z^stzs - digifind-it. · pdf filemoore was re-appointed building in- ... contractors conformed...

10
z^stzs VOL. XXIIIKQ. 47 CRANFORD, N.//., THURSDAY, JANUARY 0, 1921 THRBB CBNTS Begfo^Saver-Do it Systematically ' —and you are on the road tosuccess ;~ ' \ Ah Recount lit Our "Samite fuml ^ 1$ the simplest method of saving Vet devised. ' Y o u make srnair weekly de- posits o^er a period of fifty /wedks^ drawing the Jotal together/With the accumulated interest at the end of; time named. . / ^ . \ . , --usr- .-•v . Open anAccount Next Pay Day N ••- r v ; ••; •.•-.-".V"' - S " y . . '" " "'" ' •"', " - K - ' - \: "~\ Make It YOUR doorway to success " v - < ; / - ' ' : ^anfcard / /TVust Company SfFOKD,-';N. J . •• V—^-.-;\ Tt * r^ 'i. . -•- fit •_^ : cumm EVENTS - ... . _ J .. . / ' » . . ' ' ' • • „ ,. " . '-• _• i The^fifst of a series of six lectures by DR. TtV'ir.ribkAJM: STARR •: ' " . / ' ' ' ! ' ^ ' ' . ' " - - . ' " Thursday, January 13, at 4 P. M. CHAPEL •>•/ •£ W. f. QBAT, Psis'* " ' Established 1897 Funeral Directors and Embalmers OANfORD Avenue Telephone tti NEW YORK OfrtCE 14 Cast 39th Street ' Telephone Manny HU1 8341 WCStflELD 258 E. Broad Street Telephone' 1« . • R^B^^mm^y^E ,^ 3 -E==a55'aB=55 TownshipCommittee Organizes. Cranford Towoahlp Oommittee or- ganized for 1931 last Saturday. January 1, practically the tOaeaa it was in 1930. «eept as to Engineer, ielecUon for thl* appointment not yet baring been de» cided. Mayor ' Roach - wa* again elected chairman unanimously and hit committee appointments were the same a* for 1920, vlt: Police.—Memirs. Sims and Everett. Pire.—Mettrs. Evereet aud 8lmt. Roads and Sewew.—Messrs. Colllni and Aldrich. c. - Metara. .Aidtich.^nd Everett. 'Finanoe.— Mossrs. Aldrich and Col- Bnildlngn.—MessrsT Collins. Aldricb and Sims, C. W. Bnrtia was reappointed Treas- orerind Custodian' of School Money.at the same salary as laat.^ear, Attorney Austin was reappointed at a salary of 900O per year, and Elmer L. Moore was re-appointed Building In- spector; salary to be fixed at next meeting. Tbo Engineer appointment was -not made, %be committee having many/ applications to look over. These ha; been coining in fait Bince Mpsheriannoancod^Ae would nol reappointment horo. 'p. E. W. Chambers was make Sinking Fdrift Commissioner for 8 years. On reccmmetidation of Commissioner Sims the officers and mon of the Polioo " arttaent were reappointed, salaries e named at the-n'eit meeting, recommendation of Commissioner >tt, tho ofllcers and men of the Fire Department' were reappointed at Venire Shorlpairing , - "F. DiFABI0i Proprietor'. V&SHOES REPAIRED . . WHILE YOU WAIT BEST riATERIALS USED SAtiSFACTIOr^flUARANTEEp \ , Tel. 118-J , .'' • 11 UNION.AVTB.... -6RANFOBD. N.J. ; '• ard L(jrhbeiT& Supply Co jr and BuUding Materials i. 94 HIGH STREET "7^: —^ i CRAIMFORD, N. J; '• ? H5cl Pareons To Move Furniture * i * , ' ' i . ' , —. •• - ' . - . - . ' . ' '•» as the ret«rt- J a;'cpm|)etitor made, to a complaint for BOrvioes. < . . renderei-rrneither can wo—-; "^ ' V but .we pan oiid do, furnish competent^oxperieDced, po- lite, sober employees, together with up-to-the-minute equip- ! ment. 17-19 Prospect Street ackerj^and Shippers ' "wESTPIELD. N. J. the as for last year. Regular meeting nights Were fixed for tho first and tbirif Wednesdays of eaob month at 8.8pVdock. \ Mayor Roach's message was in the form of an address:'To the taxpayers 6f Oranford, 1 irasa, it In whi( ich ; he gave a iwrfma of thaworkT)f Tthe Township Optnmlfiij ^ / f "* "I feel that it is my official duty to report to tba taxpayers of oar Township the Work done; by your gbyeriiiiig body, and in this connection I refer to the separate reports of the chairmen of the Police, Fire, Koad, Shade-Trees and Light .Committees, which speak for hemselves. ' - In addition I wish to .call yonr atten- tion to tho road Improvementa in Cran fojd for. which your Committee tbjs year has given out contracts, and some of toe work baa. already been com> pleted on Retford avenne, North Lebigb avenue, Broad street and Pleasure Way. For Retford Avenue a central park-. way was decided on, and I am 'glad to tate that not only the citizens of Ret- lord avenne but those from other parts >f the town commented on this wopder» !al improvement.. Of coarse we wish Jo'point out (6 yon that the road work D (be gUests 'named above was oarried mt on the petition of property owners on these streets. You will recall that our Committee'bad planned various road improvements, but owing to some objections to, so extensive a program, ii waa decided at this time to abandon he ideal The Chairman of your. Koad Committee, Mr. D. C..N. Collins, has pointed out', from -tittle; to time that' Cranford, in order to keep abreast with •ther I owns in our vicinity, must keep ner roads up und alHH,continue building new roads, and I may mention the Committee has still before them the one paramount thing' tdrVPranford, that is .he undergrade crossing, and we bopd Whether you plan to dficorate one room or your ctttire house and are in doubt about materials to be used, color combinations, etc., if you will call on VOLwe will gladly gwe^ you helpful suggestions^^and advice. XL. ^ P&» p ^ , h r^ tor both the wholesale aind retail trade, is one of the largest carried in this section lot the. j»ate. ' BLAKESLEE fi Avenue, East Tel. 102 t : term of office conducted affairs In a fair and impartial manner, and your com- mittee has, appointed as Recorder to till this 'offico, Mr. C. Pitman Buckley, Police Oommlssloner Sims has devoted a reatffeal of time to building up this eportment » ;, * ' •••• We 'vhaTo improved the efficiency of the tire department by adding an auto- mobile American LaFrance fire engine and we are working with the Schedule Rating Office.to reduce the fire rates in Cranford la view of this additional equipment, wbiob will be a great saving to the property owners on their Hra insurance premiums. It Is our lnten- thaTsmyTalafies~aa~Tor~H)ZO."except tlonTQ add a motor Hook and Ladder, Chief Tuoison is give his entire time to ^B 3 ^ 116 equipment we feel WaTonf the Department work, hia salary to bo W.800 per-year. —;>-'. The bonds faf the Collectof and Treas- urer were fixed at (30,000 and 18,000; . . we feel TOaT .__ town will be well protected to far at fire apparatus Is concerned.. We have also installed a new switchboard' in connection with our fire alarm system and this is so divided that In casa any of the wires in a certain section of the town are out of order It will only affect that section. We expect to install concrete benches in our parks and also arrange for better lighting in some sections. We are working with the Public 8ervice Bloc* trio Company on a plan for a newsys- tem of lighting, and very likely we will reptaufltbe.83 candJepowerlight*that nnt jaovf ID j tho uttertn <«|?K 60 ennrita powur. ' . f • * According to the censut taken, the population of. Union County is over 300,000, and in 'view of this steps have been taken to haro a County Park Com- mission appointed in order that the plans drawn up for the Memorial Park tbiouga Union County may be realized through the co-operation of our Civic B o a r d . " - - ••••----••- < ----- •-•,-— Regarding the band concerts wblcb we had this year, wo have received both favorable and unfavorable comments, and your committee has not decided wbetbpr or not. tiMs will be continued. Oar Building Department has been In charge of Mr. Elinor Moore /and he baa devoted ' whether' or no$ these will be continued. : Our building department has bean-in charge of Mr. Elmer Moore and he has uevoted ,a great deal of time to seeing- contractors conformed ;. strictly to the,building code, and we feel )bls department is a great asset to our town. It is with deep regret we • have learned - from our . Township Eqgl> neor, Mr. Edward Mosber, vtei will, dot be a candidate for. reelection this year and I.otlab to express the appre^ ciatlon of the' Committee for' past tir- vicesrendered. His.record speaks,'for, tself. ' ' . .-..>. J •• I may also- mention that the eo-oper ;lon hv the Cranford Civic organizatiobs be Villas* Improvement - Association, ;he Business Men's i'Association and ither'orgasizatloosdnring the year npjy ndtn, has been very gratifying, and at his tim.e I wiat) to thank the members in the .near future to have sokno very of the -offlciaPSody and tbelr subordi- valuable information to report. Owing to the high cost of material, labor, etc., the Board of Freeholders has not yet started work on South avenue, taken over by them as a county road,'arid' which it is the intention of yonr Com- mittee to widen oueach side of the road by at least three feet. .- ' , The Committee appointed, consisting of Messrs. J. W/Hejni, S, B. Droeecher ariff 3. Er"Warner, tdrcdnferwltn~tHe Plainfleld Water Company and subsid- iary companies regarding the water situation of Union County, have held nameroua confereneea-with the qmcjQlft of those companies; but np to the pres- ent time no concrete plan bus- been worked ont. -.y " In reference to a trunk line sewer, the citizens must realise tbis Is one Of the necessary improvements for Cran- ford, but owing to .the Uigh cott .of material, labor, etc^ the varions ; towns whlob are joining PS in_ this imprb»o« ment, have decided for the present to wait for a reduction in.prices; ' . ' ,. During the current year ,WB have prepared coordinate grade m»ps of the principal-highways in Qraflford and no donbt tbese tyill be of great beneflt^a i I th t donbt tbes y g our community In the years to come. -Your Committee feels that our police department has measured up to the standard of any town or city.in our locality, and the members of this de- partment are deserving of much credit for the work' done by them. The -new Gamewell signal system which we have installed.at headquarters is of great value to our community and it is our intention next .year to install the recall bell in different sections of .our town, and we shall also from year to year install new. call, boxes in the outlying secti&ns of the town. During tbis year the police department lost one of Its most valued officers in the death of Judge W. R. Batchelder who during his nates for the assistance afforded me this year." ' " ' Smith Crane&Trolley Co. Are now bnilding Cranes and Trolleys from M to 8 tori capacity. : SPECIAL JlACHjNES BUH-T. Board of Organization. Following the organization meeting Of 4he Township Committee Saturday morning the Board of Health met and organized for 1021, alt officer* being the tame for 1921, vix.: Prealdent. John O. Roach, and Secretary and Health Iu- •pwstor, Alfred H. Miller. '• The fourth Wednesday night of each month was fixed as the regular meeting night. Elmer L. Moore was named Assistant Health Inapector and Plumbing Inspec- tor and tho fumigation Contract with *h«rGray-Burlart3d. was renewed at »200 per year. The only other business done was receiving the Secretary's statistcal report for 19?0, which was as follows: •—"" ' Total number of complaints of unsan- itary' conditions rtceived for the past year 65. All of which'Sirero invosti- gated and tho nuisanco abated, On 2 complaints it wan found there was no Snuse for action, and 17 were summoned before the Police Judge and fined, a genoral inspections of all cellars of the basineas section were made and in a number of casertha ownen were noti- fied to remedy conditions. 80 rear yard inspection* were- made and owners cleaned same when notified. 78 Plumb- er* permits were l u u s d a n d l l master plambers llcensos were iaaued. 80 pert mlu to keep fowls, 8 for goats. 12 fur twine, for horses and 2 for cowt were issued. , 85 samples' of milk and cream wero purchased from iba milk dealers selling milk In tho Township andabalyzed tii to Iterate, tolids and bacteria oonnt per c. a Not a sample was found that did not comply with the standard as lot by the Board of Health—SStamplcs ofico ereaa was taken for analysis and tliu result* show a vast improvement luthe grade of cream sold. , The number of contagious dlseawa reported is as follows; Meaile* 17ft, plphtberla 20. whooping cough 2», chicken pox 81, mumps 4, acai lot fever 16, tuborcaloai* 0, erysipelas si; pneu- mpnia '37, inflaenxa 10, Kdppe 170, spinal meningitis, \, Deaths from con- tagious disease wore a* follows: Diph- theria 1, tplnal meningitis 1, pneninoi . nia 6, tabercnlosls 4. Number or death* from all OHQMB 00, marriage* B4 and births 62. S-' ~y- i Itw f Ar^t.- $4,000 Being sp^nt by the management of the Cranford Tneatre Q. Okin & Son) \ for repairs, decorations, etc. Vour Comfort, Safety and Enjoyment Assured ; W I L L REOPEN FRIDAY, JANUARY ^ Factory, 833-235 Locust Avenue, GARWOOD, N. J. ••'., -. • Toledhono 788-J Pfiofle376-W We faav.e added 12 new rooms to j iarge. qunrtera, and ca can care for your good*in a first-. ,nner. * * Bates on application. J Robbins & Allison MOVING PACKING 8TORA0E and SHIPPBSa 213-215 B. Soutb Avenue FOR RENT f3/>.00 to 160.00. from Houses as; I6w a8~t350cT and aaliigb aa $100,000. - LQTS Consult UB/OB to lQciitioft if you"intend to build. ~ "- Desirable building sites at bargain priors. illiNSURAIMCE Representing-none but the—best—oompanies a doing /a large bnainoBS in this ' line,—wa are a position to cover anything insurable. [ < .• •' ' - ' _ . N - * : Courteous and efficient Borneo. Realty and Insurance Department Cranford Trust Go. ^ ' CRANFORD, N. J^ -\ .' P. M. LENZ Automobile Painting I 109South Avenue, WeatT Telephone Connection. , JOHN T. LGWERY _. Plumbing and ; Heating; Contractor 816 N. Lehigb Avtv ' Cranford, N. J. ••;] 4 >

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Page 1: z^stzs - digifind-it. · PDF fileMoore was re-appointed Building In- ... contractors conformed ; ... plambers llcensos were iaaued. 80 pert mlu to keep fowls, 8 for goats. 12 fur

z^stzs

VOL. XXIIIKQ. 47 CRANFORD, N.//., THURSDAY, JANUARY 0, 1921 THRBB CBNTS

Begfo^Saver-Do it Systematically '—and you are on the road to success

;~' \ Ah Recountlit Our "Samite fuml ^

1$ the simplest method of saving Vetdevised. 'You make srnair weekly de-posits o^er a period of fifty /wedks^drawing the Jotal together/With theaccumulated interest at the end of;

time named. . / ^ . \

. , --usr- .-• v.Open an Account Next Pay Day N

••- r v ; ••; • . • - . - " . V " ' - S " y . . • '" " "'" ' •" ' , " - K - ' - \: "~\

Make It YOUR doorway to success "

v - • < ; • • • • • • / - • • ' • • • • • ' • :

^anfcard//TVust CompanySfFOKD,-';N. J . •• V — ^ - . - ; \

T t • * r ^ ' i . . -•- fit •_^ :

cumm EVENTS- . . . . _ J .. . / ' • • » . • • . ' ' ' • • „ ,. " . ' - • _•

i The fifst of a series of six lectures byD R . TtV'ir.ribkAJM: S T A R R

• : ' " . / ' ' • • • • ' ! ' ^ • ' • ' . ' " - - . ' "

Thursday, January 13, at 4 P. M.CHAPEL•>•/

•£W. f. QBAT, Psis'*

" ' Established 1897

Funeral Directors and EmbalmersOANfORD

AvenueTelephone tti

NEW YORK OfrtCE14 Cast 39th Street

' TelephoneManny HU1 8341

WCStflELD258 E. Broad Street

Telephone' 1« . •

R^B^^mm^y^E

,^3-E==a55'aB=55

TownshipCommittee Organizes.Cranford Towoahlp Oommittee or-

ganized for 1931 last Saturday. January1, practically the tOaeaa it was in 1930.« e e p t as to Engineer, ielecUon for thl*appointment not yet baring been de»cided. Mayor ' Roach - wa* againelected chairman unanimously and hitcommittee appointments were the samea* for 1920, v l t :

Police.—Memirs. Sims and Everett.Pire.—Mettrs. Evereet aud 8lmt.Roads and Sewew.—Messrs. Colllni

and Aldrich.c. - Metara. .Aidtich.^nd

Everett.'Finanoe.— Mossrs. Aldrich and Col-

Bnildlngn.—MessrsT Collins. Aldricband Sims,

C. W. Bnrtia was reappointed Treas-orerind Custodian' of School Money.atthe same salary as laat.^ear,

Attorney Austin was reappointed at asalary of 900O per year, and Elmer L.Moore was re-appointed Building In-spector; salary to be fixed at nextmeeting.

Tbo Engineer appointment was -notmade, %be committee having many/applications to look over. These ha;been coining in fait BinceMpsheriannoancod^Ae would nolreappointment horo.

' p . E. W. Chambers was make SinkingFdrift Commissioner for 8 years.

On reccmmetidation of CommissionerSims the officers and mon of the Polioo" arttaent were reappointed, salaries

e named at the-n'eit meeting,recommendation of Commissioner>tt, tho ofllcers and men of the

Fire Department' were reappointed at

Venire Shorlpairing, - "F. DiFABI0i Proprietor'.

V&SHOES REPAIRED .

. WHILE YOU WAITBEST riATERIALS USED

SAtiSFACTIOr^flUARANTEEp

\ , Tel. 118-J , .'' •11 UNION.AVTB....-6RANFOBD. N.J.

• • ; ' •

ard L(jrhbeiT& Supply Cojr and BuUding Materials i .

9 4 HIGH STREET "7^: — ^ i CRAIMFORD, N. J; '•

?H5cl Pareons To Move Furniture* i * • , • • ' • ' i . ' • • , — . • • • • • - ' • . - . - . „ ' . ' •

'•» as the ret«rt-Ja;'cpm|)etitor made, to a complaint for BOrvioes.• <. . renderei-rrneither can wo—-;

" ^ ' V but .we pan oiid do, furnishcompetent^oxperieDced, po-lite, sober employees, togetherwith up-to-the-minute equip-

! ment.

17-19 Prospect Street

ackerj^and Shippers ' "wESTPIELD. N. J.

the as for last year. Regularmeeting nights Were fixed for tho firstand tbirif Wednesdays of eaob month at8.8pVdock. • \

Mayor Roach's message was in theform of an address:'To the taxpayers6f Oranford,1

irasa, i tIn whi(ich ; he gave a

iwrfma of thaworkT)f Tthe TownshipO p t n m l f i i j ^ / f "*

"I feel that it is my official duty toreport to tba taxpayers of oar Townshipthe Work done; by your gbyeriiiiig body,and in this connection I refer to theseparate reports of the chairmen of thePolice, Fire, Koad, Shade-Trees andLight .Committees, which speak forhemselves. '- In addition I wish to .call yonr atten-

tion to tho road Improvementa in Cranfojd for. which your Committee tbjsyear has given out contracts, and someof toe work baa. already been com>pleted on Retford avenne, North Lebigbavenue, Broad street and Pleasure Way.

For Retford Avenue a central park-.way was decided on, and I am 'glad totate that not only the citizens of Ret-lord avenne but those from other parts>f the town commented on this wopder»!al improvement.. Of coarse we wishJo 'point out (6 yon that the road workD (be gUests 'named above was oarriedmt on the petition of property owners

on these streets. You will recall thatour Committee'bad planned various

road improvements, but owing to someobjections to, so extensive a program, iiwaa decided at this time to abandonhe ideal The Chairman of your. Koad

Committee, Mr. D. C..N. Collins, haspointed out', from -tittle; to time that'Cranford, in order to keep abreast with•ther I owns in our vicinity, must keep

ner roads up und alHH,continue buildingnew roads, and I may mention theCommittee has still before them the oneparamount thing' tdrVPranford, that is.he undergrade crossing, and we bopd

— Whether you plan to dficorate one room or your ctttire house andare in doubt about materials to be used, color combinations, etc., if youwill call on VOLwe will gladly gwe you helpful suggestions and advice.

XL. ^ P & » p ^ , h r ^tor both the wholesale aind retail trade, is one of the largest carried inthis section lot the. j»ate. '

BLAKESLEEfi Avenue, East Tel. 102

t :A

term of office conducted affairs In a fairand impartial manner, and your com-mittee has, appointed as Recorder to tillthis 'offico, Mr. C. Pitman Buckley,Police Oommlssloner Sims has devoted a

reatffeal of time to building up thiseportment » ;, * ' ••••We 'vhaTo improved the efficiency of

the tire department by adding an auto-mobile American LaFrance fire engineand we are working with the ScheduleRating Office.to reduce the fire rates inCranford la view of this additionalequipment, wbiob will be a great savingto the property owners on their Hrainsurance premiums. It Is our lnten-

thaTsmyTalafies~aa~Tor~H)ZO."except tlonTQ add a motor Hook and Ladder,Chief Tuoison is give his entire time to ^ B 3 ^ 1 1 6 equipment we feel WaTonfthe Department work, hia salary to boW.800 per-year. —;>-'.

The bonds faf the Collectof and Treas-urer were fixed at (30,000 and 18,000;

. . we feel TOaT .__town will be well protected to far atfire apparatus Is concerned.. We havealso installed a new switchboard' inconnection with our fire alarm systemand this is so divided that In casa anyof the wires in a certain section of thetown are out of order It will only affectthat section.

We expect to install concrete benchesin our parks and also arrange for betterlighting in some sections. We areworking with the Public 8ervice Bloc*trio Company on a plan for a new sys-tem of lighting, and very likely we willreptaufltbe.83 candJepowerlight*thatnnt jaovf ID j tho uttertn <«|?K 60 ennritapowur. ' . f • *

According to the censut taken, thepopulation of. Union County is over300,000, and in 'view of this steps havebeen taken to haro a County Park Com-mission appointed in order that theplans drawn up for the Memorial Parktbiouga Union County may be realizedthrough the co-operation of our CivicB o a r d . " - - ••••----••- < ----- •-•,-— •

Regarding the band concerts wblcbwe had this year, wo have received bothfavorable and unfavorable comments,and your committee has not decidedwbetbpr or not. tiMs will be continued.

Oar Building Department has been Incharge of Mr. Elinor Moore /and he baadevoted ' whether' or no$ these will becontinued.: Our building department has bean-in

charge of Mr. Elmer Moore and he hasuevoted ,a great deal of time to seeing-contractors conformed ;. strictly • tothe,building code, and we feel )blsdepartment is a great asset to our town.

It is with deep regret we • havelearned - from our . Township Eqgl>neor, Mr. Edward Mosber, vtei will,dot be a candidate for. reelection thisyear and I.otlab to express the appre^ciatlon of the' Committee for' past tir-vicesrendered. His.record speaks,'for,tself. ' ' . . - . . > . J ••

I may also- mention that the eo-oper;lon hv the Cranford Civic organizatiobsbe Villas* Improvement - Association,;he Business Men's i'Association andither'orgasizatloosdnring the year npjyndtn, has been very gratifying, and athis tim.e I wiat) to thank the members

in the .near future to have sokno very of the -offlciaPSody and tbelr subordi-valuable information to report. Owingto the high cost of material, labor, etc.,the Board of Freeholders has not yetstarted work on South avenue, takenover by them as a county road,'arid'which it is the intention of yonr Com-mittee to widen ou each side of the roadby at least three feet. .- ', The Committee appointed, consisting

of Messrs. J. W/Hejni, S, B. Droeecherariff 3. Er"Warner, tdrcdnferwltn~tHePlainfleld Water Company and subsid-iary companies regarding the watersituation of Union County, have heldnameroua confereneea-with the qmcjQlftof those companies; but np to the pres-ent time no concrete plan bus- beenworked ont. - .y •" In reference to a trunk line sewer,the citizens must realise tbis Is one Ofthe necessary improvements for Cran-ford, but owing to .the Uigh cott .ofmaterial, labor, etc^ the varions ;townswhlob are joining PS in_ this imprb»o«ment, have decided for the present towait for a reduction in.prices; ' . ',. During the current year ,WB haveprepared co ordinate grade m»ps of theprincipal-highways in Qraflford and nodonbt tbese tyill be of great beneflt^a

i I th tdonbt tbes y gour community In the years to come.

-Your Committee feels that our policedepartment has measured up to thestandard of any town or city.in ourlocality, and the members of this de-partment are deserving of much creditfor the work' done by them. The -newGamewell signal system which we haveinstalled.at headquarters is of greatvalue to our community and it is ourintention next .year to install the recallbell in different sections of .our town,and we shall also from year to yearinstall new. call, boxes in the outlyingsecti&ns of the town. During tbis yearthe police department lost one of Itsmost valued officers in the death ofJudge W. R. Batchelder who during his

nates for the assistance afforded me thisyear." ' " '

Smith Crane&Trolley Co.Are now bnilding Cranes and Trolleysfrom M to 8 tori capacity. • :

SPECIAL JlACHjNES BUH-T.

Board of Organization.Following the organization meeting

Of 4he Township Committee Saturdaymorning the Board of Health met andorganized for 1021, alt officer* being thetame for 1921, vix.: Prealdent. John O.Roach, and Secretary and Health Iu-•pwstor, Alfred H. Miller. '• The fourthWednesday night of each month wasfixed as the regular meeting night.Elmer L. Moore was named AssistantHealth Inapector and Plumbing Inspec-tor and tho fumigation Contract with*h«rGray-Burlart3d. was renewed at»200 per year. The only other businessdone was receiving the Secretary'sstatistcal report for 19?0, which wasas follows: •—"" '

Total number of complaints of unsan-itary' conditions rtceived for the pastyear 65. All of which'Sirero invosti-gated and tho nuisanco abated, On 2complaints it wan found there was noSnuse for action, and 17 were summonedbefore the Police Judge and fined, agenoral inspections of all cellars of the

basineas section were made and in anumber of casertha ownen were noti-fied to remedy conditions. 80 rear yardinspection* were- made and ownerscleaned same when notified. 78 Plumb-er* permits were l u u s d a n d l l masterplambers llcensos were iaaued. 80 pertmlu to keep fowls, 8 for goats. 12 furtwine, for horses and 2 for cowt wereissued. ,

85 samples' of milk and cream weropurchased from iba milk dealers sellingmilk In tho Township and abalyzed tiito Iterate, tolids and bacteria oonnt perc. a Not a sample was found that didnot comply with the standard as lot bythe Board of Health—SStamplcs oficoereaa was taken for analysis and tliuresult* show a vast improvement luthegrade of cream sold., The number of contagious dlseawa

reported is as follows; Meaile* 17ft,plphtberla 20. whooping cough 2»,chicken pox 81, mumps 4, acai lot fever16, tuborcaloai* 0, erysipelas si; pneu-mpnia '37, inflaenxa 10, Kdppe 170,spinal meningitis, \, Deaths from con-tagious disease wore a* follows: Diph-theria 1, tplnal meningitis 1, pneninoi .nia 6, tabercnlosls 4. Number or death*from all OHQMB 00, marriage* B4 andbirths 62.

S-'i

~y- i Itw

fAr^t.-

$4,000Being sp nt by the management of the Cranford Tneatre

Q. Okin & Son) \for repairs, decorations, etc.

Vour Comfort, Safety and Enjoyment Assured ;

WILL REOPEN FRIDAY, JANUARY ^

Factory, 833-235 Locust Avenue, •GARWOOD, N . J. ••'., -. •

Toledhono 788-J

Pfiofle376-W

We faav.e added 12 new rooms toj iarge. qunrtera, and

cacan care for your good*in a first-.

,nner.• * *

Bates on application. J

Robbins & AllisonMOVING PACKING 8TORA0E

and SHIPPBSa

213-215 B. Soutb Avenue

FOR RENTf3/>.00 to 160.00.from

Houses as; I6w a8~t350cT and aaliigb aa $100,000.

- LQTSConsult UB/OB to lQciitioft if you"intend to build.~ "- Desirable building sites at bargain priors.

illiNSURAIMCERepresenting-none but the—best— oompanies adoing /a large bnainoBS in this ' line,—wa area position to cover anything insurable.

[ < . • • ' ' - • ' _ . N - *

: Courteous and efficient Borneo.

Realty and Insurance DepartmentCranford Trust Go.

^ ' CRANFORD, N. J^

- \

.' A

P. M. LENZAutomobile Painting

I 109 South Avenue, WeatT

Telephone Connection. ,

JOHN T. LGWERY_. • Plumbing and ;

Heating; Contractor816 N. Lehigb Avtv ' Cranford, N. J. „

• • ; ]

4 >

Page 2: z^stzs - digifind-it. · PDF fileMoore was re-appointed Building In- ... contractors conformed ; ... plambers llcensos were iaaued. 80 pert mlu to keep fowls, 8 for goats. 12 fur

• WJ.

-<•• C,'^^#

"V

Armpnlan'troops msrchlnir out of the city of Erlviin, the Armcnlun capital, to raw* the TurklntLforces. Sere™1

dnys igtpr.thes^ Armenians defenled flic Turks In n b«t'le_ ut Igdlr. Inserted U a. portrait or Clwtlnes Kadjamunl."wlio uaa first president of Annuula, and"l» npw mjUtlnga* a private. / ' * ~-~~

RRIGES OF-FARM:—LAND INCREASE

' '

/

'4urap.j65 Per Cent Jn-FteeJcars,.According to Estimates of

— Secretary Meredith.

FACTOR IN FARM OWNERSHIPWtiil*~ Reflection of Upward Movi-

ment of Commodity Prices, It In-dicates Increasing Scarcity of

Farm Land,

Washington.—During the last livethn nelllng |trko of farni Innd

-.andIncreased 05 |ior cent, according to pa-llin*li>n made by Ilio secretary of ngr|culluio In Ills nnnunl report to thoI'rpsldpiit lletwpen Mareli, 1MI>, undNiuncb._1920, tho Increase «n» 21.1.

Although llui (lulu fur tliu 10U0 cen-sus arp not jot nvnllulilt'. It uremii

tho Hocrt'lnry HIIII), Hintwliiru Hie* avenigfl prlco of furtir Innd

\\ , . J and Improvements per aero Increased* only 20 per cent dtivltig the 4u years

•j-^~ = fntra ,1800_io_Jfl00 Mw prlca InJJfJO•- l In two nnd ono-hplf times that of 11)10

-^ , i nnd flvo limes Hint of 20 >efln« ago."The 'price of /arm hiiKln is one. of

r

:/r -T

\

^ It

i "•j

>

\ , f<um owiiprshlp^jnld thp socre-(.if}. "It I* eiflliimtnrt that between

i _ tlnrcli. lOlt), and Mnrih, 1D2O. the In-iroriKo in the svltlnw |)MCP of farm

' laud uiidjvinrutanipnts \vn» 21.1 percent. In tlio InM Ihe years tho In-cronse has been 05 ppr CPIII.

Net Return Less."In some, sections (do not return on

HIP piirchnHc prke of fnnn lauds ,1sconsiderably less than the ordinaryrntp- of rettlrn on first mnrtgiiges andjtlmllnr JnvcAtments. Tho rontnt^nitirof cniili Icnnes, also,, is frequently-leni*thnn half the rnto of return ou Jiinrt-

Sludlcs nuidfl by^tho depnrt-Indlcntc that, In certain region*,

the recent nduinco lu the price ofInnd linn tctlil further iigKruvated thisrondltlnn. Such Ii situation." IK nnfor-tiinnte, for It Incrensps Uio-O£JI Wmlit who Is Hppltlng tonn ownrr. /

"While HieHncrpasp In Innd prices

- Is. to fillip extent, n reflection of HIPgpnernl upward movenient In the levelof commodity prices, it nuNt ho re-pnrded lu part, ns nn ImlleiiUon ofthe lucreiiHlng scarcity of land nvnll--nblp fot tigripulttmil use.

"War condition* stlmulatod an" pension'oTlfi? "urea tWofeif fo*

putluiatPd nt 101 per cent from 1014ito 101S, or nu increase of 3 4 por cpntlu HIP per Cuplta acreage. Thin waseffected by utlLlJlnt pusturo laud Xorcrop production rtiuThy bringing Into

•' UKp^olher unrnftWiited areas. The ex-pansion won particularly marked In thecase of uniall sralns™Slnco the armis-tice there has bevn n reduction hi•crop acreage. .Fronj .lfM},.* to 102Q_|.J.

-> there vo>a_a^dPfi|tfle of 5.4 per cent Inthe acreage of 20/prlnclpul crojWaSSfpvently the reduction haiN been.

brought nhotif by returnfiiK the Inndt^nVtm-!Vii?ic>'f>v iWcTrtiiiiuTii'g"'nibu«ti of tho low-gmdi* nriiis whlrti weretttinpornrlly utlllu'i].

What the War Dldt _"TIIPSO. changes shoulil lie-limtruc-

tlve to-tliose who Would reduce the'prli'r/i of fnnn pnxtucta by bringingInto-use lnrgc nremr at new Innd. UIs plenr Hint.If prices had been ex-trnonllnnrlly rpiiiuiicrntho to thefnriuer colnpnrpd with the returns oncnpltn| nrid . Inhor In Indtistry,; WPwould not witness this reduction ofHIP uerent'u In eulllvntlOn, but, on thecontniry, n continued enjnrgeniout of

lpornrlly Increased Hid net cauli jiiof thp fnnnpr n1i<! ~Ntlinutiitpd~ii tem-porary pxpanidiin of tho prop nreri,this was dim lu, largo rnensuro to thernxponsn of the fanners to tbp'ln-RlHtPiit cull for more, food, particularly,wlipiit and rjc, the principal hreud

It 1H of no snmll stKiilflrnnroguHint the contraction In mreiiKc IIIIH

niiiKt pstrpme In the enfte ofcrops, Mllinnted nt S1.B,|H4> cent

for winter whent.. 10S p e r ' c o n t j o ri g c l t iy 220 ^or ht f rspring client,

no" '22.0 -^or ccht furcht

f iremerrAre Called t o — _Rescue Family Roast

.I/0t]|.ivlllf,- Ky.—J. A. Cniw-fiirri nni.n-MIng Jn Ms home,W») ro'rtliuid nvpnue. whileimanhent' "f the fnmlly were

'WfiT-" -tfe**1*n " m>tt»pp," •*»nt-nwnkcnpO. .Sonicthlntr MM» huru-Ing. HIM nostrils Jolrt htm that.Iimtnntiy his feet pniigbt themesonc*" nml <nrrle<l him to /lienro niurin box on thp confer.When the fireuipa - arrived'the

-IKMIBO vtun filled with smoke.More wnn coming-.from thekitchen—from—the-oven,—where,

f the cauKc of the trouble - wasfound—n Inrge pork roasLiColdment|«n» nened for dlaner orthe Crawford home. \ \

Living With Bullet Ir Heart.~' Onmhu^TTenr-^^ramPH" FiwnTnh ~oTtills.city hnnaii bullt-t In IIIH heart andIH still alive. .•• He toldctjm |K>llce hewon Hliot by bis w|fp, from whuiii hehnd been sepnrnted, when he returnedlinnip after '4ie Is mild to hn\p threat-ened her. Shu met him nt tho door andIlred poUuhlsnk. lip walked |o .thopolice Blntlon, nearly three | uillea««ny, ulivre niPiJIcnl attention »uUen him. Ho mis rpmo\ed tola 1pltnl and ftn X-rny laken which fihow-eil the Imllet iifstHng In t^e lifn

CAUSES HOG DISEASEParalysis Traced to Larvae of

Blue Bottle Fly; "

Mlnn««ots Scfentlsis. Also Hop*Find OrlQln of Infantile

Paralysis. -

to

n—Minneapolis, MJnn.—Minnesota Uul-\ entity farm school experts Issued aMntement that lufniitlle puniljnls wastnuenlilo to the larwio of HIP grcpnliottlo By.—TltlfrtllBdryfwlileii, It Ishoped, will nitiko It possible fur medi-cal authorities not onlj to present tho''spread of pnrnljsls epidemic n i n «children, dut aim to pro\li|p a erne,has luTti ftudlvd by a group offnrjnschool pviHtrts." - / *

Tho subject- tias been undce'roiiHid-pratlon at the Minnesota experimentstation, In co-opemtian w lib certainmedical authorltlpo. if h'ecnme known,M n result of tho Investigation, thatthe Inrvne of the homo fly was 10-sponnll)lo for hog pa/ntysts and llui'

~ fn p y /Studies lire .bcliiir nmdo by 11. Adam

nntchrr and Stanley P. Wllklns ofthe station, In cooperation with D. Cllenvor and \V/A. Hillings of the %et-prlnnry rilvlti}on of Hie niilversUy, andA. I..1 Smith'of the poultry division

Theqt} PNUe-rtR wero conslilernMy en-h t \ ^ toXtho muses nnd method

of control of niumal pnrul>sls by i-cr-~ fries ikinde In nn attempt to

truce" *tfio catisesTof Uniberneck In^poultry. In experiment* a cockerelwns fed j n the Inrvno of green bottle

llfes, which had fed art the hi nil of ahog which had dliMl^f puruljsls

Thp rpHiilt was^bat llnibcriipck )m>meaiately dei Hoped In the cockerel.Next tho proce«g was_rcrersed I'oral-\sl8 of ttta hind qunrtcrs-wns liroduced- -In guliipn pigs b.V feeding them Innnewhich tlu\(l ft'd on n chliken whichKliohed l|nihcrw>ck cyinptoms.

Tho Mtforuuitlon gnlned from thepVporlniPiits ho\p cnuseil thp mil\cr-sltj ofllt'lals to send out bulletins toMinnesota fanners urging them toprntert their Ihe stock nnd poultry,

/ l id possibly human hpnlth, by hlirn-Ing or burjlng tltvplv nil carrion.Tho clto this ns an mWlthmnl nrgu-uipnt fur fnnn and home snnltnttoo. '

ROBBER OFFERS VICTIM $ 1 0"You Need It Worse Than I," He Sayi

to Holdup on Finding ManPenniless.'

StPUhomlllp, O—ftonlel CaUlp. apoltpn worlipr. reported to the pollcpjiprp that n rotibpr, who luid/ield lilmup whllplio wiis"'on~hls'wn.v lfi>me_"l£ ifa suburb. oiTpred to gl»e h m 510 aCtertho blghwiiytnan discovered 'that he

('ublp Mild that th/ robber Ipapedupon, roerponered him, nntf then'wentthrough his |>ocRet.H. Finding no

Cable Raid, the highwaymanIntffirbls own pocket, pulled

tout n'roll of bills and offered fo givehim $10, saying: "Here, brother, youneedJ( worse than I da" *_C.llDle_Bald_hii_\»is-t«H>-SttrpFlsed-to-accept the money. ' •

Square-MealEnglisn. Adventurer.

HAS^9-EGG BREAKFAST

*.* • : l

Months' Canoe Trip Inof Canada, and

Alaska.. —

_„ Man.—Hugh Klnderslry,tweij&*one years old, son of Sir IUih-

'""Iijaersley, go\en)or of thp llud-y,1 company, has returned frftm

iths' ciuiQtL:. rlp tbrotmbof Catsmln, and Alaska.

Capt two- O'Kelly, *n veterants service, as his guide

^Companion, .be set out from'" -.Landing lu a 19-foot

to vtrdycled ' byv AHuibasmabasca' lake, Slave river,

and the Mackenzie[U'Qu miles-of1 the Arctic

wns,then lu the rcglon-trf-tho-jnldtilghtsun Ttnd .ettirtfihioita-auyllijhij-^s he*u>8, he "saw no Htnrs from early luJune «ntl,i August ".",'

lley.om) Forr'ScT'herson nnd. ArcticHod river 4*rtsc^ndad" Kutjfivtrr^-iintrow torrpnt of rushing glacier wa-,tcr thnt drops ns nittch In 00 miles JIB'the i Akon- In 2,000," crossed h 4fteItocky jnountnlns and, with suppliescoinpletefy exhausted, ryncbed FortYukon August 18. , v

young ungluiiininn M\ his _jljory."Never bpforo hnve-1 eatefi nine egg«for breakfast, not to inentkm ham,bread, Jam, enke, coffee and whup-l "

'"From Port, Yukon he-wont up theYnkon past DaAvson amf White Horse,through the old Klondike gol4J.eTds'and took steatner tSkagwny for V«n-

the. house of Klndersley 'becarae an/expert camp coot. —- "Whllo flshtlng our. wny up

about in ileow clouds. • If I reraovptlmy gauntljrs, my_ttnnds were Instaijt-l,v-htditeir>\?ltH~the Insects. Stumblingthrough Hie tundra, I lost-my • mos-qitlto-bnr helmet and soon my faceWHS eoxered with the blood of crushed/mosquitoes. But 1 enjojoi c;\erjijpih-ute of ft." • ~

100-YEAR WINE IS FOUNDCase Unearthed by Excavating

Ruins 4>f Old Buildingi F I l d *£

in

St. Joe. Fla.—A case of choicewine, believed buried over 300 jearsago," Was Qxcavated by| workmen en-gaged In dismantling, the ruins o t « nold building In Vort Stl-Josepfi, nearhere, whfon wa»|d«erteil In '""" * "'lowing a | Tlrulent'

"£.Archacoloflirt Discovert SplendidStatue of Roman Emperor...:-, atTWoB.

LIFELIKE STUDY BY ARTISTValuabl* Addition to Portraits of Ro-

man Empsrora and 4* Only O M_ . Extant Don* During Em-

p*ror'« Ltf*.

Home.—Tlvoll, that lovely little cityperched above-Borne, allied Wbur ^f-tbje'ancieut Hdniana^jias' Just ylvua to(be arthafeylogical world two uew arttrjeanureu^au augtuteuin, or ball,and a splendid head of Kmpefor Au-giwtuii

Prof. AIewl6 Valie. one of the arch-i a d ? - T l v o l l n-

study, ioug UelleTed thatTivoll .should reveal an Ancient, hallof ifBportance, considering the flOuNtailing state "of the city In'-ltomandays, l ie began to dig near a newly-discovered weights and measures of-fice, also dating from the ltoraau em-pire,' thinking lliuTthe public'weightsund measures., must surely. be near«ome Important hull.

lie- Was not, mistaken. He baaopened up a hall with u Uoman pave-"

marblement of wbUe and greenttliich looks-ai-if it were put down"fMjff morning- serfresn 'Is. lt"and thestatue of Augustus, broken but withthe head Intact, as tlie picture shows,with the lifelike lines cut out of themarble by some unknowb"*jiculpjor ofevident genius. '._ - • -'-I

Likeness of

ius w l i n l i c had grown old. An In-hrrlpllon underneath It, which dedi-cates the-alatue_to the gods, "for thehappy return.In good lieultii of ourAugustus Caesar." proves! It was doneduring the famous emperor's lifetime,a votive offering to_jhe gods bxJ^loyal Tivoll cl'lien who signs himself

. 11"

* • ? * *%

Kennebunkport, Me^ has a "grist mill, operated by the tide. It wai erected*In 1886 and has never stopped since then. UnafTected by shortage of coal or

dll kl tonr.J«iiinuIng four. As the moonjB an hour slower each day compared with Uw sun.however,"theTnDIcTbttS to change his hours somewhat

M. Veranus OIIQIUB/ Tbe same mangave the public weights and measuresto tbe city. '.

History lets us date this statue be-tweeBTjJrA-S1 a n d A. D. 14, whenKraperor 'Augustus dlwl near Naples,aged seventy-six. Experts say tlie faceIs tbe face of a man of fifty. In tbeworn lines, the Ill-tempered moutlt. Its.upward twist at the left side, we havetut .tfalteElntf.- picture oJC-JAe, .great;emperor.-but a lifelike study, by an,artist who'dnrcd to cut his statue as,he saw the human model. ' For this,reason, uniTEecause of Its Surely be;Ing'ifone In Augustus' lifetime, it Is

I..*.™.. o , «u g u «u^ '» very voidable addition t o . the col-The statue Is a likeness of Augus" TectTon of portrnlU of Hi* Roman

emperors, and probably the) only oneextant of Augustus done during bislifetime.

The figure, which originally sat ontbe pedestal at the bead of the ball.Is—graceful, as Suetolus, that gos-

~,~~1rsftu -vwhom latersorlby" have learned all they

300^SPIES IN THEAMERICAN>^RMY

Amazing jStory of German Es-pionage During the^Var _

. / Is D/sclosed. ~ '

IONDESERTER MAKES CONFESS1

Former Officer Telia 6f Being SentFrom Germany .With Other Cadeta '

to Enlist In the .tlnltodSUtt» Aim/

New York.—AnGerman, csplonagi

rfmuzlng story ofduring the wnr

uus disclosed when John Wlllet, for-mer captain Iiv the Fortj-elgjith Unl-ted.Slates Infantrj. confessd be wnsreally linns' Wlllers. a cadet In the(icrnmn urniy until 11)11, when he wus»cnt to/this country with :i00 otlier

u Joint tbe AmerUan army midCulled States olllcers.

\Villetrudmlttcd be bad absconde»l(fi tjfOUU of his. couipanv'8 funds/'•'lUiip. Sevier on Nu\ ember ' 8, 101'tew wevLii of tor the armistice, Afia de-witpd.

It was this offense i«ul.uot/inj sus-picion of his t.p) role whlcli resultedin his nrre-t bore when llnph J. Han-nl^nn, formerly a lirst /leuu-nnnt inthe "'Forty-vlgliMi^'.recognizeir the. de-

'lelilim.jtejitrett^ ttUjl^builed a,

Hints atTreato/ln Washington."\on would be/sunirlsetl how many

Hclals "held ,Jpbs Inring thp war.' Wlllet

high GermanWiisblngtontold Detectlv^ Sergcnnt O'Leary. TheprIsimer mpdo this statement after hehu<l narrated how he Came here andMiat he/would ha\c done had his regl-nruiit been seijt to France.

_"I /would-,ha\e led my men -to

jibe police, in explaining why he nndothers werejsent to the United States'to enlist in tlie American nnny, Wll^tvyns taken to Fort Jay prison onerne's lslapd.

*i Forty-eighth Infantry, Sidney P.llownll, ^r-lawyer, nnd Francis Hatch,Wlllet began to rexpoiid to questions.

As to bis pedigree, ht/suld he wasbom In Germany jmd^educaced, there.

"J was trained fo/spy wfirJtJwhenI was a boy and Mcr when I was acadet in a Genuaii military academy,'Uip detectives qoote Wlllet as saying.""'•When thewiria" war "began InTOff

, I was 6electe^.to Join a bnnd-of cadetswho were Ut come to the'United StatesvUth orders to Jolu Hie American army.Othbr groups went to the French afittynnd to/the British. About 300 otbeiscanip/o\er here with mi I khew mymilitary training soon would be. recognl?ed and that promotion would fol-\(nv, so I enlisted as a private the first'opporlunltj I got. I had, no citizenshippapers—I did uot need any.

Enlisted as Buck JErLvate. ~ '"I enlisted as a' buck private In Al-

banj noon nfter my nrrhnl In thiscountry. U'iOiln a very short tlme myahHKy-ns-n. soldier was recugnlzod andI was promoted. ' \

"My•heart was nqnrly-liroknrt whenV (libcovored my regiment, probablywould not be sent to France. I wouldlime died for, my eountryijloxlly".' So,-ir> dajs after the armistice, I took thecompany fund money nnd 1ef£ camp.

"I'm telling you,this freely becauseI might as, w ell be dead. Life does notmatter much to me." -

Wlllet said that after he deserted" !„„„„Camp Sevier he started traveling.- Heimthertoured the Pacific coast.. •. In Chicago about a year ago he mar-ried an 'American girl named Cra\v-"ford, li ft sold. -

v £ ]»»e been use- —Wlllet recently opened n hiafPordero my, o»nNcmmtryTn' nBThy other business In this city under tho namei." Wlllet dethtred^according to of Crawford. ' '" '*

know about .tbe Bomau emntold us, saymg:

Graceful Parson."He -was. a very grajcefdl-person

tbrougb all the stages of life, thoughbe was very careless In his dress andMould set several barbers to woVkupon bis hall1 together, and wouldsometimes'dip and sometimes shavehis beard, and at tbe same timewould be reading or writing."

"' "Augusfus,'"though" emperor, called 'himself a' democrat and, snys Sue-tolus, "always abhorred the title oflord as a scandalous affront" Betells us, too, tbaLtbe emperor daaghtcold easily andfwore woolen under-wear In winter, fwlth a thick-wooltoga."

Tbls broken statue, with tbe baseon which It stood, uneartfied after solong bridges the gulf of ceaturies-ahdbrings one of the greatest rulers tbeworld ever saw very near.

Love of MEbber of Poor Bi

Philadelphia.—It was his lovefor nruslc which led to the ar-rent/ot Jacob Rats, twenty-fourjenrs old. Katz entered' thesmanuel Lutheran church here

shortly after 'midnight andfoun'd the poor box which beemptied of Its contents, $3.Tl/en_ he found the new organ.Katz had musical talent and he

his fingers over the keys.

tho mstsunjon* 4hat tie g"\*here ho was, p,ulled out-thedlnpliono nnd tliundered away.The Htrnlna nwnkened the pas-tor, R<'v. Itu'dolph Nieder, wholives next door, and he calledthe^pollce, — - - -

ORE TOTALS 50,000,000 TONSQreat Lakes Shipments Show Increase

of 7,700,000 During; Year, SayDulutli Figures,

Pulutb, Minn.—The" total shipmentof iron ore for the season reached ap-proximately 00,000,000 tons, accordingto~ftgures-nmiounced here. ~—•••*•

Iron ore shipped from the head ofthe lakes thus for amounts to 47,707,-

ton«, with about 80,000 tons rp-mnlnlnn to go out from, tho DuluthandIron Hange, railroad docks nt- TwoHarbors nnd tlio Chicago & North-western railroad docks at Ashland.Win. - ~

Total shipments from aU the'dp'eksfor tlie season show nn Increase ofapproximately 7.700,000 tons over lns-t

tons wereshipped. " ' " '

Children Unshod In Big Shoe Town.Brockton, Mnss.-^Thls city produces.'

shoes for world-wide distribution nmlmakes more of some kinds than, any

"" city, btlt Charles P. Brook8r"Bt-tendance officer of the school board,reported that many of Its_cblldren nre>unshod, t'here/are at least fifty chil-dren In tEe city who cannot go toschool because they lack shoes, hoVan], and some of them haseoo* "to i

Where Italy and Jugo-SIavia Are Negotiating

couver.-.TheVsvo-adveaturers cawbed

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It n i erectedage of coat or

nan emp

*on.racef_L personof life, thoughi his dress andrbers to woVksr, and wouldmetlmes shavetie same timeIting."inperor, called 'nd, says Sue-d the title ofaffront" Be

mperor caughtwoolen under-a thick-wool

with the base(rtfied after so' centuries-atadtest rulers theor.

t

total shipmenton reached np-tntis, accordingre. ~—r

g Shoe Town.» city produce*'Istrlbution nnciInds than, anyP. Brook8r"HT-school board,

ts children are>least fifty cbii-«annot go to

nek shoes, hohaseeo* been

. . • ' . *

»«• etecntjn*'",tweea ber>r *-range,

• A n d ! _ , . .get married,- flashedcause then I'll »nr«>.eL

"It's all very weTk tovjce." said Aunt. Julia amthis, going here, there and!fir»t with one,, then, *Ldoesn't getvjpu anywhere.Steadily, n Ith Dne.ihaF does

nut Jtoberfa was notMarriage, as endured by heulsters, held no such allurl

-m'to make her crsaqr-to-Ilie <»me time that Auntfluking tier mind to her ninnV elderly practitioner —his hand on his success.mid tdliiiK htm a few thing*

. be or ad^antnge to him as"htins flurk_lhe_ older _man wdo» a

••At first tbe.plaoe willKtrll>c \ou as a dead littleraid] "but remember, 'thingsv,tfa what they seem,' and I athere's a good opportunityright man to build up a prnctl

uritjQJLa. "be-

have to/ t .tny ad-

But

another,'s going

pressed.ifO older

it. At

?.J<rei>putting-

slmulder

t wouldtoi>k u p

rabtlessfcle,'* he

m't al-ire y«ii

lor theBrcu-

"Thanks, doctor," Bald yornfg Po«c:

las Campbell. T i l try t6 make gnod "Ami with his first patient, who lmi>-

jwm il to be Aunt Julla,Jhe new doctorniailo especially good."

lttihcrtn dlil not meet the much-tnHfilof Dnrtor Campbell until ««cm! weeks nfter his arrival. Hut loni:ljpfnn' *hr s.aw him she heard hKjirt'M«i tun)?. "In fact," she "laid toliervlf one afternoon as he drove'bytlipStlndnw Rnd roused Annt Julia tofllchts.nf oratory in bis behalf, "I'mgetting a bit fed up with that man "

And then"tine night-he-came-to BIIT*-

j BsHBi BBAlHBl eajaj

, .. -™ JV»»«e«<*ii-M W t» jRvltt^wna* and bants* • * . b a a s * table Mr-em bnt

—a»M9»—u UBKK t o th*iflqes >trr said one.

MPTO-oked^ when-the came-lnt.rit on» Hoiejron and I hadall tb> work of _ showing her

m i man was like, and hoping, t* 40 her a little. But I goes*

It'll'an right now,* ^ .. That It wa£ all right was evidentabout a year later when Aunt Julia"and her sister were called Upon tofashion all,.spria -of J o w l y garments-

iiuitjitloii tho more readily becanse liptinii recently /ennght a glimpse nf aderlildlly good-looking girt 'at missJulia's. . .

Aunt'.Tulln'certainty prided. herselfon tin' doctor's acceptance, nn<l sheand Kohortn's mother plotted, tn dothenwltcs proud In the way tof friedchicken nml snowy biscuits and dam-son [iluili Jain and Lady Baltimore

' rakf " _ , \Roberta hung around «nd ^nfijhed

hf proparaUeiis with anmneaient. So"iTTf ig enoug*taf

SIt, "I fcupporei enn start tb« phono-graph Rolng after supper and we can

- 'dnn<+" she suggested hopefully.Bolli her mother nnd aunt turned to

-1o(vk .it her. "Dance?" they questionedIn unison "You forget the doctor IRa mnn" said Aunt Julia genltyr^notone of vour boy friends. And If souever want to win the attentions of nrenllv worth-whilo • person^ Bohertn.you unnt to be less flighty. But I'mnot «nrt> It's In you, child," she finished.

t vlth,n siuh. Itohertn regardedtbonshtftilly. Then she dimpled. Hermint's'words had the effect of a chal-

Kxnotly five minutes before suppertime the guest arrived. Supper wasFerved on the_dot._But Bobertn wnstea minutes late. And^her entrancelost none of Its effectiveness -therehy

. TTcrjnintherjiaused In the net of pourv

Ing the ..doctor's cup,of tea—her auntbroke off abruptly In the mtart of n

yfio*\ nr conversation, What had hap-pened to Rohertn?

Jp place of the curly mop of halfctMomnrllv adorning her well-shapedhond she wore n coiffure so sleek anddemure as to have become a Puritan

I.-, „ mnIile«.,,tter=,plaVtest dress had heen, shorn of Its fancy collar nnd turned In

«t the throat. lier ggry-' expression.n* fhe slipped into her chair, was of'he Ultter-vQUldn't-flieK-ln-her-mouthvnrictj And-thcoughont the meal heremulation was Halted-to "Yes" nnd

>«' itnd "if yon please,"—quite a con-trn«t to her URUOI lively," Interestedcomments on things in •generBT." After"upper she gave her mother-awTaunt.no rhjmce to rebuke her by nccompany-m them to the. kitchen a's* they cleared»* table, but scnted herself 1n the Hv-

in« room nnd made a great pretense o f™>fne something with- Aunt -JnllaJknitting needles. ,

| _ _ Our m the kitchen he? aunt'andn 'tolng the dishes discussed her

linn ' htjrrjnffi«nl t h ( * / o c t ° r might not be left too

*Jfohwnwn devices, *—~—,i""V"»- noetor was noj: exactly bored."I *•"'thinking- to himself that there

1 mistake somewhere/ Sndjjenl

e, old

IT "h * **• of ^ ^ t t o i S j ^ K o r k

for a bride-to-be. -And Ir was not un-natural that they took onto themselterentlr^sriedlt tar the matrhr . ., Bot DougluK and lioberta. dUcusstngon the last nlgbt of their engagementtheir favorite lovers* , conundrum,"When did you first know you lovedmet" decided th.it no tarthly agencyhad brought about their happiness. Itwas fate—destiny—the decree~bf~lhegods, "It's funny thnt the first ques-tion you asked rot> was If I coulddance," said Roberto suddenly.'

^Ohoff-hand, thinking of the / -dear wayKobefla's eyelashes cnrled at the ends,"although, of course, I knrac^ou could."

"Ton d l d r cried Roberta in aston-ishment. _

"To be sure," saKr;ihe doctor. "Ias In Nortonvlllp'$KB~€>iii n n d on

my way-back I looked In n,t>the~m.wirclub dance, nnd -the prcffie'.V girl onthe floor, dancing with her hea<Vthrownbuck, lief eyes full of the joy oKllvlnir,they told me was Boberta DenuY AndI said to myself. That Is the Art ofgirl a serious-minded old codger\llkeme' ought to jnarry—a liappy-go-J'comrnde to go down the path o.f

* " „ lightening the <?arcs along« ny.""

"And I didn't fool yon'at all,'proiiohed Robertn. Then, with n |tosof hjer head, "I don't care!" sheMfcaldnnd held up her llps'to be klwsed!

' i.•yWCUBLDECEKVAirreS

Cosjdsnaatleii bv,Nathan tuisfcsll Dote

- Mlanwlvsataa Saandim.4r>a>(|it u4•mrrilat, wa*Jb«n

• SfaBteh « n « s u t—d •urawwi; — Htrdtd M*4ri4 la

dtmrm

A« aWilta

4daya be

k

Where he

vate to the ariar-I> a u n l battle•« Gttne k e n i

hla rlsbt h u d > .b acrauacailjr

While

pirate*t»

a n dnikn t» Alaicn

where he naa hrU as a d m for a*

- After kta n u a a he wrote HaBrplaya. Thrr braaskt hlai •ore lanethaa forlaae, aa« be added t£-hl*.r<>••wailbllltlea br-weddlac. at the ase*

i; thlt a strl of alaeteea. It;waa rmr.fl >»um*u».«».Uiher dvwrr eoaakteil oalr at "*TC VIBM,'•a orchard, aaiae hoBMhold faraltnre,fa«r beehtrea. 4S • aad ehlekeaa,

c." AKheeoald'

TtTBirTS-FOR-THE

Island pf Cuba Contributes Prg Ba.nanas.-Coco Frlo, and Other Ap-

preciated Delicacies.*

We only get thnt fairy fruItTthe figbanana, which Js^one-of the Joys of a•visit to Cuba, when a northward-bound,passenger or an enterprising mem-ber of some crew persuades'the stew-ard to help him bring us a little curgoof them, a writer" In the New forklOrnlng Post writes^ Sealer* In finefroit are, alwajrg glad_Jo receive, tugm."In any quantity, for tfieyjliirer so pi-quant in appearance and rich in fln\orthat they are sold as spon as seen.The> are no blgger^hah* your finger.

Cuba, alas, ls;most noted for delica-cies (lint could n ndwlse be broughtto Jew York. To enjoy coco frlo proj^erly jou must sip the milk of a frpsh-ly split coconnut—which an epicure-has dirsrrIBeHr"as~"i5SleIy s"vof theTsliell througli a st^aw, trie whileyou frit beneattrpaims on O/hlH atjovethe blue harbor. And agua de vino—it must be madefy spendthrift squeez-ing of ilead-rlpe pineapples, just gath-ered. fi'i\e in Cuba on#never realizeswhat pineapple Julcts can be^'

But guavas In muny dlfTerent formsare ours Guavo/paste Is the most i '-rolllar liut" gufi\u~~jelly and' gpimicream are obtainable, too, and at afew delkatessen stores mny be foundgnava skins In glass Jars preservedlike any other fruit. The seedshave all been, taken out, muskmelonfashion, »nd. only the deljcate ont-

o u cwk u d a craH(ilf.'•at live by his pea Cerraatea aerareda .Minor Rovrrnmrat posltloai bat -hewas ID coastaai dlfllrnltlra beraas» ofpresslna; debts sad fete aabnalarsailkehiTblts. lie was throwa lato prison fordebt) released,he aaak lato abject po».erty. • ' . • . . ; ._ . . • • , • • -

Part of "Doa ttalxstc" was probablyrlltta la Jail. Thlr aorel, a niaarle

mirror «ba« resfeeta aoblrs and kltchrnrrencbea, barbers aad ladles of hlukdearrre, all ib* Varied life of a brll-lUnt period, la <joaal4*red by maay to be4be' world's anreatest huniarons msstrtv

• W. Tae wosdrr of It U ibat It wj««

.,. , toy*- nt .JUi'-bau)} by- ______mnted^-lm and left hjm. vebaelesa.]3oa<)aba>t« «ncaced Ina.terrtfle com-bat wifli op* o< the lad/s laart whoaBced off haJTotihUi lMUart aad oneof his ears. 0ndanat«d th« knightpressed .the- combat ito .Tlctatr. hatJastaahewaa ' 'Ins stroke, the frightened lady, beggedhid to desist and he complied' on con-dition that, the defeated opponentshould go and present himself beforetho peerless Dolclnea, -Abo- was Inreality a huxom woinan -known

h all la ijancha for'her tklll inng pork and who had never deJco

ed to look at her amorous neighbor.A few days later, bruised and. bat

t e n - In untoward adventures, theycame upon a flock of sheep which SonQuixote conc61ved; to be a prodigious

of nations led by mighty Mines. "Hespucred like a thunderbolt from the

hischallenge, putting the hapless sheepto flight a,nd trampling both the livingand the slain. Impatient to meet thecommander of the enemy he shouted

**»»&** r e D I 0 V e d

"Where, -where; art thou, haughtyAlifonfaronr^ __

At that moraeqt the shepherds raNlied In defense of their flocks andoverwhelmed the unlucky knight firstwith, stones and then with cudgels,leading him In a desperafo-case. with

er part Is left. For pleasant As thearomatic, rather a stringent Jwite Isin the raw Runvfi, they would be'bulkyand unpalatable In a guava canned.

-Ilie3e> guava .skins are-a very^un»usual delicacy, and their rich thrownhag an Inviting look. They are Cuba'ssimcUilty1 us far as that land of fruitsli> represented In New York.

' " Arr Intelligent Fig Tree.Kljr'trees ure extremely sensitive to.

.cold, the slightest touch of "Jock"Frost" being j-ufflclent -to kill the trees.^oidOmad" they bear or mature-lrultabo\e the latitude of Louisiana, writesGeorge Parke In, the "American For-.,estr-y Maga.xlne ;3ut a fig tree,] plant-ed lieslde a ni"^"»*"^pt|clf chimney j)fa negro's cabin riear JacfespnVMIss.,clung closely 19 the- uSrar sunace.passing roand l«twekn the side of the

tiiB.ton. nhoyewUluli Hit: HIIOOLS arti^^t'u like a crownof emerald. Titus the tree__endureilthe frost and occa^lonaTsnbw 01 a ac-yjSre"wfnte;r, bore fruit and -thriveflamid inhospitabh: surroundings.'" -

f T"Why Coins jxrstnrslc

ThQ principal rn.ison \Uiy coins arestruck Instead of cast ls^that -molten,mgtftltf-contract" on, cooling. : .Thus

-counterfeit coins, which qi/e alwayscast,, show* .fntal variations in size,

.which nutheWo •allapwl coins do not;,Secdndlyil^Jsjmps(IMe t o g e t t h ejp ^name sliarpness~of delineation as. uistamping, and lastly 'when the starap-•4ng mnchlnel-ls-1 once set up the'process of-.gtr4klot_colns la cheaper:and rnbre-rjtpjjLthSn Viat of castingever could be, -f

f He—I-know by -yout face that youare "the "'deqresf—kimiest; Sweetest,,loveliest «Irl l^ the world.

~ Oh; Jackrhow qm youread between the lines.

ilrl f^r"

.-4ar, Vrho had all his life beea poor/whobin . kaoira -llllle eieept mUforlune."thlldrea tara Us pases, yoaaan people"rc-4 It. BTOWK mea^mdentaad It, oldf o l ; p r a U e I t . " .,;... •' ' • / •. • •• •• '•

flytjv ko«k«d«atbF loosened; and his /lbs half broken.

6|d'thls adventur* discourage hlmTNot at all. It'.wa's^U a"*i>art of chival-ry.- He and Sancho rode on In dolor-ous discourse^/ They were overtakenby-night ami had ho shelterl.or-food..Suddenly jfppeured n band of abouttwenty"j^rsemen, all in white robes,with" torches m their hnnds rind fol-lowed/by a hearse draped In jblack.It ,yos the fuberul of a gentleman of

ivln; Don Quixote, took It to betrain of some knight cither killed

or desperately wounded, and, assuredthat it.wns his ditty to avengeJiiixfnrtunes 9,—brother-ln

iwhich he spenta)l' hlau i n ] ' IJjsitytftn waswas.

sixteenth/jsemary romances! • otichlvalry^writtejrih absurd, ex-

*" ng-erated style/^were extremelypopuln^in^ Spalniy^*-: . £

A dlftjfled^gentleman.by the nameof Qulxa^n, who lliffid between AraRohand Casfijj.ywent-'crniy '—•"••'"•'--foolish bnlBs,; whichsubstance-V ljuylng.sWffeorbattleg, chrienges, - wounds; magicsal'yqs, compiints,' amours, tbrments.-igiants, castlei'captured maidens, gal-lant rescues, aid all sorts of Impossi-ble deeds of di^ng, which seemed tohim as true nsite most authentic his-tory. Every lnifteeper was a raog-nnte; every muleiriver a cavalier.

and Tor tK"Mfvtc%f"_ie~Wor^d, hemust turn Knlght-e*jnt and jauntthrough -the' world, r^regslng wrongs,rescuing capWredjprfcess^s, and-ai-last wlnntagtheTlmJ^d sceptre ofTrnplzondn.

He changed:

Quixote de la MaBcrin, • got himselfdubbed knight by a rascjly, publican,whbse Inn he thought * _ a castl'ewith tour turretB crownetVlthj, pin-nacles of glistening silver, ' in ord*rto carry a full pur*« ho spl/one ofhis* houses, mortgaged anoW andborrowed a goodly sum from .friend.When his practical housekeeiililw pretty, niece,.neighbors, the barber and the crate,thought to-core him by burningbooks, be was / persuaded thatJlbrary had been^ carried away 'necromnncer, and became crazier uigever. He scoured up a rusty satti %mall which had belonged to one of) hr

'ancestors, mended the broken helme

and

halted the cortege and deinanded unexplanation. The replies of the'clcrgy-men failed to satisfy him nnd lie flewnt them In high dudgeon. Encumberedby their robes they IxK-aiuo eaSy vlc-UmB and;nil~teok'WJllght'•TJiey possessed "theqts/slses of theedlblea,deserted/by tho clergymen, but,unfortunately, had nothing to drink,nor did theytikre-Mr from-thc forestbecRqse ofrlie awful clamo/'roade byu fulling-mill which Don Quixote sup-pos^ij to.be enolinfitiDPnt, —

The next morning they met a bar-~»nd wearing'his

brass basin on Ills, head "to snvo hisbat'frorif'thertiltii:.; Do)i Quixote- rec-ognlWKl th'ls'ns the gb|dcn helmet ofMamb'Hno and flew at tho enemy asIf ho would grind him'to plowdcr. Thejiqrber'jled, leaving his helmet whichSun'cho'appropriated, though It seem-ed to lilm liorely a common dish:

inn, ~In. the

with a pasteboard vljjpr, patched Itll (Sow's tafl

a\grea8y red nightcap, with a blanket.wrapped around his left arm for ashield, be was repeatedly plunging hissword Into the plump bodies of sev-eral giants. Their blood: (lowed acrob.sthe floor "in wide,'crimson streams.

Imagine the wrath of the worthyInn-keeper at discovering that hisfamous guestxhad disemboweled allhis wine-sacks, whlch^ were mude ,pfgoat-skins witli the heads left on. '—After-tiils Don Quixote—tpw—gotBorne by the curate, apd the barber;but he broke loose agqln. First hevisited bis Dulclnea, but came awayconvinced that through more eh_chnnt>ment she hod" beeri'chn'tijfedT "Into ablubber-chteied, flat-nosed, countrywench, the pearls of her eyes into galllouts, herJong golden locks into a

, , T . - and her palace lntd a hutthin, Iron plates, and thus accoutered \ H e had adventures with strolling

-•f * It, . _ %,!•. A1.1 IIBAI]' 1>Ar>fnanta MAIWI '*••**A IIAI>> • Tin ntiAn>li(>l l l infleT forth on hi? old"Whoserribs Btuck out-like the-skelctonof a ship, accompanied' by a rustic'named Sancho Panza, persuaded Into.serving as n(g squire. , -f-

Their'departure was a brave flpec-.Tjacliat-s- the tall, cadaverous,, lanijerri'-Jn^eS'^knlght, mounted on bis bonynag, wielding'his long Jnnce «nd ciir-rying his sword, Jilsr eyejk gleamlrigwith enthusiasm nnd dreaming"of hi*beautiful mistress, whom he called

paunch-bellied, long-haunched servnnth l l t nd l t h e r n.with wallet and a leathernwith n. canvast wauei ami n luutucm

bottle, mounted-tt» the dlnilrjutlve uss,Dapple,-Oft'UIB plains of

score of big windmills.i stood ,a

Don Quixotetook them for outrageous-giants >andprepared to do battle"against .them,and desptte^-Sancbo's protests thattheir huge arms were -only ranes, heplugged the 'rowels Into Boctqante's

Uhltt,flanks and with codched lance,dashed off to'the encounter. -The windblew~v!o1enfry ^ndr.theiknlght and his.steed wert whh-JeB away Irito ttefleld,where they Jay motionless1 and ns" Ifd'end; Tils lance was smashed to flin-ders. Sancho hastened to the^ald ofhis masteV and found htm unable tostir; but hte was soon ready to go onagain;. - ; ; ? v l

Their next admoBk<r, ridingdromedaries,,, inJo which sat a la<

a coachby* men

on horseback;. Don Quixote Imaginedthat'"adventurers had captured 0

efora and lions; he attended the>_i (Gnmaebo's-wedding ^he-explored

cave of -lonteslnos; ht frd*, magic bark and visited the name

lesitfuke and duchess; tlirough whose'coijnlsante Sepcho was granted hisa m b W to rule over an lsfand anddid Ifijwlth wisdom ^prtliy of Solo-mon, tgany more,advettfurea'follow-^ed, bujsjt last Don Quixote returnedto bls'hfcie and recovered his senseson his l%tb>bed, _dyjng_ as a lovable,

ik-noble-heartedCervant»f\ masterpiece Is not all

satire. —D<K Quixote 1 has lucid mo

mon -Ben8.e, t*en expressed in wittyproverbs. Ttte jg occaBlonal coarse-'n^ss, but~nbf& much as in SBake-speare. Thec^ffoultlsltstroatmentpt.lnsanlty, In'j rfof «tuel andrVwTiiaTmny^p.erntenance of bull:flJamusement of 8pCopyright, MM. br>-«|il

>o«t Publishing.. Co. (Tlio Boston J>o«ftcopyrl«hrln the

United Kingdom, tha >«nlnlon», lt»l Col.nla and deperidenclei<d£ th opy

authors fondnesslL practical Jokes,'

the malnras the notional

g « n n l o , Cjjnlea and deperidenclei<and£r the copy-right act, by the Pc»>ubl4fhln» Co,'BoBt6n, Moafc, U, S. ATA11 rlghu re-served^-- , 'ft' I

„-..MIM Fortune Had

Editor (to unsucceNone of these drawingg/BiD F

but-No o g / m e bcheer, upf Dame Forrnne-Wi "come"to your door 'one, of tbesp fU

ArtUt-^She'Jl 'jolly well,knock, OienrTIer.daughter;,

1 *

Sathes Are Good HonoyHak-er»,on.AnyFamv7;.. <,.;

COVffl CROP M O V E S SOILA|l Rubbishr Oead.VinM or Plants,

8UkM 'and Pol*, Should - • ;Cleared Away and' Ground

Planted to a Green Crop. —'

Whether It Is conducted on an ex-tensile- scale to. nufrnly-jtlift-market-orwhether; It Is to prodooe food for tho-family the tauten plot.Is likely to bethe most profitable uoreage on thufomi. Gardening really starts In'thofall.

g y s tWhen tli« last \efotublea have

stored the

* T O u n d ?er Ku( prepare

•'»« n p « y«or's wop.

Any rubbish, dead vines or plantstrnd beun poll's or tomato stakes* shouldM cleared uwuy, nays tho Untfed

'States Depurtiiient of

suit Is like taking" money from onopocket nnd putting It In auothcr.

Tho farm inventory, or propertylist, offers the only practicable way of

-and the Kroiuul-sown-to-r)e-er wmie^ -answering-(liese-tjne^tloiiH. Onrt> tintother green crop to prevent the looseearthjrroni^vnshlng undtT tho winterrains. 'A'" cover'crop 'Siso improvestho phyMml condltlun of tho soil.When a cover crop cminot* Ixi suppliedthe next best thing that may be donolsjto_plow or nprido the soil nnd allowIt to" lfe" rough' tUruuKlfuut the winter.'This wactlce destroys many Insectsthnt lie "Just below tho surface. The

Ho' bedi Furnish Ear;/ Vegetables ata Time When Thjy tjomrnind Hlflh-eit M«rk«t, -prle»tf^_, _ ^—7

winter' frosts. Cavo a lightening effectupon the soil, especially on clay sulls.

The earliest nnd choicest vegetablesare liimested by tha man who main-tains a few hotbed Hashes nnd usesthlm to utarj IIIH giirdeti. IJe Is iitileto handicap tho frost line by Severn!weeks, and to set etrong, well-devel-opcd-plnnta-4n-hla garden-at-A--tlm«

night Don Quljote.whllcr sound asleep wln-n his n'rlghlmnf are planting scedrAnd dreaming, enjojed the mast fa- The farm lncoino.-ln.-jit-Its 16«estmous battle of hjs career. Dressed point In the early spring, but It enn beIn'a short shirt-which exposed Jlls_ lncreni.ed considerably by the'sale oflean, long, hairy chunks, and wearing young plants grown In hotbeds and

for transplanting. Tomato, cabhage, cggplnnt and pepper plants arenlwn.is Vnapped up when the firstwnrmyplanting dnjs come, nml theyare eusllj grown in '{lie hotbed. Alittle more splice -nnd'a little .more sendtlian the grow er needs for his own useftiejlkely to bring good profits. Before the ground freezes In- the fall Isa good.time to deun out thft old hot

H I P goH—»Mid—In-^t4io—hotti.cd- . ^

Is to be exchange<l for fresh enrth Itshould lie sJuneled from {ho bed andtossed Into, a pile nearby,! Tho de-cayed manure from the.bottom Is scat''term! Over" (he" pile"anil' thoroughlymixed with It to fc/rm rich soil forn«xt year's bcdit. Over thl((,goes/acoot of stra* or leaves held down bybits 6f board to keep It from blowing.

Snnie farmers find It convenient to-use evergreen boughs Instead of straw

iparatlon of Hc\Jbod.New hotbed pits should ho dug so

that they "will fnee the south, and Clocution should be selected so tl „,.the beds w,rij., be protected from, -fhefcold north'winds and lntp"_BprInK_ p

Sometlmps the e"arth~ifl,kcnfrohi the ftew-pit-4s_Aultable f«£d!?«^°the hotbed,, but.this Is^-the.exceptionrather than the rule. -\ few loads of,.l£iULU10j<LfEQD1- the woorta ml^wi with-the-nfrturat-soll-wljl often formRDiooth, ;Hcb: stohelefls mass. which

The back or north frameThe n r h side ofthe frameIs usually from, }2 to 18 Inches, high,while.the south end'Is iflbODt eightInches, so thafthe whole bed may-havepitch, enough* to get" the nun upon all_

han41ed'by most dealers, and meqsureathree feet In width and six feet Inlength, ''A frame. Just"wlde~enonih "to.support the sa&h seems, to bethe most5StlH5SiSrJri_t?0J?'511.,wJaw. Peda^areK/iraetlmes u*ed with' supporting: ridgeVplaced at slT-foot Intervals, A well-painted cypresii sash, glazed with a

double-stcength glass well set-Inputty should glv;e the cartful/gardener'12 toifi years," service. " < \

Heat for the hotbed Is fnrniflhedjbyvmearur-of a bed of horse manure 8t(yWJnches- thick In the'bottom'of thepit. Perraanertt. hotbeds- are 'oftenheated with colls. otvsteam or hot-

under the,b?d. ;K- - ~frequire 'constant, care, t to

prevent • their b*"esvedally. during L_rlitht^weatiier. -1«•'•'

Bulletin -RMtntly Istuwl-by' 4 1

What Is th» net worth aC^onr , ^buslnowT Is It'more or Jet* than outwould imagine from a caaga.1 ini*p*vtton of yoor farm? Do 'you know furmire, whether you are go|ug or cominfIn financial «tnndlngT '

The*« are important questions tothe farmer, and (mentions that are not

mi'ulu m fl•appear. Farming Is an totrlcnte busi-ness, and on»-|n which returns fromInvestment are sometime*' long de-layed, so thnt progress cannot be ac-curately measured, bjt th* amount of

.whollyother

Income' nmy"'l)eattributable.

f» thnf in reality tbe. re=.

almostto -reduction In

farmer Jias made'tr-compleu- list of-nll^hlg HHRots nnil llubUltle* und himbalnnccd them he knows Just whoHilsuct'worthjs, and when li« Tiii« madesuch a llsfNjnminlly .he knows enchvenr whethcrh<» hns gone forwnrtl orbuck, nnd Jutit hofo<tmich has been theInrfensp- or rtocro'a^'fn; the fiet wortliof his buslnpRS.

The Uttltcd-Rtntefi Dppfrrtmpnt ofAgriculture hns Just IssuedBulletin 1182 entltlisl_."Kiirmtorlrs,"-ln which nro grvi'n tlctnllctl ,Ktructlons for making nn Inventory ofform property nnd rvvlslng such ii'llstfrom j e n r l o yrnr. Ry using the dimplo s.\stcm dOKurlbod in thli bulletinnny farmer can determine exactly hisfinnnclhl status nnd' lay the founda-tion for a permanent system uf ne-counting. Without the farm Inven-tory as u luihlH no system of nceonnt'Ing ihnt might bo chosen would be. ofnny great use to tliu rarmer. 7*

ESSENTIALS FOR BEST EGGS.

Proper Proportions of Sound X>ralns,Oyster Shell and Clean Qus.-t*r»

r- *»•« Neceisary. - •'

Jtlfit hccniiRe nn egg-Is freshly laidJng. ttlluapfinn'ntly hentlhy lion It cannotbe U?nuige<l (hat It,In n good*egg. Hen*that nre forced to obtain -the greaterproportion of their living no woven-gers and given a poor range to work on

ri

Ity u«i cm) a flock which regularly Isfed a good ration.

Eggs Inciting protMn have a wnterywhite and the shell Is upt 'to be thin,owing to 1IK| partial absence of suchlime. Such (jegs! besides being of lewivalue n« food, nri"> inert! thin imply to*bring forth puny chickens of low vl-7

tnllty, 8ubjett to white diarrheaan eHrfy-deatfi, With ^proper quuntl-tics of wheat, bran, clover, oyHter HhellW<1 "sounds graftis In tire ration/fed toInylng hens, eggn with firm Hhell", rlrtiIn protein and delicately flavored aresure to rcxult, provIdlngy'ojF "course,thntjhe flock In given clenn fleshr aridruns and I? kept free from mites.

DEVICE FOR HAULING FODDERR HAULI

8evtr«l Shockt/Of Corn Cm Eailly BoDrawn on inexpensive Rack-

to/Barn or Yard.

A handy device for•d'leV fro*rt ihn.flfriit li

cut. It Is n.rack-made of tvro pore*which are fastened to the Rthe front wheels.

on the ground. Two crossplecen ar*firmly fsstened to the poles and t*ouprights at the rear prevent the"con/from sliding off, Several shock*pf corn can bp loaded on this and,drown to thc^cedjng yard ~* '

____-A_M______S___l^_^_B-_H

EREVENT, HAnLJEy^OHNEr.Strip' ofTamp Wlek or Rawtlde Fa«-

The renr end rirniM

tenea Along Edge of riadiatorWill Stop Nolie. '

Tho motortruck Is, of course, pecn-.Jlftrly liable ,to rattlw, and anythingthat helps r«iiuce,thls will'be'valuable.-"A strip of rofiiifiTflnin wick or raw-hide fasteriedjjalonr'"the-edge'of-th(r~1

radiator upon which'th'e f r o t d f jupon which 'Ufe front.end pfprevent Some of

the noise. The ledge can be prepared1

fo'r tbe wjck or hide by- drilling boles,through which fhe material Is ihread-ed, or by drilling smfrHerr holesecurlng.-thft -wiclr^n-df fine wire. '

v.ntSd

,j — '

MUCH SOILFCRTrLITY

A_U_aih"lno or Erosion "ca* V j j » £ >T . .—.^. b y Keeping Hilly L»r>4k ' * ; 6

' Mucher by

sod,

* • • - , ™ —

Page 4: z^stzs - digifind-it. · PDF fileMoore was re-appointed Building In- ... contractors conformed ; ... plambers llcensos were iaaued. 80 pert mlu to keep fowls, 8 for goats. 12 fur

t-\ r - ;S?^j

Armenian Troops forthe Baftfc FromIts • a « r a a » , ,- • >• -,

UFEUKE STUOTBy ARTISTi i •

Valuable Addition to Portraits of Ho-_jh»o'Emp«r«rs and J* Onfy_p_ne_:

Extant Done During Env""' oarer's uf» .

Rome.—Tlvoll, that lovely Uttle city•- -perc-bed-above- Uouie,-caIled-Tll>ur-by

the undent Uoiuans, bus just given totbe archaeological world two uew arttreasures—au auyusteuin, or hall,and i splendid heud ot Emperor Au-gUKtUif.

- „ . « . « . » * lroopi_m*rchIng_ouL ot Hie cltl i>f_Erlv»n^tLP_Arnienlai^capllal. today* latrr Hie»e Armenian* defeated HIP Turks In a hat'le at llfdlr. Inserted Is awho « as fint president of Arweula, and Is now Ogbting as a private.,

8e*eraf

IfARMLAND INCREASE*—

Jtimpr65 Per Cent In" Five*1

, According to Estimates ofSecretary Meredith.

FACTOR I N T A R M OWNERSHIPWi.Tft'Ntrltctlon of Upward Movs-

mentof Commodity Prices, It In.dicates Incrtiilng Scarcity of

Farm Land,

• Waxlilitnton.—DurlnB the last fiveyeni.i tlio f i l ing prli'u of farm lutul

-and hp|iriniMnniii» lii n»» Unlli'<l WHIP*

/

\ ,

IX

Increased (15 per (put, according to e«-tlinilcH made by tlio necretiity of agri-cult uro In bis niinual report to IhuPresident. Hetwren Miircb. 1010, andMarch, H>20. Hie-lncreHse was 21.1.

~ Although- the <lntit for the 1IK!U cen-sus arc not jet imillnlile. It neeumivohnhle, Iho secretary wild, thatwlill« .HIP avehiKo price or farm Inndanil Improvements per'ni-re IIICII'IKUMIonly 20 par cent during the 40 yearsfmm 1800 to 1000 the price In 1020Is two nnd,.6no-h|>it times that of 1V1OauU flypilmiyi'thiit of 20-yearn ngo.

Pfyrieo-of /itfiu -iniut* in. eDdrfnpottnnt factors In thu problem

farm ownership," said the »ecrc-Tj. "K I* e»l|mittPd that hdlwernArch, lull), and Manli.-llHO, ithn In-

creawi" lu the Helling price of farm,land undl Improvements wus 2 l l i p e r

\rent. In1 tho' InM flu- ypnrs the lu-

HP tins been (13 |>of «eiu.-==-rrT<f«t_R*tiirn Loss.

""In sFrmp"SectIoim*(Iu~nel"Fo(urn on"(hp\nrchliw price of fiyw lands IsconshWnbl.v less , than the ordinaryruin ofVeTurn on flint mortgiiKes andsimilar ftiveHiinentN Thp rental ruteof ctitdi Iclweit.'also, Is frequently" lessthnn half iKp. rate of return on mort-

niiulp l(>y the depart-nt Indlcatp >hat, In certain regions,

tlie recont- advWu In tho price ofland hits Mill further nKgriiMitcd Mittcondition Such n\lmillion \n tin'ortil mi If. for- It liicrensKs Iho dlltloultlof A temttit who Is Kce\fng to ben/lirnn ovviipr." ___

"While the Increase InNKnd/priccs,!<•, to Milne extent, n pt'lloctton of theRppprnl upward lnoiyinent h/Yhe le\elot coininmlliTpnrdml ln_theable for

Km ._of the iirvn de\ott'd to crops,

putlmnred nt lpu |KT rent from Wl-lTO I01S, or noMncreafee of 3 4 per centhi Hje pyfyaipitn acreage. This WIIS

ntUUInir puitnre land for<rop pn*ttuctln>» nail by bringing Into

' oUfer uncultivated areas. The ex-s (mntfmt.wairparHriilnrly marked In the

' of small grains. Since the nrnils-thpre^lnis. bean a reduction" In-

/crop acreage. From 104^- lo ltrJOMhcijc was a decline of fl.4 per cent InIho acreage of 20 principal crops. Ap-ptreiitly t h e \ reduction.- Jins been

n«i> of U\f lo» Kruilit nn-ui which weretemporarily iitjlb.i'd.

What the War Dtd,chnnfic* HIIOUM bo Instruc-

tive to thnsc. who would reduce theprices of form pnHlucts by -bringingInto use Inrge nrvns of new lniid. ItIs olenr that If prices hail been ex-trnonUiinrlly reuiuiieratlVe""" to theformer compared with tiie-returns oncnpltnl. ond Inhor ,ln Industry, weWould not ultnpfti this reduction oftlie ncn-age In rultlvatlpn, but, on, thecontrary, a continued enlargement ofIt. While HIP wnr folidltlons teni-

-fireroen-Are-eailed-to — -Rescue Family Roast' \

LOUIKVIIU', Kj — J . ' A. Craw-ford was resting In his home,1fK)<) Portland inenup, uhllemembers of the fnmlly werenwny. lie " ?cil " Dslpep, tirltnn'nkened Rmnpthlne w«» burn*Ing. Ills nontrlls told lirai that.IiiHtantly his feet caught jliemeKKnRP and carried him toT^hp(Ire alarm box on the confer.When the firemen arrived, thohouse nan filled with Mnoke.More wan coming from tbekitchen, from thu oven, wheretlin rnutp jjti^lio trouble was

. found—a large pork roast. Coldmeat wan served for dinner at1

tho Crawford home. {.

porarlly lnrreaHp<l the net cash lncnmoof the farmer Ulid stimulated n teni-pornry expnnitloii of the crop area,this we* duo In large measure to ihorpsiKinso of the fanner? to thp In-KNtPiit call for more food, particularly

nnd rye. I lie principal breud^Jioine after he"It Is of no small significant

Iho contraction In ncreiiKe lint*IILO)M extreme In tho CDHC of

then* rmps, ptdllnatiHl nt SI f> per centfor winter wheat, 10.1 per cent forspring wl»«it, .and 22.0 per cetit fur.

Unit'I

— \ -

ceht

Oniahii, ISeh.—James/frrpetnun o"fthin city ban a hullet IM IIIH heart andIH still aUvU1 He und tho iiolltfeffiiewns Nbot by hit W/Tfe, from WIHHII hehad been neparuUMi, when he returned

H Hiild to have threat-ened Jher. Hlii/mi't him nt tho door andtired potntninnk. -Ho .walked to thopolice Rfntlon, nearly three milesaway./Uhero medical attention was

He was rcmntcd/tn a lion-nnd nn X-ray token which show-

hullut nestling lit t|aI tho

CAUSESParalysis Traced t"==~" Blue Bottle

toMinnesota Scientist* Alsp- Hop*Find Orloffi of InfanUlt

'aralysls.1-

Mliinenp/iil", Minn —Minnesota Ci)l\erslty fnrin gchool experts issued aMnti'iuiXit that Infantile pamlysWAMiatnuwflile to thp lanni^ of thi/greeuhoufn flj. Tills theory, which, it Is

|>ed, will nmke.lt |iOHslhloT<ir modi-I ntithorlHes iiol' onl\ to, prevent ttie

spread of iinralj«K t'jililoinlc nmongchildren, but alsolto f>ro\Iilo a clue,bus been studied bjya group of fnrmschool iwlierts. Y

The subject ha/been mttm rohsld-eration jit Hie/MhineMitn pvpprlinentBtntlon—ln"AM>pi'n"!lon with eertnln

nutHorlthv. It Iwranie known,a* a result of Hie la'evHxatlon. thatthe Inrync of the bottle fly was ICspoturtbit! fuc-JttiK )HU9ly«U,atul-41iu-

In i>oultry.« are beliiy madp by II, Adnmand Stnnlp} I>. WMtklns of

In CJ_M'1HTIIUUII with IX Cnnd \V. 'A. ltlllliijrs of the \et-dl\itdon of Hip unlxersity, and' Ith of the poultrv dMslrii

\ t o the^au»es atid njelhodof A>nfr0!~or\nnlmal-parnl.v<!l«s by-rer-tnln (IHi-merlitrace tbe campoultry* -In.

mndp. In an attempt toat llnjbcmcck Inlinpnfa a.' c<>ckerel

was fed on Hie',lar«rno of green bottle

flleii, whlcli liud fed on tho head of a|u>g which turn dH'd of puralysls; •

The resMU was that llnjjienicck Im-mediately do\eloped In the eockerW.JSext_tlic. processjvns jreversed. Paral-j sis of (lio~liThd~quiiK)pniwai<Iin)iiuccilIn /ulncu plRS by feeding them lnmiew'ldch hnd fed on u chicken whtdiiliowcd llmherneck symptnini. * -

The Information gnlneA from ttiohave ntmnl the u n l v e r - ^ ,

olllcliila lo send out bulletins to 1nltyMinnesota farmers urging tliom toprotect their U\o stock and ,poultr>,and possibly humnn lit*t\ltli. by burn-ing or burning deeply all carrion.TIIP.V cite tills as nn nildltlnnn) uruu-ment for farm and home sanitation. ,

ROBBER OFFERS VICTIM $10"You Need It Worse Than I," He Says

• to Holdup on Finding Man 'Penniless.

Sipiihpnvllliv O>~Panlvl Calile, apottery woiler. lepiiited to the police'

beWHS penniless. .

Cable Raid tlifft the robber leaped'upon, o\ erpiiw ere* tfim, nnd then'wnnt'through bis poc'fcpts. Pladlu»-' -oo

renvhed Into his own pocket, millet!'t»ut n roll o( bills and offered to g Vhi S10 l "H bhim S10, Riiylng: "Here;, brother, you51

nfed It worse than I do." /ICublo snld he wns too surprised to

accept the money, , c' L

HAS 9-EG6r?'A Square.Mealjtj,ast,".

English Adventurer.

' i.j'TlireeJMontJha' Canoe Trip In

"' or CanadiTana

_ ^ _ of_Slrdersley, goternor of ttiu .lltid-

ay/company, has retumefl'fivni-"'i ''wonths* ~«n5i5e" trip-'Hifftulili

.North «f Canada- and; Alaska..I ,(Japt TonJ O'KpIty, if veteran"

le'COtnpany'a service, as his gntoe"-^T.Compaq!w,iie, aet out from

ea Iiamllnf 'In p 15-footHo:traycled by Athabasea

.Slave river,the MackenzieS l a v t s J ^ a n d the Wackenxle

to- yrlthWDO mllea of the Arctic'"'TliiUnj! •tW" -1-1' *•--*— '*—

&

Hudson hayAt Fort Goott

Hope hethp

<un and roritfin iou<region-of the^nldnlght

nayik /Juno nnttl

ltoy,ond Fort

the .\rctlc circle and

ASIl'elstars from early In

j " . " ' ' -

plcl'herson and Arcticriver he fascende<| Hat r(v«t, "a

'iiarrow'tonvnt <?J nf-itfbig plncler wa-ter/that drotxuis-mnch In GO miles asHie. Yukon In U,0ii0." crossed | HieKocky mouhtaln«>,«nd. with^uppllesconipletely exhausted, reached FortVukon August 13. ' ' - / , •- -"A i^ilare-mealiit^lftsl^-nTutojthe

^ £ hi < his diary.•"Never"before'ha\e I eaten nine eggafor breakfast. • not (o nwntlon ham,-liread. Jam,.'cake, coffee andi

From Fort Tukon he -went up theYukon pa;n Dawsaa and White Horse,thrftufth tbe. old Klondike gold fields

thp house of Klndetslcj; liecnme anexpert enmp cook. - — '/_,

White lighting" lit "nld. "•merr1 _

about In" (Jeuse clouds. , r ..my ganntbti my bands, wore Instant--IjrJhlflden with tfip Insects'.! Stumblmg,feouch thp tundra, J, lost .my-mofi)iiiito-bar hfljnct^aifH' soon in.v~.face\\M covered with the blood of crnsliedmosquitoes. But I enjoyed e\ery min-ute of It." • • '

r—WINE—IS—FOliNDCa»e Unearthed by Excavating In

Rulnt_of_OJ4-BUIldintf: «• " ""-" 7 lnFlor lJ*JKT ;r '^"'

*.[Port,Sl. Joe7VIa.—A case o | choicewine, Mllevod. burled over 100 years'

-ago, 5.as oxqoVate<I by workmen'en-'gaged In- dismantling; the ruins pf "anold^ulldlng t^ Port S t Joseph, "nearhere,,wh|ch was deserted In 1840!*'

yellow ""•

Archaeologist discovers .SplendidStatue of Roman Emperor

at TivoU. •

ueologlstH whojuoclal iftudy,

have luudo Tlvoll abelieved that

state of the, city In Bouura*days. lie began to dig near a newlydiscovered weights and measures Qf-nce-. also .dating froin Hie ltoman/m-plre, thinking thut the, public weightsand measures must surely be near•oine Important hall. /

He"* wag not mistaken/ He hasopened up a hall with i/lloman pave-ment of white and/green marblewhich looks as If Itf were put downp

morning, ioftotti'h'ft and'iWie•tatuo of Augustus, brpken but withthe head Intact, as the picture shows,with''the lifelike, lint's cut put o( themarble by-some unknown sculptor otevident genius.

/ Llkentas of Augustus.The stutuo Is a likeness of Augus-

tus7 when he bud grown old. An ln»^rrlptloii utidcrnenth.lt, which dedi-cates the statue to the godu, "for thehappy return In good health of ourAugustus Caesar," pn»es It wus donaduring the famous emperor's lifetime,ir "votho- offering to the gods by nlojnl Tlvoll cKUeii »ho signs himself

by Coal

i

•Ik

1

ii

k

mm1•••I

1

IifA

Kennebu ,,„. H Me., has a grist mill, operated by the tide; It wuLerecter*- ii never stopped since then. - Unaffected by shortage of coal or

~- • — -~ . . -—, Bonn alw-^Beft-i—*•In^fouh As the monp is an hour slower each day compared wltli the i

^r, the miller has to change his hours somewhat^

-M. Veranus Dllfilus. The same mangave Hie public weights aud measuresto Hie dty.—History lets ns date-thls-statue be-t w e e n . * O. 81 and A,.. D.' 14, whenKrapejW-Augustus died near Naples,aged sevejity.-stj;. Experts say the faceIs (lie face of a man of fifty. In Hiewom lined, the Ill-tempered mouth. Itsupward twiBt at the left side, we havefti)".iia««ltttr picture of- the- -great,emperor, but H lifelike study by anartist who dared to cut his stfltue. ashe. saw the human model. For thisreason, nnd because of Its surely be-ing dono In Augustus' lifetime, It is•I very valuable addition to the col-lection of portraits of the Romanemperor!), and probably the only oneextant of Augustus done during hialifetime.

The- figure, which originally sat onthe pedestal at tbe hend~of the ball.Is graceful, as guetolus, that gos-sipy historian "* from -whotn laterscribes Imv.e . learned-ncarly alj Hjey.

would setupon bis hairsometimes clipIlls beard,

Augustus,

know about the Bomut emperor*told us, saying:

Graceful Person.He wnaTji^iery graceful Derwo

-through all the. stages, of life, .thoughhe was very cifgless In his dress nnd

barbers to workand' would '

shavesame time

writing." '_„;h emperor, called

himself a democrat and. says Sue-totus, "always abhorred the title oflord as a scandalous affront" Hptells us, too, tbat^the emperor caughtcold easily and'Jwbre woolen under-wear ln»wInter,'^With_a thick wooltoga." ~ • **"

This broken statue, with the baseon which It stood, unearthed afterlong bridges the miltvpf centuries andbrings onT^oFtho greatest- rnlers thaworld ever"sawjyery near. /-

300 SPIES IN THEAMERICAN ARMY

Amazing Story of German Es-- pionage During the War) Is .Disclosed. >• -\

DESERTEMKES CONFESSIONFormer Officer te l l s of Being 8«nt

From Germany With Other Cadets _to Enllit In the(<Unlted. '

, " States Aimy. 7

New York.—Air umnxlng story ofOennnn esploimgo during tfie wnrwus disclosed when Jolin Wlllet, for-mer captain In the F6.UJ -eighth Unl-

confeiHd.he wasreally Hans WillerSj n c'ndct In the

.(leruinn army until 1UH, when he wairt'nt to this country with 300 othercndels to Jotntithe Amerlfiin army nndbecome United Stales.queers. /

Wlllet admitted lie had abwonde'dwith J(1,000 of bin coiiiiiuny'K fund** at<'iinii> Sevicr on'November IB, 1018,' alow weeks ufter the uruiistli:eLaiid de-sei ted._

It has this" offense nnd,,m>t any mis-(IILIOU of Ills Hpy role which resulteilin his anest heii> wlion Hugh J. Hun-iilMim, forn'ie'rly n lifst Ucutennnt Inthe l^tortj-eighth, /tccognlrcd1 the de-

hca:cJhittlL33!lil!er^itlioi_ha.d_bi>liiadnu j*ir-r<>r-ivoii- thp -street-nnd-lioUed o-po-np while lie was on hla vay home In 'n suliurh, offered ti^glie. him $10 aftertho hjEhwa-iinan discovered that

lnti at Treason In Washlnatbn.You would lii) surprised li_o\( many

Iolllcluls held JobR Induring the .war, Wlllet

"told/Dctcctl\e Sergeant O'l^caryr'Theiprisoner made" this statement after h«

cumeImd narrated hajy^i^ cume here nivv\hat hefwould havb~d;bne hutl.his.regj-Uietit been^scnt to ITrnncer

"I would have led my nipn/toslaughter, uud cou,ld lunoful to my ow i) country In muny/other<<nys," Wlllet declared, acconllug to of Crawford.

the police, In explaining why ho nnd^others were sent to the United Statesto enlist lu the Amerlcuu array, WllletWHS taken to Fort Jay prison on Gov-ernor's island.- •—- H< "Cotrftouted *y two'the Kortyelghth lnfantry; Sidney V.llowoll, a lawyer, and Fruncls Hatch,Wlllet began to respond to nuestlons.

As to his pedigree, he said he wasborn In Germany pud educated there.

11 _wj»s trained for spy work whenI w'as a boy and; later when I was acadet In a Uenudu military ncademy,"-thu deteftlveB-<liuH^V41let-nS-saylng.

"When the \vjrfld w.ar begun In 1014I wns selected/to Join It'hnnd'Of cft'Ubta.who were to/torao to the United Statesw lth orders to joib the American anjny.Other groups went tothe French armynnd to, tlio British. About 300 otherscame oict here with mu ^knew mymljtlnry training soon would he recog-nized and that promotion would fol-low/so I enlisted as a pri\ale the flrst,opportunity I got. 1 had no citlzenshjpapura—I did not need any.

Enlisted as Buck Private.'"I enlisted us a buck prlvatc/ln -Al-

hanj soon after my nrri\a/In tillscountry. Within "a \ery shnrt time my

I \MIS promoted."Sly heart was nearly' Ur'oken when

I' discovered my yugtmeiit probablywould not be scn)/to France. • I wouldIm-ve. "tiled for niy "country" glailly/" §6',15 da>9 nfter/lte nrmlstlce, I took thecompany fmftl money and left camp.

"I'm tolling you this freely because1 might IH well he dead,raotte/inucli to me.'

Life does not

- -Willet said Hint after he deserted

_ In Chlcngo about-a jcur ngo ho mar-ried "nn American girl named Gravf-ford, It" Is said. -

Wlllet recently opened a mall brderi e I hi i

erbusiness In this, city under the name

f C f d

Love of Muslo Traps /* Robber,6f Poor B«x

PhlladelphloAlt was. his lovefor music jvhlcji led to the ar-rest of Jacob Rats, twenty-fouryears old. Kat'z entered . tbeEmnnuel Lutheran church -hereshortly after midnight andfojind the poor box which beemptied of Its," contents, $8.Then he found the new organ.R had musical talent "and he

hi* fingers over th

pas-who

T he railed

m/Thi

tho Instrument that he (orfitftwhere he was, pulled out / thedlaphonoj nnd thunderedTho Rtrama awakenedtor, Rev. Rudolph NIlives next doorj aflie"p"ollce. ~

ORE T0TALX50,OO0,0OOtdNSdrea^Lal

' ofShipments ShoW Increase

i,000 During Year, SayDuluth Figures;'

luth,-Minn.—The total shipmentof Iron ore for the season reached nn-iroxlinately 50,000,000 tons, accor aTng-

lo figures- announced here. 'Iron ore shlppea~from the head of J

tlie tnkes thus 'fnr amounts to 47,90",-372 tons with about 30,000 tons re-mnlniiiK to go out from tho-DtrtgflrlfiTl^|Iron Itnngc rnllroad docts-nt TTwaI^arbors nnd Hie Chicago & 'Nortli-

"wTslerir~falIrbnu"~docks at Ashland,Win '

Total shipments from all the'dqpkffor the season show an lncrense of,appr«lm|«et£ T-TW-QgO tons QV«..ftist-v|yor'—wiien—'40.007,850 tonsshipped.

Children Unshod In Big Shoe Town.B k MBrockton, Ma'Ss.—This city produces '

shoes fop1 world-wide dlatritmttoa; "—„ makes more of BomeTclnds thnn „„,

he £t_nrted_triuc!lng^.'-ili>_ ^other-clty,-butJChor»os-r,-Brooks,-at-n^in« ^.,n«f tendance officer"of the'scKool board,

reported that many'of Its children areunshodr-There ore^at least-fifty chil-dren In the city who^canqot go foschool because they, tack: shoes, ba -,-|bcaue Uiey_ tack: shoes, basnld. and some -of them have; not been";to, school ln_weeka, , _>^

Where Italy and Jugo-Skvia <A|e Negotiating— • -<.

t*srOs*fc«

I h

t h

-.-astatete^' X ^^B^BBBsBhMl

' -••t^llHP"^^>"^^^aHB-a*S

and took ><tentner.at Kkagyfa>for Vdn-

Page 5: z^stzs - digifind-it. · PDF fileMoore was re-appointed Building In- ... contractors conformed ; ... plambers llcensos were iaaued. 80 pert mlu to keep fowls, 8 for goats. 12 fur

; it was erecteovartage of coal or

•d Witt the sun.

, with the basesouthed aftervOf centuries andlatest-rolenr thenear. /-

its ShoW Incrrasang Year, SayIgurea,

e total shipmentsason reached np-K) tons, aecofiflng-here,'rom the hood ofuoUnts to 47,90",-t 30,000 tons re-in tbo-DirtHQuflfiT1 docks-nt Two"hleago &>cks at Ashlaml.

Big Shoe Town.ihls city produce*

l l t i t t i dSTjInds thnn .,nny_losrP,-Brooks,-at—the^scKoo! boani.>f Its children areit least-fifty cbll-ho cannot go foI lack: shoes, baem have not been

./

cavse tbtw l l l . suie e-It's all «qr"welM<M

vice," said Annt. Julia i,*ak •• — ^»-^lfc*j^ ftaABal— JUBBUML-BIS

• firs* with-one,^then,.,doesnt «eryou' anywhegteudily~w4th one that A

' But Boberta waa not|Jt ilarrlage/aB endured by hI ustertr held no s « h lillu

to,"my ad-

But:y»here,,mother,[U eolng

«ressed,»older-

|g charms

rt||xdc tracr a w A w t JWttu

teBCln« sp her diib t « M t Tat****thej peeked la thnrarf. lb*4oor. Wtattiwjr,Mw w»s B o b e r t * « t k e «™*- ?*

table cornea, buti t * tact .

to

^ C . "Aid.*oo katnr.f cootnreed, her mother. J I,«M"so provoked wb«a.sh« came in'Wt^i that r i j on. • Here yon atfd I hadjpoeAo'all the work of sjtctwinx her

i Tea"! man was lite/and .hopingu k to her •little:5 , But I guess

/ 1

the same tfmft that Aunt]aklng her mind to wer ?

"ton's elderly practltlohis hand on his sucefsso?and telUngJiim a few things!be/oTadvantpge to Mm as

[ the'WOTkthe older

, That tt was all/tight was evidentabout a year later when Aunt Juliaand her sister/Were called upon to•fashion alhrWta of- lovely-garmentsfor a briitetobe, -Ana* It was not un-natural thnt they took onto themsejvej

^entire credit for the-match.,^BtitfJJtfDglan'and Uohefip; discussing'*n"$#iast night.

favorite lovers' caaundriiTwr-Ji

uwK

"At" first the place willstrike you as a dead littlemild, "but remember, 'thingsways what the/seem/ nrtd 11(here's a good ,, opportunityright man/o build up a practf<

I - tWn'<i a'/ominjr town. • • - -*TluOiks, doctor." said y o m | Pone-

las/amubell. T i l try to ma]/And with his first patient,

I to be Aunt Julia, the n e ^ doctorirniile especially -good.

Roberta did not meet thitalked-of Doctor Campbell u:eral weeks after his arrival.before she saw .him 8be-Urdws siing. "In fact," sfie 'ITO toliersclf one afternoon as/he drijf bythe <i1ndow and rousefl/Aunt JBln tolllchtt of oratory in/his behaltl "lmgettlnc a bit fed un/wlth that mln"_Aml then one nlfcht he came x\

PnsslblyTiife "aocl6Ta"CC5titeinvitation the/more rendlly becnubad recently cnught a glimpse ' _decidedly/good-lookln 5 girt at HissJulia'"!/

. Julia certain! r prided herselfon/Hie doifor's acceptance, and shefid Itoherta's mother plotted, to

'themselves proud In Ihe way

me?" decided that no earthly ashad brought about their happlne

gods. "Jt's funny ihat the Mat ques.tlon you asked me was Jtt I conlddance," said Roberta

"Oh, not BO. very," Wid the doctoroff-hand, thinking op the""jlcar wayHobefta's eyelnshes/nulcd at the erids,"although, of cour/e, I knew j oil conld."

"Tan did?" cried Roberta In aston-ishment.

"To be s«ire." said the doctor. "Iirtonvlllp on a" c ill and on

-my *»j/bact-WeoWe»l in- at >Hw townnnd the—prcttli»\ girl °n

ir. dancing with her heaiVthrownbjr£k, her jeyes full nf the joytjs\llv in<r.

ey, tplrl me w.as Itoberta Denn\ AndI said to myself. That Is the Art o:girl a serlpus-minded old coilgemikeme ought to marry—a happy-go-licky-comrade to RO down the path o f \ f ewith lightening the cares alongway.'"

"And I didn't fool you at nil." r*preached Itoberta. Then, with n tos'of her head. "I don't rare.'" «1IP said,and held jap her lips to be Khi'.ed.

mMci

I'laHall*'^n

S " 4

. % •

Nathan

« 4••vcllat, waa kanila 1MT, the MM • (• SpamUh «HM|stot

'n t~n i l«w—Hrdled'ta-Madria laMIS, 10 dar* ke-f Shk

Ital

• 3 d > f t him aeaseUe*,r<to>lxote jpjntfed to a terrific com-

bat with on* rf the lady's mart whosliced off half'ot hla helmet and oneof bis aara^j-tftidavntad. tho Vnijrhtpressed, dhe/'conibat'fto -victory., butJast aa hVinui about to gtve the finish-Ins stroke, the frightened ladj beggedhim to deelst.and be compiled'on *on-illtlon that the defeated opponentBhouJdrgojittd presentr himself beforethe peerless Dulclnea, who/was InreatUy, a buxom womaV known

Mancha for her skill in

ed to lnnlf at her n'mnrnns neighbor. 'A few days later, bruised and, bat-

tered In,untoward adventures,, tfieycame upon a. fteck o f sheep which DonQuixote conceived to be" a prodlgtouiarmy composed of an Infinite number

PREPAREGARDEN- - - i

A Few WdNCare^FDr Hotbed.Sathe» Are Good Money MaK-

ers on Wfarnu ' ) ;f

COVER PROP IMPROVES SOILS

In » aaVal battleytr Greece a« waa

BlaNrtcat faaad be>

Uken towhere he n u held aa a alava foryeara.* After fcla raaaom he Trrot*plara. Thejr broasht him more fathan fortnae, aad he added to hla re-aponalbllltlea. by weildloc. at the aceof thtrtr-aeTca, a srtrl of nineteen. Itwaa evtdentlr'a marrlaice of love, aaVeV Whtt coa«Utea'6aTy"6r«at*'Tfa*«,aa orchard, aone- hooaehold famllnre,foar beealvea, '45 hrna and chlekena,one eoek; and a ernrtble." Aa he eouldmot live by hla pen' Cervantea; aecbreila mlnotr government ppallloni'but.«hewjiarin eonalant dlfllrnltlea brranat ofptcaatiiK: debta and hla anbaalneaallkehablta. He waa thrown Into prlaon fordrbti releaaea.he aanlc Into abject pov-erty.

Part of "Don Quixote" ,vraa probablyirrlitea In Jail. Thla- novel, a manicmirror that reflecta noblra and kitchenivenrbea; liarber* and - ladlea of hlshdrarree, all tbe . Varied U'e of a bril-liant period, la eonaldered by many to beihr.virorin'a snreateat- hnmorona maater-

Tbe wonder of It la that It waailtr n «*"M woiiTliiM* !•!• al^tleih

Island of Cuba Contributes Fig' Ba.nanas, Coco Frio, and Other Ap-

preciated Delicacies.

b,U known little except mUfuriune.•^Uldren tnra Ma pacea, yonar peoplere 4 it, crown men underataad It, old«ol; prnlae It." <

A|l RubbFah, Dead Vini* s / Plants,' 'SUkaa 'and , Polta

Claaradl "Away and QraunjtPlanted to a Qr>«n Crop.

Whether''It Is, conducted At" an ex-teimlve. 8<Tilfe to sup|ily the market orwhether It Is to produce food for tho•family the garden plot Is likely to bethe most lirontuble ui-reuse^ on thofarm. Gardening really s^nrty la thefall. When the last vegetables hate-been removed uud stored the prudent

DDOOTOJGRESS

Way ot i

Reewtrymsnt t A»rtwilt0ra:««aw»a Parm.

•r to bettrmlM'Xaaetly H'».

' What Uthetnaf worth of yoar farmbosloeMT Is It W r e or leek than quVwouW bp«sine fiwn a casual U»>pw-tlon pf yonr.farm? Do yo« knpw furHIM arhetlier jou are gulug ot tpinincIn flnanclal-ttftndlngT

The*tt'afe Important questions ^tothe farmer, and qiiesttons Ibat are nof"

JW easily. HDBwrred ng_wguld_Bj"_nrrt_appear, Farming I* an Intricate bnsl-nen», and one In whifhjrotnrn*-fromluvegtnwnt aru •TOnuulmen long de-la.) etl, so tluit jirogrww cnnilnt l>g_ac _curately n)ea<iurt><l by the amount iifmoney taken lu a given tlni<>, Sonie-tltnfMi. yn«|i ln<*rtmi* mt>v- ha nlinowt

spurred Uko a thunderbolt from thetop of a hillock, shoutlny his battlo-challenge, putting the hapless sheepto flight and trampling* both the livingajtdr the elaln.' Impatient' to meet thecommander of the enemy he" shouted:

ground for Hie next year'* crop.Clearing ^Away R«f u u .

—Any- rultblaltr-tUmd—vlnca—uc-plnnlii,and bean poh'S or tomato stakes shouldb<* cleartM, auuy. tinys the' Un^edStates Department of Agriculture,and the ground SOWTI to » e or aomo

At that moment the shepherds ral-ife3 In defense of their flocks and^overwhelmed the unlucky knight firstwith stones and then with cudgels,leaving hlto la a desperate case, withnearly nH of his teeth knocked outbf"ItfOscne5T,* a*hd ntB rfbiB"kfiauTT)Trtkew.-

Did this adventure dlscourngo him?Not at all. It was all a part of chival-ry. Tie-and Sancho rode on In dolor-ous jrtlt<cour8e. -They were overtakenby night and had no shelter or food.Suddenly appeared, a band of abouttwenty horsemen, all In wblto robes,with" torches in their hands and fol-lowed by a hearse draped In black.It was the funeral of a* gentleman ofSegovia; Don Quixote took it to bethe train of Rome knight either killedor desperately wounded, nnd, assuredthnf It_ wag his duty /to avenge theinlHfnrtnrtun nf n / hmthnr-ln-nnn!

earilu-from washing under the winterrains. A cover crop- ajso Improvesthe ph)lRcal condition of {ho soil.When a cover crop cannot I* suppliedthe next best Hiliitf that mil) be doneIs to plow or spade the soil nnd allowtt 1ft. US.J 'lUjH Jtri'UJfJiqut Ml?. «|ntprLT1»U prmtlce destroys mmiy Jnsecfstbnt lie Just below tho surface. The

cake.Jam and -Lady

Roberta hung around and wntched,Jne prppnrntlons1

y get that fairy fruit, the flgbannna.? which Is one of the Jojs of a

w h e n n o r t n w a r d boun(J

^ ; r , an enterprising memlicrof s6me crew persuades the Btew-unl to help him firing us a little cargoftf l h e m a VTitee la t j , e New forS:

, n flne

r'THE1 sixteenth century romancesoichlvalry, written In absurd, ex-ng-erated style, were extremely

popula jn Spain.A" drifted gentleipan "by the name

of Qulxo'n, who lhed between Aragonand .Cas<\e, went crazy over thesefoolish bnls, which- he spent nil hisgub«tarice.\ buying. His brain wlisFtnfferl*'wH-endi«nitinenti8; -qoarrelsj

It. "I supposed can start the phono-graph going afterxsuTper and we candnnoo." she suggested hojpefully.

Both her mother nnd aunt turned tolook it fier. "Dance?\ they questionedfminl»on. "Ton_iorjbt the doctor Isa mnn" said Aunt JalfH gently, "notone of vour boy friends.* And If youp.vor-7wnnt to wtti th«^attentlons_of a_reallv worth-while l)enion.x Roberta.you ™nt to be less flighty. \But I'mnot Mire It's In you, child," she finished,with n Vlnh. Roberta regarded rustthonghtfiillv. Then, slie dtmpled, MHernnnts words hnd the effect of n chal-

.five minutes before supperxt)me the guest nrrl'ved. Supper wasserved' on the dot. But Itoberta wasten raltnitcs late. And her entrancelostnnne of Its effectiveness thereby.Her mother paused in the net of pour-Ing tip doctqr's cup of tea—her auntbroke off abruptly In the mfflst of a

qunnt In appearance and rich in flavorthat they are sold as soon as seen.The\ are no bigger than your finger.

Cuba, alas, is most'noted for delica-cies thnt could In no wise be broughtto Ni w York. To fnjoy Coco frio prop-erly von must sip the mflk of a fresh-ly sidle _coc»anut— wWch^an, epicure

pof the <hell through a straw, the whilejou sit beneath palms on a hill abovethe_blue harbor ' And agua de vlna—It must lie made by spendthrift squeez-ing of dead-ripe pineapples. Just gath--ered. S i\e In Cuba one*ne>cr realizes"what pineapple Juice, can be.

B " I n lifferamW-".cream

battles, cluienges, wounds, magisalves, compiintB,; amours, torments,giants, castlek cnpWed maidens/gal-lant rescues, na all sorts of Impossi-ble deeds of dHng, which seemed tohim as true ns to most authentic his-tory. Every inuceeper/Was a mag-nate; every muleirhrer a cavnller,

-i=-He=declded thatfor-bls/own- honorand for the servlctof the world, hemust turn knlKht-e>ant and jauntthriragh-the world, rire8slhg wrongs,rescuing captured presses , nnd atlast winning the Imp-jni sceptre ofTrapizonda.

tfj h

flow of-conversation.-rpenwl to RobertaJ-

What had bap-

la place Of thenoirly nfop of hnliicnMdmarHy adorning her well-shapedhoiul she wore n "Coiffure BO sleek, anddemure as to havif become a Puritan

'irnililpn. - Her-'plalneWfdresaJiad been.'shorn of Its fancy collar and turned Inat thcr throat Her very expresston.-nB she slipped Into her chair, was ofthe I utteMvoeldn't nwiPln-hswnnoth- ..is, repivnrloti And thronghon't. tne meal her

But guavn"s In many illfferent formsGuava-pnste Is the mosti'a-^ guava jelly and gua%%

are obtainable, too, and at afew^delicatessen stores may be found7

guava\8kins In f'like any otherhave alKbeen taken out, muskuielonfnqlilon, \.inl only the delicate ont-

Jars preservedfruit. The. seeds

aptfej ^changed his'- Ome^rto Dpn

Quixote, de la Mancha, "^.t himselfdubbed knight by n rnsc.\y publican,whbse Inn .he thought v,g a castlevrlth tour-turrets crownetwlth pinnodes of glistening silver, in orderto carry a full purse he sq one oftils' houses, mortgaged ano<er andborrowed a goodly sum from .friend.When his practical housekeeir nnd

er part k\left. For pleasorft as thearomatic, nWhor a slrlngeht taste isIn the raw KUitva.jhey would be bulkyand unpalatable In a guava canned.

-HiewLeUi»va!N»y"? aejL^YyL BB:u«ual deiicjev, anjr their rich brownhas an inviting look. They are Cuba'sspecialty as fii/nsXthat land a/ JTrults

York.

i was limited to 'Tea"1-and' "No" and "I£ you plensec"—Hpilte a con--•ran to h!er "usual lively,enmmpnts on things In lgenerttTr"~After'

_S"Dwr he_Bare_het nfnthpr aqd nwit'no ehnnce to rebuke her Dy|nccompl»ny-

«lnK thpm to the kitchen a*? they elenred, hut'scated herself In,iheJlt;-and made a grekt pretense 6f

. knitting needles.fhit In the kitchen her aiint nnft.

doing the dl-ihtw-discussed her

thp doctor might not be left too

actly boreo.' that there-Suddenly

entlyMr-€ old doc-

,whnt they'doggerel

:o his" own devices.^.But the doctor waf not1-

, H)v was thlnklne tp him!s^w n mtetaVe somi'whi

• afcroBs his mind flashed, at> relevantly. Ihe wfads" of

tor. "Things aren't, BIWRJ.The words

3o you enjoy

AiMntelllflJnt IJIg Tree,i ig trees urtr Ktrtmely sensitive to

coTdT/the shEtilest touch _qt "Jack,Fro-.t" being sufficient to kill thr trees.SkclUom. do_tiej _bear or maturet fruitabove the lattlnde of JUurslana. writesCeorge.Parke In the American For-eslrj Magaxlnc But a fig tree, plant-ed heslde a. mud-and-«tlck chimney of"a*~rrtIgroiB~cablir-nea^ Jackson^ Mlss^CIUDK "closely To the warm surface.passing round between the side of the

Ws-pretty niece,—tegether-w»-hls-neighbors, the'barber ond the crate,thought to core him by burnlnrDi3books, he was persuaded thathlslibrary had been carried away b . an«!cronlriSeeri-Bii6M)ecame craiier tln-•oVer.J He scoured tip a rusty suit •Tnall Which had belonged to qne-ofrh.

halted the cortege oqd demanded ancxplunntip'n. - The replies of-the clergy-men failed to satisfy~hlm nntl he flewnt ^hem Itt high dudgeon, Kncumberedby their rp))es they became easy vic-tims nnd all- took to flight.

They possessed themselves of theedibles desertod by tho clergymen, but,unfortunately, hod nothing to drink,nor did they dare Btlr from the forestbecause of the nttfnl clamo." made byu fulling-mill which-Don.Quixote sup-posed to_be_enehant(qent./The next njOrnlng they met a bap-

be^ fidln^, OR,nn, nsg ntfi>,wenrluj{ hisbrass- bnsln "on^hls b<?a"d~ta saro- hhrhat from the rain. Don Qulxoto rec-ognized this as thegoldeu helmet ofMambrlno and flew" at the enemy asif he would grind him to powder. Thebarber fled, leaving his helmet whichSuncho appropriated, though It-seem-ed to li|m merely a common dish.

They came to another inn. In thenighTDon"QiQlxorcrwhllB"Bound-n8lcep~and dreaming, enjoyed, the most fa-mous battle of his-career. Dressed,in n short shirt which exposed* hislean, long, hairy1 shrinks, nnd wearinga greasy red nightcap, with a blanketwrapped, around his left arm. for ashield, he was repeatedly plunging1 hissword Into the plump bodies of- sev-eral giants. Their blood ftfiwed acrosstho floor In wide, crimson streams.

Imagine the .wrath of. the worthyInnkeeper at discovering that hisfamous guest had disemboweled-allbis wlne-gacks, which were muda ofgoat-skins with the heads left'on.

After thin Tlrtti QnlTntn win frot

wholly, attrlbutablo to reductjim Inother asRets, M* Hint In reality the r«>-«"li la Htri> twkiny nionpy froin WW

•\

pocket and putting It In another.The farm Inventory, or projSerty

list, offers the .only prnetlmlito.wax ofanswering' these inutUloua, 'Qnty th«fanner has mnde. a cnmpteu* list ofall his a»scts and lUblHtleo and has.balanced them be known Just tvhat IIIHnet worth Is, nnd when bo "him madosuch a list annually he known etifhvenr; whether he has gone forwnrd orbacK, and Just how mueli tins Cecil theIncrease or-decreiisp In tbn net worOi

••ofThlif inMinrii*. - - " . " " "Tho Unltc«l- States DenartmenCjef"

Agriculture has Just IHSUPII Farmers'bulletin 1182 rntlthil "Kami Itiven-torlca." In which nrp glveli (letnlleil Jo--,stnictlrtiiH for making nn Inventory offann pro|ii>rty and revlMliiK SIK-II I> llttfrom yenr to yrnr By tislng the *lmpic Fjnteni descrllH'd In this bultethvhnyfarhicr enn dotpnnlnc'cxaolly fils.financial status mid Iny I IK- 'founda-tion, for a permnnent system of no-cauntlnt*. Without tb( farm. Inven-tory as iv bnsUi no systoin of ai'cunnt-Ing thnt might be chosen would be o f r ~ ."

l * ^

Ho'sbedr Furnish .Earty Vegetable* at~a Time When \h«y Commind High.

tit. Marfcftt PL

-winter1 f rWbt- iialve- » ^ t g gupoii the soil, especially on clay soils.

The earliest aiid choicest vegetablesare harvested li'y tho man >ylio maln-taln/f a few hotbed soah^s ami usesthem to start his garden. ( He Is iijileto handicap the frost line by several

ami to set strong, well-devel-

home by the curMo abd the barber;but he brokd- loose again. First hevisited his Dulclnea, but come awayconvinced that through more euchnnt-

blubber-cheeked, flat-nosed countrywench, the pearls of her eyes Into gall-

ancestors, mended the broken helrae1 nuts, her long golden locks Into awith a pasteboard vlaor, patched wltt cow's tall and hpr palace Into & hutthin Iron plates; and thus acconteredset forth on hta old hack Boclnante,whose ribs' stuck ont like the skeletonofTTshlpT^accompanlea-by a rustic-named Sancno Panza, persuaded intoserving; as his

h

ua

of enierahf. Thus , the^lree -enduredthe frost and occnfienal snow of afle-^ere winter, fiore_fruU anrf-Jhrlved

,emld inh0spltablir'*urr6und,lngs. J1 = X-pr

— Why Coins AreThe'principal why coins are

lt. Theprincipal rfcisoi' why coistruck instead of cast Is that-moltennietals contract on1 cooling. - Thus

f l t b r ; hlr^TIre always

rving; as his sqnirjk^ |Their depa/ture WHB a r>mve pf

taclo: the tall, cadaverous? lantern-jnwdd knight,' mounted opt his bonynag, 'wielding his long lance and carVrylng his sword, his eyes gleaming•wttirenthuslBsln and drenmlng of hisbeautiful mistress, whom he tailed

T l t h h A J g u a ^

n<ountfrfelt-cbrns;diow fitful varlaHons >n_g

always

I -" ^. *' I l anc lnlf? Danel-i-;-_«d-Roberta;5 fThenfjwllte

"IahoiildBays6,"uafdl1 voujoowrrei

accent

"ke,a doctor .evMP did „..olous as'dapce,TJ"c«mmi

- Primly.'. T

me

ated Boberta

„ and nodding at t™ the corner. - ' ~

For a tnomenr,'%Wie had IntendedMothrontih. Just tp'prove«f,' lnc tor'» eiancfe wa,"Ithatossofherlinftt)

Idfi. ihV.inan,e. phonograph;.* ^i ftsfftted.

rrysh?r bluffcould, flut

Vo" Inviting.

„„,-. authentic shaped coins do not.^etoailr^it Jsjlmnossible to "get Jthe

itanHrtnsr, *tid lastly vthen-the starap-j n g machine Is onto set up" theprocess of striking co,Ins ,1s cheaperand irfbre-~rapld than tWat* of /castingever could be. * . .

i . . * '. I . ! ^

are tBe deareat jkiBdest,- sVeetest,lowliest'girt ln : the; -wor ld : '^> .

She—CUv Jackv-bonTcan jm tell7H e _ I read between the lines.', -

xmunchbeHledi g rwith a canvas wallet^arid a leathernbottle, mounted onj the dlmlttutlve asgi.Dapple. . . I

Oh the-plaln»-of Montlel stood ascore of big wind-mills. Don Quixotetook them for outrageous "glan^ andprepared to-db battle, against- them,and despite Sancho!* protests thattheir hige armsjsere only vanes, he'innircd tH° rnmHn into Boclnante'Bnircdthin flanka~nnd-wlth, lance.dasTiid off to'the fblew vlolently^nd theS T i wWrled away

led ymotionless andwas *"

monks,next

ridings

oped plants In Ills gardem at a tlmawhen his- neighbors-ore planting-ilreu.

Tlie farn'i incoine Is nt ,lts-lowest\point In the early spring", but It enn beIncreaBed considerably by the sate ofyoling/plnnw grown In hotbed* and^reaily for transplanting. Tomato, cab-bage, eggplant nnd pepper plants arealways snapped up, when the firstwarm planting da>s come, and theyare rnsfly grown in the hotbed. Alittle more spuce. nnd a little more- needthan the grower needs for his own useare likely to bring good profits. Be-fore the ground freezes in the fnli Isa good time to clean-out the old hot-beds.

Unletfs the soil usf.d. In' the hotbedIs to be exchanged for 'fresh earth Itshould be shoveled from the hed andtossed Into a pile nearby. The de-'cayed manure from the bottom Is scat'

ESSENTIALS FOR BEST EGGS^ropir l^portlon* ot Sound Grain*,

Oyater 8heir and Clean Quvters"Are N«C4a{0£y,

Just hpcauite jm egg is freshly lnlflby an apparently heatlhy hen It cannotbe assumed that It Is n goodvgg lleimthat are forced to obtain the greaterproporti^^pf their living no Heaven-gt>r« and given n poor rnnge to work oti'cannot produce egga of us good qua!-•W-w»_can,ji Hock which j

&\

Kggs lni'k|nB'Pr<]t''ln 1fAYC ° waterywhite BH|I the shell Is upt to be thin,owing, to the partial aliHence of suclt_limit, hnciipggs. bPKldes being of lenHvalue |nn food, are. more tlian Ilktly tobring forth' puny chickens of low vi-tality, subject to white diarrhea anil

eariy detith, T With proper (|UuotJ-_

%

1

"tics of wTienfTliranrcIover, oyHTST"Sneit-nnd sound grolnH in the ration foil to

W i n g bens, CRKH wltji finn HIICIIH, i;lcliIn protein and neltmtely flnvored l\r*sure",to reHtilt, providing, nfthat the flock Is given clean n«-»ta amruns and If* kepj free from mjles.

DEVICE FORJAUUNSTFODDER \ / /

8ey«ral -ah«ck» 4>f Com Cm Easily Bo"_—Drawn on Inexpensive Rack

• = — to^Barn/or.Yard.. '

A handy device for drawing cornfodder from Jlht Held Is ahown-Jit HIP"c>JE It IS n rack-made or two poieawhich are fastened t» the bolster/ifthp'front7wheels.. The renr end

ment-she. hoaVbeen- -changed-JntOv*: ter*\. p v e r t t e j p t e .and Uiorpugbly."bliihlier-cheekcd. flat-nosed country mixed wfth-rf to form rleT soli-for

He had adventures with: strolling?tors and lions; he attended theJ'h'Camacbo's wedding; he-.exploredU deep cave of Monteslnos; he rod*ot\ Jttagle bark and visited tjhe name•esdifte aad duchess, through' whose

'nce Sancho was granted hisjn tb- rule over an island and/

did, 'with wisdom'worthy of Sqlo-mon. \fgny more adventure^ follow-ed, bu^tJagfDon Qnlxote returnedto bls'lae and recovered- his senses

Kth-bcd, dyln^"as a lovable.

masterpieee— -- — - - - -j j UJUDbL* }f***T** iTTaWWv v« -

satire. Dt^Qolxote has lucid mo-faenta; Saib's simplicity velht com-mon; sense, ten expressed in wittyproverbs. ^Ttai lness, bat

phreccasronal

% much as In Shake-speare. The'e&fanlt is Its.treatmentf I i ^ I ^of Insanity^

fer cruerandhwhich may

t

author's fondness-,pracUcal Jokes,"

h l

Co. (TheLjrjnltedJjL-,,,

onlea ani) depefl .rU*l.act, by'tb*Boston, Haas., C.

.. die cepjr-,Uihbiat -Co.,

right* re-

- ^ I s a Fortune1

i .Editor^(to, JinNone o f these dra'cheer tip! JDame'I

i_ of Ihe.

,w

next-year's beds. Over thls-goes acoat of straw, or leaves held down by-bits of board to keep it from blowlni

Bnme farmers find It convenientme evergreen boughs Instead offor the outer covering.

/ Preparation of Ht. New hotbed pits BhOuld bo dug sothat they 'will face-file south, and the

/location -should"be selected so thatthe beds will be proteolcdTft-om J h ecold north winds i anil' late springstorms. ' Sometimes (be earth takenfrom thp new^plt Is suitable ffar use' fnthe hotbed, but (this IS the exceptionrather than, the rule.^,A few loads of_leaf motcf^ffoni'the wo«j8""raixed -with

soTr-vrnr^nen^tonn- a*

mass, w.nlcnglves an ideal hotbed filler..

i track, pr ndrth side of the frameT^e pJi_tumally_-from 12 tq^8 inches hiwhile the south-jBirdJs about eTjJM!nchVs,~so thanhe*whofe bed may havepitch enough'to get the sun upon altparts. Tfce" standard hotbea'Tfts^Jsbnndled-bjt niost denier*, and^measuresthree feet In" width and «lx feet 16--iength: A framojjust wlrtp pnnnghJn

'f, tnippnrt the sash seems"totte the'mosts'ftUsfactory,- t(iough_ wlder-,^eds are

t l e s used with supnortlnjg ridgesb A ffplacea~"at al3r--foot intervals. A weff-

.pafnted effrrpss, Sa"»h. xlMed with ajrood doableatrength_gIa»ajwelLjetL_lR^ntty should give The cafeiftil gardener12io,16 years* service. , '

• -Hek?/or the hotbed Is Tarnished by'Wanit.ofla -bed of h"or»? manure 8 fol6Llnch>« "tfilct In" flielbottom ofu i * i l » i — - - — ^ Hotbeds are o

or bo*i

-care

Handy Rack for Fodder.

on the ground. Two crossplecex an*firmly fastenetTto the poles and two"uprights at the rear prevent thecorn from slldjng off. Several shock"*of corn can be loaded.on this and,drawn to the feeding yard or barn,

PREVENT RATTLE OF BONNET

"Along_£dge_af..B*4l<ltor-,Will Ktnn

The motortruck lH,.of.conreo, pecn-ilnrly liable to rattles, and anythingtf h l d M I i r b l p b l ;p f p ;A strip of round lamp'wick or raw-bide fastened along the edge of theradiator ;ipon which tb*e front end ofthe^bonaetirests will prevent some o fth^no^er^Thefedge can be prepafed .

dllU^ f g p

for the wick-of hide by drllUnttrnragh—which the mute;edV,oP-*y -drilllng'^ninller' holes and

i th i k in l bV ^ a

securing the wick in place, by pieces

Soil WMhlira or Eroalon Car* Be-Prfc,/1'. '\-'?vsnttd by Keeplpo Hllfjr-j;and.. ^ f '*:-

' " " -• C tor fad? E t c ( ' ' ' • - ' ' ' " ' 'y ppotor fad.? Etc

Page 6: z^stzs - digifind-it. · PDF fileMoore was re-appointed Building In- ... contractors conformed ; ... plambers llcensos were iaaued. 80 pert mlu to keep fowls, 8 for goats. 12 fur

THB CRAKFORD CXTfJEftM,

i—=, -> Poausntr C V U T THOSSMV'BY

THE CRAHFOBD .CITIZEN

Union"Avenge, Ozsnford, N. J.JAMES X. WAUOEB.

THURSDAY, JANUARY «. JW1

Twi i Oae Dollar • Year-fataadaiUMCrufontPoftOaeaaf

Tbe decision of tbtrUnited States"Supreme Court noted in tbe pressof Tuesday, upholding tbe orderof the Public Utilities Board ofsome years^ago for t tbe elimiaatipnof Erie grade crossings in Paterson should provo a liojp ifTCrnn-ford's similar problem. -The—lextof the decision is not yot at hand,but tho case Laving been foughtthrough to the Supremo vCourt of, 1 mm • - % £31 A * i l * • •

pointed BMife f tJUeonW wri HarryBarry, of 8th & h M M

The tot neater mtlaffsCorganised Condi M b M i i U»Boroogb Hall on Tqsaday evetUaa withall tbajaMibers pretend Tbe Mayoranapanced that be expected aU wan-bars to be in their aaau promptly at 8o'clock OB ail meeting olgbta la orderthat the bostaearttigbt ba concludedby 9 80 p. m, Tbe/Baroarh gadget iapreseqted by'tbe Anaaee'camiliittae wasdrafted aa an ordinance and passed flralind aeoood reading: Tbe finalwill ba held oa Tueaday evening, Feb.1, when if paaaedwiil ba published aian\ ordinance. Tbe Treasurer's reportshowed tbat hi* collections oorreepoodwitb tbe bunk balance, that tbe State

NOTCOfilState .Senate in

Denies ConfirUtility

Se»«ioo

flab «ndgainei,_ obsensnee ot the

i* I UMaobOe r lawa> As a eo-operattnf" witb tbe, municipal potlc*

ii'saloner*.

bad bean paidLeavitt and

gtho Unitedwould seem

pState* the dociaionto settle much.

at last' oight's meetings of theTownahip^Oomtnitteo, tho railroads

t ^ i l t l l l t rtho effect of tbe decision and tbis

position as Cranford with regardto grade orosaings. Tho Uniouaronue.oroasing bore, we bolime,k rated third in tho lint of duugor«ns crossings of tho .State, Wtsome places Imvo many jjrado eros-sings within tboir bordorH iuntoailtliroo as. wo have, Grade .crossingoliuiinatton is of paramount impor-tance to Oronford nud Uio 'presenttime appears to bo the right time,to. take the propoiiMrfyn- up .vigor-ously. , /

In this issue will .,bo found" thofull toxt of t)io new ISuilding midPlumbing jBodos. Publication nmado in kill in ordor thirtr ovory

and Coufcty TaxCounty Collector13,600, the balance due tbe school)Iwen turned overUr tbe Castodlaavreport showed that ba tad fantux searches during tbe year .

at bant tb*t many /

transfers.i •93,000 more

1,000. A letterowner of tbe

yiMr't uaaeuuiont woutliao last year, or | 1 , |froin DairtSr J. Keiily

for better polb u t - * ••- ^but In ho ba

I , lift . • . ! ! •

would recei;tha otbor

protection waa read,no watchman in tbeited-that-bit building

same sgperfcliion aanctory buildings" ln tbat

STATE ICE ARE NEEDED.

F.arm«ra «f South. Jersey-Hava Madenprahinalvt'Survey of Tiffflo fTThat Will Use New Cam-

ten Bridge.

- - — - - Trenton, Jf.-J.* Nominations' made by Governor Ed-

wards to compose a new- Hoard of Pub-lie Utility CoimnlRfttoners were notconflnneov'bjr the state senate in spe-cial session. In a ten-minute executivesession tbe iteimte, by a vote of 0 to A,refused to force tlio Senate Judiciary

inu»t be watched. Tbcro uro mniiy iociihiv./Oheinicul rsoorjt on tbs w»i«rother-muuicipalitip/i in tlio Hntno suppljUn the new woft un tbe Fink

ty wore Tuce;ved from tbe VtataI at liuatlb and A private chemisthud maderibe analvais for tbe

inki us tbe uoalybii were ao differentIlia matter wiia referred to the localIward of health fur a comparlnon. The

j wiu uf contideruble importanceduo to thu fact tbut.ttio woll it tbe one{irovidfld liy thu" Vorougb In lieu of theuimpdoued wall which was on U>» right,uf way of tb« uow County road.

CapV Newell Rodney fiske Post

f

• /

d person, whether o\Vnor,r-fltmtrnotor may know

exactly wh«t* w propcwwl iwdsubmit lu tho Township uoliP"

liittoe at the boaring, Junuury .HI,'suggestions as to changes whiphmay bo doomed desirable. Wfththo full opportunity thus givonthere can bo uo just o.inso fur ob-jeation after tho oodos'nro ndoptoii.It is not only tho privilego but tlioduty of every reasonably ilisposodperson who may bo iiitoroutod todo this. Tho oodcB aro doniguodfor the regulation nud safouuard-ing -bf~build!ng oporntlons audhealth nad are ncoossary for tbe

- protection -of the- public. --

ns suggested and reooimnoiidod by- tho State Doparlmoni in ooutrol of-^buildings, And .followod '- codes in offeoi and found to bo

•mall towns. Vnriohi nbjoulrunHworo honestly raisod by co

A lurguly attended meeting wai beldin the Itfid Mon'a Hull TuesdayIMK. Tbu oQlcora olectod at the lastmooting to nnr*o fo'r tbe enanlng yearwisro sworn in by I'oat Commander K/A — 6 l l l k ^ l H fK.-WtocMor, Senior Vice pbmuiaB'deirrDunlol ,7. Arnold, Jnnior Vice/Com-mancW, Harry Craig; Quartermaster,ISdward Morrison. Chaplain/Rev, A.N Builtli^Olucor or tho C/v, ThoodoroOliuiuborlu'ln; Trustees, /Larry Uren-nun, Cbus. MoNimarai E. A. Orulk-uliunk Tbo following woro appointedby Couimundor /Wlnckler Jto>Bt>rve:Adjutant, Henry7 A. Poole; SeuioantMajor, Krank/Lonz; QaartorinoeterHorKeant, Untold AuBtor; Guard, B,

InbuH'ikH Sentinel, John Ryan;Color lie&iors, J f a d _Kuapp, Albert

to the jH-mile. The brief sessionJiJurned_wltW)Ut_jiate. 'Thenom. , . .

<>«!, still-(He with the-op<>n-liig of tt(e"11i21 legislature." "Senators Pilgrim of Essex nndMnrktty of IliTKen,' Kcpubllriins, didnot attend the luwdon, nud SenatorIlulnes of Cumdcn, Itppubllcau, Is nowcounty reitlstrar and has surrenderedhis legislative sent. — -

Ilepubllcau senutors In conferencewore urged by Senator Bright of CopeMay to have the nominations reported«ut of the Judlclury Committee. Sen-ator Kunyon of Union supported rtbe'move on "tho part of Senator IlrlRht.On roll call on this,motion Hrlglit undIfun}rm wcro Joined By Senator Whit-ney of Morris., Senator Sturgeas '.ofHJnticeatPr dlo/not take sides on theaction. Eight other senators opposedthe reporting of tbe nominations."Whllo^the Republlcnhs were, hold-Ing njjdrty caucus the RIT Democrntlcsenators n»;re«0 to Introduce- n resolu-tlor/to relieve tlio Senate Judiciary(Vnimlttop of the'tinmen sUK^eited ItyAlovernor Edwnrds for tho new boon]..

When tho session met at 8 o'clock

ly order** Democratic Lender/Brownof Middlesex offered the resolution torelievo the committee' of farther con-sideration of tho nomination?. A votewas Inken, resulting/In'nine of theItcpuhltcan senators op|w>slnK lifeBrown resolutlorKind six Democraticmill three ItenuMtvim senators fin or

• It. -Senators Itnnyon, Whitney and! I.* ^.^^t _ * ..111 _ a _ fc. . *

TpwiuHip Sinking Fund

BalanceWband

Ky pdepanmeata; itTrould.J>d Invalnable.

, Utility Beard Protests.The New Jersey Public Utility Com-

missioners protested'to tbe InterstateCommerce Commission ' atainst thelatter board acting npon ap applicationfrom tbe Baritao- River Company forperaHssfon to Issue $100,000 ot capitalstack at .par; tbe railroad company, a-New Jersey corporation, wjiose line I fentirely within this state,' bavlne_Ig-nored the Public Utility Command applied directly to tbe federalbody.' Under ordinary circumstances thePublic Utility-Commission-would-nodoubt be justified" In entering a pro-test ; but,1 "according to . a statementmade by tlie president of the Ilaritan-l&ver Company, the Public UtilityComrulBslonera two years .ago grantedperndftdon for the Issue •oT'tbe $100,-000 of capital stock. Under the clr-ciirnstanceii, the recent pretest appears

hurtGranna* Wanti

It Is largely over the fanner's landthiit'the. hunters^ tramp W[tb. gun anddogs; It Is generally In • ctsver" foundupon his 'profifirty that game Is lib-erated for breealiig purposes and heIt li-S'liP suffers most through thedepredations of pprhunters^and Uintother unsportsmanlike class which ile-atroys" fences nnd cUreleSSly\stnrtsgrass and woods fires as It phasesalong. - •"'• . •'—. ' \ .-_. T h e suggestion that the Grange b>

Wcb^ze:a'IVFth|"'a:|ii):titiiVwg8t of two"memher3 to tbe KIsh and Game Com-mission, is not- iili unrcasnniiblo oneand It should receive serious conoid-criitlohV- The only: way "in which thelcKlsluture could be Instrumental In In-suring this object wqukKbe by aniend-i

intoJan. 1

Jnne 28 Int. on 3rd Issue 43i* Liberty. 1" " 4tfa " iH%- ' -"" " Stb " 4Ji* Victory No

July 1 " " Improvement CertiecaUs I- r " Bank balance Jan. I, • "

•• Cranford School Bonds i'• 4th I s s a e ^ S IJbert?I"3rd'• 5th" ImproTemeniQertiflcate«vSJ

" ifbrd School Bonds 4J<1Bank habwee July 1, -8" '

1I

Nov. 23" z&,

Dec 18" IS" 88"'-J81

" \

ACXX)ONTlKa OF

V4th •' 4>j* " " '*• AS 6,000 00Oth " 4*i% Victory N o t e s M 7.000 00W) War Saving* Certificate*.M. .... 878 SO ~9 Thrift Stamps M . . . . . . » 85

19,000 (par vajoej Cranford ScBjtonda' 0,040 00f7,000 (par Talue) - •• faXtment

Ceriiacatej..^ TM 7,000 00 .

1920Jan.l

Total Investments aa iDeposits witb Cranford'

Total Investmentsjanicl

, . - . , . , School S | i i |

Balance on band".

bn ,....$48,917 50>••»-... 0,140-85

the- Inclusion of two Grangers In themembership of the .Fish-and GameComnilsslon.

•85,068 88

(84,408 19

Location of Fire Alarm Boxes17-South anil Walnut A»enue«.W- Oomwr Onion and Horth Areapa.^nurnslXandWUltam8ti*»t. ~".X -Corner Onion Ananoaaml (;iaremont PI

8tnriiB£Onlominil tfnbolii A

conj*nii'

_rttenow codos embody tho bosVof migrgestions iniulo by1 contwiotoVH- jiithe.Bovtiral trades iiiloonfoiumiowitb tho Township C\imiuiltoo to-gethcr with othor dqttfrnl u ohitugosRUggosted by oxuo>ioiioo iu opor-ating under, tho/oodeH. I* nowthoro appears io bu nny furthorohutigo oeodod, the timo to -Vfiugsuch to tbo «dtepUon of tho Coiu-uaittoo is, at tho hoAriug January19, mlt Bfter. .Tho Towireliip Com-iuit l«o/nd Bonrd of Health havef i i b time and thought to

Thnv_ will- not , auit-

Mt;mi important business wan trans-notod. Putt Conminnilor Crulksliankwin prrsontud witb a bandioino Pasttoininaiulor's badge by CoinmundorWliil'k1er"4'ir"ti«lHiiri)f^b"61ne«nJore oftbo Post in tokun ot |Uppreclutlon forthe Inturcwt taken in tbo Post. Mr

OTorydno, 'more pafticuJurly theboildef who doos uot^ onro wlmthegitoa his client, Jmttlloy nrineoeesar d i l L k - f o r thuneoeesary a n d ^ r k' ill proleotidu of/tho pu

KENILWORTH NOTESThe organisation moetlngof the Bor-

. ' ougb Council was beld In tbo Botuujsb-rtMI on New Yoar'a Day whou Coun«

« cilmeu John B. Noitrand and John'HJ l Koi were inducted Into oBlce and oiga-

nftatlon effected by seloctiuR Dennis J.O'Brien aa JJraldeoi of. tbe UoupcilAndrew a Ogden waa roappolniod'Bor.OBgUOferk'and- Win, D.'WoIfsklol anBoroogb Attorney and Jacob L, Baueras Snslneer. Thq "Mayor. Oswald

wan imntorMl in' linVo'li 10, 11120. withonly ~12 itiolntwra. Tho post now bus

monibuiH ia good standing, which isit fiplonflld testiuioniul to Mr. Uruik-sbunk's efforts in behalf'of tbe pust.Mr.' Ouiksbank aooeptlng tfao badgothnnked tbn Inoinbprsof tbo postinudouurod them bo would take tbe samontorost In tbo .post in tho future Us be

hud dono in tbo past,Plum woro made for tho dunce to be

given by tho post lu Clovoland schoolThursday evening. Jan, 18th AlUaMitiden's jart band has been engaged toi b t '

Jlrlglit voted with o ^- Iteimlillcan senators who votedngnltiHt'tho resolution to Imvo the seu-nto tnko n, vote on the nominations"ninde by tlio giivprnor took the pnsl-tlorr that tbe-appeal sued out by theousted Honrd of ttubllc. Utility Com-lntaalr/wrrifff» ns'n sins1 ft«tl-«i1i &tptliui* tlm himnl In olllj-o until tlwCourt of AppenlR bunds down » dCcl-Nlnn In tlio cime. > ' |

Alfred N. ltnrhpr, wcretnry of thod f P b l l U

and Wajffirratott8tnwtiu_,_i , u ' -,~—M T?"1 "«lel«1> ATenoe. .'•}-Hprlng«el.l Av«nn« and Wiwlilnctort 81M-Kli«aboth and BloomHwdale AvtMnMM-North and Kliiabeih AKennea. rUSr-Curuer Hampton an3 Eautmun Strcnl,•{'-J,«rcer Ariln«ton lioad a n * North A i —iJJ-.< orner Holly Street and Bprlngfleld / » «•{J-'orniir Lincoln andCnntonnial A « / mIllblUneola ahd Walnu -

Proposal for Sanitary Se/er. 'Hea'Ud Wil« will l.e reoi-trrd tir theiWnshlp

l unnulttae of tho Townahtpof OrunflW. N. J.,nt Hit) Townnhlh Room», on - 7W^NIWDAV W N U J U . JAfcuitY »», lffil

., f o r - K i j o n i • EK) T ( * t a t t l u a l

ttetU :>u<tatT)««<>e€Hnnn«rtcK In thi> urn of tw. nambl

iirorof thoTowtwhlpi.r tVnnrl>a ohtnlntfU nt the oHlco o r thi r l n w r C r a r d N J

yerij, when imked what nttltude the ousted ciuntiilaslnnors \iould .assume In\lew of tho turndown liy llm m-nntf

piny tbm and'tbu sputllwhich pluycd u large part in tho lustdam-is will again bo In evidence. Afouturo of" tbo ovenloK rwlll bo somesongs by a quartet of wounded soldiorsfrom tho FXJX UUls hospital who

Jt-LlHLiBBVrJJd.'a'iitdK.bjoatd,"Tlie ndinlnlstrnthc work at tile

Himrd of Public Utility Commission-er*, which Is of such n nature that Itdoe* not require formal action, liy. tlioboard, Is proceeding without Interrup-tion. I, (if course, have not hnd oppor-tunity to communicate with the mem-bers of the lioarVl Rlnco«tlfc sosfllon oftlie senate. It \i iny understand ing,ho\ve\e,r, that whllo the present con-dition exists tho board will not pressto a flnnl determination Important mat-ters unless It appears formal action byIt Is necessary or nd\lsnble to protectthe public Interest. In nny RUCII case

-the-

The CornnllttcA rWrrra tl»nj or ^^blditTbnSajT?

Ijoti-dJitnuaty 3rd, TtS!! - D. U.j J L v V - C'hntrmi

* eertlfirttile TrciuPlansmiiy

ownBhlp Bn.

/ lght to ivjec'tl b W r i F l l r i

COLLINS,1 Committee.

, - — lofore mipolnted toinakn ORBCBanivnta. (!amaJ« and benefits^ai'cru-'•>«• 'rom tho .wl,Hhirf of; Clareraont PlacB•xdwcen Union avenujpnd Prospect aicnuc.Imvlntr BIKI ihclr tbpf ot such araesunentawith accompanjrjnt: ijv *nd aalil .report andmap belpir now on Til Jn the offl<* of the Town-«hip-t!ltrlt,-j,6t|cc, / hfrebr glyen that thuTownship Committi/wllt meet in the Town•IMP Kooma, -corner/ Uniou avenue and AldvnRtreet, on - / • "

MONDAY JEVE*iO.JANrjAny 10th, 1911• • • • • • . • - • ufgbt o'clock,

to «n«tdcr 8.1,1 , /or t and map and to hear all

ilealriiiB to be hoard I, --. -_ pertalnlhB to aald

ments. - . • / - • • . '.TOWNSHIP. OOMihTTEK.

v. 83 Int. op 4th Issue 4&% Liberty M a i l •.- '.21 2S

31 Taxes % Appropriations A . (3,041.80

81 " •• special AppropriutigM . 766 28 8,797 68

— 31 Int. on Baok-bal^Jnly l , 'so'-S^an 81j-'8O '—118 60

. / ' Total Receipts:

?/ , Total TownsbipKiDking Fond•i^^-1 ~_—, — ' AOpODNTINQ OMABOVE AMOUNT:

, J 0 ? lr a . I» 0 8 4M* Liberty A d i J..116.000 00

/ V 4th ' 4M% . " _ • " 1000 00' I ' - ' - I 6 ' SiaiCZr 4 ^ * Victorylotes .'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'. 7,M0 00\j J . »12.000 (par value) CranlrdKireAppa-i sf • r»-tus 8* aerial bondSuable 18,000

- t j • ea-cb yeailbeginning J l y 1.J1921.... 12,000 00r. T ? t a l I n v e 8 t ™ n t s » | i b o v e . .

• Deposits with CranfordirDst Co

Total Investments # d Cosh.• , All of the

The obligations to be met are as follomAccount Towosbip Fund: ,<

Sewer Bonds dne July l.jCT ,~ AccoBnt School Fund:

School Bonds dne Jan. l*-i-m .". «17 006 00.. -.. j P f ^ 1 ? ™ v . , . . 18,OQOL00"

_ ^ ^ ^ * " ; H I S "'MO 00

" A p r ' . l 1 >m - *>.'OO0 00Total

Total L ^ a s t m e n t s . . . ! «S4 «IT RD« - UopfTsHs in Cra^ord Trust Company JI.'OOO 49

TotalTHE

8,963 45

•48,864 64

86,600 00.7,864 64

.*48,aaTc4

160,000 00

9800,000 00

ni'tlnn nylll

then delivered-addresAjBtlawlng tho v

his)ork

annual

•after paytn

gpoal paid a. visit to tho hospital at'Cbciitinot und distributed smokes andoheor to tho boys, and- they aro coming-'bveur tbo ovonlng bll^tba danco to bttlpthe post. .

Tbo Ladies'—Auxlllary-no,w~~BHs~~Wmemuera and coiujng along in greatsbupo.

Income Tax in a Nutshell.WHOr Sinxlo persons who had net

incomo of $1,000 or 'more for, the yoarl»2Qynarrlcd_ couples who bod net in-como of |«,000.

lion that the' board, lielng the onlyPublic -Utility Commission functioning,rtm Bssort In tbo public Interest thenmhoKtv of_the law.

Tho

Up^inakp cfTeCtli-B_Janunry_L haa'liy a formal order of tho honrd

ehtered some weeks nuarsuspended un-til April 2l t 102T. Tho •Incrense/vo-POfcrJ by the Trenton nnd MercerCounty Traction Corporation was, b)-an order ente^d nf nn jarJler_dale,

irat•paynTHnrsr;

\ViiEKELCoUector pf Iuteraal RfiVe-nuo_f,Br_ili«rict in which the personresides.

HOWT FnH directions on Form 1040Anajfora 1040; also the Ja.w and-reafi-

suspended until February 28, 1021.". "I understand the bonnt to tnke tlij

pasltiori Uint^thero will bejimple tlifor Its legal status to be finally dctjmined -nnd the question ot the rennblenoss of the pcoppscd to bp (flyheard nnii determlnod^eltlier by / o r

by n new board before rtie expl/'onof the periods „{ suspension,,'*

State Polio NeededJn the—Bupgeatert WtneTHes

supurMslcm of crime _iutlstrong argnmanc In fa\orfranlratl^o of a state po*^tnblilniy^_Bysteni| <5e\prv -speakers" at a recent j -pn / e n«L -dontTy 1ia.d that In mthd, *iugh"tinililabout ad%o~ca.tiinrjltt. '-f> principle- . '. t | | a t ^

By H. W. BORTIS,

Trewinrtr,.Oranford, N. J,,~Jantfatr

tlce of Hearing.

>S TTS6?.1111? beneflta Ur the nTaU*!?^f. J«Jf ft'•bomstreet, poranVntinco enutled An ordinance M) widen

BDOAB E, HBSTONV*", -SAMUBti H. TOOL. .-,

' ' - ' Cominiaaion

Notice of AnnuatJ|tteeUnK.

a8 highlyfor $87 / •fk but n o '

0S

j the irons that nw-*n?t" e s l e n t i a l l f o r « . o o d

g p t i j ^ h i

^ ' :

i ~tbe proposed County rood— « to Over|l,5oortheBoroujfb

j t u r - h a d » snBstaitial. balanco \a its. credit He urged mor« united Cpm, mittee work and reoammwded tbat all

_, committee reports- be • n • —--; ~ ~ ' j r i t logat each meeting, and Tarmils

t ~ , • •WS-QI*a by inch committees prior to, tbemeetiogi a r which t ^ y . ^ f l i t o bt!

' J>,' * * * * • ? * • ehalrman of such com'mittowV'f _*f«* ttn*J»ce.-FransC. firiosbn; Ordi

JatlWHAIT Four per cent normal tax

on taxable income up to $1,000 in excess^exampti^or-Sgb^peT^b-rnormiT

-J"

^exampti^orSgb^peT^brnotax on balance of taxabla income. /tax from 1 per cbnt. to 05,j«r -i»noeHocomes ovQr_«a,000. -i»nt. on

» contolaed-ln-the prTHii be dealgnatod topoitce-ijopartTtients •.oIn theljilaTi in f«tni.|

^druWIJVL, i tnv i i j i iQ^ DUI' And Auto Parts Made

• Pacto ' -

•rpmrS,The "subject "of "jj^toction la tlie

rural districts rec#°d conoid•ittenUou, and it * fact thov . . .^^of'the-hiqre^seriPs"1 crlrirea"in .thisstate recently w o / commltteS in ruralsections and tlf'mallor municipali-ties which miclfsufflpleut pojicgnenThere Is a prJidlco' BKolnst a stateconstabulary fiem whichvcannot heentirely acccJted for by the fear InJhe'poMi oO>rsaiilzedVnIabor that lrwleht baM,?/to ti^elr dJsadvintftffe '

P^perlaPfgantod and managed Jsuch a f * «-ou -b« a great aid taj

Safe and Reliable ^ ; ~

Presaiption PliarmatyWalnut and South'Avenues'

! .-.

^• ^

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^ K r t W a g

Town Notes.

dia colorjbeoHnttiiisiwd ia color

,... _,. _. i tKe deaka., Altogether tl«change; is a great' improvemento ^ t h e ; o l d crowded condition,

lord Barsobialeogotthe feveri* waking * repairs BO'longd in t&e meeting room. Itia

i t d t ' dtg ia

«3d he, intends to' decorate t i ewills-.so the room will have theSgpearanoe of a real meetfng-pllee,and i t ia whispered the towiffath-er« even intend to provide a tablel o a t h e reporters! Certainly-thereporters will ' appreciate it fortaking notes on the knee is a hard]ob sometimes. If the old more or

•dalBvttaatMMUIatpflvBe. Mayor koaob~iwaU«d that, i

Oranford/

Qtvotiooal Barrio*

memento of the W4W*t relatkwtmaintained.' Mr. Mother , «OO*ptea.;M»

iq the spirit lu'wkleh. <»> «Mr. Mosher taid l*J>ad" atteadsdtbemeeting by * requo»t ,M^egJn« to girtInformation on work-formerly,,waderhim bat ^uissurprise thtswas tnjt amean* JoTge| him oat! Mr^Mosher•bowed'he fanr*pp«clatedthr tao«*«and the souvenir, The cane curled asilver band on" which was engraved^•Presented to Edward Uo*hjE-bjr theXownihip Committee of Oranford,Dtoember8J. 1930."

tbe gublio is invited to B)t ooulbe. replaced by better seating fur-i h t l d B &p y 2ed<> It is^nranj, many years uincethe Cranford offioial-meeting-placehas Been any change or improve-ment, and it was about time^Bome-

James O.W,BM»p1n'vja« taken withleumonia the latter part of last weekA is quite sersously ill althongbt the

poctotf >ays not dangerously; . »Mrs. Etta Diamond? aged 74 Vears.

nqther of Harry Diamond, the WalnutLenue confectioner, died at her home in(tue Bronx on Friday. '

Jamos Alexander Gray, aged BO years,brother-m-Jaw of F. W. Lange, ofjtdison avenue, died at hisrhome in

Brooklyn -on Friday. \ y

Work on the remodeling of the Cran-Iford Theatre has. already been started.iTne coft will amount to over 14,000.|The theatre will open with' a speoial

Connty Saperintendent of Schools, Dr.I A. L. Johnson." .to recovering from an

in jar j to bis arm an 'shoulder sustainedwhen Bo fejl downtbe.stairs of a Plain*

I field school shortly before Christmas.James B. Fbrber,.^brmer mayor and

city commiBBioner of Rah way. has form-e d ajlegal association with John LarkinHughes of'tbe law firm of-Corbin &Hughes uf Newark and.Passaic.

E. W, Anstln of' Forest "avenue,father of Township-Attorney BerkeleyC^ Austin. wffered_a- light_ stroke of

thing was done.Fire Commissioner Everett pre-

sqnted his report for 1920 in-whiohthft-^urohase of motor truck appa-ratus this year was recanun'elrded.<T h t as received and or-

Chairman Collins of the BuildingCommittee reported favorably twobuilding permit applioations^and,one amendment. ..These were tap*proved. The Otis Wright Co.applied for a permit to ereoteign board on North avenue-frontof its property. This was referredto committee of the whole. Thematter of North Lehigh avenueaide-walks was mentioned but thewhole matter will be held in nbey-ance-until-Spring.-Clintoii Bennettof Burnsida avenue mado vigorousprotest on the condition in thatstreet due to the way .thin gB wereleft by the. oontraotor. Excavationsfor curb and- gutter work made itvery hard to get in and out of thehouses to the street Effort willbe made to improve these con-ditions.• Township Clerk Denman asked

instruction on ' applications forrebate^ on sewer permits, the

Fire Chief VtUVcm Tnnlson will here

partment, the Township Committeehaving re-anpolnted him the flnt of the

Devtstional««niceon Sfinday eveni'ne. TbeP l ' S fc

iceon Sfinday evenine. TbeSons sfcrvlceledbj Mr. John

Fisben Wilt praceda (h* evening aerviosof wofthlp as nsftal. / " , » . , ; .-

On Tuesday aftarnpon, at, 8 o'clock,at tbe home of • Mrs, Samuel Tool; 815\Valnut avenue, will be- h«ld themeetlnttJfif the Home Department of theaanday School. Tha lesson review willbe l«l by Mrs. Fretx. A social hour wilffollow the lejaon stiidy.

Tuesday evening will occur tberregu-monthly meeting of the Sunday€6ohoolBoari ,

^StP«ttr&M.L Churchw-"Friday, at 8 p. m., silver tea at the

vear at a salary ot $1800. Tbe Chieffor a nambei1 of years has given much-time to the Department under the"Buffalo System" at a nominal salary,the only men nnder full pay being thedriven bnt it has Wen-deemed wise-tohave the head of tbe departmentjob all the time and tbe appoiqtmeutrtjarksan advance for efflstan.cjfe Oran-forcTlong has held high place for" activeand efficient fire work among the FireeDepartments of the State and tbe plao-jng.*ra falTpaid Chief at the head, will~only-atfd^tp .this efficiency. Tbe Chiofhas .receiveu many congratulations onbis appointment,

borne of Mrs. L, L. Loveland. 103 Ar-lington road.

Sunday, II p. m", preaching; 12 noon,Sunday-School; 8 p. m., EpwortbLeague.

The Ladles'Aid Society will resumethr regular Friday afternoon teas tbefirst of the year to be -held at tbe homeof the President, Mrs. h, L. Loveland.

Rev, E. S. Miles will preach Sunday,and those who. have heard Mr. Milesusually. con)e.Jtiack._.

Mr. Harry usher has taken the Ji in tbefSunday^sobool.

his left Biae»was^seriously affected butnow is noarly normal. ,Mh-An«tIff1s

! over f)B years of age and has been veryi-R"nftveiillhl«'life.l ' .-' '

A.double-beader basket hall Rame willbe played at the Oranford' High' SchoolFriday evening. Jan. 7. The games

Men's Bible Class vs. Veterans of For-elgn\j'Wan) These promise to be inter

[ -jesting games and dancing will follow.The annual meeting of the stock-

IC' holders of ths Cranford Trust CompanyY' will bo held in.tbe banking' rooms nextL Tuesday afternoon at three o'clock,- to

* elect directors. These directors will in\ turn elect a president tosuc&edN. R.

^Foster who recently removed from town.

}' \r.Blythe, of Miln 'street, will givethe Vst and second class scouts a,lec-ture o\,"Fir&t jffd and Personal and

leulth in CPht WOfk,;' in Htff-'scoot roomk in the Grant School thiseveniDg.at fta'clock. Thelecture will

\ beior the threeNlocal troops and one of* a series ot lectures on merit badge and

question being.whether the streesurlaco had been restored. .Inspec-tor Mtforeeaid he hadfdundtain repairs necessary. The ntatterwas left with him with pow

The afllnual report 61 the Sink-ing Fund OommiSBio^was present-ed and read and .ordered advertised as required )bj\ law. Thereport shows tha^ total bonded

New Year's Eve Dance.The New Year's Evo Danc/at the

Casino Club'was enjoyed by^more than200 daflcers, the majority of whom coo

f l i l Milli

DrawingD

r.i- v ,^THE MORNING BATH

to recognised gonerally a* a great harVhuger of health, and When 1 H U Wtaken amid sanitary surroundings Itbedomesaluxariou*necessity. Anyulsinclination you mi»y have for a coldplunge on, arising will soon vastah ifhave H t M tROS. fit up your bathiwith opeo sanitary plumbing, plain baths' and their accompanyingappliances. _

HESS BROPlumbing, Heating^ Tinning

Cla

Stoltz—Wheejer

tinned dancing the Neyf"Year in until2 o'clock. Music was furuUbed l>yCourday'a orchestrayThe ball room wasprettily decorated with ChristinasgreenB, wreaths/and laurel. % A Christmas tree beautifully illuminated adornedtbe stage ana the chandeliers ere cov-ered with/white and red paper. A sup/per Maa^served at midnight. The com-mitte/in charge ot the. dunce consistedof .Mrs. W. W. Pluinnwr, ohalrman;MtB. Frank SpoleyMrs. Roderick/BinithWrs. Edward Waterhouso, &Ir/ RobertD. Elder, Mrs. Frederick G JSykes, Mrs.J, Rt)ss/B{>te».-Mrs.- WaWer B. Ruth»rauff, Sirs'." Moses*"$&$ttjl,*ilfi£"i£.yf.Balding, Mrs. Charle/T. Parks, Mrs.Frank Hollinfisworthf Mrs. 0. H. Silk,man, Mrs. "H". It. WnSaun and Mrs Ira0. Jones. Tbe next social attraction'dtthe Casino will/be an afternoon bridgeon January

Miss Grace Wheeler, of/Second ave~/ae,' Qarwood, and Jphn Stoltz,' ofBrooksidi^lace, Oranfqrdr were marriedby Rev. G. F. Mueller, rector of. St.Michael's Roman Cathollo .Church, in-tbe rebtory in Atden street, ou NewYear'* afternoon, at 4 o'clock. Miss.Elisabeth Stoltz. a sister of the bride-groom,-was/mald-of honor, and -tlarfy-OraiR, also of this town, was best .man.The bride wore a traveling dress ofbrown/with hut to match, After ashorywodding trip the ample will livein Second avenue, Garwaod.

/ 7 Eastman StreetA_,(Miller piork)' t ' '

Cranford* N, 4*. ^

The tetail store has beenopened for the convenienceof the public, where-freshRolls -andcBwadrtnay be-ob-tained-eyiry hour.

Al llnedeyAlAlso excellent Pastry and

Musical Trio Pleases-An unusual muslcaj- triat X

the large audience which assembledin the cliapel of -the PresbyterianChurch lost Tuesday evening when theBohemian Trio, consisting of the MissesMarie. Qroto and EIBIB Hilgar, realBobetuiuns. gavflvan_entertainment of<acfptinn»i merit. ——-~v..."« »— .«..™.

Cake..

ACALlt-

H Colored or Italian, tosell lols'neur Lebf«b Vulloy Station inCranford. Will pay good commissionProperty all tinprovemontif, % minuterfrom Lebixh Valley -Ktution.Joseph, Cranford, N. J.

FORand

—1) plocu mahogany canolii it •'50

^ p gytupoKtry living room suit, ••-'50,

yifriy lilo $45, tnuKniilcunt iniiiioxany dresses, bod spring und mattrrwt1800, Thor electric and nan ironertWwalnut roll trip dusk f i M i g M ipbalrJJUi. ^Q.ProsptckstrQBt, W*»tiiet4,

^«tt or before

DEPARTMENT

. t .From January 1s t

We1 will transfwwithout chama or

hank loss of interest.

Roselle Park

BRENNAN&TQYEPlumbing, Tinriiiig^

HeatingSouth Avc E. \Crpnford

t

Carpenter and Builder

/Estimates Funitihed

v A

i '

iWork Guaranteed

I\ O. Box 111

CRANFORD, N. J.

..V

on ltond and Morgans, IU HUIUH tosuit tiorrowerH. "

Leavitt & Ulbricb1160 r lerscy Slftct. CBiabcth\ N. J. •

o00; sewerschool bonoTs/

$50,0 and(150,000, The Sink-

j Fund slfows against_the Bewerbonds $5X058.35, and against theschool bonds $48,364.64.

In p/letter Edward Eaton of theseotirfn bepond the L. V. K-thanked the Committee for effor^to7 secure lights and strootjprovements.

A- notice front the .State UtilitiesBoard of Gearing on the trolley/ppllca-tion for a flat 10c fare brought expression of thft Ti«al«winBii*i of atffiiding Bach

Comlng/eventa lit the Casino "areasfollows-/

Janji

Bri

tnstitptiorl 'is to•ibe Ungcbed iu New1' York; mainly as

» e work of Norris >A, Briscoe, whooecantly became a resident of Cranford,

|> having bought the Plume home onOrchard street. Mr, Brlscoe's plan fora U^eraity School of ' Retailing, lotwhich he will be tbe head; has been

•y 24. Monday, Afternoon.2 80. Pivot and Progressive,

•ebraary 7th. Monday-'eveninR, Dutchipper. Bowling, cards, pool, ets,Feb. 11. Lincoln's Birthday eve

(Friday). Dance,Feb. 22nd. Washington's Birthday

afternoon (Tuesday).Tea Dance 4-7.•March 7th.' Monday night. Dutch

Sapper.

bearings, tbe companies letting fromtbe Board whatever'isVbsked for; butAttorney Austin—wily attend for theTownshlpjost-thesanael Former Com--mitteeman Tool, speaking ojMbis, felt

i

J a syndicate ot big New ..Yorkrofeilefr who will furnish an endows

: went of tl.OOO.jXJO. The training ot thene»tchoof will prepare more thorough-1 ' retail merehandlcing and tbe

found 'instore

. lives;p t c Tbe school will provide a two

sideration frOni/the -present Board butperhaps tbe now Board may be' in powerat the time aTthe hearing and considerthe people aswell as the Company, ~_Former/Mayor Heins brought to theattention of the Committee the U. S.Supreioe Court decision handed in lostMonday sustaining the Erie Crossing" Dination order in 'Paterson. Cran-

J's" crosslng-oTder- was linked withPaterson' case in several ways but

probably- may not be revived.—Mr.Heins suggested prompt action pushingagain for grade crossing-elimination,

I ttar coarse and glve"the degree "Hasterl»a-8d l H l *

-RooseveH-Btftfr-Class-PictUr^-With an unqsally well suited feature,

a successful comedy hit, and one of themost popular and interesting of theBurton Holmes travelogues comprisingthe program. Jta.»Boosejrelt BLblejClasswill resume its presentation of worthwbile.m'otiJn pictures Friday evening,January 7tb, in the Walnut avenueM. JjlSchurch.

In selecting a program to combine allof those qualities that go to make sirespomMve-appeal to^the majority of thepatrons, the.speci»l ',rUm committee bosapplied iu best efforts' to secure thepictrires obtainable, with the result thatthe program now in preparation for thecoming montbB will include the- bestpictures |n which the costs include themost popular starrin filmdom. .

With this• special, program

Present Day^ConditipnsCompel Company to askFor Higher Pare Rate

,l

' It is the wage rate of today, the fi>x bill of today, the price listof todayT the competition of today, which must be considered indetermining the tatc at which any business can sell its product and

i. keep going.

tipn through t*nulifyjheauuieme OoBrt-deeiaionvr-

effecti of tha

The Wednesday Morning Clnh-Jnet atftLlb

boar,y noarrMhatJhe s

with Mrs. H.. arCbtodler presid-

•y read severarpnemsP ? Richsrd Hovey/ .

"Reconstdnction in the War >ZonS"

^ H o m F Schooi'leagufc: -r_IHe regular meethrgof tbe Lincoln.Sherman. Home ani (School Lesgn/neld

W a d f t n o o r ^in-Iiincoln SchooKWeanesday_afternoor^opened -with, a recitation by Marie.TJohem. _-Poipfi*ol_the second grade of

nncoW^hoo)Scfrtations by Rosemary Canning^and AnnaThais*.

It waTaedtdea to

Itofol

i . _ g y e , . f t ^ i ( i n paccount ot tfie work-betagM devastated dHea._rS-bridges! fill the" countriesar was fought out; A won*

of • r e h u l l ^ S'carrfeoT

in the Lin

coin school. _ - _^ _ ; _•',Jbft'subject of a mtmibership drive

was aiscqssed and was- ta^ over-unUlthe nex^evenlng^ meeUng to ,be helotin

school on February, 2, ato^lock. A motion was-made1 and c u -riedtofgivTt8.fid gpl'4 pieces as prizes'teTtfie" s ir^l ldren who win tbe_pre-

halt in performances 'd'nrjing the holidayperfocl^lt-is' planned_to_give an *Utt»-tionai^performance-6f-an-entiraly_jiBW.an.d-enteftaining-progtftPi. ol picturesTuesday evening, January-llth^ Theperformance on both nights willstart ato'clock. — _ ^ . _ * _;_'

OUR REPAIR departmentTJpens thenew year's business'with every.jobcompleted'; every—piomlse fqliHedfevery customer satisfied. Make a noiselike an order, "Tel. 2QB Westfield.. YOU don't knovr Westfleidunta youhave visited the wtfeittVsHop-tbat madehJBt famous. Fojir_North avenue.

The

^ M £ s

n d r e d > d Forty

' WE are furniture lovers., We buy,jMSir, restore and and appreciate

.„ furniture. TelPua your-trtebles.•ej. 226 Westfield Exchange.

REWARD -for return • o j * 0 , " " '•ilver handle umbrella* marltea a. o.S "jLeft In upper station, .Libertj' streeton ttatl o'docVpjn. train, ot 16-train

l n o Itewmber Hi. Call 2*W. Cranford. (,of 'FOB'SALE.-Trnnk' practically good

1 ° ' * flB. Addrw F, care Cltixen. -

' f i t i? theTStf'things as they exist today'that the railway companymust consider when it figures the price at which it can sell trans-portation, and keep its business >n a ft^Ung th^t wi l lenablethe^

" people to get adequa*terdeperiHabI^8ervic^ahcl*tKe"Benefrfof increas?""ing facilities. ,, - ,—v- " .- - -

" • » »Pre-war prices have no);/returned in the'street railway business.'Wages is the big item ofexpense in street_raiLway servicerand our-wage rates show no indication of diminishing. Taxes, and, other muni'cipal charges'against fhe company, which in-tKc-aggregate xu^s intorhillions^ofdollira,. Kave not, given-any indication of seekjng ,lowerlevels. Steel rails ,and pjacticajly ,all-«ther materials, except'topper,cost'far more, than pre-war-prices. • ~" 1J *

"•= -1 -*;.r*

•-- Ul

^it a"pHce which did noj: cover costs' ; Now it Ssks for a'ratethat will"cover thejeosts and it. has confidence that vfjieri the-people know thefacts th'ey^wUl be willing to provide the rojraey_acjitaUy/jecesa&ry'

• to aupport' an essential service.' - \ -t ~-\ ' ' ~I _ ' - . • • • • ' ,

company wanta is that it be placgdrtra position jto carry^

-.\m<'&

s i,'

. o n ; to provide the quantity and'quality of service that builds iir>,c6mmumtie«^ni^a^to-teo^^nc>;a^

• p"' . thereof. ""

\ "

PUBUC SERVICE RAILWAY

Sr" 5 :

Page 8: z^stzs - digifind-it. · PDF fileMoore was re-appointed Building In- ... contractors conformed ; ... plambers llcensos were iaaued. 80 pert mlu to keep fowls, 8 for goats. 12 fur

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lifliiiiiii w^mm

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-'•,-•. -iwii.t-iV -»'' ~ JLf - -

; ^ t o Hold Attention. ^

Canquln Modirt Reigns' Supreme•-'-.*», . ; :.Parto'»nd;;Prw»ilsej» to Re^tn .:.•_••_:;' -7'^: ;jtS1*ppUl«ri<y,iv;J;;;-'•.;..;'

The fashlon'of wearing decorativeblouses grows/SSaJSvAndJtjis a_verydesirable fashion: Indeed It Is "hard-ly correct to speak of the'iPJctur-esque corsages whlcH are BOW SO gen-erally-worn.' as "blouses." . One. nse*the word because It lias cotqe to rep-resffit anything that is neither a dressbodice f nor; a mantle. The "arrival ofthe easaquln-blouse has revolutionized

.thefemlflihe vvprld. '•'• ' ' /•'"'•••. -In Paris the'i'nsaaulnyrelgns su-

preme, and it; Is likely ti*fremau1 In H-vor for .a long tinie^to cojne.. Wth.theadvent of the casaquln we have

TUNIC

~ J4A!C D£ T/?/C^rrVi'S'

*

"•'• • ' . • •£::•»• ••..'iSV'""!"-'"'

T.vo tuldivr detiii.. picked in the dark •From out of the untagyed grave, .

Unknown, unsung,.wilhujfl, a markOf fame of glory of Hit brave—•

i•• - . Genjti! or clod ur knave, -~.We know their all tliey gave;'

• We know they died to save—••• •, .- And one xhall tleen beneath the Are

'-_•'<-•.•••>--<-tmfeH(Tt>i AU<iy iwvc.7 :: 1 ~ ". • With thin Jo be b'y all .men read;

• ., .. "/n Wo/Mir o/ tho Unknown De.atl,".-^

: \ ; _/_;/" . ' : .. ' '• -J.-DTjkr':••• Here, to-Hw< Abbey,-tchtire all the greatest;^^__-AllJ>fj!hyikindla:gwilaLLd(adarc-i>ULto.lio-~^^li^-4^hc^Atibinf~bririq-vii-tftir latest >•

One who fur iinghtwl knew, how Ho die.-•'• — . • ' . ' . ' / — Stanley Wetit.r

KICAT IlltlTAIN anil Pninco' lira Kul "the M-coiid a Hi

(JIM pud.of the (Irent ^y«r liyffij; ' (TIliiiTj^ " in1'"lh(j•_ "tliikijtmh "IK'iid." In London (lie boily of nn-

liilknowii (Iritijfli soldier wm:burled1

In..Wt's'iiuluKter Alilicy. J n "Paris,the body of- mi .unikhdvt'n • Freuyli.-•RulilHir W'IIN lalir at rest under, theArc de Trloiiiplio. 2_ ^-- '

.Wlio'.wnh" the Orcnt \VnrV^ Wns.rfThiTBrltlHli,iiiv I'Veiicii/Jhe AincrlciiiHtl--Wus It Joltre, - I Vlidii. I'tTKliliiK, .-Koch?" AS'ns it . sailor,' alnami, :

•rilllt-ristT - 2 ,-.-:':'•'..'.••'• v ..". .. j££'All IIUIIHMI. oKo need to make coniparlniins.f''or.li «•«» tho mini in the 'rnnks who won,the.:'.

War1.' A|)(l;that_ Is wha't.Orc.nt llrjlnjil fii.d.'•'.Kranrt!';"a'rV> lirorliilScteiEUfl'^iiiejijHiiild^'by thus'

S*M5-Sfi? y/far/mtrm

also of "natural" waist measurements.Another style of'.gqfmehjt now im-

mensely pa'puluy-'ls-. tlie.. tunk-b'menscly popular la the tunle-btettse;which can be worn over any skirt, andat any timo of the day.' The Jennycreation Is* us tn'rnni)qg as |t lg orig-inal. The mntcrial Is charmeuse, white,lined throughout with black, the sgftlining turning over Irregularly at neckand hero. ,•

This blouse could be mfiflo In manydifferent combinations of color and atmaterful. .The linpoxtuntjhing Is thatIt should be'exceedingly supple," oth-ftTOJserll»e iolda, uauld,ipiit.,{all,xor.-rectly.

The combination of black with white.tliDTTiBC of the hour. The v-ery long

of hind HO bereft who fapplied for.a pine*-''lint It,'but Irhg thanhalf the othrr appll-

'cuiiu fur kviits weroblRLTK^flll, OWlllg tO

t!u> lack- (ir'spabo.After the 1U0 had

lict'ii (initnlscd scuts, J

the next to be con-Klilcrod were thosemothers who lost*their only nous, ornil tlielr ,B(III«, and

Jh<?1(J_ 0IHM! ,

=^a 7/ ,\

_Jh<?1(J_ 0IHM! , SVOITOU-. ( -^ ; " - = • '—• ' "wI'" Jo*ytelr-husbands only. They Wej[B-(l<reii _ ctly in offering bitterest resistance to the, Ger-noxltfuns In iici-ordunco ulth the price they h*A inans In 1870.Piild ilurlug the ar.-'A:ijlri:who wrote ehe bad

„,.., .IS.

Uiiknnu,, H.,,,1- ,,ro b tried «lth Z,.f Mnto ,1 X ' °

< ! d

cr KIII to the front. Nor IH;CI1 thin limnliuiiort'il t'M'r Imvi' K"t ltit»' the llKhtlna

rank*.. Mmiy H putrlot wlm dHl ttln bit' mostiu.Milly wim rcjwti'il hy the rowVlltliiB ofllci'r. Ifhe K>"1 hit niimtry the hent lie liiul, ho'nhnresthe linhor1* of Annlntlce fnv

V

r , „ Jackabout a cenotaph In Whitehall greeted to

the ."Glorious Uoncl" and after."tlie-teit stroke' of-'•te :lL«ttiri;-Uu)usand«z.-fpf. •-ppopti'i--ivti^: VrA'ydfmWhitehall fls far nsone Could sen In either, direc-tion, remained abBoluti-ly. silent for two minutes.

DurliiB Ihe. brief-services-In" tho nave of thealilwy the king, stood at Uiofoot of the grave, the

First ram* mutilated-soldlcnFund veterans ofthe Great War, then troops from "Alsace and Lor-WB«fc^t»"th0h Wlonrarfc-eeVertr-trwa'oui'at."gov-ernor of 1'nrlf", followed, preceding flags used Inthe late war. behind which came General Falqueand st ff, bearing artillery flugs, and GeneralDercsi-as land staff, above whom waved cavalrystandards] - • - I

Farted iJnd shattered flags or 1870, recently re-trieved from Potsdntn and Berlin and carried byveterans of the Franco-I'ruKsInn war. escorted the

desiterntely giving these very flags to Prussia inthe- hour of 'defeat •• . \ .

A delegation of noncommjsirioned ofliceris of allarms neiwrated-MAt-'i'iir rnnw^the !S5-gun' car

f A n n t l c e f n . v / /In hiincVlnK ffic'l'iilinowirDrad" tin1 Ilrltlxli nnd

Ficnrh plvii uttcrnnro/ to thi-lr rpcocnltkin*Hint .lOHinrruiXjnf. spFTltfo mid of Rnrrldcc wfilchIn tin- fniiiidntluii of Hdclefyaml thi> wilvntlilji ofimtintiK Tlio rcrcniony Is fur tho living even

tliiin f»( thoiU'iul

nliltey (he king stood nt tho foot of the «rs.ve, the a™" i^pnralalJWirTitr-Trotti "the 155-gun car-mjnl Indies mid prlncci ranging themselves on rlagottpttir which lay the body of the Tinknovvneither side. Tho ensket wns transferred from tbfi «fnilS\ft President Mtllerand nnd all members ofcarriage to the nltar whern '«hi> nn-Jihi.hnn «.• bls cabinet walkeil behltfd It accompanied by the

( h U i u l(Jrvht ltrlKilti/Jiurlod hrr. ."UnKnovvn, Dond"

wl)h-th<> himorji of a Hold mnralinl'H funeral. Thdbody win l(in( ot u suldlt'r, iitiine nnd rnnk nil-Knfevit M'lecti-rt nt rni»l"in f<-fi" ')nt Y|ir.es-rv*vh'illi»'r ..„,.,-.,i.™, ckuuo, ivt'isn.C'anaillniKorAAlWtrolliin Is .'not known, It wnsTiu^ti'^j at IViulogiitj with th,o Wglu'st honors by

nnd B'ltUh HoUIU rH. ' •• : , ' .The: casket was ca.rfleil throiiph lanes of .sol-

carriage' to the altar whero-Hho archbishop ofCanterbury conducted fno solemn funeral ritual.

As tho coflln finally was lowered Into its crypt,a battery of artillery In the fldjolnlng St.: Jamespark, llrfd.a field-marshal's salute of'10 gon*--tho Jitghpst tnllita'ryc honor accorded;anyone duNsldo royal'rank. ' . . ; . . ' / .

OBlcJal and cIvHWfl-France-paid honor'to the•memory >f the nation's,sons-who fell during the

_ Orent ~;>Var-, the ;c«^emonle» lending a solemn at-^e»t^e»t»^-^osphei^--to^he-eetil)rall(>ll of the/second anni-

Srotch, Welsh. '.•:'versary of tho armistice. Paris, accustomed toobjervlng its victory dfl"yS and"Hafi6nallfetei"wlthrejoicing, turned aside "thlsTyear and dedicatedthe diiy to-metnpry. and reoosmlt|on of the »acrl-'flee! by hundreds of "'thousand* of deadL^who,Jare..

f i S \ f t President Mtllerand nnd all members of_bls cabinet walkeil behltfd It. accompanied by thethr^e French mnrslinls—Joffre, the hero of the

-" Uarne; Foch, whose genius nccompllshed the finaldefeat of Germrfny, and Petaln, .whose defense ofVerdun will forever live.In French song nndjitory'.

The procession terminated with delegationsfrom the St. Cyr and Polytechnic schools, repub-lican guards, colonial Infantry, Senegalese units,avtntfon officers, two bmterles of 75's and one ofISS's. As the procession entered Boulevard Salnte- - -— —- - - - i .«^v..».^.. c m ICTI j>uuievaru saintgMichel Oiere was heajnl In the distance, from theforts surrounding Paris, the first shot of a 100-gun salute.

A4, 0:30 o'clock the procession reached thean|theon where P i d t Mlll

A lovely combination, of black velvetand gray squirrel fur, with sa»h and'hem of black ribbon. This mcidel \%^quite like a.jujt, but is. In reality tlong cost that jcould-serve for after-.'noon^eSlls.. • !' .••', • '

GRAY SEEMS TO BE POPULAB->Color Is, Used in Furs and Fabrics-

Ne* Fur Called 8lynx IsIntroduced. <

Gray seems to be the most poptila.color, both in furs and fabrics; Thereis n new fur called slynx, an lmltntloakrlmtne^ghlch. Is v.ery much -In tlwiqriijfrouBa xnen come mole, beaver,o o , b e a ,

tefikyirmra very little ermine amiseal. The.far Is mainly used as facingfor bats of panne velvet.or. brftco

This Is a New Jenny Model In WhiteCharmeuse Lined-With Black Char-meute.

opening In front la'extremely becoming[o stout figures—Indeed to everyone.

A-blouse of this kind opens over nilnlnty clioinlbette, and the liitter-mayhe made.of real lace, etc. This blouse-tunic was cut in kimono . fashion,ttulte simple nnd j^ljclilgt .—-

fnr i r supplanted)" brcottBraatfon tur-Ijans of fur and ribbon or brocade. Acoquettish model of mole skin Is be-decked with a lustrous, ravelled edgescarf of taupe moire rlbbofir~ Thtsmnll_ turban or tarn Is very popularas to shape. The most exclusive shopsnre adapting the turban to theJCgyjpJinn outline and nre Jhg_w,lngJh.iilgh, tlelrnelllke ffoht. Une Paris iifirTdevelops this up-standing, off-the-facefront Into a starfish shape. The hutItt of black panne velvet and the star-fish Is fashioned from Jet. Little tara*made of velvet are very popular whentrimmed in fur balls. . '_ , . . „ . _

Ribbon the Rager

. / . . •• --^-••-^'. ••? unit French nnd »ix unrmn

chnmiel to Dover.pnssjhg („,„ the harbor ns can-•lion from tl.o fort .roarAl the r salute of nineteenguns. Other- honor, to which v'H* ,| marshal li

. ^ Tlio historic "Pndro^itnB." •„„,,, nt innumernl»I«- '

-Coiled ^frdm-lts-:g^v^;ou;"^e^flerd oFVer^un;v' the body of all unidchtlfl*d FreuclJ ^"pollu.1'. ?«» .. carried- with" 'pomp^ and ceremony through. O»e --it'reQts will- reburibd under the Arc de'Triomphe. :

The bodies'of eight unldehtltled/Frcnch-soldlersrreximmwi from as many gi-ctdrs of thefi(prmet*af-tle line. fr.om vtlie.Belglhn frbntler to. the ttog'es,arrived nt the Verdun\citnjeltl)4 day toBfore.";a.

- In a lovv'icasemate Hie eight .bodies lay In statethat .night'surrounded by a •thousand lighted.

i-andpast.

Panjtheon, where President Mlllerand made a.abort address. :.It then continued down Boul&vnrd

.Germain, crossluc '•' "^"Ol j •

' Worn With Velvet 8klrts. ,Blouses of sliver or gold cloth are

usually worn with, velvet skirts,- - --,

Ribbon Is the rage Just now. Rib-bons everywhere I A beautiful dinnergown Is mado of cream, chantllly JaceInsertions, each band, separated fromIts neighbor by• narrow vqlyet rib''bon, henna In color, the vivid tonecontrasting cleverly, with the. lace. .A-wido*-t>ltt8-ot velvet-henis the gklrrrA veritable cascade of ribbons ripple*from the belt. Tbls dress Is made overa double fonndatlon of henna andcream chiffon.

of; IJlie; and Strausbdrg, and proceeded up theChamps Eiysees.-it reached the Arc de Triomphe

_atrnapn.^-.^^.i-._iw:-^~,T—.-• ;»-^—~—~~.*.; Armlstlce'day was~observed airoverJhe_Unfted

Slates' add .In many. ways. .JSo'national cele-bration .was'held and .where 4he -buglerij)!ejK.iapsto^ American |Iead It:, was; to/tfie ."SoldiferDead"and not to'the "Unknown. I}ead," .- • ^

-^SecreWFy <>t.War.Baker was asked to authorizetbesremqval of the body of nn_unIdentiaed."A"m'er-Icanfloldlcrifrom; FranceTfor Jnterment-ln-the

WlnteV Daj=-Qown>of-

ace foplanned Victory, hall, rershlng

r ^ i ^ w i 8 1 ?<• «•> vAmericajn soldier, should b. Karl Bratty.Sir ^t Arlington tji.lu'.guiiie ol

HeV'snid tiJtp ngto

government public buildings,JUHirt, nlr.forct.,..

- O n e body wasto be denied the, sameerencfr«nd

b^jly roJWflnal re«t.feViamtlpn. the; entire ^mbtre" " ' .«tfWfl. .the; scrvi'en.' n n<i

'.Ini'o the

«»rr.or;. _ t e

—T? e r f th , pVl!cwt hand on one **"

that BO

w,. result.' an V Americantajready set. •• lnftvct;^Ame.rlca

.._-...,;-..(L: In Arlington rises a,«ted more' than vbalf' a"mon.v. on whJeh I»

T h e h p f t r t ^ Qambetfa..

Out Smartestajon—Dolman Wraps

the.. rFore, ; .• .'• . ....-'.

Tje cflsp winter •' days call .outBmjirt fficgka,- among 'whichgray.andblack ajre prominent. At the luncheon_«ud \m hour at the fashionable hotel*"one/iecs ihe"'- Bmnrtest gowns - of i jtlwjseason. One particularly smart onew«s of black "eggshell prepe, with .a

/short rfuU7rsklrt~arid''plainly j f t t ^tbo41e©: and^Ight ^leeves?^arTBvf?3IC-irmse-eugeajKlie-Uee'eiy- gp'ilt,-;tiieshoulde'f' rnllnir-ir^P'a h'nolr hnd.'thn! inn n ||ill!*'lMTT"

wrlstaLwhlle a .fringed1 sash of-blackrI^njLiiiattag^nc4r^!|^^hlps^^lwtUils costume' was *67tarbl9ck suede

jstrappeil' FrEncET boots, bjacik •;; suede~^~"—"" a;smnl^flat;tuTban;;ofmoi»-'

Bttirwtih tini the r<)ute;-to th^ RappahannM^***** !«™ l l««^»W no?>*<IdehtjfleS? h u t . " ^ :

g^ ~. \L Dolman wraps have' come to thetneft-country «nd usgrateful clthsehs honor

r° ' *«£*« f martyn, ...wyo jiu>«] come to thefore ns 0\e most popular fohjrjof wrap.They are<]hieflyworn Tor'dres

2f ln **?.- (he iSfftona^ shrine'\ m t popular fohjrjof wrap.

They are_<]hieflyworn Tor'dress occa-sions, while fur coats-of-the shorterl

hion: The, <s h o w that the pro-' >

S.*LSSSorate Wmmlngs, nnd .,lclerle«>jrhe new garments show

a revision In styles anfl

Another costume' which attractedattention consisted, otluklrt of benna'cheviot well tailored. It was shortand wide, had Jour gores-and a fittedbaclc, and with" It was wdrn-a match-ing brocaded crepe.smock, edged withblrreif felt-daisies of cut wort a black Ivelvet turban^wltn side trlramlng-ot-[coqiie- nnd n short black satin capetrhnraeiljrJUh cloth- cut In lattice workdesign.^ - . ~. \

D

for the debutante. To be well-dressed,^g, , w h e n Jtn te . To b

w h e n s n r r o n n ( J e d ^ „ « . tha,wealth of her milieu, a young girl mostbare a modest decollete,-very shortsleeves, even transparent, but cpverlnfTthe upper shoulflen -A lovely modelseen on one of-tke prettiest buds \ftmade of pale pink satin, draped a1on£Greek lines and completely veiled Jnmauve chiffon.' The dress Is tied loose-ly at the waist by a cord made"*oT"ropes of ,pajc_nluej_plnjc_jind^ JBTenderJeadg!__The_Jilfindlpgj.ot-thesecrentps n t V ic n tVni nt*o 'describe but not

«rs^ iBMj^r^NtoKJh» i£r«*asph;and ,lri- b«mMJ<fct''--;3

\

,i«ch*seasonWefcterftBrv

seem , p v _to grow nandsomei'e, unhelted. <uxedo

inow^andICcheckan

v^he , unhelted. <uxedo_fdtaer&i very smart Just \ ile model In b r u s ^ ' W o l Aonrfl -effect has. the e a s e s —

^ery"air«cti'ver~Tihe Targe plaids snew this season and are especially,

cumoo.The puWW demand-for lowerif »«'«fft f i

Page 9: z^stzs - digifind-it. · PDF fileMoore was re-appointed Building In- ... contractors conformed ; ... plambers llcensos were iaaued. 80 pert mlu to keep fowls, 8 for goats. 12 fur

*- *. ~S&X-x^C - ^ ^ J

) BE POPULAB-N

ura and Fabrics-ed 8lynx laneed. '

the most poptila.nd fabrics; Thereilynx, an Imltatioav.ery much .In theome- mole, beam,little crtnlne ami

nly used, as facingOFOjkl

» Rag«r

»f ribbons ripplestress Is made over

of henna and

o be well-dressed,led by , all- th«,a young girl mustllete,-very ahort•ent. but covering-A lovely modelprettiest buds i»Hh, draped alonirpletely veiled Inress Is tied looge-» cord made ""or'*'!njc_and~ lavenderM)f-these shadesflult<HmpossfMeIffl£nl£_tQ_Elsnak.

r j •- • ' - - -• -.1 „ ~-V~"

BMfahanv

With tts football season closed, Princeton Is looking forward to the pros-ipects for next year's, team'.- Of theAmen.yn the-varsity, only three are lost

/through graduation—wavu at end, OaptalflHjaJ^han at center, and Joa Scbeer.l l r at fullback. • • ^**» '• ,

Eight other positions can be filled by this year's veterans, and several sub-stitutes, with, men who are'now Ineligible, will undoubtedly more than fill theplaces of the departing'- Head Coach fcpper la to have Sflnson as«ne vet-eran md and" Snlvely,'Ineligible this year, will take the other wing. '

REJjAjRKABLfJFpojBALL FEAT"Red", Barren, .Star Halfback of Qeor,

gla Tech, Plays Two Games WithI His Jaw .Broken.

"Red" Borron, Georgia Tech's half-back, and one of the greatest ba,cj£Beldmen of the year, achieved a feat1 un-paralleled In American football.

Bis Jaw was broken in fLgame withVanderbllt. His Jaw waa set and

OF "HUMAN!'FIGHTER(former Champion* Was Friendly

to Ring Opponents.

rVhll« Champion He Waa 8martEnough Nfrt to Engage In OontMtaWhere R«f«re« Was^Empowered

to Render Decisions.

Here's «r,olher atory concerning Userhuman fighter.- It concerns .the little•Englishman who for several years heldthe world's lightweight championship,only to lose It to Benny Leonard, pres-

N ent title holder, writes Itay Pearson in-Chicago Tribune.' Welsh waa one ofIKe smtirteBt fellows we ever had. In

• tlie riiifi; nit alone a smart wtelder ofthe mitts but a smart thinker, t ie

' made Iwxlng a business, or, In otherwords, ire piayeu tne garae7~just- as"•many clove men do, simply for thecoin thnt In In It

. Knt WCIJII wasn't constructed like

''mctied thVfop'fanjpof;thV'IaddeV he"was rather frail In construction. ForHint rpimon he found, out early In hisipugillntlt career that If he was to getunywliere It would not be through abil-ity tn "take It," as they say of a scrap-per w ho Is able to assimilate' punish-ment.

of clerernessL waa the Jhlng_that WeWi set out to perfect, and h'e~accomplished that 'purpose, as wasdemonstrated when he became cham-pion of 'em all. -. \

White Welsh waa champion he was*n>nrt enough not to engage in con-ttsts'in which the' referee was cm-

~-int decisions. Therefore

> Freddie Weisfi.

't didn't make"the least bit of differ^«"« whether'he wtts beaten In theni>8. as long as he wasn't knockedr) '• ™n* MIS no chance of the title's

V81"^? n(Yay (roitf him.th u~ * C T e o n y n u r a b « r o t * l m e »™at»el«iwas beaten by awtde mar-*yrnwle(;lslon"~bo¥ts. from which.^ 9 ! d J l ^

-A.TF > ' •on - Player u«ada T.hree-1fs With Ma.rk of .333— ,Z«i9l«r. la. Secondr— .-

records ofthe Three I base-ietor 1Q20

large plaids are. ' _«w espedaUy,-!^,

*or lower p r i ^^V l 4 l < 1 ' < \•> fashion: .The, <C^Y\ | \ e>

that fhe pro-: :V*A >M\ Svila- demand 'by >'- T-l^v1''-1

trlmmingajaiid-.ifc-^^P-' ^esi

garments slKtir Tf -" Mau.ta'nownosw-.?^ _J|.coat,or snlt-f-'^ . *"*\

-leil with jSSrand Zelg-e was second with ,323.

Je!\ *•Were * Smith,s^nlth, Rock-island! EnS-

and Thompson,

wat«i; ,:taforihatlon

' * • ' • '

a compe;n and-iBever T meetsItVir provable111 be among

"Red" Barron.

strapped with wire connected with histeeth. Because ..of the\vlre In bis.teeth.and jaw. he wns unable tp talk;and had to'be fdd liquids.' He playedIn the Pittsburgh game Ih this condi-tion and starred.: lie played In theCentre game In the same condition.

Barron Is rated as a star of'the firstmagnitude. > \

\ _ _ \

EXPENSE OF OLYMPIC fEAiyiSParticipants In Rugtoy, Cycling, Fenc-

lng-and-Trap«heetlng-P»ldTh"eIrT3wh Wayr -

Among the American Olympic team*which paid tlrclr own expenses -to theAnWerp festival were: Ktighy footbnlll"'- fencing, 'cvcllng,r trnitshootlngThe—Hrrftrd Stnte* navy bore the^ejitpenset of Its represerilatlvPS^n'MIe theexpenses of the riding, tug-of-war andshooting teamn recruited from thearmy were defrayed by the govern-ment ..The cost of sending the United

JStqteg teams to Antwerp and Brusselsj l 4 6 5 6 3 l l "

JACK DUNN IS^OT WOBRYING

Manager of Champion Baltimore TeamHas Signed Nearly All of His

Crack Players.

With TlrttWIy his entire team"up.'tne same players why

ed

__.,. . . tlie ' Iiifernjttluiiarleague for the Orioles In the last tfrc

g-wtBi the St. Paul Afnerlcan nssoclatiODClub-thls'fnll, Jnrk Dunn, manager ofthe Baltimore club. Is not worryingabout next year's baseball problems.'His team very proSHbljTwiinrrvlnratGpldsborough. S._C,'-neit spring, Ifsome Improvements be desires in thiclub are made.

Changl Propos«d In Three-I League:•- Blocked, by Lack of Funds at -

Dayton, O.

--.Tb,e_«hahce for an Ohio division. In^he'Three-l league, vhlch has been In('tile; minds of those wbo want to re-Arrange tbe circuit. Is gone trtth' the:iaforftiation from Davton that It wouldcost -$50,000; to provide a .new park,

-the old-one"belng,no longer availablean* that there Jajio chanee of nnanc-'" " the proJect'J, ~ 1"

N

OMy Y M r a Ago '.

—eafvator Wen Ftw Tenny ai,- -X.

While the watch race that ltan •'War won fromi&lr Barton last fall,* at'tbe Windsor track, probably stirred «pmore interest than mny other dual rortevent ever staged on this conaneatTthere have'been otaer notable dashes'of the kln<L_ ' *

Nearly 80 year* ago. In the-days offour-mile beats, there was a match Inwhich the flre-year-old mare-Fashionbeat 'the nine-year-old horse Boston Intwo Kuccewiive hrata at the old Onioncourse. Long Island. This baa beenwritten Into American rnrf records asthe first great match race and It was aduel between Sorth andTOft-i'irf'" "•^-**

Armenian volanteera in one ot their oa.«tily-«onatrwrtfrU defenses on\h» outskirts of Alntab. defending the cltragainst an attack by a Turkish nationalist force,—At'lJIW Hunt Is J. Darakjlau, over »l«y years old, who bold 8*Turks at bay, using a gun that aavr sen lea in the American Civil war.

Thjrty yeara" Uter the Harry Bas-sett-Longfellowmatch at Saratoga wash '

gthe taiK or tne torr world.This waa amatch between southern and easternowners, after an unsatisfactory' race,f th M h i d

yfor the Muumouth gup ki two ahd one-half-miles. *htch lx>ngfellow wop eas-ily. A few weeks later they mer againat Saratoga, N. X. This time bothhorses-were In prime condition. Therewas a third horse in the race, but hecut no figure Ih \he running. Early inthe race Longfellow twisted the plate,on his near forefoot, hut finished game-ly on threetes»:;ts beTTealenTfyTilr*ly a length at tne finish.

One of the most-talked-of matchraces waa thnt between Jrfmes B. Hag-gin's SMvator anjl_Pavld T. Pulslfer'aTenny, at the Shpcpshentl Bay trackIn 1800. The mutch was at a mile anda quarterffor $5,000 a side. Salvatorwas ridden by. Isaa£j&irphy, won byInches only, although at the one-milemar* he, seemed to have the race wellIn hand, Tehny, ridden by "Snapper"<3srrlson. made a wonderful sprintthrough thej final quarter of a mile,which was covered In 25% neconds,and-the-aensatloifal-finlsh-of-that race-has been written -about In song andstory-erw slnc'e.^

The dead heat between Domino andDobbins and a stmllnr finish betweenDpmlno and Henry of Navarre, wereturf events which furnished thrills forthe spectators (n subsequent.years.

At. Plmllco, Md, three years ago,vvhen AumiKt Belmont's nourlexs beatthe lat« WMfrld Vinux's Omar Khay-'yam in a special match race, the re-sult camp as n nurprlne to many thou-sands/who believed at that 'time.that

-the- Canadlnn-owAed hoVse wan Invln-clhla. -The race wns at one mile and

track-record for the dlatartce.

SHOULD BE GOOD NEXT YEARQreyworthy -Not Overlooked When

Talk of Candidates for Big StakesIs Inaugurated.

Oreyworthy, 4. 2:lf$i, trotter devel-oped hy Cliff Todd, Cincinnati trainer,and sulu to Walter Cox for $10,000, Isnot overlooked when talk of the can-didates for the big stakes next year isstarted. 'Cox worked the gray trottera mile In 2:00 nt Lexington, givinghim a breeders' record that fast, andhe wns fairly fijIng nt the last end ofIt Half-mile track fans who sawTodd step the-trottcr pver the Buck-eje tracks the past summer are con-\mciil none of the big ring talent hasnu> thing on him.

Oldest Polo Ppny Still in the Game BECK AND HIS BEARD.* !]

ytotlOiid,"i ^cUnat tfiiKteit pulo ponies In tha jmme tvilay, "ijns nailed for Gnglaud to take pnrt IntlnHnternatlonnl—polo—mntttrc>r-Ht—Hurlfttghnmr-Kuglmid,' next- spring. rJheli> probably the oldest uolo pony In 'activdysurvice.

Danish King and Queen Visit England

NEW BASKETBALL RULES\ —

Twd Important changes In therules of\the Intercollegiate Ila»-TlTe 'Sirst >vlll pei-inlt a playerwho has been tuken oat of thegame at any time to be sent back'later, provided he hufl not Com-mitted four personal foul*, whichautomnU.i;ally results in his dis-qualification for the-entire game.The second" change provides that=iafter -a "held bull" beneath thebasket, the ball will'be broughtout to tlie 15-f.oQt line and tossed

FRENCH WRESTLER.HERE

Salvador Chevtlier. tlra-aiplon woes"tier Of. France, who recently arrived Inthis'coiintry seeking matches with oflibest grapplers. He hppes to 'OteeiChampion Joe, Stecher befor* rernrn

Comrade IK'Ck.of Chicago, Ilia *bourd over eight 'feei long. 8trdhgeto say, Mr. Hecfr has novor ^ed^anjrhnlr tonic''to7 Increase Its grbVil>rnorJ

hns he ever appeared In any public ox-jijhlllnn, HO_|M_ a mechanic, nnd diir-ing noTkliig hours WVUTS lilu beardu*udvr hlH vest.

ALONZO HERNDON

The arrival of the king and queen of Denmark, accompanied )>y the Prln-rcss Slnrgnret, on-the Inmllng singe at Grovesend. on 'the occasion of theirrecent \!slt tn England. The Princess Jlargaret, who la twtinty-fl\ft yean old,hflo been mentioned frequently of late a* • prospeotlTBrbrtde tif tlie prince ofWnles. . . • ,—'

German Seaplanes Are Destroyed

tefh'rbb r.l<re«rnl • « H f f i i H i P > ««™\3 ,^ V" $•& ^^raneel ' ' v - • -'-Hontoons of (Jennanijieaplane«;"wil<!h wero^earroyed^accdjdlilif^to tlie7 ^ , r\ - aernts of peace,-lfl<ed In the' balloon ball at Btolp, Pomenala, wltB othet pTabo

" " «hTd Zeppelin wreckage. . . - ,

Alorlxo llenidon, Atlunta's "million-aire barber/' .was bom a slave. Re-cently hUjjpurclmsed ui}d equipped ja$10,000 house to be used as a day,nun-nery and kindergarten,for negro ehll-diffn. Hcrndnn wns born In 18^8-lnr'Walton county. Qeorirla. nnd was BCT-— ,*—"en years old wherj Cindnclpatlon was

-'•I

lift* '-ot- twenty*eight, he'went to Atlanta With $11 In,

barber-jUhop. He soon became man-ager of the largest and finest barber«horj In Atlanta. Now,' be owns threeShops, valued at $60,000. Hi's savings ,he. Invested-In-real-estatei flnd-«» the-——result, he l»' today one of the rlcheSrr1 —members of h|s> race. In the- entire)'South, his estate being valued at $500,-000. Be Is active In ohjirch work.

" '—-

— Walsh Halloween Custom.- It wa* a" custom la Wale* for everyfamily t,p make a great bonfire on Hal- 'toween night In ft large open epace,^..After the.flrfl had died down the fam-ily >j»lemnly mareriea-i around, and > ^ j^a &each member iossed-n whiter pebble — T * C $Vlth his name scratched on it Into the , ' * "'embers, X)n-waking Ih tHe mornlna;-.tlie first'thing each did was lo°gd'out ,to tbe flre" and. searcb, for hfs pflbbfe. • 'If one of tbe stories could not pe'fonnd',tbe family-come to.th*'«r—v'1->a- *-"-- -

een.' I-?.**

" '

Page 10: z^stzs - digifind-it. · PDF fileMoore was re-appointed Building In- ... contractors conformed ; ... plambers llcensos were iaaued. 80 pert mlu to keep fowls, 8 for goats. 12 fur

tHB CRANFORD P&18SJI ; /

Public Utilities Qwnmi«on <rfthe State of tyevv* Jersey has permitted thiscompany to file a new schedule of rates effec-tive lor gas' consumed after the usual meterreadings of November 1920, Jis follows:

1 FOR THE FIRST 100,000 "cubic feet i -per month $1.40 net perlOOO cubic feet

FOB THE NEXT 10(1,000 cubic feet .pcrnlonth *J/20 nfit per 1000 cubic feet

FOR THE NEXT 100,000 cubio feet " 0

per month $1.15 uet per lOOOoubio feetFOR THE NEXT 200.000 cubic feet

•.pw month #1.10 not por 1000 cubio feet ,FOR THE-EXCE.S.S QYKK 000,000 cubio feot '

' " " '' -r -it Wor 1000cubic feetdhJLL

1

Minjmum bill to be rendered is 65 cents— : per month. ~

Bills tjue and payable within ten. days after .rendering.

Above rates are net, no discount Y

1'e next bill will be at the new fate.

Cranford Gas Light Company.

MMMMMMMsMI

AN IS ni*i W4IM

Their I n f c t i r r C o n ^ IfeWce

Ofesermr Ah* Sees L « H M > HWMM-Hf to, the Ptrfietton «f

Have

It wiu Sffrffnwn vrtio nJA *G© t#the ut* thwfo itafssri, coosfaSatr befwajs, and be wise." Wow, t l the atorgaras la the United -Bute* would goto Florida, they wenld have ampleegpHtaoltr to acquire wisdom, it "~—" that there a n more ants to *square mil* in yisrtda tnanother country la -the world. Thereare ants which wlU measar* halt aninch In length, and there a n antt ao•nail that they can scarcely be^ees-to mm* with tie unaided eye. " i

k mam, who has had.a great'Sealof experience with them, said recent-ly:

Th« norlda ants will take oat thelettuce and other minute •eedaftyn

Sdunitz

illfltTDI

Hollywood Awmne

P1MM978-W

p 0

H. B. SYLVESTERCarpenter and Builder

Jobbtot a Specialtyt p'"887 fastfieM Avenue, E.&0SELLE PARK. N. X

Ifinsoii Tn" which they are^pGHeTanaTactually destroy the beds. They wlUget Into pie, pickle, saace. simp, su-gar and on meat; will riddle a eake,or (111 a loaf .or baker's bread tilt It

Telephone 1!M J

102 Centennial Avenue, . Cranford, N. J-Kreo Examinations on Samluy butwoon 8 A. M. and 0.80 P. M.

193-TH1HD AVENUE, • NEW YORK/1 lietwoon nth and 18th Street* •

Trusses, Shoulder Braces, BandagesAbdominal, Kldnny, Stomucli unij irinrino Supportprn, KIMIio Stockings,

f Crutctiea, (JjriiiKOS, t'Jat-^oat Apparatus,Braces tor evorv kind or deformity "? Itapulriug in all its branches

iMti$$l«ii$3<uly-4fl-B4te«<}ttne0 in-fatdhgtMfepamnBntr—-Hours 8 A. M/to-fe

Attractive HomesJust Completed"

INVITE INSPECTION,\ * * Will also i>uild accordingI'Jto your own plans. —

" pf ~ S. R. DKOESCHER.

V ;-*. l

Burglaries and Hold-UpsWby rnn the j l ik of LO93 wbpn thocost of,protection is'niutflnnlY -

" ~ A $1,000 Burglary l'olicy (i>xi'|ndinKllqoon) cost f 14, or n Bu^lnf), Tliuf (

, (and ^Larceny Polity protecting JOU^•gainst BarRlariea, Sneak Thio\imod

- H / PW»nest Servants, oust *1? OO-thtxw__ |i; policies also 'cover d.amutfa dono tobolides also cove

s < property of aninied/f'5 A Bold-Up Policy, coverinx nil mom

H I ' 1Policy, coverinx nil momHU i*ll>l I n .'ill H..1.1..1 f.

JAMEH A...> Ctt inoAm— Crantord7 N, '.t.

rJSca'tXajrooxrs: & K l t o i t o n

Firoplaoea,.Porches andVeatltrates—THOMAS H. ROSS.

^ A»eooe,

"flun to ReayYHave You.a Cold?

(Jail und got one of our ~- Ddpondablo Cola Komedies.

Just refcoitod a complbtoitBe of•Evorshnrp Ponoijs , _

Thoimos Bottle's

=- Mirror, Sumosot,Whitman Qandies

AGENOV—'tfutiorml Cigor Stand— I'roJuots

PrtKHCKIPlIONS nccurately. skillfully and carefully compounded, Allcliomicala and drug* usod'are tbeirarost obtainable My reputation asus u Phurmacist 1» your protection.

7 "Ask Your Doctor"Celerity and dispatch aaured with

every ordftr. . — —

. ^tegUtered Pharmacist oonstant-

Phone 137

Emergency-NtghtCaiis- .

Tsolicit jour patronage...

" tfd PhPharmacy,REXAI.L STORE

"«^ J.R. REAY, Prop..' **

' Sunday ond1 Holiday Hours

I took to baiting them near their nestswith slices-of mest, bones, apple andpearrparlnis, and when I had from60,000 to 100,000 out. would tarn akettle of boiling wittr on them. Ikilled, during one week, over a mil-lion, In the space of a^qnarter-acrelot and I have almost wiped themout^""It ytM" CTjrfoinT and~";Tiuitivcuve' "tvsee how promptly the anta which es-

'cape the scalding will go to work tak-ing out the dead, and, after pilingthem outside first, go to excavatingagain and. rebuilding their., tefls andmawayiL Thlrbelng do&C way quick-ly, the next work on hand is the lay-

' Ing In of a supply of food, by banllngtbe'dead bodies of the bot-watef vic-tims Into the storehonses. Ton maysea a small black ant hauling and tug-ging at the carcass of a red ant twen-ty times Its own weight and he alwayssucceeds. In the end, In landing it Intbe warehouse of tbe colony, t*

"Next yon may we a sort of ambu-lance corps searching for the disabled.These" are taken carefully Into thenndargrotmd house, where the sur-geons and nurses sre In waiting. Then,too, you may see the timekeepers andbosses directing this one, or turninganother back on some errand or tosome other duty.* There Is not a mo-

And Tax) Service.

-EDWIN K. jDPIE1 J25 Normandy Place,

Tel. 53S Cranford, N.J.

FRED H. JAHN,1 (Baeosesor to Philipp Jabn)

Foiiie, Sign, and "- Fresco Painting-,

d»y;jJjfc£jl.,ji9jdJtint «1T m"nrp &f If it were their

list day on earirV and this the onlyhour.left In which to redeem a mis-spent life, Tm lessons- In JpfloitrJand In perfect government, go to the

>or)f "Plugger* Drains Cellar..,-mey pre"railrig a rood" story along"Broadway these days about an earnestyoung JJsong plugged tvho wanted _*son* placed In several theatrical seta.Learning bat the. actors he was try-Ing to persuadn to sing his/numberUked" somethlng3XjiUtlB~atJOiiMitr thanhnrf of one per cent he got severalbottles of a liquor called Bourbon andsent around a quart to each actor,along with orchestrations of the song.

The hint wnn/n good one, and thesong went Into the acts. On learningthat the actors were Singing his song,this thoughtfuryoung man, so .-the storytoes, sent around a case of that samestuff to the homes of each of the ao-tors. It Is-said that nearly every actor/In the country now wants Jo sing thesong, and the boss of the young manIs trying to think of some appropriatemedal to be struck In the honor of hislive wire.—tiew Xorjc-Sun. . -

The Best Informed.Tht matron of honor nt the wedding

>h»d twice been a charming widow be-fore she married her present husband.During the preparations for^the wgiP

aadDceoratlv*

Paper Hanging—Am DBAtta n—

u Jaas, Oil. Paint, Varnieheeand Wall Paper.

Cranford, - . R«w JtrteyB

•Phone S74-W No, 209 Casino Ave."

Wm. C. Golding, Inc.

OPTICIANS

219 Broad Street

Elizabeth, N.'! '

ground lest some one would twit heiron being experienced In weddings, butat the ceremony she came out withflying colors determined (o outahlnethrbrlde_ln receiving attention If pos-sible. —' ' ~ , ,, And she got It, too. '

The ceremony had proceeded with-out a hitch until In the middle of tnVot <Ee response!. wheSThTintle orldeforgot—She hesitated, uttmmered andthen was silent For a minute everyonajwas disturbed and ihen orie of the

juhers leaned over to the matron-ofhonor. —"Prompt h«r, atarle,"-het«f'-dered In a whlspor loud enough formoat every one to hear-him.

-Dtvloo. SavisXaraoSurprisingly large cargo space char-

acterlses two' sttlphnr-carrytng stoarn-ehlpa ^lyl iuntatNewbnrnhrK.I.; as a cesult of anew, patented ar-

Tangeme.ni. ofjth» t^la>tiropeller shafts.I Oainarlly-these Miaffa-jrould havebe n m6a>ted faJunnelaVplaced nearth li

^ARTIN SCHAFE>Mospn and Contraotor

> d faJunnelaVplaced nearthe center line Qf the ship, therebybreaking up the floor of the afterhold> lnto.usefess wlnga and centralpockets, says Popular Mechanlcs-STsg-aiine. BdV, the new arrangemwtplacet the two powe"r units as far ut

^•S? ««»!»fJbJSto fatrtsSt&

Weather StripsFlorence

. OU Heaters

Coal StovesAXES SAWS

„ COOKINO UTENSILS/OAS BURNERS - -

HAZDA ELECTRIC LIGHTS

PIKE'SHardware andHotisefurnbtiings8-Trnst BuitdlnKt Tel. 801 W.

MEATS

ALL KINDSTelephone order, will receiVeptomOt •JUmtibnl*$

F.•Jf:

I —

Carpenter and Builder<•' . ESTIMATES FURNISHED

" Jobftixifg/of AU Ktads. Phono 373-M.

TELEPHONE 23-W

-DEALER IN . . . .

Lumber/ Mason Materials, STORWJrVINDOWS A(JD DOOR5-

•. - . . . . r. . , OLAS^ PORCH JNCL05URES^ .^-—-, . MILL WORK OP ALL KINDS

' MOULDINOS AND FINISHED LUMBERTURNED CLOTHES POLES

Mill Block Kindling Wood and Any Length Block Fire-' place Wood for Immediate Delivery. -

332 North Avenue, East Cranford, N. J. \

GRASSMAN &._KRCIiERNBST h. MEYER^Incorporatod - -

Established l«50

(SUCCESSORS TO EDWARD

Surveyor*ng.XJrantord. K. J . —

Broad 8tree£ BUnbeth, N. 3.•

-•="•=

' DOG CAKES, COLLARS, TrniXniintBiq ETC. — ~

Horse and Stable Equipments.'SF0NGES\ CHAMOIS,

•Pbone 877 Cranford

CHARLES S .(Successor to AARON D.' QBANE) ' -. X

/Warehouse, Elevator., eoal Pocket.""' _ ' ' ELIZABETH STORE f \ JROSELLB PARK. N. J. _ . v • > W04D6 Morris Ave.. f

«-••«. • • ' - • • •

ana-M»nae4uently locates the- shaftsalong the after bilges and run of thevessel; or In other worts, near thejoints of tides and bottom.

t , Let Bob bo, ItBill—Qolng to- Bob's weddtagT- " '

' Oll-Wbj'rtonot' -,•-, ' l ' -