with thanksgiving and joy - digifind-itthe boys, rompers, food of all kinds, the attendance at ihe...

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If someone advertises for a worker, and there’s a possibility that it’s a job for yon, FIX'D OCT ABOUT IT, for SOMEBODY is going to get it. U yon an- •> ie to buy a home soon, d o n 't <ti-.j-.ii that you must wait awhile lonser—ti it investigate the real estate ailt* and then you’ll KNOW. iINCORPOHATKU W ITH W HICH IS THK COAST ECHO) VOL. XX 111.— Whole No. 1244. Cl liCULATION HOOKS Ol’KN TO ALL BELMAR, N. J., FRIDAY, N O V E M B E R 20, 1914 CIRCULATION HOOKS OI’HN TO ALL Price Two Cents BOARD OF HEALTH ELECTS OFFICERS TOWN GOSSIP Oil Thursday night the Board of Health held an election of officers at the office of Chas. Hudnut. Charles Goff, an agent of the Prudential Insurance Co., was elected president; William Bergen, vice-presi- dent, and Chas. Hudnut, clerk. The Board .reported that there were -29 deaths, 30 births, and -29 marriages in the borough during the past year. There were 110 sewer connections made and SI complaints received and attended to by the Board. The reappointment of Dr. Fred Thomp- son and Jacob Rosenfeld, whose terms have expired, will be recommended to the Council. Motion Pictures at St. Rose’s Hall Resuming the weekly entertainment of the past two years, there will be motion pictures displayed at St. Kose’s Hall every Thursday evening at 8 o’clock. High grade educational pictures will be shown, five reels on each occasion ; and as an added attraction, St. Rose’s Boys’ Band will play at^every entertainment. Since there is no desire to make money on the venture, the whole income is to be devoted to securing the best attractions possible. The people of Belmar are cor- dially invited to attend. Admission, 10 cents: children under twelve, 5 cents. New Jersey 33d Degree Masons to Meet Xew Jersey' Thirty-third Degree Masons will meet in ninth annual ses- sion at The Washington, 559 Broad street, Newark, on AVednesday even- ing, December 2nd. The society is known as "The Sovereign Grand In- sp:ctors General, 33rd degree Honor- ary Members of the Supreme Council Ancient Accepted Scottish Rite for the Northern Masonic Jurisdiction of the United States of America.” ,The sooiety is composed of all Thir- ty-Third ^Degree Masons in New Jer- 'scy. Therfe are over tiftv on the list, one from Monmouth, former Judge J. Clarence Conover, of Freehold, a past grand master. There will be a ban- quet in .connection with the meeting. A former Long Branch man, George IL Woolley, now in Detroit, Mich., is s Thirty-Third Degree Mason. DEAL COUNCIL HOLDS MEETING Automatic Fire Alarm System Will Prob- ably Be Installed Next Year; Paving Bids to Be Advertised. Fire Chief Joseph Conover of Deal recommended to the boro commission- ers Saturday that an automatic Are alarm system, with 12 alarm boxes, he installed in Deal. The chief said iho system is necessary. Chief Conover also told the commis- sioners that because of the partial shutting down of the East Jersey Light and Power company's plant, which is being absorbed by the Atlantic Coast company, the boro would be without a (ir<> alarm whistle within six weeks. The commissioners suggested that the chief make an effort to secure some kind ol a whistle or bell alarm' signal. The automatic alarm system may be installed next year. Chief Conover was asked to. find out the probable cost of such a system. The commissioners authorized od- vertisement lor bids for the paving of Ocean avenue with cither wood block or vitrified brick. This improvement will be one of the largest road im- provements made in this section re- cently. Allenhurst Begins Crusade on Unlighted Wagons Chief of Polic- Hart Havens of Allen- hurst has begun a crusade to enforce th* state law requiring lights on all vehicles after nightfall, following the receipt of a communication from State Motor Vehicle Commissioner Lippincott asking for co-operation in a state wide uuupaigu, chief Havens issued in- structions to Allenhurst patrolmen to \:rh tfe.nl the law was enforced. Ar- rests will r suit, frpm its violation in III ■ boro, Furnished rooms, with or without board, in refined private family; home comforts) terms reasonable. Mrs. Robert Kstell, 1103 Ninth avenue, Belmar. '1 lie most complete line of Flastman’s HI mu in town. Filins developed and printed. Seymour’s, next to I’oht Olliee. Ady. Tlie stork has arrived at tlie home of Mr. and INIrs. Wm. B. Lokerson on (ith avenue, bringing an 8-pound baby girl. The new arrival lias been named Beatrice Elizabeth. Both mother and child are doing nicely. Mr. Charles Levinsohn lias left for an extended business trip, which will take in most of the winter season. This is the weather that makes you get out your fur bennies and ask, “ What did you do with the money you made last summer!'” Mr. Arthur Osborn, general manager of the Coast Gas Co., witnessed the Aale- Princeton game on Saturday with a party of friends. Mr. Osborn is a graduate of Princeton. Pacer and Williams have received thi‘ contract for installing a steam heating plant in tha double house, Wm. Hoerseh has just purchased of Floyd F\ Tomlinson at 1204 F street. MISS RUTH HOEHN WEDS W . WEISBECKER adv F.RTib E R prim - Secretly Married in New York-Both s now prepared to ’ . - - c of I Prominent in Summer Social Set THE COAST ING OFFICE IS HANDLE ANY LARGE ORDERS PROGRAMS, MENUS, DANCE OR- DERS, SOCIETY AND FRATERNAL ORDEIJ ANNOUNCEMENTS AND PROGRAMS, WEDDING INVITA- TIONS AND ANNOUNCEMENTS, ETC. Howard Kain and family of Phila- delphia were week-end visitors in Belmar. Next Sunday’s services at the Twelfth avenue Baptist Church will be presided over by the Rev. F. S. Berggren mf Jer- sey City. There will be a fine musical program arranged. Master Weslev Hausotte, youngest son of Mr. and Mrs. V. J. Hausotte, is con- fined to his bed as the result of a severe strain in one of his ankles. The supper wliich was given by the Twelfth Avenue Baptist Church on Thurs- day night was an overwhelming success, barring the stormy weather. Over a hundred were served, and declared this one to be better than ever. The supper was held at the American House on Tenth avenue. The library will move from its old lo- cation on F' street to its new building on Tenth avenue to day. The building has been completed and the grounds are now in excellent condition. The Women's Club will hold its regular meeting in the new library this afternoon. Warren Hoffman, son of Howard Hoffman of 613 Fifth avenue left for Florida with Dr. Schadts party Mon- day. James Bolton of Ocean Grove has rented the cottage at 611 Fifth avenue for the winter. Mrs. Henry' .V)(gor ahd daughter of 705 Seventh avenue have gone to New- ark for the winter. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Thatcher ana son Whitney spent -Sunday at their cottage, 417 Fifth avenue. At a congregational meeting held at the close of the morning service Sun- day at the Presbyterian church Clar- ence C. Wildman and William A. Gas- sin were elected elders and will be ordained Sunday morning. Clinton Y. Cooper has been awarded the contract of installing electric lights for Dr. Peter Davison of Hamilton. ! th? Yale-Prlnceton game with THE COACT ADVERTISER OFFICE j friend who lives next door- HAS A MOST COMPLETE LINE OF ! SAMPLES FOR WEDDING INVITA- TIONS, DANCE ORDERS, PROGRAMS j FOR ALL OCCASIONS, NEW YEAR AND CHRISTMAS CARDS, SHOW' CARDS AND WINDOW HANGERS, ANNIVERSARY FOLDERS, MOURN- j Miss ltuth Hoehn, the twenty-year- old daughter of Jacob Hoehn, a pro- duce dealer, and one of tha popular girls in the summer colony, who lives at No. 471 West One Hundred and Forty-fourth street. New'York City, left her home Saturday morning to go to a girl Today she is Mrs. Walter Weisbecker. The- two girls drove away in an auto, but they stopped at the Cam- eron, St. Nicholas avenue and One Hundred and Twenty-sixth street. There they were joined by the groom- to-be, who is twenty-two, of No. 181 REMEMBER THE BABY BLIND Reception Given to Rev. C. and Mrs. Everett In Distributing Your Thanksgiving Dona tions ING CARDS, ENGRAVING, TASSELS, West One Hundred and Twenty-sixth MENUS AND PROGRAMS FOR' street, and Carl Heusser. EVERY OCCASION AND HOLIDAY, The party drove to the Municipal BIRTH ANNOUNCEMENTS, LODGE! Building where Weisbecker and Miss DESIGNS, CALENDARS, ENCLOSING | ENVELOPES. BALL AND INVIT I TION TICKETS, ADVERTISING N >- : VELTIES OF EVERY DESCRIPTION. CALL AT THIS OFFICE FOR SHOW- ! ING, OR PHONE FOR REPRESEN-{ TATIVE TO CALL. Hoehn obtained a license to marry. Th? Rev. Hugh Pritchard, of No. 102 West Ninety-third street, performed the* ceremony, and the young peopie went to the Plaza for a . wedding breakfast, When it was over Weis- becker and his bride took a train for " ; Atlantic City. Lynn Morris, a well known youth of: Hoe,m WM toW by telephone of tho this town was held up by a strange niarriaE;e. and t0„day he said he looking fellow on Railroad avenue | his daag!ltei. had been, trying about 4 a. m. Tuesday morning. Mor- tQ (,odge an ;laborate ,vedding. Her ris received such a shock thathe hasn'; | engag0ment (0 Weisbecker> hosaid, recovered from it >et. wag annoullced August 12. Charles jW. Weisbecker, whose sons are con- tinuing his extensive business in Har- lem, was killed in an automobile ac- cident at Fort Lee five years ago. Interesting Entertainment to be Given in St. Rose’s Hall There will be a Thanksgiving donation parly lasting all day at the Arthur Home, Pine Grove avenue, Summit, N. J., on Thanksgiving Day. Miss Adelaide Black, superintendent, will send strong paper bags with handles to anybody who wishes to .fill them. Ten of the bags will fill a barrel. Donations of all kinds are asked for, especially un- derwear, sweaters, shoes, knit suits for the boys, rompers, food of all kinds, The attendance at Ihe Arthur Home is, on an average, forty children, all blind. As you are thankful for your own eye- sight and the eyesight of your loved ones, i do not pass these little folks by. A big j new storeroom has been built for supplies. It is empty. Let it be filled on Thanks- giving Day. Have You a Blind Baby? Wanamassa Hotel to Be Re- built On Tuesday evening,, December 1, a very interesting entertainment has been arranged to take place in St. Rose’s Hall. The entertainment will be given by the famous Irish lecturer and singer, 1 Lewis William Armstrong of New York. ork is to be begun this week on a Mr. Armstrong lias given these entertain- barn and wagon shed, bottling plant ments throughout the country, and judg-1 antl >ce house at the Wanamassa hotel, ing from the press comments the enter- 1 *^° leplace the buildingsdestroyed by tainment must be well worth hearing. ! fire a short time ago, TU.Q nsw build- The entertainment tri!! begi* w:‘h t» '.’'f s ' ' e r-0 ,'«> ol .hpllyw stuc- bird’s-eye view of the Irish history. illus-j('°- William Griffin, the proprietor, is trated with representative songs and con Have you a blind baby 't If so, do you , veer, know that New York State now provides j ^ for its baby blind by sending a child from j the day it’s blinded for special care, maintenance and education to the institu- tion maintained by the International Sun- shine Society for the Baby Blind? The Commissioner of Education ap- points these children and the state pays at the rate of a dollar a day for each one’s care. Do not hide your blind babies any longer and thus allow them to grow up crippled in body and feeble in mind. As a citizen you are entitled to send your children to school. This is the only institution now in the United States that opens its doors to any blind baby from any State, if tuition of a dollar a day is paid. If yoar baby is not in a State that pays for the blind you can send it as a private pupil. The States that now ^provide for the baby blind are: New York, New Jersey, Maryland, Arizona, North and South Dakota, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Rhode Island. Communicate Immediately with Mrs. Cynthia Westover Alden, President-Gen- On Tuesday evening the members slm I friends of the First Presbyterian Church tendered a reception to Dr. and Mrs. Charles Everett in honor o? their return from their fall vacation. The church was very prettily decor ated for th? occasion with flowers and plants. A beautiful autograph quilt o blue and white, which had been con coaled belling a la^ge flag, was remov- ed at the proper time, and presented to Mrs. F^verett, which proved a grea surprise to her. Dr. Flverett made few intersstlng remarks on the novel surprise scheme. A very interesting program was arranged, including Miss Gladys Thompson in a solo assisted by Miss Elva VanNote, and several piano selections by Mrs. Edward Rur- ben. Miss Marie- Strudwick, Miss .Marjorie Kidd, Miss Helen Wildman and Miss Elva VanNote distributed white chrysanthemums to all present Throughout the evening light refresh j ments were served. The committee in j charge were, Mrs. Thomas Prior, Mrs. I Clarence Stines, Mrs. Tunis Vander- Mrs. C. C. Wildman and Mrs Pacer. MYSTICS ARRANGE HARD SCHEDULE tinue through to the present day cf that famous little nation. The entertainment is called Ireland in Song and Story, and as we. all know that the whole world boasts and comments Ireland on its won- derful music loving and composing people, one cannot well afford to miss this oppor- tunity to hear the true history of it. to have the work done by day’s work. The improvements will cost about $5,000. Harry S. Cooper and Listen King were at the football game in Princeton Saturday. They made the trip on King’s motorcycle. The social g ven by the W. C. T. U at the home of Mrs. Wilson Newman 819 Twelfth avenue, was well attended J and a very interesting program was [ given. Mrs. E. C. Ayres of Pittsburg ls visiting Mrs. John O. Herbert of 411 Eleventh avenue. Silver Lake council, Junior Mechan- ics at its meeting Monday evening voted to attend seryice at the Metho- dist church Sunday, Nov. 29. Robert Hard;>ence of Flemington 1.? visiting his uncle, James B. House!, 704 Eighth avenue. The Misses Katherine Sherwood and j Ethel Har.ee have returned from a few I days stay in the big town, where they w re busily engaged in theatre and | dinner parties. Miss Grace Reimuller visited her parents on 10th avenue Saturday. Some gunner what this Dunfae is, in a two day shooting trip, he bagged n arly twenty rabbits, two pheasants, several squirrels and other game. A new automobi)' ■ ;iply house .is being started i n ' tl- • Chamberlain Building on 9th aveir . The new firm xpects to handle every possible known automobile acc ssory. Wm. II. Sanborn has just recently installed a new hot soda fountain in his new store on the Main street. It is the only ice cream place in town that ke ps ice cream all winter. With the hot drinks .Mr. Sanborn will do a rushing busim ss. Miss Betty Ros-nfeld, who has been visiting in New York for the past month lias returned for a short length of time. Miss Alice Williams, who is employ- 'd in Sanborn’s ice cream parlor on F street, Inis been cpnflned to her home for a few days with an attack of grip. / I “I’LL SHOW ’EM. IU KN ’EM.” I’ve stopped the paper, yes I have, I didn’t like to do it. But the editor he got too smart, And 1 allow he’ll rue it, I am a man who pays his debts, And will not be insulted, So w'hen the editor gets smart I want to b? consulted. I took the paper Tevej^ years And help him all I could sir, But when it come to dunnin’ me I didn’t think he would, sir. But that ha did, and you can bet It made me hot as thunder; 1 says, “I’ll sto^i that sheet, I will, ir the doggone thing goes under.” I hunted up the editor And fcr his cunnin’ caper I paid him ’LEVEN years and quit! Yes, sir, I stopped tha paper. FORM IN LINK, PLEASE Wa are doipg a superior Tine of printing in our job department just now, and our sale bills are the talk of the country. Week before last we got an order of bills for a farmer north of town and they were so attractive and nifty that he couldn’t begin to take care of the crowds that flocked to the sale. After getting the top price tot* ev ry animal, implement and article on the bill, the auctioneer simply couldn’t stop. The people just clamored for more. The. farmer, in the hope of driving them away, put up his mother-in-law: She brought *160 on the hoot'. Then he offered his mortgage for sale. A lifelong friend- ship betwe n two old neighbors was shattered as each tried to outbid the other. It was finally knocked down to the richer man who was promptly knocked down by the poorer. He sold the weeds along the 'roadside, lie sold a gold brick that he bought in Chicago during the World’s Fair. He sold the ruts, in the road iu front of his place and, thefi offered to sell the secret, of where h had the sale bills printed. We cannot give the results as the re- turns are not all in. They aro bidding yet. That's the kind of sale bills we print. Give us a call. Coast Adver- t.isi’r, 704 9th Ave. MORTGAGE FINKS In amounts or $2,000 to $5,000 are now available for conservative first mortgage investment on Improved property. Address Attorney, care of Coast Advertiser. Adv. Coal Office of Wm. J. Bowe Burglarized Thieves who burglarized the coa 1 office of William J, Bowe on Allen ave- nue, between the railroad and Main street, Allenhurst, early Friday morn- ing. obtained nothing for their trouble but a few insurance papers, a bank book and other papers of value only to the owners. Entrance to the of- fice was made thru an unlocked win- dow. The safe was not locked but an inner chamber, which was locked, was pried open by the burglars. Valuable papers were strewn all over the office floor when Mrs. W. J, Bowe, who has charge Of the office, discovered the rpbbery shortly after 7 o’clock yesterday morning. Latest Dances Miss Geraldine Farrell, formerly of the Hotel Ansonia, New York city, will give private and class instruction in all the latest dances at her home, 905 Berg St., Asbury Park, after Oct. 1. children’s classes Saturday afternoons. t. f. eraj of the International Sunshine Society, 9(1 Fifth avenue. New York City the founder of these institutions known as homes, nurseries, kindergartens and hos- pitals combined for the care, maintenance and education of the baby blind. She correctly affirms that we have no right to assume that because a baby is blind it has no brains. THE WONDERS OF SCIENCE Our ' prize delinquent subscriber wandered into town the other day and ail unsuspecting, we lured him up to Doc ------------'s office and tipped the doc to give him th? Twilight Sleep treatment. And say, the doc is some treater! He had the d. s. in the twi- light zone as quickly as you could break your wrist with the crank on a Ford. In two minutes we separated the patient from the money he had been owing us for back subscriptions since the time when Heintz had only- one pickle. When lie came to he was holding a receipt in full in his hand. Then we told him. He was tickled to death. He said that heretofore he simply couldn’t bring himself to pay up, because h? dreaded the pain. We turned over all the money to the doe and told him to invest it in more chloroform. We are going into this business RIGHT! Allenhurst Council Adjourns Meeting Allenhurst council did not meet Fri- day afternoon because of the lack of a quorum. Councilman Thomas Thed- lord and William Welshausen, with Boro Clerk Savage, were the only of- ficials present. Home of Enis Threatened By -Fire Fire in the woods on Pearl street, west of Norwood avenue, Deal, at 8 o’clock on Saturday night, threatened the destruction of the home of Enos Davison and a call was sent in to the DealFTre company. The auto appar- atus responded and the flames were soon under control. TK E AS IR V I) EPARTMENT 1. S. INTERNAL REVENUE DEPUTY COLLECTOR'S OFFICE BELMAR, >. J. Every firm, person or company liable to special tax under the act of Oct. 22, 1914, must, to avoid payment of penalty, render a raturn and pay such tax during the month in which it becomes due. The following is a partial list of tax due and payable in November. Bankers, for each $1000. of capital employed ................................. $ 1.00 Brokers who have not paid as bankers^. .............................. 30.00 Pawnbrokers ............................. 50.00 Commercial Brokers ..................................... 30.00 Customhouse brokers ......................................................................................... , 10-90 Co.mmisttion merchants who have not paid as commercial broker*..,, UO.OO Proprietors of Theatre^, (motion picture included) museums and con- cert halls: / Seating capacity not over 2 5 0 . .......... 25.00 Seating capacity over 25Q and not exceeding 500 ........................... 50.00 Seating capacity over 500 and not exceeding 800, ........................... 75.00 Seating capacity over 8 0 0 ..,.,..,,..,.,., ........................................ 100.00 Proprietors or agents for other show' for money ...................................... 10.00 Bowling alleys or billiard tables foreach alley or table .......................... 5.00 Dealers in tobacco, eigths and cigarettes whose yearly sales amount to $200 or over.';, ...................................................................... 4.80 Manufacturers of tobacco; Sales not over 100,000 lbs. annually ............ 6.00 Manufacturers pf cigars: Sales not ov r 100,000 cigars annually 3.00 Manufacturers of eigars t>ver 100,000 and not moro than 200,000............ 6.00 Manufacturers pf cigars over 200,000 and not more than 400,000............ 12.00 Special tax liability is reckoned from the li'rst of the month during which liability is incurred and ends with tho tax year, the 30th ofJune fol- lowing, Tax from November 1, 1914, to June 30th 1915, will be for eight (S' months, ' i Payment, of tax must be accompanied by sworn statement giving full name and address of tax-payer tog ther with Information as to kind of busi - ness engaged In. Respectfully, Raymond Dildine, Deputy Collector. BUSINESS! HINTS. In these days of f unsettled business conditions, it is necessary for dealers in all lines of business to put forth ev- ery effort to increase their sales and keep their business up to normal. The telephone as ail economical and efficient salesman is described in the New York Telephone Review, with il- lustrations of th<f experiences of mer- rlinnts in many lines ot business: “Perhaps one of the most striking in- -tanees of the adaptation of the tele- phone selling plan is that of a piano bouse with a national reputation. The retail music department of this com- pany has adopted it for .selling music rolls. This plan has worked out very successfully aud sales are increasing daily. * “A large wholesale drug house has permanently adopted‘the plan and, dur- ing September, over .S1.~i.000 worth of P lay Team s in A ll the P rinc i- pa lC ities o f the S ta te The Card Index Makes Selling by Telephone Easy. drugs were sold Uy telephone, in add tion to (be business secured by tlie out- ) side -sales force. “A wholesale house distributing poul try and g:une conducts the greater part of its business Uy telephone. "A .suburban grocery house report* that over !)0 per cent, of its orders are received by telephone. “A iain(-nt supply house reports a in per ecnt. general average increase of telephone orders --Inee adopting the Selling by Telephone- plan. "One of the prominent New York newspapers has secured a number of large advertisers l>y means of the tele- phone. "A vacuum cleaner company has In creased its sales S:ili() per week by this i modern way of selling. "Keeping faith with customers is per- haps the niiist important tiling to re member aud do. Persons who are sent inferior goods by a iner ham arc not apt to continue trading with that mer- chant. From the customer’s view point this is the uii'y objei :i m to bin- ing by teiephosie cn-l I hr irnicdii n nilii rln with tin inr*clitrnt." HOT DRINKS. The only placet in town Sanborn’s, F' street, &dvt. Tlie Mystic Basket Ball Team of this city, which will be the best in the history of the club, will start its regular season schedule on November 28, going to I.ake- wood to play the crack Y. M. C. A. of that place. The following Thursday the Belmar team will go to Long Branch to line np against the crack Oakwood Field Club. On December 12 the team will take one of their first long trips, when they will journey to Milltown, where they tackle the fast Michelin A. C. Mr. Joseph Magill, who is piloting tlie team, lias arranged games with some of the best teams in. the State. Trips will be made to all the large citien in the State. The Belmar team will put in some stiff practice, and expects to be in good trim for the Lakewood game. The team this year is composed of the following .- COOPER—F. JONES—F. BARRETT— F. REICHY—C. H. LYON-G. FLANAGAN—G. The Mystics also have a fast j«nior team. ELECTIONEERING BY TELEPHONE The telephone as a factor in pre-elec- tion day activities is the subject of a noteworthy article in the November issue of the New York .Telephone Re- view. which points out that as a means for the co-ordi-iiition of action and as in effective method of reaching the individual voter, tin* telephone is with- out a rival. In addition to these general uses of the telephone by candidates for |>o!iti cal office and their campaign man ers. there occurs quite frequently an unusual circumstance of one sort or another which makes the telephone even more indispensable. An exampie of such ii situation is the case of a candidate who by an accident was eon fined to his home during the last weeks of the campaign. On being asked ‘•Hows the campaign going?” the can didate pointed to bis telephone and said: "Over the wire. Always over the wire. It's the only thing that keeps me in touch with the outside. 1 never realized how valuable an instrumeut for conducting a campaign the tele- phone was until I landed here a few days ago. Since then there have been very few minutes during the day when I haven't had the receiver at my ear." Conducting the campaign via the Bell System was a necessity in this case, and in this case necessity proved the rule. He was re-elected. Daily Thought.^ z"' Teach your children to; create. Don't always give them finished products to enjoy. LEST YOU FORGET Date COAST ADVERTISER 704 9th Avenue Belmar, N. J. Enter my subscription to Coast Advertiser for one year. Name, ..................... City State Street. Address ONE DOLLAR A YEAR Send us your Subscription today and aid us in widen- ing the scope of B e l m a r ’s Popular Paper

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Page 1: WITH THANKSGIVING AND JOY - DigiFind-Itthe boys, rompers, food of all kinds, The attendance at Ihe Arthur Home is, on an average, forty children, all blind. As you are thankful for

If someone advertises for a worker, and there’s a possibility that it’s a job for yon, FIX'D OCT ABOUT IT, for SOMEBODY is going to get it.

U yon an- •> ie to buy a homesoon, don't <ti-.j-.ii that you must waitawhile lonser—ti it investigate the real estate ailt* and then you’ll KNOW.

i I N C O R P O H A T K U W I T H W H I C H I S T H K C O A S T E C H O )

V O L . X X 111.— Whole No. 1244. Cl liC U LA T IO N HOOKS O l’KN TO ALL B E L M A R , N. J., F R I D A Y , N O V E M B E R 20, 1914 C IR C U L A T IO N HOO KS O I’ HN TO A L L Price T w o Cen ts

BOARD OF HEALTH ELECTS OFFICERS

TOWN GOSSIP

Oil Thursday night the Board of Health held an election of officers at the office of Chas. Hudnut. Charles Goff, an agent of the Prudential Insurance Co., was elected president; William Bergen, vice-presi- dent, and Chas. Hudnut, clerk.

The Board .reported that there were -29 deaths, 30 births, and -29 marriages in the borough during the past year.

There were 110 sewer connections made and SI complaints received and attended to by the Board.

The reappointment of Dr. Fred Thomp­son and Jacob Rosenfeld, whose terms have expired, will be recommended to the Council.

Motion Pictures a tSt. Rose’s Hall

Resuming the weekly entertainment of the past two years, there will be motion pictures displayed at St. Kose’s Hall every Thursday evening at 8 o’clock. High grade educational pictures will be shown, five reels on each occasion ; and as an added attraction, St. Rose’s Boys’ Band will play at^every entertainment. Since there is no desire to make money on the venture, the whole income is to be devoted to securing the best attractions possible. The people of Belmar are cor­dially invited to attend. Admission, 10 cents: children under twelve, 5 cents.

New Jersey 3 3 d DegreeMasons to M eet

Xew Je rse y ' Thirty-third Degree Masons will meet in ninth annual ses­sion at The W ashington, 559 Broad street, Newark, on AVednesday even­ing, December 2nd. The society is known as "The Sovereign Grand In- sp :c to rs General, 33rd degree Honor­ary Members of the Supreme Council Ancient Accepted Scottish Rite for the Northern Masonic Jurisdiction of the United States of America.”

,The sooiety is composed of all Thir­ty-Third Degree Masons in New Jer-

'scy. Therfe are over tiftv on the list, one from Monmouth, former Judge J. Clarence Conover, of Freehold, a past grand master. There will be a ban­quet in .connection with the meeting.

A former Long Branch man, George IL Woolley, now in Detroit, Mich., is s Thirty-Third Degree Mason.

DEAL COUNCILHOLDS MEETING

Automatic Fire Alarm System Will Prob­

ably Be Installed Next Year; Paving

Bids to Be Advertised.Fire Chief Joseph Conover of Deal

recommended to the boro commission­ers Saturday that an automatic Are alarm system, with 12 alarm boxes, he installed in Deal. The chief said iho system is necessary.

Chief Conover also told the commis­sioners that because of the partial shutting down of the East Jersey Light and Power company's plant, which is being absorbed by the Atlantic Coast company, the boro would be without a (ir<> alarm whistle within six weeks. The commissioners suggested that the chief make an effort to secure some kind ol a whistle or bell alarm ' signal.

The automatic alarm system may be installed next year. Chief Conover was asked to. find out the probable cost of such a system.

The commissioners authorized od- vertisement lor bids for the paving of Ocean avenue with cither wood block or vitrified brick. This improvement will be one of the largest road im­provements made in this section re­cently.

Allenhurst Begins Crusade on Unlighted Wagons

Chief of Polic- H art Havens of Allen­hurst has begun a crusade to enforce th* state law requiring lights on all vehicles after nightfall, following the receipt of a communication from State Motor Vehicle Commissioner Lippincott asking for co-operation in a state wide uuupaigu, chief Havens issued in­structions to Allenhurst patrolmen to \:rh tfe.nl the law was enforced. Ar­rests will r suit, frpm its violation in III ■ boro,

Furnished rooms, with or without board, in refined private family; home comforts) terms reasonable. Mrs. Robert Kstell, 1103 Ninth avenue, Belmar.

'1 lie most complete line of Flastman’s HI mu in town. Filins developed and printed. Seymour’s, next to I’oht Olliee.

Ady.

Tlie stork has arrived at tlie home of Mr. and INIrs. Wm. B. Lokerson on (ith avenue, bringing an 8-pound baby girl. The new arrival lias been named Beatrice Elizabeth. Both mother and child are doing nicely.

Mr. Charles Levinsohn lias left for an extended business trip, which will take in most of the winter season.

This is the weather that makes you get out your fur bennies and ask, “ What did you do with the money you made last summer!'”

Mr. Arthur Osborn, general manager of the Coast Gas Co., witnessed the A ale- Princeton game on Saturday with a party of friends. Mr. Osborn is a graduate of Princeton.

Pacer and Williams have received thi‘ contract for installing a steam heating plant in tha double house, Wm. Hoerseh has just purchased of Floyd F\ Tomlinson a t 1204 F street.

MISS RUTH HOEHN WEDS W. WEISBECKER

a d v F.RTib E R p r i m - Secretly Married in New York-Boths n o w p r e p a r e d t o ’ . ■ „ - - c

o f I Prominent in Summer Social Set

THE COAST ING OFFICE ISHANDLE ANY LARGE ORDERS PROGRAMS, MENUS, DANCE OR­DERS, SOCIETY AND FRATERNAL ORDEIJ ANNOUNCEMENTS AND PROGRAMS, WEDDING INVITA­TIONS AND ANNOUNCEMENTS, ETC.

Howard Kain and family of Phila­delphia were week-end visitors in Belmar.

Next Sunday’s services at the Twelfth avenue Baptist Church will be presided over by the Rev. F. S. Berggren mf Jer­sey City. There will be a fine musical program arranged.

Master Weslev Hausotte, youngest son of Mr. and Mrs. V. J. Hausotte, is con­fined to his bed as the result of a severe strain in one of his ankles.

The supper wliich was given by the Twelfth Avenue Baptist Church on Thurs­day night was an overwhelming success, barring the stormy weather. Over a hundred were served, and declared this one to be better than ever. The supper was held at the American House on Tenth avenue.

The library will move from its old lo­cation on F' street to its new building on Tenth avenue to day. The building has been completed and the grounds are now in excellent condition. The Women's Club will hold its regular meeting in the new library this afternoon.

W arren Hoffman, son of Howard Hoffman of 613 Fifth avenue left for Florida with Dr. Schadts party Mon­day.

Jam es Bolton of Ocean Grove has rented the cottage at 611 Fifth avenue for the winter.

Mrs. H enry ' .V)(gor ahd daughter of 705 Seventh avenue have gone to New­ark for the winter.

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Thatcher ana son Whitney spent -Sunday at their cottage, 417 Fifth avenue.

At a congregational meeting held at the close of the morning service Sun­day at the Presbyterian church Clar­ence C. Wildman and William A. Gas- sin were elected elders and will be ordained Sunday morning.

Clinton Y. Cooper has been awarded the contract of installing electric lights for Dr. Peter Davison of Hamilton.

! th? Yale-Prlnceton game withTHE COACT ADVERTISER OFFICE j friend who lives next door-

HAS A MOST COMPLETE LINE OF !SAMPLES FOR WEDDING INVITA­TIONS, DANCE ORDERS, PROGRAMS j FOR ALL OCCASIONS, NEW YEAR AND CHRISTMAS CARDS, SHOW 'CARDS AND WINDOW HANGERS,ANNIVERSARY FOLDERS, MOURN- j

Miss ltuth Hoehn, the twenty-year- old daughter of Jacob Hoehn, a pro­duce dealer, and one of tha popular girls in the summer colony, who lives at No. 471 West One Hundred and Forty-fourth street. New'York City, left her home Saturday morning to go to

a girl Today

she is Mrs. Walter Weisbecker.The- two girls drove away in an

auto, but they stopped at the Cam­eron, St. Nicholas avenue and One Hundred and Twenty-sixth street. There they were joined by the groom- to-be, who is twenty-two, of No. 181

REMEMBER THE BABY BLIND Reception Given toRev. C. and Mrs. Everett

In Distributing Your Thanksgiving Dona

tions

ING CARDS, ENGRAVING, TASSELS, West One Hundred and Twenty-sixth MENUS AND PROGRAMS F O R ' street, and Carl Heusser.EVERY OCCASION AND HOLIDAY, The party drove to the Municipal BIRTH ANNOUNCEMENTS, LODGE! Building where Weisbecker and MissDESIGNS, CALENDARS, ENCLOSING | ENVELOPES. BALL AND INVIT I TION TICKETS, ADVERTISING N >- : VELTIES OF EVERY DESCRIPTION. CALL AT THIS OFFICE FOR SHOW- ! ING, OR PHONE FOR REPRESEN-{ TATIVE TO CALL.

Hoehn obtained a license to marry. Th? Rev. Hugh Pritchard, of No. 102 West Ninety-third street, performed the* ceremony, and the young peopie went to the Plaza for a . wedding breakfast, When it was over Weis­becker and his bride took a train for

" ; Atlantic City.Lynn Morris, a well known youth of: Hoe,m WM toW by telephone of tho

this town was held up by a strange niarriaE;e. and t0„day he said he looking fellow on Railroad avenue | his daag!ltei. had been, tryingabout 4 a. m. Tuesday morning. Mor- tQ (,odge an ;laborate ,vedding. Herris received such a shock that he hasn '; | engag0ment (0 Weisbecker> ho said,recovered from it >et. • wag annoullced August 12. Charles

j W. Weisbecker, whose sons are con­tinuing his extensive business in H ar­lem, was killed in an automobile ac­cident at Fort Lee five years ago.

Interesting Entertainment to be Given in St. Rose’s Hall

There will be a Thanksgiving donation parly lasting all day at the Arthur Home, Pine Grove avenue, Summit, N. J ., on Thanksgiving Day.

Miss Adelaide Black, superintendent, will send strong paper bags with handles to anybody who wishes to .fill them. Ten of the bags will fill a barrel. Donations of all kinds are asked for, especially un­derwear, sweaters, shoes, knit suits for the boys, rompers, food of all kinds, The attendance at Ihe Arthur Home is, on an average, forty children, all blind.

As you are thankful for your own eye­sight and the eyesight of your loved ones, i do not pass these little folks by. A big j new storeroom has been built for supplies. It is empty. Let it be filled on Thanks­giving Day.

Have You a Blind Baby?

Wanamassa Hotel to Be Re­built

On Tuesday evening,, December 1, a very interesting entertainment has been arranged to take place in St. Rose’s Hall.The entertainment will be given by the famous Irish lecturer and singer, 1Lewis William Armstrong of New York. ork is to be begun this week on a Mr. Armstrong lias given these entertain- barn and wagon shed, bottling plant ments throughout the country, and judg-1 antl >ce house at the W anamassa hotel, ing from the press comments the enter-1* ° leplace the buildings destroyed bytainment must be well worth hearing. !fire a short time ago, TU.Q nsw build-The entertainment tri!! begi* w:‘ h t» '.’'f s ' ' e r-0 ,'«> o l .hpllyw stuc-bird’s-eye view of the Irish history. illus-j('°- William Griffin, the proprietor, is trated with representative songs and con

Have you a blind baby 't If so, do you , veer,know that New York State now provides j ^ ’

for its baby blind by sending a child from j the day it’s blinded for special care, maintenance and education to the institu­tion maintained by the International Sun­shine Society for the Baby Blind?

The Commissioner of Education ap­points these children and the state pays at the rate of a dollar a day for each one’s care. Do not hide your blind babies any longer and thus allow them to grow up crippled in body and feeble in mind. As a citizen you are entitled to send your children to school. This is the only institution now in the United States that opens its doors to any blind baby from any State, if tuition of a dollar a day is paid.

If yoar baby is not in a State that pays for the blind you can send it as a private pupil.

The States that now ^provide for the baby blind a re : New York, New Jersey, Maryland, Arizona, North and South Dakota, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Rhode Island.

Communicate Immediately with Mrs. Cynthia Westover Alden, President-Gen-

On Tuesday evening the members slmI friends of the F irs t Presbyterian Church tendered a reception to Dr. and Mrs. Charles Everett in honor o? their return from their fall vacation.

The church was very prettily decor ated for th? occasion with flowers and plants. A beautiful autograph quilt o blue and white, which had been con coaled belling a la^ge flag, was remov­ed at the proper time, and presented to Mrs. F^verett, which proved a grea surprise to her. Dr. Flverett made few intersstlng rem arks on the novel surprise scheme. A very interesting program was arranged, including Miss Gladys Thompson in a solo assisted by Miss Elva VanNote, and several piano selections by Mrs. Edward Rur- ben. Miss M arie- Strudwick, Miss .Marjorie Kidd, Miss Helen Wildman and Miss Elva VanNote distributed white chrysanthem ums to all present Throughout the evening light refresh

j ments were served. The committee in j charge were, Mrs. Thomas Prior, Mrs.I Clarence Stines, Mrs. Tunis Vander-

Mrs. C. C. Wildman and Mrs Pacer.

M Y S T I C S A R R A N G E H A R D S C H E D U L E

tinue through to the present day cf that famous little nation. The entertainment is called Ireland in Song and Story, and as we. all know that the whole world boasts and comments Ireland on its won­derful music loving and composing people, one cannot well afford to miss this oppor­tunity to hear the true history of it.

to have the work done by day’s work. The improvements will cost about $5,000.

H arry S. Cooper and Listen King were at the football game in Princeton Saturday. They made the trip on King’s motorcycle.

The social g ven by the W. C. T. U a t the home of Mrs. Wilson Newman 819 Twelfth avenue, was well attended J and a very interesting program was [ given.

Mrs. E. C. Ayres of P ittsburg ls visiting Mrs. John O. H erbert of 411 Eleventh avenue.

Silver Lake council, Junior Mechan­ics at its meeting Monday evening voted to attend seryice at the Metho­dist church Sunday, Nov. 29.

Robert Hard;>ence of Flemington 1.? visiting his uncle, James B. House!, 704 Eighth avenue.

The Misses Katherine Sherwood and j Ethel Har.ee have returned from a few I days stay in the big town, where they w re busily engaged in theatre and | dinner parties.

Miss Grace Reimuller visited her parents on 10th avenue Saturday.

Some gunner what this Dunfae is, in a two day shooting trip, he bagged n arly twenty rabbits, two pheasants, several squirrels and other game.

A new automobi)' ■ ;iply house .is being started in ' tl- • Chamberlain Building on 9th aveir . The new firm xpects to handle every possible known

automobile acc ssory.

Wm. II. Sanborn has just recently installed a new hot soda fountain in his new store on the Main street. It is the only ice cream place in town that ke ps ice cream all winter. With the hot drinks .Mr. Sanborn will do a rushing busim ss.

Miss Betty Ros-nfeld, who has been visiting in New York for the past month lias returned for a short length of time.

Miss Alice Williams, who is employ­'d in Sanborn’s ice cream parlor on F street, Inis been cpnflned to her home for a few days with an attack of grip. ■ / I

“ I’LL SHOW ’EM. IU KN ’EM.”I’ve stopped the paper, yes I have,

I didn’t like to do it.But the editor he got too smart,

And 1 allow he’ll rue it,I am a man who pays his debts,

And will not be insulted,So w'hen the editor gets sm art

I want to b? consulted.

I took the paper Tevej^ years And help him all I could sir,

But when it come to dunnin’ me I didn’t think he would, sir.

But that ha did, and you can bet It made me hot as thunder;

1 says, “I ’ll sto^i that sheet, I will, ir the doggone thing goes under.”

I hunted up the editor And fcr his cunnin’ caper

I paid him ’LEVEN years and quit! Yes, sir, I stopped tha paper.

FORM IN LINK, PLEASEWa are doipg a superior Tine of

printing in our job departm ent just now, and our sale bills are the talk of the country. Week before last we got an order of bills for a farm er north of town and they were so attractive and nifty that he couldn’t begin to take care of the crowds that flocked to the sale. After getting the top price tot* ev ry animal, implement and article on the bill, the auctioneer simply couldn’t stop. The people just clamored for more. The. farmer, in the hope of driving them away, put up his mother-in-law: She brought *160on the hoot'. Then he offered his mortgage for sale. A lifelong friend­ship betwe n two old neighbors was shattered as each tried to outbid the other. It was finally knocked down to the richer man who was promptly knocked down by the poorer. He sold the weeds along the 'roadside, lie sold a gold brick that he bought in Chicago during the World’s Fair. He sold the ruts, in the road iu front of his place and, thefi offered to sell the secret, of where h had the sale bills printed. We cannot give the results as the re­turns are not all in. They aro bidding yet. That's the kind of sale bills we print. Give us a call. Coast Adver- t.isi’r, 704 9th Ave.

MORTGAGE FINKSIn amounts or $2,000 to $5,000 are

now available for conservative first mortgage investment on Improved property. Address Attorney, care of Coast Advertiser. Adv.

Coal Office o f Wm. J. Bowe Burglarized

Thieves who burglarized the coa1 office of William J, Bowe on Allen ave­nue, between the railroad and Main street, Allenhurst, early Friday morn­ing. obtained nothing for their trouble but a few insurance papers, a bank book and other papers of value only to the owners. Entrance to the of­fice was made thru an unlocked win­dow. The safe was not locked but an inner chamber, which was locked, was pried open by the burglars.

Valuable papers were strewn all over the office floor when Mrs. W. J, Bowe, who has charge Of the office, discovered the rpbbery shortly after 7 o’clock yesterday morning.

L atest Dances Miss Geraldine Farrell, formerly of the

Hotel Ansonia, New York city, will give private and class instruction in all the latest dances at her home, 905 Berg St., Asbury Park, after Oct. 1. children’s classes Saturday afternoons. t. f.

eraj of the International Sunshine Society, 9(1 Fifth avenue. New York City the founder of these institutions known as homes, nurseries, kindergartens and hos­pitals combined for the care, maintenance and education of the baby blind.

She correctly affirms that we have no right to assume that because a baby is blind it has no brains.

THE WONDERS OF SCIENCEOur ' prize delinquent subscriber

wandered into town the other day and ail unsuspecting, we lured him up toDoc ------------'s office and tipped thedoc to give him th? Twilight Sleep treatment. And say, the doc is some treater! He had the d. s. in the twi­light zone as quickly as you could break your wrist with the crank on a Ford. In two minutes we separated the patient from the money he had been owing us for back subscriptions since the time when Heintz had only- one pickle. When lie came to he was holding a receipt in full in his hand. Then we told him. He was tickled to death. He said tha t heretofore he simply couldn’t bring himself to pay up, because h? dreaded the pain. We turned over all the money to the doe and told him to invest it in more chloroform. We are going into this business RIGHT!

Allenhurst Council Adjourns Meeting

Allenhurst council did not meet F ri­day afternoon because of the lack of a quorum. Councilman Thomas Thed- lord and William Welshausen, with Boro Clerk Savage, were the only of­ficials present.

Home of Enis Threatened By -Fire

Fire in the woods on Pearl street, west of Norwood avenue, Deal, a t 8 o’clock on Saturday night, threatened the destruction of the home of Enos Davison and a call was sent in to the D ealFTre company. The auto appar­atus responded and the flames were soon under control.

TK E A S IR V I) EPARTMENT 1. S. INTERNAL REVENUE

DEPUTY COLLECTOR'S OFFICE BELMAR, >. J.

Every firm, person or company liable to special tax under the act of Oct. 22, 1914, must, to avoid payment of penalty, render a raturn and pay such tax during the month in which it becomes due.

The following is a partial list of tax due and payable in November.Bankers, for each $1000. of capital employed................................. $ 1.00Brokers who have not paid as bankers^............................... 30.00Pawnbrokers ............................. 50.00Commercial Brokers..................................... 30.00Customhouse brokers ......................................................................................... , 10-90Co.mmisttion merchants who have not paid as commercial b roker* .. , , UO.OO Proprietors of Theatre^, (motion picture included) museums and con­

cert halls: /Seating capacity not over 2 5 0 . .......... 25.00Seating capacity over 25Q and not exceeding 500 ........................... 50.00Seating capacity over 500 and not exceeding 800,........................... 75.00Seating capacity over 8 0 0 . . , . , . . , , . . , . , . , ........................................ 100.00

Proprietors or agents for other show' for money...................................... 10.00Bowling alleys or billiard tables foreach alley or tab le .......................... 5.00Dealers in tobacco, eigths and cigarettes whose yearly sales amount

to $200 or o v e r . '; , ...................................................................... 4.80M anufacturers of tobacco; Sales not over 100,000 lbs. annually ............ 6.00M anufacturers pf cigars: Sales not ov r 100,000 cigars annually 3.00M anufacturers of eigars t>ver 100,000 and not moro than 200,000............ 6.00M anufacturers pf cigars over 200,000 and not more than 400,000............ 12.00

Special tax liability is reckoned from the li'rs t of the month duringwhich liability is incurred and ends with tho tax year, the 30th of June fol-lowing,

Tax from November 1, 1914, to June 30th 1915, will be for eight (S' months, ' i

Payment, of tax m ust be accompanied by sworn statem ent giving full name and address of tax-payer tog ther with Information as to kind of busi­ness engaged In.

Respectfully,Raymond Dildine,

Deputy Collector.

BUSINESS! HINTS.In these days of f unsettled business

conditions, it is necessary for dealers in all lines of business to put forth ev­ery effort to increase their sales and keep their business up to normal.

The telephone as ail economical and efficient salesman is described in the New York Telephone Review, with il­lustrations of th<f experiences of mer- rlinnts in many lines ot business:

“Perhaps one of the most striking in- -tanees of the adaptation of the tele­phone selling plan is that of a piano bouse with a national reputation. The retail music department of this com­pany has adopted it for .selling music rolls. This plan has worked out very successfully aud sales are increasing daily. *

“A large wholesale drug house has permanently adopted‘the plan and, dur­ing September, over .S1.~i.000 worth of

Play Teams in All the Princi­

pal Cities of the State

The Card Index Makes Selling by Telephone Easy.

drugs were sold Uy telephone, in add tion to (be business secured by tlie out- ) side -sales force.

“A wholesale house distributing poul try and g:une conducts the greater part of its business Uy telephone.

"A .suburban grocery house report* that over !)0 per cent, of its orders are received by telephone.

“A iain(-nt supply house reports a in per ecnt. general average increase of telephone orders --Inee adopting the Selling by Telephone- plan.

"One of the prominent New York newspapers has secured a number of large advertisers l>y means of the tele­phone.

"A vacuum cleaner company has In creased its sales S:ili() per week by this

i modern way of selling."Keeping faith with customers is per­

haps the niiist important tiling to re member aud do. Persons who are sent inferior goods by a iner ham arc not apt to continue trading with that mer­chant. From the customer’s view point this is the uii'y objei :i m to bin- ing by teiephosie cn-l I hr irnicdii n nilii rln with tin inr* clitrnt."

HOT DRINKS.The only placet in town Sanborn’s, F'

street, &dvt.

Tlie Mystic Basket Ball Team of this city, which will be the best in the history of the club, will start its regular season schedule on November 28, going to I.ake- wood to play the crack Y. M. C. A. of that place.

The following Thursday the Belmar team will go to Long Branch to line np against the crack Oakwood Field Club.

On December 12 the team will take one of their first long trips, when they will journey to Milltown, where they tackle the fast Michelin A. C.

Mr. Joseph Magill, who is piloting tlie team, lias arranged games with some of the best teams in. the State. Trips will be made to all the large citien in the State.

The Belmar team will put in some stiff practice, and expects to be in good trim for the Lakewood game.

The team this year is composed of the following .-

COOPER—F.JONES—F.BARRETT— F.REICHY—C.H. L Y O N -G .FLANAGAN—G.

The Mystics also have a fast j«nior team.

ELECTIONEERING BY TELEPHONEThe telephone as a factor in pre-elec­

tion day activities is the subject of a noteworthy article in the November issue of the New York .Telephone Re­view. which points out tha t as a means for the co-ordi-iiition of action and as in effective method of reaching the individual voter, tin* telephone is w ith­out a rival.

In addition to these general uses of the telephone by candidates for |>o!iti cal office and their campaign man

ers. there occurs quite frequently an unusual circumstance of one sort or another which makes the telephone even more indispensable. An exampie of such ii situation is the case of a candidate who by an accident was eon fined to his home during the last weeks of the campaign. On being asked ‘•Hows the campaign going?” the can didate pointed to bis telephone and said: "Over the wire. Always over the wire. It's the only thing tha t keeps me in touch with the outside. 1 never realized how valuable an instrumeut for conducting a campaign the tele­phone was until I landed here a few days ago. Since then there have been very few minutes during the day when I haven 't had the receiver a t my ear."

Conducting the campaign via the Bell System was a necessity in this case, and in this case necessity proved the rule.

He was re-elected.

Daily Thought.^ z"'Teach your children to; create. Don't

always give them finished products to enjoy.

LEST YOU FORGET

Date

C O A S T A D V E R T I S E R 704 9th Avenue

Belmar, N. J.

E n te r my subscription to C o a s t A d v e r t i s e r for one year.

N a m e , .....................

City

State

Street. Address

O N E D O L L A R A Y E A RSend us your Subscript ion today and aid us in widen­ing the scope of

B e l m a r ’s P o p u la r P ap er

Page 2: WITH THANKSGIVING AND JOY - DigiFind-Itthe boys, rompers, food of all kinds, The attendance at Ihe Arthur Home is, on an average, forty children, all blind. As you are thankful for

THE COAST ADVERTISER, BELMAR, N. J,, NOVEMBER 20, 1914.

R A I L R O A D S W I N T A X A P P E A L

Levy $7,385,180 by Board of

A s se s so rs Upset

REVERSES SUPREME COURT

END “ UPLIFT” IN THE STATE. STRONG MAN AT PENNSYLVANIA IN BADNothing for the Researchers to Do

and Their Labors Are Concluded.

A Q U A T I C

Members of Board May Be Subjected to Cross-Examination Even if

They Constitute a Judicial Body, Rules the High Court.

(Special Trenton Correspondence).Trenton.—T hat the hearing in a

railroad tax case must be a real hear­ing was declared by Justice Swayne in an opinion for the Cpurt of Er­ro rs and Appeals reversing the Su­preme Court and setting aside assess­m ents aggregating $7,385,180 levied by the S tate Board of Assessors upon railroad property of the Long Dock Co. in Jersey City. The reversal was directed by a vote of 7 to 1. Justice Black formerly a member of the S tate Board of Taxation, alone voted to affirm the judgment.

The decision apparently m arks a new era iu railroad taxation in New Jersey, since it sets aside the doctrine ■enunciated by the Supreme Court th a t tlie S tate Board of Assessors is a judicial tribunal whose findings can only be reviewed, unless the principle upon which their determ ination was reached was “inherently and legally Yicious.”

In reversing this view the Court of E rrors declared th a t under the rail- •road tax act it is the duty of the Supreme Court to afford relief as well in cases where the amount of the tax is excessive or insufficient, as in cases where the principle upon ■which the assessm ent is made is er­roneous.

Elsewhere Justice Swayne pointed out tha t the m anifest intention of the legislature was to afford the rail- •roads equal protection of the laws in common with other citizens. One of the important declarations made by the Court of E rrors is that the members of the S tate Board of As­sessors, even though they be regarded a s 'a judicial body, may be subjected to cross-examination as to their knowledge of the value of railroad property.

Justice Swavze showed for example, th a t in the cases of the Long Dock Co. the testimony of experts called by both sides was practically the •same as to the value of the property. To this value the assessors added tw enty per cent, or about $1 ,000,000.

In .disposing of the contention that as a judicial body the assessors could not be compelled to testify. Justice Swayze pointed out that the •legislature, by making the knowledge of members of the board evidential and providing for a review by the court of the amount of the tax and th e exce&siveness or Insufficiency of the assessm ent, has by the necessity of the case provided for the taking of testim ony of members of the board, since there cannot be such Teview unless all the facts before the board are presented to the court.

Directed to Return Funds.The Court of E rrors and Appeals

has affirmed the Court of ChaAcery decree directing Louis Kuehnle, Mor­ris D. Youngman, Clement J. Adams, Dr. Philip I. Marvel and Israel G. Adams, directors of the St. Leon­ard ’s Land Company, of Atlantic City, to transfer 150 shares of the capital stock of the company to the corporation.

Some years ago these five directors loaned the company $1,500, each tak­ing stock in return. The money was never repaid, although it was alleged that the company had ample funds to do so. Mordeci T. Endicott and other stockholders brought the su it to compel the Retransfer of the stock, which has becobae valuable.

Storm Does Damage ori Coast.Rain and wind whicra raged along

the coast caused an unusually high tide along the Jersey cosrtst. The new bulkhead erected at S e ib righ t after the devastation by the ito rin of last January was tested by th* heavy seas. Bulkhead beyond th°- tusjw portion was hctiten thrombi, and the cottage re ­cently purchased by J. A. Howland undermined. A je tty in front of the Peninsular House was damaged. At Normandie the sea washed over the railroad, so that it was impossible to use the northbound track. Other damage is reported throughout Sea- bright and adjacent territory.

No $15,000,000 Malt Merger.The Court of E rrors and Appeals,

in a decision given, upheld the Public Utility Commissioners in refusing to sanction a union of the American Corporation and tfie American Malt­ing Co., by the forming of a new cor­poration with a capital of $15,000,000.

The Supreme Court had refused to compel the commissioners to approve the merger.

Politicians and institution mana­gers in Hudson and Essex counties were alarmed a few months ago by the news that the municipal research­ers were planning to make “surveys” and investigate the work of -certain boards and commissions. Quite a number of prominent and well-to-do men were interested in the movement.

| So far as can be learned, the only ! thing done in New Jersey was to the I financial backers of the woman suf- i frage movement, who paid to the re­

searchers fancy fees for keeping them posted on the status of the proposed suffrage amendment to the State Con­stitution.

But the suffragists did not know. They had seen their amendment pass­ed by both houses by practically unan­imous vote at the 1913 session, only

; to learn along in July of that year that the concurrent resolution had never reached the departm ent of sta te and no preparation had been made to ad­vertise it. Then there was trouble, and when the am endment was finally recovered from the safe in the execu-

j tive departm ent with the explanation th a t somebody had blundered it was too late for the official advertising. To protect themselves against any fur-

; ther “m istakes” the committee in i charge employed an agent of the up- | lifters.

No doubt the news of the exorbi­tan t fee charged served to discredit

: the research movement in Hudson ! county. W hat headed it off in Essex

is something of a mystery. It must have been the discovery tha t Dr. Al­len's assistant proposed to send out a small army of young men and young women just out of school to gather statistics and information concerning

i the publlic schools, churches, libraries, i industries, charitable and reformatory ! institutions and agencies, the county : and municipal government.

For several years New Jersey has | been suffering from the uplift disease ! th a t broke out in Wisconsin twenty | years ago and has nearly run its i course there.

A curious feature about this uplift ! movement of which municipal re­

search and charities aid are seeking I to become the foundation, is that it

seems to be more concerned about I getting jobs for its workers, magni- j fying the importance of its directors

and improving the conditions of crim- | inals and those who owe their misfor- i tunes of their own vices and excesses,! than in caring for the worthy unfor- j tunate, such as the deaf-mutes, the j blind, the feeble-minded and the vic- I tims of tuberculosis.

Example of Craze.As an eaxmple of the craze for fol-

i lowing strange movements, the New Jersey Department of Charities and

, Corrections has this year $2,000 for “research work,” $3,000 for engineers, surveyors and other technical ser­vices, as needed; $5,000 salaries and expenses of inspectors, and $7,500 for the deportation of aliens. In all, the departm ent will qost $42,400.

There was in the supplemental ap­propriation bill this year an item of $5,000 for the “deportation of aliens.” New Jersey had never embarked in

i the export trade, and Comptroller Ed- w'ards’s assistants started to look into tne law. Before they had made mucn headway they learned th a t Commis­sioner Byers had applied to the Civil Service Commission for an examina­tion of applicants for the positions of deportation agent and assistant.

as no authority could be found for the creation of such offices, which would have consumed half of the ap­propriation, the $5",000 was permitted to lapse and the Civil Service Com­mission was notified that ,no special examination or candidates was neces­sary. In all probability the $7,500 ap­propriated for deportation purposes^, this year will also lapse unless the uplifters suceeed in convincing the next Legislature that the S tate of New Jersey should bear the expense of sending back undesirable citizens whom the steam ship companies in­duce to come over.

Jersey Will Give Thanks.Conforming to the proclamation by

the President, Governor Fielder fixed Thursday, November 26, as Thanks­giving Day. In his proclamation the Governor says tha t the passing years carry their measure defeats and suc­cesses. He reviewed the fact that war is raging in Europe, while con­tentm ent and prosperity abide here, for which the thanks of a devout peo­ple should be rendered.

The Governor also issued a proc­lamation designating Sunday, Novem­ber 28, as ' ‘Tuberculosis Day,” in ac­cord with the request of the National Association for the Study and Preven­tion of Tuberculosis. The Executive said th a t the desirability of setting aside a special day for the consider­ation of rules and m easures tending to stay and prevent the ravages of tuberculosis m ust appeal to all good citizens . He also urged agitation for relief of the congested sections of the cities by creating accessible parks, breathing places and playgrounds.

Gas Probers Meet.The special committee meeting of

the Chamber of Commerce to probe the charge that the gas being fur­nished Trenton for illuminating pur­poses is of inferior quality, was call­ed by Charles K. Hammitt, chair­man of the committee. Mayor Donnelly, City Chemist Parebeck, representatives of the Public Service Corporation and consumers of gas who have specific cases • to be brought to the attention of the com­mittee, were invited to attend this meeting.

Plan Christm as Work.Im portant changes will be made

in the lobby of the local Postoffice dur­ing the present renovations. The

! parcel post m atter will be received I at the window from which stamps,

postals, etc., are now sold. Stamps | will be sold from a beautiful new i booth to be placed where the parcel ! post stand is now situated. Super- j intendent of Mails Fell says t.he I Postoffice will be as modern as the | one in Washington, D. C., when ! all the improvements are complete ! ed.

Eggs Have Soared.Produce dealers report a jump in

price of eggs from 75 cents to one iioilar a, score. The increase in price is due to the great demand for eggs, caused by people refraining from eat> Ing m eat because of the scare re­garding the foot and mouth disease affecting cattle these days. Produce dealers say there was never a great­e r demand for eggs than a t present, and though the price of five cents an egg is exceedingly high for this season of the year, yet people ir e paying tha t price.

Papers of Incorporation.The following S tate New Jersey

; charters were filed here: Idealj Music Company, Plainfield; object, \ to deal in phonographs; capital, j $10,000 Incorporators, Albert R. Pal- | mer, H arry Lawson, William Hol- j linger, Plainfield* Pearhnan & Hut- | ter, Incorporated., Newark; object, > to deal in shoe triipm ings; capital, j $100,000. Incorporators Charles Perl- \ man, Charles L. Mutter, Michael Sil- i ver. Newark.I There is a g reat rush for new char- I te rs at the present tiun*

Vivian Nickalls, coach of the Uni­versity of Pennsylvania crew, is nego­tiating with his brother, Guy Nick-

j alls, who coaches the Yale crew, for a race bet wen the two colleges on

i April 3.

Mike Dorizas, Strong Man of Pennsylvania.

(BY FRANK G. MENKB.) , "The Reversal, or Changing from 1 a

Lamb to a Lion” ought to be the title of this squib which concerns Mike Dorizas, who footballs for and gets his book knowledge at the University of Pennsylvania, which is in Philadel­phia.

Mike is a Greek and he’s a strong Greek. Mike busted all kind3 of lift­ing records, weight throwing records and strong man records at Pennsy and everybody thought that Mike would make a valuable footballer. Mike gave the game the up and down a year or so ago, and decided tha t he didn't care much about it.

However, extreme pressure was brought to bear upon Mike this year and a t last, Mike jumped into the moleskins, was put through a course of stunts and handed a football diplo­ma wrhich entitled him to a regular job on the Pennsylvania line.

Mike nearly squashed a couple of his foemen during the early games this year when Pennsy was pitted against some of the smaller elevens. Mike, with his tremendous strength, rode rough-shod over his rivals when­ever rough-shod riding was required. He bunged up a couple of foes and it wounded his tender feelings.

“Looka here,” said Mike some weeks ago to Captain Journeay. “My being in the game ain’t 'a square deal for those other fellows. I’m so darned strong that I hurt the other fellows and 1 don’t want to hurt anybody. Guess I’d better quit.”

“Nix on your quitting,” remarked the Pennsy captain. “Never mind about hurting the other fellows. This isn’t a game of ping-pong. When you hit the line hit it and h it it hard. Your mob is to make holes in the line so some of our halfbacks can get through. You go and make those holes, Mike.”

Well, Mike continued in the game, but Mike wasn’t the same Mike of early in the season. Mike showed too much gentleness in the gctme. Mike made openings for his backfield men whenever called upon to do so, but when he did he usually lifted his

HONOR FOR ALONZO A. STAGG

Name of Athletic Field Changed to Commemorate Work of Noted

Coach and Member of Faculty.

The board of trustees of the Uni­versity of Chicago has announced the result of a vote a t a recent meeting, when it w'as decided to change the official name of the football, baseball, and track athletic grounds from the former title of the Athletic field of the University of Chicago to Stagg field.

In commenting on the reason for the change in name, members of the board of trustees authorized the statem ent

Prof. Alonzo A. Stagg.

that the action had been taken as an indication of the place held by Direc­tor Stagg in the esteem of the Chi­cago students and alumni, and to com­memorate his work in the firm estab­lishm ent of intercollegiate athletics on a successful basis a t Chicago.

Prof. Stagg went to the Midway in 18D2, when the university was found­ed, and has held a place a t the head of athletics ever since. He is ranked as a full professor of the university faculty, and holds the position as di­rector of athletics and head of the de­partm ent of physical culture.

Referee Caught in Crush.In the New York University-IIaver-

ford football game Referee Ed Thorpe was bowled oyer twice. Each time he found it necessary to blow his whistle for tim e out while he recovered from two severe smashups. The intricate formations and trick plays employed by Haverford developed so quickly that before Thorpe had an opportuni­ty to judge their legality he w-as caught unawares and knocked over. At the close of the game Thorpe limp­ed to the dressing room.

rival out of position and then asked his foe to “pardon me, old chap.”

And then came the Carlisle game. Mike found himself opposed to Busch, the deposed captain of the Indian eleven. Busch didn’t size up as any more powerful in Mike’s eyes than did some of the other foes against whom Mike had been pitted and Mike, during one of the opening plays, a t­tempted to shoulder Mr. Busch out of the way instead of ramming into Mr. Busch just about as hard as he could ram.

Mr. Busch was very much surprised a t Mike’s early conduct. He couldn’t quite “make” Mike. He puzzled over it for a few minutes, trying to figure out just what Mike was trying to spring on him. Mr. Busch it may be stated, didn’t know that Mike’s actions were influenced by a tender regard for the ‘physical welfare of his foes. He thought it was some trick Mike was attempting.

As stated, Mr. Busch tried to figure out just what Mike was putting over on him. He failed to figure it out, and dismissing the question from his mind, he set about playing football the way tha t football should be played.

Well, on the Monday following the Pennsy-Carlisle game, a modern H er­cules was noticed limping across the Pennsy campus. He wore a huge bandage over his head.

There was a huge gash on the forehead of this modern Hercules, there were bruises on his body, there were aches and pains in every joint and one knee was so swollen that it made walking a laborious task.

“Who’s tha t fellow,” queried a spec­tator.

“Mike Dorizas,” answered a student.“Mike, did you say? It doesn’t look

like Mike.”“No, it doesn’t but it's Mike just

the same. I was in the dressing room a little white ago and I know that it’s Mike because I. was close enough to hear Mike’s voice and the voice came from the same fellow that you see do­ing that limping.”

“S treet car h it Mike?”“No, a fellow named Busch did it.”

AMATEUR RULE CAUSES TALK

Billiardists Have Varied Ideas on Sub­ject of Ball on Line in Balk-

Line Contests.

Morris D. Brown, national am ateur champion in 1912, is an uncompromis­ing advocate of a rule that will pro­vide that in balk-line games between am ateurs a ball on a line shall be decided “out.” A t the annual m eet­ing of the National Association of Am­ateur Billiard Players he made an un­availing effort to have such a rule adopted.

Defining his attitude, he says: “The game of billiards is a gentlem an’s game, essentially so as an am ateur pastime. Every gentleman will con­cede every other gentleman the bene­fit of a doubt. There ahvays is a doubt as to whether a ball called on a line is actually in such a position. I contend that no human eye can accu­rately determine the question.

“I consider the rule defining a ball on the line as ‘in’ objectionable. The professional motto ‘as fair one as the other’ does not appeal to me. The chief argum ent against my motion was tha t the rule as it stood was estab­lished when balk-line was introduced and had ever since applied in both pro­fessional and am ateur contests.”

SLEEPY BALL PLAYER FIRED

Vic Willis Was Sound Asleep When Umpire Emslie Ordered Him Ban­

ished From the Field.

There is only one instance on rec­ord of an umpire putting a man out of a game who wras asleep. Vic Wil­lis was the victim. Vic was with the Boston team, and the players on the bench w'ere warbling at Emslie every instant. Bob was listening hard, striv­ing to identify the culprits and keep­ing an eye toward the bench. Finally he whirled and called out:

“W illis— off th e field. G et out of th e r e !”

The Boston players suddenly be­came convulsed with mirth. Emslie rushed to the bench to enforce his mandate, and there was Willis, sound asleep and snoring, with his head rest­ing against the side of the bench. Emslie had to wake him up and or­der him off to make good.

Place for W orld’s Series.A rumor from the E ast says efforts

have been made by several club own­ers to secure Yale’s new stadium for the 1915 world’s series. So far as the seating capacity is concerned, the arrangem ent would be ideal.

Americans Lost Heavily.A prominent American league mag­

nate is authority for the statem ent th a t,e v ery club in the organization, \Ktli two exceptions, lost heavily this season. He declared tho Athletics

i are $30,000 in the hole.

W R E S T L I N G ................................ j

Johnny Billiter has won another wrestling championship. W hat of it? T in t’s what we say, what of it?

• • •Manager Jack Herman regrets that

Zbyszko has seen fit to dodge German and Austrian bullets, for he says the wrestling game looks good for the winter.

B A S E B A L L

Rabbit Maranville may go on the stage this winter.

* * *The statem ents made by President

Gilmore tha t the Feds drew 1,600,000 fans during the year in the eight ball parks is regarded as fact. This means tha t each club averaged 200,000, which is not a large average by any means.

* * *McGraw received a le tte r from Tilly

Shafer from California intimating there was a chance for him to get back into the game with the Giants next year. The letter made the Giant lead­er feel very good.

G O L F

A Santa Barbara (Cal.) hotel adver­tises it has three kinds of golf in con­nection; probably bad, worse and worst.

• • *About January 1 the golf bugs will

lay up their tools for the winter, tak­ing them out again about January 15, however, for early spring practice. You can’t stop ’em.

* * *Detroit is regarded as the almost

certain location of the next am ateur golf championship, as the W est has had but one in the last five meets.' The Detroit course is tha t regarded by Vafv don as the best in America.

t H O R S E R A C I N G I• •

J. L. Dodge will drive his mare,Lady W anetka, 2:10, next year.

* * *J. Malcolm Forbes is to be tried

again, this time by Geers, who will see if the stallion can come back.

* * *Cal Shilling, America’s best jockey,

who was suspended a year ago for rough riding, may be reinstated byChristmas.

• • •Murphy was 42 tim es first th is year,

32 times second, 26 tim es third, 12 times fourth and 41 times outside of the line *tt the pay window.

* * *Peter Pearl, 2:09%, winner of the

$1,000 stake for 2:24 tro tte rs a t the De­troit short circuit meeting in June, will be in the Murphy stable next year.

* * *Driver Thomas Murphy won over

one hundred thousand dollars in purses on the harness circuit this sea­son. Of this Peter Volo, an unbeaten three-year-old, contributed most.

FOR THE HEAD OF THE HOUSE

Some Thoughts Concerning That Timeof Tribulation Known as “Mov­

ing Day.”

On moving day take a little tip from m other and:

Don’t expect to find everything in its usual place until the van arrives. Some team sters are superstitious about moving a gas range with a meal cooking on top of it.

Don't kick if you can’t find the low­er half of your favorite suit. Prob­ably mother is wearing It.

Don’t object if mother rolls you out of bed in the morning by pulling the sheet from under you. : She has doubt­less packed all the tablecloths.

Don’t raise a row if your watch is missing. The baby has to have some­thing to keep him quiet.

Don't complain If you find your box of choice cigars nearly empty. The iceman had to be tipped yesterday for helping to move the furniture so mother could take up the rugs. I t’s a safe gamble tha t the grocery boy will get the rest of them today.

Don’t be too fussy about what you have for breakfast. Tomorrow you may have to eat what you leave to­day.

Don’t be surprised, if you find the house locked w-hen you bring an un­expected friend home to dinner after telling m other you will eat down town yourself. You will find the family a t the restaurant around the corner.

Don’t wonder why mother is a trifle irritable when you return at midnight from a pleasant evening a t the club, and find her still on the job, doing things she had asked you to do. Some things get on a woman’s nerves.

Don’t be annoyed if there is no answ'er to your telephone call in the middle of the afternoon. The phone isn’t out of order. The children are in school and mother is out doing the errands you promised to attend to and forgot.

Don’t grumble if the dinner looks rather picked-uppish after you have said you didn’t know whether you would come home to it or not. Inde­cision has wrecked greater thiDgs than dinners.—Detroit Free Press.

WESTERN CANADA’S STRONG POSITION

Taking Up Italian.Now' that German is being ousted

from the curriculum of some of Eng­land's secondary schools, possibly Italian may be inserted !n its place. Such an alteration would have been cordially welcomed by Gladstone. "A favorite topic with Mr. Gladstone,” writes the present head m aster of Eton, “was the preference in English education of German to Italian. He used to deplore it, saying th a t when he read Dante he felt th a t he was in the hands of a master, but tha t the Germans had produced no first-rate literature. Sometimes his interlocu­tor would object tha t Goethe wTas a first-rate writer. The rejoinder was ‘Certainly not. Goethe created a world w'ithout any conception of duty.’ Sometimes a discussion w'ould arise on this point, but I never heard tha t it reached any conclusion.”—Pal) Mall Gazette. •

P U G I L I S M

It is doubtful if Johnny Kilbane, the featherweight champion, will ever a t­tem pt to make 122 pounds again.

* t *Sam Robineau, the Philadelphia

lightweight, has been making a nice showing in the six-round game in the Quaker city.

* * *H arry Foley claims he has discov­

ered a wonderful boxer in the person of Ralph Grunau, a lightweight of Portland, Ore.

* • *Eddie Shevlin, the Boston w elter­

weight, w’ho has been boxing Instruc­tor a t Dartmouth college, has resigned to accept a sim ilar position a t Cornell.

• * *Now’ “One Punch” Hogan clamors

for pugilistic recognition. If he’s any­thing like “One Round" Hogan some­body will put the reverse English on tha t name pretty quick.

* * *Eddie McGoorty had hardly landed

on American te rra firma when he be­gan to hurl defiance a t Chip, Clabby and Mike Gibbons for the middle­weight championship of the world.

• * •It looks as if Jim Flynn, the fireman-

fighter, is abSut all in. Jim, w'ho has been battling for over thirteen years, has m et all sorts of fighters and al- w'ays gave a good account of himself.

F O O T B A L L• ?e •The only way to win greenbacks on

a football game is to pick one team to win and then bet on the other.

» * *Dalton, former captain and kicking

s ta r a t W est Point, helped coach the University of Pennsylvania punters early in the season.

* • *Glenn W arner, the Carlisle Indian

coach, is an old Cornell player andfor several years had charge of thefootball team a t Ithaca.

* * *Hubbard Bushnell, Michigan quar­

terback, married Miss Adelo Johnson a year ago, but kept the marriago se­cret.

• • *Oddly, the further wre “develop” our

football, the closer we get to the kindthey have played in England sinceTom Brown’s day.

* * *Robert A. Fowler, assistan t trainer

of the Harvard football team, who several years ago was well known as a distance runner, has been signed by the Princeton athletic management to coach the Tiger cross-country team.

Before New Orleans Battle,One hundred years ago the British

naval forces were .beginning to ren­dezvous in the Gulf oi Mexico, prepar­atory to the campaign before New Or­leans. Soon the calm waters of the gulf were to be the scene of a great gathering of men-of-war flying the

| British flag. All the vessels of Ad- j j miral Cockburn’s fipet. recently en- i | gaged in the Chesapeake bay opera- | j tions, were on their way to the gulf, |

together with other warships, trans­ports and schooners, to the number of 50 vessels. At the head of the fleet W'as the big warship Tonnant, carrying the flag of Admiral Cock- bum. On board the transports were7,000 soldiers, who w'ere to take part in the expedition against the southern city, and who were now' in high good humor at the prospect of escaping the hardships of a w inter campaign in the North.

Heaven’s Germicide: Fresh AirRight living, ra ther than medicine;

fresh air as the best of germicides. That is the new therapy. Every day it becomes more generally recognized in the medical profession and more wide­ly spread by the official agents of health. Director H arte of the depart­ment of public health contributes Phil­adelphia's mite to the propaganda with a weekly bulletin' urging fresh air as a preventive of all the “colds” of winter. .Not only tuberculosis falls before that cheapest of medicines. Grip, bronchitis and pneumonia can all be staved off through the w inter months if only people will sleep and work with the windows open. They can have the health of summer time if only they will deft- Jack Frost.

"T H E W H E A T G R A N A R Y OF T H E W O RLD,” A W E L L A P ­

P L IE D T ER M .

W estern Canada occupies a stronger position today than it ever has occu­pied. Taking one year with another, the efficiency of its lands to produce has been well proved. It has not been said of it tha t year in and year out there were bumper and bounteous crops. If such a condition existed it would be phenomenal in the history of any country. W ith an extensive territory producing grain, hogs, cattle and sheep, of some 800 miles wide and1,000 miles long, it is easy to con* celve of a wide variation in tem pera­ture and climate; there is variation in rainfall and snowfall; every section is not the best in the district—some are better than others and some worse, but as a general thing, the great per­centage is “better.” This past year has shown tha t some portions are not altogether immune from periods of drought. The same may be said of ad­joining sta tes to the south. But this year has also shown tha t in the greater portion of W estern Canada drought does not appear, but even in the drought-stricken area of this year, past years have shown th a t the soil produces wonderfully well and even this year, with modern methods, known as “dry-farming,” good crops were harvested. The large number of Americans who during the past six­teen years have been attracted to Canada have not gone simply because of the advertising of tha t country, but because their friends and their old- time neighbors have done well there, and w'ith careful and judicious farm­ing almost everyone has done well.

As a result of the great influx of immigration the open or prairie home­steading area is being rapidly taken up. The fact th a t this is so is evi­dence th a t W estern Canada lands are productive, and on these open plains today are to be seen the homes of successful farm ers from almost every sta te in the Union. They have earned their patents and now own outright their 160 acres of land, together prob­ably with an adjoining 160 acres, which they have purchased or pre­empted, all of which is worth from $25 to $30 per acre. They originally started by growing grains altogether, but they found that they could secure a better price for much of their grain by feeding it to hogs and cattle, and the mOst successful ones are those who have followed this course.

But to meet the w'ants of the new­comer a new homestead area has been opened up, known as the “park coun­try.” In this park country are to be found beautiful groves of poplar and willow, small lakes and stream s with sufficient open area to enable one to go into immediate cultivation of crop, and in due time when they wish more land to be put under cultivation, they may a t small cost cut down some of the groves, which in the .meantime have been valuable in providing fuel and in giving shelter to cattle.

Notwithstanding the high character of the open prairie lands and the fact that farm ers there have realized in a splendid way, there is the opinion backed up by a lo t of experience tha t this parklike country contains soil even better than tha t of the open area referred to.

The opportunities, therefore, for money making are as great today as they ever were. The opportunities for carrying on farming successfully are fully as great as they ever were. Of this park area we have an immense quantity of kind yet to be settled. It is true th a t the railroads have not yet penetrated these districts to the extent that they have the open area, but th is will come and as settlem ents advance, so will railroads build. For the pres­ent there is a tem porary lull in rail­road building, but it is always the case that where there is a demand there will come a supply, and it w'ill not be long before the park country will be penetrated by railroads th a t will give sufficient accommodation for all needs, but to those who prefer it there are lots of opportunities for pur­chasing land nearer towns and vil­lages and a t low prices and on easy terms.

W hether one cares to purchase or homestead it can better be done by paying a visit to the country and it will repay you to spend some little time visiting the different districts.— Advertisement,

Use of Sandpaper in Kitchen.Housekeepers as a rule do not seem

to realize the value of saidpaper in the kitchen. When washing dishes, for in­stance, any food which adheres stub­bornly to a plate will disappear like magic under a small piece of sand­paper. Stains can be removed in the same way from white graniteware, fruit stains from the kitchen table, ink stains from the fingers, lime from the tea kettle, etc. W ith sandpaper both the m eat board and the chopping tray can be smoothed, and, best of all, with it grease spots can be easily rubbed off the kitchen floor. Once you have a small supply of this efficient remedy for many evils on hand you will never be without it again,—Mrs A. L.

Safeguarding Wounds.In the course of a le tter urging the

immediate adoption of compulsory an­tityphoid inoculation in the British army, Sir Almroth E. W right says that the British army and navy and the French military hospitals have al­ready been supplied with 180,000 doses of an “antisepsis” vaccine, which it is believed will be of great value in protecting the wounded from infec­tion. When a wound heals by first intention, tha t is. without suppuration I the ’formation of p\is), its seriousness

Unavailing Wisdom.“Money makes uo real difference,”

said the ready-made philosopher. “A poor man may know as much as a rich one.”

“He may know as much,” replied Mr. Growcher. “But his knowledge is too likely to be of the kind that keeps him thinking of w hat he could do if he had money.”

Im po rtan t to N lo thersExamine carefully every bottle or

CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for Infants and children, and see tha t it j

Bears the Signature of |In Use For Over 30 Years.Children Cry for Fletchers Castoria

In the School of Politics.Teacher--^Define “investigation,” /

Jam es. Jj§Jam es—H untin’ up a lot of blame, j

ma'am, and placin' it on somebodyelse.

Is, as a rule, much < ontly the antisepsis promote this re su lt.

iminished. Appar- vaccino tends to

Only Way.“W hat will I do about tha t student’s

gutteral tones?”“Curb ’em.”

Y O U R O W N D R U G G IS T W i l l T K T.I, V O 'il / •Try M urino rwyo K em edy fo r Hod, W eak, WaterjT Hves a n d G ran u la ted K yelids: No S m arting—Just Bye C om fort. W rite fo r Book o f th e Eye by m a il F ree . M urine Kye Item edy Co.. Chicago.

Borrows on Prospects.“I fear tha t young man of yours 1b

living beyond his means.”“Oh, no, papa; he hasn’t any.”

K O X S IE 'S C R O U P K E .M K D Y , A C E R T A IN 1c u re lo r c o n g e s t iv e c o ld s ; n o opium * 50c— A4vl*

A fool friend can wield a ham m er as effectively as a b itter enemy.

Page 3: WITH THANKSGIVING AND JOY - DigiFind-Itthe boys, rompers, food of all kinds, The attendance at Ihe Arthur Home is, on an average, forty children, all blind. As you are thankful for

THE COAST ADVERTISER, BELMAR, N. J., NOVEM BER 20, 1914.

WITH THANKSGIVING AND JOY

SAVE MONEY BY WEARING W. L. DOUGLAS SHOES.

F o r 31 y e a rs W . I». D oufrlaa h a s g u a ra n te e d th® v a lu e b y having* h is n a m e a u d th e r e ta i l p ric e s ta m p e d o u th e so le befo re th e sh o e s le a v e th e fac­to ry . T h is p ro te c ts th o w e a re r a g a in s t h i« h p ric es fo r in fe r io r sh o e s o f o th e r m a k e s . W . 1-. Douglas shoes are alw ays w orth w hat you pay for them. If yon could see how carefully w . L. Douglas shoes are m ade, and the high grade leathers used, you would then understand why they look belter, tU better, hold their shape and vreav longer than o ther makes for the price.

I f the \V. l„ Douglas shoes are not for sale in your ^c in ity . order direct from factory. Shoes sent every­where. Postage free in the U. S. W r i t e f o r H im * t r a c e d showing how to order by m all.

W. L. DOUGLAS, 210 Spark S t.,B rockton ,M at* .

For when we gladly eat our daily bread, we bless The Hand th a t feeds us;

And when we walk along life's way in cheerfulness,Our very heart-beats praise the Lord that leads us.

—Henry Van Dyke, D. D.

T H E R O Y A L G O R G EM rs. T w it te r ’s L ittle D is s e r ta t io n

on M o th e r’s Joy in P re p a r in g th e G re a t D inner.

he Didn’t Seem to Take a Very En­thusiastic View of the Matter, But

There Was a Reason for Her Well-Expressed

“Grouch.”

YES, ma’am,” said Mrs. Bump- weather, “the mince pie is loaded, and the deadly conflict between peace and comfort on one side and pain and pepsin

on the other is about to be performed. The coming Thursday will w itness our g reat epicurean festival, which might be technically term ed the Royal Gorge.”

“I’m not 'specially keen to listening to any sentim ental ravings about the day,” said Mrs. Twitter, with her usual suspicious and refrigerated tone of voice.

“I t’s put in the calendar to pester us, th a t’s all. Autumn brings us every kind of a misery it can pick up and lug home, afte r which we are cordially in­vited to gather together and be thank­ful. Thanksgiving day, like matrimony, is a good joke. You pawn the family jewels to send the kid-child to an ex­pensive school. Blow one. You cavern into the recesses of a dark clothes closet and disinter your furs. They are somewhat deader than they were ever dead before. In fact, they are not fur a t all, ha, ha! They are merely kin what has been skun. Swat two. The first cold day blows in and the radiator of the motor car freezes up, sneezes once, and calmly expires. Slam three. Grand opera sta rs collect, but father can’t. So you don’t go to the opera. Grief four. But I don’t care. I never yet was able to harness up an opera ticket, an opera gown, and a lala ding­bat for my hair all on the same date. If I had two of the three, I never had the third.”

“Sweet one,” purred Mrs. Bump- weather, softly, “tell me your wonder­ful secret. How do you keep so bland­ly cheerful? W hat frightful and b itter experience in life has taught you to be gay? How I envy you your beauti ful optimism. Hist, once! If you don’t th ro ttle th a t whine habit, or get a dog­house for it, or give it an inhalation of chloroform, I shall be vexed with you

-quite vexed, my dear.”“You smile on me and lead me on,

and then you turn on me and frown,” protested Mrs. Twitter. “Load up your old mince pie! Struggle onward to your Royal Gorge! I don’t care what happens to you. Since I spend all my

“For Weeks She Made Mince Pie.”

bonnet, and your own interpretation of the Castle walk—even you, my love, will some tim e belong to the good old times.”

"Even thus,” agreed Mrs. Bump- weather, “even so. ’Tis truth, I vow. But I shall belong to my own old tim es; I shall not be classed with my grandm other’s old time. I shall keep alive with the elixir of the present moment. Do you know, I think our Thanksgiving days are really much nicer than those old ones. I can’t see anything particularly roaring jolly about exploring to church through three feet of snow and meeting a flap- hatted gent carrying a wild turkey. All the Thanksgiving pictures are like that.”

“But,” continued Mrs. Tw itter, “do they ever tell about dear m other and what sort of a tim e she had? For weeks she 'm ade mince m eat and stewed pumpkins, and during the sum­m er she sweltered over the fire to make the jelly. Imagine the thankful­ness in her heart when she saw whole days of hard work gobbled up a t one

time galloping from the front door i to the back, answering the bells, my j idea of Thanksgiving is a chance to I sit down and blow on my poor, tirpd, I hot, weary feet.”

“W e are certainly drifting far away from the sweet and gentle spirit of holidays,” said Mrs. Bumpweather. “The good old days are dead.”

“And why are they good?” asked Mrs. Twitter. “They are good because they are old and because they are dead. Can't you hear our great-grand- mothers scoffing about new ideas and | all that? Don’t you suppose they were roaring about the dear old tim es that had passed? Up to date though you are, my lamb, with your slit sk irt and rubber buttons; in your tango shoe aoles, your chin strap on your little

“Cold Cloths on Her Brow.”

meal. How charming to have all the lit­tle folk around the house? Yes, ma’am? But what about sweeping up the mud tracks afterwards and plucking raisin seeds off the best hair cloth furniture, and washing up the tons of dishes? Mother did not sit before the fireplace and tell stories. She was putting little cotton blankets on her burnt thumbs, for basting a turkey is perilous busi­ness, let me tell you. How jolly it was to crack nuts, too. But where was mother? Oh, she was busy some­where. Yes, we recollect now. She was putting a cold cloth on her throb­bing brow; she had to pull herself to­gether so as to have strength enough to serve a bit of supper afterw ard.”

“They didn’t have the movies then to furnish them with recreation,” said Mrs. Bumpweather, “or theaters or tango dances. Visiting and eating were about the best they could do, and, after all, th a t’s more fun than anything else. Give me tim e to get up a good, old-fashioned dinner and I can have the biggest spread of my sweet, mid­dle-aged life. Compare such a meal to anything you can get downtown, or at any country club! My child, there’s nothing equal to it, and it is really a lark to cook it.”

“B lithers!” remarked Mrs. Twitter. Mrs. Bumpweather said nothing, as

if she m eant it.“B lithers!” exclaimed Mrs. Twitter

again.Mrs. Bumpweather slipped her hand

through Mrs. T itter’s arm.“You're tired, little one,” said she.

“When the enthusiasm gets out of your system, it’s a sure sign that some other less pleasant microbe has crept in. You can’t afford to let yourself slip away like that. You’ve got to keep holding on, and feeling keen about hu­man events, and being interested, even if you’re mending a ps\ir of your old man '8 trousers or picking the roast beef bones for hash. You’ll come aud e t your Thanksgiving dinner with me, won’t you, honey?’

Mrs. Twitter wriggled about In a naive, shy twist, supposedly to signify inexpressible joy.

“What for did I do all that growly talk?” asked she. “Little Tommy Tuck­er sang for his supper, but I'd rather growl for mine.”

And she said it without the slightest show of shame.

Surely a Favored Nation.Favored by Providence, the people

of the United States are today ex­pressing their heartfelt thanks for the good that has come to them, the evils that have been averted and the bright future that opens before tkem.

f l i p p y * U p

0 ^ rY e a r 9

i n u s e .

A Mother’s ExperienceMrs. G. Justus, ot Jersey City, says

F ather John’s Medicine always cures her seven children when they are ru a down in health or have a cold or cough. “We always recommend it to every­body.”

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opium nor anything injurious.Ail druggists.

... opiu

Try Pike** Toothache Drop* AThey’re Different.

“These dressing room rows among actresses are different from other1 quarrels.”

"In w hat way?” *“They can stay at daggers drawn

with one another and still be making

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Gr.

HORROR AND COST OF WAR

Judge Elbert H. Gary Tells of Con ditions as He Saw Them in the

Wake of Armies.

On Sunday, August 30, in company with another, 1 rode by motor car about two hundred miles in a semi­circle on the north and east of Paris, going within ten or fifteen miles of the line of battle, but taking good care, of course, to keep beyond the lim its of danger. I was forcibly im­pressed first with the horrors of war and secondly with its enormous cost. I saw everything pertaining to war except actual fighting; large numbers of re-enforcements going to the front and many wounded returning to hos­pitals; troops of all kinds, and arm a­ment, ammunition, supplies, facilities of every kind for offense and defense; engineer corps, aeroplane -arps, etc. Thousands of refugees were fleeing from their homes to places of sup­posed safety.

The next day much of the territory traversed was occupied by the forces engaged in leadiy conflict. The in­strum ents of destruction, the methods of using them and the facilities for moving armies have greatl" changed, and therefore as the destruction of life will be so large and rapid it would seem as though the war must necessarily be sooner ended than in former times and under different con­ditions. I saw temporary hospitals in private houses, under the control of Red Cross societies, on every hand, and many ambulances in use.— “Prance and Paris in W ar Times,” Judge E lbert TI. Gary in National Mag­azine.

Queer.“Poverty is no crime," observed the

Sage.“Maybe not,” added the Fool. “But

It is always punished by hard labor.”

DOCTOR KNEW Had Tried It Himself.

The doctor who has tried Postum knows th a t i t is an easy, certain, and pleasant way out of the coffee habit and all of the ails following and he prescribes it for his patients as did a physician of Prospertown, N. J.

One of his patients says;“During the summer just past I suf­

fered terribly with a heavy feeling at the pit of my stomach and dizzy feel­ings in my head and then a blindness would come over my eyes so I would have to sit down. I would get so nerv­ous I could hardly control my feelings,

“Finally I spoke to our family physi­cian about it and he asked if I drank much coffee and mother told him that I did. He told me to immediately stop drinking coffee and drink Postum in its place, as he and his family had used Postum and found it a powerful rebuilder and delicious food-drink.

“I hesitated for a timt< disliking the Idea of having to give-up my coffee, but finally I got a package and found it to be all the doctor said.

“Since drinking Postum in place of coffee my dizziness, blindness and nervousness are all gone, my bowels are regular and I am well and strong. T hat is a short statem ent of what P0stum has done for me.”‘ Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read “The Road to Well- vllle,” in pkgs.

Postum comes in two forms;Regular Postum — m ust be well

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The cost per cup of both kinds is about the same.

“There’s a Reasonr’ for Postum.jj-sold by. Grocers.

CENTURY ago, the celebration of Thanks­giving day was con­fined to New England. Even had it been the national holiday it is today, the struggling young republic of the United Shates in the

year of grace 1814 would have feasted on turkey and trimmings without en­thusiastic thanks, for the nation was tn the gloomy midst of the second war with Great Britain and it had mighty little to be thankful for. The capital had been captured by the invaders and the public buildings at Washing­ton had been put to the torch. While the little American navy had won wonderful victories against great odds and w ritten a chapter in history that makes our blood thrill with admira­tion, yet Great Britain, with its big fleets, was still m istress of the seas and American commerce ceased to exist. On land the American army, ren t with dissentions and generaled by political incompetents, made a record of humiliating defeats, the sting of

j which was to be removed in 1815 by j the signal victory of Jackson and his j backwoodsmen over the tried veterans

of Pakenbam at 'New Orleans. Pol- i itical animosities flamed at a white

heat unknown today. Sectional feel- | ing was high and bitter. The national | treasury was practically empty. Grass j grew in the streets of the cities and ! shipping rotted a t the wharves. Busi- | ness and industry were paralyzed and

the nation tottered on the verge of bankruptcy. The collapse of the young republic with its five or six million people scattered over an im­mense territory, was freely predicted, now that England’s hands were loosed by the fall of Napoleon.

Only in New England in 1814 was Thanksgiving day observed, and even in the ancient birthplace of the holi­day it is safe to say that the celebra­tion was far from being the joyous feast of the past. For New England as a whole had a big, bitter grouch and didn’t care who knew it. The New England states were fiercely hos­tile to the war and had been hardest hit by its effects. Its commerce, the chief source of its wealth, had been completely destroyed by Jefferson’s embargo law and the blockade of its ports by the British fleet. Its militia were not permitted to serve beyond the borders of New England, and the leaders and a great part of the popu­lace openly and warmly advocated secession from the Union either as an independent republic or as an Eng­lish province or colony. Under such circumstances, Thanksgiving in New England in 1S14 took a somber and more religious cast while the Thanks­giving sermons, once a significant fea­ture of the day, were shadowed by gloom and saturated with pessimism. It was under conditions as inaus­picious as these tha t the homegather- ing feast of old New England was ush­ered in. How profound the change wrought by a century in the life of the Republic! Thanksgiving day, this year, will be observed by almost if not quite a hundred million people, the citizens of a great and prosper­ous nation, the richest in the world and the most powerful ever conceived in the loins of time. A century ago, the day was observed by, not quite a million and half New Englanders alone amid gloom, uncertainty, appre­hension and poverty following the

ravages of war. A century ago, the Federal Union was an experiment in government that, in the minds of many, was foredoomed to failure. There was no nation; rather a loose confederation of hostile sections and jealous states. It was out of the struggles and sufferings of this very war tha t the American nation was born. Today, 100,000,000 Americans, in identity of political and social ideals, language and institutions, pre­sent a picture of the most thoroughly nationalized_ country of which history has record.

But in a hundred other ways did the Thanksgiving of 1814 differ from the one to be celebrated this year. Of course there were the funda­mental essentials of turkey, pumpkin pie and cranberry sauce; there were the homegathering of relatives and the reunion of the family around the old hearthstone. But beyond that all has changed with the passage of the fleeting years. Could a boy or a girl of today, by some ledgerdemain of time, be transported back to one of those old fashioned Thanksgiving day of a century ago, he or she would think they were being robbed of their holiday rights. Even the wealthiest people of those old days could not have on their Thanksgiving table many of the things found today on the tables of the humblest citizen.

In fact, there was a great poverty of vegetable variety on the Thanks­giving table a century ago. No as­paragus, no sweet potatoes, no string beans, no corn, no green peas, and so on down the attractive list that consti­tutes the appetizing trimmings of the Thanksgiving table of today. The tin can era had not yet dawned, and its possibilities of smashing seasonable monotony were undreamed ot even by epicures.

And there was the sam e poverty in Thanksgiving fruit. The list practi­cally started and ended with apples— and of a kind that most farm ers now feed only to their hogs or leave to rot on the ground. Grapefruit was a word not yet invented; oranges would have been worth their weight in gold; and the banana was to await many years for its introduction to the American housewife. Nor would it have been possible for the voracious youngster of th a t day to gorge him­self with luscious grapes and delicate raisins. Pineapple was another un­known word. Of course there were nuts, but only of native varieties. Almonds, Brazil nuts, pecans and the English walnuts, without which no Thanksgiving table of today would be considered complete, were then un­known luxuries.

The farmer of that day was a slave of the season and the produce of his toil was governed strictly by the cal­endar. There were no hothouses to force fruit and vegetables out of sea­son. The good people of those days would have considered it almost sacri­lege, an attem pt to improve on the divine plan of things. A request for straw berries or cucumbers at Thanks­giving would be equivalent to an ap­plication for admission to an asylum for the insanri.

But the difference does not end with a comparison of the eatables of the feast a century ago and today. It is even more startling when we com­pare the task of preparation now and the '’ The good housewife of 1914, tf called upon to get up a Thanksgiving feast with the utensils and under the

B e l l T h r e a t e n e d D e s t r u c t i o nAn alarming occurrence took place

when the congregation at St. Will­iam’s church, Rochdale road, Man­chester (Eng.) were assembling re­cently for service. During the ringing of the bell, which is said to weigh about fifteen hundredweight, a dull, heavy thud was heard In the vicinity of the belfry. An examination showed that tho bell, the tone of which had been suddenly hushed, had broken

No Such Thing as Untalented.In the Woman’s Home Companion

Anne Bryan McCall, writing a Tower Iloom talk entitled “The Talented Girl,'’ said th a t "strictly speaking there are no untalented people.” She continues in part as follows: "Whenwe envy the f-'if^ of others we do but forget our own. You may tell me what you piefise about your life he-

life is ungifted.ty which has

and rich (talents, to us untlilented.

ing ungifted There is no not its own If our lives

away from its bearings, and was rest­ing upon a wooden beam, which pre­vented it crashing through the roof into the church. The church was quickly cleared, and the fire brigade was summoned, with a view of restor­ing the bell to its fastenings, and so remove the threatening danger. With the aid of the fire escape they reached the belfry, but were unable to render the services sought, nothwithstanding

ungifted, le t us be sure it is only be­cause we have allowed our natural gifts to be uncultivated. 'We are nobly born,* says Stevenon, with his charac­teristic pride and insight; and then, with his characteristic thoughtfulness, he adds, ‘Fortunate those who know; blessed those who remember.’ ”

Took the Hint."Philander,” said the pretty girl to

her bashful beau. “I wish you’d tie this ribbon at my throat. 1 can't see to do it without a glass.” “Of course;

kitchen conditions of 1814, would throw up her hands in despair, and if the task was put up to the average servant of today would jump her job in an instant. The hardworking housewife of a century ago, had neither range nor cook stove. They had not yet been invented. Her tur­key and her pies were baked in the great fireplace, and her fuel was wood, for coal was not yet used.

If relatives were to be invited to Thanksgiving homegatherings in those old days, the invitations would have to be dispatched weeks and perhaps months in advance of the event, for it required the best part of a week for a letter to travel from Boston to New York, as long a time, in fact, as it now takes to cross the conti­nent. W ere it addressed to Chicago, a mere trading post a t that time, it would be sent the previous July. And the invitation itself would be w ritten with a quill and blotted with sand, for in those days there were no steel pens, no typewriters, no blotters, no gummed envelopes, no postage stamps.

And the son or daughter In the city who wished to return to the old homestead for Thanksgiving in 1814 faced an ordeal before which most of us today would quail. For traveling a century ago was a hazard and a peril. The railroad was a t th a t time undreamed of, and all inland travel was by river or road.

If a man on his way to a Thanks­giving feast a t the old homestead in the country was thrown from his horse in the road, breaking a leg or arm, his case was one to be pitied. For most of the doctors of those days were ignorant and careless. If ampu­tation was necessary, the victim was generally held down by main strength while saw and knife cut their agon­izing way through the tortured flesh and bone. For 1814 was before the days of anesthetics. Ether, chloro­form, cocaine and morphine were as yet unknown, and as for antiseptics, the protection against germ infection of the wound, th a t was to wait for more than fifty years. There was no quinine, no strychnine, no tinc­ture of iron, no carbolic acid—in fact, there were scarcely any of the com­mon and familiar drugs of today. There was no pepsin for tha t Thanks­giving indigestion, and a cold or a toothache was a thing to be dreaded.

in literally millions of homes on Thursday, the Thanksgiving dinner will be preliminary to a visit to a football game or a theater, things impossible to the sturdy stock of 1814. In fact, the religious feast of our grandsires has become to a large and growing extent a part of a sport­ing and amusement holiday in which real Thanksgiving, in the sense of the origin of the day, is conspicuous by its absence. Nevertheless, when a person stops to think about it, comparing the material comforts of today with those of a century ago, considering the marvelous growth of the republic in wealth and prosperity, the wonderful advancement of educa­tion, science and knowledge—there are many profound reasons why this annual feast of ours should be pre­ceded by a moment, a t least, of sol­emn and reverent thankfulness.

Accounted For.“It takes like to produce like.” "Perhaps tha t is the reason Jim s

is so sharp since he has been living in a flat.”

that the men spent considerable time on the task scaling the steep roof and adopting other methods of reaching the bell.

Inspiration.Half the difficulty of fighting any

severe battle or accomplishing any hard task vanishes when a man feels that he has comrades at his side fight­ing in the same cause, or tha t the eyes of those he loves are upon him, and their hearts praying for his vic­tory.—C. J. Perry.

I’ll be glad to,” he said, and a t once grappled the strings. After an unsuc­cessful effort of five minutes, during which he got as red as a brick house and perspired like a pitcher of Ice wntor on a July window sill, he stam ­mered: “I—1—don’t think I can tie arespectable knot, Miss Mary.” "Sup­pose, Philander,” she whispered, with a pretty little blush, “suppose you call in a clergyman to assist.” Like the unveiling of n beautiful nystery , the situation unfolded itself to Philander,

ho fools better now.

Page 4: WITH THANKSGIVING AND JOY - DigiFind-Itthe boys, rompers, food of all kinds, The attendance at Ihe Arthur Home is, on an average, forty children, all blind. As you are thankful for

THE COAST ADVERTISER, BELMAR, N. J., NOVEMBER 20, 1914.

T n e C o a s t B d v e r t i s e r f( In c o r p o r a te d w ith w h ie h is th e C o a s t E<-ho) |

PUBLISHKI> BYT h e C o a s t P u b l i s h i n g & P r i n t i n g C o . , j

I n c o r p o r a t e d

C. S. BUHLER, Editor.Publication OOa-** and Plant

704 Ninth avenue, Belmar, N. J 'phone 580 IVI

“ Entered as second-class matter, Febru »ry 95, 1908, at the post office at Belmar, N. J., Under the Act of Congress of Mar. S, 1«7».”

S u b s c r ip t io n Rat*One Y e a r ...................................

(B tr lo t l j I t A.lvaucw)S in g le C opy g c -iu .-

A D V E R T I S I N G R A T E S C)N A P P L I C A T I O N .

All communications, advertisements, 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 of organiz­ations in cases of death of members, or similar reading matter which is not in the form of general news will be charged for at the rate of five cents per line for each insertion.

L k a l N o t i c i s . —The Coast Advertiser I is a legal newspaper, and as such is the proper medium for all legal notices. Some advertisements belong to us by law, while with many others it is optional with the party interested as to what paper shall publish them.

Items of Local and Personal Interest Invited

F R ID A Y , NO V E M B E R 20. 1914.

Ha serves all who dares be true.—Em erson.

Why is it that so many regular meet­ings of the Borough Council are not held through lack of a quorum? Have some of the eouncilmen lost all interest in the affairs of the borough, or is it that they look to the other fellow to carry out their work?

It has been more noticeably so of late than previously that at almost every meeting night there are not enough eoun­cilmen present to foim a quorum.

Why is it.' Do they consider their time so valuable that they cannot spare an hour once in two weeks to attend to the welfare of the borough?

W hen seeking election these negligent members of the Borough Council promise the people that the affairs of the borough will receive their undivided attention, but after election they seem to suffer from loss of memory, or else their promises were not sincere; and when some of them do attend a meeting they do not take any active part in the proceedings. It is very discouraging to those members who regu- largly attend to their duties, and also to those private citizens who take an inter­est in public affairs, that such a state of affairs should exist.

We hope that in the near future the commission form of government will be

-.tried in Belmar, when the affairs of the borough will be properly attended to by three men, who will be paid for their duties, and if they do not attend to same can be removed.

U n e e d a B i s c u i tN ourishm ent—fine fla­vors—purity—crispness w holesom eness. Allfor 5 c e n ts , in the moisture-proofpackage.

G r a h a m C r a c k e r s

A food for every day. Crisp, d e lic io * u s and strengthening. Fresh baked and fresh de­livered. io cents.

A delightful n ew b is­cuit, w ith a rich and delicious cocoanut fla­vor. Crisp and alw ays fresh, io cents.

Buy biscuit baked by

NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY

Always look for that Name

LEGAL NOTICESON RULE TO BAR CREDITORS

A I >M l M STB AT MIX’S N < >TK I •;Anna E. L. Kodgeift* administratrix nt

Elias Jk/hnaon Rodgers, deceased, bv order of the Surrogate ol the County of I Monmouth, hereby gives notice to the | creditors of the said deceased to bring in their debts, demands and claims against j the estate of said deceased, unfler oath or affirmation, within nine months from the Sixteenth day of September, 1914-. or they will be forever barred of any action therefor against the said Administratrix.10 t ANNA E. L. RODGtRS.

Special M aste r’s Sale

teenth day of October, A. 1) , 191*1, by j the Sheriff of ti e County of Monmouth, j Dated November 6th, 1914.

J oseph McDkhmott, John E. Foster & Sons, Clerk.

Attorneys,Atlantic Highlands, N. J.

IflllllllllSIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII

1

BELMAR’S OFFICIALS 1

layor Robert A. Pootp

The stretch of Central New Jersey ex­tending from Asbury Park to Sea Girt is destined to be the great manufacturing and commercial center of the east Jersey coast.

Already Asbury Park has taken its • place as the commercial metropolis of Monmouth county.

There are no mone enterprising, patri­otic, forward-looking people within the confines of Uncl^e Jam ’s wide domains than those who make up the population of this region of New Jersey.

With unfailing sponlr.aiety and una­nimity, our sturdy citizenry have proven themselves patriots of the first water in handling issues for the welfare of the whole people. They have been able to forget self in spending themselves for the common good. To this extent they have measured up to the highest ideals of modern Christian civilization. To such extent as our people hold to those ideals shall we continue to lead all this central Jersey Coast in the march of progress and ever-increasing prosperity.

There never has been an opportunity for the upbuilding of this section of the New Jersey coast comparable to that which is offered in the proposed Trenton- Asbury-Park Trolley. It becomes the duty of every man, woman and child from North Asbury Park to away below Sea Girt to take up the battle to place the eistern terminus of this trolley at As­bury Park. The promoters propose a trolley line from Trenton via Freehold to either Asbury Park or I.ong Branch.

Belmar, with all its wonderful advan­tages and late improvements, will also reap wonderful benefits from this pro­posed line, and it should be to the inter­est of the cit.zens to boost and do all in their power to make this proposition an assured thing.

The poor train service has seriously handicapped a closer relationship between our seashore resorts and the towns on the proposed trolley route.

A mammoth power plant for the gener­ation of electricity is to be elected some­where along the line; first choice beii g given to Freehold. This line will traverse the richest part of all tbe rich state of New Jersey. It will open up a section of truck farmers whose production is almost sufficient to supply New York city. There is no section of the United States so rich in the productive capacity of its soil as the section of New Jersey to be traversed by the trolley from Trenton to the sea. There is no fairer stretch of scenery between the tides of the two oceans. Looking upon the picturesque hills aud valleys, the beautiful rolling lands, rich in water power, that stretch to th* shining expanse of America’s eastern ocean, one may know that God, with prodigal hand, bestowed his favors upon this section of the old State of New Jer­sey.

Now Jet us all seek to measure up, in

some degree, to the benefits so lavishly bestowed by Providence on the splendid territory which lies between Trenton and Asbury Park.

Let us all rally to the support of As­bury Park as the natural eastern terminus of the Trenton trolley.

There is no other town on the central New Jersey coast whose advantages as the eastern terminus of the Trenton trol­ley are even remotely comparable with Asbury Park.

For a generation or more Asbury Park has bravely maintained prestige as the commercial center of Monmouth county.

As the first step towards securing the Trenton trolley for Asbury Park, we suggest that the Chamber of Commerce of Asbury Park, the Association of Ocean Grove, and the various authorities of Bradley Beach, Avon, Belmar, and all the way to Sea Girt get in immediate communication with the promoters of the Trenton to the seashore trolley, and in­quire what may be necessary to secure the eastern terminus for Asbury Park.

Let all this section of New Jersey an nounce to the promoters that we stand ready to meet all requirements for secur­ing the eastern terminus of the proposed trolley for Asbury Park.

Such a message as that will have the right ring.

To such a message as that there can come but one answer.

BEAUTIFUL BELMAR HASAbout §0 hotels.A handsome new Carnagie Library.F ree mail delivery .Unsurpassed surf hathing.One of the linest schoolsTwenty-five miles of the best streets.An unsurpassed water front.Six churches for white people.Three churches for colored people.A Synagogue.Five thousand normal population.Beautiful groves and parks.

Beautiful country drives within short distance.

Ideal fishing, both river and ocean.Uas and electric light system.The finest water system on the At­

lantic coast.Over fifty miles of cement sidewalks.The most salubrious summer anil

winter climate in the world.Yachts, fishing and social clubs.The finest train service in the wotrkl.A beautiful lake In the center of the

town.A first class sewage system.The largest Marconi Wireless station

in the world.Fine trolley service.Three wide awake fiie companies.Board of Health.An efficient police force.

Another View of It."It is as much trouble to raise a

puppy as a boy,” according to a critic of women. Perhaps, but the pup doesn't go to college and gamble your hard-earned money away, and then ex­pect you to buy an annulment when he gets drunk and m arries a chorus girl old enough to be his mother.— Louisville Courier-Journal.

liy yirtuc of a decree of tlie Court of Chancery of New Jersey, made on the 29th day of September, 1914, in a cause there­in depending, wherein Holmes N. Hurley is complainant and Mary Ellen Hurley et als. are defendants, the subscriber, one of the special masters of this court, will expose to sale at public vendue to the highest bidder, on Friday, the 20th day of November, 1914, between the hoars of 12 o’clock noon and 6 o’clock in the af­ternoon of said day, to wit, at 2 o’c’ock, at the real estate office of Neil H. Miller, on Ninth Avenue, in the Borough of Bel­mar, Monmouth County, New Jersey,

All those certain lots, tracts, or parcels of land and premises, hereinafter particu­larly described, situate, lying and being in the Borough of Belmar, in the County of Monmouth and State of New Jersey,

Beginning at a point the intersection of the northerly side or line of Sixteenth avenue with the easterly side or line of F street, thence ( 1 ) northerly along said easterly side or line of F street, one hun­dred feet; thence (2) easterly at right angles to first course, one hundred and fifty feet; thence (3) southerly parallel with first course, one hundred feet to said northerly side or line of Sixteenth avenue; thence (4) westerly along said northerly side or line of Sixteenth avenue, one hun­dred and fifty feet to the point or place of beginning. Thus bounding and de scribing lots numbered twenty-nine hun­dred and fifty-eight (2958) and twenty- nine hundred and fifty-nine (2959) shown on a map or plan of lots of H. H. Yard’s Addition to Ocean Beach, now Belmar, duly filed in the Clerk’s Office of the County of Monmouth.

Also all that tract or parcel of land or premises hereinafter particularly de­scribed, situate, lying and being in the Township of Wall, in the County of Monmouth and State of New Jersey, at Ocean Beach, now Belmar, being part of a tract of land conveyed by Cornelius Pearce and wife to Garrett Bennett by deed dated November 17th, A. D. 18(>9, and recorded in the Monmouth County Clerk’s Office at Freehold in Book 234 of Deeds, page 292, &c., said tract of land containing 2-84/100 acres.

Beginning at the beginning corner of said acre 2-84/ICO and running as the magnetic needle now (1882) points south eighty-seven 17/60 degrees east two hun­dred nineteen and 5/10 feet along the fourth line of said acre 2-84/100 south four and 30/60 degrees west fifty feet, thence north eighty-six 49/60 degrees west two hundred five feet to the first line of said acre 2-84/100, thence along said first line north twelve 17/60 degrees west fifty feet to the place of beginning, con­taining 10,600 superficial feet be it the same more or le-'s, reserving for a right of way ten feet in width adjoining the west line of the lot hereby conveyed and included therein anything to the contrary herein contained notwithstanding.

The above described premises will be sold free and clear of the estates and in­terests in dower of the defendants Mary Ellen Hurley, widow of Rudolph Hurley, deceased, and Pansy Hurley, widow of Harry H. Hurley, deceased, in said premises; and also of the inchoate right of dower of the defendant Mary D. C. Hurley, wife of the complainant, and the estates and interests of the defendants George W. Hurley, William Evans and Herbert Brace, together with all and singular the hereditaments and appurten­ances to the said premises belonging or in any wise appertaining.

Conditions made known on day of sale.J ohn E. L anning,

Special Master in Chancery of New Jersey, Asbury Park, N. J.

Drii.wi), Ivi.vs & Cakton,Solicitors for complainant, Asbury

Park, N. J.J o s r p h T i rnkh,

Solicitor for answering defts. Asbury Park, N. J.

Councilman Uoo. W. VanNote, Pres.

S H ER IFF 'S SALE.—By virtue of a writ of fi. fa. to me directed, issued out of the Monmouth County Circuit Court, will

be exposed to sale at public vendue on TUESDAY, THE TWENTY FOURTH DAY OF NOVEMBER, 1914, between the hours of 12 o’clock and a o’clock (at 2 o’clock) in the afternoon of said day, at the Park Hall, Asbury Park, county of Monmouth, New Jersey.

All that certain lot of land or curtilage situated in the Borough of Belmar, in the County of Monmouth and State of New Jersey, and more particularly described as follows;

Beginning at the south-west corner of Lot No. 2062 at a stake in the northerly line of Eleventh avenue, as laid down on said map; thence ( 1 ) northerly along the westerly side of said Lot. No. 2062. one hundred and fifty feet, more or less, to the middle of the block ; thence (2) westerly along the middle of the said block, and parallel with Eleventh avenue, forty-nine feet and six inches to a stake at corner of Lot No. 21 64; Ihence (3) southerly along line of said Lot No. 2064, one hundred and fifty feet to the northerly side or line of I Eleventh avenue aforesaid; thence (4) easterly along the northerly line of Elev- j entli avenue forty-nine feet six inches to the place of beginning. Being known and | designated as lot No. 2( 63, upon map of I Ocean Beach Association;

Together with Ihe building erected thereon, the same being a two and one half story frame dwelling, sixteen feet six inches wide, and thirty six feet eight inches deep, with porch in front and ex tension on west side.

Seized as the property of Ensley J. Tilton, Builder and Owner, taken in exe­cution at the suit of Lewis Lumber Com­pany. and to be sold by

WILBERT A. BEECROFT, Sheriff. Patikkson & Mhomk, Attys.Dated October 26, 1914. $13 26

Monmouth County Circuit Court.

Ferdinand Stines Williard .J Sterner .T. S. Dillon N. C. King James R. HouselC om m itteesFinanceGeo W. VanNote Ferdipand Stines N. C. KingStreetsFerdinand Stines FireN. C. King.

PoliceT. S. Dillon b ightsJames B. Housel Sewer & Sanitary Williard J. Sterner Water R. G. Poole

Board of Education Paul C. Taylor, Pres.Geo. Titus, Vice Pres.T. S. Dillon W. S. Jackson C. R. Stines Thomas Be»ton F. Stines Wm. H. Hurley Nel H. Miller

Fire Dept.Wm. K. Burger, Chief

Supt. of Streets John GleasonBoro Clerk Chas. 0. Hudnut

Tax Assessor Geo. B. TitusTax CoMeotor Abram Borton Chief Police Geo. Bearmore Belmar Board of Trade W. J. S terner, Pres.Ed. A. Voorhees, Secy, and Trea.

Committees Advertising Edw. Voorhees C. B. Honce Neil H. Miller

Finance Wm. AUspach Dr. Thompson Wm. HurleyAuditing C. B. Honce Wm. BamfordB. E. GaigeCivic Imp.Dr. Thompson Mr. Goff A. WildmanHotel & Boarding House W. H. Stoyle Chas. Robertson Chas. BrockstedtEntertainm ent Wm. Lokerson Neil. H. Miller Howard ChamberlainLegislative H. R. Cooper W. E. Allen Cook HowlandRailroad W. W. Lawson W. P. Siemon Geo. W. JamisonM anufacturing F. C. DuBois S. Michelsohn Jr.Edw. Kleinkroff

Waterway John W. Kidd Paul Zizinia Wm. H. Carpenter

Celeb raMon & Lake CarnivalAsher LambertF. C. DuBoisW. B. BamfordPeter EgenoffL. AveryRiver Carnival W. F. Seaman Geo. D. Boschen lolln A. Pacer W. A. CarpenterC. R. Stines

Where do you buy your Building Material ?

When in want do not forget that the Buchanon & Smock Lumber Company of Asbury Park can supply you. Write or see D. C. Conklin, Jr., our Local Agent, P. O. Box 46, Belmar. N. J.

IJAMES H. SEXTON

UNDERTAKER & EMBALM PR6 0 6 F S t r e e t , BEtjMAR

ISO M a in S t r e e t . A S B U R V PARK T e l. 21 A s b u r y P a r k . R e s id e n c e 3 0 7

T e to p h r u i* n r te le g ra p h o r ite rs re c e iv e I ’tfrnnn& l a t te n t io n .

Supt. of Water, Henry C. Cooper. Dlst. Clerk, Neil H. Miller.

| L . J . L E A D E R | D i a m o n d s

I Watches, Jewelry and | Optical Goods

flsDury ParK & Ocean Grove BanRA S B U R V R A R K . IM. J .

T H E S T R E N G T H OH T i l l ' BA N K L I E S NOT ONLY IN I I S

CAPITAL SURPLUS

AM ) -

UNDIVIDED PROFITS

AND RESOURCES OF

4 6 5 0 0 0 " "2 5 0 0 0 0 0 " "

HUT 4 1. SO /A1 I HE CHARACTER AM) FINANCIAL RESPONSI­BILITY OF THE MEN BY W HOM IIS AFFAIRS ARE DIRECTED.

o f f -HENRY C. WINSOR. Pres.C. C. CLAYTON. Vice Pres. H. A. WATSON, Cashier.F. M. MILLER, Asst. Cashier

O I M* H ,T. FRANK APPLEBY AAliOV E. BALLARD 00RNEI,IU8 C. CLAYTON W. HaHVEY JONES t. K. TAYLOR HEWRY C. WINSOR

Belmar, N. J . s ’|I I

g 805 F S treetRepairing a Specialty.Work Guaranteed.

w m H inm nn m in tm n H iiim m iin iin m i

S ee M e B e fo re Y o u P la c eY O U R IN S U R A N C E

Life Fire Accident

Health Disability

Automobile Collision Employers Public-Direct Public-Contingent

Elevator Vehiele Property Damage

Plate GlassJ Burglary Fly Wheel Sprinkler Leakage Automobile Teams Commercial

Householders Workmen’s Compen­

sation

chas. i. mcconnellB E L M A R , ,N. J.

f i e p r e t e n t l n g c o m p a n i e s o t k n o w n s x p e r l e n c « a n d I n t e g r i t y , n o t e x p e r i m e n t a l o n e s .

INSURANCE , REAL ESTATE

I N E I L . H . M I L L E R7 0 8 N IN T H A V E N U E B E L M A R , N. J.

Insure With The Man Who Knows HowWe have a line of the best Fire Insurance Companies

in the business.No one should be w ithout som e protection from loss

by fire, we can give you th is protection a t a small cost.MAY WE QUOTE YOU RATES?

COMMISSIONER OF DEEDS NOTARY PUBLIC

H o n c e & D u B o i sR E A L E S T A T E A N D I N S U R A N C E

7 0 6 T E N T H A V E N U E , Opp. R. R. Depot

W e have som e excellent BARQAINS in LOTS in Belm ar P ark and now is the proper tim e to Invest there .

$

L a d i e s ’ a n d ( i e n t s ’

t a i l o r !i♦

8 0 1 F S T R E E T $

b e l m a r , N. j . I

Our Unusal OfferTen Special Blue Amberol Records

F R E EWith each four minute attachment placed

on two minute Edison Machines

R A N G E S A N D H E A T I N G S T O V E ST h e time has come when you mus t think about your Range or. H ea t ing Stove

C A N O P Y R A N G E STin* raiifte th at ow es its o rig in to the dem and for a p lain ra n g e th a t is

j good from e very d etail. W’ e a re se llin g m ore and m ore C A N O P Y ttA X G K S . Can a lw a ys be seen on our lloor.

G L E N W O O D R A N G ES , P E R F E C T R A N G ES, and m any others

H E A T I N G S T O V E S1 On a cco u n t ol i Im* u n iv e r sa l »l<*nian<l lor a irood s to v e lor a I«»\v p r ic e , we

wen* c o m p e lled to inalo* a s lu r p look u n til we th e

S E N A T E O A Kwhich Iims M’.vriiiI im p o rtan t le a tm e s iiiub-riallv d illeren l from o ilier low priced stoves. W e in v ite y o u r specia l a t te n tio n Io th is stove.

Prices Rang ing from $6 .7 5 to $15 .00

P I N E A L L C A S T I R O N S T O V E SA n excep tio n ally tine sto ve and good h eater. P r ic e s from

$8 .5 0 to $ 16.75

GOOD L IN E OH C Y L IN D E R S T O V E S From $5 .0 0 to $ 12 .50

Fu ll Line of Stove Boards, Stove Repairs for Every Stove Pipe, Collars, etc. i M ake of Stove or Range

Have your two minute phonograph up-to-date

Edison Four Minute Wax Records 20c EachAll styles Amberolas and Victrolas

andEvery Edison and Victor Record

carried in stock

WHITE SEWING MACHINES HOOSIER KITCHEN CABINETS

P A U L C. T A Y L O R

All makes of machines repaired

L E A R N T O B E C O M E A C H A U F F E U R . W e c a n te a c h y o u . C o s t lo w e m p lo y m e n t e a . t l y s e c u re d

C H A S . R . Z A C H A R 1 A SEagle Hall Block. A sbury Park, N. J.

Merchants D ire c to ry ' ' 'G. P. L E D D O N

Fancy Groceries and Provisions j Fruits and Vegetables

7 0 0 I K N T II A V K \ U K , HKL.M A H

PHONE 527-J

A c m e M a r k e t A % n !*Hi;wMeats and Poultry Butter, Eggs, etc.

905 F Street, BELMAR, N .J., opp. Bank.

D IL L O N ’S E X P R E S SBELMAR, N. J.

srfli Haulina m MerePHONE; 5 8 0 - R

AGENTS OFFICEAmerican Express Co. Railroad Depot

iiifiiiimiiiiHimiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiu.*3 JOS. C. STEWARD QBO. H. THOMPSON S

a5

S T E W A R D & T H O M P S O NPlum bing, Steam and Gas F itting

Jobbing Promptly Attended to

• O. Box 1544 Phone 510-R g715 F Street Belmar, N. J.

■Mtnm»mnnniimnmiiminnni»iiiiiiinni)iiiiiiininniiniiiiiiiiiiuniiiiiiiiiiniiii?

TONSORIAL ARTISTSLadies Electric Massage and Children’s ~ Hair Cutting a Specialty. Residence Cal Is. IS

The only shop using the Fraley MassaRO Machine.

Main Shop, P. O. Bldg. j Branch Kith Ave. g

VTILO H. CRKGO,J08XICE OF THE PEACE

K O T A K V P U B L I C ..O M M I S S I O N K R OW D M l m

r S t r e e t . B t l u > r . K . J .

Charles Vivian & Co., 1Plaintiff, . . . . ,t A ction at I ,aw . I

. . d m ’- i | In Attachment. Alvin IL Morrison, Inc., jDefendant. '

Notice is hereby given that a writ of I attachment at the suit of Charles Vivian & Co. against the rights and credits, ' moneys and effects, goods and (chattels, j lands and tenements of Alvin R. Morri­son, In*1., a non-resident debtor, for thesum of Six hundred and thirty dollars, |issued out of the Circuit Court of the County of Monmouth on the Sixth day of' October, A. I)., 1914, returnable on the j Twenty-ninth day of October, A.D., 1914, , has been served and duly executed, Oc- j tuber (i, 1914, and returned on the Thn |

$ 1 0 0 R e w a r d , $100T h© r e a d e r s o f t h i s p a p e r w i l l b o

p le a s e d to l e a r n t h a t t h e r e i s a t l e a s t o n e d r e a d e d d i s e a s e t h a t s c ie n c e h a s b e e n a b l e t o c u r e in a l l i i s s t a g e s , a n d t h a t is C a t a r r h , M a l i 's C a t a r r h C u r e i s t h e o n ly p o s i t i v e c u r e n o w k n o w n t o th o m e d ic a l f r a t e r n i t y . C a t a r r h b e in g : a c o n s t i t u t i o n a l d i s e a s e , r e q u i r e s a c o n s t i t u t i o n a l t r e a t ­m e n t . H a l l 's C a t a r r h C u r e i s t a k e n in ­t e r n a l l y , a c t i n g d i r e c t l y u p o n t h o b lo o d a n d m u c o u s s u r f a c e s o f t h e s y s t e m , t h e r e ­b y d e s t r o y i n g t h e f o u n d a t i o n o f t h e d i s ­e a s e , a n d g iv i n g t l ie p a t i e n t s t r e n g t h b y b u i l d in g u p th e c o n s t i t u t i o n a n d a s s i s t i n g n a t u r e i n d o in g i t s w o r k . T h e p r o p r i e t o r s h a v e s o m u c h f a i t h in i t s c u r a t i v e p o w ­e r s t h a t t h e y o f f e r O n e H u n d r e d D o l la r s f o r a n y c a s e t h a t i t f a i l s t o c u r e . S e n d f o r l i s t o f t e s t i m o n i a l s .

A d d re s s F . J . C H E N E Y A C O ., T o led o , O h io .S o ld b y a l l Druggists, 75e.Take Hall’* Family Pills f o r constipation.

G A LLU C C IO BROS.

G E O R G E G . T I T U S II C E I

C o a l , W o o d , H a y a n d F e e d«-><•» §

* 9Corner Seventh Avenue and F Street

g -Telephone 510-W BELMAR, NEW JERSEY gSa M

| M a l l O r d e r s G i v e n S p e c i a l A t t e n t i o n .

' ' 'i i i i i i iu iii i i i iii iiin iiiiii iiii iiii iiim iiiii iiii iiiii iim m iiii irn im iiiiiiii iim iiiii iiiii is

BORTON BROS.

S A V E YO U R P O U LT R Y =BY USING ™

Bennell’sIndianRoupCure |50c Per Battle “• M K n t r

Box 621 P h o n e 5-48 W B E L M A R . N . J .

B E E R M A N N ’S( O P P O S I T E THE P O S T O F F IC E

Is the Uight Place to Go ForSelect Meats and Poultry

I WATCH WINDOW FOR SPECIALS.

G. S. N E W B E R Y MILK AND OREIAM

Grocers! M a n u f a c tu r e r o t PU K E ICE C R E A M a n d IC E S

Hotels and Cottages Supplied I Phone 431-M BELMAR, N. J.

T Ii E V E R Y B E S T I N Staple and Fancy Groceries

ALL KINDS OF T ABLE DELICACIES CARRIED IN STOCK

S t r i c t l y F r e s h E g g s a n d B u t t e r

N i n t h A v t n u e & F S t r e e t . - ^ ^ L MA R r n . s.

Page 5: WITH THANKSGIVING AND JOY - DigiFind-Itthe boys, rompers, food of all kinds, The attendance at Ihe Arthur Home is, on an average, forty children, all blind. As you are thankful for

THE COAST ADVERTISER, BELMAR, N. J., NOVEM BER 20, 1914.

S u i t e O v e r c o a t s . B a l m a c a a n s

A N D M A C K I N A W S\ ’ *

Wo are showing' fin Exclusive Lino for Men mid Young Men in the most pop. lnr g'ar- inents of the day. Every Suit or Overcoat absolutely arnaranted to wearer in everv detail as to color, tailoring*, and wearing1 ability; positively all wool. S u i t s or O v e rco a ts , $8 .00 to $25.00; M a c k in a w s , $5 .50 to $8.50.

ODD T R O U S E R SIn the Sweet-Orr make. Positively the best money can buy. In Cashmere, W ors ted and Corduroy— $2 t o $ 5 .

S W E A T E R SIn all grades. The F jne W ove V Neck C u t Sweater lo the heavy Shaker Knit Rope Wea've with the large roll col lar—$1. t o $ 6 .

M Y E R ’S G L O V E SAll C o lo r s , $ 1. t o $ 1.50

O thers from the i o c Canvass to the $3.00 kind

YOUNG H A TS$ 3.00

O ther makes $1.00 to $3.00

C A PS5 0 c t o $ 1.50

W . L. DOUGLAS- S H O E S RA LSTO N H E A L T HIu all the leading styles, shapes and leather—from the very exclusive dress shoe to the heavy, strong, durable gunning >r work shoe

$2 .00 to $5 .00 Boys, $1.50 to $3.00

U N D E R W E A RIn all g rades— the Fleece Lined, the Jersey Ribbed W righ t Health, the All-Wool, in l ight and heavy weight, double or single breasted, union suit or separate garments.

5 0 c t o $ 1.75 p e r g a r m e n t B o y s , 25 c t o 5 0 c

S H I R T SIn the popular Arrow Brand, pleated or plain bosom, laundried or soft French cuffs; long or short bosom. T h e I ango shirt in plain white and a variety of colors. T h e heavy flannel work shirt in gray or brown, Cullars at tached; warm and durable.

5 0 c t o $ 2.00

H O L E = P R O O F H O S E 6 pair Lisle, all colors, guaran teed 6 months, at » 3 pair, Silk, all colors, guaran teed 3 months, at

$1.50 B u y t h e B e s t$ 1.50 I t P a y s

W e se l l e v e r y a r t i c l e w i t h t h e H U R L E Y G U A R A N T E E o r m o n e y r e f u n d e d .

O P P . * B A N K

m i m I S t l D I t W M e n ' s & B ° y ’ s S L R “ T. .s i r M . £ 1 . i l u K l c i t I o u t f i t t e r B E i M J I R , N . JW A R ! Wha AU AAll About?

TLJ AS the whole world gone stark mad over a Very foolish and trivial question? Are swords rattling, cannon rumbling, mailed armour

glistening just because Russia wanted to show her love for the little brother— Servia ?

Tear aside the curtain of Europe’s politics and see the grim and sinister game of chess that is being played. See upon what a slim, yi t desperate, excuse the sacred lives of millions may be sacrificed. Read the history of the past one hundred > ears, as written by one of the greatest authorities the w ild has ever known, and learn the naked, shameful truth Just to get you started as a Review^f Reviews subscr:i>er, we make you this extra­ordinary offer. Wc will ; :ve to you

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Four splendid do th volumes, full of portraits, sketches, maps, diagrams

Today is the climax of a. hundred years of preparation. Read in this timely, authoritative, complete, AND THE ONI.Y CONDENSED classic wond history—of which w r 2,000,000 copies have been sold in France alone—just what has taken place in the inner council■; of Europe during the past one hundred years. Read in these entrancing pages how Russia has for years craftily been trying to escape from her darkness— to get a year-round open port, with itr economic freedom.

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P e d r o a n d t h e d a n c in g b e a r , M r . J o n e s , p r e v e n t a t r a m p f r o m s t e a l i n g a y o u n g l a d y ’s p u r s e . P e d r o 's a m b i t i o n to b e c o m e a p a i n t e r s p u r s h im to q u i t O ld N i t a a n d t h e s t r o l l i n g b e a r d a n c e r s . P e d r o , O ld N i t a a n d th e b e a r t r a i n e r s s t a r t f o r N e w Y o r k . M is s I r i s V a n d e r p o o l q u a r r e l s w i th h e r a r t i s t lo v e r . S a m H i l l , a n d t h e y p a r t . S h e d i s c o v e r s in h e r f a t h e r 's d e s k a p o r ­t r a i t . w h ic h s h e r e c o g n i z e s a s t h a t o f P e d r o , w h o r e s c u e d h e r f r o m t h e p u r s e s n a t c h e r . H i l l m e e t s P e d r o a n d M r. J o n e s in W a s h i n g t o n s q u a r e . H i l l d i s c o v ­e r s t a l e n t in P e d r o 's d r a w i n g s a n d in a m a d d e s i r e to lo s e h io i s e l f , g iv e s h is s t u d i o a n d a l l in i t t o P e d r o In e x c h a n g e f o r M r. J o n e s . P e d r o o c c u p ie s H i l l 's s t u ­d io a n d c a l l s o n L e ig h , t h e s c u lp t o r , w i th a l e t t e r f r o m H i l l . I „ e lg h , c a l l i n g in r e ­t u r n , in t h e a l l e y b u m p s in t o tw o m e n , o n e o f w h o m Is R e g i n a ld V a n d e r p o o l , I r i s ’ f a t h e r . In d i s g u is e . V a n d e r p o o l 's c o m p a n ­io n g o e s In to t h e b a s e m e n t o f H i l l ’s s tu d io a n d t a l k s w i th R ic a r d o , o r R o w e , t h e b a s e m e n t t e n a n t , o f a c o n s p i r a c y a g a i n s t a f o r e i g n g o v e r n m e n t . V a n d e r p o o l , o v e r w’h o m R o w e h a s a s e c r e t h o ld , is Im p l i ­c a t e d . S e n o r a D a u s s a a n d h e r c h i ld , s u p ­p o s e d ly d e a d in a n u p r i s in g , R o w e k n o w s t o b e a l iv e . S e n o r a D a u s s a is d r iv e n b y R ic a r d o lo a r e s o r t w h e r e t h e c o n s p i r a ­t o r s m e e t h e r a n d p r o f e s s lo y a l ty . S a m H i l l s e e s R o w e u n e x p e c t e d l y a t t a c k e d b y O ld X i t a , a n d r e s c u e s h e r . P e d r o t a k e s l u n c h e o n w i th I r i s in h e r h o m e , m e e t i n g \ a n d e r p o o l , w h o is d i s t u r b e d b y P e d r o 's p r e s e n c e . T ris t e l l s P e d r o h e r s u s p i c io n t h a t h e r f a t h e r is b e in g b l a c k m a i l e d a n d e n l i s t s h i s h e lp . I r i s p o s e s f o r P e d r o . P e d r o s e e s R o w e w i th V a n d e r p o o l a m i p e e p in g th r o u g h R o w e 's b a s e m e n t w in ­d o w is a s to n i s h e d a t s i g h t o f a w o m a n w h o s e f a c e , f e a t u r e f o r f e a t u r e , is l ik e B is o w n .

CHAPTER XI—Continued.

“Ole lady hurted?” beamed this cherubic personage.

“No, only tired out,” lied Hill glibly. “I’ll histe yer to a car,” suggested

the man. “Never di-serted a lady in distress. Nope!"

“I’m afraid they wouldn’t let us on a car,” exclaimed Hill. “Are you go­ing downtown, by chance?”

“No, I’m a-goin’ a-purpose!” grinned the man. “Get in; I ’ll take yer fur es I ’m goin’!”

Hill did not wait to be urged fur­ther, but carried N ita to the carriage door, which the heavily muffled coach­man held open.

“Easy there, with yer m a!” the lat­te r warned him. “Now jump in yer- self. This heat is too fierce to lay about in.”

The horse, which had stood pas­sively under its meager blanket for hours, scarcely shifting a foot, now

“Ole Lady Hurted?" Beamed This Cherubic Personage.

icented the bear, and sidled off a little, its city-trained senses scarcely revolt­ing, yet finding in th a t unfam iliar odor some warning of danger, and the two men noted the action.

“W hat about the bear?” gasped Hill.From within the saloon came sounds

which indicated that Mikey had dis­covered the trick played upon him.

“Whoa, my baby!” roared the happy cabby. “Push the d n bear inside!"

In a moment it was done, not with­out protest from Mr. Jones. And as the bony horse, tossing his old head about with many a suspicious sniff, set off at a tremendous pace, the window of the saloon flew open to disgorge the rotund figure of Mikey, who shouted an unintelligible threat, or command, upon the snow-filled air.

At Twelfth street the cab came to a sudden halt beside the curb, and the driver, dismounting from the box, opened the door and looked in.

“Thi& is where my stable is at,” he announced. “Right down the block. Guess you’ll have te r git out. How’s yer ma?" he added solicitously, as though to repair his rudeness in eject­ing them.

"Pretty bad,” said Hill. "Gone off again, I’m afraid.”

The cabby wrinkled up his face with a perplexed stare, and removing his hat, scratched his head with one heavily mittened hand.

“I really hadn’t oughter,” said he, "considerin’ the hour and all, but I guess i t ’s gotter be done. W here­about# do you live?”

"Little Jones street," said Hill, and gave t i e number. “I’ve a bit of money. Could you get us around there, do you think r

“Well,” said the cabby, "I might as well make a night of it, I suppose. Take good care of yer ma, now, and I'll have yer home in a jiffy!”

Then he remounted the box, and soon they were wending a tortuous way through the silent squalor of lowe/ Greenwich village. They stopped a t laiit before a tall tenement, a build­ing of uncompromising ugliness, whose intricate network of fire escapes was huTig now with a fairy drapery of white.

Whining with disgust at being again disturbed, Mr. Jones jumped out clumsily, followed by Hill, who, with the cabby’s help, carried the uncon­scious N ita into the unlighted hallway, which gaped, sinister and forbidding, under the netherm ost of the crowded

fire-escape balconies. Here Hill, one arm about his charge, fumbled in his breast for his wallet. But the cabby put up a restraining hand.

"Never mind the coin!” he laughed. "Youse need it more’n me, I guess. B etter let the doctor take it; you’re a-goin’ ter need ter call him in! Yer seem all to the good, even if yer be dagoes!”

“You’re a gentlem an!" exclaimed Hill, holding out his hand. “Many thanks for your kindness. You seem very happy. May I ask why? I should like to congratulate you."

“Oh! it ain’t nothin’ much,” said the cabby sheepishly. “I ain’t goin’ to be married, th e t’s a ll!”

W herewith he was gone, and Hill, without stopping to ponder upon the content of this odd reply, set himself to carrying Nita up the stairway. At the first landing he stopped and knocked. The door was presently opened by Beau-Jean, a scantily clad colossus, silhouetted in the aperture against the light of a single candle. With an exclamation of dismay, the man stepped back to adm it Hill and his burden, and the painter, staggering across the tiny room, deposited Nita upon a ragged bed th a t stood beside the cook stove.

“Holy M other!” breathed Beau-Jean. “Is she dead?”

“No! W here are the women?” asked Hill. 11

In response to the question Gune- viere raised herself from her pallet of quilts in the opposite corner, a sturdy, unmodern figure, with head swathed for sleeping. With entire un­concern for her negligee, she arose and came to the assistance of the older woman.

“God save us! 6he is too ancient to survive such in jury!” she exclaimed, examining a swelling which was now quite obvious on the crone’s forehead. “Hermania! Anna! come!”

From a tiny inner closet came Her­mania, clad as for the day, save for the absence of shoes, and her forehead­band of coins, which was a t this mo­ment reposing in her bosom for greater comfort with no less safety. After her came Carlos, sleep-atupid and annoyed. In a moment both wom­en were busy over the prostrated form of the injured one; and to the men Hill was giving an account of the ad­venture tha t had brought them to such a pass. They listened without being able to throw the sm allest light upon the subject, nor identify the enemy who had assaulted the old lad7 in so cowardly a fashion.

“Which of you has ever heard of her enemy?” Hill was asking. “None, really? And has she no kin whom we should call upon for help?”

“Nay,” said Beau-Jean, the ponder­ous, “she is from the America-of-the- South. If she hath kin, they are too far away to levy claim upon.”

“America-of-the-South! W hat do you mean?’’

“Venezuela, I think,” said Rico.“But how is it possible that no one

knows anything further about her?” cried Hill. “You have all been with her for years. Surely you must know —or the women will, perhaps.”

“No one but Pedro knows,” said Rico positively. “They came together; we all know tha t much. But beyond tha t— !’’

He waved his hand with a gesture expressive of infinite vagueness.

“Then, if anything threatens her, it may also affect Pedro,” said Hill.

“Perhaps the Old One will speak soon,” suggested Beau-Jean, “and then we can find out."

It was a hope to which they all agreed, but which was not to be ful­filled during the watches of that night. As it became evident that rest was the most importanf thing for her, and that little or nothing could be done until the morrow, the watchers, one by one, betook themselves to bed.

* * * * * * *The next day a doctor came and pro­

nounced tha t there was nothing alarm ­ing in N ita’s injuries, but that she must rest for a few days and have great care. Then he took most of their money, and having drugged Nita, after the custom of certain beasts who prey upon the not infrequent victim to be found among the tenements, pro­ceeded to m^ke a case for himself whereby he could come daily until his patient’s finances were exhausted. And for several days his little plan succeed­ed, for Guneviere was faithful to the nursing, and administered the drug with great regularity. On the days when Hermania remained at home to care for the old woman, she, too, was painstaking and vigilant. But there came a time when it was Anna’s turn to watch, and Anna forgot to give the "medicine.” For poor little Anna wept a t being separated from Rico, and weeping, fell asleep. When she awoke, the day was gone, and what was more, Nita was gone also. The bed was made, the old woman’s clothing had disappeared, and on the table the empty coffee cup and plate, showed that N ita had not gone hungry!

* * * * * * *Now the doctor had been a severe

drain upon the resources of these peo­ple, and just a t present Hill was bring­ing in the most money, for he added to his exhibition, sketching portraits at 25 cents apiece. He was usually the first to step out, and last to return, and this waB more regularly the case since N ita’s illness, for the two older wom­en were much occupied. It so hap­pened, then, tha t on the day just re­corded above, he had gone forth even before it was decided that Anna should remain with Nita.

And so on, past tenem ents, past gloomy little shops, past meager wares set forth at cellar doors, on and on he went, absorbed in thought; and behind him shuffled Mr. Jones, a t whom the children stared and pointed. Down a

back alley they plunged then, man and bear, and emerging upon a wide slat­ternly avenue, pushed back a slatted swinging door, and entered a saloon.

There were shining mirrors within, and polished woods, with a fine bar, all arrayed with glasses and bottles in decorative and tempting array. Here was a group of men in a post-midnight mood, hilarious and ready to part with small change. Sam made Mr. Jones dance for them, turn somersaults, sit in an armchair and hold a pipe be­tween his teeth, kiss him, be dead, and perform many other intellectual feats beyond the common acquirement of bears. The fruit of this effort was only sixty-one cents.

Then Sam strolled away, ever toward the river, in a northerly direc­tion tha t would ultimately lead toward the open country. And all the while Iris filled hie heart and mind, as, in­deed, she had done almost every mo­m ent since his angry parting from her.

It came to pass, that, being occupied with the thought of a red-haired girl, such as bore locks of a similar color arrested his eye more frequently and with a more personal in terest than did any other type; and so it followed in a natural sequence, th a t when he caught sight of a Titian head (elab­orately puffed, and curled, to be sure, and quite unlike Iris’ gleaming braids) behind the confusion of feminine ar­ticles of apparel in the window of a tiny notion shop, he fancied a resem­blance, and stopped to stare. And equally inevitable was it th a t she should feel tha t stare through the win­dow glass and over the mass of articles therein displayed, as people have a way of feeling a stare ; and looking up, she smiled upon the handsome gentle­man whose gaze was riveted upon her. She was no more like unto Iris than the cinnamon-pink to the ascension lily; nor was she a t all pretty. But Sam obeyed a sudden impulse and en­tered the tiny shop, followed by Mr. Jones.

Together they stood before the little counter upon which were piled coarse stockings, underwear with cheap lace trimming, unsubstantial neckwear, boxes of ruching, gingham aprons and bandannas. She stood there, saying nothing, but smiling. W hat should he ask for? I t was awkward, decidedly. Yet here he was, and somehow or other the situation must be managed. Very vaguely he u ttered what seemed to him an Inanity.

“I—I would like some buttonholes.” he stammered, and then blushed furi­ously a t having said such nonsense.

But the young lady seemed in no­wise disconcerted by the extraordinary request.

“W hite or black?” she inquired calmly.

"Eh?” said Hill incredulously.“I said, did you wish white or black

buttonholes?” she smiled.“But—but, g reat Scott! You don’t

mean to say you actually have ’em?” gasped Sam.

“Of course. This is a notion shop; didn’t you read the sign?”

‘‘Notion shop! I should say it was! How the deuce can a hole have a color? Is that one of the notions?” said he.

“I thought you didn’t really want them,” said the girl, "but we do keep ’em—embroidered on strips, you know, of black or white stuff—and you sew ’em in !”

"Oh!” said the enlightened male, "would you really not mind if 1 don’t have any, though? I don’t really need them. You see, you smiled, so I ju st . .

"So I guessed,” said the girl, "but it a in 't any use. I’m engaged.”

“A h!" said Hill, suddenly relieved of the absurd situation which he had brought upon himself. Then he added gallantly: “You don’t expect me to be surprised, do you? He is such a very lucky fellow!”

“He is a rover,” she said plaintively.“A what?” queried Hill politely.“A wanderer on the face of the

earth,” she elucidated. “He is in the lunch-wagon business, and not havin’ a regular stand, it takes him to dis­tan t parts a lot. You seem to be the sort that travels, too,” she added, "you an’ the bear. Ain’t he the cute little feller!”

Hill gave a huge sigh, and looked at her sentimentally.

“I wish you would say as much to me,” he told her sweetly, and then felt almost as much of an ass as he looked.

But the lady spurned him with the air of a tragedy queen.

"You shouldn’t ought to say such things,” said she loftily. “No m atter what chances offer, 1 am ever true to Mr. Lovejoy.”

“Mr. Lovejoy takes a great risk in being away so much,” he added; “some day he will return to find that you have been stolen, kidnaped, Miss, Miss . .

"Call me Lola,” said she; “my name is Lizzy Hinkle, but I like Lola La Farge better. I read it in a book.”

“Miss La Farge, you are a wonder,” said Hill sincerely. “When is the doughty lunch-wagoner going to marry you?”

‘‘Soon’s he can get the money,” she confided to him.

“And shall you join him in his rov­ing life, when tha t happy day arrives?” asked Hill.

“Yes!” she sighed. “It must be lovely to travel. I got this from him, recent. You se it’s posted clear over in Jersey. And this one is from Yon­kers. How I shall enjoy seeing the world!”

"Have you never traveled at all?” he asked as soon as he dared to raisehis eyes.

“Oh, yes!” she answered. "I’ve been to Coney Island twice. But I've never been uptown. And I’ve always wanted to seo Harlem, too. I've heard such a lot about i t ”

“Surely you're kidding me?” he asked.

"No, I ain’t ! ” she disclaimed. “I was born right around on Eighth ave­nue, and I know m ore’n one th a t’B been away less than me. And my ma is terribly strict, too. She’s never let me go nowhere. Besides, there’s the shop. I’ve been minding that ever since I left school.”

“I don’t wonder you want to get away!" exclaimed Sam.

“When I can go honest!” she added. “But meanwhile I do love to get pic- ture-postals! I t’s next best to goin’ yourself.”

“May I send you a postal or two If I happen to wander to Bome far-off place—say Bronxville, for instance— or would Mr. Lovejoy object?"

•*Oh, that would be grand!” said Lola, the freckled. "Thank you awfully, Mr. . . . W hat was the nam e?”

“Hill,” said Sam, who usually an­swered so impulsively that he seldom remembered to lie.

"Mr. Hill, you are real kind,” she beamed. "Mr. Lovejoy, he won’t have no objections, I guess. Anyway, he won’t know.”' Though not pretty, she was a sweet little thing.

“True,” said Hill. “There are many simple innocent occurrences that, don’t hurt us if we don’t know about them. For instance, Mr. Lovejoy couldn’t ob­ject because he wouldn’t know if I . . . hum !”

Here Hill leaned very far over the counter, and Lola leaned very far to­ward him, doubtless to discover what he was referring to, which she quickly did, for he kissed her lightly upon the lips.

Then he turned, and went out, hur­riedly, much astonished a t himself and leaving Miss Lola La Farge alias Lizzy Hinkle, equally astounded, though not so much a t what had hap­pened, as a t her own lack of any proper distress and re g re t . . .

* * * * * * *As for Hill, he wandered off toward

the river.When noon came, he stopped a t a

dairy, and obtaining milk and dough­nuts, sa t down (by permission of the proprietor) upon the door Bill of that exit which led into the back yard, and the two men fell into conversation. Suddenly there came a crash from the shop behind them, and they rushed in, ju st quickly enough to see Mr. Jones, who had overturned the protecting glass case, w’addling off into the street, his paws filled with comb-honey which he had stolen from the counter.

"Stop, th ief!” yelled the dairyman. "Shut up, you’ll collect a crowd!”

yelled Hill. “Here, Jonesy! Here, Jonesy! come back, you villain, s ir !”

“Hi! stop him, stop h im !” shouted the dairyman, dancing upon the door sill, but making no effort to run after and interfere with Mr. Jones.

“Keep quiet! Cut it ou t!” said Hill to the dairyman roughly. “H ere’s all the money I’ve got. I’m sorry the case got smashed, but arresting me won’t do a bit of good. I’ll send you more money later.”

W ith which he rushed out after his animal, leaving the little milk-seller still dancing for rage upon the door sill, his white apron fluttering in the wind.

At the stree t corner sat Mr. Jones, busily engaged in consuming his stolen sweets. W ith great difficulty he was persuaded to part with some of the re-

Hill Leaned Very Far Over the Coun­ter.

mainder, which a watchful urchin in­stantly seized upon and ran off with, followed by most of the little crowd; and the bear, dropping upon all fours, submitted to being chained to his mas­ter, and off they went toward the river, leaving a sticky trail upon the pavements as they passed.

A gradual progress brought him to Riverside drive, and he had by then collected over a dollar. That was very little. Perhaps the children of the rich would pay.

Along the steep embankment he paraded his bear, and drew crowd after crowd of laughing youngsters, but the returns were small. A ferry-; boat scuttled into dock, and the as­phalt walk bringing him, on an abrupt turn, to the landing’s very gate, he fol­lowed an impulse (and the bear) and stepped aboard.

"I shall go to Jersey City,” said he, "and buy a postal card.”

It proved a profitable trip, for the passengers gathered about Mr. Jones delightedly, and when the hat was passed (the bear did it) another dollar had been gained. Then the farther shore was reached, and the painter scrambled up the steep roadway to the tnn of the cliffe.

"Now that I have done my duty,” said he to Mr. Jones, "1 shall loaf; I must loaf. I must think of her uninter­ruptedly for a while. You know whom I mean, Mr. Jones: I'll leave her un-

, named, as should be the case between | gentlemen, but you will understand."

Mr. Jones grunted in reply, and they j set off.

And so it came about that, what with one thing and another, Hill re­mained in Jersey until night fell, ate his supper from a crowded lunch- wagon near the docks, and afterward gave the wagon itself a minute and critical examination. The result of this last was, that as soon as he had done,, he went to the nearest news stand. Here he bought a post card upon which was depicted a pea-green likeness of the local soldiers’ monu­ment, and wrote in the space for cor­respondence—“I had supper tonight with Mr. Lovejoy. His wagon is superb, and at the present rate of the business he has, I shall expect a wed­ding invitation inside a month.” Then he signed his own name, appended the Jones street address, and posted it. Then, much exhilarated by his “long thought” of Iris, and the piquant coin­cidence that had befallen him, he de­termined to turn the night to profit, and set to work among the river-front resorts.

* * * * * * *At midnight the Jersey shipyards

are very still, and down toward where the docks are fewer, and farther apart, it is quiet indeed, once darkness has fallen. Here and there one hears the baying of humanity (so called) belch­ing out from the swinging doorway of some low-ceilinged, evil-lighted den. the resort of poverty and brute strength, where the enormous energies engendered by outdoor work find vent under the name of recreation. Against the outer darkness loom masses yet more dark, and sometimes a crimson light, like a dull jewel, smokes at the crest of these, when the indefinable bulk is a ship.

At wide intervals, a flaring light il­lumines a throng of toilers, who, like the distorted creatures of a dream, rush about in methodical disorder, ac­complishing the loading of some vessel that must sail at dawn. Whichever lies before one, the darkness or the in­ferno of light and noise, it is a won­derful picture; one to arrest the ob­server with its vast suggestive quality and arouse the desire to linger and watch.

Hill thought of this when he came out from one of the low saloons into the tingling cold of night, and saw the strange panorama tha t melted away on either hand.

Presently they reached a small cov­ered dock where a greenish light was burning, in the glow of which some score of men were a t work, loading great cases into the hold of a small third or fourth rate steamer.

There seemed to be curiously little disorder or excitement in connection with this embarkment, a fact which soon impressed itself upon Hill's mind. Nor did the men appear to be in any particular hurry. Then a question ob­truded Itself. If they were not rushed, why did they work so late at night? It was rather odd. The cargo was odd, too. From the size, shape and weight of the wooden cases of which it prin­cipally consisted, the shipment was evidently composed of pianos. Where on earth could so many pianos be go­ing to? W ith a little effort he remem­bered the sign at the entrance to the dock—"The Venezuela F ru it Steam­ship company.” Ah, that accounted for it! Of course, it was only reason­able to suppose tha t Venezuela turned out very few pianos, if any. How quaint, though! He began to muse upon the melodious consignment, and. therefore, to observe the cases more closely. How odd tha t they should be put aboard a t night!

A man who had been directing the ■work, his back toward Hill, now turned about so tha t the light shone full upon his face, and a t the sight of it Sam gave an involuntary cry of recognition, which, however, was lost in the gen­eral noise. It was Rowe! The mem­ory of their last meeting, and of Old Nita, came to him in a flash, and his hands clenched ominously. Here, per­haps, was a chance for retaliation! But before he could act on the im­pulse, several things happened all a t once.

A piano case, which was being low­ered from a truck, was allowed to drop in such a way tha t it split open. From the aperture several objects fell out upon the pier. They were rifles! Field rifles, new and shining!

W ith a snort of amazement Sam sprang forward, and a t that same in­s tan t he felt himself seized upon either shoulder. Looking around, he saw that he was captive, between two huge long­shoremen, who proceeded to propel him toward the ship. As they came up with Rowe, who was cursing roundly, but had already managed to get the rifles out of sight, one of the ruffians called out: “H ere’s a detect­ive, mister, disguised as a dago. We caught him spying just before the case broke.”

W ith an oath, Rowe whipped around, and for a moment the two men stood glaring a t each other.

"Take him aboard,” said Rowe, breathing hard. "Captain’s room. I’ll be there directly.”

“W hat the devil . . .” began Hillfuriously. But he was cut short by

Kowe, who struck him acrosn the mouth.

Dazed by this needless Insult, and wholly unable to retaliate because of his captors, Sam suffered himself to be led aboard, his custodians still hold­ing him fast. No sooner was this done, and the door shut upon them, than it was opened again to admit Rowe, who was followed by a dark little Spaniard, presumably one of the ship's officers.

“Sit down," commanded Rowe, lock­ing the, door.

Hill paid no attention, standing speechless with rage. Rowe drew a re­volver from his hip pocket, pulled up an arm chair to one side of the table, and pointed to a second seat, which was placed opposite. He indicated the chair with the muzzle of his weapon.

"Sit down,” he repeated politely.Hill sat."Now, my dear, mysterious land­

lord,” began Rowe, "I have at last dis­covered your real trade. I always thought you were a rotten painter, but I never dreamed that you were a de­tective—a spy!”

"But I’m no t!” exploded Hill, vainly endeavoring to appear calm. “Let me explain. I’m not watching . . .”

“Pardon me!" said Rowe. “Our last meeting, taken in connection with this one, explains the situation far more fully than any words of yours are like­ly to do. You are a government spy,

D ow n!*

and 1 suppose you are chortling at hav­ing caught us ‘with the goods’ as you Americans say.”

“I haven’t caught you a t anything, so far as I know, except striking a to t­tering old woman!” responded Hill. “And, by God! I’m going to make you sm art for that! As for being a secret service man—you are all wrong, th e re !”

“Paugh!” exclaimed Rowe, flushing angrily, “w hat’s the use of bluffing? Why don’t you make a show of arrest­ing us?”

“Look here !” exclaimed Hill, re­strained from assaulting the man only by the sight of the gun that the other was still caressing. “Look here, you can’t keep me like this, you know! I’m not a detective, and I don’t even know what the devil you are making all this fuss about.”

At this all the other men shouted with laughter. Rowe leaned over the table, an evil leer on his cunning face.

“No detective! ha! h a !” said he. “You don’t really expect us to swallow that, do you? Why, next thing you’ll be telling us tha t you didn’t know it was contraband to take arm s out of the country, eh?”

Hill sat back, shocked into momen­tary silence.

“I did not know it,” he said simply.The quiet tha t followed these five

clear-cut words was charged with elec­tricity. Then, Rowe, his face very white, his eyes fixed upon Hill, rose to his feet.

“By God! I believe you are speaking the tru th !” he said at length.

"T hat’s one joke on you, Ricardo,” said the little Spanish officer with a short m irthless laugh.

"Well, he knows it now, if he didn’t before!” put in one of the longshore­men.

Hill said nothing at all, but sat star­ing at the group in wonderment. W hat on earth did it all mean?

"T hat’s true. You needn’t inform me of it,” said Rowe bitterly, “and de­tective or not, he’ll inform now if we let him go. But he’s a service man, all right,” he added, his confidence in himself returning. “W asn’t he up a t Mikey’s? Hell, something must be done with him; and something will be done, never fear! I will get the senor chief, and he shall help us decide the m atter.”

The little officer nodded, and Rowe, slipping out of the cabin, closed the door behind him. In silence they wait­ed, while a thousand conjectures whirled through Hill’s brain. W hat had he stumbled upon?

In a moment more, footsteps were heard outside in the passage. The door handle grated, and Hill, bracing him­self for whatever was to come, swung about and found himself face to face with Iris’ father, Hon. Reginald Van' derpool—millionaire asphalt king.

(T O B E C O N T I N U E D .)

CALLS FOR MUCH DEXTERITY

Chakri-Throwing Might Well Be Con­sidered as an Art Rather

Than a Pastime.

In front of the mausoleum of a holy saint—Mohamed Ghous—a fair is held annually on the outskirts of Gwalior (India) town, about the middle of the rainy season. The most noticeable fea­ture of the fair is the chakri-throw. A ehakri is a piece of iron something like a spindle, over which a long piece of string or thread is rolled. Tlie player throws high into the air thf iron chakri (literally a roll), holding one end of the string in his hand, and

gives it a swing and jerk in such a clever manner that the chakri, on coming down, rolls up the thread again on itself, aud is caught in the hands of the thrower. The a rt has been dexterously practiced by a class of people for ages past, and some members are so renowned tha t they cut a good figure a t the scene. It ls most interesting to watch the thrower fling the chakri up high, catch it in his hands on return and continue sending it up again and again till the rope be­comes as high ae se ’ entv feet above the ground. There n absolutely no spring or lever attachm ent in the chakri. Nabbo is fth e champion thrower.

W h a t w o u ld y o u d o if y o u h a d n ' t a d r e a m

S h in in g b e y o n d l ik e a s t a r ?W h a t w o u ld y o u d o w e r e i t n o t lor

t h e g le a m .T h e b r ig h t n e s s , t h e s w e e tn e s s , the

j o y o f t h a t d r e a m W h ic h b e c k o n s a n d g u id e s f r o m a f a r ?

GOOD THINGS FROM ITALY.

Spinach is such a good vegetable that it should be served often in vari­

ous ways. Wash and boil until tendertwo pounds of spin- a c h , d r a i n , chop fine and place in a saucepan with aquarter of a pound of butter. Let itsimmer until well

mixed, adding salt to taste. Removefrom the heat, add a pinch of nutmeg,a tablespoonful of grated cheese and two beaten eggs. Have ready some sea­soned broth of chicken or any stock or milk and water, pour boiling hot into the spinach. Let simmer together for three or four minutes, then remove uncovered to a hot oven. Serve with croutons.

Creamed Macaroni.—Have a good sized saucepan of boiling water well salted, drop in three fourths of a pound of macaroni, an onion stuck with two cloves and a tablespoonful of butter, cook rapidly for 45 minutes, then drain, remove the onion and replace the saucepan with a quarter of a cupful each of Parm esan and Swiss cheese, grated, a dash of pepper and nutmeg and a half pint of well seasoned broth, and four tablespoonfuls of cream. Cook five minutes, and serve before the cheese gets ropy.

Polenta.—Into three pints of fast boiling water put a tablespoonful of olive, oil and a pinch of salt, sprinkle in gradually one pint of corn meal, Stir and cook until smooth, then allow to cook two hours or longer. Stir occasionally, and cook in a double boiler; then there is no fear of scorch­ing. Have ready some thickened gravy and a half pint of strained thickened tomato. Fill a baking dish with the cooked mush, gravy, and tomato, alter- natiqg them in layers. Sprinkle the top layer with grated cheese, place id the oven and cook until brown.

R e a l s t r u g g l i n g is i t s e l f r e a l l iv in g , a n d n o e n n o b l in g t h i n g o f t h i s e a r t h Is e v e r to b e h a d b y m a n o n a n y o t h e r t e r m s .—J a m e s L a n e A lle n .

SOME BEST RECIPES.

Beef tongue is an economical and tasty m eat to serve for any meal. Buy

a fresh one and soak it ovef night in sa lt water. As it is so carefully covered with the tough covering, the juice is not lost. Then cook until tender in simmering salt water. The broth may be used

for a most appetizing soup by adding rice to it and the tongue if sliced either hot or cold is always a welcome titbit. The scraps which are too broken to be used in slicing may be chopped and seasoned for sandwich tilling.

Goulash.—This is a famous dish, inexpensive and most appetizing. Cut two pounds of flank in small cubes and put into a flat bottomed saucepan or kettle. Season well with salt and pepper and cover with a layer ot sliced onion and potatoes until enough is used for the family, alternating the meat and vegetables. Cover with suffi­cient cold w ater; when it comes to the simmering point cover with a pint ot tomatoes, cover and set back and sim­mer without stirring for two hours.

Potato Salad With Sardines.—Boil potatoes in their jackets and cut in cubes. For a pint of potatoes allow a slice of onion, a half a small green pepper, three sprigs of parsley and three small pickles or olives, finely minced. Toss lightly together, sea­son with salt, red pepper and three tablespoonfuls of olive oil and a half tablespoonful of vinegar. Put into the salad bowl and when ready to serve arrange carefully wiped sardines in a circle over the top with chopped olives in the center for a garnish.

Veal Grenadins.—Cut two slices from a leg of veal, cut again in serv­ing sized pieces, simmer in simmering w ater ten minutes, then drop in cold w ater and let stand half an hour. Cut strips of salt pork two inches long and lard the veal, dredge with flour and simmer in the w ater in which it was previously cooked. Melt and brown a quarter of a cupful of butter, add two tablespoonfuls of finely minced onion, fry five minutes, add a quarter of a cupful of flour, s tir until smooth and add two cupfuls of th e hot stock. Season with salt, pepper’ and Catsup and serve.

The “G” in “Gnat.”“Spelling’s a queer thing,” said one

boy. “W hat do they w ant with a ‘g’ in ‘gnat?” “It belongs there,” re­plied the other. “I t’s w hat you say when one stings you. The only mis­take is not putting an exclamation point after it.''

Where She Doesn’t Understand.Whenever, says a Macon editor, a

fellow tries to be as nice to his wife as he was in the good old days when he was courting her she at once be­gins to wonder what's the m atter with the old fool.

F lorist’s Bright Ideas.“The young lady has many admir­

ers. I wish to send her some flowers that will cause her to keep me in mind while she’s away.” "Well, there’s rose­mary,” said the dealer reflectively. “T hat’s for remembrance. Or you might send some forget-me-nots.” —• Louisville Courier Journal.

To save room an Ohio inventor has combined a kitchen sink and bath tub, the former being over the la tte r and .elping to hide it when not in use.

Page 7: WITH THANKSGIVING AND JOY - DigiFind-Itthe boys, rompers, food of all kinds, The attendance at Ihe Arthur Home is, on an average, forty children, all blind. As you are thankful for

W e e k ’ s N e w s I n P i c t u r e sTHE COAST ADVERTISER, BELMAR, N. J., NOVEM BER 20, 1914.

WHEN THE GERMANS REACHED THE NORTH SEA

Above, German infantry, deflected from Ghent and Bruges, passing through Blankenburghe, Just outside Ostend. Below, the kaiser’s infantry which entered Ostend, marching along the sands of the North sea a t tha t port, which they hoped to utilize as a base of operations against England.

LADY LETHBRIDGE AS NURSE

Among the many women of the British nobility who are giving their services to the Red Cross is Lady Lethbridge, who established a hospital a t Calais, where thousands of wound­ed Belgians and Germans are cared for.

MAXIM’S GIFT TO SOLDIERS

COUNTESS GREY’S MILITARY HOSPITAL

ENGLISH WOMEN AS MOUNTED NURSES

Woman riders of Great Britain have organized the W omen’s F irst Aid Nursing Yeomanry corps to help the fighters in the field. The photograph shows some of the members of the corps riding across open country.

RUSSIANS PRAYING BEFORE FIGHTING

Officers of the famous Preobrejensky regiment of the Russian army kneeling in prayer for the divine blessing before going into action.

LOADING A FRENCH GUN WITH A CRANE DRIVER OSBORNE

Countess Grey has converted her beautiful home, Howick castle, North­umberland, into a hospital for wounded British and Belgian soldiers, and she attends them with her two daughters. The photograph shows S erg t Joseph Jacobs of the Tirlemont regim ent showing his wounds and narrating his experiences to two of the workers a t Howick castle. He is only eighteen years old, but was in every engagement of the Belgians from Liege to Malinea

TROOPS OF THE CZAR IN TRENCHES

So heavy are the shells fired by some of the French field pieces tha t they have to be loaded into the gun by means of a crane, which is a part of the equipment of the great engine of death. The gun is set in w hat is known as a well and the gun carriage works on wheels so tha t the recoil carries it backward on a smooth platform.

MR. AND MRS. CHARLES S. WHITMAN

Sir H iram Maxim, the famous in­ventor, chopping up pork to be used ln his gift to tlie Canadian troops, which consists of 25,000 one-pound tin s of pork and beans, prepared by himself and cooked by the method fol­lowed by the lumbermen of Canada.

King Albert of Belgium shows quali­ties of grit and endurance that would have made him a a tar on the football field ia his younger days.

The success of the Russians in Austria is said to be due largely to the precision wit!) which they are moved from one position to another. A de­tachm ent of the Infantry is here shown in the trenches.

296,869 Prisoners in Germany.London.—A Reuter dispatch from

Amsterdam says that, according to Berlin newspapers received there, the number of war prisoners in Germany up to October 21, aggregated 296,869, including 5,401 officers. Of these it is said tha t there are 2,472 French offi­cers and 14C,^97 men, 2,164 Russian officers and 101,524 men, 547 Belgian officers and .';i,378 men and 218 Brit­ish officers and 8,669 men.

W ar to Put Lid on Absinthe.Paris.—Perm anent prohibition of

the sale ot absinthe and kindred alco­holic bevera^'i^ in France may be a result of th e ] war. Transportation and sale of a ls in th e were forbidden when the wax Vjegan, and the govern-

1

ment now has supplemented this o r­der with another forbidding the sale of alcoholic drinks similar to absinthe.

Honor for Undersea Chief.Berlin.—Captain Weddigen, com­

m ander of the German submarine TJ-9 which sank the British cruisers Hogue, Aboukir and Cressy in the N orth sea and has been active other­wise, has received the decoration of •the Ordre Pour le Merite.

Cossack Cloak and Joffre Hat.Paris.—The Joffre hat ainl Cossack

cloak are definite features of Paris w inter fashions. Tho ha t Is made of dark velvet. Tt is round and flat with a peak. The cloak is heavy and loose, ending a t the knee#.

Charles S. Whitman, the governor-elect of New York, and Mrs. Whitman, photographed at Lakewood, N. J., where they went to recuperate after their successful campaign.

EMPRESS EUGENIE AS NURSE

Uses Her Home as Hospital and Per­sonally Supervises Care of

Officers.London. — Although the Empress

Eugenio is almost eighty years old, she is taking the greatest in terest in the war and has set aside an entire wing of her house at Farnborough Hill for the use of wounded officers. Several Injured officers are now recuperating there and their aged hostess person­ally supervises their care.

Her estate is near the great camp at Aldershot, which King George and Queen Mary visit frequently. Prac­tically all of Empress Eugenie’s man servants have joined the army in France. Nevertheless, she entertains many of the distinguished military

men who visit Aldershot, apologizing for her plain fare and explaining that her cooks have more important work now than preparing food for an aged empress and her guests.

Driver Osborne of L battery, Roy­al Horse artillery, is likely to receive the Victoria Cross for conspicuous bravery. The battery was surprised by the Germans, every officer and most of the men were killed or wound­ed, and all but one of the guns put out of action. Osborne and two oth­ers stuck by the rem aining gun and silenced the German pieces one by one until finally the enemy retreated.

COLONEL BR0DGES

Britain Increases Pensions.London.—A white paper will be is­

sued announcing a substantial in­crease in the pensions for disabled soldiers, but it will not concede £ 1 weekly, which has been asked. The childless widow will receive 7s 6d weekly and may qualify for an old age pension. The additional pension for a first child is 5s weekly and a half-crown each week for the next three. For the fifth child and onward 2s each is allowed weekly. Thus a widow with five children would get 22s each week.

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T u r k e y s , ic e d —S p r in g , b r o i l in g , p e r p a i r . .S p r in g ............ ...................................

O ld , p e r lb ..................................C h ic k e n s , 12 to b o x , d p—

M ilk f e d , 18 to 24 lb s to d o z M ilk fe d , 60 lb s a n d o v e r . . C o r n f e d , 18 to 24 lb s t o d o z C o r n fe d , 60 lb s a n d o v e r . .

C h ic k e n s , d r y p a c k e d , b b ls W ’n m i lk f e d , 4 lb s a n d o v e r W ’n m i lk f e d , m d w e i g h t s . .W ’n m i lk , 2 fe to 3 lb s , . . . .

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e r s , 1 lb . p e r p a i r .................P h i l a . f e y , 2 - lb s e a c h ............

P h i l a . f e y l a r g e r o a s t e r s . . P h i l a . f a n c y m e d r o a s t e r s . .P a . , 2 lb s a n d u n d e r ...............P a . , 2 fe to 3 lb s a n d o v e r . .V a . , m .f . , b r o i l , 2 lb s & u n d .V a . . m . f., 2 fe t o 31bs & o v .

F O W L S — D r y p a c k e d .WTe s t e r n b x s , 60 lb s to d o z . .

48 to 55 lb s t o d o z e n . . . . .30 to 35 lb s t o d o z e n ..........U n d e r 30 lb s t o d o z e n . . . F O W L S , b a r r e l s , i c e d —

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F R O Z E N .T U R K E Y S .—

W ’n s m a l l b x s , d r y p i c k e d —S e le c te d y o u n g h e n s ..........

S e le c te d y o u n g t o m s ...............T u r k e y s , N o . 2 ...........................O ld h e n s & t o m s ........................

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B o s to n , N o . 1 p e r d o z e n . . VoB o s to n , N o . 2, p e r b o x 1 50

C a b b a g e s —D a n i s h s e e d , p e r t o n 6 00D o m e s t i c , p e r t o n ............... 5 00

C a u l i f lo w e r s —L . I . , s h o r t c u t , p e r b b l . . 75L . 1., lo n g c u t , p e r b b l . . . 50

C e le ry , r o u g h , p e r c a s e . — 1 00P e r d o z e n b u n c h e s ............ 10

K a ie . V a . , p e r b b l .................... —L e t t u c e , p e r b a s k e t ................. 25

P e r 2 d o z e n b o x .................... 50P e r 3 d o z e n b o x .................... 50H o th o u s e , p e r s t r a p .......... 50

L i m a b e a n s , M d ., p e r b s k t . 2 50 M u s h r o o m s , p e r 4 - lb b a s k e t l 00 O n io n s —

W’h i t e , p e r b a g ...................... 75R e d , p e r b a g . .Y e llo w , p e r b a g W h i t e , p e r c r a t e

O k r a , p e r b a s k e t P e r c a r r i e r . . . .

P a r s n i p s , p e r b b l P e a s —

V a . , l a r g e p e r f e - b b i b s k t . l 50 V a . , s m a l l , f e - b l b b s k e t . . 1 00 V a .. p e r b u s h e l b a s k e t . . . 85

P e p p e r s , b a s k e t ........................... 50P u m p k i n s , p e r b a r r e l ............ 50P a r s l e y , p e r b b l ........................... 2 75R o m a in e , n e a r b y , p e r b s k t . 25 R a d i s h e s , p e r 10 b u n c h e s . . 75S p in a c h , p e r b a r r e l ..................1 00S q u a s h , m a r r o w , p e r b b l . . 50

H u b b a r d , p e r b b l ................. 50T u r n i p s , w h i t e , p e r b b l 1 00

R u t a b a g a , p e r b b l ............. 60T o m a to e s , n e a r b y , p e r b o x . 50

H o th o u s e , p e r lb .................... 6W a t e r c r e s s , p e r 100 b u n c h e s l 00

B E A N S A N D P E A S .—B e a n s —

M a r r o w , 1914, c h c , 100 lb s .6 50 M a r r o w , c h c , 1913, 100 lb s .6 15 M e d iu m . 1914, c h o ic e . . . A 45 P e a s , 1914, c h o ic e , 100 lb s .4 40 R e d k id n e y , 1914, 199 lb s .5 60 R e d k id n e y , 1913, c h o i c e . . 5 00 Y e llo w e y e , 1914, c h o i c e . . 5 40 L i m a . C a l . , c h o ic e , 100 lb s 5 90

P e a s . S c o tc h . 1914. 100 l b s .4 20

@4 00<<&2 50 (®1 75 fy 15 f t fy 80 fy 60

— @ 20— fy 2212 (a) 14— fy 22

14 ® 1513 f e ® 1413 Cd) 15 fe13 fe®) 14 Va— @ 1 1 V?18 fy 19— @ 2015 f e ® 16— fy 15— # 15— fy r 025 fy 3 Q

6 (a) 1275 @>1 50

( e 00 # 1 00 # 1 00 <££2 50

@ 9 00 @6 00@ 2 50 <&) 1 25 ((pi 50 fy 25 (h) 75@ 1 25 <£tl 25 ftz-1 25 @ 1 00 * 3 25 @ 2 00@1 00(g) 90 Gt 90 (o)l 10 @3 50 f y \ 50 (cr2 00(fiZ 00 p i 75 (£&1 75 fyl 50 fy 60 6£ 3 00 <S*1 00 @ 1 00 fyl 25 @ 75 0 75 @1 50 @1 00 <8)1 50 @ 10 @1 50

<S6 60 ($6 25

50<®4 50 <S>5 75 @ 5 15 # 5 50 06 00 @ 4 25

L e n t i l s , o ld , p e r l b .................... —L e n t i l s , n e w . p e r lb ................. 10 fy —

P O T A T O E S .—M a in e , p e r 180 lb s .................... 1 50 tfi)l 75M a in e , p e r 1 6 5 -lb b a g 1 50 p i 65M a in e , p e r 1 5 0 -lb b a g ......... — # —S t a t e , p e r 180 lb s ...................... 1 50 0 1 75S t a t e , p e r b b l o r b g ..................1 50 0 1 65V a . , l a t e c ro p . N o . 1. p e r b b l l 00 ($1 37J e r s e y , lo n g k in d , b b l o r b g . l 50 @ 1 60S w e e ts , J e r s e y , p e r b b l . . . . 2 00 (a 2 50 S w e e t s , J e r s e y , p e r b a s k e t . 75 <3>1 15S w e e t s , s o u t h e r n , p e r b b l . . l 75 @ 2 00

F r u i t s a n d B e r r i e s .A P P L E S , H . P . , p e r b b l—

M c I n to s h ..........................................2 50 (?T4 00J o n a t h a n ......................................... 2 50 d i3 50A le x a n d e r .................................2 00 d i3 00S n o w ...................................................2 25 0 3 00S p i t z e n b e r g .................................1 75 (d 2 75F J n g .....................................................2 00 @ 2 75

C R A N B E R R I E S , p e r b b l .—C . C . l a t e ......................................... 3 00 <R6 00C . C . E . B la c k ..............................2 00 (dA 25N . J ...........................................................1 00 d v l 12

Q U IN C E S , p e r b b l .—A p p le ....................... 3 00 (5$3 75O r a n g e .............................................. 3 00 Ca 3 50P e a r ..................................................... 3 00 (^3 50

H a y a n d S t r a w .H A Y A N D S T R A W .— P r i m e t i m o th y ,

$1.25; N o . 1, $1 .20: N o . 2. $1 .10; N o . 3, $1 .00: C lo v e r , 90@ 1 .1 0 ; O a t s , 5 5c ; s t r a w , 65@ 75c.

L iv e S to c k .B E E V E S .— D r e s s e d b e e f a t 12< £15fec.

p e r lb . f o r c o m m o n to p r iv e n a t i v e s id e s ; h in d s a n d r ib e , 12fe<g)18c. I c h u c k s , a n d p l a t e s I2<f*>15c.

C A L V E S — C o m m o n to p r im e v e a ls , $9.50 <5)13.50 p e r 100 lb s . C i t y d r e s s e d v e a l s a t i5 $ )2 0 c . p e r lb . : c o u n t r y d r e s s e d v e a l s 1 2 # 1 7 c .,* s k in n e d v e a l s 10@154?.; d r e s s e d g r a s s e r s , 10(3!1 2 H c .

S H E E P A N D L A M B S .— O r d i n a r y s h e e p a t $5.35 p e r 100 lb s : p r i m e V e r m o n t l a m b s $10. D r e s s e d m u t t o n a t l l (® 1 3 e . p e r lb . : d r e s s e d la m b s 16rf?17c.; h o g d r e s s e d l a m b s 17V>o.: c o u n t r y d r e s s e d h o th o u s e l a m b s . $6.50tf?7.00 p e r c a r c a s s .

H O G S .— C o u n t r y d r e s s e d p o r k a t 1 Kft) 14c. p e r lb . f o r m e d iu m to l i g h t w e i g h t s ; r o a s t i n g p ig s 14<f/17<\

S p o t M a r k e t s a t a G la n c e .W h e a t , N o . 1. n o . s p r i n g ................. 1 .2 4 v*

I F lo u r , s p r i n g p a t . , b b l ................. 5.S0H a y , p r im e . 100 lb s ............................. 1.25T a llo w , s p l . , t i e r c e s ........................................07P a r k , p r im e , w e s t ................................... 21 .50

I L a r d , p r im e w e s t .................................. 11.60C o t t o n s e e d o il ......................... 5.35C o ffe e , R io , 7 - lb ................................................06%S u g a r , f in e g r a n u . . lb ............................ 5 .10T o b a c c o , H a v a n a , R . C ..................................... 45

C o n n w r a p p e r .................................................. 45

Colonel Brodges of the British army has been highly praised for his bravery in action, has been decorated by the French government with the ribbon of the Legion of Honor, and is slated to receive the Victoria Cross and the Distinguished Service order.

When the name of & new town th a t’s spelled chiefly with consonants bobs up in the press dispatches, what can a harassed telegraph editor do but shut his eyes and hope for the best?

BIG WAR ORDER IN STEEL.

France W ants 18,000 Tons From Jones & Laughlin Works.

P ittsburgh.—The Jones & Laughlin Steel Company has received an order from France for 18,000 tons of 3 1-4 Inch bars, to :be shipped as soon as possible. I t is understood the bars will be ground down and will be used for projectyes for a three-inch shell. The order wi’l be started a t once and tha 1,330,000 feet of steel bars wiil be ready ivr shipm ent within one month.

Page 8: WITH THANKSGIVING AND JOY - DigiFind-Itthe boys, rompers, food of all kinds, The attendance at Ihe Arthur Home is, on an average, forty children, all blind. As you are thankful for

THE COAST ADVERTISER, BELMAR, N. J., NOVEMBER 20, 1914.

L o o k H e r e , S p o r t s m e n ! !

HOLBOtiLL QREBt:

Why not have some of the beautiful birds and animals you shot this season mount ed!-

The time will soon come when our trame is no more. Hotter start your collection now.

I use the best and most costly methods, and charge you no more than those do­ing poor work.

Give me a trial. You will receive a specimen to be proud of.

W O R K G U A R A N T E E D

S E N D F O R P R IC E L IS T

F R E D H U B E RTAXIDERMIST

615 6th Ave., B elm ar,N .J.

BOROUGH 01 HELM A K

Public Siilo of Heal Estate For I'apaid Taxes For the Year 1912.

Public notice is hereby given by Abram Borton, Collector ol the Borough of Belmar, in the County o£ Monmouth, that he will sell at public vendue all the lands, tenants, hereditam ents and real estate, hereinafter

mentioned in fee, or for the shortest ter.m for which any person or persons will agree to take the same, and pay the taxes assessed against the same, With in terest thereon accruing, and all costs, fees, charges and expenses in relation to the levy, assessment and collection of said taxes.

The sale will take place a t the oouncil chamber in the Borough of Belmar, on Dec. 15th, 1914, at two o'clock in the afternoon. The said lands, tenements, hereditam ents and real estate to be sold, and the names of th • persons against whom the said taxes have been laid on account of the same and the amount of taxes laid on account of each parcel for the year 1912 are as follows:Dated, Nov. 15th, 1914.

Lot. No.2044 Allspatcii (Heyniger) 11th avenue........405 Brown. M. A. Bal.........................................1715-1716-1717 Barkalow, J. S.........................2355 Brice, G. \V....................................................2760 Berger, W. K...............................................32 Block 1 Belmar Improvement C o ...............33 Block 1 Belmar Improvement Co................11 Block 6 Belmar Improvement Oo.................12 Block 6 Belmar Improvement Oo................13 Block 6 Belmar Improvement C o ...............14 Block 6 Belmar Improvement Co.................15 Block 6 Belmar Improvement Co................1 Block 13 Belmar Improvement O o ..............2 Block 13 Belmar Improvement Oo................North % 8 Block 14 Belmar Improvement Oo.3 Block 16 Belmar Improvement Co...............14 Block 17 3elm ar Improvement Oo.............3S Block 3 Bruning, C..........................................214-215 Cohen, J. C.........................................1753 Cox, D. A and A. B......................................8263 Craig, A. C....................................................19 Block 2 Camp, M..............................................20 Block 2 Camp, M..............................................41 Block 9 Clayton, B................................ , . . .42 Block 9 Clayton, B..........................................43 Block 9 Clayton, B...........................................44 Block 9 Clayton, B............................................45 Block 9 Clayton, B..........................................13 Block 2 English, A. Z.......................................14 Block 2 English, A. Z.....................................15 Block 2 English, A. Z......................................816-817 Green, E. V..............................................2155 Estate, (A. \V. B ennett)............................

B ennett)............................A..........................................A..........................................A........................................’ ,A ........................................A.........................................A..........................................A..........................................A..........................................

2156 Estate (A. W.1 Block 3 Gilmartin2 Block 3 Gilmartin3 Block 3 Gilmartin4 Block 3 Gilmartin5 .Block 3 Gilmartin,0 Block 3 Gilmartin7 Block 3 Gilmartin8 Block 3 Gilmartin40 Hutchinson, E........................41 42 Hutchinson. E....................401 .1. D. P ay ................................3i::r> Hutchinson, E....................11: ii Hutchinson, E . . . . ............liu; Hutchinson, E.....................1138 Hutchinson, E......................1540 J. D. F ay ................................1541 J. D. P ay ................................1542 J. D. F ay ................................2-3 of 1549 Herbert, P. M............2034 Hartshorne, A. C................2921 Herbert, P. M.......................20 Brown Tract. Haberstick. S.Plot C. Hinchman, O S...............Plot E. D., Hinchman, O S3 912 H erbert S A ustin..............2403 -Michelsohn, Sol...............Vi of 28 Applegate, G................29 Applegate, G............................30 Applegate, G............................1752 McDonald...............................East Vi 1446 W.-H. DuBois. Jr. East *4 1544 Naylor, Laura .2801-2902 New,man, L A............212 Philips, B. M.........................2052 Reed, J. W............................2053 Reed, J. W..........................2765 Runyon, P. 1).....................1306 Mrs. Caroline FiJtwell1546 Smock and Buchanon..1547 Smock and Buchanon........1663 Sonner.berg, .1....................2517 Thomas H. L.......................1441 Estate Wm. W ilson..........1442 Estate Wm. W ilson..........Vi 1565 Williams, M.................1847 Wildman, A. J ..- ...............1848 Wildman, G. A......................1849 Wildman, G. A.....................2-3 1519 J. D. P a y ....................West Vi 1544 Isola, Barney........

ABRAM BORTON', Collector.A nit. Tax

............................................ $ 7.26

............................................ 49.28

............................................ 157.30 26.62............................................ 21.78 1.21 1.21............................................ 4.84............................................ 4.84............................................ 4.84............................................ 4.84............................................ 4.84............................................ 2.42 - ................................ 2.42 1.21............................................ 1.S1 : 1.21............................................ 4.03.................................... .-... 101.64............................................ 50.82'............................................ 4.84............................................ 6.05............................................ 6.05............................................ 2.42............................................ 2.42............................................ 2.42............................................ .2.42............................................ 2.42 12.10 12.10. 12.10............................................ 137.94............................................ 7.26 12.10 12.10 12.10 12.10 12.10 12.10 12.10 12.10 12.10............................................ 169.40.................... 312.18

.................................... 89.54............................................ 67.76 12.10 < 12.10............................................ 84.70............................................ 70.18............................................ 9.68............................................ 9.68............................................ 7.26............................................ 77.44............................................ 137.94 26.62............................................ 2.42............................................ 2.42............................................. 77.44 12.10 1.81............................................ 3.63............................................. 3.63 26.62.................................... , . . . 38.72............................................ 41.14............................................ 84.70............................................ 111.32............................................ 7.26.................. •'........................ 36.30.......................: ................... 4.84

........................................ 6^76.......................... 77.44

............................................ 70.18

............................................ 53.24............................................ 9.68............................................ 9.68............................................ 9.68............................................ 41.14............................................ 60.50............................................ 67.76.......................... 50.82............................ 48.40............................................ 38.72

F R E S H K I L L E Drp

S

T h e Belmar M eat M arke t has just received a large sh ipment of ihe finest Jersey fowl, including

Turkeys, Geese, Chickens and Ducks

T h e s e F o w l a r e s t r i c t l y f r e s h , J e r s e y k i l l ed

B E L M A R M E A T M A R K E TJ . C. W I S E M A N

S()<) F S T R E F T

H j' L H () E JN SL l V E i u a n d B o a r d i n g S t a b l e s

l,.V ICGIOS r , O I • I HOST A N I ) H U B T H Q U l P l ’ E l ) I . I V H l t Y

1 S T R E E T , IJ E LM A It

In and Out of the Woods by telephone.In a very interesting article entitled

"In and Out of (lie Woods by Tele­phone,” the New York Telephone Re­view gives an eulighteniiii; picture of telephone facilities in flu* Great North Woods, and the telephone as a fswtor

mm r

s ts ' ■ -.v. <

n & • B ' S s i iw s i p f a

SIGNAL TOWER ON BALD MOUNT USED BY FIRE RANGERS.

[ T e le p h o n e iu. t h e l i t t l e h o u s e . C o il o f w i r e outsit!*!. I f a ( i r e is s i g h t e d f ro m t h e t o w e r t h e r a n g e r t e le p h o n e s i t s lo ­c a t io n to t h e v a r i o u s c a m p s . 1

in the lives of the guides and hunters in this secluded corner of the world.

“In tlie large Adirondack summer re­sorts. like Saranac, Tupper Lake, Paul

little camp a t the end of the journeymight excite surprise.”

It is. however, true th a t even to camps in the heart'o f tho woods, tele­phone wires have been strung, and njany problems have been overcome to make this possible. Lines are strung through porcelain insulators which are tied with wire to trees. In one in­stance a river crossing of half a mile -had to be made. Here natural condi­tions helped and the wire was fastened to an old tree growing in Ihe. middle of the river One of the since ends of the telephone line at this point )s supported b.v a pole lashed to an old pine tree. In another place a tamarack swamp had to he crossed, and here was used a very ingenious Irlpod lix- ture made of three little spruce trees lashed together by wire One station on the line is a camp built around the forest trees, it being against the law to cut standing timber,

j One might ask. “Of w hat use Is a te l­ephone line in the woods?” The ttn-

| swer is that it saves more time and | steps tha u it does in the city, and steps I in the woods count. Tt is customary j for-the various camps to call the rail- I road station and ask if there is any j freight, express or mail for them. Here j i.s a case where there is no R. P. D., j and if Uncle Sam ever Installs i t <She

mail will have to go by pack on .a man's back and by canoe, as th a t is tlie way all supplies are taken into v'Jbe camps.

The fire rangers have signal towers equipped with telephones, so th a t the moment a forest fire is discovered the Ranger telephones the camps in that section, with the result th a t danger from forest fires is materially lessened.

In case a' person is going into one of these camps and lias not notified the camp ahead, he can call by telephone and a guide will come out to tlie sta-

L E A D E RF r o m N o w U n t i l C h r i s t m a s

WK WILL SKLL TO OCR CUSTOMERS FOR CASH ONLY A

$ 7 . 0 0 T O A S T E R S T O V EO F R E L I A B L E M A N U F A C T U R E 4 f* / |

( M a d e in A m e r i c a ) F O J ^

Make your Christmas gilts practical as well as ornamental. This can be done in no way better or more eco­nomical way than by giving electrical appliances. Watch our ads. for special sales of appliances from now until Xmas.

Starting to-day, burned out carbon and Mazda lamps will be accepted as part payment on an exchange basis for new Mazda lamps. ' A credit of 15c will be allowed for each burned out lamp returned.

PRICKS OF NF.W MAZDAS:15 Watt 12 candle power, each 25c 4< Watt M candle power, each 25c>25 Watt -20 candle power, each 25c <jo Watt 18 candle power, each . . . .30c

100 W att— SO candle power, each . . 50c

H i l a n t i c C o a s t E l e c t r i c L i g h t G o .’P h o n e I6 7 5 ASBURY PARK, N. J .

TELEPHONE WIRES STRUNG THROUGH PORCELAIN INSULATORS ON A BIRCH TREE IN A HEAVY FOREST.

Smith's, etc..” says the Telephone Re- 1 tion or to tlie foot of the first lake and view, ‘‘one would expect to see tlie meet him.familiar Blue Bell Sign and find the j Then, too, it enables a busy man to telephone in general use, but after I go on a trout fishing or hunting expe- traveling many miles over a trail so jditioh 111 the wildest sort of country, hard to find that it is necessary in 1 where the telegraph or even the mail some places to depend 011 the blazed I will not reach him. and yet be in tout-:, trees, the sight of a telephone iij a I with tin-outside world.

k a il ROACS AND THE TELEPHONE“The railroads of the I'nitcd States

could not handle the immense amouni of business which goes over their lines if they were not equipped with tele phone service A large rai.road freight transfer station is a busy place, with many telephones aud all of them coil stantly in use straightening out tangles and keeping the shipments on the move. But a new benefit provided by the telephone to ihe'iuiiilic and the railroads has been discovered by one of the largest transfers in the Oast.

“All Ihe rail road* in the United

Learning to Do One’s Duty.Make it a point to do something ev­

ery day that you don’t want to do. This is the golden rule fcr acquiring the habit of doing your duty withoutpain.—Mark Twain

CONCENTRATION, ECONOMY, PRODUCTION.

Ill pointing out t4e usefulness of til/ telephone as a factor for concentration, economy, and productivity during tlie present business and industrial situa tion in this country, tlie New York Telephone Review says editorially:—

“Shakespeare, or some say Bacon, wrote -“ T h e r e is a t id e , in t h e a f f a i r s o f m e n W h ic h t a k e n a t t h e f lo o d . l e a d s o n to

' fortune.“How to launch our c ra ft upon this

tide, and having launched it, to keep it true to tlie course and reach the port the poet names 'fortune.' require a knowledge of whnj; we may call ‘commercial navigation.’ The s' liooi of experience furnishes tlie chart, and compass and sailing directions.

“Concentration of effort instead of diffuseness is one lesson; this is a dif- lieult one to learn because of the great tendency, the other way, in our schools, social life, business, and pleasure.

“Another is the lesson of economy and thrift; ‘come easy, go easy' can­not stand the strain. Persons with large incomes have spent lavishly, and persons with small incomes have im­itated them.

“One of the most important lessons to be learned is tlie power of produc­tion. Scientific management long since disclosed the fact tha t tremendous profits can lie added to a business by decreasing the unit cost of doing busi­ness, either in spending less per unit or producing moro units.

“The telephone is the greatest factor for concentration of effort, economy, and productivity.”

s B e e H i v e

N E W F A L L G O O D SWE ARE SHOWING NEW FALL

GOODS IN EVERY DEPARTMENT —

Hi Goods, Millinery, Ladies" Suits and Goats, M< n’s and Hoys' Clothing, Shoes and Furn shinsrs : : : : : :

c o o k ' s m k l : h i v e

Avenue and Slain S treet Asbury P a rk , IN. J.

Many Have Trieti..No man has e\ er gained distinction

because of the excellence of hia jew­elry.

B u s i n e s s O p p o r t u n i t i e s$9,000.00. Corner property, one block

from Ocean Avenue, 10 room house, furnished, 7 bedrooms, bath, cellar, modern improvements, garage. Lot. 100 x 150 ft. Terms to suit purchaser.

*8,000.00. Corner property, one block from Ocean. :i room House, 6 bed

.ooms, bath. Lot 95 x 150. Terms to 311 it purchaser.

$12,500.00. Corner property, Lot 102 x 220 ft., 2 houses as follows, 14

room house, 2 baths, csellar, heat, com­pletely furnished, all improvements.

11 room house, bath, cellar, heat, furnished, all improvements. Will sell together or separately.

$3,000.00. 6 room house and bath,modern improvements, heat, etc.,

barn. Lot 25 x 150 ft., centerally lo­cated in a very desirable neighborhood. Terms to suit.

VOR SALE—A boui-fide business. Li­beral term* Failing health reason

.'or selling. Right parly can clear .rom $2,000.00 to $2,500.00 in one sea­son. W rite at once. 2 B. Coast Ad­vertiser, Belmar, N. J.

I fn im jit! . , ),/1!l.’ 1 7 s 1 !i 11 I lilt / / / ••,}

• :V» 1 ■ f! o-. ■ si.

The telephone cull ut fhanksgiuing time bring* joy to all the family.

I F business and distance combine to keep you away from the family

gathering at Thanksgiv­ing time, why not take your place in the family circle by telephone ?<2L Send your voice and make Thanksgiving Day brighter and happier for all b e c a u s e of y o u r thoughtfulness, u»-u

| C h r i s t m a sG i f t s

You can secure your Christ­mas .Jewelry now at our store by paying a small deposit. Now is tlie time to mako your selection and >ivoi the rush.

A. I. P O L A N DC O R . C O O K M A N & H O N D ST.

ASBURY PARK, N. J.

Branch o f A. I. P o l a n d , Philadelphia

N E W Y O R K

T E L E P H O N E C O

J. A . V A 'j.lEB ristrict Com m ercial L lana^cr,

507 B an gs A venue, A sbury P a rk , N. ,T.

HORSE FOR SALE—One gentle horse, j 10 years old. Mare. Will sell for {

$85.00.

RENAULT TOURING'CAR FOR SALK !—In first class condition, 24 II. P . 1

1911 model. Tlie car that never w ea rs1 out. Will sett for $500.00. Big Bar- j gain. QVpply or write Coast A dvertiser,; Beimar, N. .1.

For detailed information in regard to above advertisements, call or ad­dress Coast Advertiser, lie I mar, N. J.

[ I S H S 8 ]

. . . . TRAINS LEAVE BELMAR For New York, Newark and Elizabeth

via all rail tf.Ot , 7.50, 10.Lta. m., ‘2.OH, IU1-H, fi.50, sS 50 p. in.

Sundays 8.15. a. m., LO>, H.-lip. III. »

♦Now York Only. sSaturday only.J

IT ’S FOR SflLEW a t c h I t F r o m S t a r t t o F i n i s h

' \Y. Corner Sih Aro. and I) St.

T H E N A S K

A L j L J i N

L A D I E SVisit the famous Art Needlework and Novelty S(iop

of quality.Goods of meri t and fair t r ea tm en t to cus tomers has in

one year made this little shop famous and our town of Bel­mar the by-word in thousands of homes th roughou t theJ oUnited States and Canada. Call and find out the reason. A cordial welcome always awaits you.

EM M A L O U ISE A R T S H O P8 0 3 F S T R E E T , B E L M A R

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