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SOUTH - Atlantic County Library · cnco puuacd over thin section TUCH-ay night, lightning ntrlking...

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SOUTH (7 iHammonton. N. J., July 2, 1920. -»^Twehtieth—Yearr The place r G °° d Thin Dried Beef TASTES BETTER The Thinnest and Best ^ .You Ever Tasted -- ..-----------. - - Q Jackson's Market The Place for Good WANTED! WANTED! Young, women and girls at H. Sf BIN CO.'S PLANT Second Floor, Jackson Bldg. Hand sewers make $2.50 a day at start. The price of this paper is 5c a copy or $1.00 | per cent. FOR Subscribe now. The SALE—-Irord 'Commer- cial Car; .good condition. H. Stein Company, Jackson Bldp FOR .SALE—Chevrolet Baby Grand, good condition; price attractive. 401 10. S. Third st, Hammonton. TWILIGHT, BASEBALL imonton Baseball Crab-to"try. Hammonton ._ . twilight ball starting Thursday, July 8, gams to be called atv'j.16 P. M. Twilight baseball is all ^hc rage these days. Hammonton should cer- tainly make its debut and not be be- hind the times. The attendance will' prove if the fans desire it. This is the best time of day for fans to watch and the best for players to play. We. appeal to the fans of Hammonton to ocme and make this a success. FOR SALE—A 24-horse Merry-Go- round, with two chariots and ona eating; feature are expecfed "at the locust tub, with boiler, doublejengine, Tuesday night session. —<C ' ATTEND THIS MEETING The Hammonton Chamber of Com- merce will hold its July meeting on Tuesday evening next, at eight o'clock, in Odd Fellows? Hall. A number of new members-will likely be elected at this meeting, At the late session of the Chamber five new members were proposed Jnd elected. They were Na- thaniel, plack, James Eubertom, Jr., Howard B. Momfort, Carl Mogargel and Burton Simoiut. The organization , -^ . has tokerf h> hand "a number of mat-1 cml Hoat ' « 5 r second best commer- ters and" reports of a decidedly inter-' «»'• PRIZES FOR FARADERS. Frederick A. Funston Post, Ameri- can Legion, of this place, under whose auspices the Fourth of July celebra- tion at this place will be held, will award a number of cash prizes for those participating in the street pageant. The prizes include ?10 /for organization, with most in line, SB for best appearing float, ?2.50 for aec- flo <>t, $10 for best commer- mounted- on wheels and two organs. Will sell for $500 each. Ellis H. Park- er, Mount Holly, N. J. MRS. GARDNER PASSES ON Word reached Hammonton during the past week that Mrs. Idella U. Gardner, wife of the Rev. W. H. Gard- ner, had passed on to the higher life on June 24, at Stafford's Springs, Conn. Had she lived until June 27 she would have celebrated her-30th year of happy wedded life. We extend sympathy to Bro. Gardner on the loss of an ideal wife and ti Miss Ruth Gardner, who was devoted to her mother. fanning Big isth Here Joseplr.Pizzi and his fellow-commit- teemeiijlafe arranging for the biggest 16th crf^Fwy. celebration this place has ever known. Look for complete pro- gram ffi:the "Star" next week. >,'Races on the Fourth Hammonton High's crack track team has/entered the Fourth of July races 'at, the park. Be sure to see these'^.events and by your 'presence encourage the Legion, boys. ' BASEBALL NEWS. Hammonton baseball fans will soon have ample opoprtunity to enpoy twi- light baseball games, a lehodnl* of such games now being arranged. The first game will be played on ThuraT day, July 9, at 5.15. vA double header will be played hen on Monday next, with the Twentieth Century Club, of Germantown. Wil- liamstown plays here this 5~.~^2 afternoon. Indications point to base- ball once again getting ita hold on the sporting public at thia place. Former Hammontonian Opens Mill f , tary School .. 3^ 'ck G. Delker, a former news papem> N (i of this place, who served ii the Moro campaign with John J. Per shing, as captain of his troop, has San J'.is, Obispo county, California Dells' c has for some time past been captain instructor at the California Military Academy at Los Angeles. A Civil .Serrvice examination fo clerk-carrier will be ..eld in the Ham inor.ton post office on Saturday,.July a a a aoaBsaeiaaa o a a a a a .a a a a a a a a a B a <a a a THE MODERN FUNERAL Cautiously feeling its way to higher and firmer with its eye constantly fixed on a standard of highest efficiency, the undertaking profession is being rewarded by larger vision of public usefulness and a greater security from unjust attack. It has gradually passed from a plane of more or less menial service to that of commanding recognition. ••• i !!$BS| New springs of action, more comprehensive methods, stronger impulses and higher ideals have raised it to -the dignity and respect which, as a sacred calling, it is'entitiefHo,-— -- -.— It has expanded along lines of education and scientific gerv-< ice to the public. ".''"'. •''•.•••'•'"• " '•; , '• . •". . .-':"'•' •••• Its new strength has come by the exercise of distinct fund tions under the stimulus of a conscious dignity and import aiuf by adaptation to the changing conditions and requirements of society. ' _ ............. ..^.Sj THE JONES' SERVICE Embalmer, Funeral Director and Sanitarian Hammonton, N. J. B O * .•.I THE The Garden fnrnur wW Hud tho Ford Model T Ono Ton Truck an especially valuable factor in his builneu becatuo of the flexibility oa w«ll on the reliability of tho ncrvlco K lvcn by thl« splendW truck. The worm-drive of manganese bronze carries (ill the power of tho motor todrlvlnn tho Truck, and there are com- bined In larger on<l heavier form all tho element* which have made the Ford Model T Car the greatest motor car In tho world lr» point of service. Tho Ford Truck with its worm-drive la moat economical In operation and maintenance. There la very little, If anything to get out of order at any time; there Is the alm- pllcity In control; there is tho convenience In tho flexibility of the car. It will turn In n circle of forty-eight feet; It accommodate* Itself to narrow alleys, and it "stumls tho gaff" of hard work day after day, and month after month, to tho grcut natlafactlon of the owner. There la hardly a lino of buslnna activity where the Ford Ono Ton Truck is not really a necessity. Coma hi und talk It over. HKI.M5VUK GAltAUK. INC. 1C. A. CordoVy. Munuyer. County lloiilcvnnl. Iliinimoncoii, )JJ. J Birdsally If., Dewalt,:;rf. IJJ(JEUP FOR SATURDAY. WILLTAMSTOWN Cassabone, c. Dubois, p. L. Marsh, Ib. -Front, 1 2b. Adams, ss. E. Marsh, 3b. Sausmatoi/'c. Lobleyeia. mnSa; lb^- g arrow ' I -EHBseU^c - Lee, rf, ' The locals, showed by last Satur- day's game they have the material and expect to improve from now on. Mr. Ziiber expects to strengthen his team in; the .near future by filling up som« weak spots, Williamstown will most likely bring a following. Don't 1 forget the double-header on Monday,-; July fitn7~The strong 20th Century, (Club of^ermantov^n will op- " ~ ' ' ~ ~ " CLOSE OF SERVICE LIST. After' ten weeks' hard work the Publicity Committee of the Hammon- To'.i CliaKibor o{ Commerce is about ready td ' turn over to the Memorial Committee, •'which has charge of the monument to be erected to the serv- !te men' of this place, the names of the men and Ayoraenj for two of the fair sex are in the list,. who served their country during the world war. No such list had beep, compiled by local authorities, or individuals, and the Palace Theatre Harmonious negotiations have been entered into and successfully terminated between Messrs. Thorpl & Brim field, of the Eagle Theatre, and C. C. Cutshaw & SonVd ™S J?^ e *?f a V* > Wlth a " ewof brin&wg »««! theatres under control of one management. Messrs. Thorpe & JBnmfield, acting as representatives for C. C. Cutshaw & business at the Eagle Theatre during - 1 -, as far as possible, t of ArH a ' 5th ' in defe «nce to members ot American Legion who have perfected a wonderful pro- gram for your entertainment at the Lake Park. work of the;cbm: than appears on names of these bi placed on the ' o was far harder ice. The are to be ' Cfia; Thos. \\. Ince Special Dangerous Hours Mack Sennett Comedy Doors Open 6 o'clock Admission 30c Week of July 5th MONDAY « No Performance Closed July 5tfi on account of the American Legion Benefit at tate Park TUESDAY Buck Jones ' a, ive electric llgtht' wire, and Antonio 'agano, a returned service man, was adly burned at the same time.' 1 Dr. Charles Cunningham states that both nen will recover. At the time of the accident they vere working on Railroad avenue, yhere a massive, tree fell lust night, earing down the wires. Doth mon apparpntly .took the wire to bo one without current, but in some manner not yet made cleur the current soon made its effects apparent. Peart once before suffered Boemwhut miniliir lu- ll ties. Episode 11 WEDNESDAY William Farnnm SEVERE STORM. An electrical storm of ununual vio- cnco puuacd over thin section TUCH- ay night, lightning ntrlking In uovernl places, while hall and a. awocplng wind :ld muoli dumago to growing cropfl, uch im niHpberrle.s and peiu'huH. A uliiulu tree, one or thu monarcho f tho wooilu, IIB it wore, nnnppcd In two on Uallroad aviinue. oppofllto tho IIIIIIKIII til William lloerful, iimiintaut cuuhiur of tho Pooplu'H Hunk, an<l Doinlnick 'Machine, « former aorvlcu mnn, tearing down dot-trie light and telephone wired in itti full, and plar- Ing that thoroughfare nut of cninmlu- nlon fur 111" night, fur it fully blocked .thu roml on both nldmi. Huytirnl cum nearly' rnuihud Into tho nlititrurtloii iliirlng I In- night, iliitipltu tlio fiid Unit OvortH^r JoHoph H. Mnrt htul roptul olV tho oli.ilnlction anil iilaruil I'IM) Inn- tornH on both nldon <if It. Thu light- ning wan of a mont vlvlil imtimi, while httnvy pniilM of tliunilur i-auoi'il tlio noi'vouti In tlxitnhUr' In ttrjildltion. HOT TIME IN OI.I) TOWN. Tim two weeha daUiiK from .Inly I' |>rol»liie to 1)0 two nf thu llv.ilici.il. thin plaeo him nVur ICIKIWII. On July It them will hu held Mm lailiinm»l<>nce Day celebration, inuler the aiiii|>l<'iin o( tlie Aniorlean l.euliin I'ont, inlliiweil liy a wcok'ii earnlval, un<lt^r their tui|i- nrvliilon. On July lit the lunil loilita >f Miione will open an "Old lloin^ Week," with imradna each nlKht anil 4 curnival. Oik July 141, local Itallann ' will liolil what immilmm to IMI a rcconl I lireaklnic celebration of the annual f'eant "f My l.llily of Mount (,'aniuil, l''ollowin(( IH Ji complete liHt of naiiH-H of IKTHOUH who run Anton to Hire (luiiiiK the winter montliH when tlui roadH were at their wornt, and, now that roadH are and many otherx run- Hlill Nolicit your |iat- The Last Straw Lost City Adventurer rrto-day, 20c Mary McLaren Billy West Comedy FRIDAY Dunn ' Old Lady 31 Our Usual Clever Comedy and Pox News SATURDAY Doris Nay Doudlea McLean Charlie Chaplin Mary's Amhle. Pawnshop THE OLD RELIABLE Flags, Decorations and Flag Novelties WE AUK MANUPACTUKIHIS OF I-'LA«S nnd ucll direct to you. We have no middlemen, thereby tfivlnjf you the middlemen'u prolit. All our KliiRH and Decorationu are Kuuruntecd fuat color and will not run In thu ttuvurrot rain—you miiy tc»t them before bliy- iiiK- Our Kuarantce In for all MUKH und Decoratlonu. UK YOlIIt OWN OI'JCOICATOK and own your Vlugn und Decoratlonfl for all future ocraHlonH; It will t-OHt hut little more than to hlro or lonn tlieni and have them put up. American Klutf, Double Stitched, 18 KtarH, Heavy and (iromelH: J0.85 each 1.40 " 2.50 " :».5o •• 5.00 " 7.70 " x 4 x n X « x H x 10 X 12. . m<;iti: AUIO A i i:w HI'IOCIALS WHICH NO ONIO EUSU MAKES Hcrt A. I Albert Kvhinuiia ' Nick Orclillc ThonuiH It. Twonioy Ohtti-It-H T. Ddkcr Myorw' Auto Hcrvlcc (i ft. IVniimitH lOr each (I ft. I'lill DIIWIIH ... r>0r " (i ft. Pull DOWIIH— HlilpcM IciiglliwliM- ilfir " 1> ft. 1'ull DOWIIH .... Hfic " :i \ r> ft. Knn (for Oecorutlnff). . 75c " ft x I ft. ifutterfly. . . GOc each I ft. Butterfly 75c " r> ft. Butterfly .... Jl.OO " <i ft. Butterfly .... 1.50 " •I ft. Kcytitoitc 75c " VV«> iilno ninliv 11 M|><-« laity of AUTO OK<OHATIONH uud have n huiul HOinn iM'iuitlfnl <|CM||;IIH; liny on« run trim with (hem. M. G. HOOT (Meinlier ot W. C. No. 'M'l I*. O. S. of A.; Relict Council No. 17. O. U. A. M-; K; ot 1'. No, 247) I lag Manufacturer a Uollovuo Avo., HAMMONTON. N. J.
Transcript
Page 1: SOUTH - Atlantic County Library · cnco puuacd over thin section TUCH-ay night, lightning ntrlking In uovernl places, while hall and a. awocplng wind:ld muoli dumago to growing cropfl,

SOUTH (7

iHammonton. N. J., July 2, 1920.-»^Twehtieth—Yearr

The place *°r G°°d

Thin Dried BeefT A S T E S B E T T E RThe Thinnest and Best ^

.You Ever Tasted-- .. - --------- -. - - Q

Jackson's MarketThe Place for Good

WANTED! WANTED!Young, women and girls atH. Sf BIN CO.'S PLANT

Second Floor, Jackson Bldg.Hand sewers make $2.50

a day at start.

The price of this paper is 5c a copyor $1.00 |

per cent.

FOR

Subscribe now. The

SALE—-Irord 'Commer-cial Car; .good condition. H.Stein Company, Jackson Bldp

FOR .SALE—Chevrolet Baby Grand,good condition; price attractive. 401 10.

S. Third st, Hammonton.

TWILIGHT, BASEBALLimonton Baseball Crab-to"try.Hammonton ._ .

twilight ball starting Thursday, July8, gams to be called atv'j.16 P. M.

Twilight baseball is all ^hc ragethese days. Hammonton should cer-tainly make its debut and not be be-hind the times. The attendance will'prove if the fans desire it. This is thebest time of day for fans to watchand the best for players to play. We.appeal to the fans of Hammonton toocme and make this a success.FOR SALE—A 24-horse Merry-Go-

round, with two chariots and ona eating; feature are expecfed "at thelocust tub, with boiler, doublejengine, Tuesday night session. —<C '

ATTEND THIS MEETINGThe Hammonton Chamber of Com-

merce will hold its July meeting onTuesday evening next, at eight o'clock,in Odd Fellows? Hall. A number ofnew members-will likely be elected atthis meeting, At the late session ofthe Chamber five new members wereproposed Jnd elected. They were Na-thaniel, plack, James Eubertom, Jr.,Howard B. Momfort, Carl Mogargeland Burton Simoiut. The organization • , -^ .has tokerf h> hand "a number of mat-1cml Hoat' «5 f°r second best commer-ters and" reports of a decidedly inter-' «»'•

PRIZES FOR FARADERS.Frederick A. Funston Post, Ameri-

can Legion, of this place, under whoseauspices the Fourth of July celebra-tion at this place will be held, willaward a number of cash prizes forthose participating in the streetpageant. The prizes include ?10 /fororganization, with most in line, SB forbest appearing float, ?2.50 for aec-

flo<>t, $10 for best commer-

mounted- on wheels and two organs.Will sell for $500 each. Ellis H. Park-er, Mount Holly, N. J.

MRS. GARDNER PASSES ONWord reached Hammonton during

the past week that Mrs. Idella U.Gardner, wife of the Rev. W. H. Gard-ner, had passed on to the higher lifeon June 24, at Stafford's Springs,Conn. Had she lived until June 27 shewould have celebrated her-30th yearof happy wedded life. We extendsympathy to Bro. Gardner on the lossof an ideal wife and ti Miss RuthGardner, who was devoted to hermother.

fanning Big isth HereJoseplr.Pizzi and his fellow-commit-

teemeiijlafe arranging for the biggest16th crf^Fwy. celebration this place hasever known. Look for complete pro-gram ffi:the "Star" next week.

>,'Races on the FourthHammonton High's crack track

team has/entered the Fourth of Julyraces 'at, the park. Be sure to seethese'^.events and by your 'presenceencourage the Legion, boys. '

BASEBALL NEWS.Hammonton baseball fans will soon

have ample opoprtunity to enpoy twi-light baseball games, a lehodnl* ofsuch games now being arranged. Thefirst game will be played on ThuraTday, July 9, at 5.15.

vA double header will be played henon Monday next, with the TwentiethCentury Club, of Germantown. Wil-liamstown plays here this 5 — ~.~^2afternoon. Indications point to base-ball once again getting ita hold on thesporting public at thia place.

Former Hammontonian Opens Millf , tary School

.. 3^ 'ck G. Delker, a former newspapem>N(i of this place, who served iithe Moro campaign with John J. Pershing, as captain of his troop, has

San J'.is, Obispo county, CaliforniaDells' c has for some time past beencaptain instructor at the CaliforniaMilitary Academy at Los Angeles.

A Civil .Serrvice examination foclerk-carrier will be ..eld in the Haminor.ton post office on Saturday,.July

a a a a o a B s a e i a a a o aa a a a .a a a a a a a a a B a <a

a a

THE MODERN FUNERAL

Cautiously feeling its way to higher and firmerwith its eye constantly fixed on a standard of highest efficiency,the undertaking profession is being rewarded by larger vision ofpublic usefulness and a greater security from unjust attack.

It has gradually passed from a plane of more or less menialservice to that of commanding recognition. ••• i !!$BS|

New springs of action, more comprehensive methods,stronger impulses and higher ideals have raised it to -the dignityand respect which, as a sacred calling, it is'entitiefHo,-— -- • -.—

It has expanded along lines of education and scientific gerv-<ice to the public. " . ' ' " ' . • ' ' • . • • • ' • ' " • " ' • ; , ' • . • " . . . - ' : " ' • ' ••••

Its new strength has come by the exercise of distinct fundtions under the stimulus of a conscious dignity and import aiufby adaptation to the changing conditions and requirements ofsociety. ' _ ............. ..^.Sj

THE JONES' SERVICEEmbalmer, Funeral Director and Sanitarian

Hammonton, N. J.

B O

*

.•.I

THE

The Garden fnrnur wW Hud tho Ford Model T Ono Ton Truck an especiallyvaluable factor in his builneu becatuo of the flexibility oa w«ll on the reliabilityof tho ncrvlco Klvcn by thl« splendW truck. The worm-drive of manganesebronze carries (ill the power of tho motor todrlvlnn tho Truck, and there are com-bined In larger on<l heavier form all tho element* which have made the FordModel T Car the greatest motor car In tho world lr» point of service. Tho FordTruck with its worm-drive la moat economical In operation and maintenance.There la very little, If anything to get out of order at any time; there Is the alm-pllcity In control; there is tho convenience In tho flexibility of the car. It will turnIn n circle of forty-eight feet; It accommodate* Itself to narrow alleys, and it"stumls tho gaff" of hard work day after day, and month after month, to thogrcut natlafactlon of the owner. There la hardly a lino of buslnna activity wherethe Ford Ono Ton Truck is not really a necessity. Coma hi und talk It over.

HKI.M5VUK GAltAUK. INC.

1C. A. CordoVy. Munuyer.

County lloiilcvnnl. Iliinimoncoii, )JJ. J

Birdsally If.,Dewalt,:;rf.

IJJ(JEUP FOR SATURDAY.WILLTAMSTOWNCassabone, c.Dubois, p.L. Marsh, Ib.

-Front,12b.Adams, ss.E. Marsh, 3b.

Sausmatoi/'c.Lobleyeia.

mnSa; lb^- garrow' I-EHBseU^c -Lee, rf,

' The locals, showed by last Satur-day's game they have the materialand expect to improve from now on.Mr. Ziiber expects to strengthen histeam in; the .near future by filling upsom« weak spots, Williamstown willmost likely bring a following.

Don't1 forget the double-header onMonday,-; July fitn7~The strong 20thCentury, (Club of^ermantov^n will op-

" ~ ' ' ~ ~ "

CLOSE OF SERVICE LIST.After' ten weeks' hard work the

Publicity Committee of the Hammon-To'.i CliaKibor o{ Commerce is aboutready td ' turn over to the MemorialCommittee, •'which has charge of themonument to be erected to the serv-!te men' of this place, the names of themen and Ayoraenj for two of the fairsex are in the list,. who served theircountry during the world war. Nosuch list had beep, compiled by localauthorities, or individuals, and the

Palace TheatreHarmonious negotiations have been entered into and

successfully terminated between Messrs. Thorpl & Brimfield, of the Eagle Theatre, and C. C. Cutshaw & SonVd™S J?^e*?faV*> Wlth a "ew of brin&wg »««! theatresunder control of one management. Messrs. Thorpe &JBnmfield, acting as representatives for C. C. Cutshaw &

business at the Eagle Theatre during-1-, as far as possible, t

of A r H a ' 5th'in defe«nce to membersot American Legion who have perfected a wonderful pro-gram for your entertainment at the Lake Park.

work of the;cbm:than appears onnames of these biplaced on the

'

o was far harderice. Theare to be

' Cfia;

Thos. \\. Ince Special Dangerous HoursMack Sennett Comedy

Doors Open 6 o'clock Admission 30c

Week of July 5thMONDAY « No Performance

Closed July 5tfi on account of the AmericanLegion Benefit at tate Park

TUESDAY

Buck Jones

' a,ive electric llgtht' wire, and Antonio'agano, a returned service man, wasadly burned at the same time.'1 Dr.

Charles Cunningham states that bothnen will recover.

At the time of the accident theyvere working on Railroad avenue,yhere a massive, tree fell lust night,earing down the wires. Doth mon

apparpntly .took the wire to bo onewithout current, but in some mannernot yet made cleur the current soonmade its effects apparent. • Peart oncebefore suffered Boemwhut miniliir lu-ll ties.

Episode 11

WEDNESDAY

William Farnnm

SEVERE STORM.An electrical storm of ununual vio-

cnco puuacd over thin section TUCH-ay night, lightning ntrlking In uovernl

places, while hall and a. awocplng wind:ld muoli dumago to growing cropfl,uch im niHpberrle.s and peiu'huH. AM« uliiulu tree, one or thu monarchof tho wooilu, IIB it wore, nnnppcd In

two on Uallroad aviinue. oppofllto thoIII I I IKII I til William lloerful, iimiintautcuuhiur of tho Pooplu'H Hunk, an<lDoinlnick 'Machine, « former aorvlcumnn, tearing down dot-trie light andtelephone wired in itti full , and plar-Ing that thoroughfare nut of cninmlu-nlon fur 111" night, fur it fu l ly blocked

.thu roml on both nldmi. Huytirnl cumnear ly ' rnuihud Into tho nlititrurtloiiiliirlng I In- night, iliitipltu t l io fiid UnitOvortH^r JoHoph H. Mnrt htul roptulolV tho oli.ilnlction anil iilaruil I'IM) Inn-tornH on both nldon <if It. Thu light-ning wan of a mont vlv l i l imtimi, whilehttnvy pniilM of tliunilur i-auoi'il tlionoi'vouti In tlxitnhUr' In ttrjildltion. •

HOT TIME IN OI.I) TOWN.Tim two weeha daUiiK from .Inly I'

|>rol»liie to 1)0 two nf thu llv.ilici.il. t h i nplaeo him nVur ICIKIWII. On J u l y Itthem wil l hu held Mm lailiinm»l<>nceDay celebration, inuler the aiiii|>l<'iino( tlie Aniorlean l.euliin I 'ont, inlliiweilliy a wcok'ii earnlval, u n < l t ^ r their tui|i-nrvliilon. On July lit the lunil loilita>f Miione will open an "Old lloin^Week," with imradna each nlKht anil4 curnival. Oik July 141, local Itallann

' will liolil what immilmm to IMI a rcconlI lireaklnic celebration of the annual

f'eant "f My l.llily of Mount (,'aniuil,

l''ollowin(( IH Ji completeliHt of naiiH-H of IKTHOUH whorun Anton to Hire (luiiiiKthe winter montliH when tluiroadH were at their wornt,and, now that roadH are

and many otherx run-Hlill Nolicit your |iat-

The Last StrawLost City

Adventurerrrto-day, 20c

Mary McLarenBilly West Comedy

FRIDAY

Dunn ' Old Lady 31Our Usual Clever Comedy and Pox News

SATURDAY

Doris NayDoudlea McLeanCharlie Chaplin

Mary's Amhle.

Pawnshop

THE OLD RELIABLE

Flags, Decorationsand Flag Novelties

WE AUK MANUPACTUKIHIS OF I-'LA«S nnd ucll direct toyou. We have no middlemen, thereby tfivlnjf you the middlemen'uprolit.

All our KliiRH and Decorationu are Kuuruntecd fuat color andwill not run In thu ttuvurrot rain—you miiy tc»t them before bliy-iiiK- Our Kuarantce In for all MUKH und Decoratlonu. UK YOlIItOWN OI'JCOICATOK and own your Vlugn und Decoratlonfl for allfuture ocraHlonH; It will t-OHt hut little more than to hlro or lonntlieni and have them put up.

American Klutf, Double Stitched, 18 KtarH, Heavyand (iromelH:

J0.85 each1.40 "2.50 ":».5o ••5.00 "7.70 "

x 4x nX «x Hx 10X 12. .

m<;iti: AUIO A i i:w HI'IOCIALS WHICH NO ONIO EUSU MAKES

Hcrt A.I Albert Kvhinuiia' Nick OrclillcThonuiH It. Twonioy

Ohtti-It-H T. DdkcrMyorw' Auto Hcrvlcc

(i ft. IVniimitH lOr each(I ft. I'lill DIIWIIH . . . r>0r "(i ft. Pull DOWIIH—

HlilpcM IciiglliwliM- ilfir "1> ft. 1'ull DOWIIH . . . . Hfic ":i \ r> ft. Knn

(for Oecorutlnff). . 75c "ft x I ft. ifutterfly. . . GOc each

I ft. Butterfly 75c "r> ft. Butterfly . . . . Jl.OO "<i ft. Butterfly . . . . 1.50 "•I ft. Kcytitoitc 75c "

VV«> iilno ninliv 11 M|><-« laity of AUTO OK<OHATIONH uud haven huiul HOinn iM'iuitlfnl <|CM||;IIH; liny on« run trim with (hem.

M. G. HOOT(Meinlier ot W. C. No. 'M'l I*. O. S. of A.; Relict Council

No. 17. O. U. A. M-; K; ot 1'. No, 247)

I lag Manufacturera Uollovuo Avo., HAMMONTON. N. J.

Page 2: SOUTH - Atlantic County Library · cnco puuacd over thin section TUCH-ay night, lightning ntrlking In uovernl places, while hall and a. awocplng wind:ld muoli dumago to growing cropfl,

SOOTH JERSEY STAR, HAMMONTON, N. J.

JM.KED

Yes; Farragut Did Say the WordsRear Admiral J. C. Watson, 78

years of age, the Inst conspicuoussurvivor of an era In naval history

f of which Farragut Is the outstandingfigure, took a leading part In the re-cent unveiling of the memorial win-dow to the "Hero of Mobile bay" In

-the chapel of the United States navalrjr.ndeniy at Annapolis.

Standing In front of the altnr.Admiral Watson, who, ns Farragut'sflag lieutenant on the Hartford, wasan eye-witness of the admiral's everymove on the morning of Aug. 4, 1804,not only confirmed the sometimes dis-puted tradition of the three word sen-tence, but added thnt Farragut prayedto God for help Just before he said,"D* n the torpedoes! Full speedahead I"

Another cherished tradition of thebattle of fifty-six years ago this comIng Aug. 5, which has been questioned,but which Admiral Watson specifically

confirms, is tnat Farragut was lashed to the shrouds of the Hartford as theships passed the Confederate forts.

So much having been restored to authentic history by the words of aneyewitness, the great curtain of flags which covered the new Farragut memorialwindow In the chnpel was lowered by Farragut's grandnlece, Miss CamillaSewnll of Bath, Me., and behold the window also confirmed the dual traditionof the prayer before the battle and of the victor bound by a-slngle'cord to the

Emblematic of this Instance Is the colossal winged figure which dominatesthe central opening, of the window, if represents the messenger of God hover-Ing above sea and ships and directing the course to be pursued under divineguidance. Beneath Is Farragut, lashed to the shrouds.

For Mothers and Their BabiesRepresentative American women

are ofter congress In. earnest In behalf |of the Sheppard-Towner bill for theprotection of maternity and Infancy.Since this bill was .up the first tlmei600,000 babies have needlessly diedand "'S.OOO mothers have gone to pre-maT'.ire graves, the women state^

Mrs. Josephus Daniels (portraitherewith) told the senate publichealth committee how a great physi-cian saved her nfter her first childwas born. She snld she wante.d tosend out a cry for the millions 'ofwomen who go down Into the valleyof the shadow of death without theaid of doctors or nurses.

"It wns only the skill of n greatphysician who saved me through thebirth of my first two. children," saidMrs. Reyes, w\fe_of Senator ,IT.eyes,New Hampshire. "W* lived. In the

-oountryrand-lf-myhuwand-had^beona poor man we couldn'FJ^^UUMJlk

•.-!>• .-i V'ila.lJ -ggt%T^woineij appearlofcjifore the coijunjttco iMtffnttfl out rmft largo nums

of money have been a'pprfcprlated by congresaToTavo hogs, and other sums toshow how to feed mares In foal. They have shown how devoted the solonswere to boll-weevil nnd tick eradication. "Why not something for the mothersnnd their children?" they ask.

Wonders of Uncle Sam's PayrollCongress Is engaged In tho Htu-

penclouH work of roelttHHlfylng tho sal-arleH of the army of civilian employ-eefl In Washington. Senator Ilonrter-non of Nevada, n member of tho JointcoinintHtuon In charge of the work,made an iiddronH the other day Inwhich ho called attention to Bonn1

thliiKH «et forth In tho, report. Hemild, among other thing":

"AH an employer the governmentof t in- United Hlnti-H IIIIH not hllluTliioHtahllHhed, by law or othorwlno. aNlandard for paying ItH einiployccn uni-formly according to the dutlen, rv>-Npnnnlhl l l l lCH, anil quallllcatloiiH Involvod In (heir renpectlvo. ponltlonH.Tin' niton of compciiHilllon of HOII I I IpoHlllonn urn tlxod hy e<>n«rnl i t lnli im.la Iho other cunon hy tho annual ap-propriation netn, anil In "(111 otheri anon by Individual , executive, or nilin lnMrnl lvo nrtloii. Tho niton ofeoinpnnHallon thlin fixed pertain lo

ponlllonn with npocincil I l l l c t i lillt nail i- l l i i i-d tin to i l i l l l i - i l , degree of ronpolinllilllly, or Ti'<|iilr«d qunllncnl|na.-i.

"An examination of tlio qnoiitlonnnlreH of l,2fln employees \VIHIHH imlarleHaro appropriated for under tho I l l l o of '<'lci-lt, clann [,' nhowcd thai (hoy iirofllllUK ponltloiin (hu t call for dm perform is of »7 vnrlitllen of diillcn.

"Thin aimlynln, carried fur ther , revealed tho MIIII IO condlllotm ttiroiiKtiontIhe wholo range of proHont clerk clanmin."

Aircraft Prediction by KentyWll l l i l ln I , . Kcnly , former t>H|-u

Her Kimernl ami chief of the al l•Arvlce ami now u pr ivate cltl/.en.nmkcn ^rea^ pre i l lc l lnnn r e i f i i r i l l n i t I I I * 'fu ture of air t r a v e l . I lo Inn l tn fnrwnrd to the t ime when the aerial eftprcim wil l he an much n pnr t of l i fean the i i i i toinnhl le lit now. The ne r l t i lPKliiehin of the ru t l l re , lie linyrl, w i l lIMI a lli;l ' l l l l l h ln r l l u i l l n l r mi ic l i l l i e .VI,,- xnn I IM,- I | w i l l I.,- l inn l i i l lmmmi l i l ehelium. The n o v e l t y lie ncen In H u l lnmloni nml I I I I M M I - I I J I I T M n l l l he enrloncil I I I the lu l l ! l l » < I T Thin, lie n n y n .ivlll i - l lml l i i i le n p l i ' l i r i - M l n l l i m - e n ln l

lie i M i m i l l i l n a I , | M - I - I | nf Hi l l mlleiltil In iur w i t h I M l l l l e imlVly nml coml u l l

Thin, i ' f cum "r, In nn n i l v n i i r o ll|iIII the hil i - i l I l i l n r I n t h e I n - n v l i ' i I l i m iI I I machine. I t Mil . l u n l I I I - I M K l l n l n l i i - i llit M n n n i v . M i i i ; l n n i l , | i i n l i i i h l v t-mhn^llen the l i i l c i i l I l i l l u in 'c lni ' i i l n In alr-ihl|in of I l i ln k ln i l I t In h i , i n - , I H i n tIt » l l l he n l i l e In I I ) acninn Hi , - A l l i i n l l c \ v l l h cane, 'flie veiliiel In D.'lft f i ' i ' l InIvnitlh anil VII feet \v l i l e l l - I l i l m ; |i,m er In I l l l r t y ,-l|;lil loini, H'nlir i -n i ' l l i i - i i»nch of "4O | K > I I < C | » > \ I C I \ \ i l i I : I M - I t a in imli i iu i i i apoi-il nf n U t y llvit mllen m*b«ur. II will carry a cie» ,,i l l f t t i t -n .

OF -'fCOPVT2IGHT, Rf. PETER B.KYNE

litm running *tvii.* in,Lngunn Grande woodsmen took heartand hope nnd pursued him. Straightfor the loading donkey at the dog

Jnjidlng-Bryce .ran—Beside-Che-dopkcy-stood a neat tier of firewood: InTfi

"FOR MY SAKEI

Synopsis.—Pioneer In the Califor-nia redwood region. John Cardigan,at forty-seven. !• the leading citizenof Sequoia, owner of mlllB, ships,and many acres of Umber, a wid-ower after three years of marriedlife, and father of two-year-oldBryce Cardlcan. At fourteen Brycemakes the acquaintance of ShirleySumner. a visitor at Sequoia, andhla Junior by a few years. Togetherthey visit the Valley of the Giants,sacred to John Cardigan and htgson as the burial place of Bryce'amother, and part with mutual rt-gret. While Bryce Is at collegeJohn Cardigan meets with heavy.business losses and for the first'time views the future with uncer-tainty. After graduation from col-

—lege^and-a-trlp abroad, Bryce Car-digan cornea homo. On the train hameets Shirley Sumner, on her wayto Sequoia to make'her home tfrerewith her uncle. Colonel Fenhlnston.Bryce learns that his father's eye-•slght has failed and that ColonelPennlngton IB seeking to take ad*vantage of tlie old man's businessmisfortunes. John Cardigan Is de-spairing, but Bryce Is full of fight.Bryce finds a burl redwood foiled

~acroB8~hlH mother's "grave. He-goes"to dinner at Pennington's on Shir-ley'B Invitation and flnds the din-Ins; room paneled with burl fromthe tree. Bryce and Pennlngton de-clare war, though Shirley does notknow It. Brytie bests Jules Ron-deau. Pennington's fighting loggingbosa. and forces him to confess thatPenalngton ordered the burl treecut. Pennlngton butta Into theflsht and gets hurt.

CHAPTER VII—Continued.

The helpless hulk of the woods-bossdescended upon the Colonel's expan-sive chest nnd sent film crashing earth-ward. Then Bryce, war-mad, turnedto face the ring of Laguna Qrande employees about him.

Next!" he roared. - "Singly, Inpalm, or the wholo damned pack!1

He furqed. Colone)breath" /CMJjf been" KnockcoT ~<mf

dj JOTflW j*tttMgr&ttttEfarri - r -Ens -vtjoods-boss, and he Uy Inert,

gasping like a hooked fish. Besidehim Shirley Stunner was kneeling, herhands clasping her uncle's, but withher violet eyes blazing fiercely onBryce Cardigan.

"How dare you?" flhe cried. "Youcoward! To hurt my uncle!"

He ga*ed' n t ' her"for a moment,fiercely, defiantly, hln cheHt rising nndfal l ing from hln recent exertions, hisknotted Huts gory with the hlooil ofbin enemy. Then tin- l ight of buttledied, and he hung hla head. "I'msorry," he murmured, "not for hlHHiiko, but yours. ,1 didn't kmtw youwere hero. ^ Ii forgot—inyMolf,"

"I'll neve?/ Hnonk to you ajtaln nolong aH I live, nho ImrHt oat pasHloa-ately.

Ho advanced a ntop and Htood gar.-Ing down upon IHT. Her aiiKry gliinrumet hlH i i i i l l ln i 'h lMKl.v; and pi-rncntlyfor him Iho l lKht wont oat of tin-world.

"Very well." he nuirmun'd. "Good-bye," And w t l t i him'i-il head ho turnedand inii i l i) off tl iroiiKh the K"'*'n tlmht'rtoward nl,'i o\vn IOKKlnK-<'»io |> HvninllcH d lMaut .

With tho dom-out lll>ou hlH hn-unt oftho l imp body of hlH hlg wooilit-hnlly.Colonel IVnnl in;Km luid h<'<in utrucklo carlh IIH rrr.'cluall}1 an If a ralr-nlzi'itlri'«k had fn lh -n on him, the hint whiffof bn-iil l l had IM-OM driven from hl'iI I I I I K M ; ami f u r Mm ntiacu at a mlniiti-.d u i l i i K which .luli'n Itoiiili-iiu lay hc-iivUy n.-n"'-' l i ln inh l i - l f f , lh« (loloaol WIIHqillln n imble ' In KI-I II hack. )'ah>.Ki iHI ih iK, and jurrrd from notil to mixpcililrrii, h«i -wan iiicrHy awaro t h a ii iomolhlnK i in«» |M-f t< 'd and illncomwlIIIK INK) -u i - r i - i i .

Whllo Hi" < ' i> lono l follldlt for I l lnbmilli, hi" \ v i > i H l n i n < ' i i ri-maliicil In l h i >of l l i iK , pural.v/,i ' i l I n t o I n a c l l v l l y hyi-eanoa of l l n > n \ v l f t n i - ' i n and Ihoroi i f thmom of l lryco I ' n n l l l i n n ' M w o r k ' HimMhli-l.-y inoll I lo Ihi'io lo M'|IIIIVI<Ihn wri 'Clin^o, IOK| l l toy I l l inlr i i i - i l InI l l H ' V

r 'rt-i-il f i < n i i Iho wol f ;h l on (l ie„,,,n,,,,Irlr , r of I l l n l i r h in Cul |I ' l ' i i i i l l i ^ l ' i n h l r « l i - l i < - d h l M li ' lin, rol l i - i ll i ln l i i - i i i l f i ' i l n "I'l'- In nldo, and n n i M K ' dv l i i l r n l l y r i i - v o n i l l l i n i ' M l l l i i ^ a l i u c KA f l i - i 1 t i n ' f i l x l l i 'inoi-l ho f e l l MO muchIx- l l r r l l u i l a c lear i i i i d c r i i l i i i i d l n i , ' nfHie euicl in ih i re of Ihe c i i l a n l I -n|ilii.caiiie l < i l i l n i lie i< l r inu ; led nnd n'U ii|i,I,,,,1,1,1,; m I I'l'" n I l l i l " u l l i l l *

"Wliei ' i - i l l i l ( ' i in l l | ; an i;"'" > > n

" M i i r r i i i u i d h im I n l i r h im," I ' e i i n l i i K(on o l i l e r i ' i l "I'll C l v e n O l 4 i l l l l l ' i l

V hi eneli t)f • (lie n l a men I t m ll .r lni l Mini pciiimdrel I • <!"! him

i l l i l c l i l v I I l i u l e r n l n m l r 1

Not n i i i iui movriit. I ' e i i i i l i i f f t ' i i iihooH .vl lh fury , "<I''I him," ho CI-IM\|I

tno Job. Close In on him—everybody.I'U give a month's pay to—every-body."

A man of that (Indiscriminate mix-ture of Spunlard-rtnd Indian known InCalifornia aa cholo swept the circle ofmen with an alert and knowing glance.His name wns Flnvlo Artelan. but hisstraight black hair, dark russet coin-plexlon^beaily eyes, and hawk nosegave him such a resemblance to nfowl that he was known among his fel-lows o.B the Blnck Minorca, regardlessof the fact that this sobriquet wasscarcely fair to a very excellent breedof chicken. "That offer's good enoughfor me," he remarked In businessliketonea "Come on—everybody. Amonth's, pay for five minutes' work.I wouldn't tackle the- Job-wlth six men,but there ore twenty of us here."

"Hurry," the Colonel urged them.Shirley Stunner's flashing glance

rested upon the Blnck Minorca: "Don'tyou dare!" she cried. "Twenty toone! For shame!"

"For a month's pay," he replied Im-pudently, and grinned evilly. "Andrm-takln!-orders- f rom_my-boss.!!—He-started on a dog-trot for the timber,and. a dozen men trailed after him.

Shirley turned helplessly on hernncle, seized his arm and shook Itfrantically. "Call them back! Callthem back!" she pleaded.

Her uncle got uncertainly to hisfeet. "Not on your life I" he growled,and In his cold gray eyes there danced'the lights of a thousand devils. "I toldyon the fellow was a rufDan. • Now,perhaps, you'll believe me. We'll hold..him until Kondeau revives, and then

Shirley guessed the rest, and sherealized that It was useless to plead—that she wns only wasting time."Bryce! Bryce I" she called. "Htra!They're nfter you. Twenty of them IRun, run—for my sake I"

His voice answered her from the"Run? From those cattle?

man-or-devll." ~A-«Uence.you've changed your mind.'You've spoken to me

gain!" There was triumph, exulta-tion In his voice. "The timber's toothick, Shirley. 1 couldn't get awayanyhow—so Tm coming back. *

She snw'nlm hurst through n thicketof alder snpIliiKs Into the clearing,muv u half dozen of her uncle's menirloso In around hliu-lllco wolves.aroundit sick steer; nnil at the shock of theiri-iintnct, she nitmncil nnil hid her faceIn her trembling hiimln.

Half man and hair tiger that hewas, tho 'Illuck Minorca, as self-np-p»lnted leader, reached Bryco llrnt.The cholo wnH n nquat, powerful littleiniin, with more bounce, to him than urubber hall; Icitillntr hla men by uilo/en yanlH, he hcHllntcd not an In-Htnnt but doilged miller tho blow HryceliiHhed out at him unit cnmn up Innltlelh« latter'e i?uard, feeling for llryce'Hlltroat. Innteiiil he met llrycc'H UncoIn his aliilnnten, and forthwith ho fold-eil up like, an accordion.

The next Inn tnu t Ilrycc. hail fltonpcil,caught him hy the nlack of theIrotiHcrH and the Hcnin* of the neck ami

"Oat Off My Propm ty, YouHo ttlnlllod.

thrown him, nn lie hail thrown Itoni l t - i n i . lul l ' the mlil . l l of Ih" men nil-v a m - l i i K < < t hln ali|. ' J ' l u t M i of Iliein\ v i - n t down i M i f l i i v n n l ; nml llryi-r,i-liiiri;lll |{ over I l i u m , n l i ' f l rhct t twoI I I M I O w i t h wnll |llai eil hlnwn froin leftIn rlf lht . unit C ( ' i i t l i n i 4 - i l mi iicrunn therlei irl l l f( , I ' l imil l lK III tup H | I I - O I | , for hnri'all/,i"l Hint for all ( |M> ili'npei'ntliniI'f hln Hcht nml the Intvicn n l i r m l y lall lrtoi l on hln nn/ in l t i i i i ln , the oilOitaualnBt him warv li idiinimiinli i l i l*. '

chopping block, where the donkey-Oreman had driven It prior to Bbnn-ilonlng his post to view the'.contesthetween Bryce and Jules Rondeau, wnsta double-bitted nxe. Bryce Jjrked Itloose, swung It, whirled on his pur-suers, and rushed them. Like turkeysscattering before the raid of a coyotethey fled In divers directions and froma safe distance turned to gaze ap-prehensively upon this demon theyhad been ordered to bring In.

Bryce lowered the. axe, removed hishat, and mopped his .moist brow. Fromthe- center -of the clearing men- werecrawling or staggering to safety —with the exception of the BlackMinorca, who lay moaning softly.Colonel Pennlngton, seeing bis fondesthopes expire, lost his head completely.

"Get off my property, you savage!"he shrilled.

"Don't be a not, Colonel," Bryce re-turned soothingly. "I'll get off — whenI get good and ready, and not a secondsooner. In fact, I was trying to getoff as rapidly as I could when yousent your men to bring me back.Prithee why, old thing? Didst cravemore conversation with me. or didstwant thy camp cleaned out?"

He started toward Pennlngton, whobacked hastily away. Shirley stoodher ground, bending upon Bryce, as heapproached ber, a cold and disapprov-ing glance. ."I'll get you yet," theColonel declared from the shelter ofan old stump behind which, he had

.•ton. "--—Once more he strode away Into the

timber. Shirley watched him pass outof her life, and gloried In what she con-ceived to be his agony, for she hndboth temper and spirit, and BryceCardigan calmly, blunderingly, ratherstupidly (she thought) had presumedflagrantly on brief acquaintance.

The Colonel's voice broke in uponher bitter reflections. "That fellowCardigan Is a bard nut to crack-—I'llsay that for Mm.'* He had crossed theclearlngfjto her side and wns address-ing her wjth^hJscustomnry_alr_of_ex-_pansiveness. "I think, ray dear, youhad better go back Into the caboose,away from the prying eyes of theserough fellows. I'm' sorry you cnme,Shirley. I'll never forgive myself forbringing yon. If I hnd thought—buthow could I know that scoundrel wascoming here to raise a disturbance?And only last night he was at ourhouse for dinner 1"

"I wonder what could have occurredto make such a madman put of him?"the girl queried wonderingly. "Heacted more like a demon than n humanbeing."

"Just like his old father." the Colonelpurred benevolently. "When he can'tget what he wants, he sulks. I'll tellyou what got on his confounded

Barking dogs never bite, Colonel.And that reminds me: I've heardenough from you. One more cheepout of you, my friend, and Til go upto my logging-camp, return here witha crew of blnenoses and wild Irish andrun your wops, bobunks, and cholos ;out of the county. I don't fancy theclass of labor you're Importing- Intothis county, anyhow."

The Colonel, evidently deciding thatdiscretion WHS the better part of valor,promptly subsided, although Brycecould see that he was mumbling threatsto himself, though not in an audiblevoice.

The demon Cardigan halted , besideShirley and stood gnzing down at her.He was smiling at her whimsically.She met his glance for a few seconds:then her lids' were lowered and she bither lip with vexation.

"Shirley," he sold."You are presumptuous," she qua-

vered."You set me nn example In presump-

tion," he retorted good humoredly."Did you not call me by my first namea -minute ago?" The heir to Cnrdfcgan's redwqpds_bent over _the girl."You spoke to me — after your promisenot torShlrtey,"-heunld gently.— "Yonwill always t-peak to me."

She , coranienced Jo cry softly. ' "I1

loathe you," she sobbed."For you I have the utmost respect

and admiration." he replied."No, you haven't. If you had, yon

wouldn't hurt my uncle — tho only hu-man being In all this world who Isdear to me.'1

"Gosh!" ho murmured -.plaintively."I'm Jealous of thnt man. However,I'm sorry I hurt him. I give you myword I cnme hero to flght fairly - "

"Ho me($ly tried to ftton you fromfighting." -

"No, ho illdn't, Slilrloy. He Inter-fered nml fouled inc. Still, despitethat, If I hnd known you were n spec-tator I think I Hhoultl hav« cnntrnllcilinyHiilf and refrained from pulling offmy vengeance In yotir presence. Ishall never cenno to regret that I nult-Jectexl you to Bitch a dlni resting spec-tacle. I do hope, howover, that youwill believe, mo when I toll you I amnot a bully, a t thn i iKt i whc-n there IH an«ht worth while, I never doilgu It.Ami thin tlmo I fought for the honorof the Houno of Cardigan."

"If you want m« to hellovn thilt, youwi l l ben my uncle't* pardon."

"I can't dn that. He In my enemyand I Hhall hato him forever; I shalltight him nnil bin way uf tliiltiK hunlm-miunti l he reformn or I am exhaimted,"

"You realize, of courfle, what yotirliuitiitenco on that plan meami, Mr.CarillKnn?"

"Call inn ,jnryco," he pleaileil."You're Kiting to call me tha t Nome ilnyanyhow, m> why. not f i lar l now?"

"You HIM altogether Inmin'cruhlc,Hlr. 1'lemie i;o away anil never pre-mium to aililri-'in mo again. You ant.i|llllit lluponnlhle."

lie- tihook hln licml. "I ilo not Klvelip that reaillly, Hlllrley. I (l l i ln ' lknow how ilear -whut your frlcitilnlilpmeant to me, u n t i l you neat mo a w a y ;I i l l i ln ' l t h ink Iheio wan miy hi>|><> mul lymi witrneil m*' thnne ilniiti were luml-Inn me ami calleil me llryce." Hehefi l out hlu ham). " '(Joil itnve nn mirrelation!)," he (|unleil, " hill, t h a n k (Joi l ,we call chiinnn our frleililn. ' Anil I ' l lho a Komi rrlenil In you, Mhlrtey MuniHer, u n t i l I have cimitMl Ihn right to tinr t n m e l l i l i i K more. Won't you nhaki il ianiln w i t h me? lie . . . . . mlier, t h i n U n l i tto i l n y In only the lli'ni n l i l r i i i l r i h in uwar to the t ln lnh anil I inn Icml l t i fc nfoi l , n i l hnpe. If I Imm well, I l l l n wi l lho Kdoil l>ye."

"I It l t le you," idio nnnworcil i t r ce r l ly ,"All mir tin? f r l i t iMtn l i l | i nmiirihiMluni t you growing n t lu i l i l ly i ien l lmel i la l .I i l l i ln ' l t h i n k It of you. I ' l i-ann |<nttwny, Ynu are i l l n t n - n n l l i K me."

He nmllei l at her leiulorly, f i i r i ( l v -lli |;lv, w l n i r i l U y , hi l l nhe llhl not ncn I I"Then It In rcal lr Komi liy«," ll« ..... IInutTil W i t h iiincll llnloriiutinenn.

(Ihn uoililnil Inn- bownl heaii. "Yen,"nhn whlniiei'eil. "After al l , I have•oma lujilo, you kaoiT. You muatn'lprcmuuci to he the huifflrAjr uroachlni

nnt*-hLiii*riii to th« toad IH'nrti dunt^""As you will It, Shirley." He turned

nway. "I'll send your nxe back withthe first tralnlond of logs from my

"I* Mr. McTavlsh at Home?"

nerves. I've been freighting logs forthe senior Cardigan over my railroad;the -contract for hauling them -was aheritage from Bill Henderson, fromwhom I bought the mill and timber-lands; and of.course as his assignee Itwas Incumbent upon mo to fulfillHenderson's contract with Cardigan,even though the freight-rate was ruin-ous.

"Well, this morning young Cardigancame to my office, reminded me thattlie contract would expire hy limita-tion next year and asked mo to renewIt; and at the same freight-rate. ~I-offcred to renew tho contract hut nta higher freight-rate, anil explained tohim that I could not possibly continueto haul his logs at a IOHH. Well, rlKbtaway ho How In a rago and calledmo a rohhcr; whereupon I Informedhim tha t Hlnco he thought me a robber,perhapN wo liad better not attempt tohnvn nny liunlncHs dcallnga with eachother—that I really dhln't want hl»contract at nny price, having nearcely,Hiilllelcnt rolling Htoek to hamllo myown loRn. That made him ealin down,hut In a I l l t lo whllo ho lout his headagain and grow nnarly and abuttlve—to niich an extent , Indeed, that finallyI wan forced to atik him to loavu myolllce."

"NovorlholcHH, Unclo Kcth, I cannotimilerrilaiid why ht* nhould mak" HiK'hn fiirloun allaek upon yoar (>mt>loy<M\"

Tho Colonel laiiKheil wi th n fairImi ta t ion of nlncerlly anil tolin-aiitnmunomcnt. "My dear,- (hat In nomynlory to me. ('ardlKaa picked oaItnmleiui for Iho reanon lhal n fewdayn n KO ho tried lo hire Konileaiiaway from me ofTercd him twonty-!lvodollarn a month more Hum I wan pay-It iK him, hy <ieorK<^! Of coin-no whenItondeiui camo (o ,1110 wi th (lanllifan'npi-tiponlllon, I promptly uni t (,'ardlKan'tiIllil and retained Itoudcmi; conne<iuenl-ly < 'ardl^an Imlcn t in both nnd took thoimrllcnt opportuni ty to VITIII hln uii l loon tin,"

Tho ('olonel nllf l iei l and hrunheil thodirt and leaven from hln tweedn,

Thunder I" ho continued phllonophl-eally, "ll'u all In Iho came, no whyworry over I I T An i l wh.v conllnuo lodl'icumi an ll i lpleananl (oplc, liny dear?"

Her micle loolc htM' K c n l l y ' h y Ihoarm and nteerod her toward tho ca-linone. "Well, wli l l l do you I l i l u k ofyour company now it" ho demandedKii.vly.

"I Ihlnl i ." nhe fiimu'ercd nn l i e r lv ."lhal you tmvo |('l''leil an enemy w o r t hwhl to anil t h a t I I I M - I H I O V I ' I I ytm nni Inimdei-eiillmale him."

C I I A I ' I 1:11 V I I I

Through Iho Ki-een I l lnbor l lryceCiinl lui in nlrnde, ni td Illeni wan n l i l tIn hln heart now. Already he hailfn rKot l e i i the d i i r i i i c ru lo r i l l n a l l i n i f r nmivhlch he hail |iuil em-aped ; he lli..»i;lilonly of M h l i l e y Maiiuier 'n fnci-, learnlntlleil w i t h le r ror j aad hecallrie lieKnew tha t al toafll; nnme of tho'io (earnluul been Innplrrd hy the Ki 'ave^l itppiehenhloiin an to hln p l i vn l cn l wel lhidnff. brcanno In hln vain lhf*r« n t l l l

Imr fi«ntlc Dainl im. Ivu

I KBMzea tnat however mem uw uncm*of banlsnrnfent had been, she" wtujnevertheless not Indifferent to him.

The climax bad been reached—andinaned-;*-and-the-re9ult-lmd-bcen—far-

_from the djsasterhe had painted lahis mind's l\ve\ ever since the~knedge had come to him thnt he wasdoomed to battle to a knockout withColonel Pennlngton, and thnt one oftne enrllest fruits of hostilities would)doubtless be the loss of Shirley Sum-ner's .pTBred friendship. Well, he had!lost her friendship, but a still smallvoice whispered, to him that the loss-was not Irreparable—whereat he*swung his axe as a bandmaster swings-Ills baton; he wns glad that he hadjstarted the war and was now free to-fight It out unhampered.

Upi hill and down dale ne"~went.Within two hours his long, tirelessstride brought him out Into a clearingIn the Valley where his own logglng-camp stood. ' He went directly to the-log-Inudlng, where In a listless and!Lalf-tearted manner the loading crewwere piling logs on Pennington's Jog-ging trucks.

Bryce looked at his watch. It wastwo o'clock; at twotflfteen Penning-ton's locomotive would appear, to backIn arjd couple to the long line oftracks. And the train wns only halfloaded.

"Where's McTavlsh?" Bryce de-manded of the donkey-driver.

The man mouthed his quid, spatcopiously, wiped his mouth with thoback of his hand, and pointed. "Upat his shanty," he made answer, andgrinned at Bryce knowingly.

Up through the camp's, single shortstreet, flanked nn each side with thewoodsmen's shantles^Bryce-went.—At,-the most pretentious shanty on thestreet Bryce turned In. He had neverseen It before, but he knew It to bethe woods-boss's home, for unlike It*neighbors the house was painted withthe coarse red paint that is used onbox-cars, while a fence, made of fancypointed, pickets painted white, Inclosed)

_§_ tiny^gnrden^ln_ front_of_the_house.^As Bryce came through the gate, ayoung girl rose from where she- kneltIn a bed of freshly transplanter]pansles.

Bryce. lifted his hat "Is Mr. Mc-Tavlsh at home?" he asked.

She nodded. "He cannot see any-body," she hastened to add. "He'»sick." . . .

"I think, he'll aee me. And I wonderIf you're Molra McTavIsb."

"Yes, I'm Molra,""I'm Bryce Cardigan."A look of fright crept Into the girl's

eyes. "Are you—Bryce Cardigan?"she faltered, a'rtd looked at him more.closely. "Yes, ydu're Mr. Bryce. You'vechanged—but. then It's six years sincewe saw you, last, Mr. Bryce."

He came toward her with outstretch-ed hand. "And' you were a little girl"when I snw:y6u last. Uow-^you're n "womnn,"_Shei«;raspcd his hand with Jtlie frank heartiness of a man.

"I'm twenty years old," she Informed!blm- (, .- . .-v" , „ . ' , - : , ' „ . • • •

"StandIrlght Vhare you are until.!have looked of you." he comroandeuYand backed off a few feet, the better''to contemplate her.

He saw n girl slightly above mediumheight, tanned, robust, simply gownedIn a gingham dre«a. Her hands were

'soiled front her recent labors In thepnnHy-hcd, and her shoes were heavyand coarse; yet neither hands nor feetwere large or ungraceful. Her headwas well formed; her hair, Jet black:and of unusual lustre and abundance,wan parted In tho inlddlo anil hold Inan old-fa»hloiied coll, at tho nui>e ofa neck the beauty of which WIIH re-vealed by tlie/ low cut of her tdinplofrock. Her nose wan patrician, herfaco oval j ,hbrw llpn, full and red, woruslightly parted hi Ihe adorable Cupld'abow which In the Inevitable heritage ofa flhort upper l ip; her teeth wert-whlto aa Parian nuirble; nnd her full .hreant wan -rising nnd falling Hwlft ly ,an If H!IO labored uador HUpnroHMod ex-citement.

Ho delightful n picture did MolrnMcTuvlnli lluilio that llryco forgot allbin IronhlOH In hor mvoot prononco."Uy I lKi godfl, Molra," IM» declaredoarncnily. "you're a pencil I When IHaw you lunl, you were awkward amileggy. I l l i o a colt. I'm nuro you weren'ta l i l t KoiMllooklnir.. And now you'roIho mont ravttihlnir younir laily In HUV-enti'en coalition. Hy Jliitfo, Molra.you're a nttiiuier and no inlntnko. Aruyou married?" •

Hho nhooli her bead, h l l i f lh l l lK plean-iirahly at hln impollnhml hat nlncorooompllmeiitn.

"Whnll Not married. Why. whatthe demit can he Iho matter w i th (hoel lKlh lo youiitf fellown hercahnulnY"

"There aren'l any eligible youn^ fel-IIIWH herealini l tn, Mr. llryco. And I'vnlived In Ihono wnodn all my l l fn,"

"Are you lonely, Molra?"(Hi.- nnililed."I'onr Mohii ]" ho inunmiri 'd nh-

neul ly .

SOUTH JERSEY STAR, HAMMONTON, N. J.

What a TroutBrought Abouty

By CORONA REMINGTON 1

). HJO.*1^-*""•»•»•»»»»•"•••'

"Stop that I Stop that, 1 say, or I'l•hake yon myself I"

Charles fjowson stopped It nt onceand In amazement looked up Into th<purple face i of a very pretty, veryyoung girl who was standing nt th<water's edge.

— "Can't- yon- see- those-slgns. 'Don'itrespass,' all around the lake?"

*Oh, yon call this n lake, do you?""Yes. It's my lake. Don't get flip-

pant.""I'm not. I assure you that I had

no Idea of making trouble and I mosthumbly apologize.1

,. "But why are you trespassing?" sheasked, still unappeased, but Inwardlymelted by the earnest, tanned facelooking down nt her. , __

"Well, to tell the truth—" He hesltnted. "To tell the truth my one maniaIs fishing, and I believe I'd almost rJskmy life If I thought the chances werefair for a good catch. And there wereBO many signs not to trespass aroundthis—er—lake that I was convlncecthe flshlng wns good. The more strin-gent the warnings the better the flsh-Ing—always.'

"Did you catch nny?" asked the girl.At tbat Instant she heard a vigorous

flopping In the grass at her feet and.stooping, saw one of her mos{ beauti-ful trout gasping Its, last With ashriek she grabbed It and threw Itback Into the water.

"We only put those fishes In thereyesterday and they have to multiplybefore we start fishing them out."

"Heavens I It's getting worse andt worse I" the man said desperately. "I

nssuHT you my IntentionsTwere not "asbad as my actions. Is there anythingLean do to prove my contrition?"

His face wns so serious that the girlwna tempted to laugh for the first timeduring the Interview.

Teg," she said after a moment'sthought, "but it's awfully big pay forone Httle trout''

"NameXhe price," he "answered nn-moved, "and If It's within human pow-er to do It I'll do It."

"I think you're -awfully nice," shesaid Irrelevantly.

"Thank /•n," he smiled. "I thinkyou're—** /

"Let me tell you all about It. We'll

—.Molra MflTavlBh nnd hor

"Prlnoo Clinrmlnii."

Movlna Aid Ilia t l ty lna .A l . n i l l i l l l n n l l l e n l K l l i ' i - nn i l I n i l H i r l e r

nf w '». K I I W I I M l inn n l i i l e i l U n i t I l ioI l lmri h n v e Imil mi i m i i i i r l i t h l i , n ' i< i - t «>nthe i l e m n n i l for ee r ln ln n l y l e n , pnr t l i ' i l -I n r l y H U M mi or n l m t i l o e lminl i - l lmih ami" I n l l l l i n l i i H f l i l i l ' len." A i l r i l i ; i | l M l reI M I I I H l l u i l I h o n i i l n n r i -nruni ' l l i -n InmIl i i ' l emi i - i l '.'fi per rent n lnc -n I lie vlniihermne l i i i l m l i u .

In l l i« Ink f'ot.An olil i l l , - . - I neii, ir li<i|il In your Ink

|i,il to nlmnrli I l ln «eli l , w i l l Mhilio ll'unoun In dully lino wear |i«(l«r.

It W«a a Wonderful Afternoon.

•It ilown linre,1* afie Intemiiitofl, mor-Inff over to a fallfn tree niturliy.

"Klrnt, I'm MUa Marjorln llumlnll.""What I Lawyer ItainlaH'a ilnnntitcr.

from Conrtont""Yen, Do you know dartr' x

"I ahoiilil aajr I did. We'vn plnyeilninny a aiime of bllllarOa together attlio club."

"Ittib let'a gttt down to htinlncna.This la awfully Important," the girlwrnt on. "To hogln with, poor moth-er'a hail a ilreailfnlly niitere brnak-<1ewn, nod the iloctoro anlll nhe'd hareto KO to Iho country, where there'll tiono noln«a. Hwunda nlmoat kil l her, 00dail lioutfht thla place, and mother findI have to live here a whole year,' withno one but Ihe rnirrnnln. It'a pruttydull (or ino, hut dail cornea 'out w»elr-enila, and hn'a trylili to belli fli tlilngnup no It'll he mure Internatliiff. ThlaInkit'n one of the thlnga he'a flxiid, andnow I'm craiy le have a real littleeanoe, ao 1 «'an KO nut on II. but 1ankeil for It lioforn ino'llinr, nnd nhewitlit Into hyaterlraj nnlil I'd / it«tdrowned and made dud promlae not to

''grit iiin on". Hut I jimt know that Ifnome one olae made It for inn nni)ahowril me Imw to paddle It I'll liu por-f«i:l!v anfr."'

Tllit girl panned, out of breath, andwaited, |inr faro plnli wl i t i eji-ltoiiidntand linr hluit eyen ilnni'liiii.

"I, neo," nald Ihn man In n flabti. "Nota word now to worry your mother butI'l l ffl iarantori you'll bo nafe and I'mauro your falhei-^1 be oallntloil If nohnnw I ynn lonlil i iR nfltn' tint matter."

"How wondiirfnl I" nnld Mnrjorleeauerly. "Will you roally do 111"

"l/niler ono^coiidltIon.""^nmo II.""*rttikt yon promlae not to go oat In

It alone until I give you pnrmlHnlon,""I |M*oinlaa'V abn anld alinoat aoleinii-

ly aa aha i>tac«d her hand In hla.

•r

;ll« held II fur uli i j n t>«conit. Il it 'n"Good! Meet me here at. say, three

o'clock Friday."Til-be here.V she answered nf* she

_ _ _

wuvy brown hair shining In the suanil her red tnlildy tie adding u touch

"Walt n minute," h^ called nfter her"You don't know who I nm yet."

"That's so," she answered, flashinghim a smile. "Who are you?"

"I'm Charley," he said at last."All right. • Good-by, Mr. Charley

Friday at two o'clock.""Good-by. Miss Mncjorle. Friday a

two."That evening Morjorle's moth6

tried wearily to understand the cans,.of „ her. daughter's dancing eyes-amsuppressed excitement, but no explanutlon could ahe get out of ber.

"I'm Just dreadfully happy, mother,"was her only reply.

"And I was afraid you'd be^ so lone!;out here after the life you've been ac-customed to," her mother answered.

At last after ages of waiting, Frlda;came and the two appeared punctual!;at the take. On the surface of (inwater lay a beautiful little canoe evldently just cut out of a trunk ofhuge tree. A seat was In each end anton the side a place had been smoothedand, In large green letters were painted.the word, "The Marjorle."

"I Just can't believe," she said, heivoice thrilling with happiness, nn* athe sight oT her Joy the man felt fullyrepaid for his blistered hands.'

"All aboard 1" he said, trying to hidethe pleasure In his face.

It was a wonderful afternoon theyspent together, he paddling and she

jvatchlng_hlmj»hllejier_flnger3_tralle!through the cool water.

"I feel ns If I'd been to heaven," shisaid when nt last they had to get out

"I do^ too," Ue replied."Cau^we do It again tomorrow?" shi

aaked timidly."Indeed we can, and the day after

pnd the day'after that."It soon became a habit for the two

to nieet every day at the-lake and. be-ing thrown together as they were, Iwas natural that they should confide Ineach other, and at the end of a shortwhile they- knew each other betterthan they would have nfter months ofordinary acquaintance. Once Inwhile he came to the house but notvery often for everything had to bekept very quiet around Mrs. Randall.

As the summer waned he began todread going back to town. The daysseemed to slip throqgh his fingers likeprecious stones, and. once he went totown for the day and, unknown to thgirl, hnd an Interview with her fatherWhen they met the next day his facewas glowing.

"Marjorle," he said gently. "I musget buck to work tomorrow, so thliwill be our.last trip. Dq you want to

ry It :nlone or ^hall we agree alwaysto paddle It together"' /—He looked -at-her earnestly,-but heieyes fell beneath his gaze nnd he felher hands tremble In his.

"Did ever n chap have such Incltl"Jie exclaimed blissfully! then after afew joyful minutes he nnld:

"I Nvlsh I could Hnd that flan :caught. I'l/put a bell on his toes nndtlo a ribbon around his neck."

<©. 1920, by MoClura N«wapap«r Hyfiararter:

She-was blonde, petite, smart. Shisat Just within an office window, briskly tapping the keys of a typewriter—tapping them all day long, with heear to the dictaphone; without eventne respite of shorthand. Rotten howthe1 progress of Invention had to drlyia pretty girl I

For she was pretty, In a sweetly mature way, as If she had known 'Some-thing of-.the depth and breadth of-llfeAt least so thought a stalwart youngfellow who bent over a draughtingboardrjust within a- window/across thearea-way.

He had relt thnt all women werefaithless because one had been so; andIt was like a breath of springtime toglimpse s'uch a face. It renewed hisfaith In womankind. He smiled wanlyns he, caught her eye In a fleetingglance—smiled with lips for days unused to. smiling. He would watch forher leaving hour, and casually—. Wellhe would find a way, to meet her.

She wns really sweet. Fact I Soconceded the dark-eyed youth of rather generous proportions, sldewlse, whowas putting up very good speed on atypewriter In another window acrossIhe area-way. She was-quite attraclive, but he could give her some pointson fingering, n kink of his own addedto the latest business college methodYes, she wns almost, pretty. In n gentle-unassertmg_way.. But for her perfecl

MTR. GOSLINGTON AIRS VIEWS

Old Gentleman'* Phlloiophy of UfaHla Something In It Very Much

Worth While.

Thin inornliiK 1 mot walking alongtho street n man who was laughing;not nt something he milr, hut ]u«tInughlug to himself at something hehad In nix mind, at a happy thought.Ills face wan Inclined downward n l ittlA and he ulowcd down a little In hlagait, BH he had become, uhuorlied Inwhat bo wan • thinking about; butnow, «» ha paused the peak of thin en-joyment, ho lifted his bond again toIta iinunl Iqvol and ntrndo on auxin ntbin usual gait; bin face, however, millninlllne. Fortunate In the man thnt

inn In bin lienrt a spring that bnliblrahappy though^!.

ICvery tlin* I give Iho brunti hoy Inmy harbor nbop ft nickel I fee!•nhaniml, for inynelf and for him.

Kor blin, becatine lie doea hla workIn a cnrelcon, Inefficient manner; formynrlf, bccuune I continue to pay forsuchjicrvlce. And ho'* a nice hoy «t

t^ chrerful, well-mraning, polite,but b« nlinply dofun't kn*vr that he

r't l lv l i lK up to hln prlvllegen, llmtInil't itoliiK (he bolt he could.

«I don't knovr wtmt I can do nhout It—nolliliiir, I nuppone. Having atarUil(Ivlim, I iniint koep on. I would Ilkn10 tell him that the one *n<1 only wnyfor anybody, ma.n or boy, to get on Intho world In lo 60 hla work, wlinlaver

t innr be, to the very bent of hln nbll-ty; but I l i ta In eometlilni that I cnn't

[iluck lip Ibe cournje lo do.—New JforkSun and Herald.

Mot Off In* Wlro.

The nnury rltlron hail been trying[o talk la a pnrty over the phone, hillrvna Inlitrrupltttl hy unmeono brenklngn on him.

"Who Hie hl l i lU-hlmik la Iho illntf.i lnttei l bl l thvrl i iR lillot on Iho eml ofIlln lino!" yclli-'l the niigry clllniin.

"I'm mire I ilo not hnow who younre!" re|ill*til a awoot roinlnlno velc^i.—lalllmoro Hun.

Tlio (lion."What do y<m Ihlnll of n l>arhern'v

IrIKe f"<r l i lKhrr iirlconj""I qhould think harhern would In.

linn moro lo n ci it-ralo policy."

IUr Otyl«.Mr0. JOIIIB—I nrn economical anil

never uno niiliiien In illy (limning.Mm. Tuna—That muni h« grate «•«-'

CiB.

[noise, she ' would have seemed shy. (she had glanced out of the wlriUoWwhile her busy fingers were reeling ofthe lines, nnd catching bis gaze, hadturned ^deliberately away). Well, she-had some spirit!. He'd like to workwith her, Just to Jolly her along. Cometo think of It, that's the kind of n girlthat^makea a good wife—and boardinghouse fare does pall, pe'd watch herquitting time and get n closed view ofher, somewhere on the wny to tliestreet.

She was positively wonderful! Sothought the red-haired giant who waswriting figures In great ledgers Justwithin another window across the areaway. So nifty and neat, and still sobusinesslike; so dainty anil feminineand still with such a worth-while airas If she could make nn.nwkwnrifright of a fellow comfortable, nnireally treat him humanlike. She wnsglancing his way—Just casually, he ohserved—and there was absolutely nohint of the fllppnncy which most younggirls of the day consider quite de rigueur. She almost smiled, yet therewas not "the" slightest suspicion olnnujscment about It; Just wonderfufriendliness.

What a wife a glrlllke thnt wouldmake 1 ^addenlyhe-felt Iho quick; de-testable color covering his fnce nnimounting to his - temples; and heaqulrmed In his high-desk chair amran hia fingers through tho heavy hairthat he hated, anil grinding his teethho mutterel: "I'm filming some moviefor her entertainment t"

It might be her nlstcr, thought theboy In Iclmhl, In the still, breathlessway he always recalled u certain nervylittle English nurse, lie wan Just with-in another window across the nren-waydoing Btunts In show-en ril printing—Instcnil of flying! Hut tho sight ofthat sweet girl brought Illicit the mem-ory of tho-other, whom n thoiisnnilpoor dnvlln worshiped In lite Held hos-pitals oversells.

She could marry but one of them—Init Hhc had ber pick! That was oneHntlafuctlon to the otliern. Maybe herewns another girl like her—n litt le . IlomiiHt get next to Ihe force In bur o(llcoand some time perhaps In the illNtnntfuture he might be comfnrtel. lierooked nt hln wntcli, ntruck hy u mul-don thought. They quit at live, loo!

Mcmiwlille ho utrnlnhtened «|H nhoul-deru, mnoothed hln hair, nnd very CIIH-uully Inileeil turned toward the windowtho nleevn that bore the unit red undtho two gold utrlpen, nnil when nbaglnncoil hln wny he . frankly nmlleil.

At flvo there wnn nctlon In four of-flcen acronn the uren-wuy, for the littleDlondii typlnt covered her machine, nii-nuineil a nliiiplo lint ami nioilent fur,nnil drew on n pair of npoll«n« grayglovea. Hhfl looked illntlnuulnln-d I

Onnuully, oh, no very cnnunlly, anlnlwnrt youth, n rnl-lmlreil uliint, n:hap of rather geueroiii) proporllonn,

nlilowlne, mill II nulilln- boy of gallnnliearlng liaDpeneil to meet at tint nlu-

vatorn Junt on ahe reacheil them.An oilloua, ovitrKrown onici) lioy

frot|i t|i« floor he|n>v ull|lh|eil from nnnncendlng car anil nhe iooUiil upon himwlll i Iho Jliy of ponneniilon nn he halleilher. Thin In "lint h« hnlil:

"Hello, grnmtmn; liow'il you mnkeU"

All-Important.Not no very InnK HKO Iliorn lived In

larlhnKe, Mlnnnurl . a man who wanilown an Iho premier lohhylnt of hlu

nliile, No one mil-panned INia In leHlaal lvo exiierllincn or III He l t l l lK l l l l l i | ( Mlono or undone. On olio occanlon n

I,mil nnl|eil blm for ailvlco. "I liavojjol to uo over to Ihrt nlale l i 'Kln la lnro

nil nee If [ can't defiml n par l lc l l lnr-y nhnoxloiirt hill," Iho friend explain-nl, "ami I have coinn to ynu to ankvhat In Hi" Hint Ih l i lK to do." Outif thin b o u n t i f u l experience the lobby

nl re l i l lu i l : "The 111 MI I l l ln i l for youo do hi lo no and nee your hunlier."

Doaan't Worry tba Lion.In i t ia t ion In Ihe nlnconml (lattery,

nil yel Iho way they cl ip pomlln donalocn not look like any Ki»« l compll-leal tn tlin Ihni.- -Wnnhlnulnn lltnr.

DIPPER OF DIAMONDS

ON BRIGHT nights one can seegleaming In the sky a fonnatloi

of stars which resembles a dipper Itsbape. But once, thousands and thou-sands of years ago, thla dipper llveillo tb% home of a- peasant girl.

It -was then Just a simple tin thingwith a rusty handle.~Thisr moth'eiT'was"taken- euddenlynick one night and called to Greta tobring her a dipper of water. Though

daughter dressed, and rah to the springat once, filled the dipper and startedborne. Suddenly In her path appeareda tiny puppy. """"

"I am so thirsty," said the puppy.

"Can't you let me have some of thewater?" x

"I promised to bring It to my moth-er," sold Greta. "But I know .youneed It at once. Drink."

"Please, miss, for. heaven's sake,give me a sip of water," Bald a feeblevoice at the side of the path. Gretarooked closely^ nndr saw—an— alfr man

"I have to bring some, to my moth-er," returned Greta. "But you canhave a drink, for I Know you areweary. Best by this rock." So theold man took a 'deep draught from thedipper, which almost emptied It.

Oreta ran on toward the bouse, butahe heard another sound at her side.It, was as If someone hnd fallen andwas hurt. She looked closely andsaw a ragged, aged woman lying onher side with the blood flowing fromu cut In her head and her eyes tight-ly closed.

The girl did not stop to think aboutbow little water she had. She poureda drink down the woman's throat andbathed her wound with the rest. 1 Theold woman opened her eyes filovriy.

•'Can you help''me borne, cMjai1',nsked the sick woman. "1 live downby the spring." . , / ' _•• |__. "Certainly," replied Greta. • "1 havoused.all the water foriwbJchim»Ss^(er Beat m*p and will httvejW|jl(ny'C«the spring ^nyway.^I JwWf- D9- gltttf1 tohelp you." "' '

So with the old woman leaning onhor ntrong, young arm, Greta wentslowly back to get the water. Onreaching • the spring tho womnnknocked on the rock above It and thostone opened, admitting them to nbig chamber carved out of the solid

(Copyright.)

The Car Nut.That every village haa one, la a thin*

you can't dlapute.do la a aort or (tonlun-*! mechanical ga-

loot,luflc In the old bicycle <1«y* he rod. a

raolna- wheel—llo'd tell how nmnr cmilnrlaa he'd mone

rlKht off the reellAnd when ho waan't rldl'itf one, ha hnri

atixxlal off.—Ie wua ua loony ov«r "Mken" aa annie

man over gulf.Hut now hu'n In the nnveath liokvan;

ttier«'a Keur-Kre«ne »n hln .mtlir.And he can llnlier nil lie Ilkao—the Tll-

lajre aillo butfl

Tile keeiiont |oy hta oonl run know, la tak-IIIK (me apart;

To lirlad the eurlMm rrmn a valve plumbaallenea hla heart.

l'«t wear a fl.et uf Jiliniiflrn and ja Jirviuiyc«p, why. ouyl

Ilion a aeu of alory tin ]n<it almplf floalaaway)

And when lie liaa one out to teat, Itavlarora. ull allowing

VVItllnut Hie hoiiit, he Illtealng cloao Inhear how U la ffolnH:

Uminui-liiiitiiininnil Tbarp lan't anything,could over, »v*»r put "

Another drop of Ml" lnl<> the belaa ofthat nul l ,

<\>lka pay tilm For the wnrk, but ahuckalIt'a atioh a waalo of immey,

lo'd tin lli« name HUNK '"' >>la board, be-oatlao In. lilin ll'n fiinoy.

I<T<1 11*0 a innnliey wroni-li At ineala Ifnny«iiie woulil to( l i l in i

la'd llfl hla Ilo w l l l i n atllann-aiirelThat «(«nl Would niwnr fret him.

le linolin up wlfey w l l l i Ihe iillora, ^vltbn l i l l fn l Iwlat itinl I I I K ,

lo enln. drl i iKu. nroitnm iiiaohlaery^llilavillage anln him. •

Company.Iglil, anil the world I lKhln with you.

V«uilral, and, you neat alone.

vr« IIIKIMP

earth. Gems gleamed from the wnlls,nnd on_all sides were rich furnishingsglittering with Jewels, golden statuesand pictures. Some music soundedand the girl held her breath In aston-ishment as the ragged womanchanged suddenly Into a handsomelydressed sprite.

"I was only testing your heart,"said the sprite. "I am the fairy o!this fountain and fcnow-why^you™earnerHere Is a golden flask ftjy of waterfor your mother. It will'cure her atonces—Here,—give—me-^your—old—dip-per."

The sprite filled It full of flashingdiamonds, each one aa large as ubean. ,

"Run home now," said .the sprite."But be careful that my old enemy,the North Wind, docs not hit you. Helies about at this hour to harm al) myfriends."

Greta hid the flask of water In herdress and held the dipper In her hand,ftapldly she ran. but she could hearthe wind coming after her. Pasterand faster she flew, but onwardroared the old North Wind. Just titshe got to her door her foot caught Ina root of a tree arid she tumbled. Outof her hand flew the dipper, but It dMnot fall—the North Wind grabbed Itand blew It up Into the sky. And:here It sticks yet. But, fortunately,:he diamonds were saved, for they nil!ell out on the ground, so that Grctufound every one. 'Up in the sky to-day gleams Greta's dipper, shining nsbrightly as it did thousands of yearsago. (Copyright)

^SSSSSSSSSSS

| BEAT!APRIL SHOWERS

By SUSANNA MACKIN.

<©, I»20. br MeClara Nawipaper E

This popular^fnovle" favoritecame an operatic prima donna at tnage of sixteen and toured the country In a winning production. Shethe daughter of Fernando IVIichelenathe greatest grand opera tenor of hiday In America. Her success In motlon pictures Is well known to all whvisit the screen houses.

By Edna Kent Forbes

ABOUT REDUCTION

D ID you ever eat baked celery?Stewed celery? Celery nnd oyster

broth? Celery Is not just a relishto, go with a large dinner, It Is asplendid food In Itself—and It will notao*a weight. If the woman who wantsto reduce quickly, comfortably, andwithout looking o'd 'after she Is thin.

Eat at- Foodi That Will Not Add FlefhYot Will Nourlafi You. •

vlll milmtltllte cillery.for noitp or fatly'oftctahlcH, nh« wil l loHe weight,

If you want to Krow Uiln, you multmt ant milk, cream or cliee.se, fornllk la 4 pur cent fat and cream unitihecnn IH per cent, Ynn iiniHt not eathi) meat of the p<K— which IH IK) In MKir cent fnt, hiicon being ulmonl TO perlent. You mtint not eat olive oil forhnl In KM) per cent fl it , linlecil, It Inhe fatlleut form of liollrlHhluenl. Youmint not cut wheat, buckwheat rice,intn, potatoitH, nincnronl or com, for

ui contain from 1 lo 4 per cent ofat. Neither muat you eat HUKar or

candy, flgs, bananas, grapes, chestnuts or walnuts, for these containeither fats or carbo-hydrates, whichare fattening. ~~

This sounds like n long ll«r. but Inreality It Is a. very little one. Alother meats you can have, and fishand oysters, green vegetables andsalads, eggs.lrultss I have given thiabove list of the foods n-ost necessar;to avoid, since It Is easy to memorizeTlfe woman going In for reduction wllknow then what foods not to order foher table. Avoid drinking with meals.

The worst -things to give-up arsugnr and butter und crenin^ ButJeitaken weak with lemon is more dellcute than tea with cream and In placeof sugar one con purchase saccharin

(Copyright.)]—-^-O- L

, V...'t itTlio Itingcir a itave't roa«l haa

li«oit down, tlio holleIt liae !>«*». Lapl U|».

Newly DoNneil."Wlmt In your Men of helnu; rcnlly

iiloxlcaleil?""A cimil l l lnn In which Ihn I n t o x l c i k -

<M| <-aii i inl eililaln hnw ho happened tont I I "

[jut 6 AMf ANYHOW!)

M Y iritlKN JOlfl hcc-H wife Icavitown IUHII week HO he tella mt.

vo RO innka cut fcesh Sunday. I buyla fccuh polo and maka da lunch anilToo ho deega wormy for foola do feeuh.

dunno ver mnooha bout, but .loo nayl« catcha plenta ftM!«h IICOH life.

eeth da pole olio end and other endirn da hook. On tin hook .loo put acoglo worm and trow da whole \vorl(n

ion da water but da |H>le. I no fc<*K-iro out wot'n Idco Joo wantn krclahit worm twice—ntlck weelh da hookIrnt and infra tluift drown lieein.

l>nt worm Htay een da water lonK'llino heforti Joe pulla out. Den ho;etta noru and nay "<la eal'H no hltacr good." I no Hay mmiallnK. hut IInk Jno eea leotlo hiiKiihoiiHe—Ilo eat

eun ever bite before maka da ticraleh.Ii'or tree, four bourn we neet on dat

hnat and no Kotta noniellilnK only wet.Joe nay niehho da worm een loo hctu;no he put ta yomiK one on. I feeguredat way een ifroala Idee eef da heetfcat ectt no hiintfi'y inehhe dn kitteni lka da lunch.

Joo malul pTi;nta cunn why da catfrcnh no eilla lieen worm. 1'reety noonI am dccnunnt and pulta beefnteaKniindwlch on da hook. Joo anlui wol'aIdee anil I nay ref On wormn no eiilchilda cat feenh inebho heefnUnik calrlmdog fecrih nr nnmo nlher Ulnd, I <lim-nn. You liliow, 1 t l l l k Jne een I'raKfteen da heail and ho nay naimi tlrfuweelh me.

Wot you l ink?( > . - —

What tho Sphinx Says.Nowlori NowklrK,

MIIHT Id Iho innhl i iK of n niun."

"Be sure (bat yon take your nro-brelhvJo'yra." Mrs. Bennett had.cOrmjsoftly- Into her daughter's room. "Itlooks like rain," nhc continued, "andIt feels more like the middle of Marchthan It does like the middle of April."

Myra Bennett stood before h^r mir-ror, deftly adjusting her new springhat—a chic flame colored toque. Herblack dress of soft clinging stuff hada "touch "of ~flame~""yellow"at the neck,wrists and girdle; nnd from heryoung, well-formed shoulders It hung-In-simple,—girlish-lines.—A-swIft-flWe*—long glance at her reflection brought alook of approval to her troubled faceas she turned from the mirror and.slipped Into her coat.

"Yes, I'll take an nmbrella," shoassured her mother. - i

"And be sure you get somethlnsrgood for your luncheon, Myra," hermother cautioned, "you—you haven'teaten much breakfast—a cup of coffeeIs nothing for a girl to work on.Yon—" ' ,

"Don't you worry, mother," the girlbroke in as she fumbled In her headedbag. "Ill make up for breakfast—yonought to see bow much I eat at noon."

"I'm glad you do. Myra, I hopeyou're not letting anything troublayou."

Mrs. Bennett returned to the din-Ing room and began to clear away thebreakfast-dishes.

"I should worry!" Myra Bennettwhispered to herself. .

Her eyes sought the eyes of a square-Jawed young face In* a silver frameupon her bureau.

"I should worjyl" she repeated a«she took the photograph from theframe. "I can stand It If you can."she Informe* the picture, -flinging -It-Into; the waste basket. Then she fledfrom the house.

In the big millinery shop, whereMyra' designed "fetching" hots forMadam La Bonte's fashionable cllen-'tele her fingers fluttered about amrtn-;the frail straw and gorgeous flowers;and "wonderful creations" were fash-ioned by her capable fingers but herthoughts were leagues nway.

By the magic of thought she hadtaken herself back to a night In .Tune:to a moonlit beach and John Martin,the scent of the sea. the touch ofhnnds. By this same magic sh*walked In the future. There wns alittle white house nnd n garden ofrones—real roses. John Martin walkedbesldp her. nml there a child's chnrfbyfingers were clinging to her-skirts.

WJien she had come back from hermenndorlngs thc-same-mnglcal thought -—to|d her. that.she_ha_d_been_,dreanilnji_ .romancing, and that she had lost—lost John Mnrtln through her ownHilly nonsense, her unreasonable Jeal-ousy ' -

Myra Bennett wnn glad when the,hour to qnlf work bail. con'e- She had.of lafe; dorie ber "work-"fik.et~d*WMjetwny.

Out In the cnnyon-llke street thernln wns pelting against the sidewalk,and. occasionally, a prnst of windslapped the rain Into the faces of the

Myrn. her scant skirts • cllnclng toher. made her wny to n nenrby suli-wny. hut just as she had reached theentrance a Htronir gale ntrnck her andpent her umbrella and her flame-c«l-

>d hat chimlne each other ncro.gs thestreet.

Out from a drug store doorway aman dnrlcd after them, then anotherman Joined In the chase, and Myrn,her brown hair wet and dlflhevclcd.watched them. Again and ntniln thnmm that was chanlng tho hn( had hadilrt hanilH almost upon It when, like n|OH!I. the freaklnh \ylml carried It offiKii ln. She bad lost night of tho othernan and tho umbrella.

"It wan a perfectly good nllk nm-irellh.". Myra nolllo<|Ul£Cd; "porhanahe man needed* it hlinaelf—well, letilm keep It, and tho hal? Tlio hatim.it he a wreck."

Myra nmhleiily became uwaro thnt •all man wun holding an muhrelluivcr her. Nhr looked up Into n pairif la i lKhl i iK eyen. The man holdlna;ler nmhrellii wan hntlenn. and molevlire WIIH titrcnmluK down hln yomiff.i|iiiiro-|nweil face.

•Mobil Mar l ln l Where—""Thin only prove*. Myra," John Mnr*

III Interrupted, "thnt you neeil mejround- cniMielally In n ntorm."

Foar Coata Rabbit LIN.»ll hi l l ing grny or otlier ri

rciiHcIn often run them down. Jump)pon their hncUn ctnil Indict llw den Hikoi imt hy a hlto Junt hnell of the ear.Inmctlincn hiinlern or olhi'rn hnvn

leaned therie triilf'tlen, nml hnvnalien Ihe rnlihlt for Ihelr nlmrtr - thoeanel lieliig III nome cnhen Il icUy ti>et off w i t h Un life, nayn Ihe Anierlratt'nl'enlry MilKiiKlne. While the chnn«li on Iht^ ruhlill w i l l often Klve up nnit.i p i a l l h i f f down, cnmineiice l i> ti«|neuli l lu> monl p l l l f u l manner mull ICa

nercl lemi hlui ler InUi -n Hi l i fe . Or, . ln- , . - . »rr<> Ihe rnhhll n.i l r-.. I, rrl

>t,|| Un I rl nearly hi lrnl lnu wl t lKem TIM l l n l i f e II <-nul i l ennl ly eti<-n|)«\,nr no vxeU'Mil H v l D K cnolil nverlnllM A. l l i l i l l nn a n l c l l l chane run.

Nnt tho Time for It.l lruwn I'm K i t - a l l y nuii>rlm-i l to

. i l l l l u i l yi.u're ninnji-d )I l i n n i l \Vhy nhiMil i t^ ymk lief V

i - l l i e i l i i '* l (tmmner al 111 lljhloii. ul»lmi nevr iMictr n| i«»l ie nf ytiui- wlfu.

I l i i i m l No I I I M I I evvr iii«-n,'lnim hltt

1 ni i i lMii Aimwcia.

\

Page 3: SOUTH - Atlantic County Library · cnco puuacd over thin section TUCH-ay night, lightning ntrlking In uovernl places, while hall and a. awocplng wind:ld muoli dumago to growing cropfl,

SOUTH JERSEY STAR, HAMMONTON, N. 3. SOUTH JERSEY STAR, HAMMONTON, N. J.'

Congress Would Settle Racial Question

WASHINGTON.—Senator Spencer ofMissouri made • an address the

>ther dSv In support of his bill (S.1267) for The creation of a racial com-mission to promote harmony betweenwhites and... blacks.—Be read Into itthe text of the bill, of which the moreImportant sections r.re these:

"Be It enacted, etc., That a commis-sion of nine perilous, citizens of theUnited States be, and Is hereby cr*-ited to be known and designated Afithe commission <»n the Racial quenUoftIn the. United Stales of America. Th*

commission shall be composed of threewhite men from the South, three whitemen from the North, and three coi-ored men.

See. 2. That salrl commission shall• l»o /i|)pofnted -by tJie president of theUnited States, by and witli'the advicOand consent of the senate, and shall

ByHOLWORTHY

H A L L

men in each group, two white and onecolored ; that the term of the firstgroup shall be for one yenr, 'the secondfor two years, and the third groupfor throe years.

Sec. 8. That the commission shallhave authority to Inquire Into and

thoroughly investigate the conditionssurrounding the colored people In theUnited States, ascertain, If possible,ifce cause of the unrest .among them,and, If there be- racial friction, thecause of the same, and to suggest suchremedies as they may deem best *at-?ulated to reliev* the situation and tobring about harm^^lous relations be-

\ tween white and colored Americans."

Historical Significance of the Year B20INTERNATIONAL celebration ~of™tne"

tercentenary of the Pilgrims, owingto delays caused by the great war, willbe largely celebrated In 1921 Insteadof 1920. There are, however, manylocal celebrations scheduled for theyear. In this connection, an addressto tht American people of the Sul-Blave Institution, in association witha ionR list of American organizations

- and individuals of prominence, wasread Into the Congressional Record byFess of Ohio. This address says, amongother things:

-ll,so happens that the year 1920 Isdoubly significant historically, In that300 years ago beginning on the 80thof July there was being held InJamestown, Virginia colony, the' firstAmerican legislative assembly, calledby free men, of lawful age, and of fullunderstanding.

And while these first Americanswere Instituting self-government onthe American continent a little groupof English humble folk who during a12-year sojournvln Holland, to whichthey had fled from Britain to be freeto worship God in the manner ofwhich their conscience approved, wasalready malting ready to go to Amer-lca_ and. establish ln_Jthe_ new world_fl home of religions freedom.

Ry one of those strange coincidenceswhich sometimes seem to set asidecertain days and endow them with trn-dltlono.1 significance, July 30 _ and No-vember 11 take on nuch un endowment.

for July 30 joins Cavalier and Pilgrimtogether as twin sources of that highInspiration which met In the conven-tion of the great Constitution, and No-vember 11 Is not only the anniversaryday of the Mayflower compact, the sec-ond assumption by English colonistsIn America of an 'Inalienable right ofself-government, but is also the memor-able day of the beginning of the arm-istice which closed the great war, Inwhich the descendants of Pilgrim andCavalier and their kin across seasfought and won together,

Therefore the year 1920 being, ahistoric anniversary year:—as _well^osthe fifth year of overmuch dangerouspropaganda, false counsel, and loosestatement by public characters—Itwould seem toTrtf Vitally essentlnT'thatthere should he brought to the con-sciousness of the American people Inn great national celebration the mean-ing and tho priceless worth ot oar treeInstitutions. ' . . .

Deadlock of Congress Over ''Free Seeds"

I N 'I'll 10 deadlock hi>tw<wn m>nuto andhouso over tho agricultural nppi'o-

|>r lu t lo i iH bill out* of tho ltoinn - I f nottho ohUif HI-HI--wi i r t that for $'-?:U),-lHlfor "coiiKi'iiMHloiml Hct-il <llnlrllmllon."Qi-iu'ntlly ( t iM-nUliL^, IhA m>im(f t wim de-termined to nhnllf lh t h in old-limit np-Iiroprlallon und Llio ImiiHo VVHH di»trr-l I l l lH'cl |() 1-4-1 It 111 - I I . Y"t tilt'I'd WtTOinuny m'miloi'H for tho "mi*'tlB" aiulnin i ty rt 'pivnt'ntiillvi 'H f iKul i i r t t them,I > H V H n nil dn.VH W«TO H] i< k nt In iti'lmt"on t h t t Hiih.lcrt. Of COUI'HII, many cu-rloiiH thliirs-s wiire M u l c t , 1 loj-o lire itftiw pVlUMl nl ruiHlom from (lie In-(orinlimhto d t - tmt^ ;

Senator Uroiiim, North Dakota- Inm <|uH« mini 11 nit no rn'iwtor wi l lrontend ( l i n t iV |uii 'UiiKt» of »<'''<! cnnbo «•-nt through the mall" for I O M M Hum

ono cent, nnd It coats for transporta-tion alone $10,000,000 nnd mom.

HopreMentntlvo Lnnploy, Kentiidcy—•My obHorvntlon linn been t t in t tlio menwho It i lk tho londoHt nml protect themoHt n^nlnst tho dlHtrJhutloii of gar-den seeds nr« tho Htlnh'hiHt men In ttylHllOUMO.

Senator King, Utah—I th ink It la nmost rtlaKnh'oful performance tlmt weHhonlil npprnprlnte money for th ispurpoHo when wo know tho object ofIt nnd know tho misuse, of tho niproprlntlon.

tti'iiulor ThonmH, Cnlorndo—Just nIOIIK IIH llio hoiiHO knows thnt tlio net:nlo will iilthnnlcly ylolil unili<r Iho clr-O U I l l H l a i l C O H , j l lHt HO hllltf Wil l NI1CnhUHoH IIH t l i l t t old need nht iHe, Hint Ihonry w i t h HKO nnd claims to IH) Humti l led hy lime, ho continued upon thinhill .

Hel i i i lnr Konynn, lown—I do not hHove Micro IH nnylhli iK thnt IIIIH holdup t in t American COHKI-OHS to no muchrldlnito nnd contempt nit t h i n froo-m-edHem.

Hcimlor Sinllh, ( IcorKln I Il l lnlt ItIN nil r lKh l . l''or nl^hl yenrH wo hnvi1

Kono lhrnlli;h Iho fnreo of H l r l l i l i l K outllio Heed npprnprlnllon In tho iionntunnd Ilion yielding to Iho houito.

Like Roll of Drums and Blare of Bugles

SI N < ' I O Dr. Mllo l of l l n r v n n l mail"hln iTl l l i ' lHm of \Vi-ftl I 'nlnl D M mi

i M l n r i i l l u i m l i M h l l l l i l l any i 1 i < r < - m l i > r n<if Hi'- f i i i iH in i i l l n l l i ' i l U l i i l . -n M l l l l n i - yitra<l<'hty hltV4f oiuiu> tit lltn f rnn l , In -• • I n i l l U K Nci-r r ln i -y "f \Vnr llnliiT, wlmlinn M I - H I n i t olltrtnl foiiuiinnl''!!)!)!!! lormiKn-HH.

Il l l l l « Kl'l ' l l l ( I t l t l lM- l l Klnim \v l lK l i lWubi iv t^ I l i f aldtr wt i l r l i I I I" ouli'lit T i t r i f\vl i4-u Iho.v uuirrl i to | M I I . \ I T nl Wi-MlI'nliil nlihii- Ih i ro wunlii: "Mii ly:Honor: < N n u i l r y . " In I l i n t plnn* w<| i ' i lnn l o I H I I t in 1 i iHirc c i i i l i l i i i n n of nn t - K n l lnl n. ' i i llmrnl T l i rv n , r I I , . - l i n n l n oTHi I.- I 'V w h l r l i l l v i M . •,! Hi.-no I I I K I Iar« nl in( inl .

I l l n h i M C . I l l ' - l i i 'nl |>M|-| ' if Iho l i m l r u rI I ' . I I n l \Vi-nl 1'iihil In mil In l i i i l l l f i ' i n iI Un. II In , I M I I I I . - I . - I l . u l l ' l l M i ; , .!'•in in - l i u ' y , i l l l l v , I n d K i r , m-K i i ' l l iuu ' i ' . llIn l ln l l l l i iK n innh lo nlnliil on MMf.M.I. "Ill lliopi.. I l i l l i i i n . " n i i v n I I . I ' \VrMI'olnl'M-. "wo l i m y l i n v n n I I I - IT , I ,n l wuhnvo nut u n i i p i M l o i on 4 - i u l l i .

" I I In n o r l l i nhll, . In l i l i i i w \ v h n l\\',-nt I 'olnr i lnrn mil I n . - I t . \V,- l.-,i '- |ino ' Inn iA 1 ;, no n.H lull . , HI novl . ' l ln iuAnyl io i ly loolihii; lo I I , In I ,mi l l IHI. . I I (olio dm It- iul i ' l - In new lypi -n uf «ov<.rM|ll.'Ill wil l look III vnhl . \Vl i r l l w,- l.-n.'ll(h« Inwn of |,luu,HJ. IVn li ' i i i-l i HK-III iii

w r l l l i ' i i In I l lo Inwn of llio I l ln i l l o i l n v .Wn l i ' i u - t i l o y a l t y lo n n l l i i i i l l y , lo l l n -f f o v i - i - n i n i ' l i l nn rnt ln i l i ' i l . Thin, In l l ioi.yr'i oT ninny nioilurn I ' l l i i rn lo i 'n , init l i i 'n

N a iml l i i ' i na . "U N a iml l i i ' i na . "D l l i l i i K I I I ' - I III y r i i r n of l l io a. ' l l i l

Vl i iy 'n i . \ ln l i ' i l r i . l l io r i nml ry Imn n r v r rhint u u a r anil Iho M U p i i ' i i i o i H r r i - i l n nor a l l t i n w n l - n l i n n I . . . . . . i In I I I . - I m i i i l noT W r n l I ' o l n l o i n , n n i l l l io pol l i - l i ' i i havoIM'I-II n.-iulonili- olli-li'ii.

,IM'I-II n.-iulonili- polli-li'ii.

Mo ..Hi. -i i , li , «!.- l i i n l l l u U . n i In Mil"I ' l i i m l r y l inn |ii-i)ilu.-ril no i n n i i t iii.ini.o p i n |.|iilni.|)l III a nl l i | ( lo r n l l l u K Thol i n t ivioln Mini Hi" mil or i l i u n i n n i i ' lIho l i h i i ' - or hint l ' -n: I l l l l l l l . l.l'O, MhiTman. Mli i - i - l i lan , A l l i o r l Mvi lm.y . lol iuIho lihii'- o int'-n: lllll. .l'O, iman. Mlii-i-lilan, Alliorl Mvilm.y .loliuhtoii. Mlonownll .lui'linon. .loo John..i.in OIMII i;o Tl ...... an, (I ..... •»« It Mel - l i ' l l l l l l . IJool ln l ln , I l l l l l n n l , l . l t c u o t l .

I ' .T' . l l l l lK. nl l l l III! OJl.

GETTING RICH QUICK.

Sjrnops!*—Dick Morgan of Syra-cuae, N.._y., a failure In life, enlist-ed In tho Foreign Liiglon- of- the-I'Yench army under thu name of

—Henry—Hlllim-dr In- dlafleured-by—ahrapnol. The French surgeonsask for a photograph to guide themIn reatorLng hiq face. In his 'rageagainst life he offers In derision aplctuce postcard bearing the radi-ant face of Christ. The sureeonado a good job. On his way back toAmerica he meets Martin Har-mon, a New York broker. Theresult Is that Morgan, under thename of Htlllard and unrecognizedas Morgan, goes back to Syracuseto sell a mining atock. He la de-termined to make good. He tellapeople of the dtath of Morgan. Hefinds In Angela Cullen a loyal de-fender of Dick Morgan. He meetsCarol Durant, whp had refused tomarry him. She does not • hesitateto tell him that one had loved Mor-gan. Hllllard flnds he still lovesher and Is tempted to confess.

CHAPTER V!.—Continued.

Til have to admit," said Hilllardlightly, "that the odds are on the sideof the experts. But as for the ro-mance—" He smiled at Angela andwondered If he dared hegtn so soon tobuild up the framework of his, mission^]"I've been telling Angela that It's-mostly hard work. Once In n whileyon— do roir Into-something lurid,- of_course—romantic, If you want tq callIt so. I remember one bit out of myown experience," Angela had droppedtbe papers, and was listening ns close-ly as her father. "A few years agosome friends of mine bought up an oldabandoned property out in the Butteregion; bought It for a song, and Itwas a very quiet peaceful little songat that, because metals had been dull,nnd— to continue the metaphor—myfriends weren't In particularly good.voice just then. But after they'd tak-en title, they realized that they'd onlyBung the first verse of the song, andthere were a lot more verses nnd apretty strenuous chorus. There .wasa shaft to be unentered and a lot oftimber-work to be done; they weje Infor a big expense, and their credit hadtucks In It, and the outlook wasn't anytoo rosy. But thirty yards from themain workings TlieKf~was"a~fBlrlsrrsort of tunnel, with the start' of, awinze—that's a blind Bhnft running,.down obHqlrfVy from n horizontal tun-nel—ami if-pointed straight towardthe nmln ibUft, nnd It occurred tothem that they could continue thatwinze another few feet, strike theirmain shaft about tho hundred andllfty foot level, and nave a lot of labornnd expense thnt way hy getting aclenn approach to the nlinft Insteadof taking » lot of bother with It In Itsdecrepit condition. Well, they beganto go down thut winze, and limhlo ofteri fenfthoy struck n brand now nndunsuspected vein—thero hadn't beennny outcrop showing; it wnn nhoer,unadulterated luck. Then Ihey haderiMlIt—they certainly did I To nmkon.loupt Htory Hliort, Ihey pawned theirfutures, 'and beKKed nnil borrowed ev-ery penny they could Iny tholr handnon. nnd thoy dcvclopivl thnt propertyto tho hint ront, nnd when they hadpcrhnpH two hundred thousand or HOtoim of four per rent. copper In night ,and there wore Indicated ore reservesof another hnlf i\ million ^tons, theyHold thnt property to a group of NewYorkers for nn nUerly phciioincnnlprice, wi thout ever liavlnK HO muchun touched tho original ul inf l for whichIhoyM hoiiKht the property I"

"Ouch I" rmld Cullen, nnd "(Jood-IIOHH I" Hiild AoKeln.

"Anil," nald llllllnrd, HiullliiK roml-lilncclit ly, "If thu nr lKlmil ownern hni^pliHhed I h n t win/*1 for a couple or ilnynmore I l i i iu thoy did. or If my f r l rudnhnilu ' t decided lo K < > at the problemIn cxi ic t ly t h n t way . , . well , nn I Hay,whil l 'n one mali'ii r innnnco In anotherinan'H Irn^edy. My frlendn got theirI n v e M l n i e i i l hncU In tmiiicl l i lnic lenn thanfour i i lon l l iH , nnd l i f t e r t h n l U wan vel-vet. And the f ie l l ln t f ID-Ice wan In t t ioi ic lKl i l inrhooi l of two liundred Union\ v h n l they 'd pnld for I t . Tlmt'n mi l l -I l l K I l l n t o r y . Mr. Cnlli ' l l ." And IndeedIt WI;M nnd the only rnhrlcnllon aboutIt WIIM I l l l l l n r i l ' n clnloi of fileuiliililpfor t h e l u e l t y i iwiiern. Tliln, au Im nnmired l i h u n c l f , wait niflcitman'n llcciinn

every i tueee' i i if t i l operntor In n"friend" of tu iv i ialemiii in.

Hull . ' i i noildeil I h o i i K l i l f u l l y ; l i lneyeit wore l i r lKll l . AiiKoln wnn niter,n n l e l y r e K i i i d l i i K l i l in w i t h Indu lKcu tp i ty , mid i i e in lh lK I to ld yon no menH I I I ' C M to l l l l l l n r d .

"Where w n n Ih ln In Monlni in?""Ml lvcrb i iw c o u n t y . N«iur I l i i l tn ,

Yea, I l i e i e In r ini innce In Hin t country,Mr, t\illcn Il 'fi li\. every li'eo nml everv I'ocli, nml In every h i l l nml v a l l e ynnd imiler tlio Kroninl. And I'm a f r a idI 'm )u"l em,iii:l> of a n in l ln l lo llndii i i in l uf my own under (he nt i r fncc ."

'To h n v o my life," nald Onllei i , "1i i l l . ' I ln-l|i l l i l l l l i l l l H of Ihn t renloii ani Miii-U '1'wnln noi t of country iionisreriin nml nU- n honlern and V l K l l n n t e nmil n l l l K e eonctl holil llpn nnd Hold dl lni

M n inedlum nf oxi'lnuiK". I know It'nl i l l i l l n h , hvi l I'vn never heun out there,.nl I I ' M linpl to f£c( over whn l woMrnei l nl Hcliool." ll» n n r v e v e d hln. . > i U , l i/'ii'ileit innn nrroifnilllv ; Illo

fountain, which In bis moments ofcomplacence had all the attributes ofa, eeyser for him, was suddenly afeeble'faucet, and the tidy lawn wasno more seductive than a -window-hoz.?r'^her up-to-date BchQplbopks,'' saidrillHijrd,jlauBhlng, "have a good many"changes In them. The West of theearly eighties Is all gone, the atmos-phere is all gone, the old-style minersare all gone; you used to see some pic-turesque sights even ten years ago, butnowadays you best realize how the In-dustry has changed when yon see acouple of pals bunting tor work la anauto drive up to a camp, ask for aJob, get It, park the auto, take thetools out of the delivery body on be-hind, end pitch la. And you can Im-agine, tire other changes that accom-pany-that one. Of course,, that's es-pecially typical of Arizona, xbnt we getIt In Montana, too. I'm DOC Raying thatthe color has gone oufentlrely, be-canse It hasn't, but In the old days theVfest was the West, and now It's mov-ing' EJaat as fast as it conveniently can,so' that If you want to get the pare

rlt-olt-lt-as-it-ls today, you'll haveto go down to Wall street 'That'swhere It lives."

"Mining—mining!" mused Mr. Cul-len. "Sounds adventurous Jnst to sayIt" .He gazed at the fountain.

"And no. Industry is less understood-i«veh by Intelligent men, Mr. Cullen.As a matter of fact, the public do«sn'teven understand most of-the common-est terras. The buying public doesn'teven know what U la buying. That'swhy It's so easy to sell worthlessstock.". _

"Oh, Mr. Billiard r"For Instance," he said. "I spoke of

a certain number of tons In sight, andthat's one of the very commonest ex-pressions In a fake prospectus. I sup-pose yon know you couldn't see It,don't your

"Why, no!" said Mr. Cullen, blank-ly. "Couldn't I?"

"Ton might actually see a few thou-sand dollars' worth."

"Why,", said Angela, surprlscdly. "Ithought It stuck right out on the walla 1In gobal-.. And you knocked it off witha pickax! And shoveled It up I"

"Not, exactly that," said Billiardkindly. "Sometimes you go at nn orebody" With "steam shovels, and othertimes jAw doh'-t. But whTen"you"remem-"ber that, three or four poundn of cop-ger to cyery hundred pounds, of rock.jHULn^er^inind'some'profit, it your*(IBsts Yttiji't^ excessive, you! have nemoidea or how" little you could knock <>rfa wall. No—you tear down me wnolemass. 'You go at It wholesale.". "What I meant by romance," nld

Mr. Cullen, "wasn't necessarily luck.And liosldes, this yarn you've Just toldus doesn't Illustrate what I cull abunln,-,a proposition. What I'm try-Ing to cot at Is thnt you've got an oc-eupntlmi that Isn't n rut-nnd-drled onelike tin' average. Thorn's breadth toIt—vljilon. There's drama. There'stho outdoor aide to It. There's—"

"Don't forget." Illlllnnl warned him,"that I purposely gnvo you that Illus-tration, and I think you've mlnni-d themoral. It was a biiHlneti.i proposition.My rrli-nds bought thu mlno for thovaliicii they knew were thero. They'dhave made mouoy If tliuy'd gone ahead

"Nnw You Just Wfilt • Beoonil.1'

i i iuviii .- . ini; ami llmhorliiR "ml d«ivi'lnu-IIIK t in ' "111 uliuTt "<> Hint II wnnn ' t

vill l i n l l l i irtt , not by nuy inoann. Ani lI i - l n l i n Hint lit" romnni'o anil Ihoi l rnn in nni l tho uvcttmiH'nt !• In (her o m l i l i u i i l n n of ItitBliK'ns nt-nnn withMini \vnii . loiVful ponnll i l l l ty of urrl i lont .V . H I i lon ' l |?i> 111 nt nimloin; you linnyour h.-nl (Illlgllllllll. mill «>l"<i:l I l l i i l l l tI t - i i jn ' i r i 'u t ou ynnr numiiy nmf l l 'nII ," i l i i in. . , . nf ln'tlliiK a t l i i innnml IM-Ii - i ' h l Hun k««iM III" (iiino iillvo. tloinnmoil i lon ' l nv«l> «"' I'"' I"11 •in lB i i t v tuw . ever «"' I'1" llniu"nnd.I'm n > i i M i o i i , and Hior.i l imit nmlnnml.H i n t Hi . ' Koiln Imvti llrmi tftiotl lo nio.nml pin Hid «oinowl»«r« In br twoi ' i i "

"I nii | i |»i«u Mr H>" pooplo nn Hi" Innli lo ." n i i l . l Mr. Olllloi". '« mi l l ing I"''|P"nil I.,n In Inn) nn, nnfu «r ' liu«limn»ll»p

as anything else. The trouble comesIn knowing when a mine's a mine, andwhen It's a swindle, and I guess youhave to be a metallurgical. shark to.know that anyway. Bat the way thingshave J>een going for the last year ortwo, with all this speculation in the

"metals, and all the fortunes that havebeen made, sort of set me to thinkingthat with good advice, you—"

"I beg your pardon," said Billiardquickly. "There's been mighty littlespeculation In metals, Mr. Cullen; butthere's been a tremendous amount ofspeculation in stock. The differencebetween West and East; the differ-ence between Insider and outsider;the difference between the capitalistand the gambler Is this—the East,the outsider and the gambler buystock; the West, the Insider and thecapitalist buy mines. Buy them out-right and develop them first and ex-.[plolt them afterward. If they're good,the West keeps them to Itself andpockets the profits; If they're shaky,the West sells stocks to the Bast, andgets 'its profit that way, and calmlysteps out from under. The art _amTscience of underwriting . . ." •

"Now you Just wait a second," In-terrupted Angela, who had been fidget-Ing and playing with her wrist watch."Dad—Mr. Billiard! This Is awfullyInteresting, but dinner's In just a fewminutes, anfl—" '

"Plenty of time," said Cullen, wav-ing^ hetofL "Plenty of time! Qpahead, Mr. Billiard. This !» too goodto miss. Smoke a cigarette for anappetizer?"

"Thank you." Billiard, having de-cided to take complete advantage ofthe present opportunity, marshaledsalient details as he held a match forhis host "Well, perhaps I can showyou best by an actual example. I'mout ot, the game entirely, aa I said,but I was Invited a day or two agoto join, a New York syndicate Infinancing a property I appraised my-self In 1914. If s owned at present byfour boys with a shoe-string apiece.They can't finance It themselves, sothey need help, and they've come toWall street and whispered their se-cret through a megaphone. Now sup-pose, just to make It clear all around,that you and I and Angela are to forma syndicate'to underwrite :the com-pany." He was eustalneaTiy 1he~Te-~flection that "even though he came Inthe guise, of a mountebank, there \vasnothing dishonorable about tho wareshe had brought to sell.

"Ooht" «ntd Angela, joyously,"Thanks I"

Simultaneously her father gave hera llttli, frown of affectionate remon-strance, and Hllllard /ave her a littleimillo of affectionate esteem.

'"Now, the boys who own It," saidHllllnrd, "are In such straits that wecan practically dictate our own term«.I don't mean to Imply that we'd taketoo great an advantage of thorn, butit'a n plain canq of eupply and de-mand, and we're naturally InterestedIn a bargain. Wo go over the mlnovery carefully, nnd Dud that althoughIt Inn't actually producing any copperJiiHt yet, bemuse the owncm run outof money before they, could get tlmtfnr. It him enough ore reaurvea togunnulttNi at leant ten thousand tonsn year for twenty yenrn, provided thonecoannry equipment lu bought and putInto operation. That tonnage, with tlioprice of copper wh«r« It la now—•around* thirty contB—uml lh« coot ofproduction whut It Is now, und othorfuctorH what tbuy ar» now would

' eventually innun a net profit of aboutn quarter of n million dotlurn a yrnr.Ho Unit wo huvn tbojiu prraent ownurnorgnnl7.« u corporation, capltullnod uttwo million doiliirB."

Ollllik ninokcd violently, nnd lookedpuxKtiMl.

"You'rti tfottliitf out of .my dnplh.'How do you nrrlvo ut than"

"Tlmt'n no nn to Intiiirtt Ion per routdlvl<l4'iiilB. And Illo mlno rnn pny tenpur cent, provided wo run nrrniljr® totrot tlio capital. You HIMT, Mr. Oulltin,it rnppor inln« Inn't Ilko a factory, nmlyou rnn't (llfiiro It thu 01111111 way, tin-ciiiino u factory rtlnn on Imlrrinlloly,am! If you almply roitlHi'o tho mii-4'lilni.fy whunoviir It wonrn out, (licrc'ni tol l i l i lK to pr«v«nt tho nnimi plantfrom litioplnu on nmklnic llio nnmo nortof pl'oilurt for n humlroil yoarfl. Hutovoi-y pounil of oro yon lalio out nf umlno trnvoti t hn t uim'h l*mu for thofuturo, nml nvonl iml ly your nrti'n go-Ing to bo nil umio. Anil If Ililu par-ticular mlno In tfolnic lo bo oiliiuintnilIn about f w m i l y yearn. It nlnndn toronnon Hint I t 'n bring oihntintcil at tho.rtilo of OMII Iwontl'rth, or llvo por «'«nt,n yrnr You iniint tnko (lint nlwnyaIn to ronnlilorntlon. And therefore,iwery ntorliboliler In eiitltloil to |fctlini'k nt leant flvo por eont of Innmomvy rnch year (o rover thnt lie-prooliitloil,' In ni1<1lll<in to wlmtovor booiiHllI In K"t for nrdlnnry profttn. wlitcllla another nro per font. Olhorwlpo—^

''Oh I 1 ooo I" rrled Anifeln."Tnivn ill" (^iimimmloil Hllilnrii In-

ilulKonllr."Why, If Ihn company )un| pnia flt«

lier rent I'or twenty ynui-n, nml nl UKIend of II, your oni vrna Ni l goiie, (heppople woiilil itnly lunt hnvo tfot Itiolritfoiuiy bncb, und they wouliln't liarvmini** an* r«*l ul'ofll «t alll"

•»!« HHIIart. -So thecompany must pay at least ten percent — half for bonn fide dividends andhalf for depreciation."

"Oho!1; said Cullen, opening hiseyes. "Is thnt why the big miningcompanies pay such big dividends? Ithought It was all clear profit 1"

"No. sir. ^he^lyjd^nj!l8_j)f_ji-mlrb-!~mg company tiAve to blTvery high to-be attractive at all; ^they have tomake good that depreciation. Well,we mnkt the- boys Incorporate, as I.said, for two million dollars, on whichwe can pny ten per cent. Til showyou what the setup looks like." Hewrote on the back of on old envelppe :.Capitalization $2,000,000 — 200,000shares nt $10 each.

"Now, the company (and you mustremember that so far we haven'tany official connection with It), agreesto take over the p*operty,_an<l pay thepresent owners for It with 80,000shares of stock, and It also agrees tosell to you and Angela and me theother 120,000 shares at a dollar apiece,or $120,000, of which we agree to payhalf In cash, and the balance In aboutninety days.

"Now then, we own 120,000 shoresfor which we've paid, and agreed topay $120,000. That Is, we've under-written these shares for a dollarapiece, and paid dowp half the amount.Now let's begin to look at It from thepublic's standpoint. Here's a minewith plenty of ore; and a companywith cash enough oh hand to beginproducing at a profit very soon — airthough nobody pretends that It's ac-tually producing now. It has JOO.OOOIn the bank, and another $00,000 dueIn ninety days. It can go abend and_contfact for machinery nnd workmen,and It does, and you and Angela andI are still letting the farmer ownersmanage It, but since we're In control,of the stock, we either elect ourselvesas directors, or elect other peoplewhose names carry weight with thepublic, so that we can always direct-the general policy, and see that It'scareful and conservative. From everyangle, then, financial and moral, theventure looks like a big success. Soyou and Angela and 1 go to a gooBbroker, or to a group of brokers, andmake them a proposition. We con-vince them of the value we have; welet them send their own 'engineers outto make a report, and as evidence ofgood faith, we pay all their expenses ;we let them go over our books. Every-thing's fair and square and above-board. And we agree that these bro-kers will take some of this stock offour hands to sell to the public (be-cause they've got a selling organiza-tion already established, and plenty ofcustomers who look to them for ad-vice) and It's agreed that they'll pnyus — say, four dollars a share for whatthey1 think they can sell. The. brcStersthen do some advertising, send outtheir circulars and bulletins and

-pnmph!cts-to thelr-customers.-nnd-sell-that stock to the public for anywherefrom six to eight dollars a share. ThatIB, the public Is glad enough, when theprospect's n good one, to pay seven oreight dollars (because every share's)going to be worth ten) for what coMtthe broker four dollars, and cost usone dollar — which we've already gotback from the^hrokern, and we've Btlllgot the half of those 120,000 Hhar<>H ofourn left bc.lloesl So hare'M tho Hnnlbalance Hhect!" He hastily totaledtho list, and handed It over to Oullen.

Capitalization £,000,000—200,000 shares at110. I

Block paid to Individual >ownern ........................ 80,000 shares

Block sold to syndloato for1120.000 ........ , ................ IJO.oqO .huren

Total .......................... 9X1.000 sharesOf our 120,1100 allures

We sell to brokers ........ 30,000 shares

there's a huge , profit for ..us,, isn'tthereT" •

"But suppose there's never a dlvt- \dend?" " ' ' . ' . ' • ' . x

"Don't we know there win betDidn't.-I say we control the board ofdirectors?" '•(

"But suppose yon can't find brokereto—"

*«-y-

brutheMountain Top

Hiltlard gesticulated broadly/' i"Why, as a mutter of fact "we don't

care'very much It we don't I That'sthe commoner tneth.ooV.and that's theway to get,our money back almost at 7 ionce, and then play on velvet. But ifInstead of working through brokers,we, were willing to. tie up onr capitala little longer, we'd'mnke considerablymore money In tile long run. .as youcan plainly see. We'd advance^ ourhundred and twenty thousand dollars,wait until dividends could be declared,and then get the stock listed on( the'curb and begin to .feed It out tq the 'public through a fiscal agency.; Thece'dbe twice as much' In Ifc'for us, but wewouldn't be la that perfectly delight-ful position of ownlpg a lot of valuablestock which literally hadn't cost usanything. Or, of course, we could offersome of the shares to our personalfriends at a fair price, and reimburseourselves thnt way. Knowing that It's

J By H. LQU13, RAVBOLD

*»».» .«»,»,»«,».»;., »»,i©/ 1930. by McClure Nev/spapor Syrtdlcatq

T 'tofilse Salisbury sat o little apnfrom the merry crowtl who were gath*red on the roomy veranda of thStafford cabin this flcst evening dPeggy'Stafford's house party.

She was .wondering Dust how she,sober, serious music teacher, had thigood luck to be Included'In this happyCo-lucky, carefree party, 'Of course,she had always known Peggy Stafford

.And .now Peggy had invited her tiGtcir ijouritpln cabin -for- the \yholimonth of July!

.' Louise made up her mind, to th'rovAside her habitual gravity and for th.next few weeks .Imitate the light-heartedncss of the other girls, wb.w&e never serious two minutes I;succession, bandying Jokes' about the!clothes, their allowances, their lov.affairs—often all In the same breathActing ,011 this determination, she resfind pulled .Her low chair nearer tithe group of girls.

At that Instant from somewhere 01the mountain above,-a voice resonaniae If projected through a megaphone,called down: "Hello, everybody I"' "The Turners have cornel" crle<Peggy. "They have 'the cabin above.'. Moved by a sudden Impulse, quitpossibly the result iof her recen

—thqughtsptonlse-ptckedTip-tne^mega1

phone lying on the verantla railing."Hark, I hear a voice,Way up on the mountain ton, tip-topDescending down below—descending

down below 1"fihe sang In her rich contralto voice.

The girls clapped and from nbovi«an*e nn apnlaudlng "Bravo! Bravo

. Encorel" Bntloulse blushing,- shooktier head. .She had unwittingly over-heard an aside spoken to' Peggy bytier aunt, who was acting as chaperon,*'j suppose now the Turners havi

I<««vlnc 00,000 ahareaWo «lv« lirokero * two y«ur

opUon at |d aploco on 20,000 ahurea

leaving , 7(1.01X1 nrntrngWa pay lawytra, exutirta etn. 10,01)0 aharea

I»a.Tln« HO.OOO aharea

"And Ihnt hnlnnco of tUM^H) Hharon,"he Maid, "llolonKH jo tin three. Thehrokern are making n market and CH-tahllnhlntf u prlco; aniT In order In pro-tect thoinrielven, tl\oy can't afford tol*t tho ntock Hell iiniler Iho pricethoy'ro charicInK tho puhllt1—IIOCIIIINOIf Uuiy did, th« public wouldn't hny uptlin rent of what tho hroUern have tonull, hut they'd buy U In tho opttii mar-ket. Ho tho hrokera protect Illy mar-ket, hy what'u connldered porfei'llyIc t f l l lmnlo nidnnn, nllhouxh nomo folkncall It manipulation, and thoy keep (hitprlco up by mntn Hl re l iKth u n t i l theIlrat dividend In paid, nml a f lor f l intthey don't hnve to worry, hecauno noweverybody uor.n vrhat n KOod t i l ing It In,nnd fiockn In to tnko advant«Ko of It,nnd tho ijuntatlonn Jump lip to twelveor fifteen, IQveryhody'n innile money ;tho lii-okern liavo made, t he l rn ; the piJU/llc'n maklnu thelrn, and when the priceIn rluht (he. nyndlcnlo nelln In opennmrkot thti <14),(MN^ nharen It hail l e f t ,nnd yon and AnKcila and 1 hnvo eachmatin a uunr tur of a million dollarnwithout really r laklnK n nln^lo cent Illecannn, nn 1 nnld, wo not our moneyhack rift-lit nt the hoiflnnlnK."

AnK«iln, who had followed tho Intrlcnclon of the flntup wi th the l lve l len lIntoient , turned pain; nnd Oulleu'n )nwnaKced. llllllnrd, rotnrnliiK hln fouiilain pen to hla pockot w i t h the utn iontnhnchalnnce, had no inoi'o npprehenalou left In him, for Oullon hnd nwnlIow«u1 Ihn halt whole. 4 'n l lnn, AveriiKeMnit t lml Im wnn a n~ood enoiiKhmn'nnKor of hln own n tna l ) enterpr lnn,hut woefully lunoi-aitt of the (InancUlworld at larijo <hi l len couKhod runpIniily.

"It'n n very pr«tly picture, hut nupItitnn thn market never Keen upT"

"It vrlll aa an'in na Ihore'a n d lv ldundIn night 1 ttint 'n Inevltnhle. And evenIt It •tufa peKU*11! at auvun ur

Cullen Had Swallowed the Bait Whole.

worth ten or fifteen, we wouldn't feelvery guilty about "selling It to personalacquaintances at eight or nine, wouldwe? Why not—when we know for acertainty thnt It ought to go up to fif-teen? They'd bless us for It I"

"But the tnaln point; the staggeringthing about It, Is—"

"Is that If the public sets ten'or flf--tcen-per-cent_dlvldt>nds." said Hllllard,"or buys n,t ten and sells a few dollarshigher, It thinks It's lucky; and In themeantime, tho underwriters make ariy-\thing up to a thousand per cent, nnd V.got it In n few months. And I'veknown some of these syndicates toturn over In a few days."

"Oh, I want to do It!" said Angelaecstatically. "I want to do It! Pud!f,et'n ho n nyndlcate and go out toMontana until It'H over! Come on!Let's!" Ilitllard laughed cheerfully ather.

"In this particular case." ho mild,"the syndleati''H about ha l f" formed.Nothing fluid, but it's ponding. And ItIfl good—HO good that I doubt If anylayman'could break Into It with a coldoliliiel." Again, he einiHod himself <uithe Krounil of Hilloshinn'H HIMMIHO. "Hutthnt 'n the fuiii lauiL't i tal , Mr, (Dillon—thnt'tt tiow the thing IH done, and that'll,how the public I'nrrlcH the whole bur-ilcii of lluaiiclni!;, and doenn't kno\rIt." n

l ie aNninned an at t i tude of eany un-I'lmrorn. Angola, her hrealli oomliifrrapidly, wnn rcKimlliiK him with awivHlrui 'k i-yi-H. Mr. ( i i i l len, |I|H inolitbdrawn to a perfectly ntraliiht lino, wm.Kir/.lu^ Npellhouml at the onlerly nrruynf llKuri'H on the cnvelopo.

"And lh lH~- - ln n gennlno mine?" boiiianiiKeil pri-nently.

'"In my oplnli|ii, I t 'H u very womlor-ful proH|inrl," nahl Mi l l i a rd , and lie lie-lU'ved every word of that miloinn Htato-inent.

Mr. Cull,-u fnhled the envelope, amithen nmlili ' l ily, nn I b o u K h loo.i'iiullouH'to biMrny bin prnfonnd alnorptlmi(whlrh he luul honn h e t r a y l i i K f r u n U l yTor at leant t w e n t y mlmi lcH) , lonned itImi'k to Hllllard.

"When you've Kot a n v n i l l r n l o t h a l ' l llot me In for nay, Ih l r ly renln," honald, w i th ehihornlo bnmor, "lunt panHnliliiK the Itood word, wi l l yoilY"

"I never try lo ilo hi in luenn w i t h myfi-li.ii.lM," nnld I l l l l l u i d , w i t h the mnntilelleale I"H'h of roploor.

A loiinly man lii'hls homotown.

(To inn < : < > N T l N l l u : l > . > '

"Olvo" and "Qot."The two l i t t l e woriln "|{lve" nnd

"Ki't" mini up the dln*oi-tiiK i-rorill ofenr lb uinl Iho i iml i l l lo l ln or mankind.i'hono who urn I ' I IHOI- lo hivi tuw. to en-ili 'h Iho worl i l in.,1111,1 I I I . - M I lo blehs,to help, to t i p l i r t , r onn t l tn lo UKI onn/hum. The (ither i-i-owil ni'impn ovory-Illl i i l l lot ne l f . only Un own.

wTrails of the OHiily.

The icrl/v.ly rni -e ly l i l l iornk ten, |irefor-t l i i K lo p ruwl tho rur iMln In Iho winterninnt l in , Ilo In n meat enlor, nn Wellnn bohiK fond of honoy. rootn ami OKK".wi ld n n i i n l l y l i l l l n bin own rood. Tm»1'illiM iioinu to the iiiotbei- hoar In herdon uiiionii Illo loehn. nnd "h" Is In-nant'lr ^olli-a^ooiis l|i iroretiiiM of Hivm.

.Nattily. 8ho Turned Back./<!f>me, my duties will begln'*ln cnrncat,'fiho had pnld nilHchlt ivoUHly, and POUK.Vhad niiHwerud quickly: "HiiHh, auntienobody liiiinm yet."

Next iiiiM'nliig, Jjint nn the girls woreunltdilng hrenkfi iHt, u cheerful whlnllemounded front tho veranda und a Inllllgiire loomed in the doorwny.

"Top of the morning I" nnd [.otilutthonglui to heruelf t h n t never hefcmImd uho rHiutn p<^rHolllllod t|ie . verytiplrlt of tho out-of-dooru. Tnll', min-lirowned, rndlntlng henlth ttnd optl-inltnn l]oh 'I'urner wnn rnrtalnly Hyouth to cnptlvnto nny maiden. StickyI'eKKy, "he thoimht. Money—n pl-^luant hent i ty—frlemlH galore—thlHwoixlorful mountain cnhln--nnd noHot) Turner 1 To- HOIIII) puoplu canioovorylhlnlf.

l'*'KKy wan luadlnu him In by thn' linml anil Introducing him lo tho nth-

4'i-Hf lleti.v I.niiii ' l , Kit AiiK.-ll, VlrtilnluWnleu, Mnl ly Tucker nnd l.nulno Mnl lu-Imry. An l<onlmr nhyly a<lvtinced nullnt hnnd. Hob hold It for a nucomlIn bin. "Ho Ihln In |ho ono wlmftorennded mo hint nl|<ht," he nald.

"How odd I How illil yon knowV" nliahltle of volcon cried, <mt tho verython i th l In l.onlMO'n inlnil,

lint l}ot» only nhook hln bond anilrofnnod to aunwer. "I'm horn merelynn ineHiienttoi- hoy," ho announced."IMoth'ni' iind the Kli 'l" wnnt you tovoino up thin oventn^ for n inoonllKhttlniK'o on Iho vernndn. Mo hinifl"

Thai .-vu|iln« wnn to l.iiilln.l Iho in.illwonderrnl l ime of her l i f e - a n d thninoMt mlnernhlo, I t n Woiidej Iny hiHolt « nliiKllnii her out for ilniit-e a f t e r<hi'i'o and li'-|(i!lii|] her lo nil w i t h himon fho top vernnda ulcp when (ho llttloRiome-mnite caken nnd f ru i ty punch^vero iinrved. l ln i i i lnery connlnled Intier fnncy I h n t I 'OKK.V'H oy<-n foi ioweilher repronchr i i l ly , nni l ll) lior own ro-l en l lenn |il.li;in<'lU. which condeni I ninnn who Il lr led w l l h one Klrl whenIlo wnn rmuiKod to another.

^,oli)( nhe Iny n w n k e while tho coolJllll l l l lnce/,e, Inden wl lh the f r a u m n rfiweotltenn of t l io plnen, nwept In(hroilKh the window. CaimlnK her hoieheolih,

llor I t idt wnk l l iU . thol lKht wnn opo nfdniormlnatlon to nvold hob Tnnier Intlin f l l l l l ie , I'eidlV nhould hnvo nnennno to i-etfret u lv lnu her (hl> vvondor-nil month.

Loulao, wi th a allltfleneaa of pur.

pose, carded out her plans. When Bocalled she was busy "writing letters,

Then, a few days before the break-up of the house party, Louisa Imd ai

I'aUventure which resulted #ery nnox.pectedly—to Louise. _'She ,hnd. beertrying hot to feel envious as she heart

i:the.other girls telflng their plans.TJesponfle^tly, she left the.othei

at last .and' wandered dowp an oveigrown path Into thfe" ravine which raifor miles, bisecting'. Gfeii' mountainCareless of distance s)ie .rambled onnever doubting liejr ability to retrivCher steps 'In a place where a trail wamore or less plainly evident..

Now, In jtlie mountains, when- tlie suisets, It sets: quickly—simply dropa be-hind some peak and Is-gone. Sudden-ly, to her bewilderment, Louise foumthat she was being enveloped In twlight. Hhstlly she 'turned back, amwas umnzed to find that, while appar-ently there hod been only one way |.come, several trails offered theuiBelvofor her return.

Startled and realizing thnt she wa:ofrthe verge of undergoing that dread,ful experience, being lost In the moun-tains, she sat down on a lichen covered rock to recover her thoughts.

Lost In the mountains 1 . Well,search party would find her ultimate-ly. She wished she had left word thaishe was going down Into the ravine.

Hark I What wasTnnt? Whs It thwind In the trees, or did she fnlntl;hear a voice? Trembling a little withapprehension lest she was mistakenshe made a trumpet of her hands nnccalled. Somebody answered. Againshe called—again the answer, nearer.Then followed ^the rustle of trample.Underbrush, an'd a dim form appearedoh the edge of the precipice.

[—A-moment-later-her-handB-w:ereJinprisoned In those ot Bob. "The girl:missed you and I had a hunch youwere In the ravine. I've walked mile:along the cliff calling."

Louise started to speak—choked—then' managed to get outi "Nothlniever soun.ded as good as your voice 1'

"It was 'a voice on the mountaintop' for fair," he hummed. Then: "Wemust get back and relieve the anxietyof, the others," he said. "But first,am going to take advantage of this op-

portunity when I have you to myselto say something. I love you, LouiseI love youl"» »

"Why—why—but Peggy?"' gaspedthe girl.

"Don't breathe a word," he said,'but I'm hoping Peggy will be my

'sister. She Is aa good as engaged tomy brother Tom, who Is coming upIn August."

Louise couldn't speak for sheer hap-piness.

•You remember the next words othe song you sang?" went on Bob" 'Let us all unite In love.' How soon'dear, can we unite In, marriage? Mywhole fntnlly are In love with you, a*well as I, and there Isn't a bit'of useIn wasting tho rest of the summer."

$o tenderly He looked at her thaLouise capitulated utterly. Besideswhat a'choice she had to make tfurnished city room In- August, <Bob and tho'mountains I

'I'll marry you whenever you say!"she promised. ;

GROWTH MUST BE CHECKED^ _ ,Nature's Wisdom In Limiting Repro-

duction of Any One Specks ofLiving OrgQnlarna.

If nn organism, ho It cattle, fish atinsect*, \vofo to Inarenso nt Its nor-mil rate without lilwlrnnce, It woulIn n nhort while cove* the whole nur-'nce of tho world. That form of lifewould evi-nttinlly ho the only one, andit would bo all-powerful. A sinipoclinon of nn oyrfter will produceKl.OOO.OOft offKH.i nnd may cnnlly haven grown fnn*.lly of half n million I Her-rings nnd cod, ami Indeed tmmt f)Hhmult iply very quickly. Any pair ofllHh may hnvo n family of ninny nill-lonn. When Christopher Columhin

left Amerlcn at tho clone of bin HOCind voyage bo left a few pnlrs of rat-io a( Hnn Domingo. Tho dencendnof thene on the Argentine pnnipnn. tomy nothing of other pnrtn of Amer-ica, won\ auppuHcd to number 1U,01K>,-:MH> nt tlio uml "f. Iho eighteenth ci'ii-ury t l>urlng tho mourn) plnKuo }n

Hotith Auntrul tn Homo ycnm <iuo, niirmer Vnit down 'nonin polHot-•In-lit, nnd the' next dny found '^!I,(KH>llco lylllK Hend round hln prenilnen

Hoyonty thounund \veni nlnhi In unither vvhent ynrd, nml It anon Inn-nncil to ninny mllllonn.

Victory for T«otvHpenltlnti of nnrncn, It In nurprlnln^

ow nincti n t ac l fn l nurno can nccom-llnl i w i t h Il l l lo children, when nil

' ipintly leni-udd nnrHo cnn do almonlillilli |(. Two I l l l lo .-till .lie.) they

vero very l i t t l e --wore nhout lo hnvolit 'lr teillpo|-ntU|-eD InUe i l for the llrntlino. Mother could not he with ihnmml Iho two l i t t l e I l i l i i i -n wern liewll-ereil nnil f r l t fh len^t l nnd hou-nii to

icceniu w l h l l y . Tho I I U I - H I I preHonl In.led t l i u t nho tnlio their te inpernl t l rnthe n 'Knlnr way anil they kept on.- i i in l i iK.I'lfen wnlked In a yotniK nnrMfi whnn n l l l l i r n l n l i i K , Iml w|io tmdorHtooil

-hl ldren. "Why not In l te tho tempern-nr«i miller t he i r I I I - I I I H ? " nho riald.Heo, dour, I'm K O I I I K (o «lvo ynu a I I I .

Kl in to carry under your nni l for ui l n n t e ; holh of you nro jioliiK lo h n v «

Il l l ln nun. Now you'll .ho li t t le mil-hirn."

Ilo niTcninn died out nt oncn, (liev.roudly HntifUCleil "their I l l t l e KUIIH"liter UN.In..iiniin and Ihe nurnn i('«nlr leiniiornlnro,— Hprlnufl t ld Union.

llow«ril for "H«» AT."".Innl limk nt Ihnt roonloT," innmrl i -

d (ho *1uek [ "nlnce h«'a hoKun in*ow-ho'rt hail bin utatmi plncvd on lh«

COM of tlin ham."—-iranit) and Homo,

Germans Shipping Lambs Into'Devastated France

These Germans are sending a shipment ot lambs Into tn8 devastated regions of France In accord with the termsof the peace treaty.

Seeks MissingLink in Ether

Hotyoke Prbfessor Meeting SomeSuccess in Investigation

'~~. ^fWaves;

TRYING TO BRIDGE THE GAPBunch of Waves In the Ether Is Lost

and No One Knows Whither'They Go or What

They Do.

South Hsdley,, Mass.—The scientisthas another missing link for which tosearch. This time, however,.It Is notthe biologist who seeks the link butthe physicist, A bunch of waves Inthe ether Is lost and no one knowswhither they go or what they do. Somenf their associates were long agofound, a few others were Investigatedmore recently, but others are stillmissing. Wireless waves, heat waves,light waves nnd 'the waves of theX-rays have been made clear' to us.Yet there Is an unabridged gap, a gapthat Is hearer being filled today thanIt ever hns been In the past.

Trying to Bridge tho Qap.A Mount Holyoke college professor,

Elizabeth R. Laird. Is finding somesuccess at ono end of tho gap ahd In-vestigations ~at the~6tKer~erfd "werecompleted some time ago. At the oneend ure tlio ultra violet rays undenttho other are Hntlndungsstrahlen andsoft X-rays. It Is with this latter classthnt Miss I.ulrcl hns had considerableHiiocesn.

hfl first of thft wnvos of radiationhe studied wero thono of visible

light. Tho spectrum received the at-:eittlon of tlu> physicist, who foundthnt tho Interval from the red to thoviolet WIIB, I n ' tho Inngungn of thontiyRlrs of nound, lens 'thnu nn octnvo,Iho - vlnlut ruyH having less"thnn'TwTc«tHe frequency of the rod OUCH. Nnt-urn l ly tlio question nrom) ns to oxnct-y \vhnt WIIH oulntilu tbln brief HJIIICO

of waves cnpnble of affecting the seiisoof vision.

Whore the Link I. Ml«alno.And HO outHld^ weru found Infrn-rtMl

IIVUH of beat and above thcno, lioyoiulotlutr KIII^ were fouiid Hertzian

wavcn'utjed lu wlrelesH, whllo at tliu

Held EaQ3 lor a Raise,Got Chickens Instead

A woman, living near Illo VlH-tu, Cnl.. receiifly Met u box of<*Kgn In n eorner nf her room, bit-neadi wbleh xvan a water plpokept <io:iHiautly warm by a tiro111 the eoolt rilnvo.

Hlio plaiineil to keep ,thc» effguunti l t int prl<'e would go up, tbonreap a nice profit.

liiHieiul. Nile lizard thn rlilrpluifof cbleUn, and <i|i InveHtluailoiifound i|uit -1~ of <ia UHUU l^ndhatched.

lower end of the spectrum appearedthe celebrated ultra-violet ray. Then-came the long, gapi the ' misslnj; link

and after that the JE/ntladungsstruh-len, joined to the X-fay9. Last on thescale are the gamma-rays, probably Idthe neighborhood. of tyvo flve-blllionthsof an Inch In length. -. From the wavesof wireless which are often ten mileslong to the minute waves of tfie gam-ma-ray. the visible and the Invisiblespectrum Is continuous -save for tbetwo harrowing gaps on opposite sidesof the visible section. .. Arme3 with a diffraction gratinggraduated to the ten-thousandths ofan Inch, a vacuum of high order andapparatus for the production of slowmoving electrons, tbe scientist Is onthe trail of a wave so smajl that al-most 10.000,000 of them measure butan Inch In. length. And the physicistgives promise of finding his missinglink before his brother scientist, thebiologist,

ASKS SWAMP BE PRESERVED

Government Survey In Plea for Aidfor Okefmokee Tract In South-

eastern Georgia._ _ •

. Woshlngton.-r-Preservatlon as a permanent government reservation olOkennokee swamp, which covers 700square miles In southeastern Georgia,Is recommended In a biological surveyof the department of agriculture, madipubUc^here. --- -

Commercial Interests, bent on re-~

last of tbe three great swamps on theAtlantic seaboard — will destroy Itsprimeval conditions unless .action- Istaken, the survey stated.

T^ie swamp Is said t» have no coun-terpart anywhere In the world, andstill Is In a primeval state. Among thefresh water swamps east of the Mis-sissippi It Is exceeded In size only bythe Everglades.

Plowing by Spotlight.Cincinnati. — Farmers throughout

this secjlon are working hard to overcome the handicap of a late spring andare plowing with tractors at night bythe aid of spotlights. In Kentuckycourts are being adjourned and farmers excused from jury service so thatthey can -stick clpse to farm work.

REAL CMVALRYAMONG HOBOES

Girls, In ContinentalIndultetf Except by Rich

Motorists.

TRAMP COUNTRY 18 MONTHSCo-eds Set Out to Learn of Ufa In

Open West and Find Modern SirGalahad In cKnlaht of the

Road.

Indlnnnpolls.—The modern Sir Galn-hnd stows his evening tnenl In a to-tnnto cnn HUHpeniled over n fire builtof chips from rallri.nil tlca, accordingto two girl "knights or tlio rond," whoenjoyed n yenr nnd. a hnlf of hobo lifeIn n dozen weHtern Htntes nnd"bummed" their wny acroKs thu contl-ni'iit. Tho girls who fnunil prcsent-iluy clilvulry llourlHlilng. In n box carnrn Minn llnzol (lime, of l.n Orange,'nil., nml MlHS Vlrnn Miiskliis of Or-

liiiul. Ind. llolh nre Krndnnlen of thoTrl-Sliltu CII||CKI\ nt Angolii, Ind.

Thoy net out In 1(117 lo lenrn of theIfo In Iho open Went. Ilnhou doffu<l

Ihelr cnpn and rourteHled, lonely llsh-iruien iilnced their cnhlt iH nt tho dls-

pomil or llio Klrl imlH, nnd ruggedcnwpnnchara Bhnrod Iliolr inenla on thoprnirlo,

Traated With Reaped.

Kverywliero Iho Rlrln «'er« I rentedwith tho ntniont rcnpcct. It was onlywhen the Klr ln accepted iililoinohllorldea from Hie minlernl/,eil tonr ln tH ofho Kimt that the dreanin of knightly•I l lvnl ry huriil I lko nonp hnli l i l l 'H. Thei i u r l M l H 'would lunliit on li . i l i l lng tho

volver shots, 'they never^once were In-^danger- from 'tho ^rugged—westerners

Ihey met. A few months ago, minus ev-erything but n ray of hope, they tum-bled out of a box car on n mining campside truck near Tonopnh, NoV. In thesucceeding weeks they saved their paychecks, and, with a bank account of$400' felt secure.

Then came tho Idea to walk acrosshalf tho continent to their fiomes,dressed ns men. Their experiencesw^ure vilrlcMi and thrilling. A Mexicansheep hc.rder found them exhaustedon a JiJIlHldo. ^ Ilo sbiired his meal ofibread and mutton with ..them, man-

Allhoniihlho i bncnlun ut|iort ro-

aged to get them aboard a freight trainnnd bade'thorn good-hy.

'A tramp oil Jbe trnln peeled off hiscoat for them to sit on, and tlfo threenwappod HtorlcH until tlio train pulledon to a Hiding.

lijverywhere," said Mlfls Cage, "wofnnnil tli.i ,H[)lrlt nf felloivnblp, backedup hy tile unwrit ten law of mail andwoman. Not even lu thotie old tmloon-liotelH was (hero any Improper famil-iarity. It WIIH a new life which wo dis-covered—the life of universal under-standing In tlie great outdooru."

Giant Elm, 600 YearsOld, Has Quit Leaving

Loiiflon,—ITor tl)o lij-Mt tliuv l«(imi yenm n ifliint <;ln' ti(ni)(1li\KtmtHldo lli» (Iroydin finrluhi'hni'clt, ii*'iu- Lontloii, IIIIH fnlUxlto l«nf th lH yriir, TMH olin IHfuiiiniiu IHHUHIUO uudor I InhrtiiK'li"" jmr lHh i(itiotluttti luxlhr«n held rtnminlfyfor inoru tluin

Lion a Guest in a New York Hotel

r l i iMini i i I t . /.mill. r fK ln lu rud Hi i i i i l . env«ikvv<ir l l i , Wauli.. l i rc l i iKhl « Him"un In lo n New Mik holul In a raiivan roviircit CURII, thn dlm-iivory Hin t lh«r«11,1 n lion In III" Intel i-miliHl n nen.iHlliiii. nnil the iln|ini ln iunl «f iK-al lb <>^-

-d ".Mm." an lit) la cnllud, reiniiv«id. lln lo on bla way wllh "Jllu" Ki M<iulb

f*lr«t Hundrmt Y«qr« tb« Miirduat..lili 'kniii. <>. Whim Mr». I'i'diO Mr.

n i l l e l . \\ IH> In ent'M'lllit Her 4111" lltlli-...i mtii n lKl l i ytiiu-, <>iilobnil«<l liuf

hlnb.lay, niiuiiii! Ow '-"<H) KU""|« Wl>"Mm. Wtnnl i i Ciii-li'i', ono liiiiiiln'il "'"In.'vrn yenrn, win. Mvi-o ]nnt lea mllenrriiiil tbo Mcl>aiilo| tvtmiu.

FORMER KAISER TURNS TAILOR. . . . . . . ^ \

William UnfortuiiAto to Unvii Mloao<lVocuttan, Ouya Holland

Ota pa tch.

[,«)ii<lmi Wll l lnni of I l<t!ioiii:otlrrn,fo i i inu c-ni|)'Tor of Ooniuuiy, In f r y i n ghln Inuid IIM a Irt l lor, nc<' .n«lhiK to u('tmlriil Nowrf il l t i | r t i(ch f ront AinnUir-ilrun.

I l i > In f i i t l l i i K ot i l i m l f r r i i r i - f o r nnuiyIKU^ fHiKf i w l l l i whl t ' l i lin In H ( (I"K t<*nio<'U hi ft wit I'd rnho, it nil ( t i t i i lhpiitcU<|iiot«'f t it I nu t t i i i u jM ' i ' lui <loclui'lii|[ ho IK'Vxi'itlllniC '«' Hiu )"ti."

"Ilow INIf011111111(0 U In," nnyri ( t i l i t()n|)«ir. "thnt Wll l ln ia ni lf iHrd |tln vocitIhm. A f l m nil tho l i tMortoly liolU'hlcvt-d i\n n i l fi t i i |Mu-or t »m« «'<m I I I U I K -l i i i t wlui l would 1m vo IM^DII l)lU (it^nntin it tiillot',"

Oonth Invndoi A Crap Q*m«,Ill lUli in. W, Vu. A l i r t l f ttOAtm inon

jlini("-i1 nut of u ruiroiMl nlory window\v|).'" Hi" liollro i i i l t l r . l n cnin K"'"**-John <'ol<>i imi) wan tmii ' t lct l on (hui>1<'U«»t of mi Ityu fuiu-o «lyl"tf' *iliuo»»liuituntly.

RUFF AND RUCHEAGAIN IN FAVOR

The plaited organdUb niff hns takena flrin*jr hold on fashions than onemight have expected, according to uPnris fashion correspondent. Al-though picturesque, It has a certainImpracticability not calculated to en-hance Its value with modern womanbut despite this fact It has slowlygrown In favor. It appeared first Inthe early spring as a neck finish forcapes, coats and dresses.

Now we find it In the neckwear de-partments of the shops. Sometimes itIs attached to a flat collar ending Inrevers, the ruff setting up around thehead at the back and following tho.line of the collar~dowb "to"tlie~point ofthe rever, making the frill stand awayfrom the shoulders. This Is, of course,only for those who are slender.

There are various offsprings ofthese high frills In the form of col*lurs shaped high in the back. Not allof these, however, stand away fromthe neck like the ruff. Some fit snug-ly to a depth of about thfee Inches,but flu re at the topi

As designers have been strugglingfor some months to popularize 'thehigh collar, those described Indicatethat their efforts are meeting with acertain measure of success.Silk Ruches Trim Summer Wraps.

Silk ruches ns well as those of, orfgandle are used to trim the popularsummer wrap "of silk. There arefetchlng-llttle-taffeta-capes that drapnabout the shoulders and end just be-low th^walstllne.~i*hese are toppedby puffy ruchings of tbe silk.

Then there are long satin capesfinished at the edges with wide ruoh-Ings of satin cut in scallops, whichjre bound by hand with a bias pieceit the material. Even crepe de chine

this fabric has found Its way

like npppnrnnre to th*> skirt when th*wearer, wnlkn, i i l f h o u ^ f i If la really ustraight-l ine m«d«l. Although manjStyles are seen, the bent dressmakersstill give preference to the straightline dreaa.

Jenny shows a number of simplelittle tnffeta dresses, with skirts soshort and ful l rhat she has. been.forced to add pantaloons for j>ethergarments. A tiiod(»l In black taffetaIs a one-piece dress with low waist-line, to which is set four flcuncea cuton the bias, one Joined to the other,thus slightly increasing td'e fullnessof each section. Each joining seam

"fs^plped. The~batlice.'"'whichi "wrinlklca,""around the figure In a sort of halffitted and corsetless style, has a fichoruche. ft '

Heritage From Victorian Age.For many of her taffeta dresses

Jenny favors the quaint,little bodicesof the early Victorian period. Thesnfit quite snagly at the waistline andhave drooping shoulders. She oftenmakes plaited raffs to toll over ttfeupper part of the arm.

Crisp taffetas in light checks nr«triade into youthful frocks for sum-mer wear. Much organdie Is com-bined with the taffeta, and to accen-tuate their dainty appearance old-fashioned crystal buncos are used asfastenings and trimmings. One srjclidress buttons down the entire lengtnof-the-front-wlth-shiny-glass_button3.__A narrow sash of taffeta starts at theunder arm seams and ties In a loosebow at the back. •

Basque waists and full-flouncedskirts are other features of thechecked silk, dresses. Here thebasque does not look at all extreme,but appears thoroughly In keepingwith the fabric. These frocks, too.

Olmplo foulard ault with plaited ok l i t add hip fjlrclllno Jacket. A. taffet*frock Imvlna a ahort, full oklrt compared of three flounce* cut bl;»«,ono Joined to tho other, thu» allQhtly Increasing fullne** of each sec-tion.

Into our Hiimiuiu' vvraiiu urn htuvU.Y

Tlio liillm'iH-n of t'npti It] veryten-tit In r i iMhloiiH, II IH ii | iL>ur"fit lylot < '< i i )Umt w l l h j imf lu'Ln,; l l .u-ir hutH mu-vlnji; HM rollum uml ovnt nt«'<wmi.hrro ni'o utility tyix'tt of rupn rolltirn.

n fioino I h N l M i u ' r M Ihry uro vury f u l lnd < ' i n i n i » l » ' i l uhout Iho in-cU nndltoiihln-ti, o I l M - i M urn Ilko prl tn tihuiil-

I t - r i'ik|x-ii nnd H l l l l othi ' in m»i only Inho InicU, l i i i i i ^ I n K In llio form of M•H|M'l l tui |tiinol. A Htcn l j ^Ht cout ofx-uil t{fiiy irlcolhin c;li<llr.l wllh ni iurow I f iuhn- liolt him u I l l l lo rupo

tlpluahy Pattortm and Polka Dot*.

( ' I l l -mil UIHTI lui 'Ko tiphuihy i, t i i<l w«llri t - p M i t U f i l [MiHi- r l iM lu fmi lnnt undi lnu H t u K ' l t o i i M (ho t i r t l l i t u ry [inllm dot.1 1 IKT lmui l" i>i i i< ' ' i t tnoiloln ttho M U [ » -in- i iHon nt p o l n l H tlio |iflnloi1 O^uio t ryo v « ' i I I I K I t w l lh un t -mti ioldi-ry R X\-i\\ u i i t t f l i l i iK hi louo tlui fouiidiillori

<f Mm pr l i i l , t l i i ' i fby I t l i i l l h i t t »<it llio

foul UK I hun f ' l i l n pmn-lfi d l i l i i«- i l*" u t l i ' i > t t i of iilHiiu four

*1 1 1 I 'M, in nil In K I li narro wlu.-rvIi4-v HIM ulliu-tn'i| |o llio wulrtl, hill

[)i in II UN u\\ M.V c» nitlicf HU oxlrviiiovlttlli id llio tioltooi lloiti Ihoy uto

xl. t i nil. I Ml tlin

' I ' l iftio «lvo n ruthur liulloo

Iiuvu t'lthur u rudio, or a tichu culhii .to K'V« 11 qintlnt tifffct. |k'rmu tho(tfttfrlptlou onu inlKlit I hint thoa« llfcufu»<*y voH(ui)U'M, hut they nru »«t,Tluiv nrvt <iulto Htinplo nixl churuilai;,

Rich Golora In Evonlng Dr«a«e«.HvmhiK «lr«'HH«'H nro In bountiful

nli iuloM < i f luITrlu. Th^y nro not thul>ulo plnltH, hlncfi nnd yt-llown typicalof th<f tnlTtitu irvtMiInK fntflin of puittm'urtonri, hut rN'h r*^ltt uiid ctrful

hlin'ii iirti ultiti Hf«in In ovtruliiif fniftti.Tho fut't I tint hrown foiitliuifn to)

ho oim of Iho ino-it ftiHtilotuihlo coforvtM rt'ully miri»i l l l i iK. W» inlKht hiivi;<-\IHMvhMl It In I »«' *'iillr«'ly nu|)«3rn*'<l«)*lhy Iho l l f ih t r r oolorn lu uitdMUiiiiiinrlUliiK". hut It hurt nol. Ilrtiwn lunVtlt.t ir irwii htit nnd nil nor(ti of ntru>vo uli<lrlhhunn for linlti In Ihln nhmlo nru InIl i4> very Hinnrh'rtt t-lothvct,

'Iti.-l.) In n I'tv.-ly l.rowii (nfTftAttlilp.-.l with K'>1'1 ntudo htlo ntrlUluwlrhrunt l fu l iirtt-riioon florka. Tll«nthorti nm ttrowii ItinVtu nti l t t t Ihnthnvt> nliort JurUctn nnd |) In I ted n^topilt'tl hy \\\\KV nu^tn-rt, ||i« effect\\\K n lnioMt thnt <>t u i)r%-ettt rut li«i r tof a milt.

umctly mlturv.l llnt'vrlo of whlloaii<t lU-nh cotoretl Rrori^tlo aru an tn-*tor^vitluu Initovutloti lu tlua llnu«rltK

Page 4: SOUTH - Atlantic County Library · cnco puuacd over thin section TUCH-ay night, lightning ntrlking In uovernl places, while hall and a. awocplng wind:ld muoli dumago to growing cropfl,

SOUTH JERSEY STAR, HA^jMONTpN, N. J.

THE COLD 'SORE

THE cold sore Is n small, plnhgrowth on tbe human Up which

Is more painful to a sensitive, shrink-ng nature than upsetting the consom-

me Bt n, six o'clock' dinner. It Is oneof nature's efforts to' humble pride,and Is sometimes so successful thatthe victim-will not appear at the mov-ing-picture show tor a weefc.

AH medical authorities agree thatthe cause of the'cold sore Is harder to

Many-Cities Seek Substitufor Fire Crackers and

Toy Cannon.

PAGEANT1 FEATURESIN MANY FLA

locate than the relation of the nver-" sernion to the text. Some Investi-

gators declare It Is caused by the same;erm which brings on the hot-rivetedhay fever, while others sny that It Isdue to eating the self-rising pancake.This latter theory seems to be dlsprov-.en by the fnct that thousands of peo-ple «t layer after layer of pancakesevery morning In the year without In-curring a solitary blemish, while oth-ers who -live .an abstemious life onoatmeal crackers and last night'smilk are oftentimes stricken with a•old sore which resembles a blushing

young onion.The cold sore chooses its own time

HAT shall we doFourth of July?

The continental congress,in session :n Philadelphia,passed July 2,1770, the resolu-tion presented In behalf of Vir-ginia by nichnrd Henry Leethat begins:

"Resolved, That these Unl-ted Colonies are and of rightought to be frep and Independ-ent states; that they are absolved from nil nllleglance

the British crown, and thntrnll-polltlcnl connectionbetween them and the state of Great Britain laand ought to bo totally dissolved."

This of course Is tbe rcnl Declaration of Inde-pendence, the document now Known as the Declara-tion belnR adopted two days Inter. Of the adop-tion of the Lee resolution John Adr.nm wrote tohis wife the historic letter which says, amongother things: *•

"The, second dny of July, J77C, will ho the mostremarkable epoch In the history of America. I•ni apt to believe that It will bo celebrated byrtncceeding-generations us~the- great -anniversaryfestival. It ought to be commemorated ns theday of deliverance by solemn uctH of devotion toGod Almighty. It ought to bo Holmcnlzcd withpomp and parade, with shown, KIUIIC'H, sports, bfillH,bontlrcs and Illumination from (.no end of thincontinent to tha other, from tlilu time forward forevermore."

Time hiiB proved that John Adams, though hogot his dntcH mixed, \VIIH n true prophet. Probablythe fourth of July In our dlHtlnotlvuly American<-<-lchrutl»i i . All thu civilized world celebratesNew Year'H, KaHter, Memorial tiny, TluuikHglvlnfcund CllrlHtumtj In one way or another. ^Hut Imlo-piMiilt'iico dny IH ourn aloiu\ To Jto Hilre, we havuWiiHlilnKloii 'H hlrthdny and Lincoln's birthday,whlrli are njqo ouru alaiio hut "the Fourth" In-clutli'H luo^t If not all of what they ntand for.In Hhort tlie fourth of July COIIU-H mighty nearl»el«K our nutloiiiil day when tlio Aiiiorli'un ICnKlomTiMiitiH for cverythlntt front tliiv.Muyllowt-r (o tlioArKonni'— from 1(120 (.1 Nnvoiuliitr I I , HUH.

AnnlHlIro day I Tliut Introducrn tlio pertinentpoint that another rlmiiKO fni lHt be imuli) In tin*IOIIK tivolutlon of (In1 o-U-hrnlloii of tlt« li'iiurlh ofJuly. For If Hi" Fourth of July uliindn for ono«p«iTlflr Ih l l iK thill onn npcrlllir I l l l l i K In Junt n.actly whut Itu original mini"—•Iixtcprildonco dny—•nlKiilfli*". Ami nfl*ir AnnlMU'« dny- -iiml ni l OiatIt atnndn foi—It'n qnltii i-vldi-ni linn ilui Ami'rlcnnciiKlo ii'imt l>« I n i i K h t to coo Imili-ml of ncrvamwhen It KtM'H to tht) Jotut Hull part of lln perform-niM'o.

For we hnv« m'rn our old-tlmr -two-Hum—enemy(lulillmt 'or hln llf« and for .,ur llvnn too iigulimln fo« that would lii^vo destroyed all Hint w« H)HK-Hnli-djM-nklnK pvopl^ti tn common lioltt dtiar. Andaftor n IOIIK whllo wo <TO\V<|O<| In aloiiKnlilo ourniirli-nt unruly and Kot Ininy (o liuilto up for louttlmo. NOVIT mind who ,won (ho war. \VV liimigumption oiiOUKh tfl know rxnc l ly wlul't John Hulldid for Undo Hum nnd nr« K rn(^fnl acrnrdhiKly.And ll'n qnllo Il lmly t l in l Undo Mam rnino nynrcrlloilKh to nnvliiK John HnH'ri Itfii to IVrl miiiHilhlnumorn than n Trlrndly Inlm'vnl In him. Mil noino|>nrtn of oar Fourth of .Inly cclfl irnllon w i l l hnvoto IMI tontid down from now on.

Moreover, ll'n hl|[h llmo Hint tln> AHUMIcnn p<<0|il« put thdr ik i ln i l to l l i l M K up tlui "ilny n I,.lirntn." I1'"' llm F Ill of .Inly < - « l < ' l > n n l o n i l i i l i tnow In linlwlal nnd IXMWIK-II. 'Hi,, old f,,,,|il,,n,-,|Ir4ilirlli wim (lono nivny w t l t i . Tim "Mnno li'ourth"cupplaiitrd It. Now lh« "Hiln.' U'niirlh" In In dun.K<T of WoinhiK i i n - r i - l y n holl i lny. l l o l l d n y cHi>.liratlollh. Illlo moil und i in l l onn , do not nlnnd nl l l l .And I'"' irmirlli of July In wo i l l i llio I'loiu-nt u|.trillion nud l>r»l I'lTort of tho Aui fr lrnn |iroplo.

Tim Hinl Fourth of July culolMiillon, whlfh wnn|H-I,1 In I'll'! In I M i l l i i d H i d i l n . c- i inol n.-i v.- »n „ moit

irl. It/i principal fcnluro wnn n l inn<| iwl nt which^liinny toi ialn wrn* drnii l i , <*ncli lonni hdnK fo l low-

rd hy HID iltncbnri;r of I l i r n i u i n nud cit i inon, <'or-mlilly too "w<il" nnd poK»M>ly I iol>,,«.

Tlii* pcnco <*i'n l i i i i u K n i n l c t l l i v Hit4 ronilujf of IhoMonriM* i K l i n l i i t n l i n t l o i i ni"l < - i * i v l i i n f i l i l iu lmt (Ito'Cwontln* wa« nufi ivoit i t t le In n ilciuoiialrollvv rvlo-

brntlon of Independence dny. Tbe entlinaniom ofour people for their country nnd ling cnn -usuallybe measured by the bent of the nntlonnl pxilno.A. typical celebration of tbe dny Is tbnt of 1830 InBuffalo. N. Y., which IB (Inscribed nt Rome lengthIn the Huffulo Journal. Tbnt hewHpiiper HayH:

"The return of o.ur_rwUojiu! Jubilee .WIIH cele-brated In this village with more thtm ordinaryHplendoiir and the dtiy wnn duly honoured, 'not Inthe hrene.h but the obHorvnnce.'"

The procetifllon fomutd at tbe Unglc—a famoustnvern located on Main Hlr«*«t between Court andICngle BtroetH—and coiiHlnted of veternim of theRevolution eltl'/eim niul Grangers, escorted hy thoWnHhltiKton nud Frontier guard nnd th« cadets oftho Wentern Uterary and HrlentHIc nciulemy. "thowbote enlivened by niiiHlck from the DufTnlo bnnd."

The ovation WIIH pronounced by Sheldon Smith,KHq., at tho ttnptlnt church nnd rellgloun nervlces .were conducted by Itov, Mr. Shclton of Ht. I'mi^H.From' the church thu procenHlon marched to theHuff ulo HoiiHi) )n SOIHM-U utreot and there an "ex-cellent illnnor WI»H [mi tult i'ii of." Dr. I'o well wn»landlord of tho IIOUHO ill that time, and Ihe patternrecorded an Hom»lhliiK worthy of upcclal mentionthat there were no llipiorH on (ho (able. Ibit tbegood leHHon thin Htaloinont WUH Intended lo convoyIOHCH UM moral In thu very next line of thr narra-tive: "After tho cloth wati removed wine wanHorvod with the IOI \H(H, whldi were drunk with IboulmoHt regularity." U In hardly iiocowmtry to drawon tbe Imaglnnt lnu tn nny «"xli'Ut lo picture thofinal n tn to of many In that nohlo company of KM*who drank tho-wlno "with Ibo iitmoHt regularity."lint that wnn hoToro Iho dnyw of tomuorance woel-ollt'H und adulterated llipiorH.

Tlio martduU of tho dny WIIH Colonel, tifforwardamoral, Hylvonter Mnlhcwn. n veteran of thu warof 1H12 a hero of tho Mattlo of Ohlppown.

Apart from th«b« iiroceedliitfn wan dlneourmi byllov. Mr. Iflaton of tho I'ronbyterlan church on civiland rotlftloim llborty, Tbe f o n t t v l l l o n clonod ac-cording to Unto honored cutttnm w i t h a ball In tlio4ivonlng. N<> mention It madu of any (IroworkH.

Tho c«ilohratlomi of ntw«yal mircoodlng yoarnfii'oni to have been much Ilko tliln ono, accordingto (bo .Iminml'n (linn. In IH-U), however pro-Hiimahly bocaune of tint Monlcan war ~ t h « colnbra-tlou wan I'oKitnlod by Iho .Journal i.n noloworlhy.

Tho H l i l y l l f l h roKlniont ni.nl-i I tn H i n t appoitr-nnco on ihlti occaHton, At H t^'clock In tho morninga dolachii ionl marchnl lo tlui l''lllmoro llouno andlln-d iiomo niuall nrinti tn honor of (ho vlco picnt-d^iil . Tin- lino of iniirch Includod Itovoli i l lonarytioldlovn. Think bow old I hoy muni have boont iUly ol t i l i t yourn af tor tlio Hiirromltir of Y o r k ( i > \ v i iand n o v t - i i l y two yo t i in n f t o r , ( h o h a t l l o of I .OK! UKIon I Tlmi-o worn alno Holdlmrn "f (ho War of \Hl'£In (bo lino, olllcrin nud nnldlorn of (bo army and of(ho Mux l r i i n war, Tlio Frloi idly Holin of M l . I'mrlt-li, tho Honit of IDrlii and IIio ( lornian YOUHKMon'n i tnr tor la l lon a nui'ti tdttn Ibal l l io r l ly wanln 'Hlnnlng to laki' on coniiio|Htll(ait form woro in(bo l ino of ma i i ' h . Tbn o \ « - i f b i o n vvuro hold at.lohurMii.'ri park, tho oialor of llio day l)oln« II. K.H m l l h Vlco pK'it ldoill C ' l l l i no io itllomlod t l io ,-i«*iTlrtow niul wan l u n l l l y clioornl.

Tho t fonn of 'I 'oaini'iancn bad f b a i K < f <> r (hocolohi i i t lon In IMUO, wl i l rh wan bold "al Iho urovoni'iir Ibo \voi liliotmo," Joint M. <J(iii|(h. (ho lca.(llnu"top "rain'o" n]ii'alirr of Ibo day, wan ornlor,

V\ Iho brraUli iK out "f (ho Civil war riufTalobitrko loonfi on l td ctilubiallon of IttOl. Tho puriido

wns the "most inspiring In the history of the city"nnd occupied 5K minutes In paHHlng. Even morepretentious wns tho celebration following the Hiir-rcndor of General Leo. After IflOfl Iluffnlo's ccle-

.. bratlon. of tho. Fourth, ot July WUH.rather-humdrumnnd marked liy no special fftitureH—Just ai Ininont other American cities.

Hy 1010 the "powder dlscnNo" iind como to It**cllfciux and those bent on reforming the otnu>rv-nnce of the diiv culled It the "nntlonnl niilmince."Moreover,, the nnilon ,wa<t ullve1' to the tnwndou*

'IOMH of life, 'ruhlea prepared by U"* Jonrnnl oftlio American Medical Asaoclntlon. Hhowcd that thenumber of Hi,' killed und Injured in tho celchru-tion of lIHdl \virn 5.807: for the noven yenr* pru-ccdliiK 11)10 l l i r total wnn IM.ttoa.

PcrhnpH (lie lU'ut notable "tmfu nnil tmno" cule-'hratlon WIIH thiit tn Springfield. MIIHH., In UHH).However, In Hill) most of Ibv largo cit leH of thecountry preHvntcd an entirely new Ulnd of celetrn-lion, tbn IniHlH holng the purndo nnd pitKcnnt Flru-crnckcrH went tnhoo; tho dlsplny« of llroworkawere municipal affairs. •

"I miiHI cnnfcnH that 1 alwnyn Il l ie tn ImiK ontho Fourth of July," wrote Chauncey M. Depew,n Bowl ninny years ngo. "It l» the grentent dayIn thu American calendar. Nay, more, It givenlinrfiniKi to tin- wh6te 4ft that encircled thin globe.lOvdry innn, woman, or child who hrcnthott It, nomntlor whern ho or oho In. feiil» lln> boiler for It.Thoro In not a llbornl fl«ntlmiml wheru dvll lKnilonIn known lluii la not quickened on Ihe Firjrth ofJuly. II mulicx Ilio hut of the pennnnl. mid IIonlern Into llm tent of tho conncrlpt. The on*nnyu: Thero In for 'mo und for my children Mnnr-Ihl l iK hiil l i ir than Illto hilt.' The other »nl»:•Why nhoiild 1 flglit to uphold throneH nud cutIho liiroat of my brother to initlnlnln ciimr «udprlvllcK«7' Tlio Fourth of July l l f ln llm Ihoughl.Ill" imoli'nllonn, tho prayorn of Ihe people of nilcoiintrlun to lll«li*r pinned of l lv lnK. (I ,Inking nnddying. Why II l» a iiiUvornlly, n coileKe, n hlK>>n<-hool, n coiiunon nchool. It I" » liberal «ducnlion In pnlrlnilnni mi<1 monhood."

'I'bnl'n Hie way a good lilnny good Annjrlcnimfeel about l l i « i Fourth, of July «>vcn 10 ibln ilny,oven If (here nro lho»e Who hold Illnl iiolno la vul-gar, nnd "hniK I" our nnllonnl vlc«.'» Homo of u«hnve nil hleil wny down deep Hint Ilui Auntrlcnilwho wi l l not hrnB on thn Fourth of Ju ly In hardlyworthy of bin l i lrthrlKht.

HIIII, It In a oiilf-tivldnnt fnct that Ihe old H'ourlhof Ju ly In K i, li«v«r to conio hncU. Of coiireewo miiMl deep Mm day ami colobrnln II. It hi tool i n p o i l n n l a (jjy la 1)0 nlhjh'od. II mum lia coin-bulled r l K l i l .

Hut I,'I noliody malt" the. inlnlnbii of Irylllu lorellno n i l l l i . i Unlit out of II. Our mieenloln linndeddown lo mi freedom ""d llm lovo of frendoin nudnnd t h i l l n l l l l moro priH-loun IhlnU -Ihn rnndhioiialo Unlit for freedom. And Ihnt'n Hot lo allcU outof nny in i ip in o|mervnnc« of Ibu V'onil l i of JulyIn Dm Uni ted Hlntco of Amorlcn.

Rann-dom ReelsBy HOWARD L. RANN

Authorities agree that the eauu ofthe cold sore Is harder to locate thanthe relation of the average termonto the text °

Might's Dreams—What They Mean

QUARRELING.

DOGTQR COUIAT enys "Everybodydreams and ridiculous It may up-

Dear." But with regard to tliaprophetic quatlty~of <lijeam8" he; eays;"From a strictly ncientl.no, Ht a IK] pointfiucli an Interpretation would be veryfiupcrlh'Irtt tn that It did not take Intofull cognizance nil tbe complex factsvhlcb may produce n dream." For In-stniu'e it nuiat, be proved wbnt theevent "foretold" In the future neveri'XlMed IIH n wlah In either the cou-idoiiH or uucomu'louH tluui^ht of theilreamer. In my experlenn* I have yettolled" to 'f l i i t l biie'KejHilnely"propheticilream.

Yet all tbe H c t e n t l H t H agree thnt tbestudy of dr^niun fn>in a Helen title^(midpoint U •Mil In UH Infancy nndout1 HdentlHt goi'H HO fur IIH to HUK-Kent t h a t nn our waklnp: thougtitH fre-quently contain the yerms of our fu-ll re actloiiH HO our dream thought*nay have In ihcin similar gernm

I>r. ChnvlerJ Mackny, In hln well-known book, "Bxtrnonllnary I>elu-fdonn," Hcoffn at *be 'wllef In thoprophetic q u n t l l y of dreiuiiH but re-

i n r k H ; "U ban nutiMlHtcd (hrf tnub alltbe <' | IUIIK<'N Ihitt nonnal or pbynlcal

cvolutloi iH have operated In th« worldnd tho rocord of t\w tboiiHiind yeaiM,-III-M (.-HlliiKniy to llm unlvernnl dlf-

fu«lou of the belief,"Tbe nclvntliUn would explain •*>

dream of quarrellnK with a frlt-nd anbe nprlnKliiK l" llftl of f1(linr dorumni

Idea reffardlnK Inat frU-nd InrklnK "'tho nubconnclouHiiedn. (Jlven the wbolo

for budding. It IB very; particular toput In nn appearance the day beforesome voluptuous^ social event, andwhen worn wflh; a decollete gown andpliik carnations makes n captivatingcolor scheme. Every once in a whilewe'read In the newspapers of'some1

high society wedding having to be post-poned on account of the groom's ab-sence, but In nearly all of these casesIt will be found that the bride-electhas come down- with a luminous coldKore which cannot be hidden behind atulle yelle_wlth__any degreei._of_juc-cess. It requires great fortitude endwill power for an enraptured groomto stand up at the altar and run hisneck through the yoke, under such cir-cumstances, but It has been done.

-There Is no known cure for the coldRore except patience and hope. Somevictims carry a camphor-/bottle .andapply the contents In a stealthy man-ner, while others go forth defiantly'Into the world wearing a quarter sec-tion of black \jourt-plaster. When acold soj*e settlfijk^n the upper lip ofman he can always circumvent It bygrowing a thick; branching mustache,but woman Is denied- this precious prlv^liege and Is obliged to suffer In si-lence. "

The' cold sore Is probably given sothat we will not become too proud ofour looks. The man* who can showpride with a bulbous cold.sore on Hislower-llp-has-reached-the-polnt-w^ere-ciny further Inflation would result Ina blow-out.

fCopyrlghM

W HAT yon ore and what yon hav«yon owe largely to the blood-

sweating efforts of' Pioneers. Everynotable name in History, since Timestarted, represents Pioneering of somesort. Not all were Finishers, but allwere Starters.' If you wont to be aPioneer— . . I

Start Something.

Watt was a Pioneer In revealing thopowers of Steam. He got his firstIdeas from his Mother's stove kettle ISir Isaac Newton evolvedjhe Idea ofGravitation from throwing an AppleInto the air. Today he Is recogalretlas one of the world's greatest Pioneersin the field of Science. Thus It has al-ways been. By Thinking, even XOOmayp-

Start Something.'Woolworth, the Pioneer In Five anil

Ten cent stores, received his Idea froma conversation In a small New Yorkcountry store where'he was at the timea Clerk. The Idea was free to every-one—but Woolworth had the Nerveand Initiative to—

Start Something.

Remember this: If an Idea comesto you that you consider valuable andyou don't \rork it out, some one some-where at some, time la almost sure todo so—and receive the Glory for ittSo! day by day, keep the PioneeringinstlnctTtHveafraid to—-

Start Something.

SCHOOL DAYS

dream Frend would, douhtleHo, nee Ittinged with iieuroHlu.

^Vhat nay the nnyHtlc»? They anythnt to drtMim of <juftrr«hng with yoursweetheart nienim thnt you are B«lntfto love eiu'h other better than ever*.'t\> quiirrel with a,friend means thatyour friendship IH rtecure • ftml thatyou will Hbortly enjoy yourself In hiecompany, though Home of the myatlcuare unkind enough to aild that It A)HOmeiuiH loin of money. If you quarrelwith n 'nlrniiKer It IB nn omen thatyou will HOOII make th«i 'iic<iuntiitanceof nn undrHlrnhle pi*rNon, Any drrainof qunrrelniff nlKnlllen the reconcilia-tion of entrniiKCiuentH un<l conHtanc>Ih frlrndnhlp. Ho i)nnrr.-| all you wantto In dreumland and keep ,thi) peacoIn tbe wnkli iK world. ,

MOTHER'S COOKBOOK

t,

ICm«rt.l<1 «ur(h «i|i1 *»uro <tkr,Ittmy !>•• ari<1 ilrnnon fly,MotMt l l i iHn olnnln« l i t "'« «'•"•.'

Fruit C*k« O«iK«»l in Fir*!*** Coohor.Uno any pi«<ferioil fruit cnUn ; [ilac.i

n round pan" '"" "n« tbo ulinllow co<ili-ir kol l l« f . Hake for I wo btMirn b«-wfon (wo noapMono radlatorn, bcaled

JO mhlntiin over.. an ordinary Kntt llamo.>pon (bo rooluT Ibo tlint in mlniilon tollow (bo l lrxl bi'iil and ntiMuit lo -4'ntatio. l(>nili cake lluirt halml bun HOIIIObl i i f t o.' Iho old brl«*k oven (lav or,riltti method t'Uit bo nnrd for woddlnn.•alien or for nl iy «loui(h n iUtmo whichoiiuhrn lonK »l«'w cooUhiK.

A rbanft" f"r H'o ah-iTy i ihoi tcaUo w i l l

fo l lowing ;

yt i('">d n|rnwfound l i t l l io

ttlrawhorry OuinpllnO,Till ono pint nf (lour Into » bowl ;

ul'l ui K ha l f a nmrtponuful of "allind tt i cunpoDi i fu l of haklnK ttowdt'i ;l ib l i t . ' n r , - f u l l y M (hh lon iMionfa l of hnlnr nod adil nulllcloii^ milk lo molnlon.tn i ' i i i l H u l i l l v , and roll out Inlo n

HKft about a nUlornth of an Inch In|t|lc'ui('f<rv <:ut with n lhi-|(o round cutfjr, out thitto Inrgo hnrliin l«» ih« cvn

{

tor of 4-a«'b round ; fold over the doiiKh.rolling It carefully no I bat tho oponlnuIn cloned, Hlnnd In a uronaoil hnklnffpan, brunh Iho lop with milk and hnltaIn a ipilek ovi^n for in ^nliiuU-M. Horvnw i t h ttti'nwhorry bt i l ler , mnd« hy hrnt-ti)|{ to a cr«iatu two tnbloHpoonftiln of(Hi t l er and uddbt|{ ono cupful of pow-tlorod miKnr Kradually. Add ono miifibril borry, IM-UI w » - l l ; adil lumihor unl l lfour ttood nl/rd iM-rrUm aio n<ld<tl.l>lnh anil (ilffh<l anb'n 10 haribui.

IARY

of*pcoa'I-raiaeQO-DOWN-MY

k YOUNG -FRIENDS'THROAT3!

lB<Pf(J>Mi*<u>

Jusft FolksBy EDGAR A. GUEST

SINCE JE6QIE DIED.

W« underntnna a lot of thin if a "w*liever did bffoiv,

And It nramn that to <>arh other Mnand I arc meaning more.

I don't kno^w bow -to nay It, hut nlncol i tt le JeaHln died

Wii have Ivarned that to 4m happy woinufit travel nldu hy hide.

You cnn itliarv your Joyn and pleas*lime, hut ymi n«v«'r coiuu toUlK.W '

.hint the real depth of loving ti l l you'vegot a common woe. '

Wu'ro pant <h« hurt of fretting—wocan talk about It now, N

Rita allpnVtd nwuy nn Ktittly and thofever Uft her brow y

Ho ooftly that wo didn't know wo louther, hut Inntciul

Wo thonKht nor only nlt-opin^ nn wowatched ix-nldo her bed.

Then tbe doctor, I r«nnentbor, ralainlbin hfnd, nn If lo nay

What hln oyOn bnd told nlr^mly, nn<1Ma fainted dead awn,y,

Up lo (lion 1 Ihouuht tlmt monoy wnaIbo Ibliitf I otiKbt lo K<jt

And 1 fhi.rl«'d, onc« 1 haO^ U, 1 nliouldn«w<^r have n fret.

Init 1 naw that 1 bad wnflto<1 pnM'hmcibourn In flookliiH wealth,

I bnd* "hmdu a tidy fortune, but 1couldn't buy her henllh.

And 1 itaw ibln truth much rloart-rI ban I'd over noon l iofnro;

Thai Ihn rich man ami (bo poor iaanbavo (o lot iloath thiounh (bodooi.

W«'ro not half no kvon for motioy anOMO l lmo wo uiHiil, |4i bo

I am l l i l u k l i i K moro of mollier mi,]nlio'ft ( b l n l t t i i K moro of mo, .

[NoW W4i npond nhHo (11110 to|(ir|hor,and I know wo'ni nioitnliiK morn

To vn< h olbitr on llftt'n Jounioy, Ibiinwo'vo ovi'r moan! hofuro,

It wj\n hanl lo untb'rnland I I I Ob,Ibo dreary nl|(htn wo'vo i*rUM| |

Unl wo'vo found UH> dcplh of loving.nlnr<i tho day tbnt .lonnlo dluil.

((.'uiivrUiii, by ii:4i«*r A. UU*NIj

Page 5: SOUTH - Atlantic County Library · cnco puuacd over thin section TUCH-ay night, lightning ntrlking In uovernl places, while hall and a. awocplng wind:ld muoli dumago to growing cropfl,

SOUTH JERSEY STAR, HAMMONTON, N. J.

Common Language a Bond and BarrierBetween-British^nd-iArrnericans;

By SIR AUCKLAND GEDDES, British Ambassador to V. 3. A.

The ctiri- for Biich ills as exist is, I am sure, frank-ly to recognize that the common language is at oncen bond and a barrier betwean the English and Ameri-can peoples, and to work to strengthen its bindingpower and weaken its separating influence. It can bedone, but it is not the work of a day or a year.

The Englishman who saw his best girl off withan American soldier or sailor is going to continue bray-

Hng^that hoTJislikes Americans, which is not what hareally mehns at all. What he really means is : "I dis-like seeing my girl take any notice of another male.':

One result of the war has been to multiply the possibilities of such in-dividual misunderstandings.

What we all want more consciously to realize is that nations can notbe judged by a few chance specimens of their citizens.

They must bo judged By the expression of their collective will, mademanifest in hours of crisis. Judge Britain by her action as a nation duringthe war, during, if you will, one month' of the war — April, 1918 — and Ithink no Briton or friend of Britain need be ashamed of his citizenship orhis friendship.

Judge America by her action when she came into the war, her whole-hearted and instantaneous adoption of .compulsory military service and,oven more striking, the voluntary rationing of ths use of food and fuelin millions of households, and I think no American or friend, of Americaneed be other than proud of his citizenship or his friendship.

' These are the great signs ;of the pure gold of unselfish idealism in

have passed away, long after the false generalizations have been exposedand their falseness recognized, the ultimate essential verity, the capacityto forget eelf in the service of a common ideal, will bind our nations ina yoke of service to mankind.

Mississippi Valley Tired of Being Back Yardof Atlantic Coast.

By A. C. CARPENTER, New Orleans Chamber of .Comrnerce

The Mississippi valley embraces'forty-one p?r cent of the urea, morethan fifty per cent of the population, and more than seventy per cent ofthe raw material produced in the United States. The bu lk of the na-tional resources of soil, of mines, of forests and waterways lies within itsboundaries.

During the past half century the valley has in fact functioned verylargely as a back yard to the Atlantic seaboard. The, cause underlyingthis condition was the ability of the At lan t ic seaboard through thu cast andwest railroads to control the transportation of the valley and by, a systemof rate relationship, differentials, and tariffs so to shape the movement ofvalley commercx'_HLtcUd«yck>p the Atlantic ncuboard financially, commor-cially nnd industrially,'

The time and tlio opportunity to break up this transportation controland to give the vallcyi.ftccciw, hy low resistance channels north and southto its natural*l>orts on ,tlii' gulf have come..

The Mississippi Valley association has been organized as a strong andpractical medium through which the people of the vnl luy can make commoncause iu all matters affecting the broad, general interest", of the regionlying huLweeii thteaatjuud .west.mountain ranges, Canada.and thu gulf.

Divorces Wljich Can Be1 Stopped Only byMade Unprofitable.

By (ilOOlifOK ALLAN SMITH, Ilcnvcr Attorney

Tlii'rr is hccil of legislative reforms for ( l i t - purpose of making it, veryhard for Mrltlsh, slianiol.rpH couples to olilniu Icgtil separation. I Inuall Vof this type involve t'hnniile unprofitable.

Children are notther pcnmmle lo a sett lement out. of court or pro-lie domestic nest with the reokli'ss and ubainliiiiedto these childless nmrniii.;r:i indulge, whenever Ilicrc1

event of divorce theyvent tlui befouling oflirmiMu |n which purlicsin enough money in si

Idlest! eoiiplcn. They can only be stopped by beingi

'lily a si rung influence agiiinst, divorce, bul, in (lie

[hi. lo make I he alimony ipii'ntion a rent liglil

It ini",lit h<> worth, tho while of our spiritual leaders lo look into thomatter of |M't'nciil,iii({ to tho routing le^iHlal.uro an -miimnlim'iil to ourdivorce, IIIWH thnt. woul^; in nuui of illvorrn Hiiltii hclwccn rhlldtnnn coupler,oilhor deny alimony entirely or limit, it. to uurh an amount mi would c.nahh'tho j inrty to live, not, ac<|ordin^ fo tho weal th of tho other party, hut. txrnnl-injj to tlio roiuiiion and avora^o ittantlard of tho community an a whole.

i

"Don't Shun ttho Door on the Koporlor, TalkLo lliijl; I l e ' t tu Ke^alar (Juy."

Hy MERKOW C U I I M . Chli-niro Tri l l ium

Don't, nlum tlio dour on Iho in|Mirlrr (aKvory c i ty mlllor, t

pap. n wanln lolit) iVunlri only Turin. Mi

tlnvolcd Ilio niimo

to think l\viro MM ftml it

cry mana^m/i; editor, rvory jmMinlim1 of a mnvo-trnlli. lln wanlii liolli HU|I<M of (ivory t i tory and

ny a i I I I I M lirmi urnl , out of t l u i local roomi tio wrolo i\ t l t l l i t morn lhait I HI know lo In' truo.din HID nil uvular turn If |li» uvonigo n>|><u'tm*o n IniMiiK'iiit that, ho puln Into /(nlliiiff mill writ ingo woiiltliy moil In i'liiru^o. A K<HM! io|Hiilor Iiitn

tho JMTMOII ho in inlorvlmvhiK ; ho IIIIM lo Knowenough aliout iliploiniiryt and IncL to unit lending <|wrili<>iin ; ho han to borontirloiin of (ivory nit nation Hint inl^M ailno; ho luut to mithmiUml a Irillolioforo any on" olrw Juitt "\vlint, '* (Ml nation ninaim. '"

Don't hn afraid of him whmi tin Jim in hiti linger on your door holl iui<lrln^rt It for an honj, Mn IH a ffmiMnnwi h<< luioun mid nppir.'lnlrn llfttlio wiH IH) fair and ni|muu ho in human nnd 1m In how-tit. Tulk to hintJlti'ti n H'Htiliii K"y-

WOULD SAVE HISTORIC HOME OF MARK TWAIN

HlNliirii lining i-f Mark Twain nt Uurtford, Conn., one of the oldest residence In Ne\y lOn^lund. to suve whiche ni>[tuii.\vlde tnnvonieiit hn<< het*n started. Interesting such bodies as the Chicago Art Institute nnd ninny othwsAiiiiniincenient cif thv deHtructlon of the hulldlne. In which was written "Inn'oreiitR Ahrond" nnd other stories, hnaresulted in offers of flnnnplnl nld from all over the country, the Hartford Art society nnnounccs. hnt It Is snld thnthe present oiriiprx. who honizht the property for $5.r>.(Xio 0 few months aco. are deinnndlni: KUXI.IMK) for It. Tlieptale purlt roniinlsulon hns heen asked to, condemn the property for o state park *o ovoid paying this price.

Science Paves

of CriminalitySpecialist Declares That Most

Criminals Are Not Respon-sible, for Acts.

KEED MEDICAL TREATMENTConnection la Found Between Mental

irreflul.ariiies and Blood 'Disturb*

ar^es—Rapid Strides In Studyof Mental Deficiency.

Xevv York.—Tho elimination of 00per eer)( nf the criminality In the Hul-led States hy proper medical attentiontftvon to {-liMdreii IH Ilio prediction ofI>r. Max G. Sohlapp of thl* city, an ex-pert and specialist in meirtnl deficiencycases nnd irofe.ssor of nenropathologyat the I'osMlradunte hospital.

In an article pahll.Mhcd In the cur-rent Issiie-of tlio Medical Uocord Poc-

that In most oases nf crime the personInvolved IN not'rcM]ioiiMll>lc for his nctn,and moreover abhors the liolntf of thovery thlntrn that have eiinsed" him to henent to Hie state Institutions of pu i-iMliinent nnd reform.

Hrtctly, Doctor Sclilnpp declares,there hiiH heen discovered a direct con-nection .between inentul Irn-puln-ftlesnnd _p liy si en I dlstiirhimcOM o:iiiNo_d__by_chemical linptirlt Ion In Hie blood,nml If also bus been found thai theseCIINCM respond to eon nter-M I initiationsthe principles of which nre In certainchemicals and the ex t rac ts of nnhnal

"New rests arc helnc tried om con-Htantly," he told n reporter I'rom (lieNow York Tribune, "but It (s neces-miry to ciuiiliici exlniustlve researchhe Tore end) defec t ive nnd crlmlnnltype can 1(0 IdcnMllcd nnd iho correcttrenttneiit established."

clety can with iiMmmiiK'o a t t a c k In aImmune nnd rniiimini Heiifie uuiMllvr theKroaleMt nf KM problciilH criminology."

It li V» the end thht hoHpltaln maybe HiihMttintod for prlnoii* nnd t reat -aieat for puiilMhaicnl lo I he en Hen ofthem- u n fort mint ON who nre not reHpoiiMlble for liielr nd" mid who runnot help ihoiMNolveH Ihnt lhln work linnbeen rondiM'tod Tor 1 he hl"l el»;hl yean*

hy lliiolor Hohlapp.la hln niMlcle I'-M'ior Meldnpp NII.YH.

In purl ;"Wo Nilll ludjto crlinlnitlH nnd delin-

Ownci'Must Pnv $1.600 Now

l.oi AiilU'ler. Ill ndillllon lo nlinlimionl of $in<ll) nKi'ltiMl himIIM the ri'i-nit of III.' pet chluinniirc... nllnclilln; mill luliirlliitMlllou l.lndlev n child. K. U'Known. MI of I'n". i.l. -nil iini-l pnyft lK) for InlflliK a frlvoloiiii up-pnil iinnlil"! I he hidiiini'iil Ihcnlnte dlnlrlcl cinirl of nppvnlnileclded.

Tll« court riiiinil Ihnl Hiechlliilmnr.ee wnn "iioicllifcnllvl.erinlttcd (o he nl Ini'Ke" nud(lull M t'litcred (hi1 hny'n I. ninenil. I threw him llhoill. r.(.velelyIn (ill Inn liliu licfoi" II ...... Id helenlllllncd.

quents hy their acts alone nnj to nlarpe extent dispose of them legallyon this bnsts. The scnernl public, andeven the courts, believe thnt n personof normal Intellect cnn control-his ac-tions, and consequently that the ac-tions of nny person of normnl Intellectare premediThted. or nt least controlledcompletely hy the intellectual mentnlmakeup, and thnt therefore the personla responsible;

No Question af Altruism."Tn the llpht of well estnhllfhed

facts, known to psychiatrists for thelast half century, thin method of plac-ing responsibility fnp criminal actL Isbasically .erroneous nnd should he re-vised. We must learn to comprehendtnnny nbimrmal clasps hitherto unroe-

-oirnlzod hy society an minject* forstudy, control or nld.

"There Is no question of altruism In-vol vert; n proper uiulers t n nd Inpr fl ndattitude towardWicn** people who htive.no Innate power of tid.liismiont to theirpnylrpnmenL>yJJLmnKe^eyoryhome_ftn(lfamily more nearly safe.

"Too nre acquainted—perhaps toowell—with the hoy who, surroundedhy an affectionate family in n home ofease, runs nwny repeatedly, iinderpoesunnecessary Imrdshlpn, nnd whenbrought bach cn'u never ^Ive nriy ex-planation for his. acts except that he'Just wanted to COT away.'

Juvenile Delinquency.~"Yoif doubtless HJNO hnve come Intocontnct with those other well knowntypes of .Juvenile delinquency childrenwho Me and prnctlee pet ty thieveryfrom their earliest year*, tnier forge-checks nnd generally Involve I heir fam-ilies In NorlouH Hlluntlons :in<1 In whosi>Kcnca logical history there h no dis-cernible trnee ol' family propensity forslmllnr nclloas.

"In niiollier chiNS are the Itionsnndsof trumps, possessing xvlnit H ciiinriion-ly c-iiI led nn n version to uorl;, whoform nn almost nllen Mt r t i t n t n 'if soci-ety, useless to lhemnelv<'H, nnd llnblenl nny (line to become n iiicmnv (o (hecomtmmltloN throutrU which lln'y puss.

"Sill] another class IH composed ofI hone u u fort linn I e tiei'Moii>< \\l io he-caiise of nhnormal emotlniuil trendsor phobias nre forced to commit iii'tnover ivhb'h (hey have no intellectualcontrol.

How Elrnln lo noQulatnd."The firm tiling to he iimli'i'iitond

n bout these people |« |||(. inci thn I\\n" palholoKlcnl crlniliuil or ineiita! de-fective |H unable to mlJuMr liliawejrnoniinlly to hltt envlnuuneiil Tor (hevery Important reason tlail tliu amll-valliiK ncltvl i tcH of hln hraln "r.> rterl-niiHly dlMlurhed.

"To |uid4<rr4|nnd Mich dlnlm'bioH'eit hIH Mi MI iMM-vMrMiry to kntiw ili'U lb<*DiollCallnK act lv l t leM of til.- bniln n ixI'efMlhlli'd entirely |»y two tin' deli I

prnccriHcH Iho Intellectual mnl (heeinotlonnl, or alTectlve m-(h Ml"'- ' , 1CIhcMe (wo proeeHNen are \vell biilnii' «'"l,lhi/ni<i||vnlliiK center will h<> '-l inioial<-o] In mich a way nn to mult*' 'h ' I"<M.i*)dl1iil a.IJtmt hhtirteir nor Hy lo(n \i1ti envlrtMHiient, Mlioulil 'III1' bnl

'o helween (he Intellect mil mid theeniollonal proeehhefi he Herlnu^l v ilhiturbed. tiowov«-r (hen U will be iiopunnlhl.' for the Individual to a'lhi-<f bbonetr noniinlly and hn will pri pel ruleaetri whb'h often uio llle,:nl nail alvt\yn abiHjriTinl.

Mind a Duality"The niliiil In IImn u illinlllv nnd aol

a unity, and || aumt ho niiih'i'>hm<1 n'«nuch If \ve nrn to Kuln n lnim\ lcili;e

lln conlonth which will I I lo ncorrect dlaftnonlrt of the rmitinhnin '"«'npoiinlltle for I he nuiln,||uM nt "T Inllvldiinln lo i heir nui'romidlm;".-N

"Until tox tar t mid (lie -•! I nil}' InHHI blond act ru-lr.'lively upon tlie^lnrl• »ii^ eeiilern of tile net'/nil" ylvith'OiI'lllM-r for eiinnpb', m-le^lVel v In

x the lilfcheMi r.'nini- of ccrebinlino. inMm; i lie Ihrenhold I" "in'li Mlulut that Incoming linpulne" ''unit" nneaelloii, I linn productn/< tmconne > un

ness; hut at the snme time :t does notequally affect the aerve cells 5f—tfnrresplratory and circulatory centersthus permlttlnK those centers to re-sponil to Uicomlng-;inpulseB-ond-allow~ing the person to live.

Blood Disturbance a Factor."So we see that a chemical disturb-

ance In the blood mny nffect the funttonal activity of one op more centersof the hrnln. mnlclnp them either nweunstnhle. or stable. This hrlnps us toconsideration of the effect of snchdisturbances upon our nctions.

"Perceptions nnd conceptions, fornvert In the Intellectual side .of the brainsend Impulses tn t(ie emotional side.If these Impulses puss the thresholdof functional activity In the emorlonnlcenters, wnve of feellns, or emotion,results. If, thmuch n chcmlrnl dlstiirhnnre of the blond, the threshold offunctionnr act iv i ty of the cell groupsof the/ emotional roiiters bus boer.lectlvely lowered, the wave of-feolhiKmny he so strong as. to* wipe out «tlrely all restrnlnhiK fntluoncoM coinlfrom the Intellectual side of tine hraln.nnd nialvc the e.inntlnnnl the motivat-ing Impulse In the person's mentalmake-up.

"In persons of normnl einotlonnlmnke-np unrensonnhle rerictlons mnyhe prevented thromih Inhibitions com-

froin the Infellectunl side of theuriiin,. Tn pctHona of unHtahln t emo-tional .make-up. Intellectual Inhibitionsmay he felt, but If the wave of feelingIs strong enough (be por.son may noloven he conscious of the Inhibition.The wave of feeling simply wipes outthe mental attributes of Judgment, ofright, and of thought of consequencesand. precipitates the Impulsively In-spired action.

"It IB apparent thnt, If Mirongh testawe cnn Hud a chemical disturbance Inthe Ido7»d ~or~pe"rsons of~rtbvlous un-stable einotlonnl aialu'-up wo cnn layhands on the seat of the disturbance.In most CIISOH and help (hem. In iniinyof the cases examined at the I'o.sr-OriMhiate hospital chemical dlstarhmice WIIM fomul, and la more than halfof them* CIISCH the ci inse-was traceddirectly to certain of tho Internal se-cretory ^landM,

'This him been accompllHhedtbraugb only a few blood test* whichmve been evolved. New tests are he-n,; worlted on coiiMtnntly. and the hopoIs lo mi mm' the Meld until we canlay a l!nn<'r on tho HCIII of all «'ino-(tonnl dlMturhniiceH,

"The large iiumher of ciineH exam-ined have given Hulllcleiil daln to showa connection between emotional typesand n itlHturhltif; of detlulte glanda.nad the at tempt now Is to establish adefinite cnuse fur each ri'lmlrinl typo.

"Nooe;iHnrlly Hm tiviHineat viirlen lutrvery ciine. It conslHtH In IIIOMI CUHCHIn raining Ui« lliivHliohl of runctlonalac t i v i t y by chemical MiihHiniiceH whichI "'vent exceHHtve H|lih'ilntl«n of thehih'Hinl Hi'creiory gltimlH ami hy noa-trnll/.lug Ihe ell'celM of certain exconMtve MocrelbinM hy lnlrmlucliiK counter-balaneliM; Mubsttiuci'M.

Key H<*« Oo«n round."The pi'lnclpleM of Hie eounferlial-

iincliig HiihHlnnre nre found In milnmlMl,,ndr,, but IhcHe for the mos| partnbto r.'iiinlo to be flelci'ialned with anyileitree of precision.

"Where the dlMiurhiineo t« of thy,.nl,l origin. (hodn hnve I n fairlywell worked out. and (here Imfl been,.0014' MIKM-CMM Wl lh M11 M'lUT 11III Olllllll

IUICCM. liul the pi tu i tary and olliorj-liiiidn hnvo not yet revealed thnlr

Heere|n."Iliineil on the rnplil "trhh'n mnde

Hlare IbtM pnrllcniilr »l'"ty «'iiH begun,tl HM1.! there r-eenin to l.e no limit totl,e poMMlhtllllw. wlilch the rencarchof Hie next few venm may opeo. The

t((.v n.ny be Mifelv r-nld to hnve hfoii

( ,d nad the loelt Mil lied ; It rnniilniIn .Uncover wlinl ll«'n lievoiul In (It'll

i,He uiHlHMln of (llnK»(tfl*" nh|1 tri'"t

meat.

rvlotrlly W« Roll AloiiQ.Itiinriellvlllo, Kv AltboilKli he IIIIM

nol uiilM'il n Ml«'|> In fo r ty yenrn, I'clnjtifilled ndMiml nil Ihnl tlmo la a rhnliHlrd McrnnitlcK 1« <me of the hent anMirt'd rlll"'im of lliln coin illy nnd

(t Ini'Kc number of fi lend-' hclp<-<l him

In relelnillo bin nevealy riocoud blrlh

<lny.

Story • and - a - Half StructureMakes Real Home.

ROOMS ARE WELL ARRANGED

1'he. size of thf lion-.. .,--r i i . i is '•:•»by 51 feet. The wall* f i r e of • • i ihei-sofld brick, hollow clay 1,"\Miui; tile.

N»r frame i-on9tmotion. w l r l i f;i--,. hrlclcJv-ei]e.i'r_walls, nnd stucro m. riu- p'-inr*shown on theIng sets on a concrete f o u n - l n t ihas o fu l l haS6ffl7?nr, an.l • • • i D f n r M«,or*The sl:se ofner In ,whl(m It la l ln ishf lseparate ronms for rhe n ' -n r .n? phmt,fuel fltornge, fruit nnd v^ircf;iht*> «rnr-age and p launrtry ami thf modern^

Seven Good Rooms, Sun Parlor andGarage, Are Shown \rt This De-

algn for a Modern House—Easy to Care For.

By WILLIAM A. RADFORD.Mr William A, Radford win answer

y%£$or"> a,na Blve advlco fKBBOf-^F ,OU, £".,.?.ul*ct» J"=rtatolng S> theect of building, for the readera ot this11 «co'«« of W» wide LpeAe™r, Author and Manufactirer. he

n ^ a°^'- tbe highest authirttj£f OP™? eso °.ubtect»- Addresr all inqulrleSto William A. Radford. No. 1827 Prairie

There are two kinds of human habi-tations — houses and ' homes. Houses,as the poet>has said, are "merely fourwalls and a roof." Homes %are theplaces where families really live — theyore comfortable and convenient, andtheir exteriors seem to say: "This tgthe abiding place of happiness andreal home life." .

Here Is -pictured a house that Is areal home. Its exterior tells the pass-erby that "this Is a home." It Is onlya^tory-anti-a-naif house, but its llnesftake It out of the "house" class andput It In a foremost rank as a "home."

Pew homes have a better outwardappearance than this structure. It Isa combination of brick and stucco, thelatter material being used In the gablewalla and In the walls of the sun par-lor. The long sweep of the roof fromthe ridge out over the porch, and thebroad dormer windows set into the

Second Floor Plan.

electrically driven washing machine,and other labor-saving laundry equip-ment.

This is a house that Is a real home.Its exterior arrangement Is comfort-giving and convenient. The work ofcuring for It can be do~ne easily andTwith a minimum of labor. In exte-_rior appearance It leaves little to b&desired. Thus in this house are com-bined the things that every prospec-tive home builder is looking for, butdoes not always find.

Home building this year Is popular,especially in the more congested placeswhere there are more families than,there are places for them to live. This-

roof, both front and back make tmoat attractive.

The arrangement nnd dimensions othe &even rooms are shown by thefloor plan that accompanies the perupectlve. The entrance from the porchIs almost In the center of the front andlends directly Into the living room, Ifby 19 feet 0 Inches. At the end of theJiving _room_ia_an_opca_JlrLiniiictvwhUhack of it through a doubUHonHcopening la th« dining room, 14 hy 21feet. The latter IH u cheerful an*Hiinny room, the outside wall hcln^alniOHt contlnnouH windows. Openingout of tlio dining room at the reartlio kitchen, ll by 12 feet, and olt thekitchen In a good-sized pantry.

Tho Him parlor IH 11 feot (1 Inc!jy 14 foot, and proJw'tH to (ho frontIno of tlio open porch. Thin room IH

HNtHi In, tlut wlndowH forming thetwo oulHldu wullH. Hack of (bo HUHnirlor nnd romuM'trd with the living

room IH a library or don, 11 hy 1-1 foot..t will tie noted that nil of OICMC roomsiro lurg*'—larger, In fact, tluiit In foundn moot houmtH of thin nort.

An umimial (Vutiiro of thin drnl(i tliti K«nigo, which IH IKtt'tl into tlio

roitr corner of the ImlldlnK- Tlio K"r-IH 1« by IH foot, ii Hl/.e milted for

Flrat Floor Plan.

ho rtturauo of ono nuiom<ih|lo andii'ovl«llnK npuco for a work bench, ntvhMi minor repalrn can b*> uuuto hyJi« ownor.Tliree bedroourn nnd Urn bathroom

ift) on tlio mn'oiul floor, vwlilch In much'(I by Iho tilalrn, which run out of uiliovt h'tll nt, ono frfdo of Iho dtliliiKooin. Au IH ciinlotunry |n houm-n ofhln chmucter, two or thn hutlrooinn-o in Iho dormer i>ro|ncMoiiti, while,o thlnl In lu ono of tho Kahlon, with

tin Imllirnom lu tho other.All ofvlho iMMlrooum. loo, nro of K<»>^

rl;.i>, tho fnmt room Imlim 10 by 17Vol j (lie tildo room 14 hy 'W ftutt, andIi» n'i»r room II fruit 41 inrhen try IVout. JOin'h li«j«1rooi» Imft a Inrifo rlonct

condition has had much to do withtho unheard of rise In rents, and theconsequent determination of manyfamilies to realize that greatest ofAmerican ambitions—"own yourhome."

To build a home Is to acquire aplace Just us you want it to he, ncmatter whether or not it coincideswith..someone..ctae's. Idea of what ohome, should he and how the roomsHhould bo arranged. There Is a great-er return on the money Invested In uhome than the mere saving in rent—then* Is tho satisfaction in having fthomo of your own and tho pride thatBOCH with tho ownership of the placeIn which you llvff.

It IH not a dlfllcult or costly matterto hulld a homo. Home money Is re-quired, of course, hut Imnkn, building1

and loan aH.soclatlnim nnd private. In-voHtorn always arc, at hand to help theprovident pc.rMon acquire u home. Cort-tnu-torn and material dm I era alno aronver ready to liolp (be/ pro-spectlvoImlbler, not. ojily In tho tlnanelng of thelionm hillldlng project, but t* tho HO-e<:tlon of plant* and inaterlaln for tho

Tntten from all fltandpolntH, homo>ul ld lnK IH Kood biiMliu'HH. A homo olyour own means decreased cost otrent, and an liicrcancd amount of tmv>

1 NovolUta.Wlllliun Dvan lloweltn wnn talking

nhotit tho AnturU'un iiovetlyt. nowHtyli* and old.

'A novttllnt of H>« now ntyle," dofill.I. "pulU'd up bin ItolH-ltoyro oik(> lfth avenue ono afternoon nad lmlle<|in old Htylo novellHt, who WUH Jimt•otnlng out of the public library.

"'Well, Hill/ mild tho a«'w«tylo nov*dint, '(mvo you htid nay pre-m notlrfnatolyT I had *t7 thin morning nlnoihont my dlvorct*, nix nhoat my nownr, throe nlioiit wlint I like for din-er, two about my H)o nullH of clothoi.

Ivo nhout ^iy I«fit Jl-.(HM> tmlldoK nihtIvo about tho funny anocilotn I loltl

?i« pilnco of \Vnlen durtiiK hlM NowVorlt vMt. Now. hmv ntumt you, IIIIIT

f profiM noilci-ri todny?''Only ono,' tho oltlniyln novollttt

«..\voro«| ineekly. 'Only on«\ lloh.)nly a review, whb'h miM (hat myio\v novel wan w«ll written,' "

Clg*r*tta In MUtory.ho dunrottu In an invention of tho

Liaortcnn nhorlxhum. It ttttnlinul COH»<norrlul Importance oftwr th« Oliueni*/or. |Cnnll"U ofUccrn got Iho ha hitnun tttmoclutloii with tho Turhn.rench nnd llullnm, wh«>, like tliu

n*llaim. "rolled lliolr own." Oilier;nKll.itiiM.!ii InillnUil thin new, nmnrt

i-n, wliH'Ii, tioiii«nv|u'HT iilmiK lh« |»«thf tho eentiillort, hiMl iilnuKtt lent tliotHftrette, found U nK»ln '" lliiicluut],mj bo K cuuio hark to ua.

Page 6: SOUTH - Atlantic County Library · cnco puuacd over thin section TUCH-ay night, lightning ntrlking In uovernl places, while hall and a. awocplng wind:ld muoli dumago to growing cropfl,

$£^trj^

Gloom Chasers.. NM'JGHTV FrRNiTrni; MAN.

A bride and groom were Uuyiug tlioirfurniture. "Isthisa good strong betlV"

" " ' - -groom.the clerki "we stand behind ever.y. 1>«1we sell;" "Oh, my," whisper»rl thebrirte l»tue (jfoom, "we don't waul to

i buy a betrtiere.'' - ~

'-,.'• . . ; ••THit UPWARD TREND**'You remember. I reckon, that Spink

Siiwnfy's Wife got killed by n train uiout, a ytar ago." said a neighbor. "And| you know Splnk sued, tl^e railway com*

, pauy. Well, yesterday1, t l iu court gaveI hiui $((00 for the IOHS of his wife."; "That so?" returned Gap-Job nson^oi' Rumpus Ridge, Ark. "Wives 'pear tohave ri* like everything else, don'tthey?" —--—________^.

BLACK'S DEPARTMENT STORE

CONSULTJ—Lower Bank-ltems-

Elwood. N. J,

Agent for the Famous

BLACK BEAUTY BICYCLES

The People's BankOj Hammonton, N. J.

Capital. $50.000 Surplus and'Undivided Prolils, $80,000

3 Per Cant Paid on Tim? Deposits Safe Deposit Boxes for RentOKFICERS.

M. L. Jackson, President \ \V. j. Smith. Vice President

W. R. Tilton. Cashier \DIRECTORS;

M. L. Jackson ; ^JrGrAndejson C._E._OsgoodW. R. Tillon' S»mue\ Andcuon ' Wm. U. B\ackGeo. Elvim c W. J.Smilh ]. A. Wnas

' John G..G«lignt Charles FittingLaton M. Parkhurst W. re. Crane

' M i s s Viola l iel l .nv .in.l .M: \\ ' ' Ionlicl! wc-n- iii.irFiVilnn nn:i-. . l . i> i . - n i l l R ,June 17th, the cc r i -mui iy I I ' ^ I I I L ; J ' laceal I In- l lnnif oMhc ^ r i M ) ! i i \ m > U K I Mrs.Suvii- Cramer. Tin- l i r n k - i b 111 ' ' i i .r . :liler| of Mrs. M n r y I ip l t i nv . \ h ' I lie^ Ct'r.-Miony a - r t - C f p t i r n i ' \ v ; i s ^ i v . - i . i . llu-

- I l l H l l v frioil'lft n(-.tlu--UaLULi;-rL!ll_^i.. UMMI

l ic r i - .Hid near-by i t lac . 1^ —Mi . J. \V. C a v i l r . - r a n . i . . w h o

have liec-ii visiting tile (mi i i i ' t . ; <-• ntsat l h i > place. I c f l W i ' . l i i e . u l n t i : 'h.'ir

, s l immer I i o m > - in \ ' i - nnon l .C. C. Adams ami I , e H i > M i \ u !i ive

s t a r h ' i l i n t h e li.sli l m s i n t > - ' ( " i • ' : - 1 1 1 1 1 -mi-r in nit the II. C. 1.

Amony thosi' \\lut Kra.lnat. , .1 theSlat,- N d r m a l Sclm,.l .it T r . - i : t . •> onTlmr-- i lay. \vas I 'i .Kviir ' l f n h i i s o n t th i s].lnc, .

' -X,JNOUA AMKRICAINK.J.In a British railway carriage. o£ the

type known as "American" because un-like ibe iiiajority of cars it has an aislethe length of the car, two tTnited Statessoldiers in khaki were standing in theaisiCv Nearby were seated a prini and el-derly English lady and her daughter, whowere gathering their belongings, pre-paring to alight at the next station. Sud-denly thelndy nudged her daughter andwhispered; 'yVIary, inind what I say!When we get off do just as I do. and backdown tho aisle. I can't tell you why justnow." Daughter obeyed and both ladiesleft the train as if departing from thepresence of royalty. Safely arrived on

the daughter naturally

AddedT1 f* 7. J?°HTo Tire I /Meage

H3ke,d why. "Marj3," said her- ihothe?"you saw those two American soldiers—they call them doughboys, I believe.Well when we were starting to get outI overheard oue oft hetnsay to the other

When those two dames get off we'llpinch their seats!"

For InfantsIn Use For Over 3<l YearsAlways bears

theSignature of

fA Boston tire dealer, fi >• t'aree years, has gath-fe'red data on Miller .Tiros. Ami he reports asfollows:

Users find thei - ' r e mileage increased from 50per cent to 75 per ::t?nt.

Blpw-outs have been eliminated.(Uniform mileage has been accomplished.

/Only six tires in 1,000 come back for adjust-iment — only five Miller Cords in a year.

'A Louisville dealer compared wear and mileage[bh 116 styles of tires which he repaired. The con-stant'Miller supremacy has caused him now toiiandle the Miller Tires only.

A California stage line made million-mile com-iparisons with 21 leading makes* Andthe Miller won by long odds.

,You" owe yourself a comparisonori your own car. The Miller is thetire of the day. ,

Tread PatentedCenter tread •maatb, with raction cap, far6nn hold on wet asphalt. G0are<f'fo-fAff*Rood »ide tremdi, meih like cog» in dirt.

Now the Record MakereCords or Fabrics Gcared-to.the.Road

Erftunatr.a.m—tcf* —

Dealer's Name and Address

Copy N_a43l110 lines x 2 coU Nona ' 440S

ii ii)

Servants are HumanShow an Interest ID their vyclfar* anil i l icy wi l l nliow ilu-ir

a(ipr«fll*llon. * "An elo^trla Iron In your kltolivu will no lv<- i l ' < 1 icryaii

problam because It will kcepyonr help tion(vnl«il.

For aale by

HAMMONTON ELECTRIC COJMP/INV

Second IlaiicSWe have just purchased ,,boul IOUTY IHII I .DINC.Snt Amatol Aracnnl, N. J., iucludim; all l l ic InnKliDi ' . : , , i lCamp Pftsliilig. VVe arc nt'llini-; lln.'i i n . i l c r i u l al li i t i i ' .ainprices, lliorc is iour hundred l l iousuml loot «i l srcomlhand 2 x 6 in., 2 x Bin. »iul oilier M/C:., heat ing Movn,

plumbinif fixturcA, windowa and dom;;.

Sec our Mr. R. Iroun al Camp I 'cml i in^ , A n i a l i > l A i

.

GIBBS, MUELLER CO.Real Estate Trust Building riiilixlelpliia, Pa.

WE PA Y HIGHEST MARKET MICKSfor Country Dressed Poultry, KWtX'.s nnd Pi^x.Write what you have to of ft't. Slnftpinx tn^mfurnished upon request.

EASTERN COMMISSION MERCHANTS,376 Eighth Avenue JNcui Yorlt City

An Opportunity

For Young Men and Women

The .rhool KC;IKOII is1 iiboiit to dost1. To many boys, and i^irls, it. is

i h c l . t s i yea i ol school. Nou ronios the i]iicstion of w h a l their l i l f -

woi l . wil l b<—how they wi l l earn their livelihood !

'I'hc Hloi-li C'o-C'art Company oilers an unusual oppor tun i ty to tlie.-i<'

youiu ' people.

l l i ' i r they can learn an iulercsliiu:, .-ikilled trade ;uul receive excellent

wa-.T', ir/ii/i' Ihfij art' lt\ttritina>.

I ' l n \ \ m k i i i ) ; condition!! are a^reeabh* ; the work is p leasant ; I here

arc m i "lay-oils" or d u l l season:; : I l ie po i i i l ion irt p c n n a n e n i ; pro

nini K m is rapid and earnings .-.u .u l i ly ami ipiickly increa.se.

l l c i e i ; i i he (jucslion ol your whole lulun—decided lor you in .1 u a y

t h . i l \ \ i l l lie nioM p r o l i l a l i l e to Y O U .

( ' n i n e . i i u l :iee uii--!iee our U'orl;:ihop — w a l c h I he work be i i i ) ; i loni ' .

T. i lL i i c i \ ' c i w i t h 0111 Mi Kichard. ' ion.

Bloch Go-Cart CompanyEgg Harbor, N. J.

' 'O'

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SOUTH JERSEY STAR, HAMMONTON, N. J.

Patsy's Perfume

By HARMONY WELLER

_ "The only talent I have," sighedPatsy Van Bureon, "is my nose!'-'

"Nose?—a talent?" Joe Robinson ex-claimed. "I'd never call mine by thatname, > Pat I" he laughed, examininghis own too prominent nose In an op-posite mirror.

"Well—'by any other name* it smellsns sweet," Patsy retorted. "But I

~don't~iriean". iuy 'nose, Itself—-I "raennmy sense of smell. It Is surely de-veloped to a degree that might beclassed among the talents."

"Much good It'll do you, methlnksc,"Joe consoled her. "Now If It wereJour sense of taste you might be, atea-taster or a judge of good liquor—If the latter weren't among the ex-tinct professions."

"I can see plainly that I am goingto get no satisfaction from strugglingfor an outlet for my creative ability—\vhloh I know I have In spite of allyou-home folks' pessimism on the sub-ject I Something tells me to use thisextraordinary sense of smell of mine—but how 7"

Joe seemed perplexed. "That's allvery well, but how can one make a liv-ing—or even an approach to one fromIt?"

"I suppose," snld Patsy, "you are notfar enough advanced to conceive of a

-BlrJ—going—In—for— perfumes-and—fra-grances that might appeal to the In-dividual personality. Men and womeuhave very distinct colors In theirauras, and If colors have tones, onefor each, as has been proven you know,why should not colors have perfumes?And then, to follow It up, why shouldnot I, with my finely attuned sense ofsmell, be aule to detect the fragranceof an Individual's aura colors and try

"to-duplicate them In extracts or povTders or toilet accessories?"

Joe scratched his head. Impolitely,but his eyes looked thoughtful. "Yes—I suppose It could be developed, butevery one would think you were crazyand only tne nutty ones would come

where sue made up uo\ 10 or eirieupetals from gardens of Individuals,preserved wedding bouquets, etc. Inthis way she believed she would comeIn contact with persons who cared forfragrance, and In finding n commonmeeting ground she could Icnrn roucli_of Individual tastes and preferences.

"One thing that amuses roe In mysuperficial observation of men Is thatthey like red. Men and boys love red

-roaes.-red-necktles— red-carpets. — Also^I htt*ve learned that most men like nfaint, a suitable .perfume on the .worn*en they go about with. but. for fearof b'elng rnought effeminate, poetic orartistic, they pretend not to. Themore cultivated the Individual, tholoss easily suited he Is In perfnme.We are ^beginning to appreciate themost subtle sort of odors, odors thata generation or two ago would haveteen hardly perceptible to- the-sensesat all. A person whose artistic devel-opment has been neglected )s apt toneed the heavy scent of a tube roseor a cinnamon flower or some equallycompelling odor."

Patsy explained oil these observa-tions to Joe, who was becoming reallyinterested In the-llttle studio shop. Hehad helped her fit It up; he had tackedup curtains, painted furniture to makeIt harmonize with the surroundingsand he found himself spending everyspare moment In the pleasant environ-ment of Patsy's shop. /

"What do you know about my aara,Patsy?" he asked, suddenly, one daywhen he was helping her.

"More than I'd care to tell you,Joe."

Joe looked up at her. The tone ofher voice had seemed strange.

"If It tunes In with the color of yourblush just now It must be some aura,"

WORLD'S BIGGESTBATILipSER

United States to Build GreatestNaval FightingJVIachine

~EveFFIoaterf

LEXINGTON FIRST OF BIG SIXWill Carry Eight 16-Inch Guns and

Have- Speed of 36 Knots—Dis-placement, 42,200 Tons;

Horsepower, 180,000.

ously. Then he went over to herwhere she sat among baskets of rosepetals. "Patsy, why don't you make astudy of the flower of all emotions —love? I — I love you so much ond I'vsbeen afraid to tell you till I heardthat note In your voice Just now asyon spoke of — of me. Won't you prom.Ise .to marry me? You do love me —and I'll help you all I can, dear."

Patsy's blush had deepened In colorand her eyes had gathered a wonderfullight. It—It might he .Interesting to—to find that perfume, Joe," she said,ns he stepped close to her.

And' then, for long moments, thestudy of the fragrance of mere rosepetals from other people's gardens wanforgotten.

MONKS SAVED EARLY WRITING

Qulncy, MOBS.—The keel of theworld's biggest warship will be laiddown here within six months. Thebattle cruiser Lexington, combining ina degree unequaled by any qualities ofpowerful armament and blgh speed,lisa taken form In drawings and awaitsthe arrival of materials to be ad-vanced from the bands of the archi-tect to those of the builder. By falltt Is estimated, the prospective queenof the United States navy will becomea ship under construction Instead ofan ambitious plan.

The Lexington Is the name-ship ofa class of battle cruisers which willBlve Uncle Sam, within four years, afleet of six big-gun fighting ships un-matched by anything then afloat. Hersister ships, the Constellation, Sara-toga, Constitution, Uanger and UnitedSlates, are also under contract. Theybring names out of the old navy with

_whlch_to—develop—for—therfl rst~new-capital vessels of the post-war fleet »traditional background for fresh ex-ploits.

Length Will, be 874 Feet.With the others of 'Its class, the

Lexington will be n whale of a ship.It will displace 43,200 tons and willhave the power of 180,000 horses, asmeasured in mechanical terms. Itslength of 874 feet Is within 46 feet ofthe length of the Leviathan, monsterIhsseneer liner. The 101.4 feet ofwidth of the Lexington will make thatdentine gun platform broader than anypassenger ship.

The Lexington, which Is to beequlppod with electric drive, will at-tain a speed of 35 knots. This cruls-i-r's speed, higher than that of manydestroyers. Is the object, of much ofthe designing that entered Into the

New Martin Bombing Plane

While _ the kltchon la the stomach ofthe house It Is as essential to hdvo tlrightly understood and managed asIt Is to havb the stomach so cared for.

A FEW NICE CAKES.

Practice makes perfect In cake mak-

The new Murtlu bomber, known u» the "torpedo plane." wblcb carries be-neath Its fufltlage a Whltebead torpedo with 200 pounds of TNT.

creation of the Lexington, class.Armor will be sacrificed tor makeslble the 35-knot speed—the main belthelng only 6 Inches thick at Its mail-mum as compared with .the 12-Inchsteel belt on most battleships, butfirmament will be of tremendous pow-er. The Lexington thus will have notonly the strategic advantage of hlRhspeed, but will be able to flre a henv-Ifr charge over a greater distance thanf,r>y other battleship for which theplans are known.— ~- Eight 10-lneh Guns.The Lexington In action will speak

with a voice of 16-Inch guns, of whichthe wll! have eight The navies ofGieat Britain, Prance and, Italy con-tain no gun greater than 16 Inches andthat of Japan Includes 18-Inch gunsonly on battleships of 24-knot speedwhich are now under construction.Unlike .the dreadnaught class's relianceon bjg guns exclusively, the Lexingtonwill carry 16 six-Inch guns ns a second-ary armament.

Taking a 'page from the 'naval lessons of the war, the designers of thLexington have equipped the ship wltl

four anti-aircraft guns, eight tor-pert,tubes, four of which are submerge"and four on deck and with means odefense against aerial, "bombs an.>er!nl torpedoes. Defense against Bui

marine torpedoes will -be obtains

tl.ronpth fore and aft torpedo defenseliulkheads, by which the stability oftht vessel will he preserved no mat-IIT where she Is pierced. Under anvconditions but an explosion, It l»c.'aimed, the Lexington class of war-ship should prove nnslnkable.

An Indication of the Lexington'sgreatness Is afforded by comparisonwith the British warship Hood, which,when It is floated, will be the biggestxhlp In the British navy and afloat.

Lexington. Hood.Dlsplaccment..43.200 tons. 41,200 tons.Speed :. .35 knots. 31 knots.Length 874 feet 880 feetHorsepower... 1RO.OOO. 144XWO.Big guns....8 16-Inch. 8 15-Inch.Main armor.. .5-Inch. 12-Inch.

Her Plan* Took Effect In the Form ofa Diminutive Shop.

lo you, wouldn't they?" ho MHkt'd, halfIn Ji'Mt, half In onrnitMt. Hit \VIIH fondof I'nlHy, h lH chum from childhood,

I

inn) In; dltl not wnut to HIMMII too Imrtlon hrr. "\

*•-, "I'iM'liupH it would be dllllmlt, atl' llrnt, .loo. lint I don't l i i tvo to milko

nil l inmri l lnU' l i v i n g , ' y o u knoxv, wi thfnll i i ' r and molhi'r to li i ldt nirt! of mo.Anil II him been m.v «'X|itTlt'nro In\vntchl i i i f (ho ilovrloimifii t of nny oftin* iirln or liny plmmi of ( l inn, tin nounI I H yoll iH'Kin (O O l i l l l ' M l l ' J l t -Opt l* III ( I I I *(t lrcHlou dint tht-y ivnrli, you findninny who Imvu u l r iN idv ht'itn luliTrnt-rd, l int Tor lurk of HOIIHI ono of nil-l i ' T H l H i n l l n K hnvo hunt it to thmn-m-lvi'rt."

"Tlwl'H t r i io , loo. Human liolmpiHi'" n f r u l i l or h i - l i i K r l i l l ru l r t l . anil I l i fyf r i ' i l l l i ' n t l y rmiolhiT Ihclr I I I -H! milvi 'rtmill M|| aliii'il i i u i l i InK trivial immll l i i l l ii M f M i - i i i l of opr i i l i iK up wha t n i l i ch l|H'iiM> ro In- n i l I ' l l l l K l l l r n l l l K mih | i>r l ."

"*\ J i v , •li'i'. t ivi 'n you am l ioKi iml l iKto I l i l n U . " I ' n l n y r i ' imii 'Unil , i m l l l i i K himiinVi i i n i i a U ' l y .

• l i M ' i i I , " .I 'M. n i l m l l l i ' i l , nni l i l ln i t ."l lui you I I I M I I'" lo II , 1 'alM.y, anil If IOlll h r lp you. ( ' I I ilo II ."

'"I l i n l i k n I ' l l | .M. l in l . lv MIT,) you.,loi'," 1 ' i i l n y n n l i l . "Ki l l now, I n allIllic II M l u i l y ol' llli' f r i lKl Hlirt' of i-olorn,Fill' I n n l i l l i r o . a I I ' l l HIM. . n l l l H l M i p i l l o.1111.'inn mini ii w h l l n nil". I l u i v n nlul or l i T t l n I \ v n n l III inalu) lo.hiy. noml l imn, . lo i< "

I ' n t M n l n i o M t i l n n r i - i l oir lo hi.r M l l l nl l l l l ' i l I I . M M - r.l mi l . , ro vvhiTo. a l llllOIII', Mho Illlll I"-!'!) VVIM-l l l l IK Hill lllM-t lM*or> nf .<»loi -h . i M T r i i i n i ' M i i n i l I H I I M I U It l i i r i iN. D n i l l n o w M | M ' lin.l M a l i l a l i n u M il io lhloir a) . .ml lirr I n l i ' n l I O M M . a l l h . M i i l l i

. (f WIIM I I I I O M I I Ihal Khn luiil u \vimiliT| fully i v i t l i i ' i l r i lovi ' lopli ionl In hur iii ' i inii| of nini'll.

I'll HIM.', lu-i- (iliinn I.M.H rlTri'l lii HIMI form of n illmliiiillvi' nllop an.) nluilln

li'l'i nlio hninlli'il oxrlunlvi' iMTrilinc^I potpourri, fl-illirnut |io»il«rn, an.I

Leisure Tlma In Monasteries Devotedto the Transcription of Records,

Sacred and Profane.

The preservation, by tho pens ofmonastic copyists, of the ChristianScriptures, of the writings of the earlyFntlieru and of the great worka ofclassical antiquity seems to ho due,prlhclpnlly^'to thiTflfe and "labors of j Amerlonn Rollof Worker* Ro.toroMnimns-AJWlla,. «nK»lo,h.ms'S6frafor-.f jiany Broken Homes—RepairTlirough hlfl personal Influence with War's Ravages.the barbarian rulers who Invaded |Itomd and his devotion to the church,

Reunited in ArmeniaHundreds of Lost Families Be-

ing Brought Together.

which wns evident In tho latter partof his life, he micoeedert inIng for later generations the paganor classic literature. In tho churchhln hopes of Intellectual Interest nndcivilization ItKelf rented. Ho hnd ex-ceptional executive ability, long ofll-clul experience, a large meii.suru ofscholarship and an earnest zeal forllternry and ediinitlonal Interests.

The rule of the n inuf iHtor leH of thefifth mid Hlxt l i centnrleH Included thonovel feature of Indi iHtr lu l occupation.Often there wan wearl.somo let Hiiro Inthe moiWHterlON nnd Cannlodorun per-ceived that thlH time nilKht bo profit-ably Hpcttt In traiiHci'lblng the anMiuiu-hillon of 1MM10 yearn of l i terature, MH-cred anil profane, the writ ing* <>f He-brew prophet H, Oroek phlloHOphe.ruand Lat in rl ietortclnuH.

In tho eoui'He of yearn a cliinn ofmonoHtlc HcrlheH trnnm'rlhed and 11I tnn ln i i t ed portloim of the Herlplnrenand of tho Lat in t ex tH. It WHH from

Constantinople. — Flnndreda of Ar-menian famllloB arc helng reunitedmonthly through tho efforts of themembers of tho American coin m It teefor relief In tho near East, who aro•cnttered throughout the leading citiesof Asia Minor, with headquartersbero.

In tho deportations nf tho laflt fouryears Arinenluns have been shuttledahont hoforo vnrlous military move-tnontH with th* that nearly ov-tM-y famll ly IH Hearehlng for IIOWH of

Uicrm Hcrlhe.H tho for tho tlrtitedllloim of riroro, Virgil and the other<' |HHH|C u'rltei 'H waH produced hy thecarl lcHt prlntm't j of (lei-miuiy and

Iwlen of Vivar ia , or Vlvlera , and MUIIH('nut I ' l l h iM. It \ V I I M only In niomtHtlccenters I lk . - tlii 'Ho, where C l n l H l I r m lu-ll iM'iico » nd t 'dueatlonnl work werehold (tt ho of moro linpoi'tance t h a i )IhcoloKlcal l«Nit i ;H, t ha i I l lo rnry uc-t l v l t y ticcame |>OMHlhl<', IIIH! It way onlyIn Mih ' l i iuon i tH(«>i ' | rM I l i i i l hihor wan ex-pcnilrd III pi 'en(>i'vlntc t l io wrl t lnt ; ofpngiin u ill hoi'H.

M l i o r t l y after < 'MHr i lodnru rV wl th-• T i n w n l f ru in pol i t ical l l fn , when hoWIIM nhoiK nlxty yciirn ohl, hn organIr.inl n i l of (h ln I l l m a i ' y worlt. Thinwork nt-rved nn a nioihd for (he. longn v h t i ' t n o f , l t t < n t M l l c l l n o nionarilerliml h n ( c i i iuo |n(o ex lNtr i ic t i lhroiif[houlDin-ope I n l i ' r . U \ V I I M I l i o h i i in l of < ' H Hr<lo i lo i ' i i r i \vhlch g n v < t (hn I l l o ra ry hu| ) . - ( U M to Hi.» H ' - i H M l l r M n n , , i i l « M - . mid |(u 'Mti h l n co lhM' t lon of mammci ' lpiM, ITM-C I K M ) Trom Hie ni l im of I ho U l i n ^ r l c M (ttI t a l y of I f f llci i i o l l l h - n l I n f i l l |u I I O I I Mhnd hern nliiiHorcfl h y ^ f h o Invunloii ofH H I r t n r l l t n , I l i n l Mi ipp lH-d t h o un i t or In Ifor |>mrt of t h o u r i i i n d n < t>f n i o i i u tu l r

Too I 'rovloua,Tho l ' ' r t 'n | i i i imi \ \ ' t iy

ioi'f u l \ \ - I I . V M pu t iho l o i t i ^ i 'ln n n n x ' 7Thr Mt-nlor -Ttuii 'n nn"hnilor ."

Tlui I'1) iTiltnuiii - H u l lio'O'H only a Hopli."

Levon Rnanillan. a young Armenianwho IH now a HiiccenHful merchant atIlnUlu'fiMr, recently located hln nioth-ur and young winter through an advor-tlHement printed U) a local paper hyMlHH CarlH 1C. Mil ts of I'rlnctiton, N.J., who IH directing tho Americanmovement to unit" Armenian familiesBhamllaii IH preparing a homo for themIn HalllccHhlr.

Tho hhitory of tho Hhainllan familyIn typU'al of the experlenceH Arm«nl-nnn HiilTered at the handH of tho TorM.They Hvetl In I I K l l n , In tho far raHt-<TII pnrt of AHla Minor. I, Won Hhum-lln and hln father were Heparattid fromthe rent nf tho family hy tho Turku,mid Levon wan forced to go Into theTurldHh army, Mini IIIIH nover heurdfrom hlH father.

H|H grandmother f ind grandfatherwere Icltlud. M!H motlH'r VVHH tulcen nnA tiorvaiit hy Kurdn. Horanoiixh wantnlutn an tt maid n.-rvnut hy KunlH.The motluir and dnughter' en me uponei\fl\ o t tmr unttxiioctedly In tlui Auiur-

Icn_nt refuge «t AIntab. both hnvwalked hundreds of miles and eufferecterrible hunger and hardship In theirsearch for rolatlitesjind!,safety.

'Llrfta 6f\b:rphiaos wlU"nlsa he print-ed In Armenlnn papers IB Armenia, Intho hope of finding homes for thoa-aanda of homelcsn children who mayhave friends or relatives In America,The American committee had nearly30,000 orphans In the Constantinopledistrict alone, nnd nearly twice thatnumber In tho Beirut area.

"Horae and Horac."Danville, Ky.—It's a wlac man who

knows hlfl own horae. Fred Bodn^r ofWhite Oak drove n black home In ubuggy to tho Manning Hvory Htntile.Later he called for It. A black liornowas hitched up and Itodnor drovehome, hut upon arrival dlncovereil he

nd tho wrong borne. Ho returned tohe livery stable and found that the

other black horflo had also been drivenaway. The liveryman didn't know whogot It.

No Deaths In 57 Years- Boasts California Town

Ornnmnro, Oul., armortH Itnelftho healthiest community In tintHtate, hatting Itn <leclaratlon nit-on tho fact that tho local ceme-tery hat* not had a grave dugttl11co IWi.'t, (ho dato of tho hintfuneral In (Jranmore.

Hlnco that time Hoveral r<'nl(It intH of It.*) community havedied In other ttcclloiiH of thoHlalo, hut It In u reiaarkahlo fact(ha t not u wlUKlo doath IIIIH oc-curred In tho community Hlnc<i

PLANS FOR HARVEST HANDS\ ,Kansas May Need 60,000 at Wage» of

$5 a Day and Upward, SayEetlmates.

Kansas City, Mo.—Kansas City 18the clearing house through whichthousands of farm laborers, will passduring the next two months to harvestwheat In Kansas. Oklahoma, Missouri.Nebraska, South Dakota and Iowa. E«-nmates are now being prepared fromreplies to questionnaires sent to wheatgrowers by the United States free em-ployment bureau here, working In con-Junction with the free employment bu-reaus maintained by the states In thewheat belt. Kansas will require 80,-000 to 150,000 men from outside thestate to help harvest Its winter wheatcrop tills season, according to the mostrecent estimates.-

'The minimum wage of 70 cents «nwith board and lodging-, says J.

M.-G!lmanv-hea*Lof the.. state_ employ-ment service, applies only to the westtwo-thirds, of the state. In easternKansas there Is a larger populationand n Ies« heavy production of wheat,nnd wages there, he Bays, will benround $5 a day with 'board and lodg-

ing as In other things. The beat cake-makers are those whoare making cakes often.

Prince of Wales Cake.— White Part — Take rhewhites of three effRS. one-half cupful of butter, onecupful of sugar, one-halfcupful of cornstarch, onecupful of flour, one-halfcupful of sweet milk, twotablespoonfuls of bakingpowder.

Part — One cnpfnl of sugar,Darkone-half cupful of butter, one cupfulof flour, one-half cupful of sour milk,one tablespoonful of molasses, one tea-spoonful of soda, one teaspoonful ofcinnamon nnd .the yolks of three eggs.Allspice and cloves may be added totaste. Bake In layers and put togetherwith any filling.

Sham Tartlea. — Beat the whites ofthree eggs Very stiff, add six heapingtablespoonfuls of cone sugar, one-halftablespoonful at a time, beating wellbetween each addition of sugar. Withthe first half of the last tablespoonfulof sugar add one-half teaspoonful eachof cream of tartar and vanilla. Dropon oiled paper with plenty of space

the surface rough and bake In a slowoven one hour. Serve with one-halfpint of cream whipped, flavored andsweetened, to which Is added three orfour slices of pineapple, three bananascut in dice, maraschino cherries andnutmeots. Mix all together and seiveover the turtles. This recipe mokesseven.

Coffee Cake. — Cream one-half cupfulof butter and add gradually one cup-ful of sugar and two beaten eggs. Beatwell, add one cupftil of choppedraisins, one teaspoonful each of cinna-mon, mnce and cloves,' one-half cupfuleach of molasses and strong cold cof-fee, one-half teaspoonful of soda dis-solved In one teaspoonful of boilingwater nnd two cupfuls of flour. Bakeln_n_ moderate oven. ____ • _

Blackberry Cake.— Tako . six eggs,two cupfuls of sugar, one cupful ofbutter, one teaspoonful each of cloves,allspice and cinnamon ; add two cup-fgls of blackberry Jam, four cupfuls offlour and three teaspoonfuls of bakingpowder, one cupful of milk.' Mix asusual and bake In a moderate oven.

BIG AIRSHIP FOR TOURISTSBritain's R-80 May Carry Passenger*

Over Battlefields—Length,635 Feet

Harrow, England.—Airship R-fiO.built here for the admiralty, will holaunched In two or three weeks. It

hodlcH the latent Improvements Inaircraft deNlKn, m^], |( |H Htnteil, couldfly acroHH the Atlantic with CHHC.

The vi'H.Hiil IK Km feet In li'"ntli "nilTO feet wide. It" l i f t ing power In .18:onn. Four (MiKlm^s, each of IMO-hormv;>owor, will give It a maximum tipt-mt

l>f OR nillcn an hour. It will carry acr«w of Ifi.

Originally Inlraili'd for wnr pur-poups, the gun pliuronilM anil lightingmruphonmltn have |H:CM illHcanlcilhat more iirri»Mim><liit lon may lu> prih-•Idcd for iniHiu'iiKtTH. It limy l«i nuud0 carry tourlHtn over thu ImttlMildila

of ITruncti mill lrlimilrrii.

'Ferret Taken a Wnlk.HuntlnftUm. VV. Va. -I'anilemonliim

irovallnd when n fiirrrt riniiloyril nsrut cilti'her lef t l i lu pine" In tho foj-

nr and numi ii | intnlrti ul l lui Fountain1ruK Mlnre. Ii'our ulr l clerliM vnii lmlhe, counter wi th eune. mill ntaye.l

ivhe.ro, limy Innileil u n t i l n nmle etarkiiint llui unliiml I""'1' <" hi" i«K"liir

American Flour in Tiflis for the Armenians

f-'lv*..r.hop|<

Inoh O|-nanh«>|i|iai»,>iti lit Monlh Anii'rl

imfiMt of Uv<- Incitenpinul out l<m hid

A Uttlo mm, a UtUe rain,A soft wind blowing from the went—

And woods and fields are sweet again.And the warmth within the moun-

tain's breast.

GOOD THINGS FOR ANY DAY.

A drink which Is a full meal andone which la good for young or

old Is—Chocolate Egg Nog.—

Heat tho white of oneegg with two teaspoon-fuls of sugar nnd oneteaspoonful of cocoa.Scald two cupfiils ofmilk and pour over thebeaten yolk of efig.Heat half of tho Drat

mixture Into tho second, add n pinchof Bait ami pile the rent of tho whiteon top of the glana. This makes twoglllHMCH.

Cornmeat Muff I no.—Take ono nndone-half cnpfubj of comment, ithree tahlenpoonfulH of mignr antteatipooiiful of mil t ; add six cupful ofbolting water and ono and one-halftahleNpoonfulH of butter, cook In ndouble bolter an hour and a' }\,\\f.Turn Into u mixing howl, cover wi thn little water to keep tho top fromhardening and lot tttand over n IK lit.In the morning add ono mid three-fourtliH eupfu lH of Hour, three tea-Hpoonfnltf or baking powder and ono«KB well beaten. Hake In niuilln pan*'n a hot oven,

Date Bars,.—Take ono cupful eachof wanhed di»ten cut lu Imjvrn, nutnicatn l/rok<>ii. miKur aiul (lour, twot'KK". half a ("aNpnonful of Halt andone-half teaHpoouful of hnUIn^ pow-der. Meat (lie egK". add thu da ten,until and MiiKitr , then tho Hour Hlftedwith the Halt and baking powder. Ifmoro inolnt 111*0 la net'dod add n fmvilroum of milk, llako In a tdieet andcut In M l r l p M .

Strawberry Whip.—Take on« «,of J'lley lirrrh'it, nt lr In one cupful ofMuKnr mid fold In the HtKIIy heah-nwli l lrn of lltreo OKK»- ll>'ap In nlieioctfChlHneti and nerve w i t h a ^pointful ofwlilppfd cieain on lop. ThlH may IM;

rvrd on nliort<-nlui or hot hakli iK

a teaspoon for dropping «.« iitimp-llnffs. nnd eight minutes will hesufficient time for cooking. .Serve withn highly seasoned tomato- snnre.

Rabb.t in Jelly. — Disjoint the rabbit ;ndd^salmnd pepper ami barely' waterto cover the ment ; cook rapidly forfive minutes, then simmer for seveinl ,hours. Slip all the ment from rne

J>orres_and._ rerooY-e— thft-Chalf a box of gelatin in a cupful of coldwater; add this to the water In whichthe rtihblt was cooked. There shouldbe three cnpfnls. Add the gelatin tothe strained broth. Chop the meat.season well and mix all together. PlaoIn a mold to become flrm.

"Women are far moro conservativethan men, and this fact, to which mostclose observers bear witness, has -veryplain reasons for Its existence— beingdue absolutely to the narrow, unvary-ing range of the duties In which they

^ are _heJaV^_ ____ _. _ •

THE FAMILY FOOD.

Here Is a salad combination a littleout of the ordinary, bnt • very tasty:

Frozen Cheese Salad.—Cream two neufchatelcheeses and beat In onepint of cream. Add nsmall bottlefnl of oliveschopped, a few brokennut-meats and one cupfulof diced chicken. Mix welland pack In a mold luIce and salt to make firm.

Date Cake. — Wash one package ofdates and remove the stones, cut Inhalf and cover with one cupful ofboiling water. After standing a fewminutes add two tablespoonfuls ofbutter, one teaspoonful of soda, one

_cupfuls of flour mixed with one cup-ful of pecan meats. Bake In a one-loaf bread pan forty-flve minutes.Tills makes a nice pudding for thesecond day. Serve It with a har.lsauce.

Love Knots. — Take one egg. beatenlight, four tablespoonfuls of thickcream, three tablespoonfuls of sugar.a pinch of salt, vanilla to flavor anilflaur to roll. Knead very stiff. RoH

out, cut In narrow strips, tie in knotsand fry In deep fat Boll In sugarwhile hot.

Date Strips.— Beat the whitesyolks separately of two eggs.

anaAdd

three-fourths of a cupful of sugar,three tablespoonfnls of flonr, two tea-spoonfuls of baking powder, one tea-spoonful ot vanilla, one cupful eachof chopped dates and nuts, then addthe whites of the eggs folded In light-ly. Spread very thin In a butteredpan and bake twenty minutes In nmoderate oven. Let cool In the pan.

Cake Tarts.—Bake angel food cakaIn muffln rings or In gem pans. Cutthe cakes when cool and scoop out th«center. Fill with whipped crea'm an.lcrushed sweetened strawberries orchopped nuts. •'1* >-

Trlpo With Chill.—Have "the tripecooked until well done. Cut In tinestrips three or1 four Inches longr^'Heatsome sweet fat in a frying pan. Adda small onion cut One, fry until a lightbrown, then add two heaping tea-spoonfuls of chill powder. Let allsimmer for a fow minutes to seasonand serve hot.

"I take It that knowledge la a prettypoor commodity of Itself and by Itnelf.A ahlp doesn't sail by Itn cargo. Thotriillifl that are not transplanted Intolives are dead truths."

EVERYDAY GOOD THINGS,

A good dlnh of well-made bneh la alost acceptable food. In eplto of Iho

so-called board-ing hoime hash.

Corned B e e fHnah.—Take twocupfuls of cornedbeef chopped, onoctipful of boiledpotatoea chopped,one Hinall onion

minced, milt and pepper to tante. Meltone table.Npoonful of fat In a fryingpan. add the onion and when Hoft nddthe meat nnd potntoe.s with M l i t t le ofthe broth left from cookhift tbo mw»t.(Niok over n «l«w flre mull n mint Informed on the bottom.omelet on a hot platter.iwrtdoy.

Corn Flako Oropa.

third of a

Fold |it<o nn(jarnMi with

Heat the yolftnH"d ndd one nipful «f nit-

aMpoonful of utnllla. oite^tt-nnpoonful of Mal t ; add

TlMlw. cnnul AM'H'iiln.

lliu 4if (It" IM-Wrt'Iil» I" u w.i

O<M»O[1", lui« (MH-H Hut l i«ut i i< |UiU i«'i * < » l A I I H T M M I Ii l imu f l l lml wll l i A m u r h n u Hour tin ihu •uuvluu

Po*<v In IdmioKIn*.—Talui a can of|M)iiti or f i i -n l i coottcil pcnrt, ruhthrough a nlcvc. nild two lahli'Spoon-

M of incited bu t te r , om> fou r th of itc u p f u l of lu l l It, ouo tahl iMpoonfnl of(lour, one I c i i M p o o i i f n l of tut I t , lu-o\ \ e l l f i t i t t i ' i t ^ l r n u i o k l i i M . ,Mt>t hi a panOf l i nT \ v i l l < ' i - , cover n l l f l I t u t l e r c d pn|>cr an<l IxiKe u n t i l f i rm.

Moot Dump!(HUB.—Mrnfu iu t in , - cup.T i l l of chopped meat w i t h t \ v < » <]rnpri>f (ntifvico tiuiico, tin It, pepper mid al l t t l o o'llon ) u l c < - M l f i lOHcfhcr (hrce] i i i u t e i n of n cup fu l of Hour , on<> andme-1 in I f t c n n p o o i t f u l n of t i aMt ip ; pou'-1rr it n i l it I l l l l n m i l t . I t r i l l one CKKI l i l l l U n t i l , n.l.t to I t t u o lali lrnpooiif i i l n of ml IK n nd n th I n t o t i n - ( louri i i t \ l l l i « * . If I l i l n Ir t no t molnl v i i o i l K t i .idd I I H . I C m l l U Tho . luin-t , MK.tild he.jullr ( i t l f f . Mi l l - (ho meat In to t h t n andl i p I»x npooiifnl ' t Inlo I to l l InK ntoclt ;look Il|{h(ltf 4'ov«M'(Ml ten Hilitulert. UNO

(ho h t l l l l y beaten whl leM, one hulffid of roeonut and four ntpfulrt ofI'orn (lakeri. Drop on Krenned lutklnf;cheetii ami halui In a moilerate oven.

l l l t jc Kuchon.—<'reaiu one half rup.fi l l of HiiKur. th i t yolltH of four ti^Knwell heat en, four tahh'npooufotn <ttmilk and one cupful of (lour n l f tcd with,ouo teaMpoonftd of bak ing [towdcr.Heat well and pour In to two liiyrr cakopafin. Dent the whl t tm of (he e^f?" ""t i l M t l f T ; add one tmlf cupful of miKnr.Hpr*'nd th in over I tie cold- t Jo« IK f t ;M p f l n k h ) al i i ioodH cut lit t h i n Mlltvn,Unite In a vt-ry tilow ovt'ii. \Vheu coolput (ho lay«?ri toKiMh«-r w i t h mi or-ani;o cri'iun or xv l th (tie f o l l o w h i K :

I'.iotry Crodm.—Iti-iit t he yolU ,if ,HI«eiar. inU one ha l f ciiprul of miKnr \vl( l i( l i i « « - dd>le.-i| i f u l - t of c o i i i M t a n h . add10 the i-Kir one tal»le:«poonfiilAor hutti-r.

pinch of n a i f a^id ono plot of holt11 lit ni l 111. < 'oolt u n t i l l h i > cor i i r i lnr r t iIH ari l lu-d. 4'oo| n i i < in«> for ci lUoM l l h i K . l ' ' lu\or w i t h v a n l l l i t .

Chlrkon f ' l o Tulvn t t n - j m r t l u i i ^ lof tfrom n n|.-\\ .M ur i..,.•.(.-,t fm%|, n.t.lK t n v y nml luolh to1llr; dMi. If tlieie«'|t Ut'.f ii l itt le \

luilf (111 aI;, i ...... iio

ei t l and vover Mil ,

it.

h chicly.I hrotli.

u|t l > n k -

hefointil ( t i

t in- i t i l c l . e n 1 'ol l lnK hoton Din f . l - . t ' i i l l ' , , I luKo

ull.i H I V hroun.

Page 8: SOUTH - Atlantic County Library · cnco puuacd over thin section TUCH-ay night, lightning ntrlking In uovernl places, while hall and a. awocplng wind:ld muoli dumago to growing cropfl,

TIRES) U Y satisfaction when you buy tires.

—-*' Fisk Tires meet any comparison,any competition. Then there is theassurance of the Fisk Ideal.

"To, be the best concern in the worldto work for and the squareat concernin existence to do business with."

Next Time—BUY FISKi . is*

WILSON S. TURNER, HAMMONTONROSEDALE GARAGE, ROSEDALE

miiiiiuiinin

CUT FORCE AT ARSENAi,.A Government order cutting the

employees at Amatol Arsenal to aboutone-third the former force went intoeffect Wednesday; This leaves abouttwo hundred persons at the arsenal,compared to over siv thousand' duringwar-titnes^ Those-in touch with thesubject take the Government's actionto mean that all danger of war *xvithMexico or other nations is no\v nrpli-igible.

BIG FOURTH HERE.Plans are proceeding satisfactorily

for a great Independence Day cele-bration at this place on Monday next,nuder the auspices of F. A. PnrstonPost, American Legion, of this place.The program includes n nog-raising,tho ilafl beinjar ci""en by'He 'ocal chp.p-tc:- of the Daughters of the Ameri-can Revolution, a street pageant', ath-letics at Hammonton Park, band con-'certs, both afternoon and evening,and free movies in the open air.

FARMS WANTEDBUYER'S WAITING

C. J. DRAUDE,Laurel Springs, N. J.

H:>o:py six-room house, with bath-tion. HUH tmvn wnN'r. t'tltli. gns. t-lre-tric lights, both 'phones installed. T\votine lots, on miun xtnvt. comprising

over Ifi.flOO sitmi'v feet of land, mostlycultivated. California privet lu-ilye. 50

fruit tr«vs. inclucliug appli s, peaches,pears, plum, cherry, qtiinpi* and prim'.'.

Nice lot of strawberries, raspberries,blackberries, Roos-'berries. rhubarb andnsparaeus. lions- en" r!y on "••<> Ht.CO x 170, the other belnff available forfurther building operations. Price.

IHOOO; $2.-(K) can remain.

I

FOUND — Dog, brosvn and white.Owner proving property can have

srame. Alllo Tomasello.

TOMATO, CABBAGE and CELERY^PLANTS

A Delightful Beverage BrewedFrom Choicest Materials/

ON SALE EVERYWHERE

Order a case delivered from

GEO. B. HARRIS

2604 Fairmount Ave., Atlantic City, II J.

PLANTS FOR SALE

100,000 Vegetable Planta, alsoGeranluniH,

,In bud and

For Sale—Big work horHo for aulecheap. No furthor use to owner. Will

aucrlfico. .Sound und kind. P. Vulorio,Washington St.,

bloom; AHtcrw, Cosmos, StarletSage und 1'hlox.

HARRY 3CHAUMUEUG,St., uccond houoc fromRending Station

For Sale—Chevrolet Huby (irnnd,good condition. 401 S. Third St.

NOW'H Your Chance—-Wo buy oldnflWflpnportt at Vfic por 100 llm. Hullthorn quick while, the, price in high,

JOS. I .KKNKIl .

Prompt Service

ANTHONY PARISI[Successor lo J. L. P"cc|

Moving and HauN'horn- HO/.-Central Boilicr .Sh<i(:

KHK I l.irbor Ko«<l

A Trlwl Solicited

A K| l l« l l< l i< l l.lnr of Krxndil t i l Srlri I I r i l l l lfin tlic Koiiilli (if July iiinl Kill) of July. Diup inuiul ny them nut.

JACOMS M U S I C ! STitIKI Hrllovur Avenue

AJI- ' of our cnluw i»'«mviM'l, mill liiHcloiiH. KroinI lie rnll'cd rlnyr or crulUtriilor l i r imkfmit - Ilino, i1 u |>calum for tlio luncheon liourIn HID layer cakuu for <lln-iuir tliuo, you will llnd they»rti innilo of Hi i l)OHt inuto-rlnl.'i I'nmll ojflTH. tho Ixintl iul !<>r, Hvvout milk nnil nI l i i i i r llmt'fl (It.

. For SaleHenry M. Phillips,

~)VR SERVICE IS SPELLEDWITH A CAPITAL "B."

Th« (hiel thine a funerml direc-tor has to etll U Service, and wh«sa ii spelled S-E-R-V-I-C-E •• w«tpell it, it b the aoit importantthing. Do you know oar under-taking Bervice—how we Uk« car*of the moat minute detail*, over-looking nothing; that will add toyou- comfort and aatitfactfon.

joam PBABCSSSi.

OF BEAUTY AND,DUE ABILITY

Finely hammered, exquisitely carved and polished—lettered„• andjlniahed according to your own taste.

600 MONUMENTS, HEAD-STONES, MARKERS, COR-NER POSTS, SILLS, ETC.,TO SELECT FROMon display In our show yardaat Ploas:intville and Camden.They represent the largest andfinest stock of memorials evercollected together by one con-cern. They have beon cut fromstandard pranltes and marblesthat were purchased beforeprices advanced to the present

•figures.—

WE SPECIALIZE ?N DESIGNING, MANUFACTURINGAND ERECTING MAUSOLEUMS, PUBLIC

AND PRIVATE MEMORIALS.

CAMDEN YARDOpp. H:irlclgh' Cemetery

RcirPhpnc 27*7

MAIN OFFICE AND YARDPlcasaiitvllle, N. J.

Opp. Atlantic City Cemeteryni'll Phone Pleasantville 1

KKPUESENTATIVESO. J. Hnmmell. Pre3., 117 N.Cornwall AVo.. Venmor, forjAtlantle City.A. L. Hammell, Vice Prea., Absecon, N. J., for Cumberland. Cape May,

Burlington. Oooim and Atlantic Counties.F. Halght, Camden, N. J.. (or Camden. Salem and Gloucester Counties.W. DuKols, Clayton. N. J., for Clayton and vicinity.H. B. Hale. Cherrlton. Va., for State ol^Virginia.

6. J. HAMMELL CO.PLEASANTVILLB, N. J.

Local Phone 1046

DOMINICK MACHISEMOVKJG AtJD HAULIM6

Local and Long Distance Work

Movings a Specialty

Rail-'oad Avenue, Hammonton, N. J.

Save Money by Buying atDi Francisco's New Market

(Basement of Anderson's Feed Store)

Hltfh Cleas Orandes, Bananas, Grape- Fruit, Butter Beans, Cabbado, Spinach.Lettuce, New Potatoes. Also Soft Drlnlso

Lot U« Sand You a

FREE COPYof

mrpeesis AnnualTho Lending

American SoodCatalog

Writ' for It TuJmy

W. Alice Burpee Co.Sood Qrowora ,

O Burpoo Bldg., Phllodolphln, Pa.

LAW OFFICESORVIUUB P. D.WITT

Rod Cron BnlUlnc *r«ry Friday a(t-•moon. Consoltatloa tno,

C«md«n offlc*, 617-10 Fodtnl 8tr**LBoth pbonu.

DEAN STANLEY RBNWICK

Attorney tnd CounMtlor-4it.Law

Aftar 3 P. M »T«ry Monday at II»m-monton Truit Company.

OUior Urnen, 611 Market St., Camdin.Hell phone.

FOK HAI.K (!IK)(| farm horuc, oo|-lur niul hnrnt-'HH, :p75. W. A. Hrowu,r.lwfiod, M. J.

JAMES J. PALMER^Heal Ktutc, I 'ire and Aiit(inu>-

tllc liiHiinince, KOIU|H, l.oaiiH andWe Hpcciall/v In

(Mt

Make Hoiiaccl\\'c pay lor

Profltahlcinaloriaj ii

l\ii(;s ( l i c i t l i l l l l y ) !lc II).K u l i l i i h l i (o ld rarpcls, rle..), Ic Hi.K u l i l i c i Hunt* and Shorn . . 'Ic H>.Ar i ' l i i 1 ( )v r rMhnr . s !Jo, 11)./ \ u l ( i Tirrn 2c Hi.TllllCM llC III. ll|)

Ma.|;a/inc:> tjlUlO cwtI inn fide i'wl

\V'i- a l - i> i l iny all luiulh of meta l n , .iiirh as l l ra«H, C 'd | ip r i , /.tinI 'cwtrj , ctr.

' I ' l ionr , l l r l l ? ? ) , or (Imp pd' i talI

JOIC I.EKNKR'Jill Wanliiii|'.t<iii Street

Otto Bethmsan

PAINTINGPAPER HANGING

DECORATING

North Third Street

'urmw. Hell ll'"'

Hanimoiiton, N. J.

AiJOOil 1*11 Y!

Italian Liberty

$!>0 liuyii $200 kind, payahl" Inyearw with C> per cent. Interont.

N. CAHHAN

H. Cramer's RestaurantSPBAR BUILDinO

Choice Oystersand Cleme .—

Served in oil Styles

Droyor'B Puro Ice CreamFamilies served with Oysten and

Ice Cream on short notice.Both Phones

"THE JACISON"Third and P«aoti

flataiaoBtoB* H. J.

Win S«rv« You-On* or a 0/0Ptrly-With £}««/• af AH Hotan

Ckolte toad Taittfullj Pnperwl

Prompt Service

THE CANDY KITCHENI''or <i««ul

Home made Candy, Icemill HoUoloua ,Siiiiiln««i

"Iweryboily kiuiw;i Hie place"

110 lltllmvne Avoinc, Hiimmunttin, N. J.

PATRONS OK •llll-'. LOCAI . "I'M .I''.IM IONI-. CO.

When the I' Ire. Ml Ring* Ttil^c Off the. Rece.ioer andLlxlcii

anil ymi w i l l lumr l - l tOMI'TI .Y wllnru lh« Ore, IiP'lrmnnn nii i i iploln Iliol nil m«ny uanin nliout In (ho cipui«lor "VVHIDUB

Itl TIIIII II'IIIKII" Ulut II ilrnwiin 111" "ilmi lit tllo I'liurnlur nlul liit«r(oro*nl l l i Il in I1'! i" t l t irvlco . I

'I'lll* In nai ioi i lnl ly Iruu wlioro iiub4<;rllM)rn nru on anuio llnoa Afl ITIr*HoilBoa,

A. J. IHDIOIl M«r. H. T. A 1. 00,

Page 9: SOUTH - Atlantic County Library · cnco puuacd over thin section TUCH-ay night, lightning ntrlking In uovernl places, while hall and a. awocplng wind:ld muoli dumago to growing cropfl,

YOU ARE INVITED

The Hammonton Chamber of Commerce in-

vites you to meet with It next Tuesday evening,

at 8 o'clock, in Odd Fellows' Hall. Come out. Size

up the organization. We need you.

HOT WATER

Servants enjoy living inhomes where there is RuudHot Water—and so 'will you

T1/"HEN you want hot" * water, simply turn on

any hot-water faucet andhave it flow piping hotinstantly—'that's whatyou get with/the1" RuudWater Heater installedin your basement orkitchen.

Hot water a-plenty, 24hours a day, for shaving,bathing, for housework,

dashes, laundry, or thesick-room at midnight,and without any waitingor scolding. Ruud HotWater is always at yourinstant command.

On wash day, the Ruudfurnishes tubs and wash-ing machine with an abun-dance of hot water andhelps get the wash donebetter and more quickly.

A i i i i F^ AUTOMATIC QAMRUUD WATER HEATER

"Hot Water AH Over the House"

Nothing to light or watch. The Ruudhuatn water instantly ay it flows through rust-proof copper coils—It's as swift and aura asit'a niinple inoperatiou. Ruud Water Hoatera«ra made in sizes for-every hoino,^

Call for a demoiiHtration of Ruud HotWater Service, or If you can't B«t la toao« the Ruud, phone and we will call andexplain ita wonderful sorvice to you.

(HAVE YOUR N A M K . AODRRSS, AN»PHONE PRINTED IN THIS Sl'AOB)

Painless Dentistry"ACTUAL FACT"

Say»DR.SHORK_iS^-5l*_s' 9"<«« Air It {, aoufbla to drill. Oil, oMwa), t»a««

>^t tteth and not hart roa the leaat bH| ala niattevf ---• la •trallan. how aore your Jaw nutr *•» a» •""•'o»«h I. achlnc br. Shor o«n rell«T« yon wltkant..... c<(n (oraet tb>b (<an .na aepend opoi

II not hart them. Thla famooa n«rv AuMawrijOtlitrr and la plaead within the reaeh or all, *U>llor. Tie reaulta of Sneet Ate Dentlltry kan

I ohm, of Ita terrora.. WH» Sweai Ate It U ataapl]I TO«.

ttpem D*

Broken Plates and LoosePlates Refitted Like New In

One Day If Necessary

Caters to Plain PeoiJe <*** *°r SUP OR DROP"«wvi.«.^*o iv JL lattl J. CVpAC cuAOAurBBoiavBARj!>*••»" oaton to the plain people, the kind tknt Abraham Iite-

aatn MM. «««d love>. b.cna.e he mnde M mnn7 of them". RlA «*»••«• **%J**m**e price* of the exelnvlre dentut. wfco tfoea work f«»••IT • Orw. Dot the nveraire man.can't pay exclnatre prlcea. Or, Ska*

^ •? exclusive practice.'bat he prefera an axtaoplTe Draotlea,nfmiul profit from mnnr people. Inatead of a anulll Draotfoa••»••• Dr. Shar koepa open evening* until H o^olook mo f~ "

w«rfc comr evening*. Hlf offlc« l» louaied at Ml* ~

Work Guaranteed 1 5 Yearsh «ka_*»»«rB»ltr I* atteottd*>M|rf*. luTSowaVar. IWT tdaflh itarKr. IhW VifHirn ,

, ma fttaittar how tv•P?J*T?L" «*«"«air and wKhon|ti iStl i."°Dr. «R?'l. _ _Kte »• ran aad ho kjtorra the ralon at <h« (cod will at ut

i cannot r*r Mare, par an« dollar and

No charge for extracting, If workIs done here.

»*• Pure gold, 22-K. fine u»ed here.GUADANTEBOlftYBARS

if i

Ao InvitationUkw to ajrtand a cengrtii taiiiatlaai tf*lH> PMala at,aaU U4 aoeept nil oSaj oTa (n« axJUuiflMr Hill

"*, wttk •»•» madarm appHanoe biaWn t» 4£«tal ••£bku hnai t* m.lntati I Uoi (MM aaf rB»iilt»nimOoaa aia»» <rraalma

PRBBEXAMINATION

Your HealthREAD THIS

KURSBIN

ATT^TOANCB

EVENINGSBELL PHOVF

OPEN SUNDAYSFROM 12 TO 4

ALL WORK GUARANTEED15 YEARS

Valve-in-Head Efficiency-

B1AMRIONTON GAS and ELECTRIC LIGHT CO

THE Buick Valve-in-Head motorcar is "juat a head" of the ordi-

nary types—"juat a head" in the de-mands of buyers who know andappreciate Buick efficiency—"justa head" in superior quality, designand workmanship, and in the confi-dence and preference of thousands ofpurchasers who have placed theirfaith in the performance of Buickproducts,'and who are protecting theirfuture motoring pleasures and busi-ness interests by placing their orderswith Buick dealers for summer andfall delivery.

Mo.ui K 44 • •lni>».'>(>«...i.i K-4n . aitmn.oo

•v.-.l.l K 40 . IJJ.1HOO

MoJ.I IC-47 . .HOO.OOMoJ-l K.4l> . (15(11.00M»a.l K no . IIMO.OO

t-'. t>, JJ. M/>i(. Al^ft./VU* /(<•'".! ^J»-JI f. 'M

WI»<-« h«ttor ilea nro l>iiilt, Buick will build them

AUTO STATION

Page 10: SOUTH - Atlantic County Library · cnco puuacd over thin section TUCH-ay night, lightning ntrlking In uovernl places, while hall and a. awocplng wind:ld muoli dumago to growing cropfl,

\

AUDIT OF THE BOOKS AND ACCOUNTS OFTHE TOWN OF HAMMONTON

FISCAt, YEAR1919

Reported by A. M. HESTON,Registered Municipal Accountant for New Jersey

MARCH. 1920Atlantic City, N. J.,

, ' March 27, 1920.

T o t h e Honorable T7~~ ~ rTown Council of Hammonton.

Pursuant to your instructions, I have made an ex-amination and audit of the books and accounts of theTown of Hammonton, including the Sinking bund,Water Commissioners, Town Clerk, Treasurer andTax Collector, for the fiscal year 1919, and submitherewith my report on said audit.

During the course of this audit the Treasurer andCollector, Mr. A. B. Davis, tendered his resignationand desired his accounts audited to the date on whichhis resignation was to take effect, namely, January31, 1920. It was therefore necessary to extend theaudit of his books to thaTTiate.

In my report of-the audit of 1918 it was shownthat Mr. Davis had a cash surplus of $156i93. Smcethen this surplus has been increased to $157.80.

^Previous to 1918 there had been no complete auditof Mr Davis' accounts. I am informed that occasion-ally, in years past, he believed-that cash belonging tothe town had been lost or misplaced. These losseshe had "made good" out of his own funds. Had therebeen a thorough audit of his accounts it might havebeen shown that there had been no cash lost, as Mr.Davis supposed. The surplus may be due to thesepayments.

On the other hand, there may have been paymentsfor taxes not credited on the duplicate. It is eertamthat the total credits on the tax duplicate do notagree with the total on the cash book. All paymentson the duplicate are properly entered on the cash

The duplicate pf 1917 has been balanced and thereremains only a small amount of 1918 taxes uncol-lected Mr. Davis has placed at the disposal of hissuccessor, Mr. G. E. Chalfant, the entire surplus of$157.80, to megt-any demands that may be made uponthe Tax Collector for taxes duly paid and not creditedon the duplicate. .

The new books of the Treasurer have been made inconformity with the State requirements. This is alsotrue of the books of the Town Clerk. This will facili-tate the work of future audits.

The Water CommisaionerjL dp not seem to have fullsupervision of the receipts of tfiaTUepartinent Thisis not the fault of the commissioners. The waterrents are collected by an agent employed by the TownCouncil and deposited in one of the banks to thecredit of the Water Department. The pass book isthe only book of account of water rents in the pos-session of the commissioners. As they are respon-sible for the successful operation of the water works]theyshould have direct supervision of the receiptsas weir as" the payments.

It is gratifying to note the excellent condition ofyour Sinking Fund. You have a surplus of $8544above the actual requirements on December 31, 1919,to meet the outstanding term bonds at maturity. Irecommend that this surplus be used for one of twopurposes: 1—Purchase and cancellation of $8000 ofyour water- bonds. 2—Cancellation of $8000 of yournewer or funding bonds, of which there are now ex-actly $8000 among the sinking fund investments. Thiswill reduce the annual interest and sinking fundcharges and simplify4he sinking fund accounts.

I take great pleasure in acknowledging the uni-form courtesy of Mr. W. R. Seely, Town Clerk; Mr.A. B. Davis, the retiring Collector and Treasurer; hissuccessor, Mr. G. E. Chalfant, and others. I alsothank the Mayor and Town Council for the privilegeof making this audit and congratulate you on the re-sults as set forth in the several financial statements.

The accounts of all the officers have been approvodto December 31, 1919.

Respectfully submitted,A. M. HESTON,

Registered Municipal Accountant of New Jersey.

TAX COLLECTOR1919

.. (A.-B. Davis, Collector- and Treasurer)Dr.

Assessors' Auditor'aReturn Report

Blocks 1-9 $1,232.94 $1,232.9410-19 4,199.48 4,199.4820-29 4,970.40 4,976.4080-39 3,366.08 3,366.0840-49 2,733.38 2,740.9860-59 6,478.88 6.478.8860-69 13,705.86 13,706.8670-7!) 5,849.88 5,849.8880-89 8,200.74 8,200.7490-99 ....... .-.-I-.-.— .-.-. . 6,893.011 5,892.64100-109 5,044.50 6,044.50110-119 2,256.98 2,266.58120-129 4,218.20 4,218.20130-139 ". 2,477.66 2,477.60140-149 902.86 982.86150-159 3,100.71 3,100,71160-169 217.21 217.21170-179 11,026.02 il.026.021HO-189 7,493.80 7,493.80190-199 3,492.36 3,492.36

$87,926.96 $87,933.01Lena Hill" included In

Property Taxca ... $869.00IX»IH DI>KH included In

Property Tnxcn 265.00 1,124.00

Current Taxes paid TownTreasurer $26,651,14

Gross Receipts Taxes paidTown Treasurer 1,378.76

Franchise Tax paid Town'Treasurer ti... 1,780.32

Second Class R. R. 'T,axes paid ~c—Town Treasurer ....;.'..... 792.46

Bank Taxes paid Town. Treas-urer 800.00

31,402.67

Net . Amount lt<ial KataloTaxiiH $

I'ermmal TaxcaPoll TllXtUI

.:i,2H6.241.22K.OO

290.00

Ciiri-i'i'tiiillii l>y Aud i to r . .

Ail<lil.ioim hy ('olloi'tor . .

$!M,007.1!)'6.72

MM

1,124.00

ifH6,H09.673,286.241,2.'IH.OO

290.00

$91,613.91

li.tit.

ToUl ilumnnil of Duplicate). .$91,61!).4'.lAliiitcmriitn hy County l lna i i l

of Tnxntlon

Net itomnnd of Dupliruto(iroim Uf<-«l|>tii, Taxi'ii $1,378.76l-'niiirhlm) 1,7110.32,S<!<-i>nd (!lmi|) I tullroail Taxi 'a . . 792.41)Hunk Tamiii 1100.00

Total DublinI.mlM l)<>lli i<| i i tmt.n Dtictmilii ' i- 31,

I'.M!)

Cr.Colln-llonn (I'm- < :<>ll<vlor 'n Caul) l lool i ) :

'

$89,770.41

$04,M! I !)•!

ll.Ollli,lit!

, . , '14: < I , M I 1 > . ( I < I

7,411.1,1,1l ' ,MH()91,491.1)11

7I)(I.V(1(1(111.4(1

AprilMay.Inn,).Inly . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Anoint>l«|)l«lilh»r(Molim-

Total at Unit payment . . .November

I 'Yanrlilim, (J roni i I trrclpliiHook aa.l tlnruiM Claim Kail>'oml Taxon ................

TIIMIDI Coiitict.'d jiu>,.i::<i.::<iTIIIKIII I l.illll.illi.nl . . . 11,01)11.(Ill

Tnliil C i f t l l l i i $!M,li:!l.lMTas.'ii of 11)11) (Colluded) vv.ii.i a j> |> i>r l lonc , l an fill

lown;Mlalt i /It-htiol TIIK (inlil County

Collivlur . IfH.IOII.IHIf i l a lo Komi Tan jialil County

Collticloi- '.],I)H(I.||7Cmmty TII it j iali l County Collet-

T.:':I,O;IOIU

Cash transferred to SchoolFund

-$64,422.71

31,003.66

$85,426.26•Property .......... $79,463.23Polls ............. 972.00

235.60

S80.674.73TAX COLLECTOR

1918(A. B. Davis, Collector and Treasurer)

Dr.Taxes of 1918:

Delinquents January 1, 1919 $16,637.09Additions by Collector:

Personal ...... .......... $5.32----- Personal •":r.T~rrrrr.~.T; ~-28

Personal ................ 6.17Poll . ................ ... . 1,00Property ............ .... 12.23Personal ................ 2.44Perspnal ................ 2.44

Cr.Collections per Cash Book ..... $16,301.32Excess Credits in Cash

Book ............... $1.16Excess Debits in Cash

Book ................ .66

28.88

$16,665.9ri

.49

Total Collections .....,..$16,301.81Abatements by County

Board $63,14Abatements by Town

Council 161.57

$16,627.02Delinquents December 31, 1919:

Real Estate $21.39Personal 76.66

_EolL. . _.^. ^_41.00Dog 1.00

138.95$16,665.9'!

NOTEThe $16,301.81 collected on account of 1918 taxes

includes $61.60 dog tax«B transferred to Surplus Rev-enue. The balance of $16,240.31 was transferred tothe General Fund. The Treasurer's books show "re-ceipts" of such taxes in the total sum of $16,241.64, 01$1.23 more than the actual "payments" of the Collec-tor. This $1.23 is included in the Treasurer's surplusof $157.50 referred to on page 2.

TAX COLLECTOR1917

(A. B. Davis, Collector and Treasurer)Delinquents January 1, 1919.. $98.20

Dr.Cr.

Abatements by Town Council. $56.16 aCollections paid to Surplus /'

Revenue 42.04

GENERAL FUNDCurrent Receipts

1919Balance January 1, 1919Delinquent Taxes, 1918:

Property $16,241.542nd Class Railroad 720.07Banks 806.00

$98.20

$2,982.12

Current Taxes:Property $25,439.84Polls 972.00Dogs 289.60 -Gross Receipts ... 1,378.76 \lFranchise l.TfJOTM. ?Second Class R. R. 792.45 ]Banks 800.01)

31,402.67Refund by Sinking

Fund Commission. $114.011Justice's Fines 66.MInterest and Costs on

Taxes; 043.1.'lInterest on' Special

Deposit 6.6:1Licenses 298.(illRontB . . . . . . . ; . . T ... 55.11(1"Water Department

on acct. of Interest 1,650.011

Transfer from Sidewalks amiKirc Apparatus Fund

Transfer from Surplus Kevenut1

by. AppropriationTnuiafor from Surpluu Kovonui'

on Acet. Debt Service

Tax Antii-lpation NotonI'.imirKency Not«Delii-icnfcy Note.SurjiliiH Uovcnuo LoanTax Kovoimt! NoU;H

2/721.82

lAai.75

6,000.00

610.0060,122.86

S7.991.00329.60

2,100.002,269.506,000.00

$03,104.97

( i U N U I t / V I , r i l N I )Current l 'u> nit-atu

I ' I I !iWurranti i of I!)H|, ruiliiumi-d m

I ' l l ! )linn of 1IMH, |inl,| I M

17,690.00

$80,794.97

$2,173.0(1

A i l i i i i n l r i t n i l l i M iTaxation antl l<'iiianrtiPlllll-B

1'oor

l)nilna({i!

$ll«4.17.'188.60173.6067.00

77.9(1357.611636.1)7

4.50

Kxpminnn of 11)111, l i ic |u<l in K ()in,i tnnillnitwiin-antn:

Adi i i ln ln l r iXlo i iTilxalIon and l' 'limii,-,>i •„::<•,-h'lr.)Il imllbI'mir,'ilr.M-ln . ' ' '

2,43(f,l8

I.2H7.74

I.244.HO4I7.7I)

1,1)00.02I, ,1111 l.llll

l-'ortiiit Kli'tui

I'arli *". . ' . ' . ' . ' . ' . ' . ' . I ' . ' . ' . ' ' . . ' .Mi-iaorlal DayIn l iu t i r i l , mi litwrmio Nol enliilm'iial on Improvi 'mmi

Nottm. ' i lnli l i iK li 'uil i j i T i i u i i - i i n i i ' i i i , , 'Ci i i i l l i iKiint I0«|iiiiimin

l l i lm.mt. on ,'l,iwiir II,.11,InIn l i i r i in t on l''lr« A |> |n i r i i l i in ,,n,|

, ' l l i l t 'Wall t l lmi,I , ,i lnnt i i l on Water llonilii

i l n f l p i i l of W n l n r II,.11,1,,I ' r ln r lp i l l of |,'|ri, A | i | i i i i i , | M , ,

nnil i l l t l t iwn l l t l l on i ln

> A|> | inrut i

7,0411.2117ii.no42.21)

(Ml).71,HIHUIH

7(1.001)77.1111

74JUM•1,111)9.64I,'.!II(UO

4110.00'.!,<IM).00

f 1,000.00H.OIIO.OO

),ii::il .1:1

Surplus Revenue — returnedloan 2,269.60ing Fund Requirements

Balance December 31, 1919

January (1920) AccountDr.

Balance from 1919January Receipts

332.991.60

Cr.January Payments per VouchersBalance paid to G. E. Chalfant, Treasurer

SEWER RENTSDr.

Rents due and unpaid January 1, 1919...Accrued rentals during 1919Non-accrued centals (1920)

Cr.Accrued rentals uncollected Dec. 31. 1919Cash collections acct. accrued rentals....Cash collections acct. non-accrued rentals

I Service Mains ...Wells

2,500.00 Pumping Station:Salaries & Wages. $3,720.00

$5,430.21 freight- 1,678.622,911.76 Coal 2,727.67

-Hauling 220.60$8,341.97 Sundries 730.41

! $9,077,30Refunds 2.60

$2,911.76 Machine Shop 76.3099.14 Commissions on Rents 631.94

Interest on Bonds 1,550,00$3,010.90.

$232.162,778.76

$3,010.90

$1,482.454,689.76

•2.33

$6,074.53

$1,105.604,931.68

2.33

11)111fan Aiilli'l|iii||iiii Niilfii

I(I,7U!.<)()'

3ash on hand December-31, 1919.

SEWER ASSESSMENTSReceipts

SinkingFund

, Commis-sion

Total Receipts of year $2,116,.51Balance from 1918 account....

$6,039.4135.12

$6,074.63

SinkingFund

Require-ments$469.62

1.09

Balance on~3ep5Blt—December^ :._31, 1919:

Hammonton Trust Co.Active Account ...$986.62

Less outstanding war-rants 71.90 •

« 914.72Hammonton Trust Company,

Time Account 1,570.97-Peoples' Bank 2.41

$12,210.83

Cash in hand* of Collector to balance ac-count

2,488.10

$14,698.93

.63

~ — $14,699.5ff

WATEjii DEPARTMENT—ContinuedThe delinquent water rents on December 81, 1919,

amounted to $6.37. On the same date there wereadvance payments of $110.86. These were distributed

I as follows:Tap No. Advance Payments Tap No. Rent in Arrears

$2,116.61

Total ReceiptsPayments

Paid to Sinking Fund CommissionReserved in Special Interest Fund for

Sinking Fund requirements

Total PaymentsUncollected -Sewer Assessments, Decem-

ber 31, 1919 -Collected _during_January. 1920

. $470.712,116.61

$2,687.22

$2,116.51

470.71

$2,587.22

$5,314.05187.50

Net amount charged against G. E.Chalfant, Treasurer .............

January (1920) AccountDr.

January collections, paid to Sinking FundCommission . ..... ........ . .........

January interest reserved for require-ments ..............................

Cr.Paid Sinking Fund Commission and Town

TreasurerWATER DEPARTMENT

Receipts

Collections by A. B. Davis, Col-lector * $12,876.33

Collection by Water Commis-sioner:

Taps $190.00Sate of Pipe 238.36Refunds 53.89Miscellaneous .... 6.80Special Service ... 856.42Meters 91.00Interest on deposit 30.44

1,466.91

$5,126.66

$187.60

37.38

$224.88

$224.88

$356.32

$14,343.24

$14,699.5628,024.57

Balance December 31, 1919

GENERAL FUNDCurrent Receipts

January 1 la 31, 1920l)r.

Net llalance for 1919Taxes of 1919 $1,404.06Interest on Taxes 17.34I'ool Uoom Liccnaea 60.00Moving Picture Liccimus 6.40t'eillur's ^License ._.....'. i.oo

Adminiutrntion1'oor

Health[,'iroIntcruut on Water Honda. . .

Current PaymentsCr.

$239.183U.1I6

644.59291.03

10.26225.00

$77,861.002,943.97

$80,794.07

$2,943.97

\

~ 1,477.80

$4,421.77

$1,466.40llalancu January 31, 1!)2():Cimli puid to Ii. K. (Jhulfunt,

Truiin., an lollowu:1'uoplo'a Hank $l,4U1.5aIlamniontoifc Tr, Co. 4I),9IIllainniontim Tr. Co. 1,244.(JOllaininonton Tr. Co. 1H.67lluiiunonton Tr. Co. 176.64

2,906.37

lanli Siirplini of A. II. Duvla, retiring Trcaa-!"•<"• •• , $167.80I liu (/ontliiKcat Kxp<in»un" worn (1) on account

if till! abduction of thu hoy. Hilly Dummy, (2) tll«•urtlururl of thu local option okctltm anil (3) Injnnc-.KIII airalniit thu Hutu Highway Dnpiirtinant for ilum-IIKII to town propurty at HniiiiiKiiitoii Luka and I'arlt

In tho local option cann tbn pivyimmU wuru nil fol-I O W H :William Klmor Hrown H4Hy 0?lohn II. Hindi ......'.'.'.'.'.'.'.! 1111 40

la th« Dannoy i-anu tinHnrlHirt C. Doughty- Hurvlcuu Mynrn' tlotf.lomnili Proiiuiir--l<!x|H)iin« and «xlra d u t y . .Proiiui

lurilldiduty

A. llurilldi Hxtra duty ............ ...A. Hurilirk KxpimnDit |ini,| . ..... ' [

A. II Duvla, Tnuin.- Caiih udvnnnxl for lioifNick OrilllU. J l tnuy tutu ...............I'liort. II. Diillior rrlntluK i)lr,-nlaiii, , . . . . ]Moynrii Auto Horvli-o Auto |ilr«. . ' . . ' . . . ' . .

A. llnnlli-li - -Knpnnni i i i and oxlra dulyNli'K Ordllld Cornirlod bill, J l t i iny . . . . . ! .

$C00.42u wuru an follown:

$•10.110111.Ill)47.4020.1030.00

I.M)7.42

110.01)

3.00

f304.il'.!•SHWMIt OI'DHATION

lalani'u . l i innuiy 1, ||)||) .li'ci-lptn of 1011):

lloutn (11)111) . . .

Mount) Cimiioctioiin

.'HuilKIII'liunhorii' I.lctmiifln

11001)I, '1(1. 1 II

llonu , 1111.01)

I),(K!IUW

'litlioantni fur Vollrliurn;WaiMiiitit of 11)111, n-tlomm>,|

la 11)11)oMiivaiionn of IDID . . ' . ' '

164190278317466461481492506507509516517526533538549670573693-714804\835

377883888898910

$5.262.252.752.766.002.255.003.601.753.607.603.607.603.SO1.753.605.001.753.00

-6r75-1,751.753.507.005.256.261.751.366.00

$110.86

385528

$3.122.26

$6.37

SIDEWALKS AND CURBS— FIRSTSECOND CONTRACTS

Receipts'Assessments •

Paid toSinking.Fund

CommissionCash receipts:

January and February.. $216.31March ................ 77.90April ................. 35.86June .................. n.3iJuly ........ •. ......... 64.80August ............... 30.09September ............ 47.32October ............... 9.40November ............. 24.40 'December ............. 21.90

AND

Int. Re-served

for S. F.Require-meats

$2.4019.023.514-B8

18.107.484.164 33

71

$803.23 $o6.92Total Assessments collected ......... 1803 23Total Interest collected ............ . . . '.

„ $909.16Payments

Paul to Sinking Fund Commission pervouchers .......................... 9803 23

Balance Reserved for Sinking Fund Re-quirements ......................... *105.92

•Transferred to "Special Account" '.,Uncollected Assessments, Dec. 31, 1919. . . . $1,024.10

SIDEWALKS AND CURDS AND FIRE_______ APPARATUS

THIRD CONTRACT ,Receipts

Cash Receipts:

_ February ..March ... .April TMayJunoJuneJuly

. . .

SeptemberOctober ...Novnmlier .Dl'fClllliiT .

Paid toSurpluu Rev.

(Principal)... $40.97... 102.47... 17.13... 107.12... 217.30... 170.12... 118.07... 61.711.., 0.22. .. 12.43. . . 23.23. .. 14.28

$888.08lotal Anniiiianinntii collectedTotal Intermit collected .'...'..

Paid toSurplus Rev.

(Interest)$1.37

4.74.90

22.1443.1030.6437.3017.94

3.864.20

.444.86

$177.48$8H8.0.1

117.4JI

,„ I'liynu'nlM1 ran.ifarruil to Hurpluu Itavuniio

Jiinuiiry (1920) AccountI)r.

Amitiammmta collcctntl $4)7 no

$1,005.40

$1,066.4(1

Inturrat

Cr.to .Surpluu H«v-

2.OIS

$60.85

$60.86

$2,l)73.4.\

TrannfoiTe<|oniw . . .

Dnctillucttiil Aiiaeiiiimontii |j,,-cumlmr .'II, 1911)

llncollnctisl Aniiuiinniri i tn Jiin-•inry 31, [!):!(> '»2Ji04.fl:iI h i m u collwll,,,,,, „„ ace,,,,,,!. ni i>uM\f |111|>r()vo.

'"••„(„ an, ,,rn,n,,o»,,ly tni,,,,furr«,l to Hur|,lun !(„"-

"intm i',1 ;rlK,;",":" vf'!"! Ai"m"r- TI»' i"i«H,ii> vi i" i f 'r,1":!!1,,1""A"'"id"1 fi""' f»'-»'«1 , ,, . „ '",' I1,"11"1. I ' l ru Appiirntiin, Hlt luwalkn:LV:!±"l:!!!'l;',..orwlllr.!!.*'i!«<'..f«»'l«i« annually.. ' "" ,'( for n ldnwi i lk

r y «„,„,,„„„,i>i)ioiif<it to . i i i r i i l i i

*«»0 for l,-nrli,,. 'l'|1(1.

Kiwiinuo.SIIUI'I.UH

tl l r t

for ' ,"

Dublin

rriianroiriiti to (HIIIO

Aili i i la lnir i i l l ini .tli'l'n and Tiuin . .

u-fi iuii i , f,,,- f i h ik

$1114 IX)lll.'UO

I i i i i i t i for ilaimiifoil t u t i l nHulli l l i iK rnnnUn . . . . . . 1 ""HroKdii Manlit i lu

l((.tiiin.«IO,,nt,,i,, l.icuim',;;Hull) of Tax I,ami.'Inln of Land t t > Ciuautui-y11 i. ... '

(•ilvnt on .'lui|,l,i,i liuvnniiuDtmonltiiDM'lairo l.lctianoa . . ,

Hoard of llnallli;iii.if of i>oii,.,, . ; ; ; ; ;Tax Knlu inpt l i inn . . . \\ ' ' ' "Hnlti of ( I ravul '. . .'•'ooil (lulu

i l )»K T«««n tn,,,,,r,,rn,H f , . . . . . old account

Third Contract—Sidewalks and Curbs(1919 1,066.46

Delinquent Taxes—1917 42.04Third Contract—Sidewalks and Curbs

(1918) 888.35

Balance from 1918 accountReturned Loan

$4,108.446,498.342,269.60

Payments

Transferred to General Fundfor Town Purposes $6,000.00

Sidewalk Bond matured (on ac-count) 610.00

Loan to General Fund 2,269.60

Balance December 81, 1919

$12,876.28

Ctedita.

Deficiency Note (Acct. WaterDept), People's Bank

Tax Revenue Notes:Sinking Fund Commission... $1,000.00Sinking Fund Commission... 1,000.00Sinking Fund Commission... 1,000.00Sinking Fund Commission... 1,000.00Sinking Fund Commission... 1,000.00

Emergency Note

$8,779.504,096.78

$12,876.28

January (1920) AccountDr.

Cash on hand January 1, 1919. $4,096.78January Receipts 127.17

Cr.$4,223.95

$4,223.95Poid-to G. E, Chalfant, Treas. . ------------SPECIAL INTEREST ACCOUNT

Interest on Sewer Assessments — 1919m -- $470.71Interest on Sewer Assessments— January,

1920 . .............................. 37.38

Total amount "Sewer" Interest to Jan-uary 31, 1920

Interest on Sidewalk and Curb -asaess-" ments

Cr.Cash Paid G. E. Chalfant; Treasurer

TEMPORARY LOANSImprovement Notes outstanding Dec. 31, 1919:

Sinking Fund Commission.. $1,700.00Sinking Fund Commission.. 5,000.00Hammonton Trust Company. 6,000.00Hammonton Trust Company. 896.00Hammonton Trust Company. 1,635.29

$15,230.29

2,100.00

5,000.00329.60

-$22,659,79-

MEMO.

Royal Electric Co. (1916)... $1.35Lewis S. Spyes (1915) 2.60Royal Electric Co. (1916)... 4.00Mra. Thomas Tell (1916) 15.00E. L. Babet (1918) 7.50

30.3671.90Water Department checks outstanding.

Total amount Town Warrants issuedprior to 1919 not presented for pay-ment .-. $102.25

SINKING FUND: Cash Account .7—

Cash on hand January 1, 1919. $10,250.91Receipts:—Sewer Assessments—.—».-~~.-$2,116.6]—.

Sidewalk Assessments 803.23Interest on Town Bonds 400.00Interest on Town Notes..... 405.53Interest on Liberty Bonds... 1,217.00Interest from Banks .... 6.88Redemption of Town Notes.. 2,930.00Town Appropriations - 6,899.64School Appropriations 666.80

Service IMBHICS 10 j-iateBenjamin CarusoAntonio MacriGeorge W. LobleyTony LongoGiuseppe Arena .John B. CaporaleCharles P. HummelSylvester SantUlb"Edwin L. CrowellWilliam H. EvansFasquale ChfUtophetCarl Rlcti

_Jame&J.-Tigne_

Disbursements:Liberty Bonds $17,628.16Town Notes , 5,000.00Refund to Town Treasurer.. 114.06

15,446.59

$25,696.60

$22,643.21

Cash Balande $3,064.29

CURRENT ACCOUNTSW. R. Seeley, City Clerk

Appropriations, Transfers, Payments and Balances to' Surplus

Town purposesHighwaysFire DepartmentPoorStreet LightingBoard of HealthParkDrainageMemorial Day :Interest on Floating Debt .........Fire Apparatus and Sidewalk Bonds

As'ments, .$510; Gen. Funds, $690Interest on General BondsEmergency Note ,j_Damage by DogsSinking Fund—Sewer Operation Sur-

plus, $2500; Gen. Funds, $4399.64.Sewer OperationPayment of BondsDeficiency in Revenue of 1918Contingent Expenses

Appro-priated

$9,000.006,000.001,600.001,500.008,000.00

800.00500.00160.00

75.00900.00

Trans. Trans- Availablefrom f erred to Fund

$350.00 $9,360.006,000.001,600.00

160.00 1,650.00$300.00 7,700.00

800.00600.00100.0076.00

s . . . 900.00

50.00

Revenue AccountObligation*

Bal.to 1919Expended Surp. Rev. Unpaid

$8,926.68 $423.42 $351.4'6,881.83 118.17

255.7050.98

656.74382.25113.32

1,244.301,699.027,743.26

417.75386.68

78.6076.00

743.68 166.32 37.50

118,22304.8259.69

644.69337.98

21.50

1,200.006,330.001,052.07

175.00

6)899.644,100.001,850.002,700.001,400.00

150.00

1,200.006,330.001,052.07

25.00

6,899.644,100.001,860.002,700.001,400.00

1,200.006,330.001,052.07

26.00

6,899.642,927.16 1,172.841,860.002,430.181,236.10

269.82163.90

$54,131.71 $600.00 $600.00 $64,131.71 $50,321.76.Deduct balances of "Sewer Operation" and "Deficiency in Revenue of 1918"

Obligations of 1919 not paidAppropriation balances for transfer to Surplus Revenue, 1920

Anticipated RealizedLicenses $160.00 $298.60Justices' Fines_._._..._.. , ' 76.00 65.60Rents 45.00 56.00

-General-Taxes .r.. -...—.-.—.-36,776.71—*48,206.26Franchise Taxes '. 1,200.00 1,780.32Gross Receipts Taxes I,37a70Book Taxes 800.00Dog Taxes 175.00 239.50Poll Taxes 750.00 972.00Second Class Railroad Taxes 600.00 792.46Interest and Cost on Taxes 400.00 043.13Surplus from Sewer Operation 600.00Sewer Rents 8,500.00 2,500.00Sidewalk and Curb, $850, and Sewer As-

sessments, JlOOO 1,850.00 1,821.75Refund from Sinking Fund Commission

(overpayment in 1918) 114.06Interest on Special Deposit 6.61)Water Dept. on acct. int. on Water Bonds 1,550.00

Surplus ••'$148.60

10.007,429.54

580.321,378.76

800.0064.50

222.00192.45243.13

114.066.53

1,550.00

$3,809.96. 1,443.66

.$2,367.30

. 1,868.97

$613.33Deficit

$19.60

$1,853.97

600.001,000.00

28.26

Surplus Ucvcnnc appropriated$46,121.71 $60,212.85

. 6,000.00 '"6,610.00 510.00

$61.121.71 $62,722.85 $13,248.89Total Surplua $13,248.89Total Dollcita 1,647.75

Not SurpluH $11,001.14"Includes $610 from Siduwalka and Curbs—Third Contract.

•Current Taxca $26,439.64Tuxes of 1918 17,760.61

$411,200.26

SINKING l''UNDTISItM IIONUS OF THU TOWN OF HAMMONTON

$1,647.76

Water llondii . .Wutur llondii . .Fundlntf IlomU:

.HoworHoworHowor

Noa...41-120. 1-20

. 1-37

. 38-77

.78-117

IntoretitRuta4%

5%

Data ofIfluue

May, 1906Jan., 1910

Nov., 1916Nov., 19U>Nov., 1016

Duto ofMaturity

May, 19115Jan., 1940

Term3030

ttel.HC.IHclHclHcl.School.SchoolHchool.School.SchoolMchoolMchool.School.MchoolMchool

Totalllondii . .Iliimln . .llondn . .Honda . .Hondit . .Hondo . .llondii . .llondii . .llondii . .lloniln . .lloiidii . .lloniln . .lloniln . .llondn . .Hondo . .

on tit1

, 234

6, 7

HI)

10. II

1211114

, 11)

:cf>iint of Wntm- and Htiwur.ii/.,'/.. AUK.. 1909

AUK., i»09AUK., iimi)AUK.. Witt

4}V/.,4',(•'/..

4'A%

,4W%

4(4%

AUK., 11109AUK., 190!)AUK., HUM)AUK., 11)01)AUK., mot)AUK., mot)AUK., toonAUK., 1909AUK., i»oi»AUK., 1901)AllK., 1DOI)

Nov.,Nov., 11)111)Nov., 1946

llondn.. . .Fob., 1920l''cl>., 11)21Kuli., 1922Kdb., 192111,'uh., 1924Koh., 1926l''«l)., 192<1l''ul>., 1927l''cl>., 19211li'iih., 1!)21>Kiili.. 11)110l''til>., l!)31li'nll., 19112Kill)., 191111Ft)l>, 11)114

2030

yrn.yru.

yra,yra.yra.

Denomi-nation

$500600

1,0001,0001,000

10 W yrn.l l j j yrn.I2V4 yru.I!IW yrn.14^ yrn.I6(i yni.IBM, yrn.171-i yrn.1H% yrn.l»!-j yrn.1!0 W yrn.:!!>} yrn.22H yrn.W> yrn.24 Mi yrn.

$1.0001,00(11,0001,0001,0001,0001,0001,0001,0001,0001,0001,0001,0001,0001,000

Total on account of Mchool Hond'iTotal Wutur nnd Huwor lloiulii

.School Homlii

Cnnli In ,'llnliliiK Fund Diicuinlior ill, 1019Invimtiuuiitti, Muwnr (FlunltnK) Honda of llaininoutonInvtintinuntn, Town NotonInvontmontii, l,iburty and Victory l.onnii

Total ICummrvon of MlnklnK Fund Due. 31. 11110Total Itflinijrcimintu of HlnkliiK Fund line. Ill, 1019

flurplun Duo. Ill, 1010

TotalIntmo$40,000

10,000

37,00040,00040,000

.$167,000$1,000

1,0001,0001,0001,0001,0001,0001,0001,0001,0001,0001,0001,0001,0001,000

. $16,000

.$1(17,001)

. Ih.OIIO

Accumula-tive Uo-

quirtimtmta$13,007.01

2,008.48

13,204.065,061.783,265.96

$38.227.:;H$1,000.00

H02.04803.7(172H.05II03.04608.04l>(>9.70hld.tll,47H.H744I>.()0424.H211117.601103.111140.44

Annual

inuntH$774.Bf

193.71

11,1611.91:1,414.44

774.H1

$0,311.78

$7(1.01)611.48112.0060.67

•I) I.HI!

•1-UII40.811

' 37.94llli.llli1111.04110.9329.02117.27

$U,i>:r.!.m$!w,227.UH

.!.m $1141UH $6,311.7(1

11^)32,01 (141.13

$46,71)0.110 $6,01)2.01$11,01)4.20

$11,001)11,70032,1)1)0 l>:t,:!li().()l)

Nnnio of llt)iulW«U,rWaterWntur

Nun.. . . 1-40. ..41-121)

1 117. . . .1111-77

..711-117

Duto ofInnilo

May, 11)01)May, 11)01)

Jan., 1010Nov., 1911)Nov., 11)11)Nov., 11)11)

riowur (Kiiiidlntc) 1117 Nov., 1911)Ht.woi (Kunilliiir) . . . . . . .1111 -77 Nov., 11)11)llowor Oi'iiiulliiK) .. . . . . .711-117 Nov, l l l l l il''li« A|)|>. anil .Ililowalli. . 1-20 Due., 11)1(1tlcliool I 111 July, 11)01)(li-llool l - l l ) Ailif., 1909Mcllool I 11 July , I D I H

I Into ofMaturity

11)11) III)ID.'II)11)40111%11)31)11)41)mi'/ ;:<i11)111 llhI!)'.!() -11411)111 '.'II

T.iti.l

,4(1,1)00

Itnlo4%4%

4(1,71)0.111)

fH,l)'M.40

A ill,mill llondn Oiitntnilillnir D"l

llontln OntntaiidliiK Jmuii" y I, 1919.llondii Until.-il di i i l i lK ( D I D

llondn OuUtainllna Dcoamhar III, 11)1 U

117,00040,00040,000I'.l.OIIO111,1X10

11,000

$'.!-i:i,ooi)

Itxitlr(6,0110

ll.dlll)

„ _ tinonl-Tnrin Mnrlnl Iniitlon

flO.OOO10,000117,00040,01)040,000

)l'J,()(IO (47,400$21111,1100

4,200

H,.1(1(1III ,000

1)001,0001,0001,000

(1001,0001,11001,000

Domenico J. PaganoAlfred J. CraigNicholas CilibertiJoseph VuottoL. C. TituaGirard A. RubertonAntonino OlivoRussell X BrownJames TuonoDominick J. BerenatoHenry H. KeyserWilliam CappuccioRichard Hand . «*

"Anthony F. BrunoCharles HaroffWilliam H. DunningMichael L. RubertonJoseph D'AgostinoFrank SahtUliJames C. DonatelloAngelo MonzoPaul AridasRoss R. ThomasClifford J. WaasRobert GrayFrank JacobsJohn It. Woolbert, Jr.Anthony G. D'AgostinoGeorge EmperJoseph ErrichettoVincent Paeaalaqua,James Applegate

Monfort's Shoe StoreSpecial for Week

of July 6thLadies' Silk Hosiery, Onyx and Everwear.

20 pi^cf.noff CHiTdren'iTIcavy ancTFine RTBBe3Stocking, 50 c. kind at 35 c.

Ladies' White Canvas High Shoes, were #3.50, now^fi.75Black Kid, Patent Kid, Tan Kid, Tan Calf, Black Calf,

Any of the $10.00 line at $8.75.

Men's Brogue, onyx, $12.00, at $8.75.Men's English Wing Tip Oxfords, $10, now $7.00.

_Men's_Caps, $2.50 andJ3,.aL$2. — -$1.50 and $2, at $1.25

Men's Black and Tan Scout Shoes,^ were $3 and $3.50, now $2.50.

I

Save wear and. tear on your children's cloth-ing and stockings.

Khaki, trimmed in blue and red,sizes 2 to 7 years old,

|'JUI>,400

Frederick EbyCharles ShyderHerbert J. BrownlecJoseph PrevitoSerera LettorioonxPulmesPA.JamesPA. Johnston, Jr.

Frank DelveccioWalter BishopPeter Marinelli" '"Charles PitalUSalvatore RiiicaGeo. D'Agostino.Charles PaganoDr. Albeit Pearson HoefferFrederick Henry HoefferEdmund FittingWilliam M. ScullinWalter T. Herbert'Miss Clara H. CunninghamE. Gordon BabcockMiss Sara A. CunninghamJoseph PaasalaquaFrank CarusoRaymond ElliottCarl Ortolf,Lawrence D. Homan,Charles A. Thibault :James W. Cottrett"Harry CottrellWalter W. GiffinNelson E. SnowD. Thos. Perone,Dominic CarusoJulius D. SeelyByron .A. DavisAntonio BerenatoJoseph GiordanoAngelo EspositoJoseph Ciliberti,Gerry V. PattenMatthew C. Romeo -Nick PalmicriRocco LlulJ. Edward Wanliiii, It.Dr. J. C. HitlerDr, W. E. McllvainoWilliam B. PhillipsJ. Lawrence DewnltFrank JacobsFrederick W. Small,Dana J. SaxtonElmer J. CruinThornton D. HooperA. Everett HooperWilliam Pa|;anoAllen K. ThompsonWrn. TomaticlloThomas R. TaylorDavid M. Acl.unriH. P. SooyPeter H. Luca.1Alfred H. McauleyFred. 1C. StroimeWealey T. SlroiwePercy 13. McMlcklngLino KubhuCharloa D. MillerAnthony Llatu «Qluioppo SantoroIClliott M. l).wi» 'Antonio AniloloroJauieu Arida , PJohn StrnciUii"Ruflis II. I lurlny

l''rank Annul, winAngelo C. FoglettoDominic MuclilniJohn L. DllprAntonio JiillaiioRoaflo LurdlOahrlel A. rlillll|>nNorman HunnlI'rcnilio MyrlckWalter 1C. DangoI.<ioii MartCJmrlc» PintoOlimcppa Rlci:lJohn MniifMildJoseph Morllm.I.owla K. IinhollHurold Myer»Clmrlca T. Dclkr.rMichael MconlimJrwcpli CopnottuWlllliini MoiuoJoceph OillloFrmik P«y:Aii<)Ctmrlon I -olioWUlmr lUklovHoward J. W«»co«l

KHAKIIn 'Blue Denham, of

best quality, ages 8 to12 years, $4.00.

From 12 to 17 years$4.76.

Men's $6.00.

Monfort's Shoe StoreHAMMONTON, N. J.

Nicholas BenedettoFrank U'AgontlnoMartin WuUuilc,William ScuflidoWhitney F. BabcockRoy II. HrownDavid N. JonesMiles L. AndrewsMichael ICapoaltoAntonio Q. UereiuloAntonino I.ucuMerle MurphyNun/to ZnniJoaoph lOnpoaitoJumc-ii I.. Huirl:)Joncpli I). ThomiMiOlio TomuHelloMciill U. IlalcKenneth O. MyrlckAnthony 1'ariniAnthony Pa^anoPaul Az/araGeorge D. CollinnHarold MCK«'K°'frcdortck ScuiuolloDavid AmatoAaron S. llunocttMatthew Arcofat'oRuaaoll 1C. MontgomeryKruncln I,, l l lrdnull

John Flcnrniohn Machlfll

Frank MerllnoAngelo F. KilblmCurnon I,. AilninnWilliam UluzeiI'rcnlUt A. MyrlckFlank M. Romeo1'etcr CostaPrank

Clmrlc. R. PattenEdward T. McNunoyChuilcn DcnucciI'Viink RomeoNorhcrt I1'. UictichCliarltu L. MawionEugene D. Cor<l«ryJohn MargllnoOinucppc lj«rin«Harry CroaatlalcEdward Ilubbert ICIvinnCliurlca W. RiderJohn I). MugucWilliam TollCliurlcH KciitlullICdwurd I rt)itl HurtICdward McGovcrnJoiicpli Algncr, Sr.Jo»c|)h Al(jnn, Jr.Cratoit HlncHVcrrill HeveraKoI'. JoHepli Uctlc, Jr.Antonio 1'cnuThoiiiaa N. LocklurtAntlioiiy Crcucori<iAlliort JannottNlcliolan Klccntlo|tno|)h C. 1'lntt)Kinnk CaclltaKlvlii KciulullCurinnlo St.lutt) il.ul^l Vuoltt)Curiuallo llcr<iii«t<>

Harry IHttlrKrank L. Thorruia 1

|ofcq>li U. CaruMiJmiictt SchunukcrCuller PlcmWlllUm V. Lyrnon . L .',

Page 11: SOUTH - Atlantic County Library · cnco puuacd over thin section TUCH-ay night, lightning ntrlking In uovernl places, while hall and a. awocplng wind:ld muoli dumago to growing cropfl,

WILLIAM DOERFKL( Successor to W. R. Tllton)

CONVEYANCING NOT£RT-PUBLir INSURANCEAgent for the following strong companies :

Camden Fire Iniurance Compnny, Camderi, N. J.Franklin Fire Insurance Co., Philadelphia. Pa.

Pennsylvania Insurance Co., Philadelphia Pa.. Niagara Fire Inaurance Co., New York, N. Y.

Continental Iniuranc* Co., Naw York, N. Y.Hartford Firs Insurance Co., Hartford Con

See the remarkable RuudWater Heater on the job,just as it would workright in your home.

1 Hot Water means plentyof hot water for bathing,

dishwashing, and laundry work;no watting, no lukewarm water

_to_annoy_.you, no limit in time orquantity—and no heat wasted. ,

A turn of any hot-water faucetand the water flows steaming hot,instantly, midnight or midday.

The Ruud Automatic GasWater Heater heats the wateras it flows through rust-proofcopper coils. The Ruud is con-trolled absolutely by the turningon or off of the hot-water faucets.

Servants like to work in homeswith a Ruud. The laundress getsher wash out earlier becausethere is plenty of hot water.

AUTOMATIC CAS

WATER HEAJEH"Hot Water All Over the lltiusc"

v Over 150,000 homes enjoyRuud Hot Water. There's a propersize Ruud to go in your base-ment or kitchen, no matter howlarge or small your home

(Jail or phono and we will showyou how simple a matter it is toadd this great home comfort.

( I IAVK YOUK NAMK, ADDIU'.Sr!,

I'KINTKD IN THIS SPACE)

C-O-O-L-E-Y-'-S

C-H-I-C-K-S

G-R-O-WSend for Booklet

ELDEN E. COOLEY

Frenchtown, N. J.

ADEQUATE SALARIESFOR TEACHERS URGED

Dr. Hlbben Sees Menace to EdU'cation in Low Wages Paid"Guardians of Our Children."

Dr. John Grler Hlbben, President 01Princeton University, has enlisted onthe side of the 13,000 New Jersejteachers who, through an educationalcampaign, are seeking to obtain a liv-ing wage tor their work. IS a letteito 'the Executive Committee of theSchool and Teacher Campaign Dr. Sib-ben saya:

-UThere Is no more Important taskconfronting as as a nation In the newworld upon which we are enteringthan that of education. The vigor andsanity of the coming generation de-pend upon the kind of training we areable to glre the youth of .today whoare to become the leaden of men to-morrow. The great menace today toeducation, and therefore to the ln-<tetrlty of our political and social life,Is the fact that our teachers In schools,nd colleges alike are so poorly paid

THE WORKWOMEN'SLoan-ami -BuiMini— Assn,

3WILL OPEN A

NEW SERIES OF STOCKAt Its July Meeting

JULY 5th, 1920

Subscriptions for shares received at any time during

July at par

WILLIAM DOERFEL, Secretary

that the profession Itself Is losing fromtime to time men and womeu whowould naturally devote their jives tosuch work. To pay our teachers a liv-ing wage and to relieve them of thedally anxieties which fret and fraythe nerves Is the first and most urgentduty of our commonwealth.

"We must remember that the teach-ers of our state are the guardians ofour sons and daughters. For a signifi-cant period In the history of our chil-dren we transfer our authority and toa certain extent our Influence to otherhands, the hands of strangers."

IIAMMONTON (,AS and fiU-CTRIC LIGHT CO.

Strange Barometer.The Araucanlans of the southern-

moat province of Chile use a crabshell as a barometer. In dry, fairweather It Is white, but when rain Isapproaching red spots appear on it,and when exqeoslve moisture b pres-ent In the' atmosphere It becomes redall over.

" HERE'S A DANDY!

LAHGE THREE-STORY framehouM. all conveniences, including bath,heat (hot air), hot and cold water, largerange, etc. Five large rooms andkit'henttte, ato larga reception hall withpanelled oak, open stairway, on firitfloor. Second floor~haa five bedroom a,"extra large, with a large clothes closetfor each room; also large up-to-dateImth, and oak italrwa? leading to thirdfloor, which la finished to Oypru* wood,natural finish. Kxtrn large roomsthroughout, with high coiling*. Firsttwo floors finished with hardwood, na-tural color finished. Large cellar undermain building, with go*d koad room.Very good shads all around the house;also large drive with cement curbing.Larg* porch around the front mid sideof ho us*. Three Urge bay windows, twoon first floor and one on the uccond,which afford plenty of light. Outoldabuilding* consist of the following ; Largetwo-story born, second floor, goodfor hay loft, first floor has wagonoiled, garage lar^c c-notigh for three earn.stalls for four head of stock, wood andeosl bins, and Ice hoiiau. Han 1000 gnl-lons water tank, with engine for pump-ing watar, and sawing wood; saws andbelts for same. lOnghio, pump, well andtank In «ncloMd building, with tnnk ele-vation to Insure water presmir*. LargoI'hlckuu hous« with cement floorand anclonod run. 1'ropvrty In ylt-u«(iMl only, twenty inllrn from (liimdcn.within Btnnu's throw of Iteudtng Mention,with good commutliiu train •crvlt-o toPhiladelphia. Only part cauh m-cdril,and !• n liargaln wlu-lh <>uniiot now berqimllfil.HUiro Mid HOUM, aV'j ACCM. |*rlc«, $aWM>

TWO HTOHY HTOUlfl, wi th counter*,nhi'lvru, tnltlra show onmn, soslvs d i f -ferent »izc«, nil rcnily to «turt in him!H««», Attnrhi-d to rcnr of Htori- In llvo-room boiinv. with hfi i lur, "ti*. I-tirjM' hayrmiin, fml Itlns, fto., for »tor«. Lnrm'chlrkcii hoiiu« wi th reiiM'iit floor, antl<-nclo«»(l pen. It i ini i lng •trciitn throut(hroar of propt-rtjr. Alao lurgo t[nrd«;nplot. Will lull thu two propui'tTeM togrth'.r for 9WHH), or i t f t«r tlm Urut ouo

nt J3KOO '|<'lvc riMHU IIOIIM, only inn- uminrti from

llui Htatloit , wi th noiiui coiivtnili'iK'i'a : lotfor i i i i inl l ganli*ii, jn-l.-.- , ,nly ifl'IMHf

HlK-riHHIl luHINd, Wltll fl'W CiUlVt'Illl'lUM-r*,

only oiMt minnrti from llrlli'vuo nvii., prlcnfiti- uiilrk «nl« ?i!-HM)

Hcvuti-rooiii liuii*o, it 11 coiivi-iili'Ut'rn,front 4tn<l rt'nr porrh, nil In «oo<l COIM!!tlon, gnu, rlrctrlo IlK'iln, I'M In, * ' ( < • , , lot170, only twi» ni|unnm frcm ntntlon ; allit<|iiitr<'it from I ho nlntlon ; only purl riuihii,..•,!.-•I. un«1 will ncll for i'l(HM'

Hl*-rxxnn IIOIIMI, with convt'iilom-.-n.Int'lmlliig Imtb^gau, <-lc«'H'l<- 11^"", ("oilnhno'o, liiwu, vlA, with liiru^ lot itUo »0>IftO, only two H<|uur<'« from (tintIon, nilIn good rondltloii. I'llr*' tilOOO

Tni r«HHH IKMIM nm[ uloiv, IHIKH lunii, 'OVIT MU nn«i of IHIIO. <i<ioi| i>uiiui, nlrnInwn niul tthiidiv 1'iojM'Ky In In 111!uotnl, only nlon^'u (liiow from 1'oninty |Mliillou, on tfoml ||ritvrllr«l ,,,iiil. I'rlr.i

• (Peter C. Costa, Prop.)' ~ -*

NOTICE-We ask you to compare prices on

our high grade Meats and Provisions

We Guarantee SatisfactionFree Auto Delivery Both Phores

Do you wake up tired ?If you feel "lazy", listless, sleepy at the wrongtime, it is a danger signal. Probably your vigoris being sapped by "self-poisoning".

Self-poisoning through constipation leads to' themost dangerous diseases. When you allow con-stipation to take. hold_of_yQut-system, .you _nre_paving the way to the whole train of serious ill-nesses which follow.

Pills, castor oil, laxative waters and salts only forceand irritate the bowels and make constipationa habit.

Nujol works on an entirely new principle.

Instead of forcing or irritating the system, it simplysoftens the food'waste. This enables the many tinymuscles in the walls of the intestines, contractingand expanding in their normal wiiy, to squeeze thefood waste along so that it pusses naturally out ofthe system.Nujol limn prcventH oonntipntioii hcoiuiio it liclpn Nulurc main-tain ciiny, Clioroudll htiwcl evacuation at regular intcrvulti — lliolicullhicnt luihit in tlic world.Nujol in ubaoliitcly Imrmlcttn uiul pIciiHiint to take. Try it.

Nulul I. ...Ill hy .11 .Irumil.l. In .c.le.l li'itllc. "ill,, I.e.n.lJ Nu|"l T,,,loM.rk. Wrilo N..H Ubiirilurir., Slulvil.ril Oil <:„. (N,-,, J.-.cy).

60 llru«dw«V. New Yuri., l.ir h.n'Mul "Thirty I'ocl .il D.inli-r".

The MvJcrn Mdkut ofTfetiltnu itn Oltl Cttmplulnt

Nujol-fbr Constipation

Twelve I'oom houiri, wllli nan, townivnli'i-, Inlli'l Iwn nlilkn, 1.11II.. i-ollnr. l.olIn lH>il4K) foot, will) |fl""> nlliulo, nmliiiiini for Ini'gn Kifiloii, IIIK! In only out'lilui-li from Hlnlloii. In a liai'itulii„,' fSHHHI

'I'vvlii IIOIIBO, tell rtiointt, town wnlnr |5(UIIO font i only two iv|uim-n »w»v. nmlr.Mlili-l-lvil with noWi'l'linr, nlno of l"l In

will ""II lor f'J'/tMlI iilno hnvn l.ull.Hn, loin In nil |inilni

t.r lh«i town, nml oul of luwn |H U-on,Hiimlni from f-'ttO l» »lo<«l rm'li.

JAMMM H. MVKHM 'M.Moml Htrcot, HaiiiiiioiKou. N. J.


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