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New Township Committee Elects Gracey 16 Chairman For th ... · Ono/jyord.'can toll the story of...

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Ono/jyord.'can toll the story of con. jtinued business activity In the coin- munity—Advertising. T H T ^ M N £ R O V E T I M E S A ATf> ► f1*»r* AND THE SHORE TIMES Take inventory of your printed sup- Ptics. If you need anything, The Times stands ready to give v-'... y;\„--yon service. ''"'i\i VOL. LVXIII No. 2 Denham Posthumously Named For The Annual McRell Police Award Widow Will Receive The Award of $50., In Recognition of His Faithful Performance of Duty Under Unusual Stress of r::" The McRell award to the outstanding member of the v Ocean Grove police department during the year 1942 was awarded this week posthumously to Officer William O. Denham. The award; amounting to $50.00 in cash, will go to his Widow, Mrs. Agnes Denham. Officer Denham died suddenly November 25, 1942, : at the Fitkiri hospital where he' --- was being treated for a stomach ailment. He had been a inember of the department since 1934. Al- though suffering on und off for;a number of years from a chronic ailment, he never complained, al- ways had a smile for everybody and performed his duties thorough- ly and well. None ever knew how /seriously ill he was, nlthough he worked right up to the time he was taken to the hospital. It was these . qualities that made him one of the . most popular and respected mem- bers of the force, also among the . townspeople. When the police; committee, con- sisting of Commissioner William ts;E. Thomson;' Chief Willis R. Atkin- son and Captain Joseph A. Thoma; considered the selection of the re- cipient of the McRell award last month, their unanimous choice was Denham. It was felt that the re- quirements of the award, “Out- standing and meritorius service” and unflinching faithfulness to duty under .most trying circum- stances that were unknown, to his fellow oflicors at the time were perfectly met in Denham. “Our only regret,” said Com- missioner Thomson, who is con- fined to. his winter home in Mt. Airy, with a severe attack of in- fluenza, “is that Bill is not here to Teceive it. This boy’s widow cer- tainly deserves this award because ,none of us realized how. sick he Junior Firemen Name New Leader Le.es Broome, jr., framed to Succeed George Shibla who Entered Army Wednesday. The Ocean drove Junior fire com- pany elected its third president of the year on Monday evening at the Stokes fire house, after George Shibla, the group’s second . presi- dent, announced his resignation to join the armed forces. Shibla left on Wednesday to join the army at Fort Dix, N. J. ;■ Lees Broome, jr., assistant chief of the company, was named the successor to Shibla and took the office ■ : during • Monday’s meeting. He will serve the unexpired term of office until a new officer is named ih May. Edward Stratton was the company’s first president after its organization last May, but was forced to resign in September |when he. entered the Bordcntown Military Institute. The company also named Paul Stubb and William Guyer as 'mem- bers of the company filling the vacancies caused by the resigna- tions from the company of Shibla and James Hardagon, the latter having entered ; the Marines a month ago. The membership of [Douglas Manley was alHO con ..... .. ... .. . . firmed . ... ... ..... was, yet he continued along with, During the meeting a letter his work,until-he-collapsed. Al- from Hardagonr who is stationed ways so cheery, so willing, such a at Parris Island; S. C„ was read, . good sport, good natured; regard- ;arid a question bee held on various less of how he muBt have suffered, fire fighting equipment and meth- ~he was1 a great credit, to. the de-,ods. partment and well liked by the people of Ocean Grove. I-do not know of any member of the de-1 : partment who earned this award more than Bill Denham.” I Mrs. Agnes Denham, the widow,! left last Saturday with her son Jimmy for her old home in Sara- sota,'Florida, to recuperate from a recent illness. The award will bo ; mailed to her at that place. . The McRell award to the mem- ber of the Ocean Grove fire de' As a result of tho lowering of exemptions, many more persons are. now subject to the Fed- eral income tax than before, and for. the calendar year 1942 it is estimated that more, than thirty- ^ w vjiwvo meue-j catuimwu cnat more than thirty partment performing some out-| five million persons will file Fed- standing servico in 1942 may not ,'nco.ri?e *ax returns ns com- be awarded as the past'year has i 94j. Wl twenty-six million in not been distinguished by any un-1 An income' tax return is a usual ovent. j. ----- - IMA • JLCUUH1 18 a I declaration on the part of the tax- I DflVflP rtf llio tnfnl OCEAN GROVE, NEW JERSEY, FRIDAY; JANUARY 8, 1943 FIVE CENTS New Township Committee Elects Gracey Chairman For 16 th Consecutive Year . COMRADES IN HONOR—These two American sojdiers, friends from boyhood, who Joined the Army the same day, trained in the same outfit, were wounded in the same engagement andnrenow lying side by side in Walter Reed Hospital, Washington, 'proud pos- sessors of tbe Purple Heart, the War Department has announced. Sergeant Ernest H. Robson (left), and Private Rocco R.r Perrotli (right) both of Orange, New Jersey, both 22 years old. are recover- ing from leg wounds received in landing operations at Safi, Morocco. November 8. : When Lieutenant General Lesley J. McNair, Commanding Gen- eral of the Army Ground Forces, pinned the Purple Heart^on Ser- geant Robson and Private Perrotti it called for. a .three-way hand- shake, General McNair shook bands with both men snd they shook hands with each other. Neptune Marking Period Ends With Two Students Capturing Honors In All Subjects Only two students in the high school won honors in all five sub- jects for the second marking period of the school year, ending December 18, 1942., They were Phyllis Martin and Anthony Ventura. Others on the honor roll include the following: -.-S- Honors in Four Subjects: Katherine Alexander, Robert Barto, Eleanor Carr, Anna Danker, Robert Davis, Dorothy De Mido- witz, Sara De Samo, George Frick, Janet .' Holmes, Harriet Johnson, Donald Gant Jerome Holland, Lois Knox, Marjorie Lippincott, Helen Luttman, Carol Manzi, Alice Neidhardt, Ruth Palsir, Steve Pas- cal; Tony Pisano, Elaine Runner, Joseph Sandford, Muriel Smith, Marie Stout, John Tiedemann, Eu- gene Turchyn, Dorothy Zickler, and I Jeanne Watson. Honors in Three Subjects: Grace - Behrens, Alviri Bills, Tyler Bills, Janice Carpenter, Jackie Cullen, Edith Friedman, Le- roy Hammonds,- Virginia Hancock, Donna Hiller, Eleanor Himpele, Betty Horsey, Gwendolyn -Jones, Gordon Mncaulay, Douglas Manley, David Morton,-Robert Moser, Nick Napolitano, Frank Pelliccia, Cath- CLERK JOHN W. KNOX, whose annual report gave high praise to the committee work of the late Harry A. Whitlock. Larse Quota Draftees Left O n V(^ednesday Four from Ocean Grove and 33 from Neptune Departed including Officer Thomas J. Devlin crine I’eterson, Jane Reighton, | .*)<= recem nei- Carolinc Rice, Dolores Rizas, Lil-,mer draft departed Wednesday linn Sautu, Dolores Shafto. Mnrv 'nKirnirw rv-- " The following boys from Ocean Grove'who were in the recent Bcl- , ____________________ ucjmiicu.weanesoay lian Sauta, Dolores Shafto, Mary 'morning for.Fort Dix: Theodore R. Jane Shafto, Betty Shipman, Larry - Beckman, jr., GO Heck avenue: Stoin rr- 151J ' W-.ll.w-i I.' r ...i...:. , — . Stein, Patricia Terrett, Edward Thomas, Ethel Trimmer, and Char- lotte Wardell. Honors in Two Subjects: Helen , ArtiB, - Wilson Barber; Ventures Prediction That Committee Will Show Substantial Decrease In Local Tax Rate When New 1943 Budget Is Completed. Chosen for the sixteenth consecutive year as perma- nent chairman of the Neptune Township Commtitee at its reorganization Tuesday night, Raymond R.. Gracey an- nounced that ,the prospects were excellent for another' substantial reduction in the tax rate for Neptune and- Ocean Grove in 1943. “Until the final budget is made up and the new members become I ~ iiarwun meir departments,^ i t v-nuxiui be impossible to say-what the Jackson, John Bracken and Wil ction will be,” he said, “but *iam Carter. ........... whiuv.) j mull.; is wmcer i nomas J. Devlin, James Barnes, Ro9C Bruno, Elsa of the Ocean Grove police depart- Cjunpbcll, Lois^Candiano, Haixiet ment. Ha had been a regular Clark, Jeanne Clark, Milton Clay- ton, Charles Coates, Shirley Cole- man, Gloria Cornelius, Anne Gobi hell, Norma, Crossman, William Disbrow, Leona Doremus, Bertha Everton, George Falkner, Barbara Feldman, Lucy Fioirentino,' Gloria Froelich, Evelyn -Gant, Minnie IGenovese, Donald ;Giles, -.-Blanche Wallace E. Ludwig, 130 Heck ave hue; and George Shibla, 6 South Main street. Included also in this jjanmum.. me otncr tnrce mem- draft is Officer Thomas J. Devlin, bers of the committee will continue of the Ocenn Rmv» ias beads of the departments'they familiar with their departments, it will be impossible ■eduction will be,” he said, “but your committee hopes to show a better rate than last year.” The reorganization was remark- able for the change in personnel which took place. Two new mem- bers who had never before served on the commi tec were sworn in by Recorder Ross R. Beck. They were IHerman S. Johnson, of the Whitcs- ville section of the township, and Earl Woolley, of the Hamilton sec- tion, who were chosen at the No- vember election. -The former suc- ceeds the late Harry A. Whitlock and the latter defeated F. Leroy Garrabriint in the primary elec- tion. ■ : ; To Woolley went the post of finance chairman, and Johnson was named chiirman of the police de- partment. The other three mem- I Bruce Hartman, James Holloway, (Continued on Pape J) ■ / 7,3 30 Deeds Recorded By The Receipts in the County Clerk’s Office for 1942 were $58,617.14, According to J. Russell Woolley J. Russell Woolley, County Clerk, follows the precedent estab- lished by the late Honorable Joseph McDermott, County Clerk for nearly thirty-nine years; by having every paper that had been receiv- ed by his office copied, compared and returned on December-31. During the year 7,339 deeds were received, 4,002 mortgages,.as well .... ... n.w (lutV.UA IUD WIA“ (payer of hi3 total taxable income I for the year, together with the Ivarious deductions, exemptions, . .ont/us ueuucuons, exemptions wmwivntHIP CLUB MEETS . and. credits to which he is entitled. FRIENUSH ' It is in reliance upon voluntary dis- closure, and the integrity of tax- mnwarn 1*--: xt__ x n i Closure, ana tne integrity of tax- Entertained by Mrs. Bessie Clark payers generally, that the cost of p ”■in Bradley Beach .administration of tho income tax ... ' can be kept at a minimum. Though The Friendship Club, of Ocean the return is a voluntary statement, Grovo O. E. S., met Tuesday even- any person who willfully makes a Ing at the hortie of Mrs. Bessio roturn which he docs not beliove rssxt iJtirzss raurs ley Beach. Mrs. Nari Pettit, vice- penalties provided by law. president, in the absence of M rs.1 The first requirement of tho law Florence Lainko, presided. A re- is the filing, of an appropriate, re- , , . hltm *?»»«• as 3,225. miscellaneous papers. . ,u v. ........... ... v. i turn. For individuals generally, port was heard on the Christmas ^ mu8|. ^one jjy March 15 'charity of taking care of a needy (f0n0wing the end of the calendar i' fanrilv. and a motion was carried ** ------*• - - - i.uuuwing tne end of tho calendar family, and a motion was carried year. The return must be filed 'that it be continued this month, with tho appropriate Collector of . The nominating committee was an-1, R®venue for the district noimced and includes chairman [ dn J e 0°r offuslnct Charlotte Newbon, Margaret of the person making the return. Mauch, and Alice Evans. New Under the present law every sin- offlcors will be Installed at tho next Person, and every married per- . lann nn* U-l— -Jil t- - , . -meeting.''- A newf member, Mrs. : Laura A. Baker, wob welcomed into the club. ; At the completion of tho busi- ness'session, cards wpre enjoyed by. tho group. High.scorors were :;Helen Tilton, Mildred Partelow, Julia Brady, and Mary Strobell. ;. Florence, Bangert won “the blind -ipig” Those assisting tho hostess .wore - Alice:Evans, Jean Marshall, [‘Arid Margaret Mauch. Other riiem- :bors. attcndiiig coitsistcd of tho son not uvjng with husband or wffc, having a total income (eam- with other Income) of $600 or more, and married per- sons living with* Husband or wife throughout the taxable.year, who have an aggregate income (total earnings of both husband and wife; t°e®ther with other income) of $1,200 . or more; regardless of the amount of net income, must file a return. Serve at Snack Bar On Monday night the Ocean Grove Woman’s Club served four jollo^ing: Mrs. Sanford Flint, I hiintlred British nhd .-American m- oa . - -gervlcomen .n t- tho u. s. O. snack i^iefBMi^'fCl^riSto S o l Alice Gardner, Reba Whitlock, and T1 HulIt’ Z-,i; ^ Mrs. Frederick Schultz. Mrs.; Clif- There were 2,404 Conditional Bil|s of Sale affecting both per- sonality as well as realty. Receipts for 1942 totaled $58,- 617.14. . These items do hot cover court proceedings and other voluminous. matters that the County Clerk is' Smallpox Prevention Clinics In Township Will be held in High School .and Five Grammar Schools Starting January 11 member of the department for six years, The Belmar draft sent the fol- lowing from Neptune with the Ocean Grove group: Edward D. Ashfield, 110 Fifth qvenuc; Wil- liam A. Clark, jr., 1815 Stratford avenue; ftichard Clayton, 1505 Cor- Iim avenue; Joseph B. Coffee, 403 Stokes avenue; Logan C. Cooper, jr., 1047 Embury avenue; Anthony E. Dambrose, 902 Embury ayenue; ] James V. Danniello, 330 Myrtle avenue; Russell DeBow, jr., 1017. Corlies avenue; Sam DeSarno, 1907 Stratford avenue; Edwin J. Ervin, 1607 Sewall avenue; William C, Heidemark, 1139 Corlies avenue; Richard G. Lane, 119 Leonard ave- nue; Warren H. LcCompte, 109 Oxonia avenue; Leon Maccanico, ioi ‘ ^ ' ....... •■iUAwniauvenue; L i e o n •:M a c c a n i c o , The Neptune Township Board o£. 131 Corlies avenue; Samuel S. Health reports that the first case | Martuscelli, 1228 Ninth ayenue; of smallpox in eleven years is now Thomas’Braxton Menke, 216 Ham- in New Jersey. Therefore, the only ilton avenue; ; Arnold Moore, 118 weapon to keep it from the midst Atkins avenue; Antonio Andrew of all is immunization against this Nuzzi, 1211 Heck-avenue: Snivn. required to handle in hiB office. -V- WOOLSTON FETED BY PARTY Honored on Birthday Wedpesdav . at St. Elmo ' F. Peyton Woolston, of the St. Elmo hotel, was completely sur- prised upon returning from church Wednesday night to find the hotel guests, gathered for; a party in honor of his birthday. Woolston was presented with a basketfull of small* gifts, in which was in- cluded a wooden, mallet. He was. also- ceremoniously pre - sented with a birthday cake from [contagious, disease. As a result, Smallpox Prevention Clinics will, be held in the public |schools of Neptune township start- ing on Monday, January 11, under the supervision of the Nep- tune Township Board of Health and; Neptune Township Board of [Education. These clinics will be open to infants and school children (of the township. . A certificate will. be issued to 'any person who is successfully vac- cinated. The schedule will start at 9:00 a. m. in the Summerfield school and at 10:30 a. m. in the Whitesville Ischool,. on Monday, January 11; 9:00 a. m. in the Bradley Park school and 10:30 a. m. in the Nep- tune high school and Ocean Grove grammar school, Tuesday, January 12; and at 9:00 a. m. in the Ridge Avenue school, Wednesday, Janu- jary 13. These places and time of schedule will be repeated in the above sequence for the following two: weeks.; Church Ushers for January . ____ Sb Paul’s church ushers select the St Elmo kitchen. Games were ed for the month of January in- enjoyed : and; refreshments were elude the following for-the morning Bn—ad tt, a-- ir — T 1 --! I- served,by the hostess, Mrs.'Bossie R. Shubert Included among thpso presprit were George C. Hellwig, Mrs. William Lipfert. and daugh- toy,. Miss Lipfert, MrB. A. O. B'ro- dje, Mrs. Hedley Woodward, Mrs. Jennie Sutphen, Mrs. Maude Mac- cpbe. Mra. Norma Martin, Mr. and Mrs. Roy C.. Vanderhoof, Mrs.- Jen- nic Shenton, Mrs.;. Mario Hornby, Mrs. Thomas Young, Mrs. L. Carter, and, son, Craig, Mies Ruth Smith, Mrs.. Edna Copp, and Mrs. Allen J; Bryan. ,/ > services: George Matthews, Mor- ton Morris, Otto G. Stoll, sr.; John Grims, Benjamin Casserk, T. C. Davis, Homer: D. Kresge, sr., and [Russell Hulse.- Those appointed 'for the. vesper services-include H. A. Allen, Watkin Williams, Cur- win. Dodd, Frank Wilgus, Baniel Havens, James Mahan, L. B. Mul- jford nnd Alvin BRIb. tore Parisi, 5 Greenwood avenue; Genete J. Perccllo, 25 Atkins ave- nue;’ Frank Sauta, 1331 Corlies avenue; Alton Sculthorpe, 1-1 Smock street; Govino C. Sicilianq, 1612 Bangs avenue; LeRoy O’. Slo- cum, 1425 Seventh avenue; Earl H. Stebbins, 44 Ridge avenue; Jos- eph R:' Sturm, South Riverside Drive; Michael A. Virgilio, 1034 Heck avenue; Nevel R. Webster, 1835 Columbus avenue and Irving White, jri, 127 Hamilton avenue. From outside draft boards: the following left from Neptune: Thomas M, Askiew, 1100 Heck avenue; James McDonald, 1619 Springwood avenue; James Smith, 207 Fisher avenue; and Darvoy W. Wixon, 100 Myrtle avenue. -V- have held for the past several years. Ralph W. Johnson, of Ocean Grove, who was unable to be present on account of illness, was renamed head of public relations; Gracey, of Ocean . Grove, sanitation;: and [Charles S. Loveman, of West Grove, roads. , The first: business of the new. jCommHtee~was the usual appoint- ments for the year 1943. -They were: Cashier, Walter H. Gravatt; attorney, R. W. Stout, who missed his first reorganization meeting in many years on account of illness; treasurer, Arthur H. Pharo; audi- tor, Elmer O. Stevens. Also renamed were Sewer opera- tor, William Stanley Applegate; engineer, Claude W. Birdsall; li- brarian, Clara Youmans; police surgeon. Dr. William A. Robinson. Special police officers without. |pay were named as follows: Harry Neidlmrdt. W. A. Robinson, Earl Lawlor, Joseph - Pullen, Arthur [Pharo, Harry White, Lester Herb-; [ert, Curwin F. Dodd, Lyle Shafto, Harry. Faby, Watkin . Williams, Warren Brown, Wesley Nagle, George Dowler, Frank Dodd, Wal- ter Estlow, George Bodeep, Louis Bronson, Harry E. Robinson, Ray- mond Megill, Leo Brierly, John C.‘ Burke, 0. Van Smith, Charles The following were appointed constables: George Jeffries, Mer- rill Ritzendollar and Otto Combs. Milton T. Wright and Peter Di- Midowitz were named to the board, jof adjustment. .' The Asbury Park and Ocean Grove bank was designated official depository for the funds of tho township. A resolution, was adopted con- firming the public sale of the prop- erty at 104 Broadway to Jessie C. Koster for $2,300. : A temporary budget was adopt- ed pending the completion and adoption of the regular annual budget v*,-. Praise for New Members 'As the two new members took their seats before a crowded com- mittee room, John B. Stout, presi- dent of the Neptune Board of Edu- cation, rose to convey the con- gratulations of the board mem- bers and to commend the town- ship committee on its coopera- tion with the school board, on which Johnson and Woolley havo served for several years. Dr. O. J. Moulton, supervising principal, and Alfred P. Todd, district clerk, also offered the congratulations of the -' school district. Said Dr. Moulton: “In the years of experience we have had with your two new mem- 'bers we have always found' them fair and openmindcd and they have always shown excellent judgment” The absence of Attorney E. W f Stout for the first time in thirty years, due to illness, nnd the ab- sence of Coniinittecina:- Ralph W. Johnson, for the same reason, was noted by the committee and their years of service commended. \ The Neptune township Board of Health also reorganized by the " election of Mr. Gracey as cbair- (CoutlilDm) on Pas© *) T Grace Hall Is Wed In Neptune Four-Fold Celebration A four-fold celebration was held at the home of Miss Elizabeth Brazier, 70 Abbott avenue, on New Year’s day. In addition to the ob- servance of tho new year, Mrs. H. Floyd Rush celebrated her twrinty- sevonth birthday,, Bryan Floyd Rush, son, his fifth birthday, and Bobbin Frederick Rush, another son, his first month anniversary. Miss Eleanore Applegate; * of Orange, who was visiting Mr. and Mrs.’ Rush at their home at 76 Mt. PiBgah Way, also attended. : D. A. R. / Donates Afghan Miss Grace Emma Hall, daugh- ter of Mr. and, Mrs. George Hall, 412 Park Place avenue, Bradley Beach, and former residents of Ocean;Grove, and second class sea- man William Edward Havens, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Havens, 306 Evergreen avenue, Bradley Beach, were married on Tuesday evening at the West Grove Metho- Ann Narayouski To fVed Pvt. Bush The engagement of Miss Ann Narayouski to Private Herbert R. Bush, jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Herb- ert R. Bush, 38 Abbott avenue, was announced last weekend by the parents of the bride-elect, Mr. and Mrs. Peter Narayouski, of Neptune. Miss Narayouski is a graduate of Neptune high school, and is em- ployed at the Bendix Corporation, Red Bank. Private Bush, also a graduate of Neptune high school, is stationed at Camp Carrabelle, ** Fla., with the Engineer Amphibian Regiment. , -V- dist church. The ceremony was performed nt 6:30 by Rev. John i WATCHNIGHT AT ST. PAUL’S The Ocean Grave' Chapter of American Red ■ Cross received another hand knitted afghan from the RicharJ Stockton Chnpter, D. A; R., and a donation of five dol- lars from Circle E, Woman’s Soci- ety for. Christian Servico, of St. Paul’s church. / Mrs. Violet Gllian !s leador of this circle.:/This':1s tite first gift of impney toward the. Red Crash War; Fund Drive which will bd^ppraored in March;- Merwin Attendants were Miss Christina Trimble and Robert Duckworth. The bride was attired in a dusty pink street length dress. Miss Trimble wore a' light blue dress with navy blue accessories. Both carried old-fashioned bouquets. The'bride is a graduate of Nep- tune high school and is employed at Camp Coles. The groom, a graduate of Asbury Park high school, is stationed at Newport, R. i. A reception followed at tho Caro- lina Tea Room for the immediate families. -V- Baby Son Born to Keaste Mr. and Mrs. Frank Keast, 103 Central avenue, ore the proud par- ents of n son, Bichard Frank, born at Fitkin hospital -on Wediitaday;- .December. 39. Mr. and Mrs. Keast mny^d to Ocean Grave [from Xjill- . gp last spring.-'and.Mr,/ Keast; Is at Prtaent.located wftb.;tho feigrial Program by Bible ClaBs; Stereop- , tieon Slides The New Year’s Watchnight service hold at S t Paul’s church was staged by the Assembly Biblo Class of the church, with Mr. if. : W. Allen, presiding. The program • opciied with a song 9e»-vice, con- ducted by Samuel W. Eisenherg. Miss Dorothy ICugler was guest soloist, and Rev. J. N. Kugler rcn- deredf several selections on. the / :• violin: Miss Mary Wntson Offered;^ a reading, “The. Well of the Star.” ,'^ Miss Eveiyn Allen pjayed several piano selections. The paster, Rev. Smitb, present-^/ cd an illustrated lecturc, with .100fa: colored slides; . o n . .“New." England, the Beautiful;” *■ :The groan' retired %$£ to the jutuor room and ;a;; sqcinl;^ Ihour .was ei^^ed, sponMr^hyrtito^V 1 G.: S.j',With MrsV ’l'riuls;’^j|iv'j^. uelsori [ v In’; charge. "wSm
Transcript
Page 1: New Township Committee Elects Gracey 16 Chairman For th ... · Ono/jyord.'can toll the story of con. •j tinued business activity In the coin- munity—Advertising. T H T ^ M N £

Ono/jyord.'can toll the story o f con. •j tinued business activity In the coin-

munity—Advertising.T H T ^ M N £ R O V E T I M E SA ATf> ►f1*»r*AND THE SHORE TIMES

Take inventory o f your printed sup- Ptics. I f you need anything, The

Times stands ready to givev-'...y;\„--yon service. ''" 'i\i •

VOL. LVXIII No. 2

Denham Posthumously Named For The Annual McRell Police Award

W id ow W ill R eceive The Award o f $50., In Recognition o f H is Faithful Performance o f Duty Under Unusual Stress of

r : : " The McRell award to the outstanding member of the v Ocean Grove police department during the year 1942 was

awarded this week posthumously to Officer William O. Denham. The award; amounting to $50.00 in cash, will go to his Widow, Mrs. Agnes Denham.

Officer Denham died suddenly November 25, 1942, : at the Fitkiri hospital where he' ---

was being treated for a stomach ailment. He had been a inember of the department since 1934. A l­though suffering on und off for;a number of years from a chronic ailment, he never complained, al­ways had a smile for everybody and performed his duties thorough­ly and well. None ever knew how

/seriously ill he was, nlthough he worked right up to the time he was taken to the hospital. It was these

. qualities that made him one o f the . most popular and respected mem­

bers o f the force, also among the . townspeople.

When the police; committee, con­sisting of Commissioner William

ts;E. Thomson;' Chief Willis R. Atkin­son and Captain Joseph A. Thoma; considered the selection o f the re­cipient o f the McRell award last month, their unanimous choice was Denham. I t was felt that the re­quirements of the award, “Out­standing and meritorius service” and unflinching faithfulness to duty under .most trying circum­stances that were unknown, to his fellow oflicors a t the time were perfectly met in Denham.

“Our only regret,” said Com­missioner Thomson, who is con­fined t o . his winter home in Mt. Airy, with a severe attack of in­fluenza, “is that Bill is not here to Teceive it. This boy’s widow cer­tainly deserves this award because , none of us realized how. sick he

Junior Firemen Name New Leader

Le.es Broome, jr., framed to Succeed George Shibla who Entered Army Wednesday.

The Ocean drove Junior fire com­pany elected its third president of the year on Monday evening at the Stokes fire house, after George Shibla, the group’s second . presi­dent, announced his resignation to join the armed forces. Shibla left on Wednesday to join the army at Fort Dix, N . J. ;■

Lees Broome, jr., assistant chief of the company, was named the successor to Shibla and took the office ■: during • Monday’s meeting. He will serve the unexpired term o f office until a new officer is named ih May. Edward Stratton was the company’s first president after its organization last May, but was forced to resign in September

| when he. entered the Bordcntown Military Institute.

The company also named Paul Stubb and William Guyer as 'mem­bers o f the company filling the vacancies caused by the resigna­tions from the company of Shibla and James Hardagon, the latter having entered ; the Marines a month ago. The membership of [Douglas Manley was alHO con

..... .. ... . . . .firmed. ... ... .....was, yet he continued along w ith , During the meeting a letter his work,until-he-collapsed. Al- from Hardagonr who is stationed ways so cheery, so willing, such a at Parris Island; S. C„ was read,

. good sport, good natured; regard- ; arid a question bee held on various less o f how he muBt have suffered, fire fighting equipment and meth-

~he w as1 a great credit, to. the de-,ods. partment and well liked by the people o f Ocean Grove. I -do not know o f any member of the de-1

: partment who earned this award more than Bill Denham.” I

Mrs. Agnes Denham, the w idow,! le ft last Saturday with her son Jimmy for her old home in Sara­sota,'Florida, to recuperate from a recent illness. The award will bo

; mailed to her at that place. .The McRell award to the mem­

ber o f the Ocean Grove fire de'

As a result o f tho lowering o f exemptions, many more persons are. now subject to the Fed­eral income tax than before, and for. the calendar year 1942 it is estimated that more, than thirty-^ w vjiwvo m e ue-j catuimwu cnat more than thirty

partment performing some out-| five million persons will file Fed- standing servico in 1942 may not ,'nco.ri?e *ax returns ns com­be awarded as the past'year has i 94j . Wl twenty-six million in not been distinguished by any un-1 An income' tax return is ausual ovent. ■ j. ----- - IMA • JLCUUH1 18 a

I declaration on the part o f the tax-I DflVflP rtf llio tnfnl

OCEAN GROVE, NEW JERSEY, FRIDAY; JANUARY 8, 1943 FIVE CENTS

New Township Committee Elects Gracey Chairman For 16th Consecutive Year

.COMRADES IN HONOR—These two American sojdiers, friends

from boyhood, who Joined the Army the same day, trained in the same outfit, were wounded in the same engagement a n dn ren ow lying side by side in Walter Reed Hospital, Washington, 'proud pos­sessors of tbe Purple Heart, the War Department has announced. Sergeant Ernest H. Robson (left), and Private Rocco R.r Perrotli (right) both of Orange, New Jersey, both 22 years old. are recover­ing from leg wounds received in landing operations at Safi, Morocco. November 8. : ■

When Lieutenant General Lesley J. McNair, Commanding Gen­eral o f the Army Ground Forces, pinned the Purple Heart^on Ser­geant Robson and Private Perrotti it called for. a .three-way hand­shake, General McNair shook bands with both men snd they shook hands with each other.

Neptune Marking Period Ends W ith Tw o Students Capturing Honors In A l l Subjects

Only two students in the high school won honors in all five sub­jects for the second marking period o f the school year, ending December 18, 1942., They were Phyllis Martin and Anthony Ventura. Others on the honor roll include the following: -.-S- ■

Honors in Four Subjects:Katherine Alexander, Robert

Barto, Eleanor Carr, Anna Danker, Robert Davis, Dorothy D e Mido- witz, Sara De Samo, George Frick, Janet .' Holmes, Harriet Johnson, Donald Gant Jerome Holland, Lois Knox, Marjorie Lippincott, Helen Luttman, Carol Manzi, Alice Neidhardt, Ruth Palsir, Steve Pas­cal; Tony Pisano, Elaine Runner, Joseph Sandford, Muriel Smith, Marie Stout, John Tiedemann, Eu ­gene Turchyn, Dorothy Zickler, and

I Jeanne Watson.Honors in Three Subjects:

Grace - Behrens, Alviri Bills, Tyler Bills, Janice Carpenter, Jackie Cullen, Edith Friedman, L e ­roy Hammonds,- Virginia Hancock, Donna Hiller, Eleanor Himpele, Betty Horsey, Gwendolyn -Jones, Gordon Mncaulay, Douglas Manley, David Morton,-Robert Moser, Nick Napolitano, Frank Pelliccia, Cath-

CLERK JOHN W. KNOX, whose annual report gave high praise to the committee work of the lateHarry A. Whitlock.

Larse Q uota Draftees Left O n V(^ednesday

Four from Ocean Grove and 33 from Neptune Departed including Officer Thomas J. Devlin

crine I’eterson, Jane Reighton, | .*)<= recem nei-Carolinc Rice, Dolores Rizas, Lil-, mer draft departed Wednesday linn Sautu, Dolores Shafto. Mnrv 'nKirnirw rv-- "

The following boys from Ocean Grove'who were in the recent Bcl-

, ____________________ ucjm iicu. weanesoaylian Sauta, Dolores Shafto, Mary ' morning for.Fort Dix: Theodore R. Jane Shafto, Betty Shipman, Larry - Beckman, jr., GO Heck avenue:Stoin rr- 151J ' W-.ll.w-i I.' r ...i...:. , — .Stein, Patricia Terrett, Edward Thomas, Ethel Trimmer, and Char­lotte Wardell.Honors in Two Subjects:

Helen , ArtiB, - Wilson Barber;

Ventures Prediction That Committee Will Show Substantial Decrease In Local Tax Rate When New 1943 Budget Is Completed.

Chosen for the sixteenth consecutive year as perma­nent chairman of the Neptune Township Commtitee a t its reorganization Tuesday night, Raymond R.. Gracey an­nounced th a t , the prospects were excellent for another' substantial reduction in the tax rate for Neptune and- Ocean Grove in 1943. “Until the final budget is made up and the new members become I ~

iia rw un meir departments,^ i t ’ v-nuxiuibe impossible to say-what the Jackson, John Bracken and Wil ction will be,” he said, “but *iam Carter.

........... whiuv.) j mull.; is wmcer i nomas J. Devlin,James Barnes, Ro9C Bruno, Elsa of the Ocean Grove police depart- Cjunpbcll, Lois^Candiano, Haixiet ment. Ha had been a regularClark, Jeanne Clark, Milton Clay- ton, Charles Coates, Shirley Cole­man, Gloria Cornelius, Anne Gobi hell, Norma, Crossman, William Disbrow, Leona Doremus, Bertha Everton, George Falkner, Barbara Feldman, Lucy Fioirentino,' Gloria Froelich, Evelyn -Gant, Minnie I Genovese, Donald ; Giles, -.-Blanche

Wallace E. Ludwig, 130 Heck ave hue; and George Shibla, 6 SouthMain street. Included also in this jjanmum.. m e otncr tnrce mem- draft is Officer Thomas J. Devlin, bers of the committee will continue of the Ocenn Rmv» ias beads o f the departments'they

familiar with their departments, it will be impossible ■eduction will be,” he said, “but your committee hopes to show a better rate than last year.”

The reorganization was remark­able for the change in personnel which took place. Two new mem­bers who had never before served on the commi tec were sworn in by Recorder Ross R. Beck. They were

I Herman S. Johnson, of the Whitcs- ville section of the township, and Earl Woolley, o f the Hamilton sec­tion, who were chosen at the No­vember election. -The former suc­ceeds the late Harry A. Whitlock and the latter defeated F. Leroy Garrabriint in the primary elec­tion. ■ • : •;

To Woolley went the post of finance chairman, and Johnson was named chiirman of the police de­partment. The other three mem-

I Bruce Hartman, James Holloway, ■ (Continued on Pape J) ■/

7,3 30 D eeds Recorded By The

Receipts in the County Clerk’s Office for 1942 were $58,617.14, According to J. Russell Woolley

J. Russell Woolley, County Clerk, follows the precedent estab­lished by the late Honorable Joseph McDermott, County Clerk for nearly thirty-nine years; by having every paper that had been receiv­ed by his office copied, compared and returned on December-31.

During the year 7,339 deeds were received, 4,002 mortgages,.as well .... ... n.w (lutV.UA IUD WIA“

(payer o f hi3 total taxable income I for the year, together with the I various deductions, exemptions,. .ont/us ueuucuons, exemptions

w m w ivn tH IP CLU B M EE TS . and. credits to which he is entitled.FR IENU SH ' It is in reliance upon voluntary dis­closure, and the integrity o f tax-mnwarn 1*-- : xt__ x ni Closure, ana tne integrity of tax- Entertained by Mrs. Bessie Clark payers generally, that the cost of

p ”■ in Bradley Beach .administration o f tho income tax. . . ' can be kept at a minimum. ThoughThe Friendship Club, of Ocean the return is a voluntary statement,

Grovo O. E . S., met Tuesday even- any person who willfully makes a • Ing at the hortie o f Mrs. Bessio roturn which he docs not belioverssx t iJtirzss raursley Beach. Mrs. Nari Pettit, vice- penalties provided by law. president, in the absence o f M rs .1 The first requirement o f tho law Florence Lainko, presided. A re- is the filing, of an appropriate, re-

, , . hltm *?»»«•

as 3,225. miscellaneous papers.

. , u v. .............. v .i turn. F or individuals generally, port was heard on the Christmas mu8|. ^ one jjy March 15

'charity o f taking care of a needy (f0n0wing the end o f the calendari' fan rilv . a n d a m o tion w a s c a rr ied * * ------*•- - - i.uuuwing tne end o f tho calendarfamily, and a motion was carried year. The return must be filed 'that it be continued this month, with tho appropriate Collector of

. The nominating committee was an-1, R®venue for the districtnoimced and includes chairman [ dn J e 0°r o f f u s ln c tCharlotte Newbon, Margaret of the person making the return. Mauch, and Alice Evans. New Under the present law every sin- offlcors will be Installed at tho next Person, and every married per-. lann nn* U-l— -Jil t- - , .- meeting.''- A newf member, Mrs.

: Laura A. Baker, w ob welcomed into the club.; A t the completion o f tho busi­

n ess 'sess ion , cards wpre enjoyed by. tho group. High.scorors were

:;Helen Tilton, Mildred Partelow, Julia Brady, and Mary Strobell.

;. Florence, Bangert won “the blind -ipig” Those assisting tho hostess .wore - A lice : Evans, Jean Marshall, [‘Arid Margaret Mauch. Other riiem- :bors. attcndiiig coitsistcd of tho

son not uvjng with husband or wffc, having a total income (eam-

with other Income) o f $600 or more, and married per­sons living with* Husband or wife throughout the taxable. year, who have an aggregate income (total earnings o f both husband and wife; t°e®ther with other income) of $1,200 . or more; regardless o f the amount o f n e t income, must file a return.

Serve a t Snack Bar On Monday night the Ocean

Grove Woman’s Club served fourjo l lo ^ in g : Mrs. Sanford Flint, I hiintlred British nhd .- American m - o a . - -gervlcomen .n t -tho u . s . O. snack

i ^ i e f B M i ^ ' f C l ^ r i S t o S o lAlice Gardner, Reba Whitlock, and T 1 HulIt’Z-,i; ^ Mrs. Frederick Schultz. Mrs.; Clif-

There were 2,404 Conditional Bil|s o f Sale affecting both per­sonality as well as realty.

Receipts for 1942 totaled $58,- 617.14. .

These items do hot cover court proceedings and other voluminous. matters that the County Clerk i s '

Smallpox Prevention Clinics In Township

Will be held in High School .and F ive Grammar Schools Starting January 11

member o f the department for six years,

The Belmar draft sent the fol­lowing from Neptune with the Ocean Grove group: Edward D. Ashfield, 110 Fifth qvenuc; W il­liam A. Clark, jr., 1815 Stratford avenue; ftichard Clayton, 1505 Cor- Iim avenue; Joseph B. Coffee, 403 Stokes avenue; Logan C. Cooper, jr., 1047 Embury avenue; Anthony E . Dambrose, 902 Embury ayenue; ] James V. Danniello, 330 Myrtle avenue; Russell DeBow, jr., 1017. Corlies avenue; Sam DeSarno, 1907 Stratford avenue; Edwin J. Ervin, 1607 Sewall avenue; William C, Heidemark, 1139 Corlies avenue; Richard G . Lane, 119 Leonard ave­nue; Warren H . LcCompte, 109 Oxonia avenue; Leon Maccanico,io i ‘ '. . . . . . . • ■ iU A w n i a u v e n u e ; L i e o n •:M a c c a n i c o ,

The Neptune Township Board o £ . 131 Corlies avenue; Samuel S. Health reports that the first case | Martuscelli, 1228 Ninth ayenue; o f smallpox in eleven years is now Thomas’Braxton Menke, 216 Ham- in New Jersey. Therefore, the only ilton avenue; ; Arnold Moore, 118 weapon to keep it from the midst Atkins avenue; Antonio Andrew of all is immunization against this Nuzzi, 1211 Heck-avenue: Snivn.

required to handle in hiB office.-V-

W OOLSTON F E T E D BY PARTY

Honored on Birthday Wedpesdav . a t St. Elmo

' F . Peyton Woolston, o f the St. Elmo hotel, was completely sur­prised upon returning from church Wednesday night to find the hotel guests, gathered for; a party in honor o f his birthday. Woolston was presented with a basketfull o f small* gifts, in which was in­cluded a wooden, mallet.

H e was. also- ceremoniously pre­sented with a birthday cake from

[contagious, disease.As a result, Smallpox Prevention

Clinics will, be held in the public |schools of Neptune township start­ing on Monday, January 11, under the supervision of the Nep­tune Township Board of Health and; Neptune Township Board of [Education. These clinics will be open to infants and school children (of the township. .

A certificate w ill. be issued to 'any person who is successfully vac-cinated.

The schedule will start at 9:00 a. m. in the Summerfield school and at 10:30 a. m. in the Whitesville Ischool,. on Monday, January 11; 9:00 a. m. in the Bradley Park school and 10:30 a. m. in the Nep­

tune high school and Ocean Grove grammar school, Tuesday, January 12; and a t 9:00 a. m. in the Ridge Avenue school, Wednesday, Janu- j ary 13. These places and time of schedule will be repeated in the above sequence for the following two: weeks.;

Church Ushers for January . ____ Sb Paul’s church ushers select

the S t Elmo kitchen. Games were ed for the month of January in- enjoyed : and; refreshments were elude the following for-the morningBn—ad tt, a-- ir— T 1--! I- ’served, by the hostess, Mrs.' Bossie R. Shubert Included among thpso presprit were George C. Hellwig, Mrs. William Lipfert. and daugh- toy,. M iss Lipfert, MrB. A . O . B'ro- dje, Mrs. Hedley Woodward, Mrs. Jennie Sutphen, Mrs. Maude Mac- cpbe. Mra. Norma Martin, Mr. and Mrs. Roy C.. Vanderhoof, Mrs.- Jen- nic Shenton, Mrs.;. Mario Hornby, Mrs. Thomas Young, Mrs. L. Carter, and, son, Craig, Mies Ruth Smith, Mrs.. Edna Copp, and Mrs. Allen J; Bryan. ,/ >

services: George Matthews, M or­ton Morris, Otto G . Stoll, sr.; John Grims, Benjamin Casserk, T . C. Davis, Homer: D. Kresge, sr., and [Russell Hulse.- Those appointed 'for the. vesper services-include H. A. Allen, Watkin Williams, Cur- win. Dodd, Frank Wilgus, Baniel Havens, James Mahan, L. B. Mul- jford nnd Alvin BRIb.

tore Parisi, 5 Greenwood avenue; Genete J. Perccllo, 25 Atkins ave­nue;’ Frank Sauta, 1331 Corlies avenue; Alton Sculthorpe, 1-1 Smock street; Govino C. Sicilianq, 1612 Bangs avenue; LeRoy O’. Slo­cum, 1425 Seventh avenue; Earl H. Stebbins, 44 Ridge avenue; Jos­eph R : ' Sturm, South Riverside Drive; Michael A. Virgilio, 1034 Heck avenue; Nevel R. Webster, 1835 Columbus avenue and Irving White, jri, 127 Hamilton avenue.

From outside draft boards: the following left from Neptune: Thomas M, Askiew, 1100 Heck avenue; James McDonald, 1619 Springwood avenue; James Smith, 207 Fisher avenue; and Darvoy W. Wixon, 100 Myrtle avenue.

-V-

have held for the past several years. Ralph W. Johnson, of Ocean Grove, who was unable to be present on account of illness, was renamed head o f public relations; Gracey, o f Ocean . Grove, sanitation;: and [Charles S. Loveman, o f West Grove, roads. ,

The fir st: business of the new. jCommHtee~was the usual appoint­ments for the year 1943. -They were: Cashier, Walter H. Gravatt; attorney, R. W. Stout, who missed his first reorganization meeting in many years on account o f illness; treasurer, Arthur H. Pharo; audi­tor, Elmer O. Stevens.

Also renamed were Sewer opera­tor, William Stanley Applegate; engineer, Claude W. Birdsall; li­brarian, Clara Youmans; police surgeon. Dr. William A. Robinson.

Special police officers without.|pay were named as follows: Harry Neidlmrdt. W. A. Robinson, Earl Lawlor, Joseph - Pullen, Arthur

[Pharo, Harry White, Lester Herb-; [ert, Curwin F. Dodd, Lyle Shafto, Harry. Faby, Watkin . Williams, Warren Brown, Wesley Nagle, George Dowler, Frank Dodd, Wal­ter Estlow, George Bodeep, Louis Bronson, Harry E. Robinson, Ray­mond Megill, Leo Brierly, John C.‘

Burke, 0. Van Smith, Charles

The following were appointed constables: George Jeffries, Mer­rill Ritzendollar and Otto Combs. Milton T . W right and Peter Di- Midowitz were named to the board,

j o f adjustment. .'The Asbury Park and Ocean

Grove bank was designated official depository for the funds of tho township.

A resolution, was adopted con­firming the public sale of the prop­erty at 104 Broadway to Jessie C . Koster for $2,300. :

A temporary budget was adopt­ed pending the completion and adoption of the regular annual budget v*,-.

Praise for New Members 'As the two new members took

their seats before a crowded com­mittee room, John B. Stout, presi­dent of the Neptune Board of Edu­cation, rose to convey the con­gratulations of the board mem­bers and to commend the town­ship committee on its coopera­tion with the school board, on which Johnson and Woolley havo served for several years. Dr. O. J. Moulton, supervising principal, and Alfred P. Todd, district clerk, also offered the congratulations of the -' school district. Said Dr. Moulton: “In the years o f experience we have had with your two new mem- 'bers we have always found' them fair and openmindcd and they have always shown excellent judgment”

The absence of Attorney E. W f Stout for the first time in thirty years, due to illness, nnd the ab­sence of Coniinittecina:- Ralph W. Johnson, for the same reason, was noted by the committee and their years of service commended. \

The Neptune township Board o f Health also reorganized by the " election of Mr. Gracey as cbair-

(CoutlilDm) on Pas© *) T

Grace Hall Is Wed In Neptune

■ Four-Fold Celebration A four-fold celebration was held

at the home of M iss Elizabeth Brazier, 70 Abbott avenue, on New Year’s day. In addition to the ob­servance o f tho new year, Mrs. H. Floyd Rush celebrated her twrinty- sevonth birthday,, Bryan Floyd Rush, son, his fifth birthday, and Bobbin Frederick Rush, another son, his first month anniversary. Miss Eleanore Applegate; * of Orange, who was visiting Mr. and Mrs.’ Rush at their home at 76 Mt. PiBgah Way, also attended.

: D . A. R. / Donates Afghan

Miss Grace Emma Hall, daugh­ter of Mr. and, Mrs. George Hall, 412 Park Place avenue, Bradley Beach, and former residents of Ocean;Grove, and second class sea­man William Edward Havens, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Havens, 306 Evergreen avenue, Bradley Beach, were married on Tuesday evening at the W est Grove Metho-

Ann Narayouski To fVed Pvt. Bush

The engagement of Miss Ann Narayouski to Private Herbert R. Bush, jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Herb­ert R. Bush, 38 Abbott avenue, was announced last weekend by the parents o f the bride-elect, Mr. and Mrs. Peter Narayouski, o f Neptune.

Miss Narayouski is a graduate of Neptune high school, and is em­ployed at the Bendix Corporation, Red Bank. Private Bush, also a graduate o f Neptune high school, is stationed a t Camp Carrabelle, ** Fla., with the Engineer Amphibian Regiment. ,

-V-dist church. The ceremony was performed nt 6:30 by Rev. John i W A TCH N IGH T A T ST. PAUL’S

The Ocean Grave' Chapter o f American Red ■ Cross received another hand knitted afghan from the RicharJ Stockton Chnpter, D. A; R., and a donation o f five dol­lars from Circle E, Woman’s Soci­ety fo r . Christian Servico, o f St. Paul’s church. / Mrs. V iolet Gllian !s leador o f this circle.:/This':1s tite first g ift o f impney toward the. Red Crash War; Fund Drive whichwill bd^ppraored in March;-

MerwinAttendants were Miss Christina

Trimble and Robert Duckworth.The bride was attired in a dusty

pink street length dress. Miss Trimble wore a' light blue dress with navy blue accessories. Both carried old-fashioned bouquets.

The'bride is a graduate o f N ep­tune high school and is employed at Camp Coles. The groom, a graduate o f Asbury Park high school, is stationed at Newport, R. i.

A reception followed at tho Caro­lina Tea Room for the immediate families.

-V-Baby Son Born to Keaste

Mr. and Mrs. Frank Keast, 103 Central avenue, ore the proud par­ents of n son, Bichard Frank, born at Fitkin hospital -on Wediitaday;- .December. 39. Mr. and Mrs. Keast mny^d to Ocean Grave [ from Xjill- . gp last spring.-'and.Mr,/ Keast; Is

at Prtaent. located wftb.;tho feigrial

Program by Bible ClaBs; Stereop- , tieon Slides

The New Year’s Watchnight service hold a t S t Paul’s church was staged by the Assembly Biblo Class o f the church, with Mr. i f . : W. Allen, presiding. The program • opciied with a song 9e»-vice, con- ducted by Samuel W. Eisenherg. Miss Dorothy ICugler was guest soloist, and Rev. J. N. Kugler rcn- deredf several selections on. the /:• violin: M iss Mary Wntson O ffe red ;^ a reading, “The. Well of the Star.” , ' ^ Miss Eveiyn Allen pjayed several piano selections.

The paster, Rev. Smitb, present-^/ cd an illustrated lecturc, with .100 f a : colored slides;. o n . .“New." England, the Beautiful;” *■: The groan' retired %$£ to the jutuor room and ;a;; sq c in l;^ Ihour .was ei^^ed, s p on M r ^h y r t ito ^V 1 G.: S.j',With MrsV ’l'riuls;’ j|iv'j^.uelsori [ v In’; charge. "wSm

Page 2: New Township Committee Elects Gracey 16 Chairman For th ... · Ono/jyord.'can toll the story of con. •j tinued business activity In the coin- munity—Advertising. T H T ^ M N £

P A G E TWO FRIDAY, JANUARY 8, 1943

LEGA L N O T ICEM o n m o u th C o u n t y S u r r o g a t e ' s O f f ic e

I n t h o M a t t e r o f t h e E s t a t e o f G e o r g e T . E v a n s , d e c e a s e d .

N o t i c e t o C r e d i t o r s t o P r e s e n t C l a im s A g a i n s t E s t a t e . •

P u r s u a n t t o t h e o r d e r o f J o s e p h I*. I i n n n h a y , S u r r o g a t e o f t h e C o u n t y o f M o n m o u th . m a d e o n t h o N i n e t e e n t h d a y o f - D e c e m b e r , t!M 2, o n ; t h e a p p l i c a ­t i o n o f A l e x a n d e r W . E v a n s , H o le e c u ( o r o f i h e e s t a t e o f G e o r g e T . E v a n s , d e c e a s e d , n o t i c e I s •h e r e b y .

g i v e n to t h e c r o d l t o r s o f s a i d d e c e a s e d t o e x h i b i t t o t h e s u b s c r i b e r s o l e e x e c u t o r , a s a f o r e s a i d , t h e i r d e b t s , a n d d e m a n d s a g a i n s t t h e s a i d e s t a t e , u n d e r o a t h , w i t h i n s i x m o n t h s f r o m t h e d a t e o f t h e a f o r e s a i d , o r d e r o r t h e y w i l l b e f o r e v e r b a r r e d o f t h e i r a c t i o n s . t h c r o -

; f o r a g a i n s t t h e s a i d s u b s c r i b e r . -D a t e d , F r e e h o l d , N . J . , D e c o t n b o r

t i l t h , n 12.A l e x a n d e r W . E v a n s , .

;1 8 0 L i v i n g s t o n S t r e e t ,N o w H a v e n ; C o n n .

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25cIs All It Costs to Run a 25-Word Ad. in the Want Ads for one in­sertion (cash ra te). Additional Words 1c. a Word.

For Fivy Consecutive Insertions.

BU Y - S E L L - RENTTtie WANT-AD WAY

(Ask For the Ac!-Taker

TEE TIMES:[ s T “ !

.J S t il 64. MAIN AVENUE

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N O T IC EI N T H E M A T T E R O F T H E

N E P T U N E B U I L D I N G A N D L O A N A S S O C I A T I O N , I N V O L U N T A R Y D I S S O L U T I O N A N D L I Q U I D A T I O N . h.v- L . . N o t i c e t o C r e d i t o r s .

P u r s u a n t t o t h o p r o v i s i o n s o f S e c - , tlcrvi 1 7 : 1 2 - 8 6 - R . S . o f N e w J e r s e y , N O T I C E is h e r e b y g i v e n t o t h e c r e d i t o r s o f t h o N e p t u n e B u i l d i n g a n d L o a n A s s o c i a t i o n , a c o r p o r a t i o n o f t h e S t a t e o f N e w J e r s e y ,* w i t h I t a p r i n c i ­p a l o f l lc e a t 107 S o u t h M a i n S t r e e t , N e p t u n e , N e w J e r s e y , t o b r i n g In , u n d e r o a t h , t o t h e s u b s c r i b e r s , t h e T r u s t e e s o f s a i d A s s o c i a t i o n , i n v o l u n ­t a r y d i s s o l u t i o n a n d l i q u i d a t i o n , t h e i r d e b t s , d e m a n d s a n d -, c l a im s " a g a i n s t s a i d A s s o c i a t i o n w i t h i n t h r e e m o n t h s f r o m t h e d a t e o f t h i s ' n o t i c e , o r t h e y w i l l h e f o r e v e r b a r r e d f r o m a n y a c t i o n t h e r e f o r a g a i n s t t p e T r u s t e e s o r t h e A s s o c i a t i o n

W A L T E R I I . G R A V A T T , l lA U K Y H E I G H T .

. . , . P A U L J S T R A S S B U U G E i v ,T r u s t e e s .

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- 1 1 - 5 1 - '

I X C IC A X C K U Y O P X R IV J E U S I I Y

T o J O S H U A S . T O M C I I I N : .B y v i r t u e o f ^ a n o r d e r o f t h e C o u r t

o f C h a n c e r y m a d e o n t h o d a t e h e r e o f i n a c a u s e w h e r e i n T o w n s h i p o f N e p ­t u n e , i n t h e C o u n t y , o f M o n m o u th i s c o m p l a i n a n t , a n d J o s h u a S . T o m c i i l n la d e f e n d a n t , y o u a r c r e q u i r e d t o a p ­p e a r a n d a n s w e r t h e h i l l o f c o m p l a i n t o n o r b e f o r e t h e T w o n l y - t h i r d d a y o f F o h r im r y . l P I . V o r t h d s a l t ! b i l l w i l l b e l a k e u a s c o n f e s s e d a g a i n s t y o u ., : S a i d b i l l I s O lc il t o . f o r e c l o s e ’ a . c e r ­

t a i n ■ c e r t i f i c a t e ' o f t a x s a l e g i v e n b y W a l t e r I I . ( J i j i v a l t , C o l l e c t o r o f T a x e s , i p t h e T o w n s h i p o f N e p t u n e , d a t e d O c ­t o b e r •!, I lull*, w h i c h c o v e r s l a n d s in t h e T o w n s h i p o f N e p t u n e , in t h e C o u n t y o f M o n m o u t h a n d S t a t e o f NVr;.i; J e r s e y ; k n o w n a s L o t 571 i n B lo c k : 1 r.-t o n t h e T a x A s s e s s m c n t M a p o f t h o ’T o t v n s h i p o f N e p t u n e , •• 'A n d * ‘y o u , J O S H U A S . T O M C I I IN ,

a r e m nd»* a d e f e n d a n t b e c a u s e y o i a r e t h e o w n e r o f t h e p r e m i s e s m e n t i o n e d a n d d e s c r i b e d i n s a i d h i l l o f c o m p l a i n t a n d 'y o u h a v « - o r .m a y - c l a im t o h a v e a n i n t e i e s r i n t h e p r e m i s e s . .

D a t e d • D e c em b e r . 22 , 1042 .: U lC I I A U D .W . S T O U T , : .

. ' S o l i c i t o r o f C o m p l a i n a n t ,. E l e c t r i c lU i i h l l n g ,

’ A s b u r y P a r k , N . J . ’

DIM OUT SHOW WINDOW LIGHTING SIMPLIFIEDHere ore six simple points to observe for correct store lighting in dim-out areas.

Moderne ersona 1 Postcards

Distinctive - Handy - For Impersonal : v : Correspondence

100 for $ 1 .1 0

1. No exterior lighting or illuminated advertising signs.

2, Transom area to be opaqued. Use black-out paint, opaque paper, opaqlie drapes, etc.

3.. Deep opaque valance to hide lighting fixtures. Transparency signs not permitted.

6.

No lighted neon signs or other illuminated signs in window; 'Interior of store concealed by opaque window background.Opaque screen in door transom arid on upper portion of door to conceal interior lightingfixtures. '

N O T I C K

Marking Period( C u n i I I I iumI. f r o m t ’n g • IJ

. M R S . A V IL L i A M : K . M c . l f ,V A I X ; 224;Kast 27th Striiot, Ne\v V.ork, N.'Y, !t i | : . | . . | M i ' | ! i | : : l i | .• > > l ' ! | i ! | i > | : | i j : | i i | l : l r ' «». » '

( Blank Fo y C.orirespohde n c e p

N O T I C E O F P U B L I C S A L E O F L A N D S A N D P R E M I S E S IN T H E T O W N S H I P O F . N E P T U N E . I N T H E : C O U N T Y O F M O N M O U T H . 1 N O T I C E i s : h e r e b y g i v m i . t lm o n L e o n a r d H u b a n d , R u s s e l i n J a m i s o n ,

a t t h o N e p t u n e . T o w n s h i p H e a d q u u r t - m o n d L a n s i n g c r , A l i c e L e w i s , W a i ­n s , i a ; s o u t h M a in K i i u v t , x - * p i u n c , t e r L i t t l e , B i r i e r L o f t o n , J o h n L o m - V o w .1 *M.SL*v t h e T . n v u s h 1 o o f N < 'P lu n e , b a r d : R u t h M i n e r , S a r a h M i n e r ,i n t h e C o u n t y o f M o n m o u th w i l l o f f e r M n w ’ j« rn n „0 A n da t p u b l i c a a l d , t o t h o h i g h e s t b i d d e r , M a r y M o o r e , B e t t y P a l a i a , A n n e a t a m i n im u m s a l e p r i c e o f S i x H u n - P a s c a l , R u t h P e n n , B e t t y P e r k i n s , d i e d D o l l a r a ($ 6 0 0 .0 0 ) , a l l t h e r i g h t , V i r g i n i a P e t e r s o n , L e e P o l h e m u s ,

^ r o M P o n t e c o r v o , M e l v a P o w e l l f o r e c l o s u r e of t h o e q u i t y p f r e d e m p - Betty Riley, Gladys Roach, Albert t i o n t h e r e o f i n a n d t o t h o f o l l o w i n g Schneider. L eR oy ' Sickler, Harold

p a r - S i m m o n s . C a t h e r i n e S p r i n g h o r n , •la o f l a n d a n d p r c m ls e i* s i t u a t e , l y i n g Catherine Thoma, Jean, Turner,

a n d l i n i n g . I n t h e T o w n s h i p o f N e p t u n e , “ i n t h e C o u n t y of M o n m o u th a n d S t a t e o f . N e w . J i» r .s e y , n n d k n O ’.v n a n d d e s i g ­n a t e d u h ; B lo c k 108, L o t 10, o n - t h e T a x ’ .M '-v .non t M » p o f t h e T o w n s h i p o f

H O S T ’ C A R D

( A D D R E S S ■ I I E R E )

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OCEAN GROVE TIMESO cean G rove, New Jersey

Please m e .. . . . . . . . .New Modeln Bordered Post Cards at 100 for ?1.10 (postpaid). ( cr.elo.-sa check or money order' with order.

( ): White, blue border, blue print ( ) Grey, wine border, wine print

(Print name and address exactly as they are to appear.. - as given.)

Abbreviations will be

O t a n o . . - a m i u p o n t l i e f o l l o w i n g to n i iH a n d c o n d i t i o n s :

T h o s u m - o f .T w o H u n d r e d . D o l l a r s f ? "0 0 .0 0 ) t o b o p a i d a t t h e t t l n o o f t i i o a l e a n d . T w o j l t y -O v o D o l l a r s ' (SSii.QO) 10 ! Iio f i r s t o f e a c h a n i l ' e v e r y m o n t h , ,p i l l t h e b a l a n c e I s p a i d , w h e n t h e

i n l a s e r w i l t b o g i v e n a B a r g a i n a n d t a l e D e e d . A n y b i d d e r w h o f a l l s to o m i i t e t o I d s p m 'e h a s e w i l l f o r f e i t to

t h y T o w n s h i p a n y . . d e p o s i t p a i d .t O I I N / IV . K N O X ,

f.’l o r k o f t h e T o w n s h i p ot N e p t u n e .

!(!■:A!) TH E OCEA N GItOVE T IM ES FOR LOCAL NEW S

John Tynia. Eugene White, Lillian White, Noah Williams, Ruth Wood­ward, Kenneth Woolley, and Bar­bara Young.Honors in One Subject:

Sarah Asay, Gertrude Allen, Gloria Applegate, Albert Austin, William Barber, Pat Barone, Betty Bar to, George Basket, Russell Ben­nett, I .aura Bishop, Gilbert Bowers, Lees Broome, Doris Brown, John Brown, Peggy Carlton, William CaUanan, Edgar..Callender, W il­liam Campbell, Elsie Carson, Craig Garter, Dorothy Catley, Marccllus Clay, June . Clayton, Elisabeth Dangler, Robert Denbigh, Marion

Donahuv,' Jscquelinfi Edwards, Ray­mond Elliott, Junnitn Evans, Verna Ervin, Lovcna Evans, Henry Fal­ler, Joseph Farruggio, Doris Fau- ver, Marion Fianrnria, Doris Foss, Dorothy Freeman, Ben Glashnn, Pauline Glashan, Veronica Gorman, Robert Hannah, Myron Harris, Constance Hayward, Chtrza Henry, Edward Herbert, Harry Herbert, Roberta Hiller, Charles Hoffman, Thomasina House, Richard Hun­tington, Albert Huiick, William Huntington, David Jackson, George Jobbs, William Johnson, - Norman Johnson, Gloria Jonc-t," Fannie Kelley, Leah Kemper. Viola Laf- lin, Pauline Lopez, Robert Ltts- cotnbe, Barbara MacIntyre, June McDaniel, Jeff McElrath, Jeal McGrath, Janice Macaulay, Law­rence Micros, Ted Miguel, Percy Montgomery, Joseph Mount, Carl Neapolitario, Ddris Newman Don­ald Norman, Norma Pacher, Joseph Palaia, Joseph Parker, Betty Pat­terson, William Patterson. Shirley Payne. John Pettillo, Snlvndorr Pisano, Lois Polhemus, Harry Pyle, Edward Reid. Hattie Roach, Mary Rouch, Mildred Roach, Roberta Robinson, Marilyn Rogan, Norman Rosenstein, Frank Scannapieco; James Schembri, Donald Selover, Robert Smidt, Doris Smith, Bet­

ty Spruill, Alton Stevenson, Paul Stubb, Frahlc Sutts, Jack Syms, Marion Swenarton, Eleanor Tap­per, Walter Tarasovis, Dorothy Tephford, Evelyn Tephford, Ruth­erford Trimmor, Aretha Walker, Leah Watson, Thomas White; Earl Williams, Mary Williams, Hcmsloy Wilson, John Woolley, and Calvin Wright.

Lined tip here/in smart military formation, is a "squad" o f the mighty locomotives that work night and day fot Uncle Sam.Passenger engines, their specific job is to move troops. And, with the aid o f other locomotives, they ate doing this at a rate o f ovtr a million troops a month!T o die right ate their comrades-in-atms, freight locomotives, Their job is to haul war tr.Jtcfials. And they are moving 1,250,000 tons

get. But—with the cooperation o f travelers and shippers, the Office o f Defense Trans­portation, the Army, the Navy and Govern- ment agencies—the railroads are doing, and will continue to do, everything within their power to provide, the best service possible to the public in the midst o f the greatest war civilization has ever known.

RATIONReminders(This digest of important ration­

ing information is prepared for our readers by the Now Jersey office of Price Administrhtion.)

Fuel OilPeriod two coupons, each gopd

for ten gallons, now valid through January 26.

Period three coupons, now valid for ten gallons until February 20.

CoffeeThe Stamp 28 in War Ration

Book 1— -.■see) for sugar rationing —is good for one pound of coffee, through February 7. .

;. Sugar Stamp Number Ten in War Ra­

tion Book One expires at midnight, January 31, It is now valid for the purchase o f three pounds of sugar. Point Rationing—War Ration Book

TwoPersons who do not have r* copy

ol War Ratior Book One (sugar and coffee book) should apply to boards for a copy before January If If you do not possess a copy of War Ration Book One you will be unable to get a copy of War Ration Book Two when it is dis­tributed for use in the rationing of canned goods and other com­modities.

Mileage RationingA, B, and C gasoline ration cou­

pons are good for the purchase of three gallons of gasoiine. A ll pleasure driving is -now forbidden.

Coupon Three in A book expires midnight Janunry 21.

The deadline for the first tire inspection is January 31. All. motor vehicles are required to have their tires inspected. Go to an official OPA Tiro Inspection Sta­tion in your community and take with you your Tiro Inspection Record.

B and C ? upplomentnl rations can he secured at local boards upon proof of occupational need. Appli­cants must first have tires Inspect­ed and approved at OPA inspection station.

n g .if.freight a mile every minute of a 24-hour day!O f course, to keep up a war pace like this requites the railroads to give right-of-way snd a very large part o f their passenger and freight equipment continuously to the war effort.Naturally, under the circumstances, service to the public cannot be ail that either .you ot we would like it to be,. Trains may he late. Accommodations and seats may be hard to V e g a y 's freight locoEwtivci a n h iu l much heavier lo t *

thau the eughrea that rerved the ration iri the tart war:

P E N N S Y E * W M M S I i, j.Chie ol America's Railroad.?.. .AllilriSoblllaed fe? Woi- . .

■Mr* r N l . T R I » y S T A T E I- W A S D O N O S A N D ; - fii * A JM BU

iiiniMiiriiiiiiiiniMinaniijiHtfltimiiniirtitiiiiurmC

RoofsSlate, . Tile, Astpuitos, Slag

and Built up Roofing Sheet Metal Work Warm Air Heating ■

Ventilating;Estimates Frrcly Given

I I N. BEARMORE1 & c d , . v - v , . ;a ' 919 Third Avenue, ABboiy, i

V„ Vaxk' ,y \W ’ :1 ;‘V; vv.;-;.: ¥1858 ■ £ $ $ $

8 a l MMi»i)ii<»»i» n * * t ■ J111: i ii la i i i s u a u i u'b n ir m i) | jr i a i g

Page 3: New Township Committee Elects Gracey 16 Chairman For th ... · Ono/jyord.'can toll the story of con. •j tinued business activity In the coin- munity—Advertising. T H T ^ M N £

•'■’i'gi-x , .-, ”V - f ^V '.- . ■ ,: ■ ■; ■'■■ •.7J2rBj»

FRIDAY, JANUARY 8, 1943 1> AG E THU

M ?

E E

S P O R T S of THE TIMES

F . L. W,

Cleaning out the drawer:—Most bowlers shudder in their'

shoes when they see the ball going straight for the headpin, but up there in Newark, the bowlers actu­ally try to smack that old number one pin. The idea'being that the Newark Sunday Call once again sponsored their annual Head Pin tournament, in which the bowlers consider the score of 107 or 110 as good as smacking the pinB for a 250 or more in the regulation ten pin encounters. "

The. rules .for these head, pin tournaments insist that you hit the head pin or your score for that frame is nil. Also you get hut one

- ball to hit that old pin, but you do bowl for twelve frames; if, as in regulation bowling, you get a strike in the final frame. Thus,you. can see, that even if you get all. the pins in each frame, inasmuch as you count only those you get and do not amass . them as in regular bowling, the maximum score you can' get is 120, or ten pins per fram e1 for twelve frames. And

: when you have to hit the head pin, or you get nozzing.you can readily see that a 107'or 110 is a really good score. So, if you consistently get those splits in the ■ regulation games, fellows, go up to Newark, you may win a medal in the head pin tournament.

Tho Asbury Park Press sport pages look sort of empty without that column by Sam Siciliano now- a-days, but when the Navy calls, then the Navy calls and all else is put aside. We, and the rest of the sport fans shall really miss Sam and his newsy column and wish him all the luck in the world

•" in his new duties.In regard to Sam’s going, almost

everyone we have met so far lias spoken of that last column he wrote before leaving, in which he remin- csced a bit concerning the event? o f the sports world during his time in the picture. Particularly so was that bit in the column when he recalled the doings in that last Neptunc-Asbury game, in which Neptune did the winning, and some of the local fellows did it for the school. We can just about remcm-

:• bor those days, nnd believe us, those were the good old days in Neptune’s sports history. W e re peat, there is not the same feeling in the old school as there once was, and we are sorry to see it go. In basketball the kids are still in there fighting, but in the other

• sports—No.Well, back again to the issue.

Sam is now serving and a lot more of us will be before this, the great­est game of our country's schedule, is finally and .decisively won. But, win it we shall and with no com­promise.

Neptune looked a bit slow . in that Rumson game, but maybe i! was the slow competition the Bull-

' dogs gave them. Anyway, the Fliers wbiild easily have had a good twenty more joints had they been a bit more accurate under the basket. Time and again the N ep­tune guards stole the ball -from Rumson, only to have a poor shoi from under the hoop pass another chance to score. In all, however, 62 to 27 is not n bad margin of victory for the Fliers’ twenty- second straight victory in Shore Conference competition. Rumson has now dropped three ns against one win in the Conference. Keep

-it going fellows, but don’t let up a moment.

BeekmanLeadsXn 3rd Round Count

Tri-City Bowling Starts Tonight' The Tri-City Firemen's bowling league will resume tonight after a two weeks’ layoff because of the Christmas and New Year’s ..holi­days. ; The games tonight will, see the league-leading Bradley Juniors facing the E, H. Stokes, of Ocean Grove, and will see either a con­tinuance'of the Stokes’1 rise of re­cent weeks—a rise which carried them from, last'to fifth place in the league—or a ’ set back for' ".the Stokes as the Juniors d ig in first position, more firmly,' Washington; also of Ocean , Grove, which is striv ing; to wrest (first place from the Bradley Jun­iors, will meet the Hamilton com­bination in a battle to 'see which' team continues on the victory trail. Hamilton is also a contender for the higher, honors in the league bowling. Eagles, the third Ocean Grove team, will make an attempt

1 at rising from the cellar of the league as they meet- the Unexcelled Specials. The latter, team has maintained a standing in or near the top; throughout the '.campaign this season arid is favored to beat the Eagles in the match.

Meanwhile, the- Bradley 2 -.squad will match up with the Unexcelled1 team, in another battle: to keep from fqlling into the cellar of the league. This time it is the Bradley2 squad which is fighting to keep from falling into the cellar of the league,; there being but a game or two from that position.

•In a meeting of league officials held durinng the holidays, it was decided' to again offer Defense stamps as prizes for the winriing and contending teams of the league. This idea was; initiated' last year in the. larger Shore Firemen’s league, now inactive, when it was found no metal prizes or trophies were available, nnd war needs were found pressing.

Averages listed at the end of the third round of play in the Brad­ley Beach Businessmen’s bowling league' showed the high average men to be Ted Beekman, intrepid Ocean Grove .bowler, who has rolled an average of 181.1 in fif­teen games, and Rudy Zipper, bowling with . the Bradley ' Recrea­tion team, who. netted an average of 177.31 in forty-five games.

Standings, in the six-team circuit showed, the Major garage combi­nation to be holding the lead by but a one game murgin, while the Bradley Recreation team .contin­ued to press them for the spot. Other spots , in the standing were held by Kraft.Cheese, Kirms Print­ers, C oa s t. Cities Coaches '. and Nagle’s Pharmacy, in-that order.

The third round averages:G. Ave. H. G.

Denbigh . . . . . . . . 1 193, 193Beekman ........... 15 181.1 226Zipper . . . . . . . . . . 45 ,177.31, 224Marsland . . . . . . . 5 176.2 219Mauch , 22 175.15 213Francis ............ 40 174.14 220Huggins ........... 39 173.12 227Wendt 6 172.1 203Burdge 44 171.12 246Neary ......... . . . . . 4 4 170.43 232Gilmore ........ 43 170.34 225Gravatt .1 . 36 169.33 246Carr . . . . . . . . . . . 33 .-109.1 207Brown --- . . . 42 167.40. 219L. Tilton ....... 45 1G6.32 216Hoffman ........... 38 1G5.30 228Herbert ........ 28 163.27 202Holbrook ........ 29 1G3.20 211Glassford __ . . . 33 163.15 235Cahill ............. 39 163.15 225Ifeppinstill . . . . . 27 1G3.12 224Webster . 12 163.6 • 184Newhausen .. . . . % -163.3, 178 Vacchiano . . . . . 44 163. •• 213 Slott . . . 1 3 162. 208R un yon 34 161.16 203Taggart .............. 36 166.12 208Farry ............'... 37 160.28 237Fstlqw '-:........... 25 1G0.8 ’ 233C u l le n . ; . . . . 4 0 157.14 199Wright. . . . . . . . . . 35 155.14 211ICochel . . . 2 7 155.14 223Bernocco . . . . . . . 42 155.1 208Hill ........... 28 154.9 212Woodring . . . . . . . 3 153.2 181Kirms 2 153. 162Heckm an' 36 152.13 206Lawler \ . . . . . . . . . . 40 151.18 200N ew m an '29 151.12 189Rollo . . . . . . . . . . . 1 2 151.2 189Smith . 35 -148.3 212Ross . 25 .146.18 176Atkinson . , . . . . , 28 142.21 201Wilftus ............... 25 139.11 192E..Tilton 4 130.2 155

Neptune Takes Twenty-Second

Leading .all th e , way, Neptune High school’s Scarlet Fliers won their twenty-second straight vic­tory over Shore conference foes, as they overwhelmed an under dog Runison bull dog five by a 52-27 score. - - : ' •;

The Scarlet Fliers took the lead in th e ' early stages of the game, and hejd Rumson scoreless through the first half of . the initial, period to run up an 11-4 margin iri the first quarter. The second, third and final periodswere the same, as the Fliers amassed additional counters,', while Rumson -was held to periodic scoring, _

High scorers for the' Fliers wore Bill Bogcl, flashy forward, rind Ilenry Faller, who less than three weeks ago: was -told lie could , not play, basketball, because of an ill­ness.. Both, men scored tiine points to victory. Bob Davis, lanky cen­ter o f the Neptune combination, and Don Stratton, fust Flier for­ward, showing up well in the, floor play, setting up many scoring plays- and, .netting .twelve points between them in the scoring col­umn.

The J. V. combinations of. the, schools battled it out in the pre­liminary encounter, with Neptune easily , sinking :the Runison hopes by a 49-9 score. •

The score:Neptune (52)‘ F.

Bogel, f , . . . . . . . . . . . . 4Roehrich, f. . . . . . . . . . 3Stratton, f.- . . . . . . . . . 4Smidt, f. ........ 0Davis, c. ........ 2Faller, g ....................... 4Moser, g .; 1Atkinson, g. . . . . . . . . . 3Pisano, g. ............ 2

G. Pts. 0 8 3 90 8 0 2 1 0 0 0

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v p r o m p t i n a c t io n , e f fe c tiv e . V T h i r t y c e n t s a n d S ix ty ! c e n ts .

MU.BB M E R V I N S |I p O R r e l i e f f r o m F u n c t io n a l N e r - i *• yous D is tu r b a n c e s s u c h a s S leep* ;*• le s sh c e s , C ra n k in e s s , E x c i t a b i l i t y ,I . N c rv o a s H e a d a c h e a n d N e rv o u s . In *

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23 6 .52Rumson (27)

v-'.:'/;' / v ; ^ - f .■" g . Pts.Buy ton, f. . . . V 2 2 6Iinllitruh, f. . . . . . . . . . . 3 1 7Corrigan, c. . . . . 1 . .. 2 1 5Funning, g. . . . . .7. . . 0 1 1Cupshaw, g. . . . . . . . . 2 , 0 4Ford, g. > . . . . . . 2 0 4Bradshaw, g. . . ’. . . . . . 0 0 0

Neptune .. Rumson . . .

11 5 27. . 1 1 14 13 14—52 .V .4 8 5. 10—27

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“To be frank, Mr. Saltsby, the bank is a little dubious about a loan to finance Saltsby’s ‘sure-fire’ heir restorer."

MARY WORTH’S FAMILYMOTHER.!MILTON LEACH! what are you DOING HERE IN THE INSURANCE

OFFICE 7

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1 WHAT NONSENSE IS THIS? I ..U H --O N C E LIVED IN THE HOUSE

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. (SlAS3- WJlcll W itt Nor BREAK OR'TUE W EIGH T O r A

J 7 H R E S - 7 OM ELEPHAMT BEiMG rPOP^CcP A GuB^TlTUTc FOR. A\ETAL'

ALUMINUM PROPUCTlON N6VT 'j'CAR WILL BE SUFFICIENT TO BUlLtP 7H2EE T IM ES THE NUMBER. OF PAS5EUGER. CAR* NOW OPERATING ON A IL AM ER ICAN RAUROAPff

IC E CREAM

PROPtJCEPiNWHOLESALE.QUANiniES.

(ifJ 8 f)ltUA0tt.iN/*siJ NOT 0tCVUJ^e OF pUBUC DECA rtP . EUTA5.AMeans opPl£POSir/6 OFs o f tP so s M»ukr

THE TIMES OWN

GmMAju&id p u^ leS o lu t io n In N e x t I s s u e .

1 I 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 i .

12 13 14

15 16 17 IS

’ 19 20

21 22 '9 a23 24 IS 24 .

27 9 a28 30

J1 ■ 32 ■; • V; 33 m 34

35 36 ■Xy- « 37 7-/-' w . 38 :

39 40 V/7/JtYm 41.;; w 42-43 44 4S

46 47 W/a 48 49 SO

si 52 53 54 .: •55 56 /; ... .57

No. 46HORIZONTAL1 Pouch 4 Coronet 9 Numeral

12 South Ameri­can language

13 T o declare void - .

14 Peruvian . tuber15 Region E, of

Jordan17 Short,'catch- v ing vocal-

sound19 Hindu

cymbals20 Strong, heavy

vehicles21 To.abound 23-Coricerning 24 T o shoot at , from, cover27 Head organ28 Molten rock30 Fresh-water

.porpo ise31 Symbol for

silver32 Pertaining to

the people34 While35 Plum like :

f r u i t .. '.37 Cap worn by

a dervlshi

38 Anybody39 Weird41 Printer's

measure42 Greek coin43 Book of maps45 Skill46 Deep gorge 48 To affirm51 Torn piece

of cloth52 Equilibrium54 T o petition- ',55 Crude metal

56 To penetrate57 Sea eagle

V ERT ICA L1 Convulsive

: sigh:2 Literary

scraps3 Roller.4 South-African

. Dutch 5 Caravansary fr. Article7 Affluent o f the ! : Rhine8 Also-called

A n sw e r to F a i z l e N o . 45.

Jf I1 L

G lL lO j

i S K H I S f l H E I 0 0 I 3 ■ 00E

■ f i g '- 0 b dC 3 3 S ' '

p g r a a t a v a B H B io Ia Is a

9 Alarm bcil10 French coin11 T o sleep16 Slang: unpob

ished actor 18 Pessim ist20 G ives com- ■

pletcly '21 T o annoy22 Bird of p . ey ;23 Hindu myiti-v

ological hero '25 Music: soft’ '-26 Painter’s

stand : -28 French : .

article - '29 Solar disc :32 D ivine being .33 Whether • /. 36 Yellowish- ■

red 38 Stupid 40 To abscond 42 Province in .7-.

Ecuador -.44 E re lon g :45 T o declare .-A;46 Ancient': A A v

il tax a'-river .; ' .:

Page 4: New Township Committee Elects Gracey 16 Chairman For th ... · Ono/jyord.'can toll the story of con. •j tinued business activity In the coin- munity—Advertising. T H T ^ M N £

P A G E F O U R

OCEAN GROVE TIMESAnd Shore TfcmeaPublished F r iday V * .-H01WBB D. K R RSG E , E d ito r and Pub lisher M ARY JA N E KHE8GE, Lora l R tltor

8 IXTY«F0UR M A IN A V E N U E , OCEAN GROVE, N E W JE R S EY .... Telephone J

S U B S C R I P T I O N S : *2 .0 0 y e a r l y ; *1 .25 s e m i - a n n u a l l y ; 7 0 c . q u a r t e r l y o r 6 c .a r i d p o s t a g e p e r c o p y , p o s t a g e p a i d I n t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s ; C a n a d a 1 3 .50 a n d F o r e i g n , $4 .5 0 a y e a r .

• A D D R E S S E S c h a n g e d o n r e q u e s t — a l w a y s g i v e f o r m e r a d d r e s s . A D V E R T I S E M E N T S : R a t e s w i l l b o f u r n i s h e d ; b y u s o n r e q u e s t . .

W A T C H T H E L A B E L O N Y O U R P A P E R F O R T H E E X P I R A T I O N O F . ; ; Y O U R S U B S C R I P T I O N ,

T H E T R U T H I N - I T S P R O P E R P L A C E

N A T IO N A L € D I T O R IA i_ “ ' S S O O A I I O N

* /¥ lu r£ tA —

E n t e r e d a s s e c o n d - c l a s s , m a i l .V'at"the: V ■

V O c e a n G r o v e ' ; p o s t o f l l c e , : V

“We shall win or we shall die.’’—General DouglasMacArthur.

N e w s p a p e r P u b lis h e r S p e a k s P la in ly ■ -: At a time when the functions of government and thepowers of its boards and bureaus are growing so rapidly that no man knows'how great they are, and when they are

‘ actually usurping the functions: of the courts. A rthur flays Sulzberger, publisher of the New York Times, told 200 Detroit automotive and-advertising executives th a t the press of. America and industry must guard.the fundament­als of our system of-free enterprise against encroachments' of government. Mr. Sulzberger said : .

“I cannot over-emphasize the power and authority piling up in Washington ; .I would be derelict if I were not to point out th a t there are those in my opinion who seek to use the smokescreen of America’s foreign wars to promote and forward their American revolution.

“We of th e p r e s s m u s t b e a le r t t o p r o t e c t th e fu n d a ­m en ta ls o f o u r s y s tem o f f r e e en te rp r ise , a n d y o u m u s t b e d o in g s om e m o r e e g g h a tch in g . Y o u m u st b e p r e p a r in g t o s h o w th e . p e o p le o f th is c o u n tr y w h a t in d u s tr y ca n a n d w ill d o f o r e a c h m an , w om a n a n d c h i ld in th e c o m m u n ity w h en o u r m a jo r ta sk is c o m p le te d , f a r a w a y a s t h a t g o a l

■: 'Still is .”The men of industry must keep ahead of the proces­

sion in helping prepare a sound plan, said Mr. Sulzberger: “Let us paint it in all the colors of our genius—new houses, new cars, new education new opportunity of every kind;

“That's what democracy offers when we, the people,: do it. And to do all that, we need a free press;”

In other words, industry must, go on the offensive. It has the brains and it has the capital. Management and labor must work together as never before... - ,v- •

, Our people have everything to gain from a free enter­prise system. They_ have everything to lose by the exten­sion of state socialism. We have but to look around-the

■ world-to prove this point to ourselves. ;Real statesmanship, industrial and labor leadership,

and an informed public must cooperate to see that the United States remains the-iand of individual opportunity.:

-r■ Shun Night Club Fire Traps

“George W. Booths chief engineer of the National Board of Fire Underwriters, points out that the deaths in the Boston night club fire were about equal to those suf­fered in the landings in North Africa. In view of-that fact it might be advisable to study all fire prevention ordi­nances, even modern ones, with a view to requiring more etringent safeguards against fire in taverns, night clubs and similar places.

“Usually,” says Mr. Booth, “such places -.are poorly lighted, have flammable decorations, frequently do not have automatic sprinklers and seldom have sufficient exits. Usually passageways: and stairways-are narrow and exits poorly lighted. Such conditions can readily cause panic .and serious loss of life in case of a fire.

“Patrons can help by complaining to managements about flammable decorations and improper exits. Better still, they can shun night club fire tra p s .-

“During the past fourteen months, thirty-one Ameri­can cities have protected their residents against the likeli­hood of such a holocaust by enactment of modern (ire pre­vention ordinances. A model ordinance provides for the flame-proofing of otherwise flammable decorations arid draperies usually found in night clubs, and also gives au­thority to the fire department to require the installation of suitable fire protection equipment and to maintain ade­

q u a t e fire exits.” . * •The next question is to see that such ordinances are

enforced.

; : President Predicts VictoryThe President’s address on the state of the nation at

: th e opening of Congress was encouraging a t. home and . should be even more so to our allies abroad; There re­

mains no doubt of the' unanimity of our p.eople in the prosecution and the winning of this war and of their wil­lingness to sacrifice to the utmost in doing so. I t is a life and death struggle th a t will toughen.the national fibre.

, To what extent the people will submit when the war is won to the federal government’s becoming their nurse­maid in the attainment o f individual security remains to be seen. Human nature being what it is, it will rebel as always from the well-meant intentions of the uplifters.

’ America never asked for more than a fair and open field i w ith even-handed justice. The great step forward is that

i t now demands it for others as well as itself. As for ^ individual security and Banishment; of Fear, they are very ; much like God; supremely worth searching for, but more

often found within than without.

Township Committee(Contlnaed from rage I)

man and tho appointment of W il­liam Stanley Applegate as health officer. . This will be hla fifteenth year. The three most prevalent diseases in 1942, according to the health officer’s report, were'chicken pox with 95 cases; mumps, 79 and whooping cough, 53. .

Clerk’s Annual. Report In his annual report Clerk John

W. Knox paid respect to the late Harry A. Whitlock, who had served continuously ns a member of the township committee from JanuaryI, 1927, to his dath on AugustII, last year. “Under his super­vision,” said Clerk Knox, “the po lice department : has improved until it is one o f the finest and most efficient in the .state. He is greatly missed by those who knew and respected him.” .

During the past year Road Fore, man Sted Shafto was granted

leave of absence to enter war work in Trinidad. Three township employees have entered the armed forces: Officers John Troppoli,Max: Pollack and John Hancox.

U. S. May Take Country Club _ The clerk’s report also touched on the good work done by the tax title lien committee consisting of Alvin: E . Bills, Arthur H. Pharo, Walter H. Gravatt and Clerk Knox. Tax title liens were sold for a. total o f $47,110. The Shark River Hills hotel. Was sold to the government for $30,000 and negotiations are in progress through. Attorney Stout for the rental ; of the Jumping Brook Country Club to the government.

The work of impounding and de­stroying stray dogs was handled by Sergeant: Joseph O'Rourke, under the provisions of the new state law. .'

.Total Collections-$807,071 According to the report of Col­

lector Gravatt, collections in 1942 amounted to the. grand total o f $807,071. O f this amount,. $666;- 062 were realty taxes for the years 1942 and prior thereto and the, balance miscellaneous revenues.

Chief o f Police S. William Mans reported fines and costs imposed by the recorder during 1942 amounted to $1,814.09. ‘ Drunken­ness accounted for the largest sin­gle number of arrests, 28, with vio­lations o f road,and: driving laws at the samb figure;; Total: arrests for all causes were 249.

Building Inspector Bailey Wat-, son reported total new construc­tion- for the year in- Neptune at $16,806. F ile Inspector Harry Neidhardt reported 108 inspections and 68 permits issued. There were 58 fires, including; 24 grass fires. Clara W. Youmans, Librarian, said that there were 4,890 books circulated, of which 4,442 were fiction.

According to the report of Janet V. Bouse, , Director of Welfare, there: are 100 babies .registered in the baby clinic. Dr. W; VonOehsen assisted by nurses Mrs. Adeline Bangert. Miss Marion Ducket's and Miss Anna Bier.-

Flowers for the committee were received from Sted Shafto, the Hamilton F ile Company: and H, t . Zobek Company.

V-----

. D O N ’T L O S E T H A T C H E C K I

D o w nM e m o r y

L a n e

OBITUARY

FRANK T . BLOOM Funeral services for Frank ■ T.

Bloom, 118 Mt. Hermon Way, who died Wednesday, December 30, at Fitkini hospital,., were held at. the E ly and Woolley funeral home, As­bury Park, Saturday afternoon. Burial was made at Fairview Cemetery, Middletown. He had made his residence in Ocean Grove for the last ten years. Surviving is his wife, Mrs. Olive H. Bloom.

Layman Sternbergh has sold his Skeeball Stadium in Atlantic City to his manager, Dick Keyler, and writes:

;|;f*When we have won the war and the peace, I shall again b' l jjive my all to the Skeejball Alleys in Ocean Grove; , and ,':bere is a fond wish arid a fervent prayer tha t it may be 801 "B o on ,” - ' .' - ■ • ' M v ■ ' 801

LOUIS F; BURKLEY Funeral services frir Louis F.

Burkley, who died at his home, .137 Stockton avenue, Wednesday morn­ing, will be held at his late home tomorrow morning, with Rev. Carl Miller, of Asbury Park, officiating. Interment will follow at Hamilton Cemetery.:; A former resident of Philadelphia, he had come to Ocean Grove fifteen years ago, where he had made his home ever since. He ia survived by his wife, Snlly B. Gunzer Burkley, a son, Dr. Louis F. Burkley, jr., of Easton, Pa., one daughter, MrB. Catherine B. Smith, Ocean Grove, and four, grandchild­ren. He was an honorary member of Washington fire company. Ocean Grove, Little Temple of Philadel­phia, Lodge No. 9, and. a number o f other fraternal organizations. .• Matthews, Francioni and Taylor Were in charge of . funeral arrange; menta. •

— — -V- — —Marine Gunners ‘

•Army and N avy Pre-Fight Schools use-Marino Corps gunnery sergeants for training their men in aerial gunnery. . .

Fifteen Years Ago Reorganization of the Neptune

township committee put Raymond R. Gracey, of Ocean Grove, in the chair, distinguishing him : as the youngest executive head Neptune had ever had. ,

In charge: of Miss : Marjorie Clark, Mothers’ Day was celebrated by the Junior Woman’s Club, when their mothers were the guests of the members. Greetings were given by jtfrs; John Ml Dey, Mrs. G. M. Bennett, and Mrs. C. M. Nagle

The January , meeting of Richard Stockton Chapter, D. • A. R., was held at the home of Mrs. George C. Wertz, 72 Embury avenue. Four new members were received: Miss Ruth A, Sutton, Miss Lillian E. Robinson, Mrs. William E . Mil­ler and Mrs. Howard Stiles.

Wilbur R. Guyeiy who had re­cently purchased the plumbing and: heating business of William Young, 64 Main avenue, took for­mal possession at the new year.

Announcement had been made of the engagement of Miss Hazel E. Flemming, daughter of Mr.- and Mrs; Charles II. Flemming, 36 Em ­bury avenue, and Raymond S. How­ell, sqn of Mrs. Margaret Hend- icks, of Asbury Park.A. L. E. Strassburger, proprie­

tor of Stokes Hall, 28 Ocean Path­way, in behalf: of: the Ocean Grove Hotel Association, had appeared before the Neptune township com­mittee at its first regular meeting of the new year to urge the adop­tion of an increased publicity ap­propriation for. the coming season,

Bryant B. Newcomb, of Long Branch, was reelected director of the county freeholders a t their re­organization meeting,

■ v -----Navy lookouts and gunners are

now, using special goggles with rotating lenses, which control the amount o f light admitted; The goggles eliminate ultra-violet (sun­burn) rays as well as reflected glare. "v;.;;. ■

BODINEEstablished 1900

1007 Bangs Ave., ABbiiry ParkA dignified service, to meet any financial need. No ad-

, ditional charge for use of Funeral Home.

LeROY A. M ULLER, Manager • Telephone 4525

Thirty Years Ago The Ocean • Grove Auditorium

had been selected again as the place for crowning Titania, queen of. the Asbury Park carnival and baby parade, for the, ensuing sum­mer.- . . *. A t the monthly meeting o f the

Ocean Grove board of fire commis­sioners held in the parlor of Wash­ington engine company, the resig­nation of William E . Taylor as superintendent of the local fire alarm system had been received and accepted.

The pulpit o f St. Paul’s M . E. Church, Ocean Grove, was filled by Harry Knight Miller, an under­graduate of the Wesleyan Univer­sity at Delaware, O., and the son of . Mrs. E . V. Miller, 29 Broadway.; Mr. and Mrs. John Worden, who had been visiting relatives in Ocean- Grove, accompanied by Mrs. Effie Hamilton, Miss Catherine Hamil­ton, and T. Nelson Lillagore, of Ocean Grove, started on a sixteen- day. trip to Panama.; i James Clpiighly; of Long Branch, father o f William R. Cloughly, o f 138 Main avenue; Ocean Grove, was given a surprise visit from members of. St. Luke’s church, Long Branch, on the seventy-first anniversary o f his birth.

Miss Marion English, 55 Abbott avenue, , entertained the young ladies of the A. G . Club. Present were the Misses Geraldine Wall­ing, Grace Arthur, Helen Shep­herd, Edith Dewis, Maud Owens; Edith Owens, Laura, Anderson and Catherine Covington.

. V--During the Civil War, life in­

surance paid American families about $7,000 daily in policy bene­fits; during the Spanish-Americim War about $400,000 daily; during World W ar I about $1,600,000 daily; and today $6,500,000 daily.

Road BuildersU. S. Marines are road builders

as well as military, men. They have turned muddy trails into splendid highways in many parts o f the world.

ELY & WOOLLEYFUNERAL HOME

Successor to BURTIS 514 Second Avenue,

Asbury Park Our Services Are Available

To All. Regardless o f , Financial Circumstances “

J. R. E ly & W . A. Woolley Phono A . P . 567

*iiiiibubiiii n'liiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiinuiuuiiiiiiiiinuiMiiiamuicmijmaiimajmaiaiaug

[1943 Christmas C lu b!NowOpen— |f o r M e m b e r s h i p W e e k - ] l y I P a y m e s s t . C l a s s e s s o ’ f s u i t , y o u r t r o n v & a i e i t c e I 5 0 c t o $ 2 0 . 0 0 p e r w e e k - - j

I The First NationaLBank of Bradley Beach I | > Bradley Beach, N. J , , 1] >: Member: Federal Deposit Insurance^ Corporation-;i |

iVis'wf*rWiCiuitiiiiiiiiiftt Hiual

The Very N EW EST STYLES: at the Same LOW PR ICES >;! ;j„V Including Advance Spring Trims and catering to • • ;. '• ^. : Stylish Matrons

$1.19 and $1.95A IS O STYLISH HANDBAGS A T $1.00 A N D $1.95

PARIS HAT SHOP436 Cookman Ave., Asbury Park (Phoiie 4831-Jjjl

Open Wednesday Evening till 9:00. Saturday till 10 P. M . .. vi;

■ um

I N ^ N D b U T O F O CEA N G R O V E

Th e Ocean- Grove' Round Table will meet at tbe home of Mrs. Ida

McDougal, 36 Benson avenue,

. . . THE PIONEER O F F IC E ...Selling

We have a bargain, eight-room house, aeven bedrooms, bath, fully furnished, $1,600. We have other bargains to show you.

RentingAre you looking for an all year house, let us

know your wants.

Insurance' If you are interested in any kind of insurance,-'

and want information, just consult our insurance ‘ expert, Mr. G. William Schwartz. ‘

Still doing business a t the old stand.

-oOo-

E. N. WOOLSTON4 8 - MAIN AVENUE

T e l. 398 O cean G ro v e , N. J .

Bes- Monday

Detroit andsouthwest.

. : M iss: Anne Weir, of Paterson,' ; j w&s a guest last weekend at the

0f Mr. nnd Mrs. Charles

i.:' ' S.-'-;/ 'tlie south'

vh&Wi "',1, ■ , w . r - ) " . . . r .Weaver, 68 Abbott avenue.

' ii';!, J Mrs. Homer D. Kresgo, 96

REAL ESTATE VALUESAbbott Avenue. Duplex cottage with ten rooms each side. One ;

and one-half blocks - from boardwalk. Good - investment.$3,000.00

Clark Avenue. Eight room cottage. Bath. Extra lavatory. -Hot water heat with oil burner v.-; . ; . . . .$4,500.00

Heck Avenue. Five . room . cottage. Bath. Extra lavatory.„ -Garage ............. .....$2,100.00Broadway. Magnificent home with six rooms, bath gas heat,

two lota . . . ..-. __ $7,500.00 •Surf. Avenue. Rooming house. . Seventeen rooms. Running-

water in bedroqms., ,^even doors from boardwalk $5,000.00INSURANCE

, Bring your , insurance prpblems to us. W e write auto 11a- bihty, .workmen’s 'compensation, general liability, burglary,' plate glass, fire and wind stpfm. In other words,- ,

S E E M E B E FO R E VOU BUY, BURN OR BORROW

E. BRONSON, Realtor63 Main Avenue . Tel. A. P . 4068 “ O cean ,Grove, N. J. i

; iy ' I A ..Sii!

SALEFive rooms, two bedrooms, bath, pipeless fur­

nace, $2,500. /Also modern: house in best section of Ocean

Grove, seven rooms, conveniences, fireplace. Bar­gain at $7,500.

. .... .. War damage and other kinds of insunancce.

ALVIN E. BILLS A GEN CYREA L ES TA TE M ORTGA GE LOANS IN SU RA NCE Telephone 2124 78 Main Avenue,-Ocean Grove

FOR OCEAN GROVE’S BEST. BUYS J. A. HURRY AGENCY

APPRAISALS RENTALS INSURANCE

BROADWAY—Attractive eight rooin house, good hea ting : $ 0 o T 6 o fV1* y ° " ' 4 fl°pr- Tw^ lots- garage, largo porches :

ABBOTT AVENUE—Eleven room house, near ocean ; good condition, $2,500.00. , , 1 . ocean,r ^AVENUE—Eight rooms and bath, near FletcherLake,_nice porches with ocean view. $2,600.00. ;

J . A . H U R R Y A G EN C Y66 MAIN AVENUE OCEAN GROVE

Telephone 4132 : •

Webbavenue, le ft Sunday to visit her

y ’ , mother in Berwick,. Pa., where alio will remain'for several weeks. .■ Albert E. Robinson, 64 Heck ave-

s'V.ij;’: mio, is recovering from a slight !l'case o f pneumonia and ear infec-

.. . tion at the home: o f his daughter,: - Mrs. Otis W . Weld, W est Cald-

’ w d l. N . J.. 'Seaman Allen Hannah, son of Mr and Mrs. Norman Hannah, 144

iCpokman avenue, is spending this week with his parents. blit expects

- to return Sunday to Camp Samp- ' son, N . Y., where he i s stationed,

-Mrs. Isaac Stapleton and sisterl Mrs. Mattio Eyres, 43 Embury

- avenue,,left Tuesday to'spend some time -with their niece, • Mrs. Ray Knelly, in Hazleton, Pa.

Mrs. John Syms, 116 Clark ave- > 1 - nue, le ft today to spend a few , days with her son-in-law and

* daughter Mr. and Mrs. Harry E . Crawford, in Woodside, L. f. . ’

William E . Thomson, o f Ocean Grove and Mt. Airy, Pa., has been confined to his home in the latter place since Christmas night with

' the flu, but he; is improving stead- By;.'

Mrs. Jennie Shenton, of the St. Elmo hotel, was called to Polts-

d- town, Pa., yesterday, due to 111- ' ness o f her sister, Misa Phoebe

Thomas, a frequent visitor in Ocean G rove .;

, Ocean Grove auxiliary o f Fitkin j : : hospital, work group, has . resumed

'making surgical dressings for the- hospital every Tuesday from 2:00

to 4:80 p. m., in the Woman’s club, house.

Robbin Frederick Rush, infant son o f Mr. and Mrs. H. Floyd Rush, 76%. M t. Pisgah Way, was

' dedicated into the Salvation Army ; o n j Sunday. Colonel Walter F,

Jenkins, of Allenhurst, performed the ceremony.

L. E . HoU, 80 Mt. Zion Way, flew last week to Miami Beach,

' ' Fla., to the bedside of his son, Pvt. - Frank Holl, who is seriously ill at

"the Nautilus hospital., The latest , r report received by Mrs. Holl is that j; her son has passed the crisis and

is improving.K The . regular monthly meeting.of

. C irclo G, with Mrs. Jacob Beutell,* V . .. . leader, will be held at tho home of

M iss Lulu E . Wright, 85 M t. Her­mon Way, Monday January 11, at 7:30 p. m. Misa Mary Watson and Miss Glendora. Weeks will act as

j ' 1 • hostesses. ■ ■ ., J; •; Guests a t the St. Elmo for New

“ .Year’s and the weekend included S '" Mr. and Mrs. W . E . Groto and

- Mrs. Ida Botty, o f New York C ity ; i* Thomas Young, o f Paterson; T.

.George Stiles, and daughter, Miss Jennie B. Stiles, of .Arlington; Mrs.

> v. ’ James Shaffer, o f Philadelphia; ' and Dr. and Mrs. Elmer E . Pearce,

o f South Orange. -■ .Walter S. Propert, jr., who has

v^feoccupied a tent on Mt. Tabor Way ' ' an

stationed Ensign

stock» -;room at the North End .hotel for :.':ii; the last threo years and has served

as an Auditorium usher.Rev. and Mrs. Verne L. Smith

fj^varjs' spending some time in New lii.l’ij^YprkL.City but .will return to the ;].-:;:.v:Gr6ye: next week. Rev. B. S.

.Crowcroft, of.; Ocean Grove, will ipccupy the pulpit on Sunday: morits

at prayer meeting, and '■'".V.Irvlhsr Crabiel w ill preach -at the

Realtor’ vw,.M * » s a l6 w -■ C o n a l a t l j iR ! .: oxa s , - B a t h ; O p e n A t t i c , i n s u l a t e d ; H o t a * r a , . P l a c e , -B r e a L Crt. Tin# ■ . . n . __L- .«__. m-

FRANKLIN- A V ENU E vs . M o a t A t t r a c t i v e B u n g a l o w ,

K o o m s , J ’ H e a t ,

,’v . Franklinavenue, Mias'.:/ ;^|J fliu ^ey :’Giij(an returned Sunday to . ; ! j- the .Philadelphia School o f Bible,

■ ..-wherp sho is located as a atuderit; ....^^WorSe.Vi;.Hospitol ■ apprentice Daniel

• : stationed ' a t Little.Creek. Va.. sumrised his mother

Two-stop: Frnmp: House,_8-Jiobms, ;Bath, has ‘ ; Heat, Automatic-Hot ’Water ■H’eater, Fire

’ Phones: 8448-8449

: ‘ F irst’Lieutenant Richard B . Fre­dey, o f tho U. S. Marines, who managed the North End Hotel for many seasons, was a visitor here yesterday enjoying a short fur­lough pending his transfer from Qpantico,. Va., to Cherry Point, Ni-C. 'R e also served in the F irst .World: War.• Having completed training .at

the F irst Women’s Army Auxili­ary- Cioips Training: center in Fort Dcs Moines, Iowa, Auxiliary Mar­guerite J. Brierley, 69 Main ave­nue, haa been transferred with a W AAC Post" Headquarters com­pany for duty at an Army.post in tho m id w e s t .; ,

Dr. and Mrs. G . F ey Stoll, of Nutley, entertained on New Year’s day at their first dinner party of this type a t their home in Nutley. Among those present Were his par­ents, Mr. and Mrs. Otto Stoll, sr., brother, August Stoll and his daughter, Janet, Mr. and Mrs. Otto Stoll, jr., all o f Ocean Grove; Miss Mildred Vanderhoof, and Mr. and Mrs. Em il Waldmann.

Mr. and Mrs. C. Clinton Camp­bell, who; purchased; 57- Newi Jer­sey avenue about two years ago ond hove made this their perma­nent home, left this week for De­troit, Mich,, where Mr. Campbell has accepted the position of gen­eral manager of the Ambassador Bridge, connecting Detroit with Windsor, Ont. Mr. Campbell was manager for Joseph Bower, who was a candidate for U, S. Senator in the Republican primary last fall. . .

v — —NEW D IR ECTORY ISSUED

With^ Important War Tim e In- . structions for Phone - Users A new issue of the Monmouth

county telephone directory is mak­ing its appearance, carrying on the front' hover additional war time in­structions for using the service. In addition to the request which appeared on the summer directory cover not to make calls during or for some time after an air raid alarm, telephone users are asked to ayald making upneceasary calls, especially long distance calls; to make all calls brief; and to look in the directory before calling “infor­mation!”.1

The New Jersey Bell Telephone Company reports about 2,500 new: listings among some 33,000 in the new book, and .about 10,000 .other listipg changes of: one sort andanother.'■W'>:

JtE lD .JC ILLED IN CRASH

Was to Receive-.H is Wings on January..14,-.at Moody Field

William M. "Reid, jr., 22-year old son of Mr. and Mrs. William M. Reid, 1000 Sunset avenue, As­bury Park, and grandson of Mrs. Clara; Hepburn, Ocean Grove, was killed in a.training.flight near.Lake Park, Ga., an Tuesday o f last week: Reid was a cadet pilot in the army air corps and would have received his wings and commission as a sec­ond lieutenant at Moody Field, Ga., on January 14. Young Reid was a graduate of Asbury. Park high school. Besides his- parents and grandmother he is survived by a sister, Mrs. Alfred Argilagos, South Coventry, Conn., and ano­ther, grandmother, Mrs. Joseph A. Reid, Asbury Park.

V-----TOW N SEN D CLU B T O M E E T

atJoseph E . Robb W ill Talk ' • Meeting on Sunday ■

The Townsend Clubs o f the state o f New Jersey will, meet at the new W est Side Community Center, 115 DoW itt avenue, As­bury Park, on Sunday, January 10. There will be two sessions: a morn­in g session at 10:30, and an after- noon>session at 2:00.

Joseph E . Robb, o f Caldwell, na­tional representative,- will; deliver a message. John H. Wall, of Ocean Grovei assistant national representative, has completed plans to entertain the delegates and representatives o f the seventy-five dubs in N ew Jersey.

• V •JOH N R E ID TRA INS IN NAVY

A Lieutenant, Junior Grade, in : Training at South Boston

John A. Reid, son o f 'M r . and Mrs. John T . Reid, 70 Mt. Carmel Way, who Whs, commissioned a lieutenant,' junior grade,'in the U. S. 'Navy rece&Uy! is now located at the Naval Training atatlon, South Boston, Mass.

Ho hoa been recorder o f Inter­laken since'1935 and was granted a leave of, absence for f e e dura­tion' o f the war: Ho Is an nttorhey

CHRISTMAS T R E E DONATIONS

Committee Issues List of TKIb ’ : Year’s Donors

The Firemen’s community Christ­mas committee reports the follow­ing donors to this year’s celebra­tion:

Washington F ire Co. No. 1, Ushers’ Union of St. Paul’s church, Ocean Grove Times, Dr. R. E . Tom ­lin,; William E . Thomson, W . S.C. S. o f St. Paul’s church, W. C. Putt, Arthur Finch, Dr. F. C. Cooper,; Joseph Thoma, .Johnson Coal Co., B. J. Winters, Frank B. Smith, Harry C. Openshaw, Eagle Hook and Ladder Co., M iss Amelia Havens, Richard Stockton ChapterD.. A. R., Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Purdy, Howard L. Smith, Twin City Garage, Green-Hagerman Lumber Co., Miss: Agnes Day, Jor­dan Lodge No. 247, Frank L. Thomson, Eastern: Stair, O. E. S., American Stores Co., Lewis Lum­ber Co., A Friend, Monmouth Con­solidated Water Co., St. Paul’s Church Board of Education, Shef­field Farms, J: J. Dooner, John M c­Laren, Walter H. Gravatt, Walter H, Bray, Jacob Beutell. Ocean Grove Craftsman’s Association, Seaboard Ice Co., E. H. Stokes Fire Co., A Friend, Miss Drapier, Hurry Real Estate, Ladies’ Auxiliary of Washington Fire Co., Ocean Grove Woman’s Club, Taylor Dairy Co., Assembly Bible Class-of St. Paul’s Church, St. Elmo Hotel, Mrs; James McRell, B, Feddes, Nagle’s Pharmacy, P. J. Strassburger.

The Christmas celebration com­mittee consisted of Curwin .F. Dodd, chairman, Wallace Reed, David O ’Reilly; and Lewis B. Mul­ford, of Washington Fire company; August Stoll, George Westervelt, John Newbon, William Gilbert, of Stokes : company; Edmund L. Thompson, jr., Archer Wardell, and Frank Wilgus, of the Eagles.

V-----PH ILATH EANS S TA GE : PARTY

“Secret Pals’,’ for Year Revealed Tuesday Evening

Mrs. Joseph Porter entertained members of the Louise F ox Phila- thea Class, o f St. Paul’s church, at her home on Tuesday evening. This was the class’s annual Christ­mas party The president, Mrs. Charles Weaver; conducted the short business meeting, and Mrs. Joseph Kaiser was in charge o f devotions. Committee reports were given. The “ secret pals” for the year .were revealed, followed by a social hour. Included among those present were Dr. Lucia Grieve, Mrs. .Reba Weilert, Mrs. Ruther­ford; Trimmer, Mrs. Elmer Smith, Mrs. Ellerslie Davis, Mrs. Rollin Priest, M rs. William Heintz, Miss Lillie Truax, Mrs. Raymond Man­ley, and M rs. Joseph Sandford.' The next meeting will take the form of a valentine party at the home of Mrs. Charles Weaver, 68 Abbott avenue, Tuesday’ evening, February 2.

^-V—---W OM AN ’S CLUB BIRTHDAY

T o Celebrate its Twenty-first Year Thursday

; The Women’s club o f' Ocean Grove will observe its twenty-first birthday party on January 14, at 2:30 p .m . May Whitney Thomp­son, music chairman, has arranged a fine musical program’ and. addi­tional features are promised.

Instead of January 21, the date for the club’s • white. elephant auction sale has been changed to January 28 at 2:30 p. m. Any white elephant will be acceptable and may he useful to some one. Proceeds will be turned over to ■the U. S. O. and-the Salvation Army, for. serving refreshments, to men .in service. .

V -----Joseph Wardell Home On Leave Joseph Wardell, assistant chief

o f fee Neptune township police de­partment who was given a leaye o f absence to serve .with the F. B. I., is spending a few days vaca­tion at his home on Corlies avenue, Hamilton.

PATRONS-Plan ; Your Trips Betwfen 10:00 A. M. and 3:30 P. M. .

H u r l n n t h e e a r l i e r : h o u r s t h e b u s e s a r e b u s y b r i n g i n g

: c h i l d r e n t o s c h o o l s , c i v i l s e r ­v i c e w o r k e r a t o t h e c a m p s ,

, a n d B to r e , a n d ,o ( t lc o c m p l o y - e ' e e s t o - t h e i r - J o b s . T h e n , - ' f r o m 10 A- -M . t o 3 :3 0 P . M :

I , t h o b u s d o A r e . r e a d y f o r B h o p - r . p o r e , P l a n n i n g y o u r t r i p s ■ • d u r i n g t h e s e h o u r a w i l l h o l p . .u o I m i n e a s u r a b l y t o g i v e y o u '

t h e b o a t s e r v i c e ' a n d t h o m o s t , c o n v e n i e n c e p o s s i b l e : d u r i n g .

NOSTA LG IC SIGN POST—Young Army engineers add an extra arrow to a sign post on the route of the Alaska Highway far up in Northern wilderness,

MRS. R OOSEV ELT TO TALK

To Address Meeting o f M.C.O.S.S.January 14

Arrangements for: Mrs.’ Franklin D, Roosevelt’s visit to Monmouth county on' Thursday', January 14, are just about completed, the Monmouth County Organization for Social: Service announced yes­terday. M rs . Roosevelt will be the principal speaker at the An­nual M eeting of that organization. Mrs. . Roosevelt, accompanied by Mrs;-Lewis' S. Thompson, president o f the M COSS will, upon her ar­rival, pay a visit to Fort Mon­mouth. She has expressed the de­sire to see the Signal Corps labora­tories where there are so many women and girls employed. She is deeply . interested in the part American women are playing in the war effort, and is going to make an^jnspection o f the various types o f jobs they are holding and to what extent they are supplant­ing men needed for the armed forces

Mrs. Roosevelt will be given a luncheon at the U<S.O. in Red Bank under the : joint sponsorship of the MCOSS, the Monmouth County' Chapter o f f e e Red Cross, apd the USO. A typical soldier’s canteen fare will be served so that she may . see the facilities avail­able for the soldier personnel in Monmouth county. Mrs. George

i m o P f l i f l p r . . I| s » ’ir:.;r T i L . n v L :I«is I5 . , 7f9 . ■'■■■•*' :*= •• • B R A D L E Y B E A C H =

a : • P R I. and SAT., Jan. 8-ft s| “White Cargo” | | Hedy Lamarr Walter P idg con i

| f l r X . a n d J a n i -10-11 1| “Moon anti Sixpence” 11 George Sanders |

I TUES . nnd WET)., Jnn. 12-18. =I r - “Tish” " || Marjorie -Main (I T l I im S llA Y , January H I| Donbiu Feutnro . 5| “Parachute Nurae” || Marguerite Chapman • /1I ■ A l s o . I| “Little Tokyo, U. S. A.” |1 ' Preston Foster ■ ■ 5

■ F U I . n m l S .V T ., J a n . 1 5 -1 8 ' §| “Thunder Bird*” || Gene Tierney Preston Foster |UillillllllllllllllltlllllllllBnlillilllillillillllliiiiiiiiitiiiiiitii

CHOW MEIN SSc. QT.TO T A K E HOM E

NEW CANTON RESTAURANTC H IN E SE nnd AMEB1CAN FOOD

N ear Neptane H igh School 82 So. M a in 8trcet Ocean Orore

Telephone A . P . 8137

Dwight, representing the MCOSS, is chairman of the luncheon com­mittee. Assisting her are Mrs. Wilbur Ruthrauff nnd Mrs. Arthur Borden of the U.S.O.

W O O LM A N ’SQuality Market125 Heck Avenue

Telephone 963 Ocean Grove

J! thought for tfa Week Gnd IBy Verne Leslie Smith, ;

Pastor of St. Paul’s Church! |taiiaNaiifiiaiiBiiaiiiHaiianiifliianiJUHiiiaiwianattaiiaiiBiiiaBiiiuauBiiiiliiitiiiiiiiiatiliniiaHBHaiiaiiwtlHluiJSnluenih'. A SM IL ING PARADOX

: I’ve squandered smiles today,And, strange to say, •' “ ZAlthough my frowns with care I ’ve stowed away,Tonight I ’m poorer far' in frownB than at the start;But in my heart,Wherein my treasures best I store,I find my smiles increased by several score. ,

• John Kendrick Hangs.;: ;! • . : ' •

SUNDAY IN ST. PAUL’S CH URCH ,9:30 St. Paul’s Church School with classes for all.

10:46 Morning Worship with Sermon.Rev. B.-.C.'Crowcroft, a, member of Newark Com- v ! ference,’ guest preacher.

2:45 • Assembly Bible Class.Guest teacher, O tto Stoll, Jr.

4:00 Vesper Hour with-Sermon. . -•‘PROP US UP O N OU R LEA N IN ’ S IDE .”

Guest preacher, Rev. Irving Crabiel, local preacher , o f St. Paul’s Church. ' .

Popple? Sp o ts In T h e N ew s

| FELIN’S 2-LB. PKG.| SCRAPPLE, 39c.I We now have our ! SAUERKRAUTi Fresh Killed| ROASTING CHICKENS

| STRICTLY FRESH EGGS| Have you tried our new | Southern Style Virginia | . . Sausage?

Strassburger’sMarket

Pilgrim Pathway and Olin Street ■-Telephone Asbury Park 1749

Tht Oldest Independent Genera M arket in Ocean Grove

Full line of POULTRY

v. andFANCY GROCERIES

(MgerW O O D SUBSTITUTE—Los Angeles engineers built w o o d e n manhole covers out of timbers treated to resist termites and decay when shortages threatened to delay sew­age construction. PRELUDE TO AFRICA—Moving

Out onto proving grounds of Pull­man-Standard Car Manufacturing Company plant are new U. S- M-4 combat tanks. Company, manu­facturer of streamlined trains and

freight cars in peace-time, has con-" verted 95 per cent of its facilities

to manufacturing war weapons.

CAPTURED— Members of German armistice commission in French Morocco, taken by U.S. forces who landed there during North African-’operations, are shown being marched off for internment by American corporal. »

PRIME MEATSFresh Vegetables

BIRD'S EYE FROSTED FOODS

N eed a T A X I?C A L L

Asbury Park

Open Twenty-Four HoursNeptune Taxi Service9 South Main Street Opposite

Ocean Grove Gates

Funeral Home o f Matthews, Francioni and Taylor

I t ®

American and European Plan. A.

Open All Year. cor. Main and New York Avenues. Individual Meals Served by Day or Week.

P. 679. B. R. Shubert.

Classified AdvertisementsA d v e r t i s e m e n t s f o r t h e s e c o l u m n s , s h o u l d b e i n t h e o f f ic e o f ' T h e

. T im e s 1' N O T L A T E R T H A N 1 ? O 'C L O C K N O O N T h u r s d a y o f e a c hw e e k . ‘ . - ..j;; ;

2 5 c ,i . . . . 1 c e n t p e r w o r d

C L A S S I F I E D A D R A T E25 w o r d s O R L E S S . . . . . ; . . . . . .M o r e t h a n 25 w o r d s . . . . - V i , . . . . . . . . .5 t im e s f o r t h e p r i c e . o f f o u r ,

v C o p y m a i l e d l n ^ g i v e n t o r e p r e s e n t a t i v e . o r b r o u g h t t o o f f i c e p e r ­s o n a l l y m u s t b e a c c o m p a n i e d b y c a s h o r s t a m p s t o c o v e r c o s t . C o p y a c c e p t e d o v e r p h o n o , a s a c o u r t e s y a n d c o n v e n i e n c e t o c u s t o m e r s . B i l l s d u e I m m e d i a t e l y u p o n p r e s e n t a t i o n . : • .Vi - . . .

FO R SALE—7 rooms, 2 baths, $2,560; 8 rooms, all improvements, $3,600; 12 rooms, $3,500. House for rent, 7 rooms; Mary L. Walk­er, 64% Mt. Hermon Way.- -2-6*

HOUSE to R EN T—Unfurnished by year, 4 bedrooms, new furnace. Call 3 Bath avonue, Ocean Grove. -51-65*

F O R SALE or R EN T—Houses and Apartments. Special 4-room Bungalow, all improvements, hot air heat. Bargain, $2,500.00 Semons Agency, 124 Mt. Tabor Way.—52

W ANTED,—to rent house for all year, by small adult family, reason­able (references). Address Box 5, Times Office. Full particulars re­quested.—2-6*' JANUARY FU R SALE—On furs and fur coats. Buy direct arid save! Fur coats remodeled,' re­paired and cleaned., A. Sarian, 627 Mattison avenue, Asbury Park.— 50-64*

R EA L BARGAIN—Cottage of.;8 rooms, improvements, near North End. Reasonable, to, close estate. Also bargains, rooming houses, north and south o f Main avenue. J. C. Perry Agency, ,69 Main ave- nue.—rtf

F O R SALE—Diriing room table oak, $3.00; Aladdin heater, one burner, $15.00; 2 beds, springs, and mattress, all good condition. 3 Bath avenue,. Ocean Grove.—51-65*

FU LL ER BRUSHES make Ideal Xmas gifts. Phone Fuller-Brush man, W. F lintier, 808 Atkins ave­nue, Neptune. Asbury Park 4598. -49-53*

• ROOFS and Asbestos Siding ap­plied and repaired; work guaran­teed. , Estimates given; ,-F. H . A. William Krayor, 77% Benson ave­nue, Ocean Grove. Phone A. P. 4058-J.—45*

M URRAY ’S—“The Pants House -v of Asbury Park.” 806-807 Lake avenue. Just o f f ; Main St. Boyn. and Man’s needs supplledv—43tf

BA RGA INS in stoves,, heaters and ranges.- Also repaired and in­stalled. Newman Electric Co., 131 South Main St. Phone 1104 A; P.—

U P H O LSTER IN q — Fum i box springs,* mattresses renoi Innorspring mattresses made your old hair mattress. Called morning returned same day. Spies, 1220 - Monroe Ave. 8070.—9 t f

Page 5: New Township Committee Elects Gracey 16 Chairman For th ... · Ono/jyord.'can toll the story of con. •j tinued business activity In the coin- munity—Advertising. T H T ^ M N £

FRIDAY, JANUARY 8, 1943

CANNED RATIONING: Little Panic Buying• Fears that a nation-wide scramble of housewives; to buy canned food­stuffs would develop following offi­cial disclosure . that a point ration-: ing system would be inaugurated in February failed to materialize as re- pprts. from retail grocers indicated .only..isolated instances :of panic buy­ing. '.A?- *: £ .3 " ;;. Announcement of the ration plan which; covers more; than 200 canned food items made by Secretary of Agriculture Claude R. Wickard had been attacked by trade representa­tives as r“premature" , and .almost' certain to' result, in public hoarding; and .unfair:;distribution;vof available; supplies'.' -i ;/./.. Federa 1 authorities defended. the: advance-' announcement on' the ground ' that complicated , controls were necessary, to administer the program. They, contended^ too, that if the public , were not- notified, ru-: mors might circulate .and; cause hys-. terical purchasing. - -'Grocers attributed the absence of

panic- buying to two major reasons. One; whs the : goV.ernm6nt’s require­ment that before a / rationing book could be . is‘Sued, any hoarded goods had to be declared - and the equiva­lent number of > rationing: coupons surrendered at the time of registra­tion. The otiicr-was’ that any case of hoarding where false reprcsenta- tion was made, might be punishable 'by amnximtim fine of $10,000 or one year in prison or both.CASUALTY LISTS:F a ll Publicity A head ,

Confident that the American pub­lic can "take bad news," govern­ment officials revealed that the ban on . nation-wide publication' of war casualty and prisoner lists had been lifted. - ; .

The new policy, officials said; would permit publication anywhere and in their entirety, lists of men killed, wounded, missing or taken prisoner. Previously newspapers had been .restricted to publishing the names of men whose next of kin lived in their particular circulation area'.

Fxplpining tlie new. ruling, one spokesman declared it had been de­termined that the publication of cas­ualty lists would not jeopardize na­tional security and moreover, "the public has enough stamina and forti­tude to take the bad news of long casualty- lists if the papers care to publish them.” •;

WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS v V -V .,/ ;

Wallace Urges Post-War Federation; Giraud’s Choice for North Africa Post Bolsters French Unity Against Axis; Russ Continue Ground-Gaining Drives

y | f p lHE TIMES advertiser* need our trade and j| j * I friendship. When you need anything firstj M M try to buy it a t home. We are anxious to j| see our home community the center of com-1'. mercial and social activity. Communities grow arid j| prosper through combined efforts. Cooperation and j| team work make for results. Trade a t home. . •• jT iiiiiiiiih iu iiiiiiijiiM iiiitiiim iiB iiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii'iiiinan rtiiiiiiiiia iiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiitiiiiiia iia ittir iiiiiiiiiiitiiiiitiiip1

V HOTEL AND RESTAURANT SUPPLIES

MILK AND CREAMTAYLOR DAIRY CO

Catley A w n ilam s, Proprietors MILK, CREAM, BUTTERM ILK FROM M ONM OUTH FARM S ,

142 Lawrence Avenue, Ocean Grove Phone 1970{E fn lT O h 'S N b T E : When opin ions n rc e xp re ssed in these columns;'(Hey n re thd sc .o f W es te rn N ew spaper U n ion 's wcWs:n n n Iy s ts n nd .m it n e c e s sa r i ly of th is n ew spaper.)

' R e le a sed by /Western N ew spape r Un ion , \ ■ ' - WARDELL’S DAIRYDAIRY PRODUCTS

Telephone 1916NEPTUNE, N .J .

Of course you want the best and most reasonable.. Get it a t the •

Cut Rate Crockery Company' K itch en E q u ip m en t an d F u rn itu re

House Furnishings, Hotel, Restaurant and Bar Supplies 15 South Main Street Telephone Asbury. Parle 1117

' . . V 1 . Opposite Mam Avenue GatesAUTO BODYREPAIRS -

MEN’S AND BOYS’ CLOTHINGSAVE 10% FOR CASH Thousands of

, COA TS . ,. and • ^ 0

ACCESSOR IES . W. A s b u r y Park, K , J .

LaHAW’S. M E N 'S C L O T H IN G

P r o s p e c t n n d S u n n n e r f l e l d A y e s

GAR AGE—ATLAS TIRESI’hone 1439 24-IIOUR SERVICE

SH A FTO ’S G A R A G ES TOR A GE—BATTERY—TOW ING SERV ICE—(REPAIRING

Corner Corlies Avenue and Main Street •/ ■ . : Neptune, N . ’J.H a v e R a d i a t o r s ,C l e a n e d and H e p n l r c d Before 'Filling; A V Itl i . A n t l - F r c c z a Body and Fenders \ T : n !r A n 4 : _ L Painting

Repaired - IN 1 C K A l l l l C i l Finishingllcnr Krnmc nnd Axle Strnlghtentr—Wbool Alignment

1006 F IRST AVENUE, ASBURY PARK Telephone 3472 SKATE SHARPENING SHORE CYCLE RENDEZVOUS

n o n E I l E I t L E , P r o p r i e t o r l 'b o n e A . P . 8 4MA g e n t f o r C o l u m b i a a m i W c s t f l o l i l M n d o B i c y c l e s , C o m p l e t e I l e p n l r S h o p ,

■ H o l l e r S k a t e s . C h i l d r e n ' s V e h i c l e s ; B a b y . C a r r i a g e s R e p a i r e d .; ■ S k a t e s a n d Lnwn M o w e rB S h a r p e n e d '

617-C31 M a i n S t r e e t , A s b u r y P a r k , O p p o s i t e V . M , C . A .

CEMENT AND CONCRETE WORKFABIO BA TTA GL IA

SIDEW ALKS and CURBS C EM E N T BLOCKSSHUFFLEBOARDS, FOU NDATIONS CO N CR E TE BULKHEADS 2111 Bangs Avenue, Neptune, N. J| . Telephone Asbury Park 8938 RADIO

410. Main Street, Asbury Park, N . J. Telephone 5630■ M U SIC A L I N S T R U M E N T S - A L T , K I N D S G A S S T O V E S K I T C H E N S I N K S

R E P A I R S O F R A D I O S A N D A I L H O U S E H O L D A P P L I A N C E S

CLEANERS AND DYERSP5T°ooc Qalius gros.

RUGS AND DRAPER IES OUR SPEC IALTY 201 BOND STREET, ASIIURY PARK Otflco n n d F n r l o r y A s b u r y A v e n u e a n d I t a ! l n m < l , A s lm r y B a r k ,

___________O cean G r o v e ( I n S u m m e r ) 40 1* 11 ff r l i n P a t h w a y ________

SCOTT’S- Auto^Service

821 Main Street

RADIOCOAL AND FUEL OILPhone A. P. 4296ICE—FUEL OIL—COAL

Kelvinators Timken Oil Burners

Telephone 615TAXISf u e l o i l

Mergaugey’s TaxiT e l e p h o n e 013— D A Y On N I G H T

C n r s f o r n i l O c c a s i o n s , n l s o L o c n l u n d L o n # D i s t a n c e M o v in g C H A U T E U E D B U S S E S F O R A L L O C C A S IO N S . .

CO S O U T H M A IN S T H E K T O C E A N G R O V E , N . J ,

Theirpspn Cosi Ccir panyF U E L O IL W OOD AND CHA RCOAL ! BLl/ii

1015 Second Avenue, Asbury Park, N. J., Ph'ou* 2

Brierley’s Rug Cleaning ServiceRUGS AND CARPETS TH OROU GH LY CLEA N ED

BY B E IN G ELECTR ICA LLY SHAM POOED 67 Main Avenue Tel. A. P. 4427 Ocean Grove

JOHNSON C O A L and SUPPLY C OC O A L — B U I L D I N G M A T E H I A L — F U E L O IL

A L L T Y P E S O F A U T O M A T I C H E A T H u g h O . T o m p k i n s

P h o n o 1040 005 M a i n S t r e e t , A s b u r y P a r kSpring Neqt'Trap

Acting with all the dctcctivc-thrlU- er technique for. which they are fa­mous, G-men brought to a sudden eiid . the liberty of jail-breaking Roger ("Terrible”) Touhy and ids desperate henchmen, in raids in Chi­cago that rivaled in excitement the celebrated Dillingor case of nearly a decade ago.

Safely in the FBI bag, whose strings, had been pulled by Chief J.

County Notes ^ \ T H A r S K Y O UA G A INiiusvgj , .....

A H ANDT D IRECTORY FOR OUR READERS

BUSINESS DIRECTORYPhone: Asbury Park 4279-M

THQMPSON & GILLAN Painting and Decorating

, PaperhanginsrEASY PAYM ENTS

ARRA NGEDB o x 73 O c e a n G r o v e , N * J . :

A. J. OBRECHTNEWSPAPERS

53 Main Avenue. Tel. >2- -1 Ocean Grove's Original. I u riei

EDMUND L. THOMPSONExterior and Interior

Painting - Estim ates Furnished;.

0B C o o k m a n A v o . , O c o a n G r o v e l 'h o n o A s h n r y l ' n r k 4038-11

NEPTUNE LAUNDRYCASH AND CARRY

ALL SERV ICES ‘ ... 20% Discount

Nept. Highway & Corlies Ave, Neptune, N . J.

Navy's Army U. S. . Marines form the land

fighting arm of the U. S. Navy,P h o n e A . p . 1 4 6 4 - n

E. I. F EA G L E YWATCH

• C L O C K A N D J E W E L R YREPAIRING ,

20 Y e a r s w i t h H a m i l t o n W a t c h C o . 126 M a i n A v e n u e , O c e a n G r o v e

DRESSES MADE TO- ORDER DESIGNING - ALTERATIONSE v e n i n g G o w n s , H u l l s , .C o a t s , S t r e e t

D r o s s e s , R e a s o n a b l e .“ N o Job too B i s o t t o o S m a l l ”

M B S . S E I D E M A N 020 C o o k m a n A t o . , As bury P a r k S e c o n d F l o o r — P h o n e A . P . 117-1

J. EDGAR HOOVEREdgar Hoover, wore Roger Touhy, Basil ("The Owl") Banghort and three minor criminal members of.the bancLof.seven that had escaped from the Joliet, 111., penitentiary last Octo­ber. Dead from G-man gunfire were James O ’Connor and St. Clair Mclnerney, bank bandits. and safe crackers. -

The capture and killing of the ‘des­peradoes climaxed one of the most neatly laid traps in FBI history. The gang, living in separate hideouts" on Chicago’s North side, had been shadowed for weeks. Hoover’s men moved swiftly when they sprung the trap.

TOJO : / ■‘Real War Starts’

Bland-vlsaged Gen. llidckl Tojo, war minister, had no bland words for the Japanese people when he ap­peared before the Nipponese diet to report on the state of the war. In­stead, he warned grimly that the Allies were preparing to deliver “counter - blows of great Impor­tance” and added that Bigns indi­cated "the real war is starting from now.”

Tojo admitted that Jap forces in Burma, New Guinea and the Solo­mons were on- the defensive and pointed out that the phase of sur­prise Jap attacks and lightning suc­cess was over. He said, however, that his armies in these areas were "successfully frustrating; enemy at­tacks by counter-blows.”

Before ending on a'somber note that "Japan Is engaged day and night in providing againstair raids,” ,Tpjo listed some of the plunders of war his forces have acquired, add­ing that transports had brought homq 1,800,000 tons of material.

F l i o n o 8318

A l l B r a n c h e s o f BEAUTY CU LTU RE Permanents $3.50 up

1118 C o r l i e s A v e . N e p t u n e , .4 . J , For PROMPT relief—rub on Mus- teroloi Mussago with this wondorful " c o U N T E R -m n iT A N T ” actually brings fresh warm blood to aching niusclos to help break up painful local-con­gestion. Bettor than an old-fashioned mustard plaster! In 8 strengths.

AT FIRST SION OF AA — Alka-Seltzer, start taking it

at once to relievo the Dull, Aching Head,’ and the Stiff, Sore Muscles.

B — Ee careful/ avoid drafts and sudden changes in tempera-

/ ture. Rest — preferably in bed. Keep warm, eat sensi­bly, drink plenty of water or fruit juicos. Be sure to get enough Vitamins. .

C-—Comfort your Sore, Raspy Throat, if caused by the cold, by gargling -with Alka-Selt­zer. I f fever develops, or

. symptoms b ecom e more acute call your doctor.

‘ALKA-SELTZER is a pain re­lieving, alkalizing tablet; pleasant1 to take and unusually effective in action.

Taka it for Headache, Muscular Pains and for Indigestion, Gas. on Stomach, wh6n caused by excess stomach acid.

A t your 'drug store— Large package" 60f,- Small package 304, by the glass atiaoda fountains.

666 TABLETS. SALVE. NOSE DROPS^ If Vou Suffer Distress Froni

i n t h p w c p k ’ t n p w s

Sk£-i5’, : ■ WASHINGTON: The navy depart- MOSCOW: As a reward for lead- jfe-//.' merit announced that dive bombers ing the recent successful - break

• from Guadalcanal had sunk a 3,000- through the: Gerriiah1 lines on the a-:,/;/ . ton Japanese vessel near ."Virickham Middle Don; Vassily Mikhailovich mpf-lt-':'-'. island in the central Solomons. The ; Badanov was elevated to the rankof

, destruction of the ship raised the lieutenant general of tank forces and 'number of Japanese vessels^ simk hi .awarded the highest. Russian' mill-

| || ;| j/, ;-.-the Solomons to 54. Wickham island tary decoration, the order of Suvo- jjjSS . Is within 120 nautical miles of Guad- rov. General Badanov’s feat was

alcanal. There is an anchorage near- described as ■ "unprecedented in by where Japs have been active. scope.”

'W ^ t h i s cheese food that's digestib le

g s jn ilk jts e lf l ‘ _SPREADS! SLICES! TOASTS!

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Page 6: New Township Committee Elects Gracey 16 Chairman For th ... · Ono/jyord.'can toll the story of con. •j tinued business activity In the coin- munity—Advertising. T H T ^ M N £

FRIDAY, JANUARY 8, 1943 P A G E S E V E N/ T H E B T O H Y s o P A R : C la y M o r g a n

d e c i d e d t o p l a y a lo n e b a n d a g a i n s t B e n H e r e n d e e n , . a r a n c h e r . b e n t o n r a n * . n l n g t b e c a t t l e c o u n t r y h i s o w n w a y . T h e tw o m ien h a v e b e e n e n e m i e s fo r . y e a r s , h a v i n g f i r s t ' f o u g h t o v e r C la y ’s w i f e , L i l a , w h o d i e d h a t i n g h im a n d b e U e v in g - s h e s h o u ld h a v e m a r r i e d H e ro n d e e h . M o r g a n Is . a ^ s o l i t a ry f ig u r e , d e ­v o t e d to h i s n in e - y e a r - o l d d a u g h t e r , J a n e t . A l th o u g h tw o w o m e n . C a th e r i n e G r a n t a n d A n n M c G a r r a h , a r e in lo v e w i t h h im , " th e y k n o w h e c a n n o t f o r g e t U f a / O f h i s f o r m e r f r i e n d s , o n ly H a c k B r e a t h i t t h a d n o t g o n e o v e r , to H c rc n - d e c n ’s s i d e . N ow H a c k Is d e a d , s h o t b y H e r e n d e e n ’s f o r e m a n , C h a r l e y H il l h o u s e . G u r d G r a n t , C a t h e r i n e ’s b r o t h e r , J o in e d H c r e n d e e n w h e n h e d i s c o v e r e d t h a t C a t h e r i n e h a d b e e n to M o r g a n 's r a n c h , b u t t h e c o ld b lo m lc d n c s s o f H a c k ’s m u r d e r h a s m a d e h im b r e a k w i t h H e r e n d e e n . W a r n e d b y F o x W ill-

' In g , a “ n e s t e r ” h e o n c e b e f r i e n d e d , C ja > d i s c o v e r s t h a t H e r e n d e e n is s t e a l i n g h is c a t t l e . H e g o e s t o H e r e n d e e n ’s r a n c h f o r a s h o w d o w n , b u t H e r e n d e e n i s r e a d y . H e h a s n ’ t a c h a n c e o f g e t t i n g o u t a l i v e , w h e n L l g e W h i t e , o n e o f H e r e n d e e n 's f r i e n d s , r i d e s u p . L ik e G u r d - G r a n t , h e i s f e d u p w i t h H e r e n d e e n ’s h ig h h a n d e d m e t h o d s . . R i s k i n g h i s l i f e to s a v e C la y , b e p e r s u a d e s h im t o t a k e a c h a n c e o n

: r i d i n g o f f . l i e d o e s n ’ t t h in k H e r e n d e e n w i l l d a r e t o s h o o t . . T h e b l u f f ! w o r k s , and* . t h e y ’'e s c a p e . - N o w C la y a n d h i s m e n a r e d r i v in g t h e c a t t l e b a c k in to G o v e rn *

. '.m e a t V a l l e y , h i s r a n g e . H e r e n d e e n h a s - f o l lo w e d , a n d t h e r e I s c e r t a i n t o b e a f i g h t , : - tV v - ■ . , V:

N o w c o n t i n u e w i t h t h e s t o r y / •

J CHAPTER XVII . > ’Ligo White, considerably disturbed

toy/his ifitendbw with Morgan and pretty much at sea in his own mind,. traveled over the lower spur of the Haycreek . Hills and came down , on the Grant house at a fast clip, the’ sound .of his arrival bringing Cath­erine to the door. Ho said: “There’s hell to pay around here. Where’s Gurd?”• “Upstairs. What’s the trouble, Lige?”

White called: “Hey, Gurd, come down fright now.’* He rolled himself a cigarette while he waited and made a sketchy explanation to Cath­erine, nervousness catching at his words. V- •'

Catherine said at once: “If there’s any help needed from Crowfoot Clay will get it, not Ben Herendeen.*’.

Gurd Grant looked sick and des­perate. . He put his shoulder against the doorway. He said: “Llge, how did we get into this mess? I’d give a thousand dollars—*’

Catherine turned on her brother. “What’s bothering you, Gurd?**’

Gurd dropped.his eyes. His face, normally so light and cheerful, held a sallow unhealth. It was hard for him to talk and he pulled himself together with an effort. . His hands shook; he noticed that and shoved them into his pockets. “I was over with Charley Hillhouse, on Breath­itt’s trail. Wc trailed Breathitt all morning and found him asleep in the Potholes. Of course I thought Charley meant to take him into town, to jail. What else would a man think? How was it possible for me to figure that Hillhouse, who had been Hack’s friend for fifteen years, would—-* . . . v ; ;

Catherine breathed out: “Gurd!" “Sure,** said Gurd Grant, sullen

and full of self-hatred. “Hillhouse sjmply lifted his gun and killed Breathitt I tried to stop it. It didn't do any good;** •'

Lige White threw away his ciga­rette, finding the flavor gone out of

. It. He looked away from Gurd, sud­denly unable to meet the expression in the other’s eyes.

“What could I do, Lige?’*Catherine said: “You never should

• have gone with Charley Hillhouse. There was your mistake."

Lige. said: “Stay out of. what’s coming, . That’s the best you con do for Clay now. We all got caught In Ben’s net. I was a fool not to have known what he’d try to do. Now we .wiggle out. I'm going to town."

Catherine watched him go. When he passed the far rim of the mead­ow she dropped her arm for Gurd and faced him.

Her tone was soft and cool. “You went after Hack because you want­ed to hurt Clay. I know that. You thought Clay and I . . ."

He showed a reviving flash of an­ger: “The night Ben and Lige and I went up to Clay’s place you were- there. I walked to the end of the

. porch and saw your horse around the house. .You were hiding inside. If you had nothing to be ashamed of, why hide?" •

She; said: "Because I had gone up there to tell Clay what you and Lige. and Herendeen had said that night. You were leaving Clay out of .lt, and I couldn’t stand that. Ben had both of you convinced. But I didn’t want Baq to know I was .taking Clay the information."

’ Gurd, stung by his mistakes, still remembered he had given his word to Herendeen,. It was the one thing to'.. Which he- "could cling. So he

• saitj: “ Wo can’t go against him. I’U do nothing, one way or the oth* er." • 'v :-‘ - -V-v-,.;' '. She went on, os though not hear-

•ing him. "They, have quarreled too often. They’ll m eet" She stared at tier brother, cold as ice. "If Clay should die, I think I’d kill Ben. Is

‘- it so horrible to say? Perhaps It Is But I can’t help it."

r /Stie walked from, the porch to her, {hor^o standing by. Gurd said, "Wait

>{o mlnute—where you going?" She, ^didn’t answer. Swinging up a hand;

■v ^ho left the yard, bound.toward Mo- J: rim*^ : ciarioy -. Hjllhouse brought up >7.Bred^iU*s ‘v horse - and ' lashed; • thu ! Mdeod;;man.V to ;*the saddle^ andl* took \ him;.back -tp t o p e . Pines^p When he, .’ came' io describe the,affair to*Her*

eiidcch. the/words seemed to stick'• ini his dry throat. It puzzled'Win

u7thatH'ifioulcl: be ha^d.-jgVmhkrv.v.;-1 — ‘‘

Bullets squashed into tlie ’dobe wall beside Morgan, causing him to shift slowly.

-1*-

a simple story of i t Too, .there was on odd look in Herendeen’s eyes and something queer in his voice/.• Her­endeen said slowly: “All right, Char­ley." Nothing more.

Hillhouse said: "I’m takin’ him into War Pass. That’s where his people ore burled."

He drove, through War Pass. When he backed against the office door of Doctor Padden, who was also coroner, Jesse Rusey came by. Hill- house said: “Give mb a . hand,Jesse;" and the two of them car­ried Breathitt’into Padden’s office. Padden wasn’t around but there was a side room with a long table in it; they left Breathitt here. Rusey said: “A little trouble?" •

"Yeah." .Rusey said, “Too bad," and went

out. The marshal’s province was War Pass, not anything beyond; and he had seen too much death to show much curiosity about onc more dead man. Hillhouse-delayed his depar­ture,'both hands lying on the table beside Breathitt. Breathitt’s face was gray, and dirty, but it was still the face of a man who had looked ou life as a game to be taken as lightly as possible.

Hillhouse suddenly removed his own hat, placed it over Hack's face and turned from the room. .

He drove the wagon as far as the Long Grade, here stopping for a drink. The barkeep made some cas­ual remark about the weather which Hillhouse accepted in dour-silence; thereafter the barkeep held his own council. Hillhouse paid for the drink, went out and climbed- Into the, wag­on. *• -V ; .'. '

There was no travel on the road. It wound with the foothills, it. looped beside a creek, passed over a small divide and entered a scattered belt of timber. By the Dell Lake trail, he observed that three or four horse­men had recently come off Mogul; far up near Mogul’s rim he caught the transitory motion of a rider. All these things he’ automatically noted,’missing nothing of the signs or shapes or color of tlie land. Four miles from town he broke the neck of the bottle of rye over the brake* handle and took n long drink.

A mile beyond this point Cache River cut nearer the road and a small grove of cottonwood lay hard by the stream. Charley turned through the grove and let his horses water at the margin of the river. He wrapped the reins around the brake-handle and got down, holding tlie whisky bottle.‘ Charley Hillhouse spoke aloud; “I wish you’d seen it my way, Hack.I wish you had." He walked steadily forward until he faced a cottonwood.’ He, drew his gun. holding it only a foot from tlie tree, and fired at it. Afterwards, stooping a little he stud­ied the hole mo’de by the bullet with a strange care. He held the bottle of rye in his left hand and now, knowing it would do him no good ever, he gave it a long overhand heave into the river. As long as he was alive, nothing would cover up his thinking.

Excitement whetted Morgan’s nerves to a sharp edge as he stood there and heard Ben Hcrendeen say: “Come on. boys!"

A man yelled, “To hell with this!*’ Morgan, waiting a more definite tar­get, saw one rider swing wide and rush In. Suddenly all of Herendeen’s men were wheeling around the beefy running for the dobe building near by, as though to circle it Vance Ketchell called to announce - him- ; self: "It’s me; Ketchell —' and Llge White.** They raced down on Morgan. He had to step aside, bare^ ly avoiding'a collision. Vance was out of the saddle," beside him and grumbling. “Pamned near too late!" Llge White, still ihounted, turned "away. He called:! **Hercndeen--cut this but!" One of Herendeen’s riders plunged straight on and fired once at Lige White’B high-placed shape/ Morgan and Ketchell laid.tbefr shots on this man. They caught his! horse ,4nd watched It; sink; they saw tlie 'rider free himself and seem, to flat­ten pgaihst the . earth';. ' :V;n$V- ?-Vv - -Jump ;mumi3ttedsr;*., e y ,rc going

to try • sorrtething> _ > - ; ,PoWder smellsettled around’ Mpr;.

of wind hit his face and there was a telltale smearing of the shadows in the open area by ihd; far;building. They were running wide, Hercn- decn’.s men, and now they wore on foot, firing as they.moved away from the dobe. Jump sa id :"I'm goin’ after those' horses," nnd scurried forward.. .. , .

Bullets squashed Into the ’dobe wall beside Morgan, causing him to shift slowly. ..Horses plunged - around him,

knocking him backward; some­body’s shoulder hit him and-then he saw Herendeen’s men rise out of tho earth’s massed darkness, Into their saddles, '//

The ruffle of Herendeen’s horses diminished on the desert and, stand­ing slack and tired in the open,' Morgan know this night’s fight was done.' lie., knew something else,'as well. It was Herendeen's crew which had given way, not Heren- deen.

Vance. Ketchell called: "Ligc’sbeen hit.’’. .

Morgan went over at once. Ketch­ell knelt on the ground, his knee propping Lige at the shoulders.

Morgan drew back from the par­ty, quietly calling Fox Willing. “Fox,” he said, “I wish you’d ride over and bring Mrs. White to the ranch."

Fox cut away, at once. The rest turned, north,- reaching Long Seven an hour later. Coming into the yard Morgan, saw Catherine in the door- way. When lie got down to help Lige ’White from tho saddle. lie turned to look at her again, framed as she was In the light, tail and still arid straight-shouldered;-nnd he felt the tug of strange, old excite­ment.- Lige could use one leg only arid had to brace himself between Ketchell and Morgan. Catherine stepped aside to let them pass, say­ing: "Put him on a bed, Clay," and followed tlie men upstairs into an extra bedroom.

The room was dark and they had a moment’s trouble getting Lige on the bed. Morgan. heard Lige grit his teeth together as they laid him down. Catherine found a lamp and lighted It and by this yellow glow all of them saw the whiteness of Ligo’s face. His hair came down on his forehead and sweat oiled his skin; his lips crawled back, form­ing a smile. "I sure as hell broke something. You Know. Clay, if it wasn’t too much trouble, - I wish you’d Send for Grace."

"Already have. I’m going into town for Padden. . Vance, you bet­ter get his clothes off."

Llge White said; “I guess you don't know the whole story yet. Ciay. Hillhouse cornered Hack and killed him. The man’s a fanatic. I’m 'warning you about that, if you should see him in town.".

Morgan’s eyes dropped.. Ho stood like this, quiet and cold and too weary to feel the full shock of tlie news. He-said, after a while,. "I’ll meet him. sooner or later," end left the room.

He turned tcTJanet’s room. When he came beside the bed and looked down through the shadows he found she wasn’t asleep. She reached for his hand, saying: "Who’s hurt, Dad dy?”

"We had a fight with Herendeen’s ranch, Jancy. Llgo White was hurt I’m going after a doctor/'

She murmured: "It Is too bad. But I'm glad lt Isn't you." Tho pres- juro of her hand was warm nnd con­fident. She was pleased to have him sit here and talk with her; it mado her expand and grpw confidential, wish I had been here, Daddy, when you were young and danced with Catherine. I bet you were the best dancer of alL ’ She is pretty.” .’"Walt till you get old enough to dance. I'll stand by and remember when you were so small you walked under, the table.”

She was silent, seeing the picture •uf herself dancing—and pleased by It; her Ups softened and there was a glow in her eyes. Afterwards, in a faintly resetved tone, she said: "She isn't like I thought she was. Daddy.'

'‘What did you think?’.’ , - -SJ:• "She Ukcqyniei Daddy.- -I didn't think, she Would,"

and

by Ernest Haycox© WNU Release

'REMEMBER PEARL HARBOR/*

OCEA N GROVE Major Gen. William II. II. Morris Lt. Col. John S. E . Young Major A. E . Johnson Major Alfred Robinson

' Major Richard U. Stout Lt Com. Edwin Young Lt. Com. Joseph Young Lt. Com. Theodore Schlossbach Capt. Norman Campbell Lt. Milo Gibbons Lt. . Jacob Ilnussling Lt. Chas. W. Jcifrey-Smith Lt. F. Laird Nelson Lt. Edward Thoms Lt. Robert 13. Wills

• Lt. George Raymond Magee Lt. Cordie Wcart Lt. Kenneth MecWhiancy, jr.Lt. F,van E. James "Lt. Robert It. Stratton Lt. Wesley Riley Ensign Walter Drill Ensign William T . Kresge Ensign Donald H. Ross Staff Sgt. Robert Holfmcir StaiT Sgt. Harry Mullikcn Staff Sgt. David W. Brown Staff Sgt. Warren Vasscl Sgt. James Herbert Sgt. Wm. R. Morris Sgt. William Morris Sgt. Donald Opdyke Sgt. Royden Pcrrv Sgt. G . Adrain Schontz.Sgt. Robert Williams Sgt. Frederick Van Clcef Sgt. Robert Hammcn Sgt. John W. Jeter Sgt. Bernard T. Ring Sgt. Grover R. James, jr.Sgt: Robert Blncklock Corp. Barry Chamberlain Corp. Richard DcIIart Corp. Alfred Fourett Corp. James Hendrickson Corp. William Hughes Corp. Roy Lever Corp. Howard Semons Corp. Douglas Stirling Corp. Welter Hancock Corp. Osmnr Knkor Corp. Ralph F. Walworth Corp: Wilbur Stout.Corp. Harold G. Dunkcrley Cadet James IU-nnett Cadet Rusling MacWhinney Cadet Russell F. Major Cadet Jack Mullikcn Cadet William Perkins Cadet Charles L. Severs Cadet Earle F . G. Smith Cadet AVillinm S. Ward Cadet Hamilton Rohland Cadet Frank Holl - Cadet Eugene Wright Seaman Allen Borden Seaman William Jack Collier Seaman Wilson Kennedy Seaman James Gravatt ,Seaman Robert H. Meade Seaman David V. Metz Seaman Clyde Packard Seaman Ektor Wright Seaman William Steward Ward Seaman Daniel A. Gillan Seaman Frank Mills Seaman Robert T . Weggc Seaman Allen Hannah Seaman Woolscy Thompson Seaman Kenneth Fitzpatrick Seaman William Guy Seaman George Coder Seaman Albert White Pfc. Reginald Hurley Pfc. Walter J. Beattie Pfc. Albert Strassburger PvL Stanley Erbachcr Pvt. Herbert R. Bush, jr.Pvt. Clifford Cole

. Pvt. George Daniels Pvt. Joseph Ilngcrmnn

"Pvt. Norman Hannah Pvt. John Hancox Pvt. William Hulskamper Pvt. Homer I). Kresge, jr.

' Pvt. Arthur Vernon Lins Pvt. William Fenton Lins Pvt. Robert McClelland, jr PvL Irwin Milligan Pvt. Charles W . Newcomb PvL John Virgil Newcomb PvL Elmer A. Perry PvL Christopher Rcitzel PvL William B. Smith.Pvt. George W. Garrabrandt Pvt. James Coder PvL Milton Ridgway PvL Leon Barto PvL Alfred V. Swenarton PvL John W . Brcnnen.PvL Richard M. Borden.PvL Carl Dahlquist PvL Albert E , Catley PvL T . Hadford Catley PvL W illiam .E. McDonald PvL Kenneth J. Smith PvL Herman Metzger PvL Henry J. Wood ring PvL James Ilardagon PvL Kenneth De Rose PvL Robert E . Moss PvL Theodore R. Beckman, Jr. PvL Thomas J. Devlin .

’ PvL Wallace E . Ludwig PvL .George Shibla 'W AAC Miss M. J. Briefly W AVE Miss Ruth R. White

_ Summer Resident*Lt. CdL .Carl S. Herbst Major BIrney B ,Tru itt,, Major Thomas Howell.-. ".

:. CapL Alfred Jack 'Ball/Jr..

- Kv- » § §

/a, A small,'dcfitiUbly-cold thread ’ : ■ ^ (% 0 BE CONTINUED) . ra pL B d w h S t B a r t d ^ - 7= v .. ■ . v>,.

Lt. (J. G.) Colwell W. Carr Lieut. (J. G.) Elias B. Baker, jr. Ensign Howard W , Selby, jr.

• Ensign Frank O. Nagle, jr- Ensign Robert H. Dincgor Ensign Walter S. Propcrt, jr. Lt. Richard B. Frcdcy

. Lt. Frank E. Strolisky Corp. Ronald H. Connolly Corp. John S. Yco Seaman George P. Rogers Seaman Edmund J. Ochiltree Seaman John Thuinm Seaman Eugene Rogers Seaman Richard I). Thomson Cadet Thomas Bradley Cadet Harrison Edwards Cadet Edgar C. Washabnugh Pvt. Oscar Nicdcnstein, jr.'Pvt. Hunter DiringcrPvt. Milton A. ConditPvt. Harold H. HoltPvL James J. Shcrrard, 3dPvt. Roland G. BlakePvt. John II. SelbyPvt. Richard II. Thompson, jr.

N EPTU N E Nicholas I’. Aldarclli Frank C. Ammann •Albert S. Apicalli Charles Arnone James 0. Armstrong Thomas J. Arnone Warren Asay Leon II. Asch Paul Attardi Frank W. Bach'Albert Barnes .Anthony It. BaroneTony Barone ; • TFred llcnry Bauer, jr.David E. Beatty,Edwin R. Behrens ; ,Leo A. Bellissen Kenneth Bender Albert Clement Bennett Arnold L. Bennett' - ■Donald G. Bennett ,George C. Bennett Robert J Bennett ;-Jnmcs Bennett Marvin B. Bennett Stuart B. Bills John E.-Brannon Joseph William Brown Joseph Ackerman Brown Norman L. Brown Harold F , Burke John William Biirlte William H. Burr Herman V. Busch ! - Irving Becker Harold O. Brand 1 William Bullock Robert Britton, jr.Lester J. Campbell Victor J. Campbell William E. Candiano Arthur J. Cappa .Elmer B. Carmen / 'Chharles William Cusher Charles Arthur Chamberlain Jack B. Charlaton William Chcoseman Willie Knight Clarritt Rex Clay, jr.Fred. I’. Clayton, jr.Frank B. Cleveland Francis Cole William Jack Collier William Eugene Conltin Raymond Conover .George It. Corwin Turner R. Cottrell Silas Monroe Coy ,Andrew J. Crippcn George John Crosman Frederick D. Cross Joseph Curto Joseph Curto (2nd)Dominick Cutano ; : „John J. Cutano George W. Carhart Leroy. S. Dangler Munzio J. Danicllo George Daniels Earl W. Davidson John M. Davis Robert O. Day Walter H. De Bow Frank De Capua, jr.Ralph D'Ambrosi Mario G . D ’Dona Clark W. Dellctt William Norman Dellett Albert William Dence Robert G. Denihan Patsy De Sarno William DlckerBon, jr.John E , Diehl Stanley Diamond Louis Diehl Raymond M. Dorrer Jack Drum Frances Durkin Walter Durkin John W. Dutton Dietrich J. Eborhnrdt George R. Eddlcman . Samuel Edelson. M.D.Stanley Montanez Edwards Joseph Ehrlenbach, jr. William A. Eldridge Donald A. Ennis John J. EnniR

. William G. Erickson - Harry Ross Evan*Walter £vanB, jr.

. Patsy Carl Ferrara , Francis R. Feieharak Frederick Fescbarek Daniel Carl F iore 'John. Leroy Fitzgerald ~it . - ** —*•: La Rue C . Flega Vernon L." Ford

Theodore Franken6eld ,Lt. Robert A. Grookett James D . . Garrison Franklin Gasner

.James L. GattUng Charles Gravatt Reynold Green Albert Allison Gross \John Hammond Ernest J. Harris Fortune Harris Ralph Hartranft Kenneth 0. Hankins Joseph J. Ilartigan William . L. Hartwick Douglas II. Ilaydcn George James Heideraark Frederick E . Height Frederick P. Hendricks Frank E. Herbert Joseph V. Herbert Alulford B.'Hcrbert Vernon Iligley ■ ■ -James F. Hill John H. Holland Owen G. Hughes John Arnold Hulshart Howard L. Hulse John T. IIulsc Winslow Leroy Hurford Alfred C. Hurley Alton B. Hurley Carlton nurlcy Oscar IT. Ilycr Richard Irons Bernard Jackson ' -. . 'Russell M. Jackson Daniel Burtis Jamison Alfred M Jobes Robert Norman Jobes Harold Shear Johnson James L. Johnson George A. Johnson noward Jones

•John (Warner) Kean* ;George W. Keefe William S. King William Hudson Ktrke Alban Kenny Charles A. Krnuss Paul II. Lacey, jr.Franklin C. Lane John Willard Lane Everett Layton Theodore I.epinsky Edson-Alston f.cwis Kenneth Richard Lisle John Wright Lisle .Edwnrd Albert Lippincott Elwood T. Lippincott Irving Lippinmott Herman Lofton James R. Lofton 'Donald Fenton Lunday /Clarence R. Lyle Richard P. Lyons Ernest P. Mac Dormant Frederick T. Mac Dcrmant Robert Wallace Mac Donald

, Nick Mnrcnnicco George II. Martin Pat Mnrtuscclll Michael M'augerl William Harrison Maurer Richard B. Me Calfery • ,Walter Me Caffrey, jr.Norman L. Me Chesney Ralph Me Chesney Harry Harrison Ale Chesncy, jr. Edward P. Me Curry Millard R. AIcAIillan Stanley Joseph Meade Everett Wallace Alenke George A. ATetcalf '“ 'David Vreeland Metz Spencer C . Miller Jimmie I. Alills Michael W. At orris William E. Moris.Harry S. Morris Spencer B. Morton

I John II. Alaurer Harold C. Megill Michael Narayouski John Narnyouskj - • -/George Al Naylor Malcolm Brown Nesbitt.Michael W . Norris Michael J. O'Brien Frank P. Orifici Tf-omns -A. Orifici Y-’ilb'ir Wyckoff Orr Raymond Osborn Frederick Everett Otto Jerry Palaia , . ,,Rav Palaia . - /Gerald G. Pnlaia Paul Palmer Ernest Palmer Howard S. Parker Bert Pea rcc -Charles Pearce Harry Pcmhleton Jerry PercelloT nuis J. Pcrcelo . ■ ,Edward Perrella Horace G. Pettit Bradford D. Piersall,Edgar Phillips, jr. . v .Earl H. Plummer '

• Robert Poles Charles Sidney Polhemus Alax Pollock George E. Pullen Vito Pisano Willie Edward Reaves Andrew K. Rechtsteiner Albert M. Reynolds Herbert Barr Reynolds

■ I,inivood Allen Reynolds Aiichael Rinaldi Vie Rush .Peter J Reid Gilbert T . Redden Robert G . Redden Charles W. Rechtsteiner Albert C . Rogers James L. Rogers Walter E . Rogers Fcknlce D. Saiamone William Sch'ank Herman W. Schaar Alareus Ix>wy Sclarappa L. Lyndon Selovcr.Harold M. Shafto Frank Sjioemaker Harry L. Share Joseph Sicilinno Earl Sickler, jr.James Francis Silver Benjamin Sinensky Morris Sinensky George Albert Smith Joe Smith John Stiles Smith Donald Solovikos Looln Solovikos Frank H. Spceht Robert N . Stack Melvin A. Steward Robert n. Stowort Carl Jay Stewart •Walter J. Stewart'.George’W . Straehle : : --.V;Kenneth S. Strohm '!, / '/ ' •Arthur E . Sutton ;/•'

■, Frederick E . Shttdp Ike ScMossbaeJi

;/Epg«mg:Ci;Sl^ijtu>»’/-jSydyn:'**' • * 1

Earl Swisher John R. Tantum George H. Tallman Norman Taylor .Richard S, Taylor Samuel D. Tnylor Harold Dixon Terrio Arnold F. Thompson Edward C. Tiedemann Robert L. Tiedemann Robert E . Trottier

" Patrick F. Tierney, jr.Robert W. ToddLewis F. TortariclloLouis TraversoEmilu J. TrippoliWHIiam TurchynMichael TurchynAlartin C. TextorAnthony J. ValenteJoseph J. ValenteWendell E . Van HiseElwood C. Van NoteJohn Ivanes Van NoteJoseph G. Vetrano -Kcrmit T. WalkerRussell R. Walling >

. Andrew Wallo '- :■ ■/ 'Alfred Watson Albert Warden ‘Howard P. Warden Raymond Edgar Warden Roy Warren Agnes Weaver, R. N.

.David F. Wcstervclt - Lee Oliver White . //y.Afyron H. White William H. White Thomas Ilenry Whitaker Bennie D. Williams Robert Willinms'Robert E . V/illa ./'Richard E. Wilson :Robert Linchan Robert. Wilson John E . WiseBernard G . Wolford .-'//.Richard E. Wooiridge Robert C Wooiridge Raymond Warwick"William F . Wombough Joseph Yaccariiio Emily Yarrington Roger J. Young

.Ordwin Zagury Sajvatorc Zarcaro •Killed or Alissing in Action

REA D TH E OCEAN GROVE TIM ES FOR LOCAL NEW S

I Call f! RADIO CAB I- --5i Asbury park |

[14 I26lI Day ana Night Service |= Also Stand At Police Booth, 3| , North End |r iaiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiaiiaiiariii>aiiiiiaiiiiiaiiijiiiiiiiaiifiiiT tini9

m

L . I I A Z A T 8 K Y

We GuaranteeY o n W i l l N o t H a r e F o o t

T r o n b l e I f Y o u B r ln g r Y o u r 8 h o « a T o

THE JUST WRIGHT ORTHOPAEDIC

SHOE REPAIR SHOP203 BOND STR EET

ASBURY PARK, N . J.

iiiiiitnuuiiiiiiifDiuiiiiiHuiiiiHiniiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiujiiniiimiujiunittmuur .

Hoffman Coal Co.Field Street, Avon, N. J.

Telephone, Asbury Park 5267

Motor Coaches .Leave Ocean Grove

- Post Office (W a r Time)8:20 A .M .

1:20, 5:20, 9:20 P. M. Daily Except Sundays

Reserratlons must be made on all coaches

DAILY One Day

$0 . 2 1 Excursionf ° Good On All Coaoties

Sundays, Leaves from Lake and Heck' Street

Asbury Pnrk Tel. Asbury Park 339

Asbury Park*N.Y. Transit Co.

=a«aufitin>iniiauaiiainiiiiii>iaiiiia'Ciiiiiiu«uaniafttP

; Howard LSmitSi I PLlJMSiNGI Tinning and Heating I H A RDW A RE| Paints and Oils1 5 1 M u a A y o n i g

Page 7: New Township Committee Elects Gracey 16 Chairman For th ... · Ono/jyord.'can toll the story of con. •j tinued business activity In the coin- munity—Advertising. T H T ^ M N £

F IR E ALARMo f M o n m o u t h w i l l o f f e r , at p u b l i c w ile , t o t h e h i g h e s t b i d d e r ; at a minimum s a l e p r i c e o f F i v e H u n d r e d D o l l a r s ($5 0 0 .0 0 ) a l l t h e r i g h t , t i t l e a n d i n t e r ­e s t o f t h e s a i d T o w n s h i p a c q u i r e d at a t a x s a l e a n d t h e f o r e c l o s u r e o f t h e e q u i t y o f r e d e m p t i o n t h e r e o f i n a n d t o t h e f o l l o w i n g d e s c r i b e d l a n d s a n d p r e m i s e s :. A LL ., t h o s e c e r t a i n l o t s , t r a c t s , o r p a r c e l s o f l a n d - a n d p r e m i s e s , s i t u a t e , l y i n g a n d b e i n g i n t h e T o w n s h i p o f N o p t n n e . i n t h e C o u n t y o f J M o n m o u th a n d S t a t e o f N e w , J e r s e y , a n d k n o w n a n d d e s i g n a t e d a s L o t 1141 , o n t h e s o u t h s i d e o f B r o a d w a y , o n t h e m a p o f L o t s o f U io C a m p G r o u n d o f t h e O c e a n G r o v e C a m p M e e t i n g A s s o c i a ­t i o n o f t h e M e t h o d i s t • E p i s c o p a l C h u r c h , a n d u p o n t h e X o l lo w lr ig t e r m s a n d c o n d i t i o n s : ■

B y o r d e r o f t h e , T o w n s h i p O o m m l t - t e o o f t h e T o w n s h i p o f N e p t u n e , I n t h e C o u n t y o f M o n m o u th .

J O H N . W . . K N O X ,C l e r k o f t h e

T o w n s h i p , o f N e p t u n e . 2 -3 ; Y . : \ ' •/•••

T W E N T Y p e r c e n t a t t h o t im e o f t h e s a l e a n d t h e b a l a n c e u p o n t h e d e l i v e r y o f t l i e A s s i g n m e n t o f L e a s e . A n y b i d ­d e r w h o f a l l s - t o c o m p l e t e h i s p u r c h a s e w i l l f o r f e i t t o t h e T o w n s h i p a n y d e ­p o s i t p a i d .

J O H N W . K N O X ,. C io r k o f t h o

. T o w n s h i p o f N e p t u n e . '2 -3

•• Arrested John Brown Under command of Gol. Robert

S. Lee, U . S. Marines captured John Brown at Harper’s Ferry in 1859. . ' .

L E GA L N O T IC E

WOKINGAHEAD

N O T I C E

N O T I C E I S H E R E B Y G I V E N t h a t o n T u e s d a y , J a n u a r y 19 , 1943, n t 2 :3 0 P . M ., a t t h e T o w n s h i p H e a d q u a r t e r s , 137 S o u t h “M a i n S t r e e t ; N e p t u n e , N e w J o r s e y ; a c e r t a i n t a x c e r t i f i c a t e W h e r e b y W a l t e r H . G r a v a t t , C o l l e c t o r o f T a x e s o f t h e T o w n s h i p o f . N e p t u n e , i n t h e C o u n t y o f M o n m o u th , s o l d t o t h e s a i d T o w n s h i p o f N e p t u n e , t h e f o l ­l o w i n g l a n d s d e s c r i b e d a n d d e s i g n a t e d a s :

( 1 ) B l o e k S e c t i o n 8 , p t . 7 a n d 8 . .( 2 ) B lo c k S e c t i o n 1, p t . 2 4U ,

• w i l l b e s o l d a t p r i v a t e s a l e , b y a s ­s i g n m e n t , f o r n o t . l e s s t h a n t h e a m o u n t o f t h e m u n i c i p a l l i e n s c h a r g e d a g a i n s t s a i d l a n d s . .

■ Ocean Grove2 1 ... .N ew York and Asbury Aves.2 2 . . ........ . . .Police Headquarters23 . .......... . .Surf and Beacb2 4 . . . . . . . . . . . . .Embury and Beach25 Main and Pilgrim Pathway26..Broadwny and Pilgrim Path’y 27 Mt. Tabor and Penn. Avenue2 8 . . . . . . . . . . . .North End Pavilion29 . . . . . . . . .McGlintock and Beach3 1 . . . 50. th End Pavilion3 2 . . . . . . . . . .Clark and New Jersey3 3 .. .. .Benson and Mt. Tabor Way34 .....................Heck and Whitfield35.............. Webb and Pennsylvania3G ....A sbury and Pilgrim Path’y3 7 . . . . . . . . . . .Benson and Franklin38........ .............Benson and Abbott3 9 . . . . . . . New York and Stockton4 1 . . . . ; . , Hcck and Lawrence42........... . . . .O l in Street Firehouse4 3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..M ain and Beach

'Special Taps5—5—5 General Alarm. 1 Wire

Trouble. . 2 Fire Out and Ambu­lance Call. 3 Time 7 a, m. and Chief’s Calk 4 Washington ' En ­gine 1. 6 Eagle Truck 1. 7 Stokes Engine 3. 8 Junior Dept.

N O T I C E

N O T I C E O P P U B L I C S A L E O P L A N D S A N D P R E M I S E S I N T H E T O W N S H I P O P N E P T U N E . I N T H E C O U N T Y O P M O N M O U T H . N O T I C E I S H E R E B Y G I V E N t h a t

o n T u e s d a y , t h o n i n e t e e n t h d a y - o f , J a n u a r y , llf-ISi a t tw c > - t h i r t y o ’c l o c k i n t h e a f t e r n o o n , a t . t h e N e p t u n e T o w n ­

s h i p H a w l q u a r t e r « , 137 S o u t h M a in S t r e e t . N e p t u n e , N e w J e r s e y , t l i e T o w n s h i p o f N e p t u n e , i n t h e ' C o u n t y

IY GEORGE S. BENSONL Pcesllextjlanting College foi Searcy. JrkansaiNavyMen Get 13,700Welding, Award"When the officials of a nation are

Virtuous the people follow their , ex­ample,"said Confucius two dozen, centuries ago, and he was right. Th is. ancient Oriental was often right. His high moral philosophy has influ­enced more people and done it long­er than any other code. AU Chi­nese who can read still study his ; sage writings. Due undoubtedly to the wisdom of Confucius, China is the only ancient country left today with an ancient civilization. ,

Here in modern America we are hardly able to sense the full signifl* . cance of the proverb quoted above, because most of our officials have been “virtuous.”. We criticize rulers., freely, but not one high-handed. ty-; rant ever ruled the United States, , and only an occasional official turns out. to be a scalawag. The demo-. Gratis system safeguards citizens . with authority divided among rul­ers; with a three-department gov-, ernment; with representative legis­latures. ■ -

Who Fights Congress?Covetous enemies, itching to see

Democracy "done over” into some: form of socialistic set-up, are the natural enemies of everything rep- * resentative in government. They fight congress by instinct, with or without , cause. Just prior .to the congressional election, when: there appeared to be some dodging of re­sponsibility for the teen-age drait. ■ law, it was not uncommon to hear somebody suggest; "Congress Is on­ly in the way. Let’s suspend congress for the duration."

Well-meaning people get vexed and talk that way sometimes but it classifies them with a bad crowd. ,No political move could ,be~ worse than "purging” congress/ No mili­tary defeat would bring more cer­tain calamity. It is the law-making body that stands between our great free-born citizenship and hasty, rad­ical decisions of rulers. Judicial and executive departments rarely hear the majority’s authoritative- voice - except through represeata- . fives.

Farm Boys Deferred Some people, may even accuse

congress of playing politics with the Agriculture Bloc • as soon as they see how the new draft law favors farm labor/ but the provision Is a good one, in my opinion. It pro­vides that those engaged in agricul­tural occupation, or endeavor essen­tial to the , war effort, be deferred from training and service so long as they remain so engaged and until such time as satisfactory replace­ment can be obtained. ’

Congress apparently understands the farm labor problem. Our law makers are aware that the millions of soldiers soon to be called into service by the new draft law, are ' going to be obliged to eat if they / fight, that the farms of America must feed them! and that the farm labor shortage Is acute. It Is re­grettable that the nation did not realize this situation earlier.

Harding College is in the middle of tbe nation's farming section. I was brought up on a farm and now actively manage two farms owned by the college. Working students milk our cows, but I know well that many farmers, unable to get milk hands, have sold their dairy herds . . for slaughter.

Workers Are Scarce Last Spring acres of strawberries

rotted in the fields in Arkansas for * ' lack of pickers. Our students took a J day off, salvaged enough “free” her- ries to moke 700 gallons of jam, more than one winter’s supply. . . . -V' Last fall we had good cotton in the field as the rainy season approached, and no pickers were available. 1 Again the students made a picnic of it, picked four bales of cotton In a few hours, pooled their wages, bought a war bond and gave lt to the college endowment fund.

In addition to safeguarding tho na­tion’s food supply, deferring farmer boys has two secondary advantages:U) Young men now on the farm are ready to go into 100 per centprodue-' tion of food without further training.They arc trained already. (2) Young 'men left on the farm when the war Is over will be exactly where they can serve best, with no post-war ad­justment to rtloke. /

Stay Put, and Work . V Perhaps the wisest piece of couh-

sal offered the American public in / % recent weeks was voiced in a radio- program by Dr. Alfred P. Haake a t \|-V> Detroit His suggestion in this em'er- -‘‘::.’; gency, to every man not eUgible'for the armed forces, is this: - "Stay ‘ where you are. Work at what you • ?. are doing. Increase your output per hour and work more hours a day; d o . \i all you can, , not to hurt your offl- : clency.” . :/ ‘ \

It Is a commoh Bcnsc auggeatibrnf ■' K The actualicost of. the war is w«&£;/;'g C ongress jUleaylng!the.genuine farm ' , boys where-they can work llte .yet/: : • erans nnd where a 70-hour week is • not unknown. From .cohsiderab}*! experience with congressmen I havo learned that they can bo trusted to -':- act wisely when they have the facta, I " and mosfTit them have first hand :! *• information' about agriculture. A 1':-/ survey which I made recently!, to^s#;, dicates that morocent -como from' towns o f 25,000.op'*1fU.'; smaller. The rustic background’o f i’ 1. ,( Its members Is one" of, my reasons -i ;

in s a n i t y :ond1 '■c'^emtfwjibi'.i.ijiafr^fi .consress of thc Unlteci states, '

Neptune .'.1 5 . . . .Main Street and Main Ave,1 6 ... .Main Street and Corlies Ave. 62. .'. , . i . . Unexcelled F ire House 63/.'.. . . . . . . .Atkins and Embury64.. , . ,/. . . . . .'Prospect and Heck56.. . . . . . . . .Ridge and Embury2 9 . . . . . . . . . . Stokes nnd Stratford6 2 .' . . . . . . . . . —. .Corlies and Ridge7 2 .. .; Corlies and Union81 .......... Seventh and Stokes8 3 . . . . „ . . . . . . .Ridge and Eighth8 5 . Tenth and Atkins86.... ;Sixth and, Atkins9 2 . . . . . . . . . . .Eighth rind Hamilton2—2—2 Police.

Special Taps v , ;6—6—6 General Alarm. 2 Am­

bulance Call. F ire Out. 3 Chief’s Call. Time 1 p. m. 4 Unexcelled

^ / X UR TRAINED MEN leaving to serve with the* I - I armed forces cannot be replaced! Shortages

arc developing in replacement parts for trucks \ and other equipment. Gasoline and tires must be

* conserved as much as possible! •* Your Government is asking you to aid in freeing* more of our men’s time and our equipment for the* vital job of keeping gas and electricity flowing to army* ' posts and war plants.* You can help by keeping your appliances in efficient* operating condition, making minor repairs yourself,* T f a f T l T replacing blown out fuses and calling for service only i f ) SMMtfJWRSHD WTEfflAU ( when absolutely necessary. This is a wartime ’’must.”* We know you will be glad to do your part.

. Bradley: Beach3 9 ..; . . . . , .Evergreen and Madison 4 1 / . . . . . . . . ,V .. . . , .Cliff and Kent4 3 .. .. . . . .- . .Park Place and Ocean*45................ LaReinc and Ocean4 7 . . . . . Fourth nnd Ocean49 ......................Second and Beach5 1 . . . . . . . . . .Newark and Madison67. .Ocean Park and Fletcher Lake58-- . . . . . . LaReine and Central69. .F ifth arid Central6 1 ... Ocean Park and Fletcher Lake6 5 . . . . .LaReinc and Fletcher Lake66. . .........F ifth arid Fletcher Lake6 7 .. . . . . .T h i r d and Fletcher Lake•<*9 ..Monmouth and Atlantic73.. . . . . . . . .Park Place and Main7 4 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .McCabe and Main7 5 . ........ ........... Brinley and Main76........... .Fourth and Main7 7 . ........ .Evergreen and Main7 8 . . . . . . . . . .Burlington, and Main

• H m im iN m H N N H H t iH n ]WILBUR R. GUYER |

. Successor to . IW IL U A M YOU N G {

PLUMBING AND j HEATING I

;• Estimates Given I64 Main Avenue, Ocean G rove l

Telephone 428 i

JERSEY CENTRAL POWER & LIGHT CO★ E A C H S TA R R E P R E S E N T S O N E O F O U R M E N IN T H E S E R V IC E *

join Our 1943 ChristmasSIX D IF F E R E N T SAVINGS CLUB PLANS

Receive , $25.00 Receive $50.00 Receive $100.00 Receive $250.00 Receive $500.00 Receive $1,000.00

Save 50c a week Save $1.00 a week Save $2.00 a week Save $5.00 a week Save $10:00 a week Save $20.00 a week

H O THOME-MADE

DA ILY- 3 P. ML8 C o n v e n i e n t B a n k i n g O f l lc o s t o S e r v o Y o n

le itzM add Bakery 7 Pilgrim PathwayOCEAN GROVESon? Husband? Brother? Father?

Employe? (Daughter? Sister?)

O R G A N I Z E D 1880

MAIN STREET ASBURY PARK

M a l a A v e n o e O e c a i i G r o v e

C o r l i e s A v c u n e N c i i t a n e

I Featuring— II an OIL WAVE !i 1

I1 Raymond’s Beauty Salon I

HA IR STY L IST I 727 Bangs Avenue i

Asbury Park B

Tel/ for Appointment 8220 §■nafianaawiBannrwiniifTntatntjiimnajiaRinaTmtJiianfiiiniiiiiiiDinifgnaainiianiuiutit«Bmiin»an

1 BRA KE SERV ICE I

BA TTERY SERV ICB 1 CABS IN SP ECTED 1

STORA GE T IR ES |

NEPTUNE A U TO REPA IRS f Auto Repairing 1

BAYELU8 |Stockton and 80. Main St. I

Ocean Grove. TeL 7727 |.»naii«n«iian»»inaua»i!ianiiiifjiiiaiiiiiiiiiDiuiflinii7

M e m b e r F o d o r a l D e p o s i t I n s a r n n c e C o r p o r a t i o n

Then You M ust Be Proud Enough of H im (or H er) tq D isp lay An Official W ar Service F lag In the W indow of .Your H om e or Store or P lant. T hink W ha t T hey ’re

D oing For You.

Don’t Spend T h Dollar! Save It!• Size 8*x 12” '• Guaranteed Washable• A Blue Star for each person In service• The ndded *V Symbolizes the Servke

Flag of Today . / ■'• Not a print but a heavy woven material• This is 1942 version: of ofiicial Service; Flag

used in World War 1

So you will help win this awful war and help yourself to happiness in the days a t peace that will come with Victory.

When you buy now anything you can get along without, or more than you actually need of anything, you take something the Army and Navy do. need to win. And you help send upward the prices for all the things we must have.

So Save I Save! Save 1Put your money away—in War

Bonds or bring it to us for invest­ment. Here it is insured and grows with earnings. B . F E D D E S

. ^JEWELER Watch Repairing ’ ■ \- B EST PR ICES /

PA ID F O R O LD G O LD ;: APPRA ISED F R E E v, ;

67 Main Avcnner J ;Occan Grove 1

“ I .Pca1 ^ Building . ,

Secure Your Flag a t

imes Savings and Loan Associationfi 49,M^ttison/ Ay enhei;;: j;i;,64 Main Avenue

i p i i p

P A G E E I G H T FRIDAY, JANUARY 8, 1943

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