8
STystr wn bt>* abow^b. n per •7. S. Marine Band Will Play Only Jersey Engagement Here BJWBH V V » " V BT" w • I • " sightly ab»f» t o M quarterlypayments ot last year. * •' * ' Redemption of several tax Ben eer- tiflcatet to recent months br Iwllders bis brought a earnrtdtrabtf. asm Into the township's treasury, and also ptoced U w properties to the a c t ^ accounts again, It is reported.-;-- * . FINAL CONCERT BY BAND TONIGHT Fmnti Sl^iHSe Mwical Unk to Gin Conetrto in Hfcjh Schuw AtiuiUitiuiii, Moo> Sept 19. wer©' comptetod- tills week for the U-pleee United Btates Marine Band to make Its ortyr Kew Jersey appearance during: K» forthcom- ing public concert tour in Crahford h r i -i > ,t i Program, Feituring Cornet afterneen and evening. September 19, It was announced yesterday by J, Stan- ley Dlttmer, director of music In the Oranford Public Bchools and chairman of the local committee In charge of honking the famous musical organiza- tion. The O r a i * # . ^ M W j Band wm bring lte l M . W t o f o T s w n a - r coneerta to a dose at S-ttlS&sMtWlght wtth a varied program In Is—Otnwn Park, lasinon street, tt waa announced yee- | ~ t e r _ y bTJrmanleyTJttlnjif, " comet trio. Three SoUtalret" by Her- bert, played by Wttidea JOOUIns, Wu- 11am Ostrander and Forrest Bartlett. the band wm pJajion m stand erected today by the On—i County Park Ccm- aj—do. the township's stand was re- moved from—* part yesterday after- noon, band -dflIt—— .said. The park cornmlssloa alto has provided a large number of benches) in the park In order that the Majority of those attending the concert mar be provided with seat- Ins fadllUea, .r_-fidectlons. by.tfae.band.-1onight wm Include: King, Cotton March (Sousa), I -~£art)erM>f-4N»lUa~Oiert*i—..J———U* m .. . "the President's Own 1 ' will appear here- ——QfiT SQIaJplOtS GC vtlsV VTattaTrTft iH^ffni School Band, -•ncketswul be placed on sale shortly and may be bbtamed'from high school band members and mem- bers of various organisations in the community who are sur'irting In bring. five per cent of therproceeds-wttl-go-to ,-There <_ke>, -" ffluclki. JAMES C McGRAYNE TAKEN BY DEATH James O. MoOrayne, 73 years old, a resident of Oranford nearly a quarter of a century and affiliated far forty- flve years with the Oustoms 1 Service at the Port fit New York until his retire- ment June 30,1136, died Tuesday night at his home, 309 Casino avenue, follow- ing an illness of two months. " B o m in-Brookly-o, MrcMcOrarne had resided here since 1914. .He was one- thne--prealdent~of--4he-old .Cranfori 7 d : l d t *_(—e FantaaUque LJ" avlc7^oard:and^ras:ikpasti.preslden of the Custom* Inipectors' Association afo«toePixfcflf=He»yc»1r-v«tsu7m5; , Ltt^JL^,S,*to% fore (Sullivan), Around the Campflre (Seredy), March MUltalre, (Franealse 8alnt-8aens>, qnd Cheerio', March (Goldman). V LOCAL BOYSTO JOIN 'KNOT HOLE'GANG •li- "\ i«st Thursday Uonl.Jonea «on tbe mall boys' marble tournament at Koosevelt playground. On Friday the peanut hunt resulted tat team number l being the vtnner.'lto team ol Laurence, Ka&er, captain? Harold ftoelker, Barbara Nmton, M*» WI1- •on, Rita Oooney and Caioi Hoeenberg. FraoUeany. t^e entire playgrgand PoputaUoh to occupied In thetoaktr* <* the Seven Dwarfs. I t e famooa iewn fo«toe-Pixfcflf=He»jyc»1r«£.vts7m5;. A member of the Downtown Glee Club of New York City, be had sung with that organistlon until last spring. As a My, he was. A chorister at Trinity Churffi, New, York-, and for. some time past had been the second oldest former Trinity choir boy still living. He was'a member of Trinity Church, Cranford, and a member of the executive com- mittee, of Trinity Men's Club. Surviving him are his wife, Mrs. Lil- lian Sloan McOraynt; a son, Donald, of USalle avenue; * granddaughter, Nancy Elisabeth Mcarayne; and two brothers, John of Brooklyn. and'DaW- Staeisl services will be private wtth mtermentat4he- MBveroenee of the family In Cypress Bills Cemetery, New York. and carefully pamte-a.. Bach chOd to wry late— on ——tat*« oaeapseto set Bob 8c—tai mMleEtn—•,!*—te and It Oooneji now bu:<he task of «Une an authentic pamt Job'os —tf. - ' ' _ts_0BO-ftrr Mat and ui r Frances MafTtiall of oolum- , ii *m «i—it ~MnrA Timi TTfrW _~ ™*« *"••— |aj—t, law araaaMtaT ^awmeaw—at- • • i BaroUVoea>er,BarirmJtewtonflBay- I w^Hea-og,—ktVHttm Ooonty* ^ '••> I'"' i nu boys'str^jmTpi-Us tenstotour- niUVT-Mtv 1. ——.ft * - - • ' • *—*- r —* * -M. «mmr»ha'»recelfe<lwordtroavNew Jersey College for Women Oat aba has Men accepted for wlnt—lor. to (be e » j MngTfSSnan class. WssMacPhall areeent graduate of Cranfoct Blgh KoouSdbaTSsnawardeda tcbol- HrtripatN. J. O. for the wtnmr year. S b e i s tbe daughter of Ma and Mrs. John » MadPhaa ' " nmnd has b e w a h ^ i e o m p i t o -»oy I i ~ ' >og. Bob imn-4 Kfeatod Bob Mnd- fock. to tbe co__uj»—' round. Bay Bering defeated Laurence B—wer-.and B* Wodrock. f >r- s -vf - - T Miss Jean Tcxtrneetbti the oppor- tooity to take MfcqrtMS yean old or under over to Bappsrt Itad—a, Ang- <•* » . te7jbm the Knot aO» Gang to "•* the Newark Beits t—y one ot thBtr pme gun—7 These who have, already "roe* up are: —uffence.Kaeser; Fer- ^rKrrhain,dm-_imram^v1etarp£ """->, Harold VoeJte, Herb.Wttson and * 0UC * OTUPI^ H C-«INE» Pollot thbrwe— ate —ulng sum- mons to an dog owners who have not obtained IMS license tags fcr Ohlef Massa said this n-Wand 100 sum- Mooday evening, so far. PoUceare-. the northerly side of day ana on the S t w r n - t o one day anil on southerly side the next Thus far this »ar.,aeo dog UoeMes hay» been' iooed. Township Treastmr H. B. vnnekkr said this momlng._ the band. Mr. nttskcr said, la the only town fat new one of the the country wberai the noted mut- Ury-DUB—1 o—tnhatlnn.long a radio favorite, wffl.mak The tour, starting Bept U and end- Ing October » , Includes visits to few cttles In the Eastern, states of Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Maoachu- •ett* New York, * Connecticut, West Virginia' and Kentucky, then *Kt*TH*t to the farther reaches pf^Ohio, Mkhlgin, TiHnw^^ Iowa, iHQdlaneT and Wlaocnsln. The September IB engagement wOl mark the first tune that the faised scarlet and blue-clad musicians have ever, played In Cranford. An afternoon performance win" be presented at S p. m. for children, and an evening eon- rt-ii f «!SBifttB f SaStoii much as only a limited mimbfr of tick- ets win be placed cb sale, and due to the fact that the conceit is expected to draw Marine Band foUawom from an over Northern-New Jersey, local resi- dents have been urged by Mr. Dtttmer to obtain their Ucketo as early.as pos- G.O.P.TOOMTT AUGUST MEETING Rtwnne Actrnlies Sep- tember 14 With Csmdi- _ae«'Night Tte'CranibMltspBhucanCI— wfflnot resume meetings until aeptombes 14, lt-warfledded-lsst-nlglit at' > meeting of the-boardof directors to township rooms. The directors decided to csn- r next Wednesday, as many members are out of town on vacation. The Septem- ber' meeting ha* been designated candidates' night, and an Bepoblican candidates have been Invited to attend. Plans are underway, V for a novelty palrty to be held In the Casino on Sep- tember 18, and for a. card party to be held later in the fan for benefit of the Cranford «"t*"ft"if Replacement fund. It was announced by Mrs. O. J. Jan- sen, chairman of the club's entertain- ment rarnmltftw. A final report, on *ne card party, held In May to raise funds for the, dub's an- nual Christmas Kiddles' party, showed a net profit of WU*. Fonner Mayor Roger 6 . Aldricb. tint vice-president of the dub, presided In the absence of President f . « floracwho ls,OB-vacat-> / - i^Wi BORER ATTACKS DAHUAS.OSSMANSAYS -Dab— growers need to be on then- guard during August and September for tbe Kuropean Com 'Borer." So stated Fred D^Otman, Agrieus—— Ag- The pretence ot the com borer In eat t n , t t _ n County today. ___ is tncnas—r aa the pot—attest of tbt borer progreests to Imton C m * ty and thto pest looks around for more crops to conquer. , » to no* readOy detectad dmtee; the early stores of West—km. The fits* sign to —e"wUt—( of new foUage and new blossom butts. These turn black and are followed by wilting of the older leaves. • ' " Further investigation finds a an—1 hole at the bate of the branch or bud from wWch sawdust mater; " Control measures are available to anfonewhowill write the County Ag- ricultural Agent at the Court House In __avbeth'and are fret for the asking. J , « « «a— j n antaibjatatl »rv- from t—t«—iotber park aettvi- tOKMa Poaton to the test 4—tt p « 4—tt park propartji Has been devel- th oped In tot i t a t the county away Ma where parks are should have tbe benefits of the parks cannot enjoy thtmbscauw of trans- portation casts wttb tbe result that many of the Individ—Is making use ot tbe parks are from oat ot the county. The speaker, m . referring to-the county budget, showed that IU Increase during the past teat years-* period during whk*-U»-«oantry-waa hit br th» worst depression tt has ever known KENILWORTH Ye,! :\ ByWkrr«D.Sc__«rp y _.r -Tonight. £.\ riw" i tfclt ItatUr Mtbftct m today's tow. yTiera ittUmtUm ot reent tgesb /or a MUmse m tat press** swtfcod oy «sswHttg th» rnsoeal o/ awrbaor tmtT rabMso, ead, la sB probsNHt*. tfte tMfUr wO b* pstottl U)on tto toters at «JU Nosembcr etscUoa. A* Ctmt /ran* disc—ifcm o/ Me pros end cons m-tfUs wttroct at tali tssW, saoald fsror*— oar natters mttfc UU a*wssaf|i m/onur—i to f a M s mew to mtstHg*»t» cast ttuir tots for or a>a*ait ft it >riti»t»T t» NQMMbtr.) lofTheOtt—m ana OhraplcM, I waa quite tnttwttid to- n o t e * short paragraph about the i at Ore—rd street thelr~—rsntnatVdump^ kaj ot srarbage Biwughont. the town- ship—«lent bstn • tk^bw—t " anI It has Collection? VOCATIONAL ARTS TEACHER RESIGNS M ahal aa lit—t atlaiithsi '-*»« —«n paid tola. <Mrnocntly wtMn —aay ie> fcssp att avvoJs^snaDt at 'Hit —toi on t M — v wanlra I obMrved a ftns, apparently new oar draw to the edft of the road «n Watout^v«nBe, Just paslt tbs atbletie Hell »M tt drew, to the side of the road the occapanU In (he rear of the can hurled a tans boodle of aarbagv tttrougn «he open window. Judghs) from the oar they war* driving, one wo—t test certain that they should »e able to pay for the proper disposal of their garbage.— Willie the dumpmt of cubage along I am opposed to mttnIdpal garbage coUecUon for tbe following Masons: UMt-wUl-—seats tht-load on the at- reaoy overouratntd propeny owntrs, <J) tt wm almost certainly put our lent stx scavengers oat oTbuatnees, (t>< tt wm not provide the excellsnt stmos which we. now have and which. I firmly btltov*. resUtnte of oranford deetre td*ave eon—ined, and (4)\wttta but tn ootptions, publto ccntrot of anytJttfc&tonevCTasenMentasprt- on two arguments: First, that It can be handled at —• jots, and secondly; that it win make for a cleaner com- munity* . Ai to the east. It must be borne In mind that under tbs present system of and col- the tows streets Is moat obJeoUonable, It is no more objectionable than the practice of many others of burning their garbage In back yard lndneraton and in their furnaces to the great an- noyance and discomfort of Jhelr neigh- and persons r*—'"g by: I know Was hit b r "^nothing m«r» «<*nch of bumln —I—(.been far —< I of the increase . . In raUblea and in anticipated revenues. During (his period the county'budget meres ately-$ClOOjOOO or n per cent. Ha—tiles during, the cent, and anUclpatcd revenues only 7tt percent. Ms. Poston, howstsr, la—ed —I. ef- rt f tb g j «<*nch of bumlng'gmrbage.'. _ This practice, of dumping garbage on the streets and burning H In backyard Incmeiators and furnaces Is a direct r «uU of -the present system of garbage disposal in the township. The only way forts of tbe i i ton- trolled g g assessed against every piece of property In the townphlp. When this Is don* •»* these lKUvldls can no longer •»*• these dace _ » debt, and partteu—-h* men-< ——d >x——to C—rtes 8a—btor his work in behalf of the taxpayers, and k t y J * r _ ofJHrepJor JBrter CUBOrd-Oehrlng N •»*• these lKUvld—ls can no longer save their dollar and a half a month by dumping and burning their gaibage, they wlU cease the pracUce./ . When I say municipal controlled cot- and Countr Treasurer Arthur N. Pler- sonfor their fine work. Whereas for- merly comity- bonds. Issued for the con- atnsct—i of the eourtbtmse, earriMI an rate of 6 per cent per annum, the rate now Is less Xhan » percent andItheramtftopsylnsjgMjOOOa year on prtoclpaL It was the speaker's optnion that had tt not been for the actlriOe* of the Onion County Taxpayers* AcsodaUon and the County BnlldlBa; and Loan League during the past few .yean,, we' woBlAhave •.Conntjr tax^ate otabout «l«-|r—e— of the "present W points. Speak—g of Oranford, Mr. Poston partment to be set up to handto It This would-be a- freat mlstakev-as a study of most communities where this has been done discloses^tt tobVons of the In practice and political Influ- dOion sufdebi goesT However, for mu- co*——ns» the. town lias, to «*** $0 per cent of every dollar for debt ser- vice. Despite that fact, be said, the to- tal school and municipal debt to only 14 per cent of the total assessed valu- ations. He said that Is not bad because 11 per cent to consMend a safe figure. V—tonvwelcomed by .Past President Charles M. Bay, Included the Rev. Wal- do J. Barteto of Dover, Ohio; Herbert/ Welch and Don MaxweU of ^estneld, K Ontves ot Bos—e. /, TewTamlHes; the majority of whom, I wm wager, are not property owttersT We have a paid police department, Board of Health department — whose members have police powers—as well as some special officers who could and should check up on thto situation. A few arrests, heavy fines and Jail sen- tences, if necessary, to the guilty par- ties wm soon put a stop to the dump- ing! of garbage along outlying streets. Those persons who do-not desire to employ one of our present scavengers ... iflro^^oMered. „&& thereafter take their trucksl*r-ti»o—eotk«, the removal the town dumps and notr of all refute' front the township limits (jong the streets. and^ypeifofinsmw bond'to .guarantee to enoe.;:' ; v/ ; The most efficient and economi- cal method to'by contract between the municipality and an individual or cor- poration that Is equipped to properly handle It, the contomct to be. given out on open competitive Uds. The con- tract dscted—sbpa—Msea—ti. A I—11 Shirley C. Relnhart of south Union avenue. Is spendtag a week at Pine Brook Camp near" Pa. Strood—boxv, OF JULY 28 ISSUE . The OmiuTuid CltlsBn and Ohron- I—i 1«d a complete sen-ottt of last we—-a tosne, COTS—_ng a fun pace of pictures of U» flood to ad- , dttlon to • detaiBed account of tbe . event. *_ adrBtton to the regular sMbaVetas—v* )Ja—d DCWIllt_ls_9_^ COP* ' ies. «•» extra copies were printed, aU of which were disposed of be- uuas—slir in town sold wttUn a s_at Hme sfter they wen p—ad an the stands, and kept raftering untn the nppb; o f r ^ -. ^- sr naa i A— , mlm . * * In addition.to regular suustilp"..;j els. local residents ondtiad extra w^M a r t •#•ftHftn*^vmlmiivmm ywt . a>^iMii jesldente iiesldmtT In all parts of the country. * Other papers^ were cUspatched to " " f f pomte out of the com—7, lnclodmg Canv 1 ada,Mexk»<aty and Trinidad. ' can no longer hlf th lvato coUecUon, property tenants alike pay" their garbage lection bUto monthly. Under munld* pal sponsorship, the entire load would be. placed on the property ownen. The lowest that such a project couW be handled here under municipal control is in the neighborhood of tSOjOOO. This would mean an Increase of approxi- mately 10 points In the tax rate, pro- viding .every property, owner paid-hi* taxes promptly. This, however, to not the case.. Severity-five per cetit tax collection to high for any one year, which would mean that an additional Increase of approximately 3M points would have'to. be added to'take care of Jhe dettnquenjs/^ ,_ V ,., T '-Looting at^'-sec^'wipi^nt'cbn- cefnlnrt a cleaner community. There have been Instances In the past when townspeople dumped then* garbage along the outlying sections of the com- munity, which not only made for an untidy 1 condition, but alto for an un- healthy situation. But why should the taxpaycn..aa_a-_whnl« hf inart*tJtP_pay at a paid by those residents of who .do nave, gatiage collec-' know there wjll be considerable op- Itton to the" foregoing-propossX' I nave already heard some of the argu- ——U against it Many residents think that municipal controlled collection means curbs lined witiigarbige-cans. Thl« is not so.- if it were, I would be one of the first to oppose it But the 'contract for general collection can pro- vide for the same type of service width Is now render— by OM prijrato collec- tor. The * **irifnsirlffw wm oome from two groups. The first—<bose who now In order to save a dollar-sad a half a j their ndghbon and the deMmort of the community. I dont •hitifc we need give **ffT**^t consideration to th*? t'*Tf*i > i The other group wttt be <host who own or control •eontiderable propsi for —ve#tsj—it jMHtHiaes. Tnelr ouposl* tlon to without question a reasonable opposition but not a sound one. They win argue 4hat it wUl mean an added costof operation without any'oppor- tunity to get K bade In answer I have thU statement to make: "Any one who manages or con—— isoptUy for —^ vestment purposea snows that any con* dttiatjliat reacts to the detriment ot • , n,, * _^*f^^^T — ** ^^^B mfiHsil If IMBmXOjw nUtWal mBO OTS* tills notels^ j vfaUo unyUiitwy ra | kM ft cooBMiDUy- A more dtttdnbte place to U n in tacxeue* T-IOM tfad .Weoften bearoomment on the—eg- Ms that has been made in tuproui tog frfmift^nrftifs and "'•'Tr pBranns ask why values and rentals hi a neighbor- ing; cornmunlty. nave niriti*r*V'y creased white in Cranf ord they have re- ceded. One answer to this is that they have endeavored to make then* com- " (Contt*uti oit tut paatj Tbe propootn to of municipal garbar F. A. McCarthy Quit. P o * fa School; rVlargtr«t Antfar. ton <sga—lcd Lamve. Resignation of Frederick A. Me Oarthy, vocational arts Instructor to. Or—ford Jtujor high school, waa re- ceived by the Board ot Bduoatioa at a •pedal meeting Tuesday night In t h f high school. On rax«nmenc—ton of the teachers' and Instruetlon comtnit- , tTwhlth Mrs-. IC A: Oral* to chab>- man, the request of Mia M. Margaret' Anita-son. Bngliah teacher In the Ugh school, for' ft -yearVltave or, a—eoea,: waa granted. Miss Ar—>non plans to carry en Nsssr— work. No aeUon en fining the. vaoandea wm be taken untD Supervising Principal Howard i t Bast returns from vacation. v The. beard alsa received and referred to the building and grounds eontatt* tori for action several bids for the re- moval of the present boiler In Cleve- land School ar>d Installation of s> new unit. Bids were submitted by the Bttt Company of HUMde. A. R. MuUer of Newark, Charles Ben—n of Perth Am- ber, Westfleld, rntrlneerlng Co, of Westfield, H. T. Richardson of Clifton. George \l. Tobln of Flalnfleld. Schrer—1 * O». A Newark and Oeorge Stewart of Newark. A Prices for the removal of the present boiler and installation of a steel tubu- lar heating beUer and stoker with sep- arate motors \for blower and stoker units ranged from 13,371 to-«4jng; same, with cast iron-boUer, from 43.44B. to HXt; alternate No. 3, steel tubujar boUerf with stoker Unit drlvea by same- motor, from M*l-to"t4^«9: cast Iron- boiler with stoker urtjt driverT by stum motor. s3,445 to ttjw): alternate No. l , insUllatlon of sn tuxllEary belt or buck- et type conveyor wltfi separate motor and time control, from x M4O to *4B9; alternate No. I,' steel tubular boiler and 733: cast Iron boiler and Ml burning system, from »4,3» to |a,U»:N alternate No. 4, steel tubular boiler equipped with-, grates and metal ban for harid firing, from tlXtl to tifni and cast'iron boiler with same equipment, from g>r 3N to «9jB34. The WetUleld Engnjeer- •tag Co^ was low tttdder^onjveryjtem Is proposed to attempt to have mi pe!,«ar— oUectlo ent plan—that to, back door and ment eonecUons. While 'our present dbection administration to In office, such a plan, If' adopted, might be continued. How- ever, with the changing of the present pensonneL It probably would develop that sorrc money could be saved by having, townspeople place their garbage on ,Uti tuita as to now the case In Disabeth, Roselle, Union and many other'communities which have muni- cipal collection. At an economy meas- ure, townspeople would be requested to place their garbage* on tbe curbs. Would such a condition make for a rifanffr-t9 n W ng coinini—KSTf** It L cer- tainly would not. .It also would tmaU a physical hardship on the majority of our netSetits. Oranford long has enjoyed the aerv- Ices of private joavenasni.. They have they must give this kind of service to maintain customers. Their employee go Into cellars to bring out tnt tihnt or othtri—Ush. The employes sre known to the enstomtrs, for. In most Instances, a family employs the same scavengers year after year. Under municipal control, with a con- tract being awarded Snnuany, there to every possible chance that toe aunt bidder would not always below, which haps every year, t . \ We now have poneetlona of grrbtge and rubbish three times) s week, even when a.eoOeet—l day fans on • holi- day. Xn most fWrummrMes where thli service to under municipal control, col' leetiont are usually made twice wetkb onos for gsntsw and once for mhhltlL fffMflm do wejflnd cojnmunltles where collections are made thrice weekly, holidays not excepteA, - , ' JWith private scavenger terrise, Hjt possible to obtato many *Mi' u tifttit;1 r vices, sue6"as the "carting away leaves, refuse from .the garden, Obrtot- o»—*«o0t7 -"i. $\ Vice-president George If. Chlnery coriducted-ttitmeettorln tUrabMnce of President Joseph. A, Plummer. \ CAMPERS HONOR ROBERT ROHRER Chosen Moat OuUUnduig by By SAMVsX 1. CANNING, J*. of J, Walter Coffee, engaged In three conteste with the Chester Boy ifloout Camp from Chester. Tbe first event was a three tpune series of soft- ball, with Cranford taking two out of ' the three games. All the garnet were closely contested. The second contest was a swh—otog meet which was also won by Cra—ord, 63-xl. Once more Oranford was vls- torious In a Field Day by • toon of 8-8. The roost outstanding camper for the week was Bob Rohrer, whose name was added to the plaque In Buckley Lodge. Among hto acbtevenaaits were the boyr* table ttnntr—1'rtonesboe champion- ships for two weeks. I He was runner-up ' in the shuffle board tournament and scored three times in '_» swaan—« * _f_tB^ad^tBB^^^h_ttY fe saW^^^^^^^^^^^^Bfl^^^^_iS^^^^^^^^^^^^t^^smB^ «ayU»HJ^IUEUi.J,A>'I.JtW,jaj(UMC; to tfie Field Day Meet with the BoyacoutiianI playednoondbsuMOB ' Uie toft—IT team. BbnoraUe mentloti was awarded to Bob Meyer,* who witv alto fine camper. , The senior dtvtoleo of'OB camp; win— memtM Dick Rlpkry,. Harkr' Davidkon, Fran_i Uotta, Dick 41sebu,- Paul SJurstn t—I Bokert s—tner, were"' taken on a. trip to'MounUsn Lake tar ' < Hen— Specbt ateI Bob DeckaI The*-, spent the day swimming, and boatmg , and enjoyetl tnt> otttbui very tiwrti, " r / For the put two weeks,' -. ^ at and r tbe nut (wo weak*, «w Ce_p bam enjoy—f very dtlldoas sppki Uscfcberry plat, win- wtre-pre-, br Cbue Blk th . „. pared by O—weo Bailey, the camp. ' __ebeI, Mr. Battoyfauprovra totoonsv of the best ceoks the Oamp bat ever i-"U, had and to a gnat favorite atnonc tbe t >°f-V " "' V,. y f,'-" " *-* ".• TIM boys who were to camp'thlto we— "*_• ,. ;s wen: Robert I—ttrer, Bob Jaeobt, Bert ; r,.T'i ot chlo, J3Jck.,Ais—u, Robert st JBmar Dttlt, Bob Meyer, Bud anIHb^AJjaVran. -'-; W' ,•(1

CAMPERS HONOR ROBERT ROHRER - digifind-it.comKNOT HOLE'GANG •li-"\ ... Ctmt /ran* disc—ifcm o/ Me pros end cons m-tfUs wttroct at tali tssW, saoald fsror*— oar natters mttfc

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Page 1: CAMPERS HONOR ROBERT ROHRER - digifind-it.comKNOT HOLE'GANG •li-"\ ... Ctmt /ran* disc—ifcm o/ Me pros end cons m-tfUs wttroct at tali tssW, saoald fsror*— oar natters mttfc

STystr wn b t > * abow^b. n per

•7. S. Marine Band Will PlayOnly Jersey Engagement Here

BJWBH V V » " V BT " w • • I • • " •

sightly ab»f» t o M quarterlypaymentsot last year. * •' *

' Redemption of several tax Ben eer-tiflcatet to recent months br Iwlldersbis brought a earnrtdtrabtf. asm Intothe township's treasury, and also ptocedU w properties to the a c t ^ accountsagain, It is reported.-;-- * .

FINAL CONCERTBY BAND TONIGHT

Fmnti Sl^iHSe Mwical Unkto G i n Conetrto in HfcjhSchuw AtiuiUitiuiii, Moo>

Sept 19.

wer©' comptetod- tillsweek for the U-pleee United BtatesMarine Band to make Its ortyr KewJersey appearance during: K» forthcom-ing public concert tour in Crahford

h r i

-i > , t i

Program, Feituring Cornet

afterneen and evening. September 19,It was announced yesterday by J, Stan-ley Dlttmer, director of music In theOranford Public Bchools and chairmanof the local committee In charge ofhonking the famous musical organiza-tion.

The O r a i * # . ^ M W j Band wmbring lte lM.WtofoTswna-r coneertato a dose at S-ttlS&sMtWlght wtth avaried program In Is—Otnwn Park,lasinon street, tt waa announced yee-

| ~ t e r _ y bTJrmanleyTJttlnjif, "

comet trio. Three SoUtalret" by Her-bert, played by Wttidea JOOUIns, Wu-11am Ostrander and Forrest Bartlett.

the band wm pJajion m stand erectedtoday by the On—i County Park Ccm-aj—do. the township's stand was re-moved from—* part yesterday after-noon, band -dflIt—— .said. The parkcornmlssloa alto has provided a largenumber of benches) in the park In orderthat the Majority of those attendingthe concert mar be provided with seat-Ins fadllUea,

.r_-fidectlons. by.tfae.band.-1onight wmInclude: King, Cotton March (Sousa),

I -~£art)erM>f-4N»lUa~Oiert*i—..J———U*

m .. ."the President's Own1' will appear here-——QfiT SQIaJplOtS GC vtlsV VTattaTrTft iH^ffniSchool Band, -•ncketswul be placed onsale shortly and may be bbtamed'fromhigh school band members and mem-bers of various organisations in thecommunity who are sur'irting In bring.five per cent of therproceeds-wttl-go-to

,-There <_ke>,-" ffluclki.

JAMES C McGRAYNETAKEN BY DEATH

James O. MoOrayne, 73 years old, aresident of Oranford nearly a quarterof a century and affiliated far forty-flve years with the Oustoms1 Service atthe Port fit New York until his retire-ment June 30,1136, died Tuesday nightat his home, 309 Casino avenue, follow-ing an illness of two months."Bom in-Brookly-o, MrcMcOrarne hadresided here since 1914. .He was one-thne--prealdent~of--4he-old .Cranfori

7 d : l d t*_(—e FantaaUqueLJ"

avlc7^oard:and^ras:ikpasti.presldenof the Custom* Inipectors' Associationafo«toePixfcflf=He»yc»1r-v«tsu7m5;, Ltt^JL^,S,*to%

fore (Sullivan), Around the Campflre(Seredy), March MUltalre, (Franealse8alnt-8aens>, qnd Cheerio', March(Goldman). V

LOCAL BOYS T O JOIN'KNOT HOLE'GANG

•li-"\

i«st Thursday Uonl.Jonea «on tbemall boys' marble tournament atKoosevelt playground. On Friday thepeanut hunt resulted tat team numberl being the vtnner.'lto teamol Laurence, Ka&er, captain? Haroldftoelker, Barbara Nmton, M*» WI1-•on, Rita Oooney and Caioi Hoeenberg.

FraoUeany. t^e entire playgrgandPoputaUoh to occupied In thetoaktr*<* the Seven Dwarfs. I t e famooa iewn

fo«toe-Pixfcflf=He»jyc»1r«£.vts7m5;.A member of the Downtown Glee

Club of New York City, be had sungwith that organistlon until last spring.As a My, he was. A chorister at TrinityChurffi, New, York-, and for. some timepast had been the second oldest formerTrinity choir boy still living. He was'amember of Trinity Church, Cranf ord,and a member of the executive com-mittee, of Trinity Men's Club.

Surviving him are his wife, Mrs. Lil-lian Sloan McOraynt; a son, Donald,of USalle avenue; * granddaughter,Nancy Elisabeth Mcarayne; and twobrothers, John of Brooklyn. and'DaW-

Staeisl services will be private wtthmtermentat4he- MBveroenee of thefamily In Cypress Bills Cemetery, NewYork. •

and carefully pamte-a.. Bach chOd towry late— on ——tat*« oaeapseto setBob 8c—tai mMleEtn—•,!*—te and It

Oooneji now bu:<he task of «Une anauthentic pamt Job'os —tf. - ' '

_ts_0BO-ftrr Mat and

u i r Frances MafTtiall of '» oolum-, ii *m « i—it ~MnrA T i m i TTfrW

_ ~ ™*« * " • • — | a j — t , law araaaMtaT awmeaw—at- • • i

BaroUVoea>er,BarirmJtewtonflBay-I w^Hea-og,—ktVHttm Ooonty* ^ '••>I'"' i nu boys'str^jmTpi-Us tenstotour-

niUVT-Mtv 1 . ——.ft * - - • ' • *—*- r —* *

-M. «mmr»ha'»recelfe<lwordtroavNewJersey College for Women Oat aba hasMen accepted for wlnt—lor. to (be e»jMngTfSSnan class. WssMacPhall• areeent graduate of Cranfoct BlghKoouSdbaTSsnawardeda tcbol-HrtripatN. J. O. for the wtnmr year.S b e i s tbe daughter of Ma and Mrs.John » MadPhaa ' "

nmnd has b e w a h ^ i e o m p i t o

-»oy I i ~ '>og. Bob i m n - 4 Kfeatod Bob Mnd-fock. to tbe co__uj»—' round. BayBering defeated Laurence B—wer-.andB * Wodrock. f >r- • s -vf - - T

Miss Jean Tcxtrneetbti the oppor-tooity to take M fcqrtMS yean old orunder over to Bappsrt Itad—a, Ang-<•* » . te7jbm the Knot aO» Gang to

"•* the Newark Beits t—y one ot thBtrpme gun—7 These who have, already"roe* up are: —uffence.Kaeser; Fer-^rKrrhain,dm-_imram^v1etarp£"""->, Harold VoeJte, Herb.Wttson and

* 0 U C * OTUPI^HC-«INE»

Pollot thbrwe— ate —ulng sum-mons to an dog owners who havenot obtained IMS license tags fcr

Ohlef Massa said thisn-Wand 100 sum-Mooday evening,

so far. PoUceare-.the northerly side of

day ana on theS t w r n - t o one day anil onsoutherly side the next Thus farthis »ar.,aeo dog UoeMes hay»been' iooed. Township TreastmrH. B. vnnekkr said this momlng._

the band. Mr. nttskcr said,la the only town fat newone of the

the country wberai the noted mut-Ury-DUB—1 o—tnhatlnn.long a radiofavorite, wffl.mak

The tour, starting Bept U and end-Ing October » , Includes visits tofew cttles In the Eastern, states ofPennsylvania, New Jersey, Maoachu-•ett* New York, * Connecticut, WestVirginia' and Kentucky, then *Kt*TH*t tothe farther reaches pf^Ohio, Mkhlgin,TiHnw ^ Iowa, iHQdlaneT and Wlaocnsln.

The September IB engagement wOlmark the first tune that the faisedscarlet and blue-clad musicians haveever, played In Cranf ord. An afternoonperformance win" be presented at S p.m. for children, and an evening eon-

rt-ii f«!SBifttB fSaStoiimuch as only a limited mimbfr of tick-ets win be placed cb sale, and due tothe fact that the conceit is expected todraw Marine Band foUawom from anover Northern-New Jersey, local resi-dents have been urged by Mr. Dtttmerto obtain their Ucketo as early.as pos-

G.O.P.TOOMTTAUGUST MEETINGRtwnne Actrnlies Sep-

tember 14 With Csmdi-_ae«'Night

Tte'CranibMltspBhucanCI— wfflnotresume meetings until aeptombes 14,lt-warfledded-lsst-nlglit at' > meetingof the-boardof directors to townshiprooms. The directors decided to csn-

rnext Wednesday, as many members areout of town on vacation. The Septem-ber' meeting ha* been designatedcandidates' night, and an Bepoblicancandidates have been Invited to attend.

Plans are underway, V for a noveltypalrty to be held In the Casino on Sep-tember 18, and for a. card party to beheld later in the fan for benefit of theCranford «"t*"ft"if Replacement fund.It was announced by Mrs. O. J. Jan-sen, chairman of the club's entertain-ment rarnmltftw.

A final report, on *ne card party, heldIn May to raise funds for the, dub's an-nual Christmas Kiddles' party, showeda net profit of WU*.

Fonner Mayor Roger 6 . Aldricb. tintvice-president of the dub, presided Inthe absence of President f . «floracwho ls,OB-vacat-> / -

i ^ W i BORER ATTACKSDAHUAS.OSSMANSAYS

-Dab— growers need to be on then-guard during August and Septemberfor tbe Kuropean Com 'Borer." Sostated Fred D^Otman, Agrieus—— Ag-

The pretence ot the com borer Ineat t n , t t _ n County today._ _ _ is tncnas—r aa the pot—attestof tbt borer progreests to Imton C m *ty and thto pest looks around for morecrops to conquer. ,

» to no* readOy detect ad dmtee; theearly stores of West—km. The fits*sign to —e"wUt—( of new foUage andnew blossom butts. These turn blackand are followed by wilting of theolder leaves. • ' "

Further investigation finds a an—1hole at the bate of the branch or budfrom wWch sawdust mater; "

Control measures are available toanfonewhowill write the County Ag-ricultural Agent at the Court House In__avbeth'and are fret for the asking.

J , « « «a—jn antaibjatatl »rv-

from t—t«—iotber park aettvi-tOKMa

Poaton to the test 4—ttp « 4—ttpark propartji Has been devel-thoped In tot i ta t the county away

Ma where parks are

should have tbe benefits of the parkscannot enjoy thtmbscauw of trans-portation casts wttb tbe result thatmany of the Individ—Is making use ottbe parks are from oat ot the county.

The speaker, m . referring to-thecounty budget, showed that IU Increaseduring the past teat years-* periodduring whk*-U»-«oantry-waa hit brth» worst depression tt has ever known

KENILWORTH

Ye,! : \ByWkrr«D.Sc__«rp

y _.r

-Tonight. £.\

riw"

i tfclt ItatUr Mtbftct m today's tow. yTieraittUmtUm ot reent tgesb /or a MUmse m tat press** swtfcod

oy «sswHttg th» rnsoeal o/ awrbaor tmtT rabMso, ead, la sB probsNHt*.tfte tMfUr wO b* pstottl U)on tto toters at «JU Nosembcr etscUoa. A*

Ctmt /ran* disc—ifcm o/ Me pros end cons m-tfUs wttroct at tali tssW,saoald fsror*— oar natters mttfc UU a*wssaf|i m/onur—i to

f a M s mew to mtstHg*»t» cast ttuir tots for or a>a*ait ftit >riti»t»T t» NQMMbtr.)

lofTheOtt—mana OhraplcM, I waa quite tnttwttidto- n o t e * short paragraph about the

i at Ore—rd street

thelr~—rsntnatVdump^kaj ot srarbage Biwughont. the town-ship—«lent bstn • tk^bw—t

" anI It has

Collection? VOCATIONAL ARTSTEACHER RESIGNS

M ahal aa lit—t atlaiithsi '-*»« —«npaid tola. <Mrnocntly wtMn —aay

ie> fcssp att avvoJs^snaDt at 'Hit—toi on t M — v wanlra I obMrveda ftns, apparently new oar draw to theedft of the road «n Watout^v«nBe,Just paslt tbs atbletie Hell »M tt drew,to the side of the road the occapanUIn (he rear of the can hurled a tansboodle of aarbagv tttrougn «he openwindow. Judghs) from the oar theywar* driving, one wo—t test certainthat they should »e able to pay for theproper disposal of their garbage.—

Willie the dumpmt of cubage along

I am opposed to mttnIdpal garbagecoUecUon for tbe following Masons:UMt-wUl-—seats tht-load on the at-reaoy overouratntd propeny owntrs,<J) tt wm almost certainly put our

lent stx scavengers oat oTbuatnees,(t>< tt wm not provide the excellsntstmos which we. now have and which.I firmly btltov*. resUtnte of oranforddeetre td*ave eon—ined, and (4)\wtttabut tn ootptions, publto ccntrot ofanytJttfc&tonevCTasenMentasprt-

on two arguments: First, that It canbe handled at —• jots, and secondly;that it win make for a cleaner com-munity* .

Ai to the east. It must be borne Inmind that under tbs present system of

andcol-

the tows streets Is moat obJeoUonable,It is no more objectionable than thepractice of many others of burningtheir garbage In back yard lndneratonand in their furnaces to the great an-noyance and discomfort of Jhelr neigh-

and persons r*—'"g by: I knowWas hit b r " nothing m«r»

«<*nch of bumln—I—(.been far —< I of the increase

. .In raUblea and in anticipated revenues.

During (his period the county'budgetmeres ately-$ClOOjOOOor n per cent. Ha—tiles during, the

cent, and anUclpatcd revenues only 7ttpercent.

Ms. Poston, howstsr, la—ed —I. ef-rt f tb

g j«<*nch of bumlng'gmrbage.'. _

This practice, of dumping garbage onthe streets and burning H In backyardIncmeiators and furnaces Is a directr « u U of -the present system of garbagedisposal in the township. The only way

forts of tbe i i ton-

trolled g gassessed against every piece of propertyIn the townphlp. When this Is don*•»* these lKUvldls can no longer•»*• these

dace _ » debt, and partteu—-h* men-<——d >x——to C—rtes 8a—btor hiswork in behalf of the taxpayers, and

k t y J * r _ ofJHrepJor JBrterCUBOrd-Oehrlng

N

•»*• these lKUvld—ls can no longersave their dollar and a half a monthby dumping and burning their gaibage,they wlU cease the pracUce./ .

When I say municipal controlled cot-

and Count r Treasurer Arthur N. Pler-sonfor their fine work. Whereas for-merly comity- bonds. Issued for the con-atnsct—i of the eourtbtmse, earriMI an

rate of 6 per cent per annum,the rate now Is less Xhan » percentandItheramtf topsylnsjgMjOOO a yearon prtoclpaL

It was the speaker's optnion that hadtt not been for the actlriOe* of theOnion County Taxpayers* AcsodaUonand the County BnlldlBa; and LoanLeague during the past few .yean,, we'woBlAhave •.Conntjr tax^ate otabout«l«-|r—e— of the "present W points.

Speak—g of Oranford, Mr. Poston

partment to be set up to handto It Thiswould-be a- freat mlstakev-as a studyof most communities where this hasbeen done discloses^tt tobVons of the

In practice andpolitical Influ-

dOion sufdebi goesT However, for mu-co*——ns» the. town lias, to «***

$0 per cent of every dollar for debt ser-vice. Despite that fact, be said, the to-tal school and municipal debt to only14 per cent of the total assessed valu-ations. He said that Is not bad because11 per cent to consMend a safe figure.

V—tonvwelcomed by .Past PresidentCharles M. Bay, Included the Rev. Wal-do J. Barteto of Dover, Ohio; Herbert/Welch and Don MaxweU of ^estneld,

K Ontves ot Bos—e. / ,

TewTamlHes;the majority of whom, I wm wager, arenot property owttersT

We have a paid police department,Board of Health department — whosemembers have police powers—as wellas some special officers who could andshould check up on thto situation. Afew arrests, heavy fines and Jail sen-tences, if necessary, to the guilty par-ties wm soon put a stop to the dump-ing! of garbage along outlying streets.Those persons who do-not desire toemploy one of our present scavengers

„ ... iflro^^oMered. „&& thereafter take theirtrucksl*r-ti»o—eotk«, the removal the town dumps and notrof all refute' front the township limits (jong the streets.and^ypeifofinsmw bond'to .guarantee

toenoe.;:'; v / ;

The most efficient and economi-cal method to'by contract between themunicipality and an individual or cor-poration that Is equipped to properlyhandle It, the contomct to be. given outon open competitive Uds. The con-tract

dscted—sbpa—Msea—ti. A

I—11 Shirley C. Relnhart of southUnion avenue. Is spendtag a week atPine Brook Camp near"Pa.

Strood—boxv,

OF JULY 2 8 ISSUE

. The OmiuTuid CltlsBn and Ohron-I—i 1«d a complete sen-ottt oflast we—-a tosne, COTS—_ng a funpace of pictures of U» flood to ad-

, dttlon to • detaiBed account of tbe .event. *_ adrBtton to the regularsMbaVetas—v* )Ja—d DCWIllt_ls_9_^ COP*

' ies. «•» extra copies were printed,aU of which were disposed of be-

uuas—slir in town sold

wttUn a s_at Hme sfter theywen p—ad an the stands, andkept raftering untn the nppb; o f r

^ - . ^- sr n a a • i A — , mlm . • * —

* In addition.to regular suustilp"..;jels. local residents ondtiad extraw ^ M a r t •#• ftHftn*^ vmlmiivmm ywt .a> iMii jesldente iiesldmtT In allparts of the country. * Other papers^were cUspatched to ""ff pomteout of the com—7, lnclodmg Canv 1

ada,Mexk»<aty and Trinidad. '

can no longerhlf th

lvato coUecUon, propertytenants alike pay" their garbagelection bUto monthly. Under munld*pal sponsorship, the entire load wouldbe. placed on the property ownen. Thelowest that such a project couW behandled here under municipal controlis in the neighborhood of tSOjOOO. Thiswould mean an Increase of approxi-mately 10 points In the tax rate, pro-viding .every property, owner paid-hi*taxes promptly. This, however, to notthe case.. Severity-five per cetit taxcollection to high for any one year,which would mean that an additionalIncrease of approximately 3M pointswould have'to. be added to'take careof Jhe dettnquenjs/^ ,_ V , . , T'-Looting at^' -sec^'wipi^nt 'cbn-cefnlnrt a cleaner community. Therehave been Instances In the past whentownspeople dumped then* garbagealong the outlying sections of the com-munity, which not only made for anuntidy1 condition, but alto for an un-healthy situation. But why should thetaxpaycn..aa_a-_whnl« hf inart*tJtP_pay

at apaid by those residents of

who .do nave, gatiage collec-'

know there wjll be considerable op-Itton to the" foregoing-propossX' I

nave already heard some of the argu-——U against i t Many residents thinkthat municipal controlled collectionmeans curbs lined witiigarbige-cans.Thl« is not so.- if it were, I would beone of the first to oppose i t But the'contract for general collection can pro-vide for the same type of service widthIs now render— by OM prijrato collec-tor.

The * **irifnsirlffw wm oome fromtwo groups. The first—<bose who nowIn order to save a dollar-sad a half a

j

their ndghbon and the deMmort ofthe community. I dont •hitifc we needgive **ffT** t consideration to th*? t'*Tf*i>i

The other group wttt be <host whoown or control •eontiderable propsifor —ve#tsj—it jMHtHiaes. Tnelr ouposl*tlon to without question a reasonableopposition but not a sound one. Theywin argue 4hat it wUl mean an addedcostof operation without any'oppor-tunity to get K bade In answer I havethU statement to make: "Any one whomanages or con—— isoptUy for —^vestment purposea snows that any con*dttiatjliat reacts to the detriment ot •

, n , , * • _^*f^^^T — ** ^^^BmfiHsil I f IMBmXOjw nUtWal mBO OTS*

t i l ls notels^ jvfaUo unyUiitwy r a |kM ft cooBMiDUy- A more dtttdnbte

place to Un in tacxeue* T-IOM tfad

.Weoften bearoomment on the—eg-Ms that has been made in tuprouitog frfmift nrftifs and "'•'Tr pBranns askwhy values and rentals hi a neighbor-ing; cornmunlty. nave niriti*r*V'ycreased white in Cranf ord they have re-ceded. One answer to this is that theyhave endeavored to make then* com-

" (Contt*uti oit tut paatj

Tbe propootn to of municipal garbar

F. A. McCarthy Quit. P o * faSchool; rVlargtr«t Antfar.

ton <sga—lcd Lamve.

Resignation of Frederick A. M eOarthy, vocational arts Instructor to.Or—ford Jtujor high school, waa re-ceived by the Board ot Bduoatioa at a•pedal meeting Tuesday night In t h fhigh school. On rax«nmenc—ton ofthe teachers' and Instruetlon comtnit-

, tTwhlth Mrs-. IC A: Oral* to chab>-man, the request of Mia M. Margaret'Anita-son. Bngliah teacher In the Ughschool, for' ft -yearVltave or, a—eoea,:waa granted. Miss Ar—>non plans tocarry en Nsssr— work. No aeUon enfining the. vaoandea wm be taken untDSupervising Principal Howard i t Bastreturns from vacation. v

The. beard alsa received and referredto the building and grounds eontatt*tori for action several bids for the re-moval of the present boiler In Cleve-land School ar>d Installation of s> newunit. Bids were submitted by the BtttCompany of HUMde. A. R. MuUer ofNewark, Charles Ben—n of Perth Am-ber, Westfleld, rntrlneerlng Co, ofWestfield, H. T. Richardson of Clifton.George \l. Tobln of Flalnfleld. Schrer—1* O». A Newark and Oeorge Stewartof Newark. A

Prices for the removal of the presentboiler and installation of a steel tubu-lar heating beUer and stoker with sep-arate motors \for blower and stokerunits ranged from 13,371 to-«4jng;same, with cast iron-boUer, from 43.44B.to HXt; alternate No. 3, steel tubujarboUerf with stoker Unit drlvea by same-motor, from M*l-to"t4^«9: cast Iron-boiler with stoker urtjt driverT by stummotor. s3,445 to ttjw): alternate No. l ,insUllatlon of sn tuxllEary belt or buck-et type conveyor wltfi separate motorand time control, fromxM4O to *4B9;alternate No. I,' steel tubular boiler and

733: cast Iron boiler and Ml burningsystem, from »4,3» to |a,U»:N alternateNo. 4, steel tubular boiler equipped with-,grates and metal ban for harid firing,from tlXtl to tifni and cast'ironboiler with same equipment, from g>r3N to «9jB34. The WetUleld Engnjeer-•tag Co^ was low tttdder^onjveryjtem

Is proposed to attempt to have mipe!,«ar— oUectloent plan—that to, back door andment eonecUons. While 'our present dbectionadministration to In office, such a plan,If' adopted, might be continued. How-ever, with the changing of the presentpensonneL It probably would developthat sorrc money could be saved byhaving, townspeople place their garbageon ,Uti tuita as to now the case InDisabeth, Roselle, Union and manyother'communities which have muni-cipal collection. At an economy meas-ure, townspeople would be requestedto place their garbage* on tbe curbs.Would such a condition make for arifanffr-t9nW ng coinini—KSTf** It L cer-tainly would not. .It also would tmaUa physical hardship on the majority ofour netSetits.

Oranford long has enjoyed the aerv-Ices of private joavenasni.. They have

they must give this kind of service tomaintain customers. Their employee goInto cellars to bring out tnt tihnt orothtri—Ush. The employes sre knownto the enstomtrs, for. In most Instances,a family employs the same scavengersyear after year.

Under municipal control, with a con-tract being awarded Snnuany, there toevery possible chance that toe auntbidder would not always below, which

haps every year, t . \We now have poneetlona of grrbtge

and rubbish three times) s week, evenwhen a.eoOeet—l day fans on • holi-day. Xn most fWrummrMes where thliservice to under municipal control, col'leetiont are usually made twice wetkbonos for gsntsw and once for mhhltlLfffMflm do wejflnd cojnmunltles wherecollections are made thrice weekly,holidays not excepteA, - ,' JWith private scavenger terrise, Hjtpossible to obtato many *Mi'utifttit;1 rvices, sue6"as the "carting awayleaves, refuse from .the garden, Obrtot-

o»—*«o0t7 -"i.

$\

Vice-president George If. Chlnerycoriducted-ttitmeettorln tUrabMnceof President Joseph. A, Plummer. \

CAMPERS HONORROBERT ROHRER

Chosen Moat OuUUnduig by

By SAMVsX 1. CANNING, J * .

of J, Walter Coffee, engagedIn three conteste with the Chester Boyifloout Camp from Chester. Tbe firstevent was a three tpune series of soft-ball, with Cranford taking two out of 'the three games. All the garnet wereclosely contested.

The second contest was a swh—otogmeet which was also won by Cra—ord,63-xl. Once more Oranford was vls-torious In a Field Day by • toon of 8-8.

The roost outstanding camper for theweek was Bob Rohrer, whose name wasadded to the plaque In Buckley Lodge.Among hto acbtevenaaits were the boyr*table ttnnt • r—1'rtonesboe champion-ships for two weeks. I He was runner-up 'in the shuffle board tournament andscored three times in '_» swaan—«

* _f_tB^ad^tBB^^^h_ttYfe

saW^^^^^^^^^^^^Bfl^^^^_iS^^^^^^^^^^^^t^^smB^

«ayU»HJ^IUEUi.J,A>'I.JtW,jaj(UMC;to tfie Field Day Meet with the

BoyacoutiianI playednoondbsuMOB 'Uie toft—IT team. BbnoraUe mentlotiwas awarded to Bob Meyer,* who witvalto fine camper. ,

The senior dtvtoleo o f ' O B camp;win— memtM Dick Rlpkry,. Harkr'Davidkon, Fran_i Uotta, Dick 41sebu,-Paul SJurstn t—I Bokert s—tner, were"'taken on a. trip to'MounUsn Lake tar ' <Hen— Specbt ateI Bob DeckaI The*-,spent the day swimming, and boatmg ,and enjoyetl tnt> otttbui very tiwrti, " r /

For the p u t two weeks,'

-. • ^

a tand

r tbe nut (wo weak*, «w Ce_pbam enjoy—f very dtlldoas sppkiUscfcberry plat, w i n - wtre-pre-,

br C b u e B l k th. „ . pared by O—weo Bailey, the camp. '__ebeI, Mr. Battoyfauprovra totoonsv „

of the best ceoks the Oamp bat ever i-"U,had and to a gnat favorite atnonc tbet>°f-V " "' V,.yf,'-" " *-* ".•

TIM boys who were to camp'thlto we— "*_• ,.;swen: Robert I—ttrer, Bob Jaeobt, Bert ; r,.T'i

ot chlo, J3Jck.,Ais—u, Robertst JBmar Dttlt, Bob Meyer, Bud

anIHb^AJjaVran. -'-; W '

, • ( 1

Page 2: CAMPERS HONOR ROBERT ROHRER - digifind-it.comKNOT HOLE'GANG •li-"\ ... Ctmt /ran* disc—ifcm o/ Me pros end cons m-tfUs wttroct at tali tssW, saoald fsror*— oar natters mttfc

\- -\r '

% V

. THE CRAOTORD

Olifeim and (BijrmtirUW '•no Jt»'

tain

~ ~ BaMd's t tSiilRist Offloe at" CrinfardrHTJ,7 at Becond Class Matter.

Puhusbed Ttuirakr at Cranford. New Jeney. byTbe'Crtnferd CtUaen sod Chronicle, I n c OfBdalStwsntper lor Cnntord, Oarwood snd KenSworth.

Subscription Bate* SIM .a Tear in Adranoe.CBICf: s Alden Streetir Phone CRsnford s-OOO*.

- . - — • 7 —

•/'- . JOHN K.' CU3OT). Earn*

;F

• L A MBBkipcd BfnTcamj lot Crcasesd.

X.>Mst Cnniior4 cod U s Many SsrrJcss..

S. BfcnMpal Sponsorship of HoBday CMsteaBons.

I Q r a i i f o r a * • . ' * . ' /

Municipal Carbage Removal?• On page one in today's issue wit} be

found articles for and against municipal, con-trol of the-disposal of rubbish and garbage inCranford. : Thesearticles have been writtenat the'request of this newspaper in an~effortto enlighten pur readers retarding this timelys u b j e c t . . . ' • .."• •• •:.;•• ' ,. . . - •

_ AJetterwas received recently by theTownship Committee from/'the CranfordCrvic and Business Association requesting achange in the present method of jinandng theremoval of rubbish and garbage. While re-ferred to the committee of the whole, the'matter of munidpal control may be placed be-fore the voters at a referendum in November.

Every resident of the community should be

question before it comes up for a vote, fordud reason, we commend these two articlesto our readers. Don't read just one side of thequestion. Familiarize" yourself with bothsides by reading both articles. ;x

Last Conccct Tod«htThelast m a senes of six summer concerts

by the Cranford Municipal Band will be heldtonight in MacConnell Park, Eastman street

The band has enjoyed a most successfulseason both from the attendance and musicalstandpoints. A band such as we now havehere is a real asset to the community andsriouJdb«£Ontinue<i from year to yeafT

. Townspeople should show their appre-datibn 'forthis summer series by their atten-alanceattonightVnnalprogramT"

1 We are urged &y athing in the way of ad; . _ _and whde we do not l a m any idea that •*•*»young people ate aaadoijgrjr watching ror,««r

selves, that they snh k h

ard, y g p fthe mistake that seta die acquisition of moneya* the first objective of human activity. ' \

Secondly. we would urge theman .undentandiiig^oiitpiness is to be found within themselves, rather

'than in other people or external forces.In the third place, we would suggest

that, in their youthful zeal and enthusiasm;they remember that the world is an old place,populated by an ancient race, and that humanrelationsmps and customs are not to be light?ly challenged, or thrown into the ash-can.

For the fourth', and last piece of advice,at least for this issue, we would induce them,to seriously set their own.values" upon allthings and, once convinced of the valuationof anything, that they live their life on the•basis of their honest appraisal. .

This may seem like a small start to theyoung person, who seeks the answers,.butit is, we think, enough for a start.

The unexpressed understanding whichoften exists between individuals, or nations,is worth more than aU theJangjijife ] W canbe put into written agreements. - . \ ~

life WQuld be so much simpler if you'could believe what people aay without, hav-ing to wonder what they mean. " /,»

»' Correct this sentence: "Here, sir, is thetwenty dollars that" you loaned me when thedepression got underway, in 1932."

The strict enforcement of traffic regula-tions is one way to be sure that highway acci-dents^ will not kill IO- many people.

I Yon accomplish very h'ttle by denounceing the motives of an individual; if there usomething wrong, why not say what itis?

* awawaaKawawawawa ^ '

• So far as weaire concerned Ihe systemoffinancing that is popularly referred to as the"extortion plan", is well-named.

Cranford may not be the largest munici-pality in the nation but it can be the best, sofara* its people are concerned.

•-'SMS&msi

ffimmlilHmJOQA

•M I N to 401

saont w r i t e d> ast aha at gctta*rWllr'" '

( „ • « tas •Whss rtfch cast not d sat k>

y Betpointed sat

tdBrio> tbs troops an:aWsn. Iteawa-s

BO booe tastl^ and tenor *hldinot only stWaiuaisH SSHSTMIIWI andpride toU»owner**«Tertly«nliane.;

Better eomlrscUoa sod beterm*-int^sW^jgtsKtiuisi o » w seraaiVBMA Jtfh1*! Oft iMt fev

J^n. **l»p*i1»«*ttoMitsloaotjool bofldJm oasts sad psrlW beoauie

a6ta Ad»r-

CO9TUME PARADEAT SHERMAN PLAYHELD

A costome parade was held lastThursday afternoon at the. Sherman8choolplajground, operated Jointly bjrthe WPA*and the townthlp's play-ground HwimfHSf, In charge of BarryBatkjr and Mrs. Fanny Blesel.

Honors went to Beverly Baker, love-liest; Edith Mott, prettiest; Mary Mar-key, cutest; Mary Hannls. oddest;Clayton LMngtton, moat peculiar; Mar-lon MnTHarmid won flnt honors as alittle Chinese gbl; Betty Mott, irW,lassie, most original; Carol Mott, data-

Some weeks ago. a resident of Cranfordtold us that'he had placed an order for a par-ticular land of goods, not sold here,'With amerchant in a community not-twenty milesdistant from Cranford. • '

The merchant advertised that he madedeli»eiies in ibis county, bat when the localresident advised that he lived in Cranford, he

ably rised to hear dte query,?" Yes die merchant

ly p qy,"Where is' Cranford?" Yes. die merchantbsil been m RoseUe and in WestfiekL So.after some nplafnmg.it was pointed out diatCranford was located between these two CM

As strange as tins may this U a

i by die publicitys of die Cranford Gvk and Business

Association. Cranford needs to be put on die•aap. Our'town should be known tor milesmound. , It is not too early tight now to start

fm. campaign to publicize Cranford.

f>"J*

-. b case you haven't thought of>it lately,.you will find therSible a bookihat is worth-more than reading.

Intelligence is not ao, good when all outnrns it is profit *

AM near as we can judge the perfect gov-t would have no faxes. '

^Oj^ltrade is generally endorsed by

Looking ahead is, good advice if you planto leap. ^

, Few characters go bankrupt minding theirown business.

Modem economic jmzzle; big crops andless money for producers:

Don't forget:ToucandoaTdtof goodlfyou don t care who gets the credit

ajjj-n ^j^^jar^jJgiw^a>e»^^^>MLSj^>>a^gfc . jyj

collectors if you pay your debts

The government forces in SpaLamay bebeaten but they seem to ignore die fact

i*1 MeMBBawawaw^ * l ' *

A man. to have friends among diieves,must be willing to do as die diieves do.

The United States is a big country butthe nation will be no greater man its people.'

The average boas appreciates his helpwhen die lads andjassies take a vacation. >

There are some dungs., as easy to re-member as your own name, if you want'toremember. - /

. 7 »o us that freight rates, all overAe country^ should be based on service ren--deracL* - • " * ^ u"

A postage stampjwill take a letter a longway,.provided you know anybody who is Mlongrway, _ •

The merchant Who doesn't believe in ad-vertising rarely worries the merchant whobelieves in i t• ).„ " ,1, — ; — 1 'J -

Some women have so little to do that diewmnmg of a bndge.game is a victory of he-'KMC proportions. ' ,< '

Pishing is the father of many excuses. '

Uest; Raymond Rider, most originalfor boys; Wily Karkejr, smallest; Jen-nie Marker, lowliest; David BarthoVmew, as a Oreefc gladiator was a riot;Martha Barthoknew In a new soldier*!suit, was s, remarkably beautiful ple-

sM*was~n<id"forboys who did not enter the costumeparade. Ibat,- BUllt Prloe; second,

Wednesday afternoon the ShermanOrioles played a .double-header withthe Roosevelt Softball team on theRoosevelt school grounds. The Orioleswon M b games, II to S, and » to a.

Marker, second baa*; Clarence Ban-Bis, pitcher: aeotfs lAwrc&ee, estch-er; Sheldon Anderson, third base; Wai-

l d 'er; Sheldon Anderson, third base; Wai _ ^ _ _ « _ _-ter Merrill, right Held-'Harry Turner- avenne, and. Marlon Barbara, S Barn-srwtstot>; Howard Petersen, flnt base;ABr Price, centerfleU; Mlcker Bchulta,iettaeld • • •

•The peanut hunt Friday attemoonattracted about 110; children. EdithMott and Edward Markeji.tled for flrstPlaces second. Hanr AnnstropK: .andmm ; i i i r ^ • • •: •• - m\\ m\ * - * • • * - - "OaroUne Baldwin and^Martln SJonentied for third place. '

There-were so manv.attraeUons lastk t h t th U t l b %

PLACBB OM raOBATION

TbomM OaSney, M yean old, at 401hOl .Place, Bbabeth. arrested

rtternoon or Patrolman PeterMtner lor attempting to obtain moneyon false pretenses sad also attemptingto cash a fradweni duck was fined *X>by JbdgB Malcolm K. Wamoek la po-lles court yattidaf mornmg after thedefendant had entered* ptat at guUty.i b s J m s was ibeharior, and OeSMr was ptaced onprobation for one amr. Amst wasnadt la the Kagls Orooary Btore, 107aocth Onion avenne. on onmplitnt ofwabam Bchmal, proprietor of the store.

>IS»OOSSM|j>OOIOOI?IMI»*'

ATHLETE'S?FOOT-

CUTINmtQIGBtlt

BELLSDRUG

Barber Shop Quartets To Have : r

Inning in County?.ParkRadio crooners may be the

rage, but oid-ttmers Insistwere never so sweet as whenby a -barber shop quartet", and wheth-er this dbUncUve phase of Americanlife has become a forgotten art Is aquestion of the day. So, round up that"old gang", dear your throata, andpractice up on "sweet AdeUne""Down frJLtfce .the pan commission win sponsor Un-ion Oountys flnt official Barber ShopQuartet "Contest If enough slngmgquartets frould be located to make thisrevtral interesting.

The contest will be staged as a part

grams.' Entries for which there U nofee, and mqubies for information maybe sent to Gene -Whltford, assistantsupetintftidffnt of recreation, the Yftk-

loQ<XuntyFarkOommbalOn,Wartnan-00 Park. Bfssbeth. .

Rules, as tentatively adopted, a nfew. Entries win fee restricted to non-imifsMtiMial 1 " " ' . . .

JB%M,v9BXMml ^tmtaj In Union County, Bach quar-tet laust-have a name.-and mar wearcostumes if desired, but an Jour mem-bers must bt x d o f

be used to obUla pitch, tat the quar-tefabaD render an contest numbers

All contestants' must render, threesongs, two of them to be chosen from

Points win be swarded for techpique,Interpretstton,- articulation,

/ B s t o a o tuoksymtake a much* 4aV» Mb wtdeb could be

grata strioes have been Bade In to.pnmnf bBUdtag SWterlals- A personcan now hsw toots and watts that un-der ncimalcoaoWons waf last a life-car are fms resistant and resistant to

• and wear. 1 M B combtnaUon

, RaV SCOUT CWTI8B8ea Soout ahip, m, of Cndrord.x(hich Chi JCBdwatch

Joyed ds*b aUoper. m-

lnr-Bahway Wednesday momfe?, thescouts crulasd towhere the alup

Shtp

anchored. TheInvited aboard the a s.

of Vsniewood icd theordinary ^nd aHs 8e«18coDUeaUmHn stoops, nabfag and prutmIn navigation comprised the iMaldna tbjsen. Hate

the Mp Skipper Kosd-sen. Hate Btmmona, OfBcer of the

hut bOUes, etc.- Deck Oaffney; Coawaiu Oartlas acd*wUl"se'aMbwed'eaclltOundnrieu. Tngrnmin Markowitch acd

Of U>e crew nre

VmseandBoberttv -

pearance.tf

awardsp agtvenfer flrst, second, and third place:

' Wm KOVBS PAB8BBWinners ot passes to the Cranford

Theatre for oorrsctty* answering /ques>tlons In last week1 s lame of this paper

avenue; Carol Anderson, 1|W BIBcrestavenue; -seUna Haagensen, -7 Orangeavenue: Robert Uvtagston, 1M Orange

side avenue, Oa ot wew: l ,Ben* Drug Btore; 3, B. * H. UanarStore; 8, Cranford Trust Company,Real Sttate Dept.; 4, Union CountyTrust Company, and 8, Frees* Delica-

OTCUBT BTJN INTO CABWilliam Weber, M yean old. of U

USaue avenue.'sustained aHen shock and contusionthlghs-ai/ tMiwhile riding a bicycle north on Orangeavenue, he ran into the Msr'.of e. car,owned by JBobert F. tMngston. parkedalong the curb at KM Orange avenue.The Injured boy was treated by Dr.Rowland P. - - •home/by

Ue.Bdward

Classified adra. par big dividends.

materials dtastttaBr Hedncea malnte-y Tir and upkeep ooata wiilch. In theput. rave proved to be a heavy bur-den, i . •

x More ttvtag apace. Better exterior«sKn bas been supplemented br betterimctar pmndng.; vonaarly the sver-acs house bad as mneh as 90 per centn d e space. BMMtty in the atttc .andeasement, nowadays, these two por-Uon» of the house are used to advan-

' tage: lbs attte as an extm bed room orsrrtngroom aad the basement as anlextim lfarmg room", or rumpus room.The kitchen is adenUfieauy nuomed toh»t» steps; every nook and canny ofibestndoreiaafed. This an tends tofarthW cat the cost of bAjflding forns le ipace costs money US bulid and

4. Kitra ntfhrooms. 'Whereas «nebtlhroom was considered suffldent JustV i 4 4 f e A 4 e

roan.' m addMoa; bsUgdan of better ewsUty and wetter lookingYet tlaer are as a n e n sa » per centlea in price." In addtBan, non-corrod-tr« Juug-wesilug copper and beam

. pianhtmi is now the rote'rather than

5. The modem kltehen, inj

and taken to U sArchie Bird and

to its improved design, is s joy to thebeattof anybouaewlfe. IttoprobaWjtbe porUoa of the) bouse which naikept dcee* step with the. sapid teeh-rdol advances ot our world « todajaad Is no more- to be compared^ tht^oomy gaUer of- the UXrs than Is afairer wKh the atrasmttned auto. •

«. Ant<imattc heat and an- eondi-lining, trtthentomatte beat has com)reJease fron a, great deal of the drudg-

" • ' >

week that the ellnUnatloix fb*r%fr con-

ct the-bastr An finnortamTadjunct Uarrttmatir beat i s air condiUonlni

-•«Mdielesiis.biimldlae«-anC),ciiJcalat«the air m winter.. And although It k

SIMPLE Wfiks are in order for hot

sununer days and they are more

tempting when served on the porch. It

» ea|»y to have some* hot dishes if

percolator or the toaster, U|e waffle .iron,or an electric grill, then you can cook

'right at the table. We sell all these elec-tric appliances. They are1 modeniteljr

-priced and any one of them W y be pur-chased on the divided payment plan aFa~~ ~

- small increase over, the cash price.

.Ton$ artSTOVE _i_T6n 10.00NliT T— ft7SPEA •' ••-, Tea 8.75BOOpyifT Ton

V

1;, _

Page 3: CAMPERS HONOR ROBERT ROHRER - digifind-it.comKNOT HOLE'GANG •li-"\ ... Ctmt /ran* disc—ifcm o/ Me pros end cons m-tfUs wttroct at tali tssW, saoald fsror*— oar natters mttfc

»"A —fVT

,l<*. J *

M

to 401

BotodyttWpride to the «

the •Mrs* wtatch coat no

***-**-*.«and beantr which

sarlafartton andM greatly enhance

triis!*.' ctaUy «•» last few

the Federalother tadSjTlrt elaUaVanrJO • • » • • ~*- -•• - — -— —

grester strldss have ben tnade In to-^ _ ^ o k a . - * • * m ^A persontrtninc tafldhsj spaUerlels A personc»nncjw have roots sad waBs that rai-

l d U l wHf last •OH- normal eondttlons wflf last • Ufe-tiaie. are Pre resistant and resistant to

* fsotbpr efsjDil i fVa Uite €OBd)teaVttooof brtter wortmsnohlp and Improvedmaterials drastically rednces malnte-Eaoce i n l upkeep eosta which. In thepast, have proved to be a. heavy bur-den. ' . •

3. M m Irving space Better exterioroesKn has been sappkaented by betterfmcriar rJ.^ning Formerly the aver-age boose had asmneh as 90 per centrote space, mostty m the atUc andlavement. Ifowadajs, these two por-tion ot the bans* are need to advan-

* tagr: the attic as an esttm bed room ortewing room sad the basement as so•Wrtra ihrlw room", or mmpna room.The kitchen Is sdmUfleaBy planned toh t n steps; every nook and cranny ofthe ttrpctare Is used. This all tends to

: fartheV cat the bast of braiding for' waste space coats money to" build and

4. Extra bafhrooma. Whereas onebathroom was considered sufficient Just

day attemoon.'«t* iTacyi ttiejtnBer and

tary of the Onmmladnn. whotnt ataria vacation tniUatne TtMaday attarbelnt apprised of the haroo eaMed ttfthe parks Uat week-end, made an ta-spacUoo trip Thursday, mornta*. tadmbmitted • report'on Hood«hkh indteated that more than « « • , .ON would be needed to m t o n an eoon-ty paifk anas to their former oon»-ttonJMrst estimate, of damsae set thefl* at- HOO/no but this laehideditems each as large treta which are ao-tuaUy lrreplsceable at this time.'

The park nwnrnUstfinen TOted ansnl-moosly to seek eonntr funds and aid

• f" „ "rt "**

^s*iJggH&&&

In starting' reconstruction work Im-mediately.

Some of the work which the com-nuasUqers voted to undertake as soonas funds hffwtnft available Included re-building Scho Lake dam. building apermanent bridge In Bcho Lake Parkabove .the lower lake, building a per-manent dam i»t Brlsnt'i Pond, rein-forcing the dam at Seeleys Pond andLake Surprise In the Watchung Reser-vation.

not common In lower cost houses, thissame conditioning system can be madeto cool the house in summer.

7. Home insulation. This is one ofthe most Important forward steps evermade In the science of Jnuldlng.. Ten

r was in

a down-

are of better • •a lb* sad better looking.TH they a n as anon as » per centlea in price; In stwwBfiri. non-ocrroa-tc* Juug-wesrlug copper and brass

. tfanbmgils now the rule rather than

5. The. is a Joy to the

bent of any housewife. I t Is probablythe portion of the) boose which haskept dose* step with the sapid tech-nical advances of oar world W todayaad Is no more to be compared ,to thegpomy galley cat the lHOTs than is aStiver wUh the slwwinrtned auto.

a. *nt«wnatte beat and air eondl-'tionmg. lnmantomatte beat has comerejeasefrona

Oeoire BarerChicage, DL

M S —rnsUent —1>BeUry IntemaUenU

The Cltlsen and Chronicle eanputebased on an nswsatands.

PROPOSED ORDINANCEIN OBDINANCI renlsUni U« uw u d eon-

ttmelloa at Hwtic T U b ID UH Tomuhlp o»

Be It OnUlned bj tbt SMTd of BMlIb or tinTownihlp or Crtntord In Uw Count? or Union •

Section 1. No ivl'y null or ceupool dullhtmrm be cowlrueMI Mthla the IMIU ofUw Towpihlp oT.*Chlttrard nor ahtll mfift tedlipowd or In u i minner other thsn br « «nictlon with the Mnlurj (ever n*m of theTowmhlp, elcept In cute whire no etwer con.nerUon h aTtlUUe. In vhlca CUM the uw oT

tl k h l l U l t l l h l f lnerUon h aTtlUUe. In vhlca CKptlo lank lhall U Dernltlnl

I k l l I '

M the uw oTu hcr.ln.flet

Personal LOUMreatsrtng.Ufe l

Modwmiaation Loarieratnt, lesetr.ee

FHA—Mortgmfe Louu

t'VOHN W. Brattao, song writer for•I mere than half a century, BOW,at MTenty-ooe years, links the mod-ern school otaeair. ,wltb the trad)

Section I. No eepllc tank ihall bereartar beconatrueted or maintained within the llmlta ofthe Townahlp upon a lot or premleM barlnt a«mnertlon to tbe.aanlUrr aeirer i r e t n of theTowrnnlp M abultlns on a Itreel In which cm-nKtlon with aucb aeker mum U erallaUe.

flection 3. (a) In caiee where the m orttplle lanke la permltwd, the conatructUm ofaucb aeptle Unto ahall com|il]r wllli the fol-lowing gen'ral epeclllrallona;

Each eepllo tank Ihall W Mterrt wllli atluat one foot of earth aod aball hart a Work-ins' rapaclt]to the oplnlcapadtr la nectwnrr Ut»uietlone or other euOclent naaona. thr jordrr a lank of srealer capacitybe buUt-of M«l. btaellr Utr«4, .. . .fonee concreUi the Intake line fromilnkaaaill

itr of not leae than 410 nllniu Ifnlon of the Board or Health, neater

f loll eondl-

1 lie* in

jvsrs ago.tkls phase ot I

em without "it Its" great'the fact-thst not only dor* an elBolentJXS"type of Insulation keep a house up toIS degrees cooler on hottest summerdays but It saves as much as 30 percent on fuel bills. Thus, It pays forItself In a tew years. jototTii' irir~w~ii*.

8. 'Weather-tightwindowsanddoors. ft.ii ' —Ready made doors and windows withbuilt-in weather stripping are nowstandard equipment on all well-buntbouses. This makes heating easier, andhelps to eliminate drafts.

Uooite Increaae prnterala. ^ ^to the DCtlnnlns of

ialwaU snail basin not leea thanAlt laterals dull naveof cracked atoas or

.._ .ild In toe bottom ofU±cbT atieaiti tUut S laeb

tloni of the OayHlntllOT. Long M*I tors tbs turn of tke century he com,posed The mushloe of raradlse

jAUty". whteb still Nmores grand.Ipartnu tolreoolleclloni pt Uielrchildhood. And Uat rear, tali."Sweetheart, Let1. Grow Old To-'gether". swept ,,-Kngl.nd. thinlAmerica, u one of the hlU o( the|ye«r. His wits and daughter, shownabore. are bis not-sowvere critics., A MtlTd of Wilmington, Del.,Bralton was sscctsslTely •« choirsinger, theatrical amateur, - andflnslly a singer la Broadway produc-tions. Early In tin theatrical careerbe began writing songs. After be,created "The Sunshine of Paradise'Alley", he was Viable to keep pace•with the demands for hi* product(He wrote s U t b i f o

* S i t rflnilcat

-Tae Man from China". Celebritieswbo sang Bratton's sohp wtre.—Edna Hay. Hattle Williams, rraoolaWilson. Adele Ritchie. Marie Cahlll.Joe Coyne, Charles Blgelow, BUHaMsjbe*; Frank Daniels.__rrom song writing he expandedInto theatrical production, and con-ducted loan of more Mum 100shows throughout the countrjr. untilthe motion picture crowded the llv.Ing actors out of the theatres.

A boon companion ot Victor Her-bert, he was one of the first to beassociated with Herbert In 1*14 In

he wasated wrganisa

associate hthe organisation ot the AmericanSociety of Composers, Authors andPublishers, through which creatorsot song obtain copyright prelec-tion by Joint action unattainable byIndividual effort. The soclcly nownumbers more thsn 1,000. It Hitsmore than 504 ot Bratton's copy*righted songs. .

Bratton's Interest In A.B.C.AP.shares his loyalty to the Lambs,famous New York theatrical club ofwhich he Jssr life member. Almost

UioKtaUsiiooK-ta.rvcom-

adept at both?

Who bows?1. Have England and* the United

States a trade treaty?a. How many Americans have lr£

comes of more than a million dorians yeart v / .

3. Is Helen Wills Moody engaged tobe married? "

4. How much payroll tax money hasbeen collected by the BtsUes and de-posited wtth the Treasury?

5. What percentage of farm andfactory products are purchaesd by chainstores?

8. Are price maintenance agreements prohibited by the anti-trustlaws?

7 Where Is Ctlpptrton Island?B. Who is the best pitcher In the

major leagues? * i9. Is the President allowed money

for travel?10.. Did the Chicago Cubs win

any pennants under Manager CharlieOrlnun?

(See -The Answers, on page t)

nr mw YOUaustavefUlcht, f I yean eld. Of ft

eprucostijeet, reoel red injuries to his^ u i U e and lenimnd Saturday aft-

•ernoon when he mi I struck by a stone

.OlasslOed advs. pay big dividends.

which fep from

lance surgeon, tinpermitted to eontii ue on hla way-

passing truck a t .West and. Cedar str ets. New York Oty.Mr. Lelcht was on Us way to the ferry.going home, when | the accident tookplace. After treat nent by an ambu-

lnjured man was-

Foods

tishtt

jK^TOi1«^StbJ«SlrLIS $tkiTMUnlnliie Slled"with In* eane materiala Ue trench u d rorered la the ean. manner.

BKtlonaT(b) When aepUe tank le In placeandatl lawau are eonWructed. the entire work•hell be len open until Inapectlon b nado b7he DlumUns Inapectoe, or Mi •uthorlasl asenLvnea It Iii roadrffflr InipKtlon, the Board of

M b "JuT&Eratia aient aball be noU--four houre In adranco or dealred

U t h e work U found derectlre. orith the abote epecWca

Dated: July IS, 1111.

Mb J ued twenty-four houre In

U h kctlon. Uthe work U£ coVroraanco with the abote epecWca

b h d irlUiln one week tgreat deal of the dmdg

All iuipurlamT adjunctd the pastarrlwnstlr beat i s ah; condttlonlng

the air in winter. And although it is

IxleUns ceaapohla and aeptlcl

3. (») N"> "I*1 8 U n k lhEi1 b'rtm

conatricted within 5 reet ol «nr P«P-™r f«"S. or wllbln in ' " > • » • _ • ' " "

Rire«i nubile or pri**U, or wumn ID* i r or window or any bouse u»d

At the Cranford Theatre, Ssndey

NOTICE .OF (ETTLEaiEMTNotice la hereby «1«o. Ttot the >atj»lf!;tdlate account of the aubacrlber. aa TruiteeIS.T,™« . m u d under article "rourlh" for

S>Sm. under Jh.V B

i S art or OTW TOUT.V , Tni

Italed Julr Mlh. 1IU,

EGGSTOVENUT

T6ri 10.00T— ft7S

P E A L - L i - i - T o h . &7SBOCKWH*T Tan'; TJBO

on top of which„ .„„ „ . . of at leul S inebMMrthTM.tt ie « d •L.aafll.lataral there

> DBAW8 lAOVKenneth Walter, of JU Nortli ave-

nue, east, was conjmlttWI Sunday to thecounty Jail for thirty days after plead,Ing guilty before Judge Malcolm R.Wamock to a charge of dtoordetly con-duct He was arrested by^PatrolmanBernard Clark. ' • - . .""••• ]" \ i ' -

TOWNBHTJ- OF C t U I F O UN O T l O g •••

TO' Donunlco franil. . . . .Tale notln that ». A. Shabeen h u offend

Is purehaae from the Itanablp of Otanfordl U U l u l ! earUSeate on lot No. 4i» In MockNo. MO on the Cranfnnl Tax Map, and ofwhich lot jou appear.to be Uw owner. .

And Uk» funhtr notice that ualeaa auae la•hown to the conuarr. • - "" ' "tee will nuike latemertlns to lie htljToi

Townihlp clerk.

Standard Lumber & Supjriy Co,^ LUMBER—MP J-WQRK—MASON MATERIAL

^" BUILDERS' HARDWARE—PAINTS .~~ . . - wofJL van' or ^ _

MK! Screen Boon, Scwen Wire u d Molding,MotWroof Cedar C W lining,

oofing .ad lasulalkm M^teraJa, Cedar u dChertnut P e ^ Arbor, and TreHUe.

' OsUKTOBD, ji. AO01>

- TB1OB AND CHESTNUT

Save moneyon your summei'

shirt biU -Morey l»Bae flnlahegshirts to stajr dean•oncer . . . look nicer. . . fit better.

Collars are I r o n e dround to fit [the neck.No folds In ceUan tosou or wear. Scientificstarching and ht/atat

'make shirts stay freshlonger. Send .themwith the laundry.

, Datt/ Mrele* •> tMtsa CewstrM W . l!tsey as, tassswl*,

THE EVENT O^TOE 3

ArrhM'sMID-SII

OF

1

FINE MAPLE l^RKfrURE'Jt\

Offering you our entire REGULAR STOCK of^ENUINE ' '

maple furniture with that'rich, mellow, htyid- r u f ' '

- *- nnuh. • • • ' '

-/ Styfc« that are emihenfly different.

/ Workmanship that pleases the moat critical.'.. . .at"

/SAVINGS of ^o_ to 30%Bring your home up to the minute in' beauty and

I M t

Homeinaao

ICECREAMiH. Usdea Kyi as

PfcooeCR-

256/E. BROAD ST..

'([Next to Rialto Thea.)

WESTnELD.,N. J.Tel. WE. ^

"MAPLE SPECIALISTS"

P.S.— w'~rA. deposit will hold furniture for future delivery. .

Open every evening (e«ept_Wedne«day) until 9:30 during tale../

-'-' ."'/ '", ; ^'U'-^SA&Jh/^

Page 4: CAMPERS HONOR ROBERT ROHRER - digifind-it.comKNOT HOLE'GANG •li-"\ ... Ctmt /ran* disc—ifcm o/ Me pros end cons m-tfUs wttroct at tali tssW, saoald fsror*— oar natters mttfc

/ ' J

r- '

J

».*&£-> '•.\iY "•';. _ * \

THE CRANFORD"•*&<%

Social Items, > Personals,• * ' . ' •

SOCIAL.ITEMS

*' Wlttam ikTulilo' of 15 WoodsUesveVnne, has left for • trtp to Wot Vlr-

' Mr. and Mrs. Charles If. Smellier ofU Sim 'street are spending two weeks

/to MkkUeburg. N. Y.

aar.andltrs.JkckHawesanddaiigti-ter of Adams. avenue spent Saturdayat Asbury Park.'

Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Balmer and conof Adams avenue spent. Saturday atAsbury Park.

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Ouker, foimer-ly of But-Orange, are now residing atllOBererin Court.

Mr. and Mrs. TT'J" McUughllh andfamily of south Union avenuespending two weeks' at Seaside.

Mrs. James A, Beott of Manor ave-nue If eenaned_ta> har_home by illness.

' Mrs. I. Doty "of Adams avehu« re-turned Saturday from Asbury Parkwhere she spent a week.

Mr. and' Mrs. "Howard M. Park ofOentnl avenue win return Saturdayfrom a vacation In Maine.

MtarHelen MUkeSyof Park drive has, returned from a two-weeks' vacation at

Breton Woods. „

Mrs. Frederick''Trualow has left forhome after an extensive visit at Hamp-ton Hall.

Miss Sarah Jane Brooks or Orangeavenue Is spending a few days In LongIsland. , _„

Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Miller of Casinoavenue have returned from a week-endat Sea dirt

Mr. and Mrs. Eugene D, Towler ofMadison avenue have returned from avisit. In New, Hampshire.

V. Kennady Heston or Prospect streeth u returned from a vacatlon'at JewellIsland, Canada.

Mr. and Mrs. William M. Bperry 2nd,of north Union avenue, have' returnedfrom a week'* stay at Chaumont, N. Y.

Mr. and Mrs. LeeWrsonnrf Chicago,formerly of Granford, are visiting hismojher" for the month of August.

last, of CUmoonth place a n vaca-tioning at l i s a flumps*. If. H. -

Mr. and Mrs, Richard H. Uekey.and chUdren of Craig place gie enjoy-ing a vacation at Ocean City.

Mr. and Mr» Hugh~R. Csrr and family-ef-Bemlng avenue'haw tctornedfrom a vacation at MUfont. Man.

Mrs. Hugh F. BottTof North avenue,east, returned Monday from a monthvacation spent In Peak Island, lie.

Miss Ibtherlne~lf McOanon. childhygiene nurse. Is at WUdcrest for twoweeks.

Miss Sophie Kamachoff, stenograph*er In the Board of Health office, Istwo weeks' vacation. ,

Daniel J, KresTo7"l» Franklin aare-nue .has returned from Camp Wawayanda where be spent the month of July.

Miss Rita. McOormaclD of MansionTerrace Is vacationing this week atSeaside Park.. >

Mr, and Mrs. John Mudrock andfamily of Dunham avenue will removeshortly to Springfield avenue,

Mr. and Mrs. "Russell Watson andfamily of Iteming avenue will leaveFriday for a. vacation at Cape May.

Mr. and- Mrs. M. Stuart DufBeld andfamily of Hernlng avenue will leaveFriday for a two weeks' vacationLake WUloughby, Vt.

/ —o-»* IMlsi Audrey Donlngton of Raleigh

avenge has returned from a week's, with Miss Emily Hill at Seaside

left last week for Peaked lafend, Me,wham she wB spend' several weeks.

Mr. and lfnVJ. Howard/Houston andfamOy of Unden place have returnedfrom a months stay in Connecticut.

" MR, and Mr* dTuward NlchoU andfamily of Hajapton street haw left fora, visKwith his mother In Greenwich,

KMhcrlne Brooks of Orange\ avenue is enjoying two weeks at the

OW Scout camp at Bear Mountain,

Mr. and Mrs. W. E. BUI and daugh-ters. Betty and Emily, of Prospectstreet, have returned from a month'sstay at Seaside Park.

Mr. and Mrs. Frank H. Oordes andfamily of Casino avenue returned Sat-urday from » month's vacation at Po-cono Pines, Lutbertand,1 Pa;

Mrs. A. C. Mlskelly and daughter,Miss Harjorle Mlskelly, of Park drive,h t fhave returned from Breton Woods

- H. T. \

. Mr., and Mrs. George Carson Moonof SfeiKTark City will arrive Friday tospend the, month of August at Hamp-

turned Saturday from1* week's, vaoa-UM spent at the Duds Ranch, marMorristown, and at Beach Haven,

Mr. and Mrs. iT^bordner, 10 Tulipstret, have bten wending their vaca-tion at Oakledge Manor on the shoreof lake champlala, Burlington, Vt

wailsm,Clark"oPTaicago, formerlrof RoseBe, WH a guett Sunday of Mr.and Mri, A. B. OaldweU and family ofSOI Orange avenue.

Mr. 'and' Mrs. AtasD. MaetWlum anddaughter,' June, of. Orange — — -have left/for Mamchusetta wb

W^nT^acobbiuidfamDy of Cii% place have returnedfrom a vacation at Oreenwood lake,H-Y. \

, Dr. and BiaT. AJSert LewU' and fam-ily of Rettord avenue have returned;from a month* vacation lri'New Hamp-Aire ^

wiU Join then- son, Alex, Jr.

Mr. and Mrs. Wllllamg andhchUdren ot Orange avenue have re-

eta

l l r , and Ma. WOliam P. Banal andeon, John, of Cental avenue left Mon-day for a two weeks' stay at IndianMeek, Comv ^ \

Mis. Kenneth Jones and daughter,Cady, have left Martha's Vineyard to

i a few weeka at Hanrkhport;

, Jean Carbetry baa returned toher borne to Brooklyn after spending• week with Mhs Betty, Lyons of south

;. Mr. and Mrs."3rb. Bottoipb andfamOy of Cranford avenue have re-tamed from a month* vacation hiipowo and Missouri. '

•JUe-Park..

' Mr. and Mts. Cherter Nlmen^of 111Beverln Court have returned from; atwo .weeks' vacation spent'at White-Held,W. H.

Mrs. Stltti'Johnson and daughter,Uargaret, of l la Bevertn Oourt, haveMtomed from Whltefleld, N. B« wherethey spent two weeks/

f Mrs. O. DlTunioand daughters, Lucy,Rose, Irene and Connie, of IS Wood-aide avenue, are vacationing at Seaside

' Mrs, L. V. PohTof ^"south Sixthataeet, accompanied by her mother, Mrs.H. w." Stover, of Plalnfleld, spent Sun-Uajr In Albany; N. Y. They.made thetrlpbyairplane. , ' •' -

spent at Point Pleasant.

Mr. and Mrs. john*W. Skerratt andchildren', Ann and Jack, of Manor ave-nue have returned from a three weeks'vacation at Breton Woods.

. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph' Schacht andfamily of » 1 North avenue, east, havereturned from a two weeks' vacation hiPalmyra, IV. Y*

Mr. and Mrs. WUuam P, Xnrlgbt andStratford Terrace

a Vacation spent atBeach, Fla. They made the trip

Mr. ~and M r s . ^ ~ k . Lonland andfamily o* MO Sprtngfleld avenue re-turned Monday from spending July tXOcean Orov«,\Tbej> are spendinv thismonth in the itaconoa>\

Mr. and Mis. Cnarick V. Bosencrantaof Walnut x • •

Mr. and Mo. yof « Fnser Pls*» ban returned fromLakt Ohantamnsf K. Y, where thsyspent the month of- My,

. . . S.Meslt,Mrs. Statte-aacVson. Koyd, at sVOnstreet, a n spsndtnc thk waak a* takeOeorgs, H . Y .

f*u Lonki Bafsn of U Madison • • • •nue and Mrs. E. T. Towtar of Cranfordavenue an spendina two weeks at LakeChautauqua, H. Y.

Mrs, EdwlnJohnSon and family ofMania place have returned from a visitIn Scranton, Pa, when she was taileddue to the illness of her father. '

Mrs. W. WsJIaelMMfbeMt and chll-dran; Joan and BUly, ft Bemtaf SjVe*noe are at Beach Bavovf or the monthof August. -

Mr. and Mrs. W~&7van Stratmn andamu> of Hernlnr avenue haw re-

turned from a vacation at Lake Wine-pesauU.

Mr, 'tad Mfi, Asis msmsi of n

on July IT.

Btsnaitf M«!BJpM> to the name of •an Mar M M Mr. and Mts. U ibomltoNllIr.

Butland of « Btarthorne street.

A daughter,\plara Marie, was bornon July 10 la Ut. and Mrs, John Pug-llsl of « BVaabelb avenue.

The marriage at Mas Vivian ShawfcndaD. daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Waldo Shaw Kendall, of leg Mutbor-foniKtiyof

Omnfard, and Dr. Ralph, UsUVBtaw-IdmofBbsrlckaWro^toofcplaeeMon-day in tha_Lesaa U n i t y Chapel of

She ceremeoy was performed at highnoon by the Btv. Doctor Phtnips K.Osrood. Only oftbetmmedl-

Mr. and: LPtenk Dougherty, Jr..

Robert J.'TrumbauerMr. and Mrs.and family <* Hernlng avenue a nspending the month of August in thePOCOOOfr

Mr. and Mrs.~Frank Caruso andsons, Bobby and Donald, of 33 Holly-wood avenue left Monday for PeakCsIsland. Me., where they will-spend twoweeks.

-Mr. and. Mrs. Clinton Bennett of Iurndde. avenue and Mrs. Daniel Hey-

burn, of 6 Burnside avenue spent theweek motoring through the Mew Eng-land states. .

Miss Doris Peterson of Lincoln ave-me left. Sunday for-a week's vacation

Breton Woods where she will-be theguest of Mr. and Mrs. K. C. Downe ofBeech street at their summer home.

James A. Coffee of Lawrenceville wasle gueet of his daughter-ln-Jaw, Mrs.

Walter Coffee and family; of southSixth street, last week. They spentThursday at the Cranford Boys' Camp

Silver Lake visiting Mr. Coffee, whodirector at the camp this

Mlss.BesnorlBToaldweJl of W.Or-

of n WoomlisKhle avenue, announoeUw birth of • m , Frank Irvtog Dough-erty, 3rd. otf *oly U, '

A son; Chartes Cunntagharo,' was'born on Jur/tt to Mr. and Mrs. ClaudeCarter Jamsi of t south avenue, west.

Annwinoimeut has been made by Mr.and MM. JamesiS. Waddlll of SO Man-or avenut of ttie birth of a daughter,Oayle Vta|taia,-oii July .10. - •

A dtoanter, Oaudla Irene, was bomon Jims m to, Mr. and Mrs. James F.Darby of 1* Caborne Place.

Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Lehnon of. 436

at* famOy went presentDr. Hawkma is a graduate of LeUnd

Stanford rAHvenftft Okas of i n , andof the Banrard Medical School, U33.Be la at present assistant resident phy-ssdsnmtheHarvartMeorologleairjnttat theBoston O U T " T * « ' -

. * - — — ' /OSTKANDKft-ttANNAFOKt)

Miss Dorothy", Bmnnaford, diogh-ter of Mm? Bertha M. and the lateLeon M. Bannatord, » 0 Lelsnd •ve-nue, Plalnfletd, and Arthur .O. Ostran-der, formerlr of Cranford, son of O.Arthur Ostrander, Newark, were mar-rted Batordar at a p. m. in the Nether^wood Reforned1 Church, .Plamfleld.

flhe Rev. Leonard A. atbley,'formerpastor of the church, now of the Cen-tral Reformed Church, Jersey City, offi-ciated at the double-ring ceremony.

, M R H.A. Lo«.lUptyabb hi HUM tojvw ywm.4

If yoy m~i a AAofto^e Loea, F. H. A. offe« rttr**™F.rLA.saiksM M apprsbtf of yow property,and

will gnat a'loea up to Mjfcof tlss^ a^nised valuab'on.'

perRspsymeM avetsoet, t y v t Aoath per$1000, over a period of *we*ty jean, aitd coven intereit(if,), smorUuBon, taxes and. fire insurance.

Orchard street announce the birth of a j Mrs. Clawson_LjBn -was matron-of-daughter, Virginia, Bt MuhlenbergBos- l l " ~ - i U < t " ~ * * — " «»•—«--•pttal, Plalnfleld, An July 34.

Mr. and Mnv Charles R. Turner ofIT south Sixth street announce thebirth of a daughter, Carol'Demarest,last I Friday In Muhlenberg Hospital,Plalnfleld. ' ~

ahoweVFrtSy-Ann Dreyer of MO Springfield avenue,whose marriage wU take place-nextmonth. Ousats were Misses Dorothyand Mildred Dreyer, Louise.MerMe,Julia Perkins, Mary Ounie, Beam*Noege, Rosalyn SpechtrRlta and RuthRay, Jane Btanger, Kathryn and Fran-

Herrmann, and With Oaldwell, anCranford; Connie Ohace of Leonta,

Una Denny ..and Muriel Bickers -ofWestneld. Dorothy Brown of Platnneld,Louise Swackharoer ot Hartford, BsaHutchlnson of Sussex and Ruth Lang

CLARENCE SCHMTTZ ,'GETS 6&PQUND TUNA

ue landed a tS-pound tuna yeeter-daji while flshlrig with a party abouttwenty-five miles off Barnegat City,

CHCTtCB OF CHKI8T. 8CIKNTIBT"SPntrr* is the LesKm-Sennon

subject for Sunday, August T, in anChristian Bdence Churches and Sod-Ues throughout the world.

The Golden Text 1»: "The fruit of theSpirit Is In an softness and rsjhteous-nees and truth."' (Epheslan* S:»).

Among the Lesson-Sermon citationsla the following. from the Bibb;"WHlther1 shell I go from toy spkttTor whitheo JhaD I flee from <n« pro-eneer CFsakM 1S«:T>

IsAU-ln-aU,. VlrthataodAna alt apace, and

Ut is inipapXdt t*B«ceiw bTsucfionvnipneenee and indtrkluaUtr except asinnntteapirltorMmdr (p. Ml).

HOLDS HOOK AND CASTSROD, REEL INTO WATERFire'Chief Howard* Schlndler became

so excited at theTrapldtt3r with whichhe was puDlng tauB»h last-night InRaritan Bay'that be held on to thehook and threw his brand new rod andreel Into the water. The chief wasfishing with PoUoe Chief Carl A. Mas-sa. Assistant' Engineer P. J. OraH, Po-i > ^ l l X d W l f rBergt Edward Metaner, District ClerkH. R. McCuUough, Township TreasurerB. R. "Wlnckler, Overseer of the Poor

M M John tt . :tertatoed Mr. and

(of Virginia, atv Mn.Rol-\Mrs. L .B .

-anddaughters, Winifred and Carol. ofxOen-tral avenue are spending the summer atLake Chautauqua, N. T. Winifred andCare* are-membem ot the Girls' Club1

at the Lake.

UUDBNT DIBSJohn J.LerlgloiwJI yean old. of 309

Deteware avenue, Union;.fotmrely ofNorth avenue, Cranford, died yester-day morning in EUsabeth OenanlBoa-pitai of oswbtal" tsfitiiiiwubaga andpneumonia, Be was data agemffor theBordenMllk Oompanjiln J»e»» YorkCity. Be k. survived by his wUe, Mrs.Fjorence sheehan Loititon, and a, son*Jeremiah.

forty-seven weakfuh and a large num-ber of crokers.

„ tuna was the largest which Mr. | w * U a r 6hand and Milton Doty, fore-IScbmlta. an ardent fisherman, has ••"» «*» township's street depart-landed in several seasons. The local I n e n t- T** V^t caught a total ofman and another friend field the honor tortot taktng the first two tanas of theseason^ whfch they caught ut June.Others to the party yesterday were OusRaehwal of Centennial avenue, and JoeCampbell and Frank NUresn^otWesUfleld. The-npartet causiTa total offour tunas.

Mts. Norman H. Mather of Bloom-Ingdale avenue gave a dessert bridgeand stork shower for Mrs. Chariek V.Rosencnnta at the home, of Mrs. Wil-liam M. Blcks on Hampton road onWednesday. Ouests present were: Mrs,Ehner B Dey, Mrs; Richard L. Tonum-son, Mrs. Alvan B. O^Denman, "MissEua B. Dohraan, Mia, EH J. Loranger,Jr, Mnr'Lotus deBrigard. Mrs. 3.Dwtght Bridge, Mni. Hsrry Dunn, Mrs.

honor *Spid 'Mrs. .Barry B. Bannaford;slster-m-law of the bride, were the at-tendants.

The bride was given In marriage- byher' brother, Harry s . Hannaford, andwore a princess gown of white lace oversatin, a.tulle veil of finger tip length,and carried a brldaT bouquet of whitesnapdragons, asters, gladioli1 and baby'sbreath;

Mra, Lynn wore peach lace over latinand Mrs. Hannaford wore aqua laceover satin and carried an arm bouquetof m|xed flowers* f

Csnrton Lynn was best man/'tkiherswen Nathan W. James and HaroldDuxbury. , Organ selecUons and thewedding marches were played br JohnZeflner, a friend of Mr. Ostrander andMr. Harinaford.

Mr. Ostrander, a former musicianwith Harry Resera radio orchestrv is

FoQowlng the ceremony a receptionwas held a* Bran's Blue B u s n u t a -tion; Owen 8raokr.Townshlp..Beddea-Plamfkld-friends and rela-

tives, guests wen present from Cran-,

ford, - Newark;N. Y.; i»Mi~

New York; * Biuoklyn,Lancaster, Pa, and

Calif.

THTff MU -OCTLET.Bliss Ann OuUey, daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. John Oualer.ot SM west Ooalstreet..Keoquehontag-, and Bhrard LeeZlckler of 73S Orange avenue, wenmarried at noon Sunday, July 34, in St.Mary* Greek Catholic Church, Nes-quehonlng. The Rev. Nicholas stula-kavkh. the pastor, offldated.

Tie bride wore a, 'mousselfne de «ofct

v B S orwet «any of these. loans, and will be glad to cooperate with yoo. Your bestplMb to decidw wart row want to^^coaw fai and Wtus help you figure out the most advantageous way to do it

Do not allow your property to run dowA and decrease invalue by neglecting needed rtpttn and uaprovementa.Tneywill cost you more in the end. - .

0 ran ford Trust Company- MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM -

M o b * FMsnl D*p«it lawmc. Ce~fs»taiMl Me

is aha-.hfllenr

York m*tVt*5SS£It b lbuni :hi marinr Jsads

msnyparbjij

aredeswdtake tha sbape ot st pitcher, wt•cconata. tor the name "pileplant,".' ' ' ,

They •ometfanea have a win|keel on one aide and.are from'to two feet long. These leavescovered-with honey-glands, w|attract Hies; moths, ants and dInsects; The leaves are also covewith fine .hairs, pointing downwiwhich very effectually preventescape of any hapless intruder'ventures over the'rim. <- The inisoon falls down into the bottomthe leaf and is gradually abaorin the digestive fhdd which Is wmulated there.

Some species are suffldeilarge and powerful enough t o Itiny birds which have been untunate enough to have been luredto their fatal depths. .

honor was .Sue HoUko and her at-tendant was Peler Ousley.

Best man was Charles Zlckler, broth-

The uahens were 8teve,Sbolch, RudyBartel and Steve Beyda:1 '

FoUowing the wedding- ceremony areception was held at the home of thebride's parenta.

After sv wedding trip through Penn-sylvania the couple wiB reside in Cran-ford;

j j y « W l B nager of st hardware store ia WastttM.

geblossoms, and carried a bouquet ofwhite, tec. roses. The maid ot honorwas Miss Kay Outley, sister of thebride, who wore a white net gown.'

The bridesmaids, attired in\ yellowgowns, were Mary Ouster, -Kay Kenltnand Mary Makovec The matron of

mm

TRUSSESABDOMINAL BELTS

OV AU.SINMSt/sTTWXalSEAGER'S DRUG STORE

\ N. ONION ATK, C3UNVOBD-

Use Moore Paintrare

^

SWELL!

is the word for FOX RAISED brokersfrying chickens. Tender and sweet beyondyour.fondest dreams. Call CRanford 6-1566,

or junSp in the car and go out there" Centennial Ave. at Raritan Rd., iri Cranford.Give yourself a TREAT!

y

- F . Southard, Mrs.i. W. Robinson of 1of PlamfWd. lbs . F.

J. Bens of Chatham and Mm HaroldL. Monier of Westneld.

GOLF-SOc"Jti- S41taf***"t^t*-*?>«"4'« «•'

0 » HDGE COlf COURSE1 w.lS5Rr7.»js4

PASnOfOUS WOMB4

Mrs. Clans D. Kttbn, 8» yean old,wife ot Adam Knbn ot M» Retford-avenue, died Saturday mening at 1home following a llngermg tDness.

Bom In New Brunswick, Mrs. Kubrihad been a resident of Grantord forthirty-five years. She was a communi-cant of St, Mlchsers Church.

Besides her husband, she Is survivedby si daughter; Mta. Charles P. Barry,of New York City, and a son. JackKnbn ot Cranford.

, , ATsiuBKMhsee Virginia lake,'Alice caldwell,

Rcjalyn Bpecht, Mary Currle, EdithOaldweO. Ann Dreyer, Eeanor CaJd-well and Mildred Dreyer. all of Cnm-tord, and Connie; ohace of Umb,•pent last weekend s^ the Shark RiverHms Hotel, Avon. I

t fM THE

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tr-Bvutam POST

M. SCHNEIDERitt.JHMIal ATK, W.

oaunrsav, KTJ.--

Who Does Your PrintiM?

Notion Dept, Street Jloor.

1M raoaa Ava, R.

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THE CRANFORD

3 ALDEN STREET, ^•

, • - \

; >_.": f.' \

Tar Bridge) in ScotlandOnca Longest in Wq

The first Tay bridge, over thetuary of the Toy rivet near DiiniScotland, was opened to trafficSeptember 23, 1877. With a letof two miles, it was at that tthe-.longest railroad bridge inworld. The foundation stonelaid In July, 1871. The bridge.,slated of SS spans, varying fronto_MS feet in length. The wiiones, near the'center of the brlchad a height of 88 feet'clear^ethigh water. ». * **

The Mgin—r was Sir ThoiBouch, who was afterward blaifor'the inherent defects whichduced the disaster, relates • wiin the Detroit News.' In a high ion the night of December 18, 1the central spans were blown Awhile a train carrying about nfapassengers was" crossing. Tl

was very mochlesa than was :ftssary fnr.a-bridge in-that sarpilocation. A novel.by^A. J. Crc"Hatter's Castle," malcts use dincident ot the disaster, i

A wtssaea* '•l.ssljfs*si a a a a * - —- - » - Juvw umg9 w u *nvGi*Kitween 1883 and 1SB8, about twiyards west at the site of its prcessor. It has 13 pairs of piersihe double line of rails is 93

-above high water.—;

Bristol Betels NaaereasAlmost every city and town of

portance from Paris to Belgihas its Hotel Bristol. Go to gesnavia and you find one at OafNorway; go to Italy and theythe peninsula at Milan; GeRoma knd Rapnlln. Th«r«'« nn

. one in Gibraltar; Awhas them in Vienna and Salzb.Holland at Arnhem; BelgiumBrussels, and Switzerland at BeGeneva and Lugano. They caifound in Rumania and Hung.Germany boasts well known' H(Bristol in Berlin and in Dreawhile Prance has over two d<from Rheima to Monte Carlo,riously, there does not appear ta Bristol hotel at Bristol in EngL

First Newspaper ExtrasAlfred M, Lee, author of the t

Newspaper in America, statesextras are older in Oils country'

He mentioned,a Sui, ^ , , ,s South Carolina Ga»

d ChariWon weekly, dited420, 1783. \ After the sppearanod i U " fe in 1783, ei

' to set iship I

•hot" dev(murder t

ctiirinfta.Uewi

• HongollanlMongolian pheasants are typ

by the broadness of the ciaround their throats and a b".Ue'Ugwn iheir breast Theystrong, heavy birds, equal in-to the English ringneck andhealthier stock than the avcragibred hatchery bird. The Chibirds also are pure bred 'BINhealthy stock. The species are •similar, except that the Chiibird/shows a great deal of yeand the Mongolians are of the

newsabroad,;ments in aTha latterlate

*Fossnm b a Prowler iAlthough the damage that" a '

sum can inflict on bird life thndestruction of eggs and young it

: to be compared to that by a ror .weasel, this slow moving, tprowling marsupial destroys nnests of ground birds. There,much that the 'possum wOLpasin the way of food.j Bird eggssects, .berries, roots, acorns,

' and corn aa the stalk . . v altanything attracts tha 'pussiim i

+> Jft*..**ar|>ijgowling^ovet a Hani

Page 5: CAMPERS HONOR ROBERT ROHRER - digifind-it.comKNOT HOLE'GANG •li-"\ ... Ctmt /ran* disc—ifcm o/ Me pros end cons m-tfUs wttroct at tali tssW, saoald fsror*— oar natters mttfc

"' ''r't' ' >' ," ,l «*<% '" i * -•••<»----•

- . "1 -> •

ft

t-f /*r

T o *It b

manyparto.inmanjraredeead at to bottom and usuallytaka the. abape of fc pitcher, whichaccounts, for. the -name "pitcher

• p l a n t , " . ' ' ' • , • • . " .

They sometimes b a n * wing orkeel on one aide and.are from'ens'to two fcrt long. These leaves ar»covered with • booty- glands, whichattract flie*,' moths,- ants and otherinsects^ The leaves are alsocoveredwith flat .hairs, pointing downward,which very effectually prevent theescape of any-hapless intruder whoventures over the'rim,-The insectsoon falls'down Into the bottom ofthe leaf and is gradually absorbedin the digestive fluid which Is accu-mulated there.

Some species are •' sufficientlylarge and powerful enough t o holdtiny birds which have been unfor-tunate enough to have been lured In-to their fatal depths.

the

tshipe aockmt

Tar Bridge) in ScotlandOnce Longest in World

The first Tay bridge, over the es-tuary of the Tay river near Dundee,Scotland, was opened to traffic onSeptember 23, 1877. With a lengthof two milts, it was at that timethe .longest railroad bridge'in theworld. The foundation stone, waslaid in July, 1871. The bridge .con-sisted of 85 spans, varying from 67to_MS feet in length. The widestones, near the center of the bridge,had a height of 88 feet'cle«r««bovehigh water. ». * **

The —gin—r was Sir ThomasBoucb, who was afterward blamedfor'the Inherent defects which pro-duced the disaster, relates a writerin the Detroit News.' In a high galeon the night of December 18, 1879,the central spans were blown downwhile a tram carrying about ninetypaiaengers was" crossing. There

rwttd.was very mncrrless than was nec-«s«ary fora-bridge fa-that exposedlocation. A noMiby^A, J. Cronln,"Hatter's Castle," makes use of theincident of the disaster. »

A wUhea* 'ti .ei ljf«ia a a a a * - —- - » - J fc.—uvw omico w u *nvGiva »••tween 1883 and 1888, about twentyyards west at the site of its prede-cessor. It has 73 pairs of piers andihe double line of rails is 81 feet

-above high water.—;

Bristol Betels NanenesAlmost every city end town of im-

portance from Paris to Belgradehas its Hotel Bristol. Go to Scandi-navia and you find one at Oslo inNorway; go to Italy and they dotthe peninsula at Milan; GenoarRomaknd Rapalln- Thum'ii nna-lnLisbon; one in Gibraltar; Austriahas them"In Vienna and Salzburg;Hilland at Arnhem; Belgium atBrussels, and Switzerland at Berne,Geneva and Lugano. They can befound, in Rumania and Hungary;*Germany boasts well known' HotelsBristol in Berlin and in Dresden;while Prance has over two dozenfrom Rhetans to Monte Carlo. Cu-riously, there does not appear to bea Bristol hotel at Bristol In England.

it do you charge for a por-traits L- '

• "Five Jouis, (about *»), gtneraV"Give theM to him," said Bona-

parte to an officer with him. "Heloses by that, I would have givennun 35 on my-return from Egypt'^

"I would prefer five louls todaythan the prospect of 25, for, if yourexpedition falls, I would lose all andif-you succeed-as-I hope, then -Inthe Joy of victory you will neverthink of me."

Bonaparte smiled and carriedaway the portrait. On bis returnfrom Egypt, he sought out the art-ist.

"I congratulate you on your por-trait' which everyone has admired.I paid you only for your work; Inow want to .reward your talent.Here are 20 louls (about fHO) whichI have for you, and let us not for-get each otheri"

First Newspaper ExtrasAlfred M, Lee, author of the Daily

Newspaper in America, states thatextras are older in this country thandallies. He mentioned,a SundayextraoXthe South Carolina Gazette,

„ ( » weekly, dated'-Aprll1783. \ After the appearance of

* • • in 1783, extras1 to set forth

new* broug\t in by a ship/fromabroad, orTTrater,-"hot" developsments in a sensational murder trial.The latter wasVommon during thelate 1830s, especially in New York

Mongolian pheasant* are typifiedby the broadness of the collararound their throats and a black".tie'Ugwn -their breast They arestrong, heavy birds, equal in-sizeto the English ringneck and ofhealthier stock than the average in-bred hatchery bird. The .Chinesebirds also are pure bred land ofhealthy stock. The species are verysimilar, except that the Chinesebird/shows a great deal of yellowand the Mongolians are of the redvariety. ,_ >

"Possum b a Prowler >._Although the damage that" a 'pos-

sum can inflict on bird life throughdestruction of eggs and young is not

: to be compared to that by a minkor weasel, this slow moving, nightprowling marsupial destroys manynests Of ground birds. There ,isn'tmuch that the 'possum will-pass byin the way of food.., Bird eggs, in-sects, .berries, roots, acorns, rip-ened corn on, the statk . . v almostanything attracts, the 'possum, when« I . ^ T . . . ?~ — — —

fetebeSrotoBf afcThere i t air tnttrasttngice between the symbols

Wttor B of StaaTscrTpt endsomei of the early Phoenician andarea* alphabet symbols. Even theancient- Egyptians, whose Men-gtypbic writings were made up ofa <y™Mmtiim of letter symbols andpictures, says a writer ht the Chi-cago Tribune, had a definite sym-bol for the sound represented byour letter B. It was a picture oftr crane. -

The Roman letter B has comedown to us unchanged, although itwas a refinement of the Qreek beta.The Roman B dates from pre-clas-slcal to classical times. .The earli-est record of the Greek beta wasabout 460 B. & In any considera-tion of the alphabet it-It interestingto note that all of tha symbols ofall of the alphabets were developedin the beginning from the Crudepictographs of the ancients, whosemethod of leaving a written recordwas to draw a crude picture, de-scribing an event, on a slab of stoneor on a stone cave, wall, /Picturesymbols have been used by the abo-rigines of modern times/ Includingthe early! settlers of Australia.andthe American-Indians/ It is gen-erally accepted by scientists (hatthe invention of the alphabet didnot consist of a sudden creation ofletters representing sounds, but wasa gradual" transition from picture-to letter symbols.

ef the bride, A vocalaak^ni^ToBirtary-.WM.lwniObsuiMAtkttatPrewyaa. .*-

Tht bride v i a gowned In whitehoe Princess Ann stile, i and »or» acrown veu. She ourted •/boaajB* efwhite atadWat azjdwhlte larkspur,only attendant ma bar sW*r7Charlotte Slanders, who was gownedIn ytUow enbroidcrad organdy andcarried a bouqoet of sabnon gMMasand blue delphinium*. Peyton Onap-epUe, of Madison was tht groom's beatman. The bride* mother was gownedIn satin. / ' ^ - • , - « » .

Tht house wsawith crept S iof the season.

A reception followed: the ceremony.Quests were - present, from. ScotchPlains, Westaeid. Craoford, Roadie,last Orange. Madbon, Wildwood, J vmaict,HL I , tod Freehold. The couplewill reside tn Freehold. The bride Is agraduate of Orantord High School, classO f I B S . ' . . . - , - '•• . ...• ,. .

Napoleon Appreciativeof Painter's Fine Work

When 'Napoleon Bonaparte was-leaving for his Egyptian campaignin' 1787, the miniature painter, JeanCossard, was called to paint hisportrait. He got a good likeness ofthe/general and promised to deliverthe portrait in two days. On themorning of the second day Bona-parte called on Cossard, •

"My portrait?" said he."It is ready, general.""Give It to me, I will take it with

me.""Yesjbut general, I must have

.».— -— News ~"The use of bottles to learn about

sea 'currents Is an ancient one,- andit is on record that Queen Eliza-beth appointed an official whose ti-tle was !rUncorker of Ocean Bot-tles." He was the only person al-lowed to open sealed bottles dis-covered on any English beach—andanyone else who ventured to do sodid it at- risk of being executed,according to a writer in LondonTit-Bits" Magazine. The office andtitle continued to the tithe of Georgen j . There was a sound reason forGood Queen Bess' appointment Abottle discovered, by a nsherrnanon the shore near Dover containedthe news that Nova Zembla, untilthen Russian, had been seized by'the Dutch a long time before, amit was regarded as Important thatany such news in future should becommunicated to the right quarterswithout, any possibility of loss -*

Wirms A .Existence of a worm that ate tip

steel rails was reported in -1887 bjra commission appointed bjr the Ger-man government to investigate aseries of accidents near Hagen, saysSteel Facts. • The Cologne Gazettequoted the commission's report sssaying that a thin gray worm, .twocentimeters long and the size of the'prong of a silver fork in circum-ference, devoured 36 kilograms ofrail in a fortnight. -This voraciousworm was reported to have soft-ened the iron before eating byspraying It with a corrosive solutionsecreted by two glands in its head.

/ .Crusoe, Word "Tobacco," /

Made Tobago Isle Famous'. Occasionally cruising : steamerscall aKTobago, an island off the

ast of,, Trinidad, Robinson Cru-tqe's island, and from whose namewe acquire the word "tobacco,"notes a writer in. the ClevelandPlata.Dealer.. ~ - •

The main connection between To-bago and the outside 'world Is. T>y agovernment steamer of uncertainhabits.

The na.me Tobago is said to havebeen bestowed .upon the island byChristopher Columbus, who saw~tnits shape, the .resemblance to thesmoking pipe used by the. CaribbeanIndians and locally Called a "to-bago," from which word, inciden-tally, we acquired the word tobacco.

As to the Robinson Crusoe legendand its connection with Tobago,many garbled and misleading ver-sions of it may be heard here.

The inhabitants of Tobago feelproud of the distinction of the is-land's connection with the sojournof Robinson Crusoe, they lead thevisitor to the cave where Crusoe

out the .very beach, where the fan-mortal footprints were found.

The sUtemenl that Tobago Is, thereal Robinson Crusoe's Island maybe disputed by some, as the islandof Juan Fernandez, off the coast ofChile, has also been identified withDefoe's herd. Any doubter may,compare the descriptions In.the sto-ry with this Caribbean island In or-der to set all skepticism at restCrusoe relates, for example, that besighted land from the island andknew it" was "the great island of

once sheltered- .'another famouscharacter, a hero of real flesh andblood—John Paul 'Jones, "father"of the United. States navy, whomade—his—residence—here—durlng-1802. . / - • • : . ; . ' • • . - • . ; • -

Royal Family's NameThe family, name of England's

royar family prior to the name"ofWindsor was Wettin, arid this waschanged in 1017 to Windsor. QueenVictoria's1 consort was "Albert ofSaxe-Coburg-Gotha and the familyname of Albert was Wettin. EdwardVII was- related to the famous Wet-tin family of* Europe through bothhis mother, Queen Victoria, and hisfather, Prince'Albert. Victoria wasa Guelph, and by her .marriage toPrince Albert of TSaxe-Coburg-Gothashe changed the family name toWettin. But neither of these" nameshas been recognized by the Britishgovernment as the official name oftht royal family, house or dynasty.

Serials of RasslaThe Soviets in Russia flnt -came

Into existence In the revolution ef1905.

aoedDkuyXkMght~ Labor 4aJuep,allv»Jnjoor'.breastftarmttte" so*rlr=of" celestial flrrealled conscience.—Washington.

1FUBHIBIUP, comfortable room, cross

nntllaUon. Convenient to town cen-ter. HUnBtnet. Ttlephon* CR«n-tontt-UM-W. 1 •—*-•

, bet a said eae, aertry i i l s s s s the same curvedline Is'risiatllln the btye1 back* and tSekaek * the chair. Thl» g l m

rhyOim to the ptcten. :,•;.;•..,.... , ' t .

tore. Lines hart a delnlte "tralllnapower," espeeUllr It two ma to-gether to mike a point near the plc-tnr* edxe. Snpposa, tor iniUnce, youspan a picture of a cat's taceiandwant'the eyes, to staa'd oot In that.case, t ie cat's<share-polhted ears*need to be la thmdow, or the picture .should \b« Crlmmed so that the tips

WANTED housekeeper, white; goodhornet two In family. No laundering.References. Box 451 OlUjasn andOhfonlde. • . .

VfANY saapsaooters read about. "*• pteMrt composition, and decide

It Is somttamg subtle and "arty."and pretty mach of a putxle. Bat It

• needn't be a pvile, at all. Composi-tion Is 'simply pleasing arrange-ment.

-' TbVwoman who arranges Sowersin a, bowl. Or furniture In a room. Is

| ^composing" In much the same way<ss an artist comppiea a picture.Both are seeking balance, harmony,and an attractive arrangement (hatappeals to theeye. • " ' /

Picture oompoilUoa can be verysubtle, bat It does not have to be. As.« role, the simpler the arrangement,thtmoreeBteUvaltls.

effective slcbire arrangement Oatway to obtain this Is to seek con-trast For instance. If a gray objectIs pictured against a gray back,ground, the two tend to "ran, to-getter." B a t * a gray object is pto-tared against» white baeigroud,wlthllghte "

u t a whitesocarrang*d

gTomBd, ttereTs good ooatnst, sad

aasle of eoaltast woalc be a Ds>>-Wired Hrfo^tirtwed^ agatast abaekgnuadtf dee* shadow.

(Bgttass OattklattotoaToUat ftoad,oat> of the pis-

of thai I are cut off—olherwl»e, 'they.'will draw attention Upwardaway from the cal'sVes-; \ .,

The l u p u and ontltftes of thlnssplay a crtat part la estabUsblbs Uw\-feel- of k picture, A -pyramid" arArangement zlfes weight and stabUAIty, while slender forms, such «s a ;flower with a thla stalk standing In \a slim bud-tas*. sunwUliibtaess. \

Lines differ greatly la their eBeot, 'Low, I«T*1 llaea susxut ouletutss'uk sadOMS, wane tall straight llaes,sueik as the trunks of forest trees,stgCMt dignity and grandeur.Carved Uses have xraee, especiallyIke; 8-esrve such sa is seen la theareaotakene's aeekor a swan'sx

BOOM WANTEDUNFURNISHED room with house-

keeping- privileges; Arlington. Roadvicinity. Phone ORanford 6-0»OT-J.

atck.WUata* iskapeof line-»t iaaeitltiae»ern .Mine itsKiptewi,tore, thai

a«-pat ra,«*ali to take»" "''I'.

tkattM BBca aad BfSM ta roar ple-tsres bava% delatte ekaraetsr. TmeresaUawfflpltasayoa. . 1

LouU XIV Was Known aa

Louis XTVi who ruled Francefrom the age' of flve-until his deathat seventy-seven,, is knSwn as theGreat or Grand jfonarch, typifyingabsolute rule in its extremest form.Though he may never have said,"The state, it is I," notes a writerin the Detroit News, he was em-phatically the state throughout hisreign. His education was entrustedto Cardinal Mazarin and was largelyneglected, for which he $vas after-ward ashamed: -Writers such asHuddleston in his "Louis XIV taTLove and,in War" say that thissense of his juvenile inferiority andsuppression accounts for his latercharacteristics of self • assertion,majesty and splendor.

Of only moderate. Intellect, he hadgood-sense to select, wise adminis-trators such as Colbert, who re-formed the tax system, encouragedcommerce and industry and gaveFrance a navy., He helped litera-ture and the arts, as adding tohis own renown; His saying, "Wasthere not birch enough in the forestof 'FountainebleauT" showed "howhe regretted the, neglect of his edu-cation, partteularly to.the princi-ples of virtue. .:/•; .;'••:,' -•.!••.,• '-.••.:. ••:. ..•'•:

The Britahnica says the Judgmentof posterity has not repeated theflattering verdict of his contempo-raries, but he remains the model ofa great king in all that concern theexternals or kingship. 'The'palaceof Versailles was designed by himta scare AS thejymbpl.pt hfajrelga

Hi* court and government were in-stalled there In 1688.

CNefflThe world-famous Bocky O'Neill

H^fcj^f^jn^ffe^t Svjr ' CiCfaOQ •>!• XIOrflua#>Ul]

was unveiled In 1907 and stands onthe Prescott plaza In Prescott, Ariz.The statue was erected by ArizonaIn honor of the First United StatesVolunteer cavalry, known in historyas Roosevelt's Rough Riders,

.In memory of Copt. William O'Neilland his comrades who died whileserving in the war'with. Spain.O'Neiir~was recorded as the firstvolunteer. recruited in the. Unitedstales for service in the army whenwar was declared. Equestrian stat-ues by Borghlum test in the finestart centers of the world, and thisis considered the finest equestrianstatue in the. world.

England's Most English PlacePerhaps the village of Selbourne,

in Hampshire, la e n t l t l « t o the dis-tinction of being the most. English'place in England. It is close to: theroad that takes (he-traveler fronvAlton,down the Meon valley to the'sdutrr.coast. It has winding lanesin place of regular highways, andthe scenery is overwhelmingly Eng-lish. Here Gilbert White lived and

-wrote his history. Every year tensof thousands of his readers, frommany countries, walk through Trierwood paths and hear the wobdwrenssinging in the beech trees.

Saiat Oeerge, Patree gatssSaint George is the, patron saint

of.EnglandanJPjortugaL

*******

_~_ Midlands In EnglandThe Midlands are the counties

wnlch lie in the"1 middle of England,says Condon Answers Magazine.The boundaries' are usually given*,as between Yorkshire and theThames, and East Auglia and the .counties on the Welsh border. TheMidland circuit includes; Lincoln-shire, Notts, Derbyshire* Leicester-shire, Rutland) Northamptonshire, IW^nrictohlre. and Worcestershire.

Place Your Next Order For

- THE CRANFORD

CITIZEN and GHRQNiaEHMMIMI

Classified Advertisement-. •-' - ' "• " l A T l ' S : ; , :t ' ' wtttsBl JsVtnBttesssVsBBsflEsffBsl flUHB I M

ss tma «se «uv M TOiMMna «»> n n ia m s it* r t S U M . eewtn rrvt stvM»a« weate n I M '

minom • - • • • •

BSttESTAXEFOmULEHFOBO-Feor lets, n s H each.

OashtsM. Fhone DBtavan MOM.T-M

fOUABOOAMT bed. dnsser an* ehatr.

CW ORantord t-0tM-W.

to | H N .

School, bus. Very attractive.LEE BOOVtL

till Orange Aw, ORanford « - « «

WILL sell • eboka R. L Red Pnqata attiM ff*** Hatched April 11th. Tels-pbone ORanford s-zieS. -

FURNITUBE for sale. Dining roomsuite, almost new; comblnaUon book*ease and writlnc desk; bed fendbureau. Phone ORanford MMM.

•ELPWAJIIIII Fssath ., .wanted for tranacripUoriwork, Musi hi quick "and aocuraM.Apply, stating salary to Box UT, ClU-sen and Ohipalde.

F R B a n x i g h t t o f and Bectrio Am-ply Co., announces'the new, mndasi ofEasy Washers, In white: alto a law

—1MT modtls at very reduced prices. -Distributors of the famons WbtttOrats appliances. Deaiert ot Frtgi.daire andarUsuo lighting fixtures byJohn VUWen Company of Otovekmd,Ohio; 3M North Avenue, Oanrood.Phone W&tfleld S SSOl.' M

BOERAL noutaworxen, .with refsr-enott. atrs. MUTrtfs BnploymenlAgency, Ml Bmer SttMt, WestfWd.Fbone wyxstJttld t-OTDt. H

FULLER Brushes have bean reducedagain. For demonstration can L. A.McKet.vll Arlington Road. Phone .ORanford 6-osoi-M. >• «

BKABBOBB ROOsB FO* «ENTY the day or week. SOT Arnold Ave-nue, Point Pleasant. N. J. MTS.P.B.Keith. Thone ORantord 8-1S0O.

FOB SALE OR RKNT714 WEST HoUy Street. Oll/bumer,

double garage. Three bedroanw. Sunporch (10 windows). Newly decorated. Owner, Phil Powkr. WBitflcIdM » V ^ 4 V • £ : * \ *

TWO furnlshetl light houKkeephujrooms, with* adult family. HtOIaday,8 Heuuich Btreet, off ..Meeker; Ave-nue, Oranford. •.;••••••••••.../*

BOOH rOR/SAlB'.' R06E1XE.PARIC .

Ut W#tt OoUax AventwMaybe ttts- eaaU down wiU buy it,with net ararufe overbead. over ator* period of fttfi per month, ptuitaxes. Five rooms, bath and garage.Catt and ask for Mr. Mulford.

J. O. MULFORO. Realtork'^Va^^ralWd

LOT wniiaTKD tot for sale, M X 110

feet. On Berkeley Plaee, near WestEnd Plate. Or *dU baOd to salt.Beautttnl shade trees; all unprore-mento paid for. W*O.InqulrsF»uxDlFabto. U North Avenne, But. Tele-phone ORanford e - lUt

UPHOLBrrSRER, oeooranr,slln tovefs, shades, csklntt workalso an furniture repair. PreTntr * Bon. formerly with W.tartan.« South Union Avenue. Tele-phone ORanford 6 4 m .

MOVINO-flTOEAGE-r,LET us estimate on any of

or stoiage or""mentsnd men.Agents""for'.'Allied Van lines, Ino,long dlsUnee movers. RobblnsAllison, Ino, 311 South Avenue, East.Fhone ORsnford

PAINTlNa AND FAFEKHANaiNa,PATKHNO and pajnfrhsng1ng.\ Ertl-

tnates c h e e r f u l l y given. JamesSchlndler and/Haney Merwede,.fUNorth Avenue; East. Phone ORsn-ford S-OVtt-f. - - * • »

JOSEPH WARSINBKI — QualityTtlephone/. ORanford C-ltM-M orCRanford "JBIU; •

Espress carrying btggsgefurniture. Also

goods for tale. 306 NorthWestaeld. • OaU Henry P

WEttfkkt J-1OI.

Tusess Himiiai trips towith baggage or

Special trips to aswntalns or lakes.Reasonable rates. SargentfePhone WEstfleMJ-»O»i.

Sesslde Park, Point PJaisut,Park, AtlanUe Highlands.Bros, Ino, SorneniOe, Plainflekt andNew Brunswick.

/ BEWINO MACHINES 'ANT make sewing machine repaired,

cleaned and adjusted.' Singer SewingMachine On, 43 Elm Street, WestfleM.Phone WBrtfleld 2-S554. C-3B

rCBNUHEO BOOMS /FURNISHED room in center of town./ •

Easy access to trains. I l l H b l -Street, Oranford.. . / t t

AFABTMBNT FOR BIN*FIVE, room apartment," aecond floor.

Near town'center.. Telephone CRan-

FURNISHED or unfurnished, secondfloor, three rooms/- Available flep-tendxrjl." 705 linden Place.1 OaU«venlng» CRanf ord s-1178.

POOR rooms ana bath; heated. Hot-water, oU.burner, garage. Near sta-tion. 3 « North Avenue, West Tele-phone cRsnford e-om-w.

porchi/oompletely private; gait**awUlabiev- Pnone ORanford MSU-W-» «-O30»-W. Blake, 31 BerkalsyP l a o t . - • • • . - • . . ' . . - : • ' . • : • . • - • - ; • . ' • W

J U S oompletely furnished rooms f rhoustkMplnc. Easy aeeest to tmtas.1U Mlm Btreet, Oranford. t fFCBHAC* VACettC CIEAN1NO

LOWER TOOR QH. AND COAL BDX8#V7VSBSSW J* * • » * # • » *w*mm * v » w ^ v -^ • • • ^ • • •

Let u* vacuum d e a n your furnace •now for greater eOdeney this w m -ter. Work gunmtoed.,, Safe, d e a nand reasonable. Average f u ctSM wlula. our summer rates ar|> Ine f f e c t _••• • >. . '

p»r.»AnT.« OIL BURNERBurners a

WniFord. 10Ford. 10 Norm Art, W,

aunuiCHAIRS recaned; moderate prieaa,/ Mrs. Meyers, 10 Grove Btreet, Oran-

fordk Phone ORanford 8-O8M-M. tf

ELEOTRIOIANBouse Wiring _ Fixtures

^RepairingMotors Washing MachinesRefrlgaators Vacuum Cleaners

Cellar Drainers AppliancesDANIEL J. HRBURN

Res. S Btttnsldt Avt, ORan. 6-19MRBbon H4 Sooth Ave, ORan. eMW

\Motora

VAN WANTS„ Osn do any kind of work ta

or

accident.* Bert, of referenoss>Box 44>, Ottlsen and Obranldt

Page 6: CAMPERS HONOR ROBERT ROHRER - digifind-it.comKNOT HOLE'GANG •li-"\ ... Ctmt /ran* disc—ifcm o/ Me pros end cons m-tfUs wttroct at tali tssW, saoald fsror*— oar natters mttfc

/ • ,

•\

ZONING BOARDDENIES

TIPSY DRIVINGUNDER AOVtSEMENT

for Foal O i Stm-tion at MBcUguk A m u s i

Boulevard Rejected.

At a meeting of the- Zoning comnls-don Board to Borough Ball.nesday dgtt . request was denied toColonial OD Company for a permit tooperate a fuel oil statkm at Iof Mi»wr«ii avenue and Boulevard.Vigorous protests were voiced againsttha proposed fuel oil staefcn br Mr.

A Levins of Rawhide Products Co, O a kLamm at 21st street, Max. Jtaeft,candidate for the Borough Council tot i e forthcoming primaries, and etherdtisenk . . . , ' . : . ' •

SOCIAL ITEMS

Miss Anna Arnecke win leave Baiur-day for a week's vacation at AttantkO t t y / - .. •,;.•. . ; ' • • ' . - • « •' Carl Aroeeke Is ristttng friends andrelatives to New'York this week, andtaking in the Cubs-Giants series.

by Recorder wl&kua | tory to,-YMow Jack.'

foDowIng the bearing of testimony, oftwo phjatclina. Or. Watts, poHee sur-geon, smUVrt that testa tndicatad (batroot* -was tntmrtratw? when amated.Dr. Brack of wMtfleU oSend rebuttal

to iwnder hU dadrton JWday morning.WOUam Fnatr, am Barrack street,

Jteaey CUg. wat fined *K with coata oftXK on • oharn of faHtof to atopwaftflT hgliaff luTOlffvA l | i tui Aocldcnt.

Thomaa flhelton and Jbaepn totof i l l FtiaaU atraet. Newark, wen

— . wjMcb 4a now atRialto, WeatiBeld.

Robert Mootromery b n k b l i k

fined MIS each <n charfea of harin(rkkten norm. '•»'"»jf'"t to Robert JJer-qie or Bghth atreet in an aboshe man

\

most dramatis sol* stow "Might MustFan." with Vtrgubv Braes pUymg thefeminine lead and Lewis Stone por-traying the histories] chancier otMajor Walter Reed who was Instrumen-tal In the Isolation ot yellow lever.

Director George Setts has placed theaction ot the picture against the trop-ical background of an army medical

can War.l i e •upparUnc out UJOM of

Ffalllp McQevna, School Dosiilmiwlonfr. sustained a broken collarbone when be supped and fen on theJawn of Ms. home. \ .

Republican Club, Tnc. will meet onFriday dent. With the tortbetanlngprimaries In September a good atten-

, dance la expected. Hie three presentcounctlmen. William Rowan. John

.Qraf, and Max Benin*' nave- an-nounced tbelr intention of fntnrtnt; theprimaries JUio Joseph Straek. SchoolBoard Commissioner, and Mai Kntger,

' who list year tied, with Victor OOD-.vertb in the Council election, win tile,for the primaries, ' -

Officers of the Fife,' Drum and BugleCorns will carry on the work of re-hearsal during.the four weeks absenceof Frank Perm. C. H: Taubert afr-'

. Bounces. the receipt of $15 (mm theOranford Independence D»y Commit-tee, in appreciation of the Corps parti-cipation in the celebration.-

Board of Health met In regular ses-, \sion onvWednesday night. Eric Oecfes

of Michigan avenue was appointed as

I k Answersz. Tne lateat figure* ahow «1.3. She«artsheUn6ti. Up to jane SB. »1JMO,M7,574: paid

t. About one-foorUL*. Soch agreementt a n exempted.f. About TOO mllea off the west eout

of Mexico.t. On the taata of Us record. In

HOT and this year. Allen, of Cleveland.a. F«r more than 30 y«an, tMJOOO a

to. Two; u n and i n s .

master plumber to- the plumbers' ex-amination board ot the Borough, andRank- Schnppe of Fajrfleld avenuewas appointed as a Journeyman plum-

First Called SUtes Paper -The Drat newspaper In Americaas "Public*. Occurrences Both

Foreign and Domestic*," publishedin Boston in 1690. ,

lavtatod Centigrade tbermemclerThe centigrade thermometer was

invented by Anders 'Celsius, aSwede, in 1743.

including Andr DevJne, Henry. Bun,Chines-Oobum, Buddy Asaq,_BOKelll. Jsnet Beecher, William Henry,Alan Curtis and earn Lrrene.

The story is that of the army w d Ucal commission sent to Cub* In MOO toascertain the cause of ,a yeUo^.fever

mountabls obstadatiths rnmmlistonfinally realises thapKs only, bops forsuccess Is the voluntary service of sol-diers "as human guinea p*gff In fymtiiwgexperiments designed to estahllsh-thecause of the disease- Montgomery,'stirred by the death ot a friend, causedby the feven persuades four of the mento Join him in volunteering. Their he-roic acUs one of the thrilling pages inmedicaThlstory.

The co-feature Is Stan I*urel andOliver Hardy In "Swiss Miss."

On Monday and Tuesday, the Rialtowill present Rudy Vallee In "Gold Dig-gers In Paris", and Joan Blondell andMelyn -Douglas In "There's Always aWoman." • '

Beginning Wednesday, Knot Flyun in-The Adventures of Robta Rood' willoccupy Uw Ri>)to WMCfi.

Width of Gait StreamThe Gult Stream Is 30 miles wide

near Florida and becomes narrower•as it flows northwapL_^ —

Norfolk Oldest Dukedom . 'The auke of Norfolk holds the

oldest dukedom in England. It wascreated In H83.

to fBfcjf «rtti l

GO BY THROUGH TRAIN

ASBURY PARKLONG BRANCH

BaiaWaT \ ' ; . ' " , « *

2 5 EVERY SUNDAYt* AtO. tt tadaatve• 0 CMAKOl OF CAM

Lv. Ouford .^.-9:00 A. M.1

BLUEJAN

to

Completely Air-onMl~t«(llnbig

ehs* Cm Swata Reserved

BALTIMORE dOHIOR.R.

Going on Vacation?The- Gmnfori G t n n i «nd Chronicle

t to you cadi week. .'No extra charge far

mailing anywhere in" the United States.

BssaeAdsraa

Industrial Center of— Union County

COUNOL TABLESFIREMEN'S REQUEST

Favordble Action Hntgea onWhetnerHoee Co. Holds

BaxMr or Carnival

Request of liberty How Company for' pwmuwirm to conduct a buaar tn-the

chase of uniforms was tabled by Bor-ough Council at its meeting Tuesday

. «ight, until such time as definite mtbr-«^- nation la available as to'whether jU»

11 flrftitfTi ikstro t o staVafR1\ b«uu»r Osrcsxv*|£', nival The matter probably win be

acted upon at an adjourned meeting, the next few days.

,Dushanek; who submlttted the request,the firemen plan to stage • baaur.Dto utaf ducuaaon. hIt was the opinion ot

' a carnival, and nob a bssaar.mtght

|f- ,,,\The majority of the members were otthe opmlon that carnivals were not de-

. * e d t o the borough in view of past, >nw-i ifucMi Opinion was unanimous,

however/''that It the firemen them-selves desired to stage a basaar, a per-mit would be granted

letters were received by Council andMrt Commtsstoocr Pashantk from the

ot the' fire «««f«»*«« of

V- ,• the Oarwood fire department for theassistance gtvm during the recent flr*

1 floe '^ * Oarwood flremen., OB moUm-ot O d

;_a, better was authorised to^UiertrBcseO

b on then-noaiv

fflJ-Westaeld fire. Mayor• THffl commented<K**'rkpown that;»tag flredepartmen^and thetdstlonsfronai b W u u s c o V

Beport ot Mre Chief Thomas BrUtek)• showed ttiat^here was no o(byflreJastmonth, and, ea

i tooroer tha sidewalk repairy be carried c o t a t t r l h :

EXPECT 19 BIDSFOR POSTOfFICE SITE

p p Dnatte bavejbeen obtained bybidden, it was

MmDogaa.ly three bkht have beendate, the majority of_aexpected to b» turned m by •monow when bids wm be 'Postmaster Dagant oBoe.

Born Jn Klsabeth^wn, N. T , he re-sided hen for tweyor three years priorto the tune tbaLtno United States en-tend the Wbdof War. He was a mem-her of old -^

opentof of the bids, ln/addluon to arepresenUUve of the Ti*asury Depart-ment, are: Major Unit J. VonteneH

nbecs of the borough's lofflclallamuy* and representatlrea of the

A Federal appropriaUon ofwaa granted recently for the"tton of a new pottomoe bonding

More than/100 mombersof^L Anne's80

children and » adults, enjoyed the an-nualoDtb«toSe<hrlgbt/Monday. Thesflair is neU anmadb/ under directionof Ihe pastor, the Bsr. John "M. Walsh.The party made t»i trip 16 Hew York

system with a

OBITUARY

Ralph McMsnus, O years oM.Oanrood resident andough aerkr-Walter s ;Tuesday evening at hte home to NewYork Ottgr following a five weeks' m-

two weeks'mbtofirip through AaManiand Uusouri. They reported

. Had excellent weather duringtheir SJ»-mlle trip.,, , '. .

Mayor Louis J. Boueneln and Mrs.Kntenelli and family ot MM Window

Guard ot natofleld. sndeerred' the war with the Wh

- been engaged in the-broker-bond business in New York for

„ yean, having been employed at— time by Jones and Baker and laterby Hamilton and Ox For Ihe p u t fiveyears he conducted fab) own brokeragebusiness.. ?

Survivors axe his wife and a son,Robert, 10 yean old! three sisters, Mrs.Anna Oregory, Mrs. CUca Hsyworthand Miss Dorothy IsoManus, all of Al-bany, N. Y.; and four brotnea/aeorceot Westfleld, Bawwd of Scotch Plant,Walter of Oarwood and Fnnk otFialnfieuL "

caw and took the BandyAtlanUo BlghlauU where

two oUWspedal can were providedtathetrlptossabrtgnt. Ooodweath.er enabled tn> group to hara'aa en.Joyable day. - '

Place- xet ed, Bu from late Soyatconr where thejii .spent two weeks.

, ^'^riRobertJMlTeHew *aekVWeawssit.T»<sy. Alsaj^as«d»stsswg

|oe MS MMh" f ' s t i

street-reportedibatlthadi

H o * avenue,wmch soon ta Ilo-b» oceupsed (by at tavern, and] found |that' It complies wtth thehfaKhcooa.

aksoan fejmneth OlMtrllminted that las eonecUaos to July I

mum, wbenei m the same]last sen; Uxy were only *U,-J

resawrar

Prosecutor and Mn. LmnsLongobardl ot XUaabeta wen their

roalhiteontnendstiiB^of OeamdK

f&

in "KIDNAPPED"

Jn^Si^DAUBI^

-nrini wi\unUDAY^SATURDAV

» # :

i POM WOT PAY

W • 7 — *M

' . - % . • : • •

CRANFORD THEATRE. WHO WlXL BE THE 5 UK3CY PEOPLE

- * " THIS WEEK?V'"'-J"*_ Bead earefany l i e ejaaslsias Mew. Tfcas k a i tts answers in lbs

a * aigeailag m lids man ef tta tJtWOKf AMD- CBBONIOLE.

ttea aad saaO a» Mac I aa • • • • • aaBBiis aesaw (aea qw»' (• Ib* ORBDI AHD OBBOMICLB

W0 give ess tkkel

TOISDAY

ANSWERS MUST BE wiijuy |IN BELOW

nrerT / '

»>-W«s»sirfaB sways

1

i~WMMIikta«e4

- ,4« --..„, ,• - ^ • T e f c a i m ,

> CsBMaaaid

- If A M -, *

tasestkk

It's Use t

r.ai.1

r estaMsBsmasdsr

bskaitW*'BkaaTawa* t

W»':.AVM«

•art aMrusss sm

; - /.^.

- .

- * * —

•was-acrkspi of

', f

ly week m Be

'-••-",/

" 1 ,r _ rJ * ^

Page 7: CAMPERS HONOR ROBERT ROHRER - digifind-it.comKNOT HOLE'GANG •li-"\ ... Ctmt /ran* disc—ifcm o/ Me pros end cons m-tfUs wttroct at tali tssW, saoald fsror*— oar natters mttfc

' "vL. 'i

i '

IS" <"'.«

*' , i

CHEAPER to FkNANCE- i i o long Htm reottgoao

SMALL MONTHLYPAYMENTS

- t o w I n t o * * rates-fvB owiwnhtp In 20 ytwi.

:

. BETTER DESIGN—charm,btauty, compqctnast

BETTER CONSTRUCTIONBETTER MATERIALS

lengtr httting—lower cott(A-llumbor) . ^

IOWER MAINTENANCE, ' And upfcoop costs

= IXIRA BATHROOM /and downstair* lavatory /

ADDED UVMO QUARTERS

MORE EFFICIENT' KITCHEN

tonvonkmorroi^nwnl,

-' These16 EXTRAS

for Bet ter

. "» 9 • \AIR CONDITIONJNO

ctoan, humldinod.

1 0

, w MORE ELECTRICA1,EQUIPMENT

llmo, labor, moniy savingh IfhH too

" '•!

MORE MODERN PLUMBINGthroughout houio

12'. AUTOMATIC-HEAT •with conctalod radiation

. WEATHER-TIGHTWINDOWS AND DOORS /MVO Iwol—rodueo drafti /

' • • • 1 4 ' /COPPER AND BRASS

.PLUMBINGnoivcorroding plpoi,l l gutton'rHKWoang g

and down »pout»

ISiNSULATidN

agatiitt hoof and cold—grtator comfort and hoahh- .

low.rro.lbJII» /

• HRUESISTANT-PERMANENTROOF AND SIDEWAUS

~ will novor woor out ' '

AS A MATTER OF FACT

THE MOUSE YOU BUILD OR BUY IN 1938-WITH 25% T<40% MORE REAL VALUE-actoa//y costs much /ess than the 1926 house

It n o t paw redwd _»•» haw* w« b« M«MV-Pbe<mi«taiit Imuladoo a«4

IJlS5ifi~ofeoM*™ctico.. .-• mlalmJ»rpaitha«ardi....aii4wtUiantU»-

_ Osccola Park,Cranford Trust Co.T. V. Albert30 DUNHAM AVENUE

Chapman Brother*PLUMBING—(XL HEATING

Elkabethtown Consolidated,^±.' Ga» Co.

Cranford Mutual Building and ' Hqd-Cin BuUding Products, Inc.

Union; County Trust Co.

Supply Co.. Loan 'Association

, .- »• .i-r-roi

AVE, CRANFORD

^••^^^•^•••^•a^BMMmiKawnw»Ma^nwwatoaaM|ri»mMjRtffK^|^||; t j ^ *AJtw5BB^^^^^^j^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^g^^u^^^^^^^^^^^^a^^m^mttiimm^^^^ma^^m^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^m•^•^•^•WMB^BBjB^B^B^B^B^B^BJBBJBJJBJBJBB^B^BJnB^PBWBB^^n^a^^^^^njaBaanaOW^^nBBWwnwwW^OWW^^^^n^O^W^^WW^^^^^W^^OBBBWMBwn^^^^

^>

i1 ' I

- .

.-*I

I

m•

Page 8: CAMPERS HONOR ROBERT ROHRER - digifind-it.comKNOT HOLE'GANG •li-"\ ... Ctmt /ran* disc—ifcm o/ Me pros end cons m-tfUs wttroct at tali tssW, saoald fsror*— oar natters mttfc

'-M

T0EUZA6ETBA.A.Gabarfe'a Single in, Scora Alamo to BmaW

Onnford lost * heroVtough* * • * * *

4 at tti.OM

WOM ItttoDitaCwHstana m Wstory." • »

WBCv 11 it ranKr «•*»•

lag for ten yean with H•000 b

mg a r tan yeara wtm thaiaome 80,000 fingerprints la thairfllea, but never befon had thia"new peril to lawbreakers" (at Itwas raisrrad to in tbt ue-spaueii)

. , BMtoi ofnumy dtterentMtUnCatttto* JIM* cbtmed that their lav•data was; the an* apofcan m tfaa

noon by a l t o l m i t i l i MPark, ma (two tnna «o* dBtdkekadat 1 to 1 tor tore* tantags.

In the seventh Inning. Mis Oabaflsbroke up the deadlock wiwa singleto joare Phil AIOUDO, wbo had polsdoil a double at the Mart of the Junto*.

'. The run fare Ted Pfennig •victory• overJEIgBnalck tea keen hurlingdad.

The Btoabeth pitcher allowed «ve b*tfto seven tor Brostek,

Sunmsry CoUows*

T-*»- — ' • • • — • - " "•— w ^ m • ^ ^ ^ ^ ™ — r - q ^ l F n ^ _ ^ _ ^ ^ ^ ^ _ ^ ^ — ^ —

Bamad fltrattotu Shay w m chargadwith the murder of an old couple.Ona of the brothen had left a.

-print on a cad) bus.

Yukon*, asMouth,, lbIfaureftrfBresoh,p

H a

Caeark, cf _B, Zen-er, 3b.J. Zamkr, a .

l b .

Koneskt,rt .u

Pfennig, p .

tha prosecution announced, that thapolic* WCTB going to try toeomrlcton that evktencr, "there was a thrillfound the courf'-to quote th* au-thors of "King's Counsel: The Uf*at Sir Henry Curtis-Betmetf Cur-tls-Bennett, then a young lawyer,appeared for on* of the brothers.

Tha Judgedid not tike to tha fla-garprmt l*sr»t*mi wbol*4*artodbr,and seemed to want murderers inthe future to us* mk when theyleft their impressions en cashbaxe*.

"When proper impression* awtaken, tha ayitem la extremely r*-1S » ha mtoUted £%%?"&it la A different thing to apply It toa casual mark mad* through th*•paraplratioo of a thumb. Tha *vi.dene* ia not so satisfactory aa If,for mstanc*. tha murdenr had tok-en som* ink and made a datmtt*Impression. But to.a certain ex-tent, the evidence to eorroMtattv*.Th* Jury wOl not like to act oathtoevidence atone."

The brothers wan hanged.

_ IMF a man named Goropfa*declared that Dutch ia the language

• m to Paradise, and therefor*Adam talkad Dutch. Andnt

«o (ha-Mhar baad, btS«*«tJUnlgl feaUrt^Adaftv

nWwStiZ&mWi ,E n fat along whan tfaeytalkad toaachotherT^ „ '

The PeraUni are al*o •enaroua Inawarding three languages to theGarden of Eden, n a y baHartttatthe Serpent uwdTthe meat Parana-aiva tongue. Arable; that Adam andEva Died Persian, the moat poetic'el tongues; while tha Attgal wyho'drove them from'the OaMan Used"Turkish, the moat threatening

laturaUy... tha Jew* claim thatBebraw waa ON primitive language,n i t theory had moat veto* fcnmEastern writers, tfaa next en ttr£tbeing Syrlac; but claimt havValaobeen put In from other parts at theworld. ' .

A writer named Erro phnnpa tatBasque as Adam'a language; otheridwelar* that Polyoaslao wae theprmutire language of taanktad.

that none of t* I_ _ aa spoken, m Eden, be-cause none of tbam waa then n 'a»

Gaspa LegoncU A N TeM

i•

4

• 1 7 0Onnford : 000100 000-1BUabeth A. A. _ . _.___100 000 10X—3

Two base hits, Broslch, Icamo; stol-en bases, Yuknus, Mauren; left onbases, Omnford, 6; KUsabeth A.sacrifice hits, J. Zamkr; base* on bails,off Pfennig, 3; off Brosdck. 3; struckout by Pfennig, B; by Brosiek, l; wildpltces, Bodck; umpire, Eknoyek.

Team Stendtagslinden _-_„.. _......._.13 3ISlabeth A. A. ............. —11 6Kosbergs ......... _ 0 8TAilon-Elmora 6 ' 5Plalnneld _ _.,_.. 8 7

400.847sa»MS

OtwnfordVestlleldOarwood

9. 2

10IS

J00.375.118

BABE RUTH TO PLAYi*.»ssgL IN NEWARK MONDAY

Once again Babe Roth ta going) tostrut his stuff. The Big Batobino to to•Hay. flist base for the Brooklyn Dodg-ers la an exhibition game against theBean, Monday, night at Ruppert tta-dhao. n will mark hto initial appean-ance In a came m tha Metropolitandistrict since n e s t e d three yean ego.Ruth, now coach of the Dodgers, canstill hit them. Babe hope* to dupM-eato hto tremendous wallop of a fewyean ago when he smarted one over

- the Bears' right center field fence.Attar the clout he claimed It was the

_ longest drive of hto outer. Be wasthen with the Boston Braves,

Ruth contends he can still cavortaround the diamond in big league

Tha fisnar folk of t£e Gasp* Pao-inaula delight In narrating the weird Ietorlea and legends of the pest

Th* vary names of torn* of theOaspa localities suggest unusualhappenings: He au Massacre (Mas-sacre island), where a band of In-diana'waa massacred; Point* Fre-gate (Frigate point), where an oldgalleon waa wrecked; Hanchad'Epee (Sword Hill), where an oldsword hUt, dating back to tha earlyarrival of. the first white man, wasfound.

The tourbt.who visits this land otlegends of the Province of Quebecmay often get some "oldest Inhabi-tant" to relate some of these taleshe will swear to be true. A favoriteis that of the ghost ships which arewrecked -yearly as tempest-lashed

.waves, batter-them against darkcliffs. The story goes that once ayear, usuaiiy-omi bright moonlitnight, a terrific storm blows up and

The flnt-mu ar* men likely tobav* conversed by means of signsand cries than through tha mediumof any known tonga*. Thto to theopinion of no toss an authority thanCharles Darwin, who tha* r * "his view of tha matter:

"I cannot doubt that languageowes its origin to the imitation andmodification, aided by signs andgestures, of various nMurafsounds,the voices of other animals, andman's own insUnctiv* cries."

—on—ah-^iwhose crew are garbed Ilka pirates'of old and armed to tha teeth withcutlasses and muskets.

They will tell you, these hardyfisher folk, that there Is a crash asthe ship strikes the cliffs and im-mediately 'afterward the stormabates, the clouds break and againthe moon beams down on a tranquilscene. ' .

Nanjet.of Shore PlacesPuaale the. HIetoriana

Brigantine, the sister island Justnorth ot the one on which AtlanticCity stands, got its name becausea brlgantine was wrecked there,back in the early 1700a.

A.brigantliK is ode of the types ofsailing vessel; if it had been an-other type tha resort might bearthe name ot Schooner, or Bark.

The early maps show a settlementof Wrangleboro, a little north onthe mainland—but early historiesgive no due to what> the wranglewas about, nor what type of people& 9 k £ a ' $ J& tty* WjwdVargumentty* jWjwagumen

b p c a i B absorbed: In HiBe PortRepublic.

Those are two reasons why stu-dents declare Atlantic county holdsaomething close to an Americanrecord for hit-and-miss selection ofnames.

Washington state, Minnesota andWisconsin have their rich lore ofIndian names; California and Colo-

49°~IOC

CofsW £ I7C«8 Craya/radt Jsaoe Fmrnrgtmy Sab

M n . 0 . 6 TaarMwjsShenaaa T.-T. M.A MaaaHr. aasrlbs. H. A. GrateJM3tto«

ma* trees, sad other rubbish which al-i t

munltlea more deHnbl* to B*» ia wab«h* result, that jfasy btv* raact*at ta

r whch also is not usually aecepted by municipalnawn

ir.»fci tdMSi.i .n now as UTI

Mayonnaise T39'

t game, (f his legs permit It will mark—one of-the-vtry tew g<mes~he~hal

played undn* the lights. In the few,i aamea he has performed under -the

\eleetrlo bulbs he has made some gnatw»Uopj. so the artlfldal light hai notntemed hi* hatting eje. Other JoftnerMewark tavorltes now with the Dodgerswho will be in the line-up are Outfield-er <talexouef Kby who is having ateal great y«ar, and Southpaw Pitcher

r^ao TWnuhVwho was with the Bears'-.wonderteam last jear. TonanylaalaU

hed to pitch part ot the game, at leart.•tOhen there to Buddy Haisrtt. who wiU- stay if*, dwuld Ruth find the going

e r too atfcnuona. \

:!••• On the next two night*. Ttojdar and•WMneeday, tha Beats wlU again pet-

Jtaan under the Hghta, this time agalntt| ; t h e Tnrontn Maple lieatt, who a|»hop-*; tog to land a play-off berth. Thegamt

•WMheeda/-win mark the final ona ofthe present home stay and a gala nJghtto being arranged. It will be known a*

. Bean- Might, aa, affair being sponsored, «W the drbmlite. An the piayen wm

• Bow 8andwlch "OriginatedSandwich, meaning- two slices of

bread wxh meat, cheese or. otherfood between them, is derived fromthe name of the fourth earl of Sand-wich, who lived in the .time ofGeorge m. He was \tht same no-bleman after whom Cant-JamesCook named the Sandwich Islands;now called the Hawaiian islands.The:sandwich waa a greatJa.vo.rite.wiUQhe-.earl.:-He was a notoriousgambler, ana often became so en-grossed in his cards that he wouldnot stop to cat his meals. Insteadhe would have an attendant putmeat between two pieces of bread •which he ate. without leaving thegambling table. Although the earlthus gave his name to the sand-wich, he Was/not the first, to cotbread or biscuits and meat so com-bined. <Vnder different names thesitodwich has'been popular in sev-eral countries since ancient times.

£*nd one tknrBear win be on, hand tor l» - Al refuna. to teU what ma new|atoota are. Then ttaere win be fieldi«vante lor the ptayen ot both teamsfaad Behacht win be a eompetltor m& — » of them, , ^ ^

I the Lean come an,Uie Been

PoDc Confirmed Geld DiscoveryOn December 9, 1848, President

Polk's annual message confirmedprevious unofficial reports of thediscovery of gold in- California,nearly a year before. The first olthese reached the East in a letter,doted San Francisco, April 1,'whichappeared in the New York Heraldon August IS. Subsequent newspa-per dispatches from California w e neagerly awaited and the posting of

mW&sarjrs^w v

*" « ^ v ^ v H I w/aaA»«4av*B4i«> uiaaa, dl l t j

same presidential, message, whichconfirmed thia history v makingnews also^reported,that steps hadbeen taken toward "extending thebenefit ot our. post office laws tothe people of* California." . '

P wings, startmr Priday night with*;*tngle game. A s«ne Is achedntod

Saturday and a twin bill for em*wbJcb .win mark tha auwwen as-— of the wing* her* Una year to

^MeatafltallaaalaWotldWarTha moat disastrous defeat suf-

b> tbe'Itallans, In tha WorldSJS^^ ^ Austrlana

nrat Sastatary M Kawyffij*^ !*»^«d

5 J to laoi, WM the ttat eeo-retary of the navy.

rado names carry the stonr of their•arly Spanish explorers, and NewEngland points*'take the names oftheir early Colonial settlers or theirEnglish home towns.

But around Atlantic City, says acorrespondent in the PhiladelphiaInquirer, historians have troubletracing even the source, to'say noth-tasrof th* motive, of some designa-tions. " • ••

Most residents accept tha legendthat Bargalntown traces Its nameto the first local will <Mntf rnthusi-

NBC R i NnrlMs orSooaJ Toa Biio.it. 2 «*^ 17cO P B a j w a <"— PeposU) 3 ran at-os qt sou j 5 e

Beodamanm for, Quality Butter and

We have, at present, sbr scavengersta Oranford, the majority of whom a ntaxpayers. • They hare quite an invest-ment in trucks and other equipmentand gfhw employment to from twelve tofifteen persons. Should townspeopledecide in favor of municipal collection,* .*. " * n ^ 1 P""""*- that t h m six-little Duane^lSrwottld bTwlpidout "Competitive bidding naturallywould Invite outsldera — persona whoare not taxpayers here or who haw noparticular Interest la'thls eommunKy-to submit prices. I t i s not Improbable,either, that the out-of-town bidderwould get the contract. ,^T7,

found-pubt

sum;, the folks thought their lotswere an excellent buy.

Crossing Sea on Dry LandEven if you do not believe la

miracles, It to scientifically possi-ble for Moses to have crossed theBed sea on dry land as the BibleMates. Napoleon records in his"Memorial de Ste^Belene" that healso crossed the Red sea "a pledssees" (on dry foot). Near the townof Suez, IhasCBosalng is only about amile wide, and very shallow, write*a correspondent in. Pearson's Lon-don Weekly. Tides and winds pileup and lower the water from timeto time. Before the crossing wasdredged out for the present 38 feetdeep channel; It was possible to'cross by stepping from sand bar tosand bar when the winds and tidescombined to lower the. water level.

NavnrlweAUk*finowflakes fall by

—, -hat 1jlows.f_ Sometimes£ey are big and moist, sometimes

little and hard and dry. They akWBJTel fiAYtt UX P01Is)tH. SO U w y Vft

always alto in that way. But theyax* not alike in any other way. Nosnowflake has ever been seen thatwaa an exact twin of any other•nowflake, ahdjsdenttotsliave car*.luU»* examined and 'thousands of Icomplete

.pattern unto itself.'

v*aefMgOlvio and Busmaas ASMwork to make OnafM » ra U e j ^ to ttn ktf » wsSawai >Maacanto, gb*g*r rantal

LOCAL BOYS

Aprijcots-3 25CornFloU* *£>ioc ?^5<

CI*My M

String BeansLayer Cake

No.2 a- r

can 9 C

gJod Tunkinssays a man w

SEVERAL VEK^DESIRABLETO RENT IN

TRUST

Cranford TniSt t'O^ Real Estate DeptILfCLaaL S V H S B I . K I i* -T r—J-p-*•""*•- J * * *a7™

'BWJi^fea-sr^*^^ «w«jafi»wMii*Sifcri^ 5 e-*^

vol.;

R. C AkWAt&Smmn of- e . 1 1 1 ' . B_MLeMka_e_ Dbaajw

Joint Meetinf, KMSOCM ny

From 92,S06 to $1,200.ponner Mayor Roger a Aktffch, per-

manent chairman ot tha Rahway Yal-leji Joint Meeting, lart nnrsday nightat a meeting ot m»*eautaU-M of thejoint Meeting in Wettfleld, suggested aAuction in hto salary from OHO to11300 a year, •'

Tbt local man pointed out that tbtwork and responaWltrlfa are now lessthm heretofore as the buttrof the eon-

work to nearly completed,l fstmiemaliiaiomaltams.pfnc

ea^ry eonstracUon as weU as ertersluDflnlshed matters, such as rights of

' van. Uw suits, disouted claims andunpaia bills. T~-—'»' a* these mat-ten wlil take eooslderahle tbne to com-plete, Ur. AkMeh suggested a reduc-tion in running expmaes. and m linewlth"hls, retomnw-dwt a cut In his ownalary. 1 -

The, Meeting, voted to apply tor a- PWA grant of »M iWO-to. tostaU a gas-

operatMi power plant at the disposalplant inWoodbrldg*. Total cost of thelnstallaUon. including nwsessarymuld-lng, Is estimated s i Wf*X. leaving theMeeting's share at $35^10, which fund]) now on hand. The proposed instal-lation would effect an annual net sav-

~lng of $1,793 In power cost*. Presentuuiuul power bill of Publlo Servicecompany is »WM0. Tne saving," It wascontended, would increase titan year tonor as the power load and cost In-creased. The disposal plant now gen-erates sufficient gas to operate thepro-pceed plant.< Westneld and-OarwoodlepneentaUm opposed the application.

Supervising Knglneeir Norman O.Wlttmer suggested th* tstellatlon of asludge 6>-watering oevie* to facOitate1h*l«« ie«k»ca«tp>ant i*urr

at »n/X» oJwhiel l a«i«o»ta_teljt7,6M could be obtained from PWA.Application for • PWA. grant, was au-ttetaedT -'—fc • * - « * *

charteredbtta. Any Ctasftad bags whoare interested antrip, shouldVodrheeron

of any project, rtderal, Theflrrtnano le l th th KMaarfr—Tnanoleawlth the em- TVoorhees wffl be allowed to go oo. the

W It LUXRal,.,deney that we find to. private enter-i

gIt to nwesaur to have tha Bic

U k tThe same would hold true withd h l d true withmunicipal control of garbage, collection.

ri llondayto tha dead Baa Jorgg .A strict Jamd probably would be main-

p y would be maintamed at first, but aa It was gradually

l d The playground at Boosaiittgy

relaxed, our sendee would also decline.to sponsored by the OtanfontU

Our present rate of $18 to 118 a yearaverages about ten oasts a, trip intoth ll

pmOnion Oountj* WPA, of wUeh.Btot

pthe cellar or to the back door for gar-b d bbihtant, fee forfhavjnff our garbage and

b i if gg

rubbish takettfroin our>back doom andcellars to the dumps? , t dont think ao.

The-sgitaUon^or municipal garbage,UeU to t I ' d

Vegetable Juice Codkbul

White Rose Fnntanai

- Shoestring Beefa^

fr*k FRUnSmmd VSGEIABLES Specially Pricedp g g ,coUecUon to not new In'oranford. JX

b h t tJ

was brought up some twenty year* ago,bt df

y y * g ,but waa defeated then as H Uotnd be

Lt* itLet* maintain our present planite

prosecute those-peiibna' who a n vlo-l%Ung our health code by dumping their

b k t Bonnie BriarSalad Dressins

g tgarbage akartha outlying stteets.

OaffeaSeattoEiMfeiaUU,Coffee was introduced Into Europe

by Venetian traders In W1B.

XEMcMAHONacon la the cured ten:hog «

noerlom of the hog.

Get die'iMMtfa good newt

THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR1 < MtmtttwtUfi DtUf Ktmhif

aiw-ipir Ht - * - « - • TWpck.m<

« • € , Haddock

ttetaedT• During the recent storm. Ur.Aldrlch

nported,-tbe flow In the trunk wassuch as to carry a targe amount ot ac-cumulated grit In the line down intothe plant, when the flow was so greatthat most of It was not caught in thegrit cbamberbut.went on through thepumps into the settling tanks. Due tothe dlfficultjihi pumping the grit outwith the sludge. Mr. Aldrich recom-mended that application be made to theState Board of Health\for permissionto construct a storm water by-l>ass toallow direct discharge Into the river attimes of extra high flow. The City ofRahway uses a similar system at pres-ent -Blds-were^amhoriaed-to-be-tekenII the health board approves,

—JHoad fSmmlisIimeT^lnBikMcCullough, Oranford's representative to theMeeting and'chairman of the trunkline maintenance committee, recom-mended 1mTir"rf« construction of asiphon, to make possible the removal ofa city of Rahway sewer, which runsthrough and cute off the upper half ofthe main trunk hi Rahway.' The re-moval la necessary to prevent'the back-ing up of the trunk Una at peak flows.A' similar condition exists in ClarkTownship. TheJUeetmg authorized thetaking of bids ODTistruction. rthe proposed con-

OPERETTA GIVEN BY .NEW CRANFORD CLUB

The operetta "l_u»y Bug, Udy Bug"was successfully presented In- costumeyesterday afternoon to a large and ap-preciative audience In St. Christopher'sSchool WesHWd, by" the recentlylonncd Childrwi's Operetta, CflubofcaIff~1U^Tf~*«W;yh»tal»

, - , «n*Tnxfcrlhe*dSHaioSarWH. B. Banken. A party followed, atwhich refreshments were served byMrs. Thomas, director of 8 t Christo-pher's School

The principals In the operetta were:Heart of the Bos*, VmjinU Chase; Mrs.l«dy Bug,-ftanees Dunbar; TommyTiptoe, Billy Ranken: Terrible Aphis,Harry Kelson; Qranny Sun, MargaretAustin; Dr. 'ftost, Billy Chase. TneBaby Bugs were!.Johnny and AnneM&rie BalderechweUer. -drace»a*Ito,

.Janet Kelttng, ftntfa McLennon, Betsy.• tad Judy Peterson, Sue FfaUppe and-OorlsHankea . - •

Mrs. ElUTMssmnB, Mrs.* Xduh Mc-Lennbn and Howard Rjmken, ft. weremembers of the costume committee.

jPolish folk, and gym-

H C

• - S-\,r' ,";-"->••'"• r • '.

POU8HA. varied program of

—tenets, music choir smgti .nttlc worki* scheduled for Polish" Com-munity Night at Stadium field, Warta-acco Park, EUabeth, on Wednesday at8 p. m. PoUowing an opening selectiont>7 the WPA Orchestra, remark* win be

• made by Walter a Kaoemarskl,abeth, -president of the Polish Federa-tion, who will introduce, the master ofMiwnonlesj.Leo B..Wojc!k.«

S' ui