Firemen's Circus Promises to I

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1 -m ' ' ' * J ""*- *~ ** JL *- t *"* ^~* *-" * fc#».. ^** mm,mm m^w w- mr - ^^- -.,_ "THE HERALD COVERS HLLSDALE LKE A ROOF' HLLSDALE'S ONLY NEWSPAPER Vol. V, No. 30, Whole No. 337 Hllsdale, New Jersey, Thursday, July 23, 1931 Sngle Copy, Three Cents LEGON TO HOLD \Ahsences Totalled 7513 Last Year G CONVENTON^ At School; To Have Truant Offcer Battle for County Command- erslp Wll End at Ramsey On Saturday. The Hllsdale Board of Educaton sences, whch amounted to G per cent, surprse at the large percen- ; m absentees....,,.1 ll effort s to ha made next year to tage of absentees durng,ne la«brng ths Wgll average down. Each! ; school year, when the annual report; absent pupll ^n be nvestgated by was read at the Board's meetng on; the Truant Offcer to see f the ab- Monday evenng, and took mmedate \ sence s_ bona fde. Marsala Gven Contract for Manna! Tranng Supples, Pararms Frm for Cnders. Fremen's Crcus Promses to Most Promnent Techncolor Moves of West- ; wood Conventon Wll Be One of the Attractons. acton to secure a Truant Offcer ready! Pontage last year _was Enl PARADE S KU "' L " 3 '"" k ' " " reported due to several epdemcs from ]VQ AUGUST MEETNG Hllsdale nqurer Fnds ^J^-f, f O1. tlle openng of next years sesson, cnldren's dseases, such as measles! The statstcs showed that there and chckenpox, "whch prevaled to a Taradash Leads MANY ADDED FEATURES! were, on an average, eleven pupls ab-larger extent last wnter than usual Legonnares ELxpected to At-, =ent each school day, and that there The report stated that there were x-sw f Dr. Fox Reapponted School tend From All Over County p' ere durn = the entre year 7513 ab -^- n ^n cases o outrght truancy. Physcan Clerk Gves A ctzen of Hllsdale. assumng the : Aeral Performers Wll Thrll and State. Annual Report. [ vele of "nqurng reporter." asked fve BLUE SOX DEFEATED WE DON'T THNK RUDY Hllsdale ctzens whom, they beleved Contest to be the eght most promnent per-! BY LEAGUE LEADERS'WOULD TAKE THE JQB Goes Over S. Marsala, of Hllsdale, receved the! sons n the Borough. "Mke" Tara- What a-s been the most exctng!! ntract for manual tranng supples dash wen frst place, recevng a vote! battle of any ever waged far the yearly Blue Sox went down Rudy Vallee may, the Hllsdale school next year, at from each cf the fve asked. C. V". The crcus and bazaar beng proe meetng of the Board of Educaton Shuttleworth ran second wth four mated- under the auspces of the Hllston was formed n 1920, wll only be =,-» OTOT,, termnated when the delegates of thetested game at Tappan, on Sunday a,v» nnne'prprf ttr>' on Monday evenng. The prce was; votes. ;dale Fre Department wn open wth a may not even have consaeedl^, $ 7g c4 ^ vvoodwcrk supplles; and! The complete poll s as follows: bang next Monday evenng, on Park before a large' crowd, ca-ty Posts n the County Legon start was 2-0. J as T donbne^fcconvnced he doubtless s com meed dppuulc, ^ _ g for metal su^ppes. M-. Marsala! Mtchell Taradash 5, C. V. Shuttle- ; avenue, near Broadway, accordng to : ballotng at ther ffth annual conventon, to be held n Ramsey ths Sat- - these two worth 4, H. J. Werner 3, Frank Lve- the last-mnute report of the commt- Hllsdals boys presented croonng s good for a few years to rght 3, F. J. Myers 3, W. W. Lvengood \ tee. Several new -features and added come. urday. The two asprants, Warrn B. Clarks, outht then- foes by one blow, but were The Hllsdale Board of Educaton on & of _ 13, John G. Hansen 3, George M. Yates! attractons have been secured whch m = v.»o^«..-, -..,. +Vl-=_ -h-tno- pmmt Monday evenng, after some dscusson, were awarded the contract to f,' 2, George Koeng 2, Mrs. S. Fester 1,; are creatng advance nterest and wll of Hackensack, and Harold M. Esgrau, unable to make tnen nuran,, count, decded that a ^-a^t offcer must be cnders for the new Dlayground at ~ _,,,.., _ 1, _ A.. Herng 1, \ assure a large attendance f the weaof Bogota, have been conductng ther tor runs, by cost of $326.82, and " the Broadhead, clarl «s Wald ra Durle *, Johnther s at all favorable. espectve actve campagns along len^ frendly, 1 m- a "" MuS^e Martn, ^er^layed ~ L ^ SVwnet^rTrman Gavstt Co., of Cleveland, O., got the! 3cmotterbeck 1 Harvey Herng 1, J. One bt. g f eature g a free aer a Cr_ but nevertheless, strenuous lnes, both a steady game ht * 'le=s or woman should be engaged, When contract to supply whtewood ' cus performance whch wll be staged dong"ther" best"to garner the maorty batters n lne,, allowng _one the."msfor Boar< seemed to be n a chestnut for the manual tranng class ^ W. W. Mrs. L. on the gtolmds each evenng by the of the 85 votes whch wll be cast. Wth t^a-n DeMartrm.. He had th HelCT a K nt \CTy>\*e ever the matter, Presdent George L. at a cost of $ _ The fve persons asked were two busthe mctos ;ness me11 a w - oman ore commuter,.the oerscnal followng of, both men about equal, and' wth ther respectve tune, tallow however, pan- o to see one of the hts o,,! a-«t,=rf the «rnntv>r %PV ' contract to Tr0 " Several concesson tents and booths careers n the Legon havng been al- follow m the a frst par run of -ks^resuted ; S-twout ^ ^ ^ o n e, sa> n the school was not awarded because l rd a " pub ' lc offcal " wll consttute a large part of the We rather suspect- that hs sugges- \ the two lowest bddecs ted n prce, bazaar, ncludng refreshment stands xrost parallel, t has proven dffcult ffth nnng, ton was not taken serously, as the Harry Taylor and Webster Storer both ad -entertanment tents. for many Posts to decde whom to en- Tappan came by F. Travolta. Board members all laughed out l 'submttng a prce of $145. The Park Rdge Board of Educaton SCOTTS TO MAKE An added attracton of partcular nfour scoreless nnngs,; "<-m*»- T»- «.-~-> * * > HT» terest to all fremen throughout the H O M E N A K 1 Z O N A County wll be the exhbton of mov- granted permsson for fve pupls to FREMEN BEAT COPS ent, assure themselves as beng vctor, none on base, he allowed two to walk. go to Westwood Hgh School, whose! ng pctures of the N. J. & N. Y. Vol- t re^pted^ctedty many Ba-ry then came to bat and drove a AT BASEBALL, request for Westwcod had been pre- Mr. and Mrs-. Prank Scott and son unteer Fremen's Assocaton convenand favorably passed, upon. ^ T Perms-, -~~.. ^ ^ Std Jl t who have clossv S followed flld sngle to rght centerfeld, scorng De; vously receved oy the Hllsdale Board \ Jr. nn of Ple - mont av. nue left HU>=- ton and parade, hele n Westwood on C r ttl? a nso^ty of Martm.! Can Sngle Men play baseball better ad ^ f 7 U dec?d= fe A double steal was then completed; than Marred Men? Can the Mttag S dale 011 Monday afternoon ^.^^^ by UJ car. Saturday, July 11. These pctures son was also granted to have John b.,-eachn e'^own Penn by pvenn. vot^s wll aeca r ^e 0 ' 'portray the entre rarade n detal, bv McGlnley and BaTy, and the for-!& volger team play better than the Hans enter Westwood Hgh School,!~ whsre " ^ey spent, the nght wth rela-' al - d oth 1 ' happenngs of the affar, mterest s also ottached aaacnea to 10 the me vace'mer -<u*^ scored when F.Travolta threw the;, Fremen? Can Park Rdge Fremen also Evelyn Wnston.! fve's. They planned to "lesurely con- Part ol tlle flm s shown n techncolor. Tne mm for the four County Vce Commandershps. Although only four Legonnares, 'play better than Montvae Fremen? Dr. James W. Fox was reapponted t-nue untl they reach "then- destlna- - s several hundred feet n Sensatonal feldng on. the part of! can the lades ; School Physcan for anothe- year, and ton, at Phoenx, Arz., whete they wll length, and lasts for about three quarters of an hour. The parade was one Lous J. lls, of Lyndhuo.-st; Albert K. the Tappan felders pulled De Martn t may be that the answer to these, the annual medcal report was read; make a temporary home for about a Leader, of Rutherford; Charles Mastenbrook, of Wyckoff, and Rchard, out cf several bad stuatons n the Questons wll be solved before the sum- ; and receved. An offer was receved: year. A farewell luncheon was gven d of the most colorful events ever staged second and thrd nnngs. Wth men! m er ends, f the plans now beng con-[from the Pascack Valley Nursng Ser-the home of Mrs. Scott's sster, Mrs. F.f 1 ; 11 ms secton_by any organzaton, and second u., one out s-dered are successfully carred out.! vce to supply a nurse for the school w. Mullan. of Magnola avenue, on tne movng pcture has recorded the speared Perhaps there wll not be any nrofes-at the rate of $1 per year per pupl, the Monday; also a dnner at the home of man features and most of the Com and sonal ball playng shown, but" there nurse to vst the school once a week another sster, Mrs. F. Norman, cf pames and Auxlares. Ths attracwll be a lot of fun. And after all, sn't when n sesson, and as often as specal Large avenue, on Sunday. tcn s expected to draw fremen and completed an unasssted double play. conventon floor. double that what baseball s fdr? Sunday's occason mght requre. A farewell luncheon party was also ther frends from all over Bergen and No offcal announcements have been en Mrs. Frank Scott last Ftday, by Rockland Countes to the bazaar. lades of her brdge club, at the The popularty contest s provng a Mrs. W. W. Lvengood. The complete success. There are over a of asprants. These electve offces are: presented Mrs. Scott wth a score cf boys and grls entered, and 03,0 OCO Organzaton Offcer, Fnance Offcer, s proposed to play ether smlar games: to attend Westwood. The tuton cost travelng gft. each one s workng hard to be the Tam5an Hstoran, Chaplan, Sergeant-at-Arms, wth any, local comers. quoted was $135 for the season per A large gl-oup of frends and negh- successful contestant. Several entres and a Trustee. Accordng to precedent, however, the outgong County Bergen-Eocklaad League t-te Wth three- cozen men from whem The queston of appontng a Truant, Scott's home, at the hour of ther da- towns, ncludng Park Edge, West- Standng o? Teams n the But the game of last Sunday. " 'papl..* - ~ ;bers" gathered on 'the lawn of thehave bee. reserved from- neglbfllag Gcmmander, n ths case Robert Brnn, Won Lost'to pck a team the Fremen put n lne! Offcer was dscussed at the meetng, partte, to extend good w& Jr., -of Hllsdale, wll be automatcally T 1 man 9 a 'ood outft. The Polcemen had a and t was agreed- that an offcer =afe t.lp. and happness n chosen for the Trusteeshp. ~ pp *" p 2 th; r new ants from these towns are gvng the - - havd ob to scrane together a bare nne, \ should be engaged for ss months to surroundngs. Ramsey, cosly nestled among the Fermont 8 35 Hllsdals entrants a good run for ther but both sdes settled down to busness start wth at a salary of $100 for the money. Three damond rngs wll be Englewood T Kamapo p Mountans of western Bergen Faramus 5 at- 3:15 o'clock, and for two hours andscacol year. Tle Teachers and Study gven as przes for the grls, and a bcycle, gun, fshng pole and baseball County, steeped n hstorcal l lore, l andpearl Rver Red Men 6 6 a half the pu s b,c had a free show and 1 Commttee was empowered to select LAWN PARTY HELD proud of ts tradtonal hosptalty, wll susern, 4 6S enoyed t. The score see-sawed back'the appontee. ny f AF1FQ' PTllH suts wu te presented as przes for fcc a hearty welcome ths Saturday tohllsdale.. 4 and forth several tmes, but fnally the The annual report cf the Clerk of!, l u u l L L f ^^^-^^ the boys. Mrs. E. G. Tewes has taken. the. thousands of Legonnares, Auxlary members and other vstors ex- But they won ther vctorv. and that;the fnancal standng of the school.! The lawn party held on Monday at led n creatng wdespread nterest n Haver straw 0 10 Fremen won out by a score of 37 to 24. the Board was read n detal, showng charge of the contest and has succeedpected there for the conventon. Every Seen and Heard at the Ball Game naht "uneasv lay the bodes of the! Cthe - annual reports regardng the Mrs. O. S. Hammaek's home, on the t among the young p'eople. effort has been made by the townspeople to perfect plans whch wll make The outstandng player was Elmer usual reports cf standng ccm-1 Trnty Epscopal church, was very well and bazaar s: H. C. Hansen, Char- By Benny Margols bal* players." ' school actvtes were read. ' Crest, " by the Lades' Guld of Holy The commttee handlng the crcus Te ther guests feel at home. The mem- The Blue Sox coked goad even n HcTen, who Ptched "for the Smoke: mttees wee made and the current attended., -,, Fourteen, tables x, of brdge man; Harold Frman. Oscar Harrot bers o the Ramsey Legon Posts and defeat. They outht then- rvals 6 to 5, Eaters. He s probably the only man;slls ordered pad. and pnochle and twoof dormnoss were ts Womens" Auxlary Unt have been but could not rally once. = n the two teams that has been n eon- t was voted to elmnate the Board n play- After games refreshments of Frar_ k SollwarZ Jack Mcore ar J George Seckler. unsparng of ther tdme and energy n Jh John Travolta l t and d George Tschman stant practce. meetng for the month of August and ce cream, cake and punch were served. provdng ar back from ther vacaton. Both Htched-a moton was passed gvng authorty Among the nne non-players present, sutable facltes to lavshly Chef of Polce Salmon^., nm: +an ther comrades, expected not men were n unform on Sunday. ecod ball untl he dslocated a fnger, to the proper cffculs to pay blls on Mss Mabel Smon wen the prze. An TWO MEN cnlv fvcm C2n.=vevy y -muncpahty y n ths Tappan has a beautful basebau wn e n he tradet places wth Raymond all authorzed contracts between now attractve lamp cf talan pottery was ATTACK r" " f hrf ala0 fro alf Dart= of New! feld. The nfeld s covered wth grass, Brown, at th^rd base. The latter was; and the September meetng. won by Mrs. Charles Besler; also a GRL AND ESCORT ersey Bud Hoare was agan robbed of a ht.! ' ' and neghborng r States. "!! an outstandng fgure n the only bal a Permsson was gven the House and prze n talan pottery was awarded to' ; -.,..... _ 4moh - the attract 1 on= beng offered'(ths tme Bud ht to rght feld aganst unform seen on the feld. Someone ; the hgh scorer at each table. Some Grouncs Commttee to have the brck of those attendng nduced Mesdam-ss The Blockdel development, lyng the many Legonnares, who wll come (the ropes. A lttle bt harder and the accused Salmone of havng glue on hsrfcrk of the old schcel buldng_ pantwth ther famles, s the use of pcnc ball would have gone over, glove when he put out hs left handled at- a cost not to exceed $100, after'. Unger, M. Reed, A. Brower. H. Her- " long R-cgewcod Road ust over" the grounts, where many amusements for Al. Tsdeman was another vctm]and caught a hot lner. t wasn't glue 1 whch the meetng adourned. te, B. Sper, W. Hoay, J. Hanson, G.! Westwcod Borough lne, was on Monday nght the scsne of a most brutal Decker, G. Swartwout, M. Hubachek, both chldren and grown-ups wll be who was cheated out of a ht. t was accdent, found. Event" on the day's programme; The Blue Sox had as a vstor M.'Sherdan, J. Wolf, W. Collns, J. attack by two at present unknown on Owen. Terney ("SpHder") came near! nclude an Amercan Legon Junor Sunday, Harry Hllman, a. scout for stepp-ng out cf about the only garment, GEORGE WHTE HAS Percey, H. Maynard, G. Volger. E. young men, who approached a car Baseball League game, a parade, feld) the Chcago Cubs. wore, but he stayed behnd the bat Getz, E. Dayton, E. Stewart, A. Mcparked on a deadend" street a short APPENDX OPERATON muscal meet, rfle and pstol tourna- Abe Tschman played a nce game mhke a -veteran anf showed that- he! Claehy, M. Morrson, J. Farley, J. Kn-1 dstance " from the man read, occuped ments, and, n the evenng, a dance. 'centerfeld. Abe also got two hts. possessed <."eal 'eal professonal prcfes: tmber.! month, F. Bade.:-, E. Montressor, C. Busness sessons of both the Legon Mr. and Mrs. Bobbe Tompkns were Anderson, H. Vorrath, H. Strofel, home s on South Maple avenue. Rdgewoman, whose name and the Auxlary wll be held n theseen at the game on Sunday. Ths lecal Hgh School, startng at 9 A. M. ccuple has traveled to many of the Tns electon of offcers wll take place Blue Sox games away. We need many that the spot was durng the afternoon sessons, The more loyal rooters lke them,. _., _. _.,,_ - _ -. men asked to see ncomng Legon offcers wall be off- The Blue Sox are strong n ther. JJ " ^- was rushed wth all speed toh. Penny, F. Meyers. C. Beser, H. Booth's drvers h'cense, after whch he caly nduced nto offce by Depart- ccachng department. Between 'Gabment Commander Theodore R. Creh- Tompkns and Doc. Kwat there s n tme to beat the ball as t "kork, Y ' Dover, and a specalst called frcm New utton, W. Dathe^; also the Msses A!] was told to S e out of the car to be Sfc * ]U6t. D who mmedately performed an! Rcsemund, H. Sutton, V. Rch, K' searched for a concealed weapon, and ton. of Hackensack. asssted by Depart-1 plenty of nose made. Jfelded n. cperaton at the Dover hosptal. Pause. M. Smon, M. Perc-v, M Bell = he alghted was gven a blow on the mert-v?ce Commander Fred Hauser. of' -Clnt' 1 ' Rch wannng up end Jm] Frank Bower ht out several on The operaton has been declared very and S. Vander Clute. aw whch for the tme beng rendered! successful, and Mr. Whte s reported. hm helpless. Hocoken. P.'Q Roland Cowan, of Tren-Maher catchng hm. ones, and crppled hs muscle as he out Qf a. and ten, the State Adutant. Promptly at! The Blue Sox wll play the strong threw bans m from left feld oreaty coxely yfk The men then grabbed the grl and. en the attack came m o n lu r. t., tn the" Wyckoff Best's rtual Faramus nne at Hllsdale on Sunday, over the home plats, He may not be hm The Tale of a Dog dragged her from the car. The trampled grass bears mute evdence of the he was to a crtcal condton team wll render the Amercan Legon's n ther last encounter the Sox defeated Paramus 2 to 1 n ten nnngs. take suzh long strdes that he went were The Dog Catcher caught a e'eg. ferce struggle that ensued. But the such a fast runnelr, but- he s able to as b=f (contnued on page 4J There was a large crowd on hand on arcund the bases n fne tme. He took t to the Borough Clerk fo- grl was fnally overcome and then Sunday. The Blue Sox had ther followers on hand. p When Walter Raebel could get under e v vsted Mr. nspecton. ; crmnally assaulted. The par then GARDEN CLUB VSTS a fy ball t eldn't touch the ground, Dover last Frday and agan The Clerk advsed hm to take t to fled, leavng the Rdgewood youth and. The Blue Sox weekly meetng s an but Walter has drven a tax too long! He brngs back encourag-,-^g Mayor. ^s companon practcally helpless. BEAUTFUL' ESTATE. tem cf nterest. Thngs are, as a rule, Of Mr. Wht^' 51.T-T-r1" to make the speed on long runs to get! ""^^"" m-lt'o cnr.ton. : nn \ Hs -TT.-^ Honor TT nstructed the Dcg Catch- They managed, however, to drag them sarred out nparlamentary pro- under as often as he would lke to., we ks Hllsdale o%'er two: r t o take the dog to the Poundkeeper. selves nto the car and proceed to. The Sun Dal Garden Club of Hlls- Pete: Abee took hs frst lesson nl^."^ ago wth hs wfe and famly The Poundkeepsr ted up the dog,! Rdgewocd. They went to the home, dale ene-ed a plgrmage on Tuesday We are lookng forward to a large and t cemmuncated ts sorrows to allcf the grl's parents, where a physcan. to the beautful summer estate of Mr. crowd on Sunday. 'w4lpdo U f O he E pfays CC as a^ vacaton n the West. He went as^m» of t,. D0Ter to vmt s parents and ^hhe surroandlng communty, whle all was summoned. and Mrs. Frederck T. Fsher, of Star «-,= the others rf,»«. ^«remans Haven, Conn., beyond Stamford on the n^,, to * -,_"^. be seen. " atner and mother left wth hm andthf the r.rh=r other rr,=-= doss lur.hn wthn hearna -npatnsr mnntpr: mouthed % T /estwood colce polce were notfed at 11. The score by nnngs: Mrs. Whte and daughter on the trp, tner symcathy for the lonesome one. P. M., nearly two hours after the at- Long slanc: Sound. The^trp was made ln GRL SCOUTS ENJOY Polcemen 1C ! '~~ ar - Whtes father's car.; An ths round-rcbn occurred n a tack had taken place. p A -wde search n prvate cars, luncheon beng enoyed enr-oute. Reachng ther destnaton, OUTNG ON MOUNTAN Fremen S Sx 37 on ther way back to Dover, and mw.epaty n the Pascack. Valley. s beng conducted for the assalants. 3'ust passed Youngsown when ' ' the cla members were guests of Mrs,', Fsher and her daughter, ^ who showed) t Capt. Bach, wth a group of the Hs t---~aa'-"v" around the beatsl gardens 1 Hllscale Grl Scouts, enoyed an out- on the Muncpal Feld at 10 o'elcck ourney to Dover. the; Rev. and Mrs. Phlp A. Dales and!a PLACE TO TAKE shth -v3>-n-e oak trees, gorgeous rho-ng to Haverstraw on Sunday, where!;cn Adran plan to leave next week nest Sunday mornng. Though the J";*;.-'Z~r, n * unque rock gardens wa-th^y clmbed the Hamapo Mountans fcr a vst at Pont" Pleasant, after; Fremen are all puffed -,p over ther \ te'^rtvnd. lly pools, n fact, the from 9C.D to 1400 feet hgh, reachng r\ A MfE 1 Tt~\ whch they wll on Mr. Dales' parents, ] '" s-"vt=. u t ; vctory, the Bandt Chasers are n-ot ful gandens e«r vsted bv the hghest beacon lght. They cooked! UA>lU: 1 U '>1J: and M-.-s. Wlbur F. Dales, and' Ven's ^ems Grove, stuated oa Cental dseouragec;:. They are Sure of a vctory!, Jr., who are '*;-l club" " dnner there and had sports n the EACH FRDAY EVENNG;^ vacatonng at' venue > old Tappan, Vvhch has beers f they can ndues Felce Commssane- summer cottage =. at Haven, Me.!popular for years fcr the large and "* T -«/Z p r ==;dent. Mrs. Paul Clerke. was- afternoon. n the party were Ruth Watts to take a place n the lne-up. (They plan to ret ;; 1= " ro p for ths delghtful plgrm- Bendon, Regna Hans, Louse Os- About 100 cr more young folks urn for the frst week shady pcnc grounds mantaned there, " -.XT"r,^\na all arrangements wth Mr trande", Edth Bach, Dorothy Farley, le Ccmrassoner s understood to betecced the danee on Frday ex'enn-g n : n Sentember. 1 s now featurng dancng every Frday %^ T \ ~Fsler, of Hackensack,. who]margaret Bergholtz, Mary Bergholtz, 7,']!ng to do so f Fre Chef Madsr the basement of St. John's R. C. and Saturday evenng. There s a fne 1'"^1^lv= G -.al frends, of Mrs. Clerke. 'Capt Bach and Leut. S. Grmm. Anrty ncluded, Ms.other outng s beng planned for Sun- The attendance at the frs t game was recently scraped, varnshed and waxed \ O. H. Tcrp, Fred and Marore Torp, a buldng aosso feet, and a good 6- and Counclman Perano do lkewse. church, the floor of whch has been A pa.-ty cf frends, neud-:g Mrs.! cancefloor,_1soo square feet, located n ced, ttsre were no accde: ats, no fs- perfectly for dancng. Frank Travolta Mrs. C. H. Day and Vrgna, Mrs. W. pece orchestra furnshes the musc. lss ESSe Lverght, day,august 2. t;tes.-not hard word; only fun an-3 and hs Plordans played from 8 tlldathe and Sh.-sy. of Hllsdale; Mrs. '^ Of course,,";' all *" - fcads C--,^-. of refreshments ^en- J- T. Buckley.^rs. A. ots cf t. MO T> HT nl rl,n ««^. «^3* J-.-r 7^ T_ T-_ n.- 3 TT-. u«_ TT _T. ', ^ DCtCU G.h t 1 JUr^. 13 P. M. all the new and tuneful melo- ; John Strang and Teddy, of Westwood; " a : vv r!'okeson,"lr.*art --'3ars. M. Pederson and sons Rodney aes. These delghtful evenngs wll';mrr. F. M. Xunz, of Montvale, and ^ s. and Vncent, of Brooklyn, were recent T ^ -asms arranged by guests of Mr. and Mrs. George Bosch, xcr nest Tuesday.,. ; cr.srcoasde avenue. Mr. anc M:s. Jules Swan, of Glen-' contnue, each Frday evenng. TheM'ss A. Rosemunf, of WoodcHE Lalre, Mrs. Ehner G. Tewes, of :r -x Park, are hone agan aftsr vs- young people cf the communty and eneyed a day's outng at Crestwood avenue, s vacat-oang wth tcg aroad wth relatves snce Aprl, ther r-sn& ars nvted to attend, ake on Tuesday. 'on the Jersey Shore. Conklrx relatves

2 U mean U u UUL orn fashon's clan, for -es wear t nowadays, especally ntrgued f red wth whte, and rrve at t n one way er. That s ether the s almost sure to be background or vce ntrast s acheved by Jress wth a red acket g the whte costume sores from hat and >elt and pocketbook. n seekng a gay eos- 3, the frock pctured.appy nspraton. The fashons ths dress s snberg nnon. Beng erg ths lovely sheer r cotton or slk, wool one of the new synlch are vastly popular wanng, reaay to De uonnea at a moment's notce. At any rate there should be. Costume desgners are dong a lot of quant rufflng and flouncng these days. f one he slender two ruffles placed about the hpllne n modsh pep- lum effect as seen n the pcture, are certan to acheve a youthfnl as well as chc slhouette. n some of the newest frocks from Pars whch are made of soft weaves such as the benberg nnon whch styles the frock n the pcture, the full skrt s composed of three wde flounces seamed one to another. Myrads of tny ruffles anmate some of the prettest summer, frocks whch are made of organde, nnon, georgette and other of the sheer weaves whch fashon s hghlghtng wth "so much enthusasm ths season. Not only are these dmnutve frlls of self-materal made to flare about the hemlne of That furnshes the cas1 plot. New Tork. has phones that t has be< to ssue the telephone tons. n other words, for Manhattan, one for for the Sronx, and seve company sends you th per most lkely to others are furnshed ot Kendall had, for some enced consderable dff one hook, but had flna Now t seems that -R was over and only the at, the table, the conv to feats of strength. C ner s very bg, very l strong. n dscussng tearng packs of ca: thngs n two, he offer hs pont, and materal for the demonstrato:

3 PAGE THK.EE THAT'S HOW T LOOKS To tle Mas Lookng On "THATS THE WAY.. AA...D D The recent acton n appontng George F. L-osche Specal Prosecutor o Bergen County to succeed HobaTt seems to have wdened the breach n the Republcan party. Tle stuaton las become, so serous that Harry Harper, canddate for State Senator from JBergen County, s reported to have m- plored Davd Board, Jr., to nterfere,] and prevent the removal from offce of Marn and others. Now the Sunday Bergen Leader ap- pears wth charges that Losche hmself -was responsble for engneerng the n- detment of Borg and Rosenberg, whch seems to have started the trouble, and' :s reported to have quoted the law n ustfcaton of the ndctment, so con- - vncngly, that one of the members of the Grand Jury voted for the ndct- :ment because of the eloquent pleadng of Losehe. All of whch mates the forthcomng November electons nterestng, wth the Democrats wearng a bg smle. There s a father amusng story on "the subect floatng around the vcnty of Westwcod. t seems that Losche recently sgned a warrant for a rad on Torno's, n Emerson, and when pressure, was brought to bear to have the warrant annuled wth the assurance that there was no lquor en the Torno premses, Losche s sad to have repled that he knew there was because he :hmself had had (t served. The propretor, n tellng the story, declares] that Losche, when he was Judge of the; Sxth Dstrct Court n Westwood, was n the habt of dnng durng the noon! recess wth Sergeant-at-Arms A." A.. Kleen and Clerk of Court Peter Grande, and that whte wne was the favorte 'beverage. t was Shakespeare who sad, "Con- sstency, thor art a ewel," and there! was no such thng as prohbton n hs day. A story on the subect of the Press- cutor appeared n the nterbtfro Bevew of July 10, under ths headng: "News' Story "of Proposed Clean-out n -Pros- \ ecutor's Offce a Dream." The follow- r ng week, July 17, the paper calmed; ths headng over the story on the; same subect: "Ousted by Losche,; Marn s Defant." Ths week we Wok for a headng lke ths: "When Dreams 'Come Truel" * * * No explanaton has been gven by Losche for the ouster cf Marn, but: we suspect t was because hs name sounded too much lke what used to ;.. oe a very popular cocktal. Durng the frst sx months of ths; year the Lyndhurst Chamber of Commerce dstrbuted free over 23,000 bottles of mlk for babes of famles n stratened crcumstances, through lack f employment. The servace cost the organzaton close to $3000. but t s a good nvestment, we would sa,- and a -fne lesson m humamtaramsm. Joseph Kerkman, of Paterson, at?! "tempted to commt sucde several days; ago n Glen Rock, by chokng hmself wth a pece of strng. He was found on the ground n a sem-conscous; state, and taken.to polce headquarters,; where t was found he was n a half-' starved condton. He had not been able to fnd work, he sad, and became; despondent. nvestgaton revealed the : zfact that the man orgnally came from ; Holland, and that he entered Amerca; llegally. f he s convcted of a su- > cde attempt charge, he wll be de-; ported. "Treapers Are Forever When Ralph Martnell, of East Pat- ' erson, was fnally overtaken, after re-; fusng to stop when a polceman blew hs whstle, he gave the excuse that he; thought the whstle he heard was from: hs motor. When he was asked whyhe dd not stop when he saw the polce- ; man wave hm over to the curb, he - sad he thought the cop was wavng to the grls n the rumble seat. Hs ms- ; takes cost hm $7 and costs. ; " * * =* : ' 1 Davd Ortmann, who suffered a bro- ken back eght years ago through an; accdent., recently traveled nearly 40G0 mles to come to the Hasbrouck Heghts!.Hosptal, where he expects to be cured; through a specal operaton. He came from Oregon to Hasbrouck Heghts! after learnng of tle fame of Dr. Carl Keppler. of Newark, who s handlng the case.! Bergen County had fewer marrages and more dvorces h 1930 than n the prevous yea]: 1, accordng to the offcal fgures ust released by the Bureau of Census. Strange to say, Bergen County ' was about the only County n New Jersey that had ths stuaton. The reason t must be poltcs, that's the enly thng that s dfferent n Bergen ;County. Dd vou know there s a wax on n TSfew Jersey and the Metropoltan area? ""Nether dd we untl we read the news] releases torn army headquarters, "Don't be alarmed, however, as t s! -only one of those theoretcal wars. The latest rencrts from the "front" assure us that the coast of New Jersey s stll secure from the STSTV York onslaught. E:::-ly records.!" As::: M:r.:.;r testfy' to tho uxe of ".-,'.-: -; ; :;:u! p'rass for c;r: ;. ;r::r MJSS.:,-:-L-3. :::;l t.3 'c:tsun- b'o lo-l.-l-cv? \'.:a~ :;'.::\\~'-'S w;>rs pro- vl^' fry.- >;;a! :-.-.;?. r ":;-» :?::"!v^s for svr:u:or.-.; n.':; :..-:.: -J ls:::;>!cs and f?c(! <; nv.-s--, v.-'.' n"r:'- L r paces Kc::t:;:n:"d );;;!!:c ::r_:;:";'.:^ oflnflfl rworp o: 1.: ;;,' \~'.[-^'.[:n' ':::t hlr,ls were ratal c:::\> of. T::C.,\:"?v~."V.r ndans "Wore kr^rr,-;] to ]l'.".r." ;"V.r:!s on reos for p:'-:'r> r-::;:'; 1 -;-., _::.! o;:c-r nssct- von:::n! '.: :':-. Germany Honors "Motorzed" Solders VEW of the massve memoral whch has ust been unveled n Berln A n honor of the troops of motorzed devces, such as tanks, autos, motor cycles, etc., who lost ther lves n acton durng the World war. TKorxdoxCW T A Wolverne s very smart, A fact "whch no one can deny. A pty 'ts hs nmble wts n better ways he does not try. WHAT GLUTTON DD T S always a pty when nmble wts are used n wrong ways. Eut they often are. t s so wth Glutton the Wolverne, and t s a lucky thng for the lttle people of the Green Meadows and the Green Forest that he lves only n the Great Woods of the Far Xorth. Otherwse they would have far more troubles than they do now, and goodness knows they have enough as t s. As Buster Bear sad, Glutton s very smart, and Buster's eyes twnkled as ryng to Catch You Who Wear Fur Coats." he prenared to lsten to what Honker the Goose had to tell hm about Glutton. You know Honker had stopped ust for the nght n the Pond of Paddy Beaver, deep n the Green Forest, and was full of news from the Far Xorth, from whch he had ust come, "Xou know those trappers who are forever tryng to catch you people who wear fur coats," began Honker. " should say do!" growled Buster Bear n hs deep grumbly-rumhly voce. " never could understand why these men folks can't he content wth ther own coats nstead of tryng to steal ours." Honker chuckled. "'ve always sad that a coat of feathers was better than a coat of fur. They never try to trap me." "No, but they try to shoot you to eat, and that s ust as bad," growled Buster. Honker stopped chucklng, "That's HGH WA Y CHATTER By J. HARTLEY ROBNSON UNDERGROUND NOVELTES By a queer twst of fate, we. announced at a gatherng of frends that we were gong to wrte about- ""Underground Noveltes" for the latest column. A bt of exctement was stfcred when one asked ust what these thngs 'mght be, and 1 we repled, "Caskets." t made a frvolous oke, and v. r e laughed uproarously. We got the dea at a theatre. One wse-crackng clown n the show was n that knd of novelty busness. And t certanly s novel. t only happens to you once. * * * * Other monstrostdes also come under the head of underground noveltes. Among these we fnd bugs, subways, tunnels (whch you -go through, not uncer), and water, gas and sewer ppes. But caskets take the cake, as our ancestors were wont to say. Perhaps we should speak reverently of the dead. They do not walk the! lghter sde of lfe. n fact, they do! not walk at all. They are drven over the hghway,] } lfeless, motonless, n gloomy vehcles and sunk n sx-foot shafts, to be cov- ered by drt and a few twgs of wlted flowers. And then, a novelty no longer, ust a, spot where one ponts and says,! ' "There he les.". Cheer up, good folk, they are on ther way to a better lfe. **,* ' So we'll leave that part put of the pcture. Our ob s to burlesque underground noveltes. ncdentally, they are Held together by coffn nals, those round! whte cgs, whch, f strung from one! enc to another, would reach to the northern lghts, va Passac and Ho- boken. Dd 3'ou ever vst a eomque opera? One where the death of Caesar s portrayed, fdr 'nstance? Where they stab the old gent to smthereens, and then set hm on an underground novelty, decorated wth olves and rose bushes. true," he admtted. "'ve been won- { " * * * * - derng f t s qute safe for me here." To be a bt more modern. Dd you "Perfectly safe, for tonght any- ever read the paoers when they gve! way," growled Buster. "Kow what [ the value of the gangster's casket?! was t you saw Glutton do?" (Ffteen and ffty'grand (thousand to; "Well," began Honker once more you). These novel noveltes cause the "a lttle whle before left my sum- undertakers plenty of perspraton. A mer home n the Far North "one of c "P le of tons > m re r less > l' those trapper-men came to lve on the o l -fella. _. shore of the lake where lved and.. More ***»* dertakers who sell; bult a queer lttle house there. He these underground noveltes. You can; buy them n all shapes and szes. Gold ; made t out of logs and put a roof of bars_ s lver bars, wooden bars, ad, we 1 bark on t. When he had fnshed that supposet steel bars. Ths nformaton he took a lot of traps n Ms canoe all s no t authentc, because we've never; ; around the shore of that lake and hack teen on the nsde lookng out. n the woods and along the brooks that Yes, you four avd 'r-eaders, we know ; flowed nto the lake. He had ever ana ; you'd lke to see us there, but who \ evre so many traps, and t took hm wpuld keep you amused durng the days and days to set all of them. tme when we are called out?! could see hm when he, was at work - close to the shore of the lake, but The core of underground noveltes s ; never could fnd any of the traps aft<?r what we all wll be some tme, and:; d he had set them, thoueh went straght ' doa't forget t. f looks were daggers, over to the places where he had been we Presume that many of us would be; at work ust as» ^ e W left sometmes found the food he had, Look ^ ^ magaznes and left there to tempt the lttle people for, papers^ and you v m sfe veled ^p^. whom he had set the traps, but nev- c a t o n s of that narrow wooden box. er could see the traps themselves. Ha > Th en. agan when you 'must, poswas very smart, was that trapper. tfvely, make a mdnght telephone call, "Of course, told everybody whom 1 and the party at the ether end an- met, but you see, sleep at nght, so swers, ' nternatonal Casket Com-: ddn't see many. Every once n a cany," you almost feel lke puttng hm whle that trapper would go all around ^ one -! to look at hs traps and kll the poor * * * * lttle people who were caught, f they Ramblng about, as we nave seen do- ; were not already dead. Then le - n?. doesn't get you anywhere. Under- ; would set the tfeps azan and put!? 0 d noveltes do. Youre shpped to fela.! HOUSE FOR TRP PLANNED dea s to Pck Up Rockets on Way to Moon. Berln. Proposng to gve the earth a trbe of new moons, or at least, of moonlets, to serve as sort of halfway houses for a lunar rocket expedton, no less an authorty than Engneer Eudolf Nebel, head of Berln's one and only "rocket flyng feld" has outlned a aunt that would make Jules Verne seem almost unmagnatve. Though rockets are ust begnnng to be developed to the pont of success, brave sprts such as Nebel vson them already as realzng the dream of the great French scentfc romancer n las book, "From the Earth to the Moon and Round tle Moon." True, Verne's tro of heroes were shot out of a great gun amed at the earth's satellte, but that was n all lkelhood only because rockets n Jules Verne's tme were stll only a form of freworks. Here's the dea. Nebel's dea s that: Before the start of the passenger carryng lunar rockets, a number of unmanned rockets wll he fred nto the ar, wth ust the rght speed so that after the exhauston of ther man supply of fuel, theyvrh have attaned a heght of about 750 mles above the earth's surface. Then wll follow the rckets n whch rde the hardy souls who are to be the frst men on the moon. Qute casually and as a matter of course, they wll "pck up" the whole flock of prevousl' sent rockets, all of whch wll by ths tme be gravtatng around the earth, ust lke the moon tself. Well, why not? Polar explorers have ther halfway statons and ther emergency camps for supples, and the nter-planetary spaces are much, much colder than the polar regons can ever hope to be, says Herr Nebel. After the extra rockets are pcked up and clamped together lke peces of worm untng to form one bg long worm, they wll then, proceed wth the ourney moonwnrd. Hgh Ratss of Speed. Herr Nebel dd not outlne hs scheme n a sprt of est, nor on tle frst of Aprl. t s nterestng to note, however, that hs name means "fog" n German. He has, though, a number of nterestng comments to make, mportant to the xroblems of rocket flght, entrely apart from trps to any heavenly body. He vsons the probahle development of a new means of transportaton. The rocket system of propulson s able to produce hgh rates of acceleraton. Doubt has been expressed whether the human frame s able to. wthstand the pressures whch would be produced n startng and stoppng. esearches have been made whch tend to prove that the average person s able to survve a push equal to about four tmes the normal pull of gravty on hs body. Nebel clams that already wth hgh speed arplanes makng landngs wth the brakes on, the rate of slowng down las produced pressures equal to fve and ss tmes the normal drag of gravty. He says t wll not be necessary to exceed ths wth rockets. more food there. t was dreadful." ; ZE» aestmaton and there you stay.: ^raps always are dreaufu, growled Buster. Many of the old rhythmc songs. "One mornng Happened to look smack~ of un fe rgr ound noveltes; vz: shortly p-esent a memoral to the over to the shore, and there was Glut-! ^when De n Tennessee, Shp Me government to that effect, accordng to ton the Wolverne. swam over to Home C. O. D." All My Sns, All My tell hm about those traps, but he ust Sns A're Taken Away. laughed at me. Try that on your vctrala.! "Xou can't tell me anythng about Another occurrence we'll happly them," sad he n that ugly way of lsa ve out, s what happens after under- hs, ' know more about "them than ground noveltes are novel no longer. ' Guess he dd, too, We mentoned ths fact to show we; haven't forgotten the btter end. you'll ever learn.' for what do you thnk le was dong?" "What?" cred Peter (Rabbt, who was lstenng wth all hs mght. "He-was followng that trapper, all around, eatng up the food at each trap and then, pullng up the trap, leavng t where everybody could see t. There wasn't one of those traps hdden so that he couldn't fnd t and French Send Slver Plane to Presdent ADE entrely of slver, ths model of the transatlantc plane "Queston M Mark" s offered to Presdent Hoover by the French flyers, Deudonne Goste and Maurce Bellonte, as a mark of ther apprecaton for the cordal recepton gven them on tler tour of the Unted grates. Tle model was brought to Washngton from Pars by the Amercan mayors who have ust concluded a tour of France. No Part of Patrot Army.'.'.."Sknners," durng the Revolutonary war, were a predatory band, >rofe'ssn p.llper.nce to the Amercan ea'trn" 1 anl r-,r'::;s <v>"f?r neutral grccd. Tse of tle word "autocde" for the laborous term "motor vehcle fatalty" seems a good dea. The natonal pull t out wthout gettng caught n safety councl has gven ts approval! t." to the term, after a long search for Buster ehueked. "Ddn't tell you somethng sutable, and we wll now that Glutton s smart?" sad he. "'d lke to have seen that trapper when le came around the next tme." " dd," repled Honker. < t>y J. G. Llo-d.) Wren Servce Tufdersto-ras Everywhere The weather bureau says that there s no place wthout any lghtnng or electrcal storms. Surtv a~storm~ fe- ' ; curs about ones n ten years at the poles. Tokyo Doctors Jon to Oppose Brth Control Tokyo. Tokyo physcans, members of the Assocaton of Graduate Medcal Practtoners, have decded to op- pose the brth control movement and the vernacular press. Before any natonal polcy wth regard to the brth rate whch ncreases to such an extent that many observers beleve the empre wthn a few years wll be unable to support ts ncreasng populaton s adopted,! the physcans beleve the queston should be studed carefully and statstcs collected showng the nfluence of REAL MEANNG N! brth control on eugenrs and socal NEW WORD "AUTGCDE" see how the word catches on. After all, the people have the fnal say n the fashonng of the language. t took congress more than a century to adopt "The Star-Spangled Banner" for the natonal anthem, but the re- cent acton of congress has had, and wll have not the slghtest nfluence one way or the other. The ctzenry went rght on sngng the strrng old song, and to them t always las been the natonal anthem snce t frst came to popularty. Thus also wth words and phrases.! At frst glance "autocde" looks as ; though t would be easy to use n or-! dnary conversaton and D the news- papers and magaznes. We predct! for t, at least, some perod of usefulness. On the other hand, t mght suffer mutatons and emerge wtn a dfferent sgnfcance from what the safety councl now gves t. For nstance, the people may decde to call ht-and-run drvers "autocdal manacs." The word "autoede" may turn out to nclude all automoble trafflo deaths, or t may be used only to refer to those deaths n whch crmnal neglgence was nvolved. n the meantme we commend t as beng a strkng and forceful word, no matter what t may turn ont to mean. Portland Oregocan. condtons. Brth control clncs already are operated by socal welfare bureaus D the larger ctes of Japan. Petrfed Snake Pound! Westfleld, Mass. Evdence of what may have been a prehstorc rattlesnake has been found on Mount Teko. The apparently petrfed reptle appears on the face of a clff a sore of feet from the nearest footpath. Scentsts who have vewed t estmate that t was about 7 feet long and 4 nches n dameter. s Doubly Bullheaded Palo Alto, Calf. The old ad;ge that two heads are better than one was dscredted here at the dary farm of Sequera & Phllps when a Guernsey cow gave brth to a twoheaded bull calf. daho Plans to Hunt for Bg Lost Rver Bose, daho. t may be necessary to "fnd" Bg Lost rver to releve the water shortage north of Arco, daho, n the southern part of the state. n ths dstrct Bg Lost rver dsappears. Authortes are consderng the feasblty of brngng the water from the underground rver to the surface. PAGE THREE <K>O<>0<><>CHX>CK>O-CK>0<><>0<KKKKK>0: A TRAL OF. ROSES By DOUGLAS MALLOCH! E WAS only a common worker, Hd he moved from town to town, For men of hs trade are seldom made Who can ever settle down. But he rented a lttle cottage, He sprnkled a lttle lawn, And he planted a rose that blooms ana grows When the planter s up and gone. There s one of them down n Aslevlle, There s one of them up n Rome, There's a rose of red n a garden bed Of hs old Grand Eapds home. ts only a tral of roses, But t speaks of a sort of man Who wll come today and wll go us way And leave whatever he can. And many a tme wonder, f we, as we walk the years, Leave a smle behnd, or a wspe knd That the heart that needs t hears. We are only the common workers. And we can't do much, God knows. But hope we leave for the heart? that greve Some sort of a red, red rose. ( S , Douglas MaUoch.) WND Servlca. Red and-whte Strpes Ths nev.- and attractve frock s of brght red chffon wth encrusted strpes of whte chffon. The acket s of matchng lyons velvet lned throughout wth whte peau de soe to make t crsply.stff. Techncal Boss of tle 1S32 Olympc Sports Appontment of Wllam M. Henry of Los Angeles as sports-techncal drector of the 1932 Olympc games, one of the most mportant posts n the managng personnel of the nternatonal games, s announced n Los Angeles by the Olympc organzng commttee. Ths department, under Mr. Henry, wll take care of all the precse techncal preparatons for the ffteen sports n the games n consonance wth te nternatonal federatons governng those sports. t wll also have charge of stadums, audtorums, water courses and other places where the sports compettons wll be held. "Women aren't satsfed w everythng money can buy them ncv/adayc," says Knowng Nora. "They want everythng credt can buy." ' (Copyrght.) V;N-U Servce.

4 -"' :-' } " TAGS FO 1 E HHSBALE HEBA.D PAGE Entered as second-class mal matter at: Ulladale, New Jersey. EVERT THURSDAY A newspaper devoted to the nterests of the people of Hllsdale and vcnty. MlSS L-OUlSe Holzentalgr, Of Central The Herald's platform s, "A Beuer and' avenue, s away on a two weeks vaca- Better Hllsae." tort. OFFCE 7 "West Hllsdale Avenue Telephone Westwood 1102 STOEMS PRNTERS and BEOS. PUBLSHERS Address all communcatons to the Hllsdal - Herald, Hllsdale, N. J. SaserptoT Rate: $1.00 per year, payable n advance; Sngle copes 3c. To nsure nserton, tems of local news should he receved not later than Wednesday noon. Subscrbers falng- to receve the Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Bass are home agan followng a two weeks vacaton n Canada.! Servces at Hcly Trnty church ml close on Sunday," untl Sunday, Sep- tamber 6. Joseph O'Nell, of Central avenue, paper promptly through- the mals or from s enoyng a vacaton n Jersey Cty, ) ther newsdealers, are requested to notfy our offce at once. We wll greatly apprecate the wth relatves. co-operaton of our readers n notfyng us of srtls, marrages, deaths, and socal events n! Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Steele and son ther localtes. Jack, of Magnola avenue, are vaca- 'tonng at Belmar. Thursday, July 23, 1931 A a-uest of Mrs. George Bowen, of Fascack Road, s her son, Wllam Bowen, of New Ycrk Cty. LEGON TO HOLD BG CONVENTON! Mrs. C. Maclera has returned to; New Cty, after a vst wth Mrs. M.; (Kreuder. of Magnola avenue. (contnued from page 1) trbute to ther departed comrades,! George Dranele, of Glenbrook Park, Ths rtual team s consdered the best a s ngturned after a seven-weeks n New Jersey, havng been chosen last cl- u, e " on the S. S. Robnson. year to render the Legon rtual at the ~ Natonal conventon, held n Boston.! Mrs. J. A. Kayte. of Glenbrook Park, JNfo. offcal tme has been set fon the s enoyng a vst'from her daughter,! endng of the general merrymakng: ^.g f, Adams, of the Bronx. whch wll follow the serous busness! * \ of the day. Harold XJnger, of Hazelwood avenue,. Dram and bugle corps from at least s spendng a week wth Ms aunt, Mrs. eleven Legon Posts, scattered?: through-: TJ. Gambsy. of Floral Park, L.. out New Jersey, wll be entered n the *" - - parade and the publc feld musc meet wllard Wandell and George Roberge ; n the afternoon. The parade, sched-' a-e vacatonng at Stllwater wth hs tled to start at 4 o'clock from Ramsey fellow Scouts, at No-Be-Bo-Sco Camp, Hgh School, -wll be headed by local offcals, Department and County off-; Mr. and Mrs. Wllam B. Terry and; cers of the Amercan Legon, and the famly are home agan, followng a va- ; Bergen County Legon Band, under the caton wth relatves n Amesbtt.'y, leadershp of Charles Marquedant, of \ Mass. Woodrdge. Several thousand Legon-. uares and members of the Women's Mr, and Mrs. C. Galln and son Auxlares from all parts of New Jer-! Howard are vstng Mrs. Gulln's ss- sey and several nearby States, wll also \ ter, Mrs. George 6st rander, of Maple ] be n tle parade. The brllant martal \ avenue. unforms of the muscal outfts, the! war-tme regmentals of the Legon- The Hllsdale Methodst Sunday; nares, and the strkng costumes of school enoyed the annual church pc-! the Auxlares, wll make the parade (nc on Wednesday, at Crestwood Lake,\ cne of the most colorful ever held n n Allendale. Bergen Co^nty. At the concluson of! the parac.e, the drum and bugle corps; Msses Mnne and Dorothea Hen, wll march" to the local Hgh School;of Prospect Place, are entertanng a feld, where they wll compete for cousn, Mss Maron Hen, of New York przes. The latter event wll attract Cty, ths week. thousands of spectators as t s one of the most mposng mltary spectacles Mrs. Mary Crsman and brother Norpcsscle to wtness. No admsson wll ; man Chrste, of Jersey Cty, were rebe charged.! cent guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Ban ta, of Central avenue. Mrs. A. H. Beach and famly, o Colonal Boulevard, returned home en Suncay after a motor trp to Washngton wth her son Edwn. Mss Mldred Krkpatrck s teachng Bern dress desgnng and constructon at NUSS Cn Tuesday, July 21, to Mr. the Art Students Guld, n Rdgewood, and Mrs. Herbert Nuss, of Hllsdale, durne th summer months. a daughter. ; ' ~~ ' VE'tng recently wth Mr. and Mrs. Marred _ Wednesday ' 3 - w - Banta, of Central avenue, were MERKLE-DTJTKO Jt;y 1, Joseph August On Merkle." of Mrs. M. Crsman and her brother Star- - - ; ;-ana^vera'dutko, of man Chrste, of Jersey Cty.- _' Sprng Valley. ffrs. A. Meyers, Edna and Audrey,,.., Mevers, wth Mrs. E. Woederman and mproved H o=p ta! Call ; ^ Gg0rg8. spent Wednesday n Has- A new dea, n hosptal call bells: - DrDuo k Heghts, guests of Mrs. Foley. The patent pushes a button whch sgnals a nurse at a telephone swtchboard; and then, talkng nto a senng the waters along the Atlantc and Gecrge Drangls, who has been crusstve mcrophone by the lnmsle, the Pacfc Coasts aboard the S. S. Bobnpatent tells the nurse what s wanted, ' SOK for tne P ast tw0 months,-s home) the nurse's responses n tlp ton comng back va a l n tle hosptal room. How t Happened Josephne had ; pet lal, BHe. We notced that t showed sgns of buttng, but felt t would break her heart to separate them. One day she came n cryng and rubbng her back and sad : "Btle ran up behnd me and forgot to stop." Lberty Magazne. agan. Mrs. Free Hsssr, of Prospect Place, announces the openng of the H. & M. Coffee Pot and Tea Room, n the old Gardener house on Broadway, Saturday. ths Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Nuss, of Hazelwood avenue, are the proud parents of a baby grl, born Tuesday, July 21, at Hackensack Hosptal. Both mother and daughter are dong ncely. Mr. and Mrs. George M. Yates expect to leave for Arkvlle, N. Y., on Sat- Useful nformaton V:.rday, to spend a few days wth thendaughter and scn-n-law, Mr. and Mrs. Club Bore (relatng dreary fsh story) And then, after all that, the ^ U.; am Burtl0rn ' *' ho are vacatonng there. fsh got away! The Other (wshng to dodge the bore) By ove! 'd lke to know how he managed t. The Humorst. Mss Mercedes Bosehe, of Large avenue, wth a party of frends and relatves, s vacatonng for a month at Lake Mnnewoska. She also vsted an! POLYOAST HAS 8 WVES, 48 CHLDREN Gonlssan s Ugly, Bat Has a Way Wth Women- Warsaw. Leo Wedenberg, a talor by professon and a nusband by avocaton, s front-page copy for the Warsaw newspapers, and hs genus deserves even wder attenton. Although he s sxty-one years old and the owner both of a red beard and an ugly face, he has been marred eght tmes and hs offsprng number 46. When hs eghth wfe appeared before a magstrate recently n a plea for a dvorce she brought wth her fve other wres, all undvorced. to ad her cause. But she dd not consder that all were women of tender hearts and stanch attachment to her phlanderng mate. The moment Wedenberg was brought n all the former Mrs. Wedenbergs started a fght for hm. Durng the scramble Wedenberg modestly dsappeared and for all anybody knows s marryng agan. Decdes to Travel. Meantme, stores of hs escapades lengthen. Forty-three years ago VFedenberg, then a youth of eghteen, resded n Warsaw as a talor's apprentce, known among hs chums as "Red" because of hs flamng har. He marred Rebecca Prol and durng seven years of wedlock fve chldren were born. Then he dsappeared. All search, for hm was n van ard hs wfe and chldren suffered great need. Wedenberg had decded to travel. He went to Russa and after changng from tle Jewsh fath, to Hnssan orthodox, he marred a grl and begat fve chldren. After eght years of marrage n Knssa wanderlust sezed hm agan and!:e returned to Poland. On a rver boat from Warsaw to Plock he fell n love wth a Jewsh grl named Channa Zebrak. Havng- bs old papers he was marred by a rabb and wthn four ypavs four chldren blessed ths unon. Changes Fath Agan. At Lubln he met Mary Xowak. Wedenberg had to change hs fath agan. He became a Roman Catholc. There followed another marrage, aad twns. Two years later he was n Potrkow and there met Joan Slva, a member of the Marawt sect of the Catholc church, unrecognzed by the pope. Wedenberg became a Marawt and marred Joan. Fve chldren blessed ths unon. Wedenberg then went to Amerca There followed a marrage to Wchna Rozenkrans of New York. Two chldren were born and he returned hastly to Poland, a deportee. He contnued hs career through two more marrages but trpped up when he arrved n.warsaw. One of hs former wves met hm on the street. He was arrested and admtted hs gult. He gave the names of hs wves. Sx could be summoned. The Russan ancfvamerear/ ones have not been called yet The grand total resulted n eght wves and 46 chldren. Thrty-nne have been located. Lps and Eyes Tested as Keys to Character Oxford, _ England. The theory that lps and eyes are a key to vocaton and character, suggested by Professor Bettmann, the Hedelberg dermatologst, was tested at a gatherng at an Old Students' reunon at Oxford unversty. Many men dstngushed n dfferent walks of lfe vere chosen for the test. t was found that whle there was some lnk between certan features and character, the theory appeared correct only n the generalzed sense, but there was one excepton. The legal professon, t was found, had one predom- -natng facal feature the thn lp. Professor Bettman mantans that deep thnkers have the thnnest lps. Mantle Shelves to Adorn Parsh House Auburn, N. T. Two mantle shelves carved by Brgham Young, Mormon leader, wll decorate a Presbyteran?r»nt at Glen Sprngs, n - Sullvan parsh house. The mantle shelves are Value of Gold Ounce County. of marble, neatly chseled. Together The value of an ounce of pure told wth tmbers from the house n whch s fxed by law at $20,671,834. Harold. Abrams, Charles McDevtt they were placed nearly a hundred and Warren Bartlett are enoyng the years ago, they wll become a part of week at Kemah Lake, guests of Lesle the Second Presbyteran parsh house, Mead, at the summer cottage of hs now under constructon. Brgham CHURCH NOTES parents, Mr.<anc Mrs. Frank Mead, of Young's boyhood days were spent n leergen avenue. Port Byron, n the heart of the Fnger HLLSDALE M. E. CHURCH lake regon of New Tork. RPV Rev. H. H N. N smtt, ^mth Pastor! Whle playng on Saturday, Tommy, Fastor young son of Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Mul- Sunday school 9:30 A. M. hen, of Conkln avenue, accdentally Mornng servce :45 A. M.)fell on a rock and fractured Ms rght Evenng servce 7:45 P. M. shoulder blade. After an X-ray, he was strapped up tghtly, and s now qute hmself agan. CHRSTAN SCENCE CHURCH "TRUTH" wll be the subect of the Lesson-Sermon n all Churches of Chrst, Scentst, on Sunday, July.26. The Golden Text, s: "Thus sath the Lord; am returned unto Zon, and' wll dwell n the mdst of Jerusalem: and Jerusalem shall toe called a cty of truth; and the mountan of the Lord of hosts the holy mountan," (Zecharah 8:3). Among the ctatons whch comprse the Lesson-Sermon s the followng 3rom "the Bble: "And. the nhabtant shall not say, am sck; the people that dwell theren shall be forgven ther nquty," (saah 33:24). The Lesson-Sermon also ncludes the followng passage from the Chrstan Scence textbook, "Scence and Health wth Key to the Scrptures," by Mary Bafeer Edd': "Truth never made error necessary, nor devsed a law to perpetuate error. The supposed laws whch result n wearness?.nt?. dsease are not Hs Uv.v;*, for te sstnat;? and c;y ton of zrmony," (p 183}. Motto:- Vc! s ; The charmng Volga rver carres a large traffc, huge quanttes of tmber and s one of the chef m ans of transportaton n eastern Russa. The rver s held n great affecton by tl-? Russans, and they call t "Mother Volga." Tl'.e huge rafts uend to boat lurr.bsr dowa to the Caspan cea lr.v;) on them two wfc's! bult l'.(;"s?3 a \V!HM tn) pe:;p!e on bot-rd lve. T',:;; m?n <?.-> the steorng whle He v.'.oac-n U'.rM :";c»r the evokng. T:e Vfga! <)a;::t: lsve 'neon n)r(:ts~rfl n sonrr. A l;"d wth : date anl a grl, sucr^ost v/st ho vpr'e el:'!!::;!;'( - t of berros," tt-r::cs!:o r =?all>- G=S; t ':;!:.(! r:>!. a dnner u-;; Oral v;:;>n;.' to nl: ::':) ordsr for hur ;hc v; 1 :":;:? f:-t- Hunter Bros. Retan Ar Refuelng Record Washngton. The Federaton Aeranautque nternatonale of France, because of certan techncal condtons, has not approved the refuelng endurance record of Dale Jackson and Forest O'Bren, made last year near St. Lous. They stayed aloft 647 hours and 2S mnutes. Snce ther record has not been approved the offcal refuelng record s stll held by the Hunter brothers, 553 hours and 41 mnutes. B. & O. Purchases Road That Runs on Wet Days Olean, N. J. Tle "Rany Day ralroad" has been bought by the Baltmore & Oho ralroad for $50,000. The "Rany Day ralroad" operates on the Kushequa lne only on rany flays. t runs through thckly : wooded land, and fear that dangerous fres nrk lt 1 started,' resulted n n law prohbtng operaton of the ralroad eswn sn rany days. Dry Mrs. Robert A. Mack of PortersUe relates the story of a lttle cty grl payng her frst vst to a farm. Kverythng was new and novel to her but her nterest fnally centered n the pg pen where a huge mother sow had temporarly deserted.her offsprng n order to enoy a plentful luncheon of sour mlk. But tle pglets ddn't care so much about t. They wanted some attenton Themselves. They were very hungry and very tred. They lfted up ther voces and told the world so especally ther mother n no undecded fashon. "Daddy: Daddy!" called the lttle cty grl. "Come quck! All the lttle pgs need ong. They squeak.'" Phladelpha Ledger. German Never Predomnant Although there was a dscusson n tne Contnental congress n regard to he use cf the Genaan or Englsl language n the colcnes, and a mot»: was made n favcr of usng the Ger man language, the matter never carat to a vote. Only n Pennsylvana was ;le German elems nt more than a small mnorty before ::e Revoluton. Perhaps a thrd of t.'.a settlers n Pennsylvana were Ge:.nans. Although the German language perssted n the speech and n f'e press n Pennsylvana, the E-ngl.'su stock outnumbered all the others from 1760 to B. Sartor Constructon Go. nntractors g QJ^PBB W0OBCL1FF LAKE, N. J. P. O. Box 123. Tel. Westwood 155S ENTER THE! BOCC TOURNAMENT * NOW UNBEB, WAY AT THE» VLLA MARCHSO g HLLSDALE MANOR, N. J. Tel. Westwood 773 We call for and delver your clothes BEOADWAT TALORNG CO. H. TCHMAN Fne Custom Talors -, Suts Made to Order at Reasonable Prces Careful Cleanng Pressng- Neat Reparng HLLSDALE, N. J. Tel. Westwood 49 AROUND HLLSDALE Mederal Clocks nto the makng of clocks and ther cases has gone much of man's nventve and decoratve abltes. Comc ana performng clocks had, a great vogue durng the Ffteenth and Sxteenth centures. n the museum at Bnsle, Swtzerland, may stll be seen a specmen n whch the vbraton of the pendulum gradually caused a long tongue to protrude. Other clocks were made to show a whole seres of scenes, such as processons of the apostles and otber characters. Great nterest was also excted by clocks representng tbe postons of the heavenly bodes and the days of- the week and month. Repeatng clocks whch sounded the hours when a strng was pulled were przed n the days when the only method of strkng a lght at nght was wth flnt and steel. Prnted Page The bureau of standards says that n large lbrares t s customary to Baste a very thn slk fabrc over the pages, usng good muclage as the adhesve. The fabrc s lke chffon The bureau does not know of any lqud that s entrely satsfactory Varnsh would be good f t dd not penetrate the paper more n some places than n others, and thus caus a blotchy appearance. Wp.sh'n-ton Star.. BBSBSSSBSBg! te MOULLESSEAUX'S CONPECTOKERY SODA LUNCHEONETTE EREYERS CE CREAM BROADWAY, HLLSDALE Corner Park St. TZAVOLTA BROS. FRESTONE, GOODYEAR and MANSFELD TRES TRES REPARED Tel. Westwood 222 S, MARSALA & SON MOORE PANTS HARDWARE, HOUSE FURNSHNGS Frompt Delvery BROADWAY Tel. Westwood 734 Jook for Next Week's Specal REMOVAL SALE ', AA STOCK TO BE SOLD BELOW COST. GEKSTEN ^e and Ten Cent Store FRANK L, MEAD, nc. Chevrolet and Bnek Agency Atwater Kent Rados Machne Work "Courtesy and Consderaton" Broadway and Washngton Ave. Tel. Westwood 310 HLLSDALE SWEET SHOFPE Next to Post Offce BLUE MOON CE CSEAM QUALTY and SEHVCE K=ro's Role "A hero," sad H Ho, the sase of Chnatown, "s seldom a self-made man. Lke many others, he does hs duty wthout thought of fame ana fnds hmself compelled by courtesy to accept the roe conferred on hm by popular magnaton." Washngton Star. Kelpn- Others The best help s not to hear the troubles of others for them, bat to nspre them wth con rase and energy to bear ther burdens for themseves and meet the dffcultes of lfe bravely. Lord Avebury. TALOR CLEANER SERBAN WESS Suts Made to Order From $22.50 PARK STBEET HHXSDAXE Tel. Westwood 2386 John A. ScMoEterbeck Prme Meats and Potdfay BROADWAY : Phone Westwood 180 FSHNG TACKLE Ths s the bass and pckerel season and brooks and streams are beckonng to devotees of the gentle art of anglng. At every opportunty they are leavn the strenuous tasks of the work-a-day world and enoyng perods of cool relaxaton wth reel and rod. Of course, the pleasure s g r e a t l y ncreased when ust the proper equpment s used. And the proper equpment may always be found at Moullesseaux's. Rods, reels, hooks, lnes, spnners for trout and bass. We have them all n ample varety. Broadway, Cor. Park Street O AT rt TME MOTJO-OFJ J "When n Dutch Go to Hutch" Hutchson Bros. Garage West of Park HLLSDALE Garage Call, Westw-ood 52G Home Call, Park Rdge 425 GENERAL REPARNG "MEAT" ME AT John A. Schlotterbeck's BROADWAY, HLLSDALE. Tel. Westwood BLUE PLATE EVERY DAY NCLUDNG SUNDAY PASCACK VALLEY SODA SHOP Broadway HLLSDALE These Merchants Beleve n HOME TRADE for HOME PEOPLE By Water Wetlman QUALTY E. H. leddy COAL CO., nc. Tel. Westwood gg UNTED CGAR STORE (MARGOLS) Cgars, Cgarettes, Statonery HORTON'S CE CREAM Try Our Bqme Bakefl Products SPECAL FOR THE SUMMER All Knds of Cookes Vennese Cake and Pastry Shop Tel. Westwood 2194 GARRETT A. STORMS Hardware and House Furnshngs AGENT DEVOE PANTS PHLGAS SERVCE Tel. Westwood 272 J. ALZMANN. ;. (Formerly Wth BEST) RADO BARBER SHOP Lades' and Chldren's Harcuttng' a Specalty MEAD BULDNG HLLSDALE SANDWCH SHOP "OH! WHAT A SANDWCH!".BROADWAY, HLLSDALE

5 PAGE FVE HUXSDALE HERALD PAGE FVE MEETNG S HELD BY CVC GROUP Upper Montyae Assocaton Members Compare Treatment of the Two Sectons. There were about forty persons, 1 nearly half of them lades, present- at stated that the County s sharng expense of dong so n some nstances. Opnon seemed dvded on the wsdom of the Borough Councl n refusng to approve the map of the Hollander development at Chestnut Rdge Road ard Summt avenue, and opnon of members of Councl that less than 100x100 feet resdence undesrable. TRAL OF TEACHER DRAWS CROWD TO BOARD MEETNG Park Rdge people and all others who are nterested n whether or not the Board of Educaton has suffcent reaplots are gon to dsmss ts mathematcs teacher. A moton was made that Counclman Foxlee be requested to attend the next Assocaton meetng, and report what :he has ever done for the Upper Montvale secton of the Borough. A commttee was apponted to report a consttuton, and by-laws for the oron Monday evenng of last week. Presdent Thomas Lydon, who occu- ped the char, stated that the commt- tee named at the organsaton meetng had ascertaned that we gve the fg- ures" approxmately about $7417 was expended durng the past year for; School No. 2, whle only $3987 was de-1 voted to School No. 1. Tns meant a present to the lower school of over! $3300, for whch the taxpayers of the' upper secton of the Borough receved ] practcally no equvalent only one ehld ; from the upper secton attendng: School No. 2. Hydrant rental was another tem contrbuted to, but wth no return derved from the expendture for the secton. Upper Montvale s payng about 20 per cent, of the water cost, wthout recevng anythng n re- A Cresskll Mss Madge Lounsbury, wll have to wat two months to learn the outcome. The concluson of the case, or at least ts contnuaton has been postponed untl Monday evenng, September 14, when the matter wllfoeresumed at 8 o'clock. That the people are greatly nterested n the case was evdenced by the gatherng at the Hgh School buldng t on Tuesday evenng of last week. The S S tme set- for the hearng was 8 o'clock, and about one tandred ctzens st ot letted how "tckled" County offcals and outslde *** bumn^ watng untl the rcrmrf K!\,, S T J 7! M possble moment before enterng., pearance untl 9:30, wnen everyone.nments crowaed mt0 tne sclkk) lbrary. There work: ncdentallv hs own< were not enough seats ' were also at the command ol. aftw - hars had been brought ^ stm a number of people had to stand out n the corrdor. The frst wtness called was Supervsng Prncpal T. C. Morrll, who re-! affrmed hs charges aganst Mss Lounsburv. to the effect that her methmove that we enroll all students 0( of teachng was unsatsfactory, she BOARD VOTES TO SHUT DOWN SCHOOL NO. 1 tern. Mr. Lydon stated that person- o the Borough of Montvale n School was n GO ndetent, neffcent, and na51y he felt the matter should be taken No. 2, begnnng wth the openng of up wth the County Board of Taxa- our Fall term n 1931, closng the preston, n an effort at equalzaton, ether ent ungraded school known as School by rasng taxaton n the lower sec- No. 1 pendng further developments - ton of the Borough or lowerng t n lrl +:ho =ft «-^rf Qm subordnate. The man effort of Attorney Danel. Kealey, who s lewse the Supernn the school system." Ths was the moton made by School y g ton of the Borough, or lowerng t n the upper porton; or f ths.faled, by.splttng the Borough. One lady suggested more ^forma-..ton advsable before pursung the latter course, whch mght be only "ump-! ng from the fryng pan nto the fre." trustee Anstey voted agams t the mo- Hoboken, as was to prove that Mr. Trustee Robert E Smth, seconded by ["*""'." "* L: f ven a recommendaton Trustee Huntngton, and carred by to a ««*»»' "pncy n whch he had Trustees R E l ' ven nsr a S od character as a teach- J E mth and Hunlngton;«' ^ ^ months of the flng of Fresdent Lydon sad that hs commttee had found no cause of complant aganst the Borough Councl,! ton, at the Montvale Board of Educaton meetng on Tuesday evenng of x t hs present charges aganst her. There was much legal obectng, qubblng and argument, but the questonnare under dscusson was not put n evdence, and to a number of the TRUSTEES URGE LBRARY BULDNG The Board of Trustees of the Westwood Publc Lbrary submtted a de- BOOTLEGGERS CAUGHTJ The Recorder found both gulty of A DA owe um cr mr>lvtc 1 lv ds0rderl 5'' conduct, but suspended sen- 4 BARNS, HOUSE BURNED tence. Each pad $2 costs of court, Ryan clamng to do so under protest. Last Frday ther was nothng but a; The Recorder planly told the two mass of charred tmbers and a ple of that no gangster staff w"cu!d be tolerattaled explanaton of ther poston re-1 ashes, wth the carcasses of dead an:-: e( -_ n town, and further fghtm^ and gardng the erecton of a lbrary buld- ' -'" * '- " =-- "~ *' u ". -* ?.-=ng to the Mayor and Councl, at the regular meetng held 1 on Tuesday evenng. The report was referred to the buldngs only a few hours before. t mals to mark the ste n the center of; arrest wll send them to al Netr the vllage of Blauvelt, Koekland Co., : 0f t. he two nad taxl lcenses, and ~ ttey where there was a large cluster of fne were warned that they had no rght to carry passengers for hre :n competton wth concerns legally enttled to The Lbrary Trustees have advocated tred storekeeper, and conssted of a; ( 0 so _ the erecton of a lbrary buldng as house and three barns. There s also court was held n School No. 2. n scon as possble as a needed utlty m- a fourth consumed barn, only about 50 order to accommodate the large atter- Lbrary Commttee. was the property of Phlp Klee, a reprovement to the town. Ths agtaton feet away. met wth some crtcsm from those \ who feel a burden as busness condtons are stll at a standstll. The report answers these dance of nterested spectators, for The story, as learned from eye wt-! whch the usual courtroom n. Mayor that such a proect would add [nesses s to the effect that only a short Nchols" offce would have been too to the taxpayers, especally dstance away there was a suspcous smal. crtcs. The followng s the text of the but that the Board of Educaton has [ xt nowec alter.ne «c e^ - * questons asked, Mr. Morrll repled < *,. +,* cz^^ s n fa,-],, communcaton from upper Montvale ^ treated School No. 1 farly. Remnder was made that although Cvc Assocaton, protestng aganst what was consdered an unfar return School No. 1 had been bult 40 years, to t. axpayers of that secton, through. The dea that schcol moneys should be mex scll0ql) lor the proporton of tax- PeeksklL N. Y., that she graduated spent n the secton where rased s a eg pa<j by them for sc 1O0 l purposes; f r " alv " - s -^ " " lnl rv,w o -n p fallacy. The Board's contenton s that school moneys should be rsed where from Albany State Normal College n 1913, had receved her Master's degree from Columba Unversty n 1928, began teachng mathematcs at the Park._, Rdge Hgh School n September, dfference between dstrct and graded cajed attenton to"a" statementmade She sad that her methods of teachng hls d d tht th t d of td b M Mll also to the abandonment of the sehool tself, and asked that a fnal decson needed for the best nterests of the on the atter matter be arrlved at_ Borough as a whole. He spoke of the The olvc Assocaton's commttee that he dd not remember. Mss Lounsbury was tne next wtness. She stated that her home s n g schools, and sad that the trend of opnon s for graded schools. Presdent of the Board at thewere never crtczed' by Mr. Morrll. publc meetng held to consder She qualfed as an expert and the Trustee J. E. Smth, of the Buldng ] the Board's preposton to close or con- questonng dd not weaken her state- Commttee, consdered t a waste cf tnue School No. 2, as publshed h the nents. She dened that n her teachtaxpayers* money to make any further Local, of the comparatve" cost per cap-1 n she had ever scolded pupls untl ta for educaton durng the past year ] tkey became hystercal. py. outlay of money on School No. 1. t was reterated that f the school s closed t wll not be on account of.money consderatons, but for the betterment of educatonal condtons for ] school No. 2 at $67. Ths t was of the chldren n whch t appeared each schcol. n After Mss Lounsbury left the wtthat the cost rx ness stand several of her pupls were School No. 1 was placed at $123, and of called - Tnese were ones wh? are tte chldren. Asked 1 whether the chldren from _ly to be n college at the tme of the clamed, "was a "mstaken and "unfar next hearng of the case, so ther tes-' statement, and the commttee stated t \ tmony was taken m advance. These Sehool No. 1 could be absorbed nto! had fgures to prove ths. The com-1 W re John M. Scott. Carl Clayton, the grades of School No. 2 wthout ere- m=ttee's analyss showed that there was Rchard' Musson and Lous Bnov. The atrg part-tme n the mmedate fu- very lttle dfference of cost between> Questonng was amed to brng out the rare. Prncpal Stalter sad ths can be the' two schools on ths tem Ths fnd-! results whch these scholars had found done. lng was not dsputed, t beng stated that! lh ther e Uege examnatons, regard-: nqum as. to at whose request the certan tems not taken nto consder- ln S ther mathematcs. The general State snes advsng the closng of at O n before accounted for the dffer-' result was favorable to the tranng n. School l\o 1 was made, and why the ence_ Questoner? as to needs for the ths^lne gven them by Mss Louns- State has taken no further -aeton, also upper school, ' the heatng facltes' " t was not asked that c tn the statement that the; al equa porton of the school moneys Cont\ scnoo^ authortes are urgng ^ r;mr? af 1^+^.- +^^ ^-nr^ c^-*-;,,. ' tthe act on Thomas J. Stanton, member s p'e«mg the closng movement, w *ere mentoned. t was nofasked that' ** u o'clock a. 10-mnute recess was! taken for a rest, and durng ths tme be dvded between the two sectons, the counsel a^e8d to ths manner. of ' but that School No. 1 receve "a more securng the evdence of the college lberal proporton than t s now reof the bera proporton than t^'nowre- ; b y s - Then the case ^as resumed un- -Jersey Cty School Board, appearef as recevng. Repars should have been' m mdnght, the tme prevously attorney fcr Mrs. Gross ( nee L'Afr-! made ong before what lttle has: agt8ed on for thls sess:on to end. cane), who clams rght to teach n- Deen gven had tc be asked for repeat- ^bout f01 "" P ll P!l - s of Mss Lounsbury s* Montvale after a long leave of absence, edly. classes had been subpoenaed, but they, by vrtue of tenure He understood Trustee Anstey volunteered hs opnthat the school has a vacancy, n spte o n that the upper secton has a "us- a 3 ld as of the Board's advce that all contracts for school year have been nlled. tallv he nformed that Mrs. wat for ther turn to be heard untl 1 to Mrs. Gross tfable kck." a^d should have" receved September. The total number of wt- the comng; at tenton before. " sses subphoenaed for both sde was. neden- Trustee Huntngton saw a dfference sxty-three. Gross s ] of vewpomt between the Cvc Asso-! Tre Board' of Educaton conducted] enttled to pay n the past, f she sees loton "representatves "of the~bordj the case as a u d cal hearng nto the; ft to press her case, but ntmated that ed. Chldren whose ffth brthdays fall maae J of «* etl?r _ r not t s war-, she wll be satsfed f she s returned before November 1 wll be admtted to rant d m dsmssng the deendant to the teachng corps. M-. Stanton, tne school although the pres.-rbed < eacher on the pounds alleged by the pendng ths renstatement, asked per- lmt s reached on September 10. Ths f Supervsng Prncpal. f she s ds affects 8 chedren. Twelve outh'ne m l S 3 e d :t _ must be on account of the! Board s cecson, as she can clam the msscn for access to the Boa-d's records relatng to the case, whch he wll need n case an appeal has to be made to the courts. Prncpal Mss Stalter announced that school wll open on September 9, and there wll be 197 days n the cornmaps were authorzed purchased, to be; ugec: as occason requres. Attenton was called by a bank to a $700 5 per cent, school bond due n whch may be had at par and accrued nterest. The notce was re- [rght to reman under the tenure of of-! fc f she now enoys, havng been a techer here for at least three years. f the decson of the case s not sat- sfactory, the notes taken at the several! ng school year, 2 more than the past arred to""the~borough's""snkng Fund fea ss_ may be revewed.bythe State.year. At her recommendaton a new commsson, whch may purchase f t Board O EducatMn. and us decson s orgnal form report card wll be prnt- sees ft_ Pree ^g of school No. t s net yet fully pad for: that there has always been more or less frcton over school matters: that f the Board decded to close the school a restranng nuncton could be obtaned. 1 by Upper Montvale Ccc Assocaton, for. ts meetngs, untl recalled, was grant-; ed. The employment of only unmar-: ^ The of fnal dsposton n Supreme Court, decsons on legal exceptons] were rendered by Presdent Laurer, the prevous meetng, remaned on the bl er members of the Board concded! A resoluton was Dassed that the table unt a f ture meetng, the hour \ vrtth Hm Qute frequently t was Assocaton's commttee draw up a pe- beng tco u t e to consder t at ths ses- necessary for the Judge to rap for ortton requestng nformaton as to son. Transportaton bds for 25 or 30: der ',_ as * be. amj ence why School No. 1 s not gettng ts far; scno arg to School N a 2 axd p^on showng ts feeln.share of the money rased for schcol- Rdgs msll School ^ te a< vert S e( purposes, and present t to the Board fcr_ A commttee was apponted t0 o Educaton. arrange a route to be submtted to o-ereral dscusson on read cond- bdders " Jantor of School No. 1 wll be used for school purposes, and hs sal- Mss Allen, who taught n School No. 1 tons took place, n whch the Presdent stated that for the past two years the T,rT-^r ^^pfrv w 3^ f^r^y trg^ted n the expendture of road money. ary f^a at $100 per year, for whch Ths statement, dd not meet wth he s to look ^ ^ ^ general approbaton, as, whle not dsputng the amounts spent, t was urged that large quanttes of cnders were merely gvng only temporary relef, only to be washed away, leavng no permanent mprovement. t was thought that the pttng n of sectons of crushed stone year by year, thus makng a permanent-mprovement.would be a better plan. ". The Presdent advsed gong after one thng at a tme, the school matter beng the most.mportant at the present tme. One lady dsplayed a broken shoe heel to show how badly the roads are n her secton, and also suggested that they be oled to lay the dust. Obecton to work by tractors was also made. Attenton was called to the necessty of some sort of protecton at the.?an street and Chestnut Rdge crossngs on Summt avenue. Several aec- tents have taken clacs at 'thesa two pc.nts. The r.s;-d of sgns s urgent. Verbal requests have been made to the ' Borough Clerk, but no reqr.=sts for- warded tc the County, whch nssts) t::ar applcr^tous vrnxsz coma through! tr.'s Mavc' and Councl. Loss! nform"t'o: rven that the Borough has no rl't to pl~r~ ltht? or. CcuLt'v roads v:as sa'd to 3? ";3rr2 t, and t was tmes' showng ts feelngs by laughte or Chef of Polce Salmone at one tme warned the gatherng that! the courtroom would be cleared of spectators f the case was nterrupted. Attorney Kealey had three assstant! hs defence of Mss Lounsbury. An offcal court stenographer took down all of the testmony, the defendant had a stenographer takng notes of all the proceedngs, to prepare the case from, and several amateur shorthand artsts cf real practce. last year, wll be notfed to report for ant \ sev ea amareur snor-nana arubs duty at School No. 2, n September. ' made ^ood use ol tle taal as a matter The sesson lasted more than four hours, adournment comng after md-! nght. Upper Montvale was well ren- resented at the meetng. Ca-aaclty Dlrers R.'Klaton ap::c-;t.v ]^p?::<n nrgsly on whether t!s«sv.yface of tta raateral s brght or dull. l',n:v.os tv.'a are smack Jeft partly free to access of sea Old r^autcd! Sayng: The old phrase "Devl to pay and no plch hot" probably s a corrupton of the nautcal expresson "Hell's to pay," etc., "hell" n ths case be','s a porton of the toa ol a p>od absnrbars of heat tso have llg capacty for redactors..\' te n t Kn.^uoers' Htnlloo"; ^v ns or radatrn;: esnact stcc as 17. as m-r::: : hf.:r;:vor;'(l rop-'.pr. The p:-3.-;: «pvn r.-s. sr: f:r.-!):: for l-.r.r.);~vv:-d on-:"-. y r.f ;;] v nrs poor CL-h.neal ;L 5 :t!sorb- 7 lor : pmvstce!. water, n v/bcl freshly caught fsl were thrown anl thus kept nve. t. was, of coarse. ls'ly mportant that the bulkheads urouhl ^^hell" shoula be kept water-tlcrlt, and ths s clone by caukn; v.'u oahrnn and "payg:" wth hot ptch, r.s > t:o ou:er seams of a vessel. - Sttl ry am] =t us.t.'fn as f tv.'.tr tl'-rs ns t. s, r>! '. T Cor Ur.-7. s-n] -y s,.-'.r.!!y tu:r f n!:'s":!y. :: T'.U' Wrhsr:>;-.. ^ :!U:J- ::r?;l ;...J aa 3; } t un «-- SVJU '. *UUlU CJ O] :.:c:p JO 0 ;.-."::. p- ;:o al sr.-.-!o =.-J:l :,- poy.- :;:t;.;o m: y>u P33; <- : nw.a:- vou J" +u :o s s u.:o X so'afqu 3 o;u 3A01 n vew of the nterpretaton whcl seems to have been placed upon the request of the Board of Trustees of the Westwood Publc Lbrary for early acton n the matter of lbrary constructon, we feel mpelled to wrte a few words n explanaton of the Board's poston, as we seem to have been placed n a false lght before the Councl and the people of Westwood. At the outset, we beg to state that we are fully cognzant of the present fnancal depresson, and, as each member of the Board represents a taxpayng unt, we are not at all anxous to materally ncrease the burden of taxaton for the people of Westwood. We feel, however, that a polcy of nacton, when faced by expense for a needful mprovement, s not helpful to the town or country. We are now spendng on our lbrary about $60C per year, and n a great measure, are not dervng the benefts whch the outlay should represent, largely because of the lack of facltes to properly carry out the work of the nsttuton. t appears to the Board that a slght added outlay would be sound economy f, by t, our present yearly nvestment would yeld us largely ncreased J returns n benefts receved. Referrng to the cost of the proposed buldng, the Board's conclusons are as follows: Cost of buldng and ste.'. $45,000 On hand n buldng fund.. 10,000 Amor,nt necessary to be covered by bond nsurance 35,000 nterest on $35,000 per year at 5 % 1,750 Amount now receved per year fcr buldng fund, approxmately 2,000 Ths $2000, wthout any ncrease over our present rate of taxaton, would cover the nterest on the $35,000 n bonds, wth $250 left to apply to ther amortzaton. As to runnng expenses of the lbrary, the money saved n rent and other tems, under our present regme, would very comfortably cover the amount necessary for the mantenance of the new buldng. Ths feature was fully dscussed and agreed to when the matter was taken up by the Mayor and hs commttee n. conference wth the 'Lbrary Board. The only addtonal tax expense of ths proect would, as the Board of Trustees see t, be $3250 per year for. the retrng c-f the bonds, whch, on the bass of a valuaton of $8,000,000 for the town, would be approxmately only one-half of one mll per dollar of taxable valuaton, an amost neglgble amount for the ndvdual taxpayer, partcularly when we remember that the growth of the town s constantly ncreasng- the taxable valuaton. As to the bondng lmt of the town's ndebtedness, t has been ponted out by the Borough Attorney that bonds, n the unt mentoned would be exempt from the applcaton of ths law. And, further, when the town can float an ssue cf S200.0CO school bonds at a premum, and at a rate of four and a fracton per cent, nterest, t seems reasonable to beleve that ts credt would not be materally nured by a small ssue of $35,000 for s. lbrary, whch s really a necessary adunct to the school. The Trustees of the lbrary trustbuldng from whch the odors were so strong that they proved very amazng. A lady h'ng nearby reported the mat- ter to the State Troopers at the' Orangeburg staton, who nvestgated. Tuesday evenng they raded the place t las!>oo: lestrated that leather can be made waterproof on the outsde and stll allow" perspraton per cent foot. as fast as from the bare and confscated 1200 gallons, of make- to pass from the nsde of a shoe 80 beleve whskey. They arrested the {occupants of the place.! The story goes on to say that one of ' the men nvolved n the rad made open threats aganst the lfe and all the possessons of Mr. Klees, whom he ' declared was the nstgator of the rad.: 'At 10 o'clock Wednesday evenng a,' barn of Mr. Klees was burned to the ; ground. t was a storage structure. : flled- wth hay. The loss was put at: $10,000. At 11 o'clock Thursday nght, whle men were watchng buldngs near where the fre of the precedng : evenng had occurred, fre broke out n; a nearby barn, whch spread to the ad-; onng buldngs, ncludng a small] dwellng. These soon went down before' the flames, consumng great quanttes cf hay, nne horses, two cows, a calf,' and a valuable automoble. The loss n ths last fre was set at $60,000. A hydrant on a trunk lne water; man s located a half-mle foom the ; scena of the fre, on the outskrts of the vllage, but water mans have never; been extended nto the town, though frequently talked of. The alarm of fre! brought fre companes from Rver Vale, Tappan, Pearl Rver, Orange-' burg, Nyaek, and other places, and a.\ mle or more of hose was lad out, but was useless. At mdnght the frst feeble stream of water was thrown on' the dyng embers, a pumpng engne] havng thrown a sucton lne nto the small prvate pond at the Blauvelt Catholc convent. Probably 2000 persons wtnessed the] fre. Fremen came n full unform from attendng a fremen's conventon at Stony Pont, but were unable to do anythng to save the property. An alarm of fre was turned n Park Rdge on Wednesday evenng, for the frst Blauvelt fre, whch was so 1 brght that t was thought to be n the t north-east secton of Park Rdge. The! ] fremen turned back when they found! the fre was mles away, but a number cf people drove on from here to see the ' dsaster. A stll larger number of local \ people went to the Thursday nght! catastrophe. at RECORDER WARNS STREET FGHTERS! ^"OU don't have to learn A Studebaker Free Wheelng t teaches tself to you. Just start off drvng cs you always do. And pretty soon you'll be enoyng s. swell, sweet new sensatm that's Free Wheelng! t ust comes natural. Before long you'll bs lftng your toe from the accelerator and thrllng to costless gldng on merry d momentum. Tfeen you'll fnd yourself shftng at 40 to 50 from hgh to ntermedate and back agan cs easy cs pe, wthout usng tl;e clutch. Why, t's absurd, say, to pass up the fun end economy of t, now that'"' you can get a real Frea Wheelng Studebaker for $845. t's the lowest prced Sx today wth Free Wheelng as standard equpment engneered from tp to tal to gve you rs fullest benefts n ts fnest form. Two cases were postponed n Re- corder Puvogel's court at Montvale on] Tuesday evenng-. One was that of \ Mrs. A. Crura and Darwn Mead, where the latter's motorcycle catapul-; ted te rder nto the former's grounds,! bowlng the Crams over. Ths cass went over untl July 28. The other; was that of R. Neff, of Jersey Cty, and Matthew Sweeney, of Pearl Rver,! who had a collson at Man street and Summt avenue recently. Neff s stll n Hackensack Hosptal, and at hs at- tomey's request the case went over untl August 11. No charge was made n the case of Mesdames Sharp and Dunn, whose automobles came n contact at Wahl-! fahrfs corner recently, and t s un-!! derstood that the matter wll be set- ted amcably out of court.! Fred Martne and Wllam R'an had a general mx-up on the nght of July 6, when a party who had nrssed the last New York bus, appled to one cf them to take hm to Hackensack. Sev- en dollars was asked, but a cut-rate offer of $5 got the customer, and when ths drver came back from hs trp, the [frst man approached wanted to know [why the second man butted n and' tcok hs customer away. Blows wereldure MOTOR SALES CO. :struck and Ryan summoned Offcer! orgnated hy. Stud* at the factory that ths communcaton wll not Emerek from hs bed at 2:30 A. M. >Broadway a n d P e r m o n t A v e. HLLSDALE, N. J. Telephone Westwood 750 be looked upon as, n any way, a crtcsm of the Councl who must act n ths as n other matters, accordng to ther best udgment. t s rather a more or less orderly statement of the conclusons reached by the Lbrary Trustees, after careful thougnt, and wth a sncere desre to perform the work gven them to do, n the best nterest of all concerned, and n full apprecaton of the lberal co-operaton wth whch the Councl has met our recommendatons n the past. The Trustees are stll ready to go forward wth the work on the bass of the estmate heren contaned, whenever the Governng Body approves, and would be thankful for a defnte reply, statng the decson of the Mayor and Councl, n order that the Board of Trustees may shape ther course accordngly. The conflct was renewed and the offcer took Mertne nto the polce car, and,ryan ht Martne agan through the! ( wndow, breakng hs nose. CREATE AND PROTECT YOUR ESTATE WTH LFE NSURANCE AUBREY E. GREEN NEW YORK LFE Westwood Trust Bdg. Westwood, N. J. atc Tres n 1SSS the pneumatc tre was nvented by Danlop, and at once came nto unversal usa on the bcycle.. n England and on the contnent, an automoble casng, contanng an nrm- nflated tube, was attached to 'the wheel rra, whle n Amerca a sngle tube cemented to the rm was more generally used, and to ths day hnlrls ts place on the bcycle. Wth the advent of the automoble, a new fo!: was oner.od for the pneumatc rubber tre. Makng Frendshps Some frendshps are made bv nature, some by contract, some by nterest, and some by souls. Jereray Taylor. H. and M. COFFEE POT and TEA ROOM BROADWAY HLLSDALE Chcken Chow Men Every Wednesday, 45^ Call Westwood 393-M for Card Party Reservaton One prze furnshed free to each table FULL COURSE DNNERS S5e, 65, 75* and $1.00 Open for nspecton and to Serve the Publc ' : SATURDAY, JULY 25 ACCOMMODATE LAEGE DNNER PARTES OPEN 5:30 A. M. FOR BREAKFAST Card Clubs may have Lght Refreshments nstead of Luncheon, f desred RED'S CE CREAM 60^ PER QUART o S3 o o Q o

6 PAGE SX PAGE SX PKB^-^T "WHAT DD HE SEE N HER?" FHOl the day of her graduaton, 15 years before, from the hgh school of a large mddle western cty, Ada Glbert had been baffled by the queston wnch had frst assaled her when her old sweetheart, Tom Cass, suddenly up and marred her classmate, Evelyn Day. Whatever of pque and chagrn Ada mght have felt, were really besde the queston, because she had eloped wth the eldest son of the town's largest banker the week before the announced engagement of Tom and Evelyn. But for years afterward, long after the Tom Casses had moved East, that queston had flashed across the busy, varegated days of Ada's lfe. What had Tom Cass seen n Evelyn Day, who was one of those colorless, nce-enough grls of dust-gray personalty and no achevements. A grl, as Ada used to descrbe t, wth' no face n partcular, and no graces of mnd or manner that n any way matched up to the sparklng dstncton of Tom, who had been a dstngushed student at hgh school, had captured honors at college, and from the start had seemed pre-destned for a career of honor and mportance. Not that Ada had any rght to a sense of frustraton. She became, upon her marrage, the town's wealth- - est and most outstandng matron. But Just the same, one could not help askng, whenever she pcked up a newspaper and read the name of Tom Cass: what dd he see n her? What dd he, who was once n love wth me, see n her? t s certan that n the subsequent dvorce between Ada and her husband, the conscous thought of Tom could have played lttle part. Nothng had been farther from her mnd than to dsrupt the snug bed she had made for herself as the wfe as one of the most mportant, as well as the wealthest, men n town. But Ada had reckoned wthout her host. Practcally out of a clear sky, the husband of Ada underwent the ndgnty of establshng resdence.n a state where dvorce laws were notorously lenent, n order to wn hs freedom from her on grounds of mental cruelty. t was the most devastatng catastrophe of her lfe. A famous beauty n her socal world, a power, a woman of wdest nfluences, the acton came T.as a bewlderng blow,to her prde. Wth all her cleverness,. her nmble wt, her ablty to lay her trump'cards wth outstandng dplomacy, she had had the supreme blunder of msudgng her husband's psychology. To her he had been the ploddng, rather stupd man, who concentrates brllantly n busness, and bares hs neck to the yolk outsde. Most gallng of all was the fact that hs act had not been precptated by a flare of passon for another woman. Nothng of that sort had entered nto hs lfe., Hs act was the delberate cuttng loose of a man who fnds hs marrage tes ntolerable... At thrty-fve, stll beautful, well provded for, free, Ada found herself curously cut away from the securty and mportance that had been hers as the wfe of her husband. Lfe n the same town was no longer tolerable. Dvested of the prestge, poston and local mportance, she became merely a dvorcee, lvng on a generous almony. t was then she decded to move to one of the large eastern ctes where the socal horzon was wder, the lfe more vared. Once more t was the subconscous that must have settled her choce on the town n whch dwelt the Tom- Casses. n all the years whch ntervened between her graduaton from hgh school, she had not clapped eyes ether upon Tom or Evelyn. n the nterm Tom had become one of the most talked of magnates n the country. An entre townshp, devoted to hs steel ndustres, lay ust outsde the cty where he had bult the famous Cass eastle. Hs ndustral nnovatons, hs -revolutonzng socologcal schemes were begnnng to have ther effect the country, f not the world, over. "Tom Cass was a household word. Hs -success had never faltered. t was nto hs town, wth magnlf- cence of retnue, that Ada and her domestc caravan arrved wth fanfare. Of course, contacts wth the Tom scasses were mmedately resumed..strangely, Evelyn seemed enthusastcally glad to see her and regaled her wth promses of what Tom's exuberance was sure to be upon hs return from.europe. 'The.Casses lved n a magnfcence tehat -seemef towerng even to the accustomed eyes of Ada. The sweepng lawns, the baronal halls, the superb art wng aad spacous nursery quarters were on a scale gargantuan. Evelyn's youngsters, true to form, were nether mentally nor physcally remarkable. A nce enough brace of chldren, -a boy 'and a grl who had nherted much of ther mother's'dnstness and apparently lttle r>f ther father's glamor. Evelyn herself had not elp.n;:e{l. n fact she had not even aged. The moth gray qualty n her was apparently J a dust cover to the years. Quet, unob trusve, completely lusterless, she was tne same quet engma who had star ted her communty by capturng the brllant Tom Cass. When Tom returned from what had been the flyng busness trp to London hs delght upon re-meetng Ada was all that Evelyn had promsed her t would be. Here was recreaton, a new toy, a new delght, a new face. The years had dealt lghtly wth hm, as lfe had n general. He was a personalty among personaltes, assured, tremendously oval, magnetc even beyond what he had been. Success had talczed hm. Curous, the banterng, sex-eonscous, excted relatonshp that was mmedately re-establshed between hm and hs old colleague. t was as f the ntervenng years had been merely hatus, and here they were agan, tptoe as they had been n ther youth, flled wth awareness of each other, tantalzng to each other and strangely exctng. Durng these months the beauty of Ada seemed-to take on a new sheen. Her dolly blue eyes became brghter, her har more onqul yellow, the natural pnk n her cheeks more surprsng. She was. takng the partcular socal set n whch she was fndng place for herself, chefly t s true, through the Casses, by storm. Her dnners, her functons became focal ponts of the cty's gayety. Not only Tom, but the town was agog wth her. What dd he see n Evelyn? More and more ths queston began to torment Ada. Why, here wthn arms reach, except for ths drab woman wth no face n partcular, was happness beyond anythng she had dreamed. Not the person to err twce?, her second allance would not only he crowned wth success, but t now bpcame evdent to Ada that all thr(m;; the years of her marrage to another man, her one grand passon had been for Tom Cass. And here he was, ready except for the ntolerable mpedmenta of a plan wfe and plan chldren, ready to march hmself back nto her heart. Fool, fool, fool that she had been, ever to mscalculate n those years back there to let slp for want of magnaton, yes, t had been ust that, the youth wth a future, for what seemed to her to be the youth wth hs future n hs hand. Fool. Fool. Fool. What does he see n her? Of course, the expected happened. There came a tme when Tom, as f to announce to the world he was ho more than human, began to be seen about more than was dscreet n the company of the golden grass-wdow. nevtably there was talk. One or two of hs frends even ventured to remon- strate. But Tom was nvolved. Tom ' was smtten. Every one, wth the ex-! (fcpton of Evelyn, saw that. Plan as the nose on your face. Tongues \ w,ct ^ed... ;. ' Tragc T Even wth all hs securty,. scandal hurts a man lke Cass. Has! always seemed devoted to Evelyn, Well, serves her rght, lettng herself ' reman drab. Can't expect to hold a dynamo lke Tom Cass. Poor Eve- '!yn. Wonderful woman. Such a sense "f humor, but dumb' ; Never a word out of Evelyn. Never! : lapse n her carryng on of the tgantc household, her dutes to her -hldrer, to her socal poston, to her \ husband.! Funny thng, sad Ada, aloud to her : mrror one nght. 've a feelng she s laughng at me. Fool! There came the crss. Ada lost. A sckened, revolted Tom suddenly erked to hs senses, staggerng from her presence wth a sense of fnalty and self-loathng. Strange, but Tom, too, had the sense as he lay wth hs head n Evelyn's lap and hs arms flung about her knees," that she was laughng at hm. "No, darlng, am not laughng. t's ust that am so much wser than you are, sweetheart. 've been watchng t happen, prayng for how t would end and somehow knowng my had boy to be ust the youngest member of ths famly, feelng so sure... so sure... ust had to see the funny sde... or go under." ( McClure Newsnauer Syndcate l (WMTF Servce.) Not Galty A well-known barrster had successfully defended a man charged wth pckng pockets. After the accused had been acqutted he expressed hs grattude to the barrster and offered to take hm to London n hs car, an oler the other was not anxous to accept. 'No, thank you," he sad poltely, "'m afrad haven't the tme." "But," perssted the man, "f. we start notv t won't take long. What tme s t now?'' " don't know. haven't a watch." "Haven't a watch? Xou wat a mnute and 'll slp out and get you one." London Tt-Bts. So-So Vncent Astor, hack from a yachtng trp n the Medterranean, was talkng about Span. "The Spanards eat strange fsh n ' the south," he sad. "n Bolches, a Malaga vllage, saw an old Spanard one day carryng home a devl-fsh. "Are devl-fsh really worth eatng?" sad to hm. "Well," he sad to me, and he gave a lttle chuckle and shrugged hs ; shoulders, "well, caballero, devl-fsh are pretty much lke wves. When they're bad they're awful, and wlsn they're good they're only so-so," *., Calforna Ctes to Get Cheap Water From Colorado Rver AN'S eternal conflct M wth the desert s soon to have another epsode, one whch wll be enacted n Southern Calforna by Los Angeles and S other ctes whch make up the metropoltan water dstrct. These towns Anahem, Beverly Hlls, Burbank, Colton, Fullerton, Glendale, Long Beach, Pasadena, San Bernardno, San Marno, Santa Ana, Santa Monca, Los Angeles and Torranee have oned forces n tle metropoltan water cstrct of Southern Calforna, a specal governmental unt created by the state legslature for the purpose of solvng the regon's acute water problem by buldng a huge aqueduct from the Colorado rver. Tremendous momentum has been gven the proect by the Unted States Supreme court acton n dsmssng Arzona's sut aganst Boulder dam, a structure of vtal mportance to the realzaton of the aqueduct plan. Already the government has oblgated tself to the extent of S49,GUG,000 on the gant structure. Already steam shovels and pneumatc drlls and. blastng operatons are dsturbng the prmtve quet of Boulder canyon, along the rushng- Colorado. t las been estmated that t wll cost the average taxpayer less than one cent a day to buy the vorld's largest aqueduct. t wll be 26G mles long and w; 1 cost $200,000,000. t wll take sx to eght years to bul<!. The aqueduct wll carry water from Parker's ntrke on the Colorado rver some 266 mles across deserts and "S! S ^UTTY MATURAL HS?ORY S + BY HUGH BUTTON 4- THE SCKLESWG SKEEKS T TTLE was known of ths creature -» ' untl after the war, when a specal ; expedton was sent out by the Amer- can Museum of Nutty Natural Hstory to capture a few specmens and com- ] plete ts bologcal classfcaton. The scentsts found that t was a very df-! cult anmal to capture entre, as the ' skeeks has anywhere from one to ten dstnct sectons that at the slghtest warnng of danger wll break apart and skurry n all drectons for shel- rer. After the danger s over the! skeeks wth the head wll whstle! gently and tl:a rest of hm wll run to on up agan.. ( The one shown above assembled at the museum from parts of several crea- tures captured on ths trp has a pea- \ nut head wth sectonal bodes of small flberts. Tle ears and l'(«t arc splt navy beans, and the legs, nec^: and tals are cloves. (fp; Metropoltan Newspaper Servce.) (WNTJ Servce.) * «SSfSSo -*> By Betsy Callster EATS FOR THE PCNC t(t ET'S have a pcnc. Who wll *-' make the sandwches?" That s the queston usually asked untl by the tme the pcnc season s well advanced the grl who has the reputaton for beng wllng to make pcnc sandwches wshes that pcncs had never been nvented. Sandwches seem so easy f you don't have to make them. But why bother wth sandwches anyway? To be sure they provde bread and butter and somethng else n a convenent form but there are ust as many dsadvantages about sandwches, as there are advantages. More and more experenced pcnckers and campers are gettng out of the sandwch habt. For one thng, butter soft enough to be spread wthout breakng the bread s far less appetzng than butter that starts off to the pcnc as hard as the refrgerator wll make t, packed n a tghtly closed ar contanng broken ce. Most people lke a lttle lettuce n ther sandwches, but t becomes hopelessly wlted f the sandwches are made an hour or more before they are to be eaten. So nstead of sandwches let me suggest, for your next pcnc, an adequate supply of rolls, a ar of buttern ce, and the necessary spread of fllngs carred separately. These mar nclude a ar of mayonnase, slces of 1mm, chcken or other meat wrapped n ol paper, well chlled whole tomatoes, small cans of potted meats ar.fl.vel washed lettuce leaves wrapped n a damp cloth, then wrapped n waxed paper and er.rr:od n an a:r u!rf:t tn wth a ttle ce. EWNU Servce.) -'. ^^ f ADONNA lles should be planted M n August f the bulbs can be obtaned, but f not, as soon as they reach te stores. Amateurs often make the mstake of watng untl late n the fall before plantng the bulbs of ths lly, supposng that they requre the same treatment as most other lles. _ The fact, s, however, that the, madonna lly, whch s also known as the ascenson lly, St. Joseph lly, the annuncaton lly, and lent lly,' fcas a dstnct habt of growth, co.ng up n the autumn, although not bloomng untl sprng. That s why t should be planted early, and why t should go nto the ground only three or f ur nches deep nstead of sx or er't nches, lke other lly bulbs. t «. :l thrve n any good garden sol, father n full sun or n partal shade. ts pure whte flowers are exceedng: v attractve, especally ween grouped n front of evergreens. CC< ylehf) WNTJ Sen-ce. SUPERSTTOUS = * * * SUE * «SHE K.\S HEARD THAT f a r :rl wears her garter below her knee, t s an old sayng that she wll be an old mad but, says she, from the looks of thngs today that old superstton hasn't a leg to stand on. (G3 by McClur<5 Newspaper Syndcate.) {WNTJ Servce.) mountans to the 14 ctes n the Southern Calforna coastal plan. Our llustraton shows an artst's concepton of what the completed Boulder or rather Hoover dam wll look lke, the work of man beng sketched to scale on a photograph of the thousand-foot canyon walls between whch the Colorado rver rushes. n the foreground and on the face of the clff are hydro-electrc plants whch wll generate mllons of horse power. Behnd the dam wll be mpounded 30,500,000 acre-feet of water n a lake 110 mles long. A porton of ths great nland sea wll reach the 14 ctes o Southern Calforna through the. metropoltan aqueduct. "He that rseth late must trot all day, and shall scarce overtake hs busness at nght: whle lnsness travels so slowly that poverty soon overtakes hm." SOME GOOD HNTS HERE s no more tasty breakfast T or luncheon brand than Graham Gems. To one cupful of sfted graham flour add one cupful of sour mlk, one beaten egg, half a teaspoonful of salt, one teaspoonful of soda, two tablespoonfuls of sugar and three tablespoonfuls of shortenng. Bake n gem pans. ; Rocks. Cream one cupful of butter or sweet shortenng, add one and one-half eupfuls of sugar, two beaten eggs, two and one-half cupfuls of flour sfted wth two teaspoonfuls of bakng powder, add spces, dates,' walnuts, all together makng a cupful. Drop by spoonfuls on a bakng sheet. ' Coffee Cake. Warm three-fourths of a cupful of shortenng, beat three eggs, str n half a cupful of sugar and a cupful of rasns, ms all wth the shortenng and add to fve eupfuls of lght bread sponge. Mx well, add flour and str untl, as thck as the spoon wll ms. Set nto a pan to rse and when lght spread n shallow pans. Cover wth soft butter, sprnkle wth sugar and cnnamon well msed and set to rse. Bake when lght Smple Dessert. Place a layer of shredded pneapple "or any good flavored frut n a glass dsh, cover wth cake or cooky crumbs, add more frut and fnsh to top wth crumbs. Over all heap whpped cream sweetened and flavored. Serve cold. Banana Dessert.! Slce perfect bananas lengthwse n- to halves, spread wth raspberry am and put together sandwch fashon. Lay on a glass plate and serve -wth whpped cream sweetened and fa- vored; garnsh wth a cherry. Coolng and Refreshng. Take plenty of oranges and lemons for lemonade, they not only cool and ' refresh the body but are rch n vtamnes. When the chldren tease for a cake or cooky, gve them a rpe banana or an orange, ths wll satsfy the hunger wthout spolng the meal soon to follow. (fc) Western NewsnaDer Unon.} Whch One? V : : Kssng Gate nsured %\ Happness * * By LEETE STONE %\ ( ) McCtre Newspaper Syndcate.*!WXTJ servce.* N A corner of the rugged edge of that enchantng Engrt shre known as Cornwall there s a tny, wndng lane; ust wde enough for two to walk through, close together wth arms across each other's shoul- ders. t s a temperamental lttle. lane, for t wnds and curves along for no apparent reason untl t reaches an abrupt endng at a great anc massve, moss-covered sate that dates back some r.o) orgoo years; back to the tme- hundreds of adacent acres were parr of» great estate, and ths gate, snnref- by a pcturesquely robed retaner, was some part of ths : ancent defense polcy aganst prates' and smugglers from the hgh seas. When two who have strolled that way reach the mmense wrought* ron bars of the gate, they look drectly down from a hgh clff on a pebbly, trangle of whte beacl and beyond, an ever restless sea. f t should: happen to le a nght of moonlght,', that mellow, rleeply yellow. Englsh: Cornwall unon (for tle Cornwall moon s lke no other) then the sght, s so exquste n sudden beauty that t hurts the heart and head n the sharp way that only unexpected bursts of beauty do. You wll not fnd the n:tme that now clngs to that gate n t:u!de books,. nor wll you fnd t preserved for posterty on tlnmboyant pnsrrtl cards. The lads and lasses of the mmedate neghborhood call t "Kssng Gate" r an<3 somewhere, somehow, the fancy : was born that f a boy and grl ar-. rved there on a nght when the full moon was pnntn; a path nf golden doubloons across the lttle clff-bound bay, and kssed there n nnocent sncerty, under *le benefcent beam of that mon, ther future happness and securty from want were assured. Bodwn Lantry and Alce Warwck lved near Kssng Gate. They had been brought up n close reverence for all the beautful, smple thngs of lfe. As chldren they had frolcked durng the scant hours that country chldren are ever allowed to frolc together. Tht\v had found ther way to Kssng Gnte long yenrs before ther uvenle mnds could comprehend ts sgnfcance. But now Eodwn was twenty-two and Alce nneteer Bodwn had been away for a year workng n a factory at Lannceston, but the vson oz Alce and the hope of wnnng her had never eft hm. Xone of the gay. flppant grls of the large town had made any mpresson on hm. Now, however, Bodwn found t dffcult to get what he felt was hs share of Alce's company. She had grown nto a lttle wld.rose of beauty and her beaus were many, ndeed. Often when : he called n the evenng she was out wth one or another of them. And when he dd fnd her n, though she was cordal and pleasant to hm, she appeared nlstracted and dffdent n' manner us tlwugh a vel of some sort had les stretched between the spontanety of! her former companonshp. "Thus Bodwn often sat at home of. nghts am! brooded; for he loved Alce very much, and havng n memory tuanr plghtngs of a chldsh troth between them he had taken t for {rrctnptl that when he returned from Launceston wth hs savngs, she would fall nto hs arms, so to speak. t was lnlwn's wrnkled grandmother, rockng n her corner, puffng at a blackened clay ppe, who sensed the boy's trouble and gave hm words of wsdom from an old woman's heart. "Slly boy! What a glorous world t would be f men understood a woman's heart! t's the lttle rose-facer] lass ye want, sn't t? Doan't ye know that a woman must he won? Go buy a new sut and a sparkln' te an' make a fght for the lass. Doap't. st here an' mope whle the others are shown' her tle moonlght nn' teachn' '.er the lesson o' ksses...." Hs granny's nuncton brought sudden nspraton to Bodwn. The next evenng found hm at Alce's hnuse clad n new fnery from head to foot. She was out as usr.al; but Bodwn. nstead of turnng away from the door wth a glum look, stayed a whte and chatted pleasantly vrth Alce's mother and father. The nest lght he was back agan, and had no better lack. But the thrd nght Bodwn found Alce n. He greeted her wth a gay smle nstead of a reproachful look and sad: "Come along wth me for a stroll, Alce mne. t's the full o' the moon nnd want to show you somethn* lovely." TJs was a nev Bodwn, thought Alce; the one whose boysh charm no one else had drven from her heart. Havng thought t all out carefully beforehand, Bodwn led Alce down that tny temperamental lane that wnds and curves and rambles on ts way to Kssng Gate. They walked n slence, arms oosely caught about each other's shoulders. : At last Kssng Gate! Wth the full moon pantng a path of golden doubloons across the clff-bound sea. "Bodwn!" "Alce!". Lfe leaped out at these two from far across the moonlt waters asthey kssed at Kssng Gate. Get 'Em Turned ' "Joe wants hs eggs on fw.tft sdes. Hs brde nssts on one sde only." "Tell Joe to nsst on both sdes. t's the turnng pont"..], ;

7 PAGE SEVEN- SEVEN Hllsdale Socal News Telephone Westwood 2204 The F.»O. T\ Brdge Club has das-1of Magnola avenue, who was foup contnued meetngs untl tle fall, [years old. George Meehan, of Ndtwalk, Conn., Mrs. Nel Curtn, of Brooklyn, s exs a guest of hs SOB, Howard W. Mee-peot-ed to arrve on Frday at the home-!han, of Washngton avenue. of Mr. and Mrs. L. J. Forbes, and plans to stay a "week, or so. Mr. and Mrs. G. M3lne, of Jersey Cty, were recent vstors of Mr. and on Tuesday mornng fve prvate cars Mrs. W. Nuss, of Taylor street. conveyed the members of the Lades'! 'Ad Socety of the Methodst church! Mr. and Mrs. T. Lyons, cf Large avenue, who ape spendng the summer at where after a box luncheon, an enoy- to San Jaento Club, n Allendale, Long Beach, were n town on Saturday. able day was spent. Hev. and Mrs. H. N.- Smth were n the group., Mr. and Mrs. G. Holdnm are spendng the summer months at Longwood Lake, wfcere they have a cottage. Mr. and Mrs. D.,G. Watt, of Permont avenue, entertaned relatves from Provdence, R.. On Frday-Mr. and Mrs. H. Getz and! sen Henry-vsted Mr. Getz's brother,' of Cedar street, enroute from Wash- ng ton, D. C, to ther home n. Cana- da, O ther luncheon guests were Mrs. O. H. Knopsea and Mrs. B. Harrs and daughter Evelyn. Robert Daves s spendng a week of hs vacaton wth. Ms aunt at Oakland Ths Thursday afternoon an after- Beach. ;.ncon card party wll be gven at, Mr. and Mrs. W. Stober have moved [Mrs. Herbert W. Pander's home n! ther home n Glenbrook back nto Park. Hllsdale Manor, to help defray the! expenses of the summer round-up of school chldren recently conducted by] The Exempt Fremen's Auxlary, of te P -" T - Assocaton. " Hllstale are enoyng an outng ths., Thursday to Playlan, at Rye leach, Mrs. Jr HJSwald, of Maps avenue,, N. Y. " * s spendng the remander of the sum-! me: at Ocean Grove. Her daughters, The Msses A. and E. Johnston, of the Msses Florence and Adelade, returnee; on Monday, after spendng the) dealer Way, plan to leave shortly for Cleveland, 'O. weekend there, and her son Elmer as spendng these two weeks at the shore wth hs mother. Mr. and Mrs. Foster Arnold, of Lapge avenue, are home agan after a short soourn n Atlantc Cty. Mr. and Mrs. M. Hen, ot Prospect Place, entertaned ther nece, Mss Ma-on Hen, of New York Cty, for a few days last week. Douglas Borchard, of Permont ave-1 nue, who s statoned at Pont Pleas- ant wth the Jersey Troopers, spent a few days last week at home wth Ms parents. Recent guests at ther home ware Mrs. Borchard's sster, Mrs. H, Dnnebel, of the Bronx, and Mr. ad Mrs. P. Dorn, Russell and. Kenneth: Dorn, of Jersey Cty. - Mr. and Mrs. J. Vander Clute, of Long sland, recently vsted hs brother, Wllam Vander Clute, o Cen- tral avenue. Mss Hester Sprnger, of Magnola avenue, returned on Thursday, follow- The new home beng, bult on Conk- ng a yeek's vst n Phladelpha, wth lng avenue by Mr. and Mrs. K. Van Mrs. Sprnger's cousns, Mr. and Mrs. HEAVER ARMOR N NEWEST CRUSERS Savngs n Weght Allow for More Protecton. Horn, of Park street, s nearng com- M - Ftzgerald. pleton. were offered those bulders who saved Recent guests cf Mr. and Mrs. P. W.! tonnage. Electrc weldng was employed to a htherto unknown degree. Mr and Mrs. H Keans, of Eastern MuUan were El ' 3 - L - short > ^ Hghway, recently entertaned Mr. and fppen; P also l Herbert H b t Whte, of Wl- Lghtweght metals and alumnum Mrs. H. Cooper and Mr. and Mrs. L. nnngton, Del., and Mrs. Van Lender-, were used where possble. A hgh Geer and son, of Pttsfeld, Mass. man, of Berkeley, Cal., who spent a few! days n Hllsdale.,' A nece, Mss Joyce Wlkens, of South Orange, s stoppng at the home of Mr. Mr. and Mrs. L. J. Forbes, of the and Mrs. C. L! Smonson, of~hlsdale' Crest ' returned home on Sunday after] avenue a week's tourng through the New Eng- land States, and a few days vst wth' Mr. and Mrs. "C. H. Chatman, of ther daughter, Mrs. E. Egerton, at her Brooklyn, spent the weekend wth Mrs. cottage at Zoard Lake, Conn. Chatman's sster, Mrs. F. J. Southard, of Colonal Boulevard. Edward Manahan, of West Hllsdale avenue, 'returned home'on Sunday from Frank Norman, Jr., of Large avenue, Mddetown, Conn., where he drove hs left on Sunday for a busness trp sster, Mss Margaret Manahan and! through New York State and Penn-!^^ Louse Holzenthaler. Mss Mana- syvana than and Mss Holzenthaler are at- 1 " tendng the Epworth nsttute at Wes-! Mr. and Mrs. Guy Arnold, of Dema- leyan Unversty, whch s beng held xest avenue, left on Monday for a twol'om July 18 to 27. ; weeks tour by motor, through New J York State and ponts North. 1 James Nutt and son James, Jr., Ber- nard Slater and Robert Nutt, the latter' M-, and Mrs. W. E. Dathe, of P*- of Long sland, left early Saturday! xnont avenue, entertaned a large group mcrnng for Gardner's Lake, Conn., of relatves on Frday evenng at ther where they enoyed a few days wth, home, to celebrate tne tenth brthday *rands at the Brotherhood Camp, con-1 of ther daughter Shrley. nested wth te Reformed churah of. Hgh Brdge, N. Y. : Washngton. The last of the ten eght-nch gun, 10,000 ton Washngton treaty crusers to be bult by the Unted States under the London treaty wll have the most formdable armor deck protecton ever bult nto a vessel o ths type. These vessels wll have an armor deck skn thck enough to stop the eght-nch gun proectle up to ranges of 25,000 yards. The sxteenth, seventeenth and eghteenth eght-nch gun crusers of ths class may have even greater deck protecton than the seven buldng. One element n the navy now favors gvng the vessel an extra deck armor thckness at the cost of speed. The navy hgh command, however, s understood to favor retenton of the present speed of better than 37 knots an hour. ncrease Armor Protecton. Every new bateh of crusers bult of the eght-nch gun treaty type have been gven greater deck ana sde armor protecton than ther predecessors. Each batch also has been equpped wth a greater number of ant-arcraft weapons. The frst vessels were desgned for four fve-nch gun ant-arcraft weapons. The next group had eght. Now the last ones to be bult are to be armed wth an ncreased number of ant-arcraft machne guns. The frst eght-nch gun crusers had so lttle armor protecton they were referred to by hgh rankng flag offcers as "tn elads." Had the naval desgners known as much as they do today, the frst eght eght-nch gun crusers could have been as well protected as the last ten are gong to be. nvestgatons have shown that the frst eght are each about 1,000 tons under weght. The total lost tonnage for the eght vessels s 7,100 tons. Ths unused tonnage could have been used up n armor protecton had not desgners made the weght safety factor too hgh. Bonus Offered Bulders. n desgnng the new shps bonuses safety factor was used because of fear that the fnshed vessels mght be over the 10,000 ton dsplacement permtted by the London naval treaty. Fgures dscovered today place the tonnage of these 10,000-ton class vessels at slghtly more than 9,000 tons. Ther dsplacement s as follows: Chester, 9,200; Houston, 9,050; Northampton, 9,050- Pensacola, 9,100; Salt Lake Cty, 9,100; Chcago,, 9,300,- Lousvlle, 9,050, and Augusta, 9,050. AH of these vessels could have been 10,000 tons dsplacement. The lost tonnage cannot be bult 'nto eght-nch gun crusers, as the Unted States s lmted to 18. Whether t can be transferred to sx-nch gun cruser tonnage s a moot queston. Vstng for a few days -at the horns Mrs. 3. Tompkns, of Eastern Hgh-' of Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Davs, of Perraont- Road, was Mrs. S. Hague, u. of way, who s the Dstrct Deputy of the; for Mrs. Jane Wlson, wth dentfcaton of a gold sgnet rng OD the band Ccagc, who lett on r rday for Mary- Fassac Secton cf Hebskah Lodge, land. " ^th Mrs. C. V. Shuttleworth, of HSls- [ of a body n a new-found grave near! dale, made an offcal vst on Wednes- : Vmy Edge. ntals on the rng were Mrs. J. E. Whte and chldren Char- day at Slver Lake Lodge, n Passac.; "J. B. W.." those of Mrs. Wlson's son. lot-te Anne and James Abbott, returned, Recently Mrs. Tompkns was the vst- to- Norfolk, Va., on Thursday, after a-ng cmcal at Lncoln Grange, n Pat- 1 Prvate John Buchanan "Wlson, who vst n Hllsdale wth her sste-, "Ms. arson. had won the mltary medal. K. O. Adelsten, of Washngton avenue,! : -! Mr. ant Mf.-s. F. W. Mullan, wth; Mrs. Charles Rrae, Charles, Jr., and ther son and hs wfe, Mr. and Mrs.; Jean Krahe, of Astora, L.., were Wllam Mullan, of Long sland, spent guests of Mrs. S. Refegerste. of Per- (the weekend at Wanasnk Lake, guests ; nont avenue, on Wednesday and! of Mr. and Mrs. W. Rush, who have a! War Hero's Body Found 13 Years After Armstce Oshawa, Ont. Fourteen years of wonderng where her solder son lay bured s beleved to have been ended Wants Brother Mssng 33 Years Declared Dead TJtc-a, v.. f a man has not been heard from for 33 years, he should be Tmsday. summer cottage there. They made the legally dead. Mrs. Elzabeth Casey trp n ther new car. Whle there, beleves. Her brother, Henry Cregg, M-, and Mrs. R. F. Byers, of Magnola avenue, wth R-alph Myers, of were gathered. ever 30 quarts of choce huckleberres left home n 1S9S to get work on the Park Rdge, and Mss K. Steger, of! Great Lakes. Mrs. Casey wants hm Long sland, spent :he past weekend! Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Kng and her declared legally dead so she can collect a legacy of whch s now at ther cottage at Keansburg. son'returned on Saturday to ther! fceme n Provdence, R.., after spend-1 held: by the county treasurer. Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Collgncn, Ells,!ng some tme at the home of Mrs.; Jr., Katherne and Dorothea Coll^non, Kng's sster, Mtfs. D. C. Watt. Mrs.! = «soendng the summer at ther cot- Kng, durng her vst here, entertaned tage on Lonsrwood Lake. frends from New York wth several ].partes. Mrs. W G. Hoars, of Ccnkln avenue,"! s reported slowly but favorably m- The Wllng Workers of the Metho- \ D'-ovn- after beng confned to bed for dst church closed actvtes tor the the oast seven weeks. summer on Tuesday evenng wth a short busness sesson held at the church. Twenty-two members attend-: Walter E. Dathe, of Permont avems, s home agan alter spendng two weeks at Camp Cascade at Lake Placd, wth relatves, Mr. and Mrs. Walter S. Graham, of Mddetown. - ed. Plans were completed for a day's At the end of the leg are three separate and dstnct feet wth dvded p;cnc together on Wednesday of ths ' w«ek, at Oakland Beach, whepe Mrs. hoofs, bones, and onts. Paul Ackerman, one of the members, las a cottage. Mr. and Mrs. Jules Swan, of Glen- brook Park, returned from Europe last! - Plans are well under way for the week, after a delghtful tme- vstng) eghth annual lawn party and supper relatves and tourng Swtzerland and o f St.. John's church, to be held on the \ Germany. church grounds on Saturday, August 1. Supper s to be served from. 5 to 8 P. Mr. and Mrs. S.. Gamsby and son M., dancng to follow untl mdnght, Russell, of Floral Park, returned home wth, musc by the Flordans. on Monday, after spendng the week- ]. end w5 th Mrs. Gamsby's brother and A5 s Jacquelne, daughter c Mr. and ] famly- Mr. and Mrs. Le Roy Unger. ' Ms - G-. "W- Slm, of Stockton street, s home agan after travelng by bus to Mr and Mrs. S. Mchel of Magnola, >etrdt, where she spent a week wth avenue, returned on Saturday after a Mrs. Elln's brother, A. H. Saunders, w^ek's'motor trp through Hew York!then contnued to LambertvHle, where Sta-t» arc Canada, travelng as far she spent another week wth her north, as Montreal. brother and hs wfe, &Sr. and Mrs. W. Elln. They returnee together to Hlls- Mrs. N. L. Gross, of Orange, and Mr. {dale by car. and Mrs. A. H. Aron, of Newark, were guests of Mss Besse Lvergh't, of West Hllsdale, over the weekend. Mss verght :s spendng ths week n New' York, wth, frends. Early Englsh Glasses The frst Englsh glasses found n Blossom's nn yard date from the tme of S,, raral.o h]d^n ployed attendng Charles, when drnkng was a T>aty ^;e- en Thursday for Gladys, fashonable BD<1 the use of glass had daughter"of Mr. and Mrs. C. Johnson, become more common. Oklahoma Farmer's Calf Has "Tlsree n One" Leg Stgler, Okla. Three legs n one gves a calf owned by a promnent dary farmer near here the dstncton of havng seven legs. From the rght shoulder of the eaf there grows a large leg about the sze of a cow's leg. pooooooooooockkhhjooooooooo Baby Born "Dead" Brought to Lfe Mlwaukee Sad by doctors to have been born lfeless, an nfant was rushed to a hosptal here whle the father forced Ms breath nto the baby's lung. The 5 baby was placer! n a "meclan- X cal lung," and, doctors sad, ts o respraton became normal. The baby was born to Mr. ana 6 Mrs. Mano Westendorf, near <> Fox Pont Dr. F. H. Schultz g used every known artfcal 6 means avalable to nduce lfe. 3 Then Doctor Schultz ordered 0 o the father to run wth hm to 2 0 Ms automoble and le speeded 6 0 to Mlwaukee wth the nfant, 9 whle the father kept hs mouth $ X glued to the baby's. 2 CATERPLLAR CARS EQUPPED FOR DESERT One 9f the seven caterpllar cars of the Trans-Asan expedton, each completely equpped and provsoned as a unt n case t s eat off from the rest of the party, before the start across Asa from Berut, Syra. SAFETY One of Cardnal Prncples s Keepng Car Under Full Control. One of the nne cardnal prncples of careful drvng, ponts ont the Slvertown Safety league, s to arve at speeds n keepng wth the safety of others as well as one's self. Ths means keepng the speed of one's car under full control at all tmes, so that when unforeseen emergences arse the car may be stopped nstantly. Coastng Downhll. A warnng aganst coastng downhll wth the motor out of gear was recently ssued by Owen B. Augspurger, presdent of the New York. Automoble club. The Slvertown Safety league fully endorses ths warnng, and cautons all motorsts who would avod accdents to guard aganst the practce. The car comng downhll wth ts gear shft lever n neutral gans momentum at an ever-ncreasng pace and ts drver must rely solely upon hs brakes, or accelerate hs engne and "double-clutch" to get back n gear, Mr. Augspurger ponts out. Ths latter s dangerous and can be accomplshed by only a sklled drver. The brakes may catch fre, an addtonal hazard. On the other hand, wth the motor n gear, a retardng acton occurs whch tends to keep the car under control so that the brakes are not forced: to bear al the stran. n comng flown very steep grades shftng nto second gear s recommended as n ths poston a more powerful brakng effect s obtaned. To Promote Safety. The Slvertown Safety league s studyng the causes and effects of motor car accdents n ts current natonal campagn to promote safety. Motorsts are nvted to enroll by sgnng a pledge to observe nne smple rules of safe drvng. There s no charge for onng the league. Members receve an attractve radator emblem. Rules for Pedestrans* Safety Are Suggested Naton-wde records receved by the Calforna State Automoble assocaton show that pedestrans fgured n 55 per cent of motor vehcle fataltes n the Unted States last year. The followng rules for pedestrans' safety are suggested by the motorsts' organzaton : 1. Sever cross a street at a controlled crossng except on the g-een lght or upon sgnal of the offcer. 2. At uncontrolled crossngs look frst to the left before startng acoss the street and to the rght upon reachng the center. 3. When the way s clear, proceed wthout hestaton. Never run. 4. f caught n a traffc tangle, stand stll and allow the cars to proceed. Do not attempt to dodge back and forth. Agrcultursts Lvng on Surfaced Hghways Somewhere between one-fourth and one-half of the farmers n the "Unted States are served by hghways surfaced wth sand clay, gravel or better materals, nvestgaton shows, based on census and hghway reports. At present the Unted States has approxmately 700,000 mles of surfaced roads. The total number of farms s nearly 6,208,000 and the complete 1930 farm populaton s 27,222,000, an average of 4.3 persons per farm. f all the farm resdents were spread evenly along the 3,000,000 mles of roads n ths country, there would be an average of nne persons per mle. On that bass more than one-fourth of the farmers lve along surfaced hghways. Sprng Leaf Sreakage Sprng leaves are not so lkely to break as they onee were. However, f clps and TJ-bolts are uot kept tght they may. n event of breakage, the motorst need not be greatly concerned unless t s the master leaf that succumbs. f t s one of the other leaves, one may be able to drve many thousands of mles Tvthout further trouble provded the clps and bolts are tghtened regularly. ' Brake nspecton Flan \ " Lked by Three States Three states are about to consder laws to elmnate faulty brakes. Ths! has been brought to lght by a survey ; n connecton wth the naton-wde ' movement to ontlaw motorsts who ; drve cars wth worn or badly ad- usted brakes. Automoble authortes state that bad brakes cause a large percentage of the accdents whch are! kllng more than 30,000 people a year, and sendng 900,000 others to hos- : ptala : "n A T ew STork," says a report on ' the survey, "blls have been ntro- dueed n the senate and assembly for the annual nspecton of brakes by the motor vehcle department and the appontment of offcal brake nspec ton statons n all parts of the state. ; A penalty clause calls for a fne of $10 or ten days mprsonment, or both, for motorsts who fal to comply. Smlar blls are pendng before the New Jersey and Mnnesota legslatures. "So far as can be ascertaned, there s no actve opposton to the adopton of these.blls and t s expected that they wll be passed wthn the next few weeks. "n Calforna, Pennsylvana, Maryland, and the Dstrct of Columba, new legslaton s n force to compel perodcal brake nspecton and to brng about safer drvng condtons but n the remander of the states there s lttle or no offcal regulaton of brakes, whch form one of the most conspcuous contrbutors to traffc fataltes." Flexble Wre Handy to Clear Out Clogged Lne When ar pressure fals to clear out clogged ol lnes try the method shown n the llustraton. Take a pece of flexble wre, preferably pano wre, and grnd one end chsel shaped a3 Clogged Ol Lnes Can Be Cleared by Use of a Pece of Pano Wre, Wth Chsel Shaped End, nserted and Then Rotated. shown. Stone off the corners to prevent t from cuttng nto the ppe at the bends and use n electrc drll or a hand drll to rotate t Popular Scence Monthly. AUTOMOBLE FACTS The automotve ndustry uses S2 per cent of all rubber consumed n the Unted States. * * * Gasolne has a tendency to dull the fnsh of most cars and should never be appled n washng except to remove the grease. * * * Tar can be removed from the fnsh of automobles by applyng a soluton comprsng equal parts of turpentne and wood alcohol. * * * Many people are now lvng to a remarkably old age. Some of them would lve even longer f t vrere not for the ht-and-run drvers. * * * One automoble unt whch servce experts fnd unversally escapes the attenton of the owner s the rear wheel bearng. Eemove these bearngs and retaners twce yearly and gve. them a thorough bath n kerosene, Then repack n good cup grease. More frequently used than any other keys, hose wmca unlock varous features of the automoble deserve the most promnent places on te motorst's keyrng. An excellent practce used by many owners s to place gnton and transmsson keys at the extreme ends of the keyholder. Welds Ef eztve Axe When. Axe s Necessary. Pacfc Grove, Calf. Mayor Jula B. Platt, seventy-three, oldest womam mayor n the Unted States, may ruleths seasde communty wth scentfclogc and she may rule t wth a crusadng axe. She smlngly admtted recently that, though she regards the task of cty government ust another scentfc problem, she has known the expedency of drect acton and would not' hestate agan to employ t. She referred to two occasons once when she protested aganst an attempt to aggrandze publc beach property for prvate gan by smashng a bathhouse barrer wth an axe; another tme, when. she urged beautfcaton of a scenc spot and, falng to get quck acton, led a crew of volunteers wth spades and wheelbarrows untl the lttered spot was cleaned and planted n flowers. Traned Bologst. Mss Platt was a practcng bologst n Germany and Naples before settlng here 31 years ago. "My tranng n the laboratory," she sad, "gave me a fondness for a problem. fnd ths tranng very valuable on ths new ob. hope to work out ths town's problems as would any problem arsng n the laboratory. Sometmes that can't he done; then we'll try somethng else." She fmghed. She ran for mayor, she safl, because poltcans were tln-eatenag to undermne her favorte reform, the cty manager form of government, establshed here four years ago, manly through her efforts. Staunch Humantaran. She doesn't mnd seeng anyone take a drnk, but hates to see anyone get drunk. She does not obect to women smokng, though she feels t s unhealthful n excess. She s a staunch humantaran and her arch hate s the "eye for an eye" theory of punshment. She beleves that many are thus penalzed for heredtary and envronmental accdents beyond ther control. She beleves nstead n correctonal and educatonal methods, whch are, she sad, n ther nfancy. She s a New Englander, born n Burlngton, Vt. She was graduated from the Unversty of Vermont n 1SS2. s Blamed for $1,400,000 Annual' Loss Kew York. Hope that a realzaton of the great econ-emc loss resultng from the sun tan fad mght dscourage the fashon was expressed today by Dr. Charles F. Pabst, chef dermatologst of Greenpont hosptal, Brooklyn, n hs : annual warnng"'- aganst the dangers of overexposure to the summer sun. The doctor estmated that an annual loss of 200,000 workng days was caused by llness from sunburn, n many cases "delberately and ntentonally acqured." Placng the money loss from ths source at $1,400,000 a year, he predcted the wanng of the fashon and wth t a reducton n the number of cases of severe sunburn. Fake Apaches Put n Cells by Pars Cops Pars. The Pars polce authortes have made up ther mnds to clean, up all fake Apache dens. For someyears many tourst agences have ncluded vsts to the Apache quarters' n ther tnerares. On the arrval of the "nnocents abroad" unemployed actors anl actresses have been gvng, "thrlls" n the form of fghts and brandshngs of knves and daggers. The other day M. Prollet, the commssary of the Brgade Mondane, walked nto the dstrct wth hs ffteen plan clothes polce offcers and gathered n 200 of these fake male and female Apaches. Playful Cockatoo Costs Theater Owners $350 Syracuse, N. "S". A cockatoo's "lunge" was worth $350 to Mrs. Jula Chambers, Judge B. B. Parson decded. Mrs. Chambers, n her sut aganst the Salna Jefferson corporaton, operators of a theater here, alleged that the cockatoo lunged at her -whle she was watchng t n the lobby of the theater; that she fell backward; that she suffered a severe head nury and. fracture of a wrst. Buffalo Counclman Seeks Repeal of 200 Blue Laws- Buffalo, N. X. Among the 200 "bluelaws" whch Counclman -Frank E.- Freedman seeks to have repealed front, the Buffalo cty code are tbose prohbtng beer, drnkng on Sunday; prohbtng the parkng of bcycles wthnfve feet of a street ntersecton, and., defnng the proper method of htch- - ng horses on publc streets.._.'. H-H-M---M-K..M L! Bolt Opens Bg Hole \ ' n Automoble's Path.t : Mshkll, N. Y. Roy and Fred- K ; erek Ketcbam narrowly escaped 4- '. serous nury when they stopped ; ther automoble ust on the 4- edge of a auge hole n the read t. caused by a thunderbolt: '4- The bolt struck the hghway $ 20 feet from the automoble, renderng Roy unconscous. _. rh-h-h'! : : M'"K-" -M-H-. ~V

8 PACE E:r~T HLLSD.4XE HERALD PAGE EGHT To Fght Tcket Bratt Engages Lawyer To- Defend Hm! WESTWOOD ORDERS BARRYMORE SUPERB T CHLORNATNG UNT! N "SVENGAL" ROLE The contract Stallng a ehlor- \ r ^ nafcng unt at the West-wood sewage as the dat dsposal plant was awarded by the "Svengah","' - Q r Jo - an Barrymore n n whch the star portrays '.J.'Fred. Bratt, of Westwood, has gaged Wllam H. J. Ely, the Democratc canddate fcr Bergen County nstallaton novel and won even greater accountres Senator, to defend hm n a motor vo- to commence mmedately, When t s;! clam as a play. t depcts wth grm atcn ease whch s scheduled to be.'placed n operaton t s expected tred before Recorder E. H. Leddy. n the cdors from the plant, to whch; er the evl control of Svengall over 5tty artsts' model of the Latn West-wood, on Frday nght, July 24. nearby resdents have vgorously ob- Mr. Bratt was gven a tcket for ected over a long perod, wll be great- Quarter. o u g h ths SpeU of the parkng tco close to a fre hydrant on ly reduced. Ttefunt wll be operated; _^ snster Center avenue. Polce Chef Al. Len only durng the summer months, and!"" " master, Trlby becomes a great made the complant. when operatng t wll consume about,-^^ leaves Pars wth am, and Mr. Bratt stated he wou3d fght the case to the lmt, and ndcated that the summons was served to embarrass hm. He ntmated that poltcs was Plans and specfcatons for the new ma2c Uehtod the acton. ralroad staton as submtted by the3 ro fe en _ of sveneal s- mraculously Mr. S5- has not made a publc appsaranoe n Westwood snce hs nomp^b a f «w mnor changes suggested, dynamc" role. t provdes a -worthy Ere, were approved at the meetng,; - gyengal" s Mr. Ba-rymore's mostnaton, and t s lkely that Recorder teddy's court wll be crowded to hear the Democratc canddate defend the stormy Republcan Westwood lawyer. nterpretng ASbs Examne the falures of the world, and you'll fnd that most of them are accomplshed alb artsts. Amercan Magazne. PHONE WESTWOOO6 VESTWCOD, NEW JERSEY SATURDAY JULY 25th JOHN BARRYMORE n BENGAL 5 VAUDEVLLE SUNDAY and MONDAY JULY 26th and 27th CLVE BROOK LAWYER'S SECRET wth : Chas. Rogers Fay Wray COLOR REVEW Newsreel JES. and WED. JULY 28th and 29th CLARA BOW "MONSTERS OF THE DEEP" (Anmal Lfe of the Sea) THURS. and PR. JULY 30th and 31st RAMON NAVARO :n REVVAL WALLACE BEERY F.clca Commssoner Trmble reeom- vehcle wth whch to demonstrate the mended the appontment of an offcal almost hypnotc power of the art whch Polce Surgeon, who would handle all-.made hs "Peter bbetson," '"Rchard" emergency cases of the Department, and "'Hamlet" so unforgettable. Marncludng cases of suspected drunken an Marsh, greatest dscovery of the drvng. The Commssoner ndcated year, was chosen by the star to play that the present procedure of callng the part of Trlby. n any physcan who happens to be \ The part of Trlby s suffused not avalable does not work out to the best (only wth rare charm but wth dramaadvantage. t was thought advsable;tc power by Maran Marsh, who makes by the Councl to gve the matter ser-1 her screen debut n the role. The dfous consderaton before takng any fcult portrayal s done wth an underacton. standng whch seems ncredble n one A representatve of the Pubnc Ser- so young. The flower-lke delcacy of faoe and form vce Corp. publcly thanked the Fre'- ^^ch characterze Mss and Polce Departments for ther co- Marsh make her TrQb y altogether operaton last Saturday n enablng love1^-,.., ^ the Company to adhere to ts bus "SvengaOV as a type of evl love s kno^rl au over the schedule despte the great traffc con-! ^ rld, and the geston due to the fremen's conven- strangely nauntmg romance of the model who fell under hs uncanny Counclman Meyer thanked the Road domnance, :s remembered by all who Department and ts Superntendent saw t n ther youth. t wll be as n- 1 for the manner n whch they had thedelbly fxed on the mnds of those who "By 10 1 e na. a T d M.,x P Sunday fte : lhe mornng, conveatlcn - nobedy would have known that there had and Mss Marsh. of the talkng.screen and wth the masterly nterpretatons of Barry-more been a parade n town," the Counclman sad. Fve acts of vaudevlle wll be ncluded n the Saturday performance. t was decded to leave the Borough bear the expense or constructng a new sdewalk n front of H. Hndley's home en St. Ncholas avenue. Ths s because the sdewalk now n front of the Souse does not conform wth the grade of the street, whch was recently changed. OS3G DON'T FOKGET TO DANCE AT LEN'S GROVE WTH 6-PECE ORCHESTRA Every Frday and Saturday Nght OLD TAPPAN, N. J. G RAN 1 AD THEATRE PEARL KVEB Tel. Pearl Rver 962 COOLER THAN OUTDOORS Matnees Wed., Sat., Sun., 2 P. M. Every Nght 7 and 9 P. M.. SAT., JULY 25 One Day Only A Challenge to Women n Love! "SEED" John Boles, Geneveve Tobn, Los Wlson, Ray Hackett, Zasu Pts Ep. 8, "Heroes of the Flames" SUN. and MON., JULY 26 and 27 Master of women's souls weavng hs hypnotc spell through the werdest Q romance ever screened! JOHN BARRXMORE n "SVENGAL" wth Maran Marsh TUES. and WED., JULY See ths great pcture,.-weep wth the boy's mother,.console wth hs loved one..thrll wth exctement as he defends her honor.. LEW AYRES n "UP FOR MURDER" featurng GENEVEVE TOBN THURS. and PR., JULY Thrll to ths unforgettable drama of the Fery Sahara!! "BEAU DEAL" RALPH FORBES toretta Young, rene Rch tor HLLSDALE FREMEN'S CRCUS AND BAZAAR COMMENCNG MONDAY, JULY 27,1831 AT 8 P- M. ONE BG WEEK FEATURNG THE HELEN CLARK TRO A Sensatonal and Artstc Aeral Crcus Performance Also MONSTER POPULARTY CONTEST for Pascack Valley's Most Popular Grl and Boy SPECAL ADDED ATTRACTON. Frst Showng of Fremen's Conventon and Parade n Movng Pctures Techncolor. Come and see yourself n the moves PARK AVE. (Near Broadway) HLLSDALE Q Proclamaton to Women Tc the mothers and daughters of ths communty about Lew Ayres n "Up for Murder!" Ths s a sensatonal pcture touchng on a serous topc yet "Up lor Murder" s a pcture every mother and daughter wll want to see at the Granada Theatre, Pearl Rver, next Tuesday and Wednesday. Lew Ayres plays the part of a youn? boy tryng to earn hs lvng and provde for a wdowed mother by workng as a reporter on a.bg paper. There he meets a beautful blonde grl the socety edtor (played by Geneveve Tobn). She s loved by the publsher of- the paper but the boy does not know that. He blndly pays attenton to her also -has a Href -hour of oy then hearng the scandalous whspers and rumors, sees t through wth the other man wth fatal results. s ustce always ust? s truth stronger than evdence? Because of hs love and desperaton, was t rght that ths boy be -doomed to de? Should Bob Marshall (the ^reporter, played by Lew Ayres) go to a dshonorable grave for defendng the name of the woman he adored? What do you thnk? See what actually happens n "Up for Murder!" Every woman who has ever loved or been loved can understand and be thrlled by ths drama wth ts bare-faced realsm ts pognancy and ts heart-tugs $ The theatre management announces that Frday nght wll be a bg surprse nght at the Granada, and; that t wll be well worth your whle to attend the performance. Sunrse n the Hmalayas Toursts n nda rarey omt a vst o Calcutta and when n Calcutta they rarely mss the opportunty of wtnessng a sunrse n the Hmalayas. From Calcutta-you go to Dareeng by tran, whch s a clmb of many thousand feet. From ths cty n the clouds you ascena further about 1,500 feet to see the sunrse. The start s made at two o'clock n the mornng and the 1,500 feet referred to s made by pony back or sedan char. You arrve at the top before daybreak and you st and watch for the break of dawn. You watch the sun come up over Bveret, Knchnganga and other whte gants of the greatest mountan wall n the wora. f the atmosphercal condtons are favorable, you wll see a marvelous play of color and" after a cupful of coffee served on Tger hll you slently descend wrapped n the mystery of the stupendous and unspeakable experence.. More Shame to Them Mr. E. V. Wlknson has an aunt vstng hm from a small town some place n Oho. Cty traffc s new and alarmng to her. The other evenng the famly started out from the West sde to fceep a dnner engagement somewhere on the East sde. They ht the home-gong traffc on our downtown streets and got nto one of the nevtable ams. Two mounted polcemen scurred through the lnes, tryng to get some of the slow drvers to pull out of the way, dong ther best to remedy the stuaton. The lttle old lady watched these two fgures n scorn and fnally broke out: "The very dea! Somebody ought to report to the polce that those two men are rdng horseback tp and down the man street at a tme lke ths!" Cleveland Plan Dealer. Most Corancn Posons t has been stated that opum and ts alkalods probably led all other p3lcoso ns the cause of death. f MOVE "BG NOSE" S COUNT CUTELL There's Hardly a Nose That He Cannot mtate.. Kew York, The real "bg nose" behnd the talkng pctures has come to lght at last He s Count Cutell, an talan nobleman, who can barc Hfce a dog; cry lke a baby, roar lke a lon, crow lke a rooster, whstle lke a steamboat n fact, there's hardly a nose that he cannot mtate. He does t by no other mechancal means than hs own human mechansm throat, nose, mouth, tongue and teetl. When, n flmng a peture, there's pressng need for a realstc snore, or perhaps the howl of a hurrcane at sea, or the croak of a frog, lkely as not the drector wll send a hurry call for the count. n bs repertore he clams to have 99 dfferent sounds, any one of whch he wll make to order. He can mtate any nsect and reproduce the sounds of wld beasts and brds. He can mtate motorboat, steamboat, sren, and an arplane n the dstance, close to, and stuntng. He mtates freworks, telegraph, wreless, a speedng' automoble, motor cycle, submarne engnes, horses gong nto a trot, then gallopng off nto the dstance. " began to mtate sounds when was a small boy n Scly," he says n the Amercan Magazne. "Then became a sea ^aptan and learned the sounds of the sea. Later went to war and fought on the Afrcan desert. Then went on the stage at Palermo, ust for the fun of t. gave some ot my sound mtatons, and the audences seemed to lke them. Fnally came to Amerca. Glora Swanson's manager called me. He had heard my mtatons over the rado. He asked me to cry lke a baby as had over the rado. dd so for a screen test. t regstered so realstcally that was engaged. had found an outlet for my chldhood hobby." Watch "Waterspout" Take Cloud's Mosture Seattle, \vash. Pedestrans stopped and looked upward, golfers hestated n ther play, workmen put down ther tools momentarly when a muscal hummng perssted, and then spectators saw what was generally sad to have been one of the most pecular sghts ever seen n the skes hereabouts. A queer cloud,.appearng lke an "aeral waterspout,", descended upon a darker cloud below untl the pont of the cone seemed to enter the dark cloud and draw ts sustenance from ts nteror. The spral grew larger, whle the black cloud dmnshed n sze. Then the cone rose untl t dsappeared n a heavy bank of clouds. The hummng soura ended wth ts dsappearance. Observers were unable to tell exactly what t was, but beleved t was n the nature of a cyclone. Grandmother at 30 May Be Greatgrandma at 50 Hornng, Pa. Mrs. Xevada llarshall, who was a grandmother when she was thrty years old, may be a great-grandmother at ffty. Mrs. Marshall was marred when she was twelve and became a mother at fourteen. Sarah Ann. a granddaughter, s almost fve. "f she marres as young as her mother and grandmother, may be a great-grandmother before 'm ffty," Mrs. Marshall sad.' Sarah Ann s the daughter of George Marshall, Jr., who marred at sxteen. Mrs. Marshall, although marred, could not purchase tobacco for her husband because of a law prohbtng sale to mnors. Gant Moorng Mast Now s Ready for Drgble Akron, Oho. A gant movable moorng mast to drag the mammoth drgble Akron n and out of the Goodyear-Zeppeln corporaton ardock has been tested and pronounced ft. Powerefl wth a 240-horse power gasolne engne, the mast s 76 feet hgh, weghs 200 tons, and attans full speed n locomoton at two mles per hour. Although orgnally desgned by Brtsh engneers, the "ron horse" was maae moble by Untea States naval experts. Beggar Gets Valuable Shoes From Woman Berln, Germany. A cabnet maker's wfe here had nothng to offer a beggar but a par of her husband's old CLASSFED ADVERTSNG Wanted Female f For Sale (.WOMAN Wanted for house work. POE SALE Faroax-gas outft, frst; Gluck, Cross and Bergen Streets, HUs- class condton. large tanks.. Sturm. dale (30 Tel. 792 Park Rdge. (24-t Help Wanted Male OPERATORS and FNSHERS on cloaks, experenced and learners; also pressers. Apply at Goldberg's, Park Ave., opposte school, Park Rdge. (30 Lost and Found Automobles for Sale FOH SALE C eery and cabbage plants, 5 acres; celery $2; cabbage $1.50 1CC0 at feld. Rochele, Chester. N. Y. ( 30 Mscellaneous KNOW THY FUTURE Horoscope readngs, busness, love, marrage, llaf. dame La Von, Hllsdale. (28-tf' FOUND Par gold spectacles. Call at -Local" offce am pay tor advertse- ROBERT A. WARD Mason7~Conment - (30 tractor, Concrete Work and Pasterng. Hllsdale. Telephone Westwood 985. (43-tf- POS SALE Chevrolet coach, good condton; bargan at $150. H. C. Lndblom, e^o C. Helland, Park Rdge. (30 Real Estate for Sale or Rent FOR SALE or RENT 4 Bungalows, 4 rooms to 7; all mprovements. Zanon Bros., Lncoln Ave., Woodclff Lake. Tel. Park Rdge 268-M. (27-30 LAWKMOWERS, Real Estate for Sale SEVERAL ACRES of laud for cultvaton may be had free by nqurng at the "Local" offce, Park Rdge; also small plot for garden, n vllage, (16-tf DOGS and CATS BOARDED. Weekends or longer. Clean ndvdual quarters. Knd treatment. LeMare's Kennels, opposte Arcola Amusement Park. Tel. Hackensack ( : ^ hand and power, sharpened and repared; old saws re toothed, sharpened; new, easy-runnng, lawnmowers adust wth thumb and FOR SALE Flts corner lot near staton; sutable for busness or resdence,! Rdge. Tel " (19-tt fnger onlv. Ed's Renar Shoo. Park J, C. Storms, Pak. Rdge. (tf NSTRUCTON STUDY LAW Locally h spare tme. All hooks suppled. Qualfy Bar exah- FOR SALE Attractve shngled home, 6 large rooms, large closets, tled bath and shower, sun parlor; oak floors, lnaton. L. L. B. degree. Wrte Box 5>, chestnut fnsh n lvngrooms; fre 'co "Local" offce, Park Rdge. (27-30 place, steam heat, cty water; shaded, paved street; terms. E. B. Scott, Montvale. (31-tf tve operatons when school opens for shoes, whch, unknown to her, con--thtaned hs entre savngs, 1,500 marks Fall term on September 9. ($3S0). The beggar ad not nspect them; sold them to a second-hand dealer. The dealer read the owner's story n the newspapers, turned over the shoes and the money to the polce, who returned them to the rght owner. Long Watt: Unbalanced Mnd, Says Stabber New York. Hs walk from Chcago to New York had unbalanced hs nerves, Shela Kalesen, porter, explaned n Tombs court as he was held wthout bal for the grand ury on a charge of stabbng Charles Dean, assstant trust offcer of the Empre Trust company. Kalesen had walked from Chcago n the hope of realzng on some ol stock. He s accused of stabbng Dean when told the stock was worthless. For Rent TWO AUTO ACCDENTS AT DANGEROUS PONT Two Brooklyn! north and the partes one drvng: other east wth FOR RENT-8-Room house en Storms tller machnes on SundaV! came Ave. Mrs. R. Sappah, Park Rdge con tact at the Man street and Sum- (19-t t avenge avenue crossroads at Upv a {-. per Montvale, and a new Pontac car, RENT 10-: house- L> {occuped by one man, was badly dam-. Ffth St. &uu s=""-'^aged, whle a Cadllac, n whch a man 1" 1 and wfe were seated, was also dam- FOR RENT 7-Room house wth bath, aged. Fortunately nether of the parall mprovements. M. H. Baumann. Tel. tes were bodly nured. The same Park Edge 150. (14-tf ^y there was a close escape from an- '. other accdent, n whch three cars FOR RENT 4 Rooms and hath, all were nvolved. There have been; mrrovements; heat furnshed; newly] many serous accdents at ths pont, decorated. A. Frahn, Park Rdge. (22-tf and those lvng n the vcnty have been frequently called upon to render- FOR RENT 5-Room house, all mprovements; $35 per month rent. Mrs.!no sgns or warnng devces, and no frst ad to nured persons. There are Argentna Ganazza, Hllsdale Manor, one there to drect traffc. So serous. (5-tf has the stuaton become, that res-. : dents have serously consdered the ad- FOR RENT ^Apartment of 4 rooms ysablty of callng for volunteers to and bath, all mprovements; eeprtra] drect traffc at ths pont on Sundays locaton. J. C. Storms, Park Rdge. Tel. anc holdays. After Sunday's accdent 20 or 88. (SSf a call to the Freeholder from ths secton, resulted n a County.polceman FOR RENT 3-Room apartment, good locaton, near depot; gas, water, electrc lght; $15 month.- Wrte "R," cowho {handed tckets to at least two comng to the spot wthn, a half-houv 'Local, Park Rdg«. (25tf traffc offenders, one of them a local resdent. :?OR RENT 6 Rooms, near depot, wth,-u mprovements, bult-n shower; garage, reasonable teams; also 4 rooms. Tel. Park Rdge (30 A Frend of Lncoln's The average reader can remember FOR RENT Bungalow, 5 rooms and perhaps Presdent McKnley, even f t bath, hot water heat; garage; $50 pers a msty recollecton. He may recall month. Mrs. A. J. Hggns, Hllsdale. Roosevelt, Taft, Wlson, and the rest Tel. Westwood 92. (25-tf of the Presdents up to the present day. FOR RENT 5 Stores; take choce at! But; vl recalls Presdent Cleveland arld tlle 20 $15 $10 month; all mprovements;! others back to Cvl War days? bg bargan. Wrte "R," c! o Park! None unless t be some of the old vet- Rdge Local, Park Rdge. (25tf erans who are dsappearng fast one by. : one. But there's a sweet lttle old lady at COMPLETE PLANS FOR The T Sarbor, at Permont, N. Y., whch s a convalescent home for old people, lkes to st on porch about her acquantance wth Abraham to Trenton to present to the State Lncoln, the Great Emancpator. When a small chld ust arrved Board of Educaton the apparent ds- from G. exm&ny she met.repancy n the allotment made for Che, wa]kng, n fhe ' wth youtmul share of State money to be pad ^ nalv ete-and-from tne custom of her Park R-fge school for ts new Manual, fatleran, ; _ she gteeted - n:m ^^ a Tranng Department, he frst no-1 < Gooten Morg<sn... Ths Mr Lncoln tce receved by the Dstrct w-as tha. &e frst. tme acknowledged wth knd- 3G0O would be pa:a, whereas the-sta t e!., y C0Urt e S y_and then on repeated vshad been nformed that the Dstrct t3 they hac! beooms accustomed to desred and had voted a corre- stop nd talk f only for a few words spendng sum. n tme they became fast frends; the The. matter was adusted amcably, tau dgnfed man and' the lttle Ger- *he State havng been n error. The man ass that beamed sunshne on f emanng $2000 wll be avalable to theevery sde. Dstrct. One day the lather accompaned her Presdent Laurer and Vce Presdent J to the park. When he saw the tall m- Blackburn, of the Board of Educaton, pressve fgure approachng he was lso vsted Trenton, to complete the'preparsd to bow wth deep reverence.rrangements for the new departments. and respect as t was the custom n An excellent plan of the rooms had those' days. What was hs surprse to been prevously prepared by a State see hs own daughter run forward, takepresentatve who had personally n-1 ng the Presdent's hand, -talkng wth spected the Park Rdge school, whch 1 a freedom, and abandon of a lfe long wll be adopted by the Board n layng (frend. When the daughter ntroduced out the varous artcles, machnery, J the man -to her proud parent as the etc. Orders for these artcles have [man the famly had heard her menton been placed and they wll be nstalled wth such frankness and pleasure, he as scon as possble after ther arrval was stunned. He was overcome, here. The rooms are beng sutably Then they passed on. The father arranged for them and all necessary was speechless for a moment, then connectons made. All classes wll be ready to begn ac- Ralro^a Sgna'a The code of sgnals, unform on all ralroads, s: Two blasts (tran standng) > proceed; two blasts (tran runnng), stop; three blasts (tran standng), back up; three blasts (tran runnng), step next staton; four blasts (tram standng), test brakes; four blasts (tran runnng), decrease speed; fve blasts (tran runnng),-, ncrease speed; sx blasts (tran runnng), turn off steam; seven blasts (tral) runnng), send more steam;-.eght blasts (tran runnng), brakes stckng, '! Drven to t One great reason, why-many chldren abandon themselves wholly to slly sports, and trfle away all ther tme nspdly, s hpracse they have found ther curosty balked. Tbeke. tu'rned to hs lttle daughter and sad: "Do you know who that was? Do you;, realze wth whom you were speakng?" "Tes," repled the chld. "That's my frend. That's all." "You're rght," answered the father. "But he s the head, the Presdent- of ths mghty country. Such a smallperson as yourself should feel very proud to have such a man as her frend.". Ths frendshp contnued for a long,, long tme. When Lncoln was later assassnated later to be bured wth, great pomp and ceremony, she and her father attended the funeral. She stll retans vvdly the mpressons that chance -meetng made and the later assocatons that only ended wth hs, Assertng that there's a lot of humbug about the wel-!::ovva "susy bee", a reader denal!ds of the Presbyteran.' Advance, "Just why was the bee selected as a mode'!, of ndustry?" "Beeacse. brother," remnds te ed^tov- "the bee s always-

9 SUPPLEMENT TO HULSD-AXE HERALD Slent Automatc Sales Co., nc. Located at 276 West Ford Lee Road, Servce of the Slent Automatc - Hackensack Ths company s nstallng many Slent Automatc Ol. Burners whch hfve been perfected to a hgh degree and are gvng unversal satsfacton. Ths burner s a boon to the housewfe for wth these burners there s not so much cleanng to te done and the temperature s kept at an even heat automatcally. One can produce ust the knd of weather desred and the home becomes attractve and the favorte place to stay. One can have the heat of the tropcs, the temperature of the temperate zone or the colder clmate, ust as desred. Ths ol turner really s entrely automatc. t s economcal, governed n every phase of ts quet Bogota, N. J., -the Noseless operaton by the thermostat control whch stands watch lke a lvng sentnel at your furnace door, and gves you constant comfort, quck heat for sudden cold and mld warmth for mld weather. These burners are made n all szes for all szes of homes and buldngs and they wll be glad to fgure wth anyone upon the mmedate nstallaton so that everythng wll be ready for the north wnd. Ths company wll send a heatng expert to your home who wll fgure out mathematcally your needs and make a survey of the place so that thers wll he no queston about the success of the ehanse. Ths company has gven specal study of heatng problems and Features Sales and Ol Burner Phone wll be glad to help you wth any suggestons. They are able to lay out the work so everythng wll be convenent and ook attractve. -All work done s guaranteed to gve complete- satsfacton. The prces are reasonable, wthn the reach of all. f you are thnkng of havng any work done n hs lne t wll be, to your advantage to get n touch wth hm and dscuss prces and plans. Every detal wll he carred out as planned n a prompt manner. Ths company merts the hghest standng n the busness crcles of ths secton and takes an actve part n any cvc movement for the betterment of the communty. They nvte your patronage. 140 Cement Block Co. Located at 718 Lnwood Ave., Rdgewood, Feature Gement Blocks for All Buldng Purposes Vapor Cured Cement Blocks a Specalty Phone Rdgewood Rdgewood Cement Block Co. are At frst our ancestors had to construct needs. The products are very popu- homes out of 'what they could lar and endorsed by dscrmnatng manufacturers of concrete blocks of every descrpton for all constructon uses. get, hut wth the growth of wealth people. and ndustry people are buldng for The management have been earnest workers n the nterests of the all tme. Ths tendency assures the They are prepared to supply outof-town future of such professons as ths communty n whch ths enterprse orders as well as the local one. s ocated. Wth acute busness udg- trade. Real estate men, sub-dvders, Ths relable frm has had much ment, whch s responsble for the experence n the ndustry and features hgh grade buldng blocks and concern, they realze that every com- success of ths large and growng home bulders and farmers should consult them for prces and nformaton. and outbuldngs. would wther and de f located n a brcks for homes, factores, garages mercal and ndustral enterprse The growng tendency of our people to buld more substantal buldngs, ones that wll last through the years, has come wth the more settled condton of the country and the desre to buld a place that wll be a They offer the trade the best of servce n the way of rapd delvery n ths secton and keep a large supply of well seasoned blocks on hand. All anyone has to do s call them on the telephone, wrte, or better stll communty that dd not mprove and keep pace wth the tmes. n ths revew, embracng as t does the most salent features of our onward progress, we wsh to complment ths frm upon the economc poston famly estate throughout the years. call and see them and talk over your ther actvtes mert. 201 Elmer Mabe Located at 521 Hudson Street, Hackensack, Phone and 48 Temple Avenue, Hackensack, Phone , s a Desgner and Bulder of Hgh Grade Memorals Expert Craftsmanshp, mpershable Materals Used n Constructon. Elmer Mabe has bult up a large busness.n ths secton of the state. Monuments of qualty can be seen n all the cemeteres n ths communty and surroundng terrtory- Each monument s a credt to the establshment, the process whch they use s the method whch nsures ther guarantee. The polcy of Mr. Mabe s to produce a hgh qualty of craftsmanshp on the best grade of grante at a very reasonable prce. And by always adherng to these prncples they have ganed a large patronage and the confdence of the people. Snce he has been establshed he has been, compelled to make many mprovements because of the volume of busness he does, untl now he has a modernly equpped ] plant wth all the latest mechancal devces to help n the producton of frst class memorals. Although an expert n hs lne Mr. Mabe has always been very reasonable n hs prces and the people of ths communty have found t to ther advantage to consult hm before contractng elsewhere. He carres a large stock of fnshed monuuments of exquste and orgnal desgn, n all szes, but are glad to carry out any suggeston that'the E. F. Wokal purchaser may have n mnd. When settng the monument, the greatest care s taken ; that the foundatons are n place so that they wll stand soldly n years to come. Snce the earlest ages, n all countres mausoleums, tombs and memorals have been erected and have proven ther value by preservng for modern cvlzaton the hstory of the people. Mr. Mabe has always taken an actve nterest n the development of ths communty and s known among our foremost ctzens. He nvtes your patronage. 133 Located at Hudson Street, Hackens ack Funeral Drector and Embalm- -Phone Hackensack er- E. F. Wokal features a very complete and satsfactory fu6'fl servce. He las been unusually successful n the conduct of tlls "Dullness by re?.?on of tle fact he offers a most complete 'vee and keeps the place up to the mnute. Condtons n the professon have rapdly changed n the past few years. The ntroducton of auto equpment and good roads have wdened the scope of actvtes of the fully equpped funeral drectng establshment and where one only went a few mles from home n the past, today a well equpped funeral. d- C. C Van Emburgh, nc. rector s prepared to conduct a funeral wthn a radus of many mles. The day when t was necessary to have an undertaker at every cross road has passed away. n place of arrangements to ther termnaton. ths re have establshments that are n makng ths revew we are glad thoroughly equpped that offer the hghest type of servces. to complment hm upon ths very modern servce and to call to the attenton of the publc the promnent The outsde equpment ncludes the most stately of auto hearses, sutable closed cars and lmousnes for poston he occupes n. the busness the conduct of any funeral, no matter how large or how far dstant. the fact that he keeps n touch wth and professonal world, because of He specalzes n a very complete the ever changng tmes and has servce.'- From the tme he s called one of the most complete establshments n ths secton. on the phone day or nght the rela- fl3 tve and frends are releved of all detals. He takes complete charge and have the most able assstance n all departments for carryng funeral Located at Rdgewood, N. J., Funeral Drector- Ave. Chapel at 306 East Rdgewood Ave- The effcent work of ths man has won for hm a promnent place among the funeral drectors of ths secton of the state, because of ' unfalng efforts and expert methods has progressed from a modest start, untl at the present he holds a most envable poston among the men of ths professon. t s generally known taat ths funeral home has conducted some of the largest funerals n ths secton of the state n a most satsfactory manner. Because of acts of kndness and effcent to a marked degree, he has earned success and won. the entre confdence of Ms many patrons, who have been releved from many troublesome detals n tmes of sorrow and bereavement. There s no extra charge for the use of the modern, funeral home. Here complete funerals can be conducted. Ths frm consders t ther ov lgaton to lgmen the burden by sncere personal nterest, thoughtful care and unobtrusve counsel and ad- -Offee at 7 South Maple -Phone Rdgewood vce. Ths s always ther duty and they am to fulfll t n every case. t s qute fttng that n ths edton we gve promnent menton to ths progressve establshment on the suceess they have attaned and ther very commendable and satsfactory servce. We take ths opportunty to complment them npon the success of ther busness and to urge upon the people that ther servces should be apprecated and placed n ther mnds as one dstnctly satsfactory. 95 Hackensack Hosptal Located on Hosptal Ave. n Hackensack, Features a Complete Hosptal Servce for the People n Ths Secton Modern Emergency, Surgcal and Maternty Departments Mantaned Effcent X-Ray Servce,, Laboratory Servce, Etc. Phone Hackensack Ths s a progressve, orderly nsttuton whch s ustly noted for the careful and effcent care gven patents. Here they are_ prepared to receve patents and gve them exemplary attenton at all tmes. They are n a poston to take care of all non-contagous dseases and furnsh quet, rest and effcent servce. Under these condtons the patent quckly responds to ther treatments and return to ther homes much mproved n health and sprts. Another feature of ths hosptal s the careful attenton gven to maternty cases. Eelatves and frends can rest assured that when the patent s taken n here, that there s nothng that wll be overlooked as far as comfort and attenton s eon cerned. nstruments are at hand f necessary and all precautons are taken for the beneft of the patent. Ths hosptal offers the patent quet and rest combned wth every modern method of treatment and dagnoss. Laws of nature and prncples of scence co-ordnated n the most effectve care of ther patents. Ther modern buldng s completely equpped for all knds of non contagous dseases. Specal develop ment n the laboratory and det! ktchens makes study and rapd results n treatment possble. Ths hosptal contans complete operatng departments, nursery and examnng departments. Ths modern nsttuton contans quarters for the recepton of cases The Vogue requrng personal care and ndvdual study. We are glad to complment ths nsttuton on ts surroundngs and ther work n the relef of sufferng humanty. We udge man's love for God by the) way he treata hs fellowmen. t has been bult up to ts present hgh standard by the treless efforts of ts effcent stag and the years that have been spent and the results that have been obtaned deserve the prase of all. The hosptal has most effcently, taken care of out of town patrons n a prompt manner. Ths hosptal s a credt* to ths secton of the state and deserves the support and backng of every ctzen. ll At East Rdgewood Ave., at Chestnut Street, Opposte Frst Natonal Bank, Rdgewood, N. J., Dealers n Women's and Chldren's Wearng Apparel, Hosery, Gloves, Corsets, Underthngs, Dresses and Ml< lner y Phone Rdgewood The Vogue has an attractve a- store as one would fnd n ths secton of the state. By wse and effcent buyng and keen foresght on the part of the manager, t has grown to be a real shoppng center for a wde area. t caters to a large clentele of fashonable and conservatve people. Specal attenton has been gven the lades* department. t s replete wth the goods of the hour, n the varkms materals and shades whch have been approved by the world's leadng fashons. No sooner has any goods been accepted by the fashon authortes than t at once makes an appearance n ths store. : They carry a complete lne of lades' slk underwear n all the latest color combnatons. The gloves and slk stoekngs are from the most relable houses and have gven complete satsfacton. Tou have for your selecton many accessores of dress whch characterze the attre of the progressve people of today and one ftlst look far to fnd a stock more complete and attractve. Thus you are offered the dependablty of tradng wth home people whom you know and who know you and at the same tme you have your choce from a metropoltan stock and are served n the most effcent and modern manner. Throughout ths entre establshment you wll fnd the same hgft qualty at reasonable prces, courteous and accommodatng servce^ whch at the same tme takes ntoconsderaton the needs and demands of the people of ths communty. The future of ths store can be readly forseen. ts growth, can be traced to the wse and tmely decsons of the management, who s. responsble for the frm's progress n the busness world. When n town make ths storeyour shoppng headquarters. AH goods are classfed and arranged so that one may make ther selecton, wthout confuson or delay, whch, means much to the busy shopper 75 Red Star Cleaners and Dyers Located at 379 Man Street, Hacken sack, Features Cleanng and Dyeng Now Conductng a Cash and Carry Sale Men's Suts Cleaned 75 cents Lades' and Men's Hats Cleaned and Blocked 50 Cents Phone Ths establshment features a complete servce n dry cleanng and pressng, under drecton of an authorty of dry cleanng. There s no one establshment that has done more for the good of the publc of the country durng ths era of hgh prces than ths well-known cleanng establshment. The fact that they are able to take clothng that fades or needs cleanng and turn t out so that t looks lke new has saved many a hgh-prced purchase and helped to lower the cost of lvng. Many people have learned through ther servce that they can save the expendture of many dollars for new clothes. Every day brngs more work from patrons who have been saved the purchase of new garments through the excellent work that ths frm does n the cleanng and pressng of old ones. Both men.and women have found that the most delcate fabrcs are carefully and effcently handled here and returned to them cleaned and pressed n the most satsfactory manner. Dry cleanng was ntroduced nto ths country from France, but the system used today has been greatly mproved upon by Amercan machnery and santary methods. As ths establshment the very best and latest process s used and as a eonsequence when garments are returned to you they look smooth, odorless. and n press accordng to the styles of the day. They specalze n all classes of dry cleanng, both for men and lades, and the most delcate dresses are handled n the most careful and effcent manner. The management s of the leadng ng busness men of the communty who have always taken an actve nterest n the communty's onward progress and are among the valued resdents, whom we wsh to complment upon the modern place and the admrable polcy followed n ts drecton. 79 Located at 100 Moore Street, Hackensack, s Offcal Staton for Hydraulc and Bendx Brakes All Brake Troubles Expertly Remeded Feroda and Garfeld Brake Lnng Steerng Gear Servce Elmnatng Front Tre Wear Due to Algnment, Shmmyng, Hard Steerng, Etc. Phone Hackensack Brake Servce Staton handle the famous hydraulc four wheel and Bendes four wheel brakes. They specalze n applyng hgh grade brake lnng and f any owners are annoyed -wth brakng noses they can correct ths trouble quckly wth ther brake anchors. f you are havng any knd of brake troubles, mechancally or hydraulc, take them to ths company and there s no guess work wth ther equpment or sklled workmen. Ths frm makes a specalty of adustng or relnng two or four wheel brakes on any make or model of car. And more every day one reads n the newspapers or hears about automoble accdents that have been caused by faulty brakes. Good brakes prevent hundreds of accdents n the con ested traffc and n bad weather. Ths concern's slogan, "Stop Quck and Lve Longer" and phone number are wdely known throughout ths localty. They have devoted all ther tme to brake servce exclusvely. To take chances wth your own lfe or the lves of your famly or pedestrans when a few cents a day wll keep your brakes n good condton s a chance not worth whle. Ths local concern has been engaged n the, brake servce busness and they understand the busness from te ground up. Ther prces are most reasonable and ther servce dependable. They wll gladly test your brakes free of charge. They offer complete free nspecton and -wll not advse any work done unless t s necessary. Auto brake servce establshments are becomng more and more: a necessty. n many garages, when, the motorst leaves hs automoble for repar and nstructon to test and tghten the brakes, the brakes are overlooked and after all ths s the most mportant tem. n case of accdent the motorst wth faulty Drakes has lttle chance of provng hmself not gulty of the accdent whether serous or a slght one. The many excellent obs they have done for auto and truck owners n ths part of the state, the reasonable prces and the quckness of the servce has brought ths establshment nto the well deserved promnence that t now enoys. We advse all of our readers that when they want any knd of vors properly executed they so to ths Brake Servce Staton. 24

10 Bergen Plumbng Company of Rdgewood Located at 71 Chestnut Street, Edgewood. Features Plumbng, Heatng and Sheet SCetal Work Quet May Automatc Ol Burner Sales aad Ser- T vce Phone Rdgewood ! Bergen 'Plumbng Company of Kdgewood s satsfyng ther many customers wth, the Quet May Ol Burners. For many years the engneers of Ms company have "been workng on an. ol burner that would brng to the emal cottage and bungalow the mmeasurable comfort of the automatc ol heat, the result of absolute satsfacton. Ths ol burner s not bult Eor today, rather t s bult for the entre season, ana once you enoy ths greater and cleaner warmth you wll not tolerate any other method of heatng your borne. They are nstalled by specally traned mechancs and they solve once for all the problem of heatng your home. Back of every purchase stands a guarantee of satsfacton gven by ths concern. The mechancs are well versed n every phase of ths professon and all work s guaranteed, the work s su- SUPPLEMENT TO BUZSDALE HERALD Carroll Cadllac Corporaton Located at Passac Street, Hackensack, Features Cadllac and La Salle Sales and Servce The Many Beautful Models of 8, 12 and 16 Cylnder-Cadllacs are on Dsplay here. Phone Hackensack Cadllac and La Salle cars are now tons, wth Tch upholsteres, they beng dsplayed by ths progressve are the last word n comfort and a.w frm. They are a delght to. the eye pearan.ce...."'.- as well as a' wonderful mechancal achevement, smooth, quet and powerful they are a delght to the owner. The new eghts whch have been developed by the best engneers n the country are a marvel n the automoble feld. We know of nothng that can compare wth them for the prce. These machnes are bult pervsed by master mechancs and to sut every nee(} ana prced to sut future. The perfect performance, conforms to the rules of the natonal every purse. day n and day out denotes true assocatons, they not only want the n many beautful color combnawork to pass nspecton but nsst on Qualty. You do not have to haveany archtectural or specal constructon to nstall ths heatng system. The management would be very the best that can be accomplshed. Whey are easly nstalled and at once glad to have you call at ther show gves freedom from ashes, dust, drt., rooms and nspect ther complete lne The great army of satsfed owners who have year after year awated the arrval of new and fner models, are testmony of ther worth. The servce s to be consdered equpped wth everythng possble Vst ther show rooms and servce for satsfactory and prompt work, department and see for yourself the sklled mechancs, famlar wth every phase of constructon are employed there. Genune factory parts the place s ustly noted. hgh qualty and effcency for whch, and specal factory tools are at hand A demonstraton wll be gladly for any emergency. gven and estmates on your present The hghest degree of travel se- car furnshed. Lberal allowances when buyng a new car. To satsfy curty can be enoyed wth these are one of the polces of ths frm. the owner s the creed of each deal- cars regardless of ther reasonable Socally and n a busness respect er. To serve hm courteously, prompt- prce. They can compete wth any ths frm enoys an excellent xeputaton n ths communty. Publc ly and effcently, to gve a maxmum car on the road n beauty, durablty of servce at a' mnmum - cost s as- and rchness. sprted and oblgng they are worthy of your regard as well as your sured. Ths frm can be depended upon Our servce staton s thoroughly [ to extend any courtesy to motorsts. patronage whch they solct. 5 A man n New Jersey s sad to be carryng the same umbrella for the ffty-second year, whch not only and the gloomy shadow of the coal of burners and dscuss your problems proves the hgh grade of workmanshp n the umbrella, but that ts Shovel. "Whether t s a large offce wth them. They wll be glad to buldng or the small home; t per-] submt plans and offer suggestons owner has a fne memory and _ onest Located, at d,lo West SJlOre AV6., JOOgOa, N, J= Serns the task of heatng t better, cleaner and wth absolutely no exerton on the part of the owner. Wth less energy than t takes to that wll be of any assstance to you. Y\ r e are glad to complment them on the qualty of servce they render to ther patrons as well as the Hood your home wth brght electrc qualty of the products they specallght your home can be heated for an ] ze n. 141 Now that nventors have produced an artfcal wool, one may nqure f t comes "a yard wde." Located at 63 East Rdgewood Ave., Rdgewood, N. J., Features Hgh Qualty Shoes Phone Rdgewood The evoluton of the modern shoe szes. n fact t s a style revew of 1 store to ts hgh state of effcency the season n the latest footwear. No ",..., matter how far from ths store you may lve you should occasonally look at ther well arranged wndows and better stll drop n and look over the latest styles. from the made to orders of the cobbler of old and the department n the general store has been brought about by the demands of the people for more effcency and the better fttng of feet as well as styles that are becomng and conform to the sze of the feet as well as to the other ap- parel worn by the customer, Ths and store typfes all that s new modern n a shoe store of the perod. Ther stock s secured from the leadng manufacturers of the country " s most complete as to style and street, but n the fnancal world or any place you may be as they have shoes for all occasons. Ths excellent store realzes that the success you have wth the shoes they sell you makes a contnued customer and that you wll come back The salesmen are famlar wth the from season to season as t wll he stock and can tell by lookng at your feet ust the model of shoes that wll make your feet nconspcuous and wll conform to your requrements of dress. Then they have your sze and wll ft you scentfcally so that you wll feel good and can go about your busness wth that dash and vm that wns not only on the lttle trouble for you to shop here and that comfort that you secure wll leave pleasant memores of ther store and servce. Bergen County Tle Company features hgh grade tle and mosac for floors, wall and mantles, etc., under the drecton of men who have made a specal study of the busness. They offer a most complete servce and no matter whether t s tlng for the bathroom, walls and floors, the mantel, the floor of the pato, the sunken or Spansh gardens or anyother part of the modern estate or home you wll fnd they can furnsh you wth an endless -varety of desgns". These range 'from the shnng whte to the ornate desgns. They have made ar extensve study of the layng of tlng ard have studed ts use n Spansh archtecture where t -Phone Hackensack orgnated. They wll be able to duplcate for you any Spansh home wth all ts colorng effects n the Terrazzo and tlng whch gves t that touch of the Moorsh and that ndescrbable soft orental caste that s so restful and pleasng to the eye. General 1 le great varety. Thev car cr"y? TO" plan and smple work or the more decoratve lnes. You can see <=re whole sectons so that you wll be able to forecast the appearance of the bathroom, freplace or ktchen. They have men who understand No matter what knd of a home or the correct layng of all tlng so that other buldng you are fgurng upon t wll be perfectly done. There are no defects n the work as the work-. t wll be well to have a consultaton wth them and let them assst you n the selecton of desgns and knds of marble and tlng work to be used on your place. At the show rooms can be seen all men are artsts as well as artsans and take prde n the work n hand. n makng ths revew we are glad to complment the Bergen County Tle Company upon the ntroducton the varous styles of tles for floors, (nto Amercan archtecture of the mantles and freplaces. They have ; many refnements the use of tlng chosen the lnes from some of the [gves and to call to the attenton of leadng manufacturers of the coun- the publc the desrablty of ts extry and have desgns that are of a tensve use. " go we "wsh to complment.ther pop- Located at 21 No. Maple Ave.,Rdge:wood, Features Hupmoble and De Vaux Sales and Servce See the De Vaux t's a Sensaton n Low- Prced Cars Phone Rdgewood ular store and refer t to all of our readers. t s one of the most progressve and relable shoe concerns n ths part of the country. 172 At 307 Man Street n Hackensack, Features Delco Batteres Dstrbutor for Complete Lne of A. C. Supples Loveoy Shock Absorbers Speedometer Servce on All Makes of Speedometers Phone Throughout ths secton ths has much new busness and the number Ths s a latter day busness house, nf th P most! of ther patrons s steadly growng. that determned when they opened become known as one of the,most ^They ^ ^ have, _,, learned all Qll, of tt, the o mt1o lttle,. ntrcaces of ths busness and have that motorsts n ths part of the ther doors to the local publc to see effcent and well equpped auto electrc servce statons n the commu- branch of the work. Therefore, they tages of metropoltan storage battery had a wde experence n every country were gven all of the advannty. t s prepared for all classes of are competent to handle every feature of the busness n the most ef- queston but that they have succeed- servce and postvely there can be no storage battery servce on any make of battery and makes a specalty of fcent and satsfactory manner. ed re-chargng automoble and rado F ; fty per cent of all motor troubles Ẇe are pleased to congratulate ths battery shop upon ther success and advse the people of batteres. They also have all szes. g caus " e( J by poor _ su atlon O r other Rdsewood and on hand types at of all auto tmes. and rado batteres electrcal No matter defaults. how urgent your need the expert servce to be had at Rdgewood Tavern s the largest n When the motorst wshes start- may be for startng, lghtng or gn- ths place. They wll be glad to dsfng lghtng and gnton servce he ton servce they are prepared to take! cuss your battery problems as well features home cookng and specalzes ths part of the state and wants to consult one who knows ths care of t for you promptly and n as to gve: the electrcal system of n delcous luncheons and dnner and busness thoroughly. The excellent ] the most expert manner. They are the car an examnaton and advse specal Sunday dnners. When one servce that they have rendered ther devoted exclusvely to superor start- adustngs wthout any oblgaton to many patrons has brought lghtng and gnton servce. Located at 435 Man Street, Oackensack, Features an Excellent Servce n Local and Long Dstance Movng, Storage Warehouses on Mercer Street, Hackensack and Another n Rutherford 26 Peces of Relable Movng Equpment at Your Servce Phone Hackensack Geo. B. Holman & Co., nc., s a member of the Natonal Furnture Warehouse Assocaton to whch organzaton the maorty of the largest storage companes have membershp. Ths progressve company has recently been assgned a large part of the removal work of 1S00 famles svheh the Bre Ralroad s movng to Cleveland Oho. These famles are employees of the Ere Ralroad who gave the Holman Company ths mportant work. Geo. B. Holman & Co., nc., are operatng a transfer busness both n local and long dstance haulng. Kothng s too large or too small for them to handle and they dsplay so skll n the handlng that even the most delcate peces of furnture s never marred. When n need of expert servce phone Hackensack They take away all the wolres of the undgnfed movng days. Customers may attend to busness and even socal dutes wthout the least worry. Just leave the key and tell them what to do and t wll be performed n such an effcent manner that you wll wonder how you ever managed before you engaged ther servces. Ths long dstance transfer and movng servce s equpped wth They trucks and vans of ar szes. can move you anywhere the roads go, all at one tme. They have all sze trucks and vans and go to any part of the country any tme you call them. They are expert packers and glad to assst n any way possble, especally n the handlng of nteror furnshngs, They understand ust how to take care of them. Ther trucks are equpped n the most modern manner and n charge of capable drvers, who are famlar wth the mechancal features of the partcular make they are drvng, thus assurng tle publc rapd and effcent servce. They are also famlar wth road routes n any part of ths ana adonng states, and thoroughly understand traffc regulatons..- ' ' ; n ths revew we are glad to gve commendable menton to the superor qualty of servce rendered: the publc n ths communty and recommend them as the best transfer company n ths secton of the state. 135 The newjde Vaux cars are recog- As for appearance, no car can be on haad wth specal factory equpment and parts to gve mmedate at- nzed by the motorng publc as the more attractvely apponted. Rch farthest advanced of any car n the tolors, expertly appled and capable tenton. Owng to the, f actthat -^every man s a specalst: n hs lne, medum prced class. - M many season's of hard wear, beautful upholsteres to harmonse ths thorough servcng.. : much tme and money s saved on t s a marved n motor car excellence wth ts magcal acceleraton makes a truly fne appearance. The management wll gve you a and quet smoothness one can soar a One must see and test these ma-! lberal allowance on your present any speed wth hardly any engne [ chnes * to -----" really apprecate ther " - exeffort. The entre car s bult to eeptonal worth. Ths s what the you, t wll be so generous. Havng machne, and ther offer wll surprse match ths magnfcent performance, management wants you to do. Any-been establshed n busness for a A wonderfully developed motor-wth tme convenent to you they wll be number of years, and earnng a reputaton for honesty and far deal- tremendous power. glad to show you and gve you a. free By reason, of ths remarkable pow- demonstraton. You may rest aser transmsson these cars lt-! sured-that they wll apprecate your to take care of your motor troubles ng, ths concern s well prepared erally do thngs whch are not possble to other cars. Ther power, n regards to the servce, some- you. We heartly recommend that nterest. n a manner that wll greatly please speed, acceleraton and smoothness thng we cannot overlook, a traned you vst ther show rooms and become acquanted. cannot be excelled. ] staff of expert mechancs are always 14 Rdge wood Tavern At 168 East Rdgewood Ave., Rdge wood, N. J. A Cool, Comfortable Place to Eat Home Cookng Prvate Dnners Partes Phone tractve and comfortable as possble. t presents an appearance that s dfferent from the usual and t fgures greatly n the entertanment crcles of the communty. They make a specalty of preparng specal luncheons and dnners for busness and dnes here they are sure of well cooked food, courteous and prompt servce from the specal traned dnng The menu ncludes a large selec- socal partes. room attendants. The frendly atmosphere makes one feel at home. so essental to the average guest. ton of fruts and vegetables that s The management specalzes n They are partcularly well equpped home cookng and uses only the very for proper handlng of foods and 6est foods procurable so naturally serve them, n such a manner as to no complants are ever regstered as please the most aded appette. Moto the qualty of the foods. Ths restaurant s apponted wth all the latest fxtures to make t as at- Frank Ackernan The great popularty of ths restaurant s largely due to the unusual ablty of the management, whose wde experence and broad knowledge of the busness has well provded for the entertanment and demands of the most dscrmnatng trade. Nothng f left undone to satsfy the most fastdous taste of the most exactng guest. We take pleasure n callng attenton to ths establshment. People who dne here have found t a pleasure that adds charm to the every day torsts and after theatre partes wll J lfe. t commands favorable cornfnd ths a pleasng place to complete ment not only from local but also the pleasures of the day. (from the travelng publc. 163 Located, at 28 Talen Street, Hackensack, Specalzes n. Plumbng, Heatng and Sheet Metal Work Establshed 1896 Phone Hackensack Ta3: Aekerman s equpped to has almost, reached perfecton and gve excellent servce n the plumbng vth the ever ncreasng wealth of and heatng lne.. Call on hm for the country people they are naturally payng more attenton to the estmates when you are contemplatng new work or repars on your adornment and convenence of the present system. : home. The plumbng ol the country s ndcatve of the degree of cvlzaton. study to the plumbng- problems and Mr. Aekerman has, gven specal Wth the advent of the mechancal be glad to help you wth.any age plumbng has become more prevalent and today t s requred n an suggestons, He s able, to lay out ctes and desred by everyone n the country. '.' : /..'. The. mechancal part of plumbng the work so everythng wll be convenent and look attractve. The constructon of the modern home compels the santary engneer to have a thorough knowledge of the complex heatng and water systems. Ths coupled wth the practcal detals of the plumbng work has done much to place ths progressve busness frm n the front ranks of the professon. All work done s guaranteed to gve complete satsfacton.. The prces are reasonable, wthn the reach of all. f you are thnkng ot havng any -work done n hs lne t wll be to your advantage to get n touch'wth hm and dscuss prces and plans. Every detal wll he carred out as planned n a prompt manner. :;.. -' : '. He s a man of the hghest standng n the busness crcles of thu secton and takes an actve part n any cvc : movement for the better- ' ment of the communty. He nvtes your patronage. 1^3

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