8
f&r<>. r - ;«-..,- XXI NO. 37 CRANFORD. NT. J. THDR8DAY. ?, 1918 1 .»- ft- THREE CENTS Change in Banking Hours. On and after November 1st bank will open, .' * , daily, at 7.30 A^fl. MONDAY EVENINGS, 7.30 P. M. TO 9 P. M. dEOSfc D&Lyi'EXOEFF SATURDAY," AT 2 "£- Cranford Trust Company, CRANFORD, N, / beea pnaded about tanr to ftore yoor war garAan.iiroducts fc> M to' insure them moat effectively agatost decay the following sng**»- ttaa* sent out by the,Federal Food JACOB KLEIN Potter Building Union Avenue CHOICE MEATS and PROVISIONS 1 AT THE_LOWEST CASH .PRICES. ALL KINDS OP SEA FOOD, Telephone ordera \rill-fe6eiva prompt attention. Tel. 98. " Tha cellar I* the best place lor, pota- "tomthaaaf ttaam, ,e««st«i;:txi«SJi* and.aatalfy. Hut they .ahbuUrbe. pro-* tect*d from drx-*Jr ami furnace heat. T o provide this'protection « storage room should be made and twtlk tide* [bt the parilUon iovwed with f«ltpap«r. The material In th* cellar flosr la im- portant, If.tt U <wp«nt. occuional tW>l»tenlnj of, the 'sand coverlng.itb* Teg^tableg J» dealrehl*. An earth floor la iwualljr dapp^ enough- toinaka ttfli wutceatanr, bat if. the- floor la very damp it la better to provide a datted floor about two lnchea from the earth, t&eealvely damp atr can be reduced 'through ventilation. '~< ? Aifew hooka to the-celUnr of the Tttore room will- be found uaeful, alaft ^tome buUt-ln biqv Aload of bulldar 1 * «and to coVer roota Jika carroto and beeta and a.few alat boitw and old, n >n rea.d)r to store any 6- WINDOW SHAD6S - PICTURE FRAHBS LINOLEUM GRAY BURIAL & CREMATION CO, - FUNERAL DIRECTORS AND EMBALMER8 WILUAM N. QRAT, Proildent FBKDBBIOK H. QRAY, BMrelarjr-TrwiaMi Cnulforil, N.J. TlepboneW WMtfleld, N. J, TeHphoae IIS 1 I -I •• " I [f f I it V i b GRASSMAN & EBNEST Ii. MEYER, Incorporated Established 1880 (SUCCESSORS* TO EDWARD MOSHER) Oiyil Engineer* & Surveyori nm~.. i Maaonio Bnildlng, Cranford, N. J, Offices j aoa Broad Street. Elizabeth, N. J. •*( e • • ft .r < l' Poultry Supplies Grit, Charcoal, Mixed Grain, Soft Mash, Etc, Dog"Cal«s,XbllaFs f Retriedies, Etc, ~ Horse and Stable Equipments. SPONGES CHAMOIS /. AARON Di CRANi Masonic Building, Cranford, N. J. •&• ELIZABETH STORB' OSTJEOPATHy ;. P L B. 1NQERSOLL, '- ~ 434 Summit Avisnue, -•? v Telephone WettfleldBS. . . Packer* a hi Shippers Storage Warehouses 17 and >9 Prospect'St and Twt Through Agrlcuftural SM- t ' Jtfcru Show* Real Power B«- hlnd Uncle Sam'« Forces. Wjhat vegetables wffl you store in your, cellar} Potatoes, beets, turnips, carrotaTparsnlps' and' salsify are the best, for such a place. Squash, pump- kin, and onions should be* stored In the attie. - Cabbage Is *ettar •stored, out- sttfe." in. a atraw-llned, well' ventllatea- As the weather grows colder add m'or* coverings of straw and earth, Petatoes should be jlug, left (n'the r^ond a short tlpie and 'then stored \ s * dark place. The Ideal tempera- ira hi 88 to. 85 degree*-fahrenbelt- '-Beet*, turnip* and carrot* may be te^fi^'voMo^fmtVe^&letttr ' condition- If. they are corered'wlth jiai)d.' Oondltlon -ot-the place, of stor- t age and of tho roots thamaelvea should determine whether to u^e the sand dry br.slightly moist If they start to shrink, moisten the sand. Parsnips and salsify may be'left In (he ground. Freezing does not hurt Use Oahd In Packing. ..,—, boxes ar» used, a little damp sand should be placed In the bottom of the (boxes, then' alternate layers' of Vegetable* and sand.- When piled on •the Aoor, a covering wlth'sand Is gen- 'eraljy sufficient In drying beet* tbe tops, should twUt*d-«ff.«nd not cut joffijylth a knife, as d tbl* will cause "bleeding," loss of color and. very often, taa%-caupalftrone of the worken *t Carat district* of New'Jersey and Naw TotlT Hilt* of driving over •plendld autojnobUs roadaj>rought him to the bank of a beautiful little stream wind- Ing .it*.way «|aong ( dairy farm*.. He itoMt*4Lto enjoy the unusual privilege of lolling v ln the graas 1 and listening to the, music of the water, and,he could not -help contrasting the quiet of the place with the noise and. bustle of the grea,t city. Dreaming Idly along, h'e recalled the tremendous display ^nd_excltnnenfc of the great bond-sdllpg drive. He heard again the blare; of the. street bands, the raucous roar of the, street corner speakers, the tramp.. ot-tBousands of rs,. Slid.-the nol£a>'O&lt all en- him and reminded him it was Ume to continue hi* t*ip< " His drove oirpast rbemTln theTosd, a houM-waa is alght ,. turns, _ flesrly a mile further along, and he u w a service flag proud- ly dUpIayed'ULaiarmer**.window^ To him, It was unusual.^' Ha thought of the patriotic outburst* In the Metropo- i > g potay displays of patriotism with thl» quiet message. The house disappeared from sight, and soon another came In sight. Aguln .a -service flag,, but alongside It weru Red Cross,;Food Administration and m'tuirbe homer" thought the. traveler, and drove on. It took him ten day* to finish'hi* trip; and he gained an education-on the.wajr." At almost'every, farm fh»*» Was a aeMage in Out wlndpw-^eith«9 -a-aervics Wir^wWrns red^xiKISrrOr w>« of the other b««MlycoJor«J.mpa of {American *mnlind"WM doing, in the war. And when he returned to tit* city he bnijst Into Liberty toan bead- quarters wltlt this message:- ' "Don't talk" to m» any more of pa- triotoarmihe city, Tea. If* Hera, btot you have to dig it ont Oo Into-Oo* 1 * Own country, among tboe* farma< la Jersey and tT^SUb* aiTT tUHSf U' 'trtellsm.- Toa * » t have^«rtalk to anyone. Ju«t rl.de past the houses. to My thot-I am a dweller In the statv that, lends It* sons so gladly to free- dom's <catase> The Hun would <frees» his feetion e trip Ilk* that lle'd nod out somathing ruol about American unity. Gttc^i-fnnqscreamalUmessago. from a .window, autl It all mean* on thing. Victory Is sure. And after Fourth Uberty Loan window ap will be at a premium In tho rural sec- tions." ' Sought to .Warn Mother. The mother of flv&-yi ; iir-olil Mary fell ami fractured hi<r wrlut and » itoc- fe» wna, caltod to reset the Iwns. The j'onngntpr, from on adjoining room, ftUlwr'mother's cries of pnin dur- g the olierutlon. The wxt dny wlieu 4be physician called Mary-opened the wnn ( Miouted with evident dlmlalo: "Oil, mother, here's thut sumo doctor agalul" _____________ x _„,..;. HMV|!..ni«nsnd-for Rubber. Tlw world dhjenrded 183,000 tons of auteitMfrfflT tires during 1010. Adding to this the largo number of bicycle tires thrown nwuy every year by their owners, It appears <that tho worm spends-every year at least 1000,000.- 000 for pneumatic 1 tires ulonc. Nearly in the,Unltuil BlHtes. To supply wlthjjre* nfVlK. 89JW0 ton.*.O(L IniJU» rubber are needed every,yoar, anil thij Amerfcan nutomotiltp-ownvrii |>n<r every year as much as 1200,400,000/for tires. TRUST BUILDING •CRANFORD Telephone 411 TdWe D'Hote Dinner ^, 1 weekdays from .6 to 9 for 85c. " Special Sunday Dinner , Served from 12 to ,'J V. M. " For $1.00 -. Sunday Eve. Supper From C to 0 P. M. for 75c 0. D. IRVING -CHOICE- Meats, Fi Butter/Eggs and Poultry PHONES 303 '4. Berardineili Bros. $rti*S&HkWti.> .,._. „- W. Attnodsd to. feitlmatiM Fumishwl. 02 OURNSIDK AVKMIJE, UKANrnno. N. J. . - y L . Onion* before being stored In the attic should be dry and thoroughly well (jur^d outside. Dampness cause* de-, c*jy They will keep well In slat bores or shallow trays. - Squash and pumpkin require a jUghtly warmer temperature. Placed ,|o, barrel* or boxes.and packed in ittfm or excelsior and-!n-a part of tfvt cellar near to the furnace they,'may keep for jsome time, They should be carefully handled so a*to.avoid br_» tHg. ( Sort over frequently for spoiled ones. Other* may be laid out, sepa- rately and placed in the attic, a* a tern* lecture of about CO degree* la better tot; them. ,' 'One of the best and most recent ma,thods.ot ripening graen tomatoet In pap^r an^ place In % d l d 0p In pap^r an^ place Soxor drawer located u a.' Another method is to poll i for4 any. signs of Injury 7 ind suspend from Uw. warm roomorthecellar rrooat /vlneb* ftoai of a BfUOVED OF NEVV - YORKEfiS WMMagfam Square, <wt)iamtt*»CI»b«, * I* WltKwt.itarl^oal. lth Heje, aar the new York men of aa» ceflc face* aid the,women,of soolfnL eye*, we have what, our.,Hte« a hsve •ought Trafslgar aqaarojbaiit't tegT.do lajObnegrfe'Ja too I • •' \ixsaessa^ '$&$*#&*&* "A Message/for All America 1 R HUNT CHUTE Music-ADMISSION FREE-Music - ^C ii f^csl -zx 4 _ j»_i i -m r - V --u ttt _*X First BalRan warif>1912, second Balkan war 1913 and with our own General Funston at Vera Cruz. , One oi the few surviving officers of the First Canadian Wounded at the Sorame. 1 ' * Captain Chute is ;a powerful speaker and has an emphatic message for the; stay=at=homes. ( NO COLLECTION OR - j c United War Work Campaign Committee Cranford, s 'Kew ' —^r ' 4 I i ' '•• ' 7-t, l~

Poultry Supplies - DigiFind-It#- I J f&r. r - ;«-..,-¥ XXI NO. 37 CRANFORD. NT. J. THDR8DAY., 1918.»-1ft-THREE CENTS Change in Banking Hours. On and after November 1st bank

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Page 1: Poultry Supplies - DigiFind-It#- I J f&r. r - ;«-..,-¥ XXI NO. 37 CRANFORD. NT. J. THDR8DAY., 1918.»-1ft-THREE CENTS Change in Banking Hours. On and after November 1st bank

#- I J

f&r<>. r - ;«-..,-

¥XXI NO. 37 CRANFORD. NT. J. THDR8DAY. ?, 1918

1.»-

ft-

THREE CENTS

Change in Banking Hours.

On and after November 1st bank will open,.' * , daily, at 7.30 A^fl.

MONDAY EVENINGS, 7.30 P. M. TO 9 P. M.

dEOSfc D&Lyi 'EXOEFF SATURDAY," AT 2 "£-

Cranford Trust Company,CRANFORD, N, /

beea pnaded about tanrto ftore yoor war garAan.iiroducts fc>M to' insure them moat effectivelyagatost decay the following sng**»-ttaa* sent out by the,Federal Food

JACOB KLEINPotter Building Union Avenue

CHOICE

MEATS and PROVISIONS1

AT THE_LOWEST CASH .PRICES.

ALL KINDS OP SEA FOOD,Telephone ordera \rill-fe6eiva prompt attention. Tel. 98.

" Tha cellar I* the best place lor, pota-"tomthaaaf ttaam, ,e««st«i;:txi«SJi*and.aatalfy. Hut they .ahbuUrbe. pro-*tect*d from drx-*Jr ami furnace heat.

T o provide this'protection « storageroom should be made and twtlk tide*[bt the parilUon iovwed with f«ltpap«r.The material In th* cellar flosr la im-portant, If.tt U <wp«nt. occuionaltW>l»tenlnj of, the 'sand coverlng.itb*Teg^tableg J» dealrehl*. An earth floorla iwualljr dapp^ enough- toinaka ttfliwutceatanr, bat if. the- floor la verydamp it la better to provide a dattedfloor about two lnchea from the earth,t&eealvely damp atr can be reduced'through ventilation. '~<? Aifew hooka to the-celUnr of theTttore room will- be found uaeful, alaft

tome buUt-ln biqv Aload of bulldar1*«and to coVer roota Jika carroto andbeeta and a.few alat boitw and old,

n > n rea.d)r to store any

6-

WINDOW SHAD6S - PICTURE FRAHBS

LINOLEUM

GRAY BURIAL & CREMATION CO,- FUNERAL DIRECTORS AND EMBALMER8

WILUAM N. QRAT, Proildent FBKDBBIOK H. QRAY, BMrelarjr-TrwiaMiCnulforil, N . J . TlepboneW • WMtfleld, N. J , TeHphoae IIS

1 I -I •• " I

T

*

'A

[f

f

Iit

Vi

b

GRASSMAN &EBNEST Ii. MEYER, Incorporated

Established 1880

(SUCCESSORS* TO EDWARD MOSHER)

Oiyil Engineer* & Surveyorinm~.. i Maaonio Bnildlng, Cranford, N. J,Offices j aoa Broad Street. Elizabeth, N. J.

•*(

• e • •

ft

#'J.r < l'

Poultry SuppliesGrit, Charcoal, Mixed Grain, Soft Mash, Etc,

Dog"Cal«s,XbllaFsf Retriedies, Etc, ~

Horse and Stable Equipments.

SPONGES CHAMOIS/ .

AARON Di CRANiMasonic Building, Cranford, N. J.•&•

ELIZABETH STORB'

OSTJEOPATHy;. PL B. 1NQERSOLL,

'- ~ 434 Summit Avisnue, - •?vTelephone WettfleldBS. . .

Packer* a hi Shippers

StorageWarehouses

17 and >9 Prospect'St and

Twt Through Agrlcuftural S M -•t' Jtfcru Show* Real Power B«-

hlnd Uncle Sam'« Forces.

Wjhat vegetables wffl you store inyour, cellar} Potatoes, beets, turnips,carrotaTparsnlps' and' salsify are thebest, for such a place. Squash, pump-kin, and onions should be* stored In theattie. - Cabbage Is *ettar •stored, out-sttfe." in. a atraw-llned, well' ventllatea-

As the weather grows colder addm'or* coverings of straw and earth,

Petatoes should be jlug, left (n'ther^ond a short tlpie and 'then stored\s* dark place. The Ideal tempera-ira hi 88 to. 85 degree*-fahrenbelt-

'-Beet*, turnip* and carrot* may bete^fi^'voMo^fmtVe^&letttr' condition- If. they are corered'wlthjiai)d.' Oondltlon -ot-the place, of stor-t age and of tho roots thamaelvea shoulddetermine whether to u^e the sand drybr.slightly moist If they start toshrink, moisten the sand.

Parsnips and salsify may be'left In(he ground. Freezing does not hurt

Use Oahd In Packing...,—, boxes ar» used, a little damp

sand should be placed In the bottom ofthe (boxes, then' alternate layers' ofVegetable* and sand.- When piled on•the Aoor, a covering wlth'sand Is gen-'eraljy sufficient In drying beet* tbetops, should *« twUt*d-«ff.«nd not cutjoffijylth a knife, asdtbl* will cause"bleeding," loss of color and. very often,

taa%-caupalftrone of the worken *t

Carat district* of New'Jersey and NawTotlT Hilt* of driving over •plendldautojnobUs roadaj>rought him to thebank of a beautiful little stream wind-Ing .it*.way «|aong(dairy farm*.. HeitoMt*4Lto enjoy the unusual privilegeof lolling vln the graas1 and listening tothe, music of the water, and,he couldnot -help contrasting the quiet of theplace with the noise and. bustle of thegrea,t city.

Dreaming Idly along, h'e recalled thetremendous display ^nd_excltnnenfc ofthe great bond-sdllpg drive. He heardagain the blare; of the. street bands, theraucous roar of the, street cornerspeakers, the tramp.. ot-tBousands of

rs,. Slid.-the nol£a>'O&lt all en-him and reminded him it was

Ume to continue hi* t*ip<" His drove oirpast rbemTln theTosd,

a houM-waa i s alght,. turns, _ flesrly a mile further

along, and he u w a service flag proud-ly dUpIayed'ULaiarmer**.window^ Tohim, It was unusual. ' Ha thought ofthe patriotic outburst* In the Metropo-

i > gpotay displays of patriotism with thl»quiet message.

The house disappeared from sight,and soon another came In sight. Aguln.a -service flag,, but alongside It weruRed Cross,;Food Administration and

m'tuirbehomer" thought the. traveler, and droveon.

It took him ten day* to finish'hi*trip; and he gained an education-onthe.wajr." At almost'every, farm fh»*»

Was a aeMage in Out wlndpw-^eith«9-a-aervics Wir^wWrns red^xiKISrrOrw>« of the other b««MlycoJor«J.mpa

of {American *mnlind"WM doing, inthe war. And when he returned to tit*city he bnijst Into Liberty toan bead-quarters wltlt this message:- '

"Don't talk" to m» any more of pa-triotoarmihe city, Tea. If* Hera, btotyou have to dig it ont Oo Into-Oo*1*Own country, among tboe* farma< laJersey and tT^SUb* aiTT tUHSf U''trtellsm.- Toa * » t have^«rtalk toanyone. Ju«t rl.de past the houses.

to My thot-I am a dweller In the statvthat, lends It* sons so gladly to free-dom's <catase> The Hun would <frees»his feetion e trip Ilk* that lle'd nodout somathing ruol about Americanunity. Gttc^i-fnnqscreamalUmessago.from a .window, autl It all mean* onthing. Victory Is sure. And afterFourth Uberty Loan window apwill be at a premium In tho rural sec-tions." '

Sought to .Warn Mother.The mother of flv&-yi;iir-olil Mary

fell ami fractured hi<r wrlut and » itoc-fe» wna, caltod to reset the Iwns. Thej'onngntpr, from on adjoining room,

ftUlwr'mother's cries of pnin dur-g the olierutlon. The wxt dny wlieu

4be physician called Mary-opened the

wnn( Miouted with evident dlmlalo:"Oil, mother, here's thut sumo doctoragalul"

_____________ x

_„,..;. HMV|!..ni«nsnd-for Rubber.Tlw world dhjenrded 183,000 tons of

auteitMfrfflT tires during 1010. Addingto this the largo number of bicycletires thrown nwuy every year by theirowners, It appears < that tho wormspends-every year at least 1000,000.-000 for pneumatic1 tires ulonc. Nearly

in the,Unltuil BlHtes. To supplywlthjjre* nfVlK. 89JW0 ton.*.O(L IniJU»rubber are needed every,yoar, anil thijAmerfcan nutomotiltp-ownvrii |>n<r everyyear as much as 1200,400,000/for tires.

TRUST BUILDING•CRANFORD

Telephone 411

TdWe D'Hote Dinner ^ ,1 weekdays from .6 to 9

for 85c. "

Special Sunday Dinner ,Served from 12 to ,'J V. M. "

For $1 .00 -.

Sunday Eve. SupperFrom C to 0 P. M.

for 75c

I' t

0. D. IRVING- C H O I C E -

Meats, FiButter/Eggs

and PoultryPHONES 303 '4.

Berardineili Bros.$rti*S&HkWti.>*

. , ._ . „- W. Attnodsd to.feitlmatiM Fumishwl.

02 OURNSIDK AVKMIJE,UKANrnno. N. J.

. - y

L. Onion* before being stored In theattic should be dry and thoroughly well(jur d outside. Dampness cause* de-,c*jy They will keep well In slat boresor shallow trays.- Squash and pumpkin require a

jUghtly warmer temperature. Placed,|o, barrel* or boxes.and packed inittfm or excelsior and-!n-a part oftfvt cellar near to the furnace they,'maykeep for jsome time, They should becarefully handled so a* to .avoid br_»tHg.( Sort over frequently for spoiledones. Other* may be laid out, sepa-rately and placed in the attic, a* a tern*lecture of about CO degree* la bettertot; them.,' 'One of the best and most recentma,thods.ot ripening graen tomatoet

In pap^r an^ place In %d l d

0p In pap^r an^ placeSoxor drawer located u a.'Another method is to poll ifor4 any. signs of Injury7ind suspend from Uw.

warm roomorthecellar

rrooat/vlneb*

ftoaiof a

BfUOVED OF NEVV - YORKEfiSWMMagfam Square , <wt)iamtt*»CI»b«,

* I* W l t K w t . i t a r l ^ o a l . l t h

Heje, aar the new York men of aa»ceflc face* aid the,women,of soolfnLeye*, we have what, our.,Hte«ahsve

•ought Trafslgar aqaarojbaiit'ttegT.do lajObnegrfe'Ja too

I • •'

\ixsaessa^'$&$*#&*&*

"A Message/for All America1

R HUNT CHUTE

Music-ADMISSION FREE-Music- ^C ii f^csl -zx 4 _ j»_i i -m r - V --u ttt _*X

First BalRan war if> 1912, second Balkan war 1913 andwith our own General Funston at Vera Cruz. , Oneoi the few surviving officers of the First Canadian

Wounded at the Sorame.1 ' *

• Captain Chute is ;a powerful speaker and has an emphaticmessage for the; stay=at=homes. (

NO COLLECTION OR- j c

United War Work Campaign CommitteeCranford,s'Kew '

—^r ' 4 I

i ' '•• ' 7 - t ,

l~

..-H- <•.

• T l l - T , -»•.

Page 2: Poultry Supplies - DigiFind-It#- I J f&r. r - ;«-..,-¥ XXI NO. 37 CRANFORD. NT. J. THDR8DAY., 1918.»-1ft-THREE CENTS Change in Banking Hours. On and after November 1st bank

; • • • * . » . :

^I^^^^^M^^^^^W^^^^^^^^^^^i^^^^S&^^Si^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

^§0i§0iMM^:i^~0&

in Pellton 'By JANE OSBORN

^•^S^-:

(Copyright; UUL br Hectors' H m p t p wBrndlt»ta)

l-i-iiS."

"IF*

Srfe:

; -Bon «^'V'Mr;i^ : . :w r:'t i irl i i i '-wMart something la Pellton," wM the

. way Lucy Brown, ;reporter,t>*)clety". writer .and second mate of_the Pellton

^•^—--•^-^f^^l^^^j^^ artho oldFell homcstetti fuBUe, idea i s t o 'send

' copies of the home-toxn. papers to the- bioys at Htlie fronfrand'there are some-JiMdi*o> o t OB^fown1 boy¥?*htf"will

'; be getting the Sentinel.. iJJoWj- you••••know-how it's been-with-the Se«ty>

ntl—How Jt'si>ecn'with Pel^on, In fact•-. There's newer anything doing, and the

boys over there don't want tojrendJust, a rehash of the news fr«8 'the

before. They wont local news. "TBey

mum

mm

something like that tney'd-put yon:fof:::inayoi^.«nd—weli, yon; can^i.. .whataJotyon might do to .keep thingsgoing." Lacy sighed, and somehowher "conoern amused Mrr Pell morethan anything »he had don« before.JShe tad iiilreftdydiverting '•- \ ;',. -^

Then one tiny Mr. Pell'failed at theSentlneV office to. see Xocy, and thatwM^enouJfi^1 " '

days, fte toliTber I draft-age are eligi^le'to be

4- *.unnt toPollton.*1

nothing 'in

yknow what's going on in

~ltt]

&-%.l

^Pellton." wild Mr* Francis' Pell liiduK•^gently, ("It's.a...tconservative little

plncq, that stopped getting excited overitself some fifty years ii(?o. There'snever anything doing in Pellton."*rNo; that's Just it," snld-Lucy, the

,''color-, coming-.to her.cheek's"nnd thebrilliance to her eyes nt-tho thought

• thnt I she was being understood."Nothing ever tinppens In this place—but I'm going to make something hap-pen so's to -put Pellton on the mapnnd make the boys wnnt to get back to

, n renl live, cnthuslaHiUv humab^gorlof place. I thought I'd begin by get-ting interviews with some of the localcharacter? like you.. I went up to seeold Silas Snell yesterdny. lie's a hu»dred nnd three—nil^the-boys knowhim—used, to call*him Crazy S.I,; Well,he's got some bullets and things fro-utho Civil war nndsoraoold clothes 'A*wore seventy-flye years" ago.; I've per-suaded him to put them, on exhibition

• down nt the beokstore,. nnd Ij canmake a story about that. Then\ihor©Is Miss Hawkins that's'" always- .kept

^he-wiwT--sfn»p—1u»ed^'':^F^n^:sf&". the boys that are over there now. nnd• she's promised to do something to

make a story, and them's tho jiiot-. cheese man nnd the old seJcton-^" !

Mr, Pell was hardly flattered nt be-ing put In n class with'these local cc-

town.; 'iJucy that afternoon had been

ptoyee* of one/of the local ^factories.The place chosen for It was part' oftho old Pell estate,' and: because; of abubbling spring of water that flowed,out from the shale there It had proveda favorite spot for. .picnics :for-;sp'mey c a j s m » U * M Mr. J»ami»& never oft*-

cafuallymsde-ln* report from marinep)rp> headquarters, describing theWinning and award of JJSyrench-.war.Crease* to members of thff American

^tnpwn to the Germans asdevU- ^ % w ^ . " b « 5 ^ f c j t j i e i n e w « _Mi;:, "Xo longer do French offlcers

WM lo.-Mcn.'.^heelttaa, .^ericaiiLwliohaj woo the croljf j e guerre. Instead.

ECONOMY IN GOOD H1GHWID«m«istratton f

truck Finn In PracticalQuite Recently.

m*iJW-Jell had nerereVjeeted, in splto of his reputation formfserllnesa. Children,' too, from alloveptho neighborhoodlanJH^ilgVtffT^-thJT^Jtffyatef.wliiaseemed to be more quenching thon or-dinary water, and It was a'favoritespot for pedestrians on hot Sundays,who came there with-little foldingcups to quench" their thirst ot thoraiser's spring, aa It was sometimescalled.

Lucy 'lind seen tho pfcknlclcersdrinking at tho spring tlint nfternoon,nnd sho wns -ready wjth hor sugges-tion. The thing to do wag to give thistract of land ns a picnic ground andto put up a sort of fountain of roug)hewn rocks from the neighborhoodaround the spring HO that thlrfiy folkdmight nlwnys quench their thirst there.And there should be n drain so Hint(he wator when It rnn off should notmake n bed of mud around the spring.Mr. Pell may havo had some questionsconcerning this, blithe ngrjiedi nndwithlira few tffiys~ne "and tucy'weromeeting occasionally in'nr secludedwoodlnnd path to discussth f t i

Iii addition to the classroom work ana^nUlltary drin. wlU be laboratorywork and' practical training in barns and raschtoe shops. The companieswin Ve divided Into squada-ttt ten each m'fi ~>n •!*-"•*• • - - - - - - > - ^ •sqtiharness horses, and to*

chine shops, The companiestea each, and wilt learn to grodm, feed and

te machinery. T d

use their

The method of placing the boys In 1919 will be radically different fromto,the, past.

p discuss desIcnS-fortho fountain and tojllon tho presenta-tion. And all tho time Lucy had VIHIOBHof tho big wrlttup It was .goingJ*il--for thw^nflWTIIf

p ggor thw^enfmelWiTIIfo surprrfe]

peoplo 'would feel when theylenrnud shout It. And Francis Pell-"well, he still wntched the eager work-Ing of Lucy's lips and tho color as Itcame quickly when sho became eftpe--<-»- interested In the plnns under

f fio will remain with It all summer. A heartsquarter* will be established at some central point where the boys can gatherevenings, and Sundays, nnd will be a point vf contact between the reserve,the parents and the country director. • v , /

Jtlgld Inspection of sanitary «rrangementa> of farms will be erpatt of ttuduty of the ln»lructor In charge. . " .. / •

Farmers who make Application for reserve volunteers Viir pay a fee of$5, which will moke a fund to defray expenses of the'instructor and theheadquarters. Each county will estimate the number of boys'needed, obflthe estimates will determine the number of componfes, to be assigned to thecounty. •• < / ' •- i "'

stood,

ted States Otamber.otOuaaieifcftpf^ilgAdopted a-resolutlon^that;'..tte;"£$$0?"' ""'raent through the president ""'director general of «rfrtdiclvtloned, among; o ther things, tqplete trunk highways fftr heayyTiTUae'where they can-be nsed to; relieving*!railroad congestion.t';N(>te/the phrase*:"heavy traffic"—which calls; notmer*-- *ly for graded highway: rights :otwnyi.v,-i'

r«ver,.th t i e i s an officerofI or brick roadbeds capable lotsustaln^75i'

j'ot the hero and then shakes his

hand. _ - , / \ r ""As-yet the" official fllea-o? the marine

corps have not disclosed the name'Mthe diplomat who/brought about fhechoBge Ut.JFrcipcb tactics l a dealing« 1 U A t t I H

qno mean rank, who lately returned to'

BEGIN CHRISTMASSHOEING NCW._

CUzeu Urged to Otaryo, Six Rules

"much tact as. she had enthusiasm shemight lmve made her rippenl In nn-other A$y.*"Buf' the"fact wiflrtliaiMrr

: Kninds: l'ell, whose'.- ancestors hndfounded tho old/town, wns quite' as

'much of u character In his way ns wasvitbcrthe'todthless 811ns Snell or tholittle spinster who hnd "always kept

.:.-. the cent shop." Although senreb forty,-. mad'although noi one hnd'ever Seen

him counting out bngs d^money, norliuil lie ever been known [to be.crnftyor shrewd In money mpttcrs, he"Ayas

. roKnideil as "tiio oh! .'miser." There•/ ' were, fnhulQus accounts of tho extent/': of the pell fortune, which had onco

• 'glittered large Iff the mind's "cye~*pfPelltbn~mnmmnsf-but hnd long"slnce"

.-• ,cfnsed to bo regarded as In any way/ n v n l l n b l o . ,,: ,,.. . •. •

So Lucy paid her first, cnll on Mjj.. ~~ Pell and'was very politely-shown to

the door after sho Tia3 made herselfnultp' clear, ,and sho went nway feel-ing ns much-confused nnd dlRhenrt-Oned us she hnd some seven years be-

• fore.iwhen sho went out on hor first'•/.' nsslgnment fortho big city"paper. Pd'r,

: [hncy'..wns not n native Pelltonlte.' Ifshe had.been sho wpui'd have knownbjUter thnn to try to innke news out

'.. --. oTlfnytlilng^thnt Francis Pell might bedoing.. But she knew be'Wos^yne o,f.the most gossiped about jierswftilltlcB

'/ J Id*town. „. Fuiiilng to flnd. anything- I more fertile for discussion nbou^hini^

I . the women' discussed the size or hisi. grocer b(irB^^ou.gh_..'bey-...'wc!!B^^KgbL.I^llfectly-normHi—or-kept close^-truck of

. his harmless old nmminy housekeeperor the new cont of paint on his houBe

• ...or, the condition of his opple-orchard.

too, but she. bad ceased to be nettledby that •J^.i.,viJl"».ij..«-«.«'-'~-'^t"a^-a-_ Tho, evo^of-tho-day when the nn-!

nouncenifjit of tho plans was to bomade came at last, and Lucy had the1

first big story! ready, to seriil to the lit-tlo Sentlnt-rprcBS. There wnB-eycn tojbe a cut showing the design for.thc-fountnln. And It hnd nil been kept nsecret betwecaJUr..>Pell.nnd Lucy,though peoplo wero beginning to won-der why there Jind been surveyors andworkmen on tlie old picnic grounds ofl a t e r , , . " V : > • ' . - - , " ..'•'. "• •'' . .-••'

The Sentinel wns Justgolng to press'HpjilXucy was puttipg—thevlaBt-lIoiiri"Jshfi5_aO-^iliO-*r<;at-«nD(>'incoment~in-thtt dlnsy llttlo blllceilqng after other,good PcUtonltes I1114I retired for thonight. The .owner-editor, nn errandbby, the other reporter nnd a handfulof compositors and pressmen consti-tuted tho entire staff, and they werotoq preoccupied with their tasks'to no-tlcirtho figure .of .Francis Pell ns-It-passed quickly across tho. floor to-l)HcyT's desk. Ho. sntvUown beside her,-luldn nervous hand on tho copy shewaa.stllf Working on.7, *!Thcro!^a.hitch;in our plnns,'.'.'• I •c'on't: tell 'you now. But.trust me. You .mustn't nmko-tho nn;uouncenient now." Then he went, tell-ing Lucy, ho' would .whit for her out-side the little office nnd tell, her more

Every patriotic citizen' Is. expectedby the council of national, /defense,Washington, to co-operate Trttb. \merebnnts ns follows: - ._ <i=rf-

1. Spread Christmas shopping OVthe-months rf,,Oftgtor, ^o^sstses-aDecember. Do not wait Start now.

2. Shop during tho early boura of theday.

3. Buy useful gifts (this does not ap*ply to toys). . . . . , ,

4. Send before December 5 nil Christ-

or express.5. Avoid giving .bulky articles, If

thermust bff Sent bf malirfrelgfit"orexpress^":"'1"*'"'"" '• •,''.:",'''''y~ "..''.• "'-'•"

0. Carry home your purchases whenpossible, and do not request^ specinldeliveries.., , • ••:•"••.•."*"-; ' -;

.J; The nbovea-uleB must be carried tintsO thnt man power Will be relenscd for•war-work: and trnnwportatlonnot cou-g e s t e d , 1 . . , : " ,-•- . ; . ' - , ; • . : :. ; , ";;.:

These rules nro the outcome of nangreenjent between, the mercbants ofthe country and the war industries'board. The commercial economy «&-mlnliitrntion of the state cotinell of dp-'fense Is charged with:Ui6;a#fy of <Sife'rylng^hem-outr-The public' must help,so begin your Christmas shopping now,nnd remember tho rules. 1

flm Automobile Patent "Taken Out in France Fifty

Years Ago by Pierre RavelThe first automobile patent waa

fn*'*to'f6rffiaHon~'aithe; first occasion -UDon which

French adopted the hand-shakingtactics of the American as an expres-sion of, esteem was Tn May, jnst a fewweeks after a company of "marinessent.In to relieve n detachment of theirpals had driven off. a storm "bsttalionOf German* wjlo had tried tQ stampede

• , | h e n i . . A - " V * ' r : * • " ' • • • - ' ; : ":'"" " V ' •

. ! The/nen were ordered to algectlonof woodlnnd to receive their hard-wonwar «rOsse«." A blare- of • trumpetsgreeted them. Then, after n few words.Of commendation, the French offlceraapproached the Americans and pinnedthe medals. Some of the young heroeswere ready: to turn the othe?'cheek,;but to their surprise they found thein-

dlnnry* roads," jtavel constructed «small Tilbury fend fitted It with MB newengine which developed three horse,power. Ravel seemed on the verge_oij.succe»5 5 b j | n j h F * f o

f a cheer,

n o

began and iipset all his plans for thetime. * Later ha bollt several motor-cars In which petroleum was used/forthe direct geaciatlon of motive powerby burning It under special conditionsin connection with certain quantities ufair. Later Gcor£aJ3L.JS«Ulen.fa hnajohnnne8 Spiel, in; Germany,simultaneously carried on exportmentsthn^wcntnaIIy^W£ed"ln"ihe*"aut(>mobile of today. To Selden, however",belongs the1 cnxllt.of applying gWllne0 motorcars, BS the pinna of the Oor-

mannrcbntemplnted the' -use" of kero-sene to supply p o w e r . ' • •'•'.. .'•" '

eha tit the ceremonyygaf ?strong, lusty one, too. -

log the heaviest tracks and dependable!,1

ln.*U sefts of weathii^" u^^s^*"*1-"^

here—when such higii\TOys |tro almost-'-;pn absolute netess.Ity. In sonie se(S<tions of the country, doe to railroad y!

Inadequacy to meet the -trafBc.-,Hie§'minds, paved cross-country highways:are Indispensable to- commerce andcommunity prosperity. / ' , , ' * * , ; •

So,- while we ore' building roads l e t • \ns build them, not for'toflay, but for;1 [the days'; to come,, saj,s"AtlButa' Cott .'.--,;stltutlon. V*It wil lyM cheaper :taCttn*'%long run, and Yastr/ more ^ .B8tlafaic->-:\tory trom tha^word '^o-"1-1, ' r^.:;"~ The v46Ilars-n'nd-ceht8r Bnvlng^iinA^Othe time economy. In hard jsurfaco 2;;

toads wero clearl^ demonstrated by, •>B,-VNorthern motortruck, flrm^iir;-at -;practical tfst completed some time ago.?"when' n consignment of heaW mer -V -chandlse was moved overland- fromi -Detroit Mlchi, to Toledo, O . ; - - ; >•-.,;:• .-';•;,;

"The£ t o fa l^ay-

Whyihe

Espritde Corps albUnceasing TrMngGive Power to (heSoldiers of the Sea

•Ti

THE" STAY-AT-HOMES

office nnd tell her moreas hq escorted her hoinft as soon a s shohnd finished her work. '

But these things wouldn't make news,;< .-.,-• itenisPfor the_SentIneL "... . ;s;.'• • • "-•) Lucy was rSuffQd'thip] first time,t>o-•:•'';;.{ •"jltely but effectively^ nncl wenti^wtiy-4):: -: i"_perlmpE more Upset over .'a/"certain;.' • v. • gracip"us*;coflirteBy Wat • Mr. Pel! ha,dW i.» .-',. --' shown toward her, thnn because ofttto,

Vv-.-j.r:.. "-.'; , f But Lucy hnd.not been-a;rcpji^i^r'';•.'. .,- : for seven years for nothing, and/on^? S r~,"-.- her cheeks had stopped tingling from£.; • ''thnt first cnll-sjie decided to make nn-L£>:"}£r> • - "vpther.- Sh© would_get"*)ine..8ort ofR'ts .-.': - etory out of Jilm-—thht she determined.ferrrrll ^WjWas-on heir .third call that Mw*ellgiS/"-/-r-/:-;.<h6Wed^sigris of weakening. r- , ' ;v C.i;l5*:-:tir^~-^';^^ou:.?ay-,y°o..wnnt.me;tp;ijtf,8onjfc:,

-thlng-to hwke^a stoiy albput,*''Bej began;

hnd'flnished~her:wo?t. ... ,, t.•'It'* this wny,";(,ho beg^n;;; '^oij

from^c-w^t^.-d£DiirJini^t^tfpa::been-feellrig around, lately, nnd todny I'gota notice from' headquarters. Thatspring isn't."p, spring at nil. ; It's n leak

cautiously, looking amusedly,f a c e ' a i d " f a l

4into

y ^ K , face aid sfuaylngiHenervous twltchln^4if Jjer itlU girlishtips. t *TVhat sort of thltn? wonlo%yiC|usuggest—not, ot course, that I Intendto do. i t " - - ," Lucy chose to take him entirely serl-«uisty. "Muke some gift to the town,"She announced. "Every one thinks youhave loads of money, but—"

, Ttaiow," smiled Mr. Pell, "they callBMS£BWiPl»£!~fttas always amused

I h

fr6m the ma.uv, That*waf«s is just theRftmo water every one hns piped intotheir houses, and now they send meformal worcl. thai In future I'll linvc'tohave it motereid and. pay for it nt regu-lar rates. I don't mind paying tbo fewhundred "dollars It would cost n year,butno OTciwwWcarealkfut^toin j f It wjis j>jnlaLCity-_water^.an4tKey>e "likely; to l a v e i h e Jpk'o <m* thp"oldmls^r.::So 'w.oil'luiye ito' tjiink ofsomething else to do." ;They walkedalong in.silence for:

;a,"few inlantea,LuejJs-pretty^llps working overtimetrying, to; hold back-the tears of dfenp-pointment. f* Two or tbrM- tltnes "MtC

|J"elPtrted t o ^ c ^ n hlf next.spcech be-fore* h^-'snccxJeded.

Stray Shots, r -5Itagtlmo music is-apt to make •

tho most Rtiild man step like ft •strlnglmlt horse, . / ' / • : ' ; •

.Tho Ynnk handles his gun n»^ Jhe does his money—puts it lo f o r *a n I t ' s ; W o r t h . . . . .''""; ..-•. : J/Maybe the kaiser Id slaughter-- •

ing/; his • nrmy np6n ,tho: theory 5thnt, nfter- this war,": he., will'••'n/j\-er need It 'riny more: • ;- • ••-.'•;S

{i :i.--itgreat pntrlptlc rjara'de ls.but • •-' ytfiia publicity, of tlie abiding nrln- •

^ctple faackjof I t ' [' •;;'• 2^3^.1 ;

. , . . ^Wufl them do not eltWith Idle litmfla and grieve the hours" - a w a y , ~ - . v x / , • -, -.. ' • : . - ' '•'•.•

tuiTTapablo aid strong and keen of wit,They lenrn to plow and cook and nurso

V'.'nna knit. . ' :"•/Ketp books and b'eei; and fearless, bravo•' ' A n a g u y , - -...• •;• • . ' , ' . ..:•'.• 'i

Dofond their men. from worry ttnd dls-1' • 'rt.ay J -.'"... <

With eager, blltho. undaunted woman's

; - ; - . » > « . . : . . - • ' , . • , - ' . • ( • . • . ' ' • . : > - ^ . ' : !

Mother and aweetheart, sitter, daughter,.Sanded together by a-sacred trust, ' -

.And working: with" one leal, accordant• . •»• . - m i n d . ' . • • • - - . . . .' ' . . - - . • - . . . : . . -

To "servo with all: their'aeBt of love and" M i r e / : " ; , : / - / • . ' • • - .-:

Tboio whoso victorious Btrcngth and af-• / • • . . ' d o r m u i s V 1 " v . - V , : . '•' ••.-- • • •• > . • r

, £ Depend .upon; the sirls: they left b. 0-,.'' -• ; ••' . - h i n d . • ' - . " • • '•' '- ' -hind.

—Charlotte Becker In Life.

Thousands of Girls Cut Off v' Loott }ML§M C6ntrJliu|«Jt''?W(Sunf^?oFV^rJI'ulT»se8As proof of the sacrifices women are

•willing to make wbeB their sentlmeutsor emotions are aroused, IHsrelatedthat thousands of girls, both In Ger-

Iftlr^anti' contrTbuted^lt to their coun-try .for. war purposes, says the^Peo;pleV^Bon1'e^Jdin^^'v'T£e~lMHnceri8'not the flrst-bf-its klnd'recorded inh i s t o r y , h o w e v e r , i - i - : ' / ' / ; / •••.--•=>

An interesting example Ipf similardevotion comes from northern Japanwhere a great temple was in progressof erection. Immense timbers werebeing bauledfrom the mountains to b¥placed in' the building,-and the work'Was delayed by the frequent-,breakingof the ropes. At length an- edict was.issued calling on tlie women to givetheir long hair which could be. wovenInfo ropes Qf snfflcie^£s^nigth|fl|.1tbj),win1p<ffiet"!'"i""!;'' _*''';!l;'. - ' - — ' ' " - -••:'••

So generous was the rosponleTo thaiedict that two ropes were woven, one,It4s claimed, was 17 Inches In circum-ference n'nd 1,400 feeflohg; the other10 inches around and 2,000 feet long..With these' ropes 'the timbers weredragged to the temple site withoutfurther"breakage. . > ' . - - ' : " . > '

p y r e d y s rfour-ton tractor track and two' trail-ers. jr&B .12 tons," says .Automobile?Tolilcs in discussing the trip. The-load was distributed as follows: Two?tons on thoJxycKi slx_tons onva five-ton trailer and four tons^offa tfiree-"ton trailer. The trip was made toeight and a half hours over 48 miles?of cement nnd asphalt and 12 tallies o fdirt road. -Almost exactly ns much-t.me was required to-traver-over~the<dirt road as over tbo cement^ because-

(HE FRENCH, tired fromcouless •attacks, were filtering,the rear. -The ironds w<choked" with war niaterl

with roaring trucks and rushing caions. Everywlfere tho refugees W(

• hurrying toward safety, ^carrylnji *them their household effects; draggltheir cows behind their heavily loadwagons—sad, yet smiling and strlvlto be brave. The last great Gerni(lriy&-wns on,, pounding- relentlesifonvnrd toward Parts. '. ; '•

But In contrast to this plcturo v<- *notherr<hat-ofi(rreiit trncks crnmn:

with full-cRested, steel-muscled mligstenlrig to the fronfc Men from.t

iijew viiji'nnd new Ideas^miinew me•ods of fighting. Men who. knew Gmany only ns a thing to be defeatwho never, had met Fear, who laugTnt the horrors of the Huns. They wi

-'."United- States .marines.But the odds were. against thi

FOR A LAUGH

to

Soldiers of the Air Who ',„ _. Wave Given Uft Their Lives.

Boatoiv l-argest Capital; r

Indianapolis Is Secondfo'rty-elgtit sbite capitals,

Bo»ton:,is thKli^est,'witn'Va populn-!tloa of 070,585. Indianapolis ranks

ThcF'flrst man to lose his life In anotrplnne ^necldent'Was Llent. Thom.nsL. Solfrtdge of the United States sig-nal corps, wjbo was killed In Septem-ber, 1008, while flying jtsi a passengerwith Orvlllo jVVright n't Fort Myer, Vn.The next fatal airplane, accident oc-

, Too Many Reminders.Newrlch—Young man, I hnd

work hard for my money..Bon—Well, dad, enough -people In

onlr^ct are throwing that up to mewithout your talking about I t

second, "With. a. population of. 233,050.'The otliercapifa^SiW1

ttoCppopulBtion^iirel , ^AU»ntar 154*30;"•Bfe Paul, 2M.T&} _l-any, ;„ 100,253; CJolumbus,^ ISl^il";•Providence, &H#2&\" NashvUle,- 110,-m?Blchmond, 127,C2a'The capitalswith between-«),OOp^and;aOp.O0O popu-latlon are Hartford, oa015; Spring*fleJijU 01.678; pesMomes,^^^KM^rTren^jton; '06.815:' O k l a b b n i n a t y . e i S M ^Ilnrrlsbnrg, 04,180; Salt Lake City. 02^It t . /Thcs« figures aro all of the 1910c e n s u s . •'-"-,'-•'''•''. ' ' • ' • • • • - ' • •'-'••'•* • ' - —

nearly a year liter In France,w h e n ****?* L e ^vre wn« enrolled

B p c e ^ ' e bu'iffire'iiK, ,,-•"•••ynxy, of;course;:.braye;:flyers:'^i.thovinumber baye given their/lives to itfelirespectlve.conqtries, and a list of them

False Alarm.Eflle (nppre-

henslve of airraids) —HnrklWhat's thatnolse?

Billy — Vsilly, that's" onlythe ringing in myears!

§]waith«iangj« j(ie;«a!a.""in tiixti^f^™?*™ <«Mplong^iMmc^-ever

ISSSlSho^kS^t h i f ' . P M l t n n n s i a - . - s ! S a r u i . L ^ - - " ^ ^ . " . J -> ' ' - - - • • - i - ~ • - - - •

Btatnpes. France,

Canada's NetLqs|e&inJiVa>

s m e t h a M couldnt givethe" Pelltonltcs nnff the boys- Ut the

^^ISpt^i^odserto^kwp-vfflyfbSffef-;[fijctlons^m>«eix.: -lyiiil tell,ir8n'c i;;"^enjtolly^at-t^have;jnstiBcni p»iar)^i^::®pdr|nnt- contribution"•', to ;an

lW0P£&*iw%fryi** endowed;- and', th'ei'iosim^$m$®i£tpt!ttCr in^Shiuighal rthat Sin*.-)*ot ifly

atercsted in—'1 ,^tnTpcattte don't *nre nbont

- lhs.f,?-lriterropte>J Lucy. "They want"ydtt te^da somrihlng for Pcltton, iMt

* drikJ f t

frtint from Pellton toitch^mote-vv «surprise than^to^gei.Ftn^^would i Be a real jpiece./^f news,wwtfdn't tr // >;.-;-.- M^^MM^'^'

i^rtlmei-v>'^'viit]anTLi^o^.r/.ffi^;.,wfli«:

•S^rye^TheiPMeal/nck^~The numberC

^Kfl^^lnge^win^fdij-athe

tpt.Dp and rtod

further; ™ r ;' "There's yon(" said, Jfr> fell sbnply."HovrM that be for starting something}We could run off and be married, andthen \\Ken we come back We can dothe other fh.lngs.^the curb around, thetown hull and'the drinking foTiuCalpfor frtrfly dogs oncLcats nnd,the picnicground Una'anything elso you say."

Lucy's ialnd failed to-revolve.an»undthe-Interests;'of-the Pellton Sentinel,and irben she* snfd .that^tt ivonld be."perfectly wonderful" sWc wps think-Ingf-onljr^nfjter ownfie l f i ihrpolntf

er Jifspoff burned on aChinese monk's head shows how muchbe has elected ,to endureiCTJ's a recentwriter on the subject of Cotoa. They,receive as severe an Inltintmn as1 tbdesire, and get-therefronrcerfnjiyp

*llejr«r"Tfinaonlt 1bna three'spots „„,C(in got tBree mebb free ot-tmyvmpn-asWry'-Ib'Chln*; six spots entities, him

"to six meals t.nine spots to-three days'board, and the mozlmunt Of twelve, A

2?he net Ioisei^nJthewpsear nUli-tury. forces of Canada inaE&yana andRrtiiice up^^ugust^lAver^ 115.800°.§«<n^: .»<>5»pnJlsslpne4 ome4rs nnanien^.Thes>^«gu^4^nclnae; thise 'i»'wMedan. nctlpn or^ed^pf wonndi' ^ ,ol^d. missing, prisoners ;iofr war, jdisV «U. Cooki.1^Vtga as medically nnflt jlischarged " / *! ;

'"'" 'Fine?^fijttan^n.acB/-to--b^;0ure.>'-^- . :,j. ;. . , - v •./ "That ain't i t The teacher in schoolIs nfrnld: to. lick me, but ma Isn't"

i-i' tf.-SQn trjr/'Wi'take; away a fat -onb* Jroin a hnri-.

"bulldog

Improved HlBhwty Inj Ohjoi. V

there wns no foundation -to the roninnd boOi the L trailer.-. iind i trUclw '•sa.nfc' Three.-'fourths ofj a gnllcia o t ' :;oil nnd '22 "gallons.of gasoiine^^wer*7:nsed on the trip.";. =..-.. •;•. • . ,v ; .>•

•Thereal pith of the ,"arguinent IleivIn Onrfact.'ttot nlmbst ns muc|J t l m ^ .rr«nd, of course, mbreoil '«n'd 'gasr^ ;

Was consumed In traveling 12 miles of-« r t Irond as was required: to -.-nJaW,-;the 48 miles i v e r the' lidrd-su'iace-/highway.'•.=-.<':.y-:'-*.-'r'-.-:J?~ .•-^•'•^-^-'^-r-y-• 'An^agaral"".Con^der^The dlfferr"

ence ln,.yalue of the;jnespectlveTtypcs;:iM,rondito;the,abuttlng>pr6perty and"to Oje county and the state contnlnlhr'tue in . ;"(-...'"

:-^'-.'-:!.--'--v..";.~ii-'-.''.--. :'•;"•' '•/—'•.-

9ouble Amount,:,of 'jtinC'Pmipry^y

To see what happenBat the end ofthq good road, a pubUc road specwUst

? \ ^ " " ' W t ' O f egricultnre re-,ZT « i ob»e»™t>««»- made In atffer-;ent secUdhs of the conntry/jnoted many-conntrjr-bound.!

grjremains?"

"lout

8P(wlal^hiucimehila?"How's things In your suburb? Any

civic splrftr ( "" . *' "Plenty of, i t iMunlclpal bus meets

to be returned tp'r5 -e all the power of their t«un*V

deyoted to hanling a single -wagott.the unimproved Highway. t

SZXSIS

3 ^'the swift-moving hordes mukt be hied And.more Umnthnt. halted bjlioily of men who njust make up !their Inferiority ln^Twmbers by a•perlorlty of fighting power. Tho trU(•diurned on . -•"'• l "; •*•'.

Children, stnndlng" by the roivdWithrew flowers to those marines acheered them. .-White-haired old W(•on, rocklrig'-ntop'tKo" refugees'-hc&lcalled a bfcsslng to them.1 But woithoy—those bronzed glnnts frj m ovsons—be. able to achieve the Impslide? ,' More thnn one wrindered—t

Jiesltnted to think of- tho outcome."* A nlgjitrih nn open wheat fl<Then fhi' Rreht'clnsh' I Ana'ofirof 1grpnt~tttin;Ie. of war's compley-maet

^ty.camo n, niessajio that wns eltrlcal In its results. The weiTrench took on hew life.. Tho BritlstirnillnR only n few months befiwith their backs to "the wall, fret'ln^ji new anxiety to attack. 1whole "great brRanlwitlon of clvllltlon, fighting there on the' westifront, suddenly BOW -the dawn ofnew day,'and.tfie brightness of a nhope. For those United iStntes 1Tines had dono tno impossible. FigIng agnlmt odds of nearly "ten to 0the marines hnd turned,-; back -'<"n<w—and started the' renrwirush toward -Berlin that still Is 0tinning. . ~ '..-.!.'

They had proved that they were 1real supermen.. Marines -with ns nu

ten and eleven ..bullet holer;jhem; stilt fought-" forwardy^Jothi"onlered -to "the rear,.'jobeprSST onlfreturn without watting to have" Oiv.ounds dressed. Men\mortnllywpaed swept, on until the machlne-pnests of the enemy were. cnptureithen died. Still others,'felled by 1enemy, forgot their own wounds tlthej might nskof the-woundgof-socomrade, or. Insist on not .being .gliaid unt|l later—there-were cpinirai

r- And why? Why should this B(of Iraen—nnd remember,1 the total-thoHze'd strength of the XJnited Stnmarine corps- Is only' tS.OOO- be. ato accomplish so much? WBy shothey be the real "supermen" whflennnny believed It alone: poss.esse<until Chat«ou Thierry and BeU(

iii and ,Bonreschog? tThy «hn

month's care. /

and men glveh commissions in t&e in>; |.;.*™o i i o n s In the lm-1peflal arrays K does ootr take roto a c Lcount offlcers and thp f l rays K does ootr take roto a ccount offlcers and other rants wound-edTin Action who have rejoined their— " - j o r a « stUl'flt for 6ervlco'«vei»

vinw ~~

unitsI seas,

* ,'Abres (InBeKCuHivatron. , .'< t h e Inst pffldoJ flgures^ taken fromthe year bosk of tho department ofagriculture, show that in Wio, out of

I cent,

'Crane.'

Sorghum.ne Mm," replied Senator-etlues-the best way to'

.cause people to forget all ttfaoat 70ato, to be investigated."' ^ 1

, ' •' \ '* Celebrated l}t»\t\y,'rrhe ndyance man of 'FIddle-o>-Dee,'e big mWcal1 comedy~booKed sere

s t h ' 0

?^ **** * *" ""* ^T^t^

they be able to accomplish such de<J heroism -tiWjh'.Hie grateful Freination o«erbd?.Uie name o f - ^

tKid Shnnged 4.0 Bols de la Brlgi,leJ Mirrlnest The answer comest i * thing"—«"PrIt de corps andmarine training.

There's never nn Idle second Ina nmrinc. n u training ne

, ^ - a n d . more than tbkl thnever is a time when the bei/ef to

R o a <» '

ri?^ ***** "* *" T ta lhe **#*»imm

WORTH KNOWINGshells have beenvfonnd to e

t^in enough:Jiroteli ahfr fnt^to nfl!'„.". u^fut 'nh«o :P9iim for; sfc

Wee l« s'ni<l"to' have heet.^ first:;n.i; hnrv^tod for- £{oragB:/ln I

iimll lake- near, cambriti

JIarlborongh, <VftwjSrft'Ht.'' Hns :b<

n^.inw3<ir ••»•'••'fcwt.^-^^county -c«iuncil^;;Vg?f5'^-^

fro'i

'ft;.

Page 3: Poultry Supplies - DigiFind-It#- I J f&r. r - ;«-..,-¥ XXI NO. 37 CRANFORD. NT. J. THDR8DAY., 1918.»-1ft-THREE CENTS Change in Banking Hours. On and after November 1st bank

^

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ft:fa "i?- i

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arjoeavcMRs

Esprit de Corps ah(FUnceasing TrainingGive Power io theSoldiers of the Sea

K ' !**CV"-

(HE FRENCH, tired from count-less •attacks, were filtering, tothe rear. -The roads werechoked' with war material,

•with roaring trucks and rushing cam-ious. Everywlfere tho refugees, werehurrying toward safety, Kcarryjnjt withthem their household effects; draggingtheir cows behind their heavily load'wagons— sad, yet smiling and strlvlnto be brave. The. hist great Geidrive j v a s on,, pounding, relentless^forward toward Parts. '. ; '•

But In contrast to thl3 picture wasanother, <hat of.freat tracks crammedwith full-chested, steel-muscled men,hastening to the front Men from.the

Inew viijTaivd"new ideas'tin*d:new methVo<U of fighting. Men who. knew Ger-many only its a thing to be defeated,-who never.had met Fear, who laughednt the horrors of the Huns. They were"United States .marines. -•'- rJ '

But the odds wero against them.

i^O\«

the swift-moving hordes must be halt-ed.- And more than that, halted by. a.liody of rapn who must make up fortheir Inferiority hvTiumbers by a su-Terlorlty of fighting power. Tho trucks• c h u r n e d o n . -•'• l *-.- •*•! '

Children, standing" by the roadway,threw flowers to those marines andcheered them. •-White-haired old worn-,•en, focWSirntoprfIw"irefiigcra>-'*iat»>called a blessing to them.1 But woullthoj—these bronzed giants frj m over-,(ipas-r-he.-ahlo to achlevp the lmpbs-|sljilp? , More than one wondered—andTiciltated to think of- tho outcome. '

"~ A nlgJitTlh an open wheat field.Then fhi' great clash' I AVdouTof the

•- prpnt~tnm;Ie. of war's complex-machin-ery camo a, message that wna elec-trical In Its results. The wearyTrench took on hew life.. Tho British,rtirndlhg only a few months before•with their backs to "the wall, frettedIn n new anxiety to attack. Thewhole "great organization of civiliza-tion, flRhtlng there on the' westernfront, suddenly saw. the dawn of anew day,'and tfie brightness of a newhope. For those United States ma-rines had done the Impossible. Fight-ing ogalnut odds of nearly "ten to one,the marines had turned,-, back the•enemy—and started • the'rearwardTush,toward Berlin that still is con-tinuing. ~ '-.-....'

They had proved that they were thereal supermen.. Marines with ns manyJII ten nnd eleven ..bullet holes' Inthorn stilt fcraght_for\vard. JOthers,

"ordered-to the rear, "obpyoa only foreturn without watting to have theirbounds dressed. Men mortally wound-ed swept. on until the machine-gunnests of the enemy were captured—then died. Still others,'felled by theenemy; forgot their own wounds that^the} might nsk of the wounds of nomocomrade, or Insist on not being givenold until later—there were cpmradesttho'imwt-be-eared fcw-flirt. ••*- •—'•- Why the Marine 1* Fighter.

And why? Why should this bodyof.men—nnd remember, the total au-thorized strength of the United Statesmarine corps Is only 75.000—be ableto accomplish so much? WKy shouldl n ( !j be the real "supermen" whichflermany believed It alone possessed—

constantly Inculcated .|fl the mind ofa marine that lie must do superhumanthings simply becanso he Is a marine,and Uiat his own conscience will,callhim a criminal against himself andhis corps If he doesn't.- —

The first thing that a marlno appli-cant gets .when be reaches, tho.east-J E P . 4 ? W J ^ i p .S. C, or the westerni l d C t I h

fcJ?.: at MaTe

island, Cat, Is . a heart-to-heart talk.And It's a talk that's a work of art*-a speech that tells of the history ofthe corps, from the beginning of thocontinental . marines In 1740 to thepresent day, the great things the ma-

things It has stood for. A talk thattejls_ Of'. honesjtx,; and straightforward-ness and decency and cleanliness.

" the Creed" of thi Marine. : ;

• -And then, when .the time of proba*tlon Is over and the enlistment com-pleted, the marine learns 'this:. .--:'

"I am a soldier,.though not qn armysoldier. I g o t o ^Beo.-yet *m not "a

of I tho array or thej sailor of the- navy.I fight my. counter's battles everyiwhere and anywhere—In the trenches;in France, on ships nf sea, or inalisplanes above. It's all tho same.

"I raised the first American flagtill foreign son, "tnoi« than'a centuryago.—I-ca tried "Old-Glory-Into- actionIn; Tripoli,: Egypt, West Africa, theFiji' Islands, Sumatra; Hawaii, Mex-ico, China. Uruguay, Paraguay, Alas-ka, Panama, Formosa, Korea* Nica-ragua, Cuba, Santo Domingo, Haytt,and now I'm with General Perching InFrance. I carry a punch Jn either'hand. Tra (T hard-fisted, three-wayfighting man.' I'm a soldier of thenavy, u U. 8. marine."

That's the beginning* • That's thething that sends the real flush of prideInto the- new-marine's heart™ And-when he walks out upon the training'ground and' the physical /directoroarks out an order to seize the hori-zontal bar nnd chin ten times, thatnew marine does It 1 He maty neverhave chinned himself before. Hismuscles may;ache and twitch and.do

strange things -afterwards—but heratsej and lowers himself those tentimes—because he's a United Statesmarine-1 -

Urged to Getter Things.There's something inside him, urg-

lng~~hlm on, telling him that he mustbe better, better,, better every hour,

Anil1

start, that marine Is not only willingto go tho limit—but eager! He's amarine—he's simply.got to know ev-erything nnd bo everything and doeverything! ;—- . - . _ . . . . „ _ . r__.'.

Facing him everywhere are1 Signs:

Killed." . Ami the marine knows. He all-too-i•trainsmw|th the naked bayonet. Hegoes""out upon "(Ke"Hfle" range; "and" Iflie doesht qualify ns ah expert, a_marksman or a sharpshooter he kickshimself all the way back to camp, andsits up. nights to dream out a way ofuialdhg It up In some other way.. Ebterclscs; Training. Work. • Plny.-

Thpy fnllnir rmi+ pttvr nnnlhnr In niah-Ing sequence. Men box—because themovements "of boxlngjare similar tothoso of bayonet flghtlpg.- They have"pulling up" exercise's—because thathelps one to get In and out oftrenches..even'

Swimming—nnd thetho'swlmmtnijfijf

becau8e--that—develops—every muscleof tho body. . . / - . . . _ „ . .

Drill, hour after hour, while ser-geants bark and the man who missesa step Is his.own worst enemy. Lec-tures, more drill, more work, moreplay,.more training. In seven, weeksthe'body and the mhid of the marineare at the edge of perfection. Andthen, while the band plays and the"left-behlnds" cheer, be embarks forFrance, via Quantlco, there to workagain, ploy again and drill again. Andnot-until the moment of-the ''sero*'when, the signal calls for fighting de-mons to rush over tho top,.' la 4hattraining relaxed for a moment. Afterthat it'snot 'a question of training—but the results of It And ChateauThierry and Belleau wood have toldthose to the world.;-

Became Popular at OnceFew Songs of the Sea Secured Public

Favor as Quickly as-"Life on<the Ocean Wave."

The best and most popular of alltta, seines, of,'the Bailor bojra Is EpcsSi-iKent'V'A life on the Ocean Wave*'Si-iKentVA life on the Ocean WTbo wordkof:, this Kong were writtenfor Henry Russell, the well-known mu-sic composer. .The subject of the songwas suggested to Sargent ns he.waawalking one-breezy, sun-bright morningfil spring on the Battery In New York,

h d ll

my band at one - and fAUed. Morristells me It won't answer.": "Let mesee the piece," replied Itusscll. Bus-sell was So pleased with It that bowent Into a music store near by, andIn tiio hacfc rtota to a-feW momentsho" composed the music to nhlcb It Ismrt' sung; "it-nt once: became a favor-ite and very-shortly the bands-were

It and the pallors ncre slng-/ J "lQS. It.

BY OUR FIGHTING IRISH-AMERIGANSBoys of Ninth Massachusett» and righting Sixty-ninth of New York

Die Fighting With Smiles on Their Ups, but Huns "Pay"—- Yank, Taken Prisoner by Three Huns, Drops Gre-

nade and (tills Captors and Self.

Paris.—"Will the Irish flcMT'The same old answer may be made,

l e y wttL It can be mad« on the rec-ords of two famous Irfsb.;Amcrlcunregiments In Fronde." ""It Is'a rvcorflthat makes men of Iribh blood holdtheir heads lil«h. It Is a record thatbetters the brightest pace of Anwrl"

I'stiuott glorious military annals.Then* t»a reptments (one used to

bo tho old Muth Massachusetts and

Sew XorkJ v. ere In every pad scrapthe American army hns been In. The

told because tho censor ut headquar-ters has now ruled thnt rvglmcnts mayb* named for their part la such fight-ing a» preceded that on tho ltlverVcsle.

Tho Ninth and the Sixty-ninth weretn almost all of It. -'. The story does notcome from offlclal. reports. It comesfrom the Ups of two men, one a doc-tor In. the Ninth and tho other a chap-Iain In the Sixty-ninth^ who saw whatthey relate. '. These two have »beumany soldiers die. They know whatbraver; and courago add chwrfulncsnare . . ' ,_ . . ._ . . . . : .„ ' /L'^l,\ \:/,- '

Lieut Simon Kelleher of the Ninth^ M t l l

behind. Suddenly olio of our shell*Ut vrltliln a few yanls of the party.The three (Jormnns ducked. I thought-at Ant our hoy had. llut, ,no, ne hfttl*i*oKNl~toto" m«* htp Irtcket. l i edn>pp>Nl a hand (tremido dlroctly uthis own foct nnd those of hi* captors—and thu three Germans were killed.

"I got there quickly afterward towhere liu lay. lie- fiulled up nt roe-You. h'> siulliM,!, thuiiRli his arm and

was In Paris the otl er day; • Me tellsthe story: of hls. 6 "ofthe time he is elthAr laughing, or tenrn.Involuntarily creepjout the corners ofhis eyes and drop unashamed down

Lieutenant Kollelier's i utorlcs show

tho boys erf Boston, South Boston, ftox-bury, Cambridge* nnd Chartestnwn,

ijwlth ihe_cool conrage_that_held

Americans of an earlier day.-"saw thowhite* of their eyes." They show thatthese boys—und roost of them weremere boys—died face' to tho front, ngrim smile on their lips, lighting, doingtheir soldiers' duty to the last breath

purpose—to -flght. No inun*oJP*

of thoKlnrhrdl«f.-«ar* filcotenanf, Kelleher,Without taklntr toll-nnd morn1 of en-emy lives with h im. .

One for Each Shot •'Just now tho names of these heroes

may not be mentioned. But "Kellyn Burke and Shim" aro.there, all of

them, and many more. LleutonnntKelleher says nothing of jhln own. gnl*lantry. But his stories fliow that be.too, served. He was not called on forthfe supreme sacrtlke.i But lu> offeredhis life n thousand times on first aiddressing lexpedltlouR f the furthest

ti- -1Td-bcen-tol<l-flitre- was-a-wotindeman , In no .advanced traverse,"... IwBayn. "I crawled slowly up io gothlni.I heard his labored breathing In tn*lulls of the gunfire.. And then I round-ed the corner of the trench. Therelie Bat, propped against the wall.breath came In, teorfng gasps and with'each one the Mood. gusihed from hl4chest; for hs_uad been shot throughthe lungs. ' .IleNwas a boy I badknown nil my life.

"Th byjK you bad. Pack,' I sal'4.a s I tried to help hlin.7

"They sure did, Sluie,' he rcplicl.•But looka there.'

"I followed the wave of tho- emptyplftol he still held In bis hand, anilthere ,stretched across the. oppositeparapet were six-dead Germans, om\for every shot In his gun. They hadgot him jonly when tho R u n _ S _tied. I nkippod the bleeding, aVI could and we got him back to anambulance. Hut he died four hourslater. I guess his life wits well paidf o r . •* ~ *

"It was this some sharp raid of theGermans that produced one of thecoolest bits of defijx-rate' courage 1ever raw. Ono of our boy* had beencaptured by three dermans nail ttf.w » being led off ea. tko^rotrcaAed,. «,l crft by ui^self,. crawlji« o:g ^one on either sldcr of him and one

'"Clod! boy,' 1 sulil, horrified, S\hydid you do thutV

" T P S , but—' I didn't know what toBay ns I tried "to dress that frightfulwound.

Qava Llrt to OH Thro*."'Well, doctor.' he snld gravely.

'I'd been to communion thin morningand I Ruess I was rundy to die. HutI 'wasn't ready to go to (lermnny.They searrhc<t mo for grenades whenthey got-me, tho threo of them, nndthey took those out of my bug anilput of my side pocket. But I nlwajBcarry ono tucked Into my pants when.1 go out here. Just In cnm> of—well,anything like this. And when thosethree Oennnns ducked It canto throughmy mind a lot flitlcker than I can tellItrthaCtliWo <lwld fiornmiiis and on«dead American was a lot more on ourslilo'Of tho score than threo live Cinr-miins nnd an American as good n«dtMul lii DurlliL Su-l let her go.'

"He tried to nalso his head andlook: iiroUnil, _ _ _ .

'Novor mind, boy, you cot tliemI assured him.all,*

DC

'"I didn't nni)wer"-«ina ho_ljn«w. HidromnlnhiK hand .crept Iwnoath liliblood-Hoaked tunic, gripped suinvtlilnutight nnd stayed there. After a mo-ment, li.o spoko again.""'itoOiMw sold, 'you know all thi>

know I VIM"'And,» doc,' hln voice was weaker,

'wtifyiru—will j o i r M t my niotnor Ibad—I had this when—I went.'

Slowly hls>hand camo out;'slowlyIt opened; thnt boy's hand strangelyold nnd worn with thn l>Ioodnlalnn andgrime. Slowly It opened nnd (hero intho blackened palm ifllntiMit'd a tiny,bright pllver crudtlx. Ho was dead.'

Wwi't Stop Fighting. 'It's Chaplain Ilanley who tells tUo

utojy of tho Klxty-nlntll. They referto the chaplain as holding the clericalrecord for mlloago In No Man's land,

SINGS TO BOYS IN CAMP'

^ • 1 v .

>*? ,~Ki't

x*" "¥—i

K

;( t

can't knt'p liliu on patrols, Clmp-Iain Hunley knows tho Htory of mostof the casualtFi'H of tlu>~ SlxCy-nlnfh7tie substantlatei the shifinunt thatnot a man has boon killed or woundedby n German bayonet, notwithstandingtho regiment has encountered In pitch-ed und .open battle threo of tho Ihodivisions'of thn Prussian Guard at onotlmo nmlanother of Its career. Need-less to nay, tho PrusMau Guard divis-ion can make no such hoiut. FatherHunley, BBJS tho hardest tlmo theyImvo with casualties In tho 8lxly<nlnth14 to tnako them mop (Tghtlnf; whenthey'ru hit. Ho is himself just recov-ering from a wounded leg.

"Tho offlcers arc ns bail us tho men,"he declares. JTho day I got thiswound I was working up with CaptainHurley's company. They'd been drlv*-tn back a llttlo by a vicious GermanliarraKo and they wen; on a little ridge.'Th"eyTr""foroirrtcTr"to"lroltl-tt,Tinil theydid, for four days. When thoy left Itthey went ahead. •

"Well, I was up thcro this day andI heard of a wounded man attend anda llttlo. to ono xld<>, Just over tho vdgeof tho bill toward tho Gertnan lines.I told tho cnptitln I'd better go to himmill 'he. wanted to tfctnll a couple, ofmen to help me. I declined and start*

"Our Holdlers • think tho only rvalqueen on earth Is tho American girl,"declared-Minx ThoroHa A. Hmlth, whohas Just ri'tunu'd from u__tour of ilng-Ing to tho KAJdIera In camp fur thu i".

:. A. -KH Smith')! homo I s l i i Brooklyn,

tind j lw (4 known among thu ccmoert-fioerii as \ T h o Danlnh Nlnlitlngale.1* -and nhe has snng lii»r w a y Into tholliorta. of thu boys In tho corpjui.

giin btlllctH that would havu clippedtnu had I TUIMHIOII my olb.ow,

"I'd Koui' perhaps ftO jardH when Iheard a rustlo In tho Rrnt>a behind me,and thiTt- worn two of llurlc>'(i boys,Ilu^y Hiild tin' onnlaln had Kent them•t i f lwy 1 iiSfiflMSTr hri'ytTnhif imiipensd-, *•"•""•"Now llntrii to the Tout of It. I sentIIIPHI rlmnliig Imi-lc to tlmlr companyand crawled aheud. Just as I got toIhlw rldKti 'tho bullet (,'ot me. Mywouhdiid. inuii WiiH . across an openNpiicti nnd I knew I couldn't gut to him.I was afraid If I walttid till dark I'dbleed to death, RO'I put a tourniquetou my leK uud started buck. ^ ~

forgot About Wound."Now all of thin IH JUHt prellililnary,

They got mo back to n hospital n dajll(itrr and I'd hardly got Nettled In mycol when who Nhould they put downIn the cot next to mil lint Captain Iliir-iey lilniNelf. Ho wns bndlywnniihed •up- ln-tli«-l«((,-tiio^- Tlu» big hud-.bctnilresHi'il nt tho dro«Hlng station and« hen they got him nettled thoy startedto takp off hl» dothvH. Ax thoy pullediit hlx shirt ho let out n howl.

Thfl /htrt wna stuck to his chest

«ch npde'rneath a sfreuni of machine*

AUSTRIAN PLANE SHOT DOWN IN ITALY

itlth blood. IIo had a wound (herethat tho doctors, at tlio dri'HsIng sfa-tlon lind never discovered.

'Why, captain,' nnld thn doctor,looking puzxlud at tho casualty tag,It doesn't "ay anything about the chest.When did you get this one7'

"'What day IH this?' asked tho cap-tain. '

"'Wednesday,1 sold* n nurse. . ."'Now, let's see,' said tho captain.

'Chaplain, you were up there yester-day. 1 must have got this on Mon-

"All tho tlmo he'd been sending men,out_tQ tate. caro-oX- meJw'd Jiud thntliolo In his own chcHt pud tho shirtfrozen over his big heart with his ownMood,

" 'You're a cfiptnln," I snld to lilm, •%'Vou'rc always cautioning tho boys toreport wounds nnd got them aired for,You stayed up there two dn'y» nnd youncier even totd ni« about It.'

'"Honest, chaplain,' ho replied,' "Iforgot nil about it. You know wo had

onr»" trfut:And. wo were, awful busy/'"

INCREASE IN POTATO YIELD

Average In This Country His RisenFrom 71 to 97 Bushel!,' ^

8lhee 1894. «'• Hard to Sleep In Bed.i

Sympathy was offered In London.England, the other day to a man from

and looking out on the ships and smallcruft leaving or entering the harbor.and Belleau

ijThy nhnnirt Having completed the'song Sargent Washington.—The yield of POtntop*went to the ofneo ortKoTIIrror, wrote?they be able to accomplish such deeds

{ Mte t h t f l F r e n c hper acre Is gradually Increasing, thorecords of tho buvnnu of crop pstl*

'•' mates Khow. During 18C0-1B74 thoiivemsi* fvmfll buihelsrtmt It declinedir, 71.3/bushels In'1875-1801. 'Pcr-wptlblolrecovcry was made In tlio fol-li wing ten-year period nnd a muchlarger recovery, rlslnjf to a^cw hlgh-wnter jmnrk, «n» jfached In -J00;VJ914.vllh Its avcragl> yield of 07 bushels

j per acre. i "Th's Increase Is due to

nmonfc-whlch are greater/c'nilzirlnn of pnjila<Ttfoh. "mor£ intern'-

trpntinfnt ntnl higher fertility orthp ,noll» The ten-.voar*n\er}iaiiof D7 hufth»la per i<3» lp-

by fidSi lm'.hpls InIn-Jhe very Jew veor of 1916,

the words and showed them to his |t doesn't worry me nt all thatriloesn't the Journey," he said. "I shall

they be ab„{ heroism Mtet. the grateful French

d h f B l l e u friend. George P. -Morris.„{ heroism Mtenation offered the name of Belleau

B l d la Brigade do well enough. In the train.bl I h ' b

ing the piece, Morris said: "My dearh I ' i ill

on fd changed ..to Bols de la Brigade

i .trouble Is when you've been" roughingboy, this Is not a'song; it will neverat the front that you can't settle downdo for music, but I should like to pub-to it bed. I've slept on cobbles, I'velish It In the-Mirror."

Some days after tho publication*, .slept In mud, In a shed. In a ditch, butrin . , . .There's never an Idle second IJJ tne|

n u t i i when J came fiome for my. two bllghtlestraining neverthan thatl therei

life of a mnrinfl.more do you think. 1 could get to sleep? No,that song_ you promised

d I felt 'fair smothered' by the beds."never Is u time when the belief to not

BRIEF BITS' —7 PtuTStfeTphra'pofl fsscr tlKT-lorgestorgan In the world, with 232 speale

stops and 18,140 pjpes.

WORTH KNOWIM

pecin «heIK have been found to con*i rt f t to make French fffctcu7 turbines are hack than the latter parfof the tenthin

enouph protein nnrt fat to maketfd f t k

driven by rwuter from a reservoir oa century.The flve'hlrgest counties in Ireland

are: Cork, 1,638,931 ocres; {Jalway,^ Jlayn,-1^18430: Xtooegal,

ouph pu-iful nhen grotfud for stock

a' mountntn 800 feet! above ItA d btitut f latiA good substitute for platinum .forsain to hrue been first cut

18(B with population the ylolrtputfitopujtwr ncro declined from

1SCC-18J4 . ... - . ,I production jic'r «BJ}llrt In rewnt jrenrsI hflR licen, more npcnusc« of ^Increased

; [-iicrenB? thno bec^nso %C iftCTeased pro*'ccr flere.' '•' *~ * "-J-U \ •

iS>nt; palladium, 23 per" cent, nnd cb- l,li»iC8, and Kerry. 1459,350 acres.sin ill lake near Cambridge,orange was originally

The latest figures Show thnt thereb

shaped fruit, but not much"larger thanft Blarlborongh. for-v l V ! » l l t has been sre-4-,500 picture hbxHes In the.United

i la rtiprry, nnd It Is said thabjts evolu-(.nr,.«eI./vnixlV!»llt, has been p .

Kingdom, with an -annual attendance tion Is due; to 12 centuries of cultiva-prisoner ol: warJiilUiy.f '

g c ^ j ;-bottl«wiihit^iairblrdnfcn.;.Tl^pllo|.

' * ' — « • ' " • " • '

Page 4: Poultry Supplies - DigiFind-It#- I J f&r. r - ;«-..,-¥ XXI NO. 37 CRANFORD. NT. J. THDR8DAY., 1918.»-1ft-THREE CENTS Change in Banking Hours. On and after November 1st bank

ha»* reached N/t.t-lonal H(a4q|uaxfeni as U whether

The Xmas«artoM artd i b l 'B

BTORY THTJMDAY

0BAB70BD te-diitribatloq *t'B*d CrowOhrlatmas-paM*) to submitareport«f-too oondltip«»od

Vaioar ATMMS. Craafor*. N. I.

THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 7. 1918.

Term*. O H D d h r • Y*ar.

Hattnd «t the Cranford Port OOe*MI Second O u t Matter.

, I-

,'K

'.k

Election results, while disap-pointing to Republicaim eo far asNew York and New Jersey areconcernocl, are cause for greatrojoieing that tbo country hasbeen saved from the diegraceTnott//say tbe danger of "being longeriiontrqlled by Democrats of tbeKitchen type. Both .branobes-ofCongress appear to be safely Re-publican, which weans better bus-iness in tbe handling of govern-ment affairs as • soon as they takecharge. 'And we think there will

careful" auditingof -the past few

be considerableof the businessyears, too. —

,?

That the proposition for a bronzetablet containing the names of. allwho- have- gone into the servicefrom Crauford is favored appearsfrom the reports at ihe Committeeinectiug Monday night nearly one-Lnlf of tbe fumU required havingbeen raised. This week the Cotn-mitteo expects to complete itswork so' 'for. as this part ot- tbowork is concerned, and plans.forthe tablet will be completed veryshortly. I t will be of bronze witheaeli name in raised bronze letters,a pbrmanent Honor Roll. If anycitizen is ndissed by the Committeehe should . bunt up one of themembers and make sure his nameis on' the list'for, something., It isthoroughly a patriotic propositioniii which everyone should take

"part ; - • - • _ • • . • — • • _ . - - — ^ - . . .. .

arday Incladod.The Chapter"!^ indebted to Mr

John Banket for an amphr «upply,ofpaper and twin* with which to wraeartom.

Warning hat been fuued fay th»Atlantic Division of th« AmerifllttRod Crow U> those entitled to serjChrlrtmas-parcel* _ta.,flghtlnj_meOTcraeaa. that they must not followmailing direction*, printed on tbe offleiil labels which are now being titeived in this country.

AD order by the P6eUl Departmentlamed October Stb, ie tffe rullnwhich uaet be obierved. This nilln•Ute* that all packages must be lefat Red Crow receiving station*,wbera they will be deposited in themails for deipatch to Hoboken.

The error in the directions on -thiofficial Kabell* the* following' state

Sixty-five per COPt. of lha 200 register-ed voters cast' their ballots at the gen-oral election on 'Tuesday, when 130votes were cast. ' The vote was un-usually light daring 'the early hours,only one-half of the number polled beingrecorded at 8 p. m. Following is thelist of candidates with the number ofvotes received by each:

U, S. Senator (full torm)-I>ay, N. P.,0;-Wallace; 8. T., 1; Reilly, 3.. 13; Edge,R, 89; LaMonte, D., 80. !

U.S. Senator (short term)—Uoanessy,D., 66; Bafrd, R., M; Reilly, S., 12; Day,

Congress (full term)—Ackermu, It.,55; Clarke, N., 0; Furbcr, S., 14: Clem-ont, D., 51.

Congress (short term)~.Clement, D,,34; Fnrber, 3., 13; Birch. R..

Members of Assembly—Seoger, D.,52^Engischi S.,J8; Warmer. It., 86: Morgan,R , 54; Casserly, D.. 46; Pieraon. R., 62;Brelsford, S , 14; Zoitolhnck, S., 13; Me-Intosh, D., 01- Wulab, S.' T., 0; Jones,S, T."i 0; Wakeham, 8.. Ti, 0.

Register — Harry. F. ntopp. S., MrJiimoa j . Mc^nn,^4>rr~«:^EawardBaaor. R.', 65.-

CoTOner—Horfy Aran l)oron.Councilipan (three-year term)—James

A.Lovett.D., 58; Joseph Sb&llcross. R..hnjfi ,T YVRriftn. R •• flft: Oswald

.appealing tbejrgjin .•-"Thui coupon is—authority for-any-

post otDee to aeccept' on or beforeNovember 20, 19J8.B Chriattna* package conforming t° the above regul*tlohs for the 'soldier named thereon.

Much confusion already ha* **£.sutud from tbe direction* on thelabel, and to clarify tha situation,tbe Red Croa* has Issued a statemencontaining the post office order whichmust be followed If tbe parcels areto reach their destination. This orderread*:

"After tbe carton* have been filletby the psrsons who receive themthey shall be returned to a Red Crossreceiving station whe're Inspectors,

by the Red1 Cross wi'carefully examine each parcel antsupervise it* wrapping and the-affixIng of the 'Christmas parcel label1

and tbp necessary postage stamps,the latter to be farnithtf by theeender of the ' parcel.- Wben tbeparcels have thus been packed an

transmission, the Red Cross- wilaffix to each a certificate In the formof a^aeal showing that the parcel habeen inspected and conUins no pro-hibited or unmnllable matter." Suecertificates will be accepted by th

as evidence that the parcel confirm

Mhe necfliuty of_ eubsequenexaminvWon. / The parcels, must bleft at tha Red .Cross receiving'station, which will deposit - them intbe malls for despatch."

It Is only by following this ordefor mailing that the parcel will becertain to reach the soldier (or whomit is Intended/' was the Red CrosB t a t e m e n t . . . ' / . - . / ' i . ••••'•': . . • ; . ' ; :• .•

The packages must, under nconditions be placed in the mailboxes.pr'iii post oflloes. Every psrce

§ ! * * t | t

Nltaehke, D., 03. "_'." 7 •mncilman. (oneyear term)—David

St Sn, D., 63; James A. Nolan, D., 66:Slbprt Jnbber, R., 49; John H. Maul.

I t , 47.• -Justice of Peace—Henry L. Finkel,

*D.", 01; Anthony Grippo, R., 70. -•Constable—Elmer E. France, R., 60;

/Thomas (Q&n&U*, Q»p«4yU* » -- •" -* -•<Poandkeeper—Arthur Ureeu,.7,"

Ackerman Depresses Appreciation.Ernest R. Ackerman. congressman-

ekct from the Fifth New Jersey Oon;.gressional district, comprising Morrisand Union counties, issued this state-ment Tuesday:

£-*. - -'

Election to membership in the Houseof Representativea'prom the Fifth Con-gressional district, comprising-a-qiiartera million' people, can iiave^twt" onemeaning; that the people of Morris and

( Union counties demand as vigorous andunited, a program for peace as: that

, which was developed for the prosecutionof the'war. As a bosinees mah I pledgemy best endeavors to obtain'a* broadtrade, commercial and industrial recoo-

nrogram, the adoptloa of

France must have upon it the ReCross inspection label and must havireached fiqboken by the method pro"scribed in this order. . .;

"The other directions on the'labelthat have been received here-tfonformwith those made by the Red Cross,and the, war. and postal departmentsin thi* country. They ihuold be: ob-served. •

"When the empty. ,cartons aregiven out on presentation of-tho offlrial/label, a set of directions wllalso be given to_eachi person. Thesedirection* are explicit and If. follow-ed to the letter will assure safe transportatio'n for tha parcel."

.The local chapter's responsibilitybegins when the label Is brought toits office, r Tiren i t will giye-tnit-carton. After ..tha carton has beenfilled and- returned, it will Inspectthe container and see that It Is wrapped correctly. The organisation willthen forward tbe-^package to thetransportation point for shipmentoverseas, the sender paying the postage. . . -' -

The Red Cros*1 has announced that"ft |s following W r Aleparftn«n^ andpott office ^regulations ~in handlingIheJZhfiilmu packagea, _ The rule*moat bs obeyed to the l e t t e r . - No

"rinjement, however trivial, o npermitted, ans) infringement -of

the rules will probably lead to thesacrifice of |he parcel Itself.

The Red Crois also announces thatit h«s no jurisdiction ' concerningptckages'fot the navy depirtment.

These package* w e riot to b» in-spected by ~tbrRed' Cross. All' » •press parcel* for the navy should headdressed to the .Supply Base, Twen-ty-ninth -aticet and Third aveune,South Brooklyn. N . V . "

'baaget system", strict economy in na-_ tional, financing and an accounting to. the peopl»-of war expenditures. As a

I pledge responsiveness' to thenew era wherein tbe rights of all are re-epecteiand conserved. In this way I

^ho'pe Of convey i throng^ service my^appreciation of the confidence that was

" in mo as expressed at the polls.

Ubiary Hours.r morning, 10 to is.

Craaford M. L Chwdi.Rev, Victor A. Wood. Pastor.

Regular "aendoer- next-' Sabbath, -follow*: ~ "*' ^ - — - 7 — — "~~_~i

Morning worship. In <ths* Eastmanstreet church, at 11-00*. in.

WalnutEvening worship,-in 'theavenue church, at 8 p. m.

Epworth League at 7 p. m. -ASUverTesfwiirbe held tomorrow

afternoon at tbe borne of Mrs Chsrtvode.Nelson at EUxabeth. Tboea wishjng. toattend are requested to' t«ie2-46.tHiUey

The. 'annual - convention of • theT^ewJersey, Sunday^chobl Association wjllbe held Tueeday; .WeObeadair *t?LTtwraaay of, next week tn the FirstPresbTterlan Church at Etbahath, to

*%sm- , reaweted, to attend,

Americans, serving with1 ihe* RedCrow. Y. M. C. A., Knlgbto ofColombui, "and other ^inilar- organ!-jstions, Tiperatlog In^conneetlon with

o p «•fork i>f. the> Library for tboing-^ovetaber 1. 1918, , "

A^step forward in makinrf i ; d A v a J l a U e was taken when•w—»--——-w _ r _ _ _ _ . w ^ . _ -vwrrB.www^—•• > w * « . UWipav WWW fa*/*M«l»u»7 * * * •« M * a u i | w*a# pa«

the- military (wee* of ' the United] this year for tbe first time It was openedbtates end tha Allies, and Individuals! t 0 tne-pnUie morning, afternoon and•ervlogJn the armies of th* AllleM. hvening-of every day In Ib* week.

The W*r Trade Board ha* worked 1 AootberpiaFTo Increase.and Improee. . . . *. , . . . , . , . . . . library facllltlee to nadercoflsideratiooout apian which it is possible to

iaakv shlpmenf to" "tbe'abore™ cTaWfof individuals. Ibe plan is In gen-eral the same as tbe plan underwhich we are now ssnding Christmasparcel* to soldier* fa the AmericanExpeditionary Force*. There arethree Important difference*:

Difference 1.—Instead otthe label,v/hich was dlitrlbitted to the soldiers,everyone wishing to send a parcel toIndividual* with, the Red Cross orserving in the armies of the Allies,most make an application in tbefollowing form: "The undersignedb b W t V ^ l i t M forward

The urdar*and 'declares

toName- Address •

a Christmas packaage.signed hereby VwentsIh«tho or she li the "TftBareet livingrelative In the United States of theproposed recipient, and , that theapplicant, in tho calender "year 1918,has not made or will not make »nyother Christmas. shipment to theshove-named consignee^ ' ' -

Signature,"(Note: The Division will not issue these

applications. Each Chapter willwork out a plan; lor itself.)

When this application is presented toa Red Cross Chapter, it should be ap-proved by the inspector selected far thispurpose. This Chapter official should beInstructed to mark the application:

"Approved Chapter, A. R.C."bnd return it with a carton, to theapplicant.

Properly approved applications shouldbe accepted by Red Cross Inspection sta-tlotis In the same way as Christmas' par

routine of inspection Is the same, exceptaa indicated in the following paragraphs,marked, Difference 9 and Dlilereuce U. ~

Applications returned with filled car-tons should be filed by Chapters.

Djfference.3. In. cage.oL parcels lor.

plainly ....dressed, by the sender. Bach parcel must! J l } J W t d J J»!|oJ«yA£la}pJxW9rted.

and address of the sender.Difference 8,":'."li» the case of "parcels

6 the above class of individuals, suffi-cient postage, at 4th class or parcel postrates, must be affixed to carry tbe parcelto its ultimate destination. '

We realize that this plan is not Com-pletely air-tight and tliaf the administra-tion of tt will Involve'difficulties forChapters, .But we feel that this arrange-ment meets a/Very strong demand fromrelatives oi/nien In the allied, armies,lied Cro3S-4nd other workers abroad, andsince it Is possible to arrange some ma-chinery which is acceptable to tho warand post office department anil tjje WarTrade Board, the Red Cross should doalHri its power locarrroirtrthe-plan.-

In particular, we believe that theremay bo difficulty with the administratiouof the "nearest relative in tile UnitedSlates" clause. Chapters should, carryout the spirit of this ruling. When two.people wish to send a parcel to the sameindividual, they should be Urged to co-operate lu the. send ing of a combinedChristmas gift.

• ' • ' ' %

Trinity Episcopal Church. .Rev. Jrt. t>\ Martin, Rector

The services next Sunday will be:Holy Communion a t 8 o'clock.Church school 0.45 a. m.Morning Prayer and service 11-00Evening Prayer and address 8:00The Parish Circle will meet Wed-

nesday, November 13, a t the ForielihOuse '

l y'and~willaffect. -This It to Boake u«e~0f - the hvgeapatalre room ttsaohlldreD'a room andreferenofr- rewm^ Thi» will' require- asmall increase in the working forehandspecial supervision, but it will he emi-nently worth while,"M too'much atten-tion cannot be. given to tha children's,side of library work.

An important feature of the year'sactivity of Ihrf Library has been its participation in tbe sending of books to oursoldiers and sailors; T"rom tbe shelvesot ths Library Juelt -780 volumes were'donated WhiterH)ey;-WBTe carefullyselected, tbo donation was justified, bythe fact that shelf room i*greatly neededfor new books and for the accumulationut reference books and standard worksIt is the intention and nope of tbe Tru»toes,'as is pretty geuerally known, tobuild an annex to tbe Library when theaccumulated funds make 'it advisable.It is for thin purpose that money hasbeen accumulated for years. Part ofthis fund is invested in Liberty Bonds.A now bond for tSOO was purchased dur-ing the recent War Loan Campaign.

Iu addition to the books sent to sol-diers und'sailors by the. Library itself,about 070 volumes were donated by thepeople of the town, who respqned goneruusly.to tho request mado in April for•uch donations. Those books. were at-tractivo iu churocter aud were till, or

yearly all; new books. A dozen youngladies of the town volunteered tfifilr sur-vives in preparing the books for circula-tion. Early in Juno over 1,400 books•were seDt to CumitMorritftouj our Li-brary"and thence they were senfoverseas or distributed to camps in thiscountry/ There in strong evidence thatthey have been appreciated and used. .

From the report of the Librarian, itthat up toOctolier 1, the total

Bnb*n» a farmer ot a email town laKew Hampshire, tell* j>f a-»ew kinditf convernrJon. l a hi* neighborhoodare Jour horses,In active- aervlce.though all over'twenty year* of age.He ha* one himself "hard upon-'twen,ty-foor years.' A termer near by ha*another which Is dose to thirty. Twootters ln-the_vJdnlty,.Ar« around JheJquarter-century mark. A* be says, ItIs only thi a rural community, wherethey cherish the horse almost likes amember'of the family, where one couldexpect to find such a record. Eventhere this demonstration of longevity^Is striking. '/Nevertheless, the oldest hone tha:tbeNomnd ever saw wa* In the sery-ffceoirthe-,New Tork dry surfacerailway system. Tlua horse was, atthe time when'-'the Nomad was ac-quainted with him, actually forty-twoyears old, and he lived two yearslonger. He bad been a .etreet-carhorse on New York pavements, an"d"then was used as « "hill horse," orextra puller, on slopes, and then, whenhe became about thirty years old, wasretired on"a pension, spending most ofbis time In dignified ease In a box-stall ; and he lived on In tSls way,; ap-parently, wlthouf'a' pain or au .ache,until he'was forty-four. All this canhe proved and authenticated from thedocuments.

The Nomad's own old saddle horse,Brownie, lived to be thlrty-odd-^no oneknow exactly how many more yearsthere were than thirty—but thirtywere authenticated, and he was agrown borso when the_£ount began.Brownie looked round and smootheven after thirty, buthWegs were likesticks; end his Interest In life, beyondgross, was slight.—The Nomad InBoston Transcript. ' —•*-

I CRANFORD PHARMACY

Ouse. ,The Brotherhood of St. Andrews

wuTineet'at HiiTEtifHshFriday evoning/

Location

IIOUBV next

Fire Al«rm Boxes7-Sontham)9 -Corner OA _.U-Kira DeptTHwulqnarte™

Ullaiu 8t

«lnot Avenues,and North Aftaoa.

'I-Hurnalde and WUUani BtrMtt( -t'-uroaf Dnlun ATcauoaud i;iw»mont PI.I -Oranc« Avenue and 81ith Strait.

4 3 b U t & d M l Aue and 81it

1 b e r Uutna&dMnooln ATOQIIOB.Jl-CJoraer North Aveana u d Orolkrir BtnwtK 7 q r t w d a d W ) l t 8 t U

ForHousehold Furniture

SACRIFICE. ' _

has boen S3.323, an increase of 8,4U9oyepthe-previom yew. -Tbe Dumtoer-o( uor -rowers bos also iacreaseil; for the yourit was 2.809 Tbore have been added totbe Library in the year, 482 now vol-aines, including about 20O donated bytwelve porsons. Ttie total number ofvolumes has boon decreased quite, a littlet)ocause many volUmos have been weededout altogether as anllp,uatod or uhdusir-uble, while others haile been sblectod for

aud sailors' uso use as stated,-above Care boa been taken to rotaiuall standard works and. books of porma-nont literary value, discarding only du-tilieates-or-unnnceinary books;

In all this work, crodit sbonld begiven'to the careful and valuable super-

ROAD MUCH LIKE CORKSCREW

R a i l w a y In India' M a k e * C o m p l e t eD o u W e k o o p o n . ^ i i

• . - . - , . . .«r™H|^p :of=|M

7-1

• ^

yj- . _ ,

The

| A « we go to press whUUeB 1

flowing annonncing the glad ti

—n that" Germany ha* signed t

istioe terms, details of whi

not yet known. Cable ai

__; - - reports announce, t

r . terms were signed this morning.

JaunBargos Dies At Sea. .

. One of the moat Interesting railroadUneD, the construction Of which' roeanTthe BOlution of difficult engineeringproblems,_W the narrow-gauge railwaywhich winds Its way up the steep

Himalayas to Darjeellng. . ,Darjeellng is a noted health-resort

yision given to the undertaking by MissAlice C. Hale of your Boardr

The statistics collated by tho Librar-ian show a gratifying increase: in tbecirculation of gonoral literature. Nhtur-ally there hus been a genoml dem»ni)for books rotating to tho war ^contaKe of fiction circulated is slightlyless than in tho previous Year.

There have been no cbangos in thepersonnel of tho Board of Trustees dur-ing the year. In tbo Librarian's dopartmout, Miss Ruth Smith haq suc-ceeded Miss Loveland as assistant to theLlbrprinn, Miss'Brodley.

Simultaneously with tbis report theTrtiaijurer'ji repucLfonlho year^uill fio1

presented to tbq_ Board. Luter, in aocordatice with the provisions of theStats Library Law., tbat .report, statingthe exact financial-condition of tho- Li-brary, will bo Hied together with a sum-mary of the Library is. work-with tbeTownshsp Committee, The financialstato Of "the Library is' satisfactory,and there is on hand a growing balancefar future improvement and extension.

I i o B c e more U t t h l l

'summer"".seat of the; Bengal govern-ment It Is 7,400 feet above sea level.Its delightful climate and the magnifi-cent scenery surrounding It, Includinga panorama of the highest peaks ofthe Hlmnlnyhs, innko It one of themost desirable -places In India daringthe hot Benson. ~ctinb of the remark-able features of the mountriln railwayIs the Clinntatftr loop, .probnbly_}lioonly example of Its kind In tho world.Tho tracks, rising ut n-steep grade,make a complete, double loop to renchthe station ot the (mountain top.—Pop-ttlar Bdenco-Monthryr-

— 20 Norman ulil(, , „ . t n „ l o n b<>ard a transport gung to * ranee on October 5th fropneumonia. Word of his death w

Si . ' E.CflVe<1Tin ?"""<"•<! Just one mon

* - ^ . « H l £ ' * C T & ^^K s

rr^M\ i f l8h^^

Juan Bargos was aXranford boihavlng bt*n born-here thtrtr yea-ago. He attcudea the Cranford pb

Me schools and graduated from tlSiih .k01'??1; H e B e c " r e a a positirWith the Union County Trust Co.Elizabeth and worked himself up togood po3itlon. In April he left 1take up training at Camp Colt 1Gettysburg in the tank service. WilJ»e 327th battalion. Company C 1

^embarked for France, Sept. 241^ Prom tho meagre details It Is learnt

that ho contracted pneumonia v.hion board an.<i died just before tlship reached France^ He was a co

- poral In his company.Juan Iiargos was well known hen

During his school dajs and for so\eral years after he was the best ptCher on the local baseball'team. 11

_ pitched for the Canoe Club and fc- the Bankers and Brokers teams. II

was also an expert tennis player anwhen coupled with Oscar Lewis pla>ed In seveial tournaments arounthe county. He was a member of thCranford Canoe Club and the CJjlora Countiy Club. For many yearhe made hi» homo with Mr. and Mrt

—Jamea Caicy, of North avenue, Easi

Chin* and the Bean.- The bean ploys an Important part InChinese domestic economy, ond, ac-cording to East and West NI-WR, oneof the specially desired qualificationsof the Chinese matron throughout UIQnorthern provinces, is her ability toconcoct" from beans—green, blnck andyellow—thoso staple diSrhes that thoChinese know as teu feu ond Hang

a.- - - 'The bean seldom - appears on the

Chinese table whole; it Is not consid-ered as fit for food until It has* boonredtfeed to Its essences and put up Iuthe form ot bean curd, or bonn gelatin,which are for sale' In every roadsidefOOdshop'Of northern China.

art of producing Iheso'nourish-to'jt foods, wlilclf are-" the "ra(>aTe,ftMVpoor, is to" the rural Chinese womnnwhat the making of butter, cheesoand Jam Is Xo/iho Occidental house-wife. , In ths^large cities . bean, ran-nlpnlntloq of thnt sort Is a craft am!^commercial activity. Just as the milk-ing of-jam and butter is lu'tlui largocities of the West; but It .can hnrdlybe called an Industry, since i t Is still

_ _ . . 4fflte>-without 0*ga»lsaiUii£^EliV-"b«mB=of the Board for their constant Interest, I nrast be crushed, soaked, baked, boll-regular attendance at the monthly meet-Jed, strained, and sp ou, before the es-ings, and continuous co-oporation in Nences

inking the Library an asset to Cranford.' IHespectfnlly submitted,

ROBERT D. TOWNSENDPresident of the Board of Trustees of

tha Free Publio Library or Cranford.

.Jn -Learned Boston.A modest ndvtvtltipmpnt ii>

1UMBING a n d HEATING4 t Reasonable P r i c e s / ^

BUCHOLZ&SCHOEDErT1B0 Elm Street,

te l . 488MT

H. S. WOLFFWATCtiMAKER,. J B W E L 6 R

' " " apdORTIClANFreaoh Clock* and Swiss WatchBemirios & Specialty, at ReasonablePrices. Old Lenses Replaced andPrescriptions Filled. All kiwis ofOptical Goods on hand,, r . .. .

Ail Work Guaranteed for

—'—* , 1 One-Year. -

ike'sJStorc, 8 Trust Co. Bldg.J , Sfetsnhone) 801-W " •

^•i\~r-?--' ~-,r- ' - -

paper announces that If yon use a cer-tain brand of pest exterminator "Ante-

-dllavlan ants or any-other householdpeat cease their obrepUUous Invasionof your ^remhies."- Personally we had no Idea that antswere of such undent lineage, bnt p*>

_hapa~there are antediluvian ant* anuothers. Anyway, It would appear thatNoah carried a pair! of an~ts aboard iheArk. and we would lUks_to, know whathe oitf It for. „ '

Z3LSs,lntidLaiLWa'aiallke ants, however,11

It seems a little too much to call themobreptirjons-ln, their jconduct Theyare probably • carrying on'In life ac-cording to their best "lights, and weought to'absolve them of fraudulentIntent or of strategy that Is deliberate-ly based on tbV element of surprise.At least, we can say that the aofam'renot consciously obrepatkmsr-s\

Bnt we are not sure tSat Boston .ad-vertisers are not'acting somewhat OIHVeptltlously w^en Uiey nse words likeobreptUlona and antedilurlan Jn- *«-tlng^foHh th»,merlts ot lnstect powdersand pest exterminator*,—Prorlden.ee

What Every Poet Knows.The man of prosaic mind thinks that

composition' Is a matter of ao arrang-ing words that they shall convey ameaning that Is the sum of their sep-aratn mpnnlnes. Bnt-the-poet-knows-better. He knows that ft Is a mntjerof-BO. ordering them that they, shallsuggest"" verbal!^ 'Inexpressible" mean-ings between ttie Unea;'that tiiey shall,O.ulte liberally, set spirits to dancingfrom sentence to sentence, noshes ofIntellectual electricity to leaping frompage to page, faces t4 peeplug forth atthe reader from behind the letters HKechildren from behind tree-trunks.—Harold Goddard; In Atlantic. / J

&3 well as the cattle on a thousand hillsall contribute their share of

MEATIOR YOU TO EAT.This market handles none but tbe

choice grades of

POULTRY AND M E A T _I .'s prices are based" on tbe many

sales and small profit principle. Itwants your regular trade- and we'L'get it if you will only give ,ua a t*ial.The quality of the meats and!the moder-ate prices are what we rely pu to buildbusiness.

F'sh and Clams every Fridaytelephones 260,281. »

I.

Affairs.- •-=•—The Townsbiru. Committee met las

night for roufine business, Mayor_lJj»being the only-absentee. -Committeeman Roach was chairman pro tern. Therwas not very much business however,

, Notice !n~ Attachment.Metft W Poraella vs. Munoel- Mqnol. In

Bttaohment.Notice I* hereby given that « writ of attach-

ment tvaa iaaned out of Ilia Uiroalt Court of theCounty ot Union on the 22nd dajr ot M«rtih,1S18, aKauut the rights and oredlta, morejiaud effeota. goods and chattels Unds and tene-ments of Manuel Monox, an abaent debtor, atthe rait or Meta W. Porcella, for the mm of13,600, and lawfnl Interest, returnable on the16th daj of April, 1818, and the same baa beenserved and waa dulj returned on the Ztthdajof March, 1018, by the Sheriff of Union Count/.

Dated tiept. 1S>. 1918.WIUiUM B. MABTTO,

Clerk.BCBKILCT O. Avvml,x— - — - —

Attorney.

MARTIN SCHAFER

lyiaipjrj and Contractor''. CRMFOII0, H.j. /,

-JUUmnie* FnmUhedoaUlelunrof-work

Telephone 1B8JResidence: 76 Burnslde Avanus

negotiations were under way to securfrom tbe Ordinance Department repair

"to KlizaptK,"'Orangw-arid"Columbliavenues —the route used in truckinjmunitions "to s>nd from the AmericaiCan Co.'a plant at Kenilworth. Mr

_ Collins reported fair prospect of snecesj''and that representatives of the depart

ment bad admitted the Justness, of thiproposition. , . ,I Mr. Roach for tbe Fire Commits

reported the resignation of driver HarrPetorson and tbo appointment q'f SamueCobb to tba vacancy.; Approved..

A communication from tbo State Bureaii" of Municipal Accounts statea1

"BBVeral changes in procedure wgnrdinjTownship Finance under recent lawsalso .that a member of the TownshipCommittoo may no longer serve Oftreasurnrof tho township, ibis boebm-ing offoctive January 1./ A , V. Hart by letter complained ol

• condition of gutter of Centrujl avenue;referred-to Engineer and Road Com-mittee. Mrs. Hibaon made affidavit ofnon-ownership of dog and tux for dogsaid to be owned by her was remitted,Columbia avenue residents BsWeditor afire hydrant;, granted on recommenda-tion of Fire Committee. '•'•'••»

Committeeman Rink reported.trees ipsidewalk Una of Retford avenue" andSouth avenue. 'Cpinmitteo directed toinvestigate with power'to order removal

CflMILLO MASSA.Genera I Contractor.

nrtfltfgr,' - ~: ConfifetoCellars Excavated,

Sewers, Sidewalks, . Etc.

i_ CRANFORD N,J.P. O,BOI53.

Telephone 157-J.

• It IOUnU.Uimn.H!<iH!.IS!i—•SU-ZXSM^ZZZ.

reported, the^iutchase of a Town Flag.8-: 12,*ajLa' cost of"|20. Approved:" . 4]Fue proposition "that' tho Township

T^n ft snow plow after winter stormscame up again for discussion and wasaga(n laid Oft tbo shelf, for careful look-ing into the matter disclosed no wayby which the benefit could bo madegeneral or even complete as a snow

-Driest Place on EWh. .The city of Payta, In Peru. U the

driest place onv earth. It 1B withinfive degrees ot*the equator, and the In-babltants.Bee a shower on tho average-of about once In two years. Frequent-ljr.-slx or eight years elapse betweenrainfalls, but <vhea a shower doesCftme, It I&sta usually frbm"J2 to 20hoyrs. Strange as It may seenj, thereare .seven ^pectes ol annual 'plantswhich exist In, thlsjplace, and thejja-tlves raise a kind et cotton with extra-long roots, which j o down far Jntp~the— ~ J 4htaln,mofarore from the beel

Jr' drled-up river which once.

great for Craaford to stand.Engineer' Moshe,r, having completed

his work with the Nitrates Corporationsooner loan expected.' due to Govern-mfent taking airect,,control, is back onthe JQb""09 Township Engineer. TbeTownship CommitteeTHloptedi a vote of

Abanks to Messrs. Elmer L. iUrare^ndAlfred H. Miller for' thett-»prk and-aggiBtfoeerdaripfi Mr. M.osher's^bsenee,

Registered Architect

8 South, Avenu* VlmttCtmtifotd f*,J.

M. F. Wheeler?_ _ » . .

~ TelephoilB-l-gO-J '

Wholesale ''_ .Retail

-AlbirfaTnHtrbi ig^'or^)-^ ^yeirs.-died at Bellevue-Hospital, .Sun-day. He leaves a. wife who resides-onCranfora aveO"^ „,

' Last Saturday morning thfl-CranforaHigh School eleven defeatefftngry in

J7abbreviatea -contest-^bich lasted«trforty:nve minnles. Ctanfori

t-choroW to wia bythe

T h e prtre W l ^In the Fonrth ^iberty

Tel. 8279. Lady in attendano'

MannfMtolWototlerr

A D d < ! 6% '-Grant Houab.e. mention,ge^y, otn •vi»ui' Cook Vir*

Eliiabeth B r ^ ' _ . . ^ Norton, Clave-

Page 5: Poultry Supplies - DigiFind-It#- I J f&r. r - ;«-..,-¥ XXI NO. 37 CRANFORD. NT. J. THDR8DAY., 1918.»-1ft-THREE CENTS Change in Banking Hours. On and after November 1st bank

— JJL

• i ' - y ^ . . . * >\ -

anaonncing the glad tid-|J»ga that" Germany has signed the

—listioe terms, details of whiohnot yet known. CaWe and

_telegraph reports announce, thetirms w e r e signed this morning.

JaimBargos Dies At Sea. .

^ \ ? n b o a r d a transport golto France on October 5th from

.pneumonia. Word of bis death was

e Is survived by his wif«who was Uia. Beatrice Sherman o?

vv.?,--v ,-'%•-

timaDA^ NbtftMBER 7 1918 ". ' -«>. -~ - <;i

s drlv. for the United WwWorkera fond startaVn the eleventhof Novembe d ill lof November and wllUlast • week.In thla Una $170,000,000 • «ill beraised throughout the country ior-thr— " ~ " war funds. Each of thecombinedreeogniwd war reliefs will reeeifeanamount in proportion to tht atee Ofiti organisation and facilities fordoing relief work on "the ether aide.The figures have been determined by•he United Sta>' -

The majoriiare familiarwork that ths

arnmeatof Cranford people

with the wonderfulallied war organisa-

J

T -* l»*-«"> IQunft-coiplebeen married a short while

Juafi Barkos was aXranford boy,thaving bwn bom-here thit

Hteh Hrf . a n d e q u a t e d from theSin, ih ??K. H e B e c" r e d a PositionWith the Union County Trust Co. InElizabeth and worked himself up to agood po3ltlon. In April he left totake up training at Camp Colt atGettysburg In the tank seirlce. With

_ Jje 327th battalion. Company C, heembarked for France, Sept. 24thProm tho meagre details it is learnedthatOho contracted pneumonia, whileon board and died just before theship reached Frances He was a cor-poral In his company." ;*

Juan Iiafgos was well known here.During hi& school,days and for Bev-eral; years after he was the best pit-cher on the local baseball -team. He

_ pitched tor the' Canoe Club and forthe Bankers and Brokers teaniSi Hewas also an «>xpert tennis player-andwhen coupled wit1!! Oscar Lewis' plaF"ed In several tournaments- aroundthe.county. Me was a member of theCranford Canoe "Club and the .ElJjlpra Country Club. For many yearshe made hi» home with Mr. and Mrs,

-"Jamea-Oarey.-of North avenue, Eastr

• ^ A f f a i r s . • = -The_ Townsbiiu Committee met last

night for roufine business, Maynrjlaea.being :the only-absentee. -Committeeman Roach was chairmanpro tem. Therewas not very much business however,

negotiations were under way to securefrom tbe Ordinance Department repairs

"to Elizatwtltr"'Orangsr" and"Colunibfaavenues —the route used in trackingmunitions "to and from the AmericanCan Co.'a plant at Kenilwortb. MrCollins reported fair prospect of success'and tbat representatives of tho depart-ment bad admitted the Justness, of theproposition.

Mr- Roach for tbe Fire Committee

tiong are doing for uur American menst tha front. A good many of ourCranford townspeople are /workingoithtfae Y. M. C. A., KnlgbU o:C(,lambus. , Salvation Army and theother orgtnizationOand " tlje workthat thase Cranford people are doingia eeaesd-oaly.K^impeFtanee -to whstha fighting men are doing on thebattle front.

It lf_wroffK_tg_Msnm* that withthe war approsching ita eloae thenecessity fo»-raising funds ia notgreat. Now Is the time when moneyis needed more than ever to safe-guard and protect |the enlisted menduring the period, of demobilisationArmy discipline relates In timea ofp;rca and in the wild delirium oftriumph following the allied victoryourjnen will need help, jtdvice andprotection more than ever before.Wo,.sent them over, il Is up to u« toget them safely back.

The Dnited War Workers fund isentitled to tbe generoui support ofevery. man. woman and child whowould sea our sailors and soldiersprotected and mada happy. RemembtTr there is no ottur chanel throughwblebrwe-can g i v e : — l h « n ~ l i "noother authorized agency to carry pnthifl work". ' - i '' • ..

Cranford,' us usual, Is well . apdefficiently organized under (the" ableleadership of Mr. Charles B. Coady,who will.answer^ for rCranJo^d.toanother Cranford townsman, Mr, F.N. Ei Close,' the county chairman._/With" the system and Organizationplana worked out by Mr. Luther L.Blake, for previous drives. It ishoped that Cranfbrd'a quota of

be doubled and possibly trebled, in

reported the resignation of driver HarryPetorson and tbo appointment q'f SamuelCobb to the vacancy.; Approved..

A communication from tbo State Bar •eau" of Municipal Accounts "stated"

—several changes in procoduro regardingTownship Finance under recent laws;also .that a member of the TownshipCommitloo may no longer serve astreasurer of tho township, Ibis Jiecbin-ing offoctive January 1.

A. V. Hart by letter complained of- *Zcondition of gutter of Centrul^avenue;referred to Engineer and Road Com-mittee. Mrs. Hibson made affidavit ofnon-ownership of dog and tax for dogsaid to be owned by her was remitted.

record tabulated on.the sign board atthe Cranford station. '•{'

The members of tha ExecutiveCommittee are: Ohales B. Cua^y,chairmarrrrepresenting -th«-Y—M;rCrA.; W. W. Buckley, vice-chairman;Luther L. Blake,—-subscrl ption -com-mittee; Mrs, George H. Bates, rep-resenting the Y. W. C. A. and Vic-tory boys and girls;, Frank Sholes;representing tho Salvation Army;Joseph Peters, representing tha WarCsmp Community ;_;._A,;MV Shapiro,represneting the Jewish War Relief;Wm. P. Nagle, chairman. IndustrialWorkers Campaign; John Doyle, rep-

Colombia avenue rosidedtsBsWeditor afire hydrant;, granted on recommenda-tion of Fire Committee. „

Committeeman Rink reported-trees insidewalk Una of Retford avenue" andSontb avenue.. •Committee directed toInvestigate with power'to order removal

^i^MRLk*lso

.jent taking direct,,control, » back ontbo JQb""as Township Enfrineer. TheTownship Cam mitteV adopted a vote of

'thanks fo Messrs. Elmer L. MoorlandAlfred H. Miller for' thettJ*rk and

-assBttoeftttoring Mr. M.osber's Absence,

'" AlbeTfArniJtroog (colored),-aged 42veifs "died at Bellevue Hospital, .Sun-day. He leaves a Wife who resides onCranford aveO"8

La,t Saturday morning tbj, CranfordHub School elewn defeadS Pmpy in

J abbreviatefl contest which lastedtrforty live m.nules Cranford

hd to win by tho

resenting the Knights of Columbus;Georgti G. Moqn. Mrs. John Low,chajfrrmn, Women's Committee; P.B-Jtyan; publicity committee.

1 '•*%"• u - r " ' } _ • • • _ - ' •"•• ' ' '-.

7 : ^ . ' ; . r ' p i e d v . . ;•;_:.„.:;:•.MRS. MIRANDA J. MIX.

Mrs. Miranda J. Mix, widow of JamesC. Mix, and mother of the late RobertJ, Mix and Miss Lucy S. Mix, of Cran-ford, died Sonday morning, at* 9.80o'clock, at her residence, "il Springfieldavenue, after an illness or several weeks.Mrs. Mix was born in Terry villa,Conn., October 28,1829, and with theexception of a few years, she had beeni ;r«ldejSOiXlCxMloM.I/or: "seBnleeSyears,. She .was tbo oldest member ofthe Presbyterian church. Seven weeksago she fell lu her home and since thattime Was' confined to her bed.. Therecent .death of her sod hUatened herend. She resided with her daughter.Miss Lucy S. Mix; . •;.: ,-'•• /

Funeral services were held "Mondayevening, Rev,- G. F. Greene, pastor-of

reported, the "purchase .of a Town Flag.8-:l?,*ftta' coat off20. Approved:" .»

e proposition "that the Townshipn a snow plow after winter storms

came op again for discussion and wasaga(n laid Oft tbo shelf, for careful look:ing into the'matter disclosed no wayby which the benefit could bo madegeneral or even complete as a snowTemovai~scu6na©/;^;'*iKiD^i^great for CraBford ib stand.

Engineer' Moshe,r, having completedhis work with the Nitrates Corporation JBMA tf ART KYTE.sooner than expected,'due to Govern _ A t ^ h o m 9 | . j 2 Central avenue,

ville, Conn., for interment.-

Wednesday evening; at '8.80, Irma BartKyte. wife of Robert L.' Kjrte, andyoungest daughter of Alfred.^ and thelate Meljie Brokaw Harfc^Serviees, atFairview cemetery. otice' in-BHtaUith Journal and, Nej

papers.;

Bishop Confirms CbSs. iRight Reverend Bishop Paul Mat-sw^. of Trenton, paid bis annual visit

to Trinity Episcopal Church at-the 11o'clock service Sunday inornlng, whenhe confirmed a class of eleven personapresented for the, sacred rite by Rev..Kenneth Martin, rector of tbe church.Jthose confirmed were: Sergeant Barotd.McGrath, WjUliam Klein, Roawelt Cu-sbing. Marston Miller, Ralph Hammer;Miss Caroline Patterson, Mies PaulineMoody, Mias Nellie.Holt. Miss Elsie Za-bell, Miss Florence Durling andKatberene Norton, v ^

Bisbop,Mattbe'ws pTeicbed, an ablesermon from the-topic. •"A' New Heavenaod^JJew Earth." Tbe sermon per-tained to the war and the reconstructionperiod to follow. Bishop MattbewaTalso

' J t d f l d f

to the chnrtjh by tba Sunday schoolan4Trd&pNo. 3of tbeBoySooota. ^— "

* — . *~.i

^ c * l r a d > a P B p l n t » r i U o 8 r » b

g M #aad Btrohta U d i t h a t noMl ptur*Utlaa aM tbe r«)« aM

oveVtbaata|«aad pirabaU* AM, O S » -l i a by tJ>a Peajnaerata.ctijnaalagaiMa by tJ>a Pjnaerata.

tt would see* h W w . tbattb*««fKib-llcau have wo> both Uw 3emto aadH fworking margin*

The vote in Qranford, conaideriBf tbegreat number away ia ttofvka, u 4 sick.was a vary good paroentataraod Is* Re-publicans held their own here. Therewas no local Democratic^ ticket. B4w.Beadle being1 tbe .only Democratic candidato and he was unopposed for Justiceof the Peace, Interest centered entire-ly on the Senate and Congress fight andhere Governor Bdg»mBaw8smtor*'Ssbheld their own welL Mr. Clement,Democratic nominee for Congress, bad a

where for yeara be was principal of theschools.

Tbe result by OUtricfa:U; 8, Senator (full term)

Id iJd 8d 4d TotEdge. U 188 121 107 1B0 B78LaMontB, D~... 08 47 48 - 87 16VDay, P! . . . . . ' . ; 0 8 M 0 8Wallaoe^S, T . ' 0 4 I 0Keilly.S....rrr:T'10" 6 1 U ,80

Edge's plorality, 40* -U. & Senator (short term)

Balrd.R.. . . . . . 188 Ilii 158 187 688Hennessey. DWT4», M OB-60 810Day, P . . . . . . . . 1 ,4 0 0 11Reilly, 8 . . . . . . 10 0 0 4 80

Batrd's plurality, 828Congress UeLyerm) • ' . . - • '

Ackerman.lt., 118 109 . 1B9 148 034Clement, D.viv-; « 5 ~ « 8 58 -44 28&Clarke, N . . : . . . 1 4 8 1 0^urber .S . . ; . . 12 . 7 3 8 28

Ackermao'a plurality, SOU , : -.Congress (abort term)...._, „ <•-•' '.

Birch. R 11S0 111 1B2 145 828Clement, D . . . . 62 60 08 .44 224

urber.S | i 0 . 2 4- 2tt'Birch's plurality 804Members of Assembly

dears, windows of their cabins wereblown away,' lots of damage' done. It'ssucb an old story now, I hope the Censorwill not mind my writing; about It, Intbe fallowing May the same Zeppelincame over but she never went back. Agunner on one of pur battle ships pat aew shells into her and we saw her cometown about three miles from our Camp.

"We felt Hiewld the first winter verymuch. Our Camp, was about five milesronrtus town. We were a.big Gtneral

Hospital of over 2000 l»eds, all In tBnt«,of course. I loved the life and thoughat times the workWBJ dreadful I managedall right. I kept tit all the time though

it of our SttJI got malaria and* somelysentery<! I was one of four out of ourlumber, 7a, who dldn^t

gfPlerson, R:.. . .

Soneor, D . : . . .Casserjy, ! ) . „ .Mclntosb. D,.':

nglsh. 8 . . . . . .Jrelsford. 8.A

180.,42'804»1818

110444848"%810

178S38281

2

I54-.-.:600tt4 005154 601.852988a8

15414515824

84 n

A. __2,...:J...M>L

184884

80818420

Walsh, 8 T.Lionel, 8. T . .Wakoham, 3 .

Register - .'-.- ,Bauer, I t . . . . . . 148" 128 • 188McCann, D . . . . 118 37 27Kop, S U 10 1

__Jauer"s .plurality, 474 - . . '••Coroner . • \ - ,anDoren, R . . 150 181 184 165-880Township Committee (full teritf —

Everett, I i . . . . 170 101 104 170 086Idrieb, R . . . . 100 • 141 184 102 047Township. Committee (short term) .

tolfins, R . . . . : ( 169 -148 100 -1§8- BBS.AssouorJ • ' •:'". '--wackhamor, R 102 188 102 172 07UCol lector-":— "-:'t --•= -~':'- • v ; "r; r ••-•-

Houghton .R 172^-lBiL 19O_1JJ—085JusticesofthaPeace \'iukrR „ . 157 128 1B1ieadle, D . .

Constable<lrkman, It. v 182

Liquor QuestionDry,* . 68Wet 107

116 103; 146100122

602488

142 m 108 030

Wet majority, 10

61

m10979

10161

340859

Cranfoni Men's Club.The peremptory closing of all public

ntertainmento and social activities wasmatter of big disappointment to the

members of tbe .'Cranford Men's Cltib,for In accordance with the reRulationa,a postponement of the October meetingwas necessary.- \ '• •/'.. • ' :. •

Now that'the l»ni« lifted the offlcersf tbe club have awwged to resnise the0nlhlyffi66ilngs,-"the second "or-ihe

ew season being scheduled for Monday,""ovember the eleventh, at tbe home orMr. James E. Warner, Walnut avenue.

A s a means of redeeming themselvesn account of tbe absence of an onter-inment committeo under, tbe tempo-

rary direction of the new impressarioBilly Troeber, have secured a big featureinibe joint musical stars the De LuxeTrio,heaaaTby JblinO'BTTentbepoput

a r s o n g 1 ' w r i t e r . ; - • ' - '* •• • ••-'—" '•^••' — ••'•••" -- •• -

These artists are capable of produolngwhe!ft,.,evenlng'a entertainment, anil

ire sure of going "over the top" with ai l g ' s o r e a m . * ' ' • • ' . - • _ • . j .< ' . • 7

^ /The result of Tuesday's election on

tbe *:Wet" or "Dry" proposition was infator OHICBUBB iu Oranfofd, Not. very

uch however, the'margin being but 1?otes. It is not likely; tba soldier voteet to coiWtn will change tbe results

should be. noted,that tbe manner of•tting the question, tbe exact form be-g provided by law, resulted In^ con-

iderable nffmber of voles against licensely people who thought "Yea" was aote in ita favor. A large psreentage of

the "voters negIecUd_to regljter^beirpreference either 'way^mucb to the dis-ftnst of .advocates on both the ."dry" and

Summit and North Plainfleld alsarated wet and tbe Democratic victory

in Essex County appears to be directlycaused by the question, all the, defeatedBepubtican.candidates being" pledged toNational probibit'on./ " ,-

This week a memberof citizens" havebeenrtway cleaning tbe river bottom and-faanlu adjacent to their properties^ al-thoagbTconaideritble volunteer work wasode by. outsiders. |The gites »U1 re-

BUin open all thUwe«k. i

BttrWsflrattWlitUr froea Mra. B>

r.^ar. %, jrorneriyjiiN *•**d»nt lo her sister, Mta Bella JontanT

~ ^Dahlia. IrtUw_"' - - ' October*, 141

"Afterdologa year's botteearvle*volooleered for active and JS Kid .leftwith tbe Staff of * ( W r a l Hospital forSeJoolca. At that tnwr thijigevery unsettled to Greece.'so they, the•KtheVitiea,-oeinl.-w«i|d not )et os tend.Eveatually we did. in tho followingJanuary. In the meantime we workedon Hospital Ships between Qallipoll,Mall* and Egypt -Lapent about threeweeks in Egypt, in Alexandria,worked in Hospitals there It was onlytemporary while we were waiting orders

"Tbe first night We spont in the Bar-,{tor at Salonica a Zeppelin came overand dropped some bombs quite near our

neptton,' wa»o*fIT I assure you we didn't4Dfo4k Some

of our sisters, (these nurses are called

tho

"Tbe suminor was dreadful and exceptpeople who have lived there ' no one;ould havo any Idea of what our boys

ent through out there and bow splen-lid tliey were. If I started I could writeor u*tiruf)bu( the tlle«, ilb»" duat, theihortsge of water and tbe longing for ajatb and somothing. nice to drink, tiot

bit of sha'de.— ^ . . J . , .- :•

"I was made a charge mister In 1014,oon after I joined up, BO 1 was' reapon-

XK;all:<in a]E;ffwn'Jin.e; of^iatttaiiiio:he medical ottlcor and matron and tohe O. C. Colonel, I had a staff nurse,Itfo or two V. A. & Js (Nurjo'S aid) and> couple of orderlies. We didn't haveny V. AvD's. the Brat summorandl'veftevu longed for thorn. I had 110 patientsnd I need honllytoll you it all meantiard work, real hard work. Of coursoi tiaieajwo had purJllacktijuas, _ |u (beInter tbe-fever WBS much leas."I was happy all the time though andve'd tbo boys. They real(y. 'are spleii-

lid', no gockl to-,0110 another1, so good tois always.. . • - . ' . j ' .''..' • '• •

"Greocp, of course, or at least Mace-ouiu, tbo part wbore wo woro, Is not

November 88tb, will be held in'reebyterian Cburcb. iDr. Greene was elected President or

tbe Board of Directors of the Board ofMinisterial Relief and Suatentatlon ofthe Presbyterian Clmroh. U. S. A , at aspecial mooting of the Board in 1'lilladelpnia, held October 31st. Tbje Board,which providoe penaiona for retiredminister*, now baa Invested fund)amounting ^ttver six rnlllfon dollars.

Tbo Cranford High School olsvon wa«;lvon a big surprlao by tbo Roaolle teum

*day afternoon iu a county footballgame at Cranfonl. Although a lino upof completely green players, the Itoaellooohorts proved to have profited by thecoaching of Walter Short, who .turnedout championship ton Ins at Ruhway andButt in. Cranfohl suffering dofeat at 14too

luges for tho boys to'go to when thpycame out of tho trenches. No girl* totalk too. Nothing', oxedpt mado roadsand railways, so that wboii tboy camedown to us sick, some ot them, lots ofthem, bod not spoken to a .woman forIS months. .. ' /'

"Yon didn't get many Society-womenout there lean tell you .running Can-teens, Picture Shows or Concert Partiesfor tub dear boys,. Salonica was -Whatthey call a "dud sbWr>'in everybody'seyes, who-knew notbioK about It. Butto, tbo people who knew and who work-ea amongst tba men it wasn't a dudsnow. Unless O) man gels battered* to.>iedea some peopla think there la noredit due to him iit all. But I th|iikJiuOW, IM muelirWorsotohttvO allJhQ

life ac a energy, and all the joy 6f beingalive sucked ouV.bf one by that wretchedmdlaria and other f overs, I use to got

angry wnen I came home and peopleised toTsiy, "Obf (Salonica. but surelOlbing ever.bappons out tbert."| • ."nlIij AKebr*uaVy" bsul Jtperbeginniog ofircbi:1917,«squad>e,n Of Hun aero-

ilanei' cams,.over on two separate

ofburpatrentskill&d, orderlies; kilsisters killed and Wounded. After

the second raid tbe authorities said woAouldiiia** to move' so we did and'

ighty itlkd I was. W5» moved" down,leitrer to the town.of Saloniipa, right onbe sea front. It was a lovely place andot nearly so hot and full of mosquitoes;

as our other Camp bad been up on thel t t l u . ' , - ' : . ' . • • • . , ' " . • ' • • : > — • " ':• . • • • . ' • ; '. • „ • ' .

"Thank goodness they have done greatwork the last few weeks.. The new*, isimply splendid and now we have alltoe splendid American boys. ,

"Now about myself personally there Isot much to tell. I cams fapme lo May,

'resigned from tbe Naming Service. Myusband.came borne in June, we were

married pn tbe 25tb of tbat month. Hehad o'ply three weeks leave so It was all

jrj when Wfr firstwent to Salonica, be was attached to<rarHospital but later on went up\hB lineand hul been there all tbe ^mfi^sinceHe isa£a=ter~s>logistand is in^hargeof "a Mobile-La'Doratory attached to oneof the Clearing Stations ifc the front".He joined upon tbe v«r~r outbreak of1

-War and worked in Flanders before go-\g to Salonica. He is , quit*- a clever4o,"tbolsay it myself wbosbouWn't."

Be is An "M. D. and-a Fellow of the Roy-al College of Physicians of-LondobjMdbad been, until tbe War broke out,- a ,tachfld to aLondonHospttaL Ukttfuwt

' 7 "*••"• '-L

1

D<kj)|imifkfadapwlthWara*d longl««foriltobaover. I too wish II WM

sr, Igot'so Und of w»t having t3o«>thing to do «t bom* I tmmt up, hereaoool three weeks ago *nd have started• t o a m of Motor Driving. I'm gettingOB mnumUat it and tike 11. In theSpring I shall take op Gardening. It'ssonic* alter beta* tied for to long to befreetoAjMllilM.

"Did they teU yoa from home, or sendyon tbe paper, that 1 bad been mention-ed in DUpatcbea from Salonica andAwarded the Royal Red Cross by HisMajesty the King? I've not been decorated yet. but nay be called to Londonany time, I'm very plaaaed, prou4 aboutIt, though moat people prefer to scoff athonor's these times." »

' Presbyterian ChurchRev. Q. P. Greene. .._,_. _^_

Sunday services, II a. m. and 8 p, m.Tturpaftor will preach' at' both "SOT*

ylcea next Sunday. Tbe public la' in-Ited.

ALL KINDS J '

STOVES and HEATERSA5H SIFTERS

ASH CANS

COAL HODS

Also Axes, Sows, RoofingPfdnt, Etc.

NOW ON SALE AT

PIKE'SHardware Store

8 Trust Building. Tel. 801W.

' ?

Gustav A. NeumannHASON

WANTGD-Positlon a general manibout bouse, or us wntcbmun iu factory,l t i Riilsbman. 11 GrovoSt

FOR RENl'-Tw" largo rooms forIght houmkoaptng. 114 Ceiitonnlal Avo~"

ESTIMATES GIVENFlIlST-CLASS WUIIK OfJAIUNTBf.O

Tel. 6.V-W, Wastlluhf

Residence, II West Willow Ave.QARWOOD

" JOHN T. KANANE, :Real M a l e and InsuranceChoice Huuaea and Store for !

(1UMMI8HI0NUR OP DEEDS

—-orrios—>

fib lKBNILWORTH, N J.

/

Avoid Telephoning- y~Buring tRe Epidemic

The prevalence of SPAtfrSH INFLUENZAamong our operating forces, makes it necessary thatwe continue our appeal — DON'T MAKE UN-NECESSARY TELEPHONE CALLS.

• . . ' . ' I 'I The situation still remains very serious, and in cer-

tain sections it is necessary" for us to ask calling partiesif their calls are necessary before connections are made.

DURING T H E EPIDEMIC will you pleaseconfine your telephoning to indispensible^ calling,such as - - ' •

* I. Calls occasioned by fire, lawlessness, accident,death, or serious illness. °~ ,

2., Calls to and from_hospitals, doctors, drug-gists, etc.

3. Calls necessitated by the public interest andwelfare or by Government business and

, war work.

- -'— -4. ' Commercial calls of vital importance.

MAKE ONLY^CALLS THAT CANNOTBE AVOIDED. ^

I^J-J- «.«J laiii^t

VIEW YORK TELEPHONE CO.

FREE,'-- ON

istian Science. w r BY :

MRS. ELLA W. HOAO^ C. S. D.

f

Mamber of thi Bo»rdoi Lcdurcahip of the Mother Church, The Flnt Churcb—y y of CirUt, Scientist,.!!! Boatoo^ Mask _:

Mon(lay Evening, Nov. Il, 8:15 o'clockin the CHURCH EDIFICE

SPRINGFffiUC* A V E I , OOI^ WffiN^ST, CRANFORD, N . J .

—— •_ 71ie~Public-is - Cordially—InvitecL——• *1 •• _ _ r *

• v—7-

^

V-

\If

j-£

r-_ *.<

r i r l .

_ '~JSu-^. ^ "--r - ^-^a^^^Li^aMi

£t*X* » • ' [ • •

Page 6: Poultry Supplies - DigiFind-It#- I J f&r. r - ;«-..,-¥ XXI NO. 37 CRANFORD. NT. J. THDR8DAY., 1918.»-1ft-THREE CENTS Change in Banking Hours. On and after November 1st bank

« >, IK> Iff- LONG COAT

Outer Garment Serves Well Over~ Sheer Afternoon Frocks.

Knee Length.and longer la the Rultr\ Followed by Many of the Uad-"| * ' Ing Designers. '

- Many of the- high-grade, expensive•nits, now being shown for wlntetfbare coats that are so long* that theytuay, If desired, serve as separatedressy-coats- >-«ver -sheer -afternoon,frocks, especially if the, color of suit«nd dcess blend satisfactorily. Knee"length and longer Is the , role fol-lowed by many of the suit ^designers•jvho are regarded as style authorities.t>? course, these very long conti arewed. only with the salts ^mads,. ofhandsome rich* materials. 8uU*~forgeneral.nnd sports wear are equipped

h coats^thaf average 84 to "

The suit shown in the sketch, is anexample of the type that wilt bo of-fered in velvet, velveteen and manySt the handsomo, soft pile fabrics.Fur trimming is featured. Touchesof handsome, heavy, embroidery addto the beauty of the garment.

Satin suits are playing, an Impor-tant role In the showing of wintermodels. Somo of these are made otregular, heavyweight satin; but afabric thaUIs wool on one sjda.andsnUs-onrtbe'otner-ta being very a w n

MM

\ky

HP

Ultra Long Suit Coat for Winter.

featured, tho wool side bolng oftenused, as a trimming for the garment

, flint IsJ a suit of tho fabric may havethe satin Side -turned out, and bands'of the other side trim the skirt andbe used for cliffs, and-collar. HeavyBilk «ep'turpro also much used^n.thedevelopment of suits. /*- An Interesting suit of broadcloth re-cently seen had tho coat/skirt round-ed at the back ( l t iWis fu.il' kneelength) and trimmed with- severalrows of two-lnch-witlo velvet ribbonIn contrasting color; Tho front of the

, coa^.was.,of^the«utawayv type. „ .'_, Detachable fur cuffs,' collars thatmay be snapped, fastehed down to

* form shawl collars or revers or Wrap-arounO the throat scarf style, de-

,tacbahle vests and 'panels that foldup to toTbKmuffs are special salt fea-tures.

The straight silhouette Is the pee-vailing one. ~

Popular .Shades for Blonde* and Bru-'nettes of Any Type—Supply Is

rfi»>. Adequate for AIL

| J/U. more -women had a" finer apprcct-' atlon of the part that color plays in. leaking "them attractive or -unattrac-tive, asd In affecting their feelings,

W/-In the. list of the popular shades so-"called, decltires'n fashion writer. Take

lor example* -the craie for tango colorr- that possessed the feminine world not* so very Hong ago, From Illy white

tlonde to florid brunette everybody,or. nearly everybody, managed to In-

* traduce tango somewhere on her per-- son. The result? Well, that Is best. judged now that the craxe Is over.

. However, there /is still plenty of

btvwn lv 'being"" prophesied.'I Now there Wfy as, many shades arid,--'hues and tints ot brown as there are-; ladles to -wear them. But somebody

[ -^wnlspers that the red browns nre' • '- -•••TdljCto be the, thing.- Which 'means

t'.qll types and ages /of women" , the, >bIondy -faioTui&,of tender

sallow woman well -pasti i s going to .go ^ni for j-

"Ijcnt that she has1

r & sponsor. _ ,' . Lirjtjpnd .nll ages of,yotn-

• brown.^to M*uitrwho Is

: EbO'inay-iinve

T r t t faitowle^wnichoose from the, green brown* rad-tUftbronzes, ^.Tnen.th* lovely reOfceftaswho ie«m to thlpfc that they-hav« •sjummoIrM , t t* color wiiUoofcrtndrLest, In to* deeper, *r4ch, dark tones- ofMown. B f h F l U t b y A r equite rare, of weasel?** may - attemptthe tnn-and-yellow brown* -Tne'be-,Mrlxt-*nd-faetweea girl who.ta nettberquite blonde nor.decidedly bnmettewllj-flod-toe-goloeo taJ

h h ij d t o g o l o e o tamtMJtsfcor

perhaps, those, .with a tocgeftloa ofpink lavtb^r.mnke-np.1 $he brunettewhd, hain't Mfljcient colo» to -watnutther ;betogyeBlled vrr1d-4s privileged to;w«ar any.shad* of, brovrtf. She. cango In for,red browns to her,heart'scontent^ AS may also the true bnj-"hette with ol|ve sltUi and'pjnk cheeks.He ro1 flid IB t ill

| U a d p j k cheeks.Her raoro1 florid IBs ter will appear toadvantage In the* golden brown*.

Finished With Frln«» Bad,"~r*t" nutgvd 'Ttist It Csil^ "—Off entirely.

The narrow shoulder etrpe far seetron many of the newest and smartestwraps. It hangs only from the, back,however, and does not come over theshoulders.

Tho shawl scarf, •which can bethrown over one shoulder, is also aneW feature: It Is finished with afringe and Is so arranged that It canbe left off entirely. ' '''Some^of these "heavy ^eiounfduretyn wraps hate' beaufiful^ein-broldory In heavy 'woolen threads ofcontrasting] color. 1W» U cot unplea*-'frig,' B« sdeh trimming U i»«w and an-usual/enough -to b« welcome for Itsnovelty. For instance, a dark browncoat,'of military cut shows trailingHpraJ* of dowers, done In this heavywool" and outlined with black threads,tovgjve them tone.' For the most.partthe^bwett wrap* are made for serviceand uHlltyand have nothing frivolousabout them.

ad, , ^ » W j ;Ilgbtful brocAdoa. and velvets. Uhlesehave claimed all ot the.l^illsb, perish-

bt beautiful notions that the sternwhiter <coatsjfQrego, and reveal them-selves In fabrics as soft and. transpar-ent as f possible, such a* georgette.

^ ^ ^

left it, uud. 2, in Miani contnuit^tne cathedral of Sie«t of that city. 8—Gen. Jules JanE. now on hU wayk forces there.

1—Btttns of the Deanntui catnedrui of Albert as thvwhich the'Americans are striving to cave In theirfrom America to .Siberia to take command of tbe

% • " - r

brocades.. Fur bands.them.from hemto collar .- J ;„ , "

VELVET IS REPLACING SATIN

Only. Material That Can Be SafelWorn "AOklnst Fate Without Re- /

M«f-After Twenty. _ • / ,

More and" more weTiiotTco yilvet*r»placing satin. There Ik no^fnbrtc onearth which soften^ and beauUfies likevelvet' .It Is the kindest material Inthe tforld when It. Is/ptdccd neit awoman's fnceind lris'obdut theAplyuaterlal^that n |s /s»/ely warn ttgnfnsttfle' Tface without' KlUef"after"ono Is

Dno of tho loveliest of velvet modelsln'B&own ln/bla'ck^(good block'velvetalwuyfe- looks -like a million dollars),-Tho ^nlat has a deep V In front whlcTi-cxtendiat Kast nine Inches below thowaist. This is filled, in with a Ms.dunna blue georgette. T&e top of the^georgette at the neck is cut squareacrois. The V i a then outlined withfur and tho far, of course, goes aroundthe back of thi neck.,,. ,- The skirt la made with, two tunicswhich open at the front, Bath are, out-lined with tnlB fur, edge, the far going,around the bottom and then up to thewaist. Tho sleeves sjre quite long overthe hand, mnoothrnttlng en* without abit ft trimming. There is not a.toucuOf embroidery or braiding at any kindon this frock nnd It Is quite handsonwan£L d£stinc£ivei-

CHIC HENNA DUVEHN MODEL WEARING "FLU" MASK

jery netf^hDchrelrthi^siunrilrig^ n - J i t I* fathloiied In hennjr duve.tyn'wKh'touches of "black satin. The,ftnr-«lgW collar arjd, the W de b a Wthe •klrt«re e*bwld«r«lli»t « g la r j , ^ bardtW

the •klrt,«re e*bwld«r«l.-li» bfaefco ,'

USED B Y^M. C. A.French Town's Most Popular- Drink Emporium Is fought

at Audio

SOD A INSTEAD OF ABSIHTHEIrgej-tcan. afrf ln_ Sky Blue Uniform""•ra^-y^^tta^Wantr^ftf "the"™

Irsty jBoldlsr* and •Sail-

By ROY DURSTINE.Paris.—In . the very heart of a

French port town, where trndlc Isthickest, there stood a barroom. Itsns Just at the point where ar sailor'sor soldier's- thirst was greatest as hetrudged up the hill. It did a rattlinggood business, such a good, businessthat the authorities kept a special eyeon .It

Whenever a military policeman hadnothing better to do, he would strollup ta this, bar to see bow many mennera.draped over It. ,, Accordingly, Its. trade languished,

,for there nre more desirable things todo than to bo n consistent drinker Inthe most connpicuous place In town.

Before long the madame found Jthnther bualncss had fallen on eyll wnys.iler success had boon so great that itL bad failed I k

Bids for Y. M. C. A.A public sale was announced—a sale

of all the. oh. so beautiful fixture*.Without thought .of price, everythingwould go beneath the 'hnmnfrr of theauctioneer. Everyone In town knewcf It And when you say "everyone,",you Include Arthur 8. Taylor, whou»ed to bo a newspaper man in Phlla*delpbla, and who is; no* the head ofj

Y. M. a A. in thjj district of ther town. t • J , "So ho went to the sale. And when

the* bidding fell oft and the madame/

o, street Wejuper-wcttring an

wrung her hands becauso-the pricewas so low, then up stepped Mr. Tny-Inr. ana boughratl the fixtures for theTi. M. C. A.^Mt&t-iMt; J?« ^dickered.. wttSv. - thelandlord, and came to an ngreementwhich permitted him to leava_the fix-tures where they were, to leave thebar where lt,wos—but to change whatpassed across the liar.

That was only a* little while aga

the town, as you 'see tho doors of thebar stretching out their Invitation tobring in your thirst iind hare Itquenched, you wilt, sco a strangething. Over the door you will'see'Inlarge letters the -words"; —

The Red Triangle, _ > .Insldo, behind tho bnrt you will see

nn American girl In the sky bide unl?form of the canteen worker. And youwill see sailors and soldiers leaningtheir elbows on the, shining nmhoganyond hear them say tilings like: " ,

"Give us n chocolate milk-shake.'*"Mako mine pineapple.""How's the Y. M. special todnyr"Package ot cookies and tno straw-

berry eodns."Tltink of It I Sodns^ In France! And

yet this is only ono of three places In

Prays That God Will'. Damn German EmpireCleveland.—Not Irreverently,

but with much feeling, Dr, W.U. Crawford, president of Alle-gheny college, brought "Amens"-,from the throats-of 2,000' Methoddint divines In this city when he'prayed fervently for "God to

had Just returned from a yearand a half service with the Tc 1L -C. A. on the western front.

WljasLprt toan where t ^ ^ ^A hos-0,soda fountain.

Beside, the bar sits another Ameri-can girl selling' soda checks and, inthe lulls, changing'the record on thephonograph. Nothing old about those'records, either. With New Vork Just"«• few dny3, away," the supply'' oftunes Is kept up to the minute.,,-

In tho back room there are smalltables anil chain. Whose who preferto rest as they, drink may, Co so. Andumny do.

"You s fo I figured It'put this way,"sold Mr. Taylor, ns he looked over thoblue-and-ollve-drab shoulders packedalong thevbnr, ?I figured It out thatlialf the attraction of a bar U the so-cliiblllty of. dMnklng slon'ly nndsiplng whl|e you do It And, you sec,it isl" /

YANKS DIE WITHFACES T<> THE FOE

Valiant Spirit of Fallen Men IsTypified In Attitudes of

the Dead -

TROOPS EAGER FOR BATTLEEver Crouching Forward With Their

*' Faces' Toward Gerrn»ny, Inv-' 'patienTfe Jlake Worid ««fe

t " foi1 Humanity.

Parfs.1—Chaplains'of ^wo . Yankeeregiments that stormed the slope abovethe Oarcq rlver^came wearily back atsundown "from the task ot burying

ltuolly uplifted, and their-eyes .wereshining- as they made their brief outeloquent report

"In all that battlefield," they said,"we found, without a single exception,that every one of those boys diedcrouchlngj[orw.ard." "' '

That short dramatic! story—a patri-eulogy thjiUwas^an epitaph for

, crlcan • herocH' j cnme-flf»t-nader myeye when, after athree weeks' journeyot '4,000 miles, f reached Paris.

Pic*»Everfea«t>ivarjl.Stories' o>. the valiant Atperlcan

spirit tire "old. Set the proud words of•the vtiaplalhs were tremendously "In•the were tremendously "In-p s l ^ They interpreted the spiritof America on the fighting line in. ffiesame terms as I had seen it qmong'thefresh troops in. the convqy ncrossTlhe)AtlontlA - In England, in the Frenchport "and In -the trip across Frsnefr—troops "yeftd fdeti theiMnr"

Thonsonds' were la that convoy. Andtheir faces were'ever toward" Germany:They'were Brim faces of serious-mind-ed, silent memluring the tedfous ocean'trip—silent, strangely,-'.until acrUaUjron French sott,1 - ' , " -* r-t Then they underwent a change. Thecurtain of'solemnity, seemed.to Uft)•The frown of tmpaqence- at delay wasKone and, in contract to the silenceinwlilch they, had received" the homaget J B i t i l

war songs, lau^and replied with a Yankpe roar to thechorus of welcome French crowds gave. • A . I ^ ' . J . . . « . . .

ting ran as they'Vrilted In the Frenchport.for the trains to take them toFrance. Their eyes gazed longipgly tothe east, and they eagerly strained for-vard as if to hear the far-off boom ofthe gun*, i" -• ' ;

Every one of these Tankee- soldiers,fresh from the homeland, was crouch-Ing forward—as did the. heroes thechaplains told of—with .their faces tc-xvanl permany. i-

A complete division, commanded byon, American major general, dlsem.barked. And It was-Just one unit,'oneConvoy Of the unending stream thatUndo Sam Is sending across,

, ^Chafe at Long WaltThe o«Jy worry was whether It

-would bjra ipng wait before It wastheir tnm>«at bat",against the Htm.

Subtnarlne_rumors, Jiadn't frightenedthem on the way across the ocean.-They nod drilled1 dally, as best theycould in the cramped ship's area. Theyhad token dally exercise to keep themhealthful and fit And they had stoodguard. In farn. with eyes "peeled" forsubmarines—mostly hopeful that onewould.{urn up 'just for the delight ofseejpgan AmHm< d t b b Iseejpg-an

gdestroyer bomb-It

out of all-usefulness.1 There was a boat drill* dui|y on theconvoy reach; man answered, roll callIn his nllotted place besldo a lifeboatAnd constantly, "save In, sleep," eachman bad , to wear'u life preserverstrapped aboijt hls'chest and back. -' ••-"•'Now they're at the end of the longJourneyi-in' France along 'with, a mil-lion'and a, half fighting men from theUnited States. They're sho'wlng earlyH ^ g t A l J

many, impatient tortnake the worldunsafe focBuns, •< (. t~x<

ire a pity Kaiser Bill Wouldn't haveistood on the dock at that French portTrtMSu they landed—Just to see; them.'

t : . Dead Hen Convicted.S t IAUIST Mo.—When a decision

reached the^conrtof criminal correc-tion, fiere recently^from the,supreme

in vfouftou of .the'pure food law, itwas found that botir 3chucart

tfi8»e»Biumnsl5.bj: order oJ the health tutim!, "f - ,-.-.; -,--:*' >.- - - '•••• yeaidejjartn cnt i . J " "."'; " ? " j ^ - j . ^TJiet^fjeet^^OWjf^tromjttsgrttf < « ^

Schucarti

moiflUw ag%'-« ,-v: .•-.

WF.and as quickly as __:Is possible. There-" • *fore 1 JUH,.

o t h e rfor I nope you do not mind If I call you -a bug." - • % *..

The pyjrmy nnteater shook his Uttle _ <jtffcead.' "C ll me a bug If you will. »•„" -doesn't matter to me. But Tm wlsoh. so wise, I know what is good to e,iAnd that Is wisdom. Ah, to'kmwhat Jo *at—to always know what ieat—It's great to -be such a creatur

"But, Mr. Bug," «ald the othersect, "you said a moment ago. tl)ou could eat as fast and a? quickly aapogslblclf the meal were of antsk" /

"That's what I said. I am glad you .paid attention to me. By listening tome, you may learn wisdom," he ended -conceitedly. ; -

"But you were wrong In what you :said. That is you said the^ame thlngr'""?twice. For to eat fast and to eat ,quickly Is |tho same." / ' ' -,

'"Well, If I said ine sam« thing twl« ~, •and the thing was wtio to say. Itmi\kes no dtfference/rsald the pygignteater. " ""rr" / " • • " • ' - "

"Tell me your lltory then," said theInject "for I can see you are longing;1o tnlk abou^-yoursclf." . -

"Only because at the present mo-ment I have nothing to.eat" said thepygmy anteater.~""WeM,-Mlflnt Mother tibwjt .

>,'' go ahead and talk," too Insect

Company of Americdn dough

*l>~

J

I am the pygmy anteater," he- be-"I hold my paws before me

when I am not eating and I think ofthe ants I nm going to eat and ofthe ants J hnve eaten.

"I am gray and brown, as you flanpco If you lake a good look at me.' Iwork nt night only. I have four feetr>no nose, one tail, two eye<Cone mouth'

Bf)d a viery happy qtomach when flljed.and n very unhappy one when-empty.

"But the Interesting part Of my StoryIs this: I hnve enemies. I hnve always-lind them and. I suppose I will- alwayshave them." l ' '

'Who are your enemies)" nskea the ~

Inllucnza patients in gorermiKore Isolated from all other patleipatients shown here are wounded i

LISTENING FOR SUBMARINI

"Tlie ants," said tho pygmy ant- •enter. '

"Well, I don't know ns I blame ,A

them for belnR your enemies, wh'en .you. love, to eat them," said the In-sect ' ." w i

"Tour brains don't amount to much,."poor llttlo Insect," said the anteater,*"for it shows what a lot I-think of ~ants when I like tq eat them betterthan anything else."

"That depends on whether It Is yourturn to speak or the ants' turn to -speak," said the Insect. "If the antswere talking they would say that itwas no compliment to be eaten. Or II -J-DU thought it was a compliment, they -*didn't", 1 T

'"Poor stupids,", said the nnteaterv-Jj"Well, no matter, I don't care wheth-er /they; are bright or riot as, long as 1 '"'i.tcan find tlieJItttc dears to e a t ' .' • -""

"Ah, bnt'yAU are'right,'they dott't'--consider my love for them a. cotton-"iment. -And1 they • • ' ••« • • •«are my enemies.Th.ey hate- me!.-Oh, how theyhate me! Theythink X am a ter-rible creature, anogre, or some-thing awful. Idon't" knejw what

n ogre Is, and Idon't ^believe any-

ne 'else do«g, _forr,ve heard ther^were no s u c bthings, but any-TO-» -!the—ants'™"

I ' -

•'WS^^'%^fw'

iwjmnii ii\i*;:

Lilstenlns for enemy Bubmartnesline fiport for She''boys''wlth-theJB»- teen subinartee fleetj.to4ee*Sfe3?S|WHere is : n" |JSotograph "imtSs-.-abod•one «f'• the -AmOrTcah" subset; *oinbroriuTBiwwing the wmt<ai :nt, 1"listener." "

Doesn'tAnts.

TranrfrerrlnB the Bri iziA visltorwn~a|.Britlshtatt!efl*.'w

dlntag w«h a group of ufflcers whhis fork roocldentallji -strndk a gilltumbler ~ * s the gU*S 3>esoun0ed-t

think t am quitethe most dread-ful of creature** . ,.. ,— - ,, 'T can't say I blame them." said tn"ji iInsect "If I were on aqtI'd hate' "tod" %» -" ' ' ; ,"" •»-"Joy!" satd the anteater."-.?T"6_^jj;ish you -were an ant. for1 fnstdad oftalking to you I could eat jfyu-'-tliafiwould he muoh more satisfactory. That *twould be .more sensible, too. " - ^

__._'Ot Js-ginrloua lo have enemies—anaf>tHt nore-j»iortoTr3'"to"*lfe "alile Yo7 eatyour enemies. Ah, Pm the pygmy opt-enter, my'first numo meanlng.-fh6.t-fJ'i«i-am small, but I can hold many nntB£l.:-fil!can, nnd It gives me Joy, ido so." s

offlcewl*olleaT, On asking ttor an explanaaonj^e

Itor •was rtaaa that die ringta* Ofclass meocttod tack. One pfflcdeclared thrt on one *hrp »e fonaeri"ommanflen every toe * g l a s s y

* teU orertwarft. -

table aeeidert occurs.transfer *M* bad luc

- One

. A

me » l s story <poi«WI tad Jn phis rlfht arm hun? In «lired

iate- .notation H 4 - « ^he-enme to, he looked,

laved hi. d ^ P-Well, onvwny,"h S t

Looking!O_ne day my son,

nmisnnlly naughty, and T,-o.patient, exclaimed: "0, Ifonly a: girl. Instead of it

ippy I would oe." '- /;]William '

etWScrap" Book. ,

• " " You Cant Beat 'EmlIt was his flrst'Bllmpse of Paris nn

/wnspretty busj nbiorhlng. and cuS T . llnioWlc teeth on the Inm

«S^XribunW~T * ' - - V'r-+

Page 7: Poultry Supplies - DigiFind-It#- I J f&r. r - ;«-..,-¥ XXI NO. 37 CRANFORD. NT. J. THDR8DAY., 1918.»-1ft-THREE CENTS Change in Banking Hours. On and after November 1st bank

" * * r l- THE CRANFOHD- CniZEN

f AT AN AMERICAN CAMP IN AtSACE

Company of American doughboys at mesa In their camp on German soil la Alsace. .

SOLDIER^ INFLUENZA PATIENTS IN WASHINGTON

Influenza patients in gotenuncnt hospital? nro given every opportunity to nbsorb fresh air and BunltKhtr--Theynro Isolated from all other patients and partly protected from Contact with each other by cloth partition's. Thopatients shown here are wounded soldiers In Walter Reed hospital, Washington. ,. ,. . , ;x „ .

y LISTENING FOR SUBMARINES NEW HOME OF RED CROSS IN PARIS

YANKS RESTING ARER THE ST. MIHIEL VICTORY

Theso Ynnkeo flghtera, part ot the force* that cleared out (ho St. Mllilel enllont, ud.vnnced so for bejond theirepeclflcd objective that they had to bo'ordered to watt until the rust of their contingent cnina up.

BRITISH AIRPLANE HOSPITAL BEHIND THE LINES

• This JJritlsli ofllclcl photograph nhows ono of. tho repair BtntloiiH for dmnngod alrpinncfi behind the British linesIn PrnricbT * " i. - y , „.

FOR AMERICAN PRISONERS IN GERMANY

Listening for enemy submarines tofine fiport for She bojs with the -Juner-:

- •"" r « » •submarine De«t te4ecs!gb vtattnLHere Js n |rtiotograpb. made aboard•one of the American subsoil Viatai

' • nbrond, Rbwuing tlie wtfWn .at, bte"listener."

Tranrfferrlna the Bar! _....—A visitor ron~a British tattlefJWp was

dlntoc with ft group of"•ofllcors whenhis fork accidentally «trndk -a gins*tnmblcr. ~*a file g(a*s xesountted theofficers sh5Sted~nB onirnmn, TJocne -

, On asking tor an explanation «flie vis-Hor was HM that tte stagta* of allnss menct bad tack. One officer

1 fhtt on one *h1p S» Toenlerrly~ every time a gloss was

ten orefboftrft. a40a Is

1 Viilim and fcls rlfht arm Ban? in-Tnifneaiate-'BiBpotatlon w«i"f*

-.< -Well, anyway." » « « •

This 4s the new'generaT henilqruarters of tbe Americas Sod'Cross InIt was (Uieltiotcl Begbd." At the Heft Is a «t**ue-df Joao of ,

SPEHIING UP WORK WITH MUSIC

TURKISH DEFENSE METHODS I

> - - You Cant Beat 'EmlTt was his flrst'Bllmpse of Paris and |K was ^ — nbsorhlng. and cnt-

erabte French signs.he Atopptd before^ large

over o doorway.|e Garconsl" he exclaimed,beat [them* They're even

N J)ie^nio«IetrfiI»-yonr-me|Us Idea-Is beingyovr-work theory which^a Cincinnati dry-cleaning (•sttbttohtnenHrpuiiliig into'prnctlcnl effect This. enterpri«lnRc firm has Installed rtfiropghout- Its .factory

... . „ - ~ ™™*2W entettiUnm trihft.whole Oay KmgJ Th«yto borrt>tr«d-frow, goat6^iiji«jlca, Jiterf h\g faetorr has as

JSooue ID an American Itol Gvom warehouse la-Kew-Tork, where Christ-

mas iiacfeages for JUncrlcari prtsaaors k Oermony ana, r e c c e d and "sorted.

HERO OF ZEEBRUGQE ATTACK

//Tills photop-npu HiufttmiM'noiiip of the me-tBods employed by~tt»e Tni-ks(heir vain oi&<rffi> check QeuerarAllenby* adraice In Palestine; Sharp-

»" stakes Tvere drtren Injto tBe ground and.behlnd them Vert *f " "

Lieut. II. T. 0. Wnlker of tlio . . . , ; .navy, who -Wus tlio hero of lie funningBritish TTovnl" attack on SCecliniKge.Jtleutentmt Walker, who wan on offi-cer of 11. pi. t}nVl"$lil£!% h4>y i uIt°l 'blown off during pio iiinijmK oi t.,'CBritish Bailors.And rriurincs ,on thomole, HcTls expected In t))U» countryshortly to fill nnjoppolnlment with Ui»BtitU'i bureau of information. T t

The Coming of vpr\n^~A

the' spring (do not try to~ Btplalo- I fnwny), and we, vjcarklng la oat gar--deas, nro ot \hb imrt of lIl. Smallwonder that wo can hardly wait to b£-gln. Many an enthusiastic poascseor ofa small garden wishes at this seasoa,'that ho could eriinrgajils area and ln-Crcasi) his fjic^llties. " Ills neighbor's •gfeeriliouBQ nnd totbeds. and frames. - ..inrarptts, 3o look tintflilalDaU' <bau*>able. But,cveinfIO small garden-cairbo prbvided at a small cost with thomeans or hastening the maturity of*""P/ %•"&• fe?2«Ii the carden It-

t, if rlghtTy furtj^ed, will be foonArcady-'With its early gKts. The Frenfllsorrel, already referred tp, KumexScstotus, is amoflg thfe flrsti I|» leaver,not>e| half xrownl 5re<mjlringr>- tea-Her and; spicily tart, ne«I|njf/6h(y tieaddition, of oirand a 'f thought" of'salta P^ 'do a s Iaj) "fit to tut before the '

fore a faithful ~ganlcner.*->EllzabetliEdd/ Norris, in the (iioUsp Beautiful.'

Boy Scouts' Finds BFtek Walmitl - jAbout 15,000,000 feet of blacft wol- \

nut tbnber has beetf located nod its ex- -! Irtcnco reported to the forest serviceot "the boy scouts since they were /call-<?ljij>on by the president to asilsi tb«government in locating this Umbertor- *gUnstdck and propeiie. csiterlal. Tfoboy scouts send the renorts to Uie'/or- -'est service, where the Information I*implied, and then forwarded w-flio ' 'w»r department The government V -

fa not buying, the walituwij

inctorcnf working on

/

7 V',/

i*— ,i

-I'A.-

, _ ' • * - ,

Page 8: Poultry Supplies - DigiFind-It#- I J f&r. r - ;«-..,-¥ XXI NO. 37 CRANFORD. NT. J. THDR8DAY., 1918.»-1ft-THREE CENTS Change in Banking Hours. On and after November 1st bank

'.V

« . 1 • * • * - / * - - * ' ;

ENTIRELY SATISFIED_ tt B« Rule ojT JLIfa That HMMuaiDeairtiThlngHje Haa,

Not Got

Wherever we "are la Uils ^want to be somewhere else. I have aletter from a counfrf boy who wantsto live In the city, "where thing* /aredoing.", 1 know his present jetting; aplace where the needs and comforts of

-man are supplied with the slightest ef-fort His 'placid, suu-batei) village, InIts parkllke setting, glimpses the Ideal'.Ist's vision of the perfect life In perfect

_ 'peace. All this seems to have palled. on the taste of the young man and he

yearns.for the contentions, busy anddirty city.

' We all have visions of the peace andcontentment of the 'country; the scentof the woods, the song of the btrdj,the drone of the bees, the roses, the.grateful greenery, and maybe a cowbell tinkling somewhere. We havesensed this all, perhaps, In vacationtime and' thought It was paradise for

- two or three days, after whlch-wfe. be-gun to get homesick for the city noiseand trouble. This Is the goal menspeak of as desirable; peace, abundance, quietude—body and wind at restin nature's setting—'y4t liere Is a boy,reared In this elysluin, who want* toget uwny from It and eome to thenoise and dirt and selfishness of thebig city.

Probubly' the. Utopia to 'which somany of us aspire would not bo entlrely satisfactory If we possessed I tTlie .quietude of a country pluce or acountry town Is often .very dull.. Thereore no dally sensations, no scandals,no banner heads In the dolly newspa-pupcrs to Interest one.

Tim high spot lu the day Is when yongo down to the post oflice for the moll,or barter with the country store forcodfish and matches. The weather Isthe leading topic of conversation;there are no very rich or very poorpersons In the' cjjmjmuplty; the popula/

.tlon Is, perhiujgSlt a colorless deadlevel- of mediocrity; there ure no mil-

• llondlres to lluuuttUeir wealth, DO'liv-eried coachmen, no "aljs£_po aristoc-racy or proletariat. ~" ' "

The rural conditions are what theIdeuHstg seem to be driving at, yethero Is a boy.willing to give It all upfor the city Is It possible that easeand contentment pull on tho taste, andthat nan Is better uutlsfled when he Is

* JfflWlB^Mto"aiifctBrl^^agement In tbe bottle of life?—SeattlePoat-Intclllgcnccr.

FOR SUCCESS IN BUSINESS- Interesting LI i t of Requisites Which

Men In Commercial Occupations„ Should Have at Command.

In a Ireccnt Issue AmeflenB~Kag-aftne dijows up nn lntvrcstrog HatHt requisites for -various-commercialoccupations. For lnntunco, it statesthat tho head of a depurtinent shouldpossess the following: Keen sense ofJustice, Hyiuputhy, tactfuluess, cour-tesy, "teachableness and knowledge of

- human nature.--The bookkeeper need*most: Accurucy, speed, pertievcrunce,

/ conceutratloii and mathematical ability— —figures.' To bo successful In suing

after nefr business, tbe trade solici-tor should have: Tact, courtesy,verbal expression,. personality, optltnlsm, self-confidence and knowledgeof human nature. An auditor Is Indunger of proving a nilsUt, and a fall-ore unless he possesses In inurkrd de-gree: Love of details, perwverupfo,patience, Judgment, deliberation, riilm-ness, accuracy and analytical ability.

The cradle and the.* crooning .have gone. Today science says that

mofhfrr tntitrtfldtIn cradle or In^rocklflg-clialr. Trite,tbemotber may.coddn.ber chernktrhilo Bttting, and the occupationtherefore, -Valle/ still sedentary, la

Fact* Concerning Red Cross.In-1804 on International conference

..of, 14 nations was held In/Geneva,Switzerland, the outcome of nhlch .wasthe Treat* of Geneva, knouu as theRed Cross treaty./This treaty provW-ed that hospital foriuiitlons und' theirpersonnel should be treated as' neu-trals; that each nation sighing thetreaty should, bdve nrptissocfntion of[volunteers to osils^ And supplement

-the medical scnlatt'itf \tjf£riny; thatthe'emblem df-eervlce^eormnon to nilnations should be'a red 'cross) on afield of .white. ' Tltfs ernb pm, which

Uversed, was adopted In recognition atthe fact that the Red -Crow wastound-

' ed at Genevq, Switzerland.

_ H# Was Puzzlei.An old colored man stepped Into the'

Indiana Natlonartank one Cay recent-.^Jj^andjiresentdda check to be cashed.

It-was the window Tot the discounte&e, and the clerk handed back tbecheck.

"Take, It to the opposite window,'.'' 'he said, nnd went on with his work.I | -The'old man examined the cheek? c'are-- ' folly, then he walked, on. About nve

Jittllnutes later the'clerb; of the discountcage liad the same check presented to"

_i_Mtt>I "HI, you," the colored man said."You'll Have to fix up this piece- of pa-per for me. 1 been 'round to all tbewindows, ,ttnd "nln'jt none of themmarked I'Opposite.1" - f Indianapolis

-,, , Mascular Greek Porter*.' * Aa,porters and laborers, the Greeks

Jot •SaJonlca are_unrivaled.« Ton espy. , ,a «rand_pWo or'a gigantic wardrobe,^Y ' , apparently promenading the streets for•t.\ 'iltfj^twfl, pleasure,* and a search reveals-^-'p^sjnil l Greek of no'particular phys-

•f^'rimv supporting It without apparent:.if':!''iaSbtl^-Tbf;i*rBeemB'--Do limit to the'i ' ,1 '^ todjifieiif -they can shoulder. > During a^'^«3rfti£-ttW( ,*«<! seen; go up steepi!^.T^«Stit-ctxtslog-a ftgg££afe that would

yjU&'ifanea and pnlfeys to nniri very "useful

MYTHICAL STOIIE O f SCHAW

men

. . r . . , V .-

Schwrn* tea mjthlealy was Chat c f

lnsonracli that thereit it would aoteaL

It Canjd shaping the meUU and stomp Jarth» -Templsw Solomoo, was dto'hare dominion pvier DJlnj?v«ndJieemployed, these .men^ % bu)|djnf tl>en v l U f t a b r o n r zade joanch JwJse_wJtft^hajnperi,,iiM!irax; that the people of Jerusalemnor hear each other •pelfc/'TtHBojomon directed them' to 'cease' theirwork and inquired whether the metalsand stones could #ot be^hfped.^itd cotwithout nolse^ ^The.repJ*" was .thatthis could be done rltn the atom tatikhamlr. Now' It was'Secnr** cus-tou to pay a monthly visit to tbe landof .Hldjr and drinka certain fountainempty. So Solomon''sent a wingedO who flrwr thft watnr framithn

Bbfountain and filled HwUh.wine. Bajbjrdrank, became drank,and b ^In chains. TJ»eicaptJlv,e,w p ihis liberty on. condition tha^ he won|reveal.the place where the atone thaw»nld cut and shape the hardestMBeJali could be-found. Sachr told theking t<t take'the eggs out of a raven'nest place a crystal Cover upon .themand see* how the raven would break i tSolomon did so. The raven, findingIts eggs,covered.,fin away. and.re-turned with a stone In Its beak, whichIt dropped .on the crysta) and *n\ ,ltasunder. The raven ww'asked'bjr Sol-omon .where'the stone came from;'andwas told that Ittame^from a mountainin the.far west . Thejm,9iunjata,wasfound," a ~ nonAer bf, stpaltar1, stoneswere obtained, and,with, thcin! theminus 1>ewed the)stones for the, Tem-ple In the dlsjtalQt quarries andbrought. them_ to Jerusalem, whenthey were laid n'olselp^" in" theirproper places..'. s'

MOTHERS YIELDTO SCIENCECradle and Crfeonlng tfong Beth Thing*

of the Put-Baby Mutt No. Longer Be Roektdr

One ventures much when he takesIsaue wjth sclonce, Nevertheless,fh^rewere cradles' In those day* when theearth grew giants.) The men .of,Bonk;

J d f d l l ^rocked to'sleep in Infancyi-«OJ wtre.tho /men of Lnndy'a Lane and of NewOrleans, and likewise, the men of Gha-pultepec,' Boeni Vista, Oettysbotg andPeachtree .Creek, Btnrdj sqldiersjmade, and although In this flat it'haps^ought not to be'.s*hl.fo^y;none sturdier flghtlbg anywhere,hh

an«radled.Ia|H|

\ /~Why the Leaves Turn Rtd.

An examination of/the,withered,leaves of the autumn7 foliage at dietime of their taming red shows thatthty contain more sufar and less

than injnl^sammer. "Leaves ofevergreens/ however, lose their redtints with 4h» return, of the warn sea-son', ftnd1r*as§ume* thetf green color.In these/Plants—1, « , the holly and

sugar of the teat Is trans-lnto starch la - springtime,

these" observations two infer-can bsdrswn^rTflrst, that the red

soringtsnbstsnees are probably-ofhe nature .of the,glucoses, being In

most cases' compounds of tannlc!anh>stance*, with angar: seopnoV the chiefphysical conditions for the formationof the red color are jronWneL which,on jtlfp ol|e ban L <w*^^/^^tAj tn*i«yt*latlon and production ol angarVand, onthe other hand, qnliprocess that leadttthe.colortng nutter, and, furthermore,a low temperature, which prevents thetrantfopnation' of the sugar Into

otaqfomn ara-(ha,41ract product-offlu, ttetttttqtotictr 'couaitioar p»Tan-lng during that tauon I. a, aunthlnBand low teinperajpire. '

It laFirst QoW GwtMeatacontended-that the

L

terr>jeimthe creation of thecate.

Borne bougnL.wh»a| lnJBgipt, whilegjpt -wu foictd^to^ pay tribute

money for the maintenance of the Ro-man army. To ship gold foMnese pay-ments was totenq&thejptrates who In-feated the. eastern Mediterranean. It

' ~ ~ 3(Jj te3o^»bk fl|ancler whothooghT of/the scheme of Jiavlng thewheat Importer take- his gold' to theRoman bank, which had a branchUnAlexandria^ and get his .certificates.

woMlo^di^ to go

Th» Jtaptlau.t*x collector got hlacertificate from the Alexandria bankand sent It to|Boout whaMitstaaJion-

i - - *'

"Goo* advice

'SajBe.""He framed you not to

^ - - i"Oh, X lieard him. Bat Wa flffloutdiftVA.carried-ffiore weight wltfi

me If I Idldnt happen* to know that be

EATMGHOUSWar Program Requires Greater~ Saving of Food In Hotels

and Restaurants. -

•' New regulations for the tonservalion of food In hotels, reitaurinu ancother public eating places, as issued bj•'•' Unlte4 States' S W Aamlntitra

beoftme effective In New Jersey, Kjr 8L Stafe Food Administrator

WjjlUam S. Tyler, has announced, themtOjtne New. Jersey public, and the Hotel arijT Jtte*taurant Section., ot^-fhState Food* Administration has madan appeal to.all.eaHng houses to llvinplto tbe roles in the strictest-sense.

Consequently do not be surprised Ifthe next time yon take dinner at a hotel yftii fltt4fyftnr,bread allowance Urn*Ited, no bread brought to the ta; 'e un-,til{ after the first course Irrsorvi-d, anallpwaflce,of,only.ipDe kind of meat atany,one m*al. no bacon as a garniture;no more Umn half an ounce of butter x . , . . . • /or one-half ounce of American cheese y ° « wpuld want if you. wereto-.be served at any one meal, no'sugarbo*l ~on the table, no "double* creamand but one teaspoonful of sugaiwl|ethar you have one or more cups o:coffee or coffee and cereal.

Here are tbe new general ordersfttjf;

Qeneral Orders.JQBNBRAL ORDER NO. 1. No pub-

lic eating place shall serve or permitojbe served any bread or other bakeryproduct which does not contain at least2&<per cent of wheat flour substitutes,nof shall It secvetir permit to be serv-ed, more.than.twQ'odnces of this bread,known as Victory Bread, or If no Vic-tor*,, Bread Is,served, more than fouroupcei of 'other breads (such as cornbread.'mufflns, Boston brown.-bread,

a j . ' ' Sandwiches or bread served aboarding' camps and rye bread containing'80 per petit or more of pure ryefl^Wtd '

/OBNBOAL ORDBR.NO. 2. No.pub^

lie, eating -place ahall serve or pernjltto.be served bread or toast as a garnl-tnfe.or^der meat, /

t OBDEB NO. 3 /No pubreating vPUce shall allow/any bread

' O|n|y-Ona.lK<niQBNEEAX,,OEDEin >fo. 4. No pub-\ »ayng 'place aftaU serve or permit

to( be served to/one patron at any onemeal mpre thim one kind of meat Forthp'prjrpose/of this rule meat shall beconildere'd/a» Including beef, muttonpark,' poultry ' and i ny-1 by-products

"I !HBAL ORDEH NO. 6. No pub-

eating -place shal) serve or 'permit,served any bacon as a garniture."

GENERAL ORDER NO. a No pub-Ity eeillflg place t shall,servo orp^rmltat be served to, any ohe persoiLat anyoqe ,meal more than one-half ounce of

GENERAL ORDER NO. 7. No pubUo eating plfl'6e shall serve or permitto, be served'to any one perso.n at any

meal more than one-half ounce ofCseddar," commonly called American,dues*

_. No Mora Sugar Bowls.GBNEBAXORDERNO. 8. Nopub-f sating^plaee shall use or permit the

u^,of.tha;sugar,bQWhon the table orluncjt, counter.'.Nor shall any_publleNttaji phica,serve sugar or permit ittd be.,served '.unless the guest so re-««\ t* , arid'In no event shall theSJ lounf served to any one person atai f oh** meal exceed one teaspoonfulOf Its equivalent.

GENERAL ORDER NO. 0. No pub-Uf eating'pTace shall use or permit the

of an. amount of sugar In excess oft^o/.pannda.uiar evejry ninety meal*s^tved,(lncludlng all use* of Migar ontlje, Ub^B, an<J lu cooking, exceptingand) iiicag. aa.may be allotted by,{he'Federal Topd AdinlolBtrators to hotelsholding a bakery ''license.' '-.No sugarplotted for thfs ipeclal baking purf

ioall l)* u«ed.for any other .pur-

lib eating.placs shall burn- any food orpirmtt anyriooff.to'Jie-.biurjied, and alt'wVjtBv«h«U>b«,sa,ved to feed animalsor reduced to, obUln fats.

ENERAL^ 0BDBBNO.il . No publie ea^ngj>lace.sha}J display, or permittn.be.dl^nla^ted, food on Its premisesn any .such manner as may ".cause Its

deterioration so that it cannot be use?tyf human' consumption.r- GENEBAL 0BDER NO. 12. No pub;lip aating place shall serve or permittq be setotf what Is known as .doublecream" or cream |de luxe, and'In any•fent na-cream containing overt 20^persent of batter, fat shall be,temdL ,

wormust, literally, feed the

dorjng.the war, and at" thes^peprepare, to, rebuUd the world'ssupplies wh«n victory, brings

We.carried the 1918 objectives—wheaf,' meat, far and sugar—and nowwe are'settling down to'a'stesdy pushi l l along the line.

V" 216 South Avenue,

Cranford, N. J. - - .

StoR! Heril "ThlslsSBiilce!"

Antomobiles Overhauled and- Repaired by Expert Mecban-- icV- AllInUlrnalCtombQttfon1

-. EnginesVursoeciaHT. Driv-• ' ing lesions" given, pet the ,

bsoeSt of eighteen years ex*•perienca.. Tires and Tube* 'Vnlcaolied and ' Repaired.

Tel*69 n~ , Tel 8«-MDayBerWjaT " Nlght'Servlce

BoaqoKC.8MiTa - O a o . W. SPEHCEB

We Leave it to YouIf tJlig im>t the vind

ld t fto'store yt<ur furniture: CLEAN,DRY, SANITA RY.^ERMIN £ "LOOKED ROOSTS. Rooms-are DISINFECTED beforegoods are stored in them,that you are invited,to^inspectAlso wk'ere tbe INSURANCE andSTORAGE RATES/ARE\LOW.

&i coarse it is! / | vTwo new motor vans and fonr

•torso vans at v<mr service.

Robbijis & Allison«ioue876-Jtf--

) Phone; Weatfleld 78-J.J.

/FRED,;.H. |AHN,(Huooeetor to fhilipp JahD).

house, Sign, andFresco Pointing,

c Plain aqd Daeoratlv*

Paper Hanging>-Ain> DUI.SB nr—

, Paint, VarflishesWall Paper.

Hew JerseyCranford,Telephone 28-B.

Ji Ui WiLehigh Valley Coal

AND

MASONS'MATERIALS, <^Cement SJajr Saad<

Sewer Pipe, Etc. *OfBce, 11 East North Avenue,

CRANFORD, N. J. -*{ Telephone IN.

LINCOLNPARK^ CRANFORD .

A Few, Attractive Home sJust Completed

INVITE INSPECTION.Will/aiso build according,

o your own plans.5. R. DROESCHER.

Special. ~

and Fifty Worneo now holdJ.situationa as . conductor " fot

,' - v ,

fc>£c Positions ,. for Patriotic Women. '

at any Public Service pfficeor United_ States Employment Service;-officer

On and after Novemberdally ?t 7.3>

MONDAY EVENINGS, 7,3

WILL CLOSE DAILY, EXCEPI

(pply

Cranford Floral Co.- 814 SPRINCFIELD AVE.

Cranford TriisiCRANFORD

Flowers Fresher.xanThan Elsewhere,

Cheaper Here

WE GROW THEM.' "YOUR FLOWERS ARE NOT GUT1 YET.-"

Large and Small Ferns Tel. 156-R.

ifcmtr#

ri&xma8lm8Bs. tofemilylife fodmthaacver fee-fore

THECOMPANION gives the gt rat est• i amount at evtr>llung worth reading,

1 sn abundaikf of Fi'clioa, of Enlcrtain-menh nf lnforrning_ReadinK. of Factand Humor, besides the Speoial Pagesfor each tine o(«rery age. It appealsto the ferciliei with highest ideal*.

OFFER No, 1Kew Subunbera to The Youth'*Companion will receive]

, 52 WEEKIY ISSUES 1919 \ M t

1919 ConpWa Horn ( $ 7 . 0 0C M F --) t

OFFER.No. 2. TOE/TOUIffS CMnUOOK 1 .AHfor

j! MeCAU'S »1.00

i. Checkyourcholceandsendthiscouponwlth youri remittance to the FUDUSHEIS Or THIS tMU.

or to The Youth't Companion. Do^orf. Mass, '

SURSfRIFnONS. RECEIVED AT THIS OFFICE

CHOICE U S

MEATS and PFAT T^E LO\VEST C

ALL KINDS OF iTelephone orders -will receive proi

WINDOW SHADES

QRAY BURIAL & CREJVMFUNERAL DIRECTORS A

WILLIAM N. OBAT. Pr,»ld»n« FEKDKBICnnfanl, N. J. T)ephon»£C

ERNEST L. MEYER,/ Establiabedl

(SUCCESSORS TO EDV

T

Vifs™,. i Masonic w.\Offlc8S 1208 Broad Street

PHONE ONE-THREE

Grit, Charcoal, Mix^d Gn/ Dog Cakes,'Collars,

Horse and Stable

: ' SPONGES y C

Masonic Building, Cr

Warehouse. Elevator. Coal PocketROSELLE

FROaHUNTERDON COUNTY

Tour grocer Is pledged to full co-operation M the Food Administration

A h l i hi t klA 1orpgram.. Are, yon helping him to

DR. F. B. INOI434 Sunirolt lAveriue* '"[

,; Telephone X)F

CiprriCMrniti.re*nd FUno l lpwn

FURNITURE BOUGHT, SOLI