h. klocksin ^soii tiie summit trust—go.€¦ · »' t*r^ •^mnn^*^^^^^*?^^ •- •...

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»' T*r^ •^Mnn^*^^^^^^*?^^ •- • •" r " ' • " "V--r" ••"'•' '•"• "'-^'«-^^^ THE SUMMIT HERALD Mi 8VVMI* mfcomD WBXSD W. CUFT, Editor 9tM*i »H» »f dtr —* Ctmmtr Issued Bvsrr Hj£SDAY * JtUDAT AFTKRNOOK • th* Office W7 gprlnttMa An. yKLEPHONffia ltoo and 1M* OSCULATION B^» »• fli»»lt Bsr.ld Fablltalaf 0*. JOHN W. CX.IFT. President FRED W. CLIFT, Treaaww NORMAN & GARIS. Secretair |——enured at -th^-Pon-OfBo*, BnmnQT I N. J.. a» Becond-CIasa MatUr jne Tear ilx Months Single Copies - SUBSCRIPTIONS: -*3.S» . 1.71 . M Facts About Summit POPULATION jim—7,r>oo I'll.1—9.136 yr'n—1(1,174 l'Ul—11.C87 (Federal census estimate) l-i^ff—12,000 (Statistician's estimate) yy>,n—14,000 (StatlHtkian's estimate) Abased valuation, 1929—$27,034,890 Bonded debt—J2.062.1O0 Tax rate, 1929—City. 1.677; Hrhonl, 1.158 : County and State, 1.025. lUnk resources—$12,996.706.3G liuslness and Professional Men~-350. phases of education It la fitting and desirable, of course, to teach and to train young -people-how —to—acquit—triMnselves successfully In the active hours of life. In work, in business, In pro- fessional duties. That is n mattcT of course. But education to be complete must fit one for (tit whole of lire, and the whole of 1 Ife la not, by any means, found in its activi- ties. A very large part or It Is leisure. There is voluntary leisure, wh.en men refrain from w-ork be- rlty of Summit, on the Lackawanna It T\ , at 540 feet above tide water, with •HI tr.iiiiK daily. Bus connections with .Wn-.irk, Elizabeth, Morrfstown and Like lloiisttfong. City water from .irti'slnn wells. Electric light and R.-IS ; tide water sewerage; free mall deliv- er , excellent police and fire protec- tion. Four banks, foUr Building and Lo.in AsMficlatlous; two hotels; modem jirii^ressive school Mystetn. _,JJiiumiuiiicali;.wlUi.j5Uninili - Eualiiej.iL JlctiH AiHOClatlon. " n-^— NATIONAL ADVEtTISINO ItrRESENTATtVES REW JEtSEY HEWSPAPEIS. Inc. tUrrey C. Wood. Prtsidtnt New Vortt—Okifo-fummphU-Hrwitt TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 5, 192!) Recently we received a letter from one of Summit's most dis- tinguished residents asking us for information on speed regulations :is they are being enforced on Springfield avenue. In view of the quite considerable newspaper pub- licity given to the matter of speed lobulations and the enforcement of h.nne by the local police depart- ment during the summer months, we are rather surprised that this estimable gentleman is not famil- iar with the situation. The Sum- mit police on Springfield avenue west of the business zone recog- nize the State speed law of a limit of twenty inilus per hour hut offl- _»'«'_Ls_«iii_<±iLty_there _are_ n o t giving-l Ltlckets to anyone driving under j thirty miles an hour. This seems to be a reasonable interpretation j of the law on a highway as well paved and as wide as Is the newly built western end of Springfield ;uenue. We trust that this infor- niation will answer our correspon- dent and his out of town friends who inquired. fHE,SUMMIT HERALD ANfr SUMMIT. RECORD, SUMMIT,^?- rUEStJA 1 Yr NOy ti ,JMS?g Divine Healer associated "With It as "the Ofeat Physician!" THE USE OF LEISfliE dence and are to be &3 particularly desirable mediums for'chlnerj. , ghe^hhn the slightest the promotion ol thrift and enter- ] weight a s a pedagogical authority? Prise. ! If Colonel Lindbergh were to Unfortunately, a few, a very few, write an article of advice in mak- It is gratifying to obstjrre that! have fallen under suspicion, not?' 11 * 'speculative investments in regarded as ( ar_t__of mass production of ma- j we must regard with the highest {gramniaUc inscription applies with respect Thus we are told that President Hoover is not In favor of rcLainim; on the balustrade of the new Li- bra rj at Lou vain the inscription during the exercises of National \ because of any fault in the system ! Wal1 st, ' c «' t - w™* magailne would! which wa*.composed for tin Education week in the schools! but because of the improper con- marked attention Is being given to | Auct ot Individuals, and this fact the subject of the right use of L may not unnaturally cause some leisure; for that is by no means pe ° I>le t0 feel doub " uI concerning pay him two or three-thousaiHl-dol-T pose lars for it ami hundreds of thou-|«hiih one of the least important- but, we fear L too ^ttep^_mpst__ij&£leclejl.^HiOttestionaole integrity.- The broker's _ office, hov. If President '"I'e.-trmeil by German I'm y^ the system in general, or concern lng members of it which a r e of pur- ity Cardinal Merclejt and wa-. placed there lij the sands of readers & would' ne'eept U"archlte< t. Whitney Wuneu. in ful- as the guide of their fortune-seek- j fllnient of the Cardinals cm nest lng. Vet he probably knows less on desiie. That inscription, trans- itu? subject"~than" the average' lated from its Latin form, reads Grand Jury's inqqeBt will probably Hoov er were to write a book on; stored by American generosity therefore do much good In show- the cultivation of cauliflowers, the'its Htci.il and absolute truth there lng to what a very small extent : wno,e coun,r >* w °u ld into con-/-an be no possible Question. That there has been -mismanagement !»>"»<»»-"»* with-eagernesa-to-read 7 -U conceded.-«*n-*jr -tlMwe-»h« and how overwhelming a majority 11 ' Yel tIlere a r e a hundred thou- of the associations are worthy of! sa,u ' market Rardcncrs who know the fullest degree of public confi-j far more aD01,t the subject than he i at least'ooual force and pertinence to the suppression of Thomas Jef- ferson'^ Indictment of Oeorge III. Similar examples might be mul- tiplied. Every act of oppression or Injustice committed by one nation | against another might be regarded i as something that ought to he for- | gotten, or at least as something of j which we ought not to be reminded I in our history books or in Inscrlp- I tions on monuments. If record of Is - to" "WnrtUHed <ruT7~ wliy u- ()F^° ne all? not' dence The B, and L. system is a New Jersey institution, which has for many yeaTs been a credit to the State and a source of profit and prosperity to the people, and we have no doubt that it will perma- ever dreaihedl of knowing. Isn't it silh? Yet if so, what becomes of the truth of history? For in order to have the truth. It Is just as neces- mo.t trough object to the use of| s:ir >' ,0 hnve the v,nok ' truth ' , s , 0 it The only Question is one of ex-, havt ' "othlng but the truth. pedienc) Ought it to stand there, | "JJL.^-!. " '! ' "• . as a perpetual reminder ot a ver> I A good point Is being t'nade In J regrettable and deplorable fact? It Springfield's drive for subscrip- I would be impossible to suggest two. tions to the Red Cross. It Is point- cause they are tired, or the job in | nently maintain that admirable hand is done, or what jiat other reason. And there is inialuiitary leisure, caused by unemployment, or Illness, or old age, or vltat not; else. ' "What is one to do then"? /What has his schooling taught Mm t o "do In leisure hours and days? Does he find time hanging heavy on his hands? Is he put to it to "kill time?" Is he tempted tp £<|] e and perhaps mischievous dissipation? Or, liappily, have the schools taught him the habits of observa- tion and thinking, and tlic loTe of reading, no that he can make of his leisure a tlrmniot of tedluiri"bTif _ pTj intense enjoyment and profit? It would be well to have la every school a systematic course of In- struction, supplied witii fitting textbooks, in the art of the right use of leisure. status. TEMFEKAM'E IS CANADA men whose- opinions on the mattci j would be entitled to more weight , , ~~ ' , . . 'than the great Cardinal who was Canada Is so near a neighbor of i „,,„,. „ . . „,,, 4 . . , , ,.. .. ,»-,„., . , , ,,above'all other men the verv soul the Lnited states, and social and ^ ^ jn t h c WofW Wa] . an(l business intercourse between the )|p Pu . sMent who WJls nbove a two countries Is so mtimate, that|„ M lh(i jm savi()r (>f tljp VINDICATING THE D. A. R. two recent elections there-on the i question of the liquor traffic must be regarded with special interest The Daughters or the American; 1 " t,,is oountr - v - Revolution may presently be moved 1 ° ne w a s lK ' W others Belgian people. Between the" in their diametrical difference, .shall decide? two, w bo ed out that that community has In times past raised goodly sums to aid Red Cross work to meet great disasters, of floods, pestilence, or what not, and that it ought now to do even better, not to meet a dis- astei^-tnrt~to provide for "the ordi- nary, everyday duties of the So- ciety. For great and splendid as is the work of Red CfoBts in enier- rcadcrs, who have not had Intimate acquaintance with that institution. We trust that it will move many, in Summit and also in the numerous other communities who-e needs A fine tribute was paid the other^ night to George H. Johnston for! his work as Surrogate or Union County and also as chairman of the Republican County - Committee. are served by Overlook, to give And the finest thing about it wajfc generous support Tor - Hi.- suet ess- that he well deserved it. fu! prosecution of such work, op a constantly increasing .scale. Don't burn the dead leaves, use them for mulch. The clever discovery has liren'. that by placing ice around* l unks—-of—peaeh— trees—t-tie—l made the ripening of the frn.it can be delay- ] ed for days If not weeks By a 1 judlikuifi application, then^ -_aj peach-grower can have his fruit I ripen at successive intervals dur-1 iug a period of weeks, instead of having It all ripened and thrown upon the market at once. That will be a great gain for both the producer and the consumer. WE CLEAN birf. • I -ft in the great, Theie inevitably arises the very i gencles, still gtenter, though less pertinent and practical question. to adopt a vote of thanks to thc{ Prov,nce or Ontario, commonly es- hmM . Vl ., to what extent the " deci : - - teemed the' foremost of -all -In -the', i duTing the World War, and sub- tile --.ike tif healing the wounds of the war and abating animosities and resentments, it is best to destio> the inscription and not be continuallv reminding everybody Ui4wSe^^ , -^^»±-gl-g^^overnme.nt 1 vv4i ^ vlsiH< _ 44 ^ I ^ >t , ) ,. v _ { , { _,^ m . fti , 1 licensing and control. After three of lt , Jtl . ( , ( . iuus at . t o f vand . lU; . lu 1 divorced just as easily and precise- years' trial of this latter system, nll - . , v l t ,. .„„,„,,„„,, VB ~\ly the same way. Obviously that Is OCR A-DVEKTISEHEVfS TRAFFIC OX T H E AVEXl'E The frame-census ~Of" which the lesults have just been announced h\ the county authorities shows for the first time the effects'of the Jehuilding of Springfield avenue upon the use of that thoroughfare. As compared with a year ago, there has been an increase, of be- tween ton and eleven per cent., to lie exart, 10.39 per cent, foiat will, we fan( y. bo somewhat surprising to some of our readers, particular- ly to those who deprecated im- provement of the avenue for the lp.ir that it would thereupon be in- vaded by a torrent ot alien traffic that would make living along it in- tolerable. It nifty- also surprise A spirit of curiosity, which proved to be by no meani idle or profitless, moved us to oalte a somewhat detailed survey of the advertising columns of our last is- sue. That was not becatK* there was anything particularly unusual about them, unless in a ceTtain moderate amount of eleoLiim ad- vertising, but rather becait.se they presented an ordinary or average array, in advance of the great in- crease which will present! y come with the holiday season. The re- sults were, however, decidedly in- teresting to us, and we trust4hat a brief synopsis of them will be of i interest als The entire paper constated of twenty pages7"~containtiig- 3_(J0""coi-~ umns. Excluding a few of our own announcements, technicall;- termed "house ads," a little more than half the space, or 85 columns, was oc- cupied by ad\ F ertisemerets, Not counting the great array of small classified advertisements, ©f only a few lines each, the advertise- ments numbered 139, and of these 124 were the advertisements of lo- cal concerns, in Summit ana the communities adjacent or more or less tributary to it. It would - be—superfluous for-us- to say that this showing was pleas- ing to ourselves, not only liccause of the pecuniary receipts which it betokened, but still more liecause of its great demonstration »[ popu- lar appreciation of and confidence in THE SUMMIT HERALD as a medium of the most desirable sort of publicity. It was profoundly gr^tifyIng__to _h_ave^ the business, men of Summit and otjh«r places ask us to fill more than lmlC our space with their announcements. But the supreme reflecjteii per- tained to thc city" itself. To our mind it speaks much for Summit and its business men and vvomen. Rev. Dr. William L. StidgeT, 0 f-"=™«™ »«= M««I»UM. MI a n - i u - u i e ; ^ , , . in this ( . ase , s ( 0 s<irve a g a Boston, for lampooning and dc -; D , omin!on ' a, , ul « rta,n, y "f °" e J precedent. Let us grant that Rresl- nounclng them as he has done, i „ l c ? sest t0 the l nited Stat « 3 "".'dent Hooter is light, and that for view of the widespread public re-! ,haracter a "" ^owlar disposition.' action in their favor which his un- !Three >" ears :,K ° Ontario abandon- seemly attacks have aroused Thus I ^ the P rohi,lS tion which had been one of the roremost Journals of the !ado P^ d , v as an _f me ^. eenc ^„*?' 8te , m Middle West, the Cincinnati En -quirer, paying—tribute—to ciety as "a pillar of the Republic "^""'"n "»» 11 ""- «" C I l "" c of tlic atrocious act of through all the years of national yearfi ' tl,aI o f t h , s latter s > st<,m - w hi, h wa. there committed. Verv progress," observes: - ,l h a s ,1,nv vo t«<l •»" a decisive ma- 1 W(J TlRM1 wh . lt shl|U w o (]() ^ "This clerical critic is re i, ow iW"ty to continue it and not to go ( o m . lH , khnAlUm o[ i, M i 0 p t . n dencc? with those foreign visitors wno l»:>t'k to prohibition. ( n ((llllaill , .,„ i m i it . tmenf <>f t i, e come here and charge as from a! C ° lher W:,S heId ,n NoVa niitisi, Covernment immea^urably dollaranda,haIf upfora seatthat!? totia - Thore I>Tohil,ition hadbeeu: moie elaho.ate and severe than we mav listen to their 'wisdom •j" 1 forcc for nlne yearR ' and a But he is whistling down the wind! slronuous Mmpalgn was waged to when he attacks the Daughters ot ! contlMue u - At thc election two the American Revolution-the fine i « ucstions w « re presented to the clean, patriotic organization which! votels ' 0ne vas '' Are y o u i n favor is bent upon keeping aUve the " r to ntinnin g the temperance act?" conspicuous, Is the sum total of its routine work, through district visiting nurses and in a thousand other quiet but efficient ways. That is a very foolish proposal which is made in Congress, that next year's census takeis should ascertain the sentiments of the people on prohibition, instead of taking""a referc-nduin" atthe - p"oTTs~ The results of .such a canvass •would be four-fifths hearsay, lie- cause the census taker doe„s not in- terview every member of a family, but get s all his tlata concerning them from a single one. , in Our Own Plant, Wj AH work is done™nnder T our fler^ sonal supervision; we do not act as agents. We're In your neighbor- hood and invite your inspection at any time. . _j, Domestic, ."»c s(|, ft, Oriental, ?c~"Sqi It m -or In Soviet Russia any couple can Ket married by simply going be- fore-a registrar and declaring their | intention to live together as hus- l_hand _and_ .w.lf* 1 ;, ami they, can get storied traditions of a great day and compelling the adequate de- fense of the land their forbears won from the tyranny of mtsrule. So long as this organization en- dures in America, patriotism can never be made odious. So long as it endures the 'intellectual* and and the other. "Are you in favor of the sale of alcoholic liquor un- der a Co\ernment control net?" Curiously, a majority voted Yes on both questions, though the two were in fact antagonistic. The ma- jority in favor of the temperance act was, however, narrow, while that of Cennany in thc'Lnuialu in- scnptiou. Shall we keep on lead- ing it in public every Fourth of Juh and teaching it to our school children? Why perpetuate , a re- minder of the great evils of more than a century and a half a. Evei> conceivable reason fo-r^snp- presMiij; Cardinal Me r tier's epi- a shocking state of affairs, and It is not surprising to learn that under, its prevalence there is out divorce for every six marriages. Unfor- tunately for us, hfvpwver, that is precisely the sanwf ratio between marriages nniK'dfwrVos that pre- vails in thrllnitcd States. The ulories of autumnal coloring have vanished, but the unique charms of Indian Summer are awaiting us, just around the cor- ner. We KONATE, Too ^ ie account which-we recently rinted, of the vast and varied vol- _unif , „of_wjH'_k_thiii _is_be_ing__«lone at Overlook Hospital, will probably be a revelation to many of o u r The Electrical Shop Electrical Appliances « House Wiring f-I $* Repairs ._ \ - ::.£^ L.. "If It's Electrical We Have If* \ Z3 Laird & Co, TELEPHONE 1800 16 BEECHWOOD ROA T j sentimental emotionalists so pres-! tnat for sale of u *t uor undeT Gov " ently abundant in American pul- pits will make little headway in their labor of damning America and extolling the virtues of com- radeship with peoples who would k_than the-cnttffli of all Christian throats ""These American internation ernment control was overwhelm- ing. All concede, therefore, includ- ing the prohibition leaders, that ' prohibition has been repudiated [and a license system under Gov- t ernment control has been substi- tuted for iL The affirmative vote ! on—the—first question—in -f»voT~or- allsts are. In fact, rank enemies of retaininR the temperance act. was democracy, of the Institutions andi Iess tlKm G2l<>00 - while that on ^ ideals of the land which shelters j serond - in favor of sal « " nd e r Gov- them; they are engaged in influ-' crnmel,t colltro1 . was m ote than encing certain types of men in the' S6 ' 000 - public service with their blatant ; Thus of all the nine Provinces of emotionalism, which holds no ele- the Dom,1,, °n. cl R h t have abandon- ment or rational thought. They do 1 1 P r ol' ,blti< >" after some jears of not represent American life. The! tT,a1 ' and have re P laced « with a D. A. R-, believes in nationalism 11,cenw system. Only one, thc as a virtue, takes a proper pride in ( £ " ma,lest ° r tn *>i" «»• Prince Ed- the nation's past and is firm fori ward ' s ls,and - "Stains prohibition That is or course no reason why' the United-States should do like- the security of the nation's ruture.' ISX'T IT SILLY ? wise. But there can be no ques-1 | tion that the action of Canada will' | be carefully considered here, and ' Mrs. John A._CooIldge is writing it would be strange if-itJid-not! for a magazine an article on house-' have some influence upon public! keeping, and is getting a high price, opinion. 1 for it. She is a most estimable and! , \ charming young woman, of high! " ~"T„ „,„„. ~~ . I intelligence, but there is not the W T , , E T RI HISTORY"' slightest reason for supposing that -she-has-any-special knowledge of To what extent should the truth housekeeping, and it is quite cer-f of hiat °ry be told? Obviously, tain that she has had very little i many w,n r < ep,v ' t o t h * '""est ex- the subject, had it not been for the t ..„,^ i , L ., . , , . ... f ao t that she was the danghter-in- t' *-,°' -° n thC 0ther han '-' ad :lA"_U t i ! ., va I i0US - enter P riHes * al, - for _[la.w of Mr. and-M^-Calvin- Cool- intateir Improvement because theyleighty-five columns of aivertisc-fr-r-- n-f^^^-^^,-^ . . thought that a vast volume of traf- fic, was being kept away from the load by its bad condition. Our impression is that people living along the avenue have scarcely observed any increase of trarfic, if indeed they have not tieeu inclined to suspect a diminu- tion of it, becapse they have found » less noisy and less annoying thail before. " " ~ - ~~ ments in an ordinary edition of the paper. In proportion to tli« popu- lation, that is equivalent to 42,500 columns of advertising i n a single issue, of a New York' newspaper. Truly, from that loghial r>i>'nt of view, this development ol Turkey Hill is "no mean city." MINISTERS OF IIEALIXG Hundreds of persons who knew 'lie late Dr. English and were bene- B. AXD L, practical experience in it. Nobody j tent—"the whole truth." That in- in the world would-ever have - < l e e d J l c e m a 'ojUcaLand commenda- thought of asking her to write on bIe " Vet there"are radical differ- ences of opinion concerning it, held and expressed by those whom Thc_chaTge to_the firantl JuTyof Essex County, to make a thorough examination Into the' stattis and cpnduct of Building and Loan As- sociations, is timely and coxittnend- fited by his loving and expert j able. That is not because of the ministrations are profoundly grat- i"»'d at the tribute formally v paid t» him by the Summit Medical So-, l 'H'ty; the. more so because' they it-allze that, high as is the praise that the great majority of them are general or even considerable Im- pairment of the Integrity of those institutions, but quite the contrary. There Is, we believe, no question "•ore bestowed upon him, he fully ''f"-enes every word of it. H will occur to the reflectiVe mind,- moreover, that In paying that tribute to him the Society, quite iiiiintentlonttlly, paid one of the li iRhest possible trlbutei to Itself. That *as not only in the demon- JLtration M its ability to appreciate IJ r. English, which in itself was no small thing, but still more in the fact that what!! gald of hint might mtingly be said at least paten- '"'ily of many others if not indeed « every one of Its members. Capacities and opportunities both "iffer. But we like to think that "'eTe i 3 not a physician In Summit uho is »°t possessed or the same "'Imirahle splri_t_that actuated Dr. English, or who would not in case '»f o p p o r t u n i t y display the same 'Hialities 0 f sympathy, devotion and .;icrifi(. e that so ffnely character- "'d him. Theirs is a noble profes- -*">»>, s u p r e m e l y w p r t h y to have the fully worthy of the public ec-nfl- Plumbing Heating and Oet Our QnotaUois H. Klocksin ^Soii PlnmblnK and Heatlap INIHSThlAL rLAt I Itrtwren Park Ave. and IVnlnvt St. fhone 1M8 Itlge7 But ^tloeVthat {5terest)ng cir- cumstance fit her for thetask?~ ' Henry Fbrd'has Tecently uttered some quittf obvious platitudes con- cerning education, and these have been exploited in the press and elsewhere as* though they were the voice of inspired wisdom- *' Yet there is no reason for supposing that-he knows anything of real consequence on that subject, of which indeed he has been known to speak with indifference if not with' contempt. Does the fact that he is perhaps the richest man in America and a great master of thc fr66 I* a I*r»strlptlon for Colds, Grippe, Flii, Dengue, Bilious Fever and Malaria. It It the most speedy remedy known. * » * Kodaks Kodak Accessories Devdoping Rogers' Pharmacy INCORPORATED "i Telephone 74 Sfcttftdf, V. J. Agency for Loul* Sherry*! ChoooUt**. Win. I>. Murphy ^'- MUSIC and RADIO ^ 37C Sprlngfreld Ave. Fhone 565 ."?% Stromberg- Carlson Atwater Kent Majestic / and Brunswick RADIOS S^rvked PIANOS and Repaired if\ CONSIDER the Men Behind the Bank The foundations of a bank are more than metal and money;" glaM^andlgoldr They are human too. The. personnel of a Bank is the truest criterion of its merit—the surest basis of judgment. The officers and directors of this Bank are all men who have watched the commercial development of this community men who are keenly alert to opportunities—w;ho are ever ready to lend the helping hand to any project that bids fair to augment further the community's prosperity. h DIRECTORS _ WM. HALUS, Jr., Chairman of Board J. FRANKLIN HAAS, Vice-Chairman of Board f _\_J_ rh DANIEL BURKE CounHelior-at-Tjaw, New York. LYMAN B. CODDINGTON Wholesale Rose Grower. Murray Hill. N. J. LOUIS DeV. DAY Day & Cornish, Insurance. Newark, N. J. ^ERNEST R^EARLY ^_ Counsellor-al-T^aw, New York. O'Brien, Boardman, Conhoy. Mctnhtird & Early. CHARLES D. FERRY Director,^ Ferry Hats, Inc. Director. National, Lock Washer Co. ARTHUR GWYNNE Member of New' York Stock Kxchange CORRA N. WILLIAMS Counsellor-at-l-aw, Summit WALTER C. HEATH President. The Whitehead & Hoag Co. Vice-President, Director, National State Bank. Director. Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Co., Newark, N. J. FRANK E. KALEY Vice-President, The American Thread Companv. JOHN N ^ A Y , Jr_ Wholesale Rose Grower, ROBERT J. MURPHY Itcal Estate, Summit. N. J. HENRY A. TRUSLOW _ ' k Director, Armstrom; Cork Co, BARTON P. TURNBULL " President. c-. JACOB S. WILEY Vice-President. New York Telephone'Co Summit. N. J. X. J. BARTON P. TURNBULL, President WM. S. PORTER, Vice-President and Seci OFFICERS GEO . LUM, Vice-Preiidtnt and Treasured SHERMAN BYLAND, Aist. Secretary and Treasurer ERNEST P. PATTEN, Trust Officer Capital and surplus - - . . . $700,000.00 Resources over Six and One Half Millions Trust Funds over Six Millions, which are separate 1 and apart from bank's resources. Tiie Summit Trust—Go. SUMMIT, N. J. t ESTABLISHED 1891 vt I i-&k^&&&ii

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Page 1: H. Klocksin ^Soii Tiie Summit Trust—Go.€¦ · »' T*r^ •^Mnn^*^^^^^*?^^ •- • •" r" ' • " "V--r" ••"'•' '•"• "'-^'«-^^^ THE SUMMIT HERALD Mi 8VVMI* mfcomD

»' T*r^

• ^ M n n ^ * ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ * ? ^ ^ •- • •" r" ' • " "V--r" ••"'•' '•"• " ' - ^ ' « - ^ ^ ^

THE SUMMIT HERALD Mi 8VVMI* mfcomD

• WBXSD W. CUFT, Editor 9tM*i » H » »f dtr —* Ctmmtr

Issued Bvsrr Hj£SDAY * J t U D A T AFTKRNOOK

• th* Office W7 gprlnt tMa An. yKLEPHONffia ltoo and 1M*

OSCULATION B^» » • fli»»lt Bsr . ld Fablltalaf 0*.

JOHN W. CX.IFT. President FRED W. CLIFT, Treaaww

NORMAN & GARIS. Secretair |——enured a t -th^-Pon-OfBo*, BnmnQT I N. J.. a» Becond-CIasa MatUr

jne Tear ilx Months — Single Copies -

SUBSCRIPTIONS: -*3.S» . 1.71 . M

Facts About Summit POPULATION

jim—7,r>oo I'll.1—9.136 yr'n—1(1,174 l'Ul—11.C87 (Federal census estimate) l-i ff—12,000 (Statistician's estimate) • yy>,n—14,000 (StatlHtkian's estimate) A b a s e d valuation, 1929—$27,034,890

Bonded debt—J2.062.1O0 • Tax rate, 1929—City. 1.677;

Hrhonl, 1.158 : County and State, 1.025. lUnk resources—$12,996.706.3G

liuslness and Professional Men~-350.

phases of education It la fitting and desirable, of

course, to teach and to t ra in young -people-how —to—acquit—triMnselves successfully In the active h o u r s of life. In work, in business, In pro­fessional duties. Tha t is n mattcT of course. But education to be complete must fit one for (tit whole of lire, and the whole of 1 Ife la not, by any means, found in i t s activi­ties. A very large par t o r It Is leisure. There is voluntary leisure, wh.en men refrain from w-ork be-

rlty of Summit, on the Lackawanna It T\ , at 540 feet above tide water, with •HI tr.iiiiK daily. Bus connections with .Wn-.irk, Elizabeth, Morrfstown and Like lloiisttfong. City water from .irti'slnn wells. Electric light and R.-IS ; tide water sewerage; free mall deliv­e r , excellent police and fire protec­tion. Four banks, foUr Building and Lo.in AsMficlatlous; two hotels; modem jirii^ressive school Mystetn.

_,JJiiumiuiiicali;.wlUi.j5Uninili-Eualiiej.iL JlctiH AiHOClatlon. — " n - ^ —

NATIONAL ADVEtTISINO ItrRESENTATtVES REW JEtSEY HEWSPAPEIS. Inc.

tUrrey C. Wood. Prtsidtnt New Vortt—Okifo-fummphU-Hrwitt

TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 5, 192!)

Recently we received a let ter from one of Summit 's most dis­tinguished res idents asking us for information on speed regula t ions :is they a re being enforced on Springfield avenue. In view of the quite considerable newspaper pub­licity given to the mat te r of speed lobulations and the enforcement of h.nne by the local police depar t ­ment during the summer months, we are ra ther surpr ised that this estimable gentleman is not famil­iar with the si tuation. The Sum­mit police on Springfield avenue west of the business zone recog­nize the State speed law of a limit of twenty inilus per hour hut offl-

_»'«'_Ls_«iii_<±iLty_there _are_ not giving-l Ltlckets to anyone driving under j thirty miles an hour . This seems to be a reasonable in terpre ta t ion j of the law on a highway as well paved and as wide as Is the newly built western end of Springfield ;uenue. We t rus t tha t th is infor-niation will answer our correspon­dent and his out of town friends who inquired.

fHE,SUMMIT HERALD ANfr SUMMIT. RECORD, SUMMIT,^?- rUEStJA1 Yr NOyti,JMS?g

Divine Healer associated "With It as "the Ofeat Physician!"

THE USE OF LEISfliE

dence and are to be &3

part icularly desirable mediums f o r ' c h l n e r j . , g h e ^ h h n t h e sl ightest the promotion ol thrift and enter- ] weight a s a pedagogical au thor i ty? Prise. ! If Colonel Lindbergh were to

Unfortunately, a few, a very few, write an article of advice in mak-It is gratifying to obstjrre t h a t ! have fallen under suspicion, no t? ' 1 1 * ' specu la t ive inves tments in

regarded as(ar_t__of mass product ion of ma- j we must r egard with the highest {gramniaUc inscription applies with respect

Thus we are told that President Hoover is not In favor of rcLainim; on the balustrade of the new Li­bra rj at Lou vain the inscription

during the exercises of National \ because of any fault in the system! W a l 1 st,'c«'t- w™* magailne would! which wa*.composed for t in

Educat ion week in t h e schools ! but because of the improper con-marked attention Is being g iven to | Auct ot Individuals, and this fact the subject of the r ight use of L m a y n o t unnatura l ly cause some leisure; for that is by no means p e ° I > l e t 0 f e e l d o u b " u I concerning

pay him two or three-thousaiHl-dol-T pose lars for it ami hundreds of t h o u - | « h i i h

one of the least important- but, we

fearL too ^ttep^_mpst__ij&£leclejl.^HiOttestionaole integrity.- The • broker 's _ office, hov. If Pres ident '"I 'e . - t rmeil by German I'm y^

the system in general , or concern lng members of it which a re of

pur­ity Cardinal Merclejt and wa-. placed there lij the

sands of readers & would ' ne'eept U"archlte< t. Whitney W u n e u . in ful-as the guide of their for tune-seek- j fllnient of the C a r d i n a l s cm nest lng. Vet he probably knows less on desiie. That inscription, t rans­itu? subject"~than" t he a v e r a g e ' lated from its Lat in form, reads

Grand Jury ' s inqqeBt will probably H o o v e r were to wri te a book on ; stored by American generosity therefore do much good In show- t h e cultivation of caulif lowers, t h e ' i t s Htci.il and absolute t ruth there lng to what a very small e x t e n t : w n o , e c o u n , r > * w ° u l d E° i n t o c o n - / - a n be no possible Question. That there has been -mismanagement !»>"»<»»-"»* wi th-eagernesa- to-read 7 -U c o n c e d e d . - « * n - * j r - t lMwe-»h« and how overwhelming a m a j o r i t y 1 1 ' Y e l t I l e r e a r e a h u n d r e d thou-of the associations a re wor thy o f ! s a , u ' m a r k e t Rardcncrs who know the fullest degree of public c o n f i - j f a r m o r e a D 0 1 , t t h e subjec t t h a n he

i at leas t 'ooual force and per t inence to the suppression of Thomas Jef­ferson '^ Indictment of Oeorge I I I .

Similar examples might be mul ­tiplied. Every act of oppression o r Injustice committed by one nat ion

| against another might be regarded i as something that ought to he for-| gotten, or at least as something of j which we ought not to be reminded I in our history books or in Inscrlp-I tions on monuments . If record of

I s - t o " "WnrtUHed <ruT7~ wliy u -()F^°ne

all? not'

dence The B, and L. system is a New

Jersey insti tution, which has for many yeaTs been a credit to t h e State and a source of profit and prosperi ty to the people, and we have no doubt tha t it will pe rma-

ever dreaihedl of knowing. Isn't it s i l h ?

Yet if so, what becomes of the t ruth of history? For in order to have the truth. It Is just as neces-

mo. t t r o u g h object to the use o f | s : i r > ' , 0 h n v e t h e v , n o k ' t r u t h ' , s , 0

it The only Question is one of ex-, h a v t ' "othlng but the t ru th . pedienc) Ought it to stand there, | "JJL.^-!. " '! ' "• . as a perpetual r eminder ot a ver> I A good point Is being t'nade In

J regret table and deplorable fact? It Springfield's drive for subscrip-I would be impossible to suggest two. tions to the Red Cross. It Is point-

cause they are tired, or t h e job in | nently maintain tha t admirab le hand is done, or what jiat o ther reason. And there is in ia lu i i t a ry leisure, caused by unemployment , or Illness, or old age, or v l ta t no t ; else. ' "What is one to do then"? /What

has his schooling taught Mm t o "do In leisure hours and days? Does he find time hanging heavy on his hands? Is he put to it t o "kill t ime?" Is he tempted tp £<|]e and perhaps mischievous dissipat ion? Or, liappily, have the schools taught him the habi ts of observa­tion and thinking, and tlic loTe of reading, no that he can make of his leisure a t l rmnio t of tedluiri"bTif_pTj intense enjoyment and profit?

It would be well to have l a every school a systematic course of In­struction, supplied witii fitting textbooks, in the a r t of the r ight use of leisure.

s ta tus .

TEMFEKAM'E I S CANADA • men whose- opinions on the mattci j would be entit led to more weight

„ , , ~~ ' , . . ' t h a n the great Cardinal who was Canada Is so near a neighbor of i „,,„,. „ . . „,,, 4. . , ,

,.. . . , » - , „ . , . , , , , a b o v e ' a l l other men the verv soul the Lnited s ta tes , and social and o £ ^ ^ j n t h c W o f W W a ] . a n ( l

business intercourse between the ) | p P u . s M e n t w h o W J l s n b o v e a „ two countries Is so m t i m a t e , t h a t | „ M l h ( i j m s a v i ( ) r (>f t l j p

VINDICATING THE D. A. R. two recent elections t h e r e - o n the

i question of the liquor traffic must be regarded with special in teres t

The Daughters or the A m e r i c a n ; 1 " t , , i s o o u n t r - v -Revolution may presently be moved1 ° n e w a s l K ' W

others Belgian people. Between the" in their diametrical difference, .shall decide?

two, w bo

ed out that tha t community has In times past raised goodly sums to aid Red Cross work to meet great disasters , of floods, pestilence, or what not, and t ha t it ought now to do even better, not to meet a dis-astei^-tnrt~to provide for "the ordi­nary, everyday dut ies of the So­ciety. For great and splendid as is the work of Red CfoBts in enier-

rcadcrs , who have not had Intimate acquaintance with that inst i tut ion. We t rus t that it will move many, in Summit and also in the numerous other communities who-e needs

A fine tr ibute was paid the other^ n ight to George H. Johnston for! his work as Surrogate or Union County and also as chairman of the Republican County - Committee.

a re served by Overlook, to give And the finest thing about it wajfc generous support Tor - Hi.- suet ess- that he well deserved it. fu! prosecution of such work, op a constant ly increasing .scale. Don't burn the dead leaves,

use them for mulch. The clever discovery has l i r e n ' .

tha t by placing ice around* lunks—-of—peaeh— trees—t-tie—l

made t h e r ipening of the frn.it can be delay- ] ed for days If not weeks By a1

judlikuifi application, then^ -_aj peach-grower can have his fruit I ripen at successive intervals dur-1 iug a period of weeks, instead of having It all ripened and thrown upon the market at once. That will be a grea t gain for both the producer and the consumer.

WE CLEAN

birf.

• I -ft

in t h e g rea t , Theie inevitably ar ises the very i gencles, still g ten te r , though less

pertinent and pract ical question. to adopt a vote of thanks to t h c { P r o v , n c e or Ontario, commonly e s - h m M . V l . , t o w h a t e x t e n t t h e " d e c i : - - teemed the' foremost of -a l l -In - t h e ' ,

i duTing the World War , and sub­

tile --.ike tif healing the wounds of the war and aba t ing animosit ies and resentments , it is best to destio> the inscription and not be continuallv reminding everybody

U i 4 w S e ^ ^ , - ^ ^ » ± - g l - g ^ ^ o v e r n m e . n t 1 v v 4 i ^ v l s i H < _ 4 4 ^ I ^ > t , ) , . v _ { , { _ , ^ m . f t i , 1

licensing and control. After th ree o f „ l t , J t l . ( , ( . i u u s a t . t o f • v a n d . l U ; . l u1 divorced just as easily and precise-

years ' t r ia l of this l a t t e r system, n l l - . ,v l t , . „ . „ „ , „ , , „ „ , , VB~\ly the same way. Obviously tha t Is

OCR A-DVEKTISEHEVfS

TRAFFIC OX T H E AVEXl'E

The f r ame-census ~Of" which—the lesults have just been announced h\ the county au thor i t i es shows for the first time the effects'of the Jehuilding of Springfield avenue upon the use of tha t thoroughfare .

As compared with a year ago, there has been an increase, of be­tween ton and eleven per cent., to lie exart, 10.39 per cent, foiat will, w e f a n ( y . bo somewhat su rpr i s ing to some of our readers , pa r t i cu la r ­ly to those who deprecated im­provement of the avenue for the lp.ir that it would thereupon be in­vaded by a tor rent ot al ien traffic that would make living along it in­tolerable. I t nifty- a lso su rp r i se

A spirit of curiosity, which proved to be by no meani idle or profitless, moved us to o a l t e a somewhat detailed survey of the advert is ing columns of our last is­sue. That was not becatK* the re was anything par t icu lar ly unusua l about them, unless in a ceTtain moderate amount of eleoLiim ad­vertising, but ra the r becait.se they presented an ordinary o r average a r ray , in advance of the great in­crease which will present!y come with the holiday season. T h e r e ­sul ts were, however, decidedly in­teres t ing to us, and we t r u s t 4 h a t a brief synopsis of them will be of

i interest a ls The ent ire paper constated of

twenty pages7"~containtiig- 3_(J0""coi-~ umns . Excluding a few of o u r own announcements , technicall;- t e rmed "house ads ," a little more than half the space, or 85 columns , was oc­cupied by ad\Fertisemerets, Not counting the great a r ray of smal l classified advert isements , ©f only a few lines each, the adver t i se­ments numbered 139, and of these 124 were the advert isements of lo­cal concerns, in Summit a n a the communities adjacent or more or less t r ibutary to it.

I t would -be—superfluous fo r -us -to say that this showing was p leas­ing to ourselves, not only liccause of the pecuniary receipts which it betokened, but still more liecause of its great demonstrat ion »[ popu­lar appreciation of and confidence in THE SUMMIT HERALD as a medium of the most desirable sor t of publicity. It was profoundly gr^tifyIng__to _h_ave^ the business, men of Summit and otjh«r places ask us to fill more than lmlC our space with their announcements .

But the supreme reflecjteii per­tained to thc city" itself. To our mind it speaks much for Summit and its business men and vvomen.

Rev. Dr. William L. StidgeT, 0f-"=™«™ »«= M««I»UM. MI a n - i u - u i e ; ^ , , . i n t h i s ( . a s e , s ( 0 s < i r v e a g a

Boston, for lampooning and d c - ; D , o m i n ! o n ' a , ,u l « r t a , n , y " f ° " e J precedent. Let us gran t that Rresl-nounclng them a s he has done, i „ l c ? s e s t t 0 t h e l n i t e d S t a t « 3 " " . ' d e n t Hooter is l ight , and that for view of the widespread public r e - ! , h a r a c t e r a " " ^owlar d isposi t ion. ' action in their favor which his u n - ! T h r e e >" e a r s : , K ° Ontar io abandon-seemly a t tacks have aroused Thus I t h e P r o h i , l S t i on which had been one of the roremost Journals of t h e ! a d o P ^ d , v

a s a n _ f m e ^ . e e n c ^ „ * ? ' 8 t e , m

Middle West, the Cincinnati En -quirer, paying—tribute—to ciety as "a pil lar of the Republic "^""'"n "»» ™ 1 1 " " - « " C I l " " c of tlic atrocious act of through all the years of nat ional y e a r f i ' t l , a I o f t h , s l a t t e r s > s t < , m - w hi, h wa . there committed. Verv progress ," observes: - • , l h a s , 1 , n v vot«<l •»" a decisive ma-1

W ( J„ T l R M 1 w h . l t s h l | U w o (]() ^ "This clerical critic is r e i , o w i W " t y to continue it and not to go ( o m . lH,khnAlUm o[ i ,M i0p t .ndencc?

with those foreign visitors w n o l » :> t ' k to prohibition. ( n ( ( l l l l a i l l , .,„ i m i i t . t m e n f <>f t i , e

come here and charge as from a ! C ° l h e r W : , S h e I d , n N o V a nii t isi , Covernment immea^urably d o l l a r a n d a , h a I f u p f o r a s e a t t h a t ! ? t o t i a - T h o r e I > T o h i l , i t i o n h a d b e e u : m o i e elaho.ate and severe than we mav listen to their 'wisdom • j " 1 f o r c c f o r n l n e yearR' a n d a

But he is whist l ing down the wind! s l r o n u o u s Mmpalgn was waged to when he at tacks the Daughters o t ! c o n t l M u e u - At thc elect ion two the American R e v o l u t i o n - t h e fine i « u c s t i o n s w « r e p resented to the clean, patriotic organization which! v o t e l s ' 0 n e v a s ' ' A r e y o u i n f a v o r

is bent upon keeping aUve the " r t o n t i n n i n g the t emperance ac t ? "

conspicuous, Is the sum total of its routine work, through district visiting nurses and in a thousand other quiet but efficient ways.

That is a very foolish proposal which is made in Congress, that next year ' s census take is should ascer ta in the sent iments of the people on prohibition, instead of taking""a referc-nduin" atthe -p"oTTs~ The resul t s of .such a canvass •would be four-fifths hearsay, lie-cause the census taker doe„s not in­terview every member of a family, but get s all his tlata concerning them from a single one.

, in Our Own Plant, Wj AH work is done™nnderT our fler^ sonal supervision; we do not act as agents. We're In your neighbor­hood and invite your inspection at any time. • . _j,

Domestic, ."»c s(|, ft, Oriental, ?c~"Sqi It

m -or

In Soviet Russia any couple can Ket married by simply going be­fore-a registrar and declar ing their

| intention to live together a s hus-l_hand _and_ .w.lf*1;, ami they, can ge t

storied t radi t ions of a grea t day and compelling the adequate de­fense of the land their forbears won from the ty ranny of mtsrule . So long a s this organizat ion en­dures in America, patr iot ism can never be made odious. So long as it endures the 'intellectual* and

and the other. "Are you in favor of the sale of alcoholic l iquor un­der a Co \e rnmen t con t ro l n e t ? " Curiously, a majority voted Yes on both questions, though the two were in fact antagonis t ic . The ma­jority in favor of the t emperance act was, however, na r row , while

that of Cennany in thc 'Lnu ia lu in-scnptiou. Shall we keep on lead­ing it in public every Fourth of J u h and teaching it to our school children? Why perpetuate , a re ­minder of the great evils of more than a century and a half a. Evei> conceivable reason fo-r^snp-presMiij; Cardinal Me r t i e r ' s epi-

a shocking state of affairs, and It is not surprising to learn t h a t under, its prevalence there is ou t divorce for every six marr iages . Unfor­tunate ly for us , hfvpwver, that is precisely the sanwf rat io between marr iages nniK'dfwrVos that p re ­vails in t h r l l n i t c d States.

The ulories of autumnal coloring have vanished, but the unique charms of Indian Summer are awai t ing us, jus t around the cor­ner .

We KONATE, Too ^

ie account which-we recent ly rinted, of the vast and varied vol-

_unif,„of_wjH'_k_thiii _is_be_ing__«lone at Overlook Hospital, will probably be a revelation to many of our

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sent imental emotionalis ts so p r e s - ! t n a t f o r sale o f u * t u o r u n d e T G o v " ently abundant in American pul ­pits will make little headway in their labor of damning America and extoll ing the vir tues of com­radesh ip with peoples who would

k_than the-cnttffli of al l Christ ian th roa ts " "These American in terna t ion

e rnment control was overwhelm­ing. All concede, therefore , includ­ing the prohibition leaders , t ha t

' prohibit ion has been repudia ted [and a license system under Gov-t e rnment control h a s been subst i ­t u t e d for iL The affirmative vote ! on—the—first question—in -f»voT~or-

a l l s t s a r e . In fact, r a n k enemies of r e t a i n i n R t h e t emperance act . was democracy, of the Inst i tut ions a n d i I e s s t l K m G2l<>00- w h i l e t h a t o n ^ ideals of the land which she l te rs j s e r o n d - i n f a v o r of s a l « " n d e r Gov-them; they a re engaged in i n f l u - ' c r n m e l , t c o l l t r o 1 . w a s mote than encing certain types of men in t h e ' S 6 ' 0 0 0 -public service with their b l a t a n t ; Thus of all the nine Provinces of emotionalism, which holds no ele- t h e D o m , 1 , , ° n . c l R h t have abandon­ment or ra t ional thought. They do1™1 P rol ' , b l t i <>" after some j e a r s of not represent American life. T h e ! t T , a 1 ' a n d h a v e r e P l a c e d « with a D. A. R-, believes in n a t i o n a l i s m 1 1 , c e n w system. Only one, thc as a vir tue, takes a proper pride in ( £ " m a , l e s t ° r tn*>i" «»• Pr ince Ed-the nat ion 's past and is firm f o r i w a r d ' s l s , a n d - " S t a i n s prohibition

Tha t i s or course n o reason why' the Uni ted-S ta tes should do like-

the secur i ty of the nation's ruture. '

I S X ' T IT SILLY ? wise. But there can be no ques-1

| tion tha t the action of Canada wil l ' | be carefully considered here, and '

Mrs. John A._CooIldge is wri t ing i t would be s t range i f - i t J i d - n o t ! for a magazine an article on house - ' have some influence upon public! keeping, and is get t ing a high pr ice , opinion. 1 for it. She is a most est imable a n d ! , \ charming young woman, of h i g h ! " ~ " T „ „,„„. ~ ~ . I intell igence, but there is not the W T , , E T R I ™ ™ HISTORY"' s l ightest reason for supposing that

- she -has -any - spec i a l knowledge of To what extent shou ld the truth housekeeping, and it is quite ce r - f o f h i a t ° r y be told? Obviously, ta in tha t she has had very little i m a n y w , n r < e p , v ' t o t h * ' " " e s t ex-

the subject, had i t not been for the

t . .„,^ i , L . , . , , . . . . f a o t tha t she was the danghter - in-t ' * - , ° ' - ° n t h C 0 t h e r h a n ' - ' a d : l A " _ U t i ! . , v a I i 0 U S - e n t e r P r i H e s * a l ,- f o r_[la .w of Mr. a n d - M ^ - C a l v i n - Cool-intateir Improvement because theyleighty-f ive columns of a i v e r t i s c - f r - r - - n - f ^ ^ ^ - ^ ^ , - ^ . . thought that a vas t volume of traf­fic, was being kept away from the load by its bad condition.

Our impression is t ha t people living along the avenue have scarcely observed any increase of trarfic, if indeed they have not tieeu inclined to suspect a diminu­tion of it, becapse they have found » less noisy and less annoying thail before. " " ~ - ~~

ments in an ordinary edition of the paper. In proportion to tli« popu­lation, tha t is equivalent to 42,500 columns of advertising i n a single issue, of a New York' newspaper . Truly, from that loghial r>i>'nt of view, this development ol Turkey Hill is "no mean city." •

MINISTERS OF IIEALIXG

Hundreds of persons who knew 'lie late Dr. English and were bene-

B. AXD L,

pract ical experience in it. Nobody j ten t—"the whole t r u t h . " That in-

in t he world w o u l d - e v e r have - < l e e d J l c e m a 'ojUcaLand commenda-thought of asking her to write on b I e " V e t t h e r e "a r e radical differ­

ences of opinion concerning it, held and expressed by those whom

Thc_chaTge to_the firantl JuTyof Essex County, to make a thorough examination Into the ' s tat t is and cpnduct of Building and Loan As­sociations, is timely and coxittnend-

fited by his loving and exper t j able. That is not because of the ministrations a re profoundly g ra t -i"»'d at the tr ibute formally vpaid t» him by the Summit Medical So-, l'H'ty; the. more so because ' they it-allze that , high as is the pra ise tha t the great majority of them are

general or even considerable Im­pai rment of the Integri ty of those insti tutions, but quite the contrary. There Is, we believe, no quest ion

"•ore bestowed upon him, he fully ' 'f"-enes every word of it.

H will occur to the reflectiVe mind,- moreover, t ha t In paying t h a t tribute to him the Society, qui te iiiiintentlonttlly, paid one of the li iRhest possible t r lbu te i to Itself. That * a s not only in the demon-JLtration M its abili ty to apprecia te IJr. English, which in itself was no small thing, but st i l l more in the fact that w h a t ! ! gald of h in t might mtingly be said a t least pa t en -'"'ily of many o thers if not indeed « every one of Its members .

Capacities and opportuni t ies both "iffer. But we like to think t h a t "'eTe i 3 not a physician In Summit u h o i s »° t possessed or the same "'Imirahle splri_t_that actuated Dr . English, or who would no t in case '»f opportunity display the same 'Hialities 0f sympathy, devotion and .;icrifi(.e tha t so ffnely charac te r -" ' d him. Theirs is a noble profes--*">»>, supremely wprthy to have the

fully worthy of the public ec-nfl-

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Itlge7 But ^tloeVthat {5terest)ng cir­cumstance fit her for t h e t a s k ? ~ '

Henry F b r d ' h a s Tecently ut tered some quittf obvious plat i tudes con­cerning education, and these have been exploited in the press and elsewhere as* though they were the voice of inspired wisdom- *' Yet there is no reason for supposing t h a t - h e knows anyth ing of r e a l consequence on that subject , of which indeed he has been known to speak with indifference if not with' contempt. Does the fact t h a t he is perhaps the richest man in America and a great mas te r of thc

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"i

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if\

CONSIDER the Men Behind the Bank

The foundations of a bank are more than metal and money;" glaM^andlgoldr They are human too. The. personnel of a Bank is the truest criterion of its merit—the surest basis of judgment. The officers and directors of this Bank are all men who have watched the commercial development of this community

men who are keenly alert to opportunities—w;ho are ever ready to lend the helping hand to any project that bids fair to augment further the community's prosperity.

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DIRECTORS _ WM. HALUS, Jr., Chairman of Board

J. FRANKLIN HAAS, Vice-Chairman of Board

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DANIEL BURKE CounHelior-at-Tjaw, New York.

LYMAN B. CODDINGTON Wholesale Rose Grower. Murray Hil l . N. J .

LOUIS DeV. DAY Day & Cornish, In su rance . Newark, N. J .

^ERNEST R^EARLY ^_ Counsellor-al-T^aw, New York. O'Brien, Boardman, Conhoy. Mctnhtird & Early.

CHARLES D. FERRY Director,^ F e r r y Hats, Inc. Director. National, Lock Washer Co.

ARTHUR GWYNNE Member of New' York Stock Kxchange

CORRA N. WILLIAMS Counsellor-at-l-aw, Summit

WALTER C. HEATH President . The Whitehead & Hoag Co. Vice-President, Director, National State Bank. Director. Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Co., Newark, N. J.

FRANK E. KALEY Vice-President, The American Thread Companv.

JOHN N ^ A Y , J r _ W h o l e s a l e R o s e Grower ,

ROBERT J. MURPHY Itcal Estate , Summit. N. J.

HENRY A. TRUSLOW _ 'k

Director, Armstrom; Cork Co, BARTON P. TURNBULL "

President. c-. JACOB S. WILEY

Vice-President. New York Telephone'Co

Summit. N. J.

X. J.

BARTON P. TURNBULL, President

WM. S. PORTER, Vice-President and Seci

OFFICERS GEO . LUM,

Vice-Preiidtnt and Treasured SHERMAN BYLAND,

Aist. Secretary and Treasurer ERNEST P. PATTEN, Trust Officer

Capital and surplus - - . . . $700,000.00 Resources over Six and One Half Millions

Trust Funds over Six Millions, which are separate1 and apart from bank's resources.

Tiie Summit Trust—Go. SUMMIT, N. J.

t ESTABLISHED 1891

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| "I h a t e i h o n e i m p r o m p t u c o m -p l e x f o n s . d o n ' t y o u "

• " W h a t i l o v o u m e a n ? ' " T h o s e t h e y m a k e u p a » thftv g o

a l o n e . " — L o n d o n O p i n i o n . o - —

O u t 01 S t o c k A n i . s t — 1 -want a —famel"* T i a i r -

; b r u s h .

'• S h o w G i r l - D o c a m e l a u s e h a l r -I b r u s h e d ?

W I D E N I N G OUR HORIZON

UJOR. PLAJU

l i o m W.1I1111I s l u e t , S u m m i t

Mi a n d M i s W i l l i e d W e b e i t o N K I I O I I , W ' e b i i , p i o p e i t v 111 H l l l -

1 s i d e ,'iM'lltie. Till l e e t 1 1 0 m p i o p e l H I n o w 01 l o n n e i h o f P a u l F P i l i n e .

S p i n m t i e b l

Business Directory

SIGNS

\ " P o i l l o l l o o l ' bv It (' H u n l e i j

IS (11 11 -1 I'll l l ) ill Si lid c h e c k 111

t o t h e H i l l l i l i i i ,

Howell Bros.-

.'t T H . 12S3

Beech v»ood S n m m l t , IV. J . Hond, P . 0 . HldiT.

Dr. J. B. Engle Veterinarian

Morris Turnpike anil Middle St. O f H c e J l o u i s 2 ?,, 7 - « p m

F£L. asi , srtnin, y. .1

O. Lundell

H S c h n s t e i , o f t h e C i e s c e n t ' H a n d of N c n v a i k f u i -

r w e n t \ - l w o i n e n r b e i s a n d t w o

w lis t a t S i i J d Z D i W i k L j ^ -W11-!,il-"JL--?6-StJntmrt-Ave; IT-r-T..r:rrr: „«• ...„ l lKMl ( ) H i ( M u n r e e l n i r c i r the SpunKfield Lions

C l u b K n d . n a t t h e V i l l c x i a n t i I n n • A s t h i s w a s t h e u v u l a r m o n t h l v b u s i n e s s m e e t i n g t h e i e w a s n o s p e a k e r for t h e o c c a s i o n

T h e r e w i l l b e a m e e t i n g o f t h e P u s i n e s s M e n s C l u b F n d u v H I K I U 111 t h e L i o n s C l u b r o o m

Custom Tailor •* m u m ol s i i .ne.

TFOft'ATHOMETORlITS^ROTECTIOM

r;rJ^a;IEif ;feal^Esfate^Insurancj|

29 Maple St. S U M M I T , N. J.

C O N S U i T - A R E A L T O R

'Phone 1336

Frank Brenn Trunks, Ba^s, I.ugjfa^c

Repaired

Fiist Mortgages Guarantees Di^Title

Guaranteed First Mortgages and

Participation Certificates v

State Title & Mortgage Guaranty Co.

30 Biedhwood Road JCenteai BIdg. . Summit, N. J.

_ i —

Real Estate-

xsurance JOBS-BECK^CHMIDT

OPPOSITE T H E ^ A T I O N il Union Place THOtf F lost - im Summit, N. J.

JI? MaJn s t r e e t BRANCH OFFICE

'PHONE CHATHAM m2 COBBIIU ll ReaHor

Chatham, N. J.

Real Estate Transfers —Recorded artmrrt HoTJSe"

_ 1

T h e f o l l o w iiiR d e e c l s h a v e b e e n ' j e c o i d e d in t h e o f l i c e o l C o n n t v '

R e s i s t e i R i m e r a t t h e C o u i H i o u s c Mr. a n d M i s R i c h a r d F Dee k - 1

er t o Mi a n d M r s C h a i t e s S V o o i l i e e s , j irojLcrt i i n S u h i n r i t a . v c - . nue-, 111 (1 l e e t f i o m M o r i i s <V K— s e x T u i n p i k e , S n n i m i t _

L d w . u d K S h i v c i s t o H e n t v C o l -e t t a . h n l f i n t e r e s t in p i o i i e i t > i n S p r i n g f i e l d a v e n u e , 5 2 7 V) f e e t f r o m . U n i o n a v e n u e N e w P i o v i d e n c c

( C o n t r a c t ) N e w Y o r k a n d S i u n -m l t R e a l t y C o m p a n y t o P n b e i r K M l c k e v , p r o p e r t v a d i o i n i n j ; l a n d s o f R i o o k s S a v i e a n d l a n d s o l e s t a t e ' o f J o n a t h a n C U o n n e l ) , d e c e a s e d , i n M o u n t a i n a v e n u e , S u m m i t f

Mi a n d M i s B o l t o n H u l l l o H e r - 1 k e l e j H e i g h t s A s s o c l a t i b n , l o t s 2i) t o 22. b l o c k 2 1 . ,iiu\ l o t s "il t o ?,% b l o c k 22 m a p ot Hei k e l e v H e i g h t s A s s o c i a t i o n , N e w P i o v u l e m e

O e o r i ; e \ S a v i e t o Mi a n d M r s j A l l y t t W . F a l t o u t e , p r o p e r t y a d - . ' jo in ir iR l a n d s o f A l i v o S t o S a y r e ! a n d , ' C h a r l e s W . F n i t o u t e , in t h e * R o i i t h e r l y l i n e o f 11 p r o p o s e d n e w J s t r e e t , ' S u m m i t , I

P t i r R e a l t y C o m p a n y tn W . L o u i s | M o r r i s o n , p r o p e r t y in R r o n k . . s t r e e t , 'Gii!).43. f o e t f r o m S u i t e r . s t r e e t , ' S p r i n g f i e l d . '

. N a t i o n a l Hoir.se Si F a r n i s ^ A s s o -c i a t i o n , i n c , t o Mr, nit-tl M r s , C a r l E n g o l i i i i r d f , p r b p e r t y in l i ' l ck lor p l a c e , .29 .47 f e e t fmi ir . P e a r l s t r e e t . N e w P r o v i d e n c e .

M r . a n d M r s , M e l v i l l e M, R i i t n n R r M r , a r i d M r s . A n d r e w A , M c - , N n m a r a , p r o p e r t y i n S u m m i t . a v e -

AUTO TOP lH'lIDKR 31 Chestnut Ave. Phone 1751

Wm. J. Weiler Meat, P o u l t r y , Vpgelal»Ien, Fruit

K9 HPKIN<;I II:M> AVKNTJE

Telephone S90

[I dilur Nuie ; lol ^iii.ii| ridnii's U < » . .11 ( I l l i c i t I 1 < ad i i s N i r i 1 m o m v en clei

I Hit<>t I j

' Mt l iou^l i j l u s h o i i ' e 1, te .r l lv '

\ M ^ s m a l l I b e IIIIIK lov\ I n n s o t

tin 100I n e it a n a p p e a i a i i i e o l

11 i t i i ^ l ^ c l Pe t h a p s 110 o t l u 1 ,

, < li 1111 111 in t h e d e s i - ; n i n . . ol a

' i n , i l l l i o n i' h a s Mich a i m i t i o l l i n _

<lii i t o n I l i e c o m p o s i t i o n a s t h e

l i n t s ol t h e n u i | T h e e a v e s s h o u l d

' a l w a y s b e low t o t h e ^ l o u n d a n d

the i n o f ( . l i n e d u p at a d e c i d e d

' p i t c h . p t d f i a M v i i n b i o k i ' i i l>v ' ilOiini'i s . hut o | i o n i s e t i n s Is n o t j

.Uwav i_ p i i s s i b l e a s it i s in c c - s a i v I * in piovld<> a n i p h - w i n d o w - a n d a

n o d i i i l u i ^ lu'lf-'Til in a l l t h e m o m s mi the e«inid I bioi Dm mei , i an II --1 i-i 11 v In JIICM i d i d o n t i n M I L

I l i u s n o t n i . H ' i i i i - , t h e p r i n c i p a l e k -

i v a t i o n - i ] ( v c o y i i u i ^ l l i u r v v a l l s o l

d o i i n e i s vMr|i ( l i e s n u e m a t e i i i l a s u s e d o n the trior 01 bv s t a i n i n g t l i e m a e l a l k ( i i l n i , mi ic l i ut t h i s o b ­its H o n c a n In o v e r c o m e .

T h e e n h a n c e i , a b l e , w i t h i t s l u o a i l low l i n i 1 fo i 111s t h e k e v n o l e ol t h e d e s i n ' . i tu l a l i appv c o m b i i i a -

J l i o n o l ^ t o n ^ M i n k , s tu t t o a n d t i m b i ' i 1 o m j i l e l e s the c o i i i p o s l l i o n

f T i l e I Im 11 p l a i i ^ s h o w s n 100111-, , and a Min penci l , a l l wel l a i i a l i eel j 11 ml w i t l i i m i l n - ^ ol sp ice '1 In

TT n i l i l r I1

T h e l i o u ^ o l o t i t a t t i - . -' ' l o o c nine I l e e t a n d VMuiltl < o s l . i | i p i o \ i i u a t e l v

$ l l . : P l i l t o i f i i i s t i uc t I C o m i i l e t ' 1 vviiikin,-, p l a n s a n d 1 . spec i l i c a t u i t i s o l t h i s h o u s e m a v b e

o b t a i n e d t o t ,1 n o m i n a l s u m f i o m t h e H t i i l d l n , ; f a l i t o i , Kelc-I t o

1 H o u s e A-J ' i i i .

Local Building Continues Light

' l l u i t v o n e I I I I I I I I IUK p e l 111 it-, w i t h a t o t a l b u i l d i n g v a l u e ot j-ITJ,_•:."). w e i e i s s u e d hv Mmli l i i iA I i i ^ i e e t o i C e o l L ' e (] P a l k e u h i i l i , d u n l i n ( h e m o n t h ot ()i t o b e i Ot t h i s n u i n b e i . 11 im* p e l n u t s w e i e lo i l e s u l e i n e s w i t h a t o t a l I n i l l d i n i ; v a l u e o f $1 ID. "ino T l i e n i a j m i t v of t h e l e m a i i n n ^ l i e i m i t s w e i e l o i a l l e i a l i o i i s an'd Im • . i i , m i ' s

C o i n p a i a l i v e s t a t i o n s o l 1.1,1 ' m o n t h . S i lUetl lbi 1. I ' l^l . a l i d O i l "

b i ' i . P U S . , u e a s l o l l o w s ()i l o b e r , PiL'S V) p e i m t t s v a l u e d

at f i i H i o j - , , 1, s i d e i i t i . i l p e n u l t s . 17, l i i l i l t luu; V.ilili', >JI,li RIMI S ' e p l e m hei I'll"! 1 ! p e i m n s i s s u e i l b u i l d

Mil" v a l u e sM.s s . ' i J 1es1dc11tl . i l p e i n u t s , l i i i i l d n m v a l u e . »*is 100 O c t o b e i , I'IL") !1 p e n n i t s i s s u e d .

, bui l i l l i iK v l i n e . .SI72-!:.") 1 e s l d e t i t la l p e r m i t s , '), b u i b l i n c v a l u e , * 1 Id s u n

I t u i l d n m —his i i ec t o i r a l k e i i l i u r j . : i * ' l i e d t h e f o l l o w i n g h i i i l i l i iu ; p e r ­m i t s i lu l l i i ! . t h e in iu i l l l ol O c l o b e t

Ll i n t i d t o Joe S w e i i s o n d w e l l -Ill!; a n d ^ .n . i i , ! ' , l )om, \ o d d d n v e . |1 l l I I i i l i ik iu ow l ie) t o O O (>>e-k-j- J - e a r -r-i-i-T-^T—HJ»-e>-rh—itTdFP^-

r- I r o n l i o u n J O f f i c e -

F e r r y a t V * u U u r e i t S t i .

H P H E establishment of our', -*• bouni^ office xreatly w i d e n e d

o u r h o r i z o n . F o r n o w w e a r « neighbors to n e w hundreds of in­dustries and n e w thousands of house-holders.

Take advantage of this n e w con­venient office. H e r e you have at your disposal a l l the facilities o f our m a i n office. A n d here y o u c a n d r a w o n e x p e r i e n c e a n d knowledge gained from 125 v e a n 'of banking leadership in N e w Jeriey.\

T h e lrot ibound office in o p e n until 8 P. M. o n Mondays .

NATIONAL NEWARK

& ESSEX BANKING

COMPANY, Newark, N. J. Ei'obhihad 1804

BROAD AT CLINTON SHEETS Ironbound Office i fmrry at Von lvr*n Sti .

The IRON

cAutomatic COAL Burner Lat l fat ! co i t f s . . MTtJ

L — l a b o r . .-.inTTWHjimoIie

. . . •s inres •ready h « c

o r power at *1J timet.

Asi us

. iM' in ie s . u i i e u w i i e i . t o Ml l u t o . s h ^ \ h t u 1 o m b i e . a l t e i a t l o n , r e i n w o o i l m a d . I-; 11 T v w u i i b l v , • ovvi ie i t o !•; S h i p t i i a n a l l e i a l i o i i . I "iii D i C o i c t a v e n u e . V a n It C i t e e i i . mv n e i

T o K IliiAb, a l l e i a l i o i i . 'i'i W o o d ­l a n d a v e r i u e \ l l e ln i i_ , i t l i , o w i i t f - . to V V a l e n t i . _' 1 a i - j i a i a s c , ."]•> L M o i i i s ,1 v e n u e , s . u n e n v v n c i , t o J

-Hr«TT!Tr^ diVT^HTnTf' : n r d — r n r . n l e . -LTT= C a n o e H i o o k P a i k w a v , s a m e o w n - . 11 t o l o e S w e i i s o n . 2 1,11 c a i a g c . I'i U a l d t o n a v e n u e . A 11 R i c l i a i d s o n . ovMii 1 , to It S a l i t m i i , a l l e i a ­l i o i i . '.1 < 2 v c i l o o k m a d , I' C o i t a i i o , TTvCiici

T o - t h e I ) , I, i - \V R a l l i o a d . Slib> f—tHtiim. -eu-st e>l—Ptrs-Mic a v c T m r .

s a m e o w u e i t o F;iks C h i l i , j i l l e r a -j ; a i . n ; e s ? C l e n O a k s , s a m e o w n e i . > t o K W S t a l f o i d , d w T l l i n i ; a n d i ;a i , i f ; e , S7 cJien O a k s , s o m e o w n e i . t o F C a i u h e i l a i i K o , .'1-tai K a i a R e , 21 <)i< h a u l s t i e e t , s a m e o w n e r , t o 11 .J . N i c h o l a s , d w e l l i n g a n d - « . » -

T a K P T - K ^ r \ iorurr"W" H P a u l N o u , ow net

T o W i l l 1.1 in S a v i f f . p a r a g e . 20 L e w i s a v e n u e , V T l e i i / e i , m u n i ,

J.U-JU4J-L»«|FI I

" -%

Russell Hinman Incorporated

Building Conslructioit Tel 1722. Summit

12 HlgMmd Ave.

. i

Off To Work! Interest is the money that moneyearnil/nferesr/ro/n day of deposit today of withdrawal means full lime and full pay" for every dollar yoa pat to work at this conservative old Bank! You can start any tint! No waiting for Interest Periods either to

. put your money in, or to get your money out! Interest time i*_ all the time— 4I/2'>—and food, hard cash anytime yoa want it! , M'rlte for f'Jri'iilnr i l . "I l ini l . -

IMK lij Mul l"

Central S A V I N G S B A N K

B E S O t m C E S

orwM iss Mitxionrs 4th Ave . at 14th St. • • w a y . a t 73rd St,

Wew York City

Royal Fuel Co. 3 n . c o i p o i . t K d

R A P S I I l f ' J I C H . D I V C r

SSo Spr i i i ( ; f i i ' I i l A v e ^ S n n i m i t , V . J .

' P h o n e S u m m i t »<>10

l'j isf I r c i c l i t -'I h e t r a i n w a s l a t e — v # - t v l a t e

' I b e t a l k a t i v e l o n d u e t o i s a t c l o w n be a d e a p a ' s e n - e r " Y o u k n o w , " h e b o a s t e d , " I ' v e b e e n o n t h i s ' a n i e t i a m f o i n y e a r s "

l i a t e p a s s e i u i 1 • " W h o c clitl y o u i;et o n ' '

.! Ment ion - the H E R A L D when buying

A\fo tntWT*Mt Frown day of dtpoiit

to day of withdrawal '

SUMMIT SHEET METAL & ROOFING COMPANY

17 Union IMacc ^l'hone-1951—Summit.N. J . All kinds of hot air furnace-repairs arid installations Cornices - Skylights — Readers — Gutters -- Orna-menifejrWork - S l a t e - Asbestos Shingle - Tile and

Tar and Gravel Roofs

>rr Your Old Stovo

Is Worth

no On This Trad*

Lr!T 11* Took it o \er . For a1 I i mi le J t ime we L Jf a r e maku»K a S10 reduction <in the price o f <ujr oven heat regulator gas ranges, if an o ld »to \e i» traded in.

Vou will apprecittte the advantagei of the oven Ijeat regulator. Jt makes it so easy for you to pre.

, pare ilitiner*. fn cooking or hitkiuB there's never anything burned or uiidercooked, if the regulator is set corroetlvand the food i« left in the oven the required time.

. At your request, our representative wijl call and 1«"li Vou about the advantages of buviug a g*» range at this time vtheii M>veral intcre^tiiii; offers are be­ing made. Such a re»jue*t involve* no obligation. Any range may be purchased on our divided pay* nient plan and experienced gas men w,ill make the connect ion for you.

i PVBLIC(||)SERVICE 'X,' . - " ;' *"*' -- - I

1 ' f l - . — — " \. .-.• . • , — — 1 1

% - j

i> •mmmjmitk

%A^ B»*.V kiJ^^j^J^M^'J^i^^i^^^'A-^^ £^>M»'ui^iaLa»J:: . ^ ^ A ^ - i a ^ a ^ & s & i l l ^ A j ^ - S S ^ S r ^ i ; -.v.,,.

iSvUfi^'-Sifei-^ffH . ' . * & * * " i . .

\ ' '

Page 4: H. Klocksin ^Soii Tiie Summit Trust—Go.€¦ · »' T*r^ •^Mnn^*^^^^^*?^^ •- • •" r" ' • " "V--r" ••"'•' '•"• "'-^'«-^^^ THE SUMMIT HERALD Mi 8VVMI* mfcomD

gfr-*• »> .» y & j ^ A w w / SttHA^J —toJi- - ^ - >-J" -„ * .^V£- .^

^ A — J . ^ - -; frffyaysyiMB^tar.1.« V 1 * ^ * * ? 1 ^ ^ ^ ^

t ^ THE SUMMIT HERALD A «fiAiiwW

•.-^•^ %•** .»>•» * • * * j M f e a u

KD SUMMIT MICORD. SUMMIT. N. J. , .. TUESDAY, NOV, 5. 152

" iHiminiiV D O I N G S

^lllliliiiHK m m w ' m

* j « i

cfaflgy and Sons to Dine

of the prngr troop will present a one-act play) illustrating m e lamer ami i o n l

Hh-?h«¥«*g~ercam." -\-

Xui In Stofh Floorwalker—Why diufi't thnt

"Wbar did ho

* •

Following- the suggestion ot sev­ere! senior members a Checker Club will be organized by the "Y".

itfee has been posted on the ieirV bulletin board, and place

opening Cabinet dinner Friday eve­n i n g The program o( the Boys* Division^ Xor_ tlie_ fnll___and__w_Inter was discussed, and the specific duties of the Cabinet fox the year

provided for those interested to I w , , r 0 <],etormlned upon. The Cabi-fllgn up. Members of the Hoys' IM-1 n e t v o t c t f t o m c e t a g a t n ^-iday of

thi.s week 7.H0 to 8 for the sole pur­pose of electiiiK officers and nam­ing comniutccs for activities pro­motion.

Something unique in scouting in Summit will be conducted Friday the dueling with evening, November 22nd. and all j scout should knowJ

| IdeaL In addition to this and s c l ­eral special .scout stunts which eer- j m^a" n u v anything? tain troops will oe asked to P»*3-• w a n l i,/M.»

lent, all scouts will join la a "IJuel- jfcmuiv AHRi«tniit Me ins Contest," the contestants to do

things every F o r i h e ' j r i o -

TlBlon whd h a t e Teached their lfith ' bTTthoay will also be eligible for] membership in the club. j

o j Th* three' patrol leaders, Fletch-1

«r Thornton, George Mcintosh and Robert Martin, __wll!l Scoutmaster Jones enjoyed an overnight bike fftturihty afternoon and night, t

The Troop Cdmmittec of the "Y" t&tmts met late Friday evening to discuss Troop fj's pnrt in the t(tther. and son scout night Novem­ber 22»d. and to make plans for t»e**Y*' troop. The committee will meet again next Friday evening.

— o ~ — About thirty boys attended the

Prep Club luncheon Saturday noon and enjoyed a good meal together in honor of the newly elected offi­cers of the dub.

An interesting supper meeting was held last night us a "New Members Dinner.'' About forty new_memuexs—of-the-Senior Divi­sion were invited and were wcl-

The Stamp Club, under the leadership of Mr. Willis voted to change the meeting nights of the club rrom the 1st and 3rd Fridays to the 2nd and 4th Fridays and to change the hour from 8 p. m. to 7.30. The new schedule of meet­ings goes Into effect this week. <»

Cancer Ranks 2nd As Death Cause

scouts of the Summit district to­gether with their fathers are here­by requested to reserve the eve­ning and co-operate In making -the occasion successful and enjovable. __!* _WU1_ be scout fathu_and -san_ night, with an appropriate pro­gram of scout activities and father and son fellowship. To g i in ad­mittance to the- Y. M. C. A. audi­torium where the program will be conducted—a--*»coiit muet have his father with him, If for ;ome good reason he cannot produce his own father for that evening, the scout must adopt another "father" for the evening, an adult brother, uncle or friend who is willing to team-up with the Iwy for the eve­ning. „

Rally Chairman It. H. Wagner has the co-operation of_ the "Y" Troop Committee, .so the Scouts ]

night.

Cor^

Tier and runner-up in this contest two pieces of «coat equipment will be awarded as recognition knowledge and quick thinking..

Troops are ;5"ked to be prepared with scout songs and troop yells to add aonie "atOTnttplieic" and pn>

the rally. At the close there he a social jivnotl when re-ments will be served. Scouts

are urged to vvd?te no time iu» signing «i> fathers for the cvening.f ItVan-hiirportirnt -"-date-.™-

to tb<

frVshi

tomorrow I>ori<Ion Opinion.

— ~ o Kaslljt I'nderstood; Hovtncr

"You say Mabel Mutters?" "'Yes, with her eyes."

——o Too Jlucfc In It

Coroner—And what , were your hasbaptFs-IasIr words; "mailahT?

Widow—lie said. "I don't see how they make much profit on this .stuff at a dollar and a quarter a ouart."

-Mrpwn Jug.

Unite Ki Merit The road j*how waa playing a

poor lown. "Arc we alono?"^lilssed the vil­

lain. ''Almost," rejoined his partner,

looking Hadly" at" the rowri of empty -

sems. o —

Hardly Worth nhtlp Father (dangling l>.ilU—I shall

allow niy (laughter a hundred a year when she marries.

Prospective Suitor—That's very fair, sir, And what were you think-

I ing of allowing her husband?—

London Opinion.

ten

Homeo— What do you do; make a monkey ottt.oj

— • - — o > — -

Reason Fnoo^fc ., . , .„ . , , , "So she broke. jout tion)—111 take the money, your merit?"

Preferred Judge—Take your choice,

dnys or ?10. Prisoner (still In foggy condi-

lover, <limli up and vtn«»

t j

honor. - — o — !

Tnkinff >o 1'lmnce.s Juliet (from the balcony)—My J

Yes." Well, wasn't there ;t:

f.ion?" .'Oil, yes. She br«.kc n>

Will Vou Smile Line form* to the Kigbt

Usher- • Htiw many, please? Krasperatt-d Patron—There were^

five of us but thret- died.-^MontreaJ Star. ' i

o — - — •

and Committee of Troop So. 5 will ] Pkplea^ed a t Least < act a» hosts for the occasion. A s ; "You should have seen me foam-

inj; at the mouth the oth'er mora-matioii will ,be gladly furnished | im?" without charge, on request. | "I sure was: I'd brushed my teeth

r~

FIRST COMPLETE SHOWING ALL TYPES-NEW MODEL A FORDS Deliveries of this new model can now be made fairly prompt.

Appointments made for any time. For the convenience of those who are out of town during the day

THE FORD AGENCY 170 P A R K A V E N U E , S U M M I T

will be open Tuesday and Thursday Evenings between 7 and S o'clock until further notice.

Ts Your Automobile ^J^overed?

Consult Us About the N e w Jersey operators' and owners' Financb!

Responsibility Law, effective November 15th.

WE HANDLE ALL KIMIS OE IXSLRVNTII

:ti;

Thomas F. Munroe Real Estate and Insurance

S|>rlii£i>I(l Ave. Thone Kflfl Summit, V j .

Jib

A survey of the reports iasued by the United States Census Bureau over the last two decades show that as the deaths from other causes, except heart disease, have, decreased, thtt.se from' cancer "iave risen, until this disease is

corned by President,Bishop. J a y l „ o w \\BteA as second among the Wrightston'e, chairman^of tlie mem- eatiKes of death. bership committee, and General i n t:H0, for instance, the re-Secretary Christman gave brief j,pin,torv discuses ---1 iiberculosis talks. The fellowship was fine and . : l l ld pneumonia—were the chief the new members learned .some; causes of death, as is shown in this valuable things which as members of the "Y" they should know.

H O —

Organization' of teams for the newspaper campaign Saturday of this- week is rapidly being com­pleted. All arrangements should bo complete by tomorrow night.

——o—— The Association BoaTd of Direc­

tors will hold their regular month­ly meeting next Monday night.

Between thirty and foTfy mem­bers and guests of the Hi-Y Club will meet and dine at the "Y" this evening. Over a dozeu new mem­bers are expected to be inducted into the club.

Four groups so far have formal­ly voted to unite in a special week of prayer .observance meeting at the "Y" on- Thursday, November 14th.' They aTe the Hoard of Direc­tors, the Y's Men's Club, the Dor­mitory Men, and the Hi-Y Club. These and probably other groups will meet at 6.30'for a half hour's meet lngjn .sepajrate^Iac^.„fo.r_{Hs-.

"cussTon o f prayer and prayer, and then all will come together in.the Auditorium for a supper meeting for a special program. This 7 o'clock supper is also open to in­dividuals other than those in the special groups. These individuals who "wish t6 attend should make reservations in advance' of the 14th.

_ — - o — Almost 100 pcT cent, attendance

-of- Boys' Cabinet meTnTSerST and adult club leaders attended the

chart. Since that time a continu­ous decline in the deaths from both these afflictions has taken place. From a rate of L'01 per 100,000 in lHOo, the deaths from tuberculosis M l to lfil» per 100,000 in l'JIO, to 114 per liiOfOOO In 1*.*20, and SI per

j 100,000 iii 1!>27. This is an excel-| lent and encouraging demonstra­tion of the value of public health education and of preventive medi­cine.

These savings were chiefly in the younger age groups, and as a result greater numbers of people have reached advanced ages (can­cer age). This accounts in part for the increase in the mortality from heart disease and cancer, which now stand first and second on the list of causes of death. In 1900, as the chart illustrates, cancer was reported as the cuirse of death in only «:i per 100,000 cases; in-1910. the rate rose to 76 per 100,000' and in 1920, to S3 per 100,000. In 1927 it was 9ti per 100,000. During the same time deaths from heart dis­ease rose from 132 to 19G per 100,-1L0.Q -" —

Periodic; physical examinations and preventive measures would do a great deal to control the develop­ment of both cancer and heart dis­ease.

The vital and increasing impor­tance of the cancer problem is evi­dent from these figures. They are compiled from official reports of the Census Bureau by the Ameri­can1 Society for the Control of Cancer, and arc issued by the New York City Committee, 34 Fust 75t!f fltreet. New York. Further infor-

e as Iced cm even thousand motorists a single question u

1 Tew X oris: shows 69% increase

in EIGHTS -_T_ i_^_a*difc

Facts -Jttftt-obtatncd from 2S representative Ameri­can cities indicate conclusively that the motoring public prefers the Eight to all other engine types. Take New York City as an example: for the first

.ei£ht_months_of 1^29, new cars with list prices above Jl.OOO showed a C9 per cent, increase In Eights and an 18 per cent, decrease In Sixes!

At the "famous Pari*-Salon this fall, 44 makes of eight cyl­inder cars were exhibited, compared with 27-Jast year.

Smd<^kcr^world^-Urge3t-produtTr-of KghT»VT*^T«»ri" ago initiated thij era o f the inexpensive Eight with the cham­pion StudebakcT President which traveled 3 0 , 0 0 0 mile* in i6,32Drconaecutive minutes.

And today, at customary six-cylinder prices, you can choose from three great lines of Studcbafer Eights — hblHera of eleven world records for «peed and endurance and more American stock car records than all other makes COtnbiricd,

Get a smart, new, thrifty "Studebaker Eight — backed by 77 years of manufacturing integrity — and your car wjll_bc worth more in the trade-in markets of the future.

DO YOU EXPECT A GASOLINE TO DO?" A thousand different replies—but they all boiled down to these

six composite requirements: . ' . - . *

To start quicker"

To give quicker pick-up

11 tt

it

it-supply the

amount of

greatest possible

smoother power

To reduce knocking

lessen gear shitting

possess high-test qualities at

no advance in price

i i f lo

//-r

THEN WPTTROD STANDARD" GASOI

EW-PROCESSED AN IDEAL ALU ROUND GASOLINE

Dictator Eight Sedan .

Commander Eight Sedan

President Eiehi Sedan . Ftar-bm-StdiiMiielt. PricuaiibtfgO*^ -

More efndenf. A f e d dcsigae_d_dGiibcr.afe!y .to g i ve -a wider, more flexible performance "range. The

popu!ar-pr: ;ed gasc!:ne en the market. To make it, our experts installed a new cracking process.

itselF ths v-r>- I-fe;J word in refining methods. In a l l , it took almost a year of patient experimentation and

work—covn'Aezz L b o r c i o r y end road rests—before a single drop of the new-processed "S tanda rd " was put

on sale. The b b c r e f c r y fe : . j were excellent, tut the road tests are truly amazing. W e knew it was a good

gasoline. Du? v e didn'r know how good . And n^w we want Y O l i t o find out for yourself its superiority?

Test" ii on cr.y c.c cr c!! counts again i t a ^ y o i h e r "non-premium' ' gasoline on the market. Regardless of

weather conditions, cf reticle traffic, long cr short tr ips, we want you to t ry it. We know you wi l l f ind this a trup/)]

remarfcabb "z^izz'l^r'' gasoline. On safe today. Everywhere at the "S tandard" pumps. N o a^anc^ in r f pr lce£=

' W R N A " C E ^ U , I O liof Wiey wouJdTwirfWr yourftdrtdinWmstanr " h e a t thr f dfc ifaclctef&re tf passes into these huge rowers to be literally wrung clean of its pure, crystal-dear high-test gasofine. aASOJLINf

_ >