ay presbyterian - digifind-it.com ta^lon ^ “l lch0in0i edu- ... rÏtdne matk ^ m «^ n tt = _ ~...
TRANSCRIPT
;>rr^gÿ.¿/-s.
T i l 422-W
HONDAY, <TUSSDAY* * . -
R IC H A R D BARTHELMESS in “To l’sble David"
* C H A R L IE CH APLIN in * '“ P ayD ay-
The above cobinatlon Ls one oi t),t liest, i f not the best »how oi thc year. I)o not njiss it. . . '
W EDNESDAY " — - ■.■.!
' FLORENCE REED “— ve T b «B l* e k Panther'» Cub”— ;—
Star Coinedy—‘The Paniiky man" .Kirn-to Hevb-w
hs*\12 h««!
-,«ï]
BAZAAR
00e a Jumper Dress, and for a Hi lake a Summer Dress. |j| you will be a customer, be-fj* the garment you desire, we it;
U*
HITCHING, PLEATING, D BUTTON COVERING
nr
ry Goods Co. mCranford, N. ’J. |jï
-
Mone 471-R
rs and Embalmers>rk o m e t
39th Strettlephorv*,r H;l! -v U
x wrsîrifiD258 E, Broad Striti
X Ttriepb^Del*3
re nue»
tConstructionCo.NEWARK, N. I.
ontractorsn S tu cco W o r k .L1SHPD ISST "TY C O U N T S "
E R C . A L D R I C H ,; CRANFORD. N. J.
T). .1. HEY BURN |G E N E R A L ELECTRIC IAN
Repair work promptly attended to
5 Burnsida AvsnaA Crantord
• - ■ . . • . utcBe Given by Members of First Tho
for New Building.-The First Methodist Episcopal
Church ot Crantord Is lacing a new 2 The splendid opportunity that
s - n s a s t s f A ? « ., ,oriL h n ^ hardly conceivable that
ihe development should be such as
g f S S w S F Schurch has under way now #choolhave met tn© to suppose
a r g u.fa»s - a a iadequate ta^ lon “ l lcH0in0i edu-
hmnos'hut seek In«onto w“ y t o « -press the interest in thol^new ^
erecting m attractive new
this » « ‘M S i f ' ^ U t c on the chased tlm Tremn y ] lncoin avo- corner of Walnut aim churchnues, upon wljj 8paclous andis to lie orcctc(L > v roaches for oneattractive property ^ Groveblock on Lincoln av parsonage Is street. The heaut tui 1« pastor>already houslnt the n pian8lfev. Roland L . « W f t , a n c o Cmn- will be m iuloby « campaign In the inlttee to launch « cwnr ctB,on ¿ t o near future .* ° in the ndnd of the
, Building JJJiay*School with a ll» th o re(!utpn.ent n ^ s s a r y J o
S'. *1* th0. „ come 1 Tho people can ex-
street. This entice plan wlum complete will meet all the ijpiiiUuil.
the people lit wul ttlwnif t futiinrp. The church hus tuken to ,m:
CRANFORD. N. X. THURSDAY. JUNE
WALNUT AVL CONTRACT
1922
niurcii »»«w V““ ' v >",«crease the amount ~ m the-NewBplUllng' h!‘town. In the very near future, a Uwn Festival of three days dura tion. The.people have a tm“ '1 > I nortunlty to give Impetus to-this new church project by the wind some interest which tm-y >mghirlve to the coming fan. I hi 1 < *val Is to-be worked for th.- h.m<-lit of the people as well as foi tin.
••"UrCU 1 Details of FestivalAll preparntions are coulpleti I
ECHOES FROM M B CIRCUS 1A Mrs. J. F. rem its visite* to thank
P those who heliHxl in anX way to ,l .. .Li. i\.niiiittn>ft t*im is ft stir*
THE NEW SÌÌMAB SCHOOL
urmtaruiiojig J1 »;• . -.y: for the threeslay lawn festival " h'vh will he conducted by the lumnh* is and friends of'the Cranford l ustM E. Church on dune fid. -1st. on the spacious lawn o 11» « {church property, |,onl\ l f !, ( . and Lincoln avenues, lb ' -l'10 11 ,of the event, which proiulscs
‘ 'iM irvarUm^'oniu'ittees l|'
j S H i r H S s
Lm/.ines and druK^, kH>iL,K •U (continued on page twelve)
lUUbL wvi v »V* — ------- ■ _Made at Once.-Ordinance to Im
™ pfovi~Sy lv in ia -T ia te—and Parker Ave . Adopted.
I'dnlract for house c.uuioctionA sc« or gas and-water, in Walnut av.-i.uo: was ordered let last night to !■’ A. Vamlerweg of Hoselli at average-cost of T.V1 per eonnection. Tlic-I' house connections are to lit put ill on ea.-h Ml foot lot-where not - v in from South . avenue to t ireone avenue, prelunmary to tlioV+uv4u g -‘d -t lu V**«»t front i‘urh to 'curh. T h e r e w.-ró live bidders.' ***** tiinefor the Walnut avenue job and for a smaller numher of eoummtltms in llillcrest avenue. The latter VOIP
inn BUiv M iuu'iA. . -cT h e t.alleon l-o»'th a t the Circus
* „mroo ot great fun both to the paithii-aiils ami tlic on-
k Morris pnivct to have tlu- irtrongest anil and surcoeded in tutting thet-alUmns at thejm .per• .hue
The laity from the Soiitti Side of iovm tliat VnocksiiLmT tin* M g» w ith a ha-e tiall. tl..-rehy » innnig a dear, f-ecivcd Hie plaudits of the CiowiL Site tried to punisti 1w-r-hus band t'T luakine biin smoke the weed, tut li*‘ -trapped it and putit RT tit' jiöcket. - — ■— ----------:—— T" A l K* n/ provisi lie was no coward when tic donfUHl the liigli hat at the 'Aniericact l egion l-ail.mii Imm.U i and1 . . . «è bid lti>Hil
MIIO IH-IJEAJ m* -> -A ---- - a- . ' J r f Ai.Imâke th. Comuiunity Oimts a suc- Appt0priate . Exercises and hlag' R ÏTd n e M aTk ^ m « ^ n t T =
_ ~ - - . - t— F®“ “'r . ...k . . . .iw. rirc iis 0{ W o rk ___To Be Mode!—— -—----- StrdeUire. — ^ —-Tliesday aUernoon, w ltli.u short
tint Interestiifg formai prugram. ground «a s hroken (or tlu; new She'rimin Scliool. Trustée Messlck, clmlnnaii «T the spécial building committoe Imvlng l u- lumor o tumiug the llrst sod. t resld. t iiom.lng ami fth e r meml.ers of ht Roard ot Ediieat ion . « e u also
l l l'|'|iciirogiatU-itu'ltlilcd__Hl!'gi|'g-!i,y- clilldrcn ot She.rtmm ami Llneoln
....... Itioim-r
«ns not let hut recommittee. The' plans ami specltl cut ions for the Walnut avenue in provement have heen approved l>y the rrccholdi-rs and ldds ordi m l tidvertiscil. The work wilt e.msist oT curb to curh concrete road. SiUth avenue to Green avenue ami — tei t with* nm m 'to from (¡riM»n avt'iuio tD the Lehigh Valley K. K-
Orditmtiees were adopted la. t night bv the Townshl|i ( ommittte to ’ establish the grade of Walnut avenue mi.l to Improve Unit s ta r t ami Sylvnnl.c Chtce by t-urh to■ (tavlttg. also to lay a sewer u Syl- v;inin plm*o. \Nork on tlu*so un* provements will In-gln Just aa so w ns plans nro uppniviMl uml roiitrutt»
*'■'Elizabeth Cluiniher of Coinmeree Invltisl•Cranford Township i minnlt- tci- to join « ith Elizabeth In uftt*1}^ that permission la- given t entrul It. K to reconstruct tlm-cCay Itthlge
Las' a I t rack high level bridge. .New- liii, om-osi d_th|s.»n ttie ground
It « ¡ l i lun t. sliippiug hut It not granted it will htirt seriously- fnr L-reiiter interests. 'I he township Committe.-_hy rcH.hitlun aiiijrnved t lic lii i-lg-'-l'U'ject- amt Mayor ui-ao1 will- -attend the hearings for the Township.
„tt.-r von- A n n -r ii art l.cgi-m i -a o -— ..........»t t liv’tii ali m n »» « *• *” . .Tim man »Iw* « » " ' Ihe »hnnhtuin-
¡.ware t.y spinning the bowling hall *o t it legitimately and did not de_ £ r v e the criticism lu- u-celveii t-'r TOt unit ting the came A caute-o f fhanee is just as fair wiien you win
s ^ l B c k ' Ä l ^ ' c a ^ s i some me.ilm ent anmnd Hie iHHitlis when liejipinart-tl In tlw t«rly ovenlUB. ^ ,l,u
*‘T U -l r-'lf 'carne- punnoU-d Jty liar W ichis. was if «inrye .dr.tmieh Measure tor the coli »vnds. llar.y
S - a S à ? :
E'K;,;.“ : . « i S - i i
tele torre won if twin- in sun Tin- couple that sat ‘ "t '
clilUlrru ol um« tlSchools "The Star Spangled Haulier folio« lug Which Trustee M-'SS'k made a short address amt tm mulls inaugurated., the work by turnlug a shovelful ot earth. Mr. Mess . k then introiluced President Denning
"he Board of Kdueathm who spoke hrlelly on tlu- ellorts to sicure tlu- new sellimi, nosy »ssut-d; Mr. Denning was t*' l'l' ' l''| l,) 1builder Teller, who told of t - «dd
ytinrs ago and ‘m W ' / ‘j *2“ s
Diuon & wiicy. ^ rk2ll,1:‘!r1vlllai:,Ìturned thè soconil shoMlful oi
l' UM ta Ilice, principili of Sherman Si-lióoL told liosv- tlu- children and tcuciiers antlclliatiid svlt i ^
house iilanted a hemitItili Alili u- can ll’ag tfurnlslieil hy t1)-- ''0" 11'“' torsi nt thè spia «heie tho llrst cari li was'turned. Thls (lag w ilii » vaisi-ii wltli tlu- building as rimstim .,lY {V.rr R T ic u r le h o ,T e n .d a s h .u t
iirìiyi'r after whlch rtli « 't '^ i ^ ì'ig s ¡od Erom W hotti All > h ss L V" The... every ,sllu' 1 ,
S S S > 3 5 £ ^ - :
1 -1-1... ci.st svili he some«bererollili*. I m* ( ,ISI ” , .uyl rt'lw»It.tlivoclk unti h i
Vi,., building was descrlbed In di tal
'fil
li
mied schonis of T|1(1 building was deser lu-ii i .firn«, days-with Uu.se id the pres- ,,, ,„s, week's Cillz.-t. and < hnmii h . ent. Si-ltpol Trustee Mrs. N. K-. • ----------------- r ~ f -ont. Si'litHir iu im i*'»; v*Tliomiisoti spukt-' hrlelly
E Ä Ö - I.1» " ; r d'""!.............Ion of wlmt the new s-mout|¡¡j^"j;p;- ' „ Sm'lnglh-ld- avenu.
- ...... '
a u t o c o l l i s i o n ,As Henry Muller, a V tnn " ,r-
Spring Held avenue, WestTh.ld.. «a. » . , _ .... Ulkl-ltlI mib; im «*• V.; • *- ..
■osses 'lltiloll avemii.-'. at-of lute lu-.-n .•arefuliy can. u . . . t • m veSlerday. . the car of Mrs in-, iicci-ssitv for economy In He ¡- i-uiuicr going Nottli un t uhm
*'SV, wu.'V . . n r - ..... ........................... ..........
{ot— wh FITintm
.................................................¡anil you know we menu >'•
tereu w» »*v^ ....over fifty yeftr» :t activo fbatufo ofOno other Attracuv^, t() r0.
u this l}ew tho old church to„model R'ul. ' . .u^ narHounge on tho
Uc'-iili-tils ot I M chntil street; nAkc4 the 'Township Committee .to order, rcinm al of a tree along that s t r it t in fro n t-o t the Mnroney pioperty. «IticlT it . is ehihaed'blocks, surtoee ■drainage. This wits refcl ed lo the Iliade lice cmnmltlei- with I’OWW.
The. Voiiug /Mens Hebrew As#»- i-intioii. )»y : I. Diamomi, secreta
(latice, preferably Eastman street at ,\1 ¡In Street. This was referred to cnmmilti-e of the whole.
Engineer Collins reported work (cold hilled i’ll page (our>
, î* .V ,Vie gn-ati-st dlsJi|i|uihiinie"t
.¡ghlbavi
_ . A t o o f d I vwxtc f * A »« ~n»rrs L ïoem ix>v» 0 -AKir lie.r a?a**z» -*Ne wrfoox
S*to*0-
hav", hwl'lw itl.,'ti;ó Mulirterl |
^ r ^ J n S 4 l,w|«uiirMH M««ïTrinity Su n «»» ™ pcxl Sun- tor Hu- Sun.im-r s e ^ ' b,,, ^ H.day. |V- schotd .luring Idally ; \ ^ particularsA»l Ithe liiiinth « I .viglisi, »
I „ id e i, will to- animimi is l l im _ _ I
:u »«v o e (l O P
R. T iF R E C K L E S B A R R Y
in
“ P E N R O D ”SS N. Union Avo.'
J .
E HMES”
t ' 1,aye 19b a r g a in f e s t iv a ls
f it h a n d le s m e r -
w a n t e d a r t ic le s in
i y o n ly a t $1 e a c h .
|L f o r c o n s id e r a b ly
i r s e v e r a l t im e s $1.
‘H a h n e D o m in a n t
: M o n d a y . I f y o u
n e e d to t e l l y o u o f
e Store » »
Before G o i n g Awayl( Arrange lo do your banking t>» »>»«
«Place your securities, jeweliy and val-S g ^ h . S A J V p - i i . B « -
Store your aitverwnre in our large fir?':..;.proof vault. • • _i_
fl Purchase our Traveller’s Checks or a Letter of Credit. -
« S e c u r e from us a letter of introduc- UonUo’ a bank in .be .own where you- expect to stay. !
«W e offer the above services for.your l ^ n i n « and « » r l . y whit, on you. vacation this Summer,
CRANFORD TRUST CO.CRANFORD, N. .
„ $2,000,000.00Resources 7* *- : . . .
At North and Union Avenues Phones 460 and 461
S P E C X A L SFOR FRIDAY Afjn SATURDAY
COFFEE. Our Very Best. .. 29cper lb..... ....... — v .............
RASPBERRY PRESERVE,
m a c a r o n i O R s p a g h e t t i .3 packages............... ............ .
f u l l c r e a m c h e e s e
per lb.............. -.......EVAPORATED CREAM.
per ..................................SATIN GLOSS SOAP.
¿ikcs ,,,,,#••••••••••••• ••••••“*********"SHREDDED WHEAT.
per package............ ......—............ ' ■EASTON DRESSING. , .....¿ ¿ C
per jar............... ......v—--r-....... .......----------------- —Cw^ ny-liveries to All Parts of Town
R< T. PO TTS & SO N’ PHONE— ONE—THREE
Walter W . , Mooney Company, Inc.- ' ~ 1 Walnut Avenue . ^
Cranford, N. J- _
kt the _•C r a n f o r d T h e a t r e
. '■ ' T w o Days v . |M o n . & T u e s . , J u n e 26 & 27
Musical ServiceV
m.i'nuiltUUWIHHinmiH
BOBBINS i , ALLISONSTORAGE a n d MOVING
— r . — - - CRANFORD, N. J.,213.215 E ■ SoMth A v e y
lumber ...lathsashSHINGLESDOORStrim«
8 7 0 * ^
l im eCEMENTPLASTERSANDSLAGGRAVEL
Presbyterian ChurchC R A N F O R D . N . J ”
Sunday Even’g, lune 25,1922- 8 P- M.
'olden Tea [low I house
28 Forest Avenue /Cranford, N. 1. ,—: CHICKEN AND WAFFLE DINNER ,
\ S U N D A Y ; 1 2 :3 0 u - 2 :0 0 $ L 2 5
FU LLY EQUIPPED REMEMBRANCE SHOP T* tme
One Poor Move
H
^ T O .S E R V lc i '
oftimes causes regrets that a
j lifetime cannot ^radicate, es
pecially in the Moving and
Storage Business.
MȎir MAd tf
Phc
842-J V U
:i
w,r i
living ,I”dosigli f ¡ I1/ l * nhlYV'. V HKitcho
t t
frf
Í&.*
H i
V - j;
© o jf;
i
\ r ;
"“B
T h r y u (p-owlT. th«*y »* cru*rfr.I im h# lîfiur And the bru w £owfE, 1 T li«* Ainu an" prfü{ lu klri< nn ntut*I f trial.**- them brlth#r* »*, jowff:"V t *m» AtftVft tli*» o* • cowIT.Ì Í V«f* Tumori tht*_ JitMtitt o' gowCT, 7 li» citili und Lu U ‘w itch us a',
a duft ou gowff.-J ohn Knnn
reucti Hticli u pnss flint a movement Ih Finned li. resi rie! tlie unlimited nmtui* fnenire of uoodèti clubs thry luiv«* tuit io introduci! Hit?—conservili Ion Irmlrra to thr urnrrst link«, Irt fliciti jdn.v thelr llrst nine holes mit] thr trick w.lll fît» turned. C»m*r » piltor, uIwm.vh a pnjfcr. The yericHt dub will .yield wind ever. roiijoTyiiiiiin_l^rjmlpies he
Id Loudon embroidered woven serges are Hboui to bt* put forward for fancy Buitlnirw and thrr<M>lrred_ continues. j
useil chieily for skirts with plaits, and combined with plain; niuteriul Which ih \ solo to match. “ embroidery pat- 1 terns for colored stripes run ver- ! tically four inches apart on grounds j of navy i»r black. The pattern is woven of silk tlirrnds in four or five colors, eomidning j»urj>le, silver, green, gold, yrllow.and rust. The pattern It-' self shows either duny lure designs | or simple geometric effects, the difter- ent rtdors running: "In stripes, leaving tlic pluin ground To whew up the out*Jines._________________._-_____ ■ ’ _
theTor next winter’s routings .... steady run of plain velours wit!' ’hi varied with a ^erles grooved In Jacquard pattern in plain colors. These heavyweight cloths come not only in the jlowered grooves,- but in grooved stripes and fancy cheeks. lirowns predominate in this series, the range of .¡aeijuurds being fawn, mole,, lieuver, •nigger, cinnamon and gray. ‘ '
Mixture velours are used as else* whore, and .. pluin velours with u shadow stripe lii contrasting color. The velours-colléctlou contains tnuny :*iieck£i. the Tiuwt interesting being the .very large shaded 'cheeks in several degrees of the same color, designed for coatings.- ' .
-^The. gabardine aeries Is made interesting by the Introduction of striped materials, hands of rich colors on u neutral ground, such-combinations’-us hiwn, gray, slate and heaver, striped with*—blue._lemon, gold, poppy and
*\<t " L ' r. ^ /Tt1
!„ < ' * \/ v ‘
Tea
\
itace
When a French voile in rose Is beaded in a daisy design It becomes a charming afternoon /rock. The model wears a hat of rose straw with clusters of frosted grapes. ~ —
L A T E AND CUNNING S T Y L E SPlaited Plaid Skirt and Bloomers;
Blue and White Swiss. Dress; Chambray Frock.
hliick, each bund (ontulning bluek and' two colors. — . — ~
By JOH& ptCKÌNSÒN SHERMAN j may ìiuve Sii. uiM|iinli(led nlleghmce to ^ >LK— Amerii-imK, i the sport that In ut once tils glory
■Æ at the .lowest - e**lmHte, «nil his despair.arc playing It. And the! The photographs reproduced herenumber of devotees Hr I with have reni signlrinmce. In iTesl- ,*yi*. royali uni! Miitlem ; d«»nt Harding Is seen the ‘'biggest ama
Increasing ; b» the I ’nMed States”, playing golLtor It
^ C 2e -m m ? ¿ m va ? rwidespread application. So.
K.nnie” are hey«mé—all count lug. -wiiN only a génération
_ ago that a feu hundredAmericana wenn un*
y . uiercifully rUÜL'UieU înrtheir “cmv-puHture pí>o!.” . The g«df
enjoyment, for. ndaxatlon from the tremendous labor and responsibility of his high pluee u.iul for the preserva- thm of. his health and vigor... in. John. D77Ûüi.’Ut‘ittL!cr..lH bcriï ..the “ riclieRt tnnn In the world” playing golf because with all Ida uilllioliM—or Is It blillotiN?—he knows no keener enjoyment, no sport more fitted to UIh udvmiml uge. no better method of prolonging his .years. . f
iif Miss Murgtlr'et Cntlieron (if Los Angjeles Ik «eea a. fine type of the modem American girl who plays imlffor iits .imuiy advantages nn in out-i f|i pumos suy intiume verydoor recreuthm tuai un aiithlot«* for I M’K entile la the world is old-fasldotu-ti
* . llllt'ikh - llj.n.tl.j... t.
cliilis of tilt- comitrj rimili he nititili-tlin letiB uniti 'itti- 'ngoifrar. li »u< inllt-il a ri.-li luiia a jiuuit- nhd an ol(f mini s cauit-. .■ -
N»w. ( ’hliiiRn— usine II ns «li f i ."*h|iìi- ni ili*] 1 rliunuf—Inis f.;t 1 hre.1tlatr.iluafi .-aÌ-h • \viih if long iviilting lii-i. Il lui-, ijimii.v armili rlubs. li Jiaa i iovvii luiintt-tjui! niiirai-s. i « Uh limi’ inon- la linao-ittnii*. ami , -jiri-aMm: umj far.jlmilile- llii-Timnln-r— iohov ni Un- (ila uf a rlvllizailon Jlmtun Un- luilillr IIitIìs Hi l.lnruin jmrk J la In» <'mii|riri io lii'Viitlrelj- aafir. ’ Baili1laat irai lllo.tHKi (.«-(.¡ili- ii-t-il n|t. |t |-anil aolo-r. ‘ ■ . ■ .lina sm nasini -i-omim-n-iar rmirà.-a : : In Jm-k •Huii-hliisnn la ai-t-n a Kamiaiunj ......................il In.ItiatrUil l.o.lo-s Mimplr of il,,- liiirlsclasa profi-saloiml J**"ior lK Ul<'un- ionnlim ilo-ir ima i-luhs fo r In- «lo.at- iliani|nuasiiì|i aulii la a marU •*,l>i«',ifl<,lialami-ila oiln-r miv ri'|in--..-[iiMtlvi-a of for t-vi-ry iiapiilng golfi-r tu alioot ut,
»linai- Inatrui-lion la atliìlng yi-urly la thè-giaiil Kullliig of tilt- country.
A aure Imlli-alIoli of golfa Im-n-aa- l«K |io|mlarlty la tliat. tlii-ri- la a «|(li-- Kjiri-ml movt-im-iit to ri-ilm-e tla- cosi Uf-thi- game. Evt-ry immii-l|ail i-mirae »•Itti immilli,il rlmrgl-s Im-ri-aai-a lorul i-nthiialaam ami alida to tilt- mimi.or of Iilayi-rs. Ttila’ la Ilio'aoiiri'l of thè aun-i-aa of thè eomimircial t-ourao—Ir la ela-aiH-r to |iuy a gri-eu'a fi-e tinnì to hi-long to a golf liuti- lliat a|n-ml»
alnglé munlfltiul ! gulit- |mlf of Ha n-v,-nui- un «miai
. . . — - . flittingUn- hall la hot all of golf. Meiiiniileul aklll with ilio rltihs la very fur from tiling all there Is m the game
• 'ertala ht-milta. su iif aa fn.-ah a.tr, exereiae ami the rest Unit eomt-a from lining!* of aeone ami oeeutmtiim are "I'vlous. There la no way to reuch tlailj mysterious thing which we call the liriilu, exi-cpt tlVrougli the muscles u"il the aenai-a. Therefore to |iiu> hard miri huiip.lly In the open nlr. la ni once tile heat antidote nil'll prepnrn- Mon for work. ' Walking la good, hut It ilockn't alwaya prnenl ilie imml from keeping on with Ms troubles: Here'« where gf'lf cornea In ami llltji Ike lilll. Tail’ Can’t play golf anil keep your mind .on aoim-tlilng else'
Students of games say Unit llhe very
RO SE C LO T H , C R EP E DE C H IN E
Ainriirnni poker. Why? lti-eause tt la the Imppleat poasllite coinhlaailon of skill ami luck. There uro people who hold that n fltdidied rourse tn poker Is the nonri-at equlrulem to «
the priming industry and allied irntlea formed. I lie I'rilitlng Trinlea liolf usam ,1’iatioii »up lid eharier uiemhers. It villi hold three iniirminieniK Una aea- aou. 1.veie thi- high schools have Ilieir tiiiiitmi tpuriuiiitciiiN fi»r imyg uwl girl«. .• ' -
cnlea vary greatly In. their attitudeUnwind golf. lietroil. for example,
goes in lor expensive golf In cxeluslve el""«. Wemherah.tp prol.ul.ly costa fl,- tKkl a year in a ieiiariwenty-alx of lia Clulia. ll Tins not golt course.'
benti If, by vvny of contrast. Is building a second umuieipal eourai- from 'tlie protlta of tla* one established lu IIU5. •> So many people ure playing golf thut the Aaierli-au Fiirestry assuclu- tlon Is geitmg nnxioua. Thu« far the ndv-oiiitcs ot foresi conservation have been generous cnouglrnut to look nith extreme disfavor on the use ot wm«i for golf , rliil'm, hut If pdf continue* to win adherent« nt the rote It has ui the pust few yeirra, mid the fnrtories ore forced tii doutile their output ,,f Bliuila for golf clubs'., one hesltaies to any «hat will happen. Sitirv two mH- llon pisgile ure anld to he handling Coif sticks and alnce these .tveopie are «aid to own from ten to sixteen million of tliem. (he uniounrof w,««t n«ed for their firoductlon Is no amall quantity.
in fuel the sieel-stmfted cluh hus already mnde Its npiiearance. The Lnited Slates Golf association has
, burred Its use; the West era.Golf association. at thife writing, has made no"Mil Inf* lift lKl> e.vkfn_. I -
acUvitU-s. Ilctlalloo iif golf exponat-a Is the tuple .of cenverautlou umong golfers everywhere. ' -
Gelf In eerinin of Ita pini,sea'makes Tor deiiiiKTui-y und is u big liciti to the iiielUng-pii- process. _ It Is euslly • seeit tliut umiihiiuil .-courses In Mils reaiiect fumilon muiii like the eom- tuuiiily retd era and pluygroutals. Love of the gu me, like iioliiles. makes strunge lied fellows litui hniicsv rnlil- petitlon Is a great thing to tiring uieu closer to one another. ,
i ’resldent Hording, the oilier fjnv. paid his dues In the Wushlnglon .Neivs- PjUK-r Golf club. The President's note Inclosing" the money was written In hla own hand uud he said lie hoped “to be able to show some of the
ruling on the subject.The golfers retort that^ preserved
.woodlands and golf courses are Qrst- Cousins, since no grit course Is local
unless It has woods on it or around- if- They also say that should matters
younger fellows how to uiuke .0 good score." . . ......
1‘erhnps are explnnation of the hold the came has on nil kinds of peiiple is that 110 ahle-hodlcd man or wotimn crtvws: loo Old to play and boys and girls soon crow old enough to,learn thefundamentals and stun to pluy.
The nub of the secret of the popularity of golf, however. Is that. 11 is
A game of golf, ■ by the way, fnn he Iliade several games In one. You imiy piny, for Instimi-«, ngalnst Itn Opponent, ngniiist t ’olimel llnglt-, and agii Inst your own tiest score. .
<!ojf mny or nmy not i-gnnl poker ns a "liberal educa Unii." hut unless the pISyer la a fool golf will teach him iiiuriy things. . -
Golf tins nlwnys taught siibrleiy. A man entimit play good golf unless lie keeps tils éye on tlie tini) ‘ nnU the average man cannot drink mid keep Ids eye on the. hull.
Golf tern-lies mental crineeiitrntlon. One can’t Juki till thè bull unti trust to luck. He’s .got to wnke tip Ids mind to do 11 certain thing, and try his host to do It. .
Golf teaches self-iiinstery. A mnn eiin't lose Ills temper Mill play gulf. Me can't lose his nervi- and piny gulf. He can’t lose Ids hend und play golf.
Golf teaches honesty—as . tuunv a mnn tins learned to his surprise. Mow often lias 11 mnn who wouldn't cheat on tils score been tempted to improve the lie of tils Itali ? ' Solile men who wouldn't cheat an opponent have found themselves cheating themselves.
Golf tenches - good sportsmanship. Whut Is the goiid spbhsman 7 He Is the gent lemmi of sport. Many a man Is sportstnun enough to huiie gracefully ; It is harder for many to win gracefully. i i
Golf leaches a man to pici out the right men for friends to tie to. “Go
1th a man ( i try him put" do' df the wooilsnien.i So,
golf shows up the player. It lays hare tlie boaster, the cheater, the bluffer." the fellow with a yellow streak and the chap'with temper and malice and
A practical little, odtflt, combining Scotch ..plaid giiiglmin.und plain color
.cliunihray or white voile- or handkerchief linen, shows u- plaited skirt of the plulil fabric with plnld bloomers, hind 11 plaid ciilor or white blouse handed in the plaid.
A sniurt little blue and white dotted Swiss dress 1ms wide-flared cuffs, 11 cape collar and such tielt of white organdie,' the .frock having blonmerB of the -Swiss. A pale blue chambray frock cut on straight smock lines Is trimmed with embroidery In peilKullt cohirliigs nml hus so'f-fiThfle i 1 lomners.
For n vetj* little girl n dress of yellow chuuibruy, miiile with full Bklrt and baby waist. Is trimmed with bunds of checked' gingham, around collar, cuffs und scalloped skirt, the selffabric bloomers liuying checked bunds or cuffs. ’ '
various thicknesses of concrete, ccm.m grout und asphalt-filled brick as ».u us asphalt concretes uud concrete wuh rolled stone buses. .
bluce Uie completion of Its cousins-, thin In April, lll.’l, a corps of engineers lias been kept busy niuking ohservu-' cions for effect of temperature ehang-s, static and repeated louds and «uil- grnde eonditions, thus collecting duu wljicli when unulyzetl will supplement tjjjillufonnutlon necessury for the rational design of rouds. -
The road will now he subjected la the final test, that of very heavy truega traffic, for the application of which will he used a fleet of 10 motor trucks. received by the. stute. from the surplus of tlie War.department: At.first -these trucks will he lightly loaded, lint as the test progresses the load will be Increased until u maximum is . reached' giving a 111,000-pouml rear wheel load. The results will show definitely tlie types of pavement« which can be expected to support
They hail tel Mie days of ’•»»
' in the revival of
c o c k 01
BIG C O LLA R S ON NEW C A PESWide, Fat "Roll of Satin Stuffed Be!
coming to Long, Slender Necka;' Smart Handbag«. .
Some of tlie new capes have n veritable holster for a collar. A wide; fat, hMl hif silt in stuffed so thaf it vvlll-
' remain rnund-hnd -filulnii-is actiiulljchemming to..long and_slender necks.Other cupes have upstanding rosctf.of sofl silk us collars. These flowers nre so Mg tin.: .so.closely set oti the neckhand t.hat they fertn u ruche. Most of the new capes, us well us the new routs, have the .high, stiinilup collar.
ll is smart to have u bundling la sonar sliude contrasting with your cofituiiie. A durk suit, for example, cries aloud for a scarlet taffeta handhag. A tan suit needs u hug of periwinkle'blue. A Jade-frock or cloak Is well set off by a hug of-white. Often, the-hag and lull mutch In sliude. Sometimes hug. bin anil stockings nmtetC and this is the ultimate of smartness.
i s
auUamg a'Section oil Bates Koadt
Ojd rose cloth and white crepe de chine combine' to make this attractive frock, of which the distinguished fea- turi*is the plaiting attached with a but^gnhole stitch of rose wool.
Lace Effects in Silk.Knitted dresses »re hveninincr less
confined to sports types, nnd both in silk and-in woo! seenIn l|ice effects lntendeii,to,„ln,t«rmnl- evening wear. •- ' - - ■
F I L E T M ESH O F HEAVY CORD I pliants roniplng iilimit tlielr surface.'The elephants arc painted In white on
New Lace Which Proml.e* to Be Well_____Received, Cloaely Reaemblee____
Flih Net.
A luce which Is new nnd has all the requisites for finding, wide acceptance is 11 filet ua-sh of lieuvy cord, which resembles nothing so 'much as fish net.. _A regular filet pattern js.wpvon by hand-Into this mesh in wool yuras. and the_ result Is a most effective flouncing of bands for. afternoon frocks. This filet Is being shown In both cream and ecru and In all widths but is particularly sought in skirt widths. ,-.rfthls filet, made with "candle-wick- cotton Instead of wool. Also is finding a very wide demand for household uses- In twelve "to slxtecn-Inch hands It Is used for tnble runners, dresser senrfs nnd similar purposes Fringe, either in finished widths or handknotted from cnndle-wick cord, decorates the ends of these scarfs. ;
the tilnek.hriice.lrts and in black -on the colored ones. Other arm trln l;^
^ “ W D FOR -.CO LO REP B R A C ELET S_____ h 1 “ “ “ Sportsman nud the “white man.“ ............... .......... " r
Sup Still aThe son Is a hotter place than the
Wd orthodox hereafter. Its tempen- tore U Dhoti! 6.COO degrees centigrade lu oreadth Old tsol Is ii6o.(W0 mPes across. Compared with him. our earth la like a kernel of popcorn In the center of a dinner plate. Bnt althoogh Old Sol regulate* our life, growlh and health from a distance o f KLKO.OOO
-iiiiles.-to be eiact. sclcnce as yet knows -Utile about him, observes' Capper’s
Weekly, people realize In their sub.conscious minds that the snn Is close- ty related to the mystery of Hfe. which la one reason they are forever talking about the weather that Is regulmed by the snn ns completely as a fumnee regulates the. tenrperature or a house in winter. But the big day star Is si- mow as much ot a mystery to ns as be ^as to the oncleats.
.. L* ,<,._onJ6hlpboard_. . —AVhen one contemplates that so mach
to the .end of-kWp_
lng the wnter out of a ship. It loomsup us an astonishing fact that there Is of necessity a greut deal "of water Withinjhe hull of the vessel. A modern liner has enough water tn her hull to_ make a good-slxed lake. Abort 1.740 tons of water is carried by. 1 big passenger vessel. . The drinking water fm the use of passengers amounts to fail), and there are about 830 tons of sea water being used for bnllust. The six--bollers-ttiniiab—SKio ’ tonsT" ‘ The tanks are situated between ab* dnnhia"biitla of the vessel
Bone or the Carved Ivory Armbanda in White or Tint«, Continue
- .-to Hold Favor. .
Jewels match tlie costume to _____marked degree. The fad for wearing ( tinted ra-ee"d¿
continues, the hrnee. foe, la -m™. ___^ e ***many bracelets, 'continues, the bracelets of bone or' carved ivory In white and colors. A stunning afternoon costume In dull tomato chiffon was seen recently, the rich tone of the tomnto set off by bone bracelets ’ dull red. Ereen, orange and deep purple. Charm-.lng.„bracelets-, from..Pranee "come inMuck, a delicate, almost tmnifparent -g— and enmger-wItb-gay-HttleAdg"
show cunning little Ivory or mctnl figures Of -nilDuals anil men hung on slender gold or silver chains: For1 the woman Who travels much, or linppens lo he In plni-e« where Blit- can pick up these trihketR. it Is Interesting to gather. odd little pieces here and there. ,
Another item In- keeping with the matching Accessories is the vogue of the fancy glove, vldch murks a revival of n courtarsryrtrTfroip the"dhvsof the Medici-end Valois rulers. Jinny of the effects are much the same ns they -were then, though , the use ofdelicately..scented, perfumes in themaking, of the glove has been discarded. !
heavy traffic, ns wtfll as, tliose |wlnch will not satisfy the -requirements of such traffic conditions ns might he expected during the next 10 or L’O years.
The careful observation of the various sections In the, absence of traffic, 'which haB formed the first purt of the Investigation, it Is exjiected, will enable the engineers to ascertain tlie structural weuknesses which cause such' failures as muy take place in the traffic tests. - -
After tlie experiment has been com- . pleted, tills _rond with Its broken sections replaced will form a part of IIII; mils, federal- aid project No. 13 from Springfield,'. Illinois, to St. Louis, Missouri. - ■ . . •.. /
Tlie test will he carried on under the direction o f Clifford Older, with U. F. Cleminer In direct ctiurge of the cx- .IMiriutental work and It. It. Benedict In charge ftf the trucks and maintenance. Tlie bureau of public roads will he represented by A. T. Goldheck nnd C. A. Hogontogler. .
Again tie h.- V stands with Ä d g : ping the hi
^Thousands . -view tlie reihe monmm destroyed d 1914 tuwiir
- commeiiioni lippe« wher l'rnsslnns : ground.
auto m
r *
; Y .
ROADS PAY DIVIDENDS
annlah.Sport wear It Not M.,,,,,.,,.Edges and scams bonrid by 'braid
have given-way to ribbon and leather bindings, ffhe less austere qunlity of sport modes In the new fashion albnm seeks trimmingAccents that will subdue-the altogether mannish look that has always been characteristic of sport wear, nnd. In the use of grosgrain ribbon or .enther, for edges, buttonholes or seam finishes; n mtccess- ful subsUtute Is found. In the pastel
feet Is most eügaglog.
For Re*ort WearWhite nnd oyster-colored pongee has
been shown by some of the clever dressmakers in tie gowns shown forCar y rSvLllli:--r-e8- rt- - And -these ore fabrics that recommend them-
A wagon with a load o f 3,000 r pounds required on average J dpt ft of 108 pounds on a gravel T road In dry condition, in a re- I cent test nt the Missouri College . ? of Agriculture. The same load i on a dry clay road required u l draft of 321 pounds. This shows f the great variation In tlie work I done In hauling and In the size t qf load a team can handle, says f J, C.'Wooley, chairman of the j
Agricultural engineering depart- A ment, whldi conducted this tesL j The gravel roads prove their I value even more completely uu- j der spring conditions. This load l on thè same roads after a heavy X rain required a .draft of 180 i pounds on the gravel, and 372 * pounds on the clay. -This Is only r one of the many advantages of- X fered by all-tlie-year- roads. • ?
New complet Knglan to be with < light vi lights reacliei tinguis
Unnecessary Practice.Oiling a concrete road or any"prop-
erly surfaced highway Is not only a. nuisance to the public, but is a lamentable waste of a natural resource, say» H. H. Franklin, who claims that tile oiling system, a hold-over from the experimental .days, is no longer necessary and should be abandoned.
. T owera to ..Control.. Traffic, - - ____Towers, erected in the middle, of....... -*•“* ‘ckuauueDa uiem- me miaaie.oi
selves to the woman who must he MreeU and highways for the rrmtrol tvuaoiulcal. ” ' ' of traffic, were flm operated m r i r i » M
in 1B10.
¿S Q eÍí & í*
-- ‘•is'
ouilcJing a'Section oi bates Hoad,
heavy trnfffc, ns wffil as tliose|wliich will not satisfy the requlreineflts of such trnfllc conditions ns might he expected during the next 10.or 20 years.
The careful observation or the various sections In the, absence of traffic, which haB formed the first purt of the Investigation, it Is exiiected, will enable the engineers tii uscerhrin the structural weaknesses which cause such' failures as muy take place lh the trnfllc tests. • - -
After tlie cxjierlrncnt has been com- pleteil, tlils_rond with Its broken sections replaced will form a purt of 1111; nols. federal'.aid project No. 13 froth Springfield,' Illinois, to St. Louis, Missouri. ’ . . •.. /
The test will be carried on under the direction of Clifford Older, with U. F. Cleminer in direct churge of the cx-
„perimental work and It. It. Benedict In charge Bf the trucks and maintenance. The bureau of public roads will be represented by A. T. Gold-
■ heck and C. A. Hogentogler. .
ROADS PAY DIVID END S \A wagon with a load of 3,000 r
pounds required an average I draft of 108 pounds on a gravel T road in dry condition, In a re- ? cent test at the Missouri College . ? of Agriculture. The same load f on a dry clay road required u I draft of 321 pounds. This shows ; the great varlutlou In tlie work I done In hauling and In the size t (ft load a team can handle, says £ J. C.'Wooley, chairman of the j
Agricultural engineering depart- A ment, which conducted this test, j The gravel roads prove their I value even more completely uu- j der spring conditions. This load l on thè same roads after a heuvy X rain required a .draft of 180 t pounds on the gravel, and 372 * pounds on the clay. -This Is only r dug of the many advantages of- X fered by all-the-year roads. • ?
rtv. ■ T ¡my. .hi,, * J, fV »-# *** T—i” ' a f J■=' - , -jTSj - , --- " *22 _ _ --- . - L J '• — \TT7-
CRANFORD CI'I IZElt AND CHRONICLE
Ten-C]
K A K E T E S T S ON BATES ROA0
Has 83 Different Sections and Rei)_ 1 aenta That Many Kinds it
Construction.
- tO r«p *r«d b y -1 h e l -nnert a n 'P..aT . .— .........Uf jWr.lv lUVur*.,..
Finul series of tests on one of u,, largest and most rtmpreheii'siy». r,£. experiments ever • attempted March 27. This road, loculnl Bates, Illinois, was designed and , 0!l strutted by the' Illinois.’ dhi-iuu u; highways under the direction i.i r, ■ ford Older, chief highway eagim,'r with the bureau of public road.-. p,,..' ed States Department of Agriculture co-operating, r It is two mii„- j,,,,. und Includes 03 different .'sections' resenting as many -different. n„-ia,,,|, and kinds of ci>nstrnctliii,^_iittV4,ig- varlous thicknesses of concrete, ma.-ia grout und asphalt-filled brick as u.|t us nsphait concrefes and concrete with rolled stone buses. .
Since the completion of Its consins'- thru In April, 11)21, a corps of engineers has been kept busy niuklng nhserwe ‘ tlons for effect of temperature chung-s, static and repeated louds und sail- grade conditions, thus collecting data wljich when unalyzetl will supplement tjjjtlluformutlon necessury for the rational design of rouds. -
The road will now he subjected tit the liual test, tliut of very heavy truega trutllc, for tlie application of which will he used a fleet of 10 motor trucks. received by the. st’ute. from the surplus of tlie War.department: At.first -these trucks will he lightly loaded, hot as the test progresses the loud will be Increased until u maximum Is . reached' giving u 12,000-pound rear wheel lond. The results will slum- definitely tlie types o f pavement« . which enn be expected to Support j
with present equipment w| able to meet the situation statement made frequently dt conventlou here.
EUsha Lee. vice president] Pennsylvania railroad. Is scfae address the purchase and stoi lion of the convention at the Trayroore. Meeting« of the sections will be held.
' Utility Board Denies It] Criticism In Atlantic county
sequence of the recent accident ] New rood enisling at Absecon. six persons were killed recent! spired the Public Utility Coming
Days of *49Queen Mary Payimt T rib u te to the War Dead
r ^ v “
\
— They lind ten-cy Under motor t r n r t ^ ■ I-vs of ’-ID celebration parade
-ir th è revival of scenes of y es teryea r,^.------ --------- :---- : " " ney
C O C K O F J E M A P P E S tmn
ere to issue a^foruiaTstgiemePFR lag tlie charge by the Atlantic holders that the commission lgnol pli-a for' aadttlonnr lirmectliin-nl crossing. .. .
In' its statement tlie commlJ went"- Into a detailed history wf shows that there lias been some fusion of the Absecon crossing that ut I’leasantvillo, where otheilgijg^&$££ cidents have occurred. Greater ‘^ s * * ^ * * ^ guards at the Pleasunti llle were asked some time ago byRiley of Absecon, whose uutoim r1 „ „ this old freighter Inwas struck there. ,ay.. The motor oq , ue eightsAccordln^Id the wmmlsslom-wjti^unc 'oD1he-most-plcturi»fl---------- -
ItUey appeared ' ‘ ■ •’ that Isxly adopted additional protection ther than at regarded tills
- 'V'i
id by Legion Post
Qneen Mary of England placing a wreath »n_thq_m ^
P a s s a m a q u o d d y I n d i a n s G o i n g o n T o m
emorlal to war dead In the cemetery of T orllncthun.---------
-H E N -M M IH w o o d e n l e g
- -%!Ir,^- j * Lnr
EratS
Ì
■ i r iN - T r i . .
M 4
M
VI .
- .Ac,in the "Cock Of Jeinappes
stands wit . proudly. Ulte.1 comb top- ■ »mg^ the historic abaft B W «1 Thousands JaurneyejJ. to t*'lsn t f °
Liw«* pp-iledlcntlon ceremonies, tor The™mo'nnn'ont'was rehuHt n ^ l n g destroyed during .he “ ‘" , ^ , „ 1 11)14 toward Mons. a-*1»»
Prussians and -Austrians, on Ilelgi.tn
The most peculiar A - l c a n t g nthe Warren O. Grimm p «jt- »» ships Idly riding at -mehor.hall;, out In the harbor there (,n. ..„ring the war nt the cost.nf They hnil been built by the T “ efor one o( the ships, und pre-000. CHliens raised 51,000, Uie h g ^ haVo been W n out. office rooms | sented It to the » ° ° t\ „ d an ctobhouso Is Complete. The vessel sfitted UP. through the Lake Washington canal to It. I
- t— __Baby Elephants Come to America
— - In,, leave tlielr reservullon at l ’leus-Tlt. t'o,«,ma„ni«l'lr lmll»n» M , B- „ „ „ „ r v . Tlio iili.il-Kf-M'
WWte House Rowers AH Picked
ground.
a u t o m a t i c l i g h t h o u s e
^ ' tiia 1
liver hear of a ■; ehlcken with a wooden legr Hero's flahts mid scratches Just iih well ns 'I she lin'd li.it li legs, momlis aK"the right leg hee.i.ii- Inf.ale.l so Ihltt amputation wiik m-ci-HHary.. l>r. * •
’hnL Of l.os Angeles is the owner ofi iho hen. . '
g i r l i s a t h l e t i c s t a r
^ ! 2 3 C 2 - - m -
i f
mm,* V
I > v-s/ii- '>r;
■tÜm.—
. -rip m A ,
m > %1
* ¥
da* -s d
f * > * * i i A, - vvtiitf* IIouki) IhmIh, n! Lower picture. Tourlsls 1 '1 rk 1 '1X’, e g "tiilv 111g been griinled 1» or,1er , re idly umisu.il sight In WuHlijnitt»«. 1,1 pieture. Iteplunth.K the flower
llmt hew beds might he Pluetsl- L P P ir i .beds ih the White House grounds
J
The" steamship Mou;'‘ ,^n"m r( ;ernnunynt AmongUmm’ w ^ U iììte en baby
Will Send Moving Pictures by Radio
|UUnnecessary Practice.
Oiling a concrete road or any^prop- erly surfaced highway Is not only a. nuisance to the public, but is a lamentable waste of a natural resource, say, H. H. Franklin, who claims that tile oiling system, a hold-over from tho experimental .days, is no longer necessary* and should be abandoned.
. _ - Tower« to ..Control.. Traffic, - ____■ Towers, erected in the middle of ■toeets^and highways for the control of traffic, were first operated hi Paris is 1B10.
to be replenlshe wften Uie actlntc
ringuishesjti-eif- — . 1
. , , nsPar ! t Ch unkempt, andThe girt "ns r- _ . ber peuutiful
the dark ring'’ - “ ,,ks ef. hiunger and iyes told ofDejectedly she leaned privation. — trunis . of iagainst the P 1- ^ a tremblingmighty oak ami t„and aeross hvr hro ,n the
And ab‘'* fl‘lk, ^ n, . V r to shiver. <h^ ; ' ^ e,framed&3 -prayer as shegazed hungrily a r o u ^ ^ her Up5
"Ah l” A cry p;cad lying- - S S .B h < L i^ l " ^ c d -p^S. ■ .- out on the upon lt. and.
Eagerly she 1 ‘ & lip5, andcarried It to Jher t,. ravenously dtv - „ ^ through the . Then a ' " ‘" i ‘r ,aintv T and with wood: "Right. .M- J fiurried to her
— « -sigh of rvh « " d ,.r0>e aw^y to waiting tiut«m«?‘» ^ “ tV , _ _
-— -hex mansion ,?tar '--Sh^For she was a — •*
clppnnui»» uut' *'* . • ■ 1 u
Manhattan’s Only Remaining Squatter1
ft*
V.A
f. »
ty. Si,..
■w.
field Telegraph-
»»Uncle Jim”, the onlyThe high cost of living doe8,n,ot„ ^ ‘ ¿Vtas^Bll the happiness of health,
remaining squatter on ilanhattan Island. whom aTfj millionaires,with acres Of front lawn'and with Hudson river shore,in his "squatter mansion-' on R ' v e ^ ghacki which he has ©ecu-The photograph-Showac-Cncle Jim MIHer auu _ n
-p d -fo r-22-yeara. ■ & .- h — ^ , ..
C. Francis Jenkins. Washington lnTen^ cb ^ u m a k e -^ 3lble the trans- ing instrument of his latest Invention.jwhl^ * t of the Invention rests
i mission o f moving pictnres by ratllm perfecte<i: Mr. Jenkins holdswith the prismatic rings whch heonl^rec Ingtltate of America.the Elliott Crcsson gold medal. D a moving picture- machine. . ;as the originator and Inventor of the moving pict ............ ... —
Miss' Dorothy Rough, here seen going over the hurdles, was a «tar rformer in nn athletic meet in 11 Un .delpliln. Khe made tlio 7r>-yaril dash In ten seconds, tying the women's ret» -
ord. ■ '______ _
I Convlnclno the Captain.Wlien'wireless telegraphy was In t»
1 Inf,. cv there were many people who were ipilte skeptical as to Its efflrien- cv One of tlicse was the captain of . a7* trans-Atlantic’ liner.- It hniipenwj that on one yoyage Hlgner “ rc0^ was one of Ills passengers. Out evi. nlng the csptuln turned to the ¡great mven or ami asked him; “ Ho V hSuTve in wlrelcfis telegrutihyl Signor Marconi smiled nnd D'P1'^ 11
cnptuiin Just you send a ele- eram to your wife, and fell hci; t telegraph from I'oldu, and you^wlll receive her reply when In iiild-Atlan- Uc” 'This I dhl." related the eaptn n. ••and sure enough, my.’ wife tele- grnphed to mci 'I was qulte convlnced that •wireless', was genuine.
Motor Improvements. . t” "Gasoline becomes more evll-smelV
toV th m k,'“ ommcnted Mr. Chugglns. K.fniiv “they must bo conduct.
fU"Gas I« not more Inflammable because^
lt’ "N®nttIOTbe0idea evidently la to gettliAgas to obnoxious that the old ffiv » O P out O-. It. own areaunt todtry to'run away from M.
m
THE, CRANFORD CITIZEN AND CHRONICLE THURSDAY, JUNE 22, 1922
t ü í je ( E r a n f o r í i W ALN U T AVE. CONTRACTAND CHRONICLE
PORUSURU Evkhv T iujhsday Union Avenue, Cranford, N. J.
JA11KH K. WAKNICU. Editor nnti t'ubtuh+r.
TU I'It.SD AV , J UNK 22, l'J22
Farms One Dollar sad a Half a Year, Kntoml at thMTanford Po*d ofllo-iu»
. HrcontM’laM MatU-r. 9
NBW * m u nr
runatiH
(continmM l f rm n p a p e o n c i o n f - f u c r r b a n i r i t f a c t i v e l y u n d e r w ay . , t w o <wew> now b e i n g a t w o r k at t h e U a h u a y en d . O n e fn a n e i i , f u m i WeKt H o l l y ?»ti«*et to tin* r i v e r h a d b ee n c l e a n e d . I n tlii.-c a c t i o n w a> l o m id a v a n i t y o f t l i i n t h a t it w a s h a u l t o e x p l a i n JioW tin y #»ot t h e r e , n o t a b jy , n e a i i y >t w o w h e e l h arro w , l o a d s o f im-h am ) a. h a l l c r i i s t ie d s to n e . _____
C h a i r m a n T o o l , o f t h e I ' i n a n e e C o u n i i i l t e o r e a d t h e a u d i t o r ' s r e port ju - t hnmh d d h . T h i s s h o w i-d ac o m p l e t e c h e e k hip o} T o w n s h i p il-
r.olilplillM'llh‘d the Tl'ensuri'l', Col- K'ì 'I iH' mul To » n-liip .( In k on the liinMIiev did tlu'-lr ^ork. Tp-uiyäilp
GRADE EXER-G RADUATION CISES H ELD
The Eighth Grade held Its gradua- tlon . exercises lii (lie Cleveland School auditoriumat'2 p. m. yestcr- ilny, when ninety-six I toys and girls received diplomas. The children liiul decorated tlio hall arid platform in an attractive manner, and the niinii was thronged with Intensely Interested relatives and friends, who enjoyed the excellent program glv en lielow. All the girls of the class were uniformly attired in plain while middy suits. The High School orchestra assisted with the music
Eighth-Grads^Eaerelsea---- ’Tiass'Konc -Entire Eight'll GrAde. Address of Welcome—Lurena.Bro
ie , vv..
The Emergency Jlilk Fund, of whlclr Mrs. Roderick W.-'Smitii is chairman,.will give h charity bridge, and sale of fancy'and-useful articles on.Friday, .lone -X at 2:1A p. in., at the home of Mrs. Smith, Hal. Manor Place. ..Tills; fund lias been supplying milk to several needy children for the past two-amlsuiehalf years, and the announced entertainment is to replenish the'treasury,-which is running low’— Uilers.ot assistance in the way of service would he much appreciated, as thus a greater supply of articles to he sold would, he secured, ami-more money raised for supplying TTTral need. 'Among ■t lioso—w srtelng—lot—tinrrtwrol "lire r MrsTAcWlnnit," 7irs; ■n<:i*Hnii!i; m i>- Alice Hurley. Miss , Holly Hurley,
t
A -
>
It is, unfortunate that conditions in our school .organization have reached-the point where a public meeting of almost spontaneous ori gin passes a resolution reijiiestiii^ Ijio Hoard of Education to tualo changes ill the effort to produce heller conditions and results, Jl also is unfortunate that the Hoardin turn refuses, to I rent the ac tion of the meeting Heriomdy, as shown hy its vote at Tuesday4 night's meeting.
« * « . ' ■
The taxpayers of Cranford have provided, at all limes everything asked for hy the Hoard of Educa- turn and that means (here is no lack of funds. Cranford salaries are above tho average, ami as a broad projiosition results should lie above the average. The present' public feeling that changes in seh.ool organization are necessary to produce the results Cranford is entitled "to is net an over night discovery, it is Urn result of a long period of observation and liiml conviction on the part even of some members of the Hoard ¡(self. The situation is not one to lie treated lightly. •
COMMUNITY CIRCUS FIGURES N E A R LY COMPLETE.
I'Tom Tmisiircr Motilciiceourt of Hie Communlly Cl mis Cnmmlltee we have-very-nearly (Inal llgiiics-ontlir 1 eccipts mill ili-iiur-i-uii-iil-...
Hue lo |lie feet Hull llgnres were given very late there were some slight typographical emus In the |uluting id Iasi week's reporl and as there have been nildilional receipts.-we give helmv a new report In condensed form of I he receipts from the'Conimmilly (..'Irnis. ns 'follows:Received from various organl '
gallons..................... * '1:11; inCostumes, programs, budges |u| j; hale tickets; all somecs IVlll'iil hide Shows, Insurance.......... (151.2(1
■ s,'i.,j -.,s.:i.riDisbursements, nil hills so far
received and aidIclpated I llillliiiI : ' ■ 1 . 1 . 1 ■-
llalaiice........... pjsOn Tuesday uii.dit a elu ckt lor
•f.’.IKKI was handed In Ml- A I, .Woodland, made 10 1 lie order ol the Children's Countrv Home with a reipiest |hut II he handed, lo Ihc IJome lieniimt iis proceeds V»f fIiH Citcus with a promise lo turn over shortly ' imy linlanec left a ller all hills had been received mu) paid.
1 Congratulations. -Cranford. N. ,1., dune id, P122.
Mr. Fred T. Frazer,Casino Avenue,Cranford, N. .1., , .
Al) Hear Fred: Words eanniil express how grid Hied' I am Id Mrs. 1’ciiuis and yourself and the rest of your organization for 1 lie.'Wonderful Community Circus which you gaye to tlie citizens of (Van ford, ami I' think same will go down in history as being one of thejlnost entertain nients ever shown In onr (Vmniv. not only from the linauelul viewpoint tint for Hie geliernl-good-feel ing of everybody w ho pal l Icjpnted. It will he a lusting reiaeinhraiice to me. \ .
It makes life worth l(v\n» lo know tlmt we Imve so, imurv people around us who are always Milling to do some good for others, and Ibis has-been show n hy A lie ( ’omulmilly Clmis-A-ommlttee. . -\ '
1 am writ Ing Mrs. reruns.' thanking .her for her wonderful manage•moot In tills undertaking-.... .
With host wishes I am.Yours very truly,
JNO. G. ROA(TI, Cliniriiinn Township Coinniiltee.
.lime 'Jllth; 1922. Hon. John 0. Roncli, .<Prospect street, “ z- Cranford, N. J. / . n- Hear Mayor:-Many'' thanks for tho kind, sentiments rout allied hr your letter ebnccTnlng the Community Cirrus-Committees, work.
While yon know that’ our'fellow townsmen and townswomen w ho cooperated in this undertaking were animated solely hy Imnmnitarlim motives and gave of-their time and energy gladlyam i unstintedly in'lie- h8lLoL_tlie suffering children, yet we are glad to realize that our joint endeavors have been thus commended by you. - -----
tin behalf of my associates may I take this occasion through you to, thank tire people of Cranford tor' their curdiul and zealous co-operation in tills splendid cause. .May i also give c: ......................
( 'h - ik ' I i i -m u a i i . t h è a u d i t o r s a id , l iad fluid u ve i ti, t h e T o i u i - ' h l p s o m e $25 m o r e I b a n le- - h o u l d h u v e ' p a i d Imi lid noi ,-ay h o » Ile i-unld g e t . i j
Imek.! ' . .1. I i i -m iing , l'or I l i o - F i r s t M. K.
( ' Im rc l i , a - k e d p e rn i i l l o b o ll i a I l u c i - d a v - l a u n l e s l h i t l ut I l io eor- o e i ot l .im-ohi a n d W a h i u t m e m i e s . T l i i s » a - g r a n t e d . .Mix H e n n i n g a l s o l i iou f : l i t ti 1 e M a i l e r o l n m n o s e .d . i in p ro v e i i ie i i l a l I b i s e o r n o r hy roum l-
‘tTTjrTiieMdirirp iiTigles a m i sa l i i tt ic ( 'h n rc ) i w o i ih l c o o p e r a l e in w l ia t -
ve r w a y il cou ld . .R i -g i i la i m e e t i n g n i g l i l - o f II le
( 'oiii init l e e ' » e r e e l u u ig e d troni Isi a n d :ird W e d n e s d a y s l o Ist a n d .'ìrd T u e s d a y s ea c l i m o n i l i , a l s a m e t i m e a s presen'!, ' . l i l i s e h a u g e (o h e g in .I ul\ Is.
T h 'ro u g h t h e M a y o r of- 1‘ l a in l i e h l , i m i l a l i o n m i s e \ | e m l e d l o a l l e n i i e o l i í e r e n r e a l C i t y tin t i , l ’ lah i l le l i l , o n l h r l l o s p l l a l s i l u a l i o i i ¡11 l i l i s sec- l io i i ; M a y o r K oa i-h » I I I a l t e m i t h eoli lei elice. . 'Colnmll I ei-liliui Tool fol' lile blgllt
( 'oiulullli-e. leporled ordei ilig~ligllt 011 7!li slreel, Appliealfon ni .Mr. Aauiodt lo leniove.lml.liliiig •<> reni' of lo| oli Noi III avellile was rel'eri'ed lo 1:11 i111i 11 ir liis|ieclor and Cominit- (ee o ftlic . whole., I'elillon for jier- ini) n/iiioi’e .giírages h.v Mr. Cross mil S. 1‘osgllV .»ere referred lo Ihe Hullding 111 s 1 ie<-1 « ir, I ’elillon hy residellt s of -New slreel til lime ame scj.a|ied and griuled and ehi-
deis pul on-wns leférred to the Kngmeer. . ^
A ppl ioal Ion fo r d r l v e w n y , Ir I.au- zii. S o n i l i C u l l i l i a ve l l i l e ' w a s r e f e ! "
d l o l i l e lú ig i i i e e r . T u e l v e luil ld- ¡t ig p e í n i i l s » e i v a p p r b v e d . P ó l i c e C o i i r l lu i id s fo r M uy lurm ' .d I11 liy l o d g e ! I l l c k le y w e r e S.'!2.,
Chorus Eighth tirade Chorus, Clnss I’ ln y - 'T ll Try." - Sextette—Joseph Travis, Arthur
Comlli, • Herbert brock, John Ycl- lo »itz, .loseph Itntti, Howell Peniston.
Clnss Essay—Katharine Powell..(,'horns—Eighth (¡rude. Presentation of Diplomas anil A t
tendance Certificates—Frederick .1. Henning; President Hoard of Education. ,V, • .
- .M nO »' .-A H -hifilh a a,--Tho. w o m a n w h o w a s ( 11<• i n c e n t i v e l o r t h i s w o r k i s ' - n o w t h r e a t e n e d w i t h c o n s u m p t i o n . H e n c e as s h e i s a w id o w , w i t h t h r e e s m a i l e l il ldre.n. t h e n e e d f o r - r e s u l t s .in o u r . » o i k is m o r e t h a n M o u l d e d . .
T h e ' m e m b e r s o f t h e W e s t m i n s t e r ( ¡u i l d g a v e a m o v i n g im -tu re p la y .
T h e H e a r t o f H o ld , " III I h e c h a p e l la - t_ .M o n d a y e v e n i n g .
t l ih 'u l io iH a n d " s i m i l u r 'clTorls- In orlici - co in in m i l t Ics.
Il- Is. as you si al e, inoSI grntifylug lu i,Ilo» | hai im a people » c C ium, ioiilian'i do pause nccusloimlly In olir nulli Umiligli lite lo ilo II lift le Idi bir imliil l liliale fe llo» heings. l'or all ol us il was a labor of love. We an: hnnny.'Mr, Màyor, over Ihc- ri-sull... . -
In graleiul aniueciiillon of yotir unporl and ieticilul lotis I 14.111........ S i u e e r e l v v o l l i - . .........:
F l t E H T . F R A / K I t , C h n lr m n n C n u i f o r d C o i i i i m i n l t y C i m n r n n d H lo e k P a r t y .
HIGH SOIIOOL NEWS'I h l o l l g l l o u l l i te » e e k o l . c c i l l l -
lueim-mi.-n l • ' nel ¡v i i ics f . -ó l le ge e ie M a n c e e x a in in i l l iifiil; a r e h e l n g giv-n al llic-lilgh scliool liy III.....dlegej
lioiird, re| i rese | i l Ing s e v e r a l o f ' l l i e l a r g o e id le g è s . -l - 'orty-tour c a n d ì d i i b ’S a i e » r i i Ing I l io o ld p ia n l e s f s a m i t im r i n o w r l l Ing ne»- p ia n l e s l s , l 'Ile R o v . K e i m e l h H .Muri In- Is In l i a rg o . A n i o n g Ib i ' s c l m n f s l e p r e e n l e d i n e l ’ In g ry , V a l i Hoaiio. Hat
l i n l l i g l i a n d K o s c l l e l l i g b . C l a n fo n i l u e l e u c a n i i i d a l e s : l .o n i s el i . I l a r i l s , b i o o k s l . a l l o y l e n l i x , l i lla . II. M a r o n e y , F l o r e n c e .1 .T r lp p . H011- 11I1I W. R o b i n s o n , , F r a n e e s |„ l l e n r d s lee , l l e l e n T a y l o r . O l g n H n i m i u , C b i i r l e s W. I la n lu i . ; ( ’In i i t l n n l ’ c r Mas. ' , . . '
DEFAA—SKILLMAN ■ M iss t l e h ' i i A l l e i l a S k l l ln m i i d a n g h l e r o l Mr. a n d .Mrs. ( 'Iiar le .- S k l l l n u m o l C e n t r a l ' ave l l i l e , w a s in i i r r ie d f a s i T l u i r s i l a v e v e n l n g l o A ir . \ i t 1 nil- E d w a r d D ef in ì , p i New York '. - T h e b r ide , a l i o w a s g iy e l i a w n y h y b e r fa l l i c i ' , w o r e w l i i l i h en i led siile c r e p e , w i l l i a v e l i a n d o r n n g e M os s ó n is . I l e i1 l u a jd o f I1011- o|-. M I s s ' . \ , n i l a N l ; i l lm u i i . ,a n d lu l d e s limili . ' M iss C a l l i e r i n i f ^ H e W l t t . o f J e r s e y C i t y , » e r e a t t i m i In. s m i s e ! i iu l l i im t a f f e t à . T.l ie h es l m a n w-aj/ Mr. M o l i l i - l l e l n l ì f . a l 'o i i s ln o f f h i g r o o m . .Mr, l a » r i d i c e - t l a l l . i ff S e » Y o r k , a n d Mr. C h a r l e . s " S k l l l n u u i / ' J r a b r u t h e y o f t h è b r id e w e i / I l a n s h e r s . , • '
Hr. l l e o i g e F r a n c i s H n y n e per., fo i f i i e d Ihe. » e i l d i n g c e r e u f o i i y . m a l Mr. and..Mrs. , ' .Defin ì lél't fin- 11 l l n e e - Aveeks ' tr |p , oti r e t i i c i i l n g fi l in i W fd el i l l i é y - « il i go f r i l l i e i r n e w l a m i e in l . i i rc lu iau yt P a r k . N e w Y o r k .
\ DIEDSarah. Anderson English.
S a n i l i A iu lo iy n w K l lg l i s l i , w l d o w o f t h è l a t e . A l i m i A . ' F n g l i s I i , d ie i l ut I la - l a m i i ' o r b e r soli, . E u r i F. K n g l i s l i . Itili. K l d o n l ive l i l l e lìisl S u t u r i d a y . M r s / l ' h i g l i s l i w a s ' b o r i i in Co- lu iu h ia . Is. ( ’.. l iiiC s p e n t tIn« g r c n t c r p a r i o f f i e r l i t e In J e r s e y ( ' | t y . coni- i n g t o C r m i f o n l -ahiiiit a y jear a g o ut f i l e d e a t l i o f b e i l iu s b iu a l . S h c is s i i i 'v iv o d h y t h è o l le son , K. F. K h g l f s l i . n i w i io s e r e s i d e n c e t h è fit- n e n i l w a s b e l d T n e s d a y - atJ 2® p . in T h e in t e r n ie n t w n s - a t N e w M r i i t i s - » l e k , N, J .
T A X APPEALS HEARING_ , JUNE, 29 . -
H earing on thirtydive lax -appeals. ............... _ ... . cases from Cranford- to the County
. _ expri-sslou to the .hope Hoard ot Taxation lias boon setf'orthat we will hereafter make’ this I next Tliursilay, June 2iffh. at l::tii to noble elmrity 1111 object fo r which j I.o'clock p: m., at-Hie-office of the our local organizations wjH_sti'iveJniilnL0!T Vofinty Hoard, of Taxation, the days to -cotfto' as- earnestly, ns Court 'House,"EHwiTielir."Tlic"'irdni they did for .other nearby find Lde- involved -in tliese appeals is .sin.snn.serving institutions ^during and I ------------- 1— -----since the World YVar. I The lUiys du ll of Hie .Lincoln
It Is good to learn from tliose In School will '.hold an open meeting uuthtirity.atjlio Hoine tliat tile in- for llicir parents and friends In the lluencu and effect o f our"concerted' auditorium of - the "l.lncoln Schoolactivities -curried Jar beyoml.the. mtC.tniimrniH'.A’Nchltifc^Atluti»iiVui -w lii.___ ^ ......tuai. Income trap..this: event, and he- free ami n large;«n...p|U...... f- Tirfn ^ iH ^ M r n tT nmi: hiinruii~'*itrthat the pubiicity to"tllPAlIoITIe Oh- iPiflTesUst at the social time wliicti ..... 'tabled thieugh It lias inspired con- will follow the meeting. .
Crass Song Eight years have passed through
toll anil strife . ,Alas! We've reached ttie day,
Thai ends our lirst. hard struggles in life and semi 11s on our way,
Friiiiu day to 'day thru paths of thorns from grammar jvork wego - .....
When, years .ago as jittlo tots we frolicked to and fro.
And now ns happy Freshmen of Nineteen twenty-two -
. We'd start our tenu with joyful - _ zest and try our best to do,
To strew life's patli with roses and lay aside -nil cure,..
W ith all the burdens fronting us We ll try our best to bear.
-llreella Bergman
A list. of. the names of tho graduates is given lieiow:
Pot or .McElroy, .laines Butter Held, llreella llergnmn, Harriot Vun Sami, Hurotliy Kreio, Dorothy Smith, Mary lionmek, Edna firil- IIIlis. Blanche Enright, Norma Held, Clara Reiilgar, Joseph irokin, W incey Kuck, Hcorge Watson, Robert Neary. .Edward Riilitiml, Frederick Drydeti, Neville Seales, Dougins Wallace,’ Hcorge Rankin, Ahinder- Dill Arnold, Jo^i'ldi Is'iivy, Quintin Frazer. Josi'pli .RiiltI, llowoll lYn- TS.Ion. Josepfi Travis, Arthur. Comllt, Charles .Morris, (Ym'stiuiee Hiirnott. Kill I li Brock, Robert (Tune, Frederick Croft, Harold llolbeig, Heorge barsen, Alhêrla Hanks, Dorothy ( ; run. Tlllio Rosenlilum. Jack Hilt chinson, Carl Preuss, (leorgo Hoi- liuson, Ida Upseliitz, Kutlierlne Jailli. .Florence (hiuld, ltarhara Frimkllu, blllimi baux, / lia Ridley, Sally Hays, Heorge li'Ouukll, Frederick K'mitiicr. Doriilliy Droyer, Anna .Miller, Mildred Olufson, Sarah Landis, l.ucile Irving, Feuiicoh Her iiuinii, Ellznhetli Hlielnlmrdt, Kenneth Burton, Anna W. W’esiglian, Agallm Doyle, Florence' .Mel.eod, E.lj/abetli .(Irenden, t ieitrudo . Donnelly. Harold Cross,, Philip T 0111H11- -oi'i. Cliarles lllekey,- Ffetcli'or («II pin. John'-Vogel, Warren 1 Kolhen Meyer, Cora Wakclicld, lîlizahdtli 'spregi. Ethel Audi, .loseplilm
Simltowllz, Katherine tv ill il. Mil dri-il Emuidns. Theresa Hlcim, .Mar guret '.Miller, Hetty Boyer, Flore Sisson, Edna (irilliths, Horti'Use Iviihl. Marie I’ozsgay, Marie F1011- 11 « ■ 11 y, 1.111 lui 1 .Woisc-r, Katherinel'ow ifl, l.nveiui Hmknw, Theresa Tucker, Anthony 1‘ecina, I’ lrisy I ’ns- ili-llo. I'eter Tlnnesz. Ltadh1 H/ag- Inn. Samuel berry, A lheft Waiter. Maleolni W’alluee, (îny Kiteliel, Karl Kramer, Harry vTniTow, Tony Ri'ze, < Tirfstinn Sorlmson.
(-'ertilientes for /perfect .attend-1 aiiee were aWarih/ifo the following grade pupils, wlwf have been neither iih-eni nor tiirtiy during the past year: I Tnnels-Chiller, Kdwiml l Mover. -Albert l/lmreli; Iziiils Khiison, Mild rial Enfilions. Ewidd. beigiiliin. Hiistave pieyi'r, Alice Jackson, lie len Fox./Siargafet l<juu. Kdytlio l'A ans, (hyiililine Ehlison,. Iziuisa Drey er. "Eopiieiiila ('liureh, (Jenevieve Mead; Rufus A-pgar, Hilly Nagle, K.Umnrd Zumlel, Frederick I l ,,,ls' Ion, Filoména Caruso. Albert liar- aril, Frank Oltoli, Laura Wenzel,
M ice Wrtkelield, Anna Tlielsz, Jen- me Sallmin, Hillard Collins, Max -ITcInomnn, Isabel Ozur, Francis H leiisiilV, ( ¡itsptff'""( ll'ei'o, Rdi'iâi Del lesflnmU'is, Tuny DiF.iihio, .bilin Tlielsz, Hladys-MIller, Evelyn 1 layer k, Louis.Spurlock, John Witting, Jolin— Di Fnhlo, Robert i f Everett, Mary W'elr.' John Dei'klmt, Arthur Russidl, Stanley Campliell, lle le ir Deeklml, AYllllain Blake, Robert '/.undet, Evelyn Kugcle. Dale Jones, Alma f turnier, John Butler, Herbert Spurlock, Charles Reeves, Mary M. (Benson. Frederick Croft, Carl F. Ilagerslrom, Barbara Franklin, Jack llutcliiiison, Charles Morris, An- thoiiy_ l ‘eciiui, George Rnlllnsoll, Kenneth Burton, Gcorgo DOuilkll, Katherine. Kalil, John Vogel, Sam net Berry. •
The following high school pupils received vcvtilU'a/es for perfect at- temlaiice: Williuin Avery, Fred 1 sin'll. Philip Sliahei'ii,Christ iaii Drey- eiyEilward Everett. Joyce Hoffman, Winifred I.lsowski, James Woods. Leonora Jones, Charles Low. Robert Tlielsz, Grace Cliristilmn. Lillian Evans, Helen Jalui, ( ’Lira Kuntner. Jennie Pedersen, “ Stewart Crane, John lloiiiaek. Howard Klein, Brad-' ley Rosencrttntz, George Richards, WaUer.Tarhox, Wendell Weir.
Certillentes for Palmer method writing wore also awarded to pupils w hose mimes were not obtainable In I ¡1110' for publication___
--------TO W NSrilPNO nCES--------
ORDINANCES. All nrdliRimv In pa'c, rim! (iHisiru' t concrrte •iifDs n 1 id KiiUcrs mi Atiimi’ IrmnOf.1 HL’r Ayi-hhc Id Syhania I'lac«-, air«l Sv 1 v.1 itt.4 ri.nc from At.1 ut«r I * l . i t n Lvitux. A yi-jud.
urd.tLiuti li> itu* TttYVivslui» ufIIh*-i»1’g\vhsIi1ji ,<iI rr^nfnnl, in (he ( mmly cf
1 : ••thin...I, ..Tlmt Italelch .Ayi'ihip frum- Or-
aiit’i*. AvciiiH’ tu Syluithia i ’liuc anil Nylvanu 1*1,D-c front Manor J'laiv t<> Udiox Aw.tiu«; h.- iiiil.roMil !*y gradini; Ih«-' n.iiiih to tlic ifrjtd.’ lu'iitnfiiro I'litaMishi-d hy ordinance aitd h> ma- addiiii/iiiu dm Naim-' trout curh to eurh with
slv Inch ix'm-lrution niae.idain and |.\ cDnstruct• liiL eoncrele curhs and 'iiltei.H on |x>i!t .side;i lit Hind HtreetH In aecordaun- with jilaus and ki>cci- llr.dioiiN |in-|»aréd hy (In- -Township ¡Ktinhjocr and now on tile hi (In.- oillcp of the Town.shin flcrk. . . _
timi 2. . That tin* heiielltH ronferred hy HUih uradiiik', patini!, curhs and piiticis he as-
sed upon tho lauds and real esiati' )u ncilted linrehy pursuant lo the .statute In such ease linde null provided. " • •
Section II.. That this ordinance shall take dh et'liiutH'dlalcly. ' • ' ' ' :
jo h n r,. noAt n,(’halrman of the Township ('miimltlcc.
• 'AIiVAN‘ It. DKNMAN. _‘ • Township t'h'rk.
Ii.ded .lime lit. ,
An nrdiiiann* to rnnstrm-t a sanitary Newer In SylVmiiu -IMauc from Manor J'lact.*- to J*no\. Avenue. . . - . ' '
He ft ordained hy tho Township ('oimnittee of (he. Tuwnsiiip of Cranford, In the County ot 'nion ; . -Section IV That a 1 (I Inch vitrith-d tile sani
tary seYVcr he laid In Sylvani.i Clace from Manor I'laee t'o Letiux Aveime hi nceonlaoee widu ilaiiH /tini s|>eeilliations pnpaivd hy the I'ownslilp KliL'ineer and How on tile ill the olile,’ of the Tovvnsldp Clerk. .
4-u»it-£,---Thrtl-dl -l*etH«Htrt-eirtff»*Pf -tMry-thr
- FO B RENT.
FU RN ISH ED room for l'cuii or Iniiiincsii couple. Boar! » m?n sired. Waidnmn. 3 Berkeh v n do' Cranford. ■ Hrk(ie} P|a,.p
TW O largo connecting front r ,1*" '" 'n 'ra lly located, either stpua?;’
— AjUniK ii^r.A—e a r ^ i ^T zen lind Clironiele. ' Citl'
L{ OLdL--iv.itli_Ulo.-hathsr l;iic.,
-s-y' w.+'t■ S-V-- V-
When a French voile in rose is bead- N In a daisy' desion It becomes a
CLASSIFIED---A D V E R T I S E M E N T S
under tht« head no. log 25 word», 25
Over 25 word», tc.
down and all improvi'i «Inminutes walk from stathla"',!'!'!'' side of town. Adili-.'s, i ’ mV V1« ' Citizen and Clironiele. " rt>
FURNLSHEIi rooms fur rent r,s North avenue corner of Amj|„rPince.
(¡A R A G E . after July 1st; apply Retford avenue, Cranford. 111
SU RRO G ATE ’S, NOTICESCUARDIAN-S SETTLEMENT
-Noji.e is herchy ^ivefi that tho intermediate ¡•(TNomt Of the sol seritxT as (hiardian of 'l.irj.-rD' Ahx.uid.M Siierry, will |«- auflited and
• stal.d hi Hi,' Nurro^ati**-and reported for set- th.i/i- nt to the Orphans* .Court'of the County of l inon, on Friday, the twenty-lirst day of July
• KATE Sl'KKItY CIOODHICH,-\ Muarduuk1>»ted .June |:uh.'
D.iT.VY 0 1A Kws-1
FRANCES BO URNE. 101 H O LLY STREET - CRANFORD, N. J.
All “Kinds o f Stenography Work Typewriter
TcL 85J
Telephone 361
L e s l i e W a g s t a f f
HHistnu'iloii nf said sidYt-r t>e assessid upon Mie laiuls and reai e.sla.te heiiellted therei>y pur.Niiaiit' hi live HlatiiU- Itv Kvtelv case nude aml yrovided.
Sii'lliiii d*. Yhat tliis oidiiiamv ulialt l.tk«- 'Iteri UliUlediately. '
JOHN fi. IIOACII.Chairman of Hit- Townsldp Cnmmittee
' AI.VAN lt. OKNMAN,Townsldp Ch-rk.
Hated Jnm- *21, 11*22.,
An oriliniun-f* lo estaMish thè irradi-.nf R*- li-lyli Avenm- and Sylvanlu l'iace. . "
. Iti* Il ordaiiied hy tliv Townsldp Cnnnuiure of Mie T""'»s|il|b of Cruidord, in thè (,‘ouniy of'Ihilnn: ’ • •
«Meetimi 1. ' Timi tlie Knule of ltatéi{ih Avemu- frorn Orankc Aveimn to Hytvuuia i'iaeo inni of Hylvutila J'Iftee fniitr Mannr i'iaeo hi Izcnor Avenuo Ik\ and lt herehy. K t-idahiiithed a» sm-ii trrmloH tiro luid down on eertain ntapa entitled •'(¡rado Map of Kuloiirh .Avcntte and Myl- viniia i'Iar.r, Cranford, N, .1., .May i.'dli, IH22, U. C. «\. Collins, Townsldp Kn»:iiu-»■ r ,'* now mi hh< lii tlie ottico i/f thè Townshiji Chrk. ,J*
Sre limi 2.:' That thls ordlnnnro .sibili tak*- dTert Iniiurdlatrly. ’ ’ - .
JOHN U. IIO.MTI. |Chalriunn of thè’ TounslTrp «‘óinniltti i-.
AI.VAN lt DHN.MAN, . ' ~ . !> Townsldp Ch-rk, :Halrd .Inni- 2t , JP22. ‘ ‘ '
REAL ESTATECranford, N . J\ 9 Holly St.
- ' . • * .. --
M ARTIN SCHAFER
NOTICE h lierchv jrlven that Ihr Tovvnshii* Committer will meet lit the Township Ihumis
WKDNKMDAV. T 1IK áTH D AY O F M’ l.Y, .V P ^îrr-tF fc iî.O C K . 1'. M.
to rouslilrr- thr_.f(d|i'vvluh' unlit time amf place all persons whose lands
■ IITfï'ïTiM hy sudi Improvement "r who iuteresli’d therein will he uhm an dim to Ik- In-ard coiieeridny fjinh Imprmei
An onlluani-(' appropria tint: $:h).uoi vn-li* si-rriee nmneet ion's to sewer, tras mains and for samian sewerin Walnut Avenue, ami aiithori/.lnir ll temporary Ihonls. to iiie«t aahl apt
r'2_\ivlilih IV ho
ma V he i'ortii|iity cut.,/nr pr). ml wat( r
Mason and Contractor
CRANFORD, N. J.
Estimates Furnished on all classes ot work ’ • .* '
-— Telephon« lKkJ— -
He ll nr l.iini’d 1y tlii* Tcwn itiit* t‘Diimiitti'c nfhe TdWDUllp Df t’ranf(*r»l, in tin- Venni)
K.TtlGU 1. Thil the sums ef $ 'i.-(MM) fur ¡tri -ate scnii ta Ins Bin $ l . rGin
-Ihms to sower, yas ;»vn\ water for sanitary newer estviisions ,
i Walnut Avicduc io, limitile) lief-ehy are.ajijiro-rlah-ii tn |.mm iti;: fluids for tin- fbiMiKill nf IheONI of fll eli lini* -Viuenls.
Hci'l IDII 2. In i rder hi unit said approiiria-
Strawberry! PlantsPO T GROW N
—For July and August DeliveryA ll vniii'lii-s ineliiding
Early Jersey Giant j Delivered Marshall - - per 100Chciimeake 1 $7.50
RODERICK M. CROCKET3G Hillcrcst Avenue
C R A N F O R D , N . J. Phone 446 3 .......
linn mui li. li'm!rnr:irlly_llnmiri' miI'l I'll'l'":"’ . :emtM»iiirv Improvement Uoivds of tho TovvuhIvIii if Cranford shall is- Ksurd-porsiiant to Chapter 2á2-óf the Laws «if New Jersey of the year and -the amendments thereof and snpph-mepts thereto. Said Ismds. shall - he lsHin-d lu the principal amnunl t»f not .evecedinti $ I,imki aliali mature in not moré than three years after the tmrpose for which they are Issued has ln-en ear-' j rlvsl out nnd simII ls-ar Interest at not (Arced ’ “nu nix per cent, per annum payable semiannually. ‘ • « , .... !...
-tfeetinH it. - 'That thla* nrdlnatirr nhall' - Clivi;ffts-t liiiiiievliately. - * ...........
. ALVAN K. DENMAN.“ ■ • Township Clerk
Putrii .huir 2K l ‘>22. .
NOTICE OF riEARINM .N’otlee Is hereh) yiven 11 nit at th*- r* yol.va-
imetlliir pf the Hoard of Appc.tU In. hi- to hi WEDNESDAY,.-ll’ SM 2Nth, 1**2 -Î, r- ■
the follow lilt: pcUtifHjH f»*r eh^nve tn Ml«- Zoom;- Ordinance avili. 1»- heard and thin, w),*» m.iv i.. Interested tn such petitions for chain.-'' of ./ ‘>n Ini; Ordinance or opposed then to .in f"¿0' "(.d lo U> present and will (In n- k'ir<n «.(>; *.rtu nlty t(» Is- heard; ,
IVtitlotl No 1, - It) Shalo— P ii" slon to mill. Cent* ñni.d Aw-nm-- ài’.d ' U 01.10« Street. nn*l tj* retwove twmt- r ^-inl f»or,i i'ti, tAnnlal Avenue-to Windo*- Hie« • 1 Í
J ’etltloil No.( 2. HenPh M< an«L ovx’D.ri .,f projierty cm. North A.tyno*- • fa-.’-M/dr pr«-.
T h e M c C a rte r S ch oo l
121 Cranford Avenue, Cranford yKindergarten and Primary ClassesAlsu classes In Frertch nfter school I lours,' Mlg per lesson. ■ Tutoring In ollior sulijocts, $l'por hour.
a l i c e M cCa r t e r ,—Phone 231- W ' . i-rlnslpai
• LOST T
HANK' ItDOK -I'/ir, ,,r tho ('rnn- ('ompany.Cranford, Ñ.
•I- I h i ’ I ln d i ' r is- i.-(|ii«-stV-,| i , , re . Him it to llm hank". I f nut ir-Mor-
< d • Im Ic ri- t h , / P i l l i d a y o f J u l y , 1''22. apidiratii.ui will bn made fug H Mi-U liimk.
BANK linn K x„. Q;2| ,,f ||,n f ’rmi- h'lil lni>t I 'mummy, •(’ninfurd N.1 , . i l i . ' h n d i i i s i v i j i u ' s b ' d i , , ' r<
n, , 1». hank. If nut rnslnr-VÍ>,l,,; f,,,'íí-•-« Í" 11,11 of -July., ■'I'ldb’Otfmi will he made fur «* ri/'vv ■
R E A L ESTATE FOR RENT '
•l'*l.feyfeVNT^unrirtiwr'1imn^Twf"s‘ix ''wc'ks. Runt i'cusonalih'. R,.f,,r ona^ro./iilred. r i „ ,m. CranhmD
A now six rcioiii liouso. furnished fmm July 1st, to Supt. 15th, Mmi
- pur moiitli. Address Mis It' n
('ll 20!l !' l,lno1' I ’ liomi
R E A L ESTATE FOR RAT.e T\yI'BA 'K '(l»llni-s n foot, I20~f(.,.t
tlccp. Two lots in beautiful Hal- micro Park.'just off Sprlngffold avenue. Nidowulks, sowor, wulci' Carl II. Wursinski, ownor, Potter Building,'Cranford. -
FOIL snlo or rent—IIouso, seven rooms and tiled hath; all lmprovo-
- ments; steam beat, iiot waterelectric light and pimpiet doors' Lot »1x1(111. In exeollent location'-
.-Address Owner. " 22(1 Cofftomiiiii • uveniiu. Tel. 171-R. w .
WKK'I'FIKLI»: Our listings of desirable lioines are very complete. Let us know your reiiuireinenls! T. B. & N. F, Reynolds, 1 l'rospert . street. .Westflohl, N. J. 7-);|
FO R SALE—MISCELLANEOUSAXTM jDKS Chairs, a few small...rallies, beds, mirrors, day hod*
three clocks. .Mrs. John G. Brem- - ■ner 12(1 Riverside Drive, Gran
— ford.------- :---------------------- — go ')"AU TO knitter, on account ot w o w — ingi-niust sell,- Box IPS. _K-yd. piece, ’TT-yihC wide. (Told Seal
( ’ongoleum, grey background, bine flower, ?I2.NII. Tel. ;tl8,M. |
SIpKUOARD, ilinlng room round table, small Ico box and “ dross / form; on time, for reliable party / -
' i f desired; 11!» Nortll avenuo W ./ THE, most talked of subject in town ,
today.' ri’lie wonderful ieo cream - sold .at"tho Pliiza, I Kiistnmii street Breyor's Phlladclpliia Ico Urcam. i
CUT FLOW ERS, /Sweet Peas—$2.00 por liundred, I C!alla L illies—$2.00 per dozen. Loliigh-Avcmio Greeniiouses, Karl Jnul, 127 Nortll Lelilgh nvonuo,.. * • — • --- (T-tfi '. I ,
CHILD'S orili,-while'cniitnel, sliding si Tel. 272-W, or olili at 232sides!
W alnut avenmy IF you forget today is flic anniver
sary of t heyday no"-woman ' ever - targets. Don't look dejectcil or
apologize Bring her to Westfield alter sumier and select a piece of appropriate furniture.. State Highway to 410 North avenue. Pianos -$7.1 up; also to rent. Credit if desired,
BOSTON F15RNS—Nice nssort- n/oiit of dean, lienltliy nnd ■tiung plants, 10c up to $7.00.
Flowers and Floral Designs on short notice. Lehigh Avonue Greeniiouses. Karl Juul, Proprietor, 127 Lehigh Avenue. Phone -151-M. -. " • tf
1 u iN ’T forget tlio loved ones nt Irbiffe. ■'i'aklionm Sundae or a Soda in a paper can. Get them at tlio 1 ’ laza, 1 East man - street.
U P R IG H T , piano, exceptionally good condition. Slioritan mnliog- imy ease, will suerillee- or rent with privilege of piirdmse; ' 15 Prospect street, Weslilold. Call any evening. ___
R E A L ESTATE F O R “ SALE ~BARGAIN, iii wellloeated „house,
six rooms and bath (Cranford), -throe minutes from-station, paved street: $1700 cilsli seeures possession. Splendid elmneo. 'Address "Bargain" eare Citizen and Ciiron- Iele. , • t f
W O R K W ANTED
IVtltlon No. 2. l ’ut i fui'i’t o' jr.i ,i. if A' i,t |'li*Smith Avelino atltahw a) tium JL* r » , ■IF Hi Ih-siduH e A. 1' ivtlthm N«*. 1*« hi Id •' Í. :
i-oriit-r Milo Hfr*«t a/. 1 T/a-!•!,«(; ‘¡ ' I f ' f f»-.-. 1U( SldeflCf A ‘ l« /zs * ' ■■ !
iVtltiofi No ’l i , > 1*Gy» y «,.f ÌI I I , m and M i UaD.i A m-h .,, n-.,-' y., jIt to IbnlfDAi Zg h -c • - . • 1. Ft-tUhm No jy • 7' . "»•‘ ‘ f* i’».-'*;•.» tè t ,i jVi-tllO* I'U- t‘ *-i W ei
fi^idfiii e.. tnl ly order -»/f D.»
h r 1 it/ i ) •»>'. • j• ' . . —in 1T .T -T7' r
Dated Jimd M ' '■ X
MONEY TO LOANMAN l-. y,,i! -,',-,„„1 in„ i i l..n;l. .
WOllliJ ' f I L u , K . ' l l i z e
ni' 'l ib iuT
"DfJ.if Jijfj
youit h«.
A meri,'an i'hK 173,
PIANO INiiTRUCTION'" ' ’ I.. 1 1 l l ' » ’' ’' ! '! , ,!, I,y \|n
If > DllOil
A mbby Mrs. •Î Bum,
il.ül
IfE LP W A flTFB Femainl lp h l I ¡-¿J., U(,|, i)lt
hiriiu. i> i,, i, Apply to i I.a-I f/iíoj ..(i,-,-1,
TOW NSHIP COMMITTEE MEET- INO NIGHTS CHANGED
By resolution at last nlglit's meeting. the regular meeting 'nights of tlie Township Committee were fixed for the 'st.and-3rd Tuesday nightseacli moiitli-instead of tlie lst-nmi 3id...Y\:ednesdays.. tills. cluuige..u,..t,c.
present. Hills must “be presented not later tiian Monday night. *
Onaffu-r,
•A J! - / cot íi/e v/i.i' I, 'i'sl royi-rl llicir
( S ( ; w : i n l & S o n
/ R , al -.m-i I h m t r .w t , | {,„| ,, . ,a. - / ‘ lipikoui ( ,< aofo i .i I<|1|<
w ill
G IR L (colored) wants place at general housework-, experienced,- now engaged. Address Goldie Carter,
~ III North avenue E„ Cranford.COZY homes mnke happy people—
Decorating will make your liome more cozy. Make’ your selection of paper and let. ns rjuoto you a price on doing tlie decorating for you. It w ill lie properly dono nnd you w ill have no kick coming. The .cost will be so low ns to he a matter of strict .economy for you. It's time to get busy. Broderick & ' Steemvertli, 56 Elm street, WestHeld, New Jersoy. t f
WDM,AN, German, w illing to go out wa'Hlilng and cleaning.. Matilde It. liox Pl'2 .Garwood, N. J.
('DDK Icolored), will cater for inn- elieons,. dliim rs or . parlies; also would like day's work or small wash at. home. E. M.'Henry. 222 New street, T’lalnfleld. Telephone I 'Dili, ID-lit ;i::5-w. ;
W ANTED—MISCELLANEOUSAN English saddle, largo size. Ad-
d/'-eriJi. < Ml Izen ( 'lironielo office. ''I HKD Ford -.Ni'diin. in A1 condition.
l ,i!;:.LLyi.JJigiip.-22U(:eiileiinii«i'ave:—-turn— T e|ep|)f,ii|.-i; i i ( — ---------—_
'11VD in ihieo mifurnislied rooms by eldeiiy couple, for light house-
..kcoplng. I ’lioim 255-W. tf
V
^omiiuiu, - » -»inre
TS ! y K S ' f f i i r . 'k^ Œ j ü i S S £ 3 g f « j l3 ï -
.«■n an.i o Œ h ^ - A” « w n e « r^üiL_Jl.iUi_Lu<j.4mjj,<i_.i ____
«l«nvs and nil im |>rovi 'mV-M, ','iu- linnute» walk from ' 1’«»?!,')? of town. .Ad.lfvss i !'. 1‘"!ll> Citizen and Clironici,. ' - < !lr‘'
FU IiN L S H K D roonw VS i 5 5 »
'WâSS-'iïzirjsLv* »R E A L ESTATE F o r p p m J"
«ivks. H ont i\>as<mah|o ',7,“« ^ r n t t i l r c d . Plmm> C r a f t -
A f"nn ' '"ntlsl... .l«;r monti.. A«ìdwJ’\i£lV K1i ï T * ’ 2m m ,u ,r ^
FBE.HCH CLAIM AFFIRM ED
Lehigh Valley• Railroad Lose« Appeal <tn$122,000 Lo»» of Benzol and —
Guncotton by-French in ' Black Tom Blatt. .
rk
J.
T w î f v F f n A T E F 0 R SA^i n L IA h dollar» a foot miy-r .
ssîÆ.Âœî-ffs
a S Ä g i s .« von no. T(d. I7Ì-I{ ” <Ciit,!l|ma|
T » & n !If ' ' i ì i <1111 i I
V V r i o ,S^ E~ m is c e l l a n e o u s
- ^ " U f r r o S , . lZ y beds
- ^ y a> * * > ■ « * t e :
AIJ'/Vt knitter, on account of imie- HiKì-Hiiist »d l , Box ms
•.yd. pim-o.-T-yd»; tritio, Gold ,Saal
, Ä , ä T Ä r " ' -tu id ’l Ä
■ r'1!11', 0,1 time, for reliable narlv / , .r (le.sirod; im „ Ä ' ^ yt ,da,î " >St-r! " k,‘'1 , , r " nh)<’ct In torni
, , l" ‘ "Ondorful ico oie/nnMild nt tlin Pld'zn, I Eastman strebt B ieyors Philadelphia Ico Gronni
CUT FLOW ERS, / ’Sweet Pens—$2.00 por /liundred ( alla Lillies ?2.00 por dozen*
ínui*1hi v S i r i t<!? , ll0llsl!s’ Kari•nun, 1-7 North Le high nvonun Cinnfonl. Piume ,'ttl-M. $---- --...va. j MUIIU J.JI
I S t e S * 3 * «"»m -v1'.d 'l in - 'r '. '*5' ,s Hio mmivor- . V .* * Un*/Uu,\ no woman m»i»rn'poi.iclVe ul!' * l""1' '^ ' ‘'ded or , >f,i/o Bring her to Westfield“ Hi I »upper ami select a niece ofi'i'|,|l ' l'i^ia<' him li ure. State
if ,,No rout. Credit
" S t o f FJ'iltNS- N " 'o assort-nient o f clean, lu>altliv nn.l •tioiiff plants, I0c up to $7.00 J lon ers and Floral Designs on"
s a u a r ¿ s n J F riniidor, 127 Lehigh Avctm a’piKum
*'Ironie •'p-IlT 1 11'o »‘» ’« I omis at orrn. I aklioma ,Sundae or a Soda!, 7 'i i « ' ■ Cet them a, Z i ui/.n, i c.asl man st reet.
I’l It It« I IT piano, evccntionnllv imv cnse'Hlm'- ‘Sllol'it,,I> milling
-
R E A L ESTATE FO R SALE ....
IN ih «o l l located house, fin „ o-0!'ls mid Indir (Crniiford!, i nee-minutes from station, paved street; $1700 cash secures po.sses- sion. .Splendid chance. 'Address , Bargain” care Citizen and Chron-
tf
, W O R K W ANTEDtilltl, (colored) wants phmiTat een- [ erivl housework, experienced-now '
wimiired. Address Goldie Carter,III North avenue E„ Cranford.
COZY homes mnke happy people— 1 Oecorntlmr will make yourUiome inore cozy. Make'your selection of paper and let. us quote you a price on doing the decorating for jou. It will he properly dono anil you will Imvfj no kick coming The cost will he so low as to he a mat
time to rKrt't iuisy,," >' Enjderi'ck1 * -
d 'Z ‘Nmv‘:iersey!m ^ ^ . ..ivtf.MAN, (iennaii. wilihig to go out
¡ Z 11" ,,l" ii'ilng.. .Mutihle II. nox Mil N. J.
« ’‘ (OK (coloredI, will cater for Inn
i'lalnlleii! Vi::n \V.,,i,,rJ,i- T ‘J,ei,' « ,ne
W ANTED-MISGÈLLANEOTrqA. Frrg/lHh saddle, largo size Ad
r d l z e n t W ^ Ä c ^ 'M ,i, ' « a i condition.
I * )V 'dd :.r lv ,oM 1l!,,rV,l,lsl,t,,l room»
Tnintoni.—OoiivlcUon of Guilford O. Young, of Iluddonllcld, for the inurder of Harry OarwoOd, was upheld by tho court of errors and appeals, whfch an- nounced^ more than u- half-hundred
. decisions in coses argued at the March term, -The vote In tlie Young case, was inmntmousr-Hrid-tlie-opiiilon ..was .writ-
• ten by Justice Hergen.' Young was convicted of the murder of Garwood- in Delaware Township, Camden county, oil July St, 1021, and after shooting the crippled jitney
7 driver, Young rohhed him and then drove off with the murdered man’s machine. - lie was seatcn'ccd by Justice Kutzenbaijh to die ip the electric chair during the week beginning December 18, but tho apiienl stayed the executlofri. Young will be resentenced.
Justice Bergen's • opinion held Jhnt the confession made by Young to l ’ ros- eentor Wolverton was Involantiiry and Its admission, in evidence wus nnt legal
. error. The court overruled,other con-.1 v tentlons relative to the admission of
erroneous testimony' ' J \ '' ‘ Trenton Verdict Upheld '
.. A verdict for $CyH00 recovered by Mrs. Caroline !iInline, of , Trenton,
. ogulnst Mrs. Ellzimeth Walker, also of this city,' was/uplield. Mrs. Mahan
,• sued for the dwith of her husbnnd.’who whs rim dppm and killed by an automobile owned. by Mrs. Walker and driven belter sou-ln-lmv at the time of the accident. '
A judgment entered In the Atlantic • Circuit In favor of tlie Aerial League
of/Anierlcu against the Aircraft Flre--I-preollng__Corpornthuiwas reversed^/The league gave an noronhutlc exposi-
/ tlon, tho third I ’an-Amcrlcan aero, nautie In Atlantic City, from May 20. te SO, 18£0. Under an agreement, tho do- fendant leased 1C>0 square feet of space, which was later Increased to 1,00( square feet nnd for ’which It wad agreed , to pay $17(100 Instead o f $300.
-j Tho additional'space was never, used, ■¿ hut tho Flreproollng Company bnd paid i i $300 under the written contract ThaJ i bnlnnco was refused npon the theory”
Èthnt its representative was not author* feed to secure the additional space. /
French'Claim Is Affirmed * t A verdict o f $122,800.22, of which
qJ- $22,018.81 represented ¡ Interest, ob- tnlned In the Iludijon circuit .by the Itcpubllc of France ngnlust tlie Is'hlgh Vnlley Hall road Conipnny wasv af-
„ ( flrntei" Tho appeal inf the Erie had te, do with the loss by France of eight
-V'i'SpS oars of non-explosive benzol-and wet Kuncotton, which wore standing In the
C ,!ij4',*-f . railroad yard on July 00, lOlO, the dute ■! of the Itluck Tom explosion. Tho Jury
'■',*.','i?il;'held that tho railroad was negligent In 4v>S?s|4 4,10 enre nnd custody of the material.
M S * Verdicts aggregating $1,050 recov- eSSrujf-; ercd liy Hen.ry Tonliey of 224 Vose
i-wtor. nvenue, South Orange, and his son, Cornelius Toohey, against Franklin Webster, of East Orange, for personal injuries sustained by the son were affirmed. While, employed ns a’ caddie on the South Orange Field Club-links Tooliey, who Is thirteen years oljj, wn* struck In ttio right eye'by n ball driven by Webster. Tlie boy suffered almost the total loss of vision of the eye. It wns contended that .Webster fulled to utter the customary warning of ‘‘fore,’* or. In fact', any other signal before Blurting Ids play.
— Tenant Suit Is Decided In holding Hint Milton F. Champion,
n photographer, was a; yearly tenant and-could not lie ejected from Btlio premises nt North Laurel nnd WashIngton stri'ets, Bridgeton, without three months’ notice given prior to January 1, the Cumberlnnd circuit was nfllrined.
'The proceedings were started by George and Albert C. Haler to eject Champion. .
The premises, on Jnnunry 1, 1915, was leased to Clmmplon- for n term of three yenrs at $25 a month, the lense containing the privilege of rcnewnl for nn additional three years*, which was exercised. The' jMiilnllff refused to renew for n new term beginning January
f j , 1921, and Clmmplon held over after tlint date without any. new bargain being made.
In Mny of Inst year notice was servdd upon Champion _ to quit, tlie promises the following September, which lie disregarded, and the present action wns started. In substance, the
"Cumberland! circuit held thnt If the tenant held| over by consent of the landlord.;the resultant tenancy was not from month to month, hut was from year to year, and could only be fcrml-
innted on notice given on three months’ notice prior to Jnnunry 1. .
' Could Employ ThousandsWork for 300,000 to 400,000 men
. could be found by Ihe railroads In repairing equipment, according to B..
• Frank McAnaroy of Washington, man*. - nger of the department of equipment
of the United States Railroad, Admln- 1 :|stratlon, '.who Is ‘ attending ‘ the con
vention of the American .Railway As- ■. sociatlon. Mr. McAnamy said that .- there are about 334,000 “bad order"7 -freight cars and 13,128 locomotives in. ^•nimllnr-conditlon-... „This.. etiulpment,. J f. >7v.'renalred, -he said, would enable ' the ~ 4Talltoads to meet the demands-whleC ' ‘ put on them, when the coal
‘ V
Utility Goard Denies It -Criticism in Atlantic county In cou-
sequence o f the recent accident ut the New road crossing at Ahsccon, wherelv-porauna._M;crc Hll.wl ris'emlv, Ip.
H ifh Bchoal ;English I —Aja: Ornee Christin*n;t
I f : , Ruth Belv'Norrls Brisco; Barbara Franklin, Bolen Heckman, Catherine Park, Barry SheiMn. IrayUiA Skillln, Richard Banna, Alphonse Pulshes, Ruth Weldon. .
English II—B ’s: Margaret Jonea, Blanehe Stokes, Caroline Itauhert, Katherine Adle, Judith Botts, Marion (loll, Virginia Pike, HelenTripp. , ___
English I I I—B’s: Frances Boantori^11'-' ' Imiivinn.Berry, Doris Denning, e tîraco Ilrvden. ' Iktlorra KahL trances ithlley.
.«pteiLilift IfrhBsJBriJUDijfeiBatefe^ ere- to Issue a formal statement dciiy- lng_tliocJuirgelij'-7the-AtbinUc.Froii- luildcrs fhat the commission Ignored u p)ea for additional protection at the crossing.
In Its statement the commission went Into a detailed history which shows that there'has been some confusion of the Ahsecon crossing with that ut l’ leasantville, where other accidents have occurred. Greater safeguards at tlie l ’ leusuntvttle crossing were asked some time ago by E. D. Itlley of Absycon. wiioso automobile
loo. draco Uryden, ' ixdoroe Kahl, 4, Imi vs Vet t lesili II. Alary Nlndo. Anut’„ Richards. - . '*. • •
Ice: lfs: Elise Avery, Kinliy Hafgh, Tsiulse HI arris. ETTff Almmcy: -Ph>r- once Tripp. -
Algebra I—A's: Mario Bromncr, Holen Cos.—Alan Frazer, Agine
i
' • j lUUVUUO^ jp iu be.
was struck there;• According to the comialsslpn, when
Riley appeared before tlie Freeholder« lliut body adopted a resolution asking additional protection at. Ahsccon- rather thun at i’ lca-snntvUIe, that Itlley reguriled tills resolution us ' having been adopted In resiainse to his request anil as being Intended to refer to the I’ lcasunlvnie crosHlng, and that the resolution wus so regurded by the hoard's Inspector und was referred to him In his report ns tho complulnt of the -crossing at 1’ lcasuntvllla
Annexation Not Ripe Mayors and representatives o f Cam
den suburban towns are disturbed over prospects of an attempt to make a ‘‘Greater Cumden.” They believe that the movement started a month m o to form a commission wus Intended to get lho#uburbs Into thc^clty, but when tlie meetings -were hold opposition to tlie scheme was so evident tlmt tho leaders feured to broach the subject.. Tho representatives of tiio suburban towns suy tliut ull the real estate men and land dealers are In favor, of annexation because It would boom land In tho Ruburhs. Some of the mayors point to the fact tlmt City Solicitor Iileukley of Camden was secretary of tlie two meetings . held and prepared. data o f ’tho wants of each place and the existing conditions.: '
Mayor Anderson of Gloucester City said that the people of tho suburbs do not wunt to become part-of Camden because there would ho nothing gained. Mayor Dallas of Uuddon Heights suld that 09 per . cent or the people of Ills district aro opposed to annexation. Tho people sought tho suburbs for homes, their own government, and will tight to the last point any attempt to consolidate. -- . ■ •
Princeton Tutor* Pensioned The fourth day of . Princeton's one
hundred and seventy-flfth commencement Included tho clnss-dny exercises, ¡tiio1 annual' meeting of the Board of Trustees, the < Whig and Clio Hull Alumni meetings and the sophomoro “prom.” I '
The Board Iff Trustees adopted a rule-providing a pension for members of tho iwivqreity faculty after they have reached tlie.ago of slxty-flve, but they may continue to teach until six- iy-elftht.il! they so desire. One million liollurs will bo set aside to finance the project. That supplements the provisions of the Carnegie Foundation,, how in effect at Princeton, but which docs liot apply'to any teachers who entered the profession after. November 17, 1915.• Tho trustees elected Matthew 8. Flemming, an attorney of New York city, n life trustee to succeed tho Inte Knox Tnylor. I'rof. William Libby, muster ot_ ceremonies of the faculty, was retired by the hoar A .- An Alleged Irish Plot
Colonel Marcellus H. Thompson, Vice president and active head of the Auto-Ordnance Company of New York, hah been Indicted by the Federal Grand Jury here on a chargo of conspiracy to ship arms to Ireland Jn violation of the neutrality laws. Announcement; of tho Indictment was made by Assisthnf United States District Attorney Thomas'V, Arrowsmltli who had charge of tlie cose before thoGrand Jury. _______ _
IndlctmentB also have been returned against the Auto-Ordnance Company and seven other Individuals oh the same charge, the Indictments being the result of - the seizure at Hoboken InBt June of the Cosmopolitan Line freighter East Side, In the coal bunkers of Ivhlch were found 459 machine guns.. The guns-were alleged to have been destined for use by the Sinn Fein In Ireland. ' f' The other individuals Indlctejd are: Frank Williams, alias Lawrence De
Lacy, alias Lajvrence Pierce, I who Is alleged to have paid for the shipment .of guns,"and Ms- brother, Fred Williams, alias Edward DeLacy, alleged to have been Implicated In the purchase. Jtoth are how believed to be In Ireland. George Gordon* Rorke, a salesman, of Washington, who Is alleged' to have plnced an order for the guns with the Auto-Ordnance Company; Frank J. Merkllng, secretary o i thie Auto-Ordnance Company; Frank B. Oehsen- rlter, of New Ji oxk and Washington, accused of placing-tlav-firsT'order -for some of the guns with the Ordnance Company ¡ John CulhSne, a trackman of New York,'alleged to have carted
| the guns from the American Express ¡Company In New York to his store. liouse In tlie Bronx for Frank Wll- j llama; a Mr. Brophy, whose first name Is unknown to the federal authorities, alleged to have'carted the shipment from Cuthane's slorcliodsc to “ the jr..tirhM>r Eu«i atije.:'All were released
George Packer; Gordon Peters, Am Wilson. . , . .
Shop tlioysl -A ’s: llowanl Hermes, Bradley liosi tivnuitz. Joseph Zohal; It's: tnsirgv (Tislilng, Edward Klvatlmis, Howard Klein, ItleJiard l.a Boyteaux. Zoltuti Er- dmiy._Jolm Itmnaek. W alter Tarhox. tYbSlonrmlth. Harry Armstrong.
Shop (Grllsi.—Ajc 4 - Kntherine Cluidwiek. Kllso Avery, Phyllis Skillin', It's: Katherine A die. AglaeGates. Esther Hltiman. Clara Kant- ner, tiertrmle Marshall. Sally Peters, Wald« Bosenerantz.. Edna Wntor-
tiate.s F)luard Grau, Rieharil Han na. Helen Beckman, lloivard Hermes, Esther Hiaumn, Anthony Lmt- zu. Charles l.mv, Charles Smith, Chester' Wood; It's: Grace Christ- ninth Sylvia Conk, Sarah McKee,Clifford Soiss, littery Sisson,. RuthSVehlon. ' '
(Jeometry-kA's: Margaret Jones, emT-'i—Hitekei^Jl’s : Jiid lih Botts,
Margaret Itlako, l-'rances BeardsleeT Dougins Huigh, 1/hiIno Harris, Mn- ritin (loll, (diaries Low, SaliyT'eters,’Helen Tripp.
Solid GoojttP.try—H's: , EleanorBetmlslee, Frances Heurdsloe, Ka-ijhatahl Uterine Cliudwlek, lioliert Warney.
Rev. Mat it.— It's: Eleartor ltoards- loe, l-'i itnees Beaidslee,— Katherine Chadwick, Robert Warner, WillhilU Avery, . Ella Maroney, Florence Tripp. •
Latin t—A ’s: Hlehitrd llanna, Bolen ileekinnn; Bs’: H elen Jnhn,George Richards. Sarah McICeo,Ruth Weldon. •
Latin I I—A’s: Caroline Dimbert,Murlun (hill. Helen Tripp; IV«:France.H Beaidslee, Judith Botts,Sally Peters.'Latin l l l - A ’n: Kallierine. Chad-
wlek, 'ChristInn llreypr, lleheccn iluigh, Antie .Uleluirils; Emily I hiigh, Helen j Taylor, Helen W allace, Phyllis Zhigalos.
Latin IV—A ’s1. Emily Ilalgh, Re-- licccn Ilalgh, EITn Maroney, Florence Tripp; It’s: Dorothy Adams,Elhaftor Beardslee, Alvin Darwent,Louise Harris, Elizidie.tli Perkins.'
French,!—A's: Juditli Botts, Curo: line Dauboi't, Aliens i ’ tilshes, Helen Tripp,' B‘s: Katlmrlrie Adle, Margaret Blake, EJizalietli (Irnne, Doris Denning, Marian (loll, Virginia I'lkiv - Christ inu. Perims, (diariesIxiw, ■ , ' .....
Frepeh II—A ’s: Alary Nlndo: l l ’s:Mario Brenmer, Charles llanna, Dolores Kuhl, George Packer, Helen Tnylor., Frem-h H i- A ’s: William Avory,KlTu Maroney; Its’ : Katlierlne Chadwick, Geitnnlo Marshall, Winifred LiHiiwski, .Florence Tripp, PltyilisZingales,. liiitli Weldon............. ..
Spanish I— l l ’s: Uhlley Frances,Virginia Kuhu, Esther Klmplre, Blantlio-Htokos. Gludya Wilson. . •
ffpnnlsli I I—11’« : Ksthor BnrtTeti, Elizabeth Hryant, Edward Tlminns.
Com. Civ. I—A’s: Gra’ee Christ, man, Helen Jiilin, Ksllter ilimnaii,I'hlna .Schafer, Richard llnn.na; It's:Norris Brisco, Helen Heckman, Cn- threlne Park, Bradley ltoseiicranlz, ifarry Kisson, I’ hyills Nklllln, (!|ies- ti'r Wood. -
Anc. nistl-iA 's: Norris Bl'lsco,Helen .iHlitti It's: Grace Chrlstnmn,Helen Heckman, Esther' Hlmniui, ('nilinrlne "Park," George Richard»,Edna Hclmfor, Bliuicho Stokes, Silas Stokes. ...
Mod. Hist.—A's: Kl Iso Avery. Eleanor Beardslee; it's: (diarlotte Coe.Halsey Sanford., P. A. 1).—A's: Kllso Avery, Eleanor Heurdslco, Ellz.aheth Bryant.Elf a Maroney, Philip Slmltoen, Florcure Tripp, Doauld Warner! B's: Winehcster Britton, Clirlstinn Dfey or, John Gleason, lCmlly Iluigh, Ih- Iteeca lialgli, Izntiso Harris, (ier tmile Marshall. Grace Morris, Don aid Rnhlnson, Edward Thomas.
Ohom.—A ’s: El Iso’ Avery, W inchester Britton,. Fred Lovell; Wil Haiti A very,'Gertrude'Marshall,' Edna McKuslck, Hubert Nowton, Donald Kidilnson, Philip Shultecn, Edward Tlioiiias. ,' Fcninansliip—IPs: John’ Hoinack,Frailk Hez.o. • • — .
Sliortliund II—TVs: Iaturella Bocll,Virginia Kulm, Glacly* Nettlesliip.
Typing I I - A ’s: Lavina Sperry,Lamella Bool), V irginia Kuhn, Glndys^Wllson; B's: Norris Brisco,Gladys Nettlesliip, Mary Ninth-,' francos Ridley, Tlurry Sisson;-Hole ert Tliolsz. - —
Bookkeeping I I—A's: I/irclluBuell, Elizabeth Bryant; B's: A rthur Pike, France» Ridley, Helen .McCaffrey. ' • .
Sliortlmnd I I I—A ’s: Esther Bartlett, Elizabeth Hryant, Dolores Kuhl: It’s: Olive itollinwood. Helen McCaffrey, Florence Torr.
Typing 111—A’s:' Esther Bartlett, Elizabeth Bryant, Dolores Kulil,Helen ...McCalTi'i'y; B's: GettrudeMarshall, Walter KUchcli, Marian Schmitz, Florente Torr. .
Bookkeeping I I I—A ’s: IstrellaBoell, Honuld Wltliam: B ’s: Walter Klteheil.
Com. Geog. II I—A’shLorelln Boell,Dolores Kali): Gladys Nettlesliip.
Off. Brae. IV—A ’s: Esther Bartlett. Elizabeth Bryant, 'Helen -'.McCaffrey. ; .
Economies—A ’s: Elizabeth Bry-nnt; 'It's: Esther Bartlett, EdwardThomas. — —------. ....... ■— . ..
Art I—A 's f Grace Clirlstman: Clara Kantner; B's: Ruth Bell, Marie Brooiner, Aglae Gates, Edna Schaefer.
Art I I—A '»: Margaret Jones, Gladys Nettlesliip; B's: Sarah Aldrich,Sylvia Cook,' Florence Burling, Florence Farrell, Phyllis Zingales.
Meeli. Dr.. X—A ’s: .Harry Ann- strong. George Cushing, Howard i Hermes, John Hoinack, Wesley I Smith, Joseph Zobal; B ’s: Stewart Crane, -Theodore Crane, Charles Dooley, Zolton Erdody, Randolph Klrkmun. Edward Kivatlnos. Richard La Boyteaux, S tew art; Mci’ad-
Copkery 1- A's: Grace Christman. 'EsGS-l—HhtmnUr-EiIin^Kclmfcr: Ml.-Xlan-F-vans,' n « r a KnutncLJUiiU’«.’ Monís , Blanche Stokes. - • ■— Cuiikejv 11 -A's: Sarah Aldrich.Marion -Golii-.It's: Knüivritth’ Adi«'; EJ.tU;i'Uciv Dulling, Florenci' Fair.-II, Leonora dimes, Judith Butts, I.(Ilian Evans, Ismiso Ditzcl, Edna Me KUsIck.
Sewing 11-A's: Fhirejice l-’arrell.Phys. Training ( Itoysf- A's: Hai
ry Armstrong, Stewart Crane. Randolph Kirkimin, W alter Klteheil.' .Arthur Bike, Silas Stokes, Robert Tludsz, Edward Thomas, Mown Van- dervocr, Roimld Wltliam; Its: Norris Brisco, , Juliu s t ’o\, .loo t ’ov. Throitnro-Cratuv—(hs ugo— Uu-ddug. Zollali Erdody.' Douglas Iliilgli, Joseph Hakim, HowfirdTlei-mtWrJoliri Horn nek,' Anthony Lanza. Edward ls'c, Robert Nowton, Frank Re;-o.
Robinson. Harry Sisson, ( ’liarlos Smith. Wesley Smith, Chester Wood, Zollili Joseph. Albert llederi____ -. - - " .
I’ liys, Training (Girls' A’s: Esther I Unman, Catherine Park, Clivi 11s Sklllin: B's: Helen llreimeo, lia zo| Comes. I li’len Heckman, Jennie Pedersen, Walda Kosencrimtz, Martha Stewart, Kdi'm Wutorsim, liuth Weldon. - Elizabeth Perkins, Kathrine Attic,.Indilli Botts, Marie B remuer. Louise Dltzel, Florence Purling, Margm-et.-Jones, Virginia Kuhn, Lorella Jh.iidl, Grace Morris. Gladys Net! lési i Ip, Mary N’ lmle. " [-Toreiiee Torf-, Phyllis* Zli’igales. Grace Linst r< mi.
Lincoln SchoolSpecial (¡rude Lee Wallace, .lohn
De l’aldo, Walter Itir«!; perfect attendance, John Pe Faldo. ,
Grade IB P e ler Geiss, Sammy Riipr/asda, .lesepli Simli-IUI; Antidn ètte Bost Into.
Gnidi' IA .Marcello Mellitsuudm. Olga Specht, Louise Weiersbach, Charle»-Mey. .
(Inule 2A Mary Del Nero, Elizabeth' Gels», Heat rice (limderson. May Joseph, Ibeolyu Spi-clit, Olgu Mniuidel, Kelvin Van Nuys.
Grade ‘Jit Betty <’linmlir'llalii, Helen Dltzel, John Van ( ’leve.
Grade 3 Harry Bohumil. M olile Bey, itosi' Barrala. Alice Unger strimi. Carrie-Met’nuli.
(ìnule -I Oliver Carey, Dorothy Brown. '
Grade 5 Evelyn Silabeen, Bryce Adle, Mary Bey;-HOseiimyCanning.
tirade (! ! Ruby Itmddnson, Irwin Chase, -Anna Theisz, Is'sllo Van Cleve; Hetty Hoblnsoiw («co lgo W illiams, Margaret Wnshbouirii', tirare Torrez, Alice 'Wakefield, . Dillard Collin», Esther Hagerst mm, Jennie Snllowne.' ■ - -
Kimlergarlen-Louis Avery, Byron ('Hirieron,' Howard Francis, Maxwell' Van NilyA;' August Tln-rtmum, Jean Trochèi, Rulli Croiikcl, Flor cnee Burke!I, Vivian Dill. Joseph Auglnoli, Joseph Casi aida, Anton etili Angliiiili. Amia Castalda, Amia (dalie iVcIr..-. .Norma Wesiervelt. Vincent Lusardl. - : . . .
Gradi' I Mury Koi-ner. Mary Titilliez., Anna- Saiigíimlianim, Sylvia Massa.J«o|s Melterlioiise, E lla Nauti-' ili'r», Frederick 'Beuch, 'Ada ( ’{oft, Flora Jansen, Jacob Kaufman. Allei' Miller, .lames Avery. Anton Tinnì'/. Margaret .McMahon, Juanita dc Lnzmnn, Edna Itosendah', John Bryant, Paul Ritter, Alary l-’alihio, Theresa JnsHi, Evelyn lloi-lidorli-r, („’a tjierlue Hnslilm.
flrailc 2 Kihvurd .Naonders, Bus ter Weir, Jessie Jansen, (kitlierihe Fuchs, -Marli'-Punghorne, Valerie Konry, Ellziilieth,.Miller; Regina Demi, Milton Harris. Himo Del-’ali Ith». ..
Grade 3 -Marguerite Wtisslor, Itosi! .Miilpero, Itlnrieho Ryiin; In Ellen Nitunilers, (leorgo Glelni. Nte plien llollnsy. '
ilrade 4-.-Cornelia Hopkins, Helen Torgerscn. Edith Calilwell.
(Irado 5-M ik e lloumek, fs-ona I ’didorf,. Vivian Kali.
Grade /I M ary Weir, Itolierta Everett, fila Gleim. Frederick Vaiteli,- Evelyn -Massa, Jessie'Massa.’ Irene Csepri'gl, Jnsepliiiie Königs mark, Marianna TImrimimij -
JOdV r . BBSSL rrartdn t X. U . ROSXmDALE, Vle*-Pr**hl*nt
UNITED ICE & SUPPLY CO., Inc.' ' , Offic«: 5 osd 7 SouUi XTzdon A-venua
CKAXrOBD, H. J. 'Telephaaa C10-W . . .' - ' ' •«» ' ,
W * have started the delivery of Ice in Cranford, and in offering our services with the request far year patronage, we advise that tho ice to bo furnished by us is snpplied by the Lackawanna Mountain Ice Company, one of t^e largest harvesters of natural ice in the Poconos.
This ice is harvested from Mountain Lakes, ihe water sheds oh which are absolutely protected and it is certified os to its purity am’4 guaranteed as to its wholesomoness, by members o f the medical profession. ;. . ' '
-— a» >np iGbed to yoal free from snow and slush, its clarityfcod-superior-coaliag-ptopetties poses requiring the use o f ice.' *
Idest ta r all liousetiold-pur^-
May-wo-bave-thfeuh;orare of serving v ou? Tclindioiio ordors, Q10-W,w ill receive prompt attention.
UNITED ICE & S U PPLY CO., Inc.
G R A S S M A N & K R C M- , ERNEST L. MEYER. Inciirjuimtixl __
. Kstatdi'JHvl IN'S)«> . (SUCCESSORS TO COWARD MOSHER):
O l v l t R i i | ) ; i n « > e r M «V* S i i r v o y o i ’ « ) '
• ,U- t Masonic Building,' Granfnrd, N. .1.» 2VS Knvul Strivi, KlizalMitli, N. J; ■
...D. D. IRVINGSANITARY MARKET
Meats, Fish, Butter and Poultry
: B o t h P h o n e s 3 S ^. IF YOU W A N T IT GOOD GET IT A T IRVING"
xr/fi-i* HWA/A7M r A'b'riCNXiKtX.
Bake (ioods of AH Kinds
Ph. KivatinosWalnut and South Aves, Cranford IN. J.
CIGARS CANDY
RAT TP SHOME-MADE
ICE DREAMFRESH M A D E and PU R E
9 Union Avenue - : Cranford
Telephone IIO-M
Raritan Valley FarmsProduce Certified Milk Only
2 7 c . Q t .CRANFORD DAIRY
Phone vn - » tenth Ave.
under $7,G00 boll each.
Car! Warsinski & SonPAINTERS AND DECORATORS
50 Btmuide Avenue
Telephone 156-B CRANFORD
ilen, James señerontz.
Maroney, Bradley
Mech. Dr.- H—A ’s: Jnmee (CitizeflWailtAds Bfillg ReSIlltS-Grant- Robert—Morris,'
FRED KANT NERUpholsterer and Decorator
____ formerly with W. Itaumgarten & Co.. N. Y. -
Sperry Building, i t North Avenue, East,_ Telephone 438-W .
Upholstering , - , ■ . , Cnlilnet Work •tMrtnlha anil Draperies I ’ollshlng ,arid Roflnlshlng- ' ,Slip (Vivors .Sh.nies I finding] ' ' ■'Mattresses Uemaiie . I ’nliltlngItoprislucttons General Repnlrs (Work of Art)
Under New Ownership!I beg to announce to the people of Cranford and vici
nity tltatJ ltave purchased the
that'- at 7 Walnut Avenue, near South Avenueand will handle only high-grade meats at prices -— will appeal to ihe .thrifty housewife.
' My many years experience in business in Newark, enables me lo thoroughly understand the needs of
_the, public and my aim will be to always give iny cuBr_ tomers the best and most satisfactory service. •.... May I Itaye the pleasure of serving you? >.
• FRANK VODRASKA.Telephone 37CJ . . . ’ .
'VR O O F I N GDoes your roof-or cellar leak? _'Let me waterproof, your home freon cellar to roof. Work guaranteed
- JOSEPH DAMBRIA -.Phone Cranford Itil-M Potter Bldg., CRANFORD, N. J.
Fresh Milk and CreaduRight from the Farm
fcxrOIVfi US A TR lAL-fea W e deliver in Cranford, Roselle and Roselle.Bad
Address M EYER BROTHERST
Raritan Road,drove Dairy Farm
CRANFORD, N. J.
nan -
A - pel
F L A I N F 1E U D N U R S E R Y roSCOTCH P L A IN S ,i NEW JERSEY]
NURSERYM EN AND LANDSCAPE CONTRACTORS .PEONIES Lor F.YU, PLANTING in bloom now. Sc'loçf ® i r i0 1 e t l^ in
. ...... ; our Nursery. Over 100 kinds, “ . " * ... . -W e plant EVERGREENS. RHODODENDRONS, eta.)tip .fill JULY.
q .v to r cataloguas * - ......‘Phone Panwood 1433.-
Seven ,Good Reasons why you Should buy a -
71 A N O
Orders,Left at,Reay’s ' Pharmacy Will Receive Prompt Attention
Westfield Riding SchoolH7 MOUNTAIN AVE. WESTFIKLDj H. J.
Special Attention Given to Ladies and Children '
HORSES BOUGHT AND SOLD
Patronized Only by the Best ■
-FOR PARTICU LARS ADDRESS
Telephone 331-R ALBERT TEAR8E, Westfield
Fire InsuranceThe recent fire brings to mind the urgent
need of proper protection. L
Real Estateis still active and many good bargains are
on our booka for sale— some for rent.
Realty and Insurance DepartmentCRANFORD TRUST CO.
Ill CRANFORD, N. j.
A/IPTAI HEATING & PLUMBINGI T I E V I / A L « Jobbing or Contract Work. The Irai
WORKING.......... Our rarer Uditorato»
j o u i »7 U N IO N A V E North
work tty ox|torioiiot<d men. oncitd uni plmitail cudtomorH. furniahotl.
D O Y E EC R A N FO R D . N . J.
G L E N F. S T E E L ECarpenter.and Builder
ESTIMATES FURNISHED
J o b b in g o£ A l t K in d sPhono 373-M. .
h a r o l d L o c k w o o d - -
ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORPhone 59-
210 South Avenue, Cranford, Nr J.
P A I l i T TAsk for color card and prices of DEVOES VELOR
Flat Paint We‘ carry above in stock. , Cadoe and ,Auto P**«1» also Sapolin Varnish Stains., .... ./Paint Brushes, bristles set in rubber.
A. C. Pike Hardware Co.ylnc.> W e '.c lose W ednesdays at 12 o’clock. .
1 " ----- ------ :---------- - :----- — ,-------
By Larry - ---- -DIXIE’S STILL AT IT
Playing the same' brand of bail that has enabled them to- run up a string of twelve straight wins, the Dixie Giants added the Kenilworth
on 8ua-| woJI-scaltcml day-nt-Kentiw'orthrThe'Kenltworth team was greatly strengthened for the occasion and had a formidable tOafirdrnbeTIeM aml did all in their
Bpg" by the score o f 18-8. Tlie fans w en at all times confused'trying to pick out the local team, tfiere being so many strange faces in the lineoI). Ross was received by Charley Deck, the Elizabeth wrestler, flgflter, base ball player, etc. The (larwood team was not alone as far as being handicapped was concerned, for the Stars were without the services of Hill Masters»». their heavy hitting outfielder. Hodonitz started on the mound for the Mars but was relieved in the third inning after tin? Garwood team had scored five runs. ■ Holland then •took up the burden atid pitched fitirly good ball thereafter, keeping the ..hits
T im -Garwood - team-
and will do much better-when they return to the fold.
power to defeat their -dartskbmed, opiionents, but their hardest efforts went for naught as the Dixie boys played flashy ball and were helped along, by some horse shoes, setting tlie Kenilworth boys down writh a 9-7 defeat. Magnusson, the youthful pitching star, pitched a Creditable game for tlie losers and was really entitled to he returned the victor, as ho outpitched Alexander at all stages o f tlie game. Too muchpraise cannot be given Magnusson, considering ¿he fuct that lie was opposed by seasoned ball players, who no doubt wero playing bull wiien “Maggie” was still going to grammar -school. Alexander pitched his first game for tlie 'Dixie's and did not show anything encouraging, he being touched-up for . 1C safe hits. Streu and A. Larsen were tlie bat ting stars of tlie day ,. tlie first named getting four hits with Larsen gottlng three. Hayes, the Dixie's right fielder led his team in batting. '
Tim Dixie’s did not play on Saturday os the West Orange Field Clul> failed to put In an apiieorance. Next Saturday tlie Dixie’s w ill be oppose;! by the .New York Field Club op the Cranford avenue grounds. Sunday's summary:
''KEN ILW ORTH. ' - \ ■ ■■ ■taf : R H E
Palmgreen,\ir..... .. Jl 2 0Elko. 3b.... .7,..;— ........ .0 i 1H. J,arnon, ef..\.— Streu, lb...... .\..
... ...._.l , 1 — 1
......... 2 4 «Holt, 21*.........!.. ..........0 2 0A. Larsen, ss.. ...\ ........:,.2 3 1Hinltli, c............ 1 1Wander, rf........ _.!........:...0 0 0Magnusson, p.... : ....!.... a 1 0Brown, cf... ...... ...0
" \ 7
1 0
. Totals 1G 4•: " ...‘ D IX IE GIANTS-- —
ft I f EH. Williams, 2b... ___ -...1\ 1 2McClellan, ss..... . \ 0 0IV Williams, .'111.. ....... ;...l XI 0Washington, c.... ......... 0
2'■ 1
Hayes, rf............. .......~ - i 0Garter, lb.;.......... ........__ 2 1Hurt, cf............... .........(1 0 \oJennings, I f..... ......... 1 1 0Alexander, p........ ..........1 0 1)Harris, cf...... ._...... „..1 • 1 0
Totais 0 8Two baso hits—Holt, Elko, A .Lar-
sen, Harris. Strack out by Magnus- son 10, by Alexander 1». „Rasen. on Halls— oll Magnussen 1, oll Alexander 3. '• '
I
AT TO U R SERVICE ...
No dirt, no dangerous matches, just press-a button or turn the switch and the room Is- lllumln- ntcil. tlio coffee Is heating, the toaster Is toasting, or tho «weeper Is swcoplng. These Aro only n few of tho wonderful services Electricity Is waiting to perform for you at slight cost. Command it through us. Wiring, Topairs and all kinds of equipment.
KENILWORTH U. CONNECTICUT FARMS 6 -
Kenllw’orth.'defeated the Conner Unit Kurnistenm on Snturday by a score of ll-fi nniHn doing so chased llob ’Stewart, their old lioodoo from tlie imiitml. Stewprt scored a double win o.ver tlie*»»' last year and it appeureil ns if ho was to be tlie same old jinx tills year but in tlie third Inning file Kenilworth slug
: gors sent, five runners over the nil* her and chased Mr. Stewart to tlie showers. „7/
I - Ltitidgren started on'-the. mound for tho locals but was relieved in tho fourth by- If. Larsen, who held tlie 'farmers in clu-ek. Holt and Streu, formerly or the Garuooil team appeared, in tlie Kenilworth lineup and their presence was easily notleejiblu by their, heavy hit ting. Saturday's summary:
, K ENILW O RTH. ft I I ¥
Palmgren, It.....Klko, 3b.............. :...Streu, lb................A r Larsen.-s«..—...-Holt. 2b............... .....Smith, r........:.......’....Do Atnond, rf........Lundgren, p .!.....~Magnusson, rt........H. Larson, p...........
Totals
0
Meyll, cf.. Beyer, e....Faitoute. ss------------1). Bonneil, 21»........R, Bonnell, lb------Frlberger,' If.......... -Duratile 3b.....— ...Miller, rf..
....2 1 «1 1
__ 3 2 0.......2 1 0__ .0 3 0.......0 0 0..... 1 I it..... 1 0 0
Ï T n 1FAKMS _
It h E__ .0 i u____1 0 0„....,1 i- d____2 i 1___ 1 i 0___ 0 i «___ 0 0 1... ;.o 0 0___ .0 0 , II
~5 3 3
Stewart, p......... -------------0
Totals . _ „ .Two baso h lts-A . Larsen, Fribcrg-
er. Three base hit— R. Bonnell Struck out by H. Larsen 3. by Lumi gren 5, by Stewart 6. .. j .
GARWOOD LOSES TWOTaking the field w ith a ¡rather
banged up team, tlie Ganvood out- flt suffered a double setback oyer the week-end, losing to Rahway on Saturday, and to the Elizabeth Stars on Sunday«, Garwood was .without the services of H olt. Poole and Streu, the three mainstays o f the team and their absence was quite
- noticeable in the Garwood play. Not being satlsfled w lth having one old master. Burns secured the scr- vices of Benny Ross, who was a star many years ago. “O ld Reliable” Brewer took the mound on Saturday and was touched up for nine safeties and but for his teaiq mates, errors, he would have been returned * tlie" “ winner.” Eliuer ■Kraislfong,'*'- tlie hardhitting Rahway cqtclicr. pounded out three hits o ff Brewer.—On— Sunday the— league-leading Stars defeated the Garwood ~Pick-
COUNTY LEAGUE NOTESYou-can't keep a good man down
and neither can you keep tlie Casey team from picking away at tlie lock that opens the door .to tlie Comity League leadership. The Casey s are now'tied-with the Elizabeth Stars by reason of their doulile win over the week-end. Inning smothered, tlie Linden team on Sunday and the Pearls oir Saturday. As tlie Stars liail—mi- scheduled—game—on—Saluteday, they could n o t hold their fernf over tlie Casey s. T ile Stars defeated Garwood on Sunday in an old4 fashioned slugging hen hy tile score of 11)8. Roselle Park was saved from another setlmek by not being on the week-end schedule. The Ports did not play <m ,Sunday hut lost to the Linden team .on Saturday 18-1 .
Following-are the results o f tile games over tlie week-end: _-Saturday—Rahway 7, Garwood 3;
Casey's (i, Pearls 1; Linden 18,-Port A. C. 4...Sunday—Casey's Hi, Linden, 1;
Stars 18. Garwood 8.Tlie Casey's have secured tlie ser
vices of a fe.w new-m eii to help them in -their final drive- for the County title,.immOly Eddie .Morgan, the llasliy second sucker and ‘'JIam- bo" Surgln, the mountain-sized '.first baseman.' .....
The.Garwood team is reported .to have lost tlie services of Holt, Streu, Knott and. Poole. Humors--being, circulated that the players have quit rallier than play without Hoft, whom they claim was treated rather unfairly.Iiy tho Garwood management. It is doubtful it tho. abovenamed ,-pluyerH will ever w ear-a Garwood suit again. ■
DICKINSON AW ARDED J1TATE HONORS ...... •
Dickinson High School of Jcrspy lity was awarded the huso hall
championship,of New .Jersey- hy. tho New, Jersey State Athletic Association. llattin was oxpeeted to he Considered - before any 'decision would lie iniiile lint tlie heads did not hesitate in awarding the title to Pickiiisim. llattin was defeated earlier in tjio Henson hy Dickinson, Dickinson was defeated hy Mont.. da . while lla ttin found little trouble in defeating the mountaineers. It was generally believed Hint tho Scholastic hotly., would order n pioy-olf\liet\yeen llattin and Dickinson and if 'th e two teams should .meet" again there' is, litlle: 'doubt' Hint llntlln would reverse the verdict o f earlier .in the season.-
PITCHING GETTING BETTERTho pltcliingXof the present year
seems to lie- fiir superior to any pitching wo have sis'll. since t [in days of Matty, Eddie Walsh, Brown, Waddell, etc. The pitchers hold no fears for tlie so-calledxheavy hitlers, while Italic Until, who Inis lu-eii a menace to pitchers in tho past, seems to he a set up ntiw as many pitchers Imve. been Intentionally passing other Yankees and taking a chance on Ruth. Charlie Robertson, a .recruit with this White Sox, pitched tlie first no-liit game ot the year, when la- set down Ty Cobbs Jungalecrs with neither; lilt nor. ran. Jess'Barnes of tho Glimts, duplicated this feat against "Cincinnati not long after. Many ot tlie local scinljird jw lrlcrs have ventured into the no hit column, but none succeeded until last Sunday, when “Bclgio" Snoyers,’ pitching . for the Wecliawken Club, pitched a'perfect game against the .Marginals of New York. Sneyors pitched p wonderful game, only 27 ni$n facing Him and not allowing a tnnn to. roach first base. He also struck out 13. Snoyers Is reported due for tlie league sliortlyrlielng 19 yours of agornml standing A ft. 10 in. in Ills stocking feetrH e Js also reported to he quite some slugger Himself. ,
N A S HA U T O M O B I L E
withtheperfected valve in head motorNASH cars have jumped from seventeenth place to fifth place in
volume of sales. • .■ - * .
Ninety-three per cent of the NASH automobile , is manufactured ' in the NASH Plant: \ - .
The great popularity of NASH, cars means slower'yearly depreelation. . . .
The new type HARVEY-NASH spring consisting of sixteen leaves ,J have not only Improved the riding qualities, but have shown 7% gas saving. ' - -
NASH starting-lighting and ignition system is of thè three unit- . type DELCO, the'most supreme auto electrical system in^
the world.
Extra large cord tires are standard equipment.
Through a new system installed in our service station a complete■ valve grinding and carbon removing job can be turned out'
in two hours. This is only possible on NASH cars....
MR. R. É. W EIR , OUR CRANFORD REPRESENTATIVE W ILL
BE GLAD TO DEMONSTRATE THE W O NDERFUL P E R
FORMANCE OF THIS. OAR. PHONE CRANFORD 70.
SIX CYLINDER
. PRIClTs t o, b.FOUR CYLINDER . .
5- Pass. Touring .........J’ 985.002- Pass. Roadster ....965.00
3- Pass. Coupe . 1,485.00
6- Pass. Sedan . 1,645.00
2-Pass. Cab ................. 1,295.00
5-Pass. Carriol ..... 1,350.00
NEWTON A. BARNETTDistributor of NASH Automobile
6-Pass. Touring ... .... 31,390.00
2-Pass. Roadster ....;.....1360.007-Pass. Touring ----- ....... i,54aoo4-Pass. Sport .... . ... . 1,645,004-Pass. Coupe ...__ ...... 2,090.007-Pasz, Sedan ......... .....2390.00
276 North Broad St. EUsabeth 1833 . Elizabeth, N. X '
7 *P A R T Y
LARRY REAGAN BOXES D R A WIrarry Reagan,, tlie Elizabeth foil
thenvclglit, lioxed a hard ten round draw With Jackie Moore,-tlie colored hear cat of Columbus» Ohio, on Monday night nt .lersoy City... Reagan substituted for Julinny-Reislcr, who reported with an injured hand and Reagan took tlie light on a mo! ment-s notice, in tlie otlier star bout .Benny Vnlgar, tlie Freni-li flash,Jia'hded-Jolmny Drumuile a severe pasting and but for ids unwillingness to force matters, wdlild liave surely stoppcvl tlie Jerseyite as he lilt him', at-* w ill-w ith .every thing but the gate receipts, and tlie referee's collar liutt'hiis. ,
C O R N C U R E !P ilo t corn night and morning for 4 or 5 dajk.
Soak foot to hot water and remove corn»
. Zingalei’ Drug Store .. Prescription Pharmacj •
Walaat and Sontfe Avn^ CRANFORD. N. L
Automobile Painting-Tel. lia U
C O O K & B E N N E REstimates Give«» . -.
15 Union Avepue Cranford
i Want Ads Bring Results
I'VE JUST BEEN ASKED tF \ WOULD DINE - WITH FOLKS WHOSE QO CHOICE OF MEATS IS FINE
NOBODY would think of leaving Mr. Happy-Party
. emt when it comes tn tlie eats.; His genial appetite is
. in evidence .wherever the proper food Is- displayed. We don't blame .Happy be-
_. cause eating pure fond is a _ iniglily line sort of Imldt.
K. L E 1N SM ARKET
^ t f e r r B u Uruon.
T e l . 9m
MRS. LUCY TH (is still putting out tJjo.f
Dinner, nt a rensonnlfil
16 North Ave. E.,
Venice vShoe Repairing Co.
U Union Ave. North, -Cranford
The Shoe Repairers
Shoes Shined'
Hat Gleaning..
All our work ls guaranteed, both as. to quality and looks. Work called for and delivered.
H Union Ave. North. Cranford-----------P lione-UfrJ._____ ___
R E A Y ’ S■^q u estio n b ir d
__^' »WÈ- eé. W
t /
Ansver-./'T?'* T h e r n o p « " toilet Articles A-nd druqs w ill ttiAlóe you
• VACAtion AnATpv _ o n e » ; r r y
NO PERSON should expect to spend a happy Summer vaca
tion unless lie tnkes along with him the proper toilet requisites. W o .can equip you in a happy manner ut prices that will please you. Trip around here before you take your trip. •
R E X A U , S T O R E J. e. RUT, Prop.
Sunday and Holiday Houm ■
9 to 1A .M . , 3to7,P.M.
Phone 1 S * ^
Emergency Calla 387
Bathroom and Kitchen » ----- T I L I N G -----
Fireplaces, Forches and'Vestibules THOMAS H. ROSS :
. 270 Jackson Avenue / ■Tel. 3367 PLAINFIELD. N. J.
MICHAEL KISS ^Carpenter and 'Builder
llS Anchor Place, Garwood, N. J. Estimates given on all kinds ot
work. JobhtDg a ' Specialty. " Post Office, Garwood. H. J.
Telephone 23-J .
Cranford—Economy..CementBlock Manufacturera
Best.Standard Made Blocks for Best P rices.-------------------:------
■I362 E ast North Avo. C R A N F O R D
V7
; # w
d ■>
\ j
]|€AN NOT ESCINo Chance forHNonterer
Uses Poison.“ .
‘'¿4- % 'J ^ ^ y ‘s - r i i - ' *
'THURSDAY. JUNE 22» 1922 7 ’ %1
C o u rtsh ip
Uiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiu
" 'IDDIES S IX I1 ¡By .
_ Will M. Maupin §aiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiimimimimiiiiliiF
THE OLD SONGS_ _
SWEET1 song» of old I ilow memory1 btings
Their music hack to me , 1Until each boll of heaven rings .
Salvation full and free!*«•‘Joy totlHVjvm-ld," the music sweot
lias lilleil 11 million .souls,And marked the time for marching
feet ' . . . ,To where ¿Id Jordan rolls.. ,
“I need Thee ev’ry hour," for I Oft weary by the way;
And"“ while the years are rolling by" Tlmu art my guide and stay.
“Abide with me” through calm and . stress, ‘
Protect me by Thy might;My weak-nmj fnlt’rlng footsteps bless With Tlilne own “Kindly Light"
The dear old songs! Their echoes tillThe quiet evening air; ........ -
They bid me benr life's lond until;’“There'll be no- sorrow there.”
“Ity cool Sllomn’s shady rill" '■ Whose \vatern llnweth free,Lead me each day.and night until
tfi P& of Ppowpence rtf//!
UncommonBy—-, i., i JOHN BLAKE
eurer, my fimi, tó Thee."
And when “tin Jordim's stormy banks" My feet sitali'stand at hist;
When I shall see the ransomed ranks From whom all care Is cast,
“O riverì;may I, though vile us he" ’ Christ'(lid that day behold,
The city’s walls oTjasper see And walk Its sdreids of gold.
' (C o p y rig h t!
T H £ F R IE N D LY PATH...By W A LTER I. ROBINSON.
A im high. . '. ..“ If you hit'the mark, you
must aim a little ..above It; every arrow that llles feels the attraction of the earth.”', Tills was the advice of the great poet, Longfellow. By following tills rjile he won lasting honor, and scattered Sunshine throughout the world. llut even with all his success, otic finds conelusive evidence In many of his writings .that he was never snt-
Tsfled. lie nevef' quite gained •the .place he.aiincdNo reach, ric- eordlng to the estimate placed upon his work by lilmsolf. .
A tnnii\ls unfortunate ' If lie Is nbsoluU’iy. satisfied. Tills ns- serf Ion lias licl’ii_. widely conlrn-
■ dictt?tLv “Thff 'proof of Its logicIs found In the careers of all thetruly great. \
If lie Is satisfied with whatJie •has done or Is doing, he never
Is likely to got. much further unless pushed- ahead by sheer In?*. '
To everyone there comes n feeling of satisfaction and hnp- plnes-T wliiunAvr be .accomplishes' somelhiag ulaeti brings him returns III gold or- lioipir. ■ . Bat there may still be' something lacking to make bis Joy complete If be does not see the ben- cflts 7>f bis labors reflected in -the smiles el tlie world.
No matter bow high lie may- go in the opinion of others, there is certain In be a feeling of resentment In. bis nun ■ breast If be believes he Is leaving undone some service which will mid to the Joys of Ills fellows.
The most Ipvltingv pathways are bordered by blossoms. -The happiest lives nre surrounded*
-.by smiles............ ....... ......... - ■.Let us aim to deserve the;
honest pnilwe of thankful friend'..
WIIAT OTHERS HEAR
U'TVHAT man Isn’t, on the level,” said a ' very experienced judge
of humankind., recently. “When lie talks he doesn’t .mean what you hear.”
Talknttve, even persuasive people who don’t mean what you hear nre considerably too numerous In the world.
Their words sound pluiislble, convincing. You can hear them. But you cannot hear the silent thoughts, that are .going on In the iicud of the man who Is talking to you; the thoughts that do not check, up with the words at, all. .
You will lenrri In time that such men are flot to lie depended npon. Unless you nre shrewd or widely experienced, you are likely to learn too late. • ;•
Itut never .mind that. You will profit by wlmt your first mistake costs you. And after that -yoq. will. be~a little- bit -cautious about words, unless yon know thut the thoughts behind the words ngree with them. .
Of course It Is impossible for you, or for rue, or for all the forces In this world, To make every,man mean whatwe bear 1dm sny. ---- v
But we cari; at least contribute to tlie general snin of frankness an{l honesty by always meunliig wlmt tlie other fellow, hears. ... ' _
As It always, pays to he on the level—a thlrlg no crook ever seems to he nble to discover—It—will pay us to nmkiX our- words express our thoughts,' and nothing hut our thoughts.
It Is not necessary to pour out oiir hearts ‘to strangers nnd ncqnnlnt- ances^-It Is:not-necessary to acquaint our friends with everything that Is. In our mlnilsT although most men (ire far more secretive tlinn Is nt nil necessary. '1
Whep we do talk, whether much or. little, we ought to—speak oar tlioVglits, and not continually mnke mental reservations as we go nlong.
rJ’hc" writer knows Of jin able nnd. brilliant man who might have gofie far In the world hilt for a reputation for mental .trickiness tlm't he earned deservedly long ngo, •
ifo Is not dishonest. He means nobody any harni. But In order to onrry favor he Is continually telling people things , he doesn't mean. By nnd by the people get to comparing notes, anil presently they, have his measure.
Today he earns la his profession about half - the salary he ought to enrn, nnd stnnds about a qiinrter -as high as lie could stand, chiefly be- -enustr-he never means whnt the other fellow hears. . “ , •
Words‘ nre an Imperfect means of expressing thought, hut they nre. nil we have. If we use them to conceal thought we are getting very! little out of them, and Incidentally i olng vety poorly by ourselves.
- (Copyright.)
8clence Has Mad* That Form at'KMt-Inq a Lost Art, Unllka tha .■ Daya of Old. • ■
Ever since medieval times a Silent but none the less determined war baa been going on between the aubtlt art T’.ORllsonlng and themore. subtle of discovering and locating polaooeln the human body. - -
[ lbe" oltI "days fortunes awaited those wlio could prepare some concoction that would remove people from this world without leaving traces of how It was done. Poisoning, a» un- derstoodbyu Catherine de Medld, was u -grand art. Today It Is a lost art, for science has practically won, tbe long fight nnd Is now able to discover and classify every known poison even months’ after the victim baa succumbed to Its effects. ,
iVlthln the last gcnerattoh^almpsT every kind of poison has come vjlthln the scope of. the ever-increasing experience of medtco-legul experts who have been railed to give evidence In important -rases—from tho hyoscyamino of the CrlpiK’n case to the arsenicalflypaper of the Bcddon affair. ___
Arsenic,* antimony, prussic add, carbolic acid, oxalic uclil. mercury, belladonna, opium, heroin, morphia, calabar, bean, croton Becd, nitric acid, pyridine that most deadly poison found in minute quantities In dirty tobacco" pipes —ull* have been traced, tabulated„tltfd chained by the patient, emotionless detective. Science. ■ .
So highly has tho work of scientific detection been developed that tbe presence of arsenic nmy bo discovered even years after It has been taken. No more delicate tests In chemistry, and-St tho same time no more Infallible ones, can be used thnn the tests-for arsenic and antlmony.~~In_the former poison the tests are so severe thut one part ln- slxty millions can be revealed.
It Is to the Borgia that one must go to hear about the Incredibly subtlo poisons which could not be detected, but the light of modern science proves that much which Is credited to that fumlly’a knowledge of the art of pol- sonlng wus-'reolly Impossible o f accomplishment ‘ unless. we concede— which Is Just possible—that they know more about toxicology than do modem savants. i
There was one particular poison which the Borgiss nre credited, with using which has remained o secret It was tustelcss, could kill the victim quickly or leisurely, as the poisoner ».lied, nnd It left no trace discernible to tlie chemists of thut time. -
Tho" lists of nobles and dignitaries of the church who died- by this tmbtte means Is believed to be formidable^, I t was used In-two-ways, powder and HquIiL and Its method of manufacture was related by an obscure scientist of tlio period. . . • 1 ~ 1 ■
The powder form of the poison was white like flour, with a taste like sugar. It was culled Contarells. Its eemposltlnn wns never known,.but the liquid was prepared In the following why: '
A wild bonr was caught and to It wns administered n strong dose o f arsenic. As soon as the poison began to take effect- the bonr was hung up. by the ■heels." Convulsions came on. nnd n froth, which ran' from Its Jaws, was collected In a silver dish and then was transferred to a bottle which, after mime Cnntnrelln wns added, was hermetically sealed, s This wmj kept for a certain time and the result was the notorious poison.
Certain It Is that no poison known today Is secret. Chemistry and science can provide the means of detection, and Can often, supply the antidote.— Overseas Dally Mull.
Important to Know.A fire hud broken ont In a factory
In the cimntryp nnd a young village constable was (Amt to make Inquiries.
After questioning the manager he asked to see the man who was- responsible for the electric lights. The manager^ stated that the electric switches were under. his control.
Policeman—Then you are the man who lights up the'electric affair?
.Manager—That la so.Pollccrann (excitedly) — Now, be
careful how you answer my nest question, 'cos if It ain’t satlsfactoryjt will be used against you os evidence. When you lighted the electric light last night where did you throw the mntch?”
Tilt CHEERFUL QiERUB
TVia g e C m oF tJ\ \ / e r é .
öoin<J t o t e * •Id I n us n o w t k e y s ^ y
t r i d s o -T t .k a o n e 9 ° ° ^
r n e t n i l d e e ,A p lred id en t
in e m k r y o
Priceless Painting In Old CheatAn altar piece the center panel of
which Is alleged to have been painted by Leonardo da Vinci and the side panels by Michelangelo has been discovered in a chest at the Hungarian castle of Papa, belonging to the late Count Maurice Esterhazy's estate.
Experts are divided as to the authenticity of the painting. I f the present owner of the castle. Count Thomas Esterhiizy, hns his claims sustained tiie-sltar piece will be the-only known example of the combined work of these two famous painters. It will be worth it fabulous amount which experts hesitate to name.
__ The ni-sCcannon to he cnat.la onepiece *.vus made by an English fion-
• muster la 1543f .
Vitamlnee as a Cure-AILPossibly the present tendency to ex
tol vltamlnes as a cure-all Is drawing to its close. The United States public health service reports that efforts during the year to discover the unidentified food substance whose absence from-the-diet-causes, .pellagra have excluded two. of tbe three known
■ri...element is being steadily narrowed.
SUuuttuiMutiiiiiiiiiiiMUiHmimuiiii OssrtlsM, Ml*, « n u n Maws»*»sr Blku
Oumaby had come Bast attar fifteen years’ In California. Those In the vU- lage who remembered him as a thrift- lees ne'er-do-well, were Impreeaed to the point of revising all their old opinions. Carnaby's clothes, hts motorcar,
. Bktwlaaee,-reputed Jo si cced La hundred thousand,-mode- hlin «» protnl- nent figure. Only—Carnaby was nearlyflfty ---T—¿----:— ——----——
“He's comp home to aettlo down and marry," drawled Cy Butts, tho hardware man. “Beckon It’s time. Beckon It's that gal of Kbo Fisher's Ire's sweet on. Remember liow he used to taka her uia buggy-riding I”
The Flahera hud once been tlie leading family, but Jhey had. gone dowuldU. After his wife’s death Ebe Fisher grew shiftless, Tholr place was mortguged. And Melile Fisher was reportod to be engaged—to—Ilarry—Lucas, who—had- bever done any good for himself.
Soon gossip grew more- Insistent Carnaby was building a house. He had the Jooka' place, adjoining Fish, cris. And ho ..was often over to Fisher's.
Then-it became definitely known that Molile and' Carnaby were to be married.
“Wonder how Horry Lucas Is taking I t r speculated Cy Butta to his croóles.
Ilorry Lucaa was taking It very 111 Indeed. But Carnaby knew nothing about Oil this. HtMollle'a checks grow paler, he attributed It to tho need of a change. The new houso waa going up apace. It war .completed by tho time tbe day for the wedding was fixed. . ' . .
Carnaby loved Molilo with a l l 'thè ardor of a man returning to tho scene of hts boyhood, who sees In his now sweetheart the Image of the old one. He had been desperately In love with Agnes Fisher. * Molile was frightened,amazed at his devotion. ■___
“When wefro married,” »aid Oar- nnby, “you.shall have everything in the world. No need to worry any more about things. And Tm going to take you over to our house next week. I think It will ploaso you.”
Molile smiled rathor wanly. That wfca the Brat time Carnaby wondered whether anything was amlaa.
That evening Anice Lawson enlightened him. .Anice was tho village busybody; she stopped him In the street
“Oh, Mr. Carnnby,” she gasped, “I am so glad to hear about you and Mol' Ue Fisher. Everyone’s saying what splendid lock It to for her, and what a good thing It to sho Isn't going to marry that shiftless Harry Lúeas.
“WhaVdldnl yoti knowl". she added. ■Ok, yea, there was a lot of talk about bar and Barry, bèl I guatt It didn't amount to mudi. You know how folk* wlll talk, don’t your .
Carnaby went up/ibo’ bill, deop In thought It wae growing dark, so dark that the couple At tho edga Of thè fir plantation faBra to bear him, and Carnaby stopped Involuntarily and listened. / . . .
“Yes, It must bo good-by, Harry," he 'heera Motilé say. tearfully. Mr. Carnaby to the best man In the world, and*T would never hurt him."/ “You're selling yourself for your father I" cried Harry Impetuously. '"It Isn't right Molile, and you know It1
And there followed au Impassioned plea which Carnaby heard with amazement Ha had^never guessed, nevar suspected. . . . And at the end he heard Mo1lle*s Impassioned good-by.
He thought more deeply than ever as he mad# ids way home. Youth and yontb, youth and ago, tha eternal, triangle I Ebe Fisher had been nèarly twice hto age when he took Agnes from him. It was the old .story.
Bpt the rples. were reversed. New It was hto turn to win the girl ha loved from youth, to make her hto. '
No one would have guessed the struggle In hto mind that evening as be sat placidly In the Fishers' parlor— the old man nodding beside the Bra Molile looking up at Oaniaby and listening. Before he left he. made an appointment to meet her at the- entrance' to the new house the following afternoon at five, to show It to her.
Bufón tbemext afternoon Carnaby viras not there. Only the doer stood Invitingly open, and, tempted by the Bight of 'the interior, Molile ,wen( In,
Steps came "toward her; she shrank back in fear as she saw Horry Lucas.
“Molile, what does It meanr he cried hoarsely, '
"What Harry? Oh, you mnan’t come berel Mr. Carnaby wUl be here any moment"
“Don’t you know?" He stared at her Incredulously, “He’s left for Cell- fonia ou. tho night train. And he sent me tbtol”
Molile looked mechanically a t. the short typewritten letter. The. words passed vòfcuely before her eyes. The house—« marriage gift **~ Harry, with the lands . . of returning. . \. • ”
She broke Into passionate weeping as Harry's, arms ènfolded her.
- aievs'e Peculiar Glgnllloance.It is curious to read Ip old histories
thit iiMtead of paying rent as we do ms, Mad was sometimes held from thè kings by. payment annually cf .a pair of gloves, - together with a kalgbfa service. .The manor of Wefc- Isg, In Bnrrey. was one of many sa held under the . Plantogenet ktogn. The. exptonatlon to . that gJevwiT In that enne, were regarded os a pledge er n prantoe. The glove repres " the hand and to give a gtove
to saying: "Here's mf
n ia ian MTAsra af tte hnfg^a.
1
*WE EtHPLOT SANTf A1tT" ICLK^ COOLERS -------
t(i_jnakp jsiirfi,. tlrnt our, milk to tiionniRiify c iilll« ! boforo lt i i iibt- tliHl. .in this tvny wo mnko certain tlmt our milk will not'sour or ferment, but will reach tho publla In a pure, palatable condition.
Cranford DairyAlmost T iikkm aN. Prop.
20 SOUTH AVB.. Telephone 107. r
AnnouncementBeginninii May ist, ..wc will
deliver our high-grade
Ice Cream _IN CRANPOKO
Orders for Sunday should lie . in .the store by S.Ttnr-
dny night
New York Candy ~ Kitchen ^
l?il Urcw.1 Street, Wt-HlficU, N .:JL Tdophotie 7A&
Plainfidd-Union Water I Company
The Plnldfleld-Unkm Water Com- pnny supplies the Inhabitants ot Plolh field. North Plalnfleld, Fa& wood, Westfleld, Garwood, Cranford, Roselle, Roselle Park and Kenilworth with water for do- mostlo use.
'The - Purest. and - Sweetest
GAMILLO M ASSAGeneral Contractor
Oradlng Oonorsts Work
Cellars Excavated
’ Bowen, 8tdswalks, Ete.
P. O. Box 53 CRANFORD
"That Nature Can Yield"
Tlie wnter supplied by the Com- pnny tins been analyzed by Alton llazi'ii, Ksi|„ a loading hydraulic ex- l>ert formerly of Boston, now ot Now -York, and pronotineed by him to ho wator o f “groat organic purity,” and In a lottcr to .one ot tho Company’s patrons lie adds, “You nro to ho congratulated upon hav-' lug so good a supply, and yoh need havo no anxiety whatover as to its wholoNomouoNS."
The Company Refersto. all its Patrons
' . , \ • ‘ .Tho Interest o f tho Company to
Ideutlllod with the. communities In which Its plant Is legated and it Is tho |H)llcy of tho management to'do Its full shuro to promoto tholr growth, anil prosperity. . ’ .
A 'representative .of thoVCompany will bo plcnsod to call on parties who do not at present use water* from Its mains, and oxplaliV rates, teriiiH, method of servlco, ote.
PLAINFIELD—UNION WATER COMPAP
176 North Avo., Plalnfleld, N. J, and 141 Broad St., Weitfleld, N. J.
OPTICIANS219 Broad Street
' Elizabeth, N. J
to ber and nò Intention'
Phono 36-M “
CHA5. S. Q IVEN5PAINTING AMD DECORATING* . ' *
Satisfaction. Guaranteed
38 Johnson Avanua, ..CRANFORD
Telephone 157-J ■
CLYD E C. BELLREGISTERED ARCHITECT
South Avoaua, ORAWFORD
F R E D H . J A H N"(Successor to Philip Jahii 1
House, Sign and , ' _Fresco Painting
Plain anti DoeorativoPaper Hanging
and dealer in- ■ GLASS, OIL, PAINT, VARNISHES
AND W ALLPAPER Cranford, Now Joraoy
Telephone 26-M
T H E FO W LS OF T H E A IRns well ns tho cattlo on a thousand hills al| contribute tholr shsro-of
M E A T FO R Y O U T O E A T .This innrkot handles nono but tbe choice grades o f . i
* P O U L T R Y A N D M E A Tft's prlcos nro hosed on. tho many sales and small protlt principio. I t wants your rogular trailo and wo'll got It if yon will only* g iv o 'us a trial. Tho quality ot tho moats and the inodorate prices are what wo rely on to hullil business.t ■
Flab and Clams Every Friday
MILCH'S MARKET “I. HRF.NWASSER, Prop.
TelnplionOH 260, 281
TR O L P
Carpenter and BuilderJOBBING O r B IX KINDS
. ■ promptly attended to <
Screens Repaired and Haw Made to ' Order .
Eatlmatoa Furaiahad
W E CAN REACH ITno matter how high up. how lowly located tho plumbing troublo In your demesne. Llkcwlso, wo can plan for you a sanitary plumbing system to meet the most difficult arrangement ef rooms In your house. Everything In tho plumbing line gets our: very best attention.
HESS BROS,Plumbing, Heating, Tinning
Telephone 314J -7 8. Union Avenue ORAHVORD
HdkId^im Pbona 2CU-I Il«ldence-Phone 18LW
L. J. DBBNNAN Ù E. TOYS
BRENNAN& T 0YÉ
.H 1
p. o. Bo* m cranford plumbing, Tinning,
Wolfe Carpenter Co., Specialists In '
- Real EstateAND *
Insurant". Elizabeth Trust Bldg,
.....ELIZABETH, N. J.Phone Evenings 118-R Cranford
or linden 8513-R
Heating1 1 4 South A ve . C. Ò R n fo rd ;
LAWRENCE F. DO'Automobile R epnijL ,
and Overhauling fTel. 386-M . 1SÌ- C«atj|imial
"CRANFORD, M. J,
i f
ft
CLASS NIGHT, outgoiiig Scnlors o l thè
llic li Kt-lmol liciti tlieir class night l-i-t Fritbty. Indoro a (-routini nudi,-un- " f invitisi guest», ubo tlior-
■ «lUKlily t-njoyed thè null>nf u»d
auditorium o l thè ( ‘Ifvelatitl Sci unii wns elaborately decorateli In tlie ,-|as» color» of Rolli unii l.roHii. »tieamer» raillatliiR lioni thè (elitre of tlie celllnir loditeli «H I1 Kllow I,liner ro.-e». file Jiiuiiufm-ture ol wliicli- Inni kepi inuny liands• • . . . • . .. . . . 1... » Ini
-ifr-tfit-In In rene oli 1T~ « im e ... twenty years hence,. (lie octnslon lieliiR a Class reunion. Winchester
--------- j ÇrItTon. j,r^nlisl-Hi..»"Aiirc.iírLr-.ajos.-
Llvlng dosine K it che
i
í -
turne. Tlie stnRe was htiriR . miniv perpnulicnlnr «itB* "»>vhlt«* íííhi/í’* Im*1 > % *‘|<' ' ft.l ions Iiieinliers. Rüili il into view sin ■ resshi'lv eiu li with a costume ami spi ecli a|ipro|iiinte tu the <liariitt<-i wlili lí the supposed lapse of a Mineo f v e n í s l iad i l e u l o p i d .i., ti... 111. v t scene the class lunl
< iivrsdieir|on|i-ot--t.ije-r\y ill eo'Ulljjj.nil-lit or tlie seniors, m wnnn ■ ■■>.'devitÓnl unions hllhlts. ( Illlllll ties anil possessions to tinR ii i i l in i le s . T h i s , l i k e tin t h e p ro R r in n , rii vi
Dorothy Mirabel h KIDeAvi-rv.
William■Hailey
Adams, (nppi-rl teenier
Averv. (lower)
erls-' underrest of
opliorlunlt y tor ......r.litnnoreil nersoinil lilts. .tli'o .li'iliiinëdif the Seniors to;,; the pi,-slilflit of the InconiliiR .InnOis, nini to Miss Kilniond and Mi. Landis rnrli a framed picture of file class Miss: lodinomi inailo an ntl- dross Mr. Landis u short speech of thanks Mr. Landis was also pic-.s e i i le d with a Irai.... portrait ofA11 in tin 111 Lincoln, a Rill to theschool. . . .l olluwIiiK tills, l-'Iorenco- Dipi'.
with their Ri-iierally iccoRiil/od pio-it>H: nml »rave to Miss ..
Ir«* on Itclialf of Mu* Seniors, a pal« of I,lonze hookelids ns a token of Rial lindi- fur ■her helpfulness- Theclass sntiR, written lev KITu Maioncj, was t lii'ti ,siuir, which dosed Hin ■ proRi'iiiii and the Hour was cleared for daticiiiR.
.lames Buyer..-...-.....(iertrude Marshall... l-'l-ed Lovell..............
Hohort Newton......Edward Thomas.....Edward Tomlinson.. Donald Warner.......
- ....... *... -•
Class WillCHARLOTTE COX -,
4 Presentation of Pictures and Mantle ' - FRED ERICK LOVELL
Presentation of MementosFLORENCE T R II 'P
e V ea l .elation el's Pari
t 25th ; the ne:
... Imp.____paleft
adoption D fT lieTrTpt'i ¡Hr the Men'i
_j--postpol next Tut
prrangenften Tliere will p. m. nexi lan Ctiui
__ I evening¡Sunday inrS
The Rev. Epreaeh at ¡T rin ity Chi I-will be the iT rin ljty loi. A .siftiir¡ w ill be lie ! ¡b y Mrs. Fre f Hansel, at ! on Claremo N School Ci llton is wet troubles o l is a fine hi
■ his name I brought hi
Walter, ]
Kleatmr l-'lorlm- lh-urdsico; (upper) ■Winchester ltrltton. dr., .(cen ici). Elizabeth Itryant, (lower)
Class Songc l a s s
CLASS RIGAMAROLE
Heaviest Ip i '.'J «o- wlieax lest f f J T írettiest-
Handiest—
Most Popolar flirt ....Most Popolar Itoy...Best Luoking. ( . i r l ... Best LookniR Itoy. .. Fatte-tThlnnest-------- .......Most Afhh'tic Itoy...Most.Athleth* (tiri . .. W ittie-t _Best «¡tri Dninvr..Best Itoy Dann-r.....Neatesf.....................Quictest.....- ........•.....Loudest- -Best Nnturcd...........licaviest Line Itoy...
lin e Ciri.
Handlest
Most Attractive. Most Conscient ionsClass, Orator.—.......Most vInipiisit ivc-.-.. Most Belt Sal ¡»lied.Class Poet......... . .Best Kimrt-.........Most Stubborn.......Biggest Flirt.........Most Unusual. .......
Biggest Bind-—....
*
Xaxlest— .— ........Beat Dressed Itoy.. -Seat Dressed GirL...
.......Florence. Tripp.
....... ..I-Yeil l.iivell........Florence Tripp
...... l-'reil love ll........Charlotte Cox....Iinrothv Adams
.Alvin Dnnveiit.....Florence Tripp
.....Edward Thomas..... Ionise Harris
..Edward Tomlinson .Ionise Harris
Eleanor Hcanlslee ...... Kilw aril Tlmnms...Donald Hohlnsim...Kilwaril Tomlinson.....:.ltehocca llaluh
...... I-'mily llalRh.Kilwaril Tomlinson
i Ismlse Harris Flm-once Tripp..
lireannr Itenrilsloe: .....1‘hilip Slmlicon(iilrtnulo Mars hull
.....'l-ldward Tlionms.......liehceca llalRh.......Alvin Harwellt..........dlmmy Savor.........Clmrlotto Cox......Kcheccn IfalRh
Philip Slmliei-ti . Donald \\ ariu.-r ' Doniild Warner
........ l-'red Ixivcll
...«Florence Tripp
Favorite Class............liest All-rmtnil ( ¡ ir l...liest All-nmnd Hoy....Peppiest.....................Most Happy--go-lucky. Itesi Chums....:...........
Proli», of Amer. Democracy " - : , Florence Tripli
, Dannili Uobiiisun ' .Louise Harris
Kdna McKtisick î, il a y is & K. & K. llalRh
22ml our elms unKluntc-ii. and lias In any farrwnll In the Midi Srliool wliUll tins dnno ao murli for tln-m anil for wliicli Umy havn ilnm- llictr utionst amt Imix- lln-y hnvt- not mado an jitter failure. Many lhank» ami much grntUmle nre due Ihu fiii;ult>. T*u- *,k u ,c»* 10 all yearn following from ’- 2. , . “ • —
GLASS PROPHECY
SENIOR CLASS HISTORY,. U„H our llluntrloua I'laiw MUrroct ou Its lllpli Srliool ijnij!»-.
V.« - M« - î " “ îU.T.- i'jiml-lo 'lo'uKo lin- » " î i V r c î i o w i ..<1 «Ioidi rl.K Inil conullniti.ilii|Hih the
H>le »I. H...... . - -Ntiine nu ncy for Iho JuiUnriHfhlor uÂTtte.
A* there wan no nnow ut» h ride Imi contributed ear we timi mude our.
kiiiuTn in " v i r . ^ . '^ . r ^ o u lo V ò m 't n K r .C , « « d d i U " RnfnOa: a „nmitna .ILnr cup which V « háTt) clurlahwl ìhu» far. q« ííiAp tiAnro which was flitnnctHl hy two
i ni.-lonl rouHilml of Mr.-'Wlitlou. Tha «»» » * • » # . »»"»•»• »iward Thonm»Wlm-li.l«ii-r. lirltlou S i' I . tX i' Smtl/m-Hlumulili ll"l>ln«,ili . ;. ■ iV. n o W.-CilTn1! 1 Kiully llaleh .
.(u ririuto Mnrsliall . . .".‘. " S L " » . ràlur«l over cldd limitimi «Inllara. wlili h» » ih m - p—á mp ralnnl over olcì»t hunnretj uouarn, wiuu» « "'lc "ÙÔ ." î1 a Vliil'iY il-flns lour to WnOOnilUm, liml.-t Ilio klliilly ■•linl'iToluici- Mr':‘■inXlÎMrWl.iloi, ..ml Mr ta»Uu finn The Heiilorn nrc
clioeolate to help won by the Senior« of
Ii
lly iojUivenabled the ( Ins« 1 .
mum noil Rftli-HiiH-ii mm ou n. i-ounl o/ ,r.",ri ......... .W'l„i'lo*«tiT llrillon : - i ím ln l Tl.V-ii.as » _Pu..al*- WürST-r.liuiu« McCuttrey—............... Kilwnrd Tomlinsonlu rouit. Mnrdull , , y . « lluoW. I l«-ll- i o Ule ««o in t In Un- Si-hool » liljlory.
our I I.i«» i. 1UU1.I1I1II. U 1„ —I.vtiii lu. roulliiunl lij- paoli «ihti-hsUo ciana,ami Ju> 1run, ami ou tills old.t our Year Hook comea oui. On Juno
riense flv ahead for twenty years ami light upon the moon.For there you’ll see the Fenlnr Class that groduates m» Boon.And there upon the moon so green Is Winnie .ltrltton gay, - In Mowing robes of rflntiovv hue; Inventing every «lay. . ■He «ominous all the class to him-becaime he is so proud, .And gaily op the milky way rotmw-noisily the crowd. .A poll of smoko, a Hash of lire, a convict doth appear,And being Don. of course doc« cry, • Ilrlog H obhIc Tripp up here 1’ An expert In clllcleney Moss op with Ktta comes, *A matron in an orphan home, calls Hot and Mx, the chums.A musician and a nurse so good ?eetn hardly, a fit p4lr , .Ho next Appears the vaugelisi Hill Avery most fulr. . .
: llo '«mils his slater up to him, tr tlanccr. ¡known tofftlh................. .......James Cox, an orator» comes wttU a co^ch» Buck Darwent tail.« .Then Ilclen as a UfossninVer comes with her model fairEilna 3leKMslek, fallowed.by a vamping actress rare.- m ■
Tls Kmlly of Mushlhg fume, with Bex lu*r |dayr writer,Theu LUxlo Bryant, railroad queen, whoso salary emi t requite her. ICIcanor l!ear«laIe«V a teacher grave, with collar high and tight, <'ome* up Iho star-lit shlnl|ig, path, John (ilcason-s next hi night. ( A salesman brafe, of cheese so green, he sells IV left,aod rlght, I'ollowlug him comes Mill Hhnheon, In Jockey s chtthes no hrlghL . The« coimw Charlotte Cox bo sad. devoted to a cause, .. .Then llniniy Saycr, the actor bright, comes cracking the old saws. Chief dentist to tin* rrcsldcnt Is Certle Marshall Imld, •Fm l.bm cll ls a wireless-"spark,** all serious and cold. • -W e«w Harris comes In doughtily an agent of -(«»oka Tours’*Fearing1 nought, sin* travels thru Mohammedans ami Moors. a<!tnh” Newton Is a mlnlsten and right Itchlnd him comes Ed Thomas as a romtuelnr singing out Ids mini.And Mindly comes tripping up, Kd. Tomlinson and Warner,Both- gentlemen of wide renown, come from a distant corner.Ed- does all the work of course, an ofilee N»y Is be,Hon as a famous engineer, makes tunnels thru the sen.And thus you'll see In ipenty years, all mists will clear an ay. l ’erhaps you’ll see, perhaps you’ll not, these prophecies we play. .
1b d re d"dozen. St Karl
- tienne.it
- sliiliriR■t 2tî
Cranfor Newark, O result o t a
. . Tiie nexi [ Venice B t
lion w ill b The 'sliarei vote on an stitution, i lire paid ah lias been a
The Girl o f Mrs. Ch: night hlki Katunlay, - turning or gave a pa High Scho grade fact' Tree ex the elm t them Iron tree beeti to -prompt age. T oy suggests such work tree, but I
i ' fled, as yvi » be flnlsheii, Phelps £ts in P itt Oness for t
Is one of bold tiold
ftv o polle Immedtat- u rlously w-
’ -it and he saved by
.- ground as Pittsburg Buffalo a
ini ver LI ever . t ed or f;dtieid__ ;see of I- State enne, toedit
Every“ ;tV ton’s iaui
"LVsjTAmcrlcan *'VÏ®-;-luUy reta
B i
A
y I
A
k -
- n — r
'4,T
■ * ;/ " . ' 1
i
1 u t -. ¿j>iLA , z*
y S».'J,>"
>65‘
-a « —
fri''-
' ahull Nel „rod,” the '• which wi
A ford ,The;■ day, Jum■ einliodles
stories, a mostly o tionally i Barry wi
The W ing of tl home of tion, all Forest a the com Mrs. D. tary an Mrs. J.-, D. D. Inrepresen namely: Warner; tin; St. Kayner; Fisher; A. Rich Gallaghi for seht will be ment ex
t
The p - Thomps
on Satt Thomps street terestln as it di
■ of Inal«....... of last:S ' a r«. Mrs. H i V ffeg ioner
- V, J »notable stii Hie cor ^ T h is wc
-<*on ly U ' , hY vation
elation. . aerjed
friends£
I V.
__ Gleason. Jr., (upper)ihr Story Ilaigii. (center)- - -----McRae Haigli, (lower)
l/inise .\njiuii-uo iiiirr is (upper) -Frederick. 11. Lovell, (renter)
•- Helen J. McCaffrey, Uower) "
~EilnirU~MuRuslck. (uihiotr ltoliCrt.Barney Newton: Jr., -(wpper)-. Ella Ham Maronuy, (center) • Christ Ine E. Perkins, (center).,
Gertrude Elizabeth Marshall (lower) Donald Wallace Robinson, (lower)
-Jamo» Saye.r....(upper)--Philip J.-Sliahcervlccnter) ___Edward  . Thomas Uoyrer)
_EJward-V. T*nmtlttson. »."PP ” *, Florence Joatitm Tripp. í*
J Í j. A'
St-M ..otest wood. 1
vani 'ehow i : School Ing of o f tale commi
■ make Club e ago w a men
-. {salso . - o f thè S Ing te lisom e Tliasac
Centri it boi thè n<of Rmolooal
" 4^ '’ > Jr~~, .• ' » - . í-V
; *8Wy
n€&~
\ * g
THE CRANFORD CITIZEN AND CHRONICLE THURSDAY. JUNE 22, 1922
¿ t u f f a iW -,V ”
*
iWieh
ìIF IE d
Ì .S ? EiNtSÄ ’ S S S *’
Town Notes.
& V* i**ja»t* •. — j
hg fr„v , S1 'efth.-r J ' “*3*- I
». A... i--,-. . >:
» K i.,-..OVutif,,^ Ï *” «ari.,'~ „ ‘ H Vs* [’
. ‘It* “ • " » » l
\mfor«L u |
3R R estliornc-i.... -
[ Prom now on" the Public Library be closed every Saturday af
i and evenlnguntll Septem-
[it ie Venice Building and Loan »elation will hold an outing to « ' s Park. Bound Brook, Sunday.
___list 25th.[ A t the next meeting ot Tonaluka Vibe. Imp. O. R. JL, June 27tli,
-hree palefaces w ill be given the pdoption-Degroe.-
TÎie'trIpto'01yiüplC;Patk,®Snnod iy the Men’s Club for Tuesday night I'aspostponed.jin account o f , r ain
table Jit-
ox, (upper! Cox,. (center) • ruent, (lower)
ml which Jms dono so nt>y have not mado an i Tho tk‘Bt of luck to I 1 — K. H. II. *22.
onr r
«V flirr,i.î- pt. l.-.rfr 4, Mr' l: ‘ft lace. p (,f
' R SALE- Ot. tLHl !V.
■eantitut [>,' >n S p r in g» '» IT , n -A
•'■''»iter, i
‘U-'C. i r;'i l lhot uatw.
•• -met tl,..,-,. it I< h :i: -
-•--•eénraim¿
■■ . IBS of . comiiNt..
uiretn.-rtt- 1
. 7-ic
uj) liorel” :•
if ■
tail.. .
icqulto her. lit. tight,I In night.I rlcht. iso bright.
i old Raw s.
JÎEOUS• äw ornali
. day |».,k C. Breca- •e. ttan-
. iFjp- "* or iti«»-.
trold Seal
. kgrouti.l. 4SM. n muri.I
” id dr»T- . ' I e party
■; Ue IV. f. in toup ' Jf St cream / nstreet
. --ìCrcaui.^rf
fu next Tuesday, the 27th. Other arrangements being' the game. '
T liere w ill b$ a musical service at _g p. m. next Sunday in the Presbyterian Cliurch. Tills will . ho the last evening service until the second Sunday i nr'September. . ' '
The Rev. Harold Burrell will preach at the evening servico at Trinity Church next Sunday. This w ill be the last evening service at Trin ljty for the Summer. .~ 'A Sliver T eaT to fT rln ity Church w ill be held next Friday attemooii by Mrs. Fred Davis and Sirs, George Hansel at tho home ot the latter,
i on Claremont Place.\ School Commissioner E.. A. Hamilton is wearing a smllo these days, troubles o f his official position. It is a One big boy, the first one; and
■ his name is Donald and tlie stork brought him. Friday night.
Walter, 11 year old son of James Hardman, for many years a resident of Cranford, but now residing . In Newark, Ohio, died last week, tho result o t a k|ck by a horse.
The next regular meeting of the Venice Building & Loan Association w ill bo held Thursday, Juno 2«. The shareholders will at 'tills time vote on an amendment to the Constitution, changing tho Interest on prepaid shares from 5% to 6%.. This lias been approved by the Directors.
The Girl Scouts, under the care o f Mrs. Charles Wallace, took an all- niglit hike to Soldier’s Beach last Saturday, camping In a tent and roturning on Sunday. Last night.they gave a party to the Seniors of tho H igh School at Fireman’s Hall, tho grade faculty being also Invited.
Tree experts aro busy spraying the elm trees about town to free them from the ravages o f the elm tree beetle, which If not attended to promptly^tlireatens great damage. Township Engineer Collins
■ suggests if private owners want such work done, the cost Is (10c per
4 tree, but ho must be promptly notl- ! fled, as work for tho Township will ► be finished within a few days.L" Phelps Pen Aldrich o f Cranford,
¡P--”ta In Pittsburgh this week, as wit-' uess for the City ot Pittsburgh. Ho fa one of two men who witnessed a bold hold-up and the shooting o f two policemen. One policeman died Immediately and tho other was seriously wounded. Pen was right In I t and he states that lie was only saved by dropping fla txon tli?
■ ground as in® football game. Front i f Pittsburgh ho w'ill go to Rochester, ¡Buffalo and Utlea, On business.! |
V Every detail ot Booth Tarklng- , . E ton’s laughable charactcrlzatloa o f
"TaTA u ier lcan boyhood- has been, faith- “ fu lly retained for the screenlnMar-
S it shall Neilan’s production of Pen- m i , rod,” the First National attraction
PU R E LY PERSONALMalcolm Wamock of Miin street,
returned from college yesterday.E. E. Harris of Union avenue, is
confined to the house by illness.Arthur Mack o f ’ W illow street,
leaves today for a trip through the South.. • ‘
Mrs. C, T Parks of The Riverside, has gone to Washington, tor a few days. '
Miss Achsah Lewis will leave for her home In Westfield, .Mass., tie morrow.. Miss Bella Jordan and Master Phil Lakey le ft lor Melvin Village, N., II., l o t l a y * r;„ ,.A . , __L
Mrs. D. B. Currie of Blooiningilnle avenue, spent the .week-end will)
CONDITIONS CONDEMNEDBig Public Meeting Strongly Urge*
Changes in School Organization to Belter Conditions,—Super- vising Principal Edmond and Principal Landis Freely ■
Discussed.— Board of Education Refuses - .
■ to Act. .tino of tlie biggest public meet
ings ever, held in Cranford and sure-
TFTends aPTTuShlngrtrt:Mbis Ethel Mnpos, of Burchfield
avenue, will Join her parents at Saratoga Springs tomorrow.
S. R. Rroeseher of Lincoln avenue, lias returned from a two I months'-trip to Germany. ,
Miss Bessie Corliett, of 7 Springfield avenue, is visiting friends at South Attleboro,'Mass.
Next Friday night, Miss ltessie Corliett and Mrs. Annie, Mercer, will loin the White''-Shrine in .'Newark.1 Mrs. Edgar II. Miller o f Orchard street, is entertaining her daughter. Mrs. Lawrence Naylor, of Baltimore.
Edward Montenecourt leaves Saturday on a business trip to Argentina and other South American States. _ L _ . ,
Natlinniel R. Foster of Lbekport. N. Y „ formerly «'resident in ( ’rttn- ford. Is .president of tlie Isiekport Board of Commerce. .
I John \V. Heins left Saturday for two weeks’ salmon fishing nl Quebec. Hope Ids usual good hick follows hint tills year.
Mrs, F. C. Murey and Miss Helen May Murey, of The..Riverside,.with their friend'Miss Anne Park, are spending two weeks « t .Lnke Placid.
Mrs. Andrew Warnoek-and Miss Knillv Ilaigli.went to Princeton lust
I Monday to attend class day and commencement at. tlie. University.
S. It, Droosclier returned Saturday from, a two months’ business trip, to Europe ns fit Tfiid genial as over. It was a pleasure to greet him. -
Mrs. Francis Hansel of Union avenue, gave a children's-- party last Saturday afternoon in honor of the.- third birthday anniversary of her son. There were giimes mid rofresh- linents. ■ . .
Mr. and Mrs. Harry A. Groesboek Jr., have been spending a w ith nl Hamilton Hull, and have flow gone to Chupptunin, N. Y„ wlii-re they lire building a Summer honie.
Edward Rouvet, A former resi-
the one called for last -Monday night at ('leveland Seluiot to discuss
meeting. However hurriedly called.I It was in tvoth numbers and stand-1 Ing ■ In the -community o f those ! present, (a representative gathering! o f lnent citizens.) I
“Tiie fact that the vote on the motion calling for a change In the present system, in order to prevent the discord that has prevailed In recent years, was almost nnanl l mens. Is highly significant. Early I in the meeting the sentiment, appeared almost equally divided. Clearly, then, the opportunity granted for a free discussion was convincing to many persons that | dissatisfaction lias been too general
tho nart o f both the public * “
Health
-,hrM»t—-c< null lions—m nlilUe gravg need for changes in the organization. Tlie situation was. ta iled over Safunliiy night and Sunday and 500 liuml hills distributed Monday afternoon. That tliere is a very great |public interest in the question was levidoneod by over .150 -who Were I present splendidly reprosentnti.vo of all sections and Interests la Cranford. ,
That such a meeting would be called was quickly known by tho
on ni«' limi- » i »w *» — • isome nienihcrs oU ilie tv'liool-Kuard.| for a 'successful admin 1st rut ion o f I school-affairs under existing condì-1
afilíe
.which w ill be shown at tho Cranford Tlieatre on Monday and Tuesday, \lune 26th and.27th. - The cast emliodles all the. episodes o f tlio stories, and Is a large one composed mostly o f Juveniles, who are exceptionally adept at their art. Freckles Barry will play the leading part:
The W. C. T. U. held its last meeting o f the season, and annual elec- home o f Mrs. R. A. Richards on »ion, all day last Tuesday, at the Forest avenue. Officers elected for the coming year were: president, Mrs. D. B. Currie; recording secretary and corresponding secretary, Mrs. J. A. Knowles; treasurer, Mrs. D. D. Irving; also six vlcerpresldcnts representing each chureli in town, namely: Presbyterian, Mrs. Spencer Warner; Episcopal, Mrs. LauraMartin: St. Paul's -.M. Mrs. M aw Rayner; First M. E., M r* John E. Fisher* Christian Science, Mrs.* B. -A.'-Richards; Roman Catholic, Mrs. Gallagher.0 The W. C. T. U. prizes for school essays on_ --Tempmmce w ill he awarded at the commencement exercises tonight.
The pupils o f Mrs. Ethel T ou ig Thompson gave their annual recital on Saturday, June 10th. _ « t Mrs. Thompson’s studio, 11..street Tho program Was both Interesting and enjoyable, showing as i t did not only the Improvement
_ v e t ,/ « ......dent, who Is no\y/lo<'«îc<l « t Sieger. III. paid n shortvislt ut tlm home of Mr.ttnd Nlrs. Fi'oilerk-k Kuutner, of Union avenue, on Tuesday, while on la buslp^H trip cast. 'f Mrs. Thomas Watson, sister of the Misses Oakcy, arrived from hnghimi on the S. 8. America last Saturday, and lms Joined Mr. Watson in Scarsdale with one of tho children. Two others are staying at <>«Ko> Hall: , ' - ,
Mid .and Mrs. Clinrles Skillman of Central avenue, attended the commencement exercises sd Stevehs Scliool last Friday, whetL tlieir win Charles Spillman, Jr„ was gia- duated. ' , ,
James C. WngstalT, ten-year-old son of Walter WagstaiT.of < oiuui- hud. Ohio, :1s. visiting Ids grniid; motlier, Mrs. J. C. Wagstall of Holly street, having made tlie long joui- ney from ids home all alone.
MrH. F. M. Smith gave a party last. Saturday evening at the. residence of Mrs.'G. G. Miller, on Sylvesti.i I street. Fifteen guests from Roselle and Cranford were present, wlm enjoyed a program of games, with - freslunents.
Thé R cy. Kenneth P. Martin «p en t most of last week at Island Ileiglits, N. J- where lie attended a Summer Scliool for clergy. *'<is week lie is soperintelulmg tlie taking of college entrance exuiriina- tlons at tiie High School. ,
iMoslicr onü M-,. w 2rri?.‘ , w .... i,..,
I Miss Ferguson and Mrs. G. l . o f Crpnford..
eiviii s of Tlhi. present' sf-liool l( ‘ glme and tliey got busy."so the meeting may fairly be liehl^to represent present day feeling on the srlinoj <|Uostlnn 111 Cranford.
Mr. F. T. Frazer 'culled the. meet- jug to order mid Miv Izmls Weiers- iuieli was chosen secretary. Tin! rail lor the meeting, the.hand hill distributed In the afternoon was read as follows:
“Mass meeting tonight,-Cleveland. School, S p. m., to disetiss tlie school 'situation arising from tlio fact that •three men are «lim it to leuvo tlie High Scliool -faculty-owing to dissatisfaction with conditions-■ AH- parents ami taxpayers should ho present, .1. ( ’. McG ray tie, president Cranford civic Board:.David Blown, President. South Side Civic'Association:; Frederick Fay, President of Mini’s league-; F. S. Franklin. A. L. Woodland, (Mrs.r K. K. llestoii, C. W. Gramm, Win, F. Hoffman."
Presidout Denning of tlie Board of Education took-tlie lloor nt once amt said the cull for the meeting ups a shock to tho Hoard. Ilo said the Board Inn I signed contract of Mr. Landis: Mr. Wliiton was going into other business and Mr. llarts- hol ne was being dropped. Somu one suggested that no names were used in tlm gall and asked why Mr. Denningused.ilu-se names, lie said ho must have got the Information from the Journal,----- :
W-jit-JGipklns said very plainly it Is not pi-net ii-nlly possible to Imvo a male principal of High Scliool work successfully under, a fcumlo supervisor. Col. Hayes asked why. Mr. Hopkins said -it was. hard to express. F. W. park said lie believed no man could lie respected who took orileis from any woman except ids wife. School Trustco Mrs. Miilor rcnil u round roliln signed liy 10 toncliers favoring the Supervising Principal. Former Scliool Trustee .1. Ross Bates told why ho had refused to stay on the Board, of action to "discipline a teaeherTiikon at one meetingonly to ho rescinded at
tiens. ■ . ,,’’Reganiloss of tho morlts of tho
contentions, such a situation timkes a révision of tlie systotn not.only ndvisiildo but neeossary In tlie In terests of our chlldern and mtr coin munit y. ..
“ It Is good, tberofnro, tlmt sentiment was expressed In so décisive a nmiiner“ tlmt there can be no douiit In tlie tninds of tlie Seliool Bonn! mendient wliere n large ma- lorltv of our cltizens stand. lo r one i niu 'sallsfietT tlm l sirhitrlH-
By Dr. Charles Miller
o n e in ee i i i iK -Hie next. Trustee;,I,ones told of dir- liriillles eneounlefed In securifig action In tlie Touchers Committee.Mr. Miller, former liead o f tlie lllgli School, fold how proud he had been to work under Miss Edmond. II. N. i ’iske sufd from^nll tlmt appeared the Supervising. Prinelpul was a’-'Czar.'' , , ,
Many others took part in tlie d< hate ini hotli sides, Includlng .Mr. Rottsclmfer. E. 11. Ferguson, Mrs. Aldrich, Mr. Gramm, J. A. Sperry and Trustee W. A. Hamilton, who gave clearly impressions as a brand new member of tho Board. Apparently tliere was an attempt to nmko It unni*»!' tho oull for tho nicotine \viim jm uttiH'k on tho HuporviHinK lh incipal. hut tills was shown not to ho so. Tlio net result o f tlio meeting after nearly throe hoilre’ talk was tho adoption of the foJIowl.PK resolution by a vote of 5 or 6 to 1:
“ RESOLVED: Tlmt a Committee he appointed to, appear before tlie meet big to state that It Ih tho senso of this meeting tlmt tlio office'of. Supervising Principal ho abolished mid that tliere lie created separate offices of Superintendent of the Elementary Scl.oolif-and Supervising Principal of tlie Cleveland School.
Mr Froil T. Frazer, clmlrinan of tlie niecting,-suW'Tuesday morning. ••.There. mV u f(’W outstanding fads In connection with last nigM'sTiiass
lllll* 1 um ¡'nimmii ---Kent am! vnpublo a hoard ns wo have, tlioilgh holding lionest differences of opinion on some Issues, w ill respect tills sentiment anil take •measures accordingly.. "The present administrators of our scliool system art* individually men and women of high calibre. Tlie competency of tho Scliool Board or the supervising principal or the-ofaeulty Is not questioned. Wind the public sicks Is harmony among them, and tlmt I believe the public of Cranford Is determined to nslst upon obtaining at all Imz
This resolution was iiresented to the Board o f . Education Tuesday nigh! by Mr. Hopkins, Mr.-Gramm mid Mr. Franklin. There was a large number o f citizens, 'present,lifid -smntv of-..IJieiie-W-l’JT .J1-1. support- of - tlio resolution. • ■'*’ Board liail quite n discussion of Its own hut refused to take .any action, tlie vote on all motions on Hie subject result Ing In n t i e . 1 Denning iund Trustee Miller. \\a(- son mid! Messlek opposing any change utid Trustees Jones. I liomti- son, Cnilckslmnk und Hamilton favoring action In accordance with t he resolution ndopteil at tlie public meeting.' Trustee Haas Is away for several months In tiie South.anil theClerk wns-tllroc.ted to ask hitii tocome home to make a full Board meeting, tho Hoard to fray tho expense of the trll». it Is understood however, that Mr. Haas would vote against Hie clinnges asked for. so n tliat ease Ills coming hack would not change'the present Ht'itus.
From out of tho mass of talk It may I» ' gathered tlmt 1 rluelfral Landis was reappointed in response to tlio big petition signed by_ s<»me 200-parents- some months ago but since, tlmt tlitio condltlonH imvo lie- cotlio wUrso from bis lH»l..t-oi vhwr and lie cast an anchor to windward by- securing another appointment.TheTdtlzens-geiierally-have .becoineIncensed that the Hoard shoidd atlow sudi ..... to oblaln amare trying to sliou; tlielri wishes, .ntnl tho Board by its fie vote refuses tfr take action.
.... _.. An Operationgivo ali luljustmeiit. -whhh requlres Imt . .
few seeomls. •— - The 'tcrrorot nii-oinrndioii (s iin iiwtiil tldng to fii»!+'.--N()C- so'timny operili ioiis for aiipemllcll Is are lielng ori ered loday os formerly. imi tliéy aro stili coiishleied a necesslty If tli, ap- liendlx Is ruptuied thè operation may be coiishleied a im issity.Imt il is noi, possibili to he certaln of tliis In iiilviiiu-c. .....
Ordinarli)' In tho troiilde known as appeiullcltls thè e is no Immediate danger. even wlien Mie palli is acute "/Tho olilronnu'Uc itcoiiIh .uro filli --of nu»o aitor l’iis» wlnro Uil nnnoml>ltlrt oin'iation luw Ikm»u uvoidrtl by ehlropnwtU' **phml ailjustmeiits and tItele me even records of eases wlmre adjustments lirouglit- a recovery wlu-n thè npiietidlx wus deiliirod tohave lieeii ruptlired.
CHILD OF SEVEN TOO WEAK FOR OPERATION
’-Iti November. ‘I'dIt», my daughter Violet, 7, was taken 111 wlili a severe l.aln In her right gioiti which the met lea < odor called appendicit is. For several days she kept gi Uing M | ihinlly \vorsrjuul worsoniul u ronsultalloii o f.tlo ilo is saiil tho. anniindlv. liad ruptured and called it perltonll s. She was so iiim lown tlie doctors'^siild she cimili not-livn nnd'wi’ ie w ill, ng a chlropractoi-' should he called. -I f pviiple mily -knew that 'H tiradors can handle crii leal eases. We eoiild hard y lidii u. our vi s is sli gn.din.lly Improved from day to-day I mu sure the
clilld A w !«^ io r life to' eldro,ii'«cj|e— George G /.lni|deiiiati,Uliiropriielle Keseiirdi Bureau Statement No. l.iOSN.
Y O U R H EALTHYour hoiilth can't start lieforo you-telephone 555-W for an
appointment. ......
DR. CHARLES MILLERC h i r o p r a c t o r
19 UNION AVÉ., North (Shapiro Building) CRANFORD, N. J.TELEPHONE B55 W „
Offlco Hours: Tuesday and Thursdayi *-7;30 hi.- Saturday, 10:30 A- M. to 1 P. M.
. ..-No Charge for Consultation. 'N E W A R K OFFICE : 40 Spruce St.,—Mon., Wecl, FrL—16, 7-8 P.M,
Bu s'hi ess transacted by ¡¡lie I|o,ir,J of Education Tuesday '* ,''rdiscussion mid vote J*" -tlon was mainly routine. I hi. «“ • 1 lowing new; teachers were engaged I Jm recoiiiiiicndatlon of tlm Omimlt-1
t0Louis A. Rico—Coinnmrdnl.James J. Nash—l ’ hyslcid.._Mrs. Llsowskl -.ird grnjlo. Grant- Fmil A. Knwller- High Hdioo . Kdltli H. Hudson-(commercial. Blanche Wllllmnson—Grant,Frances Slturo—Grant.Jessie Artliiir Sheriiiun. ,Tito resignation of Miss H ew itt
was accepted with regret. 1
Cranford Civic Hoard won Mayor I Roach's cup offered hydtlm to tin. organization turning In the greatest- net aiimunt at thedom im mlty Circus. The/ V. I. A. stood next on tho | list. __ ■ .
— - First Psrmanent Photaoraph*.About one hundred year* ago tho flrat
permanent photographs were secured' by a Frenchman named Niepce. -Jn 183» Nlapce entered Into partnership with Daguerre, whose nnme la remembered | hi Daguerreotype*.-
Plume Cr.inford 396
CHAS. E. DOOLEY ESTATEFuneral Director juid
Uk ol Modem Fimer.d Chapel II Desfred Folding Chaira and Card Tablai to Hire
218 North A v e . West, Cranford, N. JJÖUIPIa u t o CORTEGE EQUIPMENT
TAXI SERVICE?New ’Phone Number 53
">/ Day and Night Service
“ ON DUTY A LL THE TIME’'
m i t aid no* omy vw 7 3 » , o f Individual pupils over tlm work % 11- of last year, but the development of
Mrs. Thompson's fork from the be- ■* f c .infiitp on Hia Advanced pupiL A
__wase cuumuiu nw»» PIa" ° S:
^ iio is work is of very great valuanot x f^on ly tectonically but la the cuttL ' .Ivation ot musical taste and appro
" elation. Light refreshments were"eerxed to the many mothers and
friends o f the pupils present. .S t Mark’s Men’s Club o f St. Mark’s •rotestaut Episcopal Church, Gar- rood, have posters out announclng , vaudeville and moving picture
’¿how to be held at th e/ran k lin :■ school auditorium on Friday even
ing o f June 30th. A splendld array •1 o f talent has been secured and the
committee is siSKlng no expense to ' make this affair a.-success. This
Club organized a little over a i m - ago w ith six members and now has ' M em b ersh ip o f thirty. The CJub .. j* also plann’Hg- to take *he children
S the Sunday School on a day^s out> t in z to Duke’s Park at Somerville, : r a n tune to A e ,u .t. t l ie 0 ,un!l,
g g 0i,rM“ 'e ta r t~ e p - l t o * . ^ from the ^University o I . « J
now^MSOciatcd wUh Uio
' « . ^ d S % r h t V , e e „sdt for the wedding.Jsirs Edgar H. M iller of Orchard
gtreet. gave a large brklge »t- Uu Casino lastguests were present. Uaijfift^r ro _ la v e the keynote to t ^ f lo r a l df.co rations, which were profuse. Prizes Were won by the following players. Mrs GnpIn. Mrs. McGrayne Mrs, Harriott, Mrs. Brundage, Mrs. L. L- Blake. Mrs. Butts; Mrs. Hayes, Mrs. Messick, Mrs. Stephen J. Cox. Mrs.in T. Harris, Mrs. Jfepnor, Mrs. C. C._Parks, Miss Fiske, Mrs. E. T.jTowler,- Mrs. St. John Richards, Mrs; - Andrews of'Westfield, Mrs. R.C. Smitji. of Philadelphia, Atrs^BearilsJey of Fanwood, Mrs. DuBois of Atlantic 'Highlands,-and Mrs. Bay Harcommr bf Plainfield.
nllfismi, iupppr);
T M m c q ü Ir^ ^ s ite -o ^ h e -w m e r^ | .- :^ ¿ p j . _ g aj^ jp ^ {_ ^ p ap{orj ^ i laa.received _ a n _ appointment _ t ic t l ie police force.
CRANFORD THEATRE T«l. 422-W
5c to 25c a RollBeautiful Cut-Out Borders to Match All PapersOur nrices do not toll the story of Q U ALIT Y offered in our iiuinue stores. Others are charging exorbitant pr,ces for the. same ID E N T IC A L papers. .
Hundreds of Pattern» to Choose From
Duplex Oatmeals—Best------- — -----Sold with or without borders
I Th u r s d a y
A LL STAR OAST in - ----“Carnival" '
I Aesop’s Fables Patiie News
a t 12c
Paper your own home. Instruc- ' tion sheet free on requestPRACTICE MAKES PERFECT
a roll iWr operate »tores in TWKNT Y-ONE
• citie*. »elling high-grade wall paper at low prices. A visit will convince you that our offerings are better values than any bargain* or sales offered by other shops or department stores; ,
J E N N I N G S -Wall Paper Co.
(COOPER CHAIN)NEWARK, N. J.
878 B R O A D S TR E E TNearC. R. R. of H.J. Passenger .... • Station, and- -
.PATERSON, N. J.2f>5 Market Street
| F R ID A Y . - - - .P A U L IN E FRED ERICK in
- “Two Kind» ol Women" i I Topics of-the Day News
Rolln Comedy •* - ' ’ ' I ‘
| SATURDAY' /W A ND A H A W LE Y in
• “Bobbed Hair’’' „ Campbell Comedy~“Stokg5‘*iolry
| Mutt & Jeff Review
MONDAY,TUESDAY
HPEOiALI SPECiAL! FRECKLES B A R R Y in
' “Penrod” ' -- -J ly Ttootli Tarkington
. i*athe News
W EDNESDAY
d o u b l e -f e a t u r e D AY -E LAINE HAMMERSTEDS in
- - | "W ay o f a MaicULCONW AY TE A R LE in
. - ' and. “The. Man o f Stone"
sm ESB SB B B SSB SSB SB ESSB S
CAMP K EEP-O FFA Two-Act Farce Comedy, given by the C E. Society
oi the Preibyteriao Church on
Wednesday, June 28th ..Daodog Will Follow .. ^ •
Proceeds for Charity
l i
i
e •< • í>
DorothyE
_ W illi»!
Most Po Most Po Dost 1am Dost 1am Fattest,.. Thinnest Most Atl Most At> W ittiest Dost (Hi Dost I to Neatest.
«¿Quietesthomiest Dost Nt
i lloavloH- . «.Heavies i ■< pro tt tOI
Handlot
b' Most AMost O
> Clnss O Most I i
• Most 8 ‘ Cfess 1
v'. Best-Si r - Most 8
Biggest - Most l
i Blggos
■ Laziest• : Best I
B e s t !
1U
4 H .
S t r ik in g a S t r id e
, W i t h P o l l y
By JACQUELINE RUSSELL
(y.' Ly McClure ftcwapap'T byiidicato.
' Well. Unit 8Htl(*.s I t ! ' ■1'ollVK IwlJL* VS H* llU'fUl, <*\ i'll U lilt
aiMinirtii'i-d-------La»—------ --------------------------.----- From lit* NtronghohJ <Tf,IliAz
tlniit find (Mitt of nil Polly * motwls,__- *N ’ ** .uriiu:_ iliiiitjiiiJ:__
vmis iiliimsi ¿,i, mnl n h ’J.i Ik» \\~u s prlv- Jli'Kijd to look ut lo u ili In tin' jifiMiii ut I’fvis, with u jmtromvuh« uir thul vus almost hoiilKii.
"NrllJr.s wlmtV" Jo* lni|ulr«»«| pi/.lly. rl <» hour hoi* rnv»*. In*r lirowii »•>«•*
< phmm'M. Ih t curly Im-ihI v**lm*iimji it In /^iior «I'slurrs, whs worth m u t I/M iik
«»v«»n ii quiet muJiiijr. |»o (h eliled. With J'ollv hour Ik* wns rcrtaii» to he .ills- turhert hooniT or Jnuw, niivliow; ns
_m-IJ liio -suuiier.__________ ,____ ________#,lt's tills iir iiilo ,’ sin» expliilue«),
'Advlri* to \ oiini; AuthoiH.' w rltlm hy Mnrv Huy (ioor^r. L lsleu.lo this h it: ‘I should coiinsol liej'lum'iH toultcinlit only (he hiiiiphst storh's, teeming with ucllou. Piitw, when they him» ‘ struck Iheir slrhlo;" they run work out more complex plots nnd psychological clmraclcr portnm il.’ "
Ned cocked Ids head on one side with Jiist ^the il^ht thade of careful
. considenitllui............. . ."It sounds nil right,V he ventured,
flmdlv. •She pounced upop him In a verbal
whirlwind. ■ • ■• * on den t nmlerstnnd." slie wailed.• "Of course it s all rhdill T I iiiL'S the trouble! Ilut tell me. bow can oik» ever inanufnctiil'e [dots teemim; with iirtloh wiieli ones expenenee Is hedg’d In with teacups and oilier peoples bahlcs/ 1 wish father hud hei'h a detective, or a poiiceiimn, or even, n Neroiidrnte m'lor, instead of a mihur*I mi ii mhilster with a strong sense of
• d u ll! : ' -Ned s sobriety deserted him. A men
tat picture of pinch' dUrnllled Mr. Mavo in tin* role of a horn storming udo r wnh too much. Ills yule of laiml.ter woke ii .^park ol line scorn In I ’ollv s eyes. 1
course- you couldp't l»e expi'cti'd to umleishmd wlint inv writing meoos to me, ’ bias Oonanentcd, her lone lira-
coming, during tb® tirade which theIncensed reprobate delivered to tbe weury attendant; but Folly did not flinch, ¿die busied herself with her notebook and allowed a bruve Interest in the proceeding«.
There wun the usual assortment of caws—mostly of drunkards, disorderly In their besotted condition, many of them old offenders; and one or two depraved creatures whose sole claim to femininity which they may once have had lay in their Marine, detached splotches Af rouge on their mrly, wnsh*d faces. 'Jhey, tin), were knownto*'tlirT‘*JiTdx;rr'niirl—wt-re-di^Hihe<l-of- ir+-jdioxt^-njujwr-tladr. .whhihui-mi Innuceiice falthiK on ears loot; binte
"Wt-itefesl-+yf->nen-;phiji+T-----------------*—;■\cd watched his companion anxious
ly, feeling like u heast for having brought her. lb*r notebook* lay idle In her lop now mid she wnfc staring, pale, fascinated, at these strange creatures of another world. Suddenly,* slot seemed to have seen enough. Quietly she asked him to. take her home.
" I . didn't know that life- w as . like that,“ she whispered shuddering,-wlien thev were once more in the street.
— lio-assiiw-d-hor— "Life—-real Ilf»»—:1s the everyday exist-, cnee of ordinary peojde. It's home, and l»>ve,. and good purpose, ¡extraordinary, dramatic things, such us you are seeking, are artificial. '1 hey may ■he life to a certain few, hut the majority' Jlnd their experiences In simple, everyday content.” j *. "The mission of tin» nmhor should
lie to picture lifn through ills own \m- (lerstiimllng. ’ she mused. "And l suppose tin* greatest thing In life Is |o\e,,t
"It rcrtalnlv Is!” Neil wns emphatic. "Why. lYggy—love is even thing! Without It no one can iutcrpnd tin* meaning of life! With It. fate Is as simple as A It P—a series of episodes leading up to one great event width Is to -direct tin» whole future.’
"'1 hen 1 shall have rovwrlte ti I ’eggv derided suddenly.
• Whv not find It lor yourself, Instead, dcnrV I love you so mueli—"
'1'he w ords rushed out of I heir ow n volition, and Ned was-suddenly-fired by the revelation ot Imw- true they were.-' lie had always.loved her!
I’eggv paused for a moment, hushed1»v his_earnestness. '1 hen. suddenlymischievous, she snuggled against his sleeve._ "(¡nose," she scolded him. "I never expected to learn- about toy subject In nnv other wuv I ’
CRANFORD CITIZEN AND CHRONICLE
Will Dive for Lusitania Treasure
T F 7
fl£M«L 29UCLOOU. and accarulug to th* estimate o f tbe foreign Investigator» more tban half this number.
“Following tbe Slanfu-LancbowfU- Turkestan highway, we ascended a small valley of steep grade directly west of Tsingnlng. Suddenly the high road , for a length o f a quarter of a .mile dropped out of .sight It bad been cut as if chopped off with an ax, leaving tbe fifty-year-old poplars and cottonwoods with which It Is lined partly uprooted, like sentinels stricken at their post
Vlt was Instills. Valley o f -the.Dead: tbaj the most arresting freak-of the tratacíysíír"oi-curr^''-Tw<f'TBwtrbns-'of the aiiHynt,- weli-packèd blghwuy. ac-
SUMMER TALKS
“ I'.had a talk with Willie Weasel suld BUIle Brownie to - Wltiv \y)iV,
ctitnpanled by the tall trees which bordered I t were cut from tbe line of road following the side hill, swept hundreds of yufda over the stream-bed, and set intact upon an angle on top of the heap of loose loess.”
_____ Tlie..-I.......mnn. Hinvwy. now «milliiHig on ,lln» radiiwnr* nv*r near Wala-rtid|dila,- for an espeilltiou to the spot where the.. Lusitania was sunk «iff u e I coast of Ireland daring tlie wur, to malic on attempt to salvage the hore treasure carried by the Ill-filled Cunardcr. Inset Is Benjamin I". Leavitt. «-13ef diver of the vessel, who has Invented a diving suit In which he says he oo i go down MX) feet. . ~ ~
200,000 Killed
Drops Half Mile inLo g Chute; Uninjured
Word_of_Appal!ing Disaster in Kansu Province, China, Just
Reaches United States.
MOUNTAINS MOVED IN NIGHT
Was Just Being Removed.
tun tie. *T uiu eratuped, Ned. My experiences on* ko limited, yet 1 know 1 could do so much. ’
lie was immeilmlely all contrlllon.- "1 in ssorry, I'olly,” lu» said, gently.
"How shall wo g(» about' getting you this experience, which you emveV”
She- was -.lustaiiUy friendly again; •won hy Ills (SmverMon to her cause. Her eyes were Murry twlus of eager (light.
."Would you, Nod-^wouhl you help tne!” she begged, breathlessly.
Ills caution ('vaporatcnl before the fire of Iter lmpuiieut fervor, lie knew, from post experience, that -the adventure was sure to,be u mud one. for I’olly had an uncanny way of doing the lenst expected thing. Yet the thought , of championing her through unknown experience gave him u wuriu rush of feeling as he promised.
¿»he lowered her voice ut her ow,n boldness. • i
"1 want you to take mo to the night court.” she announced. . , |, N\mI wua shocked, protesting, hut with the helpless sense of one who Is Hure of being worsted1. Once determined, folly wius a resolute little tyrant. :
"Hmv can l ever write of people who suffer and sin If l never meet thcmV” she argued, all seriousness.
Ned And certain theories that the sinners «diouhl he as far removed ns possible from the path of unv nice girl—especially «if this one—and hinted as much; hut ¡’oily MiHTcd derlslvely- After, all, (Ids Jhenry of .slieltering women was «lhsnletc, wasn’t It? She much preferre«! Hie enlightened modern svoinan.1ln her simpler, shleld«id predecessor. Ho Ned, with muny ml.s- gtvlngs, took her to night court, to
1 ry-Wat t.lajthc.aor dldness
HAVE NOT ‘ TAM ED ’ LIGHTNINGD’o.iat Not Infrequently Heard Is Not
Dome Out by Facts Concerning Electrical Control.
. When we wish to «peak tlguratlvcly «>f our iteldeveiuetdH In -electricity we nre MccusioimMl to tmusl that we have ''tinned the lightning," or something of the kind. Hut In rcnlltv we have done no such thing. Lightning ls n well-known natural electrical phenomenon: but tin» electricity that we us«» In drawn from another sourro—It was "tame* to start .«with. To catch u lightning dtschanm umi reduce. Its Voltage so that It may l>e utilized Is a dltrj'rcnt nmlter. It may he-suggested that th«» result might not he worth the trouble. -
liver-“ since 1* ranklln's famous kite was sent upon Us (light certain op- tlinistle Individuals have thought that this pretl.v experiment wns the kev to unlohl power nnd wealth. Th«» tumult caused hy a severe thunderstorm has cvhlentlv l«»d them to believe tlrn't vast «piantltles «if el«*ctrhftltv an» tumbling about la tin» upper air. and to render these available to mun needs oniv some method of tapping tlte invisible reservoir. Now, It bus been knld that the (pmntltv «if e!«‘eirlelty taking part In a Hash of lightning could ho collected on a thimble; |>ut th«» handling and restraining of thla thimbleful ot electricity present« problem which few electrical* engineers would cat«» to undertake. It Is a great achievement to use the water nt Niagara to drive a dynamo; but most of us would hesitate ut the Uipught, of employing a stream of rltle bullets t«ir the same purpose.^-Kansas City Star.
. - .. Mistral.Mistral—last of the veritable Trouh-.
odours—was truly gifted lu that A\y was an erudite philologist who possessed n rare creative sense of poetic fornu His name had become ..grottier than any Olivet,uppoal of the «>illpuT of his pen; for <only to (he lunrned few does the bent of his labors .mean anything. It wus to the credit of this not ungrateful or ungenerous age that he reaped all tbe rewards of fame from r public which umjersiood practically jinthlng of hhs wwk. While he liumblv puslu»d awayVscholastlc honors from himself, they only crowded' the more thickly uW>ut. Ids brow. Tlit very nature of bis undertaking d|s armed criticism. * Tbcpe was nmne o his compatriots^wlio r«»nlly Careil t« say him nay, though he persisted li not using the national language except lu trahslutlug his own hooks.— Stuart Ileury, In "French INsays and I’rolHes.” • •
that «lie expected to be her Inspiration. ■ wA Urunkard wlth u font - breath and » fouler vocabulary wns Just beingnmotod *fcen They arHved. For theA " ’ * - Umo - Ned - regretted their of broad.
. Alimony-lncludes Loaf of Bread.The Turkish girl Is-wedded with a
great ceremony to a man she has never ■seed? The lady Is escorted to his house hy her friends and she is accompanied hy a couple of loads of furniture which immprlsos a parnvf'her’dower. After entering'his house the friend* leave her alone with her husband and he Is then privileged to remove the "for* edge” or natlonid'vell and then he sees the face that he must look nt dully for yon»» jj111e d|me,_ ..The.velL Is being dlHcard(M) now nnd Is used only In the more remote sections of the country Divorce Is somewhat, easy nnd In this case her part of the alimony is a dally
Villages Were Swept Away Under Ris-, «ind^Sea of Loose Earth, Crevices
Swallowed Houses . and Camel Trains— Dragon Waggles Tall.
Washington.—"One of tbe nmst ap* palling catastrophes In history nnd, P»‘iImps, the. most poorly advertised calamity that lias occurred. In modern times," is the way the National Geo- giapldc Magazine describes the earthquake lu Kansu,. Clilim, "Where the .Mountains Walked.” .
'Though the treinendons shaking-up occurred lu December, the storyIs only now beginning to spread be- ytuul the narrow defiles which guprd the t.»nt ra nee tp Kjinsu proylnçessayathe article. ......... . •
"Mountains that moved ln’ the night; landslides that eddied like-xVaterfails, crevasses that swallowed houses mid camel trains, and vlllagefulhat—were. Mvept away under a rising sea of loose earth, were a few of the subsidiary oc-I’U IT l'H H 'H . L : •
"M r . J o s e f ' \\y H all (Upton C lose) , w ho vis ited the .ear th quake a re a 'U n d e r the a u s p ic e s 'of th e In ttM 'imtlona/Famine r e l i e f eiiiiiinltiee, hait brought b a c k o n e o f , jhe/lirHt a iv n u n ts o f the d e v a s ta te d cou n try and th e s t ra n g e th in g a that h appe n when th e en rü v ■ tu rn s Its e l f Into a contort ionist. / i h ° u re a o f destruct ion , 100 b y 000 miles In ex ten t , c o n ta in s ten la r g e ci t ies , besides num e r o u s (-Hinges. 7
“ O n e o f th e most d/nmutlc ep iso d e s ^► f th e d i s a s te r w n s / ih e h u r la i (if Mu th e ■ l le nevolent , ty fa m ous M os lem fa n a t ic , am) ¡¡00 o f Ills fo llowers, ' j u s t a s th ey laid m et/In con clave to proc l a im a holy wi)4. T h e c a v e in which l imy Imd gathered w a s Healed hy u-ter- rltie tivalaaelu*. w hile the 'group, kn e lt on t h e i r prayer-m ats .
Watchman Atone Escaped,T ïy boiiit*’ miracle,“Tlürwatcliiiuin at
the entrance to the cave escaped with his Hie; but the others were hurled so deeply that, despite months of dlg- glngyvver an area of a mile, tile Mos- letijs have failed to recover the bodies of/their leaders. • ’
"In another district Mr. Hull nnd /lit« party- found that a wholo.mounVnTn topped by a temple had slid Into n valley. A little beyond they found thut u road bordered by poplar trees had ridden the crest of « slide for tluviH^uarters of a mile, without up* parent damage.to-.the trees or even to the birds’ nests in tbelr brunches.•
“The most nppnlilng sight of alt was the -Valley of-the Dead, where seven great slides crashed Into a .gap In the hills tlviee miles long, killing every living thing In tho area excqpt three men and two dogs. _ _
"In n HinaU town on the highway two .strangers had put up at the In on the evening of the djsast^r. ‘ In tlj terror and-confusion ' that foltowi'd the earthqunke, the landlord completely forgot hts two guests. : U waé not until several days later that me re- memb«»rcd thcnfT and when, after considerable digging, their lyotp wns hcmight to light, both men yvero found alive.
"The subt«»rrnn«»nn dnigon of Chi nese cosmology who, aveordlng to thé northwest China tradition, waggles his tall every three huiidred years, this time played havoc,/such ns was never berore recorded, ytth the face of the earth apd the/ habitations of men. Llkelv no othe
frontier province;of China i* *o-a!y c<ivr, through the reports «>f rke rWjef in-! vestlguthui ’ -expedition «f./whSch Mr. j Hull was .a member, 'n-iade j .known . In any comprehensive vray. / even in Chirm’s enpltai arid cujItaL
Life ;Uss May */iVltkmigh th«»-TIensity it£ swi-T'j'alSon
Is not more than one^teiith ofSimiitiing-nrtbe-Krist-ClTtrrn: psa-nrth? loss of life frmn buuNlitbrs. ‘ 'cave homes, and flitlmg biiLEi-iESa gether with death from *rxp»*>iU!np -*f ■ the unsheltered in /riuM-wirtCer in ahis' $ high altltmle, >\aN,/a«.‘Cur«Un'g lo official.!
Snoquolmle, Wash.—»Stepping out to the edge of a snow-covered precipice to point out some seeuery to his wife aijd little son, Howard Rupert/"a salesman, disappeared Into loose suow. .■ Mra Rupert quickly notified men nearby, who looked for Rupert They were about tp give up the search on account of darkness when the missing man ap|«eared. He declared he had dropped Info a loose snowdrift and falling through, land
. *d directly into an unused fog ■chute to carry timber In summer ’ to tli£ river far below.
• - Rupert siild the chute was filled with Ice and that be tobogganed down Into the Valley us such a high rate of speed he could not yell loud enough to be “heard. Loggers foundrhehad
jn ken a...ride _ .of./fully.-. baIf._.a.,.mile in the Ice-hound log chute. ituj»ort was uninjured, but was minus flMhrge part of his wearing apparel. ___
‘•and I ' 0(i lli'ini; TTe'r Isf i f , I r.-ai] f iii " tittle ii 11in;;ii,
"TIiTtVff] in,tlmt In. »¿.s |ti. deed Smii/j, fur lie could /ehas,liis_.M i('iifics from one bniiieli to un- otliw~.<(f- a- tree, unilerM-imnd . | ftlicy hn|i|!ni,.ji [„ live iintleritround. in. the-water, on. liintl and e.verj-
"Wltere.
“ Had a Talk."
/‘‘He Raid that c was v e ry
doodthlrsty andt h a t u 11 the .smaller animals' dr eaded him
more than any other unimai. ...........“ l’es, he told/m e-lie' was it very-
(ImiKerous enei/iy ntul tlmt lie even uttneked nnlmt/ls blgeer than himself.
“He suid that he would kill each of his enemies jSo quickly with one p>ml Stroke, hut When I asked' him 'If''„»me. Mines lie didn't consider it was a had' stroke to/ he so cruel he 'said he
at all.“ lie told me Hint' he had no feetins
didn’t think of it tlmt. wav/id '
about l/eint; cruel. . He maid that he wns tun nfruld : of nnythlnc and that he wi/s rather proud of heln« cruel.
“Then lié ulso suid. tlmt there were uot/very .ninny weasels which made I uiy feel particularly pleased, as you ' cun well ItnaRlnc.” • . ■ ,
“Ves,“ snU| \VlttyJ\:itch,_“ that_is_tL |,
mol cn.rthqnnke In scientific annuls vm^-hnnsed the physical Kcoitraphy of (fie nlTcctcd region to the extent of the-Kunsn cataclysm.—
"Tlie remoteness of the district ‘In which the enrthqiinke occurred ennnot iTur-liitrlguelrrrprCRt.'AtthmTj'h-'the roncurrent quakes In Chile nnd Saivn- dor, the tldnl wave of Yap-and the eruption of Kft Asnmn Tnpao, nre nilhistory, the Kansu disaster Is still byws. What actually happened la this
Ü S. Completes
La s t Ship on W ar Program Isjnished and Turned Over......
to the Government
r.OQQ ARE N3W IYINB IDLE2,312 Vessels Built by .Shipping Board
In! Last Five Vears—Net» Liner.Western World,-Marks End of
Plan to Brtdoe Sea-
Washington.—When the ltelhlehera Shltihuildintc cnrporutloti detlTene«! to tlie"Shlppln'i; Iloaril Einertfency Kieet corporutlou the new tlner W.-.-'cni World, for operation by the Mutica line to tiuuili 'America, the sivatest shlphUlldiUK'enterprise in hUl.«ry'was brought to nil cud.
from May 1M, 1»lT. when tbe w,*-
yards were requisitioned hy the government. The wood ship Program had reached a tolal of l.017 bouts ut the time building was reduced. Of thlp number 428 were subsequently cun- ceied. 474 complet/d aud 115 partially cotupleted.— Wheu tbe-Eni/rgeney- Fleet corporation adopted \Ue plnu of building fqb- rlrated sliips/jind awarded contracts fob'a total lit ,'ttlO of 2,p75,(Kk!) tons, doubt was expressed us to the success- of this type of construction,' which was u radical change from.the.accept-, ed metliods. It was recognized, however. Oldt hy having the hull steel fabricated at bridge nnd. structural shops' throughout the 'country and then' assembled at , the shipyards, n eodsideruhle expunslea, of the ship- tulildlng industry was possliile. The, experiment proved iff be successful.
To the Atlantkyconst goes the dis-, tiuctlbu d f hnyltig turned out the greatest numlAir of ships and tlie
en cargo carrier North F.-a-L tbe (largest volujtie of tonnage. On thisvessel.to lie built under war twatr.Vcls : «vast ere- Imilt SIS vessels of 5,025,- was turned over to the govecttw*t t«v 188 tons,- The Pacific coast evus secKruse & llanlts. North Bts>L W e- 1« : «ad "|fi> 751» ships of 5,254,150 tons. May. 1), 1022. the shipping .<wn- j Tlie Great Lukes was third with 479 “structcd 2,;>12 ships ci. varf.yis ivj«es ■ ships of 1.G25.000 tons, nnd the Gulf of i:!.02(i.71l' tleadweigM /lias. At j fourth with 192 boats of 840.00Q tons.present more than f.WMy*hfytes«r:sii3ps V .. -------—— —--------are lying.. Idle, due-to (iepinesse/l/ Women Replace Men.conditions In world trade and to the | Scuttle. Wash.—Encroachment of inability of Alnoru-on //bipoor "meet foreign eoiupetitl/
/SOod thing to know.’1 •“Willie Weasel also Informed toe
that „when the winter comes he - changes ills suit to a..white one—it there Is snow litid If it is cold chough.
“ lie likes to timtcli the weather, thoug 11 I told him If tlint w;is I]h> ease he shouid he. wearing a given suit now Instead of u brown one.
“But he said tlie earth was brown, not green, nnd tlmt IL was tlie earth'scoverlfig tlm( her eared about._
“Then I told him tlmt the grass was very green nnd that moss «as. very green; hut he said lie-couldn't talk to me any more.- “He bail some engagements—cruel' ones I suppose.
" I wns glud when-lie left me iind - I went and talked to Mr. Balil Eagle.
“He told me how proud all his fain-. Ily were because they had been chosen ns the American bird of .Freedom.
He—told me how different they- were from otjier birds In ninny ¡ways— bigger and stronger—but mostly I wife thrilled hy (tearing that their eyo«‘ bight was so wonderful und that they felt It wns, because they could see . such distances that they had been chosen as the American birds of Freedom.
You see, Mr. P.nhl Engle said that he thought.tlmt It was because of the fact that they could see such distances t lint they hail been chosen because that, that'mount tlmt they were birds of a country who were going to look ahead to an Ideal and a gonj ’ rather.than grtisp the nearest tiling!
"He sang me n little song, too,-which I'll tell yon." '
"rio," sub! ' Witty. Witch? ■ “¡'This Is the song': " • '
' ‘The finest thing I have to Bay,Ms.that we're the bints of the U. S. A.' "Wasn't tlmt a" illce little song?"
asked Itlllle Brownie. “ It- wiih short' of course, but 1 liked it, nnd Mr.
the/eml offline vrar- excen.lnl forilch
2n nmiouncln; time ¡irogram. wh tiiree.tuid a half yislrs after the araiis- tTceé-héctrüse'ñif tjie contracts «sieiied
r lo , women in jobs formerly occupied by men is shown. in u report just Issued
‘ hy tlie Seattle chamber of commerce.In 31120, in the State of Washington, there were 581 women barbers, hairdressers and manicurists; 48 women
r, the shipping l-orard fishermen and o.vstermeu; seven” worn- eu dairymen, teamsters nnd expressmen ; live women longshoremen; 24 women laborers in shipyards; 203 building laborers. 233 sawmill and planing mill laborers and 53 lumbermen, raftsmen and woodchoppers.
interesting sfate- thé size o f the great
Into during the made public slime mVhts sbowln fleet.
Capacit/of 333,363 FretsM Caro.If all rile vessels on the program
were pbtc'ed In -a straight Lice, saem to stern, they would exceed (or 158 mllcs/mid if steaming a' mile ansi a. qimrter apart they would reach fr ra Neyv York'.' to Southampton. England. Tile total tonnage U equal to. the car- ylng capacity of 38Si3ti3 freight' cars
loaded 35-tons to the car. As there are approximately.- 2.800,000 cars In ..the United States, nearly onesserenth^ of them would be required'to load the ships. For manufacturing thé rivets alone a. steel rod three-fourths o f an Inch ¿.f n diameter and 37j>sl miles toeg Would Tie necessary. ■ This voa!4 extend one and a halftimes around me earth." « ' - I
The building o f the, gigantic fleet j } was not confined to the Culled Slates. ! r Japan constructed 30 steel cargo car- : i; rlers of 243-.2P0 tons each, and Ohîai. | [ four steel ships of 40,000 tons.
The original-program called bur X270 ships of 18.4072176 deadweight n n s After the armistice all comgrurt'on was canceled except when it wxs found that the government woe!-] Lne more by gtvlng up the project than Car completing them." This reduced ihe program by 958'ships of 4.771X562 u c c .yvblclt- K:preseote(t....appn.,A.ltgiteîy
U M B E R TO SEN T B Y W IR E
per cent of the vessels that -.were not jSô or lXI per rent tlnlsheiL--------
• 1,017 Wooden Ships Bui IL
^ THs photograph of Prince Umberto,: , r tl,e Italiun throne, -.ras- trans-' iml|ted by telegraph from Rome to i Milan in f*-- ------ - . . . .
In August, 1917, 433 vessels coder , was a featur/n/th VÍ ^ **lns‘ This-------- . . . “ icature of the opening of theohi»- 4 Commercial fair at Milam
Bald Eagle told me tlmt It- wus their Fourth of July, song, though tney sung It nt other times of the year,-too." ■
‘It’s a fine little song," s a i d Witty Witch enthusiastically.
‘A n d th e n,”B i l l i e Brownie c o n t i n u e d , . “ I made a few calls upon, the wild flowers. .
" I chatted with “Jack-in-the . the Queen Anne’s . Pulpit,”family, '“Juck-ln- . tlie-Pulpit, BoAiclng Bet (and how gay and amusing she was!), the Iris ( family, and heard frptn them'how they treated the bees right royally.
"So many flowers told me of their deep, great banquet halls; some of them were reserved for the HummingBirds. .. ,
"And the Fire Weed told me how It tried to cover up shabbiness.
"All told I had a series of delightful ■ calls and while I don’t care for Willie Weasel I. was filad.Jb hear there were . . not so many of them—and then theBald Eagle and the. flowers were such ....'a alee ending to my day.” . ■ . . . •.
. Was From Missouri. _
The Sunday school superintendent wus reviewing the lesson. “Who led the children of Israel out of Egypt?”
,he asked. There was no answer.Pointing to u little boy nt the end of .....
.Xhe_sdab-he-deiimnded a'-Iittle-crossly:..... -“ Little boy, who- led the children o f ’ Israel out of Egypt?" . " '
■Tne little boy was ready to cry ns ^ '
ir
.•(instruction In United Statehe piped out, with a quavering voice: “Please, sir, It wasn't tne. We Just moved here last week» We're from RIssoury." _ _ . .
y ~ ‘ V*n*r _
J ^ id .-á í 'Á■ ÎT, ’- L -r , '/' „. V, -//■
- Ô , * ^'V
Dadd\'5 Eve
CRANFORD C T Itt^ AND CHRONICLE
Rose Finds the R e si Thief
By W ILL T . AMES
SUMMER TALKS
•T hnd a tulk with Willie W<>, said Billie Brownie to . \vinv \yi,,
' J ? "4 J L '‘,n »Mute I
_ lln le Iinlniai/ .“IK r.i'fd ,7U
H>«t he ir„ . ‘It-ed forI '« could e h a s e ■J<l»_fiieiX» fr„m one W e l l lln. otiu*_yf. a. tIve_umlerghmml . | fthey liuijpeued t<( live Aaderjtround,In the Water,lunil uiiO even - Where; ------------■/“He Raid that c w a s ve ry
'loadthirsty a a d * h “ t a l l the sniuller nnimnls-
, d r e a d ’ed him more than any W r animal
1’cs, he told/me-he ' was a verv-dangerous enei/.y and that he ,,v™ ut tucked animals hlaaer than hlniselt
He said that he would kill each of „ r , “ 1'!"1“ /11 'Illicitly With one ¿mod stroke, hut/lien I asked him it ome- 'lines he didn't consider It stroke to/ he so cruel
q , ISIS, by MftClvr» M*w*s*p*r f l in lls io .
“Look here, CoUard.” said Mr. Emmons, “here'» the'way the business has gone for the past three months.“ Henuudfcd-the’-youBger-oiaaUm_ahstrfl£t. 35Srjj,uarely-lnt,._ the
' Sheet that-hp had-just finished, gomplk, ' -log from the books and sat frowning
tlly-.-whlle .-.CollotlL— With, lengthening countenance, took In the unpleusant Information the paper contained. •
“That's worse than I thought," saidCollard. - .............. ......... ,
"It Isu't worse, though, than it’s going to be ull winter. I'm up against It,-Joe, I ’m not capitalized to stand the losses tliut even a little business like this Is bound to make between now and spring. I hate like poison to
-,i,v4tr .hutll'Vg got' to let Miss Illy the
“ Had a Talk.”
was a had
didn’t tliiiik o f it that. way* aM dl. ^ '1 1 1 me ¡hat he limi no fcciiii“
thii "ile toh
/eilig cruel. . Hu .said (hat he7"
about Weijyns mit nfruld : of anything and that
. ¡" i f* r“ tl11'1' prou'1 ,,f being cruel. "Then lié also said, that there w«ro_
not/very many weasels w h ich made I m / feel particularly pleased,' as you ' cgn well Im agine.” ■ . -,
“Vex," said W llty Witch, "Ih.it I. „ 'good thing to know.’' . ' '
"Willie Weasel also Informed -me "'at _\vhcn the winter comes he - changes Ills salt to a white one—p- there Is snow ami if ¡t is cold enough.
“He likes to twitch the wcalhcr. tluaigh l tolil hlin if that . was (]w_ case he should he wearing a green suit now Instead o f a hrovvn one.
Hut lie said tlie earth was hrown not green, and that It was -the 'earth'scovering that ho cared about.- '
"Then I told idui that the/ grass was very green and that moss .,as very green, hut he said lie.-couldn't talk to me any more," “ Ho had some ones I sii/iposp.
Collard shot a disconcerted glance at Ills employer. “Miss Blythe?"- lie
/exclaimed. “ Why, Lane cuts a good deul more figure on your pay roll. If anyone must go I should think—"
"Mnn alive! Bob’s been with me almost as long ns you have; and.the girl’s comparatively a newcomer. I’ve got to play fair, Joe."
So It came that, with much honest regret, the worried Emmons broke to Hose Blythe the bad news that after the following Saturday the book and stationery shop would have to be conducted without the benefit of her scrv- ices, ' “ I understand, Mr.' Emmons,” said Rose bravely, and Emmons left her greatly relieved .thuf she hncl taken the matter so coolly. But Bob Lnne, reluming from lunch enrller than usuul, surprised the girl In the back room,' fighting With ' clenched hands to restrain a flood of tears.
“ It wouldn’t be so bad,” she fnl- tereil, "only mother has’ simply got to have things reusonably decent—she’s more than half nn Invalid, you know —and It’s just all we can do to get along now. As for getting another position. In this town and In these
engagements—cruel ’
. I iyas -glud- when - he left me mid /’i * went and talked to Mr. Balil Eagle. / I
“He told mo how proud all his fnin-.j 1 ll.v were because they hod been chosen
JisJhe American bird of Freedom. |- “He told me how different they were from oilier birds In maiiv-ways— bigger and stronger—hut mostly I wA thrilled by (louring that their eyo, sight was so wonderful gnd that they felt It was, because they could see such distances flint they had been chosen as the American birds of Free- <1(1111.
"You „00, Mr. Bald Engle said tbnt he thought .that It was because of the fact that they could see such dls- taiicos -that they had been chosen he- cause that that meant that they were jilrds of a country who were going to look ahead to an Ideal and a gorU ’ rather than grasp the nearest thing! i ; , 1! 0,?“ " " " m a ,ln,a sonK- too, which111 tell you." •
"Ito." said Witty AVitcli. ■"This Is the song: . • ‘
- ,hlnB 1 "a »« *o sav,,,7,.that,'Ve Te thu blnls °f the U. S A.’Uasut that a' idee little song?"
nsked Iilllle Ilrovvnle. o f course, hut 1 _ liked it, and .Mr.Bald Eagle told me that It- wus their Fourth of July, song, thoughthey sung It ut ather times of the year, too." ■
“ It’s a fine little song," s a i d Witty Witch enthusiastically.
“A nd the n,"B i l l i e Browniec o n 11 n u e d .. “ I /made a few calls upon the wild flowers.
”1 chatted with the Queen Anne’s family, '“Juck-ln- the-PuIplt,
little" I t was short
Stepped Aside and Passed On.
jUhnes!"—Bose threw out her hands esture o f hopelessness. 'might have s a i d “Never tiilnd,
way out ; marry salary <lo the work
. .. y/vpi two!? lie might have, thut Is. If had yielded to his first Impulse.
E i ’jgjnInstead, he thought: “No, that would ft : isf'/ be taking n rotten advantage.” And
$f?l,\Jlob wnsn’t the kind to take advnn-Sr.wri’iT-S'
D cestuiBob mlgh...............
fi^W RltttU ! girl; there's,a ßn(l make one sal
W 'f i l i s i fa . an i r . « _l. A.
"Jack-in-thePulpit’*
Bo#ielng Bet (and how guy and amusing she was!), the Iris family, and heard frpm them’how’tlrey treated the bees right royally.
"So many flowers told me of their deep, greut banquet halls; some of Uiem were reserved for the Hummlng-
it fruil ,,he Flre Wcp<1 t“ ld me how [Llrled to cover up shabbiness. .„ " AH t01,il * hatl a series of delightful calls and while I don't care for Willie - Weasel I.was t lad,.tb hear there w ere... no so many of thera-und then theBald Eagle and the flowers“ were such: ....i 4iice ending to my day.” . ■ . . . .
. Was From Missouri.
va^hrew !n?“y f h0° ‘ suPcrintendent T m i 6 Ving the less°n. “Who led ■he children of Israel out of Egypt?"ie asked. There was no answer?
J iS e V “U,e at ,,,e ‘'»I oi:L J t f l ^ blB de®un'1«» a-Httlewrossly: - •sr el n??’ ,K'?° 'ed. tbe children o f ’ sraei out of EgyptV1 ‘ ■_The- little boy was readv to m a.-.
’g f a, a ?*»-eyrii,g v?lce:, r,(rase. sir, it wasn’t me. We lust 1
front
So he went straight to Eimmons. f l f I wasn’t here you’d be keeping .Miss Blythe on, wouldn’t you; , Mr. iEmmons?" he nsked point blank.
■■V" "Undoubtedly." replied his employer.- “But why do you nsk. Boh?" ';. "Because, Tm through—I’m qult- . ting.” „
. .* ' • • •’ “ Lane Is back In town," remarked.
§ Collard, as lie and Rose were rearrangIng _the fiction section. “ Looks like
tramp. Never saw anybody go down ' the line so fast. Three months and -/ our natty Bob Is'a bum! Think I’d //•have pride enough left to stay away
I f I was In bis place./■ “But I thought he bad such a fine
if. position In Buffalo!" exclaimed Rose, f ' “ He told me he had, wlien he left here .* so suddenly. " Tm sprry. I—I always
liked Bob." :: v. Something In the girl’s tone brought t • to Collnrd sudden ¡conviction of what
■ until - now had been merely uneasy suspicion—It was Bob Lane who stood
: • In his way with "Bose; It-was Bob , Lone who, though mouths absent and
seemingly gone out of her life, was v» the underlying cause of the hesitating
'reluctance with which the girl accepted " Collard'»- attentions.^ ,
"So he told you that, did her* said Collard. “Well, now that he's had the had taste to come back here, you’d
;• better know the truth. Emmons fired ' him. Ton remember that college pro- l iifessor who disputed his bllL-of $32— -/■old be was certain be bad paid It In V cash? Well, It turned out—but I prom- 'lseil Emmons I'd keep still. He said ; he didn’t want to ruin a. yonng fel; low’s chance to~change Ms gait He’s
¿queer that way—he’d be. hot under the collar If he ‘ knew'Td'sald this-much. Keep - It mum A - Collard_ addesl_8S_he (farted to meet an Incoming customer.
-- W .rw nnril that very moment had j^ « e Blythe realized how much Robert
Isuw—sunny, nsiprut Bob—ted umsk. to her. And now, along with the realization, came a storm of resentment that he should have dared to muke -her think him fine and clean aud all that was desirable In nprahood,; while hiding from her, and doubtless deriding her ingenuousness, that hideous other side of him that Emmons had found out and CoUard so suddenly 'and belatedly revealed. She. fe lt victimised and disgraced In her own eyes.
n this mood-iha went out to a most unsatisfactory lUnch. And In tills mood she was returning, when at a Street corner she found herself look.
Fierce Battle With Smugglers
Customs Guard Has Desperate Fight With Rum Runners on
Mexican Border.
poorl>*w4h«&ied,',-lude««!».r- and his face was thin ami hugpirif. . •There.waa n. lm cp of S>mhurnisaiiHtnt. too, as he put himself in her way ami extended his hand; but,the eyes were as frank.:,us ever—umi .eager.
Rose hud not thought of meeting him thus, or ut ull. She lmd planned no course of action. Suddenly she wus awiure that Iu*r heart had given one great wild leap; that n high anger had possessed her, and that she had lg* uored his hnnd, stepped aside and passed on .without n word or a second look at him. She was shaking when
t W l l I Btll^D A E R tA L H A R B O R
she reached TTie hookvhop.Ten minutes afterword Mr. Em
mons. also returning from lunch, looked curiously at Rose na he. passed her; then he turnt-d and asked her to come buck_to the desk with him.
"Miss Blythe," said Kuunous bluntly, “ oliy did you give Itoli Lime such a ghastly cut Just now? 1 wus Just behind you."
The bitterness of Rose’s disappointment In Lane wus still upon her. "You should know better than any one elso, Mr. Emmons.” she answered. "I enn- not be friends with *n thief."
Emmons’s eyebrows went up. ' "A thief) What the deuce? There's some misunderstanding here, I guess." Jin five minutes he hnd picked It nil out of her— what .Collnrd hud told her, at which he looked grimly grave; the shock It hnd been to, her, at which he lild a whimsical s-itillc.
“Now let me tell you something, young Indy,” snld Emmons. "lioh Lane wns not dlsi'harged. Uc. went out of tlds business for a reason of his own—whether It was good or not remains to he seen. He went out at a time when It took nerve to throw up a- Job, and, lie went out pruetleully-dead broke, for he'd Just finished paying for
-a--terrible, costly..operation oo lils sister's crippled boy. He’d bad a pretty rough time of It this winter,"I take It, although he didn’t complain.-You see,I had a talk with him Just nfter you snubbed him, und lie cainc back here onlv because the sister lias been very 111 and begged for him to cmnc/liut the point is, he knew very well when lie went that lie w a s likely to. have rough sledding. ~ ;
“ Iloh Is coming hack Into the store. Business. Is enough better to warrant It, and I told him to come In tomorrow. But now that I've had this talk with you, he Isn't coming hack as a Junior clerk; lie's going to take Col- lard’s Job. Collard’s plumb right about one thing—I won't keep the I!iU-f in my employ; not even die Jtlnd-bf a thief who enn manage: to keep Ills fingers off his boss's money hut tmn’t keep' from (stealing a rival suitor's good name 1” " •
Rose wus staring nt her .employer— her color coming mid going......LLkow.JI.Klitnlhg fliisli had comesudden Illumination; " “Mr. Emmons,", she trembled, “ I f Boh didn't have another position nnd wasn't discharged, why did he leave?"' "Can’t you guess?” asked Emmons.
“Oh, oh, yes—yes-! And'I believed sueli nwful things. Just because that— that beast told them to ine! What shall I say to him? Wlmt bIiiiII I do?"
“I don’t know, my dear. But Boh told me lie hnd tramped und ridden the bumpers and starved and been threatened and had an altogether wretched .experience since ho went away, hut never went down under anything till a few minutes ngo. If I were you. Rose, I ’d Just lift him up.”
“Ohrlf there's ally way I ran I will, I will 1 He has been wonderful I”
“Then dry your Cyes and go back to your work,” said Emmons, with Ids vvhlmslc smile. “ For .If ’I know anything, of life, Bob will soon show you the-way.’’.. ...... ' ....... . .......
K nlvei'Tna/Piflonr Wire-Used- In- Bat- tie In Brush on the Banks of the
- Rio Grande—'-Automobile Is Riddled.
Hidalgo, Tex;—Oue of the most desperate single-handed encounters which ever took place between u United States cu.-toius officer aud a gaug of Mexican smugglers ou the ltlo Craude border fell to the lot of Dick McConnell, a government river guard here, u few ntgtilii .M\‘t.'olttu;U, uctulu-punted by his ‘wife ami two little daughters, was riding in an automobile along the ltlo llram’e, near town. Leaving the car, McCoam-ll started towurd the river bank, lie-lmd. gone hut u short’ distance when he was fired upon front ambush.
A bullet ksoikc!l I'JT hi„ lint.—lie rushed towurd the spot from which the bullets were coming, lie returned the fire ns he ran Into the brush and there came upon „the two Mexicans. On of them grabbed him by the back of neck and a scuffle ensued, during which he received knife wounds and hnd his pistol holster cut to pjeevs. He drew a ¿¡uah gun, w hich he carried in the holster tinder his shirt, und fired ut bis assailant, whom he ktlled, and the body fell Into (lie rapidly rising ltlo Granite. .
Sirs. McConnell, who was In the ear at the time of the attack, guve the following uecount:—r-----------Wite’s Account.
“ I and the ehlldreii were In the lnick sent of the cur when we drove up near thè Viver bank, near the small boat ferry landing. As my husband got out of the car and started to go down tile hank there came a Hash of a gun/almost In.lila fmv, and Ids hut
fell off and something struck the car, Dick jumped back, pulled bis automatic nml began to shoot. Again and again came the flash and something struck the car again. The children and .1 could see ilje man who was shooting at tuy husband backing down under
af tba crow«. On the t in * MBk ws picked-up-a loog-bladed kntf*.—Lprtng partly In the. water was • felt bat with three bullets In It. Near thj boat was a sack containing seventeen quarts of tequila.
“ Upon returning tc the car we found where three bullets had pierced" the cowl, one of which passed through and bit the steering wheel, breaking apart of It off. One of.. the -bulletspiercing the rewIr-buL-SpsndlngJts force against the Iron-dastmwn^piclred up by Deputy Collector Clark and was said to be from a ,43. The other lilt the side of the cowl and glanced off.”
i t ™
F A T T E N IN G M A R K E T P O U L T R Y
rhoy both dlsui'iH'ai^b-TMilor the bank-*-wvi4uiaEd-&-|wlggJiM* fljjhtinL* «.r strupRUn*:. ' I was poUliiK liervtm s "«till did not know wlmt to do. U 'f lu»:ml tt»rtH> more sbotK nnd l heard Mime 4>ne veil out lu Mexican. Shortly j if ic p my husband cam e to the t»»i> of th»» b a n - holdhip Ids han d !1 to h is face and told me to drive to D eputy Collector J . H. Chirk 's house nml hrinp him mu! nlso a lantern . I drove ns fast as ] could nml re tu rned w ith Clark und th e lantern.
**\\*>? found ui,v hnshaml's hat near the car with'a futllct. hole In the t<*i*
Amusement in America; $63,000.000 a Month for 0 0 . r 0 0 0 0
Washington. D. C.- /inately SrL't.OtHMidd Is
-Appro\i- spetit lu
/ A m er ic a each mouth fo r am use- nient, aec4*rdli»K to the T r e a s u r y 'departm ent. M ov ie s ; th ea te rs , c i rc uses h m l - a m u s e m e n t p a r k s a r e reeelv lnp* th e money. l .ust y e a r It w a s a m onth .
Corporation at Gothonburç, 8wtd«n, jPnipjjrti_Plani “for Joint'Mu* .
• nicipiTTIerdr. . . — . d
Óothenhurp Sweden. — Tlds city, with Its extensive ,marine Rldpidnp faculties nnd Us new free port, Is now prepiirlnp to build tin aeriui harbor.It will have all the facilities'r«|idred by Kky pilots, nn up-to-date service department and the latest convenience# f«*r laudili« und takln« oÌTf. ' - .
À coriMirathm has boon formed to hulh! the air station anil operate it In colïjunêthui witli ttre- Tiry 'nuthoFiflefe-jHtse<l—In—fnlienhi«—JimUers^^prl/iKs, of Vsotheidmr« It Is proposed that ‘ -the city shall have the privile«!* of buyln« the company's shares in the enterprise after den year* and thus Make over full control of the air. purl. -- -
Youtfi Made a MlnUter.Ueiuliu«. I*a,— OonvertcHV r »r el«ht
years, prenchln« for th « hud two years ni hi» homi» at Poftslown and ordained a minister rei*enUy"~nt the ii«e of sixteen is the .rem arkable record of Ira Itee)i!i*l. one of the new mildster* accepted today at the annual conference of thè Holiness Chris-
Unti church, meetln« at lllrdshoro.
Remarkable Survey Being Con. ducted in Texas by I L S . Ag*
. ricultural Department.
Origin of “ Blue Blood.’’ -There are two explunutioas of how
the term “blue-blooded,” to describe a person of nrlstocrutic descent, came Into use. One is . that it merely was borrowed from the Spanish, -where sangre azul had long been- used to denote the Aristocracy of Castile and Aragon—persons who traced their pedigrees-from ancestors who had never Intermarried with the more swurthy Moors, who had at on« time conquered Spain. . ..
The other explanatloa 1ft that /it was founded upon the noticeable fact. that families .which for, ¿operations have not hnd to “rough It” In any way develop, fair skins through which; the veins chow blue, whereas/ families who for long periods o f years have had to work hard physically develop thick skins through which the blue veins cannot be seen. , ; ' .
— . : Old Friends. - .. a woman went to market to buy a fo y l At one stall, two live ones were offered for sale. They were In the care of a little country girl. The prospective purchaser asked thejirlce of one, hut the girl would not sell one without the other. Remembering that a friend 'Jind expressed a desire for a bird, the woman was Induced finally to buy both. She asked the girl why she had refused to sell, them separately, The girl replied simply: “ I f you please, ma'am, mother said as how these' fowls- hkd~ lived together for.fifteen years; and (t would be a cruel thing ta separsts-thsta aow.-V
Miner- Has Three Wives; Says They. All Proposed
Freeland, I’n.—Unable to furnish $1,000 hair on a bigamy" charge brought by three women who'suhl Michael Murk», Saudy Run miner, had-married them,Morko was taken to Jail..........
"When a girl asks a fellow to limrry her, wlmt cun he do?" he asked.
. '.'No man with red blood In Illsveinswill refuse lo marry a girl. « Ilea-she asks him (o do.'so." -
RUST SPORE BEING SOUGHTAnnual Loss In Wheat Atons Dus to
Stem Rust Is Eetlmated at 64,000,000 Bushels— Mexico Believed to
Be Source ot Spore.
San Antonio, T ex—One of the most remnrknblo surveys ever’ made tinder the direction.of the. Flitted Stntes Department o f Agriculture Is now In progress In Texas. It Is that of senrcli- lng.the nlr for j l ie y>ore that causes rust on prowlnc ulieat iind onis. - —
It Is estimated timt tlie annual loss
Field Artillery Back From Germany
. Here are some of the tyoops of tlie first division of the Sixth field artillery arriving at New York from Germany on the transport Carobral. Inserted Is a portrait of Lieutenant Colonel Brevans, their commander.
In wtignt ninno duo to sleui rust Is approximately 04,000,(HH) bushols. It Is the theory of some agricultural arieti' lists Hint the source of the spore which cutises this enormous Iohs Is III Mexico or perhaps South America nnd thut It drifts through the ulr to tint wheat fields of Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas and oilier states.
: Airplane 8oarch In Progress.During tlie last two weeks Tin air
plane search for the spores has been made lit high altitudes above Sun Antonio.—For this purpose an airplane from Kelly field Is used, with Lieut T. it. Booker as pilot otul Wallace But 1er ns scientist. .... _______
Armed wish h "sporfi trap” Mr. Butler-fins milde six exposures lit varying altitudes on each aerlul -Journey. These plates have been sent to the nlllce of cercai Investigation for examina- tinti. Thus far tin reports have been given out of the findings,'Anyone wbo w-nlks througli an oat
field'in Ulis part of the state now will (siine out with bis shoes covered with li yellowish powder wliteh ban brushed off from thn Intiuiiierahle little yellow leaves. ~ ....
This powder any. farmer will tell one Is rust. In this ease the leaf rust of oats. Every lltfie yellow spot on the leaf.Is a pustule of lea.' rust, raeli pustule lining imide up of from one to several thousand tiny seed bodies nr spores whlc-li are pushed up through the epidermis of the leaf from a sort of root structure or mass of threads which are growing within the leaf. These thrcndST are very minute nnd can he seen only .liy.-1lln nhl of- fhe microscope. The spores which are borne Tn such multitudes on the ends of little branches; from these threads are also microscopic In size. The.powder <>n thé shoes after a trip through jhe ont field consists of millions of these spores. "
. D«w Helps. - ,When one of these spores fulls, çn n
drop of dew or other moisture on a leaf of oats It soon sends out n little root-llke projection which, curling around tills way and that, finds its way Into the breathing pore or open Ing in the epidermis of the leaf nnd so gets Into the leaf tissues. In due time It becomes the mass ot threads whl<*h tigniti send np the mnss of spores, and so the process Is repented with fnvornhlo wenther conditions about every two weeks, ..
Great Varlsty of Fssds Can Bs UssB In Preparing Fowls—Brollsrs
- Grow Rapidly. ,
(rr,l>»r»a by th* Unit'd 8lnl<* Pfpnrtowst , of Airiculiur«.) . - ,:
The most desirable types of rations ' and the iims( p.rofital>le feeding periods .
toned In packing plants ure discussed'In Depart nicht Bulletin-. J(K>2, Rations for- Fi-eding J.hmltry..lii,. lhe. Ja c k in Jt"_ __ House.’ Just Issued by the hurewu of ' chemistry of the United States Department Hf Agriculture. Nine« th* fleshing of poultry has boeoim, a large Industry In tlie Unitisi States, Infor- imitlon of the kind contained this bullet 111 should lie of a great deal of value. . ’ , '
The results obtained In the esperi- meats reported In this bulletin show - that a great variety of feed« can he
roasters and liens, a fortunate situation since It perndlN the feeder to adapt Ills ration In market conditions uy taking advantage of special prices of certain feeds and-nlso to use feeds avallatile locally. A -growing bird, such as a broiler or spring, requires n different ration than n mature hen. which .changes most of her feed Into fat. A simple ration of corn meal and . buttermilk Is about us good as any for Ilium. Broilers fed rations containing protein concentrates, sueli ns peanut meal, coconut oil, soybean men I,-, or-, meat scrap made appreciably better- gains than those fed on corn meal and buttermilk. They grow rapidly ami need tissue-forming feeds. Springs - also respond readily lo rullo«« containing protein concent rates. ’
Throughout (lie 1-l dny feeding period broilers eontlmiod lo gain well, which shows Dial this Is not ton long a feeding period, Springs grew very rapidly during Ihe llrsl 11 days, hut not so rapidly; though prnttrnhly. dtir— Ing the remaining three days. Itnast- ers gained well ' during the first two four-day periods, hut not so well the last six days. It wns found that the practice of feeding liens only six to eight diiy-H Is well founded. The Oresti- lug ftml chilling shrinkage- of liens, however, Was much less than In the case nt broilers, springs and roasters.
An» of the ordinary eereul grains
■ ■ ¿'iK Y;-:
THIS CURFEW HITS PARENTS ALSO
Held Guilty With Children Violation of Ordinance.
in
City “ Dads” of South Dakota CityBelieve Parents Are Largely to
Blame for Children Running About 8treeta at NlghL , > '
Sioux"Falls', S." D.—The city of Lemmon, S. D., has- hne of the most unique curfew ordinances In existence anywhere In the United States. The parents are held equally-guilty with the children for violations of the curlew.
The ordinance provides that boys and girls under seventeen years of age must’ be’ off the streets and at home after 0:30 o’clock each evening. If they,..are on/the streets or other public places after^that hdtir they rouBt he accompanied hy their parents or some authorized guardian. - ’..Tlie city “Dads" believe that par-snts are laitely to blame for their
children running about the streets at unseemly hours of the night, and therefore placed a—provision In the ordinance making the parents' responsible with the children for violations of the provisions of th «/ordinance.
Some of tlie parents who have been In the habit of permitting their children to remain awny from home until quite late at' night have regarded the ordinance as of no interest to them- and ns a result when their children were found rnnhlng at large after 0:30 o'clock at night the parents themselves were required to appear In court and explain why their children were not-required by the parents to be-home by 0:30 o'clock. •
At one time several parents were In court on the charge of permitting their children to violate the curfew ordinance, and In each case a small fine was Imposed, with the admonition that farther violations by their children would subject them to heavier fines'.
Tlie city authorities now have given notice that the’I curfew ordinance means just wlmt- It says -¡»mi that It will continue to be strictly enforced, regardless of whose children may be affected and that neglectful parent« will tie taken Into court no matter how I prominent they may be lo the community. -
Young Plymouth Rock Broiler. -
supply the neressnry carbohydrates nnd fat«. More care Is needed In se- li-i-ting feed« for protein, salts amt vltanilnes. The proteins of the rereaf griilns are present In too hiiiiiII niiioiuits iiml are of too poor quality to produce the best results In broilers rind spring« unless oilier protein cun- rentriili-« urn added. Milk and cereals .limit« one of the most profitable ra- linns; ii.4 milk supplies mineral siil»- st!inoe«/-,vllamines and very valuable priifehiB. ' ’’’lie-results given In the bid- letln- show llini peanut men I protein, ns;well a,«.soy-hean meal protein, Is eiqiei-liilly vuliiahle. The proteins of 'buttermilk lire espeelally vuluuhle, and If used 1n sufficiently largo amounts produce very desirable results. Other protein concentrates are meat and fish scraps, cot’ onseed meul. coconut lucid and sesame-seed meal.
Corn, wheat, oats and other grains lack such mineral sulistiinces iis rid*
irltiin, sodhitn nnd chlorine which " growing nnlrrinlH requIre. In the rations where butfernillk or skim milk. - Is used, these ’ngredl^nts are fnlrly well supplied. Milk also'supplies vitamines. At present the milk available for poultry-fleshing purposes Is largely buttermilk, fresh, condensed or powdered. . -j
Those. Interested In the fleshing o f poultry may get this bulletin by addressing the Department ot Agriculture at Washington, X). C.
A L B A N IA H A S N O P U B L IC D E B TOccupies Unique Position Among Eu
ropean Nations—Monetary 8ys- — tem Based on Gold Deposits. '
Genoa.—Happy Albania Is the term wh ch has been applied to that country. for-It la frtated_that-lt''oecupics the unique: position among European nations of being the only country which has no national debt and has a gold monetary system. ;
Mehedi Frostier!, the head- o f the Albanian delegation to the conference here. In - an Interview Indicated that all would bo well with his country,, “ If only wear» left in peace for a little while.” •
* 1
Hatch chicks eafly^They the good wlntèr layers.
make
rAy,..-«
Baby chicks should be encouraged to eat as much bulk as possible.
One o f the best animal foods, both to Induce egg production and promote growth, Is cut fresh bone. . .
; • • • . ' ■ ■ ,
Cold, damp land Is 'no place for poultry; that which Arles soonest after a rain Is the best land on which t » (Use fowls.
• • » ; .
Wheat bran is especially valuable for feathering out the baby chicks, and, properly used, It - will grow feathers foster than anything else. It Is advisable to keep It la the dry fares M fm the «kicks r ••
' ' '' "" ' ig rr
i / l
¿eg* ,V- •«fL~;,|M|| w-p-
J 9 V
O U T IN G SSUNDAY, JUNE 26th
L U R A Y , V A .0 A A | ) I V int the marvelous 011*1111 I underground
■ CAVERNSO F L U R A Y
1 ,|’I|'!I,V 'ull'-- <>r Mildenniicun «pirn-«lur. I lie stimig,>t nini rm.-t l.<-autiful I'lncriH m III,. I,„rill. Ml,.,- •Brail) lighted through,,m
l n i i , s i , i1 • M., Saturday. June 2-11h if,.
“tttrnjru;.--lnuiu__Luj4iv;. „.,.14 ^ ».luisilgiii rid,. Hir'imgii tii,. sii.ium (lonli \iilley. passing th rough ||i,l>.
.itraUmu, Aid.,-..Hafrinhurg;—Itrnillug: mid Allentown, |‘n
— - Continued from peg* one. ire rream- and soft drinks, ■-tucking.«, poppy bod. ,
Tlie l,ig feature o f the festival will lie the open air converts In the evening. which will tiring hundred« of v isltors from out-of-town to swell the loral uttendance. The admin- Mon to grounds will he free. In addition to the movies, tile entertain- piuit eiiinmitteei.^ias arranged for l.imd emieerts, selections by the I hursion male (pjartet of Elizabeth and a doiilde ipiartot of the Gran1 lord (flee t'llih. ............... —
LAKE HOPATCONG, $1.75. Every Sunday
* . Lcjivf ( rnnforrl. ft .1 \ \\
Cranford will lie treated to the first "■ally urtisi le -repertoire of old plan- .lot Í um .-ong«.liy.-the-Graii frmicrihir- ■ed“ men's .(Uartet, This will be an experience no one will want to miss
,f A.,W - *• ,
MAUCH CHUNK, $2.40
- . . . t iMi y n i : » i n H a u l lO IJIIHHmm one in looking forward to.
While the committee has planned to make every day a particularly in- ten-sting one for Cranford realdenis, delegations arc* expected from
, ------ •yrmm» 0Sundays, June 25, July 9 and 23
( rafifi.nl. 8:21
U P THE HUDSON TO ,
B E A R M O U N T A I N , $ 1 .4 5r- <3>
('limit rlliii; ul j"r* y'
Cailtrn blindarti T»mp Shown
NEW JERSEY CENTRAL
Dorotliv-" 1 Eli
... William
Decide non to enjoy “music from I Oie clouds’’ by histnllhig a wireless telephone receiving outfit In yourI It »III ft l'i>i,>A i.. I ...... m .i f I
supplies min inrornmtloii.• LeM.iarifoid he » radio town. Jin-, jc itn lir a roomful o f friends with the fascinating radio telephone f broadcast.^ Kets rahglng hi price from $15 to
Havo me cull some evening to sins I Idy you with further hiforuintlon
Most Popi Most Popi Best Took Best Look Pattest....^. Thinnest. Most Atlil- Most Atlil Wittiest... Best Girl Best BoyNeatest...Quietest...Ixmdest...liest Nati Heaviest
. * Heaviest4 Prettiest. Handiest,...
Most Att
, im i w o r k .- .Mol ion Pictures.... i Mol ■|)o('h. *i. V ............
P. J. Larsen Radio Co. 'nm,!vs',,ly- * b ( ’»foloria.
7 linked (jooiIh. ;
M i # u r m .K E Y TO THE BOOTHS
1C Johnson Avenue, Cranford, N. J,i„t„ î! .. Vlt u,,0M 7 ,t0 10 I'- week, duys, i to 8 p. m„ Saturdays.
The School of Nursing of Muhlenberg Hospital
I lamficld, Now JcMry■ ¡s s k s î ï j * ê È ä f f a œ a i »
Oilers a slaiiilanl ;t > . . r , | „IS 1, , , , ,S lt|| |, l „h „ |,„, I
jli 1*1,„lins or mi ,.,|mi V idi-i',1, ( i,.,,1 ,,r llil.Hs,',i,H,l.‘,r,',,ili,,itli',l I<iMi,*.S|.,|,, p „ iixniiiiiuiii„„H N,.|, .|,TM.V New-Yorkimd 1 . i m s v l , ’I inn,,,i .-,,„1 I........r<«>m mul hon,I, mid,inns „nil l.iundry’IIICIKmI atll-|til:i|l,-,.,|||,| .....Illllily ,.l■ ‘ f ' ' S l , l , l , - I , | M |,v ||„,jutai. v .laxst-s o|„-il JM.',y l s l io u l N .p l | , (
" ,ur ere«l*.s Is , <„• r .,/1 m „„ '. niRI.CTOR SCIIOQI. OF NURSINC.
. . . . . . .Idles’ A hi will hold their SII. ' A i i„ „ N.V....... . : : :.......»Prosser
< - i k . '! p- »*■ ¿fi i K/r J,
"'K
-=■ - **«*■«* mmmiíímimssittsáir.
THE CRANFORD CITIZEN A N D CHRONICLE THURSDAY, JUNE 22, 1922
ail the nearby towns. Many from Plainfield, Westfield and Garwood are expected on Thursday, Elizabeth and. Rahway on Friday and Roselle and Aldenp on Saturday.
A dandy supper or lunch w ill be served by the Indies’ Aid at thé cafeteria at all hours both afternoon and evening. The advice of the ladies is, don’t bother to fix supper at home on any of these three evenings, hut come down to the festival.
The grocery booth will take care o f any grocery order during the fes- c sir»in n „i.. ,, tival period and 11]| it promptly and G c n l d F u r i m ; n completely and deliver It to your f,'home anywhere, as far us Westllcht .. . Doulde.',or.-Uosojlo-4f-j|owi-ri-drat-c(lffent-rcÈ U11 ■ - f , jC ■, A, ,. u — ........
CRANFORD CANOE AND TENNISCLUB
The.Club tennis team defeated the University Courts team of Jersey City last Sunday, three matches to two. Tlie scores for tile live matches were as follows:
^'irst SinglesUias. Hurst. Cniv.Court« 4 1Rolit. Schwegler, Cranford.....!! "(; (i
Second SinglesL. HarrJi'k, L^niv. Courts..... 7 0 0Lion Robinson. Cranford..."”!!,’:) 4 7
. Third SinglesC. Strain, Univ. Courts,........ 2 " •». Co 1,1 IJ, , i , - ’ ,
■rtnfoni..,.....(;
dofr^rnaiibe always^ on the Job. "T h e_ Boy« " » “ i " inu joo. in o „ uoy
J ^ î u l j f j v i i c l i L t j o i L l ^ U û L M j m - N m v .urlr iiK ■•■■•„hn. Tllii'17._ • _ ..>u 1 iis.uiiMJi.im.jm vi ark or maybe PittHhuric, for a amaliPfihulilnratl/iii t <>n t ¿J.. I ■ __ ■ v* %
y. ii.cjui- , Misouig, ior a small . onslderatlon. Aunt Sally and Uncle I 'e te will prove absolutely elusive And anyone who believes ,in his lucky star will not miss pulling a poppy. Ami then the hand! Whoopee !! Thè slogan Is good eats, good music, and lots of fun.
•j 0
Geo.-Banhon and Kmi) s. i,,,______
itaiolu Millard, and Si*eiu*(..... i'Blake, Cranford..
'crmd-Drmrnë. ..1; n
Lrarik Lee and Kinil Schiiimiriri,
\
Ulv. Courts...... ........ (iCarl .Mason rid Curtis Cuihi
< ranford...... :......... ' 's .jAVliile the Cranford’ teiim wus
somewhat' liundicapjied by not hav-010 pluversout on account of their ul.senei
Ul" " <li<i exdiently ugamst a dui, of 2II(, „„
a ) i ! ‘ !,i!‘£ rlî‘ss Hay«’.*
F o r $ 1 JI We will make to your siz i a Jumper Dress, and for « ! ! few cents more, will make a Summer Dress M
.Try us once and you wUl be a customer, b e j
will save you money. ( p
I f !
J
01
8—Magazines and Drugs’.i# —< ! roceries,.....- ,.........-
ill—Radio.•I-*«;;: L'renm—Soft Drinks. 12 Silk Stockings.Kl—J“o|i|iy Red.'
Most Con * Chis.« Ort
Most Ini) Most Noi Class Po Best Npu Most Stu Biggest 1. Most Cn
T h e Dulles' A hi will hold their Sil-1 Aire« ir',V»TiV........' , ' ....... I'less,vei Tea Friday afternoon; In the IJttle Bird ° ,u" l. IAlisM1 fjnntnoi hmeh. from three 10' five o'clock ' ' . " „ ...;... ---Miirschnl-Ixiopko
, v ,TI- " " I preacli oVhoth Her- .March .. MarJ° r,c p •, iV ,'i i ’i's next Sunday. The stihlect of ......... ..... i'^7T7:'T5"“ ’’""™.'!-».P»W.lnl
P1' u i» '" ii)' he • i l ^ n r a 'a m r a J i “ ^ Klck Ä l i r ^
I " “ ’ pttslor in eht.rg.xr np' U l i , , , l r t m u Ul0Hn0rA<li<«o * Hn I ucsdiiy (wmiihjr next' tho 27tli I i 7..... “V......?Bootlibvon, .... Kpwiirtli. Li'iignie w ill h i T l m ' . J n ' - 1" ‘ •■eene
........ ...... er „ „ to!,! I ( ’Im-ks ln in .i Wright
■ > t i * illl* (JIK.* l)<*1 \t'(•<'tlBarrlek and Robinson. Jlarriek nut
«’xcellent chop st, ke g, i ,
see'« hk'1 d,‘l " ‘"'''l like tuVit*» match. T h ^ o l ^ C ' 1 "*•J;;: «-in-i»k-.I ,Ä I1l,:ieT.V
*\l(.thu jií(‘iui)(.|S it'diicsiiGj i,»î ™ fIrkt'ts foV' tlu!'Mtl % ,rirtx. »Wit, . (he
M- A- <-•'»Ik Of ilmuptont¡.'kets* din', V ' iM'rty anii.Kcts .¡in lie secured irum lier ormen",ers of tlie tenni« «C m Sttee Seieiiil pr|Z(.s xvlll lie olTered fo,' bolli huiles und im-n '
The Fourtii of July handicap sln-
dt v ¡ r Z Hmt,»J, Jttlj 1st-, and run through tin >v.s*k-end to thn-flm.ls .u. tile fte
b m "ís1 , t l/ í,,,r,h' ' ■ ' l a - V n Äí«h¡n,' ), , ni,,n ,," ,l Umso»usuine to cnlor should advi^* ii,*.
<»f the tennis r , , lit
oi Mil lunnoMip mid ono for tlx« «Inner of the consolaiidh.
“WE ALSO DO HEMSTITCHING, PLEATING Si5 BUTTON HOLES AND BUTTON COVERING M
Cranford Dry. Goods Co.
i s i t m
w M „ . Kstal.lMml IS'JT ------------—-------W. N. OH.W , PllKS T
220 Centennial Avenue . Cranford, N. J V
Telephone 471-R » p
H. UHaY SE(:.T
£»o»ral Dir“ t?5? !and Emklmers•/
CRANFORD 10G Union Avenue
'JVtpphoi'ti UU
NEW YORK OFFICE 14 East 39th Street
Telephone .M tir ray Hill Kill
WESTFIELD 258 E, .Broad Street
Telephone H3 .
SPECIALSat The Apollo Drug Store
Bathlnp Cap, 25c to $1.00Williams ‘Trl.lcsca" Talc ' ' igcBaby Castile Soap. 3 for. 25cFountain Syringo 97cBath Spray*.:./......... « , «Palm Olivo Soap gWa«h Cloths 10c to 20cHair Nets _ 10c
.... .........
?!......xi'iirshuV^e*Al«húryi]>nr<k ,an¡¡ MiT H xi r CCARTER SCHOOL*... . ........ ...... ■ ’ ark-‘l,Ull r^,V1,'( " í,'l‘r'; i h’el'''«'l closfid on
Agent for Corona Typewriters $50 00
THE APOLLO PHARMACYE- F. MORRIS, Mgr.
The Apollo- Puts Up Proscriptions
» ill hM7í ,¡T F " í7 ,,,! ^ ,,» r,l r îni"1' "!oil >«>¿orod by tito"pup'iíí»III he held briihiy evening cif this iv • ParCI -
n »M 0 ,^ , , t e mo ° ( E*y «•»
Superintendent Churlos G. Hny- Uothm^o®1* f ìo °SE ’S PARTY”
«n kn i y a” Kk‘rs' Th0 wator ! Mary w ho linïi n* i ’imV*°, Ul"hrftutr■ mike.», he says, are among t i t o ---- y - ° ll(I 11 LIU lo Lamb
Newark—Irvington A Pleasure Place
. For All People 'Frco Playgnniiid for the Kiddle«
Flop Outdoor Mum Daily '‘ h<’" ,,|l'S Displays I’ndav«
Wteo. Bund Concerts Simdnvs - Banelng Nightly '
Un tho Greatest Datiee l'’looi' ni tlie . - , East
Springfield Ave. Cars Direct to Gate —Parking Space for 1000 Cars—
«fifiL-n- I» * *«>o watornakos. he says, arc among thoV ,o ° f H*l>. young
lÌNIi chliirrìstl15'' “r° k,*°Wnthè siiake earrlo.s tho proof of Its
, .’ iinilniiliiy hi its stomach, says the I lisher.x chief nnd ho suggests timi Ihe iloulitmg angler cut open and uispeel the contents of tho next
Juater Minko ho finds. A dozen fin- Igeilmg trout will make,a day's meal I for the n iorngp Water snake. Nupor- ■ intendent llayfor.l lias learned In a stmly Of the ways of this rop'tUo"
III. lints the wafer snake In tho jumv status Mint is Rivon tho
----lAIIIIII
•'»^«nd"^;ïiïi:rRïch,i7i1' ÂLittle 'Í t o y B | u ¿ ^ l ! ,C" n Morr,son
T° Ä ™ p» ^ ew w
,„ i‘'zn s? !;:■ iÿ * ? “ **•
is t Ä T ä '..... «imi is KiVOIl tllf
Ì™!-"1’.!'"1Ii y/knter8 an<l en,ne f0"
“CAMP KEEP-OFF'"Camp /Noeiw»«.*’- the Christian
l'-mlein.ir Society s play, which is to be presented next Wednesday oven mg. June JStli. Is „ lively t „ oa™,M,n,r.i‘‘' ," " ‘‘ '• T1“ ! |,ar,s loeludo a j.loin by young man disappointed In■■VVY T - 01 *,is“ l'l'»lHtodi, a farmer b> hick, a good ’Irish" |iart, a very
haughty mul jewel bedecked mother her very attractive youpg daughter and another attractive y.nu.g adv-'
vi,'S ‘ r ,a!ls,> "*•’•»» the fris« * ' After the play there will he dan .uug. so everyone, young and 0M may have a good time. Save that' evening. W ednesday. J„ne 28th and
En.h’av.w.Sieiet.v of ,1 ,H ? S S
Uso of screen« m l? .^«“»nlaslon, prevent "tiro Rticii.*'^voters *toprohibited ° PaSenp0 of llsh also is
i l s I i S i S S
andsP of n f s0Veï tt! n,lle» nn«l thousother s em l ° , bast’ sun<1 ’ «nd muer tisii life were destroyed.
Phone Rahway 490-WA U , KINDS OF
RUTGERS PLANNING BIG $UM- r m e r s c h o o l
G one may foieeast the eomiror Snmnier School from the sir »mdlcntlons that' dally poui's int',, u MI n 'l""" '' ‘S<,f,si<'» "Ilice. Rutgers
Ï Ï Î ’ Â Î -
n“ >,.S,?.11'' " "<," l"'s,'s Provided this'Nummer 8l.(- iiniisitaliy e(xV(l . rrin» ,»»•. .
ieneed ti ichor will * n?» i "".».»bor of new ,smr«,'‘'’¡'i, “ , , t e
»»'I PartienInrly attractive OIOS In methods of tendilo' io.!hlgh<üs T 'M ,UI'° Pro' bb’d for imvnt Ì/,o.! w '1" » 1 fjradunt.'s. 'l’welv.courses In p,dille .school n,us|" • ,A vente iv '«'»I siipervlsórs
í'tolotyrüf '’<,nnsylvnnia: Gustiiv |[ ÍS’W l ? y: Kr.hert A! Vnr.úí: Ediientlor,■ '¿, y Itepaitment ofoholSrT v S " ! ln A' Clr,l(‘’ 'be
Ts,,,,;: j;.
a œ i i Æ E : «Iah.Mnnnard. Teachers Colleèe v .l
ÌL A . ; s „ Ä : Summit.m!rint,'n,,,'1,t
vl
TO THEI l^Ve had the good fortune of securing the services of
MR. ELLIS KAHN, as manager, of my Shoe Store,
who will be in complete charge. ' ’
Mr. Kahn, besides being a competent shoe
man, is also a graduate practipechist. In order thatthe many frie„ds of Mr. Kahn m . y share in ray good
fortune, I am offerins a few of the following special,.
s . T. REZE
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, JUNE 23 and 24S'.",i,..,8 lrt,a„-p,™„s. ,vi„ r Br¿í ¡uc,|0
inlaid. Special.... ..........r ’ ....... ...........■....... ....... :.................. $5.95
;
v*>-
' U : r ' * L,,n' " ,‘r ( ;<‘- "v -> r Welt, newest model• unip. Spedili.... -
, , ............ '■.................. .....................» ..... $4.95
. W-l.ile Sea Island Pi,fes. baby l^nch heel and covered mill.............1. Special '
. - ........ ..................... *... ........... ..... ...........$2,95ifl.llO off all our Men's Oxfords.
MONDAY AND TUESDAY, JUNE 26 and 27Nr I
'f ''“ !«.';!!,!!!!!'r — ,J"“ *... .................. ■ ... ;........ ...... ........ ..... i — *...... ................. .$145
t m o l l o n nil ,,uf~Tr„t-Mo.. .Shoes niid Oxfords-Women’s • .Misses’ and- Children*.' - »"m ens
WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY, JUNE.28 and 29»*.,*.* h-, ........ ... ..............
Spei'ial lot of-Dr. Posner's calfskin mu, P,ll(nitPumps . ,M|.««e.s' and Chlhlren’s at . “ ^ “tl,Pr
« . . .... ’ .... ’ .... :...................»$295' prices-on all Men's. Fiimishings.
4
r
V» .1 ^OLICE NEWS
.—„..vx, iifllMt*Summoned by Olli,-er Mml'nl.g.
M !za,» ‘tb. for tnif.. .■..... VFliVU IJV
<'roiI r. 1 ,or..lrivi,'iK ir t iÄ ’’!:license, lined $20: Iioiidn • n.-kon er.vHf N.- I l for* d^!«•nitri) conduct nnd speeding.. lined
W W t o f e p S S rPrompt Delivery • |T;r"is.s , . o ^ °,n •Si“ »'''bty. Lieut.
, , SORGE'.'HOLLAND ■ ■ ' e f e ' tvvb v v lm io v^ ^
J. HBVBURN \à? ‘{•T1"““1-------- ' lnrge
prosecuted r,„-,.ni„.i . / >nk
BEDDING p l a n t sOKRA MUMS 5c up ( ’ „ T v , ■ • “ ■ * * ■ * 1 «- EVER-BIXJOMiNO SW EET ' SN AP DRAG0NSP W A R F M AW OOL’D
b e g o n ia s — y co r n f ij ) w e r ,s- .O S p c t- u T M
h " V <u . '.M n D W «_ T O U S T a m s. .-«t o o k s ; GANNAS 15c ^ L M S Ecand up
n o r ^ Avenue Greenhous n o Southn o r t h LEH IGH A TE . S i j g
Cranfo rd n . j.
BBWRAL BLEOTRIOiah proseciitciP * rm-eni »
■ — — :--------------- ” . « e r e respandhle-fw-tLe-
SchoulerCementConstrucfion I'■ a K S S ’e - » “Ä ? -
_ e " er^ C o n trac to rs. SpeçiRlisfs^m Stucco W o rk . -
=Á0Q U A L IT Y C O U N T S "
Telephone 2(M k o g e r c . a l d r i c h
CRANFORD, Ñ. J.