need ^ o f cash •. *r to run jersey · ing np the harden of taxation, oqt of the larger items of...

8
II NO. 42 CRANPORD. H. J.> THURSDAY. DECEMBER U, 1919 THREE CENTS •. *r ffl* fes/afor submit*Ah 1 tout fous us I F you tMKr« already had yoor will ns we will be pleased to advise yon upon the subject and to telt you at length how we beat might serve yon. _7J-fl.'J--^->>^i"P= ^ NEED OF CASH TO RUN JERSEY Financial Problem to Be One trf Host Perplexing for Governor- Elect Edwards. MANY BIG BUDGET DEMANDS, All . Ospar«n*ttia aiMt *ftpMtstd bxUttbv Casts itW*. - tag—Fermir Qsweniar Named - Vie* Chancellor. of the many perple* tax problemstowhich Governor Elect Edwards will be obliged to devote « Hrt» share of hU Inaugural m w a m Ja that of Mate finances. Fortunately, however, be la well equipped to glv« this problem Intelligent attention, be ta the <ijK.je4ra.**:aerT«l «Wtt to become thoroughly familiar with every phase of the state business. In> deed. It was during Senator Edwards' regime In the. comptroller's office that the 'more .bturitiesji-llkB- ajjd . THE BEST BUY IN CRANFORD Golonjtt residence, best location in town; fifteen rooms and three -baths; breakfast room, sleeping porch, billiard room; five master bed- rooms' and two tiled baths with shower on second Boor. New modern vapor, heated system. Two-car heated garage. Immediate possession. HAT.r. PHONE Cranford Investment Company IS »to to Iniiuranoe 25 North Avenue. East TcUphone 103 J C. E. BLAKESLEK UTILIZER BONE Sheep Manure JARDEN AND FLOWER SEEDS .- Poultry Supplies r, CHARCOAL, MIXED GRAIN, SOFT MASH, ETC. POO CAKEfJ,'"'COrXAHH, iflcMfonTF^ FTO. >rse arid Stable Equipments. SPONGES CHAMOIS Pbooe 8TX Onoford IARLES S. POUNTNEY (Successor to AABON D. CRANE) Masonic BtfSdhv, Cranfonf, N. J. ». Bewtor. Goal Pocfcal ELIZABETH 8TOIU5 i PARK, N. J. 80S-SW Morris A ve. •'• -^V-"*;,^,-?*, tvs- v a « i "* KREH ERNEST It. MEYER, Incorporated Established 1880 (SUCCESSORS TO EDWARD MOSHER) Bnslneera A Surveyor* lMa«iole Bonding, Cranford, N. J. JS08 Bmad Street, Elizabeth. N. 3. i out BO satisfactorily was Introduced, The requisition syttanvby which ererj penny of the appropriations la ae counted f6r m advance, bos made II possible to ascertain at once exactlj wbat the balance sheet looks like and prevents any payable overdrafts, sack as ranted confusion and no little diffi- culty Inother years. |. ••»• . --• The bncjjfpt BjrBtera; by which every Institution. department, bureau, board of the Joint Appropriation Commlttei of the legislature, has also brought th< state**' flunnclnl nrranKemcnt up to s standard, of usefulness at ooco prac- tical and enlightening. These systems mnjie the work of th« ADpruDrlaiiott. Committee much aim pier than under ilia old system—ui Iw* «f *y*tem-fc« that I* not fhe most serious phase of tho situation "which confronts the new executive This year's total approprfatlnns of y ppprfatlns _ol "neariy |12,0o6,i(Wt>"were, the"niwvlesl In the hbitory of NewJ y n total Involve «o manr large nnd ln»- portnnt undi'xtnklngH that there m poared full Justincatlon for themand there wan no m i l nmiplalot fromtin taxpayers. There .;*av. for Inrtnucjj, the W.O0O.0OQ flat for the Hudson rlv er, tunnel anj the VtiOfiOO tlal for tin Delaware rhrer brtilge, (he lawst «lh- Ble Item for a public project ever ap- propriated. • • There wore alao largn Itema for nec- essary- additions and Improvement* to the charitable, i»iiul and correctjoiml tostltullons, for which there had lima been Jii»|atfint o dawij^ : ip^B£;n^. nues wore sufflclont to meet iliese ex- -traordlnary expenditures without [ill Ing npthe harden of taxation, Oqt of the larger Items of retenue la thai from collateral Inheritance taxes un- der the law which Governor Elect Ed- warfis as comptroller was largely In-' strninentaJ In having pnt.tbroaftl and which has proved to b» a hajren o), refuse In streselng period*. fa»mana# «n Budpet Commission. T**XM*m tbMJJjd alterable opposition- .to nii> tuini- levjlng of direct MB>T rluo f.ir n» purpose. Theonly "direct tnx \w system, and under the lawthat Im two mart yean to run. It yl'elila <i| prozlmatoly KMKKMMO a year. tJndi> tbe laws creating UIB InterstateHeld* and Tunnel OooiiuMon If Is provliln] that a similar tax shall bo U>vl«i, tu be- gin where the other vnris, but It h probable that tho governor"civ* Mil moyd vary early In his uilniliilainitloi that tlic tux will not ho nmlinui.l IH&L }«ur Jhu VIM J flunnco the brldito nnd tunni-1 iimjitl, but he lind little HiipiHirt for tlio uu-nn aro hucauiH> of the ImiH tk'luy It wnulil entail. 1 The guveninr elect 1* still of tliw bi»- llof that this IKtln< on'y t>r«|KT wny of flnniiring jthp jwp grent j «ubtnlttpjl tfltt" vntxr of tha the polls for-ralincflt.lnh or ntnl, ns New York nnd I'mumylvatila arejuotv coininllti'il to dlrt'ct aii|>rn|iri PHOtiE ONE-THREE ^ftinrttnif and Vtmno Mtowkn Packer* and Shippar [Storage Warehouses 440 North Aw. tnBU>;N;Jr'~. iNmifie BOUGHT, SOLO AND EXCHANGED pert of s demand upon the* mcooilna legislature Vhlch the'Budget Commis- sion snd the Joint Appropriation Com- mittee of the icgblatare will dud inoit dlfflcelt to meet Every department ol the state gOTernment, every Institu- tion and board has found 1t necessary to Increase Its btidset for the next fiscal ytar, beftonlttg on Taly X Th« tremendous advances In the cost of •very Item of maintenance and opera' tton have created a problem of admln- Mratfam dlfflcult Of solution. The salary question, too, baa become one of grove inoment^'fof, desplte"gen- eral imprctslonstothe contrary 1 , state agmlajr«es,>as.T« K not IMWH... allQwixl-Biw- nlflcent emduments. Indeed, tho Stat* House Commission, cbargrd wMl» th« duty of distributing the emergency ap- propriation sow made annually la preference to the. old deflqp, ocder whlcb so many abuses became possible, found It necessary to-makt an emergeocy ailowaoee for Increased pay, noting.froa 10 to 25 per cent. i ftv..(^sin:.cisaa(» of .enictl Jt was rcroDa that better, psy elsewfi«re wms attracting traiaed workers and that tn« stata was facing a serious sit nation la most of tSe lasUtnttoos. These Incressea were but temporary, of coum*, as the authority of the BtsU House CommlasioD Is limited, and, lo- will Htatir Is.'now fnnnully nnd IrrvVftfaWy lied up to tbesv two luipiirlnut undnrtitk' Inga'ahd* cannot ruiri'iit. It must forward to the compUMluri oT tliucn. ! tcrprfs*s tu co-opi>rutlon with tint uls ti-r «tutw«;'and'Uio pwipIeeycrywTi^fi ore nujiportinir tliern etirnratly. Alltliewi thlnin) and a lut nioro will hove to be worked out In mint' tiatl*> factory way, but th» Rovcrtior flwet has Do prevent fenr of lack of c> tlon on tbe part of tlie li'idolntiit'i', I'vcn If It Is of the opponlto iHilitlcul purty. Ho has already exprewhMl tlu> livllcf operation, for It li"'Kardiy that partisanship will l>e cnrrlml to sijch- e^trcmrs rotordlnK ciit*?n>rl«« or crippling state Institution)). The new governor may hnve dlfflcnlty In carrying but his program for reconstruction Innumerous depart- tuenU, where whojesome .recoiwtruc' tlon. could t(« (tarried out to the. sver- IsstlDg good or Uio stttt* <io*?™tucnt, and he; ma> chcDunter itotflo imrtiaiift this case Its powers are In question. The dual Word Is for the next legisla- tors, through Its AppropriaUosi Ooto- mlttee, bat the slluatloo will have te twttcad. \y- '. ~, ,_" ,.; • TIras there will be one., long and load waft 1 , for money, and'still mon mots*. What tbls la to lead to la d»O- ettt to forecast Taxes Uironghout tb* state are now at the top notes, and the bttfdsa appears to be grtfwiog heavier with the lnereased cost of «v f District Taua, ID Ja» campaign Senator Edward* ., iit'SilriorprSijinile'Thnl tiewlllbe left alonu to'work'out tli« sulutlon of the Intricate financial prol>- r«ms. ,The responsibility In this re- spect Unot Individual. It rests final- ly with tho legislative and i-xcciitlvo branches of the Mate govi'mua-iit High Honor for FlslUsr. Chancellor Walker named fortner. Oovernor James V. Fielder as a vlc« chancellor to succeed the late , Ick-'W.. Steven*, former -Ooyeiwrt Fielder 1*' a Democrat, an was lili predecessor. In naming s Democrat, Chancellor Walker Is following -th« long, eataiillahed practlco. of. keeping Hi. winri. :**&( fmm faft 1 "" dividing tht) meuborshlp vtmally b«- tw«eti tbe two <loinlnatlnj( parties. Vice Chancellor Fielder will lake oDlc« Immediately, when It Is understood hf ill b I h h telt y will be mworn In hy Ihti The selection gives tho ntnuwt aatl» faction to memlH-rii of tbe bar. Former Oovernor Fielder Is fifty* two /•ara 014 born In Jersey City, ofXKitch nnd Kogilsb ektracjlon and the families of Ms parents wen among the *arly srttler».of New Jer- sey and have long been prominent In the social, religion* and political ac- Uvltlesof the state,': ttt. fielder was olucated In(lie pub- , VS/*"'I<L atoro jour car lor Ihc wiuU-r nn<l wlrc-n i.." V youwant it in tlio8prin K rouil fin.l that il. in , *' in jjooil muniug Condition. We know lu>w to $1™ *?™!? > J:} 1 ° !'_?^ °J car ^ l * n ,< 1 "•'!! caw; f'»r .fo'ura as Authorized Ford Service 5tatloa Ford Par«» Potter^ Building Urtlon Avenue CHOICE MJJK OF MEATS ^and PROVISIONS , . ATvm uowmr CASH PUICKH. r , afr la -ll«-s«liooU,of J (raduated from tbe K«llwk Scliool, Korwslk, Conn. lie was gradoated from Columbia University 111 1*87 with the degree of LU It., and wa*.admitted to. the N«FW Jf-niey barTin" JSS». He was. elcvteld. to Oie fliuwmbly fr»ni Ttbdson county (n MXl and WH, and In 190T was elected state senator; was In l»10 by th« larg*st ma- ever girra to a candidate fot thlf oRlcv hi HJKIMM county. tn 1913, with' Hit* Oemoaats In coo- tTttlotto«aanate.8flB< elected president, and open tbe 'ejec- tion of Votemor Wlteoti tOj the pr«I- «»> daag bscstaw U*« atttet governor *' \t well as the caRte.ona thouwnil lillli 11 contribute-tbeir ilortxtl ' ~ MEAT FOR YOU TO EAT. This market luwllr. Hour l/ut tb« lioiee gtvltB of ' ••:•••:• .•. j Ppt^TRY AND MEAT I'M price* are IMKII on the rnnnj sales and tntsil : profit principle. ' It waatt-yoitt- «tj}'nkt"irKtJ«r-and -we'f get it if yoo will only give o» a trial. The qoitllty of the mtats and the mcxler. ate prices are what «c rrlr on to buiH xuun'M. . c - - F'*b and Clam* every Friday T^fepbonfe WO, SOI. MOVING STORAGE I. Vbtou, 274-W Jfu James Angus Knowks REAL E U f INSURANCE Aecidaot ' "Cyclone , Uabjlity Aotumomia r\n lT»toafau« " arglarr ' tAt» '" Zietjfhinj Kates add coatroots cbWallv sab- Trunk*Carted 2li-2l5 E. Sooth Avenue Rabbins & Allison MARTIN SCHAFER Mason and Contractor cta*ro(B. m. 1M I nof »<,,». W RnriwMa Ar*n,'i> Trees Taken Pown the SUM as forth are extracted —by their roots, at naeanabta . Prtosa. Small 8«ll4iacs «ad FomUy ••—•: •-- - '1

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Page 1: NEED ^ O F CASH •. *r TO RUN JERSEY · Ing np the harden of taxation, Oqt of the larger Items of retenue la thai from collateral Inheritance taxes un-der the law which Governor

II NO. 42 CRANPORD. H. J.> THURSDAY. DECEMBER U, 1919 THREE CENTS

•. * r

iR FAMHY-N6W;BCEEK.

<* to drt rOBUBHERSBurton. MaaudilwtU.

ffl* fes/afor submit* Ah1 tout fous us

IF you tMKr« already had yoor will

ns we will be pleased to adviseyon upon the subject and to telt you atlength how we beat might serve yon.

_7J-fl.'J--^->>^i"P= ^

NEED OF CASHTO RUN JERSEY

Financial Problem to Be One trfHost Perplexing for Governor-

Elect Edwards.

MANY BIG BUDGET DEMANDS,

All . Ospar«n*ttia aiMt*ftpMtstd bxUttbv Casts itW*.

- tag—Fermir Qsweniar Named- Vie* Chancellor.

of the many perple*tax problems to which Governor ElectEdwards will be obliged to devote «Hrt» share of hU Inaugural m w a mJa that of Mate finances. Fortunately,however, be la well equipped to glv«this problem Intelligent attention, beta the <ijK.je4ra.**:aerT«l a» «Wtt

to become thoroughly familiar withevery phase of the state business. In>deed. It was during Senator Edwards'regime In the. comptroller's office thatthe 'more .bturitiesji-llkB- ajjd .

THE BEST BUY IN CRANFORDGolonjtt residence, best location in town; fifteen rooms and three

-baths; breakfast room, sleeping porch, billiard room; five master bed-

rooms' and two tiled baths with shower on second Boor. New modern

vapor, heated system. Two-car heated garage. Immediate possession.

HAT.r. PHONE

Cranford Investment CompanyIS »to to Iniiuranoe

25 North Avenue. EastTcUphone 103 JC. E. BLAKESLEK

Jnlon AvenueRex&ll Store

-i

- ' - /

UTILIZER BONESheep Manure

JARDEN AND FLOWER SEEDS .-

Poultry Suppliesr, CHARCOAL, MIXED GRAIN, SOFT MASH, ETC.

POO CAKEfJ,'"'COrXAHH, iflcMfonTF^ FTO.

>rse arid Stable Equipments.SPONGES CHAMOIS

Pbooe 8TX Onoford

IARLES S. POUNTNEY(Successor to AABON D. CRANE)Masonic BtfSdhv, Cranfonf, N. J.

». Bewtor. Goal Pocfcal ELIZABETH 8TOIU5i PARK, N. J. 80S-SW Morris A ve.

• •'•

-^V-"*;,^,-?*, tvs- v a « i "*

KREHERNEST It. MEYER, Incorporated

Established 1880

(SUCCESSORS TO EDWARD MOSHER)

Bnslneera A Surveyor*

lMa«iole Bonding, Cranford, N. J.JS08 Bmad Street, Elizabeth. N. 3.

iout BO satisfactorily was Introduced,The requisition syttanvby which ererjpenny of the appropriations la aecounted f6r m advance, bos made IIpossible to ascertain at once exactljwbat the balance sheet looks like andprevents any payable overdrafts, sackas ranted confusion and no little diffi-culty In other years. |. • ••»• .--• The bncjjfpt BjrBtera; by which everyInstitution. department, bureau, board

of the Joint Appropriation Commltteiof the legislature, has also brought th<state**' flunnclnl nrranKemcnt up to sstandard, of usefulness at ooco prac-tical and enlightening.

These systems mnjie the work of th«ADpruDrlaiiott. Committee much aimpier than under ilia old system—uiIw* «f *y*tem-fc« that I* not fhemost serious phase of tho situation

"which confronts the new executiveThis year's total approprfatlnns ofy p p p r f a t l n s _ol

"neariy |12,0o6,i(Wt>"were, the"niwvleslIn the hbitory of New J y ntotal Involve «o manr large nnd ln»-portnnt undi'xtnklngH that there mpoared full Justincatlon for them andthere wan no m i l nmiplalot from tintaxpayers. There .;*av. for Inrtnucjj,the W.O0O.0OQ flat for the Hudson rlver, tunnel anj the VtiOfiOO tlal for tinDelaware rhrer brtilge, (he l a w s t «lh-Ble Item for a public project ever ap-propriated. • •

There wore alao largn Itema for nec-essary- additions and Improvement* tothe charitable, i»iiul and correctjoimltostltullons, for which there had limabeen Jii»|atfintodawij^ : ip^B£;n^.nues wore sufflclont to meet iliese ex-

-traordlnary expenditures without [illIng np the harden of taxation, Oqtof the larger Items of retenue la thaifrom collateral Inheritance taxes un-der the law which Governor Elect Ed-warfis as comptroller was largely In-'strninentaJ In having pnt.tbroaftl andwhich has proved to b» a hajren o),refuse In streselng period*.

fa»mana# «n Budpet Commission.T**XM*m t b M J J j d

alterable opposition- .to nii> tuini-levjlng of direct MB>T r luo f.ir n»purpose. The only "direct tnx \w

system, and under the law that Imtwo mart yean to run. It yl'elila <i|prozlmatoly KMKKMMO a year. tJndi>tbe laws creating UIB InterstateHeld*and Tunnel OooiiuMon If Is provliln]that a similar tax shall bo U>vl«i, tu be-gin where the other vnris, but It hprobable that tho governor "civ* Milmoyd vary early In his uilniliilainitloi

that tlic tux will not ho nmlinui.lIH&L }«ur Jhu VIM

Jflunnco the brldito nnd tunni-1 iimjitl,but he lind little HiipiHirt for tlio uu-nnaro hucauiH> of the ImiH tk'luy It wnulilentail.1 The guveninr elect 1* still of tliw bi»-llof that this IK tln< on'y t>r«|KT wnyof flnniiring jthp jwp grent j

«ubtnlttpjl tfltt" vntxr of thathe polls for-ralincflt.lnh orntnl, ns New York nnd I'mumylvatilaarejuotv coininllti'il to dlrt'ct aii|>rn|iri

PHOtiE ONE-THREE

^ftinrttnif and Vtmno Mtowkn Packer* and Shippar

[StorageWarehouses

440 North Aw.tnBU>;N;Jr'~.

iNmifie BOUGHT, SOLO AND EXCHANGED

pert of s demand upon the* mcooilnalegislature Vhlch the'Budget Commis-sion snd the Joint Appropriation Com-mittee of the icgblatare will dud inoitdlfflcelt to meet Every department olthe state gOTernment, every Institu-tion and board has found 1t necessaryto Increase Its btidset for the nextfiscal ytar, beftonlttg on Taly X Th«tremendous advances In the cost of•very Item of maintenance and opera'tton have created a problem of admln-Mratfam dlfflcult Of solution.

The salary question, too, baa becomeone of grove inoment^'fof, desplte"gen-eral imprctslons to the contrary1, stateagmlajr«es,>as.T«Knot IMWH...allQwixl-Biw-nlflcent emduments. Indeed, tho Stat*House Commission, cbargrd wMl» th«duty of distributing the emergency ap-propriation sow made annually lapreference to the. old d e f l q p ,ocder whlcb so many abuses becamepossible, found It necessary to-maktan emergeocy ailowaoee for Increasedpay, noting.froa 10 to 25 per cent.

iftv..(^sin:.cisaa(» of . e n i c t l J twas rcroDa that better, psy elsewfi«rewms attracting traiaed workers andthat tn« stata was facing a serious sitnation la most of tSe lasUtnttoos.These Incressea were but temporary,of coum*, as the authority of the BtsUHouse CommlasioD Is limited, and, lo-

willHtatir

Is.'now fnnnully nnd IrrvVftfaWy liedup to tbesv two luipiirlnut undnrtitk'Inga'ahd* cannot ruiri'iit. It must n«forward to the compUMluri oT tliucn.!tcrprfs*s tu co-opi>rutlon with tint ulsti-r «tutw«;'and'Uio pwipIeeycrywTi^fiore nujiportinir tliern etirnratly.

Alltliewi thlnin) and a lut nioro willhove to be worked out In mint' tiatl*>factory way, but th» Rovcrtior flwethas Do prevent fenr of lack of c>tlon on tbe part of tlie li'idolntiit'i', I'vcnIf It Is of the opponlto iHilitlcul purty.Ho has already exprewhMl tlu> livllcf

operation, for It li"'Kardiythat partisanship will l>e cnrrlml tosijch- e^trcmrs n» rotordlnK ciit*?n>rl««or crippling state Institution)).

The new governor may hnvedlfflcnlty In carrying but his programfor reconstruction In numerous depart-tuenU, where whojesome .recoiwtruc'tlon. could t(« (tarried out to the. sver-IsstlDg good o r Uio stttt* <io*?™tucnt,and he; ma> chcDunter itotflo imrtiaiift

this case Its powers are In question.The dual Word Is for the next legisla-tors, through Its AppropriaUosi Ooto-mlttee, bat the slluatloo will have tetwttcad. \y- '. ~, ,_" ,.; •

TIras there will be one., long andload waft1, for money, and'still monmots*. What tbls la to lead to la d»O-ettt to forecast Taxes Uironghouttb* state are now at the top notes, andthe bttfdsa appears to be grtfwiogheavier with the lnereased cost of «v

fDistrict Taua,

I D Ja» campaign Senator Edward*

., iit'SilriorprSijinile'Thnlt iewll lbe left alonu to'work'out tli«sulutlon of the Intricate financial prol>-r«ms. ,The responsibility In this re-spect U not Individual. It rests final-ly with tho legislative and i-xcciitlvobranches of the Mate govi'mua-iit

High Honor for FlslUsr.Chancellor Walker named fortner.

Oovernor James V. Fielder as a vlc«chancellor to succeed the late ,Ick-'W.. Steven*, former -OoyeiwrtFielder 1*' a Democrat, an was lilipredecessor. In naming s Democrat,Chancellor Walker Is following -th«long, eataiillahed practlco. of. keepingHi. winri. :**&( fmm faf t 1""dividing tht) meuborshlp vtmally b«-tw«eti tbe two <loinlnatlnj( parties.Vice Chancellor Fielder will lake oDlc«Immediately, when It Is understood hf

ill b I h h t e l ty

will be mworn In hy IhtiThe selection gives tho ntnuwt aatl»faction to memlH-rii of tbe bar.

Former Oovernor Fielder Is fifty*two /•ara 014 born In Jersey City,

ofXKitch nnd Kogilsb ektracjlon andthe families of Ms parents wenamong the *arly srttler».of New Jer-sey and have long been prominent Inthe social, religion* and political ac-Uvltlesof the state,':

ttt. fielder was olucated In (lie pub-

, VS/*"'I<L atoro jour car lor Ihc wiuU-r nn<l wlrc-ni . . " V you want it in tlio8prinK rouil fin.l that il. in

, *' in jjooil muniug Condition. We know lu>w to$1™ *?™!?>J:}1° !'_?^ °J car^ l*n,<1 "•'!! caw; f'»r .fo'ura as

Authorized Ford Service 5tatloa Ford Par«»

Potter^ Building Urtlon AvenueCHOICE MJJK OF

MEATS ^and PROVISIONS, . AT vm uowmr CASH PUICKH. r ,

afr la -ll«-s«liooU,of J(raduated from tbe K«llwk Scliool,Korwslk, Conn. l ie was gradoatedfrom Columbia University 111 1*87 withthe degree of LU It., and wa*.admittedto. the N«FW Jf-niey barTin" JSS». Hewas. elcvteld. to Oie fliuwmbly fr»niTtbdson county (n MXl and WH, andIn 190T was elected state senator; was

In l»10 by th« larg*st ma-ever girra to a candidate fot

thlf oRlcv hi HJKIMM county.tn 1913, with' Hit* Oemoaats In coo-

tTttlotto«aanate.8flB<elected president, and open tbe 'ejec-tion of Votemor Wlteoti tOj the pr«I-

«»> daag bscstaw U*« atttet governor *'

\t well as the caRte.ona thouwnil lillli11 contribute-tbeir ilortxtl ' ~

MEAT FOR YOU TO EAT.This market luwllr. Hour l/ut tb«

l i o i e e g t v l t B o f ' ••:•••:• .•. j

Ppt^TRY AND MEATI'M price* are IMKII on the rnnnj

sales and tntsil : profit principle. ' Itwaatt-yoitt- «tj}'nkt"irKtJ«r-and -we'fget it if yoo will only give o» a trial.The qoitllty of the mtats and the mcxler.ate prices are what «c rrlr on to buiHxuun'M. . c - -

F'*b and Clam* every FridayT fepbonfe WO, SOI.

MOVINGSTORAGE

I.

Vbtou, 274-W Jfu

James Angus KnowksR E A L E U f

INSURANCEAecidaot ' "Cyclone , UabjlityAotumomia r\n lT»toafau«" arglarr ' tAt» '" Zietjfhinj

Kates add coatroots cbWallv sab-

Trunk*Carted

2li-2l5 E. Sooth Avenue

Rabbins & Allison

MARTIN SCHAFER

Mason and Contractorcta*ro(B. m.

1M I n of »<,,».

W RnriwMa Ar*n,'i>

Trees Taken Pownthe S U M as forth are extracted

—by their roots, at naeanabta. Prtosa.

Small 8«ll4iacs «ad FomUy• • — • : • - - - •

' 1

"%;fsf'fl-fv'- i n <%•£,* > ' 1 * !

1 —r

Page 2: NEED ^ O F CASH •. *r TO RUN JERSEY · Ing np the harden of taxation, Oqt of the larger Items of retenue la thai from collateral Inheritance taxes un-der the law which Governor

• • « _ *

THE CRANFORD CITIZEN

WHERE D'ANNUNZIO WIGHT C U S H WITH AKERICANSPREPARING THE LAWN FOR PRESIDENT'S CONVALESCENCE

View of the| harbor of Bpolato, Dalmatla, where D'Annumlo may run counter to American forces 1( he pursinlan to "annex" the whole of the Dalmatian coast Yankee marine* and bluejackets have been policing Simlut

Ax rre»lileot \ V ) l n n l | UJII {«nfln*»l !•• ibn WTilte Uonw HIICI It* gnmmjM, I lie irurdeneni have done their best tomoke the sunny liiwua pleasant far hha. Ttwy are lit-re shown pltmring piinxh-H iiml lute bulbs. DISASTROUS FIRE IN SING SING PRISON

DOCTOR BELL INVENTS A WONDERFUL FLYING BOAT

^414

< • :

Dr. Alexunder (Iruham Hell. Imrntor of the t« In'honc. IIIL« Im etited 11 t|j ing bont i npalile of uiuklng 71 miles nniipntv Tfcc-lKWf. »blrt> t» knows -as *h* I I ,« . *. to esprtfipod -with *«.-« -JO&WsupawM T)1berty Tap**"*, «O* tar* ««rl**ofblndes forward nnd oft', ami on each iMr under (he so-culled wlnpi. An the bunt gains speed the action of thowater raise* It no that when trnnlloc at OJ calles an hour It Is prnctlcnlly clear of the water, traveling on tho lastset of blades. The Illustration shows the boat on • trial spIn, und Doctor Hell. ' . *

DOING NOBLE PEACE WORK D'ANNUNZIO'S NAVY IN HARBOR OF FIUME

i •

A' photograph lukeir at the ThroapOrthopedic hospital In Brooklyn. NY, allowing a little crippled child be-llng carried, Just ns one would carry a"big doll, by n incinhtr -of tho motorcorps of tho National League for Wom-en's .Service. Their emergency w«rwork at nn <pnd, nnd the war basis ofthe varloas units being discontinued.these; splendid women are devotingtheir energies-ta welfare-work rwhirtt.flwuigTi 1MB. MnhffrwMpd and wlthnot tftirrattendant publicity thnt'tho war workreceived, la none the less commend-able; The objects of their work arttho children who are crippled art a re-sult o f ' the epidemic of Infantileparalysis which struck 'the countrythree years' ago. .

.1 ..-,..;. Unpleaumt Dwelling PUeca, ,-.-•••:•''Four regions 6n the earth ore noted

by Orlttlth Taylor, of the Australianbureau of metoorolog^r, as havln; an-nual", tcmperatureBr exceeding 82 de-crees. These are^Massuvah, Red *ca.DO degrees, with nn unnnal rainfall of10 Inches: Tlmbaktu. W. Sahara; Stileffreca. with less thaa l a .Inches ofrain; Wyttdham, N. W. Australia, 6£CdegrcoB. with 27 Inches. averaKe rain-fall, and Tlnnevelly. S. B. India. S4JJdegrees, with 00 Inches of ralnfalLThe two African localities, deuplte the,fierce heat, have their discomfortlessened by their dryncss; while theIndian and Australian arras, withheavy trammer rnlns. ar»- Tery ^maKcrdaring the wet season. Tor compan-ion. It may be mentioned that the

, nw»ti annual temperature of ilanllmU ett degrees: New York City. &> d«-

Xona'on. S03 decrfca; Arctan-S3 degrees.

«'im<h(ps now under the coinnmnd nnd control of Cui t Gabrielsrmi, "dlitatnr" nf I'lume. The ships' oltloora nnd trows Joined with

ir«n.iis 4>ccu[i\Itij; the disputed rltv In placing thuuselMa uudtrf the pott aviator.

NEW PEACE WORK FOR THE BABY TANK

tank vinsusM recently* to* hrenk »wn"y"t|>eWreckhgo cmiseil by nosloa .which destroyed n ^asl tank of the Acme Hydro-Oxygen com-

puijr. a mhsldiary.iif Amour ft Co., U'Chicago, nud nn adjoining l'ard-.redncry.

' MUCH IN LITTLEPnre ctymin will help W illssohe

frost ctais» -fjwtsi' HBpn. > - - - — \"Dice w»re'invented nnd exten«lvely

csed at lesst 1J0U years before" the

The muscular power of 'the flea Is<<o groat thnt It can leap a distanceof 200 times Its own length.

Properly -uinuVj ft tms^buU bat wttt•TOKtnln nearly three tiroes ns muchivelsht as a steel rod of the same-,weight r

1 2,000 Cup* of Choinine—Hsd Many Olf

and EnccJK Many Exciting Experi

Is tlr In •Prance; of 2.TM)!ate;:pf the kitchen c• the chocolate; of I

and two evening siwrite* "Owen

;Kew York Herald,dawn was not the i•rica—It was the gli

break of duy of gas-bbattlefields. Tb

i'tho morning hearteneOn their way to face iin car was one of the

of Knights of Col"L'ncle Joe" was

JjV-Kernan. of 'U|ica,:.

I distinction andI for service. ' •

> Is a new dawn In Fthwy now. Hot'.cbocol

" In high cost of

j . . - j - - • on the glorious pathn.*' ** ••* Americans to Sed

-4UB1 fall until Just-at the• "' «fMf It had done "Its dt;t . r--Ulp3» Joe" Is back In Am

}' \' " !Si'?* f l r t y- e l l [tJ years you\ i i l B f . l h e Bortery looking foi

*B»!*ftldl he met on th" l e cauldron of ci

j , y fs and the t\

hcenu hi Slug Sing prlNon, New York, during the recent tire which destroyed a number of buildings. The losshenvy. Tho nro wus vuld to have been started by an Inmate:' ',"

SERVICES FOR MURDERED BELGIANS . ] F A TTE S T B 0 Y , » ™ E WORLD

', Nicknamed "tincle*J<wusn't "L'ncle JOB" um

V nie to France. Ue love;t. for It was given him* Idlers—In fnct hp like

, » »uy pet name ever be»'ft*nln the.dnys hf sporke

Tamlnes, Ilelglum, a mnnufucturlug city on the Sunibro/where on August22, 1014, 883 unarmed citizens were ruthlessly Bhot -down by the Oermnns,recently held memorial services for those murdered men In front of an altarerected nt the jBcene of the crime.; 1 ; „: , ...•........,'/........

BLASTING AWAY A MOUNTAIN OF SLATE

Kemnir tevtlier iion.:«fc™»i, once "United StolefJ*m \e.w York;' Ile'wus op|f**" issccri;turyb}^tiie*Orini hns.to-JInrchrldl8.-T*l> hi nor of cKtitblisblng thot I* hut— ln~J-'rance,""lrr~S!•Voni 'lie sturt the posHlhllltlt

uf >.hv kitchen car appeui ition^ and he coulUn'l

. from the front whereice,to work for the soltlkitchen car n».a buse

After he had opt'iled shuts, he went to I'nrls,

of a kitchen car andFry with It. There the

ith division was flghtinle men of

ltr Ilundschau -of Luulsv|tb Louis Lnsagc for the

'"^stance given ,,t•fla hlB story us he tell)

I started for Frnnitherf* would be f«n«ldet

lng' to 'be done i)n tI ronjlrod verj, quIckU

li» Frtmcir, -<b»t 'tint K

.This Is Lenny Mason' of Lentil -England, a bu> bf sixteen who ut'^l-1

420 pounds, making him tho uorlMfattest boy. Some of Lenny's oil "dimensions are as follows: Ann ' "cumference, 23. Inches; chest, 011Inchesrthtgh, 28 Inches, and calf, -IInches. -.—. • "

Old Tree Made Prolific.An old back-yard, apple tree In aa

Ohio city Is yielding, In rotation, cropsof apples of the extra-early, enrly,medium-early, fall and .winter -art-etles,' besides seven kinds of penrs—

Dt lines than those with|left New York. For ex

i out with several trunem held tuo Tuxedo c<

|e\cnlng suits. On my aI promptly forgot a

| trunk. It didn't nt In 'ne of things ns I fsnw It

[ejB<. Tllteli you more nlater. •'. '"

nmedlntely after landing I

GOING TO AID

GUderuiann mountain, near Snowden. Wales, to gradually disappearingas huge qunntltlcis of Its •slate are being blasted away dally. This slate Isreplacing; tur. etc., os roo* covering. i >

more.than 75_years old, was thoucbt Ito be dead and In an advanced staff-|of decay, when the horticulturist re-sponsible for Its metamorphosis hei-iiahis experiments. Skillful and studiedgrafting, ;of course, accomplished )fc*seerrilnjr miracle. The renewed tree l<now vigorous enough to product^ s215'40 to 50 busheJs pt fruit every .r«r"

.all ...piLtlie,...chplcest.kin<|« -Its.ownjer c ."inrea; that yielding several yarloWof .fruit at different seasons mate*';healthier tree than the usual prof"3"tlon of n-heavy crop all In one sea-son.-r-Pdpular Mechanics Mngazlnel'.

Simple Stunt to Cure Hiccoughs.•Thl» l»-the- Wiethod of trentlng-ob^,..:A

stlnate hlcrough that Br. D. Francis;-Vnnega*.«mploys. He desciiblps it_.,

the Itevista de'-MedlclnaPracticas (Madrid). The patientdown qn(t draws up his knees until W.

j thighs ,nre pressed tlg>tly to hla &| dornen, the lower part of the.less •*•

lng: preyed against the' thighs "»bending the knees. The posltlou »held for several minutes. .

The effect of this Is to press the vrdtamlnnt organs; Tip against (he pljragm and to sustain the P n " ^ -nntU the dlaphraszn ceasea M 1"modic costractiouii.'

r'ftiiKl for aotdtcn «nhi New York, snapp

arrure tor nance. »'i with B Tie* to establltot the orjaaizatioit a

Page 3: NEED ^ O F CASH •. *r TO RUN JERSEY · Ing np the harden of taxation, Oqt of the larger Items of retenue la thai from collateral Inheritance taxes un-der the law which Governor

I t UJ *k L « L

THE CRANFORD CITIZEN

[ow "Uncle Joe"Fed the Yanks

of United States SenatorTrance Nd Place JoV

"Classy" Clothes.

I FIRST K. CHUT

can forces If^he pursingre been policing Spulutu.

2,000 Cup* of Chocolate EveryIng—Had Many DtfficulUc* to

Surmount and EncounteredMany Exciting Expcrltncea,

f^Jf^M^Cbl* '» the storyita-Prnnce; of 2.TM) cups of hoi

•late; of She kUthen car that sup«-I.the chocolate; of two Tuxrdc

and two evening, suits andJoe,~ write* "Owen Conner la

|Ne\v York-Herald.j dawn was not the pink sunrise

a—It was the ghastly, gray,I break of duy of gas-befouled an<

H J l i t o r u . battlefields. Tlie cbwolatmorning heartener served to

on their way to face death. Thein cur was one of the proud pos-

of Knights of Columbus war"Uncle Joe" was and Is Jo-

ty.- Kernan of 'UUca,-JS...X* *w]

al: distinction and of envlublI for service. '

Is a new dawn In France, pink|ro«y now. Hot .chocolate, fljjures

In blgb cost of living tables.

- ' 'rJf , -• \ ' •

(oh the glorious pathway opened' e Americans to, Sedim, but It

fall until Just nt the very end.It had done "Its d.llty_n<ible."

Joe" Is back In America, hale', sixty years young, patrol-

frfff?fS|ggPne 8°w«rjr looking for and find

Of the rnuldron of enemy liuteway-, «he-|

o coats und the two evening

buildings. Tho loss nut

SOY IN THE WORLD

Ihlii

Nicknamed "Uncle Joe>Uncle Jou" until uftcr ho

to France, lit- loveH the ntck-for It wns given htm by Amerl-

* ldlprs—In fact he likes It betternuy iK-'t mi me ever bestowed up-ii In the (Injn hf sparked tlie girlsJ time dancea. Hwwever.. 1 jtrom• )t to t«l|. about that.

Kenmn Is tJio hon <af VnncbHI, once United States 'nt'natbr

n Vew York;' llc'wus appointed anr Hi s e c j i ; l u u : y h y t l K U h t f

Upnmhus In JInrchr idlS.-To-hbo-fell'"i honor of eKtnblisblng the, flrst K.

^ja-hutr-ln-J-'rancer-lfr^SrayriDIS.^ b m the slurt the possibilities of serv-jjf|>ij$>f the kitchen cur appealed to bis

nnd he couldn't be tornfrom the front where he had a

abfe*urj 'J" work for the soldiers with1^gttie^klti.-lii'n car us. a buse of opcru-^||tott». After he had opened several K.H£jdi huts. he went to I'nris, took pos-

^ M b t o f n kitchen cur and went up^R^ffl t lefy with It. Tbere the Seventy.

jB§£gp|$th division was fighting and Itt'-'SSl.''"-' "K'n of that ,'Jlvli4Hn"\vho nick-

•fiOMttd him 'iVnclo Joe," He |ij«!sj*-"?*llBI ItH cr.Siif .uiustTie'iHveh.to Treil-

' t Ilundsolmu -of Louisville, Kj-.,' to Louis Lnftagc for the able and

assistance given by them,ft. Is his story as he tells, it blin-

• ^ • - - , '

I started for France I wasHere would• be .considerable 'en-nlng' to 'be done on the other

I

Baccarat. In sovtor. Wlla

« »pl*i»KdIr loyat and fffl,-!rut man.We opened a hut ar Jlacrurat. Then 1«ent to liuapas "Mud camp.'

-Some D m \aln i w r n t t o ^where I « U e d a K. C. kltch«i car a,n.lcarried Ituff to the'front at Chery.That was the thine, to d.i your enter-taining with and ra ' te l l the wholewide world taat a Tuiedo or an eve-ning ciiat woulil hare (>«„ n» funnythere as a suit of overalls at thv ot«ra.

"You, se« the car brcan work ntla the «mnief that tn«-an» fnor

o'clock in Friinre. We werm't allowedto bull.1 a Jlev before dajUjhtMtmight have aided the enemy. We p uout of our bunks. Fred Itum!«<-hau.U a little after

as «iouUMU« Lara-e and I, atthree. Rtarted the firesas we rould get pi-nnlsslon ami thenmoved the car to si |«>lnt where themen golnj: out to th# trem-he* and themen .-cotubig back would nais» earbother.

"Our greatrtt pride was that wewere able to serve and did serve 2.0HOcups of hoi chocolate there everymorning, beitldei elying om cigarettes

dlers. On the way the car broke down.In war anything thai tirenks. tfoivn,you.know, Is shoved off the .road. Only

mounted. The greatest of (fame « « j the active men and active machines

.Hard to Get 8ugar."Thtfrewere dlfflcultiea to be sur-

HAS UNIQUE JOB

l>r. J'ord A. Carpenter of Loa An-•ties tus the. distinction 4>f'filling tty>iinly position of Its kind In the UnitedStates. He l» head of the newly eart»MI*ht»d- department of meteorologyami tu-ronuullco tn the Lu» AngelealclminlH'r of commerce.

He o-iilgned after 31 years in thegovernment weather bureau i*ervlct*'ttiapply his knowlnlgu of climatic conill-tlons to the better development of ag-riculture, horticulture and aerial navi-gation, through practical upplicntlunof extnbllshed facts of atmosphericconditions. . -• •_ »

HOME OF PRESIDENT MONROE IS SOLD AT AUCTION

to obtain our own-supplies of choco-l t d

was «t» much artillery and anTniunltlon0B the move. We simply had to havethe supplies for the boy*. After somethought's, was was worked out. Theambulance* bad t»vn cotntug up to thefront empty. They had right of wayou the rum!* after the artillery.

T hT h e amhnln i tup pur stuff on the tripx toIlily-Bml ihf.T Jlil irrWann't t l f p ydid of themT All thmuch the hours ofl3«^Wil!^i*^i*|vKpp^**^^o our beadquurter^. dumped Our bVxe*

of food and cli^irettes and then tookon the wounded men.

"We stayed with tin. men of the

are allowed flare! on the highway*.'

tE-iflfeaji3sSr-TrWi* Jntiu .*l<lv -%«iif-a6aiiili«ieit"^T almo« 1cried. Maybe tny c;cs were a littlewet at thnt. ;'

'Tlie other night I went Into a res-laurnnt In New York^-»ihe of "tlnw^table d'hote place*. L'l> t» mo camea well groomed, prosperous lookingyoung rlmp. He gliippvd uio on the

at the northwest coruor of 1-rlm-o nod Ufsy«tloJu»,

aod was built In

GRAIN GRADESComplicated or Difficult

to Learn.

Seventy-seventh and.moved when they bark from France.dd T

grimy and exhausted after trench workIn the Argonne,"The trunk with the Tuxedo conti

nnil the evening clothes hnn arrived'y

did. That kitchen car was the appleof my eye. It did "wonderful service

ar In line "and started with the sol-

ypenwt ItI h tsince I packed- It. Somehow, I hnti

to [think of pfiltlni; nsldo tny K. of C

a« ellle lnced.Tnxcdns andcoats."

[Bogus U; & Bills iCounterfeiter? Are Arrtsted and ISO,-

000 in Spurious Money

"'• - •• ? e l S e 4 ' '

Viennn, Austrlai—A group of conn-erfelters, who were arranging to orlnti Inrge amount ofJAUU'ticuu'$10 bills,iave been detected and arrested underccullar clrcumolancv!<. A member of. well known engravim; firm.on hl»'eturn to the city after a huxtnew*Clp found that his firm.had.made ali> which had be«n taken to the "hop

I renjlrcd quickly, once, I

nny Masbn* ofoy of sixteen whomaking him tho uorl<M

Some of Lcnnj's <>tl'«-rire as follows: Ann tir-•23. Inches; chest, 0i%

28 Inches, and calf, 24

Made Prolificbk-yard. apple treo In BH'leldlng, In rotation, crops

the extra-enrly, early,. fall and w,ln,tcr -art-Seven kluds of penrs—

J^^c?ft}jiAtr'»JitiiS^rti»S«:jsntir«ly.-rilf-

Bt llfics thnri those'with which'; Illeffi New York. For example; I

:..out.with.several,trunks* .Onebem hcluVtwo Tuxedo coats nnd

leveninjt suits. On my arrival inI promptly' forgot nil about

ftrunk. It didn't fit In with thene of things as I turn. It with my

I'll; tell you more about thel a t e r . •'. -'" "•••

uedlatcly after landing I went to

he iHillce. who:-found "sptirions-billso the ninbunf of $.Vt.(K» already prlnt-d nrid awaiting: delivery.

The printer eipldlncd that certainion hnil cntted/oh film and presentediapers ostensibly from the police, rep-

reiic'ntinK they they were memlM-rs ofn Uknilnlnn rnmmlH<ion aauthority from the AiUvrfc^K

t % pr(nt aa f « » A f tM

NEW BIGGEST WARSHIP BUl t f

Wad of Chewing GumDiscovered Iiv Eel

-.'Itoyalton, 1'n.—John I'ennlng-^tou, who has art eel rump liloag

the- Junlata river, hns discov-ered th« orfnlniil ctw-'^ingguinecL -Wlille cleaning' eels hefouml.n nib<itniico adhering totbo inside wallif of-a large eel'sjttniuncji. , InveHtlgntliMl I

The cud probably had been In ;the mautb of a fulr dnmiwl who ;canoed on tlie moonlit water* ofthe river, listening to a lover's- ;crooningK, and In'H'flt of rareectHasy drnpped Itlie fcum' frolrit1. :li'rtr llp», it-b'elag go|ibleil tip bythe eei w(in hrtijpeniii iliut \f'ay.•v-';-^^? •".•*«*"; .(fi'-V-'aTOV jSiitiiti:1

• : i e e t b ; ' - ' - " : - » • > "•""•',-•- / : • '•.-".

Monster Battle Cruiser Hoed toLaunched in Great

Britain.

86

ScotlaniL—A now "larjjeitwarship In the world" will cnon ?lipdowu'llie way* to establish new rec-ords In the annals «f naval :cor.**tr'JC-tlon. Tlie ship, a battle cruiser, is the

GOING TO AID ALLIES BLINDED IN WAR

, years old, was thuugbtnd In an advanced siact"•len the horticulturist re-its metamorphosis l)<'-i>1>

nts. Skillful and stuill«lcourse, accomplished (I*icle. .The renewed tree l»

enough to product sa!!»ihe4s pt fruit every ycjs"-pjcest. kjn4v.Its ..owner cf.(fielding several varlot*llfferent seasons tuakt'f'e than the usual prof?"avv crop all In one s e a lr Mechanics Magazine!'.

lint to Cure Hiccoughs.e- inethod of treatlng.-ob^ '..^ugh that Br. D. Francis>loys. He descrlblw:it_,de'Medlclna fl

ladrid). The patientiws up his knees until W.reused tlgjitly to his vower part of the.lei»^

against the' thighs W •knees. . The posltlru.»

•rnl minutes,of this Is to press the •»ans -dp ngainat the &*

to'sustain the rnl

iphra«in ceases itai

SOON GETS IMPORTANT JOBAccord Ing to AulhoiiiT«a7Tbtt

Prl,n«|plf».,.of .

spcctlon Ar« Bimpl*.

liy |honmnl uf

WiiNhliigliiii.—Thertt lire people whoImve HUM (hut t|n» fmlfrul trnlii gnidrn»r« vonipli<'nh'd mitl'dlflli-ult to nwmtiir,

Iltinil. Its builders »(i.v It Is not onlythe Inrgeft In the Jlrltlsh nnvy, UvX ih'1

lorgcst warship ever cuiistructed. N<iteven the four KUpKrdreiidnnuglit* IJI-Inc built for Ihn UnFfcd Klat'e* navy,shlp« of 42,000 tnuji, npproacb-the enor-mous bulk of (ho Hood. Its tionmildisplacement In +1.000 tons add at full

<*!

'Seattle, did nut tlin) them KII, purlieu-lurly. Klx iiiuiilliH nftiT Kiwi took tin'Job of carrying wimple* back and fnnh

t»;«a.')Lilui Inburulurj: .'and tlu*-«Km«he_wn» B pcrsoiL of luiportuniuijti tliue«lnbll<i|liueiit.nml wnn'nmkliig nil tlinletits mid finiilyHoR on grain sainplriito chirk tlu<. lkv iwd luitjii-Otnrs'graded. . :

Goes Through It All,>ong. lM>fiire thnt Hho.wns nuiklim

RepiirntiirtiK up wimples of mixed wlieutto .study unijler the tiiteliigu of the millnuimigcr till' iiliMitlflratloii of I'IIIHSCHof ivliout., Later «li|i llkcwlm,1 imidu

itrittg-}oV8r*>nVkine. tinderthe superviHiimof thn tiiniini:er, the In-spectors' iii-tide* <m all 'wheat rwrl»t>dat tho mill,

Till! United S U n * iIipnrtiiH'llt of ng-rli'lllHire culln utteiillun to tltln rune,not particularly by way of throwingbouquet* nt tho girl, but by wiiy ofillustrating wlmt-Uii' iliiwnlim nl, h miilmi)M Miiitiiideil, tlnil the jirl()< pof thi> fidirnt Hiiindiiril* mui the v*stnthil fintiirm of ln»p< c linn prmixli h ifcem itrv »<tlujili>

. S c i e n t i s t s Probe: • • • ' • • - • ' - ! • •;•"" " rtiddle of Death

1'arls,—I'rnmlnrnt Krenrh art-rnllnts, hnided by f'r. (limluTe(lorey, fHiuouw •:>lrlluul|nt. lint

tory of denth. All liiternnlliiii-al lnitltiitu of Mi'taphyali'K u u -fiiutuliHl by II groui) InrlntllmiHenri Ifcrgiimi, Mndniiia Curtolitid liiarles Itlchet. Th« iii'tl-Hiti' will spread ni'cult propii-gntidit and a** school will rxt

-tuiinded to—atudji—n|4r4tU4)tUua—In all Us phiiM>n,

j iti^MjrfiIIItl> no intii i lr} run gruln fnrnny fnrnier or munlrjr grain buyer t»uuderstahd nml iipply. ' .

No* Oil Truo Qrid«.The mill tiinnuger i tlie IIIH|HM>-|

tom' grnibiH on Ihn wheat rei'Wvml ntIII*LBUL.hm

:'"•; "Wlinr ImpTviS^n'rTiiwi/' >hiy« Jiii*linnutiT, "li Hint It Is puniililu now 'to

gi't tho true grmle mi a cur of grnln.Under "Id ciiudllliiUH we IIHWI to luuU

nt R nnnipln nmt cniiw lit the Krnlli-,und, U'hljit ui* wcri* ninro or lota pmfl* *dent at giii'milng, yet w» find by an»-lytlng im we iln now Hint n groat mn-'Jorlty of our gueuJM-ii were out of I.luo.We -linil, too, tlint it In very ciisy roniiply the reilenil stiiiidiiriln. TJM» .-

^ | , . c | w . y , . g . r u t o ^ ^"be"to'iili up the .work, und Vvc «>oi»found 'alia was «bh> to iiiinly/.e llmmilupli-K In a ronipiiriilUvly nliurtilimt." : '

.Kilted with oil • fired holler* undc«ired turbines, which* develop 144,0'JOshaft horsepower, the. l lood - !«=*>*-

*-4ttn>t*.- •"•

GIRL TRIES ON HAT AND RUNS6h« Pntends to Set,Mother and Es-

capes from St Louis ,Store. „• .. ,

ft*SL '•—A Ktyllrtiiy dres*^! w o m ' .

+ ... .... '. 'fit?,)fiizmlU}aeif.?tip!g.of,:;>lr». Uewelyn np*i4ii-utfgh and 'asked| permi.Mlon" "to hn nlluwed to wait for;hcr mother. In the interim sbfe tried. on nutnerons bnt». .,. j-j- After selecting a 120 hnt the womanj suddenly turned toward* the rtoorv? ,j "There's pother now." shei claJto«J.:»4>d.nw.oBt.,crylnsT st;

ob, mother I" ' v

She did not return. MM. Itowbroagbj turned over the hat tlie woman bid; dh)carde<] to the police -later, nnd of-j fered It to Ihem at a possible clewJthrougfi; which Ihey might trace thes woman.

>x-

Cirl Mesteng«f In Seattle Flour MillWho Learned to Mako Analyala, of

separations on iliiiiinged wheat toNtUUy the grudJnK fin-lorn of th» Blnnil-

Then »be bexnn making all tb<>delermlnntluns for Ihrf

Manager, such as weight per bu»helnnd mulmuru test. Tlii'i) ah<!

Mfsitt B y p p t s'fnodfor «otdl*rs an* Minors of th* riHIesi. which w u recniily 1D-

tn New York, snapped on the deck of La Lorraine on jhe ere ofarrure, for France. While abroad they will vtek all tt* cooatrtes ofwith * Tie* to establishing « series of headquarters for cairylo* oft

rot tbe orjaBlzmtloA at whlcU Mr. Kraaler la pnaUcnt.

Oofl Mutt Wear B«IJ.Axherllle. N. 'C—The ritj anthorl-

ties hate acnouriend that vMt-rj canineoiti« -mar

during tin* n*xt year, and \ri prove»h*lr eaniettJu-w they'bave purcha^'d

'« targe supply of tbo Decenaary oma-mmts for dlstribatloa among Uw OWD-

I en at dogs here.

2,O0rNEWARE OUT IN IUROPE

Postal Issues Galore oh tho Con-tinent Since Decem-

ber 1918.

MOST FOR THE NEW STATES

FlfUen Hundrtd of th« Numb«r AraAceounUd for by the First Stamps

of New European Stalls Whoa*Autonomy Was Ouprantoed.

^?i iB^^ r|(fc-;" i 7.ii« ijuKr__i!rit;*,n.«j(«'-

Kns,: i»-: t\jiw' np)irV;ii«'tii/ig '2f'm: (ittlienij mtirly '\,T*W ur« iiicounted furby liHj-.jlrdt rUuupH.-itf t!m n«w Knrii-IH'lltl tftfiU'M whol>M' iltltoilHtliy WIIM gtMT-nnteeirby tho I'nrU ciinferencn. I'o-liilid,' iiin'i.. ri'prcm-nli'il In 11 j»• Htiimp,ulbiim l>>- II KIIIKJC inljcl, linx prixlimd

the oniilHtlci! muri! thu/i.anHep-unitu urn] dlatlnel pi'iilunr ntttinpo,will It) Ihn -Ukraine runkn mmnul withnppriixlnmli-ly I7."> viirletlex of ellliiTit provlMlontil or - pi'niuiui'7it dcA<*rlp--..tlon. JugoHluvin nnd <;»«Vh«-Slova-kin nccouut for Fonieliilng Ilko I.VIW I X H I m i f i H i; | irli u n d t i n ' d e b a t a b l e , t i r -r i t o r y o f . I ' l u i i i e hit-tt^.•-.----:->'.i'—-•••••"

Cow Tightly Wed(fed 7 :

Between Two TreesS. V,—This I* a trog-

edy of two treos anil a cow. An-ton Shodd, n fnnncr living nearhere, had driven his btrd of

-flrc bOTlnWWIWStUferAII'waii"well until ho rwiched the rule.,when he found that lio wan onec<4W short. .

A Ions nenrrh through tliewoodnretwiled the inlsslnjt nril-mat It was liellowlug frantic-ally and making dcurvrate of-fortt to releowi ltwif from (t*lionltlori of bel ig tightly wedgedln-lwwn t*a lilckor/ trep<«.

HhcKld returned to.lbe bouse,got i n r r , retnnu-d tn tho wood*and cut down mne ot the trees.IVjth o f ' the covf'i sides wereWrsfn.nl taw trtim herto tstrlcate liermrlf.

In between 'M mid 90.stamps, wliilw thedborti-nt.-series thun far recordcil IsthnT of the 'franscoucimlun republic»t (ieorgla, cuiuprHng up to (hi» I<>nt four values only. Tbu highest

imp lsaulng '"r«r«rd" hlllii-r'toil'.-vcd was in the yeur Kill, wlicn

1, **<I jiirw tx'KtuKO ntniiip* wereceil througniit tlie world, i

fr» tlie'lBritish:

' ~ Unified Series far StrDt.One .lmp<jrtunt «tep townr'J- flnntlty

la the philatelic affalm <it ni-iv Kurop<!in the iwu« of milili'd 'po'sbigt) stampsfor th« klogiloin of the Sertw, Crwttn

of her current pontngft Mump* Inf

whut

tbo

for Croatia. Rlavunla,u d Serbia. Ttiey IftHir the likenessof the veteran King I'M*rr I as over-lord of Crwiti-r Herblu jind are In*«rrlbfd In both Latin and Cyrillic char-ncters. Hcanwhlli; from Agrtim; g io&tKlavla) louv* titrUn that tlie CroutiiiDnational ptmttttu- xnmpi IwUfd on Jan-uary 30 tMs yi ar hove been

My

May 'St and that In Hie Intfrlcntli.' .Slayoolnn tn>"« prlntid at I^'ll-

have been i;*cj by the CroufJaa|«mt ofllce fx^tviiut thp apix-aran^ «fthe new general itrrim. nbl<b was* tohave come Jnf> UJM? UQ August 1.

Czecbo-8lmakiji, bnrlng been admit-ted to the I'ulverfWl Costal' union. Is

with lhi« rei|tilre|iniil» o f -tlmr body; .In fiituru.the five ticllen*Nluiiip will. l"> printed lii IIIUH gretii .Inxlciid of yi'lluw green; tbu (cii bollJTJnv-»«l<iW;jifr«^i"'fnWffli1*'i»t¥«l;'iW'^''""1'"IICIILT In di'«|t nil inxleiid of green, tlio''.'."i helliT^ln vlolut ItiKlfiid of ilri-p blue,lit" Whi'ller In (lci'|i blue lirttiiKlof vi-olet and Ilu> i!0 heUi'rjmwBMopi'r stumpIn blifn liiKti-fld «f vlfilnt.

Monaco Ha* War Charity 8lamp».him Jimt'. put (ortji af-»N>nii>> ..

belli ted ' WH of. wt(r charily :lnte.Hil.i'd,.iiii ,llm Inncrlptlmi In- -

^•^••nv^ti^.^/f(!WflW..Khi!«*i.'',:'''-

th» innllt feiitiirii (if the i1o- :sign, Inwl with II i.ilrlure of it wid««- ,(Hid li clilW, IIJIII I'liih Hump Is noli! nt VII prt'iniiiui upon l|n pontul vului'p whirl*

to tin* l'ri'iicli uirrfonnl frind. Aw, tin' printing uf tin1 mump* bn»"<-nrrli'd nut by lb« KrMicb K»v-

••nimpntprlntliiil i-stttbllNliihefit In I'nr-i, thi' ili'KlglUT nnd I'liKravvl1 heliiKfrmrx, lOurnnd A Jnrrnud.. Itsly him la«ji.'d it IHTW fifteen•xlinl Mmiip, prlnt<:d in Hlali; O»

fore, but In tin- lyp>- of five iI MI rcii|i.iilml In plnrn of tbo Ml-

cbettl di'KJgti vrcvlonnly wiipfoyeij fpr_

ntnmpH only nppllitl (o spccllle vor I'lxr It wit* delnyc<l In lrii;i«iiil»»loii-At nny rule, a nmr Iw-nl unit print*-lonnl printing of ihp Turk* lnlan'1 fnmpi-nny war Inx ntnnip rencbird IsmflnoInst w«'k, iind, liavlng b'wn «ct up In

rn-Kijiinibiy , the instruction Issued«t month rc«pi-i-|lni; Ilic illxmntlriu-

<>f IlrltHi colnnliil war tax

prolific ht \itt\f\lw. Tlip tivrrjirtntIn two lines "f Igrgo nml HIIIHIIcnpltnls, with tho word "War"

Deer In Fl»h Trap.llodloii, }(nw*.—Mr. E: .V. I'nlne tefW

| nt a r«marknbj)<;c«lchjau<U;Jn h!* . tW». •—"w"elr7 It"""WjJS n young dcirr. l ie was)found swIiAmlng around In the frafi.Il» wan pursued and finally capturedand tnlicn a»lior» to a flub botnev

lie crcjitcil a jfrijnt (UD In XiJ»efforts to cwajie. It v i a flnnfly <ieciiletlto let him go, but ho had to be cap-turtd again and hi* \ettn tied, whir*was quite 8 task. Then fie WfH takenlo the woods and allowed to oscape.

World'* O«yest City.! ,„ :•.....p.*iWflPj..i*ti^:iit£Sw^:«riR?-==:^

now: given up to' fesfirity, bot Wl«» ; '1" this gnycut city In tbe world,

Hocrmoua mm* are stcnt opon deco- • •ration*, t)2&00 recently oo flowers/for

about w modify- the colon of certain for OM

V& y n flo«yp tor(he fsmoos ballroatt In tile Karbana

IP $$:M$^W?!>^$ii§*

Page 4: NEED ^ O F CASH •. *r TO RUN JERSEY · Ing np the harden of taxation, Oqt of the larger Items of retenue la thai from collateral Inheritance taxes un-der the law which Governor

€ranfortPOBUaHKO KVKHT THPMDAT B t

t H t O&ANTOBD CITHER• [Incorporated.)'

Usiea Aram. Cnnfori. V. J.

;THUBSDAY DECEMBER 11. 1818

The proposition (or a "Ooiupiunity Houso" in Cranford launchedat the lost meeting of the CivioHoard is one aimiDg to fill a greatneed. Just how it ma; be workedout is for the future, but CruitotAahould hare a well-otjuipped build-ing, furniahing not only a meetingroom for various public organiza-tions, but an., auditorium largoenough for all kinds of pub-lio entertainment and fbig aflairs.Iueluded in tbo proposition shouldl>o ample blub room facilities rightup to date,' including gyuinaBium.The organisation should be broadCUOUIJU to inoludo all eletuvuUof the community, furnish thoyoung won' means fur .rationalrecroation and tho older men anwo 11. The saloon, Tory truthfullytoriuod the. "poor UIUU'B club" ifpassing and so fur practicallynothing Las been uccoiupliuhod iutile lino of providing a substitute.

Vhe^.aj^jk^dreda^fftvn/ijb^ra^;ford and vicinity who could amiwou|d help muke such a club prop-osition Btilf-Buppprting. Truly tuosubjoct is. one worth whilo tbocftruo.Ht and uoutmuoil thought, ol

tho ootnuiunity at heart.

AMERICAN LEGIONTho Cruuforii l'oat, Anurlcan Leg-

ion, tit'ld IU regularly uuuii-uiouthlywoellng In thu Towuuhlp ltoains hintTl>ui'mluy owning. Twenty uioinburs

TJw -ralBlug-ot-Iuudii th*' h

KWILWOBTH NOTtSThe.regular nesting of tbe Board

of Education was held in tbe McKinleySchool BaUdiog oa Monday evening

itb B«e members and Principal -Asa J.Packard .present. Tbe principal submitted a detailed. report OD the school eondftibo, which showed oSJ enrolled *odate, with 803 on lha register for No-vember. 271 average daily attendance ormH%. 100 bad been tardy faring tbeBooth, and 88 neither absent or tardy.lit also reportedlbs aospeflaloa of Wm.Herbert Benedict and Arthur Wskefleld.2 year old popili from tbe third grads,ivlug hit and tbe teacher, l*l»t Juliap.< Price's report* oo tbeir actions.

WakeBeld'* case was referred to thepolice court and Benedict was expelledhU foster mother being present andstating that be bad similar troable Intbe Elizabeth schools sod ungovernableat borne as well as at school. Sbe stated•be would place him . in a private Insti-tution la Arlington. Tbe principal alsoreported that tbe children in tbe schoolbad collected f 101 in tbe children's'me-morial land drive, an amount far In tbelead of any other school in the county.The Janitor's salary was Increased |5per month, to date from Sept. lit. 1010.fbe District Clerk's report showed abalaoco of 11830.28, and with tbe directschool tax 13450.47, tbows funds on handumonnting to 947807$, A. communica-tion from Oounty Superintendent A. h,Johnson directed that 1950 00 be Includ-ed In I he bwlgat for the sinking fund,.The principal's report al» stateil thatMiss Julia F. Price of the third gradea»d Mi«; Clara 0.Wood of tba.secotidgrade bad each done surveying workin the Weatflold school*. Mlw ElizabethG. Douley of the fifth grade' and MissNora i l . Laverly of tbe first grade in

Springfield schools during the monthltepo*rts were read by tbo principal ononcb of tbelr oUwrvutions, which recxlved tho commendation of the boardTbo touchers proaouted a signed requestfur a £200 bonus, wbiuh was foforrod to

teacher*'—commHtoe-for- tt-rocomlor tho Lotion's treasury was thomain topic on which practically erorymunibur preaunt talked. A uilnstrv*liuw,j*ill' ' • ' " 'y i |talument Coiiiuilttoo, Andrew McCou110II, Is ondtmvorluu to secure tboEurvlcfii of Mr, Julis l)u Barry totuku entire cbareo o( affalra. Mr.Uu Harry Is an aco in this kind ofwork, as hu lias put on Boine o* lliobent minstrel shows that Crantord«vor wltni'SBod.. Basketball will hayoil>--^w6:rib^tMm"^FpgyCTr^*nd

U <

I.,.!...,' e ' - ^

Xliiifich Wua uppuirilocl io'lfettho iuou together ami start tbo'schod-tilo going. Uob Orooscher was ap-pointed to take charge o[ tho dancing«[(«r each game and-tho admissionto namo, tho Legion voted; will botho Biuall sum of 00 cwitg; Oainoswill bo booked wlUi WestUold, EJtea-butb, llosollo, I'lalafleld, Bprlngaeldnnd other Legion teams.in the coun-ty.

Horbort Wihckler was appointedlij Cowuiaudor l'uyno to taku chargeof hockey. Wluckler bus alreadylitoiitod liia canvas lor games by ln-scrtlug an Hum In tha KlUabottipaper, and expect* to huvo a goodlynumber betoro tho ' season begins.Thu hockey team will bo one ot thoboat, If not tbo best. In the state.

Tho American Lesion, as a body,ottered its Borvicea to" tho TownshipConunlttw in: event of any disturb^uuco that *uiuy occur. Frank MorrlBwas appointed to gut tbo men out Incttao of emergency. He will appointat least ton men who are locatedwJtbin walking distance ot niembers-who will toko part In any conflict.The duty of these--111,011, wheu thecall la given, is to get 1(1 touch withouch man In bls'squad and jneet at

,0poclfl*ov;plat!er*.---ITh|s -••j?iftp,;' iw*»rgdly mado to. -prevent radicals*y^l£liCfafe*riitn*vrifit(

If thoro are any *ilodB" in town,doa\n.osltato. If you,are euro they're"dogs," to got in touch "w-lth the'Loglon', and they, with thu consentof the Township Committee, willoust thorn out.

A totter is being mode up byAmerican Legion Secretary, Ua>'-mond Toole, ^ an'd -will - DO presentedvorbally at tho Township' meetingnext Wednesday night by Commanderl'ayno and Frank Morris. This let-ter gives, full details as to how thomembers of tho Legion aro going toholp the Township Coniinltteo In caseof emergency. '"_

Kt~the' ezecutlvia"committed- moet-^rn^Affiai^E^smttMiRfftf;^ r ^ ^ R i

Hoach's homo Sunday night the May.or said: "I. would Ilko to soo tbeAmerican Legion an established or-ganization in. this town."

St Paul's M.LChiirdiFriday. U 8 p.m. Silver Tea at tbe

borne of Mrs. 8. M. Wood, 101 Orchard

^f.

Friday evening the Plalnneja SpwortbLeague Group Bally will be held at theFirst M. K. Church. Alt members andfriends of St. Paul's Epworth LeaguewlU meet at St. Pad's Church at 7 45p.m. and march to the First Church in*body. - - , - . .

Snaday. 11 a. m. ('reaching Rev. A.L. FreU. '

18.00 noon. Sunday Bobool. 41 wereout last Sunday and we nope to see newhoes and, the number Increase.

8 p. m. ' Bpworth League Prayer andPrmlss Service. Tbpio "Tbe Doty ofCbarEDMtmberahip." Scripture refer-soee Hob, tO. 8tV9& / Leader, Miss Ber-

.8-p.tnr frayer'SerrfceSchool is mctiolaz:

Pfcil'scmmiieyoo

mondation. They also submitted signedi i ~ f — i b l i r ^ i

wbich ranged from f»ol,W to tlA^D 80;

%"ta to |»00 per year.

An ncljoarnod mooting of the BorougliCouncil was held In tho Borough Halon Tuesday evening, when tho paymentof Salaries and other yearly expensesand tbe arrangement for tbe annual

dJitiiig tho books wcrorocoWed. ihe

J. C. Water Co." bidding f 150 and tbeN. -J. Au'di)in(t Oo. (100, tlin latter so-i;u.rlnK.the wprj,. pr:afta were ordereddrawn for C4847.0O to the County Collector for the SI a to and County tax andI3.4S0.47 for the direct tax to tbe Boardof Education. Assessor Jamos J. Dixonund,A. U Lelzlor. Collector, drew $87.B0eacb for tbo last half of iheir year'ssalaries as well as a bonus of |100 eachfor the year's work. A C . Ogden re-ceived flliBOfor the lait half yoar'ssalary, J30 (or election expenses and11.60 for incidental*'. Pablio ServiceElectric Co.. |80nS for lights and thePlaloOeld Union Water Co., 1181.29 forwater hydrants for tbo quarter. JudgeWtippo.. upon locommendatioaoi theBoard of EducatioD, was appointed Rs-cordor for the balance'of the year.to actop cases of incorrigibility arising in the.McKinloy School.. An acknowledgmentfrom the 1'ubllo Service Railway Co .ofa resolution regarding tbe trolley oper-ation without comment was received an&adjuuriimont taken l o pocember_>3()lybonareportontbeWsaletobbho'ldV

Presbyteriu ChurchRev. G, Fl Greene; D. D.. Pastor.

Sunday. 0.45 a. m., Sandsiy School11 a. m., Publlo Worship . .7.15 p. m.. Chapel. Christian Endeavor8 p. m-', Publlo Worship/ .Tbo preacher next Sunday morning,

tho 15th Inst. will be the Rev. WilliamW. Ooe. J). D , paslor of the Congrega-tional Church. Wcetfleld, with whomDr. Greene will exchange pulpits. Dr.Greene will preach In the evening.

The oburch is fiirtnnate in havingugalnin the choir Mrs-Crouch, soprano

gatlon. The' new contralto, Mlaa Wbar-ton, is also an attractive addition to thec h o i r . ' ; .• ' ' ••; • . '• .

The annual Sunday School Christmasanniversary will be held as oraal in thechurch. Tbe date is Tuesday, Deo, 23d.at 8 p, m. Doabtless tbe church willbe crowded to capacity. ' '1

SpecialCbrUtmaisereloeewill behejton Sunday, Oedwnber 81st, morning andevening. No one affiliated with thechflrch should miss thorn. Unusual!elaborate preparations are being madefor the evening Christmas choral Ser-vice on that day. and It will probablybe tha best •ver.gWen liLthechurch.

Free entertainment in the church onthe evenid* ol the 18tb. For particularsInquire ot Mr. N. P. Stewart, presidentMen's League).

Twelve new members were receivedinto tbe church Uat Sunday morningand the pastor baptised a child ot Mr.and Mrs. Charles H. BoaeUe, MarionEUsabeth Rosalte, born Aug.. 28.1817.

"Ooapel Hymns" airegular -Sunday even-

Ing services, mad a,,number of newhynua vrOl be tried out at tb«bsgls-Dlogof: tbe Wvfce oaxt Sunday. The

We desire ^'apologue for the continual disappointment*suffered by.pur patron* daring the past fewmonths, and beg toinform JW that it was o .Mcounti.of labor/troub]*;^wnich ""^Vthe Hg ^uMtion tbrougbout tjie country. ' ' S :•"• We have finally^eonw "to. terms"M3.Mre3newielp and will"be able to have J our work don$ immediately, or while you w«lt.

v will be Ready on January 1st, 1920.

Beginning January 1st, 1920,* our store will 1M open from7.30A-W. to 8 P.M. Saturday until 10 P. M.

The Venice-Shoe Repairing" Co.6 ALOEN STREET CRANFORO, N. J.

Telephone 4G3-B. .

Shoes Called For and Delivered Without Extra Charge.

Md Soaker for HoaeGnr.Mayor Boaeh called a saeelal meet-% of the Executive Committee of

tbe American Legion last Sunday ev-ening for the purpose of getting themembers together and taking foilcharger of tbe dinner -and; smokerwhich the town is £Olng to give tothe home gmrdsmen. T h e meeting

held at th» Mayor's borne on

The affair will be held on the: lastFriday in January, (January 30th).tbe dinner being served in the Pres-byterian. Chapel and the smoker in

RELIGION IS POWERIt Builds the Best Human Lives

This mmiyiBellie mfssinglJart of youfiife"

talnment'wUl be enjoyed*.' T b e serv-ices of Mr. Mulvey will be asked andla will endeavor to -get some of thePlalnfleld Elk's talent GovernorRunyon will also be on hand to givethe men a little after dinner talk. Itw«s also proposed to ask Judge Win.Mendel and Mr. Stone, both CivilWar Veterans, to attend tbe celebra-tion. . • • >

Bronxe medals will be presented tothe members of the guard by MayorRoach. The medals are in the shapeof a shield'with the following In-scription lnScribed thereon: "Cran-fdrd Company,. Service, 1917-1919."One hundred and ten men will beprovided for- and.cards will be sentjut asking all men who are membersof the home, guard to let the DinnerCommittee know whether or not theywill attend. It is hoped that all themen will be out. that night as a bigtime Is expected. This affair will endCranlord's activities in tbe world's

The Financial Committee willtake charge of getting subscriptionsfor this cause, and all hearty Ameri-

are expected to donate liberally.It will be an inexpensive propositionand the guards are worthy of all thatis bestowed upon them;. It will beremembered that Capt, Frailer hadbis men" out every'night during thwar protecting'life nnd property, re-gardless ot the weather. This pro-tective service was for the benefit oftbe merchants and townspeopl

hose property .was under the mar-.

The following committees were ap-pointed by Commander Payne - tostart the ball a rolling: FinancialCommittee, Walter Scholes, chair-man; Edward Cruikshsnk and Ray-mond Toole; - Entertainment Com-mittee, Andrew McConnell, chairmanand Mortimer Prona: Dinner Com-mlttee. Win. Sperry,' Jr., Frank - L.Lcnr and Edward Washbum.

Tbe meeting ended at 9.30 p. mafter the men smoked some of Mayo:

y• Rev. George Francis Greene,. D. D v Minister

COMING ATTRACTIONS

THVIUDAT

Geraldlne Farrar inChristie Comedy .

~XATBSTPATHBKfEBKtY

. . . .

Tom Moore inHeatlaease" • . .p. v:/..

Pathe Review . ' Christie Comedy, Toplos of the day '.• \

S A T U R D A Y * ' / I- '

Bryant Washburn in•'Why Smith Left Home"'

Mack Sennett—"Back To the Kitchen"Paramount Magaiine

MONDAY

B. B e r t I^ytell i n"QThtg^AvrieO'D

jtarlinjghsm_Scenlc_Comedy—"Dreamy Chinatown"

TUESDAYMae Murray in

, „; "Twin Pawns'- . , •-"The Great Gamble" episode No. 13

. ,-" \ , I'"'. Rolin Comedy ,

Houdini in' : "The Grim Game""

Christie Special—"Be Married Bis Wife~ -Burton Holmes Travelogue

\^~;;;r*^v~^i-i;*r.^i-riv.i.jr.v^

Restoration of Pay-as-You-Enter Plan onStreet Cars Heans Better Service.

belays of Zone System Avoided.

Passengers Drop ..Fares, in Box-' as TheyBoard Car.—No Zone Checks or Waiting

for Amount of Fare to be Figured.

• "RIDE THE SAFE WAY/

Public Service Railway Company

were the ruesls or the Mayor: "Walter Scholes, Raymond Toole', RobertPayne, William Sperry, Frank Mor-ris. Frank L. Len>, Edward Crulk-shank. Andrew McConnell, MortlmeiGross and Edward Waahburn.

The American Legion . footbal

WestOeld' American • Legion a drubbing to the score of 6-0. The gamwaa a nip and tuck all the waythrough' regardlessprtae^-TBlipgridiron which the players had tcontend. with. "~ " ~~~~~Z1

HOU3E3 FOR 8ALE-BROOKWNTwo one family 8 room, homes, gas;electric: parapet throoahont; fine loca-tion of Brooklyn: bbr Orgaln; investi-Kate. Write E . O . , m East 31it street.Brooklyn. N. J. i

WILLIAM NKKCR, Inc.

953 Elizabeth Av.

UNDERTAKERSElizabeth, N. J

Autoimblle and Horse: v Equipments.

«sn hy us Ki$l -UJf is itttiliice.

Yonr nearest telephone will makeyou our neighbor*.

YeUphon* 3 7 9 Eflzab-th

• ' " • • • • " f ' - ' ' - ' • • ' • " ? ; - • " • ' * ' • • ; • • •

Meats, Fish,Butter, Eggs

and PoultryPHONES 393 & 394. 'r

Guslav A. Neumann

CONTRACTORESTIMATES GIVEN '

FIRST-CLASS WORK GDARANTKED

Tel. 557-W. Weitfield

Residence.. II West Wfltow AvGARWOOD

TeL 8370. Lady In attendant

.DORN ^Haanfsctararat

Will call on paUeats who cannot call on nswtthootaxtn efaanra.

t a BBOAD 8XRBBT.HarB. B-RtaUaa BUEABBTFI. W. J .

M.F.SJ.6.

Telephone 180-J

Wholctale Retail

REAY'SOUNFORD PHARMACY

15 Union Avenae2he Bexall Store

•ale of caanedft Monday motnii

HoimeetiDnwUlbe

tatLlaoolnacl

NoOaittMtttinzot SMcwaUi AsMsament

KotkwboenbjglTiin that • meatlns of thaJfelowslk Aasessment Oommlssloiiera for theTownahlp of Oranfard will be held on

WEDNESDAY. DEOBUBBU 17. U1Bat theTownBhlp Rooms, at 8 o'clock p. m., fortha pnrpose of ascertaining the coat and assesa-in«- tho bencflu ror Sidewalks bid by tbeTownnhlp of OnnTord within said Towntlilp,

" ° " " B I D K W A L K ASSBSSMltNT.On wtstarlr afcls of Centennial avenns be-

riajuifnnl Turrann nnrt Hlllwlda avwinB...^•i imil j

710 la isetvv •-Sallni Joaepha. lSQioati JoluvSlnkewltch. 40

feet; Heremln FllppniM, <0.12 feet; KarllTvls.Inskl,luo.aofoot; VkJtorlss. Jo»ept,lB778; An-ton J.Benps,?4.7lfeet. -. • ,• * \,

T.'Buke, 151.8 {eetTHaniiah 0 .t)r»ke.U.S7ff»t;Bst.T.A.Bperr7.lKJ.OO feet;Ulhlgh Canoe Ulnb.« fset; Clarenoe J. Collins,44 feet; Icaulo Ravea, 44 fset; VannleBates,U feet: V. 8. Franklin, (O(»et AgBesllBrnn-dsce..CJfeet. .

On westerly side ot Johnson avenue, 4tD feet.Walter T. Walklns. flb feet: Robert Plnkney

and Albert Htenenson, «0 feet: ijennr H. Pink

OUfeet: Peris B. Polberatu. ioo'feet.T>ii''"*'iCM]r^B'tf * A WB&'Xlt^?iPTJaaft-''Atts^salsSaftsM-^lff^Ps*J v

: On both *lda> of SUnsst anno*, irom Unionto North arouses, 12W.M feet.Uraee U. KlMsbury, 182.08 feet; t W. Austin,035 feet; Katharlna Jonraear, 7O!»reet; Har-riet T. ConkUnt, 00,87 feet; Kenyan Hesiick,8S.O7 feet; B. C. Austin, M.ITT feet; Hearj B.

aanoe will beon December II

I of Tonalnka Ooi

a t e r l w f e e t ^ -Thelocatlona and number of feet to be «aaa»»

ed are appnuhnatel/atated.—--. --rXaXVAM. B. DEM MAN.

Townahip Clerk.Dated. Onmtord, M. J., NOT. a, 1M».

1 batar given It Will eveoinjj by the w

. K. Cbnrch netted o, F. Randolph was c

r,lnxhat|[O.T-;'' fos' charge of -'• MiriI n . Klngdoo and Mn

booth was In <,.38fleLand.Mra...Aan apron -booth

I- Mrs. Arthur Nlcholi

PUBLIC NOTICETowhom ItTOayoonoern: ~

PabUb Notloe 1* herebr giten liy the Board i>(Heallb. ol the Borougnof Qanrood. In theConnt 7 of Union and tttat«of M. J., that: at theregular meeting of the Board to be held In thuUorooRh Hall at the corner of Center Htreetand South Avenne, Garwood. N. J. onTHURSDAY EVENING THB UTU DAT OF

DECBMBKB .at eight o'clock P. M. there wiU bo conildered:AM OUDINAUCE to mmendan Ordinance en-

titled Ordinance No. 4, Plumbing Oodool theBoard of Health of the Borough of Garwood,Adopted Angnlt 1, W12.Be It ordained brthe Board of Health of tha

Code or the Botongh of Qanrood, adopteAugust 1,1912, be amended to read aa follow*:

Section 4% Any person who tails to complywith or who violates or offenuji agalnat any pro.'Tialoir of this article or any auction thereof,

h l l l t l t h f ltf

one hnndred (liOO) dollara, or be Imprlauued ithe Oonnty Jail for not leaa than tea daja, namore thaa ninety days tor each and eoffenae, pod the officer before whom any

WILUAMT.S1,

OT WUJJAM' V1GHUJU8. De

Panuant to the order of OharhM If, Ooddlng,Surrogate of tha Oonnty of Onion, made on thothirtieth day of October, A. D. lilt , upon tbuapplication of the undersigned, as executor ofthe estate of said' deoeaaed,53souce la herebyKiren to the creditors of aald deceaaed to ex-hibit to the •nbacriber under oath or affirma-tion their olahna and •'•""""'f agalnat the?atate of Bald deceased within nine monthsfrom the date of aald order, or theywlU beforever barred from prosecuting or. rwoTerlnnthe same agalnat the anbscrlber. r >

• JAMBS W. FBBGUBON.A • • - . - • • Sxecutor.

Bma-atJT o . . tnmx^Proctor,Oranfom N.J. ouw»» FeaalU.10

Casino NotesjereniDg, Decen

| (wn Bridge party atWill bsinchargeo( 1,Mra.8holes. Mrs. 8

, » are now on sa{fr Eve Dance. Tlcki

, for at once

; In order to givec

4RESTAURANT

3 Miln Street

At North Avenue CRANFORD

Telephone 411

I symbol of UfMrs. G

1 0/ tbe Tubercul.fojVJr

3_A;J|«4.rei!aty OrginltaHon th[rive. Sbe and hert greatest spprecUU

rork they are doing. 1^1 sals go Tor work in oif oar town, that the res

1 more general most hjt realize the needs for

Tke retponss whichaya, made to every call

j:tob«a«slgo«dajarso a

"' -Mar t»» «»• «1 that Craaf ord

1 W" - i

\LC*r. <»~ '. is '"iver

Page 5: NEED ^ O F CASH •. *r TO RUN JERSEY · Ing np the harden of taxation, Oqt of the larger Items of retenue la thai from collateral Inheritance taxes un-der the law which Governor

•AY'SD PHARHACVilon AvenueleiaW Store

i ( of SMtwalk Assessment

glien that a masting, of the[lent Commissioners for theifanlwlllbeheldonIT. DEOBUBBU ir. U1Blooms, at 8 o'clock p. ra., forjertalolof the coat and afor sidewalks bid by the

oford within said Towmlilp,

ILK ASSBSSMltNT.Is of Centennial arara* be-

dUll]ld

BlnWwltch. 40KUTV

fn**t; JTH^ BlnWwltch. 40oatkt, 10.12 f eet; KarUTVto-'letorft B. Joseph,'1B7 78; An-fet

_»£ Ml .8 {(*»: Hannah "D.E«t. T. A. Bperrr, 162.00 (eet;ib .« feet; Clarence J. Collins,Kama, M (set; Fannie Bates,•nklln, 05 faes Agues B. Bran-

e of Johnson arenas, MD feet.Jdns, -10 feet: Robert PlnkneTwon, «0 feet: Henry H. PinkrtMte. «0 feet; At . Philip Jshn,'olbeiniu.SOOfmt.

SktB2ITtCJfarestatBna* irom. Union',12M-tsfe*t.iry, 18108feet;ft. W. ajutln,ns Jonrnesy. T&S9feet; Hex-

00.07 feet; Kenjon Mesefck,Austin, M.ITT feet; Hearj B.

id nusiMr of feet too* assess-itel/ stated.

Township Clerk.l, N.J-.N aiin»:

LIC NOTICE

i hereby git en ky the Board oforongh of Qsnrood. in thsandtttatoot M.J., that: at theif the Board to be held in the

the corner of Center HtreetB. Gsrwood, N. J. onKNINQ THE UTtt DAT OFIBCBMBKB. M. there will bo considers]:S tft ti"1***" mi Ordinance en*a No. 4, Plumbing Oodool thei of the Borough of Garwood,11,1918.r t h e Board of Health of the

d l n the Oponty of Union,:,...jf^titlpF'-iFSOSejeiiimijros;''oiigh of Oarwood, adoptedamended to read as follows:r person who tails to complytea or offenus against any pro*Hole or an/ section thereof,Ion thereof, pay a penalty ot[110) dollars nor greater thanf) dollars, or be tmprtauued luir not leas than ten dais, norj days for each and eierrotSper before whom Buy iaahbrought may Impose 'IQC,H -

tVojImprisonment as he mar

, WKNZKli Prwilmi.S.T. Secretary.

ffUJJAM V1GHEUU8. De-'

order of Charlsa If, Codding,Oonntr of Union, made on thoOctober, A. D. lilt, upon tha» undersigned, as executor ofA deeeased,*su)uoe is herebydltora of said deceased to ex-iriber nnder oath or affirms-

and demands against the-seated within nine monthsI said order, or they wlU beDm prosecuting or. rwoTerlnnthe subscriber. r >AMBS W. FBBGUBON.• • - . - • • Bxecutor.

J. J. onwihr Few 111-10

AURANT

iln Street

bnue CRANFORD

ephone41.

THB CRANFORD CITKBH, THURdDAT, DECEMBER 11.1919

of fin Man*

*ad tin da.for rawn altum mi l eouttBy ta.«ttb .U» uaooM-ad a m of

eboioa dalecUlite djah«a M OM ol theouia (eataratv tmrjthia* fatotM to*r^vaatKeewiror tlM flnrtABlaal Dbwar

Notes.

•ale of eauad fnrits wlUt Hoaday mohiinc.

HOBS) andim«UD(rwUlbe held to-

t»tIJBooln8chooL

wUl t» given by theflocod and * School

| Lincoln School, on Fridayj Mmlcby SkoUi Band. Tickata, 80 ceott.

| 0 f t>-tO Will bo giTOD lucky

»y. December 10, thefrom New York ware

to the thortage ofBV tt Liberty itraet orI Cranford; U. IB a. m. ator the 1163 a. m. tt

i diecontlnoed to NewCranford and the

Btord.:Tbeatr*e thtt "i F a m r l n ' T n o World

a atory of modern*y. George Broadhnnt'e

I Bryant Waabbara "Why

- wBirartn*ooeof Heever prodnoed, "The

dance will bo hold aton December 18, noder

I of Tooftloka Council No,R. M; Mnsio by oar Fa-

i.—AJmlasion 8frcent»rf vrtlhoaVii. CholrmM; auis.

j Casper Deckert, Mn. J.

special committee, with K. Wolfe, Chair,mad, and L. J. Schaefer, and E. fair-bank*. Their announcement provide*(or a substantial dinner, entertainment,speeches, along with important feature*of Interest to all. In order that tbelrleDgtby schedule may be 'carried out

C. Weisaghan, Mrs. H.I.Harris.

i batar given SaturdayI evening b? the women in

. K. Church netted orer f 125., F. Randolph Wai chairman

0.7; A/an orfa

I n . Klngdon and Mrs. Brlggs;blef booth was In charge of

.Mra..._Angtut J.ao apron booth was in

land Mra. Harry Rage. A teai of Mr*. Raymond Tool,

ng did a good business, a>s cafeteria supper managedI Herman, Mra. C. R- Var-i, J. A. Williamson; -Judge

the oldest member of, nmde.tba coffee,member* of the Cranford

|the Woman's Christian Tem-jfalbn beard ao excellent report

at National Convention in1 too meetingin the residence

The Court of Honor of the CentralUolon Council, Boy Scoots of America!met at the Episcopal Parish iiousa InCranford Wednesday evening. It w uthe tint session of the Court held inin Cranford and three First Class rJoootsrom Troop No. 8 of Cranford appeared

fafternoon. The report was| Mrs. Maty D. Tomllneon, of

the president of the CountyTomlinson, who is nearly

age expects to attend thefventlon in London next year."

preot were three of thenbers. Mrs. ttary T. Cox,

^ : : S ^ h

_r evening, December lift;| (w a Bridge party at the Ca-

»1U be in charge of Mm. Fay., Mra. 8hoje*. Mr». Sjkea and

, * are now on sale for thef a E t e Dance. Tickets should«4 for at once a* only 175f be aooomodated and the mem-" Vsrrown to sneb an extent

ad will graatir ezoeed thea requiring ticket* should

n't*' to* get tbenrat once;. „ JS, which p lan at Wan-

, „ / day, will furnish music.> for the Junior member* and

gaesta will be held Fridayunary 2nd,........

Drive ,•drive Uto becoDr

m y g:'In order to giveourpeople

j i ty to increase their pur> symbol of Uvea saved and

Mrs. Gross whoi of the Tubercnloiis Com-

iaty Organlxafioo that orgao-Jrive. 8b* a « her assistants• greatest appreciation of the

rork they are doing. The fnndem* aale go ror work in our comity| 'our town, that the response baa

i more general roost be becanaeA realize the needs for this work

The response which Cranford__ay» made to every call cansed aslt»be*jatga*3>JargB amount aa

" Mar no« tbtj extension off in vfl*j"* that Cranford mulntalna

Chfc

t o n i g h t . : . • ; : . - ; , •• .. • ]V. .;The nnmber of thoa* aotar eTprwalrnteir lateotloa otattindiBg ha*axe*«d«al

ori«tSdas«U»Ha»4/tte«{aKialocmittea In chargebat to avoid diaappointaMat todilatory one*. profMosii were made forthose few woo were unable to advisethe committee in time.

In addition to this occaaton being theOrst of a series of FaU and Winterattractions, it will also oomtrioe thedob's regularly monthly meeting atwhich the election of offloan for the en-

og year will take place. Thai thedinner will In no way detract from the

iportance of (electing canfolly those.who. by their efforts and enthusiasm in

past merit the distinction* of office,the committee have, arranged that themeeting and election ba held in advanceof the1 dinner.

Baaing conclusions on the amount otpersuasion derated to those who bareserved falthfotfy. it looks aa though themember* would bring abont a reelectionof tbs same officera. he spite of this

resident Nicholson has declined a (birdterm, as hi* boalness interests would Dotpermit bltn the ceoestary lime to devote,to the olub. Fred- Lao«e,' Harry Ott,

for daser?ed promotion, no three mem-ben of the entire club havlDg' workedmore faithfully and untiringly for thenterest of the club during the past year.

Practically ali the details ot manage-

nonnce that Mra. Edward. MacDowellwill come to Craoford on the evening ofApril 0,1030, under the auspices of theAssociation.;Un. MacDowell will speakof the Peterboro Memorial and give arecital of her husband'* works. 7bl*

III be a rare treat for the residents ofiporrat| ourTownpiaipBCtaity tliu uiniluUns. —

Olcers of the Cranford Ovlo Board washeld in the Township Rooms, Tuesdayevening. President Hansel presided.Officers were chosen as follows:'resident, Charles liansel; vice presi-

dent, William "H. Yawger; secretary.

along with a number -of scout* fromTroops 1 and 2 of Roselle Park, The ex-

linations were made-very thoroughbat erery Scout carrjB throngli with fly-ing colon. All told 28 Merit Badgo*worn awarded. Thfr Cranford ScouUhonored were^

Winchester Britton, Jr., Troop 8,Cranford — Athletics, Carpentry and

i : ; ' " " ' : : : " : ^ ' ' " " : :;::::

, WUUam [Klein, Troop 3. Cranford-Carpentrv, handicraft and Interpreting.

Donald Ilobinsoo, Troop !), Cranford-AtbleUc*.

Cranford Dramatic ClubThe third meeting of the Cranford

Dramatic Club was held at HamptonHall on Monday eveoiog. The fir»t*artof the evening Traafdevofcoa tor'the" read-ng ofv Bernard Shaw's play, "Getting

Married." The various characters wereread by: Mrs. J. Ross Bates, Mrs. Col-Una, Mn. N. Boggs, Mrs. Robert Mil-ler, Miss Elizabeth Fierce, Mr. } . RossBates, Ret. Mr. Martin, Mr. Austin, Mr.F. Sykee,vMf. Whiten and Mr. Towler".

rf/oU^^ by*.<«(*.aeipisyJ3la»peK W V C t a h

Mr. Kngone Towler. Tho character*were cleverly portrayed by: Mis* llaa-nab McAllister, Mrs. Moses Craig, Mn.Sykes, Mrs. Agnes Bogard, Miss Mar-jorle Pierce, Mr. Harold Anste'r. Mr.Boggai Mr. • Addom*. After which Mrs.Trn'slow served refreshments, whichadiled to the pleasure of. the evening.

Rose VBa Huskal SocietyThe regnlar meeting of the Rose Villa

Musical Club took place at the home ofMra^Jcihn TbiJmpaon Jast JTbarsday

The (abject for rtudy was mainly old18th and Uth centory^nniic in the formof folk tonga" .sung by the members oftfaeclnb. There were two piano selec-tions rendered composed, by Caldara,1070. and Lolly, 1600. respectively.

Miss Marguerite Winkler read a veryinteresting paper on ibe composers ofthis period and gave an account ot thea d ibitrnmenu like the ipinet *aa claviacbbnl used in the early IBUJ centary.Ulostrating her reading withjpictare*) oftbeae instrumenta. '

There were about IB members present..Mrs. Bogart was hostess of the after-noon. • .

The Wedeeday Morning Club held aPhUanthrtqncTeaattbebome of Mrs.E. E. Hasten, Claremont place, yester-day afternoon. Astistlog MM. Beatonas hoitsssss were Mrs. N< K. Thompsoniu>d-Mrs.J.C.McGrayne.

The program was in charge o/Mrs F.C. Truslow. Mrs. George C. Moon andMrs. Earl Herrick, who save readingsfrom pUya of Lord Dnnaany. with bvtrodoctory remarks-try Mm. Trnator. Aducusslou and social boof followed.Wednesday. December 8. Dr.lluotuf

»»ifltmdJdtaJkooPby»ical Ttmln-at the Cleveland School. T h a w

ThaPmidMtof t toV. L A.kas appoiated Mr*. M. J.Ora**aaChainaaaofthe cuatsBitta* io ehavtaof the sals.ofNavy anppiita. Tba chsirsuui haa ap-

it»th*>Djs«ssl*napof

MM folfewtn* oMabara: Mr* T.Crarj. lira. y.V.fc,l4«*il.-.M*e.:It.^.,Stepb***, Mrs. a a Jous, Mrs. H.O. Habto and lira. J . A, Kaowtsa- Tt*.•upply of canned peache*. pawr*. piam*

nut week. Otb«r winpUe* will be laterin arriving. The sals wUl be heHootfasaseoad floor of the Township rooms.Postsn will be placed la the windowasnoanoiug tbs day- of opening. Theoomsaittas will b* asalstsd In the conilact of the sals by diSareot member* ofthe association,

Mr*. F B. C Wincklar, Chalrmaa ofthe Hospital Committee has reoeltwlfrom the Ladle* Aid Society of theElixabeth Ueesral Hospital' ai letter ofappreciation tor the Thankagii'iDg do-nation of dellcacle* and. food* to gener-oasly glteo by U» Oanlord 'women.The Chairman it also very, grateful forthe. cordial response to this appeal.

The ne*t quarterly taeeting of the Aa-•Delation will be held on January 8.1920. at 480 in the Presbyterian Chapel.TbVspeaker will be Mra. John Yawger.EipreMdeut of the New York City Fed-eration of Women's Clubs and WorldSecretary of the Motion Picture andTbeairical Co-operative Association,whs will talk on Motion Picture* fromthe sodsj anfl educational view point.'

he Jatt«r date* have beta, observedslnee the loatitutlon of th« council,the chaax* It d*eme<l advantagcoasfrom SeverU standpoint*.

Preparations are wader way for abig meeting the second Friday InJanuary, when several Inltutldn*will be-twfd with the team of. Fire-side Council. 'Westfleld, officiating-The' tatter council and nesolute, otElliabeth. have promlted to sendtarge delegations.

After the meeting tomorrow «r-enlng a famous cartoonist, highlyrecommendod will eatmtin.

MEW5 LEAGUEIt f*. aDBOwnrfftt - hy tbOr--

IvMgue of th« First I>ri><byterUnChurch that next Thursday evening.December 18th, liter? will lu> glrvn In.,the church ono of tin sweral enter-tainments of the year to which not

nly tho members but also tbelrfriends are cordially ln*l|*ii.x Therewill-be no admlsaloa chirgQ. but asilver collection will be taken.

For this affair the artists will behe Pletro Mordeclja Company, oth-rwls« known aa The Venetian Trio.

Mr, Mordof.lt* ts a mcognlted «ip«rton tho plajror-acco'rdioa as well as ansccentrlepanUjtr. 9? ,,nnjqn«.

pointed - by the President to fill the va-cancy In the office of *ecood Vice Presi-dent created by th« resignation of Mrs.

W. Banker. v .It Is with groat pleasure and

nd talented violinist whlla tho thirdmember of the trio Is an Imperson-ator and~plaalst who "shines", bril-liantly In the duet numbers.

One ot the largest audiences ot th

no evening In but a week to bo spentIn the Metropolitan district. , Thorommltteo In chargo comprised jlluh-ard Nltchlo. chairman, Fre<p- T.

Fraxer and Albert 0. Lewis,

Cranford Ovk Board3S,000. JXhla »nr]r creditable sum baawen saved during the year hy pyer 1.400

thrifty people.

!!._ ChadDTlck, and tmstees, Kdwtn U<Woodllog, A. O. Oouslow, Konneth Fer-gnson and L. B. O'Brien. The boardIndorsed Benata Bill 1.800 to provideFederal roods; Tb» sum of $50 "wasvoted to aid the Tuberculosis ChristmasDriveu ~ : ~

A community bouse for Cranford, aplace where the young men can assembleon evenings and. a . place where entor-tainmont* and dances can beheld forthe young people and bowling alleys andpool and billiard tables can be providedto help keep the young men oil thestreets at night, was the subject for*considerable discussion. The board de-cided to ha»o the trustees make plans,for the community home and then In-rite all organizations In the, town to a

considered and decided npbn. „James 0. McQrayne, of the food com-

mittee, reported that the ,Navy cannedfrnlu would arrive here In time for thesale in the Township room* Friday. Mr.MoQrayne reported that the Village Im-provement Association would handle, thesale of the goods. The som. of »50 wa*

- - - - ' - - • • - " - • • - ^ ! - - --otrjikj

meetlDl was pr'asided over byHansel.

fltegaePresident

Christian and Missionary AffiaaoJRev. Irving O. Uoff, Pastor

Sunday. 0.45 a. m.. Bible School.I'reachiDg. 11 a. mu Subject, '

ng lu Grace amid Utorms."Preaching, 8 p . n l , Subject,

Unwelcome King."'Tuesday/ B p.. m. YouDg I

Association.Thursday. 8 p. m. Prayer and Bible

Study la tbe EpUUo to the Colmalan*

The

STENOORApHEROpportunity; with ooa pfo«-

peots for advancement Apply toCRANFORD TRUST CO.

' CJronford, N. J.

Pool Uble, cprnbinatlof), , completerikkBik ;;fj»;jW*tiBld SWf»ge. 17 Prospect »treetSewing mschlne. Singer drop-hesd PH.

cutglsa* omamenu etc half price: bookcase $4 a section, mahogany chiffonier137.90, 9 x 13 rug $39.50, round extensionUble 111; leather dining chair Ml °skryttal closet $45, leather Torklsh rocker39, g**vbeatcr&,7(r wicker doll carriage6.50, sodironJ W-50. briss costumer10.*), Hneleum tl.8S per ysrd, satiqaenhogsoy bureau |£ l , large heating

ttovesao. 480 North Aveane, WestfitM.Invalid wheel chair, wicker, new, to

hire. Westfleld Storage. Tel. SSM.

FOR RBNT>each per month,

Double Oarage.8 Arilugtoo Road.

V>

PRIVATE OARAGE TO LET: .838North aveftoe. West. Terms H par

b j r l h J * 2 XKIJRSI3HZD ROOM to let. PitvtfsR*

at light boosekeepiog. itRettotVI avs-

ROYAL ARCANUMBy secariag a dtavsnuUon tor a

special sight tor IU aaaual eleeUo.Cranford O»aaeU No. US*, RoyalArcanum, will caooaw new, officer*for th* coming year tomorrow eve-•lag, A Ian* atteadaaes U «xp«<sH A . ; • . • • - - . ' • . - • • - . .

•Vt» oOttcrs and Past K»crat* willpreecni a slatu, selortjMl.at a, ton-fe fa*Jd~ et° MM some «f 8«g«Btr d r k T. Prater. It iraa silsa de-eWsd to suggaat that In future, th*meetinis b* held oa the s«cottil andfourth Fridays of Menf t t f l H l « i t d T

The Cranford Trust Company willisburse to memrwra of Its 1010'.Christ

SOtOOl HffTlNG OWIUfD.atvanja j l f developed cootliUunin the.

title of one of the properties seleoietl by tba Board ofEducation aa desirable sites upon which to erect newacfeool baiKUnga. tko puilib tu««Ung c*ll»J far DscsmUr

T 6 t a b a o b e e n « 4 t t t < « l t « d . ' - - . • ••••• ••- •:••:- •••••••'..•'•=•.-•.

When the niatiei; ia i|ue*Uon baa been fully clarified

a acetmd call for a public gathering wilt be tuned. -

' • ' • • • - " G A. WAT80S.Cranforvl. S. J., , District Ckrk.

December lltb, 1919.. JF

We have the Most Beautiful LineEver Shown In Cranford

GRAY 'oo UNION AVE.

v

WHAT Y. M. G. A. ACTIVITIES 7

'Any youn^' man interested in athletics should beon handnext Suiulay 'morning at 9:45 to discuss

. same at the. . , |

^VOUNQMEN!S BIBLE-CLASS-.FIRST PRESBYTERIAN SUgPAY SCHOOL

1920 Christmas Club^ p will dUburse to members of its

1919 Christmas Club on December 15th the sum of $55,000. This very credit,able sum has been saved during the year by over 1,400 thrifty people, who nowlind themselves in possession of ready money to meet Christmas expenditures oir.Qth«_iwr^ses_for. which Jhcyrrwy haveTrust Company prides itself on the fact that through its eiforts this moat conven-ient plan has been provided for the accumulation of small sums, which in theaggregate amounts to at least $50 for each member of the Club.

On December 26th th[e 1920 Christmas Glib will be open, and all are in-vited to become members. Circulars descriptive of the plan have been mailedduring the past week to the members of the 1919 d u b and to subscribers of thevarious Liberty Loans.

In Class 50 at ^In Class 100 at one dollar per week, the member will receive $50.00In'Class 200 at two dollars per week, the member will receive $ 100.00In Class 500 at five dolla/s per week, the member will receive $250.00

•; Payable, December 15th, 1920- „. , | :

. . >,-4'\

:•:- I

' V *t"~" ' "*

Page 6: NEED ^ O F CASH •. *r TO RUN JERSEY · Ing np the harden of taxation, Oqt of the larger Items of retenue la thai from collateral Inheritance taxes un-der the law which Governor

<" - •!'•?*' '"!.*• *; V'% "•'* f ^ v f . T i K / ; '

T H E J C R A N F O R D CITIZEN__J___J __ ___ I

Waits nn

.?-.•

\

UST what tha airplane U to do forrltlltxatlon I* still more or lens guess-work—and one man'* guests Ii a* goodII» another's, nut of at leant one'thing1

w» may be sure: The blnlnmn andtb» airplane mean (he speedy *nd "'the •llclU place* of earth Today iom>

or n>e carirr* *aii»c*i* »tinunexplored. TqgnotTOW topographical tuaps nt •nominal cost will 1* on sale at the bookstores.

Iji«t season an airplane gilded »lov\ly downpart El Cnpltan and Half Dome and nlliilited on

away without difficulty, A daring airman swoopeddown Into the abyaa of the Grand ennon of theColorado In Arlxona and then soared out over therim without a ml*hnp. A »h»le fleet of airplane*rose Into the thin air of the llotklen crowd the14,000-foot peaka of the continental dlvldo and did•tunts over the summits of I'lkes Teak and LongsPeek. These things were something new underthe_sunj_lt Van lielleved the} could not be done.Tlu-«£jcat« merely «ui|>iiatlxe the. £8tl_w]»lc.h_Iabecoming tncrrn»lngl> apjurent that there U no-where tliht the airplane cannot go

_

\

earth are the most difficult, dangerous and! Inac-cessible hut haMens their exploration. The moredanger the greater the Incentive! The greaterthe adventure the more enjojahle tho thrill IThexf KlUnt plarr< of larth apjienl to llu< ndven-turer of the nfclr* as the mail service (ilia himwith loathing.

A. wrttrr in tlw Strand .Magazine observe* txecif that nature Mill provides the flying roan withnil the hazards of adventure. And be proceeds toset down In detnll the opt>ortunltle<t that nwnltthe tnlnti'r on e\p'"rntlim Ixnt, lie argue* thatnature. In tfac-w remote regions, has di lied all tlmwhite man's attempts to scale her helghtH, Intrudeupon her arid Kolltude*. escape from tho lurkingdanger* of her \lrgln foreMx, or feiist hi* sightupon her «nu«y wastes. She Implied till footexpeditions mil of ennrt: but she cannot ImiRlt ntthe- equipment of the winged explorer In fnct.there l» little the airman cannot <1n. Kroin (Jlb-niltnr he rnn jnvp upon the trtbul {amities' ofsouthern Morocco and dwell a while on the Hi-st-ern Atln* mountains.

from K/ypt he has a fl}lng ground of thou-Hand* of square nillr* In the eastern Sahara nnd,If he Is fond nt rolling sand, the iliserts of Ara-bia, too. Both are nlihln his rcu<h. nnd he laeertnln of no company except what he talcs withhim,. ('«{• tlwuse,tiwcoa&Uif tho Uulamis.1*idealfor !>lipt'lite Into the trininrlnl jungles of theCordillera of southern Venexucln, and when tiredand weking a brief rest he should Hud a conven-ient InnJlng «pot on the Tutunc lltimuc. Or clsnthe de«?rt of Got>1 from the Siberian rullwuy, orportions of the polar area that.urc nut "the homeof the Mlxrnrd." might t«> worth his nttentlon Ilutlet him'beware of tue Illlmltnble I'ornrts of Urazll,thti uurrkam; lands ,»t wwUm Antarctica, thewftu>y heights and ley mvstn of'{he MlmMilryna,

'svltf»«rt-}H"<<p#»-»v_g»rU-l<».U«^illfullj^ thai >3jasetthe unwary In the"*- regions.

" In the Grtat Himalaya*.An airman would probably fly • thou«nnrV feet

Ihelireat Himalaya, the main range, whichfrom the south appears like a glt'utulng wall ofmow mid ice. Some of the mow fields of thoHlninlajnH are onlj accet>*lhle from the air. nndIf he landed on one an engine stoppage mightleave him marooned in an exposed mill pncnrlousposition.

It wnnld lie hanl to find any scientific tank nioroInteresting than the exploration of certain copiousof Afghanistan nnd the *tud) of Its wild, pugnnlnluibttautK. the bold Kallrt, nnd other, strangetribes. In the northeast corner of the countryInrg>< portions of Hadakthun and Kullrstnn oreentirely unknown.

The aerial wanderer. Inspired with a'true lovoot udvrnture. will doubtles* be pleaded to knowthnt n»t all the l>ark Continent la yet an open-bnok. In fact. It still jealously guards some veryMack ppott. Even in ltritl'-h territory how nmihIs known ot the Inner Shlllul districts of theKou«t:in: 1h<» region between the upper waters ofthe Itlue Nile and the limits of the Uganda, or tholine* of the i>enqt!j traws from Trljwill, or theC>rfnnlca toward VTaduI? What Kuropean hasseen, much less trod, huge arras within the desertregions of southern Asia? There are other areaswhich have been crossssf tilwiijs In haste and evenIn fenr: also regions visited perhaps by n scoreof trnvelen ninev the revival of lemming, but In-

The biggest feat left for a traveler to perform tnAruuln, perhaps In nil Asln. la to cross tho Yemen,then on to Ntvlrnn, from there nlong'the WudyDaunslr to AllnJ nnd High Nejd. Tho southern-most •provlnous of these lands,-noted for theirfcnttirs ulttt compnrotho tcrtlllty, hnve Btlil to tooseen by western eyvit, and It would now eccm thatthebo eyefr will he thoso of nn alnuun, whose ttlr-

uhlp will be more Hum probably worshiped ns anilrncln from tho celentlnl blue. He will have todetermine wlmt hccoines of tho Inland I1owtng~waters of-Wfst-centrnl Arabia, and fo throw lighton the lii.vxtvrloiia ynlley region which MoslemaIn the mlilillo nges huld existed on the northcen- •trujfriujju uf jthe flrcflt «lcsiTt, nnd contained hulf-

-htirliMi clik-s iiiiuvB whoin ruin!) ^ho lU'djitrls_iun(itT cwtiiB. TftnaalSilJ '1*ara 1115111 about' the"'

myxterlous Knhtan Anilis, and their possible)African origin.

Hut for the modern Investigator South America(till odors the hirKest fluid of Intelligent Inquiry.ItegloiiH nenr the poles nnd In the urld deserts canon'l> lend thein<:i>l\es to the progress of materialdevelopment lu a purol) auxiliary capacity, orprovide quulut lore of the customs nnd condition*of .effete,'or almost nonexistent, tribes. JBut SouthAtnirUn Is teething wtth virgla riches thut nruonly waiting tho nmglc: sesitmo of the aerial pio-neer.

Equipped with powerful flying machines.""thework of exploration should proceed more rapidlythun -It has ever, done, and soon the unexploredciitlruiM otJLlia. poles, patches ot central Asln, aInrgv. Interior of Arabia, especially of tho Snhnraispots In central Africa, large tracts of SouthAmerica, especially between the grout rivers,.andcertain ureas of Australia should bo on tho pageof accomplished exploration.

In the Next Decade.To show the wonderful way In which the map

of the world has been tilled, It tins only to bestattd 'that in 1SC0 *A0J4,3Cb> square miles hudlireji mapped from route tra\ mcj" and sketches,whereni In 11)10 this nren Increased to 37,050,552Fqimre statute tulles. In 1SG0 no less than 30,-'W7.W4 nquare statute miles were entirely un^ur-yey.ed nnd untnnpped, while In HUG this had beenreduced to 8,:t50.7JM jpquaru statute miles out of00,000.000" square miles, the total area of the land

frozen W'nstes of the polar regions Is being ar-ranged, nnd the airship will, no doubt, be on lines,that will command a big rudlus of uctlon and per-mit large petrol storage.

The tropics created another net of Olfflcultle-3.The nlrplaae fabric and glue fixtures were foundto be ot a perishable nature lu tho climate, nndnew substances of greater resistance, to the in-

'.tense heat wera Introduced But today nn nlrpluno, ndaptable for any hemisphere, is withinthe range of science, nnd soon'the living explorershould ho on most mutes leading to the unknownbeyond tho regions of *Ivillzutlon.-His story willbe nn Iniperlshahle-umJ—tlH-llliiitf chapter of the

at JintUr* !«, her wildest ogtuiis. r

But nerlnl exploration Is not to he llghtly-un-dertnken. There Is the cost of airplanes, hangars,limGlng places and luajntenatlce of persohuel, fix-

• ploratlon Is n stnttpnnry thing at times, and basesmust tie erected. It Is one thing to fly over anuntrodden rogloh nnd quite another to explore ItScience deiuurids much knowledge from the modernexplorer. l*os*,lblj u nation, or nations, couldonly furnish the neceognry means to provide the'material for the,aerial highway and stations whfeiinre Indispensable to satisfactory exploration Inremote quarters of the enrth. Hundreds of mlleaof Ambia which no westerner bus seen haVe beenflown over by European ofUcers during the vvarMembers of these military expeditions have dis-covered most Interesting ruins of" hnlf-burled'

-dtlci. But this -worfc-Tr«s ttonc -from pfopcriyequipped depots. Military bases and nerlnl poststations may prove the Jumplng-off points for fur-ther expeditions ^nder,state aegis. De-tort (Ijlagwould lead W the linking- up "of tlie old caravanroutes by tracking successive oases; nnd then,from the beaten paths, the wastes adjoining wouldbo searched for historic ruins.

V The fact remains that the nerlnl pioneer will bethe first In many v Irgin fields ot science nnd hit.tory, and Trill In his -quests find the wine ot ud-venture In bumper draughts.

This Slrrind Magazine writer is right. These un-explored regions of the earth are full of fascina-tion for the I'XpIorer. For example, take the head-waters or ihe Aninron and Orinoco—n region ofmystery that tuiN baffled'every explorer from the

habited hj peoples of wh_onj• «e*| hive l«.rqe,l u l u c h _ s u r t l ) W . < r f ^ h e- < H , r , H l together wlllMhe- untarotnr —tronqnhrtadnrw rtown to TheodOTe-UoofeveH TlieIiit-K '•linn n iwtn l I l i a rwklnr *• «lrlntrt . . . . . . . . . . . . . , , , •» ^ »»••*• A " v

nl/rinun, nrmetl v\ith wlielens. quinine pills and flyscreeB, ought to miceeed In this centuries-old

O

less than aliout the polar Ksklmo.The greatest unseen area He* in Arabia, almost

all the FOUthern half of which Is occupied, ac-cording to nntho rei>ortsi. by a great wildernessknown a* the -Pnellinj: of the Void" Threetraveler* have claiuinl tuat they have gated onJtf uttrnnost frincr* from the west, south andit»l, re#i>ectiiely. l>ut no European has ever en-tered thK Immense tract of OuOOOO square miles.If It further doubtful moreover, whether anynative has ever crossed 'any part but certulu

, tongue* whkh It throws out Inward the Persian,culf. and toward the Indian ocran tnuthwest of

parts of the Arctic nnd Antarctic regions, whichmay be cither land ur water. With the muchquicker means, of Investigation of today a decadeor two nhould see the proper survey aud moppingof till parts of the earth's surface that nre llkelvto be of nny use to n uiun as settlements, or calla-ble of his development.

Aerial science seems to be keeping pace withthe demands which will be made upon It One ofthese l«i the resistance of tho engines to' frostwhile Inactive; otherwise (hero is the' risk offro7cn i<in;lncs nnd permanent stoppage'uponlanding This dlfflcnyy has no dount been pre-. ana nm»ra m«r uwiwi w ™ eouinwcsT or i mmting tms nuncui^y na"« no aimm neen pre-

lntler province. Some mapsrmark a camvun • nrntcd betwetn 'Vancouver nnd the Ymfon, wheretraek-rnnnlng thmngb the heart of this desert,""Shere hnve been expiTimcnts with nn nerini post,!»ai at a Iwrch colony In Java, to which colonists but flvltig In this region is comparatively simpleftofe math AmbU (nwrally reaortedl Javanese to the long <U*tariVcs to bo covered In arctic ex-

Cwnled all knomledce of lu nlorolion. Already un aerial expedition to the

quest Other explorers hnve <lle<l nf ft.»er becausethey had no quinine or sui umiheil to the rapids;, ofthe rlver\ or got lost because lh< v hnd no wireless,or hnd bceiUnfectcd nnd died from the bites of In-sects!

Undoubtedly there Is much of Importance to tht.world to be gained bj thorough exploration of thisregion. And by way of uiysterj there Is the legendof the AVhJte Indians, the Guaharlva of the. upperbasins. The Spanish explorers of 177* mentionedthem: an Englishman In 185R nnd a Frenchman InISiO reported them; nnd others have been toldabout them bj traders nmi Indians.

The Urailllnn, Venezuelan and Colombian cor-ernments hnve done little In exploring this fastrtuion which, la full of uuknown riches.

. tor tb« JtcClan Ma*a-

It was such a small hail bedroom--way up near the top of the house—so high above the ground It seemedsuspended midway between heavenand earth, somewhat after the fashionof those' hanging gardens which aresaid to have required neither Tindernor upper'. aupport. But though theroom by Its elevated location strovefor a place In the sun, it receivednone of its rays it any time otthe day, for the one window faced.In unceremonious fashion, against thebleak and bland- stone wall' of thebuilding opposite. «JJow, i t one were,as dexterous as Betsy Bond, a very•good-glimpse^- albeh-tlmltedr-eould -1«obtained not only.of-the sun casting aseemingly forgotten beam - of lightdown the murky courtway, but also of

"the window In the other building onefloor below. It la' true the. blk,ot lightwas only enjoyed' on Sundays, whenBetsys exacting .'and onerous dutiesas salesgirl at the notions counter ofTllden's,' Inc. did' not call for her ex-pert services for the. somewhat start'

"ling compensation of seven dollars-'theweek—startling how little might he

of dally necessities. And It Is alsotrue the window of (her room, acroxsthe court afforded-little distraction,for up to. the writing of tills—Betsy'sstory—It bad remained: untenanted.

ftctldn and dying because there wasnone on whom to lavish the love pentup within, hungered for romance; shelooked for It everywhere, and foundIts substitute only on the "Fictionpage" of the evening paper. It was avery unsatisfactory substitute.

The days of August had made ablistering-advnnee.-aiid-It-seemed-toBetFjrthts-dijrtfiat' iuinmer wHa"ex-Mtlng: every effort to leave a scar and

w e e • « ^ * f c ^the ringlets about her perspiring fore-head Into fantastic forms ns she ca-tered the room breathless" from theInterminable climb of stairs, l-pvent the window, the courtyard send-ing1 forth Its nightly quota of. onlnnand other odojts Jtom ;..t<J»e...<iunrtErs..1idow;":^^t|^'JK|j^^^|^l'ii«"^!jibtides of . food on her table nnd listlessly adjusted herself In the obliqueand uncomfortable position necessary

-to-- Rce-the-. window hr-the—buildlng^opt"poslte. She leaned forward. Glar-ingly It stood forth, and not even thedirty panes--concealed -the-yellow- Jptof gaslight which Illuminated tho roomand Its solitary occupant. Betsylaughed nloud. !j J- : ; i

'• "A' neighbor," *. she mused, andreached for the pillow from tiie.bed toiiinka her cramped position comfort-able. "Romance!" her thought con-tinued; and a smile exposed tvyo'pret-ty rows of even white teeth. It wasIn spite of, and nojt because of, herclothes that'Betsy was. considered' at-tractive; for the worn serge skirtloudly acclaimed Its nge by n Justrpns

hbV^be^room.'SNoon' iwifi''sotiiii(wvn'ir'u-::

sirens over..the weltering, city/us Bet*sv^passed tho music counter of Til-deff's, - Inc., -on her_ way ««t of the-store for-luncheon. In raucous tone*Rang the song-booster through his hrll-lluntly colored megaphone, nltlrli heturu^l.-«l*(>rti«tely- t,p. right ami leftso,that-uUmight hear:

"When our Ship p' Dreams cornea In.dear,

—When-ita-ca.rgp <omes to-shore, ,With gold so fine,-It will all be thino,

\"oa alone I. adore—"•

5fjonger admitted further mending.

But there Was little, In tlio man's oc-cnpatlon to excite undue curiosity orromantic. conjectures; laboriously hewrote, stopping to press his templenwith his fingertips or pass a hand-kerchief, over his forehead. Betsy•lipped from the sill to the floor anil

d ^ ^ t e ^ ^ l

Uirough- space' came the voice of theaihn falntjy/Blngjng:

••''. d e a r , - • - . ' ... . ' " '.'.." i, • '"'

When Its cargo comes'to> shore; •W|th gold so fine. It will all bo thine,>/Tou«alone I adore—" • : ...aofl. then abruptly "stopped." Betsyclltiibed. Jback ..onto the window ledge,nnd leaning- for .forward, peered down^nto the room. A gasp of consterna-tion escaped her lips as she jumpedto the floor nnd tore down the steps,the ascent of which hud so taxed her_strength._putj.ntojhe. street .she.iah.Ani.UB.tO-.tbe^loor^olLJhe jnexUbulJd;.Ing; ', ' •

Mrs. Slatterjr' appeared In answerto the Imperative summons ofnnd Irritated because supper was in-terrupted, eyed'with a landlady's sus-picion the unhatted and-disheveledBetsy. She did not make a likelylooking roomer. '

"I guess nil the rooms he filled,"wa» the curt and solicited- Infor-mation." Betsy Inserted her foot be-tween door and panel to. prevent' Itbeing shut In her face. •

"I am not looking for a room, but,J>ul—" she stmnmered as the unusual-bess of the situation presented Itself."One of your tesants seems in _tiro,tfc_ble," BeTsy "gulped hnrd. "nnd I be-lieve he has fainted. I—we canhelp—" . ,

Mrs."'Slatterjr made' unsympatheticinterruRtlon. "Oh. It be that tingingman. Never pays his rent: and he doseem to- live on air. He'll comerotind—"

In a mariner Mrs. Slattery after-ward dubbed, "fresh." Betsy brushedher aside and deliberately walked upthe step1:. Intuition directing her tothe pruo-r room. There lay- the- taanas she hnd seen hltq from above,hpnfl flat nn the table, arms hanginglimply at his side. With anwnscl..nscommand «he turned to Mrsl Slatteryrwho hnd followed In her wake.

'Help me lift him over to tb» bed."

and oypquttcatly «,i^ ^obeyed. «wkwardljr S4»i»tinK•oosened bi» collar an<J nudl.l i,«h««. -Get some water." *parting order, and Betsy tie*the room.'dovn the s.teps. inithouse into her own; an* then,vstairs to the room where, ih;,nosed, the untottcbed roijd.-\,ji;i,The artJciea.;in'- her tirnjs'sfiVretraced her Steps, an'diastln-man came to cnnsclousness hi-not UDbeautlfuI girl itaiMlln-

«l! t:_e

"ma'a

Jet. She smiled down aj him a Sii,u.loe. comforting smile. • - -

"Ilot niillc in a minute. T<«i.-t,- .crackers and a mite of cheese. 11...*doe* that soundT" Her voice Mmf,'l-ed merrily la the room and the i: ,;ianswered the smile with a w.iu ,,--fort. . : ' - . • •

"4t smells better," came the wi.'.s-per from the bed.

And It tasted equally good as r..t-gy" h,eld his head, and fed him !;,••browned biscuit dipped In the wniiamilk. .The. man slept and Betsy i |Ktoed from the room. Mrs, Slatn-rr

imounTed guard /tri the hali with aCame-Grtmdy-vlgilanee.-*-^ :—

"Hl» room rent be behind." Evi-dently, tn Mrs. Sflattery's makeup, ,there was no trace of thnt liupi'll::i;force, which • bad governed Brtsy'*spontaneous net o f loving klin)m.«<.

'She'looked Into her meager purse.wearlDg out at the.corners.

"Will a dollar on account be satis-factory J" olio asked. The bill, WHS.'tendered and accepted In silence ami

4Betsy, returned to her room, supper,less nnd happy, Aa she crept linot oV^sho^s ttlttd 'thV'-'siariB* clwriw 'it**registered awakening nt half piist llvtv

The ^ hour thus, gained next morn-ing was devoted to assisting her new-ly acquired word. With a promise iothe man who lay weak and Inert to>»tol|i^p^^«y^iow^^n^In the evening, 'he turned' to go.

"Why- are,you so good to me?" ha-questioned her. '

".Why doubf the:;inoUver by In-terrogation she answered.

Pfeoceupled '.with .ber thoughts, Bet-sy failed to be-annoyed us-she win-Jostled about. on street and car hy-

duties"" w e r e " f u t f l n e d t n Vlke; MUcscions fashion, for mind . w a s helping

" Befsy smiled as sh'S; "recalled thft "flrst occasion when she hnd heard thewords nnd sncrltlced the precious inin-ntes of her*luncheon period to heiirthe end of tlie lyric. ' |'

•• • ' • • • ' ' - • • • ' : • • i - ' ' • ' •

"When our vessel comes sailing back.• , - d e a r , . - ..•...., •;, ..

. Laden with wealth all for you, 'Then we'll niarrJ7"n"o heed to tnrry,1 W^»enour_ Ship, out Ship Q' Drtums

comes true."

She caught up._the Illttns;,. catch/nielcSy'nni'tne" Ssy,'fbiilng" wVirii Tand ate her luncheon with the tune-In her head. Anxlous-for six: o'clock,the afternoon flew quickly by amiclosing time found her hurrying to-ward her boarding house with thou-sands ot other souls,, all closeted up latheir own little worlds of pcrsonid in- 'terest Mechanically she, bought the

:iled section ,ia searcb1 for .Uie nlwny*tposslble, but never-probable, "hetfr-.:job> - Hex eye Hrffte*;^®^-:ttu>Ln*-;ing column of •"Per^onalV," nttmVi'M •ppssltlly • by • the wpfds, "Ship «'Dreams'.''. Theyrfeemed to pursue herthis day. The man seated to her rii-'iithummeil--with-heavy- breath,- -"When-our.Shlp o'Preams..comes soJli'iB I*d e a r . " - ••-•• -.-. • • < . , - - • . . • - ' .

' Betsy read:\'\^ :< """Royalties awaiting Leonard' Stit-

clllte. Information wanted.ns to pres-ent whereabouts • of composer of

o' pream8.1. ..Phone _ JPopuhir^Co." ^ -~l2 •

Sisp?SSr CouVd* ft wally"!^""no wonderfully romantic? It wasmore than food she" brought him.'. "Are you Leonard Sutcllffe?" sin*

asked as she entered the room nmlsmiled to see him seated In the clinlr.

He nodded with surprise nnd l.nofce Iat4he newspaper she hiid In his lap.

"Then your- Ship o' Dreams h:ni t t C t l h « l l n S A ! ) v i » ' ' •

Betsy announced and picked out thestopper of the "milk.'.bottle with th--thie of a fork.

A wonderful light, danced In hl-eyes. "Good Samaritan, It's our Shl.>o' Dreams, Isn't lt?"~ *

And over the. toastexTcnickers ,Bct-sy nodded assent. '

- Another Matter. ."Pa, what Is meant by! a "blue.sky'

l a w f"It's a measure deslgntid to prevent

the sale of fraudulent stofcfc, my son.- •"Yes, pn." . • ; ."Toa should not confuse the term

with jaerlal traffic 'regulations whichwill soon be on all our statute book^ "—Birmingham Age-Herald.

Asked and Answered./"Can n man lift himself by. his ho '-

straps?1*"I dunno." _"Why. the question answers Itsflf."Wen, teacher, that tots me but."

ck*d DisciM Hi* ta &

•Ing Sections of tlUuPurt

BMRt atllngton.—The. Uoiti

of agrirulturvcontaining 'vex*

("Illustrating the c»>

'Canker Stag* of MoI Can«« of Ntw Caledins in Cchttr Is H*al

g cane, which ftI Inttl rsted In this d'U

ftotldentlfy It. The mosal

jal years, la•-», nnmt. . __ _ f countries has recentl;^'*l the .southern Unitetl St

I 'disease Is quite wldes*T«r; there- are— oiaoy-

t from which deun seI Obtained.

. ,whl} ihimage to ttMideni h K e t

Porto lileo and someirlea, la one of the 1l that' has" coofi

rers In recent' years.

:

Mfst~fromIfiCBrlUah

-knl!>«fH yucbtKnglnnd carrygovernment aline, vthica is

[taatt »Bil lluenos Aires.

r.ly Oltpowd Of IThat PartnU I

omizc

to Governor Buthe high cost o

number of ^temptirarily

,«o that hoshanto ol>tala employia

rents, coupled *ibirf fowl, has compell<

en m distress to. . . I o'.rr to charitablerding to S.,'W!." Kekin

•Jent of Jht~'<?hiidren>r of illnnesnta. St. Palocal thlldrpn's ho=

ring for ^bable*. and !>being loaned,to the Ii

school for the (raw.ill. .where the Xvasxnt« crdrlni; domestic

aighl 'o nrt.it rly <yre f

Page 7: NEED ^ O F CASH •. *r TO RUN JERSEY · Ing np the harden of taxation, Oqt of the larger Items of retenue la thai from collateral Inheritance taxes un-der the law which Governor

THE CRANFORD riTtZEn

rpqoticatiy ««i^•wkwardljr a**i»tin;-bit- collar and UBUI.I |, » „•CM some water." * a , ^inter, and Betsy new „„, ;'°,-down the s.teps. out „, , /o her own, aotf Ihen.v ^ t .*

the rod», where.-imi'.jjjr:-,

re*. In her arras "sfW~ riher ttepa. and.astl.e ,,,uaj* to consciousness he•autlfuJ Klrl

smiled down aj him a Sii,u.biting irulle. • ' . - ' - :

nllfc In « minute. TI.IIM,.^slid a mite of cheese, II,,W

sound?" Her voice Mmf,'l- •ly In the room nnd the ]: »,

the (mile with a wau t f-

ell* better," mine the w !,'.*-the bed.tasted equally good as r..t-hts bead.and fed him He-biscuit dipped In the wnria 'le. man slept and Betsy i.IK

11 the room. Mrs. Slutti-rrguard /in the hali with a

tmdy—vlgilanee.-*— :—ooro rent /be behind." Erl-n Mrs. S'lattery'a inakeui> ,a no trace of tlmt tiupcll::iilcb • had governed Betsy1*,>us Ret o f loving klndne<«.ed Into her meager purse..out at the.corners,i dollar on account be tatis-

Bhu asked. The bill untand accepted In silence amiturned to her room, supper.

happy. As she crept into.ElJted. the- itoroi- clotto,™ Itv-

l awakening tit half pirn five.mr • thus, gained next morn-levoted to assisting her new-5d word. With a promise iowho lay weak and Inert to

l^hW^«y^SMa^fftffl';wMrl£5l^hW^«y^SMa^fftffl.;enlng,; she turned'" to go.ire,you ao good to me?" ha-rt her. J

doubt' tbe^motive?" by In-in she answered,ipled'.wjth.ber thoughts. Bet-

to be annoyed ns she win.bout. on street and car l>y

g ^Bre fulfilled In like: miticTishlon, for mind .was helpingyjog- 11 - « D 4 .heljvletw fa tti*>Otn. Noon wUD'fiOundwt'tiyer the weltering, city as I'.ot-1 tho music counter of Til-r., -on her_ wuy ««t of the-luncheon. In raucous tone*

song-booster through his hrll->lored megaphone, wlileh tieUermjtely- in. rlgbt and leitUntight hear:

lr Ship. ,p' Dreams cornea In,

I so fine,-it will all be thlmvme I. adore—"•

s~*be "recalled 'tKc-3lon when she hnd heard the1 sacrltlced the precious mlivler "luncheon "period to hearC the'lyric. ' f

ir vessel comes sailing back.r , • • • • • • ' • • • . - ; • . • • :

vlth wealth all for you, -1 niarryrn"o heed to tarry,>ur Ship, our Ship Q' Drtuinsles true."

light up.Jthe nittng, catch/bff™tn"e '&"sy' '"MHng"'wi>rii|<iTtier luncheon with the tune-ad. Anxious-far RIX o'clock,noon fie* quickly by a nilme found her hurrying to-bonrdlng house with thoti-

tlivr souls,, all closeted up ialittle worlds of pcrsonid in-

fechanlcully she/ bought the

>'n, In aearcb for .the nlway*but never-probable, "better-. Ir e y e arTftedr+tt^ttSttdltiiii-f- ijin of "PersohnlsC' n'ttraViV-d'"Iby- the wpfds, "Ship «'They rfeemed to pursue her

The nian seated to her rii-'litwith-heavy • breath, • -"Wheno'Prcains comes SOJUIIR in. j

sad: ' . ' ^ :<•les awaiting Leonard' Stit-'ormatlon wanted.ns to pre.*;1

redbouts • of composer ofDreams."" Phone Popul:ir

•rtully romantic? It wasI food she brought him.'JU Leonard Sutcliffe?" sin*she entered the room mul

see him seated In the chair.led with surprise nnd lootedFspaper she laid In his lap.your- Ship o' Dreams has I

ounced nnd picked out the ,f the tnllk bottle with thefork.lerful light, danced In his>od Samaritan, It's our Shli>:. Isn't Itr-. *'•r the, toagteyTcrackers .Bet- ^assent. . " ' *

Another aat Is meant bj* a "bine.sky'

neasure .deslgneid to preventt fraudulent stofcfc, my son.-

ould not confuse the termil trafHc 'regulations whichw o n all our statute books."bam Age-Herald.

PSAIC DISEASEOF SUGAR CANEAgrfcultural Departnanlfiig * e a w r w to /Stamp It Out

OF HEALTHY STOCKDltim Hay Do

Oainaa* ta ( m t Can*I Section* of tin South

—Mutt U«« Pur* Se«4.

br tb* l'n:M EUtu Otmrt.

Btoo.—The. Coitrd Statt* fle-of BEriculture U ,UMUBS »

containing iWffOTal <x>lore.|Jrlllustratln; tbe CJOSEI? disease

tn*r do d«mage

To EradieaU Oluaw. : 'Ttie measore* of control no* bring

Wtra b j thefeds^il ufliborili^; Jo < ^ojirration »lthvtui^ui local-agvnelw* f re preceded by a complete survey o'fthe Suutnern *ctates undertaken to as-«rtattt lh* extent of the mfected.arras.

In b«dly di»ea»«l Belds the onlyretnrdy is to grlmi up nil tti« stalk*.wjr the r»pre*entativ*« or the depart-ownt of agriculture. This incnon, of«wirw, that carefully wlectvd »*e<lcane most b* brought In from oiher re-giattt for rejilantlng. There Is (till an

i abundance of healthy stork In Louisl-: oca and the other rant- utaten, so that! the Industry »hould not seriously nut-: tvr from these attempts at eradication,t Where the jllneasei.ftroftE foothftlii, rogtlltlff"!' This oonsUts of pulling up infect-|rd planls. root, stem and branch, andI throvrlnc them down between the rows.

A* NOD aa ts* pi»nt« wOt rt>ey art W.longer dangerous aa * n w c * of tafce>tloo. In damp r*elons, however. cal«most -be taken to gather np ta«Mplunu asd born tb«m or otberclM 4»-tt'ray thenj.: 1«« while Ijrin* oo th«ground they sprout and to spread UWdi««»K. • . > . . , • • : •

Afiwaranc* or MMale Ols«a««.i

aoce of nuKsr-eane. mosaic Verbally,and this ta one of lit* reanons wny tit*federal authorities a n using a ballet)*witb.;co}«rr4 IJlssrtrathiii*,.-,Wy «U«»»M»Jof ihU buUelln anyone can readily a%certain the exact appctranc* of Infect*ed plants. This disease I* an Infection*chlorosis, similar In many NKpects tothe mosaic illwnne of tobacco, cvcuin-ber, bean, tomato and potato. Scien-tists have come to tbe cvoctusloa thittsome virux Is re«poni>lble for the «p-pearaiiC« »f all new cases,.ahd that theonly source of Infection Is «oiue otherInfected • plant. Experiments In I'orto*ltlro and elsewhere h»v» rep>*a1etlljdemonstrated that cutting* from In-fictwl Rtttlks will Invariably glv« riseto Infected plants. The "ohoot* seemto be mottled as soon an they appear.Therefore, llie uiie of dl*«>a«ed sfntk*fur tilauilng rouUn-ln a

button of tho disease and Insures th»survival of the virus even In the ab-Beoce of secondary Intectlonj.

MOST ELOQUENTSPEECH OF WAR

President of the BuildingTrades.

Was Mad* In th* Dirk Day* of th*;vtf»r When the Cry From Frane*"

W u -Mtn, More Mm"—Neveri Got Into Print

'Canker Stag* of M C U K OIMSS*I Can** of New Caledonia Variety.

In Center I* Healthy.

g cane, which shonld enableI In'tERested In this dl«eas« of cane

£tet]dentlfy It. The momlc-dlwaw of

fiTWOch made during the War. nccorutnKit« Ilemard M. Ilanich, former vhnlr-

^ tb<> war Jmlnsiries ijeaed; .«<•»-got Into prlut. I! wa* made In the

dark days when' the cry from Francen u "Men. more men," and the supplyavailable- In the.draft was runninglow..1 roeneral Crowder," says Mr. Ba-

rurh, "served notice on the board that

al jenrs la-a.number of other,I countries has recently been found

1'ta tbe southern United States. \Vhll»I dheoie Is quite videsprvad In the""" there are—many---djsettFe-fFee

r from which dean seed cane may

uiwalf* disease^ which has donederalili> dainage to the enn? crop

Porto Klco and some other canetrles, IA one of the most seriousdle< that' lias" coofronted caneers In recent' years, and If cn-

men, and the qul-stioni \i;a* «h("fe (heywere to "conie from. "The draft hadtaken out everybody available, nndthe only'way was to take men fromindustry -IIence-lhe-appeal...tOL.,lll«war Industries board, ^

"We put men to work on It, nnd Inclue time a i>iiin_for weeding men out

presented. Among other things Itput the private chauffeur out of ..busl-nesSf. aa well. aa ealcsmen Jind. men Inthe white good* tradi'.-Thls'VouVd'tiotliave been enough, arid the plming. of

4-iEX-KAISER'S YACHT FLYING BRITISH FLAGX

;w«te*BIk;^fta;^OTlt-tert.tS*i4«i!S4«had to bo considered—a rent dilutionof lubor..

' Labor Cilltd In."The scheme wax nil rltht, but when

It mine to us for approval w« found

portarit "had Tieen-' coimulted. I meanthe reprcHentatlves of Inhor. So theywere called In ami th« ncheine, a* wellas the necessity buck of It. Wero rX-plBItied Io"lliein7 ; : ~ T

"A» might be expected, (hero was nlot of opposition to putting women Inthe IIICM'H trade* and thn putting ofthe men thin relenwil Into uniform.

Hall one man >mt still, gnot the slightest Indication of what ha

tho floor. . '"'Mr. Chairman,' he said. 'thin

thing Is very simple. If I am goinghomo Saturday night with my week'spay In my pocket and a guy stepsup and trie* to take it nwny from me,I am H fnol If I keep my left timid oni h ^ m l J « n 9 % 7 ^ o ^ T % t ^ ^ : « l l f imy; right; ' Tlf I:;ilo thnt \he chitfeefare that he will get me and the* wadand get awny clean. ' ' ' '

and go after him'with both hnuds,I'll save the Wad iind get htm.

Us* Both Hands."'Now, Mr, Chairman, that's the

cane here. This Onmin guy la Justaround-tl^ c irneri If- we keep ono-hnnij on- our, wads he'll gut ns uiitj oufwudu,. tni*; it we use both our. Iinndswe'll FII.VI' the wnds and get him. Un-less we get .lilii). If he gets UH, ourwnds or nnythlng elKt* won't he worth

K<) I my,.:-Mr. Chnlrman, Jet\iH\lnki- hotii our hands out of our

ami get after him. Ho far usI'm concerned, you can linvo *vcryman Iniho building irudeH tha4 ciui.p««n 'die ti<«Hiir4.uud Ilia- boys,, rui•ure-,"Wlll witViiM'-up.'

"John II. DolUInt pre«lder.{ of thobuilding trudi'B dopiirtim'Ut, was tliodiap that illd the tnlklngr Ills Illtlospeech settjpi^ the ilucwllbn. and nilthe way wi)J<|eft'cleur\o us to weed-nil the jrirn out itf lndustrx that mlght-

^ OH It Jdlifv tiot, u1>nl -io illltltti1 luliwr, Iiut

The ex knl'wr'H yucbt Meteor, pboiognipbed at Ituenus Aires, on tier. ar>t Eoglnnd carrjins 170 passengers. Tbe yacbt was turned ,o»er to

coiernment ali«...the.anni*^ce..wwi.s.lgn«l.aiid,dellveted,.to tb«line, uhicb U ojang it for reguUr,|pa«^g<»*«rvlc» between_Eng-

land lluenos Aires. '*"'"_~'

»hut wai one of the nastlext sl uatious in the "wur It was the most• l>H]uiut ••pee^h mnil<> during the tvurand one of the fuiist I'fTcctlve "

Qlrl 8ave* Father.Pnr1st.Ky.—When .John-Howard, a

tenant-on-the farin-of-Frederkk-Wal-lls, attempted to pick up one of a litterof pigs In the barnyard he was sav-agely attacked by the mother of thepigs and received a number of seriousInjuries. His daughter came1 to bisrescue and.lassoed tho enraged animaland with the assistance ofi* laboreron the fa^jn carried h«;r.fMjjjrjOjjtfplace of safetyT" " ' ' "

r Disposed Of lif Minnesota, That Parents May Eeon- -

CRIME IS-INCREASINGArmed Attacks Are Quite Corn-

. mon in France.^.•~:.u . . . .-,^...w

- imXiiited to Go% ernor Burnqulst Ind!-' that the high cent of living has; Bandit* Use Auto to Get $28,000 Pay.

S number of families la Mhme-tempiirarlly d!*po*e of tbeir

|io that hushand and wifeJbptb obtain employment and Uve

t>vo nxim*._

Roll DisabledSoldiers.

Paris.—It was a foregone "coiidoiilon.t...tfce...,retnni_pf. jB_t(ate .of.,peace

rpute. coupled with the blga< wotild mean the end of a comparative' foo-1. ha« corcpelled a number j freedom from burglaries and armed

' attacks on persons. Such crimes are| now alarmingly «n tbe Increase.

Tbe other'day an .armed attack wj«made.la the holding up of a tramwayon the outskirts of the city. '

Tlira ttere was a robberjr at Havre.ring fur 44 bable*. scd «oo* of then* ( recalling Bnnnot-Oarnl*r'a method*.

: loaned to tbe Mate Agrtcnl-, T n cnlprlts are. now In the haqds of

en in d!«tress to turn theiri over to charitable institution*,

ding to fc Vf. D ckinson. s^perto-ent of tht- fhttdren'* Home' to-• of illnne«>ta. S(. I"aiiLlocal thl!dr*-ns co=ie has been

•ked and Answered.nan lift himself by. his 1>PI>'-

school for the economies depart- the police, and they bare given theWL .where the arouas l o c x s tra-. naiaes of their t»o coftfeiterotes. Hient« mir ing d«n«»tic sciroce are affair n i briefly as follow*'.

•ighl 'o nrt.it rlj <yre for baKea. i Two railway emplojeeJ were w«li-

Ing dowji the line last Friday morningwith ?28,(KJO as 1>ay_for the engine-drivers and other categoric*. Tbeiwere bbtb- dlsiibfe'd notdiern-onei-hiv-'Ing lout a leg nnd the other an eye inthe war. The robhers, wbo had evi-dently carefully prepared their coup,sprang upon tbe two pay tnessengersJust a* the latter reached a level cross-Ing. To knock( them down and selzothe money i,ag "was the_work of.au ln-

A (fray mojorcar TfflM walUng by thelevel, and the rorihers were far downtbe rond before tbe victim* could.sum-mon help. InfonilntloS. »m» brotrghtthat a gray torpedo^t&dted car tiadstopped before n little public honse intown, and that a man In uniform,hailleft It^carrylng a rase' such aa laby railway pay oQldaln.

T»o new I'orlland cement factoriesare being built at Kawwmkl and (iokr1

kaldo. Japan. »t a « « 'of R.OOO/JOO.

EXECUTIVES OF THE WORLD LABOR MEETING

fMt are. Soiiitt of th* e\ecuti\t-i« of iht> tuUTtiuttoiml. liilH>r mnfrrvtov «t WuMtltiiitoit. i.i'ft to rt -tit. \Uvy at*l_Arthur Svcevtser. uakUtnnt dlrectur public luforiiiHtlKii kprvire: Vr. '• I'unlo llnly; II. It. Huri> r. Ureut llrllulu; 11 II.Qreenwood,.l]. S, A.; Manly (V lludoon. suilHtaut (llrevtor legul dfpnrliunit ot l.i-mue uf Nuilmn.

FAST CRUMBLIMGOnce Proud Seat of "Law West

of Pecos" Is Now Crum- -bling Ruins.

W O E JUDGE BEAN PRESIDEDTown's Name, E«gle'e N«it, Vanish**

From Map and Only Memory R*.

HI* RMlingi."

San Antonio. Tex.—With lt» fniindii<.Uou txMi.WttbbllligJlk"".oJd.nieji'j) U%*.it* flour* MIIOMIIIJ: uiily Kupliu: tiolvt,Its porch roof •horn, of the lull llnner.Ing Uo'nrd. scruggy bli» of what wnsonce nblte paint lunmtnu to the outer

K. iiml ll» door« « t y - lilng*—at I/angtryr Tex,;known as Kugle's Nest—what rviimlns

is succumbliiK Io wind nml ruin.It Is tho once proud mat of tha

"law West of tha I'eco*"— the oldhome and saloon and thron« wheru,not . so maoy.year* ago. Judxe HoyItoan lived and relgne.1 supreme andl«|>enser of Justice ami red eye liquor,ani.dnml.the.wotliMa.Interfere wllh

jbW'&ig2V^^^"'VS'Ilut since Judgo Hewn went away

there has been a great change. Per-haps It Is Just ns well that he 'Va*bedIn1'—n*-JiiHilm»elf-prolHibly would -ex-press it—before thu days wbutt. BO^where In the whole of Texan can lh»truieler.flnd.n_ drop,.tu .drink u.

ln th« "Good Old Days."2 Many humorous nnd ninny sunil-irnglc litorie* regnniltig1 J|ii|j{i»: IUMIIItiuvo l)i'0ti handed down Iiy frlendt•I'DI) relatlvej. iniiny of whom arc Hy-ing In or adjacent to Kan Antonio ty-day. It won In li day when enforcer*of the law were few and far between,and when thu men with tli» i|ti|i'ki'iittrigger finger oiid Iho' HtendU'sl nervuwere motmrrlm of » large portion ofwhat they surveyed,. -

Itean wan JiiKtli'e of the pcarn ofprecinct ^offf'.unir<hi~riiiili1lii(fTiip.W:";'nentuike of the law for hiuidriMl»,.of,miles north, south, ciist nnd west ofhim. Equipped with u copy- of thustntutrs of Ohio of tho vlntngo of IHHT>;a «omi) of fair pluy, and n KtruliK con-viction of What llie >Iaw nhould hi'n i n though It were not n> urlltdidown tii thu houkit, hi) put up hlit.idgu

Hrty Ujnn.nf ti

IMW \ViKt of the I'lcnKi

In. addition to being chief IHOgls-trale- over uvprjlhlug "We«t uf tintI'ccos," Judge Ik-nn condiicteil a rtilrxt-quenching emporium typical o f th«day. Tho saloon wns In (be hall <jfjustice, and from behind the bar ramatba volcaoC outliorllj! hacked by" abrace of perfectly 'good sIx-Kbfloters.

Judge Bean's "Law."- Two Jleilcaii men and -L wommiwalked Into Judge Horn's c<iurf oneday and Informed him that they want-ed a change: tlmt they wanted to*wap' hflprncets. -The Judge majle dll|;_

chnrgtNt enctl of the men $15 nnd nsen bottle* of b>-vr and calleil It

done. i• When H ntnti* oflli'lnl .froiii Austinon n llylnu vl«lt to "KoitU>'» NVM" '•IHII.plalnti) til .Indue lli'tin Hint (it! »««

that dlvnrtvn should In1 pan<<t>tl up'toa • higher ,'n'mrl,- llenii Is 'alleged tohnvp Ti'iorlfilT"-' '•• "Why.' sn> 1 Have lever Iviitti-iUntnyour »ITnlr»I -Tluiu* people • WJihU'd

hRjf1,.-iijL!il.|1nn for,.i.

pu'fprdy 'liappy, tin' noluuly 'roundhen" him coiiiplaliml. You i!" on lim-kIo Austin mr IIIIIMUI' your iimrt* llliv>

Then lh<rt> wns Judgp III'IHI'B fn-liious dei'lMlon In tin* i'iii*i> of a IIMIIIhelng tried for kllllnit- n I'lilimiiinii.

after a direfuluse *iaruf«'i"or tmio; i

l-Baby Has a Rival -

I.ojitltiti.—- Ttuit iiwinil babyKfrn In H^tiii-rluinl Inn a rivalIn Iliilniiii-r'niltli. a Luiidun »ul>-uili. Tt»> i;i]Kllxh Infnntwplghnt uno pimiiit nnd « Imlf"Inn luirn. n«i IIITH' IIKIII'I longnnd In li.-inl WIII the olri' of nniiindiirlii nriiiit,'!'. i t i-oiild lie Inttii( !itjrm>*N hiitid mill mi1* fed forihv' (lr»i f|irtMlulit.frym n foiiiU-

. . i t , . i ) , flr,. ..'""'<fTii>"i1fi1Vd nViir-'ini'fnirold mid IH'IIT hue hrt-h ill ex-i-vpt for nil ort'itidoliitl fold.

I'lilimini'ii; tbprefori'. thenj WIIH I'H>III-Hm to do but'nli'unu Iho purly uhadill tint l.lllliiu'.- J,lkeHlH»t On* Morjp- of tin* jiulii**'*nu'thod of divpn.liiu of tlm ?">iv Intnoncy found In lh** porlinin of n drrtdClilnniiiun, A «!«tdiootiT IIUO hmlhceii found ou him. n«i tlm Juili;i> fliti'ttflu> di'ii'iiHi'd t.'ill fur currying u di'u

Harems Yield YoungBoys and Girls Sold Into Captiv-

ity Being Rescued.

Under Allied Rule Turk* Are on GoodDehavlor ind Kurde Are

New York.—How M»,IK«> *'r-|nore Ar'-ni^iiUiHRiid 8yrlH»-vblMrvu, »iol«m IiyTurku Mini KiiriN IUMI noli! Into hiiri'inxor Arab itiH'nnipiiientii. are helng rrn-ctjptffronr cnpjlvlrjron'l WOITP throi|glrlhi> pfformof tho nciirKnsl rullif, nowtlmt the neiir Kant Is-iimli-r allli*l rule,IH told by lt<rv. V.. '•>. ,liik'<), »ha 1I,IHJtiBt riilurncd from'western Aslii.

"It is no iiui'oiiiiiioii sight In Aleppo,Hyrliii" CHJH Mr. Jngo, "<» »"» *cnnmof ••hlldren liiouglil III by Hut in'iinh-liiKt'iirtli-H. - TliiM'hlldri'iiiin'nit dirty,rnKK'Ml mid Hlurvlng.-.iiml i"a*y..oftlii'in hnvi- bri'ii tattooed by Ihelr

"Ilrukvii 1 eartid .mothitrsIITH pud" mirinil down the llitri-Nc-iicd ho|.lng to see their Mm oriliiuglitp'r' uf brother, HloleiM'hrui' orfour years ago. Jinny tlmi-sTtlieru nr»happy reunioiix, but oftixAhe ijHi'it in

» 4^4- • - * . •«• •* •

found all to be of the nnmit ,mlnd, 4

Refuses to Profiteer'Aim rli-aV most p tuarkabln

Inndlord lias butt dlxovi-rirl atAkron, Ohio. 11" Is n man whonot only will not profiteer, butduring Hie last nix years ha* notIncreased the rent* >n . his ten-ants nt "ail. He I* renting nixmodern five-room frame dwell-ing* today at the mime'prlrnwhich he charged the first yearb)s tenants moved In. Thetiouwfi rant »t 130 a month.Other similar house* here artirenting at WO and $75 a month.-

In vain, mid linikriilii'iirtcd uiotlicr*Ki'em , to di'spuir of ever .swing theirJIIVPII ones a'Kalli." • '

Work siiitit tliti (iiuiitry was rewiieiifrom lint faitutlcal diiitilnatlon uf thoTurku ha* been thu ri'mvi-ry of thinon l e n r f i l l i l r r m F r i i n i pnrtntnniidfrlendt nil Infurmutlou-pouilhlii about.fhn XulxKlnit OIU>H \\n* nlilnlin-d nnd-Oil*- WHif-fflft«Ml- down- fttnl luriieil ovrr-to Hit- llrlllMi loianiaiidiilit of llu> dls-trli'l, wli'i, In every Irixtnnri* whertT tintInforittiitlnit trn". drflrd.tn, hrti wucrrtHl.I'd.Ill rciiiverllig tho stolen illlldrill,Among tlit«; rijwuml • uri? inaiiy ynuiiilt.glrlft n|ioHi> fnle In tho. hureiHN baahi'i'li too.ti'rrlhli' Io divtrrllil';

Under HIM llrltNh n«liiiM In - Ar-mi'iiln nnd Hint of the t'ri'iirh lirHyrl«hM

-(hi* Turkit-iiiro on their good hidinvlor.and In Ituiny I'IIKI'N fjre i'o.o|irrrif!l)ftwith thu ni'iir Kiist ri'lli'f workrix.ICvcii tlii- lirittnl Kurd*, lung (In- ,ip>lirntmjcn v! 'Mitt Anm!tj\ai\H. im"' ((Uli't,hut -tlioKfr-'who-know-. Hjr'ui IIPHI t»-ll'i'ye thry uro only uiiltliig fur Ihowlilidrnwnl of tin' ullli'd fiiri'i'" fur mi-otljiT iirgy of-iniirdi'r nnd pIlltiKu iliumtin; uiiolTi>ndlrig ChrWtlriiiii,

NOME LOSES ITS LAST PAPER

-H

N«ar.Mt Thle WinterWill Be 1*00 Mile*

Von-ic Alnika —Irnppim mlnennnd iiili'ir* <>f thu fur ti'irthw<'»t<'mcurrier of'th«> fotitliicfit who for yearslinvn looki'd to Nolixi for Ihelr new»of HIM diitslilit world, will receive nitrt'Kidnr new*.report Hils wlnl'-r, nn thoNugget...Mnnie'*-<iii]x..ncwt(m bee., has.rti'cldeil to <nin)inn<I piihjlcution. Pair-hatikH Is llio source of m-w» for till*.part uf thii country. '

Nome, oin-e OIIM of the largest goldenrnpn of thn North, at onn Hnin min-portpd nevernl .tiewspapeni. This yrar«o trinny pe"pl" are lenvlng on th«» la»ty i Hint a newfiliaper would not

BOSNIA IS VERY HARD HITSuffers Greatly in the Wake of

the War.

Factorlc* and Rallnisd* Hurt by Up-set—Food and Clothes Cost

HIBh. ._ . _„_

finrajevo. Bospla.—Bosnia mi»y lie*, long 41 mnrecovtrlng from, tbe effectsof the war.

Factory production Is almost af~astandstill, railroad transportation IsIrregular anil uncertoln, stor*a «rehare of stock*. Irnjiorw are much re-duced, clothing end food are high Inprice, nnd there' In much Idlenessamong the people. The crops thisyear, however, nre auundnirund there1* sufficient totki to inert nil nenls.

Tbe fiennan and Hungarian signsitblrh formerly appeared alioje thostore window* hove given plqce toplacard* In Serbian, and SnrnJ«i-o has

tnkpn on quite Ihe nppenranci' of nHerMiin town. TIIB Herblan Ihliabltantsare of coiiriu* quKe content with thepeigrade gbyeirnijienti tVo't th«<j«rtuim*i:

'Austrian* and Turks are not quite sonappy. . , '"*•*""

.Xhcie-Ia. fl disposition, hiiwever, taccept conditions as they are ami'fyhop« for a renurnptlon of the romini'r-dal nctlvlty and advantage* which the'people, enjoyed" i t liie" TiiiiiiiS of "TheAustrian*. Ttic friends of the Herbsand Jugo-Nlav* hope that with time theSerbian government will he able tomutch the .prosperity and pr»gr<-«*which the Austrlnns and German*brought to the country.

Among the population America en-Joy* great preotlge and respect. TillsIs largely due to the .timely helpbrought to. the country by the Amerl-'can H«l Cr<«» and tbe United' Stutrafood administration. Until tbe arrlr-•1 of these relief ugeucies

had nevnr before appeared In lionnlaIn any - conslilerubl* number.

Thf! pres«-n<'o of thit officers of tbe •lied Cro«s nnd the .-food ndmlnlstrs-tlon has had n apU-ndlil moral nnd i'dii-catlonal. effect ninong t(io Hoxnlnni.Much of-t'tr[f ranror and linrnh feeling

•inoVrtt;-"'nnA thrmigh itie work nf tSesivAmerlcanr the larger part-of the peo>pl« now look upon tbn United State*as a friend, nut a* a foe. '

Money Scattered About Town,

Kid and %'/) hills wn» found scatterednr<«md the mrcet* of the city. J. A.nnnnloiri of the Farmers' Hqulty waswalking down one of tho main streetswith another man when he npled ft$10 batik note. A short distance fur-ther lip found a $20 bank t-ote." Short-ly after the report on this r!nd severalmnchers a tumbled on some of tbe cov/cted bank fiotes. AM a result of the-,nnd, a lorn) crowd of treasure seek- •er* flockeil to (he street. No on*seems to know where.tbe maney>atpi»

he question answers Itwleacher, that tau me but."

•J iaS... &*1&SS.

V. *•

Page 8: NEED ^ O F CASH •. *r TO RUN JERSEY · Ing np the harden of taxation, Oqt of the larger Items of retenue la thai from collateral Inheritance taxes un-der the law which Governor

• ll ,

-v, -> - *«• *

*2&/£WBithe one whiohWo cut giveengine and 70U.Farther

EafMore Breatl

Special School John A. B d w a n U . . . : ; . : . ; : - " *Wifrtr D u n • • • > - • • • • . . . . . .

H. a « c k « r . . . . ! f • " " • " • ; . . . . . 1 1 »|

, CHAMCOAL,0 0 0 OACES

•-•V i "'I

< * • '

i\-> • !

at 8 o'clock P. Mi, in the

aEVELAND SCTOOLat which meeting the following proposition win'be subttntted-

t h r i « the Board of Education to purchaseVJZJ^J condemn lote upon which tfl_ft«ctschool buildings as occasion may require, the sug-qested sites being located as follows: >Orange Avenue Site Cost not to exceed $ 6 , 8 0 0

Gr

of theiJalof the»;,„„Tx£^Z^EHThence along the lino of Paoino Avonue 8.M-67.80 B

SttZT ^ t 0 th8 « * • "-!„ of ?f

bere the said North

be division-oifio ovenne.

17

Iti

4t7

4 t60

tiutUT3111JUS

John Ciawth*Uonrjr arifflth , ----Adam U Wannsa *&*>*• W. Holier. .."'.'"'" t/i«..-.J«ae» Pmn .«• J. n»tuirerui :.":::::::.*"

BUaiMlirtJuilUlHbJolm A. Andenra •

SW5f«^"::::::::::::::':":::":::::

s TS

14 SI IJ

tooVVe

'7Ii4»B"l??9 8 fo8t to tbe place of Beginning. .41 to 64 inolushe on the above mentioned map, in

1st:

ifi.li

14 91191

IS!:

-

End FJace Site^ ^

not to exceed $14,000

\

I

Tulipt h ° r ° a r l i D° ° f 8ftld lot" ln •

t L ° ° f 8l>rUC6 8trC0t ij?

- - * - . ^e .aid U,e „

w i ^ direoUo»443 feet

M-teri, direeUon 421.8 feet to the line of

* « - ^ d J ^ « - ^ W to the line of

* * • * « « t l * «7 feet to the place of

Centennial Avenue Site boat not to exceed $6 ,000

y i '

'(/•

^ ^ b l i V p U » 0 . k . g i t o i o e .

Total cost not to exceed $26,800

GEQRGE A. WATSON^

i~>

OilHeateraGas HeatersCoal Stoves

A. a.

14 S!lt.SS

zLss.CollKtor.

.-^»t!A l l . NOW ON SALE

«tMkIUtttat. % W «

BariUs Va4(ey FarmsCertified Milk

QUIET

Cranford DairyPhone 197

family houseMH.x 137 feet

i-lamily bouB(73 feet. Barn

rl.J.

feniVfC^*' -;'»'.*