ELECTlOrf - DigiFind-It · 2015. 1. 3. · property foUy insured. * - y *• WBITB OALL W Cranford...

8
-^*. J SM tC" 6 A Neighborly TheCianford, Tnat Company is a Ddgjhborfybankv convenient- ly located and has every facility for the ptompt accurate dispatch of fcaniing business. * , k pleases us to serve you well. 2 % Interest Paid on Dally Balances of $500 and Over. ELECTlOrf ftmton Landord-Ttnant »aa*» iwartfBwttaLawCtogit AOJQUfll. THJ. iOVElttEfc IT <• ,^0s,"-' ~V>~ Ho How Much I* Yours Worth? Treaton.-AU that la needed ao» tor t'Faato- taws ttot aretotopdedtohrtof relief to'acute housing; condtUsoa to jceueetad settiea* e* tto state la tto 1tMbtlt.|MK«a» IB tfc* A JMWtaNot bUla Out m «c «kr tfc* «M»n tot. wfll Eteiybody bx>w» tr ^ b* to*»y v*o& W i to protected with «n adequate amount of fire maaanee. Dont trust to hick. In these days of* tigk coats, keep your property foUy insured. * - y *• WBITB OALL W Cranford Investment Company Real Batate 26 N C A BliAXBSLBI y •• to tt* «*r> CRANFORD.N.J. MEMBER FEDERAL RSSEPiVE SYSTEMS| Have You an Old Mtrror7 Yes, we can resllver It Make II look like new GRAY. """"* i Tta MMtoa WM»oil«« oo« «C jtfeaM lone «mwn «ot ttmoowjjUWrj llMttm Own nteatni tmtU tftar 10 ;o<dock»rnl«bt »• tUpatUkni ••> in tto unmblr thncMMd to I m k m r from th. B^abUcta m- •ton *ho ooatro) tte « * «tow*and 'tetoctoas aod UM 1090 pnwatdlnsi o< >tha Ufiatatan. To ofl*»t thU tb« • « • atan paatad a twoJuUoo to conUpo* W l r aaaalona onUl tte ao« of tbay«ar ay adjonrnlng two and tana 4ajM at a tima. ' oooeumnt naototim to adjoon PHOME OhE-THREE And Service. EDWIN R- OPIE 26 Konaaadjr P!«*. T«t.a» Cra»tord.K.J. "/f /!•• mmhtmitml I On MB «." Thomas Mascara i UUUIUKBII Btcyd* TMw aaal Sappllas *. I. __ KOVIBS RABOLDtvZIELKE rr*B£BB is something the matter with'B. man's sLsttto yimoa it he cannot see that this repair •hop ia tba one that should; furnish all the r repair* to his anto. Onr matho^a ot doing I helpyou and your ear. 'laMuiltata fWll vtry ©a Fan! Car*t •ambiymen at tto last moment, pre- vented tto threatened break between IB the resolution and than rescinded 'tto other resolution callingtortha two land throe day adjoumntenta, but tto 'faeUag between some ot tto Bepuh- Ucan senators and assemblymen was bitter when they partedtorhome. For the Brat time in tto history lithe lagislataHk or aa longbatt aa any. |fof tto old time™ -around tto state llbooae could remember, ttoboose with- loot authority went Into ewemi™ ass. ialon to denounce tto senate. Behind 'closed doors, thehouse members pen- ned the Republican aonators for trying to conduct the business ot this year's legislature without consulting tha house and for Its alleged tack ot cour- tesy to bouse measures and to-the Bouse Itself. On tto floor of-tbe senate when the MotaUon to adjourn two and three days at a time was Introduced Senator fiunjon of Union, Republican, Joined with Benator Simpson of Hudson, Dem- ocrat, In protesting against Its adop- tion, charging that the people of the atate,would "ridicule" them. The Uud- eon aenator anld the resolution > was ^outrageous tothrowtothe face ot the Mnators," and be also characterised It 1 aa a "catalogue Of hurdles for three Okye." Majority Leader Allen said that be was Informed by Speaker Olover i that tto house would ttot consenttoa farther session of the taghdatara this nar and that to waa Introducing tha resolution so tto senate could continue to aeeaton. Speaker OtoTer'said ttot none of tha . nainbers of tto house Iroew^shout tha_ •seMte passing the three day raaohtoori , . . . . * •^^.__* J a; -fc r>..« ta> Mha^be«»k amCONLIN FOR CONGRESS 1 (FIFTH OOMGBSSSIOHAL DISTBIOT) -, Alan Bruce Conlin I - . ' BBOULAB BBPCBLICAH OAKDIDATB PRIMARY ELECTION SEPTEriBER 28 Elect a Live. Red-BloorJed Aperican to Congreis and reeewe. dean Vigorous and whole-hearted representation. t ;, L E & JPUSSYFC3OT1NG ' •-- MORE ACXIOMPIJSHMENT Mr. Conlin seeks opDortunity to tedtlate for the same people .he fought for in France with the American infantry. Primary Oection Ne^fc Tuesday H.J. OAt &MIGHT 'jtL/s-\& Ave West -f;R[ i L (Sorelick Jazz o OnJhestra aatll they learned about It through a M Mt eonoacta« wUto the laglata- tara. tto hotue members took offense I thhvMr. Olowr said, and-a«prassed memsnlrnff o n * t o nojMMartoto man- Mr and their decided^-pot throogh tto concurrent resolution without coo. 'salting with thrsenatora about It Mr. Qtorer sdmltwd ttat ha spoketotto senate majority, leader about wlndlnr •up the seseta**-aa4.to>added_ttiat ba 'wastofa»or of quitting months tga ^ RaTwrte Iwsrsasa- Bleottaa avaraV In tne house'the aaasmhlyman be*- Had ftr mane Jttoa two and a hsK M i r ever a bin Introduced' by Ma- brity Laadar Hershfleld. to Increase frfoar to a* mamtow dMlttt eleo- d»r«aOiiw»>etoBwere nUSIC PURNISHBOPOR ALL OCCASIONS I < i ft aw aMt£l£^jemtotttMal>t>ka*el , * " Prompt Sartlee ' ' . StoaOWeqpoombitt BaaaaMUa Bates * ' " .;- QsrfofJ. DB18OH.' nEakmsa ttpnlK«d >attotto.taataiae«oa jhtHw field waa aatpeftotf hy tto,DamoeraU« Tt*r " *•"*• " " " " * ' * hllmt wb* eto— •<- . Mated tto OfcjedloawaamadatotSetottadna. tton of the hoi, and Speaker Okrrsr, irt»toilsoBBepohUea«,aBstot '- the gwmd that 7* » v +"l;$'\*-f%$ _i'agr/ tavartM _ At thejPpniwieB 7.00 A.M.to9 P.M. - . ' ' Tuesday, Scfftco^er 28* •• Z'' ' ' t,\ ' ' ' ' " ' ? -< I ." Vote for Renomliiatloa of CongreMmao *--. ^ 'fT% 4 > ' 0 ^^4|^^i -tw

Transcript of ELECTlOrf - DigiFind-It · 2015. 1. 3. · property foUy insured. * - y *• WBITB OALL W Cranford...

Page 1: ELECTlOrf - DigiFind-It · 2015. 1. 3. · property foUy insured. * - y *• WBITB OALL W Cranford Investment Company Real Batate 26 N C A BliAXBSLBI y •• to tt* «*r> CRANFORD.N.J.

-^*.J S M

tC"6

A NeighborlyTheCianford, Tnat Companyis a Ddgjhborfybankv convenient-ly located and has every facilityfor the ptompt accurate dispatchof fcaniing business. * ,k pleases us to serve you well.

2 % Interest Paid on DallyBalances of $500 and Over.

ELECTlOrfftmton Landord-Ttnant »aa*»iwartfBwttaLawCtogit

AOJQUfll. THJ. iOVElttEfc

IT

<• ,^0 s,"-' ~V>~

HoHow Much I* Yours Worth?

Treaton.-AU that la needed ao» tort'Faato- taws ttot are totopded to hrtof

relief to'acute housing; condtUsoa tojceueetad settiea* e* tto state la tto

1tMbtlt.|MK«a»

IB tfc*A JMWtaN ot bUla Out m « c

« k r tfc*«M»n tot. wfll

Eteiybody bx> w» t r ^ b * to*»y v*o& Wi toprotected with «n adequate amount of fire maaanee.

Dont trust to hick. In these days of* tigk coats, keep yourproperty foUy insured. * - y

*• WBITB OALL W

Cranford Investment CompanyReal Batate

26 NC A BliAXBSLBI

y• • to tt* «*r>

CRANFORD.N.J.MEMBER FEDERAL RSSEPiVE SYSTEMS|

Have You an Old Mtrror7Yes, we can resllver It

Make II look like new

GRAY. " " " " *

i Tta MMtoa WM »oil«« oo« «CjtfeaM lone «mwn «ot ttmoowjjUWrjllMttm Own nteatni tmtU tftar 10;o<dock»rnl«bt » • tUpatUkni ••>

in tto unmblr thncMMd toI m k m r from th. B^abUcta m-•ton *ho ooatro) tte « * « tow* and'tetoc to as aod UM 1090 pnwatdlnsi o<>tha Ufiatatan. To ofl*»t thU tb« •«•atan paatad a twoJuUoo to conUpo*Wlr aaaalona onUl tte ao« of tba y«aray adjonrnlng two and tana 4ajM ata tima. '

oooeumnt naototim to adjoonPHOME OhE-THREE

And Service.

EDWIN R- OPIE26 Konaaadjr P!«*.

T«t.a» Cra»tord.K.J.

"/f /!•• mmhtmitml I On MB «."

Thomas Mascarai

UUUIUKBIIBtcyd* TMw aaal Sappllas

*. I.

__ KOVIBSRABOLDtvZIELKE

rr*B£BB is something the matter with'B. man'ssLsttto yimoa it he cannot see that this repair

•hop ia tba one that should; furnish all ther repair* to his anto. Onr matho^a ot doing

I helpyou and your ear.

'laMuiltata fWllvtry ©a Fan! Car*t

•ambiymen at tto last moment, pre-vented tto threatened break between

IB the resolution and than rescinded'tto other resolution calling tor tha twoland throe day adjoumntenta, but tto'faeUag between some ot tto Bepuh-Ucan senators and assemblymen wasbitter when they parted tor home.

For the Brat time in tto history o«lithe lagislataHk or aa longbatt aa any.|fof tto old time™ -around tto statellbooae could remember, tto boose with-loot authority went Into ewemi™ ass.ialon to denounce tto senate. Behind'closed doors, the house members pen-ned the Republican aonators for tryingto conduct the business ot this year'slegislature without consulting thahouse and for Its alleged tack ot cour-tesy to bouse measures and to-theBouse Itself.

On tto floor of-tbe senate when theMotaUon to adjourn two and threedays at a time was Introduced Senatorfiunjon of Union, Republican, Joinedwith Benator Simpson of Hudson, Dem-ocrat, In protesting against Its adop-tion, charging that the people of theatate,would "ridicule" them. The Uud-eon aenator anld the resolution > was^outrageous to throw to the face ot theMnators," and be also characterised It

1 aa a "catalogue Of hurdles for threeOkye." Majority Leader Allen said thatbe was Informed by Speaker Olover

i that tto house would ttot consent to afarther session of the taghdatara thisnar and that to waa Introducing tharesolution so tto senate could continueto aeeaton.

Speaker OtoTer'said ttot none of tha .nainbers of tto house Iroew^shout tha_•seMte passing the three day raaohtoori

, . . . . * • ^ ^ . _ _ * J a ; - fc r>..« ta> Mha^be«»k am •

CONLIN FOR CONGRESS1 (FIFTH OOMGBSSSIOHAL DISTBIOT) -,

Alan Bruce ConlinI - . ' BBOULAB BBPCBLICAH OAKDIDATB

PRIMARY ELECTION SEPTEr iBER 28

Elect a Live. Red-BloorJed Aperican to Congreis and reeewe. deanVigorous and whole-hearted representation. t ;,LE& JPUSSYFC3OT1NG ' • -- MORE ACXIOMPIJSHMENT

Mr. Conlin seeks opDortunity to tedtlate for the same people .hefought for in France with the American infantry.

Primary Oection Ne fc TuesdayH.J.

OAt &MIGHT

'jtL/s-\& Ave West

- f ;R[ i L

(Sorelick JazzoOnJhestra

aatll they learned about It through aM Mt eonoacta« wUto the laglata-tara. t t o hotue members took offense

I thhvMr. Olowr said, and-a«prassedmemsnlrnff o n * t o nojMMartoto man-Mr and their decided^-pot throoghtto concurrent resolution without coo.'salting with thrsenatora about It Mr.Qtorer sdmltwd ttat ha spoke to ttosenate majority, leader about wlndlnr•up the seseta**-aa4.to>added_ttiat ba'was to fa»or of quitting months tga ^

RaTwrte Iwsrsasa- Bleottaa avaraVIn tne house'the aaasmhlyman be*-

Had ftr mane Jttoa two and a hsKMir ever a bin Introduced' by Ma-brity Laadar Hershfleld. to Increase

frfoar to a* mamtow dMlttt eleo-d»r«aOiiw»>etoBwere

nUSIC PURNISHBOPOR ALL OCCASIONSI < i ft aw aMt£l£^jemtotttMal>t>ka*el , * "

Prompt Sartlee' ' . StoaOWeqpoombitt

BaaaaMUa Bates * ' ".;- QsrfofJ. DB18OH.'

nEakmsa

ttpnlK«d>attotto.taataiae«oa jhtHwfield waa aatpeftotf hy tto,DamoeraU«

T t * r " *•"*• " " " " * ' *h l l m t wb* e t o — • < -

.Mated tto

OfcjedloawaamadatotSetottadna.tton of the hoi, and Speaker Okrrsr,irt»toilsoBBepohUea«,aBstot ' -

e» the gwmd that

7* »v+"l;$'\*-f%$_i'agr/ tavartM _

At thejPpniwieB7.00 A.M. to 9 P.M.

• - • . ' • • '

Tuesday, Scfftco^er 28*•• Z'' ' ' t , \ ' ' ' ' " ' ? -< I

." Vote for Renomliiatloa of CongreMmao*--.

^ 'fT%

4

> ' 0\

^^4|^^i

-tw

. t

Page 2: ELECTlOrf - DigiFind-It · 2015. 1. 3. · property foUy insured. * - y *• WBITB OALL W Cranford Investment Company Real Batate 26 N C A BliAXBSLBI y •• to tt* «*r> CRANFORD.N.J.

1/•'"/'* / • • . , WiM.

****,$

%

MB. PORCUPiNE V..I

OKB morning, Bob Rabbit »nd TimHare were running through tb*

woods, when Rob espied Mr, 1'oreupln*atttlng In the doorway of bis borne.

-There Is old Miv lleaeefaog/'Jiesaid In a whisper to Tim I lore. "Bet-ttr not let him see you because he canthrow one of tnoau sharp dart* be car-

-rlM under lilt long,-coarse hair.* '-.',.Bui Mr.-Porcupine heard Bob. Ran-

(tit. for his ears are very keen and be• ai once bristled; but before Tim and

Bob had time to run be? spoke to themand dropped bis quills nut Of sight.

"Come were," he palled.."! won'ttuft you. I ' wnnt' to eiplalh a fewthings to you youngsters so you will

-«aaft.i

" never call' a I'orcuplne a Iledgnhnb.again. It juit make* mo brlstlg whenJ hear that name1."

"But we thought you were Sir.Hedgehog," said Hob Ilahblt, keepingat a distance. In spite of Mr. i'orcu-pint's promise. .. "Tes, I know, and so do many oth-ers think that Is iny nnrno," sold Mr.Porcupine, '.'but If you listen I will tellyou the difference. '

"In the first place we are In no- way related, although Mr, II. has quill*,

but Jio ram ants and many tilings—which I would scorn.;1 • "; '

-And be Is not nearly a* large a* Iam and If you rbold near the storyfrom some animal that has tried toharm Uni, I guess b* would tdl you avwy different story if h« ever tried thesame thing on me.

do not throw my qutlls at an en-emy as inany think, but 1 can easilylet an enemy carry away aa many aahe likes so deeply buried lnbhn thatthey have to Iw drawn out,' -. "Now, Mr. Hedgehog use* hi*quIIUto' defend himself, but he ctnnotwound as I' con, and look at - my t*U.Why, you should tee me tts« that \thraan enemy trtes to attack roe."

Mr. Porcupine suddenly droppea hishead, srelied his hack ahri planted Idsfeet firmly with all hi* quills or spineserect and swung around his club-liketall with many more spines, so swift-ly that Tito Hare and Bob Kabbl.r a n . •-' • " ' • ..••- • - ' ; : '•

When they were at some distancefrom. Mr.; PorcuplnV* house. - ttipypeeped oat from beiilnd a tree wherethey had taken refuge.•*"pld you ever see your friend, Mr.Hedgehog, do thatr called Mr. Porcu-pine, looking very calm again. -

" l l u U not a friend «f .'ourfC* an-swered Mob Rabbit. "I Jas't thoughtyou had two names, and that Hedge-hog waa one of them."

"Well, 1 have only one name anddon't you let me hear yon. call ine'bynny other," said Mr..Porcupine, Walk-Ing toward them. , ' ' • ' • '

"You will never hear us call youanything," called Uoo ami Tim a* theyscampered off through the wood".

"I know why he w«sso augry," saidTim U*re, when they .were safe'Intheir pitrt of the wootli.' fit. Hedge-

This la' Dainty Dorothy Olsh, thepopular "rnovia1' sUr, who rseentlyaalled on the "Imptrator" for a vacs,tlon abroad. • Mlsa Olth's work on thatr**n ta familiar to millions who relyon. motion pictures for tllelr chitfamiisernent

hoK Is the little fellow that rolin ii|ilike s bhU wh«n he In Beared noil Mr.I'orcuplne thinks lie In a cuward furnot fighting tin IUVIIOVH.'

'Well, tliey both Imve very sharpqnllls and I think Mr. Porcupine Isvery fussy," said Itob Itnblilt, "but Iwill not net nt'nr cnougn to cnll himanythlng~iigiilri.' 1 enn tell you that."

(Copyright.)

••"• ,.MttaHJ-nw«.'at

Ths'

I M .C0BH-W:

ipSiSi p t f l K B ••••'

asiad'iii^SP'^':' •'

(sBBB# tt»'Mt'?'!''^'"1 ' ' "'

;l»|;<BH<Mp||§Sj;, ';;•'

' S r T ^ T K ^ ' : ; •-••:-

aaiuity*'M^^^l-;-^'^';.! V

^S|ffi5^^w|,f;&' 5 ••

tSS*4sBBaslmi^ ;

THE ROMANCE OF WORDS• ' ; • • ' . . M A M . " . : . . . : : ' : : , , .••

LIKB mnny another word, ."Jaw" lias slipped li\to tha,

Kngllnh—or rather, -Into' theAmerican—Inngunge like. . themule of which Mark Twainwrote that It was "withoutpride of ancestry or liopo ofposterity," -. .

-Jaw Is not n derived word.It was coined-and, according toLieut.', James' Beese-Kurope, U.8. A., tt1i«. conducted .one- oftha Jajulast jam .bands, It awe*Its origin to n man mimed Itntx,.whoso niuslciii oruniilintlon wasfamous In New Orleans sotiin10 yenrs nito, Ititxtt Is reputed'to have been t-tui first to realisethe harmony nnd appealingquality which reside* lu suxo-.phone*, trombones, snare.'drtini!^apd Iho like, WIUMI |)luyed with,a «nap and. dash. Ho lie npi-clftlUod In this kind of synco-pated music and Ids fumespread throughout > the. South,Imitator*, springing up In vtirl'ous sections. -On» of thesowhich toured Missouri nnd Hie

'middle Went, styled Iteol'f the"Jats-betid"—sIlRlilly alteringthe nnnie of the ordinal lead-er. In tho courso of n yi'nr or0

BO the final "s'«'' were changedto "E'H." Jsxs-lmnds m'n'do theirappearance from the Atlantic tothe Pacific, and "Jii«" slipped

' Into tho*lahgunce and even Into.the dictionaries.

• * • • • t r % . . .

GHATSby Edi^t Kent Forbes

REMOVING BLEMlSittES

f TJIDrin the henil of serious blero-U Ishcs one shnuld Include suchthings as targe birthmarks, amallpoXmarks, unsightly Bcurn. powd,er nniltttttop miirlis, and burns. All of then*aref curable, but -unfortunately, thosewho are competent to .cure theni danot alwnys live.In tho srnnUeg,cltk-s,and so their services «rt> Itoit to thegr«aU'r part of the- country..i In'n deportment like this It Is Im-poa<iltilo to tell n wotnnri eiuctly bowHII« mn.v overcome micli blemishes.

Siimllpor pita nr« removed by otrt-erliiR the outer tikln with. n loth iwhich drlra It up so It may t|e pnln-URSIV n mini it—It ini'ts off eiutlly—1<u>lng a new ' tendir iinlili nilnluKlNklu lienenth. Kor a time this skinIs snpi r Benilthe and nuvils et<|>eclal<art> but xiub (iiinplexlinio^iire twn1111 >• lieuutlful and a ..delight -to thenimipii \\ho hiivc fnnil iHs RUreniontotlierwlnc Illrthniarks nriJ cured tlth-i r l i j n cimitlc or the clivlrlc nwilli-trintment the IHHMIII' ntruph>lng ihetln\ Vilns IIIUSIIII; the IIKI> war, aminllortlnj; tlii> norimil skin to form

MSI

LONQA Umu ago I berrn ouu inuujel la nother one 'be vaa ^ugba

back. I DO understand!! vcr moochwot eea W t 1 feeguro iifclibe he cat-ena too many holla ot !no shnva tinneck for muka Oat' way. Jiut t amnweatake bouU Idee alia tight. Seeiico

• Itetle while ago I feegurn out why et^' plonta roughs'!neckul«»n countryi,,, - Uo«ta;.eTBryboily' senila ablrt.,an(t; collar for maka clean weeth (la lauu-

dry. After I aenda few times I fln.laout gotta be roughn neck or bMy da

; new shirt nnd collsr ev«ry pajdny.. J U M (ska d» diolce. „, , . .,' ^One ahlrt I gotta eea best* health

le«tle dirty when I aendn Weetb' l l C B u t t w n e i i h ^ m m e

Wjhat the Sphinx'Says.By Newtdh Newklrk.

' E » « r re m p l o y erjtays his em-ployees t o jknowing W -

nwhich t h e y ;a s k h i m

Serious trouble* can be removed byexpert treatment.

Powder, tnnrks nn> removed bv pierc-ing the. skin nt each mark and Inject-InR iHiroxtde. %vlile,li clemis'.out 'the.jHivvder einhedded III tht; cuticle. Tatloomarks nre'rcniovecl bythe surfnceSvlth n solvont,

Sciirn are usually trttitvit^hy cuttingand ullowlui; the nniimrked skin toform again under careful 'treatments*

••' • (Coprr ictat )

for drew up now.- So Innga he stnyHtllt Oat collar* niaka greiitn saw forCuttn wood, Kveryoue ee» 'rough ontop Ilka Mnall Iowa roaiL

On dn bill from deeya lanmlry iai*."We Usn Only Sofia Water." I dun-no, but H tln,k ecs gnoda Ideo sonir-tlme ccttakn nails out.( Wot you tlnkl ,

o

CROSBY'S KIDS

SLACKERS

$£k

iCoiiyrlBht.)

SHAMELESS CONFESSION.W«'r« bounO. :t9 own the .truth; altnougii- It rmt<*B our pride r l » up ahd (ret: 'ttVVir kncHke.1 nlx>ut a lut, nnd ni>

Woman' hn« tried to steal us yet. - . • ' • • ' " ' ' •

i THE SCIENTIFIC FARMER"Mary, you'v* simply got'to

"k*cp- our children in betUrhealth or ,f»ol let tkam playground my unitary- dairy

He Wanted to Know.

.. "Yes. ,d>r>-ase,".; ;• .;' ' -; . ; : "'•"Is having a crjck In your, back any

tiling Uko having a streiini-lir.edbody}" '•; • _ ; . . , . .

. - . ; . - • . ' • • ' • ' ' • •

.. ' '-. Hung, Nothln'l-;**Did young Dauhslelch ever jet auyof his paliitinca hun^l"' '] .'.-; •'_•

"Iluflgl."' I should, sayi."Sov -Hte'cigjijjrette advertisements are. hanging in evpB^-ti*^c<mb^'s>ln-t!^c^^it|r^,^'-''^r'.

.•^::Why:a..^ehelor^U^-^rr3. by • did jou; ni?yW;-marryT*v ;-.;:':5s|,.

.. e|l 'y^:"^-:;w|heneVerJl.: boujht)}^yth^|'t;alwi^'s«^B^thligsfirii^:l!e|h|^:,f^'afl«r**^K^^fjl^ljgiwbi^ga^w^lBaia^

TAB1>B D'HOTE

n p H E table dtiotas dlnDtr l a * *»©•X ceasfml method of *a\iBf money

at the expense of the app^its.:s ?The regulation table dttott dhsner

eonsbiiai of three coarse* with' onegueu. The patron Ii allowed to lookat a lottg, serpfntme bill «f taraiwhichseems'to present untold possibilitiesfor 50 cents, but after reading It ailthe way through and de*ldlng-to or-der everything (». sight be Mumble*onto a few Uses of bnuqu* ftn* printwhich eliminate* ererythlng bat 'theroast,'beef and Iced tear, . ThI* ex-plaln* why so many, patrons. rUe upfrom** table d'hote dinner WearJBg awan and crestfallen look. : ''*':*

The table dTbote dinner was ln-Tcnted-for the benefit of people whoare riever hungry when It I* their turn

» Long Bill of Far* Which Sasrrit 'toPr«sent Untold Possibilities for 50

• c e n t * . - ; , ' . • > . ; . . • • - - , : . ' . : . . . ; _••''.

to buy. It is favored by hotels nndrestaurants because It has been dem-onstrated that almost? everybodychooses the wrong meat or vegetablesarid is'itrlcfcen with a total paralysisof the appetite. It is estimated thatthe American hotel makes more moneyoft* the fable d'hote victim thnn Itdoes ofr the six by nine sample room.with n North pole lempernture.

The unnln Idea Imcl;. _of the tnble*d'hote'dlriiierVhiin-ever,l.i to drive thepiltrons Into the op*en Jaws of the a laciirte service. This is n merciless sys-tem by wlilcll two Jilrlps nf bacon and* plate of'buttered toast are madeto "co»t more than a week's board atthe home of an esteemed relative. Itrequires more fortitude to slt*«lownBud look Into the 'threatening couu-

Shoe and Foot troubles

oorviaUIngtlwBirdo* towtar tj»legless union, siflt sfl whiter. .' '••;-.

Tb» tahW^dTiote dtaim I* o>«M-lessvall r f t W ^ e p W f e ** «*t^'(IkfifMiS^^Rf;'ft*0BHT' know; «OW-to Uve, It wtU n«r*r be adoptad a« asotxtmte for fo<St

-What They Mew

DID YOU DRKAU OF •TATUK9T

*T«HB modern adentlSc UiTcatlgatorBX of dream phenomena ' all' deny,

of course, the prophetic quality .ofdreams.' Except In one regard. Theysay that perhaps-^and they emphasisethe '•perhaps"—in the dream, state son*Incipient disease or disorder of tnasystem may manhtaajt Itself In dreamsymbolism, which said.lDdplent dis-ease or functional disorder would notbe' manifest to the dreamer In hiswaking state because as yet of tootrifling a nature to. exert 'an Impres-sion upon the mind while occupied bythe world of relatives.» That thereshould be found In this way peoplewho still cling to the Idea of a super-natural origin of dreams la ascribedby ;Uie scientists to the fact that theirattempted. psychological explanationshave, so far,'been too Inadequate-toovercome the accumulated supersti-tions of the centuries. And when weconsider the vast ntimber of yean .thatman has Inhabited the earth, and that

the circle of

seriotuTo the ancients drpatters, ttoocn at aarly as the tioi«of Jottaa Geasar Ha* Wlae had heronto anHK at than, aa wDJ be remem-bered In cooaectSon with the celebrateddream of Caesar's wtfla Calpharnia.On- thei night before Caesar's B*M>«!.natfaMl'ab*) dreamed that she saw tuthusband** -statue running with bkxvtfrom natty wounda and the Roman icoming to bathe their hands In thaporpl««rre*ni. Sbe-begged Caesar not| o (D to jthe-senate that day. but h*refa«ert:lsV,s<»r.«way-U}st the sen...tbrtshould" hiugh at him for beingafraid "because his wife had had adreanV,? Calphtirnla's dream n tprobably "born of her anxiety for thesafety-of her husband, but the mys-tics agree with her In regarding It snunfavorable omen to dream of a stat-ue. They say. however, that If you 'dream <A several statues, you willshortly receive • valuable prem-mfrom an esteemed friend—a cane, ap-patentlyrof-«|*ety In number*.

' d P'Jt 8*rlou* Offsns*."The Judge didn't seem, to know any-~

thine about the traMc regulation* In-volved. Meltber did the prosccutlnKattorney nor any of the lawyers." -.

"Welir \^"ifet the Judge found me guilty..",

'•'. %e-found you guilty of'owning, anautomobile.' Yon admitted that-"

Life and Death.• Life Is rather a state o l embryo—spreparation for life. A man Is notcompletely born until he lias passed -through: deotlu—Franklin.

THE commonest form of foot trou-ble-Is tliat which the laity speak

of as "Hnt-foot," or "fallen archest acondition which IK, In fact, nenrly ol-wu\(i caused by bud potture, by mus-

s weakened through" lack of properr\eri-l*c, and expeclally. by the use of•.liois ot poor, type which limit muscle [notl»n, especially action of] tl|i» toes,nnd elves n faulty weight distribution,on. ltie, foot. .-. j ; .'! j•'Whwi the biifeipot shvage'walks, hN

foot "toes In," and the toes Knisp theground nt each step. Ijn conspquenreof this, the leg muscles, whose ten-donjMNin bnck of the Inner ankle bonoand im> hltcheil to the sole and the'tw». arc stronK nnd elastic from useaud. hold .'up the nrch of the foi>t.- With stiff shoes, especially with tightor short ones, the action of the toesUOlroitcd or even • stopped,- and theiiiuscleji .eoiis«iuently -lose '.elasticity•nil tone • '." "| If one -stands, much nnd walks lit-tie, all. the QHUClo.s of the leg andfoot lose strength. •

If one UK-S out In walking er-j.ra.nd*

jSCHOOL DAYS

Ing (as Is easy In a stiff, shoe) thestrnlp on.weiik muscles Is increased:luoreovec. tlier.e' Is a slacking up' ofMipport on tlie Inner side of the anklennd a rolling over Inward (not reallya falling) of'the arch, with the resultof. lameness In the arch and In runny• other places from strain. ; "i •: Every foot can be rolled over,tn-

Tl» well In g-olnsrthrough the.worldnew on^a manners us carefully i i mbeholds those ot others. ' Civility • costanoUiInx in thin world and H buys «v«ry-UilnB.—Undy Montague. ..\ .;':~.*'••"*

SEASONABLE DISHE8.

,, •Yminii be,ets canneil Ifor'a" winter,'npgotnble.'. are, mo»t dellcioSs, ifihoqseKmall, even :slre45lie^pwas)v'Vp'1

leave the stem'qt ea<;h nn Inch, long to'save, them' from: bleeillnc.' • Cook •-uni..til teuder ' in" boiling'•} wnter. •' t>rpn'Into-cold water'aud slip,off the sklns^i*ack In jars;" usirik ti teospoonful ofsalt nnil two teaspoonfuls of mignr r.Qeach qunrt, place the rubhers ond ITUto overO'iiwlnR iyllh bOliltigAvater.5 Pijtoil tlje. top anlQcre* just «npu(fh; to.,

•lift, the Jar.. f Place o n > raik, coverwilh hot water.'jni' boll^ forione" hourIteuiovv,-'''smr-and^8e^jjiwa^'.fo^.>.Trtii;,te/us«:vj'^|ig|:^^p;^g^

' •....' '->;f|orn^ltKP^ppersi£:';;iy:'J>>J,i

Hemove" the,;seeds; n^m thiycVa**^peppers: h«llith>tn l^snlt^iyTOteij^mlnntes. Jhe^dralnjand'•jphop;ifffiiS'ftpi'|

•^^r^of;csni:Sn'itl\e;^je^|t£'«h5^"

•Jer. TOt the c ^ from the,fob. Put.tw.o, tnhtespoQnfols ol-bnttefj, TO ,a-

.•nd-pepiwrs j' alfd. sert«ynf,

-4 -. ! Rrun* P a lthe'-joli.- of1-tbree^m, •""''»

cupful ot

n -. tablespbbnfiil: - ofi • Kelatin.-joftenedin prune liquor, using one-fourth of acupful,. threCHfourths • of a "cupful ofprunes cut* In pieces, th^-Juice; of halfa lemon. Let stand In cold .water,'then,addflcef and- stir-tintil It begins tothicken, then fold In ooe-hklf cupfulOf Wiilppetl treara beaten stiff.; ^YbenRtlff.; inoutdT toi "hold' Its. shjjpe, ttirnInto a mold, oiid set away to become

. f i n n J ' . ' . . /•'. : ' '•'•"•••",' ;v

-j

- ' • - . ' - . ' ' . . , • • C ' . j '•-./.. {• •

••'!;';; "1.Binln^W»KtBteon>it .:•- ^f., Fry thin',sliced;.;bacon'Vnn^l; crisp;

'drali'ribn"pip»,'iapd-TBta^.'.'^:.'a;.hotplattcr.;>;.;i,In ''tW;2>SI^';r;fat;^cpptpeeled niid sliced;baniuas; dust withc^chhet"i^W]»ew^;tamedla^ely. :;--..••"'.^(&vi»•J».;;^»lOf^•w•p»p«rj!BnloaV-•^:

uati)r

wardr*-if there Iwere no roll .In or outwe-could not walk In pugh ground-but this should nor be the. usual posi-tion.'; Certain' races,anit certain peo-ple; to be;«(«!*}: have low, arches natu-rally, but without foot trouble, Never-:heless a foot which habitually rolls In-ward In standing Is never .natural.

fhe Woods

•NCtE SAWSlogue" of U

'Park Is off Ihestlng bookleibaps and Illieverything thiIt could notMount KttlnltInterestinR otnational park

Incidentallyname. the. nn.means nothln

rans who vlilt It In vacatua goiwl American naine,.

' course, menns changlns tlnler since the mountain la

•pork. .;.-•y i'eter the Great.' on lih

creed tliut'Vltus BehrinB.should cross Siberia to th

t build two iihip* and senrcl> tht) Atlantic. Thus cain<

Aon of Alanka and ofereis,. In 1T73, and H M

,Js% explored th» rnclficsound and suspected t

j™e breukorn ou Its bar.; 1.'"discovered Cook's Inlet, bflFuca's straits, and the C'Mentis of the East' .India.

straits In 1788 but dureibio's bar.

• , intemattonaUJealausles'•• • ka Convention b'f 1700, wl

right to Ssh anil trnde, pinlzlng.

', -... • Then Iri iTifi came.tn'.' . Gr»y of Boston, lpjfae C

aanoanots b s c u Kkawlirfaaadlf Hortonl's kataadof rrits's. Tbedhaa

( to meet the itamandaolfaiof CBatomaraaad laiisfaotl(Uavaryway.

TbaOnaford

Noadaf, SeptaBhl;;sfcVTIrt«.-t»a(r»o:liial

rpartl*aii.:AUwoaien Total|areln*IU«i. Inatrscttoo <faatomethodi»r>otjDgtt=tobaheld8sp<ember»Y;h itt'jL-£t»nnj*\ Craisred U (XWBMcdoa with 8

"r'Yojittotato. chart' an of Teppsr E

|»r. OroltwUI•frasHaae* teOranforu, wh<fiteUy>k*emid<<l(orsD>

•;'D*":Qrol*v:foTBi

SUMMERTIMEi

The ieavea tapon ?be .aiders clapped- ;thelr hands, their'little hands—An errant breez?: hail Reused theni •'•-"• into Uiuishter."'.,,;' 7 :'.,;•,, .

A r n y o f sunv,wint darichigo'er the^ > lands, theffertllo glands,:Tfce'perfumej^of 'a' ipse came run-.^•i''ning;Bfter;::::^(;i"..';;(;.-.i • . -r - '

The'waters of the river caught their: "TOilfi.Ubeir chiery,. smile,:-; .. .' And Crippled "Joy' to.;• ev'ry merry:- : ' c o m e r . : ' . - - i •.'•'-. '.','•" -'. •'( •• '• ' ': ' : 'A; r^ln flutttredJsoftly »to (the stile.

"•'•.vV'"':-'!;.thj»f.«hady"Bti1e.'..'.'-'':y—::.!•"•!- ••

And' raised nls-heod to'stag •• song -' - . '" ; :"of ' S u m m e r . / ' • • ; ' • - ' - . , > - ' . , • ...' ':,'.

A' dainty niald' came tripping d'er thegrass, th? spilnglng grass,

T>e alder touched her geitiy on...' • t h e s h o u l d e r . - . '•":','••''-'. ••.:•;.". ':'•-•

The ieptot kissed the tresses of the-'' :;^ia*a.'theiittle;ia;ss,^:;.; •—:.:.;:'•....

^e'^ficy5^ay^of" !sun^ was., •even;::,..}i'^*!#pK?i»r^ii?-':?"'-'^'i;''V , ' i , r

TncP.wataniv.cain*.".t* meet; her, lapped•Vlfl-^hiS- .'feet^.'b'eT'^iiW-^feet":.'V'^^ •• i » lr^'^h^?tteft^perfu|be.;sll;'

thenj I ne^.th^umtaeTtlmtv;;ihe^ tuin^rtlmejp^plisteTjI 'fi ?

.itoreTer;':if«lnc«(SI.?

becma WaM» Haard tho Nams. "A ttlH-Mphla periodical prlate «

•mm or GnX> «•

Here are^ some" randotductory pages of .llncle'S

; "Of all the flre-mouhlI once 1bl«zed alonp tlie P|

' Is t^f nbbiest." wrote* J«i^T-^aJt/Was: God," wrote

ii'HfltltT" to hte book..;.•'. ".":/-'••••r;":-*J&kslirr,'"WJiiB-lof ail 1: ; F, B. Matthes of the l?B

1 ; •• vey. - reviewing ,that.. serft'"'' -noes-towering high aboi;. ; cide ningei "Almost;.22•>•''••- Shasta, its nearest rivali- it'ls/bverwheiralnkly im:? "ness ot'ita Blacial"ma; ' -fculptureof lts.cilffii'."

ciers amounts to no le»expanse of Ice far ext•ingle peak In t ^ Dn

.7 lridlvlduat Ice' sirwrnsj'miles lbnjt and vie In-ivSwith' the most boastedi . coding from the sunini£i0t0. like: tlie arms o'S^SSeeBjfrom Tacomn.-diKappeairs: tb> '.'rise /"directl;

?K|i|fl'eany seeiputhe ridgeifsi'rhJse" .'''tneinselTBi"; are ;3;^ri|R'S.(i«) toj,000:feetSS'tn^gh/tbon.'.anci./tliel

|f^.^j«ltltod.ev :\vt": •'•; 'T-:

S S f i6ut:«^'coiossal;are, ;tJg^canotthit^they. , dwa^al»e::and;jif»ejtnen«:;tbi

RMo«^>t6i.Moujit.;,t|?bltg?sfee^Monn'trSiafei«.stan4

' tf;BiUes'-»«l

Page 3: ELECTlOrf - DigiFind-It · 2015. 1. 3. · property foUy insured. * - y *• WBITB OALL W Cranford Investment Company Real Batate 26 N C A BliAXBSLBI y •• to tt* «*r> CRANFORD.N.J.

I .' % *

!«-;-

IT but

i s silent In W0!_

sS-iyi)8s"v*=i%*?

art sUr.as pijriu>-

ys trtMB ear bake* sf t U J hin tb* circle of

reams were serlntuirly as tbe-tim*

se wise had Benmas will be retnem-with tie celebratedi wife Calpnumla.» Caesart emnsiit- .1 that she saw l»r•uniting with blonds and tbe Itoinup.their bands In .tn*.!>begged Caesar nnte that day. but h»amplest the. sens-.

at him for beingIs wife had had anls's dream wa».her anxiety for tbeSand, but the my*r In regarding It anto dream of a stat-iwever, that If you '

statues, you willvaluable present

friend—a case, ap-In numbers,

light) . ^ •

Off«ns*. .t seem to know nny-~•afno regulations In-lid the prosecutingof the lawyers." ..

round me guilty.",guilty of owning anadmitted that-"

id Death,state oC embryo—•

Ife. A man Is notintll he lias .passed -franklin.

£•

Copyright yip

ere no roll In or nntIk In rough'ground—lorbe tho*UBiial post-jees and1 crrtiiln peo-lave low, arches natu-t foot trouble. Neu'r-lch habitually rolls In-; Is nerer.natural.

a jflie' aiders clapped .Is, their little* hands—jez*; bad Reused .them •i{er."'.;.r ..%v--,. .cent dancing o'er the^fertile.lands.:'of 5a rose came run-.

the river!caught theirsir cMerjf'smile,:-; ' •Joy" to : eVry merry

sd|soffly»tofthe stile.rstite^:~": ; |--'>/. •:is head /f6>' sine ay song -* • ' ' • ' • " ' • • - ' • ' • • ' ' " • ' • ' • • • ' ' ' • ' •

camp tripping o>r the* spllnglng grass,inched b*r gently on...a v v l ' v ' , - • ' • ' < _ ' . • •_:•;.••. : • . . • . •

siia the tresses of the-,l i t t l e ^ a s s , ^ :.:.;• ^ ~ i '•:"'••ayTof" sun.: was,,Te*H»;r-'

neFJotmeet: her, lapped"•neTvStiriy^feet'vv :v>:.

e K . ; ; . " • ' • . ' . ' • . - ' . . ' • • ^ - • • • • i ' 3 - ' ' •'••••'"•j ,•.'>.'.'.•:•:"':.•.

tnewitheySumtaertliiie.:',;b^^e.;jcw«ipI*t?75,Pf>::rti^'^orwfei?:fs1nc«f|I.;

.^.,|«i*p,:vri

S*fliA*Sfj&Mj!g B^S'itf^^SI^&tf SiWyif";'an .aHw««i*Mtwt>t(k'>Mrt M M •*-ctptiM IMU t*m «UcH «t t to SBkwtW tUJI»lqt,toa»» « • «M«>4« «fl»l*»

rN'CtB SAWS 11K0 "'frustrated Cata-logue" of Mount ltalnter National '

' Park Is off tbe press. lUls an Inter-esting booklet of SI pages of text;maps and Illustrations. It containseverything the tourist needs to know.It could not very well be dull, forMount Kalnter Is one Of the most ;Interesting of tho 19 peaks In ournational park system. . ..-...•'

Incidentally. Undo Sam should re-name, the. national park. Its name .

4 »• , • inenna nothing to the BO.000 AnierT-rans who visit It In vacation time. It should havea good American nalne.. A change' In name, ot.

' course, menns changing the name of Mount Hal-nler since the mountain Is one-third of tbe whole

• p a r k . . ; . . - '-. ' ' .- ' . : • • ' . • • • • • • . • • • . . . '

:...-.. i>eter the Great.' on his d.enthbed In 1TO1. de-creed tliut'Vltus Bohrlng. a-Dune In bis employ,should cross'Siberia to the unknown wc-Rtern sea.

I, build two iihtps and search for the fabled passageI tho Atlantic. Thus came about the Itusnlun pos-stAVn of Alanka and of the north Pacific coastrVreis,. In 1773, and Hacetn, In 1774, both Span-(ds, explored th» Pacific coiiBt, discovered Noot- :\ sound and suspected the' Columbia river from

[•Jine oroukero on Its bur.; In,1777 Capt. James Cook^discovered Cook's Inlet, but mlssvd, both Junn.de"JFuca's straits nnd the Columbia. Capt. Kobert..' Meuris of the East; tndlit cdmpany discovered th*

straits in 1788 but dured not cross the Colum-bia's bar.

International. Jealousies brought about the Noot-ka Convention of 1700. which gtive- the British theright to fish.and trade; provided, they did no colo-nizing. • • • ' , . • • ••''•"•• . ••

Then In\i7i£ came,in American. Capt RobertOnjy of Boston. In j/ka Columbia the first Amer-

*"^ ' '- -world (rtOO). It took»U«p_nine days to get

^~''"'"-'-it'i-^T- — •''- Tpbla's bar. HeHarrj Dlasnood, of Walnuil aveft^nd named i t

';*' r-niftrTm hajlimliiE jia jni rtij. rfuni. | 0 . [ i>tewmhaadlf Hortonl's lee cream, in-l^er of tb*atasd of Frits's. Tbe ipaafe was made I Ivotka ron-

, to Dteei the demaad* ot< a, grovrtngillsti of castomers and aatisfacUon la aworedf ^ e v a n K ^ ^ v " • " • " • • " * ' ! ' : " • • : ' ^ ^ • • ' • ' \ ,}

TbaOnaford LsacM; pi Women Vo-.janwUlbolclanMietinta^theTowtnhjpiBapms,:HoadBf»Sejptambar » t at °8.80Ip. at. This i W n e ^ absstntaly nan.Ipsjtsskn.' AUwBSMmvi)(anofCraaf6rdlarelnvlUd. Inetractidn wlU b*dvenpMtonMUud^votiDK tt tbe Prhnaryf ti> DsbaidSeptmber Vk<; ••• '^:'\-L^i •fhi&$$ii&&l(£}itaii,. hasaaT.;: ered Us ocmaastioa wltbStarn Brotban,

rYorav to tatoehaxa^ol tb» dressa wotien of Tapper Brotban store,

BjrwsjrtoaM.1'-l|r.--Oro(t viUl ooatlnne bis^reskleaoi tfcCsjmntord, where be and bsi

f ten r«(U^ for *IMM tloM.

D, Qmse. former CranfordjlK!!.6

taTnler. ••.. - - f »* « . ^

:metr,Cap-Iver.

break-j name1

oughtoncould,

ded lOp. aboutUkea

mngnlfl-roni. '.sea *,

>roa andit'sightsicse twoma callslerJThls

he de-^nountHtn

most

tlarTltalrjler.•',."••. - v-r »• Here are- some"randiOm extracts from, the Intro-

ductory pages of Uncle Sam's booklet t -M -v ';"-- •| "Of nil the flre-mouhtalns which, like beacons,I onceWisHMl along the Padflc const. Mount Rainier*' la tWnbb'lest." wrote JOtm ilulr. "The Mountain

Was God," wrote John D. Williams, givingT . t o h l s ! . b o o k . .;.•'. •;'::/-•• . ' . " • ' • . ' . ' • » , • •' • • • '.''••^EAsllir kin^ (of ail Is Mount Itnlnler." wro«»

F. E. llntthes of the jotted States'geological sur-vey, 'reviewing; ,tbat. series of .huge extinct vojea-

- noes- towering hitch above the Sky line of the Cas-cade range. "Almost,230 feet higher than_Mount-Shasta, Ka nearest rival lpf grandeur and Jn mass;It Is/bverwhelmlngly^ impressive both by the,vast-new of'its Bla'cial"!ma5ye;tand by, the 'striking

/sculpture,of, lts.eilffs.'. Cne total area, of Its j{la-clers amounts to ho less than 48 square, miles, anexpanse ot Ice far exceollng that of any othersingle peak In t#* Dnlted 3tates. Many of Its

^Individual ice' s'trVims are between tour and six•'miles Tbng and vie In magnitude.and In splendor

with the most boosted glaciers of the7Alps. Cos-.ending from the ranunlt In all directions, they.

J;:^adlaje|ilke:tlie armi of * gritit rtarflsh,'* C .••-!.Seep from Tocomo or Seattle the vast mountain'

•4f^ro^K;'wMwi'dlrectIy:frbnt:seji^.level, so. Inslg-?^li|fl'^ysWL-,*«.'rt*W" aboflt Its base. Tet theseKi:'i'tldges.''th"ejri»elvei",;are^.;of. no. mean height.They*?'r&i-isild0'.to 4,000 feet above'thevalley»rthat cut

''llwooghtbem; aiid their cresU average 8,000 feet

^ji^tii^sv\vi":.';'^.-x';:yt!?^:'-\.'- cf^j^:\,k^5jBut:s£'c»ios?ariM^ •the;p'wporilons'of,tbi^reatSSrWoHwCthit/tiieJ ^dwwf !>**mj mnnntalnji ,ofj. this^^::ajnd"j^v^n^m'f b«;ap^eanuic«: of' mere, foot-®bnis. In height It Is second in the Dnlted states

base, is nearly

mimS^

• m y Intwwtlng Featurn (wortporated in Tills Design. .

WAKES CHARMING PICTURE

__ roaat aa ttw etber.-to aUajtawi tbe ttytnt - 3 ^ , - - - ^

far tn. >M*t.strikm*:ft*tw*-~njmuausoslly large, batnc M ft 8 to. * » «feet. An hteal place tor <be family l»tathat l» the etenla&>'<The (Mil ••»•

Ckltf Attra«tl«n LlM In Its QualntiMSS,RewminMS and Hoapitabla Apa«*r>

Jtnea—lto«a|a Large and W«U

By W. A. RADFORD.Mr, Wllliiun A. RwHort will •niwtr

'mnlttiM w>a «tv« u»lm KPGH o rCOST an kit nutijirti p«rt»liflB« to <h«• A M at bttlMln*. tutfS* rwutera nt thtaPWt'r, O« ItKOUAt Of lll» W<<U UMIIWI1

K Kiiltnr, Anihnr unit Mintifacturar, h*without daub*. th« Mihnt luthorltjr

on til thM« uihi*rtiL A44rM« ml tnntilhrvto WlUlum A, »«dfoid. No. tar Vn\r\»t m w . Chiraca. Ilk. uig only »nclo<Mfv»««it tUrap tot rtplr.. l a s|ilte of tht'fkjrt llmt the Dutchcolonial home Is over a wutury oldand. was1 brought w e * by «ur ««iv»tun. it In as |>opulac »» II h»» e rbeen. If iiol uiare so. Originally tl>l»tyiMi of liuine wits foiiml In tlu> DIKI.but. In the last few j m m iniitiy colu-

h h b b i l t luxwxti-rn

the hliilifat polut ll

but. In the last f jnlnt honiPS-htivo bwn built uraniniunlllvs. Its chief •llnu'ltnn lie*

roumln(f*« nndTill* ifivjtjt ••»»

?$tH 'A-vV '•: y^iS i i

^Js^P,,

mIWi

Vii;>i »mir». Ktlll Hours tht,. riBnw-of'CofunililB' Cresti

It la ementlnlly a hugo •now-drift, or aiiow dune hcnpvd upb y the furloua wealerly wind*.

Onr of the InrKvat "glacier ays-terns In tho world radiating from•my single peak la slUinted ontfils niouirtnlii. A study of th*innp will nhiiw II »now-c«iver»(»miinmit with- great onna ot IceI'tteiuiliiB from It down th*liioiitiTHtn"Sides, to end In flvvr*fur hvlow. Six imiTflt glacier*appeal' to originate at the v<*ry

'" oiiiiiiiilt". They nr« tho Nl*-Umilly, the Ingnilinm, thn Kin-inona. tlm Wllithrop, iho/ Tti-

hoinn And the Knuu isincters. Hut ninny o f grenlKlr.o nmi tmprcRHlvcneiui tiro horn, of tlm snow*In rock poeketn nr clrquiw.. Insjjjpulpiurwl IIOWIHof great dlincimliins unit ever-lncreimliiK-Wieptli,from which they merge Into the gllxlimlnit nrmorof tlio huge"valrrijio, Ttie most.na'labUt'qf tb<w«nre the Cowlltx, til* 1'uradUi', the Krylngpnti, the.Ciirliou. tlm H»«BI'll, th* North RHil Huillh Mowlclv,the I'uynllup, ami tint Pyramid glndcrii.'

,Twenty-eight Rhtclers,,.great and sinnil, cloth*Ilalnlor—rlvora of Ice. with many of tho chnrnc-tt-rlstlcs of rlvent of waterl muring sit tlBiwi.over

' precipice* like wuterfalls:, rlpidlng unit tumblingijpwn rocky slopes— veritable noisy cimendea, rl«-

diiiiiiis Uint III'VOT fall tuT..,,,,...,., Tlfi» modern - foiott.la>,ba\un containsall tho Innovations of building »r( nnd•tnnds at a link between the uiodeniagi; and tba'dMys tlint have pasaed,

Who could w i«li, .for H iiibrn atlrncrthan ihe ](ni>• shuw'n htvn«, i

\ t f

k*c«nd rioor*l»lau. '

tfrt-phu-e of dHirxc Is (twre, heinf OS*cmii'iiiiiiis In tlil» kind of

Tnii vvry lnrm> <IIH)IWH)S OpsDoi) the (iiwrnl tiorcli 10'fly 14 feM,whlih i-iiu Im I'usllv converted lntt>'»

imrcli 'Vfltb lilt? addition oftlm very end of tb* UvlBsJ

rtHiui-1» a mill iKHikiHihe.Tliv dlwliig riMiui' on the other ald#

of the ball la iilnmM ri|tiare Iwlog 15ft. !l III, by ir> rei't. The kltcheji, Is dl-rvrtly linnuk.^if ihu dliiliig rou'ul atxtla nlluMlv FicimlliT In »l»«. Thr sUv

down rocky slopes—vt«rltai>Io nolyIng mnnuthly tip on lilildeli rocks jllko^over Us.lower «dg«sv ~ *

are*'at-iiooat Balnler National I'ark. In chop*. It Is not a sSnplecme.ltapering to a-Klender, point-

ed summit Ukei Fnjl (Fujiyama), the great vol-cano of'Japan. ' It l« rather a t|roadly lruncaled'mass nr^mbllag an (fwrmous tree stomp withspreading base and Irregularly broken lop. .,-.--

. Its Hfe history baa bera « xnrteil one. Like all"volcanoes. Rainier has>bailt OI*J5» cone with th*

,. materials ejected by Its own eruptions—with cin-ders and. stram^aiwdded^ particles nnd lump* ofrava and wltb otcasSonal nowa ofv liquid IIIVD thathare »olWja«l Into lajrers of hard, basaltic rock.'

tAt one tiBie'lt atlsJBAl an altitude nf not Iwathan 10.000 feet. If one may Judge by tbe steepInctlnatlob ot the lavi and cludcr layer* visible-In Its flanks. Tben-is g»rat crplowlon followedthat destroyed {tbe top part of ibe mouutHln andreduced Its belcbt bjc MmM>:O.<W0 feet ' •

Indian lecends tell of a great.-eruption. TTiw«nave been «llebt eroptlons witlihi meniory—nne In1S43. one In ISM. and one lit 1858, and the lasttn 1870. Even now It la only dormant. Jets ofsteam melt fantastic boles In the mow and Ire ~

- at Its summit, and there are hot Kpringa1- at Itsfoot. Bat It U entirely safe to visit lloant IUI-Bier,,as further eruptions are tinllkely. -

Lahir on. thta crest, catity,.which meostired .nearly ,thre« mBes aicross from south to north.' wasDlted by rato fntall cinder-mnem. Successive.feebl*ernptlons. added tftjtbeir beigJitWtll at last they.formed "tosHber'Hi l«rw rounded dome—the wnl-

- nencc that now co«wfitole» tbe tnonntaln's »nrnmlLTbe higher portions of'tbe ola, crater rlrn:;rl5* toeirvatlora «fiihlo(Vfe* laiidred fcet'-of t 'e sum--mlt andJnpecially when v!ewe4'.froto below, stmalout boldly as wperat« peaks that nuutk and neem .to, overrtBidoar'Jh* central dome.. Especially prom-inent are Point Success-(.14.130 feet) on tbe south-west tide and liberty Ca$~XiX,\\2. feet) on;thenorthwest s M e . . . - . ' " "" • ".:•' •'•"•,

'..-'.•••••'••Tn* altitude wf. tte main summit has! for many.years be«»-la (VmbLSereral figures have been

*^s^B^|ncM-fr«aL tine to time, no tw» of Ihrrii InC%a»lteiaentj bat mttjgtJba^iViB to: be ofiierv'eft: "were'obtained by mare of le«a apDroxImale meth-

ods. ln'lMS tbe Cnlt«J SlarwrBeolOKical sti.rvey;-% - In'ronnectMa wttb to topograptalc jsupreyt of the^ lloant EsJnleir >'»aoaal Park;. ma6> a new.serlex-v . of BwissacsMEBts by trhmcnisfl Op methods'at close"'''•ratwt',•.Tb«siwErre,ll>e;p***"an'eieya'tkwi of 14.409

feetAthns-pliant It aear flw top of tbe llirt of;W^» smnmrta-\tt tbe^T/ahed SJates:. Tblsi last'flg-

" " *~ *" L '"- error.

o^oerUvery wlnter,the inolsrure-lnilnn \Vliu1a from the

racifle, suddenly COOIMI agnlnstjla suinmlt, ilop»i»Uupon It* top and sides enormous "snows. Them',settling In' tbe crater which was. loft after Mmgreat explosion In somo prehistoric age carriedaway pirhtip* 2.000'fuet nf tho volcano's form«rbright, prcxrt with ovi-nvlieltulnn weight down Ihemountain's sloping nldtw. . ,

' Thus aro born the glaciers, for Ilic snow UnderIts own [manure quickly hnrOvnn Into Ice. Through14 valleys nclf-CTiryed In tl|j> nollil rock How IIMWriven of I IT, now turning,;nn livers of wntnr turn,to mold thn harder ri>ck iitnitn, now ronrlng overprpcl|ilcfs|.llke.<.'oit(!i'tticil wjiterfjrllir, now rlppllilit,|lki> wuu-r current*, ovur rouglii bottoin's, pushing,pouring ri'lenllejisly on unlll tlloy ri'iich thosepnrts of'their* courses' wbiira'.warmer, air turnsUICTO Into rivers of. water, . ••

In glowliig couirimt.il) Ilila mnrvvloua spectacleof M tire the gardens uf wlhl llower*,surn)UndlnKthe glui'kTH. Tlii'SO llowery Kpots nru called parks,One will ftinl on the nccnmpni))liix tnap Spray

' I'nrk, St. AnOrews I'ark, Indian Henry's HuntingGround, I'liradlse, Summer Lnnd; and there nnimuny otlicrs.

"Above the forests," writes' John Mulr,, "ther»Is a MMIP of (he 1ovell»st' flowers, fifty inlli>» In cir-cuit nml nearly two inlli'n wide, so clowly plantednnd luxurliiiis that It svema as It nature, glud tomake ui> open itpace between woods no dcnue andIce «" ilci'ii, wen' ecoiiiniilKlng the (irr<loiiK groumland trying to seo how many of her darlings she

f o t l tnaxl idnls lva

hiillt of frntjip with thvnttractlvu int-tlce on tli» liwvprj «lurjr nnd d?op 'aid-Ing aliiivny It prenvma n vi'ry clinrtn-Ing appeal to nil liomu lovera, Thn xldii(•iilniiirii wlilpli IH WI rliiiriicK-rlailc ofIIIIH tjpi.. Inoks Mho 111" old fnahliiiit'ddoor with ItKdlatlnctlve knocker. The

and trying to seo how many of her darlings shecan g<-t together fn om# niountnln tvn.-axli~dnlslva,

J;afieit]()iu*.*»>luml)liio, crytliroiiluma, larkspurs, etc.,»lilch wv wnde kiu-« de>>p ami waist di-vp,

i d hl t l tnmuiiK »lilch wv wnde kiu« d e p ami a i t vp,the bright (.orollus In myriads tnurhlng IM'tnl topetal. AlloKi'ther thin I* tlm richest •nulmlplni-garden I lime, found, a perfect (flower elysluin."

Tho lower altitudes of the pnrk ure di-nnply tim-bered ulth Dr. cedar, hemlock, maple, alder, cot-

"tonwbud mill spruce. The fur'ustitUariras, extetnl-Jng to nn altltttda of about 0,000 feet, gradually'dvcreane In density o( growth atu-f sn altitude vt4J0O0 feet IH reachef], and the hlKh, broad pisttetitifbetwfiti the* glacial CHIIJOIH prc*N«nt Incomparablesccoes-of diversified beauties. , ,

A large part of the area al>ove OJO 4Sffl-iaotcontour roiiDlst* of open, grassy parks, Wcky wulbarren KUiniultji, snow field*, mid Kliir^Crs. Tractsof deiinf milmlplne fdrmt, occur lrK*|irlt«rtil locn-tlons. but tliK* «r« n<ywm4e ivij exteiinlrg, andtheir contliiiilty Is broken by^open swiunp gladesanfh rn'-s'lous n»d small bodies of nnndlbg wa

T M p upi «lup«s of the spurs di

First Floor Plan.

roof dormers hnvo lu'pn mndounlly nltrnctlvH hy lln> an-li ^ ^renter, while green shutters contrnaH'iwith tlio white Imokgrumid ndil ron-•Iderably to Ilia gvixtriil p'penriincv

if IIM- kliclii'U IK nu luiporiput f»arui*of tiiodiTii. coiiKtriiclloii.' Th* larK*kltilicii of a lew yimra ngo Is no long'er found. Till* IH imrlli-ulnrly uW tf>lint ahurliigi' of I|I dllc hrlp. and Ih*1

dowlfo cnminl' lithe en re "of IDS'Inrge room without Inip, As ft remith<- hiillilur IIAM rtMlui'iHl' Ihe s lw «f

room nnd lioptil In iloin* so tomnlii' It inorii dllli'luiil. The kllolnwIn Ilila hoinu In hiilll wltTi nil inodfrSic|ulpinrnt, opvtdng from ill* pantryiinlu tlin porch la n wall door Ice hnSi.,1111* I'llnilnntiMi Hid Dvresaliy of th*Ice iiiiin walklno through lh» kitchen,and disturbing thn fiuolly, ns be ranput tho Ire In tlm box frum tlw porrfr,

TIIH lii'ilnifMiiH are all litcnlei) mi Id*ni'i'onil JUmr. . Tlicrc urn four of themof' exactly tlm an me slxo. 13 It. 9Inchi-H by 11 ft. 0 Inchon, eneb Wi(t»n liiruif rlothrs clone! sml llghlfd ttfnt IciiMt two wltidnwa. Tbt bathroomrmnplut"* tlm nrrniiKCimMil. '

in v,lew of the privnl ahnrtnfft Othouii'H nml HIP crowded coudltloos ft*ninlty loi'iilltleit, fninlllva wbo hsfs*K|icli H hoinf-n* l»- ahown IIIT* art In-.it<-i>d furl ufinlf.,' Too often In III* COD>Ntnu'tloii of dwrlllngH thn children itr* ,MiVrliKikcil, mill In many cnacs are M*toliTiilMt by liitidlorda. llowMnrs tftflrIIn> n nei'coilty ami nltrortln» andPcoinfortublf homca Ilkn tills typ*. wflfilo much In dcvoloplng them lotabeirlthy men anil women.

BT

ter.1- The steep, upper slopes -of the spurs. dl-vaiglng from the innln'rjdges are-frequently cov-ered with a rtunted. scragw growth of low Ireenfirmly rooted in the c^evicer between tlie rpclukTn« «o»t beautiful of t,hc alpine trees •<tre aboutthe mountain parks. Growing In scalttred; grpveiiand standing In groups or singly . In^ibe .open,graiuifand *and" on 'tfce--nmrg.ln.il of tbe-laStss,.theyproduce a u«cuIUrJy^«a>ilnK iaods<aipe effectwhich airewibiy relieves the traveler 'from rtheextended "iitlook * tb>'«"»* iWds of the moun-talirnbd broken rUIgw about,-It,:. A1 the,: tower

'levels of the snbslplne forest Ihe average height«f tbeHarBest t««i 1« fr«ni_50 t«> W feet.r Tb*

'slx*^dlnilnl»h«g rap|(Jly as the' elevation Increase*.i•-!»#•'• 'trees arefdwaTfiA.-$L,tli* 'eold^'ind'their •" ,titin»^^rp:^'B'^^^^::^^'1^oWi^*l#l

WATER LILIES IN PRQFUSIONShaw Aqu'atle Qard«ns Near Washing-

ton Ar* On* of tht Bights of th*National Csplui.

On» of the (.oniitlful sights of Wash-ington Is the Show fii|imllc gnrdons atKfidlworlh. now tlirrnli'niM with de-Mnictlon by the Anncostln rcclumntlonD'olcct. Th* garden*, i-oftimimlymllnl "thi> water Illy furm," 1m ai'rosaIhe Annroattn, ahov« AnacoVtln island.<-l.is« to the district boundary line. Afar run* from tho tRuaiiry to the hnm-let of KBnllw/)rtlp,,fnim which u qunr-tt-r-nille walk bring* one'lo thp clna-ter.nf pools or (may ponii* constitut-ing: the f»na. /

The gardens. »nya the nirlatlnn 8'-l.Monitor, are the rMttlt of tlio en

l l l l h

tracs be regarded- as final. Greater exact-or AHluialaat1«p Is searoeiy prsOJcsbl* ,ln

B^l^irSiallilw,

t l ,» & Mao....-.., _ . ^ . , . ,

lerprln of W. B. Rlmw nmr his daugh-ter / Mrs. • U; Helen Fowler. Theirmarket extends fnm 'Portland.; 11K..to Mncoti,- On, linrt • West trt I'lileago,«a fnr.'Jtuieed. s« lllj> hlon'm* cm travelan«l' arrl»c,fr,e«l».;, TlW':/fS)njjlji: ;tfo-:*lst»;bf ;':l|,:'p^»lv wve'rlng.vilix' acr«#.They or* Irrerjilnr in shape, horderedbyHwtredJi;and«lllftws nnd Kepfl"Hed

^b^kes:>x'fo':|»ghf.f«««jwlo\»;.riBi-r-»p(; for Uielr* nrsjular oUlHhe«, they'^)ghi::u«;r«turtiir|4v^safc^L;:V]S-:'--S;.

(^slK>l»rf.nisby:klnrt» of-wat^r lilies

'rapge^irtfe^fjiwSfi^-^JbiESlt

&M&&r-:^Or«.eV' e»ct^-'r:tatBib^!Ock.>lpl»e;n^^ -range^ir t^ l^fW^^l^MgiSj :Z2r*e;i&*;>V'+-?ttS«''prat bie ^ to:?/lOO'-fe .:: ;; Djfa W^^^W^i^^MM^ €&P$a|tarfiiSinSes^wnialtS'^aB^jalw^erowMi^ " ^ ^ M ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^^^MMffiS:JSZhtM&ti ^ymi)dose,t<*dh«yr^^^i* r t^:^^ ^^RW«*iifi8!fflW5^i^SI Wl$£ffiffi%mt

,,., _;; n» larger than o qusrt»r, to*'ihe will in vlriclnnlU, leu Inches In dVjmet«r. By «oirt*l'm'yst«?rlooii time- 'aen»e, coclj vurlcty <;p«ri» srHVrlps**.at lt» own hours between dawn, snd1

.du»k,-«cept th» nlght-lilooinlng Ullts.which open after dusk; and BMnldJlsLvisited'by_riiooiiilgl(t.-, • \. ,'; ,,

V1

"j1

~:eiiiidw:ve,930".F*rt'i

One' of ' the - mo*t ":*,..fifltnrilcdl gardens In ineVwnrkt Is' that: .laid one nt:> an, Bltltiid* of OfKV)..fsWUv'' .niid th» "IJttle. 8ti;tJ#rnartl."«»««ir' tie*

• j v u l l e y * f ' , A ( » t « . '•:• •':••'• '. H. ' •••-• A - . V ; ":-':[•

Tbft?gttr>Iei». wtMbUshwl by, the- Wfat;;rrcuir oiPthe. hosph-e. M,. Cb^BealsVv^cimiprlsi-w specimens: M pfttet>nitJ0l;:;-tifOttnt lo;if>rfl,''-wn(rther;tliV'sjrwi .:j.|B

i:;,;._:;.the Alps;'the.' ttalksfls. ;tbe SCVfmi;,,-./thlan». the Caocs»u»(stbt pyrenewyj 'the lllniiilnyns or sn;nh«',!h» nwsai^.Atains of America', Japan awdftewZia^^^. | » n d . / . " : ••'-•• •••:• •-.-'••• :r-i^y--w:.'.^---!^i^.-'fiy-

ll wss begtin In t8B2. h o i : W | f t ,nctually _• rendy §fpf j--)jisn»irtfW laWtt V;1«»T^er»tb*i^«rof;tbe,ba»plf^l»ip;;trust«1 It i toiithe care f- at jJBPufiaaaf;^.'ya^.rtlTCli^J>||s^?;IWfc»qw«|^^^

vm

What Attr»rt*,,Wo«««.,

crnsyposeT

mmMSkSrm

'f'^ f.

Page 4: ELECTlOrf - DigiFind-It · 2015. 1. 3. · property foUy insured. * - y *• WBITB OALL W Cranford Investment Company Real Batate 26 N C A BliAXBSLBI y •• to tt* «*r> CRANFORD.N.J.

'' /' (' -«t>

m^^mmmmm S? 1~

v

l / ,

n

r * • •

fe

«*,

THOBSDAY, gEPTBMBKB

Tuesday aottv September S8,ui D Th ll

y v p ,Primary Day. The poll* we ojptnfrom 7 o'clock a. m. until 9 o'clockp.-m,, standard time, at from 8o'clock a. m., until 10 o'clock p.BV, looal or daylight wring time.'Every TOter should make,it Ms1

business to vote at this primary.Then are oandldatM to chooM forCongress, SUU Senate, Assembly,Sheriff, Coroner sad local offices.True, there ia no contest (or thelocal wonitnatifMiij but the candi-date petitioned for should harethe full vot* On the Republicanprimary ticket Messrs. Collins andBims for Township Committeehave given excellent sdrvioe andwill continue to do so. The sameis true as .to Alran B. Denman forTownship Clerk. Efficiency andexperience speak for him too.Martin Hea* as Justice of thePeao* AM been Poonnuter of the

" Township for some years and has

The Mfpaaaal w MM Boron* regMrstfos.

a th tU boson the peO book ae»1|

Ji- V

Mrs. a O. Tbunbert and sons ifrom Brebam. Mian., late yeetorday.and are vWtlBg bar psrenta. Mr, sad]Ur*.Oo*UvJohnMa.ofS0tha«nst.

Nnt Tuesday Is Primary Oaf. theBoard of Registry and Election wtUsttIn the fire bones, oo Washington avenuefrom T a. m. to 9 p. m-, when laanU-tioo toitbe voting privileges aayoae noton tbe IM may have their WMMS addedOB thl* dsto to vote In tbe fttacral

.a"splendid reoord in thatvery important though seldom con-aidered ofuoe; He is a man ofsound judgement and well quali-fied In every way for the positionof Justice of the Peace. .

In the County every voter shouldconsider Qeorge H. Jobmton, thological successor of Sheriff Warner,having served faithfully and effi-ciently for three years as Under*Sheriff. Experience there gainedia of value to all the people of tbe

• County in the oonduot of this im'portant office. Congressman Aokerman by usage should be given a

v second term, having served effi-ciently for the past two years

• With, a splendid record, Everycitizen.haying business1 at Wash-ington bsj^found prompt and sat-isfactory help from CongressmanAokernfan, if needed. The Assem-bly ticket shows "four candidate*for the three nominations, three ofthese being the present, incum-bent*. We Relieve it to be aiessential that all' voters registertheir choice at tbe primiry as to*vote at tbe general election. Itwill give-opportunity, too, for thegreat number of new voters to findout exactly bow it is done, for tbeway of voting is the same. PrimaryDay also offers, opportunity forregutratioa to all who may havebeen omitted in the bouse to bousecanvass by the election officers.

REPUBLICAN1 PARTY

It placed oar currency mtera on a• eoand basis and led the tight for

OlvU Service reform. ' "'Itbaslsdta the passage of Child Labor

lawi In tbe States where raoh lawiobtain. 1

ItbM numbered among Ut leaden- metkallv all the gnat American

Statesmen of the last sixty yean. •I l l s a national and not a sectional

party. Eleven of the put fifteen1 1tMrfflflV*jflni|nlatrBllimS h*** h^»

ItkssBever wavered in Its s*tri6tk<mla any war, nor In It* demand lorprsfsndnea* and Itastand for tbeprotsotton ot tbe right* ot Americanoittaane wherever they may be.

The members of the BepabUeaa Clubwill hold a smoker In the Woodmen'shall on frlday evening, October 1st.Prominent epeakers will be present anda generally latereetlng meeting le an-ticipated. In the sample ballot sub-mitted. In tbe column "for Council-men for three yean." the voter is askedto vote for one while there are two to beelected. Tbe name* John Hitler andJohn Nottrand appear on tbe RejmbM-

nldi •Ivsytcan ballot andvote, while tbe names of John Battersad Owl Noas are tbe Democratic nom-inee* without opptaitlon,

ttallA pretty borne weddlnaj tack place

Monday evening at 8 o'clock, at tberesidence ol Mr. »nd Mr*. George Han-set, 7 OUretnoot puts, when theirdaughter, Mies Georgia Mantel, becamethe wife o Marv ,tori* of Mr. and Mm. Philip W.Hall. of299 Orchard street. Tbe ceremony was

rfd b R v Kenneth Martin

tbe wife of Marvin Deao Hall, eldestr. and Mm. Philip W.jd street. Theeeremc

performed by Rev. Kenneth Martin,rector of Trinity Episcopal Church.

Tbe wedding took place Inthe Uvtagroom, which was prejtily deooejatedtwith palm* and fall flowen. MiesMargaret Hansel, a titter of the bride,wat bridesmaid and little Miss PaulineHall, a et*ter.p* the bridegroom, wasBower girl. Philip Well* Hall,' abrother of tbe bridegroom, was bastman. Tbe bride wore whlu cblffonand lace and carried a bouquet of whitejasmine and row bud*. The brides-maid wore chiffon shading from cream

Its Patt Guaranttes IU Puture, TMB«

i 1. PARTYJoaUceJ Or

fPrwperlty

(.PatrtoUunrmmmlttt,

R. Aokermaa,re-nomliitrlon on the Be-

M , cn a ttatemeDtMcodaythat daring Us otnvatj.

wUoh covered «asjmtlrejllifrlct, manyi M l n n s wars falned~ but the com-

most tnqaeatly beard was re-tfc* lawNH womaa areahowbwl ^ t f f ^

refer* the eimott lunWsrtelby women of UM doty |

mot

to golden brown. Her bouquet was ofpale blue larkspur.

A reception followed tbe ceremony,after which the young couple left ontheir wedding trip sod upon their re-turn they will reside to their new homelu Orchard street. Tbe bridegroomla connected with' tne Hall PrintingPress Company, of Danellen, of whichhis father is lbs bead.'

ICrMrfrdMLOwrdi

Sunday School, 0.4B a, m., WalnutAvenue Church,

Momlng'Wonhlp, 11 a. m.. WalnutAvenue snd Eatlman Street Churches.

Tho psator will, preach at both tbemorning and evening seryloM at theWalnut Avenue Church. "|

Prayer and Praise service ' ooWednesday evening at 8 o'clock.

All the member* ol the Roosevelt Men'sBible a s m are urgedJto be present Bun*doy morning at 10 o'clock.

The Sunday evening service wllf beginwith the tinging of tome of ofcr beatith th t g g s e f o rloved bimns. Mr. Fiaber will be premntand will lead Jteaonc Mivioe.

A plcnto for Sunday School childrenand theirfriendi wfflbeheld on- Satur-day afternoon. Tbe ptcalotr* will meetat the two o'clock and would bettor bepnvMea with a hearty lunch. - ,

The F»ll meedog otjhe V. t A. willbe held In the WalaM Avenue Churchon Tuesday afternoon, Octobers.

8**:

At the meeting ot the Board of Edu.oatlon Tuesday evening Him SarahBdmunda, the ,«uper»WBg principal,r«purted thai the enrolment In theschools U »»-nS3re than Uwssayear

t b e report sbowed over l.soo•ffjaralM. with thegnatest in .

In tbe Grant and

_ „ , 'tlyrestguad,ap'nappolnted u a teacher la tbe

and Mrs. Grace Strong: wasted a grade teacher In tbe Owe/

School.' Tbe boardgracted permit-__;^>8oontmtBer Johnson to o a t h s

old manual training room in the GtmntSchool at a fOaoe tor.tba Boy Seoat

OMfori«a«ford Joined Urtabratte-ofthe 80th

V

OF THESoitW people believe that an electrically driv-

en ironer is only for flat work.«,_' , t •^ , Many other things such as rompers, aprons,bungalow dressed Bnferie. skirts, knitted under-wear? children's clothe*, blouses, shirts—Cafe bedone on an irbner. * • . ;. • \• ' Actually 9056 of the average ironing can,be.done in one-third the time, making an ironer agood investment. — ' • '

We carry two types of trotters;' representingdifferent principles of operation, each the best of

The Thor Ironer, hand control, 44.inch, $175. -The Capitol Ironer, foot control, 46-inch, $195.

ONLY $ t 5 0

SEWING-

Yet Irons Faster.- Holds Heat Better

Uses Lap Current—the Important feature* oi an elec-tric iron, all due to the epadallydedfaed heatlsg unit.

An eielu*l*e> Public Servke Speclilty. which wean well and doe*' excellent work at a moderate price." , % ' " • -

FOR SAFETY' Oa* of the Mud* family '

1* the Hylo light. bri|btwhtp wanted, or Ivmedtow for a night litht. forHfcly In dark place*.

Fill all wekcts with ourMeadat, economica l ly•oiled ..to the - currest we•apply, 'Phone for a "cartonof »ix; no extra charge fordelivery. ' I

PUBLIC SERVICETBS PlfACB to bay electriclabor saving devices oa easy terms .

' Don't ttreyouneUal tbe fopt-trwd of"your oM.BHchla*. An electric asotormike* *ewla| eyer to much eaaUr.

Yon'llMCompIithmon,wllhoulitr*in,aad enjoy the pretty tblogi to e«ay to

Sislss—Md what a world ot time tndfatal* It UTMI $37.50 down, *«),3.71 a monlk.

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m. in" ./ UNPAID SBWBB ASBBS8HENTS DOB TSAB1S19

REAL ESTATE! Are you inteWeated In the purohsse of a home?' Would it aof*ie)' to jour advantage, to consult us ?

This institution maintains a separate department(or the management of properties, the collection ofrents,' etc, and has on, its books, tor sale, nearly '

• 100 properties, which are located in the varioussections olOranford.^Vestfleld and Boeelle, TheBailing prioes range bom 15,000 to $100,000.

'"• INSURANCEAs the authorised agents tor 12 of the foremostInsurance Companies, wo are in a position to meet

,• your requiremonta in every form of Insurance.Courteous and efficient service. - >

C' I -

Really and Insurance DepartmentCranford Trust Co.

CRANPORD,IN. J. _ .

OIL and CASHEATERS

Qive' comfort and., save coalbefore the furnaoe is started.'

PERFECTION, and FLORENCE

makes now on sale at

/TO EAT. ,

ioHN SVLbWERY^ ^ f f l ^ S r a

1C.!1>6.00Ut4.60

1SJ01.100.B8

16.0010.76'3.7*UST.SO1.00

41.212.60

J5.001T.101.296.03

11.004.9S8.75

SIM67.6B15.00«U

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Mr. sad Mav JOB* I « IYork, are vWtb«m>: aaUtJ. ArsoU. ot SS» Nor» a n

Uf. aa4 Mrs. 8«tarh»*smM •MavyHMMttt irfttwjr dauMasautor.ofQmsforu. to

:« - Beystotuof McwtBlaaUe.Tke LwUaa* Aid Society •

Pnettyteriaa Omroh wUII' meetiag on Wtdnesday.SscattJ0t>.m.intheeha|ML

. Mrrkad Mrs. Charles MMemphis, Teem., .who hamha brother. Jame* t f t ttss) days, leave tomoriow^fi

Mm. William H. Bngg.«vtattlaghsr dsagbtsr, MrSinclair, Jr.. at MasnootlOUaldll*. baa retaned toOrantard.

Pktamsof the Wall Sintakea a few minutes afterp lo*» rocked New Torieeiitar.'ihowisg vividly deitmctloawUlbeahownat tTheatre today.L Tto Bra department was i

i of ObarksLamni^BunjUy morning.tt tbe room oaaeedb]

Tk»UNPAID CUBB AND Gl t ASSESSMENTS DjDB ISIS

there were no roll Jn or oicould not walk In roughtground—tbU should not-be the usiiul po>l;

Oitaln races and1 certnlnto be sure, have low nrches nmu-, but without foot trouble. Se\er-

a foot which habitually rolls ln-ln standing ia.never natural.

oT tk* QmmnM

The Woods

. . Harry. Wamond, of Wiantrni"— begli«ilng Batuihawltthaadto Horton'e istead of Frits.*. Thechsc

" t o meet the demand* ot aoreastomstssad *ati»f»clIB every way., ThaOraaford League c

; ten wUI hold a meetings*>; BoornvHooOay. Septemb' p.m. -This Lsague is a)Llpartieu. , AU.wo«Ben votefJare invitad. Jnetrsctlon

asto method af voting fst

•tons'ahi» l

Th* bottwiarlM«t tk« n MUtHct mr* M M n n : . W*K

U»TlM.irl«t «r>«.:ftM*H5

UP HUDSON

EXCURSION

WESt POINTOdsfctf 3, 1920

i A ^

leaves BesrM«MtsiaSi^TimeBetaninir leaves Bear'HoiMti

L0^M^ja ib t .Sav^Tlme .

Mr. A.S.'Oroft.oC Crailend bis obonectton with 8

rVprt.totak»char|ttectloB ol tepperl

I. Mr, OroftwUn »iBOnmferd, wbPftMty have resnoit torso's'-'ideeph D. Ones,, fora

High SobooC athlete awllasted fortervioe in tbe «(0yard*prin,tattbeBaimeet bald at New YoiStadiUBb MrrOromia •with the Bimltable TrmWallrtreet.

Tbe Craatord Theatre«Ktraordiuary program fa« « k . On Tburtaay, Wi

r* - rSand." OaVriday.a d

»"i

1 - r - •

OUTING"asses"s.(s3&r!j

B.SOBMT. ALUOOCT. M«tt '

IMVSJ Oaaford 7 01 A. JL

-'"The Bottom of tbe Worlpletorsi record ol Sir Bton's South Pols ExptoriiOB Monday Jitoet Oilgreattat «ory ' T M - O Mpoone." •'•„/*At tbe last regular meitori CoincU No. « . , Jitour cauaMata* were inl

Ithe total memberabipot<, e U I » . Walter B.Reut

delegate to repment tlat (fa* annual aemionoCeraT^tAUantieCtty on Octoberattend tba State OounaBtmedt^ on October IS

MH> Margaret tow. d,ri««8ri

a' Stsr.T**^ '

.1 JvaU^* £££.£ &<£&&.'&'*€

Page 5: ELECTlOrf - DigiFind-It · 2015. 1. 3. · property foUy insured. * - y *• WBITB OALL W Cranford Investment Company Real Batate 26 N C A BliAXBSLBI y •• to tt* «*r> CRANFORD.N.J.

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no roll Jn or mill roughtgronnd—ie the usiiul po>l;und' ccrtnln p wlow-arches nmu-)t trouble: Nev«r-labltually rolls in-never natural.

foods

1UDSON

, .:vit POINT•rd » A, M,,

etfat

lear-'Moaataiaj T i

a taw daye with.tar 'a*.

MtavOaariai Baaaat aad Mtoi Aiy

taraaftfrasaMr. aad Mat, Job* t-ynofc, of New

York, am vtattfat Mr: aad Mm DanielJ. Araotd, of flB North avtaae. wait.

Mr. aad Mn. Batarhata announcedthe eaaagemaat of thajr daaghtar, RotbMae Bator, of Craaford. to*r. OeorgeBayatoa.of MowtalatUe. -

The ladtoa* Aid Society of taa FlntPntbitaitoa Charoh wUtfcoM Ha first

' aHMiag oa Wedtwaday.Seotembe/ffltb.rtU0p.n.latbaenapeb

ICrraad Mr*. Obariae M. Werner) otMempbto, Teon.. who barn bata vtoitiaghto brother. Jam* B. Warner, tka pacttaa daya, laava tomorrow for tat Santa.

William H. Rugg, whoha* beandaagbtar, Mn. Jamet T.

Sinclair,it..at Maanoot.Uke. in thef^frfttifrj B i returned to bar horn* inOraatord. .

Pwtamof tka Wall Street Espmekwtakanafewminntea aftar tbe big ex-ptaetoe rocked New York'* financialcenter,'ehowing vividly deatha and dectraottoawUlbeabownat tba OrantordThaatn today.

Therm department wai called to thei of Ohartoa Laamn, 43 Jobnaon

^Baaday morning.to astingatobi the room eaaatd by (perk* from

A bole wa* burned la U*[1aroond the ohtmner/oauatag tlOO

i Hdwina Woodliog, daagbtar ofand Mr*. H. Q. Woodllng, left

'Taeaday for icfaool work at Bradford_ .:; PnatonWoDdlMig.alto.lBfthomt Tuesday for hto tapoad year atMaeauhnMttU Iottitnteot'\Ut. Fred t Wilton, tbaTeiietJn tba Cranford Tratt Oompanyto lewinf Satarday to aooapt a pntittonwitb tba Plainflald Tfnwt Cbnpany. Mr.

• CM & Bradlay. of .WartfleU, it bit

, . Harry. Diamond, of Walnat avenue,aannanoat beginning Saturday, Sept V>.hawUlbandto Horton't loo cream. In-stead of Frit*.'*. The change waa madeto meet the demand, of a groWlng'ltotof caatomenand eattofaetion to aeratedin every way.

TbsCraaford League of Women, Vo-: |an will hold a meeting at. the Townabip• Booint,-Monday. September f7. at 8.80. p. m. Thto Leagua to abtolataly noa"

rttaea. '.vAUjaomen voter* of Cranford\. x*tn invited. Jnetractian wilt be given. aa to method of voting at tbejFrlmary

K. Mr. A. 8. Croft of Cranford, baa tev-|ared hto oonnectioo with Stem Brother*,

York, to Jaka charge of the dremtaaotkm of Tapper Bratbenaton.

d. Mr, Graft will continue hi*„ . ataOranford, when aaaadOt:*fa(a% have reatdod foraome time,*t •" JoSaph D. Oroav, former Cranford

High, BobooL athlete and recently re-' toated foraarvioa in tbe Navy -won the

*K> yard aprlat at the Banker1* Athleticmeet bald at Now York UolveraityStadium! MrrOromta now 'connectedwith tba Equitable Troat OompeayotWallrtreat.

The Cranford Theatre preaanU anaitnordlaary program for tbe comingwetk. On Thursday, Wm. 8. Hart in

, "Band." On Friday, a doaWe feature•iflola Dana in' "Tie Willow Tree" and-'"The Bottom of Ink World,'' a thrillingpletoral record ot Sir Braatt Bhackto-

, tafi't Sonta Pole Exploring Eipeditioo.Oa Monday Jatoee Oliver Curwoon'agreatoet story "The Courage of MargeS*<ooa." • I

X & t the last regular meeting ofjOran-ford CoaacU No. « . , Jr. O. V. A.Jt..foar r«ff*t**t** wen initiated making

- i the total membership ot Cranford Coon-- c u m . "Walter KReinbart waa fleeted* daUaatw.to nprettet tbe localcoooc}!

« t |M anaaalttaMoaof tbeN. J. Fan-,'A ami Beaafit Amoetatton. which meeto at

> Vl AttonttoOty on October 12; ba wiUatov#rattaadtba State Caawctt aemion la the

i on October W aid I tMargarit tow. daughter of Mr.

I««,of tm 8pringiW4 avanae.tered/Jtoonl Bolyoae t CoUeg^

8 p g W 4Bolyoae t

n i W a a Moant Holyoka thto year

eat from u » otaanatloa of tka ardia.aryaUaaa. Mr. Haatal did aotbattav*tka invmtigataoa bad

to have

— ^ w — . Bnad ttnat, Lawj*TawaM awljrjtajaia Way at oaa eaa<faaca, the Wetdoa ObmpHiy got tail JobatWU.TOmtagTarru Boad matartoi.OarbaadgnitarooamMt for tka 'tameatraata want to CamWo Mama at tti,«N

for t U North Uhlgh tvenaaatormwWtkaaaawooairutoratlWIT.W

The ooatraaton atata ,tbty can Batohthawork that Fall. '

Propomd raad improvement* oo ttaah-flatd aveaaaand Camming* street Wf

•Ut» •tgaaa^aktagtaaBMa Boardagain to take tba-matter ap and gateaaUy obtained vertfloatioa of the

UniHiwiry notoat oa tba rattnad*men iWiuamwd and Secretary McMea-kiadtoaatad to write the railroad, oom-pantoirwitHattagofBctolaatioB to pn>vent thto. . . .

Cbainatn Daaatow of tba RiverCommittee nported the orgaaiaatioo ofreaidtnto along the river tatoaBirarAmoeiaUoa to protect their ,rigbn andpat an end to tba aataanoa of ,aadatlr-ablarwing tbo river. Probable actionby the aawdation wUI laowde lloanalngof all canota. etc., oting tka atraam,ptrmito to ba ianad by tka RiverAttoclattoa. 'Chairman Haatai atatodthat vandal* had removed part of theoperating gear at tbe gataa aa that that*ooold not be opened bat that tba damagedone would ba repaired. .Oa river* fobIntlon Chairman Haaaal etatad thatduring tba Bummer dead tmall flahabowed gnat polla|ioa which ttto limewaa traotd to one of the Qarwood fast*oriet through Fottar'a Brook.* Tka pipethrough which thto got to tba brook hadbean taken np Mr. Haatal taid.. -

On the County Park Chairman Haanireported tba formation of tba CountyPark Association with bimttlf at Pratt-dent aad Henry Kreb of XusabathChamber of-Commerce aa Secretary.Tbe Attoctotlon had membarehip inevery mnniciFallty and thto waa rapidlyincnaalng. Mamberahlp coat bat ft.Cranford had takan tba lead ta theCounty Park proportion and waa wallrepneented on the Committee*. It watMated tba Cento* would ihow tbeOouaty aver tbe SOO.000 mark to that

for tba appointment of a CountyOboatyaoUonPark Oommkaioalaw ooold ba taken.

Mr. Btokaalae *ugge*ted Uwt'i tbapioparty oo wbtob two well* were patdown aome yean ago in teating for alocal water tapply be takan over b j tbeToWntblp for park porpoaat. Thtoproperty to on Springfield avenue andwat purebeted by patdtoipirUed rtHaant,UtheUmatoboldfortbeTowoabip to)

it waa deckled to go ahead with aTowoahip Water Supply.

On motion carried without diaeent tbeChairman' waV uatraoted to appoint aoommittee of three to inveatlgate andreport., Other matter dtoafimed Includwlthe unatgbtlr onaditlon of certain private propertiea and poeaibH remedy;, andihe preesnt ttatua of Ike Bahway ,ValleyTrunk Sewer project. Onlhto SeentaryUacMeikin wa* directed to tecure data.Xivo new member* were elected and onereaigned. Treasurer Chadwick reportedfW7 balance in hto hand*.'

PtfisGiVeRedblA large oombar of parante of tba

piano popito of Mr*. A.T. Orf, aUaodada recital given aatarday aflaraoon bythe Scholar* at their teacher'* boma, SMWalnat aveoae, Mr*. Orfjva* aatotadby Mn. Abner'Dow, oTiaarwoad. whoannoanced.the program. Ptoaowere given, by Etoto Orf-aad/ AlbertAiideraon. Sarah Froat and Helao Jahnaad Anna W«tl«han and Frank Schc-aawbtter. vocal daent by BtotoOrfaadAlbert Andanptf and vdcalaotoebr Etoto.

Individual piano numbera were gtvaaby tba following papito from Oraafbrdaad 'Qarwood:, Sidney.DeCamp, DortoDow, EMlier HaKeMmm, Artbor Coadit.Joaepbina-Wtoe. Jerome Bariala,Orf, Albert- Aaderaoa,, Arana Tktos,Bngintkl Koory* Jerome FadenoaBtxabttb Bryant, Agatha Doytot, CtoraRwlgar. UiidredEmmooa. OracaaUoer,Boai Qoaover, Anna Weatgbaa, FrankScboeowtooer, Sarah Fj«^Hawa~ "

itViorfePedoraokt;';

Who wantad.to foar6tbirti»d,maWbtatbeyfoaadWianmV

Waa wrapptd fat t n a y t f ajjaiitm.J

deterred aatU Spfing oo reoommeada-tioa of Mr. OoUlna, the time being too

to gat the legal formallttot oom-ptotad ana work dona thto year.

Oath* complaint ot Vincent Oonoattaad otaaraof flooding at rear of theirproperty on Batford avenue 4/M tofllong ot outlet of tbe 6U time anrfao*draiaway, Engineer Mother reparithe owner at theoutlet woald ba.va noobjasttoa to tbe layinc of a draintfioagfthto.property bnt would not patthtoiabiaaauV Tba Townihlp Oom.mUtaeooaaldered tba matter to ba.be-

private owner* bnt referred tbamatter to Committee of tbe'Whole forfarther invaatigatioo.

Police Oommiaaionar 81m* reportedrraigoetioo of Officer W. H. Merrimaaaad the appointment of Charlea Eattioa.

waa approved and ooaflrmtd.Ftn-Oammtoaiooer nported the Le>

|>anoaapaopto bad promtotd delivery of'maewapparataaOctobar IB. iSix building permit* wen granted <m

recommeadatton ' of CommltteemanOoUlna. The owner of tba theatre,property waa ordered to abate tbenutaence of eootinaow- dtooharga ofwater Into tba gutter of Aldan (treat.''September SB waa att for tba meeting

\* tba Joint oommtotion to tattle affair*•rowing oat of tbo trantfer to Koall-worth Boroagh of a email angle of landon tbe Arthur property.

W.J. alcKee by letter highly com-plimented tba' Potto* Department torgood can of fato property during abtanoe*.Mn. J. Henna* of Elm atreat calledattention to ligbte out or in poor con-

of roadway, when thro* botueconnecuoaa bad been pat in.' Themwen referred to Engineer for report

aaitiOm.iiry.' Sd

w p ba.mtBt hto«y<.

STdan.jwama q W wa*. bara UWaw York qtox>e«;Vo«am|ar^ Oaf

la that atty. MaMratlMUkaM«|S '

w > a *taa* mail*

Over thirty member* attended tbemid month meeting of, tbe Amoototionat Lincoln Uebool Tueaday nigbt. Seven

r member* wen elected and a nonyof name* propoeed, tbe total activeibenhip miw going over aevepty,Memberablp Oommittee repotted

plane for active campaign to inornate

ThaPnaident, David Brown, preaidedat the meetwg which waa mainly de-voted to dlacamkm of tba need, of the

Tba -Towttthlp Committeein for a vote of thank* for the help

given in foatering improvement* a*kedfor which by report of tba Civic Cummittee wen being carried out at rapidly

drcamtlancea would parmit. /Article* of Incorporation wen ulaoed

by tbe offlon* ot the Attoctotiop forfUlng at Eliaabetb aodTreatOttftbe liveofficer* of the Aawetotloa beug naraodthenln aa.Tru*te*e.' /

After dtoemwoa of the need for playground apace a oomdilttee of three v uappointed to uuttigate and «eouro IfpoNibto a p|ot along tba river wbicbmay ba need for ancb purpoee,

A revolution wa* nnanlmonaly adoptedPtodglng Cranford CWe Board help in

batever may be propoaad for tbe' bet-terment of Oraaford. ' ,' .

Tba' Eotertalnmeot, Qommi tee re-ported plan* under way to give a danoeand entertainment at.Unooln Schooltba night of Colombo* Day, October 12,

data* di&nof which will be aanoaneed later

lag tba tiMakea ia Xadoa wtth aaraoaatry. waawtt* taa U s . S. VkWUk>a*V«raOntvaadww»wltktka laadto«party a tttst <tt*? Duriaa>tkaW«tMWar ba aattatod aiOa«apPi«.Uialimbe* a , tMT, aad btmadtoaaly'volaa*

of: Bfty boyaUtoelidl. Hto tmmej»ofaarrtoa waa Oomaady B, «0t laglaean.Ha toft Camp Marvin. ITovettbar U.ivti. 0* took atok with Ufmaaaa aaddtod at.Bta* Hotpiial No. 8. Savaaat.Franca, Aagaat 17, il ia, after aa ttwawof only tour daya. He wa* bariodtwkbfai; mlUtary honor* by ktooompaay aadthe Uedtoal Dttawhmant of Baaa Hoepltal No. 8 at 8.30 p. m. Augnat W, Ittla,at Die American Cametary, oo the out-akin* of Seventy. At the time ot btodeath hto brother, Harry Albert Craigwat at tba front with Oompany 8, WedMotor Supply Tmln and did not learnOf ttwdaath until the mlddto of Sentaavfaert Ba vtoitod tba grave alter theArmutaot with hto father, who watin (Franco on butineit In February,IBlt.' Mr. and Mr*. Craig otad every endea-vor with the Waahlngtoa authoritto* tohave tbe body returned at once batowing, to the itrlot regulation* of tbeBepublle of Franot they wanoompelladto Walt until Thunday of thto week.The body to aspaotad to arrive in Cranford on Friday, Again, a* In France, amilitary funeral will be given aa tbeU»t. rwpeot to tbe memory of a wallknown Cranford boy who gave hto lifebto oountry. „

All bto friend* are invited to attendthe church a*rvioee.''Ptoa*e omit flower*.

Specials This Week!Eagle Brand Butter ' • 70c Ib.Farmers Best Eggs 72c doz.Be t Santos Coffee 28c lb

ftOdafflelkw.To the cltlaena of Cranfordt

It I* requeued that ait flag* rotnalnat half matt on batorday, September SO,MKtO, io memory of our fellow towna-man.- Mr. Sidney J. Craig, who, whileearring hto country In the late worldwar,-paid tbe enpreme atari Aoa.

Ill* body baa been brought back from,the battlefield* ot France to be' laid awayin tbeland ot bto birth, and OrantordPoatjgf tbe Vetoraa* of Foreign Wanwill conduct a military funeral anda«n>rt bto remain* to their lait natlng

"Current Events'Dr. WILLIAM STARR MYERS

WILL SPEAK JDf THE

PRESBYTERIAN CHAPEL

Friday Evening, October ltsJ^20AT 8 O'CLOCK ./

Tickets, Including: Tax, 75 CentsTlokota will ha on aala for a court* ot/ttx Thurailny nfUirtioiin

leoturoa to ba given by Dr. Mayan aftar Uta/uoliJaya. TiobtitA fur ioonrto will bo'13.00. Single leotan

It to my wtoh that all tbe cittoen* otCranford. who can pomlbly urn out willdo to in order to pay reaped to ourfellow tow'n*man.

•; JOHN O. UOACH,Obaltman Towntbip Oom mittee.

lovph H. DtdunsoA KilledJot*pbH.Oiokinion,Jr.,of>Si9l Ni

avenue, eatt. a well-known dmoa Sunday at a botplteli In Hfrom injurle* received wbile^raeing atthe fair la that city.

Mr. Dickinton for yean baa' been ongaged In tb*.man)ifaotnn of pianopart*, but for dWertkw uted hto aptretime' in driving blgb/powared can In

in New Jeraey andnearby -ttate*. holding toe reoord for

mile and ball-mile on a dirt-

Friday hto car waa entered attbe Mt. Holly Fair, wber* be woo tbeflrrt two race* In mccemlon bnt Io tbethird noa with only one top and a halfto go, bto car tkidded Into tbe railingupMttlng the car, throwing botnblmutfattmecbanla to tbe'ground. Tbemecbanto lamlitii in tba Incloaoro andwaa BBinjuted but Mr. Dickinson tended

A* next Sunday Sept ftk wilt be tbebJWalmaetiMof the Italtoo-AmericuiBepabtteaa Club of Union. County, allatomhan are apectally reminded to beareaest without nil. All Rapablicanfriend* are cordially iovitod farbaprea-aa^JTbe meetincwUt take place nt 4We* North Menu*, in it* roots* of tbeCrantontgepahllBaii Clah.%Tbto mwt-mgwill be of gnat Jnaorfaaea a* theHHasi flOffik Oat Jt^aJjBBBttft^BtBttBbaatttBM W i l l fag)

Tl» »p*$k*r*fiw7^ baBoa. J, * t Wariw, Boo^Oiorga a

oo the track and another ear wblcbwaain tbf) no* unavoidably ran over him,Indicting lojuriea from which be died,although every effort wa* made at tbeho*pltel.to*avehim.

Mr. Dickinton wat 83 yean old aadwaa bora In Detroit, Mich., but ha* livedin Cranford aaa number of yean, thefam'ilv movmg fiera when he-WJM a boy,bto. father having., bo*ln**» coooecUoowltb toe Aeolian Co.- He bad a largocircle of friend* who mount bto onUme-ly end, baton «*a.«* fwae.genlal epiritowho waaalwayireadv to.doa favor orlend a helping hand.

Ut. Dtoklnaoa to »qr»lv*d vby bitwife; one brother, Samuel L. DicklMoa,ofJrVlsdctfibia, and hto pareate^Ur»dd(sfjp». J . W,Dkklo*oa, otNew Vorlfc

Fooeral atrvios* wen bald la*t^ nigh*at bto iato.bome. Intermaat^at Fair-. l^CWU.y.WMfleM.tod. , .

Nairn

* i

Store9 EASTMAN STREET

• -us

"We SpociiltM In ItaaM Cooklttg"

, Tit out Rmatav StJada. Cold Gits, Domertic andlinpotted Cheese MKJ oar «eVMlk»o( Pickle*.

COME. SEE AND TRY!

Hops and Malt to Make Your Home Brew*

Combination $1.15

A VITAL NECESSITYTo aooura a life inanran£a poliojr la m privilogo. Not every

man can get one.Tbo aenao of eeojrrity and aalf-aaanranoo derived from tlio

knowledge thai yotir lovad one* a n tally protected finanoinlly,will ineraaaa your efficiency in too praaant and give you peaoo ofwind for thowuturo. The knowledge tfiat yon Imvo <Iou» tlioin(oUigent thing now reliavea yon of that oagK>»K conscioneowhioJKieep* informing a man thai ba baa naglecUtd to providu

tTAL NKCE88ITY. IU coat b little. IM o« tnlk it ov«r.' MILTON H. StiRIBtt

L WITH •

\ Equitable Ufe Assurance SocietyLocal AJilrea*. 3H ftaaaura Way f: ,. Phono 41H J

'elephone EIU. «M

i , •

'__ - v Eatimate* Cheerfully (liven

r \Elizabethport Iron and Steel Works

i • . > \ •-•

ENOINEERINO, CONTRACTINGORNAMENTAL and 5TRUCTURAL IRON WORK

I Beam*, Ofaanaela, Anglaa, Cellar Door Column*, Orating r

cr anything made of Iron.Main Offlceand Works

B8fl6B0TT.W»»T»n(T » --^. ELKABRTH, N. 3.Pboo or foetal will brtag*ouTioi)fc«eiit»ti«> to jmt. '

Notice to Automobile Owners!j i / !

Stromberg Carburetor Service Station!Havo your Strotnberg CarbaretOf AdjtuUd and Repaired at

the Stromb«rgC**bojttor8ervSe« Station. ' ' ' 'Antomobflo, Blirtor and IigbtiaR Repairing a Specialty.

REICH GARAGE267MorriaAvenuo,J BLIZAIflBTH, N. J.

Conning AttractionsATTBC

IFORD THEATREsmaiALi'

MONOAVaxntAbewiNAay ATTBACTION V-

•• JaameOUvar Oarwood'*He Cmng/t tf Harxe CDodoe;

Larry SaaioapMBedr. Pathe Htm*,'TUB5IMY«- » - .%jt'W <*.«••:

Robot Warwick in"TbaCUyofUaaka*-,

"•'«$

Page 6: ELECTlOrf - DigiFind-It · 2015. 1. 3. · property foUy insured. * - y *• WBITB OALL W Cranford Investment Company Real Batate 26 N C A BliAXBSLBI y •• to tt* «*r> CRANFORD.N.J.

Women Celebrate the Victory of Suffrage

VAST DRY AREAUp to Congress to Re-

etaim 4,000,000 Acres a t$250gOO(M)OO Expense.

Unfurling (In- *ulTrnK« Mug ut the headquarters, of iht National IVtitnun'a part/ in Washington m i the occasionfor II Jiijnun ili'iiiiiimiMiilini hy party worker*. Miss Alice Paul, chairman. Is en the balcony. The flog tiai 86 I t i n ,Iliv ln«.t nililivl ri'liri'hViilliic Tvunessee.

GermanRun

IEconomic Bureau Looks After

Electric, Steel arid AluminumPlants.

WorksBy State

BUT EXTENSION IS DELAYEDNatlonalliitlon of Co»l Mine* May

Have to Walt Change In Makeupof Ralchitag—Holding Com-

pany Formed.

' Wsshlmrton.—rSlncc t|ie cnnclnslimnf'^lie frpiOciinfi'rerice.'lit which Oer-

^miiy .agreed- to Increase lt» coal out-- put-In (inter to hrlng tho deliveries to

Kmnce up(tn nppriixliimtely 2.000,000(•ins pel* month, thore has been re-newed ngllntUin nttmng the miners forthe tintli>ntillxiitton of tln> mining In-dustry In thn hope thnt better Work-Ing.conllltlnns mid pay may bfr oh-.tnlni'il ijnder such n condition than-with tlie mines owned nnd operated byllii«o Stlnnes nhil Ills few associatecoat Ixironn, Other sections nf Oer-mnii liidustrlnl life, nrn nlso likely tobe ultimately run hy the state, al-though It'will probdhly be necessaryfor the Qt'rnmn peoplo to elect a more

''"'radical relehstiiK.. "to effect these* rhnnires, ns tho present cabinet U not

pledged to any grout extension of theprinciple of public ownership und op-eration. ' .

{ • In tho tncnntline, however, as the re-j tuU of| earlier agitation for' govern-

ment control and operation o f the lea*.Ing Industries, the, national 1econpinlc,

• bureau of the . (lerntnn r treasury de-partment has quite '.,n few ImportantKiiyemiuent controlled .liidustrlnlplant* to look after, according to n

., nummary nf Its activities recently pub-- iishftl In the Oermnn jjress and quoted

from In commprciv reports.-The mostImportant of thC'governni6n| factories

,nre th» .nrseimhinnd naval construc-tion jmrtis.which arc now engaged on-non-military construction.'1This. In-,rtudasi- the'nmnufiictu.re of.steel, themaking nf nil,.*nrts..and descriptionsof machinery In1 large quantities,

Hy for uirrlculttlral and On-purposes, nnd the repairing of

i, stock ond locomotives, i, Sinnll-........ -works ore being tniilnfafned assuch sii: far ns is consistent-with theprovisions of tho ntmce. treaty.

':/•"••'•':" state. In Control. ; . •• : ' ':. "In order Ml cdnsnlidnte the govern-

ment. Interests In these different uii-., dertaklnits u compiuiy was formed In, Dectttiiher", iflllVcnil(fd;the,Oe.rmiin>Jn-

dustilal Stock company, wlth-.a capi-tal of, lOO.OflOiOOO . marks .(nomTtinlly

: *23&o6,000: nt current e^chniigc, about-^{,250,000); the whole of fhet sharesT7,beliiK In the hands of the government,;-Tlie slate thus exercises either full or

Ptthlnl control, nctordlhg to the num-ber of electrical, electrochemical andother undertakings. r

: Tliei huge . generating' 'station atZschornewltx, ni-ar nut'crneld. belong-ing to the Electric1 riant company, b>controlled., It provides the current forthe state nitrogen works In Witten-berg, obtaining the necessary fuelfrom1 adjacent lignite mines. It has an

output of 101X000 kilowatt* and. be-tide* running the nitrogen plant, sup-pile* current to tlie Iterlln Electricworlrt. and will shortly extend tillsimppiy of energy to I>lpslc and Ibeprovince of Saxony. The Central Oer-man Power Work* company comprisestbo central power station at Senften-lierf, formerly brlonitlni; to the Alum-inum works, I-auta. wllh an nutpiil of8O,()W kilowatt*: and the Nloderlau-nltr.fr. Power plant, neor SpremberK.with: n'iljac«-nt lignite mlnen. and withm* output of abfloo..jtii«wiia«. -Cp.tothe prewnt the electric'energy devel-«1»M) by ihsM* two plant* has been utll-Izixt In tb* manofarture <'f alumtmiraHtiil nltrojii'n;' In the future It will ulnobe employed tp supply elwtrlclty forthe sucrouudlnit Industrial districts.

The Ratt Proiuila -Mural station,which was recently erwleil to provideHIP pnivlnce of Ka« I'ruiisla witheleclrle power. Is rontrulled, its alsoIs the AU worts, Munlrh, which wasfonneilJn 1018, In conjunction withtlie Or. '\Vscker Alexander company,for electrochemical manufacturing, toutilize the water power.of the lower

|.Ali. The output Is. roD^hly, 20,000kllowAtts. The Wurttembvrir IluralKlcrtrlt company was reorganized in1010 to .enable the state-, with the consent of -tlw Wurtlemberg government,to take a;domlnant Interest In theto'.__. ,supply of electricity to the province ofAVurttemberg. .-'.'.. •

• Great efforts were made during thewar to put the manufacture of alum-inum on a firm footing. In order tomake (lermany Independent of foreignsupplies. Plants were erected and themanufacture started at HJtrrem, Blt-tcrfeld and Rununelsburg, each factoryhaving an output of 8.000 tons of alum-inum per annum. In 1010 .the'Krft-werk.company was taken over by thegovernment and' reorganized with ' acapital of 25.000,000 marks. . Thebranch works of this company. In Ore-

. venbrolch (lower Rhine). 'hHve been[fitted tip to produce 12.000 tons ofnlumlnuiD' per annum. ' . • . • . ' •

Iron and 8U«I Mills.In regard'to irou and steel'mills th

llseder Smelling company and thePelner Kolllne Mills" company are con'trolled. These works have a capitalof 20,000,000 marks, of which tlie gpyeminent bolds 35 percent. The chief,features of, Ibis undertaking, are tuathe lulnes producing" the ore are. .1close proximity to the smelting « irolling plant, and. that, situated athey are in central Germany, they havnn advantage over' the •roinuetlaiworks In Westphalia In placing Urnoutput In'adjacent districts. In pre-vvur (iuy* ihflr yearly output of onamounted, to 1,000.000 tons.

The "Bavarian Lloyd Shipping company In lte^ensburg wljh a capital o

;v:w«

lpSeparated for 41 Years, '*<.••

"!:•. VThen" Kiss and Make Up" VVilen Jtin; JHary Walrad andCharles.li.;Wulrnd.:'caich; seven-^

'., ty-slxyeiirs old; met a t the ]$&?:•idlers' 'liiune -: at v t.eaWnworthi("Kan.. recentlyr

;lt^ wwi theinrsjtl;.' tline Ihjy hud ^Weath;''o^»eif:Jft1i '4f Spars.* Jtiya^uj^Ag^JJlwi;

B tiiuteji: vWai^d,s=haa^»!^|

DESERT IHTO BHPIREof HOUM Cemmlttea on Ap-

propriations antfQreup of WtsternColl«*gwe« 'Main Inspection '

• Tour of dovsrniMrit..-•'.;

i<l,O0O.O0O marks, a large portion ofwhich belongs to the state. Is'also rep-sented;bh the board of the Govern-ment Holding conipuny, The BnvaSInn 1.16yd held, a comranndlnjr prfsltlonIn traftsport work on th- r>anub« andneighboring rivers, but lout the jrreat-

r part of Its vessels ut the en*,bf thewar. Negotiations are. bo'w«veii pro-ceeding l.etweea the different g'6vern-

Oepartnient* and ptliers Jpter-csted to put the company one*'mpre« a commercial tooting.' The Oermunhip-salvage company "Odin;""Berlin,flth a capital of 0,000,008 marks, wns

;lnully' formed, to carry, out-workIn connection with, the, salvage ofrnnrporu find other shipping In the

Tlie company was I\o5,,,,vory. . owing to the unsultBhlcof HnlvuKe adopted, i . t t ls now

•roposed to" divert the company's ac-Ivltles tq, towage and lighterage<work.r Accordln|f1o,n resolution ndojited hyHie Oorriinn Metnl Economic leaguo,reiwrted by the Wolff Telegraph; Bu<n-nu, the export of r>0 per ctttit of allilg metals coming from German mines

.luring May, June, July and August,Is to be permitted. No limit Is placedjpon the export of all partly manu-rnctured metal products, provided theyire not sold at prices under thV do-mestic rates. German manufacturersmay import raw metals, llf they donot pay tn'oro than the standnrd pricesIn the world market. German exportirlccs on neml-mnnufhctured Iron nndJteel products have been materially,lowered during the, last few months.Dar Iron seillDg at fl,R30 marks InApril has been cut to 4,000 marks perlop for export to Holland and Switzer-land and to 3,050 to Denmark, the lat-ter'being the same ns the domestic,rate In Gertnnny. .^The Iron Industry

Washington.—Plans "for 'putUnig4.000,000 acres oflnnd on th« agricul-tural map of the United States by aprogram of reclamation, calling for. theexpendlrore of about I250.000JW0 overa ten-year period are to be considereds e r i o u s l y b y c o n g r e s s w h e n I t r e a s -

s e m b l e s , ' ' '•"••• . ' •'•.-.'•••••' •• •-.,' . . .

Members of 4 lu house appropria-tions committee and a group of West-ern colleagues whtt bav^beien makingon Inspection tour of the government'sreclamation projects and of the nation-al parks ! • company with. ojBdals ofthe department of the Interior, aftertraveling; 10,000 miles by tram and4,000 miles by auto "and viewing theIrrigation achievements since , 1002hoveycome back-earnest converts' to ablj; reclamation plan. .

Arthur IV Davis, director and chiefengineer of the reclamation service,who accorapnnled the congressionaltoiir, Is now In the West visiting otherprojects and preparing his recom-mendation" for tlie annual estimatesto be submitted to Secretary Payne! •

Secretary Payne, who has Just In-spected) two of the government's prtoclpal reclamation projects at YaklmaWash., and. Shoshone. Wyo., has be-come an enthusiast regarding the de-sirability j>f ntlllilng America's node-

iUr1-The former German liner Von Steibov.wblch Is betnc Otted put In New'

Tork foe a trade cruise«f 12 montha,all;wound the world. ..She will be' re-cM»»ened- the Dnlted SUtea aao; .wm^r^ J Ame^can . f i^ every port

" o f . I m p o r t a n c e . . ' • • • , > ' • • . . . • .••!•'/-'!";.. k ) .:• . t t . . ; • > • . • . 1 V \ . . : • . • . . ' . • ' • •

veloped resources by building newcommonwealths In the arid West

While the reclamation service Is re-stricted In Its estimates ta/$S,000.000or $0,000,000, equivalent to the amountreceived by sale of public lands, saleof water and returns on Irrigation de-velopments. Secretary Payne has al-ready declared his Intention of askingcongress for $12,000,000 to open up100,000 acres of reclaimed' land Insmall farms, with special1 considera-tion of tlie Shoshpne project. - . ;

Representative Will U. Wood (Rep.)

e In Germany. ^T y(i protesting against further paymentof export duties. ,

Al|, Available AccommodationsAre Booked Three Months

in Advance.

BLAME DISASTER T0| CARLAustrian, Collapse'Charged to, Emper.

- or*s,' Cohflletlnd War' Ordsrs, ' '.•ays Commission. V r . "•

• Vienna.—Chief blame for "the col-lapse of the Austrian forces on theI'iavo river, In the Aimtro-Italliui cam-paign, Is placed on the former Em-peror Carl by the report of a commis-sion appointed to Investigate wur de-linquencies. > ',-...'.'',. V V• O n tlie fateful. Noveinhiir 3,1018. thereport says,, the .then' emperor Issuedthree conflicting order? within' a fewhours. The first was for,the conclu-sion of an armistice. Forty-flvo min-utes later this wi»s revoked and 05mluutes afterward It wus. Issued ngaln.During this period, i t was said, thee m p e r o r c o n s u l t e d n o o n * . . o n t h e m a t -t e r . ' . - . ' , . ; . ' , . • - . . . . v - = ' - • , 1 , " ' - ' - . • • • . • . . ' - . •••:

„'" "We must "aslt," the report says,"whether the emperor and his adviser*were not gulfed by' the fear of thenmiy Ilobdlng buck on Vienna ratherthan by any other circumstances. Itmay be.iierhap^jftt by express Jnten-tlnn but rather subconsciously; thatthe desire prevailed with more than,one of these won that the troops hadbetter not return home at all." ,-' ".

PASSPORTS AT A PREMIUM"Ships, 8hlpsand More 8hlps" Is Plea

From United States Ports—Trayel. Only Half What it Was

in.ia.i4..

Kew Tork.—The slogan of "snips Iships 1 and still.more ships 1".so effec-ltvely used during tho war to speedup America's shlp-bulldlng programas a deflance of tUe^kubmarlne cam-paign still U heard In American sea-ports. . . ;;- " 'i' "i; . .."I ':, It-cornea, however, not so much fromthose having freight for transit as Itdojs from those who desire to mob*trips to foreign shores on business orpleasure. ;, " •"--•

Steamship accommodations for alllands, despite more than a doubling ofpre-wartlme tariffs, and rigid restric-tions as to passports ure at a premliim

All Accommodations' Booked. " .

Representatives in New York amiother terminals of passenger-carryinglines say, that all available accommo-dations are booked ns. far as three _._months ahead,, The unfortunate busirptheness, man faced with the need of matoIng an unexpected trip abroad.; Isforced to depend on possible cancellations of previously ./engaged passageon the part of someoue who at the lax*moment Is prevented from sailing. •

On many ships third-class accom-modations hold men. and women whoare financially able to travel In theheat-thnt the ship, affords. It Is nolotreqaent occurrence for '] a staidbanker, or n wealthy bead of.a largebusiness house -to be .found, bookedWith/the humble alien laborer return-

Airplanes for the Rifle Meet

ins to the land of tfls birth for a visit.It. was recently said by the head eff

.large line In speaking of tariffs, thntJn idl4 a man could'purchase a tour-ist ticket Including rail fares and hotelaccommodations for a trip, half wayaround the world for the same sumthat he Is now compelled -to pay for a.one^wnj' tlidcet' from New York to aMediterranean port. :

necords of departures and arrivalsas kept here by : the Steamship Men'sassociation show that despite the veryapparent rush; travel Is only abouthalf, as to number of pussengers,what it was In 1914. In May and Juneof that year there sailed from Amer-ican to transatlantic ports 104,800 per-sons of whom more than 100,000 wereclassed as third class. ' In -the)samemonths of 1920 the outgoing total was8032aof /^om 60.000 were third class,1

Arrivals Show Slump. ' }

Of Incoming :•. passengers In onemonth of 1014 there were 105,100 per-sons. The.'corresponding month thisyear showed 4S,*120 arrivals • ' "

The rush this year and the difficultyIn getting accommodations hi account-ed* for by the "fact' that there1 lg need-ed "ships, ships-and^'more ships I" ofthe passenger-carrying i class. Ayalffable tonnage,. due/ to the ravages ofthe -gar,, Is greatly depleted. ThfrNorth; German Lloyd and - thefHwn-hurg-Ainerlcan lines,*, which prior J:othe war* carried, n large percentage of~ e transatlantic* travel, do not exist.

In addition, many of the big linersof allied Hags are gpne/ as: for' exam-ple,, the Lusltanla. Almost all thesnips of the, pre-war .fleet of anotherlarge British line ,wer« submarine vic-tims. -Other ships were of a necessityiaid-upj-for^perloiiis, o|j'more than-ayear tor,'Mcpndltioninj6' 'due to th^lraccommodations having been . rippedout. with axes to make them into troopcarriers. An example of this Is thehuge Olympic, which but recently Wasreturned to Bern pasMnger-carryhig

I r a f l e . . ' - . " 1 . - : ' . , • . ' • , - ' , - i ' " ' . ' - , . • ; . ' • ' • ; . . ' •'-, :'••• '•.'. V

of Indiana, a member of the npprn-prlatlons committee, says that he niuiotherswho have Just Inspected these*T9fe t s n 8 V e heen \converted fromtheir previous reluctance to make suci»

'large, appropriations and now hellevethat It Is h nutlonnl duty thus to cre-ate opportunities for Its citizens u>-estnbllsh themselves Uj perinnnenthomes on such fertile areas, wrestwl*rom the'desert . •' Many who opposed the "farms forservice nien" proposition In the lustcongress on the'grounds, thnt It «'u»camoutlaged reclamajtion have pledgi'i!their support to un out-and-out Irriga-tion development.

• Senator Jones of Washington Intro-duced-n hill in the'last-session'.whirl*teeks an appropriation of $2f>d.noa(HM>tor reclamation work and the Interlurdepartment . has drafted a ' prpsrmurthat calls for more than that.

. ' TUm Desert Into Empire."•' Senator Charles L. McNnry of Ore-gon wrote a favorable report last De-cember from the committee on Irrlsa-tlon and reclamation of arid lands. Hepointed "out that under the revlamntlomnet passed In'1002, the government'linsexpended in .construction work a littleover $123,000,000, flint, water for Ir-rjiratinn purposes has been ninde nvnll-able for 1,780,000 acres, of land," whichhad been largely barren, desert wauli*nnd unproductive. It Is now worthfrom1 $100 to $750 nn acre, with nnaverage crop value per acre of $G3.tu).

• "Out of the uninhabited and nlniratworthless,-desert has been carved anempire of nearly 2.000.000 acres. In-tensively cultivated and producing:,,crops whose annual average gross re-turns.per acre are about "double tlins*of the r^st.of the country,'j sip's Dlrector Davis of the reclama.tlon serv-ice/, • • ; ; ; , / . , ' • ;•.,.•; :•• i - , . •;..

While the bill Introduced, by Sena-1

tor Jones calls for $250,000,000. thgreclamation service. Is now working on80 projects which call for/n • total "ap-propriation Of $302,000,000. but re-turnH. wpuld be coming In from snuie1

of the earlier" construction before the ,entire expenditure wrfs made. Of the-4,0(X),('iOO acres which: It Is proposeiVto add to.the farm-lands about one-third. Is public Innd ".belonging to theUnltefl States govjuTiruimt.

Director Davis has, figured out thn,fthe average, value .of lands In tlieprojects did not exceed $10 an acre, or$17,O00,Q00i when the government Ir-rigation \v_ns "s'tnrted In 1002. and tl-nttoxlny they easily represent IncreasesIn land values of $350,000,000 due to.this work, and has' prepared a-dt>- •talletreport-on this ..for congress. Hefigured thnt* only.'8JS;-.per cent of thetotal ^ultimate cost" will: he finallycharsed against, the'gbvernmentl

Indians in Annual Canoe Race

« w ^ ^ airplanes whkh the Pntted State^ arrofaaj;»^Mpp(i^^^^d|Jii^i?|Sp^««Sjp^lOTi^iiSiteftSil^^ift!?^^ t^f*!!S!?S#^?SS!; Sf'^teiF'i1^; torn.

Ore. of th. most ^«ct«cnlar sporHng evonta lu CSinada U tl» rtmu«i meetIng ol U» ttlbe*" in Uwlr canoe race. Tta iwe'coum^Ia. o w • utotaae^.o

\ 1 « o r l a . a c O n picture anowi tht,cwwa« ajs einMtaj foc the start

^Rattlesnake and Old -v-";^';-:.Mim'}Fii|http'DMrth'

• Atlanta, Ga.—Word lias beenbrought to Atlanta''of a remark- Jable 'fight \o ,th^ death between; *•n^flgeft formeii Hying near *Buckheud, and a ^glant rattle- t

^ a h a k e ; ^ ' ' ; . - ^ " * '-.'. :''/'''-'-"^: '•'.•*

: ' t h e Jfarmler, Mact Richards, *>v who Is' well advanced.". in yjears,'' J :

wa^^nftadlng a fence when he «.••UslUriiOjn o rattlesnake so*Inrge. J.that When plleO Inn coll Its'tteiid ,:"#,

;-wa'a, more, than . two feet nbtive; J ••v'the'-ground.ir:-';'.' • ...-.' .-• :'-'V •. :*;0;*":5.,; The snake struck, nt him and JJ would; httve.reached its mark If' *i I t hid "not : be*n deflected by J

• E'iBeipre It could coll' again,. Mr. s JcBIchards:^seUedF'a'''"mil,i';-:nnd,'J.gptnuidiithei • snake; 'agalnist;' the V >f''gr^i^d^|^8teitrleilx,'tp';.^allv for.: J*I«lKibj|'ifnoiie:.w«U!: near'/ -::Vi;XP. •'<•:*•'^•;!ThpSnalte^; bj^ tnaln;:strenjttte:-,t|l^ls'te^h»lf''pfltfTOm-Under.the^,#•^|t'aria^P^^1tp'jftHke;ai^'it'ttfegt^tlin^ttr^i^rd»t^o||j^'jsn^^iottciwea "'hliS|(p((^S>ntiiip %

^ ^ ^ ^ t t a c i ^ i f t ; . • " • " ! " " " "•'••"•'s J

i w d t h * utta'cki'1 > ' " , ">"*'" Mr. Richards picked up a short-'''1 J

W,jrall and, with i t W battle ?f l w " *nila« the^Tepai^ - » ; J

"A list of college banlearners acquired cemforcoach during Its season wiBrooklyn and Pblladelphli, Ben Houser, once a piJohn Henry, who used toBig Jeff Tesreau looked iulng the squad aHFordhn

Ira Plank, brother of; was at Gettysburg. Jackvard. Jesse Burkett. fanCross. . • • ' . •

Itay Fisher of the Rei•was at'Annapolis; Monteonce a Cub pitcher? prodthelIted-Hox. was at.the«he Yale squad.

Biiada has twice befit h e America's cup.

ifpeter the Great. 2:07'1 trottert In the 2:05

• • •Buffalo and Los Ange!

-• 1021 national rowing cliai' . . • . . • • • . » . - •

' A total of 1490 rlflcme«d to compete In "the Cau

•'-•' Lowrence, Mass^ boa:football'league" of Indust

' , ' • • • • • ' • •

The New Tork Yncht'fended the America's cU]• years.

James H. arsham ofholds Uie Olympic clay

v p ' r l z e , ' ? f; •'• . . • .'• • ; • • 1 ; • ' ' • . • • • . . * * • • " •

New Zealand cricket«n English amateur.-tthere next season.

. ' , • : . • • ; • : . _ • . « . . •

. Tiie Joe. BeckefMTranl"" tng; contest to schedu|«'•' stadium, London, Septen

..;::.;. « ; . • • , , . ; . : . .Tlie middle-state rci

mile strnlshtaway courslemr-Labor day, closes tleontn the east

• . . - • . . • • • • • • •

Frank Shcble of th«elawnre club ; spranir

he won the stxtc«the water. In one.

» ? : ; . , - : . ' • • ' • • " • • > • • • . • .

%. Sir Thomas Upton. 'trying to lift the Amer

• a period o» twehry-oncome again In IKS^r

1 - Y • • • • •

Coronaiio's winter po«ipen on January 1. K<21tlhue until April 1..match games, every wcel

• • • • * • ' : • ' • ' - ' • • • ' ~ v " ' ' - • • • * . * ' • *

•;. United States Naval 1will be In" control of concers nnd experts or pcoaches of the various 1

: ' ' • • " • - • • . ' . . . • • • • -

New Elsmpshlre mo«ers are orptnljlng/'a stand will amilnte wltlAutomobile Dealers1' n>:

• • • ' ' : ' - - ' . " ' " ' ' • i . : . , ' • • ' •

v ,;Krne»t E. Hearg., fodirector of Wnshburn <tiais been appointed h

s University of Illinois 1v - • ^ • ' - ' • ' • ' • . . • / ' . • ' • ; . " • •

• The fastest mile eve.i- horse In this countryi 'Over theSarntoipi (Nr.'iVRnhnier "in iipHlnst tl

; two seasons ago.:

' " i ? . " - • ' • " ' • . ' ' • • • . • • • . ' ; ' * ' * ' • • '

V-Sk' Peter the Oreat. 2:W'- ha^e itxi 2 :ll» performWide ly to;; havj; ii 2:<*•r - t h e M-IWOTII:««n'l» on. ' the

3|«here the Ufiht harnei

' ' Tom 'Nleotl,tlsnllu miinlrlnol fo

' <o.Tpl«*«. 4a|*n. to

JSfeii•*••• nirfms bow to p'»J J

Page 7: ELECTlOrf - DigiFind-It · 2015. 1. 3. · property foUy insured. * - y *• WBITB OALL W Cranford Investment Company Real Batate 26 N C A BliAXBSLBI y •• to tt* «*r> CRANFORD.N.J.

•«i- . ::.•;•:» tie

liipiiplilfJOBS AS COACHES

ed out In NewShe will be' re-nte ever; port

of the apn.rn-y* that lie itnilInspected these .onverted from!e to make sucl»

now •believelty thus to <TO-Itft citizens n»-

nreuH, wrested:

the "farms forIon In the lustids'.'thnt It wimin have pledgi'i!t-ond-oiit Irrlirii-

Intro-session whirl*

of KJaXooauiojnd the Interiored a ' programn that.

Empire.McNnry of "Ore-(

report Inst He.nlttee on. Irrlsa-: arid lands. He :••the reclamationgovernment lin*on work a 111119

water for Ir-aeen ninde nvnll-i. of land," whlchi

en, desert wastirIs now worthacre, with nt»acre of $G3.tH).

ilted and almostbeen carved nn)O,ppO acres. In- ,and producing,

e gross re-out "double tlios*mtry.'j sAys &'••clamo-tlon serv-

duced by Senn-K5O.000.00O. th«now working oi»for II totnliip-

XJO.OOO. but re-•", In from some

;tlon beforei the .uhade. Of the-

a: It Is proposedlands about one-..belonging to themoot., figured out •hn.f>f lands In the;d $10 nn acre, oris government Ir-ln 1002. and tl'titpresent increases58.000,000 due toprepared • a - d e - •

for congress. Heper cent of thewill: be finally

government.

d Oldjht to Death

Vord lias beena?of a remark- *death., betweenI, living neari-glant •> rattle-lack*; Richards,incedln ypars.':fence when beisnuku so* targe.i-o-coll'lw.'ft«i8;;two feet abovjj;

ick, nt him and .\ed its mark j f '£j deflected by

•coll again,. Mr.;-V::^iltr:nndte ateltwt 'thejil.to' call foris.nearV-cU; ;:;•;-.> nuUn strenxtUf fwm Joniler the^j

;to''strike'.«ff|li»;;ij.''^Hic|wird»«^j:::itotaice.TbutihefJ.-,jln^tjifewiWrtliJ,.

- St;

*A lilt of college baseball coaches (bow* that a number of firmer" bitleagner* acquired comfortable Job* leaking over the yomngstets. Amhenfscoach during Its season was FNd JackUtsch, who caught for many years withBrooklyn and Philadelphia. ., Ben llouser, once a prominent Orst baseman, had cjharge at Bowdotn,

John Henry, who used to hoto Walter Johnson, taught 'em how at Cornell.Blf Jeff Tesreao looked, after the boys at.Dartmoata. Alt pertla « u nut-ttlng the squad atiFordhnm. • ,

Ira Plunk, brother of tne treat southpaw, and himself ii pitcher of merit,was sx Gettysburg. Jack 8lattery, of long experience "up there." was at Har-vard. Jesse Burkett, famous slugger, watched over the Instruction at HolyCross. ••'. : - . • , . - • . . . . . • , •••'" • • ' , " .

nay Fisher of the Reds was with the boys at Mlddlebnry. Vt. Billy Lush•WHS at Annapolis; Monte Cross, wltb the University of Maine: Carl Lunderen.once a Cub pitcher? produced a champion team at Michigan: Bngle, 1st* ofthel lied Hox. was at the Oniverslty of Vermont, and Billy Uaoder was withthe Yale squad.

Sporting Notesonada has twice before tailed tothe America's cup,

^ • • - - • " • ' • • • • • • ' • • • • '

-gfeter the Great. 2:07>A. has fourr;teen trotters In the 2:05 list.

• v '•• . . . . » " • . •

Buffalo and Los Angeles want the'' 1021 national rowing chomplonsblps.

A total of l,4C 0 riflemen are expect-ed to compete In the Camp Terry test.. . • . i - ^ • , • • « •

; Lawrence. Mnes., boasts a soccerfootball leuguifot Industrial .concerns.

• • ; ' . . • • • ' . ' „ . • ' • ' • ' . •

The New York Yacht cfnb lias de-fended the America's cUp for seventy

, . y e a r s . • •• . . . • " " ' • • .

J a m e s B . Orahnm of t h i s .countrytiolils (he Olympic clay bird shootlbg

Vt>r,lze. • - - - • ; ,. • . •.•.-. .',.'' , ' • ' • ' • • • • . • • • j « •' . | : y • ' . • , - ' /

New Zealand cricket council wants«n English amateur .team to playthere next season.

The Joe. BeckefMhnnk; Mora'n box-'Ing;; contest Is scheduled at llolborn

';,' stadium, London, September 24.• . • • ' • ^ . ' • ' ' • ( • • ' • : • ' • * - • • • • •

The middle -state rcgatitn. over a: mile strnlghtoway course on the Hal*-

lenirJLabor day, closes the rowing> sea-89n*ln the east '_ . 1T ." ••

. . . . • •• • • • * . • ' . . " ^ . . . . . *

Frank Shcble of the Shawnee-on-elawnre club sprang* n nensntlon

he won the sixteenth bole overthe water In one. . : -

fti ' , ' . , - ' • ' • • • ' ' • ' • • j » • • • - • '

Tip Sir Thomas Upton, *vho bus beentrying to lift the America's cup overa period o* twenty-one yeui», will

.come again In lOiSrw---. • * ' . i\ / . • ' • • • • » ' 4 * \

Coronado'a winter polo season wiltopen on January 1. KiZI, nnd.will con-tinue until April 1. with severalmatch games, every week. ,r- • ,

>• Cnlted States Naval academy sportswill be In" control of coinmlsslonedoffl-cers.and experts or professlouals asccflcbes of the various squads.

' ( • ' • - ' • ' • • • • -

//.-New Hampshire motor vehicle deal-ers are orpinljlng;" a Mate ass'iclailonand will omilnte with the, KatlooaJAutohiobite Dcstem''anpclatloth .

• ' " ' . ' ; • ' : . ' " . ' • ' " * ! ; . : . , ; • • • " . . ,

,;Ernest E. Bears., foVnierly athletic"director of Wnshburn college. Kansas.lisis been appointed ii memtier of ibe.; University of Illinois athletic "staff.'

: \ - * X • ' , : • . • • « ' . . . ' . , . . • ' • : . > ' • * • • . - ' ^ . .

^.•.^'•'Tb^fa'stest'mlle'eie^ran by a raceborse In this country' was registeredover the Sarntoipi (S . Yv>-cour«* when

VRnhmer rnn »p«ln«t time In 1:34 *-3; two seasons ago. ' '..'..,-'•

' ^ ^ • ' \ • • • • • • • • • ' ^ ' • : • " ' . , • - - . , ' •

S Peter the Oreat. 2:07%. will soonJ have nxi 2:llt nerfornier»; and Is alsoJ-'Jlkfly tiv Unvji ^1 2 :lft trotteri beforei t h e M'IIWII: «>nil»* nri the. various tracksf where the ilfiht harness^ sport topopn-

•S'fiiH ':'\ ''r^i;'.''-:-''..-•.,.'.• ,*.ii':'/'' -' :•••'..!it*t?Tioih-fe>n «ill,;\)ror*'i'ntendenti;,.of,). the! llinllii inunlelnal p>ir; c^rse^wflll go1

;.tn; " •'""""recently formed there,

32

EVERS IS OVERLOOKINGDODGERS IN FLAG RACE

. Johnny ftrers. coach for theGiants, Is boslly engaged on theproblem of picking; the Sstlonalleague winner for • syndicateof eastern papers. So far hehas decided that the team thatbeats' Cincinnati and Pittsburghwill be the one to land the pen-nant He doe* not figure Brook-lyn In the running at all. butthat may b*. the way he getsfrom living In Manhattan. Ofcourse John thinks the Glsntshave a good chance, barring ac-cldents^. ..•••.

AARON WARD OF YANKSPULLS NEW BONE PLAY!

Here Is a new. tune play pulled Inthe American league, players of theYankees and Browns being- guilty:

Aaron Ward of the i°SDke«s waa oofirst. A pitched ball Brazed the shirtor'Sam Tick at bat and. claiming hewas hit. he started for first bane,vrard seetag blm coming, trotted downto Second.

The umpire, however, refwed to al-low Tick lo take his base for being bitby a pitched ball and called htm harkto bat. Wttrreupon Ward' turnedaround and slowly walked tack tolint basel

Ward technically had MMee) 'secondba«e ami vav entltlw) to It. Hot noSt. Lonls player attempted to Interferewith him. remrnmg to:.first or mad*any more to t«* bins off that bag,which was the one be legally held, anathe only one.

The game went on.' ,~ ,

NOTRE DAME SECURES HAULS

ForrnerBloemliiotBitfaelierHil*'•-•V $«Ieet»tf;as^8asebairCoacii;t*«,.;

)-• '••'. ;'-i'•-'••'•':•''••; J'r^'-fy'-t?*'-'ffii£?<-l-.*• -walt»r*^'t*^b*«rlffliipt«,,ath-,-Me. wfio" «a» a. pMcHer wlfh Bfeom-,

\fB..tn^;lTbr^^toiEoef!Jto»t

;fins: &>iraiiOii|i^|Ji*silS»

CsrpeatVsrwtta apa*

tuajpoa tkat b* aw put •**•.warn 1» arrtwd oaJack Gssrtar aa»» tk* machaMamslvwi aboot WSfiOb, past0>m twammeat abewt

IWWIWW

Diamond YamsJM> Tarry certainly la proviat fctt

srwth to dm Cubs.• • •

Max Hack contlBaa* hitting tte MUbar*,

"• • •Tb« only sport the Botshevlka hav»

taken op an far U Pal* vsnIUng.• I *

We would Ilka t» take a took atwaat la left «f th* fly that Bab* Bath

t ' '

The Pirate* lived up tit their nan*sad were the first dab to steal 100bases this season,

• • •tarry Doyle hasn't been to Florida

lately, but apparently be baa found a-fmmtaln of youth.".

. • • ' • ' • • ' •

Babe Ruth does,not make so manyhits sa some other player*,, bat h*•makes- them count more. . ,' ,

' • • • • • • • • •

. The Gunts.*rt now playing '«• «regnlar boons sjstem. Whan a pitcherwins he la banded a check.

.. • • • •Ty Cpbh may make good s» a cam-

paigner, but then there's a dllTarancatwixt a base hit and a stump bit,

• "* *Lee King, former Pirate, is playing

a good, game for the Giants, lie Isbeing used against southpaw pitching.

' ' ' • . . ; • • • ; , • / ; . . • • . '

(Iseffner, the young catcher of th*Pirates, is hustllflg all th» time, hssa flne arm. and-Is deadly to all kindsof high fouls. • ' ' .

' ' ' • - - • • . » • . • •

Pitcher Roy Banders of the .Tnplln<luh of the Western IPHKUH tins beensigned by the Louisville American as-aoclatlon club: • .

Ty Cohb Is going to be a stumpsneaker during the coming; campaign.The other party ran only retaliate bylilrlnc llabe ltuth. > '•••,'.'.

- • • • - ' • • • , ' - • • m • * •

Bill Gteason's. chief problem Justnow Is whether to pitch ClcoMe orKerr In -the opening gains, of theworld's series, '

Whether Ward or Frlsch In the bit-ter. Is the-question that Is flying fromthe Battery to the Uarlmu and fromBrooklyn to the Bronx. '

• • • • ' • *

Tbe Yankee players declare that Inthe. matter -of' stralght-away fleldlngand Retting the Jump on a batted ballFeisch Is srenter l|mn Bpeokcr.

" • • . • • • ' • • • • . • . •

Of- course the murderers' row BR-eretration led- by Bab4 Ruth In theTank.ee lineup, cause the Manhattanfans to feel sure that tho Americanleague pennant will fly polpward. j '•."' • • *.

Burlelgh Orlmes. who twirled forthe Birmingham Barons a number ofyears aso. is going grent. Orlmes waswith the Pirates for n time and thenwas sent *» the SuperbSSj

• . • •Manager Tmker has snared a pitch-

er ace by the name of I'nybe. Colum-hos had to outbid the Bonton Braves"'O cop.'. .Psyne struck out 21 battersn a single game recently. " ^

• • •Kew Ycrkers will have It. no oth r

way. than that the 1020, world's scriesia going to ber played. In Its entirety»n the I>o1o /ground*. Giants vs. Yan-kee* Is the way. the Ootbamtowuonlja beard* caper. ,

• • • >Thave seen Riith'cone to bat 19

times this.season" writes* peevish by-stander, - "and for these 19 times 1.have paid .out my money to see himdraw 13 bases on balls and bit at badones on three other occasions."

GREATEST HORSE ON TURF

Man O' War, th« greatest three-yes^old race horse on rtfie'American turf,eonld be developed Into one of th*finest, performing borse* U tne new*slty ihooid arise Ue to o«mtl b»SuBBtl O niddl* of ITlllaoelpBla and

i W «dJ l l

J g d W f JabBal u a u I .

To Celebrate the 406tfi Anniv«f»ary of Luther

Wittenberg. Prussia, I* to celebrate the 4Wth anaiveroary of Martin Luther in Doceiiitivr next. Tli« lllustrnllougtwt a view of the town, which was the reformer's bom*, and of the door of th* Stailtklrcb* to which h* aOlxedhi* r s tuuus U I M I S . ••' • .. •• x • ' . ' • . ' . • • •'• • - . ' ' • • • ' • '

British Labor Platform on Banner

. This banner briefly stu(«s tlm ni-niliiietit of ItrlllHli litlior leudurH an voicedat thw great labor conference recently Imld In the Central hull, WextmlnnliT.

Vindictive Raised at Ostend

NEW ROQUE CHAMPION

i 1' 1A. > . «

- • • • ' |

r'or tliu llrxt IIIIIH In the hlxhiry <ifHIM aiiulial nattoiinl rm\w tiiiiriii'>« awiiiniui l«il tin- Held In •inn dlvlnlon <ifthe rlmtnpliiiinlilppi nt Norwlcli, t'unii.Mr». Annie I.. \Vlilini>> u unlive ofI'urllnml, Hi'., mm prm lulnnd chum-[iliin i|f tlm Kcwiiid rllvlnl<m iiflir tv'n-ultiK I I miitchi'H mill liming Inn nunlg I I IIIIIIK I <iin|ii'll(<ir»,

{DAVID WON A PRIZE

liaising the battered liulU of 11. M. 8. Vindictive, wlrfeli was ntink InOstend ImrlKir to block thu (lentiun U-lxiflts. The Vindictive will \m towedback to Knglilnd. Thin uiont unus[ial phiiloKruph show* tlm condition vf thubattered vowel". ( , - - . -

~ _ * * /

For Perforating Postage Stamps

^ 7tUis, perfora|ea_p«Bita«« «Ump»fbothyl«»g(bwl»a, an(J;«r»» been V&\*\M\ sununed. It al*9 tnul (b* *«1np»

tinvl«r-Akh'Jf Allpn, xlevui) monthsold, won a prlw> In Ilio ndiiuul Jhnliypnrmlu nnd rnrnlvnl at Anjiiti'y park,N. J, Dnvld'M ciMluine wn's H HUIIIU,mid his n-hlctMhls fin hnthtub.

" "„ In a Qusndary. r"I say. I'm In a fix with my girl I"

sold y'llitig Dulili" fllKt'i)iiiw>lntely."Why?" ri-plliii' bin sympiilhotlc

friend, "whnfs tho umtter, my Iwy7Hnve n row?" " ". .

".Yoi'llt Isn't that. Von see, I've 'titvn snylnit IM> inntiy nlre I hint'" t» her ,thai she's getting conceited. 1 can't-stop It, and 1 (Ttii't kti'p it up."

"Cwn't. eht W l i y n o i r• "Well," yau see. If I kept on she'llbegin to think she'* too Kood for m*,utid If I stap-slie'll think I don't car*for ber any moxe,"

<M

.':': A Horns 'BUn.^-:i:&*"S$iX?^ei;;<)itf?lncorr.i()rtbj|«:;hBChj^:i;i

. lOpfJbor>rf;: '«'• honj | ' r^;« l t 'mhrrwgej»^

mm

'^^^^^^^m^mpsmmiimm

lmttMpjaf *

Page 8: ELECTlOrf - DigiFind-It · 2015. 1. 3. · property foUy insured. * - y *• WBITB OALL W Cranford Investment Company Real Batate 26 N C A BliAXBSLBI y •• to tt* «*r> CRANFORD.N.J.

,V. V - /V

. / - • • • * • • *

*>--* •f ' ; T - ^ . n * ^ :

K*-;*^?1^

body-buildingremain unchanged.

You UW Private SMI- in rite pcati |t f i ,«

g«|i l asr euet' toaar.

p;F WiflnnilllllilUlllflliRlMilllMUHl

Bottling Department .NEWARK. NEW JERSEY

•i-

FRED H. |AHN,q i o i i n i tb PhiitprJ»hp)

house, Sign, and ^ v

Prttco PaJntlng,i

l»»p»rHanging

fclat.,Oil, Paint, VkroLhe.and Wall Paper.; (

N » aw OWIBO A M .

1 H. B. SYLVESTERCarpenter and Builder

Jobbing* SpecialtyBin WeetlWd Atenue, B. -

! PARK, N. J., ,,

We h»T« «daod f t new »oomtto

|bentw9S oft S t e t Pud dMrlbotaolectlm. book*

Vm/m m torn'dan bttora »i«ctloit wtwo

fltt th.

Only atx aenatora toWd —» .—Wahfleld blll,whkmjtl|had.paaaed

*lwiebon*«rthep«rpoa«i*«f^reet.ay tfweUnt Nmearto reltoWthettoiia.

quui«n, andomr good* in • flr»t-

n»aaortaa« SMNKurmirtalbtttMt•mfled thabnita th»<W«ttrbnth*Uld not v«t« oa U» Kit salt TtwMUJjiased to tba twoM laat May. ft con*taloi a Nfirmdain etauw u t Wonld

opelmta mree yaan titan thadato

Uoulnr bHI D * t « tt tb*« * t >W bf Mf>'Bm»|«Bt

Robblna & AllisonMOVINQ PACKING 8T0RAQE

and

213OIS B.aottth Avenue

will u«« KirfanataV Clea ',? *.*<1

r"

mmti « * be wwegnt^ tn. d t , or j-ueui mm,0* property It Jooet«t-

of Ac pnbKc where fac*

CHJR AITl 15 TO PtfiASB

SCHAFERCwl

CUMW, Bi J.«lmtt«ndSa«tM A

CRANFORD, N. J.

>W bjf Mf.Bm|«Btv bodtow tB» rUht toand gMngwrntdpaU

tiw tb« right to in(jtm» into the «•»*<la« of pmpertlaa. PrtaideBt Oaae ok-Jeeted to thU meamire becana» h» bo-le*ed It «a>o munlcfoaUUM the tight9 entkr tte home tftlldint buitneai.

Be aald It waa "paadnjr t% Boek" t6•IT* mn»Uaf*Utto«;leBt»UtlYe authori-y, and'Kk aW)>«*ou«htJ It woeid undohe action of the atomta, to1 defeatingbe «ther bill, Introduted by Mr. Hwab>Md, a«*Wfc«.immJe»BalW*te enterhe builnaM of buUdlni hemea. Tbajste on tfi t>m !*iood?,to^Tand Mr.ttmyon mttetted'tKara* ueamure Uewen ThenwwtwirentM;

A«rUokn**HwiireUtt,Beftm the eiaatenieied the bW to-

nro«r Uo«ae'flH»'wfJeaawe andd l t

Beft t e n in r o « r Uo«ae'flH»'wfJeaawe andlemnerdal antomoWMetlw lection ee>ahlWdag^UMw*>for JMaajfJ bwwe^at

QNifcoVobjictirf to It., The-bill waatfterred back to the HUhfa? Oowmtt.lVMtTiUrtf^wtththatwtththat

Una pertn tb

|MIkfoer the eip»raUoi>,of tfiTc«tin«at* to thft b«n»e the bUl we« tefwfed to the JfeUclary CJommlttoe, whme^ewreetat " ' " ' "ewreetat e •

No t«n»m»t Hbdee Aiot Uhano*Mar jhe do«e oTtho Matron Mr.

Blnvaoa-ofNred a MU1 to take WreeI anlly dweUiUgat ««• of the tenementheoM ad*;eiplatnferth*t'rt wmMtrtog rdUC to the hoaaUicaaortago 1B>J > ; Olty. but Mr, Alleft objected to

raor« bUla being tntrodn»d.^ JBethe eaaafo had bee¥ liberal ejda

. _ » to letting, new bill* in after It w uagreed to atop the Introduction ofthem. m e p m J d e n t d t t d t h a t t *eett eenator oot ofM B a

tft8nlIltHB)J»ldlBWo. 8 In the reet an.V«« - .—*

te'ebMriT com.te t $ Bmll.dt M

J b t to | 1 M up the h t W'taKaJbaot to | 1

ftea«w•r. hait,-

IF YOUPtoofaaaeyeiirdngB

fnmk us you

WOULD HAVE

: ' / • • . •

GRASSMAN & KREH' ti. MSTKR, Iboorporated ' -

TO COWARD MOSMKR>:i

menrm 4b Jiurveyow

I BroadCraaford, ».' J.

BUaatettu V. J.

aa-

SBdllRITYoorrepuUtioikfor

DEPENDABILITY

teat of yean.

REXALL STORE- .IS Union AV<NMO-

Sonday and HoBday J warn

FRITlOf ROlfCarpenter and Bmlfar

WortcP. a Box 111

- • - • e e »

R ' BONEManure

. GARDEN AND FLOWER SEEDS

SuppliesMIXED GRAIN, SOFT;MASH, ETC, -OOLLABS, BEMKDIES

Horse ancf Stable Equipments.SPONGES CHAMOIS

iHflRai!STICnnford

to AARON D. CRANE)

I' . Bpafleb OHMfeeawt. KUZABBTH STORE

r

Carpienter and Builder' "" '^J- - * JBSOMAVBS FURNISHliO 4 .>

o* -AllPhoaeS78-M. .

V 1 - $

r'

*"•

- , ' • , '

ii- -^€gH

rtarket Affords.

P*: "''

GROCER

';V^5Ty;;^"^:^^;vvS^^iv^

: AHtbortzod Ford

'f