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-1— •%*• T * .I 1 II JBJi I* C I* | •I ;;-. .^.,...iv. y.J»-.%A* .». 1 V>torblng The Rahway Nowa-tferald, the «ucce*aor of the Union Democrat, Established 1840. VOL. Xffl. SERIAL NO. 1480 RAHWAY, UNION COUNTY, N. J., TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY.1,1924 EIGHT PAGES PRICE THREE CENTS CHURCH LAUDS SMITH Federation Commends Actinf Polke Chief on Steps Be Bar —-v Tak jn BOPF AND DE* AUSOUMW Meeting Sunday afternoon »l the First Baptist Churrb, for - the last m - Excellent Yuletide Programs !• *%* Given By Five Sunday Schools Annual Entertainments Attract Hundreds. WANT. COUNTY TO TAKE PARK ationaAre -AblyGiven, •That nowhere—h—mrr spirit more beartily In tboltanday Schools of ih<» city was Well ahown Friday night in t h , largo City Plan Board Makes Over- tares for Transfer Castor- Denman Tract According to report in circulation. TTB Or rtilliwflj ii Sunday School auxillnrv to St. Paul's Ih*. school which -la eonducted-weekly \ niDS Commission on at tho residence of E. K. Cone'. "The a PP eared - bef ? re the LnIon Couill >: aIttrf l 00n time the Federation ofj^nmbor-of Joyful Yule-tide entertain- Bose. waa arranged by Mrs. John C. E. Eldridge and Miss thiH year. the t-cacrauun o*| -- •-*— t m,«*«i U - ( Elsie Coddlngton. Chnrcht-w—unsTntr.*>»*ly-- pasawl—» inenu-whicb- br©ttsbt~rojrrth--r close; Ebenczer A. M. E. resolution commanding Probationary -hi*. to one thousand pupils, parents andi I-reM-ntaiion of a cantata. "When Park Commission and requested the county body to take over th<- much- disputed Castor and Denman tract for unp"in**the derclopmeTit of the county park system. Attorney David Arm 1923 Closes Eventful Chapter for Rahway Sometimes HecticratOtherTimes Fruitful GARD-EIG-GAM FOR "Y" QUINT by Citizen Workers—City Fathers Passed Through Trying Times But Made Some New Year's Night Attraction; N I s Fasi Woodbridge Five, i xPIainiidd Next did Buildings Erected or Started, Other Interesting Events r I fine work toward i-U-aninj; up the cUy,: ttclpate in ono way or another In ex- t.-rtalnWnt at the Ebenczer A. M. E. ; i:nIon Count >' commission was in- since ho wn» arpomifd (or a three \ cellent procrarn«. Entertainments | Sunday School. The pupils taking' structed to confor with CIly Attonie >" months''trial. t,nw time ago. Thelww presetted by the-pupils of tho part w.-re: The Mlssea Klolse C o l l i e r , : charIes K - Corbin a s l 0 t h e I ir0 P er Federation r.isu pled**! Chief Smith j following Mftcufe: Grand S:r<-<:! Cha-" Harriet Dickerson. Paulino Hammond. ! n - ann ** r of "Proceeding to h a v the their moral ant! i>u>nical bupport ln.p-.'l. Firtt Methodist. Holy Comforter., Ruth Madd-n. Olga Jackson. Roberta! (M 'f nly 3ca - uiro lhe tracL bit work of b.-ti-T.us conditions hcro.jSL l*a«l'« and Ebt-m-zer. The pro-' j a < •k.-ion and John- Collier. Andrew! Thus written another H.-ipter After commwitnr.s the police head icrami .follow: i Cullk-r. Veruon Cromwell. Mulfardj In ^ helon 5 and hectic history or this on the work already acconiplUhed j ' *• Paul's Sunday School [Taylor. Ilradford Jackson and Kred | hf;auTTfu! and attractive tract extend- tlnc« he took ov.-r the relna of the, Cartf: recitations. Albert Hazel-j White. The cantata was under tb.e' in S west of St - George avenue along trial period, tho' i the Federation ..."The Federation . ulnccrcjy .h.9PHj.pas£anf, ——that"it"u the ~i* liaftnu-ot nv«- tbtngi the direction Wo pledge the As Railway by dlnjv^rvonoc Buckley. Wra Cava-iable direction " *- Evelyn Conlcy: carol; Howard. of Mrrf William chiff our support, morally and physically." Rov. G. A. I-a«. paiTof Of lhe Flrtt at tn." given under' i Mini—M«r^u<Tlt<-' tlvo of the Rahway river. Chap- ter on'] saw th,? land acquired by the hu-Christmas setting waa atirac-- cily undcr resolution. Chapter two ' l':Velop*»d that this procedur -maintained In a tine big tn was ConlerMd-parttdDatcd.in by thu fol-j prettily lighted by electric bulbs, the lowing: The MUsoa Charlotte Quick.j t.anv- having bf-en arranged by Ed- Carolina Grlgp.*, KOBO Hareldlnv. Etta'ward Pyatu Presentation of gifts rot ethical tosay the least, and the city commissioners proceeded to pass an ordinance of purchase. Chapter Methodist Cbuieh Introduced ( Van "MrrtSw^and other meni-"T t ^ V|1W _ ^vanaugh. Mabel- was a feature of t. s .e evening, Key. J. i * l Hii>t Foster. Yronne'w P Clli d R C V ! ' of the FtfVratlon highly com- Buckley, Hilda Schaefor. May Leon-j Aaron, superintendent, being espo- nied Smith (or hU recent raldi bard. Vlr^InU Fosti r, Grace Kettner.'claly remembered. The committee bera pi 1 men ted on gambling doni And liquor violators. r<*aux. Kennrth Van Pelt, Jack Bose'on arrangements Judge Orlando H Dry who bai sup-triaiix. Keanith Van Pelt, Jack Bose, William Howard. three witnessed the voters* referen- Yvonne, W. P. Collier, pastor, and Rev. C. V. dum wnlcb defeated the~ord!nance. Chapter four marked City Attorney Corbin's filing of an opinion that de- ppilf the referendum that the city dispose of the land It could not he f 1 (I u 1 1 ported Smith by :mpo«ln* heavy floe* on those brought before htm. tal Commissioner U u s ell S. Hoff, ictlng brad of the Polk* Department, wen praised for their attitude In better- tnjr~conftltiona ia Rahway. ROT. Wallace.H^C*rrer. pastor of the Second PresbytrrUn Church, re- ported irramanuals complete for the week of prayer to be observed to Rahway starting next Sunday nljfht- Rev. Mr. Carver *>olu.> of the efforts of the Hev.-W_ilhQir-E_£aanderi, pas- tor-of tha securing the cfa th belof I tondent CTratrfr, Uifwelcom Her. John M. Moore marks, to Rer. comprised: chairman; Mrs Mrs lib. Paul Hullck. Louis Clinton Taylor. MrH. Waller Cook. Everett Mttaslnan, Herbert-Misa Mildred Klnch and Miss Mar- )ho Smith. Vcrnon SImmona, garet Phillips. Holy Comforter S. S. At the Holy Comforter Sunday School a Christmas sketch waa the main attraction. This number was~an original contribution and was given under the splendid direction of Miss Clara Garcia, by members of the prl- flft the presentation marydepartment. Theleading parts Supcrln- were: "Jack, FrosC Richard Elliott; Simmons look .occasion .to. "Aurora BorealU," Miss Elizabeth Sprint Kelha, wa* th4 Santa Claus of the pageant the pageant gifts were dbtrlbufcd In profusion. Superinten- dent H TV Simmons, with fitting re- do a presentation of a purse H. A. L. Sad tier. In return. Mr. Sin noes was made the recipient members of the ColonU (Continued on Page Ftve) having H. C. Rohbin?. I*an of the Cathedral of St. John In NVw York Cily, to «poak at the opening and doting wrr* Ices of the «.•,•;•. of pra>rr. Tbo op.n* inic srrvicf will bn In the Baptist Church or. thl> .Sunday and the clo* P int of ail.-Rrd liquor on Iris m»rv!r*» will h v h<>10 in ' "' ' Trcslbyu-rion (*.:ur\h the Sunday night. HELD FOR GRAND JUR Y ON LIQUOR VIOLATION CHARGE sold fo: i^tber than park purposes. It has also been reported repeat- edly that the Union County Park Com mission intends to develop its park system along the banks of the Hah way river from Springfield Into this city. It has acquired several par eels of land to date but none as far down the river as the Castor-Den man tract. night >clu-dult?fl ^for N'o-A" Yc ar'.- f or the on tjlio -"V"- court, wh-.n theij Jfl riil'A" *IJiK Kivy v/lil invade [lahivay. The locaia nosed ' Wood- OUL by tehmargin of one poujt lani N».*w Year's night and the Mid-' !!(•:•* x Cunty t*-a:n will cum • her-- dt- >--n:i;uf:fl to t.-vfn matters hy scoring Hand.-: on tho thr* . think ir.K and . iila which it is l.np- - l-d during the and devising way • lioid th- to . t ( I •:\;i:-!i back wiilji'usf'd p-.T.;i:;s Ia.-t SUIIUM- r fur ah ciir- u *jlt I ;ii\u•.- A :i:::r. ;'..».• city hauls, v. '."W and a win to >tan tho 1921 season, If Woodoridcf i.^ to win. tln-y will ve to play .-y^n better tlian they tin! !a«T yr-ar. as thn locals are anxiocs In. 1. iu IL t«v».•!'.••.• : r . o n i h VArdiis cjf cuiTt.-ciin:,' the faults of the past it sr- r rr.= litting to take a look back through the flUs for t!i thrix- > hi:n<ln.'il and sixty.HVL- il city'.-- i...vi S. Tic- ca. -ii-r-'.'- 1 .ii_ I li.i r\iy -..& past ueer. giving as caii^o \\U iuabilit. to ^ to ^erve with Mayor Furber. Albert S. sc- whSt the year 11*23 has meant iu uiank was named to the post. G---.-at municipal activities, club ami lodge p-.ogr"-.- v/as mad*? in laying tanci*.-to lif-. churrh^ x work and individual >:dewaik- ::i I'M-J c-iuer o£ the : Uy. IU-.WH:. \- !.inc')ln Park, tile Jo^ephson t::ict m- ;r running their defeat Saturday night at the hands if tli- Ia^;t Ci;>. The Stuyvcsam Fivo of Jersey not Kahway players art by _ th<j .setback_ju the handy,of the Jersey City team, "who wer-.- the only team to defeat Eliza- b'-th Y. M. C. A. la.-t year on the Th-- fi!e> uf th-'-XKvtord" furnish x^ iu iiisLory and a lUUa, dtlvln in :\ud ' adjac-nt shows trmr countless >;ri-i;s w.;.-t t,i :i• w .- re*.*i pavenient iiigiiway, i;ol and -.id-i-walks iiapp-nings, some of the high .lights »:f comni--. a fine forward step. ;ho uf which ar«i brieily mentioned, in i-:ty advancing the money with the I i which it Is flipped wiU property owners to roiinbursu the r.-mind the readers of an ^im\ Mayor Furber lost a fight to to Elizabeth court. eventful cros^-Kection of time in Its ha\\>JiU choice for assessor, and G, flight. Citizens' Commissions Active M. TRUSSLER SEES VINDICATION "Editor Record: got the post. ! Garbage Collection Woodbridge- will lineup they did; Onp of the noticeable achievements The systern of collecting garbage"* last year, with "Willie" Martin andjof the past year has been the service from the rear ot^ property was put Kaddfson in forwards; Irv Martin at: of the several citizens' commission?, into effect accomplishing a much- center, and Mepick and Hughe*! the members' of which have spent needed improvement!^ The city'g guards. K. Lorch and R. Parsons will: much timp and energy in working out swimming pool was greatly improved be brought along as subs, giving! various civic problems. There were through the fine work of Water Engl- Woodbrldge one of the strongest! among others the milk commission, neer David Gage and his son. x WaI- squads that has ficed Rahway this This "group succeeded In establishing tor. and the interest of Mayor Far- season. :a string of municipal stations where ber. Railway's municipal campsite Tho Rahway lineup will probably (; rade A raw milk was placed on sale was firmly established and h;is find Corey. Armstrong and Smith in j f°r twelve cents per quart, much gained widespread fame. the forward berths; Walter or Bliss l«'wer than sold by milkmen. the^iove ( Mayor Furber's fight on the volun- in the piv<>: borth: Russo, Gingorich' succeeding in several instances in tef-r lire department system I am reliably informed that at a 1'. MUKT and ltrook> for very n cent conference betww-n the the c!ot| M the FlrtfpKve, Ab« Kagan. Main street doHca- lism (rum thv Imu^o and then i the police that ho had not •d in four months. A litli** hu- Rahway City Planning Commission andth^-Union County Park CommiB- siian. which conference was asked for by the Rahway Cky Planning Com- mission, a t!t.*ci«ion was reached w>:«»reby i\\,- attorney r>f ih<-. Union rnunty Park fommis.sion. David Arm- -tronp. was authorized to confer with b (Continued on Page Eight) ATHENIAN CLUB IN XMAS PARTY dealer «a* arraljm.-d lu-iur..-, M^,,,,.^^. oilU-r Cruwl-y who ar- ! Juris* Dry in po!;cc court Friday «f-| : ,..,:,-<i Lucas w.i.^ broucht to the I Ivrnoon acd hi-:d under 5'-'"* ha.l-f jrl s::n,tJ— - .._ illii- action of the Grand Jury. Tho "Hi* w if" tlirw.- him <-ut of the Ttir view M iitvising some •Ny tin.* Union (*(Mi::t> Park Onmmi-sion might take •I "Dfinn;rn~tracts who made his initial appear-1 the ruinkmen's charge. The threats of recall which h- SUCJ-^S- was dispensed loose, but users fully defied. The mayor took much anct.- Saturday ntaht. will be out of !i;lVt - i o*^"n told they can have It hot- interest last spring in thr city man* the game with an injured ankle. tllti ^ lnt '- v desire it. ager form of government and at ono On Saturday night th- lMainnVld Tlu-n there was Uie city planning iinv petitions were started but got Y. M. C *\. team will- play at Rah- commission wliich worked out a line nowhere. The mayor submitted !iira- wuy. Plaintield dufeal.-d Rahway I |tfin for t ' ilv 'l--\>*lopment of a city >e!f "as a" candidate for a city man- badly last. >ear and a win over the I' ;trk sysivm. -tP's.-ing a 60-acrc park acer post at Norfolk. Va.. buta Vir- QUW.R City t^am this week will dn'-' 1 ' 1 - 1 ^ t"' 1 Ralnvay river above St ginian got tho job. much to pur a lot of pep into Rah- <; '—'- avenue and oppn-lte the w;i- •A.iy f o r t ' l on January 12 tvr work", tlu- i-ommlsaion filing an Seek Health Board Return Early this fall a fight_was who also il. PlalnnVM i ated playing Newark Y. j7]^^col!rTiT—brief-0Tr-rt0Trin 7Tn0Tir —oh"mEwTnry—\TrsTX~A. W. MHUuTy^ana" h\<i yrar l: 'inod through the servic-s of a very the Civic Club, supported by a ::u:n- M. «' n nip»-t' r.t -ngini-vr. Hcw-ver. pub- i». r of otht.T civic ".'"A". lo:fi/>rr.--w ninht at Newark; and" was the K-»p n in second app.'.ir.itu' 1 imd I pUkf-d him u;> out of the week, he haYlnR •bvyn i":ucd Slu *»n December 21, for having opcrat-.-d a chance-board in his place of buslnest. The: <i^.argo af;-*ln--t Kagan accord- ing li; Acting Chli'f of r»-:;c.» Joan A. w> ltI . , n ii ,,f..i 1 Krcilh'U :i.ad«- 1»> Ofl-cor Jaim s Co- tDjoyablc Afiair Is Held WilhU^n of t.v v^*y tm~. Tho P «-u MR. J. J. Hoffman Creit' Fan Gifts cu._LO.urr_wiib|n_a^j_p L et."_j-_ajd_^row_i;*_>\__ ' , !;.:ijanun Si'.Tiif. i-f Highland I'ark. . :ii (if ti'h c"i:ip;iny trecting f.vf-:;ty. v.- hou-r> i:i ;:!*.• souiliwesit-rn ond !' T'-li '•;*•. w.^ charRcil with leaving I-akf avenue without a t.-i-:.: told Judg.- IX'y that wn> K-ft !n the street by . f M'.ller .t Hoff Lumber of which Acting Police tli.- t'.i^tur ar.'I "Di-nin ;tlsn thf Rah way poor Farm j i'ahway f;u:~ will b».* alil.» to get ;i with a view to the dfvt'lopmentj ii'i'. 1 m; fl>- NiwnrV: cut:ir wliu play in refuse to name tin 1 ^-ti-' *n ^ l »'-<•»- ICaicsn i? allop'd to !ia\o M>: ! w- liquor," 'biii the hot tie itiul r> n;- -v.i^ wort* exhibited in court Kr:.!:»y Charles Ptamler. a*; attorn, y f.»r K» gan, put in a pK'a uf n.»t guil'.y ;i:ul waived a hearing _on tho charg.- John Lucas, of Newton »tr.-«-t. w,is r.vX i- lijinlu : . :.iuk r;:i; ;i:-.;.. \< ;..-•» \Vinkier. .Main street produce .;• .ilt-r. was itrraigiifd or. a charge ::::i.i,' by Miss Mary Uhler. of Ful- ;-M -tn-.-t. thai Wlnklor sip^rtd his >n:ii-h:ni' into hercar in Milton ave- morning. The charge The Christina.t p.irty u( the Atho- nlan Club was c-Nbratod Friday af- ternoon at thi- r.^sldonce of Mrs. J. J. Hoffman. 132 Klin avenue, arid w i n d e d five dollars for being drunk am!: mi,*. Sunday long bo recalled by those present as; disorderly on Christmas, his wife "•>•< t!isn-.i^ t il. ono of the most enjoyable erents In! ~ "—- —— the club's history. Tho decorationi! Girl Scout Notes jWoman Hysterical throughout tbc house were elaborate' ' and fitting to the Yuletide season I The different Girl Scout troops in : and lr;i« <-f-it-!-<tf t>!—-* -trH-ct^- by-the -Union County I'ark ('ornViTissu'n. as a part I * a rii'-'iy !:I>;I-- :!;;t; this propo- *t it •: i i:.:. 1 . !-•• i.-i-n^u!::!ii:itvil II"- pi—*- dl> iiur;:i^ :::> v."C- v :it--ca:ii])aign 1:: rr-Tv-ir.-n. '.) "i..- C:\y ^i i::thw;.y tr-:, : -:^:::ir :,•:•! •!•• v-Nr-i:- t h - ^ l':is- r :-•:•: H- i\'::.-.:i :;•.:»[-. \\ :*!: :• view lu l...! ; -.\ay :;s-!f il--v••!•:'j»:i*ir ;i sopa-! I ^I:it. .1 'thaf th's v.;is t!:o w.ck of; th,- i iiin: ruticty I'ark Commission! ari'l that Kahway should not interfere i with for ;he r-> ilth. This id 1) i! ' :(t N Man Loses Mind ^;;(ir.i!fi;t fi-.r ^evi-ral month?. \ t I»:.t'i:i-(h'-!:ini. H' years old. of WVst Cmm! str.-ot. sudd.-nly lost i::!n'! in front oi his hoir.t- Friday :l. ;u'c<:riling to ' '.:•.• r^lic- 1 . _:";;: v.r- callo'l ("ni-f of i'olice :ii ati'I l';itrol:r.an Crowley who ; tii-- ir.an to poliro headquarters.' Wlt \.. - xamiis-'ti and tiirii sent to - :;it lie-n^i.wuiiiinn to this and another sug- turn of the board- «est:n:i "f the plan rnm::iission for -ot r.o ;u-t."nn P-- .May<ir Furb-:r tin* :uiiuisition of the Vail plot either the prott->t.s :iK-ii a-.vaiting auui- fnr..;i..ei:y .hull, or a par.!;, jalleil_cuy_. Q f_fjie_.ljudget.. which...coatain-id (leveliipinent of either. appropriation for a publig hc-nitli '•'.•('•fare ueTiart •;]" nd I ublk ' "•'"It" and wrlfan: co::i- r. putin no cud nf work on ;h" -r.: which is .held to ith bo?rd in :•-• -m- tmly of that phase, vi t:u- r:t "ed an nxt'eilcm ani! < life j;r;iii:. Til- city last summer hinl an tailed ;».iniruiant wat-r >up all •;t:t cf it~ lindin^s, ili»- cuti- I . appv::rs will !)•• ttn» -;-.; of a (ieiiarinieiir. oi : ;tiui wi'if.iiv this ;-.t:uii; a *:a:il tiirector. Muc:! invest:- ; v.'iirk h:i - fterii do:i.- I--. i];«- !:•• cnunty ;,l , i nd t:i .-;iau- MurrU Plains. If the proposition which Is now on, to the acquisition by the RAHWAY CIRCLE ELECTION At its meeting Friday night of the though e-'tan- in vilh'iie .-sh..i*';t.i;--. II y:'.V %•>• •;\\:\k ^ :.i alc-yani 1 ". pennant paving commission ami the many weeks' wranglin- and ^-vcral river improvement commission resolutions on the subject. Commls- no reports Iiave been sub-' s ioner Frank Foulks' efforts bn-nqht :y at '.:.-r iy d iron: a record ;];. Hahway Vsl- j--ct was i:i.".de :r..ittor is now .- in til- Planner Lady Foresters, the following" ofTicers rriitted as yet. for tho ensuing year were elected: • Commander. Mrs. Edward J. Best;) t'nion County Park Commission of j !"t!ieseCa"stor and Denman tracts. be- ; I^t commander. Mrs." Elmer "Bam; j 1923 wns hectic to say tho least. • \\ tw to Woodbrirt.uv ar.d Fords When P u tOff Train comes an accomplished fact—which sub-commander. Mrs. Bernhard Wira- Deadlock succeeded deadlock par- Elm avenue eau^.i-; a-hunt it will—Rahway will get back lil ftn rniiplratton .of the Cllrtst* mas "fciHrlt to all. j' The program for tho afternoon's entertalnmentwas Iu harmony with , a new train into service hf-i-.-.ten , City Fathers* Hectic Year N'ewark ami this city !u ;h.- .-v-niiig The city sommissin's life during rush hour. Establish:::- m *>f a bus via t)Ut mor: recorder. Mrs. Charles Walker; ticularly In the opposition which de- the line wa.- >iahli-h***i. ran a while tills city <Hd much charitable work 1 Mtieh rxritcment was created irs- money, which It paid for those finnnrial secretary, Mrs. John Crosby; ve-!opetl to movf-a instltwirrf by Mayor : i nt » «*.•;;• ,. ( r -!»p.T;it:nr..-: of it> own ae- Plnclabout the Pennsylvania railroad sta-'tracts of land, and we will be ccr-! treasurer. Mrs. Patrick Toomey; right Furber in his police and fire depart- co;d. I.au-r :he project \v:i- >'nv*o& Friilnv nifiht about live o'clock 1 t:iin * l " hllf thl - v w l M b o properly de-l^'lo. Mrs." Alien Usher: left guide,'mouts. In the' lire department the anew am! CVnrral avenue u^ed. but *f hrislmas hoHduys. iCone Troop looked after a number; tlon tho occanlnn. ~ron,p,l.l. g mwlttl1 -Jot ne^dv fam.llos. (k-llv-ring to them ; »lu-:i a w.-ll-.lr M »,-,l wnman ot about ' veloprd and maintainedby the Union I'ommissinn. whU-h is Commissioner w lections, a Christmas poem read by)bnakets of food, fruit and confections: jlhlriy-ilve wa 3 * rjectel from a pas-, flI | Iy abIp financially u_nd otherwise to Mrs. F. W." Honson, dlatrlbutlon of nluo Btrl Troop gent storkinKs filled, senger train and became hysterical, j do so . gifts humorous nnd otherwise, games/ w(th ChrIstnia8 chei . r l0 the Homo;S:i- was taken to the woman's rest for Cripples at West Ihiverstruw. N. i room and it was sometime before she V.. and Other Scouts did_ their "bit" >i.uhl ^ W^**- The cause of the |., FRANK H. TRUSSLER. LOST Mrs. Chris. Murinfier; innside giiard. y»-ar -aw t!i.- demi-e ot th>.' vmuit-'er that didn't last Mrs. Peck Church; outside Ruan!, system and-llie establi^iim.-i:!. after Hoif. shortly after taking cfllce. wax Mrs. (Jus Gray; lecturer, Mrs. Emll long, hard and successful light by Mr. responsible for th.- coiij-truction of a Hlatow: trustee for three years. Mrs. Furber of a semi-paiil .lepartinent. sidewalk in Church street from C*n- A. J. Zirwes; pianist. Mrs. E. C. Bar- wiih nine paid men ami thirty call tral avenue IOih.- bridge. tels; physician. Dr. J. M. Randolph, nw-n. WaurT H. Riumar. was named Fine Buildings Erected ; <Hief of the new department. Com- The year 1923 saw the completion Prizes wcro won by Mrs. John , , , , , . .., Newklrk and Mra. James Overton, towards making it a Merry Christmas J woman s being put off the train **, to name of Jerry. Reward for return -consolation prizes gotng-to Mrs. «d.|rn"soVttraTlndtvtdual-instances. Miss--apiwirs was-ft dispute over mileage, j ta-C : -T. Myersr-AVoodbridge -Road, ward Bishop and Mrs. George B. Mac-) Lillian Roarke has been mado cap- jt i :tl woman holdiiiK Whlnney. Miss Ruth NeweU, Mrs. tain ot Thistlo Troop. Cray German police dog: answers , SUE CITY F0R REINSTATEMENT -lissiuiu-rs Foulks and Simmons op- of several ambitious building projects •* j book said to Awnel. N. J. Phone Rahway 1S2-J.— , 'haw run out in October. There was John R. Nevklrk and Mr». Ch*rle»' The contest for the handsome doll a dispute on the train and when It P. Maury wore guests. Those pros- ent were: President Mrs. Samuel D. Lore, secretary. Mrs. p. W. Henaon; Mrs. G. P. Albright. Mrs. Edward Bishop.'Mrs. Walter a Crowoll. Mra. Georgo E. Gnllaway, Mrs. Walter L. Garthwalte. Mrs. J. T. Haylland, Mrs. has notyet been closed. Much In- reached here the conductor forced torest has been aroused over the t ; le woman to get off. A handbag contest WIls tossed onto the . platform after her which she later denied owner- ship of. Thy bagprobably belonged to another passenger onthe train and Report was made to the police Sun-: vvus tarown o ff by mistake. After Adv. It Safe Deposit Boxes trom. *3 to $20 thc mayori lmt over. Mayor the action has been started by p OsfH i -navi<l~Ar-p.ifctr«ng, -iiuorn^y-for men Mclntyre nnd Jardot to compel thrva . o f recall to accomplish the new buildinc was built and oecuplod: the Mayor and City Commissioners same, he- adm'itteil months later. former a n d t h e begInninK v( severaI i a~ Tlfe ' Rahway" Tru^r'Compaiiy's \ to reinstate them in office and pay r The Police Department the National Bank made a number of fine big improvements; the Roars' a * ear - Tho National Bant suspension. them the back salary,.due.slnce..their—In—tho-pollc*»-clopartment--a-lous-Memorial-ParInh-Ho«^-wa-.-fii>l*-l»«l Theft Reported ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED Mr. a*d Mra. jLnko A. Partou, ot Qlark William F. Little. Mra. George B. Mao'toy by Jan VanHerwerden, president (s]ui ha(ipoItcn cnn trol of her nerves Whlnney, Mrs. K. A. Mahnken, MrsJo' the Rahway Trust Company. t h a t the woman proceeded on her journey B. 0, H. Mills, Mrs. Luther B. MundyJ the garage In tho rear of his real- 0;ricer Joseph Kelly and one of the Mrs. J. A. Overton, Mrs. William H! dence, 221 Elm avenue, had been en-' ra n rO ad detectives were on hard to Randolph. Mrs. William A. Rausom, tered on Saturday night and two tires. k(tp p tlie curious from the rest room Mrs. S. H. Walter nnd Mrs. John J, ^ d "«' motor-meter stolen. Acting w hiie the woman reeovered-from her Hoffman. ' * Chlet of Police Smith is Investigating, hysterics. The Club will hold no meotlng this Two/cara, driven by Mra. l->ancis ; -__—. ep.n account of the holiday T..DotbtP»* wife of. the chairman off INSPECT .HOSPITAL the oounty Democratic Committee, of President of the Rahway Hospital. Bryait street, and Frank Rlgglna, of Frank W. Kldd. Mrs. Kldd nnd Super- hw.-«bJp. ftgurcd iu an uccilcnt Intendent Mrs. L. Anna nwn '' 35$. and headllgh:«. to~gaftpr-^au \u t N*o; ijon with the prupo^-d new alruc-1 to be iioucht ftr Kahway- Me Hre ©rateful /or tbc past ©car WLc Brc -Hopeful for tbc domino l?car land bitter tight was made by Mayor and opened for man.- activities. aV 1 Kurber to have former patrolman Jo- ready proving itself of much worth; seph Gerlach named chief, in accord- contracts were signed with the C. S ance with the mayor's desire to re- Postal authorities for rental of space vamp the department after a "deal" in the proposed Masonic Temple for i let former chief Ramsey out for Railway's post office for the next ten ! good. Firsts-Commissioners Foulks years." and work was begun on this and Simmons'succoeded In Mocking splendid Irving street structure; work the move, and Inter, after Mr. Sim- has begun on the remodeling or tho ; mons resigned his post to become MiRon avenue tire hoiist; into a police j Sheriff of Union County, Commis- headquarters and work win be started isioner Russell S. Hoff. who had been as noon -as that- is ••-•flniFhed- on~ro-" j named by the remaining two commis- modeling the Main street nre houi ! t-ioners to"'Simmons* place, followed and police station Into" a" centralize , suit. The result was the naming of i::- headquarters; the haudaOl sk,.Sor£..aiit John A. Smith as pro- Elks' Home cam..- into butng; v batior.ary chief for three months, was begun on* ftghry>fivc new hoi t which period he is now srrvinp rnm- in *h«> I.HV,**'^ Mnm-r—* '

Union Democrat, Established 1840. VOL. Xffl. SERIAL NO ... · to one thousand pupils, parents andi I-reM-ntaiion of a cantata. "When Park Commission and requested the county body

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V>torblng The Rahway Nowa-tferald, the «ucce*aor of the Union Democrat, Established 1840.

VOL. Xffl. SERIAL NO. 1480 RAHWAY, UNION COUNTY, N. J., TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY.1,1924 EIGHT PAGES PRICE THREE CENTS

CHURCHLAUDS SMITH

Federation Commends ActinfPolke Chief on Steps Be B a r

—-v Tak jn

BOPF AND DE* AUSOUMW

Meeting Sunday afternoon »l theFirst Baptist Churrb, for - the last

m -

Excellent Yuletide Programs!• *%*Given By Five Sunday SchoolsAnnual Entertainments Attract Hundreds.

WANT. COUNTYTO TAKE PARK

ationaAre -AblyGiven,

•That nowhere—h—mrr

spirit more beartilyIn tboltanday Schools of ih<» city was

Well ahown Friday night in th , largo

City Plan Board Makes Over-tares for Transfer Castor-

Denman Tract

According to report in circulation.TTB Or rtilliwflj iiSunday School auxillnrv to St. Paul's

Ih*. school which -la eonducted-weekly \niDS Commission onat tho residence of E. K. Cone'. "The a P P e a r e d - b e f ? r e t h e L n I o n Coui l l>:

a I t t r f l 0 0 n

time the Federation ofj^nmbor-of Joyful Yule-tide entertain-Bose.

waa arranged by Mrs. JohnC. E. Eldridge and Miss

thiH year. the t-cacrauun o*| - - •-*— — tm,«*«iU- ( Elsie Coddlngton.Chnrcht-w—unsTntr.*>»*ly-- pasawl—» inenu-whicb- br©ttsbt~rojrrth--r close; • Ebenczer A. M. E.resolution commanding Probationary

-hi*.to one thousand pupils, parents andi I-reM-ntaiion of a cantata. "When

Park Commission and requested thecounty body to take over th<- much-disputed Castor and Denman tract forunp"in**the derclopmeTit of the countypark system. Attorney David Arm

1923 Closes Eventful Chapter for RahwaySometimes HecticratOtherTimes Fruitful

GARD-EIG-GAMFOR "Y" QUINT by Citizen Workers—City Fathers Passed

Through Trying Times But Made Some

New Year's Night Attraction;N I s Fasi Woodbridge Five, i

xPIainiidd Next

did Buildings Erected or Started,Other Interesting Events

r

I

fine work toward i-U-aninj; up the cUy,: ttclpate in ono way or another In ex- t.-rtalnWnt at the Ebenczer A. M. E.; i : n I o n C o u n t >' commission was in-since ho wn» arpomifd (or a three\ cellent procrarn«. Entertainments | Sunday School. The pupils t ak ing ' s t r u c t e d t o c o n f o r w i t h C I l y A t t o n i e>"months''trial. t,nw time ago. T h e l w w presetted by the-pupils of tho part w.-re: The Mlssea Klolse Coll ier , : c h a r I e s K- C o r b i n a s l 0 t h e I i r0Per

Federation r.isu pled**! Chief Smith j following Mftcufe: Grand S:r<-<:! Cha-" Harriet Dickerson. Paulino Hammond.! n-ann**r o f "Proceeding to h a v thetheir moral ant! i>u>nical bupport ln.p-.'l. Firtt Methodist. Holy Comforter., Ruth Madd-n. Olga Jackson. Roberta! (M'fnly 3 c a-u i r o l h e t r a c L

bit work of b.-ti-T.us conditions hcro.jSL l*a«l'« and Ebt-m-zer. The pro-' ja< •k.-ion and John- Collier. Andrew! Thus *» written another H.-ipterAfter commwitnr.s the police head icrami .follow: i Cullk-r. Veruon Cromwell. MulfardjIn ^he l o n 5 a n d hectic history or this

on the work already acconiplUhed j ' *• Paul's Sunday School [Taylor. Ilradford Jackson and Kred |h f ; a u T T f u ! a n d attractive tract extend-tlnc« he took ov.-r the relna of the, Cartf: recitations. Albert Hazel-j White. The cantata was under tb.e'inS w e s t o f St- George avenue alongtrial period, tho' ithe Federation..."The Federation . ulnccrcjy .h.9PHj.pas£anf,

——that"it"u the ~i* liaftnu-ot nv«- tbtngi the directionWo pledge the

As Railway

by dlnjv^rvonoc Buckley. Wra Cava-iable direction" *- Evelyn Conlcy: carol; Howard.

of Mrrf William

chiff our support,morally and physically."

Rov. G. A. I-a«. paiTof Of lhe Flrtt

attn." given under' iMini—M«r^u<Tlt<-' tlvo

of the Rahway river. Chap-ter on'] saw th,? land acquired by the

hu-Christmas setting waa atirac--c i l y u n d c r resolution. Chapter two' l':Velop*»d that this procedur-maintained In a tine big tn was

ConlerMd-parttdDatcd.in by thu fol-j prettily lighted by electric bulbs, thelowing: The MUsoa Charlotte Quick.j t.anv- having bf-en arranged by Ed-Carolina Grlgp.*, KOBO Hareldlnv. Etta'ward Pyatu Presentation of gifts

rot ethical tosay the least, and thecity commissioners proceeded to passan ordinance of purchase. Chapter

Methodist Cbuieh Introduced U»(Van"MrrtSw^and other meni-"T

t^ V|1W_ ^vanaugh. Mabel- was a feature of t.s.e evening, Key. J. i *l

Hii>t Foster. Yronne'w P Clli d R C V ! 'of the FtfVratlon highly com- Buckley, Hilda Schaefor. May Leon-j Aaron, superintendent, being espo-nied Smith (or hU recent raldi bard. Vlr^InU Fosti r, Grace Kettner.'claly remembered. The committee

berapi 1 men tedon gambling doni And liquor violators. r<*aux. Kennrth Van Pelt, Jack Bose'on arrangementsJudge Orlando H Dry who bai sup-triaiix. Keanith Van Pelt, Jack Bose, William Howard.

three witnessed the voters* referen-Yvonne, W. P. Collier, pastor, and Rev. C. V. d u m w n l c b defeated the~ord!nance.

Chapter four marked City AttorneyCorbin's filing of an opinion that de-ppilf the referendum that the citydispose of the land It could not he

f 1

(Iu•

11

ported Smith by :mpo«ln* heavy floe*on those brought before htm. t a lCommissioner U us ell S. Hoff, ictlngbrad of the Polk* Department, wenpraised for their attitude In better-tnjr~conftltiona ia Rahway.

ROT. Wallace.H^C*rrer. pastor ofthe Second PresbytrrUn Church, re-ported irramanuals complete for theweek of prayer to be observed toRahway starting next Sunday nljfht-Rev. Mr. Carver *>olu.> of the effortsof the Hev.-W_ilhQir-E_£aanderi, pas-tor-of thasecuring the

c f a thbelof Itondent

CTratrfr, UifwelcomHer. John M. Moore

marks,to Rer.

comprised:chairman;

MrsMrs

lib. Paul Hullck. Louis Clinton Taylor. MrH. Waller Cook.Everett Mttaslnan, Herbert-Misa Mildred Klnch and Miss Mar-

)ho Smith. Vcrnon SImmona, garet Phillips.Holy Comforter S. S.

At the Holy Comforter SundaySchool a Christmas sketch waa themain attraction. This number was~anoriginal contribution and was givenunder the splendid direction of MissClara Garcia, by members of the prl-

flft the presentation marydepartment. The leading partsSupcrln- were: "Jack, FrosC Richard Elliott;

Simmons look .occasion .to. "Aurora BorealU," Miss Elizabeth

SprintKelha, •wa* th4 Santa Claus of the pageant

the pageant gifts weredbtrlbufcd In profusion. Superinten-dent H TV Simmons, with fitting re-

do a presentation of a purseH. A. L. Sad tier. In return.

Mr. Sin noes was made the recipient

members of the ColonU (Continued on Page Ftve)

having

H. C. Rohbin?. I*an of the Cathedralof St. John In NVw York Cily, to«poak at the opening and doting wrr*Ices of the «.•,•;•. of pra>rr. Tbo op.n*inic srrvicf will bn In the BaptistChurch or. thl> .Sunday and the clo* P i n t o f ail.-Rrd liquor onIris m»rv!r*» will hv h<>10 in ' " ' '

Trcslbyu-rion (*.:ur\h theSunday night.

HELD FOR GRAND JUR YON LIQUOR VIOLATION CHARGE

sold fo: i^tber than park purposes.It has also been reported repeat-

edly that the Union County Park Commission intends to develop its parksystem along the banks of the Hahway river from Springfield Into thiscity. It has acquired several pareels of land to date but none as fardown the river as the Castor-Den mantract.

nighti« >clu-dult?fl ^for N'o-A" Yc ar'.- for theon tjlio -"V"- court, wh-.n theij J f l

riil'A" *IJiK Kivy v/lil invade[lahivay. The locaia nosed ' Wood-

OUL by teh margin of one poujtlani N».*w Year's night and the Mid-'!!(•:•* x Cunty t*-a:n will cum • her-- dt->--n:i;uf:fl to t.-vfn matters hy scoring

Hand.-: on tho thr*

. think ir.K and . iila

which it is l.np- -

l-d during the

and devising way

• l i o i d th-t o . t ( I • : \ ; i : - ! i b a c k

wii l j i 'usf 'd p-.T.;i:;s Ia.-t SUIIUM- r fur a h ciir-

•u*jlt I ;ii\u•.- A :i:::r. ;'..».• c i ty h a u l s , v. ' ."W

and

a win to >tan tho 1921 season,If Woodoridcf i. to win. tln-y willve to play .-y^n better tlian they

tin! !a«T yr-ar. as thn locals are anxiocsIn. 1. iu IL

t«v».•!'.••.• : r .onih

VArdiis cjf cuiTt.-ciin:,' the fau l t s of t he

past it sr-rrr.= litting to take a lookback through the flUs for t!ithrix- >hi:n<ln.'il and sixty.HVL- il

city'.--

i...vi S. Tic-ca. -ii-r-'.'-1 .ii_I li.i r\iy -..&

past ueer. giving as caii^o \\U iuabilit. to^ t o ^erve with Mayor Furber. Albert S.

sc- whSt the year 11*23 has meant iu uiank was named to the post. G---.-atmunicipal activities, club ami lodge p-.ogr"-.- v/as mad*? in laying tanci*.-tolif-. churrh^xwork and individual >:dewaik- ::i I'M-J c-iuer o£ the : Uy.IU-.WH:. \ - !.inc')ln Park, tile Jo^ephson t::ict

m- ;r running theirdefeat Saturday night at the handsif t l i - Ia^;t

Ci;>. TheStuyvcsam Fivo of Jersey

notKahway players artby _ th<j .setback_ju the

handy,of the Jersey City team, "whower-.- the only team to defeat Eliza-b'-th Y. M. C. A. la.-t year on the

Th-- fi!e> uf th-'-XKvtord" furnishxiu iiisLory and a lUUa, dtlvln

in :\ud ' adjac-nt

showstrmr

countless>; r i - i ; s w.;.-t t,i:i• • w .- • re*.*i pavenient

iiigiiway, i;ol

and -.id-i-walksiiapp-nings, some of the high . l ights »:f comni--. a fine forward step. ;houf which ar«i brieily mentioned, in i-:ty advancing the money with theI i which it Is flipped wiU property owners to roiinbursu the

r.-mind the readers of an ^ i m \ Mayor Furber lost a fight toto

Elizabeth court.

eventful cros^-Kection of time in Its ha\\>JiU choice for assessor, and G,flight.

Citizens' Commissions ActiveM.

TRUSSLER SEES VINDICATION"Editor Record:

got the post.! Garbage Collection

Woodbridge- will lineup a« they did; Onp of the noticeable achievements The systern of collecting garbage"*last year, with "Willie" Martin andjof the past year has been the service from the rear ot^ property was putKaddfson in forwards; Irv Martin at : of the several citizens' commission?, into effect accomplishing a much-center, and Mepick and Hughe*! the members' of which have spent needed improvement!^ The city'gguards. K. Lorch and R. Parsons will: much timp and energy in working out swimming pool was greatly improvedbe brought along as subs, giving! various civic problems. There were through the fine work of Water Engl-Woodbrldge one of the strongest! among others the milk commission, neer David Gage and his son.xWaI-squads that has ficed Rahway this This "group succeeded In establishing tor. and the interest of Mayor Far-season. :a string of municipal stations where ber. Railway's municipal campsite

Tho Rahway lineup will probably ( ;rade A raw milk was placed on sale was firmly established and h;isfind Corey. Armstrong and Smith in j f°r twelve cents per quart, much gained widespread fame.the forward berths; Walter or Bliss l«'wer than sold by milkmen. the^iove ( Mayor Furber's fight on the volun-in the piv<>: borth: Russo, Gingorich' succeeding in several instances in tef-r lire department system

I am reliably informed that at a 1'. MUKT and ltrook> forvery n cent conference betww-n the

the c!ot | Mthe FlrtfpKve, Ab« Kagan. Main street doHca-

lism (rum thv Imu^o and theni the police that ho had not•d in four months. A litli** hu-

Rahway City Planning Commissionand th^ -Un ion County Park CommiB-siian. which conference was asked forby the Rahway Cky Planning Com-mission, a t!t.*ci«ion was reachedw>:«»reby i\\,- attorney r>f ih<-. Unionrnunty Park fommis.sion. David Arm--tronp. was authorized to confer with

b

(Continued on Page Eight)

ATHENIAN CLUBIN XMAS PARTY

dealer «a* arraljm.-d lu-iur..-, M ^ , , , , . ^ ^ . oilU-r Cruwl-y who ar-! Juris* Dry in po!;cc court Friday «f-| :,..,:,-<i Lucas w.i. broucht to theI Ivrnoon acd hi-:d under 5'-'"* ha.l-f j r l s::n,tJ— - .._illii- action of the Grand Jury. Tho "Hi* w if" tlirw.- him <-ut of the

Ttir view M iitvising some•Ny tin.* Union

(*(Mi::t> Park Onmmi-sion might take•I "Dfinn;rn~tracts

who made his initial appear-1the ruinkmen's charge. The threats of recall which h- SUCJ-^S-

w a s dispensed loose, but users fully defied. The mayor took muchanct.- Saturday ntaht. will be out of !i;lVt-i o* "n told they can have It hot- interest last spring in thr city man*the game with an injured ankle. t l l t i ^ lnt '-v desire it. ager form of government and at ono

On Saturday night th - lMainnVld Tlu-n there was Uie city planning i inv petitions were started but gotY. M. C *\. team will- play at Rah- commission wliich worked out a line nowhere. The mayor submitted !iira-wuy. Plaintield dufeal.-d Rahway I | t f in f o r t ' i lv 'l--\>*lopment of a city >e!f "as a" candidate for a city man-badly last. >ear and a win over the I ' ; t r k sysivm. -tP's.-ing a 60-acrc park acer post at Norfolk. Va.. but a Vir-QUW.R City t^am this week will dn'-'1'1-1^ t"'1 Ralnvay river above St ginian got tho job.much to pur a lot of pep into Rah- <; '—'- avenue and oppn-lte the w;i-• A . i y f o r t ' l on January 12 t v r work", tlu- i-ommlsaion filing an

Seek Health Board ReturnEarly this fall a fight_was

who also il.PlalnnVM i

atedplaying Newark Y.

j7]^^col!rTiT—brief-0Tr-rt0Trin7Tn0Tir—oh"mEwTnry—\TrsTX~A. W. MHUuTy^ana"h\<i yrar l : 'inod through the servic-s of a very the Civic Club, supported by a ::u:n-

M. «'nnip»-t' r.t -ngini-vr. Hcw-ver. pub- i».r of otht.T civic".'"A". lo:fi/>rr.--w ninht at Newark; and"

was theK-»pn in

second app.'.ir.itu'1 imd I pUkf-d him u;> out of the

week, he haYlnR •bvyn i":ucd Slu *»nDecember 21, for having opcrat-.-d achance-board in his place of buslnest.

The: <i .argo af;-*ln--t Kagan accord-ing l i ; Acting Chli'f of r»-:;c.» Joan A.

w> • t» l t I . , n i i , , f . . i 1 Krcilh'U :i.ad«- 1»> Ofl-cor Jaim s Co-

t D j o y a b l c Afiair I s Held W i l h U ^ n of t.v v ^ * y tm~. ThoP«-uMR. J. J. Hoffman

Creit' FanGifts

cu._LO.urr_wiib|n_a^j_pLet."_j-_ajd_^row_i;*_>\__ ' ,!; . : i janun Si'.Tiif. i-f Highland I'ark.

. :ii (if ti'h c"i:ip;iny t rec t ing f.vf-:;ty.v.- hou-r> i:i ;:!*.• souiliwesit-rn ond!' T'-li '•;*•. w.^ charRcil with leaving

I-akf avenue wi thout at.-i-:.: told Judg.- IX'y thatwn> K-ft !n the street by

. f M'.ller .t Hoff Lumberof which Acting Police

tli.- t'.i^tur ar.'I "Di-nin;tlsn thf Rah way poor Farm j i'ahway f;u:~ will b».* alil.» to get ;iwith a view to the dfvt'lopmentj ii'i'.1 m; fl>- NiwnrV: cut:ir wliu play

in

refuse to name tin1 -ti-' *n ^l »'-<•»-ICaicsn i? allop'd to !ia\o M>: ! w-liquor," 'biii the hot tie itiul r> n;- -v.i^wort* exhibited in court Kr:.!:»yCharles Ptamler. a*; attorn, y f.»r K»gan, put in a pK'a uf n.»t guil'.y ;i:ulwaived a hearing _on tho charg.-

John Lucas, of Newton »tr.-«-t. w,is

r.vXi- l i j i n l u

:. : . i ukr;:i; ;i:-.;..

\<;..-•» \Vinkier. .Main street produce.;• .ilt-r. was itrraigiifd or. a charge::::i.i,' by Miss Mary Uhler. of Ful-;-M -tn-.-t. thai Wlnklor sip^rtd his>n:ii-h:ni' into her car in Milton ave-

morning. The charge

The Christina.t p.irty u( the Atho-nlan Club was c-Nbratod Friday af-ternoon at thi- r.^sldonce of Mrs. J.J. Hoffman. 132 Klin avenue, arid w i n d e d five dollars for being drunk am!: mi,*. Sundaylong bo recalled by those present as ; disorderly on Christmas, his wife "•>•< t!isn-.i^til.

ono of the most enjoyable erents In! ~ " — - — —the club's history. Tho decorationi! Girl Scout Notes jWoman Hystericalthroughout tbc house were elaborate' 'and fitting to the Yuletide season I The different Girl Scout troops in:

andl r ; i «

<-f-it-!-<tf t>!—-* -trH-ct^- by - t h e - U n i o n

C o u n t y I ' a r k ('ornViTissu'n. a s a p a r t

I * a r i i ' - ' i y !:I>;I-- :!;;t; t h i s propo-

*t it •: i i : . : . 1 . !-•• i . - i - n ^ u ! : : ! i i : i t v i l I I " -

p i — * - d l > i i u r ; : i ^ :::> v . " C - v : i t - - c a : i i ] ) a i g n

1:: r r - T v - i r . - n . ' . ) " i . . - C:\y ^i i : : t h w ; . y

t r - : , : - : ^ : : : i r : , • : • ! •!•• v - N r - i : - t h - ^ l ' : i s -

r : - • : • : H - i\'::.-.:i : ; • . : » [ - . \ \ : * ! : :• v i e w

lu l...!;-.\ay :;s-!f il--v••!•:'j»:i*ir ;i sopa-!

I ^I:it. .1 ' tha f th's v.;is t!:o w.ck of;th,- i iiin: ruticty I'ark Commission!ari'l that Kahway should not interfere

i with

for ;he r->ilth. This

id

1)

i!':(t

N

Man Loses Mind^;;(ir.i!fi;t fi-.r ^evi-ral month?.\t I»:.t'i:i-(h'-!:ini. H' years old. ofWVst Cmm! str.-ot. sudd.-nly losti::!n'! in front oi his hoir.t- Friday:l. ;u'c<:riling to ' '.:•.• r^lic-1._:";;: v.r- callo'l ("ni-f of i'olice:ii ati'I l';itrol:r.an Crowley who; tii-- ir.an to poliro h e a d q u a r t e r s . ' W l t

\ . . - xamiis-'ti and tiirii sent to - : ; i t

lie-n^i.wuiiiinn to this and another sug- turn of the board-«est:n:i "f the plan rnm::iission for -ot r.o ;u-t."nn P-- .May<ir Furb-:rtin* :ui iuisi t ion of the Vail plot ei ther the prott->t.s :iK-ii a-.vaiting auui-fnr..;i..ei:y .hull, or a par.!;, jalleil_cuy_.Qf_fjie_.ljudget.. which...coatain-id(leveliipinent of either. appropriat ion for a publig hc-nitli

' • ' . • ( ' • f a re u e T i a r t • ; ] "

ndI u b l k ' "•'"It" and wrlfan: co::i-

r. put in no cud nf work on ;h"-r.: which is .held toith bo?rd in :•-• -m-

tmly of t h a t phase, vi t:u- r:t

" e d an nxt 'e i lcm an i ! <life j;r;iii:. T i l - c i ty l a s t s u m m e r hinl an

tailed ;».iniruiant wat-r >up all

• ; t : t

cf it~ l ind in^s , ili»- cuti-

I . appv : : r s will !)•• ttn»

-;-.; of a (ieiiarinieiir. oi

: ;tiui wi ' i f . i iv th is ;-.t:uii;

a *:a:il t i i rec tor . Muc:! inves t : -

; v.'iirk h:i - fterii do:i.- I--. i];«-

! : • • cnunty;,l , i

nd t:i

.-;iau- MurrU Plains.

If the proposition which Is now on,to the acquisition by the

RAHWAY CIRCLE ELECTIONAt its meeting Friday night of the though

e-'tan- in

vilh'iie .-sh..i*';t.i;--. II

• y:'.V %•>• •;\\:\k ^

:.i alc-yani1".

pennant paving commission ami the many weeks' wranglin- and ^-vcralriver improvement commission resolutions on the subject. Commls-

no reports Iiave been sub-'sioner Frank Foulks' efforts bn-nqht

:y at'.:.-r iyd iron: a record;];. Hahway Vsl-j--ct was i:i.".de

:r..ittor is now.- in til- Planner

Lady Foresters, the following" ofTicers rriitted as yet.for tho ensuing year were elected: •Commander. Mrs. Edward J. Best;)t'nion County Park Commission of j

!"t!ieseCa"stor and Denman tracts. be-; I ^ t commander. Mrs." Elmer "Bam; j 1923 wns hectic to say tho least. • \\tw to Woodbrirt.uv ar.d FordsW h e n P u t Off T r a i n c o m e s an accomplished fact—which sub-commander. Mrs. Bernhard Wira- Deadlock succeeded deadlock par- Elm avenue eau^.i-; a-hunt

it will—Rahway will get back

lil

ftn rniiplratton .of the Cllrtst*mas "fciHrlt to all. j '

The program for tho afternoon'sentertalnmentwas Iu harmony with

, a new train into service hf-i-.-.ten, City Fathers* Hectic Year N'ewark ami this city !u ;h.- .-v-niiig

The city sommissin's life during rush hour. Establish:::- m *>f a busviat)Ut

mor: recorder. Mrs. Charles Walker; ticularly In the opposition which de- the line wa.- • >iahli-h***i. ran a whiletills city <Hd much charitable work1 Mtieh rxritcment was created irs- money, which It paid for those finnnrial secretary, Mrs. John Crosby; ve-!opetl to movf-a instltwirrf by Mayor :int» «*.•;;• ,.(r -!»p.T;it:nr..-: of it> own ae-

Plnclabout the Pennsylvania railroad s ta- ' t racts of land, and we will be ccr-! treasurer. Mrs. Patrick Toomey; right Furber in his police and fire depart- co;d. I.au-r :he project \v:i- >'nv*o&Friilnv nifiht about live o'clock1 t : i i n *l"hllf t h l-v w l M b o properly d e - l ^ ' l o . Mrs." Alien Usher: left guide, 'mouts. In the' lire department the anew am! CVnrral avenue u^ed. but

*f hrislmas hoHduys.

iCone Troop looked after a number; tlontho occanlnn. ~ron,p,l.l .g m w l t t l 1 - J o t ne^dv fam.llos. (k-llv-ring to them ; »lu-:i a w.-ll-.lrM»,-,l wnman ot about

' veloprd and maintainedby the UnionI'ommissinn. whU-h is

Commissioner

w

lections, a Christmas poem read by)bnakets of food, fruit and confections: jlhlriy-ilve wa3* rjectel from a pas-, f l I | I y a b I p financially u_nd otherwise toMrs. F. W." Honson, dlatrlbutlon of n l u o B t r l T r o o p gent storkinKs filled, senger train and became hysterical, j do s o .gifts humorous nnd otherwise, games / w ( t h C h r I s t n i a 8 c h e i . r l 0 the Homo;S:i- was taken to the woman's rest

for Cripples at West Ihiverstruw. N. i room and it was sometime before she

V.. and Other Scouts did_ their "bit" >i.uhl ^ W^**- The cause of the

| . ,

FRANK H. TRUSSLER.

LOST

Mrs. Chris. Murinfier; innside giiard. y»-ar -aw t!i.- demi-e ot th>.' vmuit-'er that didn't lastMrs. Peck Church; outside Ruan!, system and-l l ie establi^iim.-i:!. after Hoif. shortly after taking cfllce. waxMrs. (Jus Gray; lecturer, Mrs. Emll long, hard and successful light by Mr. responsible for th.- coiij-truction of aHlatow: trustee for three years. Mrs. Furber of a semi-paiil .lepartinent. sidewalk in Church street from C*n-A. J. Zirwes; pianist. Mrs. E. C. Bar- wiih nine paid men ami thirty call tral avenue IO ih.- bridge.tels; physician. Dr. J. M. Randolph, nw-n. WaurT H. Riumar. was named Fine Buildings Erected

; <Hief of the new department. Com- The year 1923 saw the completionPrizes wcro won by Mrs. John , , , „ , , . ..,

Newklrk and Mra. James Overton, towards making it a Merry Christmas J woman s being put off the train **, to name of Jerry. Reward for return-consolation prizes gotng-to Mrs. «d.|rn"soVttraTlndtvtdual-instances. Miss--apiwirs was-ft dispute over mileage, j t a -C : -T . Myersr-AVoodbridge -Road,

ward Bishop and Mrs. George B. Mac-) Lillian Roarke has been mado cap-jti:tl woman holdiiiKWhlnney. Miss Ruth NeweU, Mrs. tain ot Thistlo Troop.

Cray German police dog: answers , S U E C I T Y F 0 R REINSTATEMENT -lissiuiu-rs Foulks and Simmons op- of several ambitious building projects •*

jbook said to Awnel. N. J. Phone Rahway 1S2-J.—

, 'haw run out in October. There wasJohn R. Nevklrk and Mr». Ch*rle»' The contest for the handsome doll a dispute on the train and when ItP. Maury wore guests. Those pros-ent were: President Mrs. Samuel D.Lore, secretary. Mrs. p. W. Henaon;Mrs. G. P. Albright. Mrs. EdwardBishop.'Mrs. Walter a Crowoll. Mra.Georgo E. Gnllaway, Mrs. Walter L.Garthwalte. Mrs. J. T. Haylland, Mrs.

has not yet been closed. Much In- reached here the conductor forcedtorest has been aroused over the t; l e woman to get off. A handbagcontest WIls tossed onto the . platform after

her which she later denied owner-ship of. Thy bag probably belongedto another passenger on the train and

Report was made to the police Sun-: vvus t a r o w n off by mistake. After

Adv. It

Safe Deposit Boxes trom. *3 to $20

t h c m a y o r i l m t

over. Mayort h eaction has been started by pOsfHi

-navi<l~Ar-p.ifctr«ng, -iiuorn^y-formen Mclntyre nnd Jardot to compel t h r v a . of recall to accomplish the new buildinc was built and oecuplod:the Mayor and City Commissioners same, he- adm'itteil months later.

f o r m e r a n d t h e b e g I n n i n K v( s e v e r a I

i a~ Tlfe ' Rahway" Tru^r'Compaiiy's

\

to reinstate them in office and payr The Police Departmentthe National Bank made a number offine big improvements; the Roars '

a * e a r- T h o National Bant suspension.them the back salary,.due.slnce..their—In—tho-pollc*»-clopartment--a-lous-Memorial-ParInh-Ho«^-wa-.-fii>l*-l»«l

Theft Reported

ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCEDMr. a*d Mra. jLnko A. Par tou, ot Qlark

William F. Little. Mra. George B. Mao'toy by Jan VanHerwerden, president ( s ] u i h a ( i p o I t c n cnntrol of her nervesWhlnney, Mrs. K. A. Mahnken, MrsJo' the Rahway Trust Company. t h a t t h e w o m a n proceeded on her journeyB. 0, H. Mills, Mrs. Luther B. MundyJ the garage In tho rear of his real- 0 ; r i c e r Joseph Kelly and one of theMrs. J. A. Overton, Mrs. William H! dence, 221 Elm avenue, had been en-' r an rOad detectives were on hard toRandolph. Mrs. William A. Rausom, tered on Saturday night and two tires.k( tpp t l i e curious from the rest roomMrs. S. H. Walter nnd Mrs. John J, ^ d "«' motor-meter stolen. Acting whiie the woman reeovered-from herHoffman. ' * Chlet of Police Smith is Investigating, hysterics.

The Club will hold no meotlng this Two/cara, driven by Mra. l->ancis ; - _ _ — .ep.n account of the holiday T..DotbtP»* wife of. the chairman off INSPECT .HOSPITAL

the oounty Democratic Committee, of President of the Rahway Hospital.Bryait street, and Frank Rlgglna, of Frank W. Kldd. Mrs. Kldd nnd Super-

hw.-«bJp. ftgurcd iu an uccilcnt Intendent Mrs. L. Annanwn

'' 35$. and headllgh:«.to~gaftpr-^au \u t

N*o; ijon with the prupo^-d new alruc-1to be iioucht ftr Kahway-

Me Hre ©rateful/or tbc past ©car

WLc Brc -Hopefulfor tbc domino l?car

land bitter tight was made by Mayor and opened for man.- activities. aV1 Kurber to have former patrolman Jo- ready proving itself of much worth;

seph Gerlach named chief, in accord- contracts were signed with the C. Sance with the mayor's desire to re- Postal authorities for rental of spacevamp the department after a "deal" in the proposed Masonic Temple for

i let former chief Ramsey out for Railway's post office for the next ten! good. Firsts-Commissioners Foulks years." and work was begun on this

and Simmons'succoeded In Mocking splendid Irving street structure; workthe move, and Inter, after Mr. Sim- has begun on the remodeling or tho

; mons resigned his post to become MiRon avenue tire hoiist; into a policej Sheriff of Union County, Commis- headquarters and work win be startedisioner Russell S. Hoff. who had been as n o o n -as that- is ••-•flniFhed- on~ro-"j named by the remaining two commis- modeling the Main street nre houi! t-ioners to"'Simmons* place, followed and police station Into" a" centralize, suit. The result was the naming of i::- headquarters; the haudaOl

sk,.Sor£..aiit John A. Smith as pro- Elks' Home cam..- into butng; vbatior.ary chief for three months, was begun on* ftghry>fivc new hoi

t which period he is now srrvinp rnm- in *h«> I .HV,** '^ Mnm-r—* '

L I I* I

ffisTa

...cRahway Record, Tuesday, January 1,1924

LELECTRIC RAILRQAQ

Resident WritfesSolution to Traffic

Problem to "Record"

George Smith, ol Hillside, la a let-

t e r to the Record presents what he

considers a plan for the final solu-

tion of the transportation" problem

that is confronting the people of this

part of New Jersey.

Mr. Smith points out that instead

of enlarging the bus routes or put-

ting on more trolley cars there should

a great deal to real estate. This sec-

tion has much ground for residential

purposes, and It only remains to show

transportation facilities to bring on

its rapid development.

"This should reduce, the rale offaro to this part uf XL-W Jersey. 'Phisis also a matter to be taken in con-sideration by prospective home build-ers. Where Ihu transports iou fa-cilities are good with reasonablerates, the home builder is sure togo. This is why the transportationofficials In this part of tho stateshould take this under consideration.By the development of the real es*-

WOR Radio "Specials"Arthur Murray, nationally known

dancing- instructor, will give hiseighth lesson in social dancing fromWOK tomorrow evonlug (January 2).assisted by the Vernon Orchestra ofMontdair. continuing one of the most j WOK

cepted In executive capacititos, willbroadcast a talk from WOR Thurs-day afternoon on "The Freedom ofthe West." Her radio appearance Isone of the series "Half Hours WithSuccessful Women." which is an in-creasingly popular featnre of the

:se erected between this part of the

state and New York an aerial or ele-

vated electrical railroad. Mr. Smith

—says-"This railway can ue uullt uuy

~wIiere~wIUfout Interfering with lint-flc. It will also prove better thanthe electric locomotive that has gotthe right of-way-today. AVith Its in-terlocking system,such an_accident.asoccurred on the New York Centralwould not happen.

-"The time between this city and^Manhattan could bo reduced to fifteenor twenty minutes. Theae overheadrailways have proven a great sue-cess in Germany. It was only re-cently that the General Electric3hipped an electric locomotive toIterance that is capable of traveling105 miles an hour with ease.

"Traffic Is congested at this time

. and something will have to be doneto help those who have any distance•to travel. This is not only necessary

Ilta-pra.vide_heUer_£acilitiea, but to safe-guard the public and avoid accidents.

"Fast trains running into the resi-dential districts of New Jersey directfrom New York City would help trTmlld this part of the state up and•make it an Important^ adjunct to the:7ietropolltan district. It would mean

ing public, also to tho Income of thetransportation company.

"The very J a c t that tho New YorkCentral Railroad Company is seek-ing to cuter this part of tho state

proof thnt its future is assured.

attractive features ever inauguratedby the popular New Jersey station.Mr. Murray has received a tremen-dous response from the radio audi-ence to whom he malls free of cost,a series of printed diagrams to sup-plement the radio dance lessons. Thedance lesson begins at 0:05 and con-tinues until 3:40.

—On-thf*-ftanie-prograiu-&t-WOIL-UlC.TIphany Club Quartette of NewYork, a quality organization, whichhas merited and found favor withthe radio audience on the occasion ofprevious concerts from the popularNew Jrrsey station, will broadcast a

This big organization is nwaro of the special ly- prepared< -pro^ram^-of fa-promtse this section holds for the.lu-. vorlte^elections..irom_!U40__to._10:G5 l

turf, and that is why it Is so anxious j nt which t ime the Meadowbrookto enter. The transportation lines, Dance Orchestra will supply dance

tT,,, !,vtort^imr-velnB nf a

Joan SpMa, German opcru singer.arrirecently arrived from Berlin, will

sinK to the radio audience of StationWOR Thursday at 3 p. m. He pos-sesses a strong and sweet lyric tenorvoice, and will present a splendid pro-gram consisting of opera arias, andsongs.

COLDS AFFECT THE KIDNEYS

Many Rahway People Have FoundThis to be True.

Are you wretched In bad weather?Does every cold settle on your kld-

neyr? •* •" •Does your back ache and become

Weeding Out Candidates,_r Grammar Quintet

to twenty-flvo-and now tcomposed" ol only fourteen,Kroun the physical training

l th «™

non

Forty-Qve candidates reported toSoach E. H. Walter last week when ho jfirm began to prepare a quintet to en-ter In the Union C o u W " GrammarSchool League to represent Rahway.A few days later this number was cut

has yet to Holect thetake tho floor against

tilt of tho tourney•which

out test BO far are: U.K

Simmons. Theddore Landcnbef-.F Orton. H. iMtUo, J. Swlerk,Armstrong, T.iMoBamftn, Smith,

fGorgllordo, Cusunmnp-

Generally One or th« Othtr.A\ uny rate, there's a lot more «*•

rfoctum .ln_jPL»rudl.i« Jtn lending.

.JTUUJ

*rcmouTH. COPYRIGHTED

est BO farKarl Mclvor. Kenneth

The New YearAnd yet we welcome in ita turn

Each new year whalv'er It

In our hearts doth buA spark of hope for bettor t

—Paite

Holiday Left-Ov<

n.

R*»olv«

weak?

distressing?-Irregular^ftttd:

gThese symptoms arc-cause to-aus-

pect kidney weakness.Weakened kidneys need quick help.I I J l J ^ ^

nnd the better the circula-j gram closes at 11 P- m.tiou, the healthier that community.";

GEORGE SMITH.Hillside.

WOMAN'S STATEMENT - - -W I L L HELP R A H W A Y

"I hated cooking because all I ateturned sour and formed gas. I drankhot water and olive oil by the gallon.Nothing helped until I used Adlorlka."Most medicines aot only on lowerbowel but Adlerika acts on BOTH up-per and nower bowel and removes allgas and poisons. Ecellent for obsti-nate constipation. Helps any case gason the stomach in TEN MINUTES.—Kirsteln's Pharmacy, 15 Cherry street.—Adv.

Mathn Mahlonbrock, concert pianistis the feature of the WOR programtomorrow afternoon (January 2) atwhich"time she wlU'offer'a numberofclassical"-selections in" the" renditionof which she is pre-eminent. Herconcert will be broadcast in twogroups.

Mrs. Nova H. Large, lecturer andpioneer of the big Chautauqua cir-cuit in a. managerial capacity, andwho so capably blazed a trail In or-,dor that other women might be ac-

pared for weakened Kidneys.& p n n p t o rpnnmmend them.

Ask your neighbor.C. E. Beebe, 39 Bond street, Rah-

way. says: "I have the greatest con-confidence in Doan's Pills, for Ihave used them for occasional at*"tackifof kia*riey~co~m~plalnt,~broughr onby colds settling in my kidneys. Ihad dull, nagging backaches and asoreness over m>v-kidneys My. kid-neys wouldn't act right at thesetimes, hut Doah's Pills from Klr-stoln's Drug Store soon relieved thebackaches and all.other signs of kid-ney trouble."

GOc, at all dealers. Foster-MIIburnCo., Mfrs.. Buffalo N. Y.—AdvL

There are other Seasons but none like the Yuletide.

To keep my health*To do my work!To live!

To ne<> to it I

- The spirit of this time is uEeor time of year can give us.

Slvc!Ncvcr to look bchlml n;»- f«X *t hour .

fci

Tho day after Christmas t§ cookalways facoa a "Review of firlewK"of tho Chrlstman dinner. IhU Isnot Hucn a hopeless task a some-timcB BUpposcd as many aietlzlog

can bu made from lft-ovcrB.Is tho meal pie, th« ragout,There

chicken salad, chicken Ofl turkoy

Winter EveningsThe. family hour by the fireplace.

What an Ideal way to upend tho win-ter evenings. Clustered around thehearth, wurmod by the blaze, eachwith a story to tell of the day'a varied

family heartstrings aretied more firmly and fragments of

and combed for the second grade.

Every woman knows how to cook

cranberries, but many are puzzled as

to the exact proportions of water, ber-

ries and sugar. Here Ir an unfailing

rule:One quart cranberriesOne cup waterCook slowly until they pop open.

2tun_Ahrough colander and then addtwo cupB sugar.

Stir well until the sugar Is dls-Holvcd. Do not bother to warm upor cook apaln. S't nnlde to cool. Itwill make a jc-Il stiff enough^ to cutIn squares and serve in sherbetClauses or on bread and butter plates.A dot of whipped cream Is a tamyaddition If served In sherbet glasses.

.*>'/ /

Power;But always fronting "ti*

sandwiches, or the more barile hastiand vegetable soap. The pit in'* ofthe turkey can bo chlpfcd andcreamed and served In shellor tarn-overs or with mushrooms, the leastchoice pieces of fejwl'"can*,"a workedinto u meat loaf'and servccfwltb po-

Scal-woy of

I j V/>character are molded together. Tho

. talo bittls~~frted tn deep

i r d t o the! l o p C ( 1 d l B n e s a r e a D excelN

-" on -EarSf

•fe

til and the i t e j e y t o f , the heart rings truerarid the'heartaches are fewer during the holidays. :

Humanity reaches nearer - V ^ ^ ^ ^ f ^ ^ i fifeThe wish to do for others^to make our-horaes^and f r e n d s a u r a jiappier-This is the true spirit of Christianity, which after all, is theonly thing that makes life worth-while. ...._, . ^ ___

There are still many homes in Rahway today withouTa Victrolawithout the inspiration, the entertainment, the education of goodmusic.

Make Some One You Love

tuning chopped meat and coldpotatocs.

Always and always faring

rlKht

rd ibu Shop SUty

Robbed.wide astray—

Oti. with-what nirt•Back to thf way-

dfrii^*rr

I \vx\%*.

Chop Suey is anotherirniMfullj difgttfc

th whichChop

i*n- im.at, lincly and.-Jticn.wi In n hotfry pan with bacnnfoL Cover

of yearn win erase the mem-ory of other things but tho Impres-sions wrought on "the child mind onHUch occasions will always linger.

One evening a week 1B not too muchfor the family to devote to spendinga home evening. It should be re-«cnred. kept Hatred and no outsideinterference be allowed to break IntoIt except on the most exceptional of

. These—family—-meetings are

8MILE8

too sweet to be 'sacrificed to tho madchase after Mammon. Years are alltoo short and opportunltU-s of ob-taining the confidences of the younger

The young rolluge fri-sliman re-turning home for Christmas vacation,rone from her seat In the Pullmanwhen her station was called. Theporter approached her asked, "Shallah brush you off, miss?"

"No,1* she replied moekly. "I'll justwalk off in

Stop!! Do Not Turn Another Page

PROCTOR'S THEATER. ELIZABETHThe production at Proctor's Tli-n-

ter, Klizaneih. lor \v«-'k or rj»M-t"-mn~r:J1 Is "Daddy Loni; Legs." winch afew yearn ago was known as one olthe. b<-st .-ellc-I >O1]<TH. had

Ror.nrailon"win pas?"by all too quickly 2.0nQ.O*tO «npies. Itwith Mary IMckfunl

MENU FOR THE NEW YEAR

v, !tb water, add a quantirf of celery- .""",","."" i r .i. J J » ii « U falhor and mother let them go un

rut in half Incb icngtbH aid boil onehour. Add quito u few unions cutj ( nfjiiu.M' nf tlin^union-md- a table*

sau'l anKlndni-sr

charity

of chop .-uir) saufi atrl co<5kho'.ir more Just bfforu taking

:lif lire thlckon with J tablespoon

a r-;ii-' of n v rwas picluriz'-d

herded. ' ! role, and lias provm ;o hi1 one of tiu-Thr- hour can be filled with tender jen-atest drawinp rani- both upon !!:••

xcnllm*-nj and ' understanding aym-i !• Kitirnat<: Mac;-- and upon the scn^n

pattiy. H

Truth

Hr:irti A

Actually Heard Them Rustling Over

Mrs. Jamieson writes, "The night:we returned to our house. Hie rotlcheswere so thick in our kitchen and pan-try, we actually heard them rustlingover the Moor when wo turned the jlight on, Thank? to Royal Guaran-teed Roach Powder, we pot rid ofthem quickly!" Sold and guaranteedby Pendleton's Drue Store.—Adv.

"We extend to you "airourcordial greetings andwish for you Health, Happiness and Prosperityduring the coming year.

We wish to thank our patrons for continuingwith me, the insurance business as taken over frommy predecessor, Mr. J. J. Coffey, and trust the pleas-ant relationship now established will continue forthe future. ~

The protection and service of this office is com-pletely at the command of the public in general inmatters pertaining to

-^INSURANCE(In all its Branches)

J. F. GEYERSuccessor to J. J. Coffey,

_ , : —142'Irving Street.

The impression has gone out that I have retiredfrom actual business, which, of course, is not true.

Mr. John F. Geyer has taken over my insurancebusiness only, and is with me in my office. He istaking a very active part in the insurance businessin all its branches. This, of course, enables me todevote more time to my real estate business as wellas mortgages, loans, etc. " .:

I wish the public and my many friends to knowthat I am prepared to advise and assist them as in

"thebusiness properties are being prepared. Will beglad to list any properties you may have for sale.I might say, have a waiting list of prospective pur-chasers wishing houses ranging from $5,000 to$8,000.

Very truly yours,

JOHN J. COFFEY.

0 * s

Happierf r Krirnds

New Year's DayLet Us Deliver a Victrola Into

Your Home.The Terms are so very Easy than no home can afford

BUSINESS•What arr t!:-- ill

you disiri- !:i y«'urwas put l

:u li of mola^cD and four::-.i!iit« with half cup of *iter.>iUi huileii rice.

Pudding Revannedto tlir remnants cpuiiiimK. one or

»1 u: f-taU- cakou*. an t*KK- t»o-= nn-J a cup of mfllt.

mixed to KI

Tak--

Christ-CUp» of. a tp*.

mo-Mix and

Head a story or put;in to thej'if uny i-tory puhliMi-d in the Iv.-t -HI. Listen to what they have ; year*. The .story though familiar to. It Is the time of confidences.', many thousand- of p. opl-. coin•.•n;.-an interest In their stories of; on- Jean Abbutl a foundlinr virl who

and outsit!** activitieF. : r»-b«*l.- against the tyranny of the in-\Vh<-n the coals on the hearth have'.-litution. in wliich >b-. ha-" iiro'.vn

burn»-il lo-.v, tuck the children into from. babyhood to adolescence. H--rl»*-d. Til-- tu.tl.uiKlit kliiL-does more! spirit'-'', but path-'tic il« !iance of th<-to s.-t thf Httlf f. et on th* right path', matron i.« ovnrh-ard by J.TVLS p.-ridl<-tU;in hpurti of lecture The feel of totn. a n<--.vly apjiojnt*-d tru?K-e. and

_ GRASPING "FOR AN OPPORTUNITY-.Eorce.Qpportunity to knock at your door Startiny.esting_nQ.w in

^ *^ *A I *^ «^ *A ™ ^ I i ii / \ ~ " \ ' ' i —— —,—_ L ^and Loan stock ana when the Opportunity comes to own your own home you will beready for-it

Citizens' Loan AssociationJas. McCoIlum, Treasurer 129-131 Irving Street, Rahway, N. J.A. Weitz. PubIicity..Committec.;__23_vy. Milton Avenue at Fulton Street, Rahway, N4 J,

FIND NEW FOSSIL IN OREGON

rnoth'-r's hands on thf* comforts withthat comforting, rart-ssing touch

was their

nty blR cm-jo you lUlnk

not shrewdnor any

which

'•ply' itUlViT.l'.V*

of the lnipi>s lt>l«'3"i>unc p'-r^'n »lr»'ar::i "! Hid long* forand consid. rs »o far (a: of reach.

Hatbrr thcuf ar«- thf p« rft-cUy at-

s a u c e . •—•

*'rjiib«-tTy .-auc*- nt ' custard will:;.akc a i.lc" addition la baked apples'•: .. gtl:itin dessert |>r the dinner.if! r ;h.; day before. [ ~

Women CrltimaliI'ri-nn autliorltlfca tell us that

wimit n arc bring coiTlctctl of crime;.• they were not tiree years ago.T'ary attribute It to tbc lack of sapor-

to be without!, lone.tatnahlf ' things 'nuntmen of Mr bus:n»**j:

Honesty. ini.kT^r faithfulne*i.character. lov«' if ••Eplnyer. ambl- j n l o

tion. personal n*a:

by tho' ;.^ntin;.i;taniy wUb'Wbteh'women arc:nB r«carded now that they have

right* and arc stepping fortht n e world. Some

Jas. CmlumSimple, isn't II—Hi xi

iad unlimited a r , , *OnuVrlnK If woman's new free-

i.'.pm. \* bi'ing interpreted by her aaau ixrraRion for license, or whether

:i man with a penchant for doing good<!>Mds, but a p'j.-iiivo horror for b<--

fnnnd out. Pendleton admirer the

boy orThf

MRS. SOLO

129-131 Irving Street

ION SAYS:is merely

or moHnwrv/r that

befog found out more

in*oat- of us wasmay be. women crlml-

far and awny b<-hind m<-n In

is prownwarm companionship of anupcnt In such a manner will

lick the family together and you wUlJbe able to gay with Sprague:

"We art all here.Father, mother.Sister, brother.

All who hold each other dear.Each chair is filled; we're all at

home!Tonight let no cold stranger come.It Is not often thus aroundOur old familiar hearth we're found.Bless, then, the meeting and the spot;For once be every care forgot;Let gentle peace assert her powerAnd kind affection rule the hour.

We're all—all here."

Petrified Specimen of Prehistoric Mon-rt«r Is Unclassified.4"

Tan o: a vertebrn. nu doubt thatof a preiistoric monster, has boc-nadded to tie collection of curios ownedb"y A. 0. Tollln^>w(»rth of Glurlfitiw.Ore. Thlt WM found on the beachat Newponby Mr. Rolllnfraworth «lur-

. ,. . . . i i i • . • , i .4ng—big nonai—racatlon-at thai resortir \< bod declarat nn uf mdep. n«I- -,. «rt—» , u L M

The port>n of the vertebra foundnee and determine, to Klv* h.-r t:^ b y Holllng^orth has been petriflcd.hance of her life, that ha= be-:: 'U- a n d ^ abotrrfx Inches In length, andi^ti hur ; j in clrcumfetoce Is about 1G Inches."Production for wyk of January 7th j When foundthe curio was embedded

\ in pravel am »and, and no doubt hadbeen deposit^ there many years ago.

o.the fosiU Is six pounds.

i" Scares Birdies..-.:..- i:i;;;-.i- imn ' in fruit trees

-:•: .I!.- -:i:-l tn frl-'bten

"Common Clay."

use<l toElyiiin

uam«4toot* Oyaium, the hiipjiy land or par-•Alae of the blessed UD.VS ufter death,according to Greek uud Uoman mj<tfcology. Tlie region tn the neighbor-hood of Cumae, Italy. hbuun-Hns: Ingardens

h a s not h»n

Fami ly ow "Commutem.'*In Hrittnny \Q family cow actxially

•*c<»tninu!ea" anws canals In flat-Dot-I tunietl in»:its, icrnins and night, to

and vlntyarils. is often so- | nnd from the lost favorable grazing

called on account of '.is ri'>ciiil*lani'e tothe description of Kly&'um tjivirn by jVlrjlL

grounds.

Creates Craving for Water:

Wbman-itorials

Scier.t:-t? hav.* p«.rlut«- d' • :royt-r nf rat:th-y K uch :r. t!i• • y •_;.•!ing for water, but arethfv tnnch :t. Thi^ '

v(\ an abno-A.-- <n<n\ as:»rr::u- >ra\--•rnv..! .vh-n

FOR OVBL 40 YEARS

J-nutdo

r a n

rr- VA !!• »:

Homlllty make**» niakt-ii o*

kind, find kin*

HourrerWomen' i l^boi ]:nc the past winter laws to' \"0^\v th»- hours of working womenWen introduced into

CATAR2I iTEDlCINB haa• cn used aucccanjlly in the treatmentif Catarrh.HALL'S CATAEIH'MEDICINE con-istr; of .in Ointtent which QuicklyVli-ves by local T>pll~n.tion. and the'.r.tfrral Medicine. \ TX-nlc. which actii

t^e B!oo<! m the M-J.OU3 Sur-

: i n < 1 '1 S"'i-! by all Jr:'. J. Cheney A C, Toledo. Ohio.

TUT

The Best New Year's ResolutionTHE best and most practical of all New Year's resolutions

is the resolve to begin saving your money. Open asavings account and begin the year right.

m m n i t t t i f i i i u i t n u i u i i n i t m i u i i m i i i j i i i u , •! . : . . ; M . m T ; . . . ' i : . ! i u i . n . • . . i : i . . n

NOVELTIES" IN DAY-DRESSESENTER FASHION'S ARENA

5t:it»« U'Ki.-laturc-. In ton of

Succes

.V

!ia^ not crownt-dIn.- >ubjt-«/t •> a Iiv• •

n;;;- .-tat-'s hav.

iniiiiiiiiiiiTiiiiiuiiMiiiniiiiiiiiiniiiiuiitiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiMiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitmii

WASH DRESSES ARE VARIEDBY NOVEL WEAVES AN) PRINTS

UMiiuiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimi'-•iiimniiianiuiiuniiiumiH

We hope that 1924 will bringto you everything that

you may wish for.

Trust ConipanyMtmbor FedaralRifrvQ System

Opposite Railroad Station

The tataay Savings: MitatM"The Bank of Strength"

x* - . • • . - -

:~ * i - " -

Corner of Main and Mpnrpe Streets, Rah -way, N. J

Bank Open Monday Evenings.

"X

4% InterestRaid in ourSpecialDepartment

It Can Be Done.

. i

>t i » n > a t a l l

t l : -

a I r \\\- ur

.r. (.-.,

t- ,-t" y.-ar in ami year uut.

• T h e K i d d i e s ' F r i e n d

York C i t y ua- ; r . o - r . i l y d i n u l by i

rv.nny nf t h " p.ir:nin-T.t it.-npU* of

tlMT c i :y n: - i.iMf ,-f } ; , r Mifti*. n ;

} r a r s of succ-i'.-.-ful wt ; :k f.T MoihiT> ' ,

T- ' l i s ions . by th.> ;>i(i K-l wliicii

wiilo'.vt'il vi tk ' s iTt- 'd m o t h e r s c a n

k«-vp t l i t ' i r V.iiYo ourr* in* t h e i r c-wi:*"

ht>rn»'*s I n s t e a d of S*-II(!;UK 'h.- in to u p '

ijvASniON and flcklmesa have beenF asRoclated In our minds for so longthat thinking of on* »ugKest« tho«th«r. But, for once l» the history of

Btyllstfl complnln, not of the

It seems lb«t thedrcs» nod the rl&cfte hnt have out-

stayed their so far as cro-t ton of styles are concerned. Bivt,la.sptte of intprcstlnc substitutes r f-ftryL th&y__cannut-b*-<or— h»v« nyt | ttnfr-miylit bt« uscd~for~tliebWn as yet) oust id

Designers have therefore compnmlaod with Xhc fenlalne public a•re offerinB dreeset tliat ft tick

th« ttrglght llm\bt« adroitly Int/

tod panels. Thr««i prwnco a fiarincAlrt line and tin* bunded to l n j

from too nine, fimpllcMv to (thet U Many k i j u ar* fuil*j~at

eves all uvond.

I^Iian jn~t:ti:tHjns. Ml-.- Lue!> \\::~j bi'i-n t ;il:ed fo-i-r :muh<r to more 11 (hildrcn than any other woman In •: the world. Nearly every >:.iw has [! liinv iis;«tl)!shi'cl Mothers* lVnsiuus.tTho rr?ult> haV'"1" prnvnil an ernnornyas well as a luiiuaiiiiy. It costs half

!as much to koep a child with his 1! mother as in an orphan asylum. Tin-imother is the child's natural • guard-1inn, and the life of-his own cnniniu-l

tured nere.For dresses of this kind, potrtt

twill, twill cords, jersey, matelas**nnd charmeen (which renerables broad-cloth) nnd other woolens are used.Dark brown, bine nnd black share hon-ors In color and are almost universallybrightened by touches of virid color In

Loch hy fhu Uig Brother and llip: Si.stor KcdiTutimi of th" United Stateand Canada.

rijfht n belt appears, brightened withgaricolorod emhroltlpry that reappears

lt U accented by a fan of monkey farplaced back of It. The sleeves In thisfrock have a lonj: puff at the forearm.

Satin, In a contrasting color, ordure-

ered, pointed panoTICThe front"other dress, and a similar decoration

sleeves the colored embroidery Is un-expectedly: omitted. U.V\J—if^-—

\ X 7 A S l l Ureases vary only a little* " from one season to another since

they must all be designed with an. , . eye to usefulness and comfort, and

into citizenship. | l a u i u i e r easily. Nevertheless the elo-A gold medal was awarded to Mis>]m e n t of style and attractiveness

grows more and more Important Inthem as In everything else. New pat-terns in famllLar materials, especiallyIn printed cottons, contribute more tothe element of novelty than anythingelse.

Ilatine has come to the fore Oils sea-~9on~arid~niiT attractive moderts shownIn the Illustration.

The dress at theleft Is of plaidratine In blue nnd tan. The collarand cuffs are of whlto pique- nml areof course detachable so they may bt-

Jtept _lookinr;—fresh:—The*—waist—IKslightly bloused and la held just over

-the-hitrt-wlth-ti belt-of-tlw—samc-jauz-terlal bound with a narrow llk ribbon, Thero is a louch of whlu1 \tU\\nat the pockets, which arc- further nm:imenrod wltl\~~n

I W«at«n nwwwi*99*

CRANBERRIESNow is tho time to oat t

The—iiranb**rry—offyrK- a -satisfactorysolution to the housewife who is look-iIns for fresh fruit to Ecrve-her fam-Hy. TKis acid fruit ripens in the au-tumn and will keep all winter, sorv-ins as a health tonic to add varietyto the canned fit lit. : i—

There are two varieties of thecranberry, one a native of north*mKuropo and th»» other of North]Wr.i-vtrn. Tho '.Ouropran variety i^inever cu_ltiyated but the.. Aaiericj.ii^ppri^s is j;rown extensively in th*1

low marshy so1.! uf MnssnchiiM'tt?-.r;. w Jersey. Wisconsin and Cmr.:da.T'l',1 crnn N luirvi>i* d _ by huml for;hV first gradi' of liorr!*1^ and ral;ed

mlpht be accurately described na a imorn Ing d,r*-ss in which tin wearer jwill feel' comfortable on her market-Inp'or" Hhoppln^ tTiur. The blouse por-

Tomorrow

Appetite, Rdi

Vscd for over

Chips offHi Jum

One-third tha tegular dose.

Por children and adults.BY YOUR DRUGGIST

KIR8TEIN'S PHARMACY

ANITATIOH

Fresh FromThe Dairy

The sweetest freshest,purest milk you evertasted.

Why not Phone530 R.

and let us deliver our de-licious Sanitary Milk toyour door every morning.

RahwaySanitary DairyL. Strt'-kxnan, Prop.C-tMain^t. Phone 53O-K

DR. m i. mil.FOOT SPECIALIST

Chiropody Foot Orthopedics? Bast Jersey Street

T e l . FCltzabettiOKKITK HOURS

j lt A.M tn 9 P. M. Ttioa., Thnrt. , S B :A .9 >1. ;*i U P. M.. MOD., VVV1.. Fri .

WEIMAR STORAGE and[RICKING COMPANY INC.

^TORINO. MOVING, PACKING,SHIPPINGCheerfully Furnished

Office and Warehouse

Elizabeth ATCUOCFirsnrcof Wart house

337-343 W. Grand St., ElizabethA warehouse with every

flreproof v%nlt

r - •'

DR. LOUIS KL0T2 f VETERINASUH );;ELIZ. OFFICK 210 Wtsttield ATC- ('

T»Hoi*» f ^ l l z n t i t ' t h 3 9 1 3 -,;

()(!«« it Office S. H. C. A. r](4 Irvinj St.. Hnone Rahwiy 2G2-J ?•

i. CQ«I . DO£S md C' t iTroted J '

New Vear

skirt portion 1MS panels of the figuredgoods Introduced at the sldo\ ondlngat the top in capacious und very con-venient pockets.

Nothing has out-rivaled chockedgingham made up with pique or plainchambray for utility dresses. Thechecks nre small—a color withnnd the colors ure fast, so that properlaundering —does—not—change— them. -\Tliese tub dresses belong to several'."classIHcatlons. and have'varied tomes \—us momliiK dresses, houseK , r o e ,uprtm dresses, Imnpralow dresses orsimply wash dresses. Tlierg__itrgjlttle.sliacTos o'f~""dlfferenco in them—aprondresses, for Instance, nro those de-

nndnowhere else, while some washmny venture on the street, but aro

dussrof--utility dnbut tints'

The firths at the rl 'lit rimwn a o»inblntttlon of pluln and printed cottoncloths and Introtittcttt a new touch Inthe narrow iclrtllo. "f the plain am-

-terlnl ti-M • ' :: a -w T'-'w - - 'pi

I

y

This your. 1923, was the largest business year incur hkory so we feel unusually grateful to thepeople of'Rahway and vicinity for their liberalpatronage.

You may rest assured that during 1924 wewill maintain our regular standard o£ qualitymerchandise, lowest possible prices and liberalterms of credit.

Cor. Main and Cheery Sts.

Ladies^ and Misses'Ready itp- Wear

nnd

Millinery

*4r m**--

' t *

i'>v..vr\

;.vj .• ; * /

" - * .

i f

..:/

\ •- K

PASS IN REVIEWhappenings at Home and Abroad

During the Twelve MonthsThat Have Just Closed.

raw

PRESIDENT HIDING'S DEATHFutile Attempt! to Settle German Rep-

arations Problem—Franco Occu-pies the Ruhr—Turkey*! Diplo*

Trlumph—TerrIbIe Earth-

giving the in£abltantsjo<;the oc-jcopied regions. Soon aftt/r thU the'Industrial magnates ot the Ruhr andRhine)nnd signed a pact with theFrench for the resumption of workand of payments of material.

In December the reparations com-mission decided to appoint two--com-mittees of experts, one to exaoilueOennnn money lu foreign lands uudtho other 10 try to di*vU*o means bywhich Germany might balance herbudget ttud fatnlilllzc her tlnanccs.Poincare now seemed in n yieldingmood nnd President Coolldge an-nounced he approved of unofllcialAnierlcnn participation through thoselection of Americans as membersof those Committees.

Turkey's diplomatic victory at Lau-sanne wns not easily won. While thoconference there, was deadlocked In

tember IB. typhoon and floods killed5,000 In Japan; September 17, large

quake In Japan—AmericanProsperity and Politics.,

By EDWARD W. PICKARDWith the exception of Germany,

by her own acts, and Japan,^ t e all

world was better off i t the close__ 923-iftan-ar-tt»-beginn!n^-ThlsU «ip«clally true of the United States,

Finland, Cz Tur-

vj xms mfuac jinuymry cvumirutft, xmreport being adopted by the house onJanuary 25. Among the appointmentsmade by I'resldent Uumllng were Rob*ert Woods Bliss as mini SILT to Swe-den; Miles l'oindfxter as ambassadorto Peru; 1L M. Tubln us minister tothe Netherlands; K. T. Sanborn as as-sociate Justice oi the Supreme courtof the United SUu-s, tirni Ueu. FrankT, Hlues as dirci'iur of the veterans*bureau. The hitter appointment wasfollowed by charges of mismanage-ment, wiste, etc., against the formerdirector. Colonel Forties, which were

by u senate committee.Having passed:the agricultural cred-

its bill anil many acts of lewer lm-portaiUx1, uiui Killing Uie ship-subsidy

' bill, tiie iJUty-sew-uth congress cameto an end on March 4. The Sbcty-eighth congress mot on December 8and Uie llvpubllcun luujorlty wa&.so

with Uie Moors,r Trnsnrrarnctor? ffnr

in Septem-The revolt, General

Prlmo Rivera, M;ir»iuls'do Es>ellnt wasagainst tlie cabinet R rrupt poli-tlctans and also v*<ia an expressionof reaction agaijm the growth of so-cialism nnd pyjullcallsm. nmonp theworkers. The.JKinj: supported it andthe cabinet resigned on September 14.A military directorate waB establishedand Klvera was made sole chief ofthe administration. The new govern-

H.jmil)

JChl

part of Berkeley. Cal., destroyed byflames; September 2T, forty killed inBurlington train wreck nt Lockett,Wyo,; November 13, enrthqnake InShousl province. China, killed 1-VX);|1B,December 1. nearly ;»00 killed by bunt- '"*-ing of dnm near Ker-gmno, Italy; De-cember 0, nine Killed and rrniny. In-jured in wreck of the Twentieth Cen-tury train at Foreythe, N. Y,; Decem-ber 15, destructive earthquake In

'ellit; John M. SMdall, «H-

t»Jff>

u y parmles to move against Constanti-nople, Mosul and other points andcalled three classes to the colors tocombat the Greeks In Thrace. Thequarreling in the peace conferenceWas Incessant. On January 31 the

Tk

gressives held the balance of power.Speaker Glllett was re-elected andPresident Cooliilge then delivered hliUrst message, In which he declared

jhlmself In favor uf American member-; ship In Uie AVorid court, advocated re-

h la'lUeg 'submitted a treaty to the Turks,! auction of taxes and opposed the sol-acccptance wlinln fuurdemanding

days. The Turks agreed to sign it Uthe economic clauses were reservedfor future settlement. Lord Cnrzon

inform a tl on coming from the land ofjthe •orieU has been so colored thatpt w u difficult to determine true coa-Ultloai there.

Bwnomlc recovery of_tlie world was•J«Urd6d, u j t_waj> during the prevl-- M a tw«lve months^ by " failure" 'to* Mttla tht matter, of the German repa-• tmtlosB and by the steady decline of

rGermany toward the point of absolute%«Uftpse. The occupation of the Uuhr"ij France and the resulting disputeswith Great Britain brought on n1-

.'Seated el i tes each of which seemed•te thr«aten the linal disruption of the• i t e o t * cordiale.

Sereral propnsuls fo» commissionsf» determine Germany's capacity to

were made, but each of them re*ulred th« participation of tlie United

h iBgoT«rnment

6 the conference broke up. Diplomaticconversations continued, however;~theBritish indicated they would makeconcessions, and the conference waaresumed on April 23, Russia being ex-cluded. On July 24 k treaty was

"signed" which "gave* td~Tnrkey nearlyall she had demanded, the question ofoil concessions being left for -laterconsideration. A few days later theUnited States and Turkey signedtreaties of amity and commerce andon extradition. By October 2 the al-lied military forces had evacuatedConstantinople nnd the Turks soon

_after took formal possession of theirold;'capital.

Warfare betuoon Italy nnd GreeceIn the autumn was narrowly averted.An Italian military commissioner nnil

Two governors got into seriotutrouble. Walton of Oklahoma, whosaid he was lighting the Ku Klux

legislature aim assumed vlUuallj dic-t ate rial powers. Despite his efforts to

'prevent it, the legislature met in spe-cial session, Uie house impeached himon numerous charges and the senate,sitting us a trial court,' found hUa

INDUSTRIAL AND LABOR

Only one really big strike marredthe record of Uie year In the UnitedStates, and that did not last long. The

fild nd

ment made itself popular at once by j "?l **? «--—--— --a campaign on profiteering and gnni- • Colombia nnd Ecuador.bllng, by cutting oNju-nses to the bonoand by other drastic measures of re-form. Tdal by jury was suspendedbecause of tlie corruption of the courts.Altogether, It was it happy revolutionfor Spain. .

Bulgaria also h:id a revolution, al-most bloodless, when Stamboullsky'a[>e«sant_governii'<'nt was overthrownon June 0 nnd the prenileTliTuiSelf'was*captured and killed. Professor Zank-off was made head of the new govern-ment In September the Communistsand peasants resorted to anus In anattempt to regain power, but theywere soon suppressed. ___ •

Andrew Rontir Luw, prime ministerof Great Britain, resigned on May "CTbecause of the Illness that caused hisdeath in October, l ie was succeeded

_by Stanley Baldwin, who had beenat the exchequer. On Oc-

IiPre dJoharmtioni;

t c w M BColorado Jurist; Hear Ad*

H l M

f*t l etablrt. Colorad J ;l cfc. Sl**bee; William HoluMn .

rchltect; Gen. FrancUco VII-iler of Mexlcnn rebels; Sir

Walnipublish'Kato,

Inwtrey, English actor;. Warrtn Q, Harding,tn* United StatM; Col.

Martin, vtttrui ttrteant atDemocratic national convrn-

Candac* T. Wheeler, au-c% FabrUlo Colo an a. Italian, Randall Parish, authorvSoroila, Spanish palmer;. Weir, noted horsomnn;xner, English actor; Mariet, actress; Balph.L. Polk.of city directories; Baronlar of Japan; Katt ~

ChrlBtian Science Monitor. in December: Bar! bf Lowborn, fas ,,r British lord chancellor; A. O.

nell veteraB newspaper editor of"vine N. T.; Sir William Macxie and llaion ShaughniW. Can*

rolhvay magnates; John B.mm editor »f Providence Journal;

TOUun A, iMnkerton. famous detec-Uwrence Sperry. American

or. dmwnd In Bniltah channd;rro^man Ben T. Cable of WDr. Harold N. Olojrer. not»d: uf "Chicago, i! •

•'••"'u--i»j{i.-.ijn..

—•*«*• v ^ t 1 •[/

Rahway Record, Tuesday, Januar ^

CHRISTMAS PlROQRAMSJ

(Continued from !>•«• On*

ginla Felter;"What Makes

carol; recitations,Christmas/' Stanley

IVoorhees. and "If There Were NoMaury; "Little Santa Clans." - Fred, C h r l 8 t m M ; . H c l c n W c b e r ;

Trembloy; "Old Saint Nick Himself,": * T n o sunshino Xurses," Virginia Asz-

jUNTER. IHTIGHT PLACE

miners in the anthracite fields and wiggin, fcthor;* Alonxo KimbaH. "^ ! w h ( Ih« anddi-nly 1» pl»«dtheir employers tried in vain to fix » ! « * ; P + e s a Anastaslt of Oreooo : charting benr nnd"new__wngp_Bcale_j»nd working condi-tions, and on August 2l~they bToke bffnegotiations. With the approval ofPresident Coolidge, Governor Plncbotof Pennsylvania undertook to handlethe problem, and proposed a compro-mise, on August 29. The strike beganofllclolly-two days later, but the nego-tintlona were pontinttM. Plnchot'aplnn was accepted September 8the miners resumed work on Septam-ber 20.^At_yarlQn* tlmea during the year tht

dlober 1 on Imperial conference and aneconomic conference of the British em-pire opened In London, ana variousImportant measures were debated andadopted designed to bind. the_ compo-nent parts of the empire by closer

i lguiltyand removed him from hj*» of-i~n**Dl lm r i f l "> l u t : "" !••"-- »J^- . XTT-.*— »!.„„ i«ai«»<j T,« o i commercial ties, at the same time leav

action.

Autea and each time the 'American ' his aids were r;mrdered In AlbaniaoTftrnment found unacceptable the ' and on August 2^ Italy demanded tlmt

inaiKted upon byof France. As theyear^olnca

•r*w toward Its close, however, thei

Greece tpologize abjectly and payreparations. The Greek reply beingunsatisfactory, the Italians promptly

reparations commission was preparing bombarded and occupied tiie Island ofto appoint two committees of experts j"Corfu. Greece nppealed W the League

•to helD work out the problem, and! of Nations, which was disposed toPrwldent Coolidge nprroved of the ni»-polntment of Anierit-aiu on these com-mittees.

Turkey gained power and prestigethrough the Lausanne peace confer-«oe« and the resulting treaties withttt allies and with tho United States-

take up the affair; btit Premier Mus-solini declared Italy wouM withdrawfrom the league and Ignore Its ded-alon If It Insisted on arbitrating the.dispute. Tbe situation was m.ost em-barrassing for the- league, but theallied council of ambassadors rescued

to tbe year she added herself to | it by assuming jurisdiction and order-Let* In yth« list of repuMica with MuataphaKtca&l Puha as her first president

Under the leadership of GeneralVrino RlTtra and other army officers«nd arlBtocrats, then w u a house-• deaaiag \& Spain that resulted In theturalmg out of the crowd of poUddana'lhit had for years been battening on

spolli of mlSROvernment The go-t sd em •erotic Eorernment was

•«T«tfcr«wm aad a dictatorial covncll

•PresU«nt Harding*! death In SanVrandsc* threw all the United States—«&4 Udeed all the dTillied world—

:tato heartfelt mourning. Vice Preal-

lng Greece to comply 'with Italy's de-mands almost in their entirety. Greececave In, apologized and paid 50,000,000lire Indemnity, and on September 27Italy evacuated Corfu.

Mussolini achieved another triumphby an agreement with Jugo-Slaviawhereby Italy obtained possession ofFlume.

In January America* and Britishcommissions met In Washington to ne-rotlate the refunding of the Britishwar debt t« America, and their taskwas soon completed to the apparentsatlsfaction of both nations.Washlnyton' treaties on reduction of

Calvin Coolidge, succeeding tochief magistracy, carried on In

is the policies of his predecessor.:Hr. Harding bad been considered thecertain nominee of the Republicanparty iiv-1024, and isAs demise threw

d h l i t i l

armament and concerning the Pacificwere ratified by Italy in February andby France in July. Through the ef-forts of an American commission sentto Mexico, the government of ourneighbor wns finally brought to ami-

Uce. Walton wns then indicted by agrand Jury. The other "state tiecutWeIn trouble was Gov. W. T. McCtay ofIndiana, who got Into deep financial en-tanglements and also was Indicted.

The Supreme court on Aprilj30 de-cided that foreign vessels co|lu notbring liquor into American ports eventhough sealed, und l a w tbJ liquorstores of several linens wew i'lzed atNew York. Foreign nationsbut could not well take an}However, late In tlu'Vear th<ment negotiated :in ncreoinlni withtireat Britain, whereby tlie /right ofsearch was exteii'led to abolt twelve .miles from shore, and in retrn It was 'expected the ship liquor K-guIntlon ;

wopld be moditied. Tlie cv>'U»[on ofthe search limit was madanecessary 'by the activities of thelsmuKgllDKfleets which kept the oountr well sup-plied with wretched liquor./On Slay -i

repealedOctoberlaw en-

forcement was held in Washington,and President Coolidge pledsed thefull aid of the governmel machinery,but Insisted each s!:ite pust assumeits own share of the baden.

President Coolidge hajthe appoint-ment of one ambassaor last year. .Col. George Harvey r e i i e d his post 'at the court of S t J a n s on October '4 and Frank B. Kellod was selectedfor the place.

Immediately after ldsnmmar raca-tlon the Supreme coot rendered anImportant decision uppldlD* the lawiof the Pacific coast eptes which pro-hibit aliens from owing land. H W S Ilawa, of course, arejairectcd againstthe Japanese especlajy.

ing- -them • their full meapure of self-hh

Tailway—Iftbor—board—adjontrrtwages of certain dtsset of rail work-ers, usually raising them. Some ofthe roads made separate agreementswith their employees, giving them In-creased pay. April 9 th» steel Indus-try raised the wages of common laborIX per cent and adjusted the pay of

A i 3 h ChT

AH*V*d by Bear on Edo«In Ortgon.

T% thrill that cornea to a hanl d llt«rany

th«fomeriyltra. W. B. Ueds: Thoma, ; — y ' W r i ^ d by J. J

In 8«p4«ber: Edward Ptyson Dut-ton. imblfcer; W. R. Thayer. authorand Jobotanist

llist; Dr. C. F. MHUpa»*»'; iChletgo university; P n u l m f n

J. RalneJ explorer; Max Bohm. ar-tlirt: Dr.pdward Ryan, noted Re*.

In Persia; Viscount Morley, Knilfci statesman and authur:CnannctylFlUey. former Bepobllcanleader In Missouri; Chief Justice <L. Brown »Mlnne«ota supreme court;iMwiB abooleT. CnlctgD

In Octo

OttflB^ BritishJ. W. Bengough,

Bnadlan poeTand artltt; Oe«ar Brown-ing. Knrlbl historian; Prof, MalcolmMcNeil ofGovernorfornla;

u*nvernmtnt. TllesT?"qin^tiona_hrou«ht |to tho fore the old

other clasRM, and on "April 13 the ChT- j Islahd

H. Uarkhara »f OsU-Pettrs, president Long

rpDr. BorU SidU. p«y-•' Dr. C. P. Stelnmet*.

trade or protection, nnd.'since The ROV- i prime mlnUter.Buntln^ton,

building trn'l

the New York legislatorthe state prohibition law./lna conference of gowmorion

life of the existing pPrime Minister BuliM'in dissnlvrd t>ar-lhunent on November 16 and an eloc-tlon wus-ralled f«-i" lVceniher 0. For-mer I'remler Uo.vtl Oe(Tge, who hadbeen mi a speaking tuur "^ the I'nltetlStntfs, arrived Isomt1- Ji:>t In 'time t.»make up hU oU\ nuarrel with ilie utLerwin;; nf the liberal [:u:y, and wentinto tlie campaign \\h\\ Vi^-r. Wlit-athe votes ^e re connU'd I', wus fnumltliut wliile ilie Lil.fiali. ai-d l*uburitesboth had won many seats from tin*Confervatiws, no t>ue oi the threeparties had i ni:ijority._ 'iiie l.alinrites.however, nnin>;:niAv! trm't ihelr leaih-r,Ranisuy Miu'Donnhi. would untlertuketo form a government as soon as calledupon, whereupon Trlnie Miulster Bald-win declurvd he nnd his caUnet wouldretain mitre nt least until the newparliament had met In January.

During tho early months of the yenrthe Irish republicans continued theirguerrilla warfare on the Kroe State,but on April 10, their chief of staff,Liam Lynch, wns killed In a fight andon April 27 Eamon de Valera orderedhi* followers to cease hostilities andnegotiate peace. The Dublin go?er»-meat refused to treat with him andoh August 15 he was placed unfler ar-

• restChinese factions fought bitterly

throughout the entire year, and In Oc-tober President LI Tunn-hung was suc-ceeded by Marshal Trao-leuo. Con-siderable eicItemMit~~was~ caused In

wurkors wero Riven anstetM makers hail been

"tr: C n., _. _ railway;.S. XL McCall

bert H. (Jury of the V. S. Steel corpo- , Maiauichuw>{t statwninn; Frederick L.nation announced Us elimination. ; Kawson, Kn% nh melaphTficIan; Cllf-

The Am. rUan Federation *»r Labor : for! rhiirne. noird lawyer of Iowa;met In annual convention in Portland. Anthony ( V Inett!, former commls-

votrd sloner of Ini !ari»tl«»n; O. C. Tnylor.

eminent had promised th.>rv should Increase. Tlie sttvl makers Hail D « n y t n w ; - n i nho no chanRp In tlu* tariff polU-y during ' attacked bitterly for maintaining the ; In Noithe life of the i-xisting parlumipnt, twetw-hour day. and on August 2 El- j prwhlpnt

Ore., nnd. mnong other acis.agninst the fomatUm of a politicallalmr party : tn] :.!so a^':i!n-t 'JM' n'Oomltfon of th" Russian Suvlet govern-ment. The advocates of these mra«-nres and Ind^eii nil the rrmr»* r.idlcnlfactions in tin* federation wen- routedby President Ge:nner», who was r*-

Anlrlcan Hallway

bank!Whl

rock

ia d ytay»r of l'endleton. Or*,

roturn fmm a hunting trip wttlfktas'.nnd two Wallowa countyth« WalWwa mountains OB «

river.kl« way.alone th« r »

;iriet items of LocalInterest lor Quick

Pertual

Happy Now Year to All!• A Kiwanls Club 1B t>«lng organisedIn Summit.

Woodbrldgo had a 110.000 fire lowearly Saturday morning, by the de-struction of the stortnomo of H u n t

&' Melick's at 3J Pearl meet.

Mrs, W. 3. Llmond, mother of Mrs.

ofthecave,brownthe en

_ wns nturtled whM IIttiear r»niC chartingto»anl btm. Without di-rtft> tn 111* shonldtr U

H. A. L. Sadtler, of »S Elm avenue,has returned to her homo in Brook-lyn after -sponding ChrUtmaa withher daughter.

Stanley Bliss, of 67 Jaqucs avenue,has been enterUlnim as his guest

-William Mayers, ot Tranlou, a-fellow-

David H. Trembley; ChVJstmas story,'

Miaa Clara Garcia. ' Primary depart-

members took minor parts.

Other parts of the program were:Remarks, Superintendent A-L P. Rud-kln; song, Peter Cooper; recitationMiss Eltzaboth Maury; violin selec-tion, Miss Charlotte Schllermann;recitation. Miss Dora Stacey; song.

Daisy Uothmann; Christmas ca-rol; Mrs. George Dunn's class; recita-tion, Joseph Gallagher. After theprogram an enjoyable hour was spentIn the distribution of gifts and In so-cial diversions. . Rev. R. W. Elliottand-Eqgene-^Weniqr wore especiallyremembered in the distribution ofgifts.

The committee/wWeh so ably han-dled the affair was composed of: .MissClara Garcia, chairman; Mips HelenWlllamson and Mn. George-Dunn.

man, Doris'Stnmm, Evelyn Van Pelt,Anna Mao Taylor, Catherlno Beebo,Flora Klanek: carol; reading, "ADream of Christ," Mrs. Charles Nord-innyer, with aolos by Miss DorothySchneider accompanied byLcHier~Fa-Bans; carol; address by Rev. Wal-lace H. Carver, pastor; carol; recita-tion, "The Errand - Boy," HowardKoly; presentation of Bible to^ Su-perintendent Ward, by the primarydepartment- ...., _..

Awards for regular attendance Intho primary department were givento the following: Arnle Hook, RegnorHook, Harry Trembley, Edith Scho-cfllor, Kleanor- Drown, Elcanor-Xord-meyer, Helen Trembley. Continuinga practice of many years' standing-George Lawronce was again SantaClauK and in his usual inimitable waycreated no end of fun and good cheer.Tim able committee on arrangements

Edwin** Packard, Herbert Scbaefer,Livingston Angevine, tho number in-cluding recitations, songs and exer-cises; "The Crystal Girls," Jessie Tol-llvor, Lillian Carlson, Florence Schae-fcr, Clara Mao White; "Boys fromthe Northland," Amoa White, DonaldBrewer, Hurbert Schaefer, EdwinPackard. --..

Recitation. -"The - Land of "GoodCheer/' Evelyn Sturges.

Cantata, Part Two—"Sledding on aStarry Night," Evelyn Sturges, Flor-ence Schaefer, Lillian Carlson, EvelynJohnson, Clara Mae White, Ruth Ma-dison, Mildred Smith, Donald Brewer,Edwin Packard, Livingston Angevine,Arthur ChaBe, Amos White, HerbertSchaefer; "The Holly GIrle," AlldaMundrane, Anna Durmef, Clara MaeWhite, Ruth Madison, Mildred Smith,Evelyn—Joh nson r~ Avig—Chane:

,,,.•- r ' ^ J L B W , ^Albert Law, Mildred Ackerman, How-ard Durmer; one year—Marlon Lamb,Clara-Mae White, Arthur Chase, Ed-die Toms, Mrs. C. Price and MargaretPackard.

the htmi i |dTbe *sar

Hoakln<< win

aophomoro at Rutg«r» during theholiday season.

The primary dejtrtmeat ot__gjLlay School en-

\\t

instant d«atk,y f ( m r * • * ' * * • •red. according I*

Joyed l u Christmas tilobraUoo Thurs-4ay afternoon at tl» Parlih House.

!>ounu Hcartueatv

be.its i>T j

A>kt Support of All F a r m e r s !l»r. Vhtnr «; HelsN-r says . "All

farnii-r-- ihotili ;;>in tn a campaign.Kii'n-t ri'*' T-'V :irc a menace to

t-lroT ;roperty :»n<! should«;u." i ;>t b-hi«d thi* cam--iV' ;tr .n nut tfv e r r whore.

k

Mrs. Bertram Bcrrj and Miss Mar-<eU*i_Mofle 11 ..w eroaffair.

The primarybranches of theSchool, were givenat the church TUiCtfu, Knmes and ritreshmenu were

cradle rollBaptist SundayChristmas treatiday afternoon.

enjoyed; nones wcr4'u°S reclta-

h-ulthtlona given. Mis*reeled ill.- entertalrAxt'nt. asclstcd byMri* Hrtbert Mlsdoti and Mrs. Cbaa.! prayer; carol, recitation*. "A Sweet

uu," Adelo Swearer, and "HollyKU-anor 'Brown; ei'-r

rnmiiiinv

NECROLOGY

Death reaped Ms usual harvest ofprominent turn and women in 1923.Tho mnri' nutnble of his victims were.In Januury: W. T. UTjItlnc. WlseonslDX>nper mil* mn^nate; Edwin Sterena,actor; Mrs. Cora L. 7. Hlchmond, spir-itualist leader; Dr. Smll O. Hlr»ch.eminent rabbi of Chicago; Georj^Hamlln, singer; Oonstantlne, formerking of Greece; W. M. Moore, finan-cier; Alexandre Rlbot. French states-man; rrederlc Htrrison, English his-torian; Wallace Reid, motion plctar*star; Max Nordaa, O*nnan phUoae-pher; Dr. Paul Relnsch. former min-ister to China; Dr. W. S. Haloes, t«xt*cologtst of Calcago; Bmry Clews, NrwTork banket.

In rebruarj: BUbop C. J. CBel l lyof Lincoln. Ntb.; Oardlnal Prlasca,

optn tnt lists and made the political cable terms nnd the long-withheld rec-contest intensely Interesting. ! opnltlon was accorded by Washington

| on August 31.

INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS

FOREIGN 1FFAIRSGermany's intern* troublts, politi-

cal, economic and Inancial, were In-extricably tangled ip with her Inter-national woes andprought her to solow a state thai her regenerationseemed at times alloat hopeless. Hoy-alists, separatists fid communists con-

German reparations and complications resulting from the failure to pay

DOMESTIC-AFFAIRS

M p ^ ^ J h e L ^ n t n ^ B t ^ - n n m b t t - j t f ! «"^b l l»h oP °* Niplw. B. K. Barnard.foreigners by Chinese bandits, who de- '. astronomer; ex-Senator J. iu Htm«n-manded large ransom nnd immunity. ] way of Indiana; Pro?. W. C Roentgtn.The prisoners .Included several ! discoverer of the X-ray; Judg« UartlnAmericans and Encllsh. ami for a tlrat i Kn»pp of the federal court of apptala;armed Intervention by their govern- nishop C. D. Williams of Michigan;ments seemed likely. However, the Prince Miguel de Bragama; TheopnUtPekln government bought off the out- ; Delcasse, French statesman; Mrs. Johnlaws after Ion? negotiations. I A> Logan; Georte H. Pack, lawyer

In Russia, ns the soviet rulers grad-, and orator; Charlemagne Tower,_ually modiUed their Communistic^polj;4American statesman; ex-Senator G ^ C

hp-^nndy-progr-^rerTirns"1!Df~CalIfdrnta--~Fred*rtc-be

Overshadowing all other events Ini all but the Indnfrlal magnates and i re*s toward stability. Most other na- I Belleville, actor; ex-Senator J. It. Bar-

the profiteer* wrfe reduced to near ; tlons still withheld recognition of the i ton of Kansas,them "occupied much of the attention" the United Stntns was the death of 1 sturvatiun, iltlioAli the crops were ! Moscow government, but n niimber_of_j__Un-March: Congressman W. Bourke«f European diplomats. Early m Jan- President Warren G. Harding. He [ largp nnd the rurJ districts were over- ' them made cnmmerrlal arrr.ngements ; Cockrnn of Kew York; William G.

tbc vcar 1023, 1 take thisopiortunit? to tbanh von all for evervfawi 1 bavc receive, for tbc services 1baw'becn permitte^ to renJ»cr an& in tbeSpirit of tbc Season, 1 wieb vou all

H Ibapp^e "Wcw

H«-TRIIeit3*. "Real Estate,

McChe.sncy..

A ;:i-i-tlng of tb-Agriculture will bJanuary 3, nt ! rhousi\ Kllrab<'th.Horticultural :ii'«'iitir C:ty will be RI\

1 runort of State^ iu-!d at Allan-

t>v S. T. Wood-ruff V

T h - -

U Urrwc.4

*. u:

Pbe n

tlc-

of "th-danc*9 ill

! > • •

Knc

\\.

held

Ir.-ne White di-

~~ Grand 8tro«tOne or the annual occas ions of espe-

cial joy, happiness and food fellow-»hlp at _the_prand__Btreat Chapel Is

entertainment and thefest ival held Friday n l j h t was an evengreater success than any previousevent ot the kind. An excel lent pro-

carols a n d _rcclta-r

tlons led up to s rlilt by Santa Clausand the cTenfng was concluded witha distribution of candy and \gifts.Tho chapel auditorium was filled tooverflowing. . Superintendent HarryW. Ward was In charge. Mrs. Chas.Nordin«-yor presided at thp piano.

Tin* entertainment program fol-low*: Carol; responsive reading;

comprised: Mrs. Peter Voorheeschairman, ^Mrs. Charles NordraeyerMiss Mildred Hughes.

First Methodist Sunday School

for big entertainment - comprised:Decorations—MIBB Sadie Bernhard,chairman; Mr. and Mrs. A. Leonard,Mr. and Mrs. George Scbaefer; Ed-ward Williams and Philip Ackennan;

Miis LDlian Ptrrtoe,eon, Mtai Eath LaBar; reclUtSOtti,primary—MIBB Julia Ryno, Mn. Wal-lace Redman, Mrs. David Packard;candy—Philip Ackennan, chairman;

* 1

The committees on arrangements mule— MIsa Pearl LaBar, chairman; Rev. O. A. Law and George Schaefer.

The cantata closed with a vUit byKris Krlngle In the person of E. H.Chaae. Gifts and candy- were dis-tributed In abundance. Interchangesof gifts by the pupils and teachersadded to the" happiness "of the affair*

Supreme happiness both for the

Rev. George A. Law, pastor, was pre-sented with a fine purse of money,while MIBB Ruth LaBar and Miss Lil-lian Perrino and Superintendent GeoSchaefer and Secretary Philip Acker-

County Board of,:,,M Thursday.! c l b l ? ' " H f t V 0 Y o n C r o w m > J H I m - " K < I l t h

tho court' S r n o o I a e r » Klcanor Nordm< yer; recl-

«"crt ' tary.'•a::ci' .it Odd

kj niRht. J a n u a r y

Cillon. "A Caution." Elva Martin;carol; exercise. "The Parcel Post-n;an." E<lwln 1'ayne, Uusaell Tandy,Woudrow Pope, Everett Popo. MI-rhat-1 Wargo, Itussell Hoagland: pri-

children who participated and for theflne big gathering of adults who at-tended the entertainment marked theannuaL_Christmas -party- of- the-Sun-day School of the First MethodistChurch -Friday night The SundaySchool Room was most appropriatelydecorated for the coming of KrisKrinKlo./Ntjio platform _b.elng.. trans-formed Irito a veritable faryland inwinter season. The program was ex-1

ro l l ed , comprlMnc recitations, excr-;cises and songs by the primary de-|i:in:ii'iit and a splendid cantata by!tht- main «c!iool.

Tli" primary de-partnv-nt program'follows: Hrc'ltallnn. Alb.-rt "L:iw; ex-iTflst'. "Th" Christ:nas Ilaby." . Mil-<lrvd Mnncuso. Margaret Packard,Dorothy TolKver. Marion and HolonRi'.!:nK. Margaret i l o t - i u . Jessie lla-for.; recitation. "Tho Wondrous Star,"Junior Burton: CX-.TC•-••.-, "The Rest

man were, also jemembered.Honor was paid to a large number

of members of tbe Sunday School forregular—attendance- aa- folioWB:—Fouryears—Miss Julia Ityno, Superinten-dent George Schaefer and SecretaryPhilip Ackerman; tweryoars—Rev.~G.A. Law, Mrs. George Schaefer, Ade-laide Ackerman, Florence Schaefer,Edwin Packard, Randolph Arkinstall

m a r y * ° " s : r*clt«!on, r |ngt I»ay." Margarot AngeviD**, Kmma_.. u t . i h e "Two^f0 '1 1 , the Sky." Harold He«-be; carol;'

jr-i-ita'iona. "Tho Chribt Child." Eliia--.1 the plciuro i o | b - t h Aason, and "Thn Mai! That

\ Knipire Tht*at«-r \ \Vnt Astray." Doris S'.amm;-ot tbe A g , r

Hy thr Vets. Sat-g , r , Vo-

Bodoj, Catoerlne Conwsy, Vir-

^ T

A Happy,Prosperous

New Year

nary the allied premiers held a futile; had long planned a trip through the ; running wltt fooistuffs. The govern-j with the soviet regime. The Russianconference In Pari.--. nnd France pre-' Middle nnd Far West and to Alaska ment tried to npt the sltuntlon by ; supreme court rondemned Arrhblshop

Zepllak an<l VIr:ir Gt-nerul Uutclikn-vlrh of the Human Catholic churcli to

pared for separate action to collect • in «r"pr to talk with the people and keeping up the lood of paperfrom Germany. About the same time- cot their reactions. Tlmuch .tired out and of coune tit mark declined untilSecretary Hughes announced the Unit- ; and far from well, he started on June | billions cotid tJ had forgone clollar | d e a t h f o r revolutionary activities. The

' • "• - and those vhojhnd anything to sell \ , a t t e r w a g o s e cuted , hut Zepliak's sen-refused to afept the pracUcaUy I t e n c e w n s c o m m u t e d to ten years* lm-

States would nut consider Berlin's . -0. accompanied by Mrs. Harding andyr*posil for a four-power European j several members of his cnbinet. After

pact and also Informally ad- j delivering several Important addresses.peaceVised France not to occupy the Ruhr.France, however, was determined, and(h« reparations commission gave her

epeol>x by declaring Germany indcCanlt tn coal deliveries. Ger-

prot«ttlng and GreatapproTlnc* the French on

£aana i7 U befan the occupation offk* Euhr, .MUlng Its most important«lttts «nt after another. Presidenty^i-^in f txpressed his disapproval by•acalilnf the American troops from© • m a n y . Chancellor Cuno, with the—pport *t tlie rdchstaf, declared a

war" of passive resistance andall state employees not to obey

rreach. The mine owners and

notably one advocating American mem-bership In the World court, he sailedto Alaska. Returning thence to SanFrancisco, he fell ill there on July 28.Four days later, on August 2, he

worthless corraoy. In August Chan-cellor Cuno pr*ented a "rescue plan*to the re I chaffCuno reslgnjcsucceeding Hi

It was rejected andGustave Stresemann

and forming the firstcoalition mejoflty government In Ger-

back to Washington, tbe servicesthere, the trip to Marion, Ohio, andthe Interment there of the'little town'sdistinguished citizen oa August 10gave the people of tho country ampleopportunity to show In what highesteem and affection they held Mr.Harding. Literally the entire nationmourned sincerely, nnd all the othernations gave expression to their grief.

Vice President Calvin Coolidge tookfetcr th« lndustrlal_maois.tes fell 'u ' tbe oath of office as President at hiswtta this program and for months the [ father's home In Plymouth, Vt. nndf t w u b w«r« balked in their effort* I assumed MB new duties at onco. re-I* j e t Any considerable revenue from talnlnp the entire Harding cabinet and4b* region. They seized customs, bnnk announcing that he would carry outfands and railways, and arrested many j the Hnnllnj; policies where possible,!Industrial leaders and officials, but the It had been taken for granted that

passed away. The taking of his body J many's lilstc-u He undertook to re-form the Ounces by the Issue of a

passive resistance was not broken un-til late In September. The occupa-tion was assisted actively by Belgiumand piifslvely by Italy. Great Brit-ain, thimjrh she did not actually ham-per Hie Trench, gave them no help.

Ou May 'I Germany made a newreparations offer of $7,500,000,000,with many conditions, and It was lm-

-jntidUtely- rejectcd-by— France. —Enc—>antl also declared the offer Insufficient.'.Vti-dtn ihen iislied a new reparations'om:<>rcnce on the total sum nnd of-•ton-' annulth-ri of 1,500.000,00" goldTii:iii;.7. ftrent Britain Invited Fruuceiuwi Italy to Join her in a reply to-.till*, and submitted a draft of herpri/noied answer, but this also fell•through. The British government

- -thereupon sent-a note to Frnncc-nnd''Bclr'nm declaring the Ttnhr occupa-niiy.. iJlegul and a failure. Insisting*m . :i iuipurtiul reparations Inquiry.afit-r the plan suggested by Secretary•of State Hughes, and saying .France

—JWii, ]<aj enough of the money lent. tier to enable Greut~l$ritnin~to- pay^America. Aguln no results, Premierfcolncan* declaring Gerntany_miist set:

""IW~th^ reparations Question before

the Republican party would nominateSir. Harding in 1924, and Mr. Cnol-

nominee. Ilowever, before the yearclosed other candidates canu* furv/arM,nuta)>Iy Senator Hlnuir Johnom ofCalifornia, Governor Plni-hnt of Penn-sylvania ami Senator LaFolIette of

pnew currenc. the renten mark, backedby the coutry'* resources. This wasfar from fcccessful.

Tbrouchoc the year the royal!itsor ontionalsts of Germany were ex-ceedingly atlve, those of Uuvarla usu-ally hiking the lead. In* Septemberthe BavarloB actually revolted againstthe Berlin government and made Gus*tftve von !ahr dictator of the state.The Teichlag thereupon gave Strese-mann dlcttorlal powers. A little laterthe snclafet governments of Saxonynnd Thumgla refused to obey thechancelloi and he subdued them bya show o military force. l ie yieldedto Bavam's demand for greater au-tonomy, lut this was not enough. On

prlsonment.Early in December another revolu-

tion waa attempted In Mexico, tlieleader being Adolfo de la Huerta whowas offended because President Obre-gon would not support his candidacyfor the presidency. The revolt spreadrapidly, but before the month closedObregon seemed to nave the sltuatlon well In hand.

DISASTERS

vartnn Fisclstl. nnd General von Lu-dendorff attempted a royalist coupd'etat ID Munich and other cities ami

Unequsled In modern times was thedisaster that befell Japan on Septem-ber 1 when violent earthquake shocksand resultant fires destroyed Yoko-

Heale, Chicago lawyer; Orson Smith.Chicago banker; Charles D. Norton.New York banker; Chancellor J. It.Day, educator; Dr. O. Frank Lydston,noted surgeon; Dr. John M. McBryde,southern educator; M. D. Campbell,member of federal reserve board; Sen-ator S. D. Nicholson of Colorado; MintSarah Bernhardt, actress; Congress-man John R- Tyson of Alabama; Gen-eral Uanoury, French war hero; £.D. Hulbert, Chicago banker.

In April: Earl of Carnarvon; Hor-ace Boles, former governor of Iowa;Rear Admiral H. S. Knapp; MotherSuperior General Carmela of the Fran-ciscan nuns; Stuyvesant Fish, finan-cier and railway man; Georf* A. Yule,Wisconsin ftaancltr; W. T. Hazen, for-mer chief »f Ualted States secret serv-ice; Taylor Graaville, actor and play-wright; Jesj Dandy, comadlan; Bish-op Daniel Turtle; •x-Gorernor FredM. Warner: at Michigan; Her. Dr. O.

npHISjs our wish to you. If we have served you••• during the old year, we hope wfc may have "the

pleasure of serving you again in 11)24. If not, wenope you will make a New Year's resolution to try us.

JAMES VAN DYK C9.14O Main Street - Rahvay, N. J.

nrday nicht. K»*bruarj -- tThe Ladles* Auxiarr to the E l k s :

will bold an afte:»>on card party.jtomorrow. Wednesdv. January 2.

Under the ausptas of t h e . " T w oP a l i " a dance will lp held at Odd Fel-lowt 'HaU, Friday"rtfjht. January 4.

Aa entertainment of unonual prom-ise Is being plannk by tho ChurchTfortconi of St. Paul's KplscopaJChurch. Friday n phu January 11,when Miss HUdcc rde Hal idaj . ta-lented dramatic ar a t of N'ew YorkCitr. formerly of tahwar. will to*tcrr In a surfer* vt pe tcbes . Anotherprumlfllng number r.ll be a dance by•Mtu"miUi~McKoi!fc of Colonla. Aline niuilcal profiraE will supplementthese attractions, pickets have beenplaced on salt- at j i'cndluton's Drug!Storo. '

Oa tho petit Jurr panel from thiscity, to «orvo fron Januar}* 2 to 14.1aro Harry V. Mfiu-r. \V. M. Drun-ning. Thotna.* J. Itfcln-on and W. B.!Christopher

WhaliEvofutlon of Whales.i pruLably cvoiw-j from land

Is. Thvs hitve \ t - ; J h \ 'S uf hindthey suckle their your.;;, whichitnotx Invariably *MTH om- ut a

t i n t* ; they nave tuf i i of • liuir iiboutsnout, Ja»s and sk!:i; th

•Ir as Ift&d anlnioli do, l of ilk*

Korsberp, Jane Mundrane; song byih*1 primary tltp.irtmont; recitations.Durf.- nnd Marie Ityan: - i-rcis .*, "iflI Had i:.'.-n a Sli.-ph-nl Hoy." Uay-|moruj Forsbf.-rp. Walter Mill-r. Larry.Hocb. Cephu«t MonnPtta: recitation,Ilob-Ti Tr.-ssider.

T!ie cantata presfnti-d by the mainschool waj- entitled, "Kris Krlngleand His Krew." Tho presentationwas very ably done under the direc-tion of MiKrf Huth LaBar who presidedat the piano throuRhout the entertain-nu-nt. The propram follows: FirstPart— The Kris Kringle Krew Song,"

DIAMONDS 'WATCHESJEWELRY

All KtpairingGuaranteed

COLCORDTHE LEADING JEWELER138 Main St., Raima?

•M

AND A YEAR TO iJA"i

The Hoover- Electric SzrGtion Cleaner

WESTI?.:GHOUSEElec ric Ir^n i

de Luxe' u

Sp.'-fial Tor onir month onlyat-Thf- Hoover -i5-rti**ronsh— Tfj;*1 thr-all the dirt frnin {'.-,.; ;,;.»•'.: (ifthe rug out. The IIor>v.-rcleaned home Is olean. no whirling duHt clouds tn clinj; towalls and furnltun-. Th»- softmotor driven Ufu>-i. fa^tht*p-j-alt-

the dirt Into the air tlKht 1J-JK-

N'o ntjfcd to send ru^;.', dran-rics.pillows away to be cleaned.

~wh7eif~you~ own tho Hoover.

Small sum down.

Small payment monthly.

90 Cents Down—$1,00 a Month

Regular Price 37.50This llrst "Ijitr^ain" of thn newVt.i.i' ni.irit.i an uxcL-ptluudl o\>-\r iirii-.y.Uy for' >m r ...cu H to me rs.. _.

Wfjstinghnuse Is evenlyfrom heel ' to tip. the

The

t-iroEiRg—wirface—of—any-iron of its weight. A roomy

specially des|gnud forcoi::fort and eaae In ironing.

Spej^ial $5.9O

*2 DOWScientific h.umiry e^uiprh.ousckecp:;:^.The Thor \v:;shos clc/.h-:.l y . C! 'A;1L'S v.'L'ar Ihi'-. ..-

ijou'r'l ri'iciiiod.The '\":v)v v;nsho? lj!a:»x<'

Sin:p!c *'. ( \> •v;t'.e. >,'iif:

p:.U-::ic-i: \v. a:' - rosisti

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'*The prudent investment of savings is the best road to financial independence and an assuredincome."

by an Ever Increasing Number of Thriftyand Prudent Pepple Arc Subscribing for the

Dicers Play important Pari in LayingSections of Gas Mains Beneath Rivers

WED. )ING

IU> luArnold HenryAr::ol4 of

s t ree t , and M• of Mr

hama entirely and -abont~two^thirds of_Tokyo and ruined many smaller to^vn3.The number of killed was estimatedat 225,000, and the Injured at morethan half that number. Though .manyof the houses were flimsy, the prop-erty loss was enormous. The hun-dreds of thousands of refugees Buf-fered severely, but the American ROV-eminent anil tlic American Ued Crosswere swift with relief measures; andother nations Joined In the work.

revolt ras rnther easily put downby the Citionul police and the workers

"hairon tliere were several probnl)lli-tk's, Incluiiin^ Si-nator Undurwixni andWilliam G. Mc-\»Joo, avowed oariili-t]utt.'.s, and Senator I'ulston of Indlann,Gov. Al Smith of New Vork and Gov-ernor Sllzer of New Jersey. „- Therewas much talk of the possible nomi-nation of Henry Ford by one of theold parties or by, a third und

Wisconsin. For tlie_Ddiinoratlc nniiil- i nnd Ullor and' LudcndorfT wrre nr-restcd. On Novwnbur 10 FivderlekWllllan\ the former crown prlnre, sud-denly Rturhed to Gmuuny from llol-land.

In October the separatists of theUhlneliud got into actlou and .sot upa repute which was looked upon withfavor |>y- France. However, It wusnot able to'uiuliitaln Itself very sue-

•^MSfiajrpsjiDth-there—wns . almost con-•The Hepubllean national comiuittee, thiuoa figliilnt; with the national

accedlug lo-Uie wlslies of Uie.Presiv.iorcei—JUiuUier-soiwiratist ni»win**nt-^c_«t.__st;J?cted Cleveland aa the place .was started In the Bavarian palatinute,for tho national conveutlou of l'J24. but U fulled for the time being.and set June 10 as the dale TON..Its Lute in November Chaiicfllor Stre.se-opening. Previous action by which the i mann's coalition went to i>k-<-.*s JDULrcpresi'iitatlon of the southern btatcs ' • • - - -waa reduced- was., rescinded by thecommittee.—-Sucrotaryof-tlie-InterkirPall" retired'from President H a r d i n g cabinet on

threatcftd to march on Berlin.""This j Shiploads of food und millions of dol-lars were rushed to the stricken hind,and the Japnnose povernment was ma-terially aided In its task of rebuildingUie~rntn^d"cltle3;

Among other si»rious dlsnstprs ofthe year were: January 3, twenty per-

an : accord could be reached, j March 4 and was succeeded by Jlubm'Cfaancellnr Ktrescmonn. who had sue Work, the luttera place usereded Drf Cuno. jinnouncod tlie aban-1 generul-belug filled by the appoint-' -•- - - - • y-^m o j y u r r v s . 'Xew. Attorm*y lit-a-

t-ral UuUKherty. u>;uiost wLoiu im-ichnitrntVchurgea-imd been Tit.i-i.' tin"*

of passive p-lsiance amikl no more reparatlnB. would IM»

^grtgudia ied . tft? ubo

denied- a vote of coiiildrnci* in. theji 'Ichstag, he i\--[j-'in'd. I)r. lleln-rlch Aliicrt, unpliTisanTtTTonH't'ih.'rcd

Tn"Xn7erfaileda n dt h e ,

l o r on >."uVL'inlu'r HI' a n d K"i i " ^ « : ; n 'a cai.iiiel l i i . n iiu-lii 'it-.l .SU'i'.ii-:i.:,nu a.sfur t iLn inini«rt.-r :iu-j Mi.it W J S >--i.joil fV" ,:-":• v ."-. ; • . • . . : . -

C Hoo^bttn, pastor of tht "LittleChureh~Around the "Corner^ In XewYork; MaJ. Gen. Frank D. Baldwin; AB. Seelenfreud, International secretaryof B'nal BVIth; Senator Knute Nel-son of Minnesota; Mrt. Matthew T.Scott, D. A. R. leader; Enier«onHouch, author; Bishop Alfred Hardingof Washington.— I

Howard Snxby, lecturer; CongressmanJohn W. Rftlney of Chlcngo; SadieMartlnot, one-time musicnl comedystar; Hrlg. Gen. II. M. Robert; N. C.Wright, publisher of Toledo Klndo; DrJ. A. Macdnnold, former editor of theToronto-GlDbe-^_A..G.-WcbsLert. |ih>fsi-clst; Dr. T. N. Ivey, editor of South-ern Christian Advocate; Georpo Jay

sons killed by coMupse of n bridge at 1 G o u l d : Dr- ^'orena Zlerfeld. veteranmusical educntor; O. B. Halvorivn.Norwegian statesman; Capt. U. W.Baker, ship owner of Detroit; ex-Gov-

Kelso, Wash.; February 8, mine ex-plosion nt Dawson killed 320, and oneat Cumberland, B. C . killed HO; Feb-ruary IS, twenty-two patients ami | e r n o r J- v- KoHc of Missouri:three attendants were killed In Insanensylurn _on_._\Var_d!s; NewYork; March 10, Greek transport sankwith 1T.0 snldlors; April 0, thlal w^\c.s

"In"Corpa'ahil'Japan' killed" 000;14, Hot Springs Ar!;., partly

man Claude Kltchln of North Carolina.In June; Judge Thomas G. Wlndi's.

Chicago jurist; Pierre Loti, Frenchwriter; Maurice Hewlett, English nov-•<HstT-John McPnrtand; "president ofInterniitlonal Typographical union;

We Wish all Our ManyFriends and Vatron*

stroved by.ilnod and flre; Mav 17 t »'««! Cnrnoyer. American artist; Mil-^•vJntv-three killed In burning of a ' ™x* A d a i n ; - theatrical producer ofschonliiuuse at Cl,voland. S. C ; June j C h

tl r a « ° ; M w n r d «" P « l c r * 6 e " l p I n r '

10, disastrous il.mds in Kansas, Okla- | I n . ; 7 u l y l * • _ * : Marchmont, Engl.shnn.] Colnrado; June 15. UHJU- novelist; Dr. J. G.-Klernnn, allenl-* of

.m^^-^;^r r;r,T7;^. ;;7 """"""rrTl • samis-of-I 'ers an« k cd hv earth- ' " • J S I S h 0P JiDei tea, nnu .\Uain s t f^erwn •! 1m h . . , , . * , ton in • Mr« p , . , , , ,. . /• . . niiiikf'S" J u n e IS «ff»v*»ml tnwiK ih> i U I 1 ' l l l*« «*1"S. Ojr i l !«o P r Wlll-.-l-r Marx li-, ! . T «f Mr"-Vt>i I h>* »ni;.!!nii ,,f Mt. K t n a ; An- . I - 1 « » " ' I ' l s t and wii

l" ';;";:: *\ 7\r ur]'"v ^ ' ^ ^ I L ; ^ , ; ' ; „„!:;• «•....„,„,;.- „:„.iiiii 't t h a i iiu-Li'U-.l .•s)tU'.->.-:i.:,nu a.s , .... , • ' • ln.-*n rntni-.i . i . .r« H*.

-vcarr^=WESr::TUiJy-citT-jrritr'I - —Tr^

nishop James Ryno-o£—Al-:rus McCormlck, phllwidow of harvester

Admirul de HonRuprome court Jus-

,ni' !,.Pllv . l a : : . . ^ ! l,v uVh» ' I l n ' W i l l l l U " I t : ! > : ' - v : »el. (*» " i n C «< l h ' .•22, iii.ii:..;>-.|..i(rr-tJrntj' m V- I n " ' n - r ^ " r : i ( 1 " > J i r ^ t wonutn s e n a t o r r t

'"--' J"' * *""'"• '-^nt.in L I I I IHT \V. Mott of Os-

' i - r . In. lfc Wilbur M«.fls*rr. 1*.

!:.j«rL!'•••y. r . .

H. GREENSPANSucceaaor 10 Greenspan

122 Main St. Phones 536, 13 Rahway

and Thursday,January 2nd and 3rd

LargeBlue Label

JKetshupL-bottle

Hotne-MrSAUSAIlink or Looi

of Linden, wore mtrr'.fdDecember 26, at : E. Pauls Church,by Rev. H. A. U wdtler. Tho bestman ww Hash ii lannon. of ESSCJC

street, while the br ilenniatd was MissJenny Uurko. of JLongworth streot,Newark. j

The bride was p e n In marriageby hor father. Th«| bride's dress w uof coral flat crepe [and she carrjed ashower bouquet of frhlle roses, sweetpeis *nd narclssui The bridesmaidwore a dress of orchid fltt crepeand carried a showir bouquet of pinkroses'and sweet p<is.

After the ceremtny tho member*«t both families accompanied tbebridal party to be home of the•brides sister. Mrs. William Robinson,at Linden, where i e wedding sapper•was serted. The hiuse was decoratedIn Christmas array

The bride and ibride groom wOImake, their homef in Spartenburgh,S. C. where the troom holds a re-sponsible position with the RoyalManufacturing Company, of this city.

LAT^IVE

GROCERIES

Just received a car ofExtra Fancy

Baldwinics

Large Size16 qt. bsk.

This Special ior

AT THE EMPIRE' T h e Little Church Around the

Corner" Is the big feature attractionat the Enipin* Theater for Mondayand Tuesday of this week. The cas tIncludes such notable stars as Claire

sur.—Konnrth Harian,—WalterLong. Cyril ChadrJck nnd PaulineStarke. It Is conceded to be one ofthe greatest romantic melodramasever filmed and one of tho most in-tensely interesting of feature pro-duction.

Another great added attraction isLarry Semon In hU very l a t o s t " T h eMidnight Cabaret." '

For .Wednesday -'Lights Out" fea-turing Ruth Stonehouse. four acts ofvaudeville and Larry Semon in the"Midnight Cabaret" mako a most en-tertaining program.

For Thursday and Friday "Loyal!*" « VltMfir-ttflh SUUIT Special, a

—flmashlngrcraMilng-melodrama of thePostal Service.

Diver returning to derrick scow after boltlna auction of gas main under river.

or Interesting re«tures otthe Uylnx of a new sixteen-inchmala ua<ex the Hackeasack

from BofoU U Hack en a* ck. Just com-

surface of tb« rirer vaa let down Intothis box. To this pipe In he box thedlvor bolted the first secnon of theunder river main, making tho connec-tions »t* intervals of thirty-six feetfor the entire distance of 372 feet fromBogota to Hackensack. The separatelengths—three to a section—wereUolted togeluer in a derrick scowfrom which they were lowered intoihe rirer to the diver.

length welghinc ISrtO pounds. This makes two sixieen-inch main'. T h e main w*u laid on piling and running from no^ota to Hackensioh

caps placed In a dredged trench, undo: the r!v,-r. The first one wasThere was driven Into tals trench on [ lafd In IDIT. .mi a: that ifin* ":iiorotho Hackensack side a V u v y ti::i- > -,v;i« also a >*v;ve-:nch ma:n crossini;bered wooden box. clpM by I»;J f.iei i n:i-' r :h*» riyi«r. but ilils wa«: ttrokenA twenty-foot lonsth of plpt- Unix iii--i..-. a ^.iv..'rn:n>ni dr-.J^c.

ploted »y Pailic 8ervlc« Gas Comnaay, was tlie employineat of a diverwho weat 4«wm lato the river to bolttogether Ue tklrt#-rix toot sectiona.The pipe lime was laid at a depth oftwenty feet »elow the river surfao*.In each section t W e .ire three length*of heavy sUteen-inch cast Iron plp«,

l

Antiquity of the Cucumber,fh ld ^

tlie cucumber. It | s suppo 5 t t f tohare had Its t-rlKln In the Kur Kust

5

Reviser! y=M our s:?ckthere ail i!i

of men's mixture £..its—young men's models in-cluded.

- \

Mull Ontrr4 Hllfit

Roc :>RS~ P E E T "COMPANY

Broaduay HemM S^,at Htii St. "Fcur •: 3^th Su

ConvvnUnt • — •Corners" Fi t tn . \v».

at s'.^t Sufoil City

or

7/ •

T ^

ivi CE CORPORA 1OF NEW JERSEY

—Purchase terms are easy.

—Ten dQllars a month and upward may beinvested. ,

—Money paid on installments earns six percent interest.

—A mount of investment can be accommodatedto the amount of your savings.

—K pti] rn received-is^assured-and-is-at-an-at-tractive rate.

—Dividends are paid on regular days and bycheck, eliminating trouble and annoyance*

—Purchase of stock in this long-establishedenterprise offers an unusual opportunity forthrifty people to invest their savings safelyand in a way that will provide a sure return.

Sold Under

Ask Any Public Service • ' • - - -

V

• J '•

;

" 1 - •

, — — ' • ' - *

m*****WfJT

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mmmmzzs*

". Si-

' ItaiiwavTtecord, Tuesday. January 1,1924 T

Jersey AdvocateSERIAL NO. 1480

aft ts« Bsaw&y, N. J. Postoflk*CUM mstter. andsr it* tc t ftfdittT.

- GIBCULATIONPiMUked Taesdiyj « < Fridays

fithwiy-NbHsMm CtrporaUon

H. B. mOIXCtBOlf,

j . m. HOCGH.A . B B C C B COOK*

FOUI6N ADVERTISING 2EPBESENUUVESKEV JEKEY MOGHMRBOOO WEWWAPEK. 1

NEWYOttKV-KEWAtK.N.J.

TUESDAY, JANUARY l r 1924

Bible Thought Today

POOR GRACEA prominent San Fr&nclsco citizen

n a recent public address allegedhat because of a "fire Insurancerust" San Francisco staggered underv heavy burden, and that money paid

for Insurance premiums, instead of re-maining at home, was distributed allover the world.....The mythical "trust**was In his imagination |cynly. Nocity In the world has profited aolargely by fire Insurance paymentsas did San Francisco when it collect-ed on a $250,000,000 fire caused byan earthquake which in many in-stances would probably have nullifiedthe responsibility of tho insurancecompanies if they had wished to standon technicalities. They did not dothis—they paid the loss.

every fair-minded man rJg&rdleaa ofhie politics.

AMERICAN TELEPHONE SERVICE

"Nowhere else 1B there any suchtelephone development or good tele-phono service as in the United Statesand nowhere else Is the telephone somuch- uaed^sQ >vell used." ThTs.'state-ment has been heard before and willbe heard again. As the man whogazed in unwilling wonder at the shipin the bottle remarked, the troublewith It Is, It's so. When we feel likekicking at our telephone service it Istime to go abroad and try it there.One would nover kick again.

fire wipes out fifty-two blocks in Ber-keley and insurance money again re-pairs the damage. Supposing Cali-fornia had been loaded with state In-surance and such losses instead ofbeing distributed in companiesover the world, had been borne en-tirely by home people What wouldhave hnppcncd to insurance policies

: or insured or to taxpayer. One of the

all

othcr_^vQuldJia_vc^ugered_g^griiPhingThe fact that San

• over

W* have rid ourselves of moot orthe problem* of our uncostors. For

tbe other hand, we have a maae ofsocial and economic problems of which<rar ancestors never dreamed. For, In"solving** one problem, man usually

MOVING FARM TO TOWNTelephone statistics for the United

States show that of the 14,000,000 In-struments In tis», more than 8,000,000are on farms, and that of all the tele-phones In the world, OS per cent ireIn this country. We w e a nation ofquick conversational!*ts in the senseof speed even If we ar* not In bril-llanceT ThV telephone, plus tne auto-mobile, has transformed life on mil-lions of American farms, and has erad-icated much of the Isolation whichone* made th* farmer's lift a hard-ship. Between these two Inventions,now such coxnmonplatcfl In the dnllyroutine, the fanner not only Is able tocbmmunicnte on the Instant with theneighbors and with the town and city,but to receive and deliver his supplieswithout delay, as well aa to gad uboutto~hls~beurt*8~d Mire ~wttlrmother andthe kids, says the Cincinnati Times-Star* In other days the overworkedplow horse bitched to the old buggywas s slow means of transport, and

BABY CHICK MEN UNITETO URGE SQUARE DEAL

Development to -Immense propor-tions of the business of hatchingchickens has resulted in a movementof prominent hntchory proprietors toprotect the standords of the businessand tho Interests of buyers now scat-tered across tlio continent. The eom-Ins season will .see tho New JerseyBaby Chick Association fairlylaunched on this program, chieflythrough tho aid of Prof. \V. C. Thump-

of the poultry department ofState Agricultural College.

The association, which already in-cludes many ehiek-hatcherle?, aims toIntroilure a strict code of ethics in thobusiness, insist upon honest advertis-ing of their products, ami to generallypromote the interests of the hatcher-

son,

COMMUNICATIONSA TRIBUTE.TO MEMORY " - ^_Woj

OF LAT£ A. E. WOODRUFF

Editor Record:'Vi\o notice of the-death of Mr. A.

Kdward Woodruff awakened in the "minds oi his muny old aim! loyal .•friends, pleasant memories of the de-liKhtf«l-houra-flpent^inJUs_Jjauuy_aniL].[i_cultured homo. To fully appreciatehis many sterling qualities, one hadto have tho privilege of enjoying theIntimacy of his homo. His kind ho.s-pitality, sympathetic nature, ami hi?brilliant mind, which was a storehouseof knowledge, endeared him l»> his

friends.Mr. Woodruff was a graduate of

Princeton and traveled extensively

.nlhwny •*!*«»• m o r o * e e D l y ""I"** 1 'hi tho comtJtfHy. In n l 8 church, and

pt,i".'• V - • • • • r ' • • ' •

RahgayBecord, Tuesday, January 1,1924

AN OLD FRIEND.

creates several now ones. Only ono \ its'Speed set the pace for all farms ofproblem never changes—food supply- communication. What with his 3,000,-Stomach and its appetite seems 1m- 000 telephones and millions of motormime against progress. Our legacy core, the modern farmer Is broughtto the future should be scientific o«ri- strictly up to the minute in nmny of

not In this hut In Ku

state accredited hatcheries, with regu-lations that would give- distant buyersevery protection, guaranteeing haby-Jchicks truo to name and feather

uppra l r i l to him for he lp who did

not it in full He was one

PEADTHE RECORDCALIFORNIA FIND

S OF INTERESTMore

i norrf Dnticred h»U fmcked meir waylnto|p"«Hwsl"n of the ccnirnl plateauof Ilex I co •' through more civilized

The viiguc but by nu meansuntnstworthy nntlve records of Mex-ico run buck two or three hundred

before the white iimn's arrivalaiitirevcnl tlio migration*! Into Mexico

P A i f a CANAL MAKES BIG•' GAIN IN TRAFFIC IH YEAR

I Synopsis Of Minutes Of "recommended that bids be rejected..Board of Freeholders' S a m e C o m m ! t t e e alB0 sported pur-

f r easure 1 rove.Born hy tin- sea. .-mall

t r easu re t rove u!i nj: li.c '••<In a small Inter ior t.>v.j, tIn the alli'y hehiml tin-

Resident William Street

l>-»rn

of ih,' mni.t patrlotir. ami one uf tinmost pnblir-spirlted men \v»- ever luuMj

i in till- community. Nothing wn>- imiljlv)\ trouble if it wan for th- c*u»lItaliway. -And uo man e\i-r l»lft

4 4 1

insurance wasworld saved insurance companiesfrom bankruptcy and consequentlysaved

culture and conservation of forests, ! the advuntftges which were to be found s o r i s

Franc 1 scOV 8 o i l fertility and other natural re- • oniy in tbe "crowdeST"piucos?ttnr

ifr\ * * -y ' . ' '

GREETING TO 1924:-Thc-Lordbless thee and keep thee TheLord make his face shine uponth.ee.and be gracious unto thee.The Lord lift up "is countenance I proniiunis fromuDon thee, and give thee peace. j ^ p n y i n B t h ( , firp i o ^

Francisco Ray district. If San Frnnri*co-paid-*5.Q00.000 a vcar in promi-: ^ i t r o r j - ..storting...point" for the cal-

to insurance companies, it would j c u l « t l o n |B D o t explained, unless It -••

uponNnumhcrs 6: 'H-2G.

Someone hns figured that since thrSan Francisco. The Insurance! discovery of America In 1492. $13,000,-

tln- nst or "the world I 0 0 0 ' 0 0 0 h n s h w n t n k e n o u t o f t h e

sses for the San! "^^d's gold mines. Just what pur-pose ls served by making thla date an

'ALWAYS PIONEERS'Tiwiuatrv IK stabilized by ellmlnat-l u m s . . , . .Industry ^ ^ ^ a Q d i n . | t a k L i l i f t y o r s i x t y y t f n r 5 t 0 r o p a y l t s i t o empbTsixe that, m tne rew

II r<

LITERARY EARNINGS AGAIN.Each year wo siv old nv'ords shut-

ALARSl"STAT10NSJf12—Main and Cherry13—Harelwood anc Leesvllle Av,uu-

S

'hazard" for wage

tered ami new un..- .-^uit'i.>!.»•*!,the Christian S.;.-.i. v M.<nii«T. T<the iiltitmle nvt-n! !*••- return^ ii[>i»uliterary fiuleuvor »i«p*';trs to he heldhy. ...the. reported . $-100,000 j»nid .to

for liis fortheninlnWilliam Hoi:rnr...llern

, i :,s i IT—Main nnd Cnir.n-.trce Street*ti.*iV i 1G—New Brunswick and Lako AM" ;. [ 22—Hazelwood and Jaque* Avenue*

I 24—Maple and

i n g M O * - « » « * . - • • • " " i

Some big employers a r e j O n c

25—Milton Avenue and Bryant31—Campbell and Cherry

.. [32—Grand Street and *SL Ocore-o Av—433r^MaIn _Sl^e«.t _aiid KlUabeta Av*- |35—Grand and frTing Streets ~

vestor.adopting a form of unemployment In-surance that "guarantees full pay fornot less than 4S hours per week ineach calendar year." unusual circum*stances excepted. Thus Is the wagehazard practically eliminated. Thedividend earning power of invest-

3 has been stabilized through thexuentsplan for customer and employeeownership ot the stocks and bonds ofgreat industrial organizations. Witha job insured and with dividends in-Bured, workers and Investors In anIndustry are not good subjects forlabor and political agitators.

The customer ownership.. Idea waspioneered In 1914 by the Pacific Gasand Electric Company of San Fran-cisco. Today this company has 29,-182 stockholders, 79.6 per cent ofwhom live In California.

In 1915 the Byllesby Company made326 sales of preferred stock; 1923 willshow some 20,000 sales. During thenine-year period the total numberof sales was 78,465 representing 417,-506 shares of stock, while 62 per centof the 5,408 Byllesby employees areshareholders In the Company properties.

The Commonwealth Power Corpo-Tatlbn'lh 11 months of 1923 sold ap-

Agitators favoring slate insuranceshould look at tho figures from Illi-nois where out of $10,000,000 paid inpremiums by Illinois citizens, $3S,O00,-000 remained in the state, while out

! of tho $2,000,000 remaining, com'panies made 1 per cent :is underwrit-ing profit.

memoirs. Mr.rles that huve intervened, the United ' .fs a l p r e S ) . n i the -runner up." wiih a 42—Milton Ave. sxd Montgomery SiStates has held on to a t least - he r : recor(I variously reported from $I:H>.~J « - rGrand . Bond and Monroe Street*shar* of this gold, for m o » "than |ooo to . . U paid for his literary \ " ^ ^ ^$4,250,000,000 Is at present In the u t t e m p t t l l p r n V 0 himself un apostle ' 5 2 _ c h u r c h *nd Hamilton Street^treasury und the various banks of ' Of peace suiToumli'il hy misltsl nml

mlFtmldluK e<um>.-l"rs. Krom thisthe man \trtlm s*re«-t may nmchlyestlnmte Unit a priine minister still

Nearly every one wants to live to •' t n p o W 0 r may l>e \;il-,;ed nt the equlvu-

America nnd tn active circulation Inthe country.

THE MESSAGEApparently I'rosident Coolidpo, like

General Grant, will fight out a cam-paign along the line he believes isright. His message is simple andstraightforward. In his discussion ofnational Issues he considers the pub-lic interest ahead of his personal po-1

Iltical ambitions. He caters to no'class to secure votes. He adopts Sec-retary Mellon's plan for tax reductionwith unqualified approval. He (loosnot sidestep the bonus issue to whichhe is opposed, but he advocates ade-quate and generous treatment for dis-abled former service men. He favorsa world court with "reservationsclearly indicating our refusal to ad-|

be very old. By right living and rlglitthinking, the averupe person shouldlive to 100. The average person fallsto reach 100. largely because he com-mits slow suicide. Every time a mantakes a drink of bad liquor, he snipsmonthB and possibly years off his life.Slow suicide comes In many otherways, especially overeating. Yon knowthe formula for old ag«. But are youliving up to the rules? If so, you ajreexceptional.

61—6t. George Ave.. KICBOT Corner€5—N J. Reformatory53—Grand and S/

( (H t l 'OK \ T | I I N \ O T I I I'.

!'•• . i r . l

lent of two kniuer- In re t i rement , but J r . - : '• ! N I

this conclusion d«v» not throw greatIllumination upnn the value of thework of contemr<.r:iry litterateurs,whose reputations h;i\e l»cvn galnetl

bv their pi-ns. without the aid

!•• 1 . 1n »• "r, i . ! ! . i ;

f - i t l t - t ' i : >• . : ! » r •_-... r . '

I 'Ullh M WH.I.lAMS.)'i!y O.-rk

KILLED OFFJHE MASTODONBurton Mound, a small hllltx-k ly-

ing some t£0 yunbi buck from theocean beach near Santa Barbara, Cul.,has become one of the focal points ofirorld scientific Interest bj reason ofths discovery there of skulls andopear heads said to b* those of paleo-lithic man.

Instantly UM words "Santa Barbarasun" •prang into being, and If theIdentification by Dr. J. P. Harrington«f Smithsonian Institution withstandsalnut« examination of the materialthe Santu Barbara man Is dertlnml tof u s e equal to that of the Neanderthalman. the Plltdown man and the Heidet-bsrg man* _.

>t i ; . i r n \ - i v

AN

anil

An average of. more than oo« sav-

IT an American novelist writes some-thing which strikes the public fancy [ "J"1 ™*\he yields to tbe temptation to exploit | .^';'r'll

i

th« money value of bis reputation and . Vl\:r"v,,: "pours om an Incredible amount of | J >( 'J- Jmediocre writo: at »o much a word, j • *--

All Oriliiiiirn-r In \ in iltr tli.it 1*nt Di.tLi-'> luitir, I.)iitK llr(ii<-rrIttitrj;.. \ifinj)> unJ -I'irTiiiuil iLTr• IIOUII uiiil l^ild UIIHII un Mnpi <( itj of iLilmnv. l;nl«- l>> ihr Co mm IT% Anpiilntrd |ti IJ»> Oul >trrrl*.

In tlir City of

f th«*

ri. u»* ! . h . - » t i

ings account for every family In the _ . „ . , " , .TTT.-^ o» . . . JI • j i «._*. i ! W ^ 0 l l Is probable that want of pow-Unlted States Is indicated In partial : . , . ».. ., . . _ . . . .. . . fc. ! er has more to do than anything elsedata for the country, compiled by tbe - , . . . , „ M . . . . .

. . , , , , . ^ . . t with the failure of American novelUtssavings bank division of the American , A . , . ,

! to turn out more books of lasting

I Lt / f lw I A» f iu it»Tii ;i:nl i - C"«'<1t..- i ! th.-ri-f-.r-

nri! .n I t-\ Mi.

Bankers' association, revealing more worth, there la something In the over-here to Th^League^of *Xaiions7 Hej tha,I?..%000J000 ^ . f ^ ^ ^ J S ' exploitation" theory, says "the Indlanap-discusses tariff, railroad and prohlbi-.tlon questions without evasion and]

nml:n.»i-j

U i

i l A \ f n i i i - l u - >.K •• . t t u l - t i ' . i i l . ]

>t i"..iiniit»j.i..n- '

th«

addition, there are at least 10.000,000 s o ) l g N e w f c B n t b Q c k o f | t a l l u t h e

does not straddle on any issue.He makes a direct appeal for the1

other owners of savings accounts ofvaried forms whose numbers cannot

> be reduced to definite flpures.

.-».! S.|Most of " • • ' i"

i

Drozlmately $5,500,000 preferred toj farmer and suggests remedies for hiscustomers and employees. Since troubles. He would limit immigration

referred has-been sold, to 2S.000 cus- tional amendment he would prohibittomers and employees. Alabama! further issuance of tax-empt bonds.Power Company sold over $5,000,000

The army air service sends the an-nouncement out from Washington

habit of superficial writing,the ephemeral books turned out are j i.the product of credulous writers com- jpletely misted- by the__glumour of JAmerican prosperity. They write jabout sleek people and shining cities, :

"the "ornaraT»nts~'df

T i i . l . t . - • - >

I : i v - • H I

• . . f t ! i . - I!C:ih-,v.iv

JAMES H. ITHHKK.

K i. rnrr.Ks.K I ' S S K I . r . S- I l o

n:i:i> M WM.UAMS.

lie would dispose of the

car.nrcferred stock to customers in last : Shoals project and instead of makingtwo years ; Consumers Power C o m - i t V compensation the government re-

11 ,.^« •;:; nnn nnn tn 9 COO ceives from It the paramount issue,!pany sold over o.OOO.OOU to J,wv}^ l t n . n ; . n n . i n , c i j Another indication that there Is anMichigan residents. The Public S e n - V would have adequate covenants in,\nr. rnrpnrniion of New Jersey offered ( t h e j e a s e o r j50.000 shares preferred to customers j IIIIK tlicprop.n., ^ . - . •_•• • - •_ -- • - plaintive Inquiry arising here and

oped which runs without a bumarf ( e r t J i n u n b n U t i t 8 l u M i y nnd soul. And

their novels ure written because theysell, whi'-h brings tho problem back to

Muscle1 P^o t* Some of our automobile driversseem to think they have that kind of a

! the market and reflects no creditthe tuste of the country.

Every DriverAn Escort

occasional trend Imrk to the pood old , One of the most interesting

50.000 sh p ,March 1. allotments not to exceed 20: c^sful

^ a U t ^ | B ,

ro - r:y ^ all u.r r U ^ I l ,tom-lUMon . xP rum nu

shares, and on the first day 1S.947customers subscribed to 75.174 shares,It is estimated that today more than]2O0U.of the

produce, low-priced nitrates for thedirect benefit of f i i rnw^r———

o U 1 . f u , h l o u e d buckwheat

In writniB Inn

new examples they supply of the fab-

ulous luxury of tin* 11 _: >* j * * i. i n kin:;*.

Apparently it tnx.-*l the Inp 'nu i ty to

^uvPitt-^imuKh khi'i^ oi ••rnnnii-nts :tnd

furnl-hln^-s !•• u-.- \i\> \h>- rlr!u*s In

from i

"Powder Efcer"A celluloid-history of the WorfcWar, out of

the vaults of the U. S. Government^

Come and ^ee the "Yanks" in thefiur great bat-tles that proved the quality of jte AmericanSoldier— . \

Cantijrny Chateau-ThierrySt. Mihicl The Arfenne

See with your own eyes the local h<{y go "overthe top." This will bt? your only chaire to see thispicture.

BENEFIT OF MULVEY-DITMARSVETERANS OF FOREIGN WAR^OFII. S.

F)ST NO. 681

Empire TheatjerMonday and Tuesday

January 21 and 22•

estimated that today more man, •••* ^ - •• • ; I t iB reported that the emotions of furnMl!n;-s ,,, u,,. n , ( tI l l. r l P i u . s in ;000 people own the securitltos j Gooli.lpc-rnnmtMl t.i hr c o n s i d e r s all, ^ ^ ^ ^ , 3 ^ ^ . s t I r r e d w h c n ^ ; n H ,„,„,,. l h n l „„. r n ! l n , r I : t s . ]

P public utilitites of this country.; the penplc. not aii> one cUs> or an> ^ a b d i c a t c d . Almost anybody who pu<l..e<is,.,, I t h.^ bvCn t.sl.:iJ1,tl.,d tLat ;eae r u m p l e s . i U ^ t r a t c ^ o a L J n i - . Q n c J ^ l J ^ y - J ^ ^ l ^ cimraua m e y ^ ^ ^ e ^ j ^ ^ p - y ^ r - r n r T f f m . t h p h,,.!,i<m' nf'tln. -re- ' i .vnMin.rnf-;dustry is stabilized and real "publicj stating his. convictions

ownership" established without bur-; " 'm-rp.^^—^P.vi.tiP militiaHHiHiiiiniHHiiiHiiiiiniiititiiin»ittti:tiiHttntiitttin»:ittnTtTiitnmttttnttmmTffltr-

have always boon pioneers. They, F a m o U g Q z a r k QomAry DeSeV,VeS to B e KUOWU

•tni-n

Tn I.

havo stabilized industrial activity J>-y |makiiiK it possible for people- servedin a KiWn terrilury tn own tUey)roper-Mes rendtjring the service

HELP THE BIRDS

,_,,. for Its Glorious Scenery1 By JOHN T. FARIS, in "Seeing the Middle West,"

But the Oiark country, famous as it is for ii* load aiul ironthe

pymmM

In* i.'f'<:i'!.

:i!--r for ••(••

ur jHis- - . In

-.;::i.m h•-•::.«>

Millions of dollars are lost to ;igri-1 rinc, desen'ea to be even better known for its glorious six

insect

every y-ar through harmfulTin* birds an? thoir natural;They also di.-stroy tlk- seeds'

of '.vet'd-. act a> scaven^crH. and inthe winter ••at iln* <'KK anil grubs-ofiii.sectn. .Must states bavins ornltholo-Kiyt= 'have requested that personakindly disposed toward birds placefocid'in their usual haunts. The coldB'-aumi i* \LHVQ and. witirrekulaY"aup~ply uf food cut off, the birds are now

tb<j period in which there,great danger of extermination bystarvation. Although tho songsters

uni form s u m m i t leve ls ; its curious sink IH-U'S, due to ev-iiiips-ing cavern roofs in the l imestone country of (he uii?:; its cave? fur; : • .south and west , where onyx deposits are plent i ful ; its great i^ii!.::v v : - -flerve in Taney c o u n t y ; its diwippearing strf;uns; its ?pr i : ;^ down inOzark and Shannon counties, some of them the-large^t in the wwrld; *rt~"unusual water power on rapid, rock-walled streams, the p<»i>i!iiliti':- ••;'which are revealed by the dam and plant of the O/-ark Power aud W.it.-;*

-company, -on W^ite-River , -near-For*ythe.—:— :—. — -

hard put TO liml U

Now Y<<rl; Sun.

pu.;r:.i.h>' luhor pr

>• In I - ' u r i ' i ' . -

> l ; i : u iy rn l l -

Iilr-i; ..f | . u r -

] ' l l 11 V ; i « T

•••llfuHx MI)

w !int I '^ypt

,':<:* Su t.'liL'iip-

• •':!<^fS w e r e

;I . s : iys tli •

; w ; . s t i n

FRAHME'S REMOVAL »FFER!WE ARE NOW LOCATED Afl

r\i?. Thinking Fellow

s a Yellow

inThe beautiful Ozarks me the most centrally located

the United States. They covor a region larger than Knjrland in fivt;

Missouri, Arkansas, Oklahoma, Kansas and Illinois, though the greater | levcl-hcndod than the professionalportion is in Missouri. There they comprise practically half the state. j spot-li^ht posers, knows it ls tn:i\

He ra':.-»s .out clti;-on*-li:p papers nttl.- jie.. nj- ninety-:.lx— l>r. .I:imcs H.'W."Wjird. H-- snys he 1ms prni-tl'-ei] hNprnfessinn ri 11 over tbo world. :HK1 thathe hi'T.nies a citizen of th»- TiiltoO

-ina'-i_^caUiie. l ' lL la .tlu!_'ju!y_cwiutr.y. .wltJi k*i-nttlne liberty of ihoupht amiedunttlitn." Crubs will sneer nt this.Hut the average person, beiun murt;

have migrated, tho ones remainingjl£EliLVii_Oll&njii>«I_... 1 . . i i r , . l L - , ,*

A little grain will do much 10 rc-j country—though eome of the people who live there <lo not think so. It

p y jFortunately, the name of this highland district is'as pleasing as the | Amorl,-a Is not perfect. Hut, Uikon as

- a whole, it is nearer perfect thnn any

lievc the birda' distress during thewinter. Or, if this Is too much trou-ble, table crumbs thrown to them willbe welcome. Watching the cat willalso be appreciated, and this Is smallenough compensation for services

Tcndered^WTieeTrng, oW7~VaTTllgencer.

sounds like an Indian name, but it isn't; in vain philologists will geek itsderivation, until they have the simple key; it is a contraction of theFrench "Aux Area." In early days, when travelers spoke of going to theFrench port on the Arkansas, they said, briefly, they were bound "AusArcs." With eaae thi« expression was contracted to Ozarks. At first tho

"hew words meant ttie~Biver Arkansas, then ife basin, next the highlandsnorth of i t

RADIO EDUCATES THE PEOPLE•The educational value of the radio

to families in their homes and on thefarms IH becoming more fully appre-

•elated. From one Western broadcast-ing station people In 113 uffies andtowns, and thousands of farm homesin the country enjoy daily entertain-ment. Lectures from great educa-tional centers scattered over thirty-one statea\are heard from one super-statiW A family in FVrmlaU', Call-

* lornlo, henrs concert*, from Portland.Oregon. and~farmer.i at~LlvnTgst6ne,Honta&Ar_ enjoy concerts, from Des

other country. .Be thnnkful for occa-sional grumbling. It Indicates n de-alre for perfection, the only force thatcan bring steady improvement

One out of every el^ht persons Inthis country will own a motorcar this

The Coward May Be Merely a Person WithSmall "Glands of Combat"

year. The prophet wrote, you remem-ber, that the chariots aholl rage In thestreets, they Bhall Jostle one againstanother In the broad ways, they shnllseem like torches nnd they shnll runlike the lightnings.

HAVE THISLABEL

Appear on AilYour Printed WorkOriU'rfil nnd paid for by RnM

Typographical t'nlon No. 235.

The pleasure, that a whole family>ts frc/jn nationwide music and l o c |

-by-tfe -th«t;

; •--- By DR. ADOLPH LORENZ, FamouB Surgeon.

We are hearing much nowadays about adrenalin. The quality thatmakes Borne men ready for a fight or a frolic is due to the "glands ofcombat," the adrenals.

Once thought to be merely little lumps of fat, they were later foundto take a very important part in the play of life forces. The active prin-

-oplerOr-honrione,-of this gland is adrenalin. It U thrown into your bloodin a steady stream when the sensation of fear conies. Nature thus makesan effort to flood your body with the chemical basi* of courage.

The cownrd, then, may be merely a person deficient in a reserve' stockvaluable substance ol ttlu'di-valor-ia-madfe^-We-k&ow-cei tain niun

they li»v*( b c c n

• u.,:. .

who nrVftlu-nys n\ \y to flinp thein.H'lvfs into a slugging match,even beforethe chip if knul <] off their fchouMert.

American travelers, according to thoNow York World, spent S200.000.000In Europe last year, n.s much morefit Atlantic City nnd $3rw>.000.000 inFlorida. Travel broadens the smileson the faces of the hotelkoepefs.

The Washington Post tlilnkH we aregettinR near the last lap of tho ttnp-per, but the Post doesn't know thospecies. The flapper changes Itsclothes, but It never become* "exilnft.

FOR TABLE USE

Churned Fresh Daily

AN ECKERSONPuro Food Product

After much v.ork and careful preparation we .Trf-. w In a petitionto serve your needs at cup new and permanent Jcatlon. Perhap*your t run needs repairs or It Is wear ng out, -f so ;

LET US_SAVE YOU 10% ON A NEW T.LSS.By duplicatlna your old one we save you this b cur usual very

low prices. And if you wilt call we wil! nl.idly n fcr necessary re*patre-on ycur old'trtna free of Cio^gc if pcrcJjuce -you-ar* notsatisfied with the truss which you bouQht of us. reritnber cur Qtee nnd dc not fail to let us made rcod, ]

YOUR DOCTORS ORDERS ARE CAREFULi,* FILLED.

HAVEFRAHRE

Hit-YODRNEEDSNOW

Abdominal Supoorters, Orthopedic Cor-sets, Orthopedic Braco», Elastic Hosiery,Belts, Surgical Corsets, Arch supporters,etc.

Invalid Chairs and Crutches Sold and Rented.WE MAKE AND FIT ARTIFICIAL LIMBS.

HENRY F R A R33 Broad Street

TREE AUTO4 SERVICE!

For out-of-townp*rons or thoseuwble t.- call,pkrne nrid.. askta our free autolevlce.

Above

ELIZABETH WishlngtonMarket

The Only Practical Truss Maker In Union CountyP H O N E 9 1 Q 8 ' HOURS:8 A M. TO 7 P. M.

I Emernency Calls for Eveninns md Out I

of Office Hours-Phone E l l w b i

un MUH Men Inno n»>w the circular letters-you Uiro\V-In y»>ur wuHtebankct will Imvo a new

JOHN WOLKECarpenter and Builder

general Contractor

T ltphone 67-J,R^hway, N. J .

Ik Of Kan Coming t0 :Th4w conquernl the pfldtic itnd ino'rira Ppnm Asia t duirlnus iWf'piM who had built hucoerica rrom MSia. '--ImUH'ond other Important nrchl-

il works, peoples whose folk-lot* contained i~wen-dPv"*loped~»toryof j thr Creation and who used picture

tin*. Ajtec picture writing andAltec calendar with Its cyclesed after various nnlmaU point un*

tably toward n Mongolian origin,h In Mexico ami Japan the Asiatic;ln of Mexicans has nrelved offl-

okJ - rvoogni tloo,—There - Is -no - reasonti dooht that the North American In-

n and the Uexlonn rome from tbeme root.

Movsd Faster In Old World.Htre arises one of the most Inter-tlnf speculatlnns In history. If tbenta Bnrbara man ti true Cro-Mag*-

on"he" wii~t~niprilifr'or'a'"gfne<rit bad a rich nn<! uparlous continentIts disposal for more than 25,000

fears. Yet thing* did not movt htrta* twiftly M th-57 did In Korope. -or-la

-tffititf^ ICfypi or Chlm or TndU,

Nets $12,063,880 in 1923, aGain of Nearly S3,0GOfC00

as Traffic Increases.

A ri'Kular mf.-etln^ ofchaso of new

Union! 801-20. "

of;__hte flnd m Oo-Mar-opeos tb« fate to all mamier of

ecuUtlooc Tt» Cro-people succeeded the Noan-

4«rth»itr» jwujhe mftMtn o/Europ*

folk withfcods. equal in cranUI empadty to OOJ

authority oot . u lhnpolocy . . t w . . . o |them: "So f.r as the meaul powe|of thm* men U rwealed b r

msttw. The difference b«tw«enand Spaniard when they faced Yartother at Mexico City 400 years ago

measure the fabsfre of the Cro-In America

l t s

| I f e K m S winm* rather thanx l h ( r wfatte man arrived.

fllready-luid paaedof ^^^^^ b<?fonr n .

„ t h e S f « l c a n confederacy

uf the l'ufimim Omnianil auxllliiry a«»'nrleH <lurlnj; the lis-u l >eur ended June :JO, l'j^t, wererccord-br<*uk:n^ In vdluinc butli im tofinancial returns 10 tlit- Unlti-d .-laH'Sjoverument und aid midert-d worldililpplnt;, tlm uiinual report nt (Jov-ernor Morruw, mudp publl'.- in Wash-ington, shown. f

Th« cunal netted a profit of $12,-063.880 ~from~~nU~ so arc e s r ~ c i eludingtbe I'ananm Itnilroud Stvamship line,as compared with 59,201,013 in thefiscal year 1022, and traffic operationsIncreased on a scale that hun brought

water way to a point of "rapidly*OT«Chauling the Suez canal."

C>*unty Heard of Krcenoldtrs waslit-Jd ;:! thr Court linus*"1. K!lzab(:th,ion Thursday. D.-crml^cr 20th, 1023, at

Holl call Hiio'.v- -1 (.-iKlituL'u mf'mbiTHIircsf-nt. fuiir uhst'iit. Minutes of thoin-.Mip.r of I>ri'trn!)cr tilh VVCT-J ap-proved. All \ti\ih pi'fSunLcd were readand oi: roll call crdcr^d paid.

ConnmmU-atiuii:- from the StateHighway l*i*pnrt:nt.'nt, statinR thoamount allutti.-d -o f'hi^ cuunty fromMot-r Vehicle Fund:; was Jsri.nfA.OO.Alsn lliat l iny acc'-jit-'d the complotodwork on Sprin^lii.-ld avenue, N'ewPn»'. i(lt.-ii(:i'.

A copy of a reriolutlun pushed '>ytli" __Clty_of_ I'lal!iti«-Id__ri' _ _ _pnTj7o?fJ~\vi)r(t mi "K;fst Frontwas referred to th** Koad Committr-e.

The n*port of the auditors formonth of Novemht-r ,wa^ r e c e i v e d andfiled. Hoad Conunltiee reported re-r.eipt of bids for tiifcn pcwt«. etc.. and

roller at cost of $5,-

Committee reported thatBoard of Managers of Bonnie BurnSanatorium would take over controland management of County Farm.

The committee on wall at West

Report of the Road Committee re-garding proposed road work for 1924,Which was laid "over from the lastmeeting was again taken up and onmotion approved.

Director was authorized to sign a!release "to Georgia' Caaualfy~"Co." fordamages done to Eastman street

The budget for the year 1914 w utaken up and approved. FinanceCommittee recommends certain trans-fers from tho road account to otheraccounts. '

Board adjourned to meet on Moo-

IJrook and Wood avenue recommend- bridge, Cranford, upon receipt fromed that it be constructed at a cost of the Insurance company of check cov-

da~y;"T)e<:emher ~"31st~I923, whichtime a public hearing will be held onthe budget.

BENJ. KING, Clerk.

In 1023. as compared with W,400,674the preceding year. The uet profitsfrom auxiliary operations totaled

r whileas jtnose conducted -by the Panama llall-road company, excluding tb« Kteam*ship operations, showed a profit of1922.171 against a loss of $710,301 in1822.

Gorernor Morrow's report alsoshows that, the number of commercialtransit* Increased from 2,736 to 3.907,art-tuonaft. from. 11.41T.4A9 to 18.00ft,-78fl. tolls from $U.10T.832 to $ 17,50ft,-

J~1©G and cargo tonaag* from l(jffi4p 10to

r j E a m „ t h e S f « l c a n confederacybrain »tnjrt«r» th.y were quite « p 4 j w h c n Ccria .pp^red was not whath\e of hlfher educstloo.

Art Work* Fouad In Pranu.In the Cro-Macnon c«vej In Frmnot

w»re found spirited reproductions ofnammotti and relntleer. whlfh wrftthe chief MMircm of food ond clothlnfla tho** days. Tticae plctarra an* do»'with a r-rerisloti and fertlng for act!«athat dttuonntrati* their antb^rs tohave l>een !»nrn Artists, men of Iraac*teatloo mn(\ sensibility as veil as oftactual still.

Ts* Idea that men of tWs choicebreed hmd oocr ro«med Americ*. tkstth»y may been rt«pooilNle forthe Orrnt HrrprnI mound in A damncounty. Ohio; tbe "efflcy** monad* InWisconsin, tbr Mrxlnn pyramids andother my*l«rtoua clfts to America fromthr past, la b j no meso» new. It v uadvanced wben ibe Oxark refWi pro-dnc#d frscn 1U dep4tu carrvd boo*rrllcs hljrbly raccestlve of Oro-Mac-

oricin aad picturing (be mas to- iprehistoric d««r and otter ant- j

mals. iSince that .dUcuitty CDMIT anthre- (

poloftfU b«T* frfc that It W«J ramij {* queMlosi ot time nntfl more definite 'trace ot the artist w u dl»co*rred Inoar Mil. To th*t extent m« flfccotttf

Sassta Bart«ra man ls t t e foi-tat «t* a psvmtoe. -

'It U issiaiBlii bstieTvd ttstf tbe Cro-

It bad been. Old civilisations hadpassed away, leavlnc ruins granderthan the llvlnjr could achieve.

W h j this failure of a talented niceto prepress as nwlftly In the NewWorld as In the Old? Was It because,thotich gifted In many w a y s j t bickf(Jpolitical M'DM-? Tho an*wer ma^ thm?day be wrung from the »-urtb and in-terprvted by the wise men to Ul. or to

descendant*. Kur this busLicus ofout tin* far t? of the l>nf ago

Is s jTAilnr concern, likely to (nntfnueaa lung an tn»-n nnd uonmn reuuln at•11 curious atraui Ibr l r

"Tlie phenomenal growth of th«past year," tl^e report continues, "Isin s sense abnormal. It In doeprimarily to the development of oilfields In southern California, whichhare supplanted Mexico- as .thp prin-cipal *ourc<? of BUpplv for the KnstemSeaboard of the Knlte-d S ;MPR. Atthe clo*e of the jv.tr ( June 'Mi, 10'JTt)oil Is furaUMng" 00 per cent <•? t h t

Real Estate for SaleOO YOU WAWT TO SELL YOUR

PROPERTY?I handle all kinds, large, small, lm-

sroved, or otherwise, fio charge, forlisting. My buyers act quickly. A.WtilTZv~~REAL ESTATE "ANB ' IN-SURANCE, M WEST MILTON AYE-SUE, OPPOSITE RAHWAY STA-TION. nuyl5-tt

Money to Loan

ROOSEVELT STATUE GIVENTO CITIZENS OF MINOT, N. D.

Th* Unli.Mi .States mndeest gains," Th* report says, ".ncrens-Ing from l.i«:«r. ves;««-ls Tn 1.D0-T :indcarrying ":•?..:> I» r rent <>'. rt'e enr^o'moving thmuzh the ctinal, I'.rltlfUiwin 2fl.2 per <vf-nt. Japnnnso 4.SNorwegian 3 A "

The moir nntahle lncreu^»* was Inthe rnl ted S!nt«*s Inter-r^-stal trade,whirh lnrr*»n5*Ml fr«*n 2.'*?1.7>'Zt tonsto

V!ONEY TO LOAN on bond andmortgage. Hyer &: Armstrong,Rah way National Bank Building,Rahway. N. J. octl2-tf

al Estate tor RentKOR RENT—At Avr-n.-l Park. hnu?-o

six rooms ami tuith. all improve-ments ; r«-nt $4f>.00; thr"*.- minut*-^to P. R. R. station. Inquir- H. A.Tul t le . Proeppct avenue, Avenpl.N. J . dec2S-2t

it be a prosperous onefull of bealtb anb bappiness

•art. fr«d Prtrfaaaor Euntasjton

and Eotttfta agspear In strata at•6.000 y e m aid mod perbapa olderthan tha t

As the usual era assigned ta theOro-slagnms tn Kwope Is taywtwrefrom 1.1.000 to 5O.OOU yean ago tbe aa-•vmptlon ls that noe brmocfc of thatgnat family waoder^d ea«t t» Sarnpe.whUt tb* other mored weat to Amcr-

I - Itpd N^^g7*-~tf»

COLLEGE GIRL IS HEAVIER

C«-*d HaiI t Growing Talltr and- Greater Lung Capacity.

The col l ie clrl b* growing. Sine*lSS4-ffhe-haR sprouted u r average* nfone and thn-^t.iiths Inches. She al*oIs pmtlnc iHi wrlght, her waist meas-urement Is larger and even her lungcapacity has Improved.

The-v AdTAncemej^s are based oastatistics c-ii-mri-n-d at Vas*ar colle-ce inNew Tort by Mlw Uab«J Newcomer.eeooacniM d*^«rtm«nt.- from measur*--pents Ufcrc hy the de-pa rtmtnt gf

VOW RENT—Carat;.* on Main street.Inquire H. Robin«on. 130 Mainptreet. d. c2S-2t

I1 Rooms to Let; TO LET—'> rooms on West Grand

street: gas. water and toilet. Iu-quire H. Robinson. 130 Main street.

dec2S-2t

For SaleUSED CARS

1020-22 Ford Tourings1921-22 Ford Sedans1921-22 Ford Coupes

AH with .-Uarters1922 Chevrolet Tourings1923 Chevrolet Tourings

RahwayNational Bank

Under Supervision of the United States Government

Near t he Railroad Sta t ion

»iatu«, prM*ni»d toofaf Aluka rtxti connecting ASIA aod

America. However, tbe lan-i bridge „ w . „ t •*to not aawetlal: they mlxht have Bmr* W a l d o °°*' tormtr N o r t h D a"crossrd on the Ice or may ere* havt i *<** rttlMn ' ^ n o w ot Portland.aagxHlsttd a narrow strait of open I 0 " - *** « u t n * w l 1 & a*<licatad towater.

edurtiCloH. The fifmres showthat from 1 S4 to 1920 the aver***weight ot coilexe gtrte Increftifed from1213 to 12S.H. T%e waist measnr*-D O U dropped frocn 26 to 22 from 1884to 180G. stood still for ten years, thengradually Increased until It reached25 once morr.

ImproTements In physical condition-ajtrlhmn|. to the

est In

GIRL IS RELEASED TO WED

All car? first cla^s condition. Smalldown payments, r-rnal! monthly pay-ments.

If you want a good used car comeand s*1*1

RAHWAY AUTO SUPPLY ANDSERVICE CO.,

Cor. Broad St. and Milton Ave.dec2S-tf

Double Your SavingsIt Can Be Done.

Piann— in -very.—

KIIIW Off th« Mastodon.the children of North bakota at -ca-re-monlai which..will be held In 1924. ar-

-T«igwo«ntt-for-vht-Hi-are^now baingfrom A'HIS a W n H * deicendants h a d ' ] m a d t ^ ^ &*1 U * ^Pltca Of U»rfull iwlng upon t-hlsi hemlw>herr for \ •«*»• presented a year a*o to thtni*u,T ttmusandw ef yetirs.—How many *&*

condition, prico $100. Inquire12 Lufberry street. Phom- 420J.

doc2S-tf

IF YOU WANT a used Kord see EdWashington Judo« Fi-Ma Young Worn. | dio, at Gannon Auto Sales, 90 Inriox

street, or 265 Central arenue. Phonemar30-tf

Portlnnd. Doflor_Co«

an to Permit Her to Go on__ Honeymoon.

The cell doura. of .the-District- ofColumbia Jail swunj open twice forMIRS rilartlnin reytoo, nineteen-year-

t f X

IDEAL " PIPELE5S""FtrRXACE- IN-STALLED COMPLETE. $S0 UP.DEPENDING ON SIZE. GEORGE

no one can say drdslrrty as yet.Those who flml nnte<l the Asiatic In-fluence In thi* physiognomy, traditionsand picture writlnc of the Americanlndljrene* rboagnt that the ronnectloaaoay have be«i fairly recent—say tenar twenty centuries. Rot fossil "finds- j t o regain his healIn various parts ot the United States*-.-,.., ~when Inlerprated In the light of geo-logical knowledge, have pushed tbeT*U of the unknown further back.

These finds . have been numerousand wldalf scattered. TOey prove con-clusively that man existed here aideby side with tbe 'mastodon. They In-dicate that he hunted, sntred and de-stroyed that great beast. It ts evenpossible the mastodon vas extermi-nated, not by i

tlced medicine at Mandan. N. D_ dnr-Inf the time Theodore ROOMTIU rodeth* pralrtts of the western portion ofthe state, and became a warm p*r-aooaJ frten4 and aflmlrvr of the east-ern youth who wertt to North Dakota

I BAN WATERS

or a gradual atwctaalng of food sap-ply* btrt by tnimcn hunters, in muchtht same way that our ftthers wouldhave utterly wiped out the hlaon ex-cept for the belated stirring of con-science.

Through many thousands of years,then, the descendants of Cro-Magnonman fought up and down two conti-nents. Trlb«i roae and fP]| in e n ( j .leu wars; only occasionally did peacegive the opportunity for advance-ment In culture.

Discovered 400 Years Ago,When the whites discovered Amer-

U. 8. PI ana to <Sh*rt New CfcamalaSouth jof Hand.

Equipped with Abe most modern ap-pliances, Includliir the newty-dedgnedsocle depth flndfr, the U. S. S. Han-nibal sailed frotn Philadelphia navyyard at Washington recently to make

survey of tbe south-the-TldnUy-of-Bata-

Isle of Pines.the survey will derel-channels which will

bay andIt ts expect!

oia prisom-r—oix*e to permit her tomarry, the second time tn Rive hertemporary freedom and a lumeyraoon.

Miss Peyton, a stenographer, was*en*«nced to a year's Imprisonment forforgery. This did not deter Fredsr-lck Bfcrera, hor flnnre, who called byifwdal penDlolno and accompaniedher to tbe altar. The bridal party, aiarranfcd, returned to the jail and Mrs,Ew«re went to her cell.

An boar later tbe bride received herOrat weddms; present, a court permitto lea re la custodj of ber attorneywhen sb* changed her plea of "tTiUtyto not fUOty. Tbe pair left Washing-ton for a huswiiiMwin In Florida.

LESLIE. 25 CHESTNUT STREET.NUTLEY. N. J. PHONE 4191NUTLEY. liecll-Tt

WR1G18LE ANCHORED TO MAST

op deep wateipromote commercial shipping In tbefuture.

Pre*«nts to IFriwid Cover Suicide.Covered wltii presents wrapped and

directed to sJveral friends, the bodyof Mrs.- Anna IWalra, sixty-eight yearso4d, was fonoid In her home at NewYork city. Q&s was flowing from openJets In n stoje. The coroner said ahahad committed •ulcldo.

the inhabitants of the north countryrude nnd warlike, subsisting largelyby the chase, scounred by periodicfamine and low In the teitie of politi-cal orpinlxation. The most effectivelyorganized were the IroqanU, relativelynewcomers to central New York. ButIn the Southweet more clTilized tribesof agriculturists, herdsmen and weav-ers, lived In settled to*na with close-knit community organization. Someof them occupied huge buildings whichwe call "pneblos."

Still further south In the heart ofMexico Cortez found in the Aztecsan even more advanced civilisation.They-had* temples nnd priests, kingsand sjaves, arts nnd architecture anaristocracy, a confederacy of'stated•nt] n regular decent for the crown.'Even more sujwestlvi. Of m nnHnn*

JAPAN ORIDERS U. S. LUMBER

Tokyo Qovi000

OontrucUnited Stilumber byfor dwellliby the eairecentlyWashlngt

The cothe Dougjport comfcoast milllas firBrndlleRldsefiell

Old World el

bytho lam

and

ancient

ron.

concemiAabai

iment Purchases 97,150,-it—Mora to Follow,

have be«u awarded In thetea for 97.150.000 feet ofitlte Japanese goTernment,

In the area devastatedthquake. It was announced

the Japanese embassy at

tracts have" been made withts Fir Exploitation and Ex-my, representing 106 Westfor &6.400.000 feet of Dong-Pacific hemlock, and withjtliers Mill company of

h., for 730,000 feet ofNo figures were given out

the prices Involved,idor Hanlbara ls awaiting ad-

Bk*MMloaAi'» Me#Hno Said by U. ft.Airman First of Kind.

The navy's bOr dirigible, th* Sben-andoab, was made fast to Its newmooring mact near Its hangar at Lake-humt, N. J., In what was said to havebe*n the first feat of Ita kind accocn-pllshed by American airmen.

After drifting over Lakefaurst for anhour, the Shenandoah dropped to a200-foot level, from where a cable wasattached to the mast and a windlassdrew In the slack, bringing the for-ward end of thp bag against the steel

-support;-

Help WantedYOUNG LADY—Not less than twenty

years of age with bookkeepingtraining and some stenographic ex-perience. Knowledge of time-keeping and handling time distribu-tion cards valuable. In first letterstate training, experience, age andsalary required. Write Box 151care Record. dec2S-2t

YOUNG MAN—Not less tthan nine-teen years of age with stenographictraining and! some clerical experlence. Recent graduate of businesscollege_wjould—be_. acceptable. . Infirst letter state age, training, experienc© and salary required- WriteBox 252. care Record. dec2S-2t

Miscellaneous

The Shwmndonh remained securelyanchoreoL_fori_half ,an hour and wasthen returned to her hnngnr.

THE RAHWAY SAVINGS INSTITU-TION pays 4 per cent Interest, th*highest rate paid by any savingsbank In the State. Open an acconnt

—.in-your-homfr-inBtitntioii: Jlyl tf

amongibcHr unite

before calling for bids for>Ues.

-w-UI—b*—distributednf J^panV

;. an«1 the tndlvidu.i

Ship 100,000 Pounds of Live Eel*.Throe specially constructed vessels

clearsd port from Whitehall, N. Y.,bound for New York city from Que-bec, with 100,000 poundi of live eelsaboard. The total value Is more than$7,000. Devices aboard tho vesselspermit the repeated Intake and dis-charge of fresh water to keep ah*veand fresh the »els, which range inlength from throe to six fo*t.

OUTPUT OF UMBER GROWS

ROOM — Gentleman desires neatwell-furnished, steam-heated roorn(board optional), within ten min-utes' walk of Post Office. AddressF. E. M., care Record.

MONEY LOANED

Equitable Finance andGuaranty Corporation

To purchase family ncM*e«iltle«.To conduct or enlarge business.To pay tnxpB or l»uy n borne.To repair or Improve property

ON VERT EAST PAYMENTS.

Production In Oregon Ik 22 Per CentAbove Normal.

Increased output and sales wore re-ported to the West Coast Lumber-TnenVTissoclnTloTi, It was nnnonnred ntSeattle, Wash., by 129 milla for onerecent week.

_ -rmdurUtici -was- Jffll7f>3.filI.-tecL-22-L'-./.vcr rnx nhnrp iinrniat AarpnT wtih,

•Sift, "mof tb* will a ->> i-rr

ith

Chattel Uort^tpi'S. Entlomcil Notes, o:Any Other Security Takon.

UoneyXuauetl on Kt-cuiiJ And Thlr*IMortcngeB.

bKOAL INTEREST ONLTM-»n«y Given -Within 2i Hoot*

03 BItOAD STREET.Second Floor. Onbatn flotldlnjr; -

Phone Ell*. 01U. Ellubetb. N J

HVCR *\ ARHfTflOM«

rWir

mm l*t ft. «

Comfort for Winter DrivingThose whose business unusual space for samplesneeds require a car of the and baggage. The powerfulroadster type will find thisBuick four-cylinder road-ster with its winter enclos-lire ideally~~suited for "coldweather driving. Its roomybody provides ample com-fort for two passengers.Large compartments afford

Buick valve-in-head engineassures more than enoughpower for every kind ofroad" and grade. Added tothese features is the greatercertainty of control con-tributed by its Buick four-wheel brakes.

UNION COUNTY BUICK COMPANY. . . . . . , .... RAH WAT BRANCH

2 5 Wilton Avenue Pbooe7afKLUCAaBKTH

WHEN BETTER, ALTOMOBUXS ARE BUILT: ftUKfc

WHKH^^mf^^^m^^^mRahway Record, Tuesday. January 1,1924

FOR SALE-Full-Blze white ett»eledpu,nge of Insurancetlonal Week and the Kiwanis Courtesy Inquire 24 Bond streetCOMMUNICATIONSELKS NEAR CELLAR

IN STAT| CIRCUITLoss of Pair to Kearney Puts

Locals In Tie WithThat team

Elks' League StandingW. L- Pe t H.S.

Jersey City 20 7 .741 1071Patereon 19 8 .704 1002

•*aton-HIU— IS-JL.,66? 1060Newark ^^>^ 1 0

Per th Amboy 16 11P^Infield I 3 1 4

Elizabeth 13 14Rutherford . ' . . ." . . .12 15Passaic - I 2 1 5

.630

.593

.481

.481

.444

.444

.444

100S997930

1024929915

EahwayKearnyBloomaeld

.3707333".333.296

N. J, Tuberculosis LeagueAt a meeting of the Executive Com-

mittee ot the Now Jersey Tubercu-

losis League held In Newark it wa8

decided to have a General Meeting

of all local associations in Trenton

on January 14, 1924, a t which time

it is hoped that final reports on the

ChriBtmaB Seal Sale for 1923 may be

made. General reports BO far re-

ceived indicate that the Sale will

be over 20,000,000 Seals. • .

At thiB time a meeting called by j continual "freetho State Board of Health will be y\ayor Furber

Editor Record:— .I am enclosing herein a check to

pay for the "Old Home Paper" thatyou have BO kindly forwarded to meoven though I had failed to pay formy subscription. « you have hesi-ta ted. \n the sending of the Bamo atanytime, I am positive that you wouldnot have done so hnd you known withwhat anxiety I look forward to itsarrival each week.

Week attracted much attention.New Leaders in Harness

The past twelve months saw the re-tirement of Postmaster G. L. Kirch-gasner after nine years and the ap-poin tmenCSL Peter. ..Tillman to theplace. Saturday half holidays weregiven members of the postal service.Mrs. I. W. Thorn became the firstwoman member of the Board of Edu-cation. K. H. Chase and Allan Pol-lack succeeded George Fairweather

There are many Hems of interest] and Paul Taylor as boys* secretarycarried In its columns, and . with the and physical director of the Y. M

between c . A." respectively both the latterforand

all"the Commls- going to bigger jobs elsewhere.

held to consider the advisability o f , g j o ' n e r S i "Mayor Furber and the Ex-1 Roth of the Methodist churches sue-Uav l i i« -a^e j iod Ic -MedlcaLE*a i f t ina z j C i j o f Q ^ j > 0 ^

tion Campaign. If adopted the thirty-Uhe Firemen." "Mayor Furber and the Rev. G. A. Law and Rev. S. \ \ \ Towns-five local organizations in the Statewill be asked to take a prominentpart in putting the programs Into eff-fect. This will consist of the use ofquantities of l i terature, posters, lan-

over bankoscspe.

The athletic world saw themeu-matlcs capture the city league base-ball pennant for the third consecutiveyear, and witnessed the capturing of'the city tennis titles, in doublcslbyDralnerd Lindsay nud Carlton Joheaand in singles by Lindsay. Co*ch"Johnny" Urooks* Red and W«ck

FOR SALE—Squnre dinlng-roam'-ablo

and folding bed.Scott avenue.

InquireIt

football warriors made a cleannt nil the County Class B conteitswhich they entered, Summit only s v -passing th.> local record In the esti-mate of those who ax tho standingKahway High did not meet SummitThe "Y" girls1 basketball team wonthe state championship and the B\%Five finished third in the alatVn n ment.

Will bo In town month ofPianos and Player Pianos

Tuned and Repaired.JIMMY LA BAR ,

Phone 197-U.

BOARDERS OR ROOMERS—Wanted.Inquire 23 Main street, R&hwaj. Xt

J. C. SHELLFU«I Estate

andinsurance

f:. S*:oit Avenue,Phono M l

he^''~??mmm$^

N. J.

City Park Propngunders," there will end being heartily r e c e i v e r again.always be a chance for my name to j Row H. A. L. Sadtler refuse^ a very | A r e m a r k a b l e cenebration of thebo numbered among- those listed a s ' enticing offer to leave S t Paul's f ° r | pns t year was that of the ninety-your subscribers as long a s there i s ' a bigger post. Rev. Alexander Leon- a o v e n t h birthday anniversary of Mrs.

hardl resigned at the Lutheran J a n o K t tndolph. of 35 factory street.CllUTdl It' K1-1 lu Phllwilnlphln ami R P T nfthy,-ny in rnmmnn with tho entire

any desire for "basking In the Hme-

880J952825

well as securing the .co-operation ofthe various county medical societies.

Hut getting down-to—brass- tacks,"It is really ridiculous, each week to

It was also decided to have a s e c - [ s e e n o w many small men are In theond— Nut r i t ion-Jns t i tu te^-under - JDr^ japac i jy - . Of r officials- in—the City of} welcomed.Emuiuuu ot—Bostorr;—to—bo beW—in Rahway.—Nu city ur lo*u m u hope-] Seversf—Lar

Carl Krepper-toot_.li!s_plar_e^_Jlev :_ jjnltcd States greatly mourned theWilbour E. Saunders came to the"p a 8 S ( n K Of President Warren GFirst Baptist Church and was royaUM; Harding.

LOOK EP YOUR INSURAN01

BE SURE YOU HAVE ENOTJOH.

MO NOT DELAY, INSUREIN THE

UEL FREEMAN & SON AGENCT136 Irvlnjr. street.

(Estan. 1892)

: J - " -

HDvocatcAbsorbing The Rahway New»-Her«ld, the succcwor of th« Union Demoorat, Eatabllahed 1840,

VOL/XIIL SERUL NO. 1481 tAHWAY, UNION COUNTY, N. J., FRIDAY AFTERNOON. JANUARY 4,1924 TEN PAQE8 PRICE THREE CENTS

cotton?

SEEK EMPLOYEFOR LOST $270

f/flophane 50 octlfrf

—Tn'n largo furnish^rooms for light housekeeping.suitable for two or morpPhone 229 W.

Warrant Sworn for Arrest olHarry Nolan by Cross Keys

Restaoranteur

Mjndamus Writ Served City£ase_SuspeidedJ)fficexs

., fiuufibuu of Dobtou, to bo W _ R a h w a y . N u cliv ur \.ov.u m u hopeFortune continues to look with < " s - | X e w a t k i February the 25th to M a r c h j l 6 g e t f a r w l t h l h e k l n d o f I e g l 5 i a .

tno hopeB and am-

rof-thc—high— thn nrws n«

dalnful peepers on tno and am-1 1 5 s t u d e n t s t o o kj s t h t y e a r

bitlons of the Rahway Elks' b o w l i n g . - ^ c o u r 8 C i w h ! c h h a s a w a k e n e d much

the giddy dame "trun 'em a o w n w i t n f o v e r

abandon in two games of the three-tilt match. The local "Bills" failed tocasli on- the Initial and night-cap-ses-

Eions. The middle canto came to theKahwack crew when Kearny tobag-goned beneath the S00 surface. Good-will led the visitors and Kcsse theKearny five. Rahway got a pair of

' twin-century counts while the home-sters registered but one. Inability topack in good counts all together killedthe chance of No, 1075.

Tbe scores:Rahway

Reibel-McCartney-..AlbrightGoodwillKepler

143131136147151

148150158202160

20 G160170157171

818 864

many more willcourse this year.

tion and petty politics that are seem-ingly being played, week In and week

tn«-^utritton- p r o g r a m j ^ - i n ^ a ^ t t ^ ^It is hoped that. \ stranger would hesitate seriously

want to take thej before choosing to make Rahway hU

Several important flrea occurred; 1 ) r o U j , l l t t 0 i l s Krt>nt family of readersduring the year, including blares at w t i i e -Record." the publishers andthe Ilderan Club. Rahway Manufac- e ( ] t l o r w | s n Cvoryoiu> "A Prosperous

turing- Company.' nnd ther-Pratt-dence. Much good was done, .how-;over, bv the lire prevention; ucLuru cnous ing 10 m u s e n u u w a y 1113 over , D> m e n re I M U * V « L I » « ••••...

j home lf__he read what the Record; propaganda and the iu-w -system of in-i Is-fotwd to 'chronicle each week as!Spect ions fnsiltuted'"by d r i e r Rltz-'In discussing the method of putting

Into—offpet a nurs ing-prngram which! tiie-niain—events—in—the—progres8-of-i-»u

BUSINESSOPPORTIINTTIES

has been promised, for Ocean, Cum-!t l l -

city. Nothing good is ever Colonia. was fraught with con- TOO LATI FOB

berland. Cape May, Sussex and War-j creased in size or grows to those pro-1 sequences, a dispute which followed; : " ~"~~~ren counties it was the sense of the . portions of beauty by "mud slinging." j between Edward K. Cone and Mayor; LOST—An Elk's tooth mounted forCommittee that the tuberculosis p ro- ju killed everything forced to feel itsgram would be furthered better by influence since the Birth of Christnot tying up with the State Depart- u n t o the present day except "Scan-ment of Child Hygiene- as previously If the citizens of Hahway are

Furber on Kahwny's positionto fire protection of the suburb, r i l i ngup Mr. Cone to such an extent thatho stepped out of his posts as Presl-

watch charm. Howard for re turn ,to this office, or call Rahway 376-R. 1

It

announced through the press by tbe! going, to stoop totho low levels that1 dent of the Rahway Hospital and (FOR RENT—Now PIX room house.State Board o f Health, by using they have in the past to get a shot', Trustee of the V. M. C. A. \ w i t h a11 improvemonts; Third

it.

Christmas Seal funds totransportation for childnurses.

In addition to the meeting on Medi-cal Examination on January 14, therewill be a meeting of the Camp Com-mittee to try to select a site for a

provide a t the object they desire so much tohygiene 1 annihilate, they must realize that

there is a cost to the purchaser,and

war.l. Inquire 5telephone 147-J.

Maple avenue or* janl-2t

'• J-~ KearnyTJrecker 182Bayard 130Pereth 148Kesse 177Tutschek 170

~iO7

145148143156171

17316916121S168

"isi

state preventorlum and a t 4:30 therewill be a meeting of the Board ofDirectors of the State League.

-> . Bowling Results, Moose No. 1A, Kettner 145Stevens 148Cotter HOStuUlen 127Schweitzer 158

124

169165106169

772

165148105119169

706

Freidl- H . • Wlmmer

H. KettnerRommel . .Smith

Moose No.135

7467

I l l125

572

CHURCH UNION LAUDS SMITH

(Continued from Page One)On Wednesday evening, January 9,

In the Second Presbyterian Church,the Rev. James K. Shields will makean address In connection 'with a-moving-picture film, "T^Bt-We-For^get," which was written and di-rected by Mr. Shields, and will beshown that evening.

The United School for Bible Studywas again brought up for considera-tion and the executive committee ofthe Federation was given full power

some day someone must pay. Thereis more than one way to destroy a

Organizations ActiveHappenings In the line of establish

ing new organizations included: In! ; • ' T _ ~filiation of Union Chapter. Order of: WAN'TED-Tvvo automobile salesDeMolay, the founding of a chapter]

thing; true It's not always the quick- of tho Steuben Society and tho birth,est or" s a f e s t to wait ^or. but, if you-,of tho High School Parent-Teacher,

to arrange for such a school.Bcnool win nave

Tbe

779567

104104

829545

expected, and will be held on Wednes-

will have the fortitude to wait youwill find that It's the old theory ofBacteria, "leave them alone and theywill die In their own secretions."- I am glad to see the progress theHospital is making. Very soon Ihope- to contribute to that worthycause. I have a large interest Ina twenty-two bed institution here thatis an approved hospital of the stateunder state and county supervision.

that 1 have been connected with fornine years, and the struggle that wehave had has kept me from giving adonation to that great blessing to hu-manity that your worthy and eminentphysicians gave birth to. I hope thatthe good people of Rahway will rallyto its cauHe and keep it alive that suf-ffring humanity, whether their skins

day evenings before prayer meetings

be black or white, may receive someof the blessings that God intended

In the churches. The executive""comj man to share with his less fortunate

103jmittee will give the mat ter attention71

461 396

DymbiTds^re MastersIn Extra Session Tilt

Extra period games on the local"Y" court are rare birds, bu t a dead-lock a t the end of regulation time Ina contest Friday, afternoon between

at their meeting on January 8, a t thehome of the Rev. Chester M. DavlB.The executive committee will meetonce a month, start ing with the Janu-

Association. The Daily Vacation {

Bible School had its second year ofexistence, a very successful one.Drives were held for the Red Crossfor Japanpse Relief and for members;for the Y. M. C. A. for members andfunds. The Elks held a big concertfor tho benefit of the Crippled Kld-^dies and the Elks and Eagles bothjheld big clambakes. Entertainment

tt provided on several occasions by

men to popular medium priced car".experience required . Apply KahwayOverland Company. 1S9 MainSTrror • janl-2l

the Klks at Bonnie Burn, and thecitizens contributed generously to F.H. Trussler's Chrisimas fund for thatinstitution. The annual Girl ScoutCouncil court of awards was a timeof well-deserved rewards for achievement. Presentation of a beautfiulset of colors was made by school

to the Amorlcan Logton.

the Dymonds and the Grammar SchoolLeague quintet was the_resuH._qf_hanl-fought battling. Then after the scorewas 2G-26 the Dymonds came through

ary meeting.- Announcement was made of the •vrsit of "Pussy-Foot" Johnson, famous

brother here on earth. I say "Hu-manity" because the institution herethat I am associated with serves"Humanity. True, it is a Negro Hos-

j pital, but forty-five per cent of ourpatients are white, and we am "below 1

Sizable increases were noted In tbepublic and parochial school enroll-ments and the St. Paul's private dayschool was established.

The Year's HeadlinesHeadliners during the year were:

Trial of Mrs. John Crelghton for-.al-.leged murder of her brother, Charles

Week ol December 31 »t.

ELIZABETH

A emiiPily drain* In fi-ur «ct«

\\>Inter

Production January 7th

'Common Clay1'-M k 7 .Si.

Ktvrvullnriifur t ;un Z"X} k.Ailv:unv

'SDepartment

"Railway's Most Popular Store1*12 8 Main S t r e e t

HappyNew Year

We wish all our manyFriends and PatronsHialth* Hoppinesa andProsperity daring theyear 1924.

Here's a Good NewYear's Resolution

Resolve to save I0ao on al|your purchases each Wednesday

ECONOMY DAYat Engelman's

START THENEW YEAR RIGHT

by beginning to shop here thisWednesday, the first EconomyDay of 1124.

•RIGHT SPOT1 ItT CHARGESBY POLICE AGAIN

Cqtse Must Be Shown te to Reason for Noteihetating Mdntyre ind Jardot—Police

ent—fle<ommemfattortfr-

NAMES KIDD TO jMaude Klotz Heads ProgramFor Crippled Kiddies' BenefitSCHOOL BOARD

Mayor Fnrber Appoints For-mer Member to Place Va-

cated by B. M. PrudenFamouQ Prima Donna to Be Supported in

Concert at High School, Jan. 15, by YashhBiinchak nnd Walter Kiesewetter

DECLINES OFFEROF FUND POST

A7RrWendelI Rcfuscs~to~Ac»cept Treasarsrship ol Sink-

ing Fund Board

was made to

.. -j Frank \V..Kidd, f'^rrmr member of- • i ~" j tho Hoard of Education, was r«-nain»-d

thr city i was not foil necessary to hold RUCII ! as a member of ihat body Monday

—because -wool-8b«r contains m * n jmoro nir cells thon^cotton fiber. Airis"a poof con^uclor of"1S?5t-KH!;c0M^-:

Thtrefore ft woolen ga rment form* a n'U blankt't. which keeps heat Incold out Warm clothes and

5od--U»T OH -.Norwegian

n combTaaUtfn" tot~healtlj. I 'urciesl Cod L I T W

"Hi has a vitamin content 100 t ime*nn:o powerful than rich f r t i h creut t -•rv butter. It also la easy to lake.

One of 200 l*ureto«t prcpAratlon*.lT^ry^ltem the W*i tha t skill andtic-ctence can make.

lirstein's Pharmacy

Store Closes 6 30 P.MEconomy Day cameall other days exceptSaturday.

IOTTLEO MILK AND CREAMlutttrmltk and t tr lct ly pur» Butt«r

Also FrcihM. HAINE5

Phone TSW Rahway

Steadfastw K rrtnain steadfast fn our

;om- to tondurt oar bas lneMfn an ffflcirnt. comni«-ndablt* maiinar.Our n-ilabtlltT I* unquestioned. OttTbuKl:^-u conduct has b< en such t ha tIt has won for us thf public's ap-proval.

James M. PettitFUNERAL DIRECTOR

^ m , u • _

IMione 3 KN«w York Offica Pko«« K array Hilt14 E. T3i>S: 8341

the celebrated Mason-Dixon Line."Disease has no distinction in its

prohibition Reader.- who wil lspeak.- ln , ^ w e :

subsoqumt acquittal; thrilling .'-scape;from doalh by firo or drowninc of

of >ix Rahwayan

the F.irist . Presbyterian Church onjJanuary 28th.

• in S t a t .

cauirht fireIt is to be regretted that you lost ' is landso valuable a man as Mr. Cone. He ] record serl.-s of petty b u r s a r i e s ;was a great big man and very ea-; most continuous —rin> of

1 pable-to head- r-uch -a- inoveni'-nrr-bittj .ifctiir-nt?. aSERVICES~TH1S'WEEK ATEBENEZER A. M. E. CHURCH j n e w o u ! l 1 l l ; tVe risen to creator hi»lKhi.sf inp": recent clean-up started by Act-

"""Watch*' "night and the week "of j h a ( I-1»^ remained at -hip-post-nnd not \nz P o ! i r ( r r h t - f smirhn g j jprayer will be observed at EK-nezer a I l 0 W 0 ( I h i s ( I f l s i r v t(> n&n t h e battles rtluu: h\- holiday

with a pair of baskets in the flT0; A. M. E. Church.in the following man-Monday. 9 p. m., Social hour; I t>0-mp

haul. «u«-.- Tint] Jar-

minutes overtime and copped the h o n - j n ^ :

ors The teams were remarkably W P-

matched.getter of the contest, with six field

Song and Praise Fervicn w l l°W Crowell was big point- n P- m - the Pastor will preach on"Talents," and receive persons wish- g r c a t c 0 "» ' ry of our-.

goals and a pair of free tosses. Sim- ing to Join the church,mons led the losers with Pyat t a good' w i n b e e i n 11:45.

The watch

second.The scores:

Madden, -f . .Sjnfth, f . • • •Hoffman, c .Simon, g . . .F.'CroweliV'g"W - Crowell, fWlHiams, f .

DymondaO. P. P-

0330

<r60

12

300

.160

Tuesday, S p. m., Prayer Meeting;8:30 Preaching, subject. "The Sowerand the Seed." Wednesday, Songand Praise service; 8:20 preaching,subject. "The Seed Upon a Rock.Thursday. 8 p. m.. Song and Praiseservice; S:30 p. m., sermon, Bubject,"The Seed Among Thorns." Friday,8"p"mrrL6vc' Feast;" 8:30^ sermon",,iubjecU "The Seed on Good Ground.". All arewejcome_at_these services.

Grammar LeaguersG. F.

Simmons, f 5 13

30

P.11

Melver, f

cr i

i' !

Hiffer. g . . . .Swlrk, gKay. gIndelicatto, g

12 2 26

Basket Ball Results

us in our recent bereavement in thedeath of wife and mother, Julia Stoll.We especially wish to thank Rev. Fa-ther Kane, Rev. Father Boylan, Dr.G. E. Gallaway, Undertaker HarryLohmiller, and all who sent floraltributes or In anv way aHHlatpri nnijcomforted us.

WM. H. STOLL AND FAMILY.

Scaff, f . . .Thorn, t -.Melr.f, c . .Andelflnger,Abbott, g .Borden, g .

Rahway eserves RQ.15

0

t

F.110000

F3

1104

Linden Country ClubO. F.

Kerr, t ..Mnhar, f

P.7

_ 2Kovac, c .,Kalning, gMoore,w g .Sulliva'n, g

22

22

Ltiturt.

itlfttl la a man'i to a book.

than his willingness t o ^ i r t .»« <ha:-^-> of holding up a beer,those less fortunate creatures! m i , * and their -M1b-cm,.ni dischar^- '» to make up the masses of t h i ? | ; i f : , r indicttn.-nt by tntud jury. n.. •>„..

Lincoln oncei appearing apalnsf them: refusal (.f:two

"dry" . i ^ n t s ' raids: !

said that "God loved the common peo- Mayor Kurl.-'-r to n-instat.- thesepie most, and that was why He madej n:hY.T<:so many of them."

With every good wish for the dearold town, and that your Christmasand the New Year will be all thatyou would desire it to be In healthand happiness. I am as ever.

JOSEPH E. DROWX. M. D.

CARP OF THANKSWe, the undersigned, wish to ex-

press our sincere thanks to our rela-tives, friends and neighbors for theirkindness and sympathy extended to

The Deserter.Cupid IB a rnenn little JMK*>1

ini'tMles with other people's uffulrs,Jiiti ufter getting them all tanked up'!»" »n Inextrlcuble mess of disillusion,luiMmduratandlns, Jealously, dlsup-pointiiient and deceit, leaves them togei out of their troubles the best waythey can.

The Cold Douche Cure,"How does she mnnuge Icr hiiK

a witness wns asked ut Mnrylebornt*,nnd ahp replied: ^ h r piilH hlv liuad

NEW^YEAR'S^DAY MAIL SERVICE__P.P_stmaster... Petor Tillman. an-nounces_that_theriB./will. be_but_onedelivery of city carriers New Year'sDay. The lobby will be open fromeight o'clock until ten o'clock, a. m.,for boxholders. Mails will be dis-patched as usual, the last mail at sixnV.lock, ..p. .m.—.

K

TinA Champion Bigamist,world's champion hlgnmist

lives In the French Cnmeroons. Sul-tnrt NJova, of the kingdom of Ba-mmin. has a harem of 3T»0 *lvea.

ito the shiniest ebony.

. . . R A H W A YMatinee Daily 2.30

Evenings 7.10 and 9.15

MONDAY aad TUESDAYD«noinbnr .list. January 1st

Hr testerWislies

appy New Yearand plans to make many housewives happy by

starting in Rahway en

l

(Continued from Page One)

erings of county and state impor-tance. The greatest of these was theY. M. C. A. State Older BoyB1 Con-ference when 550 delegates were entertained in tho homes ot local citi-zens. The .Union County W. C. T. TJ.held a most notable meeting herewhile the Afro-American BaptiBt State'Convention and the \pun« People'sConference of the New Jersey Bap-tiBt Convention were other attractive

under the cold-water tap \vhi«nboisterous."

Corn Mill Literally Swamped!On Ohio farmer writes that nis corn

mill was so infested with roaches Itwa H nti-raUl* swamped!

T t l " G t d R husedi a U l p

Ttoyal" Guaranteed Roach Powder torid of them and had no further

trouble.—R«*niembep-Guaranteed HoaciT Powder. Bold

_ by . PendUtoa'g

"The LittleChurch Around

The Corner1'i] ram ft

conclaves. Another big state conventlon was that of the Army anclNavy Union. Tho county gatheringof Parent-Teacher ^Associations at. thenew Franklin School was a long-to-be-?!°JB) l?l).9.r ~iexe.n t» .I*ocally_ the'S.-V*C. A. anniversary, the 125th anniver-sary celebration of the First M. E.Church and a aerie* of -yprrinl ob'Brrvanci-B Including. IU-tt* r Horn.-*Wc«t.

ThoeroutoBt romanticover Qlmod.

The Notable Cnat lnclules

Claire—Windsor, KennethHarUn, Walter Long. CyrilChadwick ~and Pauline Staik

E X T R A

Larry SemonIn Hli Very Ltteu

'Midnight Cabaret*1

Wednesday

"Lights Out"K«Kiitrinif--

Ruth Stonehouae

ThursdayA Firstand-Rr

3,1924

4 Acts Vaudeville 4Larry Semon in

"Midnight Cabaret"

THURSDAY iad FRIDAY

"Loyal Lives'*

ss Fruite^Stere

I plan to supply the peopM of Rahway with the

Best Fruits^i|^ ProducePossible, in my ew SS

which was formerly concfjifcted under the nameof Winkler'slOarket at

103 Mainistreettv

1

Telephone ;Will Assure Prompt BOelivery

Warrant ha* h<I!arr>' Nolan, a

en ^ v. urn out ;i^;i:former employeeIf.n. bv Harrv t

of

ShlOIHTfi HH at that Justlct ' Snuiui'l Kultscli hwx -45 lat»rt\ at: aHt-nifiiivf writ of m;tnda* etutor 's

i iui!> I«roF?fri \viiL,n the pro-was unable to bring

the. city In favor of for- &•• wiinc-M-i' into this i-tate to appearpatruliiitii (Jtiur^f! Mclntyr*- nnd i^ninst thv olhc-rs

nsKhT'iU ili'1

I!. Furtt<*r!ii oi

M s

by Major .!:i:n'

.ppropr.,,,.5of about l . j

an..1 1 .

n i l

Wf'i!Hr=dayf _Ncwarir.

*

t - r v . -

M. l'r-.

;n

i T i

u:i.-xr-'

Company depotlt7Mi,-

.:mii»i:inly aiMiilsHcI M.. uUth March . 2 1 . 1M3. -altT ,j , t.f o f J1(J l, ( t f T h o m p ? o n h a .

for tv \o il.iys ..:ui:ii.- b u n 1: tl-r i : an h a " t ' - ' i n

SrarrliliiU for No]mrruuml'.in; irrritoryOetl. No lr.ic- nf 1!;found a!thou^:i it ihsew. Rrttijit; into anaf t i r 1M- II fi {':.•• inu t<* K'> t (> HIP b;-:ik.

Another warrant wai »worn ou: oncomplaint (if I Kawut. Main »tr- ctbatt-r. this one bflnj; agaln&t Grt TR^\V. Taylor, nronrw-mr «if a lur.rbroom In Irvine street, charging t'.i-latter with civin*; him .1 check furKO on tbe lUhway S a v i n g Institu-tion when he did not have suttlncntfunds In that b:ink to r .»vr i h - t - U kTaylor «a« placed und-T arrc.it Wed-nesday by Dftectire Ser jeant J tmThompson nnd sumnioncd to a; y&

• court this afternoon, but thl

.S1 t r u c k , i-hn'.ild Tmt b - r«Personal ***rvlcf of tho alto*

writ 1 irt* 1 bo«-a made by Mayr.'

u a r v Ur urbnr ;,u

fh i

int . . a-Mr. K

v r:v

a.-n*rtalr.'-d.

a:.O H. S. Unll. t 'uy CUt$n and City Tr-asuat

Wrmht previous to iht--m«4--i> Ait 1 r!)«•>• David Arm1 tr^nj; OtIjrtr. nf Il>rr and Armstrong.Ofcity.

Sr . in hi:tulal up*-year l-»—^fnc lhat

annual"uSoiis in, a::inunl''thcri.- wa

rrt-i^T-h-

'7 <;--ori;._' M. (;aRe.

report s!iow»-d that

only he d«I

thisto 5V

*-very

city for-tho

rca.-on tob*-li»-vc that with *h<> tdininf; of "spring

.\ill lu"- an inrr*-as---d buiMin::•tlvity \vl;;rh w:ll :::--;tti progr- is an»l

'itv to tho fitv. The

not. i!:» of rt -de-

^ITL to fului! ;i earn pa 1(;;; JJU-JI;*: '<<>lM&**e a woman on tho .-icuoui b'..ir!..^i:.c:i hi- difi in naming Mr^. 1 V.".". horn the only woman who u^s »*»trscTVi'd in that capacity in this city-

Mayor Kurbrr stated that he hadcunsiili-rablc ditMculty in prevailing

> publicUK bail bft-n Klv*i»^tr;t' accused piHil-n"n brfort* thfy were disrnlftaed. Be:tati-ii tbat owinK l f J l n t " ' a c t tha thecranil Jury of l.'nloa County hn .T»*-

i:\anufacturtnn and buslnt-ss. H~pamp.-.s. S32.120; additions and altera-tion*. $7f«.2O9. TluiUlInj: ft-* s for thep.-riod amounted to ll.OTS and waterU'CP. ITiSS.IiO.

on P « M Nht«>

hoadquarti-rs and .isl.»*d lo withdraw1 5 " ' '-""

the cune. He was sent to Jmii?|Hardine Fund Chairmai 'Dinner and Dance Closesl ombeouT mhom thc W M t WIT! Appeals for C<M>per*lon! Year for Elks and Guests

Actinic Can*:The polir*' underSmith ajo continalnx their ca.nrp»ifia' Sh'-riff Harry Stinmt»n«. thirinan "Babyto d«an up the city. New Tnar'i ETP of tho Hardinjc Memorial Fum com-. welcomePatrolman Jamea Coman. In plain! mlxslon In this city urges tis cltl-clothe*. went to the hora«- of Mr*.lions of Itahway not to I n th<move, T n , ^ a v m n r n l n e h v

Mary Korbely. of 31 Lafayette ftri-et. I ment fail in this city. Now i*t the I o dock Tuw»da> morning b>

1921"upon

at one

was given a heartytier advenCInto theBecond after twelve

a big

JTanaxaD__c&ier?4th© home _*DdU n . Korbely under arrvk. Aof the place, the police r»port.

dUcloted a ftve-icallon still, cotk andother Mqaor-roakinxand a barrel of majh. At pollc

Mr». Korbvly

noon. Cotnan and F lanaganofflccr. who went ,o the -a t 16 Main street , and

hrad-

and bought, he claima. a quart bottle I holidays are over he appeals r tvery gatherta* al the dance and entertaln-of alleged hootch for IS. Tpen a|man. woman and child in Of cllX mt-nt held under the auspices of theriven j ignal Chief Smith mad I*«trol-jto give if only the smallest^l*1

0u1

nt*! Uahway Lodge, No. 1075. B. P. O. E.ln_their_fine_big_ lodge room, the Elks*Home, in West Milton avenue. TheNew Year's Eve party was a most en-joyable one and included a delicious

board of trustees of th'- First Baptist;Oturd; and vim-president of the Y.jM. C. A. hr-re. Mr. Kidd was for-merly vicr-presidc-nt of the Board ofKdueation.

The makinR of this appointmentleaves-one other vacancy—to-be-Ailed-]

on Tuesday uvening. JanuaryIT Mftn«U> Klnr? , tho n a t i o n a l l y '

,; PRESERVE EYES, REASONSn—pTima rionTrrr

jir-'-cntativo ainiit-ncapp« ar with h<-r

i:u :::-t.^-t> in ti:--

last y-ar.company uf a--

C'lTl-i n : i ; ; .-s !">n

iiy

i l i i i

V

iy" KII:s "'tti*"r;»ii-e fur.U- withM carry out't'r.-.ir plar.i for Hi'-

itybri'.liap.t suc<:i-.-«r-.- f>$ Maude

[U,n< r..- the ' Bi.-str.ii Opora.

<-•;'!•

..iy.r-.-d

MAUDE KLOTZLoral it)u.:ic lnv.-rs will have a rare

treat cifftr.Ml th»-m a; Hahway High

Ni".v York Hhiltiarmonic, ht" Luui?SvTiiphony. Minneapolis Symphony,v'ii-mr II* rlM-:-t Grch.-.-Uras.. .-tc, have.-•s:;ibli>hed h-r as one of the sreat-.•-•t -•(>•,rar.es of the AnH-rican concertsta^-. anil h-r chanuins p.-T = c»nalityand Rracinu-! stai;.- demeanor havewon ]:f-r a place in the hearts of thou-S.MHN of nu^lc lovers from coast tofoast.

Air.nrm ill*1 artist.s who will ;l:.-r ar.- Ya.-hi.- Uunchuk, thn worldrenowned Russian 'cellist, anil WalterKieiv'Wt-ttt-r, the eminent New Yorkpianist.. A romplrte p r o g r a m ^ " 1

announced In a late/ issue ofpaper.

(Continued on Page Four)

l e a v e s o n e o t h e r a c n y t J

by Mayor Furber on the school board, | Hoff and Flirber Tangleh l i f P i d Hat the completion of President Henry

H. Jardine 's term. Speculation isrife about the city as to who the othernominee will be. Several women havebeen mentioned and indorsed by theleading women's clubs, among thembeing: Mrs. Aaron Dean and Mrs. C.P. Maury. Others spoken of fOT theplace are Mrs. Bernard Bngelman andMrs. L. F. Budenz. though the latter

Over Raising Chancemen

f th.- tanking •• ;-'iatook piace at tho -itt-

iiiiiil ;n--iiii^ held :it th- ci'y i.tl-.os"Tiil- rr.oniini; wh«?n r'ninl; M: r-::il-niiiu wa.-, r- -t;lcct»:d pre-iVi'-nt --ndFrunk I., i-'oulkn rfM-iectcd.' .-*-CiTlif- trLa^ur'-Tship wa- a^aintc ArUiui. il. .VV'.-udell i».ut he <Mr. \v.' -n.lt.-ll - ; :a in^ that

_.f_ l , - ; ^ ; | ) . , ^ . -A^.l -I i ! . . - ; i r i . ' O l - H . - ' l t i p

on iiis '.-yu.s which have caused iiitnnuir'a tn»uhU* during tli(: pa.si :• • .ir.nuid- it in^ii.-ratlve that he not uikatil*.- po-t a^Sjn. Accordingly i: -vasilfciut.-fl upon\ adjourn ment *o r i - e t

w-.-eks to olet ' awas expressed

which he has titledfor s*'V»-ral year^ i*;i t_

• Mr. Wf.-ndelf was nominated by M.'iyorI Furber.! Thn annual report of the Sinking* Fund Cnmmissinn showed tha t tho• total term bond indebtauss ol "_!iet city of Rahway is $3S0;000 and tha t

the investments of the communionare yielding an average of 4.7^ periv-n. Only one deficiency in a s inking-tun<l-accounL.is_reporte(i._that of 102S

Once again the policy nVpartment, Howard Martin has been chosen asmuddle is cause for a -break" be- the new leader of Union Council. No.

or moro is *nUUe2~ld sHCurirraved certificate. Rahway hafalwaysrrsponded nobly In the p a i t t p noblecauses and Chairman Stmmfa feelsthat It must not In

p a l K n for , h , man whommourned not *o te ry lon«

^ Hf, for h i .harnedc of the

Unco,cam-

worldwhen

o'rebet

t he

rost. at-Toral werka a«o. of Robert Hah way citizensSonkaTlrh. thi- propri* tnr. ' gotten thf lift* and K"r\

"The Rljshl Spot" will br R|aln In • U^HanlinK with al! ilth»v limelight of policy acltvi:l< * at - tvervin*. Kahway ha.*tho police court nesston thl* allt-r- j rz&t»*- 57^0. Who willnoon, when Frank Raimon. imported, contribution* t<> '

WentUl

has stated she would not accept Ifnamed. Rev. Alfred Wright, pastor

tween members of the city commis-sion, according to rt-ports of an issue

N e w Xeaders Selected" w a t e r bond8i 4.s> Of this the reportBy Junior Mechanics says: "The large deficiency in the 193

water 4's is due, of course to the factthat an adequate sinking fund forthis issue was not established at a»early enough date by the city author-31, Jr . O. U. A. M.. for the ensuing

six months. His elevation to the of-whic-h has arisen Uiwf . -n Acting Po-'flce of councilor took place at thelice Commissioner Russell ri- Hoff and j election held in connection with the

weekly meeting Monday night. Otherofficers chosen were: Vice-councilor,Thomas Stephens; junior past coun-cilor, K. H. Schwotzer; conductor, P.

beeTmeiSSner^Jardine to return has been made bytFnrber.

Mayor James B. Furber . The troublehas arisen over a resolution passedat the commissioners ' meeting of a

ol-tErSecond-Bap^Lchurch has, l ,o U , k ago naming four chancemen asM l th opposition of Mayor

ities years agomeet the issue

to provide fundsin full a t maturi ty-

andasked to

s#«*? Sendi |1arry Sim-

II. Jt<amboy.B. Slau-r. !took par t in

Ing a disorderly hoa»«Smith of 71 Main - tr .

w h o wan »upp'">'>*vii t<> o w n i!i.»pU"ict nfow w«M-ks aK«'. will h- chnrfftd w i thdisonlorly conduct. T h e thr<»

nndorman and Flanagan ar.d rt-1J25 bail for th^.r

Otto Hanitil. Randolph• and . Allan Hamtil . Mr. and Mrs. C.

-D«rW-Wt. atil Mrs.,

man- tO H 4 Murder J*ncinK.

several clubs. !

The announcement of Mr. Furber'schoice was made after adjournmentas the other commissioners do nothare anrtbinp to say on the appoint-ment. Passage of two financial reso-

l u t i o n s and reading of bills were the

resolutions were as follows: Warrant,. „ „ „ - , j c T $779.19, to pay interest on temporaryL K. SilverberB and E. ) o a n b o n d ; w a r r a n t %$Mt r e f u n d l 0

hundred persons ( , H B a r l e l l . duplication of tax pay-ment. IJillP paid were: City. J4.697.-02: water. $2.059.S7; total, $6,756.89.

City officials present wen*: Mayor.Tamo's B. Furber. Commissioners F.L. Foulks and It. S. Hoff. City ClerkFred M. Williams and City TreasurerW. H. ^

M E W YEAR'S EVE PARTY

Commissioner Hoff claims that he,acted, on a reported promise whictkhe says former Commissioner Sim-mons and Comissioner Foulks heard

.inside sentinel, Harry Brunt ; out-•sia> sentinel, William Bmnnlng. Thecouncil entertained a delegation fromSomerset Council, of Plainfleld.

Following the business of the eve-ithe mayor make to the men. Crowley,jning a New Year's Eve celebration

Farber, Flanagan and Miller, to make i was held In the rooms of the Juniorthem regulars after the general dec-j Club adjoining- A pleasant evening

He states that he' was spent in social diversions of varl-tion in November."Oiouclu_ X W ^ v ^nine days ago was perfectly l^gal am! | the good and welfare committee. Thestill thinks so. but -Mayor Furber dif-' contest for tho $50 radio set was

or-jclosel and Mrs. G: H. Bartoll, of 110f,*rs to such an extent thai h jdered City Treasurer V{. H. Wright.J^jiiojLjitxeeU-doclared the winner

the otlu-ers as regulars

Year's KVP.refreshments

All other sinking fund accounts are-adequate.

The deficiency in 1923 water 4's onthe date of December 31. 192Xamounted to J79.40B.81, 'ah'increase of$1,579.24 over December 31, 1922, doeto interest accruing. The report fur-ther reads:

"As the previously existing Special'Sinking_Fund provided to meet th»deflcviency in the 1922 adjustment-four per cent bonds and the 1032water four per cent bonds had b^en;applied in its entirety to paymentof the former Issue of November I*19.22. as prescribed by statute, it wa»necessary to set up this year a mn*~~special sinking fund to meet the de*-ficit»ncy in the 1932 water lour_jer_-

bonds when they mature i*This amounted to 510.000 on.

Deciimher 31. 1923."Accordingly as set forth in detail

cent

his lieau as art i i i^>ioi:i-r. a duty whu-:i

. Nicholasr:;«. Mr.-. Kmrl.wt- W i l l CONFER

HD(L U\\,'- tlU'to h a wu:ili:i!:ipt'r

low. the Mis«v?j Mildred and Mabfl;I.udlow. Mr. and Mrs. K. F. McMahoh 'and dauRther. Kdwlna: Mr. and Mrs.Harry C Coulter. Harry Lalnc. Mrs. '

wiu-n agreement

tiin-o months.. :nin!sl-r.-(l by.

d by any orders from:l;iM

rfor 1922 a? reproduced

not to pay tn»» OTIU-'T?

and to notify Acting Chief Smith that! First Church Workers111 w"h"n Hnn0h-'i"il'o?"S:T.; „ ov,r[ To Entertain Presbytery in the reBS of the

commis- Commission lor 192J' Plans for tin- ontortainm.-nt of tho bflow; it was? rocommendpil ny the

.m January ' nnder.-ipncd—and tho r e c o m m e n d *

I'n.sbi-tennn CliurVh nf this rity. wero ! in addition to the regular a n " u a 1 , ^prnpriation of S2.lsS.0;i to tho 10^2water four p--r font bond? s inking"

Prosbytery of Klizabuth.

post

at a mot t ins l*f tl-*? Cheerful<*-r< of HIP First (.'luin-li yfstt-r-

UPON CLINICE m n , a John

Oiganizatioa Placs Haoy Activ-ities for Coming «inter

Months

Hull,

(.o

- ua.i tluhis undo .

o I lie b-iy*;Mum.

hi-shontinK

A iii:ini:.-M«'n to <-i-s:cit\* :- tlU' to re-

oI..3y^JiKnqwn. Physiciansto Aid Cripples

I l l ' . 1 . 1 . ~

-•.-•i r - r- i l e 'i"tH--:t«-Uist:-

er states thati.-r ui

a

.-tat*

ho at-

k-1 day

avail. rO :n

Krar.k I'nWv. Thomas «M:irk. MissAnna H a r k ; r*nmfr-M3t«¥T^J^lrn--<^»n-(«i»n. Mb1-; Mar^.ir.-: Punn. M:~-< Mi1--dr.'d Conp.-r. Harold Wrifiht. Mr. andMrs Tls":;i:i*- n ' ( ' iHin<T nvA ^<>:\-T h n n r t v ::^tl CrMirKt*.

afternoon at thr-.. W. II^imstadttT, nfir-'.-t. AH arr;in^e!:if

i :• •rt;i:iiinc of :':'• Pr«t!l2ave_i>L(in._lt*ft with.

u.--t! Mayor Fur-; Workers.n;i th.* fnurt A noniiiKUint; cominin

burk

n ; i f . o7 Mr^. fund. JtrTTiuin appi'opl'liitiuii.1- nt % 10,-:V Hamilton!011 '1 TO tho spoiial

s fcr the I'ti-vtt-vian liody

sinking fur.0. bemade each year, either until tlw :n;v

(Continued on Pagethe ClieerXul i

u as ap-, flaw I'l

. i p i > > > : i ! ' : u i ? u t >•: r - ' - p o r :

.1.- ! T'r.nr-ilavat the

afternoon at t h e•:% r . - 'Xt

home of

SllNGOTHERSthe annual .-i'-rtv f

[ ! • •

A'

A

Marks Bir h Datelit fu! f-: . . lili-i

cration of plant VT nuiduring thU nioutli, n » ijority 'of ih«* tii:n- at t!thi» Junior Club la-t v.Gilnmn. past pr^siilfiit

^on^W-

ofK W. I».the «!u;».

by C. !t. Kr.-.>m;m n< m ir-shallOl'u.-r.s mstalli-d for *'J': \ w» re:

~l*r(1MftPnt,"~""N\ AT""Hrowrr;" Tirr p r u -dent, 1.. W. AiiK'-. tr«'.t-uri-r. A. II.St*h:it'fi.-r: sf'tTt'tiiry. J. H. J-'iminKs:wanlfn. P. M. Uobinsun. chaplain. H.B. Olson; iiu'mlii- rs of tV.i» Hoard ofM a i u p r^. W. I), (itlinan. M. 11. llun-dnkvr, Sr . ('. A. Mour-.

Thi' pnnl tmirn:n!:t*nt riTilur'.oil bythe c!ul> was ri-portol to have been~comp!i:;»-»I and i!i'- prizt- winners, wereannounced as beinj; W. l\ itrowvr. C !C. Hull and II. \\. Ol.-ntn. A cmuni t - itee was appointed to arrant*'' for an-',other tournament , thin committee 1

comprising W. C. Hrov.i-r. ( \ C. Hulland H. K. Olson. |" P l a n s " " w e r e ndTanced for a card*party In the pear future cand for a •

BIRTHDAY PARTY '-U. -iinuhti r of Mr. and Mrs.

brat^d hor tenth birthday Saturday af-i::U!'.rr:nj; ternoon from 1 to "• nVIork. at her

Member*Ct» i i . i : : ; t ; e e'.lave ar: iK'.1::-.. v.r. ;-:.:•

r f

:i n^ifer- rue

Kid-!.l.-.d

vh w.

u:it ( ' • > .

Ii.-'.d.M K . Wri;..r a::-

-.itve coin-Miss Mary

\\\\

a p.-r;i::i:;«

M»«r •:•!(•. [' '-'-'f ninoi.:(vvlm!t irai! I1'

au.iv.-i.; at

nmsir\:,\ diver-

nui^if am'. nth.T pn.stinies. with re-freshments made the time pass all tonf'iM. S'-uvtiirs u - r e piv^n to all,

._.I;LJL T h . Imstess

ITlpM.rThe

:i< par:

v:. :nit;l:ii!*i i*^and t reatment by

f th-

Noihe

ir workhiMr--n

onlv

n Itehaif of \b.<-•f Kahway a;.*

will this j;ive tl--1

: ct cxai'.iinatiii-:skilled s;»er:ali<s

Official UoM t l i r 1 : . ! !:>>;•.

urd Meetsth- Trt . f

'•:.i:;- Miin-:-.-. .M:-yi!ia r r n i > l o n .

-ten. Mrs . A:--iri:i:-iac!tt>r.

M. Hall.Mrs. V.';Il:a::i WyliiVt.

M i , . r : :n : : l : . ' . r M - M - " : *

alu-V.i. Mrs. Sa:r.u- 1

-. Walter Smith. Mrs.Mrs. Thomas- Vrni-

;•• Miil.-r a:.'l Mrs.

Such Is Cede Expressed bvii. A. L. Sadtltf to Fellow-

ship"C1ub

W. T-

t inK

'A i t :

:ho

• • • H M :

T O H O L D C L I N I C

T h e t ' n i o u ( , ' i ' i i lv T i .t ' :» f ircu!t>s;

:ie w i l l h o l d :• r f in : . - a : x\w K

L-:. J r . - ' u a - v v ; . t J . i \ ; t . . - \

i i" 'av

'Jr. av

T i ; i \ - . - i * >

I•"«". Mr-MHIIM;.

ti, r . t .

K.i'delv..

ian. (I'rit/ and

tr.nh-T andt'haries

M:itt:iew Ha us-Mr.-- ,vi; i'f Tar- wald. of I. i iulm. A feature was

ti:nh'l.i> cakf aiul t-n lichtt -1 cantin

many cases. . .Over one hundred cases of crip-

p!"d children of Kahwjiy and vicinityare now on the list and -very effort

POPULAR ^BAPriST~PASTORGE TS A UJO AS H0LID\ Y GIFT

will be made for the

later date . Tho committee on ihTJcartl party includen, A. K. Castor, W. ;C. Brower nnd U. H. Olson; and thocommittee in charge of tho theaterparty and supper is W. D. Oilman. A. jH. Schnefcr and I*. W. Auge. Chair- iman AURO of tho quoit tournament re-ported the Hchedulo completed and all

. .p lans , fortho opening matches nextwoelc. Remarks were nuido" Iiy theTartous orficerK and routine businesstransacted.

Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Crowell, of 62Commerce street, entertained a largenumber of friends New Years night

lBlc. danclngv-and refreHl^mgnt8_weroan joyed. Guests were present fromWoodbrldge, l*orth Amboy und thefollowing from this city: Mrs. JulesJaeger, Eleanor, Jennie and

"Jaeger. Mr and Mrs. Hur'olLAlice. Mnrti* und Harold ^kay ,Bolan. of Avcnol; Mr. and Mra. EVOA-rett and son. Jack: Mist Mabel Cro-well. Mr. and Mr*. ChjlrlpA Crowelland children. Jack on

«.'J:uiv!i and Sunday School Monday

nt^hr. nwinp to the delightful

which was Included in the cvrnts of•»U' _'l_veninp. Uey._and Mrs. "Wilbour!•:. Saunders were the recipients of aV*\rd sedan, as a token of estoem.

j Although Kev. Mr. Saunders lias ueen1 nt tlu> local pastorate but a comparn-

lively short time., he and Mrs. Saun-ci«>rs have won a warm place in theIn arts of their parishioners.

The presentation of the nuto wasuniauoL_A_packaKe__containinK a toy

lilT nblll

r.'lh'f and car-1,r—This—nohl«j

•\vnrl: which the Klks hav«* so- Rener- jously undertaken will require tho ex-penditure of a great deal of money,part of which the KU;s expect to raisehrough the big concert they are stup-IIK at Uahway High School on Tues-lay, January 15.

Miss Hansen HostessAt New Year-s-Eve-Par-t^One of the delightful New Year's

Eve part ies held in this city Mondaynight was given by Miss MarjorieHansen. of 1 Walter street. Dancing.Ramos and refreshments were all con-tributors to the enjoyment of the oc-casion. Music was provided by an

\n< lasCase.K . • • . ! . •

ne:-. J.and ih

M

\

e u - v .

UMSS.-H. Tharies—. Wiili;,!.'. l'.ur.-iinrry All".Tl-(1!i

•mi '

.i: \va>

IV

Wn(.!=•.in

• :::: v.uyV :.r's

':!•-' ''Vt.-

"n:a tues.

Mr.

A!.

lu not

\V.j[(lU\. followed t

machineof sale

_ p _ _in wlilcTi was placen"a~bllland license and insurance

'.papers wan presented to the couple' by Frank W. Kidd, president of the

Hoard of Trustees, with fitting re-marks . The recipients wore so over-

| whelmed hy surprise tha t it was somebefore they could reply.

T""~Th VVi

WILL HAVE FOUND UTOPIA IFKIWANIS RESOLUTIONS "TAKE"

'"awhich U-w persons t;<• • ' - :••:•-. u :> a n

; tiUK" T!"-"1" ar :s trrr^t-y! not I**- one ol w^alih t-r \*i :-.

the man wlm DDKS .->oai"th;following! and his country.

1 a truer hie ot d

lei. Frank Savacool nnd Karl Co-ventry.

Among thoso presont from NewYork City, Brooklyn. Newark, Wood-cliff e and this city were: The MissesLaura and Cornelia Moore, PepTempleton, Evelyn Coventry. Margie

J h S h i DThe entire evening wasTnosurable and tho watch hour servicewhich followed the social features oft h r affair wan un Inspiring one. Varlous social diversions and siuRinjmade up the Chris tmas rn tor tn inmenfeature, a visit by Santa Claus in theperson of H. 1-enti'r -Miller topping offthe program. Another ft-atiir

ttar_tl»**—u*lormal-Trccptloir"iiuen_tQ allan tm'mborft of the church who had

wmrrtir

G a l Y i n r t tDorothy Madden and Kaulston Mooro.Dave Crane. Frank- Savarnol, William

UHanson. Karl Coventry, Peter .Herman M Intel und Mr. and Mrsr.rurUne.r. Wallace and Irvtn Rrucl;

Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hnusenner, and (iprtrudo Hansen and Miss

It will

past. There will he no sharp distinc-tions hetw.'.-n the rich and i^or."

Continuing. Iiev. Mr. riiultlt-r sa id :instructive _and an_ njoy^ililo j ^ ^ r ^ 1 have been watching with keentalk on. "Tho business nf Writing".1 j iMtt:-r.-T"\vinirii7~Wi"i~iravO~'i:i;Tdi~r'fdelivered hy Karl Reed Silvers, ofjthe days of th>- yt.-ar just closed. And Socialist. I want to keep what I ha.vo

inj s t teei . secretary to Presl-; I am going to mention tho things t h a t ; as long as pussihlo. 1 mean that thodent DemitfVst, of liutRPrs. College, j nuv-7 pleased your old ' I "a (11 e"r "TlTiir-" mo fvT\'~f TT!r~rnTiTi~^s t r~ h a v i."1 n o~crt-*i i t -and a writer whoso renown is increas- su tbat you till the year 1'.'-I chuck , In the community if lie is **t i:o »i-*-- -r->ing by N-aps and bounds, and a review, full of such deeds. ; the world,of the year 's activities as given b y ' "In January of last year you were! "One of th<* supreme words of ifns-'Kather Time." Rev. C. M. Davis,, 'vett ing your club organised .so by Lin- • language is Service, for it describeswere tin* features of the weekly meet-, coin's Birthday. February 12?.you rtUjia.1 atti tude of tho individual and ofng Wednesday of tho Klwanls Club. 'ceived your charter . You will romem-1 nations which i? the very oppos i t eofing

Attiredd ti

in t_j:Euth.ct

raiment always as-1 bvr thai night as-one of feasting and selflshross, greed and lust. ServiceMr.'soiiR nnd great speeches, hut your seeks to help in a very virile and

FatmTT—Timc'-TCmcmbeni—it—tts—thf—pnrcticaHwayT—Its-molto-is-:—*Time" Uev

say'uthank you.

well

• made a nigui tha t the 'Spirit of Kiwunis* was When ymi get rid of the Idea t h a tThe mes- n o r n i n hearts of many of you. From service has any servile connotation

that day on you have seen more to about It and that Its t rue meaning lofow love in one another aiid have honestly J u s t the opposite—for it implies free-

tried to build something besides your ldom; then you will know what sucrl-The-y call me 'Fa- own bank accounts. j tlec and service mean. You will dla-am •iht* father of" " l ! 1 ^ ! l l l t same month, February, you cover that the true aristocrat of t hoI the beginning 1 w «n t to Elizabeth the - n i g h f n f t hc ! days- jnst ahead is the servant of m a n -

charter banquet for that club and car-; "More often love is the child otOf what u."ifr

Thar*?Itb her

thebounlVfuY'in' dinHn'p"om **•* nelKhhorly as well a s a brother ly! *\:y

in his historyvery favorable Impression,sage follows: \

"Mr. President: May Iwords to these hoys? IMy name is 'Time.'t l iurJ-and really Iall you boys. Frohave, been dealing out hours and ('.aysund. monthof you I

Vried''to"beV'm*ercifui'nud '"hopeful vliib with a gavel and assured them driving_tiirouKh

dcaliiiR out hours and daysand vears. And to some ried with you the spirit and enthusi-1 service than its parent.. Ohave :ilroadv' given "more asm of" men -who5G motto is-"We; is a'ship tied up to the wl

u 1^ ^ l l u l L o al- HuHd/ You proni-ntod the KHzabeth , , h l . i s on the high seas wit' t b merciful and "hopeful <l«b with a gavel and a^urud them drivin^throuKh th , Kinn,

OVf'

J' l

1j• I

i -(Continued on Pago Five)

\v\\ day:huphm aa_tl won- Men'sTaDdrVonnK-MpixJi OterfOftOi

now

days. And tho oiw tninp that K-f ps'hopefu! h e r e i n Hallway is this

m Club. \ nit-an lhatL-it kevpp a I l * r

hnppful that you will u>-e .rath**rHr.y-i* Kitra

paat twelve months.d trtead* of the Fir*t Baptlti