Cape May County Times, 25 November 1921 IIIF issue link — Page 2

CAPE MAY COUI'TY TiMEP. SEA ISLE CITY,

NEW JERSEY STATE BRIEFS

» I Recnnl* aLow nevea ir.nrrlncee, one { I fVm.. nm one birth In Riverton horI 1 oui.li iluring October. 5 I Gulltonl Young. «-nti-iif(Hl to <1lc j dnralr the ' r of Harry Oarw'

the Oni

the d< > nth hou*

•harp** of ruder Sheriff landeutted to Constable*

ilen t

r Jail

! Trenton, .

Porrivnl H. Crnden of Rnjvnne has Hetvett .»nd een named by State Prohibition PI- j.- or( j t md Schellent'er.

ector Charles VC. Brown of New Jer- ) ci a rle* <i. Wrc^e has cy as legal ndvlaer of nix department. ^ t]ie cl , mR ,,, |, V Pi: Governor Edward* announced the American L-plgn. for tin ippolntment of Aleva der S. Ward, n n imaxe at Orangi

*onkvr. of NewnrU and John I*. Pul- Xewmnrkct mad. Ilh

lelten I'

rcctlo street

. which

and

ard of Trent n tru*tee* of the new. the lowest of eypht. wu* &!*/*>"• Work date employee*' retirement system to _ w ui i, e stiiri -•( within two weeks. The Jr organlred under a law passed this clnhlouse will lie a two-stor; frame ye*.,-, which becomes effective January mruourc with .tucco finish ami mouI. Stale T-t-nsurer William T Reed Prn throuthout. It will have a fn-nt-l» a third trustee hy virtue of Ills of- npe of 70 feet and wlP be is) fevt Jeep. Be*. ■ Thirty-one new hous«*s have been The Federation of Churche* .ailed erected In Washington thl« year, in upon County Proaecbtor J. Henry eplte of the high rost o. construction. Harrison of Eases t" dose motion pic- ; i, u t still there Is demand for "‘‘"'J' ture hour 's on .Sunday. Harrison re- more, rtf the total twelve were erected P'ieH in effect that If be started ont m Park avenue. It if exp to do that be would enforce the law about fifty will be erect.d next }«»■• Jmpnrtla’ly with all prohibited Sunday Several contracts have l»eeii let. the activities. Including golf. ] ground to be broken this y«»r. Ast a result of v demonstraUon at Oondctlon • f George Washington KeviK.rt <-: a hold-up which tia.k plain* Knight, odored. for ie bnitul juurthe nlcht before, Henry WndswArth is der of Mrs. Edith Wilson, young lefth dead and George K. Ponrnler is held ] * -uboy church organist on the nignt or

pending an investigation Fournier • July 12 last, was affirm, told the police that the shooting was mous vote of

accidental and took place while they I Appeals In Trenton. Knight Is un-l were discussing the hold-up of James sentence of death at the state pr. . Worrell and Alonzo Layton. Morrell | Fanning !\ Albert, oldest member was shot, probably fatally, when be , t lM* New York Produce Exchange, died refused to surrender the cash box of ‘ ' " ,M, i

the Haxlet Trading Company. Hls as-

gallant escaped

Declaring that It would Ik- a calamity to dose motion picture houses on Sunday, Rev. Pr. Hem. R. Rose of

the Church of the Red.

COMMERCIAL Weekly Re™" e 1 ]'* 11 ' 2 " 1 Market Report:. ^Cora-TrackjteUo* «J SoilS 3! tl 40 to , pna, D-rb, rUOT„ uat . asked; No. 3 *-- lle ' M

IMl.

I (closing prices)

l-Secr -ary Hughes addlfiddng armament conference at ll» opening

Washington monument in center

g—Capitol Uiutatuateti by the

conference, ahwlns

of Error* a

NEWSREVIfVIIIF CURRENT EVENTS

ifter a abort Illness in Ub

Alpine. He »a« elghtv-fonr yenn* oiu. Mr. Alliert xvas a flour broker and a member of the exchange for sixty-four years. He xvas one of the men x ao worked for the preservation of the Palisades In the movement that re- |

gallfct one of the most prominent cler- suited In the Interstate Palisade Park. . gymen of Newark, nnnoutxed hls op- He leaves three married daughter* !

position to the movement of the Fed a public garagt cannot l»e declared | nation f Churche* to enforce the n nu i«ance i n theory l>efore It is actu- , . s™”,' 1 —' ;sr;.hughes' program approved

Frank B. Wr.Uama. proprietor of ' veb.p after the hnslneaa I* Mtabllbed.

Conference May Agree on Naval Armament Reduction Plan

Within a Few Weeks.

the Williams House at Fortescue and j such wa the ruling of Vice Chancellor | fu „ Mted Mlnur Mod hcaCon* Are * n.lng In the Court of Chancery «t Be|nB China Pleads for

well known to angler* of Pennsylvn- | Ix-sn.lng ._

Bin and New Jersey died suddenly ; t'amden upon the appl <*atlon of on: while vls'tlng a daughter at Colling*- < dais of the First Baptist Church, Pit- | wood. He 1* survived by a widow, i man. for a permanent injunction to j

two daughters and a son. ! restrain David P- ' A proposition to Issue *25.000 iKWid* Holler from procedlng to Improve the Are department of lion of n „ pauls'ooro Is before the taxpayers. , the edifice

nd Samuel |

^ with the erecroposed garage adjoining

i Broadway.

Recognition as Independont Na ticn—League Council Gets After the Serbs—Progress On

Tax Revision Bill.

Completion -f State Highway Route An autopsy jC<: -t t.. Peal Is promised next year In Warren, co the filing with the State Hlghwaw- on the body

Commission by the Monmouth County I eight years old, of irxlogt'

Hoard of Freeholders the b iurd's w>l llngness to finance Us construction on the State reimbursement plan. The Newark Paving Company "HI finish paving the highway between the Monmouth road Oceonport. to the Broad street railroad crossing. Red Bank, in

another week.

By EDWARD W. PICKARD. JT APPEARS that the pn-pbet^

I'ashlngtot

performe,l hy I'»r. physician, of Essex.

^onu'wb^dleil ' gcvnl coufrrvnce * vmlngly U

i, . 1 and sign an agreement t In the City Hospital, supposed.y from . a fractured skull, after he hud pro onsly been turue. 1 away from the sUlutlon a* victim of alcobollf

Friends of the |iro|w*s-

determine In

to the hospital after bx-ing hit by Jitney, xxas pronounced Intuxl • —Tltutlot

all wrong. The

!0tog to lUmlta-

:ion of naval annatrrnt without ^Alting to settle the problems <»f the ffuclfic and Hie Ear East. Tb!- t.-nd«o. I*

In vest leu- “ ,,f Secretary Hughes' down- , n -agun | right action in laying before tb* con-

Frank A. Lane, a chemlrt. who dls- discharged from th.

covered a method which made possible | pla.-wl In a cell at the First Precinct

the production o» gas masks In qust- station ~

t|ty for the American army, died la

hls lapse Into uncon-

iousness caused alarm and he

Bt. Mary's Hospital. Passaic, follow-j retunied to the hopltaL

feretice In its first session the Amcr-

Tmo'xirated. , lean iwoposal as to navies ^r•

' that propos-d Is that the Dtdted States. Great Britain and Jup»n agree to suspend naval construction for ten vm.r« and during the succeeding ten build only for replsi'ement: tlist

rtrdlnance* have been Introduced all encompb-.. u capUal ships a a

y council to eliml- | winy rther spedflod capltrl shl!>* b* is |wld city employ- j scrapped at once; tout the oggregate

capital ship tonnage lie limited to j00.-

for a nyv. ^ loilule ) m«i each for lUiglaud and America, the Blackwood Wa- ! *nd SW'OOU for Japan; .hat the acs

Tren- |.i«rer of the three nations he malniU*lon talned «m this basi*. There are other ' rei*- ! features of the program, but every-

if the company and the j otu . |. familiar with It by this time. msumr-rs. The conference, and the world, were .-[.re-.'dln_- with great rapidity, fire B t first astounded by thl« nnoxi>ected

tint hard work by toe residents of the practicaiiy .iest.oyeJ the building of laying ,.f the American curds ou the ” tt . ho farmed a bucket brigade, the i'alco (.'bemlcal Comi^ny :.t Eg- mbit, and ther the plan was greeted nivvented them burning. F're appa- gert station, between Woadbrldge and „., th |„ u ,i , n .i universal acclaim. Tl.t ™tm sent (torn Somerville helped Kahunx. Tne damage was -sUmated , legates of the other nations could Check the a j. read of tt fire. ; at W.O.W. j not. If they would, refuse to Indorse * ('ranges throughout Gloucester corn- Peacn and Mr- Richard P .b.nes u. and at the second op.-., mUsIoi. tv have mopped out winter programs | celebrated their golden wedding at | Great Britain. Japan. Italy and

The Woods!own Baptist Sunday ' their home In Shiloh. France school has received a gift of a i-lsno .* | A scries of community meetings pre- | rtple.” « memorial to the late Miss AUda Tur- [ parst..r>- «o a revival ikwI.kI tu-xt month -jt

* t 1 *™ Xu. I nr- I,..1,1 .t Hurffrll homes.

•hit operation for Intestinal tn-uble. ■

He lived i-t 2d rtuk frost place. Nut-11nto the Woodbury council to eliml-

lev and was asslstuut to the president nate the war bo

Of the Kalbfieiscli Corporation, cheat- e.-s,

leal aanalanar,™. The .ppllMa The .dd Millstone hotel at Millstone, of rules marie h

Bear Somerville, which v«- erex-ted ter Company w-s sppr.v more than 1U0 years ago. wa, destroy- ; pm by the I ublir 1 tll.ty

•*d ’>y tire Two dwelling* on either following ■hie of the botri and the old Dutch i resentaU'

Beformed church on the other side the street were scorcher! by the Karnes.

• with a program. But China, whose | status I* the crux of the situation, i aet before the committee- on far castenr affairs the demands of the : Asiatic repub! e. Pr. Alfred Sxe, l bead of the Chinese delegation, wss the sjiukeeronn and hr held s preliminary conference xritb American oOrials and In hls demands followed their advice .n >11 except me i-olnt— the c-eatlon of a permanent r-ourt of arhltratlcn In the For^ast. China asks res;rrct for her tacnrortal integrity. restitution of -xdsed i>rorinces and regions, nbaudonmeni cf siiectal^rtghts. monopolies, prtxlleges and extraterritorial righta. and withdrawal of foreign troops from ’mr soli and permission to direct her own domestic affairs and govern her own Internal and foreign imllxle*. She does n -t demand that all foreign monopolies *nd privileges In China he abandoned at once, but that she be given a chance to pm herself on a level with other |H)W x-rs and that »a i.-ie goes on and conditions warrant the economic and political fetter* on her bx loosened. The British delegation approved the Chli«-se demands in gcueral. especially the open door policy “ n “ ,,l *' *b» n<1 ' ,n ‘ mem of “spl-xwes of influence." The Japanese. It was understood, accepted tlie Chinese program lr prindide but would insist that wILidrawsl of interest In China should Inclwlo «H foreign powers. The Chinese delegates say they make their demand* •t. behalf of all China. Including the southern part where Kun Yet Stm hold* somewhat precarious sway, and I ha i Manchuria. Inner and outer Mongolia. Tibet and Turkestan ere Included la “Jbe Chinese republic." It is believed jo* result of the dh mission of Chius'* program may be the friendly abundontneut of the AngTo-Ju|i,<ui-*e alliance, and the British would be glad to see this source of trouble tvpl . vd by some form of agree-

ment by the great powers.

of Gottingen. Berlin and Faria, and

•peaks German and French. Next January Germany is due to pay

a reparation* Installment of glOU.OOO,000. end In February a quarterly paytuunt of about $00.000on exports. Her flintm-lal experts are wondering where It U to exuae from and the allied reparations commission In s.” slot. In Berlin U working over tbx, problem. The commission bellx-vc* OkGertuatis can raise the money fin- those two paynirat» and urge them to dc so as a show of good will. Then- was reason to believe that If they did, the French delegate* xxcrald consent to gram concessions for the rest of the yx-ar. The commission rejected apian of the Industrial leader* of Germany to pawn the country'* Industrie-* a* a guaranty for the reparation* payments: Instead it suggested tha! the Industrial Interrats make sacrifices for their country Instead of trying tb prof-

it from It* misery.

That Gx-rtnany Is miserable in some respects Is trade evident by the riots In Berlin caused by the increasing cost t>f foodstuff*. Many shot* were looted. High prices, of corise, are caused by the decline of the mark.

' are being held at HnrffvU i

‘’’’The Ocean City Autom- oile Bridge Policeman Smith of Gloucester Clt; Company bn* decided to advertise the found c ter pound mart on JerM-j-axe- , resort hy signs p’lred along the trnv- | nue. He hunted up a needy family and 'T,v hlgbwa.s -Jauajp J-; tssm aqj (wfofu* xo ;i ‘Henry PrmUey of 'be Woodbury Teachera of the Huntertan «ounty , #rc ght office U on Ws first vacation in school, met In Fiemlngtoo for their on-

' ntial Institute.

The Millville Woman's dub Is con- | Pax Id ElwelL who ha. been *ui>crln-

n new ciublMKise, to ! -.cadent of the Cumberland < ••untv Ho*.

. formally accepted It “In prlnwlth tnlnoi- m-dll.cation*, as «x-'. forth then and later.

follux

Bldcrlng plans f, st about $15,000. (

i re<-ently pur- j pit*' for the ln*a

F RANCE, a* haa often been pointed xiut. Is especially Intereste<l In the matter of mluctiot. and limitation of land anr-ameDt. and Premier Brtand took the lead In thla. though be had no concrete plan nor any working agreement with the United States Uxdegatlxm. In hls speech he discussed the military situation in Europe, particularly ss It effects France, set forth the number of men under arms In the various European countries and made plain the menace of the Bed forces, especially In Russia. Nor did he neglect to call attention to Frances iwril from Germany which, he noted, . u a nation of 68.000.000 while France

rets'n ship- I uxla ^r* but 85.000.000. It U plain e-.-r.tloa ef I tbBt tbe wRl not consent to

p’an. for radical miUtary armament reduction until the Russian and Teu-

tonic threats see remove*!. Europe the League of Na-

bornly. a* you xiioose to look at It, In the way of settiement of the Irish trouble Craig sod hls cabinet, after studying the English plan, rejected ii as unfair to their port of tin* island and offered some kind of a substitute. This the British cabin.-; In turn rejected, and au exchange of notes between Lloyd George and Craig left 'he rtatur unchanged. The Ulsterites reiterated their oetermlnatlon not to submit to anything considered a violation of Ulster's right*. The British premier's stand was strengthened by tbe action of the Unionist party In convention In Llveipo**. The Irish negotiations are dragging out so $hat Lloyd Gtorge may have to abnm: i hls contumpluted trip to Washington u, take part In the armament

conference.

eslern. <-T70*

ct tm. MiEc; c **

| tot. nearby rye. .« >o ^ fltraw-No. 1 , oll $15.;": No. 1 »“• No

(nominal). inCfli-aO.

Butter—Creamery. «-c. do.

do. good. da -

«7©49; do. hh>ckf. ^ by. 4fe«; Isdles. S6&^

and Pennsylvania «dls. »0 8 ®L rolls. 36030; West J^ U ^ ' . ©SO; storepsrk.d, K0M- Xa -

Zii' x- daln prinu. 38030 Eg*. A-mtera MuyUnd.

Tania and nearby firsts. 630®^- ' era Shore. Maryland and \-rgxnm.

flrau. 61063; Wcstcru big**

63- West Virginia first*. 69 ^oot**cm firsts. 58. JoDblng price.- higher. Ure Poultry—Chickens, old rat. 4Vi lbs. snd over, per lb.. 3te-5c.

medium. 2 io 4 lbs..

30031: "bite leghorns. -00 roosters. 15&16. springer-, large .40

35; small to medium. 24 if 25. white leghorns. 31033: rough, poor »“d thin. JO. Ducks, young pekings SVx lo»-

and over. S5036c; piddl*. 23024;

muscory. 330 23: smaller and :-oor. 20. Geese, nearby. 260 3T. V-meiB and Southern. 24025: Kent Island. 2$

030. Turkey.*, young. 8 !bt and over, per lb- 88 0 40c: old. 38040; t* thin and crooked breast. 300 32. °ou toes—Western Mary ,and and

Pennsylvania. No. 1 per 100 lb*.. S-0 2.25: New York and New Jersey No. L per 100 lbs.. 1202.2;: nai or

nearby. No. 1, per 100 lb*.. t2tf235: Eastern Snore Maryland and Virgin)* McCor. ticks, per 100 lbs, 11.750150.

Southern Maryland. McCormicks per 100 lbs.. $1-Tj02: all sections. No. I per 100 lbs.. $10155; al. seetimu. long, per 150-!b. bag*. 8303.35: round. per 150-lb bags. $35503.50; long and round No. 2. $1-75 0 2; sweet, new. North Carolina. No. 1. per brl.. $250

@3; Eastern Shore Virginia, No L

per bri.. $2.5003; native or nearby, per brl-. $308.50: • Rap-ishannock. No. 1. per brl., $2.5003: all sections, culls to No. 2s. $15001.75: native, per H, bskt.. 50065; yams, ail section* pesjj ‘ brl.. $2.5003.50: sweet* and yamr. aO •actions, per bu. hamper. 75c0$lJS.

Uat Church.

frex-hi-lder*. wi "Iprank Itreder of WestelUe I* In the iron. WxsKihnry H.xspll 'l. »>» v «ns bem •*<* Tm- muskrat In the face while gunning. Frank Pav- n|«-iied Tuesday rn'-ort of Mantua xx-as sh.-t hy some ! jn-r- ar- pr*i>ar men gunning on hls father's farm. I lespitx-the [• The -llUiAS riH>m in the Harrtsoovllle Millville Tract Rranxe ha«l ha* he«. fitted up «. » , ^ ■rhoolroom ft-r sundus PUP 11 * , , c,,ltr T he Woodbury Ubrary has been motor t.us 1 u, temporarily closed becaum- of rebuild- ; Mue'and n Ins of the city ball. . . _ . Jr ICven a hurch rummage sale Is art the franchise. *,f r from the II, ht-fingered gentry Tbe «ntenn these days, ns Mira Edith L-ste and .term,, Church Mis* Pauline Parkx r. who were con-. with api»n<prl ducting x-ne at Bridgeton for an *-r- J iluus of xiiier .an'K-xtion of the Flrat M. E. Church. Rrortlngs - xu found out. Hercules Gould, x-o.or.-xl. Mi-^ Anna Hu r’fTw'^cnta and th™ nna.'-' off with Meter one

National Park i

xv Jersey any trap-

11. <:rx-at Britain—Limit size aim tonnage of *u'umarinx^<; permit con--truction of one capital ship a, yeti ■luring ten ear perix-d to retain uhip yard facinr.e*: J . Tnlt reVntloA c more Ugiu x. olsers ami gunbodn U> je-lix*- the hi*i: sea*: reilu.-tloo In number > . nax-ai ship l-ullxlme yar<t*. By Jaium—Increase of Japan** na-

val strength to 7D j-x-r cent British , _ VEH ^

ami Aroertrnr: cx-ssatlon "f couutruc- I {_) .J,,t !ts authority is bx*tlon of naxal bases and nexx f-rt'flea- | uUHl b yJugo-Slsvla. audit has

determined to show Oiat It can stop

tions In the l*mcltic.

By Fra

Ital ship*

—Alix

•n nee of eight cap-,

- safeguard Fn

col-

mittee >m the tax rvvision bill bus beer Ironing out the differences t*ethe house and senate measures with cqpaWerable rapidity, both ride* making concesricms. One of the Important • otlons xxas the aNpitnatlon ..f the house hUl prortrioos for the exemption of foreign traders and foreign trade corporations. On Thursday the cmiferres susiiended their meeting* to allow the house to vote on tbe question of surtax rates. Tbe renate bad fixed the maximum rate at 5« per cent and the bouse a, 32 per tent. The “Insurgent" Republican* of the house w- re determined to carry through the senate plan so the lenders turned to a compromise. Just Before hr house met President Harding took s hand la the affair by Informing the hxxuse conferees tha, a maximum surtax rate of 40 [if cent would lie ngreeoble to the odmlnlstru-

* of six capita! xli Interest*. Idrta Col. Tbe.»hairman. set to ly ,h>- plan and i. and by the end (■dieted an agrox'

Therefore it adxani-xM tbe

date of its Paris mettlng and took UP the mutter of the Invasion of Albania hr th.- Serbian*. The Utter had b*oa o'rde-x-,1 to get out of Albania and to ohox-rxe the boundaries of that state as established by tbe .mod .mba*»a-

dorv but In eff-M. »t I***- tbe f

regurded -botti demands. They dlu. however, disown the trxx>ps .a AlbanlH. claiming they are I'regulars oxer which their government has no c-mnd. Meanwhile those “irrevutars ure said to be threatcntr.g Tirana, tbe riltxanian capital, and the sltuaUou l" -x'Mrt, t! .» same ** a, VHn “ where

the * ague scored » failure.

s ruler* of Au*«.

K ARL and Zita

Hungary, have t-ea landed U,«4r Island of exile. Madeira, lb-, f ,.»i (.msented ,o care for th- •.« th

Sixrted a, al*

be paid hy j formerly maxie up . tf the plan of the x-uunr! ambassador* U csrrtao out.

last Mot

Tin- boose, however, by a rote of 201 to ITS. Instructed 1U conferee* to accept the flt) px'f < ^ nt rn,e -

out Its sertou* labor trouble* - few wvek* are. Tbe garment workers of New York went on strike in protxwt against me restoration of the Jdxae ork system. Their leaders Mild U>-»t Of tbe tWJXkl worker* quit, hut the employe" u»«-rte<l tlm, <M ,a-r cent of the xxorkere

to go out.

la Chicago there "ns lively strike of the tean |.rtiled by some vloleu.

refused to accept a wage cut of $d U wee>; ordered hy an arbiter and a - rei-tcxi by the onion officials. After i « out .wo days they reiurm-d to I w-ork with the understanding tlmt thx i they Sb.nild have a rehearing before

arbiter.

p-xauJer M. Howat. for twenty ra -i loader ol the Kansas miner*

The. in-

NEW YORK.—Wheat—Spot firm; No. 3 red. IL18H: No 2 bard. $1.15Vi: No. 1 manltoba. $1.12Vi- snd No. 2 mixed Durum. ll.OSVi. c. 1. t track. New York, to arrive Corn—Spot firm: No. 2 yellow. $Sc; No. 2 white. 69. and No. 2 mixed. 674. c. 1. f.. New York, lake and rail. Oats—Spot fina; No. 2 while. 44Vie. Butter—Creamery, higher than extras. 46046Vic; do. extras (92 fcors),^ 45045Vi: dc. firsts (88 to 91 score), i 87044; packing stock, current uiaka. No. 2. $284029. Eggs—Fresh gathered, extra firsts. 650 66; do. firsts. 5806!; New Jersey hennery whites, extra fancy, candlsd •elections. 98: nearby and nearby Western hennery white*, firsts to average extras, 78092; do. beanery brown*, extra*. 73 075; nearby gathered browns and mixed colon, first* to extras. 55071; refrigerator, tpe rial marks, fancy, 38039; do. firstf 854037- ' Chee*e—State, whole milk, flata. freah. special*. 2140224c: do. aver age run. 21: State, whole milk, twin* special*. 2140224: do. arerate run’

21.

. Wheat- Higher: No. 8 red winter. I $1.10011.. do. garilcky. tl.o;0j j Corn-Steady: No. • for -xpert. 5$ 058c; do. No. 3. 64 0 55; No. 2 yellow

local. 64064 4.

Oats--Steady; No. • white. 4S4c; No. 3 do. 414042

Butter—Western creamery. extrA 464c: nearby print*, fancy. 5906! Egga—Nearby extra flrat*. etc: 4 firsts. 65: Western extra firsts 0 do first*. 6! 064; fancy relecU

packed 780 79.

Cheese New York whole ml

r He!Sc f * lr ,o

' longhorn. 224ft;s\4, *

datslei

Live P01 horn*, as horns. £0i leghorns. ] old roost e:

try—Lower; | • quality. 20$

J %

;r

live STOCK

3UE

I,

w ,, “;

t v- tsr

-RIPEST Hard!

signed wittjout any ' -rcimmj ..

roctamstloB of peaext be*we«- «

. , statx-« and Germany »>«1 de( «,e a* to wb«S be w

leclfor cinbssssdx-i 10 B-riln. nr

onilng. N. Y. He was born

““fSm* Harvard and ife^croiti

j fruai tne United Mine Workers e 1 Amerlcs <or iiU refusal to obey t I .wiK-r «>f tin* International offleen e end the Strike In that *ta»e. About 4."

It Knnra* miner*

llov

c