6
r 15,000 People Read the HERALD. Published Every Tuesday and Friday. THE SUMMIT HERALD l~-w ai a Lull- ." and SUMMIT RECORD FORTY-SEVENTH YEAR NO. 97 SUMMIT, N. J., TUESDAY AFTERNOON. AUGUST 4, 1936 J3.5O PER YEA* tapping" Dogs Health Board Topic These Nocturnal Annoy= ances Together with the! U1 , .r T . ~ , Nni ev MJII, Man R^r, [ Block Dance Thursday; WANTED Raby's ..Till, bath-tub and bas- sinet by the Summit ('hapi.LT of tile Amcrii'itn lied Cross, Tul. Summit 0-1414. Campaign Issues ]|y J. B. it. SMI III BALANCES Noisy Milk Man Before X Last Night's Meeting Ultimatum to 2 Plumbers OF POLITICAL TOWER Music by WPA Orchestra The block dance this Thursday, nlglit on 'Maple street, in front of Inter- playground tournaments with all fivi: playgrounds taking ,part and the Aluliic Playground icamp file wire the high lights of 11 lit: fifth Week on tlu- pla> grounds. Tim writer of Ihe Mabie I'lay- 'ground adiviliej, will tell all about Playground Notes j Camp Wawayanda i Sumn %X!!TK e a »ark (ierman Voullls Filled for Season ;„ ,,,„,,„.! Visit Summit IH the preredlng article 1 refer rod 10 the .speelai Federal Admlnis-j^" traiive Courts suggested by u it/in- ,,._! Llie B"od time enjoyed by all those ttie Y. -M. C. A. from 8.3U to] 1.H0 ia j mitltu; of the; American Bar Asso-|ternoon tli oialion. It U proposed that these .tournaments court* gradually shull assume all Wfclc l 1 "* 1 ' 1 " 1 sponsored as part, of the. out-duor who attended Hie camp fire pro- i a little later in tins article, to rain a week agoFriday af- Iiiler - Playground for thai afternoon : HummiT entertainment program by | ithe Board of Hecr.yatioii and the j Judicial functions'now undcrlaken : j Union County W.l'.A. Musk: Pro-, until last \Vednen- by administrative bureaus, could 'Ihe hoys and girl: according to ago are divid- for these Hie barhlUK of doss, which * not only an annoyance m u newh- borliood hut also miniewhat of a menace to health when it keeps iject. Tin: VV.P.A. ten-piece on-hea-, people awake, drew the ire of Dr. itra will be located on a platform I mole t |IIle l>' program (J. Ward DiBbrow, president of the (just off the street on the Park wide j have been presented. For these grounds to select the winner and Hoard of Health at the mid-summer j uf tn . e . street. Two > weeks tournaments and each playground not'runs a tournament on their own BC-ssion of that body last evening. | "^ 6 ^°,. 1 ! t I)lc , att , eudetl the ..°. u !: These "yapping" dogs are to be a subject of discussion between the Health Officer and the Chief of looked for at the block dance. These out-door programs are pro- vided for the enjoyment of the titi- to see what canj>e done and | z eiiB of " Summit", and you are cordially invited to come and tak'e part. V. .- if they cunnot handle the situation, a further conference, bringing in members of the Common Council, will be held. It was reported by Plumbing In- apector Walter M. Crann that the bonds as required under,the ordi- nance for all plumbers doing business in Summit had been pro- perly taken care of and filed with the exception of-two. ' Oil motion of the Hoard it was decided that these (wo late ones should he noti- fied that utileus their bond ib com- pleted uiul In the hands ofthe Board by 3 o'clock today, their li- cense will bo cancelled. Another topic taken up by the Board last night waB that of the noisy milk dealers going from house to house in the early morn- ing hours, in many cases with lit- tle thought for those perhaps more fortunate than themselves, able to bo sleeping, it Is stated that there had been an improvement in this Auto Inspection Centers Picked Elizabeth and Westfield Fixed for Union County Owner s—To Begin Aboujt November 1st. Stations in State 28 Elizabeth, and Wcstffcld "have been selected by State'ltlotor Vehl-i autocratic bureaus both Kepubll- j innner-ui> to represent the play- cans a no! Democrats are re.sponsj- ble. They aru the product ofi* year a of t-.arcle.sg political thitik- I ground in tournaments. The.se tournaments are held at Mabie Playground each afternoon at 3 o'clock. The jy on at 3 oclock. The ing. The vicious principles under, j competition is (|uite keen for the lying them now have become the!hoys and cilia are out to wake HH main trunk of New Deal heresy, j "'any points for their playground Let us briefly examine, their origin. j aa Possible. One of the playground their growth, and their nature. directors accompany the children When, about fifty years ago, rap-i to Ma bio Playground for the idly changing social custom r e s u l t - i . ournttuicnts which means the chil- ing from scientific invention aud-if. 1011 are ului er supervision all thu Tho re sults of the tourna denly placed an undue burden upoti " m i 6 : The w 8 f i T" our juridical structure, there came " eUt8 , hc . d Wednesday and Friday a proper demand: for Increased to- 1 ale as follovvs: oliitios for the administration of j justice. There has been a progies- sive increase in this demand as ao- ltK anil MiiiKllng of H>« Inlir- J'laj grounil 'J'ouriiiiinciil, Intstead of meeting: the demand In & rational way, through the" cre.a* Sfon-.jf additional juridical fafini-. ties, ..legislaturesieverywhere,, have created administrative bureaus.'' In Cilrls" Class U Jucks; 1, Julia 1'ro- cavtiiK'. Koo.st'Vt'i't i'layri roll nil ; 2, I\]ar- Kiirel' KOI.IIIKIIOV .Icflij-fcon I'IUJKICHIIHI. Hoys' llliiss C Checkers: 1, Kdwurti Hi-my/y Washington I'luynii/uinl; Z, Gt:". lUclulle, Jt(^t.4t;velt I'laygruunrt ; .(, A 1 .'-'.SixiiiiKi, li/ltlne lyaygntund, ami ,t. Vaj'-inllli, Ji-flri'sini Playground. (ii.rl«' Clans H Hopscotch:- 1, Jean '' " I'lay^ruund ; 2, decorated doll carriage, (juini u]ilet i type; riaire Count'lly had Ihe dull: with the prettiest dress; Pally Ann ' Flynu was tile ytjungest ownor tif '• Alexander T- lika.-. ,..-h'-r a: liie ( iiiiia til. l lie ai. Camp Wawayiiiiiia. the New .l.T the smallest doll; Mildred Imtmar .sty V. M- liad the curliest head dull (Shirley Temple); liulh We.slbei.u had the most uuitjue doll la colored doll); Peggy Joyce hud th* doM-withIhe best hand made dress. ('. A. camp l»r Aiulm er, j.s ( o i'k, caled a I filled fur Ihe m-asoli act ordnii: to j,,.,| |,j, John lA-dlie, Hie camp dii'ecioi-. A • h e had busy and happy season iy l l i m i t e d - ( r n i e i ill - 1 I niiin |,|,t-. at J.:;' 1 WCIIIH Sprti'-e anil Si>ii h.V Imll rul ,i., iuiiiy li,-u! 'i'^i.'t HiVets. ii-il m e n w l i lull s. , The peanut hunt which followed: 1 '™" 1 lh( ' cam l' <'"»•';"« «'"' from mormti ltl « h)lal tampers who have 1M,:I l->iii tin *•'<. ."1! "I ihe c-.i-h tli.it HI In.i pel M,ii. T w o n i i | . i'f ui lacked htl'-r in liie w hai is.Jlu.ughi in iia\ !• the doll show was a great .sm (ess and was won by John C.imilri wilh ' al Hit- tamp for one or more pc-ri- 2U peanuts and Kuth Ditimai- with-ods this season. 22 peamHU. They divided a box of; The rump players piei-nili-d a •ell the .Millie hallit! 'I'ellk.i.s i d , , | | i arMl- 11 ark City Hospital. have iiul \v\ ttt-i• 11 I ihe New Hi- ass,lilani: Twelve of Party Visiting I). S. Entertained Here Over Weekend Under Y. M. C. A. Auspices Part of Eixhange Oroups trailer-jack as prizes, four The grape-on-the-spoon race was won by Hobby Flynn with "ISunky Orcinann as the runner-up in the five i!.''. (: " (Xl : dramatic musicul ronietly, "Ihe l'Vatber," last week, which; i\,H KI:I> i\ SHOKL uAiiiix; was oiu: of the hiuh ( 'l' lh »" While balhinu. season's work. The words, music friend« in i h e s u n ,,t Long'lira'm h antl under class. In the six aa<1 I )lot w i'i'e all drawn up and ' Carmen Koniiicheihi ,,f m Moni - and seven-year-old class Waller : presented bv I he campers u it h the avenue, was severely injund In Ande won with Mary Lou Johnson i counsellors acting as Ihe advisors ; hallling Ihe waves his heaij : struck the runner-up. The raisin feeding won by the team captained by .Mary j Lou Johnson. The results of the hoys' tourna- ments were; Class A Horseshoes Winner Tom Trengrove, runuer-ui) Joe Connelly. Class B Basketball Foul Shooting Winner: Whit Moro- ney; runner-up Robt. McNany. and' coaches. Kay Williams of the sand injuring his neck ,- m( | „..<•,. contest wus'hummil took part in this prtsenhi- bark. He was taken lo l,,,nr, Hran.'li •*"" llnl:l - v t10 "- | Hospital where x rays were taken Siimmil lainilies weiv lm-.ls l,i a roiip of (iei-man hoys and tills M'l 1 I lie wt'ek-emi The ;.'roiiji, in 1 cludinit seven b ivs and I h e : iris. a parly of a n m M l ,„ x , « y,,rk h',i,|,iv hivui lor .several week.; ill Ibis couirry. •iliul.r the aili-plces of ihe V. Al. C. A. The \ isilors wen' enlei laineil ! roni aflei'liooli until Moii'lay by I he I'ttiuilie ; o f I- 1 Pi inirosi- plat e, I inoriiini; ams, Class C King Toss Winner Thomas j l ' a '"l>- Others are now at the camp The mid-way point of the season) In determine file extent of injuries. (< ll(l i ir 7 Suriev road has been reached and the Kurondjlt is mil. tlWii.nht thai his eoiidiliou half of cam)) is underway. Many is sei ioim. campers have, been to camp and; have returned home with only their; memories to remind them of tho great time they have passed ifl Mirande runner-up Frank Dunio. llandcraft continued throuKhout the week with many more things being completed and ' new things started. Tho girls started sewin (enjoying to tile, full, (he well rounded and well supervised pro- gram. At the recent truck and swim- ming period meets), Vernon Wil- Camp Caniiundus On Last Half and some of the boys made waste ') iam , s °f Summit took third place paper baskets Out. nf empty iei cream contaiiK'is. Written by Hut.li DIttmar and John Caniilli. Miiliie I'hiyi;roiiii(l iin Jhi;. liiiseball throw, a firnt in the shot put and was anchor man on the winning relay team. Ver- non \v:as the only Summit boy to place in any events and as a result stands outas the leader of tho Local Stay=at=Home Yesterday Began Sec= ond Half of Season's Program Efficiency functions of the t i i ,1 i . « ,i nr n> IliapK, were desiraWe, •o to cle Commissioner Arthur W, Magee ,,,„ „„„-..., ,,, n i fn « o ',, , be sleeping. It Is stated that there | a s th(! Unlon County ilispection cSn-lfiTiS. 6 ^' ^f"^ situation since all of the local dealers had been warned recently. The nuisance of the smoke Which comes from the pumping and heat- ing plant of the Uickawanna Rail- road near the Maple street bridge was brought up by Mr. Davis. lie stated that he believed the plant must have been built for the use of anthracite coal and now it seemed as though soft coal waa being lined. The HealthdJOfflcer was instructed to find out what the situation was and to see what was needed to £bate the nuisance. Another matter of smoke nui- sance as complained about against the Summit Laundry at the last meeting of the Iloarft, It was re- ported that tho laundry will put up a new smoke stack and make a correction in the kind of coal be- ing used, which, It was stated, would obviate the nuisance. A further effort Is to be made by the Board to have eliminated the rag weed which Is such a detri- ment to sufferers of hay fever. All owners of large tracts of land had been notified to have this matter taken care of.and owners of small- er plots are to be dealt with In the same way. Only three members of the Board were present: Dr. Disbrow, Mr. Davia and Mrs. Dpoloy. Sunday Services in Summit Churches The Inspection statujfts OTlJie of. various alzes. In aoiive of (he ,i'_tvl»aV counties one Inspection lane will lie sufficient to handle the lnspeetltfnn while the one In Newa"rk will, llavo four inspection lanes.. While there will be but 28 stations'ther.e will be a total of ^5 Ia.nea in the proposed set-up. , '•'•. Commissioner JMagee believes It will be possible to Inspect 40 vehl-^ when'tlftr-o wtfs combine also Judi.-j Piiiysrijund'; i"""('frais'.' clal.^aa well an In Some. Instances ' iJ.iSypi'ound ; ;i, I'aa.sun c.aine inevitable: It was definite re- version toward a totalitarian state. tint Wi not ters for the official examination ofi were limited to-adniinistra^ motor vehicles In compliance with j when 'tlftr-o wlfs combine also judi.-i the compulsory motor vehicle law enacted by th6 1936 .Legislature. There will be twpnty-eigjjt stations In New Jersey, and-the choice of Elizabeth and Westfield waa arriv- ed at following a survey 'conducted on thobaals of public convenience, population and caf. rpgistratlxin*. It Is hoped to begin" a iliap«ctiona ; No- vembe* 1st. you evor toast niaruhmallows as. <'liu-|(, .liable l ^ *• <'i;u-it, . laKiiuj.^Wiit a state may not exist, in Republican | •'• ;fwm, .j*ft) doBpotlsili'liiay bu-nioto. ,tyraniflca;l than a despotic majority. 'Tfte* essence,, of-freo lnaty.utl,oiui-Iff not ij^tiopubllcanlsfli. r)oi-»ls,lt in liolrils, Mabln I'laj'Krouiitl i .Ifffeison . .I'l.-iyBi-duml 71, 1 WaHlijiiBton_ I'lii.vRiviuiKl 7 1 roun<1 IMJillLS, |)()l«ltS, <lnt.s, Mu- llunult (jf tin; lnter-1'l: 'nturnanieJUH hejtl at .\labi K'rounij Krld.i.v;, :i'uly )il, nu?l ..-..„ of l A fa.yfei'(iuii(la' Hi- ihfNH< rmlWiamtiiirs. Claa.s A 'JloJW ,Ii;«,ski'Ui;jlf '.'A P<>l,ii(; ,»_, ^ , .„ , A jojt ,HnsUrtlii># .ifl point ri'ilr It lo In >a' V-nmttfnla ln> 1 -^ '""Bund shlirt HllOl contest: 1, l-'llillllj aey. It Is In a Complete,bal-, Api , lef , cM s ,. lMl! ^i ay! r r «,un<i; 'i, 'E, . 1 f n/i«fpr KiiHal nml ruilUlfi.t4'< t\..rrn».<... tj n •" .- .1..., , .. I j , " • - ./ii> . I •••PIMuiiulu, jiniMU -Iiaj'Sil'luIlH - Z, Jill. r, soeial and polUical:'.G#ffoejt;- |.J;)oaevelt Playsround ; ' S,, is" of i-nrimaVy lnipor.-' H«i)t.* Onrnicy, RonsL-vo-ljt I'lfiygrouhd,.! thQUt '.."a .sufficiently. 1 .' 1 ,.;'!; 1 "" Trun s -i-ove, -Jfff C rsoi. Play- fttfe of power, Such, power Is' tance, s^WltliQiit .."a sufficient antotrnt," itmlv'idual fre«dool ciwinot bc)-flialhtainlfe!j. But ^xiwei'" Ia"a ttwo edged AWOTM. When exertedo foci # J ,?,' gWUlNtl. \'IHBS-4»,.i;jrlH' JacJ<H r : 1, ' lillz; •"'Marlnaoeli), "Mft bit? - l'laygroiiii(} iST-Gli-l cles per l tfe'r lane. Explaining*- the. selection of. tlia station citWf the Commissioner said that -"We have endeayoretl to .cause the least'inconvenience, from good it*l6ads «fo hpr>.pjne»3.,'WJi:en| cxerted'for eyM 4t-l'eads 'to jnisery. | Scientific. •" Social evvei'hnenUi"! tion taught" our 4 forefathers tiiat 1 lea, add Mario'Mariani his guiter | lo1 "' low(iiv , i "K hoards and the wjiole crowd sang- HOIIKS l!! )W(; of . <lll .' loi ;? llt two ! I '. M :. 1;. (iai is :'S Oakland plui-c; Walter I)- W o id, II Waldi'oil avenue; and Km; cue I'restinari, , r ,ll Iiruitl Ilill, roatl. 11 o s I s a n d y, nests were eiilei'lainel as a R i ' o i i p S a l u r d a y e v e n i n ^ ' i n tho I I'resllnaii home. The IIO.VK wern inotoi'ed lo Camp Wawayanila, 't ho I Stale "V" <'M 111 p. for ihe Sunday niornini; otil-tloor chapt'l servic". I'pon ieavitiK 1\londay mornini;, tlm Ki'iiup ' expressed themselves a:> well plWised with tht! t.as'lc of An1-' jtu-l«mn liomn Hie giyeti iliein in- SiiMiinil. The Kroup came to Ihe United Slatt'.s under llm auspices of Donald W;i!t, American eeducator, who foiindeil Hit) movement known as "Kxperlment In Inlernalional I,iv- iiiK." which urrun^es for" boy« and V.iris from sixteen to nineteen years ram at J old to visit families in foreign coun- tries. Sumo American youths are tho lino! now living abroad wilh German \arewe-! families under this exchange, sys- olnedi 11 '" 1 - e wnrrioivi of Chief CannundiiK, I'Vom ' for a full week or period of fun. Those who arrived in tho rnile.l Stales 011 Friday hud been sehvled closinj; ol' thn flr.sl half of! 1 '' 01 " various parts of (Jennaiiy he- use of their personality a.s well (scliolasllc allHinmenls. Kourlcen of the uludents 1<'II Sat- 1 iipr, Mt'lHiiK a Kcori! o{ 17. Juckl ' SlromciiKer. Dick Tracy ami Allenj'lrday for Colorado, where they will Hutler -were tied for HPCOIKI wilb'do field work in geology. The ten time iloiiiK this'that wo did not | Place, Jaklnj; scfoiul in the fifty- have, time for a ghoHt story so wej'5* nl hi'Vast Htrolto and third in the are^looking forward tq our next : f ift y y im[ l)il< -? [ stroke, eamvfire. . •'• ••":•/'• | Sharing tlio^ spotlight of popu- [(.jght iioints ciwh.' Thnu prevented jollier sludents went to the Poeono •'""" "" "" • "' ' ' MounlahiH, In Penii.s.vlvania, wliyre tliey will .study living condiliims In American homes. DiirliiK tho voyage tin; only clui-.i- es they attenilnd wern for one hour •!-/I'lieaday the girls had tourna-1 laiity with the musical comedy U'7-mi 'ofr'Tr n i' : ' menta and'tho winner of the Class jand the .sporting events was tho j StrompiiKor and RIIHKP.11 wore thp captains of two CCliV«Sker Contest Was C. l'ryco JUMIUII Friday night closing banquet. ; y~ v Lirti'd' t the second place was P. San- ! All good things come at once and : | )ils ,7| )all " u ^ nM li^etl j!'t)"(m"Mondav so'ne.. In 'the Class. 13 King TosBjfhis week was no oxc°iitl«n. The inonlil)K ,„ „..,,., th( , nowW( , ck of j. _ , LContent-'-Jean. Arisen, took first I ''aiuiuet program, divided into two jtohrrt Sv.-ei : Dl-k Trift-y and daily, when they spok»> and slud- l,lifarC,w]tli,lj.^lovno s-ocond placG.,|l>iirts took the entire, evening, j K , r( , n( , M|j ul " , Pn , t | 10 ,,tave* on led English. They eaeii paid about. ' •" " \ the girls have been | After the_lodgo^ program, wherein \ atroni'-n-rpr's toam wli ' " ' " ' ' ' " " ' '"'" ""' '""'' benefits of nilgh'tbe^ol)- taJnea/wIilleUs eVIla-wbrebelBg re- sl,rainejd4 thrilttgh the maintenance' »"f scientifically a'djasteil balances betwetin the.-several, powers. Tlieyi found - mat ^lie powers' themselves Int Of travel distance, to 'than .became more ^fietent, wit'h- 3,, greatest -piajorlty ..of motor <out becoming more dangerous, as vehicle owners'." •. • . always Is the ca«e In a sovereign Ho continued: ,.«' ' . ^tate. Tfvia-Is in strict correspond "Ther,& arfe citscs, where 'motor . T e nee wl^i natural laws * ' ' vehicle owners^ from'one county v/ould he: more conveniently Servedi by a. Btatlon in an adjoining county. The best example Is. Ocean City inj Cape May Cjounty anti' th% -Atlantlii City Station, In other wordsi it k my Belief that the majority of mo- torists^ living" In Ocean -City 'wou-ld nrefer'and Avould have'conslderablly 3tali antl *Kr,;tnk yi'fAor'ts, P>yosevoU>, P l a y - ' | Jil •grorfritj. .••';,• r . -, - ' s ' ; bt . 'f'lii'.ss- C Xi\t\$ . Hoii^crik'h : Si:lllenpe, rjooaieVpTk- Playgr ... , Ketly O''Mvarn, "M.'tble M'a.VBToumi ( Thelnia ^Westheru ' ' ground" , g , < «"^,'Hiss V. Wasiior's' -, - .temy/WaSWriBMi.r'laygrnuml-; 2,' W.111. •Borle,. WlHjiiiiifIi>Ii KliixSTi)iiiiU< S, liiir- rtpn P!iluijrijn,/W*liio ,PI,1yfirournlf.'*hj(l "ii-j. AH> vlcoti. Oie girls have bueni Alter the lougo program, where a'..." , , , ••--•-•- -i,,,,. , , BWOtielng *(«v play, "Beauty andI wonderful meal was served, the ' bll ' om ''"" [ ' r * to »»> while Voegtlen \UM for 'the round trip and niri- t&;6 UoiHir'lkit-fte-tan not get a boy i campers anxiously turned their at- " a " ' ;;!il '''' hy lil( ' u Stollery, j dental traveling expenses. Dr. Al- I-H:',I, Hr ls .! to be beast e^en though we tell him! tnntion to tht? council fire'where llV1 '" ' N " rlh " Il;l All(! " »»tler. |fons Scliunter, of llerlln, was in J' i, 'CIIAS.*-he turnabout to be-a- Prince. the awards for the period were i»,'.,,.'"L.; ! ."v7 Tln$-sdayfhe boys won a Softball | Riven out. .At this time, James game from, tire,' Koosuvelt jOrton and Ralph Wagner,'Jr., re- VOCKIICH'S tINIin forged to the frontli-hargo of the group during tho with scorns in each of the first four -I.I f, We enjoy,our s.wlm.s at the Y. •tbh!*MayBruumici? M - U '^••^<>l .The hoys go On , r , Jofleiso'ir'', i?iay,.-|Tiiesd;«S' and-»On Wednesday the i&^ihJ™™!' 1 * | S " ^ 8? 'wrliip>,- i.v^.Ln' ArtsPiv j celved their Junior Circles, and i, , Oliver van ci.se won ins uiuugc . , , I victory, although by;Jean. Arisen. 1-KarWTliHrn; Malilc ,, l K The. last Sunday in July found severalof the local churches closed, assistant ministers in two pulpits, a guest speaker in a third, and the regular pastors In several others. The churches which held no serv- ices were the First Baptist, the Community Church and St. John's Lutheran. In Calvary Episcopal Church, the | loss distance ^travel to have their tivc;. mental, 4 social, .and,, political' de- velop -tUo. several' parts become mdre'Po.werful i&ed, mo.re efficient I'ance of,".thelr.: less efficient other anced political'. J';arl-TliiC Playfifrf 'roum! K "Aiai>io* Meiiiorial.FIeiJl ' This was th'e firs^lvveelt our play- gro'ohdiM'as b^en op'en in^the morn- ing, for ft was closed 'mornings while the Neighborhood House had |the;'t)aUy VacatitMi Bible" School. Lazy Driver Is Detestable gave this team tho Rtromenger's team oollect-ed KCVOII In tbn .sixth, and one in tin! first, fifth and seventh to make the final score ! M-!l. I ICach week the campers are tested 'as to weight, chest expansion and i other physical measurements and in addition their ability in running. The most dcsteStablo .species of., jumping, throwing"'" aiitl iThree New Factories doing to Stirling driver on the road today, and inci-i .bnseballs, for accuracy ami dl.s- The American Hammered Piston Ring Company, has purchased Ihe factory In Stirling located on Hail- road avenue and formerly owned by the, Sc.hwart?oiibach llu'Tier C1.1. Tin; plant had been Idlu for about _ I four yearn nave for a small part uc- curate, the,Rev. Sidney preaohed. A.t the Central Presby- terlan church the assistant minis- ter, the Rev. Ralph B. Neabltt, had inspeetc,d in tne "Atlantic City Station thaii to travel (Q, Cape May Couft House in Cape Way County." ,.- ' •• Since »each car la tpbe inspected twice "yearly under the Act, the Commies loner estimated that there will be 2,525,418 Inspections con- ducted. This figure was^ajjrived atj by Increasing tne registration llj;- by 2.8,'thja factbr^pf Increase on the baslg of two' inspections per ye,ar.°tor each vehi- cle, plus a fifty per cent, rejection r-elnspjection; In addition and judicial departments.. Several states and their, several 'de- waa the first of a series on "Some, Great Tliemea of the New Testament." "At. the Oakes Memorial Church, Miss -Margaret Becker, the general ' secretary of the Y. W. C. A., gave an address... The regular pastors who preach- ed -were: the Rev. Dr. Henry L. LarabdIn of the Methodist Episco- pal Church, whose sermon topic was "The Religion In which God Delights"; the Rev. Norman A. Andre 1 of the First Lutheran who considered "A Christian's Life Building"; and the Rev. Dr. Plor- ence Randolph of Wallace Chapel, A. M. E. Zlon Church, whose text was "A certain man had a fig-tree planted In his vineyard." "Love" was the eubject of the les- son sermon in the First Church of however, what per cent, of motor- ists will take" advantage of free in- spections over and above the two mandatory ones. July Building Here Far Ahead of 1935 -Building operations for the month of July totaled 378,569. This was below the large June total of $174,975 but far ahead of the July, 1935, figure of $28,300. The follow- ing permits were issued for dwell' ings: Frederick Van Duzer, 124 Ply- mouth road, ?9,000; R. W. Stafford, Christ, Scientist. The golden textjn Gi en Oaks avenue, $7,000; increase in effi dentally tho one that causes manyltance. ._ On Tuesday afternoon 24 boys f' 1 '^',, I to Stirling and begin operation itt becomesde, their American Red Crosn Swlm- carelessnesr-s, pile up. s'tructive. ' _ ,'? • •A"ccordlng'iy, the founder? divided tho nation Intp num<jrou3- ( .lndepend / eeXeC 5^ e M 1 5l hik t M i l On Women drivers; who have been'ming or Beginners Tests. Tli-esn criticised out of proportion to their j am ths flr.it of a several will, be hired in flu* town fact local labor g5lng on a hike to Memorial just due, are not the worst of- that lead to the life saving tests. «.. | d i t h " id th C i series" of'tos'ts | s ' 1 'l )> ^ n '' ac ' ' 0C!l1 lill)( "' is " nv preparing the place for occnpaii: y. idt f tI were held -with James ociciai HlttLBB auu uioir. acvcrai UB-i " . V " . "; ."- j iWrtKon hv Martha partments, each functioning lnde-JKeatsman winning the fou> shoot-| , ' t ^ rnten bv Mait " a pendeotly. as in tlu case of phy-;|Pi.^«t_for_boys i ll/12-«^d-18r ' - RooHevelt ^ lavK by Martha Karpenskl. out" o Koosevelt l'laj ground lenders either," said the Commis- sioner. "Nine out of ten women drivers will use the hand «ignal I when contemplntlng a stop or turn- that, though neither part properly) malfunction fpr anqther, neither part'.p'roperly in,a'y function without K | Shej.l. noUdway, uirierstandlng of natural law. Deal ls con-i „- _,, ,- their «!.*.» I °' ageSirf To all thlB the fusedly, opposed, xu wou ^'"'Pinlne succeed, •indejiendont'-local state\z. n J? government must be''abolished, and judicial, executive,"- knd ."teglslatlve' functions will become merged Into a sovereign despotism, Vy what- and enjoyed a shower Sunday Concert At Beechwood thel, co-opeVatlon 'of the others. , - . . . «v i' +. ' je •* Tfcls Is all-in con/ormance MtB-our 5 ^ ' W S^5^'S!u?il^*i u ™!Si Pleading for hotter observance of The guests of the Beechwood Ho- tel and thnlr friends attended an in- wun uienara acnumaKer seconu; *"—•"••" "••" v... JU/ v.« ~ w,.. u ,,^. „ .„ ... r and !n the, drls' 8, 9,'and 10 years bath under the showers at the Field hand signal regulations, Mr. Ma-1 I'ormal concert, in the ballroom, DII- f r i a i ! ; HOURP Thp cirls WRnt on a hikr> CRRsavs: | Sunday evening, which proved an Albert Wenzel, president of th. 1 new concern, plans to use about one-third of the floor space and is- pand a.s conditions warrant. Tin; remainder of the factory 1I;M been leased to a silk dress factory am! a knitting concern, thus bringing 'three new Industries to th'< I own- ship. Mr. Wenzel plan.s to beautify the grounds and if possible will es- tablished a training school for wo#ithe ropo skip- House. The . .._ «.,._,_ __ with Mian V.i on a hike says: Sunday evening, which proved an young men wishing unusual delight. 1 business. to en tor the Mr. \V«ii7.pl 1II : . '-^•bara.."pfief was sec- with Miss Zolowski to the Orango "Drivers should, remember that j unusual delight. l u «f Nl:m : id '. r!i .. .Mountains on Thursday and every the man in the car behind cannot j The artists, Mi«s Beaman and! According to Treasure hunts held on- TuesBa'y' one had a very good time. About know what wo intend to do unless j Mrs. Grace Bailey both well known | company makes pi.ston n n ^ 1-r otning ^vei-e won ta " William 116_BirI» ^ Ukingpart^inajap-j we tell him. But » we do^telljlm j J^iS' *™ at P resent W* at | ^ £ ^ 3 ^ and"'^.!^ Vie over name It may be known. There | JS^always enjoyed. will have been reve sioh to a less- TBe . b j g event of the week was coherent political llfo, with event- 1 ual. civil dla&olution. We have Pan'sius Mr the boys, and Char- dancing class. The Instructor is i clearly, he certainly - will maku the hotel. for the girls. These. Mr. Panuullo and we hope to put | every effort not to interfere with I M 'ss Beaman, whose voice Is of states that hla rings were in.tailed »n. raimiuiu uuu we nope LU IJUI every t'llui L nut. iu iinui'Luru wmi 1 - - - ----, jon an exhibition before the season us, and so will avoid an accident,! ''are beauty, rendered two groups of 1 in Colonel bindberKh s plane ami Is over of what we have learned. Hand signals should be given from songfl accompanied by Mrs. George 1 m »" v """"• •••"•"'rl hi-ealnmr nlanes. The big event of the week was g g the doll show on Thursday af ter-1 Bovs and girls from our play-! the left side of the car and given i LH i !bSround took several first and secj t i l f ditance of 100 noon with - . ____..__. —:,•-; noon wun sin^neeo winning rib- ground took several first antl sec- | ^.u,,,.,™,,, lul » evolved In purfeujyice with-,- t h e j bon for i arge8t doll Doris Blades ond Places in the Inter-playground f ee t before turning laws of nature ?.nd\ of nature's: w i nn j ng ribbon for smallest doll, tournaments at Mabie Playground) "it la only fair t( God." We may dissolve pureu-1 Barbara VMX the ribbon for the as tlle re P 0I> t shows. 1 - - .. ance with those same- Immutable! most un i que doll, and Siri Heeb a< Written by Jean Stewart. laws. CanAmericans contemplate an .event more terrible? ribbon for the prettiest doll. Judges i for this show were Miss Alice j ITAJ-UJf-AMEKICAIV OUTING In B. succeeding article 1 shall ; swenson, Miss JaneT BaUentine and j was "He that loveth not knoweth not God; for God ls love." The feast of St.- Dominic, founder ,cf the Dominican Order, was cele- brated that afternoon at Rosar.y Shrine by pilgrims from New York, Long Island and neighboring cities and towns In New Jersey. The exercises were opened with s procession around the lower Lenore Oppenhelm, Sunset drive, $7,500;' Paul Hann, garage on Mountain avenue, $300; C. M.l Stan- ley, Edgewood road, $10,000; Wil- Ian, $14,607; -William H. Risk Estate, 3 Wildwood lane, $18,762. The following permits.for alter- ations were made: Commonwealth Land Co., Beechwood road, $2,000; Kent Place School, Norwood ave- consider ttie necessity of an inde- pendent judiciary. Copyright 1936. Jay B. R. Smith chapel after which the Rev. Chas. G. j nue, $7,000; Tony Mike, 518 Morris Moore, resident chaplain, preacned avenue, $200; Dennis Ford, 61 River road, $200; Central Presby- terian Church, $2,000. a sermon on St. Dominic's zeal for souls. He spoke of the life of the saint, and nrged hW hearers to emu- late him in their daily life. He said that as founder of the order of St. Dominic, the saint had made him- self sacred to pilgrims in all parts ot the world and that the world was made tetter by his Hfe. 4 1 ' Meafam UMSSRALD wile* buying. RESURFACE OAKLET AVENUE The street department has com- pleted the resurfacing of Oakley avenue fall length—Beekman road to Springfield avenue. The wwttAT.n welcomes allnews. J ined for Driving Miss Margaret Backer. Written by Thyra Backer. for a distance of 100 or stopping, to give these sig- nals if you expect them from oth- ers." The Italian-American Civic Fed- eration of Summit held an outing j BIRTHS AT OVERLOOK DIKING THE PAST WEEK Born to Mr. and Mrs. John j at Bertram Island, Lake Hop.atcong,' Smith of Mountain, avenue, Murray Jefferson Playground l on Sunday. There were about one I Hill, July 25th, a son. This Tuesday the girls of.Jeffer- hundred people in attendance. Withflfft I lceime' son .School Playground went on a- """OUl UfcenS>e. hik0 toLakeSurprl8e Therewer e AHee Johnson, I fifteen girls- who went. /They ^Kent Place;played games of kick the can and of 135 Hobart avenue, Sum- 1 ; July 26th, a son. 9 many other record breaking plants. Lend at the piano. And Mrs.! Business men about the town Bailey, pianist, entranced her audl-1 have said for a long timo» that if jence with a "Norwegian Dance" by, the factory v/ere occupied a groat Olie Olson and Rubinstein's "Ro-j deal of unemployment would dir.an- mance." ' i pear. Residents hope the predic- M'lss Beaman included In her first ! tion will come true. selections: "Who Knows?" by I Ernest "Ball: "My Love or London-; Kent Place _Olrls to Smith and derry" by Helen Boardman Knox; Wellesley and "Clouds" by Ernr«t Charki; | Kent Place School, Summit, will In the second group were: be well Represented at Smith C61- "Love's Own Sweet Song" by Kul- lf!ge this fall. Among those from man; "Now Sleep tbn Crimson Kent Place who expect to matrl- Petals" by Roger Quiltcr; "The dilate at Smith in the'autumn are' Cuckoo" by Liza Lehman^ antl. In Kathleen, Crawford, Kleanor ,f'>Ick, conclusion, an exceptional rnndcr- Catherine Grimm, Barbara Jucger^ , played games of kick the can and boulevard, was fined $10 in PoHc'e.had a song-fest Returning at five Court Thursday night by Police j o'clock tired and happy. The re-- Justice Robert J. Murphy Jr,, on a charge of driving a car without a license. The arrest wan made by Officer Frank Van Tronk. Anna Barton of Tenafly was fined J6 for speeding 48 miles per hour on Broad street; Joan Jbhngon, 28 Hickory street. Orange, $5 for speeding 40 miles, per. hoar on Springfield atenae; Mildred Dono- (rio, of Chatham, $3, for speeding 40 miles an hour on Broad street. The speeding arreita w«f» made by Of- ficer Henry McTernaa. suits of the girls'.tournament were: *- OF C. BENEFIT ('ABD PARTY Class C Rope-Skipping: Winner I POSTPONED TO THURSDAY Alice Moll, Runner Up i Edna Ditt- ' ar. The Summit Council, Knights of Thursday afternoon we- had a Columbus' benefit card party doll show, a peanut hunt and a originally scheduled for. tomorrow grape on the spoon race for small night has been changed to Thurs- children, and a raisin feeding team day night August 6th. The party entertained I jj orn to ^ T am j MrB jeuiott' ins of "When It conies to the end, Mary Lex, Jean Orr, Jean Peiinell, with his guitar 1 and Neopolitan: Brockelbank of 12 Colony court, I of a perfect day." I Rosalind Robb, Isabelle Roche, Summit, July 27th, a son. I The concert was preceded by the il-"is Van Vllet, Mary Voorhees, Born to Mr. and Mrs". Daniel usual Sunday evening son;?.nervlec Eileen Ward, Mary Warner/and Loomis of 200 Riverside drive, \ in . the lobby of the hotel with; Mary Wickham. To Wellesley go mar. race. ; will be held at Highland Hall. Judges of doll show were Miss. Jean Gads and Miss Dorothy The HERALD gives you the best Wood. ; value for your money. $3.50 per The results of the dell show: Al- year. It'comes to you twice a week ice Moll haa the most beautifully | for toJs price with the city's news. Cranford, a, daughter, July 27th. Born to Mr. and Mrs. Robert.] Hunt of 1 Euclid avenue, Summit, July 28th, a daughter. Born to Mr. and Mrs, Roland Sheridan of South street, Murray HHl/Muly 29th, a daughter. Born to Mr. and Mrs: Ross DeLia of South street, New Providence, July 30th, a son. Born to- Mr. and Mrs. Peter Givens of 196 Liberty avenue, Union, July 30th, a daughter. in the lobby of the liotel with y y Oeorge See •ai the organ: Mrs. Elizabeth and Jean Brough. Marion Bailey at the piano; and Mrs. Jane Fritz. Bett y Hendrickson and June Roberts as violinist. SHIPPERS TO MEET U CHICAGO Official announcement has just been made by J. W. Davis, of Sum- mit, director of the American Fruit and Vegetable Shippers Association, whose headquarters are at Chicago, to the effect that the Executive Committee of that organization has Mason. Mention the HERALD when buying. selected Chicago as Hie place of > their next convention and the dates will beThursday, Friday and Sat- urday, January 14, 15 and 16, 1937/ -- The standing and special commit- tees will convene on Wednesday, January 13th.

THE SUMMIT HERALD€¦ · r 15,000 People Read the HERALD. Published Every Tuesday and Friday. THE SUMMIT HERALD l~-w ai a Lull- ." and SUMMIT RECORD FORTY-SEVENTH YEAR NO. 97 SUMMIT,

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Page 1: THE SUMMIT HERALD€¦ · r 15,000 People Read the HERALD. Published Every Tuesday and Friday. THE SUMMIT HERALD l~-w ai a Lull- ." and SUMMIT RECORD FORTY-SEVENTH YEAR NO. 97 SUMMIT,

r

15,000 People Read theHERALD.

Published Every Tuesdayand Friday. THE SUMMIT HERALD l~-w ai a Lull- ."

and SUMMIT RECORD

FORTY-SEVENTH YEAR NO. 97 SUMMIT, N. J., TUESDAY AFTERNOON. AUGUST 4, 1936 J3.5O PER YEA*

t app ing" DogsHealth Board Topic

These Nocturnal Annoy=ances Together with the! U1 , .r T. ~ ,Nniev MJII, Man R^r, [ Block Dance Thursday;

WANTED

Raby's ..Till, bath-tub and bas-sinet by the Summit ('hapi.LT oftile Amcrii'itn lied Cross, Tul.Summit 0-1414.

CampaignIssues

]|y J. B. it. SMI III

BALANCES

Noisy Milk Man BeforeX Last Night's Meeting

Ultimatum to 2 Plumbers

OFPOLITICAL TOWER

Music by WPA OrchestraThe block dance this Thursday,

nlglit on 'Maple street, in front of

Inter- playground tournamentswith all fivi: playgrounds taking

,part and the Aluliic Playgroundicamp file wire the high lights of11 lit: fifth Week on tlu- pla> grounds.

Tim writer of Ihe Mabie I'lay-'ground adiviliej, will tell all about

Playground Notes j Camp Wawayanda i S u m n %X!!TK ea »ark ( i e r m a n Voullls

Filled for Season ; „ , , , „ , , „ . ! Visit Summit

IH the preredlng article 1 referrod 10 the .speelai Federal Admlnis-j^"traiive Courts suggested by u it/in-

,,._!Llie B"od time enjoyed by all those

ttie Y. -M. C. A. from 8.3U to ] 1.H0 ia j mitltu; of the; American Bar Asso-|ternoon tlioialion. It U proposed that these .tournamentscourt* gradually shull assume all Wfclc l1"*1'1"1

sponsored as part, of the. out-duor

who attended Hie camp fire pro-i a little later in tins article,to rain a week ago Friday af-

Iiiler - Playgroundfor thai afternoon

:HummiT entertainment program by |ithe Board of Hecr.yatioii and the j J u d i c i a l functions'now undcrlaken :

j Union County W.l'.A. Musk: Pro-,

until last \Vednen-

by administrative bureaus,could

'Ihe hoys and girl:according to ago

are divid-for these

Hie barhlUK of doss, which *not only an annoyance m u newh-borliood hut also miniewhat of amenace to health when it keeps iject. Tin: VV.P.A. ten-piece on-hea-,people awake, drew the ire of Dr. itra will be located on a platform I m o l e t|IIlel>' program(J. Ward DiBbrow, president of the (just off the street on the Park wide j have been presented. For these grounds to select the winner andHoard of Health at the mid-summer j u f tn.e. street. Two > weeks

tournaments and each playgroundnot'runs a tournament on their own

BC-ssion of that body last evening. | " ^ 6^°,. 1! t;° I ) lc, a t t , e u d e t l t h e . . ° . u ! :These "yapping" dogs are to be asubject of discussion between theHealth Officer and the Chief of

looked for at the block dance.These out-door programs are pro-vided for the enjoyment of the titi-

to see what can j>e done and |zeiiB of " Summit", and you arecordially invited to come and tak'epart.

V. .-

if they cunnot handle the situation,a further conference, bringing inmembers of the Common Council,will be held.

It was reported by Plumbing In-apector Walter M. Crann that thebonds as required under,the ordi-nance for all plumbers doingbusiness in Summit had been pro-perly taken care of and filed withthe exception of-two. ' Oil motionof the Hoard it was decided thatthese (wo late ones should he noti-fied that utileus their bond ib com-pleted uiul In the hands of theBoard by 3 o'clock today, their li-cense will bo cancelled.

Another topic taken up by theBoard last night waB that of thenoisy milk dealers going fromhouse to house in the early morn-ing hours, in many cases with lit-tle thought for those perhaps morefortunate than themselves, able tobo sleeping, it Is stated that therehad been an improvement in this

Auto InspectionCenters Picked

Elizabeth and WestfieldFixed for Union CountyO w n e r s—To BeginAboujt November 1st.

Stations in State28Elizabeth, and Wcstffcld "have

been selected by State'ltlotor Vehl-i

autocratic bureaus both Kepubll- j innner-ui> to represent the play-cans a no! Democrats are re.sponsj-ble. They aru the product ofi*year a of t-.arcle.sg political thitik-

I ground intournaments. The.se tournamentsare held at Mabie Playground each

afternoon at 3 o'clock. Thejy on at 3 oclock. Theing. The vicious principles under, j competition is (|uite keen for thelying them now have become the!hoys and cilia are out to wake HHmain trunk of New Deal heresy, j "'any points for their playgroundLet us briefly examine, their origin. j a a Possible. One of the playgroundtheir growth, and their nature. directors accompany the children

When, about fifty years ago, rap-i t o Ma bio Playground for theidly changing social custom resul t - i . o u r n t t u i c n t s which means the chil-ing from scientific invention aud-if.1011 a r e u l u ier supervision all thu

T h o results of the tournadenly placed an undue burden upoti " mi6 : The w8f i T "

our juridical structure, there came " e U t 8 ,hc. d Wednesday and Fridaya proper demand: for Increased to- 1

a l e a s f o l l o v v s :

oliitios for the administration of jjustice. There has been a progies-sive increase in this demand as ao-

ltK anil MiiiKllng of H>« Inlir-J'laj grounil 'J'ouriiiiinciil,

Intstead of meeting: the demand In& rational way, through the" cre.a*Sfon-.jf additional juridical fafini-.ties, ..legislaturesieverywhere,, havecreated administrative bureaus.'' In

Cilrls" Class U Jucks ; 1, Julia 1'ro-cavtiiK'. Koo.st'Vt'i't i'layri roll nil ; 2, I\]ar-Kiirel' KOI.IIIKIIOV .Icflij-fcon I'IUJKICHIIHI.

Hoys' llliiss C Checkers: 1, KdwurtiHi-my/y Washington I'luynii/uinl; Z,Gt:". lUclulle, Jt(^t.4t;velt I'laygruunrt ;.(, A1.'-'.SixiiiiKi, li/ltlne lyaygntund, ami,t. Vaj'-inllli, Ji-flri'sini Playground.

(ii.rl«' Clans H Hopscotch:- 1, Jean'' " I'lay^ruund ; 2,

decora ted doll ca r r i age , (juini u]ilet itype ; r i a i r e Count'lly had Ihe d u l l :with t he pre t t i e s t d r e s s ; Pa l ly Ann 'Flynu was tile ytjungest ownor tif '•

Alexander T- lika.-., . . - h ' - r a : l i i e ( i i i i i a

til.l lie a i .

C a m p W a w a y i i i i i i a . t h e N e w . l .T

the smal les t doll; Mildred I m t m a r .sty V. M-liad t he cur l ies t head dull (Shir leyT e m p l e ) ; l iu lh We.slbei.u had themost uuitjue doll la colored d o l l ) ;P e g g y J o y c e hud t h * d o M - w i t h I hebest h a n d m a d e d r e s s .

( ' . A. c a m p l » r

A i u l m e r , j.s ( oi'k,

c a l e d a I

f i l l e d f u r I h e m - a s o l i a c t o r d n i i : t o j , , . , | | , j ,

J o h n l A - d l i e , H ie c a m p d i i ' e c i o i - . A • h e h a d

b u s y a n d h a p p y s e a s o n iy l l i m i t e d - ( r n i e i

i l l - 1 I n i i i n | , | , t - .

a t J . : ; ' 1 W C I I I H

S p r t i ' - e a n i l S i> i i

h.V I m l l r u l

, i . , i u i i i y l i , - u !

' i '^i . ' t H i V e t s .i i - i l m e n w l i lul l

s. ,T h e p e a n u t h u n t w h i c h f o l l o w e d : 1 ' ™ " 1 l h ( ' c a m l ' < ' " » • ' ; " « « ' " ' f r o m m o r m t i

l t l « h ) l a l t a m p e r s w h o h a v e 1 M , : I l->iii t in

*• '< . . " 1 ! " I i h e c - . i - h t l i . i t

H I I n . i p e l M , i i . T w o n i i | .

i ' f u i l a c k e d h t l ' - r i n l i i e

w h a i i s . J l u . u g h i i n i i a \ !•

the doll show was a great .sm (essand was won by John C.imilri wilh ' al Hit- tamp for one or more pc-ri-2U peanuts and Kuth Ditimai- with-ods this season.22 peamHU. They divided a box of; The rump players piei-nili-d a

•ell the .Millie hallit!

'I'ellk.i.s i d , , | | i arMl- 11

a r k C i t y H o s p i t a l .h a v e i i u l \ v \ t t t - i • 11

I i h e N e w

H i - a s s , l i l a n i :

Twelve of Party VisitingI). S. Entertained HereOver Weekend UnderY. M. C. A. Auspices

Part of Eixhange Oroups

trailer-jack as prizes,four

The grape-on-the-spoon race waswon by Hobby Flynn with "ISunkyOrcinann as the runner-up in thefive

i!.''.(: " ( X l : d r a m a t i c m u s i c u l ron i e t l y , " I h e

l ' V a t b e r , " l a s t w e e k , w h i c h ;i\,H KI:I> i \ SHOKL uAii i ix;

w a s oiu: of the h i u h ( 'l ' l h » " Whi le ba lh inu .s e a s o n ' s w o r k . T h e w o r d s , m u s i c f r iend« in ihe s u n ,,t L o n g ' l i r a ' m h

ant l u n d e r c l a s s . In t h e s ix a a < 1 I ) l o t w i ' i ' e a l l d r a w n up and ' C a r m e n K o n i i i c h e i h i ,,f m M o n i -and s e v e n - y e a r - o l d c l a s s W a l l e r : p r e s e n t e d bv I he c a m p e r s u it h the a v e n u e , w a s s e v e r e l y i n j u n d InA n d e w o n w i t h Mary Lou J o h n s o n i c o u n s e l l o r s a c t i n g a s Ihe a d v i s o r s ; h a l l l i n g Ihe w a v e s h i s heaij : s t r u c k

the r u n n e r - u p .T h e r a i s i n feeding

w o n by t h e t e a m c a p t a i n e d by .Mary jLou J o h n s o n .

T h e r e s u l t s of t h e h o y s ' t o u r n a -m e n t s w e r e ; C l a s s A H o r s e s h o e sW i n n e r T o m T r e n g r o v e , r u n u e r - u i )J o e C o n n e l l y . C la s s B B a s k e t b a l lFou l S h o o t i n g W i n n e r : W h i t M o r o -n e y ; r u n n e r - u p R o b t . M c N a n y .

a n d ' c o a c h e s . K a y W i l l i a m s of the s a n d i n j u r i n g his neck ,-m( | „..<•,.c o n t e s t w u s ' h u m m i l t o o k p a r t in t h i s p r t s e n h i - b a r k . He w a s t a k e n lo l,,,nr, Hran. ' l i •*"" l l n l : l - v

t 1 0 " - | H o s p i t a l w h e r e x r a y s w e r e t a k e n

S i i m m i l l a i n i l i e s w e i v l m - . l s l , i a

r o i i p o f ( i e i - m a n h o y s a n d t i l l s

M ' l 1 I l i e w t ' e k - e m i T h e ; . ' r o i i j i , i n1 c l u d i n i t s e v e n b i v s a n d I h e : i r i s .

a p a r l y o f a n m M l , „ x , « y , , r k h ' , i , | , i v h i v u i

l o r . s e v e r a l w e e k . ; i l l I b i s c o u i r r y .

• i l i u l . r t h e a i l i - p l c e s o f i h e V . A l .

C . A .

T h e \ i s i l o r s w e n ' e n l e i l a i n e i l ! r o n i

a f l e i ' l i o o l i u n t i l M o i i ' l a y

b y I h e I ' t t i u i l i e ; o f I-

1 P i i n i r o s i - p l a t e , I

inoriiini;ams,

Class C King Toss Winner Thomas j l'a'"l>- Others are now at the camp

T h e m i d - w a y p o i n t of t h e s e a s o n ) In d e t e r m i n e file e x t e n t of i n j u r i e s . (< l l ( l i i r 7 S u r i e v roadh a s b e e n r e a c h e d a n d t h e K u r o n d j l t is mil. tlWii.nht thai his eo i id i l iouhal f of cam)) is u n d e r w a y . Many i s sei ioim.c a m p e r s h a v e , been to c a m p a n d ;h a v e r e t u r n e d h o m e wi th o n l y t h e i r ;m e m o r i e s t o r e m i n d t h e m of thog r e a t t i m e they h a v e p a s s e d ifl

Mirande runner-up Frank Dunio.llandcraft continued throuKhout

the week with many more thingsbeing completed and ' new thingsstarted. Tho girls started sewin

(enjoying to tile, full, (he wellrounded and well supervised pro-gram.

At the recent truck and swim-ming period meets), Vernon Wil-

Camp CaniiundusOn Last Half

and some of the boys made waste ' ) i a m , s °f Summit took third placep a p e r b a s k e t s Out . nf e m p t y ieic r e a m c o n t a i i K ' i s .

• W r i t t e n by Hut.li D I t t m a ra n d J o h n Can i i l l i .

Miiliie I'hiyi;roiiii(l

iin Jhi;. liiiseball throw, a firnt inthe shot put and was anchor manon the winning relay team. Ver-non \v:as the only Summit boy toplace in any events and as a resultstands out as the leader of tho

Local Stay=at=HomeYesterday Began Sec=ond Half of Season'sProgram

Efficiency

functions of the

t i i ,1 i . « ,i nr n> IliapK, were desiraWe,•o to cle Commissioner Arthur W, Magee ,,,„ „„„-..., ,,,nifn«o ',, ,be sleeping. It Is stated that there | a s th(! U n l o n C o u n t y i l i s p e c t i o n cSn-lf iTiS.6^' ^ f " ^

situation since all of the localdealers had been warned recently.

The nuisance of the smoke Whichcomes from the pumping and heat-ing plant of the Uickawanna Rail-road near the Maple street bridgewas brought up by Mr. Davis. liestated that he believed the plantmust have been built for the use ofanthracite coal and now it seemedas though soft coal waa being lined.The HealthdJOfflcer was instructedto find out what the situation wasand to see what was needed to£bate the nuisance.

Another matter of smoke nui-sance as complained about againstthe Summit Laundry at the lastmeeting of the Iloarft, It was re-ported that tho laundry will putup a new smoke stack and make acorrection in the kind of coal be-ing used, which, It was stated,would obviate the nuisance.

A further effort Is to be made bythe Board to have eliminated therag weed which Is such a detri-ment to sufferers of hay fever. Allowners of large tracts of land hadbeen notified to have this mattertaken care of.and owners of small-er plots are to be dealt with In thesame way.

Only three members of the Boardwere present: Dr. Disbrow, Mr.Davia and Mrs. Dpoloy.

Sunday Services inSummit Churches

The Inspection statujfts OTlJie of.various alzes. In aoiive of (he ,i'_tvl»aVcounties one Inspection lane will liesufficient to handle the lnspeetltfnnwhile the one In Newa"rk will, llavofour inspection lanes.. While therewill be but 28 stations'ther.e will bea total of 5 Ia.nea in the proposedset-up. , '•'•.

Commissioner JMagee believes Itwill be possible to Inspect 40 vehl-^

when'tlftr-o wtfs combine also Judi.-j Piiiysrijund'; i"""('frais'.'clal.^aa well an In Some. Instances ' iJ.iSypi'ound ; ;i, I'aa.sun

c.aine inevitable: It was definite re-version toward a totalitarian state.

tint Winot

ters for the official examination ofi were limited to-adniinistra^motor vehicles In compliance with j when 'tlftr-o wlfs combine also judi.-ithe compulsory motor vehicle lawenacted by th6 1936 .Legislature.There will be twpnty-eigjjt stationsIn New Jersey, and -the choice ofElizabeth and Westfield waa arriv-ed at following a survey 'conductedon tho baals of public convenience,population and caf. rpgistratlxin*. ItIs hoped to begin"ailiap«ctiona; No-vembe* 1st.

you evor toast niaruhmallows

as . <'liu-|(, . liablel ^*• <'i;u-it, .laKiiuj.^Wiit

a state may not exist, in Republican | •'•;fwm, .j*ft) doBpotlsili'liiay bu-nioto.,tyraniflca;l than a despotic majority.'Tfte* essence,, of-freo lnaty.utl,oiui-Iffnot ij^tiopubllcanlsfli. r)oi-»ls,lt in

liolrils, Mabln I'laj'Krouiitli .Ifffeison . .I'l.-iyBi-duml 71,1 WaHlijiiBton_ I'lii.vRiviuiKl 7 1

r o u n < 1

IMJillLS,|)()l«ltS,

<lnt.s, Mu-

llunult (jf tin; lnter-1'l:'nturnanieJUH hejtl at .\labiK'rounij Krld.i.v;, :i'uly )il, nu?l ..-..„of lAfa.yfei'(iuii(la' Hi- ihfNH< rmlWiamtiiirs.

Claa.s A 'JloJW ,Ii;«,ski'Ui;jlf '.'A P<>l,ii(;, » _ , ^ , . „ , A j o j t , H n s U r t l i i > # .ifl p o i n tr i ' i l r I t lo I n >a' V -nmt t fn l a ln> 1 - ' " " B u n d s h l i r t HllOl c o n t e s t : 1, l- ' l l i l l l l j

aey. It Is In a Complete,bal-, A p i , l e f , c M s,. lMl! iay!rr«,un<i; 'i, ' E , . 1f n/i«fpr KiiHal nml ruilUlfi.t4'< t\..rrn».<... t j n •" . - .1. . . , , .. I

j , " • - . / i i > . I • • • P I M u i i u l u , j i n i M U - I i a j ' S i l ' l u I l H - Z, J i l l .

r, soeial and polUical:'.G#ffoejt;- |.J;)oaevelt Playsround ; ' S,,is" of i-nrimaVy lnipor.-' H«i)t.* Onrnicy, RonsL-vo-ljt I'lfiygrouhd,.!thQUt '.."a .sufficiently.1.'1,.;'!;1"" Truns-i-ove, -JfffCrsoi. Play-

fttfe of power,Such, power Is'tance, s^WltliQiit .."a sufficientantotrnt," itmlv'idual fre«dool ciwinotbc)-flialhtainlfe!j. But ^xiwei'" Ia"a

ttwo edged AWOTM. When exertedo foci #J,?,'

gWUlNtl.\'IHBS-4»,.i;jrlH' JacJ<Hr: 1, ' lillz;

•"'Marlnaoeli), "Mft bit? - l'laygroiiii(}iST-Gli-l

cles perltfe'r lane.

Explaining*- the. selection of. tliastation citWf the Commissionersaid that -"We have endeayoretl to.cause the least'inconvenience, from

good it*l6ads «fo hpr>.pjne»3.,'WJi:en|cxerted'for eyM 4t-l'eads 'to jnisery. |

Scientific. •" Social evvei'hnenUi"!tion taught" our 4 forefathers tiiat1

lea, add Mario'Mariani his guiter | l o 1" ' l o w (iiv,i"K hoardsand the wjiole crowd sang- HOIIKS l!!)W(;™ o f .<lll.' loi;? l l t •

two ! I

'. M:. 1;.

( i a i i s

:'S O a k l a n d p l u i - c ; W a l t e r I)- W o id,

II W a l d i ' o i l a v e n u e ; a n d K m ; c u e

I ' r e s t i n a r i , ,r,ll I i r u i t l I l i l l , r o a t l .

11 o s I s a n d y, n e s t s w e r e e i i l e i ' l a i n e l

a s a R i ' o i i p S a l u r d a y e v e n i n ^ ' i n t h o

I I ' r e s l l n a i i h o m e . T h e IIO.VK w e r n

i n o t o i ' e d l o C a m p W a w a y a n i l a , 't h o

I S t a l e " V " <'M 111 p . f o r i h e S u n d a y

n i o r n i n i ; o t i l - t l o o r c h a p t ' l s e r v i c " .

I ' p o n i e a v i t i K 1 \ l o n d a y m o r n i n i ; , t l m

K i ' i i u p ' e x p r e s s e d t h e m s e l v e s a:>

w e l l p l W i s e d w i t h t h t ! t.as'lc of A n 1 - '

j tu - l«mn l i o m n H i e g i y e t i i l i e i n i n -

S i i M i i n i l .

The Kroup came to Ihe UnitedSlatt'.s under llm auspices of DonaldW;i!t, American eeducator, whofoiindeil Hit) movement known as"Kxperlment In Inlernalional I,iv-iiiK." which urrun^es for" boy« andV.iris from sixteen to nineteen years

ram at J old to visit families in foreign coun-tries. Sumo American youths are

tho lino! now living abroad wilh German\arewe-! families under this exchange, sys-

olnedi11'"1-e w n r r i o i v i of C h i e f C a n n u n d i i K ,

I 'Vom ' f o r a f u l l w e e k o r p e r i o d of f u n .

Those who arrived in tho rnile.lStales 011 Friday hud been sehvled

closinj; ol' thn flr.sl half of!1''01" various parts of (Jennaiiy he-use of their personality a.s well(scliolasllc allHinmenls. •

Kourlcen of the uludents 1<'II Sat-1 i ipr , Mt'lHiiK a Kcor i ! o{ 1 7 . J u c k l' S l r o m c i i K e r . D i c k T r a c y a m i A l l e n j ' l r d a y f o r C o l o r a d o , w h e r e t h e y w i l l

H u t l e r - w e r e t i e d f o r H P C O I K I w i l b ' d o f i e l d w o r k i n g e o l o g y . T h e t e n

time iloiiiK this'that wo did not | Place, Jaklnj ; scfoiul in the fifty-have, time for a ghoHt story so wej'5*nl hi'Vast Htrolto and third in theare^looking forward tq our next :f i f ty yim[ l)il<-?[ stroke,eamvfire. . •'• • ••":•/'• | S h a r i n g t l io^ s p o t l i g h t of p o p u - [ ( . jght i i o i n t s ciwh.' T h n u p r e v e n t e d j o l l i e r s l u d e n t s w e n t t o t h e P o e o n o

• ' " " " "" "" • " ' ' ' MounlahiH, In Penii.s.vlvania, wliyretliey will .study living condi l i ims InA m e r i c a n homes .

DiirliiK tho voyage tin; only clui-.i-es they attenilnd wern for one hour

•!-/I'lieaday • the girls had tourna-1 laiity with the musical comedy U'7-mi 'ofr'Tr n i': 'menta and'tho winner of the Class jand the .sporting events was tho j StrompiiKor and RIIHKP.11

wore thp captains of twoCCliV«Sker Contest Was C. l'ryco JUMIUII Friday night closing banquet. ; y~v

Lirti'd'tthe second place was P. San-! All good things come at once and : | ) i l s,7| )a l l" u^nM li^etl j!'t)"(m"Mondavso'ne.. In 'the Class. 13 King TosBjfhis week was no oxc°iitl«n. The i n o n l i l ) K ,„ „..,,., t h ( , n o w W( ,ck o f j . _ ,

LContent-'-Jean. Arisen, took first I ''aiuiuet program, divided into two jtohrrt Sv.-ei : Dl-k Trift-y and daily, when they spok»> and slud-l,lifarC,w]tli,lj.^lovno s-ocond placG.,|l>iirts took the entire, evening, j K , r(,n(, M | j u l" , P n , t |10 ,,tave* on led English. They eaeii paid about.' • " " \ the girls have been | After the_ lodgo^ program, wherein \ atroni'-n-rpr's toam wli ' "'" ' ' ' " " ' '" '" ""' '""''

benefits of nilgh'tbe^ol)-taJnea/wIilleUs eVIla-wbrebelBg re-sl,rainejd4 thrilttgh the maintenance'»"f scientifically a'djasteil balancesbetwetin the.-several, powers. Tlieyifound - mat ^lie powers' themselves

Int Of travel distance, to 'than .became more ^fietent, wit'h-3,, greatest -piajorlty ..of motor <out becoming more dangerous, as

vehicle owners'." •. • . always Is the ca«e In a sovereignHo continued: , . « ' ' . ^tate. Tfvia-Is in strict correspond"Ther,& arfe citscs, where 'motor .Tenee wl^i natural laws * ' '

vehicle owners^ from'one countyv/ould he: more conveniently Servediby a. Btatlon in an adjoining county.The best example Is. Ocean City injCape May Cjounty anti' th% -AtlantliiCity Station, In other wordsi it kmy Belief that the majority of mo-torists^ living" In Ocean -City 'wou-ldnrefer'and Avould have'conslderablly

3taliantl *Kr,;tnk yi'fAor'ts, P>yosevoU>, P lay- ' | J i l

•grorfritj. • . • • ' ; , • r . -, - ' s ' ;bt. 'f'lii'.ss- C Xi\t\$ . Hoii^crik'h :Si:lllenpe, rjooaieVpTk- Playgr ... ,Ketly O''Mvarn, "M.'tble M'a.VBToumi (Thelnia ^Westheru ' 'ground" , g , <«"^,'Hiss V. Wasiior's' -, -.temy/WaSWriBMi.r'laygrnuml-; 2,' W.111.•Borle,. WlHjiiiiifIi>Ii KliixSTi)iiiiU< S, liiir-rtpn P!iluijrijn,/W*liio ,PI,1yfirournlf.'*hj(l

"ii-j. AH> vlcoti. Oie girls have bueni Alter the lougo program, where a ' . . . " , , , ••--•-•- - i , , , , . , ,BWOtielng *(«v play, "Beauty and I wonderful meal was served, the ' b l l ' o m ' ' " " [ ' r * to»»> while Voegtlen \UM for 'the round trip and niri-t&;6 UoiHir'lkit-fte-tan not get a boy i campers anxiously turned their at- " a " ' ; ; ! i l ' ' ' ' h y •lil('u Stollery, j dental traveling expenses. Dr. Al-

I-H:',I, Hrls.! to be beast e^en though we tell him! tnntion to tht? council fire'where llV1'" 'N" r l h " I l ; l A l l ( ! " »»tler. |fons Scliunter, of llerlln, was inJ' i, 'CIIAS.*-he turnabout to be-a- Prince. the awards for the period werei»,'.,,.'"L.;!."v7 Tln$-sdayfhe boys won a Softball | Riven out. .At this time, James

game from, tire,' Koosuvelt jOrton and Ralph Wagner,'Jr., re-

VOCKIICH'S tINIin forged to the frontli-hargo of the group during thowith scorns in each of the first four

-I.I

f, We enjoy,our s.wlm.s at the Y.•tbh!*MayBruumici?M- U '^••^<>l .The hoys go On,r, Jofleiso'ir'', i?iay,.-|Tiiesd;«S' and-»On Wednesday the

i&^ihJ™™!'1* |S" ^8?'wrliip>,- i.v^.Ln' ArtsPiv

jcelved their Junior Circles, and i , ,Oliver van ci.se won ins uiuugc . , ,

I victory, although

by;Jean. Arisen.

1-KarWTliHrn; Malilc ,,l K

The. last Sunday in July foundseveralof the local churches closed,assistant ministers in two pulpits,a guest speaker in a third, and theregular pastors In several others.

The churches which held no serv-ices were the First Baptist, theCommunity Church and St. John'sLutheran.

In Calvary Episcopal Church, the

| loss distance ^ t rave l to have their tivc;.

mental, 4social, .and,, political' de-velop -tUo. several' parts becomemdre'Po.werfuli&ed, mo.re efficient

I'ance of,".thelr.:less efficientotheranced political'.

J';arl-TliiCPlayfifrf'roum! K "Aiai>io*

Meiiiorial.FIeiJl '

This was th'e firs lvveelt our play-gro'ohdiM'as b^en op'en in^the morn-ing, for ft was closed 'morningswhile the Neighborhood House had

|the;'t)aUy VacatitMi Bible" School.

Lazy DriverIs Detestable

gave this team thoRtromenger's

team oollect-ed KCVOII In tbn .sixth,and one in tin! first, fifth andseventh to make the final score

! M-!l.I ICach week the campers are tested'as to weight, chest expansion andi other physical measurements and

in addition their ability in running.The most dcsteStablo .species of., jumping, throwing"'" aiitl

iThree New Factoriesdoing to Stirling

driver on the road today, and inci-i .bnseballs, for accuracy ami dl.s-

The American Hammered PistonRing Company, has purchased Ihefactory In Stirling located on Hail-road avenue and formerly owned bythe, Sc.hwart?oiibach llu'Tier C1.1.Tin; plant had been Idlu for about

_ I four yearn nave for a small part uc-

curate, the,Rev. Sidneypreaohed. A.t the Central Presby-terlan church the assistant minis-ter, the Rev. Ralph B. Neabltt, had

inspeetc,d in tne "AtlanticCity Station thaii to travel (Q, CapeMay Couft House in Cape WayCounty." ,.- ' ••

Since »each car la tp be inspectedtwice "yearly under the Act, theCommies loner estimated that therewill be 2,525,418 Inspections con-ducted. This figure was^ajjrived atjby Increasing tne registration llj;-

by 2.8,'thja factbr^pf Increaseon the baslg of two'

inspections per ye,ar.°tor each vehi-cle, plus a fifty per cent, rejection

r-elnspjection; In addition

and judicial departments..Several states and their, several 'de-

waathe first of a series on "Some, GreatTliemea of the New Testament."

"At. the Oakes Memorial Church,Miss -Margaret Becker, the general

' secretary of the Y. W. C. A., gavean address...

The regular pastors who preach-ed -were: the Rev. Dr. Henry L.LarabdIn of the Methodist Episco-pal Church, whose sermon topicwas "The Religion In which GodDelights"; the Rev. Norman A.Andre1 of the First Lutheran whoconsidered "A Christian's LifeBuilding"; and the Rev. Dr. Plor-ence Randolph of Wallace Chapel,A. M. E. Zlon Church, whose textwas "A certain man had a fig-treeplanted In his vineyard."

"Love" was the eubject of the les-son sermon in the First Church of

however, what per cent, of motor-ists will take" advantage of free in-spections over and above the twomandatory ones. •

July Building HereFar Ahead of 1935

-Building operations for themonth of July totaled 378,569. Thiswas below the large June total of$174,975 but far ahead of the July,1935, figure of $28,300. The follow-ing permits were issued for dwell'ings:

Frederick Van Duzer, 124 Ply-mouth road, ? 9,000; R. W. Stafford,

Christ, Scientist. The golden text jn Gien Oaks avenue, $7,000;

increase in effidentally tho one that causes manyltance.

._ On Tuesday afternoon 24 boys f'1' ',, I to Stirling and begin operationi t t becomesde,

their American Red Crosn Swlm-carelessnesr-s, pile up.

s'tructive. ' _ ,'? ••A"ccordlng'iy, the founder? divided

tho nation Intp num<jrou3-(.lndepend

/ e e X e C 5 ^ e M 1 5l hik t M i lOn

Women drivers; who have been'ming or Beginners Tests. Tli-esncriticised out of proportion to their j am ths flr.it of a

several will, be hired in flu* townfact local labor

g5lng on a hike to Memorial just due, are not the worst of- that lead to the life saving tests.«.. | d i t h " id th C i

series" of'tos'ts | s'1'l)> ^n ' ' a c ' '0C! l1 li l l)("' i s " n v

preparing the place for occnpaii: y.i d t f tI

were held -with Jamesoc ic i a i HlttLBB auu uioir. acvcrai UB-i " • . V " . "; ."- j iWrtKon hv Marthapartments, each functioning lnde-JKeatsman winning the fou> shoot-| , ' t ^ r n t e n b v M a i t " a

pendeotly. as in tlu case of phy- ; |P i .^«t_for_boys i l l /12-«^d-18r ' - R o o H e v e l t ^ l a v K

by Martha Karpenskl.

out" o Koosevelt l'laj ground

lenders either," said the Commis-sioner. "Nine out of ten womendrivers will use the hand «ignal

I when contemplntlng a stop or turn-

that, though neither part properly)malfunction fpr anqther, neitherpart'.p'roperly in,a'y function without

K |Shej . l . noUdway,

uirierstandlng of natural law.Deal ls con-i „- _,, ,-their «!.*.» I ° ' ageSirf

To all thlB thefusedly, opposed, xu wou ^'" 'Pinlnesucceed, •indejiendont'-local state\z.nJ?government must be ''abolished, andjudicial, executive,"- knd ."teglslatlve'functions will become merged Intoa sovereign despotism, Vy what-

and enjoyed a shower

Sunday ConcertAt Beechwood

thel, co-opeVatlon 'of the others. , - . . . «v i' + . ' je •* •Tfcls Is all-in con/ormance MtB-our 5 ^ ' W S ^ 5 ^ ' S ! u ? i l ^ * i u ™ ! S i Pleading for hotter observance of

The guests of the Beechwood Ho-tel and thnlr friends attended an in-

wun u i e n a r a acnumaKer seconu; *"—•"••" "••" v...JU/v.« ~ w,..u,,^. „ .„ ... rand !n the, drls ' 8, 9,'and 10 years bath under the showers at the Field hand signal regulations, Mr. Ma-1 I'ormal concert, in the ballroom,

• DI I - f r i a i ! ; HOURP Thp cirls WRnt on a hikr> CRR savs: | Sunday evening, which proved an

Albert Wenzel, president of th.1

new concern, plans to use aboutone-third of the floor space and is-pand a.s conditions warrant. Tin;remainder of the factory 1I;M beenleased to a silk dress factory am!a knitting concern, thus bringing'three new Industries to th'< I own-ship. Mr. Wenzel plan.s to beautifythe grounds and if possible will es-tablished a training school for

wo#ithe ropo skip- House. The. .._ « . , . _ , _ __ with Mian V.i

on a hike says:Sunday evening, which proved an young men wishingunusual delight. 1 business.

to en tor the

Mr. \V«ii7.pl 1II:.'-^•bara.."pfief was sec- with Miss Zolowski to the Orango "Drivers should, remember that j unusual delight. lu«fNl:m:

id ' . r!i.. .Mountains on Thursday and every the man in the car behind cannot j The artists, Mi«s Beaman and! According toTreasure hunts held on- TuesBa'y' one had a very good time. About know what wo intend to do unless j Mrs. Grace Bailey both well known | company makes pi.ston n n ^ 1-rotning ^vei-e won ta" William 116_BirI» ^ Ukingpar t^ ina jap- j we tell him. But » we do^telljlm j J ^ i S ' *™ a t P r e s e n t W * a t | £ ^ 3 ^ a n d " ' ^ . ! ^ Vie

over name It may be known. There | JS^always enjoyed.will have been reve sioh to a less- T B e . b j g event of the week wascoherent political llfo, with event-1

ual. civil dla&olution. We have

Pan'sius Mr the boys, and Char- dancing class. The Instructor is i clearly, he certainly - will maku the hotel.for the girls. These. Mr. Panuullo and we hope to put | every effort not to interfere with I M 'ss Beaman, whose voice Is of states that hla rings were in.tailed

»n. raimiuiu uuu we nope LU IJUI every t'llui L nut. iu iinui'Luru wmi 1 - - • - -- --,jon an exhibition before the season us, and so will avoid an accident,! ''are beauty, rendered two groups of 1 in Colonel bindberKh s plane amiIs over of what we have learned. Hand signals should be given from songfl accompanied by Mrs. George1 m » " v """"• •••"•"'rl hi-ealnmr nlanes.The big event of the week was g g

the doll show on Thursday af ter-1 B o v s a n d girls from our play-! the left side of the car and giveni LH i !bSround took several first and secj t i l f ditance of 100noon with- . _ _ _ _ . . _ _ . —:,•-; noon wun sin^neeo winning rib- ground took several first antl sec- | .u, , , . ,™,, , l u l »

evolved In purfeujyice with-,- t h e j b o n f o r i a r g e 8 t doll Doris Blades o n d Places in the Inter-playground • feet before turninglaws of nature ?.nd\ of nature 's :w i n n j n g ribbon for smallest doll, tournaments at Mabie Playground) "it la only fair t(God." We may dissolve l£ pu reu -1 B a r b a r a VMX the ribbon for the a s t l l e reP0I>t shows. • 1 - - ..ance with those same- Immutable!most u n i q u e doll, and Siri Heeb a< Written by Jean Stewart.laws. Can Americans contemplatean .event more terrible?

ribbon for the prettiest doll. Judges ifor this show were Miss Alice j ITAJ-UJf-AMEKICAIV OUTING

In B. succeeding article 1 shall; swenson, Miss JaneT BaUentine and j

was "He that loveth not knowethnot God; for God ls love."

The feast of St.- Dominic, founder,cf the Dominican Order, was cele-brated that afternoon at Rosar.yShrine by pilgrims from New York,Long Island and neighboring citiesand towns In New Jersey.

The exercises were opened withs procession around the lower

Lenore Oppenhelm, Sunset drive,$7,500;' Paul Hann, garage onMountain avenue, $300; C. M.l Stan-ley, Edgewood road, $10,000; Wil-Ian, $14,607; -William H. RiskEstate, 3 Wildwood lane, $18,762.

The following permits.for alter-ations were made: CommonwealthLand Co., Beechwood road, $2,000;Kent Place School, Norwood ave-

consider ttie necessity of an inde-pendent judiciary.

Copyright 1936. Jay B. R. Smith

chapel after which the Rev. Chas. G. j nue, $7,000; Tony Mike, 518 MorrisMoore, resident chaplain, preacned avenue, $200; Dennis Ford, 61

River road, $200; Central Presby-terian Church, $2,000.

a sermon on St. Dominic's zeal forsouls. He spoke of the life of thesaint, and nrged hW hearers to emu-late him in their daily life. He saidthat as founder of the order of St.Dominic, the saint had made him-self sacred to pilgrims in all partsot the world and that the world wasmade tetter by his Hfe.

4 1 • 'Meafam U M S S R A L D wile* buying.

RESURFACE OAKLET AVENUE

The street department has com-pleted the resurfacing of Oakleyavenue fall length—Beekman roadto Springfield avenue.

The wwttAT.n welcomes allnews.

Jined for Driving

Miss Margaret Backer.Written by Thyra Backer.

for a distance of 100or stopping,

to give these sig-nals if you expect them from oth-ers."

The Italian-American Civic Fed-eration of Summit held an outing j

BIRTHS AT OVERLOOKDIKING THE PAST WEEK

Born to Mr. and Mrs. Johnj at Bertram Island, Lake Hop.atcong,' Smith of Mountain, avenue, Murray

Jefferson Playground l o n Sunday. There were about one I Hill, July 25th, a son.This Tuesday the girls of.Jeffer- hundred people in attendance.

Withflfft I lceime' s o n .School Playground went on a-" " " O U l UfcenS>e.hik0 t o L a k e S u r p r l 8 e T h e r e w e r e

AHee Johnson,I fifteen girls- who went. /They

^Kent Place;played games of kick the can and

of 135 Hobart avenue, Sum-1; July 26th, a son. 9

many other record breaking plants.Lend at the piano. And Mrs.! Business men about the townBailey, pianist, entranced her audl-1 have said for a long timo» that ifjence with a "Norwegian Dance" by, the factory v/ere occupied a groatOlie Olson and Rubinstein's "Ro-j deal of unemployment would dir.an-mance." ' i pear. Residents hope the predic-

M'lss Beaman included In her first! tion will come true.selections: "Who Knows?" by IErnest "Ball: "My Love or London-; Kent Place _Olrls to Smith andderry" by Helen Boardman Knox; Wellesleyand "Clouds" by Ernr«t Charki; | Kent Place School, Summit, will

In the second group were: be well Represented at Smith C61-"Love's Own Sweet Song" by Kul- lf!ge this fall. Among those fromman; "Now Sleep tbn Crimson Kent Place who expect to matrl-Petals" by Roger Quiltcr; "The dilate at Smith in the'autumn are'Cuckoo" by Liza Lehman^ antl. In Kathleen, Crawford, Kleanor ,f'>Ick,conclusion, an exceptional rnndcr- Catherine Grimm, Barbara Jucger^

, played games of kick the can andboulevard, was fined $10 in PoHc'e.had a song-fest Returning at fiveCourt Thursday night by Police j o'clock tired and happy. The re--Justice Robert J. Murphy Jr,, on acharge of driving a car without alicense. The arrest wan made byOfficer Frank Van Tronk.

Anna Barton of Tenafly was finedJ6 for speeding 48 miles per houron Broad street; Joan Jbhngon, 28Hickory street. Orange, $5 forspeeding 40 miles, per. hoar onSpringfield atenae; Mildred Dono-(rio, of Chatham, $3, for speeding 40miles an hour on Broad street. Thespeeding arreita w«f» made by Of-ficer Henry McTernaa.

suits of the girls'.tournament were: *- OF C. BENEFIT ('ABD PARTYClass C Rope-Skipping: Winner I POSTPONED TO THURSDAYAlice Moll, Runner Up i Edna Ditt- ' —

ar. The Summit Council, Knights ofThursday afternoon we- had a Columbus' benefit card party

doll show, a peanut hunt and a originally scheduled for. tomorrowgrape on the spoon race for small night has been changed to Thurs-children, and a raisin feeding team day night August 6th. The party

entertained I j j o r n t o ^T a m j M r B jeuiott' ins of "When It conies to the end, Mary Lex, Jean Orr, Jean Peiinell,with his guitar 1 and Neopolitan: Brockelbank of 12 Colony court, I of a perfect day." I Rosalind Robb, Isabelle Roche,

Summit, July 27th, a son. I The concert was preceded by the il-"is Van Vllet, Mary Voorhees,Born to Mr. and Mrs". Daniel usual Sunday evening son;?.nervlec Eileen Ward, Mary Warner/and

Loomis of 200 Riverside drive, \ in . the lobby of the hotel with; Mary Wickham. To Wellesley go

mar.

race. ; will be held at Highland Hall.Judges of doll show were Miss.

Jean Gads and Miss Dorothy The HERALD gives you the bestWood. ; value for your money. $3.50 per

The results of the dell show: Al- year. It'comes to you twice a weekice Moll haa the most beautifully | for toJs price with the city's news.

Cranford, a, daughter, July 27th.Born to Mr. and Mrs. Robert.]

Hunt of 1 Euclid avenue, Summit,July 28th, a daughter.

Born to Mr. and Mrs, RolandSheridan of South street, MurrayHHl/Muly 29th, a daughter.

Born to Mr. and Mrs: Ross DeLiaof South street, New Providence,July 30th, a son.

Born to- Mr. and Mrs. PeterGivens of 196 Liberty avenue,Union, July 30th, a daughter.

in the lobby of the liotel with y yOeorge See •ai the organ: Mrs. Elizabeth and Jean Brough. MarionBailey at the piano; and Mrs. Jane Fritz. B e t t y Hendrickson and JuneRoberts as violinist.

SHIPPERS TO MEET U CHICAGO

Official announcement has justbeen made by J. W. Davis, of Sum-mit, director of the American Fruitand Vegetable Shippers Association,whose headquarters are at Chicago,to the effect that the ExecutiveCommittee of that organization has

Mason.

Mention the HERALD when buying.

selected Chicago as Hie place of >their next convention and the dateswill be Thursday, Friday and Sat-urday, January 14, 15 and 16, 1937/ --The standing and special commit-tees will convene on Wednesday,January 13th.

Page 2: THE SUMMIT HERALD€¦ · r 15,000 People Read the HERALD. Published Every Tuesday and Friday. THE SUMMIT HERALD l~-w ai a Lull- ." and SUMMIT RECORD FORTY-SEVENTH YEAR NO. 97 SUMMIT,

TWO THE SUMMH HERALD AND SUMMIT RECORD, SUMMIT, N. J. TUESDAY, AUG. 4. 1936

I

PERSONALSD l \ l i . K ( ' : ; i i "K a i . d % : n . i j l i j w -

t o l , i i K e I ; i - . . r i ; . ' w i n i i - t : , e >

W i l l I ' i ' i i i u i i i i i i i t : ; h i ' ' • " ! . ' I ' a y .

M i . s s V i l ' g i l i ' . a 1 1 , , ) : ^ V i H i n t . e - - l

i i V e i i u e - r H u i i i c ' l T h i i i - . d a y a l t e r a

s i x w e e k s ' i i i - . U . r H i p t h i ' - i l r U l ! i t -

Wt.-- .st .

M r . u i n i M r s . K i e h l i . - i 1 I1 T i n . n i -

t o n a m i l a u i i l y o f s u M . i u i i t i i i i i . < v . -

• l i n e h a v e I 1 . - I I . i t i v i l I : - i i i i i . i n i . . n ; l i ' - . - ;

Stay ut t 'yl.iil Ma- s . , i n T a p . I '(id.

Mr. a n d Ml* . H e r b e r t .1 S t p i h r e -t u r n e d y e s t e r d a y to thei i home in{'oil r o a d Horn a in.din1 ii 'iiit h r o u g h tht j White- Mi.iinta his aiidX t w E n g l a n d S t a t e s

F l e t c h e r T h o n i l n i i . w h o w^s llii.sJ u n e g r a d u a t e d I m m Massae i iu -KclJ.s I n s t i t u t e (jf Te . l i iiology. y e s -t e r d a y sl.arl.ed work with tin1 I') o. -t o r H ( Ja inb ie C o m p a n y in St. Lou i s .

L o n g l c y t i . W a l k e r of IJewliwi iodr o a d wild lias biH-ii t r a v e l i n g liiv.-lin1

pa.st t h r e e weeks t h r o u g h t heriortli* Midd le West , is now s t a y i n ga t t h e s m a l l I n d i a n v i l l a g e of T o m -a h a w k , Mis.

Mi.ss Kredrira Kvoii'tt, dieticianat Overlook Hospital, .sailed Satur-day nifilit on Hit- Canadian 1'a.iii.1

liner I'Juclies.s of Atholl on ii vaca-tion cruise between New York,Quebec and Montreal.

Mr.s. Lydiii ('loss has returned toher homo on 1 Oak Knoll road,

' Summit, lifter a visit of. several.<lnys with her won and her daugh-'ter-ln-Iaw, Mr. and.Mr.s. 1 Icibiil I..€1OH.S of Luke Midiawk, Siiarta.

John A. Pe.y and. daugliler ofMiami, Kla.i wlio are vacationing

_.itt-tha. uurih- wnni. rw.uiit. ....viallura.in Summit. Mr. Key waa formerlyconnected with the. Milllmiu-SiiortHills It din and ia now in tiio adver-tising department of tlie MiamiHerald.

is> \ifc:lhig ul Bay Head

,\!_r. anil .\ii> I 'cnd. !!WOiiVilaiiri. .I-'-ii l i l j , J.. 1.. for a

MDull-it .t!

Ii '-Sl.L.1

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it a mi;n. Ns l i i a i i i

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a; Hi,•.in i i

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and,.. Vi v.-

t-l !>de Vi

buiii

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an t .

EXGAdHMhlSTSI ' . | / ] I U . ' t l i I ' l T H I . i d

Mr a n a . V i r t . . v K . i i . i i . - 1>.. i ' e ; ' ' | . a l d

i - . f ; :••! \ \ . - - i U L i . . * - • • „ . . ; \ , w V - . r i - . .

u i i U i i ) : n . f i .• ••'[ . - . . i . i i i i i i l L a , ' " a i .

l l o u l i i - e d l i . e e . i L a - i. l i i e t ' l ' i f t . ' i i - U 1

• K K I - i n - r . M i : - s i ; ( ! • n . i i e 1 ' ( , ' l i a u j .

OBITUARY

H a v e ^ T n r Tu V m U - r ; d u l u n l i i y l v r i j i i J ^ n l n o l l , , | - o i u l t . H -t | ;

' .Mr. a n d .\ir>. A. J . Cui-hett <>i'j .SiUijii.it ai e at t h e K » s e \ aiid fc-nh-

' hex at S]n i m l.nktj .

I M r . a n d M i ' s . J o h n i ) . T l i i e t . n u . - J t i '

! .-,o)iit l i i i i e v i s i t i n g t h e i r b o n . l . i n -: e.oin Ti i ie . - im- . i e r in A i i i e b u r o . Ma.-1-:-.

| W i l l i a m J K y a i i . d r i v e r (if Hi

' H o o k a n d L a i i t i e i ' I r u c k , i s o n I l l s !i t w o w e e k s - ' w u a t i o u . \ » 1 ^ - l» r . a n d M r s . K r i e M. N n r l l iI _ . a n d l a i i i i i y u i Bi idca . i i a v e n u e h a v e

| S t r e a m W i i i l u i n .1. D u n n e of t i l e ' >'et t i r i u -d t o S u m m i t , a f t e r s p t n d i n g

S u m m i t 1 ' U I K I ; D e p a r t m e n t s l a l U ' d >lhl'' • • • " •Hi ' l l* J u ' . v a t M a r s h l i e k l .

h i s i | i u i u a i v a c a t i o n o n S u n d a y . M u s s .

A r r i v a l s at t h e G u l d e n ( i ty l l u t d | 'Mi.-'.s K s t h t r 1). R e u b e l 1 . t h e a s -

at G a r d e n C i t y l a s t w e e k i n c l u d e d i - ; l H-ia-le ' s o e i a l w o r k e r a t t i n ; Ci>j) •

M i s s W i n i f r e d ' M e N a u g h l uf H u m - | i i ' a l l ' i i ^ b y u - r i a n ^ ' I m r t - l i 4d' S u n i -

l i i i l . ^ ' ^ - . j - i u i t , l e a v e s I l i U we(-k l.u t ] ) e n d h e r

; ., - •• — • , v a . - a i i o i i in t h e I ' o n j i m .M.u in t a i i i . s

if l ' L ' u n s y l v a n i u .Mr.s . ({IIIK-1'I N i x o n of S u m m i t

a v e n u e w i l l l e a v e f o r i ' l o \ i d e l u t •, I

t o v i s i t h e r . d a u g h t e r , M r s .

leit-- o f i Iiiit p l m e .

Mrs. Ambrose J. Cea ry of slumnut and Mrs. Hotiert W. Cuinmiiiu.j r ,,| Sfiort Hil ls have' been Hie

Alls. A. D. Kdwardw all (I Miss auus ts of the i r p a r e n l s , Mr. andG e r t r u d e I n w a r d s have r e t u r n e d I Mrs. l l o u e l l (1. Lord of N e w a r k , at

i a l . i - 1 I S A . s o i l v i Vi i l i . i i n i i i w i l i 1 -

i a h d l i t ( l a r c i i r i . ' i i . J i ' . \ a s .

j A i i i - s t ' t i i j i . i r d V- a . - E r a U i i u l t i l

i i ' . i i i t h e < •- < 1 j • - • i . f M . i U h l .Si . \ h . -

i e i . I i n i . ' : ; • ! a n d i e i c i ; . f . : H i e

\ h i . - i l t - r ...l A i U a ^ u - t ! j ' l i . - i i i I - . i l . u i i -

h i a l ' i ; n •. I - il .v i n r . ' o ' . . S i n i s a

I l l e l l l l i e l i l l U i e f a i l i H V 1 1 1 l i i - l l l U l i l i

. \ l a i i w r ,Si h o o i f o r ( i i r i s a t ' i ' a i ' i ' j -

t . O W l l . . \ . Y . \ \ l l e l i - . s i n - W i l l i v l i i i l i l l

u n l i i l l t ' l 1 d t - l i a i ' l l i r e I <ii ( i l i l l u o a r i y

l i e M J e a l .

i . i . - i i l e i . a t i l . l i o i i r i u n i i i s l a m h t a -

t i u i i i < l i i i t h e h u i i i u a r i i i e " j i i . se a t

T s i i i . - ' t a o . ( l i i n a , a n d t h e i - o u p i e

w i l l IK- m a r r i e d t h e r e l i i - f i n ' e 1 * -; I \ -

i n g t o r t h e l e n l a i l i d e r o f l i i t . i n r c i i i i i

d u t y in M a n i l a . I ' , i .

l . i e i i l e i i a i i l l i u i i i l a l i d w a s t h e

r c . L - i i i i e u l a l e o i i i u i i i n i i e r o l I - i s j j r u d -

u a l i n n c l a s s iit t h e .Nil vai A c a d e m yin \'iXl. Mi.ss l ' ep i . a r . l i.s tin; s i s -t e r of n s i y n Kitmoii i ' l 'Hiui 'd (•!'tin* ['. S. S. P e n n s y l v a n i a .

WEDDINGS

: • . - : . i l u ; ^ . T l . i ; f i v - s t u i a l i w < i r . Y h

T - . - i i i u - b i ' v i t h f i l . y n . u t i I i . 1 \ ^ ; i i :

, \ i . W V . : • r k a l i u h i u i ! > h t - i > » o ! f

i.VA L ' l i b K ' l . t - r ( . ; ' i \ - , i - a . - M i i . A t - i > i . i

\ . ; - l l i : l i - . . l l . - : f \ i » \ l i ! i i a l i v i i . f ' -

t ' : r i a i . L i K i ; j ] ! : i : \ U : r > ! -li o i M a h i e n

K i - n l F l i i i •- S i l i - i t ' i . ^ i « i i . ! ! i i i a n d

S l : ; i l : i < ' u i . < • ; ; . i ' . S l i f l l . i S I n i •!, •: • 1 1

t l w M a i ! - . f l l a ' M i i . - i c . i l l i i ' l K i l i i 1

A i !., i n H . - ^ L . . i i i : o r ! ! i , 1 i . t r ; t w o

y i a r s . A i r . 'ivn'w, , ; ! ; i - i i , | i - d t

1 . ^ H a l l S ; h i ! " j l l . i . M a . - . . - . , ! ! 1 ) :

l t i : - t i l u l e i - f I f Ii i i i . - l " i ; > . i l e

M r . - : , t ; , I I .i i . - v - - i •

•I M • ; ! ' \ I i i l . i l | j A M

„ - •- :•! i ' . | - , > i , ' - l I V

V; v : i ! ' • ; I

. , i i i -

A. -,v V.'fk.Mr. .uul Mr>-. '\\

t l i . ' i i 1 i t : i i u y u i i i i i i i

T . a l l l . . L ' ' l .

;n v. i l l

111!.- t.. - M - i e i i

I ' i i , , i , i i a ; , ' l r . , ; ' v n i > - i ; i . i \ ,••••• • .

1 - H r p a n - - i l •• i N u - i t i > .

f - ! i e I - ; . - 1 1 1 V i '. f i l . i l l i . . l i i : i i - - I i I • ! ) >

i n i . - i i a l l ' i . n > t - i . - n l e i l i i i l n - l l . ' a : "'•-

,1 r . . \ • : ; ! . . , n . . 1 i , n > - n . \ L > ' \ . i : i - .

A n - 1 i i i i i i . . 1 - l i i ' 1 . 1 n i l A i i . . M a i 1 - 1 ; . i •

l l u i ! i , a i i ; L i s l i i . i t - ' i i : i . a i : i .

; : - A •! •

SAVE J l a >

their tuniuier home at Hay Head.to ihtdr , hoiiit: iiv Franklin placefrom a viait In Wiunetka, 111.

Ainonji Ilio -Kindts at. a dinnerMrs. Charles It. Jliml of Summit.'Kiven by Miss Helen Thaeher of

avenue, is s]ji.-ndiiiK tbe siiniuu-r KdKewater I'afk at. a dinner at herudying at the University oi t'ain-

preceding the weekly junior danceat the yacht eluli, was Burr Greene

liev. Father Michael J. (ilcnuon, j of Summit and Huy lleud.pastor of HI. Teresa's Church, re-

Hay Head home Saturday evening

! lurried last week from a five weeks'; vacation in Ireland.

The Oirls Choir of Calvary Kpis-copal Church returned yesterdayafter spending two weeks at Beach

Miss Until HlaesiiiK, daughter of | | | aven under the direction ofMIK. I'iml H. HlufcHinK of 21 Frank- j i.Vanklin Helms, organist, and Mrs.lm place,- left August 1st to .sjiend < ||,.l,ns. The hoys choir left yes-Ihree weeks with friend t P k 'I luce weeks with friuud.s at lJt3ak'tIsland, Maine.

; DEVELOPING•\ PRINTING .

XEN URGING/

I Keren I arrivals at the Sloniiioiillij nl: Mpring Uikn Ini'tiKli"*!!. alidIMrss. K. K. .Mdsick, Mrs. Allen| l'iereti and Mr. and Mra. \V. J.Sharp of Summit.

Miss Alice Conover of Hillsideavenue, who returned recentlyfrom abroad, is luuving today toBpend the remainder of tlie sum-mer at Cotuit, Mass.

Mr. and Mrs. S. \V. Uorden andMr. and Mrs. J. W. Meixell of Ma-ple street, have relumed to Summitafter spending the month of Julyat IJeecli Haven, N. J.

Rogers' PharmacyiNCORl'OIM'l'fcl)

Springfield Avenue andIteeclmood Koud

'Plione (t-0071 Summit, N. J.

Fire Chief Thomas FY "White hasreturned from a week's trip toToronto, Canada, where he attend-ed the annual session of the Inter-national Fire Chiefs Association.

R. L. Westervelt of Laurel ave-ntio has returned from a month'strip to the Pacific coast, visitinghis daughter, Jeanne, who is at-tending college in Southern Cali-fornia.

Mayor and Mrs. James "W. Banck-er and, returned yesterday

'

BAKERY SPECIALS

from a month's vacation in Ber-lintidu. Councilman-at-large- G.'Harry Cullls' term as acting Mayoj'terminated Sunday night.

Morlm Cream Cukes, each 23cChop Suey Buns, Am. 24c

TIIUIIHI>4YAssorted Coohlt'H, <loz. ...18c and 22cKiigllHli liutli Huns, doz. 34c

FRIDAYTench Cream Cup Cukes, ilosk.--.22cVirginia Hon«y Itims, doz 30c

SATURDAYOlt Fasliloiieil Chocolate l a je rs ,

" each ." • 27cCream Tilled Ilec Coffee Cukes,

each .....; 27c

Herbert Cox ' of Summit ,'i\i\\'iserve as an usher at the weddingof Miss Alelda Whitman Stever,daughter of Mr. and Mrs. KalphHopkins Stever of Ridgewood toGeorge Phillips, son of Mr. andMrs. Edwin C. Phillips, also ofRidgewood, which will take placeon the evening of August 14th inChrist Episcopal Church there.

ROTH'S871 Springfield Ave. TeL 6-1078

FINEBAKING

Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Scherer ofSummit, who are spending thesummer at the Essex and Sussexat Spring I alce as is their annualcustom, have as their guest therefor a few days their daughter, Mrs.Edwin Stewart of Orange. x

Mr. and Mrs. Harold Kgner, whowore married last Saturday inWest Caldwell, and their bridalparty were guests of Mr. and Mrs.John Edmund Bgner of Montclairat a dinner at the Brook, Summit,

I following the wedding ceremony.

Clogged SewersThoroughly Gleaned With The

Electric Roto-RooterNo Digging! No Lawn Damage!

No Street Gutting! .

QUICKEST WAY YET!Costs only a fraction of the old fashioned,

destructive, hand digging methods!

ALEXfWGMBLYPlumbing •• Heating -Sheet Metal

3 Fernwood Road 'Phone 6-1247 Summit, N. J.

fr

•u15 .

TypewritersAdding Ma^hiines

CalculatorsBented -. EepaJred -So ld

Lowest TermsImmediate Service.

Stationery Store" SUBMIT 6-3191

U'nlay for two weeks there.

Air. and .Mrs. Elmer Reynolds ofSuiiiniiU wlio with their daughter,Miss Jean Reynolds, are passingthe summer at the Warren, atSpring Lake, had as their week-end

Mr. and Mr.s. J. ],. Dorenius,.Mrs. Bascum Morris and Mrs. Lor-raine Stemmler of Madison; A. M.Ucibur .and William Golden.

llalph A. Taylor of 100 Klaclc-hurn road has accepted a positionwith the American Telephone &Telegraph Company. He will he as-siKned to a position in a nearbycity for the next two or threeweeks. Taylor, who was formerlyconnected with the Western UnionTelegraph Co. was .graduated tliidJune from l>uko University.

Mr. and Mrs. F. G. Charcha of 133Summit avenue celebrated theirfirst wedding anniversary at a din-ner-dance at Copper Hill CountryClub in Flemington Saturday night.Tho guests included Mr. and Mrs.Raymond AC. Murray, Helen Detles,Tl)on)as and Charlotte Clynes ofSummit, Robert T. Ames of JerseyCity, formerly of Summit, and Mr.and Mra. Franklin Ii. Hughes ofEast Orange. The Charchas leftyesterday to visit Mrs. Charcha'sparents in White Plains. '

Short HillsMrs. Bayard Stevens of Forest

•drive left on Monday on a motortrip to Surrey, Me., where, she willhe the gueet of Mrs. George Taylorof Chicago and George Fowler ofMurray Hill. Mrs. Robert S. Harns-herger will occupy Mrs. Stevens'home in her absence.

Mr. and Mrs. Harry Spicer ofSpringfield avenue left on Tuesdayfor Chatham, Mass., where they willspend the remainder of the summer.

Mra. G. B: Nickerson of Fort Leeis 'the guest, of Mr. and'-Mrs. G. D.McKeever of Meadowbrook road.

Mr. and Mra..'Herbert Hall ofBaltusrol way are spending a month,at Quisset, Mass.

Mrs. Charles H. Stout ia,hd MissVirginia Stout are spending thesummer at the Bald" Peak ColonyClub, Melvin Village, N. H. Mr. andMrs. Edward S. Pettigrew of Hill-side avenue are also spending thesummer in Melvin Village on LakeWinnepesaukee.

Mr. and Mrs. Kimball Prince ofGlenside road are spending amonth, in Essex, N. Y.

Mrs. John Rhea Montgomery- ofHighland avenue Is spending anionth at York Harbor, Me..Mr. and Mrs. George Carey of

Orescent place have returned fromXennants Harbor where they havebeen the guests of Mr. and Mrs.Philip L. Smith.

Mrs., Marshall Geer and her son,Irving G«er, have returned from amotor trip through New Englandand Canada.

' Mr. and Mrs. Smith F. Fergusonof Stewart road have returned froma month's yachting trip on the-Sound and the New England Coast.

Miss Emma Florance of East lane.has returned from a week-end atMantolokftrg.. Mrs. Tell Schreiber left ,on Tues-day for Maine where she will bethe guest of Mr. and Mrs. Philip L.

Allen -litarick.Miss Anna Roarii-k, daughter of

]Mr. and Mi.s. Allan Cliiinil>erluinjKearick of Ueirhwood road, \va.smarried lo Joseph- Warner Allen,Jr.. son of Joseph Warner Allen u|i;iizahetli and the late Mrs. Allen,Saturday afternoon in ttie Churchof St. Sinion-hy-tlic-Si-a. at. Miinlo-lpldiiK by tho Wuv. Ijiuia W. I'itlHof Ai'dmoro, 1'a.

The bride, who was givtMi inmarriage hy her father, was gown-ed in white inoustii'liiic de sou1,with a till It: veil held ,i,u plucu hj' ahalo can of the saim* material. Shecarrigd lilies of the valley andgardenias.

Miss Harriet Hilts of Syracuse,N. Y., who was luaul uf lioiuir,wore a KUWU of maize inoiiHSclinedii sole and carried blue delphiniumand yellow roses.

The other attendants, Mrs,Thomas 1'u.rsonsj Kellogg of Water-bury, Conn., sister of the bride-groom; Mrs. John Shaw Kearick ofWestfiuld, N. J., sister-in-law ofthe bride; Mrs. William TheodoreOkie of South Orangu and Miss.Suzanne IJelapicrre of Kast 0r :aii^e, were attired in delpiiluiuinblue gowns and wore flower coro-nets. Their bouquets were siniilar

j to thtit. of'the maid of honor.Kverutt Toinliimou Allen of Kliza-

beth was best man fur bis brother,whose ushers were John SliawReariek of Westfield and AllanCliumberl»in Rearlclt of Sutlilllil,brothers of the'bride; Joseph Oriel,lOaton, Jr., of New York, and Wil-liam Chalmers Sehenck, Jr., ofNewark.

A reception at the ManasquunRiver Golf Club, Bridle, N. J., fol-lowed the ceremony. After a wed*ding trip to Sea Island, Ga., thecouple will reside in New York.

The bride attended Kent Plac&-School, Summit, and was graduated'from Vassar College last year.

Mr. Allen, grandson of the lateIOverett T. TomlinHon, prepared at.Liiiwrenceville School and wasgraduated in 1!)34 from WilliamsCollege. He is a member of the St.Anthony Club,, of New York and iswith the publishing firm of D. Ap-plcton-Century Company.

R U G SGleaned Repaired

Stored andInsured

'Phone Summit 6-0500

Bo«4 Summit, H. J.

Toltln—LOYCUMiss Elizabeth Lovell, daughter

of Mr. and Mrs. F. Hallett Lovell ofNew York and Edgartown, former-ly of Madison, was married Satur-day in First Church of Martha'sVineyard to Wallace Enime-tt Tobin,son of Mrs. Wallace" Emmett Tobinof Boston and the late Mr. Tobin.The ceremony, which was perform^ed by the pastor, llev. Harry But-man, was followed by a luncheonfor the bridal party and relatives.

Mrs. Lawrence W. Marshall of

Smith.Mrs. Norman SchuKz of Summit

has returned from a month atSouthhampton where she has bee-nthe guest of her daughter, Mrs. Ste-phen P. Nash.

Mrs. B. William Dudley and MissKathleen Didricksen are spendinga- month in MantoloMng at theBreakers.

Mrs. Charles Sumner "Williams ofMinisink road aiid her children arespending the summer in Rehoboth,Del.

On Beacon Street Orerlooftlai thoParkway nnd Charles lUvet-fiasnvOffers jnst what yon arc looking forSingle rooms and bath $3.00 a day

and up E.P. •', ^Double rooms and bath $5,00 a day

ana up E. P. ' 'Living rooms Included at no extra

charge , :American Plan rates if desiredAttractively furnished suites of any

size -Desirable penthouse apartments for

any period ' i'Kitchenette or refrigeration privi-

legesFull hotel service throughoutYour individual problems can .be

solved at rates most consid-erate

Under same management

CLIFF HOTEL"On the Ocean Front"

- Gateway to Cape CodNorth Scltuate Beach, Mass.

Mi not, P. O.Sprinkler System ffhroighoit

Booklets. Herbeij|G. apiigkers

Mill \\ illiaiusdiiM i s s l ) . i i ' ( i t l , y t l . W i l l i a m p i i i n .

i l : i uM1111-1-. o f i l r . a n d M r s . W i l l i a m

K . \ \ i i l i i i i n s i u i n l ' :i."i I ' u s s c l l p l a n 1 .

S u m m i t , a m i ( i i - o r s u - I M i l . M M I n i '

I ' i i t i ' d l i i K i n a n d M r s . A n d r t - w H i l l u f

:'.:"•:) M a r i i m s~..rj; i . ' t . I" il i o n , w e r e i n a ! 1 -

r i c d . l u l y I ' M !i i n t l i f l . i l i l i - C l n i n - l i

A i ' n i i i i i l l i s t 1 ( ' m i l ! - r , N e w Y o r k . T h e

i : c \ i p l i ' ] i l a n i n m a k e t h r i r h o m e i n

S i n i i n i i t .

T h r l i r i d c is a u r i u l n a t o of S n n i -

m i l l i i n h S>-lu)(il . M r . I l i i l \va-;

l i i i n i i n N e w a r k , • a t i c m l e i l p n h l i e ,

s c h o o l s in I ' l i i o n a m i i s a t p r c i - i e n !

i i i i | i l u y c ( l l iy t h e I t i i l i h e i ' s i ' t i J ru . s i t

( ' i ) i i i n a i i v i n N e w a r k .

One Woman's IOpinion . j

^.•••••.•••-•"•"•"•"•-•.« •»•«•••»"•"•••••••••••.••*•-•'•»•.••

The night before the fight be-tween Jack l)eni]i.sey and (!eneTunnoy. back In 1H2I1, a HeraldTi'ihini! -sports writer .said toTunncy, "If you win you will beheavy weight champion uf tliewin Id. If you lo.^vj'ou'll be jll.siiiiidlher prize, fighter that eunieclose. 'JJow do you fee] about it?"T'linnoy "Himisfit a iiirrveineiit"Tin(I.said, "Lif<! iii. its longest is veryshort. And tlie worrie you can gel\y. a sock on tlie'jaw." Thal'.s thetrouble with most of us, we areafraid of the sock on the jaw. We.haven't the courage to take achance.. A .sock on llu1 jaw isn't sohad. It. seldom kills a man. Youalways recover and there's a cliane-,;you may he able to duck. Tunncydid and caine up with a million ironmen.

o- (Iraiuli wallw the London Ktreels('reused ill milk because of tho sanc-tions imposed by the League of Na-tions against Italy. The suit, hewears is made from lanital. Lanitali.s made from milk. A Huff, takesabout 25 quarts. The milk iritreated hy chemicals and is quitetlie latest tiling in fashions. The

The HICHAM) gives you the bestvalue for your money. $:s.r>0 peryear. It comes to you twice a weekfor thin price witli the city's news.

u c w . ' i u i n i i e i n ' i i l u i i i t . i ! v . ; i - n u - i i . - d

' b e c a u s e o f I i i e I , e . l i 1 1 1 1 . - - i l l i e l .- - 1 1 . 1 .1 H e l l e e M i e t i c e . s i l o w .-; U i - - . i l H e w l i i i u

; ; i n l ; - n n i e o ! i i - i i e - i i i e s A l . l i i i l i e i d

i t l i l i v e . - ^ [ l i e l l i . l i i 1 . a L - . i . > w i i i ! M i i i i v

i > 1 i - s . D i / . / . y H e . i i i i . -c , i h i d y

i i i y i > \ \ ] \ i 1 1 • a i ' I . S 1 1 < - > . ; i ! d . a 1 1

i n n ! v i s i t e d t h e e i u i v e n l i i ' i i a t

u p r i g h t l u l l il .M-eiiu-. t o m e I h a !

p e o p l e w i l l i a l l l . t l i s r e s p n i i s i h i l i l y

I o f i i o i i i i i i i i l i n r . ii I ' r e s i i l e n t o u g h t

e o i n e h e r e a n d p r a y t o ( l o d I n d o

, lii.1 h i a n d n o t j i i : - l h o l d a |>i.-i• i t - . "

i N o t ii ] ) i e l l i< - . M r s . D e a n , a e i r - l r - .

I A l l t h e h a l l y h o o , p i n k l e n i o i m d "

a n i l b u n k . K e m e i n b e r l i a r n u i n ? l i e

i i a i i t h e r i g h t i d e a . I t ' s h i s f a m o u s

| r e m a r k . " O n e b o r n e v e r y n i i i i i i

| t h a i b o t h p a r l i e s a r e b a n k i n g m i

) t i > p u t t h e m - i n p o u ^ r . I I C A I N o v e m -

, h e r . W a i l u n l i l w e w o m e n g e l i n

r i i i l p o w e r . P e r h a p s ! I h o p e s o .

T h e I r o u b l e i.s t h a i t h e r e a r e j i | s t ar;

n i u i i y w o m e n h o r n e v e r y m i i i u l e a s

m e n .

— - i) • —

K v i d e n i l y t h e n a m e of H i s t r i

j A t t o r n e y W i l l i a m K. X . (i

j d o r s n ' t s t r i k e l e r r o i ' t o t h e I ie j i r l . of

I t h e u n d e r w o r l d . T h e f a c t i s , o n e oi'

I i t s m e m b e r s s l i d e ( h e e l o l l u s r i g h t

off hi.s c l o t h e s l i n e . l ' ' o i i r s u i t s in

»(llr t l i K e e t 'f t-liMin a l l vvnul i i i i U - i i n

l i o r l e d f r o m H i e I r i s h i s l e . T l i e

f o u r t h Wiis a t u x e d o . M r . ( i c o g h a u

t h a n k s t h e t h i e f f o r . t h a t .

- - - o -

J im is a crow. Hi la. reared him,she says, "From a pup." She triedtii send him hack to his featheredli'ie.nds but lie refused to leave bislosler home. It's all right willi^Uitabut not with the neighbors andthey .say unless ' . l i iu slops pullingthe clolhi'is pins from Ih'eir dampMonday wash 'and letting theircloth(ii-i trail in- the mud, J im'shome is going to be liird Heaven.

It siiiMiis llial the study of botanymight not be amisri if you decide loJoin the liolie.e loree. I'alfoluiiinDaniel Bailey of the Coney IslandStation is a keen amateur botanist.lie turned his knowledge to .noodaccount Ilio other day when he dis-covered a bed of marihuana. Hetold his finding to the ciiplain. Allthe oilier patrolmen were .sent out

with shovels to dig up the weed.After they had dug long and deep

NOWI J i i s l l ' l i M \ s H K - , ( \ \

... Homes \ i i i .1! V n u \ V Jobl.iim I : . . | . . . - l . . i f , . , i i e p

il f i . ! u . i i . l n , - - ^ . - . , , a | M -

l icinodcl your home through the In I I . A .financing plan

Brin» your house up-to-date inside and out. Rede-signing certain parts—a new porch—or an addition to themain housc:—improving the grounds and the approach notonly beautify but add satisfaction and comfort.

The Government Housing Program, under Title I ofthe National Housing Act enables us to aid you in financ-ing the improvements you desire.

We invile you to call and d i scussyour plans with us at, your ea r l i es tconvenience. • -k

UNION COUNTY TRUST COMPANY,BROAD at WEST GRAND ST.

ELIZABETH, N.J.Mrmber Federal hr']iosii I n n e e f ' n i ' i i i i r i i l i n n .

J

Win S50IN THE

New Series 1936 Ford V-8ECONOMY CONTEST

Conducted by the Summit Auto Sales, Inc.EVERY OWNER OF ANY MAKE OF AUTOMOBILE REGISTERED

IN SUMMIT OR VICINITY MAY COMPETE. JUST DRIVE OUR

REGULAR STOCK DEMONSTRATOREQUIPPED WITH ZENITH TESTER

and see what gas mileagejou can get.—Prove to your own satis-faction tbat this NEW FORD V8 is economical and at the sametime experience its remarkable performance and comfortableriding qualities.

TO THE PERSON OBTAINING THE GREATEST QASMILEAGE WE WILL AWARD $50.00 IN CASH OR ACREDIT OF $100.00 TO APPLY AGAINST THE PUR-CHASE OF A NEW 1936 FORD V8. (Employees of The Sum-mit Auto Sales, Inc., and their families are not eligible to enterl i )

This Conrtest ^nds August 31stNames of leading drivers and mileage obtained will be publishedin this paper every Tuesday during contest.

DRIVE THE "SCOTTIE"

SUMMIT AUTO SALES, Inc.Authorized Ford and Lincoln Zephyr Dealers

PPEN EVENINGS 517-523 Springfield Ave. - SUMMIT 6-4200

<• --. r v

Page 3: THE SUMMIT HERALD€¦ · r 15,000 People Read the HERALD. Published Every Tuesday and Friday. THE SUMMIT HERALD l~-w ai a Lull- ." and SUMMIT RECORD FORTY-SEVENTH YEAR NO. 97 SUMMIT,

TUESDAY, AUG. 4. 1536 ' THE SUMMIT HERALD AND SUMMIT RECORD, SUMMIT, N. J. PAGE THREE

: •«••

New Providence and VicinityNews Freev th« -Bk>r<M l* -aai_.. .Township.,.Including Murray Mill and Berkeley Heights

\ I . H i . I : - l i 1 I.I-A -'•'•'• '•'. •••

> • i i : I T I i ; i i - o l \ V K i . i , n i i

U T V ? T T T T T r s t ^ T T i ' • ) \S : ' ! i

I 1 li ! i . i . - . i • • ' : ' . i ; T l t ' u . I M i

• V - : > ••; " I : . i H U i i L , | . h.i l i t ;

>-- -i i • - - -i - « ! . . • . • h , \ « - k I

i , i i i H I : : I . , k K . s : ; , i , - s t < . S i r .

..nd: uU

ii lid

Berkeley,]

:•:• vT. 7.; IT

« b : i t p a > l i t . - : . , i i '!"•... i !

l ' , , v ^ " l r ' i L , D e e d s R e c o r d e d * a t • '^-^^-^ :.•>•->•. s , . : ^ : : .T h e C o u r t H o u s e J ^ t ' / l i A l ^ I ' m ^ u ' i NA'::;i"~'n

N e w P r o v i d e n c e B o r o u g h ! v l l r i A iK T:0;i ' i! •v"Ul\L

I i i . - i l ; i i ; : M l - M ' ' • ' > ' r ' i ! " r ! '

Hiiwi'li I. leclcd 1'iTslikul <•!'C - j r i H - i l i i s M . \ ' , ' , A I n rtii.s ( l . r - C i i

l i r c H i i l t - m i i f i l l - - B o u i ( ) - f l K - a i l l i a :

T i n . i K i l u y n : ; i . l i l ' . - . i n - e l m m n f ' ! K -

I j . i a r d . i i t - 1 - - i n f i ' f i l s l ' ' n n , k I ! . M a -

s o n , u l i o r r s i ^ i i i ' i . i i v • i : i i - i i i ' I ) . 4 - ' i i . - ' i

. \ o D i l i 1 h a s I M - ' - I I a n | ) d i n l i ( l I d s u e

co<-(i M a s o n m i t i n 1 H w a n l M l h c i '

i i i i ' i i i l i c r s d | t i n 1 l i n a n l a i ( - K. .1.

D u d l e y , C l i a r U - s ] ! . Nf \ i l l s and A r

Ihur I'cck. Mr. liowen wa8 i*])- jp o i n t e d a i i i e i i , l » T nf t in1 l i o a r i l t h e |l i i ' s i i»f ( t i i s y e i i r . r-iic<'i.''-(li im jNich(il<u< C n i i i p a i K i , w h o r e f u s e i ] r e - ja fijxii lit mi'i i t , . ' j

T 'he I fu i i rd iiHived li> limit, i t s A u j ; - jn.sl m e e l i l i ) : , I ' l i i p o w r r i u n t lu- i>resi 'd i ' i i t a n d c l e r k In t a k e • a r e of n e e - jc s s i i r y I n i s i n e s H . M e i n l x ' l ' S l l a v er o n i m e n e e - f l a s t u d y of s a n i t a r yi odn.s h a v i n g n ' t ' r e n e e t o s e w c r s ii n i i r e j i a r a t i n n . f o r nnieridi.HK ' " "I m r u u ^ l i . s a H i l a r y ei>de. 'I 'lic i n s t a l la t I o n of s e w e r s m a k e s t h i s u e c ^ s -

s a r y . . . •»-...... - •_W a l t e r ] , . \ o l l . S a n i t a r y I n s p f e -

t u r , r e p o r t e d f i v e c a s e s i>f i n u i i i p s• ( i n l i n e t h e j m s t m o n t h , l i e r e p o r t -

e d i n . s p e c t i i i i ; U i e m i l k s u p p l y a i i ' l lliiiillnT1, it p u r e . H e altiii v i s i t e d jt l i r t ' e d a i r i e s s i i p p l y i i l K m i l k i n t h ei j o n i u K l i a n d f o u n d th-esti t i c i n g c o n -d u c t e d In a s a t i s f a c t o r y m a n n e r .Mr. Noll further reported lie hadchecked on ice cream being Bold invarious borough stores and that allbrands Sold had been approved bythe State Department of Health.

\ i , ] i - , , , l ; i | . I V - . !

. ' ; K a i l t i I 'v . 1 1 . l l i v i ! i ! >\\ i i ; - : i -- 1 . •-. h : H , I ; . M . i p . ' I i ' ^ ' j u - i u , . i l ' I ' i t - 1 - : K i - i A l . i ) v \ t i . n i i i - . - a i l i ;

' » • • 1 . r . e . K i - ' n y i l l : ( . " . ! - . l i i i ; i r ' \ c i i i ' - a l i •; ] - i t • 1 < s i < . i ; - . n u ; a j ; j u i i i . i u l ••

<\] ,'; V I * i . . " , N • U 1 ' i . A i J t i M T . l ; ' ! - i i •>'•• • S

I'laniilii),' ltouid Disapprove I'liinsFor Drvf'loJHiieiit

Tim Planning Hoard,Thursday night at theHall, diwapproved planH for a newdevelopment in the west end oftown. The development, to bejknown as Springfield Gardens]faces on Springfield avenue, justjwest of the 0. II. Lambert residenceand extends back almost, to Centralavenue, facing that sjreot on onesmall corner of the traut.

The Planning Hoard 'dejpandedthat three master plan titreefs beJIncorporated in the plans of the de-jvelopment and stated they wouldnot consider a plan of that secti'onof the tract nearest Central avenueunless said plan took into consid-eration tlifi Central avenue frontage.The. Hoard also disapproved thesi/.i! of Homn lol«, cuiiRiderlng them

' too rfiiiall, ntid objescted to thename, Springfield Gardens, as mis-leading

>o<«'s of futcrestThe Ladies' Auxiliary of Our

Lady of I'eace Church will hold anexcursion to Anbury Park August19th. In charge are Mrs. Carl Tot-ten of Elkwood avenue and Mrs.Nicholas Compana of South street.

Starry Plhg Council, Jr. O. V. A.M., held a very siicccHsful bingoparty Thursday evening in thecouncil hall in Springfield avenue.An excursion to Coney Island, plan-ned for Sunday, has been postpon-ed indefinitely.

The Presbyterian congregationwill unite with the Methodist con-gregation during this month. Rev.J. Frederick Hubach of Plainfieldwas guest preacher at the MethodistChurch Sunday morning,", speakingin his eon's pulpit. Union serviceswere held in the evening at thehome of Mrs. Dallas Wenman inSpringfield avenue, West End. Rev, jJoseph R. Appley, of BaskingRidge, jiastor of the Union VillageMethodist Episcopal Chuuch, con-ducted services.

The Board af Adjustment held itsmonthly meeting last night at thenorough Hall.

Personal Dl t lonCouncilman aiid Mrs. Edwin M.

Flatten and family of Fairview ave-nue and Police Chief and Mrs. Har-ry High and Mr. and MrsC EdwardHammond and family of Laureldrive have returned from a twoweeks' stay, at Ship Bottom.

Mrs. Robert Opitz of Springfieldavenue and Mrs. James Vissalli ofElkwood avenue are at SeasideHeights.

Rev. Dr. and Mrs. C. H. Yerkes,Mrs. Percy W. Herbert and son,Walton, Miss Irene, Miss Winifred,Gill and Forrest Gray left Saturdaymorning as delegates to the Tri-State Conference of Young Peopleat Port Deposit, Md.

Mrs. Anna Blum and daughter ofNewark "are visiting Mrs. RoseSinger of Unipn avenue, West End.

Mrs. A. C. Brunico and eon and

Acclaimed byThousands

ELIZABETH'S1936

Model Home125 Lincoln Ave., Elizabeth

NOW OPENFOR INSPECTION

Its Many Outstanding Features

Admission FreeFollow th^ Arrows!

Open Daily From Noon to 9 p. m.

BIfaalwtk ChamlMr ol CommerceExpos. C<S Inc. '

On Sale Today, Tuesday

AUGUS SUPE

Exciting!—Tliat'a the only word for our August Super-Value Sales. If you remember the real

money you saved in this event a year ago, you'll plan right now to shop here early and often

this month. And wtien we tell you that we honestly believe this year's August Super-Values

breat all records, you'll know what to expect. We expect you and thousands of other customers

to shop here in August—and we've provided exactly wliat it takes—money iu your pocket!

You'll find bargains throughout the store, many not advertised and others listed daily—watch

the papers'!

I-ANNUAL CLEARANCE!

Shoes

df style beagty

picking an undesirable pair,

»1qn to be here as early in the day as you * «

^ vgtR;fve ry height of heel, in leathers, linens aii<J •

ibJiVtatJjf^''irrcrpjs, all 6* distiht&ve Milbr styfing,

i; bltift^whlte.and some nove ls .

rA Hitrlast monthat a higher price!

RAINBOWIeedTeaSet

We sold quantities of them last month at1.19. Now for the August Super ValuesSale, we're making the price even lowed-Large ic*-lip jug with red bands and sixglasses, each with bands of a differentcolor, offset by "gold" lines. Cooling justto look at!

Bunberger •Glassware—Seventh Floor

A L E S !Tropical Suits

REDUCED!

27.50Coat, vest mid trousers

Formerly 37.50. Masterfully styled andtailored by one of the best-known niakcrHof men's dothes in America! .These suits•will see you comfortably through the "docdays" ahead . . . and get you otf to a goodstart next summer. The popular youth-fully styled single-breasted model; favoredsolid colors and patterns in the group.

FeufJierliiie* coat andtrousers

20.00Formerly 26.50. Tailored especially MrDainbergcr's of crisp shape-retaining Ironi-cal worsteds in single and double breastedmodels; solid shades and attractive pat-terns in the group. Also shantung silksand mixtures in tan and white.

.Itisl 75 Flannel Suits '":"

27.50Formerly 35.00. For men who like therich appearance of flannel but want thecomfort of a light suit! Smartly tailoredespecially for Batnhergcr's in solid shadesof blue, brown, white and grey; singleand double breasted models in the group.

Second floor

BAMBERGER'S tf MEN'S STORE

Chantrey de luxe face powder—at a saving of 34%! The only reason we'reahle to offer you such a value is that we are discontinuing this particular boxdesign. All the lovely summer shades are here, as well as those you'll neednext winter, and if you know Chantrey you'll get a whole ytiar's supply. Theshades are shell, racheljN[p. 1, brunette and sunglow.

COSMETICS • BAMBERGER'S STREET FLOOR

^Exclusively distributed in New Jersey by L. Bamberger & Co.

BERGER & "One of America's

Great Stores'*Jtaittui ft fc FiN8

'\ V

Page 4: THE SUMMIT HERALD€¦ · r 15,000 People Read the HERALD. Published Every Tuesday and Friday. THE SUMMIT HERALD l~-w ai a Lull- ." and SUMMIT RECORD FORTY-SEVENTH YEAR NO. 97 SUMMIT,

* ? • -

SUMMIT HERA1D ANT) SUMMIT RECORD, STTMMIT, W. ] .^ TUESDAY, AUG. 4.

THE SUMMIT HERALDanil M J U l I i H l i i i i i i i

FKl'JU W. ' ' L i n ' . VAl\:,rOfficial J 'uyrr t'l i i i > uml (. uuut}

in.su.il iCi..-1-yNIESDAV AKTKKN'n i . \ ;

DAY Mi 'KNIN ' i fv-.ii, iii.mi KK1-

TELKl' i io.XKS ii-i:mo and G-l'.K'l

CIKCl I.ATION 3,LHM)

Tin- Suiimill Jirisiiit i'uhlihhiiiff ( ii.,' J O H N W. Ci.Il-'T, i 'li m i . IU

KUK1> W. i '1,11'T, T n .isiitvrNUKUAN S. CAKl.% S . - r H . u y

tN. J., an Si-

Dili >•, SutliHU!ihUli-r

NATIONAL ADVEMTSlMi EEniESENUTlVU

: a f ea tu re play n. mi: ! ne port rayui: of tin: i 'avii i a n d G o l i a t h .-.t"i'>'-: which was. i^ivc-ti a.> vi.-:il• • i's" dayLa.ilia.i-ljon. It was wel i - rece iv i 'U a n dcii joycd Uy aiU-nciaiiU.

'l'lie > a m p h a s been ij|i< r a t e d 1|>rtwo .seasons, 1M ill f, e a c h j c u t in

I c h a r g e ot c o l l e g e ^.'irls who h a v e

' nut lost t l i i i r own e n t h u s i a s m a m !t

j iina^iii.jt ion for "p l ay -ac t ing . "| W i t h Olll ' KIK'ee.Snflil s e i l S i ' I i OVIT

l a u d a l i o t b e i n i i l l l i i i s t a ! i t s e n d . it i s

j sa le to say tlie d i r e c t o r s of t h e• Y.W.C.A. a r e of oi;e mind in thnl' t in- c a m p lias proVrd so s u n essful' t h a t it will be eoinlni le-.l a s a fea-

' . H i r u fur fu ture y e a r s . One of l i e '; .stall tiieinliers visi ted the c a m palmost evt ry day ami when forcedto 1)0 absent hy r e a s o n of du t i e se x p r e s s e d he r se l f as fee l ing t h a ishe had missed soinetbint ; .

The r a m p h a s p roved a w o r t h -while y o u t h work , and the c h i l d r e nare tlie b e t t e r c o - o p e r a t i v e l y andh. alt lit'ully.

sU'HSi.'KI 1'TJUNS :One YeurKU MonthsSingle (,'ophs .05 !

Display Artvi-rtlMiiu3 11. ill., Monday

Cliisfiified Adsni'tialn9 a. in., Tui'Hday

Go.nentl Newa .Matter Ited-lvi'd untilh d i t i l di

01! WHAT WILL IT IWJWe arc always 011 our way. Some

fellow is always starling soinethint;for vvi! are a. restless humanity,never Hutisfied with what we huvu.until

Received until -'""1 v v e ^'re perfectly willing, yeaat times even anxious, to pay tin

3 11. in., .Monday, with editurial dis-cretion a s fo use of lengthy matter.

Facts About Summit• 1810—7.60*."

1015—8,13*.192(1—10,174.11)30—14,&a«.

AH(«:BB0|1 vRlualion, llilili—?2!l,:>.r)8,111Net viiluiitlnn mi wliicli ('Vainly, Slat

and Stale KC.IKHII 'I'UXI-H Aru Ai>-

iioudud Debt—H,087,(KKI.Tax Hate, 1!i:iii—$:i.70: City, J.flfl

City D<?l)t, t.i1\ JjOcill School, $.MBchoul Debt, t-M; State .School, %.2HSoldiers' Bonus, $.U2; County, J.fjtiI)lBtrli;,l-Court, J.II2.

Bunk Henourees—$12,!»0ll,70ii.:ill.Business and 1'roli'nsional Men—350.

Crtji1 of Summit, on the L.-iekawannR H., a t 540 ffcet IIIHIVB tide water, wit8S traltiB dully. Bus eonncctions witNewai'lt, Mllaalietli, MOITIHUHVII nn<Lakfi lloimtcoiiK. City water froirartesian welis. Klectrie Unlit and B!i>tide water Hewf-rnse ; free mall delivery; excellent police and lire nrotcctlon. Three banks ; five Huihlinu amLoan ANSoc'Intlons ; two hotels; modoripronrcMsivo Heliool system.

Communicate, with Summit UualncsMen's AsHoclution. . *

• i L u i c h sit.-, (;ii ii e o i n n i i t i i d i i i . t ; h e k ' h t

i n W a r r e n C i n u i t y , w i t h w o i u i i . r l u ;

. i i i 'w> a t a U j j o i i i t s '.,1 i lie '. o i i ipw.ss .

M u p j . i i . ^ : I h ' i i i a i l i n i i . a t h e l)iufc

' L a t e r i u t h e in...iii h i i i . ' i n k w i i l

h e .Ne tv io i i \\ a i ' i l . w h e r e t i l e f a h i o u s

C i H l i r a i i i l o u . s e h a s ii.s h a b i t a t

; T l i i s d i d t . u w n . t i n e o m i t y s e a l o t

| O i l ] S u s s e x , i s f-'oitiii t o s e e | i l ' oh i l l

The- L ' t i - a l i s i i n f l u x of v i s i t o r s i n

i l s l t i s l - ' i ' \ l . ' l ' it iS t o o b s c i v . e t i l e

t oo th a n n i v e r s a r y of t h e oi 'Kaniza-• I K I I I o f i l s f i l e d e p u r l m i i i t . N t - w -

l i i h j l i ' s ' t a k e t h e i r f i r e i l e p a t i l i i e l i t

ian. i H e i r lirw'ifiliri-i s with ser ious-ness. The result is tha t the com-mittee, and the whole town for thai

'Hiat t 'T . is working "tooth and hai l"lor sin cess of the aflair . And it 'ss;oiiiii io be a succes s ; make no

i mis t ake about it. The da le is1 August lotb-AiiRiist l a th .I T h e Dickisoh 1 l iekerson familyj r,ei-l ofiether will be around Labor| Day, with many c h u r c h s u p p e r s ini between. Northern New Je r sey isj so attract ive, for these affairs tha ti l l ie Sl i iddards of Pennsy lvan i a and! o ther s t a l e s will th is year come to| the Harden Hfate for their hand-i shaking, meeting at liutler l'ark,\ near Washington.I The Card-Mani) families bud theirI reunion last, Saturday afternoon «ti Mountain Crest l'ark, Canistear.The Maims mid Cards were, amonn! tin; earliest settlers in • Northern| New Jersey and many of their <le-

Here and ThereErm-st MtAft'e

HEALTH COMMENTSII

I| ~ " " " • T n "

• u f f i . ! . . ;

I tMAt HMl N I1

bably ! The • judicial mind is or, va.ca-' t i ' j i i . ri l ie l i i i u t i.s a d . i u u t ' i i e u u n -

t i l N o v t - i h t i i r l l i i . I t is <l< ' l i i . t i e s s

i m p o s s i i i l e f o r a n y Aln iM'W'a i l t o

i t a k e ii i o l i i p l c i t-ly t i c t a i ' l u - d \U'-w <•!"

Hit! liK'H a n d i s s u e s h u n 1 ' . i c i o r e t h e

TTrTHiu w i l h I>r. l l v - n r y v, - in - i iB-J I K H A L i t i s u i l ' f f i i u a \ \ . - . k . y

f " i i f ! - n u ] i j ; \tVt-\ . s i c ; i t d i s ^ u S L - s . Tl i i b e v\ t llX'iii 'Jli .

price to be on our way.Kver since the day, lost, as we

are so fond of sayitiK, in the mistsof antiquity, that, man translatedtin; railing loj; into wheels we liavi | sceiidants are living in the Stock-

Nor is complete detachment, anymore desirable than il is po.ssil.iU'.Kvery voter should have convic-tions and feel liiiiii deeply Whatplays tiio mischief, anil condemns

• our polilieitt system, is tlie almostuniversal l.tidency to take menand issues and programs whole,without, ixiHsihillty of (list limiua-tion.

The choice Viet ween two com-plicated programs is put squarely

ilniore each voter. A lafiiHutl, dis-irimniiitini; choice is so far Im-

l](ossiblo that iiunihers of votersjwill side-step the obligation by vot-j inj for some of tlie minor caiull-jdates and joining one or anotherI of the essentially irresponsiblei groups behind them.I This is u poor resort, and canscarcely he interiireled us otherthan evasion. .Most of those whovote with tlie minor si'ottps would

TUBSIiAY, AUfilISl\4. 1936

GOOD LUCK!' William W. Lucas, who came tTHE SUMMIT HERALD eiglvyears ago as sports writer, my

-later did Rcneral nows us well, bantransferred hia allegiance , to theLong Branch Record,

Mr. Lucas took a course In journallsm at New York University andafter experience on the OrangeDally Courier and tho HunterdonDemocrat in Flemington, came tothe HERALD.

He specialized in sports writing,covering the gamut of games asplayed in Summit and its vicinity.To pick (iiit his hobby game wouldbe rather difficult but if a eelectiorcould be made it was tennis, whichhe played quite well and enjoyed

'e'also took a round at basketballplaying with tho Presbyterian teairin the old Sunday School Leaguefrequently.

ft He always worked for the good•i\ of any game and wanted to see

Summit teams succeed. His "Alongthe Line" column in tlie HERALDoccasioned frequent comment andwhile many disagreed with some ofhis comments' at times, amongthem this writer, ho wrote as heBaw things and was honest in the

s' statement of his opinions.I The HERALD wishes "Bill" suc-

, cess in his choson field, which weunderstand will be exclusivelySports, wltcrever he may be, and

j hope ho will keep on advancing.j,At the same time wo 6xpress appre-

ciation of his work with tho HER-ALD.

«A GOOD TIME WAS HAD"This is the final week for the

; girls' "Stay-at-Home" camp for| sixth, seventh and'eighth gradersU conducted by the Y.W.C.A.g' It has provided an excellent dem-*~ onstratlon that children, under im-* ' aginative, suggestive and sympa-C- thetic "leadership, translated intof action by the children, can have anr enjoyable time right at home with-" \ out hardly, leaving the city.:_,.; It haa also proved a boon to thosejitaothers whose children attended, in'^taking the'burden from them of, pro-

f'f vidlng1 amvsemeot at, a! time whenfi mothers are hard put to think, up\ Ways of taking the tedium of, schoolIf" vacattpn time from young minds.;.,Mothers also at this season of thef j'year should hare relaxation, and itf;-ia safe to say they have enjoyed the" hoars each day when the children

fnave beea away from home under"care "and "guidance. They have

^Undoubtedly enjoyed having theJlldren return in the early after-

idon and f recount their pleasures/adventures of the day. Most

Jactiyltles,, whether serious or for;;Biea8BTe, are adventures for the: ten- and twelre-year-oida.

The catopers have had bikesirottod town, picnics at Surprise

B'and. Echo Lake, being takenr\;,«otomabile.' Activities at the

^grounds nave included tennis,r and a multiplicity of gamescouple of plays. The latter

[ the young minds and pro-surprises for the children,

and < visitors. Theentered Into these affairs

and t a t and did.wlt£ makeshift

liecu working for spci'd to getpluces. This has meant increasedinohilily in our vehicles from thewheel harrow iTf~vvmclI""llfU tniisvry.rhyme man hrought his wifeluiniu from Loiidoiitiiwii, throughtlio gamut of wheels until now wehave tlie latest, not yet named.

Hut why should we Iry to tellyou what il i.s or the intzzlement it.is occasioning the traffic depart-ment'of Pennsylvania- at the mo-ment? '"The C-hr-isUan .Sciuuci;Monitor" covers the point admir-ably:

"Is It An"Or an aeromobile? Pennsylvania

authorities are puzzled as to howto, classify tlie new flivver gyrowhich folds up its wings—beg par-don, rotors—for a roll down thebuulevurd. They are undecidedwhether to issue a set of licenseplates to it as an automobile orhave a number painted on it andregister it as an airplane.

"Possibly after tllo bureaucraticfashion they-,wlll do both and col-lect a doublo set of fees, as in thocase of automobiles occasionallyseen sporting, by force of circum-stances, the registration plates oftwo or three states at once. Butthat will not accord with the de-sire of tlie United States Depart-ment of Commerce in sponsoringthis and other experimental shipsto bring down the price of flying towithin the reach of tho everydayAmerican.

"It is always annoying when anobject refuses to be either onething or the other. Think howmuch discomfort the salamanderhas caused to tho classifiers of theanimal kingdom. Even back incretaceous times, tho terrible-look-ing but herb-eutiug triceratopsprobably thought it was enough tohave to watch |rout for the bigsnake-liko niosasaurus or fish-bodied pleslosaurus when he wadedinto a marsh.

'"But tho amphibians and theirIlk have an undoubted advantageif they can maintain it. There is noone but would like to cruise downthe road till he met a traffic jam,take to the air over the red' light,see what's beyond the crest of thenext cloud and then resort to theroad again if the air gets too thickwith fellow sojourners. Yes, if thedesigners of the autogyro can just

holm section. This week is com-pletely taken up with the ISranch-ville Fair, with afternoon and evc-nifit? «fcti-at=tiimsi,... The...third, weekof August will bu given over to theninety-sixth annual Onufge CountyFair at Middlelown, N., Y., "withthree days of harness racing, It'great attraction, and on Saturday'!)!'that, week, all day and evening, willbe held 4he Sussex County HorseShow at Branehville, for Hie bene-fit of the Tuberculosis League. Oneof the big features of this eventwill be the dynamometer, or horsepulling machine, which will beshown in that section for. the firsttime. The instrument measures theactual 'pull of a team in pounds.Horses and mules will be used iupairs iu the contest for which a sil-ver cup will be awanjed by CharlesMcKeown of Augusta. Tlie dy-namometer has been rented fromthe Pennsylvania State College andW/iU /bo in charge of 'an operator

squeeze a pair of pontoons insomewhere between the wheels,some joy-riding Americans doubt-less will not kick at buying a mo-torboat license for it, too."

HARVEST HOMESIt isn't any particular novelty for

urbanltes and suburbanites to headthe bumper of the uuto country-ward these fine week-ends and dur-ng vacation time.., A host of folk in the larger cities

and their environs originated intlie well-known "sticks" or thereare descendants of those who did.Some don't like to be told about itwhile others throw out the chestwhen some small town of the hin-terland is mentioned and proudlyannounce they came from there, nomatter if the" place had only tourcorners with a general store on one,

blacksmith shop with its' spread-ing chestnut tree on another a_ndhouses on th© remaining two. Itwas and is "home," where one sawthe sun come peeping in, at mornand the corn and "taters" growingin the garden at the rear. And thecall of the wild" still runs warm

in the veins of most of usj so It isno trouble to head for the oldtown, to see the old home and akindly old neighbor left behind in

there. There will bo twoclasseVof horses and mules allow-ed to nnter, those weighing overand under three thousand pounds.

If you are not interested in anyof these affuirs it would be weari-some to enumerate them all—infact, we could not, .the list is solong. If you are, you know aboutthem all, or at least one or two,and have planned accordingly;

A good time will be hud by all.

Letters FromHerald Readers

THi: JAltllKTT 1XCIDKNT

Editor SUMMIT HERALD:Dear Sir—May I suggest to your

readers that the significance of theunanimous decision of the Ameri-can Olympic Committee will bo bet-ter understood by reading the fol-lowing excerpt from the article,"Winners All" in the July numberof the Christian Herald:

"The alchemy of the athlete andthe part that alcohol plays in- it isinteresting "and not too difficult forlaymen to understand. . . .

"Body machines have to .manu-facture their own fuel, most' im-portant of which is giycogen, oranimal starch. This is stored upin the muscles and other con-venient cupboards which naturjprovides against times of n'ced.Burning up giycogen by exercisepro'duces energy. It also produces*• waste product known as lacticacid. Tfiis is a poison vtliicu handi-caps tho action of muscles andnerves. Man provides for hissimplest engines an exhaust bywhich such waste products of com-bustion as the deadly' carbonmonoxide aro expelled, but thehuman machine is not thus equip-ped.

"Fresh air, in the form of oxygen,carried by the blood stream to thepoisoned muscles, transforms thelactic acid back into giycogen, thusconverting waste into power again.The endurance of an athlete (andwe are all athletes in some sense),is measured.by the balance of lac-tic acid and giycogen.

"Too much lactic acid does forthe body what It does for sweetmilk. ]t turns it sour. In thatcondition an athlete collapses, andis unfitted for further exercise un-til he has had complete rest, andhas built up a new store of gly-cogen. There is nothing on earththat can drive a human body inwhich fuel is exhausted andpoisonous waste accumulated.

"On this fundamental, scientificfact every athlete coach and everycontestant must .reckon. Not sen-

vote wlth.llu; minor MIoups woulbe horrified if the untrained or illtrained candidates for whom theyvote were actually to'be elected.Under our system the minor par-ties aj'CBIffi'ply a device enabling'the.citizen to salve his conscienceh$ Irresponsible: discharge ef-hls.citizenship.

Those who take 11 position in any•degree detached from .tlie. irration-al and often embittered partisan-ship which sudr campaigns as thinengender, will be severely put to itto make their choice. The nearestapproach to a dispassionate state-ment, of the issues, which I haveseen, is that by the oditor of tlieBaltimore Sun in his article in tlieJune number of the Atlantic.

The article was written lastApril, which is fortunate; it prob-ably could not be written by anyone now, The editor of the Atlanticwisely sought out Mr. Owen to pro-pare the analysis of "the essen-tials of the, campaign before theissues were drowned in a sea. oforatory." Already there is littlepossibility of discrimination, un-less one follows the clear and un-prejudiced-reasoning' of this state-ment, and makes his choice iu theconsciousness that whichever waylie decides he is taking risks, ac-cepting bad with good, striking abalance among hazards.

Practically none of tho cam-paign speeches and literature fromthis time forward wijl. niake appealto reason or calm judgment. Theywill be heard and read by thosewho simply wish to feel theirprejudices confirmed.

One multitude will wish againand again to hear Mr. Rooseveltdenounced as a dictator and adespot, whose malign purpose is tobring the American people into apermanent slavery. They willlearn with satisfaction that Mrs.Roosevelt's purpose in palavantlngabout over the country lias at laSCbeen exposed; she seeks to stealthe hearts of voters, while ostenta-tiously "keeping oiit of politics"for the moment, making all themore dramatic the coup by whichshe is to sweep into office in 1940,as the first woman president. Aftereight years of her reign it will becomparatively easy to provide forthe succession of the Rooseveltsons in an office thus cunningly"converted into a dynastic monar-chy. How clear is the duty of thefree-born American to prevent allthis!

Another multitude joyously learnthat Mr. Landon is exposed as anincompoop whose feeble mind'is

'just capable of being led aroundby ,tlie nose by the malefactors ofgreat wealth in Wall Street en-throned ifpon their coffers burstingwith ill-gotten gains.

The mixture of figures add.,piquancy to the revelation! Manya. campaign orator will smell a-rat,will see <it floating in the air, andwill reach forth a deft finger tonip in the bud.

We Americans do nothing byhalves, and we make no exceptionof our prejudices. '

he trek away for pastures-new andftimenLbut^col^ chemistry^shows'ortune and fame known or still toe known.Which ' leads our thoughts to

where? To the realization that theseason of annual family gatherings,bar vest homes,-farmers' picnics andchicken suppers for the benefit ofthe little white church is reachingits height. ;

These are being held almost dallynd weekly now, with a few that

ire happy memories stored up forhe winter evenings. This Week the

big celebration. is on at Hacketts-town, which will be a lively placein Warren County for th& next fewdays. The whole countryside andmany from the cities will be therefor the good time to be had and. torenew old acquaintanceships, The**r«ftov Frame" chosen h|» afe-sem4 Its 1601* trirttar*

that the use of beverage alcoholtends to lessen the rate of oxidiza-tion processes in the body, and withit, increases the lactic content inthe blood."

Sincerely,H. WALFORD, MARTIN,

President, Summit Associationfor Liquor Control.

Tire HERALD gives yon the bestvalue "for your money.. $3.50 peryear. It cornea to you twice a weekfor.thil price with the city's news.

CHILDHOOD MEMORYThe voice of tho Rev. Price rose

shrilly,"And the wicked shall be cast into

hell fire"(I sat up with a start,Perhaps I was wlckod,I was cross when Mother wantca me; to do errands)The voice went on,"Come ye blessed of my fathers and

Inherit the kingdom prepared foryou"

(I felt easier after that,And was glad when sister Brown

started the hymn)"Soldiers of Christ Arise and Press

with Visor On" ~ 1(It gave me a chance to get the numb-

ness out of my feet)The voice from the pulpit said"Let us pray"(I stole a glance at Deacon Stires

looking through his fingers at therest of the congregation to see what"was Bolng on)

(Oh dear! Now he would be tellingUaflelghbors_ Ua-flelghbors,

That the seed had fallen on~stonyground,

Because I did not .Jiave ,my headbowed.) '" '

After turning: It over. In mx mind,I came to thl3 conclusion:

, I/EnvoyThe Deacon Is queer as everyone

knows,Always anxious to hear and see;If he were attending to prayers him-

self ' •. --He would not be snylng on me.

HANNAH DICKISSiON DEPUE.

Mention the HERALD when buying.

, SPEfHUL FOR?WINDSHIELDS

W M $5UtAiK nUEIM

rtCT jfcrk*i>4 ffctttjit ATW.1 mm

A n a n i c i e i m " C i ' i n i ^ a n d f l i e i r .

E n i ' i i i U ' . - . " i * n . ' i i i ' i i i t ' - t l f n n i i t a N

i n i t n l i s i . - . s u r o f " l l y ^ ' i a , " i h i ! i

l i i - a l t ! ) i i i a s 4 i i 7 . i n i ' l m l i l i ^ t i i ' d by U K - <

A n u - r i c a : ] M i - i l i i a l A ^ . - i u - i i i t i i ' i s .

By AU.K.N S. JOHNSON j(i t-nnf. liUv tin- poi.r. a r c a! way.-!

wi th \t>- ami probab l . . a l w a y s « t ! : jhi-. Kvt 11-if it wi-t't; ])i)ssilile h i ilc-stns.y-ali I lie y,<>i'nis in iiio w o r k ! itw.nilil 11.>t |i;> (tri- irable tu tin so a sm a n y of Uii'iii i n T f u n n useful f un r -tK.'liri. T h e h e r b i v o r o u s iUiimukscould net ciificst. t he ci ' l lulosf , w h i c hm u s t n u l l ' s t he bu lk of the i r d ie t .wi thout tin.1 biu-tt 'fia in the i u i e s l i -nal trari. Tin- bacteria that brim;about tht! decay of dead animaltissue- lit'lp to convert nitrogen hit)a form which plants can absorbfrom the soil. HactiM'ia aiv inipoi'-

; lam in certain types, (if .sewage Uu;ri posal us well as in myriad jnii-; (-c ,;(-ri in tho arts aiul .scii-'tices.j Mow may man protect himselfi against the gorins that may prtfvoI harmful to him? Nature- apparentlyI Intended a certain number of u.s to^survive as unr tiSoiit'S were provid-| cil with defensive liuvlui nismsj against, bacterial invasion IOUK ho-! fori! germicides' w-eru Known. It isftiiportittit therefore that, we selectonly .'inch Rennicidal mcasuiTt-i as

i will not. interfere with (mr tissues'natural defenses.

When the relation of nei'ins to in-fection was discovered morn thanliatfirt-writMr.Y:,-a-RHr-«U uf.l'<irl±i .WHTdirected toward killing the nermseven thouuli the tissues of the pa-tient were incidentally damaged.Whim Lord Lister operated he useda carbolic, acid spray designed toKill any serins that might be intro-duced into the operative field. This•antisepsis Wius a great improvementon the, preceding era of surgicalHcp«iH, hut the carbolic, acid(phenol) also injured the lmtient'.stissues and unquestionably lessened•their natural resistance to Infec-tion. The aseptic era which hasfollowed relies largely on renderinggerm-free the -Instruments andhands that are .to touch the opera-tive fi-eld. Mechanical c.lean.sing ofhands, RIOVOS, instruments and op-erative field with isonp and water Istho fiwt. step. Instruments andgloves are rendered further aseptichy lmat. Some Kornis may un-doubtedly bo introduced into thewound; but the tissues, uninjuredby caustic germicides, are able torender these grems harmless.

The era of aseptic surgery ha.sbeen with Us for a goneration, hutthe average layman still thinks interms of tlie antiseptic clays. Achild skins his knees on the .side-walk. Only a casual effort, if any,is made to cleanse the abrasion of;dirt. Some tincture of iodine orother antiseptic is splashed on, andtho parent reflects proudly that hehas given ltis child every protectionof modern science. That infectionso seldom results may lie dun moreto nature than to the antteeptlc;the dirt and other foreign materialleft in tli-e wound may protect thegerms from contact with the anti-septic. Had the dirt been removedwith soap and water, most of thegerma would also have been wash-ed away. Soap in itself, apart from'its cleansing properties, is a sur-prisingly effective agent. Thie iswell illlustrated by the experienceof an accident ward in a wellknown metropolitan hospital wherefor several months all cuts andabrasions were merely cleansedwith soap and sterile water. Noother antiseptic was used evenwhen suturing was required.

Nevertheless, when the skin isbroken it may be desirable to usesome sort of antiseptic in order toweaken if not actually kill theKerirm that' have escap&d soap and•water. The chances of infection arethe resultant of the interplay of anumber of factors: the number ofthe bacteria present, their virulenceor vitality, and tho resistance ofthe viGtim. General bodily resist-ance Is a vague term, difficultto define and to influence. MoreIs known about the factors influ-encing local tissue resistance. Dirtand foreign bodies, which meananything that doesn't belong there,and dead and Injured tissue lowertissue resistance to infection.Hence the importance of thoroughbut gentle cleasing with soap andwater. In simple cuts and abra-sions this may be sufficient. Ifthere is bruised or devitalized tis-sue, which often results fromcrushing Injuries, this must be re-moved as germs find it a fertil-e soilfor growth. This principle of "de-brldement" is one of the great les-sons of the war which has been ap-plied to civil :llfe. This is ofcourse a procedure for the surgeonand need hot concern the layman Iin his consideration of first aid, assuch cases will obviously need ex-pert care. ,

After the dirt and foreign 'bodieshave been washed out and thewound is free from dead tissue,what germicide shall he used to dls-cotiTage-such"TKtcteria-as-Jywe-es-caped attention? Let us consider•what we eeek in an, ideal antisepticand then jpompare some of the avail-able' commercial products accord-ing to these criteria.

First of ail, the germicide mustfce capable tit killing the germswhich are likely to be carried intoa -wound.- There are various waysof determining this. A culture ofa representative germ which has•been, grown in the laboratory maybe mixed with varying strengths ofthe antiseptic. Thereby one mayfind the highest dilution of t ie an-tiseptic which kills the germs sothat no more can be grown fromthis culture. Of course this willVary win* the type of bacteria anathe length of time they are exposed,hot It afSrfrds a method of compar-ing diffei-en}. kinds of antiseptics.Wefe to'« 'pent Variety «t tfihn-

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i i in i e \ | i o . - l i i ; -

] h ' S o ! It l i t i.Ke \)\ i c

r i o l i o f 1 i l u e , i i i ]

H i r e s a r e U i k e n I u .••ei:- w h e t h e r t i n

j - ' e n i i s i l l e ^ t i ' , 1 a l i v e , a n d l . ' i l s o f H i e

t i s s u e t i i a y l i e e x a n i i M I M I ; ,O d e t e r

n i i l i e w l i o l l i e r t h e y h a v e b e e n i n j u r

e i i b y t l i e u - e n n i i ' i d i ' . M a n y in" t h e

K i T i n i e i d e s H i n t a r e l i e r u - i ' t i n t i n -

t e s t l . u l n i d o n u t l i i l l j : e n i i i ' . i n t i n

l i r t Y - e n c e o f l i l u i i t l o r i n i s , a n d m a i n

o t h e r s . k i l l t l i e t i s s u e c e l l s i i l m i -

w i t h H i ' e . n e i ' i n s . T h e : - i i b s t : M l c e i n

w l i i i ' h t h e ; 4 e r n i i c i d i ' i . i i l i : - s u l v c i l J s

a l s o a n i i i i | M > i ' t : i i i t t ' a i ; o r ,

III all such laboratory lest,-;, aswell a.s in the ainilieal ion of tileiiresults to iialiciits, it is importantto distinguish between th\} IJIU:-tci ickt l j nclion of I'lieiiiieahl wilicllactually kill jwm.s and tl:,e hac-tcriasti)t ic actions of those whichmerely prevent or retard tiieitgrowth and activity. Cultures olgenus exposed to sonu- mild anti-3e.]H.-ie wlii^h ims.se.ss'cs <>lily bacter-iost.atic uctldii may fiivc us H sensiof false socurily because no growthis obtained; yet living oriianisin.s ina (lorinaiit state limy be still iirenenlawaiting an opportunity to multiplywith i'e"ii(:\ved vinileiicc. Su.liir;iteilsolutions of boric acid or eventable sail will preserve moat andvarious other organic substance:from decomposition liy putrefactivehueteria, but. they do not liill tb(KcriiiH in (iiifistiou.

Safety • and effectivpness (shouldb« considered. It is difficult to finda gfirinici'de that is powerful enoughto kill serins and yet so mild that, itcun be safely taken internally.There, are uheniieiiln, ltowcvor"ivliich are relatively iioiipoiHonousin small amounts but. have; .such arepellent odor or taste Hint lift mon-th an a Kip will he swallowed by aliursini in lils riK'hf mind. Thin inimportant in u household wherethere are children and fools whotuk(t medicine, without, rowliiiij;labels or-turning on tho Hsht at

Finally, convenience must beconsidered. For the average hou.su-hold It is desirable to have some-thing Uiat can he painted In a ctilor scratch without, tlie bother ofdissolving tablets or making upfi esli solutions. Expense is likelyto play little part in tlie .selectionus the amount used Is trifling, andtho really cheap germicides must bemade tip in solutions the greaterpart of which is promptly thrownaway. So long a« one remembers

(Tn He Concluilrd)

Sound Picture ProblemNow Solved For Deafened

Acousticon Device in Use Here

Scores of hard of hearing people in Summit andvicinity received the surprise of their life last week, whentney visited thu Strand Theater in Summit and found theymuld hear the talking pictures perfectly.

This equipment i* the same, as is now in use in RadioCity and the Metropolitan Opera House, New York City.

This service, which is free to deafened patrons may beobtained by registering a request at the box office whenpurchasing a ticket.

i

The management cordially invites you to share thisv^xciling experience, which has solved the Sound PictureProblem for those heretofore handicapped in this respect.

CLEARANCE OFLAWN MOWERS

frol $3.95 up

Summit Hardware & Paint Co./ Incorporated

359 Springfield Ave! 'Phone 6-0216 Summit, N. J.

A HOT BATH for 2*when G A S is usedautomatically...

Matters not whether you are one who believes in bathingthe first thing in the morning or the last thing at night, youagree that having, hot water for that bath without fuss orbother is a convenience and a joy.

'The assurance that the water is hot with no danger ofscalding you or of running cold and the knowledge that afull tub will not cheat the next fellow who wants a bathpermits you to bathe in lazy luxury and at a cost which is•trifling. -—— — «-

The modern automatic gas water heater will work foryou night and day without the slightest attention. It neverforgets to shut itself off or to turn itself on. It i s . 100%automatic.

Automatic hot water service by gas costs about the sameas intermittent hot water service from other fuels* -Why nothave the best? Ask your plumber or Public Service waterheatiiig representative to call and give you an estimate ofthe cost of heating* water automatically by gas.

SERVICE

• / .

Page 5: THE SUMMIT HERALD€¦ · r 15,000 People Read the HERALD. Published Every Tuesday and Friday. THE SUMMIT HERALD l~-w ai a Lull- ." and SUMMIT RECORD FORTY-SEVENTH YEAR NO. 97 SUMMIT,

TUESDAY, AUG. 4, 1936 THE SUMMIT HERALD AND SUMMIT RECORD, SUMMIT, M. PAG£ FIVE

I

EVERYBODY READSClassified Advertisements

Ten Cents a Line

C*ipj not accepted after 9 a. nu Tuesday or s p, m. Thursday.

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

The HERALD eodeavors to print only truthful classified ads,and will appreciate caving iU attention called to any advertise-ment not conforming to the highest standards of honeatj.

10 and 2U\ ears AgoIn I he Summit Herald

M I

\ i i »

1 \ I

I.-OST

. S r O l . K N ol- k i l l . i l . S l l l i d ar i l i > y n i l I v j 1114 < ' h a i M t - s 'S);i7 , \ \ w K i i ^ L t l i d a \ c . A n y i i i l . , nt i i i i t , c a l l S u m m i t . i i - i i ( l 7 .

id, in,m

LEGAL ADVER'IIS1NGK . S T A T K «>K 'K . - iT IC l ,U- : V.

V K I U A . Il ' u i ' M i . , n t J '

ii-d.

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I I I . - I I I

i n i ' - <><< 1 1 "

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1711. i i : iy <,< Ju ly .

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, i r , l , T e l . H t i n i l l i i l l i - - 7 7 » . j I n M l c V s i f U K i l , a s c . v e c l l l • '1 •-: < - I i l l - ' • • s l a t .I j . ' i n i

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. . . I I M I I I M

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m a r k i n g ; n . - i i r I I s H . p i . u l l r y , , x l n l i i l , , . , , , , . ; , i S i ,.";", „ r s „ , „ , ' , , - „ . „ „x l i . l l l j . ( . o l l l e i ' . l , M < . i m i ; m , s | . l e . „ " - > , . • l m , i r , , - , , i , , 1 1 I , , , , , - , . | , , i M I S ; i , , , | , | i -

Z : i ^ J ^ . L : ^ ! l ! L ! ! 1 :. » w i " ^ a ^ m s i n,,- .-MMI.. <,r ,-..i.i <i.-- . . - . . . . . , , , r i - a s i ' d . w i l h i u s i v m i M i l I I H ! I ' - , J T t I l i e

l j , - r A M I I l l \ \ • S i . | - | >

i d i i i \ u l i i i f . : I n n - '<•

i l l ! ; - , l l !,• I - i l l ! S 1 ' l l i l l

m i I I n • S n y j l i ' •'• I '

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i . . i i r - ' i l a h - i ) I ' I n i i i 1 1 , , - l i i L - . l i \ \ ; i y . . . - i n

l i e l i l l . C k l ! - . \ M l ! • I l l l c J U l l l l i . • ' l l n -

l a i n - i s a i n i i c i n l c n ^ i h w i t 11

• h ( : ; i i l l i t i i l w i n i i l i - i l s i M - r c s s l i i j i n i u i l i >

t o B a l l i i s i i , 1 A l . i i i i i a i i i 1 . 1 1 t i n - . s o u t h

a m i \ < > t i n ' S c i - i ' i i i l A l u u i i l a i n m i t i n ;

i north.W i l i i t i n - ; n - ( | . i i - . i l i o n i i f t l i i s t i ' i i i - 1 .

o f p r o j i i r i y a m i i t s \ v ; i i i - r r i g h t s I h e

1 ( i M i i i i i i i u w i a l t l i ( i J i i 1 1 > ; i 1 1 \ i i . n i p ! i l t - ;

a p l a n i l i u m w ! i i i I i i i s o l f i i i - i 1 - - l i ; r > > '

b e e n . s t e a d i l y w o r k i u ; . : I i n 1 a l i u i l i

t ' w e n i v y i - u i s .

1 0 1 , C I N ' w n l e l l a l l U l s s r l l ] , l a r i .

v o i r p l a c e <>r l > « - i i i i i a n j i l a < i - ;

i 1. W ' . N. ; r e w a r d . «.:<•• J . N i l e

lit Moniti avenue.

t HKl.t' WAIH'IKK

IHOAI.KK fur i 'nvercil Wilt Trailwsi : * t \ i . r . r v i H I » > i \ c . t u * , . . s i . . . i i . i . ! • i . -

ill t h i s t e r r i t o r y , ' ' a l l W a y . M o t o r I » * - *!!U7 K a M i i l h H t . , I ' l a i n l i e l d

' I V 1 . I ' l a l n f i c l t i l i ; - j ; i^l i . • M - ' J !

i s i v ni< a i t I IH ! r - . I T I

•f S i t i l l ( i l - l l . .

l o n - v e r b a r r e d l i o i i i | i n , s e < - t i [ h m , . r r<-

e i A ' T H I K t i l l - W a i l H 1 i l . H i l l l l . S l l l | e M l l i -

S l - r i h e l - t i .

IHONUV A. KH.VKIUA,- Ti ik s i ' M M rr T K P S T c o .

i l l ' ' M ' M M I T , N. .1.W I L L I A M S * I>K.M I'SIOY; I'l^ Ii

. M

Yoli,M<i w h i l e Klrl a s n u r s e ; t w o el i i l -• d r e i i ; d o c h i l d r e n ' s w n s h ; sl t . i j i fa ;

.f:i(l I I K I I I H I . ' I ' d . . S u m m i t i',-ir>7l-.l.

4 KMI'I iOVMliNT VYANTI-:i> 4

K . M I S I O ; l ,

A \ i ' . . S l l m i i i i l , X . -I •l ' i ' ' e . s * 7 .a w ;'. \\-—

IN' I ' l l A N i ' K U Y 111'' N K W . I K U S K V .

T O W A I / I ' U U N'KLKK.N ; IIK1 M K S .\ V A I , T K l t N I - : i , S K \ , I l ls w i f e a m iM l t S . W A U ' . n K l i \ ' K I , S I ; : . \ , wifeof W . M . W i l i H X K L S K N :

_ _ _ I \}>y v i i l u , of ;tii ( Hd, r i.r [|i<- i ' -n i r tY<in . \ '< i coloi- i i l k i l l w o u l d l ike s l . a i l y " f ' ' 'hi i in-i-ry t,( \ ' n v .lei-si-y, i n a d r o n

<lay w o r k . Te l . K u n i m l l Ii-Wi!l.r>. " " ' l l ; l- v " ' " " ' ( l . r i t t ' ) " n - u l , m a .-ausi-: ; win n in ' I ' l iwnshi i i o f Ni-vv r i u v i d . i i r i ' ,

J u n X ( i * u ( l y w i s h i ' s p u s i l i o i i »u« s t . - i N' 'W J e r s e y , ;i inu i i l r l |>a l e t n i m i a l i o uiii)Kra]nfi-T "an " t \ ' rw••-Vnr l i <J4t'"-!~U;i* \.'.ii . ! '»• Sta-li%.or N e w , l i - r sey , is e o i n -h m l ofl l i -e ex p e r l , . n e e . A d i l r e s * ftlt^.s J>liiin.) n( , a l i i l i n i i r n n r i n t t i , . ^ i4 . . a n i k -10. ,1. f ' l ' iu ie , 28 W a l n u t . s h e e t . | l e m h i n t s , y o u a n - r i . i | i iUed in : ip i ie i i r

__, i : a n i l an .swei - t h e hil l o f .sn'ul eoni i i l . i l i i -C . ) l j l ( I i l ' : i> wmi i i u i Wiin is wn i ' k ; p a r t - ' n i t on o r l i e l o r c t h e ;!rd <iiiy of S e | i - j

o r w h o l e - l i i m - o r d a y ' s w o r k ; KOOII t en i l . e r , n e x t , i,r walil b i l l w i l l lu1 tu lu ' l i 'r e f i r n K i - a . Ti ; l . S u i u i n i l . (!-li)4!l. u a s i-oiil'e.sscil a g a l n . s t y o u ,

, . : Till ; stiff] hill is f i led tu f o r e e l o s i !W I N D O W wii.shlntf, I m u s ^ ch-anliitf, M V r t l f h ' i i t i ' H of T u x Kale N o ' s . (127 a m i

flour s h e l l a r t i i g - W i i x i i i K , l a w n a n d HIM, d a t e d J - V l i r u a r y fj, liCH, n i u d e byg a r d e n c u l t i v a t i n g . T e l . 6-12U8-W. | ( ' l a r c i i w H K. ( ' u r t i s , C o l l o e t u r of T a x e s

8 3 - t f ' ' ) f t h e T o w n s h i | i nf Ni iw l ' m v l d ^ n i ' V ,i _._,_£. —i I N . .1., t o t h e T o w f i s l i i p cif N e w 1'i 'ovi-

HOUHKN '»'«> 1-KT

J1OIISK; S rouniH jtrxi h a t h ; 2-car Ka-niBi'. 27 IMififtiont avenue . Tel.Kuuth Orange 2-014U.

1 COVTAdl1'' l» i» ' i housii>, s e v e n r o u n i s ,. iVoinentH. $:t.ri. T e l . S u m m i tall in

C-308II.i n n

»G-tf

61 UKAlIVCilft iivt'inie, six rooms andl ' H l

1 UKAlIVCilft i i v in i e ,lmtli, all lm|irovi-nn;iit»,Summit (!-12«!l-W.

s'. 'H-l.

• ) ; ' - t r

« n iUNIHHV.1) IIOOM TO hV,V

J^AltlJIO, a t t rac t K'cq u k ' t ; r i 'Hidi ' i i t l i i lSummit C-OO30-W.

furnlHhi ' i l r o n i n ;r o i i s o i i a l i U 1 . T i ' l .

N. .)., to the Towfisliip of N w P r idence, N. .)., covorhiK liindH and prem-ini'S iiKKi'HKcd III the name of Walhui'KNelHon as <iwner fuv t lie year l*.l.-{2,which lands.and premises (in; locatedIn the Township of New I'l-uvldenee,County of Union anil Stale 'of NewJersey and are known and designatedas Uits ll to II inchiKlve in Block illand liots I! t<i HI liu-lu.slv'e, I:! to 20 In-elusive, r»r> to .V.I lnchislvi| and 112 to (ilInclusive, in Hloidi l,:i 1 <in the officialtax inaji of the Township of New Provi-dence,- -Awl you Walter Nclsen (iremade a defeiuhinl hecause you are the'(jwiit-r of the said lands and premises.And you Mrs. Waller Nelson are madea defehdaiii heciuise you are Ihe Witt1of Walter Nelsen wlm is tilt' owner ofthi! said lands ami jiremlsos and hyreason thereof have some interest. Inthe Bald lands and lirenilses. ^\nd youM W l h N l d d

. i-l.•. , ' i . I . i ' l I , a

s q u i l l r . . I . l i t - , - i - i -

: i i , i i i i i i u i . s \ \ , >i I : . I I . M I i . . l , I , . - i i n -

l i i s i a l l ' r I I I ' ' I V . -T i ' S S I ( i M | r N " I i ll

. a s ! , l i y s i l l . - i i n . u l S . i i m M I I - l- A v . - n n e .

t h r l l i - - 1 U l l l i i l i l - . S ' . l l l I n a s l r l l y i l l . . U K 1 1 1 . -

N . . ( I I i . a . - ! - i l y s i i l e l i i i f 1.1 S r n i i i i i i . r

A v i l i i c ^ H i i l l i IV i i " M i ' - 1 ! i - - , ' i i n i i i i i i . r ;

K . i s l i s : ! . r i ! l r . - . l l o a s l a k e ; I h r i i . - . -

n i i i n i i i K . . i i a i - u r v e , i - n r v i i m t o i )••-

K i i s l , w i l h a r a d i u s o f ; , i l l e e i , 7 . ' , . l i - l

I ' t - e i t » , a s l a i u i n o r n e a r t i n - i i i i r o f

j S p r i n g I i . M A v - - h u . - a s l ; i i i l d . . \ v i i . . n

I l l i e i i f . i i e s : i i d m a p ; I h r i i i - e r i n i n i i i u s t i i l

l ; i l * . i m o r n < - ; i r l i n - l i n e . . I S p r i n g f i e l d

j A \ c i n i e ; i s l a i d d . . \ w i o n ' . h e a l ' o r . - s i i i d

I m a p N o r t h 7.'i d , - t ; r e e s r . i m i n u t e s K ; t s t

1 l ^ : ! . ( i ^ f e e ! t o i h e t i l a r o o f I I r e i n h i i i j i ,

r . e i l l i ; p ; i r l o f t h e p r e m i s e s l l e s e r i i i e d

I l l S l ' i r i - 1 I r . i e U e l H l V i - y e l l l o H i e l l e l l i i o l - i -

i R e a l t y C o n i p i i i i y , l , y d e e d o f N i e h o l a s

I | i . - l i i i o r e a n d l , . . r e l i a I i r l m o r e , h i s

w i f e , d a t e d A p r i l s . 1 ; i ^ 7 . a m i n - . - o r d r d

A p r i l I : ; , \'.i-7, i n I l o o k 1 1 m i u f l i e . - i l s

T o r r n i o n i " o u i i t y • o n p a i - . - s ^u ." . , e l c

S e e o m l T r a i - ! . l u - i ; i i i I I i I I ; : a l a . p o i i i l

i i + - l l i i - - . . i : r j i ! r j ; J i n , , o f S h y d e r A v e i i i i . -

1 i l i s l i i n i l l i . ' i . o r , " U ~ , " i f i n r r l T i - r l v f r o m I I I "

h i r e n t e r l i n e o f S p r i n i j I i t - i d A v e n m - ,

| t h e l l e e a l o l l K t h i l i l . - r l i n e o f S e h l i e i d -

t - r A v e n u e n o r i l i I I d e c r e e s 4 1 i ' i i i i i i I o s

W f - . s l ftli- f e e l l o l i l l l l i i i o f o n e K t l l l l Z ;

Ilieiiee aloiiK l a n d s of K'tinlz smilll l l(li'Krci'S, 34 m i m i t e s west I3l).ll7 feel ;Illellee smi th 'II d e c r e e s II m i n u t e sp a s t HO feet ; Ilieiien n o r t h -II' d e c r e e s3-1 lllllllltes Ciisl 13II.U7 feet lo the pointo r pla if lii-KlnniiiK.

Selllleldef A v e n u e , llereinaliox'e m e n -t ioned in llie fore^4,in^ deseriii l ion, iilsolie-lne; k n o w n a n d soiin-t i ines de.slKiiiiteda s S n y d e r Ayemie .

Cl'o lie sold in p a n - e l s a s d i r ec t ed inw r i t . ) '

Tin-re is d u e a p p r o x i m a t e l y $2fi,S7-l.7<;a n d $2-II.(1 111.1'iii wi lh in te res t I'rniu May1 1, l!i:i(i, illid eos t s .

LIOI-', S. IIKMSY, Sheriff .I ' l iAIU. lOS .1. STAM l,ICIt. Sol 'r .I.'ei-M $iiii.:ii; i - : i I J I & S I i !i7-in:i

M a n y S i i i n m i i •i l I i - H K i l l i l l i l t I p i l ! l . \

' I t ' l l i l ' i c i > . | l l o ; i o l i

I l sh ind . w h i c h loel-bi.-l v. (UMi 2 a m i '•'>

- i i l e l l i s ttl'I'C

i /J i i i -ne i l hy ;i

Hla'ck 'I'i mifivo S l i d e s .

Siiiiilay

' ~ '. r; 77 I"1 '* B1"(> UUIUH mm ineiin.-ies. a m i jouT1I13 GHAYMN, 19 Huolld avonui', --a | Mrs. WHIII.TK Ni-latm are made a dc-

fhci'Tful room, twin IIMIH, ruuninK j fendunt hcciiuBt' you lire Ihe wife of. water. Tel. Summit (i-:uif>l). liu-tl. WMIIHTK Nelnen who iMinv.-yiMl the said

iTTsUMMIT AYR., nctir Charm H<>u«';.lur(f« furnl8h«(l front room. IH;.Summit 6-H82-W.

, I I . . . / > l ^ , . . . . . H ' . . . . . . . . , . - - .

lands aiitl iirpmlsi'H to Walter Ncl.icnwithout your joining In the paid eon-veyani'e und hy lea.siiii 1 hereof you mayluivo somi; Interest in tho .said lands

UNIKHIOD room; c.C'iitral lopiilion ; I ""f,, .V.'.lii1 i!| |v 2 1rnfiIi Walnut street. Tol. G-l 118-1-W. 41-tf j ' ' " " ' .lOIlN* L20 W

A T T R A C T I V E room for huslness per-Bon or t e a c h e r ; wi th <ir withouth r e a k f a s t ; etmtral location. AddressBox 180, % SUMMIT 1IEUAL1).

103-,1-f.-

g Al'AIlTMKNTH TO LKT S

FJVB rooms and hath on first floor;heat furnished. 2U(i Morris avenue.

TWO attractively furnlnlied rooms;prlvntt! hatli; houHnkeepins lirlvl-leges; rciiHonaklo. Tel, Summit 6-2098-M.

... ITITOTMCS,Solicitor for and of Counsel w.lth

Complainant ,1*. O. Address , in Maplo Street,F i r s t Nat ional l):uik and TinintHulldlnK; Kumniit, Now Jersey.

WORTIIINGTON APAHTA1KNTS, 1G0Sumnrilt avftnuc, 3 large ruonia; elec-trlc'refrlBeratlon at no extra cost;moderate prices. See Rohert J. Mur-phy, 1 Beeclvwood road. Summit (i-0433. 13-tf

APARTMENT; G rooms; Sprlngfle d•venue; heat und water supplied;$45 month. Tel. Summit O-222'J-.T.

"'It ,0 AHA (IKS VOil RENT

G A R A G E to let, Individual, In center' of town, Tel. G-2229-J. 77-tf

1'Olt SALE 19

C O V E R E D Wngon i'raller-8 on displaya t o u r showrooms. Way MotorSa le s , 207 Kast 5th St.. Plainfield,N. I ! Tel. Plalnfield 6-2326. 97-99

ELKCTltTC RKFHIOERATOHOooa condition, cheap. Friedman,Springfield nve., New Providence 87-tf

COW and hnrae manure; well rotted;n« shavings; rich black loam; topsoil; $3.50 load, delivered anywhere;lawn nod. Daily Dairy Farm,XInlonvllle 2-0253. Sl-t£

!» R.EAL ESTATE FOB SAliB ,20

CHATHAM — On account of great de-• niaad for popular Paradise, Ciarden

Homes, we will continue trie price of?3,49O, F.II.A. plan, JM5 monthly, un-til Aug. 1st; delightful colonial de-signs (^beautiful Uape Cods at $2,9i)0;

' tuilt in . former private estate ; 12miles frohi N e w a p ; tfceea;" use pri-vate swlmmin'g p<)6r; drive out;place your i order now. Long HillCountry Club Estate, Falrmount

r Meyeraiville rd., .Chatham.- -."•: ~v • 95-tf

WASTED TO BUT

RESPONSIBLE tenant, one child,•wants to rent house In Franklin orBrayton-School district; permanent.Box 78, <•/, HERALD.

TRUCKING

SEASHORE express, carrying baggageand household furniture; rates rea-sonable. - H. P. Townsend. Tel. Sum-mit WX-8O8C. 83-tf

MISCELLANEOUS

TERMITES and PLYING ANT3 nowactive in this vicinity. Intormatlon,free Inspection of property availableto ' home owners through TermiteControl Bureau, of. N. J.. PboneElisabeth ?-19K. 67-tt

KIIKRIFF'H .SAItB—In Cham-cry ofNew Jersey. H<-t.\v<H-n lOliziiliotir

Trust Company, a corporation, com-plainant, and Dfilmorc livalty Co., acorporation, ot al., defendants. l«'l. fa.for salt* of inortKiiai-d jircinlsi'S.

By vlrtiifi of the ubovo-.stated-writof fieri facias t-o me directed I Hhallexpose for .sale hy public vendue in theDistrict Court Koimi, lu the CourtHouse, in the city of Kllznlicth, N. J.,

WEDNESDAY, T1115 26'1'H DAY OFAliCUST, A. 1)., 1!I,'1G,

nt one o'clock Slandiird (two o'clockDaylight Having) Time, in the after-noon of said day. ' •'

All the following tracts' or parcels ofland and premises hereinafter particu-larly described, situate, lyiiiK and be-ing In the Township of New 1'rovi-denee, In the County of Union andStale of Xuw Jersey.

First Tract. All of lots 1, 2 and 3and part of lot 39 as luid down on sur-vey entitled "Survey of Township ofNew Providence, Union County, N. J."made hy John .1. Kentz, ('. 10. andSurveyor, Summit, N. J., dated Marchlitith, 1933, and more particularly de-scribed as follows :

Tlcginning at a point o.n or nearSpringfield Avenue as laid down <?naforesaid survey, said point being thedivision line of lots three and four, asshown thereon, and from said begin-ning point thence running (1) on acourse north 4-4 degrees 22 minutesWest 198.10 feet to a stitlte In the lineof lot No. :)9; thence (2) runningnortherly 45 degrees 38 minutes East175 feer to a stake, said stake beingthe northerly corner of lot No. 39;thence (3) north 44 degrees 22 minutesWest 57.2li feet to n. point, .whieh«saidpoint is also 129.5 feet from the centreline of La •• Kecla Place; thence (4)south 35 degrees 23% ' minutes West185 feet more or leas to a. point drawnnearly at right angles to said souther-ly line of LaSecla Place', and being Inthe extension of the dividing line be-tween what Is known as the DelmoreHomestead property, situate on thenortheasterly corner of Schneider Ave-nuo and La Secla Place, and th* ad-joining property npw of Delmore Real-ty Company, to tho north thereof;thence (5) along aforesaid dividingline north 54 degrees 43% minutesWest 40.48 feet to a -point In saiddividing line which is distant 77.02 feetfrom the southerly line of La SeclaPlace; thence (6) south 35 degrees toa point in the northerly' line ofSchneider Avenue, which said point iaIn a line of the easterly side ofSchneider Avenue 77.02 feet south 53degrees 50 minutes east from the east-erly side of La Secla Place to anangle; thence (7) still along the north-easterly side line of Schneider Avenuesouth 42 degrees 44 minutes East 183.79feet; thence-(8) curving into Spring-1

field Avenue southeasterly on a curveto the left, the radius of which is 60feet for a distance of 81.42 feet to apoint on the northerly side line ofSpringfield Avenue; thence (9) alongthe northerly side line of SprlngfieidlAvenue North 50 degrees 34 minutesEast 123.02 feet to tho point or placeof Beginning.'

.-SALE-Sew Brick Colonial House-Slate roof, half Acre plot;line north side location, 5bedrooms, 3 baths, library,-1st floor lav., 2-car garage*oil heat. An exceptional buyat 120,000. <

Robt. J. Murphyi M. Wt St. MtK

Sll|.:iill,'l,"S HAI,h: —In Clianeeiy ol'New Jersey. Helwi-en Suininit Huild-

I l i K a m i T . i i H l l A n . - i i . r h l l h i l l , e i i n i l i l l l l l w i l l t ;

and Yolandn ('ami.-i, el al.s., deCend-iinlH. I'M. fit. for .sale of 11101-t iigedpremiscH.

Hy virtue of tile nliiive-stnted writof fieri fai-ias tu me .directed I shallexpose for sale liy public vendue in the1 ilstrict Court Room, in the CourtHouse, In the city of Kllziihutli, N. J'.,on

WIOIiNMSDAY, 'I'lIP: 2iri'II DAY OKAlKMTNT, A.. I)., V.KiC,

at cine o'clock Slnndard (two o'clockIiiiyllKht Siivinn) Time, in the after-noon of said day.

All llie. following tract or parcel ofland and premises hereinafter piirtieu-liirly described, situale, lying and he-Ing In tin.' liormmh of New l'r<ivldeiu:e,in Ihe County of Union and State ofNew Jersey.

lU'KiniihiK at il point 011 the west-erly side of Ijlvingstoii Avenue at :il>uint distant eight hundred iindtwenty-five feet and thirteen hun-dredths of a foot south of the southerlyline (if Hprlngl'Iekl Aveiiue, said pointtiring also distant one hundred feetsoutherly from the southwesterly cor-ner of said 1/ivingston Avenue andThumas HI reel, and from thence run-ning (1) In ii southerly direction alongthe said we.str.rly aide of LivingstonAvenue seventy-five feet; thence (2)in a westerly direction one hundredand thirteen feet and fifty hundredthsof a foot to. the renr line of lot 94 onthe map hereinafter referred to;thence (II) in a northerly directionalong the rear line of lots SM, !);>, illiquid!I7 on said map eighty-eight feet "andfive liunrtredthH of a foot to the rearline of lot 1(12 on said map; thence (1)In anweasterly direction along the rearlinesiif lots Kin, 104 and 105 one hun-dred and thirteen feet and ninety ninehundredths of a foot to the point andplace of beginning. Being lots num-bered 10G, 107 and 108 on a certainmap entitled "Map of norough Pifrk,property.of W. F. Hrower, situated atWest Summit, N. J."

There Is due approximately $-1.2(1.'!.22with Interest from June 24, 1930, andcosts.

T..EE R. RTOEY, Sheriff.ATWOOD IJ. DeCOSTBR, Sol'r.Fees $21,84 EDJ&SH 97-103

Houses for Rent$55-^-$bc-room franie, 1-car

. ^stett rooms, garage,Franklin School district.

$70—Six rooms, tile bath,open porch, oil leaf, 2-car

$75—S$ven rooms, two baths,\ 2-caf garage.

Munroe, Realtor15 BBECHWOOD ROAD

Su««lt

SIIKRIFK'S SALE —In, Chancery orNew Jersey. Between The Irvington

Building and Loan Association of Irv-inglon, N. J., a corporation, complain-ant, and Louis K. DeBondy and Ger-trude E. DeBondy, his wife, defend-ants. Fl. fa> for sale of mortgagedpromises.

By virtue of the above-stated writof fieri facias to me directed I shallexpose for sale hy public vendue, inthe District- Court Room, Irl the CourtHouse in the city of Elizabeth, N. J.,

WEDNESDAY, THE 19TH DAY OFAUGUST, A. D., 1936,

at one o'clock Standard (two o'clockDaylight Saving) Time, in the after-noon of said day.

All the following tract or parcel ofland and premises hereinafter particu-larly described, situate, lying and be-ing In the Borough of New Providence,In the County of Union and State ofNew Jersey.

Being known and designated as PlotNumber Two Hundred and Forty Six Aof premises laid out and shown on acertain map entitled "Map No. .1, Addi-tion to (Murray Hill Farm Colony,Township and Borough of New Provi-dence, Union County, New Jersey, sur-veyed in January, 1923, by John J.Kentz, Civil Engineer of Summit, New-Jersey, and filed April 10, 1923, in theRegister's Office "of Union County"Bald plot being more particularly de-scribed as follows:

BEGINNING at a point in the centreof Union Avenue as shown on saidmap «• said point being the corners oflands owned by the National House &Farms Association, Inc.; and runningthence'(1) North five degrees thirtyr.four minutes east along centre of saidtlnion- Avenue a distance of fifty-threefeet more or leas, to the corner of PlotNo. 246B; thence (2) north eighty-^eight degrees twenty-three minutes•west along line of Plot 2r46B n. distanceof two hundred twelve feet, more orless, to a point in rear line of Plot 238B; thence (3) south one degree thirty-seyen minutes west along rear line ofsaid Plot 238- B a distance of sixtyfeet to an old irrni.seiBfdr'a corn'er inline of lands of the said NationalHouse & Farms Association; thence (4)north' -eighty-eight degrees 'eighteenminutes east a distance of two hundrednine and thirty hundredths feet to thecentre of said Union Avenue, the pointand-place of Beginning.

Thewl.i Sue approximately $2,517.11.•with Interest from June 22, 1336, andCosta,

LEE a RHJBY. Shflttf.NKWTON P. KIN3EY, Bol'r,* t l M « . KDMkSH 95-101

i n o r n i i i h ' , k i l l h i t ; i i n u n k n o w n n u i i i -

b o r of p e r s o n s , l i i j i i r l n t ; n i i i n y m o r e

a m i ( l o i n s d a u i a K o I ' s l i m a l c i l u p l o

if ' ld . iMin, i l ( i i l .

I'I —( ' ( i i i f r i ' i ' ss i i ian . l i i l in 11. ( ' a l ) s t i f k .

of t h i s d i s t r i c t , Wii.; in i ' h i i n l iel<!

' r i u i r s d a y l o c a l l m i f r i e n d s a n d a n -

n o u n c e d t h a t lie in i lclcnniiMMl t o

liiiiKi! ii v i i i i i n i u s l'i.w;lil lo r i ' l n i n h i s

s e a t a t W i i s l i i n n l o u . M r . Ca i i s l . i ck

d u e s IIDI a-piu'i ir I n he i l i s l l l l hr'd in

Il i f lea,sl o v e r a n y i ip i ios i t i on I h a l

j lie l i a s a l ] ire.sei i l o r is l i k e l y t-.i

j h a v e , beiiiL', | ) c i i ' c c l ly s a l i s f i e d I n 1 0

t lii'l'iivc l l ie volfi-.s nil h i s f i r s t t e r m

I i'ccm-il a-nd ..;i |i |K!ul fur...!!!«:!].' su j ! " .

J l )01 ' ( .' Tim CmiKrcssiiiiin oxpi'csscd i'great cniil'iilenre in the Ktrcnglh nfIhe national ticket, believing thatHughes and Fai rbanks will be,elec-ted liy a large majority.

o ,Work was beuini Wednesday on '

an addition t o . the NeigliborhoodMouse (in Morris avenue. The ad-;dition will consist of a clasi-i roomon the south side, with a sleepingporcli on the Kceond .story. Thework, which will cost. $l,tiOU, willbe finished in September. |

o - • - - t

T11N YKAKS A(«<> IBa.siiiR his action on four rey.-;

sons, the chief of which was the jlack of unity in the (!oiiiiiiun,(!oiin- jeil on the mutter, Mayor Cornish'last Tuesday evening returned to1

the Council without his approvaltho ordinances proposing to pur-1chase land and erect 11 city stableon l'ark. avenue in Kast Summit.

The. Mayor expressed the secondfactor in inl'lueni-iiiK hi.s decision asthe almost iinaninioii« opinion ofthe Hoard of Jloallli that, the loca-tion of thi! stable in that part of thecity would be a serious mistake and•;nd that it would lead to trouble inthe future.

The third reason for his action liegave as the protest received fromthe citizens of'Summit, not onlythose from Kast Summit, thoughtheir protest was naturally themo.st viK<>ro.n«, hut also those fromother parts of the city.

As a fourth reason for his vetoMayor Cornish spoke of the highbonded iiitr&btedne.sH of the city andthe consequent advisability "to pro-ceed to new capital expenditure.-;with extreme caution."

What is announced as the firstdemonstration of__the K.K.IC- inUnion County is to bo held in Ilo-selle next Monday evening. Therewill he naturalization ceremoniesfor the KniRhta of the Ku KluxKlan, women of tho Ku Klux Klan,junior klansmen, tii-K girls, andAmerican Krusaders.

ThroiiKh*tlie efforts ot William I.McMane, the entire membership ofthe Union County Board of Free-holders, acting as a committee ofthe whole, is to make a tour onThursday of next week of all roadsof the county for which applicationshave heen recently made hy variousmunicipalities to have the countytake over these roads as countyroads.

The West End Country Cluh ten-nis team will face the MorristownField Club tomorrow on the localcourts on Sunset drive.

REGISTER AT CITY CLERK'SOFFICE

' Residents of Summit whobave not as yet registered per-manently, and who desire toparticipate this year in the se-lection of the next President, aswell as State, County and muni-cipal officials, should registerbefore October Gth. If they areWise they will do it at once.

They can register at the officeof the City 'Clerk, city hall.

Office open from 9 a. m. to 5p. m. each day; Saturday untilnoon. *

The HERALD welcomes all itemsof interest concerning you and yourneighbors..

NOTjfcE OF FIRST MEETING" ^ O F CREDITORS

The first meetinpr of creditors In thematter. of WILLIAM. HENRYMAHONEY, bankrupt, of 15 SayreStreet, In the City of-Elizabeth, Countyof ynion, will "be held at Court roomNo: 3, third floor. Federal Building,Federal Square and Franklin Street,Newark, N. J., on the 21st day of Aug-ust, 19"6, at 10 a. mr, at which' timecreditors may prove their claims, electa trustee, examine the bankrupt andtransa6t other proper business.

Claims with Itemized statement ofaccount must be legally proved; anyorlglhal note or instrument must beannexed; they must t* proved withinsix months after August lBt, 1336, andfiled with the Referee.

• -G. W. W. PORTER,' - Referee in Bankruptcy.

What are you taking a vacation

for? Need a rest? Then try a farm-

house where they take a few guests

and give them all the wholesome food

and lazing in the sun anyone could

want! Want to develop your athletic

inclinations? Then try a dude ranch

where there are saddle horses galore,

winding trails to follow, and an old

swimmin' hole to refresh you. Like to

dress three times a day? Then you'll

want an exclusive hotel with an elabo-

rate gym, a swimming pool and moon*""

light dancing to the rhythm of a ting-

ling orchestra! Have you the wander-

lust? Then let a travel agent arrange

an auto itinerary for you, with your

stopovers planned and reserved in ad-

vance. Or does the sea call? Then

your vacation should be a cruise in

northern or tropical waters.

Wherever you go, you'll \\jant to

keep in touch with Summit and the do-

ings at home; so be sure to leave your

change of address at THE SUMMITJ-',..'-'*^.

HERALD Office in order that your

SUMMIT HERALD may be for-

warded to your vacation address."

Phone Summit 6-1900

THE SUMMIT HERALDand SUMMIT BECORD

%<

Page 6: THE SUMMIT HERALD€¦ · r 15,000 People Read the HERALD. Published Every Tuesday and Friday. THE SUMMIT HERALD l~-w ai a Lull- ." and SUMMIT RECORD FORTY-SEVENTH YEAR NO. 97 SUMMIT,

-•i •

PAGE SIX THE SUMMIT HERALD AND SUMMIT RECORD, SUMMIT, N. J. TUESDAY. AUG. 4. 1936

&

A"*-

Blues Rout ColonelsTo Tie League Series

i _*s innings. ].'u(f> 8 .11 4*s [i k ) S K . ; « i _ Z 2 i : i % U l i n l l g . I

m . tu-i i i i i i . i l — C , _ i , , r a n I b y ' I E - !I I , . : O K L ' ; . - M I J J S Jl iW'htJl >' 'S l id l u . L ' l l i - ji M i ' t . i — M . . r i o i . , o i l - , I s ^ i - i . ' h i i i - — • - !l l . 'h . J J i l l ; ) . .

i...

North Summit Horsem Three Madison Hurlers Shoe Tournament

Hard to Win 12=2—Bell*„ r - L J The Senior North Summit HorsetO E i g h t shoe Tournament being played at

Hjfc

By BILL L i t AS

" l e Washington School PlaygroundI started its first round last week.

~~ . i There are fifteen men iu thisa t M«luiS011 :tou i '"an>ent and interest is running

i l i h among th& entratils.la first round eliminations a-t

! present: Charles Siniko, Jr., de-

Summit Tennis ClubPlay Starts Aug. 15

Strong Field, IncludingDr. li. W. Christensen,R. C. Taylor and JohnDiet/, Entered

Record Entry Expected

. V.1H1

I this game;kow_ki I.Jf_ . d J'eiMi.'k

i .me re s t, the k:a-uj still tu I* t c r1 W <-a\ t r A ('.^ with the Lai,,j^au ie behindI t W O I11UIV Ui i i

Lafayette"s Lin

were: Biiofka andVi i;-t

Wu-

r . i L u l i i g K : n t i i n

..•.-I-. Hid p o s i t i o n

Ivil. A;. ) ! i ( . - . . j i t ttH-

M i t e A l ,._l)J..( - IiiiiLt l i f . n . \ \ v a \ t i h a . ,

11--S t . f'i-iV U -U:Ii:-l

Place Striped Bass 'San Francisco' with Gable, MacDonaldIn Seaboard Waters Continues at Strand Today and Tomorrow

•,ii v-Kox in

N t t . S I ' M M I ' l M i l - H i U . I . I I-; . ( . I

pThe Colonels looked listless

•while the Blues, one gamo to thebad, were on their toes, realizingthat a loss Saturday would haveplaced them at a terrific disadvan-tage.

»«» Hold. Colonel*,

Sports Club DropsTwo Close Ones

Three Madison pitchers failed to ; fcated"Terrence Connol.y 21-19, 21-stop a Mlllburn batting assault j JSI HUa t | ) e n w e l l t on to detentSaturday at Mlllbum as the Blues j John Sehrump 18-21, 21-14, 21-16;punched out sixteen hits to hand J in another elimination Michaelthe Colon.Is a 12-2 pasting and tie j Karpenski defeated Charles Slmp-the -erieB for the Lackawanna'• ko, Sr., 21-19, 21-4. Matches forLeague crown at one game apiece, j ^ i s «'«<* *l» f i n d J « h f Sandello |The .bird 6an ; e of the three out of ^ « *™ ^ ^.five series will be Dlayed t-at.urday!Go(ija8 a g a , n s t F r ( m k H e n , i n w a V i iat Madi-oii. As the Millburn field a n d L e n l . P o n z i o a g a i n s l clarence!la not available on August IGtli' iiarootunean. '•there is a good chance that the | _ J |fourth game may be played here atthe Soldiers' Memorial Field.

Joe Press, Madison field man-ager, made a surprise move whenhe started Frank Osnato, who waseariier in the year with ScrantonIn the New York-Penn League onthe-slab. But Frank was wild andwas rembved in the third as fourbits, an intentional walk and twounintentional walks scored fiveruns, Osnato forcing two men inwith the bases packed.

Jim Duffy, who beat the Bluesin the first game, replaced Osnatoand after having two batters at acount Of two and three, walkedboth and two more easy runs dent-ed the platter.

Jim, who UHiially is able to wavesome kind of a magic spell overthe opposition, had a bad day andwas finally replaced by Emil Mos-kowltz in the eighth. The Blue*;who were In a batting mood, jump-ed on Emil's speed ball for twolusty bits and til rue runs crossed•the plate before the session ended.

The Summit Sports Club dropped!two tilts over the week-end, both |by one run margins, 6-5, 2-1. TheSaturday contest at Memorial Fieldsaw Pete Kevlin pitching brilliantball for four innings and with twoout In the fifth, the Newarkersscored five runs on combined er-rors and hits to tie the score at 5-all and win out In the ninth Whena double and single netted thewinning run.

On Sunday afternoon at WestOrange the Summit boys droppedthe other close decision, 2-1. Badbreaks and poor coaching adviceresulted in the Summit downfallwhen in the sixth inning Summitshould have scored at least threeruns but only netted one. i t wasat this point when the base coachused poor'judgment that probablycost the game. Meter Moroncypitched air-tight ball in the pinchesand should have won going away.

Tommy' Flnneran and Tex Mc-Grath were robbed of sure homo

Bell- «.eUip-« .la.t. P»^l^!ir,;d?ryKXy'I"_,°™n°.at™,»;

The Summit Tennis Club men'ssingles and doubles championshipswill start at the local club August15th and continue through uutilLabor Day week-end when thecity men's singles play will start.A record entry is expected to con-test for the club bowl put )n com-petition In 1932. Wharton Green,last year's champion, will be un-able to defend his title as he is now |living in Auburn, N. Y. Willard IRogers, Jr., winner in Iil32, will be Ion hand, however, to try for an- 'other leg on the expensive bowl,but he is given little chance againstone of the strongest fields everassembled in a local tournament.

Among the favorites are Dr.Harold W. Christensen, city cham-pion in 3 931 and 1932, who, in 1931,retired the old club bowl In com-petition since 1914; Roger 0. Tay-lor, present city champion, UnionCounty inrlnar tltleholder, and clubchampion in 1928 and 1929; JohnW. Dietz, Canoe Brook CountryClub champion and this year'sLeliigh University captain; C. E.Stanley Bellows, Jr., former Or-ange Lawn Tennis Club captainand runner-up in the 1931 and 1932city championships; Ralph A. Tay-lor, former city junior championand a member of this year's Duketeam; Stanley Van Cise, formercity junior champion and a memberof this year's North Carolinafreshman team; Wlnslow Rich-mond, who defeated Rogers in theclub" championship last year;Ralph C. Porter, former club cham-pion, Frederick Porter, high schoolcaptain, and his teammates, AlbertSchultz, Jr., Leroy Brennan andStanley Bellows.

Others who will furnish strong

•null's w ; i c h| Wl-i lMT A I 'j 1-afa.YftU- Aj N urlh Siimm ;1

lii'MiIls l.,i-l

La!..i i l - ) .

W e

t i n mi• A . ( ' .

l i i l s.v N.

W l < k

S . S< i , .

l - . i l 1 . : > '

Farrell WinsNew Jersey Open

Rodgers and singles by WhlteyDresseh, Kus Bergman and Jim

The Summit Club even in losingtwo heart breaking games showedprobably one of the best defensive

prevented the Rose City team fromabsorbing a coat of whitewash.

Emil Gall, who has supplantedCharley Hargreaves as first stringMlllburn catcher, clubbed out adouble and three singles in fivetimes at bat and handled Bell likea veteran. Henle Block, Millburn.|right fielder, had three hits, twobeing Texas Leaguers into right.Block is a bad b ^ l hHjefTfltad itwas his first teaser over first withtwo runners on and two out In thethird that started Osnato on thedownward way* ^a l l followed witha single and after Fritz Knothe waspurposely passed Osnato lost con-trol, walking Bell and Paul McCar- Jten with the bases loaded.,

Bruce Caldwell, of Yale fame,collected three of the eight hitsmade by.. Madison, Jim Calleran,Millburn second Backer, had a per-fect day with a double and a single,being hit by a pitched ball and-drawing two walks in his othertrips to the plate.

Calleran limped through thegame after being hit in the third;anc) Benedict showed the effects ofbeing spiked in the same inning,George Manfred), loft handed pitch-er, taking Andy's place at first ln.|tbe last canto, i

Ragnow, who this year caughtfor Morrlstown, was behind the batfor the Colonels in the absence ofButch Connelly whose father isVery ill. Bags was spiked in thethird (a bad inning for Injuries)on a play at the plate but was notseriously hurt.• The Bcores:

Mlllliurn' } • ' • ' a.b, r. h.p.o. a. e.

McCarron, c.f 5 0 2 4 0 0,'G. Knothe, ss 4 1 1 0 3 0

Calleran, 2b: 2 1 2 1 4 0tti_._ ! ! _ . - . « - . • e . n *n « -

and is deserving of the home townsupport to make this club a win-ning team. On Thursday night theSummit Club will nieut llto Chat-ham A. C. at Summit.

Tlio scores: >8uniro.lt

a.I), r. li.p.n. a. c.Ahem, ss 4 1 2 2 3 1Bruno, 2b 5 0 1 0 0 1Brenn, 111) 5 (I 1 4 4 0Flnneran, lb 4 0 0 10 0 0Brydpn, l.f 5 1 3 . If 0Would, r.f 4 1 2 0 0 0FlHkfi, c.f ' 5 1 0 5 0 0McGrath, c ,„_ 4 1 1 2 0 0Kovlln, p. ' 3 0 0 2 2 0

Totals -11 5 10 27 !) 2> Driigun A. C\

a.b. ,r. h.p.o. a. e.tleffernan, ss 5 1 3 2 8 1llardeli, lb. ,.'. 5 0 2 11 0 0Uowle, e 5 1 1 0 1 0Campbell, c.f 4 0 0 3 0 0Molkle, 3b 3 1 1 1 2 0Borgos, l.f 4 1 1 3 0 0Heller, r.f. 3 1 0 1 0 2Nlcol, 2b. 4 1 1 5 1 2Stark, p 4 0 2 1 1 0

Htf*:;:Benedict, lb ...:. 5 1 2 12gabo, l.tv ,'...;...:::z;:;;i. 5 1•Slock, r.f. 5Gall, c . ,.: 5

2 ti' 02 0 0

0 0. Knothe, 3b 4 2 2 1 . 3 0'

4 00 0

3 4 4

Bell, p .' 4Manfredl. lb vo

1 0o o

Totals 39 12 16 27 14 0Madison

a.b. r. h.p.o. a. e.Ash-worth, c.'f. ...

Totals .-..37 C 11 27 13 5Score by Innings:

DrsiRon A. C 0 0 0 5 0 0 0 0 1—6Summit 0 - 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0—5

Two-b'ase hit—Heffernan. Left onbases—Summit 1. Bases on balls—offStark 2. Struck out by KeyUn 3, Stark1. Hit by pltclR-d ball—by Stark(Would, Ahem). Umpire—Courtney.

Sunday's ScoreE. H. E.

Summit 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0—1 8 1W. Orange . . 0 Q 1 0 1 0 0 0 x—_ 10 1

YANKEES HOME FRIDAY

The New York Yankees after asuccessful road trip will return tothe stadium to meet the Philadel-phia Athletics over the week-end.On Friday and Saturday they willplay single games and for Sundaya double header has been sched-uled.

WATER CO. BALL TEAMSTO MEET THURSDAY

.W-Ur-'hing," 3b."Caldwell, r.f. ...Rodgers, lb.

0 . (I.0. 0

1 2 0 0 |" 0 02 0 0

0 3 4 0 01 2 6 0

0 02 C5 1

-Oitratb, p. .: 1 o o o 1 oDuffy, p. -.. 2 0 0 0 0 0M<pkQwltZ, p. 0 0 0 0 0 0]

ftignow/c 4 0DressjMi, ?b 4 1 1 3[Bergman, ss 3 o l 3

The Summit division of the Com-monwealth Water Company willmeet the Irvlngton branch in asoft ball game Thursday evening atMemorial Field. This will be thefirs't of a three-game series. ,

Week-End Golf Results

~i: Tft&is :.....:.:.;.....3-4 i i a s 2>' Store by Innings:Maaison 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0-TT 2Mlllb\irri 0 0 7 1 1 0 0. _ x—12 j,; Two-base hits—Benedict 2, Calloran, IGall, -F. Knothe, Rodgers, Caldwell,Dressen. Stolon base—McCarren. Dou-ble plays—P. Knothe to Calleran toBenedict, Dressen to Hodgers. Bases•pn balls—off Osnato 3,'Dllffy 3. Struck©tit—by Duffy 1, Bell 4, Hits—off Os-

ftlies- Adjusted

1>t%«!ter>»..™,

Solos .„-„.„ vrsleia ,_.._.

Ugb«

)masonBros.

8CNDAY

BAI4TUSROL (72)—Sweepstakes: E.V. Williams, 89-18-71; C. N. Fowler,78-6-72. -

BRAIDBURN (73)—Two-ball beat-ball: O. R. Davis and E. G. Hlnton.77-11-66. Sweepstakes: J. Vail, 85-16,G.

CANOE BROOK (73)—Special tour-nament, thlrty-slx holes: C. J. Good-man, 174-30-144; J. C. Hubbard, 1-7-6-151; Homer Llchtenwater, Jr., 168-16-162; Fred Lapham, 179-26-153; DousMatttce, 167-14-153. Sweepstakes: C. J.Goodman, 85-15-70; Doug Matttce, 81-7-74; J. C. Hubbard, 78-3-75. Matchplay against par: C. J. Goodman, 3 up.

SHACKAMAXON ( 7 2 ) — Kickers'handicap (drawn number, 7.5)-4 A. W.Rice, 75. Blind Bogey: Frank Stemple,93.

SPRING BROOK (70)—Match playagainst par: L. C. McDavlt. 3 up.Semi-final for president's trophy, J. fa:MacDougall defeated C7 D. Ryman, 3and 2. Kickers' handicap (drawn num-ber 78): G. J. Young, 97-19-78 ; H. O.Budd, 108-30-78.

SUMMIT (71) — Sweepstakes: N.Mosher, 81-13-68; A. Kirk, 79-6-73;George Martin. 89-14-75.

8ATFHBAY

B A L T U S R O I J (72)—Sweepstakes: C.H. Donner, 77-6-71; Robert Flnney, 76-4-78. Keller trophy: J. B. Shelby, 77-8-69. B. P. Bartlett scored an ace onthe, third hole, upper course, 178 yard*.

iBRAIDBlIRN (7S) — Sweepstakes,mornlhg: Hkrry Nash, 87-14-73; C. C.Campbell. 84-10-74; E. C Reed, 106-32-74- Afternoon: A. Matey, 90-14-76;O. R. Pavis, S5.17»78; H. Fegley, 96-

CANok BtROok (72)—Second round,president's trophy: Homer. Ltchten-water, Jr., defeated R S. Miner, .3and 1; K. M. Stepheitapn defeated J. K.tlTlnRston, 1 up; C. B. Bailey defeated•William Br#lbj;, 3 iind 2.. .

opposition to the favorites and whomay bring about some startling up-sets are: T. Dwight Bunce, HarveyMole, Herbert Lyall, Clayton V.

Johnny Fair-ell famous Iiallusrulpro and former national openchampion won the New JeiwyState open at the Crostmont (itilfClub, Sunday, defeating VictorGliezzl, of Deal, in the oighteen-hole play-off, with a sub-par 71.four strokes better'than Gliez.i.

In winning Farrell pusU'd his popularityfourth cotiKMuitivB snh-par round I.ctjiHiatiii1

and his third 71 in succession, sored liyniiirkiug his first.'triumph wince hewon the New York State open in1931, an event since discuntinued.

Farrell and Ghczzl left thecourse. Saturday tied at 286, onestroke below that of Craig Wood,1934 champion. Fan-ell scomi two71'» on Saturday on the par 72course and Ghezzi, pro at the Deal

Transported From Tribu-taries of the Delaware—New Law ProhibitsNetting of Bass

Legal Catch Ten Inchesp i s h i n g t-.ir s l r i p i i i l . a s _ a i n : i n

t i l l1 Nt 'W J e r s e y c o n M is * x i u ' i ti. d t o

I>v.' r e n e w ( ' d w i t h old t i m e ( - n l l i u s -

i a s m by t s a U w a t e r i i i i . _ l e r s i i n i i f r

. p l a n s of t l u * . S t a l e P i s h a n d C a m e

j ( " o m i n i s b i o n . e \ i - n l l m u ^ l i m i d i r e c t

! l e V t ' i n i e i s d e r i v e , I hy t h e S i u i r

f r o m t h e Cij tehii iL- oi ' l l i i s K i i i i ; ni

ba i t , w a t e r i i s h e s .

; I ' l i U c r l it(j s w ] i e i ' \ i s i u i i o f t h e

• I ' O l l l l l i i s s i o i l , 4 . i i l M I ;-:! 1 i p e i l b a s . S 1" f< J i l l

two to t w e h o iii( lies loii.u liavebeen lK-ttefi ill the Kate holes oft r ibu ta r i e s of the l>elawaie River.successfully mwisporled across theState, ami liberated i;i waterway*along the- New Jersey seaboard.Tlio .Shrew sbiiry, Shai'k, .\lanas~Quail and -Vkitede-eonk r ivers andliariiCKat Hay are ,the new domi-i-ilts of the relocated iightiiiM .uaniefish.

j In ot'der tu promote increasedof the spur t - / the lltljti

e adopted a law spon-the commission, prohibi t -

(*=. i; i ! . M..v. • e i iT"

..in . : n ( i-L.

.i( i H i a a i d .

Ii: M ti:ii ' .-

i u(

amiwithl . r i ' i i t

I h e l - . v , h

t Me \ - i . i 'e 1lit t - i ; . l l i e l .

s l l a l i l i u --11' jii F r a i i c i s i - u "

•s i . f o n d l yliai-. t h e f u l l i ;

M,e I'

\ . i i il

h ; ^ i l i ,i

and -i ami to

r i i l e

himwhich1)1'si.

his.Mi

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the nate holos of Ihet r ibu ta r i e s and .specially de-t rucks from liie l l ack i i l stow aHatchery t r anspo r t ed Hum tn theNew Jersey seaboard r ivers. Theprogram of the Sta te Fish andGame- Coininissiim will c-\eiuuacrea te a Ui'\v t i 'a fur the stripedhas« angler a s it is the first timethe fish have het-n pn i t e r t cd a;ncttiii,-, as well as the firstthey, have been artif iciallyated on the At lant ic cuast.

Uyt'd-iii-the- wool .striped bassfishermen come to New Jersey fromall sections of the count ry tu anglefor this .-.aiiiiest of salt water fish-es. Mii^t oj the old sail water fish-iiiK chilis alon.-, the New Jorseycoas t were organized by siiortsineninteicKted in stripjt'd bass fishing.

inn (he netting of striped bass Ineither salt or fresh waters, and fix-ing the legal size of the catch byrod and reel fishermen from ten loliMiury of the club, have become in-twelvo inches. The , restriction active because of the scarcity oftisaiual n.Uiu;; will increase the these fish ilurjiiK past years. " •Btipply and promote natural propa- wilh the now law probihilinu thegation of the striped buss. niittiiiR of striped bass and the fu-

Tho new law has been before the.-'ture liberation to be carried on im-Club, posted scores (,f 71 and (ill to Legislature for the past six years dor State auspices, the State Fishtie the 1928 notional open chum-! without action, and through the und Game 1'on.iiiiission predictspion. |combined efforts of the State .Fish that striped lias's fislmu; will rc-

WboT scored a 0!) In Uio af ter- | a l u i . t ' a"l« Commission and sports- turn to its former popularity alongnoon but a 7!i in the niwiiing round ..oryuiiizaticms this year, it |be New Jutsciy r-oasl.keptVhlm out of "uie ^hanipionship | ^ M adopted. The Btatute is eon-or a .noHaible. throe-way tie.

Harold J. Sanderson, CanoeBrook pro, finished with 7:5-7--75- \ n i a k i n B l»>d)'-75-299 and Ar thur .I. Po t a sh , pro a t ' G i u l l e wthe Summit Golf Club, was not fa r . 1 I 1 K s t n i K ' ( i

1

.iidered one of tbe most, important1

salt water laws enacted by the law-: WHO AKK ( U K MlUlSLATOltS! i

netted the finht-lass, or rock bass, In

bfihlnd with a card of 75-75-70-176-302 for the seventy-two hole on Ihe same field.event. Wilson Flohr, of Canoe | Tho scores:Brook, sensational 17-year old Kolf-i AIIUTINH. i,.-«l..n

Grover, Sidney Cropley, Ralph C. | er from Short Hills, was one of j Adams, _i> ' ,i' iififteen amateurs to qualify, finish-iitK with 84-74-83-8O-U21, his 15Sfor the first two days permitted himto continue in a select field. i -\I.-(\I».II< .-.:., I-.I.

Porter, Jr., Donald Uiflnger, ArthurC. Vivian, Oliver Van Cise, GeraldVan CiHiv^ftaymond Smith, PhilipTrowbridge/\-<John May, DudleySwim, Harry Megargee and 13,Clark.

Knt'rlcB for the clUjh, chaniplon-shlp may be made at the club orby con-tactlng Dwight Bunco orWillardf1 Rogers, Jr.

No. Summit SoftBall League

I N ![;<

"Would, c-. ..l )orrh:i l( , |i.F i she r , Hi.

h.p.fi.(I _I) I)1III

N. P. Boys ClubDefeats Legion

latent, ss"We lislc-r, r.r.Kelk.v, l.i

TotalsJire

a . I i , r .

iMa.son, ss.<!as|)ci-, ;!lj.-•'i.slic, l-.f. ..

The Scoop's .Wildcats won theNorth Summit Softball Leaguegame when they defeated theWeaver A. C. by the score of 17-3.The game was marked with plentyof hitting on the part of the Wild-cats, combined with excellent field-ing. Batteries for the game were:Karpenski and P. Ponzio for theWildcats; M, Ponzio and Spencerfor Weaver. •W

Another league game played be-tween the Lafayette A. C. and theNorth Summit Seniors ended in a10-10 tie. This game was a nip andtuck affair, the lead changing toopposing teams four times in aseven-inning game. Batteries for

SOFTBALL LEAGUE

L.1356779

14

Pet.'.923f7B9.58..538.4ti2.46_.308.000

A DivisionW.

Pioneers ..'..:...;.„.., 12Hose Company 10Presbyterians 7Italian-American Club 7Water Company 6Flro Wardens 6Ind. Social Club 4Summit Bulck Co 0

Result of game last Monday night—Fire Wardens 11, Hose Co. 5.

Result of game last Tuesday night—Ind. Social Club 12, Bulck Co. 6.

Result last Wednesday night—Water Co. 7, Presbyterians 3.

Result of game Thursday night—Ind. Social Club 13, Presbyterians 4.

Result of game Friday night—Pioneers 7, Italian.-American Club 3.

Game tonight—HoBe Go. vs. Italian-American Club.

Game tomorrow night—Water Co. vs. Ind. Social Club.

Game Friday night—Presbyterians vs. Wardens.

B DivisionW.

Stephens-Miller Co 13I.ions Club 7Oakes 7K. of C 5Crystal I-odge 4Post Office , 2

L.05580

11

Pet.1.000.583.583.385.308.154

Result of game last Monday night—:-Post Office 11, Crystal Lodge 6.

Result of ga-me Friday night—rSfehMll l Co. 10, K. of C. 5.

Game tonight—Lions Club vs. Oakes.

Game, tomorrow night—Stephens-Miller Co. vs. Lions Club.

Game Friday night—Oakes vs. Post Office.

Game Monday night—Stephens-Miller Co. vs. Oakes.

SEIflOB HARDBALL LEAGUEStanding ol Teams "

W. L.Comets 9 0East Summit Bears 3 4Lincoln T.M.C.A 2 5Now York Coat Co 1 6

Pet.1.001)

.286

.143

Games This WeekThursday:

East Summit Bears vs. Lincoln Y.Friday:

East Summit Bears vs. New YorkCoat Co.

'KIWANI8 JUMOR HARDBALL

LEAGUE

Standing of Team_W.

"Wheatles A. C :_. .-. 6Valley Juniors 5Eagles _ . 2Star Club - .;._. 1

Pet..857.625.286.167

Games This WeekMonday— . , .

Valley Juniors vs. wheatles A_fC.Tuesday—

Eagles T«. Star Club.Thurmla]-—

EagrlM vs. Wheatles A. C.Friday—'Star Club Ti,

. Usbonie,

|The New Providence Boys Club • ^ j ; , , 2

defoatod the American' Legion !) to iMiiiy,' pii last night in a twilight league -iiartn'i, c.game played at Memorial Field,; Kl '"nbt '1 '«.The Boys Club collected e l e v e n ; b

hits off the offering of Mike Dor- |chak as Art Pilley set the Legiopdown with four. ;

By losing this game the Legionis two games behind the league-

-.r.

. 1

. -r

. iII

. -i

.i. ...lb. - ..-,-..

1 IS 1) 7

i tTotalsiSi-oro by- innings :

Aii i . i leai i •l.i'Kinii - •' (l '• 0 « 1— : 1 'New P r o v i a e n c e 1 1 f> 1 t) 1 x—'.) \

Stolen buses—Would I!, Dnichi ik ,Kiske. S u c r l f u r liit—-\lrirlln. Duuldi;

' liliiys—MasuM to O s b n n i c , Kcl ley t<i. . „ r. , , , , . llcilli-y to Adams to l''islicr. l i a ses 'onM c C u e D a i r y t o m o r r o w n i g h t i , a i in_, , i r jx.rciiak I, i-niey 2. s t u n k

— ~ ' ' r ~ , o i i t — l i ' i r i - l i ' k 7 I ' i l ' i - v !l. J ' a . s s e d b a l l

The HERALD welcomes all news. —Would. Umpire—Brenn.

F r e q u e n t liuiuiri 's a re madeat the 1U-KAI.1) oft'ice MM to I"Who a r e our ropiTHcnlulives at IWash ing ton?" and "Who are our Irt'i)i't"ifiitativi.'H at Trenton'. '" j

1 | Kor tin; inloiinatidii of our iu-i! terestiul ci t izens wo publish lie-i I low the n a m e s of our rui)rc..i'n- |i j tat ives:

United Stnlcb1" Keiiators, Hun,A. Ha i ry Moore and lion. \V.Wuii 'en l!ii I'botir, Si'iialo (..'liain-hor, Washington , 1). C. ('on-Krcssiiian. ti 1.11 IJisl... Him. Don-ald II. McLean, House uf Kepi'e-.scntativt':-!, Wiishington, 1). (!.

Union (lounly I'eiiresenlativi'Hin (ho New Jersey Li'Kislalure:State Senator, Hon. Charles I_.Loizeaux, Mil South nvenue,I'laint'ield; Moinhors of •'Assem-bly, Hon. Charles It. Gediles,2S0 Delaware avenue, Union;lion, ThonuiH M. .Mulr, ;!')_ (Irantavenue, Plain.ie'ld; Hon. Hart S.Van Fleet, I!!!) Wc.stfiohl ave-nue, Jioselle Park; Hon. JolmM. Kernel', Kllzabe'th.

leading Valley A.the

willWill

STARTS

wm AUG.7TH

N OADVANCE

INPRICES

001 BRANFORDNEWAR

EVERY NIGHT lOOO SEATS 4 O C

i t i i - i>h t>n t> s i i i i i i u i i i i - : i ! i m i

Tlirt 'O s l i<i« S d ; i i l y lit '_*, 7, S.!)ll | i . i n .

S u i H l a . i s a m i h o l i i h n s c i i i i U n t i o i i s L' (II 11 JI. m.

TODAY and WEDNESDAY, AUGUST -1, 5—I I i n r . t l , a ^ ( ' I ' H O l ! i ! \ s

NEVER SUCH A THRILL!Your two mostexciting stars...inM-G-M's mighty

[romantic triumph!

JACK HOLT •JESSIE RALPHTED HEflLV

«-V.;S. VAN DYKE Production

THURS., FR1. and SAT., AUG. 6, 7, 8—

— ALSO

George O'Brien "Border Patrolman"

Scene from "San Francisco" with Clark Gable, Ted Healy andfJ,eanette MacDonald featured at the Roth-Strand today and tomorrow.

SPIRITUALS UNACCOMPANIEDIN "GREEN PASTURES"

AT BRANI OltD THUATER

The singing of the spirituals inWarner Bros, picture,-. "The GreenPastures," which comes to theBranfOrd Theater on Friday, Aug-ust 7th, is "a -capella," that is, with-out Instrumental music. Hall John-son, who heads the famous choirof sixty voices, explained the rea-son for this.

"When the early devotees- de-vised the-spirltuals," said Johnson,

I "musical instruments were notI permitted in their churches, but soingeniously did they blend theirvoices that the absence o£ instru-ments was not any handicap. Iuse the male voices for volume,the female- for coloration."

The famous choir sings twenty-five spirituals for the picture be-sides furnishing background music.

Marc Connelly, the author, co-directed the picture with WilliamKelghley and wrote the screenplay in collaboration with SheridanGibney.

NASH INVITES YOU TO SHARE IN ITS

:0™ANNIVERSARY

V

• To win new customers during our 20th Anniversary Celebra- Payments as low as $25 Ation. Nash offers the greatest car-buying opportunity in years I " K S S u oDon't fail to come in and see the beautiful Nash and LaFaydtte cover 'ow down-payment.models. Take one out and drive it. Then, compare our allowance $CTQC ^-n $ Q Q Con your present car with any other you can get! O J *J IO JZ/*J

In 1936, Nash-LaFayette sales increases are almost twice as largeas those of the industry! We want you to share out success. Bringin your car daring this special event add find out how little it willcost to drive out in a brand new Nash or LaFayette!

LAFAYETTE S595 and up.NASH -400" $665 and up.NASH AMBASSADOR. 125-inch whe2toase s.eJi.is withtrunks,$835to*995. Pricesf.o.b.factorv.SDecialeauiDmente-ctra.

25 summit Ave Summit Avenue Garage 'Phone 6-3549

NASH and LAFAYETTE

•. I

J