george c. moon company - digifind-it · 2015-01-03 · mutt hnu«*wltn have daxen* of way* of...

8
[II NO. 27 CRAN FORD, N. J., THURSDAY, AUGUST 2«. 1920 THREE CENTS The Importance of a Wifl. Everyone who Has real estate or personal property should make .. a will—it is important—for if he "dies without makjnff-itr-the- Courts will be called upon to decide upon an administrator. Appoint the Cwinford TriiBt Company as your Exooutor anil -you linyo one that is reliable, efficient and faithful . in the settlement of the estate. - See u* about it now. FEW HORSE-DRAWN VEHICLES Carriage «nd Wagon Bulldtr* May* About Otwan Vp Ttuit Brmifth «f . of th« Buainw*. . ~ The member* of a Una formerly prominent u> ailing horse-drawn ve- hicle* on: the raeiflc coast give W>tM Interesting ugurea showing ho* tt» carriage and wagon builders have lost business, <Jne to the Inroad* of the automobile Industry In the transport!!-' tton Odd.' ; It sewns that there wore 14,000 bun- gle* iwld IDLOS Angeles county aloe* la 1800, nfid 0,500 wagons. Two years later, the Unit motorcar appeared and ilaatfcewaftoa'edlnMjemdUi tm* NxR. FOSTER. Presidon*. ",\W. J. McKEE, View-President ^ ••-H. W. WHIPPLE. Sec'y & Troan. .'••'• 3. MAL-MEKKIN, AMI. Secy. F. I. COLLINS, Asrt, Treas. MM It la donbtfnl If 100 buggies- n year are sold, now In California. Saliwmen working In rornl dlrtarlcts usrd to soil, an average (rf two buBJIes a day and more sets of harness. 0n« protnlnent wagon builder sold $8,000,000; worth of horse-drawn vehicles In 1806; • In 1003 they stopped manufacturing them and concentrated their production fa- cllltlos on motoroura, which thoy had gradually developed as their wa-jon trado decreased. : . Not atl flrtns were so far-sighted or fortunate, however, and many fa<M to4*s that formerly manufactured thojiB/indti of horse-drawn vehicles are but a memory, Most wn(wn' Imlldwi of proRTRSstvo mind installed motor- par departments and nr» now rfuplng REAL ESTATE vs. STOpKS AND BONDS. An advantage which real estate enjoys was brought but recently by a Hebrew who has always been a large invester in real estate. When asked why he preferred real estate to stocks he said: "God has quit making more land; and as the number of people increase so does the value of land increase, but them presses print too many of them stocks a year for Mr. Goldstein." This i* another angle from which to view a real estate proposition. Cranford Investment Company Real Iii»ui:ttiio© V 25 North Avenue, East C. K BLAKESL^E . . Ti-Ioplmno loa NEW ISSUE: .MEMBER. FEDWAi - | SYSTEM | . •(*5~ You an Old Mirror? Yes, we can resilver' it V Make it look like new GRAY l06 UN|ON AVE - ifonl* M. J. .U. Teiephone 143 a harv««t.as'ninnufactur«rs of- v track and van bodies to bo flttwi to standard Motorcar truck chnssl*. work for wblch^thelr mccliiinlcal equtpioent, working forws and okporimce are par- ticularly well adapted. MOTOR FUEL SUPPLY SHORT Qstollno Cannot Re Rtllod On to PHI Demand—Alcoljol the. Coming "' " • • Powsr. x. JUn«ml oils vary *«ry much in their makeu|i. TIIORO of Muxlco aro particu- larly rlci» In the heavier tnicriMllonW, and are therefore excellently aduptod for mo as fufcl^ Tlio-llRhtor oils yield more Kproiwnc nnj gniurilns. The prospect of cii»ollne snpply of- fan somo reason for iiiixloty. It has been Increased eturrmoualy within Hie lost ten )«ur«, but the (?rowth x of th« ontpn) has beun only oniMliIrd. as Brent as-tho tmiwih of the automobile Industry. Tliere nro onw 7,rKK),000 au- toaiohUcH lu the Onlt«l Hint™; by Iliu end of the present ywir tb<>rc will O^OO.OOCT, ' NothlnR IR more rcrtntn "tlinn Mint the supply of minnllni' will not U GEORGE C. MOON COMPANY •s> Outstandlntr, Includine this Issue $5O»,0(»O. If TO! -,— - '6yRAB0LD&ZIELKE A FTER you find that thiu repair nho» ifl atwnyH at your sorvico you will appraointo the intolli- fe gpnt practibility or our sorvico. Wo'U. help you out of. a holo before you get into it 1 if you will lot us overhaul your car. t Authorized Ford Service Station Ford Parts '•.'.' Immediate Delivery on Ford Cars } ftUSIC>FURNISrlED FOR ALL OCCASIONS j^ £v':i;-V. . ; > v ) ' > / : : 2 t o : 2 0 p t e c « combinations.- ."•-••-'••••': _• ... "' * i & £ » a b l e « » * ' - -•/ -••.--• •>••••••• •' • •• •••• P r o m p t S e r v i c e i:-,r?:c.;: : :-:*.v:S:;.;vj Caroof j . O R I S O N . • .. ;•••..•••.,•;•• •.;.• i><-i^^T:VBuUuii^ff*t^- ; ^-:rX Cnwford. Jf. J. r. ,; ij||||||i|"f|||l||i^:S- MEATS CHOJCB urn OF.- ......j with the IBcfwtSTGtf dl'limild.—W> Minljl lujve to V«>k to coal tnr_ n« ja (unirco if motor fuH. Alrmidr*'Mii-ti- P «bJ," a by-product <>f| llie.idlutlllntlon of bltt(li(nlnows cosl.i in bolnu noed for UIIB pur(M»w> In romldornbli' i]itnntltln«. An- oth«r fuel iivallnble (If ciir'>»V!;torH anil cylinders arc rcdenlpicd) In alcohol, which c«n lm obtnliieu. In •-••"—"—' Utlcn from molniweH, IiotiitneS, bnd all sorts of table wastes. 'Watehlno Life o f W n t s . . Ffom fuller- Infonnaflgn, now "at hand In reenrd to the hmchlno by aid of which the Indlhn scientist, Sir J; C. Bose, has b(«n mnklnK visible In idon the Ingrowth of plrnits, shown fut ho does much more than mnkn •Islblc what everybody already know— ttiat plants Increase In size, ' Ho n\m_ has" rovenled that the growtii of a plant Is by no means steady or con- tlnuous—thnt it Is Bffectcd by many of tho Innnbncca bi'«lde» raero nutriment thnt affectrthe (frowUi of juilmnls. In short, this maehlnit,. which Is cnllcd a crescograph and ningntfles movement a million times, proven that plants are ranch more alive than It bii customary to credit them with hclng* add It In tint an Bltogothet; fanciful : notion ' that When tliS facts In relatlbn to plant life becntne better known, something of consideration for th?lr, .•fcollnKit" and somothlOK of-coropapctlon about treating 'them cruelly may. develop. 7- Pharmacy'Popular. FITrarroacyi s popular, pnrsult aroooj the women of ftraUi Arttrlra, aecorfllng to aY. W. C. A. lenilor in that country/ becauso.lt Is'a protected profession; and Is consldiered womanly. -South Amertesrt Klrls havo not (rone Into public lite B/xllhto the buxlnewi world and tho trndes.an North ADKTI- cin glrhi bavc and atfli consider, M a rule, poly tho so-cnllwj protected lines of wort." They teach and sew and n ^ftwr.ilMjfeiJweoin*. ty|>lsbs and' steno^ raplMa^**! most women who take up any profcwilon train for nnnring, medl ttim L ,-ji ( 'phamiricy. " Chemistry (s also a popular Mudy. '*''-".. : -•'•; - .-•• •.' r Nar Imitation* for K»»v. A yminit phyjIdJin took his be«t jJrl to a. local picture house. Aitverttse- ments: wore being thrown on . tha screen, among then thte on*i' "Hake them happy with n phfrtogrsi* of yrmr- »elf at Onrlstnwft.; Our*«hopvfetc." ~?'"• V : 'jibo-umiaK '.'Mir tamed to:; tui gtt\ •:il^.tt^-:^C^W^"re«Mnrli,":.^Wo||ld,,i| i j*^,otine'niak^'xoichiTOrT? ;: '* : '*i-^ ; ; of Garwood and Dunellen, NewJersey .. '. .i . {A^lMawaro pirj«irMiun) CAPITALIZATION - (nXter t[W>i>K atlwt to Ihit llnanr 8% Cumulative PreforrcU Stock Authorliwl. $750,000 Par Value $25 per share. . Common Stock (ho par value) 24.O0O Shares | NO BONDS OR — •• • ItnitUtrar ondTransfiir Admit. AMEIUUAS.'KXCIlANdK NATIONAL HANK. N. V. (iitv. --1*BHI Matters hv Morars. HAHUIN .& IIEHS. and IIKNHY K.' FltANKKfJUUHH, VM\,, NOW York City. . - :/Vuditby'-. , . • ''Appraisal by •. . TOWNHENL), MIX & t'OtlSON, Now Yotk City. AMKWCAN AI'l'HAiaAI/CO., Mllwaukoo, Tho |)rO>luutH of the Comimny, whose plants arc at <iarw«x»i nml Dunolliiu, Now Jorsoy,'ombrneo nil of ropo for ovory kuowu (HirpoiW) wluru wim «>|>o iutiy bo usc<l, somti of wliii'liuii] HH follows; Elevator Cables -• . TowinJC Ropes for Vessels Ropes And Many Others i-liVii_t rtij• i111 y ami coiitinuoiiHly;. llio buHimisH up to tlio 1 li.ia not vet UMU'II'MI (IIII export linlil. - Tlio loantion of Oil and Gas Well Drilling: Hoist and Haulage. Tramways Ships r T h e li.slil for tho milo of HH prtuluutH , I :,.|, nr( ,: w Uliiu roaob'of N«'w Vorkl.v »ur nH.I'.r trtifb**) «iycn it a .IIHIUKII iulvuiitft«o in tbo ,>, of ; biiHiu()KH furo^jxjrt UirouK»fUio I'or(of NowYolk. IU;,ir. M |iictioti IIHH HIIOWU, a vnry Hiib- 'nnij couHistont ipcrcnup oacli. year. •) '-. , j. j '* ...;.' '•• I -j ••.';.; i - ; |J •';•<" -I '-DtRECtORS : [ •.' ^ • ' • • •'•f'--"' '•• ; V / - ». CALDWELL I'rosiilont and Director, Sporry'iV llutcl Now~YurkCHy. . . Dirflctor, Criinforcl Trunt (Jompiitiy. ; "IJIrnctor, HiiyllnnAiunrlcun Sn«ur t>).» Uiroctur, Unitixl i.inlit uml Hnilwuy (>>.. Formerly Vlc» I'riMldunt, Continental and I Trait and'Hatlnft* tSaQk, ChlGUKo. Foundor and fimt I'cwiclent, InvMtmoot. U»Dkcr% Assttciatlon. o •_ LORENZO C. DILK5 Vloo Pronidpnt and Director, Uoorxn'-A. Fuller Co..- - NowYork City. f . . 1'rwldHnt and Dirm-tor, Citrollna HulplmiUlinic Oirjo . faUon, WllmlnKton, N. C. W . J. M c K H « ';.•'.• Vice I*rnslilimt. Trnasnrdr rind Ulr»wt«r of ' lltitcliinMHi (>.. Now York City. -.. Vloo President and Director. Crttnford Trust Odin- [•any, Crunforil, N. J. - . " ' ' " - . « ' ' ' ' ' OBOROEC. MOON . IMroctor of Cranford Trrnit Orniimny, .Cranford, N. J-. I'nmidont anil Director Uourtio C. Motin Uo,, Uarwood, • • N . J . ' ; . - . - .... • •: x ;.;' ; - •".'• • •. OEOROE H. FERQUSON" Attorney st-Law, Now York City, nntitla.I tf> upoa it arc not oarncu or paid t?roforroa Stock iR«ue. i nc luwto,^»v« been K% timoB tho dividend roquiremontw Net earning for tho ar *J il {'™ "*"• ^"r.^^Uollthn Halo of thin ia«uo will b« uno.1 to rotiro ,0 tUo l«r«forrod Stock now to.to ^^^^^^T^l^a,,^- of ,miUrUl« on » e»h diiebimt it u o BO ,wi.oh ft vo f .uc C fl«»fuiiy b u i u . ^ w ^ ^ . ' - j i. ;-:>•:..- ' y . WE OFiTBK tillS STOCK LS UNltS OF " 8 Shares of 8 %CumuWive Prefenwl Slod and ••.•.',..;. ^J Store of No P w Vate Omm Stock.« $ 2 8 5 ^ Unit ,'J •£.::• y i »i -^«.w» H for Mfelv"of principal.»ub»UnUal dividend y%W anil lojatojjroflt potwibiliti •SSS^^'&^r^ 8 by ft balaaeo pa^lo oi n4ico of al^^ L. N ^EiNTC^ STOCKS AND BONOS roadway, bc^iu conUuuod'ar« based on infor^Uon YORK « reliable, but ar*»ot FR1JI0F ROLP Carpenter and Builcler Bstlmates f urnUbwIf. W Flr»tXbw» Work Oua f ; ! J g & f ' : f - •" ' : .•V^gBKBW'.lilsirWBfetiB"' " ~ •" WM&«M X*

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Page 1: GEORGE C. MOON COMPANY - DigiFind-It · 2015-01-03 · Mutt hnu«*wlTn have daxen* of way* of r*-rn»kl»g of serving leftover meat* but to maoy throw away left-over vegetable*

[II NO. 27CRAN FORD, N. J., THURSDAY, AUGUST 2«. 1920 THREE CENTS

The Importance ofa Wifl.

Everyone who Has real estate orpersonal property should make ..a will—it is important—for if he

"dies without makjnff-itr-the-Courts will be called upon todecide upon an administrator.Appoint the Cwinford TriiBt Company

as your Exooutor anil -you linyo one

that is reliable, efficient and faithful .

in the settlement of the estate. -

See u* about it now.

FEW HORSE-DRAWN VEHICLESCarriage «nd Wagon Bulldtr* May*

About Otwan Vp Ttuit Brmifth «f. of th« Buainw*. . ~

The member* of a Una formerlyprominent u> ailing horse-drawn ve-hicle* on: the raeiflc coast give W>tMInteresting ugurea showing ho* tt»carriage and wagon builders have lostbusiness, <Jne to the Inroad* of theautomobile Industry In the transport!!-'tton Odd.' ;

It sewns that there wore 14,000 bun-gle* iwld ID LOS Angeles county aloe*la 1800, nfid 0,500 wagons. Two yearslater, the Unit motorcar appeared andi l a a t f c e w a f t o a ' e d l n M j e m d U i

tm*

NxR. FOSTER. Presidon*." , \ W . J. McKEE, View-President

^ ••-H. W. WHIPPLE. Sec'y & Troan. .'••'•3. M A L - M E K K I N , AMI. Secy.

F. I. COLLINS, Asrt, Treas.MM

It la donbtfnl If 100 buggies- n yearare sold, now In California. Saliwmenworking In rornl dlrtarlcts usrd to soil,an average (rf two buBJIes a day andmore sets of harness. 0n« protnlnentwagon builder sold $8,000,000; worthof horse-drawn vehicles In 1806; • In1003 they stopped manufacturing themand concentrated their production fa-cllltlos on motoroura, which thoy hadgradually developed as their wa-jontrado decreased. • : .

Not atl flrtns were so far-sighted orfortunate, however, and many fa<Mto4*s that formerly manufacturedthojiB/indti of horse-drawn vehicles arebut a memory, Most wn(wn' Imlldwiof proRTRSstvo mind installed motor-par departments and nr» now rfuplng

REAL ESTATE vs. STOpKS AND BONDS.An advantage which real estate enjoys was brought but recently

by a Hebrew who has always been a large invester in real estate.

When asked why he preferred real estate to stocks he said: "Godhas quit making more land; and as the number of people increase sodoes the value of land increase, but them presses print too many ofthem stocks a year for Mr. Goldstein."

This i* another angle from which to view a real estate proposition.

Cranford Investment CompanyReal Iii»ui:ttiio©

V 25 North Avenue, EastC. K BLAKESL^E . . Ti-Ioplmno loa

NEW ISSUE:

.MEMBER. FEDWAi• • • • - • |

SYSTEM |

. •(*5~

You an Old Mirror?

Yes, we can resilver' it V

Make it look like new

GRAY l 0 6 UN|ON AVE-ifonl* M. J. .U. Teiephone 143

a harv««t.as'ninnufactur«rs of- vtrack and van bodies to bo flttwi tostandard Motorcar truck chnssl*. workfor wblch^thelr mccliiinlcal equtpioent,working forws and okporimce are par-ticularly well adapted.

MOTOR FUEL SUPPLY SHORTQstollno Cannot Re Rtllod On to PHI

Demand—Alcoljol the. Coming"' " • • Powsr .

x . JUn«ml oils vary *«ry much in theirmakeu|i. TIIORO of Muxlco aro particu-larly rlci» In the heavier tnicriMllonW,and are therefore excellently aduptodfor mo as fufcl^ Tlio-llRhtor oils yieldmore Kproiwnc nnj gniurilns.

The prospect of cii»ollne snpply of-fan somo reason for iiiixloty. It hasbeen Increased eturrmoualy within Hielost ten )«ur«, but the (?rowthxof th«ontpn) has beun only oniMliIrd. asBrent as-tho tmiwih of the automobileIndustry. Tliere nro onw 7,rKK),000 au-toaiohUcH lu the Onlt«l Hint™; by Iliuend of the present ywir tb<>rc will b«O OO.OOCT, '

NothlnR IR more rcrtntn "tlinn Mintthe supp ly of minnllni' w i l l n o t U

GEORGE C. MOON COMPANY•s>

Outstandlntr, Includine this Issue

$5O»,0(»O.

I f TO! -,— -'6yRAB0LD&ZIELKE

AFTER you find that thiu repair nho» ifl atwnyH

at your sorvico you will appraointo the intolli-

fe gpnt practibility or our sorvico. Wo'U. help

you out of. a holo before you get into it1 if you will lot

us overhaul your car.

t Authorized Ford Service Station Ford Parts

'•.'.' Immediate Delivery on Ford Cars

} ftUSIC>FURNISrlED FOR ALL OCCASIONS j ^£ v ' : i ; - V . . ; > v ) ' > / : : 2 t o : 2 0 p t e c « c o m b i n a t i o n s . - ."•-••-'••••': _• . . . "'* i & £ » a b l e « » * • ' • - - • / - • • . - - • • > • • • • • • • •' • •• • • • • P r o m p t S e r v i c e •

i : - , r ? : c . ; : : : - : * . v : S : ; . ; v j C a r o o f j . O R I S O N . • .. ;•••..•••.,•;•• •.;.•

i><-i^^T:VBuUuii^ff*t^-;^-:rX Cnwford. Jf. J. r. ,;

ij||||||i|"f|||l||i^:S- •

MEATSCHOJCB urn OF.-

......j with the IBcfwtSTGtf dl'limild.—W>Minljl lujve to V«>k to coal tnr_ n« ja(unirco i f motor fuH. Alrmidr*'Mii-ti-

P«bJ," a by-product <>f| llie.idlutlllntlon ofbltt(li(nlnows cosl.i in bolnu noed for UIIBpur(M»w> In romldornbli' i]itnntltln«. An-oth«r fuel iivallnble (If ciir'>»V!;torH anilcylinders arc rcdenlpicd) In alcohol,which c«n lm obtnliieu. In •-••"—"—'

Utlcn from molniweH,IiotiitneS, bnd all sorts of

table wastes.

'Watehlno Life o f W n t s .. Ffom fuller- Infonnaflgn, now "at

hand In reenrd to the hmchlno by aidof which the Indlhn scientist, Sir J;C. Bose, has b(«n mnklnK visible In

idon the Ingrowth of plrnits, shownfut ho does much more than mnkn

•Islblc what everybody already know—ttiat plants Increase In size, ' Ho n\m_has" rovenled that the growtii of aplant Is by no means steady or con-tlnuous—thnt it Is Bffectcd by many oftho Innnbncca bi'«lde» raero nutrimentthnt affectrthe (frowUi of juilmnls. Inshort, this maehlnit,. which Is cnllcd acrescograph and ningntfles movementa million times, proven that plants areranch more alive than It bii customaryto credit them with hclng* add It In tintan Bltogothet; fanciful: notion ' thatWhen tliS facts In relatlbn to plantlife becntne better known, somethingof consideration for th?lr, .•fcollnKit"and somothlOK of-coropapctlon abouttreating 'them cruelly may. develop.

7- Pharmacy'Popular.FITrarroacyi 1» s popular, pnrsult

aroooj the women of ftraUi Arttrlra,aecorfllng to a Y. W. C. A. lenilor inthat country/ becauso.lt Is'a protectedprofession; and Is consldiered womanly.-South Amertesrt Klrls havo not (roneInto public lite B/xllhto the buxlnewiworld and tho trndes.an North ADKTI-c in glrhi bavc and atfli consider, M arule, poly tho so-cnllwj protected linesof wort." They teach and sew and n^ftwr.ilMjfeiJweoin*. ty|>lsbs and' steno^raplMa^**! most women who take upany profcwilon train for nnnring, medlttimL,-ji('phamiricy. " Chemistry (s alsoa p o p u l a r M u d y . ' * ' ' - " . . : - • ' • ; - .-•• •.'

r Nar Imitation* for K»»v.A yminit phyjIdJin took his be«t jJrl

to a. local picture house. Aitverttse-ments: wore being thrown on . thascreen, among • then thte on*i' "Hakethem happy with n phfrtogrsi* of yrmr-»elf a t Onrlstnwft.; Our*«hopvfetc." ~?'"•V: 'jibo-umiaK '.'Mir tamed to:; tui gtt\•:il .tt^-:^C^W^"re«Mnrli,":. Wo||ld,,i|i

j*^,otine'niak^'xoichiTOrT?;:'*:'*i-^;;

of Garwood and Dunellen, New Jersey.. '. .i . {A^lMawaro pirj«irMiun)

CAPITALIZATION- (nXter t[W>i>K atlwt to Ihit llnanr

8% Cumulative PreforrcU Stock Authorliwl. $750,000

Par Value $25 per share. .Common Stock (ho par value) 24.O0O Shares |

NO BONDS OR• — •• • ItnitUtrar ondTransfiir Admit. AMEIUUAS.'KXCIlANdK NATIONAL HANK. N. V. (iitv.

- - 1 * B H I Matters hv Morars. HAHUIN .& IIEHS. and IIKNHY K.' FltANKKfJUUHH, VM\,, NOW York City.. - :/Vuditby'-. , . • ''Appraisal by • . .

TOWNHENL), MIX & t'OtlSON, Now Yotk City. AMKWCAN AI'l'HAiaAI/CO., Mllwaukoo,Tho |)rO>luutH of the Comimny, whose plants arc at <iarw«x»i nml Dunolliiu, Now Jorsoy,'ombrneo nil

of ropo for ovory kuowu (HirpoiW) wluru wim «>|>o iutiy bo usc<l, somti of wliii'liuii] HH follows;

Elevator Cables - • .TowinJC Ropes for Vessels

RopesAnd Many Others

i-liVii_t rtij• i111 y ami coiitinuoiiHly;. llio buHimisH up to tlio1 li.ia no t vet UMU'II'MI (IIII export linlil. - Tlio loantion of

Oil and Gas Well Drilling:Hoist and Haulage.

TramwaysShips r

T h e li.slil for tho milo of HH prtuluutH i»

, I :,.|, n r ( , : w Uli iu roaob'of N«'w V o r k l . v »ur nH.I'.r trtifb**) «iycn it a .IIHIUKII iulvuiitft«o in tbo,>, of ;biiHiu()KH furo^jxjrt UirouK»fUio I 'or(of Now Yolk. IU;,ir.M |iictioti IIHH HIIOWU, a vnry Hiib-'nnij couHistont ipcrcnup oacli. year. •) '-. , j. j '* ...;.' '•• I -j

• • . ' ; . ; i - ; |J • • ' ; • < " - I ' - D t R E C t O R S :[ •.' • ' • • •'•f'--"' ' • • ; V / -

». CALDWELLI'rosiilont and Director, Sporry'iV llutcl

Now~YurkCHy. . .Dirflctor, Criinforcl Trunt (Jompiitiy. ;

"IJIrnctor, HiiyllnnAiunrlcun Sn«ur t>).»Uiroctur, Unitixl i.inlit uml Hnilwuy (>>..Formerly Vlc» I'riMldunt, Continental and I

Trait and'Hatlnft* tSaQk, ChlGUKo.Foundor and fimt I'cwiclent, InvMtmoot. U»Dkcr%

Assttciatlon. o •_

LORENZO C. DILK5Vloo Pronidpnt and Director, Uoorxn'-A. Fuller Co..-- Now York City. f . .1'rwldHnt and Dirm-tor, Citrollna HulplmiUlinic Oirjo .

faUon, WllmlnKton, N. C.

W . J . M c K H « ' ; . • ' . •Vice I*rnslilimt. Trnasnrdr rind Ulr»wt«r of

' lltitcliinMHi (>.. Now York City. -..Vloo President and Director. Crttnford Trust Odin-

[•any, Crunforil, N. J.• - . • • • " ' ' " - . • « ' • ' ' ' ' — •

OBOROEC. MOON .

IMroctor of Cranford Trrnit Orniimny, .Cranford, N. J-.I'nmidont anil Director Uourtio C. Motin Uo,, Uarwood,

• • • N . J . ' ; . - . - • . . . . • • •: x ; . ; ' ; - • " . ' • • •.

OEOROE H. FERQUSON"Attorney st-Law, Now York City,

nntitla.I tf>

upoa it arc not oarncu or paid

t?roforroa Stock iR«ue. incluwto,^»v« been K% timoB tho dividend roquiremontwNet earning for tho i°ar*Jil{'™ "*"• ^"r.^^Uollthn Halo of thin ia«uo will b« uno.1 to rotiro

,0 tUo l«r«forrod Stock now to.to ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ T ^ l ^ a , , ^ - of ,miUrUl« on » e»h diiebimt

ituoBO,wi.ohftvof.ucCfl«»fuiiy b u i u . ^ w ^ ^ . ' - j i . ; - : > • : . . -

' y . WE OFiTBK tillS STOCK LS UNltS OF

" 8 Shares of 8 % CumuWive Prefenwl S l o d and ••.•.',..;.^ J S tore of No P w V a t e O m m S t o c k . « $ 2 8 5 ^ Unit ,'J • £ . : : • y

i »i - ^ « . w » H for Mfelv"of principal.»ub»UnUal dividend y%W anil lojatojjroflt potwibiliti• S S S ^ ^ ' & ^ r ^ 8 by ft balaaeo pa lo oi n4ico of a l ^ ^

L. N ^ E i N T C ^STOCKS AND BONOS

roadway,bc^iu conUuuod'ar« based on infor^Uon

Y O R K «reliable, but ar* »ot

FR1JI0F ROLPCarpenter and Builcler

Bstlmates f urnUbwIf.W

Flr»tXbw» Work Oua

f

; ! J g & f

' : f - •"' : .•V^gBKBW'.lilsirWBfetiB"' "

~ •" WM&«M

X*

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Page 2: GEORGE C. MOON COMPANY - DigiFind-It · 2015-01-03 · Mutt hnu«*wlTn have daxen* of way* of r*-rn»kl»g of serving leftover meat* but to maoy throw away left-over vegetable*

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i

«r» m « < anrprtaeaaunjr an hamV« m l a»HUnKrnt »d<>< In u » katlto «froramonpUhc* Ufa.** .

What te Do With »*» of leftover*.Mutt hnu«*wlTn have daxen* of

way* of r*-rn»kl»g of serving leftovermeat* but to<> maoy throw away left-over vegetable* or serve them acalnwanned up In the same saor*. Vr*e-tadles of mi*! kind* admit «'f »o manyways of rooking that m a a tpooDfulshould nrrpT I* waited.

We hare any number 'of recipe*whfch t«-n na how to Mrve, trw «•«*•table In nny «iunntlly. but We have todo In this artUle with small amountsVhlch are Ixtiealti ibe rxjike of theaverage cook.

A spoonful of rooke>t bean* washedfrom the nanrw In- «hlru they werv

--served added to a po'»'o "I*1* willmake that quite another dish: the•sine I* true of |xii«. corn or othervegrlable*.

One cupful of stewed corn will makean rucalloped <ll«h sufficient for a •mallfamily, llultrr a baking dish, pat Inthe corn with alternate layers of bat-tered rrtimb*: dot «ch layer with bit*of butter If dry crumb* are omd.- andsprinkle with salt and prpper. Tourover enough milk with a beaten eggndded to cover the corn, tnd bake until

, flrni.A cupful of com will provide corn

fritter* for four pmnle. Add egg. atnlilp«|>™>iifnl T>r tallk imd~Hi>nr: tomalm a drop batter; add half a Ira-((pnonful of baking powder t» the flour;fry the *l«t» of forge oy»trr* In a well-gri-naril fr>lng PAH or»ln deep fat.

Tin-To Is no mummy In cnmbfnlngwith li-fliniTK i'i|M'ti«Hp fnmtt *ut!> • *biitlor. i ri-nni, «»irtt* an<1 milk, to makeIIIIMII pn>n imirti-r with I hi- family, forthn object In it-Ujtr leftovers l« to tiefrugal, mid Ht tbv inniv turn* ncrtfun

: illnh.

Corn Mulfina.Hint together otiv rupful of ntewr<1

rorn drnliifit'ilry; two cpe yolkn. one-<|iinrli'r trns|Mi<»iriil of Mtlt. a I'fi-•IHMinful uf iniliiil .butler; u<ld onempful <>f milk., orui niid onr-lmlf rnn-fuiit or Hour *iriii| nidi n ti'iitpoonrihof bnkltiK |H>wiU-r. Ih'nt tlRomunly furlive tiiliititim. thru fold In the well-.IHIIIII wlilttM of two ecu*. Half nillii'titt'tl munin IMII» and bake In • hotovi'll I'uilf uti hour.

Colil wrlnn iH-aii* make, an eirellenlanlail. Cook two alrl|>a of bacon, catIn illce linlll brown; add • bit «fmluii'i) onion, n i l and i^rfpor; add •Illllo vliifiair and the Ixana andhut.

—Ada * liprrrrans-rrnroupmror n u nOf urnte«l ctn-»iw to • aiuaU dish ofcrenme«l ulrlnic bf-oni. • I

A grt-en pea omelet make* a de-llcluun lunrhitm dtsh. Drain a "cupfulof cooknl pea*. nui»h with the back ofa apoon and arason nllh salt and pep-

per. Wben the omelet la ready to fold,spread over It the peas; fold and fit-Ish cooking.

A sauce 'for lamb chops may bemade of the usual white sauce withpras addfd. Serve as a garnish oil theplatter of lamb chops.

Kralloped onions are especially goodnxlng cold Cooked onlona. a layer ofgrated chreae. and a capful of whitesauce. Oak* covered with butteredcrumbs.lOwifkt. UK. WMtm

O—

FolksBy EDGAR A. GU1ST

OAODIia.

I wonld rati*r bi tb* daddyOf • romping, ronglib craw.

Of a hrfghnyad tbobby UddlaAnd a Uttla girl or two

Than Ida mooarcb of a nationIn hit blgn and lofty Mat

Taking empty adorationfrom tb« aubjacta at hia fast

I would rather own tbdrI At at night to roe tbtf run

Thao to be the king who mAll the ilrnpler fonna of fan.

When the dreary day la sadinf11a !• dlatnally alone.

Hat wlren my *un la descaodlngThere' are Joys for to* to

fie may ride to norm and dramming,I mint wnrtc a quiet street,

nm whim onc« they ae« m« comingThen on Joyous flying feet >

They come rnctna; to me madlyAnd I cntch them with • swing

And I u y It proudly, gladly,That I'm happier than • kits.

Yoa m»r »nlk of lofty plncoa.Yon may boast cf pomprand power,

Men. ttiiy turn tholr eager tacesTd the (lory of an hour.

Hut give roe the humble stationWith Iti Joys that long •nrriva,-:

For the daddies of the nationAre the happiest men alive.

(Copyright by Kdgtr A. dnaat.)

SCHOOL DAYS

Rann-dom ReelsBy HOWARD L. RANN

CURIOSITY

C L'UIOSITY It an effort to aecureInfornintlun which belongs to

tuiinrnody elw.Then! Is a KTv«t deal of Informa-

tion lying'around loow which wouldnot look w«ll If printed on the frontpticr, nnd If It w»rv not for curioaltjrIt coiilil kirk around «n the fourcor-nrra for wwki a( a tine without l>e-Ing picked up ant wuvrn Into a law;milt. Them I* ciutxldprable cnraplalntunout the activities of curlojltjv hatIt prubahly krv|» more p -oplf .fromhelping build good rwail» for the statathnji the prickings of conscience.

Curiosity Is rajMed by the noac"be-comlnit elongated and prying Intootln-r people'a buslnno. ilany a man

An Itfoct te Secure Information WhichBatons* te Somtone Else.

1 ha* begun life with a nose of normaldimensions, and after becoming ad-dlcteii to the curiosity haWt haasprouted a proboscis longer than thoAnt-eater, Tttert have been Instanceswhere this roving tendency haa beenresented by* lt» victim, who posbeathV nosa bads .to tta proper locaUoa

rwi lb ' l t f t^t im. L ' ' ' . , J-i ,> <*nrin*t»« > >hoBld be guarded

i the cat* «* ha*>lav the

i ttfttte*

hl» flno. St-orvs of happy honiMItem broken up by llio Koislp

cur(o»lty haa inn OMT thodam and convinced a crvdulous «lfothat »hc hnd mnrrlrd a k'liy UuharloIristrad of a manter brlcklnyer.

Curiosity "which In not foiu*d In ennl>c cured by rending . tho pnniMoalH.ut the mote and' the bcum andtrnlnlnK "the now to kivp on tho alilc-vralk. There would be -lr%a bale-ful cnrlo«lty at work In this country»f people would look, tnsldft a little,.oftenw nnd not worry JSO muchabout how their neighbor* caiK affonljwrk tenderloins twice a wi-oU,-' Ifnobody would go off his own premrseawhen he feel* 1UM> doing a little pro-mlccaous prying, there would be betterfeollnj; and fewer blickbiftla cast Inthe lodge. "~l1-- \ _

(Coprrtstit.)

LastNight'sDreams-What They Mean

DID YOU DREAM OF CHILDREN!

alt thoaa who claim.to bewrwd In the affairs of Dream-

land declare tbc dreaiuchild 'to be ablesslug. There are oihern—« few o?<l«jnlcs*-»ho sevm to Iwk uptin drvttft-chlldrra from the vtewimlut of a mud-«cn landlord of tlw actual world. Ac-cording to the majority tt la a. goodomen to'hear or «ee many cMldntnlaughing and playing J&cut the hou**-ofarpamar The little 8nci wltl britqtyon sneccw and If yon join In theirplay there la mnch fcapnlucss In storefor yon; especially It yon have no chil-dren of year own. To the childlessmarried Md to the unmarried theOnatneMld brings all the napplnmnand good :fonune which, actual chJl-dtt» ought to, and freqaently do not,bring thett parents. Girls are ttouphttote a fcctieromen^aiaB boya;*batboth nean food fortune—and b« soreto play wUh them If possible.* » ' » • * »*~«»a-y BOWWy , T

c* Melas ddldrea te order lo

W, CEOftGE MATTHEW APAM«

T IS itn Kconomtc truth tfcnt mostwork It undertaken for Hewurd,

would not bu dona without lleward,nnd Is streuuous nnd well directed Inproportion to tho lleward. So Tuusslgstates lit Ills "Principles of Econom-ics." This condition will undoubtedlyalways, remain true, but If you wntit tobo imToifg TVioso who are this syorld'sLeaders in Thought nnd Action-

Do a little more than that for whichjou nro ltewnrded/

Fortune does more than favor thsBrave. It favors the Alert nnd Indus;trluus—tbo Thinkers whose Thoughtsreach several miles beyond their nay"envelopes. Gintavus F. Swift loyalnnd enthusiastic In his Job as'a poorItutcher boy In an Insignificant NcSWEngland town, and Qustavwi F, Swift,'founder mid builder of Swift h Ooja-pany furnishing the Meats and pro;vision for millions, la a cuse In polntlHe saw .Howard BEYOND his pay en-'velope.' Do a little raoro than that for which

you are," Itewarded.Ilut remember thnt Money and Ma-'

'teriat Achievement Is not always B&&cess, Lincoln left next to nothing laMoney, but bis life was rui Evidence" MIn Itself of what he felt embodied In-finitely inore 'than all Material lie-wnsjl. No one nor anything Is able toffhc you In Happiness and Content-ment what your own Character andand Peucu of Mind can. .

Do a little MORE than that forvttolch you ore' Rewarded.

b« fortumttc; tbouph for a generally,ntl-round go«Ml luck dream thereshould be many of them. To dream ofa tingle child means. If you are mar-rled, that one Is coon to be born toyou. It tho child la-pretty, freat-Ttea*.ure and considerable good fortuneawait pon. It t£« child. U ugly theomen-Is not so favSnbleL. . » 'p W I « M 5 e r hand^say thfct to dream nf talking with alot of ftttdren means losses, and toifre a chVd at Its tnother'a breast, UI-nea< If you are ootmor*,careful ofyow health. However, the lovers ofthe dream-child are In aitjr

DAHLIAS ASiH A8TEH8

IT WAS getting to be very coldwantftar. but the Dahlias aad As-

ters growing In the garden by thehigh atone wall did not seem to mindIt

Th* leaves had fallen from the treesthe night before, and as they rustledpast they called to the flowers: "Tonbetter go to sleep. Jack Frost gavens a terrible fright last night In hiswhite coat-"

The sparrows In the tree met- thegarden wall looked down and chat-

turcd: "You silly flowers I Don't youknow It Is cold and you will freeze?Oo to bed I

The bare limbs of the trees wavedback and forth, crackling In the wind,to warn them that lt was getting late,tufr-the-Dnhllns-and-tbe^sters-only-l-h.

raised their bright heads and nodded.-What care we for tha chill, crisp

alrr they said tit eacfe other. "Wohave been asleep all summer. Whyshould we hurry away, now Oast woare herer

The cold wind came that night andtold them that winter was on hla wayand they better go to sleep, and therain came down to teU them It mightbe Its last visit 'or the snow wasgetting Impatient to falL

The next morning the sun came outand the Datllas and Asters laughedas they bobbed about "Who Is afraidof snow? We are not: why, we Justlove the cold, crisp air."

"Ton flowers better go to sleep."called-a squirrel from the top-of thegarden wall. "Don't you know wehad a frost last night and lt la latefor flowers to be outf"

"We are not afraid of frost orsnow," called back the flowers, "andwhy shouldn't • we stay a long time?Why does everyone tell us to go tosleep?"

But that night old North Windcame down from his cold white homeand ..over the garden wall he flew,-grumbling and muttering. "Where arethey, where are they?" be asked.

And. straight to the Dahlias nnd As-ters he flew In a terrible temper."What Is all this I hear about yourho asked. '

"Don't you know lt Is time yon wereIn bed and asleep? It Is Thanksgivingtime nnd tfco people want snow, an'lere—you—are—holdlm

laona. On M oed, all of1 And then how he old Wow andter about! The poor Dahl&ul and Aa>ten hustled Irfto bed and .when saoravIng came they were fast asleep nader .a blanket of snow, and .never one« didthey show their beads «ntU the nextyear.

Ptarple Domi

By CAJU. KZMINGTON

j p i T H ROBFJlTS•<<exun.tr

Nod Yard >trhad opncelver and ta^Uned > u ban<

- bead to Uateav A woman's wlcaover the humming ««r» from adistance—a thln#*eedy voice sptto a mere thraaainlta effort to

i cried hfamasemeni/voice cams laughingly <

At last neXhouted.**»«'.bung op the recelverrTwRJEols!

j ' In his.ear* from her b.^thousand miles away. As he t

back tn hla desk <tie growled babout old laves who would not rburied In the past.

That night be met Paula Dai~ " fiancee, at a dinner. She -men

the bol mosque at Watersedge.Caswell calls It, a "moon fete'—i

. '* Minv«ak—even at supper.- Of Proapaeaeyer to know one'i

taHUt. and Mrs. George Mack, c

street, retorned today from

Bdlth Roberta Is among the most ex-perienced of the "movie" stars; al-though only twenty-two years old' shehat been with one producing firm alnee1812. She started aa a child gctraaa.

1 DUNNO wot's matter forlnssu treefour week. I no ifo'ln nmblsh.

EvurytcetiK too itiooeha/fiot for feelnRood. For flvn, seexn.tlme everyday Itry go Bomeplnce and da collar on daueck ecs go seeck before getta start

Other night I starta out for inakadance wevth one girl and before datmuslo ces queota work I gottu roastchceckun een da arms. I getta Ideado weather man ces go to sleep on daJob. Mebbo da innchlne wot he niakawecnter wceth eel broES OBwnTTdunno.

But I gotta Idee nnd eef I am rightI no keek nuy more boutn too. moochuhot You know lusa year and da yearbtforo dat ono everybody decsa. coun>try say, "To H Wooth da Kaiser."'i'lenta tliuo myselti suy dat s&inating.

Well, when dn war was light eon dawecnter time we no gotta moocha cooKfor tnaka dnt place ver hot. Butik summer ces go to work^ariil wo

"no gotta moocha use for da coiil dnguy wot run dat. [ilnco. surd builda

I tlnk eef dat flro wns made for datson-of-a-Run wOt'stnrtn War ecs nllaright for still say, "To II Weothdn Kalsert" But eef dat ecs no dareason/- for everything gotta so hotJusar between you and mo and no foripreiulu round I say— ]

"To H Wceth da Weather."Wot you tlnk?

ALWAYS AT IT.

I >aiv her on tin train—Slttln'Knlttln'.

She had ttltchet on the brain— »•Slttin'Knlttln'.

It waa not it «turJy sockFor wm*' member of her flock.Out iomtiUdo for a frock—

Slttln'Knlttln'.

Never n w her but ah* w uBlttln'Knlttln'.

Oueu that't all ah* ever dow—Bltttn'Knlttln'.

Bet you when her hair It hoaryAnd the'a UtteJ horn* to glory.It will be the u n u old ttory—

BlUIri'XnltUn'.

• • •Evil. ,

Evil Is what the love of money Is theroot qfc_ _ I

The roof'lrf the lowest part, of course.There is ltjss iinnnlmlty of opinion as

to wlint Is the height or evil,y^if everything else thrived ns well un-der opposition ns evil does, this wouldD« a fnr OltTerentworld.

i:vll Is nlsn what men do that livesafter them. If BUI Shakespeare Is to bedepended 'on.

Somebody a long time ajo labeled aTot of thlnusl"evil" and we have stuckto the labels pretty faithfully,

I5nt most of the things they (marked•c\ll" should have- been placarded"foolishness." - . ,

People who exerefyw all the Intelli-gence they have do nothing that Isrenlly evil.

And they have n fine time, with no

lUuiiuiiiiiuuiiiuimiiiiuiiniunKinimiiimiiiiiLiiimuiiiiiLtiiniraiiiuiiiiuiiuj

BEAUTY CHATSby-EdnaJSLent Forbes ,

RTmiiTiiriTiiiiiiiiiimiimnnummmiiiifflmmiiminiiiiiiiiuninui

TIIE NAILS

F POSSIBLE every woman shouldhave a professional manicurist go

over hemalls once In'a while, unlesssho Is quite expert at doing them her-self. She sfcould Bluo have a profes-idoual go over her feet once every

h

I

few months. > Tha charges^ for suchwork a n always moderate, andthe pntu^and 'expense saved later, bytho prevention of corns and other trou-

ore than worth lt. It is likegoing to a dentist twice a year, tosave expensive aillnga later. .

At home, the nails should receive atittle attention each day. The akinshould be pusted back with an orangewond'stlck, to prevent' Its growth overthe nail Itself, and any small piecesthat collect and harden along the sideof the nail should" be clipped off. Thenails should be kept tiled to a smallrounded point Vaseline rubbed Intothem every htght will prevent ridgesforrulag,' unless there Is a quantity ofUnwln the blood.

For the regular manicure, the nailsshould be filed to shape arid rubbedwith cold cream, after the fingers havebeen held In soapy warm water. Thenth« loose akin Is scraped off" withedge-of-Jhe file,'the ctjtfcl* cut orpushed back, and all the'hard skin cutaway from, the Ude* tUl the naU ap-pea/a a perfect oval, set hi the Anger.Then the bleacfc Is pat ttnder tae nail.t« any Uoeeded. the poHahla put on.uv* th*-naU ta pnHahed with a huffier

with chalk. Than all roofe and

X«e Bea Waijto Have Pretty HandsIs to_Hav» Pretty Nalla.

powder to .washed off gently, and a »naO. pink'1 andtperfect..recelrea'teflaal poBsh. by. rubbing lt 'tr1*** tha•QAlDK Cat t tk# ksaUfetJL

CROSBY'S KIDS

\

Chief of Polio* James Hennafamily are ipending their *aKeaoaburg.

Howard Schiadlerv of the finmeat, is acting aa day daak miUee beadqaartan.

Stanley H. Chadwlck and fUnion avenue, have returnedoatingat Bay Head.

Rahway Post No. S, Americai-wUI-nn-an-eseumlen—to-Asbiiand Ocean Grove on Thursday,bar 2. -

N. JiUazflald haareaignedtlon with the Grsaford Trust Cand will enter the employ o

. New York broker.

big heads or next mornings on otherpopular brands of hang-over.

llijst of the time when we ask, "Is lt.right?" we could i:et the unswer moresuddenly If we snld:

"Is It IntelllRent?"Many things once labeled evil are

not so.We were brotiRht up to believe that

card plnjlnp is evil, intrinsically.Also dancing—see,, whiz! Dancing

whs the wor«t thing there wasf •Murder was n Sunday school exer-

cise compared with It.If one plays canH wheh one should

be nnd could be dolnp sornAthlng help-ful nnd necessary. It Is wrong.

So would corn hoeing or onion weed-In)? be.- If you were neglecting some-thing more Important for l t

Ditto dnnclng. ? •Although we do believe It wrong for

anybody to do it as badly as we do. -A dnnclng teacher told us so, once.This Isn't all we know about evil.

f But It's all we're going to tell here.

Making Up Time.Father Time was looking nnxlously

nt his reflection In the mirror.•Hei gouged nt the bits of njKment In

the pores of his skin'and rubbed vi-ciously at the-rouge-marks on his Up*and the. sooty place In his eyebrows.

"It's almost Impossible for me ta .keep a decent) complexion-," he com-plained, bitterly. "Those railroadtrain,, men are always getting behindme and then niAktng me up." .

k • •

f'lNNIGIN FILOSOFYTh' kUiatt t'ing FT mnaybody

t' tee it th' other felUr't on-plisant juty. ' ' _

I ga

How He Felt -,t"Did my husband appear to miss me

during the mouth I was owuy^Mary?"asked a matron of whom the Evening.Post tells.

"Weil, ma'am, at first be was In veryhigh spirits, but about a week ago bebecame Tess cheerful," and yesterday,ma'am, he was Just miserable."

What the Sphinx SaysBy NEWTON NEWKIRK.

"Honesty. ,among a "cer-tain percent-age of busi-ness" m e awant out'of

A Edward R. Beadle, of Springi•»s, is at Mnhlenbent hospitl

read "\ nicely from an operatmoral nrv- I was It. U " - j j R 0 , M U l l i t r ,

• and overheard UJP... "~ „for a purple domino fo« •ftin. r

! not clever to tell you. cherlc?,Ines liurtha is coming on for I

' and a little btrd told me that «I' 'to wenr a purple satin domino

Paula tossed the note Into 'and sitting on a hassock she v

Jier slim arms around her kn«Pwatched the licking flame--thoughtful eyes. She was

i^f'1 thing with hair like pale connH I great gray eyes oddly fringe!'"''= black lashes; but she passl

loved Noel and she Had his 1<devotion. She was bound to h

. to her always—there wasblood In her veins.

There was dancing In the m<on the closely shaven grass

' the softly lighted pavilion.' myriads of richly sttired dance

a kaleidoscope of colprs. Thequiet waits 'leading td the wateand rose-covered arbors whenwalked. A stringed orchestraIntoxlcatlngly and among thethere were always the pair oldomlnos. A smalKCoTumblnIng blithely enough with aisheik, followed with Intent ey

"Two I" she told herself v.1.beating heart, as they dancedalike; the same height and bul

' der, erect In long garmentspurple satin with polnted~Eo<ceallng the hair. Behind thoisatin masks, lurked—what?

And the purp'e domluos dai"Inez," -whispered one, "you rme Into a rather bad senflancee-r"

'•&•" , «|dlot—bother your fiancee,'' iliiaV1 Miss Murtha arrogantly,

must spare me this one event—you can be with her the rentdays—while I—"

"ton do not care—you neveijjr3' be said sullenly. "Ton are o

* now because you are not onteims with Mrs. Carwell andylt a treat lark to comet* hiincognito I"

"Woof I l Hear the old beat.mocked Inez. "Guess Ann <uy own cousin and 1 can conhoose- -we fight like cats, boways make up—I shall tell h<bedtime—"

Noel was not listening. 1were anxiously searching tlfor a Uower girl,'but not ODspecies did be see.

"I am tired." said Inez pert!shall tit in the rose arbor yoyou niustrdance'w}th some,What Is aiss Dare wearingr

Noel s'ow'ed under his brved. uway. Tlien she wasind »he did not like to I

fiU'\d feet enmched the

ith and ahe looked, up. In,_T,ay was poised a small CSwho suddenly tew, across t

fand sat donn beside her. ">ertejl, putting out a small 1recbgnlxed you. dear—I wai

L-'-« you now—when you -cannot?»,& face—you have not forgottf you still love me—"

• The' purple-clad arms en*;% . for a moment In a tight embi

Inez, turned and fled.The purple domino*; met or,

tr terrace, . ., •"Ondrella la tylnjj-.aald i

,Jt „ ry. -rre had a charming a

Page 3: GEORGE C. MOON COMPANY - DigiFind-It · 2015-01-03 · Mutt hnu«*wlTn have daxen* of way* of r*-rn»kl»g of serving leftover meat* but to maoy throw away left-over vegetable*

. * -- * • . ;

-&:>

" V '\ .

••f • • : -«

S3®

am

I?mple Dominos

By CAM. REMINGTON

. Notl Tard atdsad np t^teicphoo*; receiver and melmed vfcta handsome• bead to ll»w*v A woman'* voice cam*

over to* humming,jirire from a greatdistance—a tbln#nedy voice spun oat

. t e a mere tbtmi lnlta effort to.rewh

"lneal"/5a erW3 bTamaiement. and• the thu»/v*)ce came laughingly oppor-

At last bexhouted.**K«.anduva'.np the recelverTTwicvgice stillummlng' In hi* ears''from her bom* a

'''thousand mile* away. As he turnedback to his -desk the growled bitterlyabout old laves who would not remainburled In the past.-. •"•:-.

That night he met Pauls. Dare, hlaBaucee, st a dinner. She. •mentionedthe bal masque at Watersedge. "Ann

• Caswjell calls It, a tnoon fete'—no one-'**' • Insxaak—even at supper. I am1 of Prcapeevtyer to know one's partA,;v>:*flaJ»a|A»On;

,bj. aad cnigr«t*da11a*j*—-ah*) t i 'tlMin«Mw thta*. aad t fteJ natty wkfe-ltd that I Aav* nosed her a -hearts***!.

- l e a f I m mctr ho •sksri•JHi to* roe* artor. ftbtt tk*o*fct It

wm»-h»rr».»be ssay Meape—" Star'taught* floated back to a U aa ate

Not FatalIn tb* row arbor -h* found a amaO

CWemhln* sitting vary stiff asd whit*with tragic eyes, .,....•-.. . -, ~: .-•

Htoo hay* return**.* she *ald dnQy.He looked across at her aorrowfal

f a e * . ' » . _ • - • - ' •'. /• "I a n a«rry I h u t yo«. <bar.* b*•aM humbly, "but I nally did sot rec-1oignla* yoq—yon amid a flower girl, and *youi ar» a Columbine." - , '

"And yoq said yoa. would be * grayfriar—and yon are not." she {gashed.

II* watched her uncertateTy. H*knew that their furore happtseaa wasat atake—this was tb* great momentof their live*; rljghtly'Uved, all wouldgo well. If h* evaded the trntn—

"I want to tell yoa all about It." b*said evenly, aa he came'and sat dowabeside! her, "so that everything may b*dear between as always."

As she . listened she crept near,nearer, until their face* touched. "Iam glad because, you did It—*o youcould-tell It to me-^hl* way." ah*whispered.

Important* of Early TrestmcntIt Ernptiasfctwl; by New

' , YortSpeclalrt.

«««• «»"» IUU 1*01

InsascUaa ef Hid** and Pur* Under«av*rnm*nt Regulatlen Is Urges]

by Doctor—Cur* Tatna

of the **riy-day activity ofavrordlns to fUlph' tlltiMcn.Us* «l*CBWI«» wall* i nwinMUair I *

i«e* on th* Island for th* Day*.

anthrax should b* a matter of gar-crniaent ref»UtV*o.* said Pr. OwrleaNorrtt, clilrf medical ixamlaer. whobad llateaed. to tb* dlacttaUaa. "It lawry Dearly Unpoaalbl* to disinfectwttbont destroying th«-object dtaln-rcctcd. I know of only on* prore**and It la a long «oc About the onlytiling I can as*,for any OM to do atth* ptwwnt tfaa* la t* take a chance—and If he contract! anthrax get propertreatment with the serum liunif->ll«t*ly.U la eaay to cur* It If It 1* diagnosedtaU>t

Tb* bristles o*th* *gUi flher* from- th* JawbaM. of th*ettagare*' and ' th* -puff" probablywould *e«m hmvy today; for althoughft tnok* 111* the modern hit of down.It feel* Ilk* a lump of lead." It * uused. It'la •aid, ta crush.' the ochrewith which UM Indians bcautUMthemselves. , ' ',-

SPOUSE TOOK HER NAME

( *Ther* area t enough caan to alarmNew Tort—Dr. iSouflas 8ymmft«. • n » <""••" •»?«*«>* Sytnioers said. -But

director of the paihologlcal labora-1«» crops up her* and there all or*r

lir. and Mrs. George' Mack, of Willoi .^ ^ t h a t r B S k e d A n n ^ mstreet, returned today from a * t » y » u t e r m u, e e«nlng.-

. Blues Islsnd.j '. • •-• •> »jnst a Columbine and a mad purpleChUfofPoUoa Jama* Hsonastey an dominodancing alohe In the monn-

famlly are spending their vacation

th* most ex-1 stars; al-ar* old sh*i(j firm sines

IDS

\

Howard Bchlndler, of the Bra depafmant. is acting aa day dsak man at pilies baadqoartera. • ',

Stantoy H. Cbadwiek and family. ,Unioa ajtsaaa, hare returned from ajoaUagat Bay Head. : ' !

Rahway Post No. S, American Legioa1

-wUlra>ant " "

light." somebody laughed. Rut It wasmore than thatn-ft wa»-.plprfe<t Joy.

FRENCH FLORISTS IN LEAD

Horticulturists of. That Country Ac-knowledged to B* th* Finest

In the World.

Some of the most wonderful floralwhere the

and Ocamn Qro»o on Thursday.bar 8. - . - 1

N. J^Uaxflald has resigned hut pf"tion with the Cranford Trust Oompo.and will enter the employ of T. *T

> Chapman, New^York broker. o u

^ Edward B. Beadle, of 8pringh>lcfte, is all Muhlenbenc hospital r re-

read v . nicely front an ti^oymomlnis>«. . .

TsnaoYeTnearu uir.tt . j . , , ^ .tor a purple domino n>«-°nu«r'Am Inot clever to tell you. cherle? Also—In ex Murtha Is coming on for the ball

; and a little bird told me that she wass t o wear a purple satin domlno-r"

.'•SPauia tossed the note Into the fire,snd sitting on a hassock she wrapped

slim arms around her knees andv.-,_tched'' the 'licking flames with! thoughtful eyes. She was a tiny

thing with hair like pale cornsllk andgreat gray eyes oddly fringed withblack: lashes; but she passionatelyloved Noel nnd she bad his love anddevotion. She was bound to hold himto her always—there was lightingblood In her veins. . ,

ed evil ore- i >

believe thatslcnlly. '."•'si Dancingwn»K"' .'•"school exer-

one.shouldlathing'help* ~W ' -.onion weed-•ctlng some-It ;•'.

It wrong foris we do.» so. once,lbout evil.> tell here. .

e..'.\ • 'ig anxiouslyrror. •r pigment InI rubbed vi-i on his Up*eyebrows,.for me to.»,"-he com-se "railroadsKing behind

• * " • ' - • ; • • ' • . .

OFYsnaybodyll.r'. on-

• :>y >r to miss meivuy,,MaryJ7;:the Evening

was In very |•reek ago h«I yesterday,• a b l e . " • > . " ;

Wi>

There was-dancing In the moonlighton the closely shaven grass and In

' the softly lighted' pavilion,- wheremyriads of richly attired dancers madea '.kaleidoscope of colors. V- There werequiet walks'leading,td the water's edgeand rose-covered arbors where loverswalked. A stringed orchestra playedIntoxlcatlngly a.nd among the dhncersthere were always the pair of purpledominos. A smalKCoTumblne, danc-ing blithely enough with an Arabsheik, followed with Intent eyes.

"Two!" she told herself with.fast• .beating heart, as they 'danced past,-sg

alike; the same height and build, -'.'••.der; erect. In' long- garments^ ot

purple satin with pofn.tedTioods.'ceallng the-, balr." Behind those -'satin mask* lurked—what?

And the purple domtuos danced en-"Inex," -whispered one, "you havewbome Into, a rather bad scrape-will

:j. i u w B » e — ' * • • • • : , - •• . • .

'^iSfilpt—bother your fiancees" rtgf,^|ed- ! Miss Murtha arroganUy. , n o t

:: must spare me this one evening, ,—you can be with her the rest of 'dayW-whlte I—"

"Ton do not care-^-you never ct* byhe said sullenly. "Ton are onlj- l t a i t

how'because you are not on spcteims with Mrs. Caswell and jouit a great lark to comet* her house1

i n c o g n i t o 1 " . . •'•:•'.-• • , . •

"Woof Iv pear the old bear growl,"mocked Inex. "Guess Ann tasWeTTsuy own cousin and I can come to herhoose-^-we fight like cats, bat we al-ways make up—I shall tell her beforebedtime—-

Noel, was not listening. ' But eyeswere anxtOHsly searching' the place

! forji Jower girl," but not /one of the,species did he see"

tarles of Bellevue'anU allied hoapltaia,•aid that the case oT Frederick U.Post, polo player, who was discharged

, a* cureii of anthrax from Itellevue,* » I B O » I Important In that It may *uv

iphaalte that antnrax Is not a "fatsl"disease. , ;

"Mr. Post1* case wns diagnosed In(rime," I»octor Synimers sn-ld, "ThatI Is the most Important thing. Oet. »nanthrax case early enough and a cureIn practically certain. This Is the Dfthcase to be cured In Reltevue with th*•erum prepared by Um United Statoadepartment of animal Industry. ,

"I u-oiiM like to niiUta it a» t-raphat-Ic as possible,In this corinefllon thntnsie in newspapers of the phrniie 'dead-ly nntlirnx1 has a bad effect hot. onl>on the pnbljc g;ni>nilly hut on nny,pB-tlent thut mny bi> <IIHIIT twnWient.Vpu sw a nulTi-rer from niulimx Isfully ennm-tous tlirnuKhuut lut> dlst'ose1..l ie Is'jwt ns clenr inentnll/ns any oneup to pi-rhnps tlu> last' hour.'" If It,

t,o bo a enso that xvii* not

the and the newspapers C«UIt'Meaiily' and every one gets *V«isried. Mr. post came to the hospjtnton-the fourth day of the dls*ase.*ndbe was In tlm*. The enrller Jth* h«»ter, iioweveK Where It gets' danger^

That country holds first rank omoncthe countries l«r the development ofmethods for the lmprovemrri't of wod-

ga...for progress in artlnVtsl fcrtillia-tlon of «ve<Is. «nd for the- Illation of

hefflre the war Francet

The chief reason for this is herrealization that nature cannot betrusted toi mate the bes* with thebest, but that this must, tie taken Inhand as much by the florist as by theanimal brwder.

.From ench sort of »eed the horti-culturist chooses for reproduction pnr-posea thow free fmm every blemish.Now. It often rei)aires much time tofix a variety and to recoenlte In aseedling the dominant characteristicswhich Identify this variety. As soooas the plants have flowered It Is nec-essary to Isolate the specimen* jhow-Ihg the marks of t i c desired type.

This Is done by means of a lightgauze net covering the flowers In ques-tion, and preventing Insects and otheragents'from carrying out the processesof natural fertilization, ijaen theneeds are gathered, the snbilects forthe-creation of the .new generation are

That Is a (wullnrlty of nntlirnx.Bad for Morale.

"Xow, In Mr. I'ost's case, he- wasfeeling In excellent .spirits, nii'l hi'wanted the newKpnrteri*.. -Then* wns

'" i <"»*('iise for not givingwhen he P>t them ho

. ._ . . _ . . „_ . ...>a4lly.antlirnz' nnd that Itwouldn't be known for ti»n dnjn wheth-erhe would live.or not. nml It wasn'tparticularly (roml 'tnedlclne for hlamorale. Mr. Tost It lmpi*''ied. Was «

ous .Is whnt the Infectlnn gats Into theblood. The cur* take*' about tenday*.". • • • / .

Doctor Hymmer* snlil that th* ah.Ihnu linclllns first was <|l*cflver«><l In4873. It really Is cultivated In a

IslHiratory, he niMiM.

ABORIGINES POWDERED NOSE

B»e«nt Find Briews1" Qlrls ef P'r*hl*-toNo Ag* P*autl(l*d ThemMlv**

With Oehra.™ ~ - • - ' - j > • . - ,

• t.oTi. Antcjrs.'•••'Cat."~ Pn^iintdajwith tliplr iti»m*ilcs, ornniw'

itlrks nnd null; luiwdor*. "mnv•Imurlrn'il to lou'rn tliul theirml ulsnern, who dlsportmlIPKIIIO tlit> ,l'.a'clflc Kvnt'ratlnns nsn.

knew tuiiiiMliliit: Bhout IMTKOIIIII adorn.lUflll.

A dtone

.aereral years, a worth-wwill have been achieved.' .

ile result

M«xlc»n . Dla!«ct*. i'. From Sonpra to Tncatan lei Mexicomore than fifty separate dialects, arespoken. All the Inhabitants of th*west coast, however, with: the excep-tion of some hill tribes ot Indians, canunderstand Spanish. Of these Indiansthe 8.000 Taquls, with their crudeBtrCotete, hill forts,'their weird cere-monial masque, dances auA their war-like aUJtode. are; easily most consplco-

After six weeks of rain and cloudyweather the sun has .been visible twodays run Ding bat Old Sol seems a bituncartaln whether to stay, with as ornot There has bean so litti* sun thisSummer vegetables do not ba«* theirproper flavor, and the Wet weather, baaalmost .rained certain crop*, potatoesand tomatoes in particular. • _

•Michael Boyle, of Jersey City, •.lab-orer employed by the Lehigh ValleyRailroad Company, fell from a caratCentennial' avenge, Tuesday noraine;.An ambulance of lha General Haapttalbrought'the man to tha boapitali>>'

man'of fine cournce, TIIKIand rnre cntn«)es». UP was u ' .did pntlpr\t.. so rending' about themythical dcndllness of nnthrnx hi thenewnpflnM accounts didn't hnvi- as budan effect on him as, It might,

"But there are other iiatlpntu «nffeting from. anthrnx here and thereabout the conhtrv. and Ihe chancelare there will be more In Bcllevne.The public "hould be educated as towhat the dlaeaiw renlly In.

"Anthrnx. at Uie outset. Is rnnnlfested.hy a characteristic lonlon at thepoint of Inoculation. Tills usually Ison the face, as In Mr. Post's cn,««. Itlooks like tin ordinary pimple, red andttchlne. Within n ilny or BO the pim-ple breaks down Into a lnrge. blackishulwi suiromwled-' ' *IHilnless swelling.' "That one rjlmple and swelling- Isall i h e risible sign tnere may be ofthe-dlrenite. Rut, If the swelling Is onthe-cheek, as In .MrNPost'* case, Imay be' enormous, closlnjt^'i*' eye!

MVMW - I # «IIA i1laAflu».1a tnki»n r"Now, If the dlsonse Is taken richthere, a cur* Is practically certainN o ' one with any such symptom•hould wait an Instant. Any one whhas m o .the characteristic tmlon o.anthrnx cduld not full to Identify It Instantly across a room.' . . , - ' 8*rum Is Effective.' .

?At Bellevue the percmtaEe of rare-h thi» government'serum I* 100 per

, jt Qf the 20 canes treated In the|C* three years seven have (lljeoV Bo.

petl last ;tlre. Which are the lonly one*tioa which the serum has been usgd,gTeV been cured. #- .~ * n i e disease Is caused by a Inrw," ^re-bearln)» nnctllus.. very reslstnnt

i l l forms, of disinfection. It yieldsfat readily to: steam under pressure.

heap! probability la that Mr. Post was

"iiowilcr puff" fouinl ou

Cook on Lo*t Boat PickedUp In the Open Sea

Jncksohvllle, IHn.—A fCinik. mrmher of the crew of

^tne Wlnlhrop, whlrh went downoff Capo Henry July 1.1. wn«lirniik'tit hero by the MesmerKokonio. The Qreek ivas picket)up In the-open am nhnrtty afterthe Wlnthrnp foundnml. OthermemlnTs of the crew who </mtrplelitHl. up by n atenmer nnd

• Innded at Norfolk hml reportedthe cook and a mess boy asdtowned. ,

THI BIRO*.

"Thw* W*T« sit *lrds aad th*y b*>loagwl t« two girl* named Louis* and

i M l>rtrt 'The birds w«r»canary birds andthey sang almost'*I4 ot th* tlm*.

Th«r* wtr* theparent bird* Mdih* other four-w*re

\ h f children. Tr«e,Mrs. Canary: didn't«tng " Very much.HIT household du>tie* kept her bnty,and' although artvat many of herliousehold • dutieswere saved hut-be-

•tune Ada andInutile, d i d ttirmarketing a n duotueiclvanlng forher, still ah«. warit-

to fw>r-ttnrt «Each Morning.

was ready to look aftvr her homo ntany tlmo anil Hint she wasn't an IdleMr*. »'«nnry. *-. .' •

"Ada unit I.ouls* kept ths' ragesclcnn nml guve IN canarle* frttlhwntnr nml dvsh neitl vaiii morning,and 'each iiiofhlnBthvy had thi'lrtmih"nnd tlivy hml 11 |ili'ca of rvfri'»hlni{lottucc Bftvrwnrds-anil Uiclr piccra of

fish were put back lutu each

Mr*. Alfred (I. Corhln <if Oininoik,Vn.,.Isn rval. liKjpuieet fur her hus-band. 8h»;>haa Just returned to-NvwYork on Ihe B. 8. atnurelaula after abusiness tour lu llollnnd fnr bur Im*-bntid, a member of th* Wall slrrvt

| IImi of Lrnch A Co. When thoy Wvre.nmrrlnl. each liked-Mrs. Cnrliln's 4iUIVirginia name so wvll that they de-cided to assum* that, InMirad of tlwliUlbnnd's nnrne. Bho carries "fwedoll* which she braiiglit fnim llollnndfor her dnitifhter, liged nineteen. Tliulrnauiu* or* "I.eldn" and "Airy."

Alnrtn bell* can now bisWrung b)wireless at a dlatshcv of 100 mile*.

Can't IVosecute

iS»w Mm. <'nnary .nsi'd to tnlk toher clilldrpii— Hioy were In two bigens** which''.were Joined together, two

niirnnnis cugvs, fur Adn anil IJIUIHIItlu>iii2ht It was vrry, cruel nnd not atnil full1 tu |"H csnarleii lu llttli; n>K<".—nml they tildii't vet their ciiiinrli'S un-til they could afford to »>'l nice CURI-Hfor them wo.

• " | t would lie hii'nii,' L011I110 hailsntd. 'to net the canaries bwniiso wi>hml ihe iiuincy lo net llu'iii nml thenItot llttin i'tik-(Ni....\Vi"'ll wnit until w<can glvm onr cnniirlcn tiler ence*." Anilthey dld-tluit. fiir Ailn too ligrcod. Amiso 1U1I (lie mollier mid daddy (it Luulionnd Ada. , • •

"Whi'n Ad* and IJIUIHO nnd herniol^'r nnd ilnddy wont nway In tlin•tlininer thoy tonk tlm bird* along ionfor they didn't think tholr hlriia wniiMIw happy bnnrdlng, nml they kept themIn a'hiyr'lytilg nlry mom WIMTD thermwas alwnys n screen door shut tightso nothing In thn wiiy of a cat.cnulilp<MNlhly wnnilcr In. And Iher* was aspeclul llttl* plnxu where they n,wdto sit (in tlin (wrche* In their cage*anil they would slim and. sing andhrvatha In the, buautlful out-uf-doorHlr. .

" 'You know,' Mild Pmlily Canary toMother Canary, 'I enn't help singing. Itin w happy. I never sva anynnarroia h«re. Ada Is alwnys happy. Her

always xhowlnt thosw dimples

' : . » • • • • - i - . •

No Flaw "Shows In Operation ofBoston Dealer; In interna-

tional Coupons,

PROFITS BY EXCHANGE RATEConvtrt* Amtrlcan Cash Into Fertlgn

Monty and Buys Intarnatlensl Re-ply Coupon* R*d*tmsbl* at

Normal Enchang* Rat*, '• J . . ' • .

Boston.—A ban has been placed onthe rush of people to glv* their moneyto Charje> I'oniU head of ths Securi-ties feichnnte cumpdny, on his prom-lse*tb repay, their Investment with 60per cent profit In 45 days.

After * conference with District At-P I hose business

pecies did he see."I am tired," said Inez petulantly. "I

shall sit In the rose arbor yonder andyon niust.rdance' w th some one else.

hat Is Hiss Dare wearingr, Noel growled under his breath and

W . uway. Tlien she was all aloneand »he did sot like to be alone.

Say*'

pTIjJid- feet crunched the graveledfth and she looked up. In the door-;

was poised a, small Cotumbtne. suddenly...fiey', across the arborI sat .down beside her. "Noel,"'she

-w.^Jl, putting out a small hand. "Irwppilied you, dear—I want to askyounow-^-when you-cannot see my

:,face—you;, have.not forgotten me—^5youl;*yil'.love me—•*•''-'•;• »•; i'.:,1 "•.'•" '.;§•,!; The,;; purple-clad arms' engulfed < her

for a roocnent In a tJebt embrace, theii:';ln^j!nrn^^a^-;ae4§;^.jf^J-sj^,^' .^IgTbe; purirf|';.(ilottino«tii^tU)ii ;rae$9w-iV'jtr; terr»c«;;i; iv:5-*;. • ,i"f; ulpti:-^: n-::.c v^,'r\

~iitJBjfc-.

I her IT. IS68, was a T*ry Importantposscsslcn,9f the British crown, as.ltya* » station on the. outward andhomeward long sea route between

1 EKfitand and India. But from 1879:t6 the-*time of the Boer war the pop-tjlaUon dwlBdled; Its loduftries andIts usefulness to the empire decreased.Since the beglnnlDg of this ceonry.however. It has been regaining vBpe,Its climate I* admirable. Its rslnVUisufficient. Its 200 aprlpjrs of pure waterlend themselves to Irrigation and'mokethe Interior, avesy from the precipitousbarren cliffs that face the sea, "anemerald set In gray lava."

( .. Ltvel Up to SUndard. . .K<!,one has a nsoriopoly of best mot-

toes. There's no reason why '10,009men might not-nse the best that thenation affords. It will mean that atlenrt 10.000 men are trying to live upto the best standard ever susjrested fothem. The,whole world Is before yoaand yon wlU- need the best to ma"things count So. the world ~*"Buck up." -soil In.'Let the side linersIf they want to. ~what theythem at a

of bides and fnr. for j couptry to another, agreed to sccept

Japanese Sailors See New York

^ e ..beat; t^tw;b*aon»' ;:'De';*B.;

Sailors of the Japanese battleship Kasoga. In » • * lorli baxDoren rowjrLfrom Main* to Japan, got 1Jb«rtjr.and Unaedtotair •*« dot to a*»Nt«T Jan

flavoba«rr»Uon cars,

.... further ilpposlta until an auditorKflcoli-d by the dl«trlct attorney liu*

clMlitned'hlsi accounts, which are snldlo Win Into million*. ' '

Dhitrlct Attorney relletlir Mid *'iictlon tiiken was "In no sen** a finalclosing down of llm juslni-ss."

Knr several weeks pant crowd* ofpersons hn»» flocked, to Pnnzl'* office*ind given In. their saving* In exrliiintfo.'or notes of the fWurltft^^iohnnKecompany tor th* principal plu* flP percent, payable In IX). day*. InvarliililyPonil Is snld to hnve pnld off the note*In iti days and (her* tins b(*?h no cum-plaint that any person ho* tolled to re-ceive money when due; - • 'Takta Aavanfig* of Kxehsng* Rat*. -Pond describes his exchange system

In a general way as being based onth* use of International reply oou-pons authorized under the Internation-al postal agreement i s lh« medium fortaking advantag* of (h* dlfferenecs inrate* of exchango.

With deposd Is received from custom-ers, Ponil explained,, he convertsAmerican dolls«-|nto Italian III*, orother foreign money. Then, through•gentiT'located In several countriesabroad. International reply couponsare purchased, redeemable st the nor''mal and not the prevailing rate of ex-change. The coupon* are then: trans-mitted by the agents from one Euro-pean country to another, gathering;profit* through -succeeding difference*In rate* of exchange,' with assured nor-mal'payment for redemption, ontll thetransaction l«.completed nnd the pro-ceeds, reconverted" Into American dol-lar*, .This usually takes 46 days, ac-cording In Ponzl, who says his profitshave reached 400 per, cent In sometransactions. ' ' ' ' .

U. 8. Ag*nt* Can't Find Flaws.Ponzi's operations have been under

Investigation by federal, state anilcounty officials for some time withoutuncovering any • violation .of Isw.United Slate* Attorney Gallagher, soldhe was not certain, y e t whether the

which come «vcry tlm* en* smile*,i tried once to count how many

times slli) smiled In n any and graciousmercy, mp, I would hnve to go to schoolam) study arithmetic in;order to dot h a t ! ' '••' •' • } •'• ' •; ' ' - ' '

" 'A pour little canary bird couldnever count to such an enormouslyhigh dguro. ' j •1 " 'And a rnn«r/ bird enn't go toschool fnr there' are no schools faircanary birds, and after all It I* Just*s well.

•; 'Hut as I say I couldn't count Ada!smiles for they were far too many rur

canary bird to count. •"'Ana. Jlrt^Twulseji She ha* Just I

Um nicest suille In the world. It Isdlfftsrenl* from Ada'* smile—they'reboll) wonderful, Ada's to. Jolly and gay,so lovaWe and so .happy, so appealingand so. adorable and Louise'* smile so•went and sincere, so, g«naln» and soreal .that op* just want* to' smile one-wlf that, there are such people In th*world. • ' •'„

" Tv« tried to make my little beak:*m!le, but It wouldn't and so I ling in-ttead.'- — " " • .. '

"'And,' said Mother Canary, 'a* I1*11 the. children *ach, <fay, our dearcanary children, •••« •Uiey most be tliesame w*/ a* Arfuand Louise and Ialso say to myselfthat I must be thesame way. as tb<-mother of Ada and'Loulso. v ' '

"'•If she weren't.so nice and happyI don't b e l i e v e

'they'd be so hap-m : - ; - . . . •.••-.

*1t'i]u»twhatrsay alMJUt the dad-dy 1 of 'Adft amiLouise,' salt} Mr.Canary. 'And itry to be so cheer-ful nnd so bright

he was not certain yet whether thematter wss one with which Ihe federalauthorities »>-%tld concern theiDMlves.^..Toe United Ktates attorney said he'was flnfonned by the postal authori-ties that the United Hlates gnrern*•sent Is tb* Iarges«,user of InternaUfto-al reply coupons if\ tha. world." "Th*entire Issue of the past 12 months by.the government hnwevar. Is only a•mail fraction ot the entire- n&mbcr•filch musir.bars) btes handled byPonxl to account for the tremendoustacbtne which be claim* to tote mad*•face D h e r l t " *

I

ful nnd so brightand so happy that the canary children

l Ada and Lonl*»and so happy that the canaryfollow my example as Ada and Lonl*»are like their father and mother.'_( -

"And thongh I haven't any btm»»- 'bold dutlw her* I keep saying to thechildren:

"•Sever forget dear children that " f

songs and smiles and happy chirp* ar» ,,among the nicest thlng» hi tha world,and a* you're given so much freedom,and 'fO much Ihoaght., and to, mocl>pbasnre, yoa too glv* i*e*gore aa •cansrlw cai»r,r , , , , .

"'And they do,' »ald Daddy,Canary J "proudly, -ye*, tUy.dOrth* o*«rcanar»

i*::?,;

Page 4: GEORGE C. MOON COMPANY - DigiFind-It · 2015-01-03 · Mutt hnu«*wlTn have daxen* of way* of r*-rn»kl»g of serving leftover meat* but to maoy throw away left-over vegetable*

TUB CRAJf FORD

f /

f n/

!2r£ia»

R n u n o I n n r TmntatuT BTTHE OBANFOBD CITIZEN

Union Avenue, Onuifdrd, N. J

JAMBS k wABindi.

THURSDAY, AUGUST M, 1W0

T*tw O H Dollar a Year

The National political situationdevelops steadily in favor of theBepubiican candidates* • Hardingand Coolidge, and the propectssre_bright that, they will carryevery Northern State with aobaooenf break even ip tho "BolidSouth-" The country ia more andmore disgusted with the Waah-ington administration. The Dcmo-eratio candidates have said prac-tically nothing of value in thocampaign but nave dovotodl muchtime to vociferous denunciation,without facts, of an enormousBepublioan "sluah" fund, Onoasys $16,000,000 and the otherasys $80,000,000. Well, it takestnaoh money for, legitimate ex-pense, running a campaign thesedays, Wehopo tho Republicanshave a fund of $15,000,000, Itwill help materially and if suoh afund lift* boon subscribed it showsof itself tlio grent deairo of thepooplo at large to rid thomBolvosof the'. Washington gang aud tohelp do it. • . •

National Woman Suffrage hasbeon held up temporarily ' by thoefforts of tho an tig to throw

~ legal entagloments^irtlio~way7b~uTit will come and theobauco* gront-ly favor the matter being decidedto that women rimy Toto at thoFall elootions. If thoy do, electionoffioera in Now Jpraoy will hnvotheir hands full for the vote willl>e nearly doublod or will bo if thowomen make uao of their privilegeThey ahould do thin. Wo hnvohoard woll oduoated highly respect-able and reapooted women w»ythoy will not vole. It will bo jiiHtas necessary for thoao to vote nnTor the educated uidlo votor toexercise the franohlse. The timesdemand i t

NBW RATES OF FARERailroad JourMoytt from |>olntn

within tho State will cost 20 porcent mbro starting next Thursday,tho Public Utility llnnrd havinggiven coimcnt to tho oliniiKlng olIntraatato pawicnger rnton to thoeamo oxtvnt on tint rutoH on Intor-State travel worp buoHtoil. roctmtlyto th« PeilProl' I? tor-jU.rttyjgom inorcoC i i l f l l i i (P

GIVE THE AMERICANBLUEGRASS A SHOW

—Jtoproduced by permlaalon M«w torn Tribooa, Oopyrl«ht,

LONG, WARIAFTRNOONS

niasjC oaby nctft i i *

Aa electric bat.to a soqdiia« braze, keep*

. him cool sad coalcated. Tbca. . ' . . ' ' • ""-:: •::, - ' • • • - , m o t h e r e a a w o r k a n d r u e

Have a Wcatiafaouae or. Ccacfsl Electric (aa with a reliable ecoooroi-.cal motor. A l l aises at rcdacad prices. , ..• -

JUST ENOUGH UGHTNOT TOO MUCH

Summer briaga the teed lor a wnall shaded-.

..li|bl that caa be moral abooLla" boudoir or

llviaf room, ghriag light wrthoM itlamiaating the

whole room sod aeccaiitstinf drawa shadei. On

the porch such a lamp lights withowl attracting

lh* gas* ol. paweri-by. "

The Miller Boudoir Lamp !• easily eoanectrd-

and gives ihadrd light la decorative lorm. Dur-

ing1 Atifuit reduced from II0.M lo JS.SO.

You will admire many other beauliful lamps in our display.

| * i and electric reading lamp, dome aad semi-indirect fiuure.

reduced t w e n t y per cent . ..'•;.

E»ery

TO "CONQUER AND DESTROY STATE,"U. S. COMMUNISTS CALL FOR LABfJR REYOM

Revolutionary Pamphlet, Found fa U. S. Department ofJustice Investigation., Gives Message of Com-

munista hi Chicj^o to Russian Headquarters.

• brtraets from "M*nir**to and

YOUR JAZDASTo lave you trouble, we deliver

•Undard Mud* Lamp*, anywhere by

mail or' wa£oru. You don't need to

jet them. Keep plenty on hand. .

THE THORWASHER

The Thor Washerequipped with a de-vice to prevent mo-tor trouble, washesquickly and safely.

PLJBLiC SERVICETHIS PLACE to bay electriclabor saving devices on easy terms

Notk*«f!srt«atiML

•HMMfaR

• « • torn

'p.mmIM*tnMtaVlaM b» tkacMlr UM

lm

——— -• ——.™« ™ •> • — . ia l a s o*4iter Ututof 8on«h Hat atraat! tfcrae* nnaite (T) NT N

tMmln. W adlrtano, oc mMtt*iU>%biitcrUn* ot Oraan orcaar • "-• th»»nta?Uiw of <

'Edith Roberts is among th* most ex.p*rl*nced of th* "movie" stars; al.•though only twenty-two years old shehas been with one producing firm sine*1912. 8hs started as a child actress.

_ . . „ . . „—...^». . „ . , rivaTmm Constitution— Rapert toCortmimlat InUrnaUenal" by th* Communist Party of Amartoavenal by th* Communist Party of Amartoav

Oomniunlain doc* not propoa* to VaprnW th« bonnrwl*. parllarwii

rol I? torjU.rttyjgom in. Altliuuitli tliuiiow

cdulos for Imtli Intrn-titnto mid' Jntor-Stato tralllo go Into olToct on

August 2fltli, tho holdurH of month-ly cumnmtatluri ticket* "will notJiayc; to pay tho IneroaHo-jintlt thoypurchane new tli'kots. .

Clmnifcfl to bo made on tho Cen-tral railroad with ri<nanl to ratmand tho UHO of tlckots already 1H-wiwl, were Rlvon out last Monday.

Monthly commutation tickets (orAugust will bo honored until mid-night ot Augutit SlHt without oxtruehariro. Tlio now tlckot« tor Sup-toujber botwoon Now York midCranford will to &M

Fifty trip family tlckotH, isHtiodto bo good for ono year-will not t>ohonored alter Aujrust a5th. Thoymay bo tumod In fur redemption Inproportion to tho unused viiiuo. Thoooat of thooo tickets wll mlvancotoday to liato.

A flat 20 |>or cout lnc,roa»e overthe oxlutlng baso ratea will becomeeHoctivo on Blnglo trip tlukuU.

claaa can baffle of tho proletariatrtl d«t.lopm«nt haa hrniabetl tb«

XHa onions war* not nllltant

Th* proletarian moluUen cornea at the moment of crlsla tn

M»~ action concen.

aM thea into rotolutlonary maaa acttoa for tha conquest on th« power of thostore. Haas action become* political la purpose while ektra-nartlqmpntarT In

u * * «Wtt»etoM eipreatrlon of tho* claaa atronle ofIUln- »••••» «« «» Urtt thla stranl. ^

0 W t l l r m r « »P»«"«n ••"> thiT

PHOWE OHE-JHREE

Telephone Ells. 454 Estimate, Cbeerfnlly QUoo

VOCATIONAL .AGUICUI/rUHK.Tho tcachnra of voout tonal URrl-

eulturo of tlio State aro on a tripthis wook-AutuHt 23rd. to 28th. In-•poctlni the homo work ot tho ag-ricultural puulls ot (do BCIIOOIS atLeonardo, Frooliold, Hopwwull. Jlaiu-monton, llriilgcton, Slilloh. Salomand Woodstowti. Tho trlji is bolnirtaiado by automobllo. starthiK fromLeonardo on Monday and onillngat woodatown on Saturday. Profus-aor H. 0 . Sampson, Stajto » r r t

• « • « • * «»r the rerolntlon In the! ^ |?! w d l « t o -ctioa. expreatiln, the™««7t™r

»tWHiM mnat be Inaplred with rcTolutlonar,

U *Jmd»»eBt»"r • P«rty ef action; it M a n Wss ot tl>.lr. opprtaslon, of the impossibility oMnV

r capHallara. Ifc. OowmuniM p" f t , d l ^ s Xworkers ateogsle a«ataat capltallam, dtveteplng fuller forms an? purposci l ltals stronto ctdmloatlOK la the maw acUon of the ro»olutlori purpoac»,i10

^J*, Oemmunlat Party shall « k e th, .reat tarfustrlal atrurales of U.eworktof class It. major caapaUna, In order to develop an undcrttamllus ofthe strike la relation to the •rerthrow of capltallim.

M 2 * ! Oommttnlat Party shall participate In mnss strike,

SX p n s s r *th> ttr^but to dii °

• ,• . i - . . ' - . . • • « • • •••••siK* W U C I H I U U J u r g i

Elizabethport Iron and Steel Works1 ENGINEERING, CONTRACTING

ORNAMENTAL and STRUCTURAL IRON WORKI Beams, Channels, Angles, Cellar Door Columns, Orating

or anything made.of Iron.Main Offloe ana Works ^ -

'LKR STREET " T - / ELIZABETH. N. J.Phone or Postal witt " '

th. «A^ l *«S^t l ' £ Tl1i h^ i n > '" "* P"*^^'" «' "Mch derelop*the workers' utderstandkaf and,action fer^he conquest of power. . . (»CLfa. " 2 " Btx1km m 6 n < 0 0 « I « O M «r concentrated capitalism there Utalent the tendency ww^rdtt. r»«rml maaajtrtki wtlch take, o ™ poUUcalcharacter aad manlfosU th* Impobj* towartprolotirtan dictatorship.

n « J l ^ e ! ? r1!*^. T?>T^!L °" Oonunu»1«« p»«» •"»» emphasise the^ ^ ^ . k ' ^ " i * ******** « * « » taklnn oTer of aoclal function.

•JoaUy dlacharg«l by ths capitalists . 04 the ln.tltutlon, of caplt.ltau. Th"strike nrast cease botec Isolated sadpaaslT*; It mtut become positive,

Uio Stato Department of Public In-atructlon is In eharcro ot tho party

Tho homo work of tlio pupilsstudying sfcilculture la an Impor-tant phuso ot tho work. Each pupilas a part ot hU ajrloultural studyeach rnr mu«t conduot a practicalhum enterprise on his homo farm.Spls work la eajofully, gupervi«od bythe teacher vrlio lit omployoil tor thegjlondfr year In order that TO can

upil dui

(a) B*ery local and alstrlct organtsitlon of the Party ahaU establish

tk* Oommnaurt Part,, *o that the pTri, ^ ^ ^ Swwrkera and moMUaa them tor acUea acamst capitalism.

S ^ l ^ A l " ° n ^ t i • S a t a r t tte natonUmi of the Amerlcn IVHleratlon rfLabor, th* Communist Party propagandise. Industrial unlonlam and IndustrialjUta •mnliauoo. wnphaslstns tkelr rwolutloaary lmpUra0.»n». X s rtSDnloaUm Is not simply a means for th* trerHar trugl i l

EV^RYTHINGr FOR TI

LAWN AND GARDEN

fertilizerTools-

CultivatorsInsecticides and

Spraye \Headquarters at,

PIKPS

. d»Ihfit.I for

.„_ .. ."and wehave sfucito the label* pretty faithfully. i

But nmst of the things ..they marked"evil" should have- beep placarded•foolishness." .

Teople who exercloe all the Intelli-gence they have do nothing that Isreally crll.

And they have a fine time, with no

HAVE

SECURITY. o u r reputation J r -"

DEPENDABILITYwhich has stood the

test.of years.

REXALL STORE

"15 Union, Avenue

Sunday and 'Holiday 1 ours9A.M. t o lRM

•4to'7P.M.

jmiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuimii illinium

lY CHATSKent ForbesIJIHIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIimilllllHIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIf-

iiooseftymslsk^s8 TrustiauUdlna:. TU. 801-W.

ABOUT THE LAST ARGUMENT

Afbw That It Was Tim* for Hubby toCM Btrayjmd Buy rtur Tlpar

r year In order t t cantho pupils during t)i« sum

mer montha as well as d i th

^ 1 1

M with tho pupils during t)i« sum-mer montha as well as during tho

^ff1 0"1?1^1 Instruction in thepublic schools of New Jorsoy is antaportant part in tho educationaldwejopmont ot the Staic ft Isdoit-Jto«2 t o •»* w i » >«ean miicli

generations of farm-* Is Pcdoralty aidedf a nation wjdo move-8 ^ 1 1 * 1 d U t l

Dnlonlam Is a factor tn the

vr>... are

^/Mhlnaton, it^mington,.Jatersgi. iconaHo, B M SJftpfc.jSlt Harbor/Mlno.WfiBaj|iiBOnton;AD»e«oaOwrtHotua Knna and.

i — V«MractionjBf a iMaral Industrial •nloa enranlutlon, emhrachw the f. W W1 1 ^ £!B±£!a!:!L.M1<1 " ~ i t o n «*taava«lia«t »nlon»7f . h e \ iT«J^art the •aorganlsed workers, oa O* basis *t the mbluuc^rj, daS

±£!a!:!L.M1<1 " ~ i t o n «*taava«lia«t »nlon»7f . h e \•aorganlsed workers, oa O* basis *t the mbluuc^rj,

^ «»o«»ents of ik.

Davenport.

What shs deslnd was a new daTca-psnt.

She had talked dajmnport until herhnsband'S soul was tried. She madsIt her badness to be carefully strati-'

Mbd the furniture advertisementstime h« caosht her reading the

She left pictures of <avmports ly-Inj around on the table. 8hs sent forrarnttnrs catalogves and he alwaysfound the psxea.ooen that containeddavenport UlastraaoM.

The other evening he alaaced overher shoulder as die was spin* throughher, regular evening perfomsno* wjththe newspaper.

"More davenport advertisement; I•oppose," he murmured a hit sarcas-tically. '

"No, John, dear," she replied tn ate-fesaufK sV^P^^^av rfS^^^h^Ht^ai t%h^^k^B flfeh^h a\aVa1^

raili JLOU WUHH <*pmaj ID*9 U l l

ELMERCIVIL ENGINEER. AND

SURVEYOR

8 Lenox Avenue, Cranford. N.Telephone 846-J

Lots and Farm Surveys

Development Maps Draughting

. C W. RANKIN,Lehigh Valley Coal

AND -

MASONS' MATERIALS.Sla«* Sla«

Sewer Wpe, E t c

Offlo* u E ^ North Avenue,CRANFORD. N. J.l *

second look s i the

TeLBSTo.

Ad.SUaaDtcturu-ot

n attendance

Wme^oajjgh^awfco

B W OMIT • ttfciBWMJ>

icaOloaa*

Connection.Japhone

IOHN T.' LOWERY

3I

Plumbing and

Heating Contractor

\ N . Lettish Aval Cranford, N. J.

if IV* Utchanieal I Can. Fix It."

rAThomas Mascara-\ byole Repa itrlTXfg

.] (ALL MAKBO I' Blcy^e Tires aad Supplies '

, 14 North Avenue East,-CKimBDBn, N. J.

EXPRESSAnd Taxi Service.

EDWIN R. OPIED

Tel. 53825 Normandy Plaoe,

Oranford, N. J.

Power Press OperatorsMust Be Thorottgfcf? bpcrieMnl

We Pay Hl |h Wates and Weekly

Boniw to Steady Workers

Plant located two minutes fromiEUiubethport Station, Central'Bailroad. Apply

Anenca- Stamping Company, iPine and Third Street*.

_ KUZABETHPORT. N/JT. • '

Locaileii «f ftrwlsan

Town Notes.

' Tax OoUeotor Baser O. IIs havia* a vacation at Atteat

J. 8. Petan aad CasUrf. <|4ao*, hav*ntara«d frost their

MlssEaamaJohasoo. of Hoits slopfaat a* th* Van Ooort

UIM toey 8. kUz. of 208 Hois boarding UOakn Hall. In UB B S . . ' .; • •. • • . .

Mrs, O. C. Veatrts* and aoo,of Prospsetstre*t..left Wedaeivial*at Avon. ; '-. .. Mr. sad Mr*. Oeorg* Mack, ostreet, returned today from iGOuek Island.

Chief of Polios Jsmea Hennefamily are spending their vaKeaMborg.

Howard 8ebladler. of the Hnmeat, la acting aa day desk. tn«lie* Daadqoartorj.

Stanley H. Chadwlokand fiUoloa avenue, nave, retarnadoatlagatBay Head.

Rahway Post No. 5, Amorlouwill ron an excursion to Atbnand Ocean Grove oa Thursday,bar 8.

N. J. kUxfleld haarasigiiedtion with the Cranford Trust Csod will enter the employ oChapman. New York broker. :

Edward a Beadle, of Springlaue, Is at Mohlanberg hospita•ring nioaly from ab operatlTuesday.e u i s s Ida Shapiro, of Miln stnMia* Eloreooe talbot Of N(Park, are spending a few wRoaooe, N. Y.

"' Mr. and Mrs. Harry Ott.ofsveniw, and Uf. and Urs.

L Troaber and ohildreo, of ThomaiI Tuesday for a visit ia Troy.

Mies Joyo* Hoffman, daoghtesad Mrs. W. P. Hoffman, of 810

'ton street, haa been awardedprize la a short story • contort"Woman'a Home bompanion."

Jamas H. MoMahon. the geniisgw of Pott's grooery is eojimoeh needed vacation among thdanea of fldath Jarser sboolin

Trees Taken Down"" * ? » ? • • • teeth are extracted- .—by their roots, at- reasonable

Saiall BttUdlacs and Porastry

J . V .» HusaosiT Sfc-iipra, nsJaftsU, X,

The Boarii of Education heldfarence with Architect Hollingsv,fbeBrm of Holllngaworth & 1

' Monday evening on the proposefor the now Bhermaa flfihirol,

Cranford will be i wall represiBoonton today at the nnveiliDimemorial to President -SpenoeiSlate Firemen's Home, tweem«mbera of the Firemen's RelieciaUon and exempt Bremen ma

' a party that went over by antal eleven- lo'clock. The unvelllifor two o'clock.

Next Satdrdav bo the Kltzhbeone groond* Crainford'a newebest haaehall aggregation oompotirely of local ..stellar lights, aclaim «to have the beat team evcross bale with the Dixie Qlantijklsv This wUl he the A. a

and whereas the Une-apyat complete a flrsUclaaa gipromised.

Marjori* Rambeau. describleading dramatic critics as the |emotiooal actress of the Ameriesachieved her final triumph in, "1tone Teller" written by idgblon

. Osmoin. The screea version ot tlsaid to be even more striking tstag* performance, will be abowiCranford TheOre on Monday,80th.

J. H. Jobs found aa account txa namber of fFwki belongiaaiNew Jtresy lea Cre*m_ Cowan;oooneof the sssts.in the Cranfotton Bstarday. Mr. JoGB tanarticles over to the polios. SThomas "Woods found * wheel

[In front of A. G Pike'i) store, ia North avenue, 8i

Th* wheelbarrow was leafter th* store was dosed

Sergeant Woods took thei to polios Besdqoarten.

.N.Trimble, who has reaijr of th* local Pottsatora I

L:.'eBeeUv» Sept 1, was tendered a"femdey sight at the bomeof 1Mrs. J. HTMcMaboa, ia Retford iby the members of the store sUO.th* dinner Mr. Trimble' waaprwith a gold moontad foontaUn pptuaentltion being made by MMaboo. who ravtowed briefly th* Ifoor years Mr. Trimhte has bsith* store. ' Those preaant,man MMr*. Trimble, Mr. aad Mrs.' .MelMr. and Mr*. D.T. Plenoa. Mia

•TlnMahnn' M I » Ftaaoss JDUleJisWWood.

Page 5: GEORGE C. MOON COMPANY - DigiFind-It · 2015-01-03 · Mutt hnu«*wlTn have daxen* of way* of r*-rn»kl»g of serving leftover meat* but to maoy throw away left-over vegetable*

0

- .*, I, THUMDAT, AUGUST % 1890

location fir* Item Ion*

os* of Iowa art Vtaa PraMtM * * • U

hi 8k Mlokaei*ocfcwk

HsMavdwseCfeaaraeeaCartheTV bsacnaes end of theaasJnlyaavotea to reports of Ouasaallaaeaaed action therem. A * Ohio Ooenais-.tea reported bavtac acwadeda

«ev. I M M T o .bt H M f k g r i i ot aaatriaaia?.

IMd «f North w e n * a dVanZaat e i O v w d .(Mfcof Uaiee

Bavin* aaede s>dariastheaeea Mlesa yean lathe oos>•traction awl operation of

Grand Open Air ConcertbalkBafB.li>.

a Crystal, of 839 Wart End A'Mew York. decktsd M MtbUbewoahi devote the

baaleeas M f w . witkos*

North I M M waa bast aaa...,Th* bride waa i m r i la

very friendly iKiepUw, aaairgethi crepe with paotara hat ot theNcadaof the aaotkn aoeth of Laneola I same materWavenae la the matter of lights aod BrelbeoqMt of white rosso, alias Oobbhydrants were reported by Chairman I wore yellow orgaadae with ho*Gremnvof the Ohio Onmmlttea In-

- Tax OoUeotor Blmer O.• having a vacation at Atlantic City.

J. 8. Peters end famOv, ot Manor

speetion at the district showed, to Uw

ed from their atioplace, have retuMat Kama Johnson, of Holly street.

Is stopping at UM Van Court Inn. Bo-

Mist Uey 8. Mix. of 8 » Hollystreet,to boarding asOakerHUM, to Unfaa eve.

Mn. O. O. Vantriee and sou, Charlai,of Pnepset street, left Wednesday (or avkitat Avon. '-. . .. Mr. and Mrs. George Mack, of Willow•treat, returned today from a stay.*!Stuck bland.

CUet of Polios Jamee Hennessey andfamily are (pending their vacation at

of' the Oommlttaa, i'«»— hy-dranta and tea'atreet lighti to be needed.With the appravai of 0 » Aaanoiartnnthe towaahip Committee will be askedto initall theaa aoon aa praeticabw.

Arrugeiaent baa been made to Incor-porate the AaaodaMon. Ufiaer thie headdiacuaaion developad whether theof the Association should be changedleaving oat reference to "South Bide."b h i l fdbat the meeting favored re-

Howard 8chiadler. of the lire depart-ment, ia acting at day desk, man at po-lies headquarters.

Stanley H. Chadwlckand family, ofUnion avenue, nave', returned (mm anoating at Bay Head. ~ • . ••

Rahway Poet No. 5, American fingion,will ran an excursion to Aibnnr Parkand Ocean drove on Thursday. Septem-ber 8. \ • ' ' , •;• • •

N. J. Maifleld haa resigned his pool-tion with the Cranford Trust Company,and will enter the employ of T. W.Chapman, New York broker.

Edward a Beadle, of Springfield « T »noe, ii at Muhlenberg hospital recov-ering nioaly from an opermtlon ' laitTneedky.EPUm Ida Shapiro, of MUn itreet, andMla» Eloreoce talbot of NormandyPark, are (pending a few weeka atRoeooe, N. Y.

'"• Mr. and Mra. Harry Ott, of Walnutaveniw, and Mf.. and Un.. William

, Troeber and children, of Thomu atroet,I Tneeday tor a viait in Troy. N. Y.-r

Wm Joyce Hoffman, daughter of Mr.'tad Mra. W. P. Hoffman, of 810 Hanjp-ton atreet, haa been' awarded aeoondprize in a abort atory • contest, by the"Woman'a Home bompanion."

Jamai H. MoMahon. the genial man-ager of Fott'a grooery U enjoying amoch Beaded vacation among the land-danea of Soatb Jeraer abooling dean

" ana «B}oyrng^ae ocean" breexes.The Board of Edncntlon held a con-

ference with Architect Hollingaworth. offheflrm of Hollingaworth & rajgdonMonday evening on tbe proposed plansfor the new Sherman School. .

Cranford will be-well represented atBoonton today at the unveiling of thememorial to President -Spenoer at tbe

. Slate Firemen's Home, twenty oddmembers of tbe Ftremeh's Relief Asso-ciation and exempt Bremen making up

' a party that .went over by automobileat eleven- [o'clock. The unveiling is setfor two o'clock. •

Next Saturday on tbe Elizabeth ave-nue grounds Crantord'a newest andbeat baseball aggregation composed en-tirely of local .stellar lights, and whodatm Ha have tbe best team ever, willcross bate with tbe Dixie (Hants at 3.80

This wUl be tbe A. a ' s ' Brstand wbereae the line up is not

complete a first-class gome ia

Rambeau. deaaribed by

taining tbe name, already approvedwhen tbe Constitution waa adopted ak aprevious meeting.

Good and Welfare Committee byChairman Haas reported aoggeationa forthefature under this heed. Chairmanlisas apoke for greater neigbborlinessamong tbe residents of the section* Bewanted to see the lifelong habit of tbecity dweller in not knowingJiia nextdoor neighbor discarded. Suggestion aato entertainment brought forth a mo-tion, carried without dissent, that theaeoond meeting of each month be .made

social session, .entertainment, takingthe form of a mosloale, or dance, orlecture, perhaps a combination of these.

Ohtirman Hnbbard itaied tbere hadbeen an increase of those using theLehigb Valley R- K. to New York. Ifanongh regular patrons of the roaddevelop there "willbe a material IncreaseIn train service. Chairman Hubbardalso reported baring aaenred a news-

service at tbe Valley station

Baton and carried piak naae. Theehurohwhite hro>aaieM and faraa.

After tbeoareaaoaya wedding

witfc

farther neaaaal gains, to solving la*principal factors in the bossing pro*lea* of. to-day—namely, to faniisk pea-pU of oodeiate means a boaaa thatwouM be both Inexpensive and attractIve. . He has .now. smxeeiled. he an-BOunoas, hi inventing a new type ofatandardbjad boilding, of steel ani wood

was sarved at Ike of UM

through Newsdealer 0. C. Harris, amatter of great convenience to all.Eight new applications for membershipwere referred to the membership com-mittee for report at tbe next meeting.

Nab Auto ThrivesOn Monday morning Policeman Mar-

tin did a clever piece of detective work,and as a reault two young men are Injail at Puaaic charged with stealing acar.Jrom a barber who'resides In thatcity. While guarding the trafflo that-morning Martin noticed a car stop infront of the post office containing twoyouths, one white and one colored, andfrom their: actions thought something

and taked to see their license,which neither bad, and a request for aregistration canl met the same result.

parents. The hosee waa prettily deco-rated In a eolor aohsaas of - piak Iwhite and the tables were elaboratelydecorated with piak aad white roasa.while a buge weddlag cake ooconisdIbe center of the bridal table. Afterthe aappsr a receptkn was bsed and*daaeiag -was enjoyed until mldnlgbt.About ISO guests were) present fromNewborgh. N. Y., Uoronton, Pa.. NewYork aty, Elisabeth, WesHWd. Oar-wood. Newark. Flalnflald and Cranford,

Tbe voung oouple ware the' recipientsot many handsome gifts Including•averal substtnUal checks. The bride'sgift to tbe bridesmaid was a handsomegold bracelet and the groom's gift tothe bast man was cuff links.

Mr. and Mra. Iteid left for a wedding'trip.to Atlantic City and upon theirreturn will reside at North avenue.

butkx—DtvbunMiss Margaret T. Dunham, daughter

Union street, Rahway, and J. Jr. Kde-tioe, of Craoford, were married by xHev.& A. Qulmby Saturday at HP. »t. Intbe parsonage of Trinity 41. K. Oburch.Miat Margaret Rspkie, of West Grandatreet, was tbe bridesmaid, and AlbertUine, of WestBeld, was the best man.The bride wore brown georgette crepewith hat to match and carried whitechrysuitbomtiras. MlMftepkte wore la-vender organdie with hat to match andcarried pink roses. After theceremonaya reception to relatives and immediatefrleada waa beld In the bride's homo.Mr. and "Mrs. Eottlce left later on awedding trip and will reside In Cranfordupon their return.

Marjorieleading dramatic critics aa the greatestemotionol actress of the American stageachieved her final triumph In, "Tbe For.tone Teller" written by Lolgblon Graves

The screen version of the play.said to be even more striking than tbestage performance, will be shown at tbeCranford Theatre on Monday. August80th.

/ . H. John found aa account book anda, number of checks belongingjta.tbeMew Jeraey Ice Cream_Cont|iatty lyingon one of the aaatajnjhe Cranford ata-tfcm Batarday. Mr. JoGa tamed theartioleaover to the police. SergeantThomas Wopda found a wheelbarrow

[In front of A. C Pike's bardI etore, in North avenue, Saturday

Tbe wheel barrow waa left oat-after the etore waa closed for the

Sergeant Woods took the wheei-f to police Headquarters.

. N. Trimble, who has resigned aar ot tbe local Potts store branch,

^ Sept 1, waa landared a dinner"8endaj sight at the bomaof Mr. andMra. J. arMcMaboa, ia Betford avenue,by tbe members of tbe store sUS. Afterthe dianer ofr. Trimble' waaprenntedwith a gold mounted fooatain pan, tbep(uaant«tioti being made by Mr. Me*Maboo. who reviewed briefly the'twenty-fear years Mr. Trimble haa been withtoe store. 'Tboee present ware Mr. and

; Mr* Trimble, Mr. and Mrs. .iteMabon., Mr. and Mra. D.T. Piaraoa, Mkei Aasa

mMM fttw mine,

He toolTThs two boys to the jail, andbefore Judge Batcbelder they" admit-ted they came-from Paasaic and were ontbeir way to Plalnfleld.

Paesaic's Chief of | Police waa: gottenon-tba wire, and a request waa made tobold them, aa a car of that descriptionhad been stolen that morning. Theboys were placed in custody and laterin tbe day on .warrants issued in thenames of Joseph Doe and John Doewere turned over to the Passaio author-ities who came after them. „.

After six weoka of rain and cloudyweather the ann haa been visible" twodays rUDning bat Old Hoi seems a bituncertain whether to stay with us ornot There has been so little sun thisSummer Vegetables do not''have theirproper, flavor, and the wet weather baaalmost rained certain crops, potatoesand tomatoes in particular.IMichael Boyle, of Jersey City, a lab-

orer employed by tbe Lehlgh ValleyRailroad Company, fell from a car atCentennial avenue, Tuesday morning.An ambulance of the General Hospitalbrought the man to the \ hospital InElizabeth; though be may recoter. Hereceived a concuasion of the brain.Boyle Is 21 yean of age and lives at tbeEast Oak bland Camp, Jorsey Qlty.

Judge Batcbelder celebrated hU TOthbirthday on Monday by bilding courtall day. but in tbe evening with Mra.Batchelder and stop-eon, Paul Bt Llttle-bole and family, enjoyed a quiet dinnerand evening at his home on Holly street.Judge Batcbelder waa born in Bath.N.H., on August 23. 1944, and be latherefore 78 years old. He was secre-tary to General Benjamin.P. Butler Inthe Civil War, and- Is one of tbe fewmen living who waa in Ford's Theatre,ia Washington, when President Lincolnwas shot. He waa engaged in the coalbusiness in Boston for many yean, re-tiring six years,.-ago when he came toOraaford. He baa beeo a Mason forfifty years, and is a past master otPeoWckut Lodge. P. and A. H., of Low;ell,

J.

St Paul's M.tCtardiSnnday, 9.49 a. m., Sanday School11 a. m. Preaching by Kev. K.

Johnson.,• • ' {8.00 p. m. Epworth Learoe Prayer and

PraiseServke. Leader. Oea G.TsHer.WednsaOayj Prayer Meeting. , ,Mr. Teller ft m wett kaown dbarch

worker in 'Union Cbaaty.i and tee »every yoaajr, m*a.;.«nd

d b U ^ U

iSeries of ActidcaU.The large Pleree-Arrow hearse be-

longing to W. N.Qray on which'wereMr. Gray and Driver Kemp, early yes-terday morning while ion the way toOoaan Grove to take charge of a foneralskidded On a iteep bill near the powderworks at Parlinand was thrown withforce agaiss*-two tn»uiLtbo roe48iilBoverlooking a sand pit, the front partbeing stove in. A track of Bamberger's Happening aipng rendered Brat aid'and while busy getting the beam tothe rosilway, a furniture track fromPlainBeld driven by two colored mencame along at a high rate of speed andaldeawiped the beano, taking out all thepanels and glass on one aide, but no onewas hurt. Undertaker Gray secured a-beans at Amboy.and conducted tbefuneral. ^

apastruetton, (or auburban•ad baUaees that he eaaaot oalr ledveeUw cost of coestrocting Cornea by atleast thirty per cent, but also providefeatures that are ordinarily aaanrtatedwith the more expensive villas.

The Crystal House will be-adapublafor from one to a halMnaen faasiHe*.bat it Ia believed that tbe multi-familyhouse, surrounded with beautiful landscape gardening, and provided with allmodern features—for instance, son psx-lors or sleeping porches, and Individualgarage for each tenant-will rsvoln-tioataa,.suburban building. Tbe prinei.peiconstruction_ details have^alnadybeen devrloped to the aatisfaction of lb»Inventor and the 'architectural featuresare well In hand, but in order to see ifany improvements can' be made, in thelatter by tbe best European architects,and eapecially for tbe purpose of study-ing housing and landscape) gardeningMatures in England andCrystal' sailed for Europa onaccompanied by hi« wife, (nee Belli*Lauterbocb), a former-teacher, in theCranford H|Kb School. Mr*. Crystal Uaa accomplished linguist and artist whoOIMUW her bnsbond In iketcbliw obser-vation!.

It. 11. Moor.' ut Ellznlntll tiax H Ha|i|«ilHtc<l Union County. Clminnatiof the Nunilny KfliiMil ilivl.-tlnn u t t l i eNunr KiiNt lt<;|li-f hy Ji>m<i>ii II,.Wrl«ht, Ktatn Ofinlriiiaii.

HurlriK tlio ll.ti'iil yi'ar <'u<litijrJuly Ixt, tlio Huhiliiy MI'IIKOIA 'ln,Nt>wJuritcy i'i)htrll>ut«<l $IG,i!l5.;:i to'uurilftM'dlng tins 200.IKK) iirplinns in Atmen In, Syria and tlw.' «iirnitirulingcoimtrlrH.'I'ho ,Stnti>'B I'litiro ritllertIOIIM ninituritiMl to %\WfiXlZ>\. TtiNMHH umiiitfli to fo*<il 8<li) orpliwiK »li»IIBVP IKMHI mlvi'U liy thu Amcrlciui

Atktxa»i Hies PdMJOflCongressman Ernest B,; Aokennan't

petition' for the Republican' Ooogres-aional nomination waa filed wltb tbeSecretary of State at Trenton Monday.It con tains probably toe*;larKest nnmberof repretentaUve dtlseaa of Union andMorris Ooonties whose names have ever.been signed to a similar document. Thepsgea read like a roster of ex-servicemen, combined with those prominent ialabor, Industry, commerce and financewho constitued tbe home army.

the Congressman's time for filing willnot be vnp nntU next Monday aad asnanies ire still being received it hasbeen arranged to Ale aappiemsntal lisUon that date. The designation npderwhich be is a candidate la -'RegolarRepabllcan—America and HunuMit;Alwaya." . *"

CnrfordM LCkwdiSnnday School, 0,48 a.'m., Walnut

Avenae Church.Morning Worship, 11 a. m., Walnut

Avenue and Kaalman Street Cburicbes.Rev. E. s: Miles will be tbe preacher

at the Walnut Avenue Church on nestSunday morning and evening.

capable womanand have entire

WANTED.-Beanedtoaapsrviseboueebohrcharge of two little girls; one 3 yearsold;.tbe other S months. Have anexcellent maid for cooking and heavierwork. References lodlspenslfale. RW. Leary. 110 Clarenoot PI. Tel. 877-W

' LOST—Between Cranford and Garwood .silver top handle" to_ ombrsUa,with Initials "M. A. 8.Pittaflsld street. Tet 48.

Reward. 4

g. f.S J. 6. Wheefe~ Teiephoa* 180-J

W l s n l m U ., -

K . .Mr. M(M>r«i Hayx that thivn t

lmvc<-lioon k»|it from Htitmttlotibut nn tluiy a runot utTlf t» Mi|i|H>rttlu'innulvi'M an ilTort will bo. mni1i< liytlio Knhiluy S«:IIOOIH' uf .tlicj.'uimtyto prnvlilo for tlimn for—aiiotlicryour. Tlio Armenlnnx nro Ktlll a t warthlH tlmo with thi! Holxliivlkl whl.littro HHfcpliiK down froiif Kuwln.

Thoy nri! McarcDly alilu to-iiroviiU*fur tliclr own fainilicM-^tliimo tlmthave boon roxrtiocl (rout tlut TdrkiolilioretiiH—linil unloNH lieIp. It nintlii-livil from America ttio tlioiitumihi oforphmiH will l)ii no .bettor ttmii tfthey hml I I I

C t i Hutod to the Niiniluy StitumU. In thCounty wlilrh hint yrnr mloptotl anAniicnihii i)r|ihaii. I

M. KISSWH SCHNITZfR

CADINBT MAKERS

CARPENTERS

CONTKACTORS

JOBBINQ OP ALL KINDSPromptly attended to. •

8 ANCHOR PLACE.i: ! GARWOOd, N. J.

Telephone 4159-J.

H. B; SYLVESTERCarpenter^and Builder

Jobbing a Specialty887 Weatfleld Avenne,.E. ,

ROSKLLE P A R K T X J.

Bathroom te Kltp^ion

TILINGFireplaces, Porches and Vestibules.

THOMAS H.ROSS.,-,'• 270 Jackson Avenae,

Tel. 2694-H PLAINFIELD. N. J.

GAMILLO MASSAGeneral Contractor.

Qradlnf, Concrete WorkCdlara Excavated,'

Swwen, Sldewalks.'Etc.

CRANFORO. N: J.P.OJoiU.

QIVKN BT THE

Liberty Band, of PUdnfieU

TO-NIGHT

8910II12

At tastawa Street Part, Cfwford, N. J.PROGRAMME:

PART ONEMARCH "Out Blue Jkckda" HazillOVERTURE "Am***" BamarJWALTZ i-BIaoBinf Grant'CLARINET SOLO Rolllson

"Rocked ia the Crtdle ol (he Dap"" " B y R . W . H A L E . " • ' • ; . '

MARCH T h e Corcoran Odeta" ; Sou*aVOCAL ^ELECTIONS'' Baritone Sob

Mr. ROSS FOWLER

PART TWOPoet and Peasant and Light

Cmlry"MEDLEY "Iruh Melodiet-MARCH . •Aiuac."

234

56

7 SELECTION

VOCAL S E L E C T I O N A

SELECTION "BliMEtahal"MARCH j'Fraterny

"Star Singled Banner"

FlllmoreHayes

Llthgou)By Mr. Fowler

BennettHough

8PEOIAL FEATURESMR. F. VV. HAYLE, Clarinet Soloist of the Liberty Band.MR. ROSS FOWLER, Vocal Baritone SoloUt of N. Y. Cftyr.

For SalenOUSE. <» rooms, liatb, bard wood lloors, atoam lieat, (?«.»

and rlectricity. built lOliB; garage, plot 35x100; caali requlrn.l11.500. Ilarirain Ifi.COO. .' .

HKHI-BUNGALOW, 7 rooms, bath, 0 minutea' walk to sta-tion; aleatn keat, bardwood floors, open flro*placo, beautifulganlf-n, fruit trws, etc.; plot. IM) x 16X1. Ternm, 14,200 casb,balanr« first mortgage.. llargain $0,700. - .

IIOU8B. 0 roome, U t h , plot 60V 100, hot water u e ^electrieitv, parquet floors, posaeasiou U0 days, boautifulo le llarKain 17,500. . . ' • *

Large aelection of hlgb-olau properties at priowi up to

InsuranceSpecial facilities for handling insurance of every denoriptloD.

EUROPEAN TRAVELSteamakip UcltoU for Italian ports, Greeae, Tiprkoy and

otkejr central [European oount|lo*i. .' ||, - •[ - .. ULI § ' •-' '->-•• '.'•••. i V Por i a f o r n l a t i o u > p p l ; •' i - ' ; i ' • • ' !'' : •

Realty and Insurance Department

Cranford Trust Co.CKANFORD,;N. j .

I

GLEN F.STEELECarpenter; and Builder

- F , :

BSTIMATBS FURNISttBO

of All KlndaPboi»878-M.

Coming AttractionsAT THE

YOUNO PIGS FOR 8AtE. Ooodstock,' floe condition. Write C. i. Drake,Union Ooantjr Farm, Scotch HIaias.K. F. D., N. J., or telephone Paawoat1424-J-l. .,

WANTED COLORED INSUKANCEAQENT8 to represent a strong; and pro-gressive fraternal Insurance orderwhich baa been operating adaco 1308and baa nearly fJ23.0op cash reseHes.Policy valuation show* the- Sodetr tobs over VU% policy solvent. Some (roodterritory still open and • vary aUracttrereaesral oommtarino cootoot for realprodaeera. If yon late1 capable andmean riiMlnuau. cooaeet with a bis; pnt-

CRANFORD TfTHURSDAY r

Maurice Toumeur presents••Mr-Lady's Garter"

Torcfav ComedyPatbeNews MoU and Jeff OartoooFRIDAY

EnidBennet in•The Fake Hood" ~

Ditmar-s Aaiasal PictareandCkrtoooa.

SATURDAY

Wallace Reid i n ."TtwDaBda'FooL"'

Soejihiae ooendy. "His Musical Sneeze"Piaraaaoant

EATRE Td.422-W

MONDAYEXtRAOBplNARY FEATURE I

Manorie Rambeau in'•Tbe Fortune Teller." . ~

DaHaven comedy, "Beatlns; Cheaters.'"

Mary Milen Mmter in• - "Jennie Be Oood" .

CbtrueCbaplialn1

auapsOartooo Bart Holmes TravelogWBDNB5DAY

- Guy Empey in"The Uadaronrrent,"

JACK DBMP5HY InFifth episode ot "OaredevU Jack"

Roila Comedy I

Notice to Antomdbae Owner.! x

Service Statmn!Have jour Stromberg Oarbnretor Adj&ated and Kepaired at

the Stromb«rg€Wbai^^Serrioe> Station. • j

Started t o 4 I ight i i%'Bepai»^ a Specialty.•4'

Page 6: GEORGE C. MOON COMPANY - DigiFind-It · 2015-01-03 · Mutt hnu«*wlTn have daxen* of way* of r*-rn»kl»g of serving leftover meat* but to maoy throw away left-over vegetable*

t:

'VEGETABLES AREBEST FOR DUCKS

Host Profitable Returns ObtainedWhere Green Feeds Pre-

dominate in Rations.

(UTCHIN6 EGGS FROM PEKHYoung Fowls to Be MarksUd Should

Be Fattened for Two WMki Be.' fare Killing—Flsh Aid In

Reducing Feed Bill*. ~*

Docks may be fed ' on . the ration*recommended for fowls and thicken",but better result* are nanalljr securedby feeding, more green and' vegetableseeds and • larger proportion of main.Eggs from Pekln ducks are used large-ly for hatching, and the profit la • »•?cured In producing green ducklings;'therefore these ducks are fed a main-tenance ration after the; atop layingIn the summer until about December1, when a hiylng ration Is given andthe amount of mash Increased.

Runntr*, for Eggs.Indian Runner ducks have been .In-,

traduced as produce]? of commercialeggs, so they should be fed laying ra-tions throughout the year If kept foregg production. . • ' " . • -

The ducklings to ' bo markeWshould be fattened for two weeks be-fore killing on: a ration made of threeports; by weight, of corn' nienl, twoDarts of low-grade flour or middlings.

FISH MEAL GOOD ASSUPPLEMENTAL FEED

Excelent in Hog; Poultry or

MAULES W. ICLtOT, president etnerKluoof. Harvard university, made an•dilm« n«t long ego before theHarvard TeaTBers' association,1 Inwhich lie severely criticized ilie1-nl|Hl Statrs Military nrndrmy atAV«| Point as an educational Instl-lotlon. . '

Now, H'ctt Point Is. an Institutionof »upr«-iw national inportanci'. IfI>r. Eliot's criticisms can be sus-tained. It Is the itiunlfett duty of

congress and the nwrrtary of war to bring about.all chanrrs Mvtwmry to flt the Institution'to It*high publk- piirpotc

Krprt-srniatlve Fred A. Britten of! Illinois In-troduced a resolution requesting that certain In-formation be furnished the bou«« by the wardepartment. Itrpresratatlve Julius Knbn ofCalifornia, chairman of the committ** on military,affair*, wrote tu Secretary of War Newton' I).Uafcer concerning Ibis resolution. Secretary Bakertook this opportunity to write llephwentatlve

. Kaha a Ions, roomnalcaUon, which Is In purposeand effect i, formal defense of West Point nntt * honor of Ms s-nviynyioiMi

the World War lias shown could be mad* oponmilitary men. Ho then says, 1o part:

"After all, Went Point l« a special school, as lathe Naval academy at Annapolis, as Is any.'school of jnlni'K, or-of chemUtry, or of languages.Tiilk does not Justify the turning out of soldiers,or mining engineers, or chemists, who know norti-

' Ing el«n; but It does justify a coarse of Instructionwhich emphasises the specialty, while It pro-duciw an -educated man. The purpose, of' WestI'olnt, therefore; Is not to act a* a glorified drillsergeant, but to lay a foundation upon which acareer! of growth. In inllltnry knowledge can be.based, and to accompany It with two Indispensable 'additions; first, such a general training «s edu-cated men find •necessary' for Intelligent Inter-;course with one another, and second, th« lncul-cation of a set of virtues admirable-always, butindlspcnsahle In tlio soldier. Hen way be Inexact,or even untruthful, In ordinary matters, and anfr -fer as a consequence only the dlsesteem of theirassociates, or the Inconveniences of unfavorablelitigation; but the Inexact or untruthful soldiertrifles with the lives of his fellow men, and the

of~sn a'ns«r«r to OrTTBhofs criticisms. In viewthe «upmt# Importance of West PointAmerican laxtUutloa,: s sjimmary of SecretaryBaker's defense is well werth printing. * -:

for

Wki

Ifr. Eliot** crittrlan* are Ian follows; ' ,,'; l.,%\o Asfl«s1ca*.jacha<{l or.'college intended* ._youths between IS and 20 years of age' shouldaccept such IUprrp«red.niaterlal~Ss West Poiutacrvpts.. • . .__ ,-'• , .._

2.""No school or college shouid-linve'»'coin-;"plvtely prescribed curriculum. • :,

a. -No scbool or college should have It* teach-in c don*, almost exclusively by, recent graduatos«f the same ccfaool or college who are not tcaoh-.er» and wbo strve abort Ursa*. ••."; ,.: '• :' f^'y

4. -Tb* gradual** of "W«4 Point 'during tjieWorld Wan both in the. Held and.la businessogKv-asdld not rvcapc withdrew exception*, fromtlw mrtneO* which they had bma tango? i n « 4o>UIedCln during peace. The methods of fighting

- were. In tbe main,'ocw and tba iftethods of st|P-ply and sccotmt ought'to have been newt Th*red-tape method* proscribed tq.,the American, >Regular Amy oBcera of lapsing the buck wereTpfy mischievous all throagb the actual fightingand mnajn a srrlous Impediment'to the efficiencyof the war department to this dsy. "

In onswerlag; critldsn) No 1. 'Secretary Baker

Point by cnncrmlooal and presidential appointsment, cowprlltlrr eximitaatloris. entrance exam-

- uatlons, etc. He then tars, in parti ; ,• •-From JS38 to 1815 the total number of candl-

dates wbo have presented themselves for admis-sion to West Pout has been 17,019. Of these8,353 have been admitted- Of the residue 4.220wer* rejected for admission by "the academic -board; 2.7-M failed In rvport; 021 were rejected "bythe .medical' l«o»M< 573 were rejected by the jointaction of the academic board and the medical

matter of Idle pride,, bat/rather of stern dis-ciplinary necessity that make* West Point re-

' Qulro of her'students a,character for tawtworthl-: ness which knows no evasions.•-" 1; ; ' '

"1 ought to pdlntout that West Point Is but'ths.... beginning of education j in'the army. . In each of' tho* aervloes there are, continuation' schools ofgrowing-breadth aDd'jusefulncss, and the plantoward which army i sducatlon la' tending' will

" (Dor* tnd more seek only the fundamentals, both.," of' etirlcatlpn and character, at West Point, and

look more and more to the special schools forthe technTlcal,,,,sclentlflc!completl<«.r >, .: J:

V "A test may be appealed to with confidence.During the first hundred yean (1802-1002) of Itsexistence, E^Tl graduates of We«t Point left the;

' army to. go into civil life. ,The occupations ofthose graduates are ahown' In ' the following

.table': nreeldent of ths TJnlted States, 1; presl-N

'' dent of the Oonfdderete States, 1; presidential, caadldates, 8; vice-presidential candidates, ; 2; , S B (

member* of the cabinet of the Cnlted States, 4; "". not. ambassa'dor, 1; mmlstet* of the United States to' " * -

foreign countries, 14; : charge d'affaires Of theUnited States to foreign countries,; 1; UnitedStates foniul generals and consuls, U ; membersof congress, 84; Doited 8tatea !dvll officers of

' various kluda, 1T1; presidential elector*, 8; gor^ '•admlsslnn to West.,! •rnon'of Mate* and territories, 10[ blshopa, 1;

of tencblng_,by recent grnd'aates,- Be then pJintsoat that there I* more permanency In the sea*deralo staff than Is commonly supposed, Of the 12.heads oi depurtm'ents/T are permanent and 0 oredttailed for periods of 4 year*,'. , . •'.,..':...;.

Secretary Itaker .says, • in part, concerningcriUcismKo. 4: V •.-. -..'.':•'...', "'•

. , "Nothing short' of omhlsclence can anatyte theIntricate, multiplied and scattered activities ofthe war department' during the recant war athome and ,1a the field, give Just weight to thecircumstances surrounding these activities andapportion either the credit for success or theblame tor mistake as between the- persons en-gaged In those activities. The handful of WestPoint-graduates, the larger handful of RegularArmy officers drawn from civil life, reserve offi-cers,; officers of the National Guard, and thevastly larger body of offlcen" hastily Instructed hiofficers' training camps altogether comprised ap-proximately 200,000 men, of whom the WestPoint graduate* numbered 8,081. In the ; per-formance of their work these offlcen were, aidedby an Immense body of civilians—captain* of

"industry^

lieutenant governor*. 2; Judges, M; member* ofstate legislatures, 77; presiding ofBcfira of statesenates and houses of representatives, 8; mem-bers of conventions, for the formation of stateconstitutions,-18; statt orfleors of various grados,31: adjutants. Inspectors and quartermaster gen-craltrand chief engineers 6t states ani territories,

, SS; ofQcen of sjate,militia, 188; mayors of cities. ,'IT i city' officers;- BT:' "presidents of unlveraltles,colleges, etc, 40; principals of academies andschools, 32; regent* and. chancellors of educational

cosjrinrclal, industrial and all other kind* of ex-pert* worked side by side. It U my settled con-viction that-the cojmnifcrctnl and Industrial or-

: ganltatlon of "Ainerlcafaurlng the war , was a,' colossal success; bat whether It was or not, the

result was not an outcome of the system of edu-catlon at West Point The) thing was done by thenation and all' tbe varied processes by which ourc l t l u m s e r o t r a i n e d c o n t r i b u t e d . " : • • ' : < • ' • • • - • •

: Ue explains why fedcrnl statutes /and gcrsem-m«n't regulation* produce red-tape; he - admits

. that the system may be slow at times, but holds •i- that conservations otpublic safety, require that'

these transactions be matters of record and that"the person responsible fcr * .decision ahbuld makethe'decision. Bis explanation pf passing the buck(is that--"there Is as to each question, a proper

'peraon to decide It; to ask' the' wrons> person 'can,' h>tej bnt one or the ,other of two results, eitherto be referred to the right person er get an un-suthorlted answer." B« soy* the fighting was

new, but old. Then he sayis: .• , - .,

"The comment seem* to Imply a belief, onPresident KUot's part, that graduates of WestPoint have not OBOWD up well, ta the militaryhistory of the United Bute*. It is Incredible that

' he cbuld really eaUrtata this belief. In evury^ war In which the Cnlted States has been engaged

since the academy was established. Its graduateshave been conspicuous, alike for heroism and soc-ces*. The following list Is made up of nameswhich Illustrate American history. They aregraduate* of th« MIMtarr academy, and they suemen whose memory we teach our children to

T e v e r e t . ^ v ; s . - ^ . ' . r • ."• .\-''~ — ' • • > • • , & •, -

"Indian wars: Ouster, prooke, Wrlgfht, Macken-tlc Oboke. A. S. Johnston, Jefferson Davis, Aber-cromble, Casey, McColl. Canby, Rains. :.

"Mexican war: Swift, Sherman, Totteu, Bran,

Large Duck Farm on Long Island.

one part of bran, o'ne-half part of beetscrap; with 8 per cent grit and 10 percent green feed. Feed this mash threetimes dally, or use a mash of threeparts com meal, one part low-gradiwheat flour, one part bran, S per centbeef scrap, and 3 per cent oyster shell,with the green .feed and grit added.

~"'•" Influence of Fs«ds.The green fpffl \*

out of the ration during the'last seven-days of fattening, as it tends to.colorthe meat and may produce a slightlyflabby rather than a firm flesh; how-everj It Is easier to keep the'ducklingsin good feeding condition on a mashcontaining green feed. Boiled flsh mayreplace the beef scrap, but should onlybo fed up to within two weeks beforethey are killed, as It may give a flsbytaste to their flesh. United States de-partment 'Of agriculture specialistssuggest A considerable quantity ofboiled flsh Is also fed- in the mash.tolaying ducks In sections where thedock farms border-on the, water andwhere fl*h I* available at a very smallcost. This flsh aids materially In re-ducing the coat of feeding.

board; ts« pawed, foe whom no vacancies existed; •-•'tartltutlon*,' 14; profewors and" teachers, 186; R. H. Xeei Mcdelianl- Beanregwrd. Httger, Beno,IDS failed to complete the viamln«tlrm«- IRS ,I.^ superintendent Of coast sUrr«v. 1 '•• m m » » . ™_t• OrJnh'Jafltanmn n«iH« n»rW I ,

/S'-V

108 failed tq complete toe examinations; 1SS de- superintendent of coast surrey, 1: surveyors gen-clined.appoJntmena after completing the examl- ?™1 °* 8 t a t e* •n<' territories, ll.;'chlef englneeranation, and S3. appolntim-nti were cauceled. ' o f stiM*t 14t president* of raliroad* and other

"ll thus appears that the process of selection is "r"cfl?ia^l!?5!*1 8 T ; c W e f enr^wra of railroads and-,coan try wide: that the requirements,- froma purolv o t n «T fl"1*"0 wp«*. <B; superintendents of raili

•cndfiialc standpoint, or* adequately high, and ,§ "n a °mr, P»"Me-work*,; 0?: treasurerBund- lhat tne standards are rigidly enforced — rec* lver* orrRllroads and other corporations* 24;-r- • • • • • • • • civil engineer*. 228; electrical engineers, 8i -•!

torneyn'and counselors- at lavf, 200;K'American »eoKhdary education as It:1s,

^ ri5* W ' ' W . 'n the <-Ily and In the country,; ; • * • * '•*? ****•! on* persuaded that 'no'.college

•drawing Its sJwJent«*from a wide geoKraphlcal} • " " coro«*1?* w l*B 'w*st Point In the quallty^of

?;i?5-^ M«ie^I;.it6ldi It receive*, arid If more unl-$0(.&pa:«cen«ge -<!ould_b*; obtained ,br sectional orW!.^**»;*«l«3»oa. :*nrely the exchange would be as f | bad « i« for^the. national ^onstitoency which thep|ar^rl»tjy^M^iM|srsj-g hadV* ../•..' •-'.•;„ ;.;»„.i.-,.;,.':Wg>iS^^:"orttt«W":>J«- ^Sorretary Baker=sly«^he?

aia^dowrnot attetisi any. value to any opinion hefjmi^exprtmfMfo «**. controversy. beti&^the1

^gj^^M^wpwaa . and the free elective 'sys-;"llS$§iKe?§yp°9§fi*Ji; «J««»tlon.;-;';But. he /soya, -It''

|d«i^;be'co*r«aed that West Ptrfnt has' a ' '

,. ^-. vuperiorpencral of clerical order. 1; clergymen, 20-pliyslclana, 14; merchants, 122; manufacturers,77! artists. 8; architect*,' 7; farmers and pfanter*.

,230;.banker*, 18; bank 'ppe*Wents, 8; baak offl-cet*. 23; editors, SO; authors, ' TBiiiiv .....'•' .;;-(,'

;•;' ..fKot *ll of the foregotag occupations ore sinnlflcant of intellectual ;stipt«aacy or necessarfe"'

.superior trainjng.-bnt the list Is one which could s

•'nbtjftiT^jbjjfeb,^ade b; a tollege with on tnsde-qnate or archate systeni otfijucation. These menhave stepped put of^W«stKpoij»t into xlvU Ufeand fluaflfltfd'ln targe^ i\umlj«rs for jwslUon* fromthe

fposing to represent the',onstrnetlon." ' "j '

within the gift of* 11»P6>1»'

the' tehufln

In

Qr«nt,'Jefferson Davis, Earry., Civil war: General oiDcers In Union Army, 2M;U Qonfederate Army, 151; Grant. Sherman, Sherl-dan,-S<hofleld, Bu*n, Bamalde, aillmore, HaUeck,Hancock, Hetotselman, Booker,- Howard, Bum-phrey*,' Kllpatridt, I^on, Meade, Jyterritt, B*>Clellan, McDowell, Ord, Pope, Portw, Reynolds,Bosecrans, Bofcum,"; Thoma*. Warreni1 Wright,Beauregard, Bragg, Oooper. tiood. A.' 8. Johnstoa,J. E. Johnston, R. B. I*e, Ktrby Smith, Anderson,. Bnckner, Early, EwelV Horde*, A, P; J31U, D. H./.Hlll.rHoimes, Jackscuv S.* D. I<ee. Longstreet,Pefflbertbn. Polk, A. P." Stswa^ ?Wh«)ie»i^lit«

:L*e,.LoveU..Ptck«tt, 3. B, B, Stuah, Van Dom., VSpat»h|h War: Otla, King, Fits tee. Wheeler,

•B*ll;?^rshlng,:I^wton,':B*^;-.;"ki-J>:,:^yi;T**;;--;1 -Pxplorera,: build«r»yof !mllroad», canals, 'UgW

bott,.W*rreb, Bamphreys,*.* Tmlcott, Oomitoclt,BachWrtWeMe^Wrlgnt, IVTu^eti^aelCPotS*;Wilson, Orevna, Du Pont. Ludlow, Melgs, Grlfflu.

. Holden.' BuiCk, GoetiuU*. SIbert. Oalllard. Ooiey.

<5»nti «^>MeOhO«t H » e o ^

NEVER KICK HORSE ON FOOTLateral Cartilage la Liable to B*

anilsad, Causing Inflammationand Lamenes*."

When examining the foot of. a horseor mule never kick the foot to mokethe animal lift it off of the ground. Inkicking the foot you are liable tobruise the lateral cartilage causing In-flammation and deposit of bone cell*.This deposit of bone cells is the start-ing of a side bone, which will can/e,lameness. This lameness once-startedIs extremely hard to stop. JSo neverkick the horse on tho foot. i •

SUPERIOR FALL VEGETABLES!'Radishes and Lettuce Are Appreciated

arid Are as Easily Grown InAutumn as In 8.prlnaV

Radishes and lettuce are appreciat-ed again, as the hot weather has madetheir,(rrowth difficult and their quali-ty poor. In the fall they are as easily;grown as in the spring and as good.'A little fipst does not hurt them, andthey lost' over a long season. Thelargo varieties of radishes planted,

Jate In the summer will make Immense'roots that con be stored and kepiover winter. '

have removed the cnuses ofThe oil content of; the meal add*

materially to Its feeding value/ So fnrthe experiments have shown that th«-meal does not taint-the animal prod-uct, whether it be pork, butter, egg».or-rallk. Moreover, by diverting thefish meals to his animals Instead r>fsupplying It directly to his land »nfertilizer, the fanner lose* bnt a trifleof Its fertilizing value and gains Its

.entire feeding value—thus making: thpmaterial yield two profits In the placeof 6ne.-

KILL OUT PERENNIAL WEEDSQuack Grass and Canada Thistle Are

Most Troublesome and OfferGrestert Resistance.

Perennial weed* offer the greatestresistance .and require more: thoroughand persistent effort fo destroy them.Two of the most troublesome of ourcommon-weeds ore quack grass andCanada thistle. The former may- bedistinguished from other grasses If itscharacteristic; feature*' are known.Whatever, .me.th.od. wl|| destroygrass will also,kill.Canada thistle orany other perennial weed. >

; Fallowing-or cultivation without •crop 1g- the /most certain -method oferadication on larger areas and marbe ' usedf to good |' advantage excepton sandy soils and those continuouslywet or-very porous. Success dependsupon the depth of plowing and fre-quent cultivation.' The prevention ofall leaf-growth In weeds means theircertain death. Certain cropping sys-tems will! usually be successful .witbquack' grass. ^ ^

SUCCULENT FEED INSURANCEMighty Good Plan to Fill Silo Durlnp;' Favorable Seasons for Feed In

•• ' '• | Dry S e a s o n s . . '•'• :-\'J;:: .;

The silo ta th« best feed lnsurancerthat can be provided. Even when sea-sons are favorable and there 1* plen-ty of rain. It ,1* a, mighty good plan»;o fill the silo,with green succulenteed and carry It over to the not;;:ear, when a dry season may come an*

cause a shortage of both feeds andp a s t u r e . -•; . '-,:•..y'a-'M. . . t - » . . ' ; / * « ; - ' / ,

Bsrean of CheinlstizjkiMwma HighProuln Content of Scrap Has

Been Active in ConvertingMaterial lute Food.

The common domestic pig win neverbe able to write a book on.table man-ners bur he knows!'how'to order ameal as well as anyone. He Is In afair wsy to demand*-* flstt course tosoppleawot ms 'salad and vegetablediet Be win take bis flsh la the formof flsh meal, the .refined by-productmade from sound, wholesome rawmaterial at the sardine, tuna, and sal-mon canneries, or from the menhiden.

The flsb meal la not to be confusedwith "flsh scrap," a coarser by-productmuch used for fertilizer • the meal Ismade from clean, sound material anilIs Intended .<to be used as food for cat-tle and'hogs.. Formerly, the cannery-waste was all made Into "scrap" forfertilizer purposes, but the bureau ofchemistry, United States departmentof agriculture, knowing the ixtremely 'high protein content of the scra[i, tinsbeen active'In cbhvertlng this materialInto a high-grade protein.. feed. Thecleaned, selected portion is ground to a

palatable meal which < may beused1 to replace tankage In hog, poul-try, or dairy rations.

Flsh- meal hhs been recommended.,tfs a supplementary ration before now,but popular prejudice, against a> badlyprepared1' product has discouraged- Itsuse. The department of agriculture 'has proved by feeding. : experimentsthat flsli meal equals the; hlgh-'ptlc«<ltankage as a ration Ingredient; nni!-better methods of •st'lectlng nud iiillrhnr—h

Altr

The HiaHihMi Udeps «*(Oeorg» Washbgjnai at Salgni

,>j*i^l*-t--w^^y^^?%'.*f}^f

LESS HOGS AND CAHLE

"WorM war: Perahlng.' March,

FEEDING OATS TO CHICKENSFowls Will Taks to Them Readily

If Sweet, Clean and Heavy—Dlvtike- Long Points.

Oats make, good summer feed if you«ttV get:;the;fpwI*:^'MCth^\iree>yi'Most fowls wui;tak» rt«aitytoscle*n;swest, heavy,clipped;oats^welghing,%a|pomds p«r,bo*hel,,wWie t h w ^ o ^

jMfDSs^(that..g.iT^^^hu^Stqi;i6l^ol

This n« Bke wtrctess afcffewhkh ogexaWa naaCr hesudcsxried ea- tax

"Hogs thuve;,been^ «tfuc?4.liefeS 5jatjvely about fcipeir cent^urlngl} the!: firi^* ionr;, months ^pf thUJyear on the forms of the; United,

.'" 3ttt«*",'.- a»~ compared j wj .i'-' •?%; ;^d5^urlngviM;^fli*6is*>Siis;nmt^>ol1i618ii'reBW«vthe;-btte

SSs^tfi

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, • • ' I1 7

fry

» * 1

Models in Chicago Streets

Aftr Mien Is the downjown streets of Chicago were: entertained tbe other da; Uy u-duxiUnu paradeC tfea latest and tnort beautiful deslgni In women'a mar. Bom* of the manikins at* nere seen

llleiilcan boulevard. - :

Bishops Visit Sulgrave Manor

Warsaw the Objective of the Soviet Anttfas

- View o t the rojral p a l a c s l n Warsaw,'and a body of Polish troops, Une4' up la the afreets i f that citjr In pr*p-aratlon for Its) defensa agatnat th» soviet ltusslaq. armlea. * '• — •.•' < .

Knights of Columbus Attend Pontifical Mass

went to England to atteud tlie Luuibaib conference, vuitlug Uie ancu*trul liouie ofat Salera<r« Manor, Xortn Hauta, ,

Heard Wireless Phone Talk in Europe FINE BATON FOR FOCH

S - < * !

Bke wtnfea n l n t t a e station un Signal Hill, St. Johns, H. JS\, '*>whkh operators noesUy heard a wireless phone conversation that was beingCBXXfstt OB I

Latest of British Dirigibles

Di'legatra to the supreme convention of tbe Knight* of Columbus frutu every «tnte In the Union, from Mezlco,Canada, the'Philippines, I'orto Illco and Cuba, attended the sQleiun pontifical maas at Ht.«'«trlelc'« cnthedral. MewJnrk, by.which the membrra of Uie convention dedicated thnmaelves anew to the pledge* of the order. Tho photo-rniph vhowa Fourth Degreu color guards entering the cathedral. . . ' '

Iroquois Dedicate Memorial Site

Bopreme Knight Jame» A. Flahertrof the Knight* of Columbas, holdingthe Jeweled baton which the organlza,-.tlon will present to Mumlial Koch atMeU, France, August 21, when theformer commander of the allied annlnIs admitted to the order. ' '

CANNING HIS SPEECH

tot. «t

Franklin O. llooseirelt,'Democraticnomine* for Tlce president, making "i,rampaign speech for. a pbonogmphreooitLl

. Why PeetsAre Poer. ' r, Wt all, right to woo the mote, bui

bar sartorial goardlans make it prettyhanfto gn'bold of anr of her toonax—Boston B»«nlna- f

Chiefs of the ttx nations compoilng the troqtiols tribe .marking tbe south-ern boundary Una of Oa-wan-ka In the Adlrondscka as a permanent memorialto the League of the Iroquola. - * ' :

tIER SANITY QUESTIONED

Diving Fins of Biggest Submarine

An Investigation la balng laade tntathe sanity of Miss Anna. Wright, aNew Turk woman said to'be worthfQ0.QOO,O0O, who It Is reported has beankept s prisoner- In an upper apartmentof the Villa Bragiottl In Florenc*,Italy, on the ground Ibat abe la afflict-ed| with precodous madneaa. Topassers-by' the girl has cried that ibela "being held a captive by her mother,the former Un. Leila Wright, and b «ateilfather, Count Kmlllo del Bella.

Camera Tilla TaKa Quality.A tar camera for colorlmetrie tar

deterioration In prodoeur gas endother operations, - Is being manufac-tured.by the Bteere Engineering com-pany, Detroit, gas engineer and Build-er. The operation lMxised on a roughrelation between The shad* of tar;•tain and Us weight ' The stain lamade- by paailng- a cerajln amount ofgas through a piece of spedaLwhltsipaper which may then be cotnpareelwith, a standard stain chart formating.tbe tar content.

i

g-

- ' - The Exemption. '.-Tb* trouble with blographen to '

that they .tuually .e»phas(«e, a great-.man!s good points and tenor* his bad ''"one*." ' . '!> . * ' ," "Bat not invariably.'' • * • -

to* u t

Page 8: GEORGE C. MOON COMPANY - DigiFind-It · 2015-01-03 · Mutt hnu«*wlTn have daxen* of way* of r*-rn»kl»g of serving leftover meat* but to maoy throw away left-over vegetable*

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V H R CRANFOFp CITJZBN, THURSDAY. AUGUST 26. 1020

Phone 376-W

•~ T

t ' '1» 7I

^ iV . \ |i ' ''I

«' PI!'• fit hi

1

fir

rrit*K

hiIs%

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L

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v * •

STORAGEWe have added 12 new rooms to

our already large quarters, andean ewe for your goods in a flnt-claas manner. - i

Bate* on application.

Robbins & AllisonMOVING PACKING' STOnAOK

and-SHIPl'INa •

213*215 E. South Avenue

'..' 'bnui'l>»Mli.Ki 1' •' •'• '"

OPTICIANS.

219 Broad Street

Elizabeth, N. J.

FRED Hi |AHN*(Huoowrtotjo l'bllipp J«UD)

house, Sign, andFresco Painting,

flat* ana) Deaerstlofi , ,

Paper Hanging—ADD DUUni IS—

Cilass, Oil. Paiut, VarniBhe*and Wall Paper.

Cranford, • Ntw.J*ri«>Telephone 28-11.

SHOULD REVISEN,J. CONSTITUTIONMany Changes In ConstitutionDetiraW-'Among Them Raise

in SaJarkt of Legislators.

MARKB) CHANGES AT RAHWAY,

Mew Ward* at Herri* PlalM HospitalWill *«*ewbstfUlleve Congestion. ,

Oovemor It Urged te R t m nUtIIHy Commission.

Trenton.—There are many subjectswttlcft-tbe voters should bear In mindat this time, when nsplnmts for seatstii thelefialatare tiro eeeklnf their imp-part, trot, dicr* it none more impor-tant taan the noed of amending theOonatlrntion, tttnntUr which IX* nre*--«U lasjbtetnr* did not etcn consider,though thaw 1* not the slightest doubtthat; moat of the tnembors hud it inmlijd, particular the detirabQltjr- ofIncroaslng the compensntloo - beyond•000 a year.

When the present salary w»» Died,not only wore living oxpensos mud)lower, but the tout, of going througha primary end election campaign **•••inconsiderable lu comparison with theOXIXHMM now, and Mnee tho MlarMtof srerjr pttior dims of public oflli'»nhnvo boon- gonerotifiljr 'Increased .thereis no ronsun why tjse senator* inilai-lenihlyinen should not receive coiHrtd-urntlon. It la trud ttmt n. salary in-crmuii nniemlini'iit wn/> dofontoil a fewyean njgo, butrenditions wi'i.i dlffer-

tbt freitui 9rmtrtniSng at' tin

Pb0no274W No. 2t» Ouslno Avn.

as well asthe entile on n thousand hill*alf contribute llicir aha rr of

MEAT FOR YOU TO EAT.Tills market lmmlles none Imt Die

cfioice g'*dc« o'

POULTRY AND MEAT -\'.'* "prices arc] bi»»wl on the ninny

tale* aud «ni«11 brofit principle. JIIwants ' your regular trutld, nnil we'llget It if you will only ul\c u« a trlulThe quality of the uientH nnil the moder-ate prices at* what we rely Ion to but'ilbusiness..' Fish and Clams'every Friday

Telephones MX), 201.l V X i l o f t i ' t s v

I . UllKNWAH.SKU, Prop .

nut then.The subject of biennial session*

should nine rci'cu-c attention.'. NewJunay is one of not more than halfa doaan of tho »tnteii that stick to theandont custom of holdingsessions annuiilly. In the old days t mor throe'"Blttliiga'* wvro.held yearly,,and It*Is Uroo that thu people took hn<otbaf step forward and adopted thobltiimlul wHtlon plan, which will notttppnar lLIra such«, radical more nft«rtlio oxperloncoe of ibis ytmr.

Many otbor chatiReii lo thetlonum dMlrnble, uml thn IctclaliillTvcandidates, should lui im-nwltb abilitynnd force to prtmaut them for consid-eration neext year h\ order that theymay bo submitted to. popular rote in1022, (iftor baring rovolved tho ap-proval of two HUCCMSIYO legislatures.This Is no tliiio1 lu nominate cnndl-(latss whose only 'eAnlm In that thoyeovot tho honor aud ''think thoy will lieublo to slvo nit IPMHI service us" othersIliva glvuii. The fuel Is .that the wry-let) has. boon unrtiiflKfiu'tdry. It cuii W:improved by ralaliiK the stiiriiliml nf

gthey will belp tutwUotJaUy.

Want Utility Commlaslon nemeved.It In not the parpos* of tbe Tiraton

'City C'onunlaiiloa to raopente withthe governing anthorlties at JerseyOtty, ltrr-wnrk, Pateraon and other dt-lea of thu mate In a moTeAwot to urg»gpvn Oovernor Bdward* the tmmedl>ata removal from wfflce^f fb* member*of the Kew Jersey Board of PuWleUtUlty Oomralaslonsrs.

The feellnt «B«lnst Out PMBty t>ffn-mtalon bat rapid!/ been beepmtncBore Intense UiroDgtJont the state, andb ll was capped dnrtnf'the last

week wben the PuMte Barrlce OaaOorapsny was granted anthorlty to in-a*nm> Its rate for seprlee from flMto 11.40 per thousand coble feet andthe Cumberland nod Pleaaantrtlte OaaCompanlts to nrtahllsh a |2 rate.

OoTprnor EdwarOi U being; orjc»d ttjbit two rlotest political friends andadvisors, Mayor Ifugoo and John MU-ton, corporation counsel of /snur OltyT40 ttko saimn ary action against the.commission and tho Newark and Pat-ereon nuthoritif* Insist that the gor-erpor expodltfl bin decUlon. In th*cbargr* bron^ht against the commis-sion by Jenny City, \ • >;- • :

Mvmb*r» of ff)« Trenton Oltjr OPT*1

mission; ftlthpugh f«llng.that the'M-]lc Service Oas Oiropnnyt I H i n f l B 6 h: y 3 r Tevents to take Ibetr cbiofe. '

Perth Amboy Brldae Ofaeed.;Thomim J. Waaser, state highway

engineer, has announced that, thePerth Araboy brldR* \«U not be opentatll Beptemhcr 1 Motorists tratel-lng to riiota points wlU flod It neces-sary to' dt-tour by way of New Brass-wick. The best route to Now Brans-wick IN by wajjt Wostftold, PtalnOeld,Now Miirkot nnd Highland Park.Bountiful Crops Indloated by' Report.

Weathor conditions extremely fn-rorablo to tho growth of Vegetation

jr.- •*<jg»>* >..

CO OB AS EVERJ* *%>.•%• 4 J

Mors Honor Amonfl Rnhwoy Inmatsa.» I n I t i i l i H ' n . v . I l v f o r i n n t M r y i l i i i l i i K l l » i

pMVollcd throughout New JerseyI July and ns a result all crcps1 show

A substantial Incrtowe over the e*ttl-inntes for July 1. This IS Indicated-Intbo Now Jeraoy crop report for Au-gust 1 prepared by (ho United (MatesDepartment .of Agriculture In co-oporntlon with the ffew Jersey'de-partment and tun ^Bureau of Statisticsnnd Inspection:

The condition of corn August 1 nmolghty-elght per cent of normal, Indi-cating a yield of forty bushels', perncre nnd a total production of 10540,-,(XX) bushels as compared -with IO^OO.'-J000 bushola, lust yonr'M tluul estTutate.nnd 10,(103,00 buHhels,-the'average pro-'ductlon for tho pnst ten years.

Wheut sufferad severely from win-ter killing and the yield In.New Jor-say Is tho lowest for the last tenyears, It is osllmnted ut 108 buslieUper ncre, a total production of l,t>4l>,-

cornparvd' wHh lJOdifiOQ biish-ols, tho ayeruKo production for thelast tea, yonra. Tho quality of thisyear's crop Is clRhty-olght iwr cent ofnormal, which Is thnju per cant undertho awrngu <iunllty>for tliu pnst tenyean, mid twonty per cent hotter thanthe quality of last year's crop, which

In days gone by it was PrivateSeal that quenched your thirst,steadied your nerves after a hard(lay's work, built you up in periodsof recuperation.

Private Seal, as mellow and tastyas eyer, is still at your service.Tests* have shown tliat its tasteand body-building qualities remainunchanged. .

And why not?The same high quality of hops,

and malt still are used. It is stillbrewed and aged with the sameinfinite careJti It is as good as ever.

+Q}tnparc it with the sub-'wtiitcs. Then order a• cqse TOD Ay from your

grocer or dealer, as usual

PiWAIESEAl- -AC naan A c i v i n_*AS GOOD

F ;E Iv G:E N S P A.

ZINGALESSafe and Reliable ,

Prescription PharmacyWalnut and South Avenues

CRANFORD, N. J.

BABYPARADE

ASBURY PARKTUESDAY, AUGUST 31 , 1920

' APjBClAL EXCURSIONJ> ' > « ™ /WarTuxlli;\

a w O V Additional ).ial train ;leavasCrnnfoni 0 0.1

A. it., Daylight Savinx Time.,'• Betornlng. leases Aahnry rark-Ocean, 0rove 7>80 P. M , JOayl'iKht

fatal .ftflnwd of New Jersey

a]t4i«|^«M«J^ailaltasas«/.i»Ma-o

by ; Jim Htato i)(-|uiriiui'»( of liiailtiitlons nnd Axcnclon, piliu'lpnlly cmil.CTTnlnn thn OIIIHBIIU'IIIIOII ui ltn IM-matoB. hnv,o l»'vu cfirtft^l -ddt • 11oi,rjtmore nxidiHlvo niiil Ihoroiinh MUCHtluin In'nny othor' Institution of theHtrtte urid lmvo .cnta-tod a'-innrked

ige hi tlur remillji oMninrd In rtioreformatory. Tills alnteincnt In lunilcIn n lultor to ()|;(lmi II. |[;IIIIHHHIII,

»ld^iit «f tho Sinti; Ilimril nf.Con-trol of Institutions mid AJH'UI'II'H, byIlurdottc 0. Ix«wh»,: CHiitiiiil.KHlom.i' ofInatltulIoiiH rind 'AKI'IIOII;^ w|ii> niiystliat. tho rufiirumtory him ncrvtnl. n?rin' "experiment RtniWir to' &\\i\\c .thel>rogTW(S mn(l« under.then.vsicin'iii-nugurutod ulmut two -niid oii"-|ialfyoars iigo with" tho rrciitlon ofjllii'Stnto Deporlmont of liimltiillniiK iiiniAguhelos. ••'-"•

Menial tcWH, ivhlrh hiiil been' trlr)out as enrly. us 1011, but lUulit'il totho JBilrtilulHtmtimi of Iho school ofthe' 'liwtltuUon, were, kept withintheso Umttittinhs.until ihu hitter jiiirtof 1010. wliun the olii8sllli'Rtlo(T\vns-e.\;tended to. iticfmli> every linniilo eun\-,lutttod to the Insliiuilim. Not unlli'two yearn' operation of .thu olnfsill™Uon: uii'hdilsi wero noiTNxiiry-t» ilrtvvhomo their etllelem'y. It; theso un-niisIt wnsTQiMiiunstriVteil thitt them wusmore honor uiuoii); the liunittra tluin

ilt'was .possible to ilWlose iiniler tin-olU inethtwl of control,

!Coimnt(Bil*»tier_JLiavls: httei^^sliowfi'that from n n-wril of eseniKV, n totiilof twulityln inlOy to the .vein- Justdosed, during ivhliii there wvtii re-ported only, two OHenpei., wnt tin1 Ions:stop townrd the ROIII of p>>r(erilou,which the modern treatment of the In-mutus Is dpslniHMl to nci-onipHHh

N«v» Wards fot-StnUi Hospital.I'ropojml butMltnc operntliiuii lit (he

MorrlH l'lulns hospttnl, for which$800,(X>) is nvnlluhle, wen< ouiilderoil'at a conform™ liftyveu Oo\eou>r Kil-

ls, Superintendent Murcux A.Cutty at tlio hospital, DnnlPl S. Vtnir-hees of the boiml of nuimii;ers nudState Architect Frnuels Kent.

Mr. IJont-oxprefwed the belief thatIn place of the two psychopathicwine* propose.il n> be ervctetl, hutwhich It wo" fount! would ctwt fur Inexecs,* of tho uvnllnhlo appropriation.It wotilil bo posMutp In build a tloublobuilding with two pByehopnthlc wan)^anil' an nilmlnlHtmUon structure Intho center for, $400,0(H>, tho. iitmxintivrallnble 1br the purposa. It wanagreed that tills should tie dono, pro-,vlded a contract -can lw uwarded with-in tho appropriation. ' .

It was ulso axrw.d that (ho otherhilf.of too. «BpV«prhition, or $400,000BhouW-t>« dovnhxl to tmlhllug au>ln-urB»rJ--8* -.Ihe.ijospitft^ad.,^work should,be \uJdci;tnVen\asffoon aspossible.. Althbush tho compl«Qpn. ofthosa etructuR* "will "not 'rolhjro*en

H fWIUwuutlior lift of liarvost

.The condition pt tho oat»-crop A^Kustj'l wits ulncty-sbt pt*- cout. ofiiornra\, lndlcntlng ti' yield of 30.0bushels per acro"SiiiJ^n total produc-tion of 2,08T,000 btwiiols IIR .wniparcd

ii

~TI«»aaw m

with 2,401,000 bwholH, ilii- (Iriiil esti-lunto for luut ywir nnd 2,B27,000. husli-olo tho nvi'nigo production for the histten-jrears,. '': .

The yield of .rjo this senvon Is e»tl-runted nt 17.5 liushois' per ncru nndthu total production at 1.200,000 bush-ols.us coinimred with last year's iliinlpstlmntu of UmOOO bushels. TheQuality of tills.yvwr"" crop Is nlno perwilt bettor than that.of last year andHllgutly above tho nvurago for tho lnut

• i l , :

SWEET CORN LtTtem

Potntoos art reported In -excellentcondition In all parts of tho state. Thocondition AuguRt 1 wns nlnnlyTOvo-peri-ont of nonim), lnillcnting a yield pf,120.2 bushpla per acre and a total pro-duction • of 1H,8S4,000 bushels as com-pared with hist year's final emtimrtoof 10.MQ.OOb buahels-und im nvornKoof U.003,000 bushela for tho lost tenyuan.

Tho condition, of sweet potatoes Ao>1 wns KJ per cent of normal, in-

dicating a yield of 138.8 'bushels periicro nntla total ..production of 1,001,—000 hushela nn- otmipitrod with last | j |year's .final estimate of ],7M,000 bush-i'l» ami uti nrerujfo of WW.000 bush*els for the last" ten yours.

It Is 'catluintcd that New jenwy willprodu'eu 8,225,000 bushtJs of nppleathis your us coMTmrcd with 3,1113,000buHheN last year uml £,311,000 bush-els the avcrago production for thupast ton yearn. The. commercial cropof upplcj Is estlumtcil nt 833,000 bar-rels us conipiiHgJ. with oST.000 Imrrelalust year. Indlcutloui print to theproduction of 1,CKQ,WO l>U!iholt> ofpouches whlrh Is silj-'hlly In exefm ofliiBt yoar and cousfJorably' abovu theiiveraso for the past ten yfurs."

Decrease of Food In Storage.Thero wna a decrenso in tho tuuount

of in liny food nrtldoa hold In cold ator-ln Now Joreoy _ln_ July, as cora-

pnrvd with tho pre^Jou* month nnd aseumpared with tho itontliK of June andJuly of last )'f«r, nccordtng to a coovpllailon JUKI ntndu by tbx> Now JencrState IXimrtinent of Health Ot Oth-er focrtWuffei Increiised nmounti; In cold«t6ros» are- ahown. hut "tho IIPCTCAMSare greater thtih th« tnorro-evt.

On June SO, lnio. thwo wefe 033,461cases ol^vttSi In cold storngo, whjchwas lnrreiuied to 5TxJ,SS3 July. Ill, i910,and oa Jun^-80 last there W e 480,807,cnjKa-in;:st0Tap.\ which incroosod'to&ma$a on 3vij 81 last, i sna l l er bunvk o r A * l i l U H ^ t h i i n I f t H f t i a " , ' - . , ' - I '

sh Every Day• • • Bres

: • • - " . . ...• r

From Surrounding Farms.

HELLO 2 3 9GROCER

rTiynti

James Angus KnowfesREAL ESTATE

. . . . A X D . . . .

- INSURANCEAccident Cjrclone Uability.\ulomoWle Fire FUteGUssRnrglary Ufe EverythinK

Rales and contracts chNrfallv sob-Dttttod for JnformatioB withont oblis ition.

L.NCOLNPARKCRANFORD i'1

A Few Attractive Homesjust Completed

INVITE INSPECTION^\Vill also^build accoiding

' » • • • o — » - a » • • a) « > • • • • • » • » - • • • • • • » « » » »

FERTILIZER BONE:Sheep Manure , :.

GARDEN AND FLOWER SEEDS

Poultry Supplies', CHARCOALi MIXED GRAIN, SOFT MASH, ETC.. " \

DOG CAKES, COLLABS, REMEDIES, ETC.

Horse and Stable Equipments.* SPONGES CHAMOIS

Wanbotise, Etevator, Owl Packet

Mi' Ml

?'*/":. -* y*- i mp>M

Phono BTT Cranford'

CHARLES S . POUNTNEY(Successor.to AABON D. OUATSHB), >, ,V;

BLESABETH 8TOBB]iQMte : - - " ' • -•<*L-:r-