jutexature pept. friday w. a new ifynlding., at blind .... the result must- be grati ... jutexature...

8
X y Published Every Tuesday and Friday^oon. ,10,000 People Read the HERALD. "Justice to all: malice toward none. 1 and SUMMIT RECORD THIRTY-siXTH YEAR. NO, 39 SUMMIT. N. J., TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 27, 1925 ieclicatlon a Memorial Home i *-< '; , New ifynlding., at Blind "'. ' Babies-Home.' Formally Opened,qn Sunday and i..,_ Insisted!!by ; friends., ; 'Speakers- Were' Numerous $3.50 PER YEAE f M h. ( The Edgar O, Abbott Memorial home for nurses and teachers of tlio Arthur Home for Blind Babies erduted by Mr. and Mrs. John Howe Clifford"? artists of New YoTk, was dedicated last Sunday afternoon. . The .ground upon which the build- ing ~Tvaa oi'ecfctl Was doBfttfcd ^T" Mrs Charles I<\ Bassett of Summit. There was a large audience pres- ent to participate in the exercises, moBtly from New Jersey and New York; though Massachusetts and some of the wostoni states were represented. Before and after tho exercises, the rooms of tho new building woro inspected and met with general approval,' 1 The president of tho board of of- ficers, Miss Kathorlne Foster, call- er! the gathering to order and in- troduced Mrs. John Alden, vice president' and the president-gen- eral to the Sunshine Society, who •presided. , Mrs. John' Howe Clifford greeted the officers and friends of the Home and then presented th'2 building to the Arthur^ Home for tho, use of the nurses and teach- ers. The gift wns accepted by Mrs. Alden on-behalf of the managers, with thanks and appreciation of tho great gift and the sacrifices made in providing for it. She also expressed thanks-and appreciation to Mrs. Charles F,' Bassett, who gave the ground for the building, to the architect, Waiter H. Jack- son, and to the late Mrs, Mann- Vynne, and all others who had con- triTiutert toward the building' and its furnishings.' . Mrs. Alden introduced John Clift os representative of the State Legislature and .a newspaper man, connected with THE SUMMIT HERALD. Mr. Clift, spoke In part as fol- lows : Madam President, Mrs. Clifford, -and friends of Hie Home: • As a representative of tho local press, I bring you. greetings and congratulations upon- the comple- tion of this handnomo now building you are dedicating today, and ' whicft/ iS wAS so greatly needed In or- klcr to properly carry on tho grand and noblo work that this tnotitu- , lion Is accomplishing., I Wish also to extend my person- al thanks as well as appreciation of the managers and many friends Of the Homo, to Mr. and Mrs. John iHowo Clifford, for making it possi- ble to have such a magnificent building presented to the Sunshine Society as a Memorial to Dr. B. C. Abbott. The result must- be grati- fying to thorn both. ', Tho nurses and teachers will be particularly grateful for this beautiful building, which will pro- vide additional comforts and the reatfulness of a home, and thus In- "atill renewed cnorgy and en- thusiasm necessary to continue tlioir loving and humane, dally tasks, which have added su much to the success of this institution. _To Mrs. John Alden, the-Presi- rlent-.General, tho founder and In- spiring head of this Institution as well as the Sunshine, Society, I ex- tend my sincere congratulations. It must be gratifying for her to witness the grand results of her uincere and enthusiastic lahors for the education and uplift of the Iiolpless blind babies, in order that they may be trained to mingle with *•- ueqple, and tho-bettor preparcd'for the llfo before-them, and to know that all havo a higher appreciation of her inspiring and energetic labors for humanity. ' I wish for this institution ,and the society it represents, continued success fcnd the hearty support of - the general public of this State, as well as the States which are al- ready appreciating its good offices in the care of its unfortunato blind babies. Mrs. Alden introduced her hus- band as .John Aldon, of the Brook- _ _bm_Ea.gle, who-spoke-as-follo-ws: Madame' Chairman- Mr. and Mrs. .,' , (Continued on Pago Three) ' * Entries it Ha Wtifig' Contest -From tho munb'er'Qr. inquiries on various points 'connected with the .One-Act Pltlyiwrltlng Contest re Fortnightly- CSub JUtexature Pept. Friday Tbo Department of Literature is to have a speaker on Friday, Janu- ary .30th, Miss Elizabeth Cutting, Managing Editor of the "North American Review." Her subject, "The Habit of Books," is one on which she is well qualified to talk, both as a critic and as a lover of letters. The meeting will be held at tho residence of Mrs. William G. Van Schmus and the reception, commit- tee will he the members of the Lit- eratiire Department • committee: Miss Mculah Carpenter, Mrs, James J. Allen, Mrs. Philetus Holt r , Mrs. Rockwell S. Brank, Mrs. W. G. .Van Scbmua, Miss Helen Whltlock. 11 ai «ew rrovMeice Memories of a-'Literary and Social Union' Which Had a Brief $11$ jpjri]^ant Career, llqng Agp^ \ , Its Manuscript -' : Journal By WILLIS FLETCHER JOHNSON Once upon a time we "went in strong for Culture" in New Provi- dence. That isn't a particularly cultivated form of expression. Is it? No; it is too reminiscent of tho Chicago girl who resented her TJofJfbn Tnen3*B - mtIuiHtlon diat _ the = Windy City was inferior to Beacon Hill in culture. "Cultured? Well, you can juHt bet your boots we're cultured, away up in G!" Series Being Run for Boys ft^ES™ ? X^T'^I real success at Y. M. C. A. Achieving a Sensational Record in Attendance and Interest 1 Some of the Features Why the w. a A? That the Y. M. C. A. Sunday af- ternoon meetings are fulfilling a definite place in the religious llfo of Summit can easily be, judged by the ever Increasing attendance records, and by the widespread en- thusiasm and popularity accorded them. Several "Y"s and religious organizations of the surrounding eommunities have communicated with the "Y" as to the nature of this program that Is arousing such an interest. And, indeed, it,is a program that is startling and ef- fective to say the least. It lias been featured every Sun- day by two reels of motion pictures dealing with biblical stories; the first reel showing tho incident in Palestine, "the second its applica- tion to our present day life. Mo- tion ' pictures are increasing ,in popularity as a method of educa- tion and they seem especially capable of thrusting home the point of the lesson. Nor is the "Y" neglecting the speaking part of the program. Excellent speak- ers including George Irying, BJrlc North and Edgar Clements have brought a. brief, straight from the shouldpr message to the men and boys; A fine song leader, in tho per- sonage of O. P. Oakes. has built up th,o singing until It has become an enthusiastic and inspiring part of the. service. The Songs are pro- jected on the screen where all can see, a method that has obviated a possible shortage of song (sheets and has added to the attractiveness of the singing. Many of tho bqjs have partici- pated in the service by reading the scripture, or acting as chairman. A numher of special feature's have been_boj>lsejll_for_the near future, including a quartet,from the Sum- mit Choral Society and the Prince- ton Deputation team.* For the first time Sunday, the "Y" orchestra added a little novelty to the pro- gram. Tho service la open to every Summit man and boy, and the "Y" cordially invites their attendance. Meetings are held every Sunday afternoon at 3 p.m. In the "°Y" auditorium. If you are Interested in the meet- ings, watch each Friday's issue, of the- HERALD for the _ announce* ment of tho coming Sunday's pro- gram. chooi urowtn 44,278 punlic There are ' at present pupils enrolled in tho schools of the county, a survey by County Superintendent of Schools A. L. Johnson discloses. The teach.- lug staff of tho county totals 1,593. These flftures are interesting when compared with the annual re- port otJ:lie._State superintendent of- schools issued in 1856, a year be- fore Union County was set. off from - Essex. County. The State, superintendent at that time was John H. Phillips. In sub- mitting his report In 1856 ho de- voted a large portion of it to tho schools in Elizabeth, Now Provi- dence, Plalnfleld, Rahway, Spring- field. Union Township, .and West- field. These districts were then included in the county of Essex, later forming the major portion of the county of, .Union, . . . . . In 1856 there' were 3,847 enrolled cently offered by the' Summit Com- pupils in the seven municipalities mbntty Players, it would seem that \ existing at that time. Tho teach- -. - ..... . _ . ,-».„_ jt . *__,.__.... », . teac j lorai 0 ( -whom twenty-seven f were write this with only thc/ollier, and you cannot expect me to,' writhe .as elegantly with one- han<{. as with two. I did think of having my wife fiupply the other hand, but after some experimentation found a type- writer dutt less satisfactory than one on tho piano! So here I am picking the thing out with the fin- gers of one hand, using my chin or my nose or my elbow to hold down the Hbift key for capitals. Such Is my devotion to pure "culture." I was reminded of that enter- prise of many years ago by find- ing among a lot of old papers a few sheets of heavy, ruled letter paper, bearing tho impress of Slote & Janes in the corner, and closely written in ink still black, in a much more legible and graceful hand than I should he. able to write to- day if I undertook to produce a similar amount of manuscript. The makers' names, by the way,'are suggestive. How many users of paper and blankbooks today have so much as heard of Slote and James? Yet at.the time of which I am'writing they were at the very head oC that buslncs, and you could not reckon yourself among the neglect and hope for salvation if.your stationery bore any other Impress. " Well, this manuscript bears tho caption "The Voice of the Union," and proclaims itself to be Number One of Volumo One of tho journal of The Literary and Social Union, of New Providonoo. Its date Is December 6, 1877,,-an^ it purports to be .-edited by Willis Fletcher Johnson, assisted. "hy Ervln H. Schuyler, I suppose that somo peoplo In Summit remember Mr. Schuyler as having for a time taught what was then the village school of Summit; following his service in a like capacity in New Providence, And I trust that In his Florida home, whither he has re- tired after a long and distinguish- ed career as an educator, he still has some pleasant and picturesque recollections of the days when he, and the accomplished young lady who became his wife, and several more of us, strove to set up a .siaiiilaxiLofzCUituri! In New Provi- dence. • • Perhaps, with my accustomed modesty, I might claim that the thing was chiefly conceived and or- ganized hy the late Dr. Abraham Morrell Corey and myself. He was the village physician, who had a few years before pulled mo through an attack of typhoid fever on a diet- of apple whisky and soda crackers--a treatment which he, as a lay "preacher 'Of tho MtstllddlSt Church, would now probably stern- ly disapprove. However, it was highly successful In my case; and one of the first things I did after I got well was to begin lecturing for tomperanee! Drr Cory and I were .closa friends, and as ho had. one of the fastest horses in the place and had plenty of sparo time, and I wasn't exactly overworked with huslness, we canvassed the iWhole neighborhood together as missionaries of culture. We got the idea partly from the Chautau- qua Literary arid Reading Circle, which had 'been started a- little while hefore by Lewis Miller and John II. Vincent. The chief members of our Union whom I can now remember, beside Hr._ Cor-y_and - myself,_wore -Mr&r- Cory, tho Misses Belle and Carrie Valentine, of whom I have written in a former article, Ervin H. Schuyler, who afterward married Belle Valentine, and Atwood Jaco- bus, bon of the Rev. Thomas Jaco- bus, pastor of the Methodist Church. Dr. and Mrs, Cory were the only married people In It, the rest of us being-most delightfully young. We held our business meetings some- times at Dr. Cory's and Bometimes -at the Valentines* home, in the up- per story oft, what Is iio>"^Ir^ Wled's store, then conducted f by Mr. T Valentine. >":: ' ""'"" Our public entertainments, pro Because fhejY. W. C. A. through its nurnosc —to ossocfcit" young womenun/personal loyalty to Jesus Christ—seeks to enrich the lives of \hf girls and wopun of riummit throush physical, social, mental and spiritual training. Because the Y. W. C. A. seeks to establish a trlendship and mutual understanding among all the girls and women of tho United States, and stands for the safeguarding of the rights of womanhood all ovci the world. Membership in the Y. "W. C. A. is an investment in the highest woman movement in the world; there are now 559,51!) members In tho XTnited States, and the Y. W. C. A. is represented in forty- seven countries. Tho local Association stands ready to serve any girl that calls upon it, regardless of creed or clns-s, and whether she is a member or not. All activities are open to all girls, anil the employment and housing service is rendered regardless of membership. =- -Memi)erBh*p-iit^ie-lQCJll = AASO = ciatior!^_dcpendent_urinii the^ acceptance of the purpose, and not upon the paymenfTof a fee; therefore, the money to carry-on is obtained entirely from tho voluntary contributions of members and friends. February 1-8 will be considered "Contributors' Week,"' and all who feel that the local Association is'an asset to the com- munity, arc asked to send in their contribution, whether large or small. Some friends have already sent in their checks to the office v after receiving the dividend checks which were mailed last week. These checks will be given to the Treasurer, and those who have pent them in are asked not to pay any attention to the notices which will be mailed later. Walter RauschcnfiWh Voices the feeling of those who really understand why there Should he a Y, W. ('. A. in every community, in his beautiful prayer: ."Fit us for our work, lest we fail Thee. We lean on Thee, Thou great giver of life, and pray for physical vigor and quiet strength. Wo call to Thee Thou fountain of light,, to flood our minds with Thy. radiance and to make .all things clear and simple. "We submit our inmost,desires to Thy holy will, and beseech Thee to make Thy law sweet to our willing hearts." of Civics lectures Woman Attorney of Brook= lyn Tells of "The Wom= an Citizen and the Ma- chinery of Government" Held in St. Teresa's School Helen P. MeCormick, attorney-at- law, of Kings County, Brooklyn, opened her course of live lectures on Civics Friday evening at St. Teresa's Hall under the auspices ol St. Teresa's Unit of the National Council of Catholic Women, Miss -M itry "G~Iinwira"-i*ivHTUHig.====^= a 9? is osaiig oi icaaio ATOSIS V fiive Delightful Entertainment Mere "Roxy and His Gang" from the Capitol Theatre in Now York City, gave one of their delightful enter-' tainmenta last night In the High School Auditorium, repeating the success achieved hero by the outfit last summer. This trip to Summit by tho group of forty arliBts Is one of the last they will make because after appearances in Newark, Mont- elair and one or two otljer places this week the "gang" is not to be heard outside of the .Capitol Theatre. The concert last night was under the auspices of the Summit Lodge B. P. O. Elks, tho proceeds to he devoted to their chaTlty : fund. Or- iginally tho concert was set for December,' but several of' ' the "gang" were ill and all outside dates were, cancelled. The audience- last night was de- lighted to hear at the outset Miss Julia Glass, the young pianist who has been proclaimed by several of the greatest pianists in the world as the greatest of the younger group of pianists. Miss Glas.^ showed her marvelous technical ability', in a Hungarian Fnntasie,- and as an encore, as "Roxy" an^ nounced, "a Httlo thing called 'Sparkles'." "Doug." Stantmry, with his won- derfully fresh, youthful baritone voice, coming" direct from his en- gagement with tho Chicago Opera Company and singing with the "gang" for the first time since his return, was the some old "Doug.," —a happy, light-hearted, natural- born artist. ,IIe sang the well- Jinown "Mandalay," and a little Celtic song "No\a." '• -Jtyardorie HarcUtaT"\vlTli her rich contralto \fiiw, sang "Rwanee River" just as she often has done over the radio. A new member of tho "gang," Frank Moulnn, the popular come- dian of many a musical show of the past, sang' several-' Of his "ows, songs for which "Dr. Billy" bad written the music. "Too Late | Despite the intense cold- of the lowest January 2H t e m p e r a t u r e In i30 years, a liberal audience of wom- | en gathered to hear this talk on "The Woman Citizen and the -Ma- chinery of Government." Miss MeCormick, Is young, grace- ful, and of a womanly personality, with no'suggestion of the "strong- minded" woman politician that would have obtruded itself between her and the group of home women j to whom she spoke. With most ex- ' eellent judgment she laid the basis of her following lectures by im- pressing the fact that the quiet homo woman, pursuing her family duties faithfully, is already a strong factor, in national govern- ment whether she realizes it or not. "You and yojjr husband are run- ning a .gnvenimeiit in that house- hold and you have within you the power to give something valuable to this abstract matter of govern- ment." Miss MeCormick, speaking of the fact that we are not conscious of government, asked her women hear- ers to imagine the home with all government removedi from around it: "The days would pass and the garbage accumulate and there would be no removal of it: the house would take fire and there would be no tire department to answer your call: burglars would break in and there would be no police to defend you," etc. The women pictured in derby hats, mannish collars and vests may have gained the suffrage—"because they had a principle that is abso- lutely true": but it is the quiet home women in the background wjio are putting it over. Margaret Brent, the first woman to raise her voice for Ihe suffrage in America was a Catholic, of the family of Lord Calvert of Maryland. Catholic women should strive for the highest type of Christian citi- zenship. ' Woman came Into her own .with the coming of Christ, and the woman citizen differs iio-w from the man citizen only in her experi- ence. She begged women to lay aside prejudice and view public questions with an open mind. "America Is the greatest-, nation in the world," said Miss MeCor- mick. "It Is your country, and my count ry," and she gave the follow- ing eight points in conclusion ol hor first, address on civics: 1. Know your city, county, state, nation. 2, Know ytmr national and state Dinner=Dance Given at the Summit Golf Club Featured by a-' most excellent dinner and an unusually gnod or- chestra the dinner-dance at the Summit Golf Club on Saturday night waa a great success. Ray Nichols* Orchestra which has been heard over the radio lately from station WOR, provide.! the music. It was very generally agreed that the music furnished by this organiza- tion Wiis Ihe'best at any dance in Summit In a long time. This occasion was the first of a 'Series ol social events pleanried liy tlie Summit Golf Club t.> be held during tli's year. The ne-\t will probably be just proceeding Wash- ington's Birthday. lopes-te^See-Ioffl^ e.~PaVed This Year ,b County Engineer Bauer, Talk to Rotary Qnk Tells of Work on Cous : &y Roads ejcipjLAs __ _ Seen From Borne An Exquisite Spectacle Though the Features of Totality Were Not :Visi= ble in This Region Three Planets in View by Miss Ayerg and Miss Hareum, The Capitol Sextette followed with Burleigh's fino old spiritual "Deep River." "Wee Willie" Robyn, with his big high tenor voice Bang an aria from "L'Africaine" and that old, old bal- lad, "Dear Old Girl." Gladys Rice, one of the most versatile members of tho "gang" Uiij'n sang "My Hero," of "Chocolate Soldier" fame, and as an encore a negro song about "Be- elzebub," from which we gathered that a chicken was stolen last Thursday. , A male sextette with Frank Mou- lnn, , "Daddy, Jim" Coombs , and other favorites set the lioUse in an uproar .with their antics in "A" Pil- grim .af Love," closing the first part. ofXthe program. ""Hornby" and the quartet opened the last part with "That Old Gang of Mine." after which "Boniby" sang "Give Me One Rose." Yascha Bunschunk, "the Shlek Himself," with his wonderful 'oollo, provided one of the most en joyablo truats""fTam a musical standpoint Jn his rendering of that old' Hebrew chant, "Konedra." Caroline Andrews, who seems to havo taken the place of Evelyn Herhert, demonstrated her. wonder- fully beautiful voice in singing "Lo, Hear the Gentle Lark," with flute obligato by Eddie Myers. Then sho sang "that dear old prohibition I constitution ballad,". "Comin'.thro the Rye," in 3. Know your three departments nvVVIU.lH FLETCHER JOHNSON Mr. Doolry's familiar remark, "I see by th' paapers," came to mind when I read the orders is- aiiLd by the Superintendent of Police of Boston for extra vigi- lance on the part ol the force dur- ing the eclipse ol! the sun. "Accord- ing to newspaper reports," the prtclous document began, "the City of Boston will be in partial dark- ness, owing to,eclipse of tho sun." I do not know whether he hud any report or record to make after the evi nt. Ii he hpd, doubtless iie be- gan It, "According to newspaper reports the partial darkness of yes- terday was due to eclipse of the sun." Oh,-''Bo.ston! Boston!! Certainly nobody in this com- munity net-ds to be reminded by Pride in County's Record 'I be sdeaker gt the weekly luncheon M the local Summit Ro- tary Club was Jacob L. Bauer, County Engineer. Mr. Bauer came to Summit' at the invitation Frank A. Wahl.and was. introduced to the Rotariansby their Presi- jdent, Alfred W. Alpsbju^- -_. . ... i -Tn" opening" "Els talk Mr. Bauer said that Union County had good reason to be proud of its record in road construction as the first coun- ty ioad act to he passed-by any slate was drafted by Union County nun and passed by the NeV Jersey Legislature. The first county road to be built, he said, was thal'irom Elizabeth lo Summit in 1890, Street Superintendent Win. II. Swain be- ing one of the men in the Board of Freeholders ut that, time. In tho first years of county road construc- tion $17,500 was appropriated for, this purpose by Union County. Mr. tiauer pointed out that the develop- ment of the use of tnrvia on dirt roads was due to experiments mado in this county on St. George ave- nue, between Elizabeth and Rah- way. That, first ""(arvia, according to Mr. Bauer, must have been of the consistency of glue, and St. George avenue was like a lonif strip of fly pnper for some time. Everything must have its begin- ning and we should feel proud of the fact that such an Important utility us tarvla had Its origination in this county, he said. At present most of our roads are of concrete and an appropriation of $^25,000 every year has been made for the purpose of building and repairing the county's roads. This appropriation is more than lis needed, Mr. Bauer said, as there is Ihe ne.WHpapers that on Saturday morning last there was visible ]only about $180,000 used each year here such a spectacle of weird and lor repairs. The remainder is used entrancing splendor as never had been seen before within the mem- ory of men. True, we were far outside the zone ol totality and therefore missed the shadow bands (perhaps),-tho Bally's beads, the onrushing darkness, .ind the won- derful corona. Hut with 95 per cent, or more of the sun obscured, we had effects far surpassing any that were seen in former eclipses, when not niori' than one-third of the sun was concealcl. With those features of totality I have nothing to do at present. The New York lor taking over new roads and put- ting them into first-class condition. Mr. Bauer next roterrcd to Mor- ris avenue, in this city. It was taken over as a county road, ho said, in 1911), a n d tho chief diffi- culty in repairing it has been tho inability to force the Morris Coun- ty Traction Company to stand its share of the expense. In connection-with this - subject" he gave it as his opinion thatlin thc^ncar future a number of trolfer companies will go out of existence- to bii superceded by buses. As it i;> papers have told the story'better j the trollisj^cotnpany in question is than I could hope to do. Suffice it in the hands of a rcceiyer and the for me to 'say that there is good I Board ol Public Utilities has irt- reason to believe that the observa- ! tormed the city that it is impossiblo lions made will result in material to "mak<nhcm pay t their ".share" of fact sang it a couple of times. Eugene Ormondy, the popular violinist, who used to be known as the "Blue Blond," played beauti- fully a number the name of_w_hich we have forgotten and followed with an encore of Fritz Kreisler's "Lieb- cstraum." "Peter the Great," witli- his rich bass voice, sang "Drink to Me Only with Thine Eyes." Then "Gamhy," ' famed as a dancer, did some of her cute little stunts,—singing, in spite of Frank Moulan, one of the Italian patter songs and "Three Little Chestnuts," were followed by "Gamby" and "Doug." by special request in "Just '"Targejnnhiber of,contestants, it is. certainly, hoped that' such will be ti— >>.i'i' Summit does not want to In outdone by neighboring conv l u ' i m n . ••.. It would be rather a, < I'aniltv to see. the three prizes go *M ' up U .slants outside the city. fix sveeka or more is none too lunch time to compose a one-act pi U, perfect it, and get it finally ii#*pi!'f,sJ-feF=eirffflrte«tee-4«F4hHB-8ct=- r- firy nf thi* riaj?6_rd. Miss Mary *' i 1 1 i.i ifie secretary, la ready at «5l tiii\i-ato anBwer.-a'iy tiueatioitis- ii-Wivc to the conduct of the con-: Jfc?» Her telephone.16 4 7 8 . ' iMV Mmtributtons-'shimld hi addreqBed i,-> ii!«a s.Mvi', iu n Linden M*iv, s*.r3iJp;t, - "Apple Stiuce," "I- Murdered Him, That's Music" brought roars of Liko a Doll, laughter A variation of famous grand Betsy Ayers, who has been ill for i opera selections set to the words of three months, sang last night for " v — ™- ««""• M " n™™,,*" nm- •vf government, the executive, the judiciary, the legislative. 4. Vote intelligently. 5. Join a party: function polit- ically through a party 'or you are but one. ' fi. Be a good neighbor. - 7. Affiliate with at least one non- sectarian civic group in your com- munity. 8. Boost Summit. There is noth- ing lovelier than loyalty in citizen- ship. The second lecture of this course to Catholic women will he given February 27th. Women of any de- nomination may attend. the first time since her sickness, and delighted her friends-in-the "gang" as much as the audience. She sang "At Dawning." very beau- tifully and' as an encore "My Curly Headed Baby" was sung as a duet Yes; We Have No Bananas," pro vlded a roaring finish to the evening. Of course the famous orchestra of the Capitol was on the stage at all times, directed by "Dr. Billy," and at times by "Roxy" himself. addition to our knowledge 1 of the sun an(l it^pbunomeiia. , The day was! perfect. Even the intense cold, which made it un- comfortabl" tor watchers out ' of "doors, was a blcs'slng, for it, made the air phenomenally clear and transparent. There was not 'si r.iee of cloud or fog or any such thing. Moreover, the white ex- panse of snow afforded an unsur- passed field on which to waleh the we'rd waning of the sunlight and -possiblv—the mysterious shadow bands. Never was there a inure brilliant winter morning than that, U i'lght o'clock. Then suddenly I tvns awiro of ;< sliglil paling ol the solar lustre, more fell than seen; 'is though one ehetric bulb among five hundred bad ceased to f;Tow. I looked through my blackened screen, and lo! at the upper eight hand edge of 'he golden orb was what seemed like a black denl, growing slowly, eadily, remorselessly deeper Overlook B. & L. Ass'n Completes First Year The Overlook Building and Loan Association has completed its first year of'existence, and last evening held its annual meeting, at which the expense of repairing Blorris avenue. The plan for reconstructing Mor- ris avenue, Mr. Bauer said, is lo inrrca:si the width of- the street to 1 "' :56 feet TUid to rcgrade and make better drffins. Tbo county, he said,, wilt pay lj>r the cot;t of grading ant." of paving' zii feet of the proposed :Hi, the remainder to be paid for by Ihe city. The county wiiralso pay fifty per cent! of the tost: of' re- moving the trees and putting Jn tho drainage system, the city being expected lo pay for the curbs and gutter. r y '~ JUr. Bauer stfftcd that he did nut. believe that/aliy paving work hp'd ever tieen,r]one in Summit by asses- sing the property owners which hi) thinks is a great mistake. XJe ad- vocates assessing the property own- ers whoso property is adjoining to Morns avenue to help pay for ihe improvement under discussion. Tlio cost will be itt the neighborhood ol. $130,000, and, he said, he expect l-'ropi .the sun I looked, to the snow | that the road Will be paved thi,; fii Ids about me, and-^ssw them; year iVlr. Hauer's talk TO uo.i (trowing strangely gray, livid, ] instructing and of great Interest ;:'s opalehcenl, with such light as I the proposed improvement to Mor- Wiederiiold, New Baritone,- Concert of Summit and Hewar: timeytho following direet»rs,'-whosc—the st'arsvbutTntly never before was seen upon them It was not s.)ich a dimming of the I pie here lor light as a cloud over the sun Would , have caused. Hither wns it a light that was neither sunlight nor Wioonlight, neither the glare ol' i lightning ijor the soft radiance of ivenue lias been before the peo- omo time. sllere were men. The maximum salaries for the men was ?500, and for tho women $227. Ileal Estate Transfers •Recorded The following deeds have been recorded in t h e office of County- Register Bauer at the.Courthouse. •""Wilrfa'ui—Kf°^areeB'o " ttr—Mart Realty. Corporation, 35 -feet In Spiligfield fl*en«o, 20L5 feet from thevcorncr -of Mapl.e-al'reet-, SUHP- mit. '•' ' divided among the two churches and tho village school. Of them Ivpan remember only three, and I rather'thinkjljyit was all we had. In fact, I am mit sure that one of these was really the work of the Union, though somo of us took part in It. One, which I remember, most clearly, was held In the Methodist- Church. Atwood jn«">fyw-h j ifl n Tin? pirl"'' f'btnpt Albert A. Wiederhold, baritone, who was selected by the Associated Glee Club as tho soloist for their concert- last spring in Carnegie Hall, will be the soloist at the con- cert next Tuesday evening by the Women's Choral Society and the Lyric Club of Newark, in the High School auditorium. terms expired, were re-elected for throe years: Benjamin V. White, T. A. Lauer, William 3.' Post, Edward G. Prlngle, and Albert Leach The auditors re-elected were: Wil- liam Seaman, and William-, J. Dynan. The association has 1,49$' shares outstanding. The assets of* the as- sociation are - $10,704.85. A, new serlcs of shares was Opened yes- terday, M , ,„,, Triangle Club Tonight "'PhOB* 1 wtw brrtadenst. bedtime stories know litlln aimul a im.dern UldSi hnttim* 1 —-P'^iair. Ni.w>» organ, which we moved in and put on the pulpit platform Tor the oc- casion,, and-1 bad the .cheek ,to play_ upon it, aa the" opening number of tbc prograramo,-a medley^ fantasia of njy awn flrrangem-ent! To adapt Ihe wind/ of MIJIP inland, "Ob. Culture* What rrlmtii aic cniiimit f.»il .it ll'v itam<-«" My otli-i c-in trlbAition to the wo? nf the i % tug American singers who, like Reinald'Werrenratb, John Barnes Welles and others, springs from the ranks or men's glee clubs. Sev- i eral years ago. before Mr. Werren- rath, a member of the UniverBity Glce Club of- Ntw York,- had made hla great success as an operatic and concert singer/-the Choral So-' cJ6ty.,I)Eought him here. Again Ii t u r n s t o a favorTtTe~*in "the r a n k s of the .younger men and through the influence, of Dr. Woodruff, has se- cured' Mr. "Wiederhold". Wiederhold, liko "WeKrenratk, Is a singer-that' men, "particularly, ltkr to he"ir sing; IIMIIIWIH - hf ! Would not ft.we h'"jn I In' iho'i' <»f ! first of the season of the Choral Concert series. In it the Choral Society and the Lyric Club, with their two hundred members, will unite as a massed chorus and sing separately. - l_ " " '"•, • _, 7™,""" The massed chorus is - r a p i d l y | | J e W a r 'TO b p € a K 10 gaining in this country the popu-' larity it h£s long had in the Qld -W«r-15s »=flRnwi - aF=sfce*t-»Huofc s^-cf - voices are blended together they produce, the rich tone color, as well as tho volume, impossiblo in small- er groups of men and women. The individual voice is more complete- ly merged in the mass, the several parts stand out more distinctly, bringing out the finer harmonies of the music and permitting shadings and Interpretations that cannot be accomplished by -a- smaller choir.- All of Dr. Woodruff's choruses are so skilled in the difficult art of -pianissimo- stnging-thafr the audi- ence may be sure of a treat la nearing this great chorus subdue HH tones us proficiently as it will "Will thiMn lxi 10 |-n it bunt' uf The light that never was on s a or land,- The consecration, and the poet's dream. So .from, snow to' sun, and from sun to snow, I looked, enrantured and entranced. Now the black disc had reached with its forward i dge the centre of the golden one, and the sun wan seen as a mighty cres- cent. Moment by moment the black pushed on, moment by mo- ment the light w.is wlth.dr.iwn from the fields of snow, moment by mo- ment the aspect of natnie grew more weird. My nerves, I think, are above the average *ji__stoadl- , "ffess" "TT" c;i'ii_ gaze upon cTuTin Th,o Triangle Club is expecting | lightning, even in a tropical hum- Fortnightly Card iiesday All arrangements are completed lor the Fortnightly Club card parly on Wednesday afternoon in Beech- wood Hall. 1'Iay will start at 2 30. There Will be an attractive prize for each table. Mrs. Lupin- ski, the chairman ior the after- noon, will bo supported by an able, committee. Refreshments will he served and home-made candy will h^ on sale Come!, Bring your friends and help us make a gener- 1 ous contribattaft ^to the music stfidlo fund, of the'N. J. State Coif,, Jeg£jJ23uJKDra£i!———•« --— ,-**- - an interesting dlscussioA tonight when they will meet for supper at G.30 followed, by a discussion on the subject "How Far Will Dis- armament Secure Peace?" Wm. H. Dewar, former General Secretary of the Association, will lead this discussion. Pamphlets from half a dozen or more Peace Societies have -heen_£ieeurcd- and lQanQd__tQ__me]i who expect to participate in the discussion. Anyone ,who would like to read some up-to-date ma- terial such as the "Protocol." adopted at deneva, some recent sermons by Fosdick, or Robert Cecil', idili" ii, «MP • i I'IIII 1 llu MI il I'll A 1 nil UllU'H. cane, without the quiver of an eje- lash. But I must confess that as the light of the sun was thus with- drawn while it rode high and ever higher in the heavens, I could'not defend myself gainst a certain In- definable nerv6us tremor, a sense of physical as well as spiritual awe, almost an apprehension of impending doom. against a cprtalu ittdcfiirablnierv- ous Eremor, a sense of physical a;: well as spiritual awe, almost an apprehension of impending doom. And now only a-qnarfSr of the sun remained, in view; now a fifth, a "irth a "•evenlli and eirhth ninth i fi nib Tho wnv Boston Symphony Soloists to Play tkrc On Friday afternoon, Jniiuni.r 30th, at 3.30, a recital will be gi w ?r= at the Child Garden of Music ior the pupils and their mothers. Miss Marsh, who conducts the" Child Garden of Music, will haveci'-- tists, Julius ThcodornrcUuEi _VM1L: lAII-ii Mill tllKl'ttll Willi "Ullllj'llt j *!' but uf i .lriuu;i>, mi f ilhi- liihii vi.ii' '•» tin r.i>.. rji:'inni tlii»iuH , i rtl,l . u ' T . . I Mr. ''MIK'UUI <! OU I'PB-' ".'• v u i ) iv III i 1st of the Boston Symphony Orches- tra, and 'Louis Speyer, first oW'-' of the-same orchestra. Mr. !•> being especially interested ii" growth of musical agaix '.I among' nhildrm. will also si' > ' .• Ii'i"lii'i ln n H"| L'nrlj.li horn V- '111 Oiltjio'vh / v, ii r ir I- a niPiiili-1 ol the -i; ijii.mt t Ihinti I lluil '. of , 'Hir jii-p.111; ill' 1 K<n a r t ' I-. V

Upload: dinhdang

Post on 21-Mar-2018

219 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: JUtexature Pept. Friday w. a New ifynlding., at Blind .... The result must- be grati ... JUtexature Pept. Friday Tbo Department of Literature is to have a speaker on Friday, Janu

X

y

Published Every Tuesday and Friday^oon.

,10,000 People Read the HERALD.

"Justice to all:

malice toward none.1

and SUMMIT RECORD

THIRTY-siXTH YEAR. NO, 39 SUMMIT. N. J., TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 27, 1925

ieclicatlon a Memorial Home

i *-< '; ,

New ifynlding., at Blind "'. ' Babies-Home.' Formally

Opened,qn Sunday and i..,_ Insisted!!by;friends.,;

'Speakers- Were' Numerous

$3.50 PER YEAE

f

M

h.

(

The Edgar O, Abbott Memorial home for nurses and teachers of tlio Arthur Home for Blind Babies erduted by Mr. and Mrs. John Howe Clifford"? ar t i s t s of New YoTk, was dedicated last Sunday afternoon.

. The .g round upon which the build­ing ~Tvaa—oi'ecfctl Was doBfttfcd ^T" Mrs Charles I<\ Bassett of Summit .

There was a large audience p res ­ent to part icipate in the exercises, moBtly from New Jersey and New York; though Massachusetts and some of the wostoni s ta tes were represented. Before and after tho exercises, the rooms of tho new building woro inspected and met with general approva l , ' 1 The president of tho board of of­ficers, Miss Kathorlne Foster , call­er! the gathering to order and in­troduced Mrs. John Alden, vice president ' and the president-gen­e r a l to the Sunshine Society, who

•presided.

, Mrs. John' Howe Clifford greeted the officers and friends of the Home and then presented th'2 building to the Arthur^ Home for tho , use of the nurses and teach­ers . The gift wns accepted by Mrs. Alden on-behalf of the managers , with thanks and appreciat ion of tho great gift and the sacrifices made in providing for it. She also expressed thanks-and appreciat ion to Mrs. Charles F , ' Bassett , who gave the ground for the building, to the architect, Waiter H. J a c k ­son, and to the late Mrs, Mann-Vynne, and all others who had con-triTiutert toward the bui ld ing ' and i t s furnishings. '

. Mrs. Alden introduced John Clift os representat ive of the S ta te Legis la ture and .a newspaper man, connected with T H E SUMMIT HERALD.

Mr. Clift, spoke In p a r t a s fol­lows : Madam President , Mrs. Clifford,

-and friends of Hie Home: • As a representat ive of tho local

p ress , I bring you. greet ings and congratula t ions upon- the comple­tion of this handnomo now building you a re dedicating today, and

' whicft/iSwAS so greatly needed In or-klcr to properly carry on • tho grand and noblo work that this tnot i tu-

, l ion Is accomplishing., I Wish also to extend my person­

al thanks as well as appreciat ion of the managers and many friends Of the Homo, to Mr. and Mrs. John iHowo Clifford, for making i t possi­ble to have such a magnificent building presented to the Sunshine Society as a Memorial to Dr. B . C. Abbott. The result must- be gra t i ­fying to thorn both.

' , Tho nurses and teachers wil l be par t icular ly grateful for this beautiful building, which will pro­vide additional comforts and the reatfulness of a home, and t h u s In-"atill renewed cnorgy and en­thusiasm necessary to cont inue tlioir loving and humane, dally tasks , which have added su much t o the success of this inst i tut ion.

_To Mrs. John Alden, t h e - P r e s i -rlent-.General, tho founder and In­spir ing head of this Inst i tut ion as well as the Sunshine, Society, I ex­tend my sincere congratula t ions . I t mus t be gratifying for he r to witness the grand resul ts of her uincere and enthusiast ic lahors for the education and uplift of the Iiolpless blind babies, in order that they may be trained to mingle with

*•- ueqple, and tho-bettor p reparcd ' fo r t he llfo before-them, and to know t h a t all havo a higher appreciat ion of her inspiring and energet ic labors for humanity. '

I wish for this ins t i tu t ion ,and the society it represents , continued success fcnd the hear ty suppor t of

- the general public of this Sta te , as well as the States which a r e a l ­ready appreciating its good offices in the care of its unfortunato blind babies.

Mrs. Alden introduced her hus­band as .John Aldon, of the Brook-

_ _bm_Ea.gle, who-spoke-as-follo-ws: Madame' Chairman- Mr. and Mrs.

.,' , (Continued on Pago Three )

'* Entries it Ha Wtifig' Contest

-From tho munb'er'Qr. inquir ies on var ious points 'connected wi th the .One-Act Pltlyiwrltlng Contes t r e

Fortnightly- CSub JUtexature Pept. Friday

Tbo Depar tment of L i t e ra tu re is to have a speaker on Fr iday , Janu­a r y .30th, Miss Elizabeth Cutt ing, Managing Edi tor of the "Nor th American Review." H e r subject, "The Habi t of Books," i s one on which she is well qualified to talk, both as a critic and as a lover of le t te rs .

T h e meet ing will be held a t tho residence of Mrs. Wil l iam G. V a n Schmus and the reception, commit­tee will he t he members of the Lit-erat i i re Depar tment • commit tee : Miss Mculah Carpenter , Mrs, J ames J. Allen, Mrs. Phi le tus Holt r , Mrs. Rockwell S. Brank, Mrs. W. G. .Van Scbmua, Miss Helen Whltlock.

11

ai «ew rrovMeice Memories of a-'Literary

and Social Union' Which Had a Brief $11$ jpjri] ant Career, llqng Agp^ \ ,

Its Manuscript -': Journal By WILLIS FLETCHER JOHNSON

Once upon a t ime we "went in s t rong for Cul ture" in New Provi ­dence. Tha t isn' t a par t icu la r ly cul t ivated form of expression. Is i t? No; it is too reminiscent of tho Chicago girl who resented her TJofJfbn Tnen3*B-mtIuiHtlon diat_ the=

Windy City was inferior to Beacon Hil l in cul ture . "Cultured? Well, you can juHt bet your boots we ' re cul tured, away up in G!"

Series Being Run for Boys ft^ES™ ? X ^ T ' ^ I real success

at Y. M. C. A. Achieving a Sensational Record in Attendance and Interest1

Some of the Features

Why the w. a A?

T h a t the Y. M. C. A. Sunday af­ternoon meet ings a re fulfilling a definite place in the religious llfo of Summi t can easily be, judged by the ever Increasing a t tendance records , and by the widespread en­thus iasm and popular i ty accorded them. Severa l "Y"s and religious organizat ions of the su r round ing eommuni t ies have communicated wi th the "Y" as to the na tu re of th is p r o g r a m tha t Is a rous ing such an in teres t . And, indeed, i t , i s a p r o g r a m t h a t i s s tar t l ing and ef­fective to say the least.

I t lias been featured every Sun­day by two reels of motion p ic tures deal ing wi th biblical s to r i e s ; the first reel showing tho incident in Pa les t ine , "the second its applica­t ion to our present day life. Mo­tion ' p ic tu res a re increas ing , in popular i ty as a method of educa­t ion and they seem especially capable of th rus t ing home the point of t h e lesson. Nor is t he " Y " neglec t ing the speaking p a r t of the p rogram. Excel lent speak­e r s including George Irying, BJrlc North and Edgar Clements have b rough t a. brief, s t ra ight from the shouldpr message to t he m e n and boys;

A fine song leader , in tho per ­sonage of O. P . Oakes. has built up th,o s inging until It has become a n enthus ias t ic and inspir ing p a r t of the. service. The Songs a r e pro­jected on t h e screen where all can see, a method tha t has obviated a possible shor tage of song (sheets and h a s added to the a t t rac t iveness of the singing.

Many of tho bq js have par t ic i ­pated in t he service by reading the sc r ip tu re , or ac t ing as cha i rman. A n u m h e r of special feature's have been_boj>lsejll_for_the nea r future, inc luding a quar te t , f rom the Sum­mit Choral Society and the P r ince ­ton Deputa t ion team.* F o r t he first t ime Sunday, the "Y" o rches t ra added a litt le novelty to t he p ro ­gram. Tho service la open to every Summit m a n and boy, and the "Y" cordial ly invites their a t tendance . Meetings a r e held every Sunday af ternoon a t 3 p . m . In the "°Y" audi tor ium.

If you a re Interested in the meet­ings, wa t ch each Fr iday ' s issue, of the- H E R A L D for the _ announce* ment of tho coming Sunday 's p ro ­gram.

chooi urowtn 44,278 punlic

There are ' a t present pupils enrolled in tho schools of the county, a survey by County Superintendent of Schools A. L. Johnson discloses. The teach.-lug staff of tho county totals 1,593.

These flftures are interest ing when compared with the annua l re ­por t otJ:lie._State super in tendent of-schools issued in 1856, a yea r be­fore Union County was set. off from -

Essex . County. — The State , super intendent a t tha t

t ime was John H. Phil l ips. I n s u b ­mi t t ing his repor t In 1856 ho de­voted a large portion of it to tho schools in Elizabeth, Now Provi ­dence, Plalnfleld, Rahway, Spr ing­field. Union Township, .and West-field. These distr icts were then included in the county of Essex, l a te r forming the major port ion of the county of, .Union,

. . . . . In 1856 there ' were 3,847 enrol led cently offered by the' Summit Com- pupi l s in the seven municipali t ies mbnt ty Players , it would seem tha t \ ex is t ing a t t h a t t ime. Tho teach- -. - . . . . . . _ .

,-».„_ jt . *__,.__.... », . t e a c j l o r a i 0 ( -whom twenty-seven f were

wr i te this with only thc/ol l ier , and you cannot expect me to,' writhe .as e legant ly with one- han<{. as with two. I did think of having my wife fiupply t he o the r hand, but after some experimentat ion found a type­wri ter du t t less satisfactory than one on tho piano! So here I am picking the thing out with the fin­gers of one hand, using my chin or my nose or my elbow to hold down the Hbift key for capitals. Such Is m y devotion to pure "cu l ture ."

I was reminded of t h a t en te r ­p r i se of many years ago by find­ing among a lot of old papers a few sheets of heavy, ru led let ter paper , bear ing tho impress of Slote & J anes in the corner , and closely wr i t ten in ink still black, in a much more legible and graceful hand than I should he. able to wri te to­day if I undertook to produce a similar amount of manuscr ip t . The m a k e r s ' names , by the w a y , ' a r e suggestive. How many users of paper and blankbooks today have so much as heard of Slote and J a m e s ? Yet a t . t he time of which I a m ' w r i t i n g they were a t the very head oC that buslncs , and you could not reckon yourself among the neglect and hope for salvat ion i f . y o u r s tat ionery bore any other Impress .

" Well, this manuscr ip t bears tho capt ion "The Voice of the Union," and procla ims itself to be Number One of Volumo One of tho journa l of The Li te ra ry • and Social Union, of New Providonoo. I t s da te Is December 6, 1877,,-an^ i t purpor t s t o be .-edited by Willis F le tcher Johnson , assisted. "hy Erv ln H. Schuyler , I suppose tha t somo peoplo In Summit remember Mr. Schuyler as having for a t ime t augh t what was then the village school of Summit ; following his service in a like capacity in New Providence, And I t rus t tha t In his F lor ida home, whither he has re ­t i red after a long and dis t inguish­ed career as an educator, he still has some pleasant and pic turesque recollections of the days when he, and the accomplished young lady who became his wife, and several more of us, strove to se t u p a .siaiiilaxiLofzCUituri! In New Provi ­dence. • •

Pe rhaps , wi th my accustomed modesty, I might claim tha t the th ing was chiefly conceived and or­ganized hy the late Dr. Abraham Morrell Corey and myself. He was the village physician, who had a few y ea r s before pulled mo th rough an a t t ack of typhoid fever on a diet- of apple whisky and soda c r a c k e r s - - a t reatment which he, as a lay "preacher 'Of tho MtstllddlSt Church, would now probably s te rn­ly disapprove. However, it was highly successful In my case ; and one of the first things I did after I got well was to begin lec tur ing for tomperanee! Drr Cory and I were .closa friends, and as ho had. one of the fastest horses in the place and had plenty of sparo t ime, and I wasn ' t exactly overworked with huslness, we canvassed the iWhole neighborhood together a s miss ionar ies of cu l tu re . We got the idea par t ly from the Chautau­qua Li te ra ry arid Reading Circle, which had 'been s tar ted a- l i t t le while hefore by Lewis Miller and John II. Vincent.

The chief members of our Union whom I can now remember , beside Hr._ Cor-y_and - myself ,_wore -Mr&r-Cory, tho Misses Belle and Car r ie Valent ine, of whom I have wr i t ten in a former art icle, Erv in H. Schuyler , who af terward mar r i ed Belle Valent ine, and Atwood J a c o ­bus, bon of the Rev. Thomas J a c o ­bus, pas to r of the Methodist Church. Dr. and Mrs, Co ry were the only mar r i ed people In It, the r e s t of u s be ing-most delightfully young. We held our business meet ings some­t imes at Dr. Cory's and Bometimes

-at the Valentines* home, in t h e u p ­per s tory oft, what Is i i o>"^ I r^ Wled's s tore , then conducted f by Mr.TValentine. >":: ' • " " ' " "

Our public en te r ta inments , pro

Because fhejY. W. C. A. through its nurnosc —to ossocfcit" young womenun/persona l loyalty to Je sus Chris t—seeks to enrich the lives of \hf girls and w o p u n of riummit throush physical , social, menta l and spir i tual t ra in ing .

Because t h e Y. W. C. A. seeks to establish a t r lendship and mutua l unders tanding among all the girls and women of tho United States , and stands for the safeguarding of the r ights of womanhood a l l ovci the world.

Membership in the Y. "W. C. A. is an investment in the highest woman movement in the wor ld ; there are now 559,51!) members In tho XTnited States, and the Y. W. C. A. is represented in forty-seven countr ies .

Tho local Association s tands ready to serve any girl tha t cal ls upon it, regardless of creed or clns-s, and whether she is a member or not. All activit ies are open to all gir ls , ani l t he employment and housing service is rendered regardless of membership .

= - -Memi)erBh*p-iit^ie-lQCJll=AASO=ciatior!^_dcpendent_urinii t h e ^ acceptance of the purpose, and not upon the paymenfTof a fee; therefore, the money to carry-on is obtained entirely from tho voluntary contr ibut ions of members and friends.

Februa ry 1-8 will be considered "Cont r ibutors ' Week," ' and all who feel tha t the local Association i s ' a n asset to the com­munity, a rc asked to send in their contr ibution, whe ther large or small .

Some friends have already sent in the i r checks to the office v after receiving the dividend checks which were mailed l a s t week.

These checks will be given to the Treasurer , and those who have pent them in a r e asked not to pay any at tent ion to the notices which will be mailed later.

Wal t e r R a u s c h c n f i W h Voices the feeling of those who real ly unders tand why there Should he a Y, W. ('. A. in every community, in his beautiful p raye r : ."Fit us for our work, lest we fail Thee. We lean on Thee, Thou g rea t giver of life, and pray for physical vigor and quie t s trength. Wo call to Thee Thou fountain of light,, to flood our minds with Thy. radiance and to make .all th ings clear and simple. "We submit our inmost ,desi res to Thy holy will, and beseech Thee to make Thy law sweet to our wil l ing hear t s . "

of Civics lectures Woman Attorney of Brook=

lyn Tells of "The Wom= an Citizen and the Ma­chinery of Government"

Held in St. Teresa's School Helen P. MeCormick, attorney-at-

law, of Kings County, Brooklyn, opened her course of live lectures on Civics Friday evening at St. Teresa 's Hall under the auspices ol St. Teresa 's Unit of the National Council of Catholic Women, Miss -M itry "G~Iinwira"-i*ivHTUHig.====^=

a 9? is osaiig oi icaaio ATOSIS V

fiive Delightful Entertainment Mere "Roxy and H i s Gang" from the

Capitol Theat re in Now York City, gave one of the i r delightful enter-' ta inmenta last n ight In the High School Auditor ium, repeating the success achieved hero by the outfit las t summer. This t r ip to Summit by tho group of forty arliBts Is one of the las t they will make because after appearances in Newark, Mont-elair and one or two otljer places th is week the " g a n g " is not t o be heard outside of the .Capitol Theat re .

The concert l as t n ight was under the auspices of the Summit Lodge B. P. O. Elks , tho proceeds to he devoted to the i r chaTlty : fund. Or­iginally tho concert was set for December, ' but several of' ' the "gang" were ill and all outside dates were, cancelled.

The audience- last night was de­l ighted to hear a t the outset Miss Ju l i a Glass, the young pianist who has been proclaimed by several of the greates t p ianis ts in the world as the greatest of the younger group of pianists . Miss Glas.^ showed her marvelous technical ability' , in a Hungar i an Fnntasie,-and as an encore, as "Roxy" an^ nounced, "a Httlo thing called 'Sparkles ' ."

"Doug." Stantmry, wi th his won­derfully fresh, youthful baritone voice, coming" direct from his en­gagement with tho Chicago Opera Company and singing wi th the "gang" for the first t ime since his re turn , was the some old "Doug.," —a happy, l ight-hearted, natural-born ar t is t . ,IIe sang the well-J inown "Mandalay," and a little Celtic song "No\a ." '• -Jtyardorie HarcUtaT"\vlTli her rich contra l to \fiiw, sang "Rwanee River" jus t as she often has done over the radio.

A new member of tho "gang," F r a n k Moulnn, the popular come­dian of many a musical show of t he past, s a n g ' several-' Of his "ows, songs for which "Dr. Billy" bad wri t ten the music. "Too Late

| Despite the intense cold- of the lowest January 2H temperature In

i30 years, a liberal audience of wom-| en gathered to hea r this talk on "The Woman Citizen and the -Ma­chinery of Government."

Miss MeCormick, Is young, grace­ful, and of a womanly personality, with no 'suggest ion of the "strong-minded" woman polit ician that would have obtruded itself between her and the group of home women

j to whom she spoke. Wi th most ex-' eellent judgment she laid the basis of her following lectures by im­pressing the fact t h a t the quiet homo woman, pursu ing her family duties faithfully, is already a s t rong factor, in nat ional govern­ment whether she realizes it or not. "You and yojjr husband are run­ning a .gnvenimeiit in tha t house­hold and you have wi th in you the power to give something valuable to this abstract ma t t e r of govern­ment ."

Miss MeCormick, speaking of the fact tha t we are not conscious of government, asked her women hear­ers to imagine the home with all government removedi from around i t : "The days would pass and the ga rbage accumulate and there would be no removal of i t : the house would take fire and there would be no tire depar tment to answer your call: burg la rs would break in and there would be no police to defend you," etc.

The women pictured in derby hats , mannish collars and vests may have gained the suffrage—"because they had a principle t h a t is abso­lutely t rue" : but i t is the quiet home women in the background wjio a re putt ing it over.

Margaret Brent, the first woman to raise her voice for Ihe suffrage in America was a Catholic, of the family of Lord Calvert of Maryland. Catholic women should strive for the highest type of Christ ian citi­zenship. ' Woman came Into her own .with the coming of Christ , and t h e woman citizen differs iio-w from the man citizen only in her experi­ence. She begged women to lay aside prejudice and view public questions with an open mind.

"America Is the greatest-, nat ion in the world," said Miss MeCor­mick. " I t Is your country, and my count ry," and she gave the follow­ing eight points in conclusion ol hor first, address on civics:

1. Know your city, county, state, nat ion.

2, Know ytmr nat ional and state

Dinner=Dance Given at the Summit Golf Club

Featured by a-' most excellent d inner and an unusual ly gnod or­ches t ra t he dinner-dance at the Summit Golf Club on Saturday night waa a g rea t success. Ray Nichols* Orches t ra which has been heard over the radio lately from station WOR, provide.! the music. I t was very general ly agreed that the music furnished by this organiza­tion Wiis Ihe 'bes t at any dance in Summit In a long time.

This occasion was the first of a 'Series ol social events pleanried liy tlie Summit Golf Club t.> be held dur ing tli 's year . The ne-\t will probably be jus t proceeding Wash­ington 's Bir thday.

lopes-te^See-Ioffl^ e.~PaVed This Year

, b County Engineer Bauer, Talk to Rotary Qnk Tells of Work on Cous:&y Roads

ejcipjLAs __ _ Seen From Borne

An Exquisite Spectacle Though the Features of Totality Were Not :Visi= ble in This Region

Three Planets in View

by Miss Ayerg and Miss Hareum, The Capitol Sextet te followed with Burleigh's fino old spir i tual "Deep River."

"Wee Will ie" Robyn, with his big high tenor voice Bang an ar ia from "L'Africaine" and tha t old, old bal­lad, "Dear Old Girl." Gladys Rice, one of the most versat i le members of tho "gang" Uiij'n sang "My Hero," of "Chocolate Soldier" fame, and as an encore a negro song about "Be­elzebub," from which we gathered that a chicken was stolen last Thursday. ,

A male sextet te wi th F r a n k Mou­lnn, , "Daddy, J i m " Coombs , and other favorites set the lioUse in an uproar .with the i r ant ics in "A" Pil­gr im .af Love," closing the first part. ofXthe program.

""Hornby" and the quar te t opened the las t p a r t wi th "Tha t Old Gang of Mine." after which "Boniby" sang "Give Me One Rose."

Yascha Bunschunk, "the Shlek Himself," w i t h h i s wonderful 'oollo, provided one of the most en joyablo truats""fTam a musical s tandpoin t J n his rendering of that old' Hebrew chant , "Konedra." Caroline Andrews, who seems to havo taken the place of Evelyn Herher t , demonstrated her . wonder­fully beautiful voice in s inging "Lo, H e a r t he Gentle Lark ," with flute obligato by Eddie Myers. Then sho sang " tha t dear old prohibition I constitution ballad,". "Comin ' . t h ro the Rye , " in 3. Know your three depar tments

nvVVIU.lH FLETCHER JOHNSON Mr. Doolry's familiar remark ,

"I see by th ' paapers ," came to mind when I read the orders is -aiiLd by the Superintendent of Police of Boston for ext ra vigi­lance on the part ol the force dur­ing the eclipse ol! the sun. "Accord­ing to newspaper repor ts ," the pr tc lous document began, "the City of Boston will be in part ial dark­ness, owing to ,ec l ipse of tho sun." I do not know whether he hud any repor t or record to make after the evi nt. Ii he hpd, doubtless iie be­gan It, "According to newspaper repor t s the par t ia l darkness of yes­terday was due to eclipse of the sun." Oh,-''Bo.ston! Bos ton! !

Certainly nobody in this com­m u n i t y net-ds to be reminded by

Pride in County's Record 'I be sdeaker gt the weekly

luncheon M the local Summit Ro­tary Club was Jacob L. Bauer , County Engineer . Mr. Bauer came to Summit' a t the invitation n£ F rank A. Wah l . and was. introduced to the R o t a r i a n s b y their Pres i -

jdent, Alfred W. A l p s b j u ^ - -_. . ... i -Tn" opening" "Els talk Mr. Bauer said that Union County had good reason to be proud of its record in road construct ion as t h e first coun­ty ioad act to he p a s s e d - b y any s la te was drafted by Union County n u n and passed by the NeV Je rsey Legis la ture . The first county road to be built, he said, was t h a l ' i r o m Elizabeth lo Summit in 1890, Street Super in tendent Win. II. Swain be­ing one of the men in t he Board of Freeholders ut that, t ime. In tho first years of county road construc­tion $17,500 was appropriated for, this purpose by Union County. Mr. tiauer pointed out tha t the develop­ment of the use of tnrvia on dir t roads was due to experiments mado in th is county on St. George ave­nue, between Elizabeth and Rah­way. That, first ""(arvia, according to Mr. Bauer, must have been of the consistency of glue, and St. George avenue was l ike a lonif s t r ip of fly pnper for some time. Every th ing mus t have its begin­n ing and we should feel proud of the fact that such an Important ut i l i ty us tarvla had Its origination in th is county, he said.

At present most of our roads are of concrete and an appropriat ion of $^25,000 every year has been made for the purpose of building and repai r ing the county's roads. Th i s appropriat ion is more than lis needed, Mr. Bauer said, as there is Ihe ne.WHpapers that on Saturday

morning last there was visible ]only about $180,000 used each year here such a spectacle of weird and lor repairs . The remainder is used en t ranc ing splendor as never had been seen before within the mem­ory of men. True , we were far outside the zone ol totality and therefore missed the shadow bands ( p e r h a p s ) , - t h o Bally's beads, the onrushing darkness , .ind the won­derful corona. Hut with 95 per cent, or more of the sun obscured, we had effects far surpass ing any that were seen in former eclipses, when not niori' than one-third of the sun was concealc l . With those features of total i ty I have nothing to do at present . The New York

lor t ak ing over new roads and put­t ing them into first-class condition.

Mr. Bauer next roterrcd to Mor­r i s avenue, in this city. I t was taken over as a county road, ho said, in 1911), and tho chief diffi­culty in repair ing it has been tho inabili ty to force the Morris Coun­ty Traction Company to s tand its sha re of the expense.

In connect ion-wi th this - subject" he gave it as his opinion t h a t l i n thc^ncar future a number of trolfer companies will go out of exis tence-to bii superceded by buses. As i t i;>

papers have told the s t o r y ' b e t t e r j the trollisj^cotnpany in question is than I could hope to do. Suffice it in the hands of a rcceiyer and the for me to 'say that there is good I Board ol Public Utilities has irt-reason to believe that the observa- ! tormed the city tha t i t is impossiblo lions made will result in mater ia l to "mak<nhcm pay t the i r ".share" of

fact sang it a couple of times. Eugene Ormondy, the popular

violinist, who used to be known as the "Blue Blond," played beauti­fully a number the name of_w_hich we have forgotten and followed with an encore of F r i t z Kreisler 's "Lieb-cs t raum." "Pe te r the Great," witli-his r ich bass voice, sang "Dr ink to Me Only wi th Thine Eyes."

Then "Gamhy," ' famed as a dancer, did some of her cute l i t t le s tunts ,—singing, in spite of F r a n k Moulan, one of the I ta l ian pa t te r songs and "Three Li t t le Chestnuts ," were followed by "Gamby" and "Doug." by special request in " Jus t

'"Targejnnhiber of,contestants, i t is. certainly, hoped t h a t ' such wi l l be ti— >>.i'i' Summit does not wan t to In outdone by neighboring conv lu ' imn. ••.. I t would be r a the r a, < I'aniltv to see. the three pr izes go *M ' up U .slants outside the city.

f ix sveeka or more is none too lunch time to compose a one-act pi U, perfect it, and get i t finally ii#*pi!'f,sJ-feF=eirffflrte«tee-4«F4hHB-8ct=-r- f i ry nf thi* riaj?6_rd. Miss Mary *' i11 i.i ifie • secretary, la ready a t «5l t i i i \ i -ato anBwer.-a'iy tiueatioitis-i i -Wivc to the conduct of t h e con-: Jfc?» Her telephone.16 4 7 8 . ' iMV Mmtributtons-'shimld h i addreqBed i,-> ii!«a s.Mvi', iu n Linden M*iv, s*.r3iJp;t, -

"Apple Stiuce," "I- Murdered Him, That ' s Music" brought roars of Liko a Doll,

l augh te r A variat ion of famous grand Betsy Ayers, who has been ill for i opera selections set to the words of

th ree months , sang las t night for " v — ™ - ««""• M " n™™,,*" nm-

•vf government, the executive, the judiciary, the legislative.

4. Vote intelligently. 5. Join a pa r ty : function polit­

ically through a par ty 'or you are bu t one. '

fi. Be a good neighbor. - 7. Affiliate with a t least one non-sectar ian civic group in your com­muni ty .

8. Boost Summit. There is noth­ing lovelier than loyalty in citizen­ship.

The second lecture of this course to Catholic women will he given Feb rua ry 27th. Women of any de­nomination may at tend.

the first t ime since he r sickness, and delighted her f r i e n d s - i n - t h e "gang" as much a s the audience. She sang "At Dawning." very beau­tifully and' as a n encore "My Curly Headed Baby" was sung as a duet

Yes; W e Have No Bananas ," pro vlded a roar ing finish to the evening.

Of course the famous orchestra of the Capitol was on the stage a t all t imes , directed by "Dr. Billy," and a t t imes by "Roxy" himself.

addition to our knowledge1 of the sun an(l i t^pbunomei ia .

, The day was! perfect. Even the intense cold, which made it un-comfortabl" tor watchers out ' of "doors, was a blcs'slng, for it, made the air phenomenally clear and t ransparent . There was not 'si • r.iee of cloud or fog or any such thing. Moreover, the white ex­panse of snow afforded an unsur ­passed field on which to waleh the we'rd waning of the sunl ight and

-possiblv—the myster ious shadow bands. Never was there a inure bri l l iant winter morning than that, U i'lght o'clock.

Then suddenly I tvns awi ro of ;< sliglil pal ing ol the so l a r lus t re , more fell than seen; 'is though one e h e t r i c bulb among five hundred bad ceased to f;Tow. I looked through my blackened screen, and lo! at the upper eight hand edge of ' he golden orb was what seemed like a black denl, growing slowly,

eadily, remorselessly deeper

Overlook B. & L. Ass'n Completes First Year

The Overlook Building and Loan Association has completed its first year of 'existence, and last evening held its annual meet ing, at which

the expense of repai r ing Blorris avenue.

The plan for reconstruct ing Mor­ris avenue, Mr. Bauer said, is lo inrrca:si the width of- the s t ree t to1"' :56 feet TUid to rcgrade and make bet ter drffins. Tbo county, he sa id , , wilt pay lj>r the cot;t of grading ant." of paving' zii feet of the proposed :Hi, the remainder to be paid for by Ihe city. The county w i i r a l s o pay fifty per cent! of the tost: of' re­moving the trees and put t ing Jn tho drainage system, the city being expected lo pay for the curbs and gut ter . ry'~

JUr. Bauer stfftcd that he did nut. believe tha t / a l iy paving work hp'd ever tieen,r]one in Summit by asses­sing the property owners which hi) th inks is a great mistake. XJe ad­vocates assessing the property own­ers whoso property is adjoining to M o r n s avenue to help pay for ihe improvement under discussion. Tlio cost will be itt the neighborhood ol. $130,000, and, he said, he expect

l-'ropi .the sun I looked, to the snow | t h a t the road Will be paved thi,; fii Ids about me, and-^ssw them; year iVlr. Hauer's talk TO u o . i (trowing s t range ly gray, livid, ] ins t ruct ing and of great Interest ;:'s opalehcenl, with such light as I the proposed improvement to Mor-

Wiederiiold, New Baritone,-Concert of Summit and Hewar:

timeytho following direet»rs,'-whosc—the s t ' a r svbu tTn t ly

never before was seen upon them I t was not s.)ich a dimming of the I pie here lor l ight as a cloud over the sun Would , have caused. H i t h e r wns it a light that was nei ther sunl ight nor Wioonlight, nei ther the glare ol' i l ightning ijor the soft radiance of

ivenue lias been before the peo-omo t ime.

sllere

were men. The maximum salaries for the

men was ?500, and for tho women $227.

I lea l Es t a t e Trans fe rs •Recorded T h e following d e e d s have been

recorded in t h e office of County-Regis ter B a u e r at the .Cour thouse . •""Wilrfa'ui—Kf°^areeB'o " ttr—Mart Rea l ty . Corporat ion, 35 -feet In Sp i l ig f i e ld fl*en«o, 20L5 feet from t h e v c o r n c r -of Mapl.e-al'reet-, SUHP-mit . '•' ' •

divided among the two churches and tho vi l lage school. Of them I v p a n remember only three , and I r a the r ' t h ink j l j y i t w a s all we had. In fact, I am mit s u r e tha t one of these was rea l ly t h e work of the Union, though somo of us took par t in It. One, which I remember, m o s t clearly, was held In the Methodist- Church. Atwood jn«">fyw-hjifl n Tin? p i r l " ' ' f ' b tnp t

Alber t A. Wiederhold, baritone, who was selected by the Associated Glee Club as tho soloist for their concer t - las t spr ing in Carnegie Hal l , will be the soloist a t the con­cert next Tuesday evening by the Women's Choral Society and the Lyric Club of Newark, in the High School auditorium.

t e rms expired, were re-elected for throe years : Benjamin V. White, T. A. Lauer , William 3.' Post , Edward G. Prlngle , and Albert Leach The auditors re-elected were : Wil­l iam Seaman, and William-, J . Dynan.

The association has 1,49$' shares outstanding. The asse t s of* the as ­sociation are - $10,704.85. A, new serlcs of shares was Opened yes­terday, M, ,„,,

Triangle Club Tonight

"'PhOB*1 wtw brrtadenst. bedtime stories know litlln aimul a im.dern UldSi hnttim*1—-P'^iair. Ni.w>»

organ, which we moved in and pu t on the pulpi t platform Tor the oc­casion,, and-1 bad the .cheek ,to play_ upon it , aa the" opening number of tbc prograramo,-a medley^ fantasia of njy awn flrrangem-ent! To a d a p t Ihe wind/ of MIJIP i n l a n d , "Ob. Culture* What rr lmtii a i c cniiimit f.»il .it ll'v itam<-«" My otli-i c-in trlbAition t o the wo? nf the i %

tug Amer ican s ingers who, like R e i n a l d ' W e r r e n r a t b , John Barnes Welles and o thers , springs from the r a n k s o r men ' s glee clubs. Sev- i eral years ago. before Mr. Werren-ra th , a member of the UniverBity Glce Club of- N t w York,- had made hla grea t success as an operatic and concert s inger / - the Choral So- ' cJ6ty.,I)Eought him here . Again I i t u rns to a favorTtTe~*in "the ranks of the .younger men and th rough the influence, of Dr. Woodruff, h a s se­cured' Mr. "Wiederhold".

Wiederhold, liko "WeKrenratk, Is a s i n g e r - t h a t ' men, "part icularly, l tkr to he"ir s ing; I IMII IWIH - h f

! Would not ft.we h'"jn I In' i h o ' i ' <»f !

f irst of the season of the Choral Concert series. In i t the Choral Society and the Lyric Club, with the i r t w o hundred members , will uni te as a massed chorus and s ing separate ly . - l _ " " '"•, • _, 7™,"""

The massed chorus is - rapidly | | J e W a r 'TO b p € a K 1 0 gaining in this country the p o p u - ' la r i ty i t h£s long had in t he Qld -W«r-15s »=flRnwi - aF=sfce*t-»Huofc s^-cf -voices a re blended together they produce, the r ich tone color, a s well as tho volume, impossiblo in smal l ­er g roups of men and women. The individual voice is more complete­ly merged in the mass , the several p a r t s s tand out more distinctly, br inging out the finer harmonies of the m u s i c and permit t ing shadings and In terpre ta t ions that canno t be accomplished by -a- smal le r choir.-All of Dr. Woodruff's choruses a r e so skil led in the difficult a r t of -pianissimo- stnging-thafr the audi­ence m a y be sure of a t rea t la nea r ing th is g rea t chorus subdue HH tones us proficiently as i t will "Will thiMn lxi 10 |-n it b u n t ' uf

The light tha t never was on s a or land,-

The consecrat ion, and the poet 's d ream.

So .from, snow t o ' sun, and from sun to snow, I looked, enrantured and ent ranced . Now the black disc had reached with its forward i dge the centre of the golden one, and the sun wan seen as a mighty cres­cent. Moment by moment the black pushed on, moment by mo­ment the light w.is wlth.dr.iwn from the fields of snow, moment by mo­ment the aspect of n a t n i e grew more weird. My nerves, I think, are above the average *ji__stoadl-

„ , "ffess" "TT" c;i'ii_ gaze upon cTuTin Th,o Triangle Club is expecting | l ightning, even in a tropical h u m -

Fortnightly Card iiesday

All a r r angemen t s a re completed lor the For tn ight ly Club card par ly on Wednesday afternoon in Beech-wood Hall. 1'Iay will s t a r t a t 2 30. There Will be an at tract ive prize for each table . Mrs. Lupin-ski, the cha i rman ior the after­noon, will bo supported by an able, committee. Refreshments will he served and home-made candy will h^ on sale Come!, Bring your friends and help us make a gener-1 • ous contribattaft ^to the music stfidlo fund, of t he 'N . J. State Coif,,

Jeg£jJ23uJKDra£i!———•« --— ,-**- -

an interest ing dlscussioA tonight when they will meet for supper at G.30 followed, by a discussion on the subject "How F a r Will Dis­a rmamen t Secure Peace?" Wm. H. Dewar, former General Secre tary of the Association, will lead this discussion. Pamphle ts from half a dozen o r more Peace Societies have -heen_£ieeurcd- and lQanQd__tQ__me]i who expect to par t ic ipate in the discussion. Anyone ,who would like to read some up-to-date m a ­terial such as the "Protocol ." adopted a t deneva , some recent sermons by Fosdick, or Rober t Cecil ' , idili" ii, «MP • i I'IIII1 llu MI il I'll A 1 nil UllU'H.

cane, without the quiver of an e je -lash. But I must confess that as the light of the sun was thus with­drawn while i t rode high and ever higher in the heavens, I cou ld 'no t defend myself g a i n s t a cer ta in In­definable nerv6us t remor , a sense of physical a s well as spir i tual awe, a lmost an apprehension of impending doom. agains t a cprtalu i t tdcf i i rab ln ie rv-ous Eremor, a sense of physical a;: well as spi r i tual awe, a lmos t an apprehension of impending doom.

And now only a -qnar fSr of the sun remained, in v iew; now a fifth, a " i r th a "•evenlli and e i rh th ninth i fi nib Tho wnv

Boston Symphony Soloists to Play tkrc

On Fr iday afternoon, Jniiuni.r 30th, a t 3.30, a recital will be giw?r= a t the Child Garden of Music ior t he pupils and their mothers.

Miss Marsh, who conducts t he" Child Garden of Music, will haveci'--

t i s ts , Jul ius ThcodornrcUuEi _VM1L:

lAII-ii Mill tllKl'ttll Willi "Ullllj'llt j *!' • but uf i .lriuu;i>, mi f ilhi- liihii v i . i i '

'•» tin r.i>.. r j i : ' inn i t l i i» iuH , i r t l , l . u ' T

. . — I Mr . ' 'MIK'UUI <! OU I'PB-' ".'• v u i ) iv III i

1st of the Boston Symphony Orches­tra, and 'Louis Speyer, first oW'- ' of the - same orchestra. Mr. !•> being especially interested ii" g rowth of musical agaix ' . I among ' nhi ldrm. will also si' > ' .•

Ii'i"lii'i l n n H"| L'nrlj.li horn

V -

'111 Oiltjio'vh / v, ii r ir I-a niPiiili-1 ol the -i; ijii.mt t Ihinti I lluil ' . of , 'Hir

• jii-p.111; ill'1 K<n a r t ' I-.

V

Page 2: JUtexature Pept. Friday w. a New ifynlding., at Blind .... The result must- be grati ... JUtexature Pept. Friday Tbo Department of Literature is to have a speaker on Friday, Janu

F^S^

^IHMVi^lL11^

= TS£I_* OS€I aboqc&iax 4juramg *$&&$} pooMipasg- gx S

ay JQMO^ Aasaaj* peqiia^ aijj; i

'•poiasoQ / / SUUPJ ptoiudduoQ,

' ,;" , "IVNW saivs n v : -• - ... ' *

r

puc >JS0Q '^iqf'X '-*00M — duiTrj jo odAj A\i3AO putj fjjM. n o ^

•S33ij(l .iisjnlfru A\o[oq "?U3D jod ()£ y&

a p s no snprqg pur- sdiuuq ojqr.^ioj jo auq arpfduioa j n Q -

P^IS pnB sdlrai ^TT ^ 5

^II1!103SIQ -%0

iiBniiiiiiiiiiEiuiitiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiaiiiiiiiEiiiiiiiniiiiiiBiiiiiiiuiiiitiiiKifiifBnnuniiifiiiiiinifitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiT

- " " = * • • - " • i — " " t ~ ' "

-iio.ut pqjui'isqnn pmi^VpoiB uviouii

:;,7q :qin:.| Mip AJ[\V S U O J I M J o i p

]o a u o s i '.,JI(V|J -11(01110.1(1 i n a i ' i p o . v

-Hi .TO [L-puimri 'ssoulBLiq n i p ; \\ T<;

s a i u o o oqAv UOIJIKT A W : j o p u c u n u o )

d i p i c ::.v"i'up: o r e ANnp p u u 'npuWo: )

- a i : A'npi'o.i Mil? wji; o.n: c u o o t j j o

'JIUHIII'.H

j o „ i ruo ! )«M' JS.IIL>I„ o i p tppvv o n . p

'..I Mill 1U([ —SllKl.il ,0 1M.I )[]!')

(p^O.lddl! O] 01l!HI,'Oq ApU.lNllOJJ

l o u

d i p

SJEO)lS

5IC

, , ' j o p p l l l SBAV Ijq -am. op j o jaoj-ap-^oa cqAi nciu_ap iii<l„ tuoiia o[jun PICB ..'A'jpnj io3j JCTIUI j o o j s ^ p q c i « JJAV u b i n O Q „

' I [ B Aq p n q BBAV o u u i pooa B p u n - KiuouiqBSJjoJ Aq pa.vvoipj 0J3AV ftOIlllftop UUHJflJA " pilTl SJ301JJO p u c j 3 o i p A"q bOESojppy -oSpoi l u l p j o SJOOJIJO j o t i o p c i p j ] a u { oq j p a r s o n -JJAV pUC JJJt>A\0£[ JO ZLZ ON OSOO'-J IT3U5S n \ [ pona jA 05C "ON o3po- j I«1SAJ0 UIO.IJ UO[l«3aiOl> Tl 1[11A\ oAoay "H uoqno^ j -j\[ ' o ' Q -CT pi iu - j tos jof . v o x j o - ^ -o O ' I ' i i o o u s X •AVp I JQl&BJAI PU«JQ 3UIU0A0 lBCr£

S^W „ afyoj

•'.:ouu\ of.ioi=iuil „ ' o j n i [ i i j „ i « XITSSO J U O S-CAV ( [ J I I H -o.it! j o K-II.IOJ u j pn i io j unoq OAIMJI . „'^U'>n., w .^Cl FOJIT 1IBKOJ pint '[UU.IO.I XtlT! DAKIJ | IKKfll HHUf>V!l! XjUUOl ]nOO[0 S^Ht«tI OAV Ki: nai iq JUJ i;i; u v u i o i u - A i i u i j i - d o ^KOUI « [ l o n i i u m o s t ([OjqAV u o o q i;tti[ A|JOC,IIO([ w m i r a o o . U I J ,

o'.!<; ^ n r -Jtov) « n>:«l IMP «AV u « m ' j o u . - p " ^ H'tn '/Knr ,l»M^( (JH«*J puis KSIAOIH .H[j ,ni! in!/- , , 'njl i j o i t j o ^ c i f OIOUI Ann lOli .frcpoj j o s-j[IPj a n n o . i . H p ' j i i:.iiii p a n A \ O « P u t J o p i i o w J|0({ i<m - m i > J .vion.iuiOE i p u y ' i iuno . t JCJ.IA l t « • .>I<IAV' .IA\ ' p i r s OAfq' I KIT -jug •Opil.13 pil l! I[Sj.IUO|«(HI! ,tjOA .tJJOjq.l fS . I I lqnop HT!U IX -pD-lUI.nl RV.V,

11! ' [ l t !II nStU).I(Jlf H0U0p!AO.t,[ M0\ T

01[1 A\.OU 'OfilKHlJOOq.JH Oi;l![lJA 6f[l III lUOUIURJJJOlKO «1! |C ' -pJJJAJldp

UA^O Jjatji jo npiKjno s q n p nioj j uoi l i ' ip[A\ poiuicnbnv | J ^ Ol UOm I[t! ,U,J P0.13JJ0 M[ 1)IAV A j j u n i . i o d d o pipt io idt , i! p u u POAJOK oq jijAV. ' osano . ) j o ' E J U O U H I ^ J J J O H •B^IIOH PUU Equina 'SOKIKS 0Atl!40(I - m o o ouioa ^upuo HJAI JCOIIX ' s d n o j H J110J OHH pOpJAip PAVO.I.I Ul[| OAl!q IIIAV p u u o s r i s u a j ^u j o oouupuoj i i t UlJ ailUT!"10nUl! OJB SOpiUtUIOJ Ol j i •ponoou t io uooq iiniAHi[ saMfai'[d I U A 3 I[B '1U0AO KJIII JOJ JOAO (1,1J(UJ Sill -d(l Ki - y ;) 'IV "A o q i ]C uit ipiuuiuXS t'UX '^OOIO.O 8 1« 3UIUOA0 jfOpSJIHIJ, a o j ^ B A \ . l opun IIOAV d j o i f c p o s 4 " [ 0 U J - i n q j SJUOJAI a m J O J B U B I J

-pOiOoa|OAv a.iu HV •ai^iHSOd uiii . tnoJd

oA]i^i- ' . iHK-lsoui-oi[i 5'jodyo.i-A.i;>Ao H I 4ito«o.id oi p u u ,o[(ti![i«AU .laiiuodv; i s o q o q i d-inoob- o j dnojVi [Bjoi;.i ip r .o j o a.iitiap o q i oq ^ I I C I I I J I J U ^ I J I A V H •jf.104n.to s i ! n o w HC ' a j o j ^ n o j j a i y o pu t ; 5.ii!-)n^J ' o | s n i u - m o j o p n i o a i i f iqcqo . ld [\\tA. HUin.iij'o.id o ' j oqx poi i loBajdo . i 3[oo}3 ippi! . i . n i [ i i3 |v rc l

o q ) j o X4jtii!nliiii o j OO'JAJOS JI ' (J p u u I s p i o p i » n i ' Ja in iMDno 3( |) (U«^l 04.^11

-Un t Jo i i r t o Tin 3Ai:q Jivm i[v au i i JOt ' i i;sT!ur t; "|t> UOI[AV u1c.1S0.td c opiAo.i([ 04 p o ^ a u a q JIIAV a j j u m u i o v ) OOT!.I

IJOUa; "K091111UUI00 0ZIUU3.IO 04 pU'l KWijtl u o a i u i o j u o d n o p i o a p 04 ' j u a - s a j d oq o^ po i iAnt o.m UOHTSZHIAIJ u n o i J O t u y o j p o i t i q i . q n o i s u q .tijitpw

ODB.I q0U^> JO bOAI4l!4ILlOKOjd3H

,'j(UIHlUiniOD d[Ol[AY Ol[4 Ol JBOjaillT *"U[^j^OJ-JlIJ JO ifelllTIpUIO'* 4.i«)S 04 BOS{Oio.icl ' i l t i p i j n q |)!(llo

i:ioa j o X").n!il i; 110041 ' a d u o s o 04 out iiiti44Uu.tad At in j ioaoui a o u o i p n n a q i

j ' . i .miooi , ,qi j-j4ji! »mtj 'VaaAV 4Sii[ ] s'.ti) uooq SKH iioi(i""wi; p i i n o j a 0Y14

i n V H 5 I I - T J . JKK11S 3 1 1 1 J " J o q ; u o AVOUS n o i u u s c ,T ioq i isnC HUM - u i u i i I S J J J n in o.iojO(i f,juo.f . t i imu o i o t n .wuu.-i.ni '[[OAI. t io i s t 'ooo p u m

" ~ - — — - I J ' lqmonio. t 1 M . t n p a i a rn i iuodui . ) ) "Jj "V T 1 IKJij Xut j o poi ' i ruuno outuu.M3o.id

XlUU!1,Ir)J 8UAV 01[0jgS' lOUjJ 0114 'tOU PIP IT J I "u 'otun 0114 p a [ | p [ o . u u j a [ 4«q4 ^ e o n i l 1 ) n a OIIUOAU ; u n o ' u i - . i n ^ ^ p u c l o o t p c ; uou . toA 4utioj,\[

opiaqaiotf . i,» n o s p n e i J i p u u baAij ! , v > . l l . " . "

MO'JJOKJO^ ppu sg ox

. . . . 'Xijntl oqi u | HTJpisXTi'd rr KCAV oaaqx ipoT.i.q, ;• 'o j i j i t ; j i i r^ jui^_(i i i ix^^Ji] j^o^ji :d-^H iBtttf t r pttr^.'CTTiiiJmti-

aundX3^[ an JOAO appiS UT-IIKJI UU miA\ Tinj 3ujAt;q jo Bpo^ oq -ajaqA\ „P»o jqv Klitaoouui, B.UJI.'AVJ, i\lva

j o nnpooit—n A.mii.mo^i 'AX-putf - - o — 1'

•DU'osniM 41: buuoom r,^ \Z\'\i -I'L'T UIJK'l V - O'J ^.inuuiip 'AVpn^i

. o — - - •aiqisuort .IOAU

ttoitA\.' pnoiin 01 pns.m K.i.iqui.nu jo sjoincji -gj-g 41! ' v \"> "JV A 'qui.) Huixoa T„- j t junucf ' ' ^ i p s i n t i x

§3p^ tmyy iiinpun atl&ti^rZH* V~±~*.

nt : j . i a iAqs j . i u , , n l U I t!OAiiJ h-UA\ u o t u i i 3 ' J J 40 .iti!ji! o i i q n d . i n i ^ o u v .

i<iA!loo|]i Ana. id '4KU0I lis 'Huipua.1 o ip j o j j c d j u i p o;(T;m 04 i n S m i c u t ^ ' ' .vniiouioja.> j o .W^KKUI sv 'I«,i(-J4i!{tl o q j ' u o ,nu opiKaq l t rs J ^ J O D . t a s--i! p n y „-IKO.I oq4 j o iCut;

u c q j 3 | i j . i qu i o-jnpDsqi; uu oi(n o.toiu 5[ooi ppio.> oij or-niJDoq ' s t i op f lonb ?[B1? O) pn!\VJOJ .tO).)OQ 31lj PUT Ki£i,'A\.p:„ toqj j c q i r , p ; H jj.a>J\r p i n !

, ' ' _^ I_i _ ' ! [ _ _ , .

a i "vi -<1 SI 'S '11)83 A J i : n u » r ' qu i ; )

(OAYX o S u j ; u o p a i t a n n o Q )

@3II@P|A0JJ AlSjf |E

66' 9SH

aoAv "piaiisujads puu ' ' - pco juna

jo aaixioo 'ontiaAv ^nuisoqD- % TV

'i£i!pBJtiqX;«adO IHAV. _

( S ^ O J J «U;JJU)3 puu pwji)

" ' t[4P3aAV oq os 'qiieaAv BI m i ^ H •03 x>i 03tj[a anpsajojnf v-'o-ui otp HI I I—pu\! tq4iTia i i 04 d|".I4 V OI[UX •pnpu XqiiBoii u .pm? A"poq jfmic^il B OAUII 04 sua 'X411P Hiq op 04 ' I I O Z H P v '^miDaii oq IIJAY. ,tai[4' du AVOJS uojpipio a'i[4 naqAi ;i;in OK

.,'q*tT!.-»H S.PIUK),, Bt JB SttfAlJp 0J1! tfjojaop ait4 imil 3u iq ; aq4 Avon og '1IJ Aintajs^qd jou OIOAS. uo'tti .<;ni!OT 4 B ? J 3 t ! , i«m 4110 puuOj xucf; apinn JBAV pjJOAi atti aniJna„;tf,->iJimip«| itiiuiu a m JOJ itiq 'jfAnn puc Xuuu atp JOJ AJUO jou 'nam ..ftnieoq spoati Xj;tii)oa _ j«o aaoje ioqx •ipp'^q' st ajli / u t S u p p iHt:}.iocJmi oqx

[ - / "(O0qog""u[ooun

. 'b opcjjj 'jojiiL'Av.sEisnoa . a

~ AMurirx au oji si Ain/ivau ait OA

T ' N ' l iniuins j*o ' i p i n g Q A I 3 N

S i - c s d j a x ^ s ' j o iiJ3"aq."e«n J O J .

i q naAjo

uioi ojd -oos 'AVHO QHVA\aa -oj4ora

1'noas put; uoiinipouoq w.jiiiKmn -irtoOB 'AVL'l 4I100B a m UlIVV p0hO[0 3ni4oott i o q x •p j i i v t t i oj'11 E t)u.)Uj p u u s ^ u a j u d qo iq .u 04 ' p i o o q j s u 3 | t | jo tnasi p u u j o j u n f -a-tn- j o A i q u u s s n 4Ujof i! TC (J -qa,tl_ u o J[JOAI 41100b-j o u o ] i i i j | s u o r a a p B J O J aputi i OJOAV e u n i d ajoidtuo; -) \3uoa j n o o s v. iiunB p u c p a t u c o i d u o a i o q i 'paioi iRiuuj OJ3AV SJd-JJBUI J31140 J 0 4 j y SUlBBCd 4^34 J O J l l [3 ju o n oq ppioiV o.iarp 3ieaA\ Bjm auoHT!ii jutcxo j o a ^ i i o a q l u q i p a a u n o i l u c J a p o j r j a j w t m n n o a a •dpiBjciqinaui J o j pasodo . id s « u ,foq o u o p u c pua.1 OJOA\ u o u i i o j I S T I 40

s p j o o a ^ j - t i p o i n o o s p u E ' 3 c u a m 04 oSpajd ,S4noos ' jo . i c j .x s.p.to'-i o tp j o pojBtsuoo ipjqAV 'sasto.roxo Su i -uado o q i j o 03J1!UD p c q Ol[Av ' l ictti i - j o p u j T j a } s c u i 4 t i o o a - J K B V A<\ Jopjo, 04 poipj.) BBA\ a a n o o u i o q x - [ " 0 > [ J S qSiIT j o i w i i f oq^ j o moo.t i no j s - ' a i p '

UJ l l [ 3p i jtcpiIOlVI PIOIJ KBA\ f dllOJJj j o p j u t i o o ^[-JIOOAV aBpiHaj OIJX

•ypuui i s a j o j j o os,i!tp - . ind ot[4 J O J • OOO'OOTi' JO ttoni ' iJ i l -o j i ld t ; u c 4 S 3 n b a j 04 l u j i u d o p A 3 < [ put; - uo j4 i !Aj3suoy j o j n a u q j c d o Q 04C4S aq4 j o UB[d oq4 soKJOpua K

'SE6T OF l in iq oq 04 \\v\i UoiJC4Toaj A \ 3 « t;. ,toj l)00'0!jKj jo uot4i;jJ(Io.uIdt! m:"j(_su 04 UOIUOAV .IOJ aSanoo 041143 aqi jo soaiKtiJi oq4 jo mifrt ses.toptist. -^

— — _'4iidui -pnauiy j o q c i p u n y eafijopua" -j

-aJniii[si3ori 041:4a oqi ojojaq sojtiKcam puoAaS Hasjopuo sqtiiy u.uouiOjW jo i.uoj4 -c topa^ 01B4H jCaBJSX' AVO^ oqx

sqn0 jo ssoi Mopo.j , ,-OH out s [ p i a [ q r a o tp OKIIIM

- a q „ J04CAV a m H O paiiiUAi uAeai* p u c p o i r o i j p c o q 0x1; a q i s o A o i p u O([AV o u o m i q j o O^TJIH p u u i p m j upi uMpin ib p u c u c t u 3uiAi[ 04111 p o n j o J c o j a»[4 r ;nrf" pllitrrfi" 4tiql ' a u o i u -jo-j a J ! J - l p i I 'auiOBalot(AV ' p o o S j a 3 j(oq4 RpqAV KAiart XlduJ) a m [ p j p u c soAiahUuoqj pi7o.ids 01 iii A\aj p i j q i t c j a t p A\oq a a s p u c iCBpuny •c-jofj o t t toq j p c q 0 3 w a r p 401 ' u u ' oAoqc ' p u v •snoddt in ICI(AV a a s p n j s p u j o a j o u i 4jq v. oanpo . id s j a p u u - l i n c j o q i i o q , , - i a r t soa -»n vn aA!Dpi '1110 jfjo PU0441; OTJAV o jdood oq4 ' 4 sca i j y - u o t H p o j j o riSuco j q i Jnoqt ; ^.WOAV 4011 poou BOprjo oj[4 ' J 3 i m i : u t Kim u ! i w i p . u u i o s i t smti f 3[.K>A A W K JI I " " ) »f t>'PU p t ; Ai[ j t « s 04 3ti[XJ4 u ic I IBitAV "* ' 'UOIUJOK JOOd

o u i c s 0144 p u c ' S n i j a j j o Htq on ics aq4 ' P A \ O J O p o z t s a t n e s a tp—AJOJK OIUCS a q ( SCAV 41 •snoui . ios B[t[ SIKL'O

- p c o j q j o q o u o j d o q i ajaj-j ' uodo 3{)JA\ a y n c q OIAOUI" 1: j o 3po [q c in -qjiAv p u c o p i g i s c a "Ul « ° jtl-iTiou a j o u i i p i t u p 1; 4c '011114 s 'Ul : l ' I ^ r u

4c ejai[Av>!S-[0 1! ^J4 01 p o p p a p I -oi\naAT! i p j u u o S u t u j o m X c p u n s BCA\ JC114 i » q ' jfes jfctu tiOit "KBA

p.>pAvojj o s i v t|s>ani|i> a p j s J * « a PAVOJO V

4«q ' oqXcm ' t i b d u u p o o ' t p i t u i 40U — fiaajp ' j o p u a p l u 'miuaAi UH%VJ lr-^ B sc .« 11 -4coa I [ . IOJJ Avau l! mi-tt a [ q u i c 3 p t n o o a q p a j 4t[3!tu J04BI -n i in ai[4_ p u c p a j i n o q pp ioo o3t: -uob'JiPd o i p u o o3ci !4 joui a t p ' JC4"P s j i op o j o j q c oq ppi0A\ O J B U J U J t p j u q o p p oq4 p u c UAIOI HHUIK 0144 in S u j j a j j o qo i i s o u o *U'«oj ^ u i i p o)i![d 11014031100 aq4 uj g g - i i 'Hduq.i.id Oqj i s u j c i t c KC ' i p . i i t i p a u o Hjtp u i S U I J O J J O B . S H I U J O U I i j l tp u t KCA\ 000 'S i JO O0O't>S Jt ipojqriop - u f l 'uoa . toq4 n ; i [ j B t l o p - u a j v pp; i o m 04 4x0u jfpiii a l i x 'XiquiJUAiii jfouout Avail p u c ' s u o p c u p u o u a p p c j o b i p c q u a a j g UJIAV OJOAV ^ a q i (I04 a t p 04 p o d e a i i ' s u p o i p t w . i jfatp a.iojoq u ioo j o 3 l u i p o n SCAI O J O I J X - ^ I jodo j i t 3 A J I 01 K u i o o j q i r q J n o j J O o o j i y oAtiq 04 p o q OAV 3.iojaq a^up

3l[4 UI POSU 0J3A\ 4CI|4 B[A^Oq-I[KCAV liauoil lfecj-pjo oi(4 b e doop p u c l[4pcaJtl u j a 3 l i q ' s u ] b c q JoAHf. a_u] - X J J G J ' e j a q s n aApA'X - a u [ j o j j o ot[4 BCAV OS -UOH-IHJllB III,' KCA\ i)U[3uifl a q x -aiui4 p u o a a e oq4 o 3 04 4UBAV J O ^ u i i p o u o a jp ' iu 04 3 u ( l t l o u X I ^ J U B —41 i n o i p j iBtii iJidB S u m ion :uo ;4 -•coijuioil? o u i o q u o lK.itiq4H0 i c o ; q d

^ o w j t i j d t! )uq .S.CAV j o i n J O S _ a t y , ' ; S J O ) ! B I A

u.woj n m i i ? 04 A^iprijdKon a m i -OAH i p j i d - s i c o s j.>4tiaa nui'j J p i p 04 M I p a u o j p o q p « c no{4Ti3o[ a a i p o

-«L' OJ 9JIAV Btq miAV pUAOUI 'J9A0 Uuoti. a q ^ UAVOUJI s i a a n j o s o i p v ' J a i i u c q irtoj4a n « A l V . - p o i v i t s d e s --flUBJodtuoj OJOAV a ^ l •BO{sft;

""D— W- in(I-^aJ^^._Kiy;iiiA„apjs4iR. TBuoottia^ sj,^ Uj 0JJAV dI(j00(j[ 0 0 3

-Z HBqi OJOJM -uo: i« i n>3s AMOAO A[ -Jl!OU PUUOJ 3A1 apjBUI OOUO -[JA\OJO y q i 'WAV u i XBAV J I I O a o j o j p i n o a OAV o . io j j q s a i u u n u i iao4j i j 4Stra{ \v, J O J a j o q j 4 n 3 p p a A ^ s BAV m^s »«14 n o poAij.ttt ^ p i n c j AKL uoit.\i. 13A ' '49AV piIC 11SU[B 01(4 UJ [dA«J( p u c feapiBOjy UIJCAV j p m aAcaj l u o q ; o i [ c m 04 jfup ot|4 u i S a ^ q i o u SBAV o j a i n ^ [ o j u a ^ u o p c a a j S u o a

faq4 d n o p u m i p j j a q x aai in4JoiI - a i r p u u oziB j o ^ j f c l q o u c s OIIUOAV q i J M c o j itiaAv 1 'jaABAVOH "0[qc -ssijduit qaju'-HDAv aioAV sJirBAvapp p u c B4D3J4B a m -put:' - O j o j a q . Aep d m pjczz ip i i pozjg ip3uiB v i i a o q p m t d-I '")qX- 'lso.4-oi[4 J O J u o i a e o o o p c q x lq3i iB0 I •aoili}puo}4t; i p j m p U I O J J A v u j p ^ o j llua_iuoj>_npiii..^UaAo—mhvv T>Ics 1 ' A ' 4 P u o d o aptAv u BGAV a j a r i JBOA: Biqi JO ^ u p u u s 4Bjtj ot{4 i(JOA

Avajsi u j ooucAJOBqo ( [ o . n u p AliipuiiK j o i p c i u j o a u j j j o o p Biq^ p u u o j -U03 04 411S11011) 1 ' X B B I ' 03 p u v

s o i ( j j i i i [ j niox Atu.v; «> J i s i A V X i o a a p t ; j o bj jq

/ffuo ,IJOAV uEoqi : s i i o p i o j p [ j AVoq

'illltlCOIJ pBdlJ aXB Oq4 JOJ EC PUV J04CAV d in u o d n puL'jfa- p [ n o o q o n u l

og Sutq i ipAv o u o o u p u c 'b 'punoil Ofil potffeidAv' s u s a r |i:i[4 U O A O J I I n a o q 4ou 41 KI:I.[ J O J 'J04CAV . iqi u o 3UU[I»AV s n s d j : J O /•.104b- a i n j o s s a u -qb-i[ooj' a m p u c a iq i f j o i p j o j f i m q -Tlinj 0114 n o BipL't feiq tpjAv S O I M C a i p na-f HBO oq_na;iiAv p u n o j i i p u u Baiduooo a q u r t in r t 3114 u j ' O S J I I O O

10 '4do:)xa ' u u i a o i o a i p i s i u j . t p o w o i p 3II(,CJ.IOAV HI j c q i op)h* o q i — ap i a . lo ipo o q j , -4ui]i J O J i p n u i OS

'M.icdddc j a i j c n l ) IHUOT^OOOO o i p PUB }oni aq ; e n i u I p q [coo a i p uai[AV -BA^pnus OKotp' u o ;do3xo ' s p ^ o j l i puis s j o d d o o J f o i p 04 X p . u o u i 3 U J J ao4CpI uoi4-oai - p a oqi p u c ' A \ I C I B S O'JS'li' J O OOO'I* E]t[ u o X p d d n q t,aAi[ J o i s p n u i o q j , '•JO6C j o s a j e j o i p u i B i u o j 04 e n u p -uoo s,08 Olft j o soBBj 0114 pi>« p o y j - j c j o u o p a u n o X d i p B o m u n u o d d a X c p u n g ' s a a p o i A j o UAVOI i f c u t e Bjip u t u p S c j d A iBin i c q ( pntjj. a m p u s p o j no,C J J O B a i p ' o j o a a t [ ] 04 p i m i J j d s ' b i u a i n q a f a j d i s i p o m o j / v p o o 3 O J C BJBoq a n o BtioiuioB a q x f.pios 0 0 0 ' p . j o U ' A O J T)jo tiim n i IKCT

j o u o t i i : 3 a . i 3 n o 3 flnpuoiu XiipunH a q i d u a i [cu i 0S8C Tit 0 3 04 p a s l i l^Ul 5CI -TO OOt O U I P S a m ^ox I I J O S Suv j o KU0440CJ441; j a i p o o u "H-IOT aq4 04 on iCKiaqo m ^ q q u g U I O J J ouo d a a j j o j BaaBjd a iAout o u 'EOOIAOU Seq UA\04 o i4 ip o q x - e a u t p pooqXoq

HI 3J9AV Adip BB IOYC OJOip OJC ^Ol[X -i^aHJjjulj—UAV04—autoq—aqj p u v -

S u i q l d u i o S l o a IioA p i p .10 ' i p j o o q H'.to^S a i u p p [o OUICB a i p — i q S i u o j S u p p i i J p OAV OJ-E ( c q A \ „ ' q n p a i p o i X p n a p t J J O o i q u t c j jtoq4 BB B[cd p a j c o o - u o o a j p i p 3[sc OT[AV s.iod - d t ' u obi ioq 4011 j o E01U14 a s a i p u ( n i ; o o j x a q i t a t j o i a o i u AdiiBq jBipw p u c ' u o r K s a j d x a p u c nojBBOJddns j o \fap o i p ' a j p ^o Hiiup J I C J a q ; SJOAV o f ! u q X •! - iuoojb ' i ;cp a i p u i s n u i u i -.lOltio 04 p l u s p u u p i p j toq i E a n t q i o3uc . i i s a i p IB j.ipuLVA P U B p c a a j

4Uq IIC3 3AV ATTp04 4Iiq 'AVOU I OAV R ^ p j j o i p o o ip m o . i j . 4 u d j o ; j [ p n i o i p i p t u p 04 paBti OAV isitiOB J p q j BBapi ' l i i oqc p p s O.IB BjaqotM4 j u o j a m ; aq^i, -Xrp X . O A O «n p p } BBAV AVOU

S u j i p o u i r s uaqAV p i p 4! BB Bpuc4B II!is OSSt 10 Looqos o j t q n d , a q x -.Hues a i p iMBiuoa Sdiuoq J p q X 'oav. I J B O A O A I J - ^ J J O J j toq v BBAV I a o u i s p a a u m j o i.TOABq a j a t p aApB dj t ; oqAv a ' . o q x 'UAVOI o w o q p jo A"IU 111 u o o q o. \cq s i q a t u Mu s m u o i u XIB j s c d a i p jo t t[ -4so40.td i: s s o p q i j a A a u 414(1 ' 4 B 3 | 0 . T H paabdJ i Ixa X [ j u u d ' ' t ; d « q -.tad 'p i re a [qoa j v ,13400 01 a s a 1

s u u o j , H , I , n y " I "Olf l l l^ l l x 'OJdc B J C O X

]C HABAV qilOJOUl' QIUBB Oip TpIAV 1 (1.141100 dq p n e p e j 04 u o d t i piJ^Udd

,-dp aq p p o . ) s a q o j n q o o i p Bpj jo in j o ^ i i x c i u c i j i o d o j l o m Blip pB.134 -nuoo 04 a n o p RBAV a u j t p o i n o 1 ! H i u n i c i p p n e ' E o p p 3 i q o t p j o o o c p l d o d aiijAoi-.V"4Joq[i ' iciIOKjad 3 t u o 3 j tsco p u c ao.ij a i p l i i o q c p o j o j u a o OOUBpi(S44B AVC.ip 04 A"cp04 SOllOJUlp o i p j o o j n p c j a i p i c i p ' X i u i i i i i s i J t i y [C3.i j o EJCOA: j q S p - j C i q a j a u a o s SBq oipvv 'Aic iu ' i - j a tpc j Am 01 3 u i - p c a j BBAV 1 4 q a i u j a q i o a i p X p i o b o a n a j o j j i p - i p j n i p 4 u a j 3 a i p a o p o u p u c bf[odoJ4diu p a A u p q J i a q j 04 U.1U43.1 U0114 p u n p a r t s H J O J GUAVOI diuflq p j o JfOip 01 3[ocq o S 04 S4.IC011 u u u i o d o j j o i u . i ja ip n o q s o j j ppioAV

11 -qsiiduiooOB 01 l o a d x a Xoip POOS Oip JOJ UBip OJOIU 0A10J0.1 , t a ip A-nd a i u o K p u c q o i p . ioj s o i n z r - c t u o ip j o j anpiJ.M. p u n i p u i BOAJOS - m a i p j c a q o j 3 u p n B ) JO 'BAVopcqs UAVO j p t p i n pou . jqqSlJ j aJB 'B1S[ - l u a p o t u pi? j o n j o p o m IKOITT OBaip —

\M-oAJObqo o p p 4 n o a t p 411m ojn.J ipni 01 q a n o u a X p i c i J a a : i p c o p 04 j p : q u r p B u i i y p o u o u p i - ' j - p i o o q j OJBOB 04 p i c s u d d q Ri:i{ qSuOUfl Moj p o o l s .A"iJ?iinjnj j£aq4 s S u p p a t p J O oq 04 paHii , fa tp BSOBld a i p o j o m o u a,n: p a i p j n q : ) iB tp p u n yft:p s ) i p c q Bfq A ^ m c p s u q o 4 c q j u o | s n i d p d i p E a q s u o T p ' ) ! j o q a n u i JO ' o n - q n d o i p p o A o t p q oq 04 0.1c s u i i i 3 o | - o o i p u j a p o m a i p j o outob' JT

s p p Til 8 p u 0 [ j j p i n : B a o u c i n i E i i b o c /vuciu b-cq puu ' s p I H 1-ioqg pn-c i n n - m n s in q i o q S J B O X I H O O O J TI[ B o m p BtlOIJBA IK P3AII EBl[ ' ' 0 y eDHBJllKUl

i v i i n a p n ^ i o i p - j o a o p o j i p X i p i i q u d '>qi Bt oqAV ' E c u i o q x SOA.ir.Jl ' j o i p n B

"S11 4c tp l o c j " o i p U I O J J i t iq j p i s -II u t jpjOA\ s i t j o aBtn:03q i s o j a i t i j ) " .,11*J jCBpnns JIJC.W3M,, a t p n i o j j

3(iIJ|dfilU-»M«'-8qr J*. 8BBB1{<I---ft*--**.. araos j o aimo]tf-,ioajia(t B ittftdteo. 04 ^jojia uv -ni p e B ^ W a k ' STUHJ JO suox noiufoi £avut j»s.oq pttB 'po -qsTJAvtin souetp j toq i '^itJBJ'pa-maj •jjai saAiAiosnoq .uamjui JCUKIU AVOU 'posn svAV."„asiIipi?,. _pjoAi. d q j B3UI1J. ^U^Ul AVOtI 'BJOdClJtlSJpAl t l t tS -Om S31[[ IOg PIO IT! aujUIBJlS • u i p j p i o a o &-BB13 poiiouiK ^ { g n o j q i J a i p p "OJdAV BdjJO JO BJJBd U0}[ - p u t j tu i ;u i Avuq ' i u B j a e p p a t ' 'pojop -UOAV OB[B • |>A3. "|n0AO Btp PIO4OJ6; B i s i i ua io s qojqAV ipjAV j ta t ' J i iooc d ip IB *U0U0UIOUdTI(I d i p 3UIA\0TA OIjqAV •[)dtp_A_.lBm 3AV, pilB ' » m i r I ^JIIH P g j o 4 s i j j o i p i j u j n j o i u a a i A v o p o j o m 3UISE3U4IAV JO U O p ^ d p p U C UJ „'si!UI -4BIJqy 3 J o j 3 q l i t a j u aii.jA j o 4i;ip OJ Up[B 3UIJ03J V pd3UaiJ0dxd ,0 .W UlS tu - fcpr ja : p a j p a a ' S A UOTI.W

—•• • - — f . -•iiOKtloq i<tJiH3UD4 .woj

-B-iMic-^re;7Das- ,sEjtSTbTu^5q=["'iil "£yui - p i p i q [VJOAOB 4iniq o s p j oj-i ' j p o p i ZI«J1 d'Tl RO UAV0U5I OOClfl Ulp[UCJk.l p u o o«ueAB_ i i u i m n s 4c s a ' u i p n u q j o AVOJ e q j j o JOUAVO o i p BBAV OJJ

•jauatfi-g' Uf s a u r p i o q s j n , j o ' j a t p o S u o m c p u u o j o q e ^ o t o j a a u t p p u q n i j fn i iautTnojd: p o i u a p a n i i ' . m ' i u t JOJ Z4B>[ -i]^ -3[JBAV0M UI OUIOq B|q i n O 9 B B ^ B P AVOJ ti p a ( p ' 4 i u i m n y H I 041:46-0 i c a j aiqc.topiBUO.) pauAVo A p u a a o a i p n n oqAv ' iqc ju p i i u u ' g

; i u a m i j j i ' d 04 aovdB 1: a u j p u u tif x j p i o p j i p p u n o j 4.100 - n o o o m 04 ol£ o^ t-jco j p t p pos i i oqAv asoqj^ Avoiib j o s i p c q a S u q » 'U J " OBiiBjog 'IJO-iiioy „ X i o j i „ 9111 JtaTj'B jCiojcipatuui j "pun OJOJ -oq qsnf at tuoAB bUJo]/\[ u o or j jc jq - p o j t p " f n _ i n s p i 4SB[ P O H B P P "a.ia.w o a j o j ao}[od i « o o i a i p j o p e n b s o p -JLM4 a i p j o Bjoquio iu o i p j u o m o s

'- , . - ' " * : : !•• pil-i 111 ii 1 i w r i x T i.~

». p».t)sap

vsoqs arfi«l!ns 'fiu^Bpucq

jowoigMMs, a o j s n b f u i r a ^ — .

MOXS aNHOf *aa ^usunuiodt lv A-q w'noij . J,^I •pi

"•10)10(1 "AI 'Unlvl spoaoouB vil ,.'niiS aqj, , , jo joi}po icpuc i iq Xpuooaj 'HJOA. AVOM " ! J»1UAV [up -UIllIU C BJ ^OOpiOOjVv MJVT •)IUIIUT1H JO ^uapiRdJ JOlumilB V 01UI4 OUO 4n sft,w ' p o a u i i o i i u t : u o o q s c i j u o p -Bjiunion o d j o u i u i o y ai i ; iBJ34ui o i p 05 o S p p o o y 4uopiK0J,i £<i i i i a t m u t o d -an osoqAv %>oipooA.\. 'oj GUIUOUX

HOOB ,V*JOA P34,IL'1B a q 01 B I H J O . W •OOO'OiS i n o q i : oq 04 s i o j i p o i u ^ s aq4 j o 4B03 p;)04 o q x '40dop pBo.l l lBJ o i p 04jeod((o 4[|tu[ oq 04 U A \ 0 4 4 c m ut a s l i o q O J I J AVOU

a i p J O J u o i E H i i m n o y 0,113 o 3 B p i A O S U B J O q i l i o s o q j jtq 4 3 i \ i m o d o t p popjCAVB u a » q s u q ',104317.141100' 3 u i - P l i n q i B O O i ' a q i ' U B U I U I H l p B i m a

•4Uasa,id ac[ 01 p a a j n X p a o u j c a o,iij Bjoqiuaj\i - jpoi . i .o OK'K i n "I^IK XJ-UIIUBJ; ' .VcpaniBS u o ' 4 i u i r n n s "annaA-B O A O J Q a u r a Oi ' s o l n p H 'd ' f u^ i l '£*W j o e . i uop ih j j o i p Tit ppTj a q uiAV a n 3 c a f i . S J O A O I OJIIJUN "U TX Oip JO K334SnjJ, JO p j c o a a i p j o S i u p o i u inn i i in : a q x

• n o s =y jo i iBt l n "A\ en o j i p n j o i p u[. HAVOIDI oq 04 U I J J J a i p

p o t t p f a u j A n q ' j a i p t i j Htq ipiAv s s a u - i s n q A*jaq6Vpjaqt$i{ o i p 04m 01192 "BiTq" 'oniiaAB Tiic)urioi,\i jo 'jo^iee '1 "A\ JO M O S ' J a ^ t a 4-ioqiIt),-

•ipuaaiJuoJ Xjiinjqo^ no OSUBJO IB i iopcpoEav UBpBuqj s,uai\[ 3unoA ai i^S 07l) )n Acjd 04 uosoqj uoaq Bnq BJlsaqo -JO .b'Xoq ' v T» 'IM 'X I^-'Ol oqX

JO OOjapp EJH p^AlOOO.l OJj; *5|iOAV XipjoAvojou i sow! a i q ^Viq-p ipad bi 'jBif.w. p i p ja j iB^vi M a q ^ i t u p B.qv

a t p u i •pu-nsnoqi OAVJ JOAO j o . r t i q s - . w q u i o i u v qjiAV J O O J J B p.if;« IMOA\; UI pai ,uooi i p j u u . ) l O A p o )intoi\: ' 4.C3J3 oq4 AVO.IH ^su|UUj;:o>i| Oulu inq ^up jo j u o MOiswLt;}! b'B- Joq^IAV' MtX , puu .' .Vjnoeojj o ip Tif 'sjuifop OAp 'sjoqiuoiu iz ipi.w ipJ i lqy i s p d c u .iB[ttSo.i v oint pjyjni'J'JO BBAV i! 8/,Rr ui puu i p j u q y ispd-.:a OUUOAV* q u i d 9i» j o iioisi.vjocltia aqj Jopuu SBAV nons i tu s i q x ' 3 l f l

-ood pa.iiqoo JOJ suoisBiuijB.uj oip jo auo 'A410 JJJOA AVON ut «o[SBtiv* 43A!io mnojv: a ip jo oa.n;ip a n c j 04 popno SBAV oq jc ip J04JC a iup 4io;p c pitc Hntluoiyojv 'V i:so>i pai.i.-cm aq ZZ JQ *>"U aipg^v ' lu tuv jodqos jtcptiuy puu u o p s p v uo poLuiM oq , liH— EI-JD_a?lJjmJ-4iJ u»i,j3<i-,tOd^uo

Biio|Sip.i Bin ,-ioq»>AV. fippv p u t b inuioqx U O D B O Q j o u o y 'A ' IUO

o i p SBAV o n -£GSM 'S3 ipjifiv; " " A '-II0J.10N " I tl.IOq !,BAV JOlfBI l \ Mff

- 'A 'J is jmui a i p 04 po40A3p p c q a q ipiu.AV j o o u o - A p i j ' a a i : j o ujuo-t OAvj-Anqv.p SCAV on •"Tiin.ioiu A"i:p.ni}T!g J S B [

1 • 9\ntin. w&: j _ - a s ^ o ^ T ^ i l l r *

-IDA pue jjo;? %j Supfui^lj suaiiqM pntt eairsrxpiSSif Xpdmo.Tfl Edm-p eojfla 'ftk OnHiioti 'Siiimoos t» "-^.j

pouoqSnoj puu poqqcqo-awpfe^ UIOJJ aavj: la Bpucij oqj

,1>1 ,_s^lls{J>_jnTi M . Ig^^lOg.

•JI-'O P ; Jdo.iiB qi-io.s; os 'ouioq siq 1« poip 'qo . iuqj j j p d c n umiuno^i oip jo s ipuouto jo ibcd " a a 'jaipiAV utvp'uiqbtiAl Idiuua ' J a

- p o j oip uo Bipuuiu ic.id.vea. ir:«^s.r" IPAV OIJAV '0111OAU pUGjpo(!Af t--;rr •ooud.i.vvr.'i JopiiAV d 'BJIM pi.'Jj •"• -^BAV 'djipj OIUBS aip n o -iciavVv-j

"^BUCJ o i p JO-XCAV Aq U['u.to^H»:j - . > . jpaAV jsc[ 4J.>[ 'wiuoAii pir'fipV--"' jo ' u o j q o j n j j u j ^ po jppm ESJW . 7-J uooipiuyoBW "AV o a j o a a -'-<,-•-

'OHUBJO JBCCT ui oiuoq -uotp o-spui H;AV aidnoo oq4 'dl,l4 UJOipilOS V J04JV -UIHTI 1B3(1 acA\ ' iuoo , i3 o i p j o j a i p o j q B ^ J O I I -UI" "V B o u t c r p n « o i r eA una/ ;" ssjivr Xq popua44B suvv a p t j q a q ^ po'lB -PUSo ' i j i u u u i g ' q o j n q y XauApiy j o J O I O O J ' S u i A p B u i x ' o "A\ A O H a q x •03UBJO 1BBM U[ J d l p o j q R.IUOOja - a p u q • o i p j o a u i o q o i p fn ' p u j E X j B n u c f ' S u p i d A a ' X o p s j n i i x j s c j o o B p 11004 ' O ' J U C J O iBB^i j o "Hajj.-iw 0[p 'qcBi a s m p u c M i p s u p j o '44011 -I&I VT BBUIOIIX 10 03ci.t . lcii i o q x

*' 'M^jioit—»«iua , r

•qi6 XJniuqBji 'auitiBAO jCnpiiojAi no 'V "O 'AA 'A »>iO 3^ loiibucq iBntiiic pJiql aioqj pioq Iir.W V •:> -AX 'A oip jo q m o .BI J JO Bwauisufi a q x

•uoapjo; 51 J a p u u n u jo nu t j o tp pun zjuoj j "j p o j ^ Jiaoiij jCpy 04 p p s uooq aaq OIIUOAB a3p!H JIBO ui ipAvpicy , toi3pia jo oiuoq a q x

S9J0^- SM9){ • p l t i p p u c j ^

i c a . i a a n o p u u n o j p u q o p u c . i s UOAOB "bU03 OAV) 'EJOHlSllBp JllOJ 'AVOpIAV s i q .Vq poAjAJila BI JoqniAA '^Q

A4P I B t p til £J340iu-iJo X B a 31-iOA AV3j\[ oq4 u i oq IIJAV"1U0U(.L04UI d.iat[AV A^D AOSJOf OJ paAoina.1 o q n a m l l I A t ^ P 0 ( l olUh " J 0

-tU'IAV "JU JO 9J[[ '>^1 a o i p c o . i d UJAV

'X41;) 3[.IOA &.0& jo (pjuqy I'-mdca 43AJIO i n u o i t oq4 Jo j « 4 s c d 'B^Bp M Q 'Aoy a i p i p o p . o al io j c Acp - s j u q x ' j q a i u XBpbdUpaAV IBJOunj aiJ4 Jl! 01BJ0IJJ0 pUV 'jVOEJOf AVSfJ j o a o u a j d j u o j Bjo4s tup\ i j a p d u a d q ) JO HlOpjBOjd 'dAO'I '.l(J ' IPJIUID l ^ p d i i a UIC4U110JI o q ) u [ O I B J S u i a[[ U!A\ ^ p o q a i p j q a p i j tKpsjupoAi . ***'

•"-»tH[q Avoui[ CH[AV ObOlp PC UIOJJ llOpB.UlUpC pUK ioadsa.1 i M a i p i q o i p p o u p i a BBI( ^ q j u m u n s in oojA.ias p j a w i t p n n a u o i s i q a n i J i i Q • i p j i l t p o t p j o u u p -oa. ia a q i J O J JCOUOIU OSIB.I 04 H ) J O J

- J O s i q u t saa [a . i ! i SBAV OIJAV JoqatAV j g j o S4.10JJ0 d i p 04 o n p A p ^ J B i

BBAV UDJIUU 1314(11!^ UIBJUUO^ Oq4 JO au iP l f t i q e q x s a q a j n q y u j B i u u o j ptIC [OUIJB,) lUllOJC 'SpjUAl ' u o I Z tunoivi ' j a i p a a . ' n c j i i o d o j p i v o t p j o . loiscfl a i p waaq s c q .loqaiAV. '.i(i ' i p j n q O j s p d B a d i p j o .104SH11U1 1: s u jao. iBo s j q u j ' 3 [ d m a x lyililTJQ a i p pox iuu3 , io u a i p BJolvVopoj [iij - i p i u j AVOJ v ipiAv JaipiAV. - J Q p in : l 3Ai [o 4UUOJ5 JB u o p B a o j a u o o ajq lit i n o o}[Ojq t i o r j u o s s i p ( J G S I n i - X j i m p i a s i c o i S o i o o q x qajnqqou.Vi-j 11-' S ( )8 l ' n i ^ l i n i A i a j o j o p o a

• o S c j AaiuBi&.pUB - j j * '331:4 a i - t « B r I ' u B u i u o a o j [ 0 ^ 'ua.vvoa i.iBAvojy 'AOpag ja3T£oa ' J o n p o t M O S J O O J J ' p i q - l u n r scmwtf j ; ~gjTTfa5]AT ' p a a A l T3iiu;ii bb'Uvr ' s u u f pajptUM e m m ' '[OITIV 4d.ica.iPl\r BBpvr "jOHpajfj- a 3 , i o o o • sa l t ' iooi^r a i j o l ' j c i f "pBire ' :^J[)AV E4nana o q x 'bB04b'oq o ip ' KJ u i B f p c K BU '!I\I ipiqAV )v B i i o p o n n j o i p p u 0.1c 'Jr. apiBA'ofiia jbo tu SCAV 3 U [ U 3 A O oltX •paAja's BBAV u o o q j u u [ i: ip]1[.\v J34JB 't,s.i.i3< .id uj OJOAV oapi . iq -30 B^iqii) a o j q j j — q i B u o i - i t - u o i p i p i

JO U1JIIJ OIUOS IPIAV 3q-04-Op|.l(l d tp a u p i i o H o j t t " ) b d i i a i p n o ' I O O I M fib^re J O J .loAvoqs uai i . i i i i i 1: j o . u i p n u o ip u] SCAV . t p j j u a q x 'U!Btpi ; l \ [ u n o u n a ,1 JjiBAV 'Jaipi) ,n[ ' . n q j o d o j u c t j ' poo ix "U 'V 'EJJ/t p m ; •-Tivr j o J 0 4 i ; i i i n p '1031M o u o f j c j t sfajAi j o j o u o q U[ XlJBd p.IBO V. 3.VB?' 'OIltldAB |K.«J

- I I I H y i " '«i^fi;>?i-j:i '-T>>>I''A\ ' w w

p u c Mi\: j o j a i q a n n p ' invaor jAM-UBB

-,iR]\f b'^iiv i q a m XBpiJjj •4:,'>:rl

l° T.M s s l k J , )J .OU«B|S p«M OiJpiJH

'J ini - u u i a n i pop is j . i X[JOUI.LOJ A"[|iunj bfq p u c AB-l.tiiLM - j ( i MCioqjS ICUOpdoJ^O UB SB JI 'Btl l jq ,U)J 3UIBU B dlllll) Lupi l ' l l l bt pil l! OplO.TOX 4' :

pOqdB IBOipOllt B 3«lpU3}lB S| 'jtB.l -JIIJAI u c u i . i o x 'UOG . i t a q x "uoiHtri -tpcAV U| A'BJ.iniY . ip 40am 04 £r.\\ j a q KO ' J j i n u m s j o ' B O I W O I I > I ' t ' JK pai is jA A~I:J.IIII\[ p a A O ' i ' T "s-iI\T

1 *U^[',,i}'^t-feSf':: ^ ui i icuiiatis uoB4«AV P i o u w --**&# puu -jjv! jo omoq oqi JD "niiff ifiitui;™: -qo. j •uooHja4jn_j:B{j'KjirqjJ vi$^p ;s_=? SHBl UIAV 'HJOA Avax jo "fniwl-K^ JM:niB,ij[-_pra1ijoa ' pue-JiftuRwc-Tft -•'• • Ai.i3iit.toj •44iAi o U -fi -v - s ^ ^ ^ r - r 'Jj\r jo J34i[3iicp -piAv. OQ ticib'jiriis " Aipoioti y«!lM ,jo auippa.v o q t ' ; '

•opoqs' OIH uj eeajaop ys KfcJA-b'-i.-,IO43Ut0UU0tp 3 i p p|T5U Oq A13T.l,;:.if.!, IMBq -aniAtiii ajti A*am s u i " "ii -'V-' a m jo ojoq bpuap j eauJAV- -3*1.^3™ V ' v 'BJJA: pne MIVT pire- --j -•

- i i anp j ; SJJVI ipiAv B P I J O M ui n^i-V'"'' -CA B anipuodfi BJ oqAv •ssarir.-^:-;,..-: •«> oajoao Jopdr t su i S a m r t r i

'Evvajv! au[«ii;.f r --AVON aip jo .104JPHI 3upjo(Ii3,IJ;;-'>='" - J O J SBAV u u n o U K 'duueAt: ,s?is!;' a« ld jo ' i p p o a -a "AV 'BJIM }m'.f'<i'--j. Lo A*npm»y isony aip <JCAV 'a.3n.,^.;; ;o 'A*uBdwoy J040JVI lauuoo "oqi " : ' -luoupjBdop iC4|i}[tqnd put; aKji.'p:-:-•P« dip jo psoq 'uunf) H.qi^BOi*

•s,j04JBnbpBo.i[ oojpd IB 3[JO,-V e r r atitusaj oi ajqu puc pajsAOoaj ^{^''V; -uo ai '03[ a ip uo i p j ppfl.pa&'ujV. oq uaqAV ^Bpsunqx iac[ o2"a Jfft:'1

B 3pontB)b-|lB Xj_nflIJ lI«.„.?U!Art;ii-i

omoq siq jn U|BIUOJ 04 pSo-JOj uvv-i acq -oq.K""t,lO[3tS P3-i.il luij^Sjttg

A"ui:m sjq 3upiBt.\ uj Aipp on: luods pmi ABpuojv 4Bc[ mulling u oiuco '3[JOA Avajj uj 4U,amqct^qc;;k;j auii i ipjopun aa.iB[ u Uf pn /n i^ r - s BJ oq.vv 'i:,icmi;x.-)i\[ y AVO.«ptt '

% j ? y i j ^ i ' 01J4 OOS 0) JOlpOlU BtT[3TiOf| > ; ; j o omoi i o i p - 04 'uVcpjtt4B£;; 'AVOI, n i c i n n o i f o j 4uotW ' ' J f , , '^U| [''..; iHBIIIIAi P«B diiuaAB inojio- ' f - ; j o ' ipB3S[ U J J J ; 'BJivl p u c ' ,n<

Avxti p o o q . i o q q a p \ j s i p ^u S u r i u j i ! „ ' W « J A'BI,) 0 p 4 n „ a q j a a s oj/-f[}(--ot'-r JOII 5[ooi oqs -.vcp.in4Bg iffr.r Xi; J.". ,(34uetp 3upHOJ04U[ A.WA c jo t.~r-' -BOq SBAV 1400s 'n .iqiojoQ' >ii!\"

•jCtqa B,qiuom B .n)j Bpt.toi^, u | •>•* '.VHuinj . qoq i JO FJ3qmont JOtflH": o i p puB 'oiiuoAi? n n o p c a jo-ViUit ; "AVl.rI 'X i p i J O p D J ^ 'EJIM pU13 MK

'UOpCpOB'jy O.lCAVpjCJJ .VO.MOI' i p j o v j oq4 j o jinipiBo.id s j JO'.,IXI:I\: MlV •UOI1I!|.10HS>V a.lCAVpJUJI UB4t[t)d - o . p o j t o i p j o o . i o p o n i m o j P 4 0 H 3q4 4c an iuo .vo Blip j o i m i p (Lnint . : a q i p u a j j i : ipvv josnBjv: . u u p . i v

- n o s p u j l aT[) '3ur4ooitdAO a o p e s - [ P e l f i l l T t o pOflAVOlStlfl JO B l . l p p - i n o o ip n o n p i A U B I U M I . n m p JB i d i n a i u o u 'BJIV pu t : u | B i d i \ ) j u 4BOu3 pii3-jp3.vv i: BCAV IBlaA.iqy 'O uBOf

•auiuoKjort ic i i ( i^04i i i IpiAv ^ariAV r, J O J p j naoq s u q ' a o c i d p o s B i p i t j o 'BaiAvoy •() -<3 -aj iv p u c "Aan j o . la iTiancp 463;,'anoA o q i ' u a a i i p c j i

•E.i'3U)ij AYI on ioq J O ( [ 04 pbu i iuoa s i 'jqcAV 'V >lucit>T j o a J o i s Spooa a i ipJOdB 31(1 111 p3A"0[dTU0 Si oqAV 'nosd ic in iAV OpjAi\v BS[I \ I

•BU'VI-xaswa l o ' c u l l 3[JC1' .Y.Jpr PUB MIVI U)[AV pin-1[30AV utp 4tiods u o a u q o f - a l u o j j i i ' j

' s s a u p i jfq o m o q j a q 04 p o i q i u o i s j ' o n c p l u c m u a c i j o ' ^ o u u o j ^ d i ^ i ' B J I M

' A c p j u j t ' S aiuol[ poujT. , , ' ' a i p u o i u 31UOB J O J uojSuiqitUAl-•-.• uaoq b c q olpv ' i tuudwjoy ^ S I A H ' ' JO KM] J d tp JO 'fiTAllOnr ..la).'*,-!

'Aim a.4ir. ' i)V 04 U3JA j , j ' ij raojj p 3 i u n 4 3 j 3Ai:q B . t o i q ^ - ' a n n o x OAVJ j o q p u c 'prio'-t pr.c-- i i j o ^ j o '4JBA104S -x T A-'^'V:

"V "0 'Vi- 'A 3'iJ ui aniuaAa s p p PI J l l °q IIP* r-'t'-- cpossy s(u3j^r ssaiijsni'l aqi' JO J--i -133UI A'iq4uoin-!Tjia3 JvpiSaj arrj,

•OOCJ.104 u c u n p o a uo atirt'iq ,t;.i-' o c ip Xuuiig 4B puo-ipOAV oip ill . u o E p j c j jonpjtny -BJJA: puu 'ii\

'UOpCOBA BjlpUOlU B JOJ'BpJ.I 'i; 04 ouo3 acq '4Udiitd2cuBlu lojoi;,

pooAvqoooa oqi jo 'nciHO IV* " T '

•BipaAV 33Jl[) JO A"IT)9' B .t«.!i i ! p n u r j 3 a tq 0.11; 'pi 'o.i d a p o m ' i i j ' l v . j o ' j r i n a i s -y u q o C "BJIU pif« MP.

o\,pa Ac[ oiuoq joq fl^panpuoo sj "aiiur.,-. 4uoutoap5[ jo 'oAvcy; ' 3 , ' a 'i?.;rv:

SI0p3f jElIOSI f

^llIlllllllIIIIIIl91Ill»llItltIIIIllllIIIIIIlUIIHlIIllllinflUlllIllI[IlIlIIIMII311flIllUllllIII1IIIIIIIBlllllMtlHlllIII|ltfliriiie£M^£:

= -, , '6 °1 I tiio'jj fcStmiaAg A"spjnr4ES uadO* ""''" ' ' '* ; ' : •

p04'lu.(Iaj o p i j j c Bpp a; A'iuo J O X

SVKOIIJi AKAUVIT AJT

•pjcAvdn p u t ; ' J C S A JDC! 00 'S$ s s : i O g ' * ' • ' " >'i.- ~ '

• J O O p UO^-VI B P l I B W - I J U O D JO SDIJDUI QZ 3 1 B J 1 3 U 3 J lOU UE3" W J J p U G pOOTJ -

- * S S 3 T » S 5 3 t 3 : n ? 0 - * l p l I X - - p I J O M - O T p - O T S V S r 3 l f 1 5 5 j e S " " 3 t { r 3 X B IIIICA l lSULlap- J JUi , \!

JO PII^EM 3JDJ0UO3 p u C p a i s DA1S3EUI 3p ISUI SDXOq JISOdOp-OJES JO ^ S l S a i l , , » q j , - .

i&mm„ i^m MX ]iii9i:nHSiiHinuiHiiiiiari:iuuHMUiHiiiiHiHininiB!E'Hi!iiuniiunuiiiHit[iiiiiHiiiiiiiiuiiiii^iii(iciii!iiiii(!!^'r:;

SZ6I 'LZ AHVANVf 'f *M 'ilj/ttlfCXJS 'CCMOOaSI :JDIJAIl/iIflS-'aN¥ a i V H H H XIMMX1S HHJ. OMX '111 . ( ! ! -

%

f

^^^^^fm^^M^iM

J-f s

v. t

Page 3: JUtexature Pept. Friday w. a New ifynlding., at Blind .... The result must- be grati ... JUtexature Pept. Friday Tbo Department of Literature is to have a speaker on Friday, Janu

vnrxiKL: CUIA:!!: Vt\G

- } r - <

T t j E ^ T ^ a E ^ l i S K ^ B ^

^ \ - -_.-•* &*Y,r#*'X*tll+-ef*(f •tWJJ'1'i< «5—SE"4' 4

ft ir '

tieraldings:

or lousewwes

Micnim ffleMof ml lome

m

(Continued from Page One)

>,*C«G"S~0*'?!* '5«e-:

; "Tommy, s top catinK with, your

7 ^%uirT5I5TtiniF/"wcr^TlT-^irECn5-! made, boforc forks?" i "Nut your s , Tommy."

A valuable, fur sca r f - can be se­cured to your cust;inio ,wiUi tiny fufoty piU3 on the under sirld.

——o This is the t ime of the year when

the housewife call freolo he r own ice oC a oohl n ish t , shy scttinjt ou t

• n pail o r itan. Bu t he su re it lis ; p.n old .r.oceptaclc— a rus ty holler, ^ ' ^ l o r n Q t u i n s you don' t want to use

. ^ a i h -tor the freezing .will buckle -,"' 1lie bottom of it. Also, p u t it. •' where cats and. do,TS cannot s e t a t

the water . '_ -,• j . . i | Show and sal t w,Ul freeze Ice ' r ream. I t has been tried with auc-

i'.i"?fi in a vacuum freezer, we are | told, and goodness knows the re ' s 1 plenty of snow around f r e e ! I ce ! c ream is a heal thy, s imple and | popular dessert wi th al l ages In | the home.

Bo careful in handl ing fltoves and j furnaces in ltomen w h e r e house I p lants ai'e kept . T h e p l a n t s can

not fctand exposure t o coal gas . | _ o — : Turkey W i g g l e * | ~\\\- never heaTd It cal led tfciis wn-j til the other day. I t -is ou r old

familiar creamed tux-key in new pulse. But every housewife' knows

i tha t cold tu rkey can wiggle itself into anj i number of guises .

Make a pint Of c reamy white nance; into this s t i r t w o cuttfnls of turkey picked from the hones, and a cupful of canned peas . Add a shrcddctt pimonto and a l i t t le pars* ley, if tfosircd. Serve o n bu t te red toast'.

- o — "~ - Boiled Ti»ml> o r Mut ton • '"""tiolloil meat, so called, Is proper ­

ly p repared by p l u n g i n s t he piece j into' boiling water , then keep ing the ' water Bimmerlng unt i l t h e mea t is i lender "but no t cooked to ptecesj j The leg, smoulder, hea r t , tonpue, ; and cuts f rom the b reas t of ei ther ; lamb o r - m u t t o n may he cooked in

ttiia way. ' tyy us ing different kinds of gravies and re l i shes much var ie ty can be efven. Cold hoTlc.Vl, mutton.Jnan fried in a l i t t le bu t te r or o ther fat, is par t icu laxl jc sood nr, a luncheon, b reakfas t or- even dinner dish.

Tomato SaWft 1 cup canned tomatoep ' % r 2 tablespoons b u t t e r 1 onion ' - - ' - , ' , ' , • -1 (logon' cloves Sal t and pepper . , _ 3 tablespoons flo.ur_.[*/ '•;-,']

Cook' \te\ tomato", onion and ' cloves Ion-minutes . I W a t t h e but-, tor lu a smal l frytnerjnan, and' a d d the-Hour . St i r over t h e flr«v_unJU'

jioili and b rown ; theri add the i ik ioes : Coot two or t h r e e mift-

uVes. Season, then r ub th rough a "strainer'fine c-ttoush t o k e e p back the seeds .

. ANTIQUES

Clifford, ladle* and gent lemen: We al l went to bed with one eve­

ning prayer las t night, tha t there would be no' eclipse today. There is no eclipse.

It is impossible "to think of - the handing .over of tMs finely useful MwnTJrTlaTTo-IK-TTMEar m(:J"Kl> wlthoiit reca l l ing his impressive personal i ty ; h is plcturearjuoncss,

'wo-SaminftRefl-" to'Paten

rare-tits •as;'i54pGatQ^, Issued by the Nat ional Kindergar ten Association, 8 West 40tli

Street , Nov/ York City- T h e s e ' a r t i c l e s a r e .appearing weekly in our columns, . '

Till ' ; HECOMI'EN,SE Mildred Anne Leslie "

Play, laugh, run, strive, and | some pleasure work wMTyoi i r chi ldren."

There was once a l i t t le girl who hajl the most wonderful mother

ir-tne^TJromrctioni and - fa t4 te r -m^h^) -^^r i< l^^AlaaJ^ ' | l H ^ l J t : ^ ] ; i I 1 1 t G I 1 . ; o u l , ••ittHc-Elrl'-waw always finding tha t no oue else un-

' .<rV

The, table in our s i t t ing room la • most ly made pf glue.

Anil if you pu t a hook on It you'd b reak it r i g h t In two.

The Uavttaport'ii so-wobbly t h a t my mother lias a fit „

Whenever ca l le rs happen In, for •f-'.ar they' l l sit on-lt, , , , .^ • ., -

Ana when a fly wallts up "the wal l the old piano c reaks , , ,

•Thrre'a nothing new in ou r house ttow—JitBt shaky old ant iques .

t'h broken -wooden t rundle bed -where baby takes "his n a p .

TV as thrown away when Washing­ton was ju>.t a l i t t le chap. .

rnn clock looks like a coffin, and irs wUefels aro tt'Kde' of' wotfd,

his cheery smile, h is keen laughing eye, his quick wit, his voice mellow or r ing ing ; his deyotion to Shakespeare ; h is vast information o n ' a l l Shakespearean matters"; which had made him a s t rong d rawing card on' t he Icdtur'o plat­forms of the whole country. I t is in accordance with the dramat ic uni t ies ' . tha t the equipment of the roonis of this building'should- have been par t ic ipated in by Maine and California and, Flor ida and' Ark-k a n a a s ; 'as wel l ' as by Connecticut, NjCW York, Pennsylvania and New Jersey1. Tha t would have pleased hint for rio man evor had a keener sense of the dramat ic unities.

To you, J . Howe Clifford, and Mrs. Newhouse Clifford, the thanks of- the whole Internat ional Sun­shine Society are . due . Before con­s t ruct ion was begun, you had r a i s e d over $25,000 through* your reci ta ls . You have raised more since. The money was essential for the e s t ab l i shmen t ' of such' a me­morial . But I a'ai sure our mind,s dwell more affectionately on the lovely spirit of- helpfulness that motivated your efforts than on the effect.'

You do not know,"! do not know What of fOvluhe or misfortune."the future may have in store for you or for Mrs. Alden or for the re.it of us'. But if you woro, bereft 'of everything, and su'ffcriag. like Job, of old, you could still say as he did: " I was eyes to the blind, feet was I to the l a m e ; " and still hope to come back as Job did to pres­tige and prospt r i ty .

Thia work for the young blind-is, capable .of indefinite-oxpanflion. The definite expansion which this memorial makes possible is .one forward step. I t . is a work in which the per capi ta expense Is necessari ly heavy and no large gifts from grea t givers have en­dowed the undortttlflng. But if you think for a moment , you will rea l ­ize tha t the saving ' of Laura Bridgman, a lmos t a hundred years ago, by Dr. Howe was mors costly, and tho same thing is true of the saving of-Helen l£ellor, a work be­gun in 1887 when the ch i ld .was 7 years o ld ; - and kept up for a long ser ies of years by Miss Sullivan. In" each - case a special teacher de­voted to the case', the Individual case , ' had to - be employed. Mrs. Alden h a s -sought to produce like resu l t s 'for tiio benefit of numbers of children,- maTdng each case an individual study. Hundreds <5f l i t­tle . l ives have been rescued from doadneaa. And in qonie InstuneeH (he -results have rivalled wliat was achieved fof L a u r a Bridgman and for- H-elon. Kclhjr, \ ' "A , - .Tho .Proas baa-helped'immaiinely.' Tjae^feoyhfrto of'Mrs.'-'Altlen'B policy has been t o make , it clear to legis­la tors In all the -states t h a t the blind child is entit led to ah educa­tion suited to Its needs , wi much as is the seeing, child. In t h i s t l m st&te antl local branches" of the I n ­ternat ional Sunshine Society have assisted "-by their Influence .and urgencies . Already thirteen of the s t a t e s have lafas, under, which in defaul t of like provJBlori wilhin t h e . s ta te ' s boundaries, children may he sent to Summit and have the i r .tuition paid; but there are jjtfll many fields t o conquer. • - Le t me close with a thought

from the Bard of Avon as dear to Mr. Clifford a s h e . was to Dr. Ab­bot t ; the thought that wei a re al l Ins t ruments in the hands of Provi­dence; used not with regard to ourselves, but with regard to the •unlvorBe. i t Is the Duke's speech in the F i r s t ac t of "Measure for

Two Summit men are listed among the th i r ty- three j .Tseyjncn granted p a t e n t s last week They, with some i rom nearby towns a re as follows:

George K. Thompson, of Summit , and Joseph EckerL, Jr . , of M a u r . r . Process of Coat ing Fer r ic Art ic les With a Metall ic Protective. This nas i'nl' lis ubjt of a process whereby a smooth heavy coat ing may be d jpusl tod on the t reated a r t ic le , tho junct ion be­tween the ferr ic ar t icle and tho protective coal ing being main ta in­ed chemically pure and mechani ­cally int imate . This patent has been assigned to lloyt'Me'fal Com­pany, of St. "fcouis. '

Hugh D, MacPh'erson, of Sum­mit. Telephone system. T ins r e ­lates, to' pwi tchins ay»(«mi wjieren in methods autl moans are p,rov,id,ed. Tor controll ing the t ransmisslpn/pf current- Impulses for a plura l i ty of t r u n k l ines ' 'extending between .widely separa ted offices. Mr. Mac-Pherson ass igns his pa ten t to Western Electric".Company, Inc. , of New York.

Mr. MacPherson has also obta in­ed a pa ten t for a Toll-Switching System which h a s par t icular refer­ence to m e a n s f^r dis t r ibut ing call wires among outward opera tors . He ass igns th i s patent to ,th« same company.

Harold » Arnold, of Manlewood. JOlectrDn-Discharge Amplifier. This relates to an a r rangement for and a method, of^-varying the ra t io of •ijnipHficatioa of an electron dis­charge amplifier. Mr. Arnold a s -algns h i s , p a t e n t to Western Elec­t r ic Company, Inc., of New York.

Wil lard T. S j a r s , of Montelair . Rttii-OIampIng Mechanism. This is 'the type of clamp tha i d a m n s and unelampH the rail by Interml l -to.»t . rotary movement ot an eccen­tric' means i n . the some direction. "Mr. "Sears ass igns his pa ten t to &iles-Bement-Pond Company, of New York.

'Rowland L . Youngv ot E a s t Oranege. Curront-Hegula t lng De­vice. This re la tes par t icular ly to an a r r a n g e m e n t for control l ing the .charge, c u r r e n t of an electr ical stora'ge haHsry system. Mr, Yonnr: assigns his patent to American Telephone and Telegraph C o , "of New Je r sey .

It developed that there had been a reason for hin original objr etioii to tha t additional care.

No mat t e r what happened, or

State PliMiibers Hold Meeting in Summit

The S ta te Association of J o u r ­neymen" P lumber s and Steamfi t ters held tlLeir quar te r ly meet ing Sun­day in H i l a r y Hal l as the gues ts of LocjU Nth SOS). The mcet ing t was a t tended by .sixty guests f rom"a l l over t h e s t a t e . Among the p.ucsts were s ixth Vice pres iden t E. Ilairics, of Atlant ic City; a l so Or­ganizer "James Higglns. The meet-lngi was presided over by Sta te Pres ident Pa t r i ck Holland, of J e r ­sey . City, who was re-elected t o 1hat office for another t e r m of oiuV year. Severa l matterit of impor t ­ance concern ing plumbing laws for tiio hea l th of the public were d is ­cussed and t h e opinions a r r ived a t w M b e . sent t o - t h e . S t a t e Board of Heal th . Aftor t he meeting a , b a n ­quet was." held in tho Summi t House.

Many tapestry papers ' tovo in ter ­est ing borders to match. Cold weaves and 'embossed pa t te rns ^are eaiitfdially rM^joof i i r i^ to tone ITS

rS ofderThen the P i lg r ims , but it wi th colorful" draperies , WhiTg Tzrvm any good, " l n * f f '

TiicTo'a horseha i r al l aro'itnd,. tEo' floor—the" sofa ' a lways -loakB,-'

,•_ wigli %VA bad some ft trnitura_ihat •• n?p't all ahtiqi ies. /

.<•-!,, v.v mother go t th i s way, our r a r l T things' were 'new, ' . /

mi- urn enniu Bit on ' sp ine of tfiem vitlicitiL your going thrqngh.

'ML ,.1! t l ' iofftfortabie stuff she 's i".i"ly fiino end sold,

••ii'l Tfon't have nothing in t he uou " Ihet Isn' t ages old;

•'.a,i if i.ho geta l mucb-woiBtf ,t fcliov in j u s t a few'mbro weelw

.-ho'il t-Ai' u$ chlldj-e'n t6 Now j 'oih .anil t rade u s for antiques.

-^Eschang'e . Xoi-itii^Lundlng all the fun they

iis.iy n"!"!1 of our love ioT aritlaues; - » I K ' K . W I I I lot i g'et.smib. be'anty ,of

i.. * and C«H»i aa ' i t t t he reft! old . . i.-vnM . ,Ui^s IhaL' cAn Btlll be .ii^U-d TST), if oae has the enterpr i se

anri tu'11 i i ^ m e y l A study, of period f f i s s m w is dealrdblo" betore OD&

*iP» jiica .i-qiieat, o r tho advice " r .s.^t/oi." wb.o ,1s' w e l t ' u p o n the

-.1 RI4(>1; ' ' ' . -

pat te rns a r e large on auch. papor i , t h e " quiet colo'rlfig^. often, mal ts them' an utfobtrusive blenrf. TJn'-' less the Ayoodworlc, Is of pupeWor qual i ty , i t • Is likewise -b<&t- n o t ' to make .the wntl'pa'pftr, coiitraat wi th it too sharply. Blue, however, i s the leading COIOT' t;o bring out ma­hogany or •wain.ut.

The best chfetz pa t te rns , says a well' ' known ' inferior decorator , were j created dur ing ' the Georgian nwiod. Few moderr) chintzes a r e an attractive or a s adaptable - a s they are. ' ' .

"Cnintz," he coStlhues',- " is one of the best ma te r i a l s for inter ior decorat ion. I t ig authent ic for m a n y periods, ft goes \vell a l ike With tapeat^y aiiA taffeta; it does not , soli ' easily, wears well' and lends" co tp r - l an i . distinction, ttj a' fojMn'., "In ' usralg' cbi^liz, hoVever, c a t s ' ehould be" taken*t to"' 'sdle'ct dos i sna t h a t a r e in scale with the r o o m .to. be,feferblsb#cL I m a k e - a ^ticftcfa . ,6i . -.ujohDlHteriris , .with cUfnt'a w'lieU jStaln,' curtaifta. . 'are na'ed; and' . «rt"pioying"a'pTain: "ui»-Jiolatery material- wgjtslilntz^urj

M e a s u r e : " "Heaven doth with us as we with

to rches do, Not l ight them for themselves ; for

if our v i r tues Did no t shine forth of u s ; ' twere

a l l al ike, Afl if we had them not."

Tha t i s Mrs . Aldcn's thought , i t la the thought of Mr. and Mr.i. Clit-> ford; i t was the thought of Dr. Ah-1

bott. I t is wor th reflecting on—I thank you for your at tention.

Among those present who extend­ed words of greet ing and congratu­lation were "W. E. Bedell, who rep­resented the newspapers, the Ki-wauls, and the E lk3 ; a representa­tive of the Lion Club of Newark , and former Assemblyman -Joseph Gunn, of South Orange; the Ttev. W. S. Coe.yman, pastor of t he M. E. Church of Now Providence, and the archi tec t of the building, W a l t e r I I . jTaokson. . ' [The exercises were in terspersed With s inging, recitations and piano solas by t h e children of t h e home, many of them under six years of age a n d which evidenced the prac­ticed a n d successful t r a in ing of the teachers and tho nurses.

Tho exercises were held In the largo audi tor ium in the new build­ing, a n d upon the i r completion a social hour wi th refreshments was enjoyed In the main bui lding of t h e ins t i tu t ion.

brother and sif ter , who were quite grown up, Wire the finest and most beautiful youiig persons th is par­t icular liUle gir l could imagine. Unfortunately, they had t:> be away a t ' school nine montns out of every twelve, for thin family happened to llvo in a very tiny' town. '

Fa ther ' s business was such that h e made frequent t r ips to the coun­try! and still nicer , irciiuent trips tii the city. Whenever Lh.-rc was anything that this l i t t le gir l could possibly lit- interested in, Daddy was always willing to let .her go along.

Mother coald a lways find time to devise some plan for a dull day What fun it was to play school with Mother as a t e a c h e r L S n e

could teach while she was sewing.-or baking, or making beds, or writ­ing a pap*er for her club. I t wa» all tho more fun to have a teacher who made pret ty dresses tor her pupil while she \va.i ac tua l ly teach­ing her t h r e a d or wri te . I t wasn't evfry one who could l ea rn - to sub­tract while sniffing delicious cookies, and know that if one worked very quickly she miglit have just one cookie with her glass* of mi lk!

And oh, the thr i l l s before the first t r ip on a Pu l lman with Daddy, to a -Convent ion! Mother and Daughter played the lovely game of "sleeping ea r" for weeks before with chai rs and por t iers . And when the time came to go, and all of her clothes were packed in Daddy's big sui tcase , and f,he was kissed for the las t l ime, and Daddy was reminded once again to ask the por te r on the Pul lman or the maid in the hotel to tie her . hair ribbon, and the t ra in finally pulled out for a glorious adventure— what a happy little girl she was! Then the brea th- tak ing s ight of the inside of the big hote l ! The dis­t rac t ing sounds of the bustl ing city! The delicious "novt r-bel'ore-did-anything-taste-so-good" , flavor of the foodn Daddy let her order all by herself! The impor tan t feeling of slttinr: very sti l l beside Daddy at meet ings, even when she hadn' t any idea w h a t they were all about! And, bes t .o f all , t he joy o f going home again and t i l l ing Mother all about everything! Jokes wfre so much funnier shared with Mother, exper imces so much more wonder­ful afler they had been talked oveE with her, t. Once in a while because Mother and Daddy \vere so good to ibis al l-alone l i t t le gir l and so thought­ful in her behalf, she forgot to ap­preciate them. .Then they very wisely and very ' gravely would

J u s t not—have—time-for her for_|_^ awhile, and would let her exhaust her own possibilit ies for education end enter ta inment . It usually didn't fake long for her to real ize that get t ing up for breakfast with them w.ts much more pleasant than sleeping lute .and cooking her own! When she Insisted, on having a' pnppy in addit ion to her cat and two pet chickens, .Daddy bought her •one; but taking, ca re of so many pets , soon got to be a very Irk-'

•emr HEART-OP A ^ U S E JHIHII

' W h a t does h e do who p l an t s a{

t ree? ' .' J le^tJ lants the friend of r.un

and sky; H e ' p lants tho riae, of breeze:;

free; The shaft of boaufj\ tower ing high, l i e p lants a hojue to heaven ani?,h

For song and mother-croon of bird

I n hushed and happy twil ight heard—

Thfti treble, o t heaven's harmf iny-

iiiiiiHiraiiiiiiiiiiHimiiiiiin«n>mJiHiiHiiiiii»niiiiiiuii!i«lbttliH'.is": ••\' i i -

IT.9 H E R e w

°r * 2 1 ' * fr***°^il

derstood, no one sympathized, no one jejoie d as Mother and Daddy did. Of course, Daddy seldom said so, hut she always knew. Mother was so busy dolm; things, that dis­cussions were ra re , but her little girl always shared in that doing; When Big ISrotht r and Sister came home from college they always opened up a delightful new world of work and part ies anil interests which Litt le Sister could shaiv, by proxy.- if not actually. Everything seemed to combine to make this little girl happy!

Bu t ' i t w a i not always to be so. Something happened to Daddy's business which took away all the, confidence from his eyes, and all tho peace from Mother's and much of the happiness from Sister 's and put a new, s tern expression In Big Brother 's which seemed to say tha t he had been graduated Irom col­lege just in time to be Fa ther ' s strong right arm.

Little Sister grew up quite sud­denly. Mother and Daddy'had play­ed and laughed and worked and re ­joiced and bympathlfced with hor— she would sliow. them that she could find v.ay.j uf making dull hours hrlghl for them, could learn to work in order to help take bur­dens from their shoulders./. SIR1 it was who remembered to say grace at meals and have,.family worship when the family was torn up and transplanted to a new community and a strangely friendless environ­ment. ._--^=—^

Father ' s (yes^-finally brightened with confidence, and Mother 's with hope, it not with asjtmrance. Big Sister learned to work, happily carrying her end of the load, and Big Brother ' was a t rue rock of strength. Li t t l ; Sister, conscious­ly growing up, was filled with a se ine of responsibility which was a joy in Ituclf because it afforded her an opportuni ty ' to givo back in some measure the happincbs of her childhood!

Tliei'ie'-TbTnR:. he p l a i t s who plain: a tree. , """

What dpes b e tree?

He p lants

do who plant's a

cool and

EctmomlaitTrensp<!7iatha

hade lender rain, fi

And sce'd and bud of days to me, And years tha t fade and flush

aKuin; t'.; V tie. p lants the glory of the p l a in ;

l ie p lants the forest 's he r i t age ; Tho harvei-.t of a coming age ;

r lhe Joy tha t unborn eyes shall see -

These tilings he plant.; who plant:, a tree.

What does he plant who plants a t ree?

l ie p lants . In sap and leaf and wood,

In love of home and loyalty And forecast , thought of civic

good- -His blessings on t he neighborhood

When in the hollow oft M s hand Holds' nil t he growth Of al l w i r

land— A nation's g r o w t h from sea to uea Stirs in his hear t who plants a

tree. - 1IBNKY CUYLKR BUNNHK.

VIie public'arc cordially invited to cur salesroom to inspect the new cars which have: just ar­rived from the factory. An"auto­mobile show at GUi^J$bensc.,'

/

I ' INCORPORATE!* .';"'" v'VM'!'- -

| Direct Factory Dealers

1 UNION PLACE PHONE SUMMIT 1551

Tiiiiimiiiuiiimniiiiiniiiiimiiumiiiiiiuiir^

iz E£

IIIIIII!lllllIllltlllllll>llIlllllllUUlli:!!IEIlllIIUIIIllllllllllHlllimii>lli!!HIHfmi|l

s: S P E C I A L While They Last

>r

The T iwer of Butter is the name , given to the southern tower of tho j cathedral of Rouen, Pranop, be­cause it was built with the offer­ings made by those who obtained dispensations to eat b u t t e r lu Lent.

liers o e o r o

Regular $1.25 O o •5

C 3

Uiian Always The Best

Don't think the t ra in has passed Just because you sec its tracks.— From the County Motorist.

The only Egyptian rulers t ha t appear to be perfectly satisfactory to Great Britain are the mummied ones —Taqomn News-Tribune.

FRUITS -VEGETABLES

-. FISH

OYSTERS and CLAMS Approved by the Board of Heal th

& o 9 0 « o a

R e g u l a r 75c

M a c h i n i s t s ' e n d C a r p e n t e r s *

:ers R e g u l a r 40c

R u b b e r

50c axiaies R e g u l a r

s 0 1 OA)

381 SpriiiKiieM Ave. Tel. 101

B, B. Wall H 361 S p r i n g f i e l d A v e .

^iiiiiiiiiiiunniiiiniMiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiitiiiiuiiiiiaui^iaEii.-ir

iiliiiiniHiiiiVHUiiiiiiiiiEBiiiniiiiiiiuiiiiiniiuiiuaiiinaBiuiiiiiiHiuitm.il imilUrtfWlUill

'• - T e l e p h o n e 2 1 6

i i^ jwim i^ffftff^^rif^l.-^"•^.I"ifmi'iai!rinl!inl

UIIlUllUlllllllinilUll]IUIlllUUII!UI!HIIIII|IIUIIIIUIIIIIIIUIUinMUHtitUIIllin|}

/ >4"

(f-J-

" T , "

li n prescription for Colds, La Grippe, Influenza, Dengue, Biliousness, Rflalaria.

I t In tiio most speedy romcay-nn Icnow.

It,

dif',

eti!

Wiiiter ootwear

A T • i l l l S S . - .

As big a mis take as a m a n can make Is to _ th ink ftmt ho can ' t JiialtC- one.—Chatham Pres s .

Hmne of Good Shoes

Telephone 199-M'

8 ]ff£?JiE S T , SUMMIT, Jf. 3<

*>« j r .

iiiuiiiuiiiuiiiiuiuiiiHitiHiiiiiiiHiuiiiHiiiiutuiHiiiimuiuiiniuiiuiiiuiuii]!

I "- Snow and Sa *5 s

Y

9 Will freeze Ice Cream with a'V^cuvim Freezer. Now is s a the time to get in on this treat. The, Snow is Free and = 3 . ' we have the Freezers. s

:«»«- • a '

•,v--

Cijluiti,*: fuiul ' ihia^s thcio X niiiMUi*r of i-4fefcl>i, cdplcij •*hl 0»ir»» wftllpniieia. tfnnliit

-it', i i ' j jnt t 'af t i . e l ihor scstlisrs-l ,tlff

b.'. _ lli' wall t>r In pr im utrlp-"!,ai* - l - v i i S l« ? beJroiim or a M'>ali-• i: i rftosn, VMW th« Imuhjc-iiw

"« ,sr"t^1 'lVa f " r ,a,8<*^, ili*>ro lififnt-' ?«-•! fomjfl, JUi*" IsatlH, Hvtag or aln-?

^^".ooras.' ' No ffflcttnvB will hi* . i . r .^vi : with a liindsicapo paper , a.n .";" .St ^, m t i ' j r c i» Jtaeif.

•..'ranop'tfy l u o u r t , .'./blci'i tOffift in' ~>nUnisrUL aatl *l*rk .ion.^, s ro s'alt-

t a l n s . "

ikm tblMBlKll^i •iU'f i

BkiMtng Construction

to make Ice Cream with =

an Aqto Vacuum Freezer H

— does the work itself. 2

r . '^cySit "liir.^6?^t^&lutf'jia'!>l5fcftjuc-'l was

Tel, 1122 Stimimf

•t\fi.Hi«htan(t Ave. ' ,-I MANSER

43* ^rinji*ieM Ave.

' V 2

Hardware | Houscwarfes. 11 Telephone 1121 W- |

jferjiuwisYuimisiHinisiifiiuiuuiMiiHtiiiiifUHUiaiHiiarssiJintiiisiiiisunnn mii«imni«iHiiim«miraiitiiiiiiiiMUiiiHiHMiniiiiiliMiiiiiiimmiiHiMiUjiiiiHiiiiiHiiHiii

•r-&-XS 1 ^ ^ -a. — - w ^aws?—

' - ^ t -u f t ' ' " ™ _ 1 - 1 — /

'r^*&-v .jA.s.T^FiS?g^7ffTr7irii jTTTi'r ^ ^ ^ ! 7 i •B."J-?,J r r z!aS:J—* mZl^-rr-vm a TIL. ••> u« • • »—T*J" »»- • ™ , " * * - M r- - — —

Page 4: JUtexature Pept. Friday w. a New ifynlding., at Blind .... The result must- be grati ... JUtexature Pept. Friday Tbo Department of Literature is to have a speaker on Friday, Janu

;

T H E SUMMIT HER-AXD A N D SUMMIT RECORD, COMMIT, N. J. J A N U A R Y 2'/,. 1921

•im SUMMIT HERALD • 1 and SUMMIT JIKCORU .

<!j.[f|#liil rajier of Cltj; ami County lusiued Every

TUF3DAY & FRIDAY AFTERNOON VFOJH tlio Offion, 3J7 Kprlnsflclii Ave.

Telephones 1900 and J 901

'CIBCULATION—2^00

The Summit Herald PiilillBhliiB: Co. JOHN W. CI/lt'T, President

: P R t i t ^ V . CLiTFT. Ud44a»f Entered at tl>o_pQ-it _Of«ce, Summit,

K. J., n:i Second-Clana Matter. SUBSCRIPTIONS:

Ono Year S3 1 0

SlX-Months - , „ ' . . . . 1.75 SliiEhi Cojiles f -Ha

Facts- Atoirf Summit • —POPULATION

]*»] 0—7,500 i&ir.~».i:'C K»?»—10,174 ItCM—Eitlniited—11,300 A'iin:ai-il inluallun—192 •. 517.7fll.SjO

> Bonded debt—SI, '110,00(1 T.-ITC rate. 1924—City, 1 S!i . Sehoiil, 1 17

County .mil St UP. .SO Rank )e40«i<e1—J».5r,S,S'l7.S'l

Busings and jjruf<.silunal m ™ - K ' City of Summit, mi the T.nekawiinn.i

II K at 510 fi U above tide water, with 00 triilti'i dully. Trollcj connections uUli Newiirlc, JSllynbeth. Mon-Htown, iinil Lake llopatemi^. City w.itur lmm nttvulan wollK. Kleetrle llp.ht and R.'i'.; tide water ^ewi'iase; f i n mull (l*~ Ilv-ery: i«client police .and fire )no-ttet-loil. Tliree linnlti. Tour Ilulldiim

_iuid Limn. AgEurialtoiui: _thrcii-hijtph, ~ Comin"uniciit<? with -StimmfFDuMneHS

TMsn'a Association.

the [/ledge a re as ex t inc t jw the dodo una thc snow inu.'it he re­moved in order that 'tile ubiquitous automobile niay run Its un in te r ­rupted ronrse . Up to J a n u a r y G (hid city had already, spent $17."i.0u0

&ipn work; tho converts- who are, educated div not live to do a n y sus­tained work. There a r e 3G5 dis­eases in Africa t h a t have not even a name. "Africa la tho sinkhole from which the world 's pesti lences

for snow removal and relatively I r ise. The "Black Death" of Jiis-hpeaklnit 'only a" few of the s t r . e l s , ! tor.y was only t he first appearance those in the main re ta i l section"! 0 t virulent meas les brought over and Rome of the principal a r te r ies of t ravel to the suburbs , had been touched. Complaints from- resi-

-ttotfrhtfttfat-yleltr' were • 1 owd-nml-fon— tinuous. To give the relief tha t some complainants seemed to think they were ent i l l :d to would have demanded the services of ten l imes as^ many men and t rucks a s could 1/e obtained and would have cost millions. " ' • '

The fact of the m a t t e r is thai in the. p resence of a u d i an unusual snowfall as wc have had this win­ter the publio muat expect to sub­mit to inconvenience anil discom­fort. Owners of automobiles must be content to leave them in their g a r a g t s and t rust to t rol leys , buses and Shanks ' marcs to get - to-bus i ­ness. We cannot pxport under the ext raordinary conditions that have confronted us for the last th ree weeks to continue ou r o rd inary habits or to suffer no discomforts or inconveniences. Snow in a city is a t remendous nuisance , but no Avay has yet been found to abate it._ It i s o j i e ofMlie_ viays in which imfuro shows man wlfctt a puny and d :pendent c rea ture ho is any­how.

TUESDAY,J[AN_UARY 27, 1923,

, THI : TitHE

When tho winter winds • Race over tho around, Drunk with cold and s t rength, When , the g ran i te rocks Jfhlfl In deep anew, The tree is there , Alone on a high bill, Combing the icy gus ts With grinding frozen boughs.

DANA H I L L .

SUM WIT, AFRICA AN1I WEOUTUl'IlEKS

from Africa; the "Spanish Influ­enza" came first from Afiiea and sti l l rages ; the "Sleeping Sickness" TTalMii Hub i;vt»urjttoit-triIh^l-mwe-peoplc in Africa t h a n the World War destiovod in Europe, and it is finding i t s way he re . Africa is the mdigenerous home of microscopical forms of" disease, and th rea t ens the world.

The geographer recognizes Afri­ca,- further, as t he fu ture source of supplies for a world overcrowded and exhausted. Africa's na tu ra l wealtli is s imply enormous. I n her steaming t ropical zone four ha r ­vests . a year can be raised and the re is no m o r e pioli'fic food re­gion oil the ea r th . " -

But Africa is uninhabitabje. Africa is dying of he r own diseases. In self-protection t he world mus t redeem Africa, And is it not sonic-thing to th ' i l l our readers t h a t the initial s tep towards th i s rosulf, so t remendously significant, is being taken right hero in our own Sum­mi t?

Round About

This here Thrift Week certainly h a s s tar ted tolks th ink ing . Here's a fellow over a t Columbia cerebrat­ing that- "We sometimes wonder why the efficiency exper ts do'n't go in to business lor themselves and mop up."

Another chup we met comes at ns with the direct ques t ion : "Why do not su infof - r l i r • vT'opie" ^irgTrOTirrfp' the President 's economy so much emulate his example?"

Well, we went out to sec the eclipse. •Tho sidewalk was tha t k ind tha t

slips. We looked through a bimine To see the s tars gl immer: . Theif our two lcet described an

ell ipse!

They tell us tha t the moon is dead; Burn t out. Your pardon craving,

We th ink , from bow she acts, her head

Is turned by daylight-saving.

TilT-STATi; T l tEATY SIGMCD

The signing of a. compact by Trea ty Commissioners represen t me, Now'York , New J e r s e y arid" Penn­sylvania is announced, providing to r the use of the vrtilcrs fit tin* Delawaic River for w a t e r supply and power development .

The adoption of this, t r e a t y in-

Ah, Moon «f my-y-y deelight, Ah, Moon,-1 say,

Don't you go turn ing day to n igh t tn this-a way.

Still keep thy stlv'ry sheen, my dear,

O'er our nights, white, or green or sere,

Let Old Hoi e't r careen, the peer Of golden d a j .

Indeed, i t is a good, thing to p rac ­t ice tlli! whole year round, SIB tbey a r e all God's c r ea tu re s and his eye is ever upon the helpless.

A FRIKND OF ANIMALS.

Dates To Remember .

Wed., Jan . 28— Fortnight ly Club card party.

Wed,, Jan . 28—Class for s tudy of Constitution of U. S , a t Y. W. C. -&rr*38-i*-»* •

Dr. Cadman to Speak at Mid=Winter Press Meeting

Dr. S. l ' a rkes (.'adman, well-known to the radio audi.uiee in this ijoclion, will be the speaker at the annual inld-wititer meeting of IhC X J. I'res.s Association at Trenton on Monday, February 1G. Gover­nor Sil/.er will a i h 0 speak, and probably some members of the

Legis la ture wlio will be the fAiebts of the meniln rs of the association. F A. Robertson, of the Washing­ton Star , will have charge of the morning program for th" weekly papers of the State, and William B. Bryant of the Patcrson P r e s s -Guardian will supervise the pro­gram of the dail ies.

, The Hl i l tALD'S new telephone numbers , 1900 and 1!)01.

There were 7,-128 commuters car­ried pas t their stations so far thi^ first month ol 19!»r> on the I)., L. & W., duo to absorption in cross-word

in r puzzles. At least, so we est imate volves the ul t imate expend i tu re , of \TQm H I ) p r a , H n , , s o n t h c ^ a m l

Summit seems like a. vyry small atom of the ear th ' s sur face to be swinging along with t h c liig "dark

cont inent" of Africa; hut Summit j n r ! " Wal ler A . " R r i f e r T sec re ta ry i has a way of affiliating herself with | A l b o r t I A C S 1 ^ t r e a s u r e r ; Dr . H. K.

Tho Hoard Thai Begins A Board for Medical Educat ion

and Research in Africa, incorp­orated, has actual ly been formed he re , the first and to dale the only office giving i t s address as "Lit tel l Building. Summit, N. J. Cable: Tropical Summit ."

The organiz ing committee con­s is ts of Col. I I . G. P r o u l , cha i rman

THE M ' n i ' S U

What the "N. Y. Sun," very na­tural ly boosting Its namesake , calls " the greatest show on ear'fli," took place a s scheduled las t Saturday morning . Lady Moon was "four seconds la te" with he r shadow, but tha t ' s doing very well for any lady and is r a the r an amusing way for men to ptit i t—that the p lane ts are no t following the i r t ime-table.

, Tbe pyblie have met the occasion a s a Kjfoat show: motor par t ies as t c football games,; a crush on thc s'lrtnviiy u p - t o the da rk zone that was almost suffocating; Wal l street delaying ita Exchange opening un­ti l after the Jiig sight. , ,

Whs HERALD, Uke other papers , has noted a marked contrast be-twcWtfce his tor ical ancient cower­ing of supers t i t ious awe in t he face of such. ,a heavenly . phenomenon tnid our modern " s a n g frold." Here, tocirv/as heard on Saturday, "Pre t ty ftoort, ahow." "Yep,- we won ' t t;ce • a s l \ W ,Uke tha t aga in very soon," e i f . ; ' a f t e r which ^everybody went

, back, t o work. Tho' eclipse was not complete in

iftimmlt—that is, Hie th in crescent ylra,-ot. light did not entirely dis­appear on the r ight hand edge of

. Vi? sun beforp It reappeared, on the 7lfbt hand aide, showing t h a t the .lUJnso was passing.

.--- Bu t there was; u moment of wierd . ^h 'dued t ight at the height which ' " ••'•'••' ita' d ivmat i c effect. A Sum-

• - t \ ho ! -<\7 the oclipse In total --• ,-titunl.iv from uptown New

i \ ' !"l i ' . u:i thajf i t did no t mean • 'n;i'f •', HI I hat t a a e , ei ther , only

•- r-' ibi' - wc :hink is a, very good . •-. . . inlioii in what it was really

- •". . "tliu iv.ilight t ha t comes be-• ; • ' . • toi in

",ii.| II h:-« d-but a n Instnnt. As i ' lid- Summi t boy said, "If the

- i' «'> tliuu'.lil It wan time, to SO-to _y : !'>'> «III> I have t h o u g h t it was = . ' ! > . iiort nitiht! "• But tho city • 7i-- i h.'iil:. we re l i t and many ,iv.in. turned fh«uVligttts-on, which ti.'.ji ",<KM ID show the power of : 'Jf5.i'."lioil, T h e . pBrva,diig • anow.

,-"-.Tn;^(: l^Tlrhter^iMJWr' of course, •^••rlsPi m -.nmii o the t season.-' l.'l_i.-u the v.holc, U.WQB a very inter->*KL".1I»: niid u n u s u a l - s i g h t ami-one

i surpr is ing number of big things places, events, people—and so we do riot hesi tate to appropr i a t e Afri­ca as a link in her chain.

We have in Summit , a s an owner-resident here, a m a n closely as ­sociated with Africa, its unfold-ment, i ts possibilities, i ts future.

Dr. I I . K. W. Kniran, secre ta ry of the Sudan United Mission, which groups all countr ies work ins; for the evangelization of Africa, knows great places, great events , great men.

He h a s pigeonholed in his office on Union place. Summit , not only all t ha t is known of th is vast, empty, tropical cont inent , bu t all the -hopes and plans t h a t may be its physical a s well a s mora l sal­vation.

• o — • -

••rJpiH** h no one would wan t to miss.

Fi

•-i^l«iO" m<>! t i-'i-neriil media o f ob-;.-i-iMVttUiin V.SIB t h e uaed-plcture-

filin, »•' not iced; and a number of > c;i.ii"!:i;i WITH out in the_ hope of 7 .!•;fin.".i".. ^ ( u t h w h l l e " s n a p with al l : ih^ ci'ii'-.'iuciit in teres t and glory. : Ly fnii|:ij- Dr. Willis Fletcher " Jnlii^oti will have his da ta to add £_i;»" M I :• im r» newspapor obsorva-- . - j . s Tin- wea ther w a s every-1

- ".".I i »<i.it could he desired, ns^our '" r„-«.:.".'i lniiiw. •

- ~ Geographers Dr. Ktimni is a geographer . " Jus t

what ia a geographer?" we asked him in all suburban innocence : " I s it a profession, a cal l ing, a sci­ence? We moan, w h a t does a geographer do—that is , beyond making geographies'?" *' /And we laughed at the siraplieltjy of our own questioning.

Like nil big men d e a l i n g V i t h big subjects, such as con t inen t s and salvation, Dr. Kumm is possessed of ttn immense patience and gentl ness ; and BO he sat and unfolded to us his world, as to a child.

A geographer , h e explained, is not ju s t a maker of m a p s , a l though ho does that, too. I n this country the chair of Geography h a s not heen recognized in o u r colleges to the same extent as in E u r o p e : but we a r c awakening- t o it over ' here , and Harva rd and Yale and other educational ins t i tu t ions have now a- number of men, by profession geograxheis . t each ing the science of geography to s t uden t s . •

Geography includes not only typographical regis ter ings , hut all m a t t e r s per ta ining to t hc ea r th and the life of man on ear th—cl imat ic condi t ion^ soil, drainage,- fores t ra-tion, w^tcVways, deposi t s , ' p roduc­tivity, sociarvlevelopment; why men group as they do, the i r drift across the ea r th ' s surface, why they emi­grate from place to p laco and the i r physical differences; the effect Up­on mankinS of k'liinate In resu l t s of labor and in« physical and moral and bodily b e i n g ; ' t h e problem of their future,

Drv-ICumm took'~ciQwn r a r e and -Prieejcjys , copies of the- eaMiest maps, Iho "strange p r i n t i n g s of the earl iest peoples. H i s subject opened out to us in an ever -en la rg ing scale as he unfolded these7 tomes" "before us., A geographer, wc realized, i s a s tudent of tho wor ld , of tho ea r th , the sky, tho sea " a n d al l t ha t in t hem is" : he seeks and teaches t h e s u m of all our educat ion—"Why a re m e n ? "

Inar t icula te ly we expressed our recognition, and t u r n e d again con­cre te ly to Africa.

W, Kumm, Dr. Thos . P . P rou t , Dr. R, D. Baker, Dr. H. I I . Bowles, Dr. M, G. Bensley. Dr. Mart in Dodge, Uenj, J Fleuchaua.

With these men s tand thc fol­lowing: Dr. Thomas B. Adam, act­ing director of .medical and sani­t a ry service, Niger ia ; Col. Andrew Balfour, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, Eng land ; Sir Car ru the r s Beatt ie , Pr incipal of the Universi ty of Cape Town, South Africa1; Pror. D. BI- Blaclock, Re­search Labora tory , Sierra Leone, West Africa; Gen. Sir Gordon Gug-gisbcrg, Governor of the Gold Coast; Prof. Bernh . Noeht, Ins t i tu te of T iopica l Diseases, H a m b u r g ; Col. H. G. Trout , formerly Governor of thc Equa tor ia l Province, Central Africa, ( res ident in S u m m i t ) ; Prof. J . W. W. Stephens , Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, Eng­land; Prof. Richard P . Strong, School of Tropical Medicine. Har­vard, Bos ton ; Prof. Wil l iam TI. Welch, J o h n s Hopkins Medical School, Bal t imore, arid Prof. A. le Dantoc, director • of the Dakar Medical-School, Pa r i s , F r ance .

Dr. Kumm, who has brought about this organizat ion for effective work, helieves tha t there is wealth in the world in the hands of con­scious t rus tees wai t ing to find a worthwhile cause for bestowal.

Wha t a chal lenge to world cit i­zenship Africa p re sen t s !

$fiOO.OOO,000 spread over the next hundred years.

The Delaware R l i o r is a bound­a r y stream and the flood flows have, a lways caused considerable dam­age and anxiety to res iden ts of its valley. Its power potent ia l i t ies we ie wasted, put be tween the S ta tes of Pennsy lvan ia and New Jprsc£_-LL-i££aiy- «»;wle -Eilsjutrn-ccu-^ t t i ry ago forbade the construct ion of a dam that would regula te the, 'water .

In 1923 the three states' author­ized a Delaware River T r e a t y Com­mission, and ever s ince then this compact has been in prepara t ion for submission to the Legis la tures and to Congress for adoption.

The compact se t s u p an appor­t ionment of w a t e r s of the Dela­ware at thc point -where the three s t a tes meet, t ha t is, of all waters in excess of tha t r equ i ted for sani­tation and navigation.

the d inner casualties.

-Speaking oi Ibis reminds us tha t over a t Pomp ton Lakes the other day wc learned that the Misses Isa­bel and Jennie McCoy have sur­prised their friends by announcing their double engagement through the c rossword puzzle. They are Oie dajiEltfers_(jf=M:i\ «utd MTSTAVTS. "McCoy, of Lewisburg. Doth are school teachers. Mis:, Isabel will become the wife of Lee I'otter, of At lanta , Ga., and Miss Jenn ie will wed Fayet te Keyler, ol BViiimfii'ld, N. J. We wonder if we a re justi­fied In letting this- idea loose?

"Our streets were cleared of F,nn\v, a l ter the record fall, quicker and mure thoroughly than they were in the majority of the suburbs , and even in the city in places, there was more-de lay in mak ing foot traffic possible than in our own suburb. Our compliments to thc depar tmen t

ThurB.. Jan . 2 9 - - U n i t e d Men's Chinch Club Social a t Y. M.^C.A.

Fii . , J an . "10—Fortnightly Li ter ­a tu re ilept , 3 p . m.

Sat., Jan. 31—Fashion SlnJW, Hotel Bnvliwood Ballroom, 2.30 p. m. Benefit Summi t Home for Children.

Sat., Jan 31—D. A. R. cake sale at Lindsley'H, 43fi Springfield ave­nue, 10 a. in.

Tues , Feb. 3—Choral Society Concert, 8,15 p. m. H. S. Audito­rium.

Wed., Feb. 4—Foitnlghtly, Lec­tin c, James G. MacDonald, "World Problems of Today," 3 p . m .

Wid., Feb. 4—Class lor s tudy of Constitution of N. J., a t Y. \V. C. A., at 3-!0 j>. in.

Mon., Feb. •)—fcortnightly Music ( Dept , 3 ?.0 p. m .

Tues., Feb. 10—Child S tudy De-1

.paitmcnt, -Rrutdbfix-, 3T30.- ~ i Thurs. , Feb. 12 - -The Athenaeum, j Thur., Feb. 12- -Annual Cateteria

Supper, M. E, Pa r i sh House, li-K p. m. Auspices Y W. F. M. S

Mon , Feb. 16—Second Subscrip­tion Concert, II . S. Auditorium, | 8.15 p. in. "- - .

Mon., Feb Hi—High School P.-T. A., 3.30, H. S. Auditorium. J

Wed., Feb. I f i -Fd r tn ighUy , Ice-1 tare, Alexander Woollcott, " T h e , Season's Best Playa," 3 p. m. '•

Thurs. , Feb . 19—Beacon F i r e ' Chanter, D A. Il„ meeting at \"! ' W. C. A., 3 p. m. |

Frl„ Feb. 20 - F r e e Demons! fa-

O H - » T ' S N I C E T O 4 GET U P IN THE

MORNING / "Nice and comlorluble he i e

this morning," said Fa the r .

"I 'm not' having any t rouble

at all heating the bouse ," re ­

plied' Mother. And so long

an we furnish th i s ianiiiy

with fual « f think the i r con-

U'lsal iou worth pr in t ing.

Stephens - Miller C©„ ;JS BiLSscIl-l 'Iaco - - — — - 'j'eleplioni'-

V c

and may they have no need to show j tion, "Br ing ing the Telephone Co, j their skill in this direct ion again to the Public." I I . S. Auditorium,,

Each state, i t is said, will be able this winter ." This is a bona-fide |8,1S p. m. to secure about a thousand million gallons ot water a day, and should, Col. S tar rc t t of the New Jersey Commission says, i n su re New Jer ­sey agaiust wa t e r famine for the next hundred y e a r s .

I n our North J e r s e y wa te r dis­t r ic t wo arc using pract ical ly all of our availahle supply, which aggre­gates 250 million gal lons a day. Of this Jersey City t a k e s GO million and Newark SO mill ion.

Thc Delaware w a t e r can be diverted to any p a r t of the state. Trenton will secure relief from the present pollution of i t s water sup­ply; the low flow of the Delaware will be increased and . summer con­ditions will be grea t ly improved.

Pennsylvania i s rcjoicine, in the impoita'ncc of th is in I he develop­ment of hydro-e lec t r ic power and thc incrcaso of Ph i lade lph ia ' s watci supply. ,,

New York Slate 's ' wa te r supply will he. about doubled.

T h e t r i - s ta te advan tages can be seen. The t rea ty will be placed be­fore the Legislature. • , '< "

quotat ion from the "Sou th Orange Record" since the big Nov.- Year 's s torm and it wasn ' t headed: "Cor­rect th is sentence," ei ther . We had to r ub our own e j e s and read it twice; but there it is.

Tha t New Jprsey is .still a hunt­er's paradise is shown in the an­nual compilation of deer kil led in this State dur ing tho open season, December 17-20, uhnounced by the Stale Board of Fish and Game Com-•missioncrs. Inspectors reported that LOCI bucks were lulled th is year, compared with 1,219 in the pre­vious year's open season. Gloucester, Hudson, Salem and Union counties were unproductive tor the deer hunters . In every other county the deer hunt ing was "good. T h e follow­ing is a list showing the number killed in each county : Atlantic, 123; Bergen, 29; Burl ington, 419; Camden, 19; Cape May, 10; Cum­berland, 54; Essex, 2; Hunte rdon , 4; Mercer, 5; Middlesex, 1; Mon­mouth, fi; Morris, 5G; Ocean, 211; Passaic . 33; Sinner: ct, 1; Sussex, 45; Warren, 39.

'Meet the Y M. C.

new A., 7

3- 3rd Subscription m. II. S. Audi-

A study of the Chr i s tmas t ree problem discloses that there h a s been great was te of t r ees in Maine, Washington, Oregon and other s ta tes wh.irc Chris tmas t rees a r e cut and shipped to the big city marke t s lor the holiday t rade.

It h a s been pointed out tha t all thc Chr is tmas t rees needed by this nation for one year can be grown on 20,000 ac res , while the fact is tha t enough t rees are out a n d wasted to refores t 200,000 acres . Wash ing ton <N. J . ) Star .

o ' Most of t he Chr is tmas t rees of

1924 a r e on the dumps .

In a little town in the sparser regions there is a small frame building that is used for a c h u r c h , , „ .. , , ,, „ , by both Protestants and Ca tho l i cs . 1 1 ^ Summit Communi ty Players It has an al tar a t one end and a

." ,"" "J, | reading desk at t h e ' o t h e r , and the . , f" benches have reversible backs like re six- | t ] 1 0 B e tm u 1 0 t ra ins and trolleys,

that can be faced e i ther way, ac-

.appearing forests.—Boston script .

• T H I ; SNOW PR^BLEM-*-

t r^ r - To". I!:.- aifmy -Kholdiayo been .'Xri".;.3irti'ial",!:f: "a'ho'ltJ t ^ . ?,now COtt" "=-"- 'Uffen," in Kiiliihift'.'anti nearby the •~C-:.Ijiiiwinit ei i i iotjai l ' -ra ' the '"Newark S S £ S? r f l Vl l 95 -*-: »!*'!"- &n - cttnditions in

Whatever quest ions m a y agi ta te the public mind 100 years bence.

Although the const i tu t ion guar­antees to all tlu- right to a. trial In­jury and es tabl ishes rac religious equality, thilre w e . . teen lynchings in the United-Slate in 1924. The same yea r )Atui'bs"d I eording to which congregat ion i . forly-ttve a t tempted lynclrings in i worshipping the re / . )When we lind the United Sla tes and hundreds of a th ing like that^possible in the lesser acts of mob violence. No s ta te during the yea r was probably free of mob violence in some form, but Illinois was the only nor thern state in which an ac tual lynching took place,

Thoije who take tho law -into their own hands to punish a wrong-doer violate the basic law gf the nation while thc crime of their victim has been only the violation of a s ta te s ta tu te or, perhaps, only an unwri t ten law of society.— J t r seyman.

Frl., Feb. 20 members dinner p. in.

Fr i . Feb. 27—Fortnightly Liter attire Dept., 3 p. rn.

Fri. , Feb. 27- "Wha t You Should j Know About Your Govertlmenl,'1! St. Teresa 's audi tor ium, Helen I*. McConnick, 8.30 p. m.

Sat., Feb. 28 — H i g h School Comic Opera, "Captain Cross-Hones," II . S. Auditorium, mat inee and evening,

Tues. , Mar. Concert, S 30 to riu m.

Wed., Mar. 4—FOJ tnighily. lec­ture, J ames G. MacDonald, "World i J; Problems of Today," 3 p . m . j =

Mon., Mar. 9 -For tnight ly Music • S Dept., 3.30 p . m. j =

Thurs . , Mar. 12—The A t h e n a e u m . ] ; ; Wed., Mar. 18 — Fortnightly, _

Spring Luncheon, 1.30 p . m . Sat., March 14—Princeton Musi­

cal Clubs concert , H. S, auditorium. Mon., March 30—Judge Florence

B. Allen and the Gloria Trrtmpe-teers, under ijuspices Y\ \V. C. A , evening.

Sat., Mar. 21—"The Boomerang. ' in

High School Auditorium, matinee and evening performances .

Fri., Mar. 27- -"The Popu la r ] =

. Oak Kno S u m m i t , N e w J e r s e y

School of t h e Ho ly Chi ld Campus of Over 11 Acres on One of Summit's

Highest Points.

Rosemonl College of Rosemont, Pn., is under the supervision ot t h e Sisters of the Holy Child, as is also a women's college, St. Friedewide.'s College at Oxford.

T h e i e are finishing schools S i s te r s ol the l lnly chi ld in Par i ' land. '-

44 Blackburn Road

under the supervision of the :, Rome, and Fr ibourg , Swilzer-.

Telephone 1804

-1%^v

. i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i iui i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i inui i i i i i i i i

"Flrsl Monev

backwoods we come home wonder­ing what we are a l ra id .of with our public building* up civilization wav? (

T H E CURIOUS REPORTER.

of shade tree "The operation commission accomplished," wro te Governor Silver, "a g rea t deal—forward the

Letters From

Herald Readers

A Plea For Helpless Animals During this r.pelj or bi t ter cold

weather, when the e.round is cov-eied with t.now, let us , who p ro

T h i s C o m p a n y is l o o k i n g for f i r s t m o r t g a g e s , 2

h a v i n g a m p l e f u n d s a v a i l a b l e . __ 2

T h e s e r v i c e i s p r o m p t , t h e f e e s a r e m o d e r a t e a n d S

i n c l u d e t i t l e g u a r a n t e e . . 5

.IE American P a s t i m e ; Making Laws ! s Teresa ' s • "

i t is safe to say- t h a t among Hx?". [ beautification of our mumcipali-will be tha t of p rese rv ing the d i s - | t i ( , H u t l l ( 1 a a l t t c thing is done

T r a n -

The I lHKALD'S new te lephone n u m b e r s , . 1900 and 11)01. .

In municipali t ies has Mde so generously for our fellow 'men, not fot'get the helpless ani­mals Who forage about our ' doors, reeking bits of food with -which to appease their hunger .

Let the discarded sc raps meat, may h putt ing tliem in the ga rbage-can , with bits of broad, etc., scat tered about freely f o r ' t h e h u n g r y b u d s .

throughout tho count ies it will have a like effect there . A gi^at deal can be done in this way to beautify our publ ic _ fnails," the Governor adds,.

of i'lc„ , b e placed w b , o r e they j , n l

iclp themse lves , - ins t ead oft, Vl-0

and How It Ts Done," St auditorium, Helen P . McCormick, R30 p. m.

Wed., April 1- -For tnhh i ly , lec­ture, James G. MacDonald, "World I ' robkms of Today," 3 p. m. ' Mon , April 6—Fortnightly, Music

Dept, 3.30 p. in. Mon , Apr. B—2nd Choral Society

Concert; 8.30 "p. m. II. S. Audi­torium. .

Thurs. , April 9—The Athenaeum. Wed.. Apri l 15—Fortnightly, lec­

ture, Prof. H e n r y A. Overst ieet , "How to Know Wc "Are Staying Young," 3 p m. ' V _1 ,•

Mon,, April 20—Harvard Univer­sity Greo Club. Sixty men. Leader­ship of Dr. Davidson, H S. audi­torium, 830 p. m. Auspices N. j . Harvard Cluh.

Fri., April 21—Fortnightly, Liter­a ture Dept., 3 p. m. .

Fri., Apr. 24—"The Constitution and the Citizen," St. Teresa's audi­torium, Helen P . McCormick, 8 30

Y o u a r e i n v i t e d t o m a k e a p p l i c a t i o n t o

:ate T° I A

age | Guaranty Company |

Und*>r the supervision of the Depar tment of Balikill't ^ and insu rance of the State ot New Jersey . :p

= 399 Sl'RlNGFlhLl) AVR. SUMMIT, N . J. =

iiuiieiiiuiiuuiMiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiuiuiiiiiMiuiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiHiiiiiiu

Africa's F u t n r e T h c map of Africa l ies out before

lis,'-a. groat cornucopia-shaped cop? t h & n t from which - any . ploneous-ness- might be poured* b u t . hu j f barre,n7~olaiiE~andr" "empty"In pojlfff of fac t ! , , , - ' . ' . ' , ' ". • D r a w a hugo "tr iangle oyer the en t i re continent a n d .the- apex of eaeh. leg will touch • the t h r ee ifoastal' por t ions wh,ere life is en­durable to whi te irnon. Then n o t e t h e vast . trouicRl-- b e l t t ha t l ies s teaming miasm a n d fever, unde r the ' equatorial sun . To Uie' n o r t h of i t is .the .Desert, of S a h a r a ; t o the.-south-.of it t h e w i l d ' c o u n t r y of flir Kiili'l t r ibe -. ofleij f- ircd Into th>< i< |id i-i nt ia) .hilt , l o r lhi< j,jVe , of food

W i n n Ln. ICuiu'n i.laLcd in a r " - F

Oldest and Largest Banking Institution in Summit

Capital, Surplus and Profits, $506,794.91 Resources Oyer $4,800,000.00

• • Service ?• ' -

f 7 ^ - j , T j r W - : | r t

•^^Vrr.VfK**!; tuny be enl ightening; $•-=§- -,Th-s fiV'i'rion of snow removal in •-^•^lAA.i-^Tniillil'» - large and small is. •£=£q2?«jfS3VR <, , !<r H o * far are the |g^"=iisat=j>ri:p'; Justi l ied in subjecting •ci i"c:5"ip. t8*ti»f».w'fi asi a whole to the l^uggjgr^-gljilWI "Spell""' IK'i-i •< "l'y f» jylp&yjteji!!*, UK' Hrlncjn.il iLrerl-. uv.ilI-

I ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ Q t h S t i j l f l V s j i follow"d I'l i l l " | c e n t -.pm-ch bi 'r« t h a t "Africa ' I " = - '" " '^ ' - .Uie »nff'»m"iS'ile. 1" lor dti i iL," he meant ju-.l (ha*. Ai r i - !

t W'ICJJ . i h ^ i v y 'iiuiifr^iiii'.t million:; «u ; ilyiji;;. Out of a ; [ftiil .traffic <\'-»'«!rt fur Use jh l r t l i ra ia of 1,2 10 l.% to r . i t i v ;

t^TS.- ToSfiS'lUt* sieijsli jy i t l jd r«p l iv^ ' to n t n u r i t r . l a Uiti u i i S ' , L r si,--*<i • v ",~-. • .«*" . " , • • " " "1-- "."•"' -

J0frf-ul " mstruinieitt-^&f-i *sqr%$eerati aid to your '

.success-.-Qnd iothe prosperity of the en­tire community. It is a strong toot ready to your kandt, and. the me~ yo'ti make of if ttitU ~be*fhe1 measure of

its use to you.

O F F I T E B S WM. H A L L S , Jr . , Cha i rman of Board

J. FRANKLIN HAAS, -FrTfSinT'nr'-ali<i-JTTUEi---i)fEieet*"

CHARLES D FERRY, ' y ice Pres ident

WM. -S. SORTER, Secretary GEORGE V. LUM, Treasu re r

J . SHERMAN BYLAND Assistant Secre ta ry-Treasure r

ERNEST P . -PATTEN-Assis tant T r u s t Officer"

Dinii lCTOltS

WM, 1L\LLS, J r . J. FRANKLTN HAAS ,

JOHN N.' MAY - CHARLES D. F E R R Y

liy =ek&i=&£s

ter, added to strength

of resources; good

management plus the

weight of experience;

conservative policy,

combined with close

supervisioti and con-

trol—these are some

TiToitASJtf! T>EBFVOISE~ of the factors which • WM. C. RENWTCK' :

DANIEL BURKE WALTER C. HEATH FRANK E. KALEY "

insure safety to you • as a depositor.

od„ M a y * I S Fortnishlly-? an-ual mee t ing . and reception. 3 p . m . Tl iuro May 14—May Music Fes t i ­

val. H. h. Auditorium, 3 30 P. m. Fri., H a y 22-.-"The 'Why and

Wherefore of Taxes , " St. Teresa ' s auditorium,—H'ilen P . McCormick, R.30 p. in.

Tim Semi-Weekly Habit of Read­ing the " H E R A L D " Want Ads. May Profit You Great ly.

now specializing in

Homemade Pies, and Cakes

Delivered to order 4

Schraffts, Park & Tilfords_

Candies

Ice Cream - Fountain Dsinks

Winter Special—Hot 'Fudge and Butterscotch Sundae":^

SrBINGFIELD AVEKlffe !Jfow Frftvtnence Cciiftr

. _ ^zz^. . ._

Sale -on all gas ranges Fresh Air Bake Oven

Cook your foodtimpure, sterilized heated a i r ; Get full flavor and retain rich juices. Lessen weight shr inkage. Thci Es ta te ventilated oven helps you do all these.

Splashers,- panels, pans, oven top, shelf, legs and bu rne r t r ay of white enamel. One giant , three reg­ular and oqersfanmermg burner. Oven linings alumi-

^ffiTecfr'FIobi- space ~4'G "irTcfi|s mu^^Widr^n-a-siieifr 16 inch" oVeins. ^

Cash price/§84.25. On (divided payment plan-$88.50

$ 2 down i and a year 'tS^pay —Free connection'^ from gas outlet in kitchen—

: Push-button Hop- burner -liotycr-F-REE—

. Eyery range sold by.Public Service is built in strict- accordance with the specifications of the American-Can Association. '

WSB • J B ^ i f f i ^ r T T ^^^*^^ JK^ m M . • •

*^£/^^r \ _j,

Page 5: JUtexature Pept. Friday w. a New ifynlding., at Blind .... The result must- be grati ... JUtexature Pept. Friday Tbo Department of Literature is to have a speaker on Friday, Janu

e s t

\ . -I A N U A J - ' 17, 1925

i i ' .&VSJi""* fr-*i3~ =5=nriiKB=-sE» fl^SP

T H E SUMMIT H E R A L D AND SUMMIT RECORD, SUMMIT, N. j . P.ACii!:

Exclusive

Ready-td- Wear Aft" Outstanding Example -of

Signposts Symbolic and Whimsical, Designed by Well-Known Artists

. ._'_ New Rochclh _ "j?_\ .

of

Badgley •& Ziething ?M S P R I N G F I E L D AVE.

(McClay Building)

=.-/'

©

©

Put contents of Royal Gelatine Dessert pack­age in bowl—dissolve

- . e\r -

By .MA1LTHA rANDl.e:!! in "Iiou-ie Reaullit i l"

Summit has boon lu'r some t ime ' -w-HirWftriim—tiiH"-iitaitm;—ol—in't'.ii-posls, iiPfliniiiit'ly will ' rot.n'enco to the r iu in tuirnnci; roads leading in­to" tbc I'ity. The municipal a r t com­mit tee ol the City I'lannin;', Com­mission in ineludine, tlKs-s-u-blteet-^Hi— its flu'ly. in order tha t UEltAI-ID readers may" see how another com-muni ty combined historic iuterc. t with utility in ar t i s t ic slftm., we re- • pr in t Hits article froln tho "Hume IJe.uititul.", 1 , 1

Tho llKRAT/lD hope.-, EOliii. to re . piodnco in these columns the. a i l i s -tii; tie' ir.M adopted for the j>ropo.-H'<l iio.v sticct li-.htinn s tandards- to hi* placed mi the curl) l ines in the cen­tral portion ol the oily w IK n tjie nciveral road improvement in the

• bmTnifss^eincris.madc.-

I ton Kuhiijlti 'u polychrome tie.,fen I D1 " lnd.ans RoturnniK tium a Doer jHunt ." Tin:; s t ands on the 13os*on I J'o: t ri.nl near UK Larehmont l ino ' j ii the very sool where an ancient , trail lit the Slwaiioj ludiar.b cross-

ei! tne uir/orir highway. This •irlis*, l,i<iii!< an author i ty on (iul'ari-,,—tjas cunningly , wroiiRht into the design ac tua l symbols of tlic limit peculiar to" thin tribe.

a:ifo or the coloring. Lawrence I I . I . U P V . ' " ( ' h ' . u c h and Vilhiso" r^pro--—nt:, an jiitc-resting treatment nl .,o-ne notable loe.il aroint" JH" ' ' . somewhat styli.a'd and ai.sembtad into ,m attractive grouping-

1 f l a r e EriKKS has t r j n s t e r r i d (nc , nuicii loved "Yno 1-Iixi SUiin.iv," _ I with 1111; imnnirtal combiilitthili of — I "hoy and doKs," to a sign, m l his- = * | toric perhaps, not strictly symt olie, := 1 and yet of the very e s s e n c of Oie ; -a ' ou tdoor I'.pinl which has m.'de >TeiV| S; ' ^ I n . - l i n l l i . t ie b:.y.-n »t I F | l \ e < - ~ York liusina.s men when the day-done - Coles Phillips and N-i'inan RooUwell will each depua u lam-oiis local U'-volutijii 'iry siciif, and the;, will he m jil-u'e oofpre til'-

Ma} .or

illl!lillllllIllllilUIlIIIMtlllltlltHlllllIIIUIllllIHlllHlllli!UUIUIliiUtHEiIlHHi

I U S €

Get Setter ¥m .-Better 1 *ire

cup of boiling water, add cup of cold water —and then* put in the Ice box.'

Now--Roehelle, a residence suburb her resident, eighteen mile.'i frurti N'. w York, har. j Lest-Known ; pioneered in :i f-ortu of civic a r t aa | oigani^ation exproHbive of local Ji istorlcd trarli-t.oils as it ib elofjiient of the municipal and art ist ic p r t r ' r c s i v c -ncjK of the city itself. .

I t carao aboutMhus: Throe years a;;o, the N'cn Roohelle Cliamhor of (loiiimprre diciupd that there should be some hind of sli-.n at taoli of the minicrouhi pjiiiroachea to the city.' A-numher of tho.,0 are historic old roadwaya and t ra i l i

' a n d all of them are t raversed by

1 be TKat'a all—it wi ready when you want it I

BESffisaaa— &Sgd* by mafers of

ROYAL BAKING POWDER

i"i

fiomt' of the cmnlry ' i i r l ists , anil amon^; her

,i tliriviiiK Ar t Asso­ciation, il.my of the n u m b e r s of ' the. lnl l"r a r e - a c t i v e In civic af- j fairs and a re also iiu"mliei.si.-'»l the j Chamber o t , t 'ommi re >. When the co-operati'on of til ' Art Association j « a s Houclit, the a r t i s ' s came for, i ward with the ider ot a .series of j approach s.islis, each to depict j Home laid or more than nnl ina iy j "ign'ticaiice in I lie local )il'". And ; they oif-red not only the idea, but j their .services ar. well la carry it , out. !

RlKliI of these si^i l j are nov, in j place. The oilier two vi l l i; inn er tc led. Til J r,ip,nl;oaid in each ta.se, l inns from the cros-,-arm a 'ooncre le post, is surmounted by the ar t is t ' s do",li;n, forced In metal l>y the ei:perl lnnd ' j of oil" of the bfht meta l -workers ia HUM coun­try. Thoy are the product of J a m e s It. Maisli, an ai t is l and a resid nt of New Uochelle, ivln ha.s, himself, contr ibuted one of tho dis­tinctive designs of the set.

Metal -signs, the comhinr:cl handi­work of art is t and blacksmith,

s

Ih'.MI Ib'AI. 11

i f es te^^ Mm-

m~ ySe-\3^.

useii. apd for the placing A p ica t many inquiries have _

r;ud>" been ieceived frpm many | 3 par t s of the East as to how so | — spler.did a civic art project was. I s realized. Tile answer is in 1 h o | n wealth of arlisl-oifizons and in co- ~ operation I s

untold mult i tudes of motor i s t s every year. It was further decid­ed that there should IK P no un-sifthtly signboards. In the lan-K'liigo of the organizat ion 's secre­tary "none of that 'Weleome t'J Squodunk,' or 'Come Again! ' typo of booster stuff waa wanted."

N e y noohollc numbers among

JIHII3llll3E!!!JJSllllIJI!!ltHIHHIllHIUIHIlIIIIlUllllIIIlinillimMI!imillHHHllltlI

Wet Sell', "Century"l

•"•"Brand • Exclusively ...

ti^^Si •*mM

Edward l 'enlield can. At the olh ' i ' .pnd of the cily from

"Sta'-ecoach Days" s tands Hi miiiK-• 1 \ ^

I .Tamo-. R Marjli, a r t i s t and mas-j tor lorf.ri*, ha.; wi inp.ht int<i his I .i-;n a HliiEiilar sigulflcnice, j Ttiniu",h the io r luncs of I lie World ! War, Mr,'.Marsh was stationed for i in i i; lu'tlitiis in La Rocholle. tlio

.itfi'iiL <'ity from which sailed the Utile (oitipany of tieeliers lor re ­ligions llhorly, viho in fli.SK laml"d and osliVbhshed New Rochelle. Mr.

j .Marsh has depict /d a bit of th j ancient F r e n c l r / city with its i"<iro.,so, TTorlo»6," i ts arcade, and lit:, quay and /lias yiven Us "The ' d a t e s of La Btoclielle" Thus dis­t a n c e hotwtelXold and new, paK

in I pie-.ent, is ^liuic_jJloxl«\Jsflflk j in", with tins in his tor ic sequence | i . C.eor^e T. Tobin'H • eireeliye' ]'ilacK-and-v.ilJte scene of "The jL'tiilmr, of Hie Hugueno ts" in New

.tin h.-llo. \ H.ilph T. Robinson's "City of ' ITnire:," departs radically fri.ni the

;i"iil (l.'-,cribi'd. I t i:i a eoiiven-lonalizert design of a .facohe.in lo-isi', and trees , rendf red con-;pictio,i', at a d i s f n e e by the bi'illi-

Ion Teacher of Piano and Theory, Pi'oIVssm' al I'oIli'Ki' of ;!t>JJll/.al)Ctli, al roIU'Ki'

('ei i ' . f^it ,

JflO Uoulcinril lieiic Summit l.Vi-J

| Suihmit" and Madison "Ice "Co".""", B

1 103 P"ark Avenue' Summit, N . J . |

MIlIIEIllllIlHIIIIiUllllllltllllllllllllllllllllllUIIIIEIIIIIIUIlIIIIIIIIIBIIIlllEilllllllUh

!lilII«lllllllllUIIIIllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllIlinill!lllllIiIIJIlIllllIllllllljniIIIIIIlllllll!!l!llllllllIlll!!lllllll!llini!115Illll!ltH

J&,

T T r r r ^ j

Theatre Under N e w Management

M a t i n e e K.vcnin^ l ' " t 'a turc

D a i l y 2 . i 0 — C o n t i n u o u s ,

( i l ) C S ( ) l l 1 1)

Children, 15c; 7.50 to KloO -the Afli'niooii

Adults, 30c. C h i l d r e n , 2 5 c ; A d u l t s , at 3 .15, at \ ! i " h l K.50.

tts.

= LAST T I M E TODAY-

i ,

BETTY COMP - i n -

emaie A P?ramount Pictuic

And Other Interesting; Short Features

pro juc t of the Mid-there are no such

\

S A GUARANTEE O F QUALITY

| . AND UNIFORMITY.

| Hill City" Coal I and Lumber Company

•si • . ^ . •

'§£ Ilh«ino SuJihtt- 625 '155 Fork "Aw.'

| Building.Materials: '-'Cellar to Attic"

•5 . ' Anthracite Coal

Shampooing ^gs gets-f lubs or carpets a r e laid f!al o'l tlil> floor r n d covered with

u l iarni ipss-soaj i -rohi t ion. An electrically driven brush, known as the Scrubbii is Machine, in na-tied over the F-.nrface, rotat ing J7f> limes n minute and .worki'i. t/ie, r.oap solution deeply into the fibu-H of the fabric. IJveiy pni lade ot clhi^iu^ dii I, Krihic and dried animal mat te r i.i clholveil "nd loosened. The raids with all their salherinK of freasp, a n l and dirt 'nie quickly removed by powerful suction of air . i •. ,

LET A TIIIAL CONVINCE YOU.

E U R E K A . R U G C O , .-Tol. K«»h. in5G

E-WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY, JAN. 28.and 29— " " " . " ' ' =

arie Prevost, Mos\te Blue and Helens Chadwick1 | —in— , . - - *' j=

Siiiuniit

SI Suulli Street

Morrlsloiu!, A*. ,T.

F r o ' n i t h e N o v e l b y E r n e s t P a s c a l

J l ad s h e t h e l i ^ h t ' t o s t e a l h e r s i s t e r ' s hu-h . - iud ?

A b t o r y of t w o ' . i . s t c r s—one a n c u l r a n c i n e / \ i s i o n of l o v e l i n e s s , t h e

A l s o — F u n n y T u x e d o C o m e d y , I n t e r n a t i o n a l N e w s a n d O t h e r s

he r a" d a r k s w a n . i~.

m

m

* g*-»T.**fmi* lJitAUI*

TtiiiiiiuitiiitiriuiiiiituittiiHDtiiiiiiiiUiHiiiiiiiuiiiiiiniiiiUiiniiiiiiiiiiHiiiuiii

= i were a familiar 5 | fill Ages ISut E | s i^ns as New Roohelle boasts to-~ ' d a y elsewhere in the N e w World. S', There are none that equr.l them, it " " ' i s saf„ to say, nea re r in time of

-place than those adorning the colorful t averns , .shops',' and Rate-ways of Dickens ' laud and days.

There, is Krcnt breadth of ,-ir ape as wel l 'as of t rea tment in the si;?ns On? of the Tm'ppiesl "facts of the

a I whole scheme is that they were not I ™ all tirst fin shed and then p laced! ^ w i l l y - n i l l y . Each has been d ? s i a n - | H i e d with par t icu la r refer nee to iiio i — place it is to occupy. • That is why | a t^'OdPi'lclc Dana M'frsh's full-rip.^ed I s ' H u g u e n o t ship, with its gold hull I C ami its silver and mullitinleil STils ] a |-fit-aids-o,it so Kallantly a s a i m t tlio | ~ i r im ot blue Sound that has as its

sett ing wllel"1 th . Shore R i a d loads j off to T r a c e r s ' Island. ti>o ho.ne of the Now York Athletic Club The cool white of the cement si^nnosf oud the bl iu and white i f the sitrn-board a re completely "within the picture."

Araiii . t h i t is why E lward Pen-field's "Stagecoach D a j s " in ef­fective black auil-wlilio silii^aelte Stands a t t he r-Hi;>m-Ne,v Ko-chelle line on the Bcii ' i i i load. The stagecoach car r ies o"t the spirit not only jif old eoachdays but of old ' New York-Boston coaching days ; and carr ies them out as onjy

t

I V - A ,

£>/A/VWUVWVWUWVWWV^<m^

J^^iffnrnij

_ii-lf "€i fcw> «& tfW'AJrJSr

L^>

i ;•

^SaJ^T'S

PUBLIC SERVICE

..^_

t ^

mne •.•SB--. i " j T - j

*Ihe Qas Plant Superintendent T l i e Gag P l a n t S u p c r i n t u n d c n t I I M b e e n o n t h e

j o b ' i n t h e t e r r i t o r y n o w w r v e i l b y PUBLIC SER­VICE s i n c e t b c s la te ' s i i r s t gas w o r k s w a s s t a r t e d i n N e w a r k i n 184-7;

^ ^ T y ~ y e a ~ t ^ T C ^ i a s - ^ T v / r n n - t i s e f t r ^ ' t o d a y iias m a d e u n d e r h i s d i r ec t i on is d i s l r i b u t e d t o s o m e 630 ,000 h o m e s , b u s i n e s s p l a c e s a n d fac­t o r i e s .

T h e Marke t -S t r ec t . _ 'Wes t E n d , iPa te r son , C a m -" 3 e n r T r i 7 n t o u , C o n s u t n e r s , F r o n t S t r e e t , K o b o k e n , P la i i r f i e ld a n d N e w B r u n s w i c k p l a n t s , t o g e t h e r w i t h t h e S e a b o a r d - U y - P r o d u c t s C o m f i a n y w o r k s , t h e gas o u t p t l t o f w h i c k P u b l i c S e r v i c e a b s o r b s ,

l u e c - i n o r e l h a n t w e n t y b i l l i o n c u b i c feet o f a year-, w h i c h h d i s t r i b u t e d t h r o u g h 3,600

m i l e s of m a i n t o u s e r s i n 168 d i f f e ren t N e w Je r ­s e y m u n i c i p a l i t i e s ' . !

N o w h e r e i n t h e U n i t e d Sf t r tgsrs t h e r e m o r e •_'_' _ u n i v e r s a l d i s t r i b u t i o n of gas t h a n i n t h e

' ' t e r F k o r y b e r v c d b j t P U B L l C SERVICE.

FRIDAY and SATURDAY, JAN. 30 and 31-

m THRILLS- TON A ragged kid from 'Frisco, suddenly finds Jiimself cast up OFE a desert island, a .Mack

t cat his only companion—until—cannibals— attacks—the marines—-the San Francisco., police force—adventure—romance—thrills —and laughs with—

s*an ^ ig fs i r r"EME=ir-

«a£Ti:r«.-~ "^mmmm o.

fiv.&*¥i7r*lt~T> tit

i*«p'.js*r.j*jaj*iaa

mm mAi

&

stS'ffii-Sij'Sss mm

p

^ o„^, n jt i

M*Gi»it&g-Xi-iXX. .U'W.lj'J . g i ^ S t l&^-ic&z. AMZA^

By

WILLARD MACK

Supervised by

JACK COOGAN, Sr.

i#»

^ S I ^ B S ,

Colorful with splashes or. j ! sunlight and gorgeous' g

with exotic Birds and |j -. falihge*. 'j£ji±Eaesnsia^ -if

thrilling and- mith • g comedy tanighing-|L

ihrough ilne iears_ at i |:

a great story* • • X

FgAffifs,

SMI-

Also Sid Smith in "Make I t -Snap py," Latest Pathe News and Others. N O T I C E : , Two Shows "Saturday Night; at 7 and V. "."'

fi^ms.

w:rfr~ cm. n^jf-.

Page 6: JUtexature Pept. Friday w. a New ifynlding., at Blind .... The result must- be grati ... JUtexature Pept. Friday Tbo Department of Literature is to have a speaker on Friday, Janu

„u™* -~ . - , -

T H E ^ u r . i a i i ' f ^ i - ; K / i j * _ u t ' r r i i ; ^ r , •i*f^5K^i^gBpi-Mtin.igr. l-NJSi.»-X7 l,;isSi£agS=s:.&JS'; lv '

. /

» '

^ 4

r ILSi Noses Out Chatham in Record

\ Breaking -/est Aggregate Score oS Any Gasm Ever Played

h y i p^d and Blwe Fives >.r „« . — — Stintiwifs Score Also

freaks Record—Cohsn's ShooiingrGives Locals - CSisc Battlc--Field-flpflI by Col? Cinches Game-

for Locals' ......tu'if: i he 'Cha tham ' 'H 'gh ' « " - ' •r, ,-H in their annual tus.-de on

j-,c;il cour t last Friday evening j ' i rdl high school barely nosed she Chatham. t,iam in a game H:id the fans upon their feet

,,„»! (lie ent i re last halt. Sum-' :".n.-illv »J<.ed out their ancient

I • )'y i h : score of 11-8. -\.[n opened the game with a . i goi.l, and then followed up • si imo'-ltor double flecker, mak-

:ho scorn 4-0 in Summit's favor. . ;, t-" these field goals were •••.(in-d In the tlr=t minute of • ». Kront the looks of t ha t whirl-•'«•• Ltart the game, should havel .. featured by frequent scoring!

,. -,'!!i mojt of the fan's, hut Sum-;. j i-cuved an at tack of Chat-• 'it!."» which so,t them to hooting

i.ntl,-missing passcR and doing •vlbing that generally happens

•r 'nuimuit en t rant in a Chatham i!;,:t. A single pointer made by

>'- • Cowporthwnit Bet the Suni-l,illv at 5 in the Initial period, . . . foul shot by Ten Eyck, cap-

L... „r li.— .Chatham aggregation, • i Cohen brought Chatham's

i • l o 11, , r.liins and 'Cowporthwait each

. terril from the court In tho .•-.••meat, period. The Chatham

;-i'!= defense seemed to have T. intently strengthened than In

oiher games Chatham hart en-- "I in prior to this contest , but

',• 'iL>l-fl could not 'counter fioni • r.wivl. Only a foul shot by Lum

,1 the Chatham aggregation ... going scoreless th thla period.

;Inir the score to 3-3 "at half

Lum, c. . Hull, g. - ' Meffor, g.

HI'S DAY SCHOOL LEAGUE " STANDINGS

Resul ts of SrttunlnjN Games Jun io r Boys' Club 25, Calvary • Episcopal 19. Central Pre;;. J 3, All Souls ' 11. m-den Memorial 30, St. John ' s 1.

The StaiwiiiiKS _W. L,. lVti

1.000 1.000

.GGC • .GGC ~.G6G

.600

.500

.000 ,000

Jun io r Boys Central Prog, . -.. Calvary Episcopal NSW -prov. Pres . . Baptist - .... O^den Memorial Oakcs Memorial .. All Souls ' • --St. John ' s -

T rops to itii_rjace_9 ifeteateitjy Hurray Shifted to Suard-

'assaic layoflne Ho

With - Thompson, , Kolbo ami | Thursday Vaailku' shooting ami c ig in^- t i i e i b a lea ther .from al l angles, the l ' a ^ - | 7 , the date of the r e t u p

soeiation quintet defeated ! W (

Cast-Summit Boys Win Close Game

Last Sa tu rday the East Summit Jun io r Boys' five'-nosed out the Springfield Boys' quinte t in a close ly_jcW^tol_e^ij-t_J._il t :

•/iin in th? third chukker a • V.mL saved Chatham from go-

t« oveless. ' This time Mercer, , played a bang-up f a m e at ,.G. accomplished the feat. Sum-

' howtvor, went scoreless In = ;»,T!UI1. This Is the first t ime -{>?r that the Cornogmcn hav«

,r-.i in tally in a alngle period. •; ,;h the ucor- at 9-4, Summit

j^l the last lap hoping to hold .-= that smal l le-id. Hardly had nerioil Rotten under way when

.-•!, the diminutive forward o[ O'jiUhnut team, caged the lcath-

'""roin lender • tho rim f i r Chat-.-". sole an:l lono tally from the ,.. in tho cntiro game. A few .-ii-lK.l;iler this same ?»lr. Cohen » foaled, and ho„ obllglngry .• the. Kphere through the rim

::-.. caiiKing the pcore to move _-J-8. The Chatham section of

MJSTi'iVt wcro wild now.- "Evdry hv rooting' for the Chatham .-"'" wi"i on his feet, Bhoutlng .tVy for his t ram to lwep on iT'fivcrcomc tho one point lead ;".•" Miue.m't ngprrogatlon. ; \ i , n with three minutes to go '.{"-«» tinnl whlatle, the two teams '"., tUefr pusltionB With tho score '•V-8h ft fibado in favor of t he n>tiHfBtf. Cole received the ball ,

;--.l und heaved the leather •i-t lv;enty-[i-ve feet away from

'.-'ah.ist. Tho hall arched nicely, "•Jnit through the . Awjshing

"-., l tosy's shot raised the score " i . i n Summit 's favor, and caused

• : i s u ' i to go wild. Still cl inging ..-. tin- hope tha t a ra l ly might

- :'se Cha tham ' t eam fought on. ^,iM>. J lobwt J. Murphy, Jr.i • -~-r of ceromonlen and tinic-^.....r. pulicil out hla miniutip-e ?..T;'-!.HII<1 l e t ' i t ride, announctiiif -'.i - ,::._.niiaiwTt Of ono o-f the -n ios t - - - - -i Sr.i-tlf-s . neerje -fought- OUt

1 t I.) ••> ' * 'i'il court, i . . v . , in I I / . i 'omo Chat-

. _ .-!•=.- .,i,i ">,-'.>( 'til we get . t i u t . " If that a tate-

) i f e^ijiipliiv t he spiri t •II ,i 'IT H.I\I ,• abandoning

1 ti."1 ' u ) r ili •! SummiL . „ 'Ui -,\ill i,it his ?2.!>5

' • h ii < i n It Scavono, • T" t : * i • iir. l id !• i * Avitik tha t _. ;-- ..',ii",i i".Mie t ii.itliam, not

i i", , '',\ i 'HI i- e Iho' 'victor. '• • I ,'il oi lliiiv a t h a t t'a-• II. • i|,i i;d i,r - jar.i? otic, i' • y t to - that ii-Uto la Sat>-

- • "N1-!" II v 1 i j , - li,ni> a l l i a i l / nald the

- -""f ' r i v, iiM-nrl in t h a t It - "/To*, i ,1 :',*Ki'"i'.ile ecore ever ;5,-!"' 'B II l-.i in •'thill E^nid in '_. i . >.|i. i.n'ui lii-iututlon* was ' ^ • ' -Vl . ' ' n i l to.tl.i i gama tho •-. ' . . . .°fi.r II.. in" il number of : j - - - P - ' i . J 'n » ' ln . ; le contest :--= .a l».ii!i> ri tin- Woat Orange -~t •*"!'Tti ; i-ai v.In II Hie scorn wus

' I-- V in-iiiir". l i \ ' i r . Tho acoro S - ^ i ' " ! " r " • " " l l "" 1 , ' i y3 j )o ln ta .

. 'o! il . ' i i i ' "I" 11 points . . . ^. i»'' ord .il ,'i inasmuch as

!*S.r^i-=:'!r,*': T o ' t n " "imllCBt number '.grf^g-JlV^- riniU' hv Summit when u-1."1^. ' ;^ * JJ:I ' \ a . ill winner wa3 ',•;. _.T.vy|,r l-ucorii wu. madn this

^ i : i l i : " l l . ' ";ftme \vhen - j^ sv - i i woft 1 y tii'i 'ico're, 14-S,

fiiT ^UutHtj»x.g^tae ar t ,"?,' TTTi -T fTi^liara '"scored *-;'-IT i'T I ITS than any

rrinn t a s Iii-iin a b l a t o make

. Totals !. . . Score by pe r iods :

Summit . . . . B 4 0 2—11 Chatham 2 1 1 4 - - 8

Referee Stine. Length of perlodfl—S minutes . Timers—Iliinss and Murphy. Scorers—Trapnel l and Dotton.

Siimiiitt Reserves W i i Ov«r • t 'hat lmni

Jus t by way-of keeping Cornog's record clean for never producing a team that Chatham High was ,abb; to defeat, the Summit. Reserves set about to mako fast work of the Chatham subs. Summit f ;nally won by* the score of 24-10 after a one­sided game.

Leading all the way it was an easy "task for the locals to drub their time honored r ivals . From the very s t i r l Chatham did not seem to" have a: "ghost of a chance" or winning. Save for a flash in the second period the Chatham team did not th rea ten to no i e out Iho SummUitos, who were playing ear.'ly. After Summit had acriuived 11 marke r s in I he' f i rs t period to tho duo of foul shots made by Chatham, Scavone's cha rges out-scored the Hill City aggregat ion by ono point in the following chuk­ker.

At half t ime the locals Jed by a 14-G tally. The following two periods found Summi t pi l ing up a comfortable lead, while Chathnm strove vainly to overcome the ad-vanta^n garnered by the locals. The Chatham ites came nowhercs near scoring aft many points as the locals in the las t half, and the game ended .with Chatham on the small end of"a."24-Tfl tal ly.

In the lust half Oornog Iniected a practically ftsBv team in to th,c frav which carr tAl on almost as well at: its predeccessor. ' G rifting ind Gore played a falrlv good game

OIMUPS Sdirdntod For SatanTay Bajitist vs. Nov/ Trovidenco Pres , All Simla' vs. Oakes Memorial. Central Presbyter ian vs. Juh lo r

Boys ' Club.

Watermen Trounce Electricians on Court

In an exhibition game the Com­monweal th W?ter Company, has-k t t e e r s ran rough shod over Capt. Pre lzner ' s charges to the tunc of 75-15 las t Sa turday evening on the "Y" court. Jus t as soon as "Heinle" Voegtleti, "Leight" Crann and MacDougal began to regis ter it was easy t o see that tho "Watermen would pile up -a record s<;ore. The Elec t r ic ians fought on despite the fact tha t their opponents outc lass­ed them to such an extent. PaplD and Dayis stood out for the losers , while "HoiilJo" Vaegtlen, "Lelglit" Crann and MacDougal wfre tho luminar ies of the winning team.

The game between the Employed Boys and Stephens-Miller Co., which was scheduled t j be played on Sa tu rday night, has been post­poned unti l this Friday night a t the "Y."

sale a the local five last Thursday night at Passa te , thereby bonding the locals , from fifth place in l iu league to s ixth . The titial score was 45-30.

Passa ic loolc the lead from the s t a r t und hold it the entire fMi'ic. In the first half Passaic tallied 21) counters to the 13 made by Vander- j | beelc'a .charges. The final period [ | sail,' Passa ic cont inue to sho.it with j | such devas ta t ing results , and Hie | -h o m o ' t e a m garnered 2."> points in j the lasL-poriod. while the I till Cily j team managed to make 17 poiiUs, i br inging the score to 41>-30. } lli 'mipson

Vauderhoek experimented with . > T "iia, f tho t eam considerable . He shifted i Kolbi , - c. Gm? Murray, \yho had been playing at forward ever since the si a r t of tho year, to guard.* In Murray's, old place "Doc" placed Andy Keje,-,, who" rolled up 8 points, all of which were made from the court. Keyes m;asfd a good many easy shots , but t h a t is probably due to tho fact t ha t Andy has not beou playing much of late. Whether Vanderbeek expects to k e ; p Mur­ray at guard is an Interest ing question which will be solved th;^ Saturday n ight when Summit will bat t le Bayonnc on tho loc.il court "Doc" may h» planning- to use Keyes at forward hi the place i-r Murray in the high selioil fraca:, and so placed h.m in the game on

.•a that Andy could got td/ l i is " - • ^ l 0 ™ . ^ ^ " " - ^ I ^ o r e w a a 2G-21.

, , , , . . , , F rom the very s t a r t have somewhat drit ted fl/un tco], o n tho-uplicuranci

r,-ir s tory. Pnpui and Keyes tied for Heorlns honors with four field -;oals apioee. For Passaic Thomp­son, Viisllicn and Kolhe were the iiii).;t frequent a'ld timely scorer.'. Tliis is the last time tho two teams

.wil l meet this year unless Ihe tv/) i age rogations stiould c u n e together | in the state toui'nainent.

The ltnal

wrni vr, NnannT!

The Score : PA.SSAIC "Y" (4r>)

Fs .

Springfield Athletic • Ass'n Elects Officers

for the locals on the offense, while , ^ P e t X a r i n a n a « e r of t i o Spr ing Kirk, a t center , and Walling, as cuard, scinti l lated a t the i r posi­tions. Holland and Brooks were tho luminar ies for the fighting, los­ing team.

Fr iday evening at the Municipal Building, Springfield, the Athletic Association met and elected of­ficers for the coining term. The officer's elected wore as follows: Chai les II. Huff, president ; P L. I t 'ovc, vice president ; A. Schramm, t r ea su re r ; Edward Ruby, secretary. A commit tee consisting of K. A. Conuol'y, J . Riley and E. Kuby was appointed to take charge of th? basketba l l - teams. Edward Ruby, well known parsonage in the ama teu r sport world, was

N iv i n u o i i , Vasilkn, Krocl, g.

Totals SUMMIT " V

f. f. f. c

K e y s , Papio. Bi-enn, Sigier, Pofahl, g. - * • Mui ray, g. Baker, g. .

Tota ls \ S o r e by pVrioils

l ' . IEMl i l ' .. - \ biummit . . . .

0 4 I 4. ' 1.

1", (30)

FSS. 4 4 1 1 2 1 *

• 0

13

20 13

P t s 12

•>

10

1« 3

P t s 8 K 4

the r.mne of a I'losti

one. At half time the Mist Sunir mi t t e a m ' h a d jnanaj-.ed to garner :i -tW'.ivpoitit lead over t.lieir oppon­ents with the :;core a t lD-lfi 'The second half was as closely phiyed as its pruleceesor . Ea^Jl' Summit nosed- odt the Sprlnglield team "by one point in this period, thereby winning tho game wtih the final tally a t 2G 23. "

Re* and McMano s turred f^r th'-winning -t'eaM, while Morrison and Rood wore'this big 'gulls for tho los- : ers, Ytho outweighed their oppon­ent' ' cous'.dei ably.

The S c o n ' : EAST SUMMIT J R S . (2G)

Fgs.' Fs . l ' ts . j 0 2

Rahway Cagemeii to vMeet.Cornognien Today tisro

o

1

lis The Rahway H:g"h" School basket­

ball five will invado Summit today to t'ake on the Cornogi.ien in a

£—i.'onta. The game Is scheduled to get under way itt;4"i>. m. a l ' i h e hiph school gym.

Rahway is probably the only team t h a t ' t h rea tens Summit for , „ ., ,, ,, _ tlie county laure ls . ' Thus far this \ f

1 ° i t J K ? m i n l y ^ r : , a ? _ ^ " ^ l ^ J ' year Rahway has plnynd six gamos losing two and jvinning four. Ceu

The annual meet ing and election I ir.ei s ot 1.1 lc Ivoiiieu s INI'W je i -

soy Golf Aar.ocin.Uria- was__hcld _OJI. Thursday r*, the Hotel Biltmore, following a luncheon, result ing in the selection of the officers for the

Fail on te, f. . J lex, f. McAiaue, c. Dopuo, g. , It. Nelson, g.

To tills , SPRINGFIELD

4 0 1

11

11 9 01 4

I nil High of Newark , and Orange High were Che only two t ia ius that coiild gain n decision over Wal ter ' s charges . Both of these teariis a re :>£ high calibre ,aud r a n k aniong the host in the s ta te . Cranford, p la in -field, Linden, and Uoselle have all succumbed to tho s t rong Rahway outfit. Railway, therefore s tands out a i Iho leading conlcnilof for Sum­mit's crown.

Coach E. II. Wa l t e r s has developed a s t rong t eam a round ' the three le t termen of las t 'year , Cas t ro , Scliorpello, and Crowoll. The other newcomers a r e Close and Orr.

25 J R S . BOYS (23)

i-'t'ij. * Fs . Pts Morrl Rteil, Stern I ' a i n , Boss,

son i . c.

g-P-

T-It,lis ' Score at half t ime :

i1!>; Springfield, 13. -IH Sigler

30

,9 3 fi 0 0

1 23 Smiuilit,

Reljeroe—

Close Games Feature Sunday School League

17 -30

W

I lo I IT:

p i ( , t . i t

Collins Stars in Defeat by Locals, 3&J7-er in Secomi From Poor" Star'

•Recov-Period

Walling Enters

ATTA BOY!

T h e S c o r e : SUMMIT _(i!4)

Fgs-Griffing. f. Glaxohroolc, Gore, f Lee, f : Kirlr, c Larter , c. .., Walling, £. Black, g. --.. Borden, g„ i Zeigner, g.

Totals . ..

f. 3 1 ' 2 0 2 0 X 0 1 0

Fs . 1 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0

-,. - - . 1 0 CHATHAM (10)

F e s . Lenord, f 0 Carley, fv 0 .

P t s . 7 2 6 0

c 0 2 0

0

24

Ps, P t s .

lield teams. The Athletic Acsoeiatlon will

now have charge of the two ba s ­ketball teams that have been wear­ing tho colot's of the Athletic Club of Springfield. Edward Uuby, the manager-elect , experts to have the same line-up of the gir ls Ju the Springfield "wonder" five, as tjie ono prior to the reorganization, but he beliQves t h a t there may be a slight change in the line-tip of the men's team.

SIGNALS WAIMN OF FATKaiU DANGER

Cole, f. . H.ilibard. f. . . . WaPing, f. . . Collin:'., e N'elvip. ig. t'o'.viit'i'thwait, i'..

10

Brookes, f. 0 T inner , c 0 Tipwbritij!*' g 1 Holland, g 2

' Totals ; . . 3 Score by per iods :

SummiL- 11 3 4 G—24 Chatham 2 4 1 .3—10

Length of periods—8 minutes . Referee—Stine. Timers—Murphy and Heinz. Scorers—Trnpnel l and Dorten.

\ — „ — _ _ _ .

Record of «i<* High School Team uitd tho Schedule of

Ginucs t o ho Played

I d UI

i

H. S. 22 14 17 32 11 30 '

T . Bl C. A. Roselle W*atfleld Madison Chathum Mlllburh

— — o — —

Opp 3«

9 . IG

15 S

17

I-Schedule of Ref)ialfiiiiS GamctiS I *Tues., Jan , 27—Rahway. I *Pr l„ J a n . 30—Hillside. I Frl . , Feb. G~MadIson, I *Sat„ Feb. 7—Y. M. C. A. ) Tnqs^, Feb . 10—Roselle. I •Wed.. F e b . 11—Millburn. i Sat ' , Feb-. 14—Chatham. -I Frl . , Feb. 20-—Railway. I- T'ueS., Feb. 24—Hillside. ' I- •Fr l . , F e b . 27—-Westfiold. I "Homo Game.

Should Bo on Alert for Signs of Chronic Tiredness

Pa t lgue sends, out warning ' s ig­na ls that should be heeded, bu t pa r en t s and teachers unfor tunate ly often ignore theso signals in the i r children, vsays Dr. Max Seham of Minneapolis, in an ar tci ie in the J a n u a r y Hygoia, popular health magazine published b^ t he Amer i ­can Medical Association.

"Chronic fatigue does not m a n i ­fest itself overnight," Dr, Seham declares . " I t is a condition t h a t comes on slowly and in the begin­ning dooi no t appear as dangoroun as it real ly is. In its desire to p ro ­tect itself from further damage, tho body sends' out warning signals."

Foinc of thoso warn ing s ignals a re headaches , general wear iness , (lark circles under the eyes, dizzi­ness ?nd fainting spells , lack of appeti te , s leeplessness, i rr i tabi l i ty, twi tching muscles and lack of en­thus iasm,

"If a normal , well " bnhaved, hea l thy pe r ron within six mon ths or so hecomes irri table, inat tent ive a n d ha rd to handle, we should suspect fatigue," Dr. Seham s ta tes . "The child who won't get up in t h e morning , dlsliltea to go to school and does no t like to run and p lay l ike other chi ldren may bo suffer­ing from fatigue.

"We have not done all, in oitr D o v e r to relieve headaches by hav ­ing the oy6s fitted witfi glTeses. Man.v persons have been fitted with eyeglasses^by some one who t r ea ted ^n lv the eye and po t t h e whole "hild, Tti^lr evosifht niay p.a.ve been perfect and the i r -headaches -duo .to. fat igue,"

All these slgilB a re Ajgrnals of a decrease in mental and phvtueal efficiency and should be heeded.

Tolals, 'MIL l

t ' •

r Scott, [ Tr in^rovo, c. Buii i iol l , g. . . R i t i . i', Cli i ' : . t i . -n, g. .

In a gain" marked by poor de­cisions on the pa r t of the a rb i t ra ­tor the Summi t High eagenien j trounced the Millburn High court ! | r epresenta t ives ,a.t_ .Millburn last Sa turday nio,ht by the score of 30-17. A victory was turned In by tl'e Summit Heso rvm in the prelim when the Millburn scrubs suc­cumbed to the tune of 20-fi.

' Displaying the sanur, brand of ball thai m a r k e d the early pui't <>t the Chill ham contest the Summit High School qu in t t t got off to a poor s t a r t aga ins t the Mil lburn five. In t h e opening • eanlo the Millburnifcn jumped i n t o , a - f i v e -point lead by vir tue of two sen' ia-1;; '.I , r , ••'oi'al shots by Boslovagc' and a l'oul shot-by Scott , Millhurn's co lor ­ed forward. During the time thai Mtllbiirn chalked up five poinlfi, the local team could not succeed in tallying. Passes wont "wild, passes were missed and in general the locals played rather poorly, but. they came hack strong in the 'leconrt 'canto, scoring ten point-i to the lone two marke r s garnered hv the i r opponents, making the score a t the conclusion bf the first half, 10-7 with Summi t In the h a d . C J W -per thwai t led In this rally, s inking throe field goals while Collins and Cole each contr ibuted one double decker.

Once in the load the Summit i tcs continued to score frequently. I n the third period 12 p j t n l s wore credited to the locals, and in the oonelmilni" session K noints WOT-" made. by. the locals. Millburn in t he meant ime had only boon able to make 10, po in t s , causing the score to ho spt. a t 30-17 at Iho finish. •

Captain L e - s Collins came out of

rt place Mnrry Hubb.ird. "Wall-had played almost tiie entire

lim game, and was a hit Igued so he could not do him­

self lull Jiihlicj as a resul t . Wall­ing is a "comer" who sh mid show up v oil ne>,t year.

Some of the most sensat ional .shots were pulled «1E by Hoslevagc, tho Millburn forward. Thro" times in the f rd l period he, counted with • .loetaeuhir shots. ChvUtian, an-

-lulhor-^Millburn star , was sent into j ' l ie game in the closing minutes 11-1 sViot long range shots. Twice ;iie registered from about thc_mid-

ic^oOTrrh—UiS^tlmoly shots made the Millburn s c i r e take on a pi,-t-n ro"T)nl'f'-lhle ji'SVIect,

NO. <^N

SUMMIT' Ctft) " / \ F g s , Fs. P

1 1 1 1 0 0

Pine Grove Lassies to Play Tomorrow Night

After .1 ' lengthy lay-off the Pine Grove Lii;'.sies will get into action tomoirow evening When they will ^nvado Union to take on the Union L a s s i e of that pl.ice ti large band of rooters is (spoofed to accom­pany the loam For this ronnon a special bus has heen hired to take the Junga lee r s to the game

The .lungletown team v/ill bo considerably s t rengthened as three Summit g'irhi will perform with t h a t _ t e a m . Dimplos Doyle, s tar p l i j e f of the "Y. W." aggregation, will lie at lorward, with Miss Mur­ray, ano t l i ' r Suminill lo, at the other forward, while a t center Mi'JS Dot Simons will attempt lo out lump her opponent. Kitty O' l lara, a Member- of the as.iocin-liun sextet te , will hold down 'ono guard position, with oitbor Miss Rehre or Parcc l l s a t the ot'ior de­fensive berth.

dent, Mrs. Frederick B Ryan, Bal-tusrol ; vice-president, Mrs. L. N. do Vausney. Montclair; secretary, Mrs. A. M. Reynolds, Glen ftidge; treas­urer, Mrs. P . E. Don'ohoe, Mont­clair; chairman of handicaps, Mr.j. C. F . Uoboluekcr, Hurkeiisack; cha i rman of lournaments, Mrs. Charles Voorhres, Jialtusri/1; chair­man of admissions, Mrs. Walter Case, Glen Ridge.

Owing to the illness of the rctir-.lng president, Mrs,.C. F. UUieljick-, or, Mrs. P. E. -Donohoo, re t i r ing vice-president of tho association, called the meeting to order and call­ed upon tho secretary to fas t tho vote electing tho now officers. The report of the treasurer showed a balance TKJ more than $300 In the t reasury and the association in al flourishing condition.

I The report on membership wfts j equally good, although 110'figures

card of 1 wore given out. During the last year t h i r t e e n tournaments were hold, a t which nn average of th i r ty members played.

The schedule for this year is to be arrange'th- I t was decided to hold t he championship e\ent some

„ , I n u h 7 o f ' t h o ' " m e - I n the early fall, but 1,0 offers to Ihe N o r t h ' w o r o reported from club, in that

' connection. The playing ot the open championship came in for con­siderable discussion and If was finally decided to hold a two-day medal play confined to members of the association for the purpose of developing a n association cham­pion. It was also decided to enter­tain the Westchester Fairfield. As­sociation some time in Juno at the Englewood Country Club.

- . . . . 13 ml l lN (17)

FgS. 3 1

;.. . , 0 '' 0

,- 0

FV. P t s .

G

3

•1 1

J 0 fi

17 by periods:

0 10 12 fi

-30 -17

A bulletin issued by the Domi­nion Bureau of Stal is l ics states t h a f m o r e than 3,000,000 gallons of ilp and beer went from Canada to the United Slates during tho last twelve "months. This is about 1,-000,000 gal lons 111 j r e - t h a n for the previous year . The quanlity of whiskry was placed at- 2!)D,S0O gal­lon ' . The total value of the coverages tVas est imated at about ?10,000,000.

Close games featured th the Sunday School league, las t Satur i 'av af ternoon. In the cur­tain raisoi ihe J u n i o r Boys' Cluji five of \ o r f a Summit 'nosei l out the Calvary Episcopal team by the score of 2.r>-lf). • Only a desperate rally in the closing game gave victory •„ ,.., , , , , . „ , . Summit etuintet By losing this j u n c t i o n game the Calvary Episcopal aggre­gation dropped from first place to second placw, where they a r e In a triple tie with tho New Providence Presbyte r ians and the Bapt is ts of Summit .

The Injection of Buddy Gore illlo the game Raved the game for the Colenien In the second contest on I tie p rogram. Gore came to the rescue of the league-leading Cen­tral Presbyte r ians whejUjthe All Souls ' team, which had not won a single, game in the league, succeed­ed in holding their opponents a l ­most tie. Wi th Gore in the game, the P resby te r i ans pulled into the loid, and the game ended with the tally;, at 1R-11.

In" the concluding came on the urogram the Ogdeii Memorial five defeated the St. John ' s team by the lop-sided score of 30-1. This was ihe only game of the af te rnojn in which ono loaru. ,overwheimed its opponents with such, ease.

TUNING IN

<- —~«--\ _. Wave length in radio corresponds

with pitch in sound and with color in light. Sounds a r e t r ansmi t t ed through the a i r by bodies that move back and forth or vibrato and thus create a t r a in of waves. If the waves come ^ .hrough the' a i r rogi£ larly, wo hear a musical note which i may bo shri l l or h igh p i t c h e d ' o r deep 01' low pi tched. The pitch de-prnds on how m a n y waves roach our cars in ,«,' second, and this in

Campaign Expenses When woman is a candidate

She will not pass the hat i Nor throw It In the r i n g -

state I l a t j cost too much lor that,

she'll

k a l * = " tZlL 1~l" 1 oc:ii high .school | . j _ %r«n>lt) IfLtf,'Hill

' P V Scorer S U M J U T ( I I )

3 0 0 1

Ps . 0 0 J) 0

l l I

- ~ — ' ' y.',.

Summit vs . Railway.. (3,30) Orange vs . St. Benedict ' s . ' W. Orange v§. E . Opauge, Nutleyvla. S. Orange. BattiiL vs. Morr is town. -' -' . . . We&tosday _ *

TJbll.eviUe.ira, Biobniffeia. - '• Montclair Afiao". va . Boys ' High.-Passaic VB," Emeraon; .Westfiold vs . Chftthani.* Maillson vs.-Baoji ion.

• Frtrfay Sninmit, v s . HillsWo. Gl"»l R W " " VI- cvnftfrt? -

11,^ 1 • - i n . " <A Hj«.ur . • i*o-ih*!iii \ ' ( '•i ir.i i ' l 1

- ,:- 1)1.1:1 .•. n i'i„»ii ,111 . I ' • 1 'UI 1 \ . V-ihiir, V f.

,"r l,fn<.lli'"f \ 1 11'ip i ' r p •• i>uU i \ "Mlbhrn

1 . ' i l i r r ' - ' u m • ' Jj 111c r.'iSI ; ' Ffi*« wmMdltain liomit'ii'ain.

PtB 6

: 0

woman 'does not mind being calwM a kitten., bu t hatcH to \w named a cat. A man, on t he con­t r a r y , is flattered a t being tjhought a dog bu t resents ' being refcrr.ed' to as , &tpuppy." . , ,,., . . . it

ftsf-a •-Ji!yinpathell«,-3ouV. ym*' Haow tha t jsdie* h a s Jp'lacetl' horee.U l ike A s i lent and suAe.uJcht sponge full in the.flow*"ot His'eK;guence Tor a con­siderable number 'of hours , while he.'deplaime'd t o ' h e r h1a 'conquests, g l o i l i s , <ri,»iTnphs. s'poilB.' In a n un­in te r rup ted .monologue of com­placency."—"Mere Man," by Honor Br ight . " -• -

- A professional ball p layer and manage r of baseball t eams h a s , in

his scoih'ng s lump. Le^s is a grea t passnr, .probably the best " feeder" on the local t eam and tho s t ronges t defenslvo m a n on (ho team r . Cnm-blno with these iiualities his^lead^r-ship, which has led the Sumrn ' t aggregation out 01 many t igh t places we can just ly say tha t Logs is probably one of the best cap­ta ins that a hasketball team of the loop! hiP'h school h^s ever boon lpd by. , H c seems i p know when to call time o u t ' f o r his team, and seems to look ar ter the p layers In a game as n hen do^s to i ts chicItB Up until th i s game Legs had m l hennjrpllinsr un many points . P r o b ­ably , one of tho main reasons for this is t h a t he-irenuently a t t empts shoU^-flild when he doss he gets niiTr-rriTTe"~ele"vistt<nT—nvrthpm'. •- in th is game, however, Collins sunk tho lea ther t ime and time again besides holding1 his opponent score­less from t i e court , and he a lways succeeded, in g'ctting the .iump.

Co]o and CowpO'thwa' t each "Cored a ^ood manv times from tbo f 'oir^ 'Rosv was hnrnpT"-! in th ;= gamo by a very bad cold, and, it seemed t i s low R03.V up n bi t .

Dnke Cowperthwait has devet - 1 , ad .into msor.v, titr.ins^^nasd At tha. l ieelnntttp-ot tlie seasr.iv-when f/>r-nog niarle known his intent ion of shifting- FfOd from forward to Puurd m a n y of the fans thought that that move Ava ra ther unwise . The wri ter was one Of th i* Skenli-c a l - j a m i n _ -hot. .Bnkp. tiTuler . C O J ^ n o g s tu te lage , has developed into a s t rong gua rd . He has Uvirned the knack' of t ak ing the bal l from a p layet who 3a dribbling it. and he h a s learned many, oilier tWcka of a guard. B v t h e time. *he s ta te

a few' words pointed .out a funda- J tournaments! come around fi F r e d . > . , . . . ; — ^ . . ^ t _ i _ j — * i '--'""'piioiilji hu " -v"1*v T i l n i b l e defen­

sive nian, Combined wi th h i s new ttoru defensive power his skil l at

T u ' a l . S( ' ie

Summit -Millburn

Le.iglii of pi riods—8 minute Reterue Lamon. Timers—Fadls and Mallard. Scorers—P.uncher and Dotton. )

In :i hectic prelim batt le th" Snmr.i.t High Reserves downed the Millburn Seconds bv the score of 20 G. "Playing as if it wore the varmly lei.in instead of t he s^ruii team tlii' local aggregat ion jumped oft t ) a guild s tar t , rol l ing up 8 POinl'i to Uv^lono counter made by Mlllliurn. i'i&tho first period. The sub ' eepieiit session proved to be on„> hi which the ball entered the rim but unco, aird then by Buddy Gore, the dlmunltlve Summit tor-ward, lro'ii the fifteen foot line.

MiilbuiJi sraged a slight rally, in the llilril chukker, making three poiii 's ti^tim two accounted f i r by the locals, but tho las t period tounil the Coruoguion playing \y;tb but four men. Tins quar t e t scored

'more points, in, their period than in any of the preceding frames.' Nino

1 points .'.ere credited to Summit In I this historic quar te r , and the Summit hand was joyful over the splendid playing of the locals who seemed to be toying with their op­ponents.

Cornoc used ten men In the bu r ­lesque. Four would have , been enough or maybe three would have sufficed, but Cornog sen t in t en inun, all "f whom played a gojd game. Of the ten Gore and Wal l -ing stood out. Young Buddy Gore' has developed into a great l i t t le forward, aud be had the Millburn guards "buffaloed " " B u r r s " Wal l -in*^. at guard, played a very con-.-iIstciTit guarding game. In fact Ills exhibition was so good tha t Cornog sent him into the big clash of the evening.

F o r the losers no one m a n stoo 1 oat as a star . The t eam played hurii, and p"ut up a. stiff batt le, but t|iL.y—wen* outolc.okad—and putplay-i

Many a husband now knows tha t bobbed hai r has considerably in­creased tho overhead of women --Jerscyman.

Jan. 31 :s

nammst Co

A three-foot ru le does not have to apologize for being thirty-six inches long. American Evangelist.

Th" farmer who knows what the public wan t s is a poor business man if he doesn't guide himself accordingly; if ho, doesn't know vnri rni i~pi ibi i i ' wairtsTifirfcnniooT business man anyway.—Exchange.

Keep Ihe field corn seed stored In a diy, .frostproof comp.utment . Exposure to a l te rna t ing tempera-lure is not beneficial to tho seed.

T ramp - P i t y a poor man what as seven little ' uns to feed. - — -

Passerby - B u t we met a week igo aud you told me. you had five children.

"•Picture my astonishment next day, sir, when given' 'em their morn in ' tub, to dircovei I 'as seven."—Hamilton (Ont.) Herald.

Walling, g. . Black, g. . . . Borden, g. . " . . _ fe igner , g. *'. .

t u rn ilepejjjik o n - h o w many t imes the sounding body vibra tes the nTr.' When we t ighten or loosen the s t r i n g o r - a - violin we raise or lower its pitch. We call th is " tuning ." In radio we also speak of " tun ing" and when wo do wo mean simply that we a r e adjust ing t he radio pitch ot the receiver to t h e pitch of the t i anaml t t lng s t a t ion : P i lc l r" i s _ "a mat te r of wave length. The small or the waves and the smallei^thelr length, the more of them s t r ike the receiver, whe the r i t be an eye, an ear or radio t 'otector. Hence when we tune in on a wave length of th ree hundred me te r s in radio wo simply 1 adjust the_ receiving Instru­ment to receive waves of that length just as a violinist tunes his ins t rument to agree in pitch' with the piano tha t h i s accompanist plays. »

v s .

>ay®Mnei

C ~ & a

£6\r91

Lesei-ves-v s .

nweai ater

0* 0 1 0

., 1 0" 0 0

I •0

2 0

Totals

Scott , f Penoyor, f. . iVTehrback, f. Mickey, f. ... Jaciiuith, e. Grossman, g G rosso, g. .

9 MILLBURN (G)

Fgs .

Jr. Employed Beys v s .

Jr. High Scfiio6l

Fs. 0 0 1 0 1 .0 0

Pts . 0 0 ] 0 3 0

' Tota ls . Score hy per iods :

Summit . . . . -. R Millburn .. 1

Length of periods Re tc re :—Lamon and Buncher. T imers—Fadis and Mallard. Scorers—Buncher and Dotten.

Johnson had obtained work in a ra i lway yard aud was told to mark eouift. t rucks . , * ' '

"Hero 's a piece of chalk," said the loreman. "Mark each of 'em eleven."

A l i t t le l a t e r t he foreman came j a round again to see how the new hand had been get t ing on. He found him s i t t ing on a bucket re­garding a t r u c k thoughtfully. Marked upon it was a large 1.

"Wha t does th i s m e a n ? " asked the foreman, "Only one truck done, and the number wrong at that . I said eleven, not one."

"1 know," said Johnson, "but I couldn't th ink on which side or the ' 1 ' the o the r " l ' "go f s ! "

-S minutes.

A d m i s s i o n - -_. - 25c

F i r s t G a m e 7.15 S h a r p .

^"^STi^s. ii-r'/ifl

Indoor

Whal ing was .carr ied on by the Norwegians as ear ly as 900 A. D. Whal ing was a t il3 height about 1S4(J.

T7CTT

oil" In" e r t s ry -depa r tmen t . -o f t he game. Only twice did tho U a t h e r outer the rim from the hands of a Millburnite from the floor. J a c -ctaith, the high point scorer of Millburn with 3. points, acronntod for—onc^ -wMte^Gr-osso,—at- Rnard-,-ac.countcd for the o ther double decker.

A TTAlt t -A-WAr

T h e b e s t ^ w a y t o l e a r n t h e

g a m e o r t o i m p r o v e

y o u r g a m e

i s t o t a k e a c o u r s e i n a n i n ­

d o o r golf s c h o o l u n d e r

a c o m p e t e n t t e a c h e r .

The only school of this kind in ,r,H urn- fipon tn tlio ri t j^jif t

mon^nl rti«tjnr>ti0ii between the edu-•••i I n l iiMi'dncatod mind. "The 1 ih ' . in- .' -JM> says, " o r a n y o n e . A . ! , ii, 1, 1 ,partly„ t ra ined ^mtnd, eas ing t h a l e a t h e r , w e f ind ' tha* i.Grirtlnj, f. H 'J 10 ilMl ou t h i s fau l t s and IDnVe, i 8 , p p a of the s t ronges t l inks jGlaaebrook 1 i -iji t Ih ui The un1* iiooleil f*'l-]m (be li»r»l fiv» t G i r . T

\ lo» M>I. u l . M M to bide h i , " 11 j " f i ' i r r " ' W.illliia « li > V . Iieeii

The S'<*ore; SUMMIT (20)

FgS.

i '. I ' I 1 lAou^h wliUh of Hie 1 w o ' p l ; n m; n i l 11 tin- -i-cntnl ft mi, n i n . l • ' .v.l ! ! !•» fti>.i-ji 9jjii /ar t l iur . . Ls.ont 11; thu Ranw In Uu las t p-riixl ' i

1 L e i , l. Kit

FB. 0

0 0

Pts . 2

" n 7

Hillside High (2 Gsnios)

41 2 l

Friday, Jan. 30 HUGH SniiOOr.- GVM

jSlafi-i s p . i.t.

11 J*.j.g»M---Wfi»--|1»=rda3B

. HI^JSCHOOL GYM Ar1mtEsi<>si - -- - ' 2Sc

S t a r t s 3.15 l>..m.

Trus t -Company -Bnilding-i

Under direct ion of Ha r ry G. Higham, Professional

- at the- .Summit ,Golf Club.

_ r p r t e r m s and detain) a s t o courses of InstruetTon",

address

H A R R Y G . H r G H A M

C a r e of S u m m i t Go l f C l u b

S u m m i t , N . J ,

o j x p h o n e 1 7 4 t '

Golf SHcks, Bal ls , E t c J Sold

Open" Daily and o n . Tuesday, Thur#$day end Saturday Evenings

Page 7: JUtexature Pept. Friday w. a New ifynlding., at Blind .... The result must- be grati ... JUtexature Pept. Friday Tbo Department of Literature is to have a speaker on Friday, Janu

I. >i».KUARY 27, I9Z5

^s^s^^s^arsF^^FSff

THS SUMMIT HERALD ANB BVUmT RECOKD, 'SUMMIT, H. '5; PAGE SEVEN =ier-qcgisv'iTC^q.ya 3? if^W*1*?**?!

•F*r=0TVM&fii.n*TirT ttss^r-nj^rfj^v^VI*•j'-^'m^J1 i>J

V.».

\

Sfceraipse [©sue.

(Continued from l ' agc One)

the, bi'atuhes Of my fir t rees , they tell l-i tlie form of a mil l ion tiny crcr.cJtita. The inters t ices of the. tni'lchi'i IM Liny cru'i.t'cnt.s-glinimo.r,

,X^~r~

Self-interest and Business Salvation " / / •&)"Hot enough 'to five and let live%~ivq- must live and help Hv&"

upon (be, wall and floor. The cpal'iowa and anownirda t h a t -every ranming throng tlir window shelf oil which my wife dollghl.s to strew their breakfast, ut tered plaintive erica ot wonder, und one by one flow back to their lodgings in the f r... Then all was btlll. The world seemed livid, .lifcleas. One lould not apeak. ' T h e vory brea th was held, oa the . s t ra ined cyu he­rn id the crescent , of t he sun ' r e -

' """.oir.eleasly crushed down, to a - m o r e glittering line;, fa r na r rower

than thi1 narrowest r im of the pale n«w moon, Would i t he all ex­tinguished?

- , At. that supreme.- momen t 1 glanced for an instant at the sur­rounding snowflclds. I t may have been imagination. I t may have been the reaction of nerves of vision that were over- tenso ,»nd overstrain id. I cannot say. But in that instant there Reamed to me to quiver across tho aiiowflclds s t iango wnvy bands o £ l ight and shadow, more light, indeed, than shadow. It wan for only a second; then all was as before.

Of one other th ing, however, thorn was' no doubt. Up there in

, tho Kouthorn nicy, to the r igh t of and above . the • da rkened sun, gleamed serene " and pene t ra t ing three splendid points of c lear white light. They were Jup i t e r , Venus, jVFeroii ry, shining " forth to show that while their g rea t cent re wan

' obscured, they were, s t i l l swinging in their orbits , and were doing their u tmost ' I o supply tha Ions of sunlight. Of course, the sun was

L nol eclipsel to them, and the-Ir re­flection of bis rays to IIH scorned al l the morn vivid because of the daylight through which it camo.

,^- Of tho corona It would seem 'rcsumptuous to speak ; and yet I

•-""'nnist. I t is supposed' nol to have been visible outside the total zone. Y>"t it is perfectly we l l au thent i ­cated that it was seen, faintly, tor u fraction or" a second, 1& many cntsldo thai zone, and almost if not quite as far outside it as was I. "Whatever bo the fact, I know that jua t at the instant of time when the lino of gold w a s thinnest ,

: away over at the. other sldo of the } encroaching, black dlak, the re" was

:i momentary opalescent glimmer, liko a flicker of Nor the rn Lights . That wrrs.nll. ,It vanished quiekly as,-it came. And, then (lie thin line swung like a flash to "UlC otlier sldo of the dark orb, and

". . ttio s t a r s of Heaven Paled; and t h o g l o r y grew."

More swiftly than tho veil of niystery had fallen up*on u s , It was withdrawn. The snow-fields grew {•-Uttering white a g a i n ; the birds ilow out from their leafy she l te r ; tho landscape grew familiar, nor­m a l ; ' tho wjinle world srartled back to life; the-sense of awe and

J- i-'iuwrchcnslon was no more ; the ^elinag /was dime!

By WILL. HAYS In "The Rotar lan"

I have in .mind the Rotary (.'ode ol] Ethics 1 have beeai phiTSuudly interested in studying and t h i n k ­ing of what that code m';ty mean to the individual \vho>subseribed to It, and What it mus t mean to the communi ty in which the majority of its business men accept it as their guide and s tandard of action. I can sep that code t ransforming men, t ransforming cities.

1 can pic ture a business man who

to all the world. Rotariun-. should spir i tual height where he views in an Instant with a sweeping vision the w h o p experience of living and •hOca...lhc Utile th ings nn.il t.b.c_&r|-,»t

has grown up ifK /Biirroundjngs whole business ethics were lax, a man whose aim, if it h a s not been "to get the loot and damn the law," has been "to get what you can, and got by with i t"—I can pic ture such n man reading that code, and I can imagine him feeling, that a new world has opened before him. There a re men—you have mot them in your var ious fields and I

hold his memory in special rever­ence, for tils Code w e preach, lie l ivid! What wo sot drtWT^nrTnXTTtr paper, he waa! We could do worse than make Roosevelt a pa t ron saint of Ro ta ry !

In tegr i ty and service arc the es­sence of our code. In tegr i ty and service ho trumpeted throughout tho land all. lilt; life lung. Forty years ago, when he was pumping s t andards into that card-sharp , it was .principles of Rotary that he wnn pumping into him. I t was t)ie code of Rotary with which he , re­deemed him. i

C€ep%eu

'^Wfc

.cm m eke

tilings in due proport ion, each-, in its place.

Service! It la an easy thing and a common tiling to say that ser­vice is the greates t thing in life; but ask yourself whether the ancient saying is not t rue ,

I do not preach t h a t material things are nothing. Matci ial things count a good deal I t may moan all the difference between failure and success, between diaasier and achievement, even whether or not voti cr.n afford to give your daugh-

I tell you how the dkcovory of a ' j f r c r y o n r S O I 1 the right kind of

-

?se$ City \ -**^ "v^J,-

Gferke, OaS?:es EL

Clarke Accountants and Auditors

!»:» Libert} Street

New VmU

S u m m i t Address : - -L\ G._UDX_2i!i>_

General Auto Repair Work

s tandard converted -a crooked gdinbler into a decent, self-respect­ing, citiiscn.

Jlut a man today who haa a quick mind and ho scruples does nol ro in for c a r l games as a rule. He may be a lawyer—like myself—or

have met them in mine—men, who he may go Into ImsincS1-,. Nov,' 1

Income Tax Facts

The exemptions unde r the rev-' t-puo act of 1924, are $1,000 for sili-filu persona and $2,500 for mar r i ed

1 persons living together , and heads Npf families. In addit ion a $400 t-rodit is allowed for each person

"dependent ' 'unon and receiving his c h k l support from the taxpayer, if such person 1H under 18 years of age o r ' incapable of aelf-support because mentally or physical ly de­fective.

Tho n'ormal tax ,rata under the ' revenue act of 1921 is 2 per cent, oss the first $4,000 of hot income in excess of the personal exemptions, trortit for dependents,* etc., 4 per s-."-7>. on-the next-$4,-000; and C per cent, on the balance. Under the

p r e c e d i n g act the n o r m a l tax ra te ~ J.'"-;) -i per cent. ,on t he first 54,000 rsl not income above tho esemp-f=fens find credits", and S per ctnt . f # ^ h c rnmnining net income.

---, ;'51ic revenue act of 1924 con-' kViiti A apeclot provis ion for re -

"^i'ueed taxes which did no t appear in previous laws. All ndt income u p to $5,000 is considered "earned income.-" On this a m o u n t the tax­payer H entitled to a credi t of 25 j-cr ecjlL.ul the amoun t of the tax. , Fbr example, a^ taxpayer , single

und without dependents , may have received.in 1924 a sa l a ry Qi $2,000 and from "a rea l ' es ta te t ransac t ion a profit o i $3,000. HiB total n e t in­come was $5,000. Wi thou t the bonrfit ot the 25 per cent r edac ­tion his l a x would be $80. His achtal- tax 1s SCO. -From hia ^qt in-

- come of $5,000 he Is allowed a per-. nonal. osQinpUon of $1,000; t h e ' t a x

Of ,Z psr cent, on t h e first $4,000 -la-sso, one-fourth of w m c h , , o r $20,

, may be deducted. For the purpose -of comput ing

this credit, in no ca^o is the ca rn-- i>d net . iuro ine ,cons idered to be in

. fseeca or.?lO,000. A t axpaye r may r.rhjJve.-rteolYetl for the year 1924 a "".- a c t iRcomoft'oni s a l a r y of ,$20.01)0;

- t u t ihej 25 per cent, c redi t can be f , -vbplled . to only, ona-haU ot-Uhis {. Amount; ." • ••

have simply never discovered that there is a difference, between right and wrong. "They are not a lways bad men ; usual ly they arc ignor-a n t ^ m e n ; men who a r e untaught in the fundamentals of reading, wri t ing, and ari thmetic. "When tbey are led to the light, they often make the boat citlxeus.

I have lately heard a» t rue story ahout a man like that . The. story will in te res t you for Its own sake, and it wi l l . in te r rs t you for the sake oif the man who set this other mnn s t ra ight . Fo r ty j e a r s ago ou t in the old West t h ' r e waa a youn'T fellow who went about with a par t ­ner, skinning 'people at ca rds in tin- saloons, l ie was_a ca rd - sha rp ; I believe a t one time ho bad been a road-agent . . I know tlviit when a friend of mine asked him recent­ly whether he had been one of the vigi lantes In a" famous raid in IWon-Uiua, he drily remarked, No, that a t tha t t i n n he had been "on the other aide."

Well, his par tner died and.- ho was out of luck, lor I undci stand thai jus t as it takes two to make a Ctuarrel, i t takes two to make a real ly successful skin-game. Alon™ about that time came a dude from the Eas t who wanted to go bunt­ing, so the young fellow, whoso name was John , gave"him a good look over .and decided he would t ry ^him out. i They were gone two weeks. You

would have thought tha t John was. a new-born kit ten the way the dude opened hjs eyes for him. F o r the dude, it seems, had emphat ic views on a good many things, most of all, on quest ions of honesty. One time d u r i n g " t h e i r hunt ing t r ip lie told John tha t in the legis la tbre buck Eas t he had boon offered bribes running up in the hundred of thousands. "And didn't take *omV" asked John . I t was a positive shock to h im; it upaot his whole philosophy of life. Another time, he began to, ask questions. And night after night, urcder"th' , j s tars , the dude unfolded the world of ethics to this roughneck of the lill!a and pla ins . He waa never the same man again. He dropped the skin-game. He went into bus iness ; he became prosperous and highly respected. And all because, to 'bis frontier mind, un taught In ma t t e r s of ethics, a s tandard had been pre­sented by a young dude named Theodore Roosevelt.

Roosevelt! It" is "well for n s ' l o pause a moment on tha t name.

1 pay t r ibu te to Roosevelt, l i e belongs not alone to America, bait

I could iinafiim.-a m a n lie-t rans lormed by your code; I

can see such' a man, who does evil not from vieiousner.s; mind juu, but from ignorance, get t ing the shock of bis life reading the cod of Kotarian.s. There are sj lne men I have met to whom that code would moan jus t boar t - fa l lure ; but Mid kind of man I nm thinking of, it would give something else. To such a m m it would give salva­tion. .

Yes, in can imagine a city being t rans­formed by it, given a IKW v i j o a

. and" therefore a new l i t ' , sv,*-pt' clean ot corruption, swept clean of slums. Thero is nothing wildly idealist ic in such a drrani . Your code Is not f.mtasfic- -it i s .go ' i r id to ' ihunian na ture . T.et. us set it wotking in the h e a r t s of men, te."u;h them that it is not a thing on ynper only hut a way of life; loach', them, if }ou will, tho truth that it is proti iable, in material as well as spiritual gain, and your cities will shine and you will know what tile prophet m e a n t when h" prophesied the L o r d ' s " giving

schooling. Material- th ings count e.iormoiibly. They a r e the basis of life, but iinloas yob build o n ' t h a t basis a higher" life ,of love and searching and service, your lllc, for ;»11 your accumulat ions , is a failure.

If you do not li.iva any basis of mater ial success to s tand on, ymi can not nerve; o ther people have to serve yo;i. I tnt when you have that—bards," I -rem- convinced—tliat-tliere is no experience in lite as satisfactory as the consciousness 'of giving intel l igent and prac ' iea l service.

To serve! In every action of life - i n buyiiig and sellin™, in the

practice of law, in minis ter ing to the sick, in running a ra i l road or opera t ing a s t reot-car—to give a little of yourst-Jf, to throw a tourh

. i [ human sympathy into the trade, lo live a UtHo to give the olli-r m a n ' ' t h e consciousness that it is iMita word alone of yo'u-seil-and-I-buy, but o) human 1'eings work-lug together to live and let live, to prosper and fo help other;* pros­per, to j;ro\v and to help) othera jjrow. I t ia not enough ' ' to live and l"t live"—wo m u s t live and help live. /

In tegr i ty and service,!' And at tho root of both is tho t ru th that none of ua live alone. We a r 1 all par ts—and aouie of us a re fairly insignificant and minute p a r t s - cf one j j roat organism winch we ci l l

f

beauty for ashes, and the oil of human society. Since m a n haa joy for mourning; -the garment of praise for t lu spirit of heaviness." When I thjmk oi the thousands of Rolar iaua v b o are accept ing tills ciuld as their s t auda id of business and piofeaaional conduct, I feel moat c e r t a in , i n m y confidence of the future cf the world.

Integr i ty and service! The words run like a golden thread through the eleven pa rag japhs of (he code.

On the coat ot a rms of the I'rlnce of Wales, are the words , "I Serve " And I th ink the motto fits tho man in th is case. But 1 want to em-phasiz' ' that tho mot to of Rotary is too, "VI Serve." I do not shirk, I se rve ; I do not juggle , I serve; I do not grab, I se rve ; I do not push aside my neighbor, I serve ; I do not t rample my weaker brother, I se rve ; I do nol oppress my workers, I n e r v e ; ' I do not walk alone, I se rve ; I do not break the law, evade the law, balance on the edge of the law of God or man, I servo. That is the thought of the t rue Rotarian.

" I SERVE." Do you remember that magnificent sentence in Pres i ­dent Harding 's inaugura l address? ".Service is the supreme commit­ment of life, I would rejoice to acclaim the era of the golden rule and c rown it with the Autocracy of Set vice," That sentence could

lived, thin over-c-xpanding society has been torn by strife and dis­sensions. Brother has ar isen ogainst brother , sou agains t f a ther

Handsome Modern Buildin»-on Hudson Boulevard Site Now Owned by Statu Will Accomodate 1,000 Students

i * ( . )

The archi tect 's drawing of the pr«]>oHPd ctatt--noriiiat-SiJiool1_planfi for which were accepted by the New Jersey .State Board of Edu­cation at, a, recent meeting, is piib-liflhea here for the ilrst t ime, to­gether with the plan of the ground lloor. These plans were prepared a t the direction of the State Leg, lHlalure -ivitb a special appropr ia ­tion for the purpoao pro \ lded ni the last Hi.sHioii. •)

This liiugnilicenL s t ruc ture , de­signed aceordlnn to t he most mod­ern developments in the Bcleriec of Kchool architect ure—ls-to-b*»—built OIK Hudson Boulevard, Jei.'n-y City, about one tulle south of Kuniinit Avenue at.ition, on t h e altc pur­chased tor tho purpoiie by t he a p ­propriation of S1U0.000 authorized by tin- Legislature in l!»2l." The site has <;7!-i feet on HUCIHOII Boul­evard anil :m> loot on CuUer Ave­nue. The plan pro\hies for tennis courts mid other recreation space und will be developed with lnnd-scape gardening r-.o as to mnko it one tif the at tract ive proper t ies on the Uoilli'vard.

Tile Mle -was selected for ita con­venience lo residents oi Bergen,

i Hudson and Monmouth counties It will lie easily accessible al&o to many students from Middlesex and Union Counties." I t is in th is loc­ality Unit the Klate Board of Edu­cation is convinced a new normal

& ,.,,£L,v

I (.'ft

e - ^ N Wrir&l a •

Dodge Cur Specialist

!»«>- und NlKlit S i -n lco

D. Walguarnery, Jr. Mfi Frnukliii r i n e c Te l . 1CI3

I aszsz&rzzzz ajjjjes^ness^a

fc"^ZS..-i,

(Abo%e) Areliltect 's l>rawlng (nclonv) (Sronnd Floor l ' lun

lSAVli CALLS D A l L ^ r

for proper t ies for calc o r rent .

Whot Have You to Offer? List I t Npw.

Be P r e p a r e i 'fo'r i hc Spr ing R u s h .

P h o n e 369; S u m m i t

£C2Z^XU-£ te.a"clnr bhoitnge. The building as

-plsLiuuiil—will acconiodate f.OOO piUiilfa. but provision has been made .«> that it could be easily enlarged. lo accomodate <in additional 1,000.. The rapidity of the -giowth of population in these counllcs milker thi.i provision for the future tiee-eawiry. The building, which will cost if I,Ol)",OOn. was designed by nui lber t &. l i e r t . l l i " of Newark, archi tec ts , for the handsome nor­mal school in Olassboro, N J., com­pleted m l')20.

" i t is highly desirable 1liat Hie I,egislature of Now Jeirey provide

p lan t convenient to this population I eciit,er__by_l>"«_ and l ia lu , we will j be giving the_ be-sl possible en- | courageiiieiil fo thi' young people | to go into the ti'Jichln.-v profesiiion." i

The building will.be eonr.lriicled ' of led Jbrick u i th white •mortar j Joints and Hinos-loue tr im "with a . sloping—Kri'i'ii rdale roof." It will I he in the Collegiate Gothic ntyli- of I archi tec ture . popular Uuoughout , (he counlry for higher instilulions ol learning.

A unique feature or the interior Is the fact that the sealing capac­ity of the audi lo i lum, which nor-

a n be mcre.is-

gyiunasiiim be a laigo

father agains t son. But through-! "ehool will do the most toward out these thousands of years t in <Uvintf the serious problems ol saving dream of unity, oT brother­hood,' has survived, point ing the way toward peace between man and man and ul t imately between nation and nat ion. ' '

My friends, yon a r c practical men. I do not have to say that the fight to establish the ideals wliit h we have set ourselves will be a long fight, a hard fight, a continu­ing fightf a fight in which there.' will never bo a complete victory,' buU, I t rus t and I know, many lit­t le and many l a rge r victories, each OJE which will c a r ry mankind for­ward a s t r p toward peace and happiness . We do not make -the mis take of imagining that the ideals set forth In our Code a rc in any sense among the frills of life, the luxuries o r the char i t ies , to which we can afford to devote our-selves after wo have made ou r pile In tegr i ty and the desire to serve are the -essentials. T ^ y aro all that keeps society toge ther ; thr-y aro all that keeps you and those you love from misery and destruc­t ion; tiiey a re all t ha t m a r k the

for the construe!ion ot Ihc building] mally will be 11„ this T ( , ir," .•;„.] I tob i r t 1* " " c o v . j . d >'V -r><> t"'*" »' fo1" "!»'il:il _or-I'l-t'Sideiit ol the Hoard. "The need I cj-ion-i by op'-mug the of we'.l-ti.llmd te.\.-]iers is tii-ute Into it. Thei o ^ 111 in New hTsey These three coun-', l ibrary for re.ieareh work anil all ties constitute a population center I oi hi r lacllities needed for normal wliieh is the most likely, sou:-.- of ;-f'c hool courses. An at t rac t ive supply of any Krge group ..) t i ach - luncheon room has been provided , r , n a t h o lo N.-w Jersey. By for in the b a ^ m . . i t Tor Hie benefit

v oil - equipped J of those eoin.ng troni a distance. placing such a

. _ /feat Estate and

Fire Insurance Liability

4i I'Ktox H,., suMsirr, N. .1.

T e l e p h o n e 433

/

have been written" only by a man | difference in life between sordid, who,^ with the consciousness of j meaningless drmlgory and a high cnofinous responsibi l i t ies , ha s - fo r j adventure with a g rea t r eward at tho' moment "raised himself ,to a the end.

^. . -xswlts *f *><iemt, ttimbfr r<j.ntr/)l fj. nklw ot tii>.ibei'fr,iui" th" l-j," n,'-'-i"_ t *»n.il foi.^l ' , iluriii". Mi" eaiciuiat f-T---."--"- ' r - J K ' ^ a - e r i iSns_laV,jisit i-V-r y..- '.HA. fifli: !b,- i,n»»a:»l -,ii t'.i,.b.-r cut ': -, !<> 'lie f->ie',i • dur ing i l b j . n l fi, M! \'_~~ . ^i I'r'iflcri nvir ;i iilOltm bo inl : "-" .0 .1 . s'i'.^«- Ili'.n hall" of iiie amount f "• i. *•"• }?*<' ' til ih Ili'vthriM' Tnel-p.'1" -*"<""mn. o r : ' . - , M.rorSr.p, fo a H {-. - - (..i.i :.i. i»''ii i,j v.'. H. (Sri'i-ji-v. i hii-E r. Of iLi'-For>".l riii vice Other ln-'•; ' l->r-n*t\,Ti imUc;tii-wi H,.,L jf }h,. f ' .-^:.'. i.-ivi i ' .ic. i p l a in a l l ' I'liiiliiim-d p : - j [ : -C .-i?;dy i t JU.5b.r Tor biijldlm; p--_-ji-jrmiPf«i nfld rl1(i v:ir]ni|j Indus-| S J- i-jv"""1' t ' l a t i l rn 'O ' l upon It Wly ll:i"Vf ^ - i itfils'-.itfibi Mipi.isod loHEsr limn t i . ' wi.c ai iir.-;i limughr.

li3Tr .-" r|,J'v* -'M Vyzxi «r Mi<j joofV,'iu y,i':i^JM.-?sVi',l.'J"l''J''r » muftt* Jlinrui

• >•

* . - 1

k v n r ' ,h^n,M«.jfra^> U J J I _ r w y m n i i " lai.i'i |i i^^ llliiTiM i^tll *

A-fc'0>'«

It 's moonlight with me, How 1 it with y u ?

It 's silver, and shadow, ] ; ' , lobwoh and d e w . ' '

It iva i the moon waked me, H r r touc\i like a flower,

And made me dream longing At rest for an hour.

It was the moon waked me, Her whisper like s h o p .

And made me dream nearness Too pe r t f c t lo keen.

I t ' s moonlight with rso, All sh.iflowcl to, blue

And showered v ith rilvcr, i low i^ it with ynu?

GRACE HAZARD CONKLLNU.

Real Estate and Insurance

E s t a b l t b h e i l 1868

A record or over half a century

of honorable dealing wi th the In-

•mi'iiig public in Hiuiiinil and vicin­

ity

•V,S£ TIIK MAN WIIO HAS «AI> A I IKK"

R a Agency

Real Estate is

In the paper printed" here in tell when somelhin ' might happen town, The pumpkin O u t e r Breeze, !/™7 they're k'dilu' off those guys almost every time I road il I s e e l ™ ' * . , "» fnendly conversation, headlines such as these: "Pas tor " ' o n there I m i g h t ' ^ c i a n c e s y

I llsseileu cvo.ry._c v-nin* to an or

There a re numerous species of ]

sha rks , only a few of which can lie i truly r ig . i rdod as ""mnt i -ea te rs . " ' Natives ol the VVesl Indies,, the South Sea Is lands and other lands fieqiloiited by sharks a re Known to at tack and kil l shark's with tboi. inlves bill it is doubtful if those wi re Die1 dreaded white .sharks or blue ' sha rks , both man eating "spee 'e .

29 Maple Street

Opposite Union Place

Summit, N. J.

Mention the UlUiAIjIt if htm buyitiq

Killed on Way to Mission." "Texas J motor Slays Hia Wife," "Bank­er's Death From Unknown Causes," •.'Noted Lawyer Takes Hia Life," "Twenty Reds Shot After Tr ia l , " "Dayllgnt Holdup on Main Street ," "Officers F ight Whiskey Runne r s , " "Copper Clancy Killed on Hi at ," "Handsome Wife Feeds Husband Poison," "Bride Forsaken Goes In­sane," "Bank Official Shut by Bandit," "Joy Riders Hit by Train." Terr ible the way they're shootin', b.umpin' folks off every­day, hope it don't get r ea l con­tagious, hate to see it out our way. Reckon I'd stay at homo night, stead of loafin ' down to Si's, can't

chestra In Franco . One word might I br ing*mi .another , mobbce th inkiu ' j l wiu lyin' some one in the gang i might say so, 1hen tha fur would I start a I'yjn ' While I'm generally I real peaceful nothin ' i r r i ta tes me s o ' n s ' - f o have my s ta tements doubted when I 'm talkin ' Rad io ; consequences might be ser ious , then my good friends hero would see headlines In the home town paper 'bout a fight er j a m b o r e e ^ "Well Known Man Incites a Riot," "Local Store is Scene .of F i g h t ; " guess I'h. s tay a t home an ' picV: up KYW t o n i g h t - C o p y r i g h t , 1925, Weatiughouse Elec t r ic & Manu­facturing Company.

Prcs. Goolidgc Pledges Continued jEconomy

nacreSEity of reducing the, 'govern­ment personnel . He paid high t r ibute to government employees, and declared tha t only hisli class service ia rendered by the govern­ment personnel , but t h a t ' l i o felt that soirtp 'vrere superfluous. He averred that they p o s s e s s ' a liigb average 'of' libillty am} are .loyal, and thtit ' th'e, iiiHompctcn^ on'es a re the exception. Tn tfonelusioh, the Pres ident promised a continuation of the economy p rog i am we a re now following.

=. ,— -.-...-. B -

WANTED -lixpcricnecd girls on Singer sewing

machines; steady work, good pay.

ff** Infants Wear

Morris Avenue and Weaver Street.

Mention the H E R A L D when buying J =;

"In hia address a t the aemi-an-, nual busineas niebting held hist evening at Cont inenta l ' Memorial Hall, Washington, D. C ' which was broadcast through WEAF. \ President Cooiidge- told hia. radio-audience' t ha t during the fiscal year 1921, the government had.yxpended five billion dollars . This fiscal • voa*-ithas.fe^vill' S K S ' J H I io—Uirec— h i t l i o n ~ a i-eddetion of two billion.

"Every dollar," said President Coolidgo, " t h a t ia saved by careful

-adiuiii i3j^tipn_ineann reduct ion in taxta in the future. Tlie~peoplf-of this .nation*' have not only, been pat ient , they have been heroic. I ' propose to cont inue 'my p rogram ot f

economy, t n th i s effort I look to,,' you for loyal,, support . Car ry on your activit ies wi th , less mpney, aitd. olrtSo ynttr vanr "with nmlRgd balances. Tfte.se arft efforts in

w h ' c h yoij - ph^nld- tf t t r pride T mi rp-HUii,™ in v m in Hi'1 mi'Mi" I '

l u L ' i U " ^ - ! ^ 'Tuni ! Carpenters and Builders

lllilllllllIlIJ!!SIlllllll!lllinilll 'lll!!llllUIIIHIIl-lininilI?llHIIIlIIIIIUl"nii!IH'ill

'3!

Tel . RIiop 147» Tel, l i es . 926-31

Parker"

t " T \-~ri" I i T ~ - - ~ V *• *i - ' " - . — " ' — * . . '. "

H"i^f i^«B^a"S^J*^^*J !5S^3^SB!i i"- -" i^-"" ' ' -S•-•. \ v. fts?»'-" - - - - "

J ' T :,'.!> L'» i ' . n m v " . " i Tbc PrcsHicm r'-U'fi'ed ty b i>! Jfis.tirr j r r s r i i ot iitr't y c j r ' s rv'Muis:, at i '

,*i wLkto. 4Ha#."J^.-**ii-,8WiJits.'?iL liif 1-f- $*

Sli^^^B^^S^^^aa^Ra^-^.T,-": --

> .

need not be discouraged if your

car "acts up." Don't lose hope,

just bring your car or telephone

us to get it and we'll have it in

tip^top"shape "before yotrrealizeil,-

For Better Repair Service

/

eagle s Qffi'Cial Cqdiltac Service

S- 176 Park-Avsaue Telephone 1165 g

» , ' — • - » • , • - , ,

..... +K, „Sow. * . - - . .

Page 8: JUtexature Pept. Friday w. a New ifynlding., at Blind .... The result must- be grati ... JUtexature Pept. Friday Tbo Department of Literature is to have a speaker on Friday, Janu

r J

PAGE SIGHT THE SUMMIT HERALD AND SUMMIT RECORD, SUMMIT, N. J.

uiiipitismn BijTOfiirnTtnnnmipnniirjj, HinuUiiUniiuiiiqiHi)

!l EVERYBODY READS 'assmea /mveriisements

Copy mi nfatfift-merttrmrTm*^ vr-ritaa^

M i n i m u m C h a r g e of 30 c e n t s , c a s h i n a d v a n c e . 50 % a d d i t i o n a l if c h a r g e d .

The 11FRAI-I> endeavors to p r in t only truthful classified- ads , and will apprecia te having It's, a t tent ion called to any adver t i se­ment not conforming to the h ighes t s t anda rds of honesty .

~^{]Hiii)lRtlitll>l]i^i[iiniyiiilII)1ifiiiliflIUH!,II>l,"l<1

lSyn(,i,i}lit|||ilUHHHPIHI|«ltllllnillllUllBlJlitLUttilil iliH[miniiJ|lJU!i"iBliiiHl!iiiliiin II i il il 1 l iUUI II [J Hil l ! 11 f H ii • > U ) ( l " • " "< > i n n

II11 i! HI l l t i » l ! ! IU i " H I » Hliti HI i I Mil fit i l l] IJ11 HI * ll< III I I ' »

LOST A l l ) l ' (M'A'»

X,QST—Book of rcrm-dH ut ti en surer of chufch-Hoclety.—FlndeF-utaisu-i ihonit 1G33-W. _

L O S T t - T I r e f rom Cadil lac car , butwren Lenox rtiaa, K e n t P l ace School and

' s ta t ion. M. 1* Wil l iams, 3 ! L,onox foa.d.

L O S T — P I own poi ki tliook, fiunrtiiy, _ l i t , tWecll : , tu t i i i r l i l l l d . L r i n J e y . . U c w a i i l .

Uet lun tn 111') Oak n i i l eu accnuc .

TjOST-^Thi ee Yale keys on small koy-~ r ing, be tween l ieeehwoud road and

Summi t avenue . Sunday af ternoon. * P l ea se returji_Jo_ HlfinAU2_jJUUfi^— £ o S T — M o n d a y evening, n e a r High

Behno',, c a r d ease , con ta in ing money, coupons a n d Imusn key. Reward , p h o n e Mrs . Nydejnjer, 1408.

LOST—Time d e p a r t m e n t • p a s s , book No, CTO') on Sumni l t T I U H I Co. Flndei p lease r e t u r n to thta bank. TJ7-i,0

ryou a r e looking 'lor a <yuiet, m r o -iort. i l i ln mom, a t :i v c i y r easonab le inlcu, .see thi:. one . f i rs t . ' Cull a t ',A Glenwouil p lace, or phono: Summi t

F O I l - N A I . I i

F O R H A I J F . — One. '1-Heal one a-si-at .sleigh, ?1» ; I orilor. Tof|Uira.'}C. I J . <-' Overlook load . '

B k l ; ; h . ?•'•; i t h In CIMHI . R e e v e , 21

The Monday "Evening Bible-Course Talks

Eclipses-Are NotMqrerWe've Hat One Here-For Quite-Awhile

Y CTT/PRD h a n d 'carved nutfiue'u.liy tab le wi th marb le top. Will exchange for uiir luht I'iano. Acldix-as LSox 7J, c u e IIRKAJ il>.

a s L'(.m-BA*13=sSeeoitrPhlinel g in good condition, P h o n e 4G3-J

iur,e.

HKIiV W A N T E U

810,000,000 C o m p a n y w a n t s m a n to sell • WatkinH H o m o NecoBHltlea in bum-• tnlt Mora t h a n 1B0 used daily. In­

come JS5-J50 weekly, Exper ience Unnecessary, Write. Uept . B D. The

' J . I t . W n t k l n s Co., 1DD-109 PurVy 1 street,, N e w York , N . Y.

13 O a k

T i l C i'*im-tit Select ion of Bedroom," DUIIHK Kooin, I.ivluir Room, Pa r lo r , Ki tchen and I-.ib.rary F u r n i t u r e at l o w e s t j nu iMblu I i l i eC" . O u r u s e d F u r n i t u r e ir, t h o i o i i q h b c leaned a n d tfcllwreil In K<HU\ o rde i . W« also c a n y II full l ine of RiuiinonH lietls a n d ^Tattre'iser, a t ve ry low pricey. l iKht fioin the F a c t o i y to yon . Wuin-nilt Ucflnlsli lng Co., 4B(> Springf ie ld a \e l iue . • ' T37-tI .

jMAin lor KCUCI.I1 lioitM-work. i t i i lgr a \ e n u e .

W A N T t i l i — R e l i a b l e m a n led, u n i t e m m with .small family a s chnuffeur find com ra l m a n abou t n l a m . Nlic-a p a r t m e n t . Addirhs, "Chi'iiffi'iii, c u e , l I I IRAf . l ) .

l i l l l ' i O V J l E M ' W A N T E D

VOUNU mur i i ed Amcrk.vn man want job u.i (aml ly Uiauffclir. Will ing to-wutk. Adilrtu.s Uox lil, earn I I M l ALT>,

W U CARRY comple te l ines S immons b td s , hpringh, m a t t r e s s e s , b a b y c i ibs . trunkH, floor l ino leum, , cotigoleum runs , ri'frlBcnitiii'H, ebaiiH, tables , I ' lnsswiire, ename led w a r e . Money ;.ivliiK pi Ices. F r e e del ivery every-•w'hcit. J . M a n t e l & Bona Pep t . Ktore. 12 Maple s t r ee t . T103-tf

liiirXl, K S J ' A T T : l 'OI t HALE

AM O F F I S I l l N a ' m y proper ty a t 2?. l'Jdffc'muiit road ffir sale. L o t abou t H:(XlU0. " A t t r a c t i v e house, thorough- ' Iv modern In every d e t a i l ; i^riiimilii heautiCiilly p lan ted . M. W. F a l t o u t e .

Sldt'liRhtN o n , The Kevt'latlon Lesson S. Chapter I .

(kintiiuH'il Continuing -In vei'.ifi four, We find

th;tt Jehovali i s accompanied in Hie salutation" l i r s t hy "the r.even . .puits wliii-h are, before His throne." By looking throusirTBe" Coolerwe-learn- who thpso-urc. We find tha t they ar_e uaxooiated with Christ in the execution of the judg­ments o f the boolc. More of the ministry of these mer,aongerG ia in evidence in thia scro l l than of Christ Himself. I t is therefore fit­ting t h a t they should join with Gotl and Christ, in this introductory KreetlnR, and wish, Ri-iice and pcai-c upon t he churches . ItiihiVto lie noted also tha t they are always peon In posi t ions subordinate to Gort and Christ . Tn thisJt'dttie. iliey are before. t h o _ t h r o n e , more liki: e r ea tu res t h a n like a- r reator . In ^1:1 they a r c possessed hy Christ and on vi level with t he stars. , In •1:R they are' said to he seven lamps of firo b u r n i n g hoforc the -throne. In r>:C thov a r e the ho rns and eyes of t he s la in I,ambP and are sent forth into al l t he ear th . In 8:2 the seven t r u m p e t s a rc siven- to them lis lllCY-iitand Jjefojo God. T^n 1GU they a r c sen t forth to pour out ihc vials of wra th .

T h a t annels a re called spirits is shown by PH. t 0 i : 4 ; . H e . 1:7, U. They minis te r now t,o the heirs of salvation. When the Lord comes in judgment they will bo int imate­ly associated with Him, as s ta led in Mt. 13 : :» . 41, 49; 24:;i l ; 25:31; aarceine; with Re, B':6.

I n 1 Ti. 5:21 is a uroupinK simi­lar to th is in Re. 1:4, B.

In th is greetinR under consider­ation, J e sus Christ Also h a s a share . Three of His at t r ibutes arc mentioned. (1) Witness , reminding of Jo . 18:37. (2) First-born fron the dead, rcni indins of Co. 1:15-18. On these two at t r ibutes _se_c Ps . 8!l:5!7..'3f!. ^7. (SI Pr ince , lit i ler or

W A N T TO J l l /Y W A N T TO H U Y F A R M bj- A p r i l ; (,''ve

full par l lc i i l a rs , whe the r s tock, crops, pidiidL-d. AddrcfaH JJOX 7.ri, ( . 'arteret, N . .1.

M ; W p i t o v i D K N t ! ! '

N O T I C

T O W N S H I P

St'OUNtf colored Kirl wishes pnstllon n» cluiiiibi'i'inalil and w.iI(Icis . PH-mo Kunmilt 1571-k. Call a n y t i m e a f t e r 7 p. m.

" i^I tKSSMAKlcn. h i d i n g spa re d . ^ s , wnntH pl» In hcwiiuv, altel at lons, etc , Jiiiijie or ou t . Address Uox 10. c a i e

- l l l i R A L D .

I F yon w a n t j o u r house j u i d windows • e k a n e d , cull Kuinnut Itisj-W, J«tl

C A I U N C F O R FlJI lNAOER hy experl-i-ric??k ni i t i , . cxcollont .service a t a 1 eiiHorittili. l ir l ie. Also Keneriil

.-- J inuafiroik and outdoor work. J o h n iUnreljce. Phono Ji:tE-R. T:i-tf

" T ~ i ~ " T O J ' J , ; T

%. .. FOR R K N T - P . y the year , fund-died lliuiie In Prospec t IT1I1 section. Ad-d i c : s "ILouM-." ea io 1111RALD

' JHSOHLI/A'MliO'Uri

RlJfJS T H O R O U O W L Y 'CI .EAKKD. Called for mid R e t u r n e d S a m e J)ny«

The Suiumlt L x p r r s s Co., Inc . r.a-70 I lol l roud Ave . Tel. S u m m i t 3t.i

T i - L f

LEGAL ADVERTISING 1 M m " pi toYuiKNCi; T o w N s m i * ^ Nolli-i' is hereby r.lvon t h a t the fol-

lowlns local b u d g e t m i d t a x ord inanco were ajipioved by the T o w n s h i p Ciim-

I mltfco or N e w Prov idence Township , Union County, N o w Je raey . on the 2i)th

i d a y of JiLiiuary, y.\i.>. A hearliip; on tin- budge t and t ax

j o l d l n a m e will be he ld in the, Columbia T W O hit -t- ui.furnl.shed loonf-i "tiifiTISihffil. P la tnf ie ld nyetme In - sa id

l i t e h e n e U e " r 111 housekeel-m- or , Townsli lp on t h e filh day of F e b r u a r y ;,i , . . . , l n ( 1 k l t - ' i n i e t t e . l l e a t . 11125, a t K o'clock p. m.. a t wliloli t m e

Stent and^^ K , i , f , un l ' hed I ' h o n e t - h a t - l . n i d pl.ice ' objec t ions to sa id b u d e e t

Not ice i-j hereby ftlven to the lefial v o t e i s o f t i l e H c h o o l U l s t r l r l of t h e Townsh ip of N e w Providence, in the County ot Union, t h a t the annua l meet ing for the election of one mem­ber of t h e B o a r d of Educa t ion will be held a t Columbia School, l ' lalnfleld avi«nue. Berke ley 'Helphtu, N. J. , on

T U E S D A Y , F E B R U A R Y in,' l»2r,, \ a t 0 t o 8 o'clock P .m.

One "Member will be elected 3 yen™ : No Member s will be elected 2 ' y i s i i s ; No Mt-nibors will be elei ted 1 year .

T h e polls will r e m a i n open one hour , and rin much longer a s may be neces-sm-y. to enable, all t h e lc.;nl vo te rs p resen t to c a s t tlueli- ballots.

At sa id mee t ing will be submi t ted tin- ques t ion of vo t ing n t ax for the 'fninvWIfiK purposes : P u r c h a s e ol l a n d for school inuposeii Bu i ld lne a n d repaliinfi- achool

houses . • 5 l.nno.oii C u r r e n t expenses 13,D00.()L) Manua l t r a i n i n g

istics. and courtesy. W e can t each the Chinese the ideal of service, and. ean also be of ; ;rcat ass is tance in t h e field of science. Prof. Car ter made a s t rong plea for mutua l understanding, which "bore a striltinB rc'sernblanco to the ploa' for tolerat ion on both sides made so forcibly..in Summit recent ly by S h e r m a n ItORcrs, the ox-lumber jack, in his address on Labor be ­fore t h e Athenaeum.

JANUARY 27,.1'JZS

the week-end at the homo of M T . and Mrs. Norman Walker .

tort Ms es ol interest

ears tor in Summit -Stores

1

...Mrs. Thomas M. Kibbq spent the wiok-end a t tlic htuun of her sister, i Mrs; Harold S. Footo on Croscont road.

Mr. >and Mrs. William A. Melkle-ham sailed on Saturday, J anua ry 24Hi,> on the S. S. Hoinorie, They will spend two months abroad. . .Mr ._and "Mrs. Wil l iam . Sparlccs

have announced the b i r t h - of a daughte r on . T h u r s d a y , J a n u a r y 22nd.

Miss Mar tha 1*. Bayard left on Monday, J a n u a r y 2Gth, for a week in Buck Hill Fa l l s , l*a.

A meet ing ot the non-par t isan League of Women, Voters -will be

.\heln" on Tuesday, J a n u a r y 27th, at the S h o r t . Hi l ls C l u b - a t a p, m. The discussion on Child Lahor will be cont inued.

Fjd>vard Pen/lerKast, son of Mr. and M-rs. Edward S. II . Pemlergust , of Highland avenue, is recovering from a lipht a t tack of chicken pox.

Blake Lawrence , sot) of Mr. and Mrs, G. F r a n c k l y n Lawrence , spent

For the theft of two slot m a ­chines from the s tores of .Tonewb Dasmagy a n d ' Angolo Verruaio, both in Morris avenue, .Summit, Judge Steih in the -Court; of--Com­mon "Pleas in Elizabeth" F r i d a y sen­tenced Joseph Pasell i , of 140 Jack ­son street , Newark, to not less than two and not more than seven yea r s in the SUite Penitent iary a t T ren ­ton. Tho twot .men Who ' i t was claimed wore with PuselU a t tho

I time of the crime have not been detected. Pasell i .was apprflllentletJ'

|hy means of the license number ot his wife's automobile which ,l\vaa used by himself n.nd ,his two asso­ciates i n ' t h e theft bf' t h o ' s l o t - m a ­chines. Two of the throe men im­plicated in the crime, it was cla im­ed at the trial, went into the s tores and claiming to be detectives took the slot machines out with them on the pretext t h a t they wore gambling devices.

Judge .S te in dec la red ' t ha t he in­tended to treat grand larceny cases with as much severity as tho law will- pos s i l i l y - a i l nw- in - th^ - fu tu re . -Tlte number of crimes of th i s na tu re is by no means diminishing, and Judge Stein feels t h a t i t Is time to show such offenders t h a t he h a s reached the limit of h is patience with them.

Mention tho 'HERALD when buying

3 h

1mm 02D-W. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ tOR B B X T — F i v a ononis, nil "improve­

men t s , gnracB. 44 Morris avenue, ftfmmlt Phono 143-n. M. C. c^v.-,-lc re . ———*±TH»-tt

P L K A H A N T gent lemen, a n d "dinner 3tlfi-J.

ROOM for one , or two next to b a t h ; b i c i k f a s t t a x ord inance It de s l r i d , t ' iiragc. l ' hone An ordinance

the vear PJ2."i. __ '_ Re It Orda ined

F O R l t E N T — R o o m with ba th fur gen- j Commi t t ee of t h e t inman. Phone 172-Yv". ^ | U ^ & h a l l Z

' T T I t A C r J V n ROOM with b a t h ; nrl-, . • 1 « . < i ' " "v , i | . « home n e a r t o w n ; h imul ln . .

house w i th in block. ' Husiness w o m -i.n p re fe r red . A d d i e s s Rox n... CMO

ml f-ix o r d i n e i u o of the. Townsh ip of New P i o v i d i n c e for the y e a r 11)25 m a y lm jireSHnted b y , a n y t a x p a y e r of iiald T o w n . i l i l p . , . . . , , .

i , Local budget of the. T o w n s h i p or .Jt-wi-Rrovldcw*-*',-Cu-unty of Lriiion*_C.uJ' the fiscal yea r 1H2G- .

Tlila budget shal l also eons t i tu t c the r e l a t i n g to t a x e s _for

> J t HitA Li ) .

A ' -" i ; .LR~()ARACF. i Ico .Matleii or i cu Hf£7, Dum-an- l lo i i J

iiiltlillle for s e r v -i l r simp P h o n ^

Corpoiatl t in. - * TM-tf.

b v t h e T o w n s h i p T o w n s h i p of N e w County of Union,

assessed, ra ised by t axa t ion a n d collected for tin- v e a r 1SI2S the miin of Seven T h o u s a n d F igh t H u n d r e d and 'Forty. ' Do l l a r s for the p u i p o - e of mec l lng the appropi la t ions se t for th In"' tlib fol lowing s t a t e m e n t of ri'siiiiiir.i and app'fnpi'latioiis for the flHcal y e a r 102H ; . , KiTriilti:, a t b e g i n n i n g nf fiscal

j ea r 1920 - . . SC.OOn (10 J t lOVENCFK

.Budget Budge t

Surp lus r evenue app rop r i a t ed

otVE-ROOItf a p a u m r a t ; s t eam, he .d a l l I m p r o v e m e n t s : leasonali le l e n t , t'iucpuie M. JacobH, opposite ijt^ I I , i n - [Miscel laneous R e v t n u t

- i ' t U ' F F or fmi'- room sui te furnished Ant ic ipated jj...* him'-el fi ' i itm' Phone Sunuiu t F inncl j iao t a x .. V « - J b . " w.'en 5 and (i P. in. ' W : i - t t ! « ; n . s S rece ip ts l a s

""_' '_ . . - I Pol l t a x — . "s-f'OYi wilii n . l va t e ba th . Con\e i i len t j Tntereat a n d cosLs "" u ' l l - i t l n u Klnrvle ? t 2 ; double $i:i | F h o warden "STioiift -JOT. ' " ' " " ''t'Si'-'f

fo r 19M,

of la2 i

$i,-tin;oo fi.ooo.oo

- t j l t N T d H K l ) ROOM TO I.KT—Tluei> .u lmi tea t o s ta t ion . fV.!i, l\ tr' ! li".V'1M - tend place, or phone lJJJ-Al. 1-J-ti

• H I I \ T ~ Office, new Cl l i / ens I i . bui lding. 10 Maple s t ree t . I Summit . TK-I f

i .[ ' . I N T — OnniRv. individual . . u .u lMf l nveinif n p » r Suiumlt :ive-

u •• n I 'liouo, tC'JT, Duncan Tlooct • i r lVi l 'IIQ-JU _ '" .* "" "— .•

A m m i n t I n b e I ' J t i ' i ed - -b . t . i x v t l u n .

,200.00 Of.0.00 ir.0^,00 GOO.on

10,00.

,200.00

4on.on 175,00 400,00 lo.oo

The tota l amount, t hough t to be nccesi;ary Is . .„ . $ll,„00,no D a t e d th i s the 27th day of J a n u a i y ,

19 if.. . 1 W I L L I A M W O O D R U F F ,

DlstUci Clerk. NOTK :—The t e r m . "eurrmit e x -

iien.se^'' Includes p i ine lpa ls ' . t eae l ie i s ' . ianitoi.s ' and medical iiiKiie<)tor.s' s i l a r -ies, fuel, textbooks, ticnool sunplies, fhigR, (ranHl)ortntion of puplla. tu i t ion of "pupils. n t tnndln i . schools In o ther d i s t r i c t s w i th the consent of the Hoard of E d u c a t i o n . H-hfol l ibraries, t o n i -pensii t lon of the TM«trlot Clerk, of the cus tod ian of the school .nonovs a n d of tr l i f lnt-offUHis, lruant_;___ifiul_, i u su r -aiic^e a.nd t h e . ine ldenta l expenses ' o t the schools .

W o m e n ci t izens twenty-one yearn of ago o r above , by ; Virtue of the N i n e ­t een th A m e n d m e n t of the Unit.-.il S t a t e s Cons t i tu t ion , mnv vote for e v e r v t h l n g piesentect a t this mee t ing .

A m e m b e r of ihe Hoard of TCrtu''M,rm s ' e . l l b e f t le'iMt 21 Mini 's r^r a™", a Htlzi 'ii a n d reMdeiit of the |i«^iio'.l d i s ­tr ict , and sha l l luns? been i;Uch r "Hi 7en and n sident l o r at ]C"»*a\ vear.s immed ia t e ly preceding hi:-, * becomlnfr a nieniber of sueli 7'.'1

a n d shall bo able t o read and •""-!' T h e above election is to !"• i-o-idu

linde.r t h e p rov i s ions of Ch-ni ' '1-P , L,. l'.)22. g o v e r n i n g the lu-cicd'o' be observed in the <'Oiiduet. c1' "-s school e lect ions, whicli provides only official bal lo ts shall 1" i ced , tb.it tho n a m e of no " l u d ' d ' i " f 'LpPGar ution the oTficlal b i ' l ' . t lifiti h o t been duty nomlnate/l pet i t iou or pet i t ions , the -•• r " - i ' " s i r -na tures t o wh ich iJOtlHou-i m u - t amonn t t o a t bsust t. , -i u • T-- An '"• t l t ions , ' iuuat be jifldrnns"'! t " n.'id t i l e d i \ l t h i b e D i s t r i c t C l e C • ; I ' ' S t fli'e d a y s pi lor to t h e day oT i.iiil • '• > -tloii. - T - l t .

ill ea r th ly kings , t h e Chief. The kingship of tho world which Satan offered to J e s u s if H e would shun the c ross w a s obtained by Jesus hy w a y of t h e c ros s .

T h a t is a l l wonderful , bu t John had something- to say about His blessed Lord • and Savior which came n e a r e r than those attr ibutes to h is own hea r t and life. He bad had a pe rsona l experience with this One, and h e burs t ou t in an ascrip­tion of love to H i m : "Unto Him be glory and dominion forever and ever because of w h a t He has been to and done for u s - to and for mo!,. He loved- u s - H e loved, m e ! " J e sus Chris t died in His ,dove for His enemies (lio., 5 :8 -1 ! ) ; , what ittust be HiB love for Hi s friends J;

See Jo . 15.13. i j o ' not only " loved"; but as in the revised ver­sion. He "lovcth," , -p res .n t tense. See Jo . 13 :1 . ,- ' ,

Because Ho loveth, Tie

The Florence Crittenton Mission Work

One of the greates t , char i t ies in this country is the National Florence Cr i t ten ton Mission, wi th its eighty-two .homos—five ol which a r e in New Jersey.

Mr. Cri t tonton 's new found faith meant, devoting his time, ta lents and energies to helping others in trouble and despair. Today, b i s co-workers a r e t ry ing to save t he unfor tunate gir l from herself, p lac ­ing her in a n e w environment, edu­cating her tha t she may he solf-su'pportlng, giving her spi r i tual t ra ining,

t » "

,840,00 8,090.00

i n . KI . - .V—Furn i shed single or <lou-i i ln-i. separ-ltc or together , ci-n-ti >l to. . ( Ion; table board next door 1 i - \ I i \ m g place. llMi

N ' I ' I ' H M i l I E D room and ki tchen for at.;.I u • isekerplng, b a t h connect ing, iff • lb ),t and f.as fu rn i shed ; a d u l t s mil1 i. Terences r equ i r ed ; ? 1 J ; space I,, , - u •••. , Proctor , 41 Boulevard .

Tota l . •sll.S.'in no $11,275 (M) A P P R O P R I A T I O N S

Cene ra l O o v o r n n i o n t : T o w n s h i p O l t l n i s

and legal e x p e n s e AtUci Using a n d

p r i n U T i g . . . . S t a t i o n e r y , p o s i a ^ t

and oftiee suppllt n*« i r »- AudU-lng 4 , I'MoV \Tntc i tb t o iv- lu i ic in t

loan's . . . I'owiiHhro e n g i n e e r Rent ol Vownsjhiii

, tl,,7D0.0O 11,600,00

2CO.O0 BBO.00

B11

i n l

w h o I , " n.

washed (Tt. V. "loosed") lis,.from ! our s ins in- His own blood. He loved us before H e washed! us. He washed u s because H e loved us , not-in_Qijlfir. to_ make its fit to be loved. l i e loosed u s by the wash­ing. Co. 2:13, 14; Ti . 3 :5 ; Ro . 8 :1 . '

T h i s is a l l t r u e of believers, bu t the s t a t e m e n t h e r e is uot meant tor them, for verso six limits it all to Israel only and in tho coming .kingdom. See E x . l!):4-fi. Believ­e r s a re no t re igning now any more t h a n is I s r a e l ; nor are they p r i e s t s for they do not approach

^ ' l o d m tha t capaci ty. Every be­l iever h a s di rec t access to God through our great H igh Priest , J e s u s Chr is t , Who is also scr ip-tu ra l ly tho only P i i e s t existing in t h e p resen t d ispensat ion. .This is the significance of the ren t veil in Mt 27:51 as explained in He. 7: 22-28; f);ll-2fi; 4:14-]f),

Bol ievers may join with John most heart i ly in tho doxology with which verso six closes. Doxology

ready to help and advise

't-.B**pwC,.O*-*..C*.g-?0J**"B"*"—'^"fr1*"*1'

- o w n s h t o e l t e n t 01 \ o v offices \

inn.no ?Mk00p» .

5011,00 100,00

3RO.00 300-tlQ

Boo.oi) 100.00

Pi oservutloH "f Hf'' a n d p rom 11y; , i t„ . . \

M . O I l i n i M and ba th apa r tmen t , *ur-• • t ' l i .d lor hnusekiioplng. Mur i iby ' . ' t n ) , 187 Sprlngfleltl a v e n u e

Ta-t f

' •)(•,• d •«nrag<i lor Automobiles t«M per moiitrt

.., S u m m i t r.vliri'Bs Cnniiiniiy. T n c ,u 76 i inl lroad Ave. ..'^elophono 315

\ • Tl-l-tf

"L'l ' . r .L-^IED ROOMS — Fultnhlo for t iilliti>, twin b u d s ; n e a r b a t h ; no 11 • »!• •- plliK; h " t water , n t c a m I„-iv. m c t r l o l ight, Muvphy PlBU-ra •<! if«rf-'1K^t«'M«'»v*»ii»-.=ii-r'^>.rIE3»!£4

Police . \ . 750 00 F i r e \ . . i s n o o

H e a l t h a n d Chi t r i t l e s -Tlealtb .. !v • 2 ^ 0 ' 0 0

Pour . . . V 4r.O.OO «Lreet» and H l g l i w a j a :

R o a d s . - N< nnn.OO L i g h t s • H?»OJj.O0

Poynnint on B o n d s . . ""-.^ Cont ingencies 2.>0.0ft J Klorl lon expenses . . ;tnn.0ft/ Overlook H o s p i t a l .. .. DOJJff Vi s i t tng N u r s e s '

Associa t ion . . . . ,50.00 Cancel la t ion of T n v c i ^JOO.OO Soltlici's' M e m o r i u l -

12G.00

500.00 100 00

asn.oo a 45.0,00

2.BO0.0O 2,000,00 1,500.01)

200,00 150,00 S0.0O

400.00 50.00

. ?11.250 00 S1J.275 00 hull t a k e uffcrt a s

Tota l -Ti l l" ordllinircf!

p r m l d o d ta^hT „ u o r , r j B S

Tow m i l Ip t*lerlt.

T o w n s h i p Chalrm;ui . 1ft T39, F40S-

o.^««^^>•.T»*^ll"*«^»»ff"*"e"9 i. 'ffl**fi"o ,

«-#.1».*B«e«»~«T.fl-«i*O»«-'0'-»"»«O«ft"*-*O"6«»«0-B**»«4»ft«»' , .« .^ n v»t -k-» ' -^*9* '»"e*4»9»«* f

y. ismess. u i rec 14**^*"*^ •jn^ia^iinj^^^! BXI 41 »o»*ft iaT-3*****a'^' ^^ * • • * " » " -«?* *' t 'O ' -B '^ 'H Wiiauft gifl' {l»CiiB"a"4^» aiHLiWt^giii. j Mgi.flr.1 T^n^^a-^fr1 ai*"gM»"g"a"*'*>,-fti****^**fr"* -$—fr

Howell Bros. Tel . 1283

Summit, W. J. 12 Sluplc St,

YOU SPEND MONEY T o h a v e y o u r c lothes clefmed,

pressed and repaired.

Let A . C. BAKER do it. :t!3 Springfield A > P . Te l

her omctinies the first s l ie

h a s ' ever had, giving her a new view poin t of life, then sending her , out in the .world with the moral courage she needs, knowing

l t a t n ' t h a t the Florence Crittenton Mis­sion"" is mother ing her, a lways st'andin tier.

The gir ts who are all u n d e r e ighteen , y t a r a or_ascy a r e u n d e r careful supervision, have whole­some food, pure air, and nfter be­ing proper ly t aught all phases of farm life, are well fitted for posi-l ions where they can be protected and golf-supporting.

Ivakota F a r m s is five years old. There are. 340 acres, and i t now boasts of five buildings with a household of seventy-five, some­times a hundred girls, all so g ra t e ­ful to the contr ibutors who arc taking an in te res t in them, t ry ing when t l u y can to show their g ra t i ­tude by living up to the h igher pr inciples , and beiirg-inspireit by pride to make good. For several years a new b ranch of the work is the financing of the Travellers* Aid trom Atlant ic Highlands to tie. City, us ing their home at Ocean Grove as the i r heailquarlers.

H u n d r e d s of girls and women were given shel ter , food and cloth­ing. Many young j;lils who van away from home after quar re l s with pa ren t s , were re turned to their mothe r s , herare serluuf. troubles overlook them. There is nlwavs an Aid al Asbury P a r k sta­tion to r e n d e r a service for girls and women.

The, F lorence Crittenton Mission has now a Farm—called Ivakota— where g i r l s who have received a cour t sentence, a re sent for t he i r term of commitment . They a re not under lock and key—hut. are t augh t to do al l the farm work, r a i s ing vi uetablcs , canning and prese rv­ing.

At All Souls ' Forum on Sunday if temoon Professor Thomas 1'".

Car ter , of.; the Depar tment of Chinese at" Columbia University, spoke to a deeply interested audi­ence on "China 's Contribution to World Cul ture ."

" I Khali," «aid I ' I O C Carter , " ta lk to you this afternoon about Chin i from a viewpoint not, usual ly taken, namely t h a t of 1he impact of ihe Fas t upon the West, and shall a t ­t empt to show you what China has (tone for Us in the past, and what China may do for us in the future."

Then in a n interest ing and com­prehensive fashion Prof. Carter t r aced t h e his tory of China from about 3.000 B.C. to the present t ime, mak ing bri l l iant comparisons between impor tant dynast ies , and periods of development of tliougbt, and-the_ v;oiCJiatrien_ts_ and EfeiloFo-phies of contemporaneous YWest-c m civilizations. /

.s t

• 4 * - * • * - * >

1IS5MI

The H E R A L D ' S ue\V telephone

nurQSer¥rj!)P=afiuTl'D0T

Banker ,

B a n k i n g i n a l l i t s - l i f W h e s

F b r c i g n . " E x c h a n g e •' ;V; "4",',

• • , ; ' • ' • " S t e a m s h i p A g e n t s ^ t ^ J S s t a t e a n d I r ^ u r a r i c e

24 M a p l e ' S t Tel . Summit M i l

The Summit House Chas . H.-Wmif, Prop.

Restaumiirand Lunch Room

- 6 1 U n i o a . P l , P h o n e 3 8

ac Kae's B A K T J E T l S H O P

1007c San i t a ry Methods are follow­ed in thifi shop by courteous and

quick service Barbers 43 Union P lace « p p . »-, I«. & W.

Telephone 23A-.T

ing

Community Press

utiiEul Mid. a_t'- • 2J_town9

Famous ^ T -Res taure f t t—

Pou l t ry Dinner , &1.00 ' 'ScT-ve3=every",nlBm=rD.-3U" UTS' = ~

l t e f n i l a r Tjuncheon; COe ^ . 11.30 Jo 2 p . m .

Also A L a Carte

8 5 U n i o n "PL T e l . 1764

Custom Tailor

I'mninff^Griipps Severe p run ing of grape vines

| should be done i n early spring, he-fore t he re is a n y movement o l sap . I t is best done as soon as t he cold weather h a s passed, say, about the first half of March. Apple and other frui t t r ees may ho t r immed moderate ly a lmost any time, bu t it. is best to not tr im severely from the t ime tha t sap s ta r t s in the spr ing unt i l the trees are in full leaf. March t r imming would be a grea t deal bet ter than la ter t r im­ming.

An i l lus t ra t ion of th is i s ' Prol". Car ter ' s s t a tement tha t the dark ages in China came a t about t he same t ime as in the res t of the world , . and tha t ' "Buddhism was spreading in China and J a p a n at the t ime Christ ianity was reaching F.ngland. Dur ing the dynasty con­temporary with Charlemagne China produced Its greatest lyric poetry and its greatest a r t . This poetry and this art we a r e just lie-ginning t.p aciiuiie.

China 's g rea tes t contribution^, (o the world have been silk, paper , pr in t ing , sun-powder and tho eom-

Atlan- 11KU-';- T ' U ! history of silk and pr iut-' ing as given in detai l by Prof. Car te r was par t icular ly in teres t ­ing. . .

The cl imax of China's greatness came dur ing tho Crusades, but gun-powder destroyed feudalism a n d gave the individual hla first chance ; pape r aiid p r in t ing spread education, and the ' compass dis­covered America and broadened the World's horizon.

T h e n - C h i n a went to s l eep*and w a s found in th is condition by-Europe who had been progress ing in tnc m e a n t i m e ; but even in this s t a t e w e acquired from t h e F a s t porcela in (china) and some oE the finer types of paper l ike t he so-called " Ind i a " paper. China came to be considered a place for ox-oloitat ion. Opium came fiom Kurnpe, arid many o ther thiuits

i wore b r o u g h t in front the West . W h a t the West failed to recognize was t h a t it had anything to loarn.

However , with the world upheav­a l ' in 1914, came the realizat ion t h a t t h e r e was something left for u s to learn , and we a r e sti l l real iz­ing it .

T h e virility- of t h e Chinese life anil phi losophy did not stop while China, was asleep. China can teach u s to le rance , which has a lways hoen que of its marked charac tor -

prevalent among mayiy outsiders that

Summit is a city.for millionaires only,

is unfounded. We are quoting lots on

the North Side of town for $1,000 and

ul>. Surely this is not high priced to­

day for suburban property with all im>

provements.

JOBS~jgEcff-$CHMiDT <§• Realtors

_ S l ' . 3 I n i o n Placo__ O p p o s i t e S t a t i o n

„ g . -«<• p+*e**t> » e - * e—$

I i u * Hsiness uire

& »<*-• 41 • B.-to.«*• H i - t > - * - * » « C H - 1 > - ^ * * 0 " * - - ^ . * & * * « « « H f r ^ . t V U H f H " f t • ifl• • tWpt.|H-ft"OMQ«AFTS>*4»a»«o()uaMfli><MH6«1l|H£«fi

W m . G. M-itehell F . )>. Hicks

Tol.

Paint Shop 4 4 4 S p r i n g f i e l d A v e .

S u m m i t 12S5 Summit , H. 3,

Dressmaking^ all ki^«Ja '

eiJBTAljNS i iud- IHtAPl i lHUS tiy Hay or- Taken Home

P R I C E S MODERATE

The .Misses Hellquist 7 H e n r y Street Phone 937-JH

A. Tedesco L a d i e s ' a n d G e n t s '

T a i l o r a n d F u r r i e r

4,'t!> SriUNUVIEIiD'AVENlIK r i i o n e l!lfl-.J Summit , H.

v .

l l i % .

occupies t he prominent place above whtfTTin-ayFr-Ticcnrptes -belrnT.-This-doxology is two-rold; the r one in •*-5-H-4s=4'Iita*=fol,lj- tha -one - ia-5iJ2-Is1 four-fold; tho ono in 7:12 is seven-fold; t h u s growing a s the story progresses . w-_ '

T h e h e a r t s of lSflic'vers m a y join | also wi th J o h n ' s in Jhat mcan ine -f :«l-"AmenA- How-often i s - i t - sa id-in a formal thought less w a y ! I t means " let it be so." Cod V i l l le t al l we have been thinking about in th i s s tudy "be s o / ' May we, too', May we he 'o M"d not h inder

i the cause of Him to Whom a l l glory •and dominion, belongs, a n d ' Who will wash whi*° '» H ' I *>«-'n W H evory s inner v i m r e m • to llim fn • f a i th - - "God so l i nu l tho w m l d 1

t h a t >te gnve U P H«LF br> *oTt*-n I U L „ . , . Son. - % a t • wnwo-sor h-lh v i h in j - •"-*"

| : i t im ;fi l isuld"'rj ' i t perl"h hpi \m\v,

" " n -GJUPUf iOiRb" \ -» ;V "i -----l-'SS-*-,=l?'-=.-T ; i -

Eor.™Sale.

irenn Aulo Top Builder

3 1 C h e s t n u t A v e : P h o n e 3 7 5 - M

S U M M I T , N . J .

house on North side, con-venient to trolley.

TO CASH OTVEic

Fo r part iculars , see

- -J. RB White Heal Estate Specialist-13 FRAN RUN PLACK

Ler 31eat, Toul t ry , TpBotabk-s,* F r u i t

S5B S r E l K C F I K L B ATBNUE

Telephone- 390

F6 Balii -^Siiocessor tr. Thomas Bal rd

Painters & Decorators 299 3I0KR1S AVENUE _•

Phono 1081rJ Suminir, H.

Public Stenographer Mimeograph Work a Special ty

Typewri te rs F o r l l e u t Pr ices Reasonable

L. Ethel. Stcyker 25 M a p l e S t . P h o n e 1250

1 1 - S u i i u n i l . N .

Jeweler- and Optician

375 SPJHNGHEI-D-AYE. ' _

Telephone 42-.I Summit, K. J .

OOKS HERBERT S. FISH| 424 SPRINfiFIFLn AV|

i l>i,;. ^ U t ^ ^ i l K l - R H C N V

Sch^ir.fzer's 5 - 10 - 25cj D e p t : S t o r e

305 HpriugtyclJL ' j t i tvTel . 1SC-1 • ' F H l M l n e o f '• H • DRY GOODS—TOYS

IIOUSEFTJRNISHINGS

Mrs. W« Mitchell Employment Agency

M BAILHOAD AVB.

Telephone 77-K Summit , H. «7.

Blue Lantern

v..

\ nnlih' ! Mii'-oillt

is p » ' » ' l £ t t i A f ^ ; ^ . T S r * ^ S F W ^ : « f J « f t 'I""™ W"v I

.Liu tonl f'.i.ii'irifiuhl'Ave. U'lii'j1. _ ' . l imii i i i t , N , X,

IjiincliiMin - tlk'iii ' iMa ' lei : »I>inner Orntifce V^ti> ?*•»- Piis-iies

>; !>3

IT - -r>fc m. *s

J , v ^ u # « * , i a » „