8
'( ^/' i Lf i. " J * f z .,, -- K£.^jf3 e.i-Jt.^3 tsfjj-i& r-wi^'-sfiS-l-J Oi> UIV. /** ^i .-r: ; i. ad SUMMIT RECORD — - . . , f I .*'-y f V\ \ -\ "Justice lo r.ll: malics toward none," *jr:2RTY-MIWTH YEAR. MO. 101 SUMMIT, N. J., TUESDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 28, 1923 $3.59 PER YEAH fccilL fefe BUCKS iKI o miQ a i«e Ssvera On a charge of appropriating the company's funds to his own use, George Martin, of Glenalde avenue, was arrested last night at hid home by Sergeant Dunno and Officers Egan and Reynolds, and sent to Elizabeth this morning by Judge "Williams. The charge was pre- ferred by Freeholder William I. McMane, vice-president of tho Com- monwealth Water Co. and .agent for a subsidiary of the American boasting a. combined membership Construction and Securities Co., Crafts Combine in Lease of HalB la Manser Coll ding—Pairaters Ioi= Hale F/itove Ccrablnecl Membership 7©0 representatives" of "four crafts &sapprepai«'#t Finds is Charg&S in Summit of' around COO persons htvc taken a step toward co-oper- 'ction between trades locally with t'ae lease of the large hall on the tliird floor of Arthur Marker's building at 431 Springfield ave- nue. Tho lease, tak«-n for a period oi live y-oars under the name of the "Labor Temple Committee" of the r«mil<iued crafts, ban for its pur- r e e the establishment in Summit of 'a home for labor. Tho brushes of tho painters* in- itiators of the movement, have transformed in after-hour mo- Kionts, the interior of the hall into n thing of beauty. Theodore Kron- Li-ry, who together with John Ker- '•'•• ,;on, painter.';, have been chiefly . Liiii.il.-Ie for the growth of the ;:;-ior-labor movement, said «^crdjy that the place will be •I oacd to lr.bor of all crafts. The .::;I1 and the offices which are' lo >,e located in th^ rear of the build- i«G will be open at all hours, he r.aid. Kotu- Unions Represented Four of the five trades unions in Summit, painters, . plumbers and :>teamfittern, carpenters, and la- borer, 1 -- in tho building trades, are represented in the Labor Temple Committee which has taken the iea^-i. It is probabl-2 also that -the mnsonu, the fifth union, will soon ha affiliated in the movement,, making a total of some 700 per- son.", who will share the hall. While these represent the Sum- mit locals, there ar-s, besides, sev- eral trades, tho slate workers, hoisting: engineers, electrical work- •ors, sheet motul workers, and lathers, who have no Summit locals. Representatives of these trades, auid Mr. Kronberi*, will be •extended the courtesy of the offices {or moetins although they have no . representation in .the Labor Temple Committee. , ,. Have,45ttit Sleeting NIRMB • Heretofore the tradesmen hayo had no one home, but. have met-at various placer, throughout town. F,.->clr local will .preserve* its .own individuality and will'' have its •7--n rnea^intr ni^hta, ,bufci thg-»co- upevation ,is looked' tO-rprbduce a 1 . ^rj'J of' jroed fc-eliny among .tho meuibui-s of the unions, Mr. ICroti- borrr cajd that tin* effort, to secure a single home for trades unions locrdly has been under considera- tion for the past Len years. The hall was formerly leased by the Royal Arcanum. This organi- sation will now sub-ienso from the Labor Temple Committee- for its own meeting nights. Each unidn will hold its meetings i twice a month, moltingft.total of ten nights a month that the Jiall will now he in iu-e. It is probable that the i-on-n.iJttee may later sublet to other fraternal organizations. Newly Decorated Tho painters in co-operation with Tjr, Manser, have done an enor- ISIOUN amount of ivorlc on the hall. Tho celling and sides are.done in i; rich cream color. . The. whole. is r.urmtmnv;d with a sun burst at - the center of tho ceiUns. Around the pidcs are painted' tho shields of the painters, the carpenters, the laborers, the" plumbers and steam- ftttcra, the electrical' workers, the eomL-ined machinists, and inter- national decorators,' the building laborers, and tho Royal Arcanum which organization has a tease fi-om tho committee. At oiie end -of the hall ia the universal trndes motto, "United Wo Stand," tho' motto superim- posed by the American Eagle. Stenciling of bluq andt^old, lines the lower part of tho wall, with vo rl - colored marbiteln^ under- neath. .The floor is covered with linoleum. The offices are to be £;la?.ed. It is likely 'that a g:ener&! meet- i»ir r.f ail tho unions will take plae*i in "the hall sometime next month, although the date has not yet been F< t. The schedule of meeting night3 fcfcs not--yet been worked out. KcprcotfitativiK] "qs Committee s Th3 Luhor Tfniple 'Committee which ban .taken' the-lease is cora- 'icscd-of each of the tour unions: Tao repre-acrttativaa ar-3 as fol- lows: paintcT3, Theodore Kron- h-,ir : i, J-iiin Kenninfiton and Her- bert Shaw; carpenters, James Hekher. Daniel Fitspatriek and Joseph' Lipaoy; plurabcr3 and L.te.imiitters, Harold _ Aherrt and Y. 1 ill mm Ahlgrini; buUdinjr Ubor- •~rs, Aksio Uaiato, jamsa McGowan anri Antonio Nataie. Tbi- hall has been named "Laboi: tiom wljich the money 13 alleged to have been taken. Mr, McMane said this morning that a shortage in tho accounts was discovered on August 5thj and that ever since that time the company has been trying to get Martin lo make a complete story of how inueli he has taken. If they could have secured this,. Mr. McMano said, it would have Influenced the company in its action, particularly in view of the fact that Martin hiuj' a ^ife and five children. Martin had been with the com- pany for fifteen years. He , served aa aq assistant to 'Ar. McMane, the vice president. Ball will be fixed in Elizabeth and Martin will be hold for the Grand Jut'y. \mm$ Iisspei Jr. llg CQOO. New Structure Almost Ready to Welcome First Classes to Troop in September 6th Put 00 Finishing Touches The radio has revolutionized political campaigning, it has done away with the front porch days of McKinley, made un- necessary "Swinging around the circle" and speaking from the rear ol trnina. And how much better and more comfortable the. new way is both for listener and speaker! And now much more efficient! Do his i!>cst, woi'le night and day, and strain his voice to the breaking point, the candidate could only reach the ears of a very small proportion of the voters In the olA dayn. To hear him meant money and time and discomfort to both father and mother. Now the candidate can talk to ten millions every time he haa anything worth while to say and everyone can listen with all the comfort that they pick up their favonte magazine or newspaper. . Anil, the "mike" affords the listeners another relief. If the speaker is dull or prosy, if what he has to say isn't interesting, a twist of the disk and silence prevails. We are going to get all the politics we want during this campaign and all it is going to cost us ,ia a little electric juice. Great is radio! Exhibition of Handicraft made by the children at the Summit Playgrounds this season. In Ileeso Davis' window. Now on display s 7 'ay lomorrow Two Summit Young Men Pass N. Y. Bar Exams The new JTunlor High School ia within a few days of being ready to welcome Its , first classes, which will troop into the building Sep- tember (itli.- There is no question but that the new' building will bo completed in. time. Superintendent of Schools John H. Dougall told members of the Summit .Rotary Club yesterday. ' Under the guidance of Mr. Dou- gall, who Is past president of tho club as. well as superintendent of schools, -and H. Donald Holmes, w|io 16 a. member of tho guard of Education and past president of the club, the itotariang yesterday VIH- ited tho now.Juhlor higU.%ylng, in- specting the building and cuin- m'entint; favorably on the type- of- work that had gone into itn con- struction. EnthuHe Over 8SH>S>B The boy which is a part of every man, even Rotarlans, drew from the members no little enthusiasm at sight of the ahopa which are a fea- ture of tho now buildjng, especially the print shop and the mechanical shop in- the latter of which later will be brought an automobile cha.3- aia to bo studied from tho ground up. . . Tho-visitors iuspoctcd the build- ing in two groups, one led by Mr. Dougait and the other by Mr. Holmes.- The new gymnasium for girla, the built-in lockers, the sci- entific department, (lui clasa- rooms, all drew the approbation, of tho Hotariana. The groups went In at tho Morris avenue entrance and confined themijolves to inspecting the. new wing. No one elected to walk the length uf- both junior and senior high school corridors. From the Maple street entrance to the southern end Of the junior wing near Oakland place' is the distance of ft good stroke with tl)0 driver on auyone'n golf c'oui'ao. Giving VJnltinlng 'loaches A few carpenters are otill at work iii the building giving final i touches. The School cgulpnient has j arrived-and la'in tho building but is not yet sot up. Mr. Dotigall said, however, that the building could bo put in readiness in two days. Tho inspection by the Rotarlans 'followed the regular Monday noon luhch which was held at the Y. M. C. A. President Richard L. Corby ancl tho members ami out-of-town gueata ail participated in a full mooting. i The lunch-itselt had two features —presentation of a gift to Matthew L. Chambers .in honor of hi? birth- day, and, a welcome-home to L. B, Coddington, ro&e grower, who had just returned from a two months' tour of Europe where he spent the longest, vacation he has over taken. -'Attended, Convention Im' Ii^ndon * Mr', Coddlngtonand his son, Fred: crick Coddington, visited the large rose-growing establishments on the Continent and in England, in Lon- don they attended the international convention of rose-growers. . "While in Europe Mr..Coddington and hia eon took their first airplane ride, taking passage from Brussels to Paris, a distance of 1-10 miles or so t making the trip in a little over an hour, a trip which by rail rc- qiiireii between four and five hours. Steam Shovel WorEdirag on Excavation For Braiding Pounding Its way throufih tho old sidewalk and tho old basement walls, the steam shovel began yes- terday the work of excavation in preparation for tho new building which the Summit Development Company is to erect adjoining the present Central building on Spring- field avoinuo. The. presence of the basement walls, making It necessary to fight every akovelful of the way makes excavation here .difficult. It is probable that the work will require eight or ten days before the bot- tom can be leveled off. Oliver D. -Merrill, Jr., son of Former Mayor and Mrs. Oliver B, ' Merrill, of 3l" Tulip street, and James B. Burke, son nf Mr. and DailCeS SMld OaitaeS by Mrs. Dani-l Burke, of GG Fern- LOCal Playgrounds M wood rnai ' Weic om the 892 'S orses 'SSS ; Annual Exhibition of Summit Man's Three En= tries in Big Kentucky Show Last Week Firsts '.\Lover of Fine ses the rear unit of tUe Summit Trust Company is to be .erected, excava- tion has been ' completed and a beginning haa. been made of con- crete pouring for.tho walls. Fish mi fiame Clisfe kdfiood Weather Weather' in' North Jersey 'Sunday-No;.Deterrent to Overlook Fish and O&me Cuiaj at Shore ••law. students who passed the Juno Soldiers Memorial Field' Nc * Yoik state Bar Examina- _____^^ I tion, according to an announce- n i ti ———r; ir.-snt just made. Slightly more SCnedUle rOr r a i l than a third of the 2,127 appli _„„_„.„ Icants who took the examinations! The children of Summit's play-.Passed. " John n. Todd of Summit avenue, grounds are all set for a gala dayi Mr. Merrill, who graduated from . ijiia city, won tho lion's ahare of Wednesday afternoon, for it marks,Columbia Law School last June, j ( j, 0 championships at the annual the annual exhibition of dances and!Was selected by United States 1Jluo G a F a i r norKp < games at Soldier's Memorial Field, | Supreme Court Justice Harlan 1 and all that is needed now is good. Fiske Ston-3 to spend a year in his , ° " ' .."',' weather to make the affair success o if ice Mr. Merrill won the Ord- ful. So let's hope "Jupiter Pluvius"';ronaux prize in Columbia, the is kind enough to take a holiday, highest prize awarded by the Law that the kiddles will not have their (School for general proficiency in fun marred by his downpours which; legal study. He - will take up his have been rather an everyday- oc-'dutiei; in Justice Stone's office in curreuce during the past week. |September. Upon the completion Ono more notable feature has of ,the year there, Mr. Merrill will Meanwhile on the property whero been added to the long list of ac-[become associated with the law tivltiea. recently published—the firm of Sullivan and Cromwell, finals for tho playground baseliair-ifev York. championship between Roosevelt j Mr. Burke is-a graduate of Ham- and Mablc Playground teams. lilton College and Harvard Law The following is the fall schedule-School. He is to become assoei- of Mabio-RttQsevelt, and Mabie Me-'atyid. with his father in tho pme- morial Field. Tho grounds will bo tictvof law in New York, open daily until school opening,| Both young men are graduates September GUI. Thereafter, 2 p. m. of Summit High School, to 5 p. m. rtnd all day Saturday' un- til the cold weather begins. Teach- matches ever seen on Mabie Me- ers in charge of Mabie Memorial ni'nrial Playground was viewed nro Miss Dolores White of Summit, Miss Florence Raho of .Roscville, and Joliu'NIes of Xiosclle. The' above-named teachers havebceu on tho summer staff of teachers. Tilabie Memorial Tennis One of the most exciting tennis when C. Lamb and A- Pablo'played in': the final for the city's play- Kyssyul- titlel Paplo "won by scores Of >M, 0-7. Send your items of interest to the HERALD. TO F02EI FIRE DEIX IN BGUKEIJEY HEIGHTS A public meeting sponsored by the Community Association of Berkeley Heights will be held at the Community House, Plain- field avenuo, on Thursday eve- ning, at 8.15 o'clock (Aug. 30th). The object in calling this meeting is to arouse public sentiment to tho urgent need of local fire protection and it is hoped and expected as a result of this meeting, that ways and means may be devised that will lead to the organization of a well'equipped fire company. O. G. Fischer, President of the Association, has boon fortunate in securing as speakers for the evening three men eminently qualified from long experience to give valuable advice - and counsel: Prod Decker, Chief of the Westfield Fire Department; R. L. Cadman of the Schedule Rating Department of Newark, and E. L. Davids, member of the New Providence Borough Fire Department, who is also a member of tho Borough Council. This is an important meeting that should call for a largo at- tendance from all sections of Berkeley Heights. Accidents Slippery Koads amd Misty s Rainy Weather Cause Sat Part Four Minor Acei= dents Secored Annual Outing While residents of Summit de- bated as botv/een carrying umbrel- las, boots or boats to go downstreet Sunday, members of the Overlook Fish' and Game Club ninety miles away, were basking in the well- known sunshine at Ship Bottom. In Summit there was scarcely one-half of ono per cent, of sun- shine in tho entire day—or the past week for that matter. The heavens oscillated between flood, down- pour and just rain for tho greater part of the day, while even leaden sky without rain, Jupe Pluvius's nearest approximation to sunshine, horned in with great difficulty and stayed only a matter of mlnutea at a time. Although Summit, owing to her lofty location, did not suffer from water to such an extent as did her sister communities on tho west, yet there was enough for alb Gutters and sewers were called upon Inter- mittently to carry off cloudburst after cloudburst, and raindrops at times bounded back front the pave ment lake rubber balls. Onting I s gtsh^Iiine Meanwhile, some thirty members of the Overlook Fish and Game Club held their second anhual out Twenty-five- Years Ago The The-Board of Education present- ed a resolution at the meeting of tho Common Council, Tuesday eve- ning, providing for raising on notes money necessary to pay for the land purchased on DcForest ave- nue (on which to ereOt wnat is now the Lincoln School building), and to erect the schuol building contracted for in East Summit, to tide tho board over until the bonds authorized, could be rcalued on. - o •• Samuol Perry, colored, of Spring- follows: First "Ward, for* Council man/Charles E. Flnneyi of Wopd T land avenue; for Assessor, Dr. J. Edward.Rowe, Jr.; for delegates to the city convention, S. R. Mullen, Corra N, Williams, F. E. Dana; for delegates to the'county convention, Charles F. Wood, George F, Vice- land, John W. ,011ft; for member of the countv committee, William H. Lawrence, Sr. Second Ward, for Councilman, Edward S. Votey; for delegates to .the city convention, J. William field, collected $D in bills from a|j ollTlson> -vvilltaln C. Patterson, D. customer In Short Kills and placed ic. Tingley; for delegates to the the money in a. pockethook which he carried in his vest pocket. Later he stopped at the residence of his son, on Ch.ireh street, Millburn, where his wife was staying, and brought a scuttle of coal from the cellar. While on his way home Perry missetl bis pockethook. He hurried back to the house but no one had seen the purse. His wife remembered seeing something on top of tbo coal when she put It on tho fire. Perry lifted the stove lid and there taw the wallet blazing ing at the club's eamn at Ship Bot-jon the coals. He pulled it out and torn under a brilliant attn the like I stamping out the flames, found the EK'JATE IKVEK-IORl* FILED Inventories on t!ireo states, all r.f substantial fclze, were filed with ?nT7«'xaie Johnston laai wefck in- eluiiins one of Joan C. Payne, who tf'.cd in Summit. July ISlb, 1327, leavina: pergonal pmperty valued ,--? $H / Jl S07.P8 according to an in- »-pn*ory filed by the Commercial Trust Company, of Jersey City. Mr. T-.'.yne ia feitrvivefl by Mc wife, : i n . Kvinia PJJHO. of 3«mmit The chic; iit-iiis In the inventnsy are ' I'jorly Loan bonds and stock in ,• rEr.nijlvar.In Kaslroad. of which has not been seen hero for a week. Some of the members were already at, Ship Bottom; others left Summit Sunday morn- ing, dubiously surveying the sky but remaining defiant to its gloomy prognostication. At Ship Bottom tboy fished, they stayed out in the open, they en- joyed a shore dinner, and the re- port had it that the conditions all up and down the Jersey Coast were ideal' ami had been during the en- tire week. Tho club'o camp was erected more than two years ago. Mem- bers have used it for tho past two years, but only one outing had-been held there prior to Sunday. The club iiaa a membership of around one hundred. The president is W. C. Wlttke, of Mountain avenue. The committee in charge of ar- rangements for tho outing was composed of Robert Douglas, John P."Sheridan and James Hogg. money about half burned. He sent what was left to "Washington for redemption and hart the pleasure of receiving new bills for it. Canie Nation has decided to go on the stage and will appear in a revival of "Ten Rights in a Bar- room," early this autumn, playing the part of -Mrs. Slade. The old county convention, E. O. Holmes, Charles Spinning. A. S. Collycr; for member of the county commit- tee, 1st district, Jonathan Bounell, second district, A. M, Jones, The Democratic list 'filed, was as follows: Councilman, First Ward, Thomas R, Adams; Second Ward, William,D. Gibby; Assessor, First Ward, John V. Murphy; for dele- gates to the city convention. First Ward, Henry Wulff and Henry At- terbury; Second Ward, Alexander A. Taylor, James W. Reeve, B. J. Mul'downey-; for delegates to the county convention, First Ward, John J. Lane nnd Robert J. Mul- downey; Second Ward, George C. Hand, Larry W. Walsh and A. W. Compton. It Is reported that the season just past was the coldest'on recordc thc average temperature being 69. It has also been the rainiest since' 1887, the fall'being 16.61 inches. play is to be altered DO as to be up j June 23rd took the lead on chill, to date, and actual events in which .with a performance ,that, would YrthlblLs Stunt Flying Washington—F, Truboo Davison, Assistant Secretary of "War for Air, haa issued an order' prohibiting stunt flying by army aviatorn in dedication cerfmonles. 2S Nations Want Hushes Geneva—Charles Evans Hughes haa been nominated by 28 govern- ments as a member of the Perma- nent Court oi International Justice- at The Hague. Mention the HERALD when buy me Patient Cluillsnpte:-; Dentist New York—Dr. Nathsn Fos, dent- ist, received a challenge to'a pistol duel "on any day convenient", from a disgruntled negro patient. The neKro was arrested for violating the law'against duelling. 8a*es 'Era SoinOt^'des Many a sucker has been by a fountain pen that work.—Louisville Herald Mrs. Nation has participated are to be brought out vl\idly on the sta^e. —-o—-- A gigantic railroad connecting Hudson Bay and British Columbia with Buenos Ayros, South America, and having a network of branches, is planned. Articles of incorpora- tion of the Pan American Railroad Company, with a capital stonk of ¥250,000,000, have been filed at Guthrie, Okla. -—-o——- it is reported that a spirit of have done credit to a day in March.' Even Iho hot spell of this summer w;as not like the average, the high-, est mark being 91 on July 8th. Other years it has been Oi) and 97. • Lord Bra3sey, a recognized authority on the- subject, predicts that tho United States is destined to become the greatest naval power in the world. Secretary or War Elihu Root, ex- Secretary of State John W. Foster, revolution" is gaining in force on'Hannia Tcylor and Judge John M. the Isthmus of Panama as the re- Dickinson have arrived in London suit of the rejection of the canal [for the. meetings .of the Alaskan eshow In Lex- Friday, Kvery horse In his stable won a champion- ship. His stable consists; of Dark ltex, Lucky Llndy and Suttie Letgh. Ho purchased all of theso horsea from a Lexington horseman, Robert K. Moreland, last fall after the' Ken- tucky State Fair and at tho nation- al show in New York last fall each of them won their classes This is said to be tho first tlmo that any exhibitor haa over won first in alt three of these classes the first time he exhibited at that. show. "Mr. and Mrs, Todd wore present to see their horses show yesterday and last night ana wei e very much pleased with the outcome of tho show," says the "ijoxihgton Her- ald" of Inst Saturday. "While Mr. Tnrid is fond of all. his horses it IS easy to' Hbo.'that '-he .is' partial to Dark Rnx, a horse with a, great reputation on. the tahharki "Mr, Todd's run of champion- ships started In the afternoon when his fine harness mare, Suttie Leigh, daughter of Sunflower and Leigh Chief, won the senior championship for fine harness stallions, marcs or geldings. This prize came after she hart won the thrco-galtcrt cjass and tho combined saddle and harness classes. "Bob Moroland, who handles all of tho Todd horses, brought this mare out last, year for tho first time and she created n sensation at the State Fair. She is showing better this year and if she continues to go well she will bo hard to beat at any show. "When horsemen heard that Mr. Moreland was converting Dark Rex into a walk-trot horse they regret- ted to hear that the llvn-gaitod classes should lose ono of the best animals that had been developed In the last decadq but when they saw him show last night they were of the opinion that he rightly belongs in the three-gaitod class. While he was grand In the five-gulled shows ho is grander in the threo-gattcd classes and if he Is beaten this year this writer will miss his guess. - "Horsemen and experienced horse judges said last night that Dark Ilex is the greatest walk-trot horse they have seen for years. Bob Moreland and his rider, Quin Davis are pleased with the way he haa started his new tanbark career and they will give him every attention that a horse could have. "Lucky Lindy, the sensational walk-trot horse In the Moreland stable last year, la a greater horse this year because be has filled out and has more animation. He made a brilliant show last night and many horsemen who .»aw him in Now York last fall said he looked very much like bo did up there when he was showing for tho three- galted championship. "I do not recall If anyone has ever started in the horse business with such a great stable as has Mr. Todd. Ho believes in quality and not quantity and purchased only three horses but each of them are winners and champions. His horses are young and ho should continue, to win with them for some Lime. Of course, he will add young horses to hia stable from time, to time. His horses will bo exhibited at. the Ken- tucky State Fair and those who did not gel to see them here will have another chance." feat Change- Seen in Italy Summit Pastor Comments on Conditions In Europe Following His Return S Other Countries Advance Five Injured Slightly Slippery roads and the misty, rainy veathcT accounted for part, at least, of four automobile acci- dents which were reported over j the week-end. From the accidents, | five persons sustained injuries, all of them slight. Philip RafEerty, of 111 Hobart avenue, and II. O. Wilson, of 06 Whittredge road, sustained BIIBIU injuries when the car in which they were riding collided at Pari; and Ashwood avenues, with a car driven by Llbrato Yannotta, of 31 Union place, Summit. Tho impact of tho collision put out of action temporarily the fire alarm box on that corner. , Tho box was put bach in commission very shortly. Mr. Rafferty and Mr. Wildoti were given first aid at Lent's diu^, store and taken to Overlook Ho - pital where Rafferty received treat- ment for n scalp wound and Wilson for a cut over tbo loft"eye; Bn'li went home after receiving treat- ment In the same . accident a child, whoso name was not learned, re- ceived a black eye from the colli- sion. Tho child was riding wlt^i Yannottn. The accident occuried around 7 o'clock, Sunday evening. Injured WJien Truck Hits l*oli> Alfred Llppla, helper tan Noc'a mllktruck, sustained Blight injurie i when tho truck on which he, wars riding struck a pole, Saturday Great change Is manifest in Italy, said the Rev. Henry L. Lambdln,, pastor of the Methodist Episcopal |morning, at the corner of Summit Church, who returned Sunday night on the S. S. Coronla after a six weeks'^ touri-of Europe. Mr. Lanibdin, who was asked this morning to comment on •European, affairs, said tliat of all countries he visited Italy showed the most marked change, to super- ficial observation, of any Kuvopean nation since he was last in Europe in 1925. • "Italy," he said, "has a moro en- terprising and progressive outlook in everything that relates to the welfare of 'herpeople." Even tho enemies of Mussolini's dictatorship,, lie . said,, virile, -dis- satisfied underneath and desirous of more freedom, are convinced that Mussolini has accomplished many wonderful changes. Ulectrifieatlon in Ifuly Much money has boon spent there in electrification of railroads. From Bologna to Florence; from Naples to Rome; and from Pisa to Genoa, on which last-named lino there are some-138 tunnels, the loads have been electrified. This is due as much to Italy's lack of coal as to the desire to obliterate the smoto nuisance. Tho railroads throughout Europe, said Mr. Lanibdin, and not only in Italy, show a great change for the better. Signs of shabbincss and disrepair are disappearing. Mussolini's work is also notice- able in the field of graft elimina- tion. The Duco is dolnR all be can to break down graft among state officials. Of all frontiers, the sorest seems to be between France and Italy. The interests of these two nations clash in many points. ' France Garrisoned by Colonials avenue and Itidge road, throwing him to the pavement. John Dorcr, of Chatham, driver of tho truck, in his report to tho police, said that tho truck skidded when be applied the brakes before turning from Summit avenue inio Ridge road. It was misty, be said, and he was unable to see far ahead. The truck skidded into -the pole. The pole was rotted and it Lroho off. Llppia wua riding on tho hide of tho truck. He was thrown off. He was taken to Overlook Ho:- pita! for examination as to Ids In- juries. He left tho hospital later in the day. CiirH ])nmti;;ud,. No 0»fi Injured Two machines vforo damaged but. . no ono was injured in an accident, Sunday oycnlng at the- corner of Morris avenue and Weaver street, when a truck driven by Phieldo Proto, of Plninfleld, was struck from the rear by a car driven by John Pamella, of !L Aubrey street. Proto was Just turning from Mor- ris avenue Into Weaver street. He had waited for a bus to take on passengers, he said in his report, and then signaled for a left turn. His truck was shoved 200 feet by the Impact, he declared. Pamella assorted that Proto mafic the turn without having signulcd, and said that ho was unable to avoid striking the truck. Miss Francos Banks, of Jersey City, sustained contusions about, the body and the right leg, Sunday evening In an automobile accident at Springfield avenue and Mlddlu street. She was riding in a car driven by her uncle. Perry Banks, of Jersey City. The car collided with a machine operated by Altn d Johnson, of Pino Grove avenue, Summit. Miss Banks was treated ' *1 I it Overlook Hospital and vent Subscribe in thin paper, treaty by the Columbian congress at Bogota. Only vigorous action on the part of the government can prevent an outbreak and it is doubt- ful whether such action is possible. o- •— The complete lists filed with City Clerk iiiuldownoy by rcpresenta- saved fives of tho Republican and the v.-ouldn't Democratic organizations, in com- pliance with the new primary law, follow: The Republican 1i"-l tiled was as boundary commission. The Cana- dian-commissioners' arc also in London. \ o——- As a reward for faithful perform- ance of his • duties, Joseph C. Hendrtx, president of the National Bank of Commerce, of Now York City, will receive ?250,000 upon bis retiring from the chief position of the bank which is to be merged into the Western National Hanlc of the United Stntc-. v,*ithin a few weeks. The Inveterate Fan "Theso cooking experts arc al- ways wTiting about thick batter," said the mere male reader of Woman's Home Companion. "Any- body, knows the best batter in pro- fessional biiscball Is a thick bat- ter."—Woman's Home Companion. YT&nt to Get Mncftmer "Washington--A special attorney- has hpen sent to France to arrange for the extradition of Henry M. Blackmcr, vho is charged with perjury in connection with his income tax returns. • showing a great deal of improve- ment over the days of 1925 when he last visited that nation. France still maintains an army of occupa- tion at Coblentz and at Mainz. The majority of the soldiers which France maintains in her garrisons arc colored troops from her colonies, tho deduction being pre- sumably that the maintenance cost is cheaper. Switzerland, Mr.' Lambdln said, shows probably tho least change. It Is always up-to-date. With its natural resources only in its water j power and its scenery, Switzerland is second among tho nations of the world in per capita wealth. -In Us! attitude toward athletic develop- \ ment for its school children, Switzerland is probably the most progressive m Europe. Germany's recent. ' athletic development, he felt, is patterned much along the same lines as that of Switzerland. JJpflspapcrs Unsatisfactory European nowspapers, as y, rule, prove unsatisfactory to the visiting American, he felt. This dissatis- faction has its root partially in'the lack of details which marks one difference between European and American metropolitan newspapers, and partially in the meagerness of American news;.in foreign papers. News from America, for the most part on the Continent, is limited to interviews with visiting Americans, and very little of first-hand politi- cal news finds its way into their columns. , With the exception, of the foreign Issues of American news- papers, great .events are treated in only two or three paragraphs. Even in the foreign issues. ,of American papers, except for the front page story which Is generally of a political .nature, the same moagerness of detail is manifest. In England especially, the dram- atic critics and the writers of news-editorial, articles show a mark'ed aptitude. As for world news, however, Mr. Lambdln said that he felt that the New York Charged With Drunken Driving Johnson was arrested by Patrol- man Finneran after Banks said that Johnwonw.is driving on tho wrong side of Springfield avenue. Officer Finneran preferred a charge of op- porating a car while under the in- fluence of liquor against Johnson. Johnson denied tho .ehargo which was made on information and be- lief. Dr. E. H. MacPherson. of Millburn, examined the defendant and gave his opinion that the man was unfit to operate ti car. Yesterday Police Justice Will- iams fixed bail for Johnson who will appear before him in Traffic Court, Thursday evening. LODGE NOTES Crystal Lodge, I. O. 0. F. On Thursday evening at 8 o'clock a district meeting will be held In Oddfellows Hail on • Springfield avenue to select a District Deputy, There will be delegations present from the Uernardsville ami Pea- paek lodges and a large repic- scntatlon of the local lodge is ex- pected. I. O. O. F. Representatives of the lodges of the GOth District, I. O. O. F , will meet, Thursday evening, at the rooms of Crystal Lodge, No. 250, Summit, to elect a District Deputy. It is expected that around 500 per- sons from Brrn&rds-vilK Peapr'c"'. Stirling and Summit will bo pres- ent. The speakers will' include Grand Uaiitor-oii-et Walter H. Campbell, of' Xcwark, and Grand Representative ' :*ad Past Grand Master E. T. Snook, of Summit. Times was more comprehcnr-rie than all the, papers In Europe. He hastened to add, however, that ;' u was given only as, a j>erFG'>"i opinion, and that he had in this :•:••! in his other observations, had ."-, • opportunity to note only <un «.!".. i- ally during this vi-.ilt.

i Lf i. Oi3> tsfjj-i UIV&. r-wi^'-sfiS-l-J malics toward none,i Lf i. " J * f z .,, --K£.^jf3 e.i-Jt.^Oi 3> tsfjj-i UIV &. r-wi^'-sfiS-l-J /** ^i .-r:; i. ad SUMMIT RECORD — -

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Page 1: i Lf i. Oi3> tsfjj-i UIV&. r-wi^'-sfiS-l-J malics toward none,i Lf i. " J * f z .,, --K£.^jf3 e.i-Jt.^Oi 3> tsfjj-i UIV &. r-wi^'-sfiS-l-J /** ^i .-r:; i. ad SUMMIT RECORD — -

'(

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i Lf i . " J * f z .,, - -

K£.^jf3 e.i-Jt.^3 tsf j j - i& r-wi^'-sfiS-l-J Oi> UIV. / * * ^ i . - r : ; i.

ad SUMMIT RECORD

— - . . , f I .*'-y f V \ \ -\ "Justice lo r.ll:

malics toward none,"

*jr:2RTY-MIWTH YEAR. MO. 101 SUMMIT, N. J., TUESDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 28, 1923 $3.59 PER YEAH

fccilL fefe BUCKS iKI o miQ a i «e

Ssvera On a charge of appropriating the company's funds to his own use, George Martin, of Glenalde avenue, was arrested last night at hid home by Sergeant Dunno and Officers Egan and Reynolds, and sent to Elizabeth this morning by Judge "Williams. The charge was pre­ferred by Freeholder William I. McMane, vice-president of tho Com­monwealth Water Co. and .agent for a subsidiary of the American

boasting a. combined membership Construction and Securities Co.,

Crafts Combine in Lease of HalB la Manser Coll ding—Pairaters Ioi= Hale F/itove

Ccrablnecl Membership 7©0 representatives" of "four crafts

&sapprepai«'#t Finds is Charg&S

in Summit of' around COO persons htvc taken a step toward co-oper-'ction between trades locally with t'ae lease of the large hall on the tliird floor of Arthur Marker's building at 431 Springfield ave­nue. Tho lease, tak«-n for a period oi live y-oars under the name of the "Labor Temple Committee" of the r«mil<iued crafts, ban for its pur­r e e the establishment in Summit of 'a home for labor.

Tho brushes of tho painters* in­itiators of the movement, have transformed in after-hour mo-Kionts, the interior of the hall into n thing of beauty. Theodore Kron-Li-ry, who together with John Ker-

'•'•• ,;on, painter.';, have been chiefly . Liiii.il.-Ie for the growth of the ;:;-ior-labor movement, said

«^crdjy that the place will be •I oacd to lr.bor of all crafts. The

.::;I1 and the offices which are' lo >,e located in th^ rear of the build-i«G will be open a t all hours, he r.aid.

Kotu- Unions Represented Four of the five trades unions in

Summit, painters, . plumbers and :>teamfittern, carpenters, and la­borer,1-- in tho building trades, are represented in the Labor Temple Committee which has taken the iea^-i. I t is probabl-2 also that -the mnsonu, the fifth union, will soon ha affiliated in the movement,, making a total of some 700 per­son.", who will share the hall.

While these represent the Sum­mit locals, there ar-s, besides, sev­eral trades, tho slate workers, hoisting: engineers, electrical work-•ors, sheet motul workers, and lathers, who have no Summit locals. Representatives of these trades, auid Mr. Kronberi*, will be •extended the courtesy of the offices {or moetins although they have no

. representation in .the Labor Temple Committee. , ,.

Have,45ttit Sleeting NIRMB • Heretofore the tradesmen hayo

had no one home, but. have met-at various placer, throughout town. F,.->clr local will .preserve* its .own individuality and will' ' have its •7--n rnea^intr ni^hta, ,bufci thg-»co-upevation ,is looked' tO-rprbduce a 1. rj'J of ' jroed fc-eliny among .tho meuibui-s of the unions, Mr. ICroti-borrr cajd that tin* effort, to secure a single home for trades unions locrdly has been under considera­tion for the past Len years.

The hall was formerly leased by the Royal Arcanum. This organi­sation will now sub-ienso from the Labor • Temple Committee- for its own meeting nights. Each unidn will hold its meetings i twice a month, molting ft. total of ten nights a month that the Jiall will now he in iu-e. I t is probable that the i-on-n.iJttee may later sublet to other fraternal organizations.

Newly Decorated Tho painters in co-operation with

Tjr, Manser, have done an enor-ISIOUN amount of ivorlc on the hall. Tho celling and sides are.done in i; rich cream color. . The. whole. is r.urmtmnv;d with a sun burst at

- the center of tho ceiUns. Around the pidcs are painted' tho shields of the painters, the carpenters, the laborers, the" plumbers and steam-ftttcra, the electrical' workers, the eomL-ined machinists, and inter­national decorators,' the building laborers, and tho Royal Arcanum which organization h a s a tease fi-om tho committee.

At oiie end -of the hall ia the universal trndes motto, "United Wo Stand," tho' motto superim­posed by the American Eagle. Stenciling of bluq andt^old, lines the lower part of tho wall, with vo rl - colored marbiteln^ under­neath. .The floor is covered with linoleum. The offices are to be £;la?.ed.

I t is likely 'that a g:ener&! meet-i»ir r.f ail tho unions will take plae*i in "the hall sometime next month, although the date has not yet been F< t. The schedule of meeting night3 fcfcs not--yet been worked out.

KcprcotfitativiK] "qs Committee s Th3 Luhor Tfniple 'Committee

which ban .taken' the-lease is cora-'icscd-of each of the tour unions: Tao repre-acrttativaa ar-3 as fol­lows: paintcT3, Theodore Kron-h-,ir:i, J-iiin Kenninfiton and Her­bert Shaw; carpenters, James Hekher. Daniel Fitspatriek and Joseph ' Lipaoy; plurabcr3 and L.te.imiitters, Harold _ Aherrt and Y.1 ill mm Ahlgrini; buUdinjr Ubor-•~rs, Aksio Uaiato, jamsa McGowan anri Antonio Nataie.

Tbi- hall has been named "Laboi:

tiom wljich the money 13 alleged to have been taken.

Mr, McMane said this morning that a shortage in tho accounts was discovered on August 5thj and that ever since that time the company has been trying to get Martin lo make a complete story of how inueli he has taken. If they could have secured this,. Mr. McMano said, it would have Influenced the company in its action, particularly in view of the fact that Martin hiuj' a ^ife and five children.

Martin had been with the com­pany for fifteen years. He , served aa aq assistant to 'Ar. McMane, the vice president.

Ball will be fixed in Elizabeth and Martin will be hold for the Grand Jut'y.

\mm$ Iisspei Jr. l lg CQOO.

New Structure Almost Ready to Welcome First Classes to Troop in September 6th

Put 00 Finishing Touches

The radio has revolutionized political campaigning, it has done away with the front porch days of McKinley, made un­necessary "Swinging around the circle" and speaking from the rear ol trnina.

And how much better and more comfortable the. new way is both for listener and speaker! And now much more efficient! Do his i!>cst, woi'le night and day, and strain his voice to the breaking point, the candidate could only reach the ears of a very small proportion of the voters In the olA dayn. To hear him meant money and time and discomfort to both father and mother.

Now the candidate can talk to ten millions every time he haa anything worth while to say and everyone can listen with all the comfort that they pick up their favonte magazine or newspaper. . Anil, the "mike" affords the listeners another relief. If the speaker is dull or prosy, if what he has to say isn't interesting, a twist of the disk and silence prevails.

We are going to get all the politics we want during this campaign and all it is going to cost us ,ia a little electric juice. Great is radio!

Exhibition of Handicraft made by the children at the Summit Playgrounds this season. In Ileeso Davis' window.

Now on display

s7

'ay l omor row

Two Summit Young Men Pass N. Y. Bar Exams

The new JTunlor High School ia within a few days of being ready to welcome Its , first classes, which will troop into the building Sep­tember (itli.- There is no question but that the new' building will bo completed in. time. Superintendent of Schools John H. Dougall told members of the Summit .Rotary Club yesterday.

' Under the guidance of Mr. Dou­gall, who Is past president of tho club as. well as superintendent of schools, -and H. Donald Holmes, w|io 16 a. member of tho guard of Education and past president of the club, the itotariang • yesterday VIH-ited tho now.Juhlor higU.%ylng, in­specting the building • and cuin-m'entint; favorably on the type- of-work that had gone into itn con­struction.

EnthuHe Over 8SH>S>B The boy which is a part of every

man, even Rotarlans, drew from the members no little enthusiasm at sight of the ahopa which are a fea­ture of tho now buildjng, especially the print shop and the mechanical shop in- the latter of which later will be brought an automobile cha.3-aia to bo studied from tho ground up. . .

Tho-visitors iuspoctcd the build­ing in two groups, one led by Mr. Dougait and the other by Mr. Holmes.- The new gymnasium for girla, the built-in lockers, the sci­entific department, (lui clasa-rooms, all drew the approbation, of tho Hotariana. The groups went In at tho Morris avenue entrance and confined themijolves to inspecting the. new wing. No one elected to walk the length uf- both junior and senior high school corridors. From the Maple street entrance to the southern end Of • the junior wing near Oakland place' is the distance of ft good stroke with tl)0 driver on auyone'n golf c'oui'ao.

Giving VJnltinlng 'loaches A few carpenters are otill at

work iii the building giving final i touches. The School cgulpnient has j arrived-and la'in tho building but is not yet sot up. Mr. Dotigall said, however, that the building could bo put in readiness in two days.

Tho inspection by the Rotarlans 'followed the regular Monday noon luhch which was held at the Y. M. C. A. President Richard L. Corby ancl tho members ami out-of-town gueata ail participated in a full mooting. i The lunch-itselt had two features —presentation of a gift to Matthew L. Chambers .in honor of hi? birth­day, and, a welcome-home to L. B, Coddington, ro&e grower, who had just returned from a two months' tour of Europe where he spent the longest, vacation he has over taken. -'Attended, Convention Im' Ii^ndon *

Mr', Coddlngtonand his son, Fred: crick Coddington, visited the large rose-growing establishments on the Continent and in England, in Lon­don they attended the international convention of rose-growers. . "While in Europe Mr..Coddington and hia eon took their first airplane ride, taking passage from Brussels to Paris, a distance of 1-10 miles or sot making the trip in a little over an hour, a trip which by rail rc-qiiireii between four and five hours.

Steam Shovel WorEdirag on Excavation For Braiding Pounding Its way throufih tho

old sidewalk and tho old basement walls, the steam shovel began yes­terday the work of excavation in preparation for tho new building which the Summit Development Company is to erect adjoining the present Central building on Spring­field avoinuo.

The. presence of the basement walls, making It necessary to fight every akovelful of the way makes excavation here .difficult. It is probable that the work will require eight or ten days before the bot­tom can be leveled off.

Oliver D. -Merrill, Jr., son of Former Mayor and Mrs. Oliver B,

' Merrill, of 3l" Tulip street, and James B. Burke, son nf Mr. and

Da i lCeS SMld Oai taeS b y Mrs. Dani-l Burke, of GG Fern-LOCal Playgrounds M wood rnai' Weic ™om the 892

'S orses 'SSS;

Annual Exhibition of Summit Man's Three En= tries in Big Kentucky Show Last Week Firsts

'.\Lover of Fine ses

the rear unit of tUe Summit Trust Company is to be .erected, excava­tion has been ' completed and a beginning haa. been made of con­crete pouring for.tho walls.

Fish mi fiame Clisfe kdfiood Weather

Weather' in' North Jersey 'Sunday-No;.Deterrent to Overlook Fish and O&me Cuiaj at Shore

••law. students who passed the Juno

Soldiers Memorial Field'Nc* Yoik state Bar Examina-_____^^ I tion, according to an announce-

n i t i ———r; ir.-snt just made. Slightly more S C n e d U l e r O r r a i l than a third of the 2,127 appli

_ „ „ _ „ . „ Icants who took the examinations! The children of Summit's play-.Passed. " John n. Todd of Summit avenue,

grounds are all set for a gala dayi Mr. Merrill, who graduated from . ijiia city, won tho lion's ahare of Wednesday afternoon, for it marks,Columbia Law School last June, j ( j , 0 championships at the annual the annual exhibition of dances and!Was selected by United States 1 J l u o G a F a i r norKp< games at Soldier's Memorial Field, | Supreme Court Justice Harlan1 and all that is needed now is good. Fiske Ston-3 to spend a year in his , ° " ' . . " ' , ' weather to make the affair success o if ice Mr. Merrill won the Ord-ful. So let's hope "Jupiter Pluvius"';ronaux prize in Columbia, the is kind enough to take a holiday, highest prize awarded by the Law that the kiddles will not have their (School for general proficiency in fun marred by his downpours which; legal study. He -will take up his have been rather an everyday- oc-'dutiei; in Justice Stone's office in curreuce during the past week. |September. Upon the completion

Ono more notable feature has of ,the year there, Mr. Merrill will Meanwhile on the property whero been added to the long list of ac-[become associated with the law

tivltiea. recently published—the firm of Sullivan and Cromwell, finals for tho playground baseliair-ifev York. championship between Roosevelt j Mr. Burke is-a graduate of Ham-and Mablc Playground teams. lilton College and Harvard Law

The following is the fall schedule-School. He is to become assoei-of Mabio-RttQsevelt, and Mabie Me-'atyid. with his father in tho pme­morial Field. Tho grounds will bo tictvof law in New York, open daily until school opening,| Both young men are graduates September GUI. Thereafter, 2 p. m. of Summit High School, to 5 p. m. rtnd all day Saturday' un­til the cold weather begins. Teach- matches ever seen on Mabie Me-ers in charge of Mabie Memorial ni'nrial Playground was viewed nro Miss Dolores White of Summit, Miss Florence Raho of .Roscville, and Joliu'NIes of Xiosclle. The' above-named teachers havebceu on tho summer staff of teachers.

Tilabie Memorial Tennis One of the most exciting tennis

when C. Lamb and A- Pablo'played in': the final for the city's play-Kyssyul- titlel Paplo "won by scores Of >M, 0-7.

Send your items of interest to the HERALD.

TO F02EI FIRE DEIX IN B G U K E I J E Y HEIGHTS

A public meeting sponsored by the Community Association of Berkeley Heights will be held at the Community House, Plain-field avenuo, on Thursday eve­ning, at 8.15 o'clock (Aug. 30th).

The object in calling this meeting is to arouse public sentiment to tho urgent need of local fire protection and it is hoped and expected as a result of this meeting, that ways and means may be devised that will lead to the organization of a well'equipped fire company.

O. G. Fischer, President of the Association, has boon fortunate in securing as speakers for the evening three men eminently qualified from long experience to give valuable advice - and counsel: Prod Decker, Chief of the Westfield Fire Department; R. L. Cadman of the Schedule Rating Department of Newark, and E. L. Davids, member of the New Providence Borough Fire Department, who is also a member of tho Borough Council.

This is an important meeting that should call for a largo at­tendance from all sections of Berkeley Heights.

Accidents Slippery Koads amd Mistys

Rainy Weather Cause Sat Part Four Minor Acei= dents

Secored Annual Outing While residents of Summit de­

bated as botv/een carrying umbrel­las, boots or boats to go downstreet Sunday, members of the Overlook Fish' and Game Club ninety miles away, were basking in the well-known sunshine at Ship Bottom.

In Summit there was scarcely one-half of ono per cent, of sun­shine in tho entire day—or the past week for that matter. The heavens oscillated between flood, down­pour and just rain for tho greater part of the day, while even leaden sky without rain, Jupe Pluvius's nearest approximation to sunshine, horned in with great difficulty and stayed only a matter of mlnutea at a time.

Although Summit, owing to her lofty location, did not suffer from water to such an extent as did her sister communities on tho west, yet there was enough for alb Gutters and sewers were called upon Inter­mittently to carry off cloudburst after cloudburst, and raindrops at times bounded back front the pave ment lake rubber balls.

Onting I s gtsh^Iiine Meanwhile, some thirty members

of the Overlook Fish and Game Club held their second anhual out

Twenty-five- Years Ago The

The-Board of Education present­ed a resolution at the meeting of tho Common Council, Tuesday eve­ning, providing for raising on notes money necessary to pay for the land purchased on DcForest ave­nue (on which to ereOt wnat is now the Lincoln School building), and to erect the schuol building contracted for in East Summit, to tide tho board over until the bonds authorized, could be rcalued on.

— - o ••

Samuol Perry, colored, of Spring-

follows: First "Ward, for* Council man/Charles E. Flnneyi of WopdT land avenue; for Assessor, Dr. J. Edward.Rowe, Jr.; for delegates to the city convention, S. R. Mullen, Corra N, Williams, F. E. Dana; for delegates to the'county convention, Charles F. Wood, George F, Vice-land, John W. ,011ft; for member of the countv committee, William H. Lawrence, Sr.

Second Ward, for Councilman, Edward S. Votey; for delegates to

.the city convention, J. William field, collected $D in bills from a | j o l l T l s o n > -vvilltaln C. Patterson, D. customer In Short Kills and placed ic. Tingley; for delegates to the the money in a. pockethook which he carried in his vest pocket. Later he stopped at the residence of his son, on Ch.ireh street, Millburn, where his wife was staying, and brought a scuttle of coal from the cellar. While on his way home Perry missetl bis pockethook. He hurried back to the house but no one had seen the purse. His wife remembered seeing something on top of tbo coal when she put It on tho fire. Perry lifted the stove lid and there taw the wallet blazing

ing at the club's eamn at Ship Bot-jon the coals. He pulled it out and torn under a brilliant attn the like I stamping out the flames, found the

EK'JATE IKVEK-IORl* FILED

Inventories on t!ireo s t a t e s , all r.f substantial fclze, were filed with ?nT7«'xaie Johnston laai wefck in-eluiiins one of Joan C. Payne, who tf'.cd in Summit. July ISlb, 1327, leavina: pergonal pmperty valued ,--? $H/

JlS07.P8 according to an in-»-pn*ory filed by the Commercial Trust Company, of Jersey City. Mr. T-.'.yne ia feitrvivefl by Mc wife, : i n . Kvinia PJJHO. of 3«mmit The chic; iit-iiis In the inventnsy are ' I'jorly Loan bonds and stock in

,• rEr.nijlvar.In Kaslroad.

of which has not been seen hero for a week. Some of the members were already at, Ship Bottom; others left Summit Sunday morn­ing, dubiously surveying the sky but remaining defiant to its gloomy prognostication.

At Ship Bottom tboy fished, they stayed out in the open, they en­joyed a shore dinner, and the re­port had it that the conditions all up and down the Jersey Coast were ideal' ami had been during the en­tire week.

Tho club'o camp was erected more than two years ago. Mem­bers have used it for tho past two years, but only one outing had-been held there prior to Sunday. The club iiaa a membership of around one hundred. The president is W. C. Wlttke, of Mountain avenue.

The committee in charge of ar­rangements for tho outing was composed of Robert Douglas, John P."Sheridan and James Hogg.

money about half burned. He sent what was left to "Washington for redemption and hart the pleasure of receiving new bills for it.

Canie Nation has decided to go on the stage and will appear in a revival of "Ten Rights in a Bar­room," early this autumn, playing the part of -Mrs. Slade. The old

county convention, E. O. Holmes, Charles Spinning. A. S. Collycr; for member of the county commit­tee, 1st district, Jonathan Bounell, second district, A. M, Jones,

The Democratic list 'filed, was as follows: Councilman, First Ward, Thomas R, Adams; Second Ward, William,D. Gibby; Assessor, First Ward, John V. Murphy; for dele­gates to the city convention. First Ward, Henry Wulff and Henry At-terbury; Second Ward, Alexander A. Taylor, James W. Reeve, B. J. Mul'downey-; for delegates to the county convention, First Ward, John J. Lane nnd Robert J. Mul-downey; Second Ward, George C. Hand, Larry W. Walsh and A. W. Compton.

It Is reported that the season just past was the coldest'on recordc thc average temperature being 69. It has also been the rainiest since' 1887, the fall'being 16.61 inches.

play is to be altered DO as to be up j June 23rd took the lead on chill, to date, and actual events in which .with a performance ,that, would

YrthlblLs Stunt Flying Washington—F, Truboo Davison,

Assistant Secretary of "War for Air, haa issued an order' prohibiting stunt flying by army aviatorn in dedication cerfmonles.

2S Nations Want Hushes Geneva—Charles Evans Hughes

haa been nominated by 28 govern­ments as a member of the Perma­nent Court oi International Justice-at The Hague.

Mention the HERALD when buy me

Patient Cluillsnpte:-; Dentist New York—Dr. Nathsn Fos, dent­

ist, received a challenge to'a pistol duel "on any day convenient", from a disgruntled negro patient. The neKro was arrested for violating the law'against duelling.

8a*es 'Era SoinOt^'des Many a sucker has been

by a fountain pen that work.—Louisville Herald

Mrs. Nation has participated are to be brought out vl\idly on the sta^e.

— - o — - -A gigantic railroad connecting

Hudson Bay and British Columbia with Buenos Ayros, South America, and having a network of branches, is planned. Articles of incorpora­tion of the Pan American Railroad Company, with a capital stonk of ¥250,000,000, have been filed at Guthrie, Okla.

-—-o——-it is reported that a spirit of

have done credit to a day in March.' Even Iho hot spell of this summer w;as not like the average, the high-, est mark being 91 on July 8th. Other years it has been Oi) and 97. •

Lord Bra3sey, a recognized authority on the- subject, predicts that tho United States is destined to become the greatest naval power in the world.

Secretary or War Elihu Root, ex-Secretary of State John W. Foster,

revolution" is gaining in force on'Hannia Tcylor and Judge John M. the Isthmus of Panama as the re- Dickinson have arrived in London suit of the rejection of the canal [for the. meetings .of the Alaskan

eshow In Lex-Friday, Kvery

horse In his stable won a champion­ship.

His stable consists; of Dark ltex, Lucky Llndy and Suttie Letgh. Ho purchased all of theso horsea from a Lexington horseman, Robert K. Moreland, last fall after the' Ken­tucky State Fair and at tho nation­al show in New York last fall each of them won their classes This is said to be tho first tlmo that any exhibitor haa over won first in alt three of these classes the first time he exhibited at that. show.

"Mr. and Mrs, Todd wore present to see their horses show yesterday and last night ana wei e very much pleased with the outcome of tho show," says the "ijoxihgton Her­ald" of Inst Saturday. "While Mr. Tnrid is fond of all. his horses it IS easy to' Hbo.'that '-he .is' partial to Dark Rnx, a horse with a, great reputation on. the tahharki

"Mr, Todd's run of champion­ships started In the afternoon when his fine harness mare, Suttie Leigh, daughter of Sunflower and Leigh Chief, won the senior championship for fine harness stallions, marcs or geldings. This prize came after she hart won the thrco-galtcrt cjass and tho combined saddle and harness classes.

"Bob Moroland, who handles all of tho Todd horses, brought this mare out last, year for tho first time and she created n sensation at the State Fair. She is showing better this year and if she continues to go well she will bo hard to beat at any show.

"When horsemen heard that Mr. Moreland was converting Dark Rex into a walk-trot horse they regret­ted to hear that the llvn-gaitod classes should lose ono of the best animals that had been developed In the last decadq but when they saw him show last night they were of the opinion that he rightly belongs in the three-gaitod class. While he was grand In the five-gulled shows ho is grander in the threo-gattcd classes and if he Is beaten this year this writer will miss his guess. -

"Horsemen and experienced horse judges said last night that Dark Ilex is the greatest walk-trot horse they have seen for years. Bob Moreland and his rider, Quin Davis are pleased with the way he haa started his new tanbark career and they will give him every attention that a horse could have.

"Lucky Lindy, the sensational walk-trot horse In the Moreland stable last year, la a greater horse this year because be has filled out and has more animation. He made a brilliant show last night and many horsemen who .»aw him in Now York last fall said he looked very much like bo did up there when he was showing for tho three-galted championship.

"I do not recall If anyone has ever started in the horse business with such a great stable as has Mr. Todd. Ho believes in quality and not quantity and purchased only three horses but each of them are winners and champions. His horses are young and ho should continue, to win with them for some Lime. Of course, he will add young horses to hia stable from time, to time. His horses will bo exhibited at. the Ken­tucky State Fair and those who did not gel to see them here will have another chance."

feat Change-Seen in Italy

Summit Pastor Comments on Conditions In Europe Following His Return

S

Other Countries Advance

Five Injured Slightly Slippery roads and the misty,

rainy veathcT accounted for part, at least, of four automobile acci­dents which were reported over

j the week-end. From the accidents, | five persons sustained injuries, all of them slight.

Philip RafEerty, of 111 Hobart avenue, and II. O. Wilson, of 06 Whittredge road, sustained BIIBIU injuries when the car in which they were riding collided at Pari; and Ashwood avenues, with a car driven by Llbrato Yannotta, of 31 Union place, Summit. Tho impact of tho collision put out of action temporarily the fire alarm box on that corner. , Tho box was put bach in commission very shortly.

Mr. Rafferty and Mr. Wildoti were given first aid at Lent's diu^, store and taken to Overlook Ho -pital where Rafferty received treat­ment for n scalp wound and Wilson for a cut over tbo loft"eye; Bn'li went home after receiving treat­ment

In the same . accident a child, whoso name was not learned, re­ceived a black eye from the colli­sion. Tho child was riding wlt^i Yannottn. The accident occuried around 7 o'clock, Sunday evening.

Injured WJien Truck Hits l*oli> Alfred Llppla, helper tan Noc'a

mllktruck, sustained Blight injurie i when tho truck on which he, wars riding struck a pole, Saturday

Great change Is manifest in Italy, said the Rev. Henry L. Lambdln,, pastor of the Methodist Episcopal |morning, at the corner of Summit Church, who returned Sunday night on the S. S. Coronla after a six weeks'^ touri-of Europe.

Mr. Lanibdin, who was asked this morning to comment on •European, affairs, said tliat of all countries he visited Italy showed the most marked change, to super­ficial observation, of any Kuvopean nation since he was last in Europe in 1925. • "Italy," he said, "has a moro en­terprising and progressive outlook in everything that relates to the welfare of 'herpeople."

Even tho enemies of Mussolini's dictatorship,, lie . said,, virile, -dis­satisfied underneath and desirous of more freedom, are convinced that Mussolini has accomplished many wonderful changes.

Ulectrifieatlon in Ifuly Much money has boon spent there

in electrification of railroads. From Bologna to Florence; from Naples to Rome; and from Pisa to Genoa, on which last-named lino there are some-138 tunnels, the loads have been electrified. This • is due as much to Italy's lack of coal as to the desire to obliterate the smoto nuisance.

Tho railroads throughout Europe, said Mr. Lanibdin, and not only in Italy, show a great change for the better. Signs of shabbincss and disrepair are disappearing.

Mussolini's work is also notice­able in the field of graft elimina­tion. The Duco is dolnR all be can to break down graft among state officials.

Of all frontiers, the sorest seems to be between France and Italy. The interests of these two nations clash in many points. '

France Garrisoned by Colonials

avenue and Itidge road, throwing him to the pavement.

John Dorcr, of Chatham, driver of tho truck, in his report to tho police, said that tho truck skidded when be applied the brakes before turning from Summit avenue inio Ridge road. I t was misty, be said, and he was unable to see far ahead. The truck skidded into -the pole. The pole was rotted and it Lroho off. Llppia wua riding on tho hide of tho truck. He was thrown off. He was taken to Overlook Ho:-pita! for examination as to Ids In­juries. He left tho hospital later in the day.

CiirH ])nmti;;ud,. No 0»fi Injured Two machines vforo damaged but. .

no ono was injured in an accident, Sunday oycnlng at the- corner of Morris avenue and Weaver street, when a truck driven by Phieldo Proto, of Plninfleld, was struck from the rear by a car driven by John Pamella, of !L Aubrey street. Proto was Just turning from Mor­ris avenue Into Weaver street. He had waited for a bus to take on passengers, he said in his report, and then signaled for a left turn. His truck was shoved 200 feet by the Impact, he declared.

Pamella assorted that Proto mafic the turn without having signulcd, and said that ho was unable to avoid striking the truck.

Miss Francos Banks, of Jersey City, sustained contusions about, the body and the right leg, Sunday evening In an automobile accident at Springfield avenue and Mlddlu street. She was riding in a car driven by her uncle. Perry Banks, of Jersey City. The car collided with a machine operated by Altn d Johnson, of Pino Grove avenue, Summit. Miss Banks was treated

' *1

I it Overlook Hospital and vent

Subscribe in thin paper,

treaty by the Columbian congress at Bogota. Only vigorous action on the part of the government can prevent an outbreak and it is doubt­ful whether such action is possible.

o - • —

The complete lists filed with City Clerk iiiuldownoy by rcpresenta-

saved fives of tho Republican and the v.-ouldn't Democratic organizations, in com­

pliance with the new primary law, follow:

The Republican 1i"-l tiled was as

boundary commission. The Cana­dian-commissioners' arc also in London. \

o——-As a reward for faithful perform­

ance of his • duties, Joseph C. Hendrtx, president of the National Bank of Commerce, of Now York City, will receive ?250,000 upon bis retiring from the chief position of the bank which is to be merged into the Western National Hanlc of the United Stntc-. v,*ithin a few weeks.

The Inveterate Fan "Theso cooking experts arc al­

ways wTiting about thick batter," said the mere male reader of Woman's Home Companion. "Any­body, knows the best batter in pro­fessional biiscball Is a thick bat­ter."—Woman's Home Companion.

YT&nt to Get Mncftmer "Washington--A special attorney-

has hpen sent to France to arrange for the extradition of Henry M. Blackmcr, vho is charged with perjury in connection with his income tax returns. •

showing a great deal of improve­ment over the days of 1925 when he last visited that nation. France still maintains an army of occupa­tion at Coblentz and at Mainz. The majority of the soldiers which France maintains in her garrisons arc colored troops from her colonies, tho deduction being pre­sumably that the maintenance cost is cheaper.

Switzerland, Mr.' Lambdln said, shows probably tho least change. It Is always up-to-date. With its natural resources only in its water j power and its scenery, Switzerland is second among tho nations of the world in per capita wealth. -In Us! attitude toward athletic develop- \ ment for its school children, Switzerland is probably the most progressive m Europe. Germany's recent. ' athletic development, he felt, is patterned much along the same lines as that of Switzerland.

JJpflspapcrs Unsatisfactory European nowspapers, as y, rule,

prove unsatisfactory to the visiting American, he felt. This dissatis­faction has its root partially in'the lack of details which marks one difference between European and American metropolitan newspapers, and partially in the meagerness of American news;.in foreign papers. News from America, for the most part on the Continent, is limited to interviews with visiting Americans, and very little of first-hand politi­cal news finds its way into their columns.

, With the exception, of the foreign Issues of American news­papers, great .events are treated in only two or three paragraphs. Even in the foreign issues. ,of American papers, except for the front page story which Is generally of a political .nature, the same moagerness of detail is manifest.

In England especially, the dram­atic critics and the writers of news-editorial, articles show a mark'ed aptitude. As for world news, however, Mr. Lambdln said that he felt that the New York

Charged With Drunken Driving Johnson was arrested by Patrol­

man Finneran after Banks said that Johnwonw.is driving on tho wrong side of Springfield avenue. Officer Finneran preferred a charge of op-porating a car while under the in­fluence of liquor against Johnson. Johnson denied tho .ehargo which was made on information and be­lief. Dr. E. H. MacPherson. of Millburn, examined the defendant and gave his opinion that the man was unfit to operate ti car.

Yesterday Police Justice Will­iams fixed bail for Johnson who will appear before him in Traffic Court, Thursday evening.

LODGE NOTES Crystal Lodge, I. O. 0. F.

On Thursday evening at 8 o'clock a district meeting will be held In Oddfellows Hail on • Springfield avenue to select a District Deputy, There will be delegations present from the Uernardsville ami Pea-paek lodges and a large repic-scntatlon of the local lodge is ex­pected.

I. O. O. F. Representatives of the lodges of

the GOth District, I. O. O. F , will meet, Thursday evening, at the rooms of Crystal Lodge, No. 250, Summit, to elect a District Deputy. It is expected that around 500 per­sons from Brrn&rds-vilK Peapr'c"'. Stirling and Summit will bo pres­ent. The speakers will' include Grand Uaiitor-oii-et Walter H. Campbell, of' Xcwark, and Grand Representative ' :*ad Past Grand Master E. T. Snook, of Summit.

Times was more comprehcnr-rie than all the, papers In Europe. He hastened to add, however, that ; ' u was given only as, a j>erFG'>"i opinion, and that he had in this :•:••! in his other observations, had ."-, • opportunity to note only <un «.!".. i-ally during this vi-.ilt.

Page 2: i Lf i. Oi3> tsfjj-i UIV&. r-wi^'-sfiS-l-J malics toward none,i Lf i. " J * f z .,, --K£.^jf3 e.i-Jt.^Oi 3> tsfjj-i UIV &. r-wi^'-sfiS-l-J /** ^i .-r:; i. ad SUMMIT RECORD — -

. . I l l

I

-** /*~'"n

C/. w'UHeli The nicest courtesy you can show your guests Ja to havo the i r

It.it. mentioned on this page. The nicest courtesy you can show : oui Ijk.lK.Ei is to Kt t h em learn of your vit.it through this paga '.I'honover you go away. Wo will consider it a courtesy whenever . o n give, u s c,n i tem o£ any Kind, Telephone i t to Number 1300.

P:i\i;;;llH'*Yi*'ii'l<irou [ t redge road, have re tu rned from '• j Kennebunkporl , Me.

: l i ;'; M.U'.io) i ii'iiiii, is in Philadelphia, - '•

<_' i _ . i i .J . . . . , '

.Mr . A, F . Hill , <il 1'Jfc'Summit .c3i.ii'-, liii1: r e lumed from Kenn'e-[ ' • i l i p o r t , .Mi'.

A. S. Pirrce, of 01 DeForest ave-i»u.', li:in re turned troin a brief \ i , l t m Malm.

Aliss Marie l iadcau of the Beoeh-v, ood spent tlie v,eek-ciul at the Vassal' Club1 in New York.

Airs. John B .Houga l l , of 3!) Asli-land place, ha:-, re turned sifter a visit in Guilford, Conn.

:;. Itohorl P . Horsey of Hill- Mrs. G. C. Van Kirk, of 7 Lower avenue has re turned from a Overlook road, who has been visit­

ing friend;; In Allcntown, Pa., is ex­pected home loday.

i lonth's-siay in Cape Cod.

."dr. and Mrs . Luman S. Berst ler , o) Mountain avenue, a re visiting feJctives In Crookline, Mass.

Mr. and Mrs. P. W. Mercer and die .Misses Mercer of Woodland avenue are in New Hampshi re .

Aliss Alice Knrlcs has re turned from Rut;1 era University and is , pending her vacation a t Manas-fl'uui Beach.

All-;; Jeani'tto- H.' Bonnel i". re­turning shortly to her home in De-Tun sf. Court afLer spending the . iminroi in .Maine.

.'Jr. hud Mrs. \V. 1'. Beatfle. have returned lo their residence I» Mur­ray Hill after a visit lo the Lido H u b Hotel, Lido Beach, L. I.

Air. and Mrs. Pa rke r AV". Page of i 17 Summit avonuo a r e re turn ing o'l-'LabfO- Day after spending the ; ui.mier at Seliee Lake, Ale.

Mr. and Mrs. Albert Dennis and family, of C Mountain avenue, who have been spending a few days at Ocean Grove, have returned.

Kev. and Afrs, Rockwell S. B r a n k and family are ' r e tu rn ing on Fr i ­day to their home - on Maple s t reet from a summer ut-Custine, Me.

Mr. and Airs. George Slate of Summit avenue expect to leave on Thursday for an automobile t r ip th rough ' the Muskoka Lake region.

Air. and Airs. C. K. Corbiri," of Fernwood road,, and their family a r e re turn ing shnr t ly from L'dgur-town, Alas;;,, where they have been for the past month. \

Miss Amy Diiryee, who re turned from abroad on Sunday on the Belgenlund of the Red S ta r Line, is at her home on DcForest avenue for a brief stay.

Mr. and ah"*. V. AV. P. J aege r and Ah's. Guy Bates and Aliss Betsey \UBM Lillian Jaeger , of l i : t Whit- Bates, who have been a t Bay Head

. i' iiie ij^iiiijier, ai i- i - 'u i iun" . tu ilii-ir home on I-Vrnvood road short ly a i ter Labor Da>.

AfriJ. Pe te r Kelly, of :j!2 Alorri-avenue, is conilncd TO he r home with il lness.

Miiis Pamela Lyall, of SJ Tulip .street, has re turned from1 ' Bridge-bainpton, U. I., where she spent a ;hor t t ime.

Banking ;'.nd In su rance Commls:-'•iouer .ind^ Mrs, Edy,':ird MiiCtsou'or Summit avenue have re turned from an extended trip through. L'aqada.

Afisj; Gillan ajid.Alrs. Koberts of the ( Bccdiwi^oil jnanayemeut , who have' been recent ly a t Banff in Canada, a r e ou the i r way to Cali­fornia.

Dtf-n* T P'.F.I\'JEMPK^ r ; i .

^ept. G—Openinj.; of pub-

,Mry. .11. t i . , Huwies ot Woodland avenue aiid her family a re return,-in,? next week from tlie i 'oconos where they have been spending the summer,

~\\T$. /1'hoiaas .I3. Prout,, 'of, T'ron-pecf. sir^et,, .ftti'd, he r .childreii a r e re turn ing shor t I j from Deephaven Camp on Squam Lake in New, H a n i p s h U ' e , . , , ' . ,

pvjvs.* Si^rab',.Woodman '.Paiil i\iid Mibs Woorliuan, who , have ', been

Tl iu rs , lie school

Wul. . Sept . 1L'—Dr. ld la A. Uohl, Y. .M. C. A., S o'clock, auspices Summit Branch , W. C. T. U.

Mon., Pept . 17—Constitution Day service S. A. R., at JI. S.

Fri.. Stpf. a I - Children's F lower and Yese tab le Show, Lincoln Sehool.

Man., Sept . 24—Mon., Oct. 1— V. Jll, C. A. F inancia l Campiugn.

T«es., Oct. 2—Progressive Asso­ciation, Roosevel t School.

.Wed., Oct. 10- Art, Depar tment , For tn ight ly Club, .1. D. Little, "The Rninance of Old Silver," S.:'.0 p. m.

iH5V/ S'JtStf &<*•&]&

Sixtl? foimvil S£iow of Siate Society To Be Held in Newark Sept.' 14=15

Wmiy Prizes lis^e'd T h e sixth exhibi t ion of dahlias

of the Dahlia Socicfv of Ndw Wed., Oct. 17—Fo'.-tnishtly C l u b ' J e r s e y will be held a t ' t h e Kresjje

Annual Luncheon . Speaker—Mrs ' Depar t raent S to re in N e w a r k ,ont Helen Paije Wodell . Subject—Ar-jSeptember 14th .-iiifl l o t h . Compe

t i t ioh will be open to all r e g a r J -Irss of mpinhership in the society, a n d a laiy;e display of this popular fall flower is expected,. Sixty classes are provided, g iving op­por tun i ty to t he lai-pi2 g rower to

111 teisies im^t

rangeineut of F lowers and ' Con­servation of Chr i s tmas Greens.

Wed-, Ocl. 21—Cliild Study De­partment meet inc of the- F o r t ­nightly Club. , . -

KJI., Oct. 20—Annnal card par ty , Wompn.'K Auxi l iary .Overlook-iHoa-l Jxhibjit Jny iHimher of W'oo'riis, and

J ' ' ! where tlie dahlia lovoi1 wlpiso, back c» 1 j ' a rd garden has a l imited number *3 |of blooms.can [exhibit f rom one to

*-< . ,.-• /^-. . ;a dozen blooms. A special section

m Ante Tests:&t n or£"kA feow. .. „ . i l A '. . ' l-ers a re ngt res t r ic ted to this E?C~

a u » nuujiiui,!,, >i««. i ' " " . ucc.i r i r f „ „ -ni","' JL -n t ition and miiy compete in the open spending the summer at Pemaouid I E v e r y C a i * M u s t B e Bn= i for all sections. I'oint, Mb. a re r e tu rn ing to Sum- „ i j j ( . e j The en t ry fee will consist of one nut early in. Octoow. S p e O € U J D 2 > p C = « l B ! m e r i t o r i o u s dahlia b,Ioom to be

Mrs. Joseph Mastcrson and Chris and Hobby Mastprson. a r c spending their vacation at. Craig Hall , At-laiitlc City. Mr. Mastcrson will speud the week-ends with hie fam­ily.

The Third Liberty 10L Loan mm

w

m ?;•;

The United States Treasury department has announced September 15th the ,date for redemption of these bonds. Interest o£ course will cease September 15th.

Naturally you will want to keep your funds profitably employed after that date. To do so will require prompt presenting of your bonds for redemption and immediate rein­vestment.

We will be glad to serve you in looking after the redemption of your Third Liberty Loan Bonds and also in making satisfactory investment of the proceeds for you.

Air. and M.i'3. H . G. Clopper, of Whlttvi'dge Gardens, a re in t he White Mountains w h e r e they will be _ jolnf d short ly by He rbe r t G. Clopper," Jr. , who is a t p resent in Cape Cod.

specied in Lifie" Drive Beginning: ip'acedin ih,? court of Honor, and c j IL *' j , t h e winner will be awarded the

• b e p t e m t i e r I S I ;Kr<'see Depar tment Store Silver — j Trophy . The mos t a r t i s t ic ar-

Aim To Cut Accideirfs!™n|^i/i^SJSaa1£ske

A to ta l automobi

j Bamberger silver vase . The Nevv

HOOYEK—A NATIONAL ASSET

From "The S a t u r d a y Evening Pos t" of April 11, 192S

Every reader who Is fond Of biography, and who has taken pains to ana lyze . t he lives of not­able men, has been s t ruck by the fact t ha t so m a n y of them have made the i r g rea t e s t achievements In fields remote from those In

F u r t h e r

ENGAGEMENTS

Jjliss Hordon's Eiigngw'M'ui Mr. arid Airs, S- W. Borden of IS8

.Maple s t reet , Summit , have an­nounced the ejigUSemeiit of the i r daughter , Mabel C. Borden, to J o h n W. Aleixel), Jr . , son of Air. and Mrs. John W. Mcixell of Lewisburtr, Pa . The announcement was made a t a' bridge pa r ty on Sa turday after- ' noon.

of 133 Union CountyUu<k Sunday Ca'U Cup •will be es tabl ishments , repre-1awarded for t he bes t baska t of which they, began^ life

sent ing sa les agencies, KararreS, twenty-five, blooms, not less than service s t a t i ons and bther b-r'anehes t en var ie t ies ; and the silver t rophy of t he bus iness have beep dcsifj-[0r the Frankl in Con t rac t ing Co., nated bv Motor Vehicle Com mis-1-will be (riven for t h e best basket sioner Wil l iam L, Dill as inspection 10f twenty-five b looms of one var-stat ions in t he ' 'Savo-a-Life" c a m - ' j e t y . The Garden and Honw paign which begins next mouth t o .Bu i lda r Achtevcment Medal will cut down automobile fatalit ies and i l e given to the most wor thy un-

WEDDINGS

MARK TWAIN SAID— "Kearly ever; cno complai i t i about the weather , but no one did anything about i t . ' If the recent ra iny weather has caused you anxiety as to whether your wash will dry or ,not , don't complain. Send your laundry to us and after a thorough washing we'll have it seientilically dried.

TOR "SNCnaJ-WHffg~"SESJVICE

ISitehaiil—Jieeslur , F . Clifford Bach ant and Miss Florence Keesler, ot Hawthorne, . N. J., were marpjed, Alonday eve­ning, August 2t>th, a t t he homo of the groom, 19 Maple s t reet , Dobbs Ferry, N. Y. Mrs. .Bitchant is a' graduate of St. B a r n a b a s Hospi ta l , Newark, Air. Bachan t Is with , the .Summit H a r d w a r e Company. Air. and Mrs. Bachant .are now on a Lrip, in Now York Sta te . On the i r r e tu rn they will take u p the i r residence ,in Summit .

OBITUARY 31 m. Oelplihic F« Shi te

Airs. P e l p h i n o i . Sla te , 'widow, of

injuries in New Jersey. These disseminated dahlia of N e w Jer stat ions will make ' tests of all S Oy origin, and t h e si lver medal of automobile b rakes and other p a r t s the honorary p res iden t of tire Ho­of tha c a r s to see tha t they a r e l c i e ly , Mrs. Char les H. Stout of in proper work ing order to avoid Shor t Hills, will b e awarded for accidents. j t n c „es t dahlia c<E New Jersey

In S u m m i t a to ta l of th i r t een ], j rigin. which h a s never before been places h a v e been designated by 'exhibited in a show of t he Dahlia Mr. Dill, w i t h forty-four in E l iza - ' Society of New J e r s e y . Gold, silver, both, t w e n t y in Plainfield, ten in • a n t ( bronze medals of tho American Westfield and nine at Rahvvay. The ] Dahlia Society, t h e Dahl ia Society other p laces a r e d is t r ibuted i 0 f New Jersey, the Dahl ia Society Ihrough t h e following- Union j 0 f California, th-3 Ta te r son Flori-County munic ipa l i t ies : icul tural Society, t h e Shor t Hills

Eostdle P a r k . ffour; l loael le , ' ( j a r j c n (3]ub, the Mary land Dahlia three ; Scotch Pla ins , two; V a u x - Society, and of Mitchell 's Seed hall, f ou r ; Cranford, 'four; Berke- |H O U B e . a rc also offered for eompc-ley He igh t s , one; Gaivvood, t w o ; t i t ion. Hillside, o n e : Kenihvorth, one; j E n t r y blanks and premium lists Linden, five; Borough of Mountain- ; m a y be obtained f rom the chair-side, one; N e w Providenc?, two; 'man of tlie show commit tee , E. B. Springfield, fou r ; Union, th ree . . iLloyd, 1UG Bellevuo avenue, Upper

Mbre s t a t ions in tlie county will Montclair, N. J . be announced la ter . Following a r e tho names of those •, named to dat'3 for S u m m i t and n e a r l y :

Sun imi t—Per ry T. Brown, Hill City B a t t e r y Ifviiition Service, Inc., Raoul Maur ice Collin, Wr igh t -Sperco Motor Co., Inc., Rob ar t \^(, Blo&s, I I . F . Taylor Motor Com­pany, I rv in L. White, Allen ,B. Morgan, H, Mayer Motor Sales ,

John L. Slate, and -mother of John L. Dei tcbe , Wenmun Brps.i | Clu_b, George. Slate of( ir,3 Summit avenue, Inc., R. &. S. Service Station, and died a l te r a prolonged il lness on Osterberg Motor Company. Friday afternoon al Overlook l i o s - ' Berkeley He igh t s—Raymond D. pital where she had been a pa t ien t Bryan .

pilal . Wed., Oct. 31—Art Depar tment

meeting, Fo r tn igh t ly Club. Tues., Nov. G—Progressive Asso­

ciation, Roosevelt School. Wed., Nov. 7—Fortnight ly Club

meeting. l

Wed., Nov. 14—Litera ture De­pa r tmen t -rocellnf. For tnight ly

study usual ly revea ls the fact tha t their development and their t r a in ­ing for the great t a sks thrus t upon them in la ter life t race back to a geiliua for finishing ' w h a t they s tar t . To such men c i rcumstances otfer a now and different job as aoon as the cu r ren t one has been completed. Fa te a lways haw a new s t range problem In s tore for them. Biography affordw countleSH exam­ples of men wi th inborn ability who built themselves up into grea t ­ness by doing the thing nea res t a t | hand and doing it KO woll t ha t I ha rder and leas famil iar t a s k s na tura l ly gravi ta ted to them. Such men apparent ly never know where their work will lead them. No dis­tant goal trom the not even surmise the grea t and par t icular achievement for which they a r e in t ra in ing . They do not char t out their ca ree r s in advance, hut are swept on by the tide of life into the jobs tha t need them most .

I l e ibe r t Hoover Is one conspicu­ous example of such ochoolinp,. In his early profess ional life a s a mining engineer he was one of the great pioneers of Amer ican busi­ness in foreign lauds . He examined mineral p roper t ies and made recommendat ions. American capi­talists spent mil l ions upon his .say-

count on our thumbs tho men who have these qualifications to the ex­tent that Air. Hoover possesses them. American bus iness oud in­dust ry are rich in g r e a t adminis­t ra tors , but all too few are in the service ot Government ; and of| these, how many have had in ten­sive over-sea t ra in ing?

Circumstances have favored Air. Hoover in that they have given him great (Opportunities for dis­playing outstanding abilities. They have not yet exhausted hia reper ­toire of capacities. Had he been put at the head of t he State De­par tment his encyclopedic knowl­edge of foreign peoples, their r e -.lources, reaction:;, prejudices and psychologies, would have seen him through with distinguished credit . Had he been made Secretary Ai

with his own land from coast io coast, his intensive schooling in ofticial life and his sound vk-ws on business , commercial ami eco­nomic mat te rs .

Then, too, there are even more to bless him for his humanity than to praise him for his ability as an executive and lor his genius for get t ing things done. No man can uni te such character is t ics with in-" tcgrl ly of charac te r and fail to make a powerful appeal to formid­able masses of American citizens.

Tile idea of maliitainini? onpos-ing part ies guided by differing political principles is sound, but. we often car ry it to too great l eng ths : and the smaller minded our politicians, the farther they run it into tho ground. If Herbert. .Hoover had been cursed with UIIH

Agricul ture ' he would" haVe done ^ ^ i e « of ego he vyould never have

; will lead them No dig- farmer, on a sound b a d

w ^ k i n na\idV. ^ f Z ? « * » * « * I * ™ < » ' »™

Nevv Providence—George A. Kern and Communi ty Garag-:\

Springfield—Morris Avenue Mo­t o r Car Company, Carl A. Hofferfc, Bal tusrol Ga rage , Thomas Ma­

te r five and a half months . Funera l services were held Sun­

day evehinp; a t t h e Fune ra l Home on Springfield avenue with Rev. Kar l VV. Kiimm) cura te of Calvary Church, •officiating. The in t e rmen t llone, was held pr ivately on Alonday. „ _

Michigan bu t had lived tor the laat i twenty-five years with her son in r r t A >-i-w I ^ I I > I B - , j -u-k . '=-;pm Summit. She was 83 years old, and is survived by t h r e e sintcrn and a brother .

Fr i . , Nov. 16—Probable date of Community F a t h e r and Son Mass Meeting, preceded .by d inners .

AVe-d., Nov. 21—Fortnight ly Club meeting. Speaker—Miss Katherine Bacon. Subject—A Schuber t pro­gram.

Fri . , Nov. 23—Annual Bazaar of Summit Branch, Universa l Sun­shine Society.

Tues. , Dec, -J—Progressive Asso­ciation, Roosevelt School .

for the farmers even more than ho has done for manufac tu re r s and business men. F r i ends o! the farm­er openly, lament tha t they could not draft his construct ive leader­ship for the cause of agr icul ture . No o ther man in America could have done so much to put Amerl

is of prosper­

i t y AVith men of the Hoover -stamp,

the incredible is forever happening. When Fa te finds a youngster who

i never falls down o n . any job In­t rus ted to Him, no ma t t e r how hard or s t range , no m a t t e r what ob­stacles beset him, she cannot let him alone. As long a s he lives and h a s his health she thrus ts chal ­lenge after chal lenge, job after job, upon h im; first In the hope of seeing him tr ip , la t te r ly that she may admire tl^o skill and effective­ness of ills a t tack.

Mr. Hoover Is such a man. His f.o. American min ing mach ine ry . ,,, , , , trailed him r o u n d the globe. His | perBonullty^and his record appeal work uiid tha t of men like him opened up the m a r k e t s of the world to America just, fti; surely as the work of o u r . e a r l y pioneers opened up thift continent lo the hordes ,of set t lers who followed them.

During these yearn when he was learning to know men and metal and how to ge{ the best out of both, when he was acqu i r ing the a r t of port ioning out Vespousibllity, of creat ing organizat ions , and was forging himself into an executive of a high order, who can suppose he suspected tha t the clouds of World War were th ickening and

C.\ltl> OF 'J'JIATfKS

AVo wish to t h a n k all tho re la ­tives and fj'iendn for the i r kind ex­pressions of sympathy and floral offerings in the recent death of our beloved mother , and especially Fa the r Glerinon, t he choir s ingers and pal lbearers , and Air. Mc-Namara .

CHILDREN OF , MRS, AIARY R. "WOOD.

—adv.

The Gambler "I 've got enough money saved up

to pay my funeral expenses ," s a y s Aunt. Mln, "but somet imes I 'm tempted to spend a pa r t of It for a new outfit of clothes and r im tho r i s k . " ~ F a r m and Fires ide,

SUMMIT ' Window Gleaning Co.

SAM MOSTER, P rop . 414 Springfield A T S , Hamrolt, 71. J.

T]ior.o Summi t 2GSS-W

m--} r il'tin !*__ vr PJ

311! IJtIjPf Stationery

l^mmmmmmmm^m^^mm^

i ' V U l l i * IE

me WoBPr..

394 Springfield Ave. 'Phone 1C86-W

' School Supplies Each new* grade calls for more pencils, pens, rulers, erasers, pads, and the restl A. complete supply of school equip­ment now on hand.

Brief Cases -- Pencil Boxes Stationery Our -Specialty

•m JisSc-, ••«W. •Arts'' \-i «;i"/f iEisla-TiCfi-tti.3 * ' - iV?3^**^sSssS^BJ 1 ^aVi ' JS .* - i^ v*5ii"J :£sj*'r* 'S , ' i i1 . is* ' i?T^JV. '*

£* Mi

\ r^ll 'afi i i l

B < ; S

, ."3 * i%

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lt^»^*3,'!lJi , "" ft 1

1

Kodaks

Kodak Accessories

Films and

at

Wed.', Dec. 5—Fortnight ly Club tha t he was moldinT himself Into meeting. Speaker—II . H. Joachim. | the so r t ' o l auaii who could a t a mo-

to those , \vho a re u ied to doln g rea t things and hard tilings and know their own kind. I t in no won

pot where he- is. He could not have done his work. He could not have begun It. Such a mind would have made him put l i t t le prejudices first and great ends last . Thought In the large confirms alld s t reng thens basic political convictlnns and deep guiding principles, but it is dea th on the petty pa ras i t e s ( h a t , c l i n g to them like t icks on a cow's legs.

From whatever angle he. may be regarded, Herber t Hoover is a na ­tional asset of incalculable value. His ext raordinary prestige, a t home or abroad, has not yet been fully capitalized for Unj buuciit of bis own people. In His p resen t place he te a productive asset , yielding as la rge a return as h i s office permits . The question for his follow count rymen to ask them­selves Is whet he ' ' or not he would br ing In a g rea t e r re turn if ho were given- even wider oppor tuni­ties.

\ o r Lavender SIIOPB "AIosl men dislike purple," wviles

i correspondent in the Woman's Home Companion. "Well, it doesn' t

der that the big broad-gauged ' H c e u l J l l s t tho * ' o l o r f , j r a derby men of the country, those who n r e ! h ; . u , " sighed the man. with a i ts real producers and ' who a re Penchant f o r ^ r e e n sh l r ' -eontr ibdt iug nlost to its develop­ment , are his s t aunches t suppor t era. Nor Is it wi thout significance tha t those who have worked for and with Mr. Hoover a r c his mos t loyal Adherents.

Chnnfdiifr Viewpoints Seen now, t he creeks of your

childhood t h a t once seemed r ivers a r e insignificant brooks; tho hills, ire no longer imposing heights b u t

Thev know his meta l and they small elevations without lure o r know what has gone into the fo rg- ' r omance—The American Magazine. ing of it. Thev appraise a t the i r j t rue vnl»i» his knowledge of condi- ] Somiidic Aincr-Vann l ions over the g rea te r part of t h e , There Is a handover of the n o -Hvjllzod world; his unusual gift fov | mad In nearly all of us . says tho

t authority.—The S u b j e c t - B o a t and West in a New j ment 's notice j ump into the job of working with other men and c o m - ' s u m m e r tour i s hnrrject j . a s i ami ' sending across the Atlant ic t h o u - i , n : 1 I u l l n « t h e i r loyalty, his int imacy American Magazine. World llenaiHsaucc.

Thurs , , Dee. 6—Lecture by Capt. Donald B. MacMillan, High School auditorium.

AVed., Dec. 12—Child Study De­partment , For tn igh t ly Club.

Wed., Due. 19—-Art Department meeting, Fo r tn igh t ly Club.

Pharmacy Rogers' INCORPORATED

Telephoiis 74 • Summit, K. As*SBcy for Lob Is Sherry's

Chocolates.

Tlie Fanner's Dollar Some scientific s tudents of the

American farm si tuat ion, says Na­tion's Business Magazine, lean td the view that the fa rmers a re now at the tail end of the post-war re­adjustment. In the last live years noiaiile progress has been made in bringing (he farmer ' s dollar to a par i ty with the citv man ' s . This was accomplished not only through a s ink ing advance. In, prices of Luni products and livestock, but also in a decline of non-agricul­tural prices.

The McN'ary-Haufien patent medicine farm relief was first espoused in VJ23 when wheat was quoted below a dol lar a bushel and North Dal;ota was doubly harass ­ed with a meager crop. Since thai lime the farm depression has been part ial ly mitigated by a free oper­ation of economic forces. Like business, farming was subject to doflation, but the process took much longer. Less subject to legal restr ict ions, bus iness took i t s bit­ter dose quickly in lSKl.

Farming has been harassed by the long term downturn of farm ic-K.lt>" values. There is now evidence that values have begun to turn.

Itcurfxtfad a t l a s t We Have sue- I T h . ° V^1 / * r m " " ! , , s Are alrendjr CMibed. even to tho extent of ad- I 1»" I1-1,nS *"•»«• \ » ^ - b u t ™ fs

rout ine wo don ' t like draft.,-. H a y . ' V ' " 6 hi'U\,down f '1 ^ r e s s selling bo we real ly don't lind maybe- Ifa ! 1:." r ™ " ^ ' ' ™ with wholesale fore-only necauso the droasmakera in ! '"'"•:l»r*"*!. »f mor tgages . Itvrkt ba.vo designed puch fascinPt- ! I n ,"'plt<' o f d l r 0 u t t e rances made Ins odd.- end er.ds of Jacktta and j f o r l i n h t i f - : l ! Purposes , farming shawls t o -wear with evcnlufr dreia- I n , a v n o o n t h e *vc ° r a decade of es tha t v.'o'd wep.r thera even ir wo . Pennine prosperi ty, stilled. I t would takfl a s t ronu '

I minded M'Ornan to resist the lu re of j the notv Callot ne t scarfs for In-| Ktnnci1. o r thg t h r t e cornered Glik ! and Spanish Iac« sliav.-H Cent m a k e

tha simplest Of black chiCon even­ing frocks icok l ike comcthjtoij in is, feJry ta le .

I Then, if yon Hlio to slUte.r, a n d | It's still s m a r t to eiitte.r it yo;l : chocso t i o p roper means, t he re ' s I tho, palUrt is j acke t on typical caj> | dl^an lltica. Or. tho third l iana . ! , Jf you ca.ro ne i ther to look roicaj i- I S ! He ar to Elisten l ike a Chrlctmaa ) }iv^ thet! ' a.rO charmlnsj l i t t io i jackets of tra^spf?r«>Dt rayon velvet, J miidn' ,very simply and dop-^ndlnir • ors flic exquisite coiorlnsa cf t h i s

A I J L th i s t a lk of tho r e t n r a e j ~ tho feminine mode, Siius really

sands of fellow countrymen sf.rande,d in bell igerent countr ies , and do it as if he had never done anv tiling else?

Or who can believe that in ear ly lift he dreamed that bis activit ies would so school lilm that he could head lh» vas t operat ions of the American Uellef Work with signal succour, feed s ta rv ing European nations, achieve by diplomacy what could not be wrought bv force, and at length become a cabinet minis­ter v.lth a genius for fur ther ing commerce and indus t ry?

The main pa t te rn of such men ' s lives is hard to d iscern ; but after a timo it becomes plain, as the present l ights up the past and r e ­veals the l iukjge between t ra ining and performance. As t ime g o e s ' on, the" s tages of development I which at first seemed mere mat- i

"leis of chance t ake on ail a ir of [ plausible sequence and at length i Oeem logical o r even inevitable. Mr Hoover 's experiences as a min­ing man were s t range school ing ' r ' i r a future food adminis t ra tor , ! hut his work for s tarving Belgium brought him made- to-order equip­ment for his achievement in di­recting Red Cross activit ies In be­half of the homeless flood sufferers of the Mississippi Basin.

In view of the expansion of our foreign t rade, our unexampled loans to other na t ions and our commeiclal invasion of lands across the sea, wc need, as we never needed before, high execu­tives who know the marke t s and bourse1; and chancel ler ies of the whole world, men who a rc so fa­miliar with over-sea condit ions (bat they can foster and protect sound American business , invest­ment and development in whatever ] pa r t of the globe they may have | gained a foothold. We can a lmos t 1

5^i;?#*^5=^S^"^ii-^S5>'*'3~f., '

1 °t, l if 'a ,p3 .

nnsBusmi; oarcaware L©o Agents for Dnco Lacquer

J61 Springfield Ave. 'Phone 216 Summit, N. J.

j ^ S T O S M S

Page 3: i Lf i. Oi3> tsfjj-i UIV&. r-wi^'-sfiS-l-J malics toward none,i Lf i. " J * f z .,, --K£.^jf3 e.i-Jt.^Oi 3> tsfjj-i UIV &. r-wi^'-sfiS-l-J /** ^i .-r:; i. ad SUMMIT RECORD — -

J 1 . ' . .

!?::cvi:fcfe£ee and Vicklty CCVV'-J LBrci tho rough and Tav/nshJp, ncEudiii.1 Ivlurrav Hill and Berkeley Heights

-, i D « n « ! j | ' M V » R/v-n-Mfylj been completed ami the ins t rument / : i v / u i , . ! ' ^ inj^ii^.^n n o w ( j ^ j ^y . , lncreabi'U richness

and mellowness of tone. .A. Y, 'JPomiinson, Superintendent

ot the Telephone atnl Tc |egruph system of 'thci Pennsylvania Kail-roail, was to hiive' addressed the congregation of the Mctlibfllfat Church on Sunday morning. The exceptional demands which v e r b made upon I»is office, in handling the thousands of t ravel ler? "to the

*!..•:. 1 I Jan I»jiii.vtl In f.foio:' Crush J :iifj A. Jli-;Ji ot KjiriiiK.fl**l<l a"<-'-c, sus ta ined lacerat lons 'aboul the e and head when an automobile

; which Ue was r iding collided ,.!. n t r a c k In Ohlwlck on last .•May. H i g h und his wife wore ceompanylng Mr. and Mrs. .1. Mor-

rl:i Jl 'J lmcs of Spiln'-'flold avenue, 'Wc.i, f-'uuinitl, to the Flcmingtoh K i r when the accident occurred,

IVrsoiiiil r icnl ion I l r . ati<- Mrs. Cbailea Kaeiiimerer

^priiigfield avenue h,ive left for

|:,oi«e time visi t ing friend3 In En -l^k-v.'bud. j Mr. and Mrs . F r a n k Fitzpatr icl t and chi ldren have r e tu rned from a

; week's motor t r i p through Virginia. j rJibM Ek-anor Fuehs of Scotch

Plain.-; h a s ter iuiuaied a visit of a week ac. t he .home of Miss Louise Fuchs of t i l t HouUjvard. ; Miss Aga tha See.sted of Plainfleld avenue is spending a few weeks at Moriches, L. I., and Southampton,

Mr. am) a i rs . John Crowe, Mr. and Mrs. T h o m a s P. Kogers and William Simmons recently motored to Valley Cottage, Rockland Coun­ty, 1ST. Y., where they visited rela­tives.

Miss K. G., Cummlngs, secre tary of trio Essex Specialty Company, has re turned from a vacation spent at Oquaga L a k e , N. Y. . William TVilke, and family of

' 1"' , ' U ' L -!;"'i%V S <t, . - .Ul> :;U — Li'-;i.i'

to move it> I he nea r future from the Sehvarzet tbaek p rope r ty to the Morris Pende r p roper ty in I ' tdii avenue.

Mrs. Willi-tm G. t e s t e r and so r s , Stcwarl anrl William, liave re turn­ed to their home in Centra l avenue following a -visit to relatives in Washington, D. C

tea, Mary S. visiting Miss Virginia Holland of Central avenue.

Mr. and Mrs. Char les Einscldler of Long IJill road r e tu rned home on Friday from Hret ton Woods, .N. 1-1., where they spenf' some time this summer,

H:.L U. 1"

m& Mrs. George Carey of Hil ls ide

avenue is stopping at Watch J3.H1, It. I., a t the summer home of he r daughter , Mrs. Krard D. Matt ies-;;on oi Ii vington-oh-Rudson.

A r t h u r I) . Pra t t , who h;>s heeri s topping a t Hyannls, whe re Mrs. P r a t t and the chi ldren have u hummer home, has re turned to hi:i home in Old Short Hills road. . A. H. Maitkv.-ald, Jr . , .son of Mr. and Mrs. Albei t H. Murekwald of Montvlevv avenue, and Woods Hole ,

Mrs. Benjamin Nunzio of Morris Mass., took part in the final sai l ing

Democratic jvutlKTlns at Sea Gift, tiowoyer., kept Mm on duty so late J Union avenue .have moved to a re-Saiurday night- t imt .he , was not ahlo tb ret ire unt i l 3 ->b'<:lScR' Sunday morning.," Unde r - these circum­stances, Dr.. Willis F le tcher John;

JOI>:: Heach, where they will s p e n d ! son: was called upou at breakfast juviiriil weeks.

iii 'ia Cla ra MUSKIMI of Sp'rliistlcltt avenue ia speiidhiK a week 's va<:.i-t i o n i u Ocean Grnvb. filie is' acco'm-Ponied by he r cousin, Miss Clara rjjliiior of OranRe. ' L7r, and Mrs. Thomas Crane of Springfield avenue are entertalnii i / ; Mis:) A n n a Van Dusen of .Tcraey City.

Thomas Bretman, J r . of Divhaon avenue, accompanied by Jah tes Cal-lulian oi Chatham, are vi.slttus Mr, Jlreiiiian'K unele and aunt , Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Rnb.iell of Roine, N-Y. The yomiK men will t ou t NeW York Sta te before rct 'uruln^ to their homes here .

Wil l iam Dennis , and daugh te r s . Matin and Alice, of Ozone Parl t , L. I., a re visit ing John Piker Of River 101(1 (ihatliam T'l-.vnshlt).

HOT. J . l.iaclntotli Kckard, former pas to r of the Presbyter ian Church of C;-iiler Hill, Fla., occupied the local Presbyter ian pulpit on Sunday morniuE. "

Itcv. Dr. l'\ C. Mooney war, has t i ly tiunimonod to Brooklyn las t

- week, to place his b ro ther in U hospi tal . The brother is seriously ill aiid his condition causes ei'avo aii3iiu<y. f>r. Mooney v/as ahle, however, to return hoinc on Sat­urday and to fulfill a jireachinfi engagement at I l ackc t t s towh on KujjO.ay.

l-.tr:<, Lil l ian M. AnRus, of Cald­well, has been a for tn ight s u c s t of Dr. a n d Mrs. Willis F le tcher Jolm-,-.OJ1, a t Firlelfdi Wall. .

Dr. Willis Fletcher Johnson nre -uiflnl niwl made oiie of t h e pr inci­pa l addresses at the a n n u a l .mid­s u m m e r reunion of t h e Aluinni ' As­sociation of Pennington School a t Ocean Grove on F r i d a y la'it. Nearly 1\vo hundred pci'rtoiis wore Jn at,-tondunce, rcpreiuntli)R the jnemher-shlpa of fifty-three yearly classed.

Wolfs Of Kiitfftfst TIJO vt 'ry thorough overhaul ing

and tuning of ill'.' ol'Killl of the

t i m t to tt\IfO liiii place, Tloiiier Vf. Kbafi i s completinE an

a,rtistic garago a t h i s residence on Sprint'i'lold avenue . , . i ' l ie CrcsebiitM were forced to r e ­main idle, Sa turday oiji aefcount of rain, so, tha t tljo c ame s c h e d u l e r to be played wllh.'UIUijtde llad f o h e added k> the r a t h e r lonp strinj; Oi postponed (jairiea. The standing of thfi v(irlans toanis s t ands the same as all te;anis In the league were idle. . The locals a r« due for a hu,sy veefe-o'nd a s a rc all, the teahts. On Srilurflay' tliey will t rave l to Ma'dt-js'oii and t r y the i r luck with the Sec-diiil-pla.ee teani of tha t towu. On Jjabof- Day morn ing they will play MHIburu a t the l a t t e r ' s homo field, Taylor .Field, aiid ill the afternoon they will t ake oil t h e Suuiralt Red Sox- oh OUST owii' home field. P a s t,alc Oval.

The Ladies* Auxil iary of the Church of Odr Lady of Peace a t n recent meotinp; nt the home of Mra. Mhry Bellrc iii Passa ic street made jilans for a dance in tht' hall of the Lontf l l i l l F i i c Depar tment in River road, Chatham Township , on Sep­tember 2!Mh.

, A, Y. .Tomllnaolt and J. C. Over-field of Wcstfleld, who represent the Gideons, had1 cha rge of Uie sbrv-iceS in the local Methodist Episco­pal Church, on Sunday morniiig. Activities of t h e church will be r e ­sumed on Sunday, September 3 th . '

cently purchased house in Peek-niaii road, Summi t , where they will make their home. ,

Granvil le and Rudolph Do Ro'odc a re spending, some time in the Do Roode bungalow at. Lake Hopat-conp.

Louis A.-Burgmiller , who v/as in-jiirbd some tiint; apo lit l}he collapise of a building, is still in a critical condition,

Mrs. G. Dellelft ot Plainfleld ave­nue was hos t e s s a t a luncheon re­cently. Among the gues ts wore Mrs. Char les Monlco, Mrs. Jospeh Do'thp:.iey, Mrs . Lena F r a z i e r and Mrs. Michael Hdniuno. . Dr . H e r m a n Woisengreen of the

Mount? B d r h Sani ta r ium has re -sltcned as .dontisf there.

Ewar t , S h e r m a n of Southampton, Eng land , a r r ived recent ly on the Levia than to spend a few weeks wi th MrS. H. Chaplin of Pr ince ton avonUe., ,-'

M.rf». M a r g a r e t .Eng land and 'daushtcr , Helen,, of Borkeley Boule-varfi, a re gpcndhig some time lit Ocean Grove, .• .

Miss Ada Livingstone of Liberty s t ree t Is spendtne: a two-week va­cat ion at her, ho?ne here .

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Dempsey of Pluinfield avenue (u'e enter ta in ing Mr. and Mrs. Claude Cook and son of El izabeth.

;Donald Morton of the Bonnie Burn San i t a r ium is enjoying a twu-week •vacation. , ,

George Dorgeiihetsen of Brook­lyn Is a ijtiijsl at the home of, Mr. and Mrs. J ikr ib He'rbst in Liberty s t reet .

•o

street has a s he r guests Mrs . Joseph Padvvona and Mr.i. Benja-mlu Marl nolle of New York.

. o _ — — >'ot*"» of Intwrest

Members of the Ladies ' Auxiliary of St. Vincent do Pau l ' s Catholic. Church held a, food sale and sup­per Saturday aftcrniibn and eve­ning in Sf. Vincent ' s ,Hal l with g rea t

A lai'go crowd attended

races of the New Bedford Yacht Cluh races on T h u r s d a y . I n t h e S Class of sloops. His elapsed t lmo was 2.-PJ.35, and his total poin ts were 3.

Miss Beatrice Ronwlck. daugh te r of Mr. and Mrs. William "W. Ren-Wick of Old Short Hills road, who h a s been at tending a summer camp a t Belgrade Lakes, has joined Mrs . Will iam W. Renwich a t Soaraes-

suceess and practical ly everything on aalOjville, Mo was disposed of. , , Miss Elizabeth Curtis is the gues t

The recent ce lebrat ion of the lo-10 'f Mr, and Mrs. Albert H. Maxck-cal members of tho Society of the Assumption was a decided success notwithstanding the poor weather existing during the ent i re celebra­tion. All the main s t reets ,ot the town were decorated for the occa­sion. The celebrat ion included sev­eral parades, a mass at St Vincent Jo Paul ' s Church , a. carnival a n d fireworks. Samue l RUBL'ifro w a s chairman of tho committee In charge of the affair.

illington

.Berkeley Heights P e r s o n a l Ment ion"

Miss,Mario Emolaon.of the West End left, on Sa tu rday for a vacation oh Long Is land, r e tu rn ing in,,tlm.i! for tho re -opening of school.

' Mr. and Mrs . Ra lph Taylor and Mr, and- Mrs . Louis Do Roode. of Liberty, s t ree t recent ly visited t"h,v De Roode boys, who a re spending the summer in t h e De Roodo bun­galow at. L a k e Hoptacong.

l ' c r s v k i l JlciiUon Mrst. Erwha K. Kenwo'rthy of

Main s t reet gave a bir thday pa r ly last Thursday In honor of lifer four-year-old son. Roger. About fifteen boys and g l r ' s we re present,

Mr. a i d Mrs . U R. Jacobus re ­turned on Thu r sday from a visi t to A. D. Riinydn, "Who is spending the month in Maine.

Mr. and Mrs . J e r o m e Allgor a re spending several duys on a visi t to Asbury Park .

Mrs. Char les Gregory of Main street ia spending several days on a visit to re la t ives in I rvington.

Mr. and Mrs. Wal te r L- Misste and daughter , Miss Olive Nlssle, Jiave re turned from a vacat ion in Maine to their home in tho Crescent,

wald a t her hoiue a t Woods Hole , Mass. -I

Mr. and Mrs. George Drexel* Bid-die pf Delwtclc lane h a v e announced the bir th of a daughte r on Wed­nesday. . ' Mrs, Blddle whs t he former Miss Joan Kaufman, daugh1-l e r tif Mr. and Mrs. Louis G. Kauf­m a n of 270 P a r k avenue. New York, and Short Hills. Mr. Biddle Is t he son of Craig Blddle, and the la te .Laura Whelen Biddle. Mrs. Biddlo's father is president of t he Cha tham Phenix National Bank and T r u s t Company of New York . „ Donald Cottrcll of Crescent p lace is Spending a fortnight a t tjiiissot, Mass., where- Mrs. Cottrcl l and the chi ldren a r e spfcncliiU; the summer .

Mr. and Mrs. Freder ick Anson' Bur l ingame a re spending the sum­mer in Kdgartawn; Mass.

Benjamin D. MosJser of South Terrace, Is spending . t he month of Augus t In Qulsset, ,Mass. Mr. and Mrs. Mosser have bui l t a home in Buzzards Bay, and expect to occu­py it unt i l the fall. .

Mr. and Mrs. Worthington Camp­bell and iheir family have r e ­turned, to their home In Knollwood road after & month sjjent in Quisket, Mass.

Dean Emery of Wes t e rn drive is spending the month of Augus t a t h i s home at Quissot Harbor , Mass.

m e fa o-f! "1

t Jd>£lkd^ .21hJ . . i i

CatrloUc Order Sans of America George O. Smith of Hamburg was

elected State Pres iden t a t the 'iOth annual con ten t ion oi State Camp of New Jersey, held in the Rober t Tj-eat Hole" ballroom on August 21st Und 22nd. All o ther ofiiccrs were advanced, Henry C. Weg­ener of Newark was chosen as State Guard.

.Congressman James I I . Pa t ten , National Master of Forms , spoko on fu r the r , r e s t r i c t ion of immigra­tion, s ta t ing t h a t . t h e order was the f irs t to uxihold "this and the only one to have a committee in ' Wash-ingloU looking after American in­teres ts .

Coil Bald and Mort Lielmian, of Caiiip No. G, were the local dele­gates , the la t te r -presented a very large, Uccl engraving of George Washington to the State Camp.

Resolutions prais ing the w o r k of Bro. Pa t t en along immigrat ion l i n t s ; support ing the V. F . W. in trying to m a k e the S ta r Spangled Banner oiir nat ional an them wore parsed.

The 450 -delegates enjoyed a won­derful . t ime .. a t Olympic P a r k where Big Bill F isher , P, S. P . and head of t he Police of Phi l l lpsburg, was such ii big a t t rac t ion tha t one of the local, eb ter ta incrs a t the pa rk swallowed a whist le t rying to look,a t Bill from all Sides.

After a real harmonious session where religious bigotry in ribliHcs was ^condemned; the convention ad­journed to meet in Loirg Branch nex t August .

• o — —

Mr. and Mrs. Freder ick Compton, | ot Eas t Orange, a re occupying their home during their absence.

Mr, and Mrs. Edward McCarthy of Salter street had with them over the week-end the i r niece] Miss Kathleen McCarthy of Newark.

Mrs. A. Palmer Bril l has r e ­turned to her home in Keeier s t ree t a l te r spending two weeks io Ocean Grove. She was accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. Will iam Stoeckle of Miliburn.

Mr. ahtl Mrs. George Siseo of Mountain avenue a re home front a t r ip tb Point Pleasant .

Oswald Mende, father of Mrs. Fred Piersou of Mulii street, died .Wednesday a t tile Beth Israel Hos­pi ta l , Newark, from pneumonia. He was 70 , years old. Funeral serv­ices were .hold Fr iday evening a t t he funeral par lors of Haeberle and Ea r th , in Irvington.

Threat oL" tho t i i l d i . . "Wjih all those f- '-»il. ic i '• . ,"

wr i tes a cyple fn Wfj'uiii',. iJoi-.o Companion, "the,; ^ l j i '0<;'i'.h!"vi u s in stalls with a teed buy for our green tdnuhoe.-. anil 'it'" i . . ' a rake in from, from which we will noiic o u t our spbi ie ' i l ike hpi reaching for h a y . " - W o ; u a ! i " . Homo CompUn ion.

Air, jjjiil lo i l e x k d € / iy WashiuKturir-Am Septemhc. ' H o

United States aiid Mexico -..111 s t a r t an air .mail roiite 2.S00 mi les long conn'c'eliitg the bio capi tals . I n <Jne sense the service will connect / J" re -capi ta ls because aerial mall ' ' l i: now opertitiiig betf/ceu Wi-uiUr gtoa, Montreal and Ottawa. . , . . ,

was in Hollywood Cemetery on Sa turday morning.

Rev. Jphn S. Burton, pastor, will conduct tho P raye r meeting T h u r s ­day evening jn the Methodist Church.

Officers of the Springfield police depar tment have been ilractl&lng for tho pistol match which will be held tomorrow oh t h e Sprlu;;licld Mountain. The winner of the ma tch will have his name engraved o n the Edward I tubah Memorial Cup.1

Dwiglit Boss, son of Mr. and Mrs. Alvin H. Boss, Of Sal ter s t reet , re turned Thursday from California. He sailed six weeks ago as ass is tant s teward on the S. S. California.

Albania Whnts U ,"",'?U£r Tirana, Albania. — Alban ia 1

I n t e r m e n t ' about to begome a. monarchy wjth Pres iden t Ahnied Zogti t ak ing tile position as King, He h a s been " t this head of tho government ulnro the World W a r and h i s p ieser i t t e rm ej.pires in MJiS.

Booster Atfcirics Child Washington, Pa.-^Botty MorUe-

burg, 2, was knocked down by a huge roos te r , .which spu r r ed a n d peeked her about the face. U neighbor oimie to the child 's reaeuo and Saved her from ser ious Injury.

.... w __, . Mr. and Mrs . H. Oohrlg of Ber-Mctltodist 'Epiacopul Church has keley I loulovard recently spent

~% S*

K'^^^&*4i-* 'W«' ' JC ' 'e>I '***** '5-M*-5<****&S

Miei-oummer i^iearaiiee

u i ^md i *S« | l " |

se rv ice p KJZ^T . Hose 1

in pure thread Silk—full fash- £ f, ioncd with lisle garter top for A

. •!"

better wear. Quality that was %' meant to sell for $1.50 and f.

$1.65. " |

f 4 ti> pa i r

•Women's Tailor Maid

ayom Under

%

t

each HOLEPROOF HOSIERY $1.95

• • Colors by Luclllo

Chain rlosiery flA*>l- l*1sBr-

t In the newest styles of '?, Panties, Chemises, Slips; ^

etc. Yom Choice %

•f

'4

A dance -will he.hfild a t St. Mary's Hail , Plairiflcld tiveniiej Stoney Hill , on September 23 st. Music will bo furnished' bv Safltora's CollegiaHS;

J o h n Le Y o u n g of Plainfleld ave­nue , ' while a t tending the Stir l ing i i raworku recent ly , had- the misfor­tune of' hav ing his spa re t ires, all of his tools ; a groat many electric l ight bulbs which he was furnish­ing for t h e celebrat ion and aeveral other a r t i c l e s ' stoleh from his car. They were no t recovered nor was anv t race of t h e thieves found.

A -vvhllu elepluiiit sale, held re ­cently at F ree , Acres for the bene­fit tit Ihe F r e e Acres' Association, brought Into tlio'a'ssbciatloh cot ters $6<iD.-- Mr. 'Wexlor «\iid Mrs. Oet-njck, w-iib were the autlDneers' of the sale , deserve the credit for t he great success -of the affair.

L a s t ' w e e k the loCtil Trl-C6unty team m6t and defeated (He Poa-pack-Gladstone t eam Jn a well-played contest. The final score was 7 to 2 in favor of the local boys. Fred Railzlo tossed them up for the -Ber­keley-Gillette team and held the enemy well in hand, not allowing a run after the initial inning. Grain; twir l ing for the. PpapacU -boys, .was nurd 'h i t toward tile end of the fray, San tora poled out a homer for the ioea l s with two men on the base l ines.

The Junior team went down to defeat last week a t the hands of the Gillette Juniors , who came out on top of a 9 to 3 score. Lang and Rogers composed the Gillette bat­tery while Amono and Mondelll per­formed for Berkeley. - .

Mrs. Fay Kent , president of the Watehttiig Hi l ls Garden Club, h a s decided to have t he annua l flower show Saturday, ' September 8th, a t the Communi ty House; Plainfleld avenue, Berkeley Heights , from 2 to TO p . m .

F rank and ?>fpna Tliomaa have rented t he i r ' cot tage he r e to Mr. and M r s ; William Campbell . Mr. and Mrs. Thomas have been en-

... gaged for t h e Dcnlmm Theater , !> Denver, Colo., and leave for that

w § mm tteviev/s

1). of A. ftotCH National Deputy Clara Meyers, of

Newark, , National Representat ive Minnie H a m e r m a n of I rv ington and Sta te .bcpi i ty Fanny, Keller of New­ark were present and spoke at the meeting of Pr ide of Batt le III 11 Council No. 17, Daughters of America, held Fr iday liight in the Municipal building.

Several members of • P u t m a u Council.,No. 4 of Newark a lso at­tended the meeting. Following the general rout ine business, refresh­ments were served.

A shor t business session will be held at the next meeting of the council on September 14th, and Will be followed by a card pa r ty of which Mrs. John King is in charge.

ABOUT TOWN

Kesciie Aviators a t feca Lisbon, Portugal-—• The Polish

avia tors , Idzikowski and Kubala , were rescued a t sea after ilylng 3S hours ac ross the Atlantic. A leak­ing gasoline pipo forced them down Hut not unti l they had swung back tb Europe In a huge circle. T h e plane landed only (it) miles olf Capo Fln ls ta re ,

Woman VHints Iteeoril Berlin— Miss Mabel Boll Is now

planning lo be tho first woman to fly around the world in an a i rp lane but no definite, date has been set for t he beginning of her trip.

//T. 'if -<f

©(DO Cnros Mularln and quickly roltoT.-i JJIliousnt'ss, jrMMiiitlita una StltiLlniiig duo <o> trmiiurury Oomttlimtluh, AWn iii vlliiiIiilitlliiT TdSluB ami IS" Highly estnomrU lor proililtliitr s!oi>ltjt>fi iiutory nvncnntlonB,

win M Smfe

city today, where they will open a week l a t e r opposite Miss Alice Brady in Mr., Thomas ' former vehicle, "Lu lu Belle," to he fol­lowed by "The Road lo Rome." and several of Mr. Thomas ' Broadway successes , including "Aloma," "Cr ime," " T h e Dove," "The Mean­est Man In t he World," etc. They iv ill a l so produce for the first t imo the.lr n e w p l a y called "Prizefight ."

F r a n k M. Thomas has rented Ids new house . In Washington Valley to Mr. and Mrs . J . W. Zeliph, formerly of E a s t Orange .

"What They Suy Whether Ulfjlit or W r o n g "

Jack Dempsey, ex-champlon: "If I fight aga in , i t will not ho

tills year." _—~o——

Gene Tunney ret i r ing heavy­weight champion :

" I merely s tep aside land say, 'May the 'bes t man win.' "

Henry Ford , motor magnate : "Men of Gli pe rhaps , .should no t

do too much' runn ing and- jumping but that is n o reason why they should not do a s much work wi th the mind a s everyone—and be t te r work."

Thomas A. Edison, inventor: "I have tes ted 4,000 plants, find­

ing 530 tha t have rubber and will grow la the United States."

: — o - " • Hull do Ed ib , Tu rk i sh Feminis t : , "Since v the war , we liave been

watching* two peoples, tho Ameri­cans aud the Russ i ans . You r ep re ­sent Democracy and they repre ­sent Communism. We want„ to see how each of the two movements will succeed."

Natale Cccloni, Chief Machinist of tho i l l-fated I ta l ia , speaking about the sis; men who went adrift iii the balloon pa r t of the dir igible : , "They p robab ly a r e alive and

think lis dead." o -—

John R. Voorhis , 0!) years old, president of tho Board of E lec­tions, New York :

"I a t t r ibu te my heal th to sane living; every th ing in moderation. I keep my mind open and employ­ed when no t working , in keeping u"> wi th a l l tha t i s new In the world."

——o Margare t S la t tcry , speaking to a

girls ' conference of rollgioua edu­cation:

"I believe you aro the mos t con­ventional genera t ion we have h a d for twenty yea r s . "

— - o - •-

Houtliwefit Corner Attorney^—Whore was tho defend­

ant milking the cow? Witness—It 's hard to describe,

Kidge, but if you'll br ing in a, cow I'll show you the exact place.

It's! Still l e a p Year Ho : "May 1 call you by your first

n a m e ? " She: "If I may call myself by

your last, name."—Answers.

His Oruminrfr WaUes TJs Wonde r How He "(Kot By"

Dad—How did you coinc out wi th ybtir exams?

, 'Son—Passed 'em jus t l ike they were cars ahead.

, i —'Cincinnati Enqui re r , -o-

Don ' t Stop Growing The tendency of the average r u n

of folks i s to s tand still after they have reached maturity.—The Amer­ican Magazine.

4' M«lplc St. ' "S>iidHc ldHW

. A. RYAWi Succt-fesor Summit's Leading jeweler

Fine Wdteli aiid Gu.dc Repairing

Established over a quarter of a century

" Struad Til* 4*9 SPRINGFIELD AVE. SUMMIT, K. J.

4^£-SS"I«I-&*^**4«K^^^^^

Stirling IVrsonftl .Mention

Rober t Simon has broken ground tor the erect ion of a dwelling house oh HI'S p roper ty at Centra l avenue and Ches tnu t :?trect.

•Mr. aud Mrs, Pau l Thlcvon plan

John F . Finley, educator. " i n 3878 the re were about 9,-

000,000 chi ldren enrolled in the 48 Slates a n d t e r r i to r ies ; In 1927 there were more than 22,000,000."

_ — o R. E. Rleiiow, dean, Universi ty

of Iowa: ' ."It is a my th that students come

to college to play. The overwhelm­ing majority- come to study."

— — o — — .Holcn Wil ls , who won th ree

championships without losing a single s e t : '

" I was lucky."

MEDITERRANEAN -- AROUND T H E WORLD WEST INDIES « CALIFORNIA

AFRICAN EXCURSEONS ' ' Ranging Frora' Two Weeks to One Year

ALSO T R A V E L E R S ' CHEQUES Dollars, Pounds/ Sterlings; Francs, Lires. Come in and consult

s"*3 «_ &TJ« 1 Dummit j ravei. *•

24 M A P L E STREET ^ P H O ^ E -WS1 - SUMMIT, M

t i n e s by One Who Would F o r g e t Woodman, hew tha t t r ee ; . •

Spare not a single bow: 1 carved the n a m e thereon

Of one who ha tes mo now. —Milwaukee Sentinel .

— o — , . The Dreamer

v ^'ds Traumel as absent-minded as ever?"

"Yes, yesterday he put bin clothes In the bed and put himself over the back of a chairl and never discov­ered i t until he awoke in t he morning."—Nag()ls Lustlgo Welt, Berlin. i

Kity-Fiffy "And how db yoU' get on with

your missus?" 4 "I 'vo a splendid working ar ­

rangement , witlr; her. I n the fore­noon she does what she wan t s and fn the. afternoon I do w,hat slio wan(s."- - Dublin- Opinion.

——u—— "Jones ' wants to bor row five

pounds from me. I s he good for thai amodiit?" '

"Ye.a,.wltli proper securi t ies ." "What do you sugges t?" "A chalu and padlock, a pai r of

handeulfs, and a watch-dog.". —Glasgow News.

Visitor-,-So you call your canary Joe? Does that s tand for Joseph or Josephine?

Child-^We don't know. Tha t ' s why wo call i t Joe .

—London Opinion. ——-o——

"Fancy, Nora 's first novel is be­ing published.",

"Really?, Wlio's the he ro?" "The publisher, I should say."

-* —Answers .

"Well, your worship, it was like this,: ' said tho m a n charged with disturbing the .peace. "Me and my wife gets into a rgumen t .over the washing money. She cal ls me a

Mrs. Edward I. Ber ry and son, Kingdon, of Mcrchantsvlllc,- were week-end guests a t the home of Mr. and. Mrs. William M. Copper of Morris avenue.

Miss Leonle Crane of Morris ave­nue uhd AUKS Meta Dillon of Keeier s t reet left Sunday on u two weeks ' vacation to Canada and the Thou­sand Is lands .

Mr. and Mrs. P h l l l p M o w r c y and children, Muriel, Dolores and Gloria, of Profit avenue, d r e a t As­bury P a r k to , remain over Labor Day. The chi ldren a r o en te red in the Asbury , P a r k Baby Pa rade which will take place tomorrow.

Mr. ar(d Mrs. H. R. Pa lmer and son of Morris avenue a re spending

ome t ime at Stamford, Cotih. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Chiovarbu

and daughter Dorothy nnd son Edward havo re turned to their home in Bal tusrol road i rom a stay a t Belmur.

Mrs. Alonzo Allen and daughter , Tiois; of Morris avenue, spent las t week at Ocean Grove.

l i v i n g E, Brigdeh has re turned to Syracuse uflcr spending the w'eck-end at his home in Scverna. avenue. - -

Miss Gladys Chennells of Severna avenue is home Irbm Ocean Groye where She s'pent t h r ee weeks with Mrs. W, Louis Morrison and chil­dren.

Mrs. Clifford Willis and daughter , Ruth, of Short I l iRs, Mrs. Wllllum B. Denmun,,. Mrs. George Neumann and Miss Helen Ter ry of Morris avcitue a r e dinner guests toQay of Mrs, LouiStJ Wor tman at her home a tBfOoksidc .

Mr. aud Mrs. Willis and their daughter recently re tu rned from a s(ay of' several days at Lake Mohonk, N. Y,'

Mr. and Mrs. Levris F . Macart­ney of Severna avenue a r e at Sea Girt. Mrs. Macartney 's pa ren t s .

THE LANCE SCHOOL 50 W o o d l a n d Ave . Summit , N . J . '• •

A day and boarding school for boys from the K inde rga r t en th rough the Ninth Grade. Excel lent athletic facilities, ifnlslc, industr ia l a r t s .

Careful prepara t ion for H igh School or Boarding School. Spir i t of effort and spor tsmanship emphasized.

Office open a t above address aftfcr September lGth.

FJII ] Term Begins September 25th"at 8:15 h.t l l .

' , T e l e p h o r i c 245

'Hi W&ffiftfFir1--*?

• )

Matinee Dally 2.30; Evenings Continuous 7.30 to 11.00. Both Fea­t u r e s Shown After* 9.00 o'clock Every Nifiht. Sa tu rday and

Hol iday Nights 2 S h o v s . at 7 on --•* - -

This Theater's Cooli Summertime Alwi

LAST DAY, TUESDAY, AL

IITO am - in -

M C H with CARYL LINCOLN A Daredevil Cowboy help

Joseph W. Webber, p res iden t , [ l azy loafer and hi ts me on the head American Federa t ion of Musicians: [wi th a kett le. Then t .knocked h e r

The movie business has a l r eady down and iip sh£ comes a g a i n and knocks ine down and k icks me In" the neck!" .

" I sec," said the magis t ra te , "and what next?"

"Then we gets mad and s t a r t s to f ight!"--Tit Bits ,

•o

to en extent , destroyed wha t was formerly k n o w n as refined vaude­ville? and h a s pract ical ly dr iven the road show to the wall."

- — - o E . E . S h u m a k e r . president, Vic­

tor Ta lk ing Machine Company: "We have sold plenty of jazz rec ­

ords abroad, hut the Caruso rec­ords a r e still the best se l lers ."

| " H e l l " Changes Name White P la ins , N. Y.—Alphonso

and Alfred Hell , finding • their j nnrae subjected them to consider-| able humil ia t ion, have been g ran t -f ert permiss ion to change it to I Ilelll .

| Dir ig ib le to-Fh-O-n-r j New York—Capt. Aufon l l e inen , I builder of the U. S. dirigible "Shen-: ancioah," on his arr ival from Ger- j

"And Fjflna Smith—is she sti l l as snippy as ever?"

"Oli, Edna 's ranrricd s ince you Saw her—and divorced!"

"Real ly! And who's thft lucky man?"-—Life,

-o—— Tlif IVofstOat AWontl t

" I suppose you ?.nd your husband a r e out a .good deal "now you've, got a ear ."

"Oh, y03—hundreds of dol lars ." -—Havana Post,

BUS SERVICE

SUMMIT MOREtia COUS3CT—70

Kc-.s-arl;, Mnplevool ls MlMraritf Springfield, CSiathnin, . Madlsoni Etoiiv,v*»l StatSoKi Mprr ts towt i , MOTJ H? rif,ii»S, Greyatono P a r i s <SUiW flo 'spltdlj . ' " ' •

Oastr-a teav<> iiacltnvraBiui ft, JS.<

fi., For liloj-rlstoiivn Wo^lt days : G:t5 A.M., 6:40 A.M.

End every 30 minutes, unti l 10:10 p.Af. (10:40 P.M. ISlm S t . Madison), 11:10 P . M . and 12:07 A.M.

Saturdays: G:15,A.M., G:40 A.TiT. itid every 30 njimites until 12:40 P.M.: then every IB minutes until B:10 P.M.; then 10:10, 10:40. 11:10 P.M. (11:40 P.M. ttlm St., Madison), 12:07 A, M.

Sunaays : C:1S A.M., G:40 A.M. and every 30' minutes unti l !>:40 A. M ; tben i>:5S A M. and pvury 15 minutcp until 9:40 P.M.; tlieri JTlrlO. 10:40. l l ;10 P.M. (Hr'lO 1*. M. Elm St., Madison), 12:07 A. M.

3'"or Grcj-Htoae P m l i WeeTc «lays, Saturdays iind Sun­

days: 6:15 A. M., 6:40 A.M. and every 30 minutes until D--10 P.M.; t h i n 10:10 P.M. (11:10 P.M. Morris Plains Center) .

F«r jSV-vvn-rfc Weok d a y s : -5:30. A.M., 5:51, C:2I

A.M. and every 115 minutes unti l j>j 8 U P.M.; tRen 8:51. 5:21. 9:51, 10:L'l |M

nd 10:S1 P.M. (11:21 iuid 11:D1 P.M. . t)

"SQUARE ( with JOHN MACK BfeOVyN

Society's Black Sheep Fl{

Pathe News-Reql

WEDNESDAY and THURS]

1RSNE —in-

wifh AUDkEY FERRIE A Sly Drama of La

MADGE B; —in-

"TME PtAA • ^ A ,

A Comedy Romance of a $1, Pathe Ncws-Iu

SUNDAY COMIC SUPPLEMEi\ .

A-

a FPJDAY and SATURDAY, AUG. 31, SEPT. I-

H A I R Y L ^ N

Acosta (o F l j At lant ic Tal is—Bert Acosta expects to fly

many, dec la red tha t the new ?sp- i i rom France to America a s FOOH a s It' pelin should he able to make a t r ip j ibe Junkmr, Company del ivers a

J1 ' ; to this coun t ry in the la t ter u a r t of j plane v;hich is nov almost corn­e l August. Iplcted,

jor MapltTvood only), Saturdays: 5:30 A.M.. H-Gl, 6:21

A.M. and every 1-n mlnutu.5, unt i l 10:21 P M.; then 10:51 P.M. (11:0(1, l t ;21 , ll:i>l P .M. ?ml 12:42 A. II. to 1'ln.pJc-wood).

Sundays: f.:21 A. M. and every 30 minutes unt i l 8:51 A.M.: .then S:0C 'V. Til. anil e w r y l j m inu te ; until 10:51 P. At (10:39, 11:21, 11:51 P. M n i d 12:4^ A.M. to Mapiewood),

SVSES FOR HIRE Public ScTvictt Da Iruxe busts eftard d ipleiidtd meant iff carry' i.-jg parties to the seashore, moun-

[ ieins, tliealr'e, or to athletic of a'J-CT events. They are idesl for, picnics, ouiteigi, wr tours.

• phoiit: -llorrhioirn 2Z09 v

"THE C H A S M " - r

\\ T h e L indbe rgh of l a u g h t e r in his srhilc-a-sccohd com-sdy.

RIN-TIN^TM - i n —

iL~H$l *£?k?I E I N T Y O F T M E D l S E E T n

The Wonder Dog iri a Western Thriller.

Children's Hour Saturday at 2 p. m.— ROBERT AGNEW in "RACING B L O O D "

A True Story 6? a Race Horse.

WBUGtfegSEBVICE j l ^ rsJBaESfcwt*ai*ati!*tKZ*E5scafts3C7:

v. . .

Page 4: i Lf i. Oi3> tsfjj-i UIV&. r-wi^'-sfiS-l-J malics toward none,i Lf i. " J * f z .,, --K£.^jf3 e.i-Jt.^Oi 3> tsfjj-i UIV &. r-wi^'-sfiS-l-J /** ^i .-r:; i. ad SUMMIT RECORD — -

mmSh •JJi'JD V.

KERAI •:ivs TVDCOIIB . C U I ' T , Kuito?

0

•"-.013 i"iia O:

Oi'f-.-'rl T C 3 « of Ci ty enO. Count?

.-lEOied E v e r y i F I t l D A r AVTERKOOri

„.„ „ : f lce . 257 Sprlnsf leia Ave. JLjaUSyiJONlSS 1S00 a n d 1801

' "'a FniMiaLt UcisiM r a b l l s l i i t e Co, JTOHM W . CL,1F3,\ P r e s i d e n t ,

TV-ED W. CL,tF,'P,TTr;iu(;j't,q :C HOItJJAN T>. GAf t lS , Secretary, -

l i s t "red a t t lm I Jost Office, Summit , II . J., an Keetttid-Cliiss Mat te r

pflb. u o w i < 757.1

S I J U S C R d P T I O N S : OIIL- T r a r ! I:- 2"unth:i ;'.!I:L*1O f.'opleo .

- 1.7G , .03

^acts J.Tu

1510- r.oo P O P U L A T I O N

l'j-0—9,130 I'.^O—10,174 ::.l'l—11.C87 (Fede ra l census es t imate) J!>:;u—12,000 (S ta t i s t i c i an ' s es t imate)

A. :;u:isril -valuation, 19CK—$Sr>.331,S4a llnnilc-d i lehi— S2,Of.l',10U

T a x rnte , l«iS—City, 1.GB2; iffhuol, 1.101 : County mid State, .807.

"lank i-i;i.i)uri-rs—511,U5».016.70 3u:-tiie.-.M a n d I ' l o fc t s lona l Men—3G0

izlMi; n i l t h e subw.- 'ys e n d e l i w l f t d ruiul'u of New Y u r i ' i r ?rc:-.tcr tkvn the entire ponnlitlon of the world. In view of these facts t i awl on those transit lini.s is one of tlio safest of occupations. More l>eo-t>le are litlU-d by faUlnr, du-v/n tairs in their own homes than'arc

killctl in subway accidents. Beyond all question, on tii'o oilier

hand, a single accident; a slnglu death, is one too many; and It be­hooves those responsible for the subways, and also for tile Hudson Tubes, to redouble their vigilance and their .precautions, and to spa.ro no thought or labor or ex­pense in forefending against • any repetition of Friday's horror.

CONSI'mT'f HE* DAY Some preparations are already

being made for the observance Of Constitution ' Day, on September

Oat lime the word "bug" was a commonly ured synonym for "ter­ror," which indeed was ibe original meaning of tlie word. Yet even i? it had then born the later meaning which wo have given to it, namely, an Insect, it would not have been, altogether inappropriate,' since in­sects are now realized to be among the deadliest'piaffiles of mankind. Tho in.osu.uito, the house fly, the hookworm and the flea have been among the most prolific agencies of death, while others, such as the San Jose scale, the Colorado beetle, the army worm, the boll weevil, the gypsy moth and the tent cater­pillar have caused simply ines­timable industrial losses.

At the present time we are con­fronted with another formidable pest, which was almost unheard of ten years ago, but which is now so widespread and pernicious an ovil

,,.1, , -, *. , i i „_^ i that New Jersey and the adjacent 17th, but they might well be ™>rC | p a r l 8 Qf N e w Y o p k ^ v&tmyi_

of The person responsible for it. That was quite right. Anything else would haw been dereliction of duty. ' '

Yet we wonder what, precisely, he had in mind when he ordered the police to arrest summarily tho president of the road, unless that gentleman immediately turned over to them tho actual culprit. Does ho understand the 11111 of Eights of the Constitution of the United. States as authorizing the arrest, without warrant, of persons not caught in the act of committing crime or oven in auspicious circum­stances?

A T\cv Yorli woman accused of MOhiUns t«e Velsteud Act routed three policemen, trying to prrt-st her. Some of it is powerful stuff.

What the poor workinguian wants this year is not a full din­ner pail but more places to park iu the downtown district.

The Mexicans are in favor of the recall of public officials but they do it with the bullet instead, of the ballot.

Olty of Summit , on the L a c k a w a n n a j t . i t . , a t 541 feut (ibovu t ido water , w i th :m trnit.it dal ly. B u s connections v i l l i .Newark . E l i zabe th , Morrliitowii .-iivl liiilm H o p n t c o n e . City . w a t e r / join ark'MUn well:!. F l w t r l c l ight iiml t;aa : . t ido . w a t e r Hewurai-.e: fri.u niiiil de l ivery ; i-xccllont tiollcu a n d !«•• protuctl 'iu. F o u r batiks, four r i t i t ldlne a n d L,oan Associations!; t w o i-.oml:-; rnod'-rn i i roRrt is lvu Bchool ;;-. turn.

CiuiiMunlcat'i w i t h Summi t J luslness !7 u'-* Association.

;.ai.-iriAL iiovisiisiKa UEPBESCNTATIVIS KLW JLUSEV NEWSPAPERS, Inc.'

V.zney C. W««d. rnstJati Btn Vctit—Ck! eago—Plilaileljhta—Newark

numerous and extensive.' There i s no da te in all t he calendar tha t , on pat r io t ic grounds, deserves Snore a t tent ion. It is indeed regret table t h a t it is not m a d e a universal legal holiday, comparable with the F o u r t h of July.

F o r the plain fact of history in t ha t if it had not been for the adoption of the Constitution, tho Declarat ion of Independence would not-be worth the paper it was wr i t ­t e n upon. Dur ing tho interval bc-t\veen the Revolution, and the Con­st i tut ion, th i s Republ ic was a fail­ure , and was steadily going to ru in . I t was the Consti tut ion that saved it .

TU10S3DAY", AUGUST 28, lt)2S

HYDKA.NTS

MliTEOBOLOOICAL

H in announced t h a t the Wate r ' Yinip'iny i?. about to Install hy-! u a n t ; on i ts ma in along Spr lng-i'i.ld avenue ill St i r l ing, for use for tl-.-t- prevention o r extinguishing purposes. As yet it docs no t a p ­pear , how«vor, t h a t they a rc to be Inrlallcd in New Providence Town-:-bi]), whore tho need of thorn is '-ven greater.

!t (night to be a ma t t e r of course , '.•sjinnulsory and ...universal, t h a t wherever ma ins a r e laid, fire hy-i l iants shall be placed, at sui table (listantes. And as ' a rule- they .'ihould bo placed a t shorter dis-t uncus than now commonly prevai l . Air. Ackerinau i s qui te right in i-.i'lidnti the quest ion whether, In f..ji:iicetiua with tho rebuilding of. i'P'-Inisfield avenue, more ' .hydrants •hould not he ins ta l led along t h a t iiuil-our,hlar«, especially on t he \,-e.'-.t,ern slope of Van disc's Hi l l .

It co.-t.-i ' joniparativcly little to v]:.t;ill hydrants , and it may happen '•i.it to have one. in just the r ight •;!.u:e will avert fire losses far

Thoro is, wo believe, no quest ion t h a t Wednesday and Saturday of las t week were moist . We might indeed say, wi thout fenr of cha l ­lenge, tha t they were uncommonly wet.

But why not? ' They were days expressly dedicated, .to, the public appearances of Al; Smith as a can­didate for the Presidency. And he, by his own deliberate and resolute choice, is a wet candidate.'

We can almost imagine t h a t he would have been resen t fu l had the days in (luestion been anything o the r than, wet- W e wr;e told t h a t h e was decidedly • indignant w h e n a quar te t te of s ingers interpolated t h e well known 'anthem, ''Uov, Dry 1 A m ! " into t he nrojriu'ii.of Ma Al ­bany reception. * . - - . ;

i t was therefore nujte proper for t he -wea the r t o - b e wet, ' .very we t ; in Senator Edwards ' .apt phrase , "As wet as tho Atlant ic Ocean." "

We believe i n tho:CTCrtt>stirj.g fi t­ness of th ings . ' - ;

vania. have been placed under a quarantine to prevent, if possible, its further extension. This is called the Japanese beetle. It is a small, brightly colored creature, simply omnivorous in Its ravages. It attacks apples, pears, plums, peaches, grapes and practically all Other fruits, devouring leaves, blossoms and fruit alike. I t has a passion for roses, and BO blights the bushes as to prevent their bear­ing flowers, if not indeed to kill them outright. I t is said" also to devour grass, in some places ruin­ing lawns and golf greens.

The creature has made its ap­pearance numerously in this vi­cinity, particularly In rose gardens, and no entirely satisfactory way of destroying It has yet been found. The United SluU<s Government is spending this year $750,000 in a campaign against, it, not hoping to exterminate it, but at least to re­strict its ravages to tho regions al­ready invaded by it and to prevent Its becoming a, nation-wide scourge. Meantime all persons with rose­bushes, grapevines or fruit trees will do a service to themselves and to tho public by watching for it, notifying the State authorities of its appearance, and doing their ut­most to destroy if.

The rctirom*e"nt of1 ex-Senator Prelinghuysen from^the headship of the Board of Agriculture will he j on°' widely regretted, since it cari'-bc said without hesitation that sofnc of his very best public work was done in that place, and that the good results of his -\^ork were felt throughout the entire State, The best compensation we could have for the loss thus sustained would be In his prompt and vigorous re­entry into political ^activity, (as a leader in this year's Republican campaign.

Charlie,/' Bryan of Nebraska blames the Republicans for bring­ing the liquor question, into this campaign. Now you toll a funny

We shall presently' be using the new style of currcuey, with the bills considerably smaller, lhan at present. Though smaller, theylwill be worth just as mirch as tho'big­ger ones, and they will be -..ranch more convenient to use. t t "Will b'e possible to enclose them in an or-' dinary letter envel,bp<j"'.. without folding, and also in the same wuy to place them in wallets in which they now have to be folded. This will result in their keeping dean and crisp much loifjer ' th'nii"' tit present. In all respects the change in size will be an improvement.

For the, first time in many years the Democratic party is finding it necessary to claim North Carolina and Texas.

Evory.time you are disposed to criticize 'the dress of the modern girl remember the. old-fashioned one with the wasp waist and the accentuated hips.

. As soon as the pennant races are finished in the big leagues and the world scries Is over we will try to get down to the business of elect­ing a President.

JOSEPHUK .THK VKK^ATILE

ITS OUIi BOCTBiJfB

The welKstabilize.'d and turn/re: sive' republic Of •,Coit;.j4t|ch"-,,|^hk

.'.t"r than ll-o cost of placing instrument »Al>I.'arently it wants thorough-j aomeUiing ni*ke specific than the

if '•' ' ' m a Ion:.; the entire

i —

U4 EVTAY JI0Etl^0E,

^tes-c'li

was once a. mensheu; utiihi'LeaffUl.. of Nations'-'-and thc^i withdrew, ap­pears to be thintlnEf pi joining that body-again. ,j4ut before it 'docs', HO it wants tAo make surti" ,o-f ' ih6 League's" views ccinjaaiii'ei tlsfe, Monroe Doctrine. Therefore* it hue' Written to the' league, iiBldns ior its interpretation 'of that famous'

NS"instrument. »Al>I.''irently it wu l l" j something h'^re specific than —..

" League's rkuculous and entirely false description of - It In - Its

'' Covenant' as a "regional undcr-. standing for the maintenance Of j peace." j What answer the Leasuo"-will .make, remains to be seen. But we •should say that if that .body jioses-: ses human intelligence, it will de­cl ine to make any interpretation, ;but will refer Costa Riea to the 'Government at Washington. For tho Doctrine is not an international instrument, like a treaty, but purc-

' ly a domestic pronouncement, or statement of policy, of the United

' States. R is something that in to :he "interpreted" by tho United Slates of America aiu} by-it alone,

| and it would be as impertinent for - |any other country or combination

;of countries, or tho League of Na­tions, to "Interpret" it as it would be lor it to attempt to "interpret" the Constitution of tho United States itself.

It may he, of course, that Costa Rica simply wants to sound out the League as to its attitude toward the Doctrine, and find out whftlier it is inclined to. respect it as an American principle and policy. I£ so, well and gond. That would bo a prudent course, though n trifle superfluous. Jt would doubtless be a courteous and friendly act for Costa Rica to make its reentry into the League condi­tional upon that body's declaration of respect for the Doctrine. . But even that ih not accessary/.America is not worrying even a little bit about what other nations or leagues think about the Doctrine, It is our Doctrine, and we purpose to main­tain it according to our own will, regardless of the rest of the world. That is what V e have done for more than a century, .in. the face of the League's predecessor, the: Holy-Alliance, and in the face- of the hostile attitude toward it of the greatest throe Powersrof, Europe; and we have no doubf of our ability to continue thug to rnaintcin it as long as we please:-' ' "

>"Sir" Josephus Daniels, former­ly; President Wilson's Secretary of tlio Navy and one of. the national leaders of the Democratic^, party, has recently been calling1 on' Gov­ernor Smith, and iatirow supporting him in his campjrfgn for-the Presi­dency.

In April of last year, Josephus wrote ji, letter to a correspondent in p'jlifo'rniii, In which lie said: y^'l think it would be a'fatal mis­take for tho Democratic party to nominate a man with tho wet rec­ord of Governor Smith, arid I could not fltand for tiny AVef '.' j ,. . . , .

1 However, what's' a ' little thing like consistency in politlcR? '

Representative Aekerman M- re­puted to have carribd the " panie umbrella with him on his travels for more than' 700,000 miles. That must mean that he hasn't loaned it to anybody, and also that his travels have been chiefly In regions and in circumstances where ho has not had to use it as much as we have had to use ours in these dig­gings during the last-week.

,• There is a lot of talk about Al Smith's "fearless application Of Jcffersonlan principles" to the pro­hibition question and other current issued, -most of which is hopelessly mistaken. The very suggestion of having the Government go into the liquor business—or any business—-, is enough to' make the Sage' of Montlcello turn in his grave. ,:

the bell and they have to get up and let her in.

——o- -— WO IlilGYt jllTiV I t IH

A s t h e o l d m a n s a i d d u r i n s t h e n a r t y : "My h o u s e is I n t h e n e i g h ­b o r h o o d o n l y h a l f t h e t i m e ; t h e o t h e r h a l f t h e t i m e t h e n e i g h b o r ­h o o d Is i n m y house,1" , '

„ _ o „ — Dizzy Labels

I call my sweetie- Jtidso because she Is always layiDg down the law to me!

Raro CoEoruodUy A doctor says children should he

raised on common sense, • but he doesn't tell the parents where they can get it.

•*——o——

If a man can he judged by his wife, as the proverb'feus It, then n woman can- bo judged by her hus­band. The trouble Is, with somo women nowadays tho judgment has to be In the nature of a consensus,

o—— , Iirazy Kruclis

"Give a sentence with the word Andover." .

"When you come to the Andover perfect day."

c — KestoraUtin

First Editor—We haven't got any new bright sayings to uso this week.

Second Ditto—Well, polish up some of the old ones.

-——o—— . . fo r Suiuliiy Dinner

Two's company; the rest nre re-lalioiiH.

Health authorities say' that dur­ing hot weather babies should wear sis few clothes _as possible. And there doesn't seem- to'be any age limit on babies this year either.

Sonus-of the&e days an enterpris­ing real estate man is going- to build a subdivision of homes for tired ' business men with a golf course in the center.

J U D G E self

Wo Knew Wlfc^—Before yon, married me

you never even ate regularly. Now at least you always know where your next meal 1B coming from.

Hubby—Sure—From the deli­catessen.

O r - , — - ' Somehow the auto sheik can al­

ways find a place to park. o——-

Itrany ICrcclis "GIvo a sentence with the word

Celestial." "It celestial see of me,"

Contents of this column, copyright by Judgo, "Tho World's WittleHf Weekly," and reprinted by special permis­sion.

T.lVINflSTOffE'8 MEMOttlAT,

Thousands-rwe., hope millions— 5)f people in this country will be much interested in the project to purchase and preserve as a me­morial the birthplace of the illus­trious explorer and missionary, David Livingstone, at Blantyre, Scotland. The sum required for this pious purpose is only .?60,000, of which ?40,000 has already been secured. • A number of contributions have como from America, and that Is eminently fitting, since Living­stone's : great work commanded as much 'interest and sympathy here as in Great Britain, and it was an American journalist who sent an American citizen under the Ameri­can flag to find and to relieve tho explorer In the final adventure of his career.

Besides, wo owe It to Livingstone to pay such tribute to his memory, as an offset to our inconsiderate patronage of the egregious and mudsllnging person called "Trader Horn."

Governor Smith in his speech ot acceptance disapproved the policy, of our Government in sending^ Unused States,.troops, to, Nicaragua}: j In that he is>condemning tho policy, of his own party. For it ;was! President Woodrow Wilson who sent tho Marines thither, and he did so at the direct request or Invita­tion of the Responsible Government^ of that country. We should be In­terested to have Ml-. Smith tell what he, as President, would do in such a case—or what he would have done had ho been in Wilson's p l a c e . ;. „ii)

, It's tough on the Chinese sky­writers: They have to fly upside down and backwards.

' "I'm going to oult tiger hunting land get married,"

"Well, 1 s'pose you know your own business." ; . - — — < } — —

Sol e r e ' The. modern parents' Idea of

punishing their daughter for stay­ing out late at night is to take her

Itey away from her, SO tlu.it when She' comos homo she has. to ring

Sajs Acostn Collapsfd New York—According to a spe­

cial story by Charles J. V, Murphy, published in Collier's Weekly, Bert Acosta, Commander Byrd's pilot, cracked under the strain a few hours after their plane crossed the French coast 'lino. The story is that Byrd, studying the compasses, found that Acosta was off the course and was Informed by1, the pilot, "I am going hack." As tho plane wheeled around, Acosta slid from his seat and collapsed on the floor. Byrd regained control of the plane as it f«;ll downward at the rate of two miles pey minute.

Jersey fe& mid

Jeremiads By C. J. B.

The .name "Hague" means "flow­ers" according ' to a question and answer column in a Newark news­paper. Wo know of one Hague who Isn't living in a bed of roses. \

0 — , "§500.00 BUYS new slx-Toom

homes, oak floors, built-in bath tubs, breakfast nook, paved streets, curbs, sewers, driveway, • §G,950. McMlckle, CO Monroe place. 'Phone. 2810.-Y/."—Classified advertisement in a Bloomfleld paper. How about the kitchen" stove! ' '

"Dentist Obtains Right to Have Son Sundays," says a headline in a Newark paper. The Birth Con­trol League and the "Blue" Laws to the contrary notwithstanding

- — o • • •

Deapite the fact that ho had two licenses for his dog, a Westflel.d man was summoned to court. Ho was dismissed. He'd better wear the second license around his neck to avoid-future summonses.

o — — _ • '

An Atlantic City" "fishing boat captain found an abandoned-schooner the other day,' Tho Coast Guard seized the boat believing it to bo used as a rum -runner. Why all the fuss? Who wants an-empty schooner these summer days!

—o—— "Open House at Community

Club," says a headline in a Morris-town paper. Not "wide open," we hope.

— o The Rahway police the other day

recovered a watch stolon a * year ago. Now, If these cops were only assigned to some of these torch murders, a solution might bo found.

o-"Jersey G. O. P. Leaders Predict

Hoover Will Sweep State," says a headline. And ho Isn't an old broom, either.

- J . ' I 7 : # £ ' . '

L L ' l

• things r.ri the harvet

parlnershl

"Mrs. Lllllendahl and Beach Seek Pardons," says a headline. Now, who wore they?

o An .East Orange cop lias been

charged with conducting a boot­legging trade on tho side. Per­haps the quality of his wares prompted' one of his d(splousoi) clients to any, "I wouldn't take that from a cop."

jllr Jjhic to Bermuda New York — Announcement , has

been made of a new air line to Hamilton Bay in the Bermuda Islands, which will be inaugurated in November. The distance to Ber­muda is 600 miles and planes car­rying 10 passengers will he used.

"Scot Hurt in Crash," says a headline in a Millhurn paper. You can bet he didn't pay for that.

— o Newark at present 1B debating

how far a mosquito can fly. The pests certainly should bo en­couraged to make trans-Atlantic f l i g h t s , , •,.

Send your items of ^interest to tlMhHJBlitALD., •

Early to bed doys not ah.-uys mean early to rise..

What most t-ihniuals need is ;.r-rest treutmeht^'

Tho ntosnultocc- a:a the oneu that find the "shin", in fishing.

Tho • sweet,;'youus' looking forv/ajd. to tnoon. , •, - '. .'

• Many , a 'business falls becauso tho wives can't utanr, each other,

o Old topers say that you can

drink yourself to death with less liquor than ever before.

Science will be wonderful when It tolls ua how a small boy't. stomach can hold so much.

-^ 0-=-^-Can you enpect 'life to run

smopthly when wo have a political eruption,-every tour years?

o — Maybe if tho Vice-President dirt,

not havo to preside oVef tho Sen­ate he would; not mind Ills Job so much. ." . --,

Correct-thin sentence: "I would be glad to lend you the money, but I haven't, got that much left in the baiik."

o — Tho little,boy who used to be­

lieve- so strongly In Santa Claus la a man now, who firmly believes In "tomorrow."

Credit is a siihstltuto for cash but some people bollevo the state­ment so thoroughly* thtft they for-' get that aiiy cash1 is required.

A yearling colt brought S7G.OO0 last week, at auutier, Ilumaji babies would be.humiliated if thoy could understand that. . - .

, — o - - - f -Any efficiency expert can gain a

few points by observing the aver­age yolmg American storing away things in his pockets.

c ~ j _ Moving pictures In tho homo

Bound good but suppor.o junior turrts the crank while pa and mn are-having their weekly argument.

• Slnco Paris regulated American divorces it Is getting to bo com­mon for an American to return to the laud of the free.,and brave with ht&'Qwn wife.

The vWashinstbn Past' sees a big, row'over" tho prohibition law for' nothing, because if, Smith is clect'-l ed ho can't -repaid'it and if Hoover is elected he can't enforce it. :i

pedestrians • afei • glad to knaw^ that; -uhd©i>'.'oaVriu circumstances, they have the-' Tight*of way. Now, if'ooiho kind' soul will only ex­plain- hovjr they , can -assert their rights safely' the pedestrians wlllj no doubt,- award him the Grand Cross of the Double Way.

H 0 0 V E H K 5 1

': ho iji-^isier on one of the New •~'.,U ;-'.\".J>-.;•.>- lines la-,t Friday af-'••iiiouii ' \ , :a dreadful beyond -.:• -icripiiuu. lai'Liu;; not more than ."'. f,in;;l'j r lenvnt of utter horror, '-'."• while av,niting judicial de~

1<'riiiin.-itlon, it i:j impossible, to dis-7..i-3 the- thought that someone was •-.uiliy OL • criminal iiesligencp. ijiuibtlrF-s -he culprit is already : '.i'Toring from his own condemning ; .iri-ci.-^re puni.-hment n'nre poi"-o ft than any that- tlie lav. can Impose inion Mm. Tct,- painful as -t may he, it is nrcf.i:;ifryTYhat the • :-,v- shill .-.Iso act, ii-.gss^'jiy,. for ;uo salis of example? 3iic--"v"arnliii; .'i 'it'ivri:, and Lyr iho safety of the public.

inoillahly the tragedy will cause l-j man;' mir.ds.a dread of riding in ;';.- t-u!r.i.*i3":. That is natural, and !' ,io5 sultj'jcl JD reproof or ridicule. .i''i r.n;st, however, remember thsi . i the course of a year fully fifty la'Hum vwij'ie pass through the j in'our present version. This was .-'rfiinn r.t which this diopter oc-|not, of coun^ . the solecism which

toc -V t

THE COST OF BUGS

! Really, there was much justifi­cation for the famous "Blip Bible," in which a familiar passage in one of tho • Psalms was translated "Thou alialt not he afraid of the bu;s by night nor for tho arrow lhat nieth by day," instead of "afraid for the terror by night," as

There will, be more regret than surprise at the opposition of prop­erty owners along Baltusrol road to tho -proposed .improvement of that street, and the consequent abandonment of the project by the City Council. Restoration of tho roadway to its condition prior to the recent excavations will of course make Its state better than at present, but it will 'not make it what it should be, or what it must ho in the not distant future; and it is a pertinent question whether It would not be more economical, in the long run, to do the whole job now than to make merely tem­porary, repairs and postpone radi­cal reconstruction to a later date when It will Inevitably cost much more. We can sympathize with the reluctance of property owners to have heavy costs assessed against them, at a time when their or­dinary taxation is about all that thoy can well bear; yet we cannot ignore the demands of the public at large for roads that can be used with comfort and safety at all timt-s. The case is another sug­gestion of the increasingly urgent need of such.revision of the tax and road systems as will enable us to have good roads without con­fiscatory taxation.

Some of the quality of Mr. Hoover's statesmanship, in its out­look upon the practical interests, of the people, may be perceived in n few epigrammatic passages in his speech of acceptance:

The poorhouso is Vanishing -from among us." '

"Business is practical, but it la founded upon faith." ,

"We must not only'be just; we' must be respected." .

"The farm i3 more /than a busi­ness; it is a state of Hving." .•

"Material prosperity • and moral progress must march together," •

"When business cures its own abuses it is true self-'gbvernmcnt."

"There must bo ho place' foi; cynicism in the creed of America."

"There is no guaranty against poverty equal to a job for - every man." ;

"Government should not engage in business in competition with Its citizens."

"Racial progress marches' upon tho feet of healthy and Instructed children." I

"Successful democracy rests; wholly upon the moral and spirit- i ual quality of its people." j

"Modification of the enforcement of laws which would permit that which the constitution forbids is nullification."

"Man for man and woman for woman, we are today more capable, whether in tlio work of form, fac­tory or business, thaa ever before."

JAMES THE RAMPAGEOUS

!c she number pRiraa- s.ppeax.'j to34 /

to be, bscanacst

We can sympathize with Mayor Walker, of New York, in being tremendously agitated over the sub­way slaughter, and iu Instantly de­manding that the machinery o£ the law be set in aetion for the detcc-tiQUj 'jf.pi-chen&io;

Candidates for President • forty years hence will be boasting, not that they were born in log houses, but when young they had to take their outings in humble four-cy­linder cars.

Dispatch from Brule says lhat 1

President Coolidge has learned how j to handle a canoe. We always j supposed he. was an artist at this j occupation. At least we never: knew him to rock the boat. I

LYMAN B. CODDINGTON Wholesale Rose Grower,

Murray Hill, N. J.

Day LOUIS DeV. DAY

& Cornish, Insurance, Newark. N. J.

ERNEST E. EARLY Counselor-at-Law, N. Y.

O'Brien, Boardman, Fox, Memhard & Early

CHARLES D. FERRY President, Ferry Hat Manufacturing Co.

WM. HALLS, JR. Chairman of Board

Director, Tho Hanover National Bank, New York

J, FRANKLIN HAAS Vico-Chairman of Board

WALTER C. HEATH rrcsiduut, The Whitehead and Hoag Co. Vice-President-Director, National State

, Bank, Newark Trustee, Mutual Benefit Life Insurance

Co., Newark FRANK E. KALEY

Vice-President, The American Thread Company

ROBERT J. .MURPHY Ileal EstahV^uinmit, N.' J. ' "

C. RENWICK

HENRY A. TRUSLOW Director, Armstrong Cork Co.

BARTON P.. T.URNBULL President

, JACOB S. \VILBY " " Vice-President, New York.,Telephone Co.

CORRA' N. WILLIAMS Counsplor-at-L-iw,- Summit M. J.

OFFICERS

If the full dinner pail can't be inasle an issue in this campaign maybe It is because everybody has a full pantry. ,

- When, asked whether he is vret. or dry the diplomatic candidate

a a d punishment [ wil l ansinx-r "ycu and E G . "

WM. S. PORTER Viee-Presldent-Secretary

GEO. V. I U M Vicc-PresiCcnt-Treasurcr

BARTON P. TURNBULL President

J . SHERMAN* BYLAND Aso't Sec'y-Treau.

ERNEST P. PATTEN • • Trust Officer

YOUR DEPOSITS AND-TIRUSTS SOLlCiTED

Page 5: i Lf i. Oi3> tsfjj-i UIV&. r-wi^'-sfiS-l-J malics toward none,i Lf i. " J * f z .,, --K£.^jf3 e.i-Jt.^Oi 3> tsfjj-i UIV &. r-wi^'-sfiS-l-J /** ^i .-r:; i. ad SUMMIT RECORD — -

i''7i-t. "(.;, iD/ .c i;:r r_ !• r."It.J.V;- ..n.. • . , i J «,0-^L' , w o - . i - . i i i , -.4. j . L?AC^ i t.

[olds 0 p Qbse faces lira Bofe LackawffiEiaa And TwIli^M L e a s e e Safe Ageli Steps All femes Saturday

in kokwasiia lasekll league LACKAWANNA I ^ A G U E

COUNCIL TO :>1EET

Lil: aad Players Kissp= pointed—ffay Double hVn4sr , r5 Are IF"""

For Season's End

Br:sy Holiday -Ahead When the Big Ben awoke Hav iy

B o r w a i t , skipper of the Summit _ Red Pox, tram bis (slumbers Sat­

u r d a y morning . Hur ry , jiia.de a p -' pichen&Jvc l>y the selections t h e

incessant j a l n had pluyed upon t he porch roof dur ing the night, quick­ly kicked back -the bedcovers and wi thout reaching for his s l ippers or ba throbe rushed for the window.

"Ha , h a ! " cried H a n y optimist i­cally as his eyes scanned t he lie'ivens, "maybe we'll get in a game today, maybe we'll be able to get back home of ,tno money we've b e n losing r ight a long and, who knqwt , we may bump off Madi-f,OIl."

The hour s ticked Off on the Big Ben t h a t had aroused the Hill City pilot. I t was J l o'clock; the 'sky W P S c lear , when your coircspond-ont phoned H a r r y to hea r whether the Sox were going to play o r w h e t h e r your correspondent would have a n afternoon off.

Sugges t ing meekly t h a t the g rounds might be too wet, your r e m '.putative Inquired, "Are you fjolnp, to play today.1 '

"Suit1 ," replied Har ry . " I 'm go­ing up to t he field now to fix it up. P e r h a p s a little work will have to us done to get it in shape. Maybe y o t ' d be t t e r call me back a l i t t le la le i to make sure t h a t there ' l l be n game, for the grounds may be too wet ."

Two h o u r s la te r i t rained, not , however , enough t o prevent the L'amt t rom being played. But ru in began to fall a l i t t le la ter and t h e r e a f t e r ' it- fell in termit tent ly du r ing the afternoon, giving your correspondent ' an afternoon off and I l a n y Dorwar t and the other league • manage r s , ' • whose t eams \ / e r e a lso kept idle, ' a c h a n c e ' to ligiire up jus t how deeply into the red thoi r c lubs had fallen as a re ­su l t of t he numerous postpone­men t s .

The local club has fared far from svcll financially. This is only be-

'Ciu3o of the many postponements . Ti> break even, so the Summit m a n a g e r leporta , the club will have to play off a good many of Itfl post­poned games. There a r c six post­poned z;ames that t he Sox have bu t i t iu pract ical ly Impossible for al l Of them t o bq played off.

Chatham has seven postponed panics , Hillside and MIHburn have

-> pi:; , each, Maplpwood, New ^Provi­dence arid Madison four"" cacKJ Sri'fiig'fle.M"'ha-ir'+hre^-"r^ •J"< "- -'••-*•>•

This coming Week-end, because of the holiday, will be a busy one, an1 all c lubs , wea ther permit t ing, will p lay throe samen, one on Sat­u rday and two on Monday. The Sox' week-end slate cal ls for t hem to meet the Chatham Howitzers a t Chatham Saturday, to enter ta in the UprinsjflcUl Stars Monday forenoon a t Memorial Field, and to invade Nov/ Providence t o take on the Crescents in the afternoon. The two holiday games a r e par t icu lar ly a t t rac t ive .

Several important: games feature tlio week-end schedule. There ' s t he Now Providence-Madison clash .-if Madison .Saturday, t h e New Providenee-Mil lburn t i l t Monday feii tiiiooh, and the New Providence-Summi t tuss le Monday afternoon.

The Crescents cer tainly have a stiif v.'oekiend facing them. I t ' s the i r big opportunity this week-cud; It can make o r b reak the i r

lACKAWABNA. JbGAUlfc

StiinilliiLT or fho Teiiics W,

MIHburn . . . . 11 Mll<]l'JOIl r I t New J'rovJdeuvu . 10 Summit 8 Kprhirffleia " . '•> Maplswuod . 7 Chatham -Hillside . 2

L. A I. t! (i X » 11

12

Pot .TKG .GS7

.m . 6 7 1

.DM

. 4 J7 ' . 1 5 3

. 1 4 1

Kitturdaj't, IletuStB AH carara postponed—riiln.

_ — _ _ [ ) _ _ _ _ Ointii'f. Hext Haturdny

Hillside nt MIHburn. Now l'rovIdcm-« a t Itfadlsoii. Summit ut Chutliam. Altiplcwond at Springfield.

Week-end Golf Results SATimUAV

Summit—Second round for club f'bamoliinbliip A. F . Molltor defeated ItOK BnycliT, A and L'; Fr.mli Kemp won from Aithur Wuycr by default, Charles Scluii-ttfi won from J. M. Lind­say by default; J J. Car«.-w defeatuil riinrlei M Bladthnll, 0 and 4.

Maltiitrol—KivoeiMJtfllti"!, Clas'i A : J. C Smaltz, B'J-14-76 ; M H. Ijlnderove, 8U.4-7S ClHt'l B . I- J, Ple-tJ!. S4-18-7C, John Kandri'BOn, 10C-27-7W. Kolter fup qualifier, Smflfrz,

o tyUHIJAV

llultufirnl—Clm'i A wrrpsti i lcei: M. B L,lmli;rove. 74-4-70; H. A. Illy, 8i-8-75. Oln-14 JQ: J. If- ttobeita, y3-l«-77 ; M. E. Ro.ieht*. 10(5-23-83.

lief—fey Me! Zeppelin trip he re from Germany

is delay* d until September .

Byrd Antarct ic expedition to cost 5855,000.

o — P lane saves 35 h o u r s by flying

to New York wi th l iner ' s mail . ——o——-

Seventy bombing p lanes take pa r t in tes t raid on London.

E x p e r t s auree television in homes is still far off.

o Glacial dam 1>ursts in India,

I A meet ing at which tho mat -j tor of determining j u s t how ! m a n y postponed Karnes will be ', p layed and when they will be i p layed is to be held by the I Lackawanna - Xteaguo council I th i s Thursday night a t t h e Chat-| h a m Fifh and Game Club. In ­

c luded among tho o the r business t o como_ up will be t he fur ther a i r i n g of Chatham's p ro tes t of i t s recent game with Mil lbmn. which Millhurn won by a i<i score.

NEW R. C. A. Hl iCEIVCRS AND LOUJlSPEAKEItfS

.... ^ofBil;

Uii-s-fi'-Q-- -,U.

.. 'fiiliga"-"^

Good Plumbing

News

flooding Indus Valley,

Louis .Tracy, novel is t and Jour­nalist , dies at homo in England.

Coolidse views ou r n a v y as out­side Kellogg t rea ty and not to be cut.

o—— Membership of Federa l Reserve

System decreases, but percentage increases .

o — Liber ty and T r e a s u r y bonds

£old a t j o w e s t pr ices of year,

F rench tale of plot- -tO'-Wdnap-Black in or reads l ike, movies.

"PlUsourgli ' t ep i i r t s s teel opera­t ions above 1927 record .

Nansen, Norwegian explorer, plana flight to Pole nex t year.

Four dead in s torm In Southern Sta tes , extending- t o Virginia.

io—— Chapman repor t s f inding huge

fossil "beast in Gobi Deser t . »

Time inonev r a t e h ighes t in seven years .

The cost of a r m s is ?3.&00,000,-000 a .yea r , -

_ — o Chemists arc told of new tablet

which kil ls gcjnis In wa te r , '

Small marine force sca t t e r s Co­co River bandits.

_ _ — o - — -Japanese a t t i tude toward Man­

chur ia is unyielding. a-——

Norway and F rance send more ships to search For Amundsen .

.__—o__— Fi rs t movie's t r ansmi t t ed by radio

in P i t t sburgh plant , — _ _ o - — - ',

J a p a n th rea tens China on treaty and Manchuria.

Our Work Is

Super io r in Quality ' Expertly1 Handled > " Thoroughly Dependable

Money's Wor th , Always ; I t ' s a service t h a t constant ly l inc reases our bus iness .

> . ' • i

iH.1 Klocksih & Son • m i U S T B I A I , ffLACE

1 . Slioiie 1518

IILIV/CSQ Tai-L; Are. and Wnlnnt a t ,

Superheterodyne A«i Well As Tuned J tadlo Froqnent ' j ' Circuit Now

Available With AC Tubes F o r Complete E lec t r i c

Operation A new line of I tadlolas including

Superheterodyne receivers uti l izing AC radio t rous throughout , for s im­plified electric operat ion wi th self-enclosed loudspeakers of the im­proved dynamic type, and a new loudspeaker of a i Untie design, is announced by th« Radio Corpora­t ion of America of which Gula-merian'fl is a local ' iiKf.ncy. Poin t ­ing out tha t "years of in tens ive r e ­sea rch and constant development by t he leading radio organiza t ions have Served to conf i rm the sound-nfcss of basic principles r ep resen t ­ee! in the superheterodyne circuit ." the announcement r eads . "Now, wjlth t he application of AC tubes to the superheterodyne ci rcui t , fol­lowing t he example se t with tho improved tuned radio-frequency circui t , broadcast ' recept ion takes ano the r s tep forward t owards tho u l t imate of perfection."

The new AC superhpterodyne r e ­ceivers a r e Introduced in three models to be known as Radlola GO, a, popu la r priced t ab le model, I tadlola G2, a console cabinet with enclosed d y n a m i c ' speaker , and Radlo la 64, a larger console cabinet wi th a dynamic speaker of g rea te r ppwer .

T h e table type AC superhe te ro ­dyne, model 00, includes seven UY-207 radlot rona and ono UX-171-A ppwer radiotron.' T h e circui t compr ises two s tages of tuned radio frequency amplification, f i rs t de­tector , oscillator, t w o s tages of tuned Intermediate frequency am­plification, a second (power) de­tec tor , and onto' s tage of power audio frequency amplif icat ion. Rec­tification of the cu r r en t for the U

nd C requirements is aecom-plishpd by a UX-280 radlo t ron . A vol tage switch is provided to takq <-are of variat ions in l ine potent ia ls of-105 to 125 volts. -Both lecciver a n d power supply Iihit a r e housed in ft two-toned walnut- cabinet . In t he cen te r of the panel is a b ionae escutcheon...platf, ,JEramjng.vthe ^ e - . lec tor dial and conceal ing the bulb wh'tch mmulAatfa the, dial and tun-i n s control . Operation of this new superheterodyne' has been reduced to i ts simplest form by m e a n s of a s ingle tun ing control . In addition t h e r e is a power switch and volume control .

"The use of, a, power, detector tube, according to the announce­ment , i s a now and "revolutionary development which m a k e s it pos­sible to obtain much grea ter volume without over loading or dis­tort ion than from a detec tor tube in t he usual type of c i rcui t . Th i s power -detector a l so p reven t s over­loading of the following audio s tage.

"The unusual ly g rea t ou tpu t of t h e power detector tube is t h e equal of the f irs t audio s tage in t h e usual typo of receiver with, the resul t tha t t h e output Trom the ' UX-171-A Radlot ron in, the power audio s tage of Radlola GO is as g rea t as is ob­ta inable from receivers hav ing two s tages of audio f requency amplifi­cation. The uti l isation of but ono Stage of audio frequency amplifi­cation in conjunction with the power, detector makes possible a new degree of tone qual i ty ,"

niiEitELs WE scone A BEAT

Vacuum Cleaner, so numed because of his ability to pick up the dirt, repor t s t ha t L a i r y Brydon has discovered tho rea ­son why he h a s n ' t been per ­forming regul ' ir ly with the Red Sox. I t seems tha t i t 's all be­cause Larry ' s b e m missing the tradit ional handlebar^ t h a t used to go with shoitstopb — don' t remind u s t h a t L a n y plays second, as this story so requi res he must be a shoiLstop. But no longer is L a n y without handlebars . Ha i r ton ic works wondci's and La r ry is now a n i l lustrat ion of the "after-using" s tage. Light shrubbery now decoia tes his upper lip. The mus tache is to remain as i t is unt i l "Labor Day. jf it s tays t h a t long Lar ry is to receive a cii&p five dol lar hill.

igii League <o>

eds tte Effect 4 fie eatfer9' Tto; Schedule M y limtimi

i : ' 'If • *

CITY T"\VJI,I(niT

Team btundl

\ m e r k . i n LLglun Knlf lu t i of Culumbuj Y M. ( \ A llu- iile^j .Men o iKo-i JMt-moil,il

LL'AOUU

npb W. L '1 , J « 4

1(1 G lj ti 4 -J

l ' e t .Tii> .<,bl> .l>Cli GOO

. i 0 7 KIKs .142

Tlin M riihs Jtrsulti All j .unii -, iioitiioiud—i'tin

(Jump Tnmurriiw Alglit A m o k mi IJCCIDU i t 0.iki H Mrmoiial

I & T J : U - « ' ( I P M v i.RAUur.

MundliiK ot Trunin

v-^JwR'^-te-A<^^;?V TtlfiT 1 \

wwx * to UsTEStb mm

C«^::Jtfe^tt:<KG?,T^^ElIMctl•

Fred HeimacSii Out to Uet Revenge on Connie Mack

Yanks' New St. Paul Southpaw Was Let Out in 1926 - . by the Athletics ,

Slip Knots l»reSerr«iI A lover 's knot, o therwise known

ns the tie1 that binds, is the only kind a real sailor h a s n ' t much in­terest in.—Farm and Fi res ide .

Slexlce IHftS Surp lus , Mexico Ci ty—Treasury receipts

for the first s i s mon ths of 1928 show a balance of '54,750,000 in favor of the Mexican government .

t'sr--T- rvs-,

championshrn asp i ra t ions . Speaking of the Crescents , wo

humbly beg our r eade r s to pardon our error, iu these co lumns ' last Fr iday. Perliaiks , i t was the weather , we don ' t know, but what­ever i t was, i t cer ta in ly got U3 when we said. Hillside should de­feat New Providence in t twir game, which was to have been played Saturday,

will hold i t s .

&£veram Annua »l og sow a L W.

on Satorday, September 15th, 1928

Entries Close September 1st. Premium Lists and

Entry Blanks may be obtained by applying to

TUXEDO KENNE1 Tuxedo Park, N. Y.

CLUB

Lion-sidiif,' P r o p h e t s F i r s t Roman {at a Chris t ian

massacre)—"We've got a capacity erowd, bu t Still we ' re losing money. The upkeep on the l ions m u s t be p re t ty heavy."

Second Roman—"Yes, s i r . These lions s u r e do cat u p the 'prophets ." —The Christian Advocate.

. o—— As Every Wirl Knows

Appeal ing eyes, to" Avin n, ma te . Alone suffice—

A pooling nose, I . have to s ta te , Is no t so nice. ~ J . W., in Boston T r a n s c r i p t .

Ti iuTd" Coo!c: • Yes, ma 'am, p m leaving

in exact ly t h r ee minu t e s . Mrs . W«3t: Then put t he eggs on

to b'uil and we'll have t hem r igh t for once.—Life.

• o Cit-sli

" i see you've given n p teaching your wife to drive."

"Yes , we had a n accident . I told her t o release her- c lu tch and she le t go the s teer ing wheel."—Cleve­land News.

By "LANK" LEONARD When Fred Heimach, the south­

paw pifeher, recen t ly s igned up with the Now York Yankees , the fact was driveji homo tha t every once in awhile some d i ica rded pitching ace t u rns up In the blg-leagde pennant deek to w r e c k , t h o hopes and ambi t ious bf some m a n ^ ager" 'who "ha<l earl ier ' c a s t "the "ace" aside. ' '

Old Jack Scott pulled the s tun t In 1922 when, a f te r ,having been given the air by the ClncInnntl-RedH who stated he. was hopelessly th rough , lie hooked on with the Gian t s and p i t ched- tha t club into a< pennan t and a World's championship over the Yankees. Alexander did it in 192G when he helped the Cardina ls eliminate his old club, t he Cubs, from tho pennan t race ; Ar t Nehf lias been s taging a s imilar th r i l l e r this season to the dismay of John MefJraw; and old J a c k Qulnn, cast aside by Miller t t ugg lns in 1921, ha3 been ono of the big reasons why tho Athlet ics crept u p close to the Yanks this month . Time alone will tejl whether He imach Is to be listed with the s t a r s ment ion­ed above, but if you believe him there Is no doubt about tho mat te r . Fre'd, at one t ime a hopeful on the payroll of the Athletics, h a s long dreamed of uoineday get t ing sweet revenge on Connie J1aek for hav­ing been given his walking papers in 192G and does not intend lott ing this golden opportuni ty to do so, get away without resul t s .

Heimach may indeed get h is revenge th is year. One more ef­fective pi tcher to help Pennock, Hoyt and Pipgraa, and the Yank-. ee1), with the power behind them that they have, should be ahlo to maintain sufticient speed to finish ahead ot the Phi ladelphia outfit. ' Fred may be that effective pi tcher needed. Ho has been ti much fear­ed opponent out In the American Association dur ing the last two years and interes ted the Yankees by turning in 19 victories th is sea­son. His vacat ion in the st icks might have been j u s t wha t he need­ed to gain tho confidence a blg-

leaguer should always have , and, instead of seeking revenge on dear old Connie, he might ac tua l ly owe the old boy a vote of t h a n k s in­s tead.

i Heimach is another product of New Jersey, having been horn in Canlden on 'January 27th, 1902. .Hih first '-professional job was with l ialeigli of the Piedmont League in 1920 whore he won eleven games while losing IS. T h a t w a s haially nn Impressive record but he rank* (Ml second among the s t r ikeout ,ar t ls ts of the league wi th a total of 188 and Connlo Mack brought h im to Phi ladelphia when the P iedmont season closed. In 1921 ,the lean leader of t h e Athlet ies farmed h im out to tho Three-Eye

' L e a g u e where Earl Mack, Connie 's Ijfipn, was running the MoUnc cluli, and when Fred "wound u p tha t sea­son with 24 victories and hu t 8 de­feats, E a r l convinced h i s dad t h a t F r e d was r e a d y for b igger and bet­t e r th ings . ''' 4 As a big ' ' leaguer, however, ^Heimlich-, was not so t e r r ib ly hot. H o won 'Seven and lost eleven In -1923, won six and lost 12 in 1923, won 14 and lost 12 In 1924, was -us,ed. only as a relief h u r l e r in 1925, and was shipped to the Boston Red Sox short ly after tho 192G season .opened. With the Red Sox that one year , Holmach moved out of fast ;compaiiy, going west t o St. Pau l af ter all c lubs had waived on his ^services. With tho Sain ts he won 16 while los!ugil2 las t yea r and, a s •previously, stated, wen t l ike a h o u s e af i re this season. ; Maybe If he conies th rough tor 'Mlllgr-Huggins, old Connie will r e ­c a l l w h a t h is son, Ea r l , told h im back in 1921. "There ' s p i tching in [that t he re big sou thpaw. Paw," ) won "what Mr. Mack, J i \ , whispered t o ' M r . Mack, Sr., seven yea r s ago. Now Fred Is determined to prove ' tha t Mr. Mack; Jr. , was r ight and tha t Mr. Mack, Sr., was wrong.

^Meanwhile Mr. lfugglna and Mr. "Ruppcrt and Mr. Ruth , e t al, all •hope tha t Mr. Heimach wil l realize that ambition.—Copyright, 192S, All R igh t s Reserved,

Su js New Cool ing Ideas De\e lop Kt'pldly in V. S.

"Now ideas m cooking are de­veloping more rapidly In tho United States than In any o ther country ," according to Mrs Nell B, Nichols in F a r m and F l rcdde , be­cause of the Intelligence of Amer­ican housewives.

"When housewives nie bored with cooking," she continues, " they know they are" in a su t and thvy s t ra ightway begin planning some­thing Ingeniously new, whereupon cooking becomes fun."

Mrs. Nichols cites among hi-r ex­per iments which were adopted widely by her pleased guests, tha t of making cocoa o r chocolate wi th a dash of coffee She used one cup of coffee to four cups of cocoa or chocolate and, she says, " tho beverage was of unusual flavor and memories of It l ingered jus t as they do of exquisitely blended per­fumes." Other 'successful expcrl-

Morri'a PLiina l-'.ir ltlllh . .. -PpfiWi k (ll,id3tonu Mim'istdwn .Mfiulli.uii Ut-I n.\nlj.\llli-Chester l^Ihiii ly Uormr-i

W. 11 H 'J. »

r,. l c ti

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111 11 l;l

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Toffligh£<'$ • Game, Betwces Legion and K. ol C ID OK—May Be Pot <Qa Tomorrow

Bnuirilay's IU-t.uK Aloiilitown Sp Mt nilMain 0 (Hlii i it,inn 4 lMiitpoiieil—r.iin.

ments with cocoa, she added, In­cluded using a d o / e n g ia lns of sa l t In the cooking vessel, oi a dash of cinnamon.

I t is oniy recent ly, says the writer , that fruits have heen used In garnishing mea t s . Dashes of orange and lemon were used by her In all sor ts of puddings and pas t r ies in wayt not prescribed in the leclpe books.

Gravies, says Mrs. Nichols, have a lways been about the s ame throughout the count ry but house­wives a ic now using prepared sauces and other flavors to p r o ­duce a wide var ie ty of gravies which rival the handiwork of French chefs, heretofore held u p as mas te r s of the cul inary art .

. • - :

Cornog Bade With Legion Something funny should be Laid

about this weather—but it isn ' t in u v All we can say is that J u p e Pluvius (sic) caused tho post­ponement of al l the games (dated to be played over the week-end In the City Twil ight League and u l so has caused the postponement of tho al l-Important meeting between the American Legion and tho Knights of Columbus, which w a s to come oft tonight . The Inniindated condition of Memorial- Field brought abput by the rain , w a s what caused the postponement of the t i l t billed for tonight.

Twice postponed on account or tain, the game between tho Amer i ­can LcRlon and Oakes Memorial , weather and the. condition ot the field permitt ing, will bn played t o ­morrow night a t Memoilal Field.

The Legion continues to lead in the clOf.e -race, a game ahead of the Knights of Columbuk. Both the Legioneeis and the Cascyr. havo three games to play. One ot t h e trio will br ing t he two outfits t o ­g e t h e r The other Legion games a re with the Uublnc^s Men and t h e Oaltes Memorial and the o ther Knights of Columbus" fa ines yro with the Elks and the Business Men.

' Jus t when a | l the games lint tho one set for tomonoy/ night will be played Is not known.- It is expect­ed that a meet ing of the Icaguo'i; boaid of directors will bo held and

1 tha t a, schedule of tho remain ing games will be drafted. I t Is u n ­derstood that some of those games having no bearing on the outcome of the league ruce will not bo played,

Tho American Legion nine wil l be greatly s trengthened from now until the finish of the race by tho presence of Elwood Cornog in i t s line-up. The local High "School athletic coach, back from a boys '

i camp wheie he terved as super ­visor, is o\peeted to play w i th , t ho Legloncers tomorrow. l i e ' will work In the gunplt agains t tho Oakes Memorial tossers .

It

Stole P l a y ; Jllust Pay Now York—Mrs. Graco A. Fend-

ler will col lect , nearly ?>1>000,000 from Richard W. Tully, author , and Oliver -Morosco,' producer of "Tho Bird ' of Parad ise , " ' on account of the fact that t he p lo t , if ns s tolen from her play " I n Hawaii" ^which she alleged was . submitted to Morosco hi 1910.

i

- 0 -AnoHier , "Version

A fool there v»as and h e saved h i s rocks .

E v e n a s you and I ; But ho took them out of h is old

, s t rong bo-c When a salesman called wi th some

%vildcat s tocks, And the fool w ;b s t r ipped down to

his socks, E v en a s you ^Jid I .

—Fort W o r t h Times. —-_o-——

! I'EjjKpori&ni Jack-—3Iiss Bute w a n t s me to

teach h e r to swim. Tom—Well, wliy don ' t you? Jack.—I don't know how to

s- -P,

ssK5**w«WiEe eatsr-sEa^a*^*

swim. Tom— She won't mind t h a t If you

a re the liRbt follow,—Boston Transcript .

o -----"Tell me, i s Mabel still put of

a job?" "Yes, and the poor gir l 's down

to her last l ipst ick." —Everybody's Weekly.

-o—— Author: Yes. I am doing very

well. " I "make iokes and my wife makes pic tures for them

Pain ter : With me IT'S t he op­posite. I make pic tures and my wife makes jokes about t hem! — Pass ing Show.

__—o—— To a Jewish cs-servici ' m a n an

acquaintance r emarked : "So you weie in the Army, TkoyV"

"Oh, I vni in the Army," was the proud response. ,

"Did you ge t a commiss ion?" "No; only m y w a g e s ! "

—Humor is t . -——o

"Does your husband lie awake a t nicht ."

"Yes, and h e te l ls them in his sleep, too."—Tit Bits.

— — c — — She—Will you love me jus t the

same when we're marjie-d? He—Why, of course , " j o u know-

I've a lways liked m a r r i e d , women best.—Everybody's Weekly.

- o——-Magistrate—You -say t he plain­

tiff is a relat ive or you r s? Witness—Yes, by ' bigamy.—Tit

Bi ts .

Fr tes E g £ on S teps ' • Washington—During t h e intense

heat in Julj% Miss Mlla ied M u r d e r fried an egg on the s t eps of t he capitol in -4 minutes, 32 seconds. When It was done slie placed it be­tween two pllccs of b read and ate It wi th relish.

.1

"i ,V' j .

• I

I .

, i r equipment rooms of automatic telephone exchange offices.

W h a t Wmai-n Would Know Every woman probably w a n t s to

learn what al l other women find wrong v i l l i their mar r i ages , th inks a iiledlcal authori ty of note , wri t ­ing in tho Woman's H o m e Com­panion.

Ill this machine-serviced era, inven­tion ha1; evylvcd a m.uvtloub order of procedure. It is that eaiih new ma­chine begets Still another to scree it directly or to/extend its field ol use­fulness.

A recent example of this inventive procedure is tile development of an automatic brake for ladders, brought into being through the vvideiprc.ul adoption of automatic switching equip­ment for telephone central oflice",, Rising 12J4 feet straight into the air on dorciis of racks, this central office equipment is a multitudinous nia-.s of wires connecting innumerable pieces of electrical appatatus. In installing and adjusting this raelc equipment, many men must w o r k fairly close to each other at varying heights. Coiiiequent-Iy, in the thousands of central offices in the country, rolling ladder* such ai arc to be found in marry retail estab­lishments have become indispensable equipment, ,

Since there was always the danger that someone might inadvertently start one of the ladders rolling while it was in use and bring injury to the man on it, the Bell Telephone Laboratories set to work for the Western Electric Company to develop a self-locking: ladder that would be inherently safe to use. The result was a new ladder

which is snppoited at the hanger end by two spring coils. As a user climbs to the top of the ladder, his weight tend-, to pull down the spring connected to the ladder, which, in turn, affects the second spring which is connected to the hanger and operates the brake. With A. man standing on the ladder at a distance of only three feet from the ground, the brake is thrown to Midi an extent that a force four times greater is required to move the ladder tijan when the brake is not in opera­tion. As a man climbs to greater height*., the pull necessary to move it increase*, thereby protecting the user and at the same time indicating to others that the ladder is oecupiecj.

I f the worker at the top of a ladder finds that his work extends beyond his reaching distance, he can release the brake by pulling on a cord. He can then roll the ladder along freely while standing on it. As soon, however, as the cord is released, the brake resets. To guard against thoughtless opera­tion of tile cord, its lower end is fas­tened to a step approximately seven icet iron) the floor.

It is expected this brake ladder will be .-.dr-pteble for use in drug, grocery and .shoe stores, in factories and ware­houses and other place:; utilizirei the rolling type of ladder- I

6(H) Su r r ende r to IliurliWs ' Managua, Nicaragua—More t h a n

GOO rebels haVe 'surrendered to tho Marines ' since the middle of. June , I t Is 'generally believed tha t tho rainy sen.son In tho jungle, mak ing life cxtiqinely difficult, is respons­ible foi the dri l l - away frofu Gen. Sandlno, whoso forces appear to ho dissipating.

Vanished Market It:isI;ots' Out, of eveiy dollar spoilt by t h e

New York or Chicago housewife for biead, milk, Ice, coal , or Ice cream, from 8 to C2 contg soon for delivery of the product,1 according; to a recent survey . - -Fa rm ft F i r e ­side. ' '

i >

Ford O w n i n g Rubber Detroit—The Ford Motor C"-->i-

pany has two shiploads of nuppl!o3 and equipment en loute to -«An-tarem, Bwizll, where a p lan ta t ion of 6,1100,000 acres of p ioduct iye land is to bo developed as a rubbe r plantation.

ltoy Wouldn't Kill mm Plttsfleld. Mass. — Uecauso F r a n k ­

lin Ricka.nl, aged G, was, unable to hold a gun level with tlio eyes of his brother, Waldo. 15, who per ­suaded the child to shoot him w i t h tho heavy rifle, the bullet went i n ­to his brother ' s shoulder, falling t o kill him.

Mention the HERALD when buy ing

Let Us Gkm'

< f f =

Inspi ra t ion In Blossoms Only God knows the p r a y e r s that

a r e wafted upward wi th the f ragrance of the flowers.—The American Magazine.

W I I E S 1'OU GO AV.'AY^ leave your address direct a t tfte HERALD office. Pave delays and e r ro r s . Do not think fn^ Postoffice forwards t i ls p a ? e r for it d0*3 no t !

Pennbrook 'Golf Course Semi-Public

All the features of a private club

Pay As You . Play at Basking Ridge, BernardsviOe

The distinctive atmosphere of a private club 13 notlceablp at Peimbrook with practically a l l of Its advantages and none of i t s drawbacks , and for the goiter who is a member of an overcrowded club or one who has 110 club affiliations. Pennbrook affords- .a wonderful LOlution ttf his golfing problems.

Clubs — Balls --- Professionals — Coffee Shop

3£>H3=H!K3i-3E:

Boiler Soot and scale accumulate i:l

your boiler dur ing tho winter. Thi.t should be removed before you s t a r t your fire a,gain. Now is the b " i t timo to havo It cleaned and we can take care of it promptly. You wil l notice the difference next win ter . Drop us a pos t card or 'plione.

The -KPTT

enamel

jacketed

' Tiiotelier

"E l i t e"

Boiler

Aj?>.lBOI-'V\_

[^IfeKroolSSGEtn

Page 6: i Lf i. Oi3> tsfjj-i UIV&. r-wi^'-sfiS-l-J malics toward none,i Lf i. " J * f z .,, --K£.^jf3 e.i-Jt.^Oi 3> tsfjj-i UIV &. r-wi^'-sfiS-l-J /** ^i .-r:; i. ad SUMMIT RECORD — -

,ir

T. T" r c * f Ssfafcs: I/in fi-tc-Ssde Model cf a MOESG tO'JSC I

f l ' . l l

i l iO l .

of i ke have been of County

-:02 ' C i i H T R A L B L D G . ,t j Cwiiiolt OS Saa iml i , H.

Vousal t u lSr:ilt'»r

^Insurance -• Loans

--/H ilcfer ©f

1

Aii Ec«wiakal Dutch Colonial l : j it, C. Hun te r A : 3 r o . , Awhi led \ >Vw Y«r'.. CH)

What, is behoved to bo the smallest made-lo-scale model of a hoino has been completed in the model-maklug depar tment of The Homeland Company of New York.

'l'lxo model shown cm R-ioom Dutch Colonial Home, Willi g reen shingled roof, blue shut te red wlndowu and whllo boarded exter ior ; the house belni,- an inch ami a quarter in width, a bit more than two Inches in depth, anil approximately au . inch and a qua r t e r from foundation to roof peak.

The inndtil, done in natural colors, Includes the homcsltc on which the house is to be built, with garage, t r ees and gardens , al l within the dlmr-nrilons of th ree and a half hi"hos hy pis, ,The accompanying il lu­s t ra t ion shows the relative- stec of the model.

Regis ter Bauer at the Courthouse; 1 intersect ion of Valley View road

Mi

Dwellings

M. A. BOYLE. T,[n 111:1 <*onri,' V»'e5r~5nniiuit

'l'hmw 'MS'S

iki Our F'Sllciato

>-»<=!! vsiii Hliiiaiaara Incorporated

' k: zMing Construction

Tel. 1722 Summit

•12 Highland Ave.

Great Investors Mortgage Com­pany to Jcuiile Jackson , property hi Ashwood avenue, Ofi.22 t re t from Russel l place, Summit .

Builders Construction Company to Samuel D. New, proper ty in Kent Place boulevard. 75.34 feet from lands o£ ono Lucders , Summit.

Mr. and Mm- F r a n k Caitor to Mr. and Mrs, Freder ick Dannen-innn, propei iy a t 12 Reiner avenue, Springlield.

Frui ik E. Meel.tr to Mr. and Mrs. William Dick, p rope r ty lii Rattle Hill avenue, 4C7 feet from Mot l i s avenue, Springfield.

Mr. and Mis. Elmer L. Jones to Mr. and Mrs, Charles F rank l lu Cox, lot 174 and souther ly 15 feet of lot 175, ou m a p of proper ty of Turner Land & Improvemen t , . ^ . , Summit,

Mr, and Airs. fJowta*fi, M. Bullard to Ev'a II. Mnson, lot 18 on map pf I lobar t Development Co., Summit,

U \ a B. Hipson,.; ingle, to Harr ie t B, Billiard, lot 18 on Map of i l o ­bart. Development Co., Summit.

Mr. and Mrs. Olaf Theodore An-demon to Rose F. Dllly, lots 22 and 23 In bloek C. m a p of Very De­sirable Building Lots, Summit.

William A. Lauder to " Mr. and Mr:,, Frederick R. Ahlgr in , nroper-1

ty in. Shadysiile avenue , 40 feet from estate of Rlarvy T. Martin, Summit .

Mr. and Mrs Char les D. Woolsey to Mr. uud Mrs, J a m e s B. tiownu,i, p roper ty In Division nvcnuo, 22G feet from corner formed by the.

ind Division avenue, Summit. Samuel If. Tool, sheriff, to The

Four teen th Ward Building and Lon.11 Association, of the City of Ncwaik , proper ty In West Eighth street , 50 feo t ' In a nor theas ter ly course from Monroe avenue, being corner of lot No. 40 on Map of Grey Court T rac t , Springfield.

Mary Howe, and lmabaiid to Mr, and Mrs. Eusene Blondiu, proper­ty in New Providence a t corner of lands formerly of Simeon More-houso, New Providence.

Judge For Yourself (JiMit-i nf, of tills

rlriit by .luilfce, AVhlttlfst "Wti'kly," I'd by M'ocial jierml".

L'Djuum copy-'Tho "W-orld'u •mil rcpntit-loti.

- jFOa^AlHOMETOSnfS^ROTECTIOKi i.CfZia^ s, . Wonsultf

Heavy Th inker ; In facing the i s ­sues of th is cmipaiRn, t h e Tolers find theratielves between Scylla and Charhydis.'

"Who a r e those—the Viee-Prest-dcntial uoinlneesV"

0-—— L a u u d r y m a n : Hello — hel lo!

Whaddayawanl? Cus tomer : Unless you ' re saving

it for a souvetiiv, I'd love to have the tail of my shir t .

o •

--vW"

Sir Hsmc Hov.aid. B r i t b h Am-bas'^ador;

'T hea r ptopli? discus 1 i n s t*J0 , probabilitji'h of ano ther war with |

if they football

ah I as much indifference were talking about match."

„ „D — --"Bil ly" Sunday, evangel i s t : " I would be aiMin*.! my o\vn | ,

brother if he v/ore wet," - —u—

Otto I I . Kahn , ' hanke r : "I love the tin ill and tho eon-

tost and the adventure of life." ! o ^ — • • '

Robert O. MeKcnzie, professor: "The white man ' s advantage u s t s

merely in the fact t ha t he j;ot the s tar t ." !

No '-Iti'iK-atci-:," in t ' reer ; 1

A t h e n s Greece— A device to ;nv-•vent "reiKVtiii'r at the pnlh'i" Ju--. been approved by i ' l emie r Veiu . c los. Hucll \o ter will be renuirtd. to dip Mr, finder! v.hlch \ , i l l Lt.un dny.,.

in a yellow ink them foi ihrco

Mention the HERALD when huyluu

Airi-lr-iio Hits Auto ' South Haven, Mich.—An uirjilane

crashed into an automobile alonR tile highway when it fell, t e i lo iu ly

ilk. *

i *

y mm: S^K«ff

njurint ne ."

the pilot known as "Sor-r

Tho HERALD is unxlous to pr int all tho local news t h a t it can get. Our subscribers , al l over the county, a re Invited t o send In Items whif h in teres t them.

Every Listing a Real Investment

AMES To Please

- J ! ^

This email home is compact, a t - . lar- :c dormers , tractive and economical to build Tbu ex te r io r

~ SECOAJD F I J O O R . PLAW

CONSULT A HEALTOR

First Mortgages" Guarantees of Title

Guai-u* ntecd First Mortgages and

Participation Certificates

State Title

30

Mortgage »naranty Co0

iccchwood Koad Central Bldg. *' Summit, N. J.

Bi siness Jjirectory

Ultr Engl le Veterinarian

: i v n i s Tcmptta* and SUiIdlc Rt.

rXl.. Uft ' S l 'M?t tT, N. J .

ft "

Ctmora Tailor 't--Q Summit Ave. Tel. 2203-W

Frank Breitn Ant fj

a Ciitetout Ave/Piiorre 375-M SUMMIT, N. J . •

Wf • i . Weiler , P o c l t f j , TrKrSsHes, F r r i t

l i ruzy K r a r k s "Give a sentenco with the wold

Disrael i ." "My Gawd! can Dlarabll ho you?"

, 0 ^ „ _

TVIiiil'ii in a Name? I tastua texhlWUni; r a z o r ) : Seo

t ha t ? Tha t ' s mall safety nwor . Sambo: AVhat'd yuh mean, your

safety razor? It looks like t he old-iashiuned kind to me.

"Sure, but Ah has to go th rough a touuh neighborhood, and Ah enr-•ry i t I 'or .mah own safety."

o—— A professor once spent some

time tie;uring out why prbfcssois arn abKiMit-mlntled. He lorgot the answer .

o Dizzy Labels

Wo call her Grape F r u i t -"she's £ore\or giving folks an eyeful! '

ObiiBinp Dad (to d a u g h t e r ) : Now t h a t

your Mommer 'S 'awny for the s u m ­mer , you'l l have to see t h a t I pet «•> in t ime for work every moni-1 iiu?

Daugh te r : AH r lsht ie , Dud, I'll t ry to se t In in t ime.

0 Jipilattgns

Tho judges put an end To Ar thur L. Guest

When he those a camel I n a blindfold tes t

o •

Linos Wri t t en n t i'O in tho Shade Mother Nature is frigid in wtntei When the gale f iom the nor th is a

humtnor, But I 'm here to procla im Thi i illubtrloUB damo •• I s a real Hed-hot Mamma' in Hum­

mer . —A, L. L.

F u n h j Bones W h a t this count !y needs is ;t

good c l sa r - l i ^h te r .

With the ro ins ta tement of Bill Tllden, the. adago changes sl ightly to : "They also M rvc who only sit and wr i te ."

0 Wo know there 's a war in China,

because I ho last sh i r t s we jj°t back from I ho Inuiidry looked a s if they'd been th rough It.

Within a r a the r limited a r e a a r e a n d l ' 1 0 ^ ' 1 ^ provided six ^ood riidnis, a h a t h and a s u n porch, due to t h e el im­ination of all waste space and the Utilization of t h e lull a r e a of t he second floor, permitted by the

presents a s imple design with nea t

white wa l l s , da rk s ta ined loof and brl-riit colored sbut te i s and blinds.

A cel lar extends under t he en­t ire house except the s u n and provides the hea te r laundry aufi such.

The house measures Si feet G Inches across, the front and should have 11 fifty-foot lot.

Cost about ?S,100. Complete working p lans and

specifications of this house may he porch i obtained for a nominal turn t rom spare , 1 tho Bui ld ing Editor. l iefer to

1 House H-A-172.

Mgml E®MSe-'Itmurmnce

CHMIDT OPPOSITE T H E STATION

51 Union Place

137 Main St ree t

T M 0 N E 1021 - 1022

EKANCH OFFICE •3PHONB CHATHAM 2372

Couimlt a Eoa l to s

Summit, N. J.

Chatham, N. J .

SAYINGS , of

Mt i l tnUKT UOOVKlt

Howell Bros. T r t . 1283 . Sumni l t , JT» *.

• Jlccrilwood IloaO, 1 ' . O. BUI-,'.

'Public Stenographer Mimeograph Worfc a Specially

Typewri tcrg F o r .Rent Trices Reasonable

L, E t h e l Stryfcer 25 Maple St. Phone 1250

TYPEWRITERS, SOLD — IVSi IT I S,i.

"Wat-h Our — WW KJSSX)

' Alaltigraphing ; • (S.im" ar; Tyiif^-HtinB.J

STaillns IJ&ts o!T Summit and Kearby Towns.

Commnoity Press SiS Sptli-Ktlfia ATC. riione 1S00,

:ir " l e s s or in teres t tc

Schertzer's • S - 18 - 35c Dept. Store

Smal l J-iMol F i res ' Merrick, L. I .—Patro lman Wil l ­

iam DoiiRherty a r res ted an intoxi­cated motor i s t who 'Wore a work­ing modcj of a pistol a s a wa tch -charm. Wnile examining it, a car ­tridge, smal ler thati a pin head, exploded and idiot ' the officer in the l inger .

, • Another Long i l o p •Perth, Austral ia—Captain Chas.

KJnghford Smith and Charles P . Ului, who recent ly flew from Cali­fornia t o Austral ia , successfully piloted t h e Sovlhern Cross from Melbourne to Per th , 1,950 miles, in 23 hours and 21 minutes .

You can ' t bo a <iuitter. o

Le.'uleisliip ir, a quality of the in­dividual.

o — America m u s t remain American1

. . . j ou lh i i l l , i . iger, unfet tered. — - o

The f i rs t duty Is work. This Its' not a ehcmles s outlook. ' I t p r e sup ­poses conqenial effort.

o-lznak Walton thd not spend h i s

majoi life a n s w e m u ; a hell. ——o-

I t is the individual alone who can iuncl ioi i in the world of in­tellect and in the field of leader ­ship.

— o ~ — •' T) is civilization is pot going to

:\pt»nd upon what we do w h e n we work so m u c h a s what wi.' do in our llnte off. j

There were lots of people, who commuted c r imes dining the year J who would not have (lone so if they had been fishinK. •

— o At ono t ime the whole of o u r na­

tional activit ies wcrc'binipU' enough to be conducted by A tnVm ol gen­eral education. Toi^iy our leaders must be expi rfs.

— —o The 1 aw material of t r u t h \&

faotT, Sta t is t ics a ie not mental c1:-ereif.es; they j i e tho- first s t ep to right decisions, to enl ightened ac ­tion, to p ioi j iess itself.

— o Youth today is pul l ing a t the

traces as n e \ e r before, it ir, t rue , but it is also willing to pul l a. lot'd. I ts eage rness contains a more Citment des i le than c v . r to he of fiei vice.

Youlli 5s more sure of itself— surer p e r h a p s thpn at any tune In the wor ld ' s history—but it is a surenesr. t ha t carries .with it a de-t enn ina t lon to juMify itself.

_ — o Youth m u s t ever be t he bea re r of

progress, and y u u l h ' s h o u l d never

out of fealty to t radi t ion fall Into tho mood t h a t change is undesi r ­able. Youth should look upon cliango wi th cold detachment . Much change is proposed in tho name of pi ogress which is more 'emotion.

Views and Reviews

3Ieifa ClotlH-s Itim It lot Of 'Color , E x p e r t Complains

Men's c lothes are running r iot in color and i t is all wrong, declares Williams Archer, men's fashion oxparl, wr i t ing in the Woman 's Hoin-j Companion. He recommends that if mi n must have color, they should confine the b i i l l l an i hueo to house garments .

"IE you mus t throw a ra inbow around your shoulder," lie says, "confine yourself to doing It In the piivriey of the home. Break ou t as luridly a s you please in pa jamas and d re s s ing gowns or the br i l l iant new 'shorLs.' Ju s t th ink of the symphonic possibilities inherent in arising in orange pajamas pa t te rn­ed in mauve and Eicon, donning a eaiidv-slriped bath iobt \ ba th ing in one of these new mauve or sea-gieen tubs , and, if the cook hasn ' t reins1, going down to ki tchen to make the matutinal coffee in a Clnneso rert percolator, while st ir­ring the ce rea l which cooks in an azure double boiler, with a yellow handled "-pnon, j o u r ft et in red Moioeco sl ippers, Meanwhile t read­ing the bright gaiety of the ki tchen linoleum. The man whoso color sense cannot llnil adequate expres­sion in an or,;y like th is hud bet ter join the gypsies o r s t a r t t ra in ing fyr the Uussian ballet."

ATcher a lso bewails the modern li'lidi'iicles ill socks, of which he \ay.v.

"Not so long ago some mis­guided gen ius found a way to pro-dtK'«' s l r ip rd , banded, plaid and brocaded hosiery even in the (.heapest grades . Actually the pat­terned sock, If it is no t too elahor ate in design, has its place for in­formal spor t s wear, but i t should nol make the ankle the mos t con­spicuous poTtion of (he humau anatomy."

y$lLM d Stifles i

1

"lVluit Tliey May Whetlier Itlfrht « r Wrong"

ThoinaH A. Edison, i i iventor: "America will be i r res is t ible in

economies if it jcmalntt sober ," ——o——

Hoiford H. I.uccock, of Yale Cni-veihlty:

'"J'ke g rea t American t ragedy of today is the tragedy of Mother Hubbard—noth ing theie when we examine tile cupboard of ou r In­ner lives."

Edwin Bour rha id , In ternat ional law specia l is t :

"It would be an unufual occur­rence were any nation to concede that Its w a r was nol purely de­fensive,"

' I la l idc Edib , Turkish Femin i s t : "The r e c e n t tTenly of non-ag-

gresBloii wi th Italy haw casofl our suspicions to some extent but we Turks have so much experience that we do no t believe much In t reat ies ."

——0 - — 1<\ T rubce Davison, Ass i s tan t

Secretary of War fur Air: "The day of the use of the a i r ­

plane for a medium of exploi ta­tion by dare-devils of var ious so r t s has passed and the aooncr foolish a ' rplano s tun t s are ent i re ly ills-contituicd, the better lor aviat ion."

Arnold Bennet t , Br i th l i a u t h o r : "Good modern l i te ra ture is

never made out of correct sent i ­ments ."

Jriio Bay, Ameilcnn l ep rescn la -tive hi the mara thon :

" I lost jus t became.-1 r a n too slow,"

__ O V E R $ ^ , ^ 0 0 , 0 0 0

ty^Z Bfao/^O'STcsEEir N E W A R K , S\l. J J .

'" . ^ L

r~

Send j o u r Items the I IEKAI;D.

of in te res t to

r

1X7

I

H

J!JL <t0

5tr-» SwriugsIcIiS As* Tel 2£fli-TV F u l l l ine o"

B U T GOODS—TOYS

' Insurance

Tclenhonc "T5 Summit , S . J .

Oosaes On ^aif ig

At Special Prices

19

Kiddie Stars -- Toddlers - Wolverine Speedsters

Rolls Racers -- Express Wagons

All durably constructed, rubber tires.

LflJliy Oll^JaX Housewa are ures

S p r i n g t j e Id 'I'honc 1121 Stimmit, II.

E^j ' ^M^Err"5

U0-Ht>H t GO TO ©WO&K AT 8 AND pur r AT \X~

TME LKZN MAM WHO WORKS H- HOURS £*» VPV BEUEVES A

BETTER THAN

The loafer never i s comfortable. The ambi t ions mail v, ho h a s his home uutfitfed Tilth modprn plumbin-r is t h e cit 'zen who is u e \ e r : atisfied with half a lbaf.

"IVIien j o u need a p lumbpr , ^ois nf-fd 11 ~ood one!1*

M. Chrystai ssr SPREfGrniLB AV*T:,

- //J

TaBDam IH-SO-TGID J ZL

iiai Comfort in the kitchen. Beauty in the

kitchen. Less wofk for the housewife. The new Tappan In'So-Top with its Insulated Ventilated Oven is the gieatest range advance­ment since Oven Heat Control. Remarkable cooking and baking efficiency. Rock wool in­sulation keeps the heat IN the oven, OUT of the kitchen. The ventilated oven means suc­cessful baking. Insures preservation of food flavors.

Beautiful, easily-cleaned enamel, inside and outside. Round corners. Oven heat control. Come in and sec it.

N o . 646 D X T T a p p a n Specially Priced at $133

T h i s is a fine, all-ci;a!n"l!cd range v i lh a \,--ll in­

sulated oven . Equipped w i t h four b u r n e r s a n d a

s immcrcr . Q : h " r convenient fea tmes a rc t h e Oven

hea t regula tor , top bu rne r l ighter and utensi l d r a w e r .

Special cash price is .5133. T e r m s pries $141.60 £5

d e w n a n d eighteen m o n t h s to pay .

PUBLIC('@0SEEVICB GOO

Page 7: i Lf i. Oi3> tsfjj-i UIV&. r-wi^'-sfiS-l-J malics toward none,i Lf i. " J * f z .,, --K£.^jf3 e.i-Jt.^Oi 3> tsfjj-i UIV &. r-wi^'-sfiS-l-J /** ^i .-r:; i. ad SUMMIT RECORD — -

liV i t ' l ''Ji'i.' ,"^li!, '*.! It xtiiuirr1, £" t - i » i i i

i l l

?"ER¥BODY READS ied Advertisements %Jbho&

Ten Cento a Line

Cony BOI scco^tei aitoi 0 a. ra. ffiaoslay of. Friflnyt •

Minimum Charge of SO cents, cash in advance, 50% additions! if charged. <

Tha HEKAtD endea?nri' to print inly truthful biasBlfiefl ada, find will appreciate having ita attention called to any ndvertiaB-scat aot conforming to tha highest standards ,ot hoaeaty.

l O S T ]

JJ t jNDAY evening, m a n ' s w r i s t - w a t c h JO fsonl c.f s t r a n d Thea ter , K e w j r d if ri t u r n e d tn 1U0 Prospec t s t ree t , o r JJh-in<- 2630.

, A J l A N ' S gold wr i s t watch. F i n d e r 'i|i«aua call JoSeph Costablie, S u m m i t lilus-K, R e w a r d , '

H E L P W A S T E S

A U T O M O B I L E ' mechanic ' s helper , l.lUht b e 18 year,-) old or more. J a y -cox O a r a g e . 7 Morr is avenue.

4 B B W l t O f M K H T "tVAMTBI*

P L A T t o let—5 rnrtms anil h a t h , B C t d n r s t r ee t . P h o n e 030. »l- tf

A P A R T i l R N T — 4 rooms and b a t h ; Utearti furnished, all Improvements . Central ly located. gDO, Phone lOU'J,

ba-tc

BABY carr iage , good condition. 5>3nuble, 31-A Rust-ell p lace .

icea-

K I T C H E N J.IKKK, Hus^fii pi.n>-

sl ight ly u-ed, H - A

C O W immure, w t l l ro t ted , no ^luiv-iiigss; r ick tup : ,o i l : l a w n sod, ve ry | nice quality—flfcllvered atiyivhereii neusonabie-. Ch< at^mt Da i ry F e r i n , Pnone Terrpen 7782. ' 97-11

11 FOU BA1.B o"!t I t E S T 11

J3-L.I5CTHIC fluoc w a f e r s a n d v a c u u m d e a n e r s tit ?2.QQ j i e r day , delivered aho! called for. C r a n e Elerfrlc Co. . 35S Springfield a v e n q e . Tel , 241, 83-tf

ia MEAL L S T A T K c U Q SALE 1;

IIOUPIBS. bunga lows , tots, acrea-po. I n ­qu i re ti l l lettu Bu i ld ing L'u., u l l le t te .

5B0u down ^eetires l i ne home-Mte-, hu l -i n t f on isaby t e r m s ; beautiful s h a d e t r e e s ; eimVe-Ment to r.tatlon, school a n d business -ee t ion , AddreLs L. T , Owner, KL H E I t A L D . U3-t!'

STDXtEB on Hprlnefleld avenue ; m o n t h free r e n t ; h e a t f u r n i s h e d ; vury r e a ­sonable ren t . Apply 3m. W a i g u a r -riery, 2(5 Beeehwood road , o r y o u r o w n broker. , , 83- t t

G O I j O n c n c i r l wijjhLB i>gsitlon a a u e n -oral houseworhe r . Plione S u m m i t ii.'D-W.

C o L I P L E f a e r m a n ) wi sh ynd j lon in pi i v a t r fnmily, .Mummlt nr Short H i l l u ; \yito tinult una Beni-rai h o u s e w o r k ; Imaband rnalct; himself uspful a r o u n d the houSH u t t e r work ing houra. B o x 16t, I I B T t A L U

W1N1JOW waah l i i t ; housa H t a h l n g , floor shellaeliiff, c a r t of fi ir tuiee, EdKar F , Obl inuton, SS Summi t a v e ­nue . P h o n o S u m m i t 1921-W.

F B K N n l l l ady wishes wmall ch i ld ren to c a r e for d u r i n g Um d a y or oyeninB. Will teadl i t h e m Fronbh. 3 C o t t a g e l,irn>, Sun iml l , N. J .

|33iALL watjlii'M to do ftt home, oc conk­ing d inne r , uveniims. Apply L a a n -d ros i , % H E R A L L l .

UOi iO laundii>3( w a n t s wnahlriK- tu dD a t home. Plmnu HSS-W, ' Call 12B S r o a t l s t r ee t . ' i)9-lul

3TBNOQR'APW33B wlahefl fcftttdy )iUi>t-tlon, P h o n e 14D1-B. . U^tf

P A I N T E R a h d papf-rhfinger—Itislfle worlt only . E . T. NelHOil, BQ Aall-wood j ive . t*hone 1084-3, 11-tf

A P A H T M B N T — T h r e e o r four m o m s with k i t chene t te a n d pr iva te ba th , a l l Improyemeat i , in p r iva t e horns . Garage '' If aanired, Lqca ted o n

• Hobor t avenue , Avai lab le •September 1st. Phonti BUmnllt 1200-W, Bl-tf

TWO stores , a l l Impts . , heat a n d h o t wati-r rurnlHhod jnsar ftroUnd. C e n -trul ly located , s o 6 d front, r e a s o n a b l e rent . S u m m i t S t d r a g e H a t t e r y Co., corner Spr ingf ie ld and S u m m i t 'avenues. Tal. 4K.i, 4S-tr

GARAQJ5S for r en t . 317, Spr ingf ie ld Avenue, 18B7,

Scl iounwelsnea S u m m i t SC-tf

T W u housi-'i, 1 and S- roonus, prl t^d for nuit'lt aulioii. Spi 'elal b a r g a i n a t 51U.-flUd, Phonf 10G1-M, l OG-tf

U P - T P - P A T J 3 h o m e In rentrU'trd neijfhborliood, 11 looius , J b a t h s , l a rge mjn porch , l i e . t tud ; sle«pljn; por i ' I i ; Btul'aflcs spAt(s Iti attlu. FlraL lloor, qh^^itnut t i j m , leitehch and b u t ­le r ' s pan t ry , whltt i enameled ; bvl i t of hnllov.' t |Ie. L'-car garasfe w i t h hea t , IIBIIL I a n d - \Vatcr, a e p a r a t e iKiUse fu)- sa,riiish tools, e tc . A t t r a c t ­ive yard wed p lan ted wjth Uuwi-rs a n d shrubbery . F u r sa le a t it b a r -iraln iJtitie, P h o i i t Buinmlt 1784.

' ,• ' • - , :).'•-! 01

TliHMlO C-routn houses , a l l Mpi ' ove -, mea t s , C a r r i a g e hme. Apply F r a n k

Carnbarlliijjo, SO U r c h a i d a t r te t . D3-tf

±<2fc

E W G U S l t cot tajr t . Fen iwood Wione Hiimnjlt 220G.

roi^d. us-tr

IB ' AUl'IHHOIHLHta J.<UU'feAI,Ji I t

APAR.'i 'MBNT in DeForea t cour t . S ix rq'oiri'a, a !«itlis, a n d sun par lo r . ' I n ­quire SuEer ln teudunt , ' Ci-tf

DESJBAlJ t ,E flirnWhed rodin a n D e -Fore^t a v e n u e , t i en t le rmm only, Xtef-truileo reuulrLtl, • p h o h e S u m m i t "2i0.

• 77-tf

FIIRNJISH^l) r odms central ly loca ted . iSreakfaat. 14 I r v i n g place.- 7S-tf

A N T O N E w h o Wantii m a n t o c l ean !

house , w a s h windows, or w a x flopr^, •phwiH nss-W. Id l - t f

^ao=nBraism^ssnu,i> »i,, mi i urn ,• Sn— -i^iiii*M« imiii ' Ti r-"~r^y

•xo t t e i '

OWtfCI i 'H O P F K B . ' l ' I * f f i ' I tOtTSEi 11 BOOM -*, M B A T H S , (lAIt/WJE l i t HABEJIMXT, . . F M t l i t ' l A C B S / ON j r o N - T i i ' A i ' F i c s T i t t i s T . t i o w y i u c -IKITT TO BEJ' .QT, JEKNT^ 83,000., l O i A U Y OCTft l l l iU ' I S * . AJJbHtJSSi BOX 1S1, tt J I E E A i B , I0I-B

M O D E R N ' p l j t - r o o r a h o u s e ; e v e r y im­provement ! a t t h e a i l le t td itatSon1 , a t i lo t iy AmoHcan naimhnorhotfd. *S0 to des l raWa p a r t y . Imiui re Gi l le t te Bu l ld lnc C o , Gil let te .

F t V K - I t O O J I house, pll Smprovem'snta Apply JJeeehwood Talldrtna: Co„ - W Duechweoa roatl . '

NMW PROV1DENCK—$i» , h a l f Uuu-1>1B house , five rooms, p a r t i m » r i v e -meh t s , n e u r s ta t ion , etorea, arid bus . Pl ione S u n m l ' 1503-Rr —

F U R N I S H E D o r unfurn ished a p a r t ­ment , 1 « floor, five rooms a n d Bath, numiorch, i j a r s e j;raunoi!. I n q u i r e L. 13. Strylcer, 23 Maple s t ree t , P h o n e S u m m i t 1250 or 10S6, . 101-tf

O i r A T t t A l I — 1 ' t l E H I A B f •.,.' « F X J t E BtJBEB .

TO RENT—0-roorn dwelling, r e v e a l s 'most moderrt appoirttni'ents ttnfl In­s ta l la t ions , t i le b a t h a n d shower , Uarage . J a m e s IS. Shea, Chatham:, Phone Chathar j i 2362 or 2413, Oa-tf

P U R f f l S i l E D rtom to- let'; '3 ' m i n u t e s t o ' s t a t i o n ; , r e a s o n a b l e . C a l l a t M Gle'o*ood p lace , o r "phon* 1231-M,

. S8-tf

8I3f roAm house?,, nctar s tat loni o i l m o d -' erh"l r r ip ioVetn«nts , 'Apply -to local

aaen t s or, E..O.' Bos .Sp l , , i 4B-t£

RUrCK, -132(1 31ast,«-r Six rondater , rour new tlrvs, ^patnt a n d upliol«l«ry in excellent condit ion, mo to r excellent, down pu jmel i l $2C0. PliOii^s | 21!), Auburn ' i iummit C o m p a n y , '

MOON nUi.Il, 1325 Modal Series A. t 'ld-i ciir l j in Vf-ry ^dod eundLtion, mo to r b*is been overhauled, tir* 'i, Iiailit, a ad u p h o l s t e r y in good condi ­t ion. fijU d iwn, P h o n e 21'J, A u b u r n Summit C u m i u n y ,

C H A N P L Q l C psisj,. 4-door fedan, Fi^iier liudy ; OEilyo.DOO m d e s ; ,t yra old ; east f2,7S0 Fiiinlly h-avltig city m u s t s.ieriflcu |3S0, Tel. Short Pliils 1172. l

E S S E X iPBG eoauh, flVe new t i res , Kuar.mteeil Ifi e;nod condition, |,10b, Phonn s a i n m i t ;U48, -

1? WAM'JTISD TU UTJY I I

R E D (complete) , dresBur, S roehers , ruif. irvaht be in good condition, 321

' M o r r i s avenue .

B0 F I ^ A H U I A L S3

• W A N T W J ' i ' 6 imM-i •

;TJSlJlfi33 ivonjan v desire* f i i rn lshed roorn, Quiet , reatdejt t ial seolrbh, n e a r qeptBr town. Pr iv l lppes . Addica-s Adilresa B d i 1BE, '% H E R A L D .

U N F U I t M l l H E m ' five or ElX rooms , imprbv^megt i j i^ two ' - fanl l ly 6 r half h'oilse p r a f e i f e d . j ' Family• of- t h r e e . Oct. 1st. Refe rences . N e a r s c h o o l ; kc'rioa nol^hbdrhood, R t a s o n a i d e B o s 147, Vo H E R A L D , OU-101

A b l l L t f ami ly <3) Ueaires 0-room a p a r t m e n t , exclusive .location. W r i t e

- B o s ' 1 8 4 ; fa - S U M M I T H E R A L D , . . . ' . • . * , „ • , 37-tf

MONEY to loan in s u m s up t o J30Q-confldential , cour teous and qu ieb sorvlea j i feval l . Hil l Ci ty L o a n & Finance. Co., 25 Maple St„ 'phonr 22f>B, BtBtfi LICBOSH 2H7. BS-tf

U a i S C E L l A J i E O I J S , 14

I1TJOS t l t O R O i m i l l i T C L E A N E D Called for And 'Returned Sumo D a y .

Tim Sn in in It Ekp roes Co., I n c . CO-70 BftlliOud A t e . Te l . Summit Olfi

7 , «

Ussex Turnpike , t o g e t h e r w i th the r i g h t of Inirrtsa and e g r e s s t he re to for t h e purpuse of cun-sLruetlns', opcra t lnu &nd main td ln inu t h e s a m e , all In ae ro rdnBra ivtth the p i a n a n d profile p r e p a i t d by the City E n g i n e e r a n d now on file in hia office.

i*. T h a t the r ig l t t -of -way for the a fo resa id con^trucilort bo actmire4 by t h e Cl iv a s pa r t of tfli i IraiireieuivKi,

3, T h a t tile b,Uirv-tJ£ JJJ,S00 be and I t he reby If apyropr l a t t f l for the purpose of e a r r i l n s ou t sajd local Im-orovenicnt ,

4. T h a t the cost of s t l d local lm-p r u \ e m e n t shall be assessed on the l a n d s In tilts vicinity thereof benefited the reby .

0. S i i d Improvement sha l l be tempo­r a r i l y t inaneed by b o r r o w i n g money i n d IbSuinB irom l i m e t o t ime tempo­r a r y nol i . ; , beariBB intereii t at, no t ex-c e e d i n s five per eetitmii (n,lJ p t r a n n u m , aald notes to be execu l td by the, a i a y o r and City t i lerlt . Th<2 u the r m a t t e r s In respect t o s a i d notes t o be de te rmined by the Ql ty T r e a s u r e r ,

U. This ordinance sha l l U k a olfect Immedia te ly In thn t n a n n e r piovided by law. „ ,

I F rede r i ck C, Kenl:-. City Cle^tf of the ' C i ty of Summit , do he reby certify t h a t t h e foregoing o rd inance \va-i in­t roduced for first r e a d i n g a t a r e g u l a r nieetlne; of t h e Common Council lu-ld oil T u e s d a y evening, Aup-uat 21et, ip2S, l ind t h a t sa id o r d i n a n c e will be sub­mi t t ed l o r ifjiislderatlon a n d Uaal i ias-»age a t the next r e g u l a r mett l i iB of t h e "Coinni'm Council to bo held on T u e s d a y iiveninir, September 4th, 1D28, a t the City Hul l a l nltio o'elutlc ( D a y l l s h t Savintf T ime) a t which t ime a n d p l ica a n y p e r s o n s whoso l ands m a y be affected the reby o r who m a y be fntSre^ted, the re in wi l l be Ijlvcii h n oppor tuni ty to ba h e a r d concern lug- s u c h ordinance .

D a t e d Ausu&t 21st. I9HS, F R E D E R I C K C, K E N T Z ,

'(I0-1O1-1US ' City Cloi'k,

S H E R r F F ' S SALIC — I n Chancery , of New Jersey Be tween Abrul iam

I l a lkcn , complainant , a n d Pel le Con-Htructlon C o , Inc., a, coriioratloh of N. J., et alts,, de fendan t s . F l , f a . for sale of mui ttfaded pieinlsei ,

By v i r tue of the above - s t a t ed wr i t of •fieri fttuhts to me d i rec ted I &hall e x ­pose for s a l e by jiuhUe vendue, a t the, Sher i f f ' s dlfice in t h e C o u r t Rousu In t h e e i ty of E l i iuhe th , N , f,r on W E D N E S D A Y , T H E SDTH DAY O F

AUGUST, A, U., 1'J'JS, at- two O'elpnfc la the af ternoon of sa id d a y , (BayllKht Bavlnir T ime) ,

PreiiiiacB In the T o w n s h i p ur Union, In the County uf U n i o n a m i S ta t e of N e w Je r sey , m o r e p a r U e u i a r l y ' d e ­scr ibed im follows I

ReglnuItiB a t a ipo in t In the souther ly Hue of I n d i a n a S t ree t d i s t a n t two hun­dred and flfty-aeven a n d seven hun-dindtli-s Ca"i7,07) feet southwester ly f rom the' Intersection of said side of I n d i a n a S t ree t wi th t h e southwester ly bide of l i a k r r Road ; thence runn ing Houth for ty- three , deg rees fifty-i-Iflht m i n u t e s e a s t one h u n d r e d fct-t <100) ; thence south fo r ty - s ix dec rees two mlnutcB west - fifty feet ISO); thence n o r t h fony-thret" doKrees flfty-eiBht minu te s vv est. one hundre.d feet tldO) to sa id aide of Indiana, Street r thence n o r t h forty-six d e c r e e s two minu tes eas t ttlona tho Bdld s ide of I n d i a n a S t ree t f if ty feet (BO) t o t h e point or place o l Beginning.

Be ing lots n u m b e r s e ight (S3 and n ine (a) on a c e r t a i n m a p ent i t led " M a p of Orchard P a r k , s i tua ted in Union Township, Un ion County, N, J ." m a d e by Ccorge H, Hardener , s u r v e y . or, October 10th, 1923, which m a p is on file In the off lev- of the Regis te r of Union County,

Decree amounting; approx imate ly f2,-300. ' '

SAMUEL I I . TOOL, Sheriff. Z I I C K B R & O O L D B E R G , Sol 'rs,

flS-101 E D J ^ S H Fees $13.74

PARENTS AS E&UCATOIIS " T H E C H I L D ' S F I U B T S C H O O L I S T H E F A H i M * 1 — B r o o t e t

I s k u e d b y t h e N a t i o n a l K i n d e r g a r t e n A s s o c i a t i o n , 8 "Weit 40£b S t i e e t , N e w Y o r k C i t y . T h e s a a r t i c l e s a r e a p p e a r i n g i n o u r c o l u m n a .

J u a i m u t t D S t e T c i i b o n J l u r r a y

" W e boug l i t J e a n a n y e s t e i ' d n y , " s a i d h e r p i o t h e r , '"^.t e v e r y t u r n t o d a y I ' v e f o u n d b e r s t a n d l n c ; i n f r o n t of m e w i t l i t h a t c o a t o n . "

",OE c o u r s e , " s a i d tliti i i p lg l ibo r , t ' p h e w a n t e d ' y o u t o t a l l t a b o u t t h e c o a t — t e l l h o r l o w n i c e abo l o o t a t i i n i t . "

. " O h , I n e v e r . t l i o U E h t of ffiat," h e r m o t h e r re ta i l ed , " I l u s t ' k e p t t o l l i n g bst" to t a k e i t o t t a n d g o a w a y a n d p l a y , T b a t w a s t oo baf l . I r e m e m b e r n o w, a l io a e o m o i l r a t l i o r d l s apDh? i i t ed , " .

T o o o f t e p motJ ie rB a r e s o a b s o r b ­e d i n t h o i r o w n i n t e r e s t s t h a t t h e y b r u s h t h e i r cbii ipi 'ei i 's a f f a i r s a s j j l e a a of n o c o n s e q u e n c e . I , h a y e . { i i i e m o t h e r }n miu i l w h o s i t a d o w s q u i e t l y a h i , o b a | r v e s . h e r e b i l d r e n , even- a r r a n g i n g i o r o t h e r s t o c o m a i n r e g u l a r l y t h a t g h o m a y h a v e a i ^ roup t o s t u d y , . y h e s e c h i l d r e n w l H h a v e a g r e a t dJtvu.n,tQEe' o v p r t h e t w p l a d s i n t h e ' e o i ' n o r c o t t a g e , t o r m u c h of t h a l r i i o m o t r a l n i n e h a i l t o b e u n d o n e ,

D a v i d , t h e e l d e r , w a s aq l f - a f fae -itte; w h i l e Jobu . w a s a l w a y s , w a n t ? i n g t o o c c u p y ."the c e n t e r of t h e s t a g e . T h e i r p a r e n t s ' e m p h a s i s e d t h e s e o l i a r a c t e r l s t i c a b y t a l k i n g a b o u t Uiom b e f o r e t h e - b o y s . M o t h e r .would $ a y , " J o h n , y o n " c a n t e l l t h e cleric w h a t I w a n t b e t t e r t h a n - D a v i d . "

F o r t u n a t e l y J o r D a v i d h e e n t e r ­e d k i n d e r g a r t p i i a l o n e . T h e t e a c h ­e r ' obse , r f ed t h a t h o w a s p a i n f u l l y Bhy '&nd a l w a y s g i v i n g u p t o o t h e r s ; Bo s h « b e g a n c o m m e n d i n E h i e w o r k n t t lm t a b l e s , a s k i n g h i m t o c h o o s e t h e g a m e a n d e x p e c t i n g h i m t o t a l t e h i i | t u r n , ,

O n e m o r n i n g ' h i s j n o t h e r v l a j t e d t h e k i n d e r g a r t e n , T h e e h U d r e h l w e r e a c t i n g o u t " T h o T h r e e R e a r s . " | S h e w a s s u r p r i s e d w h e n D a v i d w a s I a s k e d t o bo t h e g r e a t f n t h e r b e a r a n d m o r e s u r p r i s e d w h e n p h e h e a r d D a v i d ' s " g r e a t g r u f f v o i c e , "

A f t e r t h e s e s s i o n , t h e t e a c h e r e x ­p l a i n e d w h a t . D a v i d n e e d e d t o b r i n g h i m o u t : T h e m o t h e r h a d h e r e y e s o p e n e d t o t h e f a c t t h a t s h e h a d b e e n a c c e n t u a t i n g , t h e f a u l t s of b o t h b o y s a n d t h a t t h e y s h o u l d h a v e b e e n t r e a t e d i n e x a c t -

Wise, i l l Sflierwse

c o a t 1 i y o p p o s i t e w a y s . A t h o m e t h e p a r e n t s s t o p p e d

s p e a k i n g of . D a v i d ' s s h y n e s B , I n ­v i t e d in c o m p a n y e s p e c i a l l y 1'or h i m , e n c o u r a g e d h i m t o , g o a l o n e G a z e t t e t o h i s f r i e n d s ' h o m e s , d r e w h i m , i n t o c o n v e r s a t i o n b y m i k i n g i t e a s y for l i l m t o e x p r e s s h i m s e l f a n d t o o k i t a s a m a t t e r of c o u r s e t h a t he w o u l d s t a n d u p l o r h i s r i g h t s ,In tit© h o m o a h d a m o n g t h e c h i l d r e n of t h e n e i g h b o r h o o d . |

W i t h J o h n t h e i r p r o b l e m w a s t o I d i v e r t h l i n . f r o m h i m s e l f a n d i n ­t e r e s t h i m i n o t h e r c h i l d r e n s o t h a t he w o u l d n o t I n t e r r u p t a n d o v e r r i d e t h e m . I t I s t r u e t b a t J o h n h a d s u p e r i o r a b i l i t y b u t h i s p a r e n t s c e a s e d t o i n e u t i o n It,

T h e y w e r e a d v i s e d t p b u y l i i rh t o o l s a n d e n c o u r a g e Kim to m a k e t h i n g s . T h i s g a v e a v e u t t o b i ^ s u p e r a b u n d a n c e of e n e r g y a n d i n i t i a t i v e a n d l e s s e n e d h i s d e s i r e t o " b u a s " e v e r y t h i n g a n d e v e r y b o d y

i l i w t b s i * T i l i n g t o E x p l a i u W h e n s c i e n t i s t s a r e t h r o u g h d i s ­

c u s s i n g w h y m a n a d o p t e d c lo th lnp - , m a y b e t h e y c a n e x p l a i n w h y h e t o o k u p t a t t o o i n g . — B o s t o n H e r a l d .

"ft'e K n o w W h e n a w o m a n o c c a s i o n a l l y

d o e s t a k e a b a r k • s c a t , s h e d r i v e s t h e a u t o m o b i l e f r o m i t . — A r k a n s a s

H n y o I t Al l

M o d e r n W o m e n s o i d o m r e s o r t t o t e a r s , b u t t h e r e i s n ' t m u c h le f t t o c r y f o r . — D u b u t i u e T r i b u n e .

' . W a r n i n g 3 I c n ! D o n ' t g e t f l i r t i n g , y o u m a r r i e d

m e n . T h e g a m e ' s n o t w o r t h t h e s c a n d a l , — T o r o n t o N e w s .

— — o — - — W o m e n t r a i n e r s

I n M e x i c a n c a m p a i g n s t h e w o m ­en a l w a y s a c c o m p a n y t h e i r h u s ­b a n d l b t h e a r m y , so t h e s o l d i e r s a r e a l w a y s k e p t In f i g h t i n g t r i m A r i z o n a R e c o r d ,

<3

vlev. 'B. ,—Easton E x p r e s s ,

K e e p H i s E y e s Oi i en - I t ' i s s a i d t b a t f e m a l e c r a b l i a s o n e m i l l i o n y o u n g a t a b i r t h . N o w o n d e r t h e f a t h e r c r a b ' s e y e s s t i c k o u t s o f a y . — P u n c h .

i—^-o . . T h e l e a s e r B e n e f i t

T h e d i s h e a r t e n i n g t h i n g , a b o u t t h e a v e r a g e d i e t i s t h a t i t d o e s s o m u c h f o r thfe w i l l p o w e r a n d s o I j t t l e ' fo r " l a i e I ^ e w s .

t e w a i s t l i n e , — b e t r o i t

'- ms; c w I d e a

T h e o l d - M - . h i o n c d m a n w h o u s e d t o b r a i ; a b o u t h i s d e x t e r i t y in b u n d l i n g a b a l k y h o r s e n o w h a s a t r j i m h o n w h o k n o w s j u s t w h r . t t o d t i w i t h a s t a l l e d c a r . — P h i l a ­d e l p h i a I n q u i r e r .

C r y i n g a n d Mnklbg U p T h o s e - B r i t i s h p h y s i c i a n s w h o

u . _ _w s av t h a t c r y i n g i s g o o d fo r t h e A m o t h e r h a s m u c h t o g a i n In j c o m p l e x i o n of c o u r s e n e v e r h a d t o

v i s i t i n g t h e k i n d e r g a r t e n . S h e c a n p u t o n e o n a f t e r a h a r d c r y , — o b s e r v e h e r c h i l d a s h e d o e s h i s . L o u i s v i l l e T i m e s , p a r t a n d c o m p a r e h i m w i t h t h e _ ^ o — — ^ o t h e r s . T h e n , t o o , s h e c a n c o n f e r | H e a t h e n L e a r i w w i t h t h e t e a c h e r w h o Is a n i n i p a r - H e a t h e n s a r e a l o w t o a d o p t ( h o t i a l a n d t r a i n e d ftbsorver, e v e r i w h i t e m a n ' s r e l i g i o n , b u t t h e y s e e r e a d y w i t h s u g g e s t i o n s a s t o t h e j t h e n e e d of i t a f t e r t h e y a d o p t h i s b e s t m e t h o d of d e a l i n g w i t h e a c h | " c h i l d .

For Any

Radio

Repairs

S f n i M f t f i i L & f i ^ U I J H I T M »

MM I T , N . J . 1 - — H RADIO SALES # SERVBCE • I I II I, I H • « • I I M i l ! • ! Illl i '

F o r m e r l y s u m m i t p i e r a g e B a t t e r y Oo.

R A D I O service t m d repai rs . Tubes , bat ter ies , ftrtd rebui l t " t r a d e - i n s " for *ale . E F R a d i o . A3 Summi t a v e n u e , 'phona Summi t S32S. 04-tf

S l l A l t U IV'ASTEJJ

YOVJN*'!- couple wish board a n d room, PWrt'eataht,- A d d r e s s Box 153, %

i i U A H f t £ H & IVAIHTiiJ)

F U R N I S H j a U room W o o d l a n d avenue .

for r eh t . Phone 344-W,

10

S I N G L E house , 0 rooms a n a ba th . R e n t $18, I n q u i r e 244 MorriH a y e n u e .

Jfrl-tf

C O M F O R T A B L E room a t 300 S p r l m j -tield avenue . Mlddlo bell.

F U R N I S H E D room -to let. 2bU-R, 4't D e F o r e s t avenue .

P h o n e

T W O doub le bedrooms, sultal i le - for ti-nehor-i, n e a r B r n y t o n onel Hlfrh Bcliooi. 00 Moun ta in avenue.

O N H or 2 .ROOMS, fine loca t ion , r a t e If des i red . Phone 172-J.

ca-

B l ' N N l ' furnlslicii room, n e a r ba th , all p jnven lences . R e n t r ea sonab le . Lont 'd tf desired, 321 Morr is a v e n u e .

F U R N I S H E D room ^ F o r e s t avenue .

for rent . 34 De-

H A L F -rlrjubln hmifeo, G rouina, all Im-pfovemen t t . G a r a c e . Apply H - A itus-«ell p lace .

A P A R T M E N T , 41 Boulevard, Q rooins a n d b a t h . H e a t a n d hot w a t e r fur­nished. S100 per mon th . Phone 1214-J.

S l X - r o o m h o u i e wi th ba th and s u b . llorch, a l l modern improvements , one-c.tr BaraBC R e a d y for occupancy S e p t e m b e r l i t . Apply t o W . L. Siiyre, 13 Greenfield avenue . 33-tf

F O U R - l o o m a p a r t m e n t , all i rnprove-ipentit. P h o n e Summi t OOCC. C. I. %Vulff, 392 Sprlng-flcid avenue, S3-101

r m i F O R T A B L E room for g e n t l e m a n or l adv . T h r e e minu te s to s ta t ion , ftreakfast If des i red . B o s H I , r/. - H E R A L D , »S-tf

F U R N I S H E D room, comfortable , cool tuid qu ie t . 9 Woodland avenue . f h u n e 1S31-W. 9'J-tf

H t i u S E , 0 rooms, • i « rooms , |125.

1'he.iie 1064-lt,

$70 ; 7 rdonaa, | 3 i ) ; B a c h h a s g a r a g e .

»7-tf S K W five-room bungalow, w i t h 14

acres!, in (Jll lette. R e a s o n a b l e P h o n e evenings , Summi t SSS-J*. »7-tf

E C A U T I F I T J - i t room a p a r t m e n t , a l l Improvo taen t s , inctudltiB hea t . Also tttirch. P l ione t & m m i t 303-R, ftG-tf

TUKKEY H I L L COTTAGK. J3 Reeeh-wood road , Del ightful rooms a n d ex ­cellent tab le . Phono 3006 or 23S3.

101-tf

P R I V A T E farnlly offers room a h d board to p a r l y will ing to p a y for auinirlor.atoomiiiftdatlon, In beau t i fu l Heme, ejiolusive location, i B o x 149, % H E R A L D , • 30-iU!

CA-STLE-ELM:, 34 Him s t ree t—rooms with botird. w i t h o r without ' P r i va t e batli. Tab le aues t s . , , B7-1U1

THp E U C L I D , -18 Euclid a v e n u e — a t ­t rac t ive R.ceommodatlon.1, honlo com­fort, cu is ine uneker i led . W i n t e r r e s ­e rva t ions n o w being made. P h o n e Summit 140 o r 3032, 37-tf

THIS B R A Y L I S , 10 Kucllti a v e n u e — Sbt*!e.. a n d double rooms wltl i ho t a n d ' c o h l run.nlns water , H X L c l i e n t table, • Spac ious porch, Pl ione ,1063.

Sl-tf

LA ROB a t t r a c t i v e rooms w i t h o r wi thout b a t h . T h e Hobuft , ' phdne G8,

Bl-tf •m l« FOB- SSA.LE 10

ONE tftble lump, complete, (4 i , sma l l oak t ab le , ? 3 ; a rey r tod b:iby ca r ­r iage, | 5 P h o n e 10bJ.

CORD wood, v.eli s e a s n n i d for f i re­place. 117, Kindling;, fi bushel b a s ­kets, J i , Call S u m m i t 1S83-R. 101-103

L'Off m a n u r e , well rotted, r i ch top soil, c inders for dr iveways . Call Summit ISS9-R, 101-103

CHtCICBRINO u p r i g h t pinno. P r i ce reasonable . P h o n e Bummlt 1G4-J,

MEtHUM-sige Bi tehmgB boiler, j i r ae -tldnlly now, p r i ce %Tj, P h o n e S u m ­mit 2034-JV, '

( t T l i K . E llnta, four rooms, it O r c h a r d forest , all- improvements , r e a d y Sen-!«zMl-«ir 1st. Apply F r a n k C a m b e r -Hugo, 2D O r c h a r d s t r e e t - 35-tf

F t V E - r o o m tous", all Improvements , i C a r r i a s o l i n e . Apply P r a n k C t rn -b e r l i n e o , 28 Orehip-d s treet , 35-tf

•OME l a n i i roomi wel l furnished, wi th p r i v a t e b a t h , in p r i v a t e home . Lo­c a t e d in - H u b a r r avenue . G a r a g e if des i r ed . P S o n e Surtun.lt LIOG-W, 91 -tf

I t f cASONABLE—newly decora ted 3 and s» r o o m as>arlments, cen t ra l ly Ideated, fltrsiiaiiuJ^ o r unfurnished. Also a l-.ougts, i n q B t r c of airs.- Mulhsis, i CJIef.wood place . P h o n e 31Bfl. 3l-tf

A b A R T J I E N T S — 4 , 5, 0 and 7 roam*. $50 tu B140, Al l h e a t e d and m o d e r n , i -hone 1084-M, S7-tf

\

C f e ^ J T n A L niiar tmer. t—6 ro j fns and t -a t l i ; w e a r a hea t , j a n i t o r service, A p p t v I,ouvlB &. Co_, Ine. , '3G3 Spf taE-f ie ld a v e n u e . P h o n o 1S3S, . B3»tf

••hMPX.B^'Et.Y furnished a p a r t m e s t , 4 r o o m s a n d k i t chene t t e , ftlgh-cfasa r e a i d e m l a l Motion, , f r i e * p 3 i , P h o o e Euramlt. l tfSO-W. BT-H

O N E JiO-H double housa , 6 M o m s And tetth, ail i m p r o v e m e n t s . 1-car gara-C*. KB Spr tegf le ld ftvoiUe, P h o n e t*T*

L A R O B a u c t i o n s a l e of 4(j head p u r e ­bred mid g r a d e Holatnln a n d G u e r n ­sey c a t t l e , . f a r m equipment, g r a i n , hay, 3 htsad 'horses, 7B fowls a n d enlckena, on Corey Lane F a i m ' s i t u ­ated one-ha l f mile off &IorrI".tc-wn-Meitdham road^ -about 3 miles from Mendhahi , N, J „ un Thur sday , A u a -ust 30th, a t 10 o'clock a. m. (dHy-ll^ht s a v i n g l i t ne ) , This Is a. c lean herd a n d one of the best . L a r g e p r o ­ducers of milk a n a but te r fa t . T e r m s etish, S a l e posi t ive . Lunch counte r , W r i t e for 'cataiORUe to ei ther S, I t , Neidiftt, owner , o r *1. II, Day, a u c ­tioneer, Meni lham, S . J,

T B N - P I B C E a in ins - room s e t , 3-piece livfnfc-room set, o thvr smal l ptecea. 410 Springf ie ld avenue .

SQLID m a h o g a n y round dlnlnff bible , 4 r t . 0 i n . ; mitfepje co lo r ; largt ; ex ­t ra top inc luded, prlee |G0. I n q u i r e Summit E x p r e s s Co, 101-tf

L IVING and- l i b r a ry tables , bed joom suite, t w o c h a i r s , aunporeh fu rn t -

~ture, ^.ft.-Kee refrlg-er.uon*, 4jxreU^nt eondltloil. R u b y y a r d (whi tes , fin-cart , h i ^h c h a i r , doll carr iage , S^dtlle ear, t r teyctc . P h o n e S u m m i t aa - i i , after 6 p . m. -

F R E N C H w a l n u i upriBhL p i ano . fln» eonmtlon.; l a r g e p a i r impor ted o x h o r n s ; p a i r b r a^s a n d i r o n s : s eve ra l pieces handpalntf -d eMna, a n d ot l ter t h l s s s . Phone-138-W- ,

O W N E K ' S B U S I N E S S AV K A H W A J

O f f e r s h i s h o m e i n a F h i l a f l e l p i i i a s u b u r b , i n QXchurige f o r a h o m o ^n t h i s s e c t i o n . HiB i s a n d id s t o n e W u s e , 4 1 r o o m s a n d 2 b a t h s a i d o t h e r e o n v o n l e h c e s ; 2 - c a r g a r a g e ; l o t 117x190 ; a m p l e s h a d e a n d f r u i t ; 9 m i l e s P h i l a d e i p l i i a Ci ty H a l l . D e t a i l s o n a p p l i c a t i o n .

t \ 1?. P E T E R S & BON -, 000 C h e s t n u t S t , P h i l o d e l p l i l a !\ fldv, J jomh, 6 2 - 6 7

LEGAL ADVERTISING E S T A T E O F CJ,,AK13Ndn B. T17BBS,

Deceaned. P u r s u a n t to the order of Ceorire H, J o h n s t o n , ^surrogate of tho County of Union , m a d e on tlto e i eh -t een lh dav of A u u u s t , A. D., 1D2S, upon the aiiullentlon of t h e undeialcnetl , a s I-lxeeutor of the e s t a t e of sa id de­ceased, notice is he r eby iriyen to- t h e credi tors cif salrl deceased to'.exhibit to t h e subscr iber u n d e r o a t h or a f f i r m a ­tion their ehifm-^ a n d d e m a n d s a g a i n s t the es ta te ol* sa id d- ceii ied w p h i n six moptbs from t h e du t e of said order , o r they will lie f o r e v e r ba r r ed from prohe,-i-utlnp or r ecove r ing the same agAlnst the subscribe*-, '

T H E HUMMl'l ' T R U S T COWPAHT, , - _ h*x»eutor

CORRA I*f. W I L L I A M S , Proctdr , SununU, N. J .

3D-107' o a w 5w - Fees 5? 8"

S H E R I F F ' S S A L E — I n Chancery of N e w Jersey . B e t w e e n N.a,than S t a -

vi tsky, complainant , a n d Aurel lo Con-fortl , e t a ls , de fendan t s . F l . fa, for sale of mor tgaged premises ,

Ry vi r tue- of the fttjoVe-stated w r i t of fieri f ac ias to rn£ d i rec ted I shal l ex­pose for sa le by publ ic vendue, a t t h e Sheriff ' s office In t h e Cour t H o u s e in the ci ty of El izabeth , N . J „ on W E D N E S D A Y , T I J E 23TH DAY O F

AUGUST, A, D „ 1328, a t two o'clock In t h e af ternoon of sa id d a y . (Dayll t tht Saving- T ime) .

All fhJ,t th iu t or pa rce l of land and premises , s i tuate , l y i n g and belnj; In the Ci ty of Summit , County of Unlop a n d S t a t e of N e w J e r s e y .

D I S C I N N l N a a t a point ' In the' Sou the r ly lino of R a d e a u A y e n u o 4B9.S2 feet wester ly from the wes ter ly s ide of Summit A v e n u e ; thence South 0 degrees 19 mlnh tes Wes t , 105.41 f e e t ; thence Nor th 83 deg rees 41 m i n u t e s West , 3S.3S feet ; f-henee Nor th 5 fle-e/rees 80 minutes E a « 122,83 feet to the line of Badeau A v e n u e " thence alonn t h e line -of the s a m e Sou th G1 degrees 4 m l a u t t s E&i?t 51.118 feels thence still a l o n g the line of t h e s a m e N o r t h 82 degrees 25 minu te* Bas t , 40,52 reet to the point and place of B E G I N N I N G ,

BclhC p a r t of t h e s a m e p'rumlses conveyed to Aurel lo Cotiforti by deed recorded in the office of -the R e g i s t e r of Dnion County Tn Book 101S, p a g e 111, and Including a l so premises con-v e y i d to? the s.iid Aure l lo Confortl by deed recorded In B o o k 1051 of Deeds for Un inh Counts-, p a g e 133,

Decree amount ing approx imate ly | 5 , -1S0.

SAJfUlqL I I TOOL, Sheriff. ITARRY D V O R K i ™ . Bol'r. .

33-1DL BDJS.SH Fees flB.OO

U N I O k - C O U N T Y C I R C ! HT U O ' L J R T ,

J o h n Rutnllnll, paul l i in Hilmball , L e n a E l las >nnd B m r y E l las , plaint i t ra , vs . H a r r i ' Jdaeph MwUii-y defendant .

Action t i t "LaW. NOTIfJB OF. A P P L I C A T I O N F O R OR-

W S a DIRffiCTTNOi ENTRY O F - j u n n i r a w T .

To Ha r ry .Joseph,S,lof>hey : T a k f N o t l c f . t h a t p u r s u a n t In a n or­

de r of the Duion t l oun ty Circuit C o u r t notice in he'rofay fitveh tu you t h a t on the eisriith d a y of Seirteriiber, 152S, a t t h e hdur-ol t en "o'clock in the for-en.ion ut Braid aay r '-Wc sha l l lhftlte uppllcAUon to Hftibrabtr. Rqter F , Daly r Un ion foun t s . -C i rcu i t C o h r t .tudqf, a t h is of­fice, One Klin- How, N o w RrunsiWick, N e w .Tersey, for -rtn' order-dlrej-t!n|; t he e n t r y in" Juflgintnt *>n>tlie v i rd le t s r e n ­de red In the a b o v e fcntltled' cause in favor et tlie abevu nam'ed plaintiffs,

- - ' KINfi- « VOGT. •' ' .AHortieJH of-Plai j i t l ff t

' P B H D l l f f J O H D I J S A H C I S

A N ORDfNANCIB ,to unde r t ake tin a local i r n a i o v e m e s t t h e Construct foil of a s a n i t a r y Hewer from t h e in t e r ­section of Glenda le Road w i t h t h e proper ty l ine of t h e Prdspoet, Hi l l Company l a a g e n e r a ! eas t e r ly d i r ec ­tion th rough l a n d s of Freder i ck , Mc-Cann t o e x i s t i n g s a r g t a r y sou-ef lo­cated in t h e a i o t r l s & E s s e ^ T u r n ­pike, and to pro-vida for the a s ses s ­m e n t oC the 'coat thereof Span l a n d s in the v ic in i ty thereof benef i ted thereby a.nd t e m p o r a r i l y to f inance the same. , ' B e It O r d a i n e d b y the Common

Council of t h e C i t y of Summi t , p u r s u ­a n t to the provis ions of nn a r t en t i t led " A n Act CoTicerWoH JTUnletpallticB," approved March X7Lft, 1917, e n d t h e severa l s u p p l e m e n t s there to a n d a incndmes t s thsr^of, - -, -

' 1 . Tha t a n eifrtit CS) inch v i t r i f ied pipe s a n i t a r y , ^ewer w i th t i r t u r f t n -ances , be enns'trQcted from t a e i n t e r ­sect ion f>i: t l lcnelale R o a d w i t h the proper ty l ine "of .the, P rospec t HJU C o m ­p a n y In a j fenera! eas te r ly d i rec t ion t h r o u s h l a n d s of F r e d e r i c k MeCanri t o

H H K H I F F ' S SA'LIC—in Chancery of N e w Jersey, B e t w e e n iNicholas D e l

Deo, e t a l s , compla inan t s , and Aure l lo C in fu r t i , et a ls , defendants , P i . fa for sa le of morttrfLjiod premises. • By v i r tue of t h e above-staffed wr i t of fieri fat ins to me d i rec ted I shall ex­pose for .sale by public, VendmS at thel Sheriff ' s office in t h e Cour t House In! the ci ty of El izabeth , N. J., on ' W E D N E S D A Y , T H E 20TH DAY O F

AUGUST, A.-D-, 1328, i a t two, ireloek I n t h a a f te rnoon 'o f said! dity, (Dayl lah t s a v i n g Time) . • ,

All t h a t t r a c t o r pa rce l of land and premised, s i tuate, lying- a n d being in the Ci ty of S u m m i t , ; C o u n t y o f ' U n i o n a n d Sta te , of New J e r s e y . i

BEOINNIN'O ah n. point on the, Sou the r ly line of D i d e a u Avenue d i s ­t a n t EGG.W Xe'e-t W e 3 t e r l y fiom the AVestorly fildeiof S u m m i t Avenue m e a s ­u r e d aloiljr, t he v a r i o u s efiurses of B a d e a u AvWnjt-; thcWci South 3 de-: g rees Bit minu tes Wes t , 122.83 f e e t ; t hence N o r t h fU deferens 41 minutes; W i s t , 33.38 fe'el: thei iee Nor t i i B d e ­grees 2.J minutes E a s t , "11737 feet to t h e Souther ly Sine of B a o e a u A v e n u e ; . thence s lung" , the lino c*t tliei samel Houth 40 degrees , B2~ mlnutt-a, E a s t , 3D B!i f ee t ; thence sttHl a long Hie lllne of th^ . sa .n ie -South .00 degrees. 3» m i n u t e s EaSt.-D.l.fiB f c t t ; - t h«neeBt* l l a long t h e l ine of the same Sou th Oi dasl 'ecs 4 m i n u t e s Bast , 10 Sr. f«pt to t h e po in t a n d p lace of B E Q I N N I N t L ' 1 Bel n>r t iart o l the jflfenijsr«« pohveyed tp Aut-ello Confotti b y d e e d 1043, pag^e 111. . ,

Decree amounting; anpro -amate ly S5,« 12D.

S\sTl ,T3I J H . TOOL, Sheriff. H A R R Y DVOIilCKN, Bol'r.

05-101 E D J . t S I I F e e s |17.22

t h i r t y - f o u r minu te s E a s t four hundred for ty-four feet a n d J i f fy- three one-h u n d r e d t h s of a f o o t ; t h r n e e N o r t h f if ty-ana degree^ five m i n u t e s B a s t one hundred s ix feet a n d fifty-six nne-i m n d r e d t h s ot a f o o t : thenee N o r t h th i r ty - f ive degrees t h i r t e en minu tes "West th ren hundred elehty-foiir feet a n d twenty- two o n e - h u n d r e d t h s of ti foot to t h e eas te r ly l ine of Lot No. 115 a s shown on t h e a fo resa id m a p to a point d i s t an t s o u t h e r l y seven feet a n d th i r ty- four o n o - h u n d r t d t h s of a i -foot from the s o u t h e r l y l ine of L o t No, l i t a s shown un the aforesaid m a p • thenco wobleriy a n d paral le l to t h e said Southerly lino nf Lo t No. 114, one hund red feet to t h e eas te r ly line of Q r u b e r AvonUe: t henee a long tho said e a s t e r l y line of G r u b e r Avenue South fbr ty-n lne degrues fo r ty -one mlpu tes West j m e hundred f i f ty- two fert a n d slxtyJalst ane-hundref l ths or a foot to ttiH point and place of B E C I N N I N C I Be ing known a n d des igna t ed aa lots

Nos . 116 t o 118 inclusive, lots Nos, 123 to 13S inclusive, a n d a port ion of lot 110 on blOLh S un t h e a foresa id m a p . , S E C O N D T R A C T : All t h a t ce r t a in

t r a c t o r parcel of l and and premises , he re ina f t e r pa r t i cu l a r l y described, s i t ­u a t e , ly ing nnd being tn the Township qf Union, in the C o u n t y of Union a n a S t a t e of New J e r s e y :

B E O I N N I N R a t t h e corner formed by the intersect ion of t h e eas te r ly line of O r u b e r Avenue- u n d t h e sou the r ly lino of Seymuur A v e n u e a s ' laid jdown a n d shown on a • c e r t a i n m a p ent i t led ",Mflp of Burbot P a r k , Unliin ToWn-ehifi. Union County, N . J., bwned a n d developed by E lmwood Rea l ty Com­p a n y , 403 Lyons Avenue . Newark , N e w J e r s e y , 1825, m a d e ,by G r o s s m a n & K r e h , Eng ineers and Surveyors , E l i za ­be th , N, J , " ; thence a l o n g the e a s t e r l y l ine of Gruber .Ayetiu'e South frtrty-n lne degrees fo ' r t j -one minu tes W e s t one hi indred n ine teen feet and t h i r t y -t h r e e one-hundredt l i s of a foot; t hence S o u t h twenty-e igh t dujjrees f l t ty-nlne m i n u t e s E a s t one h u n d r e d for tv-four feet and fifty-five on«--liundredths of a loot t o a point d i s t a n t w e s t e r l y twelve f t e t from the wes te r ly line of lo t No. 30 on m a p hereinbefore m e n ­t ioned l thence n b r t h e r l y and para l l e l w i t h the said wos te r ly line or lot N o . 00, 117 feet to the sou the r ly line of S e y m o u r A v e n u e ; t h e n e e a long t h e s.ilcl eoutlierly lllie of Seymour A v e n u e N o r t h twenty-e igh t d e g r e e s fifty-nine m i n u t e s Wes t one h u n d r e d s l x ty - e l ^h i feet to the point a n d p lace of B E G I N ­N I N G ,

Be ing known and fleslgnated a s L o t s SO. S7 and 85 and t h e wes t e r ly po r t i on of Lot, No, S9 fur a w i d t h of t w e n t y -e lgh t feet on Block 7, on tho a r u r e -^a ld m a p .

D e c r e e a m o u n t i n g app rox ima te ly •J1J.300,

S A M U E L H . TOOL, Sheriff. , B E N J A M I N H B U R , Sol 'r . 30-101 ISDJ&SH Fees ?44.10

S H E R I F F ' S SALIO — I n Chancery .of N e w Jersey. B e t w e e n S-tmuel Bean ,

compla inant , and H a r r y Miller, et a l s . de fendan t s . F i , fa, for sa le of m o r t ­g a g e d premises

By v i r tue of the above- s t a t ed wr i t of fieri facias to me d i r e e t - d I shal l ex ­pose for sale by puhl ic vendue, u t t h e . Sheriff ' s office in tire C o u r t House In the city of El i sabe th , N. J „ on " •WEDNESDAY, T U B ZSTH DAY O F

AUGUST, =A, D., 3 32S. a t t w o o'cloek m the afternoon, of sa id U.ly, (Dayl ight Savme; Time) ,

F I R S T T R A C T : All, t h a t per ta in t r a c t or parcel ^of lat id and premises , he re ina f t e r p a r t i c u l a r l y described, Situ­a t e , ly ing and being- In the Townsh ln •if Union, in tli» C o u n t y of Union a n d S t a t e of New Je r sey ' :

W FASHION NOW

Velve t , b o t h p r i n t e d a n d p l a i n , w i l l b e l a v i s h l y u s e d f o r t h e n o w f a l l f r o c k s , a c c o r d i n g t o r e p o r t s f r o m P a r i s . A m o n g t h o l a t e s t c o l o r s b e i n g s h o w n a r c r i c h s h a d e s of b l u e ( m o s t p o p u l a r ) , s e a l , o l i v e , H a v a n a , r u s t a n d b e a v e r b r o w n s ; t h e w i n e s h a d e s , g r e e n s , p u r p l e s a n d g o l d .

o B l a c k t r a n s p a r e n t V e l v e t

w h i c h g i v e n s h a d e s a n d t o n e s l i k e t h e b l a c k of a r a v e n ' B p l u m a g e ta a f a v o r i t e w i t h t h a c o u t u r i e r s . I t s l u s t r o u s s u r f a c e ia " c l r e e d " t o p r o d u c e t h e n e w v a r n i s h e d e f f ec t , w h i c h i s b o t h so f t a n d s u p p l e .

o-—— T h n p r i n c e s s g o w n s , r e m i n ­

i s c e n t of t h e I t a l i a n R e n a i s ­s a n c e , a n d o n c e s o p o p u l a r , a r a b e i p g r e v i v e d l o r t h e c o m i n g s e a s o n , g i v i n g t h o f i g u r e a l o i i g , s u p p l e s i l h o u e t t e t h a t Is e x c e e d ­ing ly g r a c e f u l .

o — — T h e n e w e s t In t h o r e a l m o f

I h o s i e r y f o r t h e fa l l i s t ho s p o r t s I s t o c k i n g k n i t t e d In s t r i p e s , I c h e c k s , z i g z a g s a n d g e o m e t r i c I f i g u r e s . F o r d a y t i m e a n d e y e -I n i n g w e a r , s t o c k i n g s h a v e ! g r o w n e y e n m o r e s h e e r . I n I t h e s e t h e l a c e a n d n e t w e a v e s I i n t h e b e i g e t o n e s , s a n d , n u d e , I p a l e g r a y , - d a r k b l u e a n d s h a d e s I of g r e e n , a r e m o g t p o p u l a r .

Telephone" Ml FOR ALL, ELECTRICAL NEEDS

Wiring — Repairs --Appliances Prompt Service—Efficient Workmanship

Crane Electric Co, COIBIEKCIAI, BUILIHTTG

TEIEPHONE 341 S8S SPEINGFIELD ATE.

The Electrical Shop Electrical Appliances « House Wiring

Repairs

" / / It's Electrical We Have It"

Laird & Go. T E L E P H O N E 1800 16 B E E C H W O O D ROAD

Sj

I n t o A N o s o Dive | C h i l d r e n a r e n o t h i n g if n o t u p -

t o - d a t e in t h e s e d a y s . T h e r e w a s a a u u d o n c r y f r o m t h e g a r d e n w h e r e b a b y w a s p l a y l h g . " M o t h e r , I G e r a l d ' s c r a s h e d ! " s h o u t e d h i s ' o l f te r b r o t h e r , — W e s t m i n s t e r G a ­z e t t e ,

S a n d y o u r I totaB t h e ITERA1,D.

'fM Us' Solve : Your Tooiems

Asphalt - Asbestos - Goppcr-Clad -• Built-up arid Roll Roofing «- Waterproofing

B B M - I & C t S P E C ! U i S J , S l A S T E t & S O S 8

D E P A R T M E N T STORE IS Maple St- P l i t t i e 268-W, S u m m i t , N\ J .

F r e e De l ive ry E v e r y w h e r e E a s y C r e d i t T e r m s toTJa i t

s y w i u i -Bod, spr ing , m a t & ^ s s , ail for-_', $17.35 Strumites b e d s t e a d s „$3.35 t o 25.00 SIminoriS befisprings 1,35 t o 13.S5 SlBftnont m a t t r i s s e s — _.. 8,35 t o 33.3S SlmreioBs d a y b e d s „ _ _ 15,35 t o BS.00 SIrnmons cola - . - — „,.„„„ S.B0 Simmons cot m a t t r e s s e s __„ i.4B

, . ,. P-tf

. _ . _ „ _ . . . . . . B E G I N N I N G a t Hie corner formed connect w i th .ex is t ing s a n i t a r y s e w e r hi" t h e intersect ion^of t h e eas te r ly- l ine m -the H o r r l s & .Bsftet Turnpike , a l o n g the following d e s e r t b e i center l i n e :

B E G I N N I N G a t a point o n t h e center 3tlle at fllendale S e a d w h e r e the sJtfd c e n t e r l ine Intersects lite dividing l ine of p roper t i es of the Prospec t M i l Co- and F r e d e r i c k Mc-C.tnn, Mienee . (1 ) S. SS degrePS 07 minu te s E. d i s t a n t H3l,04 feot, t henee *2) ST. 63 d e g r e e s 47 -rnlnutes B . d i s ­t a n t 313.53 feet , t henee CSl S. B5 de-gi-ees 27 KilnnteW M. 1G3.S1 fee t t s a point f* feet W e s t ot L a c k a w a n n a R. R KlK-ht-of-way, thence (4) M. £0

of Q r u b e r A v e n u e a n d the nor ther ly l ine of N o r t h Th i rd S t r e e t a s laid down mid s h o a n on a c e r t a i n map ent i t led "'Map of Burne t F a r k , Un ion Town­ship , Union Countv , N , ,T„ owned a n d developed by E'.mwoftil R e a l t y Com-n a n y . V>" Dyons AvenuU, N e w a r k . N J „ IS!?, madi ' h y n r a s s m a n H K r e h , . EnBlneers and Sur-veyors, , Elizabeth, N , J . " ; thence a long thf*.,Borttnjrly line

Public Service Corp. • of New Jersey

lili-ideiiil Ne . Hi on Com-, moil Slnelt

Dlvldnnil N"o. B(l on B% Punthlatlvi! p r e f e r r e d Slock Dividend Wo. 23 on 7"f0 Cumula t ive P r e f e r r e d Stock Dividend I ro, 1 en 8S.O0 Camnluflve p r e f e r r e d Stock

The Board of D i r ec to r s of P u b l i c Se rv i ce Coipora t lon of New Jersey h a s dec la red dividends a t t h e r a t e of S% p e r a n n u m du the 8% C u m u l a t i v e , P r e ­fe r red Stock, beinff J2 00 pe r s h a r e : a t t h e r a t e uf l"a p e r a n n u m on tliis 7% C u m u l a t i v e P i e f t r r e d Stock, be ing Sl.fO pe r oh-ire; u t the r a t e , of jS.nfl p e r a n n u m on (be nan p a r - v a l u e C u m u l a ­t ive P re fe r rea Stock, be ing ILL'S p e r s h a r e : a n d SO cents p e r share on t h e h o n p a r value C o m m o n Stock for t h e t i u a r t e r end ing , S e p t e m b e r 3D, 132S, Div idends a re p a y a b l e September 23, 1028, sto s tockholders 'of record a t t h e close .of business S e p t e m b e r l,*13i'S.

Dividends on 0% Cumula t ive P r e ­ferred Stock a re p f iynb le ,on_ lhe l a s t d a y of each month .

T, W, Van Middleswor th , T reasu re r .

Public Service Electric anil Gas Company i m i d e n d S o . IT oft 1% CumninUVo r r e f e t r e d Stuck Blvldpha S o . 15 en t% Cnmnlot1\e P r e f e r r e d Stock

TI IB D o i r d of D i r e c t o r s of p u h l i c Soi vice Elect r ic a n d U a s Company h a s dec la red the r e g u l a r a u a r t e r l y d iv idend on t h e "*M nr.d. 0C£, P r e f e i r e d Stock of t l in t Company. D i v i d e n d s a r e "payable -...- . . . . t

NEW JERSEY BANKS INVEST $7^0,000,000

"Types

Securities |j Selected ,!

B e r r k s

Pictured

i D a + a Coliecfeo

U . S .

^Conrptnellgp

Currency

of N o r t h Third S t r e e t South for ty-four i " u t u i m n m y . u i v r a e n a s a r e n a y n o i e « « B T B " S no m i n u t e s E a s t th i r ty-f ive ^ p t e j i L e r £3, 1921, t o s tpckhoWers of feet a n d seven ty- th ree one -hundred ths I t-ecord a t the cu.se 01 hus iness o e p t e m -

„ . „ . . . -^ .,-,.,. . . . of a foot t o a ^tone m o n u m e n t ; thenceJ " e l " b l y « | - , degrees 11 m i n u t e s E . 312.S5 f e t t t o i s t i l l alonff t he nnr t l ie r ly l ine oE N o r t h ] T - W. ^ *n Mldulaswor th , T rea su re r , the sxlat ing i e w # r b i Uin-3lQrTl» filTinra Stre*t Sou th for ty-one d e g r e s s 1 „ ^ , ,,. . ... • , ,„, ,. r- , ,

R e c o p s i i i n g t l i B d a a i r t b i l l t y of p u b l i c u t i l i ty Eccuri t ies as an. I n v e s t m e n t , 11.6 p e r c e n t , o l

t h e fimeb of N e w J e r i c y b a n t s a r s oo i n v e s t e d — t b c U n i t e d S ta tes C o m p t r o l l e r of C u r r e n c y

r e p o r t s . "Vs T h e s t r e n g t h a n d t o l i d i t y of t h e Sta te ' s b a n k s a r e i n d i c a t e d b y a tota l Inves t

m e r i t o f $ 7 5 0 , 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 .

Not only with, banks but with individual mveitofs have public utility securiticfj estab« l is ted tbdmselves as safea^d attractive—Public Service lias upward of 75,000 individual stock* holders and tbe number grows constantly.

P T h e success o f P u b l i c Se rv i ce a n d d e v e l o p m e n t of N"ew J e r s e y a r e b o n n i l 'toSeSfai

. . . — P r e s i d e n t T h o m a s N , M c C a r t c r .

.er.

jkmM,

Page 8: i Lf i. Oi3> tsfjj-i UIV&. r-wi^'-sfiS-l-J malics toward none,i Lf i. " J * f z .,, --K£.^jf3 e.i-Jt.^Oi 3> tsfjj-i UIV &. r-wi^'-sfiS-l-J /** ^i .-r:; i. ad SUMMIT RECORD — -

r •- ' - 4 J « .

, Cl>'

_'c;s:;«s oj Official Activities and htaian Released asrdn&Gis

€0!iHtl; ii the

>oSid{;o en iSie War latter part 'olJuly/y r&ii-

ut Ooolldtfe delivered an address

cause It was not compelled to rts-tablir.h it3 methods of life i'.nd. at buslncas on now theories. It was

''tin-T a memorial to Colonel WHI-• n Colville. leader of the First 'hMjosota Volunteer Infantry in

Cannon Killb, KuimV:!b:laJ'ticdl-[ possible to InUld on-the solid foun­dations that 'were already laid.

"In th<? South' it was necessary to go through the long and pain-

Olvil Y/ar. After paying due. ful process of erecting an entirely ihute to the memory of the sol- new structure. The old methods IT jn whose honor the memorial j «f existence and of business had ".n dedicated, President Coolldfie. to be diacardcd and new systems I the purpose of obtaining lights and • •Jared: "The time hats come J established. This would have been I fire find it hard to realise tho dif-kon'our whole country can take! most difficult under any cireum: j flcultlea endurod by the people of more dispassionate view of the, stances. Coming at the end of four the world less than one hundred

probably i-.c.jti' <i iTa;U HC:J; hi flic world of coinniorr.e r.t that time. The.1 rtevol6;5'neHt of the sau*-

! ty match tvonly yrprs later added xn thu RTov.'tli of a ^nrjl'ipcs that scoffib phenomtnti vi;on hns con-

• alders the product lt;:elf, ' .Quantity production «of, matches la made possible.'through the use of machines which are marvelous mechanical geniuses. Tho United States, according to a recent bulle­tin of tlm Department of Com­merce, along , with Sweden, NOT-wav, and Japan make mo3t of the matches . in . the world. In the United /States there are 18 estab­lishments, employing 3,885 wage earners,, and making matches to the value of. more than 524,000,000.

Those of us accustomed to the Incessant use of the tiny match for

•••nn train of events that led up to ispomattox." The Chief Executive thereupon

.crit • Into an explanation of the oufllot, seating that there was no "icit u ate declaration at; to the nu-

. hortty of the States and of the •'.iiloral Union and that some, of w ablest minds in tho country

'i.imr-jlly differed In their Inter-r -ir.tion of our institutions." Aa '.'.>r,c differences proyreiiaed '-• nln an irrepressible - conflict, :-ii Mr. CooHdKc, "The South

. >\nul itBolf involved In a net of ••ircunihtanceH which very much of If: bent thought undoubtedly de-;,!orcd but from which it wan total­ly unable to t-xtrlrale ItRelf." Tho President eipveascd his Idea of the conflict In tho following words.

"We can uee now that instead' of !> slm; charged with all the blame, •'"•• \v v.-oyo hi many ways entitled ..ii 'sympathy. Our country was all u.'olvcd In ii great national trag-•:•.- from which It could cKtricutc • •-elf only by an appalling na--;M:J. sacrifice. That I raped/ in-.<lved both the North and the -onlh. The conditions which "•rouKht about tho ru'oat conflict v>ro national condition's.

"It. was humanly lmpcntthto for .•ifhor section of Itself to furnish :-ii fideriuate solution. H there was Us bo'an extension of freedom un-. w constitutional guarantlea, it v\l to be hroutcht about by na-• iciinl action. Any adequate expla-•Iiii required the r-Ieiitislnp of the •!::rt of the Avhole Nation. This could only be ucemnpl lshcd : IVOURII an ImmeiiRurabli' sacrifice '•"".!'' hi the tears of our women .Mid the, blood of our mem"

Continuing his speech, Presl-s7^nt Coolidgo described the post­war conditions In the North and 1'uuth, as follows: "When the great tvagedy - .'aa passed, when tho vimult of the conflict had ceased, ;,!!! North found itself depleted, but i'sie South wan entirely prostrated. ji, wiia under (he npeo>;Elty of ve-i.'i'Idlng its whole social atid eaou-s-nilc r.tvuctui'e. The recovery of ii"1 I forth began moro early, he-

yeara of conflict, It was well-nigh | years ago in keeping "the home impossible. But the task was "per-1 fires burning," formed slowly and imperfectly at I' *—a-first, but In recent years with a rapidity that seemed scarcely pos­sible."

After quoting figures to show the growth of tho South, president Coolidge took up sectional animos­ities left in the way of the-War and declared that "the day of sectional

to-; ism is past. We are a united na­tion." Referring to bitterness and hatred left in the nation, after Its bloody conflict, he said: "For many years, both for the North and for the South, these were unfortu­nately stimulated and kept alive lor tho political advantage that the sponsors of such action hoped to secure. The time has long since passed when to hold or exnreHS such hostile sentiments should ever be permitted to work to the advantage, of any one.

"ThoMo who. reaort to- them should fhul that their standing in the public confidence is thereby impaired. While, isolated out­breaks may continue to occur In unresponsible quarters, I am 'firm­ly convinced that the responsible elements both In the North arid the South each' look "with pride and satisfaction upon the brilliant con­tribution which the other is mak­ing to the national welfare and are just as eager to help the other as thev are to help Themselves. . . ,"

That the President of tho United States speaking upon an occasion dedicated to the memory of a bravd soldier of his nation's • armies, can thus freely express himself. In "re­gard to the blttor fitrifo Is evidence. If any is now needed, to convince the world that the' United States, of America aTe Indeed united. We call attention to the- remarks of ouv President' in order that the sentiments ho expressed may he generally accepted in' all sections of o,ur country. • • '

The Frktion ainfcli The invention of the •,friction

match In 1827 and Us subsequent development seven years later

Jboss Front IHnesB The loss suffered try the peoplo

of the United States every yeur through sickness is $31.08 per. per­son, or $134.68 per family accord-

ry ff r\ ] iL 1 / 0

n* vee&OYttt As boy just cnterinc the 11 ret. Crimea at Koonton they iclt quite

't«cn," I romeaibcr some happen- safe. Powervlllo look orders from lugs that Involved my father and some of our ncictibnru. which to me seemed mysterious. B- lng slightly observing, yet, I dare not asit for explanation of even my closest

Grimes' office, and when his place was having too many and four or five was too many, word was sent to Powerville to assist, and both places "ware well watched by tho

friend—my mother—ai isho seemed > hungry constable who lived six to enter into the mysterious going miles av;ay; hut, when word came and coming of persons that wo were to be on the lookout, he war, on his not allowed to see face tp face; be- job. His favorite stand in Power-cause'children ask many questions vllle was at the blacksmith shop of

John Gallagher, across the canal near the rolling mill; from morn to night and even in the long night he waited, only to bo outwitted

at

that often confound their .elders. Under cover Of darkness '.these movements were the more, d.f a mystery.

Wo moved from Hope, thp place and disappointed. Tho hotel

lng to Homer Folks, of the Publtc ,_„ ^ „. Health Council, of New York. This, Some o£ the wounuedloutid tlucOld

of my birth, In 1847,'to Drakosville —now Jjedgewood—and father,Itept the old Jerry Baker hotel—since burned to the groufcd. It was a larse commodious hostelry, double gambrelied roof, a sood old time resting placo for t,he tired mai^'aml boast. Across the road liear • |ho brook was an old style enormous red barn. We saw,the men who fought in Mexico on their long hike £rom New York,, where they had been landed from the transports

does not take Into calculation the reduced earning ability of tho loss of future .wages as a -result of ill­ness.

The average citizen gives little thought to the illness prevalent in his community but' when one con­siders that tho earning, power of our nation is diminished by ?1R,-000,000,000 from sickness, the value of public health work be­comes apparent. As ' a matter of fact, tho increased lifespan, which has been presented to mankind In the past fifty years; is due, in all probability, to the- advanced methods of preventing disease.

rief- km A. F. of L, reaffirms non-parti-,

nan stand. , -—~o

New Chicago police head clamps lid on vice.

1339 budget set within Cool-Idge's "safety limit" of S3.700,-000,000. •

-—-o—— ; Prof. Knlpp demonstrates to

chemists that dust makes rain.

i i

,now-that -washing and polishing your car by s k i l l e d , a r t i s a n s will lengthen the life of the finish aad increase the 8ales value o£ your antomobile. We make a spe­cial price on this work.

Gall for information

Motor Go,-; • Studebafcer—Erskine

517 Syrinfifield Ave. ' P h o n e 3123 ' Summi t , N . J .

Polish fliers picked up off Spain by Gorman freighter.

O —r

Start of air matt 'route to Mex­ico planned for September.

— , o , i All leading nations ."agree to

make maps on uniform scale, ,' , ^ • - _ _ 0 _ „ '

."Picturesque Tobes figure In now Paris fashions.

.Warrant for arrest of Blackmor in Prance Issued by Coolldge. ' ,- • ~ c i — - -

. International Ufo Insurance of St. Louis short §3,600,000,% '

.Soviet now 'offers to sign Kel­logg peace bond;'

• 0-^ Auto output in first half E.8 per

cent ahead of 1027,

Sussex teamsters, with thoir -four liorse and mule teams,' loaded to tho top' of their big covered wagons with.the goods to supply tho coun­try stores (there bains no railroads nearer than Morrlstown) yet will­ing to.maltoa comfortable "ride for the wounded or voihi-out veteran. They came In droyds of from ten to fifty and our hostelry was filled' to Its capacity, and shakedowns Were made comfortable- for • tho overflow In the barn;' the tables"

.well loaded with food, and several settings had to be supplied for sup* per, and breakfast, and then.on the way to 'their homes In old Sussex ami Warren. • i

Thcso scenes Impressed me as a. small boy very much,' but this is aside from our subject, though it was an incentive to make me curl-oiiH'of the later comers. My father was a Whig. Morris County was very strongly Democratic; the Rightora, Furrands, MacCarty'S were dominant, Henry D. Farrand having been sheriff about this time or a little later. Of course there were other Democratic 'lights throughout the County; the Jack-sons, Kings, Dellickcrs, Hortons and .Stanbourroughs. While all these were willing to have- slavery continue as a. southern Institution,' practically holding the Southern States solidly in lino for the Demo­cratic Party, still not all wore will­ing to return a. slave to bondage uftcr ho had made his escape to the North on his way. to Canada, whiii'f ho would be Hafe; yet, thero were some petty officials like constables who, for the reward of Irom $300 to ?i,500to catch a slave, or. slaves, would sell their rouls, and Morris' County had two nf those character^ that 1 knew of later on.

In 18B5 I noticed that our horses' had a. busy Umo In the evenings; mid "hush" seomed to he tho pass­word. I noticed also that the gar1

rot of the hotel and the loft of thd

Powerville, as it now stands, with its double hip roof, had on the attic iloor three rooms, two hi west end and one in southeast corner; a win­dow in tho end looked southeast towards Boonton with the full view of the road and the big barn. Here •in daylight the coming and going of all traffic could be seen, and In these rooms were kept the escaping slave when not Jn the loft of the barn; both had to be used to get better access to enter the covered Rocka-way wagon. Either end of tho barn had large double doors, both being required at times. Father had two marcB, both fine animals, one .grey, $he other jet hlaclt; the first a. greyhound on the run, the black gentle aa a kitten, fast,pacer, swift runner and seemed to understand .every word; both trusty, I was working at tho trade of harness-making when not at school, and was used to horses, i One evening, .early, my father asked me If 1 cared to take a long, dark drlvo. I said "Yes, I am not afraid of either:".' "Go get supper and be ready in the barn In a half hour." I knew what it meant, and also knew that Constable Zeek was lying In waif across the canal; but, 'I asked no questions. I went to tho barn through the garden to avoid being seen. . Both horses were hitched to separate rigs, I was to take the sulkey and the grey mare. The sulkey was a high-wheel, six-foot affair; and built very strong by Geo. Russell, a local wheel-wrlght, and seemingly foi1 tho purpose I was using it. My brother, Emmett, went out of the wepte'rn door in the closed Kockaway • wapon, drove to the hotel .door* ostensibly to get a passenger; passed around the sign post and flew away' for Boonton. Constable - Ze.tslc jumped in hia

tfew l iSrfs Csrs

Tho most important news of the past week to motorists In the fine

cav :iaa Lr.Vi"rente P. Fisher, president and general manager of the Cadillac Motor Car Company, of the new Cadilkic and I^aSallo cars and Fleetwood bodies. •

The new cars further reveal the often-mentioned purpose of General Motors to have in 1he products of

there! I had given him all tho I the Cadillac Motor. Car Company a room I could. It turned out to bo a! Hue of cars which are superlatively friend, but a good Democrat. Wil-jrme regardless of price. They re-Ham Earles, coming home froml fleet In both' bodies a»id chasses

«no;iPi-.:i,is nt by, he HIIOCI; aUurbira are Intro.i

New Foundland. He know the mara and wanted to know what in 'ell 1 was doing up there at that time of night and said. "You arc doin' some­thing in the nigger lino."

lie passed on and 7 was relieved in mind, called my man and on my way to Canister. Nothing in the way to fear as John P. Brown later stated to me. He kept . tho New Foundland hotel and was one of the conductors on the "Underground" and a station also. It was late now, or early, as It was past mid­night; 1 reached tho road where a turn to the loft led to Canlstear. and I was moving on a fast walk when I saw a light and heard voices. My orders from father were to kill tho mnro if need be by driving, but at all events I must not' lose my papsengor. I was some nervous and was about to wheel the maro about and let her fly on back track, but tho swing of a light came at once, which was my signal; but I was not looking for it so soon, as I. was to sec a light In the upper story of a houso first; however, the men spoke their signal, "Yes," and I. was a happy boy to bo rid of'my passen­ger. I stopped at Brown's for breakfast, rested and fed the mare, reached home about mid forenoon to find the constable on his job. He asked mo where I had been and threatened to arrest me. Father came to the rescue and laughed at him. He had been duped, for my brother Emmett had no passenger in tho closed wagon. The con­stable had followed the wrong scent.

C. P. HOPKINS. Bi/onton, N, J.

Increased value made possible by tho doubling of the company's out­put during the past three years under the leadership oE Lawrence Fisher.

There are three outstanding im­provements in the new cars—a new Cadillac - designed transmission which, without changing the stall-

in the Cadillac. They are of t '^ two-way, platan type, v.-h'.c'i smooths out the elfoct of road uii-evenness by controlling both thj down and upward motion of the cm.-. Instr>ad of the web strap formerly used, they are connected to tho axles through a rigid tic-rod fitted at the onds with ball a.nd socket Joints, and the rods operate on a double-barreled reservoir.

Other important improvements include adjustable front scats in all body models excepting the Imperi­als; more powerful engines with a larger engine in tho LaSallo; lice­nse nf principles of pneumatics In engineering to insure maximum quietness; chromium plating of ex­posed nickel parts, assuring per­manent luster: strengthening of

dard positions of the gear-shift body construction with reilnements lever, provides for easy, immediate, quick and silent gear shifting with­out the usual hesitation, in neutral position; two new and independent braking systems -of the internal shoe type, and "security-plate" glass In all windows and wind­shields.

Improved, double-action, hydrau-

in body exteriors and interiors, and the addition of the Fleetwood line of an entirely new type, tho "all-weather" phaeton, which pro­vides for five passengers the ad­vantages of both an open and closed car which heretofore have been limited to the two-passenger con­vertible coupe.

)

Cutter Delays Assistance Washington — Differences with

Great Britain over tho activity of American rum-chnslng cutters pre­vented the immediate dispatch of a cutter to a schooner reported in distress in Bahaman waters. The Coastguard atattoli at Fort'Lauder­dale was notified that a Belgian tanker "Matoearoline" was In dis­tress. After telegraphing Washing-

wagon and aTter hlm"as"fast'as tils' t o n i f w a9 announced that no as-animal could 1g-o, hut was nowhere, s l i j t a n c e w a s Probable unless Brlt-with that black mare. Meantime j l s h authorities requested aid. the stableman opened the door fori ,„ . ,"7 ~ ." , . . . ine, My passenger was already on! Whistles l*n»t«ct 1%OOIIK •the aulkejvand the grey swept outl Washington — Bamboo whistles like the wind, across the canal and! attached to the- tails ,ot carrier

Refrigerator (.raffle on railroads growing In importance.

— o - - _ . Blazing • piano -forced Courtney

down, ho radios to wife. ——o—--

• Arms parley snag looms In An­glo-French cruiser plan.

——o—— Coolldge consldera need for pos­

tal increases to meet deficit. ——o——

Chancellor says Germany wants no colonics or • mandates.

-—.o—— •

Acosta broke under strain on Byrd hop, says magazine article.

Expedition sails for African jungle to fight sleeping sickness..

— — o •

Coolldge approves pay increase for civilian employes in navy yards.

Labor Council plans fight on Communists^ politics postppned.

Ryrd buys second shop to carry supplies to Antarctic.

' ' Hoad actors fear logs of work due.to talking moves.'

river, towards Rockaway Valley, and on' up through the back road to OreenvUler to Charlottesburg, to 'TSIew Foundland, and to Canistenr, my 3top. That road was dark, in­deed, over a wood road, bordered by a thick forest most of the way to Chnrlottuaburg. On the way I met a' team, and when first I ljeard it, I was troubled, as all roads were likely to have a man looking for

barn were'being used to hide' some runaway "slaves.- Just before the one in over a day, and carried oni6 tuam came on in the dark, I asked

Blent Ion tho HERALD when buying

Jn 6-

©*" ™->gGds a tons %my to make friends •

We tmye a she for your car: Tubes « Oils .-- Greases « Accessories

d'S

STOR^ 4.GE BATTERIES:

Mot

some other place by our horses'or some one that cabled tor the pass­enger or passengers. This went on until 18GG, at which time we moved from Drakesville to Powervlllo, father buying out the hotel stock of Henry D. Farrand, who had been sheriff, and died at the hotel.

Now I was qulto a lad and was reading the semi-weekly N. Y. Tri­bune anil Harriet Beecher Ktowe's ".Undo Tom's Cabin," "The Impcrifl1-' ing Crisis," by Hinton Rowan Help-, or, tho-Dred Scott decision, and all antl-slavcry productions, and found that my father was one of the con­ductors of the "Underground Rail­road."

My good mother had died and I had become more Inquisitive, and considerably mo™ observant, as I was used to convey the hunted slave from station ,to. station to avoid the two constables we knew wore aflor tho rewards. Thero were at times detoctlves on track an tar away as Baltimore, Philadel­phia and Newark. ' At Boonton there was an Abolitionist Church,

my charge to stop down and Into, this woods to the right, and after a while I would whistle to him to get on again. I could not see the com­ing team, but heard the driver talk­ing to his .team, lie had been drinking I found as he came on. Ho saw my grey maro and wanted to know what the 'oil 1 was doing

pigeons, arc being oaei to protect them in time of peace against wild hawks and in time of war against the trained falcon. The noise of the whistles made as the pigeon flies keeps ' birds of prey away. Tke U. S. Army maintains 1,200 carrier pigeons in peace time.

Muy Increase -Posijil Kates Superior, Wir,.-~An increase In

postal rat es may, hd necessary on account of the higher revenue granted the railroads by the Inter­state Commerce Commission. Presi­dent Coolldge, however, awaits the arrival of Brigadier-General H. M, Lord, the budget director, before making up his mind on this matter.

WW7WV) W T® /27 TWTW Tfiz

Mid)®® Mnmss"

( t o t o ? ctapscd Csroe)

A t A t l a n t i c C i t y S p e e d w a y , b e t w e e n J u l y 21 om«fi A u g u s t % f o u r T e g u l a r f a c t o r y p r o d u c t i o n S t u d e -bakcr!Pr<D3i<I!e2itEightG a g a i n prwved S tudcbnf w r ' o ouprcmacy- in. tHio a u t o m o t i v e w o r l d .

U n d e r s t r i c t s u p e r v i s i o n o f t h e Amepaean A n £ o m o b i l e A s s o c i a t i o n , t w o PreuacEemt E i g M iroanB-otters teavelccl 30,C0» m i l e s i n l e a s t h a n 27,080 eom-oecutiv© m i n u t e s — 1 9 daya a n d .18 n i g h to o? d r i v i n g a t b e t t e r t l i a n 68 m i l e s p e r bouur! T w o P r e s i d e n t Bedann a v e r a g e d 63.99 a n d &1-.15 rnilca pes1 h o u r fo r t h e e a m o d i s t a n c e ! Al l f o u r criTq w e r e s t r i c t l y s t o c k — c h o s e n sat r a n d o m £r»im Studebnlccff 's ooyeiiably l i n e b y A . A . A, officials,

E v e n before, t h i s g r e a t a c h i e v e m e n t , S t u d e b a k e r h e l d m o r e .official speed a n d s t a m i n a r e c o r d s t h a n a l l otheff m o k e s of cairo combined—Tlbo C o m m a n d e r wi t lk 25,000 m i l e s i n lesa t h a m 23,CU0 m i n u t e s ; T h e D i c t a t o r w i t h 5,000 l n i l a i i n le^ti t h a n $J©() m i n i a t e s ; a n d T h e E r s l d n e $ ix , a t QSJ6Q Eu o . b . f a c t o r y , 1000 m i l e s i n 934 m i n u t e s 2

W h a t e v e r S t u d e b a k c r - b u i l t c a r y o u b u y , y o u o r e a s s u r e d s u p e r l a t i v e p e r f o r m a n c e — - s u p r a m © One-Prof i t v a l u e . See a n d dr ive a Sftudcboliep t e d a y f

S T U D E B A K E B ' S F O U R N E W O N E S The EirsMne 0 835 to OW-iS Tho Dictator 1105 to 1395 Tho Commander . . . . . 1435 to M6S lUlio President Eight . . . 16G5 So 21C3

AUitriceof.a. b./ccsoc? '

Send your Items the HERALD,

of InteTeBt to

stertan f\ M m ixt\d>o

517-23 Springfield Ave . 'PJione 3123 Summi t , N . J.

mmtt j u s t a reminder t o stock

tip-with a u t o accessories, |

tubes" and . t i r e s "before '

s t a n i n g . on y o u r out ing

over L a b o r B a y , W e pre

fully equipped and ready

to supply y o u w i t h these

necessit ies.

j j Bat ter ies ;Hft-charged R e n t e d a n d Repai red

] | Let Ua^gpsStc Your Car » Cars Wasbcd

j White's Ii M SUMMIT AYENUE

awpa t Thonc 14994V SUMMIT, N. 'J.

Ive antl-3lavery men of pronjineneo, aa Doctor John Grlnxeq, who built] Liberty Hall; his office at tht;-cor-11| ner of Liberty and Main- Btre'nta wjia one o£ the ,cl»lc£ underground niatlons. Associated with hlui wore John Hill,' William G„ Lathrop, Philip Wootton, .'Chan. $.' N'orrli, James Norrls, James Grimes—• brother of the doctor-s-who lived a t ' Parsipnany; Thomas C. WIHIG, ! George Jehkhls, and others, among whom was my father, Nathan Hpp-ltlns. ], ' . r The South was preparing for. the, struggle to come, having militia companion • in every.' fairly sized • Community. Beth, seclionn of the', country were lilw? a smouldering \ \ fire, only t wa.itlng for the leant dpark to light up the.-would-be dev-', astating, scourge. i

The Korth' took the hint and raised company alter company with t&e ostonmhlo ohjoct.to give pleas-lire' to the young mini as well aft exercise ahdto Improve thorn phys­ically;-hut, really, for the'purpose of being .as •well- prepared as our Southern frlcnas, who were hitol-qrnnt to the Norlnerrj. man who -vis­ited their section; and liiade- Ufa miserable for those who' settled there, who were not of their way ot thinking on the Slavery question.

Much oC this dlslilsc waa based on the fact that we of the North helped slaves to escape to freedom, and the fact of the exposurp of t ie -wrongs committed in the name of Slavery by tho chivalry ot the South. The "Und-orEroi'iiid Rail­road" «aa an Institvftinn that sup- U plied ways and means for tho un­fortunate slave that toiled that, an­other should live and, like every­one else, panted for freedom that he might become a man that no one owned as a chattel. There v, ere stations at. Sorr.erville, Slorris-to^n, -Parslppany, Boontod, Ponip-ton Plains. New Fotmdland, Oai.ls-

11 tear, that -R*« kne ,- of, and u^ed the j 11 last nvo In our ai^hl rides. Power-11 ville was of course one of 'the pta- i ''icions. TrUeu slaves reached. Dr. ^>

=^h *»

Sensational— In trodlmciory ffer

The New

AGITATOR -At the Lowest Price Ever Asked for a

Thor Quality Washer

%mm

10 Important Advantages in the Ne'W Thor Aviator

6.

10.

Highest quality In 21 years of building. Fov.-or parts than any washing mnehlno on the market. Bip; capacity—compact in falze. Occupies apace only 21 inches square. Washes clothes cleaner and faster. Round tnb. No corners to clean. Most sanitary typo built. Beautiful beyond comparison. East Tndia B-iff and Ebony. Enaracliacd tub that cannot rust, rot or corrode. Auto­matically cleans itself. Direct cear drive—no belts to slip anrl broa'st. Unique rubber soft cushion roll v.-rinqer that won't break buttons:. General Electric motor.

$5.00 DOWN 18 months to pay the balance.

This is a sensational offer—on a now washer that is even more sensational 4n its beauty, compactness., speed and thoroughness. AH the. worth-wlille features to be tound in any washer aifl ^mtodlcd In this new product of the originator of the electric washing machine. Tho le:-sons oC 21 years of building now hrinc; you advantages never before combined in one washer—and at a price that Is even more appealing when you consider that hero is highest quality—tho same quality that has made the Thor name famous in over a million homes.

Before you put your money into any washer--take time to see this new Thor Agitator. To see it-—Is to be convinced of its quality—its beauty. To use >t—is to learn that here, at last, is true relief from all the drudgery of wash-day.

Talie advantage of this remarkable introductory offer— EOod for four vvcolts only.

Wc will give a demonstration in yo«r home at your convenience. 'Phone 1350-1351.

JERSEY CENTRAL GHT

330 Springfield A v e , Summi t , N, J.

^J