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- ' ' " ' . ' " " . ' " . ' . . . ; ' . ' . " . . . A your money ler Radio mm m HIS. IS Announcement from the Railway High School shtrtrtd the following students had been credited with perfect attendance lor the month CHRYSANTHEMUMS YOU ARE INVITED TO CALL AND SEE ~ Baumann's Chrysanthemum Show Over 80,000 Blooms 3 0 0 Varieties. For the birthday party, the anniver- sary, or any occasion, decorate your home with these magnificent mums. Whether or not you come to purchase- Call anyway and see our exhibit of these gorgeous fall flowers. _ Plant Tulip Bulbs Now It is not too late and think of the beau- tiful blooming flowers you -will have next i John R. Bauntann Greenhouses—St. George and Hazelwood Avenue. Phones 711-712 Friai]ima5C!S rence, Virginia Anfcleln, Gertrude HM, Audrey Islelb, Albert iBoll- deau, Robert Barns, Frank Capo, Joseph fttnesl, Martin Haluia, Lea- He Bartell, Mildred How&rtfa, BOB- alle Sactaider. Harold Alexander, Doris Arnold, Florence Balr, Vivian. Balrd.-: Amia_Barton,_Lu.ey.Brafclaw- Bid.' Boniface •Braxatlc, "Raymond Brennan, Harriet Brown, Catherine hedGeoTKe whose number Is legion, but/ ot thorn the "department has no rec- ord us they are. not required to take out a fishing license It la a conservative estimate, Secretary Fell, says In. his annual report, that the hunters and fresh- rater fishermen will expend an average ot $26 ayear tor guns, am- munition, ashing tackle, clothing, railroad, gasoline, guides, boats, board, etc Excluding the 2.345 woodcock hunters, wno require a ipeclal license in addition to the .-egular license, he figures that on. this-«a8is—trom-th« -187,6T7-~1U :enses, tbere was -put Into elrcula- lon at Wast $4,489,425. These figures do not Include the lcense fees paid tp the State, rhlch In 1927 amounted to $270,- M4.-.This Income makes the work it the Commission salt-sustaining, .'here la no tost, to cltltens other, ihanthosg who-hunt and fiBh.—L. Brunt, Anna Cherry, Leroy Church, Mildred Clark. Phlllpp Currle, John " neibert Denton, Andrew 'Dunn,/J6hn~EiiF bey. Prank Mesaros, Princes (Dohr- man, 'Louise Piietz, James Moore, Albert- Schweitzer, Rudolph Shnp- per, John Svtrha,- Stanley SwlerJr, Stanley Taylor, Roy Tralna, Morti- mer Washbum, Frank Yarnell, An- drew Zboray, Bonna Lee Schaefer, Dorothea Somerpllle, Helen Ssaboc- slk, Jennie Tara, Dorothy Van Valen, Rose Vlrostko, Frances Za- cek, Irene Zsltny, Richard Uttle, Randolph MiyneSPTttissell—Mtntelr Howard Morecraft, Gabriel Pehalm, John Pekarsky, Joseph Pelote, Alex Prtsh, Arthur Rolph, Arthur Sam- mond, Alceste . MUbury^ Grace Moore, Harriet Mueller,-Marie Mun- drane, Josephine Pepe, Betty Heed, Catherine Remexky, Daisy Roth- mann, Evelyn Ruddy, Doris Ryan, John D'Ambrosa, Wellesley Fisher, Albert Gillls, William Glnlrlda, Frank Goehrlng, Winston Greene, •Leslie Guile, Arne Hook, Ragnar Hook, Stanley Hrudka, Frank Htt- -benyf^HRobert—Keating, Herbert Klnch, Arnflnn Klepp, Frank Kro- both. Virginia Felter, Jane Fiero, Pauline Hammond, Margaret Helsch. Ruth Hoblltzel, Marion .Hone, Marjorte Howe, Frances Hen- I son, "Leslie Baitell. Sophomore • Class—Vincent An- dresky, John Beebe, Willis Booth, Whitman Campbell, John Collier, John Cornell, Bernard Escandon, DeWltt Foulka. Donald Gibbons, Thomas Hejfleld, Thomas. Juve, Marie Beam, Olga. Carlbers, Elea- nor Cartwrlght, Helen Cook, Ga- zella DubrowolskL Dorothy Graeme, Eleanor Greslln, Eleanor Horneck. Tony Mossccttio, KobeiTNtckau, Jfl? seph Person, Raymond Rigney, Frank Roberts, Stanley Spitzer, Mi- chael Tara, Lancey Thomson, Law- rence VanGordon, Vivian Lawrence, Anna Lederle, Catherine Mancuso, Helen Men, Viola Pascale; Helen Peterson, Claudia Reed, Doris Remor,—EUzabeth__Sch«ldegger, -Edythe—gchnnhpl, Isabel Semple. Josephine Schwlndenhamner. Gro- ver Kuch. Arnold Carkhnff, Will- iam Clelland, Andrew Damhrau- 3kas, Kenneth Gross, John Koslk, i Arnold Kovacs, George Lindstrom, Wmia"m^acCarthy. ; Edward McCnl- lough, Gecrge Selbert, Clinton Ste- phens, Joseph WelU, Geno Zlrpolo, Angelina Coppola; Florence Han- nekln, Pauline Posaski, 'Rath Scbptt, Helen Wargo, Anna Wood- en, Hatel~McEwenr George~Met- ^calf, Russell Roarke. Anna Hardy, Paul" Alexander; Harold~Beebe; Clayton Cowan, Hilton Crans, John Curniewy, Nicholas Buroff, Oscar Capo, Jerome CUento, James De- pew, RaymondGage, Albert Haiel- dlrie, ChrlsUon Henrich, Harold Knox, Joseph Koslk, Edward Ma- chon, Joseph Madden. Elwood Mil- ler, Edwin Payne, Eugene Sava cool, Albert Schultx, Bruno Tarlach, Ernest Beckhusen. Junior Claws—^Walter Graeme, Russell Hoagland, Camilla Lecu- ream, paul.Marhak, Joseph Mesco John Mlchels. Raymond Wchels. Herbert Moleen, Erwin Mueller, Raymond Plckens^WllUam Riefler, Stephen Scupper, '"Lewis Turner, Ferdinand Sneedse, Stanley Voor hees, Frank Walker, Patsy Amo- >relll, Howard Borst, Edward Scho- Uffl T S U t d l l b e r t WeB On November 16th of the 2 6 2 East Broad St., Westfield, N. J. (Near the Public Library) 'Il21Zl^ Wnere; foa w&hfind a fu& assort-?•-- < ment of Infants' and Juniors* wear." ~~ Exclusive and latest designB. Prices ; moderate. Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded. terlund, Charlotte Schllermann Doris Stamm, Beatrice Taylor, Mar tha Weigl, Vera . "Witeny, Ethe Yorke, Andrew Collier, Richard El llott, Ross Fowler, Carroll Francis Herl)ert_Granholm, John Hopkins. Paul Howard, Charles Howe, "Alvln 7oWpHSon7~Sarah~A ; PBBTT--Virginia- Aszman, Ruth Atkinson. Edith. Bee- be, Margaret Bender, Ruth-Dean, Helen Emley, Charlotte Fraxer, Grace Hamlll. Ruby Hardenburg, Doris Held, Kae Hoffman, Evelyn Hrudka. Earl Carkhnff. John Jost, Raymond Kuneyl, John MoCul- lough, Tony Ruggeri, Thomas San- tomasso, Herbert Schaefer, Ed I war* Tompklns, Charles - Revoir, Olga, Hrudka, Nancy Kertnlla, Mary Kieman, Mildred Lee. May •Leonhard," Jennie"Lnks, Edith-Mo Clare, Evelyn Morton, Florence Ochlltree, Lillian O'Connor, Lucht Pascale, Florence PeterscnVCather. tne Rankine, Phyllis Reed, Barbara Rltter, Eleanor Roberts. TsTCofilificiDg If you realty ftarit to know the difference between rufla cleaned by our "Shampooing" and other methods, Just tend ua the rue that needs cleaning the worst. JUJceitared.beauty will astound you. )Q YOUR CHRISTMAS SHO 25.00 10.00 5.00 , This to any and all articles In our large and varied stock, andEARLY SHOPPERS ^ t ^ - ^ WHITAKER and SLATER Have Moved From 84 Irving l^SJi^Jtt ^ol^SJtying (Bauer Building) Coats and Dresses At Cost. Today and Tomorrow RAHWAY AGENCY Gotham Gold Stripe Silk Hbae for Ladles. Best silk hose made. A pair .65 All the leading shades. A lot of Ladles' White Initial Handkerchiefs: value ' to 19c >each. Special .each 10c | - Ladles' Chamois Suede .'Wash- able Gloves; value to 1.69T" pair 1,00 Ladles' Pure Leather Hand- . bags—pouch or under arm styles. All the leading colors; -value to-3.9S;^ach 2^95 Ladles' Pure Wool Sport Sweaters. Value 3.9S. Choice, each 295 Ladles' Umbrella*; rainproof; black or colors. Also Gents' Um- brellas, good quality covering; value 2.60. Sale price 195 Ask to see these. y 36 Inch wide. • Special, a yard 79c Gries Bros. THE STORE OF QUAUTY 27 and 29Cherry St. Rahway, N. J. ^ T¥3 " RAHWAY AGENCY Centemeri Imported Kid Gloves for Ladles: every pair guaran- teed: a pair - ------ [5an»3.50 RAHWAY AGENCY ^ Xaros_Brand .Rayon Silk. Unt derwear for Ladles. A good se- lection at low prlc'es. Every garment gives satisfaction. MIase3' Pure Wool Novelty •Sireatcrs-and-Pure-Wool-Sport^ Skirts; value 3.98. Choice, each Rayon and WoolJJnlon- Suits for Children and Misses— Slie 2 to 10 1X0 Site 13to 16 ..... .149 Children's Heavy Ribbed Fleeced Union Suits-. Slie 2 to K; value 1.S0. Sale price each 95c BED BLANKET SPECIAL , Extra heavy, full size, novelty |_colored blocks; part wool; value 5.50. Choice. Sate~prlce^ 4.69 -RAHWAY-AQENCY- The H. W. Gossard Corseta, CorseWtes, Completes, etc. Free Fittings -by-Graduate.... . Coraetlere. Maternity Fittings a Specialty. Men's Fancy Novelty Socks, -TCnadorhoae Branii: all iiliwi.- a pair "" 35c,3prs.l.0i Men's Rels Brand Extra Qual- ity Heavy Ribbed Union Suit*. All sizes; value 3.00; a suit - Boys' Pure Wool Pants Plus Fours; sizes to" 17; every pair Ira-pair 2-69 . Men's White Initial Handker- chiefs; value 19c each. To close Ilk Wool and Jersey Imported Berets ;all colon;- choice, each - 1.25 Children's Mercerized U«le Stockings; eixe S to 10; black or colors; apair * 25c Children's and Misses'. Anklets; all sizes; a pair 50c Rayon_andWoo|Novelty Long Stockings; 50c .ahway,N. Ji COAL Thoroughly serrened: > A bttter quality coal has built up our a*. Why not try some now. Courteoui Serrice at all timea [ODOSB BROS. & WEXLER COAL &ICE CO.,Inc. " A ISt., Pba«a328 Robert-AndrewBrWUUam Bedman, John Boae, Helmer Chrlste'nsen, NormanDempstar, William Droege, Prands Dadar, Harrison. DuRle. Chauncey Edgar. Charles English, Frank Gerner, Robert Graeme, John Kertnlla, George Bartell. Virginia Bostwlck, Evelyn Bracher, Fannie Chevalier, Mabel Hill, Madeira Is- telb, ..Marie tlslelb, Sadie Jolly, David Dembllng, Robert Knox, Rob- ert Krewson, George Lang, Frank [LeCompte, Lester Miller,. George Murphy, Anthony Plosko, Alfred Plunkett,.. RusseU- Post, John Schmaellng, Michael Wargo, Will; lam'Welgl.-iLeon Friedman, Jessie Lamb. Helen Martin. Elizabeth Maury, Margaret Opdyke, Matilda Regal, Harriet Overton, 1 Edith IwUkl ; ' Anglers, Hunters Create Large Yearly Trade Licensed iporumtn In New Jar a«y put into '-circulation nearly $5,000,000 -a year in punning thel: favorite pastimes ot fishing em | Jinatlne, : according to Walter H. .Felt secretary at the State Board ot Fish.and Game Commissioners iiThla doM not Include -the expend!- l_tnfe» by_e»lt_water flshermep L MAGIC JERSEY iKNEV OTEQ. towers «cren a WUop—Spider- 'wtb oetwwk* cf wit* fromtowwtp t w v w - B u W r w f « below-Bcwildtrina ^ppgrttus—Tiny Iwtehbojrd Imps bW- kq on aid off—Huge slowing tube. A •urge of power— « V O K B O» AMDoCA AK KMG HUHJP R O M NEW JOSE/ACROSS THE StA AT 1>CSPEED Of UCHTI . BOe*hoe« WCH Jetty tutnes to conjure with; (or hut «re grt* r«dto tdeptione sWicmj of (}ie Bd Syjtetn Wang dietelephonesof this nation, of Mexico and Canada to tpepnoncs in CUTDpe. NEW JERSEY BIN IK FltONTUNE O^PROCHESS IN TH£ A I T OF TELEPHONE COMMUNICATION - .> . BELL •TELEPHONE COMPANY lie Ends Tomorrow Take Advantage of These Super e ifiTcl tT Novelties, oi Sile Boys' Shoes Men's Oxfords The Famous ShoeforWomen On Sale, $ 5 . 4 5 pair Vatnca up to $8.50 Tomorrow is the Last Day/ SHOE SHOP 9 Cbnf St, Live Wire-Shopping-Center J24jn«utSt,. i Tel. 1424^ i •'TheStcrt thatStrva th» Now; In Full Progress^ Rijht in the H«»irt of itw Curtain Seatspn We^decided i^naakiotir entire stocks Curtaira, Draperies, BedapreadB ana Fancy Pillows the leaders (or this Sale* b r*«tStfrngrlfoSf i You Want them Most All Our Othtr Dcparfi^ciit Join la thia, Grwit E»«nt w i WEATHBtt FORECAST Today: CMMMtly fair. Tomorrow: ralrj'tomewhat cooler VOL. XIX. SERULNO.2093 wsipminis fway New Jersey Advocate %f Abtorbtng The Rahway Newt-Herald, -the lueceuor of the Union Democrat, Established 1840. *.,: ...... •;.'- •; ...... f 7^ *:. fr'i.v'vi-iV. ;;-.•: £•..•: .' 2 -. ...... ..-;. .-.-... ..-.--v:.; .,.-,...„..- ' . '. " ' '• 'PUBLISHED TWICE WEEKLY IS -"•':•: •'-••—}• :..' ,.- II ^y IN RAHWArS INTERESTS I St. tfaryV Parish Event Attmcti Unprecedented Here AWART)S MADE | HEAR SPEA Booth* and Orgahlrations Award Print to Many The annual harvest party ot St. Mary's parish, which Is the hope and plans for a successful affair for many months previous to the dates necessarily far tnexcess .bf-.the r R reatei't' T expectation» of tho lead- ers in the affair. A list submitted by the committee which so ably ••iiandled-the-event,-«f-4boso-»bo. g won the awards, special prizes, etc., ' had the appearance ot aoout a halt ot an ordinary city directory, while a list ot those present, had It been compiled mutt have included the other half of the city." -affair was conducted ottir t«o> week-ends, with thefinaleve- last Friday and Saturday, a Jttlng climax to the event. • Booths were operated at the Har- Tt»t-Party_by_Ui»_Kni«hts_ot_Co^ - lumbuA, Court- Victory Catholic Daughters of America, the Ladles' Auxiliary to the Ancient Order ot Hibernians, SL Mary's Alumni As- sociation, the parish Itself, as well as various other attractions of note. Kach booth had Its l a n e repre- sentation of members from_lts_EBfc irrei5Ty~Kroop; Rev. c. J. Kane vaii general chairman. Various general prizes were dis- posed of on Saturday night. In ad- dition to those of the various -Thoy—»ere- aj follows: Rev. L. W. Warren of PUlnfleld Auumet Dual Role Dad and «on Joined the ranks of a solid, single generation, with In- erests alike iu the ceremonies ot the 'rather and Son Night" .which WasTponsbretl-by-tne-Y—MirCr-Ztr Friday night. Each of- the-el»h'. churches In the city Instituted its Individual recognition of an un- recognized institution, that of a fatherly and filial bond, with serv- ices a n d a banquet In the church "precsaiBg-iKeTfraiid~ceremonles-at the- Second "~Presbyfertan~ChUrch of- -»hl»-. city.- .-Following -these, he boys and their Dada marched irm In arm through the streets ot the city to gather In harmony to bear Rev. Leroy W. Warren, pas- tor—of—the—Flrat ^"Presbytertinr Church of Plalnfleld, attack "the ltuatlon In a dual aspect, namely In two divisions of his talk: "If 1 Were a "Dad" and "It I Were a Boy." Stanly W. Jones was grand marshalL __, Once at the local church tfie| Urge group .Immediately launched 'tselt Into the spirit of the occasion irlth Chalmers Reed, general'secre- tary ot the Y. M. C. A. presiding. The evening was well under way 'ollowlng the Introduction of Elwln Friday night door prize. trine Kelly: Saturday night door Ijtlie, Mrs. " Oscar Hbagland: Alumni Association breakfast set. -Mrs.—al: - P.-Ennla: bope-che»t-i>y atbollc—Daughters—Robert—Bren nun. Money awards were made as fniin..- fisft, MIMAnna CoHer: JIOO. SL Lang; t^.jNUss^arsani 1 Mbultotu |M. Loul* ilorajf: ^i6.1 MUs Mary Miller; 1*5," Thomas ll<-msel;' SZ5. O. Y. Cortw'right; $2S. William Gleaaon-. Jr.: $20. Maurice I. Moran; $10, Him Loretu Allen; 110, Evelyn Ounphy; $10, Dorothy Balr. Annual Praise Service ——At 2nd Pres. Church Tho annual praise service of the Second Presbyterian Church, this . rlty. Is announced for' Thursday evening ot this week at eight o'clock. The speaker of the occa- sion will be the Rev. Forest O. Con- srr. one ot the most able and ver- satile leaderj In the foreign mis- sion cause. After speaking recent- ly In another church, one. present described him as "a cbarmlnc fel- low" who "(really .delighted the people" with his "wonderful ad- dress." v "Any person who thinks the. cause of foreign missions li dead will on examination of the corpse enjoy a new mental experience. Indeed, the foreign missions idsa has girdled the world and Its issues are grip- ping, the muds of men as never ' etorer- J Wflen r -tw«nty-yearB ago^ for example, when the missionary came back trom India, he was bom- barded with such tquerleti as. 'How hot does It get over therer, TOd you see any big snakes?' and "Just anyway?' Now, when he returns he Ix asked about the Nationalist Movement, about Ghandl and Stan- ley Jones, and If the native Chris- Han churches in India are really -KoInR concerns." . The coming of Mr^-Conser~on Thursday evening brings a very special privilege and all interested are cordially Invited to hear him. The meeting held nuder the aus- pices of the Missionary Society ot the church. Party Committee A' public card party will be held !>y the Franklin School Parent- Teacher Association, on Thursday afternoon. December 12. Mrs. Rus- sell s. Hoff, president ot the asso- ciation has appointed the commit- tee to take charge of the altatr. Thl.i committee'Includes: Mrs. DeWltt C. Foulks, chairman: Mrs. R. S. Hoff. Mre. J.- J. Bemer. Mrs. Edgar KeUey, Mrt. David Schwartz, Mrs. W. F. Buddy, Mrs.- PhUlp P. Corey, Mra. Otto Wlemer. Mrs. Archie Mclntjre, Mre. Charles Ber- ber, Mrs. Emma Jodes, Mrs.. Sam- uel Kremer, Mr*. A. H. Jeambey. Mrs. j. Flathmann, Mrs, F. B.- Tandy, Miss Milan "Roake, Miss Virginia Taylor, MUs Mildred Wralght. Mrs! H. I t - Daly, Mrs. W. S. Mundy,.T«r*.-Oscar DIUel Mrs. Marshall Bruce. Mrs. B. Pascale, Mrs. Ernest Leech,* Mrs. Oscar Uurene, Mrs. R. Q. Chase. Mrs. Q. Vanderbeckjuid Mrs. E..G.'.Bart- -lett; rr—:--:••— The committee will hold its first meetlnr at the Franklin School on November 19 at t*» o'clock In the a f t e r n o o n . •••:•'•.'..•• •.-• •' ' , :> ;" KAHWAY, UNION COUNTY, N. J M TUESDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 19,1929 EIGHT PAGES PRICE THREE CI M S AND SONS HOLD _GEREMONIES Conduct SeiTices at In- dividual Chorches, at 2nd Presbyterian MISS MACANN A6AIN hose work and experience bring In) peculiarly Into clcne touch with the younger members of the assem- bly, and also William 'Wison, physi- cal director, another member of the "V" staff whose Interests concern mainly the welfare of Els younger harges., , The singing of the services which constituted an Integral part of the proceed lags-was led-by-A^-V.-Cark- " tiff, irllh nthop fcatnrpn nf the musical program in the formot lano accompaniment provided by Harry Stuuu Maitlti. John-Gernw SeiUthted the listeners wfth asolo. The Invocation was pronounced iy Rev. Flnley Keech, pastor of the first Baptist Church and the wnedlctlon by Rev. Herbert Rhlne- mlth.The address ot the speaker if the evening. Rev. L. W. Warren, h i f g met a hearty reception. banquets and appropriate services were-conducted.jnelndijig the First M. E.. First Baptist. Trinity M. E.. 3L Paul's Episcopal. First Presby- :erln. Second. Presbyterian. "Lu- theran and Holy Comforter, the fol- lowing men led: Rer. M. L. An- duriese. Frank W. Kldd. Fred B. Or- vis. George Anderson. WUIard Jen- nings. K. G. Schoeffler. William- F. Greentg, Paris R. Forman, A. V. Carkhufr. Rev. H. A. L. Sadtler, Seymour" Williams, Thomas Fltz- patrick, John J. Hoffman, Mayor Adolph Ulbrlch. Freeland J. Gib- sons, Stanly W. Jones, Rev. Ches- :er M. Davis and many others- Mrs. Clifford S. Woodruff of 68 Bryant street- entertained the-first fall meeting of the- Sick Poor So- ciety on Wednesday, November 13. Those present were: Mrs. Frank Moore. Mrs. Luther B. Mundy, Mrs. Blanchard Edgar, Mre. Walter B. CrowellrMrsr-aeorge-A.-Bush.-M»L A. D. Brearley. Mrs. W. E. Cladek, Mrs. W. C. Freeman and Mrs. W. Marfln. Council" win be hftd at rtie~c!ty ifflces tonlfiht. November 19. j-Waghtngton. P.. Or wlII-present-Hi., ? ,,, h concert at the frankirn~SchWlI. NAMED S.P.G.A. HEAD A'ter Sixteen Years As the Leader, Is Again Made the President een years-the-recognlzed leojer In humane work for animals In this city, was again given the undisput- ed honor of another term in the ^iresldental office of the Ttahwsy Chapter of the Society for the Pre- vention ot Cruelty to Animals. An- other position which has been hers -for—many—years,—that-nof -police role. In her hands, was again given her, in' the same elections held on Friday night at the -beadquar^ ters. Miss Macann's home, 34 Irv- ing street. Mrs. Lucretla -M. Ed- wards was elected first vice-presi- dent; 3Irs. Anna Farley, second vice-president; Miss M. T. Brlstor, treasurer and Miss Grace Jackson, secretary. 'churches,- where )~~Mlss Brlstor, Mlss^racTtsoh, ^ Monkosky and Mrs. Washburn" pro- vlded the educational portion- of "the meeting w1th~lheIr~tttlks~onteT- tain branches of, the work being done by_ the S. P. C. A. Plans were noted tor the distri- bution ot educational pamphlets concerning the proper care and feeding ^pr birds among the chil- dren ot the local schools. This is a portion of thfe^regular^program of he S. P. C. A. in Its humane work. of the association was accorded to Mrs. Margaret Perkins and Miss Emma Mix. The resignations of Mr. and Mrs. Charles D. Gray were accepted. The disposal of the twenty-six dogs left by Harjr Shlrintan of Ave- nel, who was killed in ah auto- mobile accident, was reported at the meeting. Twenty-three were executed and three were .sent to homes which would provide tor hem. The vote of tne cnapterwaaTaadr toward co-operation with American FOUR MEN INVOLVED Freehold Authorities Nab Criminals en Local .Police Tip RED GROSS-DBIIIE- NETS 300 MEMBERS Report Made on Work Ac- complished in Porto Rica Storm Again the announcement of a crime committed In this city Is fol- lowed closely by the announcement of the apprehension of all the prin- cipals Involved. Last Tuesday, a gasoline station was reported held up by four men who deprived the' operator of sixty dollars In cash. Yesterday Police Court , Clerk George Stewart announced that the four men-had been arrested in Free^ hold on the tip from the local au- thorities that the. men bad headed In that direction. TheFreehoULaur thorlties were .said to have been The Roll Call for the renewal of memberships in the Red' Cross Is making steady progress In Rahway. Wheatena Corporation reports an enrollment of 92- members and ex- pects to make it an even hundred by the end of the week. -The Rah- •way_Chapter._.of the -Eastern—Star has sent a contribution of. five~doF lars. Total enrollment to date Is already over three hundred mem- bers; - Meantime the report from Na- Uonai >ieadquarteriF"~o"h ihe Red Crcis relief _ work In the Porto Rican hiirrican has jtist appeared another similar crime had been been committed in that munici- pality. The men who will be held for a return to this cfty after the Mon- jjnouth County city officials have dis- posed ot the case are: William Gtarahere, 231 Bay street, Jersey City; John Labinde. 235- -Varlck street, Jersey City; Elmer Arm- Btrongr-12S~Palisade-aveOTie—Jer* sey City; Albert- Becker, 252 Rail- road avenue, Jersey City. All the men were In ages betweerf twenty and twenty-two. They were taken Saturday night. . ~ On Friday, night in police court, presided over by Judge Fayette N. Talley, Anton Hahn, age forty-nine, 16 Madison Hill road, was held un ^ The welcome of thejocal brancK|3er_ H.000 _bail for action by the Grand Jury on a charge ot assault and battery brought by his wife. Mary Hahn. Thomas Salvia, age twenty-four, was given a choice.of paying a twenty-five ^dollar One or a sentence of ten days in jail on a charge of assault and battery brought by his wife. Kay A. Peter- son was fined fifteen dollars .for driving an automobile without a driver's license. Other fines for parking violations at two dollars were Issued to Harold Sandorff and [Charles-Johnson. ii— Humane Association In Its program j Donation Day Is Most of abolition ot ? teel_ traps._ « win) a.^^J,^ :„ n ;^. B ngg"«"'d tn tlm icgislaturaa-l considering such measures, to ap- prove laws,to that end. Rahway Theater Adopts Paramount Vaudeville With the announcement of an- ther big change in. the weekly vaudeville program at the Rahway 4rheatre,- there seema-llttle_more. Manager Morton'MrBratter to There is nothing finer than a Jarfton. Bowers, 86 •tM*tHM«.-.-«r;'--V-i>-«*«' unless musical comedy on hi* s^Ke- latest announcement ta an agree- ment with one. of w « k ^'«»^ theatres, to have the vaudeville bill transferred Immediately on fin- ishing the performances there, to he Rahway Theatre. It Is known hat^Uh such heavy competition n the theatres In Newark, only the best is secured. for the vaudeviUe performances there. According to & agreement made with the house in Newark, no acts w 11 be signed up for that theatre unless It Is ad- ditionally agreed that the act will follow, direct from the Newark «t«wi with a two-day run, Satur- aa/and Sunday on the stage of the Rahway. Starting November SO, the Pfthwav will present vaudeville per- Kces on Siturday and Sunday. Starting with the new change! this week, the stage show, which from ^ w on is ot feature Para- wnounces that William the famous etar of the Box «evua" and "Urtw and a real star, wUl be artist to open the new hlnl^ h>» seven protegeB-iil^ an act to' be entitled, "The Miniature Mu- sic Box Revue." As If this were not enough of a startling headline tor the. opening engagement—of—the Paramount vaudeviUe, It Is likewise revealed taaT*S5h4}'fff pfr here In "A Breath ot the Orient,' a now famous act. Tommy Van and Lucille Vernon will play In the r Kirk in ' The'{Donation Day for the Rait way' 'Memorial Hospital -held last Wedn&iday was considered to have been the most successful ever con- ducted by the Woman'aAuxllrary to the Hospital. A statement re- leased by the leaders In tho day's activities to secure supplies for the support ot the hospital, states: "The wonderful co-operative spirit and—the— great—generosity shown by the public on Donation Day is greatly appreciated by the Board of Governors, the superin- tendent and the Ladles'—Auxiliary. Mrs. .Brachhawen. the chairman of |33woaOT2»J&ft^?^3r^' : fe&f Btantial sum of money as well as two thousand garments hi that emergency, a brief resume is given here. On September 12 storm warnings were set at noon. At ten o'clock 1 a slKnal gun boomed from the fort at St. Crolx and the people had twenty -minutes in ..which to._reach Its thick walls. —Slilps-in—Porto-Rlcan-roadsteads raced for the open Bea:- Thestorm swept over tlie Isand and left havoc in its wake. •MHlioa') of dollars worth of sugarcane was destroyed. Tobacco seed-beds—were—ruined; grapefruit anil cocoanut trees,were stripped and the coffee and banana crops devastated. The cabin3of the poor were destroyed.. Thns the Inhabitants had lost crops, food and shelter. They had no means of procuring money to buy the rice, dried codfish and beans on which they live. The next day the Red Cross took charge. Truck loads of food were dispatched from San Juan and emergency hospitals established. A Red Cross officer In New York contracted for 1,000 tons ol rations and the Navy lent a ship to trans- port them. Two ships loaded with food for the Canal one were dl- verted by radio to Porto Rico. All government supplies were distrlfr uted through, the Red Cross, and all nursing work was conducted un d ^ l l f t R d REGITALTOMQRROW Official U. S. Organization to Be Heard at the "Franklin School Program'Tor. Evening Announced, Concert Benefit Hospital Tomorrow In the afternoon and evening, the United StateB JJavy Band, on tour through New Eng- land for the one time In the'year that It leaves Its official duties In The concert which is .fitting for the concert .stage In New York City, Is to be conducted by the Rahway notary Club In a magnifi- cent gesture for the benefit of the new Rahway Memorial 'HoapUal. Frank^fe-Hltchoook-ls-chalrmau-ot the commit tee facharge orffie CQiFJTyS)- Memorial Hospital for treat | BauerYTrepor fert The undertaking Of such a propo^ sitlon by. the local group was a mammoth one. hut- lt_waa_felt^fiat the Rahway public would respond to the unusual opportunity realized In the one official band of the United States Navy, whose excel- lence In musical circles brings It well Into the class of the country's greatest bands. Included with Sousa, Pryor. and others. The popular conception that a band.con- cert is one consisting totally ot blaring, deafening marches, may be allayed by an examination of the program. The concert planned will Include many, symphonic and fanci- ful selections, in such a manner as only the famous Navy Band can execute them.. The ^program, as announced -for the evening, is as follows* 1. Overture—"Festival" (Edouard Lassen). —2.- "•Danses-Polowitsiennes," from Princelgor~(Alexnndei^Borodlnh— 3. Solo for Cornet—"Bride of the Waves" (Herbert L. Clark), Mu- sician Ttalph Ostrom. "-~ 4. Tone Poem "Mississippi" t'emte uroie. •5. A Few Mlnutea with "The U. Si Navy Jazz Band." JntArmtasion - 6. Suite a. "Dauza Esotlca'i -Ex- otic Dance (Pietro Mascagnl); Suite b. "Caphlchio Espanol"— Moralma (Gaspard- Esplnosa). 7. Excerpts from the Musical Cbmedy—"Desert Song" (SIgmund lltomhers).. S. Humoresque—^"Strike Up the Band—Here Comes , a Sailor" (Benter-,Alford). —9—Xylophone—Sold.—J'antasia—-| "The Mocking Bird" (WilliamR. Stobbe). Bandmaster Louis J. Goucher. 10. Rhapsody—"Hungarian, No. 3, E-flat Major—(Franz—Uszt-H-j "Anchor's Awelgh," "Star Spangled Banner." —-. BAND—Lead to Come .. Although quite a young man. Jack Bailey, saxophone soloist with the United Slates Navy Band, has had experience in playing almost every type of music. He has played in the best jazz orchestras, he has done the highest type of concert work, and at the present time he Is performang with one of Amer- ica's leading musical organizations —the United States Navy Band. "You can't force people into Ilk- ins a certain type of music," says young Bailey. "They just -won't respond. You can tell a man that he Is listening to one of the world's greatest musicians playing one of the greatest compositions ever writ- ten, and he'll think It is terrible. most heartily thank her many help- ers, those who offered their cars, and the general public, .for mak- biggest best Dona- ever tish presentation; and Elttage and Vernon in "My Caravan." This week, for the last time, there will be a complete change of snow for Sunday's vaudeville perform- ance. After that the Rah-way will have vaudeville, the same show (Or both days, on Saturday and Sun- day. Latest word from the deal in which It was rumored that the Brat- ter and Pollack Interests had planned to take over the Fox Em- pire in this city. Indicates that there has been virtually no change In the situation since the last edi- tion ot the R«oord, when it was ex- plained that things were being de- layed tor the adjustment of the legal technicality. ' ' Further. Information on the J3tah.waji- -High -Schoolr-rgoothaiV Week" being run here. Indicates one of the most interesting and en- thusiastically . supported .movie events of the city. Manager STat- ter Is still pushing forward with greater plans as the week of De- cember 1, which. Is the opening- date, approaches. known." A list of articles secured, by do- nations on- Wednesday Includes sixty-nine varieties of usable food and other, contributions, ranging trom potato chips to step ladders. In addition the ladles of the auxili- ary received sixty-seven dollars in cash donations-. Jelly, marma- Aldes and preserves headed the list as the. most popular contribu- tion, numbering 544, with other foodstuffs found popular, as fruit, vegetables, soups end broths, cereals, sugar. _ .The..First _Preshyterlan .Church ot Avenel will bold.a rummage sale on Thursday from ton a. m. to 6:30 p. HL, In the vacant store at 76 Irvine street Make Good Uso of Rwer The Blue tjver In Nebraska l.t regarded an the nation's most high ly devtjppfd power stream. * Automobile Insurance —3 big companies. Clifford B. Gehrlug, 146 Cross. Hospitals- were Improvised In schools, clubs and even tents, and patients were brought-In every conveyance. Many came in litters made of sugar sacks suspended on polos carried by men. "The used clothing such as was collected in. Rahway proved not enough and contracts were let for new garments. The Red Cross stood between the laborers^, and--starvation Kyen plantation owners were frequently obliged to join the lines that re- culved codflah and rice. - A—great. clean-up and rebuilding campaign was Instituted all over ?&?- isisirSf- Tite-dsj- itter Christ- mas there were 25,000 mfen on the Red Cross pay roll for this work. Caravans of laborers went from farm to farm. Porto Rico, producai no lumber—it had to be brought from the American mainland. Sani- tary arrangements had to he super, vised. Vegetable seeds were distributed with directions in Spanish. A member ot the Insular Agricultural Department has stated that "IS to 85 percent of the vegetables in evidence in the markets, were raised from Red Cross seed." When the RBd Cross relief unit left Porto Elco It received resolu- tions of gratitude from-fcpth houses ot the Legislature. Many tributes were paid by representative Porlo Rlcans to the sympathy and gener- osity' of Americans who through the Red Cross Jiad given swift re- lief to their fellow-citizens ot Porto Rico. * P«ti«nce - --Patiericfr^ts -^the^-.. shock absorbers. The only thing you can get in n hurry Is trouble.— Lord Dewnr. -On~the~other~haiid, the~renne-pBr r |~This-incrade3~boyg~3l; son might listen to a negro play- ing 'coon' melodies on a rusty jews- (Continued on page Eight) BAUER, ENGINEER, TALKS ON TRUNK SEWER TDPII TWO WOMEN HURT ^ IN AUTO CRUSH Infant Receives Cut Overt Eye'-When" It is Thrown ' Against Windshield Two women were Injured In an automobile accident on -Saturday ~when~fh~e"machlne In which they were riding, driven by Grace Palmer, 73 HIrk street, Brooklyn, engaged in a collision with a ma- chine operated by Alfred Grophe, Mornlngside avenue. Union Beach. The two women taken to the Rah- ment for Injuries, received were Miss Palmer and Florence MasBey, •-of- the same address. The acci-j •3en"roccurreTaT9T4S"aTnT.""dn"take avenue,nearSt. George. The acci- dent was Investigated by Patrol- man Nathan Farber and Lieuten- ant Joseph G«rlach v An accident which resulted In one machine driving onto a lawn and another overturning. Involved the cars of James Maher, 9 Underhill place, and Harold Crane of St. George_avenue;-both -of—this city, on Saturday morning at 7:50 a. m. The accident occurred at the cor- ner of Elm avenue and Plerpont street. Patrolman Farber investi- gated for the police. - * •• An infant received a slight cut over the eye when the machine driven bxhis father, Edwin J. Handley, 609-Brinley-avenue, Jer- |^ey-City-and Ray-Van-Buskirky-New! Dover road, collided Sunday after- noon at the corner of' St~Geor«e_ avenue and River' street. The child. William, was hurled against Tni5 windshield wlren tire car struck the rear of Van Busklrk's machine, inflicting a slight: cutr He »a« trpataii hy T)r..P--W. Rpll Patrolman Richard Welshaupt in vestlgated. The machines of Joseph Pfeiffer, 920 Dewitt street, and David Gross- man. 595 New Brunswick avenue, Perth Amboy, "were involved In an |jiccident_on_St_George-avenue^nea.r- Maurice, on Saturday about noon. Investigation was made by Patroi- man William Flanagan. —John—Lyaek, Roosevelt—avenue, Carteret, and Frank Nagy, 527 Thomas street, Carterct, were the drivers of two cars, which-were In- volved in a rear-end collision on Friday-at-6:20-p.-m.,-on-East-Ka-- zelwood avenue, near Plnewood streer."'"Patrol ma'n'TV'IlIianr'Chrls 7 : tlan Investigated and reported no injuries. Meeting of Taxpayers' PrC tective Association^ Hears^ --•-— Engineer Speak .CITES MANY. TAgtm '• : ' ? ( . , « Declares Decision/to Install Trunfc- Sewer Fortunate, for Clt/^ The most* complete ,and tralght»_ forward summary of the new Rah- ia£lyailejLjrrunk_S.e.w£r_an(l Rah way's connection with it,.wa given by Jacob L. Bauer, engineer, at tt}& meeting of the Taxpayers Protee- tive Association on Friday night al the Rahway High Schooli at the invitation of that body Mr. plicitrirrthe extreme and succesfully clarified", virtually every point upon which any questions were previously cast;. At the conclusion of>Jhe talk, dur- ing which he _ accepted various, questions, the erigimiiT was'given ai rising vote thai:!;.- . " •.-;_> •He stated that th .'osent city:, sewer wasan old-fashiuiied variety, with one pipe for holh house and? storm sewer drainage. With th's". situation, it has become more and tlons were necessary as the moat to s omae i etaoi etaoln taolnnn ot some sort of purification ..plant,".,' This,_howe.ver, he-atated^was-pro-^^V^ hlbltive because of the cost. '.. ;" The move of the surrounding . municipalities for the installation"'" ot the trunk s'ewer he declared was a fortunate one for Rahway. for in. '; this manner, the co&t to. this city, L S3 was only $385,000.' which would; have otherwise have amounted to a quarter of a million dollars for. a- purification plant -alone .The'_ cost-to-thls-clty-of-that-flgureT-noBL gives the, city privilege of twenty percent of the space in the seweri^^-l Concerning the grade adhered .to. '"" on the sewer, Mr. Bauer stated-that- . waTs fruquentty—wmrdered- the new sewer was higher on the; ' east"ald?than-the- present-system.-— for this, he asserted, Vi P.-T.Av LUNCHEON Columbian Parent-Teacher As- was because of tne lact that lho~ action of the sewer was made by gravity, and since the drainage eventually flowed into the sound. It was necessary not to have the out: let too iow, in order to avoid "tido -water- obstruaion_Thus^_to—jQin__ the sewer In this city, pumping sta- tions were necessary a sthe most effective 'and "cheapest means ot connection.—Ihe-total_cost_he a.it_ 'ProximateU at $75,000 for the sta- tions. It had been at first thought that the joint riieeting would as- sume the cost of this ihsfallai ion, [but—with-the—\vorlt-already_under_ way, without any such_lncluslon_pt _'a that cost In the budget, this was impossible. He further asserted that the new trunk sewer wil help the local water works. sinc= it-will provide efficient drainage for Kentlworth A soclatiou will have an "Economic 1ami other municipalities along the Luncheon" on Wednesday, Novem- ber 20, 1929,vat the school. ' This will be under the direction of Miss Randall ot the Public Service. Re- freshments will be served. .This luncheon is in charge of President Mrs. M. Myers. A very enjoyable afternoon was spent on Tuesday last with Miss Prudence Penny, a writer for the N. Y. American. Her topic was. ""•"Apprentice Housewives.' alieialll stress on the child being taught to cook as early as five years of age. . "social"] time and refreshments followed Miss Penny's talk. Mrs. Samuel R. Morton was In charge. LocdVFootball Coach Rutgers Radio Speaker banks'ot the Railway River, pro- viding a purer water flow through this city. Mr. Bauer set the cost of sewer at from three to ten'dollars a. foot for Installation. The coat would bo aproximately $30,000 per mile and there ure about .twenty-live miles in the entire sewer. Questioned by Eugene Millar, president of the association; con- cernlng.liow long h"e~lrad~been~"ln;— this work, Mr. Bauer replied that he had been retained by -this city since the nTiaale of IMS Thomas Higgins inquired as to the possibility of Rahwit'y, through Its strategic position at the end of the .sewer, forcing other cjties to give free access to this city In the sewer. This he explained as im-' possible through state regulation.. [Concerning the jrasudtaUity of havlmie the joint municipalities shoulder the cost of pumping stations here, he declared that this was not pos- slble-now. --i-.. The committee reprejp^ting tha association on the invet!H&atlon ot paving in tKli? 7-Itv. reported'""' Irving street.—Adv. Money to loan on bond ana man <age. - Citizens' Balldlng ft Loan Association, 129-131 Inrlng street nol9-2l v iiahway. N. J.—Adv gridiron. The scene is one I ehall"f never forget; fain pouring monoto- nously upon the empty rows of con- crete stands, two loyal bands of rooters darkly outlined against the 5ray background, and beneath eaden skies Bhadowy figures bat- Jed desperately on a mud-covered field. "Alone up there In the tower, I viewed the progress of the game. Dave has. told you about It; our Initial touchd&vn, and the cheers of the Rutgersifctands! Homer Ha- zel limping to the sidelines, and the team losing Us vital spark; the kick which went straight up In the air; and Bucknell's assault against the Scarlet line. "1 know only from hearsay what happened during tho Intermission, but I saw Bucknell score again In the third quarter. Helpless to aid, I watched my teammates go. down In defeat. "We could not blame those Rut gert, men in the stands if at the epd J>f ; ,.,the ..ga.me. they had. filed quietly "through the- gates;"^Phelr house of dreams had.gone tumbling about their ears; the great Scarlet team had been beaten. "Stunned by the realizations! de- feat, 1 waited In the tower. The players had gone to the dressing (Continued on Page Eight) liVtomto. .'•^S - Ws»yfW*. -<BJt.\UjB.\ ; £ 'matter liad'Tieen put' to the touncif"" .; and that answers would likely be provided In a few weeks. ' Councilman-elect Alfred Feakea spoke ot the new appointments in. he police department, asaertinp hat the number of patrolmen did not seem to justify the number of officers. He asserted thnt this nxi an unnecessary tax on tho budget. On the question h t old Franklin School g \he use ot >erty as a k t 1 A stirring tale of a team which trom one ot the towers of the was regarded as greater In defeat stadium. ~- ,,,»••••» - -•.-• than In victory was told by Austin "Sheltered from wind and storm, j through President Miller, with the S^JSVosKij joasao: uJ-;iiB SVaSswo High School football team and for- mer halfback on Rutgers football team, back In 1924, when that eleven was regarded Tjy manyas the greatest In the country, in a talk over station WOR. last night. His. address was made during the Rutgers hour at the station, and followed the talk of a teammate, David T. Bender, one of the powers in the line of the university, that season, it was a story ot a team that successfully encountered such teams as Cornell, Lafayette; New York University and a number of others, with flying colors and then went down with the colors still flying on a muddy field before a powerful Bucknell eleven. "Mr. Singer brought the message of the moral value in the lesson of defeat. His talk follows: _ "Dave.-Bender- has- just. told_yot» about one of the .most significant football games In the history of Rutgers': a game which endedin defeat and yet meant more to many f^ us Ihan-Ylctory,could OTerjnean. "It was'not my privilege Id "play" tor Rutgers in that memorable game against Bucknell. I "had ex- pected to, had looked forward to being with the team In Its final test; tout Ulneas kept me from the practice on. Friday, and on Satur- day afternoon I watched the game v playground,-J. P; Malloy spoketor 1 "; Sflsa Emma Johnson. President: Miller appointed Mr. Malloy as n--i committee to Investigate the facts, •• conferring with Miss Johnson, the.,^ Board of Education and other agen-'. clea Involved. - i." Secretary Paul Lazar presented a: question concerning the fact that . Morton, Turner and Rutherford. -treets; while paved and accepted by- the city, were now In a poor condl- ; tlon through action ot the weather etc. He will address a communlca- . tion to the Common Council on this" i question^ oni^.the authorisation^of^jSSI the-assocfatlon:—•-— : : za-T^fM" Edward Breunan waa appointed- to tho executive committee of tha>s association for the Fourth Ward;\S; Sate Deposit Boxes trom l.f (25 a year. Rahway Narlonstt. Bank.—AdT ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ife^Si^^s^^^lg

DigiFind-It · -''"' .•'""•.•'".'•...•;'.'."..•. • A your money ler Radio mm m HIS. IS Announcement from the Railway High School shtrtrtd the following students had

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Page 1: DigiFind-It · -''"' .•'""•.•'".'•...•;'.'."..•. • A your money ler Radio mm m HIS. IS Announcement from the Railway High School shtrtrtd the following students had

- ' ' " ' . • ' " " • . • ' " . ' • . . . • ; ' . ' . " . . • . •

A

your moneyler Radio

mm mHIS. IS

Announcement from the RailwayHigh School shtrtrtd the followingstudents had been credited withperfect attendance lor the month

CHRYSANTHEMUMSYOU ARE INVITED TO CALL

AND SEE

~ Baumann'sChrysanthemum Show

Over 80,000 Blooms300 Varieties.

For the birthday party, the anniver-sary, or any occasion, decorate yourhome with these magnificent mums.

Whether or not you come to purchase-Call anyway and see our exhibit of thesegorgeous fall flowers. _

Plant Tulip Bulbs NowIt is not too late and think of the beau-

tiful blooming flowers you -will have next

iJohn R. Bauntann

Greenhouses—St. George andHazelwood Avenue.

Phones 711-712

Friai]ima5C!Srence, Virginia Anfcleln, GertrudeHM, Audrey Islelb, Albert iBoll-deau, Robert Barns, Frank Capo,Joseph fttnesl, Martin Haluia, Lea-He Bartell, Mildred How&rtfa, BOB-alle Sactaider. Harold Alexander,Doris Arnold, Florence Balr, Vivian.Balrd.-: Amia_Barton,_Lu.ey.Brafclaw-Bid.' Boniface •Braxatlc, "RaymondBrennan, Harriet Brown, Catherine

h e d G e o T K e

whose number Is legion, but/ otthorn the "department has no rec-ord us they are. not required totake out a fishing license

It la a conservative estimate,Secretary Fell, says In. his annualreport, that the hunters and fresh-rater fishermen will expend an

average ot $26 a year tor guns, am-munition, ashing tackle, clothing,railroad, gasoline, guides, boats,board, etc Excluding the 2.345woodcock hunters, • wno require aipeclal license in addition to the.-egular license, he figures that on.this-«a8is—trom-th« -187,6T7-~1U:enses, tbere was -put Into elrcula-lon at Wast $4,489,425.These figures do not Include the

lcense fees paid tp the State,rhlch In 1927 amounted to $270,-M4.-.This Income makes the workit the Commission salt-sustaining,.'here la no tost, to cltltens other,ihanthosg who-hunt and fiBh.—L.

Brunt, Anna Cherry, Leroy Church,Mildred Clark. Phlllpp Currle, John

" neibertDenton, Andrew 'Dunn,/J6hn~EiiFbey. Prank Mesaros, Princes (Dohr-man, 'Louise Piietz, James Moore,Albert- Schweitzer, Rudolph Shnp-per, John Svtrha,- Stanley SwlerJr,Stanley Taylor, Roy Tralna, Morti-mer Washbum, Frank Yarnell, An-drew Zboray, Bonna Lee Schaefer,Dorothea Somerpllle, Helen Ssaboc-slk, Jennie Tara, Dorothy VanValen, Rose Vlrostko, Frances Za-cek, Irene Zsltny, Richard Uttle,Randolph MiyneSPTttissell—MtntelrHoward Morecraft, Gabriel Pehalm,John Pekarsky, Joseph Pelote, AlexPrtsh, Arthur Rolph, Arthur Sam-mond, Alceste . MUbury GraceMoore, Harriet Mueller,-Marie Mun-drane, Josephine Pepe, Betty Heed,Catherine Remexky, Daisy Roth-mann, Evelyn Ruddy, Doris Ryan,John D'Ambrosa, Wellesley Fisher,Albert Gillls, William Glnlrlda,Frank Goehrlng, Winston Greene,•Leslie Guile, Arne Hook, RagnarHook, Stanley Hrudka, Frank Htt--benyf^HRobert—Keating, HerbertKlnch, Arnflnn Klepp, Frank Kro-both. Virginia Felter, Jane Fiero,Pauline Hammond, MargaretHelsch. Ruth Hoblltzel, Marion

.Hone, Marjorte Howe, Frances Hen-I son, "Leslie Baitell.

Sophomore • Class—Vincent An-dresky, John Beebe, Willis Booth,Whitman Campbell, John Collier,John Cornell, Bernard Escandon,DeWltt Foulka. Donald Gibbons,Thomas Hejfleld, Thomas. Juve,Marie Beam, Olga. Carlbers, Elea-nor Cartwrlght, Helen Cook, Ga-zella DubrowolskL Dorothy Graeme,Eleanor Greslln, Eleanor Horneck.

Tony Mossccttio, KobeiTNtckau, Jfl?seph Person, Raymond Rigney,Frank Roberts, Stanley Spitzer, Mi-chael Tara, Lancey Thomson, Law-rence VanGordon, Vivian Lawrence,Anna Lederle, Catherine Mancuso,Helen Men, Viola Pascale; HelenPeterson, Claudia Reed, DorisRemor,—EUzabeth__Sch«ldegger,-Edythe—gchnnhpl, Isabel Semple.Josephine Schwlndenhamner. Gro-ver Kuch. Arnold Carkhnff, Will-iam Clelland, Andrew Damhrau-3kas, Kenneth Gross, John Koslk,i Arnold Kovacs, George Lindstrom,Wmia"m^acCarthy.; Edward McCnl-lough, Gecrge Selbert, Clinton Ste-phens, Joseph WelU, Geno Zlrpolo,Angelina Coppola; Florence Han-nekln, Pauline Posaski, 'RathScbptt, Helen Wargo, Anna Wood-en, Hatel~McEwenr George~Met-calf, Russell Roarke. Anna Hardy,Paul" Alexander; Harold~Beebe;Clayton Cowan, Hilton Crans, JohnCurniewy, Nicholas Buroff, OscarCapo, Jerome CUento, James De-pew, RaymondGage, Albert Haiel-dlrie, ChrlsUon Henrich, HaroldKnox, Joseph Koslk, Edward Ma-chon, Joseph Madden. Elwood Mil-ler, Edwin Payne, Eugene Savacool, Albert Schultx, Bruno Tarlach,Ernest Beckhusen.

Junior Claws—^Walter Graeme,Russell Hoagland, Camilla Lecu-ream, paul.Marhak, Joseph MescoJohn Mlchels. Raymond Wchels.Herbert Moleen, Erwin Mueller,Raymond Plckens^WllUam Riefler,Stephen Scupper, '"Lewis Turner,Ferdinand Sneedse, Stanley Voorhees, Frank Walker, Patsy Amo-

>relll, Howard Borst, Edward Scho-Uffl T S U t d l l b e r t WeB

On November 16thof the

262 East Broad St., Westfield, N. J.(Near the Public Library)

'Il21Zl^ Wnere; foa w&hfind a fu& assort-?•--< ment of Infants' and Juniors* wear." ~~

Exclusive and latest designB. Prices ;moderate. Satisfaction guaranteed ormoney refunded.

terlund, Charlotte SchllermannDoris Stamm, Beatrice Taylor, Martha Weigl, Vera . "Witeny, EtheYorke, Andrew Collier, Richard Elllott, Ross Fowler, Carroll FrancisHerl)ert_Granholm, John Hopkins.Paul Howard, Charles Howe, "Alvln7oWpHSon7~Sarah~A;PBBTT--Virginia-Aszman, Ruth Atkinson. Edith. Bee-be, Margaret Bender, Ruth-Dean,Helen Emley, Charlotte Fraxer,Grace Hamlll. Ruby Hardenburg,Doris Held, Kae Hoffman, EvelynHrudka. Earl Carkhnff. John Jost,Raymond Kuneyl, John MoCul-lough, Tony Ruggeri, Thomas San-tomasso, Herbert Schaefer, Ed

I war* Tompklns, • Charles - Revoir,Olga, Hrudka, Nancy Kertnlla,Mary Kieman, Mildred Lee. May•Leonhard," Jennie"Lnks, Edith-MoClare, Evelyn Morton, FlorenceOchlltree, Lillian O'Connor, LuchtPascale, Florence PeterscnVCather.tne Rankine, Phyllis Reed, BarbaraRltter, Eleanor Roberts.

TsTCofilificiDgIf you realty ftarit to know thedifference between rufla cleanedby our "Shampooing" and othermethods, Just tend ua the ruethat needs cleaning the worst.

JUJceitared.beauty will astoundyou.

)Q YOUR CHRISTMAS SHO

25.0010.005.00 ,

This to any and all articles In our large and varied stock, and EARLY SHOPPERS^ t ^ -

^

WHITAKER and SLATERHave Moved From 8 4 Irving

l ^ S J i ^ J t t^ol^SJtying(Bauer Building)

Coats and DressesAt Cost.

Today and Tomorrow

RAHWAY AGENCYGotham Gold Stripe Silk Hbaefor Ladles. Best silk hose made.A pair

.65All the leading shades.

• A lot of Ladles' White InitialHandkerchiefs: value ' to 19c>each. Special .each

10c| - Ladles' Chamois Suede .'Wash-

able Gloves; value to 1.69T"

• pair

1,00Ladles' Pure Leather Hand-

. bags—pouch or under armstyles. All the leading colors;

-value to-3.9S;^ach

2^95Ladles' Pure Wool Sport

Sweaters. Value 3.9S. Choice,each

295Ladles' Umbrella*; rainproof;

black or colors. Also Gents' Um-brellas, good quality covering;value 2.60. Sale price

195Ask to see these.

y36 Inch wide. • Special, a yard

79c

Gries Bros.THE STORE OF QUAUTY

27 and 29 Cherry St.Rahway, N. J.

T ¥ 3 "RAHWAY AGENCY

Centemeri Imported Kid Glovesfor Ladles: every pair guaran-teed: a pair - - - - - - -

[5an»3.50RAHWAY AGENCY

^ Xaros_Brand .Rayon Silk. Untderwear for Ladles. A good se-lection at low prlc'es. Everygarment gives satisfaction.

MIase3' Pure Wool Novelty•Sireatcrs-and-Pure-Wool-Sport^Skirts; value 3.98. Choice, each

Rayon and WoolJJnlon- Suitsfor Children and Misses—

Slie 2 to 10 1X0Site 13to 16 . . . . . .149

Children's Heavy RibbedFleeced Union Suits-. Slie 2 toK; value 1.S0. Sale price each

95cBED BLANKET SPECIAL

, Extra heavy, full size, novelty|_colored blocks; part wool; value

5.50. Choice. Sate~prlce

4.69

-RAHWAY-AQENCY-The H. W. Gossard Corseta,

CorseWtes, Completes, etc.Free Fittings -by-Graduate.... .

• Coraetlere.

Maternity Fittings a Specialty.

Men's Fancy Novelty Socks,-TCnadorhoae Branii: all iiliwi.- apair ""

35c,3prs.l.0iMen's Rels Brand Extra Qual-

ity Heavy Ribbed Union Suit*.All sizes; value 3.00; a suit -

Boys' Pure Wool Pants PlusFours; sizes to" 17; every pair

Ira-pair

2-69. Men's White Initial Handker-

chiefs; value 19c each. To close

IlkWool and Jersey Imported

Berets ;all colon;- choice, each -

1.25Children's Mercerized U«le

Stockings; eixe S to 10; black orcolors; a pair *

25cC h i l d r e n ' s and Misses'.

Anklets; all sizes; a pair

50cRayon_andWoo|Novelty Long

Stockings;

50c

.ahway,N. Ji

COALThoroughly serrened: >A bttter quality coal has built up our

a*. Why not try some now.Courteoui Serrice at all timea

[ODOSB BROS. & WEXLERCOAL & ICE CO., Inc.

"A ISt., Pba«a328

Robert-AndrewBrWUUam Bedman,John Boae, Helmer Chrlste'nsen,NormanDempstar, William Droege,Prands Dadar, Harrison. DuRle.Chauncey Edgar. Charles English,Frank Gerner, Robert Graeme, JohnKertnlla, George Bartell. VirginiaBostwlck, Evelyn Bracher, FannieChevalier, Mabel Hill, Madeira Is-telb, ..Marie tlslelb, Sadie Jolly,David Dembllng, Robert Knox, Rob-ert Krewson, George Lang, Frank[LeCompte, Lester Miller,. GeorgeMurphy, Anthony Plosko, AlfredPlunkett,.. RusseU- Post, JohnSchmaellng, Michael Wargo, Will;lam'Welgl.-iLeon Friedman, JessieLamb. Helen Martin. ElizabethMaury, Margaret Opdyke, MatildaRegal, Harriet Overton,1 Edith

IwUkl ; '

Anglers, Hunters CreateLarge Yearly Trade

Licensed iporumtn In New Jara«y put into '-circulation nearly$5,000,000 -a year in punning thel:favorite pastimes ot fishing em

| Jinatlne, : according to Walter H..Felt secretary at the State Boardot Fish.and Game Commissioners

iiThla doM not Include -the expend!-l_tnfe» by_e»lt_water flshermepL

MAGICJERSEYiKNEV

OTEQ. towers «cren a WUop—Spider-'wtb oetwwk* cf wit* from toww tptwvw-BuWrwf« below-Bcwildtrina^ppgrttus—Tiny Iwtehbojrd Imps bW-kq on aid off—Huge slowing tube. A•urge of power—

« VOKB O» AMDoCA AK KMGHUHJP ROM NEW JOSE/ACROSSTHE StA AT 1>C SPEED Of UCHTI

. BOe*hoe«WCH Jetty tutnes to conjure with; (orhut «re grt* r«dto tdeptione sWicmj of(}ie Bd Syjtetn Wang die telephones ofthis nation, of Mexico and Canada totpepnoncs in CUTDpe.

NEW JERSEY BIN I K FltONTUNEO^PROCHESS IN TH£ A I T OFTELEPHONE COMMUNICATION

- .> . B E L L•TELEPHONE COMPANY

l i eEnds Tomorrow

Take Advantage of These Super

e ifiTcl t TNovelties, oi Sile

Boys' Shoes Men's Oxfords

The Famous Shoe for Women

On Sale, $5 .45 pairVatnca up to $8.50

Tomorrow is the Last Day/

SHOE SHOP9 Cbnf St,

Live Wire-Shopping-CenterJ24jn«utSt,. i Tel. 1424^ i

•'TheStcrt thatStrva th»

Now;In Full Progress^

Rijht in the H«»irt of itw

Curtain SeatspnWe^decided i^naakiotir entire stocksCurtaira, Draperies, BedapreadB anaFancy Pillows the leaders (or this Sale*

br*«tStfrngrlfoSf iYou Want them MostAll Our Othtr Dcparfi^ciit

Join la thia, Grwit E»«nt

wi

WEATHBtt FORECAST

Today: CMMMtly fair.

Tomorrow: ralrj'tomewhat cooler

VOL. XIX. SERULNO.2093

wsipminis

fwayNew Jersey Advocate %f

Abtorbtng The Rahway Newt-Herald, -the lueceuor of the Union Democrat, Established 1840.

* . , : . . . . . . • ; . ' - • ; . . . . . . f 7 ^ * : .

fr'i.v'vi-iV. ;;-.•: £•..•:

.'2 -. ......

..-;. .-.-... ..-.--v:.; .,.-,...„..-

' . ' . " ' ' •

'PUBLISHEDTWICE WEEKLY

IS

- " • ' : • :•'-••—}•

: . . ' , . -

II^y

IN RAHWArS INTERESTS

ISt. tfaryV Parish EventAttmcti Unprecedented

Here

AWART)S MADE | HEAR SPEA

Booth* and Orgahlrations AwardPrint to Many

The annual harvest party ot St.Mary's parish, which Is the hopeand plans for a successful affair formany months previous to the dates

necessarily far tnexcess .bf-.therRreatei't'Texpectation» of tho lead-ers in the affair. A list submittedby the committee which so ably

••iiandled-the-event,-«f-4boso-»bo.g won the awards, special prizes, etc.,' had the appearance ot aoout a halt

ot an ordinary city directory, whilea list ot those present, had It beencompiled mutt have included theother half of the city."

-affair was conducted ottirt«o> week-ends, with the final eve-

last Friday and Saturday,a Jttlng climax to the

event. •Booths were operated at the Har-

Tt»t-Party_by_Ui»_Kni«hts_ot_Co^- lumbuA, Court- Victory Catholic

Daughters of America, the Ladles'Auxiliary to the Ancient Order otHibernians, SL Mary's Alumni As-sociation, the parish Itself, as wellas various other attractions of note.Kach booth had Its lane repre-sentation of members from_lts_EBfcirrei5Ty~Kroop; Rev. c. J. Kane

vaii general chairman.Various general prizes were dis-

posed of on Saturday night. In ad-dition to those of the various

-Thoy—»ere- aj follows:

Rev. L. W. Warren of PUlnfleldAuumet Dual Role

Dad and «on Joined the ranks ofa solid, single generation, with In-erests alike iu the ceremonies ot

the 'rather and Son Night" .whichWasTponsbretl-by-tne-Y—MirCr-ZtrFriday night. Each of- the-el»h'.churches In the city Instituted itsIndividual recognition of an un-recognized institution, that of afatherly and filial bond, with serv-ices anda banquet In the church"precsaiBg-iKeTfraiid~ceremonles-atthe- Second "~Presbyfertan~ChUrchof- -»hl»-. city.- .-Following -these,he boys and their Dada marchedirm In arm through the streets ot

the city to gather In harmony tobear Rev. Leroy W. Warren, pas-tor—of—the—Flrat ^"PresbytertinrChurch of Plalnfleld, attack "theltuatlon In a dual aspect, namely

In two divisions of his talk: "If 1Were a "Dad" and "It I Were aBoy." Stanly W. Jones was grandmarshalL __,

Once at the local church tfie|Urge group .Immediately launched'tselt Into the spirit of the occasionirlth Chalmers Reed, general'secre-tary ot the Y. M. C. A. presiding.The evening was well under way'ollowlng the Introduction of Elwln

Friday night door prize.trine Kelly: Saturday night doorIjtlie, Mrs. " Oscar Hbagland:Alumni Association breakfast set.

-Mrs.—al: - P.-Ennla: bope-che»t-i>yatbollc—Daughters—Robert—Bren

nun. Money awards were made asfniin..- fisft, MIM Anna CoHer:JIOO. SL Lang; t^. jNUss^arsani 1Mbultotu |M. Loul* ilorajf: i6 .1MUs Mary Miller; 1*5," Thomasll<-msel;' SZ5. O. Y. Cortw'right; $2S.William Gleaaon-. Jr.: $20. MauriceI. Moran; $10, Him Loretu Allen;110, Evelyn Ounphy; $10, DorothyBalr. •

Annual Praise Service •——At 2nd Pres. Church

Tho annual praise service of theSecond Presbyterian Church, this

. rlty. Is announced for' Thursdayevening ot this week at eighto'clock. The speaker of the occa-sion will be the Rev. Forest O. Con-srr. one ot the most able and ver-satile leaderj In the foreign mis-sion cause. After speaking recent-ly In another church, one. presentdescribed him as "a cbarmlnc fel-low" who "(really .delighted thepeople" with his "wonderful ad-dress." v

"Any person who thinks the. causeof foreign missions li dead will onexamination of the corpse enjoy anew mental experience. Indeed, theforeign missions idsa has girdledthe world and Its issues are grip-ping, the muds of men as never' etorer-JWflenr-tw«nty-yearB ago^for example, when the missionarycame back trom India, he was bom-barded with such tquerleti as. 'Howhot does It get over therer, TOdyou see any big snakes?' and "Just

anyway?' Now, when he returns heIx asked about the NationalistMovement, about Ghandl and Stan-ley Jones, and If the native Chris-Han churches in India are really

-KoInR concerns." .The coming of • Mr^-Conser~on

Thursday evening brings a veryspecial privilege and all interestedare cordially Invited to hear him.The meeting 1» held nuder the aus-pices of the Missionary Society otthe church.

Party CommitteeA' public card party will be held

!>y the Franklin School Parent-Teacher Association, on Thursdayafternoon. December 12. Mrs. Rus-sell s. Hoff, president ot the asso-ciation has appointed the commit-tee to take charge of the altatr.

Thl.i committee'Includes: Mrs.DeWltt C. Foulks, chairman: Mrs.R. S. Hoff. Mre. J.- J. Bemer. Mrs.Edgar KeUey, Mrt. David Schwartz,Mrs. W. F. Buddy, Mrs.- PhUlp P.Corey, Mra. Otto Wlemer. Mrs.Archie Mclntjre, Mre. Charles Ber-ber, Mrs. Emma Jodes, Mrs.. Sam-uel Kremer, Mr*. A. H. Jeambey.Mrs. j . Flathmann, Mrs, • F. B.-Tandy, Miss Milan "Roake, MissVirginia Taylor, MUs MildredWralght. Mrs! H. I t - Daly, Mrs. W.S. Mundy,.T«r*.-Oscar DIUel Mrs.Marshall Bruce. Mrs. B. Pascale,Mrs. Ernest Leech,* Mrs. OscarUurene, Mrs. R. Q. Chase. Mrs.Q. Vanderbeckjuid Mrs. E..G.'.Bart-

-lett; — rr—:--:••—

The committee will hold its firstmeetlnr at the Franklin School onNovember 19 at t*» o'clock In thea f t e r n o o n . •••:•'•.'..•• •.-• •' ' ,:>;"

KAHWAY, UNION COUNTY, N. JM TUESDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 19,1929 EIGHT PAGES PRICE THREE CI

M S AND SONSHOLD _GEREMONIES

Conduct SeiTices at In-dividual Chorches, at

2nd Presbyterian

MISS MACANN A6AIN

hose work and experience bringIn) peculiarly Into clcne touch with

the younger members of the assem-bly, and also William 'Wison, physi-cal director, another member of the"V" staff whose Interests concernmainly the welfare of Els youngerharges.,, The singing of the services which

constituted an Integral part of theproceed lags-was led-by-A^-V.-Cark-" tiff, irllh nthop fcatnrpn nf themusical program in the form ot

lano accompaniment provided byHarry Stuuu Maitlti. John-GernwSeiUthted the listeners wfth asolo.

The Invocation was pronouncediy Rev. Flnley Keech, pastor of

the first Baptist Church and thewnedlctlon by Rev. Herbert Rhlne-mlth.The address ot the speakerif the evening. Rev. L. W. Warren,

h if g

met a hearty reception.

banquets and appropriate serviceswere-conducted.jnelndijig the FirstM. E.. First Baptist. Trinity M. E..3L Paul's Episcopal. First Presby-:erln. Second. Presbyterian. "Lu-theran and Holy Comforter, the fol-lowing men led: Rer. M. L. An-duriese. Frank W. Kldd. Fred B. Or-vis. George Anderson. WUIard Jen-nings. K. G. Schoeffler. William- F.Greentg, Paris R. Forman, A. V.Carkhufr. Rev. H. A. L. Sadtler,Seymour" Williams, Thomas Fltz-patrick, John J. Hoffman, MayorAdolph Ulbrlch. Freeland J. Gib-sons, Stanly W. Jones, Rev. Ches-:er M. Davis and many others-

Mrs. Clifford S. Woodruff of 68Bryant street- entertained the-firstfall meeting of the- Sick Poor So-ciety on Wednesday, November 13.Those present were: Mrs. FrankMoore. Mrs. Luther B. Mundy, Mrs.Blanchard Edgar, Mre. Walter B.CrowellrMrsr-aeorge-A.-Bush.-M»LA. D. Brearley. Mrs. W. E. Cladek,Mrs. W. C. Freeman and Mrs. W.

Marfln.

Council" win be hftd at rtie~c!tyifflces tonlfiht. November 19.

j-Waghtngton. P.. Or wlII-present-Hi.,?,,,hconcert at the frankirn~SchWlI.

NAMED S.P.G.A. HEADA'ter Sixteen Years As the

Leader, Is Again Madethe President

een years-the-recognlzed leojer Inhumane work for animals In thiscity, was again given the undisput-ed honor of another term in the

^iresldental office of the TtahwsyChapter of the Society for the Pre-vention ot Cruelty to Animals. An-other position which has been hers-for—many—years,—that-nof -police

role. In her hands, was again givenher, in ' the same elections heldon Friday night at the -beadquar^ters. Miss Macann's home, 34 Irv-ing street. Mrs. Lucretla -M. Ed-wards was elected first vice-presi-dent; 3Irs. Anna Farley, secondvice-president; Miss M. T. Brlstor,treasurer and Miss Grace Jackson,secretary.

'churches,- where )~~Mlss Brlstor, Mlss^racTtsoh, ^Monkosky and Mrs. Washburn" pro-vlded the educational portion- of"the meeting w1th~lheIr~tttlks~onteT-tain branches of, the work beingdone by_ the S. P. C. A.

Plans were noted tor the distri-bution ot educational pamphletsconcerning the proper care andfeeding pr birds among the chil-dren ot the local schools. This is aportion of thfe^regular^program ofhe S. P. C. A. in Its humane work.

of the association was accorded toMrs. Margaret Perkins and MissEmma Mix. The resignations ofMr. and Mrs. Charles D. Gray wereaccepted.

The disposal of the twenty-sixdogs left by Harjr Shlrintan of Ave-nel, who was killed in ah auto-mobile accident, was reported atthe meeting. Twenty-three wereexecuted and three were .sent tohomes which would provide torhem.The vote of tne cnapterwaaTaadr

toward co-operation with American

FOUR MEN INVOLVED

Freehold Authorities NabCriminals en Local

.Police Tip

RED GROSS-DBIIIE-NETS 3 0 0 MEMBERS

Report Made on Work Ac-complished in Porto

Rica Storm

Again the announcement of acrime committed In this city Is fol-lowed closely by the announcementof the apprehension of all the prin-cipals Involved. Last Tuesday, agasoline station was reported heldup by four men who deprived the'operator of sixty dollars In cash.Yesterday Police Court , ClerkGeorge Stewart announced that thefour men-had been arrested in Free^hold on the tip from the local au-thorities that the. men bad headedIn that direction. TheFreehoULaurthorlties were .said to have been

The Roll Call for the renewal ofmemberships in the Red' Cross Ismaking steady progress In Rahway.Wheatena Corporation reports anenrollment of 92- members and ex-pects to make it an even hundredby the end of the week. -The Rah-•way_Chapter._.of the -Eastern—Starhas sent a contribution of. five~doFlars. Total enrollment to date Isalready over three hundred mem-bers; -

Meantime the report from Na-Uonai >ieadquarteriF"~o"h ihe RedCrcis relief _ work In the PortoRican hiirrican has jtist appeared

another similar crime had beenbeen committed in that munici-pality.

The men who will be held for areturn to this cfty after the Mon-

jjnouth County city officials have dis-posed ot the case are: WilliamGtarahere, 231 Bay street, JerseyCity; John Labinde. 235- -Varlckstreet, Jersey City; Elmer Arm-Btrongr-12S~Palisade-aveOTie—Jer*sey City; Albert- Becker, 252 Rail-road avenue, Jersey City. All themen were In ages betweerf twentyand twenty-two. They were takenSaturday night. . ~

On Friday, night in police court,presided over by Judge Fayette N.Talley, Anton Hahn, age forty-nine,16 Madison Hill road, was held un

^

The welcome of thejocal brancK|3er_ H.000 _bail for action by theGrand Jury on a charge ot assaultand battery brought by his wife.Mary Hahn. Thomas Salvia, agetwenty-four, was given a choice.ofpaying a twenty-five ^dollar One ora sentence of ten days in jail on acharge of assault and batterybrought by his wife. Kay A. Peter-son was fined fifteen dollars .fordriving an automobile without adriver's license. Other fines forparking violations at two dollarswere Issued to Harold Sandorff and

[Charles-Johnson. ii—

Humane Association In Its program j Donation Day Is Mostof abolition ot ?teel_ traps._ « win) a.^^J,^ :„ n ; ^ .

Bngg"«"'d tn tlm icgislaturaa-lconsidering such measures, to ap-prove laws,to that end.

Rahway Theater AdoptsParamount Vaudeville

With the announcement of an-ther big change in. the weekly

vaudeville program at the Rahway4rheatre,- there seema-llttle_more.

Manager Morton'MrBratter to

There is nothing finer than aJarfton. Bowers, 86

•tM*tHM«.-.-«r;'--V-i>-«*«'

unlessmusical comedy on hi* s^Ke-latest announcement ta an agree-ment with one. of N « w « k ^ ' « » ^theatres, to have the vaudevillebill transferred Immediately on fin-ishing the performances there, tohe Rahway Theatre. It Is knownhat^Uh such heavy competitionn the theatres In Newark, only the

best is secured. for the vaudeviUeperformances there. According to& agreement made with the housein Newark, no acts w 11 be signedup for that theatre unless It Is ad-ditionally agreed that the act willfollow, direct from the Newark«t«wi with a two-day run, Satur-aa/and Sunday on the stage of theRahway. Starting November SO, thePfthwav will present vaudeville per-K c e s on Siturday and Sunday.

Starting with the new change!this week, the stage show, whichfrom w on is ot feature Para-

wnounces that Williamthe famous etar of the

Box «evua" and "Urtwand a real star, wUl be

artist to open the new

hlnl h>» seven protegeB-iil an act

to' be entitled, "The Miniature Mu-sic Box Revue."

As If this were not enough of astartling headline tor the. openingengagement—of—the ParamountvaudeviUe, It Is likewise revealedtaaT*S5h4}'fff pfr

here In "A Breath ot the Orient,'a now famous act. Tommy Van andLucille Vernon will play In the

r Kirk in '

The'{Donation Day for the Raitway' 'Memorial Hospital -held lastWedn&iday was considered to havebeen the most successful ever con-ducted by the Woman'aAuxllraryto the Hospital. A statement re-leased by the leaders In tho day'sactivities to secure supplies for thesupport ot the hospital, states:

"The wonderful co-operativespirit and— the— great—generosityshown by the public on DonationDay is greatly appreciated by theBoard of Governors, the superin-tendent and the Ladles'—Auxiliary.Mrs. .Brachhawen. the chairman of|33woaOT2»J&ft^?^3r^' :fe&f

Btantial sum of money as well astwo thousand garments hi thatemergency, a brief resume is givenhere.

On September 12 storm warningswere set at noon. At ten o'clock

1 a slKnal gun boomed from the fortat St. Crolx and the people hadtwenty -minutes in ..which to._reachIts thick walls.—Slilps-in—Porto-Rlcan-roadsteadsraced for the open Bea:- Thestormswept over tlie Isand and left havocin its wake. •MHlioa') of dollarsworth of sugarcane was destroyed.Tobacco seed-beds—were—ruined;grapefruit anil cocoanut trees,werestripped and the coffee and bananacrops devastated. The cabin3 ofthe poor were destroyed.. Thns theInhabitants had lost crops, foodand shelter. They had no meansof procuring money to buy the rice,dried codfish and beans on whichthey live.

The next day the Red Cross tookcharge. Truck loads of food weredispatched from San Juan andemergency hospitals established.

A Red Cross officer In New Yorkcontracted for 1,000 tons ol rationsand the Navy lent a ship to trans-port them. Two ships loaded withfood for the Canal one were dl-verted by radio to Porto Rico. Allgovernment supplies were distrlfruted through, the Red Cross, andall nursing work was conducted und ^ l l f t R d

REGITALTOMQRROWOfficial U. S. Organization

to Be Heard at the"Franklin School

Program'Tor. Evening Announced,Concert Benefit Hospital

Tomorrow In the afternoon andevening, the United StateB JJavyBand, on tour through New Eng-land for the one time In the'yearthat It leaves Its official duties In

The concert which is .fitting forthe concert .stage In New YorkCity, Is to be conducted by theRahway notary Club In a magnifi-cent gesture for the benefit of thenew Rahway Memorial 'HoapUal.Frank^fe-Hltchoook-ls-chalrmau-otthe commit tee facharge orffie CQiFJTyS)- Memorial Hospital for treat | BauerYTreporfert

The undertaking Of such a propo^sitlon by. the local group was amammoth one. hut- lt_waa_felt^fiatthe Rahway public would respondto the unusual opportunity realizedIn the one official band of theUnited States Navy, whose excel-lence In musical circles brings Itwell Into the class of the country'sgreatest bands. Included withSousa, Pryor. and others. Thepopular conception that a band.con-cert is one consisting totally otblaring, deafening marches, may beallayed by an examination of theprogram. The concert planned willInclude many, symphonic and fanci-ful selections, in such a manneras only the famous Navy Band canexecute them..

The ^program, as announced -forthe evening, is as follows*

1. Overture—"Festival" (EdouardLassen).—2.- "•Danses-Polowitsiennes," fromPrincelgor~(Alexnndei^Borodlnh—

3. Solo for Cornet—"Bride of theWaves" (Herbert L. Clark), Mu-sician Ttalph Ostrom. "-~

4. Tone Poem — "Mississippi"t'emte uroie.

•5. A Few Mlnutea with "The U.Si Navy Jazz Band."

JntArmtasion -6. Suite a. "Dauza Esotlca'i -Ex-

otic Dance (Pietro Mascagnl);Suite b. "Caphlchio Espanol"—Moralma (Gaspard- Esplnosa).

7. Excerpts from the MusicalCbmedy—"Desert Song" (SIgmund

lltomhers)..S. Humoresque—^"Strike Up the

Band—Here Comes , a Sailor"(Benter-,Alford).

—9—Xylophone—Sold.—J'antasia—-|"The Mocking Bird" (William R.Stobbe). Bandmaster Louis J.Goucher.

10. Rhapsody—"Hungarian, No.3, E-flat Major—(Franz—Uszt-H-j"Anchor's Awelgh," "Star SpangledBanner." —-.BAND—Lead to Come . .

Although quite a young man.Jack Bailey, saxophone soloist withthe United Slates Navy Band, hashad experience in playing almostevery type of music. He has playedin the best jazz orchestras, he hasdone the highest type of concertwork, and at the present time heIs performang with one of Amer-ica's leading musical organizations—the United States Navy Band.

"You can't force people into Ilk-ins a certain type of music," saysyoung Bailey. "They just -won'trespond. You can tell a man thathe Is listening to one of the world'sgreatest musicians playing one ofthe greatest compositions ever writ-ten, and he'll think It is terrible.

most heartily thank her many help-ers, those who offered their cars,and the general public, .for mak-

biggest best Dona-ever

tish presentation; and Elttage andVernon in "My Caravan."

This week, for the last time, therewill be a complete change of snowfor Sunday's vaudeville perform-ance. After that the Rah-way willhave vaudeville, the same show(Or both days, on Saturday and Sun-day.

Latest word from the deal inwhich It was rumored that the Brat-ter and Pollack Interests hadplanned to take over the Fox Em-pire in this city. Indicates thatthere has been virtually no changeIn the situation since the last edi-tion ot the R«oord, when it was ex-plained that things were being de-layed tor the adjustment of thelegal technicality. ' '

Further. Information on theJ3tah.waji- -High -Schoolr-rgoothaiVWeek" being run here. Indicatesone of the most interesting and en-thusiastically . supported .movieevents of the city. Manager STat-ter Is still pushing forward withgreater plans as the week of De-cember 1, which. Is the opening-date, approaches.

known."A list of articles secured, by do-

nations on- Wednesday Includessixty-nine varieties of usable foodand other, contributions, rangingtrom potato chips to step ladders.In addition the ladles of the auxili-ary received sixty-seven dollars incash donations-. Jelly, marma-Aldes and preserves headed thelist as the. most popular contribu-tion, numbering 544, with otherfoodstuffs found popular, as fruit,vegetables, soups end broths,cereals, sugar.

_ .The..First _Preshyterlan .Churchot Avenel will bold.a rummage saleon Thursday from ton a. m. to 6:30p. HL, In the vacant store at 76Irvine street

Make Good Uso of RwerThe Blue tjver In Nebraska l.t

regarded an the nation's most highly devtjppfd power stream.* Automobile Insurance —3 bigcompanies. Clifford B. Gehrlug, 146

Cross. Hospitals- were ImprovisedIn schools, clubs and even tents,and patients were brought-In everyconveyance. Many came in littersmade of sugar sacks suspended onpolos carried by men."The used clothing such as was

collected in. Rahway proved notenough and contracts were let fornew garments.

The Red Cross stood between thelaborers^, and--starvation Kyenplantation owners were frequentlyobliged to join the lines that re-culved codflah and rice.- A—great. clean-up and rebuildingcampaign was Instituted all over?&?- isisirSf- Tite-dsj- itter Christ-mas there were 25,000 mfen on theRed Cross pay roll for this work.Caravans of laborers went fromfarm to farm. Porto Rico, producaino lumber—it had to be broughtfrom the American mainland. Sani-tary arrangements had to he super,vised.

Vegetable seeds were distributedwith directions in Spanish. Amember ot the Insular AgriculturalDepartment has stated that "IS to85 percent of the vegetables inevidence in the markets, were raisedfrom Red Cross seed."

When the RBd Cross relief unitleft Porto Elco It received resolu-tions of gratitude from-fcpth housesot the Legislature. Many tributeswere paid by representative PorloRlcans to the sympathy and gener-osity' of Americans who throughthe Red Cross Jiad given swift re-lief to their fellow-citizens ot PortoRico.

* P«ti«nce- --Patiericfr^ts -^the^-..shock absorbers. The only thingyou can get in n hurry Is trouble.—Lord Dewnr.

-On~the~other~haiid, the~renne-pBrr|~This-incrade3~boyg~3l;son might listen to a negro play-ing 'coon' melodies on a rusty jews-

(Continued on page Eight)

BAUER, ENGINEER, TALKSON TRUNK SEWER TDPII

TWO WOMEN HURT^ I N AUTO CRUSH

Infant Receives Cut OvertEye'-When" It is Thrown

' Against Windshield

Two women were Injured In anautomobile accident on -Saturday

~when~fh~e"machlne In whichthey were riding, driven by GracePalmer, 73 HIrk street, Brooklyn,engaged in a collision with a ma-chine operated by Alfred Grophe,Mornlngside avenue. Union Beach.The two women taken to the Rah-

ment for Injuries, received wereMiss Palmer and Florence MasBey,

•-of- the same address. The acci-j•3en"roccurreTaT9T4S"aTnT.""dn"takeavenue,nearSt. George. The acci-dent was Investigated by Patrol-man Nathan Farber and Lieuten-ant Joseph G«rlachv

An accident which resulted In onemachine driving onto a lawn andanother overturning. Involved thecars of James Maher, 9 Underhillplace, and Harold Crane of St.George_avenue;-both -of—this city,on Saturday morning at 7:50 a. m.The accident occurred at the cor-ner of Elm avenue and Plerpontstreet. Patrolman Farber investi-gated for the police. - * ••

An infant received a slight cutover the eye when the machinedriven bx his father, Edwin J.Handley, 609-Brinley-avenue, Jer-

|^ey-City-and Ray-Van-Buskirky-New!Dover road, collided Sunday after-noon at the corner of' St~Geor«e_avenue and River' street. Thechild. William, was hurled againstTni5 windshield wlren tire carstruck the rear of Van Busklrk'smachine, inflicting a slight: cutrHe »a« trpataii hy T)r..P--W. RpllPatrolman Richard Welshaupt investlgated.

The machines of Joseph Pfeiffer,920 Dewitt street, and David Gross-man. 595 New Brunswick avenue,Perth Amboy, "were involved In an

|jiccident_on_St_George-avenue^nea.r-Maurice, on Saturday about noon.Investigation was made by Patroi-man William Flanagan.—John— Lyaek, Roosevelt—avenue,Carteret, and Frank Nagy, 527Thomas street, Carterct, were thedrivers of two cars, which-were In-volved in a rear-end collision onFriday-at-6:20-p.-m.,-on-East-Ka--zelwood avenue, near Plnewoodstreer."'"Patrol ma'n'TV'IlIianr'Chrls7:tlan Investigated and reported noinjuries.

Meeting of Taxpayers' PrCtective Association^ Hears^

--•-— Engineer Speak

.CITES MANY. TAgtm

• '• • • • • • • • • : ' • ? ( . , «

Declares Decision/to Install Trunfc-Sewer Fortunate, for Clt/^

The most* complete ,and tralght»_forward summary of the new Rah-ia£lyailejLjrrunk_S.e.w£r_an(l Rahway's connection with it,.wa givenby Jacob L. Bauer, engineer, at tt}&meeting of the Taxpayers Protee-tive Association on Friday night althe Rahway High Schooli at theinvitation of that body Mr.

plicitrirrtheextreme and succesfully clarified",virtually every point upon whichany questions were previously cast;.At the conclusion of>Jhe talk, dur-ing which he _ accepted various,questions, the erigimiiT was'given airising vote o£ thai:!;.- . " •..-;_>

•He stated that th .'osent city:,sewer wasan old-fashiuiied variety, •with one pipe for holh house and?storm sewer drainage. With th's".situation, it has become more andtlons were necessary as the moatto s omae i etaoi etaoln taolnnnot some sort of purification ..plant,".,'This,_howe.ver, he-atated^was-pro-^^V^hlbltive because of the cost. '.. ;"

The move of the surrounding .municipalities for the installation"'"ot the trunk s'ewer he declared wasa fortunate one for Rahway. for in. ';this manner, the co&t to . this city, L • S3was only $385,000.' which would;have otherwise have amounted toa quarter of a million dollars for.a- purification plant -alone .The'_cost-to-thls-clty-of-that-flgureT-noBLgives the, city privilege of twentypercent of the space in the seweri^^-l

Concerning the grade adhered .to. '""on the sewer, Mr. Bauer stated-that-. waTs fruquentty—wmrdered-

the new sewer was higher on the; 'east"ald?than-the- present-system.-—

for this, he asserted, Vi

P.-T.Av LUNCHEONColumbian Parent-Teacher As-

was because of tne lact that lho~action of the sewer was made bygravity, and since the drainageeventually flowed into the sound. Itwas necessary not to have the out:let too iow, in order to avoid "tido-water- obstruaion_Thus^_to—jQin__the sewer In this city, pumping sta-tions were necessary a sthe mosteffective 'and "cheapest means otconnection.—Ihe-total_cost_he a.it_'ProximateU at $75,000 for the sta-tions. It had been at first thoughtthat the joint riieeting would as-sume the cost of this ihsfallai ion,

[but—with-the—\vorlt-already_under_way, without any such_lncluslon_pt _'athat cost In the budget, this wasimpossible.

He further asserted that the newtrunk sewer wil help the localwater works. sinc= it-will provideefficient drainage for KentlworthA „

soclatiou will have an "Economic 1 ami other municipalities along theLuncheon" on Wednesday, Novem-ber 20, 1929,vat the school. ' Thiswill be under the direction of MissRandall ot the Public Service. Re-freshments will be served. .Thisluncheon is in charge of PresidentMrs. M. Myers.

A very enjoyable afternoon wasspent on Tuesday last with MissPrudence Penny, a writer for theN. Y. American. Her topic was.""•"Apprentice Housewives.' alieialllstress on the child being taught tocook as early as five years of age.

. "social"]time and refreshments followedMiss Penny's talk. Mrs. Samuel R.Morton was In charge.

LocdVFootball CoachRutgers Radio Speaker

banks'ot the Railway River, pro-viding a purer water flow throughthis city.

Mr. Bauer set the cost of sewerat from three to ten'dollars a. footfor Installation. The coat would boaproximately $30,000 per mile andthere ure about .twenty-live milesin the entire sewer.

Questioned by Eugene Millar,president of the association; con-cernlng.liow long h"e~lrad~been~"ln;—this work, Mr. Bauer replied thathe had been retained by -this citysince the nTiaale of IMS

Thomas Higgins inquired as tothe possibility of Rahwit'y, throughIts strategic position at the end ofthe .sewer, forcing other cjties togive free access to this city In thesewer. This he explained as im-'possible through state regulation..

[Concerning the jrasudtaUity of havlmiethe joint municipalities shoulderthe cost of pumping stations here,he declared that this was not pos-slble-now. --i-..

The committee reprejp^ting thaassociation on the invet!H&atlon otpaving in tKli? 7-Itv. reported'""'

Irving street.—Adv.

Money to loan on bond ana man<age. - Citizens' Balldlng ft LoanAssociation, 129-131 Inrlng street

nol9-2l viiahway. N. J.—Adv

gridiron. The scene is one I ehall"fnever forget; fain pouring monoto-nously upon the empty rows of con-crete stands, two loyal bands ofrooters darkly outlined against the5ray background, and beneatheaden skies Bhadowy figures bat-Jed desperately on a mud-coveredfield.

"Alone up there In the tower, Iviewed the progress of the game.Dave has. told you about It; ourInitial touchd&vn, and the cheerso f the Rutgersifctands! Homer Ha-zel limping to the sidelines, andthe team losing Us vital spark; thekick which went straight up In theair; and Bucknell's assault againstthe Scarlet line.

"1 know only from hearsay whathappened during tho Intermission,but I saw Bucknell score again Inthe third quarter. Helpless to aid,I watched my teammates go. downIn defeat.

"We could not blame those Rutgert, men in the stands if at theepd J>f;,.,the ..ga.me. they had. filedquietly "through the- gates;"^Phelrhouse of dreams had.gone tumblingabout their ears; the great Scarletteam had been beaten.

"Stunned by the realizations! de-feat, 1 waited In the tower. Theplayers had gone to the dressing

(Continued on Page Eight)

liVtomto. .'•^S - Ws»yfW*. -<BJt.\UjB.\ ; £'matter liad'Tieen put' to the touncif"" . ;and that answers would likely beprovided In a few weeks. '

Councilman-elect Alfred Feakeaspoke ot the new appointments in.he police department, asaertinphat the number of patrolmen did

not seem to justify the number ofofficers. He asserted thnt this nxian unnecessary tax on tho budget.

On the question h told Franklin School

g\he use ot>erty as a

k t 1

A stirring tale of a team which trom one ot the towers of thewas regarded as greater In defeat stadium. ~ - ,,,»••••» - -•.-• —than In victory was told by Austin "Sheltered from wind and storm, j through President Miller, with theS^JSVosKij joasao: uJ-;iiB SVaSswoHigh School football team and for-mer halfback on Rutgers footballteam, back In 1924, when thateleven was regarded Tjy many asthe greatest In the country, in atalk over station WOR. last night.His. address was made during theRutgers hour at the station, andfollowed the talk of a teammate,David T. Bender, one of the powersin the line of the university, thatseason, it was a story ot a teamthat successfully encountered suchteams as Cornell, Lafayette; NewYork University and a number ofothers, with flying colors and thenwent down with the colors stillflying on a muddy field before apowerful Bucknell eleven. "Mr.Singer brought the message of themoral value in the lesson of defeat.

His talk follows:_ "Dave.-Bender- has- just. told_yot»about one of the .most significantfootball games In the history ofRutgers': a game which ended indefeat and yet meant more to many

f us Ihan-Ylctory,could OTerjnean."It was'not my privilege Id "play"

tor Rutgers in that memorablegame against Bucknell. I "had ex-pected to, had looked forward tobeing with the team In Its finaltest; tout Ulneas kept me from thepractice on. Friday, and on Satur-day afternoon I watched the game

v

playground,-J. P; Malloy spoketor1";Sflsa Emma Johnson. President:Miller appointed Mr. Malloy as n--icommittee to Investigate the facts, ••conferring with Miss Johnson, the.,Board of Education and other agen-'.clea Involved. - i."

Secretary Paul Lazar presented a:question concerning the fact that .Morton, Turner and Rutherford.-treets; while paved and accepted by-the city, were now In a poor condl- ;tlon through action ot the weatheretc. He will address a communlca- .tion to the Common Council on this" iquestion^ oni .the authorisation^of^jSSIthe-assocfatlon:—•-—:—: z a - T ^ f M "

Edward Breunan waa appointed-to tho executive committee of tha>sassociation for the Fourth Ward;\S;

Sate Deposit Boxes trom l . f(25 a year. Rahway Narlonstt.Bank.—AdT

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ife^Si^^s^^^lg

Page 2: DigiFind-It · -''"' .•'""•.•'".'•...•;'.'."..•. • A your money ler Radio mm m HIS. IS Announcement from the Railway High School shtrtrtd the following students had

j

' - , PUBLI8HED

TWICE WEEKLY

RAHWAV8 INTERESTS

PRICE THREE

{SEWER T O P I lMeeting of Taxpayers' Pittective Association HearsjM

Speak

.CITES MANY FACTS;!!

Declares Decision/ to Install Trunfc.--^Sewer Fortunate for'.'C.lty; :

The mosCcomplete,_and atrajghhiJ'orward aummary-of the'new;Ranr',.\\:way'Vallpy Trunk SPWPX nndZg'"*"way's connection with It,.was given"'by Jacob L. Bauer, engineer, at.Uj&y;-meeting of the Taxpayers' Prolee> ,i:Ive Association on Friday night a t .Jhe Rahway High School, at .the •;nvltatlon of that body. . Mc.5••'.•

AS'mlcem-•hislissRe-!hisent

Hasthevas.Taiirt toage.

!

[ Bauer's ret>OTr~wanextreme and guccesfully clarifiedvirtually every point upon which.any questions were previously cast;At the conclusion of-Jhe talk, <]ur- .ing which he s accepted various,questions, the erigii.i .T %as given a'rising vote of, thai I -

•He stated that th ."isent city:"sewer wasan old-fashioiwil variety,with one pipe for both bouse andstorm sewer drainage. With the'.situation, it has become more andtlons were necessary as the moatfo s omse I etaoi etaoin taolnnnof some sort of purification plant. <This, however.-he—utatfid, »aB pro--hlbitive because of the cost.

The move of the surrouaSingmunicipalities for the installation"of the trunk sewer he declared wasa fortunate one for Rahway, for inthis - manner, the coat to this city,was only $385,000, which wouldhave otherwise have amounted to

quarter of a million dollars fora-purification plant aione. The

feost-to-thls-clty-of that figure, now:gives the. city privilege of twentypercent of the space in the sewer.

Concerning the gr^de adhered to"on the sewer, .Mr. Bauer stated-that. _it. was. ftmiiniuUy nuuriemr-the new sewer was higher on the:~e&st~slde7than~the~-present~systein.-~The reason for this, he asserted, —:

wed1 R.

the

Drm,

was because of the ract mat ins ~action of the sewer was made by"gravity, and since the drainage -eventually flowed Into the sound, Itwas necessary not to have the out-'Iet too iow, in order to avoid 'tide-water- obstruction^-Ihiis, to_jo' ~the sewer In this city, pumping star -.-'•tions were necessary a sthe mosteffective and "cheapest means, .'at—conneciic.ni—The-total-cost.-he-ap-,-iproximated at $75,000 for the sta-tions. It had been at first thought'that the joint riibeting would as-sume the cost of this installation"-but-with—the—-work—alr.eady__under^^way,without any such InclusionS^}sthat cost in the budget, this v/as"'impossible.

He further asserted that the" new"trunk sewer wil help the localwater works, sinco it -will provideefficient drainage; Tor .Kenllworthand other municipalities along thebanks of the Itahway River, pro-viding a purer water flow throughthis city. . ••' '

Mr. Bauer set the cost ot sewerat from three to ten dollars a-foot^for installation. The cost would beaproximately $30,000 per mile and :

there are about .twenty-five mlle3In the entire sewer.

Questioned by Eugene Miller,president ot the association, conycernTnTFniaw^oifK~frer~hsa'~been~ln-this work, Mr. Bauer replied thathe hadj>een retained by this city"since the mulille of 172S: ~ ~

Thomas Hlggins inquired as tothe possibility of Kahwu'y, throughits strategic position at the end of •the .sewer, forcing other cities togive tree access to this city? in thesewer. This he explained as im-

. possible through state regulation..'Concerning the possibility of havingthe joint municipalities shoulderthe cost of pumping stations hero,he declared that this was not pas-sible--now. _i

The committee repreayitlng theassociation on the Investigation ofpaving hi this "clt>*. ~re"portetl'through President Miller, with the '

ihdirfio-to-con-s of. theeathbat-

ered

er. Iame.

ourleers• Ha-

and; thei thealnst

whatsalon.In in> aiddown

Butt th

flied

lbllngcarlet

of de-Th

ass In

latter had' been'put' to the tounctf"':nd that answers would likely beirovlded in a few weeks.

Councilman-elect Alfred Feakea .jpoke of the new appointments lathe police department, asserting- 'hat the number of patrolmen didlot seem to justify the number of '••-•;ifllcers. He asserted that this was..;-.-.,n unnecessary tax on the budget; ',:.

On the Question ••( '.he use ot".'V.old Franklin School . .erty as »'•',' "•playground,-J. P.- Malloy spoke.tor*!.--Mlss Emma Johnson. President •:';••':Miller appointed Mr. Malloy as 'a-;--;:vcommittee to Investigate the facts;':>•*conferring with Miss Johnson, tha '-;*Board of Education and other agen- '':<\-cles Involved. . i / ,

Secretary Paul Lazar presented a•'.''••>question concerning the fact t h a t . ; 'Morton, Turner and Rutherford! •treets; while paved nndacceptedby-;

the city, were now In a poor condl-J:'tlon through action ot the weather ""etc. He will address a communica-tion to the Common Council on this"question^ on the authorization • 'theas.iocmtiori.— :-^-^——-S2S=

Edward Brennan was appolntejli':$to the executive committee of the v

association for the Fourth Ward.v'?^— . - " - . • • • • , i " . ^

Sate Deposit BOXM IromKB a year. RahwayBank.—AdT

RAI^^^^JR^^ElS^ya^MBER-lil^feM*m®

>UT SALMONPounds .for

main, Woin&n,

ly-hasy recently brought .theu^wtenr of the United Statesjj-JfJnaheries4 back from Its

"tjprinlfe migration,ftr-tbe headquarters Is In

, 0 . ( 1 ; actually the bu-__-^jartersls.lh.Alaska dur-ssummer months. -

"Jpsionei,- Balling in thebin In Alaskan waters,1 orders to Washington

w,„-,„ -i order fti tlie «ec-y>f ..commerce for his signn-

WUI Raze AncientCapital Church

• Washington.—A new West--erh~Presbyterlan-chureh-sooii_

wlll .be built here replacingshe historic old one sponsoredBy President Franklin Pierceand In whleh PresidentUlysses S. Grant often wor-shiped: - •__.'•'

j T h e " new cliureli, wlileli[-should -not-bo-cmif used'JVJUL-^ 'Abraham Lincoln's New York

' Avenue Presbyterian church,will be erected at Twentiethund H streets, directly acrossfrom the present edifice. Com-mencement of constructionwill mark the fifty-seventhanniversary of the originalchurch.

RED CROSS EXPENDSEIGHT MILLIONS FORRELIEF m DISASTER

Year Just Closed Put HeavyTask on Society—120"CaHs

„ -illes" by, "cable anu,-Jje tbe recommended or-Irlal regulation within less

^,*~~6$t*. .' • -' .^>!A^$54,000,000 Business.

~ '\-tor the protection,elevates tlie

commerce to master,,rj6ltec of- commercial .fish-i.the territory. He dictates

mine; an annual busi-er, to $54,000,000,-theindustry .in.'.'SevEtird's.

J ' . U

..wJttlon ot tlie fisheries "is"AJyliJommigsIoner O'Mnlley,"—*'- every summer inr , . _^- . j ' secretary of com-In -ft communication to the

Geographic society.A tHslrair 5nlnMjn~nTcH

TJOLS FOR CDHRDBITIAE.-STRHNCEIVWITHGUBTSU

UW|«UU IVIIV wa w . _ n

WORLD'S LARGEST BH1LDIHSEnormcus Quantities of Material'

Osed~ln" Merehandl»e-Mart-^-In Chicago.

Chicago.—Another few" months"will seo tbo completion of the larg-est'building In the world ot today,much larger than nny the world

Vjyi^l^lfK"CblN.:

An unusually large number* otin the United State's, and

Its insular'possessions have re-quired assistance from the Ameri-can Bed Cross during the yearjust closed. The organization sentemergenoy relief workers to- thescenes of 120 tornadoes, .floods,fires and other types of catastro-phes and expended $8,020,000 In Te-Olef.: and-jehabllitation -ot - the-vlo-_-tlrns. .

Calls for aid came from eleven"

a c J 5 i O ? t) «Ke*+j^Anjrust 31, niid Is wellfb AgjHSjk of the flve-year nro'r

&lsS&&armed: two one-poundof salmon tor-every manrwom-chnd In the United States.'

of-airplanes for patrollngWidh 12hour senlce onv-jiiwuuK muc^io, 12-hour ser\*lce' on

|ofllclaUdrdezs limiting or extending'ifl?ihilis>pstvUeges, depending on tbe'(iSlmon^rotiis, and the Introductionjf;to'.the BnltW States market of the

jjrj:j."fjieglected chum salmon In frpohfe> sfflletB. Jtere featjirex.of^thelOGO

Conscience Smites Him Whon HoExamines Bargain, but He

: :Was^Stuna.—: —

Kew . York. — A confldentiHlstraiigtr \yith a glib tonRUe tliateven an honest man-thought-toofeood to be true plucked the sleeve

I 'of-"a" stransor and drew him Into a-s!dewalk-<loorn-.iy, -. - •

"He had, as tho stranger suspect-ed, a Jewel to sell for a sonff, spe-cifically a Watch o f t t l i a t i i e de/scribed as platinum. Thrown Intothe bargain was si sold ring with al:irp> stone of the shape and color

The stranger laughed, but botiglit.

1mseTeTknown.Ui»tbeMeichandise mart, being erected' Intliis city. The amount of materialsus<Ml In the construction of thismammoth bnilOIng nukes.Interest-Ing reading. Into tbe building havegone, or will go before its com-pletion, the following: .

Sixty thousand tons ot steel. In-cluding 01,000 columns, girders,ainl.boams; 558 caissons, requiring50,000 cubic yards of--concretei3,1)15,000 cubic Jteel of concrete;200,000 cubiix feet of stone; 29,000^000 b i k f BtiOO^cindowsrTeqnlr'

other nat ions- in whlci earthquakes, floods and other problemscaused • distress to large popula-tions, and the Red Cross sent $76.-300 to help in relieving the suffer-.

The catastroplio causing thegreatest loss of life and most wide-,spread devastation was the WestIndies hurricane ot September,192S, .in -which more .than_ 2,000lives-were- lost- la - Florida, PortblRico and the'Virgin Islands. A re:lief fund ot-*5,S83;725.G2' was" con-tributed by the public, following aproclamation by the President oftho United States, to which theRcfl Cross added J50.000 from its

a s o n ^ . . ^ . . .**The United States -bureau of

fttherle,:; ij\ Alaska must keepwntchon a coast .line longer than a lineah>nndJ7J3i<! earth at the equator.

'A t_,of 200 representatives andf^^r bureau-owned boats

land nntSfrous ebnrtered craft, carryajon dntlea "rahgins from capturing |g}ppachers^to'teachlng school. Fish-'^VerlSS RS&(S,.' must actually connt

^esalmorx,that go to tlie spawning.^CB>nnds_ne«use the law requires| that 50 per^cenFofilje snlmon~nm

ffivI^USt bejiermlttedrtoaiass the netsp(;ari3 tlraps"or ^the commercial can-

'S(i»eries. During the pnst yair

Ile-wns a- New Yorkor. l i e Avas gettine a tin watch, rrilhcrr handsome,anil a brass rins for several dol-

;lars, nniPtbeadvtnTuTiTTvTts^W'oTth"tlie ciish:

Bui' when the stranger opened thehack of the watch ho found n shin-ing assortment of stones ns areseen in jeweled watches and read"1-i-K" in the ring. Slowly there-came over him tbe feeling whichcomes to nn honest man whentonthed by dishonesty. ,• •

—Flmilly-lie-wrapjKHl-tin-tlie-watclHnnd ring and with a conscience cry-Ing out for. consolation sent withthe package .the following note toa newspaper: —

"The—tralvli -and—ring—Inclosedwere bought from a stnmger In thestreet for" a "small sum with the

Rcfl Cross added J50.PUU irom ™ | ' J V " " ." i"C «f tlown treasury, and the. ^ ^ ^ w ^ " ^ " ^ ^ ^ ^enablodto givefrellef tomofeTthan"700,000 persons.

In the early spring river floods

200,000 cubi000 bricks f B.tiOO^cindowsrTqIn? 132,000 square feet ot glass;SO^OOlhtlfiitores^ltbSflOtV000 feet or 380 miles of wire welsh-ing 00 tons; 35,000 electric lamps,drnwlng 13,000 kilowatts; 15 pas-senger elevators, traveling GOOmllea a day; M freight elevatorswltlraslnfilenrlp total en paclty-of-101,000 tons: 5,000,000 feet of lum-ber; 0,SOI,000 square feet ot steelwire reinforcement for floors,enough for a 100-mlle highway, 18feet wide; 142 miles of piping forthe sprinkler system; G0,0W sprln-klep Iwnds; 32V4 miles of piping forthe steam-heat- system; 40~milesof plumbing'pipes.

Qutside hase dimension tor theMerchandise mart are 206 feet onFranklin and Orleans streets, 320feet on Wells street 573 feet along

" _ths_Chlcago

Issued a t the state mlot In honor ofthe late Foreign Minister Strew-mann of ferraany. The Inscriptionon the obverse side calls hint "TheServant ot- Peace and the Father-

Final V a ^ u U a e a for'L' Hill%t of OM v*

vf OB toe??** "a1p^'r««Sj"ft*:jan old-aehootter_ to condemned «*'active tea iervlce, and «««-««•Jttnk, It doei not necessarily turnUnit she will be banled np.i«'«,

jaadijaOurnetl ^J^P^^M.some ship graveyard .to awaitbrSTklng ip. OW hulls frequentlyMve unanapected market value.

First, ot coarse,, sails, rUjslng,dtck hardware and all • • *lanenona eqnlpownf that may be

Masts, out of old Kboonew fee-^uently take on a new lea»e of lifeM derricks, M flagpole* oa publicparks or squares, or to replacebroken, masts or span In otherw a f t . ' - . •:;' '.".• ..^Timbers. and' planking .from s-tVessel that has sailed the awa tor-years and become thoroughly im-i>reftnH«a with salt are In nueb4iem«nd by dealers IS »mok«d her-tins. • The amudte from thetn U•aid to- be nneqnaled Jn ImpartingOellcloui flavor to newty caujhtherring. Sometimes old hulls are

ict as additions to «KD«

HWU. • lit-waa Widertakett. largelyf i t t M 'purpoiB* ot CetemtolnaeoDfrsMlODal MttresentatlOD, andthe distribution o f taxes. UnitedStates marshaU were the cenna•upenUonfc^-'— -•—-- ---^-J^-^-—

t i r e Alarm Statiopa ••_-1J—Main *. Cherry. 8U, ..1J—Campbell * Broad Bta.

"i+^:»iainT» •CoTnawrw-fltar

, iMne principal salmon rivers- of^I-Alasia. At-Chlgnlk.1^00,000 sal-

lon swam through the hurean'3

thought I was being stung anyhow.On examination they-appear-to-begood. Slid perhaps stolen property.Will- you please, through the me-dium of your paper, see if you can

_trace the rightful owner?. Than);you.

"A

in the soutneaslern stiteB coat~a-heavy loss to many persons, 76,000inhabitants being affected in fourstates. The Red Cross assisted4.S83 families, approximately 28,000persons, with food, clothing, tem-porary Dousing, feed for slock andseed for replanting. ^

In all, thirty-eight states worer ~ t B

-,.•..• Decline In Fisheries .Checked.'• "Conservation -pays its way. In:Alaska-ami has « o n . wide : public

.•; approval^' continued the commts-•rtsioner. "Under old loose regula->,.IUuua Uie-salmon-pnpk-of the terrl-

w 4 t o r y fell 3,500,000-cases. Under theKSiistrlcter-controlof_the_WhIte bill of.

1lD24, annual flshery figures roll up^BnmUtaTSbleevIdon(ethnttliefle

dine ot Alaska's salmon fisherieslias been checked. Five years' op-

5 - «ration have proved that the terrl-lorv, through scientific fisheriescontrol, can stabilize ICs chic; Jn-dostrf which'glves cmploymenFfoj30,000 nien and provides two third3ot the-inirl<l> annual salmon cntelu

""Tllf Jukon uud the Kuskokwlinare opesvonty to nntivps and rcsl-

.dent «Mt«eB, who catch the fish for(food ffy£jhemselves and their dogs.

l S3& i f Alaska are

A JTassau street jeweler exum-Ined the cbromluni case watch,white metal dimn, and il ring Ueiir-iug a 2*8 enrat whitp-sparkler.

Inside'the-hack of the watch then'iml'"M;mi,""iirewdlus tlm »md"jewels." had been scratched outand tlie figure 17 substituted. Theworksr wltlrfl strange disregard fsr

"• tlie location of pivots, bad been dec-orated with well glued on stones.

The stone, a high-grade MontanaTIiamon(l~ml2ht~~mnke-~~thc~ringworth OS cents, the chain could be j

"worth~10" cents," the"5e«'cler~siil(l:!_iisJor_Llie_watclu It might lie bought

for S-J.3S). A totnl of RT..47.The reader will have no publicity

if be^ - • •

year, affecting 364 counties. Twen-ty-eight "counties were devastatedtwlce~by~storms, fires and floods.

Red. Cross expended' $431,000from its treasury in giving reliefin these disasters, and at ono timehad as many as 120 disaster reliefworkers, nurses and other repre-sentatives in the field.

Fund3 for this relief work areobtained In tho annual roll call formembers, which occurs from Arm-istice—Day to Thanksgiving—Day,November 11 to 28. Only onco a

Iandr!-^whlle-tbe-i«Tet»e--slde_contuemprntes the' freeing of UieBhlM*land district. ——- - -

Royal Medal Is Sought~ for Bahaman FuhenDan

i d V

riverp^and-724-fect-onKIntIestreet."To duplicate the 4,000,000 sqnnre

feet of floor space in tbe mart, askyscraper 200 stories high on aground plot 125 by 150 feet would;be required. " . ..

To heat the mart 204 .tons of coalwill—be-burned -each-day—in coldweather to • pYoduce 2,880,000pounds of steam; 2,000.000 cubicfeet of fresh air per minute will beforced through the building by

-fans and radiators, enough to fur-.nlslLnlr.for a quarter of a millionpeople.

Sir and a half miles ot plateglass will be used to line the G5O-'foot sales corridors on 18 floors;

[02,000 square feet of-space will[be utilized on the nlneteentlr-floor-to accommodate the NationalBroadcasting company in theworld's largest broadcasting studio.

harbor breakwater or perhapa u aHarbor•whart.

Pkfert ef

.".-KansaO.»~™-—. .for bravery will undoubtedly beasked for Edward FrHnnna, a fish-erman of Spring Point, for tho res-cue of twelve persons. Including twowomen and two children, perform-ing a seemingly Impossible task. The | Buuicuiuca iu c u > « _ . . . _ . . .-HMsUes^B^r^-returnlng^ftCOT aJsacquebjtte, which shows Its connec-Sunday jcTJ66lj>Icnle_«Pel^ablo;'-•'»"-—••h-»h»--»iiiin«»rmiM>ntmSsf

with 12 iiasscngers aboa'SI;"

: Gl»« It Various-' The Barot* of nroslcal Instru-ments as they appear In differentlanguage* art often tery mislead-ing. Most Americans coming!across a reference In Dutch to a"baxuln? would readily Inwaine thisto be a bassoon. They would, how-ever, be quite wrong, for It la whatla England. . France, Italy andAmerica is called a trombone,though the bass Instrument Usometimes In France called the

1&-Kew Brunswick * Lake Ate.it—Hawl Place *AM«rt 8 tIT—Hawlwood * LeeatUteIAIMlfr-HA»elwood Ate. ft Wood-

bridge': Road. • •'•••Id—Hilton Ate. & Main Stit—Hasolwood ft Jaqaes Ate*.28—Jefferson ft' Central Avea.24—St George ft JUpW' Ates.25—Milton At*, ft Bryant Bt

S l a d•IT^r^tBttaalSW,,rJSrJeffetwn^w^*^ 8 "! 1 1 0 ?

S t -~-'- fc MadisonHUI.Road.

81—Irving ft Hamiltot SU.3»—Grand St ft St. Oeorse Ave.

it—BUsabeta.ATft. * Main SLS4—Scott Ate. ft Etans St. -

' * Irrlog 8U:

ST—EUxasetb ft Jaeloon Area.S»—Uncoln Ave. * Price StS»—Maurice ft St deorge Aves.«—MUton Ave. ft Montgomery

M-Onrch.*.__«_New JafM

Btudloua and^ohettom

We offer witSonl adaltlonalexpense a home of conttaV

U> »hof» rtvdrins oar

FuMtal Horn*

bay, with 12 passengers a b o a ;capsized and the entire party wasthrown. Into the sea. Hanna, Inhis boat nearby, jumped into thewater and saved every one of thepassengers single-handed. Swim-ming from one drowning person toanoffier he brought them one byone to the ripslns and roast of thecapsized boat.

One woman, clinging to an elght-ycnr-old fflri, was almost drowned

-when—Hnnna-reached -her.—Threeof the rescued were In a semi-con-scious state when saved, and twoof them were practically broughtfrom the bottom. All of. the party

year—during this period ot Roll"tfag-Ri'd Crus-a ask. pub-

carry on its many

--..l-onuuu.—^n»ifcm..vM—*«— -r«_.—•-11)e solved throngh an Invention re-

cently demonstrated by John L..Killnl, Inronfnr of tflpvlslon. Bnlrd

He Bupport toacUvIties.""

Thousands of Birds

Allmselves and ther dog

rivers of Alaska ared

All S3&Q0n rivers of Alaska a edo ed»-t» commercial fishing, andall flalHrig areas have a HG-limir

, •weeV.fQJosetf period. This period;ias bseo*estended l'S' order in manyicases-*> as lonp as 00 hours afweekC".*The secretary of commerce-.lias f S S r t o prohibit commercial'fighinsSi any area; channel, estu-ary ontay, at any time.

"AlrjiWiies proved so successfuli M ! k

^.wlld,'that

«s])O<.taH>intedfiUpd Pan-liandle coast,ureau will probably con-

d t l i u e w s e r v i c *Tli

'be

eirpndtliisuewservic*rof the square milos canIn brief time with anbe cofiic#d In brief time with an

alrplaiiaannd the observer hlsli in'the nip»«in soe fishing gear In thej\rater*'Cflcli more readily than can

o^upm a boat."

PARfiLYZJED FRESHMAN SAYSCRIPPLES GET THl BREAKS

University Student Believes"ThayAre-Given the-Best-Thinos

In Life.

He Claims Hit DeviceAids Sailing in Fog

London.—? In^fpg^mayi

calls his new Instrument the "noc-tovisor," and claims that a shipfitted with the apparatus could

l

^ l ^ r t t h t b o o d JMtromentimosfpeople know only through thepsalms, called the sackkut Its Gcr-tnan name la posaune. a name thatIs sometimes used In -England fornn organ stop which has the samekind of tone os the trombone andtrumpet. Curiously, white trom-bone Is a word of Latin origin andposaune nnd baxuln are old Teu-tonic. It Is more than likely thatthese latter words also originatedIn the old fioman bnclna, a aheU-

Tmaped trumpet^or h

Tribesto Pull Teeth

ia*Jtved

Die in Electric Storm• : St. Cliarles, Mn.—Smooth-barliPdtrees served as fatal nwsts forthousands of birds nenr here whenthey were charged with" electricityduring n storm last August. Dr.William O. Wilson, ornithologist,will tell tbp-UnitPd States Depart-ment of Agriculture Iu a reportwhich.lie Is preparing.

More'than ">.000 deaO-blrd? were-reported to.'have been found on nfnrm a short distance from thiscity .and more than 1,100 on an-other farm following tbe storm,according" to Doctor Wilson. "Ihave never heard of a ense of this

|-lcin 0-irofore^'-TWct onrilson~sin(ir"and It may not hnpppn again In

. a thousand years, but I believe that|-itHfHvorth~rei>ot'«ng-to-fetleral-e-s-

ports."In my opinion only birds roost-

Ing on the smooth-harked trcoswere electrocuted when unusual at-mospheric conditions charged tlietrees with electricity. ' I believethat this kind of tree Is a conduc-tor of electricity during n s tonnbecause water cannot be.absorbed,making the tree attractive to the<>U>itrical charge. 'if...

"Thp rhiirgo wns not strong

rhiladclpliia. — -V whoel-chnlrphilosophy of optimism for Invalidslias-hern evolvedby a twenty-three^yeai-old pnralyxed freshman atr-einple-unlvprslty.

Kdwin B. Tremnln for 10 yearshas pithpr lain on a hospital cot orfound his onl.v means of- locomotionIn a wheel chair, as tli6 result ofan attack of infantile paralysiswlien he was four. He grinned adenlnl into the face of his question-er nt tlie Episcopal hospital whenhe wns nsked if he didn't think lifehad given him a pretty bad break,since his desk In Temple classrooms Is a" wheel chair. -.-::—-.•• .

"As a matter of fact. I think In-vnlids are thp people who get allthe good breaks," lie said. "Afternil, when you are out In tbp worldnntl have to find for yourself, yourPt somi> nretty raw ilenls some-

lijck up tbe navIgattTiE-or __.head llcbt-of-a ship In even tbethlckest'HddUef of fog.' :.-•-•. .

The first public test of the noc-,tovlsor was curried out inland, ona dark nlghf, but without any fog.The instrument was located ontop oi a niu, and~Tr~BtnBie-hrad--

4ight_ot_iL motor car was lightedsome three milea tnvayr~The lightwas-left-bnminc._butjraB_entirely_ihidden by a sheet of ebonite,whlcb Balrd claims is the best ar-tificial substitute. for iog.

The noctovlsor then went to work_on_an_absplutely_dark scene, hunt-Ing for the one llgKf~obscureTI"T)y~the artificial fog. The rays of themachine swept the vallpy severaltimes, and finally the flash of abrilliant orange light on a disk in-side the apparatus Indicated thatthe motor headlight had beenpicked up. The exact distance andposition of the invisible light wasaccurately determined.

"The importance of tbe wholething," ..Balrd •.sald,_3s.-that_wliatwe have done can be done on thebridge of any ship, in the densestfog."

Russian Admiral, Chumof Czar, Now CarpenterLondon.—Working as a carpen-

ter In a small London shop Is aformer Ilnsslan admiral who wasa close friend of the late czar.

•" He -Is -Admiral -Barakoff. beforethe -revolution one of the most pow-erful men' In Russia. Today, hoir-' n w , lie Is only-^liiter" DarnkntT,a rourteons, old carpenter, whoworks hard In his shop throughthe week.

Sickly Boy, 7, Gains15 Lbs.—Father Happy

"My boy, 7, would not oa t 1gave him Vtnol and tho way hoeats and plays now makeshappy. Ho gained 15 pounds."P. Andres. •

Vinol U a delicious compound--of cod liver peptone. Iron, e t c The•very FIRST JwUle often adds sev-eral pounds Wolght to thin chlV

jdren" or adultK—Nervous, easilyllf-pd. ant-mii- pooplo ar« narprised

Bnrakoff Is nearly "eighty but lie-will accept help from no one. Hehas been approached several timesto publish Ills meiuolra, especiallyMs letters from the czar, but hasrefused to do so.

I ^y- work _for_inyllvlng," be toldthe publishers. "<TUd~norT*li-prt--

how Vinol gives now pep, soundsleep and a BIG appetite. Taste:delicious. Klrst»ln's Pharmacy.—;

o ^ - ^ — — ^

mi"""im'JctinUtUTQ,riaBQ3* • sudden need of ready cash.

We wUI rbe-TttotrtO-wip^ryour neods. ~8M"U today.

•Our Plan Will Appeal"

INDUSTRIAL LOAN

ITS SMITH tTRKCTP#fth AiMMy* M* •!•

TeU Perth AmbeyiKi

Boyhood Friend* Meet;- Separated 62 Years

Colorado Spring. Colo.—In the

(Inies, and people are not alwaysfriendly, by a long shot. Butthough I can't walk, and I've spent

~of my life

s tesiCwliich were removed fromi J4w*»had been loose enough tcove>-«rltli the fingers alone.hJ8Jfevery Is of importniice

riiiiklve people have beenknown to Qdopt ibis slm-

for the relief of pain.ent Esyptlnns.-wlio werely 'advanced In some oflcal knowledge and sur-gnorant in other surgical- not know how to pullough tlielr teeth, showmust have suffered ag-

, itors "Arrested"Connecticut Police

Conn.—While walking•beach near here Leslie

aw what he thought was

8" Hgntrir ^i'nking-the-ijrea-a stick to make sure, be

much alive and, re-s t stepped .on anpth-

. . . j not belnc native to»'Johnson went for theejpoltc«.took.the.two al-" jwOierJhejr.tftUndin

k4:.all^0Bi;Ta:"thl5

^ , , , nt A, iimmn* ^VIM# i x m- , i n . n . . , ; UJIN UWL oi j .

Sew Mexico in prehistoric, "enough to'Tiiil uny'biit the smallest>K}tHne!i,V*n tbe centuries Iwforc binls, howpvpr, since no largp ones^Chrlst*«jrrn.cUcPd tooth extraction, wpre'found tn have been victims ofSH-w^t- .t^Jhe'concluRlon of modern this wlmlpssiip electrocutig^i.'Ube

a)S4|jSt9)J)AW '»rt«>'ih»i«i>u»li»p-?-J>a'9ii»"At^^.-&.>ii;->.—i_.<k^«(illectlon of jaws'.nt pre-

""' tdiuns. If is considered _ _ , " . j C . j.,.„-»...., Jit tlie Indians imd some ruget oound Island bold5IttStrum««t nuide of hard wood for . r * e ;_ 11 c K,,~tinr>Its .tempi operation, for none of t o r *6 in U. b. Auction

i were removed from Olympia, Wash.—For six dollars.Tohn .McAvoy of Seattle, boughtfrom the War deportment a tinyisland, marked by a single, tree. InI'uget sound here recently. Morethan 150 tracts of lnnd and islandsIn l'ngpt sound, held for decades

l f . g rIsn't anyunc In the world whodoesn't seem to try to be awfullydecent nnd helpful to me. I'm thelucky OUP, not you well people."

Tremulntras graduated with hon-ors and won a scholarship lastJmie from Northeast high school.'

Mrs. Louise S. Trcmaln, tbeyouth's mother, came In during theInterview.

"He's the optimist of all niy fam-^Hioiiali-4-liave—another— boy

705 Ships Listed as

ittIe_townjDf_GallaUn1_^Moi^ra_years ago, two boys, Mark Stewartnnd James Watson, became friends.Mark was five and Jim six.. ThenJim's parents moved.-

Recently they met for a reuniondinner, fioth distinctly remem-bered events of their boyhood life.

Watson now Is a prosiierous Chi-cago business man, maintaining* asummer home In the Black Forest,near here. ,»

—S!ewart-ls-a-lay minister. In theMethodist church at Phoenix, Ari l ,where be Is Interested In establish-ing an nil-states sanatorium ' foryonng men without means.

London —The statistical summaryof ships totally lost, broken up,or condemned, puulftlitil by LiojdRegister, shows that during '1828the gross reduojlon In the mercan-tile marine of the world amountedto 700 ships, totaling 1SK047 Wns.excluding all ships of less than 100tons.

Of the total. 584 ships werestenmers or motor ships and 121were sailing vessels.

These figures, compared withthose of 1027, Bhow an increase of

.UJC—;uiongii-i-iiave—nnomer-m>y 357773 tons; as regards steamersnnd girl, who are both strong nnd n n (j m 0 ( o r shlps, and a decrease oflipaltliy. It's Kdvvln who Is tbe 45000 tons for sailing shins. This:cheerful one, and to whom I come | g ' n o t a]togetlier due to actual cas-for-pncniiragement when I getdis- I mvtles l"*t to Die. fact that_T83,580conragpn'.'' yfr'g :.<rrt7ar" ~gg'"vw/'<a't fItorig were'-brofceri' up JurfagtaaS-

—There—Is—nothlng-finer-than^*,•Btromberp-Carlson. Bowers, 8*Irvine street—AdT. . oc8-tl

for military—purposes,—were dis-posed of at auction. Bidding onnil, from the smallest dotV>f landto 40-acre tracts, which"brought$1,400. wus spirited. Jinny. Islan<l3still nro held by the state as schoollauds. Some are heavily wooded.

Edelweiss Doomed:, •. by Tourist Ravage*

Geneva.—Edelweiss, tlie famousSwiss mountain (lower, is threat-ened with extinction, due chiefly tothe ravages.ot.tourlsts.

pi 1131 formerly flourished have re-ported that I t Is now. .very. rare.;Edelwel8S does not spread rapidlyeven under normal, conditions.

A Bavarian botanist estimated-recently that lii-a i-nrtaln-iaountuluarea ti«ce were20,000 roots of edel- •wblss: Jn J920." At the end. o£ 1028, 1he eaio. obly 600 remained. ' -|

sppms to get discouraged. He lRthe most optimistic person I know."

Ench morning Tremaln Is calledfor by his rlnRsnjntes and drivento-Temple university, where anoth-er wheel chair awaits him. Hisfriends push him through-the cor-rlilors to various class rooms dor-Ing'the day.

Though his !ower limbs are com-pletely paralyzed, he hns • move-ment In his badly crippled - fingerswlth"whlch-to-takcnotes-aml-pflssosnmlnallons.

Batket Granary, 'A large baskef cranaty, used byPacific coast Indians to storescorns, one ot their chief foods, onexhibition nt the Field Museum ofNatural History, Chicago, is shapedlike a beehive. It Is made by twist-Ing, willow withes wltb the .leavesleft'on Into a rope-Uke form, which(s then colled-to make the recepta-c l e There 13 a month In the topwith a cover. The granary restson « nlatform of polea devised to

irout-ot reach df-rodentaL—-

Women Given Mirrorsby Astute Politician

Boston.—A new magnet designedto attract the feminine vote hasbeen devised by. former MayorJames M. Cnrley, who Is again run-ning lor mayor of Boston. He hasdistributed among Boston-womenthousands of gay little mirrors.On the back of each riilrror Is hispicture and tbe slogan: "Bostonneeds Curley." ' ' . ' • ' • ' . :

Find Pile VUIage .Trenton, Ithly.-<Trac»s of tt pre-

historic village of pile dwellingsv/ere discovered daring the partialdrntainsr—nf—ITHITIT—ivirm—Tni-—-tK,,buildinc;' of bydroelectrlc works.Among-.tlieiplles-were found yalu-abt&'dblics'and ccnuulcs.'

FUNERAL SERVICE

LOHMILLER-LEHRERLEHRER, Director

Prompt and Efficient Service

us against1027. '

obly 474,677 tons- in 153,000Depositors

tki*-k

Camera at Race FinishWill Decide Disputes

Paris.—The famous Langchampsrace course has been the scene" ofsome bitter disputes at tbe finish,so Hie stewards have decided toInstall a camera, In the Judges'(tand nnd hereafter the result of:evey race_jvlll be, photographed,.The pictures VJirDe'deVeToiied^tur--medlately 'and can be studied by'any dlssntlsflert plunger. •

C t T o N v n e to Or5«t«i;were"named;by

f L d BltlElnnaeus In honor of Lord Bnlti-l faipre, whose colors were black and

oranse.

ce««rTatrreeUr4»Y«kIwik*adicn*nr153,O0O.Many of them do alltheir banking by mailSo «s»yl S» ssiel 4VJ%tiattirifktfnaitkedayoldttWNwaitkfr

l»t»«tPrWp^yma«oa«7-ia,or*itk-drawtt. Cttt.thiM tittlead oaf now u * rciaia-der to trriu for mr Chxmlar \19,""Bankinfl* by'Mall." .

CentralSAVINGS BANK

S^SSi4th Are. art 14th St.B*way. at 78nt St.VYtkOtr

Jnttrut From JayafJtpatit

2% Interest on Checking Accounts4% Interest on Special Acc^ount*

Acts as executes under wills or in any trust oapa*city with experienced officers in Charge.

" ~ fbr rent ^"" 'Sale'^§^timm ^ i ^ e r f .^dt for amoderate prices. Storage vault for the safe keeping ofbulky packages. __. ; ^

, • - • _ - • • ' • ' . . • - " ' • • » . • •

All of our officers and directors are residents olRahway and any of th«m will be glad td consult withyou at any time. ,

DIRECTORS

Walter B. CrottellFrancis V. DobbinsPredCHyerAlbert R KirsteinHenry L. Lamphedr

Hatry T. McCHntock ;.'.-.George C. Mcdintock

' James McCoDum~n {.••••

Jan van Herwerden, PtesifientJoseph C. Potter, Treasurer

• ' . ' . . . • . - • - ' . ' . . . , ' • • ' . - > V • • • • • • • A • : • : - . • " . • • r : - v ^ : ! i " - :

Upgn Monday Evoninj from 5 to* 8.30 o'Ctock

?•-$$&&

Color 1* the'life of a room; andthe alternaU»e-U, true: that U arestful 'room-whose (iunishin(s area neutral, gray. Mop are we to ar-range a room which is lively, batDOt too loud, andrestfnl. but notdull? The answer Is: understandth« wU»:nse-or.eo1or; ,

The most- attractive • room Isboth balanced' and harmonious. Abttenced.jroonL.Ja oneln which - dieiwckgronnda • arer aimoat; i t T T i

atral Tha fornlih

•»«» m.+j

• _ - • ' • — ' - ' I ; • ; * - . - - . T ••-. 4J. ; ' • • — • ' • ^ - - V f l f l ?

oulie, n « a t a l T a f o t . b elag de«Ixned. to, attract more atten-i-6Mftjno«iot,_epter; tnt^the

resl accented pieces are the orna-cents, wblcb may be, of Intensecolor. It the walls are of strongolor they do' not • make properlackeronnda bat overpower any ob-

placed: before, them and make" T " iMJfnJfltr Thire m

•tliein "seemT" iMJfnJflcantrkes ur onbalanced room,

ri b e h l f I t

Thisukes ur on .Draperies may behalf Intense or

Dore M they are often osed to

Ijiitbten and decorate a room. Theproper piece.to be a vitld, strong

ilor la a bowl or vase or somer

Statistics show that- one childIn tour la undernourished. Thladoes' not mean that be does notget enough food. Tor children ofthe well-to-do are as likely to beundernourished - as those ot the.j>oor; but that ho l» not getting the)proper foods to keep bla body litor that wrong conditions are pre-T « n t l n r l h I « = f o o d i f r t r t = I

•It should.-^^TIowTah'j'flu'leirif youFcblld IsuudernourlshedV_ Weight Is the•first—Indication. 'Does'be weighwhat . b e should tu proportion tohis height! Allowance should'bemade for hereditary alie and'pro-portlons. A child may be eight orten pounds under weight withoutserious- re»ult3.~but if be- isTnorsthan' that, the matter should belooked into; '.' • -.-.•.-•

Other fllgns of undernourishmentare , fatigue. The undernourishedchild la'dull, listless, unable tomake any effort. He Is always

- • - - ^ bard to copcen-upon bU work

. Fashion] are becoming more for-mal; ' more'. fussy, more feminine.The bean-pole eluhouette has givenway to one ot'natural ciirves andgreater grace;" Ribbons, Maces ..or-nate Jewelry, bows,. flodnces,sa-shea,: fiowers.lbucklesiaijdjrtofejhave_youlare::»upplahUng_the..boy:Ish tad of yesteryear. . .'•- ' ••""'

Chief among pur trlbulaUons willbe belts, -whlct plainly-de markingthe proportions of the, galat-llne,

n r f h f b

The harmonious^ room Is oat- 'or anylength of time: Usually heUttrd la colors whkh are related.

.. example. If green is chosen,Ut will make tor color harmony Ifthe rest of the furniture are either

oroe ihadff of green—or—yellow-xrfen or blu«-fre«ii, since blue andfellow, comhlnxi, make jreen. But

room, completely decorated InKreen family, U too monoton-

ous. To liven IU Introduce amaU1 ot tbe coBtraatlnc color, red.

Other points - t o -remember- inplanning the color aeheme of a

om~are: a dark room must bodone In shades of yellow, which

snaahlne;* a larte room

does not do well In school. On theother band',' be may be nervous,high strung and orer-acdve and tr-ltabU, crying easily. He takes cold

ima ; gno«i have more neutral colon thani small room: light colors make aom took-latger-and dark colon*ke tt look amaDer.

DressingMix together salt, paprika and

near to taste, and add to themme quarter, cop of vtnegar, orftron Juice. 8Ur these to a paslend beat In ana cap ot olive oil.hr mixture " thoald' become theoiulstencr of thick cream. If Ittmdi, the oil will separate, but!t may be beaten In again before

lng. A dash ot onion Juice Im-TM the flavor of this dressing

or~*on» people. If you want an-sslng whlcb I* not fattening, uce

i l il l l i

diet: eating Irregularly or too has-tily, and insufficient chewing; ornot enough rest,-too late hours, toomuch emotional excitement andstimulation.

Ftds.-FashTons,-Foibles

•caofle she loved tnem atoTTlelpWtcare'tor them. • • ' : ~ > : ;;

It was Saturday morning. Pollytl^tbMerry'SunfthlnB

seta._wh4ch^4re .gone but not for-gotten. -Sport coats especially sup-port belts. . -

The. navy, blue suit ..wlUi. whiteblouaec-Jabot—andi-everytning,-4scoming back. We have become ac-costumed to the Irregular hem lineand-the exceeding dlp-in-tho backof party dreases. A new variationof- thia general scheme is the dipin front, with the dreas short inthe back, or the dip on one side,or posalbly both, while tbe rest ofthe(sklrt maintains its even waj asto the hem. •_..-

It Is going to be easier to makeovtr dressei-of-Iasl-year's vintage,since good* of contrasting colorsare to be more used in one gar-ment. A collar, a flounce, panels,belt, cuffs and pocketa ot any con-irasttag-eolor-may-bo-added—to-aHdress. _Thnsjrou_ltoay a d ( 1 t h ? ? e w"er Business to an old " ' '---'-"The round color of a simple ruffleis a'new tofth. .

POLLY A?H) HER PALSEVELYN tfJltOstM RANO

PoUy Love was a little girt mhohved on a small firm with barMother,-Daddy-and Baby-Joy;--'•.

-Besides tier,- own; family Polly

*khad » great many fait:-

Flrat there-was Dicky'Boy,

hay,' and-Okly-noticed-a-piece ort fly In BlacUe'a eye. Thkv hnrtW poky -and frightened.' him? and

lie- Hashed on taster than' ever.'-" 1(j Boy called, "Whoa! whoaf"

ly called, "Whoa, whoa!" andlived--across the way on anotberfarm, walls- down the. roadV-aft«ryou had passed three" cornflelds,")lived the large- family of Thomp-sons. This family was; busy .fron)morning until- night,, but - some-

Tije pony' dashed madly down thew i - . - x , - : " ' • • • : . • • • • • • . • • • - • • ' • : : • • • • • • • • • " •

'- By-this. time' the children knew,that Blackla waa running away,

{low frightened they were.' They

Polly and Dicky.Then'on' the farm, Jhere was

Molly Moo Cow, Harry'Horse, llt-yt le ' Pinky

h

H a y H ,and' his mother.t l e P i n k y Pig and s h

Brownie the dog, Tad the cat. Wad-dle tbe duck, the chickens aridp i g e o n s , - v . •"*••, -'-•'•/--

They Were all Polly's pals, W

il to the side of the cart. "Help help!" they called _they vent tearing pa.it the Thomp-son-l?o t i e . ;

Mother Thompson.saw that theywere In- great- danger, so she ranto the fields and told Mr. Thomp-sofa to follow them-with their fast

tw- . v » - -Pretty soon Polly; saw that they

we're swiftly passing the fields thatj t h l ^ i U T bghe jraa_ l t e f c _ J D y . _ W I

Before long-a little freckled facedjxiy^came.'-'-scampering. ipver_'ItpPolly'a yard. '

^Hll Pol

b e I o n j 5 e d t ^eating grass, she saw-'her old pal

H ' ^

Polly," said Dicky Boy."Hello, JDlcky," answered Polly

with, a big "imiler 'Dicky Boy said, '<If I get by little

pouy and cart; will you and'BabyJoy..ilile:jtozthBjBtOTB-,wItb;.mel'i:::

-Oh, goodie! goodie!" eaid Polly.Then Into the house she ran toask Mother. As aoon'as PollyVlmother gave her consent, Polly pata little ruffled' bonnet an Baby Joy.Then taking bold of her. little fat

Dicky Boy helped them iato hisJlUle_Dony_'carU_ Then.:he.calledglddap, glddap, and Blackle thelittle pony -vent trotting down theroad, with Baby Joy waving bye-uye to everything she taw. '—^Oh^Dlcky-•-'•Hald-Pollyr^ " l i t UBstop, in and see the Thompson chil-dren.'' - '- - -'-•-;: . -- -

they reached the Thompson homecalled, "Whoa, whoa.''

PorkPork Is one of the standard and

most delicious foods, but It shouldalways be well cooked to avoidArngar of the parasite: trichinae.Only a~<small p*retnt of hogsareInfested with trichinae, but thepresence of these virulent germscannot be detected by the appear-ance of the meat and It Is Impos-sible to (ell which has It and whichh»B not.' The only safe way is tocook all pork. . .

g g,araffln mineral oil lnitead_of olive

Sour MilkWhen von have sweet milk In

some bottles but one bottle contain.)sour milk, anybody going to theIce-box will readily recognize-thesoar milk and arold it. If you makea habit of tying a strip of muslin

And" breaks' to sodden, leapinglight;-

cricket In* the corner calls;Slow silence' deepens down - the

night,- ..

y p•bout a bottle of sour milk, to dls-6 ^ i

A Thanksgiving Tree_ A Christmas tree Is familiar, toall, but nora'Tiarvesl festival treefor tbe family homecoming. Selecta tree which reaches to the celling.At its base make an embankmentof golden pumpkins. On ithe treefasten, as if they, grew there, anassortment of all kinds"of fruits:bananas, apples, 'orangas. ~Bg»,dates, even clusters of grapes orralilus. 'Before the guests dis-perse, after they have enjoyed thenovel tree for several hours, letsomeone dress as Ceres—tbe god-dess of Ihe harvest—dispense thefruit,; as old Santa might do withthe presents.on the Christmas tree.

Fireplace HintTo put nne..coal-_npon_the__nrer

place fire, means to send a cloudof black smoke through the room.A scheme to prevent this is to placethe flne "coal sittings in a papersack and set this on the flame. <Bythe limp the bay Is burned the heathas tuned the coal into a mass and

DickyBlackleclimbed

stopped, and they allout. Dollv and* Ted

Thompson. came running to meetthen

They left Baby Joy to play withBaby Thompson. Mrs. Thompsonsaid the children could play withPolly -and -Dicky for- a- while. Sothey bad several games of tag andhide and go seek."~Tn6n~DIcliy~ana-Polly decided Itwas time for them to go on to thestore.

They ran in the house tor BabyJoy and they were soon In thepony cart, waving good-bye to theThompson children.

Dicky had finished buying thegroceries, and they were on theway home when Polly said, "MakeClackie go as fast as the wind."

Dicky -waved a little whip highIn the-alir-Asfloon-aa Blackie sawthis, away he ran.

"Oh, this is'fnn."'said'Polly ranBaby-Joy clapped-her-two"little faihands wtlh glee.

Either raw or canned pears may

halt pear on a lettuce-leaf, fill thecenter wlth"cream "cheese and topwith mayonnaise dressing to whichwhipped cream has been added.

^Jfegfeter as-Material for Hats,

j ^ g ^When you open a cau of poai-hes

slice five small, peeled oranges andone orange-unpeeled. and add tothem. Let this stand for several

.hours, then set It Into the ovenjaniLleLlt.CQPk.jlgw"" to the thlck-ness of peach butter.

r JULIA BbTTOMLEY ;.

Tthe children looked np the roadapd there was'Mr Thompson com-ing on his horse.

He was glad to see that, theywere all safe; and he thought HarryHorse was very wonderful to stopB l a c k t e ; ' . '•' : • - ' . • ' • - • ' •

-. Dicky told him about the pony'se y e . ' : : \ ' • ' • ' • • • • " "

Mr. Thompson said, for Dicky to.

held

arryHorse: : 7 ^^Polly .stooiLnp..In.the..cart_ and

called, -"Harry Horse, help! .help!"Harry Horse lifted his head and

saw- Blackie the Pony dashingdown- Uie road with three littlechildren that he loved. ; ' .' Harry knew Blackie was running

awajv iso ::the.-jald:Thorae-stampedthe ground,, gave a loud neigh, thenover the fence he jumped anddown the road he ran after Blacklet h e P o n y . -'•• • • • » ' " '

The children's mothers Heard thescream for help as Blackie ran

announce the- death of M. LouiseDndeThiuY President of the RahwayWoman's Christian TemperanceUnion, November <, 1929, afterthree days' illness of pleura-pheu/

__r , 1 would lastenBlackle to hla horse's reins.' Then Mr. Thompson took Baby,

joy up OD the horse's back with[him, and Polly rode home oh herfold pal Harry Horse. - ....Hpw._haj)jy_JtheIr_mother8 werewhen, they saw them alPcbmlnghome safe. . v

Dicky. and Polly declared theywould never make Blackle run nofast again. They thanked Mr.Thompson, and he told.them tobathe Buckle's eye.

Baby Joy cuddled in her mother'sarms-and-felt-ver-y—happy. . L _- That night when Polly, took HarryHorse bis supper, she gave himtbreejumpa.bf sugar,.._ "Here/'jaidPolly, "Is' a lump of sugar fromD16ky_Bby,Iojie_lrom Baby .Joy andone from he. ~ "'you."

They mean Thank

hand, .they went down to the gate, (.faster than ever by his own home.How frightened the - nytfcers

were, But when _Mrs^_ Love sawHah-y : Horse coming down "the"]road, she called. ~Save them, HarryHorse;, save them."

Away he dashed like the wind,and before.long he was up neartbe pony cart. Now he was rightbeside Polly, "bis:-UtUe-paL. She

MI88.M. LOUI8K UNDERHILL

With(Contrlbotrd) ,

most - aincete sorrow

have been continuous toent.

Who can estimate the modkspiritual welfare of the""]hrorugh their efforts vij•Miss Underbill's quiet pt«

Ity • was ftlwiys'so appareai'_,he did In her varioua duties;She gave utatlhtiagly of b*r time',|;dtalnt ' * ""

olaMiss Underbill Is a great loss to

her family, but to the Union, herchurch' associations as teacher oftbe Woman's Bible Class, memberof the Missionary Society and aworker in the many church activi-ties,— also-1 ln-«lvlc-ialfalrs-for~thewelfare of Rahway.

For many years.she was a teacheVin Rahway's public schools, andlater on secretary to the superin-tendent. . •

In'all her .duties she was de-voted, conscientious, efficient and

l l l f l d ^

Well done, good a id falfMulant, enter into the rewards ol b ^labors.'

They «ent "dashing by a load of'fright.

was callingr~"Hotd~Blackle—holdBlackie."

That" wag It,. thought HarryHorse. He must make the ponystop. He must grab his harness.So Harry Horse ran very fast andclose- to.. Blackie. • Then^ he grab-bed the pony's harness "withrhisteeth and held fast.

At last poor frightened Blacklebegan to slowdown

Dicky called "Whoa!" Blackieand Harry Horse stopped by theroadside. ' . _

Tbe children were badly fright-ened and poor little Baby Jo Vsbonnet was down over her littlebrown eyes, and she WEB crying asPolly carried her over byJHarryHorse. How Polly did~love andpat tbe great big brown horse.

iDIcky was much concerned overhis; little, pony, "because he knewthat something terrible had hap-pened to make him run away.

"Poor Blackle,". said Dicky, .ashe looked In the pony's eye. Itwas all red where It had beenscratched by the hay. and poor lit-tle Blackie was trembling with

(To be continued)

Great Commanders -Not .Famed as Rifle Shots

—-Tie .fireat-jfopoleon,. being eco-nomically minded, would have" beengratified to know that Ills "fowl-ing piece" brought 11,000 second-hand at a recent sale In Paris. -

Bona»arte. educated as an' ar-tilleryman, was a "bit; gun" manIn. Ills .military ..attitude, and de-pended largely on his artillery andcavalry sabres to win glory. As a"handler o r small- arms-he- was -»-;true artilleryman.

The Little Corporal was a poorshot" and sport did not appeal tohim, perhaps for thnt reason. Stu-dents of the Intimate details of hislife recall that on one of the few

"occaBlonshe^wentsunnlng for gamebis entire bag consisted of his fa-vorite dog. ' •

His great adversary/ the. dukeof Wellington, wps no better. LadyShelley. In her memoirs, describinga hunting with him. sayf:

. T h e hero of Waterloo was a veryI .wild shot. After wounding a re-

triever and peppering a keeper'sgaiters, he sprinkled the bare armsof an old woman washing dotbeaat her cottage window.".

For many years slie and her sis-ter, Miss Georgia T., were enthusi-astic ln/Loyat Temperance-1 Legionwork for children,, and many-ofthese have risen—up—to-call themblessed for. the inspiration -andknowledge so faithfully and loving-ly Imparted. ' . . - - . .: Their mother, Mrs. J. U. Under-hllV-had—bBen_an_lnteraBted andfaithful worker for .TemperaficePirnot the President since 1874 or be-fore, bat records, are. missing.,' 'Miss Julia Barker, dearly be-

loved, was the successor la 1907,Her prolonged Illness made neces-sary the service of M. Louise asacting president and Georgia T astreasurer and secretary, and theaa

There IsStromberg-Carlson.Irving street.—Adv.

finer than aBowers, 86

oc8-tf

GreenJn.JIa^IFeJtcMng:Tones and Tin^ for Evening

By JUtlABOTTOMtEY

0J&&Difference in the Sexea

- at Periods of Growth"There is a marked difference be-

tween boys and girls In the waythey grow, particularly during ado-lescence."

Tills Is the opinion of a well-known woman authority on childwelfare, who h«s observed aboutn.two children over a period of 11years-nnd has followed about TOOor them to adult growth.

"Growth In the. girl practicallyceases' between fifteen and sixteenand In many cases earlier." she

Maid. "But In the boy this Is pro-longed until eighteen and oftenlater. The girl, having to get hergrowth over in a much shorter pe-riod and doing It In rather a Jerkyway, tends to go through a phase

-lastlng-from-12-to-18-monthB-wlien-|she Is disinclined for any physicalor mental exercise, and welcomesgroup control and routine.

"The boy, on the other hand,tendsto Jinve a. marked freeing of

"I—wnnts—to—undertake.

Mrs. M. VanderhovenRepresenting

Metropolitan Supply Co*Wiihcs to serve old and new

customer*.

Blankets, Curtains, Drapes,

r Bedspreads," etc.~- ~ ~

-—Showroom-69-leving ^St,

.Phone 1109.

Fall ApparelMore. ap<? more.the women ofRahway are ap-preciating thefict.that they can doas well in style.and better iiiprice here at the" *;Hamilton Shopthan they can out _of town.

TheHamilton Shop

gaale

• EMMA ¥Sf tChairman of, Comm

.T^aTnlnte said HI Lo, ^ot Chinatown. "Is a guide to t h * Wfortunate, but n menace to mfmtio-'^lffselects.the wrong teaeher.V-'ttr(ftn>' •:f"-;MInsrtpn:Star.. ' '"

7If -funcUciiU gladder Irrgatloa"disturb* yom sleep, c*u*e» Burning'^t^f TfMiing .Sensation, "fi*\*fr*TiVhifr *ff>i* -Leg Pains; making' you fe«i tired. •depressed and discouraged, why n o t , _try the Cystox 48 Hour T « A r D o o t ;;glve'up: G«t Oystez today'*t"ter? W!drug store. Put It to the tes t "'See -wbow-f«atjit- works.' Money- bicV-ifIt doesn't bring TjuicTt"improvBm«atr^and satisfy you completely.,,,^Crjr. . 1and satisfy y pVyttoc today.. .Only_60c,..

Put tbe Friendly Smilt ':'.ofCGLOKin every ^0

Dress up die shabby, old pieces with^ _''';' ffibright, ,ch«rf colon!.-.-. You•'atr*- '.V.'?"-''J-ff h f / / d-effea the trmtfonmcion.TQ<ff/y/f*a&d- -!

with scarcely a dedc io your hpuai--bold budget. -'.'_'S A P O U N Speed Enamel is so :so e4sj to use, thartbe ' 'a realpleuiue. •-.. . .-.-

J n 1 single bout S A P O U N is'dry tit''touch ftad v/itbm joir hours it &*is.k

hard and smooth as glassf . . . No-,odor, no brush marks,.no stickixi&sl^.'Sevenieen glorious colors from which'to choose — also blade and - 1 ' — -

"KM

FJtEE/ -ran—tkt DtcortW, <a intmg mmi ftictical mrnmud vtukkridkjk* frfftr u i 0/ Color m Ikt Ho*U.

SAPOUNSPEED ENAMELS

GLOSS FINISH 'Sold and Rtcommcnded by: •••)

-T.-H.-ROBERT8-COT-148 Main Street, Rahway, N."X

some particularly Individual tasknutBlde routine and tends to re-sent group tontrol."

Some'Call U a D*pot RowVtteit Hiram w»» coming to

visit his city nephew and thenephew was looVins forward to thevisit with some uncertainty. Hehad warned Uncle tllrnm that behnd chanced since the days on thefarm. . But he didn't realize Just

IKE everybody' else -who has-* anything to do with fashions,Ulmers .bare not been, able to re-

r«-the- lnre-«^ 4he';ne?r woolens,nchas arebr(nglng glory and re-.iown to ttte textile arts.

There'a no iinarter wajr to "start"he season than trf hat and scarfmeself In some one or other of theweed, broadcloth, or Jerser-^Bets"*which are the-new note In early

v ; U t I 6vB.;coUectI6narf- - - - - - - =In-their ieeai to make the.inort

>f-a good.thlig,.Paris modutesarantiiiiing every. Inch of the- new

t I U t o t b e l raterIaU--«rett^to_Jt«g * jxhat a aelvedge«an be

* y dtcoratlvt rla- cttarir Ulut-ireted In mafiy-of the new toques••hlch are made f a t t e r the-man

. doned .'of a handsomely colorful|o««e woten twtet . thg,»e,lv«dte ofTrolchU so1 «|e»«iy. manipulated, as

)forn) fhah^miTiimofit. Apocket-

book, rtade ' of 1he samotweed, completes this mostIntriguing millinery ensem-blei

' - " A spotti fabric In grayand navy blue was the In-spiration for the fetcfitos

hat-and-ecart set shown, to tbe eftThe hat combines the. nonchalantlines ot the tarn, and the POP?J«beret It Is part of the featureof these nifty sets that the hat fitvery snug-and that the scarf-beworn tight about the throat. Justas you see it In the picture, . ....

Another medium for the*' hatmuch employed for the.new mod-eU la «ede* also finished kldskln,Which comes in all fashionable col-orinff. One sees, for Instance, amolded-to-the-head shape^of graySoved. kid,' "which to deftly Inter-worked with velvet or some othermaterial such as yardage felt or an-

^ I f scarfing.—The hat below•circle:Ja. ot gray, kldskln

i darker gray, velvet shown In

till be read Uncle Hiram's tele-gram.

"Meet me at the Grand Centraldepot at 2:15."

"The Orand Central depot," helaughed. But the laugh had a guiltysound. ' '

•It- hadn't been so many year*,be remembered, since he hnd calleda statlcn a depot, and made fun otthe Upltys, the town snobs, whowere very superior and called Itthe "terminal."—Vew York San.

Wh*a Ignorance Expand*— -A-wonl/to_(he.w!se may give yonaway.—-Lafayette Journal and.Cou-rier.

$2,667.33 Interest

3, Glasses Water

.VHelp Constipation

tan

One glass of water la not enough—take three glasses one hour be-fore breakfast Much better re-sults are obtained by adding a tea-spoon HOf-^«Imple.-.glycerin,. .salinecompound (known as Adlerlka) toeach glass. , .."• •

Adlerika acts on BOTH upperand lower bowel and removes oldwaate-i matter, .yoaj jeve i^ thought

iWisTnTyourrsystsnirStops'ifaa^indI sour-stomach In TEN minutes! Re-ilesrea^consttEatlojrJn ^twq^honrs.

Pharmacy.—AdT.

WELL, like It or not. we ore Infar long skirts, so. we may as

well "be Kame" and accept fash-Ion's verdict gracefully. It Is thelone-limbed godctas which fashionenthrones this season. •-• •

Of course such radical changesIn drefts ns pertains to descendinglicmllnea arid ascending waistlinestins nnt happened all of (r-sadden.At lenst In matter of evening frocksthe chnnge from short to long hasbeen a gradual process^—perhaps aliemllne swooping to the hack butretnlnlnR brevity at the front, orHint which Is Just as chic, the hem-line which lengthens at the sides.Rut now! behold the frankly long-all-around hemline.

The light green moire eveningSown In ihp picture feRtures thenew lenBth,^_Two huge bows makethis gnwn dlslti)ftb& There neverwns .such a season for'bows asthis.* , . , -.Just what'we are coming to In

matter of hemlines, -who can telliIn fact tlieentlre silhouette is un-dergoing a revolution Especially

I Is this true of daytime modes, theLJonjflthentUneev the fitted, bodices.

Uie higher wafttHnei;~nieTiash-tte-bncks which, timidly hint at thelbrfestt8-Qp«-of~183O-innuence-

these and other l derails of fussysblrrlnga and puffings and "dress-maker touches" In general, are caus-ing nothing less than a sensationIn fashion circles. • ,

But why talk-of such Impend-ing events as hidden knees andcurves at the waistline for daytimefrocks, when such fascinatingthemes await .discussion as thenew colorings which are enhanc-ing the. formal evening picture withtheir glamorous beauty}

If yon like turquoise blue, wearIt, for It" Is o n e ' o r "the- favoredshades for under the arc-light So,also, are light blues. Green Is es-pecially enjoying many triumphs,'notably such esthetic shades assage and other subtle tones, par-ticularly a new "frosted green.*"which is among the loveliest of pnleevening tints—also, If you please,bright emerald" green." Eggshelland pink tones are In profusion.

And there's". black 1 The en-thusiasm, for color In no way dims

. the Importance of black? Much otfashionable Earls Is .tr$najnE_bIaffc_ward, and It not all-black,, thennUack-and-wMtecrfrpthy black andwinte~evenlhg-fiv\^pSfiups,-dr"»!

white-beaded black' velvet.(0,1111.-- W

In 1819 a savings account waa opened with $15 in a New York'"-City bank. The depositor;_never_ added to it, but that $15 has been "iearning interest aU those years and today the account totals

compound interest! .

A savings account is the one safely profitable and profitably

safe investment for small funds.

The Rahway Savings Institution"Tht Bank of Strtngth'\

119 Irving Street, - Rahway, N. JTelephone 1800

Open Monday Evenings from 6 to 8:30 o'Clock

Page 3: DigiFind-It · -''"' .•'""•.•'".'•...•;'.'."..•. • A your money ler Radio mm m HIS. IS Announcement from the Railway High School shtrtrtd the following students had

•< *

• been" cpnttnnous';to U>$'- "

NOVEMBER i

vap o n estimate the matHritual welfare of the*")cngb' tlielr - effort*rilss Un^erhltl's quietwas always so apparent

s did tn her vsjrioua duties,!he gave lutttlntingly of her titnaj_ialeats. - r*Veil done, good and ral^tnl, enter Into tha reward! of rt

>ors ' «•••»EMMA JOHS^O

Chairman of Commi

E d i t o r i a l Page of f h e RaIRfl&KS^Record

,",-. -.' N W Jeney MvpMt* . _ • ••'' . . : . .SBRiAt J«HJ 2093 v

; ta*> •skwar.- B. ,*. *os> Offie* u aaeoaaciue-SaStt*fV TMflar the act ot October X IBB.,

Netfuilm:. snM HI Ln.Clilnatnwn. "Is n pilde to th* *"V

rtanate, hut a menace towtvwhor""''wroflR t

ed, Tuesdays and Fridays

Publishing Corporation

ff~ functional Bladder- -rturbs you*-sleep, wises Bornliuf;Ttching-Sensation. Bij"'"" '-"

•g Fains, making you fe«l,«iTO.pressed and discouraged, why not ,y t i e Cystex 48 Hour TestrDotrtve up. Get Cystex today at" toy•UK store. Put It to the Wsf ",'?*--H8_fast_lt works.' Money- back'-lfdoesn't bring qulcIrimprovBsrefit; '

id satisfy you completely.i,,^~:-tdday._OnlyJ»c, _ . . i i _ . .

•«V«. KOUOHV PmWwrt.Or«TUAflT OCMARBST, Local Editor.

n rat* «&» per year, payable In advano*.

-TUESDAY NOVEMBER 19. 1929

.2>S8

YocationaLTrairungthan nine-tenths of one percent of the

V- ;v;J bllc^BTAool monies or this country goes for toca-

:|Ag'" tnT>»JU*talrilDg. The other 39J. percent Is used for"g^wStiKitfHaiid professional education. The last census•i rvjjiiort shows that only 8 percent ot the people /who

|J;._T»r« tatafuUy employed belong to the professional,and managerial .groups,__Th.ej>ther.92 per-

are engaged in farming, industry and similarjlnea of work.

T - , - M o s t or onr education-Is -especially prepared;c.tor-the"leneflt of this 8 percent. Is the other '92 per-: cent getting a fair share of training?" asks the "Na-tional Home Gtudy Council ot Washington, D. C,

governmente-spend-ap-

tit the Friendly Smile " T ^ .of COLOR, in every Bloom..:

D r e s s up the shabby, old pieces with.]bright, . cheery c o l o n ! . -.-. You< •«*rr" '•effect the transformation, yonff////-grid - •with s e a t e d ; a dedt iti your hpus6-- -..rbold budget. . - -S A P O U N Speed Enamel is so simple, ,so e a s y to use, tharthrworfc-becocaes'^—

a real pleasure. ; '•""'"•In.*. single.bout_SA^oim_iitouch and v/hb'tn JOMT boxrt r ._,hard and smooth as glass!... No.,odor, no brush marks,.no stidrinissl .'.Sevemeen glorious colors from which'•to choose — also blade aad wEtei"'« £ £ / " " " "

|&'v. proilmately 425 per student per year on the students",/wno arfe'taklng -vocational courses. A mere pittance'compared' to the amount spent in training for theprofessions. One state University has estimated thecost of a 4-year medical course at $19,622 per gradu-

ate. ': . -ecaaae the vocational training given by the

*md fr*aitml msmtudt Cl**« °t Color at tkt Hoidit.

SPEED ENAMELGLOSS FINISH '

Sold and Recommended by:

148 Main Street, Rahway, N'."X

fm* —d VtrmUk .Froimat.

public schools is inadequate and l;lng the demand, approximately 2,000,000 people inthe United States are depending on private corre-

_SI>ondence schools to give them better preparationlor earning their livelihood."

';" Edward T. Franks, vice-chairman of the FederalBoard of Vocational Education urges better voca-tional training as a means of conserving our nationalresources., .'There are many things that contributed to our'greatness in the past that we cannot claim for thefuture," says Mr. Franks. "RaV materials and fuelIn abundance were close at hand, but these resources%re-fast disappearing. In-the past .we had a steady

-stream ot trained workers from abroad—a resource-fwe-canaot-rery-npon-in-tbe-future-because-of-immi-j'.Bration laws. All of these things make It more Im-.'•portant <hat^e^tr1airrour~owri~pe«ple"so"that-our-in-duatrles may not suffer for want of skilled artisans

>hould be lower than last year. In 1928 they ranged,'rom 45 cents to 75 cents a pound, depending largelyon the purchasing ability of the local dealer and hitsalesmanship. Also, we are told that with "the Im-proved methods" there will be "no goocTreason whymany consumers should not have turkey for their

unday dinner and at many other times during tho

The Use of Leisure Time—It Is gratifying to observe that during-the exer-

cises of - National Education week In the schoolsmarked attention is being given to the subject of the

(rlgn~t"usrrof "leisure; for "that~is~byTJo~means~&ne~~e»fhe least Important but, we fear, too often most n eg-

%— —^toinan them." —

rest>sit

Aiding the AgedOf late years many agencies and individuals have

iaKen up the question of:ald~for persons no longerSable to work and who, through no fault of their own,stalled to accumulate sufficient funds to maintainithem in their declining years." • : — - '-* A—poignant-£xample_of_the__klnd_appeared_in

eccnt_n.ewsnapers__when an aged couple living inIGlassboro, this State, were said to lace~evictiorrbe-"

Jr -cause they could not-meet the Interest-on-the-mort-'gage held on their home. Their •case had previouslyattracted attention", for President:-Hoover had con-gratulated them on the sixtieth anniversary of theirwedding. . The husband, it is understood, has beenill," a"nd there is no relative to aid them,about by State legislators, but nothing has been done.

The question of old agje pensions has been talkedWhether it would be wise to adopt such a law is aquestion to be determined.

Many business concerns maintain pension sys-tems, and municipal and federal government em-

ployees -receive—stipulated- sums on—retirement.There are many, however, who are not in the classeswhich are benefited, and_who have no means of live-lihood unless it be through the charity ot theirJriends.

Almshouses and similar .institutions are main-tained, but these places are generally for the infirm.The whole problem Is one which has been puzzlingsocial workers, government officials and many otherB,but a solution is difficult. The problem remains, for,as the scripture says, the poor, regardless of thecondition onfrertlunis, iiiinain-aiwaya-wlth-ua-

i 515 in a New York "

>qt that $15 has been '

the account totals

The Bible On the CampusCritics of the presently college student, who

-declare that almost the only examination he can passIs the blindfold cigarette test, will find only partialsupport in the results of a recenMmjuiry by the Bible

itable and profitably j

l'"!«

InstitutionRahway, N. J

I* •••'.•••'•• . ^

.SO o'Clook

Replying to the Guild's question whether Biblereading and knowledge of tho Bible Is decreasingimong the student body, college presidents and deansexpressed varied opinions. Fewer freshmen, prob-ably, pack a Bible in their trunks .when they getTeady for college, but on the other hand the reg'ia-

-tration -In Bible study courses is increasing.. ' l e s s perfunctory and mechanical, more 6pon-

tsneoua and sincere than forty years ago is the aver-age. student's interest In the Bible today, according

""_ to.Doctor Thomas Arkle Slark, dean of men at theUniversity ot Illinois. A study of twenty-three col-leitea.and universities has revealed that only about

' ialf the Btudents read the Bible occasionally or^tteaer.

\- Tit'la «n-unknowit hook, to manyot pur stu-^ U " declares one president, "consequently they

iu>t recognize Biblical references In their road''--•••l4t-" "Another writes that this lack of knowledge, he~" t#*T». has a bad effect on conduct.

Presldftnt Hoover's words might well be broad-_;•« i(t'to e»ery campus; "The study of the Bible is a5jp wt-cradnate course in the richest library ot hu-| » i » experience." It would be a pity if this priceless

were to be neglected by young men andpreparing b fara thn realities of business

i7pfofe5»l6nal bfe. Every"parent rt;a 'college' ' " t. regardless of religious beliefs, should make

u flit the student has his or her own Bible anden«Bti«l,«l % good

Some EncouragementWith too stock market in a -mad scramble and

many Rahway residents put at their wits end to

secure enough money to cover margins, there ap-

pears abpTe the horizon a crumb of comfort in the

fact that prospects for reasonbly priced turkoya at

Thanksgiving time are pretty good.

From' tha United States Department -of Agrlculture cornel an announcement that will be__par-tlcalarly gratifying to the public It Is that "turkeysand most Thanksgiving accessories, such as cran-berries, celery, lettuce and nuts, will be plentifulthis seanon, although a tew fruits and nuts will bedifficult to obtain." There~are~tirli«rabwirniHeTi«:cent more turkeys than last year, and, about 52 per-cent- of- the production—will-be^ marketed beforeThanksgiving Day. "Pottltry production "will be

pOHlsTseaSon andjprices =somewhat-lower-thaalast-year." .

Equally pleasing is the statement <hat therehas recently been a revival In the turkey industry,made possible by the adoption of better methods o l |production, throughthe effor&~of~-t]ie "gdfanfmeBCIn- the yeaer-^1900-thera-was-a^production=5)f-«b«nt9,000,000 birds, which in 1920 had decreased to 3.B00,-000. The prediction i»_.made..that.if^In the futureturkey prices recede somewhat, on account of bet-ter methods of production, costs are likely t« de-crease also. Some of the hazards of the businessHavelbeeri'eirmlnafed through"the"dlscovery ot In-formation on turkey, diseases.

_Dne_.staiemenlmf considerable interest Is. thatmost of the crop marketed in January will go intocold storage to be available for turkey dinners until:he new crop Is produced next year. It is probablya feet that not-one housekeeper out. ot five la ableto say whether a lufkey Is~ourof cola" slbragerajutraised in Texas or other Western States, or "near-hyJersey" or produced In Maryland, Delaware orRhode Island. It is also a fact'that few consumersknow the difference, or care whence t ie bird comes.

However, unless the experts are wrongjr-thereare to be plenty of turkeys and other poultry for

prices

What Fools We MortalsIK fool born^ every minute" is a frequently

quoted adage, and according to Dr. Arthur J. Cramp,Director of the Bureau of Investigation,-American-

woman and a bald-headed man. In a recent publica-tion called "Tour Weight and How to Control It"compiled by eminent medical specialists, Dr. Crampsays: "Quackery Is * versatile. The medical char-latan adapts his methods to take advantage of anypassing fad or fancy. Women's fashions during thepast few years have given a wonderful stimulus toone branch of charlatanry, that of selling alleged-cures for obesity. With possible exception of thecredulity of tho bald-headed man in the field of hair-growers, there is nowhere to be found such simpletrustfulness In the verity of the printer's ink a» thatpossessed by the obese woman in the realm of fat

lected phases o£ education.

It is fitting and desirable, ot course, to teachand-to-txain_young peoplejhow to acquit themselvesinccessfully in the active hours of IiIerin~wOTkr1n |lusiness, tn professional duties. That Is a matter of:ourse. But education to be complete must fit one:or the-whole of life, and the whole of life is not, by

any means, found in its activities. A very large part'f it is leisure. There Is voluntary leisure when men

refrain from work-because-they are- tired.or the.obJnJianajs-_done,j3r_what not other reason. And:here is involuntary leisure, caused by unemploy-

Tcentrt>r-llln6sSr-or-old-age^-or^w_hat not else.

"It would be neither fair nor correct to say thatall overfat persons eat unwisely and exercise too lit-tle, but it is a fact that most of them do. And usually,he woman who exercises too little and eaU. unwisely

ia_the_pne who believes that somewhere there must

-WhaMsone-to-do-then? What-has-hls-school-ing taught him to do in leisure hours and days?Does'herfind -time hanging-heavy on his hands? 4she put to it to "kill time"? Is he tempted to idle andperhaps mischievous dissipation? Or, happily, havehe schooh taught him the habits of observation and

thinking, and the love of reading, so that he canmake of his leisure a time not of tedium but of in-enso enjoyment and profit?

It would be well to have in every school ayatematic course of instruction, supplied with fit-

ting J«U)TOk^,jn_the_ar^of_thejl|ght_use of leisure.

Does This Condition Exist In This City?United States'Senator Brookhart's promised ex-

pose of wet-drinking Senators at Washington'sparties, and his failure to either have the stuff orhe lack of nerve to remember any of the names ofhose who drank, and produce such names before the

Senato's investigating committee, calls forth a replyfrom the Cleveland (Ohio) Press in an editorial ofrecent issue, when It comments upon alleged condl-IoBB~exlStlug In thu-eity-ot-~Glevclanrl, Thlfl_broad1

sldo from the editorial chair ot the Press, causedhe thought to flit through oar menial machinery * •o whether it was possible for such a condition to

exist in Rahway. While we refrain from stating thatwe even think it does, we leave our readers to formheir own conclusions. The Press editorial follows:

hart did in Washington, and we can do it withoutgetting out of onr desk chair, on the basis of. in-formation we already have. ' i"

"We charge that the majority of Clevelandudges on all benches drink (and the nse ot<the wordmajority' is just a kindness, a charity on our part)'.

"Tha majority ot all CuyaUoga legislators takedrink. . '

"The majority of lawyers take a drink."The majority of hankers take a drink."The majority of doctorB take a drink. ."The majority of councilmen take, a drink (and

we'll be more than fair, we'll leave it 'malortty' even!here).

The majority of voters take a drink.The majority of taxlcab drivers tako a drink.The majority.of husbands take a drink."The majority of unmarried males over the

ot 16 take a drink."The;-majority of those "attending 'any show,

game, prize fight, race, or any other general publicamusement other than a public meeting (we saidpublic meeting) of Mr. Southwell's Dry MaintenanceLeague, take a drink.

"We have outbrookharted Brookhart We haremade some sweeping -statements, but .we are _waUwiyiin the facts, and we will be glad to appear tie-fore the Senate at any time to tell what- wo know,provided th^ Senate wlUJetna tell «H (bat we know—="8eSSle,~W8 await *

Along the Concrete

O«ober' this %cow»trr sold^eotjntries merehandlw

aamnntini1 to 'tin hundred andthirty mUUoa dollars, a record for

for eltat y*ara, ai

In. October w* fcoaiht from for-•tcMN Uu«* koaOrtd u d ntn«tj-

bitub.minioni worth ot (ooda.

v 6

-f eaWos. "-Maw ~¥!nMu taabto4 s k ta On**, kwws wSJ•irplane* will BMM «)W& « V

Wrr, * i 6na a t Uffee hrtnciei o j .B*tio»al <t*MM srtte*, «*4 jbt kit

surely be available a panacea that withouteffort or a change in habits will transform her^rora a'stylish stout" to a lissom 'boyish form.' With Ham-let she cries: 'Oh, that this too, too tolid flesh wouldmelt'*' The wish b father 'tothe thoagat

allprnntplY a fat | -rh^, »~Hpf that urtunce shonld milts It possiblefor human beings to violate physiological laws with.Immunity explains why those ahrewd" Individuals whopot out "anti-fats' nearly always emphasis* the claimthat when using Ihelr preparations or devices It Uunnecessary to diet and a waste ot time to exercise."

The prevalence ot tuberculosis among y o u gwomen in the twenties Is believed by tnbemlosis•specialists to be to some extent influenced by dan-gerous dieting. They continue. to Insist that theonly armor'agaiost this dreaded disease is body nu-trition maintained through proper food, reit andright living. A tew surplus pounds is the young girl'sdefense, and even mothers and atrnts should seek theadvice of a-phyaiclan_beforo_adopUni the "Holly-;wood Diet" or any other reduction tad. accordingto "the New Jersey Tuberculosis League which wincontinue to finance a campaign for the betterment

of health conditions among young women With theproceeds of the salevof Christmas Seals.

+S*pirif of the ffation*^HE POLITICAt-COW

Gasoline taxes have increasedfrom an - average - of-only 50 - cents

i-pennotor—vehicle—ippeT^veliicie injhe American Petroleum Institute.[t is forecast that the average maybe as high as $17 this year.

Every state now taxes gasoline,with rates ranging from two to sixcents per gallon. Thirty states col-lect four cents or more and sevenstates have a five-cent levy. Theinterest the press of the nation hastaken in the war agalnrt exorbitantgas taxes is one of the most hope-ful signs for fnture relief. A sur-vey of editorial comment Indicatesthat most editors favor a reason-able gasoline tax, with revenoTefftciently and honestly expended forhighway building and maintenance.•It is likewise the editorial beliefthat high gas tax rates, diversionof revenue to other purposes thanroad work and waste and ineffici-ency In spending the money shouldnot be tolerated. . . <

To levy a tax against such a com-modity as gasoline and use tile pro-ceeds for general purposes Is dis-criminatory legislation of the mostobnoxious type.—And the tendency,noted by the newspapers of many

sonm-ot_.the .prisoners _wMlo_8enT--ng. their terms Is worthy of study.

H Is a-dlffltcolt -problem- to satisfy-USllhe_ends_ot iuaUce and the de-

T«»rdlnx^o-fnia3ras~6rTgScletjr7 " "time help aolve the economic prob-lems of the prisoner's family.

* * *THOSE INTER-STATE BUSES

(Prom tbe Jenevaun)From the tenure ot reports In

the over two hundred New Jerseynewspapers- that reach our desk

Lpach week, we gather that recklessdriving, speeding and pother Infrac-tions of the motor vehicle laws byoperators of Inter-atate hoses is sowidespread and so pronounced asto"justlty-action-by the—state-au-thorities.

There la nothing to excuse apolicy that makes for danger on thehighways, and resentment againstthe drivers ot some of these Jugger-nauts of the roads Is growing and

ifeecomtng Intensified, it the com-panies cannSt or will not. controltheir drivers, and force them toobey the traffic laws of the ntateand municipality, then the authari-ties are Justlfled in taking a hatidIn enforcement. Subsequent actlflnshould lnfclude both the punishing

building unsuitable and ."political!'highways, amounts "to -{heft of themotorist's property.

The' general public must co-operate if tbe gas tax menace is tobe effectively opposed. Alreadyrumbles are heard from several

[toost" taxes during the'comrnffTairr!Gasoline.is in danger of becominga political «ow, to be milked whenever money is needed for' somepurpose or other.

• » • . • .JAIL CONDITIONS

(From KHiabeta TfmnO -Sheriff Tool's suggestion -that the

Board of Freeholders' make- a spe-cial study of Jail conditions, witha. view ot remedying somb defectsIn the present system ef incarcerat-hg prisoners will probably be givenfavorabe: consideration by theboard. . . .:. .' • -

The present Jail on top of thecourt house annex was erected onlya few years ago, and while thorewas Eome objection at that time <olocating It there, it was. erectedwith a view of meeting modern re-quirements, ouch as were. lackingIn the old building In Sooth Unionstreet ' . • . . , • ' • " '

Whethera new structureAlanessary or merely 'an addition, is aquestion, which the- freeholdersmust decide. However, t i e jfactthat two prisoners aro kept In onecell is an indication, that eomechange is needed. The prison popo-•tetlon ot tha county haa Increasedbeyond: and'-flgure^.that. was; ah-tlclpated when the court honso an-nex was planned, but regardless ofpast planning this situation must

l t b f d t

^sKacMys

p p gsome employment be found torte-metr— • v ~

ot V>+p

fnnnii mWy ""JLit can be done, the company ho rep

tSuch procedure might bring the

companies to their senses andcause them to. issue Instructionsagainst the. practice and see to Itthat they are uphold. Not .howta*V not. hnnj teckleaa, -h(tt Jlowsafe inuat be the"principle"goyern-ing the carriers' operation.

BUILDING AND LOAN

The charge to the Grand Jury o:Essex County, to make a thoroaf hpxajuiistkm—tnro the—tattw-condnct ot Balldlng and Loan As-sociation*, is timely and commend-able. Ttiat Is not became of thegeneral or oven considerable iipairmenl of the integrity or thoseInstitutions, bat quite the contrary.There is, we believe, nothat the great majority of them'arefully worthy of the public confi-dence and are to. be regarded asparticularly desirable mediums forthe promotion of-thrift and enter-priser—*--

Unfortunately, a few, a very few,have fallen under suspicion, notbecause of any fault In tha systembut because of the improper cos-duct of Individuate, and tola'factmay not unnaturally c u t e somepeople to feel doubtful concernhnthe system in general, or concern-ing members of It which are of «n-queatlonabie integrity.' The OrandJuryV Inquest will probably there-fore do much coed In showing'towhat a very small extent there hasBeen~"mttmanageotent; tf' h

h l l ji howojetwholmlng a majority of the isoclatlons areest degree of public contdtjBt*.

The B. and L. system -i» a NewJersey msdtotton, whteh na» formany yean been a'credit to'theState and a source of profit andpcosperlty to the people; and w»have no doubt that It will perm»-hentrr'*"stains.

eoiM tookaft«r4«alla.

Jait now, as you know, the He4'Crew is makla« a drive for mor»mamku* aa4 mow Mossy.Ptssldent urges aU to loin.

Some 1>uay ganUemen la WinStreet.felt aaeair receotly wh»a t 'hnge Red Croes tag was sees fiow-lag over the Stock Exchange.

TWi, what Is toe matttr wit*•aT T»o* itiMi—a"T*rl6« ofreeUwr'taabHas; end a "wave of

it :Hoov»x Mfgciia lastwtriSoull" WalianMNrhamin*,that the, blockade, whteh uieastarvatlOB ai a weapon In war,alr|kln( at WOJUBU and ehfUraa, b«

Tba Laagna ot Nstiqns <hUkeathis Jdaa. It saya that it JOB stopbiockadlBg sad sUrrbf yoa takeaway.' the league's meet Talsableweapoa.'' .. - .

The big idea was to boycott aadBlockade any nation that went towar wltho«t pcrmiHtoa.

Othet eouatrtea-arepextraordinary aecnsMlattoasotgoldIn the Bask ot rraace. The Frenchhave more gold than any eoantryta the world except this countryand are rapidly approaching us lagold reeerres. .

IL The Er*nch are aarvelooatrthrifty. Their govetament la Intel-Ugaat B M determtaed. what theywast they mean to have, and theyyaally get It.

play for the beaeflt ot the worldat large; and thtm hold a post nor-tam to explain why the fallbackhad ran a cross-buck through iraardwhen we had predict** a delayedforward pass to the toft end.

Bat that ton of football animalis even lew offensive 'than ~ theproverbtil ^wUe gay* who must, otcoarse fellow every football team,conduct himself on the propotlUonthat he paid his halt^ dollar andconsequently has the rtgbVtoTMFhave, la plain language aa If nedidn't "give two hoots In a zost ofwind." -.r- - : = = : : . - — • - -

ttaltha coutrjr aastst

sabmlt to Ike iaraiUlo atteaHomof Its orer<««UBaia3Uc ahuanlthniacat of ooana may excuse amaKIUjde of aina. Vlrtoally •obodyobject* -to- having his kat smashedto a level witb-bia ears ky the dandtrecUy beniad. provided tka rightteam acored the touchdown. jBot

• wno-jMtve-prevloasly-severed their conotcUona withschool, yet -continoe to be recog-nlted a* renreientatlve* ot thatto-

Judge another team's skillplaying still another team, neHhe:having any conaection with theirschool—welU we .can simply/say,more power to the exterminationdepartment of Ike B. P. C A.

(By way of-a aorl of aztenaatlns;xpUnaiioB, If it laay help at all,

this degtrttseM' aaoald like to beunderstood *y th« BsaaU HighSchool Uem aod Hi foOoweA. ashaving tavasUgaUd Ike tacts awllearned tkat none of the BahwayHigh School s*»4enu w«re mem-bers of tke dUtarbuce whlck qtrtte

T«m -At» 1 n » t . < ^

war. w4r— ' ' "Howevtr, prices went up, so Uw

lag was a good men.

ThegonrsuBents of Tartey

tantattons br Amorlcaa rug udptt. manufactOTCTs, marketing

product* under Oriental names."

No American aerchant.ot coo-teqneace misrepreseata goods.

American* are nunufactttrinrags'aad carpets, superb in colornd wtaring qualities, that wiTIi;

ake the place of" Orfeutil ruxi laimt.

Ask Jame*.8lmpson of Chlcaga'or details.

One* the Eomsas drank oaly3reek wiaea, thinking their own Is- -inters .

Fraach arbtocraU »c-npUd only Italian wtate, althonshJieir own were admtnbl*.

This country"!' wealthy woold -Irlsk only French claret and chua->»gB»._ allhoagli: we. made gopjstats hint, until prohibition cam*ilnny and a»nt ih« enantTV hack tnha whiskey ot JeBtnoa't day. onlyrone. • -. • •

Before lone Americaas will real-M that their owa rags and ctrpttsm'i* good as any in the world.

Charlt* B. Hughes made a Rood

(camos endowment ot women •idacatlon.

Savcn leading women's colleteiMV» aet one Unla tba endowmenta! the seven leading men's eoliegts.

That Is extremely foolish, tbtnotaen of the hmmaa race a n ateast ttn times as Important as th«athtm

What women learn, they rcmera- ,ler, and teU to tbelr chiMrcxVb»t men lesra, Uwy target ta •

aad doat tell anybody. \ i

The Senate, refusing ta adjoaraM November 3 , by a vole of fitly,we to thirty-tour, will go on work-ng at the tarlfc —' Buropeaa eoantries,. afraid otilgher duties, had rejoiced to b»ifrf the idJournmenU and a more or••3Tli«We"nV6t» Id Jiaot waa abandoned.

It may be take* up agjln.

For first time twentrrears, savtogs bank deposits baretropped. Daring the peat year tar-Ings have diminished by »1M^O5..WO,' and the number ot depositorsiyUizSLt • WB. Klas Jw)*rm

samcleatfr' Marred Its - fahi—£ar| hm»Tcounty rtianrptoniwlp hoaora last | man ucounty, champtomlitp aoaors lastSaturday, Tke C U M ot tae aCatrmay be found la taat -bread" we.have described la tae precedtngparagn.pl>.

The following Is a brOUsnt salljonea beard duriag a debate In tieGlasgow BDlnratty enlon: "1 bateall my brigbttet Ideas la ssybaih,*declared the speaker, who was bold*Ing the Boot bat by no Means tbt

man aroM and said: ICr. Spetkcr,-air,-•-! propose tbat-thte iwote s*-Jonrn In order that, the millemsatsar take a oath.*—London Opbr-

'A football game arouses a call toarms tor the cheering sections anda call-to feet for tie. players. Atthis tim? Ot the year, if the stockmarket behaves at least decently,It Is permissible for conversationto have no ot£er subject than thegreat old .classic game ot flatten-

' f l l h

tlon of the curious one to the factthat there really, was a footballgame in progrese and,, that thethree dollars. per, .were spent forthat and not for a fashion show.

But while this wasat «rst relievrIng, the escort found himself laterdemanding or himself why. the mil-linery dltplsy at the game couldnot have been eren, more' engross-ing.' C t i l K ld t h Vawakenedtionsthis

cQnned;«ardifm

Certainly K. would _nat haVey

as the fpothail game did,-ini

loveliness' of the Beautiful bit VeryDumb <& V. D.) variety. ' Suchquestions as "Why didn't theythrow it to the man with the whis-

his month," • "why did bethat man down," or "why

did be-ran In1 that direction whenthere was nobody ln-W« way in the

came in. rapid; sac<pcession, with infflcient monumentaldumbness to flabbergast the mostcelestial disposition. But sach

t mes vheri dini at (ha club,icK .and span,again

only a single trial of the ipectatco-.There are others

ran bam* oldterated dambness to the artificial pan.oe fij"ftepuotarstumote wun,

Intelligence. -Those of j*"-,wderttand the game freqa«ntly com-mit tho error of assumtng that wegare the only ones in the stand- who

geat old c g ting -one's fellow humans.

But a spectacle such as twenty-two men In more or less heavilypadded clothing and about three

.whlte-shlrted civilians, all • racingabout In circles over vast areas ofKuge:wafBe ironfleld;"Tnay te 1hecauso of varying emotions in dif-ferent people.

For instance an editor once es-corted a member of the less vi#ile,but by.no means weaker sex, to afootball game. After ihe customaryflftoca nrioBtea—fottowtog th rrival of the pair, which- tJmp wasspent ln-'cranin the. foroirilnd neckfor a'sugastlon la a "gorgeoua neck-piece" which someone else's girl'sneck wore, something/ perhaps K

-4-wftg--a-.wttUttef-attnicfcd.-tlie-atten-

Wait.25Ywr.toGet $2 Witaew Fee

B W I B S * . v <*

JERSETCTTY CLUB| Former Pb^/'IMrcdor't

• Tc«m Ft4l« rBefoVe. • « Y * "

6.«3ditebuslMaitottBs. Sheastored

.Wrnthat aba htd speda|lied'In cor-twpondenca la business • coliece.Beeves thereopoaMESSSO h e ^ i^LJf" M ' had

: VTfctatbegW li ldlie eonmleted

look-at them and almost Mt tae«njns> tw tbe stoosrsphtr todwrittea Qutt--OentteDtn—"No.- ' . .:

trought a basketball'team to this|cliy on Saturday ntgbt; wtta every

IUOD of rttnmlag wiih a %hi-team to the h»adqoarters ot

"team »t UiTlerw City Y. M.A. However, the Jocal outflt

-too-j forced' them To return to

Ijersey • aty.-O*' «g*W>l«tt« pos-,e»8ofs of a « to SI defeat, largelyd"e w ike-sKMhubOMi tadnlgedIt-Tfi

and Henderson.

c»dln:th»JJr»C«»rt«r.-'whlchv extended to JT to » by the end

lot the half- But Ike Jersey aty*%a took eleren «teHJn the third

Mo-anotfler-eltTMi lalae-toarttvooarter. while the local dob tooktlghl~art-^lJt-^J<€i«ttelei»v.tka

Ioatcome ot-the-fM»e-wa» neverin doubt, since th»*Y" teem seemedto have to«nd Its strldt after tht

|Snt two nalr-ralilng engagemenulot the »eason. • • ..

"Mats" Orr and Henderson led

m u with a'aeriea o t jho t s thatcould not be denied for accuracy,od neatness. »Henderson's floorrime, with hla fast caUlng'Tor the

k t made him on a par withOrr as a scoring factor. ChalUetlikewise waa a brilliant contribut-ing factor in tha victory with hisfloor tame. One of. the besBtytpots ot the game came when Orrcafcutedwhat i s technically knownu "ianjping.thebeir lato the net.

On thTwfioIirJIarsejr City wss

Ihell powerless against RailwaysDre-man defense. . Only the spec-uctibr long ahota of Totten andCllnchy seemed to have any effecttgalnst the airtight defense,

splte a rather staggUh exhlbl-Itlon ot basketball, the "Y" Phan-l were able tu outplartetly their opponents, tha 3erseyCity -Y" Juniors, turning In a win-sis; •core of n to > for their third

J-tralcbt victory. Nevertheless, theI o m * proved that while they

ere off form, they were stilljnble of despatcbtog such teams

_» thit from Jersey City.I -Tha-Phantoms foand themselves

»rd hit by inlartes l o h tvnibcrs when they took the Boor

pn Saturday night. Three men,t ctcrs, Prelu and Karan havekprained anklet. Prietj. who ha»Ihi- moat severe wrench to his

dal extremity, has been oat ofthe game for two week*, but ex-

4-cts to get back into action on

MeycrT andHilbert -shared- ta*for .point scoring for. the

l-hamoms, wklle" Betd made twoeld gtolM lor.the "8keetets>".r , r .This week tie Phantoms have

TonigBt "they travel toKi'irny to play tbe feUowshipriub of that dty. and again onThursday, the highly looted Junior

. will be the opposttloa. Salur-bir. tho Phantoms will play thekVllson MemorW Club at the "Y"F5«ri,_a»_yie_5rellmb»ry_to therV1 varsity" game.^Tlic lineups:

o.-

SriTirl.ir. tl«fcrrlr. c . .llnrrti. c . .hrk.I . . . . .llrherl, f- . . ;iarxn. g ,.\~,

Urjrn. c . . .

Totala . . . .

t•Ibrm. f

nrur. f

JBBSEV CITT 8BCOSD8, . i o

" " l o

TolilsIWYrw—U-Unkr.

BAUWAt T"hllllrl. f

MUka. <-f . . .tfntlmon. f .

ra' f . . .>rr. c . . . . . . .Vrcwardt. s>«ra. B . . . . . .»olr.' s . . . i . .

Tolali . . . . .

o. r. P.

1M 5 41

JBR8BT CITT -T

Dr.S*ia*aTliny*r*

John ftoach Strattontalking about -prtytr at a luncheonla Brooklin. ; ;• V* -

"The anbject ot Prayer,'* he said.k W r t d t^akeajBaWafcirtim

an anecdote thai » almoet aa b l e . ' " . •-.-: -:,.- ,- .

"A ntotte* savrto bar lilUa bojY|nnrse:" : ' »~ \ / ;

" 'Does my little boy sty bb pray-ers every ntgbtt'

- ^ W ^'W«ek bejawiiair.lt w«*'* «<U»set; last wtj»»t*as.a btCTde,^it's a nwtlotfplctor*,camera thtt

II EarlyrVnHsathrt«*Ye«m,JamwliOBroti'Jffh Prtsidantof

th» 0 n l « Blitti, best known to

tloo of'-txrs^wSof DoctHriBf'Inhis famous tim*&)tp coBWets ofDecember 2.1S28, was nearly Hfty-nine when bt)"b<gon bis first termot the nation's ChW BwcaUve..This was »b«rt the age at which

p t tk office.

President a Hi. . . . . ..„iMven, while Jolta, Adwns wai stillfld t U t t ^ a Q y ^ 0 » l c

,«• flnt weeki d k

Others boit)""fis«£*iinB withthe notation,

Dtetes believes there: Is toowu~it47UpVIaTmtlnea» and ad-,

^ l s ^ ^ 4 a « « n ilwOoVbe-aherttrJthan the average, but be considered. waiting "for hi» slgoattue a

Wfla too Iteonlfe—New Tork San. •

Produced by ImtaBooThere are several ways of. hyp-

Mitlm animals. With many speciesaxing aibeetles shock wfU cause them to

become rigid. . , ' :— With the- vertebrae*, amphibia,fish,'birds, and mMnmiln, hypnosisIs attained by external irritation.The most effectise Irritation -Iserased by placing an animal. Is aposition from which it cannot re-gain its normal poctare without de-lay,- and where It is deprived of es-cape, A hen cannot move whenplaced quickly on its back, havingIts legs held fast for a while. Manyflab remala noUonltsi when placedquickly on their backs In a water-Oiled vessel.

A rat or moose, If selxed sharp-ly by tbe tall or foot, can be re-duced to this rut*. Tbe male ota certain species of «plder pinchestbe female. Urns casting Immobil-ity.. By a quick blow on the head

Xf h M hy y q

lmmobUe.hft-

StiO Fear Death Can*Though. "smaams," ot-"prajiuc

to death," Is outlawed In Hawaiiby an act which la sun on the stat-ute books, this torn) ot reprisal Istar fkun actually extinct, accord-

modern. "fortune teller" has re-vealed that she has frequent visitsfrom persons (anally Bawailana)who think that they are tha tar-

Last Half Attack' SweepsOpponents Before

: • •;••; Local;W««fc'^•-'":'-

-Alter ^.perfect dssdIock-iwMtoifirst: two quarters of the Rahway-North Plalnfl'eld high schools'gamelast Frldsy.on the iaiter's loVthelocal outflt returned>to tbe. field otvalor after the intermission-and,racing their opponents off tteirfeet. ^spond_tKo_toschdowns^.one,III each~ 'm]alnm^: ~QQarter~aSldrwere started well .on the way to an-other when the flnal whistle blew.

A hard-fought,brouh

ceaseless .vigil

the coach told his men between thehalves Is not being divulged, bat tti

turned to the Held, ready to kickholes 1B anytnmg but the goalposts. In - the first score ot thegame, which came In the third Quar-ter, the Bahwayana'had kicked oSto North PlalnfleH on the twenty-five yard line. After the NorthQueen City outfit had scored a firstdown In three-pjunges, Engelmandished back, up to his old. tactics,and nailed a back who had mis-handled a lateral pass for a.twentyyardW toss. North Plaihfleld wasforced to kick, but the .breaks andan onrushing Bahway line forcedthe kick to go out at the twentyyard chalk line.

The ball was taken to the threeyard line on successive plunges by

and hnt an. incom-pleted forward pass across the goalline gave 'North PlalnAeld the baU.The ball was kicked ont to thetwenty yard line again. Seidel andDuBJe cooperated on a forwardfus for sixteen yards and placedthe team' In such a position thatSeidel scored through the line.

The second touchdown ot the

playing Us osnal flawless "football;raced across the goal line on along pass from DuRle. The fiaalhair raiser of the fray was Tandy'sIntcrceptence ot the North Plain-field pass and racing forty-flve yardsJo come within ten yards of a touch-down, where the referee ruled thatIt should be finally put to. reposeby_ the conclusion of the game.

aetrriUea, and wish tha fortuneteller to. come to. tbelr assistance.Throughout tbe South seas, nativesIn ancient days used various Tormsof-•praying to death" or prayingtor lllaess, aad often effectively.Whatever tha phytloloclcal expla-nation It stems well establishedthat natives who found themselvesthe object ot tWs aetivtty-by adreaded "kahuna" would oftenpine away and die.

Hesse, Plesens and Jaques"~werepowers on the line, while Tandyand Btddar flaunted their colors inthe faces of their opponents.

The lineup:Po«. ttJlHWAT

pThe schoolmaster was ctvlng his

data ot boys their wtekly'Scrlp-tnre" Itrnn ITTI tnfl bOTB. Wf** Inan unhappy tnune of mind, for theywere always kept tn school later onthis day; ""

C a n y y qquestioned the schoolmaster.

"Please sir," spoke op TommySmart, "Judas went and' hanged

K . . M j1«.T. ...Jaqpes.

. O lO_ JoltR.0....T. PtcktnsB.T Hr«e

SO. PUJhTIELDFmllrr

Tl»lmiituts

CoaorrrJ. B**ne«k!C B t U

O v a r < r w y(hre yesw ago the city otCleveland gave A. 9. Folsnma nicely worded bit of piper.It.waa a legal equivalent toan L O. V. tor 12 and waaesrMd'by Folronr when hewas' a cdBrt witness.

•Recently It occurred toTolsom that be had never-collected. So-be rummagedth hh l *eated the .- subpoena, - -andpresented It to Deputy AimerPatton In' police' court ItWM' Patten's tun to rum-mage, for two' hours he.nngtred through" dusty andyellow flies. With a- sigh ofrelief b« toum the records

T g ythat, toof asked Folium..lhac-wss another puzxte. butit was finally.decided In thenegatire snd Touram depart-ed with his «2 fee. . ,

•••••»»••>»•<«•••»•••»

After gtndymff the records ot]jnore-, than 1^00 earthquakes inOeUfomla- which hava-occurred'aincar 1812, a Pacific coast scientistcomer to the interesting conclusion;that alt the quakes came when theinopB was In a certain quarter. Xbe'quakes occur on a fault-line, orcrack In the structnre of the earth'scrust. It was found that when thefaulMlne ran In a northwesterly dl-

Trecttai'tltaiearthquake would come[when the moon was between the[meridian and the western horizon,forTwfien "ft hao" nofyet arTsenraiidwas In the directly opposite -posi-tion.- -•• • •

When the quake occurred 'on afaulMlne running east and west, It'was found that the moon would be!ln the corresponding quadrants of.the: sky. Four.out of Bye of the

to Exterminate Mice•pviTrfi*,,—ft fqiriTTy n f Tpri~'

hawks, led by. the patriarch, circledonce.and swooped low over the de-coys. They circled again. Theducks hadn't been flying near, andhunters who crouched In wait werepeeved'; they shot. The hawk fam-ily came down.- - •

As -(he Birds fell,- farmers - lost$100 and to Wisconsin .duck huut-

-erswere chalked-ten more- uselessdeaths.. Wisconsin farmers are losing

their hawk and owl friends inswanas because the trigger flngeraof duck hunters itch and no ducksare flying, Owen J. Gromme, Mil-waukee museum taxidermist andIxaak Walton league member, de-clares. Mr. Gromme iias beenspending several days In and nearMilwaukee marshes waiting torspecimen ducks.

"Tbe hunter who shoots owls andhawks now is upsetting a naturalbalance," he said. These birds rebeneficial flesh eaters, killing theTnlw» that fpe<i on

Took Pessimistic View"~ of Wire Communication- A number of prominent men of ___.Professor-Morso's-perlod were dubl- Tlfie.ons about the practicability of the

-telegraph and believed It to havevery restricted limits.. In view oftho development ot' this form, ofcommunication and Its present highefficiency- It Is interesting to note

h l t J

grain. -With the older bawks andowls slain In tbe hunting season,farmers tell me they notice inIncrease in mice in the gntnaries.

"A hawk or an owl eats 15 mice aday, and-the United States biolog-ical survey has estimated that eachhawk or owl, resident on n farm, isworth S10 to s farmer."

SlmloeCIrarth

VltdllKrystopik

, jfcleHH....Bl>ldarK.H.... TandyF.B....S

li*—ni^ind«^ '-0 0 0

No. PlilnBrh! O 0 t O— 0Touradowu—tirldtl, Marbon. 80b-

•tIto(loB4i—for Babwar. Cariaon . forHiw. MIckaeta for Ulnfrlda; NorthPlainacld, H. Broralcttc for reedier,Utrlry for C. BnmnkL Brfem—OILUmpli - - - - -mcl.

or C. Btm OitUtri. H.-a.l Llsenuit Ped

Time of ptriodi—Tea mlnates.

OocoUte tuuSml BmrageChocolate was a favored drink on

l ^ t t h e a f e

Feign Death to EscapeIU Actual Visitation

Nature -has provided the major-ity-of animals with some means ofself-preservation. The bold over-come the enemy by flghOne "toothand claw"; -the timid escape byrapid flight Some creatures takeshelter behind a plating of armor;others merely rely upon their pro-tective - coloration. Some Injectdeadly poisons; others -emit'nau-seating .fluids and even electricshocks. - -

But probably the most remark-able of all niethods of evading the>i»>niy is that of shamming death;

and one need not necessarily travelbeyond the confines of one's owngarden for proof of the fact .thatsome creatures do sham death, forquite a number of . caterpillar?,

-spldersV-tcsds-and-snakes-are-adydieted to the habit, sajs IL D. D.In the limes of India IllustratedWeekly.

"Ihat U a text certainly.1* saidthe schoolmaster, "but cannot yongive me a better oner*

"Xes, sir," quickly piped opTommy Smart. "Go than and dolikewise."—Birmingham (England)Weekly Pott

KgUy DsnbU Stom.The factitious atones employed

by the Babylonians and early Egyp-tians. a» wen as among the Cheeksand Bomsnt, and at the prescnt-atBarbary and among the nations otMalabar, were all a species, of be-ton. Pliny mentions that thecolonms which adorn the peristyleof tba Egyptian labyrinth were otthis material and the great lengthof time it baa existed (aver 3400yean) shows the dntabllity of thistorn ot eonstraetloa. The Romansmade tree use ot the material inconstructing their walls; aqueducts,

and roads. Portions ot these

Stephen FeaUr Snrtnareder ball, -the old Rowan

homestead . at Barfstown, Swhere Foster wrote his

jfcpewitoenrlofirlval of the white nan. It was ex-Jtenslvely used by the A ^ J ^! before them theToUeca. AFljren-itae who bad resided In thej te t

.Indies finally lntrotaad ehveolatellnto Italy. « » w ^ ? Sspread th

llnto I t y .spread through

SoSpttw.ptFrederlck tbe Greatphyddan, Bochot, on

d T d l dtha otherphyddan, Bochot, on —

nandTpcodalnwd cacao-one ot-themost noble ot -Ostoi erles. far more

^ toba tttgdjof the, gotod flbl and Lto-

hw^y t tgdjof tthan nectar and aflbroala.

t d S b tthan nectar and aflbroala. a dawns, noted Swedish botanist; whogave cacao Ita adentUcjchristehin* coined- a aame, •mieobroma,"

^two GwekTwords, meantegth 4 V W 4 ***&*>

place .would-come when the moonwas In the same position it hadbeen In daring the main shock. Justwhy Oils relationship between themoon's position and earthquakes.laso consistent has not jet been ex-plained.

efficiency It Is interesting to notesome of these- early comments;—J;Fennlmore Cooper, anthor of the fa-mous Leather-Stocking Tales, wroteto Uorse on January 31, 183S; as'follows: "My dear friend:'I wishyou all success with the telegraph,which might be made very usefulfor long distances. Your difficultywill be in communicating betweenmore than two stations, for half adozen sparks traveling on tbe samewire will" play the devil-with- theregisters." The Western Union to-day sends as many as eight mes-sages over one wire at the sametime byvices.

ingenious automatic de-

Chain Stars idea OldAlthoagb—the-Americau—chain-]

stores, are generally looked upon as-n modern institution, the idea isvery old. .The enormous Mitsuichain system in Japan dates backto 1&43. The Fugers of Augsburg,flourishing In the Fourteenth cen-tury, managed scores ot branchesIn mnch the same manner as thoseof today.

uncanny knowledge of the comingweather and it makes.use of thisin the manipulation-of its webs. If.the.dayJls to.be fair..and_aolet.tbestrands supporting the web are farflung, it is not i an uncommon,thing to find that, from"Uie~<*nFiter of a. web to the tfolnt where, theextremities of the threads are at-tached . will be three feet or evenmore. This Is, of course, an ad-vantage to have the web as fullyextended as possible, for then thechances that files will blunder. Intothe entanglement are Increased.Some-honrs In-advance of- the -conv-Ing of wind and raHfcthg spider willbe bard at work shortening thestrands which support the web.

fe"pr«>sass^Wft"'^^^'KE!<JIC^ AXX-HtCORc3Tff^eariy" nve:tlmes the number.'.

. v Silant on His Man-i^ge -Sir Thomas Bodley, founder of

the famou3 Bodleian library at Ox-ford, was married, lor he set up"a monument to his wife, relatesMay Irene. Coplnger in an articlein the Baltimore Sun,"yet bThls au-

_tob!pgraphy_ Sir Thomas does notmention marriage at all, and there |Is nothing to indicate whether thiswas~becaase~*MlHtreBS-Bodley-wastoo much of a "domestlcal impeach-ment," or too much of a nonentity-to-recaH-heraclt-to-mlnd when her ]lord and mnster engaged himselfwith the Important questions of

Loaded PockeSTlie Iwlwanls dub In New Britain,

Conn., wanted to know bow manyarticlesi-men carried In their

A ipockets. —A physician produce<l-38and a nirvv TKiner mnn 44.

All October-production records Inthe history of the Chevrolet MotorCompany- were broken -last- monthwith an output of 85,915 cars andtrucks, it- was announced recently:

Compared with the output ot 65,-052 units for October of last year,the 1929 October manufacturingvolume shows a gain of more than20,000 units. It indicates an in-crease of more than 900 cars andtrucks a day over the showing forthe._correspsnudlag_jno'nth;_of_jiyear ago.

Chevrolet's record October per-formance brings output up to 1,275,-778. units as of November firstThis is more cars than Chevrolet

ijigr. n}it ^i.aa'cnifroyear;sS^

any other elx.cylinder car built:an entire year. '.

TJue to the continned1

mandrCheWoletT>lantsing on the blggeet Notemberached-w;uie. on record. An Indication..of.1the volume of bnslness that Chev-rolet Is doing nationally Is seenthe report for the last tffi - *of October which-shows a"'tato:-'-<>l$49 percent-over the corresponding^]period of last year. The;,Sgu*es,tor the period are 36,640 for the'last ten days of this October^aacompared with 24;S39 for_ "*'responding " """" ~

There Is-nothing finer 'thin_-at f b C l Bw 86Stromfberg-Carlson.

Irving street—Adv.Bowersf* 86 •A-.im

oc3-tf ȣ,%

666- Is a Prescription for

Colds, Grippe, Fin, Den-gue, Bilious Fever and

Malaria.It is the most speedy remedy knowr^

Atlantic CityThursday

„ .. . _ ,; j _-

SPECIAL TRAINL n r a Babwar . . . 8:10 A. M.

Ailantlo CUT (South Carolina Avc.)1X» P. M-

Peansyhauia RaiLro«dIt Is a well-known fact that cer-

tain birds will pretend to be lameor .wounded in the wing In order

Jo draw away Intruders from thevicinity of their eggs or young. TheAmerican ground dove, the duffledgrouse, the green plover and thewild -duck are among those thatpractice this art of deception.Among birds that actually shamdeath nay be mentioned the landrail and the water ralL

Us fritr""" name'todsj. •

Kaagnoo*"ATotralia baa aotv than 100 vs-

rltUes of animals la which themother Carrie* ber yovng In* poochon her stomach, gays. James T.

In SoccessfuX Vanningill

n, Sy ,master-

la sAssdlng^aod' la anstate ot pttserratlon. The stateof Kentucky has ma da I t a shrine,l i e bouse was completed, la 1705,and nas always belonged to tbeRowan,fanUly, to.which>WephenCollins Foster was- related. The

'" *; wfcleb deUghta Movers of_. ivts-tbetssme that the Bow-,i', had' seleetsd, many--of the"

1 being Sherston, Chlppen-ala -Ueppelwblte, and, Duncan

Birds' That Cs»et .*aBAD aemberaot theawsllowvfa*

ditiguished by. their aakaU

, "33*6 most noted ot all thesesmals Is-the kannroo," he writes,

i "of which then are a halt hundredj varieties. Anna kanfaroos areramall aa a r a t a a a othcr^ are solarge that when.standing on theirtoes they ata taller than a man. Al-IXwaSi-s. kaMWJ»ls_s.ha,rdt_ ani-mal, at birth It Is very small, oftenbut little laxget than, a mouae.*-

— - H a d e Good Un of Kit.The first railroad suspension

bridge at Niagara waa begun In1852 by John A. BoebUng aoi tbefirst locomotive crossed it In March,1855. The flrat suspension bridgeof any kind acrotsthe NlBEaragorge was built by Charles EUet,in 1840. He offered a reward ofS5 to anyone who would get astring across, and the next windyday most of the boys In the neigh-borhood attempted It with kites,one ot them succeeding. This stringwas used to poll a small wire cable

PHILADELPHIAThanksgiving Day

ThursdayNovember 28th

Learo Rahnajr . . . , - . 8J51 A. SI.kETCRXING

LT. PhUadrlpkla (Uroml StreetStation) 7.10 P. SI.

Pennsylvania Railroad

"T — FesjWne HsWV T• "What i s a gooa cure for absent-nimdedBe8»r asked a man-of hUdoctor friend. - • . • '

"Why,- are "you": absent-mmaedrOe physician retorted, laughing;atthe question. - •

•No." aaia Ms friend. 'It's myIwtfe. The.poor dear.makes the: strangest mistakes. I gav» her aiSobuTthe ott«day wtth whlcb-to' S ^ me:aome:shlrU ani aha camesome with somashoea for herselt"

r ana p m ppcannot wslk or- hop on

^ D M • b W i i p e n a W

which they catch while .lnKvtn watvUscoooedfro«b t h U ^ n ^irwlnsf o n ^ r s

KTmawMowiaBd purple Jtortwisire, the most common: species ofSta famllj la America.—PothtoderItacajt ina. "• •••'-. -•^•'- •

a.Three Biaish soveralfos, Henry

tn, Qeorge m and Qneen Victoria,h dfned nota than half a cen-

.: HUtory of Aviation •A' curious old! catalogue of boots

on aviation In tbe print department:of the Museum- ot Flue. Arts, Bos-ton, brings to mind .the.Interestingand -often amusing Inventions,•dentine and literary, from the time-ot Leonardo d*:Ylasl to the tint i-jraccessful ascent in 1783 of the'•Hontgolfler balloon. When a chir-l(»ble mind, one may accept .1785as the high point In the history ofTUllwulng;—A41-before_±hat_jlate_

^ S ^ % ^ t ^ \ V l « " < S : | «ntion.-

.was experimental. Since that timeman has been perfecting th* in-

Fkwt grade and guaranteed atprices Below inferior makes.

$ 6.207.15

30-4^50 725V 31-5 25 1Q.80

3t->6iOQ .2.2532-6.Q0 12.65133^6.66 13.10

Such savings as quoted above canbe made on all size tires: purchased at

ClevelandCanton, Akron, Ohio

SatutdarV-November 2 3 —

I.v. \\>

-..4.K.r.M.-"r~J"' ''""•In

t I'hilailulplila 7.03 V. M.Returning, leaves Cleveland

(Euelid• AveuiiL') ...'i.K P. M,Cvurh I.unrb S«rTlce by

Boilroud-Attendnntii

ALL STKEL EQUIPMENT

Pennsylvania Railroad

EIGHTSElevenworldTccoroVfor-speed-and-cndurance—andmore-^.._^American stock car records than all other makes combined,— ,-.;;are held by Studebaker Eights. • • -- • " , . /

This year's Penrose Trophy Race to the summit of Bikes--Peak was won in record time by a Stndebaker President Jyghf.,/,. -f.—over a tortuous twisting roadway involving 154 breath-. : J,

_ . The greatest record in the hutoryqf transportation estab--"--,,,"Eshed over a year ago by Studebaker's'PresiJent'Eight pJm ,-;,.- -traveled 30,000 miles in 26,326 consecutive minutes— ,..„'Still stands unchallenged. And this time-tried champioush/p..rauniM is built into every Smdebaler Eight — President, -. ^Commander or Dictator. - ^."" ':.

Studebaker is the world's largest baflder of Eights because^t n d c ^ S e r ^ i g ^ B 4 r b T u y ylotordom has known. Drive one of the new Studebakefore committing yourself to any new car—Six ortudtbaitr Eights cost so mort tc bay er to operait...

DictatorEghtSedan . . . $1285 ...„„Commander Eight Sedan . - $1515" "•President Eght Sedan . . . _, """"

SHOLES MOTOR COMPANYPhone 1057 5 9 - 6 1 Main St;,

Elizabeth Roselle Park

Jbr SconomicaT Transportation

^EVERYBODY'S S 2

Bros.\ Edgar Road and E. Grand Street

Smart • Smooth"• Safe-;

Dependable—and Prfced •

Within the Reach of All!•;t-H

>HE new Chevrolet wssiesigned and~built to

bring the advantages of six-cylinder performance withinthe reach of all those who canafford any autorrtobllc! For

is smooth, powerful and un-. ;usudly swift in -acceleration'."" 'It is designed throughout for-»igreater safety and depend-ability. And its low first cost,

"CombinedwithTtsoutstanding' ~

that reason it has met with economy of operation, makes'" ""sensational success—more -—it truly "Everybody's Six."_ <;than a million two hundred ^ . , , , ""'".

Come in today for a demon- -srratfon?-''" '":':'":'•'•'."r-:•"•'. : ' ' ' " . ' ^ i 'road in less than fline months!

We cordially invite you tocome in and see this remark-able car. Its smart Fisherbodies are styled in the latestmode-r-with tasteful mould-ings, concave~iront pillars and ~oblongwindows. Its great six-cylinder valvc-in-head engine

The Roadster, JSIS; TJtt Phaeton. SS1S; Tt»Coach. J595; The Coupe. JS95; 7T>« SportCoupe, S64S: Th* Sedan. S67Si Tha Imperial'

Uvllrrry (.Ctuuih only). S40O; l<n Ton TruckiChaxstt only). S343; Jurilh Cab). USD. All pticts.l. a

riint. tXlchltan.

Consider the delivered price u well aa tbeUac—(l.-o.-b;)-prlce wben-compttrtnft-automohUa-

values. Cbevrolec delivered prices lnctadaonly authorized chnrftcaf or !rei£ht and deliT*cry. and the charge for any additional

•ortea'or

Rahway Auto Supply & Service Co.Milton A Venue and Broad Street -=;-

Telephone 6 0 7

SIX IlSf THE" PRICE RANGE

' "T

Page 4: DigiFind-It · -''"' .•'""•.•'".'•...•;'.'."..•. • A your money ler Radio mm m HIS. IS Announcement from the Railway High School shtrtrtd the following students had

T ,_

^pr.Jjui l t Ji.an'cinllro year « ^ Knearly fire.times the irairilieT?"^1^- other nlx.cyllnder car bui l t :entire year. '. '..'. '.„,yae to the continuedfftfe! / ,na;" Cllevfdtet~r>lanta -arWfcra,.-^on the biggest Notombef echod-won record. An indication o f ^volume ot business t i a t Cbey-fj

at la doing nationally la s e e n . 'report Tor the last ti& T !«

October which-shows a - f a l n - _percent-over the corressondlnffKl:lod of last year. T h e j . ^ g i P " '*

the period are 36,640 fort ten days of this October aa-nparedjri th. i*< saa fnr ^afajjr- 'ponding period- o t 1928 . - . '."jf-"'

rhero Is nothing finer'thin_;a^'i|onVberg-Carlson. Bowers f 86 •'•.•'%Ing street.—Aav. oc8-U-1 .vi

_.-;_J__^-.._^---iLJ.E

••.'•••t!!g

!2§

.". ' r-1 V;

^peedandendns than all other males combine —

__. . ; i • ,•.„.;.g ;•ophj' Race to the summit of Eiket--Tie by a Studebaker President I gJlJ, ,x-,,ig roadway involving 154 breatJv-- '

_ • iTf lf»4jitt'

the history qf transportationesta6---T•Studebakcr'sTresidentEight$#, ,.,1 2 6 , 3 2 6 consecutive minute* —And this rime-tried champiotu&jj}..

y Smdebakcr Eight — President, • •

d' s largest bolder oFEights because, ,6^ifd6tnyihijig~u l i a n t a ^ j y y i g

ive one of the new Studebaker Eights^elf to any new car—Six or Ejght^it no a»rt (a buy or to operatl...

>R COMPANYIain St.,

Roselle Park

•I

X- * . • • '.*t *

rtatlon

,..,:,,. .-Vil

r'SSafer:;;;

e—and Prfced-

i Reach of All!

ooth, powerful and un-. :ly swift in acceleration'."" 'designed throughout for-ter safety and depend-y. And its low first cost,unedwithTtsouctanding' -jmy of operation, makesily ''Everybody's Six."J_'<•

e in today for a demon- """

tetsler. 352$: The Phaeton, $523: Th*JJ»5; The Coupe. tS9S; Tht SportSMS: The Sedan, 1673; The Imperial ' "1693: T/icicdonDeHKrs.-HSiiX/Jltfm? '; IChasrU only). HW; Hi Ton Trucktontyn.tui: 'Vi Tan Tract (Ctarrfj-.»•««-...JW, J450. All prices,], a. b. factory^ _t A .

runt. Mii : ' :

RAHWAY RECORD, DA^KdyEkBE'HJi&r^gQ ~» Y ^ f ^ r " J~

_ of Three 'Is Successful

*"^riwpi?BB"">r ToF"t l ia~ t tawilfie prgalnUaUona, including the

•Mooseheart Legion• MbOBe organltatlon,

• a t , the Moqse Home ini,' proved. an extreme

t « social way, when mem-W'fitTUi* three organUattonsm thesfivenlng to a variety oTi'~*~ e*i manners, with refresh-

,,.,... Mat ing -sna~pooV -playing.'•I'the r^EJp: occupying the roles of

>rtan«*,-.-'..-t ;-. .irl Helsch was general chair

~ of tjje affair. His assistantsij.the..a*nlor Moose were Anton

,^Mred Hammer, and Henry!" t o r the ladles, Mrs.

3a: Catherine Kottner..'Kettner and Mrs. Daniel

ir the Junior Moose,oughlln and Charles

Bremen's AssociationHas Successful Party

The~TJnlfonned Firemen's" Asso-ciation, conducting a .popular'cardparty at the Moose Home on Fri-lay night, awarded a great number

ut prizes to play'er.-i who excelledlu participation in -the various cardtames.. The.committee in charge'as composed of the followinglembers: Alex. D. Gibson, chair-man—BernhardWimmer, Henry BiVImmer, Thomas Walsh, William

H . _ B r a n n e y , . .Chester, _A.. J-ewlsrank Murray and Charles Rodger'sThe. prize winners In bridge

/ere: C. , A. Lewis, Miss . Elnslergh; pinochle: Harry Jones,"Mrs!harle,3 Carroll, Miss Mararet Ben

? S l n g * e r e served by CarTHeiscnTKettner and Mrs. H. G.

p i l i n g m i i q l p g a s - f u r

ran, Charles Post, O. A.Airs. H. M. Durand, Mrs. AmplesaPagans, Mrs. George-W~PalmerrJUHalllgan, Walter Clos, Jr., Mrs. J.C. Plckens, Mrs. Hugh Macdonald.Mrs. A. Rath, Mrs. L. H. Wolff,MraT ChaTles Smith,-MM; jR.- CAiremethy^Mrs-W Illiam Jt. -St%Ie.Clemens Draeger, Mrs. HarryBrunt, Mrs. W. A. Meyers, Mrs. L.

«rJby Miss Henrietta. Sergen,Marlon OBergen and Miss Cathktt • ~~lne kettner.

Announcement has been made bjMoase organjzatfon that a reTias been "«naUe-concernlng-themna7TriherMoo3e-on"No T r i h e r e o n N

J Vemhfi»t^23. the day followint^{-Tlwinhiakitng, when ex-Governor A," "HarrJlJoore has been secured a' ' spealgj-.^with John T. Oatefc • an

other, prominent men In the Moosla the state. -.-^~.

It Is expected now that approximatetVpiTJty membersjv l l lJ ie .real :l i e d . T r o m the new membershidrive and that elaborate plans wibe made for the class initiation 1January, when leaders in the ogantiation will take part in thceremonies.

i—FuneralofJErankP.

Puneral Services HeldFor Miss Augusta Storck

—The- funeral-services -for—Miss |Augusta H. . Storck, age eighty-three, 88 Seminary; avenue, whodied last Wednesday night, wereheld o n Saturday afternoon a t thelate residence, with Rey. George ALaw, of Plainfield, formerly pastorof the First M. E. Church In Uii3city, conducting the services. In-terment _waa_ in_Fa.!ncount._Ceme.|tery In Newark. Bearers were :'"S7'"O. H. Mills, George MacLeish, FredMiller, 'Jesse* Lawrence, Charlesand Theodore Schmidt, the lattertwo.of Newark.

Ier,-U-Peterson. J I r s , i ._A. Salli-jj_Mls3__Storck had lived here forran, Charles Post. O. A. Wllltliis, j i l i 0 U f - S gVenfy -yeafs. havlirg-bien

ST^E^ptOTiTMrs^CharlesGjJ. C. Plckens Mrs Albert Krels

U^l}llBllani^ohnBlerwirth, ! . .*. -« _..- _.Reed Genslnger, Henry Schaefer,C—H._EetersOH,_Jlt'?s.Oraee_Kettner.

hard Wimmer, H. G. Kettner andA. D. Gibson:

^ x i H a r y t o t h e R a h yElkSf a m o m b e r o t t n e

Cowan Held Saturda;Funeral /services, for Frank. I

Cowan*, *age fifty-eight, who diet:at" hta^bwne, 28-Essex street, lasWednesday ' night, were held oSaturday afternoon, with Rev. H

-—A - L ^Sadtler, rector-of-^St.-PaulEpiscopal Chnrch, conducting thservices. . Interment was In thRahway-Cemetery. Bearers wereJohn Murray, William Hines, E.KoU,: Frank Condlt, Harry We.mantel of Newark, and George Witfield trt-Arlington.

T h e . deceased was born in NewYork-City, but had lived here fortwenty-three years, a member of St.

- Paul's Church. He was a memberot Union Council Number 31, Jr.

" O U -i fc MiT-Prlde-oHJnion-Coun--clU Sons and Daughters of LibertyIn this c l ty .both.ot which conduct-ed their services on Friday n i g h t

He is survived by his wife, MaryCowan, five sons, William, Stan-ley, Frank, George und Clayton;four daughters, Constance Cowan,

— Mrs. Raymonds-E.-Eggers—7?-Bar-nett •stre.et, Mrs. John He.anes, 2Evans'street and Mrs. Maurice Gi-roud,...418 Jefferson avenue.

and memb_.Church. She leaves _Theodore H. Schmidt, and a niece,

-M.-ugene_tv^vY_< !.uHli_^.?v^^ :.__ Mlfs Augusta Storck of Brooklyn:Urmston,' Mrs.' George HelmsHatef ° - • • — — — — - • ^ -—1a n i S " " S ; , K - D , G l b , s 0 . n - " .K HAVE CARD PARTY

Mrs. Albert Krelsberg was the A n e n t e r t a | n | n R evenl in " waswinner ot the-door prize; the con- , , t n e . g U e 3 t g o f M r . a n d M r s .test for the basket of groceries, Kalman Gvory, at the carl partyM.r-S-. . J - t Jp-P lckens : and the non- a t | h e l r h o m e 2 1 4 w , M m a v e .players^Trizes Avere^awardg] -to n M e r - o n -^"aturday-grgntngn-fTl ie-Mrs. William . H^Branney^ F r a n k L . i n n e r s f o r jjie.evenUig.sssre.Mrs,

""""" Margaret Love and LieutenantR|chard Mayo of Boston, Mass.

^ Samuel D. Love. Mr. and 'Mrs.-C.""> 7 i Those present were Mr. and Mrs.

Stewart-Speaks On First *• ward ot mis city Mr. ami uri.. . j , rf /-,« i j Howard Spooner of Elisabeth, Miss

A i d tO brOVer Cleveland Lunrof London, England. Lleuten-j.int. Richard Mayo of Bostou, John

—In-a-number~of-startl lng_slaUs4BaHas of N'ew York^lty . and Mr.tics and revelations, George WTlond Mrs. Kalman iiyory~!nrd~MlssStewart, police court clerk and lo- Irene Gyory. Refreshments werecal authority on first aid work,-told j served following, the card games.

TJ«8Ttimrrt5<t^rtttJ»BThey sing the theme eon* iLoye

Will FJnd a Way." Destined to bewidely popular ttla, new melodywas •tfrUten especially (or "In theHewlUnesVby 'Joe Bwrke «nd AlDuoln, well known Broadway songwriters,-who are now member* otWarner Broi.1 group of celebratedTin Pan Alley" »ong vrttem.• Others In-, the xast. ot "la theHeadlines'", aro .'Pauline: Qaroa,Edmund Breese, > HaUam -Cooley,Frank Campeau, - VlTlan Oakland,Robert Ober; Ben Han and JackWise. John Q. AdoU directed.

Thg_yersatlllty ot Hollywood wasAever more ' vlvlW~~exempttnedthan In the, new First' National pic-ture,, -Love and the Detrtl," whichtars Milton Sills and which Is com-ing to the Rah way Theatre tomor-row and Thursday.| " L ' d t h "

5&

iumorGIRL SHOULD KNOW

bo'rn In Germany. She conducteda -dry—; goods- -business—Injtvlngstreet tor many years, and was ex-tremely well known here. She suf-fered an injury to her hip from afall" about-flve -years ago, - andJ iv tLbeen-conGned-to-hei "'* " ' — •«•-»!time.

She was

—"Loveand-the-DevU!_aa.a . . j toryof modern Venice, of Alrlca and ofLondon.-- Yet i u w a a made in l u

[entirety,In Hollywood.-with hun-dreds of, various foreign types, withmarvelous and. stupendous sets , andi l l theiatmpsphere_pf the _forelgnclimes.-- •• -™--^^™»,A . , ^ - ^ i I ^ i ^ ^ Z - ^ s

Only In Hollywood could .such a.picture have town made, for h«T"

fcw6«all*

-' . ' T.-»: rimn Intaf

. Tatopkok. om«* HOI

• . XTtBlnf* b»-\i

. ' : • BUSH A

Tni«toVi*lll« Tn UDevil," f•aturtd, at. the Rahway

'BNQINXBB8 AMD BfBVSTOU*" 14a irviot WTMI

Bahwtjf, I V *M M N W W H 4

HYKR * ARMITItONaI

ftahwuy NatlaMl Bank Bul ldl*RAHWAY. W. J. m

JOAN CRAWFORD and ROD LA ROGQUE7^OUI?MODERN AAAIDENS*—

AT THE FOX EMPIRE THEATRE TOMORROW AND-THURSDAY^

ONSTAGEAND SCREEN

'AT THE FOX EMPIRE—John—Grawford—makes_ner_3iaw

air the necessary' properties ands e t t i n g s . _ f _ . r _ • • • ' • • ' • _ i

Maria Corda, tho beautiful Hun-garian actress, plays opposite thestar. :M'me.\Corda..wlU_b9_reniein-bered for her_j»lyld. portrayal ofHelen In -The Priv»te~~tlte ofHelen of Troy." also produced -byFirst National. This Is her secondAmerican screen role. .

The -picture was . directed by I[Algxander Kord», one ot Holy-woods* see directors. . ~

pleasure, and that one may'bargain I Its coming to this City Is looked Iwith the devil anil cheat him too— . . . . . . .for pleasure.

/-Theatre tomorrow aiViThurtlay

FOtLOWTHE CROWDS

as a full-fledged star, and at the.same time gives the screen oneof the most powerful dramatic

Parent-Teacher Association yester-1 ;JIIP U U R - I .-vu*........ .„ : roles, not only in her own career,day afternoon that there were an-1 American Legion will hold a public but perhaps_in_lhe .entire.historyproximately twenty million acci- i-arii party on Thursday evening, of modern drama, when her newJ — . _ i_ , i , i . ,.n,,,,tr^. B n P ) , vear. at the Moose^jpmej_25_Fulton^^Mjetro-Goldwyn-Mayer vehicle, "Our

r pleasure. _How she learns thd;grear"laxra

ot lite thut underline any artificialconventions or style-made ethicsfornvi the basis ot the drama. Setin magnificent modernistic settings,great and spectacular locales andr&ntastle—surroundings,—it i- »y».

cal authority on first aid work,toldmembers of the Grover ClevelandParent-Teacher Association yester- Thp Ladies' Auxiliary <o ' the

CORRECTIONS FOR FRIDAY'SPICTURE

dents_ln_Jhis_co_uiltrjr _.e.ncJu year, at the Moose Home,amounting to losses financially, of street at S:30.about $25,000,000. He declared that |3,000 lives had been lost in the.past month through automobile ac-

Icldents.In making a plea for greater care

in all things which may prove dan-gerous ot life or limb, Mr. Stewartstated that it was held that aboutninety percent of the accidentswere occasioned by carelessness onthe part or someone. He insistedjhaj, carefulness was the prime fac-tor ifiTaccident-preventioir-and-thatfrequently a knowledge.of first aidwas_a^ "necessity:.

KDarefulhess iii driving—and^nparking as well, were stressed bythe speaker in his address beforethe mothers and teachers of the

| association,

PlCTUKt The new play, hailed as t p.Two Characters in Grecian Costume of the Jazz age, is' gripping, fantas-

1—Man of left should not wear | lie, frothy, scintillating—and under

Classified Ado

sySMetro-GoldwynMa

I Modern Maidens, a souria sySchronized produttlon, opens at theEmpire Theater tomorrow.

The new play, hailed as the epici ' ripping fantas

upon as one' ot the big events ofthe theatrical season. *—Youth-runs rampant- throurh Ra-dio Pictures1 all talkie, "Halt Mar-riage," at the Rahway Theatre PrWday and Saturday, with Olive Gar-den featured. This film version otGeorge Klbb« Turner's "macaiineatorv. "Companlonate." concerns *

baffling as well as grlpplngly dra-matic.

Miss Crawford rises to supremeheights aa an actress In her sceneswlUr .RodiLa Roauo and iDouslasFairbanks, Jr., who play the two

LAST TIMES TODAY100% ALL TALKING

gyv" j • ^~*"»~-.-——, •

I young art student who marries abudding architect in her, father'semploy, then tries to keep the nup-tiols secret until her hubby's genlosjis recognired. The secret "wife; be^sieged by the menace of a young

iand-.w.ealthy_man-abont-town. In a

HE HEADLINES': _ V . _ . W i t h . - . — . , - . - - . • • • .

leadlnr;'roieg among the men In th^ |a"d w i t h y man-nhnnt-lown, in »play. Albert Gran as the million- straggle to free herself from nnwel-alre father,-Anita Page as the rlvul sweetheart, Josephine Uunu,Kddle Nugent, and others In the_a t were ideally chosen

1—Man of left should not wearmodern cap

2—Suitcase is moder n3—Wrist watch Is modern4—Round arch not known In an-

cient Greece&—Phone modern invent ion-^_

I G—Modern office desk ~|—7—Modern picture-and-frame

S—Spectacles unknown In ancientGreece - ~ " : .

-9—PSpes-unknown_toiancients=r=10—'Design on border of mantle

does not match11—Modern chair12—Newspaper on desk not known

in ancient CireSce r-1—Haircut on man on left is modern

:r thed«llTCted prlcens veil aa the Ua£-"- *~";)-prtco when-cotnpartaft-autoxnobUa-'

ChrrTolec dclWercd prlcea tncloda :'«ii-*tborizod charges for fr«40it a1 rlin rhircrifnr nn'j mirilrlnnal a

[tfiel

Democrats Name GroupTo.Handle Victory BallAt a large and enthusiastic

meeting of the Rahway 'DemocraticAssociation held at Us headquar-ters In the Coppola building. WestMilton avenue, last night, a com-

~Tn1ttee~rwas—appointed—to—takecharge of- arrangements on the pro-posed victory ball to j>e_con(lucted_

^yz3h«3iSBoriatloni=JiaEph=&tinaivwas named chairman of this group,assisted by James Brennan, JamesTayloj,' Harry C. Hoffman, JohnDrexler,-Thomas Hlgglns, Ted Row-land,'Francis Schwlndinger, FrankEngelllardt, Charles Tlorke andWilliam Hurst.

A *eport from the nominatingcommittee, charged-wlth the <propo-sltion/.o'f selecting the new officerstor the .ensuing year, declared thatthe group was having a difficulttime ln'Belectlng the officers. Sev-eral candidates were outstandingfor the office of president, as welltor minor offices.

Alfred C. Feakes and Edward~Brent>an~spoke to the—meetlng-^oir-the cooperation afforded in the re-

cent .election.George W. Palmer, former presi-

dent o n h e Thomas A. Fylfe A&so-•• rlatlrni,_Bpoke_of..the. clean work

conducted by the Democrats at thepolls at the last election.

' Alfred'Q: • Feakes, first vice-presi-dent, w a j in the chair, with HarryC. Hoffman, secretary.

'. SoclaLand-PerspnaL-A public card party will be given

by the Ladles'. Auxiliary to theVeterans< of Foreign Wars on No-vember 26 in the Roberto Building.

'-—Mr.-anS Mrs. William H. Peter-son, Mr. land Mrs. Arthur B. Hull.

; Mr. and Jlrs. Oscar A. Wilkerson ofColonla, tind Dr. and Mrs. Ralph<3. Stillm4n of Rahway went to the

^YBAtEflacetqn ^ame at New'"Haven" o»-SatbrJsj^jied.-.spBDtlip*i;week-end"at Woodmont at the sum-: mer homj of Mrs. Frank M. Still-

., .man. f

i _ ^ _ . M r s — K e n n e t h . Van Pelt and. daughter^'Rita. Elizabeth, have re-'? turned to<thelr home from the Rah-! way Metqprlal Hospital.-: The Uriion Thanksgiving service";of the.Federation of Churches will

be held at the First Baptist Churchf at 9:30 a- m., Thanksgiving Day.

Mr. Robert A Coan will preside,;' Rev, Finley Keech will have charge

of the dbvotlonal service and Rev..;,.-; HerbertKhinesmlth will preach thel£'E Thanksgiving sermon.

.WHAT'S WRONG AND WHERE?

the tinseled spectacle of modernyouth there lies a dramatic themeas huge as life Itself.

Miss Crawford's faultless acting;plus the masterful direction of JackConway, brought this huge thenu-to the screen In a perfectly movingpiece-of^pure .entertainment

It Is a stop' of a girl caught Inthe midst of the'whTrrbf "the mdd-

le Nugent, and othera t were ideally chosen.

Josephine Lovett, whol l

wrotei"Our Dailclug Daughters." perhapsmore than anything else responsiblefor MLss Crawford's having" been'made a star, wrote the new play.

AT THE RAHWAY THEATERGrant Withers and Marian NTxon

have the leading"romantlcTDles-in"In the "Headlines," Warner Bros.'new all-talking Vitaphone news-

r-plcturtf-Tvhlclul3-teaturgd_fpr

come advances, sees the menace tailsix floors to bis death, -which fast-ens suspicion on the newly-weds andbares the secret of their marriage.

In addition Is an nnnsoally attrac-tive "vaudeville program.

"" Bit B£UwAny married woman can tell yon

that the blgxest babies are marriedmen over, thirty jears. of ase.—Mi-lan Standard.

There Is nothing Dr?r than aS tromberg - Cailscn Bowers, 86'rvlnR street.—AdT.—. oci-tf

< 3 i

.N SN\\^

THERE A?E 10 MISTAKES IM THIS PICTURE.

How good are you at finding mistakes? The artist has Intentionallymade several obvious ones In drawing the above picture. Some of them

"STerVicH^ dXv^yered,"others may be hard- See how long It will takeYOU to flrid''theni;"-~-----.-;----r:.-':-.-v;.,,.-.- ,_,._CORRECTIONS FOR THIS PICTURE WiLVK'APh^::s;

Thursday R.A HWAY N, • U.PHONE RAHWAY 9 9 4

XON PAULINE GARON andEDMUND BREESE

Also 2—Vitaphone Acta-2

TOMORROW AND THURSDAY

AS CLOSE TO LIFE AS ONLYVITAPHONE CAN BRING IT!

Beautiful Joan Crawford nevermade a more" thrilling appearancethan in this picture of Flaming

"YoulE! : ; ' —

WithThrillingSOUND

andTALKING'

Gay, . g l p T i rblooded - life, fiery love-beckoningto her! Then tense drama stalksinto the party! A sensation!

The Flaming Successor to"Our Dancing Daughters"

NGE

•v - MARKS 8TH BIRTHDAY:-.' Miss -Ruth pvelyn Mclntyre,

.... dsughter]ot 'Mr. and Mrs. ArchibaldS-.-'llelntyra Of 129 Church street,

;xole"brat<m her eighth birthday withr tecently. ,irslions were In yellow, and

RetreghmentB, music and' l f t re enjoyed, JdMter Will-

4 e y wlnntna; first prize forCame and Doris Mclntyre" >n prlie. 11181 br i sOib-

1M fur carvel game;. fttests irerei'-ftnOili-Jeambey, CUlfe Me-1

XJIbtoa, Brace Gto-1

'zaivaBcH^and. Wpt^.Far/eyJt'HalFttfa.t'riiige'FEATURED AT THE RAH WAY THEATRE FRIDAY * 8ATUR0AY.

With MARIA CORDAAlso a Vitaphone Act^Comedy; and Drima

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

Yooil Be Amazed at Rahway's New

Coming Direct from Newark's Leading Down-r^r-r—rtown-VaudevHle.-ITieatre

—Headed by—

William S e a b u r y -And His 7—Proteges—7

Late Star of the "Music Box Revue" and l i s ten

• ; ' < ; v . - ; -

LaBocqueDouglas,

Fairbanks, Jr.Anita Page

A Jack C o n w a y production '— •-- - JosephineDuru?

A Talking Comedy—Screen Snapshots—Fox Movietone News

LAST TIMES TODAY! ,PAEAMOUNTS NEW SOUND HIT!;; " ,

\More Adventurerthah "Beau Geste'?! More Thrills than "Cliaiig''! .

WithRachard Arlen—Wm. Powell—Noah Beery—Clive Brook

\MA MINIATURE MUSIC BOX REVUE"• • • . - - • w i t ' . : : . ' . ' . -

10 Kikuta Japs 10"A BREATH OF THE ORIENT*

Tommy Van &Lucille Vernon

Neil Kirkin

"A Breath

Eltihge&Vernon

In

ON THE 8CRIEN

100% ALL TALKING MUSICAL DRAMA!^^Hfll^tfJl«J9

DIALOGSMASH

WWi ,,' ;. .', .i -"-i^,;.'-.

Rahway High School Football WeekMonday, Dec 2 to Friday, fiec 6

\'" v1--}A: -•#gi;

| i mtic fnitlier.\M-S (ilUcnstedly)—Why don't

cot Vni oat .entirely and poM(another E ?

? joalt-'bestN«ta best*

wmfS',

Old Annt—Xou're been married

Xoune Wlfo - Ob, perfectly,»ttnUp—we'jt^ning. to-bollil-on-lt» book a«ei>t tell-

BwjaraWhat U It, do yoantrriase.

jlsrbe It's • cook book. WHATJSTOPPEDHIMT

(d tltl Wtcttnl Krwi

KOI1 ItBXT—Ilanmlow fltt roomi and Help WantedBHNT—Apartmentm fl omi andl>ilh. two blo<-ki rruml'. It. U. sia-- 5 i t

p^batb, ail iiiiproremenU.

aa uabus.. Ai>pl7 FoxKnililre Thmlrt", Kahway. ItKENT—Garape. Inquire Mrs. E.

Blscboff, 170 Church strvet.ft'ANTED—flltl fur.telepbone work, ex-

uuuecessiirr, Jtletniaiit bournl 14 Main m .

Itami cood nay. Apply 140 MainFOIl 8AtB—Man'a bicycle In SIMMI con-

dltton, $5.'"lnqnlnr25T>TM6ntiroia<inOAUMIK KOK UEXT-B«lt comlruc-

UOD. clean autl comfortable. I*oa-ses«lon lumetllately. Kaclnc Mapletrcouc at IX.' Bryant alnet. PhoneOit-W. Jovph Ljron Ewtnir. noia--t

VANTED—Maid -for .generalW Ml

gAply 1C West Milton avenue.1*0R SALE—Iloaacbold farultare.

quire 110 W«»t Oraud *tn*LFOB SENT

Honae. tlx roomi and bath,t uooK. IOD porch, tiled kltcfien

batb, gangWt all laiproremeiita.Employment Wanted

KOR KALE— New Zcbfaml red rabbits,l

flre roomi and bath, all Im-pedifTeed ..stuck. l*rices reasuuable.Also two Flemish slant dot-M bred.Call eTenlncr. H. N. Bolster. 305 J<-f-

-terson artnoe. Itahwar

ACCOUNTANTr acrea roomi aOffice pp*<* ' n Citlaeni* Hank

AU KlBB.Oav Caku far Chankaa, Clatn, Lads«i

aa4 Qtrd rafllw Qgarlai *tc DOMR

ocS-«

H1IU 8.CABPJCKTXB AND BDILDEUa M . Ouain, Fardi nHonm,

AUoaUaai,. b U n l n tarsUhcdUS Xailwftnd Hi. B«llw«r, B. t.

Jersey MotoristsT~~ t$eiiti6iST~

THE NEW -AUTOMOBILE Fl-IANCIAL, RBaPOJJSIBIUlT Y t A W

BECOMES BFFOEOrryB NOVEM-BEE 16, 1929. l lOW WILL THISLA-W-EPPECT YOV1 HEBE TST H E ANSWER:' • ' •- W E CAN paOTECT YOV WXTH

, INSDRANCB - ON-yOOa~GAH~iyEM-f"COMPLY. •WITH THIS U W I N ' '

AN OLD ESTABLISHED -INSTJE-r i \ANCE COMPANY. I '-<

SON,

Miiii% Motor Vehicle •Oiehe^i

oc8-tt

PAINTING with a. Modern Sprar Gun,. also Interior And Piratic or any Mod-ern Paint Decorations. Call Td. 744.Bob«rt P. SmlLh, 2 Meadow •t*ct.E l * . . ocUS-ti

Stop Hen for Toor •CIIBI8TMA8 CABD8Uat Hbute Olft Shop

tt Cherry Street.od--25t

He—Don't' think It's fear thatstops me.

Hen—J-wlKh-4-Vnc«LJKhetlicr_ll

•Oil IlKNT— nnncalow. Ore routnu. allluiprorcniruta. Inquire a- Tottrntlrcct. no!2-U

Rooms to LetKOI! KENT—Two.ruomi furnlibnl for

llcbl bouitckeepln^. Ran nntl elertrlc,•team Brat, one block from P. R. ItInquire In rrar, S3 UtmplKll iltcrt.

nol»It

HfltNIKUEU. 1IOOUS - Larer. wellHtfhtrt! and farated rarnlshcHl roomfor >onc or two men; convenient tobusts. _And_traiuj—Qul«t-h(imer~^(juin evenlu^s 'JO Uroad slm-t. city.

FOK SALE— rn>elwB furnare. Inoulrc!H Seminary avenue, l'bonc 1K5-J. It

FOR tALE—1021 fbevrnlct Sport wdan.- a l l -equlp | ie t l . practlrallv n e w .will sell reasonable: terms If desired.Inquire 114 East Kutberford street.Phone Z B - n . nolO--Jt

FOK BAIiB—Star Touring Car'; stoodcondition: nibtwr In excellent Kbapealso bstli-ry. 135. Apply Day. Hoi149-A, Wcslflcld avenue, Clark Tuwu-•hip. II

KOK SALE—Thor electric waabcr Inperfect condition; rery reasonable.Inquire 18 Maple terraev. J^houe^l.VK.

P<llt_,itKNT—Thre» ro.im« Ior_ llbousekreplne. .all tm|irpvotncuts. on2nd dour, 07 Central avenue, ftahiray.Vr — io:t

J X T — F l a t are nmms and bath,straw beatr^sH linprureuieula: mi l137. Inquire 47 New Brunswick ave-nnc. opposite Columbia School. It

GOOI> IHt.VSS BEP anil Sprlncable width for sale cheap. VI 'Uazelwood arenue.

^ tjfe-trotfiiglo halrn It!

LADIES' AND CHILUBENS Sl-OIt'8ocks^ nllk and- -tooot. made to onler.75c jier pair: also Bt-n-t Taiu C*apH.*l-3). Mrs. I<. Wllaon, il'J Jaquro avcnu<>. luhway, N. 1. l'houe r^t-IC.

^_ _ noUI-2

G, PAPEBBANOIKO andrepairs. A. Rtover, Madison

HU1 Eoa'of, Kahway, K.J. ' Telephonefiahway 103-W. .

eep3BDO-30t

-•TheaBoveeirtoon ihowt ichatuillhappen when thti to effect on Novtmber 15th.

*-nffm--K^irrM

We hare prepared a foMer (from whith this cartoon toitpri^dnced) that explains In a simple, terse and graphic way expctljr w U ' ; -the We* Jersey motorist will be op against when this J U V begin* tq. ;operate. This folder to yours for the asking, and it will pay jrog.to ..'get it at crttceand know where yoa stand, - / , *<''/-,,. *.<..

^WARNING!The DPW law concerning every Anto-

mobilc Owner and Operator la effectiveTODAY.

The sensible way to comply with theLAW la to_eet_Uie_nccci!i«ry_iirotcctt«nat once. This office represent!* threereal ble com pan lea. The Aetna Casualtyand Surety Company of HartforjJ. TheMetropolitan Casualty Insurance Com-pany, and. The Great American In-demnity Company of New York.

Iniure with % Bahwnr Accncy. Con-suit"CLIFFORD B. GEHBING. 1W Irr-Injc xtreet. Office Phorje 078; KeaidencePhone 1232. - It

Complete Service, ...".'_System,^; • .EntrlcK. ' " " „ _ _Trial Balance.AdjuitraenU,Profit and LOM Statements,Balance HbceU.

AdUrcM Box- 317, care Uccurd.no!5-2t

S I T U A T I O N WANTED—PracticalI\ursc. l'bone 1309-J. notl>-2t

AUTO OWNERS

Driver's License-An? you prepared to meet the re:

fjulrernents- of-ihe-—New-Jenwy—Klnau-cial ReiponalbUIty Law governing theoperation of motor rehtcles?.

"Initnre and be iure."REAL ESTATE SERVICE CORP.

INSURANCE\W West Milton Arenne

(Opposite P. R."R. SUUon.) •; . • • i oell-tf

BSTSURANCE COMPANY~1 Tie*. Verity

Act Now. Get in touch with -,;.,ni

CLIFFORDiB. GEHR1NG - -146.Irving Street Phone 678

- r t •>••

of the unflers1i;ned, QH AduilnlHlrator of-|_tbc^tt(tat«-*>t—said—<lecense<lr'notice-la

hereby jjivi-n to the creditors of wilddt-ct-aaed to exhibit to thu subscriberunder oath or atflruiatlou their claimsnud demand* npalnBt tlie eKtnte.of.-Balddeceased within HIX montlig from thedate of'said order, or tbey wJU.no for-ever barred from prom-cutlug or recov-eriuff the satm- agaiUKt.the subucrlher.

UAI1WAV TltrST COMI'ANl",ot Bnhway, N. J.

Aduilnlstrutor.IKKER P

WOMAN—Would like ladles' ormens' wash to lake home.

l I l f c B b

cenInq

ntle-uire

WANTED—VTasblhg iiud Iro|lng to doat home. Will rait, for and deliver.Pbone .10 Uahwar. Inquire 2S Luf-berry streeL . noL!-4t

JOB'S 'SHOE RBPAIU1NG— 03 I n -ing .street. Opposite Bahway Thea-tre .Our specialty,.men's and ladles'I nil soles. Wo cOTer ladles' _wooden.

—hwlarran-rBlo™. Call and dellTerservice: - Telephone Iiahwaj -2351.

Miscellaneous

FOR KALE—IkHler Tourlnc: Kood con-

WANTKP—Kind home for large male- dor. houHcbroken, gentle. bnndHome.

Apply Mrs. Eckcrt. a«J Pleri>oittstreet. It

r*'*:•>"Thcro Is nolbiag. r.ncr man aStrombcrc-Carlson. Bbircrs,' SBIrvine street.—Adv. oc8-tf

:VERYBODY READSClassified Advertisements

Cents a line ~' -Copy not Ko*pt«d after 10 A. M.TuMday or Friday.

80% additional h charged.

Mlnlnum Charo* <>f 29 otata, cash In advanc*. ;

KOK IlKNT —With prirate family,lar^o neatly furniabt>d room, all con-Tenlfnccs; suitable for one or more|»4»riioli». Muitt )*cc to appreciate. Call

i inijiTrlwinnm'wr: ^ ~- —^~

eal Estate for Sale

11BTAXT BtKOtT«UMm_heiu«_ ia iL |w»«f tmrnrr ot Ilrvsnt slreet and Tjker. opDortunltj to bay car or theboturs la luhwsy at a barEaln;

-..(T at this offer bnt ioTestl»a<eill i.r »|va for Inspwllon Salur-i,d SunOsy. It wIU cost Jt>« ooth.< Untie at It

HSCOMSTRUOIOjltO.

KOR SAI.G-Huucaiowa 4 nx>m« andhath, all Improrrmcnts. on lUchw'v1 block trout A. * 1*. Store. C l . . -Tnwu.hlii. I1O1 down and « i t>»rmonth. Also (or rent In ltahway,

i nt-w 7-rooui hou*,- irllh. 2-car traracv.Andren—i —Sous.—1'houe -Itahwar

FOU RENT—Four-room apartment*, i -»i'bMie ICES.•' ltnnrt>*.nn»nts itwgt heat: s n per —

nth. Inqnlre at meat market. 41 |p(

nol'J -2t

Aoutii Montitomcr7 street and Lafaycite •trerl no!S-4t

FOIt RENT—Six-room s|iartmcnts: allImprovements; rvady.fur occupancyDerrmtier lat. 137 Eait Milton ave-

.nue, Phone :MD. •

FOR KALE—Small library table andLanler-Humana Player—Plntm. H."5

_ Jaques avenug: Calf'afTcr 4 p.- uolS--.t

FOR SALE—<"!uder«. W.OO per load.Innulre 237 *\Vest Orand Btrcet( or.mil Itiihjny 174.11 IL

FO1! RENT—Threehousrkeeplni:, |2n

romim for llirht\KT - month: ccn-

trally located. _AddreMBox^404. care~~ -"- • " noT32t

OR IlKST—Pour newly decoratedroomt^ . all improvements; adults

-only. - R e n t » 3 . Inaulrc 11) Leesvllleavenue. nol3-2t

FOtt RKNT—Furnished room for gen-tleman, convenient to nus and station.Inquire 18 West Ilaselwood avenue.

,• nolSIt

LARGE PLEASANT ROOM TO RENTGl Maple avenue. It

• eHo.

BrnAs VIMB MOSKT~

f *Da«ch It st <l«wm parsamt <«- bnlla 4 l l at-•lalnr prtm^—tha lawcat price.n>r (tr lad Mate •--•rr soiaa real sarrinn barsiln

IUIIH, tmatt, W m. . slam, lactarMa Ja • Kak-land « l m -.,. • -

Bahway n a f«r aa app«lnl-ULI. PAT YOC TO Binvar.tii

|TRAI>K E.VCLC««Kl.T T1IB0l'KTCB .\.HESUU(IU -

- Kitate—VaMncM—lasarasn!•€.(! Air*, M Keatt'Ank BtaM»».

Baawar.X. .*.

Seal Estate for, Sale. . Station. Closo to schoolIlinrches. All UnprsmmtDta. Lot*T">t prlna.-VUftnlld-boaMa.ta

hoas« now ready. Six rooms andbath. Tile, kitchen. Bnnparlor.•o'd openpoHUr TlttpUec Steam

Cas rantr. Pantry and break-1<>n*. Screens and garare. House

itril Home Buildingand Finance Ctf.

j N. J;Telephone 474

ALBplace ^ n d t l z r

Bahway.hare B l

bungalow, 81m Tionie, 33All Improve-,l d Loanf

PWce. Bahway. All I m p r o ,•• Both hare Bnlldlni and Loancacea a W can be p«ld for ss

Alto six lots ftn Ellna place,* -tor building, purposes.M d RUmler, s ^ r r a d T « t t w t ;

N J TelephoB* Trinity— tef»"

, fttato aad lannuw* I xI M>ia BtrM*. aakirsqr, S. J.

Real Estate for RentUllitiKHT lt.\IUi.VlNMFOR KENT

-Ktirht.room bmim-. all improTeuientR.hcdrooni*. uptown cttrtier plot, near

h'ranklln iScbintl; Imnuillate possesfion.

_ Klte-rmim ' ltuncal"f, sttnparlnr. On-•bed attic, Tirgc- plot. K««t- Bahway.

o.Brand new 2-ntnry. r,-rootn bouse,

»lh |.t.T..l .im-l. tin.m new houw

tile

|8ll-room ne

yh.-n.V-. Fourth >Unl

FOIt nE>>T—Two fist.. SI and 33 EastUlltun avenue, six rooms and batheach, all Improvements. Inqnire JohnJ. Warsa, 12S Commerce street,

oo

FOUR AND FIVE ROOM' apartmentsfor rent on Ualn street. Inquire H.Robinson, 130-132 Main street

ocl7-tf

loodyear tire anil tube.X : M ^ . >vaii carrieil. as an .extra,spare for fo"u> months: ncrer uncil.Be«annahle. Call OT-J, between Band'7-p. m. -It

DELICATEMKEN—FOB SALE.GOOD KTAND

Owner rctlrlnjr. any reasonable offeraccepted. Inquire' 17 North' avenue,west. Wlnkler. Cranford Theatre hulld

ione~Cranford~TJ33.— JI0lS.1t

BLCE BIRR TAXinERMY STUDIO&nd Pet Shop—Birds, anlmnU andCame heads mounted true to life. Allwork guaranteed. 783 St. George,avenne. ltahway. N. J. Work canbe l e f u t Anthony's Sport Shop. 101Irving street, next the Empire Thea-tare, ltahway, N. J. nol-13t

FOR SALE—Kindling wood ent n>adyto use 30c per bbl. Richard HamiltonInc., New Brunswick avenue. PhoneRahway 100. ol3-2t

Money to LoanUONET TO LOAN on bond and mort

rajrc, Hrer & Armstrong, BlhwayNational Bank Building, BahwaT.N. J. ocUS-tt

ANNOUNCEMENTKATHLEEN WflEELKa LA

Jitrw..One Block from. Llucoln' Highway

Expcrt'Iustrnctlons InBawanan Suitor. Ukulele ,

Violin and Piano."• • . norlO-'Jt

RAIIWAY GLABH WOBBHPle|are Training

Automobile Glass Onr Sneelaltr .Mirrors—Furniture—Tops-—Renllverlpg

No. 8 Main Hi., Bahway, N. 1.nione 1S90-W

: ; - • • • ool8-«t

TVIM.IAM V. HBKER."i'roc"tor, ,4-j. IrrhiB St.. ltahway, X. J.-nolU-o a w-5w . ' .' Fees ?7.S0.

AN ORDINANCE Al'TUORlZING THEI X * H A N C K O F « 5 ; 0 V

JIRGF.N8EN Jt FL<\TIIMANN

(fAKPENTEBS. BriLDEKHAM> GENEKAL CONTRACTORS.

MR. AliTO-OWNKB:AUTOMOBILE IN'StlBANCB OS" TUB

INSTALLMENT PLAN.DON'T KISK ALL. INSUItE TODAY.

NINE MONTHS TO PAY.ntx r .tb** now . antnmobile_inaur_^tew—uoe«—inCeet

10J9. Be oo the safe Bide—insure yourcar today In one of tbc larpest com-panion lu the business, no additionalcoat for the extended TiayinentB^—Ratesare the same as tfcutich you paid cash.

/ d b l i D t b C l lw / r d o w n r b m twrlte or phone. .

W. 8. BENDT. AKfnt10 Turk. HtTOrt, Bahwar, S.

Phone 7R3-W.

Houses, Garaffcs. Sunparlors;Alterations and Repairing.

AXI. KINDS OF MI LI-WORK

Store Fixtures. Slain Screens. 4itortunashea. Porch Enclosures, etc.

30 Madfton HIM Road, Rahway.— Telephone 157^ - - -

Shop: Corner Ollrer St. and JacksouAve.

nol5-tf

~~SKWEE BONDK OK THE *OW>"-HHII' OK CUUK, IN TJ1E COUNTYOF t'MON. NEW JERSEY. ! •

ORDINANCEBE IT ORDAINED by the Township

Committee ot the Township oC Clark, luthe Cuuuty_ut_L'iiIuu, an_lullowii;__ ._. _

Section l. iVmiiorJry Bmj»I« of tn'«Towtmhi]) of Clark, in tlie County otUulou. - t o - b e - known--as—-TemiKSewer Bonds of VX&" are hereby au-thorlK-'tl to be issued in the aggregateprincipal unionut nf ?T7,"W, lmratmutto prurlwlona ut nn Act of the Legisla-ture of the State of Now Jcraey. cn-H t l e t l : ' • • - - • • •

construed to make ah appropriation, £ & . .antl-to-authorl«e-i)onds in-the aniooD1. - —nercin stated, but such appropriation.' .nd the authorisation of the bonds ahal l_ . .

not be construed to be additional to,a . ' .-lite .amount, .heretofore aulborl*«lLW' ' ' L,-another ordinance. All ' temporarybonds heretofore issued for: the,-mif-,.,;, ;ioie and within the amount states Jn , , . .Mlz ordinance, and outstanding at thetime of flnal paatiage of this ordltttDccvj'-^tan> hereby nnprored, ratified aadvcott- •>1-:1llrmed. - ..'.- —

Section 5. This ^ordinance shaU-Laki)"'effect a t - t t e expiration of Un UJi*J"*"'frotD.tlio-'diilc'of-iu publication alterlinul'.fwHrijpc'.ji^-provided by Jaw. -t-

Pasvod: Xov:rniber K' i™*. — "—r~-'- HERMAN A. GRAVES,

Chairman pfthe Township Committee.'

late thel

"iKsuunreus and-

-h:

'binulw ahd uTliCTlaet. », lna>rTrxii33w *

. . ./!*„ town, "l«wnahlp, or any uiunlcl-{•pality sorcraiMl . by an improvementcomiiiisMion." approved March '22, lyid,conttitntlnf: Chapter '2S1 of the Pamph-let Laws u f 1911). a ml the nctK amenda-tory thereof and supplemental thereto,for-the puriioae nf temporarily flnnnc-Uis: thu Townahip'M share of the cost ofconstruction of. the_ Rahway TrunkSewer• and disposal work»i an providedin a contract entered Into by the Towu-tshlp aud certain other municipalities.

AMUEL KLAMM, , -Towusbiii Clerk.

. STATEMENT . . . . . . .The forpRolns ordinaucirwas adopted^,

on the tith day of November, 1029. 1 ..,.;-;•?• SSSIUErrr-LAMM, ".'.

TownBhlp Clerk..

NOTICE OF CfTKNTIOH !PUBLIC NOTICE In hereby siren

that the following Ordinance waa Intro-duced at a regular meeting ot the Com-mon Council held Wednesday

lha*

VIOI^mSTRUCTIONDAISY MJNCST VIOLIN flTTJDIOS- U New BraiiBwlek 'Aveao*

Baiiwar, K. t.

Kions mA.bory Park Btadlos J » t Tth Avemitk

. . . : TASJJJKBJUSTTAXIDERMIST—Hunters "kill two

birds with one shot"—I'hcasantHskinned while TOU wait, entire meatbody returned for rating, skin mount-ed later. T. \V. Slaty, Studio, oppo-site Dunellen Car Barns. PhoneDunellen G44O. Tannin p. furs madeto order trom fresh or dried skins,doer bead, hat and gun*racks.- De-posit required on all work. no5-7t

Section 1\ The said bonds ttbnll he ing aj>polnt:FHU«MCTn t \_o ji e 11 in e__o r _ f r o m _ t l m c_r oi.J^ u H e s tn e rcfure.

[ t h a t • nald Ordinance .^rUl be t n r t b e r *cousiderci l a n d preSentiifl fur flnatrpa**^HUjre oh N o v . IT. 11)29, a t 8^)0 P . M*. "a t the C o m m o n Council Chambers , 118Main Street , R a h w a y , N . J . i

AH p e r s o n s Interested w i n h a r e airopportuul ty to be heard at that t ime.

J O H N J . H O F K M A M r -City Clerk.

A N O R D I N A N C E - , ,A N O R D I N A N C E c w a t l n e a n d e s t a b -

. .Hblnj; .certain oiUces in the P o l i c e D e -partment of the City of R a h w a y mak-. .

time, shall hear interest at not exceediiip HIX per centum <(!'{) per ininuin,and may hv renewed Irom time to timo

b i d l b l t l h t.nH_inay_bi^prDvideil. by_.xeaolutlou^..hutall- the liundn Issued by rirtae ot thisordinance,- including renewiils-_BhnllJ filled by James Albers, who Is hereby. *'mature wlfliin thp period pro~vule"d" ityTappointed" thereto. "The salary ~fOr~Bt.*ir~r'

WILL. BCV OK KENT—Bungalow oflire roouirt; state price and location.Address A. P., care Kecord. noS-4t

The Act liprcliiiibnvf* referred to. Allmatters In cuiinectlon with the issuanceand sale of said bonds and the bondiinHU d lu. renewal hereof., iiot-. deter-mined by this ordinance may i)e deter-iniOLtl by rcaolutlon, and.if not so de-termined. nh:ill b«» ilMprm.npfl by thoTownship Treasurer. The nald bondshall recltt1 tbat They are issued for thpimrpoKc of temporarily ilnanclus theTowiiflhip'x yh:tre ot the cost of con-ntmrtliiii of the Rnhway Valley TrunkSewer ami PlHposal Works.

S*TtIcm .1. Said bonds may be fund-d. but If not no paid or otherwise, shall

lie paid byueiieral tax whlrh shall belevied in amount sufliclent lo pay tlieintnrest on the said bonds, and If neces-sary the principal" thereof na the same

of Union, made on tbt* Kith dny «r No-1 shall become due.vember A. D,, l'XS), upoti the application S«:tlou 4. Thin ordinance abull be

ERW1N TBt'DEL"Carpenter to Uie PnrtlcuUir"

" Jobbing* and Kr-Porrh Kndo«urr»;

... !ra- Farnlshrd.3 St. Georre Avrntir.Phone lUfaway 1936

nolU-St

LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS

KSTATB OF IDA M. COX. DKCEASEWPursuant lo the onler nf (.EOIU.E H.

JOHNSTON. Surrocote of the Countyf U i d h Kith d f N

of the City of B o y m . _lntm»nt thereto and tlxtog thq, ,,hf HI Z,.- therefore. HI Z _ . . .

BK IT OltDAIN'ED tiy the CornindaCouncil of the City of Rahwoy: **1'r*

Section a. The office of CiptaLn inr ) l D t t j h h t lihe_ru)lcc_Dej>artincntjH_hcrehy^cxeateilj

and established and said office shall tote *~

salarynt,.£heayah.^ u

ntlicc is hereby - flied at the sum of-S2.OOO.04) per annum payable semi-..'monthly, commencing January 1, .lWOv--' . Section '2. The office. - o£-.Lieutemmf *^In the Police Department Is hetebgzcreated and established and tald office.. ,wTinll ho flilPiT liy Edwin Pnyno who l a ^hereby Appointed thereto. The salaryfor said office is hereby fixed iBum of ££.500.00 per annum p;semi-monthly."~ Section 3. The office of Sergeant Inthe Police Department In hereby created;,ntnl established and said office shall hetilled by William Smith who.la hereW",apoluled thereto. The salary for s'aT'lnilice Is hereby flxrd at the sum of£*,.YMi.0O- per annum, payable teml--monthly coinmeudnjr January 1. 103tX

S*'.-tlon 4. This Or(IInacre shall'CBkroeffect immediately. ••"

THE FEATHERHEADS BrOAcam

i!ce wrtlon, immcOlate possession, *•<>.

Kltf-room bunpalow, Clark Town-

. lr«ur ruutus, it. Commerce street. *UtnprorcmentK, I^C •

Three and four nlre niomn, 21G Maintree!. $20 wen. — _ \Kour-rooru bunjcaluw, IiW»vlllc are-

Klvc-riMnu h«.tijM>, Mntu •trcct, part

Fire rootna, all impnivruents firstfloor. Grand atrvet, |3T. -

KlVe-room buninlow, partly furolihcd.Third Ward. $tn.- Four rnoma. drat Boor. 73 East Grand•trtet* 130. - -i - Hit-r6otn"*Kott«e. 'U«utKomery- ftreet;all Imvrovrmenta. 130.

Two-family noasc. I^ecsvllle atenoe.Fo«t-room Rpiirtu»^ntrhlclrwfty.-<om^;

Irtcly funitshefl. |58.Thrw-room anartracpt/LluUen, iteam

rat, hoi water. Jaiiltor.Wa.Foar ro<jra». afl

La«-

"S^ISS.V^uiproT.m.nl.,- «- F.r < l {&S-o««»taw It

• >t)B BEXTFive rootna. sunparlor.

Third Ward, H3.Ne* daplnx, flr**. ropms. A

V»n'«l for C\\<frFurnished house or btin]

Nlrooms; all ImiiroTcmrutt.See our compute list nf rental*..BBAIJ ESTATE SERVICE COttP,

• M Weat Milton Afcnue . . '(Opiioalte, T. B. K. Station) H

decorated,

tvo

The Choir Crop Suffers a Blight-.-BM l t«W» VUlCk Wif»SAT0cmU.SAM6 VISTKftW AND AittTW HAMW8-MAUD «ACAS WTItlf

HNNEY OF THE FORCE -ZJ&J&xt No Miracle Man;,;;.

Rmnll afore at 121 Inrlntr ttrwc KaOn« alnjle office. IIS, In-Baser Boud

One 2-room oOce, JM In Boner Balld-

Uaraffe to rent.BAUEB-BRO0KS CQMPANT,

. 1ST lrrtne limit •}• anSI-tf

tray

)Mii&:

Page 5: DigiFind-It · -''"' .•'""•.•'".'•...•;'.'."..•. • A your money ler Radio mm m HIS. IS Announcement from the Railway High School shtrtrtd the following students had

I ->

l^^^lsgSS^lSiM^

i

fe Ownetk OFFICE OF GENERALS^ '8ECRETARY

^iffTne" program of activities.at the-JTjWSESV' which have been plannedgg l j r . the present week, will probably

&,:<WItxtiimber those ot last week, when••»«*"-tt*a'-a full program in all

Jnartmenta. Outstanding featureskjAO.; physical department tor the

- include-—the—organization"' of the newly formed Cityall League,, the first of the

rlct_ championship basketball. . . .-^ to be played at Plalnfleld~d£.Wednesday evening, and the Ira-:: portaut basketball tilt with; the

ctarAfilon Montclalr . aggregation,^i lca. Li scheduled for Saturdayevening. A large number of theloyal rooters will accompany theteMn to. Plalnfleld on Wednesdayto "whoop it up for the home team.

, Tihe. Montclalr clash on Saturday"f&'^rrTriteht-promlses to bea-thriller.-'The

pen when w . > _ — , , , . ^ s_.onTiottmbtrlStk. ' "j -. 7

hich thb cartoon fe ttprtf

\r ••:•;•••

hg, «nd it wffl Ptrjrog^.^v7

?&•&!$ tested the home team after a hard££§*'•'•'•./. ^ttle.-'whlch went into an over-Sjj^gi-ttne-period.' They still Insist thatiSSaK; yje^better"'team lost that particu-*YviEiW.\U«i. game; and that the local boys'"•'.&*?•!•'• : - * « going to prove It right here-onS>2&Y.i''.t3ne -local "Y" court on Saturday® j wf. "i$gl£E: "TfeTnembers of the team;:aii!.:v^ajej. going out to win this game, and

therefore, one ot the best games or": tBe.- whole reason should be the re-s j l t Montclalr will present almost

flamp llnpun as last year, and

at the "Y," besides an older boys',league on SaUu day aflgrrioonsA—

Hand ball la red hot at present;and the handball club Is about tostart a doubles tourney. The un-usual'interest In the game la caus-ing'some concern.at *he "Y," fromthe'fact that there la not room norcourts enough to meet the presentdemand. Already ahout thlrty-aveot the business, men have signedup fpr the tournament, and theschedule committee Is' to meet onFriday night ot this "week, to makeajt_nlans_for_ the tournament. Justwho the champ""slrigle'~pl$yer""1n.Rahway has not been determinedfor at least two years, and thlB alsogoes ror the doubles, but' the Hand-ball Club Is going to find out dur-ing the present active season.

A full schedule or bowling, islisted tor the week, with oppor-tunity tor open bowling on Satur-.day afternoon: and evening. - OnTuesday evening, the alleyVare re-~served tor the women. On "Wed-nesday the Robins '.tackle . theRamblers,-and Seminary and the

Thnrnfiwy

>MPANY:

• i - j i . ; > • » • •ouch with

JEHRING •:-Phone 678

;d to make an appropriation i^uthorlie-ijondnln-the tutorial'stated, hut nich approprlalltmauthorisation or the bondi ahall _ . . .

construed to be additional to* V '"."""lount heretofore ivXhorivULJiy" - i i

ordinance. All ' tettp«r«ry" :heretofore issued for -tne.-nw-,..;.id-TTithln the amount - stitea In .... -llrmuce. and outstanding- at (Itsfinal paa aKQ of this ordinance/"1"' ' -

eby ajiproretl, ratified and-.eoB- >•"-'- -

n 5. This .-ordinance ahall. Ufc£" ' ,it .tie expiration ot tan -daya'""ta-imui'oC'ltrn publication a i t oBtupo'.aij -provided by law. .<. ' •»A: November .&: .103) : Z _\^U_"" HERMAN A."GRAVES. "•riufln at the Township Committee.' • ' *rBL FLAMM, ~ ~ ~ T 7"nisbll> Clerk.

. STATEMENT •». •• •'nrpRolnff <tr(tinnuci-*-was adopted.*,,Ctb day of November, 1029. l ..,.;...,..

• .-;.-?• SJBIUEIT'H.AMM. ".'.Township Cleft. ';

HOTICE OF INTENTION -TH. . , / . -LIC NOTICE la hereby given ic following Ordinance trfla Intro- . .it a regular mcctinc of the Com-caneil held Wednesday er«almr,.-.

J*jJa_wortn_ golng_a_Jong way toWBtch the-performance or the Cart"^bn and the Shoefler brothers. The

; "af" Phantoms are going to playin the preliminary game, and theyore going strong at present, and

-Jtte—going to try hard to annexUieir. fourth straight.••Tire' City Basketball League willljbld its second organizationmeeting on Wednesday night, andit-looks at the present time esttiough there would be at leastsix' teams entered. The Ramblers,

~8jfeel 'Equipment, -Avenel- ArCr,Orioles, are all .sure while theFirst and Second Presbyterianchurches are to report at Wednes-

-: day's, meeting .their definite word.There are also some other possibili-

r ties, and prospects look good tora- successful league. With tbe(jjaryng Of this league In Decem-ber, local basketball fans will be8j)le to get their fill of the popular

~1»dodr" gamer"for~ it" means games&ery Monday and Saturday night

night, Mohawks and Centrals, andthe N. S. team opposing Mercks.The Business Men's Bowling Cluboccupy'alleys l a n d 2 6a Fridaynight, the other two alleys beingreserved .for a special-match.. Theteam in, the State ? league havewon two of their three matches eofar, and will probably flnlsh near,the top, but the champion Metuchenoutfit is again out in front, and Isgoing to make a strong bloTtor tnetitle again.~Th ijThe^soclal jtyenta for the week

"include a dinner "of a "fesd"-~torevery night. Monday night, aboutthirty young men enjoyed a specialdinner, and signed up to help the"Y" boost Its membership by secm<ing some new members. The usualcust6WoT"BCTvtng--eatt'-to--the-conitestants In the State Bowlinggames was followed on Mondayevening. The Rahway Council B.S. of A. is having a special chickendinner on Tuesday night, the Hl-YClub dinner on Wednesday nightat—6:16, - the regular FellowshipDinner at 6:45 on Thursday night;another dinner for the membershipworkers on Friday night.

• The new billiard balls have ar-rived, and niore "activity in the pooland billiard department is lookedfor. Inter-assoclatlcn tournamentswill be promoted starting in De-cember,' and tournaments in thevarious games "are to beJnorder to determine the"chainpTdiFships, and to help In selecting

• • • • • M

flrtr«adlDBUyContrat-readIng—by—Com*-

!oQQcU:at the- said- meetla^'wid*-*-." I'•aid Ordldancg. will be f a r t h e r " ~~ "tre3 and pre£eQteiT"for flm^rpay*^*— •—n >'«v. 27. 1929,-at-8:1)0 V. AH ~Common Council Chambers, 113

Street, Knhway. N. J.persons interested will bare aaunity to be beard at that time.

JOUN J. HOFKMAKr *City Clerk. - ••. -..--.

AN ORDINANCE . , ( W | 1 W 'ORDINANCE creating and estab- , , -

certain olliccs In tbe Police De-nt ot the City-of Kahway mak-._ . - 'liolntm*iit thereto and fixing tag,*4hex£iureZZ 1*4x£iure ZZ , ., 1 .IT OKDAINED by the CommonT 1

1 of tbe City of Rahway: **'"• "on 1. The office ot Certain in •lIce_-DepartinentjH^bereby^cxeated • _ . * : .UblUhed and aald office shall totTrrT"by Jainea Albers, who Is herehyv*"1"toil thereto."The salary foresaw ~nTtr-Is hereby - flxeil at the aum ot- - • •X» per annum payable semi-.. •']yt commencing January I. .1WO-.-ion '*L Ihe .office-aI_Xieuteoftttt-•*—R Polite Department Is hereby,,.••1 and e«tabliflheil and aald offln.. ,beijllled.by. Edwin. Payue .who ls_.• appointed thereto. Tbe salaryLtd office Is hereby fixed nt;,fcheof $2,500.00 per annum payable u...nonthly.Jon 3. The office of Sergeant Inillce Departmeat 1« hereby create^stabllnhcd and tuihl office shall beby William Smith who.is hereby" ":i>it thereto. The salary lor s'aM""is hereby fii**d at th« sum of -

(O per annum, payable semi--- .7ily coinmoudnc January 1. IKJOLIon 4. Thin Ordlnaurc shall' takeImmediately. -»*••»,».-

towOpcn At„ We carry a complete line of. beautifijl4>]ankets, undergarments, stockings, Presses,~Bbjs'~suiIs~ahli coats for Iniants and Juniors.^Newest styles and exclusive patterns. AlicTkpretty-novetties-for-gifts. ——— ^ —

Prices Moderate

room and the field was practicallydeserted. And then. In the gather-Ing darkness, a cheer leader raisedhis megaphone and said somethingthat I could not hear; - "Five huntdred Rutgers students followed himthrough the mud-£nd- water-andstood outside the locker room.

"A "minute" later, the sound ptsinging reached me: ."' Loyal sons of Rutgers battlingIn the shadows of twilight .For the prestige of the college

L_the grldlron_nOw_UieyJghU—••Clear and true, the song rang

out. I could garely hear the words.But It didn't matter. The spiritwas there. The college was sing-Ing-^in. defeat. ;•

"Five years have passed sincethe tragic ending of the Buckneligame. The members ot the teamhave, gone their several way«. _Wesee one another now and then, atclass reunions, at fraternity din-ners, or at chance meetings In un-expected places. But - whenevertwo or more of UH meet together,the talk turns Invarlbaly to the lastgame of all when, we were beatenIn the mud of. Franklin Field.

GREENSPAN'S> Suffers a Blight3-riAUO K2ACAS A F t M /

ECONOMY MKT.122 Main St., Phones 914 and 915 Rahway

Specials for Wednesdiy-Thnrsdiy

StewingVeal, altSolid meat

pound 33•SlBiouJder

Pork Chopspound

No Miracle Man

M MM£ TUOS£SMtf/);p L o i o rouvjv >toggSi/

''* . ' :;•*'i'r.11..,'- .''Vj

• • • u '•- " ^ «

-• ... . v : - 5. . , . , . - .- , v f c |

•"• • v ; - J. ' ' , ' , ! ' . ' •

l V' =

l

..,-a i*"i* '•• ..-•>

. " . " - " " . . ' . . . ' : ' ^

Fresh (\ «fSparc Rib. " / •

pound

Sauerkraut'.•). 3 .- .

pound* 25Frt.h

Call Hamtpound 17

'StevriDgLamb

Carroti, B«eta,White Turnipi

bunch 6Spinach

;" 3 :""''''•"' pounda

Fancy RomanBeautyApplcal( h 1.25Bob W h i U — £ V f > |

Sardinaa 7 K3cana Uk%3

Aunt JemimaPancake

Flour2 packagea 25

B-andPure Maple

S

of all other Fruit* andet Lowest iHbr|e«f Prit**

tho pUyers,Tfbo will reprgtecnt theiX^-Jn-Jha different .game*.

Th B ' J le .g .

The Boyr'program Js. ln » ^yactive atate, and the boy«' sec-retary, £lwln .Noyea, oa»';a fullechednle ot events planned Tor theweek. The Hl-Y dinner on Weflfnesd»y night, and the ,boya hikescheduled for Saturday iflornlrifc,are the outstanding numbers, aKthough there Is something for thebpya • every/ afternoon' and' evening.Tho ' came room . down ^ stairs hassome new equipment in the way ofgames, and is open every"aflernbonto'JhlSne'dt tothvfcyrtotfJhlSnx

The boys' gym registration Is largefor so early in the season, and Isdue-largely, to the interesting1 pr»gram being given by PhysicalDirector BUI Wllsofl. The hike onSaturday morning is in' charge -ofElwiir Noyes, who will accompanythe 1>oy hikers to the newKUta-beth -Y", where the boys wfl} havea' chance tp look over the buildingand also to enjoy a swim in thepool. -There - will be tournamentsf b o n Thursday night, the

meet on Friday Tilght, aii3 thVBoyswill have their roKUlur Saturdaymorning chapel service ' at- &:4So'clock.. An Inter-game contest Isbeing held with the older boys ofthe Bayonne **Y"' on Saturdayafternoon at the ."Y." Pool, chess;checkers and~pQig pong will makeUp the program.> There is a new atmosphere pre-

vadtng the Lobby- during the pastmonth, due to the several changeswhich were made—The -radio andthe soda grill are helping In a realwayrthe-general-BoolallblUty i« nil

designated aa providing a warmbreakfast, seeing that-the child Is.at school on (line and .that he Ishjappy. -The teacher, another tool,Mr. Ferry declares, had ai her 'firstiljity an Intense Interest in herWork in order to fee of adequatevalue.as_a "Jeacher, The_chlld,_heasserted, must receive the co-operation of «U inrorder that hemay- like to go to school.•The best teachers, asserted the

|prlnrlpal, ahnrilil h* given rhargn'•oi-jinpllii-ln—th'«r-IMiitr-Beeond-«nd-

' " " yraripn, glhc# It la there. In

to ,bo-desired, and there jeemV tqbe every Indication that the "Y"has taken '#• decided step forwardin its lobby policy.

R.H.S. Coach DeliversAddress^ver-Radio

ino >muwu,v lro>nn. Of a Cnlld'Slife, that the most good may beaccomplished in effecting the right"Ind ot an educatlbhal future forhe child. He further pointed out"

Jiat books, buildings and -a radio,were vital points In the beneficialeducation ot the child.' A highschool education, he concluded. Isa necessity.••; ArTeport on the summer roundi)n In the Rbosaveli School wasgiven by Mrs, jatnea T. Wells, while"the report was "prepared by Mm.iD." W.Young; Eighteen examina-tions were reported *s having beenmade In tbe Initial round-up andtwelve In the second. Fifty-five per-cent of the defects were said to

| have been corrected In this manner.Winners in the attendance

(Continued from Pig* On«)

. A rejport.jjreparea. py MrL. iMarkey, was given by Mrs. H. E.Davis, concerning -the UnionCounty Convention at Summit, re-cently.I Sirs. W. B. DoRie was in charge

of the meeting. • .

Funeral of Mary CrowleyIs Held at St Mary's

i_The funeral of - Mr*—Maty" C;Crowley, wife ot Patrolman C. J.Crowley, was conducted this morn-ing at nine o'clock, with a highmass of re<uIem^"ndrewa~b"y7Reyrf1

A large attendance was noted withan S unusuallly large number offloral pieces. Interment was inHaxelwooa Cemetery.;~The" various iodgesT with whichthe deceased was associated,. con-ducted their services at .the homehist night These included theLady Foresters, Rahway Circle,The Exempt Firemen and theDaughters of Pocahontas. Mem-bers of the Rahway Local, Patrol-men's-Benevolent-Association, -of

that the college,-, expecting-as tbl i d h d f ^ t e l t

whlch

r d g» "If we. had gained the victory,we would have forgotten about, itafter a year or two, bat haying lostthe ~ game, the memory of defeatand Its aftermath is still vivid Inout-minds. ' — ' . '.''I*——~!—r

We. have gone, as jl have said,onr seraral ways.—Hoiner. Hazel Jsdirector of athletics "In.a southerncollege'; Heinle BenVeri la.

l l t t b a l t % t t y j ^ Q^ a y g t p > t = % t o y j ^ Q j gA. C.; Captain: "Mickey" Brennanl ^ l h i h t S t4 yford, Connecticut... Ben^Glbson, ourtackle'Is In far-off Singapore, tn theStraits SettWments.. "There Is nofootball there, buVBen has'n;t for-gotten. Heha8'seen'many-stran«epeople/ undergone.mapy unlqfle ex-periences.:'But he. remember*, theBuckneli gamer "We all do. It -Isbrought. Wet-to 'us with startlingvlviinesa - whehfefer we." Heard agroup ot Rutgiera. men filng LoyalS o n * . ' - ';'"• ' : , ' • I

|—There-are—tetK&eni—among - us,and "business men, and -lawyers.College., dayr.-Mp - BeCo"aflng~ ttitf:We recall unrelated Incidents; awinter evening before -the firs' In afraternity house, something WhichjLchap^JlsBeakTj^saldaii espedally bard exam, an act of sports-manship, a quiet talk with an un-derstanding professor. We haveforgotten - -many "of ' the lessonswhich we-learned in-thoclassroomrbut' we shall' never forget the les-son of defeat

"And thos« of us who are privi-leged to be in contact with, grow-lng-boya are In position to teach

Them many .things! "We can tellthem out of our greater, experiencethat It .pays to be clean and/square; TO can tell them that agood man takes his coaching. Andwe can teach them, it we' will; thatalways the team comes first; thatIn-the-Game of Life as well as in.tha game of football, It;paor8:-to\,,sincere and loyal." and to fight fromtoo'first" whistle to-the h u t '

"We can.ton them to win If It tostill at all •possible but—that thereare greater things than -victory. Tolose a game or a race squarely inmuch more desirable tSan to winby questUmable .method^! Theteam matter* infinitely. more; thanany members of i t Mo. team, lastronger ^than-lU-weakeittnan.

"We can tell them these things.T.he_§.ort_clajr of them Is yet to bemoulded. Give, them the properleadership, "and. they will becomemen "of .character and high Ideate,not'only oh the football field but Inafter lite when they may apply1 thelessons which the coach has taughtt h e m . • . .' ' ;.. •• • ' . ' . . " .'' T o .the boys In my charge at theRahway High School, many ofwhom are Uitenlng In-tonight andto boys everywhere, whether they,be football players or not, I wouldlike to pass on thu brief messageof Bportsmanjbip:-\

'.It Isn't- the winning or the los-ing that count*—rather, it's how weplay tbe .game. The Rutgere teamof U 2 t learned th»t ta the niad of~TBaain gjoTd: afQeaW'ttgor ; '

'And no*, when occaalonilty weface defeat, in tbiigame ot' Ufawhich we 'ari all playing, w» draw

i back- our shoulder*' and. -with chinsupraised, take our knocks Withoutwhining. '. For; after «11, if we haredoneiowbeet'what does the vic-;to^jn«ttorti.^__=i^.^^_=^i

:^^Mii^^^Si^^^^^S^^^ SiPP &Ufi

Roo&velt P.-T.A., Hears

•The Mwterjr lls and tte,,._g," a talk

4-A principal, ofS i " Wood'bridjli" "H|gh .School. In-cluded a aeries ojt»>!n.ta indicatingthe most valnablp feols to the chil-dren In their school • study lire,given the memhefrs of the RooseveltParent-Teach'et i JUBOclatlon lastWedheBday. Tntr most Importanttool, according to &T. Ferry. Is the

the formative per

class for the Eighth Grade,Miss Helen Empey's class fpr thelower grades.

member, called at the house last"' fl nplfnrtrfAj Twwiy,* to pay

t h e i r r e s p e c t s . - • • . . . ' . . . •

tBetreifi.". '•£''. thV. funeral rwe^:

GUtabt, J nand "James Donnelly.

ot Qarwood

Navy^Band in Rotary \Club C o n ^ r t Tomorrow

(Contlnutd from PSQ* Ont)

harp and get.a great kick out of ItIt's all a question, of environment."

People like what they are fn-mlllar.-with,-aays-Mr.-8aUa)r^_Mostpeople ore - familiar with popularsongs because they have them athome on the piano or the vlctrola.When a popular song hit comes outeverybody is soon whistling it onthe streets. Who ever heard" thebeautiful "Moonlight Sonata" whis-tled on the street?~$V>relgnera;-accordlug-to-youngBailey, are much more likely to ap-preciate the classics than Amer-icana, because of their environ-ment. Many of the famous operas I,

•""" HgBter symphoniesore popular,.even among the most-iKnorant-elaaaea.-on-the'ContluenUJThis is simply because the'peoplehave been familiar wlthauch tunessince early childhood. Ot course,however, some people Just natu-rally have music in them. Suchfolks do noTneeTenvlronment, edu-catlon or anything else to quickenthoir appreciation. They enjoygood music instinctively. But withmost people it's a question of Ilk-ing "what they "are used'-to; - Thesame Is true to some extent InHlerMnrp, nnlrl Mr Rallay,[ngly. "I remember an Instance ota friend of mine who; though.notat all literally Inclined, readthrough an entire book 61 five hun-dred pages because he heard thatsomewhere In the book a town wasmentioned that he lived In for a

EartVa WatonIf the earth—were a perfect

sphere It Is estimated that It would.be covered by water to a depth ofabout 0.000 feet or nearly twomiles. The erdct volume of watereoQtamed In tbe cceon IN nf course,not known—only an .rtdmste ta-

-Carpenter,

General-Contractor

ResidenceS3 William Street

Theworld.

. HtgUtt F«n»KaleUiPr fall*, hljhtand

^."WW-Wi'd^

an« a i S S T iths heJrtt of Nlawtra,

-sbntit a » wllea from.British .nqlnnn :<

More than J 7.000,000been printed since the ndprlntlnt. / : ."-.-• v;

CARD OF THANK* A!

COWAN—We the undewlgned with,to .exP-r*i* .o?!.8-10.08?* Uiiiiiu^to

the kindness) and sympathy extend-ed to ai in. our recent bereavementat the death of our bebved hue'band and father. Frank P. Cowan.We especially thank Rev. H. A. L.Sadtler. The' R. R. Qnyi Construe-'tlon, Undertaker A. B. Lehter andall -who sent floral tribntea-orlnany way assisted and comforted us,

Mrs. M. Cowan and Family,/

DepartmentStorel

lafcwiy'l-MwtPopalir Store1 2 8 Main Strett

Do YourChristmasShoppingEarlyand

DO IT ONWEDNESDAY

-When we allowyon a

from our regularlow prices on everyarticle you purchaat

in our atore'

Store Cloaea 6.30P. M. Economy Dayu m i u ill other dayaeiccept Saturday:—

2% Interest on Chccking^Accpunts.

4% Interest on Saving Accounts.

Sate/PcppsirBOT

The officers of this bank are glad togive you the benefit of their long experiencein any way that will be profitable to you,

DIRECTORS; Fred C. Hyer .' ' . J Eugene Miller

Henry H. Jar4ine M. P. QuinnILL Lamphear Thomas H. Roberta

Jan Van Herwerden

Open Monday^ gy»?»iipgg /fom *5lp g o'Cifocfc

i -

FLOWERS for Thanksgiving! In no othct;way^anyoii-grace-theicstivc boariquite so becomingly as with Autumn'ibrilliant flowers. They sparkle with the

spirit of the^eason. Order noi

. Everyone Says thnt

Baumann's Flowers;-.—^satlrtoiitjesfr

We grow pur ownTHEREFORE""

They Arc Always FreshIf yon can't call i n person ju»t use your

Flow»r Phone*. 711__ot^712_We will deliver promptly.

Grcenhouaea St- George and, Hazelwood Arc

of Srnitcs<|R D W m « G \ O U r

STATIONMH.TDN cVJRVING STS.

OPP.' PENN. STATIONPHONE- RAHWAY 1415

yiiig;^(^jli§iieji

sJeKW^iiS^SSSftiBia

Tod»y:Tomorww: '

ing"«|owly rl».

PUBLISHEDTWICE WEEKUY '

IN BAHWAY'3 INTEREST^

T(i»' BahwsV Nswa-Hsrald, the'successor of the Union Democrat, Established 1B40.

VOL. XIX, SERIAL NO. 2094TT"

RAHWAt, UKION BOUNTY, N . J , FRIDAT AFTERNOON. NOVEMBER 22,1929

Y.M J I A . Speaker To BeHeard at School

Local Post Plan* To AttendAffair at Westfleld

Heatth Offletr: and Two Nurses8ubmft M9W« Figures

The reaifnaUon.-'pt. Mln HelenCralfc ' assistant - child, hrglenosurse ot the city of Rahway. re-celled Tuesday nlfht at the neetlug ot the Board-ot HeaUhr-oeea-«loned comlderable dUcnulon Inthe meeting to the piirpose ot theneceulty ot tfsenrins anothet nurseto nil the position. It was feintedcat that the proxlmltjr of the closeof the year might make It adrls-

, to wait unttt-that-Ume-befowU l t

Miss Cralg^ duties' to be carriedou by Mrs.. Anna 3. KlUby, regularchild byclene nurse. HoweVer,Fred- M. WlUUnis. health officer.was authorised to attempt to le-

" care someone to nil Miss Crate'splace. : . .-. . -•" ,

The reason- given by MUs CraigIn her resignation was to the ef-fect that she was about to assumea full tlm» po»ltlon4n K'ewark -asnurse. • '

The statistical report for themonth-of - October- submitted "byHealth OOcer Williams was as fol-\n**: Marrlases^ 15; births, 23;deaths, 8. Qtascn qt'death wereriven as follows: Cerebral hemor-rhige. 2; chronic nephritis, 1; pre-mature birth, 1: carclnpma. 1;chronic myocarditis. 1: accidents.

-I. -Contaxtonadiaeasas In the city«t>re reported aa folBVrs: Scarierfi'trr. 2; diphtheria, 1; whooping.oufh. 3; -chlckenpoz, S.—Tbe—report—ot—chlld—iygienftl,

. nine, lira. AMU 8. KlUby wasitlren as follow*: Rome vlilu.313: new case*. 35; terminatedcasvs. S3: attended keep-well sta-tion. 48; total on list.- 617. -Thereport mad« by Miss Craig ihowed:Home visits, 1$?; attended keep-Kfli sUtlon. 71V gUen achoolei-

tfauu.Ut; ioUlon item

First of Itectnre Series ofJrr.M.~Y.W.H.A..To

Open Tuesday

Launching tt* lecture series otthree nationally known speakers,he Y. M. and Y. W. H. A. of this

city will present Richard C. Reagerof the Public Speaking DepartmentAt Rutgers University. His themeIs a characteristically interestingone of tbe nature which Mr. ReagerIs famous for delivering. It • Is'Keep Your Chin In," the matter>r which; although unknown as jet.

will likely compare favorably withother lectures and performancesconducted by the well known elocu-tionist and public speaker. Thefirst of the series will be given atthe Roosevelt School at 8:45 p. m.on Tuesday eT

Th ly g

The early career of Mr.' ReagerIs Interesting, as that of all'well-known favorite talkers. He taughtl l J l h ^ B l l l

U«[, m, ot vbtetr W were" schooli'i:efc: : •

The entire board was present atthr meeting. Including: Dr. GeorgeI. Orton, president: Mrs. William

Foulks. George E. LltUe, Arthur J.Murphy and FTfd, M. Wllllam».|

SebraskA aiid-Chlcaxo. Ha is a grsdaate ofJJorthwettern^-BnlTerslty^—While

rMember of Elks, Dead

After an Ulneaa of less than.aweefo-durattoo, -Alpheas O^Crm-«ion, age fifty, died yesterdaymorning at 5:30 at bis home In theKooserelt Apartments In PlerpontMreet. A natlre of this city hehad always llred.here, and was

""'p lly Impwii f"r hl« ariiyitiesin the Rahway Lodge of Elks, be-ing one ot the three Ormstonbrothers who were charter mem-bers of the local lodge. This is theHrat break In the ranks ot the threemen who fortwenty-two years havebeen prominent fa-the Elks' orgxnt-ution aa three ot its chartermembers. '^ j

The deceased-was an accountantfor the Pennsylvania Railroad, andwas extremely wen known in thiscity, tie was - a- i>reaDyterUn byfaHh and bad been active In theSunday school of the First Presby-terian Church of. this city.

~ It snrrlttd by hl» wlTftt *3«leHoliday Unmton, and his mother.Mrs: Lydia B. Urmston, wife oftho late Daniel Q. Urnuton. He isalso BUrvliJed by two brothers, Fredand Joseph WlUard Urmston, Union.mreet;- one. sister, Mrs. Elwoodi'harca, Elltabeth. two nephew*,Eugene and v Stanley Phares ofElltabeth. •

The ceremonies of the RahwayLodge, NnaberrtOW.'B.T1; O; E.;will be htld on Friday evening ateight o'clock at the Pettlt FuneralHome. Funaral services will be•held at 2:30 Saturday afternoon atthe Pettlt Funeral Parlors, with

- Rer. Chester M. Davis conductingthe- services." Interment w i l l w i nthe Rahway Cemetery. '

HONOR OUE8T "Mrs. Arthurs. Hull of Colonla Is

entertalntsc Mrs. John. T. Fullerof Padweah. Ky, and m her honorgave a bridge luncheon on Wednes-day. The guests were: Mrs. W.H. Rolltnson, Mr*. B. K. Cone, Mrs.

-J>0rana-H«da»8r*Ts--WJLjEfitefcson, Jr, Mrs. O. A. WUkenon otColonla, Mrs. Bidnay Johnson, Mrs.J- W. Ackley, Mrs. C. T. Myew,Mrs.Ht D. Tucker, Mrs. F. V. Dob-bins Mrs. J.^B. Hoagh, Mrs. R. G.StiUman, Mr». F. C. Hye r, MissEdith Collins of Rahway, and Mrs.Louis Naah of East Orange. '

frttnlMV9.nm^7 M"- Myers,Mrs. Houtb. Mrs; Hyer, »nd a guast

• Prlta awarded to Mrtt Fnlter.r—

Thi lawman's auiiHary to tPaul's Church wMltold a rummagesale tomorrow, clothing etc, In oldSavings Bank BuUdingj corner Main

onflSPftf«t«r- snaVfnrnHar«Elm arenne.Pariahi-

' • t ; . " f . - > ' " ' i i i ] i i f I ' I I L : ' . ' ''.' '••'"Sits o''Joy Round Town/

sored. *r-Ijafayette I djr?soon

27,ttssrJJanclng.

BICHARD C. REAOERProminent Public Speaker

JILLfflLHEBE

In tho middle went, the Rutgers.rofejsor* created considerablepopularity tor himself by his work

"with—amateur-and professionaldramatic- productions.—Dnrtns-the-warv-he-was-a-^top-

eiyarar-wrth-thc A. E. F-COCKInitto-Rutgers in IMS, Mr. Reagerlmmedlalely Birca~aTarg8nplace-Iffthe public speaking department,taking over the work ot directing

ension JJlrector qf^the^ RutgersCnlvCTsltr lnterschoUstlc DebatingLeague. His work in other exten-sion courses has brought him Inouch with many people of thettate, among them many cltlxens otRahway.-

Mi.-Reager Is nationally-famous'or'his theatrical work and is an

rtTIri th N t i l T h '

this .dtytime wa»-presented to-them-wlthIngular success' Wedneadiy after-

noon and evening by the Unitedatates Navy-Baud, au the-BranklteBchool, under" the sponsorship 'ofoho Rahway- Bptary-r Club.' Thepaclous hall was flotlghtly "packed

Big

IBscusslon of complaints said tohare reached the headquarters ofthe Rahway; P03t Number 6- Amer-ican LeglonTVas held last night at

t the afternoon performance' thatconsiderable difficulty was found Isleattng tbe entire audience. A re-port from the Rotary Club indi-cated that the success ot the' twoperformances was assured to "tno,satisfaction of- all, with the - pro-

l g <jf LhL uvg&iauon atthe Moose-HaU;-26 Fulton^streetrIt was pointed ont by various mem-bers present that citizens of thiscity had been communicating withofficers and members of the Legion,relative to a number of canvasserswho are soliciting funds In somemanner,. _Jt_~ was not definitelystated what the agency was saidto have represented.

However, officers and membersot the Legion released a definite,statement last night, asserting thattbe American. Legion of this cityIs conducting no drives nor solicit-ing funds In any manner.. State-ments made declared that any con-tributors of this city would do soon their own Initiative, but-the Le-gion desired to have it known thatno. activities of that organisationare how being conducted requiringtbe subscription of money. Theonly activity of that nature Is* thecontest being conducted for theaward of eight twelve pound tur-keys at the Fox Empire Theatre onMonday night. This will be con-ducted between the performancesof the evening's feature,v An Important announcement wasmade concerning the big meetingot the Union County American Le-Klon In Westfleld on December 3.State Commander Hartshorn is ex-pected to b( presenUjtogetherwItha number ot other "prominent Le-gionnaires.- The Legionnaires- conducted onlya short meeting last night, tamingthe hall over afterward, to mem-bers ot the Ladles' Auxiliary to the"American—E6gton~-for~use~!nHthe

rHospl t tC.Frank C. Hitchcock was general

chairman of the Rotary Club's ar-rangement committee, with the en-Ire club assuming responsibilitieslor the-success of the affair. Mem-

JjenLof JJjgJ^dleslAuxlllaryjto theRahway^ Hospital, including Mrs.Little, Mrs. Russell S. Hoff andGeorge U Orton, Mrs. William FiMrs. Ross , O. Fowler, were theushers and attendants at the after-noon performance. • - '

In tbe evening," members of theRotary ;Club in evening dress, werethe ushers. These Included J.Stanley Davja, president ot the Ro-ary Club;, Frederick L. Mintel,

vice-president;—Harry—T—- McClIn-cock, secretary: Chaa. W. Nichols.Harry Nimsik, J. Erwin Pettit andMolpb Baumann.president Davis Introduced Ueu-enant. Charles Benter to the audl-nce In the evening and the con-uctor, who is also organUer ot the

bandr having effected this workhqrtly after the "war, turned to

the band ot forty pieces, and therogram of unusual excellence had

t>egtm.•Lieutenant'Benter, a man of" gi-

gantic build and imposing stature,W * _ L j p l _ ^ D _as_he.Seemed to mould perfectly blendedones from the instruments of hisand in the opening number, aniverture, "Festival," by Edouard

en.r The-reception of the- first

fit Thf playswhich are the high spots of. theSummer School Sessions-at Rut-gers, and - which have attractedwide- comments.- are also coachedby Mr. Reager. '—The-next-two lectures-to-be pre-sented—by speakers under Jhe aus-pices of the'Y. M. and Y. W. H. A.

his work with the'"talkies" ot theParamount Theatre in New YorkClty — This-Iecture-wtU-berin-thefform of an Impromptu concert Withexplanatory and supplementary re-marks on the subject. "The He-brew Influence on American Music"The date Is January 13. ,

James Waterman Wise, famousson of the famous Rabbi. StephenS^_WIse,Vand-Jnstructor_AtjDolum-bl U i e i ill b b fil lb!a University, will be the final lee-

imtiuTityln the National Teachers' tnrer^yi JFebrnary !«. •

Hears Red Cross TaikMrs. A. D7~Br6aTl8yrfor*seTeral|Red CToss-correspnnrtenre wiltrlhe.|

,ears a leader In the Rahway Vlslt-Jng Nurse -Association, was hon-ored, on Tuesday by re-election tolit) presidency—tor—the seventh.Ime. She Is a pioneer In welfarework in thli city. Others electedto office were: Miss Edith Collins,vtco-presldent: Mrs. E. C. Lunt, re,cording secretary; Mrs. Charles L.Russell, corresponding secretary.Mrs. .Arthur L. Perry _ and MissJulia Mershon were elected to~theexecutive committee.

Mrs. J. A. Wagner, National Su-pervisor of Nursing Work for theRahway Visiting Nurse Associationon Tuesday afternoon on the his-tory ot the organisation, explain-ing how It was founded otter thebattle of'Solterlno by Jean HenriDun ant, a Swiss .gentleman, andhow the reverse'of the Swiss flagwas made Its symbol. Mrs. Wag-ner also gave a report of the year'swork ot the American Red Cross,showing that the national organi-sation has given relief In 117 dis-asters In this country and fourteenoutside of the United States. Dis-aster relief was' administered -inthirty-eight oX our own states, at a•co»t-of-oTer-48|0<>0/inn. Mm. Wag-

children of foreign lands. Theybrought' with, them portfolios ofwork done by children In Greece,l T-nHHii »niT i^thar foreign

ner explained that it b necessaryto keep a reserve fund ot $5,000,000on hand for disaster and exMrvicerelief. The reserve fond has beenlargely drawn upon in the lasttwo or three years for disastersand that Is why the organisationcalls upon tht public for a speciallylarge enrollment

Mrs. "Wagner said that theJRedCross-gets the-htghait standardsIn nurses and thatmany^craduatenurses' cannot meet" th|' require-ments tor joining their staff. She'specially commended. Bah way torIts tour Red Cross classes In Hy-giene, and Home Care,of the S!ck

Wch^JrejtUr«5'4n4h»»pubUc

M r s ^ k : Collins,junior Red' Orossv.o

k on that braneh f r .as accompattledbT.MUaSchols, an eighth Wl d S told o t

Stde Schols, an eghh W P WiTcranlord, w S told otthe Jnnk>r

countries. Letters from Crantordchildren are sent, to Paris to the'League of Bed,Cross Societies tobe translated. into foreign lan<guages. :

The annual report ot the associ-ation was submitted, by Mrs. C." M.Lunt at this meeting. It follows:

"This meeting;of 1JM. completesthe "sixth" year of the RahwayVisiting Nurse "Association as aseparate organisation. During thistime the membership has Increasedmaterially and more - interest lashown by the general public in ourefforts.: -"FinanclaHy^;:as-: the.: :report "ofour treasurer wJU show, the or-ganisation &as a solid 'foundation.

"The executive committee hasmet the first ot each month (ex-cept during the summer season) toreceive the report of the nursasand to discuss ways and means torthe furtherance and extension otthe work. .

signed In June and the aasocla"-tlon has been exceedingly fortu-nate in obtaining the services otMrs. Gladys Fellows Breslaw tosucceed her. Mrs. Breslaw trainedat the Elisabeth General Hospitaland afterward held a responsibleposition there. She also has hadconsiderable experience In socialservice work. During the year the

u M l J i i j M d a l m o B t M n 9JiuMslJ«iijjMd__M9vlaltt, In spite ot the fact that dur-ing one month, when M|ss Whit-craft was away on her. annual vaca-tion, there was- but one nurse. This.Is a record Xo be proud of. '. "The association has received i

money donation' from the Honv

from-the Sick Poor " Society;. thiTGirl Scouts and the NeedleworkGuild.. Many articles of clothinghave, already beta distributed.

"Mrs. Brolaw la giving the

FOURTEEN PAGES . PRICE THREE CENTS&1• • r ? - K i

HELD AT SCHOOL-Probably—the-greatest nmslcal

lorer»- olTi

[Qeaert Sons," fulfilled the stand-ard of the band. The; encore was

Band, Here Comes a Sajlor," wrlt-'.en "by" •Benter-Alford", exhibited

luslcally . the glory ot a navalcareer • in .complete, detail, denot-Ing virtually? every phase ol theleaman's life. • The, encore was the'Fleld--ArtlHery''~ march, touis J.Voucher, played a exylophone solo,he "Mocking Bird" so effectively

that he was called to play an en-core of "Kitten on the Keys" thedainty grace of which seemed even

lore pleasing than tbe other sum-

ied» to be

Virtually the. only classical at-impt of the program waa- theapsodyrll'Hungarianr-Number-3!1|-t

jy—Prani-ljIsttT;:wblcb-while-wellixecated bore too evident traces of

the habitual emphasis ot rbyChm.Anchors Awelgh" the song of the

S. Naval Academy and 'Thetar Spangled Banner" closed thevening.At the afternoon performance,

lieutenant Benter was IntroducedVice-President Mintel. '

selection was immediately evidentand the band played "The. LibertyBell." a march 'by.Sousa as an en-core. • - • ^~1' '•

The :. "DansesivPplbwltsiennes"from Prince Igor was a grotesque,almost fantastic number in thetypical Russian vein, written withmagnificent power of expressionfgr__tb.ejband. •_ The exquisite blend-Ing of the wind, Instruments andthe brasses produced an unusual

id exhilarating eitect. The en-core was "Stepping Along," march,

-Goldman.Ralph Ostrom, famous youthful

sornetlst ot the band, was able to•btajnjucb^dellcately_hflndjed_ run^

and clear tones as Is seldomieard- on-this type of-instrument.

Tbe softness ot the notes beld a;entle appeal and the audienceeemed to note lt-in thla selection

well as in the encore, 'The Bun-shine ot Your Smile," played by Mr.Ostrom. . '

Ther-tone—poem,—"Mississippi,"was a composition of unusual con-trast - combining _ all .the glories,grief and realistic lite ot the"Father of Waters. The "AllHands" march was the encore.written-by-Lieutenant Benter.

The ~Unltea StateB^Navy—rJa«Band entertained the audience withthe lighter side, of music tor closethe first halt of the program. ThePagan Love Song and a "Conglom-iration of Popular Airs" were the

hits—of—this—number.—A -certainamount ot nonsense by two of themusicians did not detract from theexcellence ot this part.

-Theprichlo Espan'ol" at the start of thelast- halt, followed by excerptf

the vocational school with many Inattendance. - '

•"The speakers for the "year have'been Mr. Perry," head of the voca-tional school, who so enthused the,association over his Red Crosscourses that a class was formedfrom the • members alone; Miss-]Slry demonstrated what a nursemust do when she.goes to a housewhere there Is abject poverty anda. newtaby" has arrived. Thedemonstration was exceedingly In-teresting .and...was followed, byniuoh applause. -Miss Emma. Me-Cloud, superintendent ot nurses ofthe New Brunswick; Visiting NurseAssociation, spoke on CommunityHealth Nursing. She said that noother organization began' to do as

Visiting Nurse Association."Miss 'Martin, Miss. Walden and

Mlfls Comerford ot the -Union

t U vai s t t th k"of the various aspects ot the WOT'.ot the League—tho preventivemeasures, the enormous amount otfree " clinical work. They allagreed that many patients - aftercoming home from the sanatorium.

~dt money enough to hire a pri-I nurse but could pay tor hourlyk They wanted the Vialtintie.. Association to' ally itsei

wIUf-UiaTLeacueVand:'put .over thisIdea >ot hourly service to the pub-lic so that the returning; patientscould' afford to have the prone:

. Due to a last minute cancellationjlVtWO: acts of the Rahway Thea-

and tomorrow "La Temple and. Co.'will take the -place of Eltlnge antfVernpn, and." "The Whlfney Dolls'Instead of the' "Klkuta - Japs.These acts are equally as fine aa

ronWhe==mns!cal i o o m e f.The Wedding of the Painted iDoll.','T b ^ S t l k n p — I h e

;ees New Ways Found By Investl-' flatlon of Old Ones

Calling his listener's attention tothe fact that the educational busl-

ess la "the biggest business in theorld," William F. Little, super-itendent of Rahway schools, spoke

l b ^ h l h

OCIAL AND PERSONALThe Ladles Sewing Society ot

he Second Presbyterl«ui.._Churchill present a sketch, • December

entitled "'Sewing for theeathe'n." Ice cream and candyIII be sold.. .Mrs. Charles p. Edwaraa and her

aughter of 169 Elm avenue arepending a week In .New York ati2 Gramercy Park North.

Miss Betty Hull, daughter of Mr.id Mrs. Arthur B. Hull of Colonla,ho has been visiting frlenda in'okio, Japan, since July, left Yo-ohama "NdvemiJer^S'apd-iSTiow-on,er way home. She will come byay of China,-Mallna, India,Jtalyd England, finally .sailing from

louthampton to reach New Yorkbout January 6.Arrangements have been com-

leted by the OddFellows for theircard party on November 22. Theirizea have been on display at thelabway Drug Company. WilliamJpdfrey la. chalrman.«fab4e.>».ni»lt-l«e-with -Herbert-Eckert_ assisting.

Knppa-Chapter-of-Alpha-Ga mmahi fraternity will hold Its Thanks-Iving Eve dance November 27 athe Chateau BaltuBroi, located inpringfleldr-N—J;—The-brothera-of

vappa Chapter cordially invite tnemembers—of—the—Rabway—Chapter

attend.Th^Ledles' Aid Society of the

Lutheran Church.—servea~a~sauor-raut supper last night at theiharch on Campbell streeL

The~Odd~Fellows. wllTTiave aird party tonight in their rooms: Main and Monroe streets. -A largely attended card party

'as given last night by tbe Ladles'.uxiliary to Rahway Post Number

at the'Moose Home.'The Social Chapter or St. haul's

Ihurch arfi'holding a card partyUils afterobon in the parish house.

The third annual dance of Ad'ance Council Number 104, LoyalAssociation, will be held tonight at

SchqoL__Lclasa _rou8lwle_andl radio

talent will be given tonight (Fri-day) at the -New Dover M. E.Church at S o'clock. Admission30 cents. Proceeds tor the benefitif the church.

Mr. and Mrs. Paul Orr Elliott re-urned yesterday from Kingston,amalca, B.W.I., iwhere Mr. Elliottas been manager tor the Texas

Co. tor sixteen months. Arter ahort vacation be will be assigned

to another field.Dion K. Dean or 16' Pierpont

treet is away on a business tripthough: the-Mtddte^WestenrStarer

Red Cross Roll Call IsAbout to Pass $500 MarkThe lastest report of the Red

Cross concerning the current rollcall In this city was an optimistic

ne, presenting encouraging re-ults.—There ts-a-total of- $447.55low reported deposited In the Rah'way Trust Company tor tha fund!to date," with announcement of 110oiore dollar memberships securedat Merck and Company, exduslviit that already deposited. Ap-pearances are that Rahway willram Its quota ot 800 memberships

much for the-"publlc health" as"the_}.b-3r-NoyeniDer 28, which. Is the.datiset for the close of the roll-call.

Such liberal contributions havbeen reported by Miss M. T. Brlstor,chairman ot the committee, as thifollowing: WhBatena—Corpora^tlon, S25; Wheatena employees,J42; A. Jt.'Wendell, head ot. thjcompany, J25; Eastern Star,Second Baptist Church, $5; collec.tlon in First Baptist Church, $25

A delegation from Camp 172,Patriotic Order Sons^^r Americahut night attended ajfijunty lnltla-tlon at EUzabeth.^BSeveral local

[candidates were te group.Automobile insurance — 3 bit

companies. Clifford B. Gehrlng, 1«Irving street.—Adv. no!9-2i

Money to loan on Bond and monage. Cltliens' Building & Loapissoclatlon, 123-131 Irving- atreeitab war, N." X—Adr

Qroes Course In home nursing at those first booked.—Adv*L

Safe Deposit Boxes from 13 t»85... a. ._year..- Rahwaj.-NatiomBank.—AdT

William F. Little Says thttEdncalion i

Largest Easines

n^Wednebduy noon,ncerhing the present situation in

chools of the country. He sub-tantlated his assertions ot "theIggest bnsinesa In the country" bytating that a million teachers:ere_^eniplojed_in_the_instrjjctlonf 32,000,0W> children in the coun-•>'. for WHcS $2,500,000,000 waBpent each year.

Proceeding on the basis of hisontentlon that modern educatorsad, through research, acceptede realization that "we are not alleatBd ~ equal" according to theleclaratlon of Independence, thepeaker divided his • talk underree points: the past era In educa-on—the- Investigations - and status

the present, and the.problemshich education must meet In theture.He shewed that the i conception' school in the past was-.-ihat ita,s an institution that createdsome miraculous transformation"y merely "acquiring facts "fromooks." Difficulties were common

d the "little red, schoplhouse,"opularly regarded as the "bestay after all" was conducted along:e~"pTlnciple -that- the -knowledgeas there and should be- gotten,liere was no means, he-declared.ir assisting the students, norlought of psychological benefit.a student did not obtain the de-

red reaction from his study, heas dropped. Consequently that

leriod In education was markedirregularity of attendance, a

eat number ot studenta dropping

Church was held yesterday at thecommunity house, with the time inthe early part devoted to hospitalwork, sewing, quilting and knit-ting. Following the luncheon ashort business meeting was heldwith Mrs. Seymour Williams, presi-dent, in the 'chair. '

minutes of the executiveboard wero read by Mrs. FrankPatterson." and MrsVAfthur Mullergave the IfeasuTgr'iPreport. He

lUtjat earjy stages and thedeveiqp-lent-in them of what is todayrmed "an~ inferiority—complex."

he summary, dropping of a stu-ent who did not immediately makeic grade was tbe cause of this he

lointed-out. but frequently, theseame students were found later t9ia_yj; surpassed their mates whoind been the "book worms."

It was the realization of thl,iKtich_bronght..the_jnodeni_eilnca^

rs to investigate the system toam the mistakes of the past and

iresent. The Investigation comrjiit-:e found certain purposes in edu-tion essential: setting of objec-

ives, health, the home, recrea-ion, vocation, citlzeiisbip and theonstruction of ethical character.Modern psychologists, he said,

ad learned that the system byhich the student secured-his-edu-

(Continued on Page Four)

TO BE FURNITURE HOUSEWork

The meeting of the Parish Workat Home of the FIrat Presbyterian

lutions on the death of Mrs. WaFter C. Terrlll were read and willbe «ent to her hister, Mrs. J. LeVisMartin, as well as inserted In theminutes.

'Letters of thanks will be sentto-Edward-StacyTand Wilbur Bau-mann who assisted the associationin making a shipment to the HodgeAcademy in Washington, Ga.

The announcement was madeconcerning the Praise Meeting tobe held on Sunday morning. An-other announcement concerning theParish Work at Home meeting,.wasmade with the date set for Decem-ber 4. A poem .on "Stewardship"was read by Mrs. Kenneth Ritchie.-Those~in charge of-the-luncheon

and dining room were: Mrs. S. C.Bull, Mrs. J. p. Person, Mrs. W.H. Wright, Mrs. R. S. Hotf. Mrs.Samuel Tooker and Mrs. JamesLints.

The, meting ot the Mission Groupof the First Presbyterian Churchwas held yesterday afternoon, withRev. Forest O. Conser. the speakerot the day. His talk was on an In-teresting topic concerning his In-dian friends, their life, schools andchurches.. He. declared that through

ifts and prayer3 the mission.'; weredoing a wonder!uljtvork, especially'among the women who have al-ways been held down, fftfe womenin India are a sad race, he assert-ed, but the missionary In that coun-try is giving them new- hope by..therevelations of Christianity. Hedisplayed several articles of cloth-ing worn by the Indians. Mrs. J.

U g ^_..... .Those present were:" Mrs. J. D.

Person. Mrs. W. H.-Wright, Mrs.Arthur Muller", Mrs. William 'Lints,Mrs. W. H. Merritt, Miss EmmaJohnson. Mrs. Townsend Shotwell,Mrs. J. M. Pettit, Mrs.. Robert Tait,Mrs. Cliester M/Davis, Mrs.'Chaa.Hiibbard Mrs Kenneth ilacWhin-ney, Mrs. Kerr7~Mrsr^Vllbnr-Ban-mann, Mrs. E. C.-Barteis, Mrs. J.J. HQtfniant_Mrs. Seymour WHUlams, Mrs. S. C. Bull, Mrs. C. W.Ludlow, Mrs. Willard" Clarkson,Mrs. H. M. Woodruff, Mrs. WilliamF. Davis.

William F. Veech, president ofthe Safety Council and otthe KantRust Company, has returned fromattending and conducting an ex-hibit at the convention of the Na-tional Standard Parts Associationat Detroit and the Accessory Manu-facturers' Association at CliIcagoT"

NeyXarge Company BnyǤQldlBuildirig on Sty%|

George Avenues

EXTENSIVE PLAINS?!*

Direct Saving Furniture Co. -Toat Reduced Rates

The plant of, the Royal Co'aijhl';Manufacturing' Company.,._ .on _St._George avenue, next to the'FranS-lln Srhnnl, has 'hRRti snlri tO~tEeDirect Saving Furniture Company,'a newly organized company .whichhas announced plans for an exten*alve business whkh is. to be apurely. Rahway...enteo o

According to an Interview ob->tained from A7"V. "fcarKhutf, wellknown in this city, who was thorepresentative of Louis Schles-Inger, Newark broker In the deal,'the entire building Is to be re-modeled, redecorated by KaBway"firms and developed into- u highgrade furniture exhibit and show-room. The front of the building'.wlll_lje-so_fashioned..as. to consti-tute a most attractive ahow room,with the remainder of the-build-Ing, consisting -of 25,000 squarefeet, to be used for elaborate db-play purposes and office rooms;The headquarters of the firm willbe in this city, with the main officeshere. The stock which will boplaced on exhibit here has beenestimated at close to a half mil-lion dollars.

-The policy according to which,the firm will conduct business Issaid to be orfe which will-sub-'stantlally reduce the cost to thabuyer,—by-eliminating the-cost ofretailing the goods. By buying di-rect from the furniture firms, thofirm expects to be able to put thofurniture before the public atwholesale "prices." — •-

The new business which hasstarted up in this city is expectedto—accomplish—mm-h hore,. •• Thnofficers of the company are CharlfSKoos, Sr., Edward Koos and cha»Koos, Jr. all ot Newark. -----

It is the intention of the noworganization to make this a Rah-way enterprise, with offices. here.Parking space will be provided inthe Tear, and the entire grounds-which pxtfncLfrfim the school to

Cornerstone To Be LaidAiNew AverieI Church

Thp First Prfishyterlan Churchif Avenel will see Its new churchfnclally started on Sunday whenhe ceremonies ot laying the cor-ierstone—will—be—conductetb—RevrChester M. Davis, pastor or theirs< Presbyterian Church in this

moder"tor. Mayor William Ryan of

Woodbrldge, Joseph L. Ewlng ot;hl3 city and Rev. Clalr A. Mor-ow, pastor or th& church,- will be

other speakers on an elaborate pro-

used bv the church now, hasbeen deeded to them by BenjaminB. Clark, a leader in the church.

The building committee consistsor William Labat. chairman; An-

TlTgw~Snillli. Atrid Winqulstr-JolroDunigan, Herbert Aj'res and Ben-del Pomeroy.

|—WIlliam-Fardner.-superintendent;has been a leader in bringing

the river and approximately as far~"back as the rear line of the school •-propertyrTHll^be-heautifiedras-weU-palso the interior and exterior of';tjie building. The entire place willbe- made-over-and-the-plamt'of-the. ~_company call for harmonizing theproperty with the Union County-Park-across—the-hlghwayr— —^i.

Thls headquarter.? will be used?,for taking orders and exhibiting,with shipments received here dl- •rect from the leading furniture'houses of the country. Prices are-reported —to—t>e—planned-far— belouordinary furniture rates.

All the employees of the newconcern "will ~ be required to' live. •In this city. This building is tobe the beginning of a series of fur-niture exhibits and salesrooms.

The deal for the purchase of tho •property from the Royal CoachManufacturing Company, was con-sumated today, with plans tor thecompletion of the work by Decem-ber—9:—-Trustees—of—the—eoaehCompany were the Rahway TrustCompany, the Rahway National.Bank and the Union County TrustCompany. The attorney for tho

The -program • will consist of:esponstve reading' hymn. The

Church's One Foundation: prayer,Joseph—L.-Ewlng—auperlntendentof the JJatlonalxMis'sions; greeting.Mayor William Ryan; laying of thecornerstone,. Rev. Chester M. Da-vis, moderator, assisted by thepresident of the Board of Trusess, the. architect, William M.

Finne ot Elizabeth and the builder,Charles Peterson, Rahway.

The principal speaker ofwill be Rev. Herbert K. .„.of Roselle. ' Frederick L. Mj(f?j't«!>tthis city will deliverThe benediction wlll'be pronounced[By-Rev.. Clair ATTaorrow-or-thS

j about the new church, as well as amember ot the Sessions! Othermembers ot the Session are: Fred-erick L.- Mintel, Rev. Chester M.Davis, H. W. Thorn.

Alfred Smythe is another nameprominently associated with thehistory of the new church.

Quartet to Appear HereHeard in New York City

: The Brahms Quartet, which lito give the first of the series offour concerts that the Rahway Con-cert League Is to give, under the

l/iusplcea ot the National Music Lea-'Zfsae of New York, gave its annual

three bank-! was -Hyer-of-Hyer & Armstrong- of this clt\Atorney for the buyers was C -MWoodruff, of Newark. '

A big opening Is planned to, ueheld Immediately after the complttion of the remodeling and the in-stallation j»f the exhibits.- '

First PresbyterianAvenel.

Church of

The building was first started inOctoher, and It Is expected to becompleted In February. It Is ofold English type construction, ofbrick and concrete with slate roof.A bell which Is to be used In thebuilding is an historic, belongingto, thB_famllyJ<!f_BlancbQtte_Bdgar.The bell U said to have been usedon a slave plantation of the familyyears ago, to call the slaves tomeals. -..

The church' was started aboutfifty years ago with Dr. John Llg-(ret and John M. Clark, aa leaders.

recital at the Town Hall on Tues-day evelng. U was exceedinglywell received by the critics.. T h i s popular quartet will givea program for young people at theFranklin School auditorium onTuesday, December 17, at 3 p. m.Other programs will be presentedduring the winter at Intervals offour or five weeks, by young artistsof the National Music League whohave proven their ability to appealto young people.

, s Gg ,account of the proximity to a dan-gerous highway, It was concludedto sell the property and to use "theproceeds-Of _that.sale for.the.new.

Rotary Club DiscussesConcert and Ladies' Night

Considerable time was spent at ..,'•the-meetlng-of-the_Ra)rsniy._Rotary___Club on Wednesday noon, in check-ng over the fina] d>r;iiU in connec-:ion "with"the "c6ncSn'"::""'7ie"Trnitea"r*.'States Navy Band'lie;-*"last"Wed-/'.":esday night. Other discussion ot

jlans was held concerning thoLadies' Night dinner and entertain-ment to be held Wednesday e,ve-nlni?. December 4. at-seven o'clockat the Riverview Tea Room. A -committee was named by Presi-dent J. Stanley Duvis to take;charge of arrangements, which In-cludes TTarry—Wr~HolmeBrchair=—r•man; Robert A. Coan. and Fred-;'erick L. Mintel. William C. Cop*'of Newark,, a past district gover-nor In Rotary, will bo thp principalspeaker. The present district gov- ':•••;ornor for ihe thlrty-flixth dlstrlctr."-

__VVINNERS AT CARDSThe public card, -party ot the

Women's Democratic Association otthis city was held yesterday after-fnnn. The following' winners wereannounced: Mrs. Susan Flake, MrsGeorge Strieker, Miss Emma Ryan,Mrs. F. E. Moore, Mrs. Fred DohmMrs. William Connelly. Mrs, fl. Fa

church now started. The property Snnt.

gans," Mrs-. Amploss h'ogans, Mrs.Pierre DePotter. The committeein charge Included: Mrs. ClarenceTitus, 'Mrs. Jo3oph Ryan, MidaMary Ryan and Ml s Grace Von

Rev.y ;

J. Cu|U. or New Brunstd tll

Re C d | .wick, is also expected to partlclpate in ilie program....The_name or Harry W. Holmos,past president or the club, ws Inadvertently omitted from lastweek's announcement ot the com-mittee which had chai-ge ot secur 13ing the rabbits for the gameluncheon.

D. A. Howell of the Linden R->-tan- Club and iDavld Edwards andChaun:ey.Edgar::o.t;thcwere visitors.

Them is nothing np#r- thanStrombergtCarlson. flowBra,Irving; atreot.—Adv. - '

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