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Four Page Colored Comic Section VOL. X, No. 11 The Price t)f This Paper is 3 cents everywhere—Pay no more CARTERET PRESS Two Sections 12 P t g t t Today CARTKRKT, N. ,]., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 27, PRICE THREE CENTS May Form Junior Unit Of Auxiliary! Monaghan To Speak At Holy Name Meeting Announcement was made Sunday ~ , of a meeting of the Holy Name So- Church Wedding For Carteret Couple I'lan Di»CUM*d By Unit Of Carterftt Pott Of Legion M«mbf»bip Paid Up. Plans for the organitation of a junior auxiliary to the auxiliary unit of the Carteret Post of the American Legion were discussed last night at „ meeting of the unit held in the War Veterani room in the borough ball. The auxiliary and the post, will hold » joint meeting on Tuesday, De- cember 1, when the matter wijl be taken up again. An executive meet- ing of t i l auxiliary will be held early in Deeeniber in the home of Mrs. john Kennedy in Washington ave- Mr» Harry Gleckner, chairman of the membership committee reported that the Carteret unit was the first to report to the county organization with a on*hundred per cent paid up membership. The members of the unit received Rn invitation to take part in a mem- bership raUy to "be held at Butler, N. J, on December 5. Deputy and Staff Are Gueats At Rahway Home Mr and Mrs. Abe ChodoBh, of 526 Jefferson awnue, Rahway, enter- tained the District deputy and staff of District No. 10, I. 0. 0. F. on .Saturday night in their home. There were'many games and refreshments. Those present were District Deputy and Mn. Thomas Moan, Mr. and Mrs. August Kostenbader. Mr. and Mrs. William Schmidt, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Richardson, Mr. and Mj-s. Uopwt K Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Vonah, Stanley Andrewski, Mr. and Mrs. Sam Wexler and Mr. and Mra. Abe Chodosh, comprising the mem- bers Of the staff and their wives. ciety of St. Joseph's pariah to be . _ held on Monday night, Novemher | Mis» Margaret Telepoaky Be- 30 in the St. Joseph School hall. The principal speaker will be Francis A. Monaghan, former assistant; prose- cutor of Middlesex. There will be a motion picture with sound, the use of which will be donated by the Navy Department thfough the efforts of Jprvis Nevill. There will be other entertainment features. Edward Do- Inn, president of the society, invites nil men of tho parish and boys of Inch school age to attend. Interest In Charity Grid Contest Rises Game Between Carteret Field Club and Alt Star ElevenTo Be Played December 6. Interest in the charity football game between the Carteret Field Club and an all star eleven, led by John Cassalegft, and comtpiyjixl ai former and present Carteret and Rahway High School stars, to be played on Sunday, December 6, is steadily increasing. With sweet Charity as beneficiary, U is expected tKat a record crowd will witness the game which prom- ises to be the biggest thing of its kind ever staged in Carteret. The entire proceeds of the game will go to the Mayor's Relief Committee to be used for distribution among the poor and jobless of this,borough. The Field Club will play two more Kames before it meets the all star Tomorrow in the an- Thflnkngiving Day tussle, the comes Bride Of Louis Kady —Big Reception Follows. Mills Margaret Telepoaky, daugh- ter »of Mr. and Mra. Joseph Tele- poRky, of 18 Emerson street, and Louis Kady, of McKinley avenue, i were married at a church wedding in I St. Elizabeth's Roman Catholic Church in Washington avenue on Saturday afternoon by the Pastor, Rev. Father L. R. ChaAy. The cere- iwmy was witnessed by a large num- ber of friends and relatives of the couple. The maid of honor was Mias Rose Solteaz; the matrons of honor, Mra. M. Kady and Mrs. S. Suto. The bridesmaids were the Misses Anna Fozman, Irene Kantor, Betty I.iptak, Esther Soltesz, Betty Kaz mere, Betty Buck, Grace Uhouae, Helen Piaak and Helen Derezo. The best man was Stephen Peto. The ushers were: John Telepoeky, Frank Kady, Paul Pirigyi, John Mirag, Geza, Budar, Stephen Derezo, Stephen Kady, William Teleposky and Stephen Peterczak. Joseph Busy Bee Club Meets 1 Many Attend Function New Social Organisation It Entertained At Strandbcrg Home. The members, of the Busy Bee So- cial Club met last night in the home of Mrs, H. L. Strandborg in Wash- .. , ingtnn avenue. There were social ya, John Kondas.^ Stephen t K°pn, | ,,„,„,><, a nd refreshments were served. " Th t M R L Surprise Party Given For Miss Decku* Of Mercer St. A surprise party was given to Miss Anna Deckus. of Mercer street, on Saturday evening in her homtt at 51 Mercer street. The rooms were decorated in pink and blue. Supper was served at midnight. Then-, were games and dancing. Those present were: Irene Hogyw, •'Helen Dom- browski, Helen Kuzmak, Stella Kon- kas, Ju|ja TVhite, Stella Gronska, Katherinfl Roskoss, Eva Bobor, Lena Amanda Someone, Victor Hog Foresters Plan To Honor Old Members At Testimonial Plans were completed last night At n meeting of Court Carteret No. 48, Foresters of America for the testi- monial dinner that is to be (riven by ho court in honor of John S. 01- brocht and Martin Rock, old mem hers of tM court, to be held on Tuesday, l>prembpr 8, in Odd Fel- low* hull. Vinitinir Jorestpr* from4 Anna, Pauline and Ma'mif Deckus, Stephen Sestaye, Stephen Greek, William Fedor, Edward Solkowski, Al. Simnnski, Walter Kowalsky, all of Carteret. Stanley Koiidns and William Stownta, both of New York; Benny Menucci, Port Rending; Julia AHi nnct Olgn Shnron, of Hound Brook. ' jRailway Man Takes Bride In Carteret Teleposky, aged fi, was the ringbear- er. The flower girls were Margaret Psiller'and Violet Telepoaky. A reception was held Saturday Tells Stabbing Story Police Lock Him Up Carteret Man Drives To Wood- bridge Police Station Spends Night There. Tony Novobilsky, of 301 Pershing nual and evening in sTlE'liTa'-j avenue, went to police headquarters hoth's hall and was attended by in Woodbridge and reported that about 200 guests. A ban'quet was F ran k Molnar, of 76 Easex street, served in the evening. . wented to stab him. Novobilsky was Mr. and Mrs. Kady went on their . . . . , , ,,j \, BMmnnn t.n Washington. D. C. [intoxicated and was locked up. M nar who was found in Novobllsky's car was also locked up for being drunk, Novobilsky said he drove to Woodbridge from Carteret. Hia li cenae was revoked for driving whili drunk a few years ago Hut it ha been restored. Those present were; Mr», Rosooe Le- vi, Mrs. J. Braun, Dr. H. L. Strand- brrg, Mrs. C. H. Byrne, Arthur Hall, Mis, Sager Bonnell, Mrs, Charles Bryrr, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Baker .Inhn Alexander, Mrs. William Ja- miaon, Mrs. Churl™ Morris, Miss Violet Reason, Walter Eggert, Mrs. Alexander Kish, Mrs. Danie Reason, Mrs. William Klliott, Mrs. Thomas Moss, Mrs. John Richardson, Mrs. Gus Wulf, the Misses Margaret nd Lillian Donnelly, Miss Elsie pringer, Mrs. Thomas Way. Mrs. ercules Ellis, Mrs. J. Engert rown, Mrs. James Perringer, Misa _.nn Morris, Mrs. Harry Yetman, Misa Theresa Kapusy, Mra. Nate ustig, Mrs. D. Lnluter, Mrs. Ed- ;ard Straek, Mrs. Matthew Sloan, Mrs. Harold Edwards, Mrs. George Bakke, Philip Eggert, Mrs. Louis onah, Mrs Harry Axon and Mrs. . J. Keays. The next meeting of the club will be held Monday night in the home of Mra. J. Eggert Brown in Emerson •• " ~ ..-Ml t - -!J-J ]_ nil parts of the state will bi> present, l delegation of the local For- esters will attend Court Hpley night in Jersey City on Monday night, fie- combor 7. The, trip will be ninde in nutns thnt will leave Odd Fellows hall nt 7 p. m. Mist Mary Kurdyla and John Harvey United At Ceremony In Holy Family Church. Carteret Women Guests At Rahway honeymoon to Washington, D. C. They will reside at 18 Emerson street. Other guesta were: Mr. and Mrs. Robert Chodosh, Mr. and Mrs. Louia Chodosh, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Cho- desh, Mr. and Mrs, Nathan Chodosh, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Goz, Sam Cho- dosh, Mr. and Mrs. Sumner Moore, all of Carteret, and Mr. and Mrs. Neil Chodosh, of Rahway. State Director 0- K; s Appointments Heads Of Relief Work In Var- ious Town* Acceptable To Bernard Carteret First To Submit Program. nual T h a n k s g g y , locals will play the Vailsburg Col- legiiites of West Orange. Sunday they will be host to the Plainfleld Sacrecens. Both games will be play- e.l at the Carteret High School field. Starting Monday, the all star team will begin preparations for the con- tent. It is planned to hold drills every afternoon at the high school field. Among those who are expect- ed to come out are Duke Harwach, Ron Armour, Charles Ellis, John Cassalegi, Hook Garber, Mitch Cnr- IISIP, Mike Poll, Ted Kleban, Bob Henderson, George Challiet, Ike Daniels, Joe Medwick, George Cho- micki, and several'others. Relief Committee Ready For Work The appointment of three munici- pal dir«"eier« "f unemployment relief in Dunellen, Carteret and Plainsboro Township have just been approved by Chester I. Barnard, State Director ' of the Emergency Relief Administra- tion. The appointments were made on recommendation of Lewis Comp- ton, Middlesex County Director, and included the appointment of Mrs. Emma Rowland as district director far the townships of North, East and South Brunswick. Klemmer Kalteis- sen is deputy district director in the same townships. Wheston M. Sherman was named municipal director in Dunellen and will have charge of the registration of unemployed and the handling of direct relief. In Carteret, Mayor Ju- eeph A. Hermann will assume the similar duties and in Plainsboro Man Is Fined For Using Gun In Holdup Anthony Russo Who Attacked Boat Captain Assessed $28. Anthony "Red" Russo,'of McKin- liy avenue was arraigned in police court Saturday morning and fined $25. Itusso was arrested for striking a boat captain on the head with a re- volver in an attempt to rob him, ac- cording to the police record of the case. The night following the attempt to hold up the boat captain the lat- ter was reported to be seeking re- venge and the police were on the lookout for the captain all that night. The alleged attempt to hold up the boatman took place in a Chrome speakeasy where the captain said, he was attacked when he displayed some money in paying for a drink. Holy Family P. T. A. Card Party Tonighl The P. T. A. of the Holy Famil: school will hold a card party Wed nesday (tonight) in the Bchool hal! Mrs. J. Tomczuk is chairman of th committee in charge of the nients. ^__^_^__^ Sub - Committees Organized; Registration Now Going On —Plans Discussed. The Mayor's Committee met Emergency last night Relief in the Auxiliary Members Of Broth- erhood Of Israel Entertain- ed In Home Of Mr*. A. Cho- doah. 'IS ^'*?*M*ry Kurdyla, daughter of • I Mr?. Anna Kurdyla, of 167 Emer- son »tre<t, and John Harvey, of 47 avenue, R»hwny, were married Sunday at i p. m. in the Holy Family Roman Catholic Church by the pastor. Rev. Father Joseph Di The maid of honor was Miss Dorothy Kunlyla, a sister of the bride. The best mtn was George Fedles. There were three bridesmaids, the Misses Mary Harvey, Mnr(t»ret Pas- ter and Mildred Niemiec. The ush- ers were: Frank Wijliar**, Wal- t( r Niemier and John Zitos. The bride wore white s»tin with rs.. J. Eggert Brown itreet. Mrs. Brown will be aided In entertaining by Mrs. Harry Baker, Mra. Roscoe Levi and Mrs. Matthew Sloan. y Mother-Teacher Group Forms Social Unit Mrs. A. Chodosh, of Rahway. en- tertained the members of the auxil- iary to the Congregation of'the Bro- therhood of Israel Thursday night at her home. Cards were played and refreshments were served. Those present were: Mrs. Abe Durst, Mrs. Nathan Lustig, Mrs. Alec Handel- man, Mrs. Benjamin Klein, Mrs. I. Gross, Mrs. Leo R. Brown, Mrs. Dav- id Venook, Mrs. Abe Zucker, Mrs. Han-y Chodosh, Mrs. Robert R. Brown, Mrs. Edward Hupp, Mrs. Isa- dore Mausner, Mis. Aaron Rabinn- witz, Mrs. Isadore Brown, Mrs. Leo Rockman, Mrs. Dora Jaoohy, Mrs. Max Glass, Mrs. tsadore Zimmerman, Mrs. Louis 'Chodosh, Mrs. Sam Brown, Mrs. William Brown. Mrs. Sam Wexler, Mrs, Robert Chodosh, n Spnniah lsce veil and carried white chrysanthemum*. The m»id of honor and the bridesmaids were In green nitin. After the ceremony a reception was held in the home of the bride's - mother. Mr. and Mrs. Harvey will reside at 1ST Emerson itreet, after a short wedding trip. Rebekah Lodge Member* Have Business And Card* Members of the Mother-Teacher Association of the Presbyterian Sun-| M 7 9 ; H e rmaii Fisher, Mrs. Neil Cho- dosh, Mra. Joseph Blaukopf, Mrs. Harry Goz and Mrs. L. J. Weincr, all of Carteret; Mrs. M. Kaftan, Mrs. Freidman, Mrs. J. Schwartz, Mrs. Cooper, Mrs. R. Bel'., Mrs. Mark Hni- ria and the Misses Gordon, all of day school met last Thursday night in the home of the president, Mrs. Sager Bonnell in Atlantic street and formed a social organization to be known as the Busy Bee, Club. Mrs. Bonnell was selected to serve as tem- porary chairman. The evening was taken up with plans for the club. At the next meeting officers will be elected. Refreshments were served. Guests At Christmas Seal Dinner Hear Many Interesting Addresses Three Carteret Women Attend Pickersgill Is Toastmaster At Spread In NewPacker House Use Of Seals To Raise Money Has Long History. Rahway. High School Pupils On Honor Roll Many Gain Place On List By Faithful Work In Classes. A short business meeting was held Wednesday night by the members of Deborah Rebekah Lodge in I.O.OF. hall. Cards and refreshments follow- ed the business meeting. Those pres- ent were: Mrs. August Kostenbader, Mrs, Abo Chodosh, J Mr-«. Isadore Miuisner, Mrs. J. Reiii, Mr. and Mrs. (ins Wulf, Mr and Mrs I) Patemon, Mrs, PcRRy Morris, Mr. and Mra. Mat- thew Duffy, Mrs. J. Kggert Brown, Mrs. S. Koed, Mrs. Summer Moore, Mrs.. Louis Vonah, Mrs. William Schmidt, Mrs. Alec Handolman, Mrs. A. Zucker, Mrs. Louis Chodosh. Mrs. Abe Chodosh, Mrs. Robert Brown, Mrs. Al. (inrdncr, Mrs, Benjamin Klein, Mrs. Nathan Lustig, Mrs. Jos- eph (llnukopf, Mrs. Edward Hopp, Mrs. Sam Wexler, Mrs. Clara Jaml- son, Mrs. John Haas, Mra, EsteUe Jamison, Mrs. A. Vornbaum, Mr. and Mrs, Walter Vonah, Mrs. Ellen An- di'tson, Walter Vonah, Jr., Alex Handclman nnd Mrs. William Moss. similar duties and in FlainsDoro r^-- :-• , ... Township John V. B. Wiscoff will do lhe va » ou » sub-committees have a. i" / •]organized and are ready for work. council chamber and discussed ways and means for carrying on the re- lief work during the winter. Chair- man Elmer E. Brown told the mem- bers of the program of road worlp that ha.s been laid out in order to Kive employment, and explained the wage rate that will be paid. He stat- ed that the work the committee pro- poses to do ij the greatest work that hunfan beings can engage in. The person who does something for some one else, he said, experiences rtal satisfaction with his work, The various sub-committees have Mayor Hermann, of T^'y were instructed as to the pa d telegram of con- oi lhe state director of relief. Bach bt t t n ra the work. Last, week Carteret, received a telegram of con- gratulations from County Director Lewis Compton as follows: "Mayor Jos. A. Hermann, "Carteret. N J. "Congratulations. Carteret fu to submit program which has ha approved and forwarded today. Your whole plan and organisation a splen- did one. Lewis Compton, Director." 'y were instructed as to the plans h dit f relief Bach tirsr en Carteret Student. To PUy At Atlantic City The Department of Music of the New Jersey State Teachers' Associa- tion, meeting in Atlantic. City No- vember 27 - 30, will present the All- State High School Symphony Or- chestra in a concert on Sunday af- ternoon, November 2'Jth. at three o- clock, in the Ball Room, Convention ""-The personnel of the consists of two hundred kcted playera from the schools of the State. Thefollowing program will be giv- committee is to submit written re- ports of its work from time to time. These reports are to be turned over to secretary Russell Miles. ^ Edward J. Walsh who has been appointed by the borough council tc have charge of all registration of unemployed told' of his work and the experience he has had to date. He said that some persona who are in the greatest need of relief are too sensitive to register. He asked that other members of the general com- mittee who know of such cases re- port them in order that relief may be A COMMUNICATION Dear Editor: This Thanksgiving spirit is in the air even if there ain't no good Jimes. I ask Scrogpins what he is thankful for and he says he's thankful for the cross-eyed cat. He says he knows some other guys which they ain't so thankful for the cat. Then Scroggins has a croney who Says he's thankful for his wife. That it is, he says, he's glad because there's only one of her. He might have been Mormon, he said, and then he might haye had a bunch like her and that would be something fierce. Then the Democrats are glad of the hard times because they can blame it on the Republicans. The Re- publicans are thankful for the same hard times because there ain't no l_pickin's much for the Democrats in office. Some guys has grabbed off nice inside jobs and are thankfuk for the friends that fix 'cmup. One gin mill keeper is sorry he changed his Believe It or Not—By Ripley provided. Id of the commit- Joseuh Fitzgerald of the commiv- ;; ,n benefits outlined a general t«e on benefit tn: Overture. "Sakuntala", G°Mjnark. "LiebMtrautnV 1 Lifltst, conductor, Ben Levy of Bayonne. "Southern RhapWy," Hosmer. "Air for the G String", Bach. Conductor, Clifford Demurest of I ^ Beauty,' Sleeping tee on UCUCUL.T wt .* _. _ plan to hold social" affairs for the purpose of raising funds. He desir- es to get in touch with all organiza- tions planning to hdld card parties or other functions for the benefit of the fund. The committee on merchants will secure .donations from the merchants of the borough, either cash or mer- chandise that can be used for the needy, PhilipTurk explained that » com- mittee of which he is a member has arranged for Tom Noonan, of China- town to be at the high school on K H. o ^slsy. Conductor dUur* of S Dudley &ahn*a*J Liquor U C*UM Of Four Arre»U Hero Four arrests were made «1 tu {. dl * y ichael Rosko, of 6^ Kan town 10 UK •»!. ...... ...„- Sunday night,with the trumpeters, Japanese tenor and others of the staff of the Doyer Street Rescue So- ciety of New York. He said that tickets are stilling rapidly for the meeting and that a capacity attend- ance is expected. All of the proceeds, he said, will go to the relief com- mittee. Assemblyman Brown thanked Mr. Turk for his good work. Miss H. V. Hermann, supervising principal of the schools of Carteret said that an effort is being made to arrange a football carnival for the benefit of the relief fund. The plan is to have two football guinea in one afternoon, four t«ams to''engage in the day's play. Mins Hermann said she could not say whether the plan politics. He forgot about tjie prose ciitor. He ain't a bit thankful since a week or so ago when he had visit- ors. I hear Sctoggins say he knows of a lotta kids that ain't thankful on ac- count of the Thanksgiving vacation comin' the sama time thpy had to stay home on account of sore arms from vaccination. They say there ain't no percentage that way. I ask Scroggins to discuss some local folks and things but he backs down and says he might say some- thing that would hurt some guy's feelin's and that don't fit in with Thanksgivin'. HUCKLEBERRY HESS. Father and Son Injured In Crash Residents Of Sewaren Have Bad Accident At Old bridge —Taken To Hospital. A Sewaren man and his son were injured Monday afternoon when their Ford car was in collision with Mack truck at Old Bridge. The in- n are John Wickerstrom, of age, and his son, John ADOPTED WE CHRMfVtt St'HL w n t UNITED STATES-mi 9 The annual seal sale dinner under the auspices of the Middlesex Coun- ty Tuberculosis League was held last h Pk House Lg in the new Packer House, ith bt sixty y night in the n Perth Amboy, with about guests, Mrs. Emil Stmjilau, Ci h B Mrs. S by Officer charged with A1 p tt ated, ra she couia not suj ....could be arranged or not at present Memberi Of Bright Eye* Council Change Quarterly Meeting Date At u meeting of Bright y Council No. 30, Daughters uf 1'wa hontttB Monday .night it wtt» decide to hold the next a^a^tedy jaeetini on the first Monday f the seco The Held a ured 6 men both, of 66 Robert street. The At ounc hontttB to hl n the fi Lead of on the secon ule.. RoutiiiB business" w a a t r a n uitfd and refreshments were served. Field Club will hold h HU School The Carteret d»n« on F Nathan nUdWi ub will o H«U» School bS lather has a fractured hip and other injuries and the son has numerous ody bruiaea. They are patients at the South Amboy Hospital. The accident hap- pened at the foot of Old Bridge hill. Patrolman James Hoover and Walter R. Grote of the East Bruns- wick township police department learned that the Wickstrom car had collided with a truck driven by John Krosuowski, 3$ Prentice avenue, South River, which WHS traveling to- ward South River, and that apparent- ly the Sewaren man was at fault. Chester Huff, of YardviUe, JUI eye- witness to the accident, was stand- ing- in front of the Old Bridge post, office when the crash occurred. He said the Mack truck operated by Krosnuwski bud the right of way and tliat the Ford car driven by Wick- strom proceeded against a red truffle light at the intersection of the Bor- deutowu road mid Old Bridge-MaU- wan roads. The Wickstrom car was demolish- ed and the truck was also damaged. Krosnowski was taken into custo- dy but it wan decided not to hold n htuuing until a further investigation could be made and the W'WMM could giv* testimony. Carrie Drake and Mrs. John Bodnar, of Carteret, were among the guests. The principal speaker was Dr. Samuel B. ' English, superintendent of the Glen Gardner sanitoriun. Other speaker* included Dr. Charles I. Silk, president of the League Freeholder C. Raymond Wicoff. Judge Harold K. Pickersgill toastmaster. Mrs. John J. Quinn was chairman of the committee in charge of the arrangements for the dinner The twenty-fifth annual campaign for the sale of sealu begins on Fri- day, the day after '"' ' —-"•— The history of the usu of stamps u means of raising money for tht? The y u means of raising b l i Thanksgiving of y of tuberculosis and similar pur- llUt OI LUiici.uiu,,., poses is interesting, as told by the speakers ..... -„—. IMVE K R E A ' i l HO* 86 io 633 -me oem wi nn tttti- KMTIHHkiF "Bur luWRiuloilS snu. RWtlHi flRW CAUSt Of ptAIH KMIM lHt AOES OF / IS Wd 15 -iarBUY CHRISttW SfAlV idea and in that year raised $3,000. From then on, the Christmas seal rapidly became a nation-wide enter- prise and since- 1910 has been under the management of the National Tu- berculosis Association, furnishing the funds with which that organiza- tion has developed its far flung ac- tivities. Since 1919, the stamps, in addition to an attractive design ap- propriate lo the Christmas season nas arways borne the double-barred cross of' Lorraine, which is/the em- blem of the tuberculosis movement. From the association's small work in 1907, tbi! need for a larger income has grown until.this year it will be necessary to print several millions of the bright little stamps tofinancethe work tliat the 2,000 associations plan to undertake in 11)31. In l'JIM only twenty tuberculosis associations were in existence in the United! States. Today every state lias a state anti-tuberculosis association. In addition there are over 2,000 af The following students in Carteret high school have attained places on the honor roll and on the honorable mention list for the first six weeks period of the term. Honor Roll Seniors: Edward Riley, John Richey, Ethel Kathe, Syl- via SchwarU, Julia Kachur, Stephen Baksa, Harriet Lebowitz, John Po- piel, Lottie Weinstein. Juniors: Ann Daniels, Adele Byrne, Milton Brown, Milton Green- bi'K, Anne Cinege. Sophomores: Eleanor Voorhees, Helen Lysek, Helen Turk, Bertha Vonook, Mary Dylag, Stella. Mos- cicki, Genevieve Penkul, Stanley Uszonski, Marie Pupp, Wanda Nic- iniit, Anna Magac, Mary Koncie- wicz, Jean Schwartz, Elizabeth Sirak. Freshmen: Anna Moravik, Doro- othy Vouchees, Thomas Brandon. I Honorable Mention—Seniors: Jos- eph Venook, Francia Auito, Hazel j liyrne, Staell Chomicki, Evelyn Knot, Julia Karwensky, Lena Rosen- blum, Elizabeth Zeleznik, Dora Chin- chin, Mary Gerganich, John Good- man, John Sidun, Pauline Szeeshy, Doris Weller. Juniors: Leecadia Tomczuk, Anna Dmytriw, Helen Hudak, Sophie Pry- wata, Edward Galvanek, Francis Koepfler, Albert Matefy, Rose Berb- er, Mary Dmytriw, Mary Fisher, Walter Popiel, Beatrice Steinberg. Sophomores: Philip Goz, Mary Ginda, Ruth Coughlin, Helen Kantor, Victoria Karveestky, Claire Mullan, Irene Teleposky, Joseph WeisS; Genevieve Bastek, Gladys Huber Martha Ernest, Dorothy Fisher, Eve lyn Greame, Dorothy Guyon, Andrew Sumutka, John Demeter, Irene Beig ert, Charlotte Gavaletz, Elsie Rock man. Freshmen: Joseph Kubicka, Ann* Gerzanich, Edith Kamstky, Mar Butkocy, Lillian Barashke, Josep Lozar, John Marczi, Bertha Koi Michael Woynarowski, Edith Day, Stephen Tarnowsky, Mary Mudrak •Emily Szlachetka, William Sidun Chester Milik, Charles Breske, Syl .via Brown, Mary Evelyn Richey, Evelyn Kircher, Marie Podgursky Carol Marciniak. Woman Is Honored For Helpful Work She Did In recognition of the work ahe has done for the organization of women known as the Associated Fal- ji'i'ns, Mra. S. Harkiewicz, of Long- fellow street, was given a party on Saturday night. The rooms were decorated in a color scheme of blue and white and the table was deco- rated with cut flowers. There was a supper at midnight. Mrs. Harkie- wicis was presented with a silk quilt. Among those present were: Mr. and Mrs. ft. Hux, Mr. and Mrs. S. Cho- nicki. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Usiym- ski, Mr. and Mrs. John Tomc7.uk, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Tomczuk, Mr. and Mrs. J. N- Makcinski, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Kaminsky, Mr. and Mrs. C. GodltrwRki, Mr nnd Mrs VVnltflT Sak, Hoso and Frank Tomczuk, Sophie and Eleanor Harkiewicz. Junior Woman's Club To Aid Senior Members Stumps were used us a means oi raising money fur hospitals as'lbngj ago as the Civil War. In 1897, such stain[> was sold in Australia to se- re funds for the establishment of . ,,f filiated associations and societies 25 s 0I , a.r^jit^t ;., Wu, u lui-ndu There cure re funds for the establisl a tuberculosis hospital. But it is to the inspiration of u Danish postal clerk, Einar Holboell, that we owe the Christmas Seal idea us it has de- reloped in the past twenty-five years. it was. who in 1903 inU^ested the idea of a" sale Pastor Attends Session Of County Christian Endeavor Rev. D. E. Lorentz, of the First Presbyterian Church, Mias Ina Baird and Miss Blanche Ferris attended the convention of the Middlesex County Christian Endeavor Union in the Old White Church in Woodbridge Saturday afternoon and evening. The speaker in the evening was Dr. Chat-lea Poling, »f Bloomfield. Former Carteret Man Married In Local Church Charles Ely, of Hampton, N. J., formerly of "Cartert't, and MIBS Bea- trice Hunt, of Hampton, were mar- ried Saturday at 4 p. in. at the Pres- ttlLU uiuy ..w._ cle for the sj>read uf health educa- vi ......... are in New Jersey. There are now over GOO sanatoria and hos- pitals with over 73,000 beds for tu- berculosis patients in the United States, In 1904 there were only100 hospitals and sanatoria with about 10,000 beds. New Jersey has eleven county and one state sanatorium, with approximately 2100 beds. Although u large share in the ti- of these activities is borne lieu oamruaj ot -, , byterian Church. They were attend- ed by Mr. and Mrs. Sager Bonnell, of Atlantic street. The ceremony wa» performed by Rev. D. E. Lo- renU, pastor of the church. After the ceremony a wedding supper was helj in the-Bonnell home, Mr. and Mm. Ely will live in (lurielng of these activie by public funds the money raised by the Christmas seal has provided the teuna of demonstration which htta enabled the official body to secure funds to cany on. For twenty-five the tuberculosis, associations h id t new and The Junior Woman's Club held a regular meeting Monday night and transacted routine business. Plans were made for the members to assist the Senior club with the Colonial ball on Thanksgiving eve. Attractive season programs were distributed among the members. It was announc- ed that a card party under the ails- pices of the club will be held on Tuesday night in the home of Miss Ann Reilly in Chrome avenue. Post Auxiliary Plan* For Winter; Card Party An executive meeting of the offi- cers of the auxiliary urut of the Car- teret Post of the American Legion was held recently in the home of Mrs, John Kennedy in Washington avenue. Plans for the fall and winter were discussed. The business session waa followed by a social hour. Re- freshments were served. Those pres- ent were: Miss Jane Cook, Mrs. John Nevill, Mrs. Fred Ruckreigel, Mra. John Katusa, Mrs. Harry Gleckner, Mrs. Walter Sak,-and Mrs, C. H. Slugg. About thirty men and women, members of the Post and the auxil- iary attended the county meeting held in Metuchen under the auspices of the Post of that town. Mrs. Char- lea End, county president of the aux- iliary presided. The Carteret unit of the auxiliary wa» complimented up- on having a 100 per cent paid up membership. On Tuesday night of next week there will be a regular business meeting of the auxiliary in the War Veterans room in the Borough Hall. There will be cards and refreshments after the business meeting. Affiliated bemocrats To Arrange For Card Party The affiliated Democratic organi- zations of the borough will hold ft meeting tonight (Wednesday) in, Firehouae No. 2 at 8 o'clock to com- plete arrahgementa for the card party and dance to be held on th* night of December 7 in_ the High Hampton. school gym, turned over gency relief committee. The proceeds will be to the Mayor's emer- tion. In 1U07, a story written by Jacob Uiiu about the Dullish seal appeared in the "Outlopk." One of the majja- iine's reader*, """ ~ !1 " t "-" 11 Wilmingto /ears the t riHve been path tinders to new and etter uaage of safe guarding health, i ks seventh in etter uaage of safe g u a g Tuberculosis now ranks seventh in the list of causes of death in New Jersey but still,finds most of it* vie tii.m amonir neople under 45 y cu rs A s among ccessful people under 45 years. InientNsUuc set] sale this year will be decided County Democrats Plan Testimonial For Hayes Leading Democrats were in session al New Brunswick last night to make arrangements for a testimonial din- ner to be given for Edmund A. Hay- i-. 1 ,,. c o n n t'y Democratic chairman wbose effort* had much to do with the Democratic landslide in Middle- sex on November 3. A good deal of progiess was made in the arrunge- liientasbut the date and place are to >> J ..4. n»ktk«ii m«ntinif to be Tenderfoot Pin* For Girl Scout Group ' At a meeting of Troop No. 2 Girl Scouts of America Friday night in the Sunday school room of the Pres- byterian Church, Jean Mott and Helen Stein, patrol leaders, present- ed for tenderfoot pins a group of candidates to Scout Captain Misa Mae Misdom. In the group were.; Aguts and Lydia Wohlschlager, Vi- Luck, Dorothy Straudberg, Mott, Anna Orou, Henrietta • M4 meeting to be I Z*n# Moti, A Wjtt l»« » uub- Weiss, Mju-y Dunn A«MM

CARTERET PRESS - DigiFind-It€¦ · I St. Elizabeth's Roman Catholic Church in Washington avenue on ... Cassalegi, Hook Garber, Mitch Cnr-IISIP, Mike Poll, Ted Kleban, Bob Henderson,

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Page 1: CARTERET PRESS - DigiFind-It€¦ · I St. Elizabeth's Roman Catholic Church in Washington avenue on ... Cassalegi, Hook Garber, Mitch Cnr-IISIP, Mike Poll, Ted Kleban, Bob Henderson,

Four Page ColoredComic Section

VOL. X, No. 11

The Price t)f This Paper i s 3 cent s everywhere—Pay no more

CARTERET PRESS Two Sections12 Ptgtt Today

CARTKRKT, N. ,]., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 27, PRICE THREE CENTS

May Form JuniorUnit Of Auxiliary!

Monaghan To SpeakAt Holy Name Meeting

Announcement was made Sunday~ , of a meeting of the Holy Name So-

Church Wedding ForCarteret Couple

I'lan Di»CUM*d By Unit OfCarterftt Pott Of Legion —M«mbf»bip Paid Up.

Plans for the organitation of ajunior auxiliary to the auxiliary unitof the Carteret Post of the AmericanLegion were discussed last night at„ meeting of the unit held in theWar Veterani room in the boroughball. The auxiliary and the post, willhold » joint meeting on Tuesday, De-cember 1, when the matter wijl betaken up again. An executive meet-ing of t i l auxiliary will be held earlyin Deeeniber in the home of Mrs.john Kennedy in Washington ave-

Mr» Harry Gleckner, chairman ofthe membership committee reportedthat the Carteret unit was the firstto report to the county organizationwith a on* hundred per cent paid upmembership.

The members of the unit receivedRn invitation to take part in a mem-bership raUy to "be held at Butler,N. J, on December 5.

Deputy and Staff AreGueats At Rahway Home

Mr and Mrs. Abe ChodoBh, of 526Jefferson awnue, Rahway, enter-tained the District deputy and staffof District No. 10, I. 0. 0. F. on.Saturday night in their home. Therewere'many games and refreshments.Those present were District Deputyand Mn. Thomas Moan, Mr. and Mrs.August Kostenbader. Mr. and Mrs.William Schmidt, Mr. and Mrs. JackRichardson, Mr. and Mj-s. UopwtK Brown, Mr. and Mrs. LouisVonah, Stanley Andrewski, Mr. andMrs. Sam Wexler and Mr. and Mra.Abe Chodosh, comprising the mem-bers Of the staff and their wives.

ciety of St. Joseph's pariah to be . _held on Monday night, Novemher | Mis» Margaret Telepoaky Be-30 in the St. Joseph School hall. Theprincipal speaker will be Francis A.Monaghan, former assistant; prose-cutor of Middlesex. There will bea motion picture with sound, the useof which will be donated by the NavyDepartment thfough the efforts ofJprvis Nevill. There will be otherentertainment features. Edward Do-Inn, president of the society, invitesnil men of tho parish and boys ofInch school age to attend.

Interest In CharityGrid Contest Rises

Game Between Carteret FieldClub and Alt Star Eleven ToBe Played December 6.

Interest in the charity footballgame between the Carteret FieldClub and an all star eleven, led byJohn Cassalegft, and comtpiyjixl aiformer and present Carteret andRahway High School stars, to beplayed on Sunday, December 6, issteadily increasing.

With sweet Charity as beneficiary,U is expected tKat a record crowdwill witness the game which prom-ises to be the biggest thing of itskind ever staged in Carteret. Theentire proceeds of the game will goto the Mayor's Relief Committee tobe used for distribution among thepoor and jobless of this,borough.

The Field Club will play two moreKames before it meets the all star

Tomorrow in the an-Thflnkngiving Day tussle, the

comes Bride Of Louis Kady—Big Reception Follows.

Mills Margaret Telepoaky, daugh-ter »of Mr. and Mra. Joseph Tele-poRky, of 18 Emerson street, andLouis Kady, of McKinley avenue, iwere married at a church wedding in

I St. Elizabeth's Roman CatholicChurch in Washington avenue onSaturday afternoon by the Pastor,Rev. Father L. R. ChaAy. The cere-iwmy was witnessed by a large num-ber of friends and relatives of thecouple. The maid of honor was MiasRose Solteaz; the matrons of honor,Mra. M. Kady and Mrs. S. Suto.

The bridesmaids were the MissesAnna Fozman, Irene Kantor, BettyI.iptak, Esther Soltesz, Betty Kazmere, Betty Buck, Grace Uhouae,Helen Piaak and Helen Derezo. Thebest man was Stephen Peto.

The ushers were: John Telepoeky,Frank Kady, Paul Pirigyi, JohnMirag, Geza, Budar, Stephen Derezo,Stephen Kady, William Teleposkyand Stephen Peterczak. Joseph

Busy Bee Club Meets 1Many Attend Function

New Social Organisation ItEntertained At StrandbcrgHome.

The members, of the Busy Bee So-cial Club met last night in the homeof Mrs, H. L. Strandborg in Wash-

.. , ingtnn avenue. There were socialya, John Kondas. Stephen tK°pn, | ,,„,„,><, and refreshments were served.

" Th t M R L

Surprise Party Given ForMiss Decku* Of Mercer St.

A surprise party was given toMiss Anna Deckus. of Mercer street,on Saturday evening in her homtt at51 Mercer street. The rooms weredecorated in pink and blue. Supperwas served at midnight. Then-, weregames and dancing. Those presentwere: Irene Hogyw, •'Helen Dom-browski, Helen Kuzmak, Stella Kon-kas, Ju|ja TVhite, Stella Gronska,Katherinfl Roskoss, Eva Bobor, Lena

Amanda Someone, Victor Hog

Foresters Plan To HonorOld Members At Testimonial

Plans were completed last night Atn meeting of Court Carteret No. 48,Foresters of America for the testi-monial dinner that is to be (riven byho court in honor of John S. 01-

brocht and Martin Rock, old memhers of tM court, to be held onTuesday, l>prembpr 8, in Odd Fel-low* hull. Vinitinir Jorestpr* from4

Anna, Pauline and Ma'mif Deckus,Stephen Sestaye, Stephen Greek,William Fedor, Edward Solkowski,Al. Simnnski, Walter Kowalsky, allof Carteret. Stanley Koiidns andWilliam Stownta, both of New York;Benny Menucci, Port Rending; JuliaAHi nnct Olgn Shnron, of HoundBrook. '

jRailway Man TakesBride In Carteret

Teleposky, aged fi, was the ringbear-er. The flower girls were MargaretPsiller'and Violet Telepoaky.

A reception was held Saturday

Tells Stabbing StoryPolice Lock Him Up

Carteret Man Drives To Wood-bridge Police Station —Spends Night There.

Tony Novobilsky, of 301 Pershing

nual

and evening in sTlE'liTa'-j avenue, went to police headquartershoth's hall and was attended by in Woodbridge and reported thatabout 200 guests. A ban'quet was F r a n k Molnar, of 76 Easex street,served in the evening. . wented to stab him. Novobilsky was

Mr. and Mrs. Kady went on their . . . . , , , , j \ ,B M m n n n t.n Washington. D. C. [intoxicated and was locked up. M

nar who was found in Novobllsky'scar was also locked up for beingdrunk, Novobilsky said he drove toWoodbridge from Carteret. Hia licenae was revoked for driving whilidrunk a few years ago Hut it habeen restored.

Those present were; Mr», Rosooe Le-vi, Mrs. J. Braun, Dr. H. L. Strand-brrg, Mrs. C. H. Byrne, Arthur Hall,Mis, Sager Bonnell, Mrs, CharlesBryrr, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Baker.Inhn Alexander, Mrs. William Ja-miaon, Mrs. Churl™ Morris, MissViolet Reason, Walter Eggert,

Mrs. Alexander Kish, Mrs. DanieReason, Mrs. William Klliott, Mrs.Thomas Moss, Mrs. John Richardson,Mrs. Gus Wulf, the Misses Margaretnd Lillian Donnelly, Miss Elsiepringer, Mrs. Thomas Way. Mrs.ercules Ellis, Mrs. J. Engertrown, Mrs. James Perringer, Misa

_.nn Morris, Mrs. Harry Yetman,Misa Theresa Kapusy, Mra. Nate

ustig, Mrs. D. Lnluter, Mrs. Ed-;ard Straek, Mrs. Matthew Sloan,

Mrs. Harold Edwards, Mrs. GeorgeBakke, Philip Eggert, Mrs. Louis

onah, Mrs Harry Axon and Mrs.. J. Keays.The next meeting of the club will

be held Monday night in the home ofMra. J. Eggert Brown in Emerson

• • " ~ ..-Ml t - - ! J - J ] _

nil parts of the state will bi> present,l delegation of the local For-

esters will attend Court Hpley nightin Jersey City on Monday night, fie-combor 7. The, trip will be ninde innutns thnt will leave Odd Fellowshall nt 7 p. m.

Mist Mary Kurdyla and JohnHarvey United At CeremonyIn Holy Family Church.

Carteret WomenGuests At Rahway

honeymoon to Washington, D. C.They will reside at 18 Emersonstreet.

Other guesta were: Mr. and Mrs.Robert Chodosh, Mr. and Mrs. LouiaChodosh, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Cho-desh, Mr. and Mrs, Nathan Chodosh,Mr. and Mrs. Harry Goz, Sam Cho-dosh, Mr. and Mrs. Sumner Moore,all of Carteret, and Mr. and Mrs.Neil Chodosh, of Rahway.

State Director0- K; s Appointments

Heads Of Relief Work In Var-ious Town* Acceptable ToBernard — Carteret First ToSubmit Program.

nual T h a n k s g g y ,locals will play the Vailsburg Col-legiiites of West Orange. Sundaythey will be host to the PlainfleldSacrecens. Both games will be play-e.l at the Carteret High School field.

Starting Monday, the all star teamwill begin preparations for the con-tent. It is planned to hold drillsevery afternoon at the high schoolfield. Among those who are expect-ed to come out are Duke Harwach,Ron Armour, Charles Ellis, JohnCassalegi, Hook Garber, Mitch Cnr-IISIP, Mike Poll, Ted Kleban, BobHenderson, George Challiet, IkeDaniels, Joe Medwick, George Cho-micki, and several'others.

Relief CommitteeReady For Work

The appointment of three munici-pal dir«"eier« "f unemployment reliefin Dunellen, Carteret and PlainsboroTownship have just been approvedby Chester I. Barnard, State Director

' of the Emergency Relief Administra-tion. The appointments were madeon recommendation of Lewis Comp-ton, Middlesex County Director, andincluded the appointment of Mrs.Emma Rowland as district directorfar the townships of North, East andSouth Brunswick. Klemmer Kalteis-sen is deputy district director in thesame townships.

Wheston M. Sherman was namedmunicipal director in Dunellen andwill have charge of the registrationof unemployed and the handling ofdirect relief. In Carteret, Mayor Ju-eeph A. Hermann will assume thesimilar duties and in Plainsboro

Man Is Fined ForUsing Gun In Holdup

Anthony Russo Who AttackedBoat Captain Assessed $28.

Anthony "Red" Russo,'of McKin-liy avenue was arraigned in policecourt Saturday morning and fined$25. Itusso was arrested for strikinga boat captain on the head with a re-volver in an attempt to rob him, ac-cording to the police record of thecase.

The night following the attemptto hold up the boat captain the lat-ter was reported to be seeking re-venge and the police were on thelookout for the captain all that night.The alleged attempt to hold up theboatman took place in a Chromespeakeasy where the captain said, hewas attacked when he displayed somemoney in paying for a drink.

Holy Family P . T. A.Card Par ty Tonighl

The P. T. A. of the Holy Famil:school will hold a card party Wednesday (tonight) in the Bchool hal!Mrs. J. Tomczuk is chairman of thcommittee in charge of thenients. ^__^_^__^

Sub - Committees Organized;Registration Now Going On—Plans Discussed.

The Mayor'sCommittee met

Emergencylast night

Reliefin the

Auxiliary Members Of Broth-erhood Of Israel Entertain-ed In Home Of Mr*. A. Cho-doah.

'IS '*?* M*ry Kurdyla, daughter of• I Mr?. Anna Kurdyla, of 167 Emer-

son »tre<t, and John Harvey, of 47avenue, R»hwny, were •

married Sunday at i p. m. in theHoly Family Roman Catholic Churchby the pastor. Rev. Father JosephDi The maid of honor wasMiss Dorothy Kunlyla, a sister of thebride. The best mtn was GeorgeFedles.

There were three bridesmaids, theMisses Mary Harvey, Mnr(t»ret Pas-ter and Mildred Niemiec. The ush-ers were: Frank Wijliar**, Wal-t( r Niemier and John Zitos.

The bride wore white s»tin with

rs.. J. Eggert Brownitreet. Mrs. Brown will be aided Inentertaining by Mrs. Harry Baker,Mra. Roscoe Levi and Mrs. MatthewSloan. y

Mother-Teacher GroupForms Social Unit

Mrs. A. Chodosh, of Rahway. en-tertained the members of the auxil-iary to the Congregation of'the Bro-therhood of Israel Thursday nightat her home. Cards were played andrefreshments were served. Thosepresent were: Mrs. Abe Durst, Mrs.Nathan Lustig, Mrs. Alec Handel-man, Mrs. Benjamin Klein, Mrs. I.Gross, Mrs. Leo R. Brown, Mrs. Dav-id Venook, Mrs. Abe Zucker, Mrs.Han-y Chodosh, Mrs. Robert R.Brown, Mrs. Edward Hupp, Mrs. Isa-dore Mausner, Mis. Aaron Rabinn-witz, Mrs. Isadore Brown, Mrs. LeoRockman, Mrs. Dora Jaoohy, Mrs.Max Glass, Mrs. tsadore Zimmerman,Mrs. Louis 'Chodosh, Mrs. SamBrown, Mrs. William Brown. Mrs.Sam Wexler, Mrs, Robert Chodosh,

n Spnniah lsce veil and carried whitechrysanthemum*. The m»id ofhonor and the bridesmaids were Ingreen nitin.

After the ceremony a receptionwas held in the home of the bride's -mother. Mr. and Mrs. Harvey willreside at 1ST Emerson itreet, aftera short wedding trip.

Rebekah Lodge Member*Have Business And Card*

Members of the Mother-TeacherAssociation of the Presbyterian Sun-|M79; Hermaii Fisher, Mrs. Neil Cho-

dosh, Mra. Joseph Blaukopf, Mrs.Harry Goz and Mrs. L. J. Weincr,all of Carteret; Mrs. M. Kaftan, Mrs.Freidman, Mrs. J. Schwartz, Mrs.Cooper, Mrs. R. Bel'., Mrs. Mark Hni-ria and the Misses Gordon, all of

day school met last Thursday nightin the home of the president, Mrs.Sager Bonnell in Atlantic street andformed a social organization to beknown as the Busy Bee, Club. Mrs.Bonnell was selected to serve as tem-porary chairman. The evening wastaken up with plans for the club. Atthe next meeting officers will beelected. Refreshments were served.

Guests At Christmas Seal DinnerHear Many Interesting Addresses

Three Carteret Women Attend — Pickersgill Is ToastmasterAt Spread In New Packer House — Use Of Seals To RaiseMoney Has Long History.

Rahway.

High School PupilsOn Honor Roll

Many Gain Place On List ByFaithful Work In Classes.

A short business meeting was heldWednesday night by the members ofDeborah Rebekah Lodge in I.O.OF.hall. Cards and refreshments follow-ed the business meeting. Those pres-ent were: Mrs. August Kostenbader,Mrs, Abo Chodosh, J Mr-«. IsadoreMiuisner, Mrs. J. Reiii, Mr. and Mrs.(ins Wulf, Mr and Mrs I) Patemon,Mrs, PcRRy Morris, Mr. and Mra. Mat-thew Duffy, Mrs. J. Kggert Brown,Mrs. S. Koed, Mrs. Summer Moore,Mrs.. Louis Vonah, Mrs. WilliamSchmidt, Mrs. Alec Handolman, Mrs.A. Zucker, Mrs. Louis Chodosh. Mrs.Abe Chodosh, Mrs. Robert Brown,Mrs. Al. (inrdncr, Mrs, BenjaminKlein, Mrs. Nathan Lustig, Mrs. Jos-eph (llnukopf, Mrs. Edward Hopp,Mrs. Sam Wexler, Mrs. Clara Jaml-son, Mrs. John Haas, Mra, EsteUeJamison, Mrs. A. Vornbaum, Mr. andMrs, Walter Vonah, Mrs. Ellen An-di'tson, Walter Vonah, Jr., AlexHandclman nnd Mrs. William Moss.

similar duties and in FlainsDoro r^-- :-• , ...Township John V. B. Wiscoff will do l h e v a»o u» sub-committees havea . i" / •]organized and are ready for work.

council chamber and discussed waysand means for carrying on the re-lief work during the winter. Chair-man Elmer E. Brown told the mem-bers of the program of road worlpthat ha.s been laid out in order toKive employment, and explained thewage rate that will be paid. He stat-ed that the work the committee pro-poses to do ij the greatest workthat hunfan beings can engage in.The person who does something forsome one else, he said, experiencesrtal satisfaction with his work,

The various sub-committees have

Mayor Hermann, of T^'y were instructed as to the pad telegram of con- oi l h e s t a t e director of relief. Bach

b t t t n ra

the work.Last, week

Carteret, received a telegram of con-gratulations from County DirectorLewis Compton as follows:

"Mayor Jos. A. Hermann,"Carteret. N J.

"Congratulations. Carteret futo submit program which has haapproved and forwarded today. Yourwhole plan and organisation a splen-did one.

Lewis Compton,Director."

'y were instructed as to the plansh d i t f relief Bach

tirsren

Carteret Student. ToPUy At Atlantic City

The Department of Music of theNew Jersey State Teachers' Associa-tion, meeting in Atlantic. City No-vember 27 - 30, will present the All-State High School Symphony Or-chestra in a concert on Sunday af-ternoon, November 2'Jth. at three o-clock, in the Ball Room, Convention

""-The personnel of theconsists of two hundredkcted playera from theschools of the State.

Thefollowing program will be giv-

committee is to submit written re-ports of its work from time to time.These reports are to be turned overto secretary Russell Miles. ^

Edward J. Walsh who has beenappointed by the borough counciltc have charge of all registration ofunemployed told' of his work and theexperience he has had to date. Hesaid that some persona who are inthe greatest need of relief are toosensitive to register. He asked thatother members of the general com-mittee who know of such cases re-port them in order that relief may be

A COMMUNICATIONDear Editor:

This Thanksgiving spirit is in theair even if there ain't no good Jimes.I ask Scrogpins what he is thankfulfor and he says he's thankful for thecross-eyed cat. He says he knowssome other guys which they ain't sothankful for the cat. Then Scrogginshas a croney who Says he's thankfulfor his wife. That it is, he says, he'sglad because there's only one of her.He might have been Mormon, hesaid, and then he might haye had abunch like her and that would besomething fierce.

Then the Democrats are glad ofthe hard times because they canblame it on the Republicans. The Re-publicans are thankful for the samehard times because there ain't nol_pickin's much for the Democrats inoffice. Some guys has grabbed offnice inside jobs and are thankfuk forthe friends that fix 'cm up. One ginmill keeper is sorry he changed his

Believe It or Not—By Ripley

provided. Id of the commit-Joseuh Fitzgerald of the commiv-; ; ,n benefits outlined a generalt«e on benefit

t n :Overture. "Sakuntala", G°Mjnark."LiebMtrautnV1 Lifltst, conductor, Ben

Levy of Bayonne."Southern RhapWy," Hosmer."Air for the G String", Bach.

Conductor, Clifford Demurest of

I ^ Beauty,'Sleeping

tee on UCUCUL.T w t . * _. _

plan to hold social" affairs for thepurpose of raising funds. He desir-es to get in touch with all organiza-tions planning to hdld card partiesor other functions for the benefit ofthe fund.

The committee on merchants willsecure .donations from the merchantsof the borough, either cash or mer-chandise that can be used for theneedy,

PhilipTurk explained that » com-mittee of which he is a member hasarranged for Tom Noonan, of China-town to be at the high school on

KH.

o^slsy. Conductord U u r * of S

Dudley &ahn*a*J

Liquor U C * U M OfFour Arre»U Hero

Four arrests were made «1tu{.dl*y

ichael Rosko, of 6 Kan

town 10 UK •»!. ...... . . . „ -Sunday night,with the trumpeters,Japanese tenor and others of thestaff of the Doyer Street Rescue So-ciety of New York. He said thattickets are stilling rapidly for themeeting and that a capacity attend-ance is expected. All of the proceeds,he said, will go to the relief com-mittee. Assemblyman Brown thankedMr. Turk for his good work.

Miss H. V. Hermann, supervisingprincipal of the schools of Carteretsaid that an effort is being made toarrange a football carnival for thebenefit of the relief fund. The planis to have two football guinea in oneafternoon, four t«ams to''engage inthe day's play. Mins Hermann saidshe could not say whether the plan

politics. He forgot about tjie proseciitor. He ain't a bit thankful sincea week or so ago when he had visit-ors.

I hear Sctoggins say he knows ofa lotta kids that ain't thankful on ac-count of the Thanksgiving vacationcomin' the sama time thpy had tostay home on account of sore armsfrom vaccination. They say thereain't no percentage that way.

I ask Scroggins to discuss somelocal folks and things but he backsdown and says he might say some-thing that would hurt some guy'sfeelin's and that don't fit in withThanksgivin'.

HUCKLEBERRY HESS.

Father and SonInjured In Crash

Residents Of Sewaren HaveBad Accident At Old bridge—Taken To Hospital.

A Sewaren man and his son wereinjured Monday afternoon whentheir Ford car was in collision with

Mack truck at Old Bridge. The in-n are John Wickerstrom,of age, and his son, John

ADOPTED WE CHRMfVtt St'HLw n t UNITED STATES-mi

9

The annual seal sale dinner underthe auspices of the Middlesex Coun-ty Tuberculosis League was held last

h P k HouseLg

in the new Packer House,ith b t sixty

ynight in the nPerth Amboy, with aboutguests, Mrs. Emil Stmjilau,Ci h B

Mrs.

Sby Officercharged with

A1 p t tated, ra

she couia not suj ....„could be arranged or not at present

Memberi Of BrightEye* Council Change

Quarterly Meet ing Date

At u meeting of Bright yCouncil No. 30, Daughters uf 1'wahontttB Monday .night it wtt» decideto hold the next a^a^tedy jaeetinion the first Monday

f the seco

TheHeld a B«

ured6

menboth, of 66 Robert street. The

Atounc

hontttBto h ln the fiLead of on the secon

ule.. RoutiiiB business" waatranuitfd and refreshments were served.

Field Club will holdh H U SchoolThe Carteret

d»n«

on

FNathan

nUdWi

ub will oH«U» School

bS

lather has a fractured hip and otherinjuries and the son has numerousody bruiaea.They are patients at the South

Amboy Hospital. The accident hap-pened at the foot of Old Bridge hill.

Patrolman James Hoover andWalter R. Grote of the East Bruns-wick township police departmentlearned that the Wickstrom car hadcollided with a truck driven by JohnKrosuowski, 3$ Prentice avenue,South River, which WHS traveling to-ward South River, and that apparent-ly the Sewaren man was at fault.

Chester Huff, of YardviUe, JUI eye-witness to the accident, was stand-ing- in front of the Old Bridge post,office when the crash occurred. Hesaid the Mack truck operated byKrosnuwski bud the right of way andtliat the Ford car driven by Wick-strom proceeded against a red trufflelight at the intersection of the Bor-deutowu road mid Old Bridge-MaU-wan roads.

The Wickstrom car was demolish-ed and the truck was also damaged.

Krosnowski was taken into custo-dy but it wan decided not to hold nhtuuing until a further investigationcould be made and the W ' W M Mcould giv* testimony.

Carrie Drake and Mrs. John Bodnar,of Carteret, were among the guests.

The principal speaker was Dr.Samuel B. ' English, superintendentof the Glen Gardner sanitoriun.Other speaker* included Dr. CharlesI. Silk, president of the LeagueFreeholder C. Raymond Wicoff.

Judge Harold K. Pickersgilltoastmaster. Mrs. John J. Quinn waschairman of the committee in chargeof the arrangements for the dinner

The twenty-fifth annual campaignfor the sale of sealu begins on Fri-day, the day after '"' ' —-"•—The history of the usu of stampsu means of raising money for tht?The yu means of raising

b l i

Thanksgivingofy

of tuberculosis and similar pur-llUt OI LUiici.uiu,,.,

poses is interesting, as told by thespeakers

. . . . . -„—. IMVE KREA'i l HO*

86 io 633 -me oem wi nn tttti-KMTIHHkiF "Bur luWRiuloilS snu. RWtlHiflRW CAUSt Of ptAIH KMIM lHt AOES OF /IS Wd 15 -iarBUY CHRISttW SfAlV

idea and in that year raised $3,000.From then on, the Christmas sealrapidly became a nation-wide enter-prise and since- 1910 has been underthe management of the National Tu-berculosis Association, furnishingthe funds with which that organiza-tion has developed its far flung ac-tivities. Since 1919, the stamps, inaddition to an attractive design ap-propriate lo the Christmas seasonnas arways borne the double-barredcross of' Lorraine, which is/the em-blem of the tuberculosis movement.From the association's small work in1907, tbi! need for a larger incomehas grown until.this year it will benecessary to print several millions ofthe bright little stamps to finance thework tliat the 2,000 associations planto undertake in 11)31.

In l'JIM only twenty tuberculosisassociations were in existence in theUnited! States. Today every state liasa state anti-tuberculosis association.In addition there are over 2,000 af

The following students in Carterethigh school have attained places onthe honor roll and on the honorablemention list for the first six weeksperiod of the term.

Honor Roll — Seniors: EdwardRiley, John Richey, Ethel Kathe, Syl-via SchwarU, Julia Kachur, StephenBaksa, Harriet Lebowitz, John Po-piel, Lottie Weinstein.

Juniors: Ann Daniels, AdeleByrne, Milton Brown, Milton Green-bi'K, Anne Cinege.

Sophomores: Eleanor Voorhees,Helen Lysek, Helen Turk, BerthaVonook, Mary Dylag, Stella. Mos-cicki, Genevieve Penkul, StanleyUszonski, Marie Pupp, Wanda Nic-iniit, Anna Magac, Mary Koncie-wicz, Jean Schwartz, Elizabeth Sirak.

Freshmen: Anna Moravik, Doro-othy Vouchees, Thomas Brandon.

I Honorable Mention—Seniors: Jos-eph Venook, Francia Auito, Hazel

j liyrne, Staell Chomicki, EvelynKnot, Julia Karwensky, Lena Rosen-blum, Elizabeth Zeleznik, Dora Chin-chin, Mary Gerganich, John Good-man, John Sidun, Pauline Szeeshy,Doris Weller.

Juniors: Leecadia Tomczuk, AnnaDmytriw, Helen Hudak, Sophie Pry-wata, Edward Galvanek, FrancisKoepfler, Albert Matefy, Rose Berb-er, Mary Dmytriw, Mary Fisher,Walter Popiel, Beatrice Steinberg.

Sophomores: Philip Goz, MaryGinda, Ruth Coughlin, Helen Kantor,Victoria Karveestky, Claire Mullan,Irene Teleposky, Joseph WeisS;Genevieve Bastek, Gladys HuberMartha Ernest, Dorothy Fisher, Evelyn Greame, Dorothy Guyon, AndrewSumutka, John Demeter, Irene Beigert, Charlotte Gavaletz, Elsie Rockman.

Freshmen: Joseph Kubicka, Ann*Gerzanich, Edith Kamstky, MarButkocy, Lillian Barashke, JosepLozar, John Marczi, Bertha KoiMichael Woynarowski, Edith Day,Stephen Tarnowsky, Mary Mudrak•Emily Szlachetka, William SidunChester Milik, Charles Breske, Syl.via Brown, Mary Evelyn Richey,Evelyn Kircher, Marie PodgurskyCarol Marciniak.

Woman Is Honored ForHelpful Work She Did

In recognition of the work ahehas done for the organization ofwomen known as the Associated Fal-ji'i'ns, Mra. S. Harkiewicz, of Long-fellow street, was given a party onSaturday night. The rooms weredecorated in a color scheme of blueand white and the table was deco-rated with cut flowers. There wasa supper at midnight. Mrs. Harkie-wicis was presented with a silk quilt.Among those present were: Mr. andMrs. ft. Hux, Mr. and Mrs. S. Cho-nicki. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Usiym-ski, Mr. and Mrs. John Tomc7.uk, Mr.and Mrs. Thomas Tomczuk, Mr. andMrs. J. N- Makcinski, Mr. and Mrs.Edward Kaminsky, Mr. and Mrs. C.GodltrwRki, Mr nnd Mrs VVnltflTSak, Hoso and Frank Tomczuk,Sophie and Eleanor Harkiewicz.

Junior Woman's ClubTo Aid Senior Members

Stumps were used us a means oiraising money fur hospitals as'lbngjago as the Civil War. In 1897, such

stain[> was sold in Australia to se-re funds for the establishment of

. ,,f filiated associations and societies 25s 0 I , a.r jit t ;., Wu,u lui-ndu There

curere funds for the establisl

a tuberculosis hospital. But it is tothe inspiration of u Danish postalclerk, Einar Holboell, that we owethe Christmas Seal idea us it has de-reloped in the past twenty-five years.H« it was. who in 1903 inU^ested

the idea of a" sale

Pastor Attends SessionOf County Christian Endeavor

Rev. D. E. Lorentz, of the FirstPresbyterian Church, Mias Ina Bairdand Miss Blanche Ferris attendedthe convention of the MiddlesexCounty Christian Endeavor Union inthe Old White Church in WoodbridgeSaturday afternoon and evening.The speaker in the evening was Dr.Chat-lea Poling, »f Bloomfield.

Former Carteret ManMarried In Local Church

Charles Ely, of Hampton, N. J.,formerly of "Cartert't, and MIBS Bea-trice Hunt, of Hampton, were mar-ried Saturday at 4 p. in. at the Pres-

ttlLU uiuy . . w . _

cle for the sj>read uf health educa-

vi ......... are in New Jersey. Thereare now over GOO sanatoria and hos-pitals with over 73,000 beds for tu-berculosis patients in the UnitedStates, In 1904 there were only 100hospitals and sanatoria with about10,000 beds. New Jersey has elevencounty and one state sanatorium,with approximately 2100 beds.

Although u large share in the ti-of these activities is borne

lieu oamruaj ot -, ,byterian Church. They were attend-ed by Mr. and Mrs. Sager Bonnell,of Atlantic street. The ceremonywa» performed by Rev. D. E. Lo-renU, pastor of the church. Afterthe ceremony a wedding supper washelj in the-Bonnell home,

Mr. and Mm. Ely will live in

(lurielng of these activieby public funds the money raised bythe Christmas seal has provided theteuna of demonstration which htta

enabled the official body to securefunds to cany on. For twenty-five

the tuberculosis, associationsh i d t new and

The Junior Woman's Club held aregular meeting Monday night andtransacted routine business. Planswere made for the members to assistthe Senior club with the Colonialball on Thanksgiving eve. Attractiveseason programs were distributedamong the members. It was announc-ed that a card party under the ails-pices of the club will be held onTuesday night in the home of MissAnn Reilly in Chrome avenue.

Post Auxiliary Plan*For Winter; Card Party

An executive meeting of the offi-cers of the auxiliary urut of the Car-teret Post of the American Legionwas held recently in the home ofMrs, John Kennedy in Washingtonavenue. Plans for the fall and winterwere discussed. The business sessionwaa followed by a social hour. Re-freshments were served. Those pres-ent were: Miss Jane Cook, Mrs. JohnNevill, Mrs. Fred Ruckreigel, Mra.John Katusa, Mrs. Harry Gleckner,Mrs. Walter Sak,-and Mrs, C. H.Slugg.

About thirty men and women,members of the Post and the auxil-iary attended the county meetingheld in Metuchen under the auspicesof the Post of that town. Mrs. Char-lea End, county president of the aux-iliary presided. The Carteret unit ofthe auxiliary wa» complimented up-on having a 100 per cent paid upmembership.

On Tuesday night of next weekthere will be a regular businessmeeting of the auxiliary in the WarVeterans room in the Borough Hall.There will be cards and refreshmentsafter the business meeting.

Affiliated bemocrats ToArrange For Card Party

The affiliated Democratic organi-zations of the borough will hold ftmeeting tonight (Wednesday) in,Firehouae No. 2 at 8 o'clock to com-plete arrahgementa for the cardparty and dance to be held on th*night of December 7 in_ the High

Hampton.

school gym,turned overgency relief committee.

The proceeds will beto the Mayor's emer-

tion.In 1U07, a story written by JacobUiiu about the Dullish seal appearedin the "Outlopk." One of the majja-iine's reader*, """ ~ !1 " t"-"1 1

Wilmingto

/ears the triHve been path tinders to new andetter uaage of safe guarding health,

i ks seventh inetter uaage of safe g u a g

Tuberculosis now ranks seventh inthe list of causes of death in NewJersey but still,finds most of it* vietii.m amonir neople under 45 ycurs

A samongccessful people under 45 years. InientNsUuc

set] sale this year will be decided

County Democrats PlanTestimonial For Hayes

Leading Democrats were in sessional New Brunswick last night to makearrangements for a testimonial din-ner to be given for Edmund A. Hay-i-.1,,. c o n n t'y Democratic chairmanwbose effort* had much to do withthe Democratic landslide in Middle-sex on November 3. A good deal ofprogiess was made in the arrunge-liientasbut the date and place are to

>> J ..4. n»ktk«ii m«ntinif to be

Tenderfoot Pin* ForGirl Scout Group '

At a meeting of Troop No. 2 GirlScouts of America Friday night inthe Sunday school room of the Pres-byterian Church, Jean Mott andHelen Stein, patrol leaders, present-ed for tenderfoot pins a group ofcandidates to Scout Captain MisaMae Misdom. In the group were.;A guts and Lydia Wohlschlager, Vi-

Luck, Dorothy Straudberg,Mott, Anna Orou, Henrietta •

M4meeting to be I Z*n# Moti, AWjtt l»« » uub- Weiss, Mju-y Dunn

A«MM

Page 2: CARTERET PRESS - DigiFind-It€¦ · I St. Elizabeth's Roman Catholic Church in Washington avenue on ... Cassalegi, Hook Garber, Mitch Cnr-IISIP, Mike Poll, Ted Kleban, Bob Henderson,

PAGE TWO

Valcum Polish Formerly Called ClenolIs Now Bcinjf Sold By

HUMPHREYS & RYAN,'INC.74 MAIN STRF.ET,

WOODBRiDGE, N. J.Main Office

Consolidated Products Corp.332 Leland Avenue,

Plainfield, N- J.

Come In And See Our Stock OfNEW

PONTIACS AND AUBURNSALSO USED CARS

M A Y F L O W E R R E F R I G E R A T O R S

~~~ All Kindt of Body and Fender WorkCars Repaired

McGrath Auto Sales, 195 Roosevelt Avenue

Tel. Carteret 8-1313 Cartefet, N. J.

"""'COIVIE UNTOM v

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 27,.

~~ Him time

This glKiintlo ri-iirewiUatlou ofChrist, which was nnvellcd recently,looks down upon tho port of Rio de.iHiifJri), Uriizll, (rum Hie summit ofCorcovndo mountain. !t« head la2,200 feet nbove the city. On occa-sion the statue Is Illuminated by floodlights.

Fool CovcrinftThe sandal, the earliest and simple*!

shoe, was known by th« most primitive,races and was certainly worn by th«ancient Egyptians. The Uittltea wor»shoes, often with gnllera above to pro-tect the ankle and cnlf uf the leg.

BUY NOW AND PROFIT!We have a large assortment of models

and makes with prices to suitevery pocket book.

COME IN AND LOOK THEM OVER!1930 Ford Standard Coupe1930 Ford Sport Coupe1930 Ford Sport Roadsters, 21930 Ford Tudors, 21931 Ford Victoria 4-pass. Coupe1931 Ford Deluxe Roadster

Practically New.

1929 Ford \ ton Canopy Top Delivery1929 Ford \ ton Deluxe DeSveryInternational \\ ton Panel Body Truck

WE HAVE SEVERAL FORD DEMONSTRATOR CARS

TUTORS AND COUPES, PRACTICALLY NEW.

FQRDSON TRACTORSi i ; : v : \ — •

CONVENIENT TERMS.

\' *. 1

OPEN EVENINGS AND SUNDAY MORNING.

FAYETTE USED CAR MARTBETWEEN OAK AND ELM STREETS,

ON NEW BRUNSWICK AVE.

PERTH AMBOY, N. I

WHEN YOU

By DOUOLAS MALLOCH

»IS 1. the now home of Colonel r.,,,1 Mrs. «:i.Bri™-l.ln.lh..rKh near no,.,.«oll N J. ^ ^Orient, work was rushed on the .teiKleiu-e, so It was .Imom completed by the time they returned.

* *

lo **1 Orient, work was rushed on the .teiKleiue, so It

Only One Ferryboat loft on f/ie Mrs.sis.sippi j

LAST of the ferryboats toto ply buck niwl forth

across the Mississippi river Istho Mary Ellen. She hasBeen carrying pawK'nci-rs andfreight I>etween (torondt'let.Mo, and Bast Canmdelet, 111.,for T6 years ami Is stilllng her 40 trips a iliiy. Thefour Zsller brothers own andoperate this survivor of thepre-brldge age, us did theirfnther befoVe them.

THREE GOOD PIES

HIOKE ts a simple pie thnt the mostInexperienced may make without

a failure:Graham Cracker Pie.

Roll fourteen grnham crackers andmil with one-half cupful of butter,Une a pie tin wltli tW» mixture amifill with cooked and seasoned appl-sauce. Serve with cream, after bnkIng about twenty minutes.

Lemon Fluff Pie.Tafce thp grated rind nnd Juice Of an

orange and a lemon, add three-fourthsof a cupful of sucnr, the well-beatenpolks of three euss to which one table-spoonful of cold wuier has been addedgradually. • Conk in a double boiler un-til smooth anil pnur over the stifflybeaten whites tg which one-fourth cupful of sugar has been added. PnurInto a baked shell, add a tabletpoonfulof butter and bake until firm—aboutten minutes. Fur those who dlBlllie «meringue, this Is especially attractive.as the texture is like sponge cake oromelet

Moravian Deep Apple Pie.Cora and pare sit even sized apples

Place with a tenspoonful at lemonjuice, a little of the grated rind oflemon, a cupful of susur nnd etimi!?nwater to cover the bottom of the ssmcepan. Cover and conk until the appl.*are tender but not broken. Line «(le*p pastry dish with rich pustry. run-fully place the apples In the shell, tillIng the centers with pencil tnarm:ilade. Cover with strips nf pastry aihlhake Just lont; furnish to brown thepastry. Serve with crpam.

( ^ 1931. Western NI-WIM-KI* r Ininti t

Help Destroy Them

SOMETIME I shall sleep—nod you.Will yon come, I wonder,

In the sunshine, in the dew,In th« days of thunder7

Will you come with wreattiB alone,Come with red, red roges,

Where the one that you hare knowsNow at last reposes?

I would have you come, 1 know,nut the thing to bring ma

Is some drenm of long ago, ' «!Song you used to Ring me, |

I would have the gift you broughtIn tbAt moment to ma

Rut sonie nnforgotten thoughtProm Hie dRys you knew me.

Sometime you mar come againWith some gad reflection.

1 would have ynu bring m$ thenBut a recollection.

Sometime you wtll come at lastThnre whers 1 H« sleeping—

nririR me flomctblnK from the past,And lenve It In my keeping.

«6. m i . Dou«iiuMUIpch.i—WJTO Btrrlo*.

PUBUC INJUREDBY BANK GOSSIP

National Association DeclaresCommunity Interests Demand

Protection Against IdleRumors

n O T H In their advertising and In* * their direct contacts with cus-tomers nnd others, bankers should"consciously nnd persistently d«TOt«moro tlmo and thought to keepingpfnplfl mindful nf the /act that whilelbs bank' linn ninny obligations towardIts customers, equally Is It true thatthe depositor also has certain obliga-tions to the bank to enable It to prop-orly maintain Its position in the com-munity," a recent statement ot toeAmerican Bankers Association da-

I claras.I "A hank admittedly Is a seml-publlc

Institution and there l» a mutualityI uf obligation resting upon bota the| banker and his customers to maintain

ho effective functioning of that lnstl-utlon that la superior to the personal

Interests of nllher," It saye.Bankers might well consciously dt-

voto greater effort to building up th»public viewpoint in their communitiesthat due to their public obligationsand burden of public Interest, thsbanks are. entitled to protectionagainst Ill-Informed or malicious gos-sip and rumors, the statement says.

"Aa to banks In some states, bankslander laws afford this protection,"It points out. "We recommend thatthis protection be availed of by definiteaction wherever practical both a« amatter of Immediate expediency andalso to awaken public opinion as tothe dangers of Idle gossip about acommunity's banking Institutions."

I

PARAMOUNT PUBUXTHEATRES

PERTH AMBOY

4 !>•>» Mart. Sal,, Nm.Dlrn-r I ruin llu) (air

Thrntrc N. V. <\• AHK TIIKNK III It

( I1I I .HKEN-My thf CrruliH-it i>r

Hllli A llrtllUnl Ciul AllIn Thrlr Trriu

HUH, Wed., DM. tAUn4 LuM

TUB UUAKU8MAM

Maria H»luril«». Nov. HthFUK (INK HEBH

Tb« Huiireuie Hwrlflca IKA Hullicr t'ur Her Child

Hat. U> T u t .N*v. M • IM*. 1BAD r

H. J. HAAS

AMERICA'S WORLDRESPONSIBILITIES

By H. J. HAASPresident American Renters Association

WB are in a changing world, withmany new financial problem! for

which we have no precedents, andmany old prob-lems which haveso changed aa tobe unrecognizable.American bankershave been calledInto world affairsto blaze new trailsot u n k n o w nfinance. We mayexpect these callsin be moro nu-merous In the fu-ture than theyhave In the past.We a r e t h e

world's financial leader and we mustaccept the responsibility which goeswith It.

Let us look to the future with con-fidence. Every one has experienced agreat sorrow tome time, perhaps so I

reat we talt we could never over- !come It, but time Is the great healerand eventually we have come out nft. Aa It Is with individuals, so It Is

with nations. Our nation has hod:niu;h sorrow In the 155 years of Its

In tttat time we havethrough the major depressions

of 1837-1857-1873 to 187D-1884-1893-1B9S-1907-1914-1921 and the present,

I venture to btme that In each ofthese periods there were those whohad doubts of the lulu re Just as w«have them today, but what happenedafter each depression? Our countryrecovered, to b» better and strongertuau ever, Its puuvle were Introducedto modes ot living they never dreamedof, until today, notwithstanding ourdepression, we l^jo on the highestplane uf auy uatlou lu th« world.Should we not Judge the (uture bypu»t eiperleuce?

Surely our people are better pre-pared, financially and Intellectually, tocups with even greater problems thanthey have been lu the past, so why notlook to tht> Hituru cuutldent that tundainental social and economic problenii will ba adjusted aatlulacturlly?

Coufl««uc« In not established by anyon* thing biit by an accumulation ofthings. It we can gut confidence startedon Its way, gathering a little here andtuwe, it will accelerate Us speed as Itgoes along. This Is uot th» work "fany out mau to psiforni but Is thecumulative effort of each, and everyuu* t>f us. What we ar« In tb« futureIs not th« r«sult of what we h«v« don»on any ou» day but the result of allthat we nave done for all time. TbaAmerican Bankers Association U «n-daafprlng to do Us p^t lu41vldu»llTonr af ort» stay *at count (pr miuh,b u t fthi~ - • - • - » * -- ~ * - ^ "

Japan'i Cl im. t .Since Jayni] extends Uirough nearly

30 degrees of latitude. It nticessa^llyliiis a great range of climate. In thesouth the cllmnte Is sub-tropical; Inthe north it Is extremely cold. Thesouthern Islands have high tempera-tureH 1(1 the summer uitd no snuvr orloe in the winter. In the KurlleMslandsthe miow and Ice ni'ver entirely dlsap-pi'.'ir. Kltishu and Shlkottii have amoderate climate.

Oce«n 6ddiu*iThe seas posse » (.rentures called

flagelliites, Kwlinnilng by means of aliving lush, which uru half plants, half

What Can Be DaneFarmers should rid themselves ofany false hope of outside aid fromlegislation. The only recourse telt fortho producer on a reduced price level Isto produce his goodt at reduced costs,and nearly every farmer can likely putInto force a few economies In prodno-tlon. Farmers,must produce as largelyai potsiblo the materials they use, ">*get away from cash purchase! untilprices coma dowu proportionately onthe things they buy. The cheapestway In thv farmliiK business Is to rail*your own feed and not let the otherman get your dollars.

— Please mention this paper whenbuying from advertiser*. —

1911- 20 YEARS -1931SELLING NATIONALLY KNOWN MERCHANDISE AT

LOW PRICES!jGenuine LeatherLumberjack Coats U

$4.95$6.95$8.95

$10.95Great Pants Sale

A rood hvj allow, ui to icll pant*«t the»« ri

TRENCH MODELRAIN COATS

Sued.Lumber JackGenuine LtatherLumber JackiGenuine HoruhideLumbar JackGenuina Hori«hid«Leather Coati

$1.29, $1.69, $1.95, $2.45,$1.9, $3.45, $1*5

$4.45A BIRTHDAY SALE

And Here h What You Get

Ready-toWear All $Wool Suits & Topcoats x

VALUES UP.TO $25.00

G R E A T S A L ETAYLOR-MADE MADE TO ORDER SUITS

$30.00 and $35.QQ1 Pure Virgin Wool — Suits' to MeMura

$20.00New Patterns

iCUN

Page 3: CARTERET PRESS - DigiFind-It€¦ · I St. Elizabeth's Roman Catholic Church in Washington avenue on ... Cassalegi, Hook Garber, Mitch Cnr-IISIP, Mike Poll, Ted Kleban, Bob Henderson,

CARTBRET PBESfe FRroAY, NOVBMBEIt 27, 1881 PAGE THREB

Attelunt Italian CityTh« city ol TIM, Italy, wqs probably

of Btruca i ] drlrfn. It brrnmn auhjectto Horn* la l?0 B. C. At the heightof t t t trettlteto. In tho Twelfth rnn-tnry, It U thought to have hnfl n pnn-tilltlOn <tf 160,000. In tlio SixtepnthMntOrjr ft* population hurt dwindled toabort 8,800, ft Is now In a thriving«onditlon with a population in theCOfflttUM of about 70,000.

Biiqu* Doll Not DomwticAll (lolln of ilnmi>stlc manufnotnr*

ir» todfly iiinrte of nn tmtireRknhlf rnm-poiltlon, which l« onrfrrty sepnrntamd illsllnct frnm tha bliqnp doll*,which «rf> Htlll Imported, ajthmifrh toa wry much lf>ss<>r extent, -Into thlfeonntty.

—Please mention this pap«r whenhuyiOK from advertisers.—

NEW YORK'S INN OF HOSPITALITY^In the mldit of the city but away from the noise1,000 ROOMS WITH BATH-5 DINING ROOMSNt«l Iht Grait Diptttmtnl Stores. Convenient to Church*.' Theatre* «nd Transportation Linei. '

• ',. \ R A T E SShttU ' .witbB*th$2.5O to $ '

Doublewl* frth $4.00 to $6NO CHARGE FOR CRIB oTcOTFOTttiEJJJTirfof

PRINCE GEORGE HOTEL

$5 to $7Parlor, Bed- . ±room and Bath $ 5 to $ 8

SUPERSTITIOUS 3« * « SUE • • *

Me

Fifth Avtnu* and 28th Street

Alburn M . Gutterton

Motorltto from

<ht North

' South1 East and

Wert

Find thit Hotel th«B«t

AUTO INTRANCIS ON TWO STREETS EAST 28th and EAST 27th

Old Gardener

f I YAi'INTlIS, [inper white nWlsni,' *• I lie <'lilnosi> sacred IllUm, thetrumpet Nisrchsl, nnd tlie Hue VnuTlml (ullps nre enslly (rnnvn In (lliersuch «* In sold In nil need stores. Theuse of llher In pnrtlcularl) acharttage-ims In city nparlments and whereverCCMnl pnltlnK Roll Is hard tn oMaln.Nn ilrnlnnee Is required, und the bowlsiimluliilng (ho fiber may he set safelynn> where about the room. The fibershnulil nhviiys be finned 'when tliebowls nro helng prepared. Most nmatfurs lanve It In a loose condition,which Is a mistake. 'Hynrlnth bulbsshould be planted so thai the.orownsonie almost thith with the surface,

but nnrclssi and daffodils should*! haven little of the bulb projecting, whilethe Due Von Tbol tallpa shodld be Justunder the surfnee:

BROTHER BILL HAS TOLD HERTHAT—

The wife of a certain baseball pltcti.cr wore a pink drew to a game oneday when friend hubby pitched—andwon. Tfle next time he pitched, heasked her to wear the tam« dr»*»—and he won'again.

And so on through the tummtr poorwine had to wear that "pink oharm,"unlaundered and unlroned, lor thegood luck of the team.

(IES by HuClurr Nnirtoaiwr(WNt> Service.)

— Please mention this paper to ad-vertisers; it helpt you, it helps themit helps vour ^anet' —

Tngli hman't ld«ftThe mrrin)l:ne [irojedll" wnn de

veloped and ftrrt perfected hv an P.ncllRhman, Sir Jo«epb WlKwnrth, In IKOrt.The Kreiirt hnve naed.the striwrnllneproJectllJ slnre 1R03. It wus used bjthis emintry rturtnu the World war.

Nam* C I T * » by RomkmThe name "Africa" was orlglnnlly

applied to the country in the neighbor-hood of Carthage, that part of thecontinent first known to the Romans.Carthase was founded In son B. C

Again . . . for THANKSGIVING

FRESH-KILLEDSELECTED NORTHWESTERN

TURKEYSW l PICK

OFTHINORTHWESTERN

FLOCKS

ONEPRICEONLY

9 0 carloads of these Northwestern

birds wer# shipper! to us in the New

York territory. Don't wait and risk

disappointment. Order now. At so

attractive a price these Turkeys will go

fast. Also a choice selection of chickens,

ducks, geese and othor meats priced

especially low.

COASTING «Li FANCY LONO ISLAND FANCY

CHICKENS 35 DUCKS 23C GEESE . I T

Now they ore here . . . the finest,

Specialty selected, (lesh-killed Turkeys . . .

plump, meaty . . . the kind that roast so

taruW, tempting and delicious. Our buyers

or* mighty proud of these Turkeys . . .

and have reason to be. They are the cream

of th* Northwestern crop . . . just as high

in quality as last year . . . when over

^T A&P Turfceyi are

identified by the name"Pilgrim" tagged onevery bird as a guarantee

of A&P quality.

To Locale Your Niorait Market,phona lor Brooklyn, fVergr*en3-6100] for Long liland. GardenCity 86OO) lor Manhattan, BronxandW»ilch«it»t.lUdlow 4-3000)or MOhawh 4-7MO; for North.rn

N*w J«rwy, Ttrrac* 3-7600}(or Pot*non and vicinity,

SH.rwood 2-14SO.

AND OTHER FINE HOLIDAY FOODS FROM FAR AND NEAR

Cranberry Sauce

Mince Meat . . *NOMSVCH

Mln^e Meat . .Fiwcy AtP Brand

Pumpkin .*Fancy Buddtd

Walnuts. .

Sx.dNutsSo«i Shtll

Abnondt .

P

23*

17c

Dromedary Slk«d

Citron PeelSjyrn

Fig!I™ 1I g s >• H »• <*«•- »

fnyme Leaves .

POULTRY Seasoning,dary

ipefRa|ah Cleaned

entrants . .bromedaryD a t e S PASTEURIZED

Stuffed

Dates. . . •Cr.ilmont

Chocolates .Dal Mont*

Raisins „«•£».

*> 5 C

Orjsnwdory Sliced i***v&

Orange or Lemon Peel 13<

Pitcher of Sweet Cider

^ ;

™ » -

25c

19c

Uneeda Baker*

Fruit CakeHoliday

Fruitcake >»33<Cantrell & Cochrane (CtC)

Ginger Ale £«-Canliell & Cochron* ICtCI

Ginger AteClicquot Club

GlngerAle^" 2-.27cClicquot. Club

Sec . . . . 2t°*25cYukon

Ginger Ale . 3 »•>. 25"Canada Dry

Ginger Ale . 3 b*. 40°Alf PunGrape Juice ^,14^ ^27G

5porkllng

Perrler Water 2^.25C

NODEPOSIT 25C

Join* Pile* o ' Tub

«b 3 7 eSUNNYFIEID

Print ButterD a MONTE

Asparagus

Whole Milk CheeseA TASTY TID-WT WITH THIS CHMSf

Uneeda Biscuits 4 C

GRANDMOTHER'S

Bread •PURE

Tub LardGRANULATED

Sugar

Sliced BaconGEIATIN DESSERT

STANDARD20 O L L O A F

2 *m Ib. Cotton

2GELATIN utaacKi

S p a r k l e ASSORTEO nun KAVOM 3 pta* 19 C

FUITA S K PAGE-PURE FRUIT

PreservesHOUOAY ASSORrMENI

Cakes and Cookies . "• 15c

FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES

FRESH CRANBERRIES 2 - 17c+ VF1LQW

23*

• STORESOPEN UNTIL

8 P.M.TUESDAY

to COME IN•ndSEEthe

GraceMianhgiving

ENRICH THE FKAST

WITH

BAUMANN'S FLOWERSCHRYSANTHEMUMS IN

LOVELY W A R M FALL

SHADES OF RRONZE, YEL-

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PAGE SIX

CARTERETRnhncriptinn, $1.50 Per YearPublished Every Friday fy ,

C. H. BYRNE, 130 Jersey St., CAKTtfRET, N1. .1.Telephone Carteret 8-1600

C. H. BYRNE „ :. Editbt ifld Owner,T. .1. RAFFERTY Business ManajrerMEYER ROSENBLUM Sports Editor

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FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1931

Thanksgiving • OTHER EDITORS SAY-

THANKSGIVINGIn this year of depression and unemployment there are

many who will say that Thanksgiving is a mockery. There islittle to be thankful for, ia the complaint. It ia true that thereIs leas of material benefits and comforts than in prosperousyears. But there are things to be thankful for — finer thingsthan those that are ordinarily cited.

There is the finer side of human nature that is being dis-played just now in practically every town in the country, inthe preparations that are being made to aid the unfortunateduring the coming winter.

Thousands of men and women are giving of their time,thought and worldly goods to help those who are in distresson account of unemployment. They are giving without remu-neration other than the satisfaction that comes from goodwork well done.

Certainly nothing could be finer than the spirit of help-fulness that is being shown here by the members of the re-lief committee. Serving cheerfully they are organizing so as tomake theiF work most effective ia helping those lesk fortunateto go through the severe months without distress. That is some-thing to be thankful for, indeed. ' < < <

And while the, depression is very real and distressing itis not nearly so bad in thiB country as it is in other lands. Qurnation is in better condition to recover promptly then any othdrland. Already there are signs of improvement. It is pretty gen-erally agreed that while our present economic methods con-tinue in use we will have periods of depression, But this de-pression has brought more earnest effort ta find a permanentsolution of the problem than was ever before, attempted. Theresult of all this effort must bear fruit. It may be that a realsolution will be found. The effort to find it is worthy and is athing to be most thankful for.

ROADS FOR SAFETYThe road is an important factor in the highway safety

problem. ' • • • - • . •

Narrow, one-lane highways, and those of inferior con-struction, are a menace to the driver. A false sense'of economyhas often, in the past, led states and counties, .to build roadsfar below any reasonable standard of safety.

Now, fortunately, low-cost roads $nd safety are not ne-cessarily opposed to each other. Modern developments havegiven us non-skid highways, made of crushed rock bound withasphalt, at but a fraction of the cost of highest-type main high-ways. Maintenance cost is likewise low. Such roads are ideallysuited to rural districts where traffio does , not warrant thebuilding of the more expensive surfaces.

In the future, it is safe to say, the most pronounced roadprogress will be made in the territories to which main roadsdo not penetrate. It is here that the farmer is cut off from hismarket several months each year by dangerous, impassable,unimproved roads. It is here that full-width, moderate-cost,year-round highways are essential to the progress of a smalltown or a countryside. And so low have construction costs be-come, both because of modern developments in surfacing ma-terials and building technique, and because of the drop in commodity prices, that there is hardly a territory which cannotafford to build the good and aafe roads it needs,

IF AMERICA WERE JAPANA Japanese petty officer was killed

one ilny in Manchuria. The Japan-ese govcrment snid the Chinese didit. The Chinese said they did not..iRpan started a war over the inci-dent—at leaRt thnt was the fisnt ex-cuse given by the Tokio governmentlor sweeping across Manchuria withiier armies.

At about the same time two Mex-ican youths were killed in the UnitedStates. There was no doubt aboutwho did it. Two American deputydheriffs (ltd the shooting.

Unlike the Japanese petty officer,ITZT the Mexicans were not obscure per-

sons, hut one was a relative of thePresident of Mexico. Unlike the.mpanese officer who was hostile tothi> Chinese population, the Mexicanhoys were completely innocent ofnny Hntaironism to America.

An American court has now ac-quitted the Americans of murdercharges. FcelinR in Mexico againstthe United States is running high.There are demonstrations in Mexicoiipainst us, just as there were dem-onstrations in Japan against Chins,.

Japan would not think Mexico jus-tilled in starting a war agaiftat theUnited States overThe United States

A GLOOMY MOMENT ? ? ?"It is a gloomy moment in history. Not for many years—

not in the lifetime of moat men who re'ad this paper—has therebeen so much grave and deep apprehension; never has the fu-ture seemed so incalculable as at this time. In our own country. . . . thousands of our poorest fellow citizens are turned outagainst the approaching winter without employment . . . .

"In France the political caldron seethes and bubbles withuncertainty; Russia hangs, as usual, like a cloud, dark and si-lent, upon the horizon of Europe; while all the energies, re-sources andtriea "

influences of ' the British Empire are 'sorely

This has a familiar ring. It might have appeared yester-

This Weekby ARTHUR BRISBANB

Why Do We Worry?A Mind Diseased.Prepare to Pay More.Russia Build? a Big One.

Washington predicts "a,vast Japa-nese invasion" In' Manchuria, and i t"deeply worried." Why?

What difference does It make whichparticular Asiatic tribe occupies thefertile lands ot Manchuria? We arenot the mother or father ol the Chineseor Manchii race, and not* mentors of

those killings,does not think

Jnpan justified in starting a war overthe Manchurinn killing.

Perhaps if Japan will considertho Mexican-American case it maygive her enoiiRh perspective to setherself as the world sees her.

The Chinese broke their treatypledges to Japan—so Japan says.Therefore Japan is fighting a warnf?Rinst, China to preserve the sanc-tity of treaties. This, at least, is thelatest excuse given by the Tokio ROV-

for the military invasion ofChinese territory.

Japan . is breaking her treaty

Assorted Mongolians and othershave been moving over that Far East-

day in any one of a hundred publications—probably something the Japanese. Sam is our uncle, notlike it did. But the particular quotation comes from Harper's thelr8<

Weekly—dated October 10, 1857—seventy-four years ago!There have been other depressions in our history. There

will be other depressions, no doubt, in the future. They will besurvived, exactly as those of the past have been survived. Andj-moving?the length of time it takes us to come 'out of them is dictatedby the fear or cpurage of out people. If they attack our insti-

pledges to the United States and toother nations. Japan is violatingthe League of Nations Covenant) andthe (American) Nine-Power Treatyand the (American) Kellogg Pact.

If Japan has a right to invadeChina for breaking a treaty the Unit-ed States and other nations have anequal right to invade Japan, bombJapanese cities, overthrow Japanesegovernments, kill thousands of Jap-anese citizens, for breaking a treaty.

That foreign invasion would seemvery unreasonable to Japan. Itwould be unreasonable—so unrea-sonable that neither the League ofNations nor the United States isplanning such a military invasion.

Perhaps if Japan will consider thiscase of broken treaties it may giveher enough perspective to see ner-sf If us others see her.—N. Y. World-Telegram.

OUR MAGISTRATESProsecutor Douglas M. Hicks turn-

ed his speech into a lecture beforethe Middlesex County Magistrates'Association at its banquet in the Ho-tel Klein the other evening. With-out scolding, he urged that recordersand justices of the peace refrainfiom sending unimportant cases, like"backyard scraps," into his office forpresentation to the grand jury, andat the same time he called upon theassociation to weed out those officialswho did not know and who do notconform to the law. While it ismost likely thst the fifty mpmboriwho were present did not come with-in that category, it wa» timeiy lec-turing on the [>art of the prosecutor.As a rule, those whortnay be or be-come remiss in- the discharge of theirduties do not belong to such organi-zations as this association, whosepurpose ts to elevate the standardof the magistrates' courts, andneither do they very often attendsuch affairs. However, Mr. Hick'stalk will have a beneficial effect.

The too general practice of mag-strates in sending cases, which often

might be better disposed of with asevere lecture or a minor fine, intothe (Jrand jury room and occasion-ally in,to the court, ig both unneces-sary and expensive. There ought tobe a halt, as the prosecutor suggest-ed. Most of the offenders in this re-spect are those who are not wellenough acquainted with the law andprocedure or who are too timid toact on their own accord. These andthose who wilfully violate procedurefor financial gain are the undesir-ables to whom Mr. Hicks -was refer-ring. •

We agree with Assmblyrnan Jos-eph T. Karcher, who is the recorderin Sayreville, that New Jersey needsa revision, a modification or a system-a t a t i o n of the laws governing thepowers of the justices of the peace

BOt "t6nd t0 at h o m f

tutions, put government in competition with business, sanctionexorbitant taxation policies and <ax deficit, it will take a long BelTes "T

time. But if they live normally, do their best to carry on theirwork and uphold sound and constructive governmental poli-cies, depression will give way to normal conditions with theleast loss and suffering.

that need attention and keep on friend-ly terms with distant peoples by sayingto them,, "Arrange matters to suit your

"Canst thou minister to a mind dis-eased?"

"Yes," replies Cornell University.Mental trouble Is due partly to cer-

tain elements In. the brain, the "col-loids" becoming too watery or too"thick."

Drugs have been discovered tbatremedy both these conditions, an Im-portant step In the treatment of InBanlty. In one case a man- who hadlain In a stupor for eight months wasbrought to his senses In four mlnuten.

No cure-all has been discovered, buteverything may ba hoped tor, since it

*., » « « « « „ „ „„ „,.„, vu WKVMMVO » . ^ v *wi»«.^u """"•""-. j s poggibie to cure paresis by allowingof the hazard they presented. It is the policy of the depart- the victim to be bitten by mosquitoesment to seek cooperation of the owner, and to use the law only | bearing the mafcria germs,when results can be secured in no other way. The orders is-

GOOD WORKA total of 1,729 unnecessary fire hazards were eliminated

during the year ending June 30, by deputy fire marshals onthe Illinois Division of Fire Prevention, according to the FireMarshal of the state.

In addition to this, 63 structures were removed because

!

and recorders.with him when

We also agTeehe says that the

"judge" is not always wrong. Nineout of ten times he is right. Thiscounty has some upstanding and wellinformed justices and recorders andthey suffer, unwarrantedly, in rep-I'tation, through the derelictions ofthe comparative few. The associa-tion should make its duty to weedout those few and perhaps under-take legislation which will eliminatethe hit-and-miss methods of theirbeing elected. .— New BrunswickHome News.

D«i«rv»d t Maul

Hubble, a I'ekliiese owned by Mr.and Mrs. Eagle, was awarded a medalat the Croiley (England) canine showfor rousing them by pulling the bed-clothes when (ire broke out In theirhouse.

"Amcriu't Cup"According to Frank Menke'i "All

Sports Record Book," the prize forthe first International yachting racewas a cup costing about $500, donat-ed by the Royal Yacht club of Eng-land. It was first put In competitionIn 3A51, and was called "The 100Guinea Cup." A guinea Is equal to$5, After the America won the raceIt was referred to as the "America,*!cup," and such has been Its designa-tion since.

i ' Congress has authorized, the sum Of $700,000,000 for gov-ernment buildings. It is proposed to construct 245 new build-ings to replace obsolete BtructureB, to provide 191 existingbuildings with major extensions, and to erect buildings in 1,085communities which are now without Federal buildings,

A SIMPLE PROBLEMThe railroad problem is not so involved as might be imag-

ined. The fundamental issue is simply this:., The railroads,which pay high taxes, must* maintain high standards of serviceunder the law, and receive no subsidies. This makes compe-tition with other forms of transport that in some eases are sub-sidized by the government and in other cases are unregulatedand comparatively tax-free, extremely difficult or" impossible.

In short, we must have better coordination of transporta-tion methods—not only in the rajlroad interest but in the pub-lic interest. In theae days, with fast and reasonably-pricedtransportation of vital importance to our economic life, the.public interest and the railroad interest are very lively to beidentical. There \s a place for buses and trucks, and there isa place for waterways—but each of these means of transportshould stand on its own feet and be subjected to exactly theaame treatment in matters of taxation and regulation by thegovernment. • .'., • ,

This is what the railroads, en masse, i r e now seeking. Itia what they will get if the public is wise and too much politicsdoes not enter into future transport legislation. With coordin-ated transport, according to a recent sppkesnian for the rail-ways, the result would be that the railroads would take thelong-haul business, the trucks retain and increase their termi-nal and short-haul business, and tha t coordinated /ail-truckservice w.ould carry goods from the door of the shjpper to the,door of the consignee. In this, there is, a living for all., I t is cer-tainly a logical forecast. And, as certainly, it is desirable forthe public and for all concerned. ».•• « • •••-....

sued are always reasonable and only the minimum require-ments for prpper safety are required. As a consequence; mostproperty owners voluntarily take advantage of the instructionsgiven, them, Inspection work is carried on in cooperation withlocal officials of the communities.

If every state conducted such work as this, it is safe tosay that a deep dent would be made in our national fire loss.The responsibility of the individual for fire cannot be over-emphasized—but in the many cases where a sense of such re-sponsibility is totally or partly lacking, some official body mustshow a property owner what he must do to make his propertysafe. There is no excuse for the presence of fire t r aps and "un-necessary hazards on otherwise sound buildings, and there isno excuse for new construction below the accepted standardsof safety, We should follow the example of Illinois on a na-tional scale.

|v". JLpving Justice Group* H M Big'Card Party

A successful card party wag heldnight in the home of Mrs. Thorn-

ally under the auspices of thef to the Congregation ofJdatiee, Refreshments were

present were: Mrs. Iwdorelan, Mrs, David Wohlge-

Mis. Jennie ffewitt, *fra.Brown, Mm. H, J#to«r,

mond, Mrs. E. ToIkVartt, Mrs, Hob-ert Owens, MrsV Jacob Daniels, Mrs.Arthur McNally, Mw. C. J. Brady,Mrs. c. A..B»ad», Miw Anna Sch-wartx. Vim KAthwjne Dunn, Urn.Jacob Carpenter, Mr», • } , ftosenrbleeth, Mra. I. M. Weiss. Miss HelenDaniel*, Mia. Edith Jacoby, Mrs. Wil-liam Brown, Miaa Flora Roth, Mrs.Sam Drourr and Mrs. Mary TruirtUB!.

fhe Children of Mary will hold aThipkairivtng party tomorrow alter-

SAVING OUR COUNTRY FROM TAX DESTRUCTIONTax reduction must be accomplished.No other problem, except employment, so vitally affect*

every citizen. It strikes rich and poor alike, the small businessand the large one. It is directly related to the business depres-sion in that it discourages industrial activity and investment ofcapital,kinds. •

High taxes are the great enemy of progress of all

Leading foreign nations of the world are staggering un-der intolerable tax burdens. The fact alone is a powerful ar-gument to try and keep this government from being submerg-ed by a similar burden of public debt. If we are to remain theeconomic leader of the world we must have a government that jis run efficiently and at the lowest possible cost. Otherwise, wewill sink to the common level of other debt-ridden nations.

- It is trite, but true, to say that there is but one way to low-er taxes—for government to spend less money. The creation ofnew forms of taication, of apeclal'or class taxes, solves nothing,^t should be the duty of government, local, state and national,to aid the general economic recovery by adopting stringenteconomies and tax reduction programs.

Senator Watson says an Increase Intaxes Is "Inescapable." Senator Smuot,head of the Finance Committee, agrees.Therefore, prepare to increase yourcontributions to Uncle Sam.

Senatora Watson and Smoot favor asales tax, but they do not believe Con-gress would approve It.

More money must come from Bornesource. The Government faces a deficitof two thousand million dollars.

Under the circumstances, forgivingour European debtor: tnunds pious, butsilly.

Russia announces the biggest landplane built thus far, the ANT-14, withfive engines, oarrying li passengersand creV,

And worse news for those thatshiver at the word "Bolshevism." Bussia ttffbouBcee her readiness to turn outthese "carriers for troops" mass pro-duction.

Let us hope all tblB Is aimed at

Japan, a nation well advanced in avla-tlbn and ready for trouble, and nottimed at this nation, temptingly richand quite unprepared.

The Prince of Walta talking to hlafellow Britons, via th« radio, urges allBritishers to "Buy British goods."Britons, proud of their country and Itsproducts, think everything "BrltUl)" alittle better than auytulug else. ButBritish manufacturers am undersold,in automobiles by our producers, Inother lines by Germans, Czechu-Slora-klani, etc.

Temptation to buy cheap Instead offindfor

elgn goods as better than British, orany British citizen paying more forsomething made abroad because It Isnot British. Americans, take notice.

Germany seems to be following Eng-land on the road labelled: "This wayout of the gold «laniard." Germansthat ship foods abroad are said to col-lect (or them In gold, leaving the gold•broad, Instead of bringing It to. Qer-

THENEW

RISING GASOLINE TAXES,"Living costs may fall and gasoline prices are con»tant-

ly fluctuating, but gasoline taxes seem to know no other di-rection than up/' says the Middletown, N. Y., Times Herald."This year 10 ijtates boosted the gasoline levy another notchor two. Florida 1B now collecting seven cents on every gallon.Five states have « six cent levy; 11 collect five cents; 16, fourcento; 11, &ree wnU and five let the poor motorist off Witha 'cut' of two cent^ on every ga l lon . . , .

! "At the iiniawlly J«» priwn pairt

In tlM Iwt t w k the R»lch»bank lost• t f b t m mllllos* in gold.

OwmMr's export busiuess Is flourtehlnf rsmarkablx, but the DawesTurn, tMt mptcUd to t*t hundreds olaUUou • r«*r la gold from Gtormanr,tt4 oriraU leaders, hsr« and lit Bui-

tm tot other hundreds of nil;vfll pfobtbly have to do without

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CARTERET PRESSFRIDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1931 PAGE FIVE

Carteret Defeats Amboy, 7 - 6, As Chap Thatcher StarsCarteret F. C. Wins On

45-Yd. March For ScoreDefeat* Metuchen Firemen In Bitter Struggle By Parading

Down Field For Touchdown In La«t Quarter After Trail-ing 7—6 At Half—Charles Szelag Give, Brilliant Per-formance.

An East vs. West TestBy HARDIN BURNLEY

A 45 yArd march for a touchdown in the last quarterenabled the Carteret Field Clubgridders to overcome a 7deficit and- defeat the Metuchen Firemen, 12—7, at the highschool field la»t Sifnday afternoon before a crowd of 1,200in one of the most ftarcely-fought games of the season. Thevictory was Carteret's fifth in six starts, the locals have asyet to lose their first game on their home field.

Getting the 'ball on their own 45 1 Substitutions —Carteret ' Kleskoin the fourth quarter, the Alex-'for H. Morris, .1 Szelag for Karaander-men inarched down the field W. Galvanek for Lyman, Chaloka forfor a touchdown. It wan CharlesSielag's spectacular end run's behinda human wall of interference thatbrought the ball to the 3 yard linewhere Al Biegert smashed centerfor a touchdown.

Metuchen scored a touchdownearly In the first period. Aftef re-ceiving the kickoff, Carteret begantossing forward passes near midfieldwith the result that Fugel intercept-ed one and ran to the 22 yard linebefore he wag brought down byHenry Green. Had it not been forGreen's flying tackle, Fugel wouldhave easily scored on that play.

However, it soon developed thatGreen's tackle went for naught aaon the next two plays Metuchencarried the ball to the 12 yard linefrom which Wainright circled endfor a touchdown. Leiss' kick for theextra point was good.

In the next" few minutes of thesame quarter, the tide turned andCarteret became the aggressor.Starting in midfield the Field Club

Biegert, Conrad for Szelag, Szelagfor Conrad, Dwonkowaki for Szelag.

Metucheo,: Landers for.Senkew,Mundy for Tucker, Brown forHance, Senkew for Hommell, Yors-ton for Byrnes.

Referee: Rosenblum, Alabama.Umpire: Cutter, Carteret.Head Linesman: Kapucy, Cnrteret.

Carteret High HasGood Grid Season

Record For Season RevealsSeven Victories and ButTwo Defeats.

Though they lost two of the, mostimportant games on their schedule,Coach Frank McCarthy's CarteretHigh ScBool fjridden closed their

the quarter ended. I » .£ ? ^ • w ,Once again it was Charles Szelag' Both defeats were by close scores.

who did most of the ground gaining South R l v e r defeated Carteret, 12—in that march down the field. From'Jj ? n 8 spectacular 45 yard pass inthe 36 yard line he crashed his way ""f last minute of play. And Wood-around the left wing for 11 yards bri<lKe managed to eke out a 7—2and • first down. On the next play, i fiumph over the locals. N>he again circled end for 12 yards! Of the seven victories turned inand another first down on Metuch- ,hy t h» B 'ue and White, five were byen's 12 yard line. Following two shutout scorea. Carteret rolled upunsuccessful stabs at the line, Sze-'," total of 132 points for the seasonlag ,'took the ball on the next play against 37 for its opponents,

d t i h t d hi t thand straight-armed his way to the1 yard line where Biegert knifedcenter lor a touchdown. The kickfor .the extra point was blocked.

While it was Szelag who mademost of the big gains, it was the menon the line that made possible theseruns by their brilliant work in open-ing up hole's in the enemy defensein addition to giving him some pret-ty interference.

If ever any team deserved to winby a larger margin, it was the Car-teret Field Club. In the secondperiod they smashed their way fromtheir own 30 to Metuchen's 20 onlyto lose their 'wecious chance for ascore 0* a fumble. Again in the third

Here's a brief summary of'the sea-Bon.

Carteret opened the campaign atl-'reeh'old on September 26 with a14—0 victory. The game was play-ed through a steady downpour on amuddy field.

Traveling to Flemington, the Blueand White marched through for an-other shutout triumph, 26—0. Play-ing their first game a t home the fol-lowing Saturday against North Plain-field, the McCarthymen made itthree straight, 19-12. Incidenally,North Plainfield was the first team toscore on the locals.

I Then meeting Toms River, theMcCarthymen turned in their fourth

COLVIM

opPASSES

CAA4NELL"DARTMOUTH

ELEVEM STOPTHE

INVASIONSOF PACIFICCOAST TEAMSBY BEATWC?

?

Blue And White Closes BrilliantSeason With 7 Wins, 2 Losses

Chap Thatcher Plays Hero Rol«-—Hi» Spectacular Run* laSecond Period Remit In Touchdown After Amboy ScorMOn Run By Eaton—Paw Stutik? To Poll, For Extra Point,Decide* Contest—Coughlin, Stutzke Give Fine Perform-ances.

Seven to six.Ry that score, the Cnrteret Hi|fh School football team de-

feated Perth Amboy High nt the high school field Saturdayafternoon before a crowd of approximately 2,000 spectatorsin the closirijt game of the season for both schools. This vic-tory enaRled the Blue and White to close ita campaign witha record of seven triumph* and but two losses.

The brilliant playing of, Ch»pThatcher, substitute halfback, stood«ut through the forty-four minute*

of the fierce struggle. It wanThatcher's nensational 22 yard run inthe second quarter that started theBlue and White ontouchdown.

the ro»<l to

Gaining the b»l! in midfield, latein the second period Thatcher, be-hind an escort of blockers, (mashed

way around end far a 20 yard

line for a touchdown.Then came the play that ilecided

the gam«. It was t ry for the extrapoint. Carterct lined up for a place-ment kick hut instead Stutrke heay-<<l a pass to Poll who cut diagonallyto the left. Thin w w the (litTrrene*between victory and a ti«>, fnr PerthAmboy had scored just a few min-utes before that.

A double pass (rave Amboy th*hall on Caj-trret's 2fi. Thfn Eaton,

pain on Amboy's 30 yard line. Poll 'Musky star of the Amboy team, thrilWhit the line but was stopped, Again ,.<l the spectators with on<- nf th«Thatcher wait Riven the ball and the I n,i>st freakish runs ever witnessed onelusive Blue and White halfbackapain wiggled his way for a 12 yard

to the 18 ynr|l stripe.Here ajfain a reverse play failed.

Then Stutxke hurled n perfect passThatcher who raced HIMOBS the

period" they~rammed to the enemy triumph of the season -" . •• ' - <• i ) —i.. i - On October 24, Carteret4 yard line for a first down only tobe beaten back four times with only3 yards to go.

In the last quarter, the locals en-gineered a march down the field thatresulted In the winning touchdown.

The lineup:Carter*I F. C. Matwchen FiremenHart Byrnes

left endGreen , Hance

left tackleL. Godmustad

left guard

andSouth Hiver, both undefeated, metbefore 3,000 at the high school fieldand fought to a B—G draw all theway up to the last minute whenO'Carroll hurled a 45 yard pass thatgave South River a 12—6 victory.

Bettered fromdefeat, the Blue

ully recovered

Lyman

H. Morris

Kara

Donovan

Sielag

center

right guard

right tackle

right end

quarterbackT. Godmustad

left halfbackA. Galvanek

> right halfbackBiegtrt

fullbackScore by periods:

Cartewt 6 0Metuchto - 7 0

Touchdowns:(2). \

Point after(drop kick).

Anderson

Lacase

Hommell

Wallace

Tucker

Wainright

Fugel

Possiter

Leiss

WoodbrWge the following Saturdayand as a result dropped a 7—2 de-cision to the township eleven.

then finishedThe McCarththe season in a- Maze of glory, winning the last three games. Rahwayand Leonardo were swamped, 19—0and i)fl -0'. And in the season finale,Carteret defeated Perth Amboy bya one-point margin, 7—6, in a stub-bornly-fought contest.

Mike Poll was the team's leadingscorer with 73 points.Final Record of Carteret High School

6—120— 7

Wainright, Biegert,

touchdown: Leiss

Tht Eagle A. C. will hold a dancetomorrow night in Dalton's Hall.Music will be furnished by the LmdBroUww CMffwood Beach Orchestra.A large crowd Is expected.

News of All Carteret Borough in theP the most widely read

pajter in Carteret

the South Riverand

whenWhite, notthey met

11931, King F«turt» Syn»w«M-lne-Greit Britain right* rocrved.

TEMPLE - WHOHELPED OiaEGOAJ SCO&EW A T FAMOUS UPSET UJlAiOVEB Ai-VU- LAST

Another intersectional w h i c h most enthusaistic of "Native Sons"should give a fair line on the merits will have to draw breath while di-of East vs. West football will be (jesting the score, and thus interruptplayed Saturday at Cambridge, vfver growing claims that the West isMass., between Stanford and Dart-mouth. Neither are champions iijtheir respective sectors, SouthernCalifornia having decisively beatenStanford, 19-0. on November 7, whileboth Columbia and Harvard havebeaten Dartmouth. But the latter isa good major team in the East andthe Palo Alto product of "Pop"Warner's couching genius has a similar standing on the Pacific Coast.Last year, Dartmouth went West a.ndlost to the Warnerites in a 14-7thriller. Tomorrow's engagementshould be just as stirring for thelineup of each is studded with eensa-

detinitely superior to the East infootball among other things. McCall

of Ail-American calibre a re-

tional players.Dartmouth is countii

the marvelous "Wildchiefly on

Bill" McCall

CarteretIt251913

919

627

FoottnTI Teun

FreeholdPlemington

North PlainfieldToms ElverWoodbrldge

I RahwaySouth River

LeonardoCarteret

Opponent00

1207

and wily Morton to run, air-raid, andkick the visiting Indians into suchcomplete submission that even the

markablc runner, kicker, passer andtackier. And Morton is almost as use-ful to the Hanover Indians.

Stanfonf has such stars as "Phan-cy Phil" Moffatt, "Airways" Allen,and a pass-catching end named Col-vin who may more than match theMcCall-Moiion duu in tuuchdownrmaking. Furthermore, rumors haveleached New England that Warnerhas devised one or two baffling ballplays. He tried them against South-ern California and only Trojansmartness squelched them short ofscores at least.

Those who are whimsical enoughto muse over comparative scoresmust feel that Dartmouth is doomed.For instance, Stanford held Southern

Cal to that 19-0 margin and the Tro-jans had beaten Oregon early thisseason, 53-0. Oregon came East andWalloped New York University, 14-6.N. Y. U. later held Georgia to aneyelash (and lucky) 7-6 win and theSoutherners had trounced Yale, 26-7. Dartmouth just managed to tiel a l e ; 33-33. With Oregon "just an-other Western team1' able to clearlydefeat N. Y. U. (a representativeEastern eleven on a par with Dart-mouth) surely Stanford, a Class-ACoast machine, should ride throughand over the New Hampshire boystomorrow. But will they? Not if Mor-ton, McCall &. Co. get going.

Through the courtesy of HarvardUniversity, at the request of the Bos-ton authorities, this contest will takeplace in the oig Crimson stadiumwhere Barry Wood's last period passand drop-kick from touchdownB juBtgave the Cantabs victory over Dart-mouthy 7-6, three weeks ago.

Diamonds Gain OnLeague Leaders

Sweep Spades To Cut Heart'sLead To Four Games.

While the Hi'arts were winningtwo out of three frames from theClubs, the second-place Diamondstook advantage of their opportunityand gamed on the leaders by sweep-ing the Spades in three games. Thilethe Diamonds were able to cut theHearts' margin to four games.

Though they lost one game to theClub, the Hearts turned in the bestscores of the evening, towering overthe 600 mark three times*. Rolling640, the Hearts walked «way withthe first game by nearly a hundred-pin margin. The Club evened mat-ters by winning the second game.

Finishing up with a 602, theHearts took the match, two gamesto one. Mat Urbanski and SteveCzyzewski stood out for the winners,the former averaging 190, the latter

«ny field. Taking thep»»» from ccn-t t r ho ran buck about 10 yard*.Meanwhilp hit succeeded in drawing-the whole C'artpret team1 to one spot.Then with n sudden bust of speed,he reversed the field anil run about•10 yards to the 1 ynrd line where hewas forced out of bounds. On them xt play, Oslislo reeled off tackUfor a touchdown. Then the kick forthe extra point was blocked by Kant-01. Carteret scored several minute*Inter thus taking a 7—fi lead whichit maintained to the finish.

In the second half Amboy threat-ened to score but failed on a fumble.After recovering a fumble in mid-field, Amboy marched down the fieldto the 8 yard line only to lose itaprecious chance on a fumble

In the last quarter, with the min-utes slowly dwindling away, Amboyresorted to long passing which

i f f t i

172., In the other match of the evening,flie Diamond encountered no diffi-culty in sweeping the Spades. Al'three games were won by decisivem a r g i n s . ' ' ' • ' • • ' • '

Walter Rose, hitting 203 in thefirst game, and the- same score in thesecond, sparkled for the Diamonds.

PULASKI FOWLING LEAGUET«m Standing

G. W. L. Pet.Heart! 18 IS 3 .833Diamond! IS 11 7 -811Clubi 18 8 10 .4+4Spadei 18 3 16 .111

INDIVIDUAL AVERAGESG.

W. RoBe n

Carteret Cage Loop 'To Open December 4

Two Games To Be PlayedFirat Night At High SchoolCourt.

Just nine more day3 and the Car-teret Basketball League will get un-

12|der way. A week from this coming^Fr iday , December 4 to be more ex-

act, four teams will sWing into ac-

37132Game* Won, 7; Lost, 2. - i

SimpU Fulling M.thoJNatives of South America and East

Indies extract a poison from tropicalplauts, especially from the "cube,"which they pour into a (treum. Thefan become Intoxicated or stupefiedand the primitive fishermen theo gath-er tlicm In.

D O YOU KNOW THAT -By M. R.

teretthe

TroskoJohnny it

W n ^ t h e "Joe Humphries of Car-the fellow who does the announcing at

b .

wick, Perth An,boy

Saturday I U « « « - « • *In the Cit, Stadium in Perth Ambo,

„. e,imin,tion

the roundsship . an exceptionally food

Coming to think of it, the, ptan to, ^ ^ ^one . . . It would pack the vny _ , ^ ^ d i f l f e r en< ,ea a n d

tion at the high school court.Two games will be played that

night. In the first the Boys Clubwill meet the United States Metalsfive, while the second will bring to-gether the St. Joseph's cagers andthe Liberty Falcons.

Two teams have already concludedtheir preparation (for the opening.They are the Liberty Falcons andthe United States Metals. Lustweek St. Joseph's was scheduled tohold its drill but it was postponedbecause of a play thut was beinggiven in the hiffh school. This coin-ing Friday evening, the Boys Club,led by Jerry Harrigan, will be sentthrough an intensive practice aea-

,sibn, in preparation for the openinggame. . ,

Jjerry Harrigan claims $o hawthe best team in the league. WithHook Garber, Sam Uosenblum, JoeComba, Ted Kleban, Mike Poll, heexpects to be a leading contender forthe championship.

However, the three other teamsall boast of the same thing. Theyall are looking forward to winningthe title. Which is another way ofsaying that the race may developinto a torrid struggle from the startto finish.

Old l«Wm RefuUdA ntlemlbi of* the United States

count and geodetic survey declarestbnt there In no foumlution for thebelief that the winter climate of north-eastern United States could be mod-erated by changing the course of theGulf ttreum. -

Falcons Drop TwoTiltshst Night

Lost To Meadowbrooks ByOne Point, 18—17 — ThenSwamped By Iroquois, 31-19.

The Liberty Falcons took it on thechin twice last night, at the highschool, losing the first game of atwin bill to the Perth Amboy Mead-owbrook, 18 to 17, and dropping thesecond and final to the Amboy Iro-quois by a 31—19 score. In bothgames the Falcons were without theservices of their star center, BillBiesle.. Next Tuesday night, the Falcons

will get some more preparation forthe opening of the Caiteret Basketsbull League by engaging in anotherone of their customary double head-in t the high school court.

The scores: 'MEADOWBROOKS (19)

G. F.Russo, f 1 0Totoski, f , 1 0Diekle, c 0 0Yaeger, c Q 2Mudrak, g •• 0 0Tignone, g 0 0

New County RatingsListed Bv N.J.I. A. A.

Four Class "A"County—ThreeFour Prep.

Schools In"B" and

The new ckss ratings for highschool, which have come about aa aresult of agitation for reforms inthe administration of school athlet-ics, have been announced by the NewJersey Interscholastic Athletic Aaso-

T,14

. 80200

FALCONS, (18)8 2 18

Razaral, I ...Barna, f IG. Balaris, cMamulak, c ..(ioyena, g ...D'zurilla, g ..

F.2100,11

T.230278

7?

S. Czyzeski 12M. Urbanski ' . . - 18C. Godeski 3H Chomicki - 18F. Kraska 7

. Lempicki 18Tuholski 15Meshlovetz 12

. Wutkowski .:..-., 15

. Wojtlwwski .-'. IS. Czaja 18. Urbanski .......,..,.,........ 17

Brus ..." - '..-. 12. Eck 17.. Martenczuk - 11'. Szymartowski 18:. Sopeta - 6

The scores:DIAMONDS (J)

iempicki 129Meshlovetz 109Rose 203Blind l&O

ciation and list fourCounty high schools in

Middlesexthe Class

A group, three in ctasa 'B, and fourothers in a prep school division.

Comprising the county's contribu-tion ot the ClassPerth AmboyBrunswick and

ranks are:Woodbridge, NewSouth River. Of

these Woodbridge and South Riverare new additions to the list.

In the class "B" group, are: Carteret, South Amboy High and Me-tuchen. There seems to be no di-viding line among the prep schpols.Listed in this division are St. Peters,Rutgers Prep, St. Mary's of PerthAmboy, and St. Mary's of South Am-boy.

only thing is for the teams toget tpgftther . . . For charity will

fe

| Local Druids Attend

d ? p a r t .AnnivMrwry lot Pamic

A gToup of Carteret members ofthe Ancient United Order ot Druidswent to ftwale Bftorday eventagwhere U>W attwded the c«l«bratton

h ftttrt>lwwwy otiV-

(Second G U M )IROQUOIS (31)

J. Wydranic, t .: .' 6B, Wydranic, t • oMamrek, c 0Kurtz, c 0Kovacs, g 4Bolanowski, K - • ^

15FALCQNS (19)

O.Goyena, t 2Ba*aral, f QG. Balaris, c ,» 0Hamulak, c ,. 8

F.000010

1 31

Barna, gPWilla,

F.000001-

T.400609

Carteret F, C. PlaysTomorrow and Sunday

Meet* Strong Vailsburg Collegiates At High School FieldTomorrow andEleven Sunday.

Plainfield

The (Jurteret Field Club gridders,victorious in their last engagement,will meet the Vailubuig Collegiateof West Orunge, at the high uchoofield tomorrow afternoon in the annual Thanksgiving Dtty contest. Sunday at the high school field thu locala will tackle the PlainfielSaracens.

Anxious to preserve ita record onut having been beaten on ita buijifield this season, the Carteret teamhws been drilling industriously sinceSunday. Coach John Alexander has

1681661616IB1&141414141313131312!12!12'12

561SPADES (6)

liymanowski ,. 129J. Urbanski 161WojkoWBki ..;'.:! .- '118

esora ineffective.

Besides Thatcher, another backhose flee work stood out, was Babeoughlin. In the third period, Babeue off several lengthy runs aroundnd. §-

Anpther who deserves a good dealcredit for the victory in Al

itutzke. It was Al's spectacular>asses that paved the way for Car-ejret'a touchdown and the point that'ollowed immediately thereafter.

The lineup:krtwet High P«rth AmboT Hi«h

(antor

Galvanek

37ulimowski

tasig

R. Grutza•

orlisle

Schein

'oil

Kleban

oughlin

Stutzke

left end

left tackle

left guard

center

right guard

right tackle

right end

quarterback

left halfback

right halfback

Romaneti

Munyalc •

Bareltcki '

Osieckl

Jerome

'Goldstein

Lasio

Diclcaon

Raton

Skelton

Oslislo.fullback

Score by periods:Carteret 0 7 0 0—7Perth Amboy 0 8 0 0—«

Touchdowns: Thatcher, Oslislo.Point after touchdown: Poll.Referee: Compton, Rutgers.Umpire: Hummel!, Rutgers.Head Linesman: Werlock, Wood-

bridge.Substitutions — Carteret: Thatch-

er' for Coughlin, C. Grutsa, forThatcher, Niemiec for Essig, Thatch-er for Coughlin.

Perth Amboy: Chizmadia for Ro-nianetz, Otlowski for Goldstein, Paulfor Otlowski, Diamond for Skelton,Pucci for Munok, Munok for Pucci.

Blind 100

141132157100

136110124100

608 630 470HEARTS (2)

Martenciuk 117M. Urbajski 188Tuholski .,r.-..,t1 186

Izyiewski 19*

120195155158

113187113189

640 628CLUBS (1)

aja j . . ....v 188 196Sopeta' 133 124Eck - 128 156

Chomicki .~1B4 161653 637

602

123123110

170526

Final Batting Average*Released By Texas League

Final batting averages of theTexas League srjow that Joe Med-wiek, l.oca} boy, who played the,out-field on the champion Houston team,led the league in driving in runa withu collection of 12JS.

In 180 (tames Joe compiled an av-erage of .31)6. Hia bib included 47doubles, S triples ami l'J home runs.He may be promoted to the Koenes-ttr U'ittn next ye»f.

Balong* to tb* N.lion ' ,CarlabaU carern la a imHt>nul mou-

nuieut under t)»e guu«rvl»lon «f thenational p»rk iervlce. It was' createdOctober 28) 168& It e<rot»lnis 1™-'-%

These Uwe«U»n« carerna are ofd f

U9 1 19

City Urn* la Iaa««l H*»«kWhen ttie British occupied Jeniw-

Um in 1017'It w u the ant time '

been elaboratingplays that wtretuchen la»t week.

onused

severalagainst

newMe-

For the game tomorrow, the localswill taktj the field with their fullstrength. They will need it, how-ever, M tke viuitors will came withgome oi the fleetest backs in EssexCounty.

^h Fi ld Cl»b ty» wnnftvo g*m«»

acreB. These UentrBOrdlmiry proportion and of un-usual btauty.

Loft endLeft' tackleLtsft guardCenterRight- %

HartGreen

L. Godmuatad: ' Lyman

H.' MorritiKara

Donovan

Won All GamesHigh Sckoolt — CU» A

A»bury ParkAsbury Park DickinsonCollingawood Tenafly

High Schooli — C1M» BOcean City Riverside i

Prep Schools — C U M A(None) i

Prep Schoolt — CUtS B(None !

Undefeated but TiedHigh Schoolt — C U M A

Roselle » 'High School. — C U M B

South Amboy WeatfleldPrep Schoolt ~- CUit A

(NonePrep Schoolt — Clu> B

Newark Academy

Not Scored OnHigh Schooli — C U M A

(None) iHigh Schooli — C U M B

(None)Prep Schooli — C U M A

, (None)Prep School! — C U M B

Newark Academy 1

Highest Scores iHigh Schools — C U M A

Vlneland 59, Bridgeton 0. •Roselle, 58, Summit 0.Leonia 53. Cliffaide 0.Anbury Park 52, Centjral (Pateraoa)

6. •Coiljngiiwood 52, Bridgpton 0.Columbia 52, Orange 0,Long Branch 52, Toms Kiver 0,Vineland 52,. Haddon Heights 0.

High School. — CU.« BUackettstown 72, St. Bernard 0.

Pr«p Schooli — C U M A 'Penningtou 107, Bordentown Mil. 0.

Prep Schaoli — C U M BSt. Peter, N. B. 61, Good Counsel 0.

VocatioDnl SchovbAtlantic City 31, Tuckerton 7.

What I . Trutature very 1»terj>retl\<-

different

s3» '

Page 6: CARTERET PRESS - DigiFind-It€¦ · I St. Elizabeth's Roman Catholic Church in Washington avenue on ... Cassalegi, Hook Garber, Mitch Cnr-IISIP, Mike Poll, Ted Kleban, Bob Henderson,

PAGE SIX ' FEIDAY, NOVEMBER 27, XOi

R. 1 0 . RAHWAY THEATRE NEWSJUST A MOMENT

Rolf Is i) R|>i»rinllRl, unique, In aflpld of Its own.

Todny _ forpoln ycstcrdfly but r«-mpmnnrs toiimrrnw,

WB do not rnnli/f fh<» buoyancy ofIllusion till If crashes.

Llfp ri olvpR nttrillion whore clrcum-don't <l<vmnm1 It,

Men who follow one line of thoughtbecome linear.

More nrul rnnr<> Inimnno become thelawn nn flip rry of the unfortunate be-compi louder.

Compare yonrsolf with those belowyou wonld you he hnpny, with thoseHbove you would .von he great?

Only relRtlvrly nre most thingsworth while, hence cense to Beem «>as they acquire ttielr nnsolirte value.—Stephen B. Stantcin, In the' Washing,ton Port.

Guess work with n pood tnnny peo-ple Seems to inenn they guess theywon't.

When a womnn begins L6 shoparound for huts her "trying" days havearrived.

Few business practices nre un-ethical except to tliose whose pocketsare picked.

The principle tlie professional re-former seems to work on la that IfIt's fan It's Blnful.

Popular ScreenOfferings To BeShown At Rahway

"Guilty Hands" Starring Lion-el Barrymor© Holds Board*Saturday.

Saturday bring* to the screen ofthe R.K.O. Rahway thentre for oneday only an excellent double featureprogram headed by Uonel liarry-raore in "Cftlflty Hands." an excitingmystery drama that gets away fromthe cut and dried murder stories.Supporting .Mr. Bsrymoie will befound K«y Francis, Madge Kvans,William Bftkawell, ('. Aubrey Smithand Polly Moran. As companion fea-ture on the same program will In-found George O'Brien in ZaneGrey'H love romance "Riders of thePurple Sage," with Noah Reery nn<lMarguerite .Churchill. A straightshooting talc of the great, out-doorsthat will hit, the center of yourheart. AH nnnnunml, thorn wiU betwo more week* of tha n|i|ienranceof Prince Dc Calhis which has arous-ed so much interest with the Satur-day evening patrons of this popularplay house. For Saturday night, thePrince Has in *tore for his friendsand patrons, ft U. E. Radio, compliments of the Williams Electrirnl Co.Numerous furniture pieces from thestore of James McCollum, v'll!< fiftyneighborhood njerchants' prizes. Ad-ditional prizes are added daily to thebig list of (rifts that are on displayin the lobby of the R.K.O. Rahwaytheatre. Com.e early for that goodseat and bring your coupons.

Sunday, November 29th, one dayonly. A double feature programbeaded by Paramount^ newe.it Rtftriii his newest offering, Paul I,ukas inlhi> "Hcloved Hacholur," with Doro-thy Jordan, ("hnrlie Ruggles and Vi-vienne Osbornc Ho hud that, sometiling that, women noiildrt't* itarist,not even) the girl he adopted. On thesumo program nn companion feature,Hcbo Dnniels in "The Honor of theFamily," the moat ravishing romanceof the year.

Monday and Tuesday, November.1 (Ith and December 1st, anotherdouble feature program headed byAnn Harding in "Devotion." Athrobbing and romantic love story ofthe devotion that lies in every wom-an's heart. On the same program ascompanion feature the only pictureof its kind ever screened, "Tabu",primitive love in the South Sea IRI-iinds. Actually filmed in the SouthSeas with a native cast of p-Ctors.

Wednesday and Thursday, Decem-ber 2, 3, brings another double fea-ture offering headed by Tallulahllnnkhrnd and Frederic MHreh in"My Sin." On the same program ascompanion feature PArizona," ' aheart, gripping drama of a woman"corned, with Laura La Plnnte andJohn Wayne.

Friday and Saturday, December 4,n, brings William Haines in new itd-vintures of "Get Rich Quick Wal-lingford" with the musical comedystar Jimmy Durante (Schtiozzle),Krnest Torrence, Leila Hyams andIlnle Hamilton.

Sunday, December fit.h, one dayonly, Elissa Landi and Victor Mr-Laglen in "Wicked", and "Murderliy the Clock," with William Boydand Lillian Tashman.

Lukas Enacts LeadingRole In Love Tale

Tender, Human Story Present-ed by Paramount in "TheBeloved Bachelor."

A tender, and intriguing lovestory is presented in "The Beloved

I Bachelor," the first picture in whichI Paul Lukas appear*, as the featured| lead, showing at the RKO Rahway,Sunday, November 29th.

Based upon a play by Edward H.Peples, this talkie places' the hand-some and highly effective Lukas inn role such as his many admirerswould have ordered for him, hadthey a choice in the matter.

Lukas, throughout the action of

— Please mention this paper to ad'vertisers; it helps you, it helps them.It helps your paper. —

WE'LL REST OUR CASE

WITH YOU!IN telling corsets, especially, it i» always ea»y to in-

• troduce a new line and make many sales. THERE ISONE FUNDAMENTAL REASON FOR THIS. Worn-en, as a group, have been so dissatisfied with th«foundation garments they have been able to find,and realize so completely the necessity of properoutline that they are willing to try anything, hopingthat it just may solve their problem.BUT IT IS WHEN YOU DO OR DO NOT GET RE-PEAT ORDERS that the merit of your garment isestablished. There is not a woman who reads thisadvertisement who will not remember several casesof this or that corset agent sweeping thru a townmaking sale after »ale. Yet how many of thenf'cameback after- six months and re-sold?

A year ago last March it was decided to retail Hypatia FoundationGarments from the Avenel showroom, thru the medium of Mrs. Braith-waite, herself, and Mrs. Charles Demarest, of Sewaren. Over six hun-rdred women in Woodbridge and Rahway are now wearing Hypatiamodels and over half have already repurchased.

And the biggest reason for this has been SERVICE. Style in itselfnever would have created this result because it is pure nonsense tosay that any one style or any five styles, however good, will fit alltypes of figures. This claim is made by many companies simply inthe effort to keep going on it production—NOT a service, basis. Andsuppose the style is generally good, but wrong for YOU. Isn't theability to diagnose your figure requirements just as essential as thestyle itself?

t

Assuming that you find a general style which ia right for you but nejedscertain changes; to be longer on the hips, we'll say, or lower under thearms, what a relief to know that we can make these changes for youright here at our plant—the little "trifles that make perfection" —and behind all, the knowledge that you are being fitted by one whoknows just the effect these little changes will have.You may have custom or stock corseto-service at our office or a fittingin your own home, as close as your telephone—lovely materials thatyear—heavy for winter—light for summer —prices that fit your needs,all very reasonable, quality considered. And the service does not endwhen you have purchased your garment. t

We say*we'll rest our case with'you. Naturally WE MUST. Yon arethe jury—it is the satisfied customer who will dictate success or fail-ure—but to those who have not worn Hypatia Foundation Garmentsw e 8ay—never a day passes that does not bring repeat orders.

CALL MRS. BRAlTHWAITt WOODBRIDGE 8-2347 OR

MRS. CHARLES D £ M A R ^ , WOODBRIDGE 8-2147

uil.h (is little rrsoilinft to the drama-tic II•< pniRilde. In (net., it i? nlrtfost.entirely romantic. with (fP-nernuBdnshes'of comedy furnished by Char-lie HufegleB, Marjorie (Inteson andHarold Minjir. The finale is exciting,and pleasant. It, is nil achieved with-out the flrinft of a single shot, ofanything more violent, than CharlieRugbies' spontaneous wise-cracks.

ODD FACTS AND FIGURES

There are about r>20 muscles In th#human body.

On the average mnn'a head thersare 121,CH0 hairs.

The name side o. the moon alwnyaIs toward the earth.

There were 16,775 fewer births InPrance ID 1M0 thon In 1029.

Nobel, founder of the Nobel" Penceprize, made his fortune In dynamite.

Alexander the great had conqneredall the Known world at thirty-three.

King George of England has 100different naval* find military uniformsto wear.

This Is the year 1849, for Moham-medans who date time from Moham-medan'* attention.

Paul Lukas, Vivlctint Ojborncft "THR BELOVED BACHELOR"

A Paramount Plcturo

the piny, is a thoroughly lovable per-sonage. As n sculptor, who is slowlycarving a name for himself in theworld of art h<- lives quietly in a

studio building with l«a artist-cro-nies. Charlie Ruggles and tfatrold

Minjir. ,

Paul is in love with a beautifulyoung actress, Vivienne OsborncBut she becomes unjustly suspiciousof his relations with a woman who*lad been his model, and their ro-'•ance is shattered. Later the modelies, leaving a six-year old daughter,'aul, out of kindness, adopts the tot,nd rears her in his own home.

When the ward attains youngwomanhood, she develops an intenselove for Paul, but cannot bring her-self to tell him of this feeling. Hecontinues to treat her as a little girl.Meanwhile he has achieved renownfor his creative work as a sculptor.The former sweetheart, now marriedto a business man, learns of his suc-:ess, and meets him again, after aapse of 12 years. He still loves her,md she declares she will get a di-'orce so that they can be married. '

But the beautiful young ward.Dorothy Jordan, learns of the renew-ed love affair, and decides it is timeto 4o something vital in behalf ofher own affection for Paul. She doessomething and the result is a hap-py one.

GREAT MINDS AT WORK

The past Is a bucket of ashes.—CarlKnndtmrg.

I believe In grnmbllng—B. W. Howe,Kansas City Star.

Itlomls have to keep cleaner thanbrunettes.-—Norum Shearer.

I always like to dip raj bread In, mjcoffee i t breakfast.—King Albert

Pretty girls are delightful creatures,tint they are not necessarily the1 no-blest Vorks of God.—J. B. Priestley.

Divorce? It U Iniquitous.But so la marriage. One Is as bad

us the other. And as l«ng a i you hay*marriages you will have drrorces.

Do away with them both.—CosmoHamilton.

MAN'S AMBITION

At four—to wear pants.

At eight—to miss Sunday school

At twelve—to be president

At fourteen—to wear long pant*

At eighteen—to have roonugrammedcigarettes.

At twenty—to take a show girl outto dinner.

For Your Coal Supply SeeJOHN RYMSHA, Manager Of

STATE COAL & SUPPLY CORP.Only The Highest Grade Of Lehigh & Wyoming Region

Coal Obtainable Handled.We Alio Sell Coke, Soft Coal,.Fire Place Logs, Kindling

Wood and Ice.WiU Gladly Call At Your Home On Request.

TELEPHONE PERTH AMBOY 2332991 State Street Perth Amboy, N. J.

Old Coal Yard At Maurer

SATURDAY - NOV. 28th—ONE DAY ONLY—

2-BIC FjtfURES-2

-*OEORQE O'BRIENMAROUIRITI CHURCHIU

NOAH 1IIRY

with

Lionel BarrymoreKay Francis

Madge Evans, WilliamBakewell, C. A u b r e y

Smith, Polly Moran.

At 9 P.M.Free Gifts To Oiir

Patrons

ONEDAYONLY

SUNDAY, NOV. 29

BIG FEATURESONE

rd DAYONLY

His most,

lovable role!

—Charming andheHrt-warminp, u

MCHtLORPAUL LUKAS, and Dor-othy Jordan, Charlie Rug-gles, Vivienne 0 s b r o n e.

Play by Edw. H. Peple.

A picture for womenwho understand men—and men who thinkthey understand worn-

HONORof the

FAMILYMON. - TUE. — NOV. 30 - DEC. l»t

2 - Big Features - 2THfc SCREEN'S LEADING ACT*MftS OUTDOES HER €MO-TKONALTRIUMPH IN "HOUDAY"

G. FOREST BRAITHWAITE

:.:t\

' 'j^UNDAffdN83 AVENal 'f TREET

SUITS ami DRESSES $MEN'S OVERCOATS

LADIES' COATSCLEANED and PRESSED

QUALITY OF WORK NOT LOWERED BUT PRICELOWERED TO JMEET COMPETITION

NEW YORK CUSTOM TAILOR73 MAIN STREET WOODBRIDGE

Work Called For And DeliveredPrompt Service Tel. Woodbridge 8-0167

f One in a Thousand

? Se« thit rap-of uncirilii-turoua ttoryrd !»*•—*c-tu»lly filmedin a Pacific

A story of love—BO beauti-

fully, powerfully told you

live every fascinating mo-

ment of it yourself! You

exult, you suffer, laugh and

weep, as this romance, "Ta-

bu," gurgei through ecBta.-_

cy, despair, joy and heart-

break!

WED. - T H U . — DEC. 2 - 3

- Big Features - 2TBNSB DopLOVB

«d UoV. SOTIC* U awl*

Carolina CretfTboutandtb

* f yM» W « « m am 9K* do—tow w«yaw horn tq tU

CAROLINA CRIST

FREE TO YQU OURPATRONS

- S A T U R D A Y N I Q M T

AND SAT., DEC. 5th

PRINCE DE CALAISBRINGS YOU

AN ABUNPANCE OF NEW GIFTS

$500 in PRIZESSEE OUR LOBBY

SAVE YOUR COUPONSS A T U R D A Y i f | Q | l T

i . ' .'* SI

t

Page 7: CARTERET PRESS - DigiFind-It€¦ · I St. Elizabeth's Roman Catholic Church in Washington avenue on ... Cassalegi, Hook Garber, Mitch Cnr-IISIP, Mike Poll, Ted Kleban, Bob Henderson,

NOVBHBteJl 37, 1981

v•i

Herbert M » shallAs British Lover

In Society TalkieHas Been in Drmand aa Lead-

ing Man for Legitimate

Herbert Marshal, thp cood-look-inf? young British nobleman in Clau-(leite Colbert's "Secrets of a Secre-(leitetory is a Britisher in real life —

l Bi t ih t thian exemplary Britinher at that.

For MartinaH was dangerouslyh Bi S hil

" "A Free SoulCast Combines

Workand PfeyN{>rma Shearer'* Company En-

joys Location Trip to Yote-mite Valley.

Work and vacation were combinedh\ Nnrma Shearer in the making of

A

)nce NotoriousBarbary Coast

Dive RestoredTub o' Blwd" S«en In ItsGlory in "Shanghaied Love"

while

ery which could not have been madewithout the use of supreme courage,he returned to tho JtAfre which hohad left when his country called.

A favorite in London, Marshallpaid his first professional visit to thoNew York Btage that in Broadwayseveral ye*™ ago. He was associat-ed with Marie Ixihr, English actress,and their first play-offermc in "theStates" was "Fedora."

0 t h 6 r productions followed.Among the most successful wan "TheHigh Koad" in which Marshall ap-peared opposite Bdna Rest, popularlegitimate star. Ho later married her.

Marshall has always been in de-mand as a leading man for Broad-way actresses. He is tho favoriteactor of many of the dramatic crit-icsof the daily press.

Prior to his engagement for workat the Paramount New York studiosin "Secrets of a Secretary" which

"A Free Soul,"Goldwyn - Mayer

her latest Metro-starring picture,

wounded in the Big Scran wunci i • . •„ . . , „ , .• for Britannia After a recov- w h l c h wl11 c o m e t o th« S t a t «

tre, Deoember S and 4.

opens at the State Theatre, Novem-ber 29, Marshall was appearing op-polite Zita Johann in Phillip Barry'snewest success "Tomorrow and To-morrow" at the Henry Miller Thea-

One of the first talkies in whichMarihall appeared—and in fact oneof the first talkies to be made—was"Th» Letter" with the late Jeanne,Eaglw.

In "Sfereta of a Secretary" Marshall plays the part of a young Brit-ish lord who comes to America asthe suitor to the hand of Betty Law-foH, daughter of a wealthy and so-cially prominent New York family,only to fall In love with the dark-eyed, and desirable filaudette Col-bert—a one-time debutante who haslott her fortune and has become thesocial' secretary for Betty's family.

•Others in the cast are GeorgesMeUxa, Berton Churchill and MaryBoland.

After the interipr scenes werefilmed, under tka direction of O r -ence Brown, the company proceed-ed "on # location" to the YosemiteValley, where the star and LioneBfirrymorrf enacted the camping soilueTtce, migrating by horseback tonew scenery daily, amid the beaut.icof Vernal Falls, Half Dome, Cathidral Spires, El Oapitan, YosemiteFalls, Bridal Veil Falls, and otherworld-famous spots in the "Valleyof Sublimity."

The now picture is a filmUation:if Adela Itogers St. Johns' relebrat-•d novel, dealing with the "emnnciMited1' girl whoso father's teaching!ead her to the threshold of ruin.

Clarence Brown Direct!Clarence Brown, director of "Ro-

mance," "Inspiration" and other hitshandled the production, and anotheifamous director, in the person oBarrymnri1, forsook direction for thitime to piny the dramatic role of thtlawyer father, one of the moat dramatic in modern literature.

The unusually brilliant supportinoast also includes Leslie Howarilast seen in "Five and Ton"; ClarGable, whose work in "Dance, FoolDance" and "The Secret Six" hasmade him one of the most populaleading men on the screen; JamesGleason, remembered as the comiciceman of "It's a Wise Child," andf.ticy Beaumont. •

Vivid glimpses of San Francisco'sgambling (palaceB, Chinatown andthe scenic grandsur of YoeemiteValley lend an Interesting back-ground to the production.

Motoring Across Afrit*In 11X10 C. K. Helium led A motor

carnvnn of five rum from Mnmhtna"n th* (Mint coust. to <Vfthlanra, onthe west cnnRt, marking tly» flrd Irnnn-contlnental trip acrrma Afrlrn ny mo-tor north of tlie equator and endingthe Saharn ftcsert. The snme yenrf'npt. Ownn Tweedy nnd Cnptnln ('rot-ton, of the Itrlllsh nrmy, mude R Wmft-mlle trip from llejuf. In Hie heart ofAfrica, to Algiers, crnmlng the

One of the most notorious dives- of *" rfMlfp- ln_n »m»" fo»vry cnr.h4 Pacific coast was used as a back- " '

CHRISTIAN SCIENCEground for the remarkable romanceof clipper ship days depicted in,"Shanghaied Love," a Norman Sprin-'Ker story featuring Richard Crom-i

Firit Church of Christ, SeienliilSewaren a

A Branch of The Mother Church,veil, Noah Beery and Sally Blanc > The First Church of Christ, Scientist,it the State Theatre, November 29 m Boston, Mass,nd 30.

Long before the earthquake

SAYS iHE OWL

Ilqrdereri will out

^o the visitor belong the golig.

Too many crooks spoil the brew.

l i t the punishment fit the rime.

The' good die j;ouDg; the ( old dyehair.

A little bit added to what yon gotgoes for a new cur.

If wishes were horseB today theywould merely b« In the way.

NottcMbU Fact"Dah am lumpln' wuf while notle-'t" said Ulcle Ehen," "In de fack <tath»h politics am de plentlfullest,

coh'n bread am ll'ble ter be sku'se."—Wishlngton St«r.

PROBAK-

laidSan F"ranciaco in smoldering ruinsand old Chinatown and the Barbary R:00 Poast in ashes, there was located in-he toughest section of Frisco's wa- to 5 ;00 P. M.:er front a sailor's dive commonly<nown as the "Tub of Blood,"

Strange to relate, thin hell holewhich, in the days of the clipperships, was owned and managed byhe "Knitting Swede,1' was one of

the few buildings that withstood theravages of the earthquake. Learningof this, Columbia officials decided to

it as a background for "Shang-haied Love."

Accordingly, securing some oldphotographs taken in the nineties,Columbia technicians reconstructedthe old building, exact in every de-tail. When the cast arrived in San-Francisco to commence shooting, theold "Tub of Blood" again began tolive over its unsavory past in enact-ing scenes for "Shanghaied Love."

The casting department scouredthe water front for deep sea sailorswho had known this dive in the olddr,ys. Wonderful to behold are someof. the types they finally securedMen who actually had been shang-haied from the old cftfi' and who, af-ter awakening aboard some-old wind-jam moil hound for an out-of-the-waypert, roundly cursed the "KnittingSwede" and all his ilk.

One old chap, now well along inears, was cajoled from a most re-pectahlo homo, where he was sur-ninded by admiring grandchildren

.o take part in the picture. He re-nted how, after a night of wine,

men and song in the "Tub o:Bl«od" some fifty years ago, he haawakened one'morning on a foul-smelling old clipper headed for portsof ill repute on the Indian ocean.Five years later, after touching atmost of the hell holes of the earth,ht finally sailed back into San Fran-cisco harbor n sadder br.1 wiser man.He can be seen in "ShanghaiedLove" among the various water frontcharacters in the early scenes.

Sunday Service—11:00 A. M.

Ke«p Your Eye On Th«Chevrolet" MMHI What?

Cciniidprnble speculation w n Karoused here today hy the nppear-ar.ee around, town and along automo-bile row of posters, utreamert andplacards bearing th(> advice to "KeepVim Kye on Chevrolet,"

Whnt this loading manufacturerplaps in thi> way of K follow up tothis preliminary announcement, couldnot be learned from Peter Van Syc-kle of the Jefferson Motors, Inc., nfPerth Amboy.

"Tell any of your readers inter-ested,'1 says Mt. Van Syckle. "towatch next Friday's edition of your inewspaper for any further details. Ican't ti'll you any more just now. j

We have don* a fine business;Sunday School—9:30 a. m. * I during the past twelve months, nndWednesday Testimony Meeting I throughout the country the Chevro-" n " •» 1 let six is leading every other mBk«

- i L-. ft • VV 1 ' 1

-shopshavindcomfortuthmne

MThursday Reading Room — 8:00

"ANCIENT AND 'MODERNNECROMANCY, ALIAS MES-MERISM AND HYPNOTISM,DENOUNCED" will be tht mh-ject of the Le»«on-Strmoh in »UChurches of Christ, Scientist, on{Sunday. November 29, 1931.

The Golden Text is: "Thus ssiththe Lord of hosts, the God of Is-rael; Le(t not your prophets andyour diviners, that be in the midstof you, deceive you, neither hearkento your dreami Which ye cause tolje dreamed. For they prophesyfalsely unto you in mv name: Ihave not sent them, saith the Lord"(Jeremiah 29: 8, 9).

Among the citations which com-prise the Lesson-Sermon ii the fol-lowing from the Bible: "Blessed isthe man that endureth temptation:for when he is trird, he shall receivethe crown of life, which the Lordhath promised to them that lovehim"' (James 1: 12).

The Lesson-Sermon "also includesthe following passage from theChristiaA Science textbook, "Science and Health with Key to theScriptures" by Mary Baker Eddy:"Rcsi«t the temptation to believe inmatter as intelligent. i« havip? *-nsation or power" fn. 218V

in registrations. Yft, good as thatshowing is, w»r expect to do betterduring the coming months. Just keepyour «ye on Chevrolet," Mr. Van-Syckle concuuded.

Thoi. "Good Old D . T . "When Qn*«n Victoria came to th»

throne In 1887, there were 1,600 boj»under 16 awaiting transportationabroad for petty crime*.

Two Gnat TMs|sLearn these two things: tfever to

be dlseonraged because good thing* geton so slowly here, nnd ticvor full dallyto do thaf K°od thing which lies nextto yonr hand.—G. Muct)<>nald.

Wnat a BUdder PhysicShould <V>. Work on the bladder —

cantor oil on the bowrla. l>rlie not Imparttin and rirtm Midi thnt riuiH IrrltMlan

hlrh reanlU In ((Mint up nl«tat», tn-qnrnl ilnlre, barnlnf, lr« pkltw or kftrk->rh*. Ill'-KIETS (5 tt. UblrU) In » l>lMI-ant bladder phutc. O*t a J»o t«t boitram your drugilit, Aflrr four day« If notirllurd in bark and «*t your monty. VwiHilt (<rl Komi aittr thin rleauilni and younet you' rnular llrrp.

THOMPSON-DRAKE DRUG CO.

Jefferson Motors,163 New Brunswick Ave.

Perth Amboy, N. J.Tel. P. A. 4-0015

Inc.

GET RIDOF DISEASE

RECONDITIONED CARSPRICED RIGHT FOR QUICK SALE

1 9 2 9 Buick 5 -pass . S e d a n . . . . .1 9 3 0 Ford Sport Roadster $ 3 9 51 9 2 8 Studebaker Sedan $ 3 7 5

. 1 9 3 1 Plymouth Sedan , , ,•:• • • # &. 1 9 2 9 Dodge S e d a n . . . $ 4 9 5

1 9 2 9 Ford C o a c h . . . <&•',...1 9 2 9 Ford Sport C o u p e . . . . . .

v

UNION GARAGE CO.BWCt - GADlUC • LA S M

273-277 High StreetPerth AmboyOpen Evening

Phone; P. A. 4-2400

mouth and throat

STATE THEATREMAIN STREET _Saturday, November 28

Double Feature

Ranks with "Eiq Parade" forheart-throbs ancTlenrlur" (or thrills /

TELEPHONEWOODBRIDGE 8-1212 WOODBRIDGE

Tuesday, Wednesday, Dec. 1, 2,FEEL THE fcOLD FINDER OF FEARl

THRILL TO A STRANGE LOVE TALE!

ADDED ATTRACTIONSTHE JUNGLE STORY

"NBANGI"COMEDY "BIG HOUSE PARTY"

7th EPISODE "DANGER ISLAND"

Sunday, Monday, Nov. 29-30Two Big Features

ft CAST OF*>f BORNEO'

- T R

ANOTHER

FASCINATING TRIUMPH

Would anice girtdo that?

enough, uyi the•ocial lecretury!

OF A

StatTARYQ. Qtuumount Qklute

WITH

Claudette ColbertHerbert MarshallGeorges Metaxa

THE SENSATIONAL

SEA DRAMA!

ShanghaiedLove"

FEATURING

Noah BeerySally Blane

AND " "

Richard Cromwell

CHARLIE CHASE

COMEDY

Latest NewsEvents

WITH

ROSE H0BARTCHARLES BICKFORD

ALSO

s. s. VA'N DINE DETECTIVE THRILLER

Comedy "ARABIAN KNIGHTS" Lone Star Stronger

TUESDAY EVENING

PHIL ROSE FOOD SHOW* Enuff Sed!

Thursday, Friday, Dec. 3, 4A GREAT STARS GREATEST TRIUMPHI

1—COMING

SUNDAY . MONDAY — DEC. 6 - 7

EDDIE CANTOR

A Fl€€ SOULWITH

IN

LIONEL BARRYMORECLARK GABLE

JAMES GLEAS6NComedy "LETS DO THINGS" with The Boy FrUmb

Page 8: CARTERET PRESS - DigiFind-It€¦ · I St. Elizabeth's Roman Catholic Church in Washington avenue on ... Cassalegi, Hook Garber, Mitch Cnr-IISIP, Mike Poll, Ted Kleban, Bob Henderson,

PAGE EIGHT FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 19S1

INUTTY NATURALHISTORY

4 | V MUOH HUTTOM •

THE MOUNTAIN IPSK

AltliimiMi rallicr r:irp, <lio lp»k nin

iiKimlly In- fiiiiinl viliiTPver there are

inotintnlii.o. I nlikc llic s ldehl l l c u # ,

wliirh, hav ing "I1"''! I'lW "O o n e *'•'*•

could only go In ''nc direction nroundthe hill, the lp«k lm» developed ihortlegs on IMPIJI siilrs with Inns °nes Inthe. middle, and <">m turn nrnund, re-versp, or go Into inlorinPillnte. PaulBunynn, the • noted woodsman, oncetold the writer !»• hail t'tioa Been theIpsks traveling down the Grand can-

yon, walking on euch side and swim-ming In the middle nt the same time.

The Ipsk rdinwn here on the side ofa mountain has a doiibleJpeanut body,a filbert head, popcorn ears, and clovehorns and tnll. Six toothpicks fromthe legs, nnd the feet lire split peanuts.The freckles arc 'i<«mlly done with apen. Well-chcwcd chewing gum Isused to fasten It together.

(£1 Metropolitan Ni-wnpaperIWNU Frrvlca.)

.-Please mention this paper whenI uying from advertise™—

Afternoqp EmembleJ

This pretty ensemble fur aftunioonwear In of griiy rreiie, the Jncket be-In* furred wltli blue foi.

See Old' Family ^IbumIt Is y-stlniati'd that men on this con

tlnent imminlly prty »T!V),000(000 to bar-bers. And If you don't b'lleve the reRiilt Is wortlt^evjry^penni of It, Justriffle tlirajgh thpjxtfjrs offhe qld fainlly iilhunic—llfcrnftoj (Ontario) Spur-la tor /

The Paulus DairyMain Office:

Phone: 2400

Established 1890'

189-195 £*«yr St.New Brun«*ie*t, N. J.

PauW Positively PkfectlyPasteurized Milk

Raw milk* produced by'tuberculin and blood tested

cows: Walker Gordon Certified, Golden Guernsey,

Suydam't Special, Rutger'a Special

Distribution Covers: New Brunswick, Highland Park,

South River, Sayreville, Parlin, South Amboy,

Perth Amboy, Woodbridge, Carteret, Fords

, and Metuchen, N, J.

CROSBY STORES1

97-105 Smith St. PERTH AMBOY

The Greatest Sale You'll AttendShop at Crosby's Saturday and Save

Women's Full Fashioned

SILK HOSERegular $1.00 Quality ,

I'erfect and slight im-perfects of l o v e l ys h e e r and serviceweight silk hose. Buya hfilf dozen pairs now.All newest shades.

You Will never get values like these again.Buy Now',;

60 DOZ. MEN'S UP TO $1.98High "Grade

Your Home and You

By Betty Calliiter

WASHING DISHES

\ I 7 A S l U N ( i dishes 1g tiresome* * piimmii u'hi'ii ynu do It alone, Imt

urwi'l there ilnii'8 when doing all the(IMIM nni] silver nml pots and pansyinirKolf norms better ttian having twoor three more or loss willing asslatnuHIn i lie* kltclir-n nt the same i m t , work-Ing at rnwloni, hrlnglrg dialing fromthi! table Imfure there In any jjluce t»iwt them, atiickliiR up plntes tlint hnvftnot been superficially cleaned off, dry-Ing the dishes r>p,fi>re they tuure beenfliiFeil nnd putting them up where theyilon't helonij?

Clearing'up nflor a meal Is • com-liUciitoil matter, and when there aremany illshen ami a number of workerjthere should be definite dlviBion of la-hnr. Hnch Inillrldunl should be givenn deflnlte task. tf there are five tohelp, the work may be divided as fol-lows :

A. Carry sliver and glassware to thekitchen and pile at the side of thesink. Collect table napkins, crumb ta-ble, remdve cloth, take out leaves fromthe table If extra ones have bgen add-ed, brush dining-room floor, put diningroom In between meal order, and quit,, B. Carry all chlnaware to the kitch-en, scrape and pile,.'Help dry dishesand finally collect and dispose of ref-nue. Nothing more.

C. Collect all food left from themeal, put Into suitable dishes and putIn th* refrigerator. Put up bread andother food left In the kitchen. Tidythe stove and wipe off. Put up allkitchen dishes, and be In readiness tobrush up kitchen floor when work tidone.

D. Get ready dish water and beginwashing dishes as soon as glasses andsilver begin to arrive. Wash all dishesand pots and pans and then quit witha free conscience.

R. See that tables are cleared forclean dishes and begin drying ai toonaa things are ready. Dry pots andnnns as well f!B dishes add finally washout dish towels. ' \

Usually that would be a fair di-vision of labor with responsibilitiesfairly distributed.

{{£) by UcClure Newspaper Syndicate.)IWNU Sirvlca.)

Folly of IncredulityA rational against Irmthwa! e\

cesses and vagaries of skepticism mn\readily degenerate Into the rival foil?nf credulity.—Gladstone.

SLATS' DIARYBY JROSS FARQUHAR

Friday—well I got me a new bi-sickle for ray berth day today & I

never road 1 be-fore but pa aed itwas as easy asFalling off a log.well I was andeven if 1 neverdid fall off of aLog why I gesa Ifell a b o u t the.same as if I hadfell off of a logonuy this was fer-ther to fall.

SHIRTSlful quality broAd'brocaded madron,aua |14*> i eoust

,,!!•» All tolorn AllEveiy uhlrt wortbjs lUuit twite tutu 69'

BUY THESE BY THE DO/EN AT THIS PRICE!

100 DOZEN REGULAR 69c

81x90 SHEETSFull »it«; 81x!)0. De«puia, excellent quality

bleached mud in Come.early for 47

PUBLIC Hf4LT|-|by Dr. Edwin F ttahn • I

Q

Untor-

HEART IH8BASBMar* d»»tbi are caiwtl T>y Tnwt

discus* than »ny other cslnmltywhich C»n h»pi»n to the Human twdyand the Importune* of thli atnictlonh u been much npprOTlated Itf them s t |n»uf»nc« compunles and causedcansMcrf-blo concern amongst •v"-"Interested l«-*ltsl statistics,ttinately. heart <S\UIM is nn u.o .-»-cresse and It heccmita a serious prob-lem as resivrd* rlw (uture of the hu-man rare.

The term heart disease 1» » *eryarmipreh^nslve one, for th*T« are a

RrrBt many varieties of the complaint.•Ehere am two outstanding typesunder which all others may r* claaal-flecl »*. Punctlonsl nnd OrjanlrHeart n t o w The formPr Includesthose vafletliw brought on by nervoustrouble, «uch M mpnial worry, dls-ekae of the thyroid gland, dlnnrdrrs '>tdlf««tlon, over-eiertlon and thece*»lw use of tobacco. This Is hy furthe commoner variety and. Isrule responsive to the rpmnvi'cauM. The other groul>, thetype Is far more serious «J> it Involvesstructural changes either In tt"he»rt muscle Itself or In 1U> valvand adjacent ntructurM. Orimnichet-rt disease iwldn *rom the typethat la conKcnltftl or wlitent frombirth In always of Infectious origin orin other words, la due to some tx>l«o"'n the blood-stream, that 1« carrteilto tho heart and lodges therein caus-ing deflnlte organic changes In thatorgan or IU affiliated structures. Thecomplex poison of so-called Rheu-matism 1» a frequent eiample of thisvariety. These poisons which affectthe heart excluding those due tocontagious disease, ar» lnrartably

of Its

found within tlio burly and the focior UPPM from which thny arliwt, a* thesinuses, teeth, . tonnll". Ball blftdilerand other partn of the Intestinal tractare often difficult of detection.

Now th» 'question »rl«e»- Why liHeart IHMIIMT The answer to thUli very almple and short—streM atliving. Th* heart l> the atronirest'organ In tha body tnd will stand moriabuse without ramplalnlng than anyother. Rut when we keep on over-working that organ. It win In dmUme rebel. Our bodies am »o «m-"tHiited that they require a certafnamount of rmt In nrder to keep upwith the wear and tear of lit*. Regu-late our life nn that the heart g«t« IUshare Be oinmlnwl at Interval* byyour doctor and have local tTifectlonitaken rare of. and rememrwr, that Inorder in kepp happy, nothing U to betrained hy MreAilvo lshor and XMrry,Changs your ylewpnint nt Intervalsand Klvn yourseU a new outlook uponlife and what IU all about. If thereIn any question u to your heart con-dition have your doctor check you up.Always remember that heart diseaseIs one of tlie moat amenable to treat-ment and the person with an organicheart trouble Is often a better riskthan the one who thinks Jie h u abad heart Moderation Is the pass-word to Oood Health.

N O W . . . .The Supercurline Steam Perma-nent with Vegetable Oil Treatment

Medical Itnn Service Copyright WJt

Health questions will be an-rweiedby Dr. Hahn. Writ* him In canof tbit p*per. The answer willbe published In our next lasu*.

Historical StudyHistory was not taken up until the

Nineteenth century In the schooTKofthe United States. One of the earli-est histories prepared for school usewas written hy a citizen of Massa-chusetts. This WHS In 1821. In 1822Rev. O. A. <;oodrich published his his-tory. In 1832 Noiih Webster publishedhis history of the United States forschools.

—Please mention this paper whenbuyinjf from advertisers.—

CLASSIFIED ADSClassified advertisements only on*

I'ent a word; minimum charge 25c.

EXPERIENCED coloredwants general house

d G

w o m a nwuik, orwants ge ,

home laundry. Good references. In-quire 14 Monteque avenue, CliffordHeights; phone Woodbridge 8-1532J.W. I. 11-13, 20".WORK WANTED—A young girl

wishes house-work. Call Woud-bridge 8-1990-J.W, I. 11-20*. ^

FOR RENT — 3- rooms; all improve-ments; steam heat. Peter Gatson,

Brookfield avenue, Woodbridge, N.J.W, I. 11-20*.

FOR KENT — 6-room house withbath; all improvements, garage,

near park; $50 per month. 439t. Tel. Woodbridge 8-1299.

Noonan To DrawRecord Attendance

Early Sale Of Tickets Indicate

That Every Seat Will Be

Sold.

The hair is left soft and lus-trous, due to the Veg-Oiltreatment.The STEAM WAVE needsno fussing with — it FALLSinto waves after shampooingand it is comfortable. Takes1 1-2 hours and guaranteedsix months.

Tom Noonan will draw a capacityattendance at the high school audi-torium when he comes here Sur 'night to hold service. The proceedswill be turned over to the Mayor'sEmergency Relief Committee. Tick-ets for the service were put on saleabout a week ago and the sale hasbeen steady and heavy.

Phil Turk, one of the committeeresponsible for bringing1 Nootoanhere, said on Tuesday night, that agreat many orders for tickets arecoming from other towns, some quitedistant. Tickets are for sale at Mit-tuch's Drug Stove, Brown's ReliablePharmacy, Enot's Drug Store, Brad-loy'a Drug Store; Al's barbershop,Laster's barbershop, Greenwaldareal estate office and the Rooseveltcafeteria.

$5-00Shin|la

Long Bob,$1 Extra

20% Discount for the monthof November

Phone P. A. 4-1110 for Appointment

KJAERS BEAUTY SALON"A PERMANENT INSTITUTION"

262 Madison Ave. Perth AmboyV

OPEN MONDAY AND THURSDAY EVENINGS

FOR RENT—Small furnished apart-ment; also rooms and board. Ap-

ply 144 Main street qr Phone Wood-hridge 8-0003M.W. I. 5-1 tf.

ROOMS AND BOARD611 Barren avenue, Woodbridge,

N. J. "/hone 892.W. I. 3-14 tf

Lured to Death by MoonThe moon has the strangest nttruc

tlon for earthly creatures. Even 'theequld, a well-known relative of tin'octopus or devil-fish seems to be Inspired1 by her charms. When the moonIs full the squad will swim along onthe surface of the water, his cold eyestiled on the lunar orb until he instranded hlch and dry on the bench.After a bright uiouullt ul^ht duztns ofthese ferocious pirates of the deep arefound helpless on the sands—victimsof their misplaced sentiment.

FINEST QUALITY 5«c VAJJUE

Table DamaskPlain wLlte

with colored boldeffcill. wide . . . . . . . .

ace Flatt sed hewood sell i i s carCheap, he told pahe had baut it forto use as a plash-ure' Car but nowit had got go hisfamily wanted to

11 it to so he says he will sell-hiscar cheap now.

Sunday — Ant Emmy had the he-.-'ups today ami finely we sent for theDr. and when he cum he pot to tawk-ing- about how sum times hecupslasted for a weak at a time and theperson witch had them died sumtimes and she got so skared she quithaveing them rite away.

Munday — pa (rot balled out todayby the boss down at the noose paperwear he wirka. The boss balled himout for smokeinfc wile at wirk and pasays it was very very unjust becuzh wassent wirking.1 Teusday—Ant Emmy wants to be

rite up to stile and now she is look-ing for -a new sute to ware this Pall.She wants it to be in the new cullorshe has ben heering so mutch aboutwitch they call Zane Gray.

Wensday — Unkel Hen was at arehouse today a lone with sum utherCo. and 1 and him was tawkinuamongst each uther and he showedme a nife he has had sence he wentto skool morn fifty yrs. ago. All hehas done to it is to have 2 newBlades put in and a new handle putonto it. ' —

Thirsdsy— Elly Protz has rote abook and she was a getting prittydiscurraged about it till the preech-ers cum out vs. her book so nowshe is happy, and it looks liko she willbe a very very rich lady sence thepreechers have dinounred her book.

Saterday— Hor-ipoR SAL*E—1930 Harley DavidsonM l "74" i dMotorcycle "74," in

condition. Price veryu Id

very goodreasonable.nd y

Inquire Woodbridge Independent Of-fice, 18 Green street.

FOR SALE—Five roorn house withbath and all improvements in Row-

land place. Telephone Woodbridge8—171U.

FOR SALE—Hardy garden tulipbulbs, mixed varieties, $2.85 per

100; 55c per dozen. Imported PeatMoas for covering roses, perennialsand Bhrubs, $4.00 per large bale. J.E. JANSA, NURSERY (near school)SEWAREN. N. J.W. I. 11-13, 20, 27; 12-4*.

LANDSCAPE CONTRACTORFULL Line of Evergreent

Shrubs, Trees and Flowers, all local-ly grown. J. E. JANSA, Nursery, Se-waren, N. J. (Near school.)W. I. 7-24 to 10-30*.

HOUSE FOR RENT — 6 rooms, allimprovements, garage. $45 per

month. 629 Railway avenue, Wood-bridge. Inquire Mrs. H. L. Demarest,437 R h T l h

g q437 Rahway avenue.Woodbridge 8-0124.W. I. 10-30.

Telephone

C. LEPPER—Furniture and pianosmoved anywhere with A-l equip-

ment; storage reasonable. 441 Am-boy avenue. Tel. Perth Amboy 2818.W. I. tf

TRUCKING, local or long distance;two trucks at your convenience.

Phone Woodbridge 193. John Thom-u. Oakland avenue, Sewaren.

Please mention this paper to ad-vertisers; it helps you, it helps them,It helps your paper. —

Sensational Discovery, 666 SalveA Doctor1! Prescription for Treating CoUU Externally

Everybody Uiing It—Tolling Their Friend*

$5,000 Cash Prizes For Best Answers"Why You Prefer 666 Salve for Coldi"

The Answer li Easy After You Have Tried ItAik Your Druggiit

First Prize $500.00; Next ten Prizes $100.00 each; Next twentyPrises $50.00.each; Next forty Prizes $25.00 each; Next one hun-dred Prizes $10.00 each; Next one hundred Prizes $5.00 each. Incase of a tie identical Prizes will be awarded. Rules: Write on oneside of paper only. Let your letter contain no more than lifty words.Tear off Top of 666 Salve Carton and mail with letter to 666 SalveContest, Jacksonville, Florida. All letters must be in by midnight,January 31, 1932. Your Druggist will have list of winners by Febru-ary 15th.666 Liquid or TableU with 666 Salve Make* a Complat* Internal

and External Treatment.

— A CtoMified Adv. Will 3 * It -

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PORT READING, N. I

1925 STUDEBAKER SEDAN $47.50

1925 DODGE BROS. S E D A N . . . . . . . . . 85.00

1928 CHRYSLER SEDAN 95.00

1929 CHANDLER COUPE 165.00i

1 9 2 8 CHEVROLET SEDAN . , . . . 1 4 5 . 0 01927 DODGE B R O S . S E D A N . . . . . . „ 125.001927 JORDAN S E D A N . . . . . . . . . . . . . 125.001 9 2 8 ESSEX COACH ,.,....... 125.001 9 2 9 FORD C O A C H . . . , , . ' , r . . . . .

152 JEFFERSON STREETPERTH AMBOY. N. J.