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Page 2: 4. *£• 1 ivons 1 8 nosihso · 2015-02-03 · I WMMaawBBttttBHa I T '.NT ‘a e t u p q H - H - H -t- w w * . .m u h ,h w + i - i 1111 f n -n -j y w w t < h ^ ,, _ — ~ ~ B £

¥ THE COAST ADVERTISER, BELMAR. N. J.

Theodore H. Bennett

F u n e r a l D i r e c t o rand

L i c e n s e d E m b a l m e r

Harry E. S. S. BennettG r a d u a t e E m b a l m e r o f t h e

R e n o u a r d T r a i n i n g o f N e w Y o r k

O FFICE: TEWTH A V E , O PPO SITE POST OFFICE

RESIDEN CE: 1201 B ST.

Telephone Belmar 577, Any Hour, Day or Night

Advertise II With Us—It Will Be Soldf H 4 » W i l ! ♦ ♦ ♦ » » » t i l l * W t i t M m i m t t t » I

• I

Honce and DuBois f%

Rnftnrc. toaoaa -Ho t o Leans786 Tenth Avemie,

Phone 683

& e t t g t o u s ^ e t t t o n

F irs t P r e r ty te n a n C hurchCorner of Ninth avenoe and Bast

• tre e t. The Rey. Andrew 'R ichards, A 3 ., Th.B., pastor. M anse phone Belmar 3SS-M.

Junior Christian Endeavor Service a l ft), to a. m. Divine worship at 10:45 a. m. aad 7:39 p. m. Bible School at 2: J0 p. in. Christian Endeavor Sarv* ice a t 7:00 p. m.

F irst M ethodist EpiscopalC orner of Seventh and D stree ts .

Rev. E dw ard H arrison Clood, pastor. Sunday School, 9:45. W orship, 10:30 a. m. and 7:30 p. bl S trangers wsfc come.

h

F ir s t B aptist Church F irs t B aptist Church, N inth ave-

iKie, betw een C and D stree ts . Rev. P. T. Morris, D.D., pastor. M orning wwnship begins a t 11 o’clock. Sun­day School a t 2:30 p. in , and Eve­ning Service a t 8 o’clock. Young peo­p le’s m eeting each F riday evening a t $ o’clock.

Mt. Ofive B aptist Church M t Olive B ap tist Church, Seven­

teen th avenue and F s tree t. Rev. J. J. Davta, pastor. M ora ing w orship be­gins a t 11 o’clock; Sunday School a t 12:15. Evening service a t S o’clock. P ray er m eeting W ednesday evening a t 8 o’clock. S trangers wiil find % h earty welcome.

.'Ji BELMAR

17—E igh th At®, and F. S treet, il*—T enth Ave. and F S treet.19—T w elfth Ave. aad R iver Rd.*3— T hird Ave. and A S treet.$6— F ifth and O cean Aves.27—F ifth Ave. aad C S tr e e t 34— Sixth Ave. and F S tr e e t 26— Seventh Ave. aad D S treet.41— F ourteen th and Ocean Aves.43— T enth Ave. and C S treet.44— Bigh&i A t* , a a d A S t r e e t45—E leventh Ave. and A S tree t.H —F ourteen th Ave. and F S tr e e t W — T h irteen th Ave. aad D S tre e t

SPECIAL TAPS 1-1-1, C h iefs call. 2 taps, te s t a larm g iven every evening a t 7:30 o'clock, rl tap, B roken C ircuit; 2 taps, F ire O ut, given a fte r Are is extinsafariied.

DON’T FORGET ------- US--------

When you need any­thing in the line of neat and attractive Printing.

Advertis­ing a Sale!*■ r O C d o s t leave f / y o u r rig In th e (£ ’*3 m iddle o t th a

ro sd a n d flo to a fence* p o s t to read a sale fell d o y o u ? T hen d o n 't expect th e o th e r fel­low to do it.P u t in in t T i fi ix p — rfimi regm ilen o ftfa t weather, the fell-ww you v a s t te m c b te a d ir w r im u u i ic c - ■Mnti wMto Mated at hi* Arc tide.If he la a prospective buyer Jraoli h iv e him t t jr tu n d e . One extra buyero flen jtjr* tha entire expuu* e f t in id . and It** a poor ad tha t w on 't pull th a t tourer.An ad in th is pape rraeb ea tlu ceap le you are after.Bills m a r be a a e e a d tr .b a t thead la the thing tiiMt iloaa the)Don’t th in k o t special aela v ttb a o t uiiaK

p a c e la

-4

attx* extern ei

Get That Boyer• *’.*5 d.- -

BILLH EADS

ST A T E M E N T S

L E T T E R H EA D S

EN VELO PES

N E A T W O R K

G O O D STO CK

BELMARCOAST

ADVERTISER

4*4*4-

Mullen’s Bakery1003 F STREET BELMAR

The Largest and Oldest Bakery In Belmar £OUR TWO BIG SPECIALS +

REAL HOME-MADE BREAD *AND COFFEE CAKE +

For Your Meat Phone 560

Make it a Daily Habit to phone 560 for your Meat

W e k n o w you w ill be sa tis f ie d w ith th e QUALITY o f th e M ea ts w e d e liv er, an d th e excellence of o u r SERV ICE w ill P lease Y O U

St. James Neat MarketA. S. KLEIN, Prop.

701 T e n th A venue O pposite P o s t Office

Plumbing & HeatingF. J. NEWBERY

Phone 1014-M416 12th Ave Belmar, N. J.H “H-4*4*4*4*4*4*’T

X Phone 1844

I$

I+*2*

PLAZA GARAGEFRANK ERICSON, Prop.

REPAIRS ON ALL MAKES OF CARS

Cars Washed Fenders Straightened

711 10th Avenue Belmar, N. J.

4- 4*

$4*4**4*4*4**4*4*J ,•j. 1015 Fourteenth Avenue 4-

Telephone 1136-R

LAVANCE & HOWLANDCONTRACTORS a n d BU ILD ER S

PLANS FURNISHED ' ESTIMATES GIVEN

Belmar, N. J.

Phone 1124-W

LEON T. ABBOTTSite AM FITTING and JOBBING ESTIMATES CHEERFULLY GIVEN

415 Thirteenth Ave. Belmar, N. J. * *

Advertise It In This PaperIT WILL BE SOLD!

FO UNDATIO NS FOR FORTUNES $

A R E R I G H T H E R E I N T H E A D V E R ­T I S I N G C O L U M N S O F T H I S P A P E R

I F W H A T Y O U ’R E S E L L I N G H A S M E R I T . A D V E R T I S E I T

A N A D . W I L L S E L L I T F O R Y O U

Wctchert Gtttoria k a harmless Substitute tot C u tw Q ^ ra rc g o n c , Teething Drop* and Soothing Syrups,

®o relieve Infants la arms and Children all sges o |Constipation (Wind Colic Flatulency fTo Sweeten StomachDiarrhea Regulate Bowels

Aid«la the stfrmiladoo of Food, promoting Cheerfulness, Rest and Natural Sleep without Opiates -

To «w>M taxation*, always look far ll« signature ofZagfel. f e s a k tJ . a a .g & a ^ n g g , Phy»idmns everywhere recotmnend ft.

Plumbing & HeatingMWo Specialize cm Repair Work Electric Water Pomps and Repair*

Jos. C. StewardPhan*620-R R B O fA R 1106 F S t

.. ................................................... ..

PRIDHAM & BRICEContractors and Builders

Plans Furnished Estimates Gives* ^

419 14th Ave. Belmar, N. J.

T E R N E R4*4*4*f4*4*

LUMBER MILLWORK X COAL FEED LIME ± CEMENT WALLBOARD 4*------------------ 4*

4*j j 12th & R. R. Aves. phone 9 Belmar, N. J.

jl l 1 I > I i l T j f j i 1 i | i £> |Phone Belmar fiOl-W

FRAMES MADE TO O&DEH MOSQUITO FRAMESSTORM SASH SHJ7TTKRS

Plane Arranged and Estimates Offered

PETER MACLEAEIE & SONCURP3ENTER8 and BtJILDEBS

ALTERATIONS and REPAIRSResidence and Workshop A Street fc»imny fj. j ,

Bet. 18th and 19th Area.

i < 1 H - + * 4 l 11 I i n t 1im nitinntw m t

a HABERSTICK & SONe « M s * s « n t e W M . A L L S P ACK

t*Sj* Sanitary Plumber1004 P Street, bet. 10th aad llth Avea.

B E L M A R , N. J . ■MMMMHimmiHiiiiiHiinniiiamMiiNuiiu

BE SATISFIEDAre you always satisfied that you are getting the value you should for you money in—

FURNITURE and HOUSEFURNISHINGS?Look urer our large itock and let ui quote pricei before you buy elsewhere.

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

Page 3: 4. *£• 1 ivons 1 8 nosihso · 2015-02-03 · I WMMaawBBttttBHa I T '.NT ‘a e t u p q H - H - H -t- w w * . .m u h ,h w + i - i 1111 f n -n -j y w w t < h ^ ,, _ — ~ ~ B £

THE COAST ADVERTISER, BELMAR, N. J.

i j j j j f f f ~ - - ------------

Phona 210

W. L HefterPLUMBING — HEATING

(Next to Bank)

9th At*. BELMAR. N. J.

W h e n Do Yon Btqr Your BUILDING MATERIAL?

W hen in w a n t do i 4 fo r get that the Buchanar. and Smock Lum ber 0 * <t As­bury P ark out rapiHty you.

W rite or »-*

Bocbanon & SmockASBURY PARK. N. J.

BICYCLESRepairs and Suppliea

Baby Coach Wheels

and Tire*

Base Ball Goods

Opp- Public School

1108 F street BELMAR

N a sh a n d

Ch e v r o l e tCars and Trucks

I Machine Shop

I BELMAR AUTO CO.| 804 F Street BELMAR'!3S5I5@I5IS5I5J05JS5EJi5ISI5J5I5fBI3MS19J5M

Phona 14

Central MarketHerman F. Lazaraua, PropCity Dressed Beef

Lamb, Veal and Pork Fresh dressed poultry

a specialty.908 F Street BELMAR

YOUR HOM E TOW N

the Prettiest Place on Earth

| BUICK CADILLAC ?T el. 1263

S to rage B a tte rie s and A ccessories

::Ervk*g & Freer::AUTOM OBILE R EPA IR IN G

O xy-A cety lene W eld ing and C utting

F Street Belm ar, N. J.

S. Dresden* Ladle's and Gent's

T A I L O RPHONE 44$

EIGHTH AVENUE AND F STR EET

BELMAR, N. J.

John GuincoDealer in

FRUITS and PRODUCT

f t r k sad Tftford f n d i e t i

and Tobacco

915 F Street BELMAR

We Design and Build CompleteTo Suit You

All Work Guaranteed

H. A. SMITHDesigner and Builder

Phone 323 JtT 1701 A Street

Belmar, New Jersey

CleanUp and Paint Up

Do your share by keeping your home attractively painted. Painting is goor economy, too.It prevents decay and saves re­pair bills.Entering the home—Is it bright and cheerful. If not, we can paint or paper your walls as they are most important. And about your furniture, we have discovered a way to make your old furniture new and modern by decorating it in the new pastel shades. Just phone or drop a postal.

FRANK BRIDEN, Jr.702 F ST., BELMAR, N. J.

iCA*As<A>

PATRONIZEt h e merchants who adver­tise in this paper. They will treat you right.

GIRLS WANTEDW e offer you clean, s t e a d y em ploym ent m aking Pajam as. Yon need not be experienced. W(j w ill pay you good w ages w h ile learning the trade, w h ich w ill enable you to earn $20 to $25 a w eek.

Valeo Mfg. Co.First Ave. near Railroad

ASBURY PARK

V A N S & E X P R E S S L O C A L Sc L O N G

D I S T A N C E M O V IN G 516 -B thAve, BELMAR.N. J .

B E LM A RS T O R A G E

SEPARATE R O O M S 7th. Ave. Phone-505-J

b e l m a r

I

The Merchants who ad­vertise in this paper will

jive you best values for your. j ^ n e y .

0 . H . N e w m a nHUDSON and EHBlCT

FuQ l in e o f SuppliesS X I D E

Battery Service 708 F Street R R IJtfA R

Phone 513

W. A. RobinseoC A R P E N T E B

andB U I L D E R

Jobbing Prom ptly Attend­ed to. Estimates Cheer­fully Given.

601 EIGHTH AVH, BELMAR, N. JL

Phone 518-R— rrr r j j j

Tfcb is “HARRT” (Oar i -Foot Fitter* Mo.

f —■[)— * M jinriilljvaati a ahoo vttki aad al tha aam* Marifie* om bit olj

j o a a u f i ctjrfe ttuM doos aot w crtfle*O t io r * and Quality for K jrlU 9 >| paanmco I t * f in a l favof iha 'W this stylo at 9IM r v m beyond a d o * t it . W H M alted

Low or E B fh C o t Price 96.75

. LEWIS'TEN TH AVENUE AND F STREET

BELMAR, N.J

COLUMBIA AND MINERVAf

YARNS

3 . M. C. COTTON

ALSATIAN EMBROIDERY

Ttlepboaa M»-W

KMBBOIDKRY ITAMPDM and -

HAND-KNITTED SW2ATRBS

tOC F St. Belmar, N. A

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A re You in Need ofTags

Cards Blanks

Folders Dodgers

Receipts E nvelopes

Statements Bill Beads

invitations Packet Heads

Letter Heads

Call at this office

Good Work Is Our Specialty

AROUND THE HOME

By MARGARET BRUCE

■Sx»Xa)<S<sx5)«KS®X5><SXaX®®<5XI)®®«XaX5XSxSi®®®WNU Service \

The Decorative Value o f LargePictures.

I f I ,were asked w hat one fau lt rendered the in terio r of many homes Ineffective, X th ink I would say, too many small p ictures on the walls. A living room of noble proportions, w ith ample wall spaces can be u tte rly spoiled by being d o tted ^ y es , dotted is the word—w ith p ictures ranging from ten to eighteen inches in size.

Such small p ictures as th is a re en­tirely out of proportion to a room of any fa ir dimensions, especially if there are no big pieces of fu rn itu re to rise against the wall space and help to fill It up. The dignity of a spacious liv­ing room is lost w ithout a t least one or two large m ural decorations, or even more, unless there are a good many windows to break the wall spaces.

Not long ago I sa t in a beautiful home where the entrance hall, living room and dining room opened into each other w ith wide rough-plastered arches showing no woodwork w hat­ever. There w ere very few small p ictures on the walls, and w hat there w ere had been gathered together in a w ell-arranged group th a t had the value of a large picture. Over a long divan against one wall was a color p rin t in quiet rich tones. I t

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formed a background th a t had the effect of a tapestry . I t hung low above the couch and w as nearly as long as th a t piece of furniture.

Over the stone m antel a t the other end of the room was a long duskyoil painting, a copy of a m aster. In ano ther broad wall space hung an oriental rug, w ith a massive' carved chair below it. T here w as an en­tire absence of petty pictures.

If sm all p ictures are used in spa­cious rooms, they should not be streched a t regu lar in tervals here and there over the wall, bu t gathered to­gether into panel-shaped groups, or perhaps hung in th e narrow space between two windows. They should never be flung m eaninglessly over the surface of a large side wall, like bits of paper afloat on a river.

For the H om e Color-SchemerNot long since I called one a fte r­

noon upon one of my friends who told me th a t she had done every bit of the decorat­ing in her new h o m e herself. She had gotten t h e unpainted wood fu rn itu re ln charm ing de­signs and had enam eled a n d stenciled a n d decorated to her h ea rt 's content, With a different color scheme In each room. She

had painted her plain p iaster w alls in the softest of aquatint^ and paneled them by painting heavy double lines up them In a slightly darker or a con­trasting tone. She had appllqued un­bleached muslin cu rta ins and bed cov­erings, a fter dyeing the fabric in ju s t the colors she wanted.

“But best of all,” she ended trium ­phantly, "are my home-decorated m etal accessories — my door-stops, light sconces, bookends, inside door knockers, and candlesticks. I have discovered a foundry th a t tu rn s out all these things In plain gray Iron castings which one may decorate to su it her own taste . You know th a t o rdinarily we have to buy these things already decorated, and frequently in colors th a t fairly fight w ith everything ln the house. T his foundry realizes th e need for Individualism Jn the modern home, and simply tu rns the Iron castings over to us, saying: “T h e re ! color It up y o u rse lf!”

And she pointed to a gay cockatoo door-stop, ln Chinese yellow and ver­milion, on a jade green ball, which was holding open the door to her bright little library, w here the curtains, candle-shades, and the decorative book-jackets (which she had made herself!) w ere in th e sam e original colors.

“Yes, he came ln plain gray iron,” she said, “and I painted him my­self. I decorated the iron wall sconces, too, and the metal book-ends on the library table. You see when you have Just the plain surface to work on you can do anything your fancy dic­tates. You can choose the colorful silks for d raperies and candle-shades, and then decorate the heavier articles In shades th a t harmonize.

“T his foundry also makes colonial curtain holtv*“icks, match-holders and ash-trays, lamp bases, flre dogs, and other articles in the sam e gray Iron. They a re decorated by using flat colors in oil paint. In enamel, or In bronze. I t leaves one free to work out ju s t the color combinations need, ed.”

_ (.Copyright.J

PHONE 499

SERVICE ELECTRIC CO.VERNON SHIBLA, Prop.

Wire Us and We will Wire You

1002 F STREET BELMAR, N. J.

SSISISJBJ5JSJ5ISf5/SfSJ5J5J5l915IBf5JBf5J5JSf5JSfSfSJ5J5JS/5JBJ5JBf5J5f5J5/BJS

LOTS FOR SALEMoney to Loan on Mortgages

E . B . B i g e l o w

Telephone Belmar 709-R

Tenth Ave., Opp. R.R. Depot Belmar, N. J.

FRANK P. ERBESpring Lake Florist

TREES . SHRUBS ~ HEDGE PLANTS, Etc. BEDDING PLANTS . . CUT FLOWERS, Etc. Funeral Designs • W edding Decorations

807 Ludlow A ve, near T hird Spring I.»lr*r N. J . Telephone 59

| ’ Phone Belmar 704-W _ v 'V 5

BRICE BROS.—Electrical Contractors—

WIRING m FIXTURES M MOTORS

•11 12th AVENUE BELMAR. N. J.

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B e t t e r T h a n

H o m e M a d e B r e a d

Blank Bread, -scientifically compounded from | the purest materials, baked in a sanitary Bakery in | an oven just the right temperature is more whole- | some and nourishing than home made^bread. Now is a good time to try i t

T R Y O U R C A K E

Light as a feather, yet full of substantial good­ness. Set one of specials before you tonight—and cut the piece big.

BELMAR BAKERYA . M E N Z L E R , P ro p rie to r

8 0 9 F S t r e e t B e l m a r , N . J .V- v

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o o o o o o o o o o o < x x > o o o < x x > o < x > o o o < x x x x > o o o o

! PERLMAN’S !o Belmar’s newest Ladies’ and Gents’ Apparel o$ C L ^o bhop o0 r oV Always Plenty of Bargains 0

917 F STREET BELMAR, N. J. 0 We Give S. & H. Trading Stamps q

> 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 O O C K X X K X X X X X X X X K ^ O O O O O O O

3EISr5I5ISJ3®13®3EISJ3MS®3J3E®HISlSISJSJ51SJSJ5I5I3EISI5JSEI3JSJ3IEJBJ515IS)SJ3JSI5/BJ3HS|

The Store With a Thousand ItemsI

Ruben’s Sport ShopWILLIAM RUBEN, Prop.

913 F Street Belmar, N. J.?13M31HJBJ3I3I313J2l3IBJ2I3IEIS[SI3/SEEfSi5JSJ3J3EISIS/3IBJSEi3ffif3/3/S/a

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THE eOASTTVDVEBT 1SERLOUIS BARR

Ownsr and Publisher

Publication O ffice ?nd Plant 704 Nintli Avenue, Belmar. N. J .

Teleylu»ne—&W0-M Belmaf

TOWN TOPICS

Tennis still holds its popularity j ! with the Belmar chib members.! j Having defeated Avon, 3-2, the ciub | team teeis confident o i scoring an-I utiicr victory in the return game, j

T H E C O A S I A D V E C T l S t a i , B E L M A R , N E W J E R S E Y

BUENA VISTA HOTEL NOTES ... ..........wSoiiiiiiiiiittiiimriinifmimitiuwBSi?FWBDfAY, M W . 27, 1920

MIBHUHiriR

Airs. H. W ish m ea , th e w ife of the :~|t ■vi-fl k n o w n B ro o k ly n atto rney ', w ho yj h a s bean a g uest at the Buena Vista -..!§

• <3hole) fo r th e m o n th of A ugust, w ill j S leuvc fo r h e r h o m e on W e d n e sd a y -: I

Mr. an d Mrs. S. Long a re s to p p in g ! §

E n te re d as second-class m a tte r ut j th e postofiice a t Belmar N ew j J e rsey , under the act of O sngresn . i

OneS u b sc rip tio n R ates

y e a r .......................

C ard parties and dances w ere nu ; nre'rous over ihe week end, a n d : the ho te l tot liuee w eeks, n ow many Belmariles ar-e lo«l?ing> Miss Lillian ISradfleld of W fo rw a rd to the Asbury P ark baby parade- Grabbing, sailing and ca­noeing were popular oh the few rj.i'iir days of tbi* week.' Because

111Property Owners

*159; of the:Six months ................ ,75 placesT h re e months ............................... . .40Single copy ..........» .................... .<M

ra in ,were

the moving picture unusually crowded.

field w ill leave on Sunday fo r h e r ! hom e a l te r h very p le a sa n t s ta y of j tw o w eek sa t th e B uena V ista. '

Mr. N o rm an D. C oyle is recover :

Mews Item s of L ocal an d P e rso n a l in te re s t In v ited

in o rd e r in g th e change of subscrip­tion ad d re ss , please give the ofd S a* well as th e new adriress.

F u lfil AdvfcrtUm* Raprgamttttttw AMDUCAM PRESS ASSOCIATION

New Yotfc CUeapt. Sw» fra n o te *m i M il__m -•*

T he Belmar Fishing club wil! hold its annual dinner here Sep­tem ber I t . Special entertainers and tlie c lu b ’s orclkestra w-iS put. zestin th e event.

The Ladies’ Auxiliary o f tlie B el- mar American Legion w ill h o ld its business meetings on SepJ."8, 9 and 10, at Hie Belmar dub . A luncheon will lx given on Friday, Sept. 9.

SW IM MING P© O L

Just about this time of the year, there bobs up the annual discussion of the advisability o f a swimming pool for Belmar. The ppol would undoubtedly increase the resort value of this town a n d add to its interest and attractiveness, The pro­ject seems to be gaining new ad- herants every day . If the- thing is conducted in a dignified and syste­matic m anner it w ill be a profit­able venture. However, there is a large initial expense to be borne by the town, and the whole proposition should be analyzed from all angles and subject to mature and careful deliberation.

Tlie-re is nothing that increases SO rapidly in bitterness and hard feeling as a grudge or petty squab­ble. And when a boro official is- Involved il is fraught w ith much danger and malignancy. We have in mind the alleged hum iliating and boorish treatm ent Of Mr. Carr at. tlie hands of Chief of Police Law ­rence McCormick. The chief un­doubtedly erred and is probably cognizant of his indiscretion, but we are all human after all, and un­der the circumstances, Mr. Carr, himself, might have been equally impulsive.

Mr. McCormick, our police chief, has an estimable record qf many .years of efficient service, and an incident such as this, unless speed­ily thrashed out and forgotten* en­genders more hatred and rancor, and in the long run reflects more on fhe administration and town than the individuals involved- We feel that the whole affair is being mag­nified and exaggerated beyond all •proportions and should be closed.

The cast and managerial s ta ff of the “Vanities of ii»26”, w h ic h re ­cently scored such a sucoess h e re , wore given a dinner at tlie R oss Fen tea Farm , last week.

The card p a r ty w h ic h w a s field here a week ago fo r th e b enefit o f the St. James h o sp ita l o f N e w a rk was a big success. M ore th a n 200 attended. Mrs. RoAen O dell w as in charge . • , -

ing from ;i v e ry severjscold.Miss E lizab e th L ande o f C olum ­

b ia u n iv e r s ity is s to p p in g a t the ho te l fo r the. seaso n , acco m p an ied by h e r .m other.

Miss Anna Ja c o b s o f N ew ark , w ho is very p o p u la r a t th e h o te l, jo u r ­neyed to N ew Y ork, T h u rsd a y , to get one m ore g4imp.se o f R udo lph V alentino .

T h e B uena V ista h o te l’s guests in c lu d e : A. G. N elson an d Mrs- H il­da S irlv n o f M aplew ood, M r. and Mrs. K. Fcltman ,Mr. an d Mrs. F„ I). C an ton , W eym er R u b ack an d Jo h n C lancy o f N ew ark .

1 I V " iaim Renters

A Belmar garage owner is ac­cused of scattering taek s along the' roadw ay in the vicinity of his place of business and reaping a rich h ar­vest from repairing punctured tires. He is now u n d e r arrest- Haven’t •the Monmouth authorities any re ­spect for ingenuity a n d business en­terp rise?—From New a ric Sunday1 Call.

Mrs. W ilhelmina C- YetterMrs-. W ilhelmina C- Yetter, w id­

ow of 0 eorge M. Yetter, died, Sun­day, in the Long Branch hospital, following an operation. She had

The Llanymor h«tel entertained W ilbur H. Baldwin of Passaic, Misr* Caroline and Miss Louisa M. Pieper of Bloomfield, Mrs. James McIn­tyre and Howard McIntyre of New ark; F. Bede, Air. and Mrs. William, McConnell, Mr. and Mrs W. H. Mc­Grath and son, F ranklin , of New­ark; Miss J. Denny of Harrison, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hybanet, C ather­ine M. Lukpns and Ronaldo Lukens of GoJlingsvvood, Ruth Mftier, Alice, Palser, Irene Schaffer. WHfred, Cooper of BetleviHe, R. Russell and, F. T. W inner of Orange and’! Florence Brenner of Montclair.

Miss Anna Moldrum of Seventh avenue has as her guest Raymond Cassidy of Point Pleasant.

Mr. and Mrs. Chester Bennett and children are spending the summer at a cottage or River road.

Miss Helen -St re it will entertain Miss Virginia Blachle-y this week-

Mr. and Mrs. Hiizer and family of Newark have arrived here to .spend the remainder, of tire sum­mer at a bungal&w.

Mr. and Mrs. .T. Morehouse have as their guest th is week, fo s te r Manning of Newark.

Miss Josephine Smith of Hillside sp en t ffle. w eek eJYd as the guest of Miss Edith tSemptou of Tw entieth avenue and A street. Mr. and Mrs" L. Wade a re spending the summer as th e guests of Mrs* Wade’s father, Assemblyman George Compton.

Dr. and Mrs. F rank Devlin of 171 Washington avenue aTfived here on' Monday to spend the rem ainder rrf the summer. Dr. Devlin w ill mo­tor to the .wily eaeli^T tiy sday and return to Bel'mar ^ o i^ ’naav...

Mr. and Mrs. * Strong and chil­dren, Edytfi, Gertrude a*d R.q£>ert, of Newark are spending several weeks here in a bungalow on 16th avenue.

Miss Sophie ScW oss has returned home after sp en d in g a week at Sea Cliff, L. l.

Mr-, and Mrs. W alter Spitz were

MASK BALL A T N E W COLUMBIA

T h e m asq u e rad e ba ll a t th e New .C olum bia h o te l, la s t S a tu rd a y n igh t, p roved to b e a huge success. T he fea tu re o f th is occasion w as th c im ­p e rso n a tio n of M ildred M ass, a B.F. K eith ’s v au d ev ille a r t is t . An e th e r famous co m ed ien e represen t­ed was L arry C olien , w h o to o k first p rize fe r his co stu m e as “the. -Bel m ar H obo”.

T he New Columbia orchestra p lay ed a big part in thc affair.

Guests a t the Columbia include- Mr. and Mrs- Fisen, Mr. and Mrs J.H. Dwork, Miss S. E . D w o rk tind fi C. Dwork of N’exvark, Gewrge Neil of Westfield, R o b e rt A. Kas­sel of Paterson, Mr. and M rs. L. Kissel of Paterson, L ou is Weeked- man, Milton Coven a s d Jean Sch­wa i t / of Paterson, Is ra e l Lipshitz Li

.e f B ayone - aad Miss R. Weiss of f i MapJewood- i i

In order to complete our 1 9 2 .7 files of property Listings in Belmar we ask that you kindly send us your property listings

i u - u i e u u ie r„ . , l: [ l!a l w,c ,M,ly » l « n e d *h i* o f f i c e i n t h e l a t e S p r i n g o f8 ***>' t h e r e f o r e w e. h a v e not h a d f e e opportunity o f h a n d l i n g y o u r

p r o p e r t y a s ' i f ic i e n t ly a s w e a r e now a b le to d o .

l iy s e n d i n g to u s y o u r p r o p e r t y l i s t i n g s e i t h e r F O R R E N T O R ,K,W* ^ e llW)IJ *» in a p o s i t i o n lo d i s p o s e o f y o u ? p r o p e r t y d u r i n g

th e e o n m i g h a l l , W i n t e r , o r e a r l y S p r i n g m o n t h s , s o t h a t w e w i l l » o t a g a in , ne-x: y e a r , h a v e th e l a t e r e n l i n g f e s q p a n d t h e p o o r R e a l E s t a t e m a r k e t f h a t w e h a v e h a d t h i s y e a r .

Kindly p e r m i t u s t h e o p p o r t u n i t y o f p r o v i n g t o y o u t h a t w e o f f e r t h e v e r y h i g h e s t c la s s s e r v ic e . W e a r e t t p d i n g o u r b u s i n e s s o n a p o l i c y o f S O 0 N S) S E C U R I T Y , H O N E S T S E R V I C E , A N D G O O D F A I T H . P l e a s e r e m e m b e r >Js(< t-ha-t w e h & n d le f

I n s u r a n c eIN ALL IT’S BRANCHES

m'ftound and reliable com panies only.

Vvre. h a n d l e I 1 A R M S a n d A C R E A G E f o r s u b - d iv i s io n s . I n c o m e p r o p e r t y a t t h e r i g h t p r i c e a lw a y s o n h a n d .

C h o ie e

FIRST M- E. OH¥RCH

Following is the musical program at the F irst M. E. church for Sun­day:

Morning Service Prelude—^Charily" BraadeisPi'ooes«ionalAnthem—‘T h ere is a Green Hill

F ar Away” GounodOffertory—“Berceuse*’ GilderThree P a rt Chorus—“0 Lamb of

God, Still Keep Me" Manney RecessionalPostlude in I) Roberts

There w ill be a union evening service at the F ifth Avemie pavilion- from 8 to 9 o’clock, w ith Rev. An drew Richards of the F irst Presby- =tc-i-ja-naion.

church preaching the ser-

Kindly send sis at ©ace your listings of property you now have for sale, also yow RENTING listings for the season of 1927

D r o p i n a n y t i m e w h e n p a s s i n g o u r o f f ic e , o r t e l e p h o n e us* a a d : w e w o u ld b e g la d to c a l l o n y o u a m i g o o v e r w i th y o u y o u r R e a l E s t a t e - i i r f n s w a r . e e p r o b l e m s , th i s is p a r t o f th e C O N N E L L Y -R E R G F ^ N s e r v ic e , a n d is g r a t i s .

Connelly-Bergen Inc.J e r s e y C o a s t R e a lty S p e c ia l is ts

710 Ninth Avenue Telephone 1398 Behnar| B E L M A R , N E W J E R S E YmcsiBntiuiitrs uiiiNnicatiiiiHiiiHCjiiiiiniMiinHiiiiniiiiEsiiiimiHiicHmiiinitirintiniinHcaitiitBitiinmiiiiniiitiiiitimiiHniiiiiiuiiiiniiiiiiHiiHEiHiniHiiiitiiaHKiiimiHHiiniiUHiHiiiuiiiiuiiiiiiCBinijiiiinrir”

66

Theatre Asbury Park;SHOWSDAILY 5

X

lived with her daughter, Mrs. Min­nie Million of 203 Ocean avense. Funeral services were held at Smith

'a n d Smith’s funeral parlors. 100 >CJir*ton avenue, Newark.

been a local resident, w here she entertained at a us?ilng party onSunday.• Miss Gunn, fiancee of Harold V. Sherman, form erly o£ Hillside and now.,u£ Chicago, 111., is spending several days here a s-th e guest of Mr. Sherman’s mother, Mrs. John

■| Sherman oi P inetree way. Miss Gunn’s s is te r , Mrs. E . B. Brown of Chicago, ami mother, Mrs.- F. M-1 Gunn of . Chicago, also will spend! sevdVel days. here. f

Mr. and Mrs. I. J. MiWer>of W est j Seventh street, Plainfield, are spend j ing several days here. (

Miss Helen Williamson of North j Branch i s spmidin* the week end j here.

Mr. and Mrs. Howard Lawfencei and children are spending the sum | mer w ith Mrs- Howard’s pnrwits, j Mr- and M rs.'F rank Dodd. f~ j

John Caliban is spending the- summer w ith his parents at their | summer home on T<?nth avenue and j \ street.

M iss S a lly D resse l is a guest a t ! the A tlan tic ho tel- i

A k id d ie p a r ty is one of 1he fe a ­tu res to bo g iven a t th e A tlan tic J h o te l to m o rro w . f ,

Clean teeth the right way—w ith a Bentifrice that does not scratch or scour. “Wash” your teeth clean wTith

CO LG A TE'S

H A nO lOflCYD

Directed by fA M TA Y LO R

DONT CHASE FLICS KILL THEM?

J **t h e r ig h t w ay to *

j f __“ s w a t t h e fly” . N o t o n e a t: a t im e — a ro o m fu l a t a

I » troke . S pray i ta r o u n d t h e Ii ^ r ^ ' r o o m s a n d th e fl»«a f a i t f

ctRtM d e ad . Q u ick , su re . safe , j

c en o lFLY OESTROviR

if*— f roduce<t bq■ ST - 8ARCID LT.OV0 CORP’C~ O Qaiwnmnt Qlei ease

REGITAL AT SPRING LAKE

A recital by the pupils of Mrs. j Clark Hummel will h£ given in the community house. Spring Lake, on - Saturday afternoon, Sept. 4, at 3 1

o’clock. Mrs. Hiwrwnell will be as-| s-isted by Mrs. Florence Paw ley, so- j prano, and Mrs. Viola Lessor, c.cwi-1 traito. The public is inwted to a-t-j tcud.

Week of

A u g . 3 0th

< ns iife th a n sorry

''Thereisnofun in driving when your car is missing fire—start­ing jerkily—refusing to climb your favorite hill—lying down Jin traffic—aregular kHl-joy . And all because you took a chance with your gas—filled her up with sonie unkno^vn stuff and trusted to luck.“ Better to be sure with the best —‘Standard’ Gasoline, always dependable, obtainable every­where— than sorry with any old brand.”

S T A N D A R D

GASOLINEA L W A Y S D E P E N D A B L E

fcfc

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’r *1* -'i* •f- •§• 'i" »£*

lU m g 'D istance ca lls Room 3 1 3 perienced and Inexperienced

To W ind ©n A rtificia l Silk.\N1> THE ■OUi-.ST IN ROOM J l } It,IS tG

, all th e way d o w n sta irs to thc one bone in th c h o te l lo b b y . Som etim es

■rv in c o n v e n ie n t.

V ^ u l d n ' j y o u r guest? b e b e tte r satisfied th e y c o n 'd c ra k e and receive te le p h o n e calls

without f w ' J ’. t l ? t /m r r ’. 'tm s ?

n . new co.vr of house p a in t m ay firing p eo p le

in b u t on ly th o ro u g h -g o in g service w ill k eep

th em an d b rin g th em b ack y ea r a fter year. A.

sw itc h b o a rd w ith a te le p h o n e in every room

w ill give y o u r g u ests th e service necessary to

th e ir sa tk fa& O ii.

S t e a d y W o r k

A l ! Y e a r A r o u n d'4 • *■

Pleasant Conditions

A p p l y

13th A v e n u e & R. R. Street

jo f c n o++ 'H " H " fr h ’b l'+ + + 4 » 1 I 'I I " H y l"> 1 ‘t* t I H W H*

MILLWORK

F o r d s c l i m b hills

b e t t e r w i t h this n e w oil

R o a d t e s t s p r o v e i t

Julius A. Abrams18th Ave. & M St Belmar, N, J

PLUS QUALITY & SERVICEWe are building a Reputation

TRY US

MONMOUTHCoal & Supply Ce., Inc.

’771s Little JVitrse for ZAtil*

/ % m* "7 Advantages o f"Standard” Motor Oil

1. Constant lubrication.

2. Minimum friction

3. LesS “ breaking-dow n” under load or a t high speeds.

4. More miles per quart of

IKth AVE. AND RAMjROADR OAD tests over approximately a thou-

. sand mile course with dozens of Fords, both passenger and truck, proved that the new “Standard” Motor Oil makes Fords climb hills better; gives from 10% to 20% increase in gas mileage and a reduction in oil consumption of 12% to 40%; affords better lubrication at all times, with a cooler motor, smoother operation at all speeds and little or no carbon accumulation; relieves gripping bands.Test the new “Standard” Motor Oil yourself. Verify these results in your own car. Just get your crank-case filled at any ‘ ‘Standard” Service Station or dealer.Then expect results. You can actually feel th e difference.

STANDARD OIL COMPANY (New Jersey)

P h o a e 706

5. Better hill climbing — smoother operation.

6 . Negligible carbon.

7. Actual saving in gasoline,

c J Q u a r t e r a Q u a r t

— 31NO VACATION

T h ie v e s aad t i r e n e v e r t a k e a Vacatiou. B u t w h e n y o u r v a lu a h le s a r e securely p l a t e d in o u r S a f e D e p o s i t V a u lt , y o u can take a vaca­t i o n w i th :i m i n d s a t i s f ie d of their safety. STAN DARD

MOTOR OIL

1FK»AY. AUG. 27, tm , THE COAST ADVERTISE®, BELMAR, NEW iE R SE * )

f- T —

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FRIDAY, AUG. 27, 1926,

S u m iT ^ y ©f A n n u a l A u d it

1918, an County

D. Magistrates anti Officer

E. Miscellan......F. Bd. of Chil-

oi’en u u arU ...G. S pecia l L aw

en fo rcem en tF re e h o ld e r 's

SalariesSat. Officers of

.Board

ofACCOUNTS AND FINANCIAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE

COUNTY OF MONMOUTH FOR THE YEAR ENDING DECEMBER 31, 19U5

By virtue of Chapter 268 of the Laws of New Jersey for annual audit of the account* and financial transactions of each is required to be naede and the Clerk is required to publish w ithin th irty days after the report of audit is received, a synopsis or summary of such Co. Dept. Pub-rmdit and recommendation. l:"

In accordance w ith tbe above mentioned statute, the following syn­opsis or summary of the annual report of audit is herew ith submitted and the books and vouchers from Which the report is made are on file in the County T reasurer’s Office for the_inspection of anyone interested therein during business hours.Dated Aug. 20, 1926

/ BP SANT B. NEWCOMB,D?r?eter, Beard »f Chosen Freeholders

of Monmouth County.COLE,

Attest: CHARLES

Clerk.

AssetsCash Dec- 31, 192e

General ............................ tai9 Rd. Rep. Reserve 1920 Rd. Rep. Reserve Sheriff’s Account ........

Emergency Notes, 1925Prosecutors Office Sheriff’s Office

COUNTY OF MONMOUTH, NEW JERSEY BALANCE SHEET

Ye^r Eprifttg December 31st, 1925 Current

lie Inst County Health

Depi: ......Buildings, Court

and Jail State Institu­tions:

Trenton

16,000.001 4 ,m o o

20,000.00

i 0,000.00

15.000.00

32,750.00

2,750.00

2,^00.00

25.000.00

273.119,703,292.613-75

7.69

4,7004,300.00

*306,507.84

9,000.00

Accounts Receivable Allenwood Hosp.,Allenw&ed Hosp. Ad. 24 Allenwood Hosp. St. Ad. 25Road Rep. St- Aid 1924 ..............Road Rep. St. Aid 1925 Aid for Blind Mun, 1924•Aid for Blind Mun. 1925 ........Co. Tax Mon. Beach 1921 Allentown Bnk. St. Tax 1921 Manasquan Bnk. St. Tax 1921 Englishtown Bank, 1921 Englishtown Bank, 1922Surrogates Office .......County Clerk's Office Sheriff’s Office. Fees Sheriff’s Office Fines. Ct. Motor Vehicle FinesInt. on Deposits ............Operation Co. Farm 1924

1919 Bills paid 1924 Due from Capital Account Premlum and Int. on R onds:

1920

1925 ..... :......................... 3,991.875;oie.oi

16.655.132.000.00

25,342.41789,45

i,r,o«.oo.0-1.ai.0101.01

1,950.8113,977.00

2,788.234.661.40

288.00327.58

1.119.15

370.35

80,529.09*230 71

’921 ........................................ ........ ................ . 5,395.001912 i .......................... .................... 1,712.9915)23 ..................................... 25.086.811924 ...................................................... .*......... 4,430.79 36,085.94

LiabilitiesEmergency Notes 1925

Prosecutor’s Office Sheriff’s Office ....

Current

4,700-004,300.0ft

433,343.r>8

9,000.00

Accounts Payable:Overpayment Co. Tax 1921:Shrewsbury Township ......................... _. .01Highlands Boro .........— .........-....... —....... .01Sea Girt Boro ....... ,<............. ............ .......... .01

R eserve, fo r A ccoun ts P a y a b le :Sheriff’s Office .................................. 7.631920 and prior bills .................................. 64.331921 bills .................................................... IS,959.771922 bills .................. ................ .............. .... 25,251.111923 bills .. ................................................... 13,286.331924 bills ...................................................... 50,394.24i m bills ...................................................... 151,481.52

S t tlosn _ 35.356.00B. Morris

Plains Hosp. 1.03700C. New Lisbon 2-OJ.aOD. Idiots

Woodbine 1,. 41.25E. Epileptics

Skillman 5,244.50F. Vineland

Training Sc. 1,014.00C. Feeble Mind­

ed Vineland a,937.00Coroners and

Inquests 500.00Burial of Sold­

iers andSailors 4,500.00

T. B. Pat. Main.out of C. Ho. 10,000.00

General Hos­pitals 85,000.00

MaintenanceCo. T- B. Hos. 60,662.00

Co. 6. B. Hosp.grounds 2,000.00

Operation Co.Farm ......... 2,500.00

County TaxBoard ......... 3,800.00

Contingent Ex­penses ....... 12,000.00

Printing andStationery ... 7,000.00

County Clerk’sOffice ......... 48,000.00

RebindingBee- Books ... 1,000.00

Surrogate’sOffice ......... 19,500.00

•Sheriff's Office 19,800.00Sheriff’s Office

Em ergency..W arden’s and

Matron’s Sal. 1,$00.00. Widow’s

Pensions 36,804.96Farm Demon­

stration 11,4641.00Mosquito Com­

mission ..... , 7,800.00County Adver^

Using ...... 2^500.00Forward 720,496.21

Sheriff’s EmgInt. 1924 6,760.00

Board of Pri-

2,000.00 33986 17,660.14 i A.4,844.44 9,455.56 |

4,600.00 2,200.03 22,399-97 jI3.11 9,996,89 ;

1,250.00 13,750.00

2,620-91 30.129.00 J400.66 2,349.34 J

787.59 1,312.41 |

2,000-00 659.69 26,340.31 j

35,356.00

i 458.25 578.751,161.79 1,047.71

1,099-24 642.01

616.91 4,627-591 781.86 232.14

, ” ^ 2,907-69 3,029.31

342-50 157.50

o- ' ... .' 1,312.28 3,187.72

3,235.57 6,764.43

4 85,000.00

5,965.29 52,696.71

737,08 1,262.92

500.00 141.07 2,858-93

345.71 3,454.29

5,365.77 6,634.23,J

_ 1,301.60 5,698.40

353.37 47,646.63

.25 "999.75

3,561.70 15,938.302,200.00

4,300.00 2,292.72 24,007.28

150.00 1,650.00

V, 3,000.00 2,895.60 30,999.36

526.79 10,933.25* 'h 7.SOO.OO

2,500.00 \22,600.00 5,500.00 65,473.96 672,032.25

• cunts Receivable:County Clerk .............. .......... ......................Sheriff ---------------------------------------- - .....Fines and Costs ...-.........................................Surrogate .................................................... -State Hospital ................................................Court Stenographer’s Salary ........... .W idows’ PensionsInterest on Deposits .......Alleuwoed Hospital .................. .State Aid 1923 ....................................... -......State Aid 1924 ........................................... .......Surrogate’s Office 1-925 ............................County Clerk ...........................................Sheriff’s Office ...........................Transfer Inheritance Tax .....................State Aid Motor Veh. Fund ......_.......Co. Farm Operation ....................................Liquor ViolationsOther Violations .....................I , ..............M agistrate’s Fines .......................................Motor Vehicle Fines .................................Interest on Deposits ...................................County Tax ....................................................One Half Bank Stock Tax .... ........ ..........Tax Anticipation Notes Allenwood Hosp. St. .Aid 1921 Allenwood Hosp. St. Aid 1922 Allenwood Hosp. St. Aid 1923Widows' Pensions ................. ....................Maintenance Lunatics .......... ....................Work of Prisoners .......................................Sale of Materials .............. ...... ;................Stenographer’s Fees .................................Auto Insurance .......................... .'...............Refund Wildwood Hosp. ...........................Refund Prosecutor .. ; ....... ........................Probation Officer Fines ................. ..........

Juries and Courts Emergency ..................Sheriff’s Office Emergency ................................ ^.uuu.uuState Institutions Emergency 11,000.00Prosecutors Emergency ......................... .......... 4,700.00Sheriff Emergency .................................... 4.300.00

2,08 a.7SI,961.51 4,120.11 2-,032.50

20.00300.00

73.00 283.50456.00

... 7,962.44II,571.4239.447.6570.170.65 24,494.61

.... 12,24836 123,455.59

656.69964.00

... 13,606.461.274.37

24,032-80 3,799.35

1,348,872.46 24,344.53

689,50C0o 9,536.71

15,20999 5.98S 2,7

431.97 4,186.55

567.50 301.79 471.30 33.00

.311.06 110:00276.00500.00

2,000.00

2,812,421-01

Current12,604.7763,641.17

- I).

.032.600-00

Reserve Unfinished1919 bills1920 bills

Surplus Revenue

Road Rep.:9,703.292,613.75

256,444.99

12,317.04155,584.52

433,343.58

B U D G E T Year Ending December 31, 1925

Surplus Revenue.Appropriated ....$105,000.00

Surrogate’s Of- 28,000.00 County C o rk ’s

Office ................. 65,000.00Sheriff’s Office 22,000.00 Transfer Inheri­

tance Tax ........... 25,000.00State Aid (Motor

Veh. Fund)Re. Allenwood

Hospital Pat.State Aid T. B.Patients 1925 .....Receipts oper-

Cfcunty Farm Court Fines:Liquor Violations Other Violations Magistrate Fines Motor Vehicle

Fines ..............Interest on Bank

Deposits .......... 2,500.00Reimbursement

from Munic. un­der blind act, ... 1,002.00

County Taxes 1.373,210.99

Anticipated Realized

105,000.0041,398.46

S4.167.65 27,282.84

12,248.36-

148,798.00 148,798.00

2,500.00

15,000.00

500.00

5,000.00 15,000.00 ■ 1,000.00

25,000-00

3,99*1.87

16,655.13

656.69

964.0018,267.86*274.37

24,340.60

4,126.93

1,602.001,373,216:99

Excess

13,398.46

19,167.655:282.84

1,491.78

1,655.-13

156.69

S,267.86 274.37

1,020 93

Deficit

12,751.64

7,8000013,520.00

4,688.28

2.475.00

4.000.10

2.925.00

3.000.00

2,208-75

12,000.00 1 ,8 0 0 . 0 0

24.720.00

4.036.00

659.40

1,835,116.99 1,803,991.75

Emergency Note ...Misc, Rev. not Anticipated:State Aid Allen­

wood Hosp..........Widows Pensions Maintenance

Lunatics W'ork of Prisoners Sale o f m aterials Stenographer’s

Fees ........... .........Auto In sura nee .. Refund Vineland

Hospital ...... ......Refund. PrpsKCjjtor P robation Oificer

Fines '.......... ..... .

•9,000.00 9,000.00

36,788.97431:97

4,186.55507.50301.79

471.3033:00

311.06110.00

278.00

46,321.80

30,788.9743l;97

4,180-55507.50301.79

471.3033.00

311.06lUMW)

278.00

17,44704

soncr’s Emg Juries and

Courts Emg.State Inst. Emg.Sinking Fund

Commission I Int. Court House

Add. Bonds Prin. T. B. Hosp.

Bonds .........Tnt. Co. T. B.

Hosp. Bonds P rin . Co. Bldg.

Bonds Int. Co. Bldg.

Bonds .........Discount and Int.

Gen. Co.Note

Int. Co. Bridge Imp. Ronds1021 ....... .

Int- Road Imp.Bonds 1021

Sinking Fund requirements Road and Bridge

Bonds 1921.Int. Bridge Imp.

Bonds 1921 Bridge Bonds

1922 Int. Road Imp.

Bonds 1922 Road Bonds

Series 1922 Tnt. Bridge Imp.

Bonds 1923 Bridge Bonds

1923 Int. Road Imp.

Bonds 1923 Road Bonds ’23 Tnt. 1924 Road

Bond Tnt. 1925 Bridge

Bonds Bridges and

Culverts Road Repairs Read Equip,

and Opera­tion 20,000.00

New -Bonds 175,000.00 Court H. Jail

Rep. Bonds Int. Court H. Jail

Rep. Bonds.Allenwood Hosp.

Imp. Bands Int. Allenwgod

Hosp. Imp.Bonds

Care of Blind Int. 1925 Road

Bridge B. ... 18,000-00

587.22

23.19

3,68584227.22

6.172.78

2,576.81I

4,114.1613.202.78

4,688.28

2.475.00

4.000.00

2.925.00

3.000.00

2,200.75

57.42 13,742.58

9,996-8913.750.00 30,129.09

2,349,341,5/2.41

26,340.31

25.350.00 578.75

1.047.71 642.01

4,827.5>J232.14

3,029.31157-50

3.187.72 6,764.43

85,000.0052,096.71

40,080.00

32.370.00

878.75

1,000.00

18,762.50

18,00.0.00

10.755.00

6,000.00

40.005.0040.00000

48.015.00

6,34500

250,000.00290,000:00

3,000.00

2,430.0*1

3,00000

1.732.502,700.00

4,409.03 51,430.4514,921.32

30.0118,018:68

1,54968

Emergency Note 1925

1,835,116.99

9,000.00

967.50

£,000.00

24.720.00

40.020.00

32.370.00

878.75

1,000.00

18.762.50

18,000.00

10.755.00

6,000.00

40.005.00 40,000.00

48.015.00

6,345.00

194,160.52 275,078 08

19,969.99153,981:32

3.00000

2.430.00

3,000.00

1,732.501,150.32

17,032.50

Disbursements-—Board of Prisoners Election Expenses ....-

Court Expenses:A- Salaries .........WL........................................... 40,474.04B. Prosecutors O ffice ............................................ 30,880.04C. Juries and Court Operations ....................... 32,235.51

M agistra tes.......................................................... J 7,600.14E. Miscellaneous ...................................................... 9,455-56F. Children Guardian, etc .................................. 22,399.97G. Special t«aw Enforcement Freeholders’ Salaries ...Salaries Officers of Board Co: Dept, of Public InstructionCounty Health Dept........................Buildings Court House and Jail

State Institutions:A. Trenton State HospitalB. Morris Plains ..... i,........................C. Feb. Minded, New LisbonD. Idiots WoodbineE. Epileptics. SkilhnanF. Vineland Training School <i. Feeble Minded, VinelandCoroner’s inquests .................... ....Burial of Soldiers and Sailors T. B. Pat. main. out. of Co. Hop.General Hospitals Maintenance of C. T. B. HospitalMaintenance of Co. T- B. Hospital 1-.262P.92Operation of County Farm *............................. 2,858.9*3County Tax Board ............................................... 3,454.29Contingent Expenses .......................... ....... ............ 6*634.23Printing and Stationery ............................... 5,608.40'County Clerk’s Office ........................ .......... 47,64(5.6?Rebinding Record Books .......................... 999.1#Surrogate’s Office ....... .................. ............... ........ 15,938-30Sheriff’s Office .................................. *................ ... 24,007.28W arden’s and Matron’s S a la rie s ........................... 1,650.00Widows’ Pensions ...... 30,999.3gFarm Demonstration Dept. ................................. 10,03335Mosquito (commission ........................... 7(s30.(K5Sheriff’s Emergency and Int. 1924 .............. . 6,152.78Board of Prisoners Emergency and Int. 1924. 2,376.81Ju rie s-C o u rts Emergency and Int. 1924 ....... 4,114.16State lust- Emergency and Int. 1924 ............... 13,292.78Sinking Fund Commission ............................ . 4,688-28Int. Court 11. Ada. B o n d s.................. ..... .-............. 2,475.10Prin. Co. T. B. Hosp. Bonds ___________ ____ 4,000-00Int. Co. T- B. Hasp. Bonds .............................. ,2,925.00Prin. Co- Bldg. Bonds .............. ............................ 3,000.00Ipt. Co. Bldg. Bonds ....................... ........., ........ 2,208.75Dis. and Int. Gen- County Notes ...... ................ 13,742,58Tnt. Co. Bridge Imp. Bonds .............................. 24,720-00Int. Go. Road Imp. Bonds ............ ................... -• 40,02O.<JOSinking Fund Commission for Roadand Bridge Bonds 1921 ---- -----------Tut. Co- Bridge Imp. Bonds 1922 .....Bridge Bonds Series 1922 ........ ,...........Int. Go. Road Imp. Bonds 1922Road Bonds Series 1922 ...................Int. Co. Bridge Bonds Bridge Bonds

.......... 32,370.00.......... 878.75.......... 1,000-00.......... 18,762.50......... 18/100:00

1923 ............................... 10,7551001923 .................................................. 6,000.00

Int. Co Road Imp. Bonds 1923 ..................... 40,00500Rood Bonds 1923 .................................... ItJ.utf&OQInt. 1924 Rood Bonds ...................................... 48,015.00Int. 1925 Bridge Bonds .................... ... ............ 6,345.00Bridges and fiulverts ........................... ........... 194,160.52Road Repairs ................................ ......................... 275,07.8.68Road Equip, and Operation ............................... 19,969.99New Roads .......................... ............. .................... 156,981:32Prin. Court Ii- and Jail Bonds 3,000.00Int. Court H. aud Jail Bonds .......... -............... 2,430;00Alh'nwood Hospital Bonds ........... ..............- 3,000.00Int. Allenwood Hospital Bands .................. -...... 1,732.50Care of tbe Blind .............................. 1,150.32Int. 1925 Road and Bridge Bonds ............ 17,03250Tax Anticipation N o te s .............................. .. 669,50000Accounts Payable’ 1925 Accounts Payable 1924 Emergency Notes 1925

Cash Balance Dec. 31. 1925

■ i».

4,51230 125,676^)0 1 3 , ®

306S.597.S4

2,SI2421.Il

1925Gounty Taxes ....Bank Stock Tax

ANALYSIS OF TAXES Year Ending December 31, 1925

................... ......................... 2,178,949.95

.............................................. 48,689.05

-

2.227,(539,00

State School Tax 428,602.09Soldiers’ Bonus Tax ................................. 32,84.0.00Bridges and Tunnels Tax .......................... ........ 69s776i53“ • " * ~ .. .............................180314.05

.................... ........... ir>;235^c

..~................... ...... . 93,20.7,47................. ............... 24.344.53

State Roed Tax pCountv L ibrary Tax State institutional Tax y2 Bank Stock Tax

1,844,116.99 24,400.00 24,400.00 151,481 52 1,09?,635.47

1,844,116.09 1,910,411.89 83,741.94. 17,447.04

B U D G E T Year Ending December 31st, 1025

Transferred

Board of Prisoners

Election Expenses

Court Ex- pewses:

R-. Prosecutor’s(office . ...

Prosecutor’s ©f, Rmg......

C Juries and CoiprVs

Appro. To From Reserve

12,500.00 405.23

71,100.00 7,458.83

44*950.00 4,475.96

36,001*00 2,300.00

^7«0.80V

2,110.96

32.500.00 a64.*9

Expended j

12,004-77 j

63.641.17 !I

40.474.04 1

36.880.04

38,285.31

NoneAppropriated 1925 105,00000

UNEXPENURD BALANCE ACCOUNT Year Ending December 34st, 1925

Surplus Revenue AccountNone

Balance Dec. 31, 1924.......Excess Misc. Rev. Ant.... .Misc. Rev. Not Ant. .........State Aid All. Hosp. 1924

Balance Dec. 31. 1925 1.55,581-52

260,581.52

189,609.1928,874.7637,420.1.44*87.43

260,581.52

Net County Tax Relized

Emergency Notes Outstanding Dec. 31, 1924 Issued 1925'

RECEIPTS AND DISBURSEMENTS Year Ending December 31st, 1925

i Receipts— , S l S l ^ Cash Dec. M, 1-924 .............. ......— .....................- 364,147:86

Pair! ................................

Outstanding Dec. 31. 1825 Prosecutor’s Office Sheriff’s Office

Tax Anticipation Notes Issued 1925Paid 1025 : .....................

12,000.0022,500.00

4,700.00 4,m o o

854,422.0*

1,373:216.89

34,500.00

25,000.00

9.0&0.«&

ao.ok

Page 7: 4. *£• 1 ivons 1 8 nosihso · 2015-02-03 · I WMMaawBBttttBHa I T '.NT ‘a e t u p q H - H - H -t- w w * . .m u h ,h w + i - i 1111 f n -n -j y w w t < h ^ ,, _ — ~ ~ B £

IKFRIDAY, AUG. 27, 1926 THE COAST ADVERTISER. BELMAR, NEW JERSEY

BALANCE SHEET Year Ending December 31st, 1925

Assets I iu s t Cash Dec. 31, W25:Confity Medical I^sp. Fu»d .County Library ........-....»........................ 4*w».04F irst D istrict Court .............................Second District Court ................................ io4.39County Attendance Officer ............................... 2,475.»5Super- Child Study' ........................................ a’ q'oqHelping Teachers .................... .... ...........-........... 6,763.29Surplus Principal Int. ....................................... 2>952.16U ndistributed School Monies — ...................... *00.0590% State School Tax ...................-........... 385,/41.88

405,897.44

Accounts Payable:Liabilities T rast„„

90% Stale School Tax 385,741.88Surplus Tnt. acct. 1925 2,952.16Undistributed School Monies 100.0*Hciping Teachers Fund .................................Supervisor of Child StudyC'ounty Attendance Officer 2,47o.JoF irst District Court ................................ 8ob.W>County Library 4’?tV'2«County Medical Inspector ............................ b.ii.78Second District Court .......... ............................ 154..i-

x 405,891.44

RECEIPTS A*ND DISBURSEMENTS Year Ending December 31, 1925

Receipts TrustCash Dec. 31, 1924 ..........................-..... -.... --.... *M 6 U 3State Treasurer 90% ........................................... 388,604.04State 'T rcasurer 10% ........................................ 18,914.81Accotints Receivable;1924 90% St. School Tax .......... , 366,586.241924 10% St. School Tax ................................... 17,657.39State School Tax ....................................... :.... 428,602.09Soldiers’ Bonus Tax 32,840-99Bridges and Tunnels T a x ................................... 69,776.53Stale Road Tax 186,414.95County Library ..................... ................... 19*235.46County L ibrary State Aid .............. 860.00State Institutional Tax 93,207 47

Bank Stock Tax . ...................... 24,344.53Second Class B. IL Tax .......... 116,554.45County Attendance Off. Sal.............................. 1,248.10Helping Teachers’ Sal. ................ 9,500-00Supt. of Child Study .................................... 3,000.00Dist. Court No. 1 Ac. Bee................... * 709.35Dist. Court No. 2 Ac. Bee.................................. 315.1D'sf. Court Tax No. I ....................................... 2,285.(1Dist. Court Tax No. 2 ........................................... 2,430.00Dist. Court Rev. No 1 ................................... 4,048.89Dist- Court Bev. No. 2 ...................... r............. 3,742.35Notes Payable:County Library ‘........................ ............... 8,900.00F irst Dist. Court ................................... ......... 1,C50.00Second Dist. Court .......................................... 1,840.00

1,820,818.97

-r*

V.

Accounts Payable: Disbursements

State School Tax Railroad Tax Surplus lilt- 1925Surplus Int. 1924 ...................S tate School Tax 1925 State Treas. 90% St. School State Treas. 10% St. School■State School T a x .......................Soldiers’ Bonus, TaxSt. Bridges and Tunnels TaxState Road Tax .......................County Library ...-..................State Institutional Tax% Bank Stock Tax ...............District. Court No. 1 ...............District Court No 2County Attendance Officer ...Helping Teachers Supervisor of Child Study Second Class B. R. Tax Motes Payable:County L ibrary ......................Dist. Court No. 1 Dist. Court No. 2

Trust210.90973.45

1.985.00 25.58

18,914.81366,586.24

17,657.38428,602.0932,840.9969.776.53

186,414.95Iff,293-19 93.207.4724.344.53 7,430.59 6.520.97 1,768.409.430.00

. 3,000.00 116,554.45

8.900.001.650.00 1,840-00

C*>h Dec. 3L 1925 ... 405,891.44

1,820,818.97

BALANCE SHEET Year Ending December 31st, 1925

Assets CapitalCash Dec- 31, 1925 ......... ................. ................... 141,299.85Cash Mortgage Acct........... .................................. 5,100.00Mortgages ..................... ................... .......... 48,100.00Amount to be raised by future taxation ... 3,958,866.84

4,148,266JS3

Wt ■■■i ;

Liabilities Notes Payable:Temp. Tmpr. Notes Tht to Dec. 31, 1925

■One Current Account .................Bonds Payable .................. .............Reserve Allenwood Hosp. ..........Spcc. Engineering R eserve ...........Unfinished Road Work Reserve

‘ 5 • ‘T<Iter

Capital

372,181.325,234.40

45.49

9,990.35

NOTES AND BONDS Year Ending December 31st. 1925

Temporary improvement NotesOutstanding Dec. 31, 1924 ................ 634,533.15Special Engineering ................ ...... -.... . 26*000-00

Interest to m aturity ........

Issued 11*5 ............ ..........

Retired 1925 .....................

Interest to Dec. 31,. 1925

......

6*ndsOutstanding Dec. 31, 1924......................... 4,431,000.0*E rro r Bond Imp- Bonds issued March 15,

1922, shows 412,000- should be 104,000........ 8,060.0®

Issued 1925 Permanent Road Imp. Bonds Bridge Bonds ..............................

595.000.00162.000.00

654,57315

20,688.70

675,26)1.85410,046.87

1,085,308.72713,127.50

372,181.22 5,334.40

S77,415.32

4,423,000.00

757,000.00

RIALTO

Paid 1925Temporary Bonds .......................................... . S00,000.00Serial Bonds ........................................... ............. 78,000.00

5,180,000.00

378,000.00

Outstanding Dec. 31, 1925 4,802,000-00

Sinking Fund Bonds ......- 1,0^?,000.00Serial Bonds .................................................... 3,723,000.00

4,802,000.00

•AT-. •

—IT IS NOT TOO EARLY TO CONSIDER—

T he S t o v e Q u estionFor THIS WINTERWer« you contemplating installing new equipment

this fall? The solution to this problem lies in our cow ple-te line of heating and cooking stoves.

HOT AIR FURNACES PfPELESS HEATERSCOMBINATION COAL and GAS RANGES

CABINET GAS RANGES 0tL STOVESFIREPLACE ACCESSORIES ELECTRIC STOVES

Your inspection is invited, or a card will bring our representative with full details.

PAUL C. TAYLORj F St. & 9th Ave. Belmar, N. J,t

» ♦*> '! + ♦ V fr+ * + + + * + + » l ♦

T h e a tr eOcean at 8th Ave.

t**4**

t*

m swept fly ocean Breezes *Monday, Aug. 30

JOHNNY BINES In r

“Brawn Derby”•j. Tuesday Aug. 31

“SA N D Y”

Wednesday. Sept. 1—

PRE-RELEASE

R e d G r a n g e i n

“ O n e M in u te

T

Thursday, Sept. 2—MARY PICKFOR© In

“Sparrows”

Saturday, Sept. 4—

RUDOLPH VALENTINO In

The Son of the Shiek” *

Announcement

1 T h e G r a y S h o p<•31'

711 F Street Beimar, N. J.

Friday, Sept. 3 ... 4

THE FLAMING FRONTIER’

' MONMOUTH COUNTY SUBRO-t . i . J - L J —f

ir k A 4 1 I I

2

H W - H - K

.10 ExcursionS«#m S U N D A Y trip

I Sept. 12, Oct. 10, Nev. 73

I fa wakuMiiV.Wr

j r ■ ■

377,415.62

36,985.943,723,000.00

10,865.13

4448^26^69

IS N O W OPENFor the Season

SPECIAL THROUGH TRAINEastern Standard Time

Leaves Long Branch 6.35 a. nt.

Receipts Cash Dec. 31, 1924 Note*, Payable Terti Imp. Notes Special Engineering1925 Bond Issue1926 Bond Issue

RECEIPTS AND DISBURSEMENTS Year Ending December 31, 1925

Capital

i j' ^m u t

..-v .ftJT '

37.865.658,705-34Sfu'

117,683.91. - . u m sf

Road Bfchcte .......................................Bridge Bonds ............................. .....Premium on Bonds ...................Boro of Bnglishtown Aid ..........State Aid Section 2 ............. ...........State Aid Route No- 4 ...................State Aid No. 65—1926 Bd. IssueState Aid No. 66 ................. ...........Boro Kcansburg Aid ............... .

r 410,046.87

xi* 595,000.00 1B2J300.00ooo.oo

' 22.831.92 6,07.08

32:728 M

25;Q0©0 1 5 ® 0

7,'082.24i* • •' . . .

1,616,826.55

. l 'I

^ r t Needlework Greeting Sards GiftS

Stopping at principal stations § between Long B ranch and g

DaytonRETURNING

Lv. Phils. (Broad St. StaMon)5,23 p. Mi. .li.'j 4-i

Making same stops as on going trip.

Tickets on sale two days pre ceding date ef Excursion

See Independence Hall; Mem­orial Hall, Academy of Fine Arts, Commercial and Uni­versity Museums* Fairm ount Park, Zoological Garden, and the many other objects of in­terest of “The Quaker City”.

1 1 Pennsylvania RailrsadThe Standard Railroad ef

the World

NOTICE TO BIDDERS

GATE’S OFFICE In the m atter of the Estate of

Louis Greenberg, deceased- Notice to creditors to present Claims against Estate.

Pursuant to the order of Joseph L Donahay, Surrogate of the County of Monmouth, made on the Second day of June, 1926, on the application of Fannie Greenberg and Samuel Greenberg,' Executors of the estate of Louts Greenberg, deceased, notice is hereby given ta the creditors of said deceased to exhibit to the subscribers, executors

§ | as aforesaid, their- debts and de­mands against the said estate, un­der oath, ■within six m onths from the date of the aforesaid order, o r they will be forever barred of their actions therefore against the said subscriber.Dated, Freehold, N. J., June 2, 1926.

FANNIE GREENBERG, 415 10th Ave., Belmar, N. J.

SAMUEL GREENBERG, 415 10th Ave., Belmar, N- J

+ 1

DisbursementsReserve Unfinished Road W o rk ......Special Engineering ........... ...........y.........1928 State Road Re-imbursemen* ftnd int. 1-924 Bond Issue .............................."...............1925 Bond Issue ........... ................................1926 Bond Issue ............... , ............... ;...........1922 Bonds ................... ................— -------- --Tem porary Imp. Notes ................................Cash Dec. 31st, 1925 ........................ „............Cash .Mwfctage A ccount

Capital1,794.66

10,906173?13,500.0040,04165

134.839J5256,155.39

■Z: -* m s .1,616^95.55

THE BICYCLE OF

SUPERIORITYFor real riding qualities this bicycle excels all others be­cause it is m anufactured w ith regard to smooth, flexible, run­ning equipment, and strong, sturdy frame w ork plus beau­ty of design. Every compon­ent part of these bicycles on sale here is made of tlie best materials obtainable.

J®S. C. STEWARD n m F St. Belmar

tATD E S T R O Y E R

F r e e y ou r prem ise* ot l e r u u , 4 » l r s c t l » ro d jM r®»U. Get Ceool Rut D* s t r a y c r . Q iiick e n d » h » « .

For Sale ByF r a n k E . M o y e r

DRUGGISTAve. and F St., Beltear

lice of the Borough Clerk. Plaits and specifications shall form part of the bid of each bidder. Tfoe

by the Mayor and Council of the Borough o f Belnrar, New Jersey, on Monday evening, September 13, 1926, at 8 P- M., at Council Cham- i)e,r. Borough Hall, N inth Avenue aud E street, Belmar, New Jersey, for the construction of a stone

satisfy the Mayor and Council of the Borough of Belmar as to their financial responsibility and th<> completeness of their* equipment.

The Mayor and Council of the Borough of Belmar reserve the right to reiect rvnv or all bids.

FRED V. THOMPSON, M. D.Borough Clerk,breakw ater and jetty on thc Atlan­

tic Ocean, in thc Borough of Bel- : mar, New Jersey. * , , , ' , , , . ,

Plans and specificstkms for said j T h e \o lu n te e r nook and Ladder stone breakw ater and jetty may be i company requested permission to inspected at the office of the Bov- j have a tag day, Saturday, September

i *• t > « ™ r l r r f c m "i B ; J a -w hich may be obtained at the of- FW VanNote.

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TSHERIFF'S SALE— By virtue of a

w rit of li. fa. to me directed, is­sued out of the Court of Chancery ol the State of N*w Jersey, will be, exposed to sale at public vendue O'!!. Monday, the 301 h Day of August,' 11)26, between the hours of 1-2 o’clook (at 1 o’clock, daylight sav­ing time), in the afterfioon of said day, at the Court House, in Ihe borough of F reehold, County fo. Monifiouth. New Jersey, to satisfy a decree of said Court amounting to approximately $5,650.00.

All that tract or parcel of land and promises hereinafter particu­larly described, situate, lying and being i« the Township of Shrew s­bury, in the County of Monmouth and' State of New Jersey.

Beginning at a point formed by ihe westerly line of Broad Street and the southerly line of Newman Springs Boad; running thenee (1) along the southerly line of New­man Springs Road one hundred Ihirty-six and fifty-four hundredths feet to an alley; thence (2) south­erly, along the easterly liHe of said alley fifty feet, more or less, to a point; thence (3) easterly, and par- stllel w ith Newman Springs Road one hundred-th irty-five and fifty- six hundredths feel to the w esterly side of Broad Street; thence (4) northerly, al<5ng the westerly line of Broad Street, fifty feet to the point or pltice of beginning.

Seized as the property of HL New­ton Spencer and TheOdhre J. La- brecque, t&ken, in exeoivtion at the suit of Edgar N. McCIess, and to be sold by

JOHN H. VAN MATER, Sheriff Da Died August 3, 1926 Quinn. Parsons & D or emu*..

Solicitors-

SH£h»*'F’S SALE— By virtue of a w rit of ti. fa. to me directed, is­sued »ut 'Ji the Coiu t oi Chancery

of the Slate of New Jersey, will be! ©posed to sale at public vendue, on Tuesday, the Seventh Day of Sep­tember, 1926, between tin; hours of 12 o’clock and 5 o’clock (at 2 o’clock daylight saving tim e), in the after uoon of said day, al the Land and Mortgage Agency Office, 701 Matti­son Avenue, in the City of Asbury Park, County of Monmouth, New Jersey, to satisfy a decree of said court amounting to approximately$10,mao.

All the following tract or parcel of land and premises hereinafter particularly described, situate, ly­ing and being in tbe Township of.i Wall in the County of Monmouth i and Stale of New Jersey- Begin-1 iiing at a point in the southwesterly f corner of lands owned by George) Bailey (1902); thence (1) easterly! along the northw esterly line of said Bailey’s lands one hundred and) fifty feet to the line uf lands of Da vid Hilliard; thence (2) in a north­erly direction along the westerly j line ®f HillianFs land, eighty feet to a staka for a corner; thence (3);

. in a westerly direction in a line parj aJlel w ith the first course herein, one hundred and fifty feet to the northerly edge of P ark Avenue; thence (4) in a southerly direction along the northerly edge of Parli Avenue eighty feet to the place of; beginning. Being a lot of land eighty feet front and rear and one..; hundred and fifty feet deep. Bound* #d- on the north by land of Davitfj HilWary, on the east by land of/ •George Bailey, on the south by Park-} ■Avenue', and on the west by laridj

James A. Longstreet. j■■VJ!Also all those certaip lots, tracts'; lli- liparcels of kind and premises,! Hereinafter particularly described, SHtMtfo*, lying and being in the Town j Shijf W Wall. in the County of Mon-| Jlk)ijttii%nd State ot New Jersey, and W£?ignWft‘d as Lot Namber One and Wese’PlB'Cd as follows: Being a build

,

•*Wsif;']<1ftaf(*d at West Brielle on thei IMAeitit !»dc*: of Agnes Avenue, and] bounded on the north by AgiYfes j JKtfiinuSe tttttv feet;- on the west by laiwTCJ-S^li^ifng to Emma if. H it i lia/d taisttrtineired and fifty feet; on the tend or James A. Longstreet 'Hfity’Sieot^'and on the east by jands of Mary-E.-Reynolds, *ne hun­dred and fifty feeft Said lot being!

rear and one I _.|i in depth, building lot, o rj

situ-jmd by«ww^i|^rest Briellg, j

in the To\fy]ST9PSW5Wfc aforesaid, known as IViict NunibejE*Fhree, and

, m e ^ t - a n Ave- Mbugnated as Ag- ; pnow n on a plan A. Longstree

as f(| stand!

me soutneriy line ot said

cowfte«iibf wjaaed liyJ ...A .*r.rm gs.ite^Shd w ri» 'to F ro rim e it- Edgerton; thenee (1 'i westerly . following tljffisouthf^’ly- line of saic jl Agnes Avenud tnfrty feet to a s takq-l fo r ;w,MMeMth<*4c(iji so irtherly; | at rigitr aogre1? ffr^aTtr Avenue line 1. one hundFejj j , an$ jfyjyj feet to a t stake; thenctV [* r easterly and p a r- jl allel ^with said-? Av^ujje line. thiii$y]I feet to the westerly corner of said,?

■ F tn r r n w • ■ftr~E(l(M,i'ltTH’K*"TWr "TffS rifie ' 5

being o nue nesof lots o’ mocr_fu!Bethe scmtherly line^of stud Agi:■». o tje no;

T O COAST ADVERTISER, BELMAR, NEW JERSEY FRJDAY, AUO, 1,926

S H E F F I E L D

F A R M Sis th e L a r g e s t P r o d u c e r a n d

D is tr ib u to r o f

C e r tifie d M ilkin A m e r ic a

KEAKS8UROATLANTIC

HHj HLANQS^.<^r o m » o n

|NAV£3!MK BEACH_ "FAIRHAVEN

r e d s a n k

fMONMOUTH BEACH

lU.LONG BRANCH

* lL O N C B R A N C H / w e s t e n d ,

lE L B eR O N .

W-ALLENHURST • ’ fO E A U ALLENHURST.

N. ASBURY PARK A S B U R Y P A R K * J

: e a n g r o v e

BRADLEY B E A C H 'NEPTUNE CtTY • ^ V O N BV THE SEA

W. BELMAR • f N . BELMAR fB E L M A R

/COM O KLSPWNO LAKE . / s m w c LAKE

f SEAGIRTIASOUAM

r e R tc L u c

Jt-yntt avo ia <Jta> fenlfciy SfceflWrf tnii aerrojroa

W E OWN and operate four Certified Farms, Purity Farm (42 miles from Asbury Park), one at Pompton Plains, N.J., an­other at Pawling, New York, and another at Hiddenhurst,

New York, These farms, models in every way, produce over four million quarts of certified milk annually.

• In addition to this we distribute the output of three other famous Certified Farms of national reputation.

For Asbury Park and the New Jersey coast communities from Keansburg to Brielle we provide a Certified Milk service unexcelled in any other section of the country.

From Purjty Farm (near Trenton) we run a line of fast trucks that bring tonight’s'milk, fresh and rich, to our local branches from which it is delivered to you before breakfast in the morning.

The methods employed at Purity Farm comply with every known advance in Certified Milk production. Even the bottles are new and are never used for Certified, Milk again. Surely in quality and economy of time, milk service here has reached its climax*

The physicians of this territory have at their command a Certified Milk service (365 days in the year) that affords every advantage a per­fect milk supply can offer, *

For emergency calls we die always ready to do everything possible . to meet the requirements of the mother or physician. The rapidly low­ering infant mortality rate is still too high. Good milk will play an im­portant role in saving the babies for lives of usefulness. Sheffield Farms will devote every ounce of its energy and every dollar of its resources to making good milk available.

Call either one of our branches and your service w ill begin at once

SHEFFIELD FARMS GO.(Division of the National Dairy Products Corporation)

AVON - BY-THE - SEA WEST ENDTele: Asbury Park 238 T e le : Long Branch 814

£ N o w /

JB _ M .... foflrthSu j Kaiid and fiv^’hnn'itt^Scihaf^.'ftqt,Strict' wieastfrW 'B jHfe L’ot :wiFinir on safdv^lln ..«/ [$$."?. *'"* Seized as ’ Uie-.'pro'perty o f tjd'&m ’ S. BrowM 'et. a) .- taken ''ill tx m ftlo ii i ■'<*>" ’Hi the sfijt'Vif NVnlnne'fiiiitdiff'J.aijd i ••’tioan' A'ssariaHWn\ 'bydV e a r t / i^ 'te , ' ' and SS'fl®: K!a..hV'!. !' • 1

K, tA X M A tfeft. Sheriff! Dated .Vnait'sf*9. 1926 i- "iiRichard W. Stout, Solicitor.

Mitu«ht «rrni»g tnMLVnW n g h t h o a r . T h e n r e d tiloud

.the. |• th e i v n i l j - n j i y

HwroldJBeUr

^right’s

j /*I Mi :

New Low Prices

SPECIAL SALESClark-Jewel Gas Ranges

on

$49.50

i. V

For Sale By

U. S. ROYALa n d

u s c oLess need now than ever before to shop around for “bargain" tires th a t you know nothing about. Come in a n d let us te ll you the New Low Prices o f good United States Tires to fit your car.

I$49.56

l a t e s t a n d b e s t s to ry ," A Son o f £ iis >F a th e r” . S ev era l hundred thousand fam- )ilies are doing th is within a w eek after )publication. R f oneof i hem copy )ut a i 'wjksellers. D A;:plct«>n A Comparsy P'»hluh'35 West S'.’tid Stmt. Ne-w York.

A---,,. J

--■» •?>».( ■:< :'•> , : Hi* ’ft ‘- r 'c j;t:

( ■>*■' i.’iifix L--i {•*•!••(>} frsrt

COAST TIRE EXCHANGE

L. A. N BSm -AN

U N I T E D S T A T E S T I R E S A R E G O O D T I R E S

This new irange is very good looking; it is made with the best material and workmanship. The white enameled doors make the range very handsome in ap­pearance and besides their smooth surface is very easy to clean.The range is regularly equipped with porcelain enam­eled splashers, porcelain enameled broiling pan and burner tray, aluminized oven linings. _ If 1Giant burner, simmering burner, and three single burners o h cooking top, large loop burner in oven.Top burner lighter.Baking o v e n ....................... .Broiling o v e n .............................T o p ................................................Elevated shelf ........................

Outside measurement withoutshfelf ....................... ........................

Outside measurement with shelf —Agent for—

LEONARD and FRIGIDA1RE Electric Refrigerators

William Hoersch

16 y2 18% 12i m m /2 9%2oy4 19% 3120 6 46

40 2748 27 # #

1208 “F” Street?H 3N B 7*» WFMIaR

Belmar, N. J•TROLLEY PASSES BOOR-

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FRIDAY, AUG. 27, 1926 THE COAST ADVERTISER. BELMAR, NEW JERSEY

. i1 *

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$ D A Y S O N L Y $Our First Dollar Sale in our new Quarters Will be the talk of Belmar and Vicinity

Starting$

“ ” jj£ SS A T U R D A Y . 1 1 1 1 .

VISIT OUR STORE—BARBAINS GALORE MANY ITEMS IN UNLIMITED NUMBERS (No Mail or Prone Orders Filled)

BATHING SUITS1 00% Pure W ool—-For Boys and Girls

A ll Colors $ 1 ,0 0

RUBBER BATHING SHOESW ell Known J^rand inRed, Gi^en. Blue, Gray and Black 2 for $ 1 .0 0

BEACH CAPESExcellent Quality

All Colors, AH Sizes $ 1 .0 0

LADIES' SHADOWPROOF SILK SLIPSV ery fine quality Silk in W hite. Flesh, H eneydew , Green

Blue, Orchid, Grey, N avy and Black.Sizes 36 to 44 For $ 1.0 0

LADIES’ HOOVER APRONSGenuine Broadcloth— W hite only.

Sizes 36 to 44 For $ 1 ,0 0

MOHAWK BED SHEETSSize 72x90

CHILDREN’S SWEATERS. Ideal for School Wear, with or without Collar

Guaranteed AH W ool ' $ 1 ,0 0

Saturday Only $ 1 .0 0

MEN’S SHIRTSExcellent quality Imported Broadcloth, guaranteed fu!4-

cut. White, Tan, Blue and Gray.Sizes 1 V / z tq.J.7 $ 1 / 0 0

Sizes 8 to 15

SOYS’ BLOUSESSports and Collar attached

3 fo r $ 1 ,

Sizes 7 to 1 0

BOYS’ GOLF SOCKS

Plain or Fancy2 for $ 1 ,0 0

CHILDREN’S SOCKSG ood Assortm ent of Styles 5 for $ 1.0 0

CHILDREN’S UNION SUITSG ood Quality. Sizes 2 to 1 2 3 for $ 1 .0 0

GIRLS’ DRESSESPrints, V oiles and Charnbrays

With or without Bloomers. Sizes 2 to 1 4 $ 1 .0 0

INFANTS’ DRESSES•2 for $ 1 0 0 Neatly Made

CHILDREN’S FELT SLIPPERS

2 fo r $ 1 .0 0All Shades

LADIES’ HAND BAGS$ 1 , 0 0

V ery Attractive Assort­ment. Many Styles and

Colors.

LADIES’ TEA APRONS4 for $ 1 .0 0

Very Fine Quality

INFANTS’ SWEATERS$ 1 . 0 0

Pratty Selection

CHILDREN’S SUPS and GOWNS2 fo r $ 1 , 0 0Sizes 2 to 8

LADIES’ BLOUSES 2 ^ $ 1 .0 0

Special Values up to$1 .50

COLLAR AND CUFF SETS

4 for $ 1 . 0 0Good Looking...Styles

MOHAWK PILLOW CASESSize 45x36

S«turday Only

FANCY TURKISH TOWELSVery Special for $ 1 .0 0

HOUSE DRESSESOdd lot of attractive Frocks made of good materials amd

styles.Regular and Extra Sizes $ 1.0 0

LADIES’ PURE THREAD SILK HOSE

In all wanted Shades. Full Fashioned Foot. Sizes 8 J/2 to 10 $ 1 .0 0

SANITARY NAPKINSWell Known Brand 3 Boxes for $ 1 ,0 0

For Saturday Only

B a t h in g S u it sAll 100% Pure Wool Suits for Men and W om en

All Colors. All Sizes For $1.98-----------------------------------------------• —----------------------------- -----

For Saturday Only

y

MEN’S UNION SUITSG ood Quality English Broadcloth

Sizes 34 to 46 $1.06MEN'S PAJAMAS

V ery good quality in W hite, Tan. Blue and Lavender Size6 A , B, C and D $ 1 Q0

MEN'S GOLF HOSESnappy Styles to suit all

Sizes 9 Zi to 1 2 $1.00MEN’S OVERALLS

Men’s Bib Overalls of H eavy Deniija; Blue, Khaki, W hite and Hickory Stripe.

Sizes 36 to 44 $1.00

MEN’S SHIRTS aud DRAWERS2 r $1.00

A Few Qualities. AH Style*.

LINGERIESplendid Assortment of Dainty New Styles in Slips, Chemises, Gowns $1.00

STEP-INS and BLOOMERS i.Fine Quality Materials and Prettily Trimmed.

Also 3 Pieces for $ 1 ,Q 0 A lso 2 Pieces for $1,00

• ■■■ ....... ................................... 1— — — — — ---------------------------

Former Values up to $5.00 F°r$1.9fiW E GIVE S. and II. G R EEN STAM PS W ITH EV ER Y PU R C H A SE EVERYBODY SHOPS AT

CRETONNE5 Yds. for $ 1 . 0 0

Plenty of Patterns

LADIES’ VESTS5 ^ $ 1 ,0 0

In Fine Cotton Bodice or Tailored Tops4-GARTER

CQRSOLETTESilk Stripe, Long M odel

$ 1 . 0 0

BRASSIERES and BANDEAUS2 for $ 1,0 0

Side and Back Hook

TURKISH TOWELS4 ™ $ 1 . 0 0

Large Size, W hite (or Colored Borders

LADIES’ PAJAMASM ade of G ood Quality

Cloth$ 1 . 0 0

DRESS SGARFS$ 1 0 0

Made of G ood Quality G oods, V ery Pretty

•Styles' y

LADIES’HQS

4 forjn.OOy, AllA^olors

Sizes iP ’/ j to JO

P E A R L M A N ’S\

W H E R E YOU PAY LESS AND GET MORE

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917 F STREET, Between 9th and 10th Avenues, BELMAR, N. J,♦»♦<«"> H"! » W " H « I I I t » ♦ * ♦ + + » ♦ + ♦ , t j ; ;..r i *

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W LTHE COAST ADVERTISER. BELMAR, N. J.

Pom

‘ H AT goes on behind the locked doors of the ju ry room? How do tw elve men, sitting in judgm ent of evidence on which rests the fa te of a hum an being, d e p o r t them selves ? L aw yers and judges

can’t tell you because they are barred from ju ry service. No one is supposed to know but the ju ro rs them selves. B u t • inform ation leaks out, and in m any cases eavesdroppers have over­heard the en tire proceedings in sup­posedly sealed ju ry rooms.

Recently a ju ry w as deciding the fa te of a m urderer. The case had a t­trac ted national a ttention . All through the night and on Into the morning the Jury rem ained out. W hen the twelve men finally filed out of the stuffy/room w ith the ir verdict they w ere amazed fo see morning new spapers, prin ted several hours earlier, carry ing news of the verdict they w ere about to an­nounce. I t , w as “G uilty,” and the new spapers said “G uilty.” The only p a rt of the proceedings the papers lacked was the penalty.

Investigation la te r revealed the method by which the new spapers thus had “scooped” th e ju ry itself. A re­porter, using a physician's stethoscope applied to a pipe connecting w ith a stfeam rad ia to r in the ju ry room, had te e n able to overhear practically ev­ery th ing said in the room above. De­cision as to the guilt of the defend­an t had been arrived a t by the ju ry Just in time to allow the reporter to inform his paper before the presses s ta rted rolling for the final edition. In th ree more hours the ju ry had fixed the penalty, bu t the big news already V as out.

The secrecy th a t eavejops the de­bates held w ithin the frequently hid­eous, dirty, smoky ju ry room has a fascination for alm ost any im agina­tion, says the New York Times. Ju s t w hat brought the decision in such a case? W hat w ere the fac ts th a t tipped the scales in favor of a defend­an t whom all the world thought guilty? Even judges them selves a re curious about the workings of the ju ry ’s minds —for it is of many minds.

“I ’d like to hear those fellows de­liberate ,” once said a judge, who had charged countless juries.

“You can, your honor,” spoke up a court a ttendant. “T here 's a crack in the wall where we often listen to ’em. I ’ll take you there.”

Som ew hat incredulous, the judge fol­lowed h is guide. The crevice was found. H e placed his ear to it.

Loud voices issued forth. “W hat makes you believe tha t?" “I t ’s not so !” “ lo u .” “I—” “Who said so?” “The judged’ “Well, w hat does he know about 'i t th e old fossil?”

“I think I haye heard enough,” said his honor, rem oving his ea r from the opening—which, \>.v the way, was sealed up soon

On how slim a tllread the life of a m an hangs only thoselknow who have sa t around the tabljf in the sealed chamber. The sligh test circum stance may save a man jto in or condemn him to p rison ; yes, and even the chair. The w eight of Another hum an being’s

existence rests heavily on the shoul­ders of those who have it in the ir power to m ake or break it. They grasp a t any favoring evidence.

Not long ago, In a case tried in the Crim inal court of New York, some men w ere accused of having throw n a w aiter out of a hotel window. The strongest w itness fo r the plaintiff w as a woman who testified th a t she had seen the ac t committed from h e r room window a t a distance of about 100 feet. The ju ry had been out for hours. They seemed hopelessly deadlocked.

H alf of the men were unw illing to believe th a t the woman could have seen so fa r ; the rem ainder w ere dis­posed to accept her testim ony. The d inner hour came and the controver­sy was tem porarily brought to an end. W hen the court a ttendan ts saw the guarded jurym en re tu rn from their evening meal they sighed, expecting an all-night session.

The twelve re tu rned to the ju ry room. The night was hot and sultry. Like caged anim als they paced back and forth, snarling and snapping, for they w anted to get home. One man stepped to the open window for a b rea th of air. B right lights were sh in­ing in a p rin ting establishm ent more than two blocks away. E very move­m ent o f the typesetters was plainly visible. “Here, you fellows, look t” H is companions crowded around him. in less than h a lf an hour the ju ry was of one mind.< Any one fam iliar w ith ju ries and Jury* duty will tell you' tha t, w ith ra re exceptions, the men serving in crim inal-cases a re trem endously con­scious of th e ir responsibility. “There is a genuine effort to be fa ir,” to quote a man who has served in both crim ­inal and civil cases. “The ju ro r in a Crim inal court feels the gravity of th e situation . Not so, however, the one in a civil court. In the civil case his hum an qualities en te r into play— he is prons to be swayed by prejudice.

R egarding the seriousness w ith which the ju ro r takes his responsibil­ity w hen he is called on to judge be­tw een righ t and wrong, the well-known exam ple can be cited of a dozen who went out to determ ine the guilt or innocence of a youth accused of grand larceny. They began to ta lk tne m at­te r over before the guard had fairly closed and locked the door. They weighed w hat the law yers Had said, they* spoke of the cast in the defend­an t’s eye, they removed the ir coats and, as th e ir conversation became more heated, th e ir collars. They puffed* g rea t clouds of blue smoke into the dense atm osphere.

A fter four hours they w ere still talking. “L et’s take a vote,” a t last spoke up a self-constituted leader. No one had thought of th a t before— they w ere all novices a t crim inal ju ry duty. E very m other’s son of them w rote “guilty” on the page th a t he tore from his note book !

Gentlem en of the ju ry fall into ce r­tain d istinct types. The most am us­ing of them is the one who, in the vernacular of the courtroom , is called the “peewee.” He is a very small peYsnrt^fU home, and In h is place of business no''STKNiJstens to him. I t Is when he gets insif%»4£f a ju ry room th a t he has his innings

“I w as the guy th a t dtaiided th a t

case,” he tells his w ife when he goes home. “You should have heard me ta lk It over w ith the Judge afterw ard . I said to him . . . and he agreed w ith me.”

Some peewees even bring the ir wives to the courthouse, so th a t those ladies can behold them as they stride m ajestically into the box w ith the a ir of a to reador who Is about to confront the bull.

Then there Is the “Jury law yer,” the m an from the business world, who, in h is college days, took a course in law. H e rem em bers ju s t enough of Black- stone to be convinced th a t he knows more of the legal aspect of the tria l than the lawyers, and sets fo rth his knowledge in a lengthy oration.

Many a tim e it is the member with a prejudice who form s the stum bling block in the way of a peaceful se ttle ­m ent ; perhaps his prejudice is re ­ligious, perhaps racial.

L ast, but not least, th e re is the na tu ra lly stubborn m an—the bugbear of every jury.

In civil su its one of the difficult problem s th a t confront ju ro rs Is the aw arding of ju s t com pensation in per­sonal in ju ry cases. H ere prejudices of all kinds enter. Many are the tricks the gentlem en of the ju ry p la j on one ano ther in the se ttling of these disputes. On one occasion a woman sued a trucking company. H er in ju ry w as slight, and w as largely due to her own carelessness, most of the ju ry felt. Eleven voted to give her $500, the tw elfth held out for $1,000. “L et’s compromise,” spoke a man having initiative. “Every one of u s will w rite down the sum we think should be given her. W e’ll total the figures and divide by twelve.” They agreed. Much to the surprise of the tw elfth man the answ er was $500. “I don’t believe it has occurred to him th a t I pu t down zero,” the speaker la te r w hispered to his companions.

Ju s tice and fa ir play are, on the whole, the rule of the game, says a business man who has served on seven juries. “Several tim es I have heard it discussed how a large verdict could be rendered w ith the probable chance th a t the court would perm it it to stand and not set it aside. A well man who depends on his health and streng th to m ake his living fo r him self and family, which is th e position of nine ou t of ten jurors, cannot m easure in his own mind the am ount of dam ages th a t would com pensate for th e loss of such health.

A man was run into by a motor ca r th a t w as driven w ithout proper regard fo r the righ ts of pedestrians. H e w as in jured so th a t he could not do any hard labor th a t required him to be o:i his feet. The evidence seemed conclusive as to the in jury. H e was a naturalized citizen. One of his own_ race w as on the jury . The forem an asked th is ju ro r w hat he thought w as fa ir under the circum ­stances, and the ju ro r answ ered : “His law yer will w ant a t least $2,500; It has probably cost the man about $2,- 000 thus fa r for the loss of tim e and for expenses. I f he had $10,000 in cash, he could buy a little business on which he and h is w ife could support themselves. So I should say a verdict of $14,500 would be fa ir.” The ju ry aw arded him $15,000.

Eugenie Used Canal FirstThe Em press Eugenie of F rance

w as one of the first passengers taken through the Suez canal when it w as officially opened to traffic in 1869. She w as aboard the first vessel passed through. D israeli’s purchase of the shares in the Suez canal w hich had been held by the khedive of Egypt, on November 25, 1875, w as considered his boldest and tim eliest stroke. By this iuove G reat B rita in ’s position In

seatlyEgypt and the N ear E ast was strengthened. Not only was F curbed bu t the B ritish n a t io n ^ ’e- celved an investm ent th a t has n l r e than quadrupled in capital v a * e during the years th a t have elapsed.’

H um or D uring S trikeSigns on some ot the omnibuses1

m anned by volunteers during the Lon­don strike took on a humorous tone. Said o n e : “A stone In the hand is w orth two in the bus." On an omni­bus w ith all Its glass gone was the

rem ark : “I have no pane now, dear m other.” One carried th is w arn ing : “The driver of th is bus is a Guy’s hospital student. The conductor Is a Guy’s hospital student. The police­man is a Guy’s hospital student. Any one who throw s a brick will be a G uy's hospital pa tien t.”

Too BusyA rchie—Do you th ink you could

learn to love me?Alice— N o; I have as much as I can

do to learn tennis and bridge.

SEARCH OF FOURTEEN YEARS BRINGS GOLD

Prospector Stakes Out the Stanislaus River Bed.

O akland, Calif.—Lee Silver and B ert W arrington hold the secret. Lee Is a hard-bitten prospector who w an­dered around 14 years before he could get anyone to listen to his story. Oid legends clustered about him. The ta le of the Mexicans’ mine w as ascribed to him. Chinese cooks in the gold country .w ho had w alked w ith B ret H arte and fed M ark Tw ain shook their ancient heads in honorable dis­dain.

B ert W arrington of th is city took a chance. Craftily, cannily, he and Silver m ade th e ir survey. Now the whole region of B righ tm an’s flats bristles w ith their claim stakes. They believe there is gold in the S tan is­laus river gravel. They have posted their notices and filed th e ir papers. Even now the shafts are being sunk tha t will tell them if th e ir dream s a re to come true.

How He Discovered It.Silver says it all s ta rted 14 years

ago. H e was w andering arom id in the H igh S ierra of Tuolum ne county when there came a call fo r help from his b rother in San Jose. Silver and his p artn er sta rted out im m ediately.

Down the S tanislaus river they went, along the tra il th a t leads over Sonora pass, to B rightm an’s flats, 50 miles east of Sonora. H ere they camped for the night. W hile the partner was saddling the pack mules iu the m orning Silver, in true pros­pector fashion, panned a little gravel in the river bed. Tiny and scattered but unm istakable w as the gleam of gold. Silver’s g rea t dream w as born.

He pushed on to San Jose, helped h is’ b rother and sta rted back for the gold country. To his dismay, there was none to believe him. He knew that gold could be w rested from th a t river bed, but the experts smiled.

Engineer Takes a Chance.W arrington, a civil engineer with

some knowledge of mining, finally de­cided to risk it. Painfully, alm ost inch by inch, they w ent over the te r r i­tory, digging and panning. They pros­pected the side stream s, Eagle creek, Cow creek, N iagara creek, and others, but found no gold. I t existed only in the m ain valley of the Stanislaus. A fter months of labor, they filed their claims in Sonora.

G raybeards of the gold country link th e ir venture w ith the legend of the M exicans’ mine. The story comes down from the days when the jum ping frog of C alaveras was still a gay young blade and had never tasted buckshot In his life.

Two lowly M exican sheep herders w andered into Sonora one morning w ith nuggets valued a t $15,000. Peo­ple tried to vain to solve the m ystery of where they had discovered them.

French Women Sail Boat 1,700 Miles

Paris.—Two noted French arche- ologlsts, both women, have ju s t pub­lished a book on a rem arkable voyage they have made. Alone on board a little 24-foot sailing boat, the Per- lette, of the sam e type as th a t in which the ir fellow-countryman, Alain Gerbault, crossed the A tlantic, M ar­tha Ouie and Herm lne de Soussure have covered some 1,700 miles in the Aegean sea.

The two women sta rted from P i­raeus in Greece, and visited Asia Minor, doing all the w ork themselves, in port as on the high seas.

Mile. Ouie has ju s t obtained her de­gree a t the Sorbonne and is well known for her excavation work in Crete, where she has discovered the ancient city of Mallla, which had dis­appeared. H er comrade, Mile. De Soussure, is also a noted archeologist, who has worked in Greece.

Postmaster General Out to “Teach” Addressing

W ashington.—Lack of s tree t and number addresses on le tte rs has be­come such a drag on the postal serv­ice th a t A ssistant Postm aster General B artle tt has begun a general cam­paign to educate the business public In the necessity of giving complete addresses on all letters. Postm asters have been requested to take up the subject with advertisers in their cities w ith a view to having a com­plete address appear in all advertise­m ents in new spapers and magazines.

> o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o < x > I $200 in Will for Cat; v Relatives Get RestX New York.—“I give and be-V queath unto the New York a W omen’s League for Animals X $200 for the sole purpose of X tak ing care of my cat, Bunny,”A read a provision in the will filed X for probate in the Surrogate’s X court of Miss Cecelia Romain a Stinson, who died in Belleaire,$ L. I.0 Miss Stinson, whose esta te is 0 estim ated to be w orth more than Q $1 1 ,000, made bequests to the Q American Society fo r the Pre- Q vention of Cruelty to Animals,0 the Bide-A-Wee Home for Poor0 C ats and Animals, and an addi­

tional legacy of $500 fo r the Women’s League for Animals.

Caroline V irginia Moyle, “daughter of my dear friend Seth Moyle,” receives $1,000. The residue is divided among

V relatives.0 0 ► o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o < >

T o C u s to m e r s o f

G e n e r a l M o to r s

General Motors is unwilling to leave to chance anything involving your satisfaction with your purchase of a General Motors car.

This is why more than seven years ago the General Motors Acceptance Corporation was organized. It assures customers of General Motors who prefer to purchase out of income a sound credit service at low cost.

In the General Motors line there is a "car for every purse and purpose,” and the GMAC Plan can be comfort­ably fitted to the individual circum­stances of buyers of assured income.

The GMAC Plan is offered through General Motors dealers exclusively. Ask your nearest dealer to explain its advantages.

GENERAL M OTORS AC CEPTANC E CORPORATIONoperating the G M AC P lan for the purchase of

CHEVROLET - PONTIAC ' OLDSMOBILE

OAKLAND ' BUICK ' CADILLAC

FRIGIDAIRE » DELCO-LIGHT

i Die 3. O. C.. Hi. i J

krC yov being bored to death?TV/TOSQUITO torture is quickly ended if you keep 1YJL a can of Flit handy. Flit spray clears your home in a few minutes of dis­ease-bearing flies and mosquitoes. It is clean, safe and easy to use.

K il ls A ll H o u s e h o ld I n s e c t s

Flit spray-also destroys bed bugs, roaches and ants. I t searches out the cracks and crevices where they hide and breed, and destroys insects and their eggs. Spray Flit on your garments. Flit kills moths and their larvae which eat holes. Extensive tests showed that Flit spray did not stain the most delicate fabrics. ,Flit is the result of exhaustive research by expert entomol­ogists and chemists. I t is harmless to mankind. Flit has replaced the old methods because it kills all the insects—and does it quickly.Get a Flit can and sprayer today. For sale everywhere.'

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DESTROYS Flies Mosquitoes Moths Ants Bed Bi’gs Roaches " T h e y e llo w ca n w ith the

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? M E N ?You have no reasons for

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Drug Stores and Barber Shops. Correspondence given personal

attention.W. H. FORST, Manufacturer

SCOTTDALE, PA.

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That Are Sw eeping the Country

“Kentucky Lullaby” I "Out of My Dreams”

“Don’t Forget the Pal You Left at Home”

( A l i H a v e U h e le le A c c o m p a n im e n t )

G et ’em fro m your MusicJDeal- er or d ir e c t from Publisher.

F orster Music Pub., Inc.2 1 8 S . W a b a s h A v e . , C h i c a g o

previously, bu t none of them had been proved.

N orth D anville residents, on the o ther hand, pointed to m illions of black frogs as large as a m an’s finger­nail hopping about B ryan t avenue. Small boys w ith cans and buckets col­lected them by the thousands. In some cases the frogs w ere shoveled from porches and w alks. At six o’clock in the evening there were no frogs in sight. Following a tropical deluge a t th a t hour, lasting a ha lf hour, the s tree ts and yards of th a t section of the city w ere thick w ith them . One theory w as th a t the tiny frogs w ere brought out of hiding places by tlie heavy rain, but. th is w as held unlikely by the ab­sence of trees on the stree t.—W ash­ington Post.

b runette ladies of intense personality , and alw ays suffering from a slight cold, would travel from town to town and collect th e ir victim s into halls, and goose-pimple them w ith “Rum ’s M aniac,” “Curfew Shall Not Ring To­night,” and “The Fall of the Pem ber­ton Mill.” I can th ink of only one form of en terta inm ent more d evasta t­ing than the serious recita tion given by the lady professional who bites her words, and th a t is the hum orous or laugli-provoking selection attem pted by the sam e type of perform er.— George Ade, in H ea rs t’s In ternational Cosmopolitan.

Bed by 111 Health

Because of h is w ife’s frequen t 111 lealth, Mr. J. F. Gage w as obliged to

do the w ashing a«<3' c o o * i n g *or

S m M rs- Gage was con-flne<1 to ^er be<1>be f t * ’** j | | § b r o u g h t her the

H I « | | p t$? new spaper to read.* ■*;»*> j f Among th e adver-* ' tisem en ts she no-

ttced a le tte r from r? % ; ano ther sick woman

: : -■ -Ms- gj]e had received from L ydia E . P in k h am ’s Vegetable Compound.

“ I ’ll try It,” she decided.H er husband brought home a bottle

an d only a few days a f te r she had be­gun to take i t she fe lt well enough to be up around th e house. G radually iher general health im proved un til she lis now able to do h e r own work.

In a le tte r w hich Mrs. Gage recently w rote, she said, “ I have tak en tw elve Ihottles and feel like a new woman.” She has told m any women about Lydia E. P inkham ’s Vegetable Compound and one of h e r friends is now tak ing it. H er address is Mrs. J . F . Gage, R oute 5, |Brownwood, Texas.

L ydia E. P inkham ’s Vegetable Com­pound has been taken by women for m ore th an h a lf a cen tury w ith very satisfactory resu lts .

Cuticura Soap for the Complexion.Nothing better than C uticura Soap daily and O intm ent now and then as. nv-eded to make the complexion clear, scalp clean and hands soft and white. Add to this the fascinating , frag ran t C uticura Talcum, and you have the C uticura Toilet T rio.—A dvertisem ent.

Skates for PoliceThe num ber of men on German po­

lice forces is lim ited by tbe tre a ty of Versailles. To enable th e reduced corps to cover the ir te rrito ry expe­ditiously D resden patrolm en get around on ro ller skates. Classes are held twice a week under expert in­structors. In addition to speed on the skates the men practice ta rge t shooting while on the rollers.

H e H ad the “D openFrom a school boy’s essay on the

race horse:“T he race horse is a noble anim al

used very cruel by gentlem en. Races are very bad places. None but wicked people know anything about races. Tlie la s t derby was won by Mr. Mor- riss’ Miinna, a beautiful bay colt by Phalaris, rising four. The odds w as9 to 1 against hijn, and he won 8 lengths. Good old S teve!”—I.ondoo Daily Express.

P erfec t PoiseA young man and a girl emerged

from the m arriage license office.“They have taken a very im portant

step .” suggested a benevolent by­stander.

The pair paused.“Doubtless they realize th a t,” said

another bystander. “W atch them .”The girl fixed her face while the

young man lit a c igarette.—Louisville C ourier-Journal.

Clear Your Skin With ^

CuticuraS o a p t o C l e a n s e /

O i n t m e n t t o R e a lA b so lu te ly N o th in g B e t te r

Bromine From OceanA m erican chem ists plan to get bro­

mine, which is indispensable in medi­cine and many a r ts ' and industries, in unlim ited quan tities from the ocean in the fu ture. About 1,800 gallons of sea w ater m ust be trea ted for every pound of brom ine recovered.

T h ey H a d to W alk“W hat’s become of the H ikers’

club?”“Oh, it disbanded. I t w as getting

too hard to persuade passing m otor­is ts to pick us up and give us a lif t .”

f Copyright, W. N. U.)

M isunderstoodAudrey was visiting her g rand fa ther

while the veterinary w as there a t ­tending to one of tlie horses, which had swallowed a sliver off a tooth. Audrey “listened in” on all th e medi­cal instructions and when she got home she excla im ed :

‘‘Oh m other, one of g randpa’s horses has swallowed its liver.”

MICKIE, THE PRINTER'S DEVIL S ta m p Sells for $500An erro r in the A rgentine stam p of

the 1S99 issue resulted in one of the specim ens being sold a t auction in London the o ther day for $500.

" t h e S R A S S o u - t h e o t h e r . S i d e

o p * h e F e u e e a l w a n s l o o k s

6 R E E U E R , " A U D S T R A W Q E S T O R E S

LOOK. M O R E E U T I C I U G T W A U O U R

OVUM, B U T A F T E R A U , , H - I S T H E

G tO O O S T H A T O W E B U V S T H A T

C O U k lY , W O T D A Z iU W G f SMOVU

VUIUDONUS W O R W IFVY S T O R E

F I X T U R E S . _______

SW GOLLY, \ SIT HERE AT THE ^OLD PESK MAJJY A WICfMT AFTER “THE ^

PAPER tS OUT AMD UJOMDER WHAT VUILL SECOKAE OF “THIS T&WW \p PEOPLE DOUT QUIT BUVIU(5- OUT OP 7DWU * WE TALK ABOUT BRIMGflUCc IU FACTORIES TO PRAVJ

OUTSlOE MOW EM TO THE 'ToVJU,AUD ~THEU VJE TAKE LOTS’ OP THE MOWtH WE HAVE <JOT WERE, AUD

S p e u d r r awav f r o m h o m e , w h e r e <T Ne v e r v jil l

£ O M E ©A<2K

G ospel P roph etIsaiah is known as th e g rea t Gospel

P rophet, sin^e he is spoken of so often In the gospels and because m any of h is prophesies are recorded as fu l­filled in these books of the Bible. B obbed Seals’ Hair

Some fu r seals in Bering sea got the ir h a ir bobbed under a dictum is­sued by tbe U nited S tates bureau of fisheries. TRe seals on th e Pribilof islands w ere shorn of tbe thick hair or mane in order to note th e increase, if any, nex t year. Only a certain num ber of three-year-old m ales were subjected to the trim . Regulation liv­ery barn clippers w ere used to shear the seals.

Oh, Joy!“You look rad ian t, old man. S ta r t­

ing off on your vacation, I suppose.” “N o; ju s t learned th a t the w ife’s

re la tives a ren ’t coming here on the irs.” —Boston T ranscrip t.

Fair W arning“Am d a t a sixty-dollar su it?”“It a m ; an ’ de man w hat steals It

gets sixty days.”Ireland P lants Fish

Ireland is im porting fish eggs from the N orth American continent, p rin ­cipally Canada, and p lan ting them in Irish w aters w ith good results. Japan is doing likewise and has recently taken 50,000 speckled trou t eggs from Vancouver, B ritish ‘Columbia, to place in O riental w aters.

The death penalty w as prescribed for alm ost 300 crim es in E igh teen th century England. OUR. TOUJW MOTTO SHOULD

BE -tUAT OF t u e “ “THREE MU SKBTE ET2.S "=■ REMEM8ERirr

"ALU FOR- OWE AUP dU E FOR- A LL. "

UKEUJiSE, OW5ERIUQ FROAA A FLOWERV, PE SC R tPnve CATALOG POESUT PRODUCE AUN BETTER GOODS THAU '“/OUR. PR.IEUDB i l l h a u d S o u t w i t h o u t a u u e o fe U L O S tS T N S A D J E & T W E S s - 0 1 L L P R O B A B L Y

S E L L M O O 0 E T T E R - G O O D S ', V JIT U T H E

P R I V I L E G E o p E X A W lU tW < * B E F O R E BUWIU<t .

H E D E L I V E R S IM M E D IA T E L Y A U D W A tT T

F O R H IS M O U E M I F N O U P R E F E R T O PA Yl a t e r , a u d f h r v o f e-iu’s p r o f i t <3 o e s

TO PAY t a k e s t o e d u c a t e VOUR.K.IDS A U P RDW YOOR -TOUJW *

Sure Relief1 1 FORI INDIGESTIONJi<7/ ?kc£HTS_J /

6 B e l l - a n s H o t w a t e r S u r e R e l ie f

B E S T fo r th e /Complexion

G olf Courses for W om enGolf courses for women only a re

common in England and Scotland. Fem inist desire for complete independ­ence is the cause for the separa tist movement.

O pen-A ir ClassesSecluded corners in parks, even

abandoned churchyards, as well as playgrounds and o ther available open spaces, were utilized th is sum m er for the 137 open-air classes of the Lon­don County council. ’

FOR INDIGESTION25<t and 75$ Pkgs.Sold Everywhere

W estern N ew spaper U nion

T h ey W ere ScantyNewlywed—My w ife is going to

P aris for her gowns.Cynic—I though t she had left them

som ew here!—London Answers.

P A R K E R ’S H A I R B A L S A M

‘Removes Dandruff-Stops Hair Falling R e s to re s C o lo r a n d

B e a u ty to G ra y a n d F a d e d Hair)c*nd $1.00 at Druggists.I Hiscox Chem. Wks..Patchogue.N.Y.

THE FEATHERHEADS Big-hearted Felix

H IN D E R C O R N S. ToT- ToT '■SAioTHlMG

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< He AM AWRJL BOlHEf?,IM AFRAID A dm onition

“Mother, H aro ld ’s been h itting my head w ith his sla te .”

“Son, don’t knock your own sister.”

In one m in u te y o u r m isery from co rns la ended. T h a t’s w h a t Dr. Scholl’s Zino- p a d s do sa fely b y rem oving th e causo— p ressin g or rubb ing of shoes. You risk no infection from am a teu r cu ttin g .n o danger from “ drops” (acid ). Z ino-pads a re th in , m edicated , an tisep tic , p ro tec tive , h ea l­ing . G et a box a t y ou r d ru g g is t’s or sho« d ea ler’s to d a y —35c.to t Free Sample write The Scholl Mfg. Co., Chicaf*

563 A cres— F o r sale, 563 acres v irg in tim ber, m in e ra l a n d ' fa rn iin g land or p a r t of it. $20 acre, fee sim ple. JO H N S IH E L N IK , R oute 3, Nauvoo. Ala., W alk e r County.

F requen tlyBella—H ave you ever met the only

man you could be happy w ith?D ella—Oh, lots of them !

L A D IE S : AVI! PAY S I5.(Ml P E R H Ito g ild g ree tin g cards. F ree p a rtic u la rs for ad d ressed envelopes. Y orkville C ard D ept., 3, 864 L ex ing ton Ave., New York.

A T rem endous S um m er H it— T he Sun VisorCap. I sh ip by m ail anyw here. Send 25c coin and cap size. R. X,. T h u rber, F a irlee , Vt.

D Z S c h o lfs' Z i n o - p a d s

Put one on—the pain is gone

FOR OVER 200 YEARS

A re tired bunko man Shys th a t love is not the only thing th a t needs the services of an expert oculist.

Cupid is a celebrated m atchm aker bu t som etimes he isn 't in a hurry.

Skunks make good mouse hunters. W . N . U., N E W Y O R K , N O . 3 5 - 1 9 2 6 .

haarlem oil has been a world­wide rem edy for kidney, liver and b ladder disorders, rheum atism , lum bago and uric acid conditions.

/ >H THANK Yoo SQ M0 CH!MV SlSfeRS HOME IS 0*1 LY

A&60T A MUE FOOM HERE AND X WANT To ToSS A

v KISS OOT TH£ VJIMDOW \ T o HER PEKINESE I

POPPY

ITS AW PLY GOOD OF VOU

HAARLEM OIL Camp Fire Qirls J S T H E R E anything m ore refreshing

after a h ike in the woods than a cup o f M onarch Cocoa? I t makes “ a feast o f nectared sw eets” possible at the camp fire. P ure, wholesom e, rich , •atisfying, delicious.

correct internal troubles, stimulate vital organs. Three sizes. All druggists. Insist on the original genuine Gold Medal.

RED,ROUGH SKIN■ * is ugly and annoying—make your

skin soft, white, lovely, by using

ResinolMONARCH

Q ualityfor ToVearsVroduct■mcludini

Never Sold Through Chain Stores.REID , M U R D O C H &. CO.

Chicago B oston * P ittsburgh « N ew York

W estern N ew spaper Union

THE COAST ADVERTISER, BEL! I, N. J, *HUSBAND DID

THE WHSHIHCHis Wife Confined to Her

Insist That Frogs Arrived in Deluge

The governm ent meteorological of­fice in W ashington gave scan t cred­ence to those D anville residen ts who said th a t it ra ined frogs. Officials said there, had been several sim ilar reports

When the “Elocution Queen” Was Supreme

I th ink th a t elocutiouism . as perpe­tra ted by those who have taken les- many of our sta tes, but it was alm ost sons, is now prohibited by law in an epidemic in tlie “seventies.” Tall

Page 12: 4. *£• 1 ivons 1 8 nosihso · 2015-02-03 · I WMMaawBBttttBHa I T '.NT ‘a e t u p q H - H - H -t- w w * . .m u h ,h w + i - i 1111 f n -n -j y w w t < h ^ ,, _ — ~ ~ B £

THE COAST AUVKKTISKfl. RELMAR. NEW JERSEY

I

FRIDAY, AUG. 27, 1926

-J-! - * ! - * 2 * * £ ■ ~lr

• r

*

t*

•i*4

$*

*I++

**+i*$*

•s*+❖*f

4**It•i****

4

'I*'I*• J**1”“I"“I**I*

B e k a r 5 c t o $ 1 . 0 0 S t o r e ’ s

C o r , 1 0 th A v e . a n d F S t . N e x t t o P o s t O f f ic e

Extraordinary August Cut Price Sale

S t a r t in g SATURDAY. AUG. Z H

C o n t in u in g U n t i l S a tu r d a y S e p te m b e r 4 t h

| Is there anyone who does not remember our last year’s Sale when merchandise was actually given away? * This Sale is just a replica of what took place last year. We are overstocked with goods and MUST clear

our shelves lor the winter.

RUBBER BATHING SHOESAll Sizes--All Colors

Valued at 98o Now Only 59c

LADIES’ ALL WOOL BATHING SUITS >00% Pure Virgin Wool, in the latest colors

Come early, not many suits in stock Values up to $4.00 $1.75

BLACK ROASTING PANSValue 19c...............9c

SCRUB BRUSHESGood Quality

Value up to 2 5 c ...............8c

LADIES’ DRESSES Value up lo $1.98 ...............79c

lust the thing before vou go home'. TRAVELING BAGS AND SUIT CASES

At the Unheard Price of 95c

THIN BLOWN GLASSES Value 5 c ...............3 for 10c

HANDY RECORDSLatest Dance and Vocal Hits

Come in and hear them Vah>e, 3 for $1.00 a ...........5 for $1.00

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KED OXFORDSFdr Boys, Girls and Women

Value 9 8 c ...............67c

LADIES’ SILK HOSEValue 5 9 c ...............29c

CHILDREN’S 106% WOOL BATHING SUITSValues up to $1.49 ............... 75c

WATCH OUR SURPRISING

Week End SpecialsGOODS MARKED EXCEEDINGLY LOW

LADIES’ VESTSThis is our regular 25c value

You will never regret buying these at, 2 for 25c

BROOMSGood Quality, All Corn, Wire Bound

WHITE CREAM PITCHERSValues 1 5 c .............. 2 for 15c

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DECORATED PLATESValue 10c e a c h ...............6 for 25c

WOOD CHAIR SEATSValue 1 5 c ............... 9c

ALUMINUM CUP AND SAUCEREach worth 10c................Both for 5c

BOWL BRUSH (Good Quality Brush)Value 2 5 c .............8c

HAND PAINTED GAS SHADESThese shades sell for 19c

Limited Quality now 9c

WRITING PAPER Blue, White and Pink Value 2 9 c ...............19c

GRAY ENAMELED DISH PANSA Real Value for 19c

DOLLS (Sleeping- and UnbreakableValue 1 9 c ...............19c

BABIES RUBBER PANTSValue 1 9 c ...............8c

4,5■i•i

Free! Free!Cut out this COUPON and bring

it to the stores We will give you a present with je^ery purchase of $1.00 or over.

B e l m a r 5 c to $ 1 . 0 0 S t o r e Watch Our

Cor. 10th Ave. & F St.N ext to P o st Office OUR ONLY STORE

Belmar, N. J. Window Display4*4+4

DON’t FORGET SATURDAY, AUGUST 2 1 stThe “Biggest” Value For the “Littlest” Money