· —----* wp5tt¡?í7!*£&*t?‘i3s£t'r ’f w. m m . i of the lolden be union klers...

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* ’f --- - wp5tt¡?í7!*£&*t?‘i3S£t'r Wmm. i of the lolden be Union klers was on Thurs- :30 p. m. members * oi July ed as per presented 1 ordered Farm Commiftee was ree.-jr^i ordered ¿Jed/ ‘r~( a-, i The following resolution- adopted: authorizing the u , f r‘‘ of &I.700.M temporary no'*-- < '„"V,!" improvement of Walnut a' .1’" Cranford:. adopting a Springfield avenue, ' the State lying the en appris rtcaTs* in iL.T, wa- imittee. passêil by regarding ived and Township, as a county road 3 ¡ring thd road eomiiiittr*- t . tise for bills for work ji ¡ and Liberty avenues. Hili»:-;.* ' Board adjourned to ;...•' day. August 3rd. IK” at ’■ ■> . BE.vj k -------- Adjourned—Meenrg "A n "" aijjim rriéd friê<- Z Union County Board oi } .ia- .JieM on .: lts.’i at 2:3h p. in, Ri,i‘j .-a;, eighti-eii tueiubers ¡ t , jb-s-nt. ' . . A copy of a ri—jlut:.-:; til*- Township i>f '¡nesting- county t*. r:i- Springfield avenue a- a «a - referred to the rund Boati co’ ::tintte.;- r-pringìii-M avenue. adopted us a coutiiytoa.: t;d a list ' referred to the foi:ii:..:t*-. ill - . lundi -Alhole--------------- , ---- -------- Hoad committee' t. mit tee of <aii cross- hvd and roving of 'rd. via« i-ey Coti* ( ' ají : mit- That ttl* ftuaruTrikr <* let íon ior f,, nn{i Ol stnr s;»r ir. •ti. -- Nt-xi Vn ♦V j Mu--u, i lit tf V r»- Aug -L Vr.v. Imá H. •Nt », A*»>n:ir. on U**\t I •m:! ti:♦a lit tC K uK-rk »WSl% S' M.r fi*tur f t h** H -ri ui a ri-is r «*nn iur:: rii to the B. a rii ü iji*un:-»i . the <*on* Till! Inly ìm ìì . [&ZrlxV(H>«l lie Pr i><*n / B K NX KIN«; )- The Tire Supreme' Guaranteed for 10,003 miles against a blow-cut. rim tut or stone braire. • Samples ana Tires m service glad- ly shown upon request- _ \JKV. H. Bradley Tel. 225-W 339 Orchard St IEADQUARTERS . for * . ' ‘ " ~ ' CHING, -. ■ AUNG, BUTTON HOLES AND BUTTON COVERING lummer Sale r Cent Reduction Specials, as well as big savings in many otiter lines ' 1 , 1 3 V 2c and 19c yard, and 18c/yard. oNGHAMS, 25c yard. u ^ N G H A M , 39c yard. ONS, made of checked gingham and patterns, 75c. d Dry Goods Co. GOODS AT WHOLESALE P R IC E S _____ AVE., _ CRANFORD TELEPHONE 471 R . n Drug Store indice you will always find it at oar stare. Oar- quick turnoversrenable us to carry ar prices compare favorably with' New Tork * W ! ^ i/- - r si'..’ -, - 12 &** 12 N« * ?» A N D c: VOL; XXV NO. 26 CRANFORD. N. J. | r cv. Edward L. Jearabey Gives Series of Afternoon Talks it Gospel Tent—Dr. Troy ............. Chief Speaker.. _____ Rev. F. W. Troy begun a two i week«*’ series of messages at the tent last Monday night The emu- i,any that greeted him uus not so large, for many had gone to Newark- to hear Paul Rader. President of ti,e Christian and Missionaiy Al HiahctT Mr.—Rader- spoke-at—tl i I* - • ' i horn hftA nltfllt BPlOr from without, but do not let trquble gaiOiil^^ is all right. Bui water in the ship i . ..II .......... LN....*.,, i.tvf. liuo I fAIllklâ ............ .... mu iitsit-i iu tilt? ship is all wrong. Every one has trouble stml cannot est-upe It fur It—Is met with in every walk of life. Men try to escape trouble in three ways, viz.: by (letting, lining and Being. (!et‘ is the worlds answer, and •teaches ‘If married ami unhappy, get unmarried. If unmarried and unhappy, get married. It ih'iT get wealth.. If rich aiul unhappy get inoiH* wealth., This •is the world;* piitlosi'PliV. TO 1 ><> Is tin« ehurch s answer, Imt to BE Is (¡oils answer, which solves the peace problem^ the Christian and Missionary -vi- which solves im t'c“ > , • ” 11Hnce---- M r~Raderspoke-at—the tipit irutit*-u»-t<> lie like 11Im. -11 - rnsnei Tent here one night before has made provision for our being “ •• ‘ v. ftlH Orchard coil- in-., itlni IlmillL'h His sou. Jesu BUSINESS MEN'S ASSOCISI CLAMBAKE AUGUST- n--tK.TT“paDll A t'th e ' "Tegnlsmncethig “» »'r«* Association Monday night .plani iur_Xlie_big Çlwnbake it- PO] Tret« inn. lhmelleii. \Vednesu. August tiilh. were reported eoi - .. o.v ilnf-ttll iif vnpI a Gospel ieni iieie u w ‘“ s;"- voing to the big Old Orchard eon vention. in Maine. The crowds Tuesday and Wednesday night were especially delighted with the phasing way Dr. Troy gives his messages. His talks are always full I of Bible quotations und fitting, ap- propriate Illustrations. J* Rev Edward Jeumbey, of De -W itt, Nebraska, gave a series ut l’ -messages afternoons.; Monday at 13:30 he spoke on , u?..l!o l: tiie texts Matt. b:33, Rom. 10.3. Philip. 3:9. Tuesday the subject was "Separation.” with tçxts 2 Cor. 8:5 5:20. G:18, and Rom ..12.1,2. * rl; day ids message was on "Service. Speaking o f Sepnrut|oii. Mr. Jeam- I hey- said that God jvus not uiiieason- I aide "A woman once asked a young niiin wlii>’ was'gü1ng ti; si’hool.-<'iirn- ing ids way. if lie would cut ha f an acre of grass in half an hour with a dull lawn mower. Then she was paying fifteen cents an hour fur the work Tills .woman-was unreason- /aide” But God said in Romans through- ids servunt .Paul. ”1 resent .your bodies n living sacrifice which Is'YOur reasonable hofvU’ o. ................ ■•Malmminedanlsni, Coiifuchinlsiu and other-religions tell peoph w ««p to do in this they are like Chris- tianity But Christ, also slmws us how to do, and gives the strong«» to do it. “Bishops . and church liends are calling for Good Mixers and many pastors and preaehois have mixed with so much that they have lost their power. God is look- inir for separators, and -.those p lio ‘ eparaie^nto Him who died 1er them, arc the ones that may eMieet to he used and kept for service, said Mr. Jeamboy: J. WHbcr l man asked once, liow long -you keep, a tiiuuJn your miiploy that was giving part time to- your I cldet competitor? Just long enough i to find, out and *',ln^ 0,.a TTiv'flAfvicGj—“Ho^V patient Gôd W r with us give. Him partial ser« : vice Tlie word Is clear,.“Come, out from among them and be ye sopa- t^ w it wcek-Kev.« Joseph jyexi -w eea ^ (s ln ohargc Of like iiiiii tlirough His sou. Jesus Clirisl. wiio loved us so that lie paid the supreme price of U*ye. he gave ills life for us. Love us we often know it is refined selflslini w But true-love' teruiinid.esjn the oi jis-t loved and seeks no ridiim Where there is true love there will lie peace, anil it Is for the lack of love Hint there is not more peace on'earth today. Dr. Troy c‘»'w>«‘,‘,‘1 his message with several IHustrn- lions that were very helpful. A sailor could not. guunintee me a smooth voyage from England to Australia, hut could promise a Dig ship-that would outride the gales anil stand the storms, No, our God will never give us a smooth voyage lUii'ie to lllm ,1 blit lie has promised ;iinl-nl-<> given tlie.-iioly Spirit, ami n r need t.pt claim tie’ promise mid take tin* tu-Jiafidy tlirongli tin storm with those at homo, at bust ness or even at tlie church, where Silt nil likes to sllr. “ I!,- e n a- ue are partakers of tlie dhini. na ture there'will 1»' heaven 111 "«t races ami as the H o ly Ghost fills us welwill Imre fruit of the Stdrlt^as August lUin. were ti'imi w, pleti* except as to detnll of variot games to Ip« held during the afri* noon. Tlie Bake will lie a flfatcl nlTnlr and Will cost $5 tier. .Tilt who know suy it will he well WOT the price. Anyway, nearly a nt. dreil meniheirs of the. Associati« and guests have signified jm>*T trillimi to go. Automobiles Wj leavi- t'runfonl àrounil noon tun Cimeli w ill lie served at two od o« and tire bake will he opened..» IB o'clock. , •*■ Utile other business was tl acted ut the meeting; George Jl si'll was elected a member. we-will nin e i r’i "«juit recorili'd in Galat ians'5 3 2 . " the fruit of tlie Spirit is Du . W P oikm* long sutbMinL. kiiulii . • no law, , __ y ' ' ÍE lHilpli A. I ''m m e r ,^ u r n e d ^ V York win speak Wednesday aTternoonat 3:30, openly I be sec- ond annual mlsshmuryv&ventl^ Rev. W. c. Boyer oj/Congo W1. con vetted Jewi the " " ” New '" ‘Ü FridaTWDr t0W K disturbance«, it I /to ' )AY, AUGUST 10. 1922 SD ZONING ORDINANCE three cents ^Township Committee Adopts^ Bec-, Commendations of Zoning Ap- surplus stork held by the Depart- ment. This was approved and Mr. Vliiricli antliorl/eil to socliro sueli mppiv-I( TallistiJd.-— _ — ; ---------- r Building Inspector Moor.« report É .> I ..Jl. 11 .... .i.irinif militi I* Hi 14911S. peals Board - -Improvement Ordinances Adopted - on Third Reading- .. At tlie adjourned meeting of the *ft>wnshlp t'ornnilttee ludd Tuesday lllght an ameiiilment to the zoning ora* ' ....... SPECIAL COAL COMMITTEE APPOINTED At the meeting of tlie Township tTinmiitt (•«•—'lSiesilav-iiigliL—Brosi- ¡TtCur'BGïWn fit-thc South Sid<—t-3v lo— . ' . .i 1 .. .1 ........t tim iii'llld g M tins I leadings vidinunco ruil.ixiybig reromiueiida- «Olla ut thè Zonlng Appeals Board ied—on llrst ami seeolid ..... .. and liearlug on thè sanie fur August —i'hr lUie'iidio«’111 nges thè zouing on thilon ave ,JBe Nor(.!.i to Include th è . wliole irontage lietivf‘1‘11 Alilell Street limi lurllioro Street In (he -Business ini' ami similarly Iby inuit THE CLASS OF 1922 Of the twenty-si;veii member* lip-i'lass of nineteen twenty-two the Granfimi lHgh School, oignU; Intend to enter college this Kcpto, tier. Tills a greater per cent, till from any class that has Krmbiati from tills school. Tho list Is f,,piW,. Avery will enter tlie Central^ Sclmol of Physical Kilugatlon. William Avery, Brown Hnl\ ' Eiemior Bcarilslce, Golumldil Uhl ' ’wiuelii'ster Brittoii \vlll g n y ibe University of I'ennsy vijnili. Alvin DarwtMit %vill^enlvr Kuv- »»ors UnivurKlty. J runes Gox w ill Mij/r.Ulty (allege, l'\'oiiise llurris.ivill atteml SwoOt ''^Lo^inithtoLelilghllnU TKtdii/AÌct'nflrey; w ill - out er Pah ami MiiiiiHM,! 4*»’* ................ on ila* Kast siilo ul Wulnut avi*- io lirtwoon- Solitli avoinn* • uim lORtnut Ktreut./ Tln’s«* viiaiig«*H ire n'vumnuuuii'd by tb^ AiuauiN .Jariì utler'Jinarlngs »n*l full *»>n- Werut ion. v » •A protesi ngiilnst elmnge ut /;>n éi/.v Mitili hóust 1 ‘ornt‘r ni \\ al lui GliestllUt Street. ,„i ut Ilio tasi meeting thè Appeals Board was refei’i«-« tlie Appeals Board..Neiirly eveiy wsldent and ownor un Walnut uve ràe heyonil Chostuut Street, slgiu-i Building Inspector Moor.« repori- tlm acute ed 15 building peruiit «Vv'. ^ni iU'w /Hliorlug ' of c!.al in Cranford, the Ttn^ic-werienqiproverf; - « >ni"wppl>c-i-^ j1 ,|iH ,,f the dealers being e,v- ti.m, l«y the Sltali.'en Mik Mills. Tor >' K v,,ry „..„Dy so and u pi-rmll to luiilil adilltl.|n arge per.vntuge of famllles"havlng apiiroved ami refernst to tin /onint, arg I cellar Tho sltuav •Appeals Board. Mr. Moore report- Ho■ *•»! In said, requtr ,»il ri'mmirliug itii* «vory etfmt -i*> ttnirlloratr In July total cost L-I,t»»> this • hn. K^ m.|, said tho members of ¿'lulling, however, the imv .Mo rpmn , - > T(i^ |ls,llp ,»tee fully ap- Nciiool vn.iv i nreeiateil tllO situation and would EnVnjoining Idilve I t , new Newark Bay I u I iIm of tin t ■ , .¿ke tlie matter in R. stall'd tin«.new bridge would,, tlzens t ‘f*-, „t’tlw.Town- r?o.;:....^ c .. 1^: v ,:s ; lint u^i'niu*. u ûtJtiDtn*«i fur ..«•rii e.l In tho report-,1 V>iwfifr. ^ f «'¡arci.ee Blnkcslee coi..pl.il..c,l of j M. Mac Keielt, ami Jam.s E. Wa. dust «m North'avenue fr»"J Ì “ '-n,,. Gounnittce will promptly get dropped by wagons i uilluk nu I > | un,| endeavor to find lai eveavated at the- . seme 's of supply. Enquiry among liulhllug site. Engineer ‘ ^ ..... s' practically Gils inalnly wns due to l uni » urn h I . .inu amt a 'very smalt ,v the wheel* anil that In a «lay ««. of ,ma eoal coming in. En- M',!ilv.müy n m Î s ‘m ie gru..... .... Uollln* couM «'„ I no coal the protest. f.Ur Jrilhiaiiccs providing fp.a.-Uio Jui „awmonl^utlAtirlLms slns-ts aml pljavhllng fuiiils. for mer BuHi iess Wriling Sclmol. Eihia MeKuslek will go to Pratt duv from a six weeks in tlie nortluMTi Maine 'G1 '1 '™- 1,. s ".vurni ahn.it thme M m^ «*««« i',,;,Xm!g Ä °St! Jiihiis river 'systems, beginning issi? '’ t ! co of the most ’interesting feu r .i,,' trip wus the running i the fohl of Allegasi! l alls. iiln /'KtTii^.Martiney will atteml Smith * Gertrude Marshall will go to Hkld- ''‘Hotnirf Newton will attend Now nrk MYuhnii'al Scltonl. . KllzaV.otl. Perkins will go to l!\ ’ )oimlV Robin soil will enter Dart 'Xiarnes'sam will-go to Rntgera 4lphfilp .Nhalieen will .attend th® rnlverfiity oi PflnnHyfvan.ja. ~ • 1 nmence Trlpp-AVlil ether 8^ ^ » gers College. at Maneliester, u , i„ Hie plaved the hob's siiceesslvely in tin exact par of euch hole. - Siiliscrilo' toTTm ('ilHzeii t'hronlcle. Crackera A 1 Sauca Swedish Wafers White R ob. Lobster H McMAHON ' " High-Grade Groceries . ,it ......... same wen pasaéd'eu linai' reading. St ree»« *«» Included were Sylviuila 1 Ini' “'l ’ Parker avenue, Cliristopliei' .stus t, FUllcrest avenue ami ■Union avemm. fO n report of Englni’i’r , G«.l n.s hat Contractor Costa amt Ills suu ;y homi tCorporatlon) 'Vere not ¡naklni; nr4»Kiu«« ° n ,*'1 îtreiit seWer lnteralv Attorney Am ** "-as ill ree ted to take the ...litte in no. n»«»v , ibeii ami tim bond hola. C. Staple* asked peruiit to ri vl * . ..ff fl lii«i/ilii UVI dA oifiee al corner «f I,Incolli àv. le untll Novetiilier I. Ilo limi heen atlfied to movo suino. I ornili fi* ,Vn| for was gruntoil. Tlio round- mlr of tiro cornor* nt .tlils stroot in- »«iBotlon wlioro Tiot now rouiided ìmMcroforrod to Attorm-y Ausili. nuineroiiHly..slgncd ^ ’ qn. e è "ialriat-. ucrinlttlng tlm bu li iu. " undor vvny ut < entoiinliil av '•nd Lincoln nvomio h. h'1 ; to' ho complctod, was pn ■ TIiI h cornor lt wuh hold vny i» ««lini’ ,*• ...... . U I*. Buckloy. Normali Place ami ur ti .i. tìross. Grange.livellile. M'I- 1 m Gemelli Willi tilo Iiiil.-.iiiii Ity Co. fm; acciuni of Gllicor Metz.nor. Injun'. |,v l.olng struck by un auto on Nortll'iivemie last your was ropurt ed. the aimmiit pulii over appi ox l luni-cl V-$Î51L-------- ------- -- ------------ SEASON OPENS AT MINER'S Miner's TheHtre. Newark, Is to. «.pen tlie seusoli wltli "'I’lie Minile World." us the first attract Ion. There is not a theatre.In ilio wit II sllllleielit .capacity to ludd ■honey enough'to j,ay .the sahu l.-s id-Nan liuhierln. Niira . Ihiyes^ J” le I'liivton, 1'lorrle Mlllcrsliip. H'" IldIv ■Sisters, the Courtney M-ter-, I'einpost, ami Sunshine. M ; “ nd Mrs. Carter l»e Haven; M Ulo M ieli, mill till' do/eii other Stage •elelirlties tlrnt I1 ,1 '",1 ,/ laveMpiii'I's "Minile World will ie •all in mliidery aiul linporsoiiiitlons ....... al Miner s Empire Tlieiiln\ Newark. ( i..i«k start Ing.Siimlny *?votdug.A i.. Ltlli ■Twenty slurs of the period ami favorite* id «.tlM’r .ltxyH^xxill G* , viewed In eollllti'lfell pieMlil ! conili Ilici co Vlneer Gidllns colili! «mi no coni for ' remi roller freni any dealer* bere ply tlnoligh thè klliillie.-s ut tho : l'hhlle Service Co.. t SIFT8 TO THE SOHOOL A( t he' cpciilng et seliool In Nep teinlier. Ilio ilecorallims of thè walls "Tit'Tlirr ^‘bn^faml-HvlHMÌl-vvill-bi^-iliu- pimeli hy thè aililltion of severul nell pletiires. The Imlum’e of thè lelilíes, ine funds'cf thè sHiciil play. All thè ( 'umici Is cf IIcilio,” have been In- teil In fon' Mauves "Alitili With the Hoe" the dccorutliiM cuttldcr'. A 11 framed pictures, in" ami "The Man -tliave lieell ililileil to if the High School ,,j-- fi te cidoreil print of King I .ear will arroiupUiiy the girls of last year's Freshman class and ,,ne of "The Rimimi Forum the lM.,v i'i,-iiinmi class to their new nmnis. Unse pictures having heel} won hi competition. The elusa of n1,let eon twenty two piesented llm M l ..... with II tine earliim print of "Aliruluuii IJucid.n. _ DIED Tom Watnon Watson, of Court nXlwei'rVi'reXili.Veireir pvesci.t; ! -j',,,,, ÁVal^íi. j.t Court Haw. incut in whirl promises to lie one of ¡ wnudiiuuislorn. Surrey, Eng¡a®■ the most novelImrlesquo enterlaill j w hose wlf-^ wa* a IpTiimr Crwf®^ nint* of tlie season. . . - gl, I, Jm .ny Sin Ito Oakoy. a « SOW TURNIPS BPINAOH AND BEANS FOR FALL August 11» 1» not too late to Sow liunips, spinach or bmins (or a lull crop The tumlpS nitty he stor«-il for' ¡lie Winter, tlm beans may Itjier he cunlied or pickled, ami the snlniicli, if sown hi huccchhI oii ami cud “hml as cold weather eomeS-Pii will supply the home table through- out the Winter,., - Send In your now* Items, we »vill he glad to print thorn, and lt helps us make u newsier newspaper, hi" sides pleasing friends you visited or wlur paid you that long promised ¡sit. ' ' ' - - - Phone C76 23 N. Union Ave. WHÓTLtTVOURMONCV i ) TOOTHPASTE with a 50c Tooth I Brush, also FoUing Tooth Brush. d TOCtl V ! made,: Jl. uni- for en Simply T T CRANE’S STATIONERY Jn5t whet yon -west for rammer Cards and Paper ' letter xrritinf. in all the latest Crass style. 35c to $10 per box KODAKS and SUPPLIES Ton trül be surprised with this department. Come is and look ns over. timo[:!><£ b Printing and Developing ' IDS o9 on all these goods this ,, . . w e *t ' . ■" s in every detail, we have the fa- ts; 25 years practical experience- work. .... ■iif; ' tUG STORE* Mr. Commuter Do You Know? ’ That thi* bank is open and ready for busl^ ness at 7:30 every morning, and on Monday cyen- * tags from 7:30.until'9:00 o'clock? That it Is equipped to give you complete and efficient hanking service for both your per- ' sonal and-New .York Business accounts. That it Is prepared to act Mr you In- any fiduciary capacity, such as Executor; Ad«.lm..- trator; Trustee: or Guardian? - That this is a Tri7mdly, accomodating hank. - where you ahd your account will he cordially wel- corned and whose officers are always ready to help or advise you? CRANFORD TRUST CO, CRANFORD, N. J- , SAFE DEPOSIT AND STORAGE VAULT3 FOREIGN EXCHANGE TRAVELERS CHECKS ___ __ ..... LETTERS OF CREDIT s È Ï KiVi. Fmiiiy Sliidton oàltüÿ, died laut Thureduy, at tlni Ookoy Farm, . J O r --------- 1,1 ..ri..« Tin« plot 1* small muV any -■gJSSSf&SÄ'V V » under wns are coiiiph ti (I It # w II ueedeil ovini more. I Ills was h i • *n Uh* Fin* ( .omulIttJ-M i _ W I) Law by letter to Mayor the Rertolctte l | referred to Engineer Collin* us in. > s, verni 'other «linHar . Gomiiitti'i'iiiai1 Alilii'ii Ihn Giiiliity. IlIHl* aiiuirm» " y;" which provod fatal, tura, naie !!r exiënuinatlim of the^ iirnsim to. ' ^ " ^ p 'e ’ i'.ver later on and waa This year owing !«• weather. tlu»| ^ . t|l0 timo of .Ills-death. Four iiiioujiltin' I'1 '*1 threatened to I h.- , U|M, survlVo, two lioys ai d eoii.e very bad hut lh- Ä J.«l..., Oharlotto. Tom ami - 1................ STANDARD LUMBER sextette 94. HIGH ST TEL 50B ONE uf tlie best posslblo m»0* to which money can be put Is the purchasing of choice, well-seas- oned lumber. Lumber that live« year after year, doing. Its duty y its owner Is surely a worth while investment. Wo are asking you over to our lumber yard toJn- sndet the well taker, cared tlm- ber we are offering. Will you eome? IVI. Aamodt Furniture Repairs AND REFINISHINQ I beg to announce that I have Be cured new work rooms at 20 North avenue, East* (foot A W « at»®») and am now prepared to execute promptly all order» In my line. M. AAMODT, 20 North Ave., Bait Tej. 632 CHAS. LANîfA Choice Fruita and Vegetables By Ohaa. Minor, — • - ' . nahvfs Choking Cough at Nignt Bal>y 8 ,g.it...v« COMPARE THIS (NERVE) WITH THE ONF AUOyl. and im or«. lu : low FREE DELIVERIES 111 Union Avenue (near Theatre) -CRÀNFORD, N, J. GARAGE Has Changed Ownership MR. JOHN BURKE of Carter«, tk. :^new owner i. now ready to ^ ¿“ w Ï^ANSHIP: EXPERT CAR WASHER — — . . A baby's cliokhig '" " k 1 ,1 ,¡n,'\,Ítíul V.'ismus.« thc-llUlo Krisiucnt voids I" <» ‘ „ If hal.y coughs and s coustuiit eryihg. 'o n inuy 1 ; l(l that Thu vltullty Is sub- »*■”- « r 1 ‘' “A.Vluui'n ° n |HI,.ifiIi!i]M<,m a u l   0 Kffi'Us ... got cG-ml temporarily, 1M VS,i?.*„ jV . i ,U oui * h * ■u H f !a Í. 11 « of trouble unies* ,|" “'kl> ,W ‘•',l,opr“ Mc. adjustuicnts. ' ' ------- OETTINO WELL THE OHIROPRAÖYIO WAY »ml »f« worth »nd iu he*«**« V;,!.y‘1«m ‘ i r « / l,Uln(<l m follnweiB 1 » » « -» u,? â ,‘ ïïjïïâ iJg's'.sarfftaSiJs:v U,«.yl-l|.tln îr *u“ l,-ïù.C• Ä 1/. : DR. CHARLES. MHXEBj . 19 UÄioh Av®., N., Cranford, N. J- S T»|. SS5-W. Tum.. Tk#"-. 8,L u'(y ./2 ..4*. *t *r: i ROBBINS &, ALLISON - -, ■: (INC.) ., ' „ , , , . STORAGE and MOVING - ' >. ‘ ' 213-215 E. South Avenue ....... ) ' : QIANfORD," N. I. . ' i - . T»l»pl»one IW 'B 'W O XOMPARC r^TMlS. r*?Acc •r .wiTrt :/irtiS one Waiter W ; Mooney Company, Inc. -------------- -- 1 Walnut Avenue - ' Cranford, N.,J. J. lumber lath SASH _ ï shingles doors trim .... l im e ^ CEMENT - plaster SAND SLAG GRAVEL PHONE 0NE-THRE& 'rra-—

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* ’f—---- wp5tt¡?í7!*£&*t?‘i3S£t'r

W m m .

i o f the lo ldenbe Union klers was on Thurs- :30 p. m. members

* o i July ed as per presented 1 ordered

Farm Commiftee was ree.-jr^i ordered ¿Jed/ ‘ r~( a-,i

The following resolution- adopted: authorizing the u , f r‘ ‘ of &I.700.M temporary no'*-- < '„"V,!" improvement o f Walnut a' .1’" Cranford:. adopting a Springfield avenue, '

the State lying the en appris rtcaTs* in iL.T, wa- imittee.passêil byregarding ived and

Township, as a county road 3 ¡ring thd road eomiiiittr*- t .

■ tise for bills for work ji ¡ and Liberty avenues. Hili»:-;.* ' Board adjourned to ;...• ' day. August 3rd. IK” at ’■ ■> .

BE.vj k ‘

—--------Adjourned— Meenrg"A n "" aijjim rriéd friê<- Z Union County Board oi } .ia- .JieM on .:lts.’i at 2:3h p. in, Ri,i‘j .-a;, eighti-eii tueiubers ¡t , jb-s-nt. ' . .

A copy of a ri—jlut:.-:; til*- Township i>f '¡nesting- county t*. r:i- Springfield avenue a- a — « a - referred to the rund

Boati co’ ::tintte.;- r-pringìii-M avenue. adopted us a coutiiytoa.:

t;d a list ' referred to the foi:ii:..:t*-.ill - . lundi -Alhole---------------,---- --------

Hoad committee' t.

mit tee of <aii cross- hvd and

roving of 'rd. via«i-ey Coti*

( 'ají: mit- That ttl* ftuaruTrikr <*let íon ior f,, nn{i Ol stnr s;»r ir.•ti. -- Nt-xi Vn ♦V j Mu--u, ilit t f V r »- Aug -L Vr.v.Imá H. •Nt », A*»>n:ir.on U**\t I •m:! ti:♦a lit tC KuK-rk »W Sl% S' M.r fi* tu r f t h** H -riui a ri-is r « *nn iur::rii to the B. a rii ü iji*un:-»i .

the <*on* Till! Inly ìm ì ì .[&ZrlxV(H>«llie Pr i><*n / B K NX KIN«;

) -The Tire Supreme'

Guaranteed for 10,003 miles against a blow-cut. rim tut or stone braire. •

Samples ana Tires m service glad­ly shown upon request- _

\JKV. H . B ra d le yTel. 225-W 339 Orchard St

IE A D Q U A R T E R S

. for* . ' ‘ " ~ '

C H IN G , - . ■

A U N G ,

B U T T O N H O L E S A N DB U T T O N C O V E R IN G

lummer Saler Cent ReductionSpecials, as well as big savings in

many otiter lines ' 1

, 13V2c and 19c yard,

and 18c/yard.

o N G H A M S , 25c yard.

u ^ N G H A M , 39c yard.

O N S , made o f checked gingham and patterns, 75c.

d Dry Goods Co.GOODS A T W HOLESALE P R I C E S _____

A V E ., _ C R A N F O R D

TELEPH O NE 471 R .

n

D rug Storeindice you w ill always find it at oar stare.

Oar- quick turnoversrenable us to carry ar prices compare favorably with' New Tork

* W !

^ i/- - r ■s i ' . . ’ -, -

12 &**12 N«

* ?»

A N D c:V O L ; X X V N O . 26

C R A N F O R D . N . J.

| r cv. Edward L . Jearabey Gives Series o f Afternoon Ta lks it

Gospel T en t— Dr. T ro y ............. Ch ief Speaker.. _____

Rev. F. W . Troy begun a two i week«*’ series of messages at the

tent last Monday night The emu- i,any that greeted him uus not so large, for many had gone to Newark- to hear Paul Rader. President of ti,e Christian and Missionaiy A l

HiahctT Mr.—Rader- spoke-at—tl i I* - • ' i horn hftA nltfllt BPlOr

from without, but do not let trqublegaiOiil^^is all right. Bui water in the shipi . . . I I . . . . . . . . . . LN....*.,, i.tvf. liu o I fA Illk lâ............ „ .... mu iitsit-i iu tilt? shipis all wrong. Every one has trouble stml cannot est-upe It fur It—Is met with in every walk of life. Men try to escape trouble in three ways, viz.: by (letting, lining and Being. (!e t‘ is the worlds answer, and •teaches ‘If married ami unhappy, get unmarried. If unmarried and unhappy, get married. It ih'iT get wealth.. I f rich aiul unhappy get inoiH* wealth., This • is the world;* piitlosi'PliV. TO 1 >< > Is tin« ehurch s answer, Imt to BE Is (¡oils answer, which solves the peace problem^the Christian and Missionary -vi- which solves im t'c“ > , • ”

11Hnce----M r~R ad ersp oke-a t—the tipit irutit*-u»-t<> lie like 11 Im. -11 -rnsnei Tent here one night before has made provision for our being “ ••‘ v. ftlH Orchard coil- in-., itlni IlmillL'h His sou. Jesu

BUSINESS MEN'S ASSOCISI CLAM BAKE AUGUST-n--tK.TT “pa DllA t 't h e ' "Tegnlsmncethig “ » » ' r « *

Association Monday night .p la n i iur_Xlie_big Çlwnbake it- PO] Tret« inn. lhmelleii. \V ednesu. August tiilh. were reported eoi- .. o.v ilnf-ttll iif vnpIa

Gospel ie n i iie ie u w ‘ “ s;"- voing to the big Old Orchard eon vention. in Maine. The crowds Tuesday and Wednesday night were especially delighted with the phasing way Dr. Troy gives his messages. H is talks are always full

I of Bible quotations und fitting, ap­propriate Illustrations.

J* Rev Edward Jeumbey, of De -W it t , Nebraska, gave a series ut l’ -messages afternoons.; Monday at 1 3:30 he spoke on , u?..l!ol: tiie texts Matt. b:33, Rom. 10.3.

Philip. 3:9. Tuesday the subject was "Separation.” with tçxts 2 Cor. 8:5 5:20. G:18, and Rom..12.1,2. * rl; day ids message was on "Service. Speaking o f Sepnrut|oii. Mr. Jeam-

I hey- said that God jvus not uiiieason- I aide "A woman once asked a young

niiin wlii>’ was'gü1ng ti; si’hool.-<'iirn- ing ids way. if lie would cut ha f an acre of grass in half an hour with a dull lawn mower. Then she was paying fifteen cents an hour fur the work Tills .woman-was unreason-

/aide” But God said in Romans through- ids servunt .Paul. ”1 resent .your bodies n living sacrifice whichIs'YOur reasonable hofvU’o.................

■•Malmminedanlsni, Coiifuchinlsiu and other-religions tell peoph w ««p to do in this they are like Chris­tianity But Christ, also slmws us how to do, and gives the strong«»to do it. “ Bishops . and churchliends are calling for Good Mixers and many pastors and preaehois have mixed with so much that they have lost their power. God is look- inir for separators, and -. those p lio ‘ epara ie^n to Him who died 1er them, arc the ones that may eMieet to he used and kept for service, said Mr. Jeamboy: J. WHbcr l man asked once, liow long

-you keep, a tiiuuJn your miiploy that was giving part time to- your

I cldet competitor? Just long enoughi to find, out and *',ln^ 0,.a

TTiv'flAfvicGj—“ Ho^V patient Gôd W r with us give. Him partial ser« : vice Tlie word Is clear,.“Come, out

from among them and be ye sopa-

t ^ w i t wcek-K ev.« Josephjyexi -w eea ^ (s ln ohargc Of

like iiiiii tlirough His sou. Jesus Clirisl. wiio loved us so that lie paid the supreme price of U*ye. he gave ills life for us. Love us we often know it is refined selflslini w But true-love' teruiinid.esjn the oi jis-t loved and seeks no ridiim Where there is true love there will lie peace, anil it Is for the lack of love Hint there is not more peace on'earth today. Dr. Troy c‘»'w>«‘ ,‘,‘1 his message with several IHustrn- lions that were very helpful. A sailor could not. guunintee me a smooth voyage from England to Australia, hut could promise a Dig ship-that would outride the gales anil stand the storms, No, our God will never give us a smooth voyage lUii'ie to lllm ,1 blit lie has promised;iinl-nl-<> given tlie.-iioly Spirit, ami n r need t.pt claim tie’ promise midtake tin* tu-Jiafidy tlirongli tin storm with those at homo, at bust ness or even at tlie church, whereSilt nil likes to sllr. “ I!,- e n a­ue are partakers of tlie dhini. na ture th ere 'w ill 1» ' heaven 111 " « t races ami as the H o ly Ghost fills us welwill Imre fruit of the Stdrlt^as

August lUin. were ti'imi w , pleti* except as to detnll o f variot games to Ip« held during the afri* noon. T lie Bake will lie a flfa tc l nlTnlr and Will cost $5 tier. .Tilt who know suy it will he well WOT the price. Anyway, nearly a nt. dreil meniheirs of the. Associati« and guests have signified jm>*T trillimi to go. Automobiles Wj leavi- t'runfonl àrounil noon tun Cimeli w ill lie served at two o d o « and tire bake will he opened..» IB o'clock. , •*■

U tile other business was tl acted ut the meeting; George Jl si'll was elected a member.

we-will nin e i r’i "«juitrecorili'd in Galat ians'5 3 2 . " the fruit of tlie Spirit is Du . W Poikm* long sutbMinL. kiiulii . •

no law, , __ y' ' ÍE

lHilpli A. I ' 'm m e r ,^ u r n e d ^

V York win speak Wednesday aTternoonat 3:30, openly I be sec­ond annual mlsshmuryv&ventl^ Rev. W. c. Boyer oj/Congo W1.

con vetted Jewi the " " ” New

'" ‘Ü FridaTW Dr t0W

K disturbance«, it I /to ' ‘

) A Y , A U G U S T 10. 1922

SD ZONING ORDINANCE

t h r e e c e n t s

^Township Committee Adopts^ Bec-, Com mendations of Zoning A p -

surplus stork held by the Depart­ment. This was approved and Mr. Vliiricli antliorl/eil to socliro suelim ppiv-I ( TallistiJd.-— _ — ;---------- r

Building Inspector Moor.« reportÉ .> I ..Jl. 11.... .i.irinif militi I* Hi 14911S.

peals Board - -Improvement ’ Ordinances Adopted

- on Th ird Reading- ..At tlie adjourned meeting of the

*ft>wnshlp t'ornnilttee ludd Tuesday lllght an ameiiilment to the zoningora* ' .......

SPECIAL COAL COMMITTEE APPOINTED

At the meeting of tlie Township tTinmiitt (•«•—'lSiesilav-iiigliL—Brosi- ¡TtCur'BGïWn fit-thc South Sid<—t-3v lo—. ' . .i 1 .. .1........t tim iii'llld

gM tinsI leadings

vidinunco ruil.ixiybig reromiueiida- «O lla ut thè Zonlng Appeals Board

ied— on llrst ami seeolid..... .. and liearlug on thè saniefur August —i'h r lUie'iidio«’111nges thè zouing on thilon ave

,JBe Nor(.!.i to Include th è . wliole irontage lietivf‘1‘11 Alilell Street limi lurllioro Street In (he -Business ini' ami sim ilarly Ib y inuit

THE CLASS OF 1922Of the twenty-si;veii member*

lip-i'lass of nineteen twenty-two the Granfimi lHgh School, oignU; Intend to enter college this Kcpto, tier. Tills a greater per cent, till from any class that has Krmbiati from tills school. Tho list Is

f,,piW,. Avery will enter tlie Central^ Sclmol o f Physical Kilugatlon.

William Avery, Brown Hnl\

' Eiemior Bcarilslce, Golumldil Uhl

' ’wiuelii'ster Brittoii \vlll g n y i be University of I'ennsy vijnili.

Alvin DarwtMit %vill^enlvr Kuv- »»ors UnivurKlty.

J runes Gox w ill Mij/r.Ulty (a llege,

l'\'oiiise llurris.ivill atteml SwoOt

' '^ L o ^ i n i t h t o L e l i l g h l ln U

TKtdii/AÌct'nflrey; w ill - out er Pah

ami MiiiiiHM,! 4*»’* ................on ila* Kast siilo ul Wulnut avi*-

io lirtwoon- Solitli avoinn* • uim lORtnut Ktreut./ Tln’s«* viiaiig«*H ire n'vumnuuuii'd by tb^ AiuauiN

.Jariì utler'Jinarlngs »n*l full *»>n- Werut ion. v »•A protesi ngiilnst elmnge ut /;>n

éi/.v Mitili hóust 1‘ornt‘r ni \\ allui GliestllUt Street.

,„i ut Ilio tasi meeting thè Appeals Board was refei’i«-« tlie Appeals Board..Neiirly eveiy

wsldent and ownor un Walnut uve ràe heyonil Chostuut Street, slgiu-i

Building Inspector Moor.« repori- tlm acuteed 15 building peruiit «Vv'. ^ni iU'w /Hliorlug ' of c!.al in Cranford, the Ttn^ic-werienqiproverf; - «>ni"wppl>c-i- j1 ,|iH ,,f the dealers being e,v- ti.m, l«y the Sltali.'en Mik Mills. Tor >' K v,,ry „..„Dy so and upi-rmll to luiilil adilltl.|n arge per.vntuge of famllles"havlngapiiroved ami refernst to tin /onint, arg I cellar Tho sltuav•Appeals Board. Mr. Moore report- Ho■ *•»! In said, requtr,»il ri'mmirliug itii* «vory etfmt -i*> ttnirlloratrIn July total cost L-I,t»»> this • hn. K^ m.|, said tho members of ¿'lulling, however, the imv .Mo rpmn , - > T(i^ |ls,llp ,»tee fully ap-Nciiool vn.iv i nreeiateil tllO situation and wouldEnVn joining Idilve I t ,new Newark Bay Iu IiIm of tin t ■ , .¿ke tlie matter in

R. stall'd tin«.new bridge would,, tlzens t ‘ f* - , „ t ’tlw.Town-

r?o.;:....^ c .. 1^ : v , : s ;

lint u i'niu*. uûtJtiDtn*«i fur

..«•rii e.l In tho report-,1 V>iwfifr. ^ f ‘«'¡arci.ee Blnkcslee coi..pl.il..c,l of j M. Mac Keielt, ami Jam.s E. Wa.

dust «m North'avenue fr»"J Ì “ '-n,,. Gounnittce will promptly getdropped by wagons i uilluk nu I > | ■ un,| endeavor to findlai eveavated at the- . seme 's of supply. Enquiry amongliulhllug site. Engineer ‘ ^ .....s' practicallyGils inalnly wns due to l uni » urn h I . .inu amt a 'very smalt,v the wheel* anil that In a «lay ««. of ,ma eoal coming in. En-

M',!ilv.müy n m Î s ‘ m ie gru..... .... Uollln* couM « '„ I no coal

the protest.f.UrJrilhiaiiccs providing fp.a.-Uio Jui „awmonl^utlAtirlLms slns-ts aml pljavhllng fuiiils. for

mer BuHi iess Wriling Sclmol.Eihia MeKuslek will go to Pratt

duv from a six weeks in tlie nortluMTi Maine 'G1'1'™- 1 ,. s ".vurni ahn.it thme M m ^«*««« i',,;,Xm!g Ä °St! Jiihiisriver 'systems, beginning

i s s i ?'’t !co of the most ’interesting feu

r .i,,' trip wus the running

ithe fohl of Allegasi! l alls.

iiln/'KtTii^.Martiney will atteml Smith

* Gertrude Marshall will go to Hkld-

''‘Hotnirf Newton will attend Now nrk MYuhnii'al Scltonl.. KllzaV.otl. Perkins will go to

l !\’ )o im lV Robin soil will enter Dart

'X ia rn es 'sam w ill-go to Rntgera

4lphfilp .Nhalieen will .attend th® rnlverfiity o i PflnnHyfvan.ja. ~ •1 nmence Trlpp-AVlil ether 8^ ^ »

gers College.

at Maneliester, u , i„ Hieplaved the hob's siiceesslvely in tin exact par of euch hole. -

Siiliscrilo' toTTm ('ilHzeii t'hronlcle.

C r a c k e r a

A 1 Sauca Swedish WafersW hite R ob. Lobster H M c M A H O N ' "

High-Grade Groceries

. ,it......... same wenpasaéd'eu linai' reading. St ree»« *«» Included were Sylviuila 1 Ini' “ 'l ’ Parker avenue, Cliristopliei' .stus t, FUllcrest avenue ami ■Union avemm. fO n report o f Englni’i’r , G«.l n.s

hat Contractor Costa amt Ills suu ;y homi tCorporatlon) 'Vere not¡naklni; nr4»Kiu«« ° n ,* '1îtreiit seWer lnteralv Attorney Am

** "-as ill ree ted to take the ...littein no. n»«»v ,

ibeii ami tim bond hola.C. Staple* asked peruiit to rivl * . — ..ff fl lii«i/ilii UV IdA oifiee al corner «f I,Incolli àv.

le untll Novetiilier I. Ilo limi heen atlfied to movo suino. I ornili fi* ,Vn| for was gruntoil. Tlio round-

mlr of tiro cornor* nt .tlils stroot in- »«iBotlon wlioro Tiot now rouiided ìmMcroforrod to Attorm-y Ausili.

nuineroiiHly..slgncd ^ ’ q n. e è"ialriat-. ucrinlttlng tlm bu li iu.

" undor vvny ut < entoiinliil av'•nd Lincoln nvomio h. h'1;

■ to' ho complctod, was pn ■ TIiIh cornor lt wuh hold

vny i» ««lini’ ,*•...... .U I*. Buckloy. Normali Place ami

ur ti .i. tìross. Grange.livellile. M'I- 1 m Gemelli Willi tilo I iiil.-.iiiii It y Co. fm; acciuni of Gllicor Metz.nor. Injun'.|,v l.olng struck by un auto on Nortll'iivemie last your was ropurt ed. the aimmiit pulii over appi ox l lu ni-cl V- $ Î51L-------- ---------------------

SEASON OPENS AT MINER'SMiner's TheHtre. Newark, Is to.

«.pen tlie seusoli wltli "'I’lie Minile World." us the first attract Ion.

There is not a theatre.In ilio wit II sllllleielit .capacity to ludd ■honey enough'to j,ay .the sahu l.-s id-Nan liuhierln. Niira . Ihiyes^ J ” le I'liivton, 1'lorrle Mlllcrsliip. H'"IldIv ■Sisters, the Courtney M-ter-,I'einpost, ami Sunshine. M ; “ nd Mrs. Carter l»e Haven; M Ulo M ieli, mill till' do/eii other Stage •elelirlties tlrnt I1,1'" ,1,/ laveMpiii'I's "Minile World will ie•all in mliidery aiul linporsoiiiitlons .......al Miner s Empire Tlieiiln\ Newark. ( i..i«k start Ing.Siimlny *?vot dug.A i..

Ltlli ■ Twenty slurs of the period ami favorite* id «.tlM’r .ltxyH xxill G* ,

viewed In eollllti'lfell pieMlil !

conili Ilici coVlneer Gidllns colili! «mi no coni for ' remi roller freni any dealer* bere ply tlnoligh thè klliillie.-s ut tho

: l'hhlle Service Co.. t

SIFT8 TO THE SOHOOLA( t he' cpciilng et seliool In Nep

teinlier. Ilio ilecorallims of thè walls"Tit'Tlirr ‘bn^faml-HvlHMÌl-vvill-bi^-iliu-

pimeli hy thè aililltion of severul nell pletiires. The Imlum’e of thèlelilíes, inefunds'cf thè sHiciil play. All thè ( 'umici Is cf IIcilio,” have been In-

teil In fon' Mauves "Alitili With the Hoe" the dccorutliiM cuttldcr'. A 11

framed pictures, in" ami "The Man

-tliave lieell ililileil to if the High School

,,j-- fi te cidoreil print ofKing I .ear will arroiupUiiy the girls of last year's Freshman class and ,,ne of "The Rimimi Forum the lM.,v i'i,-iiinmi class to their new nmnis. Unse pictures having heel} won hi competition. The elusa of n 1,let eon twenty two piesented llm M l..... with II tine earliim print of

"Aliruluuii IJucid.n. _

DIEDTom Watnon

Watson, of Courtn X lw e i'rV i'reX ili.V e ire ir pvesci.t; ! -j',,,,, ÁVal^íi. j . t Court Haw.incut in whirl promises to lie one of ¡ wnudiiuuislorn. Surrey, Eng¡a®■ • the most novelImrlesquo enterlaill j w hose wlf-^ wa* a IpTiimr C rw f® ^ nint* of tlie season. . . - gl, I, Jm .n y Sin Ito Oakoy. a «

SOW TU R N IPS BPINAOH ANDBEANS FOR FALL

August 11» 1» not too late to Sow liunips, spinach or bmins (or a lu ll crop The tumlpS nitty he stor«-il fo r ' ¡lie Winter, tlm beans may Itjier he cunlied or pickled, ami the

snlniicli, if sown hi huccchhIoii ami cud “hml as cold weather eomeS-Pii will supply the home table through­out the Winter,., -

Send In your now* Items, we »vill he glad to print thorn, and lt helps us make u newsier newspaper, hi" sides pleasing friends you visited or wlur paid you that long promised

¡sit. ’ ' ' ' - - -

Phone C7623 N. Union Ave.

W H Ó T L tT V O U R M O N C V

i) T O O T H P A S T E w ith a 50c Tooth I Brush, also F oU in g Tooth Brush.

d TOCtl

V

! made,:Jl. uni- for en

Simply

T T

C R A N E ’S S T A T IO N E R Y

Jn5t whet yon -west for rammer Cards and Paper 'letter xrritinf.

in all the latest Crass style.

35c to $10 per box

K O D A K S and S U P P L IE STon trül be surprised with this department. Come is and look ns over.

timo [:!><£

bPrinting and Developing '

IDS o9 on all these goods this,, . . w e*t ' . ■"

s in every detail, w e have the fa ­ts; 25 years practical experience- w ork ..... ■iif; '

t U G S T O R E *

Mr. CommuterDo You Know?

’ That thi* bank is open and ready for busl^ness at 7:30 e v e r y morning, and on Monday cyen-

* tags from 7:30.until'9:00 o'clock?

That it Is equipped to give you complete and efficient hanking service for both your per­

' sonal and-New .York Business accounts.

That it Is prepared to act Mr you In- any fiduciary capacity, such as Executor; Ad«.lm..-

trator; Trustee: or Guardian? -

That this is a Tri7mdly, accomodating hank. - where you ahd your account will he cordially wel-

corned and whose officers are always ready to

help or advise you?

CRANFORD TRUST CO,C R A N F O R D , N . J - ,

SAFE DEPOSIT AND STORAGE VAULT3

FOREIGN EXCHANGE TR AV E LE R S CHECKS

_ _ _ __ ..... LETTERS OF CREDIT s

ÈÏ

KiVi. Fmiiiy Sliidton oàltüÿ, died laut Thureduy, at tlni Ookoy Farm,

. JO r --------- “ 1,1

..ri..« Tin« plot 1* small muV any

-■gJSSSf& SÄ'V V »

under wns are coiiiph ti (I It# w II ueedeil ovini more. I Ills was h i

• *n Uh* Fin* ( .omulIttJ-M i _ — W I) Law by letter to Mayor

the Rertolctte ‘ l |referred to Engineer Collin* us in. > s, verni 'other «linHar .

Gomiiitti'i'iiiai1 A lilii'ii

Ihn Giiiliity. IlIHl* aiiuirm» " y; " which provod fatal, tura, naie !!r exiënuinatlim o f the iirnsim to. ' ^ " ^ p 'e ’ i'.ver later on and waa

This year owing !«• weather. tlu»| ^ . t|l0 timo of .Ills-death. Four iiiioujiltin' I'1'*1 threatened to I h.- , U|M, survlVo, two lioys ai deoii.e very bad hut lh- Ä J.«l..., Oharlotto. Tom ami

- 1 ................

S T A N D A R DLUMBER s e x t e t t e

9 4 . HIGH S T T E L 5 0 BONE uf tlie best posslblo m»0* to

which money can be put Is the purchasing of choice, well-seas­oned lumber. Lumber that live« year after year, doing. Its duty y its owner Is surely a worth while investment. Wo are asking you over to our lumber yard toJn- sndet the well taker, cared tlm- ber we are offering. W ill youeome?

IVI. AamodtFurniture Repairs

AND REFINISHINQ

I beg to announce that I have Be cured new work rooms at 20 North avenue, East* (foot A W « a t»® ») and am now prepared to execute promptly all order» In my line.

M. AAM O D T,20 North Ave., Bait

Tej. 632C H A S . L A N î f A

Choice Fruita and Vegetables

By Ohaa. Minor, — • - ' .nahvfs Choking Cough at NigntBal>y 8 ,g.it...v«

COMPARE THIS (NERVE)WITH THE ONF AUOyl.and im or«. lu:low

F R E E DELIVERIES

111 Union Avenue (near Theatre) -CRÀNFORD, N , J.

GARAGEHas Changed Ownership

MR. JOHN BURKE of Carter«, tk. : new owner i. now ready to ^ ¿ “ w Ï ^ A N S H I P :

EXPERT CAR WASHER — — . ■

. A baby's cliokhig ' " " k 1,1 ,¡n ,'\,Ítíu l V.'ismus.« thc-llU lo

■ ■ Krisiucnt voids I" <» ‘ „ If hal.y coughs and scoustuiit eryihg. 'o n inuy 1 ; l(l that Thu vltullty Is sub-

»*■ ” - « r 1 ‘' “A.Vluui'n ° n |HI,.ifiIi!i]M<,m aul• Â Â 0 Kffi'Us ... got

cG-ml temporarily, 1M VS, i? .*„ jV . i, U o ui *h* ■ u H f ! a Í. 11 « ■ of trouble unies*,|" “ 'kl> ,W ‘•',l,opr“ Mc.

adjustuicnts. ' ' -------

OETTINO WELL THE OHIROPRAÖYIO WAY

»ml »f« worth »nd iu he*«**«V;,!.y‘1«m‘ ir «/ l,Uln(<l m follnweiB 1 »»« -»

u,?â ,‘ ï ïj ï ïâ i J g 's ' . s a r f f t a S i J s : v

U,«.yl-l|.tln îr *u“ l,-ïù.C •

Ä 1/. :DR. CHARLES. MHXEBj .

19 UÄioh Av®., N., Cranford, N. J- S T»|. SS5-W. Tum.. Tk#"-. 8,L

u'(y./2..4*. *t *r: i

ROBBINS &, ALLISON• - ■ ■ -, ■: (INC.) ., ' „ , , , .

STORAGE and MOVING- ' >. ‘ ' •

2 1 3 -2 1 5 E. South A v e n u e .......) ' : Q IA N fO R D ," N . I .■ ■ • ■ . ' i - ’ .T » l » p l » o n e I W ' B ' W

OXOMPARCr TMlS.

r*?Acc

•r .wiTrt : /irtiS• one

Waiter W ; Mooney Company, Inc.-------------- -- 1 W a ln u t Avenue - '

Cranford, N .,J . J.

l u m b e r l a t h S A S H _

ï s h i n g l e s d o o r s t r i m “ ....

l i m e ^C E M E N T -p l a s t e r

S A N DS L A GG R A V E L

PHONE 0NE-THRE&

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w m -, - '> t&-*u Ut'ut&r-tiú&JuJií-itu *>***<.■

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BURN UIHow Unexpe

Was Done

Bonfire* Every - Considerable,]

End oy

At a certain strange bonfire ,- every ulghL 1

During the d> ; toot of urnmiUL the war—sonie I

- ................«very-—deacrl —— stripped" of - ü irr—-

were laid with ) '—. shallow trcnchi./1

with brushwood picrate and cel shells and cart ,;

At 6:110 In t: [, lire wus ready <1 p. A. Talbot, aj the following tbc way In wlij

“Sharp to >1 whistle, and tl) of .workers f , -

- motorcar has— bearing the a assistants.

"lie makes m of the now all ; lug, re-arrany |I rimming the j Sleunwhlle a. j from hi« «hr j rods, un arm -) of pnrulllu. , ; "T h e ruga k

end« of the f * the lufluiiim!:5:4« a matc/y lng torches safety olllclif :

"Tlie inotr : us the lire,|,Bach man ■ j •! _lng_of so u , Inspiring r' : 7 trench to tr their brant- In passing. '

" ’the cor, : iuBtantly b ■the speed t , lly the tin; tired the ( oped in s '. ■

- as phnntes ; '“The hr !

ed, and I ' across til -, the road ( t ulrendy • \ ■the velilc « ' opened a., j there bell V . a mile h r taping I -1 ground. :!i f

“As tb ' grows fat ; clouds J r wltli lu iïï miles ar ; =- and It o B, , ernoon I i; • hi.ruralpiece.”

By n-i ;“burned clently1uro tin lug bmprepur,fire.

Hon ! Times with t llün I organi which 1 la forpliant eyes, jr

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CRANFORD CITIZEN.AND CHRONICLE

( S A A T

Q Z 4 S > .6Z Z A W Z V 0

RM?r £"MW/ .

Pk*ts tr

budget i f f

s-.y \ \\

Tli«- government can not only be run an •donoinJcuIly as a private business, byt si so can be run more feotibnilchlly than' a private business.—Uri#. Oen.rCliarlea (2. Itewoa. • • r .

« « * /

By JOHN DICKINSON SHERMANO KAVS lien. "Hr—11 and Marla” , Imwes niter a year of> budget-making fur I'nrieSuni. Now he hus turned over his desk Ip Itrlg. Geri. H. M. Lord,, who leaves the position of chief of finance of the War department'll) he-

7 come director of thebudget. ‘ Oenerul Hawes, quit in no- eordnnco with his understanding with President Harding that he would guide the budget bureau only through Its first year, (ietierul Hawes has u hunk to miinuge In t'hleugo.

Clenernl laird has been In close touch with the work of the budget bureau for some tlmo. He's slxty-une years old, a congressman, and began life as a -newspnlvr man. The Kpunlpli-Amerl- can war made him a major of volun­teers. In lPtll he etitereir the regutar urmy as oiiptiiln; He was - awarded n. K. M. for service as assistant to

,tlio quartermaster general and n|_ di­rector of finunce. . ... ,

UncloHum has the wealthiest nntlnn In tbe world buck of him, or he would havo gone broke long ago. For up to • year ago the well-known and Justly celebrated drunken sailor had nothing

/

<s¿zp/r/r- æ

' Ofoeitoapj- ítuf<cjnnx*>

at nil on Uncle. Sam when It came to getting rid of the cash. In fact, Uncle had tlie Inebriated tar beat to a fruz-( lie. The Illuminated seatnati. had to quit when ids money was gone, but uncle kept right ij>n spending. 1

Hut all that la changed. Unc le now ■ him n perfectly good budget system and has to live up to It. lie has, to tell In advnnce how much he Is going to spend and quit when Its gone und strlko a balance at the end of the year. . . . ■ ,

There'- is- muclr eonfushin- la the public mind an to the amount of the savings effected by the budget bureau. That Is because of politics. Hut that, will all he changed, too. The truth Is that there Isn’t any politics about a budget. It's business. The budget bureau Is net, concerned with any pn 1111 ca l-pnrtyr l TH-gr. rro mre m it e n rand hqnest—and to the dickens with politics!

the budget system, and the budget bureau, is the fact that for the first time In the history of tlie United States of America the President has assumed -».the responsibility for the spending of the executive departments. . Oenerul Hawes undoubtedly did a good Job. (¡encrai Lord will he Just as clllcjcnt. ■ So will succeeding budget directors—provided the President of the United States—whoever he may be—keeps his eye on this responsi­bility. Here's tlie situation In a nut­shell, ns General Dawes put It up to congress : — . . .

“ It cannot be too often reiterated that this most Importnnt reformation In the governmental business system Is dependent upon the President of the United States himself, nnd upon his

.continued assumption of his respon­sibility as Ha business head. The min­ute he relaxes his attitude of atten­tion to this duty there will be felt tbe natural: pull of the departments and establishments townrd the old system of complete Independence and de­centralization. This Is because of laws firmly embedded In human nature which have existed since man began. Budget laws or other legislative enact­ments cannot change ltuntnn "nature, and while compelling the letter of co­opération cannot compel _ Its spirit.

which Is nbnve nil things essential- In business organization. The President and Hie President alone,- can do this for his attitude trnrurd the bends of the departments und the Independent establishments Is n mutter constantpj In their minds. What he desires It be­comes their-Interest ns Well as their duty to do, where consistent with rigid principles and In nocordnm e with the low. In. the absence of tils expressed desire, what becomes their selfish i^e«^ .Ja j^ l*B „l«..ln cV ltiil)ly .n ln ii» the'lines of decentralization and tlie rc-ostubllahmen't o f the old condition o f- things, with everything runninghnphnzurd.” ....... ' ■

“ Itepresenintivse Mart In. JV Madden of Illinois, ehnlrmun of the np|iroprla- tiotjs cmntnltteelof-the’ house, bus thisto say, in pnrb concerning the budget

torn nnd thé making of-appropria­ti« is ; , . ------ --------- -r ......-

Under the hudget. act, the director of the!budget Is required. on; heluilfof the President, to cull upon the heads of departments nnd Independent establishments of the government for detailed statements of the activities upon which they-, arc about to -entri for the coming fiscal year, wlth-n-do- tailed estimine of the cost of such activities. , .

“These statements nre diade by the bureau chiefs to the henil of tbe di>- purtment or Independent establish- im-nt,“ lin'd refetred by-hlni to the bud­get offlccr. nf the- department, who. on bollaif of-the department bend, revisesthe cstlmntes upward nr dmvñwiirans‘the case may he. nnd Inter they are

. reviewed and rovlsod hv the head ofThe big-lhlng tihout the budget and1 ilio' deonrt im-n! before submission to

the director of the budget.“The director of the budget ex­

amines nil parties Interested In the figures submitted nnd makes n further­detailed Investigation of tbe needs of the activities proposed, nnd goes care­fully Into the question ef cost. He hns the power to revise, to eliminate or to add to the figures submitted; nnd after be has completed Ids ex­amination. tabulation nnd revision he snhmlts the report to the President who, under the law. Is required to re yort to congress the full details of nlL -government activities arid thq financial needs for the ensuing year, and If tpe aggregate of his recommen­dations exceeds the anticipated reve­nues the law requires him to Indicate liow the proposed excess of: expendi­tures over the revenues Is to he met.

“ After the submission o f the Presi­dent's recommendations to congress the whole subject Is referred to the committee on appropriations. The com­mittee divides the President's recom­mendations up Into departments: and for >nch„ilepfirtment_prepnreij- n bill. Ench bill Is'prepared in detail, show­ing' the amount requested for each activity within a r dcpnrtuicnt. The committee then holds hearings to as­certain the necessity for tlie amount requested In ench case. Heads of de-

partmenls nnd bureau chiefs are culled Ip and required to testify In great Vic lull us lo wind (lie activity means, why it Is necessary, und whether It can he conducted for Ic.-s than the amount re quested. The hearings on ench bill urc comprehensive, . . •

eWhenJhc committee completes Its healings the hill is revised to bring h In harmony with the fuels and re ported to the house. It Is referred there by the-speaker of the house, to the committee'of'the wholebouseTin the state of the Union nnd considered for amendment; and when this process is completed It Is referred back to tlie house for final action.

"When'the IToiise completes the bill it Is sent to the senate end referred tv (he commltfeo on appropriations there. This committee goes over1 the details "of the 11III us passed by the house mill frequently amends It up­ward. rarely ever downwnrd.

"When It comes buck with senate amendments each house appoints a commtttee of conference to reconcile the differences hetween' the two houses The conference' committee generally consists—ofr-thVee-inemhers-of^ each house. A majority- from each house In conference is necessary\to the adop­tion of a final adjustment of the Items In difference.- The conferees of the house report, the conclusions of the conference to the house and those of the sennte report to the Semite, and when the hills lire finally adopted bv -hotli—houses—Micy—are—signed by- The President and thus become law."_ ‘.'The..responsibility..for-- the-recom­mendations under tbe budget act are pluced upon the President, but the filial responsibility for the uinount ap­propriated rests with tlie congress. The President, on the qne bnntl, states the case of the government needs us he. understands, them. . He outlines the, activities In .'which he thliiks tlie gov­ernment should engage, and the cost thereof. The congress decides which of the activities recommended shall be conducted, nnd whetlier then mounts recommended shall he allowed; so thnt- here- we—have under Jhejwdget- act two,forces, each charged with separ­ate responsibility, the executive with the responsibility of outlining Iris pro­gram. and the congress with the re­sponsibility of limiting the cost of the program. l_ -

“Prior to dhe enactment o f the bud­get act tlip’estlumtes were submitted to. the head of each department .'by the bureau chiefs. They were never re­vised before being ^pbmttfed to. the head of Hie department, nnd rarely ever after^iey^enine-T(rTflim~Eacii department bend submitted the recom­mendations of his department to the secretary, of the' treasury, who. In turn, assembled them without revision and sent them to congress. This sys­tem necessarily. engendered extrava­gance. and in many Instances great waste.” - o

Object of the Machine“Say.” complained a stranger, step­

ping Inside a drug store, ‘This weigh­ing machine In front o f your place Is out of order.” “ I've got nothing to do with thnt machine." said the sleepy looking young man behind the coun­ter. “Well, somebody ought to hnve.”

rr^VhBt!aithe:mattet3Utiauraftpirj^:Tt: “ It won't work. I dropped n penny Into It Just now, and the Indicator didn't fix round. I shook the machine

f i ,V- -4

and Jumped np and down on thé plat­form, and still It didn't move. It's a swindle.! “ It took Hie penny nil right? didn't It PH "Certainly." - -Well, that's what it's run There’s nothing the matter with HfeVmnchlne, sir.”

first of the following June. At the head of the funeral procession were

i “.Victor Hugo's Historic Funeral.Tlie largest funeral" ever held In

France, and probably .the..Iargeat~to^KiPHra'toriFoiRiie tvorldr wus thiit of

three- enormous' wagons filled with fiornl tributes, nmong them a huge dladein of Irish lilies with tiie Inscrip­tion “To tlie World's Greatest Poet,” sent by Lord Tennyson, poet-|aureate of England. Tciegrains were re- celved from virtually all the proml-

-nent- ineq - altve; nn<T fbe'~n''TmKS££iVt:

Indians Communal Farm

Menominee Tribe Making Sue- cess of U. S. Government ,

Test In Wisconsin.

THEIRWQRQISÂLWAYS 600D

To All Outward Appearances Reserva­tion Indians Lead About the

Same Lives as Other Rural American».

Menominee Indian iteservatlon, Ke- sheua. W in-—The pish trail from Chi­cago to northern Wisconsin, one of Hie first autoniubile trails blazed by wealtliy sportsmen, v-inn tin- auluni:»-

Each Indian receives all the profits of wliat his own enterprise produces, bnt the forest lands produce u community fund. This usually Is small, the last allotment from It having been $10 a head, a-year. '

ChlldrenAllvePlay...-- ------After the inspecUou trip Mr. -Vaux

and Mr. Allen attended u play glveq by'Indian school children.

Along with the courtesy of these Menominees goes a marked degree of neatm-s.s and order i hout their farms. Disorder and dogs,are-no inure appar­ent than In other communities, but there are a few dogs with traditional habits as night prowlers

TO nil outward appearances the res­ervation Indians lead about tlie same lives us other rural Americans. There

upkeep are lo be nigm, ,These are the.govemuiei.ty 1either self-supporting ur ir . - , “'1'*'S fd' aliow" the Iadluua whai 1

, ‘ *“ ‘-istrjwill do. o lit an Ice cream parlor nr,. ’ severalthis summer t-nisj j

chatting, most -o f them »(.. v '-from families of small butmeans. The topic of conver- u ' ''" 1 not how they could find ih.-ir the woods, but how they k , a'-i,,?* lost when ever they visited CIum .J*1

CEN. AGUILAR IN TEXAS

bile was a luxury, runs through Ibis j ,,re nn «Perimeutal farm, a govern- reservation. ' . _ j tIlent logging industry and houses that,

This summer a Menominee Indian, j for ° ^ er Q^iei, good taste ami

Victor Unno, tlie gre^ pivet, author nnil dramatist, who died In Muy, 1&A5,1 nud was" ,burled In the I'amtieoo the j

spectators was estlmat^l at 1,000,000; of all classes and kinds, nil striving to--do-homage to the memory of the dead writer, t .

hearing that an auturnoldl cam]»er be-! fide tlie trail had been caught in the ; rain with InadiNjuate ¿belter- removedl the tanaiulin from his threshing ma- j chine and <;fTered it to the camper. No tips were involved; it was ¿imply an act of .courtesy. ’ *

Tliese are the Menominees of today, whose hlatorh-a! character was de» scilbed In u Washington Indian service report thus:

MA Tvoods Indian, tbe Menominee was a striking figure, generally six feet mid over in height, a giant iu ttrength; fe^* iu number comparvtl with other great tribes, their bruverjT^md lighting qualities. emdde*l—them—to-- hohl—iheir ovvu with surrounding tribes. Their word once given could in? relied updn.**

Tbe federiil goveimhent Is working out nn experiment with these modern 'Menominees by trying to develop them through tho„trthuI. that Is, the emu-, iiiunni. land holding system, now a rar­ity in most countries. Among most American Indian tribes communal land holding has been uholished through acts of congress allotliig the lands, ,

War Veterans in Tribe.The work umong tbe Menominees I*

under tbe direction of Superintendent Kdgnr A. Allen of Keshenu. The reser­vation in nortlieabtern Wisconsin cov* ers an area approximately Hi by *J4 miles and has a pt»pulation_of_about 1.S00 lndfuus, vvhose communal hold» lngs total L\'n,<)uu acres,'u large portion of It Tn tlmbe».■ Superintendent Allen's days nre full of vuriety. One opened recently with0 request by an Indian for u carriageharness,' “ •

**You do not heed a carriage, hat* ncss^LrepliiM Mr, Allen. **You are op­erating a farm and 1 am-not going to •give you n requisition for something to take you away from It/* . ' *- -Hut I can’t fanu without a hat*

tliSS/* f 7, ■' . : • -*'V ,wVogJ can liuve a harness, but you

uniiHiff life u carriage harness for plowing.’* r

^der Mr, Allen led a DccorutJon day parade. The Menominees still have tine living Civil war veterans and 1*0 volunteer veterans of the gfeat war. I-ater In the same week Mr. Allen t’jok George Vaux of Philiulelphla, one of Jhe Indian ctumiissioners, to insj»ect the funn of a Menominee who has put 1*10 acres under cultivation, and has1 »ore-than a dozen men working for him, including a few vvliltesl ThisMenomim*e Is tlie.most —successfulfarmer on the reservation, the out*

W>!\

v ~ V

Srvni iMIvhlganfoITThesa

Charged Woman forHysterics in Office

After sitting calmly by while his client, Mrs. Violet Bromberg, went Into alleged hysterics, Wil­liam V. Tyler, attorney, of Chi- - j on go, thought he ought to ehnrge her something for the use of Ids office for the outburst. Accord­ingly. on Mrs. Bromberg’s bill' nppeared the Items: “For calling nt offlce for one hour nnd one lmif7 $10; for becoming hysteri­cal, * 10.” '"

.' 'rs. Bromberg took the bill t o ' Judge Gemmill. He character­ized the charge ns."scandalous" and threatened to carry Tyler's tactics to the bar association. The “ hysteria charge" will re­main unpaid. '

L s t íCGen. Candida «Aguilar prefers hi,

IfiO-ncro stock farm in San Antonin to I the hlgnest honors the Mexican got.1 emmei.it can bestow upon him. TIi,

gei|eral-atnrted"hts"cnrf‘ef-ns a fncgiiTI private at Vern Cniz In 1014, 'Ilir.-e years Inter he was .leading the Car­ranza army, nnd la 1017 he married Ills chief’s daughter. When the Mexi­can government beenme settled lie was appointed foreign minister, and dtmns thnt period attended the penee_coiifer. ence. Then Cnrrnnzn flopped, anil his men fled In all directions. Texas was General Aguilar’s choice. .

?» .KtS“*“■ - * '—ó?!i ' k í í

VT';/

Vil" ns a H

I hut exe:

Som

University Man

Becomes One of Them to Get First-Hand Information About

-Their Lives and Habits.

HAVE .SLANG OF tHEIR OWN

‘Hobohemiahs” Dwelt at Ease on 40 Cents a Day in Chicago—Lead filer,

i ry Existence in “Jungle*" in I Summer and Cities in Winter.

standing example of what the govern- n.cnt is trying to do,—For ttiose whaTin-hlm»—At the nge of twenty-one he'

Chicago.—Men are living on West Madison street on 40 and 50 cents a day, according-to“ Nela Anderson, who IS making a study of homeless and mi­gratory men under the direction of l’ rofcssor -Ernest W. Burgess,- of the University of Chicago, for the United Charities and the Juvenile Protective society. • - . ,

Mr;. Anderson heonn\e a wanderer himself na a - boy. lie explained, - but Imppemq) to And work on u ranch, where the family took on nn Interest

newed Investigations. Accordingly he lias been mingling w'ltli tramps ns one o f them nt the|r “Jungles'' or stininier. cnrnps, on the rond.'ln the city streets, «and lo.JaUt •■?"= , ' .1v - Slang of Their Own. . 9

“The average student who hasn't* been an. the-roaij' htilTself;" said Mr. Anderson, “ Is apt to find himself un­able to approach a tramp and get his' true story.' Not only ure trumps full of suspicion 'jtjnd prejudices, and likely either to exaggerate or to keep still If they suspect their questioner, but they have it slang of Mein own. ___

“For example, a mnri who works wltli a shovel is known In the fra­ternity of 'working stiffs’ as a 'muck- or’ ; the man who drives a team Is a ‘skinner’ ; one who tramps ties on the railroad Is a 'gandydancer.'' “ la the..winter .the tramps flock tothe big cities. They manage In some cases to make *50 Inst a long while, for they know where they can get tliree_dpughnut8_nnd. s cup of_coffce for 5 cents and lodging, for 10 cents, If In the moaning they will sweep o ff tlie ' floor they slept on. You will find 30*

Culd succeed the tribal system of land holding is n potential discourage­ment, because when the lands are ah loted there Is no nssarance that an Indian will receive that which he has developed, or even as much. This communal system .furnished a fund to help support those members of the tribe who nre helpless, or so unskillful as to be unable to support themselves.

entered the high school. Eventually he wus confronted thy the . problem of selecting aAoplc-for_hIs doctor's thesis, and finding, according to his statement, that no study had beeD made previous­ly of the hobo, he begun to vvrite on that subject on the basis of his early experience. After he had written 250 pages he felt a desire to strengthen his preparation for the task by re.

Postal Bank Patrons Finger-Printed

m - '

. „ ' * d,cp<7 tors In lucIe 831118 P°s' “ l «Bings banks, an orderhas bwn Issued by-the department that all depositors be finger-primed as a n)rons-»f.idei>rrflc«ilon-lirth-eever,t;t}ostaII^ng^rcerti(t^reyT1TFlraT- - Noilr;

men oa the floor of one of the popular Chicago ‘flop houses' In the winter, though In the summer the fume place will be nearly empty. - .

“ Where nre the men in the summer?' Mnny, of course, are engaged lii son- sontil occupations. The Idle ones nre often gathered at the ’Jungles,’' which is an Institution in Hobohemla like the - fashionable club In another stra­tum of society. The men select for their; camps a . shady place,., near enough lo town for an occasional JiAodout and far enough from town to seem secure from the ‘bulls', or constables -They—build 'shucks of wood or rooflng-tln or whatever ma­terial-they find handy; I hnve seen very good shacks built- of rlpped-up oil cans .. . Tabulates 402 Cases

"Last summer I tramped through Idaho, Nevada, Utah and Wyoriiing. covering 300 |qjlies I talked to some . 2,000 wanderers, and tabulated 402 cases. I had slashed my vest to carry my Index cards ; only one man noticed the slashes-and the slight bulges; he asked me If I was an organizer for

'the"'\Vobb!les.' I said no. end that was - -­all.” ' .

No man ever sinks too low “to ry tain some spark of self-respect," ac­cording to Mr. Anderson.

“Many take to the road or the city streets because they are physically Incapacitated nnd therefore dependent, nnd they feel that they are unwelcome i Incumbrances upon their families. ___y

“Many are the dodges employed to , ' get means ■ of Subsistence. One man addresses a street corner crowd thus,T am different from the rest of youse stiffs. I. want to get enough for a flop tonight; I wont to eat today, tomorrow, and the day after. I'll talk to you on nny subject you choose.' Then lie makes his speech and- hands round the hat. Anybody enn get up a . crowd on West Madison street, for __

u

when the holder of rrcemfiraTtrpres?fitS'irri,r payment, the finger print Is com­pared with the one on record1 and if they agree, the possessor of the certificate receives the, money .,n depost«: The phoulgniph shows the system placed In ef- feoi lu tjie New York post offices---- - • : , ■ **

there ’ore always' Iille 'men who aro glad listen."

-1n-

Il’s a pity n man can't put a piasteron his conscience when It hurts him.

% ,

‘ \

rmthe profits of produces, but u community iati, the last

been (10 a

upkeep are u, peThese are thegovenum-', ....either selhupportluir or" ,v *Xa3it'lttt«T show the Indians «111 do. o . 'ihdl is-lasu,_ Itt an Ice cream parlor

this summer several „ ! HV*-nit, chatting, most - of them v ?

prom families of smun hm‘‘‘atni1’ means. The topic of c.nve^.'.o

¡not how they could find .1 •' the woods, hut how th,,v w “ “ lost when ever they visile,, o ’. • - _____ ■

-GEN. AGUILAR IN TEXAS

in J

ip Mr. Vauxi play givet) i

" . . ' - I

sy of these f ;d degree of i tlielr farms, i-j. more appar- ■ mnltles. but • i traditional i

ices the res-1 at tiie same ¡Tins. There ] i, a govern- houses that,

i taste and

i Officeby while romberg, Ics, WII- of Chi-,

o ehnrge Be of Ids Accord-

rgs bill r culling itnl onehysterl-

riri-*

Gen. Candida «Aguilar prefers hi, I 300-acre stock, farm «„■ ««„ Am„nlo ’ 1 the hlgnest honors the .Mexican K,lt.

, eminent cun bestow upon him. The e-ei(era hdartcd-hls^rnreerns a rmf"ëT private at Vera Cniz in V.IU. Xhrêe

e bill to i > vears liter he was .leading the cHr. mracler- ¡: 1T Z"h," r,n,y: on,l •« h'17 he married idalous" !; 1,18 chief « dnughter, When the Met]- T.vlcr's Ï Cl,n i-overn'nent beenme settled he wn3

•dation. Î I f l ’liolmed foreign minister, and durlns will re- Ï t,mt illcmled the peace confer-

nieif'fl V ‘ï a <r“ rrnnzn lloppcl. and hl.i men fled In ail directions. Texas was Genera] Aguilar’s choice.

sity Man

1 ,0 Get oewed Investigations. Accordlneiv i„. n About I “ W .1" « yith tramps ns'bits.

R Mase on 40 cad nier. is” in nter.

" atl; i,rt!,e c" y *«***•■.

V S,an® ,o f Their Own. .The average student who hasn’t'

been oa. the-roatf- himielf;” s.,i,i j j r Anderson, J,ls apt to find himself un­

true bis-^ on'.v "re tramps full of

suspicion and prejudices, and likely either to exaggerate or to keep still f they suspect their questioner, but

they hare « slang of Melroun. on . " > s t , ,„For «“fimple. a man who works nts a day, " l " ‘ »„.shovel is known In the frn-

i. who is Icnilty of -working stiffs’ as a -muck- i and ml- : the man who drives a team Is a ectlon of skinner’ ; one who tramps tics on (he¡5,- of the niilroaij-ls a^’gandy-Unncer.'____ _______ie United -“ i i thC JVlnter .the tramps flock t o - Protective .'he cities. They manage In some

cases to make $50 Inst a long while, wanderer rur “ ley know where they can get ■ lied, but ?hree_ doughnuts and. a cup of ...coffee •a ranch. iur J tents and lodging, for jo cents, i f 'i Interest jP the morning they will sweep off the * ty-one-heo Jk*HLjjje.v slppt_on^_you Wjjj gnil ventualiy 'nen oa the floor of one of the popular oblem of Chicago ‘flop houses' In the winter, r's thesis, though in the summer tile sume pjaro -tatement, J* nearly empty. .........previous- “ H"here are the men in the summer? write on JInny> of course, are engaged In sen- hfs early occupations. The idle ones areitten 250 often gathered at the 'Jungles; which rengthen j ! Institution In Hobohemla like i by re! the. fashionable club In another jstru-

turn of society. The men select for their, camp» a . shady place,'., near enough to town for an occasional handout and fur enough from town to seem secure from the 'bulls', or constables. Th ey , build shacks of wood or rooflng.tln or whatever ma­terial-they find handy; I have sen very good shacks built of rlpped-tiu oil.cans. V

, Tabulates 402 Cases.Last summer I tramped through

Idaho, Neynt a, Utah and lVvoriilng. ™™rlnG 3g0 miles. I talked to some -.000 wanderers, and tabulated 402 case*. I had slashed my vest to earn- my Index cards; only one mnn noticed the slashes-and the slight bulges; he

1 Was Qn orS«nlzer for." ihhiles.’ I snld no. and that was. ,

' No m i" ever sinks too low "to re . tain some spark of self-respect,” ac­cording to Mr. Anderson.

Many take to the road or the eirv streets because they are physically □capacitated and therefore dependent,

and they feel that they are unwelcome incumbrances upon their families. V

“Many are the dodges employed to ; set meqns - o f ¡subsistence. One man addresses a street corner crowd thus,I am different from the rest of

youse stiffs. I. want to get enough for a flop tonight; I want to eat today, tomorrow, and the day after. I ’ll talk *°, yo» on any subject you choose.'Then he makes his speech and* hands roundJhe hat.. Anybody can get up a cailf|l on w'est Madison street, for

ed

----7=---

Sfr

iCRANFORD CmZEM AND CHRONICLE

Summer Homes at Macatawa Beach Go Up in Smoke

'4M1

li

4 >7

Kivne during the contlagnitton which ally dc.slroy.il thirty collages at Macatawa Ileach. a well-knownISIlchlgun resort where many Chicago fumHles spend the summer. At Ihe left are some of the '■refugees’1 encamped [off ihc sand. _

McQean Place to Be Summer White HousevY : >v i

^ f !*:J)M ^

- >1,11j

i

VU*\v of the country home unit surrouniHnu ^rmimls of Kdwnrd Mrl.mn, Wunhln^ton puldlslior, whir]» will In* u*uh1- ns a summer White House by the'i’resldont. The place Is but u short distance from the cupltul and lum a snmll

[ Imt excellent Rolf course. ,

Sonny, Evan and the Baby in Question I l o w e r s in t h e s n o w

r f d

I - 1 ^ .it” i?* at

A' 'f :

- ¿!Sfet-

New York Basket Party That Is Really Worth While

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' T f c V i ; - * ■ -■if . i I * v.-s • ’ .

" H

••INTERNAI IONA.

Here Is part of a novel "basket party" at the Sea ltreejo (Staten Island) bomo of the Association tor Improving Conditions Of the I'oor. More than seven hundred youngsters, children of New York’s poor, are having a two weeks’ outlng iib llie .Staten Ulabd bonie. where they are ublo to onjoy the fresh air und sunshine denied them In the crowded Streets anil tenement districts of the city. ~~TT~, ^ -------- ---------- ^ ________

d e a t h for pu c k s Testing Flour for Bread for Uncle Sam

naass*»

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A ,i l :

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Here arc the principals in an afTalr that'Is Interesting the American pub­lic. At, the left Is Cornelius Vanderbilt ("Sonny") Whitney.-son of Harry l ’nyne Whitney, In poslllon ns a member of a Yale crow; at the right Is Kvnn Hurrotys Fontaine, lnterprelallvc dancer, formerly, of the Zlegfcld IfidlleH; and in the center Is Miss Fontaine's little boy. who, according to her hitherto uncontrndictcd story, Is the son—op-youug—Whitney^ against the youth. .

She has begun suit

b This One of Stuart’s Washingtons? oiftfPom italysk.no

igrt

* K

.7, iM^Andck of Ione, Anniderò coun­ty. i ’nllfornln, - with » a fo\vlln« ploco which Iiiih liccn In his family for many centuries. It 1h now Neven feet Ionic, hut orljjlnairy wiih a fall el^ld feet hIk

“inctj H from butt'‘ Jo hIkM. Mr. Amlclt uses the j'KUn for duck limiting njid Fnys lie can.hrlnt; a hlrd d<»svn from a b<d(fht of .*100

It tun’t every one vli<T can' jdciK flf)\verH from the »now In .Inly, but MIks Alice JmkHon of t'anyon-t’amp In Vel|f)WHti>ne lH dolni; It hlj$b on .the «lopes of Mount WiiNhlfurit. The nov­elty in hut one oC the nmny that tin great' national park 1h ^prln lruf on vlnltors to Its golden Hmiiverajiry cele- bnrHoih—:— ------- • ■ ___________•

TESTING RADIATORS

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f y v V ' i f - <

’ ’ J i :<t l " ' * '

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w i rAt tlic Department nf Agrlcultare In Washington tests on inoHt ovcrytblng

yon can ,tblnk of aro canstantly gulng on. llere’H un odd une. Ittght In tbo- lieimtlfnl hulldlng Oii-tbo Malí Is a miniatura haUe h1io|>, cqulpped wltti dec­irle oven», mlxvrH una overythlng. The iihiitograph show» n clmmpbin bread! i.inkvr mlxliiK u bntch of Uougl. prepurutury to buklng bread to test the llour.

Life Isn’t Always Easy for Navy Lads

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A-ïl'-V- o . - * ;VAIÀ&T;

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...S - X. s**, s a ?::, ,,.a

: If you think the boya In the navy have an easy Ufe, bike a look at thinpropeller of (lie U. K. H. Paul Hamilton, In dry dock at .San, Hlego, (,’al. It ia covered with barimele» and other »eu growth and the lad» l/iHpecting it will have to help »crape it clean. •» . .

If you have coal enough next*winter to keep tiie furnace going, you will be Jntert sted in this photogruph., It shows a leaking xmllator tewt under .way in the great laboratory of the bu­reau of KtnmlftrriH la \Va«Mngfon. Through the research of the bureau automatic drain valves have' been standardized to make the radiator»- 100 per cent effective even in the cold­est weather.

Yellowstone’s Bandit Bear at Work

'•d*«

F/f,

i order <1 ns a

Tfovr Is com­tíllente 1 In ef.

uVfflEaaiEBiH .---.- .la -m ,- .» , . . . . . . • /

Chalice presented’ I>y_tlie klng. ofItaly to the H oly Name church In Washington. It 1.4 of solid silver,, Iio- nmn design, 12 Inches high, with chis­eled reliefs of the apostles on the hose and delicately ongrave.l handle sym­bolizing faith, hope'and jcharlty.

^ jR«n»an k.tww¿i

111 — gtt UL t, DUere are always lille'mch Wiro aro

glad to listen.”

I ts a pity a man can't put a piaster tf” on his conscience when It hurts him.

('onsldernble discussion lias been uroused pmong art critics over this pnlntlng. \vblcn shows George Washington with -Marquis Lafayette In the background, ns to tlie. possibilities of lts~tieing the work of GllherCC. Stuart. The picture, which is euppr-scil to have been painted for Lafuyette. Is now

.,f tv Ti.-Bristol of Lisbon, O. It was purchased from a French 'family in 1840. There are many Sfuurt-cliaHlctcrlsihrs in the-plcture4 nnd an critics are waiting to see tlie results of the cleaning process before I passing final’ judgment._________ ______________ . . i

Automatic Pistol With Flashlight.As a device to discourage burglars,

a newly Invented flnsldlgbt plrtol should prove quite effective. The .pistol barrel Is placed along a tabu­lar flashlight, and six shots or .22 caliber can Is? fired.— The pistol Is a'utomatic, and the trigger Is con­veniently placed on the side of the tube opposite the barrel.— Popular" Mechanics Magazine. ■

. . Let Him Sleep. .— Tlii'ce students »* the, DeP-iuw uid- versity summer school are ¡ rooming together at Greencastle. One.-morning two of them had arisen arid were inak- ing im effort tb-ttfouse the other. But linlt awake he pleaded with them for time. .

?‘I rnn’t get up yet* I must go back to sleej,,” be said. - . .

‘?I'„ut wliy mUBt you go back to sleep?” they argued.

• You see, I dreamed I was In Toledo and lost my hat. Now I must go" hack to sleep arid find It."— Indianapolis News. -. . ' ■

11>

Business Suggestion.“Tills Is a pretty good novel tor

summer .-reading, hut. why did you name your heroine Euphosyne?”

"I got It from clnsslc mythology.'' ‘1T ? you want votir liook~lo sell’ you'd

better pick mit a n.ime the dappers can pronounce.”

$» MJesse James Is at It nguln. The famous holdup bear of Yellowstone Park ■

fh.stopping-whole processions of cars this year In his search for eats. Hero ^mls-on-lits-UHUHFv'twnt’y-TraT.the-roBd-betweeiwthiCparfc-CntTttncei-nt--Yellow— stone and Yellowstone Lake. • ~ ' .

fy*r ^ r r *n y f

THE CRANFORD OT1ZEN AND, CHRONICUS THURSDAY. AUGUST 10, 1922

At * certa in » strange bon fire * f every n ig h t

D uring u « i *l*i[(if t o f iiumiunuthe war—*>ome *

—every — d e s ix lu lL —- stripped " o f th e f)-

w ere la id w ith i| ; shallow Uvn> hep . w ith brH8bwoo<l| (dera te and eo. shells auil curtr ,

A t 5:30 In tt v fire waa read y 'F. A . T a lb o t, ul the fo llo w in g 1 the w ay In whl

“ Sharp to t whistle, and t l o f w ork ers tl ■ m otorcar has bearing the tu, assistants.

" l i e m akes .¡I of the now sll i

, l|ig, re urrung trimming the Meanwhile at.: from 1,Ih aha rods, an arm! of paralllh. ■

“Tito rags * ends of the

the Inllamim 5:40 a luateir i lug torches |

€ fjeQtanforti (Etlt|enA N D C H RO N IC LE

P d w u s u e d E v e r y . T h c k s d a v

Union Avenue, Cranford, N. 3.

JAMES e . w a k .n e r .Editor ü»»ii

T lU :KSr»AYt,A l ’ (;.r.ST 10. I Ä

'I ernu One Dollar *oJ a Half m Yc«rKntertHi at th« Crmnfoni P«*t

. Becond-CUaa Matter-

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"T h e m o t if eg. -tlie tlrt-li

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- ~ Euch »u m l AL lug o í « o

I f -------- 1 - r insp iring r i ‘ i— í

t'- trench to W

tr

r i the ir b rand ; xIn pnsslug. Ì

f i . • V »■" "T h e cur- ;

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luBlnntly U i the speed l ly ttiu t lm .

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fired the i . oped In si ’ as phantoi >

“ T h e hr. ed, and t across tli the roud ulrendy o. the ve ld C opened a t < there heir a m ile hi ‘ cuplng 1 ! ground. 1

“ A s th growls ... C r

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clouds .!^ í ¡ ”~rr. - .if.-, T » With lur ,

b - ' i .miles ur and It o, j' ernoon t l"

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rurul pa.! piece." i

A * : ,■ ’ fBy in

ImrntAl iclently are the; lag bat c irepuri fire. t

How * Times with t tlon p organl; which. !|Is fo r.il, phnnt -'.Vi;: ej es. V Etnll . age s'Ji

__the ti ’’ hlnise pnehjone l ler U grew

“D you Mam

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bo Vbis, !line;,1

M F reel!f e g y ‘ n ;

greli ”1 .

‘TUbat j

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The Citizen and Chronicle ha.-I... .. harping on the increa-ing nui>

-tine. -.of raw-leas th rowing o f tva-t mol litter on the sidewalk and in, tlie street. The Police recently had

' Die iiiitiiHgeTs ol milk delivery eon eeins on the carpet mid had fh- promise flint their men would r.ot 'leave hot t ies around promieuously and 'there has hern some .'improve­ment iii this regard. The police ulll now get., nfler the general of lender, a learning" first then arrest and fine if I In* warning is not liet-d ed There are rrrrptitrlrs at eonvr

. —n lent piitees for dill w aste and there Js no excuse for any one to throw any litter far the street.. . . .

It will lie easy to enforce, the or dimmer if - tile townspeople wilt onlv help, ‘ Surely clean streets are desired liyh-vriy one. Vet now. if the si reel is swept ill the afternoon,

' il Is iiltem l again in the morning.. it should not he han! to secure a

yeiienil uuilol,Hiding that alt will help hy' gentle reminder that tte- plarr for a diseardeil container.

* whelher a eigraette hoy or u (wa mi I shell, Is in llie ran. atai if this doesn't - work—then a reiiort lo lire poller. If may take a lew lines |o really do file work linttilts should not he, lns;w--.:iry:• ■ ' . . .

Il Isr-godd Inislness for Cranford C ilia i- llie Slide'-will f l i t the -comer

at- N'oiili avenue and Kustinan '■Heel on tin-" Relnrimm property. The comer will he 'taken in depth praelienlly from the Itenseh priip e llv lo tin* Xorlli Avenue Garage trout. This will give a eleur view

~ nl .Ninth uveuiie to (lie station. There Is inueli more to lie dime in tills line along North avenue, in Cranford hut a good beginning will have hern made. .Nint h of the pro potoil changejim North avenue will lime illreel liearing on the eliuii- iiafloii^ot the Union uvt-nue cross­ing which is the chief- work the Towiislil|CUpnnnlt lee lias he fore it m thi’ present.

• ,\^# * #That (lie TownshipComnlittee is

alive to the serious situation in. ( riuitonl witli. regard to shortage ol mill supply Is evhleiieeil hy the iippvdntnient Tuesday—night of a special committee lo tulip ehurge <d the matter us noted elsewhere in this Issue. \Vlint may he uccom- pllshed liy tlilHCoiiiinltteo time'w ill slimv, but It Is satisfactory to know that all possible to relieve the si­tuation trill lav done.

' One of .the laddeBt and most veia- ttoui trial* that corne to a girl when gbe marries, la thut she has to dis­charge her mother and depend upon servant girl.

-IUncle Levi Zink jays that to -the

American boy there ts un awful, a majestic difference .In weight between the butt end of u tlslipole and a ho« handle.

BUT HAS HIGH FOOD VALUESeed ef t o « Is Net as Fully Apple-

cUtc« ia This Country1* » Its Qualities Deserve.

Few n s o u n are tamUlar with tie iA&an ant. a tiny bat wonderfully Favored and nonrlvhlng pins tree seed. This cot. which finds high favor on Sew York’s (ewer east. aids, Is much mNsademood. ft Is catted an Indian net « j wwwBfdn not. bat most peo­ple believe it comes from China.

It l* found only in North and South America and Is the se d of the ptnon ¡il«. Il ls »bout the size of a navy bean. U autumnal, brown In color, with •¡daptZea- and atrlvi mu* ■ of - a - deeper.

TO W NSH IP HOnOKS

brown, »woring Jt beautiful to look sL .lt Is highly charged with oil and ta-maKCdeUdou*. It li the principal food ef mountain squirrels or .chip- btasks. ■ •’

The 'wood of the tree which pro- dares this seed 1» the be« firewood tn the world. It burn* slowly, pro­daces beautiful colors of flame and great LeaL It abounds most profane­ly In the temperate rone Rockies. The Cntorado Rockies" produce It Ini greatfp p f t r i i i x . • - ■ '. -. peculiar fart relatWe to th#

plsr&a aa r ii that U finds no faTOr tn tta cutIt* country excepting among tta arjnlrrvla. There la little sale for ptaoo sms In the West, but the west­ern ehooniiilneera tuake much pin cabeejr gathering the nuts for the market* uf the big eastern cltle*.

JLN OBDIN'ANCX to »crept Christoph* Street and Union Atenúe from Lincoln JLvanue to Murih HtreeL

B* it ordained by the Tovnship Committee of live Township of Cranford, ia the County of t,Tnkm: • .

Whereas the owners of certain lands and premises in the Township o f .Cranford bare plotted the same luto building lots and streets and, on July 2ml, ItflP, filed In the office of the Register of the County of Union a map thereof entitled "LeilugtoD Heights, Cranford, X. J.. tactUm one/' sod bars since made and recorded in said office deeds of lota by refer* erne to said ntsp thereby dedicating to the

( public the street# as shown on said map, and | Whereas said tuap shows a street named there* i on Thriuopher Ktreet between tile plotted streets on said map named Hmerest Avenue and L'nlon Avenue,, and another street named thereon Union. between Lincoln Avtuue#hd the plotted street on said tuap named Marsh Street. ! '

Kvctlon l Thai—Chrlstopher-^gtreet—aajscrlaid' down ■ <ifraatdritSp'lktwe\'n^IIlllcrMit"Ave- nue and' Uriiph Avenue between Lincoln Ave­nue and said Marsh Street so dedicated be and they are hereby accepted as public streets of the Township of Cranford.

Ruction 2, This ordinance shall take effectImmediately.

JOHN G. ROACH,Chairman of the Townahlp Committee.

AJ.VAN It. DKN'MAX,Township Clerk.

Hated August 8, J922.

RECORDS FOR SW IFT TRAVELProject!!« From Qun Ho* Qroatori

Vcisrety. but Light and EI#o- triclty Are Epally FlreL

f f t i l «re the etoweat and ipeed- Iesv (Mnp <m .earth'} Scientists be­l l « « light « id elmrlilty, whkh dtrsvel

feel «..second, are the faoteat, ■nl gfce human thumb, which grows twoeEMhiriiuuUis of «yard a *e ootid, ts pruCooMy the slowest.

The flute« material thing on earth ts thought to be the projectile from a ( im, the velocity from which ts 2,000 miles « » hour. According to spott­ing re Heels a man can walk a mile In OH mlsBira, abd run It In 4H minutes.

Probably the fastest apeed at which a «earn engine and train ever ran over the ralla was In 1001, when an engine and train reached a speed of (20 miles on boor, or two tulles a minute.

Tommy MU ton traveled In an auto at the rate of one mile In little more than 23 seconds. An electric train between-Berlin and Zossen attains a speed of IN) milea an hour, which Is the highest ever attained by a rail­road train. ----:-----

The highest speed attained, by an aviator U that of Oe Komanet, the French aviator, who reached 163 miles an ’hour. It has been reported, . ever, that this speed has been ex­ceeded la this country. .

. GERMSA million microbes may bo found on

the point ot • pin. .

The germ theory of disease hold» there Is • specific germ for each defi­nite disease.

Microbes are never found on gold coin; paper money Is an Ideal harbor­ing place for them.

Webster defines bacterium: Micro­scopic organism of various forms and shapes ; u disease germ. .

Bacteria are minute vegetable organ­isms, many aperies of which are harm- leu; others ore harmful to man, bat all are of more or less value In the economy of nature.

The average number of btcterl»«5 a teaspoonful of ..milk, kept under th« moit sanitary condition». Is 0,000,000. Some ot them are probably doing use­ful work,' bat th# others are decidedly pernicious.

.. Tht gins theory of disease Tmpllesthst the*» living organisms ore com­municated from an Infected person, principally by food, drink or air, grow und maltlply In the body with which they have come In contact and produce

"the disease of which they an charac­teristic. .............. .

VAGARIES OF HUMAN LIFE -Mot* okAfi th&n women are color

bUnd.

Four per cent ot children are left­. handed *t birth.

- Onlj one man In 200 U more than ■lx feet In height

Medlcel science Is tumble te expUln the canee of warn. -

One stde'tif'm^persoQ’e face It better looking then the other» end experts 0gree there la no exception to thle role. - - ,

. .v ........■■ ■• Bee s Stlnp. '° À bw l i ie w it# sling und Us life when U u ]>crsun. lAeraune o fche pek'oU«rt of ihe stluj;. It 1*Uj u s I I ; * vAa-rkibi UW* Umt stUignhumans, for. atlUioiu:ti the li»ts astUtg. the gies^ntily usi's il upon rivals onlj. The wôrhlnir lMv’îA «ting Is Just

tul>e-,wLk'h-«3aiT^-''\lu* yn»l«»n. The tube Is fitted wUh tuo Mmi-ply tooiliei) minute sjiwsl which ar**\drlvi*n Into Die siouad aîï«-nuu*îy. 4f tho ju rson who U Irving %tung. remain?* mvifoutly •till, th e t * * ^an w iilu lra w lis\stln ^ so me whs I Miser tliv faslilun of a cork* •cr**—that 1«. Ity moving romul In a circuler direction. In wlilrli «-a**»*, of course, it live« t«« Ming ugnin. rsutiUy, however, the cutn*go<l IfuTmin tvtull*Atew-un-tLr-5*ec. wiiMt,—driven-uwu'yvperforce Us* Ming, teurlnn ttwuyu porttvc 3îac-st<mjuuli to \vliidi It ta É tH ^ iA il—jiTS'l Vu kH)1ng~l t7»rH;------

H ad D a d 's W ord fo r it.

“ W h ich re-stlies you ih e qu icker? ’ ' sskevl th e d e rg y u u in ; “ sight or sound w

• - iw u B i • Ir ." ’ . tiiisvvered Tom m y.smsirtlF. - • '

“ X o . TvsaEuy; itu it's not the right Answer. ??4itit resrh t*« us first. I f you w a tch a t s i iJ j.'isyin.g » good wuy o ff y o u l i s *e i L e drum m er h it the drum • second o r « o b e fo re you hour the sound o f n r -

. “ Y « . s ir. t u t som etim e» sound does reach you ' "

“ C&n you g iv e m e au exa m p le? "“ Ye»w sir. T h e new church hall. D ad

sa id t t l i that w e had beenh earin g i i fo r ..the last ten years,and ‘ w o u id a l see i t - fo r the next tw en ty P . ^

AN ORDINANCE to vaUbilih lh# grade of Chrlatoiriier. Htrcvt anti psrt o f Union Avenue.

Ilu It ordained by. the Townalil|> Committee of the Townahln of Cntnford, in the County of Union: ,

Hfftioii 1. TlAit the grade of Christopher Hirw*r from Hliicrust.'Avenue to Union Avenue und of Union. Avenue from Lincoln Avenue to .Mtirnh .Street be and tile same hereby i» és- (AbiisheU us such grade In luid down «rid »Iiuvvii on u certuln uup entitled "Grade Map of Christojthtir Street and part of Union Ave* riue, July 18, 1822, l). C N. Collins, Township L’nglinuT,” now un file in the ‘ófflce of the Township Clerk. *

Nectiou 2. Tills ordinance shall Uke- effect iniiuridlutely. _ -— - ' .

- JOHN G. ROACH.- Chairman of the Township Committee.

ALVAN R DENMAN,Township Clerk.

Dated August 8, 1822. .

AN ORDINANCE to provide for the necessaryprivate comiectlans wUh_the sewer; gss sud water mains located In tHfrlstoplier Street and fTtiioii Avenue between Lincoln Avenue and Murah Htreet.

He- it urduined- hy the Township Committee •if' the Township, of Cranford, in the County of Union ’ * - . r

Hi t'tiou 1. That the owners of any and sit lunds on tiie Hue of Christopher Htreet between illilcrcHt Avenue and Ufllotr'Aveuue still along the line of Union AVeiiue between Lincoln Ave­nue and Marsh Htreet, not already having a private service connection with the sewer, gas and. water mains. located in said streets fdr each fifty <!•()) feet o f frontage, shall, within thirty (20) days front the passage of this ordi­nance, make private service connections with Die sewer, gas and water mains in said streets for each fifty (fill) feet of frontage as Indi­cated on the map entitled "Private service con­nections lit Chrlxiuphvr Street and part of Union Avenue, July 18. 1822, D. C. N. Collins. Township Engineer," now on file In the office of tiie Township Cltrk, as follows:

A. Beucr service connection to be extended to a distance of 2 feet 0 In. beyond the curb line, tlie section connection to the sewer Y branches to lie 4 feet 0 in. long nf !> in. terra cotta pipe, the remaining pipe to be'4 in. extra heavy cast iron, the ends to be carefully lo­cated and marked by an Iron stake.„ - It . Gas service connection tn be. extended to a distnare of 2 feet 0 in. beyond the curb •line mid ail street main«. - ' .

Water service connection' to he extended to a distance of 2 ft. 0 in. Iieyond the curb Hue. .

Section 2. That in rase said owner or owners or any of them shall fall to-make such connections, or any of them within the time above specified, the Townahlp Committee shall cuuse such connections to he made and pay. the exireuse thereof, which expense and cost shall he'assessed upon the lands benefited T»ut- suant to jh e statute, in aueh caie-made and provided, •~ Hcctlon 3. Tills ordinance shall tatfr effect Immediately.: .. „

JOHN ( l ROACH. “ Chairman of the Township Committee.

ALVAN R. DENMAN,. ^.Township Clerk.»1 'Dated August 8. 1922. . ' • '

AN ORDINANCE to pave, and construct curl« atpl gutters in parts of Christopher Htreet andf i ' - -Union Avenue.

Re It ordained hy the Township Committee of the Township of Cranford in the County of Union: |

Section 1. That Christopher Street from the i.orihtrly side o f lllllcfest Avenue to Union Airnnu and Union Avenue from Lincoln Ave­nue tu. Marsh Htreet be Improved by grading Dm same , to the grade established by ordi­nance, h.v macadamizing the 'same from curb to curb with six (tl) Inch penetration macadam and h.v constructing concrete curbs and gutters nn both sides of satd streets within the limits almve specified in accordance with plans and spelfteatlons prepared hy the Township Engi­neer. approved hy Die Township Committee and now on file In the office of \he Township Clerk.

Hectlon 2. That the benefits conferred "by such grading, pkVlng, curbs and gutters be as­sessed upon Die lands and real estate benefited thereby- pursuant to the statute In such casemade and provided...___ . . - —.......

Section' 3. Thl* ordinance shall take effect4immediately, . • ....................._ -......... . JOHN a ROACH...............

Chairman of the Township Committee.JUA’AN-R,- DENMAN, -- — -------- -----------

• Township Clerk,lined August' 8, 1922. ‘ _

Ctcstftemft F ro m T im #f o f H e n ry I.

S om e duties and strangeperqu is ite * fa l l u* t fie lo t o f Ib e lord g rea t ck x s£ *r ia d n o f England. A t a evrotiatfioQt _ o s e o f h is du ties 1g to s e r v e tfee i d a g w ith v a t e r fo r w ash in g h i » hands b e fo r e th e banquet« knd he re c e iv e * “ fourty <dls o f crim son v e lv e t fo f^ íü s ^ o ía ñ robes.” besides th e g lit ta s ín a fid tev re fc f o r <this serv ice . N ow ad ays th e lo r d grea t cham berla in is a lso enrÉiEexS t o £200 <$1.000) In lieu o t th e o f th e k ing 's bedroomwhich, w a s f« .n x *T lv h is by r ig h t

AN ORDINANCE appropriating 112.000 for grading and paving and constructing concrete curbs and gutters In Hlllcrtst Avenue between Christopher Htreet and Marsh Htreet and au­thorizing the issue of temporary bonds to meet said appropriations. ' : ' ' - .

Re it ordained hy the Township Committee of Die Township of Cranford, in the County of I ’nloni" .. ,

Hrctiott 1. That the aunt of $12,000 for grading and paving and constructing concrete curt* and gutters In Itlllcrest Avenue between Christopher Htreet aud Marsh Htreet, an ordi­nance for said improvement having been re­cently passed, be and hereby are appropriated to provide funds for the payment of the cost of such Improvements.- Section-2. In order to meet said appropria­tions and to temporarily finance satd purpose# Temporary Improvement Bonds of the Town­ship of Cranford shall be Issued pursuant to Chapter 212 of the Laws o f 'New Jersey of the year 1916, and the amendments thereof and supplements thereto. Raid bonds shall be Is­sued lu the principal amount of not exceed­ing $12.000, shall mature in not more'than three years after the purpose for which they are issued has been carried out, and shall bear Interest at not exceeding six per ceut. per an­num payable -semi-annually.. •

Hectlon 2. This ordinance shall take effectIm m ed iately .___

- JOHN G. ROACH.Chairman of ths Township Committee.

ALVAN R, DENMAN.ToWnshlp Clerk.

Dated i August '8. 1922.

“B ig ' »aïe 'at .NathanX -Variety. Store ' next Thursday.

Nature's Plan re Ffowor ArrangcminL In Japan sm sftn » cut flower* Is an

art. Tire w*y w ay branch or spray l* placed Tnjm« sume-thlng, 1b symbolic. The Japanese Insist on keeping the natnral sad typScsl form ot each stem or branch sa l depend on combining two or three branches to moke on o t feettte derign. Barely ts mare »tun one khul'af plant used In‘the same v*ie. and the vases are purposely kept almVte. so that Urey shall not dtetroct 'attentloa" irww ibe" dowara.

AN ORDINANCE tpiiroprlatLng $4.KQ0 tor prt- ' vate service connections to aewrr,. gas and .water-mains In part of Union Avenue, aud I $18,000 for grading, paving and curbing and .guttering parts of Christopher Htreet aud Union j Avenue, ami authorising the Issue o f temporary ttonds to meet aatd appropriations.

Be It ordained by the Township Committee of tlie Township o f (¿ranfnrd, in the County of Union: *s ‘ •

Hectlon 1, That the sums of $4.500 for private service connections, with the sewer, gas and water mains In Union Avenue, from Llnv.

.coin Avenue to Marsh Street, and of $18.000 [fo r grading, paving, curbing and guttering ' Christopher Street from the northerly line of Hillcrest Avenue to Union Avenue and Union Avenue from Lincoln Avenue to Marsh Htreet be. and they hereby are, appropriated to pip- vide funds for the payment of the cost of eurh Improvements. -- Hectlon 2. In order to meet said approprla- . tlons and to temporarily finance aatd purposes. Trmporarv Improvement Bonds of the Town- •hlp of Cranford shall be Issued pursuant to Chapter 25$ o f the Laws of 1916, and the amendments thereof and supplements, thereto. Raid bonds shall hs Issued tn the principal amount o f not exceeding .122,500, ahatl ma-

^jure.-lft uol more than three years after, the purposes for which they ay® issued has been carried out tad ahaU bear Interest at not «X-

TOWH8BZP HOTZC28feeding six per cent, per annum, payable semiannually.

Beet ion 3. This ordinance..ftballlako—effect InunedUtely. - *

-----JOHN G. ROACH.~ Chairman of the'Towftshlp Committee.

ALVAN ft. DENMAN,/ Township Clerk.

Dated Atigust 8, 1922. .

AX.,ORDlNANCB to provide for the necessary prirste connections * with Die sewer, gss and water mains located in Kyirkiila Place between Manor Place and Lenox Avenue and in Ra­leigh Avenue from orange Avenue to Hylvania Flare, _ ’v Be it ordained bv the Township Committee o f Die TowiiMiiip of Cranford. inMhe t'ounty of Union: - . w

Whereas an ordinance has been passed to pave Syiraula Place tu-tween-Manor Place and Len­ox Avenue god in Ralelgii Acvnue from Orange Aveiiue^fi^-Hyleanja—PlgT?rahd^uiisiriict--aaitt*! 'Cret^curl'a*'Vnd'”guiters on tetDi aides of #ald streets. , ' . "

Hectlon 1, Tlie owners of any aiul all lands on the line of Hylvania Place between Manor Place and Lenox Avenue and in Raleigh Are nue from Orange Avenue to Hylvania Place not already having a private service connection wlUi tlie sewer, gas and water juulns now lo­cated in said street for each' fifty (.10) feet of frontage Khali within thirty CJO) days from tho passage of this ordlnunce make private service connection with the sewer, gas and water rnnjns located in said street for each fifty (J»U) feet of frontage as follows:

A. Hewcr service connection to be extended to a distance of 2 feet 0 in. beyond the curb Hue, Die »fctlon connection to the sewer Y branches to he 4 feet 0 in. long of 5 in. terra cotta pipe, the remaining pipe tu be 4 in. extra hesvy cast iron, the ends to lie carefully lo­cated- and marked -hy an - if on s la k e ."' ‘

B. this service connection to’ be extended to avdlstunce of 2 feet 0 in. beyond the curb line and all street mains. -

C. Wuter service connection to be extendedto a distance of 2 ft. 0 in. beyond the curb line. * * . . -

Hectlon 2. That In case said'owher or owners or any o f them shall fail tu rnuke such con­nections or any of them within the time abm« specified, the Township Committee shall cause such connections to he niude aud pay Die expense and cost thereof, which expense aud cost shall be assessed upon the lands benefited.

Section .*1. This ordinance shall--,tske effect Immediately. ' ,

JOHN G._ ROACH,Chairman of Die Township Committee.

ALVAN It. DENMAN. * -, Township Clerk.

Dated August 8, 1922. •

AN ORDINANCE appropriating $1,700 for the construction of u sanitary sewer in Hylvania Place between ManorN Plat* und Lenox Avenue: $1.G00 for private sOrvlee couneetlona to sewei, gas am) water mains in Hylvania Place between Manor Place und Lenox Avenue and In Ita* lelgli Avenue between Ora*hge Avenue and Byh vaillii Pliice; und $1-1,000 for grading, paving and eonstructlug curbs and gutters iii Hylvania Place between .Manor Place dud Lenox Avetiue and in Raleigh Avenue between Orange Avenue and Hylvania Piuee und authorizing the Issue of tcmporuiy lunds to meet said appropriations.

lie It orditlucil by Die Township Committee of the Township of Cranford, in the County of Union: • . .

Hectlon 1. That the sums-of $1.700 for the eonstruciiou of n-sanitary sewer in Hylvania Piuee between Manor Plaee and Lenox Avenue; $1,000 for private service connectiuim to sewer, gas and water mains lu Hylvuula Place between M|itior Place and Ldioi Avenue und in Raleigh Avenue -between Orange Avenue und Hylvania Clue: and $1 1,000 for grading, paving and con­structing curbs und gutters in Hylvania Place between Munor Place and Lenox Avenue and In- Raleigh Avenue between Urangc Avenuo and Hyltyiniu ' Plaee, oidlnunecB • for said improve­ment having recently been passed, be, aud they hereby are npproprluled to provide funds for the payment of the cost of such Improve­ments. .

Hectlon 2. In order to meet said appropria­tions nnd to temporarily finance said purposes Temporary Improvement Ronds of the Town­ship of Crunford shall Ihj issued pursuant to Chapter 2 >2 of Dm Laws of New Jersey of tlie year 191d. and tlie amendments thereof and supplements thereto. Said bonds shall be Is­sued in the principal amount of not exceeding $17.:Ute, Khali mature In ivot mote than three years-after the purpose for whlelt they are Is* sited has been ekrrivd aut ami shall bear In­terest at not exceeding six per ceut. per annum payable aetnl-annually. .

Section :i. This ordinance shall Uke effect Immediately.

JOHN G. ROACH.Chairman o f the Township Committee.

ALVAN It. DENMAN, _TowhnUlp Clerk.

Datcd; AugUHt 8. 1922.

NOtICE OE 'INTENTION 'NOTICE Ik hereby given that the Tuvvnship

Committee will; meet lu the Township Rooms

-TUESDAY,-AUGUST-22. 1922.---- ----AT B;:iG O'CLOCK l\ M. ..

(Daylight Having Time) to couHlder the following ordinance, at which time nnd place ail persous whom lands may bu affected by Mich Improvement or who may In* interested therein will tie given an opportunity lo be heard concerning such Improvement,AN ORDINANCE to amend nti ordinance en­titled "At» ordlimnee to regulate and limit the height'und hulk Of buildings, to regulate and determine Du* area« of yards, courts und other open spaces, aud lo regulate, and restrict Die location of buildings designed for.specified uses, and Die location of trades nnd industries, the location of buildings designed for specified uses and for such purposes to divide the Township of.Cranford lot») districts so as to promote the publie heailli7~safet.v and general welfare, with rtutionatile^cdiislderatUiu, among other things, to Jhe most desirable ‘use. for., which the.-land of'each district may lie adapted, the peculiar suitability for particular use of a district, the conservation of property values amt the direc­tion of building development In accordance with a well-considered plan and also to establish penalties for the violation of these regulations, restrictions, determinations ami limitations/' adopted May Will, 1922. . ' ’

Re U ordained by the Township Committee of the Township nf Cranford. In the County of Union.

Hcctlop 1. That section one of the ordlimnee entitled "An ordinance to regulate and limit the height nnd bulk of buildings, to regulate and. determine the areas of yards, courts aud other open spaces, and to regulate nnd restrict the loentlon of bulltUngs .designed for specified uses, and the location of trades and industries, tlu> location of buUdlugs designed for specified uses and for such, purposes to divide Die Town­ship of Cranford Into districts so us to pro­mote tlie public . health, Safety, nnd general welfare, with reasonable consideration, among other things, to the most desirable use' for which the laud o f each district may be adapted. Die peculiar suitability for partlciilhr ,use of a district, the conservation of property values and the direction of. building development In accordance with a well-considered plan and rtso to establish penalties for the violation of theAo regulations, restrictions, determinations and limitations/' -adopted May loth. 1922.^hc and U hereby (s amended by adding a para­graph to read ns follows: . .

The following changes are hereby made in the map referred Jo In-Du»- foregoing paragraph :

U l Extend the business zone on the east shlo of Centennial Avenue, between. Winnns Htreet and the Lehigh Valley R! R. to include the land 75 feet in width north of the north-- erlt right of way of the Lehigh Valley R. R. to n line parallel to, Centennial Avenue ami *19 feet easterly from the easterly side iit Cen­tennial Avenue* -

.(21-,Change from Residence B to Residence A. all land between . South Avenue, Rahway River. Chestnut Htreet and the present business zone along High Htreet to Homh Avenue.

(fi) Enlarge the present business zone tn the block between' HottDi Avenue, High Street, Chestnut Street and Walnut Avenue to include the entire area o f the blqek. .j (4) Enlarge-the .present business zone in the block between Union Avenue, Alden Htreet North Avenue,- Springfield Aventte Routh and Marlboro Street to Include the entire area of the block.

Section 2. This ordinance shall Jake effect immdeiately. - ,

'ALVAN R. DENMAN.lu , . . „ . ’ Township Clerk.Dated August 8. 1922.

ADMINISTRATOR'S SETTLEMENT.Notice Ik hereby given, that the account of

the autarrlber. Administratrix with the will annexed of Elizabeth Anne Kane, deceased will tie audited and stated by the Surrogate, and repotted for settlement to the Orphan’s Court of the County o f Union, on Friday, the fifteenth day of September next. - Dated August 10th, 1922. •

LUCY M. ADAMS,» * . » to Administratrix, e. t. a.Parrot 4 Parrot, Proctors,

120 Broad Street». ElUahtth. N. J.0 a W e w 7-10 IWIS40

TOWMSHIP XOTXOESPROPOSALS FOR PLUMBING

F»r Hiu m C a .K tU . i to t w * . W itor H i Gas Maids ftrhare tkey ia »at w v w ist an

HILLCREST AVENUE - -from Cftristagfcer te Mars* Straws

Seated bids wilt be received by the Town­ship Committee,, of the Township of Cranford, N. J., at the Township Rooms, on TUESDAY* AUGUST 15th, 1922, at 8:30 P. M.

- (Daylight Saving Time) for .U>e Installation of about 11 sewer connec lions to be extended to the curb line for future sewer service, the work to be done by licensed plumbers in strict accordance with tlie require­ments of tiie Board of Health and the plans and specifications to be obtained at the office of Die Township Engineer, Cranford, N. J. Water ami Gus connections vrUl^atso be required. ‘

Ka.'li bid shall be clearly marked "Proposal for House Connections* lllllcrest Avenue," and shall, be urcoiupanled by a certified check for $60. ('ash will be received lit Heu of certified check for the same amount.

-reaervea-'Rie-right to reject ahv or all bids as In their opinion will, beat serve Die IjitercjiW o f the Townahlp.

.. ' l>, V: N. COLLINS., Townahlp1 Engineer,

Dated August 8, 1922.

PROPOSALS .FOR CURBS ANO GUTTERS HILLCREST AVENUE

CRANFORD, N. J.Scaled bids will be received by the Township

Committee of Crunford. N. J., at the Town­ship Rooms, at Union Avenue and Alden ‘Htreet, tCranford, N. J., on TUESDAY, AUGUST 15th, 1922, *at 8:30 I*. M.

(Daylight- Having Time) 'for tlu* construction of concrete curbs and gutters on 'Hillcrest .Avenue, between Chris­topher and Marsh Streets, about 21 DO lineal feet of ♦» In. x 18 in.. In accordance wiUteplauH and specifications 10' be obtained at the office of the Township Engineer, Cranford, N. J.

Each bid ahull be clearly marked "Rid for Curbs and Gutters, Hillcrest" and Us accom­panied by a certified check for $59. Cash will be received Ih Heu of certified check fot the iiiincumouiit. '

The Township Committee reserves the right to reject anv or all bids as in their opinion will best servPMhe Interests of the Township

D. C. N. COLLINS, Township Engineer

Dated August 2nd, 1922.

PROPOSALS FOR PAVING HILLCREST AVENUE

CRANFORD, N. J.Heated bids will bu received by the Townahlp

( ’oinmittce o f Cranford, N, J., at the Town­ship Rooms, at Union Avenuo and Alden Street, Cranford, N. J., oil « ( »TUESDAY, AUGUST 1MU, 1922, ut 8:30 1». M

(Daylight Having Time) for ulxmt fioOO sq, yds. of Street Paving of IVmU'ulioii Ditumlmms Mucadam on Hillcrest Avenue, between Christopher add 'Marsh- Streets, in accordance with plans and specifics tlons to bo-ohht Ined at tho office of-the Town •ship Engineer, Cranford, N. J}

Each bid shall be clearly marked "Bids for i’uving Hillcrest" und kIiuII bc\accoinjmuled by a certified check for the sunt of $259. Cash will be received in lieu o f check for the same amount. • • . '

The Township . Committee" reserves the right to reject any or all bids us In thvlr opinion' will beat serve the interests of the Township

_ 7 D. C. N. COLLINS... Township Engineer.

Dated August 2ml, 1922,

PROPOSALS FOB HOUSE CONNECTIONS TO SEWER

Hylvania Plaoe and Raleigh AvenueHealed bitla will be received by DiivTownahip

Committee of Die Township of Cranford, N. J. at tlie TiitVnahip Itoonm, on TUESDAY, AUGUST 15, 1922, ut M

(Daylight Having Time) for Die complete inHlaliatiou oft home conncc lions tu aewer, such connections to he extended li» a point about two feet inside Die curb line for future servin'. Die work lo he done by a Unused plumber in strict accordance witli the regulation» of the Hoard of Health and the plans and HpecincutioMH to lie obtained at the office of the Township Engineer. Cranford, N. J.

There will lie about 13 such couneetlona All blda shall he clearly marked "lllds for House Connections Hylvania Place aud «Raleigh Avenue" und shall be accompanied by a certi­fied check.for.. $99.00.- Caul) will bu received In Uni of certified check for the same amount,

Tim Township Committee reserves the right to reject any or all bids..which 111 Uielr.oplnlou will best serve Dio Interests o f Die Township.

; D. C. N. COLLINS.Township Engineer,

Dated July 2f.th, 1922.-........... ‘ ------ ---- ~

NOTICE OF HEARING. Notice H hereby given that at the regular

meeting of the Hoard of. Appeu|s to bu held at the Township Hoofiis, on - ‘ ■

1 i WEDNESDAY, ANGUST 9. 1922 1 ut 8:15 o'clock P. M.. 1

the following petitions for Hikrigu hi the Zoulng OrUhiuncc will be heard and tlio^u who may bu interested in such petitions for change of Zon­ing Ordhiauco or opposed'thereto are requested to be present and will there be given opportu nit.v to he heard.

Petition No. 13. By 'Joseph.'A. Salloum to change zoning, corner Ccutennlul aieitue aud Cranford Terrace, from itcsideiice B to Busi­ness. • • ,.

Petition No. 14. By Angelina Zlnguiei to change /oniug, corner Walnut u venue and Chestnut street, from Hcaideuce A to Business.

An adjourned bearing on petition.for extern Don to the Hhrtheeii Hllk Mill, Wlrians' Street, will ulso cottu* up, at thVs meeting. .

H) order of the Board xof Appeals.DAVID BROWN*

• • Secretary.D.vted July 28,. 1922..... .........- ....... -Notice is further .given that the hearings.to

have Wen held August _9Di.__as_iier_lhe-ubdv*- notire liBve-bociV'udJuufneir to

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 23, 1922, • at the same hour uiut pluce.

* DAVID HKOWN,Dated August 9, 1922. . Huretary.

IN AND ABOUT THE CITYThe oiUy sure thlng^of life are the

things that have already happened.

The world will sometimes take • man on bluff, but It la better to have » return ticket.

It may be air right to follow the crowd,, but It's a mighty poor way to got to the front.

Of course foresight Is a good thing, but It. won’t keep a man from being stabbed In the back. . . .

. Any marrjed. man will tell yon that a woman doesn't have to get on' the scales to have her own way. ‘ ' .

Accepting gratuitous advice proves that the fellow who gets something for nothing must pay dearly for I t

Y?b .-9SW*.-'c» il tell. The -woman who Is talked about Is apt to be al­most aa unhappy as the woman who Isn’t "

It Is doubtllul i f there Is any stmt* lartty between a fair weather friend snd the one who makea hay while the aun shines. \

“Honesty Is the best policy,1* quoted the Wise Qny. “Yes, but you’re got to keep your premiums paid-up,” added the Simple Mug. - ■

Mugglne—"Did Wigwag go la for ■thletlcs when he was tn collegeT* Bugging—"J , believe he held the fee* ord for Jumping at conclualona.**

The Cynical Bachelor observes that Inasmuch aa marriage la a tie, It ■Duma Quit© natural that a matrimonial alli­ance should have a string te tL

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS

Over 25A Word,

R E A L ESTATE FOR R E ­W O R K next t.. f

Apply Burke, ut Ou“ I'Ugi' 'nge.

W IL L lease fumlsl»>,| j,,,.. adults, year or long,.,- fulland bath, near stution i' , ;"'1“' Rhode. .Relerence, 12> r J nue. „Teleplione 73-\\; 01 BVti

F O R . M I J i L Q t t ^ K ^ i ’- ^ r T r r v T ^ r .--seven ■ room- house; ir,'t ñi 171 mm ,’t1’ r

all mo,lern ImpnlvenuM, !. , V,lh cellent , Iocaiton; i„.ar schools\ anS stores. t , l. 471-R . I . 1 I i,ui

R E A L ESTATE WANTEDW ANTED —A furnished Imu-efr.,

Sept, until June. Ad.lr 1 f t ”" nlslied -Utilise,” Cit i z e n - c i , , j j

SMALL house or unfitrnisii,..(|With liglit lioilsekeepiu^ ,,, r';' leges, by teacher in i ’rai.lonl f Nrhool. Address Tea.!,,.;. (itizen and Chronicle.

VOR SALE—MISCELLAN EO uTHDSIXESS. suits ami ...............

•sizes lid und If. ■ Tel. L'.-,;,).' a) liens.- Phone IK! Cranford B lU S -y E .li ’N Pliiludelidiiii hc

Creitni. the only ice ereuiu gimrun-’ teeii to contain no extia ii. m , filler, or no glueuse. At The |'ia/#'4 liustmun street. . t{ '

BOSTON PERNS—Nice assort, ment o f elean. healthy am] strong plants, 10c up to $7(»j Flowers and Floral Designs on short notice. Lehigh Avenue tireenhouses.', Karl .Innl, Pp, prietor, 127 Lehigh Avenue. Plmno

tlLA itfi'E Cemetery Plot, Uosedale H

Linden Cemetery. Best location in Cemetery. Price low to prompt buyer. J. W., care. Cranford t'iii- ¡ten und Chronicle, Ci an foul, X. ,|.

: i fW E deliver Breyer's Philadelidda

lee Cream" anywhere, any time, uny plaee. Just phone Crunionl ,r>!t:t-W. The Plaza, I F.nstimm street. ’ . it

ROOMS W ANTEDROOM and board for elderly lady,

flood bouse and tuble. Room with Southeast or South exposure. Warm in Winter. Uive location in answering. Answer real soon. Address “N/UtoCitizen Chronicle office. s 1*1

ROOMS FO R RENTLA ROE front room, .business mini,

private family; all conveniences, neur station. Address Rooms, care Citizen and Chronicle, Cruii-ford. . __

COM FO RTABLY fllinislied room, convenient loealilyy l'.il -Norlli avenue East. ’ '

TW O furnished rooms for rent. Large or small room, newly deco­rated.. Phone .Cranford :W!t, or 1111. North Union avenue.

TW O large comfortable rooms for light housekeeping, Unfurnished; will furnish if periuunent, all: im urovements. .Mcrwln, New street, Cranford. .

BOARD W ANTEDBOARD wanted south side of rail­

road ami west of Walnut avenue, quiet working man.. Best of ref­erence. Address "Boarder,”' care Citizen und Chronicle. tf

BOARDERS W ANTEDROOM and board, lurge airy front

room, excellent tuble; 7 Wood- luwu ayenue.

- R E A L ESTATE W ANTEDFURNISHED; house with__piano.~"for October und November, pos

slbly December, near river, North side of town. Fumile of'three. m> children. Address, W!-A. H., cafe

.Citizen and Clïmnicle. S ii

;W, th ethrouglP ‘a r s , ,A meri« missioi tlie An to' ohewill-beyear iu project CUildrc

A'jce-of -7. additiv

ttmtioi scltoohlug "lì

Spe« Junior W . I "• "A -1 notv b and St reads:.. • p0

WillForTlieTim

peace-tlie "Jill A'ol timi U titillai in Cel in pai

.. „ r ,

all ih an id, Stl'llBi war, i unti il isli w Red < will i of tie

"T’li icuil heurt of F. to bn

: it 1« less tuilit ami liad

-Tl giun,

~ rimi, inenestui oiga Juni tiie < The of t timt tilt’St at are C/.et Ital:

T t ut ') denby < a 1 tori

...-A-iicelt lug tUb sell stn in voc dm

h ; ed

\V<- t>a>

gai sci.

■ iss1 -Cr,

to Ju tri coi tri te Sc­oi' ac be

____Ai

R E A L ESTATE FOR' SALE$2.000 cnsli purchases Calitornia

style bungalow, six large looms, large attic witli space fur three more rooms; bath, steam,, electric, gas, on Improved street: ironfence, fireproof garage. Terms. Owner. 10 Pleasure Way..... .

H E LP W ANTED . Female .

A reliable mother’s helper, all or part time. Apply morning, W,1 Hantpton street. . ,

COOK, and general houseworker wanted to go witli family to sea­shore cottage for three, or tour weeks. Telephone 277-W.

OARAGES FO R RE NTG ARAG E for one car, centrally lo­

cated, September 1st, room for one car. ' Stephenson, 2-1 Eastman street. Telephone 13S-W. .

, LOANSO U R service converts frozen assets

into new capital. American Na­tional Association, Box 173. Plain- Held, N. J.

' Flret Duty of the Poet. .Poeta do not write for poeta alone,

but for men. Unless, therefore, we are advocates for - that udiulratlon which subsists upon Ignorane^, and that pleasure which urlses from hear­ing what we do not nniicT^tiuul, the [foet must descend from his supposed height; and, In order to excite na­tional sympathy, he must express him­self as other men express themselves. —Wordsworth. '

i R

No Neceaslty fo r G rizzling.We grizzle every day. I see no need

of I t Whilst we converse witli what Is above us, we do not grow old, bat grow young^—Emerson,.... ....... .......

Many bargains to be had at Na­than's Variety Store next Thursday.

¡ K í -;K

m ks.

ir.-?6-~.~.'ai jin_L-f. *-.v.j gv'j1 irrfUiuiififcnjftfffÄ 5 ^ W r ) S - & « ’ '*j***»^*

n o £ s-UMBING w«f, WftUr Mtf >* mw wilt •• MUE „• .nt StrMt» d by the Town- hip of Cranford, on2. at 8:30 P. M. Time) .LI sewer connec- b line for future done by licensed »1th the require- ■ and the plans a at the office of rd, N. J. Water w required 1 arked ''Proposal' it Avenue," and rtlfled check for I *leu of emitted

|Ln their opinio»[r the -Township. COLLINS.

Inship' Kiiglneer,

F O R % 4 ? v P" 0,ie ^ l,,,0 ,,^ ‘

j o GUTTERS

i.y the Township at the Tuwti-

ue and Aide«. at 8 :ao p. MHe) . '‘*le curbs and between Chris- *>*t 210« lineal' mce with plans■u at the office ord, N. J.»rked “Bid for md bo aeconV f5u. Cash win check for thorves the right their opinion

the Township COLLINS, ship Engineer.

/INQ'e

the Township at thu Town- v and Aiden< t

ut 8 :3U J\ M

■et Paving of * on linierest

afld 'March­and specifica- of-tiie Town-

Ited ' ‘Bids for ■compau led by f 1251). Cjjsii for the suine

"~ £ »,en"r?om"*iOUiie^7f rM , ..... «•

« ¡ T * ] at* * « « * . V f t

until June ' " \ I1!01' '" fc««

S u ^ S ^ « f»n , is,

» OSIN K , ^ ^ I^ f LLAN K 0 ^ •siz^ ‘<0 ami *JJ ■ ' iv V ^ 1'11."

B It I t - A- r- . 1 '-lllt.Ji !lOi-i-aii,. t lul. o,,).. |,cj « «

f l f c s w t i ' * ' * * *b o s t o n -Ke r n s mi

uient at clean o Z . , a«'*rt- »troiifi- plants, % c ,<.'al,!l-v ?nd Flowers and Floral }j,J i° ()IJ'? , notice, ' <m

In Cemetery. Price l o Z t u('ati"11 buyer. J \v ,, ' I*><jnn,t

i!en uni1 o i . « ; ; , i e i e , : c U u f t ' . v lJ;-

'™ 1S&. w V ,taTi,eJM ,0T l > l Sstreet Juistmmi

■■- -____ ti

I liO tiu R<? ° MS W ANTED1 “ "O M ami hoard for . ,

Good house and tuhh- i? ' 11 v

office. SjaUiUen-t.hromeit'■ s 21

i \ i ? f ^ v UJV,s FO R RENT

& £ & & ! $ &Z < CUIZ" n »n 'M ’b 'u n le .^ ^ 'u :

«venue K,est • V 1 ” Nonl‘ TWO furnished rooms for

nit S ' -newly, ,1c,/

. K « t u’ . t e ' . s a f " 1

1

on BOARD" w a n t e d ~ ~f ')'antetl south side of rail-

nU et^Zo -L -iZ 0t Walnut avenue,r e n l m 6 nal1- B ,st of let eiente. Address "Boarder" care

Citizen and Chronicle ’ tf

R rin\?O A? P ERS W ANTEDR ioom n°“ rd' lai'K'-‘ airy front» 5 f nt t#We: 7 Wood- ,

ifarlnga _tu F (• f i S ,? ,81* 1 6 W ANTED .-Uiu-abow _ ^ ^ f « F d ^ J h o ^ niano.‘ ureiHlier,|i(tr

Z Z , r ‘lhcl:' fiver, .Vorthel IhKen 1 l' “ ' " l,v of lluee, m. un (Ireu. Address \y; ,\. }) vu^,Cftixen uml Oluoirlele. s i r '

,e s t a t e f o r s a l eSt vie m i» .,>ur■‘-■bases 'California

mnrn ,.at ‘ " ,ltl1 Shari' I'll' three moie roonjs; hath, steam, ele. tnr,£ „ or' , ¡'nproyed .street: iron

' Owner * oeDi'0o£ Burat?<- Terms. uunei, 10 Clensure Way. ,.

H E LP W ANTED

n..f/JaMC mot,* « ’s belper, all or

C?vflnVi ,ar.Ul general liouseworker wanted-to Ko with family tu sea- -u-iem. l ?rti“ gt; tor fbree, or four neeks. Telephone 277-W.

OARAGES FOR RENTen ^ iGc f?r 9,ne C1,r- rrntraily Io

^b t?n .b er 1st, room for one s irL e ^ephenson, 2-1 Eastman street. Telephone 13S-W. .

, l o a n s

° m * l 8.ervice c9nverts frozen assets Join C?P tal- American Na- ~Jleld N^ jS° L atl0n' Box 173, Plain'

the regularbe held at

I |the Zoulng who wav by hie of Zon. ** requested en oppuriu-•SalJouni to Menue and o to BusiIngaiea to

venue ami tf Business, for extern

ana Street.

BKOWN, Secretary.

1U23.:.)WN, Seeretary.

1 thing, i being

>ti that on' the

prove*lag tor

P™.fo O m DUty ° f th® Poet-but f lr 0 DOt 'Vrite for poets alone- are “ ? • Dn,ess- therefore, we which * n Z V ■ t0r that oJmiratlon that nipn bS StS Upon I8nor“n ^ r * and tae w w ^ hICh urlses 'rorJ hear- Ifoet om « o6 do not “ nilcrAt,lI‘d. theheight- anrf68|C6Dd from hla supposed•i an<*’ order to excite na-*e°f nBS8oh fathy' he must e3CPress him--W o rd a trth ” “ them8eiTes-

w „ N°, N,#“ “ ‘W for Grizzling.

of l WhuLeVerï Ü“y- J "*■ “ o o -dIs ahhv« hU 1 * oonverse witii what

' d° not «Id. bat “ZPtT _®,198f~_Einersgn,_.t h ^ v Ä ^ t0 be had at Na-luanfl variety Store next Thursday.

JUNIORS TO “ C A R R Y ON“ THC E U R O PE A N H E LD

With the withdrawal of the American Red Cross, as such, from Kuropean relie f operations. June ;r), tho toreh which has been home tlirough distressed are as for live years was tossed to the Junior American Bed Cross, with the com­mission to “carry on.” Tlds order the American Juniors are .prepared to'obey. They are intrenched aii.l will be active during the next fiscal year in at least nine countries, w ith projects which are rendering to the children of Europe the douide ser-

.yjce of relief and education, and. in Sililition. lire Sources of valuabje e(|-

"tirntiotiai---inater4al—for— Anm-rh-mi schools,' and' the moans of promot­ing understanding and good will.

Speaking o f the furniture of the Junior American lied Frossj Arthur- \V. l.mnu,' Nationul Director, said­- "A Junior Red Cross world song,

now being sung in English, Czech and Serbian, includes a verse which leads: ■ -

. "For universal peace we strive.With Love our way is lighted; .For service to ImmunityThe Juniors stand united.'Thus At will lie seen-that world

peace is a fundamental purpose of the-Junior Hod-Cross, and this is in conformity with a joint'resolu­tion adopted at the Tenth Interna­tional Conference of the Red Cross in (i'enevu, April 1, lirjl, which reads in part:

"Today the'Red Cross owes it to all its many workers to proclaim, a- an ideal and u practical intention, a struggle aguinst the horrors of war, un attempt tiy world-wide help und iinselllsliness definitely to aboj isb war. The mere continuation of lied Cross activity in time of peace will no longer sulliee. It is the wish of the Red Cross to wink for peace.

"Tho program.of file Junior- Amer­ican Red Cross is designed to put iieart into tin- dispirited children of Europe, to give tlu-iu 'courage, to build Ufi their faith in tin- future.

' It takes t<il impoverished and spirit less children o f Europe tin- oppor­tunity for health, play, education, ami happiness that they have not linil before. .

"The activities Include health games, playgrounds, schools of va­rious kinds, scholarships ami a|e prentieesldps, mid assistance’ in tin/ establishment of .lunior Red Cio-s organizations uml tin- launching of Junior Red Cross publications on the order of .lunior Red Cross News. The countries in which one or more of these types of help will con­tinue, through the cooperation of the school children, of the Cnited States and the American Red Cross, are Albania, Austria. Belgium, Czeeho-SIovakiu, France; Hungary, Italy, Jugo-Slnvia uml t ’ohmil."

The Albanian Vocational School at Tirana, Albania, the scat of an­cient Illyria, for a(IO years oppressed by the Turks, Is planned to become a permanent institution for the technical training of Allianinrrdmys.

-A-nntional holiday, was.observed rt-- cently on the occasion of the break­ing of ground fora new building for tills original Junior Red Cross school. During tho past your "in­struction In this '.sellout was largely in academic subjects, but genuine vocational brunches:-will ho ■,intro- dm-ed this full.. . •

In Austria, where sullering scom- ed to Increase lifter the close of tho World Wur, the work, during thepnst year iius i included a lieulih game, production program in. tlm schools, and ilnunciaDAssistance m issuing un Austrian"- Junior Red Cross News. This lias been Incident to tlie organization of an \ustriun Junior Red Cross. While >.io Aus­trian Junior Red Cross is a going concern, general conditions in Aus­tria muke.it a peculiarly inviting territory for continued assistance. School-gardens, work shops, and an urt class are. included among—the activities which afe .destined to I benefit large numbers of needyAustrian cliildnhi....— - ,

o r success in the Spring, training - course

XN,>ral racial interests. Is pruvlhg a most attractive field for the incul­cation of Junior Red Cross ideals ami habits o f serif ice. v ' '

.Roland the American Junior activities are centered mainly in -bva-tat.-.I territory, |,llt include the oread lints td. work in Austria and Jugoslavia. An American so­cial worker is prun'd,-d as an ad­visor for the Polish Junior Red truss. Conditions along the Polish Russian frontier are receiving Ju- nn>r attention «*sjH»t‘iaUy,

According to a statement from It. P. I-uno. European Director of tin American Juior Red Cmwkltlie ap t -ad td t;ht-...^jtOtlgaJbraHg)£ the countries in which American •innior |m»j»ct> Imw lioon uiuU*r wa\ i> ' aitvsU^l |»y ftim-n'ii' prwifs.”

WHEN DICKENS VISITED YALEStudents Sang Under Novell*t’« Win­

dow at Bedtime, and Their Effort* Were Not Appreciated. .

With the dojurture from lk>slt»n for Woriviter. Sjirln^ncld, Hartford and “a place tgllttl NiW Haven/* began tlie ob»ervaiiona on American travel, American hotels. Aiuertcun expector* atiun. which were—is—the tuuln ex­cluded from “American Notes" and which make the vital interest of the Inters. After two hours und a half by b«'ut from .Springfield to'lUrtford^- ■'»juevr traveling/’ 'Pickens avers—he undertook « hold venture—the train Journey to New Haven. This was "completed speedily In three hours and Uicken* was ut;ain In university Ufe. Hut alas for Yalvl Whereas the young men of Harvard university had yearned as one man to sit under the novelist as a teacher, these others, more *arnal. craved no intellectual niuDRn. Instead they sung to him— yes. sang t»> him. under his window at h4‘dtlme;-Stanley_T.—WilllailBi writes In the North American Hevlew. And unsuccessfully. The Yale students, declared the Allantic Monthly, In the dear, familiar phrase, "were there In force/’ IdekeuV amazement at this custom was not wholly pleasurable. “Anti when/' he says, sadly, “at last we got (o tied and were ‘going* to fall asleep, choristers of the college turned out In body under the window and serenaded us! . We had hud, by the by, another serenade at Hartford, from a Mr. Adams, nephew of John Quincy Adams, and a Herman friend. They/* says tills cutting novelist, “were most beautiful singers."

»mall erect cones colored a brilliant scarlet. Between- the scales of the cones are very small llowera which

............. .......... for pluy-h-tulers ontim Charleroi playground. 'Belgium, lias intensified tin- playground work o f 't l ie Junlur Red .Cross. Inthat country. Immediate plans-j-j-jf-aue |i,Ue bear seeds for Belgian children include the completion of construction and In­stallation o f a playground at l-a- LomSt-re,” opernt ion of litis play­ground for a year, further a-sistmico for the C'hurleroi playground and other playground extension activi­ty.

Dogs!Ever since tlie -days when old Homer

wrote of the lioine-coinlng of Uiyeses when Ids fatthrul old bound alone recognized 111m In lit** disguise as a beggar, there have been some of the finest tilts of literature devoted to notde cburucteristlcs of dog*. Llewel-

lcan lunior Red Cross continues-in lyu’s faithful bound. Bill Sykes’ loyal a-sist the Czeclto-Sioviikjan Junior: mongrel; Bayard, Baldy of Nome, Jer-

■ lied Cross in an advisory capacity.-ry, arid Michael, brother^of Jerry, France is the scene fit contmmngTplermti Dei of Belgium. Caesar the

educational work it>/heliulf of war, K ing-S ,iog are Just a few of the mod- .orpiians, the American Juniors con-; ern3 names come to memory outtributlrig to; the/fsiucation of tmr-. ... nt th. o-niden books. F

jrsliip ..........ship holders. /An

At the rennest of Mis» Altre M«v- uryk. President of tlie < zeri» Red Cross, a representative of tie- Amer- lini»-» .Iunior Roil i'rOSS VOlltlllllt*-_ tf*

DWARF TREE NATURAL FREAKFrequently Attaint “Diameter of Six

Feet, but le Never More Than a Foot in Height,

7 Welwhschia— Mlruhllls/ nature'« queerest tree, lives to be 100 years old, and often attains a diameter of six feet, bur It Is never more than a foot In height.. ..

When tiie seedling of the tree, first pokes It-T head above the dry and (pi sty soil of tlie most ralnlesB region in whirl. It grows, It puts forth two seed leaves or Cotyledons, not unlike those or n to-un. As the plunt develops.- two green leaves - spring from the edges bf tlie cotyledons. These two leaves are the only ones borne by the plant throughout Its century of existence. Flat und leath­ery. six fret long and two or three feet wide-when fully developed, they hang from either side of the atubby trunk In gracefully curving green streamers. In later yeara they split along straight lines Into a number of narrow strips. When old enough to boar fruit, double-branched flower stalks, nearly a foot Idgl), spring from the edge» Of till' need leaves, bearing

............ .. , j r - i o f some of the golden books. Fondty-one scholarship and as the Worid..has always been of love.............. Amcri.au I . sn<J romance if has always been glad

................ ... real/nrui imsLstunee is iieing ong ior in n o » , c«--'/ -■

ghen Vor the maint.'-uaue.- of Bag- Innate likingj-f humanity for hone.ty nolet ‘playground. Paris, pending-. , „ d nobility of character, end partly tlie taking over of the latter actlv- ,iecaus* 0f all the creatures man haa ity, possibly by the Freneh Junior aomes,feted the dog haa the liveliest He'd Cross, in the fall. ' i i sense y-f humor and the highest ideal

The Hungarian Junior Rim trox * . onshlp,is being aided in Rs early . ---------serve the children of Hungary

snip noon.,--- .. I ..1.11,1 and romance it nas always v ™ itrice for avaigli| > , , v w tum to the book which had a iS * Z t . S r /lsisî;inre is J,mn^ dog for Us hero.

Th* Beit ConnttIc*. -Many T^ar* ago an old New EngUDd

lady wrote out the following Hat of

throuKh the schools. This n e y or­* ganization is making striking liead- fvay and has a Junior Red < ross publication of its own. .

The American Playground >cqulr« . n„ UBe thembeing welcomed Into « « « Rouu. { FInrt_ Self.knowIedge> a - mirror

foMtalinn children, tiirongii the aid | showing the form In the most perfect

wil/^iier/Infsbed tn™August or Se/| 'second—Innocence, a white paint, • teniber. During the past year a . beautiful but easily soiled and requlr-

cliain of farm and trade sctiools. continual care to preserve Its lus- including two school ships, have re - jterjceived American Junior assistance.. -Third—Modesty, a rouge giving a de- and a playground Ughtful bloom to the cheeks,in ...Florence, the birthplace ot Fourln _ c ontentment, an Infallible Florenc Neightingale . raoother o f wrinkles.

Activities in Jugoslav ia . fo llo w , F)fUj_ Xratb. a ¡^¡yg reDderln* the the general ¡¡m « of ‘ " ^ - . H p . s o f t and delldoux . '

- Work producdon i^seboois. and as-! Slxtb-Gentlztiess. a cordial Impart-sistance in the organization o f a lng-sweetness-to-«be -voice.------- ----Jugo-Slav R ed " Crosi " 'T llB ' netr»--SevHiib—Gorid humor, * universal new country, which embraces sev- teautUUr.—Boston Transcript

VEGETATION AND SNOWON MARS

Recent Observations Bear Out Theories of LoweU.

SEE ÜHAN6ES OF SEASONS

HERE ARE A FEW OF THE

IN OUR

at Any Tima In tJ Ysart SaaeSha' an Mara Hava Sams signlfleanee as on Our Earth and Ooour in Sams Mannar, but Ars About Twtoa th* Length of Ouro—Hundroda of Photographs and Chart* ;

Members of the staff of Lowell ob­servatory at Flagstaff, Arts., are elated over recent studies of the planet 'Man which, they assert, bear out the theories of the late Perdval Lowell founder ot the observatory, as to snow­fall and vegetation on- the tittle led planet. .

Mara, nearest neighbor of this world with the exception of Venue, la closer to the earth now than at any time In eighteen yeara. Observations have been in progress for the last five months each hour of every night that weather conditions would permit. Iluudreda of photographs and charts have been made. -

8sesons Longer Than Earth’s The aeasona on Uara have the tame

significance as on our earth and occur in the same manner, but are about twice tbe length of our own. according to Dra. E. 0. and V. M. Sllpher of tta observatory staff. A statement by them on the results of the latest ob- servstlons here follows: .

“Winter has been occurring "in the southern hemisphere of the planet Mara and the extensive dark areas there are now faint and have been so for tome time, betookenlng the dead season of xegetatlon in conformity with the view held by Lowell regarding the seasonal changes on the planet. .

‘The large winter cap of white about the fouth pole of Mars, which for some, months has appeared to consist of only mist or cloud covering the South polar regions of the planet down to -latitude forty degrees, Is now dissipat­ing and disclosing a mantle of snow beneath. The spring season for the southern hemisphere Is now approach­ing, the season there at present cor­responding to our March 21, and these changes are characteristic of late winter over the south of blank '

1 Autumn le Arriving.“In tbe northern hemisphere antumn

Is arriving and tbe polar, cap there haa already become conspicuous, hav­ing increased rapidly during tho .last few Martian nights. On tbe night of June 17 It was observed that when the" plaoet's longitude 205 came luto Martian sunrise, and therefore-vlsttile to us, a' vast- area there bad during the preceding night beefi covered by a bright canopy. This bright hood faded off toward the equator, but was dis­cernible! down j nearly to fifty degrees north latitude and', veiled the darker merklugs of the northern part.of, the planet.' ! .

“ This event marked the first really big antumn storm in the northern hemisphere of Mars so far this year. On that date the Martian season cor­responded to our September 18. Early indications of autumn made their" ap­pearance a month and a half ago at a Martian season corresponding to our late August. /These observa­tions have been recorded on photo­graphs. ... /

WE ARE PUTTING ON SALE FOR TH1S~WEEK:

Women's Buckskin, 1-strap Pumps, I’at.

Trimmed. Goodyear Rubber Heels.

Welts. Reg. Price $6.50. _ mmm i

at...... :. .. . ......................... .........3.75. “ ' . • .

White Buckskin Oxfords, with Pat. Trim­mings/ Reg. price 6.45.. *% . f t p

Special at.........” .................* 3 b l j w

■ ' - .

Full line of Satin Pumps with brocaded — or plain hacks, low or Cuban heels, at - especially low prices, ra j t y

Up from...................... (.t;-.-;.""'• 3 )

-' - * • ■ - - - . ; :. ' ■ • ■Women’s Wliite, 1-strap Pumps, Rein­

deer Cloth. Plain or trimmed 'with

Wliite Kid. U. S. Rubber Heels.

Reg. $3.50. a

- Special at.....,-;..... ............ ........... ' ' • "

Children's Patent Leather a a

Sandals. Special at.........

. . - - _ . . .

Bargains in Pumps and OxfordsF O R M E N , W O M E N A N D C H IL D R E N

. ' ' , ' *

. • . - ' FLadies’ White Princess Slippers

$1.19, $1.49, $1.98Boy's Brown and While Tennis Slides,

up from............................... .......$1.19

Children’s Gingham Dresses, 6-14....98c

Boy’s Washable Suits.............................. 98c' ' . ' - .

’ \ ' ' __Men's Ruction Tennis Shoes...... . $ -!9

* •

17-19 Union Avenue, North

ODD IDEAS CONCERNING TIDESAnclenta Htld Ftarful and Wondsrful

Bsliefs aa to tha Cause of Water'« Ebb and, Flow.

structed;-Tlie last one was found quite recently, and It 1ms proved to be the finest of tlie three. It 1« known al the Osebrge ship, being unearthed In ft lie pltic«"of that name, In the province of Jortshcrg and I-arvtk.

W le d - u ^ H M Im ^ ^ lg h e r ^ h i t ecurrlog In union with the planet’« sea­sons Indicate that conditions are more analogous to those of the earth than to any of the other planeta.

DIAMOND FAD IN THE U S.Purchase« by-American Woman Cause

Scarcity In tha Popular 81ms; -American women are wedrlng mdre

diamonds thah ever before, TIip de­mand Is Increasing to such an extent that prices reveal a tendency to In­crease, and there la a scarcity In the more popular sixes.

Bo great has become the call recent­ly that even the smaller and Inferior s^one Supply has been visibly de­creased.

News from overseas declares that, while mines In South Africa tre op­erating slowly arid the London dia­mond syndicate keeps a close fist on production and distribution, opera­tions In tha " cutting ' establishment progress evenly.

Kitchen Distiller« Cause City Floods.Kitchen-; distillers are responsible

for tbe flooding of many cellars - In Ogdensburk, N. Y., according to city plumbing Inspectors. Enough mash to fill a bushel basket was found In one city sewer. The mayor has Issued or­ders for a thorough Inspection of tbe entire sewer system of the city.

Aristotle und Heraclitus said tho | . No OangsrIlde» wer, causyd by the »u».^which j - ^ |Ika a U, lng

which swells and thus causes the ltd,-a | / i,“ ,d fhi lightrrsm.h.cWel’ Iuto's expliiilutlon wuh lliut ttiey »ere cuused by un u ni inni llvlng lu a cuvern, whlch tliroiigi, thè nmveinelit of Ita mouth cuused tl,e tlde». Another hiv Ilei wus tliut thè ttiles were u imtnnil moveiuetit of thè resplrutleu or breuth-Ing of thè si-a,.. . .— Tilt-re are records. of medieval l>e- llefa aiuong thè Araba. Home thought tbat thè tldea were cuused hy tlie tuooo heattug thè wutera so tlnit they

- ONE DAY

OUTINGSLAKE HOfATCONC, *1.75

Every SundayLiatii 4'raitfut<1. H 31

rA T LA N T IC CITY, $3.60

Noxt Sunday and Aug. 27 and Sept. 1(1!«niiu Cfinfurtl, (\ ,r.l' A, Al. •

U P THE HUDSON TO

t ; ; : ; : ; b e a r , m o u n t a i n , ] $ «- - 1 ' — ----- -- v -■

others believed they were caused by vapors generated In the bowels of tho earth. Agulu, others believed they were caused hy. the alternate decom­position of the sea hy - tho sir, and then the ulr by the sea, thus account­ing for ihe ebb and flow. Still another belief was that a great serpent bw«J- lowed and vomited water alternately.

Early Cape Cod folk arid those In oilier districts along' the ' New Eng­land coast believed that people' died at the ebb or flowing out of the tide.

art which trundled behind It. When the' anliiial began to trot very alowly nfler n good, lie»! of practical persua­sion on tlie part of the driver, a young hopeful standing In Ihe road could not let tlie opportunity pass " himself directly In front of the on­coming steed. '

The driver shouted, but the boy re- j fused to move. !

"Why can't [you get out of the trasa r cried ti,.- ^ r iv « r ^ t o - ^ n t i_ | N H W ^ I i“ R S E V C E N T R A Lwant to be run over?" j

Without moving, the led glanced ! contemptuously al the horae, and j

shouted, with withering «corn: !’ “That-bony thing run over in«7 It couldn't t It might tumble over met" j

Every Wednesday-Lf-arp 7 Iti A. AL '

C.mn.ftlii« ti JrfHcy (tty with - iLKIiMONT

Tit'ki’li CDD'l tHtljr on npi’tilâl tr*lu . Eaittrn HUndird Tim« _

Sewer 8ystem 3,500 Year« Old.In the palace of the Cretan kings

_of KnoHsoii (ulmut 1500 B. C.) ware bathrooms and u drulnsgs system tliat

at uie euu or «owing oui or me « “ «- - .al(tu[llah* j the etcuvatore. When we Watchers by the bedside of dying Remember that even London and Partspeople firmly believed that one could not die until the ebb tide begun to.ruii, In Scotland It was formerly thought that In Setting eggs to hutch one should net tiie eggs ut flood, tide If one wanted roosters, and-at the ebb tide If one wauted hens. —

Latest Wife Gets Man's Insurance.Lulu Belle Taylor, of Newark, N.

J., the latest wife of the late Thomas B. Taylor, will receive $500 Insurance left by him. Application for the In­surance was made by- three women, all asserting they had been married to Tsylor.

Falls From Th«st«r Box on Musicians Feinting while leaning over the edge

of s balcony box,In a moving picture theater In Broeklyn. N. Y., John Dan- aker fell 50 feet Into the orchestra pit. iec*ivsa~teHda«“ ln}tn'le«r end - eaussd- Injurisa to two mnaidaa*.

VIKINGS BURIED WITH SHIPSOltftlms Loading. Freebooters of tho

Saks Ware Appropriately Honored ' by Their Followers. "

It vaa one of'tlie ancient VHdnga’ customs to bury their prorolncrit deiul In a ship which was sunk.In the earth and covered with a mound.. Within these burlai ships were placed thè choicest belongings, horses, carts or wagons, sieda; appurai, cooking uten­sils'and quite often s living servant accompanied the'master to tlie grave to minister to hla wants In the hallsof Walbulla. ........

Only through s fortunate circum­stance see any. relics o f this kind In existence, and that is dae to tbe fact that In severs I cases the ships were buried In potters’ clay, which is par­ticularly good for the preservation of wood. Under ordinary dreumstonese these boriai boats have been total­ly' destroyed by the dsmpneM of the eerth, only the rotted_ rivets, giving any dew ss to the size of thè boato

To-date ,onljLtbrèe_sadi boats have ten tetrad that" cenili be reqra

Bad no sewage systems In the days of j Queen Eltasbeth, we certainly' should /" not expect such a thing In s forgotlsn civilization of thirty-five hundred years ago. Vet experts tell us thedrains of this ancient palace Wire superior to anything, known afterward In history until the middle of tbs Nineteenth ''century;—Josepti McCabe In "The Evolution of Civilization.”

FLOWERSfor all occasions.

Artistic and Latest Designs in S,

Funeral Work a Specialty-’v . - - . ,

- — at the----Riverside Flower Shop

62 North Ave E.

F E L IC E E. D I F A B IOMASON CONTRACTOR

AND BUILDER Estimates Furnished .

Jobbing and Repair Work /F e lic e E . D i F a b io ;

1C3 Burnside Ave., ORANFORD

- A Good Game.Here Is a good game for you to

play. Take two. sheet a of paper. At the top write this: " What I Can Do." On the other, sheet write: “ What I Can’t Do." Then see/ which list-Is. longer. After that place the list of the. things you. can/do In the bond of some friend and ask him to ques­tion you in order-to test the knowl­edge. / '. , .

I f you do this riften enough you or* bound to grow.-/Tom Drier, lb Fort»«# Magazine. . . /

8ns Salmon's Jump. ' 1n of_fl9]ierle9 says thnt o of a fall there U UHual­p well. Tlie Hulmon swim line bottom of thla well, have BUflieient depth of

e force to get the power r do so by Bwiramlng very hing nut." This fored me-

(basically causes them to Jump tha

ROBERT THE1SZ *C arpenter and Builder

JOBBING OF ALL KINDS J Holly Wood A ve ., Cranford ’ . ' Telephone 127*n •

P; J. HEYBURNG ENERAL ELECTRICIAN

fiepalr ’Hork promptly attende«} Lo 6 Barnsids-Avsnas, Cranford

THE McCARTER SCHOOL.121 CraRford AvisutCHANF0BD, NEW JERSEY

Fa)) term begins September 87lb, 1922. Kindergarten tod Prlnury cIu m * . -wUb FrcncU (oduded. Tutoring dating, tbe jumper tuuntlm. In Hl*h School and Gride School «ubjeta. at ll.qo P « »our. M e 0 A a I B I L

T llo liu Ns. 231-W J

BURN URHow Unexpen#

Was Done!Bonfire* Evtry O j

Consldsrabla fl End ofJ)

At a certain strange bonfire tjtevery night. (y

During tlie <lij/ tool of animunfii the war—some ■ ;

-jfverjr- descriptl r stripped of the) J were laid with ci. ■ shallow trenched with brushwood!, plcrute and cor i sheila and cartr j <

At 6:30 la tt j Ure was ready <F. A: Talbot, ul| tho following U the way In whll

"Sharp to tl whistle, and thj of workers fi ■ motorcar lius bearing the or assistants. . .1

"lie makes >: of tho now nil' lug, rearruug , irlmnilng the. Mcunwhlle ui from his slm rods, un anal. of puralllu. - |

“Thp rags ¿V . ends of Ihe fj

the lullnmini r. 6:40 a uiatdo i Ing torches safety offlidaE.y

•The motif • us the Hr cl 5 : Huch man I , 1; lug of »0 Inspiring rt, trench to tr.' . their brand" lu passing. ;

"The corr 1 - . lustantly.. t t !the S|ieed 4, lly the till)i! llred the g i oped In s i . ' us pbantoi l

“The hn . , ed, ami t - across tie ■ the-road ulrcody 01 : t tho velilc’ 1

' opened ui there belli i a mile hi raping I ground, J

.“As Un.- grows H i ,}i

- "cloud* ■''’ ' v wlth lur , n miles- ar - and It 011 cruoon t rural po piece."

TH E CRANFORD CITIZEN A N D CHRONICLE, THURSDAY, A U G U S T 10, 1922

HI

/

By n«.j.i burned : elently . uro the lug hai y iwcpuri^ ?■ ' Are. ’ 1

I',

Houi Tlnies. with t lion p organl which > la for phant eyes.

-Em il- age S'

¿pm t hlmsepnehj one c ler U grew

“D you Muni

Th

H i

Do You Pin a Towel Around Your Neck—or arc you luckyenough to possess

an attractive pure gum rubber shampoo cape that slips on and off in a jiffy, fits snugly around your neck, and covers your shoulders? -

WH E N you go to your liair- dresser for a siiamjioo she

puts one of these capes on you, but when you shampoo your own hair you are lotted to ¡»in awkward tow els around your-shoulders. '

Your-dainty-negligee-is not pro­tected, you feel uncomfortable w ith a.soaking wet towel clinging to you.

A rubber cape, however, enables you to shampoo at any time in com- foit without changing your apparel.

REAL BOSS OF ROYAL FAMILY

Princess loianda of Italy Has None of Mother’s Timidity.

DEMANDS OWN ALLOWANCE

Tall* H»r Mother That 8he Muet Oct About -to See the World—

dot hing— no water can t tickle clown11 affords cotnjileteprotecti<>ri toypur

le a o \

your neck. ___• When waiting for your hair to dry you- realize tire comfort of one of t liese capes.

Women find'many other uses for them. As combing jackets they are excellent, for the hair does not catch on them and pull out. —

Afbwomen want them— few have them. Why? Because they are. not generally sold for horrte use in re­tail simps. Where have you person^ ally seen them on sale?

When you do locate a goo$ sham­poo cape it costs you

To introduce to yutithe virtues of Pineglow,-the Shampoo of Health and frag ran ce, weareofferingfor only a few^days more, a beauti­ful and serviceable pure gum rubber

shampoo cape $1.50 value together with a full size 50c bottle of Pineglow — 2.00 value for $1.00.

-Pint-glow is the shampoo^fhat contains no alcohol. Pineglow is made 'from the healthful cssortces of Pine Forests and purest refined cocOanut oil. It is delicatelyJFagrant with the breath of vacation Woods. There is no after oiloi>/ - - ^

At All Druggists

STONE POTS, PRESERVE JARS, ALUM INUM

. . ; KETTLES _L_. ■

Everything for Canning,. including Begt Rubber* and . - - , j Racks . .j

W O O D KEGS, ..5, 10 and>15gal. at very low price* M Now oil sale by

A. C. Pike Hardware Co., Inc.

IF YO U W A N T TO PLANT IN THE FALL !While ou your vacation.

Phono Rahway 4Ï0-W ; ALL KINOS OP

Poultry Feed, Hay and GrainPrompt Delivery

GEORGIE HOLLAND Olark Township P. O Rahway. M J

M f. & J. G. WheelerI C E

. . Telephone 1ÄWWhole* al* Ratall

We work out your plan or*eitimate.PLAN T FROM A U G U ST UNTIL NOVEMBER

A ik tor catalogue or have our representative call

PLAINFIELD NURSERY-SCGFLH PtAINS-NEVV JERSEY

LANDSCAPE CONTRACTORS AND NURSERYMENS

M E T A LW O R K IN G

- J O I I I V7 Ú N IO N A V E . North

H E A T IN G & P L U M B IN G.lobbing or Contract Work. The be» work by experienced men, Our refer elioni ure pleased customers. Estimates furnished.

I J O Y L ECRANFORD. N. L

------ G. J. JANSENCarpenter and Builder

Parquet Floors. Jobbing a Specialty. .-- . Tel. 495 R _23 Grove Straat ORANTnnn

— Breaks All Precedent* and Deals Directly With Tillor—Lately She Haa Takan to Doing Her Own Shopping.

Princess lolundu. the eldest child of the king and queen of Italy, la visit­ing London. She virtually bosses the entire Italian royal family, Including her brother, Prince Umberto. - She hat Inherited her mother's, beauty, but not her timidity. It was she who planned her trip to England. Being nearly twenty-one, and not huvtng been out of Italy, she told her royal mother that ahu must get about to see the world, probably no 'commoner's family have

lived such a dull life as have the royal children. Their mother was so afraid that they would get wrong Ideas of life that she rarely allowed them even to huve friends In to tea. As fur gee ing to visit the children of her ladles ln-waltlng, such un Innovation wiis never even suggested. It was only when the new governor of the crown took charge..that a changs-came over the royal family. .. -

Commander • Bonaldl, as he was when first he wus made aide-de-campto the king, and luter governor of the crown, Is a Venetian and u man' of good family but nut of noble Uneuge. He bechrne a favorite with the royal children, because he was youngish in years . and. a cheerful, happy person. They shared fils society with that-of their brother, and whenever they wunt- ed anything they often talked It over with Bonaldl.

Until this year the queen ulwuys or­dered clothes for Iolabda, as well as for the other children, but now that loianda Is grown up she prefers to order her. own dresses.

Deals Directly With Tailor,No doubt the question of a separate

allowance for loianda might have been held In abeyance had not a. letter been received from an Itulo-American tailor begging the princeaa to fill In an ln- closed form with her measurements, stating what sort of dress'She would like the patriotic overseas tailor to make her. The royal sewing woman was called In and the measurements takes and sent the same day, with a letter from the princess saying that she would like a riding habit, as no one had ever made her one which fitted her perfectly. This step was not according to., royal etiquette, 1 as loianda should have sent the tailor's

see her of an aft ernoon driving about the villa Borgbese and the Pindo, in her little-two-seater, with « small seat in the rear for the attendant.

Princess Giovunna, the third daugh­ter, is next to Princess loianda, the beauty of the family. She lacks the energy of the two older girls and Is fond of embroidery and reading- . She. too, has been taught tennis and rid­ing. but is' a bookworm like her father.

Princess Maria, the baby of the fumlly, Is the favorite with her broth­er, the crown prince, who plays with her ‘ many a gunie of croquet. She Is the one delicate member of the family jftod hn« hn-n nrftrr.-ri hy rhc rtuciorrm'take a cure by tire sea. The queen, not wishing to gu too far away from her botner chose CivitaveeChisr'Wtieftr Prince Odesculch! has a villa, built on a clUT overlooking the sea. The royal couple, of course, could have gone into residence near Pisa, but as they are j going to Denmark to return the visit paid last, year by the king and queen of Denmark, they decided that Civita­vecchia, being nearer, was the Ideal spot, as It Is within motoring distanceof Borne......................

_____ ,.Most_lmparlant_of-Family______iThe most Important member of the i

royul fumlly Is the Crown Prince Co- berto, who, during: the last few months, hns been visiting the different provinces su that the Italian people ; may become acquainted with their fu- j ture king. He bus tusde a decidedly ! favorable Impression on the people. Ills smile has captured "their fancy, ' and wherever he goes even though It I

' Is shopping In -Rome, his motorcar la ■ BUrrounded by admiring crowds, anx- i lous-tO see him tit close range. In the royal entourage lie also Is very popu­lar. though he. too, has led a very quiet life ahd has never become intimate

-with-the sons, of the gentlemen and lndles-ln-waitlug. From a very timid boy he bus grown Into a .young man ready for Ills future Job.:' JHIsiJfather-j

s — -----

q u e s t i o n b i r d/fit ** if

•JH a. t fh u .

f /yuJt o f z t r jQ r v s w e v ' : - V

U se o ut -Bigdionniy ‘

ÿbiûr ¿polony w ill br .a c c e p t e d !

I »ONT .MAKE E X (T <|v , the telephone. IM- t In- ¡,:i

Give tiie other petMin think it over and gel pmi: p of view. We're . s e l l in g ~¡ proper line o f stationery stundurd writ ing- fluids nini tf-rialinimt will assist you dj pressing-or ra t tier- i¡¡ üil'iñ g “j n-grets. . '

RfiXALL STORE

- J. R." HEAÏ, Prop/1 -i

" Sunday and Holiday Hours :

9 lo 1 A . M. 3 to 7 P. M.

Phone 1 3 V -

Em ergency Culls 387 •

considers 1dm suitable Ito take his pluee, and would willingly abdicate, ' but this, too. would he ai disappoint- ' ment to the jusqile. who admire the pa- i trlotlsm and simplicity of the “ first , citizen" of Ituly. - !

Even those who consider a mon- | urehy un obsolete Institution are i united In udmlttlng that though Victor ! Emmanuel Is ii king be couldn't be a | better head of the stBte though he j were a president. " i

“We have nothing against oar king, j and fee! It would be a mistake to ' change him for an ordinary man, who . -would surely look only to his own In- i terests,” I have often beard peasants and workmen say.—Agnes H. Macken­zie In the New York Tribune.

Telephone 137-J------

C L Y D E C. B E L LREGISTERED ARCHITECT

South 'Avsnua. . CRANFORD

JOHN F. HESS, President E. ML ROSENPÀLE, Vlce Praildsut

UNITED ICE & SUPPLY C0„ Inc.Office: 6 and 2 South Unión Avenue ■

OR ANFORD, N; J - ’ ' 'Telepbouw 410 W

W e have started the delivery of ice in Cranford, and in offarine •o tl10 ¡'e,Iue,t tor y®ur patronage, we advise that the lea

’ '«ehv on*1 H U* *• *uPl,liad by the Lackawanna Mountain Ice Com t?aby, one of the largeit harvesters of natural tee in the Poconoa.

, . Thie Ice i i liarveited from Mountain Lakes, the water eheds otrkU«infe:d*‘Ja,,0,Uto 'y,e,,r0t?Ct,ed 8Dd U is certified’ M L l U ^ r i t y a n ^proVesitom1 * U wholesomeue“ ' by members of the medical

, . ^*6 w ill bo furnished to you, free from snow and aluih its clarltv““ Xing it ideal for-all houleholdposes reilutriag the use of ice

M*y we have the pleaiur will teeelve prompt attention.

_ ....... ........... pur,

M*îv*p rom pt attention™ ° ' iervln* ^ ou? T«l»Phone orders', 61Ö-W,

•eh

UNITED I0E & SU PPLY ÒO., Inc.

- ' /- - . . Plions Oaoiord 396 - n 1 ■ !s

CHAS E. DOOLEY ESTATEFuneral Director and Embalnier

Uve of Modern Fuorrjl Cbjp<l ITDrilrid Yolding Ohalrs and Card Table* to Hire

218 North Ave. West, Cranford, N. J.AU TO CORTEGE EQUIPMENT----- --- ---- ™-----

Electric

Short Cuts in Serving

The electric disc stove plays the part of a top burner most successfully.1 Fry.^hoil 'or pan broil.

Equipped with an elec- ’ trie grill, many meals may be prepared at the table, eliminating all tire­some trip* to the kitchen.

PublicStirVice

application to the secretarial: stafT of the .royal household, who. In turn, would have written a formal note In­closing the measurements. Instead, the . princess Is modern enough and feminine enough to want to attend to things In a hurry. She .and her sisters and her brothers ull wulted'anxfousiy for several months, and Mafalda, who Is ayterrlble^" teuSer^wueiled her poor sister loianda beriufse-'an Amerlcun tsllor had wanted to play a joke on her. ■

But after three months were over a box was brought to. the royal resl

■| dence, Villa Subolo—otttaldV thr - arla 'gate.' and In It was a wonder- derful rlAlng habit of covert cloth ana also a skirt, In case the princess some' times rode a side saddle. The suit fitted beautifully, and other costumes would no doubt have been ordered, hut the tailor refused to accept pay­ment for the liahjt, Insisting that the letter written so kindly and simply by the princess was enough reward. Of course, under the.circumstances,''the royal princess could not possibly ac­cept further kindnesses. .

This.bit of Independence on the part of loianda led her to broach the sub­ject of a separate allowance. The matter was talked over with the friend and counselor, Admiral Bonaldl (for he had been promoted), and finally the queen agreed.

Does Her Own Shopping.During the last few months loianda

has been shopping on her own account and has ordered several dresses, nearly all of them coats and skirts. Her. friends say that It Is this fondness for

and skirts which has decided her der some when she Is In London

_ ... this year she never went to the operii In the evening its the queen Is a great stay-at-home and prefers visit­ing hospitals and charitable Institu­tions daring the daytime, which leaves her ready to retire early at night.

This clustering around the home hearth Is" not at all to ' the taste of Prlnceea loianda and her sister, Ma­falda. They have gradually taken to going to the theater, accompanied .by lsdles-ln-waltlng. ,-ASv no royal balls have tfeen given for seven., years, neither I'hss been Introduced to the Inner clrcle-of soelety. which Is - their right, but It Is certain that next win­ter loianda must have a coming-out.

Society Is not much In either of these girls' life, as they have been, brought up to love the open sir. When­ever they have a chance they go motor­ing around the country with only a gentleman. In waiting, and a chauffeur. Thelstterhss.lUUetodo.asPriacesa Mafalda has already been given her permit s* chsuffease and a very clever *■* ah* la. Any visitor to Boms can

SESES25H5H5H5E5H5BSS5MH525E5ESH52I

NEW BEVERAGE IS CROSS BETWEEN TEA AND COFFEE

!S252S2525552525(525a52525H52525E5t

Wib. C. Golding, Inc.OPTICIANS

219 Broad Street

Elizabeth, N. J

Raritan Valley FarmsProduce Certified Milk Only

2 7 c . Q t.. CRANFORD DAIRY

Phone ItT • M South Ave

A iiwv uiina culled Uassuiu or kau-'e)-ba*-bo*n-:

covered by the bureau of chemistry. Department of Agriculture.' The bev­erage grows on large tree*, which are abundant in the region o f the' St. James river, and also near the Kid Grande In Texas. It cdatolns leas.tan­nin than tea, and less baffeln than cof­fee, Is palatable and tnstes more like tea. Its excellent flavor bids fair to make It a favorite of the future. Pho­tograph shows Miss Hilda QulCkert of the bureau of chemistry about ready to sip a cup of the hew brew. .

CLAIMS CANAL ZONE LANDColombian Corporation Seeka to Eject

Americans From Toro Point.The Componía de Faros.de Colon y

Panama, a Colombian corporation, haa filed suit for ejection against the Pana­ma canul, claiming ownership of the tract upon which the Toro Point light­house' Is situated und demsndlng Im­mediate possession - o f thè land. and the Improvements, thereon. ■

. A concession held by the company prior to the creatimi of the Canal zone continued to he. recognised by the Pan­ama government until 11)17, When the American authorities took . over the property. The .'concessionaires received $50,000 annually up to that time.

Judge Begins War on “Male FlappersTPolice Judge Woerst, of Cincinnati.

0 .,_ hns declared' war on the “male flapper." Young men with patent leather Imir and slippery elm com-' Plexions must either go to work or go to Jail, the court declared In fintng a young man SÓ0 for Inhering: .

Venice Shoe Répairing Co.

11 Union Ave. North, Cranford

The Shoe Repairers ■

Shoes Shined *

Hat Cleaning

-<snf-worlt is guarantee^ both as to quality and looks. Work called for and delivered.

11 Union Ave. North, Cranford

Phone li8J.

ZINGÀLES’F ly and Mosquito

* ExterminatorZingales' Drug Store

PrtKxijJtion .rb*r&Acr WxlDot » * SMtk Ain.. CflANFOBO,

Automobile PaintingTel. 116 R '

COOK & B E N N E R— _ Estimates Given

15 Union Avenue Cranford

Bathroom and Kitchen-------T I L I N G -------

Fireplace*. Porches and Vestibules - ’. THOMAS H. BOSS -

. -270, Jackson AvenueTel. 3367 PLAINFIELD , N. J.

M ICHAEL KISS Carjpmter and Builder

115 Anchor Plsca, Garwood, N. J. Estimates given on all kind* of .work. Jobbing a Specialty.

Post Office^ Garwood.». J.

Mayor Blows Up Court House.Arrested on a charge of .manu­

facturing bombs, Flladelfo Castro mayor of I.entlnl. Sicily, blew up the court house, killing nU the; occupants.says a dispatch, to Rome, Italy ' •

---- ---- : ' jTeleplione 23J , ■

piece ghen him hv his uncle. Clifton ! Block Manufacturers Frank Oulllftt three '„ T „ - - year* old, o f:Echo, La., dlvidn a few boon despite ! th* work of physicians.

Best Standard Made Block* for Best Price*.

W l u t l u t t ì i i a ORAXTORD

(rseeeaEssewsaaify-( \

' í J 'Í" ' J "'

m t m m?1X

' •- V - - • - . ■ • ••• --: .-ij--. r " ■■ . • ■ ■ . - .; » ••-. ■

THE CRANFORD CITIZEN jW D C H W W O ^ THURSDAY, A U G U S T 10. 1922

ring aboutPiodo, In ■null

nLdrd daugb-landa. the lack* the

rla and la Ung- She. ■ and rtd- ber father. iy ot the herbroth-

ilays with ;L. She Is the family

N T

° S § ä B dT-JZifltsAjt f £ i O- '*&**%-

* < -' /McC off / y u x oftCeA tv s w e r :

t

Use our Vtolittt U i i c m t r y ^ L ^

«________ ! ybfj.r A p o lo g y _•be queen, nay from ilSTwtiefe l, built on The royal gone Into they are the Tlslt

ind queen at Civita- the Ideal : distance

>Bvtr A p o lo gy will b e , . A ccep t erti

nlly____er of the I ince Cm-

l*O X T .MAKE K X C l^ l v the telephone. I „■ u„.

tiive the other iieison i;,, think it over mid get p,„|. of view. We’re .selling proper line of stutionerv standard writing'' fluid*-mi- terials that will assist von

-f»rtwings=or- rat her iii uil'ih g regrets. .

ast few different

n people ; their fu- j

decidedly people.

Ir fancy, ■ hough It i torcar Is ; rds, anx-i . In the ry popu- ery quiet Intimate nen and ry timid ing man s fattier ake his ibdlcate, lappolnt- e the pa­le “ first

RliXALI. STORE

REAYt Prop/i. f -

Sunday and Holiday Hours :

9 to 1 A . M. 3 to 7 P. M.

Phone 1 3 7 • •_

Em ergency Calls 38“

„ Phone

842-J Westfield

ResidenceU H E. Broad St., Westfield

WARREN GROFFV I AN O TUNER

fo rm erly with AEOLIAN CO. STEINW AY

. Orders Left at Reay’s -Pharmacy Will Receive Prompt Attention

RAILROAD WINS WANAQUE SUIT

Chancery Court Decides LfihiQh Valley Would Lose by Water­

shed Development.

THE DECISION BEATS NEWARK

TUle the Shrlnerf* nftlionml'«invention in <*«Uf»>mla. Mr. WlaklÄ- iftd shirt* Ihvii «hvMnîtuï In heftlt*

H>urin¿ liU st;i\ In t'lilitornla .the SowihmI master was cnnfloêd 6Bt hospital four day«, but, although Ul, be made th« roturo trip with tbm Trentoti Sltrl^er«. *

rpon Ids arrival home arrangement® were Immediately made f>r M* **" movrtl to the hospital. b>r a time roi- towln« hl« removal to the institutton, the veteran musician- rallied, but re­cently he suffered a relapse and, in an effort, to bring about relief, physician* at the. hospital performed a delicate

PlalnM-llnion Water Company

Water 8upply Commi,,ion Loses Too. State Board of Eduoatlon Jm Ious.

ProfMior' Winkler, Famou» DU ractor, Ha, Stauly FunaraL

The Plalnfleld-Unlon W ater Com- jinny supplies the Inhabitants ©t Plainfield. North Plainfield. Fan- wiKulf Westfield. Qarwood. Cran- foni. Roselle. RoaeUe Park and Kenilworth with water tor do­mestic use.

pilUl |'rl IV!J invu an *----operation. lie riillM nCttln for a tima iTVnT Iü.'TTöy- t'Tsn-i-roTrry wer»-.otar, tulli,-J ululi 'lu* suffered »notlicr re­laps,. « few ,l:ivs im», and hls condition gruil mill y Ihm':»»,, w orse until delitti.

“The Purest and SweetestThat Nature Can Yield”

tL i- ■“

the ----luunillut of tli

mon- on are tb Victor j n’t be a ugh he

or king, j take to an, who own ln- leasants tlácken-

S2SHS21

AT YO U R SERVICE

No dirt, no dangerous matches, just press a button or turn the , switch and the room Is lllumln- " uted, tho rolTeo is heating, the toaster Is toasting or the sweep­er Is sweeping. These are only a few of the wonderful services F.lectrleity Is waiting to perform for you at slight cost. Com­mand It through us. Wiring, re­pairs tin(1 all kinds of equipment.

Wm. C. Golding, Inc.OPTICIANS

219 Broad Street

Elizabeth, N. J

H A R O L D L O C K W O O D i

ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORtil. ___ • CO CTTPhone 59-W

210 South Avenue, Cranford, N. J

sasEsa- Raritan Valley FarmsProduce Certified Hilk Only

27c. Q t .CRANrORD DAIRY .

Phone t*T . M South i n

g r a s s m a n &- - - m.itTL'aT r. Nfp.VKlt; IncortwratodEKNE3T L. MEYKK. Incorporated

KutuhliNhwl 1K50

■ . ' (SUCCESSORS TO EDWARD MOSHER»’

C i v i l K i u j l n e o r s * S « < « - V © y 01?*

- 4 j Masmilc BiiU,Ung, Cranford, N. J.Office» joüt) Broiul-atroot. Eluaheth, N.. J.

VenieeSlioe Répairing Co.

11 Union Avo. North. Cranford

I S

The Shoe Repairers

Shoes Shined ’ •

Hat Cleaning

Meats, Fish, jBiittef Eggs and Poultry

£3 0 3B o t l i P l a o x x e s 3 0 4

rw YOU W ANT IT GOOD GET IT A T IRVING"

- A f f"TSnr work is guaranteeiiT liotli as to quality and looks. " ort enlled for and delivered.

Bake Goods of AH Kinds

Trenton.—Tbe Leblgh Valley Rail­road bai won Its Chancery Court a * tion to enjoin the North Jersey Dls- trlet Water Supply Commission Mil Newark from proceeding with the de» velopmeut of the Wunuqua watershed.In an opinion filed at Trentpn^y Vice­Chancellor Foster tbe restrain «ought was granted on the ground that the railroad, as lessee of the Morris Canal, would auffer serious injary through tbe development project, which WM undertaken primarily to add another source to Newark's’ water supply.

In a brief filed by counsel for both the North "Jersey commission - and Newark It was urged that In view of the fact that the canal la not being used for navigation purposes, “It must be perfectly obvious to every fair- minded peraon that the rights ln lands or waters, whether by direct grant or aa appurtenant tu the lends (title to which was acquired by the canal company for canul purposes only), are l of a most flimsy and Insubstantial, character." This Is not the view the vice chancellor tubes of the aubject matter of the controversy. ,

Two questions are Involved, th« vice chancellor says. One la: “ Is t b e «1- teut of the contemplated diversion of waters now flowing Into the canal ao great that it will Injuriously affect couiplulnanta' rights (lessor and les­see) and prevent them from perform lng'their obligations and duties It. maintaining the canul In an operation•undltlonr .

The other:’ “Are,the defendants un­lawfully atteuiptliig auch dlveralonT

The vice chancellor anawers bothaffirmatively. .

While, a» a n utter of course, vice Chancellor Foster’s Judíela} pro­nouncement will not he the laat word in the controversy. It will nevertheless serve to Jolt proponents of tbs Wsna- que development. 1’ or be bold« that the originally contemplated dlacharge of 60,000,000 gallons a day from the

¡ reservoir for the uso of Ne™ rk “ d other prospective takers wlU contó- tute a violation of the ^chapter 71 of the lows of 1016, from which the North Jersey commissionderives Its powers, wliereaa It 1» nowproposed to divert B8.000.il00 gaUons

22 of the sct of lBlO the vice chancellor says, provides that nothing in this act shall authorise any action or agreement that .hall oper- ute to'abandon or make necesaary the abandonment of any canal or watM- wav . orrelieve any canal com­pany from the obligation to mrintoln and operate'said canal.

Jealousy of Eduoatlon Bosrd Although questioning th« propriety

nf ri.e Board of lnstltuUona and Agw-cles msklng a vuluntary survey of tbeBordentowu School for glared Touttuk the State Board oti Educatlen accepted Its recommendations sud de­cided to purchsae cows ln order.apply pupU. with mom mUk.

Th» water supplisti by thè Cont­ini!»’ bus buon anslyietl by Alien Uit/. ii, Ks,|. jt lendine hydraulle es-

(iiinierly ot Boston, now of N, w York, aii,1 iironounced by lihn to he water-of "grcat organlc l>ur- ity/' nini In a letter to one o f tlie t ’onipany's imtrons he addv "X ou me to he congratulateti upon hav- i„g SO..-gl,od a supply. and you need linve no anslety whatevor as to tuwlioleMimotioss."

Company Refer» all its Patrons1 *

Probe Eligibility oj School O melaiPendine un Inquiry by State Educa­

tion ('»miniarlo,T .1oliti Knrlglit to de­termine If Mra. Catherine McCarthy holds a position oilier than attendance t,Ulcer la Monmouth county, the Stilla Boanl of Education hits postponed eon- «lderntlon of reappointment until II*September meeting.

Mrs McCnrll»'-* untile wasirabmlttento tbe Stille Eiluentlon Bearli. At tho request of Oscar W. Jeffrey of Engle­wood, the nomination was laid over to find oui If the-uttemlunoo otlleer hold* more than one position In the school

Commissioner Enright sabl that th« nomili ut I on was submitted *">'dy ,on * basis of efficiency, It Is lmmutor ul. the commissioner sold, whether the ■vonian holds .me or a dio.en Jobs, liin»-mitoh .is she gives satisfactory sen-lie*

„Itendance.otîher Mr. Enright sa d bail made a diligent Inquiry to

termine upon tbe nominee’s tltness.Judge Lawrence of Monmouth county, will, «bon. the ntteiidi.nce officer ha* considerable hiis|no«s, emlorsed MrU,McCarthy for n'liiipolntment.

John’P. Murray of Jersey-< Ity. a hoard member,“ cal list attenllon t o -* rtrnem statute problldHiig county sctuml superintendents from holding down

r .r J h « . “K h t 'X 'U r t t It PLAINFIELD— UNIONact sbould. apply to subordinate posi-1 . --------- ------ - -tluns. - , ,

Traglo Doath of Princeton QlrlEllinbeth Jones, seventeen

The ■ nit crest o f tho Company Is 1,1, nlilled with tLii cotimiunltles 111 nlileli Us plant 1* located and It 1»I lm policy of (he management to do its lull sharo to promote their gniwth anil prosperity.A representative of tho Company

will ho pleased to.call on parties who do not at present tiso water frofy ItsTTialnsrand cxplalti w i n terms, method of service, etc.

11 Union Ave. North, Cranfor'd

Phone' 1Í8J. ' T

ZINGÁLES’

P h . k i v a t i n o sWalnut and South Aves- Cranford N: J.

C .0A R S CANDY

F ly and Mosquito Exterminator

Zingalea* Drug StorePrnorlpUon. rbarmacr

Walnut uni South Avn.. CflANFORO. N.

Automobile PaintingTel. l ic i t ’

COOK & B E N N E R-” — . Estimates Given

15 Union Avenue Cranford

FR ED K A N T N E KUpholsterer and Decorator

- ’ fom eriTw itlTw . B.umgartcn & ,0 °, N. Y.

Sperry Bufidir«, U North Avenue, East. : . . XelophoD© 43p-\V » t

Upholstering ’ Poú'íhlng and Refinlahlng

Batlirooin and Kitchen- t i l i n g -

Πn s and Draperies Slip Covers ShanesMattresses Remade Reproductions -

Gliding/■.^‘ r1,^Repairs (Work of Artl_

Miss M U«»'-," , . wt ears old. daughter of ' rot­Jones, bend of the department of ch ’«n- lslry of -Princeton University, met s irsg.e death h, YosemUe Valley when she slipped and fell over « chff lnto the HWlrllng waters of the Merc» do

" mTss Jones was with her father, who made a fruntlc effort to save her and nurrowly eBCftiHMl » RlmUur_futo.

According to toiirlHts who witnessed tbe accident, FroMssor Jone^ gras,o;<l hls daughter’s hand ns she started to full. Ho clung firmly, but the hands parted and she slliqicd over the prec-Inlce Into the ruphla. ; ■

A call was IniiiKsllntely sent out for park and forest rangers. Accordlng to the rangors It may bo some tlmo h«“ foro the body Is ’ found, because of the swiftness of the current. ’

Professor Jones und hU daughterarrived In the vllll" y k°n ^ n^keley They had been alt weeks In herkelcy.where he whs .a In« S ■ummer Beasoim ut the. Unlver«ty (oi

^M lw 'jones waa graduated from I ’ l«» (Mnu-a School In Princeton In June ano ^ p la n n ed to enlor Wellesley College|n th« fall. She was one of the leadersof her class and an only child. .

Borrowed *400; O.U Into Scrape Frank Berardcill, of 128 Bay“ pfl

street, started «"me trouble for hl.m ■elf when he borrowed $400 from HU

[ M at' Amalia-Lupin, who lives near by, several moatlnr ago.. Frank wunted to get married, and d l i - .

■ « E E K ^ . : r s 3 “ |s=waa arrested on a serious charge In­volving another man’s wife, . .

Meanwhile the aunt had not ed her $300. so she appealed to » « eberlff and he put a levy upon Frank's household goods JUH' ureuariDg to move lo New York. Frank then promised to make good end pay hls ejint the debt and wns_ In f t * sheriff's office iw-ttllng up when hl»} bondsmen on the »ertous crimloal charge walked and said he wantedto surrender Frunk.

yv.f.v (a now endeavoring to »«cure , new bondsman, although be has been released In the custody of h's legalrepresentative,. Romulus P. lUnm.New Indictment Against Policemen

*<*«». Dresch, suspended Newark po- llceman, was cbariied with first degroe

W A T E R COM PANYIIS-North Avo., Plainfield, N- í-,

1M Broad St.. Westfield. N. J-

I f y o u COULD W ATCH -|csFc-ciupluyml hy_ uv hi th(J

’ ‘ milk ami cTi-am foniï ï d , T t î . i r i ’rcà.imï/ irtainouFTffmrr-,.,ul.i arrive at a hotter understajul- iiig of why It reaches you in such »\i hole some, palatable condition- A ll ,,f our vans ami hollies are mechan- ¡.ally stvrlliml.

Cranford DairyAtnil’ s-r TllEHMAN. l ’ rop.

20 SOUTH AVB Talephono 1B7.

Announcementlicgintiing May ' s', we w*

ileliv-Vl óur high-grade

Ice CreamIN CRANFORD

Orders Tor Sunday- should be in the store by Satur-

. day night

New York Candy Kitchen

173 llrttol Stiret, Wrsltiebl. N. J. ------ ------i>ÌP|ih«)i»c 755 ------7

GAMILLO MASSAGeneral Contractor

« . R A P P /p a r t y

aradlng Oonorete W ork

Otilara Excavated

Sewers,-Sidewalks, EU.

I*. <1 Bur S3

I p e M t M B c S W i s INS O Y I H E R SP O R Ä M t W S ■YCW HtJ

PC |{ p; MEAT Is a summer tin».: lift- suver. Keep in t’01*,111 imi .luring this weather l,v oidertng yoini hiete of ■ 111iq siioil I'li.me your order In. Wel l a t t e n d to Hiii*iiiiptly. . .V/utcli lor Mr. Happy Party. |

K L E I N ' S M A R K E . T

v -"otter. Bu1 ,r4" Uruorx• 9 3

»ve

u h a n f o k dV-

R A T T I ’ Sh o m e - m a d e

ICÌECRE a mFRESH MADE and ‘PURE

, 9 Union AvenueCranford

Tflephone 116-M

Joim P.'Murray of Jersey elleged, end hlsEducation Board meiuVer, warn«d-nle- t t f belsnro. -N colleagues to beware ot t h e b e e n brought at of the Institutions’ board, the opinion that Bordootown may leU e to he-a school and b . dasslAsd as an Institution. fie-

The Education Uesrd m*Ung veloped that a dletk'lau frrm Oomrnl^ sloner I-ewls’ office «dun a r i^ ga™•he Bordentown acliool a dean health! with the exception that -un­dent milk la not supplied. ^ _

Col D. Stewart Craven of Salem, chairman of the Bordentown School Committee, appealed ,ur “ eency appropriation to purchase - ­The governor, comptroller end treas­urer L id that thojf could not view therecommendation In th.emergency, though suggesting that other* fund« be used to meet the eltua-

tl0Mf. Murray que.tloned | m ^rf^ ln m L uoH with the killing

FRED Hl. JAHN(Uuccoanor to Plilllp Jnhn)

House, Sign and „ . .Fresco Painting

Plain and DecorativePiper Hanging

/ and dealer In .g la ss , o il , p a in t , v a r n is h e s

/ AND WALLPAPER Cranford, ,p , , „ N o w Jersey

Tiili-nliune 26-M___________^

I LAW R E N C E

Automobileand Overhauling

I Tel. 3CS M — - 138 Centennial Ava.

F. D O Y LE

Repairing

Carl Warainaki & SonPAINTERS AND DECORATORS

. 60 Burnalde Avenue z"’

Telephone lfiS-R CRANFORD

t. H. QUAY Sac’r

V?. N. GRAY, PB ia ’T

Fireplace*. Porches end Vestfbules THOMAS H. ROSS -

- -270. Jackson AvenueTel. 3367 PLAINFIELD, N. J.

QQ.

MICHAEL KISS^M Jjifite and Builder ’

115 Anchor Place, Garwood, N. i. Estimates given on all kinds ot ; Jobbing a Specialty.

V f u

Funeral Directors and Embalmers* 1 NEW YORK OFfICC , c

CRANfORD " -106 Union, Avenue

Tftlephor« ®

258 E. Broad StreetTel*pb°n®

E S S . ' S J before the public a. an educational borne rather »hap have It «upear as a Mate Institution. The d>-. f l . * . recommendation wai decUretfT h e . l ^ r to work of an effid.ncy food expert and one man’« J»dP DBordentown pupils “ re. }*?*^mtisfled 1 ■»Id and the board should be Satisfied to^repose confidence In the manage- ” ^ 0“ f e S t e n d e n t WUUmn B.

Va-Another efficiency expert •inn« and recommend the spoonful of t S S b t w . milk and vorterhouro Veaks" said Mr. Murray. The hoard by i 'vote of two to one decided to transfer funds for the parch— »* additional cow«.

Profaeeor Wlnklsrie Pimeeel Prof. A lb .« Wffikler.^tWy-toown

^ jP o s t Office Ganrood. N. J.

¡Telephone 23JCranford..Economy—Cement

Carpenter and BuilderESTIMATES FURNISHED

Block Manufacturers« « j

Best Standard Slade Blocks for Best Price«.

_ » Ree» I n U ì A m n n n m i p n

j o t o t o l n e o fPboD6 373-M* . ■ .

band mist«», p l ^ Jin the “ Srtsn^rdsln ^^nton.whO died In Mr­

. montbi. waft banftd waane»*à^mwnlng et 10:80 «fdock from fe fai home. 284•n««# eerriew were condiiefM »t

wee ta Blverv * *I Oetnetwy- .

ofU Ueutena'nt” ctinrira Harm In W Hoboken January 28. li« fore polIce Judge Edward Markeley, In the Third Precinct Court of Jersey Olty, Dresch was held without ball-

The charge followed the release of Drescb and hls rourrest on the mur- der^omplalnt, aftnr thirty seconds of liberty It was the opinion of Supreme Court* Justice Porker th « the «mi- plaint on which the policeman was, first arrested Indicated manslaughter rather than murder through faulty wording.

Railroad Bars Road to Bathe« The Pennsylvania Railroad Com­

pany. following the disturbance atSand Island, ban laaued an order pro­hibiting any but Its e j^oyeea to m i » the tracks omx the round house. Tffie paana o f reaching tbe Deieware river, where many go dally to belbe. baabeen used* » « ' » " « . - ¡_” lCo_ fe5ar»h a trP|irt ^of-the river 1»

THE FOWLS OF THE AIR bh well ns tho cnttle on lillls all contribute their ahnre ot

" MEAT FOR YOU TO EAT-This market handle« none hut the. elioicc grades of.

POULTRY AND MEATii’K iirlees are based on the menfiaUis mutsmalt profit■ ,“ “ "V t yi<fUy»ru ‘ wlll only give ue • Screen« Repaired end New M ed» totilal. The quality of the meeU M d l .{lie niodorate prices am whnt werely on to build busioci^

r . R O L Fj Carpenter and Builder

JOBBING OF ALL K lMDHpromptly attended ■

Fish aad Cl&mft Every Frldty

MILCH’S M ARKETI. BRENW ASSER. Pmp.

Telephone« 260. 261

Order

Estimate« FuxnUhed

P O. Box 111 CRANFORD

Uu-düeM Plv-nr ’¿ftkJ IlMldence Phone IlfrW

!.. J. egENNAN C.g-TOVE

j Phone 36-M '

CHAS. S. O lV E N SIPAXNTDIO . AND D E CO R ATI*®

M J e u S

TO remen .the future. It will be neceesaur to g * through Oenter street over the romr panjTs trucks, tnd then watt »bout throe blocks to th« »h o r^ T h e pro^ •rty «long the river 1» owned By the S U T a n d It 1» reported K m jj •ttier farther hindrance«. In the d l» l y t i M i L r bathe« drove railroad

- freu the watw. _____

BRENNRN&TOYEPlumbing, Tinning,

Heating

Satisfaction Guaranteed

jg Johnson Avenue. ..CRANFORD

114 South Ave. t . Cranford

M ARTIN SCHAFER Mason and Contractor

GRANTORD, n . J.I Estimates Furnlshed on a ll e l s « * 1 \ 01 worm .

— Telep

Ä S i ’-s

Mis

aM

t

éi. Sjüà^i^f^J * »'ft * Mil {ff

BURN UP8,.

THE CRANFORD CITIZEN AND CHRONICLE, THURSDAY, AUGUST 10. 1922

tHow Unexpend|\

Was Dono $

Bonfire* Every Os* Consldsrabl* F f f

. End of i j v

At a certain "lit strange bonfire u>| every night.

a w m FOUR-raw “ j f w a u r PAsstse

W UH’II WAS QI.KC.’ i

j^J ISS COUNSTAI X grew

During tlie tlu.t r tons of aminunly ;the war—some I',I every— deacrlptli—- stripped-«ii-~tbeli yv were laid with on I

proud an the days m-ut by and her silky lialr floated over her_pule_ green dress In the breeze.

"It la plain to me It.nt I am the queen of the field. " »he Mild to the Pumpkin Vine, entwliitg on Tlie ground

Am iT vus in-

sliulloW trencbefn; with brushwood/»

- l r

> I

I r»

plcrute and cor' shells and curtrl

At 5:30 In th fire wus ready t F. A. Talbot, un! tho following L'l the way In whit)

“Shurp to tl.v .Whistle, and tin 1. of workers fr 1 inotorcnr bus - hearing the sa i BBSlStaUtH. !

"He makes |,| of the now silt lug, re aming! trimming the Meanwhile an from Ids shat, rods, un arinf of jmratlin. ■

"Tho ruga ends of the the lullumme 0:40 a match lng torches ; safety olllcln _ "The moto Ha tlie lire , liuch man h ¡7

...lng of so... ai-i Inspiring ra i trench to 1«,; their brandt In passing.

"The cart’ luBtnntly to the speed't‘i lly the time i fired the g ’ oped In sn i us phanton i

"The hr» ; ed, and tl , across the . ’ the road . v alreudy on .5 tho vehlel opened un there heln, a-inl!e hu' raping £ - ground.

“As the ' grows flt Cloud» < 1 with lurl miles arc and It oc I

--nearly.;--“ r TiM.r'sdrT Tendetl to he queen, else why should 1 lie so inuidi ulaive all'others aroitiel here 7"

' "We each [day our'part, I think," replied the lowly Pumpkin Vine. "M.v day has not mine yet. I am sure when you 'beheld ine In m.v glory you will see that 1 am qulle your equal

. though I do md think I was made to be queen." ■ .

Ml should say you were not:" haughtily ■ replied Miss Cornstalk looking on Pumpkin Vine'with scorn

only "shook bar silken locks that tbay might glisten In the sunlight and M d

Yery~H*?r head higher than ever as bar green sash fluttered In the b re ess.__ Hut one day when Pumpkin Vinehad forgotten’ all about the unklndness Of. haughty Miss Cornstalk, down fel| Something close beside her . ‘

l ’umpkIn VIrle ii 1 r.i hud a large’ yel-10W pUftf|£I(Xf£=SX3 inc n|e lKSr~i ftttldrhave been proud, hut slie-dld not brag ih'onrltsgotdr.Hhe^kirewtliutdthervines had golden pumpkins and that It watrnot the only beautiful thing In the world. "" '

Hut what was It that l*y on the ground beside her? Pumpkin Vine looker! ami there was .Miss Cornstalk, proud arid haughty no more, for her Silken tresses were gone and“ her green sash and all that was left of her former glory was a long «talk with husks withered unrl dry,

fimv~U’nH~"tlle’ rin7e: you TRTnlirToF

Gems Valued at Billion- Francs j Dumped on MdHcet in

Paris. '

Pumpkin Vine-Had a-Pumpkln.

“and now limi I think of It I wonder I even so fur forgot my high slullmias to speiik lo you. ...

“A queen should spelili only to her eqtiuls, and i wish you would md nil dress me ugnili, for I mill.v ,m,m,t notice one so fur heueath me." '

— Pumpkin Vine said something aloud kindness being the greatest virtue a queen conili have, hid Miss Corns!,ill;

*..... »■••Hi*, IUII umpklnVine to hnve revenge; bnt not in the Huy you may think did she take It. Very softly she spoke to poor fallen MKs Cornstalk. “The 'sun Is idee anil warm, even If the nlglds lire I’ool," sliob-snld, "ami It will not be long before you will he taken Into a nlie warm barn, so do not feel so sad. - ; •. .­

“Von lire very forlunate^fo he able to see so niileh of the world; for from your Infly place you must have seen many things I have missed mid I am suri' you will see ninny things down here that will make you glad you inme." .

Miss Cornstalk looked at ’Pumpkin Hue mill saw the hlg golden' pumpkin. "Ion were rigid. Vour day of elory lias come ami you are my equal." she sighed, "and yon" should i,,,,.,,queen of the field Instead of me, for

Europe’s four-year "Jewel Jag" is about over, and the Paris gem trade | foresees the passing of the crisis that resulted from tho dumping of about 1.000.000.000 francs’ worth o f stolen, confiscated-sod smuggled Jewels on the PuTls market; ~ 7 '

Leonard Tiosenthai, the jewel «... fieri employed to value the Hapsboig' I tTeasure. Vays the Voilap6e lo the precious stone market was prevented only by the war’s creation of enough I profiteers to absorb the oversuppiy.

Tills flood of Jewels, M. Rosenthal says, came In three waves. The first was brought by fleeing Russian aristo- ents, -who smuggled out family for­tunes In their hair or sewn In the lin­ing o f their clothing. Sometimes valuable stones were even imbedded in the flesh. One Russian prince sold for 3.500.000 franc* agrouporeineraldihis ancestors ’ bought two centuries ago for 1NO.OOO francs. One of tlie

N E W A R K , N à J .“MERCHANDISING ABREAST OF THE TIMES"

STORE HOURS-9.00 A. M. TO 5.00 P. U, CLOSER ALL DAY SATURDAY

DollarMonday, August 14

you know how to he kind to thnse’wh hnve been unkind to you. unit the tfk\ queen ’Is the one who rules perso]f first.” .

l ’oor. foolish Miss Cormdidk ; while Slie wus heiuitlfid she hrfil mi time for «'Ise thoughts. l'Ut Vt.en |„,r ,.entity was gone she fomiti out that beautiful deeds count frfr more than silken tresses iiiid/fmught,v milliners.

I© l>y .McClure New.p.p.r Syndicate.)

czar’s emeralds was sold In Paris for thlrt.v-two limes Its cost. A Hussion duke, congratulated upon selling Ids Jewels for IO.iaaysat franca, replied: _

"Ilmv can 1 live on 500,1X10 francs a year?"

His prewar expenditures In I’etro grail varied between 12,000,000 ai 15,000/mo franrs yearly.

The second wave consisted of-'Jewels valued at 3UU.OHp.O0o to Adb.000,000 frtH)rs,-Teonflsiuted by Hie soviet gov­ernment. The tldrd wHve was the dispersion of tlie collections of kings and kinglets,. pvfnres \unil dukes of fiemiany and<AustrIa-lhingary. The Hapshufg^^uitfunilsheiiiJie. treasureof tenyenturies. and for thlXEmperor Clmries’ agents asked 50:000,000 francs, but took between 25 buO.OOO and 30.000.000.

Hundreds of seasonable, wanted, new and fresh articles at the uniform price of $1 each -articles of wear for men, women and children—articles of beauty and utility in the home. In short, articles for everyone.

Don t Miss This Great One-Dag Festival o f Savings

See Newark Sunday Papers for DetailsBRITISH WORKMAN-CAN SPEED

THE RIG H T TH INGat the

RIGHT TIME

By MARY MARSHALLTJUFFEE

>u r >:

V ß i ) ' i : a t

_ _ ^JJ How to Rm <1 Yourl A N n jI Characteristic»

Tandanclaa — th. Capabilities 'ór Weak.

' “ ••••» Th .» Make lor Success ór Failure as Shown in Your Palm

,1A BU8INESS PERSON’S HAND

ernoon tl j1 rural po) 1 piece.

ii

burnedcleiitly . ure tliei V: lng bun jwepa.

VL :

0 O H N —Pick up the ear of boiled i . i -----.

fromC!^ Ìu Ì r 7 ; . lm.ml1n"" ' À S S,niK'VD-N’K^ and camion are ,. . V * 1 r' 1 lls Iä ln Perfectly neces.uiry to the businessfhilern"!1 ‘I'"' '* l'""1 lulling : «oiiiiin, In order to help In suwew.ine kernels trmn.it.... .......... the-line „m u .. ...... .. 1 . am ve»»., , ............. lulling

'rnels troni the eiir in tuhle. Cherries Lift the cherry by the stem

the line of life and the line of the............ " •! me Niem l'end should he Joined «hnve the

he!lc l'!T ; “ t llis,'" nl V“ lnt" ‘ »‘«Hit*. ¡The line of the head linist be i Hal Ï'.'" ' '" ’vjt " " ^'i' Plate, i atfoiig, ils hri.lii power Is Required InI Raked Poiatm's-ru, ....... leng.le «rent measure In s t r u g g Ä ö r lu c !if tl U tr" ss" isi; " n tile dinner plate cess In business. Therefore the line

my have not uireuily been opened l,f the head should he cleur and well_ ------ «v. viva* uuu wen-I lmirk,'<I. «ml should extend rightï iinrucu til« a . ... . 8,11across the hand.

! - (,f ‘■‘aurai*, good fortune Is neces- ; sury In business, ami this Is Indicated I by a strong line of fortune having Its

rlfla Iti »I... Il_.. a . . . °

n thekltehem Take the morselHof i tato from tin* open skin with the fork Do pot expedite this by squeezing the Hkli^wlth the tinuers. If yon like to eat the skill cm the potalo withthe skill, on with-the' knife and fork 1 h .„ i, ~ „ " ...... ■'“ '***» nsNever serup’e the skin win, t|a» shh-1 ti'J ' ‘e, ne of 11,0 “ hi* running of the fork jo~goTThe ms« « ^ . ' TT u n \ Z W fliiK^<>r MeriUr^

Berries—All should he eaten with „ ’ m If ’ ’ ,n a(,dl»°a . therefork^or spoon excepting str„wherries Mercurv“ ?» T ^ i ,,ne ° 'Mhe mount of which, if they m e served with the ',\r i , J’' U. 8 Bta? • V««T good sign hulls on, are.yalscd ,o (Rv f y l ° f for,UD(! »UrincM.meuns of the hull and bitten olT

Lohste ‘

Proves It by Building a House a Day Under a Transatlantic Boss.

Commodious, well-built dwelling houses are going up at Felthum, a suburb of London, at the rate of one a day. Such speed ln building has never been witnessed here before. I f is all tha more striking because it occurs at a time when complaints are heard on every side that the British work­man “ Is not what he used to be,” and that nothing will Induce film, to get through any Job at’ the ordinary speed of an American workman. • '

The explanation Is found In the fact that the -man who ts getting the work done leamed how-to hustle and i how to handle men on the other side-1 of the-Atlantic. He is j . H. Taylor, head of an engineering Ann in Lon-' don. By birth he Is a Canadian. Early In his career he was a railroad con­tractor. He helped to build the Great Northern, the Canadian Paclflc and the Grand Trunk railways. Now he Is In England applying what he learned In Canada. 1

Speaking of the British workmen Sir. Taylor says; . ’

“They are fine when treated and handled properly. I harei never seen better nor more rapid work done In any .part of the world than British workmen are doing here."

.,500 Tool Boxes—Rugged, Handy69c

t Die same kind that went so quickly atew days ago. Were made for the government at f 1"6®? cost fur the shipping of ammunition. Handy

Rome and the garage. Heavy 1 -in. lumber, tw^Wnge fasteners, rope handles. Size over all 28J4 in. x 12J ta\x 14 in.

*»<1 phonè\orders filled vrhile quantity

‘New Jersey’s Favorite Store”

CONQUERS BONE INFECTION

I»’ tlie .Shell—H |s necessari jand qulle all right n, pU|i such .g-!, !.food apurt, win, the lingeis and kucli'1» - .......

(® by th* W hM i.r Syndfôït*. Inc.)■O--- . ....----- -

New Traatntsnf In Chicago Hospital' Cures 75 Par Cent of Cates.

A non-surgical treatment of osteo- aylltls; or hope-infection, hat been re. TeilM -ró thrChTcago Medical aodety

things ns slirlpy.s even lie ....«rated and peeled with the' lingers However great daintiness should he ex­ercised In doing this mid one .should take care not to put the fingers to the mouth or to eat tlie fist, with tin lingers. The fork should he used tl convey It to the mouth though the fingers may |,e ,,sed ’|„ separating the parts of the lisle. . ..

(© by McClure New.pa„„r Syndicate.)- .

<•1*

K S b

A LINE 0 ’ CHEERBy John Kendrick Bangs.

THE GUIDE.

W H E N on some street

darkened

pathway 1 pursue - . TJa rather Fuith than Keel That holds iny courses true

So too In puzzled «lays, ... ' ' / The Lluht ohsouretl” by Uoubt * '

' ii^ Uh thut flfds the ways ’T o lead me sufcly out.

<0 by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.)

the romance of words

"BOARD"

McClura .N .wapay« Syndieole.)

'PU h , resources of a language .for the expression of thought J

are frequently lnereused,by at- trlhutlng to the sniue word a number o f , dllTerent meanings. Thus we have "post"—from the Lutin' pono, "I- pluce"—showing up In such words as “postage,1 “post-haste,” ’‘post-office" and the like, while "head" and “court" ure others of the same type. But, of all these, the most Interesting Is "board,” orig- inully connected with "broad’ and applied to that form of.ttmberyyhlclLlachaructorlxedbyIts breadth rather than its thickness.

Several boards manifestly go to make up a table but. In the old days, u single "plank, rather tllmsity supported, was sufficient for this purpose. We, therefore have the use of the word ln the sense of the table’ Itself—the “festive bpard"—and also the meals, "hoard and lodging." The significance .of the table Is also uppurent In the use of the word ln such titles ns Board of Trade. Board of Commerce and the like —all of these bodies meeting around or sitting beside' n table. Again. ‘ "board" ,1s specifically used to denote the plank-cover­in g -«!-a . vessel, and In this sense, gives rise to a new group of phrases. ,of which "aboard" and "above-borrd” _are typical The paper-maker, too. has his technical uses for the term. To him It signifies the stltTest and thickest—the most board-llke— of hit products, and "card­board”. Is the result. .-<©• br th4nVTifefeV 8yidic^‘*71nc.)

I

by Dr, N. M. Laporte of Chicago. This I new treatment, now available" to all

Physicians, reverses the methods of j cnrrent practice. Heretofore bone-ln-

flammattona have Involved disfiguring operations, prolonged Invalidism and crippled bodies. The héw treatment utilité* the oxidising power of alumi­num potassium nitrate. Dressings of rolled oats treated with the chemical enable the affected area to.avail It- ,elf of nature’s power for self-cure.

At a recent series of demonstration .clinics In Mercy hospital 400 cases were treated. Though many were in the chronic stage the resalts tn the opinion o f the hospital surgeons were extraordinary, for 75 per cent of cures

I resulted. Patients were able, while Ijinder treatment, to leave their hospl-

‘ re *d* *o about their butines^- ^ helng applied to

l aiL varieties of Infection of tl)e bone and soft tisane—bone tuberculosis,n«nlng sores and abscesses and evenforma of diabetic gangrene: . _

TH O RO UG H W O R K 'you ajwuyg get when wo tlo your jiliintbing. You will never thid lenity joints or cnreless siihlering in any work (lone by us. Reliability ? our, ' ' 1atcli''or(l, and n o live up to it and tlieieliy aro favored with tbo patronage of tbo best families In u.r?nfor^ J’L‘ar In and year out. When you want seientiilc, export plumbing have I t attended to by-

\Ve anticipate a very active market in the fall and„ j~. * ‘ ,r ,\J ' “ w" “ ‘«•»■ci in ine ran and advise those who are considring the purchase ofnrnnArh? (■/* k.,,1; :____ *property to buy now.

Opportunity to purchase desirable dwellings and lots at reasonable prices and in some cases at prices tar below market value-is here today.

It is decidedly to the advantage of the prospective-

r e r V CT u k th is ° ffice a s w e avery large list o f properties to choose from.

<0

H E S S B R O SPlumbing, Heating, Tinning

Telephone 314x17 8. Union Avanns ORANTORD

I

teliJboihe.

-cldc now to enjoy “music from clouds • by installing a wireless

’phone receiving outfit In yodr ie. Com© lo Larsen for. all your ness , supplies and Information,

Nssliicttd W if. to Colloct Stamps.Charging that he neglected her to

pom e h i. hobby of collecting

cEcT?P*- EMa 11 fv if^ o fS r e !* ü * ul2? for * “ P «k te main­tenance from William Wilson. w i iJ l .J* president o f . M ^ p ~ m p Ä S ‘ “ e fasci U aald to hâve an tourne T S r ro,dea,t‘

'•*• rear' ...... ................. ■ ' W * 1"^ ,n prIco irom $15 "to

|ThouM«d Woman Are P o r tm « . « . | Havejne call some evening to sup-

Prices from $5,000 to $100,000

i n s u r a n c eO f every description written promptly and correctly

Really and Insurance „„ wC R AN FO R D T R U S T

CRANFORD, N.

it Cranford be a radio town. En-# a. ro.0,mful o f friends with

the ^“sefnatlng radio telephone

ALONZO D. HOUGH, Jr.CARPENTER and BUILDER

Estimate» Furnished T „ , rr326 R E TFO R n »wwTTTi rr, Jobbing PwmpUy Attended To"a w m x o x v m . , t, i. c™m w h OEABIOWt N ,

a - ä rpn m iitin . I uave me call some evening tn sun.

RlBBtBM h . T>____________ r * ^ | |W B a -

P. J. Larsen Radio Co»

w i r e l e s sI . . --------- «FFWUUWI DOST"in ! t bjJ^retdent Harding, acconl- “ « to a report to Arttag Postmaster

I General Bartlett The women are mak-

ïo n 'Z T ” 01 thelr new Sota- * • **■18i ^ î f î , î n Aya?ue* 0r»hford, N. J.Calt between 7 to to p.-mTweek­days: 2 to 8 p. in, Saturdays.

Ä“ YOU PREPARED to hearÌ.S. Ä Ä S T “n..why if/’ev l18''6 yo“ r -set made upn° " ' . 5 “ ,®.” ^ .on '»««MI and

X

A HMeirf.1!’ ,a *nd Mi,,,on* Home. Anheuser Bush BudwëuèrHnngarian Immigrant* in the ünlt-1 . . . »u a w e ts e rî!d sent *40.000,000 Malts and Hops

....OeuVERED

ment wIU cause a big decrease *dw-1 - C H R IS S C H M ID T

would be pleased to' have you cän for a demonstration. ' Ca^ make

E. P. Chamberlain216 North Aye.; * . .. - ORANTORD

m i n e r e m p ir eTHEATRE

Washington Street^Newark Ladies’ .Matinee Daily

Tel. 0939 Mul, Smoking Permitted

l

\V1 Scuri and in r

M. man, that lins I aveu

M ly st her 'reed, of T

Mi Mr. Wall ■lng 1 ut t betli

Ye Hriu colli Unii to tl lice

- andEl

C’ou sign witl Mr. ford Eng in I tllie timi Bue van

- and cd '

- Stal wor mei

poinit

f t ", ? T

Season’s Grand Opening Sunday Evening, August, 13th

Ini 1922, the paper predicta1 PHONE Ml 1 ALOEN 8T„ CRANFORD

, t

-------- .

Gtizen Want Ads Bring Results

“ M I M I C W O R L D "40—Brand Kow Faces—40

Matinees 25c and 50c (Pius Tax) Evenings—Orch. Less than *1.00

Week comm. SUN. MAT. AUQ. 20th “Al Reeves New Beauty Show11

it

äSfaamr«;

.-C, i ■ * reja f / * -'¡ÿ

- t i %-"*$<

__ ?r_¿c

# -,

f

TOE CRANFORD O T E E N AND CHRONICLE, THURSDAY, AUGUST 10, 1922.

N . »J.

O F T H E T IM E S ”

usi 14

wanted, new and form price o f $1t men, women .-au ty and u tilityles for everyone.

' F estiva l o f Savings

pers for Details

now

active market in the fall and are considring the purchase oftnu r "

MICKIE SAYS

r«tW EDITOR. €CMDS V A OOTN HERE "TO WlAKE VÛÂtâCMISÊ 1

\ 1 iA WjJUXrBOróeít

V&» soo.'s w e ^ e t u iu w s ) m m ' H »v » j? s u r U J

Xbwu U TW COOUKRM V V tK ONGEhRS VtOBOON

Yiowvtaoßs GOT Aft UCNAU 'M fR^M PlX A BUMCh ]

OF SOWäeWiBEßA \

- i x ~IXuE___kMH ' WHO OBMouw0*•Meant*’©eurrfcw#»rMNWt

P T O X IY PERSONALP* Oiton has returned from a

station at BelraarMiss Fran.w Everett is at New

l alt/. N. \ for two weeks.'I,. P. Martin has gone to spend a

weeks vacation at fceyport..A'. J.Mr. and .Mrs. 1'. r . Zundel" and

■family are at 'AiiBUst.

Mrs. H spend a Key port.

I'nujcis'llnnsel is visiting Ids fain­’ ‘ Summering at Shelter

Mr. and Mrs. John Tt. Uelaa ot Holly street are at Clifton Spring«. -V Y „ for a short stay. s

Mrs. fruikshank o f Holly stieeL returned Tuesday from a taro w etsfcs' vacation at Branford. Cohn.

Mr. and Mrs. EL 1). H ir b o t Hamp- . . ... S.....UV. «. .« *‘,’n Ko»d. left yestetday tor a vaea-

Deposit; X. Y.. lor ti'*" trl(> ,n Masagehnsetta.----------Mi>.. Fred t . Frazer o f Casino aye-

mte. is entertaining the Thursday Afternoon Bridge Club today.

Mrs. 11. L Post ,,f New York City, will spend the rest ot the Summer months at 705 Walnut avenue. Cran­ford. . . ’

Postmaster Pentston and Mrs. y.' Penlston o f 213 North avenue W.. “ are-sf^nding a'two. w o ka . varatk.U

at Keanshurg. • . ■ -Miss Edith Gruittner o f North

A. Oswoeds, has gone to two weeks' vacation at

ily. w-lio ui-.Island. X. Y.

Hciheit Farteli and family J- aTTv^lT a y euÏÏi^.JiâiulL.'it.iur. _a._Yiiit*

CeobcT*JuowWt

Town Notes:

ise desirable dwellings and lots -es and m some cases at prices value is here today.

■ advantage, of the prospective-suit this office as we offer a properties to choose from.

$ 5 ,0 0 0 t o $ 1 0 0 ,0 0 0

JRANCEwritten promptly and correctly

surancè DeparTR UST c o .

FORD, N. J.

-0

►•HOUGH, Ir.R and BUILDER _

Jobbing Prompuy Attended To

Cranford 446.lt CRANFORD, N. J

■ William A. Landis will leuve ldr Scursborough Tuesday on business and from there will go to his homo in Pittsburgh Wednesday night. '

M. Aamodt, the furniture.‘repair man. who was wiped out in the lire that destroyed the old Town Mall, lias opened work rooms at 2(1 N’ oi-th avenue East.

.Mrs: Ch urles S.T.I f I el I of 'J I r f I ill­ly street, will give a Silver Tea at

.; tier home ‘tomorrow-night,--'the1too reeds to go towards Hit- organ fund of Trinlnty Church.

Miss Annie Uiumoud. daughter, of Mr. and .Mrs. Marry Diamond of Walnut avenue, is home again, hav­ing heetl successfully opcruted upon at the General Hospital In Kllzu- betli, for appendicitis.

Yesterduy a cur owned by \V. II. Bradley-of Orchard street, was in eollfkion with u delivery cur of llut Union Beef Uo. The latter ran in­to the Bradley car according-to po­lice reports, breaking a mudguard

• and rods. . * • . . ■ .Elmer W. Packer, assistant to

County Engineer Bauer, lias re­signed ■ to tuke a^dtpilur position w ithH lie State IWuil .Department. Mr. Pucker Is a graduate of .Crun- ford High School and .studied Civil Engineering at- Rutgers. .He was in the service with the Field A r tlllery in the War ned came.uut of that a lieutenant. -Mr. ami .Mrs. Packer hud just returned from a vacation trip by auto to Buffalo and Niagara Falls, when he recelv- cd word of Ills;.appointment in the

‘ State service. lie will begin Ids work with the State Hoad Depart­ment next week ut Jhickettstpwn.

Don’t forget’ the big sale'which starts next Thursday at Nathan's Variety Store.

M AYO R ROACH REFUSESFor some time past Ids CranhmF]

friends and many leudlng party men throughout the Comity -nave been urgipg .Mayor John G. -Roach to stand, for the Bepublhdin As­sembly nomination..iind jbcro js hut little question, had \\y consented, he would liuve won, tyr the County and Stato need business men of ids

; calibre in .the servUr uml the Mayor had friends in eyery section of Ilm

I * County who would liuve tdhl lids to .— .rtio—voters olfertively. However,1 till! Mayor Jlfiully refused.to snout­: for (lie main reason lie could notI -spare tlie time from Ids private ! businoAs affairs. II was a d|sup- L poiiitnient to runny when lie ilefi- |— nitely decided tiguitist tin* prop” - 1 gltlon. . ...

. POIJCte NEWS ,,Last Friday :a strange auto side-

swiped- Fire Chief Tuiiisons Henry at' Fiedler's Elbow,' N’ortli uveiiue. Tlie only damage was a broken hub call arid the stranger kept right on. No clue as to ids identitywus available. - - . . .

Saturday Charles Jovas mid John Clurk (cob, had trouble and Clark complained that Jovas used bad­talk and even threatened hlrn wltli| a stick. Jovas was. held on a dis­orderly conduct, charge.'

Monday Harold Dove of Plain- Held, was fined $3.00 for traffic vio­lation and John Foxton also-u l Plainfield $10.00 •for speeding- OItU cer Manning appeared in each case.

John Nutter (coD, and wife, oi £ High street, had an argurnnet on K Monday and were tuken in. . John

wits found to be carrying a revolt er .y Tills was cordlscated and a v w nne

"iflitjiosed witli strong warning for isijthe future..

• W t N E R 'SWashington S t r e e t ^

rv , ad es Matinee Dailyei. 0939 Mul. Smoking Permitted

Season’s Grand Opening ’ unday Evening, August, 13th

“ M I M I C W O R L D ”V. 4. 40—Brand Row Faces—40

E v S f o r c f tMC '.PiUS -e.vening.s-Orch. Less than $1.00

Week conun. SUN. MAT. AUG. 20th ■ K*0vea New Beauty Show’*

i « t O SECURE PENSION PROTEC­® TION FOR POLICEMEN AND

FIREM EN . .* , Under the State law a munici-

# »a lity .m a y vote to put paid potice- femen and ffremcn under the protcc- f t io n of the pension act. which

provides pension? after having serv­ed a certain mumber of years or on

_ f it ta in in g a speei'iled age. The law • l^ r o v ld in g such pensions may be-

eomc effective here if the people ih favor of it at a general elms

i M t o m - Petitions are now tieing cir- py4't3^iM’«tllated for signatures to place the rv'■■sA'vil-iyquestion on the ballot this Fall, and

being-signed freely, hardly an S:-VvW/ipbjection having been raised by any.

Sucli pension Is blit Just, for El■■■(:ii%rjsi,J)6th firemen and policemen per-

w . 'M i lw n at times very dangerous duty tlie benefit ot the public.

ices smashed at the Midsum- Sale at Nathan’s Variety Store, starts next Thursday.

to Xhim ir, Conn. Benjamin l ’ownul] of Christiana,

1*a.. is visitirijuPlcn-ticr n’npiii r»f Xorili avenue W.

■Dimes Adic of 1ÔS Centi'iinlul avc nne. is spending a two weeks' vaca lion at Ocean Grove. ;

Mi's. F. E. C. W incklçi of Willow -street, has lie,.n visiting Mrs, T. A. M l'euii at Sia.scos-sett. ■ .

Mrs. It, X'. Fiske of Clurcmoru I’ lnce. is enjoying a vacation ut lier hmne in Hie Catskills.

Mrs. Jv A Wnrtiohl of MO l.imletiavenue, lias "return oil“ f roYu a Stiprt visit at Medford. Mass.

Mr. mul Mrs. I’. W. Hall of Or chard street, made a-weekend trip in l.mig Isliuid, hy'motor.

Margaret Addoms of Hampton -tivet. is visiting her aunt, Mrs. Os car Griwold of West Point.

Mrs. Agnes Itniiuiiige of Jh.lly street, wilt sail on Saturday,' for Scotland, to visit rdutives.

Mrs. Thomas D. Stevens ¡if Bros pect avenue. Is at White Sulidiur Stu iugs, for a 'couple of weeks.

Mrs. Kail Hrcekeiiridge ami Miss Breekenridge m e in the Wliite Momilatiis' for a couple of weeks. .

('. .1. Slelvnsiek of 1ST -North ave­nue, Ims left for Siicuudugo, New York, w here he w ill spend a shortYiieal.loii,.:__________'____ _______'2_.

Mr. and Mrs. G. liaiisel nml tlielr dni.igliler Margaret, ot 7.. Cluremopt I ’ laee, are at I ’ lynioulli, .Mass,, lor two weeks. . '

Mr. and Mrs. Hlsmark Hoffman of Walnut avenue, tune returned from a two weeks 'visit at Centre Mo- rieliesyj- 1. . .

Hr. F, 1!. (<ilpin mid family, with Mr. and Mis. Frank Hollingsworth, have relurtif-d from a week's visit to Sopthold, I,. I. ,

Margaret Jones of-H olly street, left Tuesday to .visit .Miss Carolyn Christy, who is at Twin Fire Camp, on Lake Saranac. ‘ '

,\lr. ami .Mrs. Joint C? Hoaeli mid Miss ntfrliain made the trip from Buffalo to Cranford Monday and Tuesday by unto.

!<>, I,, lledenherg, Sr..'and duugli lor, Mrs. Alfred i l , .Miller, of Eliza both avenue, are Summering at l.ulir-Hopuloong. . ■ .__William Searliorougli of 107 Wal-iniUmVeniter returned r to- Cranford from Aslmry Park, wliere lie. spent a two weeks’ vueation. . .

'Elinor- Ifoldnsoti ot IS Forest ave­nue. lefl last— Friday for a two weeks'vlsit to Miss Frunees Angler of Framingham, Muss.

Mr. mill Ml'S. H. C- Guimnoii, of 42 Slmtli I'nloii avenue, have left Cranford to spend a two weeks' vie cation at .lUmpon, Maine. ; . -

Mrs Ernest.'n . Squire of 121 .Ret- ^furd-avenue, lias left her Cranford home to spend file rest of^lie Siuii-- nier moiltli.- id Salisbury Mills, N. Y.

Louise and Madeline Harris ot Madison avenue, will leave today for Boston, where they will visit f ri.-n11 - • I >1 r lie- i ,1 st . of 11 o1 Summer.

1,. A, Hagen of (ill Willow street, lias relurned to Cranford after olending three ' months touring Eli rope. Mr. Hagen visited prac­tically every, large city ill Europe.

Winchester' Britton. Jr;. -of Uran-f,,rd uveiiue. nml A lyitr Dantent ofI'niop. avenue, left for Camp DiX, where tidy will spend tlie• month of August: ...-T h e .Misses Sally mid Kiln Aldrich of :!I).Y Central avenue, are spending tlie Summer at Heechwood nmi As bury Park,.with Mr. and Mrs. James Carimry. • •

Air. mul Mrs. Thomas J. Stephens ,f fin; Prospect avenue, have left o f White Sulphur Springs. Vlr-4

glnia. where they will remain for tw o weeks. -

Miss Florence Tripp of Berkeley Place, and .Miss Ella Mnroney of orchard- street. Ifave passed tlielr examinations admitting -them to Smith College. .

Mrs. Kenyon Messlek, who is Sum-, inerlng-at Sachem's Head, Conn.. made a llyllig trip home, to attend tlie-Tu ttle Dinner last night, re­turning today.

Mrs7 .f. Schindler ttrid' AlrK AV.--U. Schindler of Wa1[nut avenue, have Yetucned from Ashury Park, wliere they have been spending) a two weeks' vacation: .

John .0. Avery of 9 Washington Place; is spending the Summer at Hampton. Virglnlu. .Air. A very ex­pects to return to Cranford tlie lat­ter part'of Sejptein’oer. ■

-.Miss Helen McCaffrey of II Union avenue S„ lias just returned from a two weeks’ visit- with Mrs^JJ. Wert h.of U’estmorit, XT. J., formerly Miss Madeline Sell, ot -Weittfitljl. ...

.Mr. and Mrs. John D. Meyers of Grove street, liaveJeff bn a tour o f ttie South. They will stop off at Baltimore and expect to visit their old home in the South before re­turning-here.

Mr, and Mrs. Hall B. Sims of Nor­man Place, returned Saturday, from an auto trip 1/y way of Saratoga. I.ake George and Schroon Lake, to Crown Point, X’ . Y'. While there they were the guests of Mrs. Sadie F. Desmond, .who is spending the Summer at' her cottage on Lake Ciiampfuiii.

Secure your needed articles at greatly reduced prices a~t Nathan's Midsummer Sale next Thursday.-

nveiine=Fsst. is spending two weeks at Upper Twin Lakes Camp, Cen­tral Valley. X. Y.

• Mrs.. SiliiliT of :!7 Henley avenue, returned from Ashury Park last Wednesday. Itaving Is-.-n at the re­sort for two weeks.

Grace Tripp left Saturday to visit Miss Arllne Willenbrock. formerly of Cranford, ami now living at t ’en- Irul Sjuare. Oswego County, X. Y.

Mrs. A. M. Shapiro and her son -Suiuee>f~lia-$Ulnv9.trvoLaai-s|>en4UOR. a two weeks' vaeali.m at Ashury l’ark. Tbey will stop at tlie Hotel Fdgeim-re wliite there.

Peter tiark ot VVoodlnwn avenue Ims returned from Fisher's Island. Pete admits having caught some o f tlie biggest tlsli that have ever been hooked at the I-laud - ’Airs. Tomlinson and ' Philip Tom­

linson of Cranfonl avenue, have gone to Siiring Lake, wliere they will stay at the Allair Hotel.

J. Clifford Schindler, tlie daddy o f tlie Cranfonl letter carriers, will leave Ids home at 19 Union avenue S. on Saturday ami will visit several beaches along the Atlantic Coast. Mr. Schindler U to travel by auto mobile, but Ids many years walking around Hie Cranford streets with mail lias-him-hi good condition in VHsc-nnyt hhtg-happens-!«» -titi-JJz- zie. ,- ,

lioiiglas lla ig li anil family will leave their home on Sylvester street today, ami will spend tlie following two months in New York." In the Fait they will return to t’rmiford and will occupy the present resb ileliee of H. U .W es i and family of ¡¡21 North avenue E. The Wests. In­tend to live in New York tills W in­ter and will live, in the same apart­ment house that tlic llalghs will occupy during tlie Summer, at 2 W. tvlrd street.

THE SEXES AT MIDDLE M EWoman Invariably Ronwlnt Younsar

Tti»n tho Man, Daelaroo Wrltor In Kaotom Magazina

“i t we coarider the avormto tnlddlo- agod woman.” writes AY. L. Georgia “h«r fWrolty for xioptint new Idcaa for being converted to uvw rallgiotas. bowwver Incredible, for packing her day with occupations such s* -soctsl latSrcourae, dress, muses, occupations which may be entirely Imbecile, It •arsly must be agreed that She retains mor* characteristic* of childhood, or, t f you like, savagery, than does her '¿aidTb'uitBudr'ldoMJ^ it hisodes, making money wlth dull bte' thuslssm. and going to sleep after S day devoid of plinul «Bin»: .-'------- - -

“It Is likely tliut the middle aged woman Is younger than the middle- aged man. She thinks herself very clever, but os a rule slie Is the buby Of the pair, and If It comes to a Struggle where one must outwit the ocher, the man will, usually prevail If he puta-hls mind to anything so futile. I f women often beat men at the game of Intrigue, It Is mainly because men can't be bothered; they're generally

H e Call's Fattem i Fall Quortsrly 25«

Gainsborough Hair Hota Singlo, 10e ooch Double, 1 lor Be

D R Y GOODS, HOSIERY, . NOTIONS- , ' ■broken lines o f S u mmer Goods we want to clean

— "-« p — vour--of>t)oitufutifc»ta.^aYeIinprtey. . ' -

thinking of soturlblng else.“ Hist Is the ccntrul point. Most men,

when they reach tin- shadow line, are Infinitely more Interested In their am­bitions, In their career, In tho making of money, than In the quest for love. They have passed through all that. If, they are lucky, and If they have not poaaed through It, love encounters for­midable rivals. I ant sure thnt this day many lonely women are bitterly say­ing. ’Whnt’s a woman by the side of a curccr?” *— Harper's Magazine.

MUST HAVE WORD FOR LOVE

Watch papers for'big sale at Na­than* Variety Store. Sale begins next Thursday. .

WHAT EVERY BOY KNOWSHow to be interesting.

How to settle any argument.

How ts get fruit for nothing

How tsTdress Id two minutes.

How to create a laugh In company.

How to keep a bath tub 1mm* culata.

How- to Improve oo tho dictaphone. 1

■uggsstlon That Oldtlms ‘‘Bwssthoart" B* Substltutsd for Allen “Fiancee” .

Qosnis Worth Consldtrlng.

The old belief that “love hath no need of words" bus proved Itself ‘to be wrong, declares .London Answers. When you become engugud to be mar­ried you cannot Introduce the future sharer of your domestic life by taking her up to a friend und saying:

"This Is my-----" and do tba .restwith a display of eye work. Yet that ta what we were tuhl—that 'lovo spoke with the eyes.” The poor man would tbluk that lovo bad driven you mad. ■

Wo had ta And some word to de­scribe our own chosen on» of the fair •eg, and we selected, of all thing»— fiancee, a French, and at Iti best a terribly sounding word.

At last, however, a protest haa been made, and "betrothed" has been sug­gested. Tbs word sounds sweet oh a poet’s Ups.K* Is tho .first flowar ot my fruhoat age Betroth earn* unto .the only heir. - -

“Beloved” has been snothsr eug- Bastion, but tbe dear old word "sweet­heart” requires * lot of besting,..Butwhether It ts betrothed,, beloved, sweetheart or even a new word—norw Words or* always creeping Into the language, so why shouldn't we have a new one for love7—don't please, call heir four fle-on-s«y. — ■ - . .

How! to fa r «.

avo money so atreet-cok-

How to dispel the tedium of a houe» bold. .................

How to polish s banister moot efik- den fly.

How to get foil benefit out of a va­cant lot. _

How to get along without. a stop- ladder.

How to keep pillows Crura gettinglumpy. . ‘

- • - King of.; PostsI f Shakespeare hud been a morass

be might liuve been-a great poet still i but be would nut have been tho aos figure In literary history who to­day Is regarded with as touch real and Inttmute affection as If he were actually with us In the flesh. Us Is mridnger. tbsuk Heaven, so much as a “cult." To read Shakespeare's plays, to see them on the stage, to quote openly and with relish tbe passages you lovo most Is uut now to be thought “high-brow" or even. odd. What other writer la rend so extensively or with

Howopiata.

to fu i asleep without an

How to beat Bystem.

the daylight-« ring

How to . escapo boredom during ■ sermon. y

Bow to mske s favorable trapteorion on a dog.

How to get around tho « »p la c a bathing suit erdteanca

How te get moro than pries tar a catch o f fish.—1

such unspoiled pleasure in tue nome* of tha poor, oven In the homes of the richt In this age of a highly solf-con- sdous Intellectual pessimism the popu­larity of Shakes pen re—s blithe prince of philosophers who looked upon Ufo and ftrand that It was good—Is s salu­tary, not to say a sanitary, Influence of supreme value and Importance.—- London. Dally News.

FARM JOURNAL SAYS^ ,W t don’t care how ranch a mas says If ho only says it In s tew word*.

Bril esanot bs fought anew and dome with. R oust bs fiaesfi sad cooqusrwd day by day.

XX. costa l e « te keep a coal firs ever night than to loan tt go sab HolMo Ann Irina rays so. -

Girls, mistrast n nan who WO net take the lari hot cake, but petaca te irait for tho nect^batthl -

At this season o f the ywr, wot ef re «eet for tholr age O f not at rii seasons, te order te A* than fu s ti«), potate« should bs baked.

Next Tuesday, under the auspices ot Washington Post, No. 1, Rahway, there will be a series o f good box­ing bouts. They will be held nt the open air stadium. Main street, com­mencing at 8:30 p. m. Ringside seats $220.

Golden opportunities offered to aU^At Nathan’s Variety Store Clear­ance Sale next Thursday.

Blackbirds’ Curious Nsstlng Plsoo.After building -five nests In a:Una

oo the head of a drag rtko In a farm building at Devizes, a pair of black­birds have Just reared a brood of four In the fifth neat, the ouly.une actual' ly used. The Dumber of half flntahed nests may be accounted for by the po­sition. of the bead of the rake. Lean­ing against tbe wsU with the_ teeth sloping downward, tha nesting ma­terial kept' sllpping oflf, until, after four failures, the birdsi at-lengtb suc­ceeded In getting the last nest to bold together. A somewhat similar Incident was reported some time ago from Cambridgeshire, but In that case the fieri* were ' placed between the rungs of a ladder which- hung hori­zontally against a wall.—From the Field. ’ '

Rafuasii to Be Sst Aalda.Owners of bull-terriers bare countless

stories to tell o f their favjpte breed. Ona of the best Is of the ap'uil which went to a dog show "on^^K’ .wn-’’—He was a wonderful dog « f i j f rnd token prises ovarywhere, but f e atually he grow old and hla son reigned In Us itetd. 4 • ’ ”

Bridently, however, his thought this was an oversight on this part o f Ida m ast«, which it was hla duty to rectify.

Consequently be Jumped through a kitchen window, over several walls, made blit way through m il« of Xxm don‘s~thlckest traffic,, and finally fin> isbed up at the Horticultural hall,' where be took his place <m tbs stasA

SH IRYW AlSTS^S izrs 34: tt> 4 6 r Wjiile and Coloredr- l^Awn, Batiste and Voile Waists. Originally priced $2.00 to 3.00, all at................. .........................$1.50

SUMMER VOILES— 40-incl. fancy Breaded Voiles Otic quality, to close nt per yd............................ ..69c

SILK HOSIERY— ( 2 Numbers) — 1st lot was $1.48,' sale price,^....i.............. ....$1.192nd lot was $2. r>0rsa!e'price.... r.....;.:$2:00

Black and White only— quantity limited.

SUMMER NET CORSETS— Medium or Long Waist-' ed Models, each................................................$1.50

Rubber Girdles, each.... .....$1.00, $1.50, $2.50, $4.00(W e feature the Treo Girdle mid Debevoise Brazziers)

KHAKI PLAY SUITS............................ $1.25

BLOOMERS, M IDDY’S, KNICKERS— Cretonne Dress Materials, per yard........... 35c

REMNANTS GINGHAMS, per yard ............ ......39cJ'. . - - - (were 4Bc yd.)- '

40-in. LINEN SUniNGS, were $LU0 yd'. iiow” ”

r »

T

DOTTED „SWISSES,IIÒW..... ;......................

(Imported), were $1.23 yd., ....... ....................................98c

SUMMER NIGHT GOWNS AND ENVELOPE CHE- M1SE, all sizes, 2 lots: $1.50 quality, now each $1.00 $2.0(h-quality, now each...........— ..... ............ .$1.50

NEMO CORSETS— Special Sale, one new and several old models; closing out, instead of $7.50 a pair, only..................... ........................................... $4.00

MEN’S UNDERWEAR— I or this sale, our special $1.00 Check Nainsook Union Suits to go for only, 75c

IT JS NOT PR O FIT W E LOOK FOR—RATH E R TH E TU R N ­ING MERCHANDISE INTO CASH—TO U R O PPO RTU NITY.

Next to Post Office

Illobbs-r“Are you doing anyttüni these dsysr Hlobbs—“ l’m wortlngevery day, eight hours at a stretch«“ Blobbs—“ WhereT” Blobbs-'ln OSSrubber factory.”

ODD FACTSTrial by Jury la sold ta hnva

ed In 2000 B. a

Portuguese te tho laugaags s f 80,000,000 people.

AN UNDERSLUNG

Ford: SpeedsterAT A BARGAIN. D1S0 W HEELS AND MANY EXTRAS. ~

r W . H. BRADLEYTel. 235-W 399 Orchard S t

There are 6,000,000 every year In Uilna.

dill Oran benSPEND A D AY AT

Women farmers in tbs United State« i number over 260,000. ;

— A~welgM -40a-tliB«S-lte-S*n_bL|!Äan average lift for a crab. Newark—Irvington

Curs from »vcryivlicre take you di­rect or transfer to lines leading to I ’uik gales.

MUSIC AND F U N -----A single tusk of an Bari A fr ica y 0 R THE MASSES

bull elephant has been known to welfih /( n(J(.r ,|,m)y tn-,.-, and amongst

Ravens pair for life and use tba aame nest year after year......

230 pounds, but the average tusk of tbe old wild ball elephant of today Is said to be not more than 40 pssrada,

INSECTJALESThe microscope-will show tbs ■ «

quits baa 22 teeth.

Tbe caterpillar's range of Vinton Is only two-thirds of an Inch.

A beetle has been known te dispense with food of any kind far three pesm

There are more beetles than all off» er creatures In the world, put together.

Tbe gnat fashions Its eggs in tbs Shape of a lifeboat. You cannot sink them without breaking tbea to pieces

Bdentlllc coinputstleo haa Halted that 10,000 threads of tbs web Of a full-grown spider are not larger ftwn a single.balr of a man’s beard.

A Mediterranean moll oak to locally called tba allk worm o f tbs seei, as tt ■pine s fiber from which clothing and boat err can be made.—New York sun.

CHUNKS OF WISDOMA crowd Is not company. .

A boaster and a liar are eaurian

A bravo retreat to s brave « spirit.

A . cracked writ.

bell can never

mtod to a

Im-Um uf prutty flower».Band Concerts Sundays. Fireworlta

Fridays .DANCING EVERY NIGHT

Phone- Orunforil 73.\1

TAXI SERVICE. DAY AND N IO H T

7-Paiseniger Car for Hire

C. H. Butler111 ,Y.-Union Ave., CRANFORD

HAVE Y O U DECIDED

-What To Plant Thin Fall?

I F IT . IS TREES, SHRUBS, IRIS, PHLOX, PAEONIES, TULIPS, HYACINTHS, DAFFODILS; OR CROCUS, SEE ME. ; .

R. M. CROCKET;36 Hlllerest Avenue

Phone 113 J CRANFORD___ l__________ ___ _______________ ______.. . „ A Walkover.Among tbe many amusing stories

which Mr. Eugene Corri baa at bln command is one concerning a prize fight which occurred In America- One of the contestants bad-been Instructed by his father to cable the result as soon as the fight wa* over. The daly sent off theTolIowlng message: “ Won easily. Seventy-five rounds.” —Tstler (London.)

Midsummer Clearance Sole tiiStt'a..Variety Store-on­street next Thursday. '....

J? "’

bearing the w asslstunts.

"lie imikeS— of the now alh • lug. re nrrimg" .trimming the - Meanwhile u[ ? from Mb elm ! rode, ail uriiif >. of iiuriiltln. ■ i

"The rugs - tiuli of the the lulluuiiui £>:40 a match, .Inf torches :/ safety ollldu, .

"Tlie moti j ■us Uie lire!Kuch man I Inf. of so i lnuplrtng re trench to tr< their brand In panning.

"The cori Instantly U the siieed -t liy the tint, tired the g : oped In s r , us phnntot,

-The bn id, oml t across thi - the road already 01 thu velild opened til there beln u mile lit raping I ground.

“Ab thi grows fl ' cloud* i^ with lur miles art and It oc !|. eniooti t Vi rurul po I ' piece." !

By n« , burned , ,j dently ure the log hue J jeepure •' •

- tin . ■ ’ ■

G jrm p.rt is One e ' the ra n tte s c f tho Season: Russia*; lrtf;ueoct ir.

*Qu?t? P rp m m fn i. •

S . t . ** • 4.'

h ‘.V~A . v . *-v 's A :

■ : ■ " -v.: ii.»ihm- - i MMi i* >h > 1 tin**-, s»*:W i­ ' f- ., 1 : .rj-.pr l<: #*r*riu~h■ toi-m t u ■nif*r*■ 2‘cciiriiT- ■ inmr:

1;re.!- this ,- ! 1 >! 1 Yp- i;-' tt ml hours- :: 1M. • - meaii.-i rn- t'nin:! i ^

MMH*.' ti'r ( LMrmenis * >»

Ti: \\ u:t;. ::

-r: t**j u 11 i *

"A - in:ii- h «>■. tin__ TV* 1»'Mt-nr, : wgrri.'

sm.Vv s]m’ r*ir-;r;Trait*'.: sr.mt*- ]

REST 0,\ ""HE SEVEKTr Di

■**>v % -**• * ■*

,-r> k> • * ,1,

iierr-p» Tn,v. $o O rd rtn r^ H a :tic*" i T>er; W isdon . AcccrcMn* . u Thu- W r i t e : '" HOMESPUN DRESS AND C0A1

:v-4; **•

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If

o - !*•*•—jriMiiiir wha* other.-? tinaa - .- ‘- I tier* ar* sOiit* er»':tr*irt‘*" ih lh»'ivot i. ~ w m iT- .mva-v- tiai»K:r*v abou: u m r o iii-r* u .iu i : in»*:.. Tn**',a /ir*-’. tti«<v r- i ) f thnuira; \vf.. o f m:.: !* th»‘V.r»- n o '- iv o :; hkoa .. .

“ I:::: it,* ( ♦*•**»- n r- iIItTenr.: \\i-T“uoh ir-Tor;’ it w tia: others ma.*

. • «*• • • v- v , ,a * _ 'M jl

Um tiii»«- thi< pi- | u■ .<ni!Tlt!r dn-i o f rvs: \v*oiuo« bo na7^ ■.d m ' d-.’ : uirtr inhonmn I once

VC ..................... .. Rl i V '*4 '

« 5 T 'y r - . s '_.

' • * * * * . ' '. y r e p 5 s .’ _ -v.«, '

H ou ij f T im e s || j w ith O f ' tlon p i organ l | w hich .- « is . Is f o r ' " f ~ pliant-

"V-r.'it ’S-v« hr::* • ß«r*

V' • vv'- -

eyes. - Etnll

Vttge »* - the *,

% "•tail:- hluise*“ pnchy•v ;f.*. v ■* . one of

i * ler IniI f* * grew {| \ . “Di f|p < ‘ you !a! ■ : f'-V-.f*;* . Mansin * 7 . ThV| < ’* jf t Strl*<! •

? ■ ■ hew!• .j*: " *If- . hit) 1}tine >

I i ' redt 1£ ' >i-K". ' ' ■-. i i. ' II-

1«. nr:i? *■» nrort* sJrouiia: c.

:. .< ij. . n* :iu- in* lifr-TOJ.:man* f

riifP * nr*- 1■ji.' S\v.■•Ti*, wi;-;* jnv*.1 to. ro riaan

• SM-.iUiv.- ¡1in: \r*,. * rir*- iH'.TUtiri:..r r o r - t.

■' Tuimf»***- * I lit'!' i in - ' in :•.i ’ t i 1*'

*?-.* MnUi; •*- sw il!:• iv iis fciJUIi:’ i ’ll o iitam epm S'* Dr*s ’ nn* } oü; ap* i b— case* l

I n r e

fill

rMid^rr,m-.. • Im isvs ait v*

f*uL';

Mr-riji•t«* '** - UUi _

whnijvrv JJpt*.w fam lv Fm'ii n- IllilUSs- nj.v sman tvHs

I r - cnjnrr <tH * Vi'pti*- 1o: V*iic).-»v prints* ■con-

tlir.Tr*'- i:i. ! cr**u- u ' *llUVVi'N, J'!*'': iip'ir*>v ■j*. :*[<.. hoiiiL*

TIM'.*- 1 i • * ' !A f

t*nri. i .M it \ih.' i-aiwr**.. fu ; i vtn»:i!i' r :; Tii-- v'Ui^r siu* ,

Tii* swuii* can- 1<n ik*iutt\. •*T n* :: rv.*;a- nr* U»::a Ilia : r r ;n v ;u ..

. Tii.*.: Toitiii'• i-x“ !»t.»auTl11~i T h »”- i<»uL .\ i » r . it.- Tii* uoiiL..! Tii*-'- iw n v r.ic li perrecr v,*bitr teata-

i—*' i**v.:_tit* raaiÜ4«.*v: lililittriiauv. liii.v f***i':. liwessnT

: ..ua mernu ni€> ct u>i i rt*a-ir>-*'

L o v f iv _a ce Gown t . - I Yt -

ih c :r loap no *Ji-a 'im']*.*:' v.::it’ r

s ¿a tmi-c- nr** . .. ■ •■■' . •

ho-ii*.*.- o ! tin* ' — - .. ff-.''

i: • ■. ■ r*- ■ ■■ •

1;

■ir»- T\-i»*] j * I - if iu r i:

■v*~ 2

1* cjTi - '

• I t

rn e B rc tn e rton *B eri! n Roan. Jtv lvan i: ■» -f feyy . } * -

const*Hu:

is the fr* c f the vou tir m is: "sirnwr if, a!.* c* blue, w n rr w ri r.* straw .me er.Tbrcoae»--. C sram ei S rt»w r H r :

Before ar.ci Afte- ft Was Imc'^vt: Dv k Concrete-Roan-Bea . •

G oer Luo< Cham\r G-ThtbierLT iv,ic*i;ii;v r!*.1:-' Hi. . nri

t ' Nev»- Materui. • 1 oiv*j:i• •;• , -iL; '> f»v Id

Ui • s:ni*c. j* n:":*"' ¡a! r-*- . mne-I w—.-■ i- ■- tho *hoTi -cf 'K i th r

r'Mi,.1.- >v «&: , rtciyv

n-ftnv.'.r r*-DRrSS-DV EF BDDiCE RETURNS

' ' - --- ' - . . ... . ". .TTiiha

tinu*v tin- Infry-rmiitioi. hn- r*» ; ..nf t£-r. .:T-ftl.rsona: v :

onv star*?* om-sTnir.r.airMv«■’ * I - *

i l l11i in smut- :: n t- :■ U iai b rn c n ra li-*' h-- rv-rortiv r»;r.

k e i'; }• u:- sornr ur th e rou u n *-MtlXu'O tlt:?*sI:üLUJ2iirt*.vt ¡ai; Ts• ¡**ic tru Im «» ^ ’.unusii hpfoTv t;tr r-. Class co ’Jiu inoiorsnu iti m rr...

fo r

SuTOie » * e r :n?s? t-e Drct>e- T rim:

P u li*BRIDGES OK IMPROVED'RD^DE

. m i t to !*♦ l

*M',r uU*: fiiau ipnnttM!

’SM'av sor ” n ienrv

■ sill-over ruri.* m f-

pew Structuref. Less Tnar IP Fee:-A~r . Now Being Construc±ec—S; %

. E n g in eers •

m s

' 1"- +iOW TO CLEAN STRAK HATSc**r.*a«» : _____. •ashmu

suit*1 W Iiar.. Lephorr, a rd O tr»e-f MaO -ß t

Cleansec: W?t*» r-f••; AT*..: ^ o w o e re r SuiDhu**

■ - V . \ . 1 !

'j Prwt'2 sit

I'U.t S heer n Shruan

\l;:>s;a*ni;vu’ i ;

ii> * I*»-';- -■< i* ’- ’ -. • *••:

-'•ra:1.’ .s 1'» : ’ » 'M s a: : :

VtMTS !U;:r»*v. 2

1,31 J 1 ' l'».T!*V b n V ' tihOUC-iS’- -*.*r»rv nutsI/iTliv tii* v * . ■jjTh?*rs. R c*Tv. Te-.

n*<>T>' •„"Titiv-ii. •Ärev it:: t ie r m.

V.fucj2 p r f- •• n r

r .r IfilfS <T? ; ,th e i

iirconinmajirr- it-.r-.M ira iiu . ■

,ji" , V , , s*:t* t:ir» 'k c ; TSc nanir

T n esr niTiiri- nrr useii hv tS*' nuVNmmKT ’fli 1 ■•' ■ ■ —— .

. vh J J'i: tn«-' • l it ... tmC * t>rs «a ey Kszompswe? rv H ats wrnti.

PR5NTED GOODS !S POPULAR=.veninc uow r

’H ii.’U; i i r ' T vp irii t r t t ir «3 - nn--'i-'r’iihiiT Ui ’v ck -TsiHUt then; u«t nr ehrwwsfc.

« ’srraxhiy t f Wa::-'- A -e the ^ a *h to r ir f'arit».

4>:i‘*>*s nr*' miscrutii^tnoting : Ü!^ Trr: w THatn- vrf;i- :-f»pens tbe Fhnrki

1 a** I-*;-::**. .«,*■enhati^n: * v ::•*• Tims roxrp. \viu *j ; tn rt, Tin» i*Tjtirv.

' T*a !'>■ 1: 1 TT>iirni>en:Lr -*•-* ;

ii- Tlf '• r?ta■noM-.. • is zzz)ru Of

\ t';

t.ir t AOCTrcrris~*r«f rTi"v; ru. ¡it'.: ir.i'üi1. <v; th»' *

{¡r*]3~*"O . ttf,iiin* jiTi

Sr rrvHspn* r.v~. ; „ 1

-foi;*'.: M’-'unjri't» n* al: eoior*. < Tnctng wsimt at. mcii 'veur. 1 .«rnus:ap. se-i^umv ölm jja is rs p :uivu*

uit . - «a . jj-naSi»t n iiik iiiy a. iS iV i*. piias- iv- i l i - c tcai • ■

s • Usurers *rf*rr > 1/tuni's nac- SilurH* c«»olfi- t3*tnk tritt mfiissi'V. as -trr *ai>stew tam cti. n f vjihi1

• rr Fitmiai:mvo: j, s>7T blue.. 1 Hirer, "ctmflemß ! bnlä? BO!P«*thbip «■ s:- i*. mter^s;'. * tiic m v i.’ v ss-v .h m *^ ^i-r—V’-;}**r» ,'iuol' 4rnt specfcled tnmiis: 3 f TrttttvC örss««. i^rasievalir. -ärmste \ •cai-wcbor.* rtmTn, •• s’iriiv- -• rbint. m*T th fjr a o K Im v e b e a t a ? 'E m I TBEieC T ir ¡h e »m s t i iiarum«!^ r** tn a te a ; I lui»k n im x M Äf*? - i.n Ä **

JSttcthmt; stBat.- . ¿ 3 » ttmawiJ •ane-sstpw; Tin rtillllrwry I the hnd. Uiwihöbbi««.--eacsi»«» t 1smd hlgb?’ deeasatlve sleeves Howiiip 1

Sihg Sm pe-s. -•- ■ *.*iuvv n rr iin im ' hl**-

f} ' biHi.v nr*- tre*a . 1lIt „ - ,

. Tonnr.'— •¿uLniras.— ChrLsUm; Su l ., j

: --------^ l iw w s - .......... -.-} iViih- stViWii. kii**i* ■’•antfv; *Hvr i ro T«»\vii ¡mu 2. b it 1*se:- ■! arv’ iimiT rrm-k to hnni e m it o r ( ;b «p

lia tlie Tarsht'r wii.- T;*ic;i rt-* pivrm f'.r m li iiiu i wiiU'T tT iia^harratbit-

h*

CRANFORD CITIZEN AND CHRONICLE

Ç ^^>rv%<vaQ<!w»o<iQoooo

TheVacuum Man

B y RÓSE M EREDITH

ltil. *7 McClure N«w»pap*r Syndicate.

The young nipn with the vueuuin dfaner paused at the foot of the stops tji 1 .Raised hlsLstmw hat.

-May I—" he wa^ beginning« _ when Barbant smiled negatlveiy. —

I «'in sorry, but we do not heed, a

will come to your doum," ti* . «oueo, gloomily. _

“ I hope so!"“Why? Because he Is handsome and'

rich?" asked Alice bluntly.“Uloh? His father Is the head of

the whole industry» 'Like most"” rich nien‘s sons. Hod U learning the busi­ness from the ground up. He can make ’em, he says, und now they have put him In the sales department, of which one day he is to be the head. Uncle flick says Hod will make good. Aunt Lettle says her. poor boy must not be humiliated, and we think lhut's

cleaner,” she suld pleasantly.••Everybody needs one of ' these—

that is. every household should have one." He pulled out a little book and studied It carefully. “ It removes all tl.e dirt from curpets, stuffed furni­ture, walls, bedding, curtains, clothing, without leaving u truce of dust be­hind. It Is sanitary, speedy and sav­ing He puused breathlessly. “ It is very worm today,“ he. apologized, ns fr,. drew out an immaculate handker- chlef. .

-It Is, and It must be very exhaust­ing to talk to t>eople and persuade tiiem to buy” Bald Barbara primly, for she had- been taught not to enter Into conversation with strangers, and yet .he. had a very* engaging manner and resembled Alice Westerly so strongly^hot she.wanted to ask him

: if they were related, n ils was hard­ly likely, because Alice belonged to a rich and clannish family and all the members of the family were affluent end very prominent. .

Barbara was pouring out a glass of lemonade—It was a tall, thin glass, fn-^ty and Inviting, with the yellow rind of lemons und a long straw flout*

aj:**od j»port !“ _‘ih » really in—nnd 1 hope hè wUl

succeed.” declared Barbant, H8. shepoured tinot her cup’ of r-aT

Vile has the most captivating man­ner—he could charm the birds from the tree»«,' and he • could make any woman buy a cleaner, whether she wanted It or not!”

“He couldn't persuade me to buy one," retorted Barbara. I

“Bnrby! flUl he come here?" Alice caught her. friend’s little hands and held them captive. ■— “About an hour ago,” confessed Bur- 1 Tara f HeF'clieeks' 11dt. ' ’ . 1 ""

“ How ftmny! And you-thought ho wns a real agent- and turned him

“ iwayT* giggled A l •” ... " ’“ I sent him to father—he was very

Courteous—und—nice. I gave him a glass of feed lemonade—there, _thnt‘l nil!” Barbara was furious with her­self foT^hlushlng, with Alice for her Intine giggling and above all with Hod- nev Marvin, who. was beginning at the bottom by selling vacuum cleaners. “And I hate vacuum cleaners!” she burst forth viciously.

Voices sounded from the hall and three peopTe’ cnme Into the veranda— Barbara's parents and Mr. Hodney Marvin, cool, calm. Immaculate.

"Thank, you, Mys. Ureye,** he wni saying-, “yonr order shall be the tlr t

> 3 ¡

?.t

,r

' 5 ' >

r a m

CULLING FOWLS FOR MARKETTo Mak« Be«» Po«»lble Return, Every

Hen In Flock Shoul0 Be Layer—. -------.------ LJW««4. Opt.

I 'h*' enlli <1 MM'uLlut—L

À■ . . . . . . , .Iilm-n.il I). I' tire shown wearing sweaters limile by

These ten pretty girl*. nil high .»olmol undentsi of W '. , , r-, \» -aovcMIi from the. U-ft, _aml Hi« |themselves «1,1.1. won the prizes In a contest just held 1 ‘ ' " , ,,.1,ftv-- '•second prize winner Ik next-In order; the third winner In on »he extreme .. _____ _ ......

.. .. . . . . . . . . -UidiCUL*—I-----------.------livery hoy' or girl In.\Inir potiliry

naliirall.v wl.-hes to earn iH money an |...-cible. To do Hit» »-very hen sliooTi! l»e a g o d Ihver. AU • III k- prels, except tlo.se kept, for breeding purposes, ns well ns poin ts tli.it ho k vigor mill vllnliiy. should he roten, .-limosi for home nso. or sold ns « “ 'S ns they uro largo enotlgb. says the Viilled Stilles Iii'p.'irtmrol of Agrlrut- Hire. Selecting'or "wts'ihng out" the lu-its-l tin t -n i e pm.r-lo sw^j,.u.l_plc!UiiS-..IIt for miirket ............ . Urr. ls h-iotlikely to develop Indi ¡mod breeders is commonly cnllcd-■".-tilling'or cnlllng for ei;i;s 11,1.1 for unirlo;!. '

The best lime to cull ihe liens -

Is on Increase

• m « «.m « % *

one on my .book,” nnd he scribbled in n new iiotel.iTolC while nil of liiein looked at him .with vnrled decrees of Interost.

Mrs. fire.vo thought lip wiis n prom­ising young business nmn. Her lms- Imnd eoveteil ilini ns n pnrtner in ids business. Alice Westerly thought Itndney vviih very "m-rvy" to Inviule the hnines of the-Well-tn-do mnl make- himself so thoroughly one of them while lie 1-00001110(1 his Identity.

Wlmt did lliirlmr.il think? She never (old nnynne for many .months, nnd when sin- did speak—she told Hodney.

And on the tiny of the wedding the electric current wus turned Into tlie town (if Memlmvhnnk. mid- It Is . safe to enleiilnte Hint In every household there \vnn a Marvin vacuum elenner.

HAS VARIETY OF MEANINGSI n Continental Europe.- Bunch ot

-Entry of-Women-Into-Professionof Making Spurious Money

Adds New Problem.

SECRET SERVICE IS WORRIEDIncrease In Counterfeiting Began

Shortly After the Armistice and Hat Been Growing Noticeably

Since-r-Moro Opportunity.

■It Is Sanitary, Speedy and Saving!”ly and

me on top. She brouclttjhe class toi the cilce of the porch. “ I am sure!. yon most be thirsty," she said, “and -• It must be hard to sell vacuum clean­- era nround Mendowbank.. ■ ■li He drained the class with a littleii bow as he handed It hnck. ¿'It la de- KlTl.louis-Jhnnk^vim—rcrlilijeLj;1'11 'vl11i f . ______ t._ T norimit (toll tll(* f

Straw Speaks “Little 'Lang-jage , of Its Own."

The hunch of strnw In Continental Europe has as many nieniiliics as n Chinese word. Tt Vs qliltc a . little lmicttace In Itself. When seen In the midst of a field tied to a post far from human hahitatloti tt Is a wiirimic nealnst trespass.- 'ihe peasant knowsthat he will he arrested ............'found within’the hound so marked, for the (h-ld haw-been late­ly sown with seed. Woe to the sports­man or travclor who falls to .under­stand this slcn Innc'iace’.

A small upright slpn scarcely ever more than two feet lone mnl much like-a miniature torpedo hunt stnnd- Inc on.eml Is riot a clear, as the ilrst clancc 'would cause-one to suiipose. To he sure, It htincs outside .n clear shop nipl resembles a hud Imitation of n clear, hut Is In truth shaped and tied nhout like the orlclmil packaces of

WpSfa

tell ine why I caiinot self the cleaners around here." -

- “ Why there are no houses wired . for electricity.”pc “ The dickens!" he ejnculnted, crow-, i'lng very red. “Anyone but nn Idiot i at the game would-have known that k'before start lac out. Who Is the local r agent for the nearest power station f Ss “My fattier. He lias tried to Intcr- | cet the reople. but they cllnc to their I ail «oves and heaters and llchts.

There Is gas In the vllluce."}■' “ Thank you. T am coinc to talk to

j » your father. I f I can iiersuiiile some jjtSteiz«f the people to petition for electric Sc’» - : aervlce, then I'll come back In a month­

and sell. cleaners to the:». Will you save your order for me?"; “Of course," laughed Barbara. And, Vlth a businesslike nlr he lifted his xanvns package,-raised lils-Jmt_an<J. «trade down the bricked wulk to the white gate. -

It was pleasant, sitting there on the porch. looking down the red path be­tween the sweet-scented boxes and watching the roan's straight form step­ping briskly! down the road toward (be village. She hoped her father

t?" Would do business with the stranger.-c. gbe rather liked lilm for his gentle , V 'courtesy, his evident rellaeioent, am]

: . -•ahe may have woven bin, .Into her day - ‘ dreams as she wulted for her friends

' {(, coroe for a cup of tea and a bit of

«dlsb. chatter.Alice Westerly came first, and she u plaintively Indignant. “ I thought would never get away," she com-

= plained as she stirred her tea. “Moth- ■v.c w bad a letter from her sister’ this , * Horning and Aunt I.cttje Is all upset.

ruS we talked about the rnatter until . v j f e e l that I never want to see another *•$' oaconm cleaner In the world.”- .V-««Vacuum cleaner?" murmured Hnr-

bar* feebly, her brown eyes started. ? ' ‘-'■.•Why—Why talk about vacuum clean­

— ‘,±0 «D a prett>!_dni 1 _±3>W hy talk about them? M y

¿imiiln Rod Marvin, has gone on the "••Ut-ijkjia selling them—not as a-wholesale '■■“^iwbositlon. but Just a house-to-house

he's an agent—some day l*e

toiiiiccii iirniight to' nnrTovmrryr

Waslilngton, IL- C.—(.tuinterfeltlng of money 1ms Inereiiseil to liilherlo un­precedented proportions In the Halted ¿tales and Is musing itiueli eoneern to the secret 'service of the Ireusury, tile federal agency charged with sup­pression of lids species of crime. Of particular Interest Ih the tact Hint for the first time In history, women have filtered the counterfeiting loolesslon, presenting new proSlctaa, for, the gov* eminent experts. , "

The increase In cminterfelllhg began shortly after the armistice und lias been growing noticeably'since. II. lfl regarded as ii part of Hie phenomena, ill crime which every greut wur brings in Its wake. i m

War Draft Thinned Ranks.A carious effect of the war while It

WHS being waged was that It resulted In almost complete suspension of inoneV” counterfeiting -In—the—Hulled State’s. There were two good reasons for this. Hirst, native-born Ameri­cans ure seldom found In the. profes­sion. it Is a department, of crime In which foreigners, anil especially snulh- *rn Europeans, engage. Under the re- servlst system o f military service which obtains. In nearly, all European countries, these foreigners, living and counterfeiting In the United Slates were called to their home colors and Hion-hV forced to abandon their pro-

• _ --1— - • - 7 thV»

Issued hlUions of dollars In Liberty Immts—Vli'Hiry antes, war savings eer- Htientes, thrift slumps and treasury certificates .of Imlehledriess. These were all new to the people and of un­familiar design. They constituted’ ll paradise for counterfellers.

Reprint, on U. S. Paper.One of (lie most illllleiiH ohslneles

for (he counterfeiter Is the distinctive paper on which government notes im­printed. It Is made by a secret process and has so Individuili an ■appearance anil feeling timi almost every one can detect a substitute. All (lcnomlmillnns of American money are printed on notes of a uniform size.. Therefore a favorite device of Ihe counterfeiter Is to take a *1 bill and raise Ils denomination.. He will hleaeli It nnd have a ¡dece of nearly- white ills-, ■tlnetlve eurreney paper on which he will priai a note of u-hlgher -denom­ination. Such noies are hard to de­tect, especially If tho counterfeiter prints a yr>0 cTr $10d note of u new and

during August and Sepieoiher. usually from August If. to Kcpinnl.rf l.\ Hu­nt that season II is easier to ileiernnpe Which arc Hie good layers am i "h i-h arc hoarders. At flint Ho....... year

IC.III UIM» | » " V I “ • , i,ons ulih' li sh ow signs or laying or aleWalking, Warns Doctor ; laving mid'have mu moped muuHy

- áre the 'anea., that have been the bet­ter hivers during the entire sciismi., mill dll' lien that lays hi st .luring her tirsi .leur usually wilt lay hesr during ber second nod third rears. She I». therefore. Hu- one to keep 1l I“ tint rifiati advisable, lit.«ever, to keep lo lls ¡If- ||„. I,carier hr.eds. si,. I, as l'Irta . ,aulir Hocks, Hlif.le Islnp.l. ltc.ls . a.V'1 1‘triihiaas heyond Ib.dr see.-od rear, or -lie smaller breeds. M ieli'as the I o ' minis mid Am .unis her.aid i le Pord

; Race to Loso Power of

Las Angeles.—The human race . Is destine 1 to lose Hie power of #

, walking if the present tendency J• continues to Its ultimate con- * J elusion, according to Dr. H. ,• Kemlrlck Smith, w ho 'remi l i tui-• * f per here on I'rldny lit Hn* lie ,J Hi,mil .......................invention. ,J$ ..Tn*ll**y ‘i‘arH ln*j:iiik .tin* rrtrot 0• irmi«* prtuvKM, I»« tlorliiriMl, 11ml *•0 • nutomoblloH, 4 'lrvntors nml »»•J liuintTuhU* itllitT ronlrlvn iicrR .# ooii.splro to Un*p Immun livliutH J <>if lln’ lr frrt. An ii roHiilt, lu* J# Kiihl, ivi» «ri» hiM'oinln»; n rnr« ot t .I wi'iiklltiftK from lin* Mpn down. # m$- Bark to. t ho \v<hmU. In l>nri* j5 font, with plenty of rminln«. 5 f would nml;e ovi'r7 tho raro, Hr0 Smith Niihl.#

unfamiliar series. ........Another selienie Is to take a note

arid ehiinge only the figures. This pfeoves n snare to Hie counterfeiter If lie gives such lim ite to it. man fallili- lur' with Hie designs of tiiotiey. Hu,eh a man knows that a $‘dd note lots abuffalo on IIS design, hut tin »Ml or »100 IsHlte has. This sort of counter­feiting lias lncri-iiKt-.il with the new money because the counterfeiters know that ferv people'are fiiniHlar with the

-designs of Ihe various ju'W lHHUes.. The sume Is-lrue of the Liberty Imnil

Issues. No two Issues ure alike, and a 'counterfeiter-changing the denomina­tion of a »100 bond to » 1,000 could readily he detected by one-who has studied bond designs

lice Is for Hie counlerfeller to sell Ills spurious money at a substantial ills­....ml. He will sell ir »100 cnimlbr-fell hill to a passer for ,».10 of gen­uine money and of course no one Is more expert In detecting spurious money then a counterfeiter., 'The pastier Then may make unotlier snle, 'getntigr perhnpB $7fi In real money for Ills »100 eoiinlerfelt.

('rent rare It taken net to let many of them get. Inio circulation at Hie same place.

■ Womon Plead Ignorance.It Is In this passing branch of Ihe

profession Hull women lire being cmThey make v

■iti-s because when riiplpyrd. ii.rualde eorifeder-

•tcried they fri- by claiming to

lllng money andipu-nlly escape arrest kninvl little abolit him therefore are easily Imposed upon.

A ~ élirions psycho logie,il mystery nhout'ilio whole profésalo» of counter­felting Is Huit a really good counter­feiter requires skill o n„- >> » --.m.....der Huit he could earn a heiter living by 'holiest .'Iiipliiyiiirl t Ilf Ills talents

■'>.V ■ i■ y- »

¿•¿ig-Vi'cyc-,* ksfV-'V.rie

Club Member and His Flock of Rhod* Island Reds. . ^ -

year, Ils they «chinili prove profitable. Ym, run iraní, all ah,ml' l|ie .viirb„i'i lesls nei'j'ssory to pick "in tl,c g '«"l iwuillie iloiir layers I,y rending l''arm-,-rs' Hull,di,i III'-', which dm ........ .talni'd-hy-«rlHng to tlm IdvI'-hUL “ f T'lihll. iiHons, l 'alted SiaH;s -Depart­ment "I Agriculture, Wn'drlugtnn, D.

sill'll a high or-

These packages, called "clvetles, were of a given size, were Inrge In the middle nnd tailoring towards the ends. Such signs originated' when many' of those who hud learned to smoke had not learned to rend.

Red lights, which shine from afar at night, show to nil Rtnokers bow they can replenish their slock. Hut the unwary stranger may bring up some night In the police station, for the red light l j not only n sign of the tobacconist, hut of tljt; watchhouse us well.—New York Herald.

tension here. ' In- the second phi

' Experts In Secret Service.The secret, service at Washlrig|on

has many experts who are very hard to fool with even the cleverest coun­terfeit, ami while counterfeiting has increased, to a great extent, the clreu- —'------ ------- ------1---- ----- -— ■— rmrr-mrt-

Colony of Georgia.Georgln. the thirteenth colony, wna.

founded in the spirit of benevolence for the poor. The Invvs of England permitted Imprisonment for debt. Thousands of English laborers, - who through misfortune nnd - thoughtless, contracts hml become Indebted to-the rich, were mmpnl.ly nrrested and thrown Into Jnll. Whole-families were

-destitute-or -starving,-'—To provide- u refuge for these downtrodden poor of England and t’fie distressed Protestants ,,f other countries. .Tames Oglethorpe, the philanthropist, a member of pnrll-. ament, appealed to George II for the privilege of planting n colony In Atner- Icn. The petition was favorably heard anti June 9.17,'¡I!, a roynLcharter was Issued by which the territory between, the Savarinnlt, and Altamaha river«, and westward from the upper foun­tains of those rivers to the Pacific, was organized and granted to a corporation for twenty-one years, to be held In trust for the poor. In honor of tbe king of England the province wnj named Georgia., '

„ Mum.Hill—is lt possible to confide a

secret In you? . "Phil—Certainly. I will be as silent

as the grave. : . -- Bin—»v“" i tt>lT"- 1 preastogneed for two buck«. -

PI,11—Worry not, my friend. It is as If I had heard nothing—Americas Legion Weekly;

•war upset the channels of distribution of counterfeit money, and turned the thoughts of all men, Including counter­feiters, to otliei; things.— Hut after the wur. the profession enroo hack stronger than ever with many recruits. Pour .million Ainerl-. cans were under nrms. They were taken to the war from their -accus­tomed vocations and pursuits anil ..put into a life which, despite Its manifold hardships and dangers,., was a Uh* lacking 1n responsibility. ,N'o one In the nrnivhnd to worry nbotit earning money for his next meal. It came from the government,,as much u mat- fer of ecTnrse as the sunrise.

Aim-» the* very Iflan of an army U the d¿itruction, of property rind life. To be sure, it I» the enemy's prtqr erty which 1« to-be destroyed, butninong -inany_ yuiiLhfu] nnil Irresponsi­ble persons r the fundamental Idea of contempt for properly rights persists and makes few hounds for Itself. It was natural that among soldlers.J»ho for a year or. two had followed this Ir­responsible existence there would be »¿me who tacked the force of char­acter to return to the drudgery ot hard work. Jhey wanted easy money, so counterfeiting ns well ns other de­partments of crime received fresh re­cruits.......— ' ■ . .

.....More Money to CounterfeitAnother strong reason for an In­

crease In counterfeiting resulting from the war wnB that there was an In­crease In the number of Kinds of money and securities to counterfeit. When there ure only a few kinds of money In generai use', the people be­come so familiar with their appear­ance that they quite icndlly detect any. fault In design or general appearance. But when there ure many new and unfamiliar kinds, the people are nt a loss to know whether they have gen­uine money. "

Tw elve federal reserve banks were 'estnMlshed.aL,.the, time the war began, and all Issued currency of two kind»: federal reserve note« and federal re- irr«e bank notes. Alto, the treasury

turi’' of' simrlimsH fi g e Is a long,

hitlon of emimcirclt ftnuif-y done so. The new counterfeit Issues are detected very early In their ca­reers nnd the soiiree discovered und

.slopped. It' meiinsriinpre!_w»rk uiid l constant vigilance for the government agents and greatly Increased lnvestl- gntive work.- The-.n|iliearance of women In Ihe counterfeiting profession has caused Hie secret service many dllhculHes. The women are not .engaged In the actual manufacture of I'oiintcrfi'lts. but are confederates In the passing of the Bpurlous currency. — - _

Counterfeiters seldom work alone In .spite of the fact the record» »how thnt only the counterfeiter who play» a lone hand meet» With mieces» for any extended period. • Hut It Is hard to practice the profession- singly. The

-great difficulty .III In getting the cqun- , terf.'lt money Into elreuliitlon. To m­I compil«h tills the iriaster counlerfeller has accomplice». The general prac-

Hum by the rminiifut currency. Coiinterfe («yllouH priM'OHH, Im'kW with hnr<l Work ami dllfieulHi'S and It Is rarely Indeed tl.ni n counlerfeller makes as much money before lie Ih apprehended mi

• upluy7ie~t'Mriht 'f|'|iTTr-m;"lirr-4wtw-n-enqr,ient a» an ingraver.—Erederle J. Ilaskln In-Chicago Dally News.

BEAUTIFY CITY OF BELGRADESerb*. Ru«h Work to Make Capital

Worthy of Now Nation—Many New Bulldlnga.

NOVELTY FOR BATHERS

A book, a cigarette nnd the cooling water» about your feet—wlmt more could be desired on a hot ilqy ? These are the eqmforts offered by the new aurf chair and being Indulged In. Inthir-pleture.-by-Mlss-MurUrl-Quacken;bush nt the Tidal Basin bathing bench, Washington.

Belgrade. Jugo-Klnvla.—To make this eiipltul a worthy setting to the. magnificent territorial patrimony to wide), they have fallen heir the Herlm are working swiftly. They ure cnlHn«new streets, paving,them with us....HIInstead of cobblestones and erecting new dwellings and public buildings, ^ prize of ?7r,.000 wna awarded recently for a new city plan. Fourteen hundred new buildings went up In 1»‘J1 and •I.000 are going up this year. A new betel has Just been cempleted opposite tiie ’siiiHbur^irwas htigUfi before, the war nnd used for barracks. Hut Its wall» have been replnstcred and the

'building" wns rnmpIcted'Tmil „penetr- two duys before the wedding of King Alexander. ' ■ ' .

The city Is still (Ivcrpopulated. Res­idence has been refused to jlO.OOO per­sons. l ’ rlces In the city are very high, „ml should the local money Improve In value Belgrade will rival Constanti­nople us n city of. huge expense for living. House rents nre prohibitive for Hie native, nnd for the foreigner they range upward of »100 monthly.

Farm la n d .within 80 miles of H*l- gfndo sells from »100 to »800 sn acre, a - big prlce_.when converted Into the dinar currency of the country. Uot** Moscow,iwlthln-the-clty. recently soldfor 14,000.000 dinars, °r upward of. » ‘200,000. a . price that astonishedstranger».. ' • , '

The best buildings within the clty a f . the present Hn)0 are the two paWcea of the king, located centrally and ad­joining. A parliament'building Is par­tially-constructed.- Other offices for public .uses, nre plnnned. Some por- lion ■ of tlie new American loan will be~used foV projected publlc buhdlrff«.'

PORTABLE HOUSES ARE BEST .Mak* it Possible lo Kerp Voung Crov*.

Ing Fowla ori Fre«h, Uncon­' taimnated Land.

On a recent vlslt tn n birre prm- tleni iftiuliry furili, fi "ns «.l.«erxe.| l lii'il' T omt tno— ivirs—l.i-ltip .irutdir—r.L-U— - numher of' porlohh' "'potiHr.v house*, 'llii'sc were of gol,d si/.'' o"d woro mirimncrs limde of henv.v h'Isls. Tli»- numera' were I,nicol opilnst rudi „l!,,.,-. soihni II borse rmild liejillch*«I to (he front and thè hoii“.- hii.iiled nny1 wher". Thls Houle It posslhlc tt.-kcfi (he young growlng blrds on fresh, im- .«•„nti,minateti sod, whlch was nlrvnyf» sendlng Ufi il potiti |ot of fresh prnss.

Wlien thè uioviiblc liouscs w ere* piilled nwiiy frani erich filine where tlu-y litui licei» for li few wcfcks. fhe nilns so„n viaslied Ihe dropplngs Int» thè soli. Thls nmirlshed thè gres* sml Improvcd thè land. In' nò case wìrs thè sod cntcn down tifi- thèground wns bure. ...

l'or simili 'elilcks thè rame- piant­atoli simili conps on two wlieels tlint rollili easlly hy pushed frinii piace to place hy liand, In thls wny tliey ■never-weri—t ro.phlcl wlth gafies o r eontninlniited soli.- ,

P oultryN oteiSaa>y> ]

Look out for I lice when your chick­en* look droopy and sleepy.

• • • ' iEat or sell off all ytiur surplus cock­

erels before 'commencing on the pul­lets. ■ ■ . . ■ ■ .

The very early pullet Is apt fo molt In the full und he no more protltuhl» for laying purposes thun the hen. - - ' .• • • « ,.Tut the. coops for your little chick­

ens ns lilgli ih the yard us possible. -A knoll covered with grass :ls" prefer­able; then n sudden shower will notdrown them. : .

*- ■Where healthy fowl« nre used for*

breeding purposes, nnd they urw housed in properly ventilated and nr- • ranged houses, and are fed a prop«* ration -for„the_purposo In mind, dl»- * l* i* Is practically a total stranger, , -

um#/***'™éésC

mmarnJss»_ * I I * ■> * *1% rvr- -. .- -5«^ <*«—*- ‘i**

'\io.,!.ir?. . •*>;••'!■ ' - •*". ^ïCfflBçr i ,\*^“v™-* h, T +*•& *r*s*»Ä#1

* . ** '^Nyi-* l ^ *• v ^ * »r ' tT*-fíww?~* S

lorf I

BURN UPI 12 THE CRANFORD CITIZEN AND CHRONIOE, THURSDAY. AUGUST 10. 1922

f f m

How Unexpen« Was Oone.i

— i

JAMAICA PLANS TO BAR CHINESE

FIMIICE lEADS WORM IN ARMY «P EN SE H T

Banfi na» Wvary O f Considerable a :

End of!

V ­At * certain ’;etreDge Imuflru !}every ulght- ‘

During Um d,|| toni of aiumunI* the -wnr—euim*-■„■••■

^•every— deaerli't-i— ..~r ;-

Worrlsd Over Rapid Increase of Yellow Population.

IS IMDER BflinSH CONTROL

Has Largest Proportionate Re­duction of Military Expend-

tores, OffWal Claim. .Franc* "In «rile of (he heavy her

ilone, wjityb the rare of Inaurici ba »»fety sn.l eitflllint her Intenta (tonal «ilillgatl.ini has Imposed.” la Ipa.lliig (lie «rotili In (be proportlfloate

L

vi/

i ^

»trippe«! ut 'lite * - «vere latti «villi ■ ,

-»liHlliiw-lre.nclulj— «vl(h brusiiwool) ploralo «mi co ,■. «tifili ami dirli »

Al 6 :JO In t y lire « in remi?K. A. Tnlliot. a Ibo fulluwtng tho «««}■ In »li

“Sharp to I »binilo, ami II . nf wnrkvra f r luotoroar bua. .,- ben ring Ilio » 1 aanlntantn.

"Ilo inakoirf.....tif Ilio mi» al!« luti, ro iirrnnp trlinmhig Un Minimi lillà a ' frinii bla «In nula,vini limi : n( panillln. '

•Tlio ragn i! omln nf lho|j-' tho lufhimm \f

~ b :40 a inalu'l In* turche» y' nnfol

“Di unlièti oli man-, big of «n |t limplrlng r trvnch lo tl tholr hram.In paaslug.

"Tho col i Instantly t the apeod.V >ly ilio UniUnni thè npotl In i j. un phnnto' ;

"The lil ? oil, and >■ornnn U‘ r tho rtuid/f

i r > ,a

already « ilio volili tipomnl ai there bel' a lutiti h taping i ground.

“Aa tl grow* V «loud*with la mllo» ar i end It * i omoon rural po' picco.” i v

Uy %'■' bumwK|r domi« aro thf Ing bai propal­ili«. |i

HOTlmetfl ««Ith tien organ whid ',L

phao?' oy*a.(

I- i /

M

. . i muHiK utf wnrui ut tuv pn}|iuni«aiawAlreftitx—ì 4a«—On«—0*»*--T3febtem-r4*4't,# ,ir1 j wi\y*n>11 tqnwr wtv' 'Bf ' -NiPBT^ér^wmcii'rwrilitìr ttT flTr-nfl1rt»!'rownorttn(ttnn

** - . . « I pp<vj||,K (|)p milltHry budgets of l iMah« Up Fui!)- 93 Per Ont of Ahe----PopuIaAtert-”Much-t*f Ceoñrr-yTüHif#i

vofeped. end Thil Under ' Cultive~ie*rU*t«— -iMniivHed—hy—tirar

. Frwoh go* eminent.Ileo I. Lary-hy •« «b. H.nd. of N * j ' " ,h » ' ' • » " r * * * 8» P«r. In her w«r budget «mr th« y v ñ rgre Ptaaant Pr^pHeiene.

Ht i Invent i*»«trbtb>n nf niln*‘w» Im* htl^iat)«n to .IrtntHbn, i’d;:.hn-i-nne»» thf repM im r«M*n of tüTT i loss 1’1'i'n Ih * ItMi. e!i«*nt1*>n <o thUm n«i - hnponnnt o f ihp \V*•«I Indinit ; unll« nf ib*-' tArliuh xO;>« h t.mi ’

.-baivi sLVlne-H«is f-?>t eae*“tuve «tfh n»UM\|Rl« An HauMt. Thia I

. Ml nf Uiltlal) tf“u1inty irnnr o»ir nnu HbtM>*« i» of iii€ foUi'wl'uv1 «Unun iYn'iti the 'VeptbiiiRihin IV »V, hnRdqneimra . of thè Keitonel \ir.y- vrephtí, piv tot » • .

‘ J niAltiA. alidads hae nne rftt.'»' f%r«’b- ' u'm - il^ b.jiinUn, "fnr Ihle miifbt

«lnit>s.t N> An- AMrtr. la-And'xtth h t îil f i \ Hitvi nf Rj-itie>b k*»''vn-m innnt, n sa ih«> prvjv.nvÎR'Ant «>f

ln U,.' pAy-r.latt,v, {b# A,v)>tvMu¡MAlN ^ s .W ir.hsMie.ntN> f\i\\x

• y.n 11V,1 MV biaMi-» Ar iTiV.iAlt.^v: aiid ihf r.vrni-yri ,-,f ih<> ilurV^Klnr.M

niv .Min innhfT. hy. Ili»-, l-i-wniv ,-.f fth.»,! 2d,i>V Karl Tn­

. fi IA Tt*!. Un.|Sm\ V J,.f iW,t nf Ihr- y,,{V pLefinfi »v.n«ii‘ }cM of xx Mrvs in -IV'IT,iitlf Uifi \ trfj». ihn < ’V,jt,<>gv

N*x>* ihAn 1 |v-r \s>r x.leV of rotiMeioe. _

tlumhloh, jikv Hft'x-fiiy (l**fs jï)tt ln tT.t «Hlgv of ib*- i iY»yii.*fc.: An<ì rotore ♦**•*•<!ia Io hitxv lr¿rf*fHfnvT u t,v bt a í'áíia ìsim-hì, Ib'Miij w-no-lAâ rfNMir.fAìne-

. vrvrij.y n.iifi, ,-.f ;hc îr.Tfiifn-, hnà hrr.tHih lTr<*m, iVMinun«. ni(v*»rñs inrn- M»*. XftVTnhnh. ihr . riMiw Tn.IiAf, nhfr/f- t.f 0(0 ïiai ï*ff*nV>r<v>f>i»#nTiTrod. rnoAns ‘Ta.'î- of j\»an-tftlOK’ . ‘ ’ •

'falmV of wv<-rt.l eort» Inoln/llng <vt iwiutn, bamboo, hanori»* a roi a vii<je «M-lfit; of whoi- rropitwi tivoi.. oîoibo hUlnMoo and vnlim-n. S'oroo of the «low« fruta (>». hilft, .'»onfrai .hIIh over tough /ooi Miln, va Hay* «mi pinina and ont to tho doopow of bine una a, aro tiiiivlij fo he KurpfiaHOä olaoivhoro

•In tho world‘■Ttiit thort' are orhor anpoofo to Ja­

maica Than bountiful »ot-npiy. MuMi of tVo country It-tnxIevoloDod and that In cultivation In the Interior in Jatvoly’In tho Immls nr negro phannnt proprie- fora, who tend their few fruit troon. tliolr yam cardans, and rholr patchoa of tho ‘root that nmdf Jauihh-a fu- riiont, .-glngei. Mam- gatiat ebinmooa HlHiid In (be plains to n„irk the aire« ' of aiutar plantation rnltnorj lionne* of ! thd lalpndV palmier duys. Alone the j •'ouatai hwanipa kiiurrn* f * - nirm^ultoca !jittnck workMion anil wayfarer*. |

'•Klncufon. the •capimi. Is almo*: a* ! tond. » Muck niai,-» ro«i¡¡; aa Po-M-tj. ! f'rltb'c. 'Hie two ivblro pt.raon* to cv- { cry biiiwlreil negree* who rifinititit{v Ì are a port or the city'* popiilnrion. ! hvo In spechi! wiihnrb* ano miinnpe | alipp* and tin- tante.- entorprlsMi and !

i Ipin It, stands far ahead on lh* IIM.the mem.«nndmn |*ilnU out, while

; l'rniice, nidi nn hirrease of but S2 : pet .ent Is at (he belt cm. Other

iMundle«. the e.imp!t«tlou »how», range In l.he following enter .

•I«ism; îiV |s>r cent; Speln, 273 per ■'em; N‘.«rw»y, 103 per cent; Great bri Is in l»t per «T il; rnlte.1 lotste», 1T4 per ou i ; So et eie l.Vi per ceot; Il .-‘lin nd,. irci per,coni'; l>onm»rk, 128 per .v.ii sod ttw»lerlsnd, 7Î tssrceñl.

j Eisbe.i * ting u|*m the f'renoh rodile­: tl.m, the memorandum adds (hat In j 1P13 ihe mlHisf} branch aba.yrbed , fillly r.ne-ihird of Ibo genenl huilgol,! or. 1 iv;,,’ T4,rfW fiTinc» fnmi « total ; ,,f .VVnisvVVi) In i «2 , with th« j nVdtisry ovvondunres liicroaaesl by j « aliens (nloroaltonnl oNIgalton* such j e - the nrslntenanco of trosip* on tht j Hhific aed oisowhoro, (he defense arm

m; o I rod bm one fifth of (ho general ! *p|,r.v| -lisilor,*, or ’.V03A.«VXWV> franca j f’r.nïi h îoisl of ai-vproxlroatOly 25,­; i*V>«Vvi.iWi f,.r the ordire g>«vornment ! Vhe roii.uary ov|iomti(fire* of th*

five .groar power», t-sse-l on' »' gold

PORTSà•T URNT

I?

DtXlKS DETSAT K E N ILW O R THKxcillng imiiiicnls and aimctacu

Inr (days ar«> always Imiketl lor whbn rival loatii« ootlldo on the Hold, bill tlniso who tteak.sl up to tho Cran fnftl avonuo gnminls on Saliinlnv. TTpiVI (lit ; In sei“ » rilltor ’Touginwtliigglof^irriv-tsartlir -ilis-irpTiinntrirhir tho Mlxlc (Hants I ram pioti all mmMi,eh,,»o|(ai|«‘ t,gfn(r-Ttr»K~^"till1 Kbnflwoith A ld e f o a t in g thorn

I, The ohi'onòs* nf Ilio scoti' docs Hot linllcatc tho suiiorjorlty- o f tip eolniod Imy* for (hoy nutplayod am onlhh tild i lival* at all stagoa of tho game Alovamlor proved t«H. much fot Ilio «Kiting aggregationsmotiiotfng iltoin with slanis, trhioh Ilio« «vorn tmablo in solvo. «nio IMvio» havo. Ilnally pfuggiwl up tholr long woaWno*. at-s.ooo'inl has«1 ain have In. • Sumy'’ I ’anol, otic o f tinIn-i initphdra nrimrnlpivr li»sc IwTl The all auwmd toam «iork nf tho

: fi-firrc- TtandR rd, a rc 's « “ forth in the' memorandum ' aa follow-» : United

.Slate»;. MAiVAiM.<tiV; Ureal Britain. ♦ M V ^ V W ; Japan, l,fkXI,0«VV,(XM ;I'l'i oce, 1,K2i;,i\VlAV, Ital«, eriUXtt,■ «Vi. , - .

Iiomnslci* «va* far su|««>rlor in nny seoi\ nn l.i.-a| .liaii)oiRla lUise-_yoar, and il I* donl'lful if any of thè tVmnty boa può toam* 0\>ut<i havo d< fonii*l ilio invio lìiants on last Sanivday. Hayo-v, tho no««ly acipiìrest hackstniv i* n'«j'coi<'«| by all or.cmy bave nnvnoTx a* hi« luillot litio a m ha* <li*hoatton<'i| innn tliaij onc tlee* i,*i|i«l ha*«' *toalo; Tho |va**mg o f \\>*lnngt«ni as eatoho! (ni thè Divio (ìiants tako a«» a« uno ni tho must popolar plavow'ihat ha* ovor poi formosi on any v ranlonl ilold. a* In* haixl play ing ami v«itty *ayings had inailo Ivi ni a di-oidod favorito «vith tlio locai 1an*. ■ Il i* ov)»-ft<*l Miai tho -»•n1k~o;- Haye* wil] fili ilio Invio which i*- loft - h«r t ho •afcptng Wasli--frigiTifr-------L-------- ■— ^

saS?SZSZS!SZSZS?SÌSSSZ

THIS INFANT HAS TWOGRANDDAD« IN CONGRESS

'.raTffS?J2S2S2S?5ES^_S?S2S2S2S2SS

LIKDKN HITS CROW DER H A R Dsemine Avo- m*n in thó cieluli

imiine pw'-oti io ho ihc undoing of lioili Civiwih i àiid tboU iv ic tìiani.s last Snnday. «vhen thev vv oro-do- i.-ntc*i hy l.indon I l i l>o«vdor had hd-n .yiiwhii'ie iairly eooil hall unfil ilio righili Inning nhon sevc-n con-, vocili ivo hit* oaw*r»ì Manager T\ ¡ve In vn*lì A lev arnie; in thr- roycm-, hnlThe fatai ìr.n* had lier-n «oorod «nd tho gyiod wv.rk, w ivie'li A lex­ander prue f hoi-eaftor. «vent fnr nanght, l.indòn had il* strongost te*«vii on ilio field, n*inp t.he o-ntiro toam tfi/ii fo m o ily ylayo.! in iho t’V'linl'y, l.r*ft'giio. I''c,ici'*dn . stanod

tho *lah fnr l.indon, hint tr*s ro- l'icvod fn thè, -fifth inrving hy Xeil Tkw.giioi tv. ««ho nthe T>ivhr'.y?l*nt« had voni'od a total nf Avo rans.

Thi* ovon in* ilio l>|\io (Tiant* m ll Tnoot ilio Thom All-St-ars, ««hn lefi-atod ftliorn- -txy-o wock* ago ami

nn sai inviar «y ¡11 ho oppose*! hy tho .ivTòi A.-V.-AT Xf-warK

l’ in IT, 111.. ....................... 9 1 -0Ilrlttaln. rfi....... ........ . I« t 9 01’ folfTcr. p4 .............:........ i, 0 9

’ Totals....,.......... :......... 7 3RONFI.I,K PAHK

Player R H KGeisler. cf................. ;.... •> •> ONiiuht>rt,_ rf........... ........... . •1 IIK. Keiltpsnn, Ur................ •1 l>Knut «elio, *.«,.................... i :i 1Si nn (Ter, If.... ,........... ...... t 1G Kemiisuii. :jb........... . fï :i 1Itni*h, 2fi................... . o 1 (»Retti, c............... ......... . i 1 11Sargent, p..... ;........ ......... 0 2 0

1Nrt«|s....................... . i:> s 3

right hand. Ward is ■ In perfect aliape and expect» to score a, win over the New England welter weight champion. ,

COUNTY LEAGUE NOTESTin1 lunch advertised and long

¿I— for . gartm |ioT\vnon tin-funk

1 )

. ‘,i*cy* and the I ’curl* drew a record i-i.ivvd In l*c«rl Oval nn Sunday Iasi, iho Pearls winning the game- hy a smal ninth Inning rally .VI. Hy M-nrlug three runs In the (Inal in­ning. lho IVarls tied with the Purls fnr the league, leadership. The Ports Inst nil Saturday to tho Stars 10-1, hut oaino hack nn Sunday and de­feated Kaliway 4*1 Roselle Park

Jill Hod the unexpected and won both game* nver the weekend, defeating (iarwooil mr Safnnla^litvli ttiming back the Star* on Sunday S-7. The 'asey* hold d ll»ii third place with

tour «yin* ainl two defeats, having Jitpft«aT«sl • Uahw ny on Saturday .i-1 The Innglnnkisl for uplii'jtval in thè '»inuty l.engne i* evpoi't«'d at any imo. Rosolio-Park and tho Star« Inoatening lo \le*ert Ilio leaguo

an d '( bore Is talk of (larwood not hoing. roprosonteil in tho league af- lei the nevi meeting. T h e , Presi­dimi nf thè l.eagne. tieorge'(ìm ss- hans, he* foniteli a roniproinise he- tvvm'ii thè managers uf the Star* and Rosolie l*ark hv taking Un* pick nf thè tuo'team * and letting -hem cnmpte as «ine, hringing tlie leagne «Inwn to.n siv team Circuit. The transfer o ! Shriner ami l*en-

oyer to tln- Pi-arls ha* caused hit or feeling; as thè director* nf thè'

W A L K E R TO B O X NELSONMickey Walker, the Kerlglty Head

mauler, w ill return to the paddeU ring next Friday at the Long Hruitch Club when he will »wap punches with W ildcat Nelson In the imlin hout of twelve rounds. Nel­son Is a willing pleasing fighter, who Is always boring in. providing

11 * “ 1"- o v i »Hit.IW.J JJ V 11 lUUaright hand punches will soon have Nelson making a hasty retreat. Walker w ill no doubt knock out

rives; -

Me CRANN LOSES“ TO GAB A•Charley McCrann, the Elizalietli

featherweight was handed the worst of- the decision in his fight with Hurry Oalm at Freeport. I* !.. on Monday night. McCrann won at least six of the eight rounds anil looked like a sure winner, having •loured Calm ln tlu> liest round. Calm is the hoy who recently spiting a surprise hy' holding W iliio Jack­son to H draw in Madison Simare Carden.___ ■__________- .

Sha W M Worth Much to Himfb. 0 8 marri“S« m the groom called the minia teraad inquired the price öt Z * ' as!a* “Well.” said-the pey me whatever IP. worth „“Be reasmiable !” rxianed t L ' * ^ ' “ThJt woman Inherlfs » ?r°0Q•wnwi ------ » ‘ vnucu IQ*TThJt woman Inherits JUniMon hmion her twMty-flnt b irth day-^?fomla Pelican. , 7' C*H-

■ Aooordlng to B L T .“ Ih e aol-dlstant hunian rui'-J

to 1U beat advantage, peri,«,,* i,* advantage, In work. T ^ r u c ¿J^J-oniamentai,-nor.lg j t » ver^,4 |:l'ä.'ll,t'•

with..' Work is the best tbh.e i t l ’l* •ABd'-wheg; 'lt~i»ekS'-fü''-'âv'5I'fi'—wason for existence, disappear^-U Chicago Tribune. "

W ITH THE SERn-PROSThe llehiionts broke even in a

pnir- of-Tilrs^-iiveT^~Hie‘~iveer-imd,scoring over the Columbia A. C. on

t Saturday !M'i, and losing to the Tap­I pt-tl Post team at St aten Island tin Sunday s r.

Beware of Coraets!A bone In corsets recently

the death of a young w o m a n r akflng In Swltierlund. She /„¡J a ledge Into .deep snow. ’n... , rpierced her heart and she di.-d ;• 'dlately. - " ‘ ‘

Waatem View of the MatterThe luliabitahts of n.„ ,j;.

the porr of .\>-.\—y ,,r!: of

»poll,, and otherwise destroy * li.' -nu' 000 pound!* of fi.od e-.ery y.- ir times it doesn’t seen, úorti, it.—¿In Fraui-iseu Argonaut"

Tel. 422-W

Ih-i-ïi. am«■ clan-;'i 111 Pi-a; I« fî:n , Isilsterc-d up hy players that wen not eligible to play, according to a ¡caglio ruling. -

-•tó jftv * í.« i

BASE BALL M ISH APHong liit >*n the head with a liase

»all proved fatal for Melville—Moore of Jersey City last Saturday. Moore «vas playing with the Eagle Work* oí the Standard Oil leagu«"* against the Itavi«ay plant in a league game. .Mooie came to bat in the second inning and was struck on the lies«! •>y a 1 ’ll i i delivered by "J iinnvö-.'! l 'Oidi y. t lie- liny«« ay htirlec. Mooie did not appear hurt and refused medical at lent ion- a r the lim e o f the iiijnry, hut later consented tu go in the hospital an.) have an ev­ia« lakxn, "h ere it ««as found that lie. liad iCirao! nred skull, lvoolcv. " lio lives in Klirabeth. i* cons'idoivVl the leading hurler of the to n n iv Î /cague, and-.single-handed pitclii»! t lie-t 'asevs to tlm i-Iiampionship la*t yt-ai. . ! .

FR ID A Y (MONDAY.• AGNES A Y R E S in R IC H ARD BARTHELMESS AKD

“The Lana That Had No Turning” j ' ANNA CORNW ALL inWill Roger* in "One Glorious Day" ‘‘The Seventh Day' ,

' • ¡Harold Lloyd in '"Prom Han,«: . ; •M o u iir . ” .\, v.

in

SATU RDAY

NORMA TALM ADGE“Smilin’ Through”

tVinstanee Talmadge” iïi "Primitiv Ixive“

i W EDNESDAY •j PO LA N E G R I ini' “ One Arabian Night"| Rolin Comedy—"Good ,M«*niLni' i . Judge" ~

% ft”

•a, : '<>

t'iionaimpi, •«.( little Mia* Virginia AHVilili e'iaiifrílf, itgê~'twti~aiiiu7Vhà,-'Wh<kthè »trenti, b.re g.vt.n up uhnoat enflre- . ...... *.... . ■**< **.-*. «aimu«, who

h tti ne*:rot>s, tS-ei, thè pnllcciren j !>“» thè li tilt) uè dlatlnctlon of belng the unti maro or the Jutlge* ore tiluck * i ¿rrwrnliInnphMr of two ootibrmaman at

* Jamul.'a'» bisturi' bit* iti niuay ì thè »lune tlm«. Oongraaaman Aaweii « f vft.y* be.‘ ii lite timi of Halli, but li | IouIhIuiib timi OongrMainau (iantrill Ila* stari ned short of tbe fluitimi eli- i o f Koiifiiclcy. bath vie -for. HI» biiniir........ ........... a «'» *»*V MUlUMi: Cif» I '■* •ss-..«ws.i» , irs>«.u -Y«V _*|UT - W ‘(MMIOIiimx. Coliiinbns illscoverml ibi- Isinni1 I <‘f taglile her out am lU ac l » j i » fan.,«itti! iSailloa!' I * U,.é,s. ,“!■_i. f (1*, - - » . . . >,Ily huby carriage -ou Sunday». Vic

güila I* «he dmightor of Mr. «nd Mr». Josopl, E Ountrlll of Washington.

«mi cullivi It Smipni'Jiorlh, for u ceti fury uni] «d illi: I; wH* Sfumisi-, ; than I: fell le a firltlsl, expeilltlnn aem outby Gromweh pox Hoyuj. u* ch'ef __

,.I” 'r; _bçç«iii.,; Hit n>nil»r.-mii- itf Bj|i*,; WIFE DOfiS BOXING QL8VESl*b Im.’ .'wncer* unitor tlie leurtersbip | .- _______ " v , u "o; Tb. nntorlmis Sir fleoriy Morgan. ! Sarto» Woman BnUtitf"Frnht' Arena Tb toivn. pcoplci. lorgel« by the mer, Wbot, -Hutband Sócame 111bim; .««moi, who llvmi oí, (ilruie eniii —. o » ™ ill. .

..................... 1 ' WIipii hbr buabanfl fell m, Bhfl the«PO glldm. b« tholr eusllv ape»: Ione* om '"“ bw,a * «! ' m- in,a ‘ bcguioo«: Ih,- reputi.(loi, or bm.«r^i,e , ty Tor ■»<">■ «W

„ne s . h W o v. « -or rtl" are'1 ^ hwP»; llb. jbulmt. «mi nomor^kairus. d ..«„ s si. -ori e»rth.pmue^* i > «a •*fiitrw li; loft'. HI»! Por; Ito vili af h' ,,8r 1,lsB,ls- * M -

..... .................. . „•Under Spellisi, explnitutlou tbe in- a card nr dwi*lne o«aetit*; .«nd haB 'la-

dui. IntiHMtaiit« or Jaruutcìi -wev- sue«! a clnillenge to-uny vontan In Ut» stile*, <e «Peti. ’Dii- S'*ui«Ì!»*iì* brough;— s- *'d«’ iti ber «celjtht.—Ellle look» lesa lu some pegni «lave* tu replece tbeiu. HSe a feroale prlae Ugbter tbon -a «le-' ani! ir tho Elgtiteeùft, «ouNiry liH tià i «he reti

____JTMnvoi'

Miignussori l ’J k o -o ,Holt. 2li.......Erti «cu, et....A. ldlbsi'n. ssT*nhngmi, If AfoU. ri. . Nfirponi, il* II. l.iirsen. p

plantiitlan owiiera Imported more timi,. buttle. Men «vhc^lmye faced her toatlf«' »JM.Müi Afrlcups, tonUdlng up u large Gibt there's dynamite In .hor deft hook sugur umi rum production—-When sia- ¡ “T want lo bo »h* ssmniin -championvery WH* abolished In ISB4- (nirüy 0f4 tl«e wlilte landlord*, left the Island aud ! ttumerou* lurge «tute», and. milla i «rere HbiirüIonëïïT; In lute years Ja-

prlaeflgliter of the teoria.'' Mrs. Gravea says. “ It muy seem atrénge -to many wtunen that 1 should be so Interested In -bfwlng. hut I have aiwnyi loved It.

XENTL'WORTH TRIMS TTGERSV eri ile-ort li start od -on -another

w iTinlng vproc -on Sunday w hen t-hfiy nif.ha! hmitliT-'-f-vl ra-inning garne to Mim i fi*i. ylefoai ing t he 'Vailshmg Ttgor*. ¡in n (vonsational ihrUcon in-- nirig gnme r.«I. th e Iasi t ime thirnr l etitn* Tfir-t the Konilicori h A. C de- toiiteil the Tiger* in nr, elei-ori Tn- riing giurie f!-2. and anorhf-r game lieuveori t lio two team* would guar- fuller' flit- manappmonT ol t-lib Kon- iIuiiHii A. ('. a big crowfl. Heiney l.nc-iriri. rnri-iir-d good hail for the lirirrie ream, holding the visitor* to figh i sent fr-Tcri hit* in the thirteen frame* plnyod. also having ton rt.rikr, fiiit*_Jto hi* ersdit. htargrtnt, Mon .‘arid fTolt ruppi ieri idre I] eld Ing tour* (.[. I he day, w ith Kike Arid Sar­gent Hit1-best » t the bat, Mergner, i-lte visitor» -ftrsl slicker, pro voti to 'he "the'.'most-dangerous of H ie Tigers a* lie got three.hits, driving-In' two' run* and neoi'lnc his team* -other-

SMASH ECHO LA K E RECORDJames Dftlgliesh, the Echo Jjrtte

Cititi prolesvional. filaving ««itti F XV: SiuitJi. against a . K. .Keller nnd Vii tu pel A riíisl ron g ta-„ke Ute rf-eord of t he Clrrb-irith a 72, ejuailmg par

,,1,0*1 lent Dagliesh ..eonaUed ihr- ireeord when, he Went ¿rownU • the course ¡n 7‘1. ■ . -

4

The Tire Supreme

Guaranteed for 10,000 miles again ; i blow-out, rim cut or-stone bruise.

Sample* and Tires in service glad­ly shown upon'request.

W. H. BradleyTel. 235-W 399 Orchard St.

W A R D AND SHEVL1N TONIGHTXVit Ii n ehiirwe to step i.pcg

the. Umeiight a* one oi Jack Rrit- ts'in s closest .rival*, ('.-eorgre 1\ ai-d » i l l do hi* he*! to score a win over Rfl.'tie Shi-vlin. whom' hr- rni-i-ts in Boston jtonight. Ward reer-ived a sol hack' arid disappointment «hen . ire was tint point ed- hy Duvr- Shade hnl n UctiH'm iria ti.nii-til “w iir start him all over again. That

Schouler Cement Construction Co.J54-156 FrcUnehoyscn Avenue, ' N E W A R K , N . J.

General Contractoi■ J _ ' - ¡L " '

. E s ta b lit lie d 1S87

- R O G E R O ALDRICH, President —

Telephone 284 CRANTFORIr. X. .1.

1 we rhris. Nmnnmry:

K K x n .w o R 'n r

.'lh.... .............

. ...... - ------ • — . .... ;or hh/ithere i* rrn rlouht. n* Shr-VUri is u/it- of ttie eiiissiest weiter* in the ring toriay, havirig rlefeated siuee of t he liest inen in.-Jii* eins* Ineluding T'ttut DtL«:ie....l.i.rtiKiv.'...K~.(-.liv—1 "

R Tl K í I IIi- “t - n

Al Norton and Pal ,R citi. Fp in Boston Shevlin i* ennsidr-rerl t.he 4Ci*lterwr-ipht» ehtnnplori as Britton hn* lurried down »f-roral large of. »-rs ln meet Mir Uriti hai l ie- K/jrlie is.w ie rd thê'tioxlng type,^i ciÍHek tiilnket with n hard piineli In Iris

HEADQUARTERSf o r

D R E S S M A K IN G , H E M S T IT C H IN G , P L E A T IN G ,

B U T T O N H O L E S A N D B U T T O N C O V E R I N G

CrarfforcT“Dry Goods Co.R E TA IL D R Y GOODS A T W HOLESALE PR IC ES

220 CENTENNIAL AVEL ........... CRANFORDTELEPH O NE 471-R

• Tritai* - .- 1 ‘T ili KR

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a s e s t o Pa r k e r s !

■ uuimu«»n-«i. IL Itile 7« » « pH* lu "Mt A HfWRyN lOVtm t|t,malcu bus become a more utiU more ■ 1 «0'* brought up In the country and ImportHiit ftictor In -mppiylng bunuuaa nlwnys played busoball «ntl btntmtball to both British und American reblen, when attending high achool. 1 «lwayt It« -advHOPigi- over the Oeiitrul Ain«* had a 'keen rieatre to beootnc-e -wre«- treu bHtinbH countries lies ctileßy '• « or borer.“ '

.... tinrtvnnd Just Sun-, dHV. imd toilKy Guru-odd e'lnim«, tlre’l

thè faci thut lt la rivo duyb neurer thè market*

‘The Brltlsli tmve glveti goral- ineua- ure of self guveruraeot to tlK- Ja- omtcgns, bm 'hirve rebrlncl fimiI con­trol. a povemor !s nppoliiicfl lo thè Brltlsti klng tinti preside* o«’er a log- islntlve couticll of «,-lilch ir, memhora «re uppointed and re eleotrel. 'Hhvreti hoords In the Hi parlabcs udmlnafer locai uffalra.”

A.1-

hUrretlc Prevebta «8er!ooa TealnWreoVA himitlo «mvotl the lives of B «core

or 'pus-setipor* oh -a dilcagownd North- wreti-rn train near Junauu wi«., «yban bt» fraolb- slunula to the iMtplr.ei.r « « * veored a ■cdUlsloti «viti, «,11 oli uink «mr. The lutmtlc was working about- the grounds of an Hsyltuu when he «iiw the tunk cur Had the approaching

* train. He algnuled In time for the on _.. »’ •"«u'r to atop the trete a few f w

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. . . . --- _ f*..i»m* IV rni\Wotnari Maton Guilt of Vl.flÖO f*l»o*». from the par

-A quilt conhiltdng IW.flOO pfccre of .> ¡ ^ ,oíh * n<1 dnttild ttihllotn of «•«•‘he* Ts*o Million In Liquor Fire, ire v « . ,

Vtoliitdre nf I b e ^ o n n 'T q ù ô Æ

I f f W ^r i : s s r Ä ' Ä

..«>■!■■»« **- •■»( llscul your. More Jhan -twelve bollitori w in ptOMciitM,

» nn/ ..t V ’ ,,4i >v,»vu (MHiiTis th fiiluf’ ht*W»nro(i 'hy TRóJ

Ih- Thi.k: Thf- piiin('. wiis a1Tf?/ s*'5,rin& i-oiirwt* bfit-liPaikor h,r!'i " T" 1 ':rr" M- "'Ifili the linkers having a docldód pricePn.iir?1*"''1'."' J ,f ',,lr'-K " ' « ' I f 1S-7erf r o '1 è i l " ’i.? Burnsul to baffle the Barker*, iiroverl to

1,11 l,(,|"k' lilt atfivlll unrl Imvliig v'ery poor -cniitròl. The'

liiiÌr L 1 e ,]PnrÌ Wnm ',,i, tho, i ' ’ ir<,v,,r K'Mimpson -load ui '^.t««nMMM4re.|n tlie attack'

<1, n id i! tw" o f w l'M i w tw

» « 'I Brlttahr ptoioil to tie rhe best Garwood stleker* it* «ach 'found the ofTor-. f«r a pair -of:ihmhips. T ìmì soorD;_ /-OARW OOT)"..........P layer

Branford’s Up-to-Datf Drug StoreT H E R E PR IC E A N D Q U A L IT Y r e i g n s

TH E -

STORE

OF

- . P U R E - ­

DRUGS

AND

CHEMICALS

The Apollo Soda Is the BestBout for aeirerai reusoni,, but eapocially so bbcause o f It being nervoff in aonttary papor amis only Nobody b lipa, but yours, touch thin woudorlul Cup oi Ice Cro&m Boda vou got at The Apollo Fountain Rvnty -Soda and Sundae is the yory boat tbat^cah « h o can TimApollo will -nibke tiiom! — __ \ .........

SPECIAL THIS W E E K ! A Most Delicious Ruiiduo. C31AKF0EX> SPECIAL STn>

. SQUTBBS ,

Drags aal Qiaiikals ■Special

.4 ot. Rot. Rhubarb

•' NY AX • -

Family RemediesW e carry a • Itili as3ortmont o f

these High Grade Preparations.

and Soda.....,_2uc8 or. Dobell's S o l............26c1 lb. Xp.iom Salts........... 10cJ lb. B, Oarb. Boda ........Jfic

Larimpur Lotion..........................JIucPoiaun Ivy Lotion...................r..7.....A0r-Corn Remover.:....... ................ ......26cRhouinatiam Treatmopt............SUO

faffing Caps Soaps Robber foodsTD% dfi on »H daps this coming' 1:..... ' week. ' ■

25c to $2.50

A laTge 1 assoranont of Imported and

Domestic Toilet Soaps J organ's Seontad, 3 for. J3oc

W e-are headquarters tor .'guaran­teed Rubber Goods.

Special Fountain Byringt--- -___-SL25

/

The olutii man favor aiu'e

-.liver, one < comn chart

■"udire Is fir pools rung' next been

' bathshim trot is tl tuin cuni|

parUti

Dueaa, i. Wail... 31

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. g*.............. — ...3b— -™_Peek, c"Bfoivii. c f.....P i t t o mtn, 5b...«Barra, « . .....

R P E ä t s ä a s b s s S £ » 3 ä S :,ai:,B^ ^- T H E A P O L L O D R U G S T O R E

X. F. MORRIS. Mgr. ' '

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