsky Atlantic City, April 28.—The re- ceipts of the Protestant churches of the United States have increased 100 per cent, during the three-year period following the close of the war, according to a report read at a conference on promotional work of the churches, which opened yes terday and which was participated ; in by representatives of nineteen different denominations. The conference, called by the Federal Council of Churches, was made up of organizations respon- sible for raising money in the churches, such as the Methodist Centenary Fund, the Presbyterian New Era movement, the Reform Church Forward movement, the Cogregational New World move- ment and the Baptist New World movement. It is presided oper by Joseph H. Ipple, President of Hood College, Frederick, Maryland. According lo the report, seven- teen different denominations gave $100,000,000 for missions and bene- volences in 1921 rind S220.00fl.00fl ! for congregational work. The to- tal amount received was $320,000- 000 and 17.500.00 persons were rep- resented in the giving. The am- ount per captia was $18. I How to maintain this standard of giving and the best method to <> n- |tenr? the missionary program was also discussed. MYSTICS TO OPEN SEASON ON MAY 27 THE FAST KEASBY A. C. TO AP- PEAR AGAINST THE HOME- STERS IN THE OPENING AT- TRACTION. WHY THE SHIFT IN AMBOY BRIDGE PLANS? Senator William Mackay Books Under the provisions of allowed to increase rents more than an adavance of 25per cent, of the amount of present leases. His vic- tory stamps him as a man who can accorapolish big things in face of almost unsurmountable odds as the anti-rent profiteering law was bit - terly opposed by the powerful real estate interests. Such service de- serves commendation. SALVATION ARMY’S vnrRTH ANNUAL HOME SERVICE LOCAL ORGANIZATION TO MEET AT A. P. ON MONDAY The third meeting of the Belmar Coast Branch of the International Sunshine Society will be held in the League Room of the First M. E. Church of Asbury Park, corner of Second and Grand avenues, on Monday, May 1st, at 3 P. M. Mrs. William II. Force, the State President of this society will be down for this meeting. Other speakers will be Rev. I). Roe Haney the local chaplin will open the meeting and Mrs. Paul C. Taylor will speak on Foreign Missionaries. Mrs. Furnan T. Bailey of Mana- squan, soprano of the First M. E. church will sing at this meeting, ac. companied by Miss Belle Greene. Joe Cohen has soda fountain. installed a new Harry Mount returned from Stu- art, Fla., where he spent the winter The River Crest Inn has been changed to the Honk Konk Inn. Its new manager is J. Ong-Akie. * * * Naylor’s express will move the following families to the shore Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Ripley of New- ark, to their cottage at Como; Mrs 'fjourdier of Newark, to Avon; A. P. Keller from Asbury Park to 212 Fifth avenue and Mr. and Mrs Scherrer of Newark, to 509 Eighth avenue. BELMAR GRAMMAR SCHOOL | DEFEATS AVON NINE The Salvation Army’s fourth an- nual home service appeal is bring- ing out some of the best “human in- terests” stories of the year in New .Torsey. Told bv campaign speak- ers these stories are from th« depths of human nature and touch the hcaT 't I'rofoundi'*’. Rut the hesi story of the Army’s wonderful ac- hievements during the vear with the comparatively limited financial resources it has had to work with. The good people of New Jersey are called unon to replenish a trea- sury almost depleted bv the unpre- cedented demands of the year. In the large centers of population, the Salavation Army has taken care of fully 100 per cent, more relief rases than ever before in a similar ^et-jod of time. This has been made possible by the generosity of the public and also by the very low op- ^fitinfr post of all the departments of the Army’s work. Here is an institution which in ,its great world contact, has learned 'the lesson of economic efficiency thro1 ' '’■ » perfect organization and Stand 'zed svstem. And yet it is so e’ Stic in its methods thal it individualizes for every commun- ity. giving to that community, the full benefit of the experience it has gleaned thru the world in its long years of service to humanity. The Belmar grammar school open- j ed its season Tuesday on the dia-1 mond by walloping the Avon gram- mar school lads to the tune of 22- 13 in a seven inning game on the Avon field Wed. afternoon. The Belmar lads were in fine form and had little trouble in finding Beddie and pounded him all over the lot. Meller was the heavy slugger for Belmar, getting four hits, two ol them being home runs. FURNITURE FOR SALE ’ Ihen the new bridge across the Raritan River from Perth Amboy to South Amboy was first projected, at a cost estimaed at $4,000,700, it was announced that arrangements had been made with the Public Utili- ties Commission which had agreed to lend its bridge engineers to the State Highway Commission for the purpose of preparing plans fort the structure, so that the enormous fees of private engineers might be sav- ed by the state. Their plans have been prepared, ac- cepeted by the state engineer and by the Federal government and actual work started on tlu approa- ches to the bridge. Eeverything has been going along in perfect order. Now, it is revealed, some mem- bers of the State Highway Commis- sion are endeavoring to have a de- signing and consulting engineer named who will receive at the us- ual rate of remuneration, about $240,000. if the cost of the bridge does not exceed $4,000,000, or of the cost advances, he will receive more : as the usual rate of payment is six per cent, on the cost It may im- mediately be s°er Mint under c-iHi a scheme the i i "'"""" lose money for every cent saved the tax- payer. It is rather strange that the com- mission, at this time, after it has ( spent about $50,000 in preparing the I plans it now has, should decide to |scrap these plans, and the public’s j S50.000 and go in for new plans and hire a high-priced engineer when the project seems to be going along remarkably well as it is If the present plans are good en- ough to be accepted by the state engineer and the Federal authori- ties and to have satisfied the two engineers on the State Highway Commission, if is passing strange that some commissioners should fi- nally decide that tiny are all v rong. New Jcey has n > quarter of a million dollars to waste.. The State Highway Commission should proceed very cautiously in ! making this expensive change, i -------- The Mystics will open their sea- son on Saturday afternoon. May 27 at Worthington Field, with a first class attraction. The fast Keasby F. C. of Keasby N. J., will play the Belmar club on Saturday afternoon, June 3rd, at Belmar. The Norwood, F. C. of Long Branch will be the attraction on the following Saturday, June 10 and will also come again to Belmar on Saturday, July 1. The Mystic’s management intends to book only first-class teams thru- out the season. The Freehold B B. C., Lakewood, baseball club, Matawan, Keasby. Norwood, Oriole baseball clubs of Red Bank, Irving- ton Professionals and Speedways of Perth Amboy being some ot the clubs which the Mystics manage- ment hopes to present to the fans who attend games here. The Mvstics will hold their first practice Saturday afternoon. May 13. Any baseball player of ability in this locality will be. given a chance to try for any position on the team. Altho practically all of Inst year’s team will be back in the Mvstie togs this year, any newcom- er will he given a chance to make the team. CONTRACTOR KEPT BUSY W. A. Robinson, one of the Boro’s leading contractor and builders, is being kept busy erecting homes. A bungalow of the colonial type is being built by Mr. Robinson for Barney Isola of Sixth avenue and Lake, at 415 Ninth avenue and a home for Harry Lyons at Seventh avenue, near railroad. A big addi- tion is being made to Hellig's Llanymore Hotel. WALL VOTES $16,700 FOR NEW SCHOOL V Little excitement prevailed at Wall township Tues. night when the voters asserted themselves by a vote of 15 to 8 as in favor of the purchase by the board of education of a lot adjoining the West Belmar school house and the construction of an addition to the building. The polls werp open only one hour, from 7.30 o’clock to 8.30, There were 23 votes cast. The am. ount estimated as necessary for the purchase of the lot construction of lb” addition and equipment is $16.- 700. Of this pmnnnl, which lies east of the building on Seventeenth avenue with a frontage of 100 feet and a depth of 150. The balance is deemed necessary to cover the cost of construction of the addition, which is to he fireproof, and the installation of necessary furniture and supplies. MISS BROWN WEDS KARL EGGIMAN AT ASBURY PARK HOME MADE CAKE Chairs, Dressers, Iron Beds, Wooden Beds, White Mantle with French plate mirror; Springs Rock- ers, for living room, 2 Morris chairs Window with Frames, Doors with Frames, Chicken wire. Can be seen any morning except Thursday. Apply 105 Eighth ave. Tele- phone 194-M. Robinson’s Cake Shop. Orders taken and delivered. 605 Eighth avenue. Phone 694-R. FORD OWNERS Get ready for the Summer. Valve>s j ground, carbon cleaned, crankcase j washed with kerosene, new oil in crankcase, clean and adjust vibra- tor points 5.00 Install new trans-j mition bands $6.00. Starter type $7 j “Dick” Enders, Lightening Garage 8th Ave., near F street. G-et ~ST oiii' nxr &-\KT Line Of W ALL PAPER ■A .T OTJE ISnETWLOW PEICES PAINTING \ND PAPERHANGING AT REASONABLE PRICES ESTIMATES CHEERFULLY GIVEN G U A R A N TEE PATNTCO. MAX BTT3SrilSr, Prop. 7 06 1ST in-bix Belmar, KT J" FURNITURE Both new and second hand, bou- ght. sold and rented at our new store at 71 So. Main St. Asbury. Let me supply your wants in furniture Frank Edwards. Phone 59-J Miss Camille Elizabeth Brown and Karl J. Eggiman were United in mar riage by Rev. David A. MacMurry, pastor of the First Baptist church of Asbury Park on Wednesday afternoon. Miss Grace Brown '"as (he mat- ron of honor, wh:'" J O. Eggiman acted as best man. Immediately after the ceremony, a wedding din- ner was served. The couple left for a short trip and on their >e- turn will reside in Manasquan. Al- though Mr. and Mrs. Eggiman re sided in Como, both >cre socially prominent here. Mrs. Eggiman was employed in the office of Roro Attorney Harry Cooper for a number of years, while Mr. Eggiman is in the renortorial I staff of the Asbury Park Press. am FIRST M. E. CHURCH CLEANING Mr. Louis Heckman, formerly of Montclair, is now located at 1201 Bay View ayenue. Belmar. N. J. Hr has had twelve ex^oripnee i' House Cleaning with both hand an<J electric vacuum plpinnt-s. H p ;• readv to mate contracts for cleanin' entire interior of houses or Hotel- and will ehnot-fuPv estimate for doing the snm". Phone 817-W Corner of Seventh Avenue and I) Street Rpy. D. Roe Haney. Minister Worship 10 30 and 7.30 Daylight Saving time. .Sunday School at 2.30 Epworth League at 7 o’clock, xho pastor will preach Sunday •norninn on “Endurance.” Sundav •"-ening on “A Fighting Hero”. A song service will preceed the even- ;ng worship. Special Music by t’ Chorus 'hoir.

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Page 1: $1.50 a Yeai Town Topics H. STRUNKSY PRAISES ...Single Copy 4c.. v**» T ' $1.50 a Yeai VOL. XVII No. 6 BELMAR, N. J., FRJ DAY. APRIL 28, 1922. Single Copy Four Cents RECORD DAMAGE

Single Copy 4c.

. v**» T '

$1.50 a Yeai

VOL. XV II No. 6 BELMAR, N. J., FRJ DAY. APRIL 28, 1922. Single Copy Four Cents

RECORD DAMAGE DONE BY FOREST FIRES

ALLENWOOD HOSPITAL PARTLY

DESTROYED— MORE THAN 50,-

000 ACRES ARE SWEPT BY FIRE

Lakewood, April 28—Fire which

laid waste 150,00 acres of timber

land and which destroyed a hotel

other home in Lafayette Wednesday

Town TopicsThe Senior Christian Endeavor

society of the Twelfth Avenue Bap­

tist church w ill hold a sociable in

the church this evening. A special

program has been planned.

JOSEPH R. GASSIN DIES

IN HIS EIGHTIETH YEAK

Among the very pretty bungalows;

that have been completed is that of i

Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Bishop in Surf I

avenue. Mr, and Mrs. Bishop w ith

a party of friends arrived in our! other home in Lafafette yesterday I city Sunday to open their lovely under control of volunteer Are de-1 home for the season,

partments after an all-night battle, i * * *

Meagre reports from the east side

of the Barnegat peninsula indicates

that a dozen farmhouses were de­molished by flames there. Brush

blazes have been burning briskly along the coast for several days,

but the most serious of these start-

Mrs. M. Wolins and Mrs. R. J. War-j shaw o f Brooklyn are spending |

awhile w ith Mrs. Bishop in herj

new home in Surf avenue.

¥ * *

Mr. and Mrs. M. Tcpper of Brook-j

Joseph Rogers Gassin of River

road, died of complication follow­

ing a lengthy illness, Wednesday at

his home. He was in his 80th year

Surviving are his wife, two sons,

W illiam A. residing at home, and Joseph E. of Washington state;

three step-child ren, Charles E Parsons of Roselle, Frank J. of Ma­

plewood and Miss Helen O. Par­sons of Belmar; a sister, Mary 3

Gassin of River road and three brothers, Charles E., Fred and Ja-

'vk 's, all of Washington. Mr. Gassii

was an aclive member of and an elder in the Mrs! Presbyterian

church. Funeral services were held {*I- hous“ Thursday afternoon,

conducted by Rev. Eeverett of the church with which Mr. Gassin was

affiliated. Interment was made in

the family plot at Glendola.

H. STRUNKSY PRAISES FIREMtN FOi! SAVINGTHE ATLANTIC SCTEL

GAIN 100%I N FUNDS FOR

PROTESTANT CHURCHES

FOLLOWING IS THE COMMUNI­

CATION RECEIVED RY THE

EDITOR.

ed in Lower Squankum, two and a | lyn were visitors to our city as

half miles from here, late yesterday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur

It spread rapidly and broke into i Bishop,

three lines, one pointing towardGreenville, another toward Point Jacob Rosenfeld, president of the

Pleasant and the third toward Her j B°ard of Health, is now dealing in

bertsville and Manasquan. I a" kind of beverages.

At Allenwood the tuberculosis hos- J * » »pital housing forty patients, was j I homas Dillon, Roy P. Hutton

threatened. Smoke filled the build- j and Harry C. Cooper motored to

ing, but volunteers, by pouring wa-1 Newark on Sunday,

ter on the roof, saved the structurej , , ,from igniting. The patients were

removed to a field back of tthe

hospital out of the danger zone.

Thousands of rabbits, squirrels

and birds were driven to the fields

by the fire. Several' outbuildings

in Allenwood were destroyed.

The blaze was checkcd in the lines pointing tward Greenville and

Manasquan, and the entire volun­

teer'corps moved toward Point

Pleasant.

Miss Helen Jaeger, daughter of

Mr. and Mrs. H. Jaeger of F street

was married last night in New York City to Abe Finkel of that

place.★ * ■*

H. C. M. Quelch attended the

Grand Council session of the Royal

Arcanum this week at Lakewood.* * *

Miss Marion Crosson of Thirteen­th avenue visited relatives Sunday

SENATOR 'U IT

A RECORD

Senator W illiam Mackay of Ber­gen county has earned the confi­

dence and applause of the people

because of his successful fight in behalf of proper legislation to curb

profiteering landlords. It was his

efforts that made possible the anti-

profiteering law now on the State

the measure landlords w ill not be

TO PLANT MEMORIAL TREE

A tree is to be planted on the lawn of the First Presbyterian

church property in Belmar tomor­

row afternoon in memory of the

late Mrs. S. E. Everett, wife of the pastor. Rev. Charles Everett. The-

ceremony is to be held on the an-

in Brooklyn.* + *

-Mr. Benjamin Horowitz, Mr. Sam­

uel Horowitz, Miss Sid Horowitz

Miss Pauline Weisman, Mr. and

Mrs. Leibowitz and Samuel Saun­

ders of Boro Park Brooklyn spent

their week-end w ith Mr. and Mrs.

Greensaft of 11th, Avenue.

» K *Mr. Dave Barr, Joseph Barr,

niversary of Mrs. Everett’s birth, Nathan Steeples and Mr. A1 Brunthe exercises opening at 3 o’clock

The various organizations of the

church w ill participate in the pro­

gram which w ill include brief ad­

dresses and music.

APPLICATIONS for PLATTSBURG

wasser all of Belmar Spent the week-end at Gotfried’s Hotel in

Long Branch.

¥ ¥ ¥

Dr. and Mrs. J. W. Hassler w ill

arrive home next week from St, Petersburg, Florida. Dr. Hassler

w ill open his sanitarium on May 8, * * *

G. Barnett w ill occupy their sum­mer home on Ocean avenue next

Lieutenant Colonel Betts of 100 Tenth avenue, Belmar, of the 301st

Reserve Engineers, announced to­

day that he has received blank ap­plications for the Citizen’s Train-! week,

ing camp at Plattsburg this summer ; « * *

The camp opens August 1 and con- Mr. and Mrs. Barnett have rented

tinues thru the month. The purpose out their house at 101 Second ave- of the camp is to train men for a nue to Mrs. A. F. Hensler of New- reserve corps of the army. Thej ark. age lim it is 18 *o 40. fThe colonel

stated that he would be glad to give an application blank to anyone

interested, fThe government pays

carfare to camp and return, boards

the soldiers and loans a uniform, making the cost of the camp very

slight. ,

Beaumont Glass of F ifth avenue, arrived home this week from Hav­

ana, Cuba, where he spent the w in ­

ter.* + *

Members are requested to be pre­

sent without fail at next Monday evening’s meeting of the Herbert-

BELMAR CLUB ENTERTAINED j Worthington - White Post No. 151

BY MRS. H. C. STEVENSON 1 American Legion. Important mat- AT CAMDEN, N. J . 1 jcrs w j]j j)C discussed.

Mrs. H. C. Stevenson, of G2o Penn j ^any tickets have been sold for Street. Camden, N. |J., entertained. cjam bake to be held at “Yellow

Bank” this Sunday under the aus-the Belmar Club at luncheon, Thurs

day. April 20th. Her guests includ­

ed Mrs. J. :T. Solmson. Mrs. Joseph

Weed, of New York; Mrs. Charles

N. Schneider, Mrs. Elizabeth Shee-

hy, also of New York; Mrs. E. S. Oliver and Mrs. Fayette Simonson,

of Newark; Mrs. Joseph H. Forsyth

and Miss Mary Parsons of Camden.The decorations were of spring

flowers and the color scheme laven­der. Cards followed the luncheon.

Mrs. Oliver and Mrs. Schneider

were week-end guests of Mrs.

Stevenson.

LOCAL GIRL ENGAGEDTO JERSEY CITY MAN

Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cohen of 1401

F street, announce the engagement of their daugher to Harry Feinstein

a prominent business man of Jersey

City. No date has been set for the

wedding, but w ill probably be held

in the fall.

Miss Cohen is well known and

very popular. She received her

education in the local school and

Neptune High school. Mr. Fein­

stein is in the hardware and fur­

nishing business.

piccs of the Loyal Order of Moose.

Editor of The Coast Advertiser Dear Sir:

Please allow me to express

my gratitude and appreciation

of the heroic effort our friends

made to save the Atlantic Hotel

when it was menaced by fire a

week ago last Thursday. I was

told of the bravery of the fire­

men, the work of the boro offi­

cials and the effort of the

prominent citizens of Belmar to preserve the hotel by which

they had stood ever since it

was built.The sympathy of our friends

is compensation for the loss

sustained and it encourages further activities toward mak­ing The Atlantic deserving of

the beautiful Boro in which it is situated We have contin­

ually improveing the place and

we shall continue to do so. Plans are already made for an

addition to the 15th Avenue

cottage; the erection of new bathing houses; the enlarge­ment of the children’s dining room; the installation of addi­

tional lavatories. On top of

the kitchen w ill be built a structure consisting of a large

children’s play room and a doz-

e” outside sleeping rooms.

We are happy the hotel has survived the fire and thankful lo our friends for their effort.

In appreciation of this we are

planning a banquet to all who participated as soon as the ho­

tel opens so that we can thank thorn in person and have them

with us the escape of

mirrht have been an irre­

parable loss

Hyman Strunsky

Atlantic City, April 28.—The re­

ceipts of the Protestant churches of

the United States have increased

100 per cent, during the three-year

period following the close of the

war, according to a report read at

a conference on promotional work

of the churches, which opened yes

terday and which was participated

; in by representatives of nineteen

different denominations.

The conference, called by the Federal Council of Churches, was

made up of organizations respon­

sible for raising money in the churches, such as the Methodist

Centenary Fund, the Presbyterian

New Era movement, the Reform Church Forward movement, the

Cogregational New World move­

ment and the Baptist New World

movement. It is presided oper by

Joseph H. Ipple, President of Hood College, Frederick, Maryland.

According lo the report, seven­

teen different denominations gave $100,000,000 for missions and bene­volences in 1921 rind S220.00fl.00fl

! for congregational work. The to­tal amount received was $320,000-

000 and 17.500.00 persons were rep­resented in the giving. The am­

ount per captia was $18.

I How to maintain this standard of giving and the best method to <>n-

| tenr? the missionary program was

also discussed.

MYSTICS TO OPEN SEASON ON MAY 27

THE FAST KEASBY A. C. TO AP­

PEAR AGAINST THE HOME­

STERS IN THE OPENING AT­TRACTION.

WHY THE SHIFT IN

AMBOY BRIDGE PLANS?

Senator William Mackay

Books Under the provisions of

allowed to increase rents more than

an adavance of 25per cent, of the

amount of present leases. His vic­

tory stamps him as a man who can

accorapolish big things in face of

almost unsurmountable odds as the anti-rent profiteering law was bit­

terly opposed by the powerful real

estate interests. Such service de­

serves commendation.

SALVATION ARMY’S v n rR T H

ANNUAL HOM E SERV ICE

LOCAL ORGANIZATION TO

MEET AT A. P. ON MONDAY

The third meeting of the Belmar

Coast Branch of the International

Sunshine Society w ill be held in

the League Room of the First M. E.

Church of Asbury Park, corner of

Second and Grand avenues, on

Monday, May 1st, at 3 P. M.Mrs. W illiam II. Force, the State

President of this society w ill be down for this meeting. Other

speakers w ill be Rev. I). Roe Haney

the local chaplin w ill open the

meeting and Mrs. Paul C. Taylor

w ill speak on Foreign Missionaries.

Mrs. Furnan T. Bailey of Mana­

squan, soprano of the First M. E. church w ill sing at this meeting, ac.

companied by Miss Belle Greene.

Joe Cohen has

soda fountain.

installed a new

Harry Mount returned from Stu­

art, Fla., where he spent the winter

The River Crest Inn has been

changed to the Honk Konk Inn. Its

new manager is J. Ong-Akie.

* * *

Naylor’s express w ill move the

following families to the shore

Mr. and Mrs. W . D. Ripley of New­

ark, to their cottage at Como; Mrs

'fjourdier of Newark, to Avon; A. P.

Keller from Asbury Park to 212

Fifth avenue and Mr. and Mrs

Scherrer of Newark, to 509 Eighth

avenue.

BELMAR GRAMMAR SCHOOL |

DEFEATS AVON NINE

The Salvation Army’s fourth an­

nual home service appeal is bring­

ing out some of the best “human in ­

terests” stories of the year in New

.Torsey. Told bv campaign speak­

ers these stories are from th« depths of human nature and touch the hcaT't I'rofoundi'*’. Rut the hesi

story of the Army’s wonderful ac­

hievements during the vear with

the comparatively limited financial

resources it has had to work with.

The good people of New Jersey are called unon to replenish a trea­

sury almost depleted bv the unpre­

cedented demands of the year. In the large centers of population, the

Salavation Army has taken care of

fully 100 per cent, more relief

rases than ever before in a similar ^et-jod of time. This has been made

possible by the generosity of the public and also by the very low op- ^fitinfr post of all the departments

of the Army’s work.Here is an institution which in

,its great world contact, has learned 'the lesson of economic efficiency

thro1' '’■» perfect organization and

Stand 'zed svstem. And yet it is so e’ Stic in its methods thal

it individualizes for every commun­

ity. giving to that community,

the full benefit of the experience

it has gleaned thru the world in its

long years of service to humanity.

The Belmar grammar school open- j

ed its season Tuesday on the dia-1

mond by walloping the Avon gram­

mar school lads to the tune of 22- 13 in a seven inning game on the

Avon field Wed. afternoon. The

Belmar lads were in fine form and

had little trouble in finding Beddie

and pounded him all over the lot.

Meller was the heavy slugger for

Belmar, getting four hits, two ol them being home runs.

FURNITURE FOR SALE

’ Ihen the new bridge across the

Raritan River from Perth Amboy to

South Amboy was first projected, at

a cost estimaed at $4,000,700, it was announced that arrangements had

been made with the Public U tili­

ties Commission which had agreed

to lend its bridge engineers to the State Highway Commission for the

purpose of preparing plans fort the

structure, so that the enormous fees of private engineers might be sav­

ed by the state.Their plans have been prepared, ac-

cepeted by the state engineer and

by the Federal government and actual work started on tlu approa­

ches to the bridge. Eeverything has

been going along in perfect order.

Now, it is revealed, some mem­

bers of the State Highway Commis­sion are endeavoring to have a de­signing and consulting engineer

named who w ill receive at the us­

ual rate of remuneration, about

$240,000. if the cost of the bridge does not exceed $4,000,000, or of the

cost advances, he w ill receive more

: as the usual rate of payment is six

per cent, on the cost It may im­mediately be s°er Mint under c-iHi

a scheme the i’i " '" " " " lose

money for every cent saved the tax­

payer.It is rather strange that the com­

mission, at this time, after it has

( spent about $50,000 in preparing the

I plans it now has, should decide to

| scrap these plans, and the public’s j S50.000 and go in for new plans and

hire a high-priced engineer when

the project seems to be going along

remarkably well as it is

If the present plans are good en­

ough to be accepted by the state engineer and the Federal authori­

ties and to have satisfied the two engineers on the State Highway

Commission, if is passing strange

that some commissioners should fi­

nally decide that tiny are all

v rong. New Jc e y has n > quarter

of a m illion dollars to waste..The State Highway Commission

should proceed very cautiously in

! making this expensive change, i --------

The Mystics w ill open their sea­

son on Saturday afternoon. May 27

at Worthington Field, w ith a first class attraction.

The fast Keasby F. C. of Keasby N. J., w ill play the Belmar club on

Saturday afternoon, June 3rd, at Belmar. The Norwood, F. C. of

Long Branch w ill be the attraction

on the following Saturday, June 10 and w ill also come again to Belmar

on Saturday, July 1.

The Mystic’s management intends

to book only first-class teams thru- out the season. The Freehold B B. C., Lakewood, baseball club,

Matawan, Keasby. Norwood, Oriole baseball clubs of Red Bank, Irving­

ton Professionals and Speedways of Perth Amboy being some ot the

clubs which the Mystics manage­

ment hopes to present to the fans

who attend games here.

The Mvstics w ill hold their first practice Saturday afternoon. May

13. Any baseball player of ability in this locality w ill be. given a

chance to try for any position on the team. Altho practically all of

Inst year’s team w ill be back in the Mvstie togs this year, any newcom­

er w ill he given a chance to make

the team.

CONTRACTOR KEPT BUSY

W. A. Robinson, one of the Boro’s

leading contractor and builders, is

being kept busy erecting homes. A

bungalow of the colonial type is being built by Mr. Robinson for

Barney Isola of Sixth avenue and

Lake, at 415 Ninth avenue and a

home for Harry Lyons at Seventh

avenue, near railroad. A big addi­

tion is being made to Hellig's

Llanymore Hotel.

WALL VOTES $16,700FOR NEW SCHOOL V

Little excitement prevailed at

Wall township Tues. night when the voters asserted themselves by a

vote of 15 to 8 as in favor of the

purchase by the board of education of a lot adjoining the West Belmar

school house and the construction

of an addition to the building.

The polls werp open only one

hour, from 7.30 o’clock to 8.30,

There were 23 votes cast. The am.

ount estimated as necessary for the purchase of the lot construction of

lb” addition and equipment is $16.- 700. Of this pmnnnl, which lies

east of the building on Seventeenth

avenue w ith a frontage of 100 feet

and a depth of 150. The balance is deemed necessary to cover the cost

of construction of the addition, which is to he fireproof, and the

installation of necessary furniture

and supplies.

MISS BROWN WEDS KARLEGGIMAN AT ASBURY PARK

HOME MADE CAKE

Chairs, Dressers, Iron Beds,

Wooden Beds, White Mantle w ith

French plate mirror; Springs Rock­

ers, for living room, 2 Morris chairs

W indow w ith Frames, Doors with Frames, Chicken wire. Can be seen any morning except Thursday.

Apply 105 Eighth ave. Tele­

phone 194-M.

Robinson’s Cake Shop. Orders

taken and delivered. 605 Eighth

avenue. Phone 694-R.

FORD OWNERS

Get ready for the Summer. Valve>s j ground, carbon cleaned, crankcase j

washed w ith kerosene, new oil in

crankcase, clean and adjust vibra­

tor points 5.00 Install new trans-j mition bands $6.00. Starter type $7 j

“Dick” Enders, Lightening Garage

8th Ave., near F street.

G-et ~SToiii' nxr&-\KT Line Of

W A L L P A P E R■A.T OTJE ISnETW LOW PEICES

PAINTING \ND PAPERHANGING AT REASONABLE PRICES

ESTIMATES CHEERFULLY GIVEN

G U A R A N T E E P A T N T C O .MAX BTT3SrilSr, Prop.

7 06 1ST in-bix Belmar, KT J"

FURNITURE

Both new and second hand, bou­

ght. sold and rented at our new

store at 71 So. Main St. Asbury. Let

me supply your wants in furniture

Frank Edwards. Phone 59-J

Miss Camille Elizabeth Brown and

Karl J. Eggiman were United in mar riage by Rev. David A. MacMurry,

pastor of the First Baptist church

of Asbury Park on Wednesday

afternoon.Miss Grace Brown '"as (he mat­

ron of honor, w h :'" J O. Eggiman

acted as best man. Immediately after the ceremony, a wedding d in ­

ner was served. The couple left

for a short trip and on their >e-

turn w ill reside in Manasquan. Al­though Mr. and Mrs. Eggiman re

sided in Como, both >cre socially

prominent here.Mrs. Eggiman was employed in

the office of Roro Attorney Harry

Cooper for a number of years, while

Mr. Eggiman is in the renortorial

I staff of the Asbury Park Press.

am

FIRST M. E. CHURCH

CLEANING

Mr. Louis Heckman, formerly of Montclair, is now located at 1201

Bay View ayenue. Belmar. N. J. Hr has had twelve ex^oripnee i'

House Cleaning with both hand an<J electric vacuum plpinnt-s. Hp ;•

readv to mate contracts for cleanin'

entire interior of houses or Hotel- and w ill ehnot-fuPv estimate

for doing the snm". Phone 817-W

Corner of Seventh Avenue

and I) Street

Rpy. D. Roe Haney. Minister Worship 10 30 and 7.30 Daylight

Saving time. .Sunday School at 2.30

Epworth League at 7 o’clock, xho pastor w ill preach Sunday

•norninn on “Endurance.” Sundav

•"-ening on “A Fighting Hero”. A song service w ill preceed the even-

;ng worship.

Special Music by t’ Chorus

'hoir.

Page 2: $1.50 a Yeai Town Topics H. STRUNKSY PRAISES ...Single Copy 4c.. v**» T ' $1.50 a Yeai VOL. XVII No. 6 BELMAR, N. J., FRJ DAY. APRIL 28, 1922. Single Copy Four Cents RECORD DAMAGE

THE COAST ADVERTISER, BELMAR, N. FRIDAY, APRIL 28, 1922

IH E COAST ADVERTISERLOUIS BARR

Owner and Publisher

Publication Office and Plant 704 Nrnth Avenue, Belmar, N. J.

'Phone 580-M

wnen tney spoKe -msparagmgiy or the settlers of Michigan. When the boundary trouble \vas at its hottest in tiie 1830’s they used it most freely and most bitterly.

Entered as second-class matter February 25, 1908, at the post office M Belmar, N. J., under the Act ol Congress of March 3, 1879.

Subscription Rate (Strictly in Advance)

One Y e a r ............................. $1.50Single Copy , . . i eeata

Advertising Rates on Application

All communications, advertise-! meals, or other matter to be guaran­teed proper insertion, MUST be handed in not later than noon on Wednesday of each week.

All notices of entertainments by churches, societies, etc at which an admission fee is charged, for resolu­tions oi organizations in cases oi

..... of members, or similar read-,ing matter which is not in the form I of general news w ill be charged for j at tiie i<ate of live cents per line for j ^ach insertion.

••"gal Notices—The Coast Adver- ■ 'isei is a legal newspaper, and as ouch, is the proper medium for all legal notices. Some advertisements j belong lo us by law, while with many others It is optional with the ] party interested as to what paper shall publish them.

News Items of Local and Personal Interest Invited

Strange Friends.It appears from the testimony of

many naturalists that tiie lomeciiusa and atemeles beetles live in the i:ests of ants, much as cows live with man. On the sides of their abdomers they

have many unicellular glands that se­crete a fluid that the ants like as much as we like cows’ milk. The beetles, how­ever, have an independent standing in their adopted home and are rather friends and allies than domesticated animals, for they are quite capable of protecting themselves. Beside? the fluid that the hosts like so well, the beetle can produce from other glands a fluid of most disagreeable odor, which stupefies the ants, and which i* used whenever the ants become troublesome. In general, however, they apparently use it only against strange ants—the enemies of their hosts.

* j V 1 VVVVV

8

THE BEST OF ALL

P I E S

I f th e re is o n e th in g a b o v e a n o th e r th a t w e lo v e B E S T , i t ’ s P I E . K n o w i n g so m a n y are fo n d o f P I E , w e m a k e i t o u r w o r k to m a k e th e best P I E S th a t can b e m a d e - a n d use o n ly th e b e s t o f f lo u r , f r u it , p u m p k in a n d m a te ria l o f a ll k in d th a t goes in t o th e p ie ’ Y o u h a v e a c h o ic e o f e ig h t k in d s o f a l l - a l l g o o d --b u t th e c h o ic e is y o u r s .

Foreign Advertising Representative

THE AMERICAN PRESS ASSOCIATION

GOT IN BAD W ITH PIPKINSNn Question That Observation, Ready

Innocent, Was Not in the Eest Possible Taste.

“I don’t often say mean things.” said Dingbatt as he studied the piece nf apple pie and wondered which was the best point of attack, “but I surely said something mean yesterday. And t said it to my best friend, too.”

“How come?” asked his companion, who bad a cup custard that co d he tackled from any angle.

“Well,* you know Pipkins? 1 liuv<* known him nearly all my life. lie has always had the faculty of making money—not millions, of course, but more than I ever had. Several times lie has helped me when I needed it, and right now if 1 had to have some money I could get it from Pipkins. And I would get a lecture with it, too. Not ill-natured, but a lot of good advice, for Pipkins likes to feel that lie is managing my affairs.

“Well, yesterday I said to him: ‘Pip­kins, you have made a lot of money— more than I ever expect to have. From a financial point of view I am a good deal of a failure. But 1 have been married 30 years, my wife still kisses me good-by when I coine down town and she sees me turn the corner if I go home on my usual train. As a husband, I regard myself as an emi­nent success’.”

“I don’t see anything mean about that.”

“No? Well, Pipkins’ first wife eloped with a cheap actor, his second wife divorced him, and he and his present wife have most of their communica­tions by mail or telephone.”

M E R E L Y BORROW ED BY D E F O EImmortal Story of Robinson Crusoe

Founded on the Actual Adventures of Alexander Selkirk.

Daniel Defoe (1659-1731), the fa­mous English author, as is well known, conceived the design of “Rob­inson” Crusoe from the account he heard of Alexander Selkirk, a Scottish mariner, who hailed from the fishing village of Largo, in Fifeshire. Sel­kirk was left on the Island of Juan Fernandez in the Pacific ocean,, as a punishment for mutiny, and his his­tory is briefly given in the memorial tablet, which in recent times has been erected on that island: “In memory of Alexander Selkirk, mariner, a na­tive of Largo, in the county of Fife, Scotland, who lived on this island in complete solitude for four years and four months. He was landed from the Cinque Ports galley, 96 tons, 16 guns, A. D. 1704, and was taken off in the Duke privateer, February 12, 1708. He died lieutenant of H. M. S. Weymouth, A. D. 1728, aged forty- seven years. This tablet is erected near Selkirk’s lookout by Commodore Powell nnd officers of H. M. S. To’.w.. 1868 A.' D.” Selkirk’s cup and chest have been preserved and are now to be seen in the antiquarian museum in Edinburgh. *

Jenny Lind, Swedish Si.iger.Jenny Lind, or Madame Gold­

schmidt, famous Swedish singer, was born at Stockholm October C, 1820.

and died at Wynd’s Point, Malvemi. November 2. 18S7. She first appeared at the Royal theater in Stockholm as Agatha in .“Der Freisehutz,” March 7. 1838. From 1841 to 18-12 she studied in I’aris. Ihe next two years she spent in Stockholm. From 1844 to 1847 she* studied and sang in Germany, going from there to England, where she remained for two years, thence coming to America. She was married to Otto Goldschmidt, conductor and composer, in Boston. February 5, 1852. The last four years of her life she taught singing at the Royal College

of Music.-

BIG C E N T E R S O F P O P U LA TIO N

REITZ BAKERY

!

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8 0 7 1 -2 F S t . Belmar, N. J.

T E L E P H O N E SS I5-S6S

the

P R E S C R I P T I O NDRUGGIST

C o r n e r F S t r e e t a n d 9 t h A v e n u e REXALL STORE B e l m a r , ^ J .

Frank E. Moyer,

Twenty-Five of the Largest Cities of

the World, in the Order That

They Come.

London, England (Greater London>, had an estimated population of 7,562,- 124 (in 1919) ; New York city (Great­er New York), had a population of 6,441,445 (in 1919)'—and the city with­in limits, had a population of 5,620,- 048 (in 1920) ; Paris, France, (in 1911). had a population of 2,888.110: Chica­go, 111. (in 1920). 2,701.705; Petrograd, j Russia (in 1913), 2,318,645; Tokyo, Ja ­pan (in 1913), 2,173,162; Berlin. Ger­many (in 1919), 1,902,509; Vienna, Austria (in 1920), 1,842,005; Philadel­phia, Pa. (in 1920), 1,823,779; Buenos Aires, Argentina (in 1920), estimated population, 1,674,000; Hankow, China (in 1918), 1,443,950; Osaka, Japan (in1920), 1,252,972; Calcutta, India, with sulfirbs (in 1911), 1.222,313; Buda­pest, Hungary (in* 1921), 1.1S4.61G; Rio De Janeiro, Brazil (in 1920), 1,- 157,873; Moscow, Russia (in 1919), about 1,121,000; Glasgow, Scotland (in 1919), estimated population. 1,113,- 454; Peking, China (in 1918), over 1,- 000.000; Constantinople, Turkey (in1921), about 1,000,000; Shanghai, China (in 1918), 1,000,000; Detroit, Mich, (in 1920), 993,678; Hamburg, Germany (in 1919), 985,779; Warsaw, Poland, 980,000; Bombay, Tndia (in 3911), 979,445; and Canton, China (in 1918), 900,000.

Our Motto; SERVICE

N A Y L O R ’ S

V A N S a n d E X P R E S S

B A G G A G E , F R E I G H T , F U R N I T U R E , P I A N O SPA D D B D DUST PROOFS M OTOR VANS

FOR LONG D ISTANCE MOVING

Agents;

New York Transfer Co.

Dodds Kvpress

OfflCBS-.

Baggage Office, R . R . Depot

Res. 511 8 th A ve ., B e lm ar, N. J

706 NINTH a VKMUE

Phone 362

The K ind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over th irty years, has borne ihe signature oi

and has been made under his per*

sonal supervision since its infancy.^ Allow no one to deceive you in this.

A ll Counterfeits, Im itations and “ Just-as-good ” are but Experiments that trifle w ith and endanger the health of Infants and Children— Experience against Experiment.

W h a t is C A S T O R IACastoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is p le asan t. I t contains

neither Opium, Morphine nor other narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. For more than th irty years it has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, W ind Colic and Diarrhoea; a llaying Feverishness arising therefrom, and by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural sleep.

The Children’s Comfort —The Mother’s Friend.

G E N U IN E C A S T O R IA A L W A Y S

t B e a r s th e S ig n a tu r e o f

In Use For Over 30 YearsT h e K i n d Y o u H a v e A B w a y s B o u g h t

T H E C E N T A U R C O M R A N V , N K W Y O R K C I T Y .

"JVVVVVVVV9VVVItVA

R E S A T I S F I E D

Are you always satisfied that you are getting

the value you sh.iuld for you money in—-

F U R N I T U R E and h O U S E F U R N I S H I N G S ?Look over our large stoclv and let us quote

prices before you buy elsewhere.

M . . M . A jN J V E R7 0 1 N 1 M H A V L-i I I-: B K t - .v A K , N . J .

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. . | . • • j 1 • 5*5 / vJJL I S 1 1 n A v L . N l . -L-j . f . Q

It pays you to advertise in this paper!

S IE G F R IE D 'S SWORD IN B ER LINWeapon Had Long Been in German

Capital, Though the Hero Was

Really a Belgian.

The theft of the sword from the statue of Siegfried in Berlin raises the question. What has Berlin to do with Siegfried’s sword or with Sieg­fried himself? That hero was no Prussian, but rather a Belgian—at any rate, a Netherlander—and it was a Burgundian princess that he mar­ried. In his day the Borussians were an obscure tribe and scarcely heard of In Burgundy and along the Rhine.

Moreover, the difference in char­acter makes it hopelessly incongruous

for the Prussians of today to exploit Siegfried as one of their national he­roes. Hagen of Tronje would be more fit, chosen at the moment when he treacherously murders Siegfried, when he steals Kriemhilde’s fortune or when he brutally slays the Infant Ortiieb. But Siegfried was honorable, Sieg­fried was brave. Siegfried was chlval- ric, Siegfried was not a Holienzollern.

To exploit Siegfried and his Bal- mung as emblematic of Prussia, or in­deed of the Germany of today, is gross impertinence perhaps. It is well that the sword is gone. The statue itself should follow it into retirement from a place where it does not belong.

—New York Tribune.

isJt theUse©”

“Wolverine” Not Complimentary.Somebody put something over on

the people of Michigan when they termed inhabitants of the state Wol­verines. The wolverine, according to his most charitable biographers, is the most detestable four-legged brute of the new world. It is the largest of the weasel type of ani­mal, which includes the mink, skunk and marten, being about the size of a full-grown bull dog, but very short in the legs. Besides the wolverine, the skunk is a gentlemanly and compan­ionable creature. He is fierce, glutton­ous and unspeakably filthy In his hab­

its.Michigan had fewer wolverines than

Wisconsin, Minnesota or northern New York in the early days. One finds the term “Wolverine" commonly employed fry rpslflejits of Ohio about 100 vears,

Now Believe London Is Dead.The Danes are at last convinced that

Jack London is dead. A rumor had been widely circulated among them to the effect that the American author was living a secluded life on a South sea island and would not emerge until he had finished a momentous novel. A young Dane returned to Copenhagen the other day, fresh from San Fran-

j cisco. He said he had taken a walk ; with Mrs. Jack London, near the Lon- | dons’ California home. Coming to a | boulder, he leaped over it. Mrs. Lon- j don said: “Do you know what you | have just done?” The Dane confessed | his ignorance. “You have jumped

over my husband’s grave,” she said. I The Dane apologized for his seeming ! lack of respect, took the next train for j South Brooklyn, and embarked on the } Oscar I I for the Danish capital, where j he related his experiences. Jack Lon- ) don’s Danish publisher, Herr Martin,

said: “I never did quite believe that rumor."—New York Evenins Post

| H E m a k e rs o f U . S .T i r e s m a d e t h i s

^ a n n o u n c e m e n t last N o v e m b e r —

“Hereafter the price of the 30x 3!/2 ‘Usco’ is $10.90.”

T he lowest price ever quoted on a t iie o f quality reputation and standard performance.

And now, with the opening of Spring, there seem to be quite a number of “New and Special tires” coming into the market in the $10.90 price range.

Perhaps you are wondering just what there can be either “new’* or “special” about these tires.

It can’t be the $10.90 price— “Usco” established that five months ago.

Nor quality reputation and standard performance—for it takes more than one full season for any new tire to demonstrate where it stands in quality and value

* * *

With so many tires r us h- ing into this $10.90 price

United States Tire

field (now that the season prom­ises business from the American car-owner), it is worth remember­ing that “Usco” showed its good faith by announcing this price last fall.

The same intent to serve thathas made “Usco” a standard value for years.

The “Usco” Tire was never better than it is today—with its established quality, its time-tested performance, and its price closely fig' ured in tune with the times.

are Good Tirss

Copyright 1922

U * S. T ire C o ,

United States TiresU n ite d S t a t e s ( f l R u b b e r C o m p a n y

'/•three Factories

The Oldest and Largest Rubber Organization in jh e JVorlJ

W here Y ou

C an Buy

U . S . Tires:

COAST TIRE EXCHANGE L. A. NEWMAN

Page 3: $1.50 a Yeai Town Topics H. STRUNKSY PRAISES ...Single Copy 4c.. v**» T ' $1.50 a Yeai VOL. XVII No. 6 BELMAR, N. J., FRJ DAY. APRIL 28, 1922. Single Copy Four Cents RECORD DAMAGE

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Page 4: $1.50 a Yeai Town Topics H. STRUNKSY PRAISES ...Single Copy 4c.. v**» T ' $1.50 a Yeai VOL. XVII No. 6 BELMAR, N. J., FRJ DAY. APRIL 28, 1922. Single Copy Four Cents RECORD DAMAGE

THE COAST ADVERTISER, BELMAR, N. J. FRIDAY, APBII. 28. 1922

William H. Hurley’s Column

SUPPOSE a fellow

WAS taken sick

AND he needed a doctor

AND he phoned to

EVERY doctor in town

AND asked each one

HOW much he charged

A VISIT

WOULD you say

HE was thrifty

OR just plain crazy

AND what would you do

IN a case like that?

ALMOST everybody

HAS a family “M. D.”

HE trusts, honors

AND respects

HE wouldn’t let

ANOTHER man

HANDLE his case

IT’s all a question

OF confidence

OR reliance

OR dependability

CALL it anything

WHEN you boil it down

IT’S just a feeling

THAT you know he’ll do

HIS level best

FOR you.

HAVE you ever wished

YOU could buy your clothes

THAT way?

IT seems to us

THAT should be the aim

OF every man’s outfitter

TO make service

A PERSONAL matter

TO win confidence

TO deserve it and hold it.

AND by the way

W E’VE Got a motto

ABOUND here

AT the Men’s and Boys’ Shop

IT says that very thing

AND we want you to know

W E’D like a chance

TO show you

THE way we have

OF living up to it.

William H larley907-909 F S t ,

B E L M A K , N . J .

The Exclusive

Men's and Bogs' Shop

DRINK HOT WATER BEFORE BREAKFAST

Says you really feel clean, sweet and fresh inside, and

are seldom ill.

If you are accustomed to wake up with a coated tongue, foul breath or a dull, dizzy headache; or, If your meals sour and turn into gas and acids, you have a real surprise await­ing you.

To-morrow morning, immediately upon arising, drink a glass of hot water with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in it. This is intended to first neutralize and then wash out of your stomach, liver, kidneys and thirty feet of intestines all the indi­gestible waste, poisons, sour bile and toxins, thus cleansing, sweetening and purifying the entire alimentary canal.

Those subject to sick headaches, backache, bilious attacks, constipation or any form of stomach trouble, are urged to get a quarter pound of lime­stone phosphate from the drug store and begin enjoying this morning in- slde-bath. It is said that men and women who try this become enthu­siastic and keep it up daily. It is a eplendld health measure for it is more Important to keep clean, and pure on the inside than on the outside, because the skin pores do not absorb impuri- 'ties into the blood, causing disease, while the bowel pores do.

The principle of bathing inside is not new, as'millions of people practice it. Just as hot water and soap cleanse, purify and freshen the skin, so hot water and a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate act on the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels. Limestone phos­phate Is an inexpensive white powder and almost tasteless.

CriAlTERLook for the next war. Also keep

out.

Order your winter’s coal early

and avoid the rush,

A chronic critic seldom hears any

thing but criticism of himself.

Some women never appreciate

their husbands until other women j come alo.ig and take them away.

—o— ‘

Always look twice before cross-1

ing a street, lest a bicyclist ram you ]

into eternity.

Don’t scold yocr wife anl daugh- j ter for having ‘heir hair bobbed. It

requires less soap to wash it.

Anyway, life is just one thing

after another that we can’t have.

Never tell another man how to

manage his business. He w ill sus­

pect that you don’t know how to at­

tend to 5rour own.

— o—

Some people complain that they

never get their just deserts, and yet

if they did they w'ould howl like the devil.

The more we editors write of

short skirts the shorter they seem

to get. But perhaps that is the rea­son we write

— o—-

Every man who walks on two

legs is a stockman. At least he has a pair of calves.

Judging from* press reports, the

radio has made wonderful strides in the last few minutes. In an hour or so we ought to be receiving elec­

tion returns from Mars.

—o—

If it is true that we can talk w ith

departed spirits why not ask them

how it is down there? I might in ­

duce us to change our mode of liv

ing.

— o—•

It ’s a fact that some women are like houses. Paint improves their

appearance.

—o—

And still, we can hardly blame

some people for not telling the

truth. Jail life is anything but com

fortable.

— o—

] Cheer up! Ther’s plenty of work

I ahead for those who hate to see ) their wives do the hoeing in the

garden.

Some people are mighty sorry thev ever undertook to make the

other fellow sorry.

— o—Not a bit of it! Charitv doesn’t

alwavs begin at home. The boot­

legger often gets the first crack at

Wisdom is particular as to the

head in which it abides, but fool­ishness creens in wherever there is

a vacancy.

— o—Garden seeds cost a few cents.

Prinoing them tp maturity requires

n little effort. Eating the pro­

duct gives a lot of satisfaction. And

vet some people never bust a clod.

—o—

A local w it says it doesn’t make

any difference whether a woman

has anything in her head, provided

the husband has plenty in his pock­

et.

Many foresighted thinkers be­

lieve that the great war iust closed is only a prelude to a greater one vet to come. Unfortunately, liow-

fver. the Lord doesn’t tell all that

he knows.

When a hish financier steals a

I m illion and gives a nickel to char-

| itv he thinks he has naved the wav | to henven and is entitled to a soft s^ot of the right hand of t he Al­

mighty.— o—

Women who have fat legs prefer

thin ones, and those ■who have thin

I ones vearn for plumn ones, but we

I don’t see the men passing any of

! them up. Provided they are in sight

HELP WANTED

We are now able lo use a number of Boys from the age of 16 and 17

Girls wanted for doubling and winding Silk

No experience necessary

A p p ly a t once

B e lm a r B ra id M ills13 th A v e ., a n d R . R . B E L M A R , N . J .

\ V f.4finvv

vvv

United States Senator Joseph S. of the principles of President Hard-! X Frelinghuysen has vnnounced bis ing and wTill have the unanimous j V candidacy for re-election. He w ill | support of the Monmouth County! ►*«

stan<l on his record as a defender Republican Committee.

GAS RANGES,From $16.50 up. Why pay More?

All the Latest Models in Gas Ranges

Catarrh Can Be CuredCatarrh is a local disease, greatly

i influenced by constitutional condi­tions. I t therefore requires constitn-

j tional treatment. HALL’S CATARRH j MEDICINE is taken internally and j acts through the Blood on the Mucous j Surfaces of the System. HALL’S j CATARRH MEDICINE destroys the foundation of the disease, gives the

j patient strength bv improving the gen- l eral health and assists nature in doing its work.

All druggists. Circulars free.F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio,

LIST YOUR PROPERTY

FOR SALE OR RENT

with

E . B . B i g e l o w

R E A L E S T A T EINSURANCE

T e le p h o n e B e lm a r 7 0 9 - R

T e n th A v e ., O p p . R . R . D e p o t B e lm a r , N . J ,

*vVV

*VVVV *VVVVVVVVVVr<

*

¥

VVvV

1VV *VV

$ $ $V

$&

Sole agents for the well known Clark jewel Range with

Lorain oven regulator on display at my new salesroom.

Also Oil Stoves and Electric Appliances of every description

at bargain prices.

Call and be convinced. Phone or write for re­

presentative to call.

W. HOERSCH

1208 F St. Belmar, N. J.P h o n e 7 4 9 B e lm a r N e a r 1 3 t h A v e .

Ordinance No. 142, Borough of Belmar, N . ).P u rch as ing - C e r ta in E q u ip m e n t 1922

AN ORDINANCE Providing for the Purchase During 1922 of Certain

Equipment for the Borough of Belmar.

Passed: April 25, 1922

Approved: April 25, 1922

AttestFRED V. THOMPSON WILLIAM B. BAMFORD

Borough Clerk Mayor

The foregoing ordinance was passed as to its third and final read­

ing on April 25 1922.FRED V. THOMPSON

Borough Clerk

Ordinance No. 143, Borough of Belmar, N . J.Water System Construction, 1922AN ORDINANCE Providing for Construction Work to the Water

System during 1922 in the Borough of Belmar.

Passed: April 25 1922

Approved: April 25, 1922

Attest:FRED V. THOMPSON WILLIAM B. BAMFORD

Borough Clerk Mayor

The foregoing ordinance was passed as to its third and final read­

ing on April 25 1922.FRED V. THOMPSON

Borough Clerk

Capital and Surplus................ $600,000.00! rMK'.ivcs over .......................... $ 1,000 ,000.00

(I 1 i On §i HAsbury Park . N. J.

Every Banking Facility

Executor, Irustee, Administrator Guardian

Safe Deposit Boxes Banking by Mail

Interest Paid on Savings Accounts

May We Serve You?

M O R T G A G E SN E G O T IA T E L O A N S

$500. to $25,000First and Second Mortgage

Write

JAMES A. HARMONAttorney at Law

M O R T G A G E IN V EST M EN T S

142 M A R K ET ST., N E W A R K , N. j.

1 KEEPI

A h

KEEPING WELL MEANS ^ A CONSTANT FIGHT

AGASNST CATARRH

Many diseases may be described as a catarrhal condition. Coughs, colds, nasal catarrh, stomach and bowel disorders are just a few of the very common ills due to catarrh.

Fight it! Fight catarrh with a remedy of assured merit, a remedy which baa a reputation for usefulness extending over half a century—

n . P R . H A R T M A N ’ S

' -Tpe-ru-na II Tablets or LlQuld Sold Everywhere

Page 5: $1.50 a Yeai Town Topics H. STRUNKSY PRAISES ...Single Copy 4c.. v**» T ' $1.50 a Yeai VOL. XVII No. 6 BELMAR, N. J., FRJ DAY. APRIL 28, 1922. Single Copy Four Cents RECORD DAMAGE

Ra-Do Heaver with A Gas Mask

A heater without odors or un.

healthful vapors, Chemical com­

pound attached to Radiator, purifies

and humidifies the heat, provides

adequate oxygen, and maintains a

systematic circulation. _ The heater

can be installed for a small cost and

do the work of a large installation.L is t Y o u r H o m e s

F o r R e n t and F o r Sale

W it h tb eirTnrfA

IDEAL FOR BUNGALOWS

You can walk into your home any

day in the year, and have heat in a

few minutes without coal or ashes,

unhealthful vapors or any worry

looking after the furnace fire. Can

be operated for Z/2 cents per hour.

Como and see this remarkable heat­

er at the salesrooms of706 N in th A v e n u e

BelmarW I L L I A M H O E R S C H

1 2 0 8 F S tre e t N e a r 1 3 t h A v e . B E L M A R , N . J102 Lake Avenus, Ocean Grove, N. J.

NATIONAL BICYCLE WEEKA P R I L 29 - M A Y S

LOUIS SILVERS

I f y o u in te n d b u y in g a b ic y c le see o u r s to c k o f 25 b ic y c le s o n th e f lo o r t o ch o o se fr o m also v e lo c ip e d e s in all sizes. D u r in g th e w e e k w e w ill a llo w a d is c o u n t o f 1 0 p e r c e n t o n b ic y c le sales. F o r th e b a ll p la y e r w e h a v e a c o m p le te lin e .

Belmar Theatre Rep Hi ring A specialty Work Guaranteed

in c lu s iv e REACH BASEBALL SUPPLIES

BICYCLE SHOP1106 F ST. BELMAR, N. J.

Diamonds

Watches, Jewelry, Optical Goods

Cut Glass

BETTY COMPSON In

A Paramount Super-Special

“THE LAW AND THE WOMAN”

Pollard Comedy Pathe News

MONDAY

TUESDAY

Topics of the Day

B u r n s

Bandage the spot with plenty of soothing

mentholalumCools and heals gentlyand antiseptically.

The Little Nurse Jot Little III*”

BEBE DANIELS

Belmar, N. JW EDNESDAYIn “NANCY FROM NOWHERE*

ALL STAR CAST In N e ar Tenth Ave

Mutt and Jeff Cartoon

SPECIAL SALE OF

FINE FURNITURECHARLES RAY In His Latest'

L IG H T N IN G G A R A G E8th Ave. near F St.

fT in i^ o T U V

Century ComedyIf you are looking for fine furniture for Living

Room Dinning Room or Bed Room you should not

miss our stock. Never before since the opening of

our Furniture Department have we had as neat a

displav of furniture.

A n e w S h o p at an o ld s ta n d . A n e w P o li c y w it h an o ld n a m e .

S e r v ic e a n d s a tis fa c tio n . R e p a ir s o f a il m a ke s o f C a rs . W e are n o t F o r d M e c h a n ic s b u t d id y o u e v e r h a v e y o u r F o r d fix e d u p b y a

REGULAR MECHANICY O U ’L L B E S U R P R IS E D

O u r c h a rg e w ill be n o m o re th a n y o u h a v e been p a y in g . W e c a n n o t a ffo r d t o d o a c h e a p jo j) , n o r w ill it p a y y o u .

W e a re s e l l in g “ S e rv ic e a n d S a t is f a c t io n ”

M a k e u s p ro v e it .

WESLEY BARRY In

Ruth Roland in “The Flaming ArrowF R ID A Y

S A T U R D A YAesop’s Fables

I t a l i a n W a ln u t B e d R o o m S u it s

I t a l i a n D i n n i n g R o o m S u it s

A m e r ic a n W a ln u t B e d R o o m a n d D in n in g

R o o m S u it s

F a n c y T w o-T one E n a m e l B ed R o o m S u it s

P h o n e 8 8 5 - WR e p a ir s o f all m akes o f C a rs

PAUL C. TAYLORB E L M A R

S h e rm an ’s G arageT h o m a s S h e rm a n , P r o p ,

D IC K ” E N D E R S

Subscribe to The Coast

A dve rtise r $1.50 yearSubscribe to T he Coast

A dve rtise r $1.50 pe r Y e a r

THe F Ir s t Na t io n a l B a n k . I1 3 i s I—- AA. a r , . j r .LUCKY

STRIKECommercial Body Building

7 0 7 T e n t h A v e n u eOpp. R. R . Station

CLARENCE HARVEY

MANAGER OF REPA IR SHOP F o r Y o u r C onven ience

S e c o n d - h a n d C a rs b o u g h t a n d so ld Y o u o u g h t to h a v e a p e rs o n a l C h e c k in g

A c c o u n t w i th th e F ir s t N a t io n a l B a n k

I t is a s a fe w ay to p ay b i l ls a n d w il l

sav e y o u ex pense .

Y o u c a n s ta r t a C h e c k in g A c c o u n t w it h us a n y T i m e — d o it n o w w h ile i t ’s o n y o u r m in d

Notice this delicious flavor when you smoke Lucky Strike — it’s sealed in by the toasting process

fFRIDAY, APRIL 28, 1922_______ , ________ lB W IP THE <COAST ADVERTI SER, BELMAR, N. J.

Page 6: $1.50 a Yeai Town Topics H. STRUNKSY PRAISES ...Single Copy 4c.. v**» T ' $1.50 a Yeai VOL. XVII No. 6 BELMAR, N. J., FRJ DAY. APRIL 28, 1922. Single Copy Four Cents RECORD DAMAGE

THE COAST ADVERTISER. BELMAR. N. J. \ FRIDAY, APRIL 28, 1922

SSHERIFF SALE— By virtue of,

a w rit of fi. fa. to me directed, j

issued out of the Monmouth County |

Common Pleas Court of the State! of New Jersey, w ill be exposed to

sale at public vendue, on

Monday, the 1st day of

of May, 1922 between the hours of 12 o’clock and j 5 o’clock (at one o’clock) eastern j

Standard Time, in the afternoon of j

said day, at the Court House, i n ! the Borough of Freehold, county o f| Monmouth, New Jersey, to satisfj j

a judgment of said Court amount­ing to approximately $238.00

AU the defendant’s right, title and undivided interest in and to the fol-1

lowing:

Charles v. vickrey

T w e n ty - five thousand innocent c h i l d r e n have been condemned to death by the will of the Amer­ican people. Such is the statement made by Charles V. Vickrey, Gen­eral Secretary of the Near East R e l i e f , on the passing of a reso­lution by the ex­ecutive board of

T H I S M A S O N I C K E Y C H E C K * .....................................................Made of Geitna'n Silver

Lettered with your Naire and AiYrecs

that organization cutting down thfe ap­propriations for relief twenty-five per cent.

“At the lowest possible administra­tive cost,” says Mr. Vickrey, “the Near

A ll that certain build ing, lot tract) Bast Relief has been caring for one

or parcel of land and premises

hereinafter particularly describe:!

situate, lying and being in the Town ship of Wall, in the County of Mon­

mouth, and State of New Jersey.

First Tract Beginning at a stake standing at

the junction of the westerly line of

Cardeza avenue w ith the southerly

line of Sea View avenue, as shown

on a map of l a n d s of Charlotte Longstreet aforesaid:

Thence (1) south westerly follow­

ing the said westerly line of Car­deza avenue seventy-five feet to a stake; Thence (2) north westerly

in a line parllel w ith the said line of Sea View avenue one hundred

and twenty-seven feet to a stake;

thence (3) north easterly in a line parallel w ith the said Cardez ave­

nue line seventy-five feet to the said southerly line of Sea View ave­

nue; Thence (4) south easterly fol­lowing said Sea View avenue line

one hundred and twenty seven feet to the place of Beginning. Con­

taining nine thousand fice hundred

and twenty five feet (9525 square feet) strict measure, being the same

lands as conveyed by a deed of Charlotte Longstreet and Tabor C.

Longstreet, her husband to Sarah A. Vandehoof (n o w deceased)

bearing date of January 17th, 1899.

and of record in Monmouth County |

Clerk’s Office in Book 444 of Deeds [

page 4 etc. iSecond Tract

All that certain lot, tract or par- j

cel of land and premises hereinafter j

particularly described situate, lying

hundred thousand children, the home­less little orphans of the Near East. The cut in appropriations, made neces­sary by the decreased contributions, means that twenty-five thousand equal ly helpless children now on our door step must be refused admission and turned into the streets to perish of cold and hunger. There can be no other fate than that awaiting them. We are their only help and support..

“Five dollars a month will commute the sentence for one child. And I do not believe there is a man or woman in a home in America who could not and would not give that much to save a little child.”

AOSTO T H I S

S le e ve S iid e K e y H o ld e r tW

Both Complete For 50c

Sen d M o n e y O r d e r to H - A . W ills , E a t o n t o w n , N . J ,

* » > » * » » » : > " » » » » iX*x*XK*XK*XK*XKK^K*x*x*x*XK

FOR SALE

DESIRABLE F STREET

M AGN IFICEN T CO-OPERATION

OF EPISCOPAL COMMUNION

A plan of co-operation in the work administered by Near East Relief has been inaugurated by Bishop Thomas F. Gallor, Presiding Bishop, and coun­cil of the Protestant Episcopal Oharch. An Auxiliary Committee consisting of eminent churchmen, including bishops, clergy and laymen, Is being formed. This committee will he nation-wide In its personnel and will have a local executive committee with a prominent layman as chairman.

An especial emergency appeal Is go­ing forth to all parishes of the Epis­copal Church for a Lenten contribu­tion. Ten thousand orphan children, for whom no other provision is possi­ble today, are made the special charge of the Episcopal Church.

Bishop Gailor has given his personal indorsement to the Lenten appeal of the Near East Relief.

Some New Features In j Button Down Collar-on-Shirts

Albania Defied Sultan.

In the 25 years that Amureth I I was

and being in the Township of W ail Sultan of Turkey. lie conquered two

in the County of Monmouth and

State of New Jersey.Beginning at a stake in the west­

erly line of Cardeza avenue as laid down on a map of lands of said

party of the first part; Said stake

being one hundred and fifty feel from the easterly corner of Long­

street avenue w ith Cardeza avenue aforesaid; Thence (1) northerly

at a right angle w ith said Cardeza avenue line one hundred and twen­

ty seven feet to a stake for a corner Thence (2) easterly at a right angle

w ith the last described course

seventy five feet to a stake at the most westerly corner of the S. A.

Vanderhoof lot; thence (3) souther­

ly following the said Vanderhoof

lot line one hundred twenty seven ft. to the line of said Cardeza ave. Thence (4) westerly along the said

Cardeza avenue line seventy five ft.

to the place of Beginning, being a

plot or lot of land w ith all improve- m ents thereon seventy five feet in

w idth and one hundred and twenty seven feet in depth, adjoining the

said Vanderhoof lot on the wester­

ly side thereof.Seized as the property of Frank

N. Stires, taken in execution at the

suit of Julius Lewis, and to be sold

bvWALTER H. GRAVATT, Sheriff

Dated April 4, 1922Benj. B. Pearce, Attorney $33.18

empires, 12 kingdoms and 500 cities; but there was one little kingdom, ly­ing at his very door, which for a quar­ter of a century successfully defied and resisted Turkish Mohammedism and gave Amureth II more trou­ble than all his other enemies com­bined. The kingdom was Albania.

John Gratiot, leader of the A l­banians, repelled 20 separate inva­sions of the sultan’s army. All in all, nearly 1,000,000 Turkish soldiers were dispatched to conquer the little coun­try which was protected at no time by more than 30,000 Albanians. The Turks suffered frightful losses.

At last after 25 years of the most stubborn resistance recorded by his­tory, Albania yielded, but not till Gra­tiot himself had been harvested by

I the inevitable grim reaper.

T h is n ew s ty le e l im in a te s a l l th e

t h in g s y o u d o n ’t l ik e a b o u t a t ­

ta c h e d c o lla r s , a n d le ave s y o u a

s m a r t , c o m fo r ta b le s h ir t . T o b e ­

g in w ith w ith b u t to n s b u t to n s

k e e p th e e n d s f r o m f la r in g , l ik e

th e y d id w h e n c o lla r s w ere lo w .

A n d th e p o in ts a re n o t re a l lo n g ;

th e re is n ’t a s m u c h c h a n c e o f

w r in k l in g a n d g e t t in g o u t o f

s h a p e . N o w t h a t th e y ’re in c i l o r

as w e ll a s w h ite eve ry m a n s h o u ld

h a v e a few .

In White, Tan, Soiesette and

Oxford,

$2.00 and $2.50

COOK’S BEE HIVEASBURY PARK, N. J.

ASPIRINN a m e “ B a ye r” on G e n u in e

Master of Style.

The tjrutli of the matter is, that neither he who is a fop in the world is a tit man to be alone, nor he who has set his heart much upon the world, ttiough he lias never so much under­standing ; so that solitude can be well fitted and sit right but upon a very few persons. They must have enough knowledge of the world to see the vanity of it, and enough virtue to despise all vanity; if the mind be pos­sessed with any lust or passions, a man had better be in a fair than in a wood alone. They may, like petty thieves, cheat us perhaps and pick our pockets in the midst of company, but like robbers they use to strip and bind, or murder us. when they catch us alone. This is but to retreat from men to fall into the hands of devils.—

Abraham Cowley.

Plumbing & HeatingW e S p e c ia liz e o n R e p a ir W o r k

E le c tr ic W a te r P u m p s a n d R e p a ir s

Jos . C. S te w ardP h o n e 6 2 0 - R B E L M A R 1 1 0 6 F S t . 7!

J

&

A

VvVV►5vVVV *

r_It Pays to Advertise in this Paper

*

*

F IR E A L A R M B O X E S17—Eighth Ave. and F Street

18—Tenth Ave. and F Street

23— Third Ave. and A Street

25— Fifth and Ocean Avenues

27—Fifth Ave. and C Street

34— Sixth Ave. .and F Street

36— Seventh Ave. and D Street

41—Fourietnth and Ocean Aves.

43—Tenth Ave. and C Street

44—Eighth Ave. and A Street

45—Eleventh Ave. and A Street

53— Fourteenth Ave. and F Street

55—Twelfth and River Avenues

57—Thirteenth Ave. and D Street

SPECIAL TAPS

l-l-l Chiefs calL 2 Taps. Test

alarm given every evening at 7.30 o’colock. 1 tap, Brokevi Circut,

2 taps. Fire Out, given qfter fire

is extinguished

There are three sizes o f

Smoothtop Kanges

TH E C LO S ED : TOP GAS R A N G E YOU NAVE ALWAYS WANTED

This new gas range w ill give you more cooking sat isfaction, reduce your kitchen work, save gas for

you, and takes up less space in your kitchen. It

is the

V U L C A N S M O O T H T O PCompact Cabinet Gas Range

Ail the heat is retained and otilized for cooking purposes,

r id ah over. Every part ol (he top can be used for cooking or keeping things warm One burner cooks several vessels.

Prevents tipping of pots and any size vesse. can be heated.

Easy to clean. Food that boils over does not get into burners and can be easily wiped from the top.

W ill hold more pots than any tour-burner cabinet range and needs less space in your kitchen.

Automatic top burner lighter. Just push the button. No matches.- •* IJW jP IT -3 n;vThese are just a few SMOOTHTOP advantages. There are many more Before you buy a gas range, see the SMOOTH- TOPS displayed at our salesroom. One for every kitchen

The Coast Gas Company7 0 7 F S T R E E T B E L M A R , N . J

*vVV XVVV v

VVVVVVVVVVVVVV *

Each Lot

50 x 150 Ft.

♦VVy 1

5 *VVVV■3

V£<

F> $10,000 F>

R $12,000 R1 $15,000 I

Q $20,000 -GE $22,000 E

Term s to s u it B uyers

E xc lus ive A gency

H e ld B yx*x*x*xox

vVVVVVVVV

It$VVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVV

* I►5 1

765-7 lOih Avenue

Belmar, N. J .

VV

$ $ $ vVV

*x+x+x<'x<*x*z*x< * - ■« >" *f

V

........ ..

| Established m . . . Telephone Connection t

I E. 11ABERSTICK & SON IS u c c e s s o r s to W M . A L L S P A C M £”

= Gas Heaters . „ IHeating S & n i t x i r y P l u m b e r £

1 Gas Stoves5004 H M ree t, b e t . 1 0 th a n d J lt h Aves.

B E L M A R , N . J .

<«g»nini::iniu»iimmm;umnnmummnjnunmiiinnimnimi,n»nnmn„»—______ _ _

ri§eg

niiiin^

For Raw Sore ThroatAt the first sign of a raw, sore

throat rub on a little Musterole with your fingers.

It goes right to the spot with a gentle tingle; loosens congestion; draws out soreness and pain.

Musterole is a clean; white ointment made with oil of mustard. I t has all the strength of the old-fashioned mus­tard plaster without the blister.

Nothing like Musterole for croupy children. Keep it handy for instant use. 35 and 65 cents in jars and tubes; hospital size; $3.-BETTER THAN A MUST ABU PLASTER

EMBROIDERY STAMPING AND

HAND-KNITTED SWEATERS

Of course, there are tfWrculties i

about enforcing the prohibition law, j

but it is an easy task compared witIV

enforcing traffic laws.,,

S E E D B O C I i rThis wonderful Lviok ivta you the benefit ofour 45 years of experience aa seedsmen, gardeners and fa/mers. Send a postal for it today.WM. HENRY MAULE, Inc. 2{.°h!i.A:eS.st-

Catarrh Can Be CuredCatarrh is a local disease, greatly

influenced by constitutional condi­tions. f t therefore requires constitu­tional treatment. HALL’S CATARRH M EDIC INE is taken internally and acts through the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of the System. HALL'S CATARRH M EDICINE destroys the foundation of the disease, gives the patient strength bv improving the gen­eral health and assislfc nature in doing its work.

All druggists. Cii'cnUrs free.F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio,

w . L . B A B C O C KTYPEW RITERS BOUGHT

-VND SOLD

txpert Repairing and j V

Rebuilding of All M akto f i

at Reasonable Rates 1

Victor Adding Machines ’

805 10th Ave Belmar, N .J.

1 • Cement\

^V/ater Proofing)

'mpoundj

r. Award'1&C0LD NEDAL ^

►jVV

V ►J

IMPERVITE COAt CEMENT WOOD

SEWED PIPE FEED

W ils o n N e w m a n & Sons 13th & R. R. Aves., Belmar, N. i.

Page 7: $1.50 a Yeai Town Topics H. STRUNKSY PRAISES ...Single Copy 4c.. v**» T ' $1.50 a Yeai VOL. XVII No. 6 BELMAR, N. J., FRJ DAY. APRIL 28, 1922. Single Copy Four Cents RECORD DAMAGE

THE PRINTER’S DEVIL f Charles SugjWtstem Newspaper

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SROOVOS 8 TOCR e o . -TEW SHOW A U . MEXT W E EK -S i

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at fpeepoflt, m o m r o c f a \r , g e e , >'aa am$s \u' p

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FRIDAY, APRIL 28, 1922 ____________ THE COAST ADVERTISER, BELMAR, N. J.

" ’S M id P le a s u re s a n d P a la c e s

l V?H p<g

THOMAS 0. jOECKSu ce~ sor to

N e i l H . M i l l e r

7frb r»lr*»h / 1 > E M I ; E BELMAR, N. J. The Business Which Fair Dealings Built

Commissioner of Deeds Conveyancing Notary Public INSURANCE MORTGAGES REAL ESTATE

A GOOD HOME is the Best Legacy ever left One’s Family. W liy not own your own home?

We can help you to secure a home.

Is your property properly protected with good Insurance

We cap give you valuable information on the subject.

lemerCOAL and LUMBER

Hay, Straw, Lime, Feeci Cement, Sewer Pipe

and FJue Linings

Sash, Doors, Frames and Moldings

Rex Shingles Best Wall Boadr

Yard and Officr 12tb Ave and IV. K., Belmar, N. J

Frank Briden Jr. & SonSpecialty COAL and WOOD

Hay and Feed, Lime Cement and Plaster

Sewer Pipe and Flue Linings.

Yard and Office 13th Ave and Railroad

BELMAR, N. T.

Paperhanging a

PAINTERS and

DECORATORS

Estimates Cheerfully Given

Banished forever in a S

| couple of hours

j FUMIGATION METHOD i

| Cast Iron Guarantee |

> Phone Asbury 1772 J

I Asbury Park New Jersey j

Try Our Saturday SpecialsB R E Y E R ’ S I C E C R E A M A lw a y s th e Be? t

Special Prices on Cream to Lodges, Parties, Etc.

Full Line of STATIONERY and TOYS

SCHRAFTS CANDIES

Conotw’s Damply £tor?NEXT TO BANK PHONE 789 BELMAR

702 F Street F. 0. Brice, SuccessorNew JerseyBELMAR

ELECTRICAL

CONTRACTORS$ Phone 527 ’

Riverside Dairy Belmar, N. J

Centra! Market Phone 519 !J

| Herman F. Lazaraus, Plop <

| City Dressed Befef f\ Lamb, Veal and Pork S

Fresh dressed poultry ?? a specialty. I

| 908 F Street BELMAR j

INSURANCE &ONDS REAL ESTa TB

L is t your Cottages and B unga low s for rent

w ith me: I w ill secure the renters

PURE MILK and CREAM

Deliveries Made Daily

Headquarters for al|l kinds of

AUTO SUPPLLIES

Service Station for Goodyear Tires

1004 F Street BELMAR

Phone 49*

508 E ighth Avenue

Where Do You B u y Your BUILDING MATERIAL?

When in want do not for cret that the Buchanon and *Smock Lumber Co. of As­bury Park can supply you.

Write or see

Buchanon & SmockASBURY5 PARK, N. J.

Phone 520-R

Successor to Wm. Shafto

CIVIL ENGINEER

and SURVEYOR

F Street near 17th avenue

Phone 483-M

v m g

AUTOMOBILE REPAIRING Burglary Insurance inspiresa

feeling of confidence and security, whether you are away or at home. We are prepared to write it for you at very reasonable rates.

HONCE & DuBOISB E L M A R , N . J .

Oxy-Acetylene Welding and Cutting

'>01 F Slreet 1ELMAR

Pearces ExpressCARTAGE DRAYAGE

BAGGAGE EXPRESS

Orders Promptly Attended to. Furniture and Pianos moved. Either Long or Short Distance.

Telephone 630-R

Beilmar, N. J.

Dillon s ExpressG. W. Hurley, Prop. Dealler in

Repairs and Supplies Local and Long Distance Hauling

616 Sixteenth Avenue

FRUITS —VEGETABLES

Confectionery, Soft Drinks

and Tobacco

915 F Street BELMAR

Baby Coach Wheels

and Tires

Base Ball Goods

BELMAR, N. .)

Phone 569I C A R P E N T E R? and <I B U I L D E R \? Jobbing Promptly Attend- ?5 ed to. Estimates Cheer- |I fully Given. »\ 601 EIGHTH AVE. \f BELMAR, N. J, || Phone 518-R f

T h e F isk N o n - S k id T ireA G L E A N - C U T , s tu r d y t ire ,

b ig in s iz e a n d p r o v e d in

se rv ic e . A d e e p b u t t o n t r e a d

g iv es s u re t r a c t io n o n w e t r o a d s

— a t r e a d th a t g iv e s a sense o f

c o n f id e n c e fo r th e s u d d e n s to p

a n d th a t r e ta in s its s a fe ty fe a ­

tu r e in to b ig m ile a g e .

T h ere ’s a Fisk tire o f ex tra value in every size, fo r car, truck or speed wagon

Opp. Public School

1106 F street BELMAB

First Class References

Jobbing Promptly AttendedEstablished 1886

103 Seventh AvenueResidence 611 12th Ave.

BELMAR, N. J.Distributors of

Nash Touring Cars Nash Trucks

Stewart Trucks and Dort Cars

Machnie Shop

800 F Street BELMAR

Slate, Tile, Rex a n d

Asbestos Roofing Tinning and Sheet Metal

WorkPhone Belmar 592 Care of

Rosenfields Cigar Store Home Address

902 F Street BELMAR

Phone 592 !W

S. Dresden

PLUMBING - HEATING

J. C. PridhamContractor and Builder

W o r k G u a ra n te e d P r ic e s R i g h t

419 14th Avenue BELMAR, N. 1.

925 F Street BELMARLadies and Gents

T A I L O R I N G| 9th Ave. BELMAR, N. J. jNext to Post Office |

All Kinds of Merchandise Bought and Sold YOUR CAR

0. H. NewmanHUDSON, ESSEX and OVERLAND CARS

Full Line of Supplies

E X I D E Battery Service

708 F Street BELMAR

Phone 513

Six-Ply Non-Skid Cord 31 x 4 —$27.00

Non-Skid Cord32 x 4 — 30.50

Non-Skid Cord32 x 4K— 39.00

Non-Skid Cord34 x 4K— 41.00

Non-Skid Cord {35 x 5 — 51.&)

Fisk Premier Tread o0 x VA—$10.85

Non-Skid Fabric30 x 3 ^ — 14.85

Extra-Ply Red-Top 3 0 x 3 ^— 17.85

Six-Ply Non-Skid Clincher Cord

30 x 3 X — 17.85 Six-Ply Non-Skid Cord Straight Side

30 x 3'/z— 19.85

Looks Shabby writh those

Curtain Lights Out

Have them put in at

1112 F Street BELMAR

Tim© to Re-tire?

| A d v e r t i s e r A d sB r i n g G o o d R e s u ltsBELMAR

Page 8: $1.50 a Yeai Town Topics H. STRUNKSY PRAISES ...Single Copy 4c.. v**» T ' $1.50 a Yeai VOL. XVII No. 6 BELMAR, N. J., FRJ DAY. APRIL 28, 1922. Single Copy Four Cents RECORD DAMAGE

THE COAST ADVER SER, BELMAR, N. J. FRIDAY, APRIL 28, 1922

ANNOUNCEMENT

The C oast D a iry C om pany w ishes to a n ­

nounce the o p e n in g o f one o f th e ir stores a t

702 Ninth Avenue May 6th, 1922

with a full line of Dairy and Grocery Products, Luncheon­ette, Candy, Ice Cream of Superior qualities.

C om pare o u r prices w ith

Stores elsewhere

FREE!

T he Ice C ream w h ich

denotes Q U A L IT Y

FREE!

W a t c h

for our

Grand O p e n i n g

if

IC S C]

FREE!A h i g h g r a d e b o x of Stationery

w i t h your i n i t i a l s embossed w i l l b e g i v e n w i t h e a c h

$2.00 purchase.Telephone 7 0 9 - M

B A B Y W E E KM AY 1st - WAY 6th

W hile this offers many attractive buying opportuities. Special

sales w ill be featured in the! Lafayetje Shop thruout the week.

It is primarily a practicalexposition of modern merchandise

essential to the health and welfare of Baby Week. There are

large selections of every type of Infants’ Wear, Nursery Fur­

niture and other Baby necessities.

A consulting specialist w ill be in the Infant’s

Shop every day all through the week. Here

mothers can receive, without charge, the advice

of health authorities on the proper feeding and

care of babies of every age.

H a n d s o m e B a b y F ro ck s

A s L o w A s 7 9 c

From those first sheer fine ones Baby is slipped into after

pinkly emerging from a fragarent bath to the sturdy Rompers

he learns to walk in, Baby Frocks offer a generous

variety. Some especially dainty •white nainsook styles with

yokes are entirely handmade and sPecially priced at 79c. Others

are of batiste, nainsook, handkerchief linen, etc.

B a b y F u rn itu r e F o r

F u n a n d C o m fo r t

Every self-respecting Baby owns his own Furniture. First of

all he w ill need’ a dainty Bassinette, and when he gets older a

Crib. And getting alon g without a Carriage simply is out of

the question. We are now showing an excellent selection of

Bassinettes, Cribs, Baby Carriages (fourth floor), Kiddie

Koops, Shales, Chairs, etc.

In fa n ts S h o p S e c o n d F lo o r

Ask for Tree book on child care and feeding1 by Drs. Shaw and

Holt, prominent authorities on baby health and welfare.

f i f t m b a d ]A a f a u r t t | a r k , .■us jin m y

Yesi t ’s t o a s te d , o f

c o u rse . T o sea l

i n th e flavor-—

Ordinance Ko. 138, Boiougii of Belmar, N . J.faxes 1922 "

AN ORDINANCE Relating to Taxes for the year Nineteen Hundred and twenty two.

Passed: April 25, 1922

Approved: April 25, 1922

Attest:

FRED V. THOMPSON WILLIAM B. BAMFORD

Borough Clerk Mayor

The foregoing ordinance was passed as to its third and final read­ing on April 25 1922.

FBED V. THOMPSON

' ( Borough Clerk

Ordinance Nn. 140, Borough of Belmar, N . J.AN OBDINANCE amending an ordinance entitled “An Ordinance

providing for the laying of House connections on Ocean Avenue before

paving” passed and approved October 4th, 1921.

Passed: April 25, 1922

Approved: April 25, 1922

Attest:

FRED V. THOMPSON WILLIAM B. BAMFORD

Borough Clerk Mayor

The foregoing ordinance was passed as to its third and final read

ing on April 25 1922.

FRED V. THOMPSON

Borough Clerk

FIERY, ITCHY SKIN

BY THIS SULPHURMcntho-Sulphar, a pleasant cream,

will soothe and heal skin that is ir­ritated or broken out with eczema; that is covered with ugly rash or pimples, or is rough or dry. Noth­ing subdues fiery skin eruptions so quickly, says a noted skin specialist.

The moment this sulphur prepara­tion is applied the itching stops and after two or three applications, the eczema is gone and the skin is de­lightfully clear and smooth. Sulphur is so precious as a skin remedy be­cause it destroys the parasites that cause the burning, itching or dis­figurement. wMentho-Sulphur always heals eczen, right up. f

A small jar of Mentho-Sulphur may be had at any good drug store.

Ordinance No. 141, Borough of Belmar, N . J, Certain Construction Work, 1 9 2 2 *AN ORDINANCE Providing for Construction Work During 1922 i:

the Borough of Belmar:

Passed: April 25, 1922

Approved: April 25, 1922

Attest:

FRED V. THOMPSON WILLIAM B. BAMFORD

Borough Clerk Mayor

The foregoing ordinance was passed as to its third and final rea

ing on April 25 1922.

FRED V. THOMPSON

Borough Clerki

K e e p W e l l !W hen you feel nervous, tired, irritable;

. when you’re ill w ith any disease caused by

\ disordered nerves, don’t gfive up until you try

D r .M il e s ’Ne r v in e