VOL. A X XVI. T H E CHURCHES. . First Presbyterian. Sunday morning—Preaching by thi pastor Rev. J. B. Carry. Subject: "The Mysteries of God I nees'MThn 8:16. Sunday 8chool at 10 o'clock. Prayer meeting Friday Night, 7 30. Second P r e s b y t e r i a n . Sunday morning—Preaching by Ib pastor, Rev. Fredeiick Schweitzer. Sunday School at 10 o'clock. Communion—The sacrament of thi Lord's Supper will be celebrated Sun day, October 24, at 11 A. M. P-epaiatory service will be held Friday evenin October 22 at 8 P. M. after which th session will meet to receive new members.
CBANBTJBY, MIDDLESEX CQUNTY, N . J., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1920. T h e Birthday P a r t y . 'Very successful was the Birthda Party given on Thursday evening b the Women's Missionary Societies of thi Second Church The invitations wer generally accepted,, and a good crow was present. The tables were set t suggest the months of the year, am were very attractive, guests being.sup posed to sit at the table represents the month of their birth. The suppei was excellent, and was greatly relia'bei During the serving entertainment wai given. Piano solos by Miss Mario -Hugbes-and-MissLillie Farr,. recita tions with musical accompaniment by Miss Mary Spaulding, Mrs. Martin Welsh, accompanist; reading by Mrs Wm N. Hughes, solos by Mrs. John Stonaker. All of these were very good, and at the close Rev. Frederick Schweitzer made a neat speech About a buDdred dollar!) was realized.
F o r Whom Shall I Vote. In the current issue of The Outlook eight leading American novelistsanBwe the question, "For Whom Shall I Vote' and among them is the following nxce lent article by Mary Roberts Hicebar '•I shall cast my first vote in Novem ber and that vote will be for th6 publican party. ' Had I cast my fire vote ten years ago, it would also.huv been Republican, but with this differ ence—that then it would have been mainly the result of heredity sod en vironment. Now my decision is, to b honest, a compound of discontent witb present conditions, resentment.at tb negation by Woodrow Wilson of the representative form of government and hope
"Two of these fundamental impulse are negative I shall vote against the Democratic party. One is positive, want the Republican party to be given a chance. Although I am aware tha to become heir to the past eight years, Sehultz memorial M. E. to come back to the changed social nnd Sunday'morning—Preaching by th economic conditions that face'' th Honor Roll. pastor, Rev. L. E. Lennox. country and the world, to inherit, no The following pupils.of the Cranbury only blunders and debts that were Sunday School at 10 o'clock. Public School were on the honor rol avoidable but also the aftermath of an unavoidable war, is to come into powe Second Church C. E. Society. during the month of September: Eighth Grade—Karl Puerschner, Irv under the worst possible conditions The C. E. Society of the Second Not at ODce can administrative blunders Church will meet in chapel next Sun ing Bennett, Edward Scbnel). be remedied. Debts incurred cannot he 8eventh Grade—James Davison. _day_evening at 6*30 o'clock. canceled It will take time to rsstore Subject—Christian principles ib poll "' "Sixth ~Gra3e"—Alice" Brown—Donald our standing-with-the =world and-ituwil take effort and good faith to restore the Campbell, Bertha Oehler. tics. Leader—Walter J. Griggs. confidence of our people in th Fifth Grade—AnnaSchnell, Florenc Government. Woman's Club. Martin, Thomas Dolan, Sylvia Johnson "I have spoken first of my persona The Woman's Club of Cranbury wil Fourth Grade—John Barlow, Donald meet next Wednesday in the home of Owens, Gladys Petty, Virginia Pullen discontent .with present conditions That includes several things. Our form Mrs. H. N. Scott. Subject, ' Preparing "Third Grade—Marion Clayton, Hilda of government is founded on representa ourselves for Election Organization Hickey, Harold Hagerty, Josephin tion in good faith, yet there has been i Platforms. Stryker, Mount Hulick, Harvey Hut- consistent refusal on the part of thi Executive to recognize the will of thi cbinson. Play T o B e Given people, through their accredited repre Second Grade—Alice Btsrcalow, Bell sentalives. Our only check on the exe The C. E Society of the Second cutive office is through our Natioua Church will give a play entitled " Th Ryskind, Elizabeth Ellis, Mazie Cullen legislative bodies, and their proper lee Evelyn Oehler, Winifred White. Elopement of Ellen" on Wednesday ognition is essential. The Republican -».-•-• "November 17th. nominee has had his training iu ih< T h e Stitch a n d Chatter National Legislature, is fully awars o Supper a n d Bazaar. Change iu Teachers. their importance as representing tlie This is au annual event, and the will of the people, and of their power The School Board baa eDgaged Mrs F. A. Brown to take the place of Mi=.-: ladies of the Second Church have be and authority. But my personal dis content goes further. Not only has* thi Bertha Applegate, resigned, for the rt come famous for serving a fine supper political morale of the Nation been up gular work of the school, and Mips Iuu and also preparing for sale numerous set by the unseemly bickering of those Puerschner to take charge of the music articles of the kind suitable for home in high place, but the social and ecoi omic Morale is from the top dowr ine and for holiday gifts. department. On Thursday evening, December 2d Quarreling above-stairs meana quarrying below; waste aud extravagance nit Stitch a n d C h a t t e r Club. they will have the best ever in the way contagious. Inefficiency and poor manThe Stitch and Chatter Club will meet of a good supper so they will expect agement at the head of a business menn next Thursday afternoon, October 21ft large crowd, and the bazaar will be up the same thing all through. at the home of Miss Ethel Snedeker. Al to date in every respect. Following "But, granting that war was an err.members who can attend please notify are the names of the several committees ergency for which we were unprepared Mrs. Henry Conover, ('phone 483) who General Bazaar Committee—Mrs. M and that the chaos of admiuistratiot will arrange for the automobiles. A. Rue, chairman—Mrs. C. R. Wicoff, has its excuses, there are other thii g.not BO easily explained. To be hontst Mrs. E. S. Barclay, Mrs, Warren Hutton I believe that the Democratic partv Sunday School Anniversary. The Sunday schools of Cranbury will Mrs Henry Conover, Mrs, .Calvin came into power with two fixed ideas hold their annual Anniversary Service Stults, Mrs. Charles Walters, Mrs The first was not an unnatural one—to remain in power. But the second ont ~i5"fhTSecou"d""Pfeabj"teriaTrChTirch"Suu- .Edward Simonson. Tequires-explaining^—The-developmeutAdvertising—Mrs. F. Schweitzer, day afternoon, October 17ch at 2 30 of the party was from the masses aud o'clock. The speaker will be J. Duncan chairman—Mrs. G. W Burroughs, Miss be mass is always Socialistic until it acquires property. Therefore, wealth 8parth, Ph.D., Professor of English Bessie Bergen. Sell Supper Tickets—E. S. Barclay. was a crime, not in the concrete but Literature, Princeton University. The party came into Supper Committee—Mrs. Calvin the abstract Mrs. Southard Mather of Princeton power with a practical denial of class, Stults, chairman—Mrs. AnnaSpaulding and therefore at once awoke class "conwill sing two solos. Mrs. Samuel Dey, Mra. Augustus Con- sciousness. It went further, and iuFamily P a r t y . over, Mrs. Henry Conover, Mrs. Wm. stituted class taxation, thus ignoring Mr. and Mrs. Disbrow Bergen gave a Hughes, Mrs. Willis Applegate, Mrs. the fundamental fact thatTwtfat is"giveu .o a man free is without value. grand Christmas dinner on Saturdav Frank Davis, Mies Marie Groves, Mrs. "In the same way it denied wealth, for the members of the Bergen famil>. Id ward Walker, Mrs Harvey Scott, That is it was the annual feast, but Mrs. Richard Hagerty, Mrs. Edward ,t denied achievement, and as it espou=d lost causes it espoused mediocrity. given at this time when the weather'is Simonson, Mrs. Raymond Reed, Mrs. It had forgotten that Jefferson was an good and traveling pleasant. About meat Laird, Mrs. Howard Wilson, ristocrat, a gentleman and a scholai thirty were present and a merry time Mrs. Clarence Grove'r, Mrs. Disbrow and remembers only that he wore no Bergen, Mrs Joseph Owens, Mrs. John frills on his shirt, was enjoyed,
HIGHTSTOWN Mr. and Mrs Wilton Lanning o Jersey City spent the week-end wit Mr. and Mrs. Walter McDougall. Mrs. W. A Robbins spent the week end in New York. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wolfe and Mr and Mrs HolmeePellett'ofBordentown spent Sunday at Plainsboro witb Mr. and Mrs. A R. Dey. Mr. and Mrs. Willard Peterson spen Tuesday in Trenton. While threshing last week at the home of William Grover, Elwood Pick efirig "caught his~arm~in tho~boltiffg-a~ir( btoke it in two places. Mr. and Mrs. Charles R Field spent Tuesday at Manafquan Beach. Mrs John L Applegate was a week d guest of her son and wife, John Applegate, Jr. MrB. Peter Johnson has returned to her home after spendiig three weeks with her daughter, Mrs. Elmer Pullen of Harriman' Pa Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph Heidinger atended the Heidinger-Newman weddiDg at Brooklyn on Suuday. Steinbach_Company's Opening. The first Fall Opening in the enlarged Steinbacb Store, Ashury Park, is an event planned to biing economies to every home. The range of savings extends to the wants of every member o the family and to the home itself. In other words, the economies run the whole, gamut of human needs Jrom apparel to furnishings. Prices at Steinbach's have been getting lower and lower as alert buyers are constantly taking every advantage o price-breaks but for this sale they will be reduced to a point where it will tak he rest, of the country a long while to catch up No matter what the trer.d of the market many months will elapse before clothiug, furuiture, etc. leach the low levels established for this sale Saturday, October 16>b. to Saturduj ;he 23rd. are the days Steinbachs havt' set aside for winning new friends through the Opening Sale. If you are trying to obtain the maximum purchasing power for jour dollar you'll check up your needs with the long list of ad' vertised articles.
Republican Candidate
NO. 15
M- 1 1 M M-I-I •l"M"l"M"M-H-m.M.fcM-|.M'M-l"H'iM-M"t-M"M-I- M"M
The First National Bank, of Cranbnry, N. J . Aims to be abreast of the times and still be conservative. It merits your confidence and invites your business whether you are a depositor 6v a borrower: ' FOUR PER CENT. Interest Paid in Savings Department. Accounts Opened by Mail;
»,+.».»,
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Five Thousand Dollars _ _ Horjthjrf speciaLma_ttresse_s ___ for this sale
: COTTON AND FELT MATTRESSES Our special sale prices are simply wonderful. We did not think it could be done. A big contract did the business. Best Royal all" FELT, full size, royal edge, magnificent ticks, value $38.00. Our sale price $28.00. Wonderful cotton FELTS, full size,.royal edge, art ticks sold often for as much as $32.00. Our sale price $20.00. Almost unbelievably good all cotton, full size, art ticks, should sell for not less than $25.00. Our sale price $16.00. Another, pretty nearly as good, for this sale $15.00, just a few of them. ;A few.B. & G. grade husk and cotton goods at the ' before the war price," $8.75. Soft top and bottom wood fiber filling, fair ticks full size, should sell for $11.00. Our price while they last, $7.65. _, A large lot of the best of these are in stock, samples of all. We will take orders"only as long as this contract lasts. For cash-only, delivered at your door. Absolute satisfaction guaranteed or money back. They are going to go with a rush, and it is up to you to get in line. Sale starts Saturday, June 5th. To be withdrawn •'. •' without notice. Better telephone about them.
Jo S. Rogers & Son, Hightstown, N
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YOUNG WOMEN EARN-WHILE--YOU-LEARN VOTE FOR
Elmer E. Wyckoff
Silvers, Mra. Clarence Hagerty, Mrs "Of the second reason for my personal Miss Applegate To Leave Town. John Bennett, Mrs. Edward Grove. For Sheriff. discontent I have stated the fact, and Miss-Bertha- Applegate-has resigned Fancy-Work-Booth—Mrs.-E.-S.-Bar- hat ia enough. Our President is our Who stands for Honest Government her position in Cranbury School, resig- clay, chairman—Mrs. Charles Walters, President still, andean ilFman/ He~is" and Economy in County Affairs a great man, also, greater than we nation to take~~eftect;—in~accordance Mrs. Ella StuHs,~Mrs. - Russell 8ilvers,- Know, ~"'but~not so great that he, or any Justice and square deal to all people with contract, in one month. Mrs. G. B. Mershon, Mrs. Milton Ber- ither man can carry us, Atlas-fasion, Paid for by Elmer E. Wyckoff. She will take up her new work in ;en, Miss Adelaide Tantutn. in hiB Bhoulders. Our President is at once our servant; he must have both the Lincoln School, New Brunswick, as Children's Booth—Mrs. Raymond trength and the ability to compromise a teacher of music Wicoff chairman—MrB. Warren Hutton will but also submission. He must place We regret losing her here, but the Flower Booth—Mrs. E. C. Wilson, hia country before his party and God in good wishes of the community will go hairman—Miss Clafiin, Miss Stella La- his Cabinet. Baw. with her to her new field of labor. "Hope. I hope for better things. If Produce Booth—Mrs. David Griggs, Next Monday evening, October 18th, hairman—David Griggs, Mr. and Mrs. ;he Republican party fail to make that tope reality. I shall still hope for out at 8- o'clock, Miss Frances B. Cropsey Carl Below. Many an exposed film has f-that failure will some day come a new will open the Dancing Club in Odd Candy Booth—Miss Mary Hughes, party, not a Socialist one, nor a lost been ruined by keeping'it hairman—Miss Mary Spaulding, Mrs. Fellows Hall. ThiB will be composed cause party with the "lunatic fringe," Frederick Schweitzer, Mrs. Carleton around the house too longas Theodore Roosevelt called it, 'rushmostly of married couples who are glad ampbell. ing to join its ranks; but a fine, upafter it was used. of the opportunity to receive instructions Package Booth—Miss Imlay O'Neil, itanding,middIe-of-the-road-in-the-Bunin dancing in their home town. On hairman—Miss Edna Walker, MrB. ight party. But I believe that the RtWrap your films carefullyThursday evening the Younger Set will Martin Welsh. ublican party will endeavor to be that put your name on the package meet, and Thursday afternoon the Ice Cream Tickets—O. Raymond party. It has a majority of the thought in PRINT letters, preferably and responsibility in its ranks. It has Children's Class. -Miss Cropsey has Wicoff. een able to sit off during eight years of and let our experts get the lately come among, us her classes hereIce Cream—Mrs. Ernest Stults, chairapid social changing and see, like all best negatives possible from tofore having been in cities and larger man—Mrs. Charles Farr, Mrs. Farr mlookers, most of the game. It inChamberlin, Miss Bessie Bergen, Miea towns, but aB her family is here she Dorothy your exposures. Huttou, Mies Ethel Snedeker ends to be a fair-deal party, and by .hat I mean that it will not recognize will conduct classes in the town if the General Helpers and Checking Room tither the autocracy of mass or the auBut do it NOW and don't people show their appreciation. —M. A. Rue, ohairman—W. H. Gordon, ocracy of class. It will remember that risk the light striking your Charles GroveB, Earl Wilson, Samuel 10 one class can keep a party in power films. Dey, Warren Hutton. >t return it to power-tjiot labor or The members of the Social Club are Associate Members for General As- tankers, women or secretforganizationB requested to meet at the home of J. B. ietance—Mrs. Lewis S. Chamberlio, ir chifrches or armies; but that the balPerrine Saturday evening, October 16tb hairman—Mis. Anna-M. GroveB, Mrs mce of power lies in some ninety milat 8 P. M. for the purpose of holding a Lemuel Stults, Mrs. Isaiah Barclay, ons of people, unorganized, inarticuMrs. Peter Hagerty, Mrs. John LaBaw late save at the polls, and asking only business meeting. Mrs. Benjamin Van Dyke, Miss Anna [or the right, under honest conditions oJabor, to achieve, and to aspire." WALTER H HAVENS, Pres. Schock. TRENTON, N. J .
Don't Hold Your Films Send Them In
STOLLS
20-22 E. State St.
__i [
RIDER COLLEGE has several splendid openings for girl readers of this paper to earn their board while obtaining BUSINESS or SECRETARIAL TRAINING. TEe-work is light and pleasant. Number of Places limited. Write at once for particulars. Address Employment Manager,
— RIDER-COLLEGE, TRENTON, N. J._
With a SmileThat's the way we band back money any time a man would rather have it than the merchandise he bought. ~ We don't believe in a double standard. The store that took your money with a smile ought to hand it back the same way. Suits and Overcoats, for both Men and Boys, that are most appealing in both style'and price. Sweaters, sweaters and more sweatere in all styles and shades, $1 49 to $13 50.
DANIEL BLOCK CLOTHING CO., G WASHINGTON M A R K E T BUILDING, 107-109 S. Broad St.,
TRENTON, I?. J .
§>
THE CRANBURY PRESS.
RED REGIME ON BRINK OF RUIN
T-0
ANDREW OF GREECE. Probable Successor to the Greek ' Monarchy.
U. S. POPULATION IS 1 0 W 1 G 8
Famine Threatens Population of Russia and Disorders Reported Among Troops.
Rate of Increase in Continental America During Past Ten
OUTBREAKS
IN SIBERIA.
DRIFT GROWS FROM FARM.
Wrangel'a South Russia Drive Continues— Poles Rout Northern Armies. Subjects of France Given-Aid , in Getting to Native Land.
Director Rogers Attributes Large Falling Off in Rate of Increase to Almost Complete Cessation of .Immigration!
Paris.—In comment upon the successes of the Poles and General Wrangel against the Russian Soviet troops, the opinion was expressed by the French foreign office that the'situation of the Soviet government has nev> er been so precarious as at present The Soviet authorities, it was declared, have never been as ready as now to make "concessions," "as "wasshown by their present eagerness to fulfill the agreement entered into at Copenhagen between the French coverntnent and the Moscow government for the repatriation of French citizens from Russia. Previously great reluctance had been displayed by the Moscow officials to carry out the undertaking. The French government, while the Polish drive was at the height of Its success, however, Informed Moscow that It would take such measures as it deemed necessary "If'oTf French~sub-' Jects were not permitted to leave Russia before October 1. Several hundred of these reached Paris on a special train, and 300 more crossed the . Finnish -frontier.--.-— ,-_^_^ Advices also have reached the foreign office that General Wrangel's advance 'n South Russia Is continuing, nnd that the rout of the northern Soviet armies facing the Poles has been complete. In Interior Russia the foreign office advices showed, it was said, that the situation was desperate owing to the threatened famine.- which it was predicted would make the two previous lean winters seem to have been seasons of abundance by comparison. Edgar W. Nye, a former officer of the American Expeditionary Force, who holds the title of general in the Wrangel army, will leave Paris next week to join his command in southern Russia.
Washington.—The population o f Continental United States is 105,683,108, it was announced at. the Census Bureau. The figures are subject to correction, but any revision will leave them substantially the same, possibly o • little'higher, according to .Sum L. Rogers, director of the bureau. Although it was generally believed several months ago that Uncle Sam boasted of 110,000.090 nieces and nephews. It became apparent with the tabulation of the first figures that this estimate was some 5,000,000 too high. During the past ten years the rate of Increase, it was stated, has been 14.0 per cent, as- compared with 21 per cent during the preceding decade. "The large falling off in the rate of Increase is due mainly to an almost complete cessation of immigration during the past five years," said Mr. Rogers. "In some- degree It is due also to the influenza epidemic and casualties in the world war." The 1010 census showed 53.7 per cent of the entire population rural. This represents a loss of 5.6 per cent
Drive Reds Across Rivers. Warsaw.—The advance guard of the northern group of Polish armies pursuing the Russian Soviet forces crossed the Losha and Niemen rivers Sunday, says the official statement on fight operations. "A detachment of Posnanlans attacked Neswlsh (southeast of Novogro^ dek) and KJeck (south of Neswlsh)," the statement adds. "A Lithuanian armored train which had bombarded our positions on the Ulla river, despite the armistice, was almost captured. "Prince Sapiha (Polish foreign minister)' has left Warsaw for Riga, where he will remain several days for the purpose of acquainting himself with the trend of the Russo-Pollsh peace negotiations." Revolts In North Russia. . London.—Further reports of disorganization and revolt In Soviet Russia have been secured by Reuters, Limited, from "a reliable person who has just crossed the frontier into Finland." Reuters' informant says the Red army Is In a state of disorganization, that the harvest Is exceptionally bad, and that revolts have broken out In Siberia, Tcmbov and near Samara. There is great unrest among the workmen. The Bolsheviki are very anxious about General Wrangel's successes in the south, and the latest call of Leon Trotzky. Bolsheviki minister of war, Is for "the liquidatio- of the southern front before winter." The Bolsheviki, says the advices, realize that this, winter will be the hardest they have experienced, and _that it-is_donbtfnl whether it will p;ass calmly. Their leaders are very anxious about the whole situation. Ck>ntlnued~retlfement" of~tfi Bians in the region sonthwest of Minsk, where the Poles have been rapidly driving eastward. Is reported In Monday's Soviet official statement from Moscow,-received by wireless.
There have been rumors that Kin? Alexander of Greece was contemplating abdication. If he does, his successor probably will be his brother. Prince Andrew. '
FLYING EXHIBITION
BANDIT GETS HEAVY SENTENCE. Ringleader of Portland Bank Robbers Quickly Convicted. Hartford.—Thomas Marrp, alias Morro, ringleader of the New York bandits who robbed the Portland National Bank of $12,556 on "August 21, was sentenced to not less than twenty end not more than twenty-eight tears In State prison by Judge Burpee at Middletown, Conn. Marro was the .first of the gang arrested, being captured in West 110th Street New Xork city.
Dr. Matt! Helonlus Seppala of Helslngfors Is prohibition commissioner ol Kinitind. He came to America to attend the fifteenth annual congress nguinst alcoholism In Washington.
OFFENSE IN IRELAND Failure to Apprehend Perpetra« tors Furnishes Motive for Reprisals, Government Says.
I*
i:
I:
WORLD N*WS IN CONDENSED FORM
Porto Kico Hawaii . .-.7~...:.-.— Alaska Panama Canal Zone Virgin Islands Guam Samoa (American).. Military and Naval Philippine Islands
1920 1919 1,297.772 1.118,012 255,912" 191,909 64,356 62.810 27.086 9,000 6,100 8,056 65.608 7,63M26
was held for $150,000 ransom after he had been kidnapped from Puebla, Mexico, will return from Mexico soon. VIENNA.—A plebiscite is to be taken in Klagenfurt, the chief city of the former Duchy of Carinthia, in order to determine whether it is to belong to Austria or Jugo-Slavla. ATLANTA, GA.—Complete unofficial returns by the Atlanta Constitution showed that Thomas W. Hardwick, former United States Senator, had been nominated for Governor of Georgia in the Democratic primary. LONDON.—Pussyfoot (W. E.) Johnson, American prohibition propagandist will proceed with his "dry" campaign in England despite .the breaking up of two recent meetings. NEW YORK.—,Royal S. Copeland, Commissioner of Health for New York City, issued a call on health authorities of all cities of population exceeding 200,000 to take part in a national conference to devise ways and means for meeting the housing situation. , ROME.—King Victor Emmanuel of Italy has. cancelled the aesthetic college education of his son, and has ordered hlm-to learn a useful trade.
Government to Build on Old St. John's Chapel Site. New York.—Plans calling for the erection of the largest branch post office in the United States on the site ,of old St. John's Chapel in Varick street were approved when agents of the Federal government completed a transaction involving a lease calling for an aggregate rental of $7,000,000. The- building will be ready for occupancy July 1, 1921, and will represent an investment of $2,500,000.
LIQUOR VALUE AS RATE BASIS. Commerce Board to Consider Advance in New Charges. Washington.—Increased value of alcoholic liquors incident to operation of the prohibition amendment was 'taken Into consideration by the Interstate Commerce Commission In authorizing the Missouri, Kansas and Texas Railroad to establish upon thirty days' notice rates on such liquors dependent upon the value declared in writing by the shipper. This will materially raise the freight rates. '
NEED MILLIONS FOR N. J, BRIDGES
Xork Mnd New Jersey b5 a detachment of the National Guard. Adjutant General Gilkyson, by order of Governor Edwards, Ims issued instructions calling for the participation of a band and a battalion from the Sixth Regiment of Infantry nnd a band and two troops from the First Highway Department Estimates Squadron of Cavarly In. the exercises. The commanding officers of the Sixth $18,000,000 Must Be Spent to Regiment and the First Squadron will designate the units of their respective Replace and Repair Bridges. organizations to form the detachment. • Governor Edwards and his staff, many prominent State officials and a large number of citizens have been invited.to the ceremonies, arranged by State Board of Taxation Explains the New York and NW. Jersey commissioners. ' Exemption of. Assessments Under Tax Exemptions Explained. " New Law—To RedisUnder a new act no buildings constructed after October 1 and for a . trict State. period ~bt two years will be assessed Trenton.—Not less than $18,000,000 for five years. Those that were startwill have *o .be spent eventually to ed October 1 and not finished will bring the bridges connecting the high- .be assessed, however. The act was ways up to die proper standard set by passed to encourage buifdlrig. • In the opinion of the State Board; the state for this phase of the road construction program for the ensuing of Taxes .and Assessment, improvesix years, was the declaration made ments In c6urse of erection on Octo-' by the State Highway Department in ber 1, 1920, are not within the exempta communication to Governor Ed- ed class. On that date there could be no improvements which will comply wards. In urging the governor to Impress \y,ith the conditions of the housing: upon the next"session the necessity for act-that - they— must— be-erected—be-adequate bridge improvements, so that tween October 1, 1920, and October lhere> may be nothing lacking to per- 1, 1922, in order to be entitled to exfect the highway system, the commis- emption. . The State Board also Instructs the sion declares that unless ample financial provision Is made for improve- local assessors to pay special regard! ments much of the value of the sys- to the purchase price of real estate and also the amount of rents, demandtem will be Impaired. The commission points out that more ed and received during the last year. than $4,000,000 will be necessary if The assessors are empowered to take there is to be prompt construction of these facts into consideration in makseven new bridges to replace struc- ing their assessments under chapter tures which have come to the state-In 356 of the laws of 1920. The purpose a deplorable condition from the coun- of this act was to prevent ownen or ties. This work, the commission r.dds. profiteering landlords from escaping a should be done in the next three years. siiare of taxation commensurate with The commission further recites that in the market value and earning power the neighborhood of $2,000,000 for re- of their properties. In its instructions to-the local aspairs are needed on 200 of the COQ bridges on the highway system, and if sessors upon this point, the state —,-"ffie" presenrpfogram "of tlie~"sfafiris~fo -board-says-: "This board has heretofore held, be carried out $12,000,000 will have to be spent to replace a number of the and has so advised assessors, that under tho market value rule of asbridges. In its letter to the governor the com- sessing, in force in this state, the soculled Inflated prices and the greatly mission adds: "•\Ve would respectfully urge, there- Increased rentals exacted by the ownfore.that consideration be given by ers of real estate were factors which the next legislature to the proposition the assessor should take into account for bonding the state, with the ap- in determining values. The amendproval of the people at a referendum, ment made to the tax act by chapter for an amount equal to put the bridges 356 removes any. doubt upon tills point In proper condition to meet the traffic and makes it the statutory duty of assessors to give full weight to rentals on our highways. and tli8 purchase price of property, "In this connection, may we Invite without regard to what may heretoyour attention to a report by State fore have been considered as normal Highway Engineer Thomas J. Wasser, standards. In making the assessments just submitted, based on data collected of 10120 the assessor must be guided by Charles A. Mead, department engiby market prices as of October 1, neer of bridges, which carries infor1020, with reference not only to propmation in detail as to the situation reerties sold on or before that date, specting the bridges. We would parbut with refe"rence to all properties In ticularly call the attention of your exhis district." cellency to the seven structures which The question has been frequently Mr. Mead' characterizes as important locations needing immediate attention, asked of the StateJRoard ns, to whethto use his words: 'As a matter of ur- er the assessments are to be made gency.' Following are the seven struc- as to values and the amendment was passed to cover the point. It means tures : "Raritan river bridge at Perth Am- that if the assessors curry out the loy; Matawan creek, Monmouth coun- law many assessments will be doubled ty; Cooper's bridge over Navesink rlv- as they have been assessing as to pre•r, Monmouth county; Mannsquan war values. State to Be Redistricted. bridge, touching Monmouth and 'Ocean counties; Shark river bridge, MonNew Jerseyls-reported gain-of-moremouth county; Pine Brook bridge, Mor- than 600,000 in population since ris county; Bedminster bridge, over 1910 will result In a redlstricting of the north branch of the Raritan river the State by the next Congress, to In Somerset county. The Pine Brook determine Its representation in Constructure Is on route No. 12 and the gress, and the present twelve may Bedminster on route No. 16. All the be Increased. The next Legislature others are important links of route No. will also be called upon to fix a new 4, which runs from Rahway to Abse- apportionment of members of the As«>n. sembly. The State Constitution pro"These bridges are in such condi- vides that there shall be sixty memtion that regardless of what Is to be bers of the Assembly, so the census done as to their -permanent replace- will not change the total. There may, ment the sum of not less than $315.- however, be a redistribution among 000 must be provided for the repairs the more populous counties of North to keep them In passable condition Jersey. pending the availability of adequate There has been an exceptional funds to meet the permanent construc- growth botli in Essex and Bergen tion plans which Mr. Mead has out- counties and there is a possibility lined for them in his report. that each will be given an additional "A survey has also shown that im- member of the Assembly, which would mediate repairs are needed for 200 of give Essex thirteen and Bergen four, the 600 bridges on the various state cutting some counties which now have highway routes. These repairs nre for two or three, as each county must the purpose of providing light bridges have at least one under the Constiof a temporary nature until new ones tution. of lasting type are built. It is estimatClaims Motor Law Unjust ed that $940,00ft will be required for "Senate bill No. 331> Increasing mothese minor Improvements. To take tor vehicle fees from 20 per cent to cate_of_IacidentaI_J.eDnirs_uot_de_nii_lte_-. -400-per—cent1-i8-conslder');»-i/j,_many_ ly foreseen at this time, another item to be one of the most unjust and unof $500,000 should be provided, mak.rensonable.brlls.ever put=througb,_and lng In all $6,000,000 for urgent repairs a' blot on the fair name of New Jersey. nnd rebuilding the bridges mentioned It is a cuse of 'We need the "money; before within the next three years. slam the motor car owners.' They "It-Is our view that this work can- don't seem to realize that, the motor not be ignored If traffic Is to he main- truck Is an Investment, a real business tained on the highways. Even If the proposition, just the same as a stutioaamount above mentioned is provided. plece of machinery." It will not contribute anything ftr ths Thus the new license fee bill was rebuilding^ of other .bridges not enucharacterized by Frank J. Summers, merated In the foregoing, but which secretary of the New Jersey Furnkure examination has indicated are below Warehousemen's Association. Sumthe state's standard and the requiremers voices the sentiment of furniture ments of-modern highway traffic. It warehousemen throughout the state, as is estimated that this additional work expressed at "their recent meeting. will mean a further outlay of approxBusiness men in all lines of endeavor imately $12,000,000 for new construcappear to be incensed at the attitude tion alone, If the present program of of the legislature, which, they say apthe state Is adhered to. Adding the pears to regard the motor truck as a .cost of building new bridges In the luxury, or even a -lenace, instead of seven urgent cases already recited and an important economic factor In the repairing another 200 throughout the industrial system. The cuse has been state means that the sum of $18,ably stated as follows by the transpor000,000 will have to be provided eventation expert of one of the largest cortually to build highway bridges adeporations In the world: quate to meet the demands of the pres"This Is done under the guise of tryent traffic and to form fitting links In the state highway system. These es- ing to raise funds to prc perly cure for timates are based upon present day state highways — a laudable purpose If carried om. But it is evident from costs. , the condition of the -state highways Hudson Tunnel Ceremonies. that money collected up to the present New Jersey will be represented at time lias beeu either Improperly disthe ceremonies to be held in New York tributed or the specifications under on October 12 in connection with the which the roiuis were__b.iilt w,ere imbreaking of ground for the construc- properly drawn up, or considerable tion of the proposed tunnel under the short-sightedness was shown by the p between the States of New engineers in charge."
HUDSON TUNNEL CEREMONIES.
Dublin castle gave oiit a list of outstanding "offenses" from January 1 to the week ending October 2. I* was acompanled by the statement that it was 'a significant fact that for all the murders and shootings of police the = i "finiTe ""proportroirTor' the" p~opularioTr "number" "of perpetrators" apprehended Mineola, N. Y.—Winging his way to living in rural territory. could be counted on the fingers of one earth from a height of 5,000 feet in an These figures do not reveal, how- hand." airplane abiaze with flaming torches, ever, the real magnitude of the exodus ' "In this fact," the statement adds, which, reflecting on a series of mir- from the farms, Mr. Rogers pointed "might be found the motive for lerors attached to the under wing, illu- out. prisals. The authorities cannot get the minated the landing field with a dayThe rural population, he said, can men responsible, or, if they do, they light refulgence, Paul Collins, an avia- he divided into two classes—those liv- get'off through- hunger-sts-iking or clemtor, thrilled a crowd of spectators at ing !n incorporated places of less than j ency of the government. No one can Hazelliurst Field, near Mineola, L. I., 2.500 aud-those in purely country dis- be found to testify against them, either the other night when lie demonstrated tricts. through intimidation or because of pothe practicability of landing in the Of the former the 1020 census shows ] liticar sentiment. Therefore, many of darkness and of tireproofing aircraft. B.S6TU96, or 9.3 per cent of the entire •The police feel that drumhead ustice Is Representatives of the British and population, and of the latter 41.002.703, [ the only way to deal with them." United States army and naval air serv- j or 3S per cent. The respective perThe list of offenses follows: ices who witnessed the demonstration | centages shown in the 1910 census "Courthouses destroyed, 03; Royal congratulated Pilot Collins on his ex-1 were S.S and 44.S. Irish Constabulary barracks destroyed, ploit. "Thus it appears," said Mr.fRogers, 504; Royal Irish Constabulary barThe plane used in the test was a i "that the portion living in incorporat- racks damaged, 16S; raid"; on mails, Curtiss, to which had been attached j ed places of- less than 2.500 inhabit- C4C; raids oaCoast Guard stations and more than a dozen reflecting mirrors ants shows an increase of 21.5 per lighthouses, 3S. underneath the lower wing. On the cent, whereas that portion living in "Raids for arms reported, 2,075 tips of the wings magnesium flares had j purely country districts shows an | (many of these raids do not come to been placed connected to the pilot's actual decrease of six-tenths of 1 per the knowledge of the police); police seat by electric' wire, by which they cent." • killed, 109; police wounded, 174; solwere set off. On other parts of the The bureau made public the com- diers'killed, 16; soldiers founded, Cl; airplane torches such as are used on parative rank of the states based upon Civilians killed, 27. These figures- do Fourth of July "were tied. not include the casualties in the Ulpopulation us follows: No better night for such a demonster riots in July and September." --State ••' 1920 Population.. stration" "could have been asked. The New York 10.384.144 I Coincident with this announcement field was in total darkness when Col- Pennsylvania 8.720.159 '• 6,485.098 | the Sinn Fein Irish Bulletin publishes lins "took off," with only his green Illinois Ohio 5.759.36S ; the details of attacks on 58 police burand red head and tall lights showing. Texas 4.661.027 I racks up to September 30. of which, it Massachusetts 3.852.356 Ascending to a height of about 1.000 Michigan 3.667.222 ' is stated, 12 were captured and two feet, when the sight of the plane was California 3.420.535 i destroyed during fighting, while 14 suc3.403.547 ost to the spectators in the darkness, Missouri Xew Jersey 3.155.374 j cessfully resisted attacks. Collins touched off the torches on Indiana 2,930.544 j "Seven men alleged to have taken 2.894.683 either Ride of thj fuselage. In an In- Georgia Wisconsin 2.631.839 | part In attacks," the hulletin continues, stant the whole plane was bathed in a Xorth Carolina 2.556.486 ; "were captured, tried by court-martial 2.416,013 flood of fire, and residents of Garden Kentucky Iowa 2,403.630 and sentenced to long terms of penal City, who during the war had frequent- Minneso!a_ 2.3S6.371 ! servitude." The bulletin adds that in ly seen ill-fated aviators "fainng~~In a Alabama IT. 27oT?r>95addition two civilians were murdered Tennessee 2.337.459 mass of flames when the wings took Virginia 2.308.361 ! as a reprisal and the town of Trim was fire, must have thought that a recur- Oklahoma 2.027.564 I burned. It asserts that the object of 1.797.798 rence of that type of accident had hap- Louisiana 1.789,384 '• attacks on barracks" was to secure arms pened. Around and around the field Mississippi Kansas 1,769,257 for Ireland to defend herself. the plane sped at a rate of SO miles an Arkansas 1.750.995 Carolina 1.683.662 hour, ascending until a height of 5,000 South West- Virginia 1.463.610 * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * feet was reached Maryland 1,449.610 UP IN MODERN HISTORY. * 1.380,585 * Before commencing his downward Connecticut Washington 1,356.316 I * glide Collins thrilled those on the Nebraska 1,395.502 Chicago.—"What do you know * 966.296 i * ground with some aerial acrobatics. Florida Colorado 939,376 • about Absalom?" Rev. George * All during the time the plane was In Oregon 783,389 Craig Stewart, pastor of St. * 768.014 the air the outline was plainly seen Maine Dakota 645.730 Luke's Episcopal Church of * from below, which made It possible to Xorth South Dakota 635.839 follow the maneuvers as in the day- Rhode Island 604.397 ; • Evanston asked that question of * 547.593 ; * 200 students of the Northwestern * time. Shutting off his motor. Collins Montana Utah 449.446 University. * commenced his long spiral glide, en- New Hampshire 443.083 "Ignorance of the Bible Is ap- * 437,571 circling the field as he negotiated his District of Columbia 431.826 palling," Dr. Stewart said. "Out • distance for a landing. When at a Idaho New Mexico 380.247 of 200 only nine had ever heard * height of about 1.000 feet he touched Vermont 352.421 Arizona 333.273 of Absalom; and about 190 who * off the magnesium torches which re- Delaware 223.003 could tell rr.3 all about 'Babe' * flected on the mirrors. The whole field, Wyoming 194.402 77,407 hitherto dark, became as broad day Nevada Ruth." ' * hithe The population of the outlying posses- i • * * * * * light: * * * * * * * * * * * ~ l m h L ' i t d S i f U
Aviator Demonstrates the Practicability of Landing Aircraft Safely at Night.
WITHDRAWALS. William O. Jenkins, the American who LARGEST P. O. BRANCH FOR N. Y.
Kramer Issues Order for New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania. "Washington.—With the assertion that "an eel has nothing for slippiness on whiskey in bonded warehouses," Prohibition Commissioner Kramer ordered that all withdrawals from such warehouses in New York.- New Jersey and the greater part of Pennsylvania be abolished for the nest few weeks. This action was taken to stop liquor traffic by bootleggers, which has reached an alarming amount.
Prohibition .Commissioner of Finland Now Here.
Years Was 14.9 Per Cent.
EL PASO.—Former Consular Agent
STOPS LIQUOR
DR. HELONIUS-SEPPALA.
;* ' *
LATEST EVENTS AT WASHINGTON The railroads of the country came within 5,313 cars of loading 1,000,000 cars of revenue freight, the' actual number being 994,687, in the week ending September 25, according to a statement issued by the car service division of the American Railway Association. , President Wilson has referred to Secretary of Labor Wilson the request of the. policy committee of the anthracite coal miners that the wage award of the Anthracite Coal Commission be reported and that the Joint wage scale committee be called together to discuss ineqaulities. , An examination of the total trade of Asia and Oceania, which comprise the Far East, with the United States for the eight months'' ended' August 31, 1920, valued at $1,870,556,213, reveals "an Increase of $563,518,916 over the same period of 1919, when ithe t r a d e u n d e r consideration amounted to $1,307,037,297. The new classes of "plebs" at the United States Military Academy Is 630 strong, and includes the largest number of appointees from the ranks of the army in the history of West Point; with 60 former privates enrolled.
0
THE CRANBURY PRESS.
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THE BLUE MOON
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A TALE OF THE FLATWOODS By D A V I S A.jrn>E1tSOJf
Copyright by the Bobba-MerrDl Company
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"A great many campaigns have been successfully conducted from front porches." "Perhaps," rejoined Senator Sorghum. "But many poems have been written In attics. I don't regard a front porch as any more essential to a politician than an attic is to a poet"
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'"Do you and your wife talk politics at home." "Nevor," replied Mr. Meekton. "We have a perfectly good cook." "What has that to dj with it?" "We are afraid she might get into the conversation and tell us both how we'll have to vote to keep her from leaving."
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Some writers never disturb the truth thnt lies at the bottom of the inkwell. Poverty is no disgrace, but there is precious little else can be said for it.
Bynopsta.—Never having known his father, and living with his mother on a houseboat on the Wabash river. Pearlminter—the only •namo ho has—learns from her » part X the story of her sad We. The Hdtal is - Interrupted by a feartMl fit of coughlag and he hurries Mhore to seek a. root that affonSt relleC He meets a young Kirl whom he mentally christens the Wild Ro»e.. She eludes him before he can make her acquaintance. A vacant cabin on the shore bas •Rracted the attention of the alMh£ woman, and they move Into It. Their first meal Is Interrupted by a stranger -who resents- their presence. Th« youth drives the man from their home. His presence has strangely .affected the mother. Th*t nlght.the youth finds within a mussel the largest pearl that ha* been found on the river, the Blue Moon.
CHAPTER
II—Continued.
wide stretch of solitude. Nobody bnt he could have found so many, because nobody knew the woods so well. As he looked back over the years, he found himself pondering the contradictions of his mother's life, in the light of the story he had heard that memorable afternoon—the refinement in the midst of mean surroundings, the stern pride that had held her so long in exile because of a word that had, mayhap, been long repented. The' muck and grime of the river had never smudged her. Through it all she had" kept as pure, as white, .as a flake of snow—and as cold. "What air y'n calc'latin' f do with them wild roses here in th' tumbler in the winder—keep 'em 'r chucE 'em out? I cayn't find but one more tumbler." The voice of the oW Boss half startled the man on the doorstep. The gruff old fellow had never left him, night or day. The Pearlhnnter had forgotten him, the rumpled house, the dishes, everything. He lifted his face from his hands, rose, and entered the cabin. The Boss was pointing to three wild roses—a red, a pink, a .white—In a tumbler of water in the window. The vision the Pearlhunter had seen on the rock at the pool came again. A vision—It had been just that, only that; an exquisite picture flashed beTore his face and instantly snatched away—a picture he would never see
the stain of time. Down beneath. everything else lay a small box which the Boss, from an experience which befell him as a soldier in the far South, knew to be satlnwood. The young man stood with it in his hand, afraid to raise the lid—afraid to put it to the test So far,.the trunk had given np nothing. He was still nameless. What if this, too, should prove a blank? At last the Pearthnnter raised 'the Hd-rsome baby clothes, clean and neatly folded;- a plain gold ring wrapped in' a handkerchief of the finest cambric; and, under all, a picture—what the Iron-Gray-Woman must have been in her girlhood. He snatched It np, carried it to the light of the door and looked long upon It. After a time he came back to the trunk. The satlnwood box was the last article In it, and It had told him nothing. He laid the picture In it, replaced the baby clothes and ring, closed the box and put it back. He even took a sort of melancholy satisfaction In replacing, with studied neatness, the glove, the dress and other articles, after which he. closed the lid, locked It, pocketed the key, and turning to the window, stood staring out over the river. He was still a man without a name. The Boss stepped back from the door. "The Blue Moon." he said. "Hit orta be putt away safe." —As—If—the—-statement—recalled thoughts that had strayed far, the young man reached '.n his pocket and drew forth the pearl, still rolled In the bit of cloth. The two days of ripening and the chafe of the cloth had greatly enhanced Its brilliance. Quietly rolling the pearl up in the cloth again, heleft the cabin and, followed by the Boss, strode down the slope through the trees to the boat, and together they rowed away toward the village. . The fame of the Pearlhunter had preceded him. As he came up from the wharf into the town, the Mud Hen, the one saloon of the place, disgorged a swaggering, swearing population that gathered round him. The Boss' crew, camped half a mile below Fallen Rock, and the crew of Bull Masterson, camped three miles above, were both- there. Besides these, the Obenchain, a small steamer plying between the ports of the Wabash. had come In that morning, bringing—otherrlver men.
•TTnat pearl's lntlrely too valuable to take chances on," he muttered, laying his coat In the bow, with the shotgtm across It, giving the final shove .to tn« Soat and leaping in. "I reckon m Jlst stick around till y'n git It in th' bank t'morrow. That hell-hound, •*' Red Mask, stuck up th' Mllford Mage down th' river last week. Your Blue Moon would be nuts t' him; an' we did make a right smart fuss when Tn'found it." He shifted the six-shooter in his pocket from between the edge of the seat and hi* flip, picked up the shotEun and' examined the caps on the' tabes. tfa all talk about these newg llx-guns that wan' t', but they cayn't nothln' come up with a good ol' ecaM*r-I6ck when "things git tight" The young man at the oars made no •e-ply to theso remarks. He was think'ng of that bit of flaming cloth behind the chink at the cabin. For a moment the impulse came on him to tell the Boss, but he decided to keep his own counsel. The moon Dad poked her round face up over the hills by the time they landed at Fellen Rock. The Pearlhunter picked up the big bass and led ttie way to U»e cabin, up under the cliff. The candlo was still shining out through the one small south window, the dimmer for the moonlight, a little square of luminous yellow set In the gray and ragged logs. Full of the big Caught In the swirl of the crowd, news he bore, the young man hurried' the Pearlhunter and his companion up the slope. The pearl almost were swept into the Mud Hen. A hunseemed to become a creature of sense dred voices clamored to Imve the pearl and sympathy; to feel warm against laid upon'the bar where all could file him; the luster of it to shine through by and see It. There fell a few minflls pocket. utes of comparative quiet while the When withjna few feet of the door hungry eyes of the river men-were dehe heard his mother cough—hissing; vouring it. Then followed drinks all whistling; choky. He dropped the fish round—at the expense of the finder; and darted In at the door. Her Hand Moved Over the Cloth as if and—what followed Is not a pleasant She stood stooped In front of her Trying to Write. task to describe. chair, clutching the table. Her hand The Pearlhunter, remembering that moved over the cloth as If trying to again. It seemed unreal as he looked. "write: ~ Blood" was pouring-from—her ~b~ack~~upon lt~ln~the" light" of another ;-mound of_fresh_ earth_at_Fallen. Bock, mouth and falling to the floor. He day. But no, there were the roses. He kept his head and drank but little. Sprang at her. She clutched his arm; bent his face down and caught the The Boss, on the other hand, "cut th' dog loose," as the river men say. By bung to him. He would not have be- aroma of their breath. noon he was singing snatches of halflieved It possible she had such force "Let them be," he said. "They will forgotten songs and fighting the .InIn her fingers. She struggled painful- last another day." dian wars all over again. Coming up ly to choke back the blood; then The Boss made no reply. To him to where his young friend leaned strove pitifully to speak. ' No word they were merely faded roses. He was against the bar, in easy reach of the caine—only that awful whistling hissing gasp. He saw the luster die in sitting on the doorstep about to light pearl, syu lying upon its bit of cloth, her eyes—the eyes that in their day his pipe when the younger man called he threw an arm about his neck and had been ao wonderful. They were him.. With the freshly filled pipe in leant hard upon him, something he trying hard to tell him something—, one hand, the unlighted match in the couldn't have been hired to do when words„ her lips were not able to other, he rose and stepped back Into sober. frame. He strove to read their mes- the cabin. The Pearlhunter was "Come 'ere, you fellers. This'n'son sage. In vain! There' came a last standing before a small hair-covered me, an' it's to th' Pearlhunter, th' trunk, scarcely bigger than an ordigasp; her body suddenly stiffened, whitest man along th' Wabash—an' quivered, relaxed—and he eased her nary suitcase of the present day. It be d d t' th' man what says 'e stood open, with the lid thrown back, back Into the chair. The Iron-Grayain't!" exactly as It had stood two nights beIPoman was dead. The- rabble swarmed about the bar fore when he came up from the river The Pearlhunter raised her hands and found his mother dying. Its con- —all that were able. Bottle necks to cross them on her lap.' Some ob- tents seemed to indicate that they had gurgled; glasses clinked; red whisky ject fell from the lax fingers to the -been_runimaged.. through by some one sizzled down hot throats; a few floor. It was a sol'dief's" glovei "stlff~| whose haste had been great—doubt- -shouted;- some-swore-;-others- merelyand mildewed with age. less by his mother. It hurt him to re-_ laughed foolishly. That-last- drink-was-the Boss'-finTurnlng~to"Iay"it"upon the table,-he call the cause 6f~~thaf~haste. The stood startled and staring. His cry bloodstained glove she had held in her ish. He wilted down Into the nearest brought the old Boss to his side. Two hand lay uppermost, probably tossed chair; lurched heavily over upon a table anil'lay there mumbling, or laughwords, scrawled In blood on the cloth, there by one of the river men. ing in high, shrill key; occasionally glared up at them: "It's time to know whafs In this shouting out a note or two of a boat"Your father—" trunk." ing song that had been old on the rivThere had been a further attempt A certain tenseness in his volc» es- er for a quarter of a century. to write, but the effort had only re- caped the Boss. It was early afternoon before the sulted in a scrawl, impossible to de"Oon't y'u?" cipher. "I've never seen inside of It before." Pearlhunter dared to think seriously The Boss was In the act of scraping of depositing the pearl—before river CHAPTER I I I . his match. He stopped; looked" etiquette permitted him to remove it around out of the tall of his eye, but from the bar. He triefi to rally the - A Man Without a Name. whatever his thoughts, he made no Boss. All he got was a further installment of the Indian wars. The Pearlhunter sat on_ the door- comment Half disgusted with It all, he turned step of the cabin, his face bowed In "First of all, here's this glove," the his hands. It was June upon the young man went on, lifting the glove back to the bar and stood leanlnghls »lnpe under the trees; June In Wolf from the!' trunk. "You know where chin upon his hand. & door opened from another part of the building— Run chuckling and chirking along on we—saw it .first." Its way from spring and waterfall to The Boss threw away the stub of the Mud Hen being an inn, the only the river; June In the heart of a car- his match and felt the time-stained one in the place. A man entered. Crossing the floor with as little attendinal rocking upon the top twig of a and mildewed article. tall hickory-;- December In the heart "West Point," he muttered. "Hit's tion to the crowd as if the place had of the Pearlhunter. th' kind th<«n sprigs wears—officer's, been deserted, he swaggered up to the bar. Perhaps he secretly wished that Half-way down the slope, beyond I'd say, offhand." the tangled underbrush and In the The other stood considering it; laid somebody would get In his way. He edge of the grass-covered open strip it aside; and lifted the next article had Just that ulr about him. The Penrlhunter heard the door that bordered the river shore, the from the trunk. It proved to be a green was broken by a mound of fresh woman's dress of rich brocade. Little open; felt the hush that fell—the earth. He had rimmed It round with as the two men knew of such matters, hush that always falls upon the rabihells brought up from the river; it impressed even them as being of ble at the coming of a masterful presipon the head had plained a cluster the very finest material • and of fin- ence. He turned his' eyes slowly to(rf orchids, the lady's-sllpper of the ished workmanship. Under It lay ward the newcomer. His nerves were Platwoofls. Itsey were like her, the other articles of woman's wear, all as steady as the woods make them, •>rehtds—a lonely flower; one to a equally rich, though now yellow with but they were not Quite proof against
what he saw. It was the Han-in-th* Fancy-Vest A look flashed between them. The One of the interesting places In Pearlhunter fancied the other stif- Lowell, Mass., Is the old apothecary fened, and he was quite conscious of shop on Merrimack Street, established a tightness creeping into his own in 1827 This location is still a drug store. The old prescription books spine. The Blue Moon was still lying on its have been preserved and form an inrecord covering nearly a bit of cloth -upon the bar, where, teresting century. among the river men, it was as safe Perhaps one of the most interestas anything of value ever gets to be ing books is that of the year 1859. in this avaricious world. He deliber- On one of the pages of this book, that ately picked it up and thrust it Into dated June 9th, 1855, is written the his pocket. original prescription for Father John's It was a distinct affront. Blood Medicine. This .prescription was comhad run in the Flatwoods for less. The pounded for the Reverend Father man facing him started; flushed; bis John O'Brien at the old drug store on that date, and was so successful in right hand dipped toward his hip. treating Father John's ailment, which The Pearlhunter's body became like was a severe cold and cough, that iron electrified; his eyes like flecks of ~ "fie recomsteel in the fireglow. His hand had mended the closed upon the pistol butt while the medicine to other's -hand was still on Its way. *fiis friends and parish"Draw!" he hissed. "Draw! I'd ioners. In give the Blue Moon if you would! going to There's a twenty-year-old score to sett h e d r ug tle between your blood and mine!" storeand A dead husi fell. The more sober calling for men of the crowd jammed doors and the mediwindows, others huddled against the walls; some had dived under the ta___ cine they bles. It was a moment of keen ten- always asked fop "Father John's Medi- " cine," and in this way the medicine sion. Not a man breathed. The line between life and death Is a got its name and was advertised^ Father John's medicine Is a safe hair line when two gunmen stand face medicine for colds, coughs, to face. The chnnces are split almighty family and as a tonic and body-builder, befine. The Man-ln-the-Fancy-Vest evi- cause it does not contain opium, dently decided they were split a little morphine, chloroform, or any other too fine. He slowly relaxed the pose poisonous drugs, or alcohol, but is all "to"wh"Ich""the" 'dangerous* instanr~had-j K i h f c strung him; lifted his hand; folded Ask Peanut Tariff. his arms; turned; leant against the Importation of peanuts from China bar; and stood coolly looking the threaten to ruin the growers of Amerother over. The Pearlhunter had been half ica, according to a statement which is crouched. lie straightened and took being distributed to farmers in the Southern stsitos-by -the-United J'eanut his hand away from .his. hip. "When I get ready to leave Flat- Association of America, urg"i~n>Ttliem woods I'm expectin' to ask you some to co-oporate for their own protecquestions—and I'm expectin' to be an- tion. The association proposes as a remedy a restrictive tariff on peanuts swered." His voice crisp as the snap of sleet and vegetable oils. Tlip production of peanuts in China, against window glass, he stuffed the pearl deeper into his pocket, in a man- it asserts, lias increased on .a_ trener that somehow had the effect of mendous scale in the past few years, and the importations for the year endemphasizing the affront. The other shrugged his shoulders, ing June IK), it adds, were in excess of barely perceptibly; his lip curled in 130,000,000 pounds. a hard smile that carried all the force of a sneer, but he made no answer. With the air of a nian bored unspeak ' ably he sauntered across the room to the door by which he had entered; paused an instant; glanced back over "California Syrup of Figs"' "his shoulder; tossed~up his chin contemptuously ; passed out, and closed Child's Best Laxative the door. But, for all his easy acting, It did not escape the Pearlhunter that the blue in his eyes was black. Pearlhunter rescue* Wild Roae-^and gets acquainted. (TO BE CONTINUED.)
TIRE KNOWN BY MANY NAMES Nbt~~lnclucJing What It Is Called by Impatient Autoist When It Punctures.
A thing which ties is a" tire—say Accept "California" Syrup of Figs makers of. the dictionary. The first only—look for the name California' on purpose of the tire was to tie or band the package, then you are sure your the wheel together. As time passed, child is having the best and most harmthe original moaning of the word has less physic for the little stomach, liver been lost' sight of and now the tire and bowels. Children love its fruity is the part of the wheel which touches taste. Full directions on each bottle. the rpad and stands the wear and tear You must say "California."—Adv. of travel. England and her possessions, exOn Strike! cept Canada, spells the word "tyre," Hick—Time is money. No less an authority than England's Wick—No wonder, then, people buy own Encyclopedia Brltannlea Is on rec- on tick.—Cartoons Magazine. ord with the opinion that "this spelling Is not now accepted by the best Among the people who get satisfao> English authorities," yet "tyre" pertion by going to law' are the lawyers. sists. • In some of the Spanish-speaking Solitude is better than company— countries, such as Chile and the Ar- ]-when—the-conipan-y—is-not-congpiiial.— gentlne, tires are known as 'tneumatlcos." In Mexico they are "llanlas." In otlief Tplnces~wh~erif "Spanish" is "the language, notably Cuba, the correct word is "gomas." In Brazil, where Does the least exertion tire you out? Portuguese Is spoken, the name Is Feel "blue" and worried and have daily "pneumaticos." backache, lameness, headache, dizziness, The French have the short rame and kidney irregularities? Sick kidneyi "pneus" for tires." This Is a contrac- are often to blame for this unhappy tion of pneumatiques. In practically state. You must act quickly to prevent all the Scandinavian countries the more serious trouble. Use Doan't KidDanish word "gummriginger"—rubber ney Pills, the remedy recommended everywhere by grateful useri. A.»K ring—is used. your neighbor!
Weak and Miserable?
Names.
Most
A New Jersey Case Mrs. Anna Lowden, 21 E. Pearl St., Burlington, N. J., s a y s : "I had so m u c h m i s e r y In my back I could hardly get about Mornings I could hardly get out of bed I was so lame. My kidneys acted too freely, also. I _. read of Doan's " Kidney Pills and used them. 1 felt better from the first and continued use freed me from kidney trouble." Get Doan'i at Any Store, 60c a Box FOSTER-MILBURN CO- BUFFALO. N. V.
HOXSIE'S CROUP REMEDY
Provents the baby from strangling and .•ho king as In Croup. No opium. 60 eta.
«DBM9HED ETIBI FRIDAY AT OBANBVBV, N. J.
Greo. W. Burroughs & SOD Editors and Proprietors 11.50 PEB TEAS, in ADVANCE.
••••«
WARREN G. HARDING
- T H E CRANBURY PRESS.-
Your Kind of Man and-
STEEL HOG SCALDERS. - S T E E L HOG SCAIiOEBS Wo have tho agenoy for an elegant all steel, large sized Scalder. Tho Fire Box is very heavy eteel with a good door with damper. The Soalder proper is ot very heavy steel, much heavier than usual and large enough for the largest of hogs. * They have a practical lifter that -will hold a hog juBt where you want it, and will turn the hog ont onto the Bcaffle or platform withont having to toaoh tho hog. • Price $55.00 Spot Cash. If yon want a good reliable, durable hog Scalder, oome and see onrs. CATTLE STANCHIONS I N STOCK. Wood, Tubular steel and wood-lined steel. All wood $2.60, Tubular Steel $3.60, Wood-lined Steel $4.00. J O H N D E E R E LOW-DOWN M A N U R E S P R E A D E R S / Are without a shadow of a doubt the very best on the market. We keep , them in stock, and we would like you to come and look them over beforo yon buy. They are as low in price as any and are absolutely the best. John Deere Two-Way and Siag Sulky Plows. Farm Wagons and Low-down Farm Truoks that Track our RoadB. Carriages, Buggies, Jogger and Carryall Wagons. , -1 . Farm and Single Harness and all Harness Parts. ! Heavy Grade Crib Wire, Bale Lots only, 7 cents square foot. Wire Fencing, Plain and Ornamental, Smooth and Barbed Wire. Com Shellcrs, Single and Double Hole. Hay and Stalk Cutters, for hand or power. Circular Saw Frames and Saws—Several Varieties. New Holland Gasoline Engines and Feed Mills. We Cordially Invite You to Come and See Our Large Stocks.
seconcJ-class matter July 17th, X8S5 at the post office at Cranbuty, New Jersey, under the Act oi Congress of March 3, 1879. FKTDA.Y, OCTOBER 15, 1920.
Defiling t b e Temples ot t h e Lord Washington, October 15th—" A. desperate endeavor to sanctify hypocrisy to the use3 of national betrayal," ia-the characterization of Che proposed Democratic crusade among the churches on behalf of the league covenant, made by the Republican Publicity Association, through its President,. Hon. Jonathan Bourne, Jr. "Preparations have been perfected in Washington to stage a groat crusade among the churches on bohalf of the league of nations, and an attempt will he made to stir up fanatic zeal in support of the Wilson covenant. Thi8 is claimed tfy the Wilson sycophants to be the President's trump card* the 'card up his sleeve' which he has been holding out in his great game of internationalizing the United States. In this era of the 'new freedom' it is not considered unethical to keep a card up tbe sleeve, nor in violation of the principle of 'open covenants openly anived at.' So Wilson is to slip into the churches 'with a card up his sleeve. "The dramatispersonae in this crusade -The-FirsfrCrusadep-1095-. 99, it will be recalled, was preceded by The Next President. a tumultuary horde of riffraff from all As certain as anything can be, in this world, Europe, which perished in Hungary, is the election of Senator Hardinjf. just a3 the tatterdemalion vanguard of • To readers of this newspaper, the many the ^Yilson intemationaliata melted be- family groups to which it comes a regular fore the onslaughts of the Senate. In welcome visitor, Senator Hardinsr's face the organized movement now under ghines as that of a friend. Senator Harding, your next President, is way, the churches wili readily recognize your kind of man. You see him, hear a few Godfrey do Bouillon in the person oi words, and you know it. Boss Murphy of Tammany Hall; RayHe was born in a small town, has lived mond oi Toulouse in Tom Taggart of there, all his life, lives there now, and will the French Lick layout; Robert of Xor- live there a^ain when he leaves the White mandy in Big Jim Nugeut of the Jersey House with his work for the country done. booze brigade: and Hugh the Great in How He Lives. Brennan, B<>3s of Chicago's political " He lives as you. live, simply, in the old underworlii In their crusader robes fashioned American way. they may be able to horn into the The main residence street in any little churches. Of course, Mr. Wilson, the American town, boasts half a dozen homes cloistered visionary, will essay the role more elaborate than Senator Harding's, and of Peter the Hermit, with Jimmy Cox many as good. - Millions of men, believing in th,is country, as his choir boy and Fraakie Roosevolt 83 his censer swinger. The churches* devoted to its government, SATISFIED with are to be asked to aid in putting over the UNITED STATES, believe that the United what Hiram Johnson terms ' a league States iB able to deal with its own problems, with death and a covenant with hell, and settle its own questions free from outside assistance or interference. 1 the churches to furnish tbe votes and Those millions of men are men of the^same the gang to direct tut campaign. sort as Senator Harding.
Peppler's Weekly Chats
Thomas Peppier, Son & Go,, HIGHTSTOWN, NEW JEESEY
I 1'I"H"I-M-I •!•I-I-I-I-I-M-r-M-l
•I"I-I-M"M"M"M"t-I-I I-M
The Next President of the United States
A. F. Williams
— Whatis-Senator Harding's outlook upon life? It is YOUR OWN. Read these extracts from one of his recent speeches:
Diamonds, Watches, Jewelry,
"This government is your B ovorr i m » nt i not that of *omebody who Is placed In office." "You clothe us with authority. We are pleased to execute your will. And one reason I want the Republican party in power onoe more is because we are responsive to tho will of the poople of the United State* and do not try' to tell you that what one man thinks is necessary."
No hallucination there./l'o idea that Harding was made to rule, afrd YOU, who read this newspaper, made to\be ruled, or preached at from above by your own elected servant. The duty of the American, whether he be President or simple citizen, is not complicated in Mr. Harding's mind. He says:
Clocks, Silverware, Cut Glass, Etc. Expert Watch and Jewelry Repair Work a Specialty. All; Work Guaranteed.
23 E. State St.,
Trenton, N. J.
frM I I-I !•[ I I H-I-I-I-I-M M l-l I'M-t W-M-I-MTM-M-I-I-M I I I I I M M' I !•
"As I said at the outset, government is a very simple thing, government is only the regulation of our relationships to one another. The government's first task is the protection of the.minority against autooraoy, or the domination of the majority that sometimes forgets the rights'bf the minority." "I am preaching the gospel of popular representative government in the United States, a government that does not know any class anywhere-in all this Republio.1
$25,000 8CHL088 "CLOTHES BEAUTIFUL" High Grade Fall Suits for Men and Youths A late addition to oar full regular stock—this special purchase of surplus* and sample suit* represent a lar^e money saving opportunity. S 3 3 . 7 5 l"or $13.00 li;in
"Nothing will b? said to tbe church What Kind of Man. people of tht- betrayal of China to Japan . . Harding is a big American in physical size, In his speeches and in his daily life, runby the Ve-rsiilles treaty, ia the matter thanks to vigorous farming ancestors. He is ning for the Presidency or running his counof Shantung, nor of the Japanese mas- a big American also in heart, in understandtry newspaper, Senator Harding is just an sacres in K >re.i under in- aegis of the ing, in sympathy and in simplicity. everyday American neighbor: This is what You read his speeches and know that he league. They will not bi» informed of he says, as he bids farewell to a crowd of the promise which Mr. Wi'eon made to does nui imagine himself created to tell all friends : the world what to do: He believes in, and RumauiU ami rferbia to send American "I am very happy to see yeu all this mornhe understands the American people, his ing. As I have said, I want you to know me,, armies and fl-eta lo their relief when friends, the citizens of his own little town, and I am delighted to know you. W« are called for. Tae preponderant vote o( Marion, Ohio, and the dwellers in thousands going to work together for the good of the Great Britain will not -be mentioned. of other towns like it. United States, and we are going to hold That the league surrenders American America first in all our thoughts and in all Your Servant, No Autocrat. sovereignty will be dsuied. Tuat the our actions." After you have elected him, you will find covenant reaches certain understand- in Senator Harding an earnest, conscientious, Women Voting. TRENTON, N. J. ings with Europe in the French version -straight thinking servant of the people, not an ^'omen ', especially have reason to conHORACE MANN.,-and different understandings with autocrat, but a man respecting the traditions gratulate themselves on the fact that Senator of American government, and the ConstituHarding will be the next President. Americans in the English version will Their sons are taken in war. Their huabe suppressed. To ,'wipe off the lroth tion of the United States. of falsehood from the foaming Iip3 of Senator Harding understands that the ' bands and fathers are taxed to pay for war. They spend the .lonely hours of dreadful * -l-l-I •l-I"I-i-I-I -I-I- I-I ; • : i M - M " I ' i l - . - t •» t 1 I I I l ' M " l M - H " I " M - M I !• I I I •! I' inebriated virtue, when]fre3h Irom the people will elect him to be President of the anxiety, while the son is away. United States, not President of the whole sexless orgies of morality and reeling They, above all, are interested in having . Lowered Prices in Our Men's Furiiisliiug Section Offers from the delirious riot of religion, is the world. He will know that he is employed for President such a man as Senator Harding. by the PEOPLE of this country to look after You Wonderful Money Savins Opportunities. purpose which the gangjhave in mind He does not believe that foreign powers the interests of THIS country. in this sinister program for debauching should be allowed to conscript American boy* MEN'S SHIRTS—A special purchase of 50 dozen excellent quality Shirts Born on a farm, living all his life close to the church vote. for men enables us to make this wonderful offer. Made tofitperfectly of farmers7"he"knows and sympathizes with the ..for war beyond tae seas. - materials that will give tbe best of wear in a variety_of_pattern3and color T "A more desperate endeavor to sanc- problems of the farm. Living in the average He does not believe that a Foreign Council | combinations that willinake choosing a shirt a very easy task and at the '~ very low price of EACH, $2.00. American way, in the average American tify hypocrisy to the uses of national should send to America for men and money to settle wars not of our making. Of course you will find plenty of better ones of fine Madras or Silk up to betrayal has never been recorded in our email town, he knows the problems of the $10.00. He understands the Senator Harding does not believe that this political aunals heretofore. A party average American. MEN'S NECKWEAR—In Mo.«t Varied Assortment, made of the Finest country should be taxed to finance the amwhich goes to thU length would smiliDg- printers he employs, and he knows their trade Silks. 75o to f3.00. bitions or the land greed of foreign nations, ly stuff the ballot boxes oa November and sets type as they do. MEN'S WINTER UNDERWEAR—All reliable makes and the best known and as he believes, so the eamert men and His Ambition. 2nd. Every known^method of deceit Brands, all wanted sizes at from $1.00 to $3.50 per garment. women of this country believe. Senator Harding has no ambition to be MEN'S UNION SUITS-$2.00 to $7.00. and political malpractice, short of firingWhen you caBt your vote for Senator HardMEN'S PAJAMAS—$5.00 to $3.00. equad duress, has been resorted to by called a political superman, or RULER of ing you will vote for YOUR KIND OF MAN, America. It is his ambition to be known as And hundreds of other Articles which space forbids us to mention at very the frenzied zealots who have canonized the intelligent, straighforwaid. unpretentious low prices. a good American, a faithful servant of those the White House megalomaniac and de- that trust hini. American citizen. President Harding will be an American President, not an international mand the plenary acceptance of all his National politics are discussed this year B . F . GUNSOiV, Clothier and Haberdasher* President. "workF; but that they would defile the less than at any election since the republic You will have in the White HouBe a man 121 13. S t a t e S t r e e t , (Hotel Windsor Bldg.,) temple of the Lord with their mephitic was founded. Why? Because men do not of constructive mind, a plain American with propaganda was beyond the powers of discuss, to any great extent, that which is TRENTON, N. J . no dreams of world dominion, but with ft Betthe sane majority of our c'Uizena to DEFINITELY SETTLED. tied determination to restore normal conW-M-I-M-M-I i-1-H-l-I-t-M i i-M M - H ' I - H M i l !• H-I-I-M-M-M-M-I-H" And this national election is definitely imagine. Christ drove tbe moneyditions and normal prosperity to this country. changers from the temple. Why should settled as you read this. YOU know it. After the War. But it is important that demonstration of not the barterers in national sovereignty After a war that has destroyed old conthe popular will should be of the most overbe summarily evicted ? " ditions, cost many lives, squandered Jawy Grip. Grip usually starts just the Bame as a cold with a watery discharge from the nose. You are much more likely to contract the grip when you have a cold For that reason when grip is prevalent you should go to bed as soon as you feel that you are taking cold and stay in bod until fully recovered which should not be long, if you take Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. Three days in bed now is better than thtee weeks,later on
whelming kind. Therefore the good citizen billions in reckless extravajrance • and diswill do what he can to increase the vote for honesty,' and weakened' respect for the ConHarding, should there be any doubtful votes stitution, you need for President a straightwithin reach of his voice. forward, constructive American, ^ It is almost ludicrously difficult to find a And you will have such a man in the White man or woman that intends to vote the DemoHouse after the 4th of next March, for after cratic ticket this year. But if you do find one, show him or her-tjiia. ,- that the President of the United States will be Warron G. Harding, your kind, of man, one picture of the next President. And express that you would gladly trust with your own in your own way the reasons that inspire you affairs, and the affairs cf yo.ii- country. to approve and vote for him.
REPUBLICAN NATIONAL COMMITTEE
THE SUN OPTICAL CO., F. C. LEAMING, Pres.
R E M O V E D "TO 38 West State Street, Trenton, N. J. Between Warren and Willow Streets, opposite aito of new Staoy-Trent Hotel, within site of the old location at State and Warren Streets, one-half block west.
Eyes Examined, Glasses Prescribed, Made and Repaired,
Oeneral Election. General Election. SIDE LIGHTS. v Notice is hereby given that a general Notice is hereby given that-a general We hear a lot about Article 10 of the election will be held in and for the Borough election -will bo held in and for the townLeague of Nations Bending our boys to of JAMESBTJRG, on ship of MONROE, on FMDAY, OCTOBER 15, X02O. Europo>every time that a little trouble TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2nd, 1920, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2nd, 1920, starts, 'what an absurd argument. between tho hours of six o'clock In the between the hours of six o'clock in the Dr. J. L. Whitaker and MlBBea Ida Bead what Ex-President Taft has to morning and seven o'clock in the evening, morning and seven o'clock in the eveniDg, said election -will be held in Borough Hall, said election will he held in tha Old School -and Ruth Whitaker atteaded .the wed- say about this. House, Prospect Plains. "When Mr. Wilson brought to this Augusta Street, Jamesuurg. ding of John Straley at Brooklyn on Said Generol Election will bo held for the Said General Election will be held tor the conntry the league covenant as reportSaturday evening. ed to the Paris conference, I urged purpose of electing the following officers : purpose of electing the following officers: Electors of a President and Vice PresiElectors of n- President and Vice PresiMrB, Harden, Mrs. Earth and son from the same platform with him that dent of the United States. Mr. Schwartzenburg, of Brooklyn, we join the league. Had I been in the dent of the United States. Ono member of tho House of RepereentaOne member of the House of Representawere week-end guests of Mrs. Wm. J. Senate I would have voted for the Lea- tives from the Third Congressional District. tives from the Third Congressional District. gue and Treaty as submitted, and adThree members of the General Assembly Campbell. Three members of the General Assembly ol tho State of New Jersey. vocated its ratification accordingly. I of tho State of New Jersey. did not think, and do not now think, One Sheriff, two Coroners, three FreeMIBB Marion Van Derveer and Carl One Sheriff, two Coroners, three FreeBalrd, of Freehold, have been visiting that anything la the League covenant holders for the term of three years, and oneholders for the term of three years, and ono Freeholder-for the term of one year, for the ae Bent to the Senate would violate the Mr. and Mrs. C. P. Emmons. Constitution of the United States or iD- Freeholder for the term of one year,- for tho County of Middlesex. County of Middlesex. One Assessor, one Committeeman for the Miss Leota Ferrine sang "Face to volve UB in wars which it would not be Two Councilmen, for the Borough ot Township of Monroe. Face" in the Second Church on Sunday to the highest interest of the world and Jamesburg. Publio Questions: A Soldiers' Bonus Act, this country to suppress by universal morning. Miss Perrine haa ft sweet PublioQuestions: A Soldiers' Bonus Act, Chapter 159, Laws 1920, A State Bond boycott and, if need be by military Chapter 159, laws 1920; A State Bond Issue, Chapter 352; Laws 1920. voice nicely cultivated. force. Issue, Chapter 3J2, Laws 1920. Notice t o A b s e n t e e V o t e r s . Mr. and Mrs. Geo, S. Burroughs, of I consider that the moral effect of Any elector who is registered for the Notice to Absentee Voters. Trenton, have announced the engage- Article 10 on predatory nations would Any elector who is registered, for the General Election, whohy reason of inability ment of their daughter Myrtle E. to restVain them from war-as the cfec&ira-. General Election, who by reason ol inability through illness or absence from the County tion of the Monroo Doctrine has done, in which he resides is unable to cast his Mr. John I. Errickaon, also of Trenton and that the requirements of the unani- through illness or absence from the County ballot on the day of the General Election in which he resides is unable to cast his • Mrs. i. E. Curry returned home from mous consent by the representatives of ballot on the day of the General Election at the polling place in the Election District in which he is registered, may make applithe hospital on Sunday, and her Bister, the great powers in council beforeleugue at the polling place in the Election District cation for an official ballot to the Municipal action would safeguard the United in which he is registered, may make appli- Clerk in any Municipality in which he Mrs. Ernest Scott, of South Orange, is States from any perversion of tho high cation for an official ballot U> the Municipal Clerk of any Municipality in which he resides or to the County Board of Eleotions staying with her. purpose of the league. resides or to the County Board of Elections of the County of Middlesex, on or before Moreover, I believe that the issue of of the County of Middlesex, on or before Tuesday, October 19th, 1920, and a formal Mrs. Harry./Schnell was a visitor in application will be forwarded said elector Philadelphia on Saturday. ^ the Leagne transcends in its importance Tuesday," October 19thrl92O,-and a formal and when properly tilled out" and returned any domestic issue and would justify application will be forwarded said elector to the County Board of Elections of the Mr. and Mrs. Wiafield Johnson have and require one who believes BO to and when properly filled out and retnrned County of Middlesex, when an absentee returned home after spending a few ignore party ties and secure this great to the County Board of Elections of the ballot will be forwarded to such elector. • County of Middlesex, when an absentee weeks at the home of Peter Johnson of boon for the world and the country." ballot will be forwarded to such elector. Witness my hand this 7th, day of SeptemA vote for Cox means going in with Hightatown. Witness my hand this 7th day of Septem- ber, nineteen hundred and twenty. 36 nations of the world to keep peace, WALTER J. IUELLEY, Miss Louisa Schnell is spending a and to make this a better world to live ber, nineteen hundred and twenty. Secretary, WALTER J. KIELLEY, few days with friends at Harriman, Pa in. Middlesex County Board of Elections. Secretary, A vote for Harding means a seperate Mrs. Lizzie Stah), Banks Stahl and Middlesex County BoanTof Elections. ~" "GeiierarElection. Myrta Hagerty were Trenton visitors peace with Germany, the honor of our country paiuted yellow, and Russia, Notice is hereby given that a general Croneral Kleotlon. on Saturday. election will be held in and for the Borough Turkey and Mexico as our company. Notice is hereby given that a general Mr. and Mrs Andrew HarriB and Remember one is always judged by election will be held in and for the town- of HELMETTA, on TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2nd, 1920, family were week-end visitors with Mr. the company they ketp. ship of SOUTH BRUNSWICK, on Ordered and paid for by the Democratic TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2nd, 1920, between the hours of six o'clock in the and Mrs. Charles Petty. Publicity Committee of Cranbury Township between the hours of six o'clock in the morning and seven o'clock in the evening, Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Bennett left on morning and seven o'clock in the evening. said election will be held in the Hose House, Said election will be held for the" firstin the Borongh of Helmetta. Lot F o r Sale. Thursday to visit Mrs. Bennett's sister, election district of said township in Publio Said General Election will be held for the MiBS Gladys 8nedekerr~atT"SaTatoga —T-hres quarters—of— an^aece—of-landr "ScGooITToFs"erDoyfon7for the second elecSprings, and will visit other places in between the property of C. R. Wicofl tion district of said township, in Public purpose of electing the follawing,aiILceis.'._ Electors of n President and Vice Presiand the Murphy property on Maplt- School House, Momnoath Junction. New York State during the week. dent of the United States. wood avenue S. E. BENNETT. Said General Election will be held for the One member of the House af RepresentaMr. and Mrs. G. B. Mershon motored purpose of electing the following officers : tives from the Third Congressional District. to Manasquan Beach on Tuesday, -to FOR SALE—50 shares of New BrunsElectors of a President and Vice PresiThree members of the General Assembly dent of the United States. close up their summer cottage for the wick Fire Insurance Stock. of the State of Ne,w Jersey. One member of the Hoase of RepresentaS Er BENNETT. winter. One Sheriff, two Coroners, three Freetives from the Third Congressional District. Three members of the General Assembly holders for the term of three years, and one Mr. and Mrs John Bennett and Mr. FOUND—Auto Tire on road between Freeholder for the term of one year, for the Trenton aid Now Brur>3wick. The of the State of New Jersey. and Mrs. A. A. Bennett were week-end County of Middlesex. One Sheriff, two Coroners, three Freeowner can have Bame by proving visitors at Belmar. Three Councilmen, and two Surveyors of property. For infmiDitinii rull at the holders for the term of three years, and one Highways for the Borongh of Helmetta. Freeholder for the term of one year, for the Fred Applegot, of Philadelphia, and PRESS OFFICE, Public Questions: A Soldiers' Bonus Act, County of Middlesex. William Appleget, of Trenton, spent Cranbury, N J One Committeeman, one Township Clerk, Chapter 159, Laws 1920; A State Bond Sunday with Mrs. Harry A, pleget. one Collector for the Township of South Issue, Chapter 332, Laws 1920. FOK SALE—Oak Heatiug sitove in Brunswick. Notice t o A b s e n t e e Voters. Mrs. Arthur L Burroughs and daughgood order. W. H. JOHNSON. Pnblic Questions; A Soldiers' Bonus Act, Any elector who is registered for the ter Betty, of Mootclair, are visitiug Chapter 159, Laws 1920; A State Bond General Election, who by reason of inability Will the party who borrowed my Issue, Chapter 352, Laws 1920. Mr. and M.rs. Geo. B. Mershon. Mr. through illness or absence from the Connty l*ipe Wrench please return it. Notice t o A b s e n t e e Voters. in which he resides is unable to cist his Burroughs will be but over Sunday. And oblige W. H. JOHNSON Any elector who is registered for the ballot on the day of the General Election The Misses Ina and Ottie Puerachner General Election, who by reason of inability at the polling place in the Election District APPLES—Before laying in your winthrough illness or.absepce from the County iu which be is registered, may make appliare visiting in New York. Mr. Puerter tipple." see iu which he resides is unable to cast his cation for an official ballot to the Municipal schner will join them over Sunday. ballot on the day of the General Election Clerk of any Municipality in which he ELMER H. DEY, at the polling place in the Election District resides or to "the Connty Board of Elections Prospect Plainf, N. J. Mr. and Mrs. F. S. Davi3, Jr. are Phont -104 in which he is registered, may make appli of the County of Middlesex, on or before spending sometime with Mra. Edward October 19th, 1920, and a formal WANTED-Live Poultry Highest cation for an official ballot to the Municipal Tuesday, Clerk in any Municipality in which he re- application will be forwarded said elector Appleget. Prico Pai.l. Louis BARTH, and when properly filled out and returned sides or to the County Board of Elections 119 Mercer street,, Mrs. Geo S. Burroughs and sons Regof the County of Middlesex, on or before to the County Hoard of Elections of the Hight-town, N J Tuesday, October 19th, 1920, and a formal Connty of Middlesex, when an absentee inald and Irving, of Trenton, visited Tel 14 M. application will be forwarded said elector ballot will be forwarded to such elector. Mr. and Mrs. Geo W,. Burroughs on G e n e r a l Election. and when properly filled out and returned •Witness my hand this 7th day of Septem— Monday. —Notice-is-hereby i;ivcn—tliat.a general to-the County Board, of Elections of the ber, nineteen hundred and twenty. election will be held in and for the town- County of Middlesex, when an absentee WALTER J. RIELLEY, ballot will be forwarded to such elector. ship of CKA.NB1/KY, on STITCH AXU CHATTER , Secretary, Witness my hand this 7th day o f SeptemTUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2nd, 1920" Middlesex County Board of Elections. S U P P E R AND BAZAAR, ber, nineteen hundred and twenty. T H U B S D A Y , D E C E M B E R 2 d . between the hours of fix o'clook in the WALTEU,.T. RIELLEY, G e u e r a l Election. morning and beven n'iijock in the evening, Secretary, said election will lie held in Odd Fellows Notice is hereby given that a general P r o p e r t y t o r Sale. Middlesex County Board of Elections. Hall, Cranbury. election will be held in and for the town"* Modern BuildiDg with all improveSaid General Election will be held for the ship of PLAIN'SBOilO, on G o t H e r Good H e a l t h O u t ments, on Mercer Street, Hightetown. purposse of electing the following officers: TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 2nd, 1920, Electors o f a President and Vice Presiof a B o t t l e . Second floor for residential purposes. between the hours of six o'clock in the dent o f the L"uit«l States. Ground floor for busiotss purpoaos. InMitt. Edward Raifauider, Wabaah, morning and seven o'clock iu the evening, One member of the House of Representaspection invited. Must be sold to close tives from the Third Congressional District. Iud. says that she owes her good health said election will be held in Plainsboro the estate of the late L. D. Tillyer. Three members of the General Assembly to Chamber Iain's Tablets Sho suffered Hall, Plainsboro. Said General Election will be held for the Apply to of the State of New Jersey. from distress afler eating and couslipoOne Sheriff, two Coroners, tlirce Free- tion and was completely cured by the pnrpo>e of electing the following oQicers: MRS. L D. TILLYER, holders for the term of thicc years, one use of these tablets. Electors of a President and-Vice Presi207, 209 Mercer St., Hightstowu, N. J. Freeholder for the term of one year, for the dent of the L'nited States. County of Middlesex. One member of the House of ItepresentaI m p r o v e Your D i g e s t i o n . Oue'Conimittecinan, one Township Clerk magazines^ Subscriptions T a k e u . tivesfrom the Third Congressional District. for the Township of Cranbury. If you have weak digestion eat sparPictorial Review 1 year $3 00 or 2 Three members of the General Assembly Public Questions: A Soldiers' Bonus Act, jears for $5 00. Women's Home Com- of the State of New Jersey. ingly of meatg, let at least five hours Chapter 139, Laws 1920; A State Bond elapse between meals, eat nothing bepaniou $2 00, American Magazine $2 DO One Sheriff, two Coroners, three Free~ tween meals. Drink an abundance of Issue, Chapter 352, Laws 1920. or to one address $3 50, Lsdies Home holders for the term of three years, and one At the same time and place there will be Journal $2 00, Saturday Evening Post Freeholder for the term of one year, for the water. Take one of Chamberlain's Tablets immediately after supper. Do submitted to the voters of the Township of $2 50, Country Gentleman $1.00, Rural County of Middlesex. Cranbury the following proposition : this-aod you will improve your digestion New Yorker $1 00, Christian Herald One Committeeman, one Township Clerk "Shall the bonds provided for in an Or- $2 00. Apk for my clubbing rates on two Justice of the Peace for the Township dinance entitled 'An Ordinance providing of PlaiDSboro. any magazines 30U desire. F i n a n c i a l Loss D u e t o Colds. for the issuance of and sale of bonds for the - Publio Questions: A Soldiers' Bonus Act, Miss MASIE CHAMBERLIN,It is" estimated that the average man acquisition - and -purohaso of a-site., and Chapter 159, Laws-1920, _A. State Bond loses three days time each year from erection of building for the purpose of a Phone 3 tn 16. Cranbury., N. J. Issue, Chapter 352, Laws 1920. inability to work on account • of having Township Hall and Meeting Place, for the Sept. 17-lm. Notice t o Absentee Voters. Committee, the Volunteer Fire a cold; Much of this loss can be avoid- Township Company, or Companies, and to House the Any elector who is registered for the ed by treating every cold as BOOD as the Fire Apparatus of the Township of CranGeneral Election, who by reason of inability first symptoms of the disease appeur. bury, in the County of Middlesex and State through illness or absence from the County Chamberlain's Cough Remedy has won of New Jersey' adopted by the Township in wliich^he resides is unable to cast his a wide reputation and immense sale by Committee on the 7th day of September, ballot on the day of the General Election its cures of this disease. Try it. You 1920, providing for the issuance of Eight at the polling place iu the Election District Thousand ($3,000) Dollars o f Bonds for the in which he is registered, may make appliare certain to be pleased with its pleasCranbury, N. J .cation Maiu St., 6or an official ballot to the Municipal ant taste and the prompt relief which purpose above stated, be issued," Clerk in any Municipality in which he it affords. To vote in favor of the issuance of the resides or to the Connty Board of Elections said bonds mark an "X'" in the square of the County of Middlesex, on or before opposite the word "YES,'1 to vote against Tuesday, October 19th, 1920, and a formal the issuance of said bonds mark an " X " in application will be fprwarded such elector the square opposite the word "NO." and when properly filled out "and returned Notice to A b s e n t e e Voters. to the County Board of Elections of the Any elector who is registered for the Bring me your Shoes and I will County of Middlesex, when an absentee ballot will be forwarded to such elector. General Election, who by reason of inability through illness or absence from the County return them to you equal to new. •Witness my hand this 7th, day of Septemin which he resides is unable to cast his ber, nineteen hundred and twenty. ballot on the day of the General Election WALTER J. RIELLEY, at the polling place in the Election District Secretary, Containing !1OO Acres in high in which he is registered, may make appliMiddlesex County Board of Elections. for an official ballot to the Municipal state of cultivation, located on cation Clerk of any Municipality in which he State Highway, on edge of Cran- resides or to the County Board of Elections of the pounty of Middlesex, on or beforo NOTICE. bury, known as the D. C. Lewis Tuesday, October 19th, 1920, and a formal All persons cnacorn^d miiy ttike ootico. application will be forwarded said elector thut'tbo Kubhurlbur Administrator, etc.. of farm, and noted as one of the best and Uobort M. Vundonboreb.doceivsed. Intends to when properly filled out and returned exhibit bis llnnl account to tho Orphans producing farms in this section to the County Board of Elections of the Court for tho County ol M i d d l e s , on County of Middlesex, when an absentee FrldiiT> tho twonty-becond Any o( October. for the past thirty years. 1K0 ut 10 *• M., Iu tli» Term "f 8optombor ballot will be forwarded to such elector. 1'JiO foi- buttlumunt und nllo\viu,co: tho snmo For particulars inquire of bolntf first uudttoU and htuteil by tho Witness my band this 7th day of SeptemBurrouato, ber, nineteen hundred and twenty. GEO. B. MERSHON, Dated September 11.1020. WALTER J. RIELLEY, KOBEBT R., VAN-DESBEKaU. Executor, Secretary. CRANBURY, N. J . Administrator. Cranbury, N. J. Middlesex County Board of Elections.
- T H E CRANBURY PRESS-
B. Viola
Choice Potato Farm For Sale
Shoe Repairing. Shoes Shined.
To Settle the" Estate.
Plumbing, Heating, Tinning. Pipeless Heaters, Water Supply System. E. E. ORTON,
S. P. Dunham & Co.,
Trenton, N. J.
Store Hours 8.30 to G.00 Every Day.
For How Little Can Good furs Be Sold ? We will demonstrate this to you here now, in scarfs, a great namber of them, ranging from the moderate to fine,' always good, though, remember, the best of their respective kinds, and as we sell other merchandise, so we sell furs, at the very least possible profit margin. There are certain kinds of furs in the market that we wouldn't offer you, it would only result in harm to us, you'd be displeased with the service of the scarfc, they would ' change their color, or they would shed their fur, but these scarfs are perfectly safe to buy; we secured them from furriers whose reputations are unquestionable, have been for many long years, as our own is ever, in fur selling. Black lynx scarfs, of goodly size, unpieced skins, perfectly safe, black dye; animal trimmed, finest quality silk lin' ing, $67.25. Marmot scarfs, fair size, perfectly marked unpieced skins; animal trimmed, $26.25. A taupe fox scarfs, here's the unusual, and you will say so, after you've examined it closely; full'size, animal trimmed, $40.25. Bed fox scarfs, finely marked; trimmed with heads, claws and tails, soft silk lined, $39.50.' Blue wolf scarfs, perfect shading, perfect skins, too, and at fair enough price, you will say, $62.98. Taupe wolf scarfs, fine glossy furs, perfect skins, animal trimmed; extra large tails, $56.75. A b*rown wolf scarf, extra large size, finer quality fancy silk -linings,-head, claw and tail trimmed, $55.75. A dyed black fox scarf, a close approach to the finest lynx; at arm's length you'd say one and the same; good full size, $57.75. Of course we have lower priced fur scarfs, some in black, brown and taupe coneys and China wolf, at $10.50, $19.25 to $28.50.
A Few,and Only a Few of the Many Sweaters for Anniversary Month Four fold more you will see when you come. Women's All-Wool Jersey Sweaters, $12.98. Tuxedo models, belted; every shade that is worthy, includiug sand, heather, navy, black, peacock and the new browns. Heavy Winter sweaters, thesey-knit-from the heavier double and twisted yarns and best grades zephyr yarns, some with brush wool collars and cuffs; colors a-plenty, $7.9S to $10.50. Women's, misses' and larger children's sweaters, crochet styles and purled styles, knit from finer zephyrs and ' shetlands, and there are all the colors that are best liked, $7.9S to $16.50. Women's and misses' slip-on sweaters, fish tail and rippled styles, these, mainly; some hand crochet, some purled finished; colors as many as you'd care for, $5.9S to $7.9S
Inexpensive, Serviceable American Wool Dress Goods These in part wool and all wool such materials, as you want for dresses and suits for the more serviceable wear, something to save your fine suits and dresses. 3S-inch part wool serge, a strongly woven material that's well adapted to dresses you want for more practical • wear, $1.39. 3S-inch all-wool storm serges, colors and black, $1.75 and $2.00. 38-inch hal^wool surah serges, woven like the foreign goods '• at three times the price, only not ^o fine or so wide, $1.39. " " " •1-1-inch shepherd checks^ three size checks, weights for Autumn and early Winter, $1.39. 38-inch novelty cloth checks, several different size and color checks, $1.25. 44-inch half-wool sport skirting plaids, heavier weights', styles much like the foreigners at high cost, $2.50. 3S-inch half-wool granite cloths, colors, white and black, heavier weights, $1.39.
S. P" DUNHAM & CO. •|..I-H-I"M-H"M"I-M"M-I"I"I»I-M"M-I-H"1-I-I-I-H-1-1-I-I->M"1:1 1 111 1 I H-I->
All Shirts, Neckwear, Overalls and Boys' Blouses Reduced 1-4 R. A. DGNWELLY, S t a t e S t r e e t , E a s t of B r o a d ,
T R E N T O N , N . J;
jr
• 1 1 M I H-M H-l M-1II I M i l I I V » H H - 1 - H ' M - M ' M - 1 1 I I I H I 11 Hi
THE CRANBURY PRESS. Mr. Turpln of Mercervllle, the Coun ty Boys' and Girls' Club leader, is considerably mystified over thefllsavppearance of a pure-bred Durbi: Jersey sow pig, which somehow made Its escape from the rear of his Ford car when It was being returned to the owner from tbe Fair Grounds.
tndo nutrk of Bayer ibuiufiicture ot UonoactUctciaaaUr of BaUorUaaaM Hc Service Gas Company to charge catsup, season to taste wlth-salt and nature had put in thefields'and The Susses county Board of Free- $1.40 for the present quality of gas forests, for keeping us healthy. holders has deferred, action on bids Is to be brought In question on tech- pepper and cook until dry. A trick may sometimes make money Thin. Frozen Chocolate Pudding.—Pour (submitted for the reconstruction of Few folks or families now living Smith—"They are making some fine but It never makes a friend for yon. nical grounds, It was asserted In Trenone cupful of boiling water over oneMontague .Township road pending hosiery these days." Jones—"Sheer have not at sometime or other used atheconference with the. Township Com- ton. The law requires that "a ,mar half cupful of sugar arid six ounces A man's accusations of himself art this "Golden Medical Discovery" mittee of that municipality. L Stout jority vote of the board shall be neces- of grated chocolate; stir until thick enough, sheer enough" — Cartoons always believed;-his .praises seldom. Magazine. sary to the making of any order." for 'the stomach, liver and heart; & Son of Newton were low bidders for and smooth, then let cook. Mix lightTony Bucco, three-year-old son of ly three cupfuls of whipped cream Over twenty-four million bottles work on this road, which runs from of this tonic and blood remedy the Sandyston Township line to the Vtteo Bucco, of Harrison street, Boon- flavored with vanilla, turn Into a fancy Intersection of the road leading to ton, was botten by a dog thought to mold, cover "securely and rack In Ice have been sold in this country. have been mad, that ran amuck In that and salt. Let stand for five hours. Milford Bridge. quarter of town. The child was atIn an attempt to compel the Jersey tacked while on his way home from Serve with preserved strawberry city commissioners to divide the fire the house of his grandparents, nnd be- sirup. Stewed Beef and Cucumbers.—Take fighting force of that municipality into fore the dog could be driven off his a round of beef weighing two to three two platoons Andrew Hart, a.taxpayer face was badly torn. - •• - - — pounds, brown it 'quiekly_in_ beef dripof Jersey City, has obtained from JusMayor Victor Mrnvlag of Elizabeth pings. Rembveto a deep kettle and tice Swayze an order to show cause why a writ of mandamus should not appointed Edgar A. Knapp, one of the brown two sliced onions and_ three be issued compelling the commission- Rough'Riders in the-Spanish-American cucumbers which have been pared and AND FOR ers to comply with chapter* 8-of the war, to be chairman of the committee quartered and the seeds removed. Add La "Grippe" Colds, Coughs these to the meat; then to the fat in ;aws of 191C providing for the platoon to arrange memorial exercises in ElizPEGGY coughed for an hour abeth on October 27 to commemorate the pan add sufficient flour to absorb after bedtime until Mother system. Neglected Colds are Dangerous it. Stir until browned; then add half thought of Kemp's Balsam. A the birth of Theodore Roosevelt. Anew club has been organized In half teaspoonful quickly rea pint of boiling water. To this add Take no chances. Keep this standard remedyhandy for thefirst«neox«. Commissioner John F. Woods re-Hillside, to be known as the Lehigli lieved the irritation, after which, an equal quantity of stewed and Breaks Dp a. cold in 24 hours — Rolieves Athletic Club. The officers are: Pres- ported to the 15oard~of Commissioners strained tomato; pour over tbe meat, she soon went to sleep. ; Grippe In 3 days—Excellent for Headache of Lyndhurst that there was no imdent. Allan Yulll; vice president, Walseason with salt and pepper, cover and Quinine in this form does not affect tho head—Cascara is best Tonla er Boernement; secretary, George provement in sight for borrowing simmer.for two and one-half hours. Laxative—No Opiate in Hill's. Schultz; treasurer, Robert Havilnnd; money at a nominal ra-te and therefore Serve the meat on a platter with tbe Will Stop That Conqh no new frfiprovements could be undersergeant-at-arnis, Frederick Adams. vegetables and the sauce around it. During September there were 6 mar- taken. All improvements contemplat- garnishing with triangles of fried riages, 25 births und 1G deaths regis- ed were accordingly held up. bread. The Hydewood Golf Club elected tered at the office of the Board of Surprise Pears. — Pare and core WHERE TOMMY MADE A POINT COUNTRY'S FIRST CORN MILL these officers-at Its annual meeting at Health of Summit. The health nurse made 147 visits. The question of con- Plalnfield: President, Charles H. Rus- pears and put : bit of preserved ginsolidating the work of the'nurses of sell; vice president, William P. Em- ger into the center of each. Season Remarkable That School Teacher Had Recent Discoveries Establish Its Sito cold-cooked rice with sugar, salt and at a Point on the St. Croix Never Noticed That Quite SimWhen the body begins to stiffen the Co-operative Charities and the mons ; treasurer, Arthur Hassell, and lemon juice. Make the rice into a River; Eastport, Me. ple Truth Before. secretary, Frank A. Grant. Besides and movement becomes.painful it Health Board will he made at a "speMr. Emmons, Mr. Hassell and Mr. paste with the yolks of two eggs well is usually an indication that the cial meeting to he held soon. beaten. Cover each pear with rice, The site of what undoubtedly was Arltlr».ptic, according to the average Looseness of law enforcement by Grant the following were elected trus- dip in crumbs, then in beaten egg, kidneys are out of order.. Keep the first tidewater mill on- the Ameritees: Harold E. Blazler, William P. small, boy, was simply invented in orShese organs healthy by taking the police, the alleged prevalence of Townlcy, Weston Williams, G. S^ Si- then crumbs and fry in deep fat. der to give teachers a good excuse for can continent'has been discovered nt gambling and violations of liquor liiws Popovers.—Beat two eggs light nnd punishing their unhappy pupils. And Ited Beach, Me., where Low's brook n Newton were topics of conversation mons and Harvey R. Llnbarter. mix with a pint of milk. Pour gradnt a meeting of the Town Committee. In a race with death Mrs. Joseph ually over a pint of flour sifted with a certainly little Tommy Smith found it empties into the St. CroU river at a the unpleasant feature of his young point nearly opposite the southern end Although one member of the commit- Gloskin of Jackson avenue, Linden, of Dochet's Island, where De Monts tee said he believed that conditions was the loser. Leaving her six-week- teaspoonful of salt and beat well. Fill life. . hot greased cups two-thirds full and "Now, Tommy Smith," said the and his men settled In the year 1604, were bad, no action was taken. ~ " old child asleep In her crib, Mrs. Glos- bake in a hot oven for thirty or forty school teacher one morning, during the, three years before the settlement of The world's standard remedy for Iddnoy, Health Officer Fell of Trenton ar- kin went to the grocery store. Reliver, bladder and uric acid troubles. rived home after a month's trip to the turning, she found the child suffering minutes, according to size. Serve at usual hour of torture, "what is the Jamestown. In excavating for a fish pond ne.ir his summer nome, R. S. Me> Famous since 1696. Take regularly and Pacific coast. He was accompanied by from a hemorrhage. Rushing down once. half of eight?" keep in good health. In three sizes, ail his wife and daughter, Alice. The pri- St. George avenue on her two-mile "Which way, teacher?" asked the Carter of Cambridge, Mass., unearthed the unmistakable remains of an andruggists. Guaranteed as represented. You have eyesight and hearing and youngster cautiously. • • Journey to the St. Elizabeth Hospital, (Looic for tho n«ma Cold Madal on amcy has mary object of Dr. Fell's tour was to Mrs. Gloskin had traversed half the speech. Your limbs are sound. You cient dam of stone and timbers. Cora"Which way!" replied the. astonnttend the national convention in San use your arms and your legs and your mad accept no *** hands as freely as ever. What In creished lady. "What do you mean?" - paring the site with the origlmil map Francisco of- t h e - American-- Public distance .wJien._a motorist placed her are "you" walling" about? If one Agents and Dealers Wanted Health Association, which v;is In ilk his car and raced to the hospital. ation "Well, on top "or sldewaysi teach- of the Island, authorities agreed Epot Is crowded, go where they need it must have been the site of the to handle Preyed SteeL Automobile Lugs, a progress there during the week of The physicians there said that the iner?" said Tommy. ~ a crowd. If one resource fails you. device attached to the rear, wheels and ter mill mentioned in the old records guaranteed to take any automobile or truck September 13. fant had just died. Invent another.—Kaufman. "What difference does that make?" as employed by Sieur De Monts and oat of any* mud hole or ditch, or through "Why.i Tommy explained, with a liis men to grind their corn, being, the any road. Gives absolute traction through Stepping fro-M a freight train on Part of the big crop of field' corn In mud, snow or any bad road; does not injurf IN CHESTNUT TIME. pitying Air, "half of the top of eight largest stream within an area of sevthe tires. Sell instantly wherever shown. he South Jersey counties hus already which he was employed as brakeman. Retail at $8.00 per set. Liberal com'ftissions. is nought, but half of It sideways Is eral miles on either side of the river. —Distributors' -territory—available ^Address been husked, the grain havingdried Sergeant Cy.us P. Reed, 38 years, of The. cooked chestnut Is not nearly three."—London Answers. V/ORIiD-OVER SALES COMPANY. 505 Fifth out quickly during the September Jamesburf.', was instantly'killedby an. so popular as It deserves to be. Any AvpnU(\ New York City. other train in the Coal Port freight drought. time or labor enr .Y REMOVED bj- Dr. Ben-fa posmvcLi Her Break. An Objection. How many fanners vould leave yards of the I'. R. R. In .''renton. . itznmt—Tfonr druszbt or D» tailed in its prepIfrecki.OJn> rufl. G5e. Froe book. Dr. CTH. Bern 1 Mrs. Knwlei-—We generally dine al Worth while things are being dons "Are you in favor-of a front porch Co.p 2 9 7 S Michigan Avenue, Ctdcaso S20, $50, and even $100 in UHs out aration Is amply fresco during the summer months. My n the open du:ing an entire winter? at least in one of Orange's government repaid by the re- campaign?" Not Quite. Sounds absurd, but scores of such branches. The street department Is "Not me," replied Farmer Corntos- husband enjoys it; does yours* sult. Mr?. Newrich—No; John doesn't "So they had smuggled whisky on bills, In their enuivalent of farm Im- doing splendidly In regaining the city's sel. "Miranda would never stand for Chestnut Cus-' -are much for putting on style in hot that yachting party. This is going the plements are left in the shelter of. lost reputation for good roads, and having the grass all trampled out in tard. — Blanch, wir thrr t : he prefers to eat out on the limit." he broad skies all the yenr. Few the citizenry is indicating appreciation boil until • soft, the front yard." linvn.—Boston Transcript. farmers who follow this practice do so of the effort s of George Roche and his "Oh, no; that is three miles o u t " a n d n . a s h with a realization of the great loss able aid, City Engineer Walter I. Hull. The manly art of self-defense is apt they are sustaining on the money InThirty-five of the more than 300 through a colander a quantity of chest- to go wrong when It encounters a wom- A widow never tells her age; she's vested. drivers of public ronveyances In At- nuts. To one cupful of the chestnut an's eyes. always old enough to know better. pulp add three egg yolks with one In his report to New Brunswick lantic City have not yet paid the fed- beaten white of egg. one cupful of milk louiicll. Boy Scouts of America, ns a eral tax due August 1, according to. and half a teaspoonful of vanilla exol' the local branch of government agents. Of 125 jitneymen tract, and sugar to taste. Pour into "They Work while you Sleep". representative the boy scouts organization to the In- 24 are alleged to be delinquent. Under the laws of New Jersey tho a buttered baking dish and hake slowternational Jamboree held In London ly. Make a meringue with the reJuly 31 to August 7, Harold T. Cook- assessors of every taxing district in maining whites and two tablespoonthe state began their work on last tells In a very interesting manner of fuls of sugar, and bake slowly on rethe trip abroad nnd makes some rec- Friday of .nuking the tax assessments turning to the oven. Garnish "with ommendations as to Improving the for next year. The assessments must preserved cherries. be finished by Jam ary 15. The local A Paterso\ boy. Angeio Casselo of a ssessorsi"Jeroialnli"Donovan Ahralram" "~rmperla|—Chestnut-Pudding.—TakeEllison street, has hecn notified by the Jehu and Edwaid Banker, begun their one pint of chestnuts, one pint of alwar department that he has been round of the city of Now Brunswick monds, two cupfuls of. sugar; the yolks awarded a Distinguished Service Cross on Friday and hope to have their work of six eggs, two cupfuls of cieam, two cupfuls of boiling water, one pineapcompleted in December. Do you feel all "unstrung?"—-bilious, for extraordinary heroism at "Fon- A bronze Masoui<- tablet will be un- ple or a can of tho same, and one taines. France, on November 8," 1018. constipated, headachy, full of cold? Shell and veiled in connection with the dedica- pound of candled fruit. Cascarets tonight for your liver and The D. S. O. :s the second highest hon- tion of the Roosevelt Memorial Temple blanch the chestnuts and cover with bowels will have you tuned up by or conferred in this country, the Con- on Washington street, Newark, for- boiling water and cook until tender. tomorrow. You will wake up with gressional Medal of Honor being the merly the B'nai Jeshurun Temnla, on Drain and press through a colander. your head clear, stomach right, highest. Cut the candled fruit, Into bits, shell George Brandon, alias Harold V. October 17. breath sweet, and skin rosy. IMo gripIn order to further a publicity cam-, and blanch the almonds. Boil the siigLainble of New York, crfhvleted of the Ing—no inconvenience. Children love palgn to secure the passage of the ar and boiling water for a quarter of Cascarets too. 10, 25, 50 cents.—Adv. murder of Arthur L. Kupfer and his bridge and tunnel bond Issue referen- an hour, then add the beaten yolks of fiancee. Miss Edith .Tanny, both of Perth Amhoy, was scntencocl by Jus- dum in the state the North Jersey Port the eggs, remove from the fire and No More Snuggling. tire Eergen to dip in the electric chair Development Association has issued an beat until cool. Now add the fruit, "The honeymoon must he over." during the week of November 10. appeal for funds from business men. cream, almonds, chestnut flavoring and "Why do you say that?" Charles Pert-hand, also of New York, The question of the securities will come a quarter of a cupful of orange juice "They now carry Individual umbrel- Ifclio.turned state's evidence and whose before the voters on election day, when Mix well and freeze. Pack for five las." plea of manslaughter in connection they will be asked to vote "yes" or "no" hours to ripen. on nn issue of state bonds for the Mashed Chestnuts.—These mny be Insist on bavins Dr. JPeery's "Dead Shot" for with the crime was accepted, was senWorms or Tapeworm and tho druggist will tenced to four years at hard labor In building of the vehicular tube under served as a vegetable or as a cake fillprocure' it. It la tho only Vermifuge wblcb tt the Hudson. Ing. Put boiled, blanched chestnuts operates thoroughly after a single dose.—Adv. state prison. Travel over Hawkes bridge, between through aricer, season with salt, butTransfer of funds to nvct a situaEvery cloud lias a silver lining. The tion caused ' by ovCTexpenditurps in Pennsgrove and Slapa's Corner, will1 be ter and cream as for mnshed' potaboy who has the mumps doesn't have si.veral budget appropriations • Is to hold up for another week while' re- toes. For puddings add flovoring, suto go to school. he nuthoiizet! o* the next meetlr? of pairs to tho span are being completed. gar and a pinch of salt. Scalded by falling Into four feet of Chestnuts and Ham.—Place alterle Bloomfulii Town C.ounii as the Night and Morning. outcome of a conference of the olli- boiling wator li. a room ' i the Eas" nate layers of thinly sliced cooked ham Fifth street plan., of the Public Service und mashed chestnuts In a baking Have Strong, Healthy •l:ils1 Eymt. If they Tirejtcb, Whlle watching n machine gun dem- Gas Company, Heiuy H. Schoonejon- dish. Season with minced marjoram A BEVERAGE Smart or Burn, if Sore, •lnstrntlon by a ••'ntp.thment of soldiers gen, chief of the Prospect Park volun- and sage, salt and bits of butter to the "»*• of difT.r.nt p rt» Irritated, Inflamed or from the First Division a^ 'he Inter- teer fire company, died In the Pater- top layer of chestnut pulp. Bake un< d • .mill pMJon Made by Granulated.useMurine Postum Cereal Celtic, often; Soothes, Refreshes. Safe for state Fair g ounds \V:ilts»r A. Rich of son General Hospital, anJ Jdwo'rl til" brown on top. Infantor Atiult.. At allDruggists. Write for Tre.iton was sin * through the hm k of De Groat, an employe ;n :he works, Battle Creek Jiich. Free Eye Book. HuiineEjc&emedrGfc,aiap tbe head by bullet from the weapon is at his home •mfferlng from severe aiid'foll dend at the feet if his wife, bunn received when ^e wiided W. N. U., NEW YORK, NO. 42-1920, to whom he hud been married only a through the seething water In an effort to find the victim. i*ort time. >»»***»»»»
NEW JERSEY STATE BRIEFS f
The Kitchen Cabinet
Kill That Cold With
CASCARA & f QUININE
KEMP'S BALSAM
ALL DRUGGISTS SELL IT
FRECKLES
CASGARETS
If you like the taste of coffee, you 11 like
POSTUM
and you'll like itbetter thancoffee because itis a table drink of satisfying flavor, with no after regrets, and it costs less. Coffee disagrees with some,but Instant Postum agrees with everybody.
There's a Reason
for POSTUM
Sold by grocers everywhere!
t
THL CRANBURY PRESS.
LIFE WAS A MISERY TO HER
fWO METHODS GIVEN FOR MAKING LIME FOR IMPROVEMENT OF SOIL
Says this Woman Until Relieved by Lydia E.Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Carrollton, Ky.—" I suffered almost two years with female "weakness. I I could not walk any d i s t a n c e , ride or' take any exercise at all without resting. If I swept the floor or did any kind of work it would brine my sickness on. I was weak and languid, had no energy, and lifewaaa misery tome. I was under the_care_cf_a_good_ physician for several months and'tried other remedies. I had read of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and decided to try it. After taking twelve bottles I found myself much improved and I took six more. I have never had any more trouble in that respect since. I have done all kinds of work and at present This Outfit—Small Crusher Operated by Farm Tractor—Produced 300 Tons am an attendant at a otate Hospital of Lime in 30 Days. and am feeling fine. 1 have recommended your Vegetable.Compound .to. _ Wlthjhe building up- of soil by which type of outfit Is the best pun dozens of my friends and shall always recommend it."—LILLIAN THABP, 824 proper crop rotation becoming more" ("chase: Application of Limestone. general the use of nine for Improving S. 6th St, Carrollton, Ky. Limestone ground to pass through agricultural soils Is increasing. LimeIf yon have any symptom about which stone soils- are- universally, recognized, a ten-mesh screen, all finer particles you would like to know write to the as rich soils and especially suitable Included, is recommended by the deLydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, for stock farming, where proper partment of agriculture for the comMass., for helpful advice given free of mixed hay and pasture are vital. By mon application of two tons to the charge. the use of ground limestone many acre. Either very finely pulverized farmers, frequently at a moderate ex- limestone or burnt lime Is recommendpense, can make their soils better, say ed where an application of only a few specialists of the bureau of soils, hundred pounds to the acre Is to be United Stafes~department" of- agricul- •made.- -For general use-In the more humid portions of the country It adture. Where lime can be bought from vises an application of one to two large plants producing it cheaply. It is tons of ground limestone to the acre, doubtful whether the farmer In a lime- or._ one-half_that. amount of burnt lime, once In a rotation of not more Just Takes An Eatonio stone region would do well to make than five years unless actual test his own lime. In other cases, how"The first dose of Eatonic did me proves this unnecessary. For. alfalfa ever, the existence of local material •wonders. I take It at.meals_and am no longer-.both£red.-\glth Indigestion,!!! .an.cLJh.e_ac!.vlsabn|ty_^f__using power I and permanent pastures, an Initial apwrites Mrs. Ellen Harris. or labor which would otherwise "gcTfo plication—ef~%ouble—these—amounts Thousands of people, like this dear waste make it the best policy to pro- should be made. Lime may safely be —lady, gratefully testify about Eatonie, duce lime on the farm, in some rural used at any point in the ordinary farm which does its wonders by taking up communities are sources of power, rotation without serious loss of the and carrying out the excess acidity and such as sawmills, which are only used material. If applied in connection gases which bring on Indigestion, with tilled crops, its mixture with the heartburn, bloating, belching and food for a part of the year. In cases of soil will be Insured. The effects of this kind it may be possible to utilize repeating. Acid stomach also causea lime are likely to be In- proportion to about seventy other non-Organic ail- this power for limestone grinding, and the thoroughness with which It 1s ments. Protect yourself. A big box thus lower the price of the product. of Eatonic costs but a trifle with your In other cases, as at prisons, reforma- mixed with the soli In which the crop druggist's guarantee. tories, Institutions for the insane, etc., roots develop. there Is available a lnrge amount of unpaid or cheap labor which may be used to produce lime for the institution farm or even for sale to neighboring fanners.
Ho Mora Misery After Eating
SUPERIOR DUALITIES
Burning or Grinding.
Given a source of limestone or he Bate easy way bef ore shell, the farmer has a choice of either xwne troubles follow. Take grinding the material finely and using It in the form of carbonate or burning It and using it in the form of oxide or OF HOREHOUND AND TAR quicklime. In the early days of this The tried home remedy tor breaking country the burning process was the up colds, relieving throat troubles; only one employed, but at present healing and soothing—quick relief ground tJpiestone is popular In many for coughing and hoarseness. sections where long freight hauls are 30* at all drat tit* not invohfed. Good results agriculturuiaTIka'fl Toothaeb* Dropi. ally are obtained from lime in either of these forms. Burning has certain advantages for small operations, chiefly because It takes no expensive equipment or power plant. Where only a small amount is needed all that Is necessary Is to use the so-called heap method. In this system a layer of two rows of dry cordwood mixed with a lighter kindling Is first laid down, next a layer of coal, next a~layer of limestone, and above this several layers of limestone and coal. One part of coal Re£ U.S.Pat.Off. should burn several parts of limestone. The outside of this heap Is covered with soil and 'the kindling lighted. The burning of the wood and' PETROLEUM JELLY coal turns the whole amount of broken limestone Into burned lime, the carbon dioxide escaping as a gas through an opening left In the top of the henp for this purpose. The process Is not completely satisfactory unless the gas Is allowed to escape. This method produces lime which Is mixed with ashes, but as the coal ashes are harmless and the wood ashes beneficial to the soil no 111 efAVOID SUBSTITUTES fects result from this mixture. Oyster or clam shells may be burned In a simmanner or In a special rack made New York ilar fitata Street of cordwood. In all cases the heat must be controlled and spaces must be left between the stone"oFshells"for" the flames to penetrate. Restore* Color and BautytoCnranlFadedtfaU Where larger quantities of lime are tOcudfl.MatPlta to be made It may be advisable In some cases to construct a small cylinHINDERCORNS S Km™, ow* o* iossn, ct&. ct&. iiton t o n all (fcln, eeniure* wmtort to tha drical kiln, which may be lined with (MK zznaltel n l t l wlkt r lsa ls by mall or at Draff* fire brick or sandstone. This Is rare(MK wftlktnr rrrnnr. ClM*. Blacox Chemical warka.Patcluzaa,ti.X. J ly advisable for the farmer at pn.»sent, however, as under these conditions It would probably pay him better to purchase a grinding outfit. Community Production. The use of small crushers and pulPromptly Relieves verizers to produce ground limestone has proved satisfactory In many localities. They are naturally not as economical as a large plant but may save high freight rates to Inaccessible And it's harmless localities. They are often employed also at off seasons of the year where labor would otherwise not be used to the best advantage. The most convenient outfit Is a "combination crusher and pulverizer, but good • results are serured from small pulverizers, although In this case a good deal, more hand sledging has to be done. Portab'e outfits may be moved from Soap 25c, Ointment 25 and 50c,TaIonn25c. place to place and thus utilize outcrops and save hauling. Where associations of farmers are If neglected, often leoda to aerioua trouble. buying machinery a stationary plant Safeguard your health, relieve your dtitren may be Installed which should produce and loothe your irriuttd throat by taktag limestone at a low cost per ton. As each case Is a business proposition which will have to be considered by Itself, it is difficult to advise as to
Vaseline Carbolated An antiseptic dressing for cuts sores, etc. —» A necessity where there are children.
\3LOV
HEADACHE NEURALGIA TOOTHACHE
KeepYourSkin-Pores Active and Healthy With Cuticura Soap A Bad Cough
Acreage in Kansas Estimated at About 500,000 Acres. Kanred Is.Variety Developed by Kan. sas Agricultural Experiment Station—Widely Grown in Many Western States. Deep Interest In the success of Kanred wheat reported from Kansas Is being shown by specialists of the bureau of planPVIndustry of the United States department of agriculture. According to reports this^year's acreage of Kanred Is estimated by Kansas authorities to have been about 500,000 acres.- Of this total area 15,000 to 20,000 acres, grown by selected farmers, have been carefully inspected in the field by representatives of the Kansas agricultural college - and - certified as -furnishing sources 'of seed of high quality and purity. Kanred Is a variety of hard red winter wheat developed by the Kansas agricultural experiment station. It was obtained by selection from the Crimean variety of hard red winter wheat introduced from Russia by the bureau of plant Industry of the federal department of agriculture and widely grown In Kansas and adjacent states. It was developed by the Kansas scientists with special reference to conditions there and has proved to be a better ylelder by three to'flve bushels to the acre compared with other hard red winter wheats. Its better yield Is due in. part to greater resistance to winterkilling and to rust and In part to Its slightly earlier ripening, say special lsts of the department.
MAKE WAR ON TUBERCULOSIS Campaign Now - Being Conducted In Forty-Five States in Co-operation With Owners and Officials. The campaign to eradicate tuberculosis from live stock Is now being con ducted In 45 states In co-operation •with the live-stock owners and the respective state live-stock sanitary officials. Arrangements are being made to have other states engage In the work. However, state and federal ofcials cannot prevent losses from the disease without the assistance and hearty co-operation of the owners.
Bats destroy valuable feed. • -*- * Full many a1 farmer's table Is set from the egg money. • • * Soybeans can be threshed with an ordinary threshing machine. w •
•
•
•
Cut corn for grain and fodder when the kernels have fairly hardened. • • • Build up your soil with limestone-• your live stock with a purebred sire
Butter. Creamery— • Extra high scoring 59'M 60 Extra 92 scoring 69 4 Firsts El%« 68 Seconds 4° i Cnsalted C r e a m e r y Extras 61%« 62 High scoring 62J4 t 63 State dairy finest 67 4 58 Creamery, Danish, casks, duty paid 62 4 65 46 Ladles, our make, finest 44 i Packing stock— „ , No. 1 current make 41% 63 Fresh gathered extra flrsts. 69 4» 61 Fresh gathered flrsts 65 4W 57Fresh gathered seconds 62 431 54 Fresh' gath., reg. packed. Fresh gathered checks . . . . . 43 W 45 NEARBY BROWN AND WHITE EGGS. Stat«. Pa. & nearby Western hennery, white, extra 81 @ 82 StatB. Penn. & nearby hennery, wh., 1st to extra 1st 72 @ 80 State &'Perin. gath white, flrsts to extra firsts 72 @ 80 Stato, Penn. &.nearby hennery browns; fancy 68 @ 73 * State, Penn. & nearby brown and mixed ^colors, fancy.. 62 ® 64 DrMsed Poultry. CHICKENS—Fresh, dry packed, 12 to box. Western, milk fed— 17 lbs & under to doz., lt>. .60 < ) 51 48 lbs 48 < ) 50 •Westernrcorn- fed — 17 lbs. & under to doz., lb. . . < j1" 48" 48 48 lbs. and up 46 ( bbls. CHICKENS—Fresh, dry packed, Western— ) 43 _.MIlk fed...d. p. broilers, lb. 42 Corn fed, d. p. broilers, lb. 40 ( ) 42 SouthWn. milk fed. d. p. " chickens, In kegs 40 ( ) 41 CHICKENS—Fresh, Iced. bbls. Western— Milk fed, dry picked. 2% 40 to 3 lbs. each 39 < Corn fed, d. p., broilers, 2 42 lbs. each and under 41 ( Corn fed, dry picked, 2% 38 ® 39 to 3 lbs. each Scalded, -broilensjb^_v,. -_t. 40 <§> 4 2 46" 1W—47 — Virginia, mjlk fed 46 & 50 Nearby broilers, per lb 40 (3 Nearby fryers, per lb „ 44 FOWLS—Fresh, dry packed, milk fed, 12 lo box. Western— 60 lbs." and over to doz., per lb 42 «J .. Under 30 lbs. to doz., lb... 29 @ 30 FOWLS—Fresh, dry packed, corn fed. 12 to box. Western— 60 Ibu. and over to doz., lb. . . . . Under 4-lbs 33 & 35 W'n. milk fed, kegs. aver... 38 @ 40 S'n & S'w'n, corn fed, kess," -----average 36 @ 37 OLD COCKS—Fresh, boxes or bbls. Western, dry picked, lb 27 Western, scalded 26 <$ . . DUCKS— Long Island, spring, per lb.. . . © 37 SQUABS— Prime, white— 10 lbs. to doz., doz. «5S10 00 6 to 6«, lbs. to doz, doz... 5 00 & 5 50 Dark, per doz 3 50 6L4 00 Culls, per doz ; 1 50 @ 2 00 LIVE POULTRY— Fowls, by freight 40 & 41 Fowls, by express 36 w 43 Chickens, by freight (y> 40 Chickens, by express 39 4 2 Old roosters & 24 Ducks 35 «|> 40 Ducks. L. I., spring 43 & 45 Geese (9 25 Pigeons, per pair @ 35 Guineas, per pair ©1 25 Vegetables. Beans, per basket 1 00 © 2 SO Beets, 100 bunches 1 60 @ 3 00 Brussels, sproutb, per qt... 20 cy) 25 Carrots, per 100 bchs. . . . . . 1 00 0 2 00 Chicory, per box 1 00 @ 1 25 Corn, per basket 75 1 7 5 Celery, per doz. stalks . . . . 15 (§> 65 Eggplants, per carrior . . . . 50 (p) 2 25 Garlic, per lb 2 & 10 Horseradish, Imp., per bbl.23 00 @25 00 Leeks, per 100 bunches . . . 1 00 @ 2 00 Lima beans, bsltt. or bag.. 1 50 @ 2 75 Lettuce, per crate 10 © 1 2 5 bskt. , . 2 00 8> 4 00 White, boilers, bskt 75 @ 2 00 100-lb. bag 1 25 <0 2 00 Red, per basket '. 75 @ 1 25 Yellow, per basket 75 @ 1 25 Western, yellow, bag 2 00 © 2 50 State & W'n, red, per bag 2 00 - 2 25 Orange Co., red. per bag. 1 26 2 25 L. I., yellow, per bag . . . . 1 75 (jj) 2 25 Jersey, per basket 75 <<* i '•>* Peppers, per basket 60 Peas, per bag 1 (10 Parsley, curly, per 100 bchs 1 00 Radishes, 100 bunches 1 00 Romaine, per basket 50 Scallions, per 100 bunches. 1 00 Spinach, bskt., crt or bbl.. 1 00 55 1 75 Squash, bskt., crt. or bbl.. 25 © 2 00 Turnips, new, white, 100 bu 2 00 @ 4 00 Potatoes. Jersey, per 165-Ib. bag . . . . 2 75 Jersey, per 150-lb. bag . . . . 2 25 Southern, No. 1. per bbl... 2 00 Southern. No. 2, per bbl. 1 50 Sweet, Jersey, No. 1, bskt. 1 76 Southern, per bbl 4 60 Southern, No. 2, per bbl. 1 60 Southern, basket 1 50 Southern, culls, per bbl.. 1 00 Beans and Peas. Marrow, choice, 100 lbs 11 00 Pea, choice, 100 lbs 7 00 Medium, choice, 100 l b s . . . . 7 60 Lady Washington, CaL . . . 6 25 Yellow eye. per 100 lbs Pink. Cat., 100 lbs 8 25 Lima. California 11 25 Peas, Scotch, per 100 lbs... 5 50 Green, domestic, 100 lbs... 5 50 Blackeye, CaL, ch., 100 lbs.10 00 Fruits and Berries. PEACHES, bush, bskt.— N. Y. Elbertas JJtJUL,. . _ 3 _ 0 0 ~N.~~r: Crawford" 8 00 Jersey Elbertas 2 26 APPLES, per b a s k e t Windfalls .•. 60 Windfalls 1 50 Wealthy, hand picked 1 25 Duchess, hand picked . . . . 1 00 Mclntosh ) . 25 Twenty ounce 1 25 Qravenstefn; box 3 60 Greening, hand picked . . . . 1 25 Alexander, bbL .%... 3 60 Jonathan. bbL 6 00 PEARS— tf Seckel, barrel 6 00 Ordinary basket 1 25 MUSKMELONS— Jersey, Ford Hook2 00 -@ 2 26 GRAPES, per crate— Delaware 1 50 @ 1 75 Moore's Early 1 25 @ 1 40
Hay and Straw. Prime timothy hay, No. 1, $2.50; No. 2. $2.3002.40: No. 5, [email protected]. Clover, .mixed. [email protected]. Rye straw. $1.30. OaU straw, 80@85c, all per 100 pounds. Live Stock and Meat Prices. Common to prime steers, 100 lbs., $9.00 @1G.6O; common to choice bulls, 100 lbs., [email protected]; common to choice cows, 100 lbs., [email protected]: common to prime veals, 100 lbs., $15.00021.00; common to prim*' sheep (ewes), 100 lbs., [email protected] common to prime lambs, 100 lbs., $11.00fol6.76; live hogs, 100 lbs., [email protected]; dressed beef, Bteer sides, lb., 18@29c; city dressed voals, lb., 24@33c; dressed mutton, lb., 8@ 16c; dressed Iambs, lb.. 25@32e. Spot Markets at a Glance. Wheat, 2 red, c. 1. t. 2.70 Corn, No. 2, yellow 1.52% Oats, No. 1, white 76 Rye, No. 2. c. 1. f 2.05 Barley, feeding .•. 1.10 Tallow, spec, loose 10 Lard, prime west 21.35 Stearino, city oleo 1514 Grease, yellow 08 Lard prod., cont 22.00 Dressed beef ribs. No. 1 34 Dressed hogs. 140s 25% Sugar, raw, lb Noraf Sutfar, gran., lb Nom'l Bulter, 92 score 59 Egl's 57. Cbonse, special .29^ Culton 81:00
a package
before the war package
during . and a package
The Flavor Lasts So Does the Price!
Derivation of "Magnet." Conditions. The word "magnet" is derived from Knlcker—The modern child goes to the name of the city of Magnesia, in a part time school. Asia Minor, where the properties of Bocker—And has a cart time home. the loadstone are said to have been discovered. Cafaroh Can Be Cured Cuticura Comforts Baby's Skin When red, rough and itching with hot baths of Cuticura Soap and touches of Cuticura Ointment. Also make use now and then of that exquisitely scented dusting powder, Cuticura Talcum, one of the Indispensable Cuticura Toilet Trio.—Adv.
COMMON ERROR IN GRAMMAR
Catarrh Is a local disease greatly influenced by constitutional conditions. It therefore requires constitutional treatment. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE is taken internally and acts through, the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of the System. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE, destroys the foundation of the disease, gives the patient strength by improving the general health and assteto nature In doing Us work. All Druggists. Circulars free. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio.
GEORGIE'S PATIENCE
GONE
Words "Begun" and "Began" Are And the Youngster Signified the. Fact.. Wrongly Used by Those Careless With Slang Phrase Much to in Their Speech. the Point It Is quite common to hear some "Slang and children are the two one say, "I begun to do that work yesterday," "the battle begun between most prominent paths by which colthe-two armies," etc. - This - use of joquial andtechnlcal terms come Into "begun" to express the past tense everyday use," remarked Professor (sometimes called the preterit) of Jorgan. "Only the other day I over"begin" Is not Incorrect, "according to heard two small boys talking to-, some authorities on the uses of words, getlier. "Georgle had a better memory than but there Is a- fairly general agreement that the better word to use Is his brother, and Roger was always "began." If you wish to safeguard trying to get him to remember things yourself against possible criticism, say for him. Georgle got tired of this, "1 began to do that work yesterday," and when Roger wanted him to re"The battle began between the two member something he must do before school time the next mornlDg, he armies," etc., not "begun." asked: Richard Grant White, In "Words " 'What do you think my head Is, a and Their Uses," a high authority, criticizes and condemns, the use of parking place for what you want to "begun" instead of "began" to express remember?' "—Los Angeles Times. the past. ~ Inside Information. Of course, It Is incorrect beyond any Billy went up to dad and said: "Fadoubt to say, "I have began" to express the perfect tense of "begin." ther, I know what Mary will want this Say, "I have begun," never "I have year for Christmas." "It's a bit early to start telling what began."—Columbus Dispatch. you and Mary want for Christmas. But -whnt-is-it7^-replled-the father, The Result "Mary will want a doll," said Billy. "I hear Ja«k Is spoons on Mildred." And just then little Mary came run"Yes, It has made quite a stir."— ning Into the room with big tears dripBaltimore American. ping down her cheeks and exclaimed: "Daddy, Billy broke my new doll." Trouble. "What is that?" If some fools were to remain. quiet "The trouble wagon.'*" they might acquire a reputation for "Are'they-delivering it these days?" wisdomr
Ifie Blended Flavors of wheat and malted barley, fully developed by twenty hours baking make
Grape*Nuts The Ideal Cereal Ideal not only from a taste standpoint but because of easy digestibility, full nourishing worth, economy and ease of service.
At Grocers Everywhere
m^^y'-y
THE FIFTIETH FALL OPENING OF
Boys' Wear
Women's Wear
Corduroy-Snlts
Cloth Coats. $ 3 5 OO Values to $49.50. 01 soft woolen fabrics with oollars of self material or of the -winter's favored furs adorn these coats. All are full; lined with figured silks or plain satins of splendid quality.
£••
Saturday, October 16, to Saturday, October 23
Fall Suits, $29.73 Distinctive of line, excellently tailored throughout, beautifully lined and effectively trimmed with braid buttons,. novelty collar and pocket effects and with lur are these suits of Velour, Silvertone, Tricojineand Serge offered for the Opening at $29.75. .The number, of suits in this lot is. limited so we advise an early selection. - - Values to $45.00. —0f-satinrtaffeta,-8erge and triootine_ these dresses follow both the plain tailored and the draped effects approved for the new season's wearing. They are adorned for the most part with embroidery or beads. Value $39.50. The model offered is one of unusual smartness, cut on a long sweeping line with a belt and a large cape collar. The length is fully 48 inches. Lined throughout with attractive fancy silk of good quality.
Arcadian Lamb Coatees, Value $49.50—Special $ 2 9 75 • Smart coatees of Arcadian Lamb, a fabric of excellent wearing qualities that closely resembles the genuine Persian JUtaib^Fully lined with fancy silk or plain satin. §29.75. — o
Sweaters and Scarfs Surplice Sweaters,, tie back, with long sleeves, in navy, brown and black. Special at $5.95. Tuxedo Sweaters, with collar and cuffs of imported mohair, in'bufl with brown trimmings. Special $17.50. Tuxedo Sweaters, in fancy weaves in navy, brown, purple and black. Special $14.95. ".• Rich Searfs, in heather mixture, trimmed with imported mohair and fridge. Special $17.50. Pretty Scarfs intanand camels hair, very good quality. Special $12.50"
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Women's Wear
Children's Wear SHOES Dark brown Lotus calf lace shoes, with oak leather "stitch down" soles. Fine for school wear. Sizes 11 to 2 inclusive. Regular$6.50. Special $3.76. Broken lines of Infant's and Children's shoesin black, brown and white. Both lace and button. Sizes from 4 to 8 and 8$ to 11. Regularly to $5.00. Special $1.98.
Men's Wear
BLOUSES A fine taffeta blouse with two-in-one collar and.,turn-back button cuffs, specially priced at $10.50. Satin blouses in blaok and navy., with long roll collars in 3-button models with turn back button cuffs, $12.50. White Jap silk is made into long roll collared blouses with tucked front and cuffs, collar and front piece trimmed with fine pleating, $13.50. Radium silk in flesh and white makes a roll collar 3-button model, with" turn-back button cuffs, $12.50. A beautiful tricolette over-blouse, in brown and gold, or navy and gold, with square neck and belted back can be purchased for $21.50. Tricolette overblouses in drop stitch with round neck, three-quarter sleeve, cord and tassel belt. Sleeves and waist finished with fringe, $13.50. Hand jnade_-blouses with square or V-necks, Tolled collars, and turn back cuffs. Trimmings, hand drawn. Special at $4.95.
GLOVES Chamoisette, 2-clasp gloves in white, yellow, mastic and grey. Rugnlar $1.25, special 89c. , Chamoisette, 6-button length gloves with strap wrist, in white, grey and mastic. Regular $1.50, special ?1.25. Fowne's doette gloves, 2-clasp, in grey, pongee, mastic, brown and white, Eegnlar $1.95, special $1.65. Meyer's mocha gloves, one clasp, in grey, mastic and brown. Regular $4.00, special $3.50. Meyer's washable kid, one clasp, in tan, brown and grey. Regnlar $4.00, special $3.50. Fine kid gloves, fency embroidered back. One pearl clasp, in grey, tan and brown. Very special $3,35.
Overcoats S28.50—Fur woven black bear cloth coate, in double-breasted models with large shawl collars and heavy quilted linings. These coals are heavy, warm and comfortable and possess remarkable wearing qualities. Raincoats $9,50—Khaki-colored, of heavy texture, doublebreasted models, with strep cuffs, either plain or belted styles. Sizes, 34 to 44.
HOSIERY Children's Woolen Socks, threeqdarter length, with fancy turn-over tops. Colors: heather, navy, brown and green. Special $2 95. Children's Cotton Hoae in blaok, white, and cordovan, fully fashioned, Wayne knit. Speoial 75c.
Fall and Winter Suits $38.50—In the popular dark mixed cassimeres, in single and dovble-breasted models, with full or one-half mohair-linings. ' M e n ' s Shoes—Brown Lotus calf, double aole, laced shoes with round toes. Suitable for hard outdoor wear. Regular $11.00; Special $7.95. Florsheim Oxfords in black and brown Russia calf, English lasts with~straighfc--tips-_Oine of America's best shoes, and a segnlar line with us for sometime, Regular $Iff.'50. Speciar$12,50:• " • - - • • • Men's Gloves—Meyer's make"kid, in brown.and tan. Special $3.50. Grey mochr gloves. Special $3.95. M e n ' s Furnishings—Soft collars are more popular than ever._ You can purchafe two regular 35c collars during Opening Week foa the price of one. A special offering of- broken sizes. Silk Scrrfs that will satisfy even the most fastidious, in fancy colors and stripes. And we have also added a few knitted ties. Values $1.50. Special 79c. * White Sport Shirts with collar attached find a place in many a wardrobe. Regular $3.50 grade. Very special $2.49. Ribbed Union Suits in white lisle, specially well made for Fall and Winter. Very special $1:89".
GLOVES Chamoisette, 2-clasp in yellow, grey, mastic and white. Regular $1.00; Special 85o.
"Dress Goods Silks aud Woolens Minuet Satiu in Fall and Winter shades. Very special $2.98. ... .. Chiffon Taffeta with a beautiful rich lustre, 35 in. wide. Our entire stock reduced to $2.00. Ihiperial Satin in colors and black, heavy quality, 35 in. wide. Spec., $2.75 Crepe de Chine in colors and black. All the new shades, 40 in. wide. Our entire stock reduced to $2.25. , Louisine Satin, 25 shades to choose from, 35 in. wide. Very special $2.00. Georgette Crepe in the new Fall shades, 36 in. wide. Our entire stock reduced to $1.69. Suiting Velvet in new Fall and Winter shades. Three widths to choose from. 22 in. Special $1.25. 26 in. Special $2.75. 36 in. Special $3.75.
W o m e n ' s Shoes. $ 8 . 9 5 Value to $15.50. Hich cut lace boots with full Louis XV heels aud turn or welt soles. Included are brokeu lines of Queen Qualitv and other makes of distinction.
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Open Saturday Evenings
Special Values
Beautiful
in High
New Pall
Grade Rugs.
.Draperies.
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Sharp Fall JJa^H~eT^HeTe7TooraPrices in the Donnelly |
-Opera Brand Tailored Cotton Blouses for Business, Sports or Travel^ Wear $2.95 to $5.50 Nothing can quile lake the place of "the tailored lingerie blouse, especially in the business woman's wardrobe, aud how many other occasions are there that demand a blouse with a tailored air. Tailored blouses are being worn more than ever before. -They are made in many smart styles with fine pleated or tucked fronts, very becoming collars, either higlf~6Flow~necks, and~witlraeat "cuffs; The Opera brand blouse is shown by discriminating women as the most perfect-fitting blouse made. . They are to be found at this store exclusively in Trenton. In the showing are blouses of fine imported Irish dimity, plain batiste, plain and novelty voiles, in dozens of attractive styles, in all sizes.
Hand Made Blouses in Tailored Styles One can't have too many separate blouses and there are a surprising number of times when only a tailored, hand made blouse is appropriate. They are designed" for a career of usefulness and they find many ways of being charming. One may don a hand made blouse early in the morning, and go .happily through the day, content in the thought that she is not only appropriately dressed for whatever the day brings forth, but becomingly dressed as well. And when the routine of the jday has left its mark, a hasty tnbbiDg and one's hand made blouse reappears as fresh as the day it was purchased. They are all hand made, with hand drawn work and hand embroidery, some with real filet lace edge trimming. There is a vast difference in hand made blouses. These were designed and cut by the leading blouse makers of this country. They were then sent to the Philippines where they are embroidered and made up. In this way you are assured of a perfect fitting garment. Prices range from $5.95 to $12.95.
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Alteration Sale of all Fall and Winter Suits f M H E suits must be sold ! No ifs or ancls about it—we simply cannot handle our JL big Fall and Winter suit stocks in less than half our usual store space— Right now the contractors arc demanding more room-!
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Hard on us, for it means a forced selling of all our fine new suit stocks at just about wholesale co9t! What a chance! What a wonderful golden chance for Trenton men ! The big clothing racks are full, every one of them. All this season's latest models, all the newest weaves, patterns and colors, all regular and extra sizes, all ready, all greatly reduced. "" " Tomorrow is the best day for you to pick out your favorites. .._. "
Or. William E. Ramsay
Remember, All the Suits in this Donnelly Alteration Sale Are New Fall and Winter Stock
"Democratic" Candidate
' $35.00 New Fall and Winter 840.00 New Fall and Winter $45 00 New Fall and Winter $50.00 New Fall and Winter 855.00-New Fall and Winter $58.50 New Fall and Winter §60.00 New Fall and Winter $65.00 New Fall and Winter $70.00 New Fall and Winter $75.00 New Fall and Winter $80.00 New Fall and Winter $85.00 New Fall aud Winter
Suits Suits Suits Suits Suits Suits Suits Suits Suits Suits Suits Suits
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$29.50 • $32.50 $35.75 $39.50 $43.75 $45.50 $47.50 _ $52.50 $55.00 $57.50 $63.50 $69.50 ,
ALL NEW PALL AND WINTER TROUSERS,REDUCED. ALL NEW PALL AND WINTER RAIN OOATS, REDUCED. ALL NEW PALL AND WINTER TOP COATS, REDUCED.
All New Fall and Winter Stocks of Boys' Suits, Mackinaws, Jr. Norfolks, Trousers at Greatly Reduced Prices.
FOR
CONGRESS HE BELIEVES IN FEDERAL AID FOR STATE ROADS AGRICULTURAL TION,
PROTEC-
DEEPER WATERWAYS AND SHIP CANAL TO REDUCE THE COST OF LIVING BY MORE AND CHEAPER TRANSPORTATION, ' INDIVIDUAL LIBERTY, RESPECT FOR LAW AND THE PROTECTION " OF T H E HOME, INCREASED PAY TO POSTAL EMPLOYES,
Third floor—centre.
131-133-135 East State St., Trenton, N. J.
Separate Knickers
of grey corduroy. Good full out and well made. Sizes 7 to 16. Prioe $L49 . Blousgs—89
Our Annual Fall Opening Sales this year, in full accord with, the" spirit of the times, present the-very best in mercbandise at prices tbat are destined to agreeably surprise. Tbe smartest of Fall apparel for men, women and children, distinctive home furnishings, reliable household needs, dress goods and accessories^'art novelties, books, stationery, and hundreds of articles in everyday use, are offered for this'seyen day period1 at greatly reduced prices. Space will permit only a mention of a few items. Note the prices. Visit the store and you will find your needs, whatever they may be, at similar reductions. ._____,_
Fall Dresses—Special $17.75
Silk Plush Coats, $29.75
Browns and greys in belted-coat models,' with three outside pockets and button down tabs. Tbe kniokers ore full lined and strongly sewed. All sizes 7 to 17. Price $9.95.
TRENTON, TS. J.
JUSTICE AND REWARD TO" THE . EX-SERVICE MEN AND WOMEN. Paid for by Thomas H. Hageriy, .Campaign Manager.