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Discountfor Taxes Paid in Advance Common Council

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JCHu/iaaJ16,000 P«pk, TU*d tbt

HERALD.

and SUMMIT RECORD

"Jnttfca te aBt

saalica'tmnurf

FORTY-THIRD YEAR NO. S6 SUMMIT, I*. J., FRIDA¥ AFTERNGON,-MARCH 18, 1932 t3.50 PER YEAS

;. I

Discount for TaxesPaid in Advance

Council Passes ResolutionAI!owliMiiPerCeilt.toTaxpayers—Will Save

3

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18S4

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laired

1015

MlK.

4201

lew

wt-/V;

bePromptness in paying taxes will

ds b ****g^Jh

" BITSIJIEHH OIHLS OP SUMMIT

The Business Girls' Club ofthe Summit Y. W. C. A. will hold;open house next Monday eve-ning, March S l i t ; Supper willbe served at 6.15 and the meet-ing begins, at 8 o'clock.- Anybusiness— girl Interested heedonly tejep^ne_ the^; W r C r ^

or comel.both.» • -

to the meeting—or •1

Patten Succeeds Rogersas Hospital Secretary

Ernest P,.1 .IJJJ i ' * * *W1

night, setting a sched-ule allowing live -PJS£.-iM$!«i*W

, ,wuuKft» 4a«lW3%f» %*O faytheir _ ,bills before they become., felln-ittu I J T R

w*s elected seceOTerloiAHiJtalJU

wsteceedl&r (he'taw Will

received Is a matter of conjecture.City Treasurer Albert Leach In-forms the HERALD, recalling thatIt was tried In Summit in 1920 and1921 with little ijajcess becausevery few took advantiie of i t Torday, in a different economic period,It Is unable to predict whether tax-payers will pay promptly in orderto secure the sating or whether de-linquency wilt remain because orlack of money to 0ay. " "T '

• The resolution provides "that adiscount at the rate of five per cent.per annum Bhall be allowed for thepayment in advance of that part ofthe taies for the year 1952 whichbecome delinquent on the first dayof June, 193J, as follows-

"If paid on or before April 1st, adiscount for two months; If paid onor before May 1st a discount forOne month."

Similarly, "that a discount at therate of five ger cent, per annum•hall be allowed for the paymentn advance of that part of the. taxes

jhlch becomes delinquent on thefirst day of December, 1932, as fol-lows:

"If paid on or before April 1st, adiscount for eight months} if paidon or before "M&v 1st, a discount for

fleers were re-elected. Mr. Pattencontinuing as treasurer In additionto bis new duties. Walter C. Heathis president and Charles M. Lumvice=preBldent.

Talks

Chas. H. Baum to AddressClub Secretaries'

Next Week

3 Service ClubsW Meet'> jttwKastf 4* nmiis, oV summitavenue, was the guest speaker atth Sumi tL iO C l b l b o tthe Summit. Clubthe Summit.LiOOK Club luncbeonAtthe Hotel Beechwood on Wednesday.HJs subject wu& "The Port of New

Common Council Disapproves flanyBills Pending in Stale Legislature

-Summit, as far as the Common providing studji\,.., pf governmentCouncil 'Is concerned, disapproves costs toTorniuiate standard for tax-a;;iajrf;gs»ater proportion of bills payers wishing to check on localdealing with municipal affairs budgets; 222, requiring establish-pndl i th N J * LeglSla t f f f i

Benefit Musicalat

Fire Damages Roof-Saved By Prompt

g ppendlng in the New Jersey* LeglSla-ture than It favors. The Council

incut of-.office or comptiollt-r inevery' municipality; 22!), allowing

D

Wonderful Synchroniza-tion of Organ, Victrola,Electric Piano and

Fire Tuesday afternoon ate at*hole thr»uKMht>'roq'f of a.house atPark avenue and North Btreet be-fore being extinguished by firemen

i thanswering the general alurmbuilding is owned by Fran

Tbe

Tuesday night went on record In State Department of Muiikiiial A1-oppoaltlon to 15 Senate bill*, and. 13 counts to

In the

* . « .

at six Two Heuuto Joint .pending Senate bills and twoIt»tttB and 5, tronjsn UnUit. Thvy would' , , > •> »Assembly. , „ ," . . -"•> - ' ''.Set u» f legislative committee* for T- ,,'S3Riarl»u»»r fcf Crest Acres

Among Vtie Senate bills favored. Kivjmratton at "fire "ami buPdiiiK D.ea-lLt"HI r,(?*idS,UC#' 5 W-rere 107. which veraltf * Use"'-state 111

[rfrhly $10«.j ' The Jtjaze. w-jw. fortunately

by tfdivard Miiyijjuii

001-

were , .1.07.i load

York Antho

codes ttittl.ai*Ili4f1i'yiiiK'

Jagels was the scene on

i to the sr<jtark&i^'jri the alarm

prompt action probablyplace from greater damage

CityTaxRateRaised 6 Points

af-That

tinwere , .1.07. which vaaltf Uses ta te i codes ttittl.a mmfflil/Mr'ji&iWtwk!^tWgs was the scene on place from greater damage a.......railroad tax" profeedsL>|ttrIlf^eJ»ooi,f'ii*Ilit4f1i'yiiiK'oiit reductions In taxi-H ! T u e s d a > r ev*ening of a most enjoy-' the flames, originating in a second-

.. „ , .-.ia.ii . r d b th S f Ial<Ie a n d u n i < l u e m"sical iv f ! story k i t h e t t h d t h

Mrs. Cross Namedon Welfare Board

Summit Woman Appointedon New County Bodyto Handle Old Age Re-lief

y Vice-President RalphH. Wagner, chairman of the en-tertainment committee.

The speaker explained that "ThePort of New York Authority" hasbeen In existence since 1927,, andduring that time there has been•completed five means of vehicularand pedestrian communication be-tween New .York and New Jersey,the Holland Tunnels, tbe Washing-ton Bridge, and tbe three bridgesbetween Staten Island; Elizabeth,Perth Amboy and- Bayonae.

Mr. 4de Setting described theWashington Bridge as tbe largeststructure of Its kind in the world:Its towers are 160 feet higher than

Monument. Inthe bridge be-

seven monthB . ,continues, giving

The schedulea discount for

one less month as the paymentnears delinquency. For Inftatice, ifpaid before November discount fora'single month is given." •>'•*- '•••**•'-

Other Cltlen AdopUnic Pla*The plan Is being adopted In sev-

eral cities and - to, wns throughoutNew Jersey. Perth Amboy andIrylngton recently resolved upon asimilar table. ' : - *- The question of how a budget canbe made up with a definite figureset for taxes to be raised whea thenumber of discounts tp b j r t f<

gdeteralOTo^* a n » W i « 5 y .Bach. The difference, he said,ill be absorbed in an item "ihter-it.cost." In other words. If We

taxes, were not. paid in advancestatute provi'deB that the city, mayborrow en "tax anticipation notes"from city banks. Thus, remarkedMr. Leach, giving of a five per cent,discount to taxpayers is as good ifnot better than paying interest tothat amount on loans from banks.Whether the discount will be suffi-cient incentive for promptness, ofcour.se, remains to be Been.,For instance,. If your tax bill for

the year totals $200; your discountfor the half due in June, if you payon or before April 1st, will be ap-proximately 83 cents. The otherhalf, $100, due December 1st, willdraw a discount of Some $3.33 ifpaid by April 1st. Tfeus, a savingof $4.16 is possible for taxpayerswhose yearly billa amount to $200.

Mayor Edward T, JJojk, who hasidentified himself with every ef-fort to reduceVtaxes of Summitresidents, it author of the plan. He

Provisions of New tawThe personnel of the new County

Welfare Board, whicn is to admin-ister relief under the old age pen-i b b d D

g psion act, bat been announced by Di-

lli £ *

ratlflcation

rector WilliamBoard of Freeholments were subof FreeholdersThursday.

The welfare board 1> created un-der the new State law which pro-vides for old age relief. Tbe Free-holders have appropriated $167,809in the 1932 county budget, of whichamount $97,875 will be returned tothe county by the State, The ap-plications for old age relief may betaken t^glnniug April lat, but nopensions can be {told until July UtTThe appropriation made - by tSecounty I* forihe six months begin-ning July lat.

cMane ofThe appoint' • *-, . .. - -to the Board Joterest on the bonds, but has so

are:8. Merchant Mefker,Mnsuranceok f ?2r 8ttt» treet Ellta

erbroker, of ?2r 8beth.

Mrs. James

Bfer««t.Eltta-

f, overseer ofMs. Jame _ .the poor, tl High* street, Summit.' Mrs. Emery L. LlIHbrldge, of 119Third avenue, east, Roselle.

Rev. Cortlfttm H.*Mallery. rectorof $t. Andrews EpJscopal Church..Plainfield. . / : \ : ' 4

Jan Van Herwerd«n,.president ofthe Rahway Trust Company, Rah-way.

The act provides for the appoint-ment of five persons, who are notFreeholders, and for the naming oftwo members of the Board of Free-holders and the county adjuster tocomprise the welfare board.

Mr. McMane will serve as one pfthe members from tbe Board ofFreeholders, and he has namedJohn Z. Hatlield of Scotch Plainsas the-other. County AttorneyFrancis J. Blatr of Plainfield ascouhty adjuster, automatically be-comes a.member, of the board,_

In announcing Monday ' thenames of ine-others selected asmembers of the Welfare Board. Mr.McMane declared it has becomfe

the Washington,comparison withtween Camden and Philadelphia,the Washington Bridge Is almosttwice as large.

The building of these bridges andthe Holland Tunnels, Mr. de Seld-lng explained had not cost eitherthe 8tates of New Jersey or NewYork one cent. The tolls collectedon the various/bridges &» well as

l

a a , l t l , ty f u a d

pension188,

Ilt4f1iyiiiKoiit reductions In taxi-H ! > g a t e n j o y , riginating in a secondproposed by the State fax Survey Ial<Ie a n d u n i < l u e m"sical given for! story kitchenette, had eateh upCominlsslou." IHIIH 221, 9G and 244 i t h e u e n e f l t ot the Summit* Home for j through the roof before it Was dis-

W r - has perfected n very• I fe'

rovement without advertising I revenue notes and bonds, specify [wonderful synchroniaation of • pipe j IJ • - n •bids; 206, abolishing duplicate j in ter«st ••payments on delid«ncy or5aI1> v l c t r o l a . electric piano ami i KCCCIVC D l li. pf automobiles in tax records: noteo of, counties and munieinall- r ° a t h l s n e w ho l"e- T h e pro- ^

payments to countfe* on1st and June 1st.

' ANHentbly BIHH In DisfavorAssembly bills opposed follow

'of paperplus to .

the audience Tuesday evening wattunique and :jomewhat differentfrom any previous arrangementwhich he has demonstrated sincethe completion of this unusual

budget appear bal- first

h varous/bridges &» well athe Holland Tunnels have practi-cally in all cases not only paid the

far met the liquidation of thesebond issues as they have matured., in an addiUoaal ten-mimite talkthe speaker told.In detail how ex-Governor Smith of New York wasentitled to the credit for tbe exist-ence of the present Port of NewYork Authority. No difficulty wasekperiebced' in'.New. Jeriifry, -when

te, and especially- „ - . . strong, oppbiitionwas- met'; with, until. at «•* confer-ence, ex-Qoyersor Binfth tfrlth a n

address, thit tpipk not:- more thin anThe Members of the new* board •hour, overcame all opposition in

the Empire. State and made possi-ble .tbe existence or "the present

ot New Xork Au-" • • - ' " f t ' - ' 1 • : • ' • " • - • - • ' •

ni TiuL. ««»• ' *u dY : "-" • -l-KOMie, we Eternal C ty," and wascoming into the State; 414. new descriptive of ' a visit to StProcedure..for cemetery location; Peter's on a dav whin P n i P.n«

which favors municipalities con- are others; they respectively per- j-Cn»dren.trading for sewer, gas and water { mlt tax title notes only for tax " ""'Improvementfor

209, preventing elections for re-1 ties.- and provide statei highway I g r a m a a arr t tnBed by Mr. Jagels forsumption of city managership in' ~ * * • • iha ni"11'"""*••«•..—^-» ~ — i —cities which have -discarded thatform, more than once. every twoyears. Others were 245, which pro-vides for distribution of $4,000,000for roads and bridges on a basis, ofpopulation, mileage and area, and265, which provides for destructionof. unsafe walls or buildings .withassessment of cost on owners.

The. Assembly bills approvedwere: 112, permitting municipali-ties to designate depositories fortheir funds, and 346, which pro-vides a new schedule of fees forcommercial motor vehicles. ..---.

Disapproval* GaloreAmong the. 15 Senate bills which

the Common Council disapproveswere 242, requiring municipal aud-iting by accountants chosen by tbeState Department of Municipal Ac-counts; 233, providing retirement oftax anticipation notes with firsttaxes received; 175, permitting abank to act as city treasurer, 88 and89, which would give the Commerceand Navigation Department a largeshare of gasoline tax receipts.

Others are Hated as follows: 216,allowing municipalities to provide$200 funerals for veterans; 225,

.j covered.

Award Contracts

432, providing at least two realtorson condemnation commissions; 441,imposing an amusement tax for un-employment relief; 442, a luxuriestax for the name benefit; 44 3, giv-ing tenure of office to recorder'sclerks; 436, authorizing state com-

Peter's on a day when Pope PiusXI celebrated mass at the great al-tar. A descriptive reading writtenby Mr. Jagels to accompany themusic, was read by Miss FranklinM. Kellogg of Brantwqod and wasalso printed on the program. Thispart of the program, so far as the

missloner of municipal accounts to music Is concerned was as follows:prescribe city budgets; 435, regu-;latlng county and city bond issues; '421; regarding Old tax legislation; '422, similar to 421; 157, tenure forborough recorders who happen tobe exempt firemen; 130, providingthat employees of first class coun-ties may withdraw from pensionfund and refunds money deductedfrom salaries on withdrawal.

Copies of the Council's resolutionwere ordered sent to Union Coun-ty's representatives in the Legisla-ture and to the New Jersey Leagueof Municipalities.

Meditation—Carillon HellsIri the Cathedral—Organ — ••Ven! Creater Splrltus—ChoirSaint Ceculin—OrganI'ruelftxuH—Cathedral ChoirAvc Maria—OrganTe Deuni—Description of tin*'arrival-of the Holy Pathvr'atthe Cathedral

Grand Ohofur--Organ"The Garden Idylle" began with

,'a prologue called "Dawn in a

Varied Bids on DivisionAve. Sewer Extension^-Consider AdditionalWards for City

Savings in Street Work"Bids for street supplies and con-

struction of a storm sewer exten-! uted within the last few years and

dence Borough, town*ship, Sprioglield, Sftksv

final "Rates MondayIn spite of the fact that the City

Of Summit kept Its oudget down forthe year 1932 to produce a veryslightly, lower tax rate for citypurposes than tbe year 1931 therate aa fixed by th? county boardof taxation yesterday for this cityincluding all Btflte, county and .lo-cal tuxes Is six points higher .thanthe total, rate of last year. Thecounty board fixed the rate of$3.82 as against:$3,76 for Summitlast year.

In fixing the rates for the twen-ty-one municipalities in the countythe results .show that ten munici-palities will have a higher rate andten will have a lower rate and oneremains fixed at the same rate aslast year. Summit, with' Its rate of$3.82 is one of eight municipalitiesIn the county which has a rate lessthan $4.00. The lowest rate is thatof the city of Linden, $2.96, whichIs accounted for by the fact thatthis municipality was newly ere- '

alon in Division avenue were re-ceived and contracts awarded atTuesday night's meeting of Com-mon Council. Despite that lengthyprocedure; reading of a pile of billsstacked three feet high and a five-minute r<scess, the

has not an accumulation of bondedIndebtedness. The next lowest ratois that of $3.37 for Clark Township.

In comparing the Summit 'ratewith that of Westfield, which is thecommunity nearest in size andpopulation to Summit of any In the

Bride and GroomElectWalkRightIn

and Out Again

declared that in hisOjlliion It wi l l ! e y l d e n V that the Legislature willbe very successful and "wiH keep n o t m a k » any changes in the ar-the money wUhthjet taxpayers andat the same: time effect a savingfor the c i ty /Un other words, heremarkedYi&Tcpayer* will be ableto nave by-prepayment and the city

* will save since tax ^anticipationnotes are secured at 6 per cent, in-terest from local banaT. - ._

In a letter urgiar the move,Mayor Snook toldjhe cSuttcil of thebenefits of the discount plan, re-marking that:

"In view of the fact that a dis-count such as this would toot costthe City of Summit any moremoney than we would pay in lnter-

Bt charges in tax anticipation bor-rowings, I recommend that youadopt a resolution which will au-

*e our tax collector!© makei( tax discount allowance."As a coincidence^ he continued,

i might mention that on FridayI received a telephone call

New Broad StreetOn

timemer°aJ 8treet' «haracterlied some

on whlh fl<

Centra P ft8

length

8 t r e e t " W work

w e e k B p M t - « • * « *. Poetically the entirel e n e w thoroughfare.

SprlnKfieicln i 1

willweatherPlacing of

are still to bePark, between

erected as soon aspermit satiifactory

company said

on

night.

Maple

w w e » • • *

not make any, changesrangements for carrying oat theprovisions of the old age relief law.While Union County voted down aproposal that the Welfare Boardalso care for all indigent residentsof the ctranty and establish a coun-ty welfare noBM . the old age re-lief features of the welfare act areto be liLeffect It had- been pro-posed in the Welfare Board act toabolish the overseers of the.poorin the various municipalities, andplace the care of the Indigent poorIn the hands of the Welfare.Board.This feature, however, was defeat-ed in Union County. ' • ~ '

Director McMaae has been watch-ing the progress of various propos-als with respect to changes In theold age relief act, and lie declaredtoday he believed the Legislaturewould not make any changes at thissession. The county must there-fore go ahead with preparations foradministering the law which takes,effect April 1st ,

Two proposals for delay havebeen before the Legislature. Sen-ate Bill 121 would permit Board ofFreeholders to suspend from timeto time the provisions of the oldage relief act for such period oftime as the board may deem prop-er. This bill was referred to theSenate Judiciary Committee buthas not been reported out of com-mittee. It is sponsored by StateSenator Clifford R. Powell of Bur-lington County;

The other proposal to that of As-semblyman Charles Hood of EssexCounty. It would postpone appli-cations for relief until April 1st,1933, and payment of relief untilJuly 1st, 1933. This bill no*{ restswith the Committee on Claims andPensions In the House, and has notbeen acted on by the committee.

Kxpect W.It was estimated at the time the

county budget was In preparationthat 900 persons would be entitledto pensions for the first year. Tbesums provided In thi« year's bud-get are, however, only for the sixmonths' period from July 1st, whenpayments are to begin, to the endot the fiscal year. December 31st,

(Continued oft P*g« 8»ven) ,

t h o r t t y . V y;; President IrvJnt M. Kelson, who

presided, anno\in«ed that the Sum-mit Lions Club-would:be the,hostclub and entertain the Kiwanis andRotary clubs on Wednesday, April13th, The nature of tbe proposedprogram will be In (keeping withthe Washington "Bicehtenniai, ob-servation. ' '• /• ' .• ' _ :

An invitation from Superlntend-nt of Schools John B. Dougall was

read, inviting the members of theSummit Lions Club to witness thepremier showing in this city of thefour-reel motion picture, "The Lifeof George Washington." at the Lin-colp School last evening.

Secretary Charles H. Baum itwas announced; would deliver anaddress at the' State Lions clubsofficers' conference, to be held atthe Hotel Hildebrecht, in Trenton,at 5.30 p. m. on Wednesday of nextweek, March 23rd. His Subject willbe "The Value of a District Coun-

District Court Clerk Anton C.Swenson can rattle otf "Do youswear to tell the truth, the wholetruth and nothing but, the truth.,-£,••. ."•*' -••• «^9d'-VKJF\^60t'"at'ficlalr In the State but when itcomes to pronouncing a weddingceremony, it's "No, thank you."

All by way of Introduction to thereport that a middleaged jnan whodeclared himself the scion of aprominent Camden family on Mon-day asked Clerk Swensen. to makehim the husband of an attractivewoman who designated herself- asof a famous Ptlladelphla family.

CivieXIut AskSchool Site Facts

Echoes of the Ash wood avenue!

"short and snappy" as possible.The Maplewood Construction

Company, with a bid of $360, was

Summit Garden." and the audience S t t i ^ T T V v th«.8fwer

needed verv llttl« imnHnniinn m extension 325 feet altfng Divisionavenue. Bids were numerous andvaried from the $360 to $851.60.Those seeking to furnish the streetsupplies were also numeroua andthe various Items were split upamong several companies at a.sav-ing to the city that could not beeffected if a blanket contract wereawarded.

Tho Barrett Company of BoundBrook and Koppers Products Coin-

needed very little Imagination Inthis number. ~

In the main part of this sectionthe numbers were: -

Forest Memories — Sitgfrlcd'aSong-of IMVB

Fountain UeverlesTrees " • • , •

"A Chinese Temple Garden,"j where a garden fete Is in progresa,j was the next feature, and-the en-; tertainment numbers were: •'I Traumerel ' J

Lover Coino Bai'k to M«Ohtnese SerenadeThe CanaryMcmorleH—Viennawith the Board of Education refuse j _

to be slleuced, and In the latest re-L T n e u followed "Walk in thovlval of the discussion the Civici j

organ, and "The Storm,"I

vlval of the discussion the Civic H g , ,Ciob seeks additional information j organ. In this part use wan madeon how the purchase price of the-j-°"nstnirnent*'«uch as the ocarina,Jefferson Schoor site was detrmln- j theremln, etc., which are nevered. [heard in the usual concert._J'We. desire to know," their letter T n e theremin- takes the musicto the Board states, "if the school. rt«ht out of the air by means ofboard ever had the land actually j t h e n a n d s intercepting the waveappraised and by whom. From re-! lengths; and the hands donotlouchliable Information In our hands, it 'he vibrator at any time. • No or-appears that the value of this T>rop- cheatra instrument produces the

points higher than Summit or 13.85,4 decrease of two points tinder therate of that town last year. Thehighest rate in the county this yearis that of New Providence Town-ship, $5.51.

The rate fixed for New Provi-dence Borough Is $4.32 or an |n«crease of 32 points over thafof last

I year. New Providence Township'srate is $5.51 or a decrease of ISpoints from last year. SpringfieldTownship rate is $4.03, one pointunder that of last year.

The rate fixed for Summit willproduce an excess of the total

pany of Kearney were successful budget the amount of $2,483.93. InSpringfield the excess producedwill be $116.09. In New Providence

bidders for furnishing'the differentgrades of tar that will be required.Asphalt will bt; furnished by two Township the excess will beconcerns/the- Franklin Contractingi49, while in the borough th» exCompany of Newark and The Texas) will be $110.60.Company. CriiHhed stone in differ- The net valuation of propertyent sizes will be furnished by Gennaro l,opre of Orange.

City Engineer Frank A. Murrayhas pointed out (lie. saving effectedin ull the street department sup-plies this year and the crushedwtpne contract la u" good example.Screenings are this year $1.40 aton, 60 cents less than the city paid

1932Clark :............|3.37Cranford ...:.. 3.90

— - r ,erty prior to the opening and nav- s a m e tone and the reproduction, as f | | m i ; three elffhthB iireh stone i.sThe couple had been told ln New | ing of this street did not justify the 1 Played, was a distinct novelty. j %{M compared with $2.40 last year.

- - - - - ' price paid. it seems to us that I ^ this part the songs of real The North Jersey Amesite Com-althdugh $15.50 a front foot might! b ' r d 8 a n d not-hunjan. Imitationsbe justified for ashwood avenue, I Played an interesting part _ _ _ _certainly that Is not just fo.r front-! -Tha audiencewas thrilled by this h c r e , WCre low on bids for hituml

Kllzalmth 3.49

York that New Jersey was a niceplace to be married. Summit wasthe nicest place in New Jersey,they decided, so they sought a mar-riage license here, not from theBoard of Health but from the Dis-trict Court clerk! When the latterexplained that he didn't issue li-censes and besides, couples had to

p a n y o f M o r r l s t o w I 1 ( Op e r a t o r8 ofthe Commonwealth Quarry near

ape on AHenwood and Faituote\ yery. 'unusual program of music,avenues which may exist on a map -but do not in fact. j

"Are we correct in understand-j t nls great art.Ing that from' previous corres-i

Mr. Jagels Is a great lover of musicand haa a keen appreciation of

Announcementfeatures

of some of theof the program

cil."Eric von Siefart, chairman of the

Charter Night Anniversary commit-tee, made a brief report about theSalmagundi party lo be held at thefield house, Memorial Park-, at 8.30p. m. on Wednesday, March 30th.

Hospital Auxiliary to ~. Hold Annual Meeting

The Women's Auxiliary of Over-look^ Hospital Association announcethat they will hold their annualmeeting and-election of of fleers atthe- nurses'. home at Overlook onMonday afternoon. March 21st, at3.30 o'clock.. Mr». T. I*. Prout, thepresident, will preside.

Beside the election, and readingof a few very brief- reports, therewill be for the entertainment of themembers, a play presented by thenurses. The skit Is entitled "A DayIn The Hospital," and should bemost Interesting as well as enter-taining, for the cast will un-doubtedly be able to Interpret theirparts with true feeling and under-standing!

Be sure, every member, to. savethis day, and not only to join Inmaking this meeting ft success, butto bring with you a possible newmember. /

Three tptngs to remember, auxil-iary annual meeting, March 21st, at3.30 at the nurses' home, and, mostImportant of all, come to this oneyearly meeting to learn for your-self what your auxiliary has beendoing and how It Is spending Itsfunds for Overlook Hospital.

Tea will be served after themeeting.

Easter Program atArthur Sunshine Home

The Easter program at the Ar-thur Sunshine Home in Pine Groveavenue will be given on Sunday,March 20th. at 8.4% o'clock. Theprogram will be given by the chil-dren.

Marcel, Shampoo, Wng«r Wave atLillian's In Mafferi barber shop.

Mentloa the HERALD then buying

wait a total of 72 hours before a pdndence with your Board no por-:ceremony in this State, Mr, P. C. F. i tlon of the purchase price was j «n.d. grouping of instruments wasand Miss F. P. F. returned to Newfglyen In consideration of the open-' m a d e a t lbe beginning by Mrs. M.York, where probably the "tie that ing arid paving of Ashwood ave-j L. Hemlnway, chairman of thebinds" was made. n e r '' «-«»-~«»»»—- «' ti,« e..mmif

Why they didn't try Elkton orl d G t

Board's reply to a former letter'some other Maty land™ GretnaGreen near their home towns wasexplained by the pair in that theyhad been vacationing in Boston anddid not realize "It would be a nicesurprise to their families if they.,married" until both reached NewJfork." ' ' ~~

The occasion was the secondthat Clerk Swenson has been ask-ed for a marriage license since hebecame affiliated with the District j ket value, of/land in that vicinity.

nue?"The

from

board bLmanagerj of the Summitcommunication resulted i Home for ChHdrehT

dissatisfaction ' with,. —the

from the Civic Club. In that reply,the Board stated the price wan de-1termlned "through discussion be-tween the parties, the Board offer-jing and the Faitoute Company asking more than purchase price. Theprice was an intermediate^price fin-

Oratorian MothersAssociation FormedTlie Headmaster of the Oratory

ally agreed upon. One basis usediSchool..takes pleasure in announc-in thedisfiusslon was the themnar- »»g to the alumni, Jpatrpns^and

friends of• the Oratory SchooF theCourt. While <iourt% convene(Mn The lot has A85 feet fronting on'J o r m l n S ot an1 aBsoclatlon com-_City Hafi, some months ago,:a Sum- A&hWobd avenue and approximaite-iposed of mothers of ;the studentsmlt couple mistook him for the ily equivalent frontage on Faitouteiand friends of. the Oratory School.

" a n d AHenwood avenues; This -would Mrs. James J. Kerrigan,-who con-give a front foot price of $15.50 ceived the idea, invited the motherswhich we understand was almost of the students and friends livingone half for surrounding property. I within the near vicinity of the

Registrar of Vital Statistics andasked for a license. ' ,

Sears, Roebuck Co.Open Store Here

tioua concrete. The two gradesbe furnished at $8.B0 and $7.90ton. .

Additional Wards Considered.A question from Arthur S. Mit-

chell on. the propoaal to create sixwards to replace the present twoin the city led Council PresidentJames H. Bancker to declare thatthe committee of the whole Is con-sidering it and will.act when"theyreach agreement."

Councllnian Harry T. Hamilton,as chftlrman of the Finance Com-;mittee, introduced an ordinance air^thorizing the Issuance of $50,000worth.of street and sewer improve-ment bonds. The umounr would beused- ln paylngr for improveinentaalready niade. ..„

April 15th was sot a a the datefor hearittgren the assessors' re-port on the apportionment of costsfor house-connections'fo.the Glen-side avenue sanitary sewer. The as-sessors also reported that througherror Patrolfiiuri Nicholas J. Graaso

1 taxable in this city is fixed at $30,-259,947. • ' . . - •

The county board of taxation willmeet at Its office In Elizabeth onMonday, March 21st, for, the pur-pose of confirming .these figures.

1931$3.44

4.003.504.634.54S.874.11.11

2.923.62-4.005.6?3,954.304.214.084.784.043.76

JIST

Kanwood ..:.... 4..14(iarwoqd ....,„, 4.83'Hillside .....:...: ;... 5.31Kenllworth 5.4!)-Linden Township I fLinden, City : 2.96

».634.325.51

alnflt-ld 3.73Hallway :.. ..T.."'.."....;..... 4.44HOHPIIB I.. 4.8GRosalie Park ..•:• 4.18Scotch 'Plains 4.49SprlnKfleld : 4.03Summit 3.82Union 5.01WeHtfleld 3.85

Big UnemployedBenefit Show

Laurel and Hardy in their firstsfeature.. production, "Pardon—Us,"

-Slim Summervllle: .Jn "Bless theLadies/' "and single reel animated

cf Sylvan terrace had been -assessed$3.76 for ^personal property. Thecouncil authorized destruction

cartoon,, "OswaC the Clown," are"the -outstanding screen attractions-announced for the Roth-Strand's ,monster_ benefit program for 'the,,.,unemployed to; be held Saturday -'-_morning of this week, March 19th,at 10 o'clock.

"Another basis considered by the; school to meet at the Oratory for ... h a r K e a K a l n B t t h eBoard was comparison with the j the purpose of forming the as8oci-| l l l e t M r J L g S . »onlv other available school site ination and the election of officersrthat neighborhood. Negotiations I . The mothers gatliered in the

A persistent rumor that Searsv j w e r e begUn for said other site, i Oratory chapel and an address wasRoebuck & Co., large mail order j wj,lch Was considered smaller, and given by tbe headmaster, the Veryfirm that in recent years has beenjjn e p r | C e demanded therefor was Rev. Father Joseph, who thankeddveioping Us retail business J a D 0 U t two «nd a half times that .them for their presence and thethrough, stores about the country, | ^ for ^ Faitoute property." I enthusiastic response to the invita-will shortly establish in Summit j | Donald Holmes has been de-tion of Mrs. Kerrigan. Father Jo-now has it that the company hasleased the store at 417 Springfieldavenue from which Wool worth's 5& 10 cent store will move May 1st.

It is known that the mail orderconcern has been trying for sometime to secure a Springfield avenuestore. Local property owners, It issaid, were' not agreeable to a rentbased on the amount of businessthe store does, the type of leaseSears—was* said to havecBtnigiih'They are opening a store in Wush-ington street, MorfiiloWh. tW

signated by the Board to reply to seph felt confident that it was thethe latest query, but has not yet

month.Woolworth's refuse to confirm

the subleasing of the 417 Spring-field avenue store, They hold alease from the William H. Risk es-tate for another five yearn, but aretrying to, sublease now that theyhave rented on a 20-year lease alarger store at 407 and 409 Spring-field avenue.

Hotel Suburban—Springfield ATC*Snmmlt

AfcN0UNCE8 LOWER RATESSingle rooms with meals as low

as $25 per week. Double roomswith meals as low as $47.50 perweek. Luncheon, 12-2, $1: dinner,6-8, $1,50; Sunday dinner, 12.30-3,$2; supper, 6-8, f 1.60.—Adv. 52-60

Sixth Petit JuryPanel Drawn for Duty

_ . . 7~T.—. ,L , ! movement, saying,The-sixth and final petit Jury L o r d b u , ,d t h e h o u B e >

panel for Ihis term of the county• ,n w h o b u l l d j t . .couVtB.t t o - serve from Monday, AU._ n e M d i c t i 0 I

beginning of a great movement for-the Oratory School: Before theformation of the association hegave Benediction of the MostBlessed Sacrament that the Lord

thoae present in theofflcera and bless the

Unless thelabor in

March 21st. until the end of theterm, was drawn this before

After benediction the followingwere elected: Mrs. James J. Kerri-gan, president; Mrs. M; Thompson,

StationApplication of the Locust Realty

Corporation to erect a gasoline*service station at Morris avenueand Locust drive was again madeand it was decided to advertise fora hearing on the plan April 5th. W.A. Compton, who requested per-mission for. placing of pumps at 166and 168 Broad-street, was author-ized to erect two. • - . •

Gaetano Orusao again made ap-plication for change of his propertyat Broad and Orchard streets from,residential to business zone. Therequest was referred to the Plan-ning Board.

The admission for this elaboratescreen entertainment, which is to

o f be fully two hours in length, is onlytwo cans of food for either grown-ups or children.

"Pardon Us," is Stanley Laureland Oliver Hardy's-flrst feature -length farce comedy production, 'and the entire program is made upentirely with screen portrayals and ,preBentatlons never before shown atthe Strand Theater, Summit.

The management of the Roth-Strand Theater is working in con- .junction with the Summit Emer-igency Relief Committee and the \American Legion Post of Summty ln the presentation of this benefit forthe unemployed, The Relief Com- 'mittee will recommend the needy,and1 the American Legion will col-

Notification of the acceptance of | ioct and distribute- the cannedgoods >flceiveV| :aa payment for ad>Broad street was received from th~

Union County Board of-Freeholdersand ;fJled. " , °

City Clerk Frederick C, Kentz re-ported receipts last month of $1,-

' $438 of that figure repre-

Colllns. Among those summonedfor service are:

Summit — Charles E. Halnes,David N. Mauser, Karl S. CliriHt-man, Alfred J. Halm.

New Provldence-^Oeorge W. Fitz-inger, Louis H, Watt.

Springfield—Edward M. Drehvr.

' t a w CollideCars driven by Miss Elsie Swain,1

127 Morris turnpike, and AnthonyBuhagler, 79 Union place, collidedin Summit avenue last evening.

• When' buying, mention that yousaw the afl. ID the HERALD.

was the titlethe organization, and the membersdecided that the first need of theschool was a new and larger gym-nasium, and towards this end hayoarranged .to have a card_party_onAridity, April 1st, to collect fundsBO they might be able to lay thecorner-stone for the twenty-fifth.anniversary of the fouiidatton~ofthe school. ;

The following mothers werepresent at the first meeting: Mrs.George Crowiey, ghort Hills; Mrs.Paul Usterhazy, Madison; Mrs.George Hulsking, .Maplewood;Mrs. Louise Hughes, It ah way; Mrs.

(Continued on Page Two)

219was payment for. 67

licenses for tininoculated dogs.Two permits for alterations were

granted, first, to Mrs. B. Carlson,9 Aubrey street, and second, to theAli'lc and Old Hickory Building andLoan Association for a change at69-71 Union place.

Refunds of portion of depositsr(!(|uircd before sewer connectionslire made were authorized forThomas A. Curtis and John It.Croot. There were twenty prop-erty owners given permission tospread their assessments for bene-fits over a period of years.

Subscribe to. this paper.

mission! to Saturday morning's un-employed benefit at! the Strand.

The Roth-Strand Theater em-ployees are giving their time andservices gratis and the theater man-agement Is furnishing the theaterand pictures absolutely free. . ',

Takes 7 Months forLetter to Go 55 Miles

Fifty-five miles In seven monthsis the record Of a letter just re-ceived by a Division avenue rest-dent. It was mailed In Trenton onAugust 17th and reached Summityesterday after visiting severalpost office* >tyoitt;th« state.

Relnharfsabout April 1Ing, 359 0prln|

.will rnovtBuild-

• . . : \ ' ,< . - . . - . I - I

FRIDAY, MARCH 18.1932 THE SUMMIT HERALD AND SUMMIT RECORD, SUMMIT, 41; J. PAGITHWDT

la Summit ChurchesRer.

preachHenry h. LaroMIn willSunday moruing in the

Summit MethodistChurch on "The Proposal of JeauBChrist to Our Modern World.

Thereparty

will be an evangelisticOlive Holy

Christianity's contribution "to the world.;*«fiiis

J)r. Stuart L. tyubti » t i4

% | b o u f fcUUrCta

THE COMMUNITY CHURCH(Undenominational)

' Springfield and Waldron Avenues Summit, N. J.

CJmrch, 42 Railroad avepue,day, March 20lh. Mrs.(Robinson)

Sun-Ruth

in the Parish house, there will b e , p e a c f nfthe first of tae Easter w«k **rv-| r C d M 0 I

Thompson, an accom-1 lce3 "with'nov.Ralph B. Ncsbitt as0 1 ^ 1 ^ 1 1 8 1 ^ His sub*** will be, "I

present.

St. Jphn'stutheraa Church. Rev.W, $,' Hinnmn will -preachSundayat 11 a. m. on "Is Christ an Ahso-iute, Monarch?" On Thursday,March 24th, at 8 p. m., there will beholy communion.

Churcrc tzrtclass meeting prayer

Sfr,<

and praise}

j On Wednesday evening at Sj o'clock 111 the parish house, Mr.f Nesbitt will speak 6a "The Good•Shepherd."I .., On Thursday evening at 8 o'clockhln the'qhurch auditorium, thej Lord's Supper will* be celebrated—the minister, Dr. Brank prill bring

j tho message. Members ofI Communicants' Class and othersdesiring, to' unite with the church

Informemberghlp.At the "

Jewish Community Center

The Jewish penile of Sunimit»vill-celebrate the Feast of Purimwith a, play am! eau-italanient bythe children vi ihe Hebrew andSunday School. und«?r the leader-

;lii|> ui KabEiW. Weiner, oif Sun-

i.l..oist.erous carnivals of the Kurop-c-an -tUttions among which the Jews

[were flattered, the day became a, time i"or merry-making and revelry.No matter how oppressed and em-bittered the lot of the-Jew in exile.,

mflaiHIirSifcH and frolic I l k , j ^ c t 3 I f a

PILGRIMAGE SIXDAY TO 'SAl.Vf JOSEPH'S SHRINE

Sunday, March 20th. the fifth an-

Tho ceremoale* %lll beg! apromptly at 4 o'clock. Rav. Mat-thew J. Toohey will give a sermonon Sain( Joseph. This will be-foJF

nual pilgrimage will take place at | lowed by a solemn benediction ofthe National Shrine of Saint Jo-1 the Most Blessed Sacrament. Spe-

/ l a r g e crowd isttend from various

day, .March 2i>tb..a;t,-2 p. mrhe owning -oflief tfi^MmsMjOt^tth -destruction...".!}?:.; their

thei%vi!' •>«• the sinvinz. of the 'Star > n^W^'Hamtm^tfeft ^ v o i i t ^ o | "theyp.myled Jtonatr aud t|ic Hatikvoh 'kins. But due to th¥ Ioya1tr';ofaccompanied t»y Gertrude Feibush the Jew, Alonk>cui, nnd the bravery

a child on Purim.' EiJriin commemoratea-. the deliv-

i-iaiH-e of the Jews when as exiles | t .e ive ( ] thromUi the intercession ofm I cTsia (hey.- were threatened | t h l s B r c a t , S a l , , t . r l u r jng the past

arch- jyear, it is announced at the shrine.

cial music will be rendered. Fol*lowing this there will be venera*

partH of New York and New Jer-1 tion of the relic of St. Joseph,sey. Many favors have been re- |

The HERALD welcomes all newsItems of Interest to TOO or yourneighbor. -.--

Daruick.

1 "

I Lferencelice. The program will cons.Jst of ai•guest speaker from out of town and Ij specialmusic. 7 p. m. Young Pco-I!pie's hour, subject: "How can ij

.{show my crowd that I am a Chris-:J -I tian?" John 13:35 Lit. 3:l-S. 8 p. m. I. I Evangelistic aud._ altar service—!

of hisof . were s

:^M)W:S\i;f ~«tnsse*-J'!lt • veryatjir two "

Herbert*!«%j|b/SauI

Kl&awiSjJioyU,

heHut• it

Esther, the JewsHainan, sufft'ps'rthid: P|nned for-to«-hotonly the

11

M n f i u ;rrof<ss|i.n.ir—'If.iii

I'< .id. r •

.Sermon—The I1*.

Ken leesSi r\1rcHim I^rd. ftml

J-'aureCrtwsa

'Prayer That Brings Results" will1 Anthem—"OiVri.st

iof tho

Service

irchbiBhop of Capua,fLlte or St. Philip-o great reformer of, a penitent of st.

de Berulle, found-'itpry in France; St.leB, founder and firste Oratory at Tuoiion,• Congregation of thu-

ich numbers unionsSt. Margaret" Mary;Newman, famous asntrovertialist, andader of the Oratory

welcomes allnewrrest to you_ or your

"After Jcsns, It Is His Religion or None."

PALM SUNDAY, MARCH 20, 1932

The Methodist Episcopal ChurchOF SUMMIT

Kent Place BoulevardHENIIY L. LAMBDIN. Minister

11 A. M. Worship. Sermon: "The Proposal of JesusChrist to Our Modern World,"

Music: "Here Yet Awhile," Bach, and "Crucirix," Faurie.

'•-..". COME AND WORSHIP , . . " . , .

Tjbe the pastor's subject.

The Community Church"The Value of Personality" will

be the subject of Dr. Stuart L. Ty-son's sermon on Sunday, March20th. Dr. Tyson will discuss theunique contribution which theChristian religion has made toward,a true evaluation of personality.

, r :Sermon—Tim Cross in

\.L. p . EmersonChristian Ex-

Central Presbyterian ChurchDr. Rockwell S- Brank, pastor

11 A.M^-Message by Dr. Brank on "The Lord of Lords"

8 P. M.—-Choir will render Stainer's "Crucifixion," underT the direction of Chauncey S. Hickok.

You are Invited to worship with ns.

First Baptist C'liiirch"Life's Imperative Realities" will

be the subject of the morning ser-mon, in the First Baptist Churchon Palm Sunday, at 11 o'clock.Rev. David K. Earnwell willpreach, and Arthur G. Huson, bari-tone soloist, will sing Eville's"Ride On! Ride On, In Majesty."The'choir anthem will be Parker's"Jerusaleni," and the orgsin musicwill be Jlailly's "Palm Sunday" andFauro's_"The PalniB." -

SWEDISH LUTIIE-IIAN C1IUBCH

Palm Snndnj-Sundrty School—9.45 a. m.Mofhlns Worshlj)— j.i a. m. (English

language used)l'rngrnm

Organ I'roludo :.-..'. ...:.' Handel1'rocos.siondi hy the Choir—"How

Shall. I Receive Thee"Anthem—"The Palriia" .• Pauro

The i:ho!rThe Acting I^wtor, -Mallard Jfolson,

will preach the sermon. • His topicwill be, '"Jesus the llread of Xlfti"

Bai|ltonu Soli)—Selected ....: .-., ' Adolph Swenson

niaoOrtjan- Uir Your,

Christian Science Church"Matter" will be the Rubject of

j the lesson-sermon in the FirstI Church of Christ, Scientist, onI Ruthven place, Sunday, March 20th.j "the'Golden Text is: "Be still,land know that I am God: I will be{exalted among tho heathen, I willI bo exalted in the earth" (Psalms140:10). _ 'j Among the citations which com-; prise the lesson-sermon is the fol-lowing from the hible: "Love notthe world, neither the things that

'are In the world. If any man lovothe world, the love of the Fatheris not in him". (1-John 2:15).--.

the Star of Judah, in twol»y jtabbi W.

Wt'iiicr. The t'radlc Son's;-.of Ks-tlier. The .east includes' Alfred «Levy its .Xkmkeai, Clara Falcon as ;

Kstlier, Doris.Freldiaan -as., llelvin Keiahart an first ;ntv Morry Ko^t-Hslein as ]

second- 'uttendent.—Jwsfph Lc-viiiejan King Aehashvoms and Philip j.Vlinitel as iJaiuan. and Adoif Fish-er as herald. - . - , • ' . . .

1 A play; "The Salon of Purim"j (the banquet of purim) in one act.The cast is as follows: "&IshanosViikov" suns; by.Rabbi W. Weinerand-diildren of '••class- three, HaroldWeiner, Edward.'Gold. Albert Dar-diek, .\telvin KeiRbarl,, Joseph IJQ-viim and Alfred.'Levy. •

I A sons in Yiddish by Haroldj Weiner. "Homontashun." A sons'in Yiddish by Rabbi \\\ Weinc-r andthe children," '"Haknt is- Purim

j BredW*-'»---T-he Shaiach Moneis girlsKvelyn Fischer.. Rhoda Alantcl;

Itevine aad VAha Go!d- jtho Turitti. Slipiilor (the I

: Purim players) ar* "»•»- n**4* ™A !

Majesty"Postludiv—".Lift.O Ye CJiUes" .;..

There will be, a service ivnrl Holy j jf.un*e|^'Communion at 8 p. m. The Rev. j g t ( , j nA. S. Pearson of Montclalr will; p u H | U , s ) a r t f R e t a ^ i t a n dhave charge. Swedish and Engllsh1Ull th F r i o d m 3 n , G S a ^ n w H 1 a c twill...be used at this service. ;.,„ ..„.,=_,„,„ o f l h e , a v s a n d e n .

tliat Purim rc',caHs to the stulllnrT1

hisUrry."A*gain~Jind; asainJewTa^a"n«triaetton,,,,aiid,

•strain""-a ndjr iw«itt; aaA,.'.a..,'J!jen'ver'o'r'

her despised and helpless peoplebeeoines tho prototype of the un-dyin^ devotion of the Jew who iswilling to risk all for his people.But although a feature of thePurim celebration Is the reading ofthe jiiegUlu (tho scroll of Esther)in "the synasoKue, the greater partof the festival is given over tomerry-making. Many merry '-song'shave been .composed for this holi-day. ,

Th,e custom of presenting Purimplays has never died out and untilthis day Jewish children retell intheir make-believe characters the-heroic story, of their ancestors.Purim may be said to bo the play-ers' holiday, for its story is but atype of the colorful drama Israelhas presented with simple heroismupon every stage of the history ofthe world. ' •

-Subscribe to this paper.

Surgeon ChiropodistDR. V. F. HARYEY

Summit 4ve.V*v

'Phone 6-4318h'ltp \he firo. house)

Summit, N.

Of lice Hours 0 a, IU. to 5 p. m.

Summit Secretarial Schoolk Intensive Training In

r SliOKTHANl) - SECRETARIAL DUTIES

DAY AND EVENING SESSIONS- . Individual Attention

SS2 Springfield AvenueSummit, New. Jersey

Tlione Summit «-38S*Baitsett liulldlng

"Somla" nt Swedish LutheranChurch

The Ladies' Aid Society will hold

as chairman,tertaintnent.

a "Semla" festival Friday at 8.15p. m., in the church. A programwill be rendered and refreshmentsserved.

THE FEIXOWSHIF OF

Lenten Season of 1932

Announcement!

Reinhart's Market, Inc.WiU Move

About April 1st- to the •*

Building359 Springfiiiij Ave.

IVatch for .fort^^r announcemrot in the Summit Herald

('iilvary t'hurcb ServicesOn Palm Suutiay the Holy Com-

niunion will he celebrated at 8 a..m... Morning .prayer w-lll-'be said atH i m The Rector will nreachon the?i ?

PURIM, THE FKAST'-OF LGTSBy Uabb'i \V. Wtscer

j . Purim, which is said to-bave de- Iirived it:'; name-- from the Persianword pur. meaning a lot, is a rar-Divixl holiday of the Jeai?!^ yeifr.

i t n t v r n I Although'it is a minor holiday it is1 JCAYfcK : l)nf. of the most widely and-heartily

(celebrated of all aJic festivals.I Aibptin?; many features of the

FRIDAY, MARCH IS jlove Thee, until weVaall-liavo come"Simon, Lovoat Thou Me?" j to love Thee wholly and without

(Read John 21, 15-22) I any,lack of fcHin?,' any lapse ofWhen love has become the sole '• m i t u l - o r an>' r l a w oi conduct, either

and single force Unit'governs ac-i i l1 sleeping or in wakisa?. either bytbn, wo are brought inevitably to (»»B»t oc by day. Amen.that soul-searching experience to t »i » . '_.._ .'11H_ *'"'."' 'which Simon Peter came in his lastmeeting with Jeaua the RisenChrist. Tho "new commandment"

rangement of "The Palms" lorbaritone solo will be sung by Mr.Grosslinger.

Stainer's "Crucifixion" will begiven by the choir at 8 p. in. Thebeauty and emotional appeal ofthis setting; of the passion story iswell known. .Mr. Dortsak, tenor,and Mr. Grosslinger, baritone, willsing the solo parts. Tschaikow-sky's lovely poem, "A Legend," willbe sung as an offertory By LehRhett. All are welcom.e.

The Youns People's Fellowshipwill meet at 6 p. m. An interestln,and instructive program has beenarranged. •„ • -•—•'

It Ww?t Be LongThe season will soon be over lor

STROBES SAUSAGE• '• " - — • a n d ; • . — ^ - l l - ••.'.

SCRAPPLE

How About aFresh Killed Chicken

From Our Own FarmKilled only to order. Orders must be in the

morning before they arc wanted.

< We also have a limited supply of

Fresh Brown Eggsv

From Our Own Farm.

383-385 ^

Thppes Sunjmit 6.?28Q>8i^?

°n't forget that we allow 5% for cash and carry

LU.

l*rcKiiyterlanRev. Rockwell S. Brnnk, pastor

of .the Central Presbyterian^Clwrchrwill have for his sermon "loplc atthe morning service"The Lord ofLords."•-••--—__

At the evening service at 8o'clock,' the choir, "under the di-rection of Chauncey S. Hickok willrender Stainer'y "Crucifixion."

The '.Senior—Young People'sj Group meeting at 6.45 for a fellow-ship supper—and having a briefdevotional service following, willthen attend! the evening service ina body. ..'Heirr Russell-...Vfc Abel, on fur-

lough from Paqua, New'"(5ulnea isio.lie the speaker at the meeting of]the Yoiirig People's League at 7p. m.__Mr. Abel has an. outstandingmessage which -he givesywith un-uaually .te'ITIng effect. Supper"wilPJbe served at <5.-%..„ m. with Mrs.Charles^D. Woolsey, Mrs. Edwin CjjVan Cise and Mrs. Frank H. Rey-nolds as hostesses. The entire pro-gram for the evening promises tobe exceptionally Interesting., The Easter meeting of the Light-

bearers, under the 'leadership ofMrs. "Charles Beck and of theKnights of the King, under the di-rection of Mrs. George Marvin is totake the nature of a joint celebra-tion arranged for Monday after-noon at 3.30 in the parish house.The alumni group of the Knightsof the King will conduct the pro-gram, with Peter Wood, as chair-man. Both groups will participate

| in the programi. ^herewill be BPO-cial messages by Mrsv-George Mar-vin, Mrs. Charles Beck, and thespeaker for the afternoon will bo

!Rev. Ralph B. Nesbitt in costume.The entire arrangement will havea distinctively Easter flavor. Alarge attendance is anticipated.

Special Holy Week ServicesOn Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock

5AL TOX for•'AUTO INTOXICATIONiOID - G AS -IN D_IG_ES_T I ON

-whom shall hereafter be the focusof our attention? Love can not re-main ajMibBtraction. It may con-centrate upon some great cause. It,May go out in loyalty to a system ofthought or to an institution. ThoQuestion which Christ asked Peter,and which he asks of us implies onesingle answer:,,."! love Thee, Christ,more than any cause, I lovo Theemore than any other person. I love<Thee_ so,~ because Thou art mycause, "Thou art my creed, Thouart my church, Thou art my coun-try, Thou are indeed my God—forThou art the Way, the Truili, andthe Life, and no man cometh untothe Father, but by Thee.".

Prayer; O Christ,-wirsinipiy askThee nov^tha! Thou wilt help us to

Hair CutMarcel

ShampooManicure

Eyebrow ArchingFinger Waving

Children's Hair Cut 40c

DeSantis Hair Studio. "" (Over A. & P. Store)

37 'Haipte-Stmt Summit, X. J,

For Appnlnttnent'Cill -Sajnmit fi-1096

MINUTES

Safer and SorerHan Baying a

Bond.$1.00 for theempty bottle

. if it failsto satisfy.

Tune In WEAFTuesdays.9 p. ni.

Wm. Tyler GreenD R'fTG'S

Cltliens Trust Ilank BIdg.10 Maple St. Summit, Jf. J.

aoinatv

He means what he says. ^

His telephone connection will

be made while he holds the line.

He will hear and be heard as

easily as across his desk.

The cost will be about $1.45

(from most New Jersey places by

day; 85 cents after 8.30 p. m.).

Business done by telephone is

low-cost business, in time, money,

energy." ' ' • • "'~~ ~^r---.

i

U Ifi Thrifty to Do Things hy Telephone'

I N«u> Jermty Iiutitution Bathed kf H»

Come One - - - Come All to theGRAND OPENING OF THE

On Friday, March 18th, 1932_ : : - ^ ' . - ' - ' • " • .. . . ' • ' - • • • • . . • - A T . ' • • ; • • • : • . . •

428 Springfield Ave. Summit, N. J.Now, you can buy QualitjrBeef, Lamb, Veal, Pork and Poultry at prices thatwill Save You Money! These "Opening Specials" are just samples of the —many Sensational Meat Bargains we will offer at our, markets every' day of ~the year! Start buying at the American Beef Go. today! A trial will con-: ._,

. vince you!

SIRLOINSTEAK23c "

PorterhouseSTEAK23c it*.

ROUNDSTEAK23c H).

LEGS OF GENUINESPRING LAMB

21clb

PRIME RIB ROAST(HcstCuts)

Top mid liottnni

ROUND ROAST

CltyCnt

Fresh Hamsi

Fresh

Cali Hams

Fresh PorkShoulders

8c"

(By the piece)lb.

Look What 5c Will Buy! Why Pay More? "FRESH NECK BONES-NEW SAtfBBKBAUr

PORK KIDNEYS

FINEST SOCP 3IEATFBESJI 1'Ifi'S FKKT

BEEP HEARTSLAMB

- lb

Shouldersof Veal10c lb.

J.S. •

Extra Special. Sugar-Cured Smoked

CALI HAMS(Only One Ham to a Customer)

nnd Mllk.Fed

Roasting ChickensAll Sizes

24c

Finest 1MIlk'Fed Veal

Breast of Veal

Yeal

Veal Cutlets

Look What 15c Will Buy! Why P^y15c

FBEHH CHOPPED BEEFCHOICE CHI CK STEAK

FINEST FJtANKFUKTERSSMOKED HAMS

lb.CHOICE LAMBF l f E S f P0KM CHOPS

SEST SAUSAGE MEAT

SELECTEDFKESII EGOS 15c d(M!.

HLICEDi BACON 8c

ITRE CREAMERYBUTTER

^4-lbrprlnts or rolls25c lb.

FULL CREAMSTORE CHEESE 49c lb.

American Beef Co.428 SPRINGFIELP AYE.

wm

mifM m.

tt,J932 1 PRIDAY, MARCH 1% 1932

»nd the Growing," will be the sub-

, Warren Bar-eraey over UadioSaturday*yenlng,

o'clock, Inaiigu.thr«Cftftflen-tnin-

h the junior Sett a-ersey will discussnal interest,t talks, on Marchid, will be deliver-Be station at tho

r filling the va-death of the late

Is the author of aisolution recentlyitch would returnmanufacture, saleIon -—of-- alcoholic

States. He hascated repeal of thendment and thedeclared in a re-

:, with a majority% for repeal, legls-:al parties shouldthe issue,>r to Dwlght Mor-cut stand for re-

lonwlde comment,'s remarks willInterest,

Turkey Hill Cot-. throughout, and

>ut the motif to u ,ice cream, mintTlie club thank-

a for her efforts.eed that the cardday afternoon bymbera' wives atr Children nettedlefit of the home.lad charge of ar-

endance prize, of-V. Luna, was. wonrrock. vlce-presi-ock, incidentally,lit delegate to thexranls ConventionJune 24th to July

ntlon will beheldprll. 28th, it wasutenant Governornara, who has- ar-

which Includes aim E. Bedell ofetarial Duties."

ketimmit 6-1495

Cloverbloom

ed Fish

unit 6-1495

/

E TOf

S OPENthe door swings

has fbjia great

$189.50Delivered

Price

mmit, N. J.

lay Evenings

R DERATOR

New flwifence and VicinityN Prom the Borough and Township,Including Murray Hill and Berkeley Heifhtt

tmttmun HERALD AND SUMMIT RECORD, SUMMIT, M. J.

Providence BoroughTo H»M f a b * Services

the auspices of the

Berkeley Heights

At the regular meeting of theboard of directors of the SummitY.M. C. A, last Monday evening,the announcement was made thatthe goal set at the beginning of theseason of 210 boys "in organiiedpurposeful clubs, had been past,there being 214 fully signed and

__ enrolled members, with 25 addl-. Union Holy Wees wui w s i ^ ™ o f the"warren"Athle't'lc"cVub I t l o n a l o n e s 9» roll .whose parents

lebratcd next week in tteMem-; {m ^ ^aetlt of the baseball team I have not yet been interviewed byEpiscopal Church with s e n r - ' ^ g staged under the direction of club leaders. The 12th club was

recently started in the North Sum-mit section of the city, hiving its

There was»f Interesta large attendance

Old Guard to Hear

Ices Tuesday, Wednesday, 3Jm«- \ Floyd Williams. The affair wasand Friday evenings »t 8 • very successful* both from an. tfr-

oclock. Rev. Peter Lacey, pastor tiatlc and financial vlewpoinrtr club meeting in the Neighborhoodthe Union Village Methodist<„«**• Peter Lacey, castor of thetHouse and its physical program at

Cborch will he Iheij^ton, Village Melhtodlst Episcopal the"Y."of

followedservices

and he will i c ** r c l 1 ' instructed the probation-sncceedlng - e r » class t*f the church Wednesdaydaring succeeding

SL 1 evening at the home of Mrs. Theo-

palVerkes,

1Lpastor of the Presbyter-

ian Church.The Young Peoples

the Presbyterian Church isof

- i

ning to hold itsdawn service at thi

'Indian Bock,1

annual Easter

Cold weather has temporarilystopped work op" the 'storm sewerbeing constructed in Mountain ave-nue in the Gillette section.

The Ladies' Aid Society of theUnion Village Methodist EpiscopalChurch met Wednesday afternoonal the home of Mrs. Henry Seideu-

: «*P «* aV e n u e . ^ lunch-F ^ l m « n t eon Preceded the regular business

venue, Chatham Township. Youngpies Societies of the other to-churches will be invited to par-

ticipate. .',"'•

pfflj

session.The local volunteer fire company

was called out twice Tuesday topat out Held fires in different sec-tions of the township,

o-

rwperai »e » , _ > - j t - • • «*»w* wi • uun> UUUUUIVK HUBBU

day afternoott for Mr*. W«ia ^ | Of Springfield avenue has resumedLibby Wright, who died in OverlookHospital, Summit, after n fall inwhich she- sustained a broken hip.Mrs. Wright had been visiting thefamily of H. K. Badger at 903Springfield avenue. About Owe

h b d the family dogpg

weeks ago she the family dogweeks ago she baout. While trying to control theanimal she was thrown to theground. Xk»n*plications developedwhich resulted In her death. Mrs.Wright was the widow of NelsonWright of Lunerbarg, Vt- Tlie bodywas placed in a vault in FairmoontCemetery, Chatham.

mis» Mary E. PflktaftwMiss JMary Elizabeth Pilkfngtoh,

daughter of the late Rev. and Mre.Rlchard Pilklngtbn. died Wednes-day night at the home of her sister,;Mrs. Robert S. Holt, to Springfieldavenue. Funeral services will beheld this noon in the Greenwood jChapel. Interment will be In]Greenwood Cemetery. 1

E. S. Lybn, a member of theboard of directors,' was given- a

* • nr i - i t • .„. . v o t e ° ' thanks for his work in

^ S S ^ S . t L ° " f c ^ i ! ? ^ . ^ . rrlting^0UJ 8,h0rt play8 expreSRly

for the Y. M. C. A.'s of New Jersey.It was reported that 162 people

who subscribed during the currentexpense campaign of the associa-tion last fall bad not yet paid any-thing on their subscriptions. Thepresident of the association wasauthorized to write to these folkssuggesting the need of the associ-tion and the hope that they mightbe able to make . their* paymentsbetween n o w and April 30th, theclose of the fiscal year.

Ralph H. Wagner, Boys' WorkSecretary, was authorized to attendthe Fourth North American Assem-bly to discuss Y. M..C. A/work withboys, to be held at Blue Ridge May28th to June 4th.

Approval of the placing In con-dition of the tennis courts was alsogiven. "

A committee composed of JohnG. Voegtlen, R. L. Jones and W.Richmond Tracy was appointed, tomake plans for the annual anniver-sary service which will be held thisyear in the Presbyterian Church.

The annual state convention willbe held at the Monterey Hotel, As-bury Park, Friday, Saturday andSunday, May 20th, 21st and 22nd.Dr. Fred B. Fisher, formerlyBishop of the Methodist EpiscopalChurch, now pastor of the Method-ist Church at Ann Arbor, Mich.,will give three addresses.

Personal MentionChief of Police Domlnick Russo

his daties, having recovered fromhis recent illness.. JI«nry Thorn IB ill at hla hoinfr inthe Union Village section.

Mr, and Mrs. Joseph Horwlte areplanning to move from Maple CrestLodge In Mountain avenue to theBronx. Mr. Horwitz has returnedfrom a two-week visit at Orange-bnrgh, N. Y.

Henry Lang, Jr., a patient in St.Barnabas Hospital, is recuperat-ing after an operation, and expectsto return to his home in Union Vil-lage within a few weeks.

Paul Davis and family have re-turned, after several weeks' staywith relatives in Yonkers. < '

Sirs. William Lang, Jr., of UnionVillage has returned from a visitto her mother—and friends inCanada.

PersonalMi»8 Kathleen Krayer of Madi-

son avenue, Lackawanna Part, en-

\otes of Interest. There was a large attendance

last night at a St. Patrick'*) Daycard party and dance, held in-St.Vincent's Hall under the auspices

tertained the members of a bridge of the Children of Mary Sodality of| club Tuesday night at her home. «St- Vincent dePaul's Church. The

Mrs. John Tonkin is ill at her]society is planning to present aI S i f i l d j review shortly after Easter "'| home In Springfield arenue.

l f N

g preview shortly after Easter.

l i lMiss Holen Walsh of Newark was,) Alviu and Adolph Swenson Post,a week-end guest of Mr. and Mrs.| Veterans ot Foreign Wars, is plan-R. G. volgt of Hirer road, Chatham ning to hold a benefit dance April

| Township. - ]2nd In SL Elizabeth's HaH", »Ber-'J$jr. and Mrs. dedrgeV.. Howard ^nardsville. " ' *•• — :

'""birth street, Murray Hill. en- | . The Youth Council of the Presby-Jned tjie-Bible class of the'terlan Church held a St. Patrick's

| MeWodtst Episcopal Church Tues-j Dav__party_ Wednesday evening inday night. ' theY. M. C. A. Rehearsals are be-nght.

|rs. William Palmer of & s t Or-'iiJK held for a play to be presentedlange has returned after a visit toUn the near future.Mr "and Mrs. Thomas Musson ofj — - o - —

I LaureTdrive. •••{ Personal MentionMrs. Mary Behre of Passaicj Mrs. James V. Shand of Main

[street entertained on Wednesday,arenue is visiting her son-in-lawafternoon the members of the;and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Will-Ladies' Auxiliary of the Church of) lam Conley of Kearny.

I O Ld ^T* i ill

Col. McEntee Tuesday! On Tuesday morning the Oldj Guard found itself, without aj speaker, as the man scheduled wassuddenly called away. This organ*ization has on its roster too manytalented orators, however, to beruffled by a little thing tike thatHomer Johnstone give us somemore' of bis stories connected withliis wide experience on the ArizonaDesert and Director Heberd gave* athrilling account of the only timehe was ever really frightened. That

, was an experience riding In a trainj on a thirty-inch guage xigzag rail-

road, some of the grades of whichwere almost horizontal.

Mr. Dunsmoro .regaled the audi-ence with a number of Scotch stor-ies. Mr. Kirk tried to outdo Mr,Dunsmore, while Mr. Kent, the OldGuard's poet laureate, gave someof his latest poetical effusions.

The Ananias Club recently form-ed is steadily gaining. Dad Farr 18temporary chairman— The presi-dent, however, will probably beeither "Josh" Johnstone or RayBaker. Ray is sadly handicappedby the fact that bis true stories areInfinitely worse than anything thatBrother Johnstone can conjure,, Mr. Kirk is chairman for thisweek and hopes to see as manymembers as possible at the Infor-jnal. meetings held every morningexcept Saturday.

Col. 0; L. McEnee, of Beekmanroad, will talk oh the PhilippineIslands at the meeting next Tues-day.

A number of new members haverecently been added to the OldG u a r d . - - . • '•' . — - - • • - . .

Faversham to AidPlaywrights and Players

r

W.C.T.U. Meets Yesterday—Plan for Institute

The monthly meeting of the W. C;T. U. was held at the home of Mrs.W. I. Harrison yesterday afternoon.The devotions were led by MissEsther Reuber. Final plans -wer©made for the local institute to beheld at the home of Mrs. W. T.Green, 20 Ruthveh place, April 13th.Announcement was made ot theCounty .Institute, at Rah way May20th and the meetings of the alliedforces at the High School May 24th

-and, 25th. Reports were given ofthe regional- conference recentlyheld in Newark. Luncheon will beserved at the Hobart oh the daythe local institute is held. Ladieswishing to attend kindly communi-cate with Mrs. W. I. Harrison.Phone Summit 6-0312-R.

| Our Lady of Peace.Mrs. Harold L. Splcer of Spi

John Santoro is ill at his homer.'to Laurel avenue.p p

field avenue la recovering from an Mr. and Mrs, Kenneth Moffett ofi] operation

Summit.

•b.

in Overlook Hospital, Valley road have moved to Dun-el lea. ' . • . . . .

Mr. and Mrs. Edward Hoencke ofChicago are viflitng Mrs. Hoencke-s

Vfmother, Mrs. Clara Monteith of Val-

of InterestTho norena in honor of St.

aeph being held in Oar Lady of]ley road.ace Church of this place and SL """ — - —>hcent dePaul's Church of Stirling Mll l i fHrimi

111 be concluded- with services to- JMUUllglUUday and tomorrow. Morning mass' —is at7 while evening devotions a r e i T 0

at 8-TTclock. Rev, Matthew J.' P^ns

Hose Destroyed at Firereplacing several

l thToohey is-tn charge with Rev* j IengtliA...of.:.hose, belonging to the"a~ business meeting will be held.Aloysius S. Carney assisting. : " Liberty Corner and Basking Ridge 4 '— ~ -1"-*- - *-tA "r"y

The iocal volunteer"fire company i j f i r e companies, which were de-

Bethemek Masonic Club held a cardparty Tuesday afternoon at theclub headquarters in Long Hillroad. The affair was for the bene-fit of the club. <

There was a\large attendanceWednesday evening in the Ber-nards High School auditorium to.witness the minstrel show present-ed under the auspices of the Bask-inf Ridge- Parent-Teacher' Associa-tion. Arthur Pr Brush was Incharge, of the production- whileRoland FHRandoiph"was in chargeof music. . . , . - • . .

Members of the Warren Tpwn-4 ship Republican Club will meet to-

morrow evening at Mt. Bethel andgproceed to the home of Mrs. PierreM. Looker in Basking Ridge, where

A leap year party was held Wed-,,.W. W1MM nesday night In the Mt. H o r e b

_„ called! out"twice "eaV^v"*thi« 8 t r o J ' « d at* t h e recent fire at BonnieJ Church under the" auspices of theweek to extinguish field fires I n ] B r a e H o i n e f o r B ° y s wH>-'he madejEpworth League. A play, "Ag u s h fielddifferent sections of the

Th| a t

ymeeting of the Bernards

i 2 2 dThere was a large attendance jTownship^^ Commit tee March 22ndv

lust night at the card, party h«H by ij ' Members of t h e two . companies .| "tho Ladies' Auxl l iasjcof O t t f L a d y i j 1 * ' ' ^ 8 1 ^ the replacement of th is 1

of Peace Church~in t h e parwhlhal l | i e i 9 I ! MP m c n t a t the~rmeeting of -thein'p'assaic street. - ^ ----- j c o m m i t t e e lask-week, but as" there

The Bible Ctass of the Methodist »*«!» doubt as to the actual aum-Eplscepal Churcft will bold s c l a m ' o e r o * lengths diestrpyed, they werechowder sale—this noon hi the'asked to submit-a report;church parlors. Chowder will he l" fhiscommittee author lied Col lee-p Chowder will b e l

by the porttStt or quart. - ^ ~ T * O TStarry Fkg Goancil. Jr.. 6. U.

nit Wd "

Truman Spencer to removey Fkg Goancil. Jr.. 6. U. A.?**0111 his books uncollectable tax

M., niet Wednesday evening in "thei! t e m s a m o a a t i ! > 8 1° 1124.76. A re-•*"ptlng lialtin Springfield avenue 'port of the auditor, John W. Wey-

its regular business session. "*"« ••**« ordered published.|La»t night several members at-i T h ^ S t a t e Highway Commission

d ! ' ' * * 1 committee that a re-ght several membe

tended the Past Councilor's meet-!'11'!01™***116 committee thatins at Franklin Council of Plain-] < W e a t r ° r a l d f o r rebuilding a por-Held. A motion picture on the lifeiMon oi StonehouBe road at Westof George Washington was shownJ MiU!n#ton_i:ould Jiot be granted

The Men's Tuegday Night Clnb s t l h i a y*81" because of lack of funds.et Tuesday i " : ' h h * ? 8 1 * 8 tor furnishing crushed stpne

s Tuegday Night C l n b h y 1 b c a umet Tuesday evening":'at the home*?81*8 tor furnishing crushed stpneof Thomas Musson in Laurel d r i v e - l r e r e received from the MorrisThe next meeting will be at the 5 County Crushed Stone Company ofhome of Alb L d th S m t C r h i n g

C pyand the Somerset Crushing

lhome of Albert Musson in the same8trcet- . Company of Bernardsville.

The Roy Scout Trooo met Toes-1 b i d « *««* ordered filed.Hold Instate

The

! *»/„ !Tn K i n t h e Jaftlor^OrderjHall under the leadership of Scout-1

i f n t c r1 1

L o s I e r fienmig. The troop"w»i collect

.6 . B W . . ^ . j . The W. C. T. U. of this districtcollect newspapers and maga-! beW an institute Tuesday after-

zines on Wednesday, March 30th, in'noon and evening in the Presby-"nilfnJ^,,st'c'ire funds for troop | terian chapel. At the afternoon

m""f If the day'is stormy, i session, 'an address by Mrs. Emmam^mm c|tho collection willj the next clear

take place on ;j Chase'was heard. In the eveninga pageant, "The Crusader's Story,""•v- «B« ciear day. a pageant, "The Crusader's Story,"

thn 4s o p e m t a . "Snow White and was presented under the directionl . ! , ^ ? " . ^ " ^ " ' * ! ! ! be pre-of Mr«. Lester R. Van Woert of

tonight in

[Over 100

p r e . :Lincoln School i Bemardsvllte. The cast Included

auspices of! Mrs. J. V. Dumont and Mrs. E. J.Episcopal choir. Quick of JSforth Branch. - the

(:ni1dreiK.wM take part. Misses Angelina. Tessie a,nd Mln-st

Was attendance I nle CroveiH ofHvi.nfOft

eyening at a common-'Mrs. Herman T. Warren and Mrs.a K . W * 1 * 1 1 ' theschool.; Donald Douglass ;of Liberty Cor-thP Hnh U11(ler t h e auspices of mer. Members attended from Ber-- H o m e atl(l «chrv«i AsaodationJ nardsville, Blsking Ridge, Liberty

act* Corner and this place.o -" • .

Xoten of Interesti, a mo-1 A minstrel show will be present-

I'rosram and dancing, ed thin evening In the flrehouse bySchool Associa- the Warren Athletic Club for the

Thejtlonilara nt

ami«ver thirty-nine dol-; benefit of the fire com-

meht wwt, rn ,ninn in'ty entertain- pany. The .club presented the mln-fchool »,u!V'!:fay RJsat In lhe|«»rel last night in Berkeley

Total 'receipts!! HeLgbf;.' • • • ••^m%,^^^wmI T i e Udies 1 Auxiliary of the

Paper Wedding," was presented.Games were played and refresh-ments were served. . •*-'-—The Ladies' Aid Society of theMt. Bethel BaptiBt Church .met lasteven ingest the; home of Mrs. Ed-ward Meller in^iJJeinmann =road;—The Bethel A. C. will hold adance March 26th in the Mt. Bethelfirehouse..^ " "

Sunday School services wereheld Sunday afternoon in the SouthStirling Chapel in Weinman road.

' . • — _ o . ' • ' . ' -

Personal Mention .Mrs. Ned O. Howlett of Allen

street, Basking Jtidge, entertainedthe members of the. Ridge BridgeClub Tuesday.

Mrs. William Piekell of Craigstreet, Basking Ridge, is recover-ing from illness.

Mrs. Charies, Shaffer was hostessTuesday night to members of abridge club at her home in Finleyavenue.

Mrs. Fred Flint of Finley avenuehas recovered from illness and hasresumed teaching duties in theBasking Ridge school. Mr. andMrs. Flint will move soon fromFinley avenue to North Maple,street. " ' ,

Mr, and Mrs. Samuel S. Baldwinhave, retlirned to their home ln Lib-erty Corner after a (rip to Florida.

Charles Romph, Michael Kingand Charles Herman are buildinga house on their property in Lyonsroad, Liberty Corner.

Carl H. Booth of Oak street,Basking Ridse, Is on a trip toChicago. William Canada, a stu-dent'in Yale University, spent theweek-end at the Booth home.

Ed>ard A. Schult, Jr., of the Mt.Bethel section spent the week-endvisiting friends in Brooklyn.

250-Pound Onvel--•Washington—A>- huge mesqultewood Ravel, the hnrtdle 7 feet longand the head or hammer morethan 3 feet has been received bySpeaker Garner from friends inTexaR. It weighed 250 pounds and

;ira8ithe sixty-third to bo added tohis collection.

Short Session ofDistrict Court

District Court yesterday took acue from the. Summit CommonCouncil and indulged ln a "shortand snappy session," largely be-cause of non-appearance of defend-ants In eight suits. There werethree cases contested and a mone-tary judgment given in but one.

Judgment for f 140.06 was giventhe National Asbestos Company ofJersey City in a suit against Her-man and Anna Otto, trading as theAsbestos Insulation Company,Tyler street, Union. The amountrepresented a sum due on a prom-issory note executed July 15tb,1929, .- '

Judgment for possession of ahouse at 135 Hillside avenue,Springfield, was given the owner,Elizabeth Seweke, in a landlord andtenant case against" Howard Hall.

Judge John L. Hughes favoredthe defendant, Karl O. Johansen,803 Carlton road, Westfield, in a1165.25 suit brought by the NorthJersey Credit Bureau. The amountwas allegedly due for plans whichhad been drawn for Johansen byD. Wentworth Wright, who laterturned the account over to thecredit bureau.

Trout Season Just ring areas in the State under theI recently enacted law effective this

- /•••" i year increasing the license fee andi l l A llirnpr I P r o v l d |n8 <hat one dollar from eachl l lW V U I l l C l license be used for the purchase of

hunting and fishing lands.The policy of the Commission,

?M learn upon good authority, Is topurchase rather than lease suchiands, and for very good reasons.It la pointed out that If the Com-mission should adopt the policy ofleasing lands .it could lease thisyear out of the funds received fromthe sale of.'license's (estimated at1120,000) approximately 240,000acres of hunting and fishing lands.Next year it could lease the sameamount, and so on. There couldnever be any increase In theamount of land leased exo^it thesmall Increase made possible per-

Ambitious young playwrights andplayers will receive a helping handon the path to fame and fortunefrom William Faversham, "notedstage star, whp will open theMontclair Theater, Montclair,March 28th, with a combined stock'company, school of acting, andtesting-ground for new plays.

In co-operation.with the WarnerBrothers, film producers, Mr. Fa-versham plans (o make the thea-ter a "test tube for talent" bywhich he will single out a few per-formers and writers of merit, atleast, from the thousands who as-pire to success.

Mr. Faversham chose Montclair Ing at the present time with many

Oak Knoll PupilsVisit Legislative Halls

Senior and Junior history andcivic classes of Oak Knoll Schoolattended Tuesday a session of theNew Jersey State Legislature,where much valuable civic inform-ation was directly obtained. The.school received a courtesy vote inthe Assembly through the thought-fulness of J. N. Byrne, Jr., Assem-blyman from Essex County. -

Afterward the classes visited theGovernor's office, where they weregreeted and photographed withhim. The group'also visited the'Washington bicentennial exhibit inthe museum and the old Revolu-tionary .barracks In the rear of theState House.

Summit and Madison Police toShoot

. Sergeant William J. Dunne's" po-lice revolver team, now leading inthe departmental competition, willshoot' it out with the-police ofMadison next week,not yet been named;

The day has

as the scene of his experimentthough J..L. Warner, In charge ofWarner Brothers production lnHollywood, had originally soughtto have him establish a theaterthere.

"Montclair is situated in theheart of a populous and culturedsuburban area," Mr. Favershamsaid yesterday. "Furthermore it isclose to New York where everyyoung player or playwright insearch of success must sooner orlater migrate. I feel I can help afew of them with my plan."

New plays submitted to Mr. Fa-versham will be given careful con-sideration and those deemed worthywill be given a trial week's produc-tion. Warner Brothers officials willreview these productions and willreserve "first call" on the motionpicture rights. .

"The chances against the un-known young playwright are about1,000 to one," Mr. Favershain ex-plained. "Even those who havetheir plays accepted can not besure that they will be produced.Often a producer will take an op-tion on a play, paying $500 or soto tld* jt up for* six months or ayear. Only one of ten plays BO ac-cepted is ever actually staged, forthe producer hesitates to hazard acostly production on an unknownquantity. In the end,. the play-wright gains little or nothing whilehis play has been kept out of themarket for months quite useless-ly." ' •* ". Not only new plays but newplayers will be the rule at theMontclair Theater. Scores havealready enrolled for the school ofacting which Mr. Faversham willlaunch as soon as the professionalstock company has been safely es-tablished. All applicants will begiven preliminary tests and thosewho qualify will be given trainingand a chance to acquire experienceIn the stock company. Warner'Brothers officials will also reviewtheir work.

As a tribute to the" star, WarnerBrothers are planning a novel"Hollywood" opening;, similar tothe film premieres popular on theWest Coast,jfor the first night ot-"Lord and 'tiady Algy," the initialproduction. Mr. Favershara him-self will take a leading role in thisproduction as will Edith CampbelliMrs.-Favershain), who has beenseen in some of his foremost suc-cesses.

Twenty Years Agorin1 The Summit Herald

The' following items appeared- inthe HERALD of March 2nd, 1912:

On Monday, March 4th, bids forthe old City Hall will be opened.The building has been bringing inno revenue for some time.. . ' • • • o •-_ •-

One of Summit's distinguishedresidents, William D. Porter, diedhere last Week. He was eightyyearB old. Mr. Porter for twentyyears served as treasurer of theNational Temperance Society. Hewas a cousin of President GroverC. Cleveland and the poet, EdmundClarence Stedman.

— — o ' •".

At the flrBt meeting of the Busi-ness Men's Association Wednesdayevening program advertising andtrading stamps were denounced. Itwas determined not to allow trad-ing stamps to enter the city. Ed-win G. Hotchklss presided in theabsence of President Joseph O.Chrystal. ' *

oMrs, R. Greenberg-Hecht. Spring-

field avenue, is continuing theagency of the Staten Island DyeingEstablishment.

Rev. Howard Colby Ives has ac-cepted the unanimous call to re-main as pastor another year of theUnitarian Church of Summit.

——o ,;, ...The Dramatic Department of the

Fortnightly Club Wednesday eye-ning presented to an audience thatoverflowed the Y. M. C. A. auditor-ium two plays, "Tho Real Thing,"by John Kendrlck Bangs and "Howtho Voto WBB Won" by Cicely Ham-

Tuesday's "bjg social." evening" atthe Y. M. C. A. building. DanielBeard, leader of the Boy Scoutmovement; told of his life in theY. W. € . A. building- Daniel Beard,leader of the Bdy 'Scout movement,told of his life in the West and InKentucky.

' .. — — o — — ' - ' . , - • :

' ' • ' • • • -

The Board of School Estimatehas certified $27,000 as the amountrequired for erection of a newschool in North Summit This is$3,000 less than the Board of Edu-cation decided would be necessary.

Anglers Rarin' to Go —Some New Equipmentfor Nimrods—Streamsin Good Shape

Why Change Opening DateBy TKOIIT DOCTOR

Trout fishing i« Just around thecornerr_the season opening fourweeks from today, which leavesjust about time enough for troutersto overhaul their tackle and geteverything In rcadinoss for the firstraid upon tne.*~tWut'¥treams^ Therecent annual dinner of the Over-look Fish and Game Associationserved to start the old-timers offon their annual attack of springfever, an attack made worse by ex-tremely mild and balmly weather,but the recent cold snap has servedto abate the symptoms of the dis-ease to a considerable degree.

Reports.from nimrods who havebeen out scouting around the troutcountry are to the; effect that, as aresult of good rains during the lastfortnight, brooks are* right now, innormal condition; They have beenrunning full . during much ofthe winter now ending;. For thepast three yearB trout waters havebeen unusually low during thesummer, fall and winter months,creating bad conditions for thetrout population. But even thoughstreams were very low last sum-mer, the-pollcy of making shallow-dams in main streams has createdpools which" have been able to car-ry the trout over.

Stocking of streams Is progr.ssB-

trucks of trout leaving the hatch-ery dally.

Some New ItemsThere are some new items in the

sporting goods stores which will in-terest sportsmen on the lookout forthe newest kinks. One of the larg-er manufacturers of steel rods isputting out a new telescopic troutrod of hexagonal Instead of roundsection. In finish the rod resemblesa brown-finished cane rod, whilethe hexagonal construction pre-vents turning of the joints, keepingguides In alignment. Such a rod isan excellent one for angling: insmall brush-choked - mountainbrooks where the experienced ang-ler would not care to rink his bestlight cane rod, the telescopic fea-ture enabling the fisherman to in-stantly shorten tho rod to meetlocal conditions or to enable himto worm his way through a brushtangle without getting his linecaught in the briars or 'breaking therod. This new rod 'Sells for $5.

A gun maker presents a boll-action .22 rifle of unusual rugged-ness and strength. The bolt in fir-ing' position la held not by the bolt-lever alone but by a lug on bothsides which engage recesses in thebolt-tube, making the arm safe forthe new high-powered ammunition.The gun has a tapered round barreland an adjustable sporting rearsight. It is being marketed at $5.85,which is about half the price for-merly asked for an arm of similarexcellence. . ""

The Tow price of crude rubberand cotton fabrics is reflected inmuch lower-prices for waders, mak-ing, It possible for the angler whohas long regarded a good pair ofwaders as way beyond, his meansto at last indulge himself in thebest possible equipment for'wadingbig streams.

Bills Will FallThe latest news from Trenton in

regard to measures affecting hunt-ing and fishing is to the effect thatthere is such a vast number ofhunting and fishing bills before theLegislature, with such a resultingdegree of confusion that it IB doubt-ful if any of them will pass, whichwill be all for the best. There isno merit in change as such, so Jongas present machinery is adequate,working-smoothly and to the inter-est of the sportsmen. It will be bestfor hunters and .fishermen Tf Justone bill out of the entire lot shouldpass and that is the Commlsafdn's jEnabling; AcV which will make itpossible for the Commission to pro-ceed to purchase hunting, and fish-

Sunday SchoolLtssoo

(B? Henry KakfiSa)

JKSIS DIES

International Sunday Scfcoel Lc*.son for March *>, 1W2

Golden Text: "Christ died forour sins according to the scrip-tures." 1 Cor. 15:3.(Lesson Text: John 13:lT-22,

25-30.)After the last Thursday eveaiag

with his desciplea in the upper

haps by an increased number of li-censes sold. At the end of a given

room at Jerusalem Jesua led Maeleven followers (Judas had de-serted) ,to the Garden of Geth-

period of years the State would'semane. Here he left eight on thehave a lot of lease receipts but own ' outskirts, then left Peter, Jamesno land. : j and John a little nearer to aim-

Under the purchase plan land! self, as ho made solitary prayer,will be purchased each year andeach year's purchase will add tothe State's accumulation of hunt-Ing and fishing landa. To com-pensate the tbwnshipB to a degreefor the loss of ratables it is pro-posed to pay a lieu of ten cents peracre annually to the townships.Thus gradually there will be builtup a large acreage of hunting andfishing lands.

Furthermore if land Is leased,tmproved as game cover, and heav-ily stocked, it might be easy for theowner, near the end of the leaseperiod, to offer the land on lease toa club, and, being well stocked suchclub might pay a higher, lease thanthe Commission could pay, its workand money therefore being spentfor

Changta* Open Seasonh

g pIt has been the custom in times

past to shift the open season datesfor trout from .time to time. Wehave known the season to open asearly as March 1st, later it wasApril 1st, now it is April 15th. Butpersonally wo do not think thedate of the opening is BO important,except for the fact that anglers be-gin' to gee restive, along in thespring and a later opening wouldonly make them more restive.

In the IH^RALD Of February9th there was reprinted a letter ofV. D. Smythe of Division avenue,this city, which had appeared-inthe Newark Evening News. Mr.Smythe advocates changing theopen season, making it from May1st to September lst ron the groundthat it is usually too cold to fishon the fifteenth and that anybodycan catch trout early In the sea-son on any kind of bait. He thinksmoving the Benson along two weekswill give the fly fishermen a betterbreak.

With Mr. Smythe we are not in-clined to agree. Of course it is of-ten true that the weathor on April15th 1B cold and storrny, but on theother hand we have seem good troutweathor a month before that date.A glance Into the average creel onopening day, we feel, would notshow proof "of Mr. Smythe's con-tention that anyone can catch trouton any kind of bait early in theseason. Anyway, if April 15th istoo cold.-there is no law preventingthe man who doesn't like fishing innasty weather from sticking- of hisfireside. As to. the greater diffi-culty of getting trout in late sea-son: my experience is that trouttake the fly avidly in late seasonat the right time of day. But afterhot weather sets in there are fewanglers along the trout streams. Ithas always seemed to me that acommon sense change might betwo trout season^: April 15th toJune 1st and then perhaps Septem-ber 16th to November 1st. We donot depend on natural propogotionvery much, anyway. But on thewhole most anglers are well satis-fied and desire no change. Wemight suggest, however, that theCommission and the wardens willdo a real service if they will con-duct an active campaign igaTnsfthe fishermen who go out in Marchand early April and .under cover of"slicker fishing" as an excuse, re-move illegally thousands of troutfrom "The streams.. .This practice(roes on annually on many streamsand nothing seems to be done about

ent auto chemical engine will:remodeled into a hose truck.

be

^ .Jacob A. Rlls, prominent author

and lecturer, will 'speak on "TheBattle with the Slums" in Lincolnauditorium, March 22nd. The lec-ture Is to he sponsored by thoBoard of Trade.

NewClubs

York Universityentertained in

MusicalLincoln

School Tuesday night, in a benefitperformance, for the high SchoolAlumni Association.

With basketball's season nearlycom pelted, the High School boysare thinking of baseball- Thisyear's nine will have as a nucleusReavey, Dean, Turner, Falkenburg,Hubbard, Rowe, Nelson and Hall.

Mrs. Edwin F. Phelan of 34 Ho-ba&JL avenue gave a "bridge" to anumber of her friends Saturday af-ternoon.

The Board of Education has al-tered the plans for the new schoolto be built in North Summit to cor-respond with the $27,000 appropria-tion being allowed by the Board ofSchool Estimate. ThjeT educatorshad planned originally for a morepretentious building. "

William G. McAdoo, who wasscheduled to speak before the Sum-mit Board of Trade In the near fu-ture, will be unable to keep the en-gagement, due to tlie"death of Mrs.McAdoo.

The following items appeared inthe HERALD of March 9th, 1912:

: Hornen will be Entirely elimi-nated from the'cUrp fire-fightingequipment In the n\ar future, theCommon Council' having decided topurchase from the American La

C b i illton and Christopher St. John.

Samuel Oraydon presided at to^ftl cost wiu bo $13,000, The prea-

pFrance Company two combinationchemical and hose trucks. The

Mlss LOUIBO R. Morris, librarian,has made her .annual report on thelib-ary, showing an Increase of 4,-732 volumes circulated over thofigure for 1910.

A special ser'vice^in commemora-tion of the fortieth anniversary ofthe efforts of Anthony Coriistock ofSummit for the suppression of vicewas held ln Newark Monday eve-ning.

• Robert J. Murphy has purchasedthe three-Btory brick building at19 Union place from Samuel Katzand plans to remodel It.

John H. Nelson of the Boulevardhas returnedFlorida. "

from a trip to

C. H. C. Jagela wan In TrentonWednesday, looking after certainlegislation affecting Hudson Coun-ty, where hla business is located. ,

GLEAMS

Look then, into thine heartand write!— LoHgfellow. _ "

You write > with.*easo to showyour breeding.'

But easy writing's curst hardreading.—Sheridan. —

Let our literary compositionsbe laid aside for some time, thatwe~""may after a reasonableperiod return to their perusal,and find them, as it were, alto-gether new to us.—Qulntillan.

True ease In writing comesfrom art, not chance

As those move easiest who havelearned to dance.—Pope.

But every IHtlo busy scribblernow !

Swells with the praise which- he gives himself;And, taking sanctuary in the

c r o w d , " ' . • • •Brags of his Importance, nnd

scorns to mpnd.-^Horace.

Engineer Rescues DoprLogansport, Ind.—As his train

whizzed past Bunker Hill, A. W.Paxon, engineer, looked out of hiscab and saw a hound dog entan-gled in a barbed wire fence andhowling plteously. Thirty milesdown the line he %m relieved byanother engineer and:.he Immedi-ately hired an automobile, wentback to the fence and released thedog.

1,(IOO,(MM> MeteorsCambridge,

a Day•k meteor

census shows that about l,G0O,000observable meteors fall Into the up-per ntmoRphere each day, but mostof them burn up before reachingtho «nrth.

Subscribe for the HERALD.

GOLDEN GLEAMS

The course of, nature is theart of God. —Young.

I.

Nature, so far as in her lies.Imitates God. , —Tennyson.

I am whatever was, or Is, orwill be; and my veil no mortalever took up. • —Plutarch.

Slave to no sect, who takes noprivate road, <

But Jaoka, through nature upto nature's" God. —Pope.

——o——The perfections

show thatof Nature

she is the image ofGod; her defects show that she'Is only his image. —Pascal.

All are but part of one sto-pendoua whole,

"Whose body Nature is, and God• the soul,. ' < , . . . —Pope.

asFully realizing , the betrayal andtorture which was ahead of himJesus only prayed that it be avert-ed J if In accordance with thedivine will.

To this retreat the soldiers ofPilate and the temple police cameto arrest the religious teacherwhose influence the ecclesiasticalleaders feared would overthrowtheir authority and wealth. Judascame with the party, pointing oathis • former master by - a -kisa ofsalutation. The bearing.'of Jesuswas so majestic and his reputa-tion so widespread that even someo,f the soldiers fell down as he ap-proached. Jesus surrendered with-out any contest, .save for the im-petuous act of Peter who.used hissword on a servant of the highpriest, Annas. Jesus healed thewound and was led away by thearmed band; his own disciples dis-appeared in the night as bis ene-mies carried him away. .

Jesus was first carried beforeAnnas, regarded by the Jews as thelawful high priest, although theRomans had deposed him andplaced his five sons successively a ]and then Caiaphas, his son-in-law,ln the priestly office. Annas seemsto have been the chief mover hi theplot to kill Jesus, probably desiringvengance for the. daring attacksJesus had made upon the pervertedsystem of religion of which he wasthe nominal head. Jesus refuse*to rehearse his teachings, demand-ing that witnesses be produced to 'testify against him, which demandcaused some of the soldiers to >iistrike him. _ j -!•

The examination by Annas wasearly In the morning, then Jesus' - -was carried before Caiaphas, whoseems to. have occupied anotherwing of the-same palace, connect-ed by a court yard. In this opesplace Peter, who had followed-John to the palace, waited andduring his wait on three occasionsdented those who charged him withbeing a follower of Jesus. As thethird dental was made Jesus wasbeing led through the court jardon his way for the next examina-tion and it was then that he re-buked his fickle follower by onesad look, at which Peter rushed

••.

A

1.

•- r»

out into the open air of the nightweeping bitterly for having sosoon belied the brave, words spoken-earligr.. in* the night.

There seems to' have been twotrials before Caiaphas. For thefirst only a few members of theSanhedrin were present but for thelast, after sunrise, the full Councilseems to have been on hand. Al-though the witnesses brought In tofalsely accuse Jesus failed In theirmission, Jesus at hist,,-in answerto a question from the high priest,solemnly affirmed that he was theMessiah and the Son of God. This"was blasphemy to his Jewish juryand sufficient to authorize hisdeath. Before he could be execut-ed, however, the consent of the Ro-man Governor had' to be obtained.Therefore, Jesus' was carried be-fore Pilate. , ' . - , . ' . '

Here the—Jews dropped their .„„„,„„,religious accusations and chargedJesus with seeking to make-hhn-.,self king, air offense against Cae-sar. Pilate"was intelligent enoughto understand the subterfuge of theJews and had no desire to see3esua crucified, but. Has too weakand afraid of thaJ&w^Hh. threats tofollow the dictates of justice hi thefttce-of the angry clamor for, his ,.

[ death. Pilate sought to evade thej difficulty by . sending Jesus toI Herod, but this ruhr sent him bask..and finally, after• vainly' seeking,.another avenue of escape for Jesus,Pilate surrendered to the mob andJesus was led away-for crucifixion.

During the six hours of agony onthe cross Jesus spoke seven times.First, it was a prayer of forgive-ness for those who killed him.Second, a "promise to the repentant"-thief that he would meet him inparadise. Third, he committed hismother to the carejpjf his descipleJohn, who subsequently carriedMary to his own home. Fourth, acry of anguish. Fifth, an utter-ance of the torture of thirst. Sixth,an expression that his work hadbeen completed. Seventh, and last,. •a commitment of his spirit untothe Father. :

i

I

i

P

*•>£,

$&*8UiKit!T AM strniMtT aticoftb, iutttfrtT, w. j .

EVERYBODY READSClassified Advertisements

j Ten Gents a Line

Copy not accepted after 9 a. nu Tuesday or Friday.

Minimum Charge of 30 cents, cash in advance.50% additional if charged.

ThirHEinALD endeavor* to print only truthful classified adp,«nA wlll"appreclate having Us attention called to any advertise-ment cot conforming to tfca highest standards of honesty.

1O8T

thre* diamonds, very heavy"',„! iuu'T'old setting, Wednesday

?wn "ff March 16- between Bcekmant rt"lev and Prospect street: reward.t,rratt anu B c e k m a n terrace.

O!fil3N wanted. Applj J .& Sons, 34 Maple street. 55-tf

woman wants days work,

iVlWwWwAJIn5-«r c o o k l n 6 < I l n n o r a -. T e l . 1 S 1 5 - W . - .' .•••• - • ' . '•*

1, Wishes part time Job,, sood wok,useworkcr and laundress, refer-

Tel ftR '

WOMAN would like Isiunclry work to

NU ni.iii wauls. |K>slt1on iu» chauf-i d d mechanic best

OL'NU ni.iii wauls. |K>slt1onfer • experienced, Bwd mechanic, best

Tel. Summit 6-2011-J.

CHILD'S"'nurse, wishes) care, of chil-dren, five ye.-irs' experjence, best ref-erences. Call WiiVerly 2-4341

<1\1U)KXER, handy man, experienced,"hiiH registered 30 years in Sumniiy;Lrxanal reference. Tel. Su i rn^hi« ropersonal reference.Q.0580-U.'

GIRL wishes steady placew.rlt. AIIHS Tremmel, 'Mnue and Deliblo place.tel. .Summit f4)40»Mg

ave-

COMFORTABLY furnished rooms, cen-tral, breakfast. 14-Irving place.

M'fctf

7 imFUUMSHED BOOMS TO LET 7

TWO rooms *4th bath; Apply MissC. I. Wulff, 392 Springfield avenue,tel. 3050. • ' 5C-tf

8 ArattTJHBNTS foil HK2TT 8

FIVE-ROOM 'furnished apartment,good residential section,' near .sta-tion ; for'-quiet couple only ; rent $600per year. I'hono Summit fi-0!»!;:i.

GHEKRFUL-. three-room apartment,Claremont Court, Tt'l. Summit 0-4073or see Supt.- \;J

i l ' BOULKVARD, 4 riK»ina md/|vtH;heat and water furnished, ,pfewt rea-sonable. Tel. 12H-.J. A '

FOUR rooms, bath', alL^mprovcments,Hteam heat, f?ardi'B#fent very rea-sonable, 3» I 'ark^enue, tel. 2S3O-M.

" " " " ' ' j » f> ' ' • ' ' " • • - • — — • • — • — - ii .i

tiath, heat and waterfurnished,/$S%t floor; four rooms andbath, thj^l* floor. 41 Boulevard, tel.

uiTiK, all lnfp.rovements. Inquirebnr.her shop at New Providence

#Tcehter.'

FOtJlt rooms, bath and kitchenette,slevplng. porch, all improvements,heat furnished, one-car garage.'. Call1259-W. - ' -

- f :'^a Tl* v ''-* •*?*'-* *<~.vPAGE SEVEH

rKlNO room furniture, very cheap.37 Lower Overlook road. 54-56

PUEPARATOHV to moving to«ttrnewadd runs w« are offering our completestock of antique furniture, Jjla«s,china. and d«-ur;Ulvf accessories 'atextremely nubatantlal reduction*.

JOHN MORRISON CURTIS, ING,,380 Springfield avenue. Shop open

dally from 9 a, m. to 3 p. m. (Includ-ing Saturdays), . J2-56

PROTECT your lawn and flower gar-.den with well rotted cow manure,no shavings, delivered anywhere,will spread on. lawn reasonably.Chestnut" Brook Dairy Farm, Tel.Unionvllle 20253 32tfChstnutBrookUnionvllle 2-0253. 32-tf

17 HKAL K8TATK KOlt HAliK 17

SIX rooin Enfjllsh cottage, tile bathand kl tchenriavatory, garage, oilheat, cost $14,000, for #12.000, 12,000

- cash, Tel. R M. Obrlfr, Bum. C-2252.

SIX room house, Brayton School din*trlct, rented on one year lease lor$840; *8,M>0, ISOO cash. Tel. E. M.Obrlg, Sum. 6-2252. '

13 .OVERLOOK road, English typohouse, 8 rooms, 2 baths, heatedrage, open iwrch. Consulthroker. ,/A

A STONE front Colonial v « n h twotiled baths, tiled kltc,hj£i, panelledrecreation room, at^JStiied Baru^e,lavatory, central, ;»y>illal>!e this sum-

—inoT,—for—less—itestt $1 l,5OU.O0r THeRlchl.ind Co.,j^vMaple street, 'phoneC-3311, evenMfs C-2G80.

FIXE y u ] house, center half, fourS, three bathH, llko new, great

financed. Tel. 0356. 64-tf

J$Aliti Hacriflcc- nearly new six-roomhouse, all Improvements,' garage,near West Summit station. - Tel.Summit .6-3911 evenings.. 52-tf

SEVEN room.s and bath,, steam heat,garage; Fine location, 12 minutes'walk station, near schools. > George

.Marvin, 49. Union place. 'PhoneSummit 6-2252. 48-D8

FINE building lot in good location.Write to llox I8G, % HERALD, forparticulars. • 40-tf

WANTED TQ BUY

SECOND hand rug, Oriental or solidcolor, approximate slxe 18 to 20 x 12,must-bo In good condition and a bar-gain. • Write Bofc 208,-</c HERALD.

rray Hill, FOUR-UOOM/Imt, 2J Say re street, for1 colored ; Tent ?2t>," oc'ciipanoyApril

_ 1 _ — -rip ; —I 1st. Tel. Summit 0-1517. — 56-tfCOOKS. Roneral iijggftM, couples, moth-j : _ _ _

ers' helpers, !i»rnatlonalHlea. t o r ; piVK mom. apartment. IncludingHelp -or KinyfiJ'ment 'phono ^Morris h,..,t. eU-ctrlcitv, K;IS, ' garage,' $85County KinaKymeiit Agency, Morris-( m o n t lu Tel. E. M. Obrig, Hum. 0-2252.

T1IRKK aTltt-rour iooiiilXn&*W\i Kardcner, caretaker,,, htat, garajfi-, *40 ami ?50.- Tel. K. M.

l^nimirR, S houm *•«.' Write A. I . oi.rlK, Sum. C-22S2.Jrtsc-h, Hi Walnut .street, Hulnrnlt.

T

MAN wants steady work as gardener,caretaker, thirteen years one jol>,flrst-clas» references. Tel." Summit

'WHITE woman wants washing to dont l)«nic, called for and ..delivered.

'""Tel S i fi«rttnt ) ,"Tel. Summit C-3HG«.

fi«-r.tt

I'AINTKR dnHires work by day or con-tract. Tel. Summit C.-;U1C. iO-OO

SUNKYaitartJiient, ituteil, quiet neiKh-l h d , TL-asonabk-. Ttl. «0.'iG-\V.

• • : - . . 5G-tf

MtLLfilTItN, modern flat, 5 rooms,hath.- iievviy decoraied, $45. W. L.Morrison, Tel. Mim.um 6-0662.

TO ' sub-let' four-room apartment. inWorthltiKton Court, fully furnished,from April or May, for a year orliiure. Apply to Superintendent'.

51-tf

FINANCIAL

MON.EY loaned ifor long term on firstand second mortgage. John Bovit.414 Springfield avenue:

Mrs/Gross Namedon Welfare Board

(Continued from Page One)

1932; U Is anticipated that nextyear's requirementsimatcly

convicted of a felony or high mis-demeanor.

If any recipient of old age t0M.is convicted of jauy misdem«$$OT, orother offense,, aud puni«l*$S'by im-prisonment, payment&^iiall not bemade during thement. ^

The appli^t"cannot possess realor persow#%roperty In excess of$3,000 /

'act also creates a Division ofPreparations have already been {$0 Age Relief as a department of

made by the Freeholders to estaM'^116 Department of Institutions and

Halt temporary offices In t h e ^

I louse for tho new boarcU£%henthe Coil rt House Towe^Sa complet-

l ^ i l l b hed the Welfare Boa^'will be hous-

ed, there. igfi1' . • . • - .Tho old ag^/i-ellef law was signed

by .'. Goverj rir Larson April 24th,1931, i<}p6 effective this year.

TJtjfSact provides:jgfellcf. shall be granted to any

Jprsou wjio lias attained the age ofseventy years, and is unable tomaintain him or herself, either inwhole or in part and has no chilrdren or other persons able to sup-port him, or responsible under thela wa of - the Stftte-f or hisr support, 4

Tho applicant must be a citizenof the United States and a residentof the State for fifteen years im-mediately preceding the dat^ of ap-plication, but continuous residenceiil the State shall not be deemed tohave been Interrupted by occasion-al perioda of absence therefrom ifthe total of such absence does notexceed two years, and if during the.five years immediately precedingthe date of application the Appli-cant has not removed f.rom_;thteState and remained therefrom fora period in the aggregate of oneyear.

The applicant must not, becauseof physical condition, be in need ofcontinued Institutional-care. ' . , . '

. Other Provisions of Law

The applicant has not made avoluntary assignment or transfer ofproperty for the purpose of qualify-ing for such relief, or has ever been

jgi'tftP'lctcd-MftT-15th;-lJ«I"-:.;..7.;;.-.:.:.r S.482.78• . K<

MONEY TO LOAM on Bond and Mort-gage pr Improved Summit RealEstate In amounts to suit borrower.Send In your application to EUGENEC. PIERSON, 65 Union place, Sum-mit. N. J. F-tf

KIIKCKLLAAKOUS

'or tho construction of 'astorm sewer under and alongWoodland Avenue, completedJune 2nd, 1!*31

Cost of Issuance and" s a l eof bonda hereby authorised

TotJilThe s

H,588.57- •32.53

Department of Institutions andAgencies. All provisions, rules and

:ireman Held for GrandJury on False Alarm

A member; of the Summit FireDepartment was this morning heldffor the Grand Jury on a charge of••}turning in a false alarm that sent;•all city fire apparatus to Park and IAsh* ood avenues at 2 o'clock in jthe morning- on February . 11th, jJohn Ennis, Millburn carpenter,!who is a member of the Hook and

Company here, was the man

The »"»*«»«» •"»!<*

foil information «uid belief. Ho was;

provides that the County•! "Pr^ented this morning by Jacob |L-.« .Hnii w » - . ^ i t l « . Mantel while the city's case was

regulations made by this divisions a rg« i with 'pulling the hox' thatshall be binding upon all Welfare ' r e s u I t e d l n a * e n e r a l alarm, of fire.Boards in the various counties ofthe State.

The actWelfare Board shall be composed , . , ,,„ _ ., .. „ ,of five citizens of the county/not]*1?*?6"1*! b>' cn* Solicitor Fred-holdiiiK the ofHce of Freeholder, at I e r l c t c-K < ? n t 2-least two of whom shall be women,two Khali be members of the Boardof Freeholders, and the County Ad-juster. Members shall hold theiroffice for the term ot five years,the first appointments to be forone, two, three, four and five years.The board members shall receive nocompensation, but. will be allowed 1 rauged a match game ' withactual and necessary expenses.

Bowling EnthusiastsArrange a Match

At SU Teresa's bowling alleys onThursday evening, March 31st, theLackawanua Dunkers have

Funds for old age relief shall beprovided by the Board of Free-holders.

Each board shall elect a presi- [dent, vice-president and secretary-treasurer.

The Welfare Board shall name a

af-the

Lackawanna Bear Cats.The Dunkers are a number of

commuters who bowl on Thursdayevening on the St. Teresa's alleysand are captained by William J.Flynn.

The Bear Cats are members ofthe staff of the comptroller's office

director of old age relief, for the; of th^-I^ckawanna Railroad, Newterm of five years, and such offi-1 YorR Citj^isd by Captain „,cers, employees and -assistants as Sullivan. „'"•",'•may be necessary to carry out the |provisions' of the act. The directorshall 1)0 a citizen of the UnitedStates, and bo capable of makingsuch reports as are required .andshall have complete knowledge of

Alpha Phi Court TeamWins at Maplewood

The Alpha Phi fraternity basket-| ball team traveled to Maplewood

. . . . „ , , , „ 'on Tuesday and defeated the Epsi-

expert in the field of welfare serv- j , O B C h J A 1 ^ h a o u t f i t o f t h a t p , a c el c e ' ' " . . . ' • . . , , , , . . . i The locals led all the way with thewThe wt 'ur ther proridestbat«ie! f l , s c o r e b e i 3 2 _ 1 9 W a l t e r

Welfare Hoard shall provide ade-j W u U f m t h e M $ * p h | t e a m w l t h

quatcly for those eHglbleJor old , s M e e n mtiTkerav a n d Bohne.con-

a g £ l e . i »i V " """ T . »•' ,' tributed nine" to the local cause,Oil, the death of a recipient of-* jjAaTa "

old age relief, the board may grant I , . ,$100 for funeral expenses. i P°IHIS-

No person receiving relief under jthe act shall bo deemed a pauper; Wolff, U

and shall be a trained and qualified

or-ganized the first of t aft year underthe leadership . of IJra; Lovelandnow has an average attendance oftwenty little girls under regularscout age. Recently the followingten were enrolled as Brownies—Polly Kitching, Aijeen Hammond,Virgiaia Kirk, Doris FIrehock,Madge Kenyon, Virginia- Jones,Elaine Towne, Aim Underhiilt

Janet tfnderhijl, Mabry Eastmanand Claudia Halues,.-. The scout cabin which is beingbuilt in the Wutchnng Keservationis progressing rapidly and will beready for use in a very short time.

Through the courtesy and hospi-tality 6f Mrs.'; Thomas Prout ofProspect street, some of the friendsand supporters of the Summit GirlScouts'spent a most delightful eve-ning On Wt'dneM'arr March 16th, ather home. A benefit entertaininent.w;as given to add to the scout bud-get for the year, and Miss Heat riceHerford generously contributed herservices and gave a most"Mliglilfurgroup of monologues wlilich werereceived with much enthusiasm*' bynearly 100 guests. Later in theevening refreshments were served.

Troop"80The meeting started "at tho reg-

ular time-7.30. It was opened by K.Dennis1 patrol. Mr. MOOR" talkedabout camp and Mr. Jones nsKedhow many were sick from going tocamp last week-end^ but there wereonly a couple with colds. One ofthe patrols .went over to NorthSummit for the opening celebrationof a new troop. Charles Deckergave a talk about Scouting in theAir Mail. We then had time for testpassing. After test passing wewent down stairs for a game andthe.i> dismissal. After the meetingthere wan a patrol leaders' meeting.

SCRIBE LAWRENCE CRISPELL.

Summit Boy WinsAviatftiii Prize

Rhodes H, Coplthorn, ot 87Beechwood road, Summit, wa»awarded the $5 cash prize for last 'week's jcontest of the ElementaryAviation Ground. School course be-ing conducted by Unger Aircraft,Inc., and this paper. Mr. Coftl-thom received the mark of 96.

It has been suggested that thepeople who have been reading tbalessons each week in this paper, buthave not as yet entered any of thocontests, try their luck by sendingin'a set of an'swers to the simple-questions printed with today's le»- ,Kon, on Page 5, Second Section.This week's- ?5 cash prize will go tosomeone who has 'not yet wo»; and,of course, everyone cempetfrig thisweek for the first time will get aseason ticket toal l air meets heldby L'nser Aircraft, Inc., at the Han-over Airport this year.

• -Also,- Hendintr iiir a .set— of- an-swers today's lesson will be excel-lent practice for competing in thefinal examination* April 22nd, forthe grand .prizes. Answers to today'squestions should be mailed not-later than midnight this comingSunday. . ,..-. " •

3lA\ BADLY IHKXED

K Burned badly about the face andI hands, Ora Ciipp, '148 Snrinaf ield.avenue, was treated Wednesday

| night at the office of Dr. William! H. Lawrence. The man was burned! at..the Canoo Brook Pumping" Sta-•jtion when fiasoilHe he was handlingI caught fire.

MaOlSOfl FllldSWatCll LOSt Hef6

Alpha

by reason thereof.

, hil.N'tJEU SKVVING MACHINKSIlepnirH, Kc-nte

F. A. Doyle, Mgr., 38 .Springfitld nyc.Phone Summit 0-2931

LEGAL ADVERTISING

$50,000.00 HaK.so-.snu-rits on the local

vmtnts <ilM>ve de.serilx'd have incase boui)»cluly conflrnifd and no J

part of K.m-li" iiHso.s.sinfnt.s nave ht-eniiu;lutl<'il in the amuuniH nbuvt: stated.The purpose;!, (Inscriptions unU dates

l i d i d

DATES To REMEMBER

p p , pof complc'tion art- hen-hy diturmiiifd tol i c f h All f id

"Fit, Mar, 18—Brayton P.-T. A.Child. Study Group; leader, Mrs.

Musson, f.• I tank-Is, f.! I "."hm-, c—.-• foftt-y. K.(Tullin. K. —Parkin,- g.

Totals-

Keller, Home Demonstrator forus sec forth. All of s:»id purposes I Union County "Problems of Mod-

.•xpuiuliturt- fur wh!,;h i e r n Parents." Home of Mrs. A. J.p p u jmay oc. Issued, under said Act. i

' b;XptICE OF HKA1UXO

i/The amount <>!'''raised for tlie?5(»,U00.O0.

in-ecKsury to.be' said purposes is

IS-HEREBY OIVEX, that! *• 'Hie fo!!o\vi:iK: matters are herebyappllcatl'in has been made by Loeuct ' detorniined and (ieelar«:d :R l t C f i i (i) ' ' ' fI HOUSES FOI-

. . . : -'• "" ' ffKWl^V (h'coratcd niKirtmcnt.fcir rout,Dl'f'UI.K h.'iHscf!, six "rooms, imj»t:s.J almi K-'iraK'1. Apply' W. J* l'nkor,•..i'..Jli>nr.v St. ami 2'U Mxtri'n Ave. I 420 H|»riiiKlickl nvomic .ri2-tf'I'd. Uii), im'iuiro i'21) Morris) Avc.

(!<iol) mudrrrrhnijKf, in pood location,.<"• ronmH, Minpiirith, uarage, inoderati'.Tel. 0:i.jfi. -5B<f

Khil lT roiun IK>UKC, iirayton ".Scliool,, short walk to Htalion, fur-or uiilurnl.sliid, $85, April 1st!

K. Jl. OhrlK, Sum. ti-2252.

?K.\ rooiiiK, .half double house, ga -near JIlRh School, $05, April

Til. K. JI. ()l>rlk, Sum- 6-2252.

FOUR riKiinH, a i r im| i rovomcnt8 ,4 l . '8per month. 9 Park avenue, Summit'.

JIAI/F lmu.se, fi rooms, hath,May 1st. Tel. 3!i"J-\\r.

KGG-tf

SIX liirfje,' llRht rooms, all . improve*nn-nls, newly dtcorated, rent $50. !)I i i>liu)e. 5G-5S

27 IIUCFIKS I ' I JMIK—Al l Improvo-monls, .seven minus, near Kchool.'Tol. ti-HHO or 20 ItldKodale avenue,

02-5S

FOIt Ki:.NT—One .side of two-familyhouse at 2 William street, BruytonSchool district. Apply to J . M«c-dunald, H Sayro .street. ' 40-tf

4i DEFOItlCST AVENTUK-^8 rooms, 2baths. Apply Nelson, 88 Boulevard.

.Tel. 0408. ic-lf

HOOJtS FOK EE7TT •

warm, tiuiet, also l i o i BrMvcry ••onvt-nloncc. !l Wood-

land avenue, tel. 1821-W.

i riM)m, iluun,—comfortable;i-piura.1.. to gentleman"^nly, rcaKon-a l l l t ' - JLLi^ethwood road, Tel. 35'>7.

TO |t.(.,. d u r n i h dtlli'mvood place, to], 0312-J.

r<)oiitr S'J

i'('tl;IM,K (inning. attnuillve homes twotiimutfs from .Short JUIIH station,will rent large nxjiti—mid bath -to

_>:entleiiian, BiiraBo, mouls M "clubt B

'i<'r<l'iri'r\"n s n r t 1 o n ' W r l l e -Kos .209,

W IiX I siIED. room for busincHs

l\l"1'l"l's-, \v-r>V r e u S o n a l ) I e ' t;«ntfal.

,,,,,. • , , • reasonabk1,HI M' or iiusi ness-woman, continuous

IV.!.' nJ a l i r ' 55 JSwiuvolr nvenue. tel;• - 54-tf

_ . „,. ; ' : : T"«™» on" third floor, furnlsli-^ . • L i T s S . ^ nnuirnlshud, heat and litcht.J B l B g — l l l i i Wulnut street. , C2-tf

threcriootn apartmont, fur-Hii'J furnished rooms, 256• avenue. - ifl-tf

water n l r° l l b l e r o o m s with runningwater, near thu station. Tel. 30fl«.104-tf

lOuclid avenue, beau-nnds S 8 : f r"wle nnd <loubie

•vat.' IV1M1 r l l nn inK : wi tur or. prl-

Jt«ln a \ T i u ^ l w l " teds,' M Moun-

iuu t d If

^ -mall Voom/fari) nn. Jtc f n m l l y : reaijon-' t d If l 0 "«J'on. Call at

d l Phohe Summit

1'urk

« .«awA. A. few

8 t r e e t >10Q-tf

" T

NewColonial Home.

n a t h R > 2 . c a r G a _

to. Ea«y

eU B£ 6.0483Consult a Realtor

•KUCIJI) AUAUTJIION'TS-Kliclid av<!liiie, tinier-Summit

.Summit, X. .1.2, 3, i, 5 and (i spacious room

apartmentsrefrlKoration, iinlnorators, elevators,large Li'dar cloKets, ^oncroua closet'siiact', wood service to tenants, selectclientele

Itcntahsyou c.m pay chburfuly that are downto your current needstie*; Afrcnt, Apt. IJ-4, on premi.sf'H •

Telephone Summit ti-:!Sfi'j 48tf

CKNTUALLV lovattd, G rooms, bath,steam heat. Apply 303 Springfieldavenue or tel. Summit H-'M'Jl*. 48-tf

BEECIXWOOD APAKTMENTSModerate rates

1 to 6 rooms. Eleetrtq refrigeration., Robert j . . jntrpBy "' 41 U i Pl T J 0

p y41 Union Place. TeJ. 0-0(33.

48-tf

TWO corini'i'thiK rooms furnished forHlf Ht houseltL-eplng. 1)0 Aluuntalnavenue. . ' 118-tf

DK FOREST AVK.—Xewly painted andtlecorated upts, 2, :! and 5 rooms, alllmpts. Oombias',.75.Unlun place. 2S-tf

8 CKOAR street, S-room.apartment,.all# Improvements, heat. Tel. 0330. 2G-tf

JtKNT

'OAUAOK,' 2S Glen wood plaeot Tel.T.245-W or call at ^5 Oakley averiue." " -•• ... ' 51-tf

12, WANTED TOKHSl

WANTED,' room and bath, refined• home, meals optional. KriKlish gentle-maiu references exchanged, answerseonfidentHJiTr"Wrl1t;~TKi*r 200, '/,-HEIIAKD 6Gt£HEIIAKD.

, /6G-t£

IS IS

TUP.KEY .Hill Cottage, -wceepUonally., large double room- with runnlnK-

wttor, attractively furii'shed, tableexecttont. Tel, (Cy$£"or3<)G<i. . 30-tt.

THE OAKS, 155 Suinniit nvonur, large,- cornftJTtable rooms, food .oxc-ultcnt, at

moderate iirkp. . ••_"•-- ' 5 2 - 5 8 .

NT board and room nndlocation, references^ $12. HoSemoiit.Wrltt? Box 176, <•/» 1-I'EBAtD. \11-tf

It 8ALK IB

TE]ST Kelvlnntors, -size Xo. 4, 10 Serv-•"Vli.-'Slsse No. !>. 2 I'erintltit Water" Softeners, Typo R I1., size Xo. SO.

1 f-lutUMH' JPlTiTTpr Type. V. .1., siise1(1(100" 2 laVfiV^'orwiu- Oil Burners,suitable for greenhouse or. factory.1 OHomatlc Oil Burner, house size.For inspection and" details apply tosupeiintendent of nuildiiifr, II!:! .Sum-mit avenue, Summit, X. .1.

$7.50 CASH buys one ton of Economyeoal. C -B. Snedeker, 22.7 .Morris aVi"nue. Tel. Summit 6-1421. . ISfi-tf

THHHR thoroughbred Mlre-haind foxterrier puppies—one female ftfld twomale. I'lease telephone bfiiire eltfhto'cUick In the 11101 nliiK or after sevenin 'the cvenliiK for appointment. Tel,Summit C-0404. !

BABY and started chicks—Leghorns,ItedH, Rocks, Assorted, a.s.o. $7 up.Kchtatter's Poultry Farm, 384 Lake-view avenue, Brooklake Park. PhoneMadison, N. J., 6-1180-M. 52-5C

PLAYEIt piano with ;50 rolls, electricThor washing machine and lariioIroner, very reasonable. Tel. •Sum-mit C-3257-W. ' ' ' .

MAYTAGWashers

Sales and Service.;., JNew Low Prices

H.F.TayIorMotorCo,

pp n ma y L u tRealty Company for a permit/to eroct i (i») ''''>•* averagea gasoline Service station at the corner r'perlouV of usefulnes

f l ) urp f ' th fi«f Ij(u.-ust I>rlvir and Morris Avenue,Summit^ New Jersey, and that theCommon Council will tflvi.' a public.hearing oti said application at u'regu-lar meetirtff of said Council to be heldat tho City Hull on Tuinday eveningApril 5th. I!»:i2,-at clg-ht-thirty o'clock.

Uiitt-d 'March 17th, 1!»:!2.FREDERICK C. KRN'-TZ,

HC-r.S . - • • • • . • ' C i t y C l e r k .

f theof the

iariousseveral

A8SKSSMKAT NOTICE

TAKE NOTICE that tho Board of TaxAssessors, of the City of. Summit will

meet at the City Hall in the City or.Summit on Tuesday, Starch 22nd, 1932,.at 8 o'clock, p. m,, for the purpose ofgiving a hearing to- all persons inter-ested in the assessment for benefitsconferred by_tho. grading, paving andcurbing of Woodland Avenue fromIlillcrest Avenue southerly to the northside line of Crescent Avenue.

BOARD OF TAX ASSESSORS.FREDERICK C, KKN'TZ.

City .-Clerk. 54-5G

pur|H>.vi-M fur' tlie finaniini? of whichthf'Nc bonds arc to lx< issued, withinthf liniitiitiot'is of Seetion 4 of tlio Actabfi.vi! I'cfi'iri'd to, <• <>7nIf111< < 1 us pro-vided in .said Ad, taking into ninsld-orali'in the anmurit of bondss to beJKsucd on ,'ircnuiit of tlio. .said severalpurpose*, is 2."> ycurn. .

(Ii) 'J'IH1 :ivcr:i(fe a^sfS.scd valuationof th" taxable .real property (ineludiiiR

i the linprdveini.-ht.s) of the Cllyi-oinput-ed upon ttio next preceding- three \*nlu*alioliK tlu-n-ol' In the manner providedIn Section 1'2 of s;iid Act is $26,1.77,.-"

"(c-) Thi' net debt of the City co.ni-imted In the'manner provided In .saidSection 12-l.s ?l,075.fU!>.ll. - '

(d> The utivtenient 'r.cii'ulrod by'saldSection 12 has been made and filed ustherein 'required. t .

5. The bunds hereby authorizedshall be general obligations of the Cityand a-general tax Khali be levied ineach year sufficient In amount to paythe Interest on the .said bonds and thematuritif,' installriK nts of principal a«

NOTfCE- OK SETmEMENT. -Notice-is hereby given. That the account of

the subscriber,- Administrator of theEstate1 of Domenlck Mazzue-co, l)e-i-eased. will be audited and stated bythe Surrogate, and -re}w>rted for settle-ment tu. the Orphans' Court of theCounty of Union, on Friday, tho 8thdny of April, IICJU, at 1.30 1'. M.• Dated .March 2. 1M2.

BEliXAItDIXO MA5?ZU<?CO,~— Administrator.

V17//.X & PJZZr, I'roetors,15 JInple, St., Summit, K. J.

oa-w5w'02-60 Fees $3.20

ESTATE OF OILIJERT B. LAW-RENCE, DewaKoil. Pursuant to the

order of (.Jeorge H. Johnston, surro-gate of the County of Union, made onthe 17th day or-February, A. D., 1M2,upon the applipatlon . of the under-signed, -as Executiir of the estate ofsaid deceased,-jiotlco is" hereby givento' the creditors -of-said de:ceased t«exhibit tolho Bubseribefunder oatli"c»raffirmation (their—claims and demandsagainst the estate of"said deceasedwithin six^niolitrfs from the date ofsaid order, or t)a>y_will bc_j£urever-barred from' prosecuting or recoveringthe same against the subscriber.

'. • .__ AilBUOSE A. KEXJZ,. • . Executor. ;

FREDERI2ICK C, KBNTZ," Proctor,;~Summit. N J. — . I'.

oa\v5\v52-CO '—..- , Fe5s$7.80

l'K.NJ»lN<i OUIHKAXCE

AX ORDINANCE to authorize the la-su'iince o£ ?5O,O0».np of Street andSewer. ._Ijni>.r,o.venient bonds of tho

. City of Siiniinlt, Xew Jersey.I?e It i Ordained by the Common

Council of the City of. .Suinlult.1. Bonds of the City of Summit to

be known us Street and Se\yer Ini-jtrovement lioudu, are hereby authoiiz,.ed to be lssti«f(l In the aggregate ]irli»-cipal amount of $50,1)00.00, in' pursu-ance of provisions of an Act of theLegislature of the State of Xew Jer-sey, tiititlr-d: "An Act to atithorlsieand reguiat'e the Issuance of bonds and«ther oblfjf:\tidhs and the incurring, ofindebtedaesa by county, city, borough,•village; fiiwn, township or any munlcl-I'ality governed'• by an Improvementi-onimlHsion," '.approved March 22nd.I'.ilfi, con.stitutliiK Chanter 232 of thePamphlet Laws of ltUfi, and the netsanitinriatory theriiMf und suiiplementalthereto. . <&

2. Said Bonds shall be dated Aprillyt. l!i:!2, shall mature In the principalamount of $5,(imt.00oii April 1st in eachof the years 1»3J to 1012, both Inclus-ive; said IKUKIS shall hear interest attho rate of ly;;. tier annum, paynbleseml-annually on the first day of Apriland October.In euclt year until mtitur-Ity. shall be In tho denomination of$1,000.00 each, numbered In order ofmaturity, and In Mich form as shall bedetermined by resolution.

,'!. The pl'.xwelM of the sale of saidl>onds shall be applied' to the followingpurposes,In the following amounts, In-cluding the rundltm of temporary obli-gations Issued and .outstanding there-

.LOCAL IMPU0VEMENT8AA r u n

Oi./'s-share

31 SUMMITPhone 6-2H4 ^ _

Pi'scrlpllonof Improvcnirnt

For the imvliiK of Pprlnpr* •field Avenue frrnn Morris '

pletoil"November Sth. 15129 $14,022.20For tlie pavlnu and curhr

ln«r of Webster, l,r>Wfll, Mont-r.iHP, Madlsnn and (JntPSAvemipfl. cnin]i|etctl January<th, l!>30 .-.: •• •

F.»r. tho construction sot astorm sower under nnd nlonu

, Ashwood Ave|ine and Ilus-'soll 1'lace, eotni'leted May

lHI, ifll'S .. .' • :•••'•• For the graillnK and paving.

of Ashwood Avenue, conir

the samepayable.

shall become due and

I^yon-s. f.Sixnce. f. ..Morrison, f.

Ci.

. s)

:" i). 4 .- -. 1.' 0. 1

15( h i

<!.'}

0

u4.»0

• F .0O01100

«»

K.*»00.010

p .16

0y:!,0•I

V.t,i)0850

Totals .Iteferw-

nt i

I3ion, 3.15.Fri., Mar. lS-Jr . High School' M ! ^ . .

plays, S.15. " ' Ku-iiker, g.Fii., Mar. 18r-Frlday Afternoon t

Clul), Jllghland Club, 4-5.30. • 'Fri., Mar. 18—Junior Friday Evc-

niiiK Club, MaMonic Hall, 8-10.Mon., Mar. 21—Women's Auxil-i

iary of Overlook Hospital, N'urson'j.Home, JJ.30 o'clock, annual tnccting.

Tues., Mar. 22—Roosevelt -P.-T. |A., Fathers' Ninht. 8.15 o'cloelc j

Ttiea., Mar. 22^—International Re- Ilations Dept. Fortnightly, 11 mu«s took three.straight games (rom theplaced 1 Summit A team last night in- a

BowlingLA(KAWAXXA LKA(U

The Hoyal Arcanum, of Dover,

Thurs.. Mar. 21—D. A. R., home.Mrs. C. H. Lane, 45 Prospect Hillavenue,*2.S0 o'clock.'

Wed., Mar. 30—Fortnightly MusicDept. meeting.

Mon., Apr. i—Spaghetti dinner,Holy Name Society of St. Teresa's

Lackawanna Bowling Leagueninfell. The Summit H team, how-ever, fared, better, taking two outof three game""? from the Millburn

| Recreation pinuers. • • • . . _Hnjal "A" «f riovcr

Church.Tues., Apr.

representatives-Special meet ingof all agencies

wofRing with youth.- Place andhour to be announced.

Wed., Apr. 6—Fortnightly meet-ing, H. V. JKaltenborn.

Thurs., Apr. 7—Progressive As-

, (i. All ordinances or parts of' ordi-nances IticoriKistent herewith, hut totho extent only of such incoiiKlstcticj:, ,arc hi-Tcby repealed, and this ordi- i sociatlon, Roosevelt School, 8.15nance; shall take .effect :it tho t'.xjilra-! o'clock ' _tlon of tt-n days from the date of Its 1 _ , ". -—« _ -,-'.- •puhlU-atlon-nftcr final passage,'as pro-j Frl., Apr. 8—Dance sponsored byvided by law. - Fortnightly Club, Hotel Beechwood,

1, Frederick C.\ Kentz, do hereby: ;( o'clockc e r t i f y ' t h a t t i n - - f o r e j r o l r i K O r d l n a n c i - j - , , „ • • » _ » ' 11 r>~~,.tnn i> T Awas iiitrodiicod for .first reading at a ' Mon., Apr., 11;—Bra>ton T.-T. A.regular mtotlug of tho Common ("nun-; Prof. Harry A. Overstreet; "Kmo-VHu' "1,'!,?11 Tu^s"}a-v-evVIlIn,'?',rMl'irt-hitional Attitudes of Our Children,"loth, 1!».!2, and that said Ordinance! , , , , j | ( n , ! l l m 0 i r nviaritwill he submitted for consideration aIm i-auditorium, 8.15 o clock.l>iis.«afw-flt the next regular mei-tln'B of: Mon., Apr. 11—Garden Dcpt. Fort-

ld C i l b h l d T d j

Rcinliardt

KhifflKT*Mfird'ock _,..Keller ....:.

Totals

1 <1*'.'.r~. is 1

IT.".2252 0 3

-.-.'....-... :<«::Suiniult "A"

\VI<.-lH)ldtCain .!>>rwart . . , , . .rjiiehtmr VLudwig :T. ...

Tota ls ".:.::•;•

l"iO' i*»*-

17;>17*i'

- sns

mMMl l ( > . '21118:«

1(0.3

21215213.S1S2lf i»

873

Mlllliorn H<rr«alienSUevo '_SacroKist-hofrA"|»i»let"it .'... ...XlacWIiiniK-y ....

121..'.. 147

1 ?.',>

ir»2^0J

1S1Ifi!'

nr>1 I'M

17.'!15;',l i i : :2012011

iCil

no,170175145

. 1G7

SOS

1C4145

. 1G2140171

Cough Syrup figuresin Drunken Driver Case

To Edward K. Young, 320 Elleryavenue,'>Nowark, KOCS tha doubtfuldistinction of originating a new de-fense for a drunken driving.chargein Summit. In the past JusticeItobert IJ. Williams lias l)een forcedto listen to atteRcdly intoxicated,drivers explain thut they had beenInhaling Khcllac, or had their headsbumped in au accident or werestruck by police, hut Young wa3flrat to attribute his unstable de-meanor to cough fiyrup.

Youug was -driVeir"of a ta r that-collided, in llobart avenue earlyWaKliington's Uirlhday .with a newlimchine operated by Ira C. Jones,150 Hobart avenue Dr.. J6'liiii'':"li!'

..Meeker BubHerjut'iitly pronSuricedhim unfit to drive because of intox-ication.

Frank Pizzi, local attorney, rep-resented Young laat night,'cluiming-that, a codeine .compound whichhad been prescribed for Young'scough caused him to* full in theorthodox testa fora drunken driver.

Codeine is mi opium derivativeand Young hud taken eight doHest,or equivalent'to'one grain of thedrug. A hypothetical (mention putto Dr.'Meeker brought out the pos-sibility, that the drug iniglit havecaused Young's condition.

Justice Robert B. Williams re-served decision.

Wins-Prize For Itoses; Aprize for the best commercialdisplay of fifty roses at the -GrandCentral Palace flower., .show, NewYork, this week went to I*. 1).Coddinston Co.. of .Murray Hill.

j Mrs. Samuel McKendrv of Madi*I sum had .heard Summit's police de-! partpie.nt conducted a lost andfound bureau, but never dreamed of

jits efficiency until yesterday. Andyesterday wasn't a dream* either.

She lcat-a gold watch on Sum-mit avenue'.near SpriugfJeld ave-iiiH1 ycHterday nftcrijoon and whe'ishe discovered her loss reported topolice headquarters'. She was nolittle surp'rised to learn that thowatch had already been found byJirn. John W. Hcniscy, 123 Summitnvenue. An officer took her to U16local address, where she identifiedher watch.

Small FireUnion Hose Company No. 1 was

summoned Wednesday afternoon to2 put out a small fire at the~rear of

Clifford Bernard'H home, 30 De-

•Totals.l g p•sald Council t<» be held on Tuesday j n i g h t l y C l u b , ' C o m m u n i t y H o u s e , '•-•evenlnp, April r.fh, I!i:i2, a t the C i l v j , , . , ' ' . ' • • - • M«>Ht-t.rHall, a t S.l',0 «VI«(.k, at which t ime! " H Y L p - n \ - _ „ • , . » > , ' I-STCUM

d l t t h h ! RfottgpApr 11Board of Directiind pl'irCF—-uny person wha may 1int'eri'stpd therein will- h,c_Bivpn an op-portunity to lie -hcard_ consuming .suchOrdinance. - - •- .„,...

Dated .March 17th, 19.12. . .KfTEDERICK C. KKN'TZ,

5C-58 - ~ _ City Clerk.

MoifcpApr. 11—Board of Direct-ors' meeting, Y. M. C. A.-flies., Apr. 12--Card party and

|{fi>outl»at!--nI'ar.-c

7CO

124

1S1

UOi.

Kit

sw

ll'.tINS14G

S?nlftr und Junior Students1

i'oiincllThe Senior and Junior Students'*

Council will have its monthly meet-ing at Miss JohnsJon'H, 17 Olenwood •place,' March 18th, at 8 • o'clock, tSubject for discussion: "Personal.Thoughts on--Religion.." :

Otitcera elected for 1M2 are as''fr.-H'ows: Misr. Helen Chapman,>pvcs;id»'nf. Lcuin Hlackman,/vice-'pic: ideal; Donald Cunn, 2nd vice-

' president: Miss-E. Junnlta Shealey,,|'isecretary; Mis:; Willie Anderaoillr-iassitstant secretary; Miss Ella Ilob-iJiiiHoii, corresponding'' secretary,'."MisH Mae Edwards, assistant cor-responding secretary; Kenold Bar*row,-trea:iurer; Miss Goldie Bene-ford, assistant treasurer..Miss Carrie Powers teacher in

public school of Newark.Mr. Howlls, president of Student

Council of Newark. '"Lawyer J. Mercer Burrell will bo

present.Miss Oeorgie Carroll, director;

.Miss' Wjlmenta Cato, assistant di-rector; Misa Viola A. Johnson, su-perintendent. .

j'Signed.-for ShortstopA slsiu'd contract froin-4immle

Reese, Summit shortstop; has beenreceived by former Manager An-drew McNainara. Reese will prob-d e MNamaa. Rese w l p

Bary place. It was a playhouse < ably l.o retained by Manager Jackand.neighbors turned in the.alurm. IPallenstin. "

«r7.M SS7 .----S48

UNITED STJ\TKS DISTRICT—. JMSTIIICT. OF NEW JKRSEX:...-....

In .the-Ma.tter-.of HABHY WALCiIEK,Unitkrupt. - ..

In -BtHikruptcy.

Dept., meeting,Thurs. Apr. 14—-Athenaeum, 8.15.Mon., Apr. 18—Inter-Glub-dinner,

Y. M.-C, A.,. 6.15 p. m., both .men's_ and boyi divisions. - "^

"13.1s hereby Klvon that Harry Tues," Apr. 19—Summit ChoralWakiiok, Imnlfrupt, has.filed his pcti-; f<i..i, Suhsi-rintlnn f"oncort HJirlition dattid March 8, 1!»32, praylnj; for; ^ , 1 ' ' B ^ » c r l P » o n concert, J l lgna dim-liiU'Kt' fr»m all his debts In-b.arik-j acnooi. S.-10.t-uptoy aiid that alLcrodlttirs andotlii'i1

per.son.s itro ordered t(»- iTttond at~IWhturliitr u|X)ii mild iictitioti before .saidCourt at thiJJ^ofcourUKKlK., a-t NMraTk,;In1.0:30 A: M., and. then arid tht'i-f showcause If nny.'_they havo, why tin'prayer of sa|d petitlonor • should nothe granted.Dated:-March 16, 1932.

GKOHftH XV. W. I'OUTKU,lt»»fiT.3p In liirrrtrniptry;—

SPRCIAT, NOTICK TO CKKDITOKS—This Is to Inform you that it Is not i c . j . Beck, 3.15 o'clocknwjpssary for you to pi-rsonally attend i p r i A n rCourt on the return day above men- j ' *M"»tioncd. If you wish lo . oppose tin

dance", Roosevelt P.-T. A. audi-j r.-nNtorium, 8.15 o'clock. " . . {-!_—— —_

Wed., Apr. 13—Portiriglitly Lit-! benefit Community House, highschool, 8 o'clock, Anlta._and theDuncan dancers. ~ ~ ; ' -- ~ •• t

Tues...A~pr. 26—International Re-lations Dept., Fortnightly meeting. -. Wed., Apr. 27—Arr Dept. .Fort-

nightly meeting. • - .Thurs.7^MaK,-.feProgre8si\re As-

sociation* Roosevelt School, 8.15o'clock. "~ "riJS'-''

; Mon., May 9^-Annual Mother andSon Banquet. Y. M. C. A.

Monv May 9—Garden Dcpt. Fort-nightly Club, Community-llouse,3.15 p. m. .

Mon., May 1.6—Women's Auxil-iary of Overlook Hospital, Nurses)'home, 3.80 o'clock.

Wed., Apr. 20—Fortnightlyan-nu-al meeting and,tea.

.„..—,..„., Mon., Mar. 21—Meeting of Junioroii AiiW 'th," iitaaV'i/t''- parents and teacherB.-illgli School

P.-T. A., High School, 8 o'clock.: Thurs., Apr. 21—Roosevelt T.-T.I A., 3.15'io'cJpck^a;i-,.lJ_t._j!t^J^ci_, : •! Fri., Apr., 22—Braytofl^ P.-T; A.'I Child-Study Group. HcaUer, Mrs.! George- W. Brown. ""Home -of Mrs.

•nl

for OLDCONSOLE Tll'lv (OMFIK^KIil

GAS RANGEATritAtTlV*: TO LOOK AT KCOXO.MHAJ, TO OPEKATE

I , : - ; . : - .. - ;. 2 $ 7 9 . 5 0 I ; : ."". .- . - j . See model in our~window, ' — ^ -

" JOS. a CHRYSTAI,387 SPRINGFIELD AVENUE,Office 'Phone 6-0-271

| . i . . _ ^ _ _ , ^ . - . • • ; '

SUMMIT, N. J.Home Tlionc 0-1183 I

sociation,o'clock.

2—Progressive As-Roosevelt School, 8.15

disclmrfft1. you may do It Uy attorney iat law.ior you jnny enter yoiir appear-! — g ^ , _anees liKiiinst discharRe by Utter to i.f»tho. Clork, but your .opposition imist '•be based on. one of th» acts which are.bars to discharge as set out in Section11D of the Hankrupte,y—Act. .

GKOIS.(;R w, to. vorvrm,K f i o in Hankrupt'.'y.

UNITED STATUS DISTIUCT COUUTDISTRICT OF NEW JERSEY

In tho Mutter oC KOV A. DKLKSPKK-XIKH. Hnnkrunt. '

In Uanltruiitcy. ' 1TO• TIIIO CREIHTOKS of Roy A.I

Doicsdcrnier, • of the Town of Went- ifi«ld In the County of l.'nlon In -s;iidiDistrict. , -I

NOTICK Is hereby Rlvfn that <>n the :fttlrdny of March. 11(31, the said jl'oy A. jKi'k'Htlixnler wan duly iidjudgi'd a tinn)t- :runt anil thnt a first mpetliiBof creditors 'will be hold at the United States DIs- -trk't Vhurt Itoom, MilKar.v I'nrk IJIdK... I60 I'urk Place, 4n tho City of Newark iIn Essex County, .on the 1st 'day of.April.' I!«I2. at ii:()() in tin; afteriioon. Iat which time tho HMiil creditors, may ;iittond nlid provo their claims, :tpi««*iiit ;a truMi>or..(<KJtmlnp the bankrupt and Itrannaef"mielif-<itli(>r huninesH as may;ooini- before said mt-etlfiK. • . !

Said proof of claim must comply Iwith Section 57 of tho Unnkruntcy. I,nw 1and Itulo-21 of tho General Orders oftho llnltfld HtatOH Supreme Court, nnd !must be properly endorsed In UIIHmatter, -

11,872.40 Said proofs of claim may be filedwithin Htx months after, adiudleatkmwith tho Referee ,it Room 1104, Mili-tary I'nrk Bldir:, 00 Park Place, New-

! ark. N\ .1. .12,001.52 1, U.itetl: Muri'li 17,

GKQROK W. W. POUTBIt,.Iteferoo in Bankruptcy•1

LEHIGH

GOALEGG stovfe NUT

V *

$12.00

A TON —CASH

TONY GARLONE ;Telephone Chatham 4-3749-W

11 River Road Chatham, N. J.

Lawn MowersReconditioned

Have yours attended to NOWbefore the rush begins.

All Took Shan>ene#Keys Made-Baby Carriages Repaired

Bicycles Bought* Se|fl,Repaired and Exchanged

All Bicycle SuppliesWork done by first class mechanics and guaranteed.

Will Call For mul Deliver-,Ut

General Repair478 SPRINGFIELD AVENUE

(Opposite the Boulevard)

'Plior.c Summit 6-4H3 Summit, N. J.

JTfUUA*.

points

erialty

unmit, N. J.

> ^ *

convention to be held In Minne-apolia May 1-5, 1938, the Woman'sPress quotes M». Glitter "I cannotclose without speaking my deepconviction that the persistent f i th

We Came From

W. C A. CALENDAR FOR THE WEEK

. Harrh £1— .. " - , ,OMa-m.—March Meeting Hospital Auxiliary.

Membership Open House, Business Girls* Club.«.45; Meeting 8 p. in.

3.Sfip.m—Seventh Grade Girl Reserves.( ;

W r f t * * — " : — " " " ' • •io!w a. m.—Executive Board Fortnightly Club.3 IS p. m,-^-Senior Girl Reserves.g!op p. m.—Meeting International Club.-1.00 p.m.—Neighborhood House Girls'Club.

l ' Jftd S* /

Supper,

iwMlajt Jftun .3.30 p. m.—Junior High School Colored Girl Reserves.3.00 p. m,—Roosevelt School Girl Reserves.'

ifsfaff Maw* SI— -' "'• . .' .".All-day Physical Education Program, Y. M. C. A.€J00 p. m.—Sapper Meeting; Senior Colored Girls.

FrUar, Xarrk 9^— - • . •" '\; ' - . ' . •3.15 p.m.—Junior High Girl Reserves.

OUR LKNTFX TEB8E

"Who lor the Joy that was set before Him, endured Uie cross."—Hebrews 12:2.

TEE WAI ©P f BE CROSS

<A challenge to our Lententhought—quoted from Sherwood

j Eddy in the March 16th issue of-Hie Christian Century.")

i Finally, during this period of! transition aad depression, we

strive in each land and inlue, to put our own house

la order, to build nothing lessjiaa a social order for both jus-tice and liberty, tackling ourspecific problems, personal andsocial, oae by one. East or west,ia Asia or in Europe, in China orla America, I can find nothingbelter and nothing else thanJesus" way of life, in the whole-toeuied lore of God and man, intbe fall sharing of Christlikelore, for the individual and for.society. If the way of the crossmeans love sacrificing itself tosave, there is no better way forman or for the world. Therein

-Uses victory. ." ' • ,..' ..: •'..::

club gives recognltlpn to the Wash-ington celebration being observedeverywhere in the. United Statesjust now* . v

, Mrs. Brown was hostess Thurs-day afternoon at her home on Lin-den place when the entire club anda company of their friends enjoyedthe afternoon at cards.

March Meeting Board of DirectorsThere was a busy session of the

Board of Directors of the Y. W. C.A. at the association building onMonday morning, March 14th. —

In addition to the monthly re-ports of chairman of committeesand secretaries tbe finance com-mittee completed its report of therecent maintenance campaign.

Mrs. T. P. Prout was in chargeI of the devotional period and used

as her theme the association thomefor the month which is:

Janlor HighOn March l«h, 1832, the etgnth

and nifiti grade Girl Reserves held<t*e£r meeting Mt noon, I P * all

ht o*fting P

brought o*f lunches and sat attables talking and barlngHF-feMItame.—We decided we would post-

tie tea for our mothers and|re it around Mother's Day. Tbe

meeting we will talk about©or program in entertaining theSenior High Girl Reserves.

All EMB who are interested injoantag a good club and who are Ineftier eighth or ninth grades areoordiallT Invited to join the JuniorHigl School Club.

DORIS LAMBDIN,Club Reporter.

- O - . - : ••'•

we ((the Y. W. C. A.) have heldover the years, la that religionmust be expressed in terins of liv-ing" Mrg. Gilkey then quotes Dr.Juptln Wroe Nixon, who la to bethe inspirational speaker at theconvention as saying this la regardto tile worshipful solving ot our as-sociation problems: ',

"Crises of personal experiencewhen duty conflicts^ with desire,when human frailty is helpless inthe presence of fate, when the bat-fled soul, craves guidance sad as-surance, these will continue tot; bethe occasions when men will reachout to apprehend a wider spiritualreality which, however Inscrut-able, ia^yet capable of enteringtheir llvfa in a helpful way.to get somewhere in religion onemust start with life as It is ex-perienced by- ordinary men andwomen who may become extraor-dinary men and women if they canfind a religion which is 'concreteenough to become real in terms ofthe life that they live. .

"The God of such a religion isaccessible to all men because Heworks his transformations Withinthe world of concrete everyday ex-perience."

Brief Historical Notes of the Summit Y.W. C. At.

Roosevelt School Girt ReservesMrs. N. L. Murray met with us on

last Wednesday and we talkedabout our very, very good fortunein being able to study a little moreabout the side of our triangle whichrepresents, body. The local chapterof the Red Cross is going to giveus a course in home hygiene. We'llbe learning about first aid, how tomake a bed, and many other things!Our first trip to the Red Crossheadquarters will be next Wednes-day. \ We shall meet as Girl Re-serves In the RooBvelt School at 3o'clock promptly and all come tothe Summit avenue office together.

The other Very nice thing.thatwe talked about on "Wednesday is tohappen this Saturday, March 19th,tomorrow. We're going to take care

while our mothers do their shop-ping uptown. Then the mother ofeach gir| will stop Into the littleY. W. C, A. to see where we'hadour happy. Christmas party, to seewhere our club will meet next year,

Seventh Grade GlrfTfegeryesMonday! Yes, It is our lest

meeting Before Easter and our lastmeeting before vacation. We hopeevery member of the 8eventh GradeClub will be here!

. / .s—o——' ' \The last of the series of three

, , m , , . , , , , it_ J,Lonten meetings which were heldWho for the Joy that was set be- Jolntly by the Glfl Reserves of the

« «,m M*,.~A ^ . . . . y . W | C . A. and theHl-xloyB ofthe Y. M. CL A.jvas held In the Y.

fore Him, enduredHebrews 12:2.

the cross."—

Mrs. Gllfcey Plans With Us For OarNational Convention

In a message from Mrs. CharlesW. Gilkey, president of the YoungWomen's Christian Association ofthe United States for the biennial

Presented bAssociation's First President

In the autumn of 19<Mquest of Ernest D. Nortl, president success because Of her."of the Summit Public L brary, and j About this time there was es-Mlss Louise Morris, Hbr rian, Miss Uablished a weekly Saturday morn-

* ^*-- ing cake sale; these sales provedto be the nucleus for the Women'sExchange. - • t •

May, 1911, Miss Ethel Hann waselected president of The Institute.

The board of' managers, evernnxioiia to improve and to enlarge

i the- scope of its work, frequently

Marie C. Ubby consents Lta gathertogether a small group f businessgirls and to help ther form aReading and Lunch Club. Thisgroup was given tbe fin e use of asmall room of the Branin the old Mansion Hous] on Maplestreet.

Later, Miss Libby WHS assisted > invited members of similar orgati-by Miss P. Lyall, Miss J nna Crdm-lizatlons, of other towns, to attendwkll, Miss Julia WilcoJCaroline B. Hlnman.

As the girls' club Ii

able to organize it intoof society having a boaagers and officers.

A committee visited t ie Woman'sInstitute of YonkeiB, N. Y., and asthe result of a study of hat organ-ization the Woman's J stitute ofSummit was established with MissPamela Lyall as first c lairman ofits board of managers.

The first monthly mee Ing of thisof Septera-board, recorded, is that

ber 22nd, 1908, when "itto' advertise, by po&tenWoman's Institute willes in dressmaking, mllliing and embroidery."

October 8th, 1908, MilHawks was elected presiWoman's Institute.

On the minutes of De1908, it is recorded thanightly Club had co sented tounite withrenting of

thethe

Instltu

-j.

Miss lddA,Rosenquest, the

at the re- tbe coming year promises greater

h Library,

and Miss J special Institute meetings, and toexplain their methods of work. On

creased In jMnrch 25th, 1912, a Miss Chapelmembership it was deened advis-[outlined the organization of the Y.

some sort I W. a A.d of man- In 1913 Miss Marie C. Libby was

elected president of the Institute,During these five years of the ex-istence of "this organization,, it hadsteadily grown in usefulness to thecommunity, and was supported bythe dues of Us members, rentals ofits hall, frlendly; contributions andthe proceeds of many and variousentertainments.

Most clubs and classes were leadwaa voted! by volunteer workers.

May 1 Oth, 1915, Miss Ida' A.that thepen class-lery, cook-

s Mary G.

Rosenquest was elected.to serve aspresident of the Woman's Institute.

The annual meeting of 1916 wasthe first one to be open to all gen-

lent of the • cral members and interestedfriends of the organization, and it

ember 14, j was very well attended. Thethe Fort-! speakers for the alternoon were

Mrs. Copper, one of the trustees ofe; in the the Ypnkers Woman's Institute,

old P esbyterianchapel, at the rental cf J20 permonth; all running expenses to beequally shared.

The new quarters was called the"Woman's Building" and the twoorganizations had theii separatesigns. The Womani Institute'ssign was the gift of Mr. Sharp, thepainter.

TBplace of most of the women's or-ganizations of Summit.

June of 1909, Miss Caroline Hin-man was elected to the presidencyupon the resignation! of MissHawks.

In March, 1910, itthat Mrs. Shackleton haigaged to serve as theMatron," and that "withing the entire atmosphere of theInstitute has been changed, and

M. C. A. auditorium Wednesday,e v e n i n g . • : •••••• . "" - , 1

Prof. James McClintock of Drew,who has led the three lecture-dls-,cu.BsIon meetings, brought hisaudience a most inspiring message

' (Continued on Page Eight)

to

Hlrt Colored GirlsTie Colored Girl Reserve Club

ort at t ie Y. W.-G. A Wednesday,March 8th. We had the businesspart ©f oar meeting. Wednesday,Marca 23rd, we are golngXto give atea xai are inviUng the SeWr Col-ored €3u». We also plannej jjnTgo-'Tig to Xew York during our Easter

station but will talk more aboutIt at <mr next meeting. J

HILDA EDWARDS.Club Reporter.

ws4ay ia tae I . M.lor a swim? Then come in-

classes foF women, schoolr%, or business girls at the Y. M-7C. A. on Thursdays. You will liketee splash of the water, the joy ofthe exercise.- The Business Girls'

«ui have basketball preced-tieir 8.45 o'clock plunger-

• " " - T - ^ - p — _ ; - " • - — •• .

ladastrlal GirlsOnr trip to Madison on last-Sat-**¥ sight was,mot* than a suc-

w a ! l o t i * f u n t 0 K° t n e ^and to enjoy together th«P;f*m*s' a n d dancing provid-

* l b ^ P a n t n e r 8 Club In the-Set-

chose LouiseSarerno

Jersey City

ofthe

SliabByouse.

Tuesday, u,en,

d,el^at«s to

r - P811" <"»' Presidentio resign; we decided that^ 1 1

President. The

o . . .Junior Girls^basketball on Tues-fn

dfb o r no«» House, wehM e a.n »««tet'8erT-

f ireDl«ce, and thati later!

Y o r k WP. with its terrydlnn*r to 'W

CHE goes hbmfr alone when other girls say•y"Ws go to iny housel'-She couldn't say "Come to MY house" becauseof worn, scarred furniture/floors and wood-work . . . She lets popularity go the otherway when she could have great fun makingthings new again and her home happy withcolor by use of

s 1J,

Ciab\ A.of the __„

C. A. Tues-and at this meqt-

»ade for a Colonialthe association on

of the club andDSKea to come in

Club is notbicentennial year |'"" by which the

—• WaterSpar Varnlih that even boiling wafer cannot harm.WatwSpar Enamel that dries in four hours and gtvM baautifulchina-smooth finish. WaterSpar Liquid Wax to gtv*lustra and elegance! Marvelowsly soft huoslcolorsl Stop in for Color Cards.

Hill City Coal & Lumber Co."We Serve to Please"

Fiimnce OilMotowt<ik«

Bulldlnfr Materials -. CoalWcstlnghonse Refrigerators

Telephone Summit 6-0525

recordedbeen en-

"Instltuteher com-

and Miss Parsons, the general sec-retary.

The Institute was turned over tothe National Special Aid Societyfor use during the three summermonths Of: 1917. In fact, allthrough tho World Warjthe build-ing was much used by many patri-otic groups.

At the annual meeting of 1917Miss Titus, general Secretary of theY. W. C. A. of Plainfield, and MissFeddernjan, teacher of craft work,were the speakers.

During the winter of 1017 and1918, because of the illness and thesubsequent resignation of Mrs.Shackleton, also the intensive warwork of most of our board mem-bers ._ and volunteer workers, itproved indeed most difficult tokeep the Institute open. It was be-cause of the untiring aid of its

•••you've never worn

"My, my, wl

think there

who didn't a

you live and

versation w<

for those wo

such excepti

whole sectiol

inent They

[ stockings

, they won't g

meant to.

really sheer,

at you've been missing! Didn't

as a woman in seven counties

least know about them. Well,

learn." That's all of the con*

Jheard, but we were grateful

da of praise. We feel they're

not stockings that we devote a

to them in our Hosiery Depart-

e just about the finest ingrain

They're { not cheap—^and

ve you long wear—4hey're not

'hey're for women who want

beautiful stockings I

mi de,

WOMEN'S H

1.65 to ••3»95SIERY DEPARTMENT—Street Floor

L. BAMBE RGER & CO., Newarkhone Summit 6-2600

founder, Miss Libby, the chairmanof the kitchen committee, Mrs, M.S. Sherwood, and the. Misses Nancy,Elizabeth and Mary tllfford, thatthe president was enabled to holdtogether most of the clubs, classes,etc., and to keep the Exchangeopen. _

On February 1st, 1918, a confer-ence of board members, associatemembers and contributors washeld, to diacu8s the advisability ofreorganizing the Woman's Insti-tute into a Young Women's Chris-tian Association. Miss Cbapin andMiss Clark, secretaries of the Na-tional Y.-W. C. A., were present toanswer _auestions and to give ad-vice.

All those present were stronglyIn favor of the change, but theywarned the board of managers toremember, that if the work be,re-organized during war times it wasnot wise to ask for greater financialsupport at once.

At the regular monthly boardmeeting of February 11th, 1918, itwas voted to apply to the NationalBoard of the Y. W, C. A. for an ex-perienced secretary who wouldcome as secretary of the Woman'sInstitute for a time, and later tohelp with the re-organization.

We were most fortunate to se-cure, for one year! Mrs. Goodman,a Y. W. C. A. worker of very wideexperience and great magnetism.She took up her work in Summiton the 15th of April, 1918.

Five months' service with theWoman's Institute of Summit, en-abled Mrs. Goodman to gain a com-prehensive acquaintance with thegroups of girls and young womenin the town nnd vicinity, and gaveher the vision of what a YoungWomen's Christen Associationmight do to broaden their lives andto make them forces for better-ment in this community. Thosewere busy days of preparation:laying foundations both broad anddeep;

Under Mrs. Goodman's enthusi-astic leadership the sewing classfor children and other classes andclubs were carried on as for yearspast. Also four troops of GirlScouts were organized, ail evening

class for colored girls was. started,eighty-four girts were enrolled ineducational classes, a High SchoolGirls' Club was organised and aBusiness Girls' Club formed. Mrs.Goodman also established mostcordial co-operation with the Y. M.C. A., the School Board and othercivic institutions. It was duringthe summer of 1918 that our organ-ization was given the use of the Y.M. c. A.'s gymnasium, a shower-baths and bowling allies, for oneday each week.

A membership campaign tookplace during the weok of November10th-17th, under the able chair-manship of Mrs. Fred Clift, and onNovember 15Uu M18, the formalorganization of the Young Wo-men's . Christian Association ofSummit took place by the adoptionof a constltutoin and the election

elected to sen* fatbe new. organisation.

Officers to serve for three yearswere: Resident, Miss L A. Roaca-quest, vice-president, Mrs. C K.Cor bin; secreUry, Mrs. Win. Gay-lord, and treasurer, Mrs. T. P.Front.

The first Board of Trosteeswere: Tbeo. Beck. John O. Morgsta,Mrs. Carroll P. Bassett, Coaa. D.Ferry. R. Franklin and Miss J. R.Bonnel.

When Mrs. Goodman's year wltaus came to an end, we were againfortunate in the selection, aright person, to jaxry on _„„splendid start; Mrs. C. EL Moshercame to Summit in April, 1919.

It was during the year 1919 thatthe Summit Y. W. C. A. received thenucleus for a building fund. In tbeform of fifteen dollars worth of

„# ». "A' .AI' \ ' ~ W a r Saving Stamps, a gift of aof t r u S s »ors a n d a b o a r d f business woman. Mrs. Rose A. Bal-

(Too much credit cannot be given j April, 1921, the Y. W. C. A. re-to Mrs. F. N. .Waterman during the.1 ceived a be^aest of"two thousandbusy time of re-organization, for dollars from Miss Emmaline Bon-

I her invaluable asHiHtance in all 'I matters relative to such a work).

The Womairrinstltute Board of l V B 1 , 1 B U W . 1 1 1 „ ,Managers and its officers were (Continued on

nel.A most constructive work ac-

complished in 1921 waa the First

EW YORK ASSORTMENTS,

STYLES AND PRICES PLUS

NEW JERSEY CONVENIENCE

& SERVICE » » • » » ».BAMBERGER'S

General

Let's put^fefde, the technicalities of radio engineering. After

all, the name of Genera! Electric assures you of a high score

there* doesn't it? But tone is important. Once you've listened

to a G-E radio, you will understand immediately why G-E is

acclaimed by artists, musicians, and the public in general-

people who want entertainment undistorted by inside sounds

Visit Bamberger's tomorrow: Listen to a G-E, and then judge

for yourself. You'll believe what your own ears tell you about G-E• . • . • - ' . ; • j . - , . ' ; . . • , • . ; ; •

GIN ERAL0E LECTRIC (

FULL kANGE RADIO

Installation if desired, $5

BAMBERGER'S for RADIOS—Eighth Floor

, ' T M 1 - —•'

L. Bamberger Co., Newark, N. J.'Phone Summit 6-2600

• i

•\« I-

M A * C H 18,1932

• - \

S"'

covered wf thicd. in variegated

21,000 cubicpproximate cost of-ould be $7,900.orking plans anilf the house maynoniinal sum fromEditor. Refer to

of Titleand -

s

rage

Co.

ionds

teed

iiiHiiiiiimiiiiimj

Springfield News of Varied InterestsSchool, CSvio and Church Activitiei

' —Personal Mention

Tha_ OTAIg b «i - t o evenr Mrs. Mundy. Hl» Wegle. » IBS Day,

j . Tantoenbaum,avenue, Sprinjpfl«W.J

iU In wi »» #FRIDAY by B. Shack,Morris

Board df Education Appoints Com.» nittteesM. Duguid and Edward M.

ljapies M. g

Cook, netf members, were welcom-ed to the Board of Education at themonthly meeting Tuesday night by.G Arnold Wright, who was re-elected president at a reorganisa-tion meeting March 4th. Mr-Wright appointed standing commit-tees for the year as follows:

School government. WalterWhite, John Potts and CharlesPhillips; bookstand aftpplios^ Aug-ust H. Schmidt, T: Q: WvWfM, 3f:,and Mr. Phillips; grounds aridbuildings, Davidson, Duguid andCharleB T. Smith; finance andaudit, White, Potts and- Schmidt;printing and law, Duguifl, Smithand Cook. , ~.-~

Appointments of the followingteachers were confirmed: BenjaminF Newswanger, Clayton M. Spahr,Ida B. Hess, Frances D. Wall 1,Edna B. Purcel, Edith Quinn,Emma L. Pinette, Marian E, Jakob-Ben, Mabel MrStanton, Harriet E.Smith, Alice M. Rei«, Marian L.Bolles, Isabel O. Hanrey, AHfcc E.Meade, Grace A. Gabriel, Thelma.aLXake, Ruth C. Pieraon. Lucy M.

> Jakobsen and Marietta^ Parkhurst.Appointments of supervising

principal Fred J. Hodgson, JohnMorgan Nels, director of physicaleducation; Anne E. Herche, musicteacher; Arthur D. Schoonmaker,manual training, and Helen T.Schultz, home economics, were alsoconfirmed.

Mr. Hodgson reported on his at-tendance at the recent annual con-vention of the Department of Sup-erintendence of the NatlonalEdu-catlon Association at Washington,

. • - O — r - ~ ' 'Free Public library Opened With

Reception Wednesday, A reception marked the opening

of Springfield's Free Public- LibraryWednesday night" in the formerbank quarters In the BrooksideBuilding. ,

About' 1,350 volumes ranging in.extensive classes of literature wereon the shelves, most of them thegifts of friends In Springfield andnearby communities. Miss SarahBailey of Main street, donor of 150books to the libraryr was given thehonor of the first application andA. Ii. Anderson, president of theLibrary Association, was given the>second. . ^

Mr. Anderson, in a word of greet-Ting, emphasized the fact that the i

Mrs. Wright, Mrs. AndersDannefelsor.

Book committee—Mrs.chairman; Mrs. WmrFlemer, Mrs.R. T. Bunnell, Miss Sarah 1 Jailey.

P b l i i t iPublicity committee—A.yderson, chairman;. MJBJ LilaKneen, Mrs. G. M. Dutwellsr, F. J.Hodgson, Mrs. C. O. Nelsoi.

Entertainment—A. G.chairman; Mrs. Schmid , Mrs.Bunnell, Mrs. Nelson, Chas.

There are 165 members

Republicans Plan Pig ] toastThe Republican Club of

field is making plans for atojbg, held, on J5aturdajrJUA >jc.UJad,.

Supper wiy be served from 6 to 8o'clock and tickets may be obtainedfrom club members.

Frank E. Meisel is chairman ofthe club's entertainment committee

StJIflin1 HERA14NUID StJMMIT RECORD, SUMMIT, N. f. PAGET1

n, Mrs.

Oodruff,

B. An-

rrundle,

Phillips,to date.

Spring-1g roast

and Reuben H. Marsh is i>of. the roast which will.bethe P. O. S. Of A. Hall iiavenue.

Lions Play Cards TonightThe Springfield Lions Club will

hold a card party tonlghLions Club (rooms in Fierier ave-nue. Richard T. Bunnel 1 is incharge of arrangements.

The weekly dlnner-meeti lg oftheclub will be held prior to he c»rdparty at 6.30 o'clock in the Mar-guerite Inn on State Higlway 29.Dr. Stewart 0. Burns, pwill-preside.

Celebration Committee T > MeetA meeting of the Georg s Wash-

ington Bi-Centennial Comnitteo tocomplete Arbor Day plansheld Monday night at 8 othe P. O. S. of A; Hall. '

will beclock in

G. Betzler, general 'chairman, re-quests representatives flocal organizations to.attend.

W. C. T. U. Mission Day f uesdayThe Springfield unit of tl e Wom-

en's Christian Teinperancwill observe "Mission Dayregular monthly meeting Tuesdayafternoon at 2.30 o'clock at thehome of Mrs. Charles H. Huff InMorris avenue. Mrs. E< win D.Pannell, president, will conduct thesession and Mrs. Frank flohl willbe in charge of devotions.

The subject will be "Tenlperanceand Missions" and membeis of theMissionary Society of the R ethodistChurch are invited to atjend themeeting.

Professor Albert T. 'ijayls ofNewark Academy^will address thecommunity rally to be helcat 8 o'clock in the Methodist

library Is for the'" bTncYiOff al l! Church under the auspice of theresidents, and not for members j Young People's branch of tbe W. C.only. He took prkle In-reading-. to-|T<--u- A gold medal declinatorytho'se present two.: messages of con-1 c o n test with seven contest; nts willgratulation, one from President i a ' s ° be held. There will be corn-Herbert Hoover and the other from munity singing and music} by theGovernor Moore. . --" Young People's Orchestra] A sil-

chargeheld inMorris

in the

esident,

tieodore

om all

Unionat the

tonight

Mr. Anders6n introduced MissSarah Byrd Askdw, librarian of theState Lrbrary Association, whocongratulated the members of the

"association-.'who had helped tomake the opening of tho librarysuch a splendid success.

The members of the association-are most grateful to Mrs. PhoebeM. Quick for her gift of

hd

vcr collection will be taken andrefreshmentsr will be served.Adults as well as young people arecordially invited. .

Committee Denies Fee Waiver ,•• Pleas. . !! ..: .

The Springfield Township Com-mittee at a'meeting Mondfiy nightrefused tffwaiv d l p tgf auo

graphed photograpireiTZane Grey. and also a group picture of Rexj | r —Beach, Zona Gale and Joseph C.

Lincoln.

i- i refused tffwaive or delay paymentsi ^> tf (A * " M^\\ f\ 1 ' A rt i\ tf\ 1 J ~ tf 'I t1% • iof $500 and $300 license f<by ordinances for a secomaterial storage plant ancyard, respectively. Cc

The library will "fce^opened on! members pointed out orThursday and Saturday afternoona regulating the ^plants hifrom 2.30 to 5 o'clock and on Mon-day eventhgs from 7 to 9 o'cloek.Librariaa .service has been volun-teered -and assignments _ for thofirst month are: ThHoadays,..Mrs.John A. Dannefelser and-Miss JuliaWegle; Saturdays, Mrs. G. Arnold

_ Wright and Mrs. N. C. Schmidt and- Mondays, Mrs. ChaTles A. Mundy

and Miss Evelyn Day,,Besides President Anderson, the

_ : other offieer^ of the Library Asso-i Meiation 4re: vice-presidprit, Mrs; Ni.

C Schmidt; treaBiiper^Mrs. Ralph_^tM T i t l o y ; aBsi8tanttreasurer,~Mrs —o_, .„

lUchard T. {Bufinell; secretary, I avenues asked that they be. .£lvcn aCharles Phillips;, trustees, Alfred j similar period in which tG. Trundle, F r ^ J . Hodgson, Mrs. j $300 fee for a, junk yard tlBenjamin M. Woodruff. «•-•---••-- ^_..._,-_

passed months before andtors had been given amplepay.. .- " ••"'• : — '

Joseph Honixfeld, ofproprietor of a second-handal planj in Maple ayeTjSprfngfleld avenue,- askedcommittee waive the^ fee aihfns sixty to rifnely daysout.J},^ material. He wchange f$ra plants to a lumlfor which .no licensecharged. -"~r.

Representatives .-of-the'..Garage in Mountain and

Finance «lbmmittee^-Mr8. N. C.Schmidt, chairman; Mrs. EverettSpinning, Mrs. CharleB Mundy, Mrs.•W. B. Morris, Mrs. J. E. Gunn, Mrs.W, M. Selander.

House committees-Mrs'. *R. H.Titley, chairmaH;: Mrs. Schmidt,

pay aere;ned de-ce'eom-hargin;;dinance

by non-payment of a license fee, to

Recorder Spinning postpcision one week on, a pollplaint against Honixfeld <violation of a township o

give the committee opportact On the appeal., Townshtt, D^ Treat was authorize

of DIRT.THE HOUSEWIFE has three kindsof dirt to contend with, and none ofthem ehonld be allowed to remainupon her rugs or carpets.

There is the destractive griti whichcuts the fabric; surface litter such asbitspf paper, hairt etc., which do littleharm bat are so untidy; and lastly thedangerous beauty-destroying surfacedust, which comes into every windowand carries disease germs that multiplyrapidly [and are dangerous unless atonce removed. '.*"*•

We are selling this week the FederalElectric Suction Cleaner, possessingwhich no housewife need worry aboutdirt;.price $34.50 cash or $3.50 downand $2.86 monthly. " '

es fixedd handa* junk

mmittceinancesd beenproprie-time to

Newark,materi-19" nearhat thed-allow.o niovoshed toer yarfl,tee.' . la

I. *'_K.Mlllsido

form both parties of the commit-1 nesday night, March 30th, ia thetee's decision. j James Caldwell School auditorium.

The committee adopted a resolu-; Dancing will follow the perform-1tlon offered by Tax Collector Wil-lance with music by «ateardtaal'siHam Hoppaugh, suspending cus-\ Prtaifose Club. Orcnestra. The;

Short Hillstomary publication of names of de-1 Martha Dress Sh<linquent personal property taxpay-ers, Mr. Hoppaugh said he believ- _ed such publication would be of;little aid In collecting the taxes.!Committeeman Alfred B. Trundlesaid he would favor publication ifit would aid collection, but not

will present a dre^s to 4be winneror the lucky nanjb k^anc«. There

l ' i,„ T_ «wIU a ! s o * » •p of Springfield

(lemon's priste.

On SetterTownship Com-

mittee will hold a public hearing i

Brief'

"merely for the benefit of scandal- on the report of the commissioners jmongers." of assessments for the sanitary jmongers

At the recommendation of Com-mitteeman George B. Gosklll, Del-mar A. Tappln was reappointedconstable for- another year. . Com-

sewer system in the : townshipTuesday night at 8 o'clock In the \Municipal Building.

The purpose-of the meeting is tomitteeman Lewis F. Macartney, consider 'any objections that thein'wn nnnmnlnvmpiit rnH»f iliiwfnr Dronertv owners mav crescnt in re-town unemployment relief directo,said fl.691.20 had been received asa major portion of state aid for re-lief work. He safd unemployedwill be put to work in the town-ship soon.

property owners may present igard to the report.

Brash-FireSpringfield firemen "were called

out Tuesday morning at 11 o'clockA recent drive by the Emergency t o extinguish a brush fire on

Relief Troop of Summit Post, Am- Tooker avenue near the Day and

ing for township needy, netted fourwagonloads of clothes and 375articles of food, Mr. Macartney re-ported.

Building Inspector Reuben H.Marsh reported permits with avaluation of $2,400. issued in Feb-ruary and $35 collected in fees.

. ' • . • o - . . • '

Noted Speaker To Be At P-T. A.• Meeting •'

Mrs. Sidonle Oruenberge, directorof the Child Study Association ofAmerica, and author of "Your Child j harth, who will spend a fortnightof Today and Tomorrow" and "Sons here.and Daughters,'' will be the speak- ] Mrs. Alvin H. Boss of Salter jer at the monthly meeting of thei street was hostess to'the B. L. C. D.Parent-Teacher Association to be | club Tuesday afternoon. Mrs.held Monday night at 8 o'clock in \% Manning Day, Jr., will entertain thetho James Caldwell School. f club next week.

Mrs. Graenberge also has written | Mrs. Ernest F. Swlsher enter-

By War of MentionGeorge Jacobus, son~ of Mr. and

Mrs. Walter S. Jacobus, of Bryant javenue,-fe returning the first of thejweek from Cornell tor the Easterholidays. , ,,

Emil Battile. of Maple avenue, isin Venezuela on a business trip.

Mrs, Stewart O. Burns, who hasbeen visiting relatives in Balti-more, returned last week, accom-panied by her young nephew, Billy

many pamphlets on "Health Train-ing for the Pre-School Child." Sheis a member of the White HouseConference in Washington on"Child Health and Protection" andalso a member of the staff of theFederation of Child Study. Mrs.Charles G. Nelson, president of theSpringfield P.-T. A., hopes that allparents in town will avail them-selves "of the opportunity to hearthis interesting speaker and attendthe meeting. Invitations have alsobeen extended to members of par-

talned the members of her bridge)club last night. Present wereMrs. James M. Dusuid.Mra. Clif-ford Walker, MrsJ Richard Horner,Mrs. Robert Harmon, Sirs. F. S. Mc-Adam, Mrs. Harry Spencer andMrs. Stewart Knowlton.

Miss Isabelle Jacobus will enter-tain the Katy-Dids Bridge ClubThursday night at her home inBryant avenue. _ Members areHisses Evelyn Day. Edna Arney,Mae Desmond, Celfa Loveland andDorothy Trigg.

Mr. and Mrs. Norman Walker,Jr., of Far Hills Balled for Italylast week with their two children.They will spend some time InAsolo, where Mrs. Walker's par-ents, Mr. and Mrs. James Sullivanhave a villa..

Mrs. Sidney H. Browne, who hasbeen spending two months ut theHotel Casablanca at Montego Bay,}Jamaica, returned on Wednesday,on the. S.S. "Carillo" and haa open-ed her home in Jefferson road.

Mr. and Mrs. John B, Uunnell OfHillHjde avenue have^ended a fort-night's stay at Bradentown, Fla.

Mrs. Charles M. Echeverria en-tertained the Short Hills BridgeClub at her home In Hillside ave-nue on Wednesday.

Mrs. H. H. Fryliiig of Barnsdaleroad entertained'at luncheon andbridge on Monday.

Mrs. Philip Hey wood of Worces-ter, Mass.^ia:the guest of Mr. andMrs. Marshall Geer at their homein Jefferson road. '

Miss Edith Baker of New Yorkwas the week-end guest of Mr. and-Mrs. Wilton O. Langc at theirhome in South terrace. *

Dr. Mother Abbott, headmasterof Lawrenceville Schopl, will ad-dress the ShoK Hills ynit of theParent-Teacher Association oilApril 5th at 8.15 p. m. at the Ho-bart AvenUe. School.

Robert L. Harnsberger of Hill-side avenue is stopping at theHotel Madlton in New York"City.

Mrs. Athol, Burnhnm of ChapelHill, N. C, is the guest of Mr. andMrs. William W. Rcnwlck at theirhottie on Old Short Hills road.

Frank A. Dillingham has return-ed from a business trip to Porto

Washington's Burial

ent-teacher associations in 'sur-l- Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hankins ofrounding towns tp hear Mrs. Gru- Salter street will take up theirpenberge. Her subject will be, "HowParents Establish' Standards andIdeals." — • .

It Is announced that the attend-ance banner this month will go tothe classroom having the largestnumber of fathers present at themeeting. A social hour,will followthe business meeting with Mrs. \V.Louis Morrison as hostess.

The meeting is being held oneweek earlier than usual, due to theEasterweek.

vacation the following

residence tomorrow with their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.Albert A. Schramm, of Lyons place.C. S. Andrews and family, of Eliza- j -betb, will occupy the Hankins .resi-j _ '/•.deuce the first of the month. Mrs.Schramm entertained her card clubTuesday evening. Two tables werein play. ' ' . ' • ' " .

Will Chism is confined to hishome in Salter street with scarletfever.

Albert A. Sicfeley of Morris ave-nue is ill. .

A ,son was born at Overlook Hos-pital last week to Mr. and Mrs.August Anderson. -. —

IX THE t'lU'RCIIES " ~

ternoon from 2.30 to 6 o'clock inthe parish house. Mrs., Harry B.Venn is chairman of the sale, as-sisted by the following: Flowertable. Miss Alice Liebeuson andMiss Dorothy DeUer; grab-baRS,Misses Evelyn Hoffman, CharlotteClark and Helen Haniherger; can-dy, Miases Ruth Geissler and Ade-laide Silance; cake, Mrs. Mueller,Misses Lorraine Hoffman and Mar-garet Richards; ice cream, MissesAlta Robinson and Anna Richards;door prize, Miss -Lyra Anderson.The proceeds of the sale arc a partof the Church School annual mis-sionary offering.

In, this y,car of the WashingtonBicentennial tho following briefiiecount of the lirst president'sburial taken from the tllstcr Coun-ty Gazette of Saturday. January 4,1800, will be of interest: -

Washington Entombed"•'' -, George Town, Del.

On Wednesday last, the mortalpart of Washington the great—theFather of his Country and theFriend of man, was confined to thetomb, with solemn honors andfuneral pomp. . ' " • " • - ,

A multitude_of persons assem-bled, from nmuy miles round, atMount Vernon.^the choice atodeand last residence of the illustriouschief. There were the groves—thespacious avenues, the beautiful andsublime scenes, the noble mansion—but, alas, the august inhabitantwas. now no more. That great soulwas gone. His mortal part wasthero indeed, but ah, how affect-ing! How awful the spectaclo ofsuch worth and greatness, thus* tomortal eyes, fallen—yes, fallen,fallen.

In the long and lofty Portico,where oft the hero walked in allhis glory*^ now lay the shroudedcorpse. The countenance stillcomposed and serene, seemed todepress the dignity of the spirit,which lately dwelt in that lifelessform. There, those who J)ald thelast sad hdnors^ta - the bojieTactorof hiscountry, took an impressive j

ed the soul into all the tenderness

The procession was formed andmoved on in the following order:Cavalry, infantry and guard witharms reversed; lriuslc, clergy. TheGeneraTs""horse with his saddle,holders and pistols: Pall bearers,Cols, Sims, Rainsay, Payije, Cols,Gilpin, Maffleller, Little; -Mourn-ers, Masonic Brethcrn and Citizens. I

-When 'the. procession had ar-rived at the bottom of the elevatedlawn, on the WUnk of the Potomacwhere the family vault is placed,the cavalry halted, the -infantrymarched towards the .Mount and

their lines—tbe Clersrv,Masonic Brothers, and the Citdescended to the Vault, andfuneral service of, the churchperformed. The lining wased from the vessel in the riven •the sounds echoed from theand hills around, < .

Three general* discharges by»infantry—the cavalry and. eler«pieces of artillery which linedbanks of the Potomac back of t h # |Vault, paid tbe last tribute to thftlentombed Commander in Chief of]the Armies or the United State*]and to the departed Hero.

The sun was now setting. Alasj»lthe son of Glory, was set forever*!No—the name of Washington—ttAmerican Pxes'iiBlenF andwill triumph over Death. The'un-]clouded btightness of bis Glory]will illuminate the future ases. ,

fr

—a farewell view.On the ornament at the bead of

the coffin was inscribed Surge AdJudicium—about the middle of thecoffin, GloriaJDeo—and_ on the sil-ver plate, -v •

GENERAL'. GEORGE WASHINGTON

Departed this life, on the 14thDecember, 1799, Ago 68.

Between 3 and 4 o'clock, thesound of artillery from a vessel inthe river firing, minute guns, awokeforth our solemn sorrow — thocorpse was removed •—a band ofmusic with mournful melody melt-

Rico, Cuba.MIHB Helen Faitoute, who has

been spending a month in Daytona,Fla., has returned to her home inHobart avenue.

Premium

Lehigh CoalAT

NEW MARCH PRICESFOR CASH ONLY

Stoye Coal.................... $11.75 per tonNut Coal . 1 . . . . . -......:. $11.75 per ton

Coal „ . . . . . . . . . . . $ 9.75 per tonBuckwheat (No. 1) , : : . . $ 7.50 per ton

E. J. GORDON67 Newark Way Maplcwood. N.

'Phone South Orange 2-7475

Red (TOSS TO Meet- The monthly executive meeting;of the Springfield Red Cross willtake place Wednesday afternoon at1.30 o'clock at Red Cross head-quarters. Mrk-Chaj-Jes D. Horster, F i r s t Presbyterian. Rev. Dr. Geo.chairman, will preside. A. Liggett, pastor. Sunday School

Plans will be completed for a ; a t 9.45 a m Morning service athome-made food sale to be held out n o'clock. Miss Marian JakobsenSaturday, March 26th.

SpnNlilne"Mrs. William Stocckle, the presi-

dent, will entertain the Springfield-

will lead^ the Christian EndeavorService at 7.30 o'clock, sharp, in the jchapel. Everj'one is welcome. Thecommunity Easter sunrise service,under the leadership of the Chris-

Millburn Sunshine Society at her tian Endeavor and' the Epworthhome in Taylor street, Millburn, [ League, will be held on SpringfieldThursday afternoon. •—- " JRock. Those desiring to attend

Seventeen tables were in play at i the service will meet at the Trcs-the card party held last Thursday byterian Chapel at 5.15 a. m. Carsat the home of Mrs. Raymond C. will leave the chapel promptlv-atBartrom in Rawley place, Millburn, 5.30 a. m. EveryoheTs"urBCd to at-for the benefit nf the society, tend this most interesting worshipAprons were given as a prize to 1 service.

Methodist Episcopal. Rev. Wil-liam I. Reed, pastor. Sunday Schoolat 9.45 a. m. Morning service at 11

tsael*-tables—

Food Sale Tomorrow—The women members of the offi-

cial board of the Methodist Churchhave completed details.for-a foodsale which will be held tomorrowmorning in the Lichtenstein Build-ing in Morris avenue. — "

Home-made foods will be for saleand the sale wlllropen-at 10;30 o'-

o'clock-. Epworth League serviceat 7 o'clock. Plans are being fur-4hered for thie^turkey dinner to be"held on Tuesday, March 29th, bythe men of the church.—---»"£_„

St. James Catholic. Rev. ThomasB. Larkin, pastor. Masses Sundaymorning" at 7.30/ 9.30. II o'clock.

mass;clock. In charge ^ r e Miss Lila I Sunday Schoor followiqg the 9:30Kneen, „ Mrs. Manning Day. Jr., ; •••••-Mrs. Phoebe J», Quick, Mr&..C. B.Meeker, Mrs..Robert B. Ferguson,

Stephen'3~Episcdpal (Protes-tant )t Millburn N. J. ReVi Hugh W.

Mrs. Charles H. Huff, Mrs. Elmer 1 Dfc'Iinson, f&iXtst. Holy Cpmmuh-Slckley, Mrs. Charles Stearns and j idrTat S L I D . Church School andMrs. William G. Krenke. j Bible ClassI'M 9.45 a. m. Morning

0 i prayer and sermon at 11 o'clock.To Present Play {Vespers at 5 p. m. The annual

The Collegians will present a Easter Food Sale of the Churchcomedy, "The Old Soak," on Wed-_School will be held tomorrow af-

uiity top Clerk1 to in- LITTLE JACK HORNER

TURN AROUND H E R E . - T M ST.GEORGE AND VOU RE THE ORAGON.I'LL SLAY >OU AND MARRY THEBEAUTIFUL PRINCESS. OM.SECWD THOUGHT.

LITTLE SNAKE, I'LL PUT YDtl IN MyPOCKET AND TAKE VOU TO SCHOOL

LITTLE JACK HORNER SAYS: "BALDWIN'S ailLK is the kindof a rhlnk for n brave knight like St. George. It make3 a manfeel like doing thingB.*'

••*

for this week-end, "we yare offering a most unusual assortment offine quality foods at exceptional savings. Don't miss this opportunityto stock your pantry .j.\.#shop at your A&P and buy liberally.

ASSORTED SOUPS (All Varieties Except TOMATOl

Campbells 3 on 23C

• Campbell's Tomato ^

MANHAHAN-QUART SIZE

qh jar 15*THE NEW IMPROVED

FLAKES orGRANULES '

NEW LOW PRICE

COFFEE

HiMfRE ECONOMY RUtS-

Grand mother's

BREADHere it New York's greatest value in quality bread. •Made of finest ingredients . . . . in pur own greatmetropolitan bakeries...and rushed oven-fresh andcrispy to A&P Stores.... you con not buy better, tastierana more wholeso.me bread than Grandmother1*.

Standard 20 oz, loaf

Small loaf . . ^ . 5 C

©I*^ ^ » - FRESH

EGOSCarton

of 1 dor.SUNNYflELD

Sliced Bacon 2h,C25<

Mello-WheatThere's no finer farina than Mello-W h e a t . . . wholesome, delicious;

ideal for young ond old.

CigarettesLUCKY STRIKES CAMELS

OLD GOLDS CHESTERFIELDS

2 carton of 1 * 2 5lOpkgs. 1

28 oz.pkg. 10

SPURE ^RUIT-FLAVORED

KGELATIN DESSERT

CHttW UMONORANOB.UMf

6pkgs.29c

FANCY

Crabmeator Lobster

OUALITY MEATS af AAP MARKETS

F a n c y F o w l AUS.ZES b25c

P O t R O O S t BONELESS CHUCK Ib. | V *Sirloin Steak CHOIM GRADE .

Chuck Steal* . .Shoulder Lamb Chops .Leg or Rump of Veal .

; Ib. 21C

«>. 2 3 C

Plate and Nave l Beef FRESH or CORNED "». 7 C

Selected Frankfurters .Red Salmon Steak t

, * * 2 1 e .- . i f c 21C

—•*

Evaporated Milk

Pillsbury's Pancake Flour 2 ^-17«Old Dutch Cleanser > 3 «19«Noxon Cleaner Polish . » »<"<<» 19c

FRESH VEGETABLES

Fancy FreslTPeas v • , 2 > 29<=.Fresh Asparagus . a hi*** 49cIceberg Lettuce .-. 2*^\$* !39c

UNEEDA BAKERSOldfashbn Ginger Snaps *•«** 17C

Champion Flake Butters 2 -• »• 23C

.'.. -, I. '•

18, 1932 JrpTDAY, MARCH18, T»*1E SUMMIT HERALD AftP SUMMIT RECORD, SUMMIT, N. J.

* » * » «Qnity in.*N* program

r««r-twt prob-«wvlnc«d mdirection.«M th

on.«M the Gov-with such a

•He ^ r hon8 and a[>-

ipulsory pay-„.• I'believe-uwill be usheredU relieve theowners.

JMUaysto make Sat-h b

ill o make Sat-ay has been in-tatlve Brittenated that this

workers to the <

ELEMENTARY AVIATIONGROUND SCHOOL

| course, gives Immediate warningj should the engine speed fall off.On multi-engined craft, a tach-

ables the pilot to run all the en-

LESSON NO. 8

Inntramcntu _ . . .Vwn fiillv-eauipped modern ! air- ometer on each engine (required byThe J u l i y . ^ X i s e s of InBtru- til-. Air Commerce Regulations) en-plane has two classes- ui JHBHU _ K 1 IU, _,,_i 4_ ..,-, 1L. _„

C%) FlylnB Instruments. ThfrG l n e Instruments are the "watch1 g•• They keep the pilot inform-ed of tile gasoline supply, engine

.eat oil pressure, number of rey-Jutions per minute the engine .IsLiming over, etc. Knowing what

he instruments should r*ad orllhow when everything fa "OK" thenllot can tell at a glance the mo-S anything starts to go wrong,

[whereupon, depending upon the na-Iture of the trouble and how soon It'may become serious, be will either"and immediately in the llrst suit-able hayfleld he can spot, or keep

jon to the next airport and tend

_ „ „ flying instruments, whileifolDful in clear weather, are de-S e d primarily for use In'•thick-weather or at night, when the visi-

bility is bad, and the horisou orCround not easily seen. The flyingI instruments Mil the pilot hl8 altl-liude. air speed, and whether or not

he Is holding hla plane in straightand level flying position,

'glnes at the.same speed. The tach-ometer also figures in the "line in-spection," eliminating ail guess-work as to the engine power In therevving up test."

Flying Instruments.Altimeter—The most commontype of altimeter is un "eneroldbarometer" with a needle or handwhich poiqts to a scale in feet onthe face or dial, and thus shows

! how high up the aircraft is. The[density or pressure of air is great-es t at sea-level, and Kradually les-'sens with height above sen level. It

PAG1TFIW

Ewlne iBHtro ,Gasoline Ouage—Thig. of course,

tells the pilot how much gasolinehe has In his tank or tanks, and isplaced where he can see It at alltimes. Running out of gas is an"unpardonabie -sin" while flying,"

It means fin" inttnetHate

far

rthwerstt cos-

urc to

with a

plant,

now!

.' . i s

enough

becauBc":if:~ifiwfii'~'a"ir"lnini«aiate"forced landing. The importance ofthe gasoline guage as a "watchdog" is therefore evident Soineairplanes have a guage which

lows the number of gallons perur that the engine is consuming.

n.iowlng the amount that the en-gine should be consuming at vari-ous speeds, the pilot can Imme-diately tell from this instrumentwhen and if the engine starts usingtoo much fuel, and then he;can ad.-just liis mixture control, or if nec-essary, land and Investigate beforethe trouble gets serious^

Water Temperature Guage—Thisthermometer Is the same as the"motor-meter" on an automobile.It Is used oil" airplanes poweredwith water-cooled engines, andshowf the temperature of the wa-ter In the radiator. If the watertemperature .guage shows the wa-ter in the radiator to be gettinghotter than it should be, that meansthat the engine is getting too hot.An overheated engine can be dueto a number of causes, such as not

igh water in the radiator, ajk In the oil line resulting in

..^ifflcient lubrication, etc., anyone of which might result In en-»glne failure and a forced landing Ifnot attended to. If the pilot landsSB soon as the water temperatureguage warns him of impendingtrouble, he will, in all probability,get down safely before the over-beating or its cause has-become iserious enough to, damage the en- :

glne, loBe power" or "cut odt" en-1.tlrely. Without a water tempera-ture guape the first warnine the;pilot would have would probably bethe-•rt^Lpr^bpiling-^ovhr, accom-1panied by ininiWiate toss of power, Iand possibly the engine "freezing"and stopping dead before he couldset downr necessitating a forced'.landing, not to mention damnge to Do

e engine costing perhaps several; —mdred dollars to repair. jOil Temperature Guage—This

does for an air-cooled-engine whatthe water temperature guage doesfor ji water-cooled engine, by -show-ing the pilot the temperature of theoil In the engine's crankcase. -

Oil Pressure Guage—'This s h o w s ;the pressure at Which the oil is be- f

ing pumped to the engine through,"the. forced lubrication-system. ...A}wavering or fall of the oil pres-sure guage below normal would l i t

rdlcate trouble in i h e Jubricatlngsystem, such a? a leak or break Inthe^ilne, before .,that trouble had ".

t i m e to result in overheating the , .engine and**Hhow up on "the • water' -or oil temperature guage. '

Tachometer—This shows- exactlyhow many revolutions ner minute .("K. P. M." ) the engine or pro-peller ia turning over. It enables

pilot to run the engine at ani and economical speed, and, of,

QuestionsWEEKLY CONTEST XIJMBEU EIGHT

1. What instruments tell the heat of: (a) un air-cooled en-gine? . (b) a watert'ooled engine?

2. What doe8. a "tachometer" d o ' - •-. -.""7 3. Why does an "aneroid type" Wltimeter work?

4. How doefl a turn and bank indicator help a pilot to fly"blind"?

5. Of what'UHe to a pilot are: (a), engine instruments? (b)flying instruments? • •

(Write your answers on a plain sheet of paper." Fill put theEntry Blank. Mail your answers, the Entry Blank and a dollarbill In one envelope addressed to "UNGER AIRCRAFT, INC.,HANOVER AIRPORT, HANOVEjl, N. J , " not later than mid-night Sunday, March 20th. Season Ticket will be mailed im-mediately upon receipt of Entry Fee. The winner of this week's$5.00 Cash Prize will be announced in the March 25th issue of thisp a p e r . ) ' . • / • ' • • . • , • • . . . : / . • . •, . - . " ' • • - • - .

• .V . •' . .•• ENTRY BLANK . ": ''* '• ' \ . ' .Uhger Aircraft, Inc., < 'Hanover Airport, 'Hanover, N. J. . —

Gentlemen:. • Enclosed are my answers to the questions contained in

W e e k l r e o n t e s t No. 8 of^theUnger Elementafr Ground School; ~I also enclose a dollar bill as my Entrance Fee for this and.

all the rest of the Weekly Contests with their |5.00 Prizes, and torthe Final Examination and the two Grand Prizes.

If you have already sent in your dollar, do not send another.Please send the Season Ticket to the Air Meets at the Hanover

Airport, to whichTthis Entrance Fee entitles me, to:

M r . . ' • • - ' • • • ' ' ' • • . . ' • . " ' • ' • • ,

Mrs _u .....; ....;..„„..'...<.,.. ,k „.Miss >' • • • ' " • • • - . . • • • . . • - ' • - . . •

Street Address

City or Town :„•,..„ ; State.J,

is this lessening of the air pressurewhich works the sensitive aUi*

j meter, causing the needle to pointout on the dial the height In feetabove sea level which correspondsto the pressure of the air upon Itsmechanism. Because all places are

, not ut sea level, the altimeter canj beadjus ted to read "zero" on theground at any particular place, andthus show the trite altitude of thecraft in relation to the place atwhich it was set at zero.

Turn and Bank Indicator; It Is-impossible for a pilot to hold astraight and level course for anylengtn- of time when he cannot seethe ground or horizon, unless hehas a turn and bank Indicator tohelp him. His flying sense "goeHhaywire" and a compass is worsethan useless as a guide in pullinga plane out of an involuntary turn.A turn and bank Indicator is an in-strument worked automatically bya tiny wind-driven gyroscope, anda spirit level, and it shows Instant-ly any turn or bank of the airplaneaway from a straight and level fly-ing position. •-.•,•'

Air Speed Indicator—This showsthe speed of the craft in relation tothe air, and although not obBO-lutely accurate, it is enough so towarn a pilot of too much loss ofspeed and consequent danger of a"stall" and "spin".

Rate of Climb Indicator—Thistel ls the rate, in hundreds of feetper minute, at which an aircraft Isclimbing or descending. Observedin connection with the other flyinginstruments, it is an added help tosafe "blind flying."

Compass: The compass is funda-mentally a direction indicator, andas such will be discussed under"Navigation" in next week'8 lesson.

Rocks and minerals will be ob-served by the nature lovers ofUnion County neat Sunday after-npon, March 20th,• during a naturewalk which wjll ibe taken in theWatehung Reservation, Summit, un-der the direction of the recreationdepartment of . t h e Union CountyPark Commission. The assemoly;Ppint will be the loop parking areaon the Houth side of Lake Surpriseat 2.30. Carl Dautermau of thejpninerology department of the NFrkTMWcTm'"win"lea~tli"irlp~

PANIC CONVALESCENCETINUKS STEADILY

CON.

Constance Bennett and David Manners In "Lady with a Past" willfeatured at the Millburn Theater. Sunday, Monday and Tuesday. .

the

| Uptrend In Stocks and Bond» CitedAH Cheering BunlnenH Sign

New York, Mar. 10.—Psychologl-cal convalescence from the panicstage of depression continues stead-ly, saya "The Business Week" In re*

i viewing progress of business for thej iaj t seven days. The narrow fluc-jtuationjMtnd slight uptrend of stock! prices and the strong, continuousirise in bonds since early Januaryare encouraging surface symptoms.

! Steady decline in bank suspensions,'unseasonal lessening of outstand-ing currency, and slight increasesin member bank-deposits and re-serve balances are of more, basicsignificance.

Expectations of persistent Fed-eral Reserve pressure continue, Iwsigns of any very vigorous seasonaexpansion of member bank credi

: needed to replace depleted pur' chasing power, .Improve employment, increase consumption an<stimulate business activity are stil

'lacking. Irt consequence commodIty prices show no sustained

: strength and most industrial andtrade indicators at the outset o

; March are at beBt stagnant nncbarely holding their bottom levels.

The liquidity complex in bankingpolicy continues, and the fiscal phi-

jlosophy exhibited in the saieu taxand other features of the new Fed-eral revenue proposals is likewisepersistently deflationary, in point-ed opposition to other attempts oithe Administration ,.to promote ex-pansion. The strengthening of

• sterling (.and' th« swift lmprove-' ment in prospects in Britain under'Intelligent monetary and trade con-trol policies are In striking contrastto the desperate struggles and slowprogress-pf Continental countriesin trying to maintain stability un-der the burden of the gold stand-ard.

The preliminary index of "TheBusiness Week" for the week end-ing March 5th reads at 57.7, whichis a slight gain over the revised

; reading of 51A for the previous"week. The index lor the seven-days

period ending March 7th, 1931, was8 0 . 3 . . . _ • • • • - . :

666

To Observe Rocks andMinerals on Nature Walk

methods of collecting various kindsof rocka for .private exhibits andcollections. Those who have start-ed private collections of New Jer-sey rocka and minerals will have anopportunity to aak question* con-cerning location of various speci-mens, also the preparation of anexhibit. The leader will review thepresent extent of New Jersey'smineral producing areas. He Justrecently completed a survey of thesemines for the Newark Museum.

Pauternian will make four or ttveBtopH along, the t\yo-mile [trip tomake short talks on rocks and min-erals which may be found in thereservation.

Since.Mr. Da'uterntan has special-ized in preparing exhibits for theNewark Museum, he will discuss

Lake Surprise can be reachedfrom State Highway No. 29 by NewProvidence road at Mountainside orfrom* Summit by Glenalde avenue.

The following schedule gives thenature walks which remain: —*-_-

April 17th—Common LandscapePlants" and Shrubs,.... WarirvaaraPark, Elizabeth and Roselle. Ac-senibly point, flagpole at 2.30 p. m.Leader, Carl Flemer, F, & F. Nur-sery, Springfield. -•'"'

May 8th—Wild Flowers and Blos-

. soms, Watchung Reservation, Sum-;,mit. Assembly point, loop parkingj area, south side of Lake Surprisej at 2.30 p. m. Leader, J. Otis Swift,) Nature Editor, New York World-Telegram.

June 5th—Wild Plants, EchoLake Park, West field and Moun-tainside. Assembly point, the pa-vilion at 2.30 p. m. Leader,- Pro-fessor M. A. Chrysler, Departmentof Botany, Rutgers University, N«wBrunswick. .

W H O I>II> rrr

(Krom I'cKa.su.s In Pound)Once into ii quk't vlIlaKti,

By the niirn*; of Hopewell—In thu Koldi-n prime of tlj«

Strayed a kldnul»>r •Covtrctf from Hlsht.

Scanning; the landscape. I n ilH Klooll l l lHHH,A ta'ddcr.did he lilac? :

With everything In readinossHe stole theTjulje iind made his

Thus, u]H)n the little villaFell this (,'rt'fit calamity,

And all wlsn men in theirTried to solve thu

Then the nowKpaper rrler . "ShoutlnK loud the liews—

Lindbergh's baby Is K«H«'!The kldnapi-r. l«ft flu ,elt>w.s! -

4»i<l the curious cfluptry, • .Rich and poor-people, young and old,

Walt anxiously and offer g l dFor this during kidnaper.

. _ „ .. _.:._.By BTHKL, -Summit Hitch School, KnglUh IV.

When buying, mention that yousaw the ad. in the HERALD.

Yes, Indeed, Prices Are Lower.,But \ 'ou Receive the same High Quality in Yonr OSCO s t o w

Millions of SSCO Customers have solved the problcm_of how to sav<Tmoney and at the sametime receive Highest Quality Foods, , Table Needs, etc. Lower Prices—Highest Quality inyour Nearby 6S(D Store. ,, ••• .

Finest Pure Lard 2 «» 13cUse the Best for Baking,' Cooking, etc.

MOO Lean Siloed

Bacoii - - . * 5 1 0 cTry some: with our Goto Seal Eggs,

(BOO Sliced ',

DriediBeef

Gold Seal

EGGS Carton ofTwelve

The largest and freshest eKgs obtainable.

Fresh EGGS ,...:.'....,, doz. 19cStrictly fresh—for poaching; boiling, etc.

( hlok th ick or .Muffle Wanu

EGG DYES 8c15cJ>«Ud«B» Hawaiian Broken Slices

Pineapjple 2 « t 2 5 CAs a dessert, or for cake, salad, tarts, etc

Our Three Favorite Blends—Choose the onethat Suits Your Taste

S3e—2Sc= 10e .Saved ,;

A SCO COFFEE lk23cThousands prefer this delightful heavy-bodied blend.

VictorCoffee

Pleasing and mild.

17c Acme lb«Coffee tinFresh, delicious, heavy-bodied

29c

Asked and AnsweredDoes Paint Improve"

Cojil?No it does not!

Then why pay f 1.0<Lper ton extra for col-ored Scranton Coalwhen Block Shiney,Scranton Coal can bebought in_Jummlt atmuch lower prices.

Kejr. 10c FancyCalllOrnla

Prunes

Good for any meal.

l ' i ( i Sauntlia

Soap 25cFanndole " > " ,

Evaporated Milk 3 cans 17cmatEvaporated Milk 3 cans 19cGold Seal Rolled Oats 3 pkgs. 25c

Tasty Lenten Foods

FarntdaleSweet

Peas

Early June Peas.

Choice Pink •Halmo».....:....;..;....;:'..::-.taM can lOeFaucj Wet Sl ir lmp. . . ! ScanHSScHom-dc-Llte Muj on Milne . pU jar 21cKrart (heose H-ll>.pk?.17c

White Pea Beans ; .8 lbs. 10cASM JSupir Torn •...-....„•>., _, .cun 10c050} t:ldef V i n e g a r . 2lM»t8.2»cSunrise Tomato Ketchup 2bots.2»c

Glenwood Apple Sauce

JJLIQVID - XABlgTS _• SALVE ,868 Liqniil or Talilcts u»ed liitornnllyjand 6«6 Halve cxiernnlly, miikra roni-|»li'ti- niul ffiortlve trcutmeiit (or ('olds.

Most SpeedjReniedieH Known

3-Tott LoadsC.B.D. C.O.D.

EGG $11.25 $11.50STOVE 11.50 11.75CHESTNIFT 11.25 11.50PEA •-• :'-^tSM— 9 75

'Phone WX4800=: -HMnin Office ._,

Park Square Building'-— - MorfisfiiflTii, N. .1.: - _

M e m e the finest Ingredients and bake itas rarefull) as you would.

large Wrappedloaf

Save, time and money—use our Bread.

Bread Supreme

Sliced or Unsliced VICTOR BREAD big pan loaf 5c

_ * asat . . .j |t.b«t.iJ5cHoy (ilnger A l e . . . ._....<it. bot. 15c

Clicqnot Club (iliij<er Ale.., :....'....3mUUttC. & C. Uinger Ale...... .. ..^:^..^

_ K»h K«y Pale l l r j . .,.. 3 bots.23c_18c Old-fashioned l i n g e r Suaps...r pk>f. 17c

29c K«)a| 3iut Top».., -......... .lb.25cJelly Mlrd Ef

•Phis usual bottle deposit. ;

Ritter Cooked Spaghetti 4 cans

19c asm "-• - V

Peanut Buffer ?" 1 5 c23c pkf,'. 3 ftmall

19c 25c

PHIZES

Everyone who enters any ofthe Weekly Contests or the FinalExamination, will receive a Sea-BOH Ticket to all Air Meeta helduy Unger Aircraft, Inc., at theHanover Airport during the year1J32[

In addition, prizes, will beawarded each week and at theconclusion of the course, as fol-lows:

Weekly Prizes•5.00 cash each week to the

Peraan who sends In the best se tof answers to the questionswnica accompany each Weekly' L e s s o n ' ' • ' • ' • ; r

I

Grand ,.._^CTNo. l. An hour's flight In an

airplane from Hanover Airnprt,ovor Xev, York City and vicin-«>., To be awarded to the fourPeople who win the highest total« points, arrived. «t by addingnelr marks in the Weekly Con-

tests to their marks«fn the FinalExamination.

N'o. 2. A half hoar's flight Inan airplane from Hanover Alr-ort over Morris County and vl-'••ity. To be awarded to the

mnr>pe?nlc w h o w l n *»• highest'narks in the Final Examination,«,, ,ervor n o t t h e y competed inany of the Weekly Contests.

Who Mny Competei y o S e m a y comP6t«^ except:i. Employees of the'tiewB-Papers publishingtnecfiuwe.•: EmI»'oyees of anr avia-tion concern.

~" a. er-pllotsnndhol4-Dept -.of •«*-"-—--

Richard Cromwell, Marie Dressier and Purnell Pratt In "Emma,"featuring at the ftoth-Strand Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday,

Meat Markets Offer Unusual Savings

FATTED ' T W TT L*(nil sizes) | b .

m CAPONS27c39c(|I!ALITY

—• Milk-fed, Soft-meated, Tender.",.... . D e l i c i o u s for Sunday Dinner.

Fancy Chuck

PICTURE QUZby NOtROAST 111. 1 7 c 1 ROAST lb.

Freshly Cut Broth Bones

L J

QUESTIONS

3,, What flight was it? ;

2. .Who commanded the ex?pedltlon?

3. What did he discoversome years ago?

4. Who flew over'practical-'i ly the sume course in an< airplane in the samev year? .„"•.

5| Wlmt was the name of hisplane? '

! ' • '

This dlrlfflWe made a famoiis expeditionary .'flight InSee answers on Page 8; Second Section. '

No matter where ydu go, north, Bouth, east or west, you'll notfind purer, fresher milk than that delivered to you by the NoeFarms. Produced on our own fnrtns ami delivered to your homewithin H few hours. Drink this Better Milk for Better Health.

TWE'NOE FARM,INCM ft n I C h SJ N I ••• *•• rl .•• f tf.i PIS OH *'• z !

A MiSMOKKD

2 lbs. 5c Freshly Ground Suet lb. 6c

SKINNED HAMS (whole or lb.shank half) i 17c

ii,. m

In All Our Meat Departments

Fancy Boston MACKEREL

tuy coal nowl Wlw folks do. Fall bring* hlflhor prlcos..Toll us how many tons you'll nood, what six*, and lotus flguro your saving.. • now. Savo In cold cash onhot hoot nsxt winter. Phona now!

38 RUSSELL PLACEPHONE 6-OO29 SUMMIT, N.J, I

IV

Finest Fresh Produce • -:,

N E W T E X A S C A B B A G E . . . . . . . . . 31bs .2ScF A N C Y R E P A C K E D T O M A T O E S . . . . . . . . . 2 lbs. 29cI C E B E R G L E T T U C E . . . . . . . . . . . .^. 2 heads 15cF A N C Y S N O W B A L L C A U L I F L O W E R . . . . head 19cF R E S H C U T S P I N A C H . . . . . . . . 31bs .25cG O L D E N Y E L L O W B A N A N A S . . . . . . . . . . dozen 19c

1 Bigger and lletter vuluen dally In your nelghlmrnoud GOO Store.Quality Food* at the Lowent l*rlwH In jrean*.

cie PrlcM BffMtlr* la Oar nxnn «M * # • !M«ffc«to ta,BiiiBitt. W. in »•« vkUlty.

mm

I 1•Mi*im!i-mi&&£am

^Mm^mM

AY, MARCH is. i<J

*HB SUMMIT HERALD AND SUMMIT RECORD, SUMMIT, N.msmmm

been

-Whaf s Henry Ford going to do?"a whole autoffloDlle world hasasking that question since tbe

93Q, when the industrial(ia .f the world's greatest de-

jn first began to be Un.And here's the answer: - ,

l As hi* major oKering forthe season now ?penin* he s

a neweight-cylinder V-shaped motor

« • He will continue buildiugfour-cylinder cars -an improved

upattion •; Attract ion'"'

aw andOrder"• . w i t h . - ' ;'.- ,« ;

LTER HUSTONpIS WILSONRRY CAREY

ALPH INCEflOND HATTON

Sound X<-«s

M f lBoth the "V-8V and theModel "A's"~wlU~have, roomierbodies W wholly new desijprlonger wheel-base, lower hungS s i s and heavier.frame, than

X I W yet appeared ~hr any Ford

price range of the 10different models will continue inth» low price field.

5 The chassis is so built thatthe "eight" and "four" enginesmay be interchanged at will.

6 Production will start sometime thia month with the firstnubile showing eartyin March.The question is no longer what

Kordis«o dd"-r-lie'8 doing

d idl i[t now, on a mighty and rapidly in-

? S p i S e - beats- through the1 v-mt Ford organization-today—it'severywhere evident In the labora-tories, the works and the shops.

Henry Ford has again become wedirect driving, supervising dnd cre-ative force behind the engineeringundertakings of the Ford Motor

y, is Waking the su-pfemY effort of his career "to pro-duce," as he expressed it.tpuay,"what these new times reqthe most advanced form ofitortation, at the lowest cost everknown, for the greatest number of

-buyers ever encompassed by theplans of any one motor raanufae-

Thomas A. Edison used for 40years 'at Fort Myers, Florida, and whichis now in "Greenfield," the Ford oldAmerican village in Dearborn.Twenty "eights" were built. ThomasA. Edison rode around in one ofthem a year ago. Thought was,given to bringing the "eight" modelout then—but the depression waaon, business was bad, the "timewasn't r ight"

Two lightson Your Car?

By HAROLD G, HOFFMANSiiateTSa&BBSsaejsfr d Motor

Why ate awtec TeMScs required

But that didn't dispose of the »question. "An 'eight' or a 'four"- i n the late summer of 1931 it was I eTeETagain pressing,for an answer. f***

d

25«ar©"«raM'.r,er op£ratf5r,

tat&w tl# t a s t e r , but theaga prssng,for an answer. itfwas decided to get out an improved j .naffi-hei- of "«sa-eK©i"Model A. The engineering laiota- [ thai can 6w iiti k d l j

vpesi the hlgh-g i t [ p gtories worked long and feverishly j waysof tik«-saiika any iniglit wouldat tests and experiments to develop' indicate J&at- aaaaiy x»*ver have con-improvements Ford b timprovements. Ford began to ap-|pear daily in the shops, the draft-! ^eat*ing rooms, the plants, watching the j b edevelopment of each part, watching jevery -detail of design and produe-,'

too,'

I Use- i\Bi«fflB.jfcr this reQuire-~ .profitably

'*•*'' •' ' 'nS't^>ft"**^^'KHflMK

as of the Ford lieutenants »B*!."wo believed we had a perfect I'four'" The improved Model A w a ^ t M & u fe fm ^ motor * spoke veryput into production. Suppliers all > - - « - - ••• - - - ,*»n«*« *«-•>

country were given orders.

railroad!'

Trainloads of raw "materials beganrolling In. The power-plants start-ed up toward peaks not reached in ( [ Umonths.- The foundry began' work- j y e ^ t e . ^ w ^ i jing day and night. And the endless j loeonioiiarav to*

are

Fine Lenten Meeting 'The third and last of-the joint

.tij^iaentsi ex - ; I j O n t e n m e e t | ! U : : ? o ( ^he Senior Girl,,1° . ; Reserves and Scott Senior HI-Y

[ Club"was held Wednesday eveningi in the Y. M, C. A. auditorium, v/ith

the motor tbe girls of the Y. W. as hostesses.Haws. " : ! In,-hid closing address, Prof. James

reason for;A. McClin'tock of Drew Universityforcefully about the

, , things which go to make up Chris-T * S S * & $ & \ * " : . <fracte, pointing t>ut par-

tieularly the commitment, the

World BrotherhoodThe. person strolling into the "Y"

building now will be attracted to aloug line of flags overhead. Theyare" lhe flags of 27" of the world'snations, and are rained at this timeto call attention to the fuct thatthe Summit Association is for thenext mouth placing special empha-sis on its program upon the world--]wide aspects, and activities of themovement. All boys' clubs are"co-operating- —In educational worldbrotherhood programs, andLeach isaccepting a. share in th;e "Help theOther Fellow" fund which is beingraised to help less fortune boys in

j New Jersey and in foreign lands.There are also many pictures about

tholnniew Senior Hi-Y, Tremont | t l i e Io»by portraying people, buikl-Par-k Hl-V. Acme Junior HI.TY, Sir'!11*8 a1'!1 a.^vi! le8,'•1

1n °\h** l a n ? 9

(;oo,.,3uniorHi,y; Comrade - O r . - 1 2 ^ ! 3 iff^JS.' "T.£"L ami Edison Gra-Y.

(Alt ULAMS

, It is not necessary \o remove theupholstery on the doofor belowthe window to replaco.the glass onclosed cars. In moat of them* ail

that is needed is to remove tbegarnish mourdings* insert the newpane in the graove and then re-place and ' tighten the moulding.The car owner can do the Job him-self, but ita simplicity makes thelabqr charge negligible.

i the eveiling at 7 30 the rest ofclulw will -gatherfor an Easter

together. They are: Good-Ejn-Y, Bona Fide Em-Y;

Undy Em-Y, Roosevelt "Gra-Y, andthe ii£w North Summit club justbeing" organized. • • ' . . ' .

uuino of thetbe members

.its vastly moreIfeunion

A j;roui) of Summit boys "and menpowerful! UfUffl alte sarangest nrotor I courage and the disciplined life i will leave shortly after noon to-

• - - • • - • • - jja^ -unlike tbe j which are necessary to full Chris- morrow for Montclair, where theyvehicle Ulan living.. Thi-k was undoubtedly i will join othora from many, pointsi lutuuttnue, miw inwway ' veuitue : mm UHIIK. mi*, was unuuuuteuiy | win join oinora irom many, points

carriers; of parts started a 24-hpur daes .Q&t ^ ^ j 4 fi3D£,a p a t h a n d i t s i t h e b e s t m e o t l n K o{ the jihrea, in j ' » Mie State in a Wawayaiidu Camprun. Down the assembly lines the J iJK&tmjr «niiBaa*a!! must servn iiie won- wav rai™hnth v#«»n4inn icrs'. Reunion- fmm ? sn until nhnni

y nes tae; ngitmg eQimproved Model A started rolling to tUoctioa-«ta tt'T '

must serve the-; every way.g aie form and \ president of

•m *. •«# r* i **. ^* i.. i " ' " u o£ Otft "KdMlcle. That is-.-th-e ! presided."But Mr. Ford wasn't ' s a ^ a t * " wuaoa fer «S«'»*»ffli«n«it. and If I"' ' • - ^ - o - _ ".-o nontenant ^ent on. " m K o w ! i U M ^ e ^ t t ^ t o ^ r ^ v e i y l h e ; E f l s Je r Sfrvio<, J o r Boys , € l n b s

could' ' '

Rlizabeth Voegtlen, i ers' Reunion, from 2.30 until aboutthe Girl Reserves,;!* P. m,

. d wasnt satisfied;the lioutenant svent On. "His oWsmile didn-t come back, as it-usu-

ll d

Cabinet tojMcetA special meeting of the Boys'

.,, . . . . . . . , .. t i .«m.iiLKij.uu*i«r • Bauua-aiietuaii'cr fuumi Tho Itorq' Division Easter sorv- i Cabinet will be held this afternooninlteat sSeh^ 'he S e ^ t ^ b i i ^ & a SlB£te " ^ °X iwf l i c ton t I will U SXSd^Rdniday ! at 3.30 o'clock to continue work onInstead, somehow, he seemed to be p0 We r .getting madder and madder,..: Of j of next week, afternoon and eve- • the Division's World Brotherhoodcour's^we'oWt know wht i^e w S fc

H ( i w e ^ ^ M**-.***?*™.****- \ ning, with the motion picture, "The | project. Last week the Cabinetcourse we qiun i Know wnatnewas i becaafse. tB* psurjMwe «af two hghts ; RaRHtnn pjnv» tv. roni«v »a JI»» ! i»ani,«.i ...in. -Ti^m.. m m ^thinking—but we knew he felt we'weren't yet on the right track."

Then came the morning of De-

,or-sp g j priorita.oatMiae isfe Isaran &L lhe auto-! feature

Passion Play" (5_j"eels) as 4he \ ganized with Thomas Miller asmobile on*quate-

chairman, Louis Day as vice-chair-

It

turer.

Mound News

hit fojhe

LP ;YEAR' --IU

pRCH" 24th

Coumin WillAfttflT

Potformnncc>r MCL _ _ _

t Performmicc

c This fonponUox Office

\r

This sudden, tense atmosphere ofbig things afoot—I asked Fordabout It.

, He had come into one of the lab-[ oratory offices, to sit, for a mo-t incut,

Jf t .Plant

£ • Rougewent to hia ofjice rnthei

Dearborn laboratories. Henry'Ford oC.jijteq.afecame over. Fathwr ;itul snn ivorol.i •'

In the afternoon at 3.30 the fol- i man, Dan Hazelton as secretary andlowing clubs will have their service Richard LinKe as assistant secre-jointly: Scott Senior Hi-Y, Bar- tary. -~

pive boys and menopportunities whichhere enjoy.

Real World Brotherhood isfriend8lil|)-Avhlcli--^nowis no barri-ers, which Is seeking to-^get pastthe barriers of iKiiorance, of pred-judice, of niisiinderstandiiiK, of in-tolerance, and of distance, that sep-arate people. •• "Y" membershipshould mean .Christian citizenship,which means .fitness for this worldwide fellowship, and participationin It.

'Take us on the Quest of Knowledge,Clearest Thinker man has known.

Make our minds nine-ore nnd patient,Satisfied by Truth alone. '

Open-Daily and Sundays

Bender's Garage & Auto LaundryCLARENCE H. BENDER, Prop.

'.-DependableCars Washed

nnd Simonized.Towing, Battery

and Brake Service.Uepolrlng

BY EXI'KHTS

444 Springfield Avenue

TVIpphont-sU

Summit C-31C7Dayil c

Summit 0-l!218NiKht •

Summit 6.4230-WJfiKhf-,.

Summit, N. J,

-BETTER..FOR KNtSINE OIL

Another.thought about the morevolatile gasolines that car ownersmight.well bear in mind is thatthey cause less dilution of the en-Rine oil. In cooler weather, quitea few non-burning components ofthe heavier gasolines^seop down in-to the crankciise to thin the oil,often dangerously. .

came over. Father and son weretogether, alone, for an hour or so;Then suddenly, things, began tohappen. ' "

Orders went out to .the plants tostop production—to stop production,when 35,000 of the new improved"Model A's" were already manufaotured and on their way to the Westfor early January snowing—with

150,000 more of them "in float"; that| is, cpming through the plant in fin-

tourden jill between'

themL (The thotcar ear asaraers -oi tlie na- •

tton

o.f'

Feally E€«^ to g*t a p.ropei«a (tftie-w3s«3e -questioni

Oldest•'It is as*-and? m.a»A. jmagle aiSrans Ihat thecar awaer aeinar s««s Ms own head-

It £s aSasamd Jiat-. this*? «SE5W, Jt is very easy !

for any ECEJiBjriLsa it©. .see.."bis own j. aeadlfe&fcs scwi So tell -srliether ' or !

alertiy"^ctive" mentally and phys- S s ^ i b S " B * t o T i m \ ^ ^ * f » ^ ; . |' 'fit as a fiddle." -He • « u • i - , , - ' '" ! All .ftteJ lte meete to<ao is to-walh-i

- auestion with a wave L T h e w h o l « Productive organiza- QUt t««i»--fi«- U* ahead of bis:«f his hind • 'u°\ W a S *uiA?*£ t h r o w n ba<^k o a ! car and gkura ait ibe lamps. This'ot h l s lian&- its haunches. The carriers slowed j i s not ^ ^ ^ ^ e d s e method of!

down. The-trains of raw materials | checklttjp &a» a^nsnaieji't, but it is idumped, went out empty and came i the qmelfcesii mrnr-ter the averageno more. The assembly line again j automobile wmssar to teli whether

his band:"Oh!—That's nothing,'' he said,

"I've just got back my old deter-mination. That's all." - —

"To do what?" I asked."To p:et the price of an automo-

bile dawn to the mark where thepublic can buy it. The public willalways come .half-way 'to meet aman who does his part to meet thepublic's demands — I've alwaysfound it so."

Ford moved his chair around,.tilt-cu" it against, the.wall and, restingone foot on the edge of the desk,went on. •

"You know," he said, "the public-pis suffered a lot. Everything wo

now must take into account the»1jpople's pocket-book.' We developed

71 was empty. Everyone was set towork on something else.

What had happened? . „ _Then Ford "eight" had- been

horn.

or nofe Ms. KyJaSa apeof ami ami' If,

out!standing

J i lg

erect.. Us- is 6r4ia«2€ia by tiie Jiglitsat tbis it as -a sure sign jthat apprtxjeMEs (flinxers are simi-

Henry Ford had decided to put itilarly affi&eedi 6>y xtoeir maladjusted Iinto production as his chief offferrlbeant. • >. Iinn? for the coming year.

That same morning he ordered'; motorist: stoasMj the laid-away plans to be brought j " b n g W - i aout and prepared for large-scale I the upperproduction^-

BJBUS Siirfi of test, the |2a?:iiKiits -se.t.|icars -and ©ii I

ia 5ifjstr'-*3th dual '•

chievement

I .beams B rom that .moment Henry Ford | As--tLUIe' efSnrt as as 5-nvolTcdpersonally became ;the dynamo of j an expeeiEteal ©I this character,

H

in!

(the-works; l i e was here, there,j tKere IA a sSEII severywhere, ordering, directing, I indicate sttJii

one that wiljaur accuracy

did not make—these had to be de-jof b.is ear*"u Isglblts ssriles lhe ma-jsigned, contracted for,'production elsewhere.

putA

into] chine s JESS io'Upcmt of him.t]vast! At a,tfistatts*• ©f.ifwenly-five feet,!

amount of machinery had to be; the raystaken out—new machinery, not yet' rear_of .the afl.laerin existence, had to be designed, j"ttistan.ee. finaca thebuilt elsewhere, brought in and ia-stalled. Somehow a rumor gotj

a corkiiiKKOoi'four1 nnd were all c j m n g j n f f > A'task'immeasurable by I-whether ©tie'"* Ea<»dllciita need ad-ready JQ...ot it go. but we found, it • fl c o n t r 0 n t e d h j m The'whole llustmeat. lh* o ^ r i s T does notwas not the -new eifor t w h ch the ^ h , b e c h a d i B u i l d . e v e n Q e e ( 1 t o ^ a t e a r iv«- 3 seatpublic is-expecting Fhats why " e i Rht" wotild require to mate tbL* ««a^ AM that is ncc-

" • • f f i g r i K uaf i t s ^ t ^tain finished parts which lord { o r 1. to « • ^ re tic beamln< these matters. Somehow it in-stinctively knows when the time isripe for something new. ~~2Tnd evenafter the industry has produced itsbest design and developed its. bestmanufacturing method, it onlyamounts to about 90 per ceni of thecompleted job. "The public contrib-utes the other 10 per, cent, out ofits actual use of the car in roadexperience. Now the public hasBuffered a lot ana has been verypatient. Itdeserves a lot from the

inianufacluferr From now on the, public's p6cket-book sits in aleveryconference. •

"And here's something I wish* you'd make pretty strong. It's for

—. the raw material: supply men. IfAmerican manufacturers do theirutmost to start the wheels1 of in-

_ dustry and the mate'rlaFm'eirbo-sinW raise prices, the whole ef-fort may be- throttled. In times

WHEN THE FIRST NASH ADVANCED EIGHTmodel rolled from the famous production lines in Kenosha,it was greeted by one of the strongest executive groupsin the motor car industry. The picture shows, from rightto left: C. W. Nash, chairman of the board; R. IB. Elliott,•vice-president in charge of operations; G. H. Bliss, vice-president in charge of sales: D. M. Averill, I. S. Seaman.

E. H. McCarty, president and general manager; M. F .Moore, chief engineer, Racine division; II. J. Mellum,secretary; H. E. Long, vice-president in charge of pur-chases; N. E. Wahlberg, vice-president in charee ofengineering; .1. T. Wilson, vice-president of the NashMotors Company, and H. H. Seaman, president of theSeaman Bodv Corooratinn. - -

"HpW WE GOT THAT WAY" by Wyatt Started

MAN MAYDOWN BUT

UE'S N6Vf COUT—TU|C fftCTPROVCNBVA

WHO HAD 8€T OM THt-LOSING OLADtATOQ. HETOOK CO LONG TO COUNTTEN.THAT HIS MAMCOULD HAVE CICOVSBEOFROMTUE

THOUGHT^WAS OKlGINATeD QV

f NEWTON WHENTM€APPL€ tV£ FIR9T DI0 TI4I9' FELL OH UK MfAD I WHEN £W£WENT

AND D£riONSTGAT£DTM£ LAW OF GRAVITY

-8ERI0USI.Y, thou,'?H, ihorc is food ami UunigUt in the additionalmileage that can bo obtained by a ";cll 'Forvlcolf car. Repairs,lubrication,'.even wr.sjilnjr and polishing, perform a:i Importantpart in the nniount of UKC you Ret from your automobile.

Summit Auto Sales, Inc.l(l.> Summit Ave^ corner ui Spiincflold Avo.

Attlborhed 1'ord ami 'Lincoln AgciiryTUone Summit C1200.1201Commercial Dulldlng

on thethan the I

surface to;the 'center mi «*•"* lamps." Lights j

reftecS Strcna tt-e Tear window >jiround-'-that.Ford hiid discontinuedi ct.th*.»-ar aliesiJ «tt&iicas3y ate outmaking the "fours." Came a flood i of adlustmeEtLof letters urging that the "four"! There- sSiM 6s scmfl&er simple waytype be' continued.. That was 'good!-:ci uotias Site tH:f«ftof one's own!in itself— lt showed "something of jthe market; a lot of buyers would!continue to want "fours." .. The > v o u r li&** a r e ™Mm»n3y ^ojustedvolume was much sreater than he I lt they jltiin*-m-socar a « y . as tohad planned. For the time, so far! ™ a ^ t t e ' ff™ f"3™ " s l W c a t a

Se cieclcedafee most precisetat.dhe attentive,

tSriw-ir caun aake:simpletests of

Ira -passms a vehicleg Frami iaeffff.j»ns3te -direTUon,

fox

like tiiescc everyone has ..to take:;„.^onio ri«k, make some sacrifice

affiTcv.eii be willinc, for a time,to do business "without profit Inorder to sturt-tKo nprmal process

j_ of. industry and busiwess"agaim""Ti?il!\laa"Ford's way of disposing

" a titanic situation. The first en---,Rlnos Ford over made had but two-cylimiers'. Then he made a "four."

The foundation o'f his whole, world-wide industry was the success oflie old Model T rfour.-"- And thevolution Of i,is "V-type Bight."

«ow |H l l o t t 0 Ford the epochaleu'iit it seems toothers. To himis just anotherrform of his old

H I ^ ? o me,he' might haveA.IU r^,ret -^ abandoning the

fo«r model. I said as much/ x

'four- r ' 1 ? n o t aband°n«ng thenrinni . 1(1 answered, "either inJ o S ? P i e w r ' l n Prod«ct«oh: We'reKoiiig right on making, 'fours' forwiv n ^.Unt t l l e m-a»<l the 'eight.'gcS'er" 3U8t t w o ' ^ r s ' put to-, The Idea of building an "eight"

J 1f F o r d » S ' i

-.but It must have beenJ cv«"t throughout the

c O m n a n y the day Ford,y a.nd a lone> d ^ ided toout an "eight" •S? ? u m m e r of 1921 I remem-

On a pedestal not faron -X-shaped "twenty-multiples of the baplft

' , theand the

„ n—•• -'ytf It tOO• ' Dutitdldnot

results o£

mettled

"eight," this unexpected demand jwas rather"' disconcerting. Ford jthen had approximately 50,00i> oienworking. He put half of them Towork making the. injproved ModetiA and with the-other half he ftun,arhimself, into the job'"of -'changrng ;over the plant to get out -thfiJtV- fms w ^ s e a ! r r f e ^ .*». -*

andtHem.a.ts

Eight".iVfoarntime the for --

jbills' *eEe-_c-oA*to'*»xL-'-Our

£a-^irU-ftMr-tJ»-4)ldJlQdeLJr."eight" were coniing.ihrott§h. Fordiwas agrain about the plant as b.ejwas 25 years ago. _ T

"Mytather is never happier thanhe isvjolving some big me-

chanical problem," -said EdsetFord. "When the new Model Awas brought out he left manythings to others, but I.have neverseen him give such attention to de-tail as he is now." He works for

*^ ) W-W* a HjSanlL.. On iherMwlelA.t&i^fell oflC,|s» Strati ^3,<>00,000to

Agdidn't, reqafw- ss aaasda service.'""*—From"'D^ttniMlt'lSe'S^; Feb. 53,1H32,

in a -isridehours at a time trying to eliminate' ris&t sobstaaw aw msc an repairinga single part. He figures 'ffiat, the! and retooctoias; sfucCs da' the' bodyfewer parts in a car the less the! finish. VarnisUi as 4 irisk

1.

of trouble. In the Model A; etL

: — : :., il

?r i r taUon.anda n " e ^ t " had been

Par t of j ^

laboratory, which

Announcement!The Summit Used Gar Exchange

is-now occupying the showrsKan at

166 Bi oad Street, Summit(Formerly the Franklin Aiiency)

The/expansion of our business requires tHs move.

In connection with the showroom we have als» -itquarod thevacant property adjoining on which wa will tlfopSaj- oftei tars.

Summit Used Car Exchange, Inc.FLYNN & GORMAN

•• i . - •

Better Used Cars Bought ia<I S&U81EnclW Avenue 1OB Broad

'Phone 0.0138. SummH, X . J .

DISPLAY

jcotors, ia tbe"!

Tfc«ae G-S5H

SUMMIT BUIfK COMPANYf F. E. Montgomery, Proprietor

68-72 Fraiiklin Place Phone Summit 6-6512 • Summit, New Jer$^